Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1915
Page 1 of 380
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 380 of the 1915 volume:
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1 x A 1 x u v 1 fi limp cj xxxuylff, 33.2.3.1 J ff, 1 l is? XT! ,lf Q7 Zf ' ,uf '.'.x . , i 1.55 TM qW'jlu152t 1. 2 f tQI QI R M 'ixfvgul ,. f 31 , ' ff, ' 'J' -Y 9 v f ' V Jliihrm' 1 4 N ' I I 1 w 1 , 1 4 , ' v fa ' A ' I u m f r gifffw i TO CHARLES EVANS HUGHES. LL.D. THAT LOYAL AND DISTINGUISHED SON OF BROWN, WHOSE FEARLESSNESS, CAPACITY, AND STERLING INTEGRITY COMMAND THE RESPECT OF THE PEOPLE OF OUR BROAD LAND THIS FIFTY-SEVENTH VOLUME OF THE LIBER BFIUNENSIS IS DEDICATED. LIBER BRUN EN SIS VOLUME LVII One Dollar and Fifty Cents the COPV o' Address HAROLD M. TAYLOR 47 University Hall Providence, Brown University Rhode Island ' Ll B E R BRUNENSIS HAROLD MJNLOR EDITORINLHIEF LDC-AR J. STAFF ART EDHOR WXIIERRBIRNHAM MANAGING EDITOR 1 1 'X 'xx 4 X ,Q -Nvl-Q X- - X ' 'ilf' Qfgvbw h 7 'E f'71?'?y H Eertm: Eeneuulel- 35111: su he 'Sh llllle hmft pretenh tn make gnu reall Efheg useh tn :ull gnu lung nga,- - JVM 1 gig ,X Glhe pages that tu this mtuzeehz 5 fix Nut ruulh me- if me muulh - exeuae .fain-M 4122 N f Glhe lllilglllilfh prnnnptingu nf the muse 1 X X Rt mhuse rnummnh me mrute them huum X fl we haue nu hupe tu pleauae the tmun. Ke me hrh hut thmk Hume fmenhlg suul e 'X CNut ill-zrhuiueh mum the xuhulej , ,g1'x, .!W'9, fik.5J . 4, ' ' , . .- QQ might luke them, .mb nur hutg u Dune fe A-' MMM Svhuulh theg cewll in gears tu fume ...1...w.C'l RH U! lLlmu: mxlzth bags at Eiruxun, that thus ff! f Ghingn might he lean numntuuuuu. g WWW ex X ' Qff ml1Bl1J f1l'BE12L1IZ,hB Eieneuuluusl g, I v ,,. ,fp i X' f- , N - KJ CJ ii AB LE f o if' y fy s .Q 2 143 Page P7120 ACADEMIC coaabca muzss .... .... 2 60 FRAWRNITIES ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS ....... .... 2 ss Alpha Df1'i 'hi '--- H 11 ATHLETICS Alpha Tau Omega .... . . 51 31,561,311 Beta Theta Pi ........ .. 23 pmghmnn .,. 'l... 196 Delta Kappa Epsilon .... .. 27 Herald-Brunonian .... .... 1 98 Dena PM 15 Inter-Fraternity -.... . . . 197 Dem' Tau Dem' 55 Varsiiy .','A,'..- lr.. 1 92 Delta Upsilon ..... .. 39 Football KEVIN' Sigma - ---' 59 Varsity ..,.l... l..' 1 86 Lambda Chi Alpha.. .. .. 79 second Team , ..ll '..l 1 90 Phi Delta Theta .... .. 47 Gcncmi Athletics Phi Gamma Delta ..... .. 67 Athletic Association .... .... 1 83 Phi KHPW '-'- ' 63 Wearers ofthe B . . . .... 208 Phi K8I'P31'9i '--' ' ' ' 71 Intcrclass Basketball ..... .,.. 2 O9 Phi Siam Kavva ----- -- 75 Minor Aghiciics Psi Upsilon ....... . . 19 Gym ,,,..-,.' ,A.. 2 14 Sigma Chi ..,...,.. . , 43 swimming ,.,, 212 Sigma Nu ............ .. S3 Tennis ,.,', '.l. 2 17 Sigma Phi Epsilon .... .. F47 Wrestling .... .... 2 16 Them Della Chi ---- -- 35 Track Zeta Psi ........ . . . 31 C,-O55 Country ,,,. ,..I 2 03 HEVVY STUF ...... . . . 287 lnterscholastic .... . .... 207 MUSICAL CLUBS N,E,I,A,A '...., ,,,' 2 05 Glee Club ....... .... 2 32 R,c1,,d,m, ,,,, 205 Mandolin Club ..... 233 Relay . .. .... 204 Ofchfiffa ----.'f- .. . 234 Varsity ...... ..... .... 2 O 0 PUBLICATIONS CLUBS Brown Daily Herald ..... , , , 210 13, M, C, pmfee Club ,,,, ,,,, 2 53 Brunonian ...................................... 212 Bioiogicai Club ,,,,, ,,,, 2 51 Liber Brunensis ................................. 208 Brown Union ....... .... 2 39 sHoULn AULD ACQUAINTANCE BE FORGOT ..... 263 Cammarian Club ..... .... 2 46 SOCIAL EVENTS C and C Club ...... .... 2 48 Gymnasium Ball .... 231 Hill Club ........... .... 2 55 Junior From ..... 229 Engineering Society .... .... 2 52 Junior Week ,hli 228 Menorah Society ...-- .... 2 57 Senior Ball ........ 227 Peddic Club ....... .... 2 56 Sophomore 13,11 ,,,,, 230 Phillips Club ..... .... 2 54 STATISTICS Pi Kappa .......... .... 2 47 Corporation ...., .. 92 Sphinx Club ......... .... 2 50 Faculty .......... . . 94 Waste Basket Club .... .... 2 49 Freshman Class ..... .. . 169 Y. M. C. A .......... .... 2 43 Graduate Students .... , , , 100 DEBATING In Memoriam ..... , , , 179 Debating Union ............. .... 2 40 Junior Class ..... 151 Freshman-Sophomore Debate .... .... 2 42 Phantom Roll ..... , , . 176 DRAMATICS A senior Class ...... 107 Sock and Buskln ...... .... 2 36 Sophomore Class .... , I I 159 Cast ol Annual Play .... .... 2 38 Special Students .... H A 174 -'11 A ll Zvi Y K1 Hrfl , 548 E A wir ' 8 AAA FRATERNITY STATISTICS Active llesitlenl ll ll f Name Address Nlemhers Nlemhei Ch ii tu Alpha Delta Phi 54 College Street 133 Delta Phi North Slater Hall 60 Psi Upsilon 4 Maniiing Street 173 Beta Theta Pi 41 George Street 77 Delta Kappa lflpsilon 65 College Street 1l0 Zeta Psi South Slater Hall S2 Theta Delta Chi 81 W'aterman Street 103 Delta Upsilou 100 Waterman Street 70 Phi Delta Theta Brunonia Hall '38 Alpha Tau Omega hliddle Caswell Hall 525 Delta Tau Delta 04 Angell Street 315 Kappa Sigma l27 Angell Street 24. Phi Kappa 100 George Street 97 Phi Gamma Delta South Hope College 4l Phi Kappa Psi 108 NVaterman Street 38 Phi Sigma Kappa lirunonia Hall 34 Lambda Chi Alpha South Hope College 46 Sigma Phi Epsilon South Caswell I-lall 0 hqidtlle llope College 47 Sigma Chi 10 J' A am ',llMllllMMIllIllM Ng l m lllllmll lll . l l ' l X l J l lwlw SKQQ .-l Q, X- A, .9 AQ rx X Q Y JK I' -A ff '-1. Aa r l -I fi 0 l 1 1 C ' ' FL go Il ig Hi ALPHA DELTA PHI E B11 in Bi lg Founded at Brunonian Chapter Hamilton College 1832 lnstituted 1836 VWMQ 5 g ' l Y 'x l ,mf ' 'M ., l A l lmlllllmlllllm lmllilmlllllmlllllmllgg WX, .JO L- - -l LIBER BR UNENSIS -'- 1 - ' -- 0 J ' f T1 f - 'f'fT'T ' 1'iTTi..j'g',. 'iii 'jjj Alpha Delta Phi Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen JOHN BLAIR ABBOTT CHARLES MYRON CLEGG DONALD DIKE JOSEPH IRVING GREENE COLIN GORDON MACLEOD ROWLAND HAZARD MCLAUGHLIN WILLIAM PAINE SHEFFIELD, JR. LOUIS MORENCI SWEENY HAROLD LESLIE WILSON Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen RICHARD DRESSER PAUL BARNEY METCALF PAUL LEWIS RUSSELL EARL WINSLOW SCI-IOONMAKER Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen GILBERT CONGDON CARPENTER, Jn. ASAHEL STULZ DILLON ROBERT WARREN HAMILTON ARTHUR BARTLETT HOMER SOLON CHESTER KELLEY, Jn. HARVEY SHEAHAN ' GUSTAV HENRY TOBELMAN, Jn. RAYMOND BELCHER WARD GEORGE ALBRO WILLIAMSON Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen HOWARD HORACE ALLSOPP OCTAVE PETERSON BEAUVAIS JOHN SHARPE CI-IAFEE CHARLES GUERNEY EDWARDS CHAUNCEY TAFT LANGDON HENRY COE LANPHER KENNETH BRODIE MAcLEOD WILLIAM EYRE SISSON i I if I K NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters Hamilton Hamilton College . . 1832 Columbia Columbia University . -1839 Yale Yale University . lS'5l' Brunonian Brown University 13-511 Amherst Amherst College . 1831 Hudson Adelbert College . 1841 Bowdoin Bowdoin College . 1341 Dartmouth Dartmouth College . 18415 Peninsular University of Michigaii 18-l-li Rochester University of Rochester 1851. Williams 1Villiams College . . 1851 Middletown W'esleyan University . 1850 Kenyon Kenyon College . 1858 Union Union College . 1859 Cornell Cornell University 1809 Phi Kappa Trinity College . . 1878 Johns Hopkins Johns Hopkins . . 1889 Minnesota University of Miniiesota 1891 Toronto University of Toronto . 1893 Chicago University of Chicago . 1890 McGill NlcGill University . 1897 Wisconsin University of Wisconsin 1902 California University of California 1908 Illinois University of Illinois . 1912 Resident Members C. T. ALDRICH Brunonian '77 T. W. BICKNELL Brunonian '00 H. L. ALDRICI-I Brunonian '76 J. M. BRADLEY Williams '03 R. S. ALDRICH Y:1lc'06 C. R. BRANCH Brunonian '07 SAMSON ALMY Phi Kappa '92 AYLSWORTH BROWN Brunonian '06 F. W. ARNOLD Brunonian '98 PROP. L. M. BRISTOL AlI1llCI'S1L'96 REV. H. G. ARNOLD Brunonian '05 H. H. BUCKLIN Brunonian '00 R. S. AUSTIN Brunonian '07 I . H. BUDLONG Brunonian '09 BENJAMIN BAKER Brunonian '75 E. C. BULLOCK Brunonian '08 B. C. BAKER Brunonian '06 G. B. BULLOCK Brunonian '05 D. S. BAKER Brunonian '11 . A. A. BURGESS Brunonian '09 H. C. BAKER Yale '10 DR. H. W. BURNETT Maillizittaii '94 DR. A. A. BARROWS Brunonian '98 J. H. CADY Brunonian '03 .l- P. BARSTOW Brunonian '09 W. H. CADY Brun0n1an'98 MAXWELL BARUS Rev. F. J. BASSETT 7 Brunonian '10 Union 77 13 J. W. CAMBELL DR. r. P. CAPRON Brunonian '99 77 Brunonian 3 86 07 ? LIBER BR UNENSIS - REV. C. E. CATE Dartmouth A. B. CHACE, JR. Brunonian M. G. CHACE Brunonian H. S. CHAFEE Brunonian ZECHARIAH CHAFEE Brunonian ZECHARIAH CHAFEE, JR. Brunonian DR. C. V. CHAPIN Brunonian H. M. CHAPIN Brunonian R. S. CHAPIN Amherst W. W. CHAPIN Brunonian DR. P. P. CHASE Brunonian G. E. CHURCH Amherst P. O. CLARKE Brunonian R. B. COMSTOCK Brunonian G. L. COOKE Phi Kappa G. A. COOPER Brunonian J. A. CROSS Brunonian REV. H. I. CUSHMAN Dartmouth DR. I . L. DAY Brunonian PROF. E. B. DELABARRE Brunonian E. G. DURFEE Brunonian REV. E. R. EVANS Amherst ICI. C. FIELD Brunonian PROP. H. T. FOWLER Yale WILLIAM GAMMELL, JR. Yale J. R. GLADDING Brunonian H. L. GRANT Brunonian C. A. GREENE Brunonian E. P. GREENE Brunonian VV. C. GREENE Brunonian E. T. GROSS Brunonian PROF. A. G. HARKNESS Brunonian H. C. HART Brunonian E. S. HARTWELL Yale J. C. HARTWELL Brunonian F. L. HINCKLEY Brunonian G. C. HINCKLEY Brunonian M. W. HOUSE Brunonian G. W. HUBBARD Phi Kappa I. O. HUNT Brunonian S. F. HUNT Brunonian E. W. JOHNSON Bowdoin A. L. KELLY, JR. Williams G. I . KELLEY Williams WILLIAM KENT Brunonian C. A. KILVERT johns Hopkins REV. H. M. KING Bowdoin I. G. LADD Brunonian DR. C. H. LEONARD Yale P. C. LESTRADE Amherst ll. W. LITTLEFIELD Brunonian IVORY LITTLEFIELD Brunonian '76 '93 '96 '09 '80 '07 '76 '08 '09 '55 '06 '72 '80 '76 '70 '06 '78 '65 '85 '86 '67 '04 '94 '90 '06 '81 '90 '08 '79 '75 '01 '79 '01 '04 '97 '91 '96 '88 '08 '99 '02 '09 '10 '14 '10 '92 '59 '86 '65 '17 '07 '09 J. B. LITTLEFIELD R. M. LORD H. MASON, J... E. W. MASON R. MASON DR. WM. MCDONALD, J... C. D. MERCER J. M. MERCER O. T. METCALF HOUGHTON METCALF N. V. S. MUMFORD C. D. OWEN, JR. E. K. PARKER C. F. PARKHURST W. C. PELKEY WYMAN PENDLETON W. R. PERCE J. A. PIRCE A. H. POLAND REGINALD POLAND PROF. W. C. POLAND F. M. POND PROF. A. K. POTTER A. E. RAND H. A. RICE H. M. RICE G. M. RICHMOND K. C. RICHMOND M. W. ROGERS W. B. SATTERLEE M. E. SAWIN H. D. SHARPE LUCIAN SHARPE C. P. SISSON R. E. SISSON REV. F. W. SMITH N. W. SMITH R. W. STEERE T. W. STEERE ALLISON STONE RUSH STURGESS N. S. TABER ORRAY TAFT R. R. TAFT A. A. THOMAS H. E. THURSTON W. R. TILLINGHAST E. H. WEEKS J. H. WELLS P. R. WESLEY I. O. WINSLOW -QM Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Dartmouth Brunonian Dartmouth Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Brunonian Amherst Brunonian Brunonian Amherst Brunonian v v 9 3 1 1 7 2 1 5 1 1 1 J V 02 14 10 68 04 95 06 09 13 04 1 2 97 57 76 04 '12 7 9 1 65 92 09 '14 9 9 2 9 1 3 3 7 68 60 89 60 97 85 Brunonian '14 Brunonian '03 Brunonian '14 '94 Brunonian Brunonian '93 Brunonian '11 Brunonian '11 Middletown '86 Yale '96 Brunonian '01 Brunonian '98 Brunonian '96 Yale '02 Brunonian '13 Brunonian '85 Brunonian '88 Yale '01, Amherst '79 Brunonian '79 Brunonian '93 Brunonian '09 Phi Kappa '94 Brunonian '78 E W 'ia t v - 4 XXJIIHHV A gefggmnu nlnlnnIIIImImnnInlunnnlnnllnnmmwg iumnullmu uum Ilunmummmnn nnuumm uuamnef X 'f nv 94 ' A e ' iv DELTA PHI , , X -, : , 1 X670 1 ' f ' W lax' 1 B'-if X lvl, nn.A.,. Founded at Beta Chapter Union College l827 lnstituted 1838 X G JWFMVN' ' 9' Q N p ' . H L .Q 1 AD 7,gg nmuin1:nnmnium 1m1i MN Her ' LIBER BR UNENSIS Delta Phi - Class of Nineteen Hundred SIDNEY CLIFFORD WILLIAM CLINTON CROLIUS, JR. HAROLD THOMAS EATON Class of Nineteen Hundred LINCOLN RICHARDS ARNOLD JOHN CLARK HAZLETT CLIFFORD DAVENPORT HEATHCOTE and Fifteen ' FREDERIC JOHNSTON HUNT RICHARD DRURY RICE WALLACE GEER STEWART and Sixteen WAYLAND WILBUR RICE JOHN ALEXANDER RYRIE FRANKLIN CHAPMAN SMITH Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen THOMAS BAIRD APPLEGET JOHN RUSSELL BROWN DONALD KELSEY DOBBS WILLIAM BARBOUR FARNSWORTH DAVID THAYER GALLISON Class of N inete FRANKLIN COOLIDGE BROOKS JOHN HENRY OLSEN HUGGENWIG RONALD MACDONALD KIMBALL FRANCIS METCALF en Hundred 16 PAUL HOMER KEOUGH HOWARD BENNETT MARBLE BISSELL LAMONTE WADE WILLIAM WALLACE WADE EDWARD THOMAS WILLIAMS and Eighteen JOHN CHAMPLIN NOYES FRANCIS ROBERTS PARSONS WILBUR LAMPREY RICE ISAAC GALLUP SMITH Q-L: NINETEEN FIFTEEN Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Eta Lambda Nu Q Xi Omicron Pi Rho Roll of Chapters Union College . . . Brown University . University of New York Columbia College . Rutgers College . . . University of Pennsylvania . . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . Lehigh University . . . Johns Hopkins University . Yale University . . Cornell University . University of Virginia . 17 1827 1838 1841 1842 1845 1849 1864 1884 1885 1889 1890 1908 ' YF FV H. T. ANTHONY PAUL APPLETON J. I-I. ARTHUR S. R. BELLOWS HON. G. T. BROWN COL. R. P. BROWN DR. M. S. BUDLONG LIBER BR UNENSIS Resident Members Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown A. M. CAPRON Brown J. M. CAPRON S Brown R. F. CHAMBERS Brown M. D. CHAMPLIN Brown H. G. CLARK Brown J. C. COLLINS, JR. Brown PROP. THOMAS CROSBY, JR. Brown F. B. DAVIS Brown H. N. DAVIS Brown PROP. N.' F. DAVIS Brown F. T. EASTON Brown I . W. EASTON Brown J. P. FARNSWORTH, JR. Brown R. W. FIELD Brown DR. G. W. GARDNER Brown H. D. GILBERT Yale R. H. GLADDING Brown DR. C. H. GRIFFIN Brown F. H. GUILD I . T. GUILD PROP. J. F.. HILL REV. J. E. HOBBS A. S. HOFFMAN N. E. HOLT ISI. HOWLAND P. B. HOWLAND B rown Brown Ru tgc rs Brown B rown Brown B rown Brown D... P. V. I-IUSSEY E. P. JASTRAM G. A. JEPI-IERSON A. P. JOHNSON A. S. JOHNSON E. M. JOHNSON P. C. JONES R. B. JONES EDWIN KNOWLES J. C. KNOWLES J. W. LEWIS W. K. LOW W. A. MCAUSLAN H. L. MCAUSLAN M. MEDBERY DR. W. L. MUNRO PROF. W. H. MUNRO I-I. W. MUNRO E. G. PARKHURST E. S. PARSONS C. A. PHILLIPS L. T. PLACE DR. E. M. PORTER H. A. RICHMOND A. C. SNOW E. S. SPICER DR. G. T. SPICER W. A. SPICER, JR. H. A. SWEETLAND HON. C. M. VANSLYCK E. K. WALLING PROP. A. E. WATSON S. W. WRAY . i. B rown B rown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown B rown B rown Brown B rown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown B rown Brown Brown Brown B rown Brown Yale Brown Brown B rown B rown Brown Brown B rown Brown Brown n we w w ,mem .lllmlllllmllllllmmlllml !4Z'dllIlMllHMll!lIMlll!l - . H' lggg I 1' p e F ix H H A E fi. 2: B E N PS1 UPQILON 2: eg is f I5 'A E5 35 B? EH ga Founded at Sigma Chapter EE Union College l833 instituted l840 Q' We 'Q 1 I ' 'NG , ' VflllllIllIIllllllllllllllmlllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllW k MllllflllllllllllNIHllllIIIIIIHIHHIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIll 5 E 55478 - LIBER BR UNENSIS ZL: Psi Upsilon' Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen MILTON HAMMOND STANSBURY G ICORGE CLARK YALI'IN'I'INI3I HARRISON BLISS SAMUEL GREENE ARNOLD ROGERS Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen WILLIAM RHODES LIQROY AICBISIC IIAROLD DUISL SCOTT FRANK RUSSELL SMITII WILLIAM RUSSELL AI I'I,lfICIi FRICDICRICK ALLAN BALLOU, JR. Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen -IOIIN FRANCIS BROWN RAYMOND JOSEPH WALSH WALLACE RHODES CHANDLICR, -Inc. STANLICY AYRAULT WARD BRUCE MONAT JEI I RIS ARTHUR HAMILTON WILKINSON, I Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen LESLIE RUSSICLL CLARK KI'INNI'I'Il'I'I SAIIIVORD PARKICR IIARRY RALPI-1 GORDON Clelixlzlmzs Rlmln Rrclnxlwsox GISORGIS W'lII'1A'l'ON CARR YALGIIAN 20 5 I3 fe ,I 11 ix I Li - NINETEEN FIFTEEN Theta Delta Beta Sigma -Gamma Zeta kambda a pa Psip Xi Upsilon Iota Ph Pi i Chi Beta Beta Eta Tau M U. Rho Omega Epsilon 'Omicron Delta Delta Roll of Chapters Union College . . . New York University . Yale University . . Brown University Amherst College . Dartmouth College Columbia University . Bowdoin College . Hamilton College . Wesleyan University . Univeisity of Rochester Kenyon College . . University of Michigan Syracuse University . Cornell University . Trinity College . . Lehigh University . University of Pennsylvania . University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin University of Chicago . University of California University of Illinois . W'illiams College . . . Resident Members H. M. ADAMS M. H. S. AF1 LECK H. B. ANDREWS D. S. BABCOCK H. P. BABCOCK S. N. BAKER E. A. BARROWS A. E. BAR'1'LE'1 1' D. BECKWITH H. L. P. BECKWITH T. BECKWITH, 2n E. R. BLANCHARD F. I-1. BONTECOU H. W. BOSWORTH A. O. BOURNE, ju. S. W. BOURNE H. B. BOWEN J. BRIDGHAM S. W. BRIDGHAM F. H. BROWN W. T. BUCKLIN DR. W. H. BUFFUM Du. A. W. CALDER N. S. CAMPBELL MG. C. CARPENTER E. CARRINGTON Brown 95 R. CASE Brown 07 A. D. CHAPIN, EIR. Brown ex- 12 H. L. CLARK Brown 10 A. M. COATS Brown 09 tl. 11. COLLlER Brown 05 Du. G. L. COLLINS Yale 57 LEB. B. COLT Brown '1-1 LHB. C. COLT Brown '70 R. VV. COlVIS'l'OCK, -In. Brown ex- '14 hi. l . CONANT Brown 80 G. M. CONGDON Brown 65 H. CONGDON Brown ex- '17 REV. T. 1-I. COOPER Rochester '06 EDW. VV. CORLISS Brown 89 REV. A. COULTAS Brown 99 G. G. CROCKER Harvard 66 H. P. CROSS Brown 67 -1. G. DAMON Brown 94 A. L. DANIELSON Brown 85 H. DEWOLF Brown 68 P. DEWOLF Brown 98 P. C. DEWOLF Brown '91 W. P. DODGE Yale 0-1 C. T. DORRANCE Brown 93 H. L. DORRANCE Brown '73 AI. K. DORRANCE 1833 1837 1839 1840 1841 1842 1842 1843 1843 1843 1858 1860 1865 1875 1876 1880 1884 1890 1891 1896 1897 1903 1910 1913 Brown Brown Brown Yale Brown ex- Brown Yale Brown Brown Brown ex- ' 3 Yale B rown NVeslc ya n Brown VVes1eyan Amherst Yale Pennsylvania B rown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown 1 a '76 3 '06 5 1 9 9 9 9 9 2 1 91 90 73 68 99 02 1 0 09 9-1 84 95 90 55 96 07 86 57 01 05 09 67 07 6-1 il.l....1.1- 1,.LiT,..-1 S. R. DORRANCE L. W. DOWNES H. E. DRAKE W. W. DUNNELL S. S. DURFEE COL. H. A. DYER C. C. EARLE W. ELY F. W. EMERSON J. H. FARNI-IAM F. A. FARNHAM. 2ND REV. G. MACC. FISKE D. W. FISK F. C. FLETCHER J. E. FLETCHER, JR. J. C. FOSTER W. GAMMELL PROF. H. B. GARDNER L. GARDNER R. GARDNER V. C. GELB COL. R. H. I. GODDARD ,06 105 05 '76 R. H. I. GODDARD, JR. D. GoI'I' If. Is. GRANT H. T. GRANT E. H. GREEN T. E. GREEN A. E. GREENE R. GRINNELL C. A. HAHN DR. A. E. HAM L. HAM F. A. W. HARRIS R. E. HARRIS S. C. HARRIS F. HAYES L. H. HAZARD C. L. A. HEISER J. I-IENSHAW S. HENSHAW R. S. HOLDING, JR. C. E. HOLMES C. T. HOWARD H. HOWARD, JR. E. N. HOWARD A. W. HOWE, JR. P. D. HOWE Pm. C. H. I-IUNKINS W. C. HUNTOON F. L. JENKES T. A. JENKES H. A. KENYON H. E. KIMBALL C. F. KNIGHT H. N. KNIGHT R. L. KNIGHT W. KNIGHT S. D. KNOWLES W. LARCHAR, JR. R. N. LEITH LIBER BR UNENSIS Brown Trinity Wesleyan Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Rochester Brown Brown ex- Trinity Trinity Cornell Brown cx- Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Yale Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Yalc Brown Amherst ex- Brown Brown Brown Dartmouth Brown Brown Brown Brown ex- Brown Brown Wesleyan Brown ex- Brown Brown Trinity Brown '63 '88 '66 '73 '80 '94 '09 '78 '87 '14 '10 '00 '01 '96 '11 '96 '78 '84 '11 '77 '14 '58 '02 '11 '69 '69 '98 '87 '76 '87 '13 '64 '94 '86 '82 '86 '81 '89 '90 '87 '96 '14 '84 '78 '13 '07 '13 '11 '95 '94 '98 '77 '16 '04 '85 '77 '02 '03 '12 Q. - - .. i J. B. LEWIS Brown C. W. LIPPIT Brown H. LIPPITT Yale H. F. LIPPITT Brown M- I' LYNCH Brown DR. G. S. MACHAN Bgwdoin C. B. MACKINNEY Brown H. A. MACKINNEY Brown A. T. MANSFIELD Brown E. W. MASON Brown G. MARSH Yalo W. L. MAURAN Brown C. H. MERRIMAN, JR. Brown E. B. MERRIMAN Brown H. T. MERRIIVIAN Brown I. B. MERRIMAN Brown DR. R. H. MILLER Brown W. D. MILLER Brown F. W. MINER, JR. Brown rl. MORRIS Brown C. A. NIGHTINGALE Brown H. R. NIGHTINGALE Brown P. NICKOLSON Yale G. L. C. ORMSBEE Brown F. P. OWEN Amherst J. F. PAINE Brown rl. D. PRYOR Brown DR. F. L. PURDY Syracuse DEAN O. E. RANDALL Brown C. D. RAWSTORNE Brown E. R. REDMAN Bowdoin W. C. RHODES Brown J. RICHARDSON Brown F. E. RICHMOND, 2D Brown I-I. A. RICHMOND Brown DR. A. W. ROUNDS Brown F. P. SACKETT Brown H. W. SACKETT Brown F. A. SAYLES Brown B. M. SMITH Yale F. M. SMITH Brown R. C. TAFT, JR. Brown COL. R. W. TAFT Brown E. H. THAYER, JR. Brown E. G. THURBER Brown F. B. THURBER Brown T. F. TILLINGHAST Brown A. THAXTER Trinity B. S. WATSON Brown H P. WATERMAN Brown R. B. WEEDEN Brown W. W. WEEDEN Brown DR. J. L. WHEATON, JR. Brown M. WHITE Brown N. D. WHITE Dartmouth W. W. WHITE, JR. Yale E. L. WILSON Brown ex- M. A. WOLF Brown E. L. WOOD Amherst H. GHWOODBURY Trinity '96 '65 '09 '78 '04 '93 '96 '03 '68 '99 '98 '87 '92 '94 '94 '97 '07 09 '94 '50 '78 '83 '11 '90 '74 '98 '08 '92 3 '84 '01 '70 '64 '82 '99 '97 '95 '97 '94 '90 '03 '92 '95 '91 '98 '86 '05 '84 '11 '97 '78 '99 '91 '90 99 '01 '14 '84 '12 '1i B pi UM A u p vig,Eff452l1L 1l111mMwl1I1WM!ii Milamunllmllzxlmwlxllwmmmg K 1' I N 121 1 'f Y ', r ' ' ' 1 E a xx 5 3 BETA TH ETA Pl 5 is Founded at Kappa Chapter if Miami University 1839 lnstituted 1847 4' W 'Q 1 C 5 5 3 'r ' Y, A WMlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll hMik milIllllllIlllIlllIIIIIIIIIiIllHIIllilIIIIIIl1llillllllllllllllllllllli , R li LIBER BR UNENSIS Beta Theta Pi Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen JOHN MORRIS DAVIS HAROLD LESLIE MYERS WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen GEORGE STACY BEARSE RALPH WILLIAMS I?RA'I I' ELLIOT HARRIS BOSWORTH EARL DUCKWORTII SANFORD THEODORE RICHARDS FORD FRANK ELMER STARRETT Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen RICHARD BURTON CARTER CHAUNCEY BENIIS LADD PAUL CARTWRIGHT VICTOR RITZENDOLLAR L.41VAr.LEY ARTHUR BARDEN FINCH GERALD REYNAR ROWLAND ROBERT HUGHES CLARENCE HENRY WOODMANSEIQ Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen RICHARD CLARK BELDEN JOHN CALVIN BUTNER JR. PERCY GORDON CLIFF MARTIN JOSEPH DONOVAN ARTHUR BANCROFT LLOYD HENRY RUSSELL IVIANNEX FRANK CASPICR SPECK . 24 psi Bctham, 1 Washington-bleiicrson - l..,T.- ..l..- Upsilon Beta Sigma Kappa Beta iota Alpha Omega Xiu ltfpsilon .Beta 'llheta Beta Delta Beta Zeta Alpha Alpha Beta Gamma Alpha Sigma Alpha Chi Alpha Upsilon Ifhi Alpha lata Beta Lamhtla li appa Alpha lilta Beta Alpha Epsilon Beta N u Alpha Delta iota Pi Gamma Phi Beta Omieron Chi B-alnbtla Rho Sigma Rho Alpha Xi Alpha Beta 'l'au Sigma Alpha lfpsilon Boston Bowdoin Brown . Amherst Dartmouth . 1Vesleyan . Colgate Cornell . , St. Lawrence . Columhia . .Rutgers Dickinson . -lohns lloplcms Pennsylvania State Davidson . North Ca rolma Case . Denison Kenyon Central Cincinnati hliami . De Pauw . Hanover .l ncha n a Oklahoma 'l'exas . Beloit . Chicago lllinois . K nox . Iowa . . Iowa State . iowa Wesleyan NINETEEN FIFTEEN R011 of Chapters DIS'l'RlC'l' l 1876 Beta lita 1900 Beta Lipsilon 1847 DIS'l'RlC'I' ll 1889 Zeta 1889 Phi Chi 1890 DlS'l'RlC'l' 111 1880 Beta Epsilon 1879 'l'heta Zeta 1879 Nlu DlS'l'RlC'l' ,lV 1881 Sigma 1879 DlS'l'RlC'l' V 187-1 Beta Chi 1877 Phi DlS'l'RlC'i' V1 18150 Gamma 1888 Beta Psi DlS'l'R1C'l' Vll 1850 Omieron 1852 DlS'l'RlC'l' Ylll 1905 Theta 1868 Beta 1879 DlS'l'RlC'I' IX 18-18 Beta Kappa 1890 'l'heta Delta 1839 Alpha Gamma DlS'l'RlC'l' X 18-15 Beta Alu 1858 'Pau 1845 DlS'l'RlC'l' Xl 1907 Beta Xi 188.5 DlS'l'RlC'l' X11 18152 ' Lambda 1868 Rho 1902 Alpha Pi 1855 DlS'l'RlC'l' Xlll 1866 Beta Pi 1905 Gamma Alpha 1808 Alpha 'l'au 25 Maine XI. l. 'l'. NVilliams Yale . Syracuse Toronto Union Stevens Lehigh . . Pennsylvania 1Vest Virginia . Virginia Ohio Wesleyan . Western Reserve . Ohio . - Ohio State , Xvittenherg . . Purdue . 1Vahash . 'l'ulane . . Xliehigan Northwestern . Wisconsin Minnesota South Dakota . Nebraska - ,,l.i. ..- 1879 1918 1914 1891 1889 1907 1881 1879 1891 1880 18-12 1900 1 855 1853 18-11 18011 1885 .1867 1903 1846 1909 18-15 1873 1878 1890 1918 1888 I an: F1 LIBER BRLHVENSlS:::1-::L- DISTRICT XIV 7 SGW'PkfO?E'Sf F25SSOEP'PFFQS- P1FP+'f12ew5w2P 5 ss? wg-pa wUHO2FQ3 Z QU F' P'2oQmr'ewQeHb mfg H Q Sa 53 S52 - - tim- - fdgrjmfrjncgqmikjm, ...- W. w- . - . Q. Us HB 3,-I U-U35 I-1 L. ,,,, - . ' ' w 'gg rv I 3. igioogggiwgeUEU2mQObQQ9QEQEwQEzEwwE'E55 ag Q2 mi? Z:-'t,,'4xA mgm 4, 2-EP. ' NW' 557152 G30-QEQWPTPUJQZ F. N Q 45 ZwOr1.qZ+,1nHm- 'fhpmz Qbwqqowmhgwwinr 7-1W7'0 QQF 3 x 2. F10 o:f1gF'r+P,,G'7.1WgO,wZFlor-pq 7,-Cmztfl FJ'-4ZZO:wr'F1i 3 N 5 U Z zwpQrgP5oHrggmggE Oggwg 4 QQQQUF 2 S '4 Z I-j GUI? Ubin-1 Z .-n v - . F1 L-J T' ' ' Q QQ- QQ P4 Z UQ I' Z v 'IQ' oo .mp '-1 f- cn :: 09' --- 5 F ww - m gf as mae 7.1 -2 po mn: gms: D D-IL -,mm E' - OO --gg. O S UI O F' '11 V' ... 5. . 0. rn 5 -- U Q as w D w H v 2 2 Q ?i?21??????5Eggwiwwiwg'wwwwwavwicsw ,U -- E91,,,,ESEf+E22: 00,00OmOOEoE0ooooooooof+ooo iiiqss:S:D53555255555ESEEEEEEEEESEEEEEE 2. HU HHU HHU HHH oc -'- - Y 'v Q ' v--v -Q-vvqvvwq-v---p. ...- ,-4 -HH . QNassesassesseaawsasaagsaaxsgaaaaaraaaa g E2 EES E52 EES ' E E 5 3 Q 0 E inPFWWQWIIPPSWO1P02mwQwUwwngUmUHmrbww Q 1 A 4 ----- ,..f:. rxwcnxgw :Egan PFSP1SFHpwEwQrrQrwzroEwiPg:pZeZSgwwF3Ew 5 Q5 555 E35 235 we sfeqe w wwmmw: w,w-H4 'f f ' 0 QH O5 Q: mir ggggegggggggfgS3S?3Q57gOQaQ5mEo?E5E5FEF 3 3 EQ E1 925 ' F1 Q0 W,-. O 111' UUU Wv-UFIO ' 'No 12 FF-'U' ZUmL'I12j7UZZZFJZ3PZZZU jC3C+'Z7wZf 'mWw'1Zw-gn mzm. 7,4 U3 pf? F-2 Q. Q Fr-vw wrf1--emn000F1W 111,02 P1 -z 'U av: I E b 2 52? 57129 was-as 23 WSSQSEWSQMEFQ-EM U ' W P3 2 5 ' H F2222 m04Hww FE v - Q Zz 5 7 S 8 U KH Bw z 5 59 X9 555 ' H z 2 5 5 9? 55 2:5 W 5' ' 0 EU-3: : Z 35 U on E: 2 . . . 9' H fj rr W I 'f O H 5 :Pb Q ??5'??5??2 gumwwwwuuwwrxwwwwwwcvwwwgmwwwa wBE3 - . - - - . . . 22222222322222222222SESSSSSBSSQSSSSKSH :rw:w:sv:1q:suS-iswzzwfvznvp ::q:::::s:::::?:::S555EE5S5'5E5SE:EE,?, HH HHPH HHH. HHH.-A ssa:2s.:as:s:Qweassessas:ss'es:,a:3z3S.fTs.Fs2s30C2a,6a5 if E5 55? .1 A eJ.llMllIllMMMIllll l--Y QAQQIIIHMHIIMIIIUMIIIIMMH. y e 14 A u w ' l ' l l XE:-JMLS EE B3 A E21 gl rg HW El gl H: DELTA KAPIDA EIDSILQN ix gi 5A 'gg ,Phe i 0 Qi Founded at Upsllon Chapter Yale College I844 Instltuted 1850 : EB 1 W , VW L , - Ox l f 3 N H QQ! X' W,- M UllllllIlIIIIIllllIIlIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l lIllllllllllllllIIllllllIIIIIIllIllllllIIIIIllIllllllllllllllllllllll LIBER BR UNENSIS -Q Delta Kappa Epsilon Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen ARTHUR EARL BARNARD HARLEY CLIIIFORD HYDE RAY LAWRENCE BURNELL WILBUR JOHN PHILLIPS RALPH BROWN GRAHAM SHERMAN MERRILL STRONG Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen HAROLD PATTERSON ANDREWS JOHN BERNARD DUNN JOHN MORTON BOOTH FREDERICK LUXI FERRIS WILLIAM CURTIS CHASE PERCY WATERMAN SARLE IRYING CLOUGH WHITE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen HENRY AEOUSTUS BATCHELOR OLIVER WEEKES INOERSOLL, 1 T1-1EOP1auLUs DINIICK WARREN MAYHEW SNII 1 IN MAURICE W1-11'1'COx1E HOLTON FRANK VALENTINE WILLARD Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen cu R1s'1'OP1a1ER ALLEN CHAMPLIN JOHN GORDON x1OR1AR'1'Y ROGER DISRING GORDON LANC.fxs'1'ER PARKER 'IWHIOHAS CALVIN JONES PIERRE EVERE'l'T '1'EE'1's RAYN IOND BROOKS WEST 28 1 - Phi Theta Xi Sigma Upsilon Beta Eta appa Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Chi Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Psi Gamma Phi Epsilon Slgma Tau Delta Delta Alpha Phi Tau Lambda Delta Kappa Tau Alpha Slgma Rho Delta Pi Rho Delta kappa Epsilon Omega Chi NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters Yale University Bowdoin College Colby College . Amherst College . . Brown University . . University of North Carolina . University of Virginia . Mianii University . . Kenyon College . . Dartmouth College . . . Central University of Kentucky . Nliddlebury College . . . University of Nlichigan . Williams College . Lafayette College . Hamilton College . . . Colgate University . . . College of the City of New York University of Rochester . . Rutgers College . . . De Pauw University . . Wesleyan University . . . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Western Reserve University . Cornell University . . . Syracuse University . . Columbia University University of California . Trinity College . . University of Alabama . Vanderbilt University . . University of1V1innesota . . . hfiassachusetts Institute of Technology University of Chicago . . . Toronto University . . Tulane University . . University of Pennsylvania hflcfiill University . . . Leland Stanford, Ir., University University of Illinois . . University of Wisconsin . University of Washington . University of Texas . . 29 18-1-1- 184-1 18414 18411 18511 1851 1852 1852 1852 1,853 1854 185-1: 1855 1855 1855- 18515 18511 18513 18513 18111 18117 18117 18137 18158 18711 1871 187-1- 187-1- 18711 1887 18811 18811 181111 18112 18118 18118 181111 111011 11101 11105 1 11011 1111 1 11113 50202E2EFWFEF'EFr'Pr'11S7sf1.L':9orr9sf1 0. ALDRICH s. ALDRICH M. ARMSTRONG N. ARNOLD H. ARNOLD W. ARNOLD P. B. ATWOOD R. BALLOU R. BIANCROFT D. 1sAR'rLE1'r L. BATES L. BEERS BINNEY BINNEY N. BLISS C. BLISS E. BOURNE R BRENNAN T. BURBANK B. BURCHARD W. BURNI-IAM C. BURWELL J. BROWN B. CALLENDER H. CHACE B. CHACE I. CHACE K. CHAFF EE DR. E. D. CHESBRO 553512fl'E2QF1E9 fI F?UOFEFZF'Y'?UFfI7s2-1 E. CLAUSEN COLLINS A. CORNELL W. DAVIS B. DAWLEY W. DEMALLIE F. DYER M. EATON S. FANNING FEARY D. FORBES M. FREEMAN I-I. GEORGE, 20 F. GEORGE K. GEROLD M. GRANT J. GREENE P. GREENE E I-IAHN ' L. ' HARRINGTON W. I-IARRINGTON HAYWOOD, JR. L. HODGEMAN W. HOLLANBECK C JOHNSON 'WQ JONES D. JONES E. KENDRICK R. KENNISON LIBER BR UNENSIS ----:----l Resident Members Brown W. E. Columbia Brown' H. B. KNOX Cglby Amherst REV. A. E. KROM Miami Brown O. LAPHAM Brown Brown REV. A. E. LEGG Dartmouth Brown E. L. LEGG Dartmouth Brown N. W. LITTLEFIELD Brown Brown I . N. LUTHER Brown Brown G. R. Brown Brown cx- A. C. MATTESON Brown Brown '1'. W. MATFESON Brown Wesleyan DR. G. W. MATTESON Brown Harvard C. MATTESON Brown Harvard P. MATTESON Brown Brown C. C. MAXSON Brown Brown' C. D. MEAD Middlebury Brown' E. H. MANSFIELD Wesleyan Amherst L. H. MEADER Dartmouth Brown S. O. METCALF Brown C. C. N. Y. L. S. MILNER Brown Brown ex-' DR. A. S. MORRISON Brown Brown' W. J. MURRAY Brown Brown H. W. NICHOLS Brown Yale C. P. OLIVER Rochester Brown C. H. PAIGE, JR. Wesleyan Brown E. C. PALMER Brown Brown ex- I'I. R. PALMER Brown Minnesota G. R. PARSONS Harvard Brown ' H. H. PAYNE Brown ex- Amhcrst E. D. PEARCE Harvard Brown ex- ' B. C. PEARCE - Yale Colgate ' DR. N. P. PERRIN Harvard Harvard T. F. PEVEAR Brown Trinity J. W. V. RICH Wesleyan Rochester' REV. C. A. L. RICHARDS Yale BFOWII I'I. B. Brown Yale L. Brown Brown L. E. SEARS Yale Brown W. B. SHERMAN R. P. I, Brown C. H. SMART Brown M. I. T. R. O. SMITH Brown Brown R. W. SMITH Wesleyan Brown' DR. S. N. SMITH Brown Brown' H. H. STEVANS Lafayette Brown ' H. W. STINESS Brown ox, Brown' G. A. STOCKWELL Igrown Brown W. S. SWEET Brown Wesleyan O. C. SWIFT Brown Brown E. D. TALBOT Brown Brown ex- ' C. L. THOMAS Yale Brown ' W. R. WALKER Brown cx- Yale A. T. WALL Brown Brown G. W. WARE Brown Brown C. H. WARTEN Harvard Brown DR. W. R. WHITE Dartmouth Brown W. W. WHITFEN Brown Wesleyan C. P. WILLIAMS Brown Colby J. D. WILLIAMS Brown '06 '81 '92 '64 '84 '94 '84 '84 '89 '93 '92 '96 '60 '06 '11 '90 '77 '72 '78 '02 '90 '07 '93 '00 '92 '00 '90 '86 '09 171 '05 '61 '02 '75 '49 '81 '63 '61 '72 '09 '02 '70 '02 '95 '02 '72 '10 '82 '91 '53 '02 '82 '05 '04 '74 '86 '87 '89 ,Ml -Y l , J 2 X Kg' X , f Jlmim ' - ---. o l-1 rv rx r umlllumrllllmnllmllu Q?7r11umlIuMlI1uMMI11I1Mu, ., 4V ': - ' ' rx c rf fa Q 3 gi' nk gferg B , 1 a H421 5gQf B 'M 55' ' SOUTH SLATER ffl ZETA PS1 - r :LE Founded at Epsilon Chapter New York University 1846 ' Instituted l852 Q' ' F. . M ix, J N H . 6 359 EEEnmrrrnmirrrumnirumrr' fr VQW 'H llHl IlilI IlIllllllllll ' , U ll In 1,-T , W 'D C fl 'La 'ei' A- LIBER BR UNENSIS -:Zi Zeta Psi Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen WILLIAM RUSSELL BURWELL EARL FRANCIS LUTHER IIENDRICK GABRIEL NELSON GEORGE TI-IOMAS PAIN E FREDERICK WILLIANI ADDISON MILLER RUSSELL MILLS WILSON Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen HAROLD CHESTER BARNEY FRANK EUGENE PAINE, Ju. 'THOMAS MAYNO HULL EDMUND JAMES GIBBONS SU Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen LORY 'VALNIAN GARDNER, 20 IIUGII WILSON MACNAIR ERIC ALBERT MUNROE PHILIP RAYMOND SISSON DAVID NEWELL TORRANCE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen -GEORGE CLIl 'I'ON HULL DANA RICE JAMES AI.BER'I' CRUMLEY I'IARI.EIGH VAN SLYCK 'VINGLEY JAMES HAROLD WILLIAMS EARL HOWARD SU'I .I'ON IIAROLD RAYMOND STRAUSS FRANCIS COLT DcWOI,I 32d LLIVAN i - Phi Zeta Delta Sigma Chi Epsilon Kappa Tau Upsilon Xi Lambda Beta Psi Iota Theta Xi Alpha Alpha Psi Nu Eta Mu . Alpha Beta 'Gamma Alpha Epsilon Lambda Psi .,.,-.'Ti '. 'vm' 7 NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters University of New York . Williams College . . Rutgers College . . University of Pennsylvania l Colby College . . . Brown University . Tufts College . . . Lafayette College . . University of North Carolina University of Michigaii . Bowdoin College . . University of Virginia Cornell University . University of California . University of Toronto Columbia University McGill University . . Case School of Applied Science Yale University . . Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Nlinnesota . Syracuse University . University of Illinois . University of Wisconsin . 33 1846 1848 1848 1850 1850 1852 1855 1857 1858 1858 1868 1868 1868 1870 1879 1879 1883 1885 1889 1892 1898 1903 1908 1910 P. E. ALDRICH G. L. ALGER C. E. BAILEY J. C. BAILEY P. H. BLANDING R. W. BLANDING R. B. BONGARTZ H. M. BOSS, J... I-I. W. BRAYTON GEORGE BRIGGS A. L. BRIGGS M. N. BROWN J. K. BURWELL C . S. CARPENTER E. N. CASEY J. L. CASEY A. G. CHAI-'EE C. E. COHEN PROF. S. S. COLVIN R. P. CONLEY P. W. COOK M. H. COOK I-I. R. CROSS H. D. DAY J. T. DAY C. v. DEAN W. H. EDDY H. P. ELDREDGE C. E. FITZGERALD E. S. GRAVES H. W. GREENE PROF. J. I . GREENE H. W. HAYES W. D. I-IEYDON G. J. HOLDEN DR. H. J. HOYE S. D. HUMPHREY N. P. HUTCHINSON DONALD JACKSON H. G. JACKSON H. K. JACKSON LIBER BR UNENSIS Resident Members Brown ' Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown ex- Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Colby Brown Brown cx- ' Brown Brown Brown Yale Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Case Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown P. S. JASTRAM I-I. D. KNIGHT I-I. L. KOOPMAN K. H. KOOPMAN W. D. LAMOND J. D. LEWIS P. W. MARVEL J. E. MASON R. E. MCGOUGH P. MONROE H. W. OSTBY R. G. OSTBY C. E. O'1'IS I . A. OTIS DR. M. N. OTIS H. N. OTIS J. O. OTIS W. P. OTIS W. P. OTIS J. S. PALMER, 2D J. R. PECK D... J. PERKINS B. PICKHARDT A. K. POTTER R. C. POWERS O. E. RYTHER R. G. SHAW E. G. SMITH I . A. SPRAT R. J. B. SULLIVAN P. H. TILLINGHAST J. P. THOMPSON J. H. TUCKER G. A. WARD P. H. WEBSTER P. A. WHITE H. I-I. WILKINSON DR. C. N. WILLIAMS E. B. WILLIAMS HON. J. C. B. WOODS H. P. YOUNG Brown Brown Colby Brown Brown Brown Brown Tufts Brown cx- Brown cx- Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Williams cx- Brown Columbia Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Tufts Brown Brown Brown Brown Tufts Tufts Tufts Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Sm o :WM Q QW 1UMll!HMM!ll!llllllllllllWllWll!h ilUWllHMMlllllMMUllIW0. m ' Elma - 1 1 A Kiwi A SKCQ ........ , 1, ,, ...T X 174 gk S ...S A .. . V 'f 0. '- N l , 3 C LX x 33 new 23 E5 Eh 'EH P 'S THETA DELTA CHI Fifi gf. , , BZ SLQAPSSQ Founded at Zeta Charge Union College I848 lnstituted l853 Q' Wm 'Q 51 E Y g 1lIIlI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllll Illllllllllllll llIIIlIIlllllllllliiilllllllllllllmlllilllllilllll kim : LIBER BR UNENSIS Theta Delta Chi Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen GEORGE FREMONT BLIVEN JOHN LESLIE JENN1-:Y PAUL OLIVER CURTIS HAROLD CLARENCE KINNE FRANK ELAINE 1fROs'r RICHARD LAMBIIQ MCL1-QAN EDGAR UIONATI-IAN STAFF Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen HARRY HUNTER BURTON BARCLAY LINCOLN JONES WILLIAM HEISEI. DICK HENRY BLAINR KULP PHILIP PADDOCK GOODW1LL, JR. HUGH S'l'ANI ORD MCLEOD GRORGE FRANKLIN JOHNSTON VERNON RICI-1 HENRY PARKER WI'l'l'E, NIR. Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen WARD RLSMERI-1 BU'1'LIf:R STEWARD TILTON-MACN1QlLI, ROBERT NATHANIEL IFOOTE RODNEY HOBBS SCOTT JOHN ROBERT WHEATON HALL LESLIE RAY 'l'A1g1.jR WILLIAM STANLEY HOWARD .IASPER WIGIIT Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen EBRN STI-zvlfzxs cL1':vRLAND R1-:NJAMIN IIOWARD SLADIQ DWIGHT TOWNSEND COLLEY JOHN SWEETLAND MARK FARNUM RALPH DLW1'1 r WEBB JOHN FRANCIS ISAAC EDWARD CLARENCE WNICII HAROLD PAGE WRIGI l'I' 36 M Zeta Epsilon Eta Kappa Iota Xi Nu Phi Psi Omicron Deuteron Beta Pi Deuteron Rho Deuteron Nu Deuteron Mu Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Theta Deuteron Iota Deuteron Tau Deuteron Chi Sigma Deuteron Chi Deuteron Delta Deuteron Zeta Deuteron Eta Deuteron Kappa Deuteron Lambda Deuteron Xi Deuteron NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters Brown University . . College of William and Mary . Bowdoin College . . Tufts College . f Harvard University . Hobart College . . University of Virginia Lafayette College . Hamilton College Dartmouth College . . . Cornell University . . . College of the City of New York . Columbia University . . . Lehigh University . Amherst College .... University of Michigan . . . Massachusetts Institute of Technology Williams College .... University of Minnesota . . . University of Rochester . University of Wisconsin . George Washington University . University of California . McGill University . , Leland Stanford Jr. University . University of Illinois . Toronto University . . University of Washington . 37 1853 1853 1854 1856 1856 1857 1857 1866 1868 1 869 1870 1881 1883 1884 1885 1889 1890 1891 1892 1892 1895 1896 1900 1901 1903 1908 1912 1913 F. A. ARNOLD W. J. BALLOU C. P. BEARCE E. C. BAKER H. D. BENNER W. O. BLANDING C. H. BRIDEN GEORGE BRIGGS I'ION. A. L. BROWN C. BROWN, JR. J. A. BUFFINGTON E. A. BURLINGAME F. P. BURTON REV. G. BENEDICT C. T. CALDER J. G. CANFIELD M. S. CURTIS P. C. CURTIS W. W. CURTIS T. DAVIS DR. C. If. DEACON H. D. C. DUBOIS C. Is. DRAPER, JR. EAYRS DR. R. H. EDDY R. s. EMERSON M. C. FISH W. H. FISH A. A. PRENCI-I J. s. FRENCH J. R. PALEs E. FREEMAN DR. W. A. OAYLORD R. M. OREENLAW W. N. OERE B. I-IAMLIN DR. R. HAMMOND C. H. I-IARRINGTON W. N. HIDDEN C. E. HIBBARD P. W. HILTON J. s. HOLBROOK DR. A. HOLLINGWORTH swegwwgof- QEQOPHPF :di ' EEHQHGSO QW?-lU1Fr'U 5-L-,ZOO er' ZZ F' . KNIGHT LIBER BR UNENSIS Resident Members Brown Brown Tufts Br0wn Bowdoin Brown Brown Brown Brown Williams Brown Cornell Dartmouth Boston Uni. Brown Brown Brown Brown Bowdoin Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown cx- Tufts Brown Brown Brown Bowdoin Bowdoin Brown Williams Brown Bowdoin M. I. T . Brown Tufts Tufts Brown Harvard Boston Uni. ' Rochester Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Tufts Williams '97 '98 '03 '02 '09 '74 '08 '73 '70 II4 '99 '90 '10 '87 '11 '09 '07 '11 '82 '70 '98 '07 '10 '97 '97 '03 '08 '97 '95 '10 ,IB '90 '99 '12 '72 '98 '70 '05 '00 '08 '00 '97 '00 '99 '01 '03 '92 '94 '10 ,IG A. H. LAKE A. C. LEWIS F. D. LISLE L. S. LITTLE R. K. LYONS E S MACOMBER W. D. MARTIN REV. E. L. MARSH C. P. MASON J. MEIRLEJOHN DI.. M. H. MERCHANT O. L. MINER DR. J. s. MOORE I-I. A. MUNROE L. H. NEWELL H. s. NEWCOMBE J. PALMER E. s. PARKER s. M. PITMAN C. POTTER W. K. POTTER, JR. DR. A. G. RANDALL s. O. RAND DR. R. O. REED . M. RHODES '11 C. N. ROBERTSON C. A. ROGERS F. W. SENIOR S. A. SHERMAN PERCY SHIRES W. F. SHOLZE E. A. SHOLZE W. H. SNELL HON. H. T. SPOONER H. J. SPOONER, JR. C. STINESS HoN. W. R. STINESS A. C. STONE F. H. SWAN HON. C. S. SWEETLAND DR. H. TETLOW J. H. TOWER C. S. TOWER DR. A. W. A. TRAVER M. H. TYLER W. 1. VOSE DR. C. H. WALLING A. J. WARREN Col.. O. H. WEBB J. I-I. WILLIAMS H. E. WRAY Brown M. l. T. Brown Brown Brown Brown cx- Brown Amherst Brown Hobart Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown cx- Brown Brown Tufts Brown Brown Tufts Amherst M. I. T. Brown Brown Bowdoin Brown Amherst Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Bowdoin Brown M. I. T. Brown Brown Brown Amherst Cornell Brown Harvard Brown Brown Brown cx- :wmv Q 'fl ' xlmbm - A--1-T 1 Q' 'lx xl Wy 'age u l S Ki J' .ll llllWlllll llllmllllP H f f f --'llllWllll lllllWMMllllllMUll 122 1.5 Q inn? 1 lla DELTA UPSILQN Founded at Brown Chapter Williams College 1834 lnstltuted l860 ' 4' f 'Ml l M, QS Q ' ' 'l' ' Q' t -,ll-:iv e r 4 Q . -41-11.0 if ,-WW, 'i IIlllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIMQK 5-EliIIIIIIIllmllllllIIlllllllllllllllllIIllllllIllllllllllllllllll 'K -1-i--: LIBER BR UNENSIS Delta Upsilon Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen ALFRED WILLIAMS ANTHONY, JR. THEODORE CHANDLER RALPH WALDO CRAM MINOT JOY CROWELL NORMAN LE ROY DUNCAN ELLIOT HAROLD FALK Class of JESSE MITCHELL BAILEY RICHARD DAVIS BANNIGAN JOHN LAMSON EDDY GORDON BANHAM EWING FREDERICK I-IARTWELL GREENE. DANA MORTIMER HUBBARD PAUL JOSEPH KINGSLEY WARREN PERHAM NORTON ADAMS THURBER RICE PHILIP CARL SCHERER, Jn. Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen WILLARD WARE FERGUSON HAROLD RAYMOND HALL WILLIAM HENRY HURLIN PAUL CROUSE LYALL HAROLD MADISON MESSER ARTHUR WARREN FAIRCHILD EDWARD TALPEY WILLSON, Ju. Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen MALCOLM WRIGHT BURNHAM WALTER KENNETH SPRAGUEZ CARLTON HERBERT DAY JOHN STORER, JR. JAMES GORDON FERNALD, Ju. PAUL NICHOLS SWAFFIELD BENJAMIN HORACE YERXA Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen WILLIAM WATTS CHAPLIN CARROL BURTON LARRABEE. ICDVVARD JUDSON DILTS ALLISON NIILLER WI-IICATON GREENVILLIC HUDSON PAUL NARVEL SMITH DANIEL HALE WOOD Graduate Students RALPH GIBNEY I-IURLIN FREDERICK DAVIS 40 , 1 l L Williams . Union . Hamilton . Amherst . Western Reserve Colby . Rochester . Middlebury Bowdoin . Rutgers . Brown . New York . Miami . Cornell Marietta . Syracuse . Michigan . Northwestern Harvard . Wisconsin Lafayette . NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters 1834 1838 1847 1847 1847 1852 1852 1856 1857 1858 1860 1865 1868 1869 1870 1873 1876 1880 1880 1885 1885 Columbia Lehigh . Tufts . De Pauw . Pennsylvania Minnesota Technology Swarthmore Stanford . California McGill . Nebraska . Toronto . Chicago . Ohio . Illinois . Washingtoii Pennsylvania State . Iowa State Perdue . 1885 1885 1886 1887 1888 1890 1881 1893 1896 1896 1898 1898 1 692151 1901 1901 1905 1910 1911 1913 1914 .M-i DR. 1-1. P. ABBOT REV. C. M. ANDREWS P. H. ANDREWS A. A. BAKER 1-1. M. BARBOUR A. C. BARROWS C. W. BARROWS A. A. BENNETT R. 1-1. BEVAN W. M. P. BOWEN Pm. W. C. BRONSON W. D. BULLOCK REV. C. E. BURR N. S. CASE S. CHASE W. W. CHAPMAN P. O. CLAPP G. M. CROWELL PROP. L. T. DAMON P. W. DAVIS PROF. J. Q. DEALEY C. E. DENNIS, JR. J. R. DICKINSON F. H. ELMORE S. A. EVERET1' LIBER BR UNENSIS Resident Members Brown Tufts Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown B rown Brown Brown Un ion Rochester ' Brown Brown Tufts Brown Brown Harvard' Brown Brown Brown Brown Williams Brown PROF. W. G. EVERETT Brown PRES. W. H. P. FAUNCE Brown F. A. FOGG Bgwdoin DR. C. M. Brown A. H. GURNEY Brown W. T. HASTINGS Brown R. G. E. HICKS Brown E. J. HORTON Brown E. S. 1-1ORTON Brown R. HUMPHREY Brown G. HURLEY Brown R. G. HURLIN Brown PROF. H. B. HUNTINGTON Harvard N. M. ISHAM Brown H. E. JACOBS Brown - i PROP. W. B. JACOBS Brown A. H. JAMESON Technology P. JETTER Brown ex- REV. H. E. JOHNSON Hamilton l . A. JONES Brown PROF. C. VON KLENZE Harvard REV. A. M. LORD Harvard J. MACPHERSON Brown C. H. MANCHESTER Brown REV. C. A. MEADER Brown I-I. C. MILLER Brown M. E. MITCHELL Brown ex- A. H. MORSE Tufts C. D. MORSE Brown W. W. MOSS Brown C. C. MUMFORD Brown J. S. MURDOCK Brown W. B. PECK Brown PROF. W. T. PECK Brown W. L. PHILLIPS Brown C. C. PLUMMER Brown H. W. PRESTON Brown J. T. PYKE Brown C. C. REMINGTON Brown E. I. ROGERS Union ex- DR. F. T. ROGERS Union C. P. ROUNDY Brown W. O. SCOTT 'Technology F. W. SLIPPELL Hamilton E. A. STOCKWELL Brown B. TRACHIA Pennsylvania W. H. THORNLEY Brown J. A. TILLINGHAST Brown W. TOWNE Brown R. D. TUCKER Brown A. P. WARD Bowdoin G. F. WESTON Brown DR. H. A. WHITMARSH Brown REV. L. L. WOODWORTH Brown E. L. YATMAN ' Brown Wu gm SQ nf - 'ffwf 'ff' 5' 'li' X A m .Umlllllmlllllml Umlllbw- Q --frdlllmllHWUIIIMMUUIWU. my 1 4: h f - , U H r t E231 HOPE COLLEGE N121 3 SIG MA CHI if ag as Y' - Founded at Miami Beta Nu Chapter ' University 1855 Organized l872 Instituted l9l4 V WWW 'ED HMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIH hm ilmll HIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKQQQ at f, - Q A7 - ' V ' 5 - f X -,4 41-1-1-1 ' , ai K h 4- Q - '---l ,X ' 'Str E LIBER BR UNENSIS i Sigma Chi Class of Nineteen Hundred Fifteen EARL ALLWOOD BOWEN WALTER RUSSELL BURNHAM RODERICK ALLEN GILLIS LAWRENCE HALL LEONARD BROWN CAMPBELL JOHN ANTHONY OWEN, ju. HOMER EMSLEY VAN DERWERKEN WILLIAM MARTIN TILTON Class of Nineteen Hundred Sixteen GEORGE RALPH ARNOLD LEON WILLIAM BROWER SEWARD GROVES BYAM ALBERT EDWARD MAYOH HENRY AVERY MORGAN HENRY BACHELLER OSBORN Class of Nineteen Hundred Seventeen RALPH AVERY ARMSTRONG WILLIAM NEWTON HUGHES OLIVER ADDISON FULLER WENDELL EVERETT JAMES' HERBERT PERCIVAL HALVORSON I-IARTLEY FOREST ROBERTS Class of Nineteen Hundred Eighteen IIER BERT ALAN BROWN CLARANCE EUGENE NATION LIC-lI'1'FOO'I HAROLD EVERETT COLLINS ALAN WOLFRAM MILCKIE IRVIN CORRELL ELMER ,IAMES EDWARD PAIGE DUDLEY RICHARDSON SIBLEY Graduate Students LOWELL CLAPP KENDRICK PERCY DAVOL MEADER 44 Theta Kappa Omicron Phi Epsilon Zeta Psi Alpha Beta Gamma Mu Alpha Gamma Alpha Pi Lambda Xi Rho Omega Alpha Zeta Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Epsilon Alpha Eta Alpha Xi Delta Alpha Psi Alpha Beta Alpha Upsilon Alpha Omega Beta Delta Alpha Alpha Alpha Theta Alpha Phi Beta Nu Alpha Nu Alpha Omicron Beta Kappa Pennsylvania . Bucknell . Dickinson . Lafayette . George Washington Washington and Lee Virginia . . Miami . . Wooster . . Ohio Wesleyan . Denison . . Ohio State . Albion . Indiana Depauw Butler Northwestern . ,Beloit . . Illinois Wesleyan Wisconsin . . Nebraska . Iowa State Kansas . Georgia . Vanderbilt . California . . Southern California Leland Stanford, jr. Montana . . Hobart . . Mass. Inst. 'I'ech. Cornell Brown 'l'exas 'I'uIane . Oklahoma . NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters PROVINCE I 1863 Alpha Rho Lehigh .... 1864 ' Alpha Chi Pennsylvania State . 1859 Beta Theta Pittsburg . , . 1867 Phi Phi Pennsylvania . . PROVINCE II 1864 Alpha 'l'au North Carolina . . 1866 Beta Lambda Trinity . . . 1860 ' PROVINCE III 1855 Beta Eta Case and Western 1873 Reserve . . . 1855 Zeta Psi Cincinnati . . 1868 Theta Theta Michigan . , 1882 Xiu .Mu Vllest Virginia . 1886 PROVINCE IV 1858 Chi I'Ianover . 1859 Delta Delta Perdue . . 1865 Delta Chi Wabash . . PROVINCE V 1869 Alpha Sigma Minnesota . . 1862 Beta Zeta North Dakota . . 1883 Kappa Kappa Illinois .... 188-1 Omicron OmicronChicago . . PROVINCE VI 1883 Beta Gamma Colorado . . 1882 Xi Xi Missouri . . 1884 Tau 'I'au Washington . . PROVINCE VII 1872 Zeta Zeta Kentucky Central . 1891 Lambda Lambda Kentucky State. . PROVINCE VIII 1886 Beta Epsilon Utah . . . 1889 Beta Iota Oregon . . . 1891 Upsilon Upsilon Washington . . 1906 PROVINCE IX 1892 Eta Eta Dartmouth . 1882 Nu Nu Columbia . . 1890 Rho Rho Maine . 1914 Psi Psi Syracuse , PROVINCE X 1884 Iota Iota Alabama . . 1886 Omega Omega Arkansas . . 1912 45 1887 1891 1909 1875 1889 1912 1909 1882 1877 1895 1871 1875 1880 1888 1909 1881 1897 1905 1896 1903 1876 1893 1908 1910 1903 1893 1894 1902 1904 1914 1906 li? LIBER BR UNENSIS J. A. ANDERSON H. ARNOLD M. H. E. BELLOWS R. E. BURNHAM L. H. CAMPBELL F.-E. COOPER C. G. DICKERSON A. U. EDDY j. A. GAMMONS C. C. GLEASON P. T. GLEASON O. T. HANLEY F. rx. 1-IAWKINS J. HOLLIQN Pnor. A. ls. JOHNSON L. KENDRICK DR. D. O. KING s. s. LAPI-IAM W. F. LARDNER Univ. of DR. J. W. LEACH C. L1'rrLEr1ELD I-1. P. LOVEWELL W. J. MAGUIRI-1 F. F MASON Resident Members Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown M. I. T. Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Wisconsin Brown Brown Brown M. I. T. Brown 'll '97 '92 '13 '92 '13 '03 '79 '98 '03 '05 'os '05 '00 '91 '12 '76 '08 '03 '02 '85 89 12 08 1..H.M1f:AD1aR, fr.. P. D. MIEADER W. O. MEADER R. MITCHELL B. MOULTON W. A. MOWRY J. H. O'NEIL, JR. Geo . W L. J. OSLER H. W. PAINE I . L. PIERCE D. B. PIKE R. S. PHILLIPS DR. G. I-I. RAYMOND S. REYNOLDS W. H. P. SALISBURY W. SANDAGER W. A. SCOTT Du. E. B. SMITH I . H. SMITH HON. W. I-I. SWEETLAND H. M. WEBBER Du. S. A. WELCH Du. R. S. WILCOX W. L. WILMARTH Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown ashington ex- Brown Brown M. I. T. Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown 1 :MMM xt n'l'i4 ' Xfktg' W! !W 'grae - 1----l'-A f imr.HMWlllllMHlllMMHHMllIh l!lIMllHMllIllMIIll!WUL an l c n , , In I X N -D GJMLJ J E U BRUNONIA HALL Pl-II DELTA THETA EH d 'ia d E35 Founded at Rhode Island Chapter 2 Miami University 1848 lr1SUtUtGd 1839 VWWNQ ff pmmuulinnmnliuimmm nmiuiunmuiulinnnuuimnq, nw 'wr L1BER BRUNENs1s' Phi Delta Theta Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen FRANK BENNE'If'I' CROCKER EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS JOHN LINDLEY GAMNIELL JOHN EDWARD KELLY IIAROLD LESLIE GIBBS HARVEY BULLINGER MCCRONE .AARON ELMER GO'l'l'SHALL WILLIAM KARL RICE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen ELMER FREEMAN DAVENPORT CHARLES JAMES fIIl,,LL ARTHUR GEORGE EAMES ALLEN GUY MAXWELL EARL RUSSELL I'RE'I'Z GUY WILLIAM WELLS Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen ALEXANDER PECK BATES EARL MOORE PEARCE BANCROFT HUNTINGTON BROWN l OS'I'ER BEAL WHITEHEAD LEON EUGENE CLOSE HARDING DECANTILLON WILLIAMS Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen PAUL FRANCIS GILES NORMAN LUTIIER KELLER HARVEY SCO'I I' HINCKS JOHN RICHARD LEENIING EARL HOLIER 'IONILIN 48 NINETEEN FIFTEEN Ohio Alpha Indiana Alpha Kentucky Alpha Delta Indiana Beta Wiscolisiri Alpha. Illinois Alpha Indiana Gamma Ohio Beta- Indiana Delta Michigali Alpha Illinois Beta Ohio Gamma Indiana Epsilon Indiana Zeta lXfIissouri Alpha Illinois Delta Iowa Alpha Georgia Alpha Georgia Beta Georgia Gamma New York Alpha Penns lvania Alpha -Y 'California Alpha Virginia Beta Virginia Gamma Nebraska Alpha Pennsylvania Beta Pennsylvania Gamma Tennessee Alpha Alabama Alpha Illinois Zeta Alabama Beta Pennsylvania Delta Vermont Alpha Pennsylvania Epsilon Missou1'i Beta Nlinnesota Alpha Iowa Beta Kansas Alpha Tennessee Beta Ohio Zeta Texas Beta Pennsylvania Zeta New York Beta glVIaine Alpha New York Delta New Hampshire Alpha R011 of Chapters lVIiami University . Indiana University Central College . Wabash College . . University of Wisconsin . Northwestern University Butler College .- . Ohio Wesleya11 University Franklin College . . University of IVIichigan . University of Chicago . Ohio University . Hanover College . De Pauw University University of lVIissouri 1 Knox College . . Iowa Wesleyaii University University of Georgia . Emory College . . Mercer' University Cornell University . Lafayette College . . University of California . University of Virginia . Randolph-Macon College University of Nebraska . Pennsylvania College . . WVashington and Jeijferson College Vanderbilt University . . University of Alabama . . Lombard College . . . Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Allegheny College . . . University of Vermont . . Dickinson College . . Westmiristei' College . University of lVIinnesota . University of Iowa . University of Kansas . University of the South . Ohio State University . University of Texas . University of Pennsylvania . Union College . . Colby College . Columbia University Dartmouth College 49 l- -lil- 1 848 1849 1859 1850 1857 1859 1859 1 869 18150 18134 1865 1868 18158 1 8158 1 879 1871 1871 187 1 1871 187 l 1872 1873 1873 1873 18741 1 875 1875 1875 .1 8715 1877 1 879 1879 1 879 1879 1889 1889 188 1. 1882 1882 1883 1 883 .1883 1883 1883 1884 1884 188-1- . M- North Carolina Beta Massachusetts Alpha Texas Gamma Massachusetts Beta New York Epsilon Virginia Zeta Pennsylvania Eta Rhode Island Alpha Louisiana Alpha Missouri Gamma California Beta Illinois Eta South Dakato Alpha Indiana Theta Ohio Eta Ohio Theta Washington Alpha Kentucky Epsilon Quebec Alpha Colorado Alpha Georgia Delta Pennsylvania Theta Ontario Alpha Idaho Alpha Kansas Beta Oregon Alpha Colorado Beta Iowa Gamma North Dakota Alpha H. M. BARRY H. C. BEEDE H. D. BRIGGS R. M. BROWN C. E. BURNHAM G. E. BUXTON DR. B. H. BUXTON L. V. CALDER A. CUSHING DR. W. B. CUTTS B. EVANS W. L. FROST REV. c. NI. GALLUP P. W. GARDINER DR. N. H. GIFFORD REV. W. T. GREEN T. 1. GRIFFIN, JR. E. A. HOPKINS, JR. W. H. HOPKINS LIBER Resi Brown Brown Brown PROP. Brown '93 A. E. '12 Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown U. of P. Brown Brown Br0wn Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown BR UNENSIS University of North Carolina Williams College . . . Southwestern Un'versity Amherst College . . . Syracuse University . . Washington and Lee University Lehigh University . . . Brown University . . . Tulane University . . . Washington Uinversity . , Leland Stanford Jr. University University of Illinois . . University of South Dakota Purdue University . . . Case School of Applied Science University of Cincinnati . . University of Washington . Kentucky State College . McGill University . . , University of Colorado . , Georgia School of Technology . Pennsylvania State College , University of Toronto . University of Idaho , Washburn College . University of Oregon , Colorado College . , Iowa State College , , University of North Dakota . dent Members '94 '93 R. M. HORTON W. H. KENERSON LEACH A. M. MCCRILLIS ' M. T. MORGAN MINER F. E. I-IORTON '97 .I- ' R. L. RICE ' s. H. sAI.oIvIoN '99 C. R. STARK, JR. foi H. I.. SWAN 'oi A. T. SWIFT '96 J. C. SWIFT os C TILLEY 02 '02 D. 00 89 ' . E. '99 C. F. TOWNE '90 C. C. WHITE ' DR. R. H. WHITMARSH N. M. WRIGHT '91 N. M. WRIGHT, JR. 50 99 '05 , 1885 1886 1886 1886 1887 . 1887 1887 1889 1889 1891 1891 . 1893 1893 . 1894 1896 . 1898 . 1900 . 1901 . 1902 1902 1902 1903 1906 1908 1910 1912 1913 . 1913 . 1913 Brown ' 95 Amherst '98 Brown '96 Brown 09 Brown 97 Brown '10 Brown '91 Brown ex- O6 Brown '02 07 97 89 95 7 9 3 Brown cx- Brown Brown Brown Amhcrst '92 Colby '00 Brown '00 Brown 09 Brown '99 Brown cx- 14 1 3 J 7 I 'K HP at t Y YYJMLD - umI1HL ulutMuumlNg tnl m lllumnll um uu a A I d n - i g'v ' aid -112 , ' CASWELI. HALL ALPHA TAU OMEGA 5951 fi-WA? Founded at Rhode Island E dd d S L Virginia Military Gamma Delta Institute 1865 Instituted 1894 KS 53 1 V W i m . A ' gj5E1a1mn' 1nnmi:u1m4f 1 4 ga lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIII Hmgkiwr L HIL-T TW i 7146 05 -if-: LIBER BR UNENSIS Alpha Tau Omega Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen IIAROLD CRANSTON MINER CIIARLICS STUART PHELPS CIIARLICS AUSTIN PIPER I'II.IO'I,' SHIPPEN STAPLES Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen GERALD DWIGIIT CURTIS 'IIICNRY DURSIN, jk. CHARLICS ALICK LICVIN I Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen RUDlJI.I'II ARXIIIJAS GLADUIC ICDWIN NIUNROIS KNIGIITS RICIIARD IIOISART SPEAR ROISICRT TAFT STAPLES CARLOS GRICI'II,Y WRIGIIT 52 l- NINETEEN FIFTEEN R011 of Chapters PROVINCE I. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas Alabama Alpha Epsilon Beta Delta Omega ' Beta Theta Zeta Alabama Beta Alabama Beta Florida Alpha Georgia Alpha Georgia Alpha Georgia-Alpha Georgia Beta Iota Louisiana Beta Epsilon Texas Gamma Eta PROVINCE II. Illinois Gamma Zeta Illinois Gamma Xi Indiana Gamma Gamma Indiana Gamma Omicron Michigan Alpha Mu Michigan Beta Kappa Michigan Beta Lambda lX4ichigan Beta Omicron Wisconsin Gamma Tau Alabama Polytechnic Institute. . Southern University . , , University of Alabama . University of Florida . University of Georgia . Emory College ' . . Mercer University . , Georgia School of Technology , Tulane University ..., University of Texas . , , Illinois, Indiana, IVIichigan and WVisconsin University of Illinois . , , University of Chicago . Rose Polytechnic Institute Purdue University . . Adrian College . . Hillsdale College . University of Michigan . Albion College ..,, University of Wfisconsin . . . 1879 1885 1885 1884 1878 1881 1881 1888 1887 1897 1895 1904 1893 1904 1881 1888 1888 1889 1907 PROVINCE III. Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, lVIinnesota, NIissouri, Nebraska Iowa Beta Alpha Iowa Gamma Upsilon Kansas Gamma Mu Minnesota Gamma Nu Missouri Gamma Rho Nebraska Gamma Theta Wyoming Gamma Psi PROVINCL IV Maine Maine Beta Upsilon Maine Gamma Alpha Massachusetts Gamma Beta Massachusetts Beta Gamma Massachusetts Gamma Sigma Rhode Island Gamma Delta Vermont Beta Zeta and VVyoming University of Colorado . Simpson College . Iowa State College University of Kansas . University of Minnesota . University of lVIissouri . University of Nebraska . . . University of Wyoming . , , Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Vermont University of Maine . . . Colby College . . Tufts College . . . Mass. Institute of Technology Worcester Polytechnic Institute . Brown University . f . . University of Vermont . Colorado Gamma Lambda V PROVINCE New York Alpha Omicron New York Beta Theta Pennsylvania Alpha Iota Pennsylvania Alpha Pi Pennsylvania Alpha Rho Pennsylvania Alpha Upsilon Pennsylvania Tau Pennsylvania Gamma Omega New York and Pennsylvania St. Lawrence University . Cornell University ..., Muhlenberg College . . . Washington and Jefferson College . Lehigh University .... Pennsylvania State College . . University of Pennsylvania . . Pennsylvania State College . , .53 151111 1885 1908 1901 1902 1906 1897 1913 1891 1892 1893 1885 1906 1894 1.887 1882 1887 1881 1882 1.882 1.882 1881 1914 -S-- LIBER BR UNENSIS PROVINCE VI. North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia North Carolina Alpha Delta North Carolina Xi South Carolina Beta Xi Virginia Beta Virginia Delta Ohio Alpha Nu Ohio Alpha Psi Beta Eta Beta Omega Gamma Kappa Ohio Ohio Ohio University of North Carolina . . Trinity College .... College of Charleston . . Washington and Lee University University of Virginia . . PROVINCE VII. Ohio PROVINCE VII Kentucky Mu Iota Tennessee Alpha Tau Tennessee Beta Pi Tennessee Omega Tennessee Beta Tau Tennessee Pi Mount Union College . Wittenberg College . Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio State University . . Western Reserve University . I. Tennessee and Kentucky State University of Kentucky ' S. VV. Presbyterian University Vanderbilt University . . University of the South . . Union University . . University of Tennessee . . PROVINCE IX. California, Oregon and Washington California Beta Psi California Gamma Iota Oregon Gamma Phi Washington Gamma Chi Washington Gamma Pi Leland Stanford Jr. University University of California . . University of Oregon . . Washington State College University of Washington 1879 1872 1889 1865 1868 1882 1883 1887 1892 1900 1909 1882 1889 1877 1894 1872 1891 1900 1910 1911 1906 Resident Members SAMUEL ADAMS Brown '97 R. F. KING Brown ex- '09 G. C. ANTHONY Brown '03 W. R. LAWTON , Brown '03 EVERARD APPLETON Brown '04 S. E. LINCOLN Brown '04 C. L. BAGNALL Brown '14 J. F. MALMSTEAD Brown '02 L. H. BALLOU Brown ex- '04 W. DE B. MCBEE fthe South '83 A. H. BERRY Colby '94 W. F. MINER Brown '96 W. A. BRIGGS Brown '06 REV. C. C. MITCHELL Hillsdale '01 G. H. CAMPBELL Brown '09 A. PAGE Brown '01 G. W. CARPENTER Brown '99 l'. D. PERKINS Brown '98 W, L, COLE Maine '02 G. L. PIERCE Brown '10 G, F, COOKE Brown '00 L. A. RANDALL Brown '00 H. R. CURTIS Brown '09 H. P. RENO Lehigh '04 H. DAVIS Vermont '98 O. P. RICHARDSON jk. Brown ex- '11 R, C, IQISTES Brown '99 D. V. RICHARDSON Brown '09 R. FULLER Brown '98 W. O. RICE Brown '03 T. j. FREEMAN Brown ex- '04 A. I. RUSSELL Tufts ex- '07 F. P. GARDINER Brown ex- '10 I. C. SNOW Brown ex- '11 NV. S. GARST Brown '01 DR. B. W. STORRS Florida '95 G. H. GIFFORD ' Brown '11 ,I. V. TURNER Brown '09 I . L. HALL Brown '97 C. N. UNDERWOOD Lehigh '06 J. F. HECKMAN .Brown '0-I C. C. WATERS Brown '05 DR. H. W. HOPKINS Brown '99 DR. G. WALSH Brown '06 REV. W. L. HOPPES U. of Penn. '87 DR. W. A. WATTS Brown '09 Du. H. B. I-IORTON Brown '96 DR. J. A. WHITNEY Tufts '01 M. L. HOUGH Brown ex- '08 S. D. WHITING Tufts '04 W. T. IDE Brown ex- '08 R. H. WILMARTH Brown '10 IIROF. A. H. JONES U. of Colorado '01 54 xl A fx a lh lllllmllllwl llll L lI11vMMl111lWl l?f2Z fwjllttw t w, .. B a lf lg-'f tg Pl D ELTA Tx-tu D ELTA Founded at Beta Chi Chapter Bethany College l86O - Established l896 gf? at We l I l l 5 SWB I P89lllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIlllIlllllllllllllllllllll Il JLIGLIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllllllllllllllll et C 11. - LIBER BR UNENSIS -- Delta Tau Delta Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen JOHN RUDOLPI-I CARLSON RAYMOND BISSETT GALLANT ROLAND ESTES COPELAND MORRIS EDWIN HULTSLANDER CLARENCE FREDERIC CORP SETH KIMBALL MITCHELL CECIL MERNE PUTNAM CROSS HAROLD WINTHROP TUCKER CARL DEWITT EVERINGHAM HAROLD EARLE WATSON Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen FRANCIS JAMES BRADY CHARLES CURTIS FIELD JOSEPH NIERRITT COUSE WILBOUR EDDY SAUNDERS Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen JOEL MEAD AUSTIN PAUL CURTIS RICHARDS IRVING SCOTT FRASER ALBERT ESTES WA'I'JEN, Ju. HERKIAN WILLIAM WATJEN Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen VERNON AUBREY BOWMAN LAWRENCE GUSTAV FLICK ALBERT HARVEY CHANIBERLIN WILLIAM ALFRED GOGGIN REUBEN ROGERS CHASE,Ju. LEROY DEXTER LINCOLN JAMES IRVING McDOWELL 56 H Gamma Beta Zeta Alpha Mu Kappa Pi Lambda Beta Alpha Beta Beta Rho ' Beta Lambda Delta Beta Epsilon Epsilon Upsilon Omicron Chi Beta Delta Beta Zeta Beta Kappa Beta Eta Beta Gamma Beta lVIu Beta Nu Beta Xi Beta Omicron Beta Pi Beta Rho Beta Tau Beta Upsilon Beta Phi Beta Psi Beta Chi Phi Omega Beta Theta Beta Iota NINETEEN FIFTEEN ---l-l Roll of Chapters W'ashington and Ieilerson . Ohio University . . Western Reserve University Allegheny College . . Ohio VVesleyan University' Hillsdale College . . University of Mississippi . Vanderbilt University . Indiana University . . . De Pauw University . . . Stevens Institute of Technology . Lehigh University . . , University of Nlichigan . Emory College . . . Albion College .... Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute University of Iowa . . . Kenyon College . University of Georgia Butler College . . University of Colorado . University of Nfinnesota . University of Wisconsin . . Tufts College ..... Massachusetts Institute of Technology Tulane University . . . Cornell University . . Northwestern University . . Leland Stanford Jr. University . University of Nebraska . . University of Illinois Ohio State University . Wabash College . . . Brown University . . . Washington and Lee University . University of Pennsylvania . University of the South . . University of Virginia 57 1861 1862 1862 1863 1866 1867 1868 1870 1870 1871 1874 1874 1875 1875 1876 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1883 1883 1888 1889 1889 1889 1890 1893 1893 1894 1894 1894 1894 1896 1896 1897 1898 1898 Beta Omega Gamma Alpha Gamma Delta Gamma Gamma Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Eta Gamma Theta Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Nu Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu LIBER BR UNENSIS University of California . University of Chicago . University of West Virginia Dartmouth College Columbia University . Wesleyan University . Columbia University Baker University . University of Texas . University of Missouri Lafayette College . Purdue University . . University of Washington . Gamma Nu Gamma Xi University University of Maine . of Cincinnati . Gamma Psi Gamma Omicron Gamma Sigma Gamma Tau University of Wooster Syracuse University . University of Pittsburg University of Kansas Resident Members D. N. ALLEN Brown cx- '07 F. T. HALLETT L. T. ALLEN Dartmouth '10 Du. I-I. HARRIS Dv.. H. H. ARMINGTON Brown '00 O. H. HELTZEN Du. S. E. BLOUNT Brown ex- '10 A. J. LATHAM G. W. BOSWORTH Brown '10 E. F. LEWIS H. G. CALDER Brown '02 R. P. MCCANNA A. CAMERON Brown '04 E. T. MORGAN C. B. COPPEN Brown '02 I. W. PATTERSON A. E. CORP Brown '11 O. W. RACKLE E. B. DANE Brown '11 F. W. ROLLINS Du. E. P. DROWNE Brown 02 H. M. SHERWOOD H. E. EMMONS Brown cx- 15 R. L. STICKNEY H. I . ESTEN Brown '04 R. P. STICKNEY E. G. FLETCHER Brown 12 G. E. TI-IURBER A. A. GARDINER Brown '14 E. L. SWAIN F. I. GREENE Brown '06 C. H WARD C. S. I-IASCALL Brown '04 H. C. WHITE, Jn. T. C. HASCALL Brown '05 C. E. WOODWARD 58. 1898 1898 1900 1901 1902 1902 1903 1904 1904 1905 1900 1907 1908 1908 1909 1909 1910 1914 1914 Brown '00 Brown '07 Brown '04 Brown '05 Brown '05 Brown cx- '10 Brown '12 Brown '09 Brown '00 Brown ex- I6 Brown '09 Brown cx- '15 Brown ex- 15 Brown '06 Brown '08 Brown '09 Brown '01 Brown cx- 13 ? mx 1 f.-. V . r--. X , it llllllIIIlllllmlllillllllllllllillllll II ,I II Hllll II IIHMHHIIHIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllIIIIIII lil y ' li x gr .1 W it E W- e E T fa: 5 KAPPA SIGMA Founded at U Beta Alpha Chapter University of Virginia I867 lnstituted 1898 ,gn K- ? 41 WWW Q I 1 g PS3 lllllIIllIIllIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW hmggk Jll lllll IllllIIIIIlIHVtlHllllIIIIlIlllIllIIlIIIIIl1lIIillQ5 'wr ' ' L -- LIBER BR UNENSJS Kappa Sigma Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen OSCAR ANTHONY BROWN SCHUYLER VICTOR HAYWARD EDWARD HARRISON WINSOR Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen FLOYD HALL BAKER JOHN WESLEY MOORE SAMUEL REED DAMON WILFRED MCCULLOUGH MURCH ROGER LAURENCE MARBLE WILBUR JOHN SNYDER EDWARD FE RDINAND WALDRON Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen 1 RALPH CARLTON ALLEN ORVILLE BYRON HAYWARD ROBERT CLYDE PADLEY JOHN GEORGE PETERSON WILLIAM HARRIS REESE LESLIE EDMUND STONE HENRY ELDRIDGE SWEET HERBERT TUTTLE TIN KER Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen JAMES VAN BENSCHOTEN BENNETT ELDRED MALCOLM VANRIPER LESTER RAY CRAIG JAMES WALTER WILSON Graduate Students RAYMOND CARI'EN'I'ER COLWELL KENNETH STILLMAN RICE LELAND SCOTT MCLEOD 60 ' 1 Zeta Eta Prime Alpha Alpha Alpha Beta Kappa Alpha Chi Lambda Phi Omega Upsilon Tau Chi Psi Iota Gamma Theta Pi Eta Sigma Mu Nu Delta Xi p Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Alpha Eta Alpha Kappa Alpha Lambda Alpha Mu Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma Alpha Tau Alpha Upsilon Alpha Phi Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Upsilon Beta Zeta Beta Eta Beta Theta NINETEEN FIFTEEN -T Roll of Chapters University of Virginia Trinity College . . . University of Maryland . Mercer University . Vanderbilt University Lake Forest University . . University of Tennessee . . Southwestern Presbyterian University University of the South . . Hampden-Sidney College . . University of Texas . Purdue University . University of Maine . . Southwestern University . Louisiana State University Cumberland University . Swarthmore College . . Randolph-Macon College . . Tulane University . . . Wasliington and Lee University . William and Mary College . Davidson College . . University of Arkansas . University of Illinois . . Pennsylvania State College University of Pennsylvania University of Michigan . Columbia University . . Cornell University . . University of Vermont . University of North Carolina . Wabash College . . Bowdoin College . . Ohio State College . . Georgia School of Technology . Millsaps College . . Bucknell College ' . . University of Nebraska . William-Jewell College Brown University . Richmond College . . . Missouri State University . . Washirigton and Jefferson College University of Wiscoxisiii . . Leland Stanford, Jr., University Alabama Polytechnic Institute . University of Indiana . . 61 1807 1873 1873 1875 1870 1880 1880 1882 1882 1883 1884 1885 1880 1880 1887 1887 1888 1888 1880 1800 1800 1800 1800 1801 1802 1802 1802 1802 1802 1803 1801 1805 1805 1805 1805 1805 1800 1807 1807 1808 1808 1808 1808 1808 1800 1000 1000 ...MM Beta Iota Beta Kappa Beta Lambda Beta Mu Beta Beta Beta Beta Omicron Beta Pi Beta Rho Beta Sigma Beta Tau Beta Upsilon Beta Phi Beta Psi Beta Chi Beta Omega Gamma Alpha Gamma Beta Gamma Gamma Gamma Delta Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Eta Gamma Theta Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Lambda Gamma Xi Gamma Omicron Gamma Pi Nu Xi W. H. BACON R. J. BARKER W. BURTON G. Ag BRYANT R. A. CASHMAN R. C. COLWELL L. DODGE W. H. GARRET1' LDR. HART J. o. HAZARD A. A. LIVERMORE A. J. MARYo'1'r LIBER BR UNENSIS Lehigh University . . . New Hampshire State College . University of Georgia . University of Minnesota . University of Alabama . Kentucky State College . University of California . University of Denver Dickinson College . University of Iowa . . . Washington University . . Baker University . . . N. Carolina Agric'1 and Mech'1 College Case School of Applied Sciences . University of VVashington . Missouri School of Mines . Colorado College . . University of Oregon University of Chicago , Colorado School of Mines . Amherst Agricultural College . Dartmouth College . . New York University . Harvard University . University of Idaho . Syracuse University . . University of Oklahoma . Washington State University . Washburn College . . Iowa State College . . Dennison University . . . University of Kansas . . Manchester Institute of Technology Resident Members Brown '00 F. B. OAKES Brown '02 H. E. PATTEE Brown '02 F. C. PERRY U. of Vermont '03 F. W. POLLITT N. H. College '05 W. POTTER Brown '13 K. S. RICE Brown '03 H. W. ROCKWOOD Brown 'I3 H. L. SACKETT Brown '98 B. W. SEWALL Ga. Brown '04 W. H. SMITH N. H. College '04 H. N. SWEET Brown '07 C. WHEELER 62 Scho 1900 1901 1901 1901 1901 1901 1901 1902 1902 1902 1902 1902 1903 1903 1903 1903 1904 1904 1904 1904 1904 1905 1905 1905 1905 1906 1906 1909 1909 1910 1911 1912 1914 Brown '12 Brown '06 Brown' '12 Brown ex- '12 Brown ex- '13 Brown '13 Brown ex- 11 Brown '10 ol of Tech. '02 Brown ex- '11 Brown 07 Brown '09 . X W 1 Q? F rw 121 i' N E E3 215 gg PHIKAPPA gr L, ,- 1 gg .WS . . W N ,, 4' YA. A 0 an ? ' .G ',-, foo Q Q 3, ml ,rf B, , 5 Qi in B? reg gr 'wig gf' is HQ? if Founded at , Alpha Chapter :jg Brown University 1886 lnstituted l9O0 N i e een XE iz., i l H ..-U M' x'-- ..-............-.. w V - ,Gr v , QQ lllll IIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllll H QI Jll lllll Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll G5 3 We LIBER BR UNENSIS Phi Kappa Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen WILLIAM EMMET BEEHAN JOHN HENRY NOLAN EDWARD JOSEPH HORRIGAN ROBERT EMMET QUINN CLARENCE JOSEPH LAMB FREDERICK JOHN ROGERS EDWARD ROBERT WALSH, JR. Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen I JOSEPH RICHARD BROWN THOMAS BARTI-IOLOMAE KEVILLE GEORGE JOSEPH CAIRNS JAMES JOSEPH MCGINN LOUIS WILLIAM CAPELLI JAMES ANTHONY MURPHY JOHN JOSEPH CASHMAN FRANCIS JOSEPH O'BRIEN EDMOND PATRICK CORCORAN WILLIAM NICHOLAS ORMSBY FRANCIS MICHAEL DWYER JOHN JOSEPH RILEY WILLIAM AUGUSTUS GRAHAM HAROLD GEORGE SAYTON JOSEPH FRANCIS HALLORAN JAMES EDWARD SKANE FRANCIS CARMODY HEALEY WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen ANTHONY CALDERONE ' JAMES STEPHEN POWERS JAMES PATRICK MURPHY EDMUND LAWRENCE SHERIDAN JOSEPH ANTHONY MAGUIRE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen RAYMOND FRANCIS BAGLEY WALTER ROBERT MCGINN PETER LEO CANNON THOMAS ANTHONY MCGUIRE MA'l'I'1lEW JOSEPH CUMMINGS. Jn. WILLIAM ANTHONY MAGUIRE PAUL JOSEPH GRIMES JAMES RUSSELL MURPHY BURTON FRANCIS HARRINGTON ARTHUR CALLISTUS PATRICK ALFRED JAM ES SULLIVAN 64' -lv--' NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters Q Alpha Brown University . 1886 Beta Illinois University . . 1912 Gamma Pennsylvania State College 1913 Delta University of Iowa . . 1913 Resident Members JOHN F. BANNON Brown '07 DANIEL QHURl.1'lY Brown 03 JOHN 'l'. BANNON B1'own '97 JOHN H. KELAGER Brown 98 LEO M. BANNON Brown '07 Dn. EDWARD S. KILEY Brown 91 FREDERICK BER',l'H Brown '03 JOHN VINCENT KEILY Brown 11 DR. EDWARD BLACK Brown '04 'l'I'lOlXfIAS L. RILEY Brown 14 CHARIQES E. BRADY Brown '14 AIXIBROSE KINION Brown 11 JAMES E. BRENNAN Brown '92 DR. WILLIAIXI W. KIRBY .Brown 99 JO1lN B. BRENNAN .Brown '11 ALEXANDER LARKIN Brown '06 MICHAEL BRENNAN Brown '00 JOHN NI. LENNON Brown '04 HISNRY MORGAN BURKE Brown '11 WILLIAM P. LENNON Brown '08 WILLIAM Il. CAMFIELD Brown '05 CHARLES P. LYNCH Brown Cx- '00 CHARLES CARROLL Brown '98 DR. NVILLIAIVI H. IYIAGILI.. Brown 93 FRANK A. CARROLL Brown '07 JOHN C. MATIONICY Brown 05 JOHN P. CARROLL Brown '03 JOHN L. AIARON EY Brown 98 JOSICPH Il. CARROLL Brown '03 EDWARD MCCAFFREY Brown 03 CHARLES D. CASEY Brown '04 JOSEPH BACCAFFREY Brown 99 JOIIN CASEY. Jn. Brown '13 DR. JAMES A. MCCANN Brown '04 REV. .THOMAS A. COFFEY Brown '00 IEDW. 1-lUlX4PHRl'lY lVlCCAR'l'HY Brown 09 JAMES H. CONN ELLY Brown '05 F. iXf1CCAR'l'I'lY Brown '9S JAMES G. CONNOLLY Brown '09 DR. LEO F. MCCREADY Brown 02 JOHN E. CONNOLLY Brown '99 CHARLES DILLON NICEVOY Brown '07 LAWRENCE D. CONNOLLY Brown '00 FRANK E. IXICDUFF Brown '14 WILLIAM M. CONNELL Brown '00 JOHN M. AICGOUGH Brown '05 DR. JOHN P. COONEY Brown '98 DR. 'PHONIAS E. NICGREEN Brown cx- '12 THOMAS P. CORCORAN Brown '93 JANIES IVICGOV ERN Brown '14 DR. HENRY J. CORRIGAN Brown '9S JAMES MCKENNA Brown '04 MICHAIQL F. COS'l'l1I1.LO Brown '05 FRANCIS IVICLAUGHLIN Brown '12 DR. .FRED A. COUGHLIN Brown '04 DR. W. C. MCLAUGHLIN Brown '01 WILLIAM A. COX Brown '05 ROY L. IVICLAUGHLIN Brown '12 PATRICK E. DILLON Brown '08 Dv.. H. MORRSSSEY Brown '11 FREDERICK DURFEE Brown '02 'l'1lVlO'l'I'IY A. NIULLIGAN Brown 96 LEO F. FARRELL Brown '00 JAMES F. MURPHY Brown 03 JAMES G. FIFZGAN Brown ex- 07 DR. MARCUS fl... MURPHY Brown 03 HON. JOHN .FITZGERALD Brown '93 WILLIAIW 'l'. A4URPI'IY Brown 03 HON. JOSEPH H. GAINER Holy Cross '06 D11. WILLIAM F. O'BRIEN Brown cx- 02 OWEN F. GALLAGER Brown '93 FREDERICK YV. O'CONNELL Brown 04 JAMES GALLIVAN, Jn. Brown '06 CHARLES J. O'CONNOR Brown 95 DANIEL E. GEARY Brown '91 EDWARD DEV. O'CONNOR Brown 92 ANTHONY GILFOIL Brown '11 DR. JOSEPH B. O'N,l1I1LL Brown 94 IAMES M. GILBRAIN Brown '93 PETER IW. O'REILLY Brown cx- 02 HON. CHARLES E. GORNIAN Brown '99 JOHN H. SLATTERY Brown 01 C. WOODBURY GORMAN Brown '02 Du. JAMES E. SULLIVAN Brown S4 THOMAS L. GORNIAN Brown ox- '12 GEORGE F. TROY Brown 98 D. GUIL1.ElVIET'I'E Brown '10 WILLIAA4 G. TROY Holy Cross 01 AUGUSTUS l'1AlX4P'I'ON Brown '11 JABIES TYRRELL Blown 14 JOHN P. l'IAR'1'IGAN Brown '10 CHARLES A. WALSH Brown 99 DR. JOHN HILALEY Brown '98 HON. ALBERT B. WEST Brown '04 EX-Gov. JAMES H. HIGGINS Brown '98 HENRY WINTERS Brown '01 ia'3.4f V '- M . 4 19.103 Qgdllllfw V iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiNg 'ii iiiiiiiiii A X - .. - f'-'...-.. ...lMlMllllllMJl. W 65349. I I Q ZgiI W xl A --- me 1 . ai .1 Q3 79 il! 'l KAJMQKW 5 . Ref eil, Ei of 5 HOPE COLLEGE 'E PHi GAMMA DELTA AAE ,E gig A Founded at Pi Rho Chapter E5 Washington and ' Established l9Ol Jefferson College I848 lnstituted 1902 W l F imiiiiimiiiim i i Mi iiiiniiiimiiiimi LIBER BR UNENSIS Phi Gamma Delta Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen EDGAR ALLEN RAYMOND C. McKAY EDWARD RAYMOND CAMPBELL JOSEPH ANDREW MILLER HENRY l ORRESTER DRAKE HERBERT NEWELL NICHOLAS HERBERT AUSTIN LARRABEE THEODORE PETERS WHI'l'TENIORE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen ARVID AXEL ALM EDWARD INGERSOLI, CRISTY Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen ALFRED WITHINGTON BAKER HOWARD DAVID CORKUM BE R'I'RAND MUNROE CROMACK, ju. RALPH TILLINGHAST DENISON ALBERT HENRY FLINT, Ju. BICKNELL HALL, ju. Class of Nine ,FRANK ROBERT AMES ju. FREDERICK BILLINGS BROOKS ALBERT EDWIN DILLINGHAM RAYMOND EARLE FARNSWORTII teen Hundr ALFRED JOSEPH MARRON JOHN THOMAS MCQUAID GEORGE ARNOLD NORTIIUP RUST SCOTT IRVING GORDON SMITII' WILLIAM LEROY WEDENIEYER ed and Eighteen MANNUEL JAMES JEMAIL RUSSELL ELWOOD McliENZIE CHARLES BERRY WADDELLMI14. WILLIAM LEWIS WADDELL HAROLD l AIR1 lEl',D COIT W ILCOX 68 I Omega Mu ' Iota Mu Pi Iota Pi Rho Delta 'Nu Alpha Chi Iota Tau Alpha Nu Deuteron Omega Nu Epsilon Theta Psi Kappa Nu Chi Sigma Nu Beta Sigma Deuteron Beta chi Beta Mu Delta Xi Gamma Phi Omicron Zeta Deuteron Rho Chi Alpha Pi Rho Deuteron Xi Deuteron Lambda Deuteron Sigma Omicron Deuteron Theta Deuteron Zeta Lambda NINETEEN FIFTEEN R011 of Chapters SECTION I University of lVIaine ..... Massacliusetts Institute of Technology Worcester Polytechnic Institute . . . Brown University . ' .... Dartmouth College . . Amherst College . Williams College . SECTION II Trinity College . Yale University . Columbia University New York University SECTION III Colgate University . Cornell University . Union College . . Syracuse University . SECTION IV University of Pennsylvania Lafayette College . . Lehigh University . . Johns Hopkins University SECTION V Bucknell University . . Gettysburg College . . Pennsylvania State College SECTION VI A University of Virginia . . Washington and Lee University . Richmond College . . . SECTION VII Washington and Jefferson College Allegheny College . . . Wooster University . . . Adelbert College . SECTION VIII Dennison University VVittenberg College . Ohio State University . Ohio Wesleyan University SECTION IX Indiana University . De Pauw University 69 1899 1889 1891 1902 1901 1893 1913 1893 1875 1866 1892 1887 1888 1895 1901 1 880 1 883 1887 1891 1882 1 858 1888 1858 1868 1890 18418 1860 1882 1902 1 885 1 884 1878 1869 1871 1857 LIBER BR UNENSIS Tau Hanover College 1864 Psi Wabash College . 1866 Lambda Iota Purdue University . 1902 SECTION X Kappa Tau University of Tennessee . 1890 Theta University of Alabama 1855 SECTION XI Alpha Deuteron Illinois Wesleyan . 1866 Gamma Deuteron Knox University . 1867 Chi Iota University of Illinois 1897 Mu University of Wisconsin . 1893 Mu Sigma University of Minnesota . 1890 Alpha Phi University of Michigan 1902 Chi Upsilon University of Chicago 1902 SECTION XII Tau Deuteron University of Texas . 1883 Chi Mu University of Missouri 1899 Pi Deuteron University of Kansas 1881 Lambda Nu University of Nebraska 1898 Alpha Iota Iowa State College . . 1907 Zeta Phi William Jewell University . 1886 SECTION XIII Chi Sigma Colorado College . 1908 Beta Kappa University of Colorado 1912 SECTION XIV Delta University of California . 1886 Sigma Tau University of Washington . . 1900 Lambda Sigma Leland Stanford, Ir., University . 1893 Epsilon Omicron University of Oregon . . 1911 Resident Members L. AINSWORTH Brown '14 A. A. HAMILTON Brown '06 A. E. ALLEN Brown '13 G. 'I. HENDERSON Brown '09 R. D. ALLEN Brown '10 W. L. JENCKS Brown '12 W. BALDWIN Worcester Polytechnic '94 H. E. KEBBON M. I. T. '12 REV. G. H. BENNETT Colgate '07 W. F. KEENE M. I. T. '91 L. M. BRAGG Maine '11 R. MCKAY Brown '11 L. F. BURROUGHS Brown '12 C. W. MILLER Brown '12 A. W. BUSHELL Brown '07 G. D. MOORE Brown '11 I-I. I . CAWTHORNE Brown '11 W. I-I. PARTINGTON Brown '11 D G. CLARK Brown '09 E. PERKINS Brown '12 H L. COOK Brown '12 B. P. RYDER Brown '07 A. M. CRISTY Brown '09 DR. H. B. SANBORN Dartmouth '01 G M. CROWTHER Brown '13 H. A. SCHERMERHORN Union '11 C. NV. CROWTHER Brown '14 H. B. STEARNS Brown '09 E. P. DEMMING WV. P. I. '17 H. B. STITT Brown '11 F. E. EDGECOMB Brown '07 REV. W. I. SIMMONS C. C. N. Y. '67 J. ERWIN Brown '11 REV. C. W. STIMSON Bucknell '86 A. W. FLETCHER Brown '06 L. P. WILLEMIN Brown '09 C. B. FULLERTON Union '11 H. WILLIAMS Brown '10 DR. L. K. HAGANAW Trinity '96 W. F. WHITTEMORE I W. P. I. '02 C. B. HADLEY Brown '13 - I E4 l l li '4 4 'Xlllll WP W W l e .llmlllllmllllmlllmlllll- 5 ff ff 1 -I-lllllWlllmlllllmmllllllmml A tt Q l F1 ff' Pl-ll KAPPA PSI QQ 3- M1510 115. 5 ?T5 gbeqii' 'EH :eg Founded at . Rhode Island Alpha Washington and lnstltuted l902 Jefferson College l852 l i . 1 l l l l I, A211 ' ' x?h. ' l fl lllllIllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l , lIllllllllllllllllllIlIIIllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l g, SX 'MJ LIBER .BR UNENSIS Phi Kappa Psi Class of Nineteen Hundred .IOHN IIANSON BOWER , SHIRLEY EVERETT CULVER HARVEY GLADDING DENHAM WILLIAM RANDALL WAT Class of Nineteen Hundred ALBERT BULLOCK COOP and Fifteen MCDONALD LOW EDINGER JOHN RUSSELL HAIRE GEORGE WILLIS WATERMAN ERMAN and Sixteen ERNEST HALLIWELL EDWARD LAWRENCE KEHOE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen ROGER UPI-IAM ALLARD ELMER ELSWORTH BARNES Class of Nineteen Hundred HOWARD BARTIIOLOMEW ARNOLD ROY WILMOT BENTON ARMAND LAURIER CARON EARL THOMPSON COX FLOYD CERELLE FAY, -IR. 72 PERRY MORELAND CHADWICK EGBERT FOSTER TETLEY and Eighteen WILLIAM MILLER FAY WILLIAM McKINLEY GAFAFER SIDNEY RUSSELL GAIR V WILLIAM SIMPSON SPATCHER GEORGE RODGER STURTEVANT NINETEEN FIFTEEN Pennsylvania Alpha Pennsylvania Beta Virginia Alpha Pennsylvania Gamma Pennsylvania Epsilon Virginia Beta Mississippi Alpha Pennsylvania Zeta Pennsylvania Eta Ohio Alpha Illinois Alpha Indiana Alpha Illinois Beta Ohio Beta Iowa Alpha New York Alpha Pennsylvania Theta Indiana Beta New York Gamma NIichigan Alpha Kansas Alpha Pennsylvania Iota Marylancl Alpha Ohio Delta Wisconsin Gamma New York Beta New York Epsilon Nlinnesota Beta Pennsylvania Kappa VVest Virginia Alpha California Beta Nebraska Alpha Massachusetts Alpha New I'1ampshire Alpha Wisconsin Alpha California Gamma Indiana Delta Tennessee Alpha Rhode Island Alpha R011 of Chapters Washiiigtoii and Jefferson Allegheny College University of Virginia Bucknell University Gettysburg College College WVashington and Lee University University of lVIississippi Dickinson College . Franklin and Nfarshall College Ohio W'esleyan University Northwestern University De Pauw University University of Chicago Wittenberg College University of Iowa Cornell University . Lafayette College . University of Indiana Columbia University University of 1NIichigan University of Kansas University of Pennsylvania , Johns Hopkins University Ohio State University Beloit College . Syracuse University Colgate University University of lVIinnesota . Swarthmore College University of W'est Virginia . Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Nebraska Amherst College Dartmouth College University of Wisconsin University of California Purdue University . Vanderbilt University Brown University . 73 1852 1853 1853 1855 1 855 1855 1857 1 859 1800 18151 18641 l 865 1805 1 806 1867 .1869 1 809 .1 809 1872 1870 1876 1877 1880 1880 1881 18841: 1887 1888 l 889 l 890 1892 1895 1895 l 896 1897 ll 899 1901 1901 1902 n 1 l 1 i I 1 1 1 1 LJBER BR UNENSIS Texas Alpha University of Texas . 1904 Illinois Delta University of Il inois . . 1904 Ohio Epsilon Case School of Applied Science 1906 Missouri Alpha University of Missouri . . 1908 Pennsylvania Lambda Pennsylvania State University 1912 Iowa Beta Iowa State College . . 1913 Washington Alpha University of Washington . 1914 Colorado Alpha University of Colorado 1914 Resident Members EDWARD R. ALDR1c11, Jn. Brown '02 RALPH E- HADLEY Brown '07 JOHN N. ALEXANDER Leland Stanford '09 NATHANIEL 0- HOWARD Brown '03 PBRLEY 11: BLOOD Brown ox- '11 WILLIAM F- HUNTLEY 'Brown '07 WENDELL s. BROWN Brown '11 CHARLES H- JONES, In Brown '06 REV. F. I. COLLINS U. Of Wisconsin '90 RALPH D- KETTNER Bl'OWr1 '05 HARRY W, COLLINS Brown '07 FRANCIS E. KINSEY U. of Indiana '90 JOSEPH B, T, C0012 Brown Cx- 117 PHILLIP S. KNAUER Swarthmore '96 FREEMAN CORSON Dartmouth '00 HENRY G- MARSH Brown CX- '12 PAUL L, CHIPMAN Igrgwn '08 RALPH H. MARSTON Dartmouth '10 A. BURROUGHS COMSTOCK Brown '10 ADRIAN MATHEWS BuCkr1Cll'71 HOWARD W, CONGDQN Brown '06 JAMES MINNICK .Wittenberg '85 STEPHEN H, EASTON Brown '03 REV. E. S. NINDE Northwestern '86 CHESTER A. FILES Brown '14 ARTHUR T. S. PHETTEPLACE Brown '06 HENRY E. FOWLER Brown '09 CLARENCE H. PHILBRICK Brown '13 WV. BELFIELD FREEMAN Brown '10 HARRY S. RICKARDS Dartmouth '05 CHARLES A. HAGGERTY Brown ex- '09 WILLIAM N. ROSS Brown '07 JOHN S. HODGSON Brown '11 RICHARD A. SANDERS Brown '07 DR. CHARLES H. I-IOLT Brown '02 FERDINAND WARD, JR. Brown ex- '14 JOHN PYOTT IIADFIELD Brown ex 'H LESTER A. WELLS Brown '05 74 l l l l l l I 1 ll 'A l l X 1 a-RA I r l 4? lf Q lf lsiig Sm lMlllll .ll llL . llmllwg 1llllL l111L ll1lM. llg . ' as , f4 ' ' fl Rlmbw ' s -it PHI SIGMA KAPPA ss, ig 'vf - H l,l ' lvl ' f 1 P 7 V- QV 0. Al Z 4.:- 1 ,nl l, '- A I l f Qs Founded at , Upsilon Chapter Massachusetts Agricultural lnstituted 1906 B College I873 ' rfmw ii WIN l W ' ' X' S.. lmillllmlllml llggi Ml lmllllmlnIInIlllllmllllmlllm 'WEE 'ifsfr LIBER BR UNENSIS Phi Sigma Kappa Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen HERMAN NICHOLS HARCOURT HAROLD MURDOCK TAYLOR RICHARD BOARDMAN STANLEY GEORGE HENRY ANTHONY LAROE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen EDWARD WARREN BLUE CLAYTON LEROY PHILLIPS ERNEST FREMONT MATTISON PAUL FOSTER SINCLAIR JOHN PITKIN PALMER EARL FRANKLIN WOOD Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen JOSEPH DANIEL HAGGERTY Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen JOHN MARSHALL DOWE ALFRED ROUNDS HOLDEN HARRY WALDEMERE KALLSTRONI 76V Alpha Beta A Gamma Delta Epsilon- Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Omicron Pi Sigma Tau Upsilon Phi - Chi Psi Omega Alpha Deuteron Beta Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Delta Deuteron NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters Massachusetts Agricultural College . Union College .... Cornell University . . University of West Virginia . Yale University . . . College of City of New York . University of Maryland . A Columbia University . . . Stevens Institute of Technology . Pennsylvania State College . George Washington University . University of Pennsylvania . . Lehigh University .... Massachusetts Institute of Technology Franklin and Marshall College . . St. John's College . Dartmouth College , Brown University Swarthmore College . Williams College . University of Virginia University of California University of Illinois . University of Minnesota . Iowa State College . University of Michigan 77 1873 1888 1889 1891 1893 1890 1897 1897 1899 1899 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1903 1905 1900 1906 1900 1907 1909 1910 1910 1911 1914 . New York Club Boston Club Albany Club Connecticut Club Southern Club Morgantown Club Philadelphia Club Seattle Club Pittsburg Club Chicago Club Baltimore Club LIBER BR UNENSIS - Roll of Clubs New York City Boston . Albany . New Haven Washington Morgantown Philadelphia Seattle . Pittsburg Chicago . Baltimore 1889 - 1897 1900 1901 1902 - 1903 - 1904 San Francisco Club San Francisco Resident Members Dn. FRANK M. ADAMS Yale oz HAROLD A. BRAMAN Yale '09 Brown '07 EDWARD J. BRENNAN DR. HERBERT W. BROWN Univ. ofMd. '10 ERNEST R. CLEAVELAND Brown '14 JAMES I. CRAWSHAW Brown '11 ROBERT S. CURLEY Brown '07 ROY E. CUTTING M. A. C. '08 WILLIAM C. DICKERMAN M. A. C. '01 FRANK O. DROWNE Brown '11 DR. RICHARD E. DUNCAN M. A. C. '86 MUNROE T. FAGAN Brown ex- '15 THEODORE B. FARNSWORTH Brown '12 WILLIS S. FISHER M. A. C. '98 WALTER E. GOODWIN Brown '10 JAMES H. GORMLEY Brown cx- '14 THOMAS L. HEFFERMAN Brown '07 78 1910 1910 1910 ' 1910 - 1910 J. WILLIAM JAMES Brown 'Ou ROYAL K. JOSLIN Univ. of Virginia '09 JOHN F. KEIGHLEY Univ. of Md. '12 CARL H. LAMBELET I Stevens '11 CHARLES L. LELAND Brown '11 REV- JOHN S. LOWE Sn. Lawrence, '05 WILLIAM A. MAI-IONEY M. I. T. ex- '13 WILLIAM D. NISBET Connell '13 ARTHUR N. NICHOLS Brown cn- '12 FREDERICK H. READ M. A. C. '96 WALTER C. ROBERTSON Brown '12 HARRY E. ROELKE Rmwn '11 THOMAS ROALFE WARREN ROOT HENRY B. SELLECK ARTHUR W. TALBOT HARVEY E. WELLMAN Brown cx- '11 Brown ex- '12 Brown '09 M. I. T. '07 Williams '14 in 1 , I F Q' QGRMIIHHWW J 1 V A VX k Ilumllnll mwllnlnwullmuly MHMHHL lllu mmllllnmwu oag K ' A A x E Ho di x: HOPE COLLEGE B E LAMBDA CHI ALPHA lg E B Q55 Ni - 'low A ,nj TT 1 'QEfaf.', B gg si l , B : Founded at lota Zeta Boston University Organized 1907 W emma wi X qi MQ Q , X! it 4 '- .-. .-1...1.-...-11. Hmmmmlllllmmlllllm fhglgli sli HIIIIIIIIIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIlIlllllllillllllllllilllllll , - H 1 1 if NX Fil Q3 F Ek FI ii: LIBER BR UNENSIS Lambda Chi Alpha Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen SEWELL WOODBERRY ALLISON CLIFFORD SHERMAN HATHAWAY BYRON LILLIBRIDGE WEST Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen LQUIS EARL BAUER JOSEPH AUBREY LANDSCHOOF GEORGE BURTON CUMERFORD HERBERT ROYAL LINDBLOM GAST AVE DESIRE HOUTMANN BURTON LOREN LUCAS Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen ADOLPI-I CURTIS JOHN WESLEY RHOADS ARTHUR ARIEL HOPKINS HENRY CARLETON ROBERTSON JOSEPH WOODBURY STROUT Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen EDWARD JAMES BUTLER PHILLIP EZRA NEWHALL ATTMORE EDWIN GRIFFIN EDWARD MALCOLM PHILLIPS ALBERT SANGER PRATT 80 J Alpha Zeta Gamma Zeta Epsilon Zeta Zeta Zeta Iota Zeta Lambda Zeta Beta Zeta Sigma 'Zeta Phi Zeta Delta Zeta Pi Zeta Omicron Zeta Mu Zeta Tau Zeta Eta Zeta Theta Zeta Upsilon Zeta Boston Alumni Zeta New York Alumni Ze NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters Boston University Massachusetts Agricultural College . University of Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania State College . Brown University Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Maine ' University of Michigan Rutgers College Bucknell University Worcester Polytechnic Institute . Cornell University University of California . Washington State University Rhode Island State College Dartmouth College Louisiana State College R011 of Clubs ta . Providence Alumni Zeta . DR. E. B. ALLEN E. B. ARNOLD G. II. BABCOCK C. B. BENNET L. H. BEYTES T. M. BOYCE W. W. CHANDLER W. A. COLE H. H. CI-IAMPNEY W. A. CI'IAP.PELL REV. A. D. CREELMAN H. L. CUSHING C. A. DAVIS R. H. DUNBAR W. J. DWYER DYER DR. H. M. FROST R. H. GASKELL R. K. GOULD R. W. HEWITT R. C. HOPKINS E. M. HOUDLETTE L. P. HOWARD Resident Members Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown Brown ex- Boston Univ. Brown Brown Brown BrOwn Brown Cornell Brown ex- Maine Brown M. A. C. Brown Brown Brown ex- Maine M. A. C. '11 '11 '09 '06 '09 '09 '15 '12 '14 '14- '09 '111 '14 '13 '10 '12 '09 '13 '10 '12 '14 '10 '14 E M. JENCKS C L. KNOWLES E H MILLER L C. 'r. MILLER 11. C. MORSE C R. Nici-1oLs R. E. NUTE DR. J. OSLIN w. K. OSLIN L. E. ROBBINS 1. R. sr-IELDON L. E. sM1'rH C. H. SPENCER L. A. SPOONER C. E. sviofzs E A. TEWKSBURY E wEBs'rER . C. W. C. WEST W. H. WHITMAN T. 1-1. WILLIAMS L. A. WOODBURY N. WOODBURY LIEUT. S. S. WINSLOW 1909 1911 1912 1912 1912 1912 1913 1913 1913 1913 1913 1913 1913 1914 1914 1914 1914 1912 1913 1913 Brown '11 Brown '14 Brown '12 Brown '14- Boston ex- 12 7 I Boston ex- 1.2 14 114. A. C. ' Brown '10 Brown ex- '14 Brown '13 Brown '11 Brown '12 Brown '12 Brown '14 Brown '09 Brown '12 M. A. C. '14 Brown '08 Brown ex-'12 Brown ex- 16 Brown ex- '17 Brown '14 08 Brown 1 x W. . M, ml '.. ng ,-1 J' 5' 'Tr' 5,1,i,A4,nN Giga' v -xl' nr t l l 1 l l l B Mliiibev - l M- ga Q, l HIM? ta im iiiiimiiiiiwiimiii - iimiiw f . 1' ' 54 '1 X l I i t . figs fl. sig 1 E E3 M ' 516 MA N U Ei lil f- -I B E E Founded at Delta Lambda Chapter 2 Virginia Military Established l907 ? 'gh institute 1869 1 instituted 1912 E -t 1 - e ' ..-...-1.-. . 1' Www 1 t . ix ll we A t Mm 4, 1 ia: LIBER BR UNENSIS -fil- Sigma Nu Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen ERNEST HARTWELL ENIERY WALLACE ALLYN GANNON SILAS WILLIAM FOSS GEORGE EARL HEBNER WILLIAM THOMAS JOYCE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen PLOYER PETER HILL WALTER VINCENT MURPHY CHARLES BERGER MACKAY GEORGE MORRILL WHITE STUART EDSALL YEAKEL Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen I V FREDERICK WILLIS CONOVER MORTON PERRY MCLEOD KENNETH AINSWORTH FLANDERS EVERETT GRANVILLE PERKINS LESLIE LOVELL PERRY Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen BERTIL ABRAHAM JOHNSON CLIFTON IRVING MONROE ALBERT EDWARD PEARSON CECIL GEORGE STRATTON YOUNG WILLIAM HOWARD YOUNG CLIFTON ROY ENTWISTLE DANIEL HOFFMAN ERICKSON, JR. CYRUS GLENN FLANDERS MALCOM CLEVELAND HYLAN 84 v l Alpha Beta Lambda Psi Beta Tau Delta Kappa Sigma Gamma Iota Mu Theta Iota Kappa Eta Xi Beta Theta Gamma Alpha Delta Mu Epsilon Beta Mu Beta Iota Gamma Pi Delta Alpha Delta Zeta Gamma Beta Gamma Gamma Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Rho Delta Theta Beta Mu Gamma Sigma Gamma Tau Delta Eta Nu Rho Beta Xi Gamma Xi NINETEEN FIFTEEN Roll of Chapters FIRST DIVISION Virginia Military Institute . University of Virginia . . Washington and Lee University . University of North Carolina . North Carolina A. and M. College Delaware State University . SECOND DIVISION Vanderbilt University . . State University of Kentucky . THIRD DIVISION University of Georgia . University of Alabama . . Howard College . . . North Georgia Agricultural College Mercer University . . Y . Emory College .... Alabama Polytechnic Institute . Georgia School of Technology . Stetson University . . . FOURTH DIVISION Bethany College . Ohio State University . Mt. Union Scio College . University of West Virginia . Case School of Applied Science . Western Reserve University . FIFTH DIVISION Northwestern University . Albion College . . University of Wisconsin . University of Illinois University of Michigan University of Chicago Lombard University . SIXTH DIVISION Iowa State University Iowa State College . University of lVIinnesota . University of Nebraska . SEVENTH DIVISION Kansas State University . Missouri State University . William Jewell College . Missouri School of Mines . 85 1869 1870 1882 1888 1895 1910 1886 1902 1873 1874 1879 1881 1884 1884 1890 1896 1913 1883 1891 1892 1904 1907 1909 1898 1895 1902 1902 1902 1895 1891 1893 1904 1904 1909 1884 1886 1894 1903 - LIBER BR UNENSIS -i--i Roll of Chapters -CContinuedD Gamma Omicron Washington University . . , 1903 Delta Epsilon Oklahoma University . . . 1909 Beta Kappa Kansas State Agricultural College . 1913 EIGHTI-I DIVISION Upsilon University of Texas . . . 1886 Phi Louisiana State University . 1887 Beta Phi Tulane University . . . 1888 Gamma Upsilon University of Arkansas . . 1904 NINTI-I DIVISION Gamma Eta Colorado School of Mines . . 1901 Gamma Kappa University of Colorado . . 1902 Delta Xi University of Nevada . 1914 TENTH DIVISION Gamma Chi University of Washington . . 1896 Gamma Zeta University of Oregon . . 1900 Gamma Phi University of Montana . . 1905 Delta Iota Washington State College . . 1910 ELEVENTI-I DIVISION Beta Chi Leland Stanford, Jr., University . . 1891 Beta Psi University of California . . . 1892 TWELFTI-I DIVISION Pi Lehigh University . . . 1884 Beta Rho University of Pennsylvania . 1894 Gamma Epsilon Lafayette College . . . 1900 Gamma Theta Cornell University . . . 1891 Gamma Psi Syracuse University . . . 1906 Delta Delta Pennsylvania State College . 1909 THIRTEENTI-I DIVISION Beta Beta De Pauw Univeisity . . . 1890 Beta Zeta Purdue University . . . 1891 Beta Eta University of Indiana . . 1892 Beta Upsilon Rose Polytechnic Institute , 1895 FOURTEENTI-I DIVISION Beta Sigma University of Vermont . . . 1898 Gamma Delta Stevens Institute of Technology . , 1900 Delta Beta Dartmouth College . . . . 1907 Delta Gamma Columbia University . , 1908 Delta Lambda Brown University . , 1912 Delta Nu University of Maine . . . . 1913 Resident Members ROBERT G. CASYVELL Brown H. THORNTON PEACE Brown '07 FRANK B. GIBBS Brown ex- THOIVIAS H. ROBERTS Brown '13 HOWARD G. HUBBARD Brown WALTER H. ROBERTSON Columbia ex- '13 HAROLD G. I-IUEY Univ. of Vermont NELSON E. SMITH Maine '11 ARTHUR E. KENYON Brown ex- WILLIAM T. WILSON ARTHUR KIERNAN Brown No. Georgia Agricultural College ' R. MCBURNEY MITCHELL W. Univ 88 HARLAN H. YORK De Pauw Univ. '03 9 f JMLQW Null, i id 'N '-'Q X f ,,e .lMlllllMI1llMll1.lllmlIlQg --.lllllmlllmlllmllllllw ,QQ tg l l l 1. ma 5 .X 7 li - nl gf SIGMA PHI EPSILON Ea .I w . f4,.J 0 Q I if if 11' v Q-. A 1 iff: gg 'uf 9 Bi lv Founded at , Rhode Island Alpha Richmond College l902 lnstituted l9l2 rfwmw we 'M ' L -' Y' lllll lllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l gk Ml lllll llllllllllllllIlIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll 'Q lg! B sq l LIBER BR UNENSIS Sigma Phi Epsilon Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen HOWARD LOUIS QUIMBY JOHN ALBERT WELD PEARCE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen NEWTON PECKHANI LEONARD RUSSELL BILLINGS QUIMBY VINCENT WASHBURN LEONARD DAVID STEEL Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen NELSON BARLOW CHARLES BIRD KEACH EDGAR OTIS BENSON MELVILLE MORRIS LOWE HENRY THEODORE HAEGSTROM JOHN GREENE RICE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen I-IORACE CARPENTER JEFFERS JULIAN BREWER MARSHALL WARDWELL COLES LEONARD FREDERICK NEALE TOMPKIN S Graduate Students HERBERT ELLIOTT FOOTE JAMES EVERETT RICKER RALPH BAKER LOWE WALTER HOFF SPRAGUE 88, NINETEEN FIFTEEN Virginia Alpha West Virginia Beta Illinois Alpha Colorado Alpha Pennsylvania Delta Virginia Delta North Carolina Alpha Ohio Alpha Indiana Alpha New York Alpha Virginia Epsilon Virginia Zeta Georgia Alpha Delaware Alpha Virginia Eta Arkansas Alpha Pennsylvania Epsilon Ohio Gamma Vermont Alpha Alabama Alpha North Carolina Gamma New Hampshire Alpha District of Columbia Alpha Kansas Alpha California Alpha Nebraska Alpha Washington Alpha Massachusetts Alpha Ohio Delta New York Beta Rhode Island Alpha Michigan Alpha Iowa Alpha Tennessee Alpha Missouri Alpha Roll of Chapters Richmond College . . University of West Virginia University of Illinois . . University of Colorado . University of Pennsylvania . College of William and Ma1'y . North Carolina College of Agriculture Ohio Northern University . . Purdue University . . . Syracuse University . . . Washington and Lee University . Randolph Macoii College . . Georgia School of Technology . Delaware State College . . University of Virginia . University of Arkansas Lehigh University . Ohio State University . Norwich University . . . Alabama Polytecnic Institute . Trinity College . . . Dartmouth College . . . George YVashington University . Baker University . . University of California . University of Nebraska . Washington State College . Amherst Agricultural College University of Wooster . Cornell University . . Brown University . University of Michigan Iowa Wesleyan College University .of Tennessee . University of Nlissouri 89 1902 1903 1903 1904 1904 1904 1905 1905 1905 1905 1906 1900 1907 1907 1907 1907 1907 1908 1908 1908 1909 1909 1909 1910 1910 1910 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1913 1913 1914 1 Q ,I I1 1 gr H 'I 4 l - x L uw , 4 YAIIUN' The Officers REV. WILLIAM HERBERT PERRY FAUNCE, D.D., LL.D.' PRESIDENT. ARNOLD BUFFUM CHACE, Sc.D., CIIANCELLOR. REV. THOMAS DAVIS ANDERSON, D.D., SECRETARY. CORNELIUS SOWLE SWEETLAND, A.M., TREASURER. The Board of Fellows REV. WIILLIAM HERBERT PERRY FAUNCE, D.D., LL.D. Providence REV. THOMAS DAVIS ANDERSON, D.D. Brookline, Mass. ROBERT HALE IVES GODDARD, A.M. Providence WILLIAM WILLIAMS KEEN, M.D., LL.D. Philadelphia, Pa. REV. GEORGE EDWIN HORR, D.D. Newton Ccntrc, NIass. HON. ROWLAND GIBSON HAZARD, A.lVI. Pcaccdalc HON. HENRY KIRKE PORTER, LL.D. Pittsburg, Pa. REV. HENRY SWEETSER BURRAGE, D.D. Portland, Me. HERMON CAREY BUMPUS, Pli.D., Sc.D., LL.D. Madison, Wis. I-ION. CHARLES EVANS HUGHES, LL.D. Washington, D. C. WILLIAM VAIL KELLEN, PILD., LL.D. Boston, Mass. 92 - NINE TEEN FIFTEEN The Board of Trustees HON. WILLIAM SPRAGUE, A.M. ARNOLD BUFFUM CHACE, Sc.D. RICHARD MEAD ATWATER, A.M. HON. JOHN CARTER BROWN WOODS, A.M., LL.D. I'ION. ANDREW JACKSON JENNINGS, LL.B1 HoN.A OSCAR LAPHAM, A.M. COLGATE HOYT, A.M. HON. JONATHAN CHACE, A.M. CORNELIUS SOWLE SWEETLAND, A.M. The Corporation GEORGE LEWIS COLLINS, M.D. GARDNER COLBY, A.M. EUGENE WATERMAN MASON, A.B. WILLIAM ENSIGN LINCOLN, A.M. REV. HENRY MELVILLE KING, D.D. STEPHEN ORSTROM EDWARDS, A.M. STEPHEN OLNEY METCALF, A.B. THEODORE FRANCIS GREEN, A.M. RAY GREENE HULING, Sc.D. EDGAR LEWIS MARSTON, A.M. REV. THOMAS SEYMOUR BARBOUR, D.D. HON. WILLIAM WILBERFORCE DOUGLAS, LL.D. HENRY DEXTER SHARP, A.B. DANIEL WEBSTER ABERCROMBIE, LL.D. I'ION. EVERETT COLBY, A.M. WILLIAM THANE PECK, Sc.D. IION. FRANKLIN ELI BROOKS, A.M. REV. JOHN MAHAN ENGLISH, D.D. HON. LUCIUS BROWN, LL.D. AUGUSTUS LEVI ABBOTT, LL.B. ' EDWIN FARNHAM GREENE, A.B. WILLIAM RICHARDSON DORMAN, A.B CHARLES SUMNER STEDMAN, Pn.B. ABEL CHALKLEY COLLINS, A.B., A.M. SAMUEL HAMON ORDWAY, LL.B., A.M. 93 LL.1s. Narragansett Pier Providence Chadds Ford, Pa. Providence Fall River, lVIass, Providence New York, N. Y. Valley Falls Providence Providence New York, N. Y- Providence Pittsburg, Pa. Providence Providence Providence Providence Cambridge, IVIass. New York, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Providence Providence Worcester, Mass. Orange, N. J. Providence Colorado Springs, Col. Newton Centre, NIass. Norwich, Conn. St. Louis, NIO. Boston, Mass. New York, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. Great Barrington, lVIass. New York, N.Y. The Executive Officers WILLIAM HERBERT PERRY FAUNCE, D.D., LL.D., PRESIDENT OTIS EVERETT RANDALL, Pu.D., DEAN OF TIIE UNIVERSITY CARL BARUS, PHD., LL.D., DEAN OF TIIE GRADUATE DEPARTMENT LIDA SHAW KING, A.M., L1TT.D., LL.D., DEAN OF THE WOMENIS COL- LEGE FREDERICK TAFT GUILD, A.M., REGISTRAR, AND SECRETARY OF TIIE FACULTY 94 ? NINETEEN FIFTEEN The Faculty and Other Ofiicers WILLIAM HERBERT PERRY FAUNCE, D.D., LL.D. Prf:ide1zt,' Profcfxor of Moral and Inlcllrctual Philosophy JOHN HOWARD APPLETON, A.M., Sc.D. Nrwport-Rogrrr Profrxfor of Clzemiftry WILLIAM CAREY POLAND, A.lVI., LITT.D. ' Profcxfor of ilu' Iliyzory of Arty Dirrrlor of llzr Muxeurn of Fin: flrlx XNATHANIEL FRENCH DAVIS, ANI., LL.D. Profrxfor of Pun' Matlzmrzatirr ALBERT GRANGER HARKNESS, A.M., L1T'r.D. Profefror of Roman Literature and llixtory HENRY BRAYTON GARDNER, PH.D. Profcxfor of .Ecorwmirx COURTNEY LANGDON, A.B. Profrfxor of the Romancf Lzmguagrf and Lilvralurrx WILFRED HAROLD MUNRO, A.M., L.H.D. Profzffor of European Ilixtory, Emrrilu: OTIS EVERETT RANDALL, PH.D. Dean of the Univrrfizyg Profrxxor of 1lIZ'6'l1H1l1.C.f and illvclmniral Drawing EDMUND BURKE DELABARRE, P1-I.D. Profffxor of Psychology FREDERICK TAFT GUILD, A.lVI. Rrgixtrar, and Sccrrlary of the F116-uliy JAMES IRVING MANATT, PH.D., LL.D. Profrfsor of Creek Literature and Hillary WALTER COCHRANE BRONSON, A.NI., L1TT.D. Profzarror of Englifh Literature WALTER GOODNOW EVERETT, PH.D. Profrffor of PfLilo.rophy and Natural Thrology ASA CLINTON CROWELL, PH.D. Affociale Profrxror of the Gcrmauir Language: and Lilcral14rr.r HARRY LYMAN KOOPIVIAN, A.M., LITT.D. Lilzrariang Prqfcxfor of Bibliography CARL BARUS, P1-LD., LL.D. Dean of ilu' Graduzzn' Drpartmrnlj llazard Profrffof' of Phyficx FRANCIS GREENLEAF ALLINSON, PH.D. David Brrzvdzrt Profr1.ror of Claffiral Philology HENRY PARKER MANNING, PH.D. Axxocialr Proffrfor of Purr Malh:malic.r 180 Hope Street 209 Angell Street 53 Lloyd Avenue 159 Brown Street 7 Cooke Street 5-li Stimson Avenue 86 Upton Avenue 115 Butler Avenue 65 Weymouth Streel 9 Arlington Avenue 9 Oriole Avenue 59 Charles Field Street 1410 Mor1'is Avenue 85 University Avenue 66 Oriole Avenue 76 Taber Avenue 30 Elmgrove Avenue 163 George Street 258 Medway Street 'W On lcavc of nbscncc during the academic year 191-I-15. 95 LIBER BR UNENSIS - JOHN EDWARD HILL, C.I5.M., SC.D. Profcfmr of Civil Enginccring JAMES QUAYLE DEALEY, PH.D. l'rofr,rxor of Social and Political Scicncr WALTER BALLOU JACOBS, A.lVI. ljrofrifor of Education ALBERT DEFOREST PALMER, PH.D. zlffociatz' Profcrfor of Pliyficx ALBERT DAVIS MEAD, PH.D., Sc.D. l rofc'.r,ror of Biology ALBERT KNIGHT POTTER, A.M. .f1.r,rociate Profrffor of the Ifnglixh La-nguagr ALBERT BUSHNELL JOHNSON, A.M. 1 fluociatc Profrxsor of thi' Romaucc lolltlgltdgff FREDERIC POOLE GORHAM, A.M. Profruor of Bactcriology ARTHUR EUGENE WATSON, PILD. flffixtant Profcfxor of Phyxirx JOHN FRANCIS GREENE, A.M. flxxociate Profzxfor of Roman Literature and llixtory WILLIAM MACDONALD, PHD., LL.D. George L. Littlrnvld Profexfor of flmrrican Ilixtory JOHN EMERY BUCHER, PH.D. flsforiatc Profcxxor of Organic Chrmiftry HENRY THATCHER EOWLER, PH.D. Profeffor of Biblical Litcraturi' and lliftory 'WLINDSAY TODD DAMON, A.B. Profcrfor of Englirh Litcraturz' and Rhetoric 86 Taber Avenue S72 Hope Street 310 Olney Street Tl Elmgrove Avenue 283 Wayland Avenue 212 Waterman Stleet 138 W'alnut Street, East Providence IVILLIAM HERBERT KENERSON, NLE., A.M. Profcxfor of tllcchanical Bnginrcring GEORGE WYLLYS BENEDICT, PH.D. flfroriati' Profcrxor of Englixli THOMAS CROSBY, JR., A.M. rlfmciatc Profrfxor of Englifh and Public Spralcing HENRY BARRETT HUNTINGTON, A.B. flffocialc Profcfror of English GEORGE PARKER WINSHIP, A.M. Librarian of the john Cartrr Brown Library FREDERICK WILLIAM MARVEL, PH.B. I'rofr.rxor of Phyfical Training 4' On leave of absence during the academic y 961 CM' 151 Nleeting Street 30 Congdon Street 49 George Street 132 George Street I Summit 127 Lloyd Avenue 1 University Hall 100 Morris Avenue 1G John Street 49 George Street 23 John Street 31 Benevolent Street 281 Olney Street 1914-15. - NINE TEEN FIFTEEN H:---2 ANSEL BROOKS, PI-LB., NLE. .1J'.f06'illlL' 1,f0fL',S'J'0f of ,IIl'L'llI1IllL'.f and .ll1'rl11l111'cal D1'awi11g CAIVIILLO VON KLENZE, P1r.D. Profrrfor' of ilu' Ccrmnuic l,ll7lglt!tgL'J' 117111 l.'1'l1'1'z1l1u'1'f CHARLES WILSON BROWN, A.h1I. .'l.r,roci11l1' Prof1'J,ror of Geology HERBERT EUGENE 1VALTER, PH.D. zl,r.focial1' 1,I'0fL',i'.1'0I' of Biology ROLAND GEORGE DWIGHT RICHARDSON, P11.D. .4.v,rocla!1' l'il'0fl'J'J'0I' of 1,1lI'6' Mzlllzfmalicr JAMES IVIARVIN IVIOTLEY, IDILIJ. .-l.r.rori1111' Pro error 0 L'C!Hl017Il.IT.1' f f CHARLES HERMAN IIUNKINS, DR. UNIV. PARIS 1fJ'J'IJ'lCIIIl 1,l'0-fL'J',f0I' of the RONIIIIICL' l,H7lj.flHlgl',l' llllll l,'1'l1'1'11ll41'1'r PHILIP HENRY IVIITCHELL, PILD. .-l.r.rifla11L Profzxvfor of Plzyfiology f RAE IVIOND CLARE ARCHIBALD, PILD. fl.f.fl..fl!lIIl 1Jl'0fL'J'.f0f of 1 1m' .ll olhc'111z1!ir.r THEODORE FRELINGI-IUYSEN COLLIER, 11,1-,i-11cir1l1' 1Jl'0fL'.1'J'07' of 1fu1'opnl11 lliftory HARDY CROSS, A.B., C.E.NI. .'1.l'.1'lJ'l!llIl 1'1'of1'.i-,for of Civil E11gi11fcri11g I-IARLAN HARVEY YORK, P1I.D. flJ'J'l.Vl!I7ll I'1'Qfm',ro1' of Botany YVILLIANI THOMSON HASTINGS, AAI. .J.f.1'i,1'llllll l'1'of1':for of Engliflz JOI-IN CORLISS DUNNING, PH.D. flffixlzmz l'rofe.r.ror of Polilifal Soil,-116: STEPHEN SHELDON COLVIN, PII.D. Profmzror of IL'1l11mtio11al l',vyz'hology ALFRED HARRISON JONES, P1I.D. .lxfiflawll 1'rof1u'.ror of Logic LUCIUS IVIOODY BRISTOL, PH.D. .4rJz',rt1111l l'1'of1'.v.ror of Sociology ROBERT NICBURNEY IVIITCHELL, AB. flr,ri,rl1111L l'1'ofv,fJor of ilu' GA'l'HIdILlC Lzlzrguagrr and l.1'l1'1'ol1u 1 HENRl FERDINAND MICOLEAU 111511111111 Profvffor of ilu' Ronmlzcz' L1111g1111g1'.r and l,1'l1'r11l11r1' r PERRY BLAINE PERKINS, Pu.D. - fl,v,ri.vm11,! l,7'0ft,',1',1'07' of M 11111111161 HAROLD EUGENE BIGI'lI1O11 , I,11.D. fluifmnl Profzzrror of Cl11'ml.rlry NATHAN STERN, PH.D. l1l'L'flH'l'l' in liibliml l,z'l1'1'11l1m' and llirlory Tl. PH . D. '1 On leave of absence during the zxemlexnic your 101 1 1 97 25 Everett Avenue 125 Lloyd Avenue 37 Barnes Street 523 Arlington Avenue -l-1 University Avenue 125 Butler Avenue 107 Angell Street 19 Creighton Street El Charles Field Street 1111 Governor Street 118 Cushing Street 51 Arlington Avenue 123 John Street 45 Waterinall Street 146 Taber Avenue 98 Cushing Street 156 Prospect Street 1-1-I Congdon Street 262 Brown Street 511 Charles l ielcl Street 142 Irving Avenue 2121 Beneflt Street 5. l 1 l 1 li-l LIBER BR UNENSIS EDWIN ERNEST WILD Lecturer in Muxic CLINTON HARVEY CURRIER, A.M. Inrlrnclor in Mallienmtiar NORNIAN EDWARD HOLT, A.B., SC.L'I., Instructor in Clzernixlry ROBERT FRANKLIN FIELD, A.M. Inflructor in Plzyfir: 'JAlVIES ALEXANDER HALL, A.B., Sc.B. Inrzruclor in Mechanical Engineering BERNARD ALOYSIUS KEENAN, A.B. Inxlruclor in German and French ALBERT EDWARD RAND, PH.D. Inflrnctor in German ALFRED CARY HAWKINS, A.M. Inftruetor in Geology WALTER CLARK PHILLIPS, A.lVI. Inrzructor in linglirh JOHN HENRY WILLIAMS, A.B. lnxlrnclor in Englirli LEIGHTON TEETERICK BOI-IL, Sc.B. lnrtructor in Civil Engineering FLORENCE HARRIS DANIELSON, A.M. PH.D. Instructor in Pliyriology and Ilonyelzolcl Economic: in the Wo1ncn'.r College 119 George Street 311 Wayland Avenue 322 Maxcy Hall 25 Wilson Street 31 Pocasset Avenue 8 Caswell Hall 134. Lloyd Avenue 39 Benevolent Street 427 Maxcy Hall 23 Caswell Hall 32 Henry Street, Edgewood 118 Cushing Street FRANK THURSTON HALLETT, A.M. 47 South Angell Street Inrlruclor in Greek V THOMAS CLARK SHEDD, Sc.B. 432 Massasoit Avenue, East Providence Arxirianl in Mechanical Engineering SAMUEL TOMLINSON ARNOLD, A.B. flrfiftanl in Cherniflry EDWARD SWITZER ALLEN, PH.D. Inxlrnctor in Matlzemalicr JAMES HENRY CONNOLLY, SC.B. Inrlructor in Mechanical Engineering 119 Waterman Street 68 Hazard Avenue 1 University Hall PAUL HART FRANCIS, Sc.lVI. 385 Laurel Hill Avenue Inxfruclor in Ilrleclzanical Drawing HENRY REED BOWSER, M.B.A. Inflrnctor in Economic: ROY FOLLETT, A.B. Inrtruczor in Englixlz HENRY GARFIELD CLARK, PH.B., Inxlruclor in Phyfical Training FRANK CARLETON BLAKE, SC.B. flrrirtant in Pliysicr BENJAMIN CROCKER CLOUGH, A.B. fluixlant in Englirlz FREDERIC MARSHALL JENCKS, A.NI. flrsirtant in PlLilo.fophy 'On leave of nbscncc during the academic your 1914-15. 98. 7 Brunonia Hall 68 Hazard Avenue Brunonia Hall 9 Searle Street 2 Angell Street West Barrington NINE TEEN FIFTEEN MARION KENNETH FORYVARD, PH.B. f1.fJ'lJ'l!l1ll in lfrzglixlz RALPH GIBNEY HURLIN, A.lVl. .flxrirtanl in Biology CARL BANTA GIBSON, A.B. flrfixlanl in Botany JOHN BURNHAM FERGUSON, A.B., lX4.D. Demonrlraror in .fluazomy JAMES FRANKLIN COLLINS, PI-LB. Drmonftrator in Bolany THERON CLARK, A.B. .flxxiflarzl Regixlrar ENIIVIA BRADFORD STANTON, A.Nl. Rrgiftrar of ilu' Wornarff College. HENRY DEWEES CADY In.rn'uctor in Shop Practirc M. ELIZABETH BATES , Imlrurtor in llygirm' and Pliyriral Education in tlir Uf01I1L'ILl,I' SARAH GRIDLEY ROSS, A.B. Ilrad of Mi'lrr llall, Womrn',f Collrgr EDWIN AYLSWORTH BURLINGAIXIE Suprrintarzdenl of Groundr and Builzlirigf GENE WILDER WARE, A.B.' Orgauift and Dirrrlor of Chapel M urir PETER PINEO CHASE, M.D. Plzyficiau to the Uniwrxity HARRY EDWARD ROELKE, PLLB. Rrfrrfrzre' Librarian PHEBE PARKER, A.B. Calalogurr OTTILIE ROSE IVIETZGER, A.B. Axrirlarzt Rfferrncc Librarian EVELYN BUTLER TILDEN, A.B. Clark in the Library MARY WIDMAN BRONSON, PH.B. Axxiflarzl Catalogurr JESSIE HELEN BARR, A.B. flxfiftarzt Calalogurr REBECCA PHILLIPS STEERE Calalogufr in tlzr folm Carler Brown Library LOUISE PROSSER BATES, A.M. Krrprr of Graduate Rrrordf JOHN EDWARDS .4.r,ri.rla11t in tlzr Ladd Obferoalory LUCIUS JOSEPH GAY d.rJ1'.rtanl in Ihr Gymrzarium CHARLES HENRY HUGGINS Arriflant in the Gymrzafhmz 99 College 100 VVaterman Street Rhode Island Hall 303 Benefit Street 309 Broad Street 468 Hope Street 152 Congdon Street Bristol 2 University Hall 118 Cushing Street 118 Cushing Street 359 Brook Street 130 Adelaide Avenue G2 College Street 11 Brunonia Hall 7 Congdon Street 52 Alumni Avenue 63 Lloyd Avenue 11 Benefit Street 117 Howell Street S4 Waterman Street Oak Lawn Ladd Observatory 46 Daboll Street 100 Lancaster Street sy I it l .XX mln fi calnun N .XX . lla, . X f fa X llll ' ffl' i , Lair. X... W N' i 'I X , ll' ill. lv f if-As ill 'ip ' in i 2 -rj 1-' .59 .-f ii. as A' ii David Isaac Adelman l'1'r1z'idf11rr A.B. ilirown Universityj l9l'l. Economies, History, Political Science. Enrolled eandidate for A.M. lilton Mcrville Adye Forarlffillr, N. Y. Ph B Cliroivri Universityj l902. Physics. Registered candidate for A.M. Levon Nlanoog Aharonian flrmmzirz A.l!. tliuplirntcs Follege, Ilarpoot, Armenial. Chemistry, French. Registered candidate for A.M. Abel Alexus Ahlquist Ponliar A.I3. CAugustana Collefzvl H1035 B.D, CAugust:ma 'l'heological Seminaryj l909. Biblical Literztture. Reg candidate for A.M. RlCll2ll'tl Day Allcll I,r0'Uiflr1igf AJ3. Cllrown Univcrsityl 19105 A.M. 1912. Education, English. Registered candidate for Ph.D. Waldo Vanderbilt Andrews Pawl1M1cz't ' A.B. Cl3ates Collcgcj 191 I. Physics. Registered candidate for A.M. Samuel Tomlinson Arnold Corinna, Mr. A.B. flirown University? 1913: Sc.M. l9l4. Chemistry, Physics. Registered cxmrlirlate for Ph.lJ. Reuben Charles Bates Providrm'r Sc.B. Clihoclc Island State Vollegej l9l3. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Irving Thayer Boardman f 1,70Zlidt'7lt'L' AJ3. Cllrown Universityj l9l-l, Education. Greek, Mathematics. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Raymond Franklin Borden flle'lv1'llc Pl1.B. tlirown Universityj 19l'l. Mathematics, Physics, Mechanics. Enrolled candidate for A.M. lose li A. Butler Warren i 138. Clloly Cross Collegej l90li. liduczition. Registered candidate for A.M. Charles Carroll 1,f0'Uilll'lLL'L' A.ll, fllrown University! 18983 A.M. 19135 LL.l5. Cllarvard Universityj l90I. Education, Political and Science. Enrolled czmdirlate for Ph.D. llubcrt llayward Champncy Talmlovl, lllarf. Ph.I3. Clirown Universityj I9I-l-. Chemistry. Enrolled candidate for Se.M. Beniamin Crocker Clough 7'1'.fl11l1'y, .fl'l11,r,r. AB. Qllarvard Universityj l9l l. English. Registered candidate for A.M. Raymond Carpenter Colwell !0fL!!,fl0H, A.l3. Cllrown Universityj l9lClg Biology. Enrolled candidate for Sc.M. Percy Raymond Crosby A llf'1M'1'Ah'r'lf1, Jllzzfx. Se.l3. 1X1-w Ilampshire State Collegeb l9l2. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Cecil Merrie Putnam Cross Vl,7'0'Uidt'lICL' Ilistory, Education, Political Science. Enrolled c:mdulate for A.M. blames Laurence Cummings l Fall Rivrr, .'ll11,r,r. A.l3. tllrown Universityj 191-I. Education. Registered candidate for AAI. Clinton llarvcy Currier l'f0f'if1l'1ICf Plrll. Cllrown Universityj 18985 A.M. 1899. Mzithernatics, Astronomy. Enrolled eandidate for Ph.D. 100 istered Social NINE TEEN FIFTEEN Frederick Davis Montclair, N. j. Ph.B. CBrown Universityl 191-1. Social Science, Biblical Literature. Registered candidate for A.M. lrlerbert Franklin Davison l'awluclert Ph.B., A.M. fBrown Univcrsityj 1905. Chemistry, Physics. Registered candidate for l'h.IJ. blames Russell listy Slatcrrziillr Sc.B. Uirown Universityb 1914. Biology, Philosohpy. Enrolled candidate for Se.M. Ralph Beach Farnum Provirlrucf Sc.B. fBruwn Univcrsityj 1910. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Lewis Carter Flocken Pawzurlert ' A.B. CWesleyan Universityl 19123 A.M. 1139. Education, Latin, Greek. Registered camlidate for Ph.D. llcrbcrt lfllliott Foote Pawturlcrl Ph.B.. A.M. CBrown Universityj 191-l. Chemistry, Physics. Registered candidate for l'11.lJ. Marion Kenneth Forward Chicago, Ill. Ph.B. fBrown Universityj 191-1. English. Registered candidate for A.M. Paul Hart Francis l'rovidf'nrf Sc.B. CBrnwn Universityl 19125 M.S. 1913. Physics. Registered candid.tte for I'l1.D. Robert .laquith Fuller North rllllfbllffl, .lla,v.r. A.B. Clirown Universityl 1898. Education. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Carl B. Gibson l.ogrm.rport, Ind. A.B. QWahash Collegej 1914. Botany, Chemistry. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Sven Gustaf Hagglund Ivopidfnrfl A.B. fAugustana Collegej 19003 13.13. CAugustann Theological Seminary? 1904. Social Science. Biblical Litera- ture. Enrolled candidate for A.M. and registered candidate for Ph.D. Alfred Cary Hawkins l'lai1ifir1d, N. NI. Sc.B. CColumbia Universityl l909g A.M. CPrineeton Universityl 1912. Geology. Enrolled candidate for l'h.D. Nathaniel Orson Howard Conimicut Ph.B. CBrown Universityj 1903. Chemistry, Botany. Registered eandidate for A.M. Ralph Gibney Hurlin flutrim, N. ll. A.B. 1Brown Universityj 19123 A.M. 19121. Biology. Enrolled candidate for Ph.D. Arthur Burton Hussey ' Lnonzimlfr, A4lI.1'.l'. A.B. CBates Collegej 1914. Education, Physics. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Edwin William Johnson 1 awturl:fl A.B. CBowdoin Collegej 1909. Education. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Bernard Aloysius Keenan Pawluclcfl A.B., A.M. tBrown Universityj 1909. German, Romance Languages. Enrolled camlidatcfin' Ph.D. Lowell Clapp Kendrick Providence' Ph.B. llirown Universityl 19123 A.M. 1913. Biology. Engineering. Registered candidate for Ph.B. Chester Lewis Knowles 'Narraga11..rrl1 Pin' Ph.B. CBrown Universityj 1914. Chemistry. Enrolled candidate for Se.M. Karl Henry Koopman P1'0U1.d!7lL'6' A.B. CBrown Universityb 1913. English. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Benjamin Towne Leland Providence A.B. tHarvard Universityj 1906. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Benlamin Samuel Levine Rorkvillr, Ct. 'e.B. CTrinity Collegel 19123 M.S. CBrown Universityj 1913. Biology. Enrolled candidate for Ph.D. Ralgh Baker Low Errzx, Marr. h.B. CBrown Univcrsityl 1914. Education, History. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Harry Havelock Lowry Providrncf A.B. CBates Collcgej 19123 A.M. CBrown University? 1914. Education. Registered candidate for Ph.D. Francis Aloysius Mangan Pawtuckzl A.B. lBoston Collegej 1913. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Albert Pray Martin 'Pawtucket A.B. CBrown Universityb 19133 A.M. CUniversity of Wisconsin! 1914. German, English. Registered candidate for Ph.D. joseph Belfield Mclntyrc - Providenrr Ph.B. CBrown Univcrsityj 1894. Botany. Registered candidate for Se.M. Leland Scott McLeod La Grangr, Mo. Ph.B. tI.a Grange Collegel 1914. Education, Political Science. Romance Languages. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Percy Davol Meadcr l Providrnc: Ph.B. CBrnwn Universityl 1914. Biology, Botany. Enrolled candidate for A.M. 101 --4 LIBER BR UNENSIS --is Iesse Benton Mowry Chegaehet Sc.B. CNorwich Universityl 18925 A.M. 1913. Education, hilosophy, Botany. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Courtland Sawin Mudge Providence Ph.B. QBrown Univcrsityj 19115 A.M. 1912. Biology. Enrolled candidate for Ph.D. Ira Leston Nickerson johnxton A.B. CBrown Universityb 1907. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. james Francis O'Donoghue Lowell, Marr. Mathematics, Physics. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Robert Hardin Power Yunna, flriz. - . D D A.B. QBay1or Univcrsityj 1913: A.M. CBrown University! 1914. Social Science, Education. Registered candi date for Ph.D. Arthur Forest Ranger Providence - A.B. CBrown Universityj 1914. Education, English. Latin. Enrolled candidate for A-M. John H. Reilly North fldamf, Marr. A.B. CI-Ioiy Cross Co1legcJ 1913. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Arthur Leslie Reynolds Whkejield Sc.B. CRhode Island State Collegej 1913. Education. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Kenneth Stillman Rice Gloueefler, Marx. Ph.B. CBrown Univcrsityj 1913. Biology. Enrolled candidate for Sc.M. A James Everett Ricker Providence Sc.B. fBrown Universityj 1914. Chemistry, English. Registered candidate for Sc.M. Stephen Hendrix Rider Gilmer, Texa: A.B. 4Baylor Universityj 1914. Education. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Harry Edward Roelke Frederirk, Md. Ph.B. CBrown Universityj 1911. Social Science. Registered candidate for A.M. Warren Andrew Sherman Phenix A.B. CBrown Univcrsityj 1911. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Harold Everett Smiley Providence Ph.B. CBrown Universityh 19123 M.S. 1913. Biology. Enrolled candidate for Ph.D. George Hathorn Smith Meredith, N. II. ' A.B. CBates Collegej 1909: A.M. CBrown Universityb 1910. Biology. Enrolled candidate for Ph.D. John Lebroc Smith Auburn , Sc.B. CRhode Island State Collegeb 1908. Education. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Walter Henry Snell Brockton, Maxx. A.B. QBrown Universityj 1913. Botany. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Walter Hoff Sprague Somerxel, Marr. A.B. QBrown Universityj 1914. History, Political Science, English. Enrolled candidate for A.M. John Lovell Sperry Oak Lawn Sc.B. CBrown University? 191-1. Geology. Enrolled candidate for Sc.M. Henry Iennison Blakeley Stitt Pawtnrleet Ph.B. CBrown Universityj 1912. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Elias Charles Sydney Providenee Biology. Chemistry. Enrolled candidate for A.M. Jose h Willard Thomas . , Earl Douglaf, Maxx. XB. CWesleyan Universityj 1896. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Edward Howland Wardwell U New Canaan, Ci. Sc.B. CPrinceton Universityj 1911. Biology. Registered candidate for Ph.D. Carle O. Warren D Gorham, Me. A.B. CBowdoin Collegej 1912. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Lucius Albert 1fVhipJ7le Saylewille Sc.B. Cllhodc Islan State Collegej 1908. Education. Registered candidate for A.M. Alfred Howard Williamson Providenee A Ph.B. fBrown Universityj 1913. Education, History, English. Enrolled candidate for A.M. 102 ' 9 1 5 f - LIBER BR UNENSIS :+1 gF7TQ2E ZZ6ZJq 5-fifzzzsq ssmzffz SMZZZQEWQ 5 Q5 Q W QQ CLASS YELL Gs Q EE we N Ki-yi! Ki-of Ki-ya! 5 Br-un-on-ia gg? BRUNONIA- N R35 Rah! Rah! '15! '15! '15! Q P . QQ 95 W 2? V W Kawai:-,Q bgizzkla ffsicfagzzg Lfeidage-QYLAQ4 104 B do over 1nK rl' If 1' hcl ik to .1-u uf -1'a-- -- W 1 Musings of a Swede Q' 'E CLAUGHLIN, Much Big Sahib of the glorious class of 1915 and Ilmllllllllllllllfllllllll IITUIIIIIIIIIIIUHII :QZET m3 f'?ClJ :mg FD s- ,gen YD OE-:.93 C53 gbjli 209, 255' r-r:.C1 O32 9,55 Drug Om,-. PQCDED O3 CID.-DD :u-'SB 5250 sam D-4 OO 'h Fe? 2312 :ago 25? Elie 02' T523 25-'S :n0?::: Q55 U O53 3 2 WO: iid 0'-10 E were feverishly combing dandrulf out of their exquisite mustachios, 5 ''U Mildred Lagerbcer Taylor was scanning a Christian-Scientist Sunday-School Paper for Brown Jug humor, Van der Werken was standing on a table vociferously proclaiming the virtues of the clothes he bought in dear old Lunnonn, while Hap Meyers and the other three-quarters of the varsity Musical Four were shrieking out Roy Phillips' latest novelty dirge Qwords written by Irving Gumb and Red Campbellj entitled, I'd Shovel Coal for You in Hades. Of course Mac didn't feel peeved at these mild disturbances, but when Babington drifted by, towing a fish poolroom-wards, when Sherm Strong began to scrape plaster off the wall with his beard, when Ma West and Chubby Lamb started a game of leap-frog over Nicholas' feet, When, I say, these things began to happen, why then he snorted contemptuously only to close the portals of his eyes in feigned slumber as William Arthur Needham sauntered majestically into the room as suave and important looking as a Porto-Rican dog catcher. I Wonder , mused the old Windy City Squarehead to himself, how this class of 1915 was ever pulled together. Prexy's Scouts sure were well-wised when they scraped the bush-leagues for such phenomena as Bill Crolius, the Colorado Daffodil, and Oscar Brown, the dainty sprig of timothy from West Kingston, not to mention Shanghai Chen Chon Chen of the musical name, Nemo Harcourt, the once verdant native of Wappinger Falls, Apollo Kinne, that surprising combination of the uncultured engineer and king of fussers, and his fellow Countryman from the Holy City, Jack Lovetheladies Jenny, 105 LIBER BR UNENSIS -- whose fiery eloquence secured sweaters for 1915's unparallelled baseball nine. By heck, we could start a circus sideshow with Graham, the hlagician, Acro- bat Eddie Hinckes, Bearded Lady O'Donoghue, and Breckenridge, the vinegar- blooded sword swallower. Then, as a.fall guy for lonesome Pembrokers, our Eicke can put graceful Sydney and Cap Crowell of the tooth-powder ad smile, down for the count-in fact,he needn't even bow to foxy Winsor, curly haired Beau Brummel of Ifones Alley, or Frost that devilishly handsome Fall River Highbrow. Dana Hubbard's a good chap, though it's hard to forgive him for his thoughtless editorials in the daily journalistic outrage, in which he has been aided by that rosy-cheecked rascal Edinger. Acting on the advice of Spike Staff and his football philosophy, It makes no difference what you do, it's just how far you go,i' Ismar Baruch Baruch has wasted four years on books and the erstwhile President of the Newport A. C., Doctor Langley, has learned enough English poetry to be refused a life-job as Federal League Umpire. The track team has appreciated the gallant, noble edorts of Larry Hall and Waterman, Batty Stansbury is still able to snort con- temptuously at a thousand knockers,and the Sock and Buskin has had at least one actress since Sammy Rogers was enticed to Brown instead of Bryn Mawr. A decidely intellectual atmosphere has pervaded the wrestling room since Bliven elucidated the psychological aspect of that popular parlor amusement. Eddie Horrigan has hung around here a few extra years so as to graduate with us. Beehan stacked enough brains with his nerve to land the Chancellorlof the Exchequeris job, and Billy Sheffield is still laughing over the old psy- chology joke, Why does Professor Delabarre resemble Tom Sharkey? Then, after all is said and done, we can't help wondering how dignified Pop Kingsley would seem if he were two feet taller. Wefll never forget good old Ted Chandler, the Hindu halfbackg we hope that Vic Hayward, Shirley Culver, and the other silent members of the class will make more noise in the world than they did here at college-yes, and let's pray that the Y. M. C. A. won't collapse when Hartwell Greene, Bill Paine Sheffleld, Jr., and Call-Me- Papa Cross slide out of Brownf, This last thought so discommoded the worthy Class President that he jumped from his chair unwittingly. Sammy Watson was cheerfully munching a chunk of the plaster which Strong had dug from the wall, Shaphat Tucker was trying to tell Eddie Walsh that the Rathskeller was a Bowling Alley, and Ab- bott had fainted over a joke in an 1866 East Greenwich Gazette. '4Ugh! yelled McLaughlin and then he quickly made another bluff at sleeping as McCrone dashed in upon him, seeking a purchaser for his ten-cents-per-each Snapshots. 106 H t . ' N ,fiat ' 1 t- V - . . :' A ui A . f?l't't7. . ' I .- ' 5 I - :fix ,'1B..1- if u . 7 .A -1 A ,. '.5: '7 .lefty- 5:2l.! A v . Y. iff, fr. 11' f i-'gf kv--G FI., : V 2 vt 0541 . V-.Q , ' 'gg , ,nf 'si '. ' .' ' I wa s ', i, f -- ,.,4'g. .' V 5-I-ss f I .. ' 536 'NP' ' 55 I- ' '. . - 1 .1 f .V 1,13 4 , f,., ' V, . ,, , .sy . , U., 6. - V G V ,Lp 'J L 1 A - . A-. -4 ' 1' ' ' I s -'qt' ,g.-. - , I ,ii .V 1. fr., at fs - ,..,t n l G V :. .' -.t:Q:.',.'.,4. - ,N .1 : -1, K A ,va .lg- , , , .. - -. 1 t.. 7- rs.. Wi ls I l Officers ROWLAND HAZARD MCLAUGHLIN .,........... MACDONALD LOW EDINGISR ...,.... . . . . . . . . . . . .1'rc:1'dfnl . . . , . . . . . l'1cf-1're.r1dm11 CHARLES STUART PI-IIELPS. ..... . . . Svvmul l icf-l'rfxir1z-111 DANA MORTIMER HUBBARD. . . ...........,.. S4-crrmry WILLIAM EMMET BEICHAN .... ............ . . . 7'1'm,vurn' cms Yell ' Ki-yi! Ki-ol Ki-ya! Br-un-on-ia BRUNONIA AIOIAIN BLAIR Al3l3O'I I' St. Louis, Mo. A A fl' 'flonniel' Apple Commencement Marshal Cljg Ass- istant Swimming Manager C2Dg Manager C4-jg Secretary Junior Week Committee C355 Athletic Board C355 Chairman C-U5 Chair- man Senior Ball Committee C4j. ICDGAR ALLEN Cranston, R. I. fb I' A lid Class Football Cljg Musical Clubs CZD, C3j, C413 Class Swimming Clj, CZJ. Rah! Rah '15! '1,Sl 'ISI lt would hardly do to call .lonnie a drop of water, but that's neither here nor there. Outside of his stlsceptahility to female wiles it is doubtful if you can lind a more agreeable, gentlemanly, generous soul among all our il- lustrious class. And he's got the old ability, too: it wasn't .lonnie's fault that the best little swimming schedule this college has seen in a long time didn't turn out better. Whether it be a formal address before the C. and C. on the Inlluent'e of the Restoration of the Seven- teenth Century Novel or a delicate rendition of one of his original ditties, you will always he impressed by his charm of manner and his personal magnetism. lle's the kind of fellow who won't forget his friends in the l'iast when he becomes the head of the Missouri bar. If you could see I-Id taking in the metallic superlluities of the leisure class during the sum- mer months along the North shore, you would not be surprised that he Could enjoy the lux- ury of the Union Poolroom oll' and on. l'id is some pool player, let us state. Once he played a I0llI'llilI11CIlI game with liabington that took exactly 5 hours and 42 minutes by NVhitte- llltlI'ClS patented stop watchg and he won the game too, In fact this illustrates perhaps as well as anything you could name, friend, the quality which Ifd possesses above every- thing else, that is, grit. Along with his iron will, his masterful control of every situation, goes about as warm a heart as ever beat under a llannel shirt.. V LIBER BR UNENSIS Sl'IWl'Il,l, WOOIJBICRRY ALLISON Rehoboth, Mass. AX.X Allie Iunior Week Committee Gig liiber A Board GJ C-lj. .'Xl.l Rl'il3 WY.'Yl l' .vXN'l'llONY l,ewiston, Kle. A T Annie, l5oslqo College Orchestra flj KZJ f3J. ClliXRl.l'iS l'l'iRCY li.Xl5lNG'l'ON Cranston, R. l. Dinlts,', Bah Varsity Baseball Squad Clj f2Jg Var- sity Baseball OJ fsljg Class Baseball 423. .xtwtsititt t-puu. ta,xaN.x1m Providence, R. l. ' 4' it my A lx l. ilrt ilec Club UQ. By heels, who left the door open? Allie was deported from Rehoboth by the.'Xmeriean Con- sul in the year tot: because he would walk up and down the village streets on Sunday after- noons in tan shoes. Back on the farm in thc early days, he acquired the patience and ten- acity that has made him most conspicuous during his residence among us, by lliclcing fleas with the one hand from the ancestral eow as he squeezed with the other the tnelo- dious stream into the foaming pail. At Brown Al has always been a man that could he depended npon. VVhen he returns to Rehoboth in Alune. there will doubtless be feasting and harmless revelry upon the village green. ln the list of this youths's college honors should appear l irst Prize for Dropping llags of W'ater fjgl, for it was flirting with an nnexs pected hath to pass beneath his window in llope during his .lunior year. Usually he is a qnict unassuming, hard working youngster but that year he was rooming with Rube Cram. Anothcrinstanee of Cherehez la femme. lie- sides knowing what's what among the dit'- ferent shows on the wheel, he can tell you the make and model of any car that browses along Waterman Street and anything else that yon want to know about alternating currents. Some electrical engineering lirm is going to be lueky enough to get him for its consulting ex- pert as soon as he gets his sheepskin. It isn't generally known around college that Dinks was not very well satisfied with the name he originally had wished on hitn--l'vrt'y Charles- but this is a fact. lle petitioned the Legislature and now basks under the rougher eognomen of Charles l'. Dinks is the eue expert ofthe college. With the exception of this last year he has currieulated most of the time in the pool room. and the funny thing about it is that he's about as good a student as they make. l or a man who does the least atnount of bon- ing, he gets about the best marks of anyone on the faculty list. llis next greatestjoy in col- lege has been secured front nonehalantlr holding down the hot corner for llarri' l'attee's ball tossers. l,et's hope he lands iii an Al league when he leaves Brown. You could tell by the most cursory glance at the portrait at our left why Art gets along so well with the fair ones. lle admits, moreover, that his really bad habits are fusstng and erahbing . but the hissing cutiies lirst on his l,iber slip. As for the latter l am sure he never wounded anyone, very deeply, at least, with any of his invective. 'l'he fact is, reader. Art is about as quiet. ttn- assuming and inoflensive as a large, fat pussy eat in an old maid's family after a full meal. Down to the ll. K. lf. house they say he spends nnteh of his time in deep meditation upon eugenics and the lfnropean War. llut tt is certain that when it comes to loyalty to the college and to the class, Art is right there with the old pep. After june he will chase the gold pieces arountl the blocks of business. g NINETEEN FIFTEEN ISNIAR ISARUCH New l.ondon, Conn. Barker. Class Debating 'l'eam C115 HiCliS Prize Debate C11 C215 Alternate, Varsity Debatingleam C316-115 Car- penter ltiloeutiou Contest C315 De- bating Union C11 C21 C31 C415 See- terary C415 blames Manning Scholar- ship C21 C31 C415 l riend's Scholar- ship C315 William Gaston Scholar- ship C415 Second Prize 1880 Essay C31 C415 l irst Prize 1880 Discus- sion C41. Wll.l.l1XM liiMMl'l'l l' Bl'il'il'lAN Providence, R. l. ill K Bill Class Baseball C215 Junior Prom Com- mittee C315 junior Cruise Comput- tee C315 Cheer l.eader C4157 Pele- bration Committee C415 Class l reas- urer C41. S.fXN'lUlfil. BlCN.I1XMlN Providence, R. l. Benny R.'Xl.Pll LEON l3l,ANCllfXRD Pittsfield, Maine l5untyl Sphinx C31, C415 yVastebasket, C415 Secretary C415 Second llartshorn Premium in Mathg Second Entrance Premium in l reneh5 blames lWann- ingSeholarship C21 C315 lirancis Way- land Scholarship C415 Brunonian Board C315 l.iterary liditor C415 Phi Beta Kappa C31. 109 lf lsmar is a bit of Gaelic slang meaning lionehead. rest assured that this tiny lad de- serves not the sobriquet. Barker has suf- fered the ignominy attached to three years' residence in Maxcy and has also squandered many diamond hours in plugging. While madly pursuing scholastic honors, he has found time, however, to do more than a little debating and has taken eleven hundred and three snapshots of Saxton and Rosenberg. lf he doesn't go to the dogs this summer, some prep school will undoubtedly engage him to in- flict mathematics on defenceless youngsters. A good chap without a doubt and one who de- serves the success he will surely win. Clear the decksl Wave the flagll lvfy name is lieehanfyes, Boss Beehan. l'm not bash- ful a bit, and if you don't like my venomous appetite in the seventy-three suits that l've bought since toll, you eau go and bury your- self in a bucket of onions. Acting as the watch dog of the Senior cashbox and squeezing yells out of the cheering section habitues at Andrews Field have not disturbed my popu- larity or equanimity. I sleep peacefully every night in Scotch-plaid, minstrel-man pajamas, and if you want to razz me without getting a come-back, you will have to talk to your- self . All right, limmett, you'll do. We're wid yez all the time. And we know you will get your reward. So long. 'l'here's one thing you can't get away from, boys and winnnen, this Benny person is right there with the wallop. Not very long ago, says Prof. Gardiner, this lad nearly broke up the lfconomics class with some of his social- istic clatter. You should have heard the bundle of words slip soapily from his pearly teeth--words of the profoundest wisdom, too. llaven't you ever seen him about the campus, this man with the Kaufman derby shut down over his head, balmaeaans flapping in the breeze? Benny has waded through twenty courses in three years and has still found to keep Sidney from the lure of the pace that kills. Watch him put Carl Marx in the shadel Ralph had the air of a student until this year when he fell in love with a Child's res- taurant waitress and went to the dogs. Still we havcn't lost our respect for him yet. ln spite of the fact he's been a confounded shark ever since he has been here Cuntil this year1 he finds time now and then to discuss with his friends some of the more seedy things of life. 'I'o be sure he gives you the impression of old aristocracy when you are in his presence, but don't be alarmed, don't be misled, the murder will out if you wait long enough. 'l'o use a homely but effectual proverb. Ralph is as straight asa string. Our best wish is, liunty. that your wedded life may be as quiet, sweet and happy as is your disposition. - LIBER BR UNENSIS HARRISON 'BLISS Providence, R. l. Xl' T l'looley', Junior Prom Committee Gl'iORGl'i l Rl'fl'iKlON'1' Bl.lVl'IN Providence, R. l. 0 A X liliventZ', XVastebasket QD 13, C-l-lg 'l'I'CZlSlll'Cl' C-ljg Brunonian C22 C31 C-Og Sock and lfvuskin QZD Q31 C-1-lg Glee Club C1Jg1'hi Beta Kappa Q3Jg WVrestling Chllg Francis NVayland Scholarship C17 C39- EARI. ALLWOOD BOWEN Providence, R. I. E X Whoop-la' JOSEPH BROWN BOWEN Pawtucket, R. I. HJOCQS l . l'rovidcnce is responsible for Hooley or 'l'eter as he is best known to tlmse of his classmates who know him. After being nursed at prep school, he came to Brown where he he has the distinction of being the only man in the class to have his skull fractured and get away with it. NVe've got to hand it to you l'eter',, for it certainly looked at one time as though you would not be with us this year. lYho was it, the doctors or the nurses that pulled you through? We don't know, but we have our suspicions. WVe can't publish your last request, Hooley but believe us we are all back of you, and hope that it will be soon. NYC know that you will make good in whatever you take up. so go to it. George always gives you the impression that he has a still' neck. One day hc saw a great man walking around the campus with his head cocked on one side and ever since lili- venz has done the same. Morally speaking he is an enigma. Certain it is. anyway, that there are quite :1 numher of little girls around here who lust dote on his carefully cultivated pompadour and call him the best little lover that ever hoeked a Phi Bela Kap ia key to buy the drinks tlemon and lime. George is distinctively individualistic, not to say intel- lectually diagnotie. I-lis middle name is hard work and he has stubborn grit enough to get out plenty of it. He will make a rattling good undertaker, when he gets out of college. Primarily, my children, Earl is a thinker, a deep thinker, in fact. ,lust start an argument with him some time and he will sit up half the night trying to convince you. Unless you start the argument, however, he will maintain a grave silence enlivened only now and then by his kindly smile or at very rare intervals by his deliciously mellow laugh. ln spite of the fact he is handicapped by his middle name, he is really a very human individual. fl'd rather be all wood than all Il number of things you might mention, now hadn't youil Having taken all the education courses the university has to offer l'iarlie will now endeavor to com- bine practice with theory. May success at- tend your ellorts and prosperity be your bride! Yea, mmn, this is our joe. llc is the of' licial shadow, eonlidential advisor and buz- xum friend of his cousin liarlie, but when it comes to having the right dope you've got to hand it to him. There certainly is too lnuch sticking around oue's own fraternity house and Aloe isn't the only one that says so. Prob ahly no one in college realizes the moral sup port the daguerreotype over opposite has given our undergraduate institutions. I-le hinisel, admits his greatest fault is a tendency to play the role of spectatorg but it's a pretty safe het, boys, that if there weren't any spec- tators there wouldn't be any show, so there you are again. After a crack at some forestry school, joe will start in spraying treesg then you below had better watch out. --- NINE TEEN FIFTEEN JOHN HANSON BOWER Nlethtten, hflass. fb li Xl' 'flackv FRANCIS CHAPIN BRHCKIIINRIDGIL Providence, R. 1. Breck WILBUR TOBIAS BRFICKENRIDGIQ Providence, R. l. il'1'Oby,5 XR ANTHONY BROWN kVest Kingston, R. l. K E Smudge-Out Brownu lluring Jack's stay at Brown he has been most impressed by the fact that the facultv were not present at chapel the morning of the Belgian Relief Fund Collection. fjust be- tween you and me, jack, did you ever see tltctn present U iVhen he says the Liber is the best thing that is published at Brown we might add that he is undoubtedly correct.. .I ack, first, of a' , is essentially a gent- leman. lle is so extremely courteous that you feel like backing out of a room when he is pres- ent. He is, likewise, a very modest, likeable chap and should make an impression when he starts teaching his kindergarten, While we are on the subject we might add t.hat while .lack hasn't caused any tidal wave. such in- fluence as he has exerted, like restraining the frivolotts lfidinger, etc., has been greatly apprec- iated hy the college in general who will doubt- less cannonixe him for his service as the years roll on. lf we remember correctly, Francis was ex- traclitecl to tts from tlte Providence Classical School School four years ago and immediately began to do light housekeeping in Slater Hall. Then began his career. As a camp follower of class meetings, he at once became conspic- uous, his knowledge of parliamentary proce- dure becoming soon a hallling mystery to cven the most sophisticated. Though dilliering from every one, lireck manages to keep his dis- gust to himself and bestows a gracious nod upon everyone he meets. Were it not for his celebrated indecency in private life, he would certainly have the approbation of tlte crowd. As it is, his charity, honesty, and sincerity commend him to even the most scrupulously inclined. What a school teacher hc will makel Fascinating man, how can I write you up! Oh noble Muse, who prompted singers long ago, inspire me to do justice to yon alluring soul.-Toby broke into tlte public gaze by his attentions to the wimmen folks. Most any brillig morning you'll see this sttave person- ality, with his green bag tlnder one arm and :t bit of femininity under the other, directing his steps toward our fair State Normal School. When not making Sunday evening calls, lireck has fooled around with an engineering course as if higher mathematics were so much liquor to his thirsty soul. As soon as he gets a half- nelson on that degree. why then he'll be ready to tackle a real job: and he ought to make good. He will be the father of a large and happy family. Wall VVall By cracky! Four years ago Oscar heard about the Brownses stewdent who used to tend President Manning's cow. Straight- way he dove into his Sunday shoes and cltnnb into the train from YVest liingston to see if Prexy Faunce could ttse a first-class tnilk-tnaid. Upon learning that our President does not bother with the pastoral stufli, Oscar buried his overalls and settled down to study a bit. Along in his junior year the Muse of literature began to tickle hitn under the chin, rattle up his cerebellum, and play upon his spareribs, the net result heing a series of masterly sketches for tlte lirunonian, written in true, villainous, Brownesque style. Now heis go- ing hack to the South County to stupefy the natives. A serious-minded youth with enough animation to be likeable. - LIBER BR UNENSIS SILXRON USBORN BROWN Providence, R. l. Sitting Wastebaslcet C21C31C-l15 President C415 Brunonian C21 C31 C-l-15 Brown Study C315 ltiditor-in-Chief C-L15 Sphinx C31 C41- Secretary C-l-15 President Cercle lfrzincais C315 Dunn Premium C315 Class Odist C-l1. RAY LAWRl'iNCl'i BURNICLL Portland, Kle. A K lti Bunny Class Banquet Committee C115 Class Baseball Cl15 Class Basketball C11 C21 C315 Class Football C11 C215 Second Football 'l'eam C11 C21 C31 C415 Liber Board C31 C-l-15 Business Xlanager l'ilect C41. WiXl.'l'l'1R RUSSELL BURNIIANI Central Falls, R. l. 22 X Hamburg Glee Clttb C11 C21 C31 C415 Secretary and 'l'reasurer of Cercle liracais C215 Liber Board C31 C415 Managing ltiditor WILLIANI RUSSICLL BURWICLL Providence, R. l. Zlll Russ Second President's Premium in Latin C115 Class 'l'raek 'l'eam C115 Com- mencement Marshal C115 Albert llarlcness Scholarship C215 'l'hird Prize, Carpenter Prize Contest C215 Captain Class Debating 'l'eam C215 Class of 1338 Scholarship C315 lfrancis W'aylancl Scholarship C315 Varsity 'l'rack 'l'eam Cl1 C21 C315 Xlusical Clubs C11 C21 C315 Nlando- lin Quartette C215 Sock and Busltin Cl1 C21 C31 C415 Cast in l arce C115 Cast C315 Liber Board C31 C415 Secre- tary, lnter-Fraternity Council C-l-15 George lde Chase Scholarship C415 Sphinx Club C415 Cammarian Club C41- 2 Sharon's susceptibility to emotional spasms, though disproportionate at times to his etnotion- al stimulus, mal-te him an interesting figure. lle made a speech in chapel one morning and awoke the next to find himself famous. llis speech was about the llrunmtfrln, the thing he made over to a thing of promise until it nearly died on his hands. Good old Shring is the man who is responsible for the existence on the l'lill of that well known lslarvardian sport of tea-drinking. Drop around most any winter night to his retreat in old U. H. and you may have your choice of tea with cream or tea with lemon: and as you sip the delectitiotts beverage before the blazing log wood fire, you may have an opportunity to listen to his harmless chat- ter plentifully interspersed with Hers. lf Butmy were a little larger, he'd be one of best all around athletes this college ever had. its it is, he's a pretty heady little gamester, hav- ing played on about every class team the Uni- versity has to offer, not to mention those it does not. If we muld crochet, what a tale we could weave of his exploits among the city's fair friends, of his conquests be ond enmner- ation of childish hearts, The fact is. Bunny has himself the warmest of hearts and the girls go crazy, they say, over ai man with a warm heart. Generous, keen, courteous to a fault, he ought to be a valuable man for a valuable itrlt. Gaze upon this radiance and he damned. Bill has one great distinction, he will be the last man to tester the life out of the ltiditor of thel.iber. Wlhen he getetoutof college he is go- ing to write a book entitled the Rise and l all of Managing Editors front the Beginning to the Sad. Sad End. But you've got to go kind of easy on Bill: few men around here know what he does when not. attending classes. Go out to that famous watering place, Cent- ral l alls, some night, and you will see hitn in all his primeval glory teaching the children of the idle rich the rudiments of the three R's. A hard worker-when he gets going- and at all times aglow with the joy of living, is Bill. Look at that string of honors, and yet if it did not speak for itself you wouldn't know Russ at all,--unless you happened to be one of his more intimate friends. The fact is, Russ is modesty personified. He is not one of these individuals who will admit, before the argu- ment even starts, thathe isa pretty wise gavabo. l or this reason the college has come to trust Russ: it has faith in his sincerity because it has a knowledge of his worth. He is an all rotmd man,--athlete, student actor, musician, friend, lle was never known to knock and his spirit is indefatigahle. But say, Russ, don't. you think you've studied about enough? Why don't you lay oll' the stull' for a while after june? NINETEEN FIFTEEN l'il3WARD RAYMOND CAMPBlil.l. Putney, Vt. fb I' A Red Second 'l'eam Football UD C-ljg Class Baseball CID C2jg Class Basketball CID QD. LICONARD BROWN CAMPBICLI. l Providence, R. l. TI X Soup,' Boob Class Football Cljg Alunior Week Com- mittee jOllN RUDOLPH CARLSON Roslinclale, Mass. A 'I' A jack Class Social Committee CllgChair- man of Pipe Committee 'I'l l ICODORE CHANDI.l'I R Auburndale, Mass. A T mllctln Sophomore Ball Committee f2jg 'l'en- nis 'l'eztm QZJQ Varsity Football Team l'iddie's career has taken almost as many turns and twists as he has nick names. And that means something when you consider that lte is known by sttclt choice sobriquets as Red. Rusty, liddie-Old-'l'op, and many others. lf you want to know what's going on at Brown, ask ltint about it, for he is the regttlar little man about town ofthe class. lie claitus that lte was innocent ofa single attempt at stttdy ttntil he struck lfnglish 33 in his Senior year and he Q wasnlt to blame forit tlten. Up among theiireen lVlountains he is sotne cttt up. but in the big city he leads tlte simple life, or at least he has since totg adopted him. l'iveryone likes Red and if yott see a fellow pass ltim on lite campus without speaking, you'll know that he hasn't paid his board at tlte Union for the last two or three weeks. Soup is not related to tlte originator of the twenty-one varieties, bttt like tltat worthy per- sonage he claims to have twenty-one dillerent excuses to get around tlte dillicult angles be- setting the path of the college student. With his curly hair and cheeks that grow red with- out warning, he has been found very accept- ahle to the ladies, but not ttntil his Senior year did he deign attend a Pembroke dance. lle mromises to keep all future Brown Campbells from committing a similar error. Soup does not know what he intends to do after college days are over. httt the great variety of subjects he has taken enable us to recommend him as an all round handy man. Alter looking at jack. we have quite a little respect for the kind of men Roslindale sends out to struggle with the wot'ld. .lack has two qualities that few ownga bean for engineer- ing and the ability to act ltulnauly sociable. Wltenever subtle mathematical tortures pro- duce little impression on his mellow intellect, he buckles on a boiled shirt and ducks over to the Churchill House or down to l ay's hall. When he craves real excitement on Sunday afternoons, he limps down Watertuan Street and watches tlte electric cars shoot through the tunnel. Then on week-ends he tnttst have his little trip to Boston University. After .lime he intends to revolutionize the steel in- dustry and accumulate a hoard that will make Carnegie tremble. Then, like all the steel mag- nates, he will cop oil' the best looking wull' on the market. Go to, jack, my boy. l ar from tlte maddening crowd, in tlte foot- hills of India, tlte Hindu moon first gazed spell- bound on yon cherubic countenance. Ted, alias tlte Hindu Halfbaek, came into his own when he sailed up the Cltarles River to Newton where he became the john Drew and Charley Brickley of Newton dramatics and football, res ectively. Then there was some doubt. It looked like Amherst or possibly going to work, but Ted linally came to Brown, to dabble in mustacltes, football, finance, and fulgcnt fem- ininity. If lte had begun to study earlier, there's no telling how nonchanantly lte would be wearing a key by this time. Ted has had a pretty good time during ltis four years and has done much that ltas been worth while and that's what he will probably continue to do. LIBER BRUNENSIS - CHEN CHONG CIIICN Shanghai, China. Pincher CHARLES MYRON CLEGG Youngstown, Ohio. A A 'lv HCleggie', Class Pipe Committee C215 College Orchestra C11 C315 Sock and Bus- kin C21 C31 C-l-1g Glee Club C11 C21 C31 C415 Quartet C4-1, Mandolin Club C21 C31 C415 Leader C41. SIDNICY CLIFFORD Providence, R. I. A fb Sal Sock and liuskin C11 C21 C31g Class Debating Team C115 Herald Board C11 C21 C315 lvlZ1lIZlgCl' Brown Hand Book C215 Second Prize 1880 Dis- cussion C21g Ass't: Manager Gym Team C215 Second Debating Team C21g Sphinx C315 First Prize 1880 Iifssay C315 Senior Ball Committee C31- ROWLAND ICDISS COPELAND Roxbury, M ass. A 'I' A Cope', Cap Celebration Committee C115 Glec Club C11 C21. Well, Pincher, how do you like us? Don't you ever get homesick when Prexy talks of China? Don't you evcr feel funny when they get together over there in the Volunteer Band and start in crabbing your fellow count- rymen? As a matter of fact, Pincher is too broad a .soul to he very much impressed by tlwsc tllllliw. Whenever he gets home-sick all he has to do is to go down city with Shiang- l'uan Fay and eat Chop sney in Mr. Chin Lee's. XVhenever he feels funny when Cese Cross or linlia Gallop begin crabhing his compatriots, all he has to do is smile, shrug his shoulders, you know, just like that and they forget all about it. Our best hope is, Pinchcr, that youve not found ns such a bad lot and that when you get tired of studying around here, you'll go hack across the water and tind some nice little cherry blossom to make you happy tn your old age. One evening a year ago, when Myrcmn was on the stage at the Colonial Theatre, some denccdly clever educated low-brow in the shutes threw a spitball consisting of a bag of llour at him, mussing his hair quite a bit. Of course Cleggie appreciated the little joke very much, having a poetical sense of humour himself. This sense ot' humour expresses itself at all times on his most expressive face whether he be diddling the tnanclola, scraping second fiddle in our orchestra, or yoddling for the glee club quartette. Of his had habits he simply says, you know -which you should hear Charlie say to understand it fully. Isle has upheld the honor of the college at manya'l'he Dansant and for that reason we forgive him his you know.' He leaves Brown in june to become a soda Clerk in one of the Youngs- town drug stores. For years Sid looked with mingled regret and env on the class of 1015, then unwilling to be identified any longer with other than brilliant men, he burst his bonds and became a Senior in three years, Look at what he has done in college and you'll see that he hasn't been a parasite here: and he's done more than the appended list would indicate. It's impos- sible to find out his bad habits. At the Delta Phi house they swear he hasn't any because he lives in Providence, for you can't get away with anything when you K0 U1 College ill YUUT home town. Conlidentially, he wouldn't have any if he had gone a thousand miles awayg in fact, there'a so little you can really crab him about that it's hard work to write his history here. Unollicially, he intends to study law: and if you want to play it safe, don'l let anyone hire him to convict you. Chawmed, I'm snref' Ile happened Cof course,1 twenty-four years ago up in Roxbury and sat around on the rox until he developed some very red cheeks. 'l'hen he eloped on a milk train to Providence where he has been hanging around with ,lack Carlson, and l'li Draulics ever since. At those critical mo- ments which come in the lives of all great men, he will light his fatima and become implicated with Curt l ield in a premeditated fussing party. Good-tempered, easy-going, hut genllemanly, he has made many friends at lirown. W'hen he returns to the native hearth, he will be feted by the entire debutante population. Cifiext time. you drop around to li. U., Cope, just mention my name. llard luckl1 -- '- ' NINE TEEN EIFTEEN -- EDWARD JOIIN CORCORAN Newport, R. I. Eddie Cross-Country Team RALPH WALDO CRAM lXfIelrose, Nlass. A T Rube Varsity Baseball Q21 Q31 Q-113 Glee Club Q31g Class Social Committee Q31g Cammarian Club Q-415 Secre- tary C and C Club Q41g Second Vice-President Ql1g Viee-Pres- ident of Union Q31g Class Basket- ball Q21 Q31g 'l'reasurer Senior Ball Committee FRANK Bl1iNNE'l l,' CROCKICR Le Roy, N. Y. fb A 0 Crock WILLIAM CLINTON CROLIUS, -lr. Denver, Col. A fb 'fliilli' I oam,' Varsity Swimming Squad Q11 Q21 Q31 Q41g Class Swimming Team Q11 Q21 Q31 C415 Sock and Huskin Q11 Q21 Q31 Q-11g Junior Week Committee Q31g Class Day Committee Q-l1g 150th Anniversary Play Q-l-1. Eddie has done many notable things nn- mentioned among his college honors, He has roonted in the attic of Caswell, scampered about' the cross-country course in a suit of summer underwear, and last Saturday he wiuked at a fat Pentbroker in the john Ilay Library. In spite of all this, he is equipped with all the tinesse and nobility of character which characterize his fellow Newporters, llaire and Nolan. If he were not of such a re- .tiring disposition, I ant eonlident that his curly hair, mirthful chuckle. and piano- tickling ability would win him lots of friends. Be that as it may, we'll leave the man with his Schumann, Shakespeare and solitaire, and trust that he will make somebody'sIireside a cheery place during the long winter months. Remember cross country and constitutional history, lfddie? Those were the happy daysl There is something fascinatingly picaresqne about Rubeyg about his melodious voice, his absolutely Correct form at dansants, and his iirst class ability to toe the rubber and pitch the pill. But no mere recital of such externals can give you an adequate conception of his true personality. I would call him a bon vi- TYHII, but even the immortal Pickwick would envy his vivacityg I might call him a savoir, for he has had profs eating out of his hands: I will call him one of the bestlittle protagonists there has been for a long time. When Con- nie Mae, Stallings and the Feds get through wrangling over him, he will once again play the role of host, though it will probably not be in his C. an C, Club eapaeity. lfixeelsior, cried this dark eyed don as he said the maternal farewell and beat it for Brown. And he has been crying it ever since to more or less purpose. Crock is essentially a savoir: you can tell this by looking at him. but you would become certain beyond hope if you should ever talk with him. He is a firm be- liever in that line old adage it is better to be seen than heard. Quiet on the whole but extremely energetic when it counts, he will enter the ranks of business next fall. lint. Crock, who ever heard of business in LeRoy! Look me square in der nose, Abie, und esk me, dot's a hendsomc feller. This is the only Hebrew-Celtie-American in captivityr- American hy birth, Celtic by force of natural wit and Hebrew by acquired dialect. It was born twenty-four years ago and is now six feet and two inches old. When it came to us it was the freshest young Lochinvar that ever came out of the WVest', but on graduation we shall present it with a de luxe copy of Lives of Great Men as a prize for greatest im- provement, for it leaves these classic halls as one of the best reg'lar fellers in the bunch. After graduation it intends to sleep a little and work a little but you shell believe me, Milton, dot' feller must got to eat once in a while occasionally. Such a eppitite he's got it, you eouldn't believe, und a taste for wines. liquors, tehampanyer wine und seegars like a No. I Choruser lady. Yal L113ER BR UNENSIS Cl'iCll. XHCRNIC l'Ul'Nl.-XX CROSS l'rovidenee, R. l. A 'l' A Cese', X. ond 'l'eam l oothall C33 C435 llerald Board Cl3 C23 C33 C435 Secretary and 'l'reastu'er li. C. A. C235 Vice- President C335 Cahinet l5.C. A. C23 C33 C435 Class 'l'reasurer C235 Sec- ond Vice-President of Class C335 Class Prophet C435 Class Relay Team C13 C23 C33 C435 Sphinx Cluh C33 C435 Sock and liuskin CI3 C23 C33 C435 l arce C435 Camntarian Cltth C-13. NllNO'l' .IOY CROWl'Il.l. Melrose, Mass. .A 'T' Cap Varsity liasehall C23 C33 C435 Secre- tary Senior Ball Cotnntittee C43. SHlRl.lf1Y l'IVERl'1'l 1' CUl,VlCR Attleboro, Mass. fb KW f'Shirt Sophomore Baseball Team C235 jun- ior NVeelc Committee C335 Senior Ball Committee C-l3. PAUL OLIVER CURTIS Dorchester Center, Aflass. 0 A X l'. O. Reciprocity'l l'ollanaris Freslmtzut Football 'l'eam C135 Cap and Gown Committee C335 Senior Social Committee C435 'l'reasttrer Class Day Comtnittec C435 Senior Ball Committee C435 'l'reasurer C and C Cltth. arsity 'l't'ack 'l'eam CI3 C23 C335 See- 116 llts adtntrahle comedy is the delight of all who know him. Yet Ceeil's humour is of the facile type: it never overllows. ln other words, he is a pattern of natural education and simple virtue. When it comes to hard work, you'Il have to hand it to old C. M. l'. no matter he it on the cinder path or in hehalf of the Brown Christian Association. By dint of lahour he has in all cases achieved most cotu- tnendahle results. ln the field of ethics he is ahsolntelv non-pareilg his honesty, pur- pose, and industry are shown in the composite in tlte aecotnpztuying illustration ahout :ts well as they can he done hy the most modern print- ing processes. As for his popularity with his fellows, look at tlte numher of otlices he has heett elected to, Down tlte rat hole. Ct-se. llipe us and know why they call lioston a fnhurh ol Melrose. 'l'hough known in various communities hy such choice epithets as lirotvn's Big Blond 'l'wirler, or the ldol of the Rumford l aus, Cap's hest claim todistinc- lion is as the man who came hack. Oll tlte diamond lte is supposed to knou' tlte history of every rock in the state, and tve're not saying he tloesn't either. lint he knows a lot tnore than this if his various week end trips have meant anything at all. liig-hearted and sound, Cap has the wishes of the mass. lle is hound to make friends everywhere he got-s,for who can resist his irresistahle laughl Shirley's domicile is among the Attlehoros, just across the Rhode Island horder. Als though he came to Brown with a reputaion for leading a quiet life, his Senior year has found him a veritahle hutterfly. Yet with all ltis lack of attention to study, Shirley has heen pull- ing straight A's consistently and has high hopes of hecoming the possessorof a Phi Beta Kappa key. liilly Mac's Constitutional History and the course in lfnglish Novel have proved the hane of his existence at Brown. llis greatest atnhition is to hecome a college pro- fessor of the tnodern sehool and lte has set up Professor Langdon as his tnodel. l'aul has a proclivity for making trips. Brown is hetter oil' for his ltavittg journeyed down front DORClll'iS'l'l'iR to Providence in- stead of going to llarvard, Dartmouth, or some other trade school. But the way in which he slides up to Boston, or Wheaton, or Newport every ttow and then leads otte to helieve tltat he has one in every port. llotv he keeps them all in ignorance of the others is simply wonder- ful, marvellous. But, gentlemen, pause for at moment in your appraisal attd take him for what he is worth. As a husiness man, a .cap- tain of lndustry, he appears tn lns trtte light. lalk insurance to ltttn and tvatclt lutn shoot to pieces any policy, hut those which the New l'illHland Mtttual has to offer. 'l'o all of these accomplishments add the fact tltat he's a handsome devil and there ain't tntteh left tt say. No, there ain't. NINE TEEN FIFTEEN JOHN MORRlS DAYlS Youngstown, Ohio B H ll jack HARVEY GLADDING Dl1iNllAhl South Attleboro, Mass. fb K Xl' llarvcy'l DONALD D1Kl'i Melrose, Mass. A A fb 'lDon Class Basketball C11 C215 Capt. C215 Class Baseball C115 Basketball Se- cond C215 Varsity Baseball C21 C31 C41- HENRY l ORRlLS'l'ER DRAK li Brooklyn, N. Y. fb 1' A 'lHeinie Glee Club Reader C11 C315 Sock and Busking Football second C315 l.iber lfditor C315 l.iber Artist C315 Class Secretary C115 Class Cheer Leader C315 Secretary-'l'reasurer Worces- ter Academy Club C21 C31 C41. 4 jack, it is absolutely impossible forus to give you a good write-ttp, for we t.lou't know you and we never saw you and you didn't say any- thing on your Liber slip we could crab. NYC asked llill Sullivan one day for some dope and he gave us a cigar aml said: Go have a good time. We asked a feller down to your house named llearse and all he did was to meow. lint we know you must be :t regular guy be- cause you came from Youngstown and pretty decent specimens come out of that burg. Some- time, when you have time, drop around and in- troduce yourself. 'l'hauks,old matt. llaryey hails from South Attleboro, and is an engineer, which accounts for his attitude toward the thick text-books which are always scattered in disorder on his desk. llis chief delight lies in taking Shiang l uan l ay to the sink to gaze in open-monthed admiration at the stage Venuses while he, llarvey, lnakes caustic allusions to their pedigree. llar- vey has designs on the engineering profession with far away China as his ttltilnate goal. lle says continually that Professor lienerson rates him at the head of the class. XYe think, however, that Gladding is exaggarating some- what. 1lere's luck to you llaryey, anyway. lf you ever catch a glimpse of rt fellow wearing a white li hat, heltnet style, letter at the back, and a black pipe stuck between his teeth, you ntay know right away that itls old Don Dike. If you see a chap looking around the Union Dining Room like a German spy before consulting with his partner in crime, Red Campbell, you may know at once it is old Don Dikc. Don was very wise when he too decided IQIS was the only real class to be- long to. Besides having played a line game for three years as a Varsity ball tosser, he has spent many golden hottrs within the john llay l.ibrary with more results, we might add, than most of tts get. lle hasn't got it all mapped out yet but if he strikes right, he'll soon be working in double harness. Good luck, Don. llow be ye, llenry? l.et's give a minstrel show. llenry is rather strong on the black- face comedy stull' and ever since his first year he has advocated a class minstrel. lf joviality and good nature count for anything, lleinie should get by old Pete without much dillieulty. ln fact, treating others and taking sass without lighting are lleinie's worst fattlts. lle has no secrets to hide, makes no false pretensions, says just what he thinks whenever he thinks it, and lets it go at that. lle is the lineal descendent of the good old honest and generous Dutch burgher. llis sincere proportions will ctmtribute materially to the happy home lleinie will undoubtedly have. LIBER BR UNENSIS NORMAN Lli ROY DUNCAN Woburn, Mass. A 'T' 'iDune llerald Board CU CZD UD C-Hg Liber Board f3j HAROLD 'l'llONlAS l'ltYl'ON Stonington, Ct. A fl' Gus MACDONALD LOW ICDINGICR Kingston, N. Y. fb li tll Dolly blusical Clubs CD Q25 f3Jg Class Basketball Cljg Herald Board CZJ UQ C-lj, News l'iditor C355 Managing Board HB3 Union llottse Com- mittee Q-I-lg l irst Yice-President Senior Class C-ll. WILMICR llUOlllfiS l'llClil'I Narragansett Pier, R. l. Bill Ike Sock and Buskin flj QD C31 K-Hg President Deutsche Klub C3Jg Vice- President Cercle lfrancais C3jg ',l.'reasut'et' of Intercollegiate League of German Clubs Q-ll. Once, someone called Dttttc tlte sleeping Scotchman and tlte ttante stuck among those wlto new him best and were aware of his pro- pensities for slumber after dinner. Perhaps the daily ttap is tlte reason why he scintillates when he is actually awake. ltt the realm of Seth Mitcltell's Union dining-room he is unique because of the silent, speedy. and superb service which ltc dispenses twice a day attd when he doesn't sleep over in tlte tnortting. Dttnc says tltat lte will try anything once attd incidentally ltas taken everything from Mon- ey and Banking to Dante. 'l'lte latter with tlte New York Tributtf reckons ltittt among its lirmest rooters. lf it weren'L for the eternal racket which lte is always keeping up, tlte old Scotch Sphinx ntigltt be called a good fellow. What lte should really worry over is how he can get in tlte daily ttap after lte lands a regular job. Look at tlus man and tell tts if he tsttt enough to inspire tlte most obstinate bard. llis embryonic days were probably spent in Stonebroke, Conn.. but hispoeticalgerms were still ra'sing the diekens in his eupola when lte was called to these plantations . The boys in Slater cleaned these out pretty well with otte of those ltattd vaecuum cleaners and now lte only annoys tlte prosaically inclined by occasional musical spastns on tlte Union lottttging room piano. On ltis senior Liber slip he tried to fool tts by saying lte was a regu- lar Guy de b'laupassant, but we know a dattm sight better. Brown eyed, greatrhearted and sweet-tempered witlt a walk like llorace Mann or Prof. Vlacobs, Gus ought to make a hit with someone-and pretty soon ltiu. 'l'his is Dolly. Yes, Dolly. If tlte attached map could have been tinted by an accomplished artist so as to bring out the trtte ruddiness of tlte pigment, no otte would ask wlty such a ttame has been wished on him. llampered by YVhite llaire and Chadwick he has persisted in being irresponsible for tlte Daily l'ill'usion and considering tlte drawbacks, it would seem that lte has done pretty well. The only real thing we have against him is his disgraceful behavior on tlte junior Cruise,but he has done much to live tltat down despite his pitiful attempts at harmless frivolity. Yllhile tlte hammer is ringing on the anvil one might state that Dolly is a dartt sight better journalist than pool shark. lle will help clean up New York State after gradttation by ambling into newspaper work in tltat sleepy lludson River towtt of Kingston. lloclt der Kaiser! Wie gehts? ,lal .lal This is lfieke, gentleman. We were espl:Ci1lll5' fortunate in securing ltim as a member of our illustrious class, inasmuch as he has enabled us to maint:tin amicable relations witlt Pem- broke ever since we arrived here. llow did he do it? Well, when he grew weary of cav- orting about ltis father's pastures at Narra- gansett Pier, he looked the society people over carefully, developed his famous laugh, ancl then was drafted into Brown by tlte Deutsch- er lilub. liven though he has been a ladies' man, he's a good skate and after lte is safely married, lte will undoubtedly prove success- ful as a school-teaelter. llere's hoping, llill. l l l i l l r I l 0 NINE TEEN FIFTEEN ERNEST l'IAR'l'WELL ICMICRY North Kingston, R. I. E N Felix Sock and Bnskin C21 Q31 C-U. CARL DE Wl'l l' ICVERINGPIANI Suncook, N. H. A 'lf A Sock and liuskin CU CD C35 f-fig Second Team UD. IQLIOT l'liXROl.D l Al.li Meriden, Ct. A T l'illie hlusicztl Cluhs CU Qbg Sophomore Banquet Committee C255 Soph- omore Ball Committee C235 Secre- tary Q53 Commencement Marshall C2Dg Junior Prom Committee f3Jg Chairman Union Alumni Dance Committee GJ. SHIANG-l UAN FAY Tientsin, China. 'ilgnatz h'lel ay Senior Ball Committee C-lj llow d'ye do, Felix? You know, we always feel like handing you 3 houqnet of heels when we see you statnping ahottt the campus. Most of these people tvho Colne up front Soutlt Kingston are socially impossible in their Cot- ton suspenders and bulldog-toed hrogans. lint' you'rc tnot'e like a real city feller with your urhane smile and trim fitting clothes. Suppose you'll he missing those pleasant evenings at tlte Ratltskeller with tlte Sehlitz and chatter pretty soon. won't you? But never mind, l'.tnery, because some day you'll sit in a wheel-ehair before the fire and tell your grandchildren how long old College llill ttsed to scent to you after midnight. Those will he the happy days. Carl is lazy. But for the peace of mind of tlte ten per cent it is a good tltittg he is. Square-jawed. tenaeious.keen,ltc is a had man to call a had name. He is not a Pittsburg millionaire yet: rather lte is tlte pride of Sun- eook where mothers take their little hoys in hand and tell them ahout the great l'ivet'ingltant. Despite the faet he is so lazy ltc has fotutd time to keep Sant NVatson out of mischief a good deal of tlte titne and has deported him- self gracefully and dignihedly about the gridiron on Andrews Field. Xvlten lte gets ready to settle down he will do so in earnest. 'l'lte law will claim him as its own after june. If there is anything lnade in Kleriden, Ct., of which you haven't, heard, let lillie knew of it at once and he will prepare to enlighten you with tlte smoothest flow of rhetoric that any httsiness ntan in the class possesses. When lte isn't boosting tlte old home hurg, he Can give you expert advice on tlte market et al ad inlinitum. Besides laeing one of Harry Gardner's proteges, he is also :t social luminary. Oh dear no. a college dance tvouldn't he com- plete withoul him. And as for teas, he's a heat'. Take it all in all if tltere is anything on which Ellie can't discourse with perfect ease and savoir faire, it's still in tlte wood. Some one of these days you'll find tlte sntall town newspapers calling him one of our leading young lwusiness mengn and take it from tts his name is certain to he known wherever tlte Svensk is dialeeted. When Milton was composing his well- known I.'Allegro, tlte old man had hefore him tlte terra cotta map of little Shiang-fuan. 'l'he terminology of Shian I uan with us for fottrs years has tnade us like him, how you say it in lfngleeshi like a college hoy likes his water. 'l'here's one tlting about l ay, and it's a thing that is very rare in these days and that is that lte minds his own business. If lte hasn't. atty good to say of a classmate lte remains silent. l'le never hears false witness. llis sttn-lit faee has ellttsed the Union Dining rootn until it seetns like a perntanent fixture whose ahsenee will he keenly missed. lle will leave Brown lt: hecome President of l'rexy's hudding reptlhlic, and with him go the sincere wishes of ltis class mates. LIBER BR UNENSIS -Ti-E SILAS Wll,l.lAKl l OSS Laconia, N. ll. 2 N l'Si Glee Club FRANKLIN BLAINIC l llOS'1' 'l'ivt-rton, R. l. 0 A X I-landsome First Speaker Class 'l'rce MD. RAYMOND BlSSl'i'l l' GAl,l.ANT Exeter, N. ll. A T A Stub Stubhy', Class Baseball Team QD, Secretary Phillips Club Q21 C3jg Liber Board C43- WALLACE LESTER GAl.l.UP Springfield, Blass. Speed Wally , B. C. A. Cabinet, Q21 GD C-U5 Student Volunteer League-Secretary Glg lgesident Qsljg President Ilill Club Sometime when you haven't much to do on some rainy afternoon, perhaps, try draw- ing a nail across the window glass and listen to the noise. Well? Oh this will remind you that Si was an engineer, what did you think we meant? A long stride, astrident. rasp, and a bunch of good sense is the best way to characterize him. If he hadn't fooled away so much time down in the old Engineer- ing Building and had come around more, he'd made some people jealous. Yes Sirl A well meaning man is he who intends to tunnel the YVhite Mountains after the march down the Hill. Sure Pretty penetrating, eh? You het your life. There is little in fact that Handsome can't see through lflirls, bewarel he it somebody's blull' or a ballling social prohlem. During his visit on the Ilill he has heen a keen observer of certain of some of our more iressing social problems and I don't mean what you mean either. Not very long ago he won distinction recognized by the local authorities with an essay on Occupational Diseases. As for his personality, here is his picture so judge for yoursell. Alert, a man who can never stray far afield, he should he a success, but don't get kidded into politics, Blaine. Remember our experience. Stubbv comes from Exeter but that isn't his fault. 1-Ie says Ilcrhie Nicholas is the most: winning man in the class with the ladies, but that isn't his fault either. Stubby would probably make an ideal Southern gentleman. Courtcous in demeanor and bubbling over with generosity, he is just lazy enough to like noth- ing better than to sit on his back veranda and smoke his dirty little pipe and gaze over his great cotton fields. Of course thisis allrather imaginative, but still Stuhby really does prefer most anything to work. Ask jack Carlson. When it comes to real fellowship, however, you just simply can't beat old Stub. After june he will sell insurance. Wally has been so completely occupied in public benevolence and service for others that he has starved his child to death. In his Freshman year he refused a bid from Phi Beta Kappa and has been hoeing his own row with more than less success ever since. If you don't hurt him. he won't lmrt you, you may be sure of that. Ile says his bad habits Ilfc IOC llUl'llcl OllS to lllillllclllll lilll, XVC knOXV bet- ter, for is he not the leader of thc student Vol- unteer Band and a memher of Billy Shef- lie1d's Christian Association? llc was chosen in his Senior year to guide the destinies of the Virgin Hill Club, varying the monotony with various periods of philosophic and theological reflection. When he stands u 1 in the pulpit he will undoubtedly inspire fear among his worshipful parishioners. -f-Mn-A , v, NINE TEEN EIETEEN WALLACIC Al.l.YN CANNON Newark, N. gl. PJ N g'Wally HAROLD LlQSI.ll'i GIBBS WVestlield, Mass. fb A 0 l'loho' AARON ISLNIISR GOT'1'SI-IALL Providence, R. I. fb A 9 Gotty Varsity Football Team Q35 GD, Class Football Team Qljg Varsity Wrestling Team CID Q25 131g Man- ager C3Dg Second Speaker at Class Tree 1-ll. RALPH BROWN GRAHAM Lynn, hdass. A K E Red Athletic Board QD Q31 GD, Soph- omore Ball Committee 1255 Chair- man of Junior Cruise Ujg Com- mencement Marshall C3Jg Sphinx Club Ol Q-ll, Tt'easurer HD, Pres- ident of Class Supper C-ljg Bru- nonian Board Q-U3 Art Editor C-U5 hlusical Clubs l'intertainer UD Q-Hg Treasurer Senior Ball Committee C-1-jg Cammarian Club Q-lj. This debonaire young blade has more had habits, he says, than could he mentioned. Yes, New jersey is to he blamed for many things, hut it seems a pity to hold it to account for wishing these awfuls on NVally. llut after all, kidding a queen or drinking beer isn't the worst thing that was ever done, and when you take into Consideration tlte faet that Wally has put in four good years of hard work with com- mendable results, why it seems as though he was sort of ehalfing with the sad eye stuff. lle is going to try batehing it with Fay next year and unless he gets lonely he should die at a ripe old age. The lirst three years of this man's colleg- iate training. spent at Trinity, seem to have shrouded him in the clerical atmosphere. Yet withal, he has acquired in this brief visit with ns enough of tlte old spirit to have made many friends. Hoho is a rabid student of tlte Kul- ture: lte will study tlte dictionary for hours to get new dope on this. Tall in stature and mild in manner, llarold will leave Brown with pro- found impressions, even though it he with noth- ing lnore than a Y. M. C. A. handbook. Soc- iology has had its charms for Harold in tlte past and no doubt he will continue to play with this fascinating thing in tlte future. ' The cares of the conjugal life have not inter- ferred in the least with old Gotty's collegiate activities. llc has stamped around our fair campuses pretty consistently for four years and wherever he has been discovered has made his presence felt by his inimicable optimism. He is another of those Pcnnysylvania you- know-what-you-call-'ems, but he's the kind we like to ltave at Brown. As a pfrcr df rr.fi.i'- Inner he has been valuable material in the hands of Robby and Spraelc and when he gets to shooting that mmf Jana in rorpare .frmo stull' he ought to ntake good. Oh, see tlte man! Ah hah. ain't he funny? Um, hum, very. ls he not a magician? Yes lte is not a magician. Listen. Ladies and others, before 1 begin this trick of which I am tlte sole originator, lAntos, speak to tlte lady she spoke to you. 'How do.J let me say be- fore 1 begin, the quiet, Amosl that I have noth- ing up my sleeve. And thus it goes. But though Ralph may have nothing up his sleeve you may be sure he has something in his head and his heart that is distinctly sound, Willing, studious, very witty and very wise he is a cre- dit tothe dirty old City of l,ynn. lf you are ever in the need ofa trite friend, Red is one of those few fellows who will answer to the eall. llow's that, Ralph? LIBER BR UNENSIS FRICDERICK I'lARTWl'il,l, GRICICNE Newton Centre, Afiass. A T Hartwell Class Debating Team CI1 C21g Car- penter Prize Speaker C21g Sphinx Club C21 C3C C-l1g Asst, hianager Tennis Team C21 C31g Varsity De- batingTeam C31C-113SoekandBuskin C31 C41g Treasurer Christian Associa- tion C31g Junior YVeek Committee C31g Francis WVayland Scholarship C31g Phi Beta Kappa C31g Ass't. Business hlanager Heraltl C21 C315 Bttsiness Manager C-l1g Secretary l50th.Celebration Committee C31g Class Orator C-l1g Catnntarian Club C41- JOSICPII IRYING GRICICNIS l ishkill-on-I'ludson. N. Y. A A fb joe Irv Sock and Buskin C21 C31 C415 Glee Club C31 C-l1g liiber Board C31 C-l1. Chairman Trophy Committee Brown Union C415 Senior Ball Com- mittee C-l-1. BENJAMIN IIARRY GROSSKIAN Providence, R. I. Bennie IRVING TURGLIS GUNIB I.owell, Mass. aalrvu And I ask yott if there is any need of im- porting any such radically soeialistic scheme from the Antipodes? -Neither Samuel Gom- pers nor the opponents of Bernard Shaw talk- ing, only llartwell getting ready to do tlliIlKS to some of the Triangular League debaters. Besides debating his diversions are quite tame, at least those at Vassar and Wellesley are. Be- tween times he has found plentyof op :ortunity to divorce advertisers in the lleraltl of their available funds and embrace a l'hi Beta Kappa key in an amoeba-like grip. And, lest we for- get, he is an interested and intense student of eugcnics. IVhat else? Oh hum, look at his record. Yes, without a doubt Newton and Brown will be prouder than ever some day when the papers call him The Cotton King or the Textile Prince or something like that. After having forced oneself to write up a number of biographies, it is a genuine pleasure to come across a man who really writes him- self. All you have to say is lrv Greene and 'lhe knew her mother and you have his whole writeupg but for those who may never have penetrated the circle of charm ever surround- ing him, it may be well to elttcidate in more de- tail. Geniality is .Ioe's chief characteristic. lle is a man of real breeding, with an educa- tion that enables him to converse familiarly and intelligently, if need he, with anyone, no matter what his age, sex, or vocation. In other words he can adapt himself to any situ- ation and get away with it. Good looking, hard working. and sincere, Greenie is one o the boys we will want to look up when we come back on our class reunions. Long ago Bennie found'that Russia's un- savory climate agreed not with the feelings of publicity about ltis throat when he buckled on a soft collar. Russian cops too, have a nasty habit of mistaking a few cucumbers in a gentle- man's halmacaan pockets for a shilling's worth of bombs: hence Bennie tripped aboard rt packet for Brown to KUFHC llilllsclf Willl knowledge. The cloistered seclusion of the Ilay Library has enabled hitn to enjoy great volumes undisturbed, and whenever he has treated himself to a Brown ,lug joke, the casual observer is afforded the rare opportun- ity of seeing him giving the Czar a Grossman ha-ha. He has a kind disposition and much persistency. If the boss doesn't pay him in wooden nickels when hc gets a job, we expect to see him make them darn Rothschilds look like a bucket of stale caviar in a few months. Ile should make an impression when he gets going. This is the great man who put Kansas City on the map. at least so faras the Brown S. B. is concerned. The sonorous periods in which he detailed to us one morning in chapel his profound impressions of that metropolis have left no room for doubt that his career in the pulpit will be meteoric. For some time now lrv has known that there was only one life for him, and his feet have never, to his credit, swerved from the path. lle is going to do some good in the world and if the place where he settles down has any possibilities of redemp- tion, put it right down, it will he saved,-- by gum l l l l l 4 NINETEEN FIFTEEN JOHN RUSSl'fl.l. lllXlRl'l Newport.. R. l. fb li tl' White Knob I,.lXWRl'lNCl'l lIAl.l. Providence, R. l. E X Larry Varsity 'llrack 'l'eam llj C25 C35 Q-Hg Captain Q-U3 Class Relay Team flj C39 C37 645, HILRN IAN NICI lOl .S IIARCOU R'I' NVawingers Falls, N. Y. l l, t Y U , Y fl' E lx Nemo ll1u-lue ' Sock and Ruskin C35 C-Hg Varsity Swinnmng 'l'eam C213 Commence- ment Xlarshal QD. CLI l l ORlJ SIIICRKIAN ll.Yl'll.XW:XY Peace Dale, R. I. AXA Hllassie 'l'his blonde youth is one of the Newport colony at an institution of learning. l rom a timid little l reshman, Russ has hlossomed out into a lnost progressive Senior. llis golden yellow locks have made him a favorite at Pem- broke and vicinity, although he blushes when accused of the crime. Textbooks are ltis bane for they have hacl a slight tendency to retard his attendance at shows, after which we lose track of him for several hours. NIacCreath's is said to he his Mecca: at least all the u'aiters hail him as he enters. Russ plans to enter busi- ness with his father in New York. Nlay his ellorts be rewarded with their deserved success. l'ixeuse me for saying it. but l am the cap- tain of the Brown University Track team. 'l'hat telegram is meant for me. This woetic fallacy is in truth the captain of our lleet fooled flyers and he is some flyer, too. While some of tts are razzing the llerald, the .'Xdministration, or the spry choristers at the Sink, l.arry is straining his liver down on the hoard track or laying awake nights thinking what he would do if he were asst. manager of the team instead of .lack Starrett. Space alone prevents llS:tt this time front speaking of l.arry's propensities as a chippy charmer, bitt it's a safe het he'll never go wrong. llere's looking at you old man. llere girls, is one who spurns your charms. 'l'he reason for Nemo's attitude in this regard arises from his thorough knowledge of all fem- inine foihles. llis remarkable taste in this matter is the wonder of those who know him. 'l'o continue in a salivary vein, he isalsosome- what of a connoiscur in wines. l'le knows more about rare vintages perhaps than all the bartenders in the city' put together. Yet wine and woman take a back seat when we consider Nemo in the Iield of song. lle is absolutely non-pareil when it comes to warblingand that's all there is to it, my friend. Those whom he honors with his friendship admire his liberality and kindness of heart. .-Xfter throwing his pig- skin in the river, he will grace the law ollice of some Wappinger Falls shisters. llurrahl llere he is---spick and span as any habitue ofa cnlmhvhole under the eaves in U. ll. ought to be. llassit-'s protozoon sprouted down in the South Countyg he whiled away a couple of semesters at Kingston, and then was renovated with a Peace Dale haircut and crated to dear old Brown. Pop Gorman drafted him on sight and dut'ing his three years' stay here he has ex- plored the inner regions of everything in R. I. llall that could be ripped open with a scalpel or a pair of scissors. lle has spent his spare moments qualling formaldehyde and taking occassional drags at. a fresh '1'urkish Trophy. lf the Peacedalers don't appoint him town con- stable this summer, nothing can stop him from coming back here in the beatiful auttnnn. Sick 'em, llassie. ?li LIBER BR UNENSIS SCI IUYLICR VICTOR IIAYWA RD Chicago, Ill. K E Vic Glee Club CD C21 C31 C-U5 Sock and L liuskin CID C21 QQ GICORGIC l'iIrNIlfiR CI'I1Xl.NllCRS I'IAYlflS W'ashington, D. C. l'lllie GEORGE ISARI. IIICISNICR LeRoy N. Y. 22 N Heb I,iber Board C31 HD. PRESCO'l l' WILLIAM IIIl.l. Providence, R. I. l'Iilly My goodnessl Ilow absent-minded he is. Vie eame to Brown with Sherm Strong away lmek, but while Unk retired into the oh. livion. Vie , as he is alleelionately' Called bl' his friends, has been the eynosure Uf all eyes at many a hoard track meet. Game? You bet- eha. Can he run? You heteha. lint there's one thing about Schuyler we ean't quite swaller andthatisthe wayhe hangs aroundthewimmen Can he fuss? You heteha. 'l'hus you have the pieture of the great man in the rough. Ilo- fortunately. we cannot here go into greater de- tail: to really get the inside Stull' on old Vic you would have to live with him on a desert island all your lifefand then some. Cor-rect, these he hard times. George, dog- gone hard times, dammit. After fooling a- round W'ashington for quite a spell, George discovered the climate did not agree with him as well as it might. 'l'hen, too, Wiillliam ,len- nings Bryan eopped the job he had been laying for and so he came to llrown tlntil things sort of blew over. livery day the War continues and helps bawl up the VVilson administration, George's stock takes a rise. Ile has enough a la llruno culture now to take up his legal duties and become a veritable limb of the law. Then maybe the ghost of Daniel Webster won't twist and squirm! An ostrich? Mercy, no. lNVho ever heard of ostriches coming from such a tankofa town as Rochester, N. Y. This is George lfarl Ileb- ner. I.ook over carefully, while you may, his immobile map, the precisely parted hair atop his head, and the ealm,unperturbedglancewhich he bestows upon you. liven the lordly Roelke quits work to stare in admiration as George treads with measured, dignified steps down the library aisles. There is naught of the llippant or llirty about him. Neither Fatimas nor Pil- sner are elassilied in his list of nourishing foods, and whatever be his chosen lile-work, we know that he will succeed. If determination and a level head count for anything Ileb. ought to get there. Coy, but careful is one way to Christen I'liI- ly You can get the lirst part of the party by a glance at his bust. Note, if you care to, thc ellervescent sparkle of his eye, the eorroding dimple of his cheek, the almost smug smirk of his lip. 1 guess not. As for the last part of our general characterization, numerous examples could be found But for the present purposes, let us content ourselves with a reference tn his work as a student. Painstaking to a fault, systematic above hope and studious beyond repair, he will doubtless make u lirst-class man for somebody. On with the marehl :--Z: NINE TEEN FIFTEEN --- EDWARD WINSLOW lllNCliS Providence, R. l. fb A 0 lCddie', Varsity Gym Team CID C21 C31 C-lj, Captain C21 C33 C-U5 College Gym- nast CU C25 C355 Class Baseball CD5 Vice-President Class C215 Pres- ident C3jg Athletic Board C3j C-fig Sock and liuskin CID CZ, C31 C-l-jg President Brown Union C4-jg Var- sity Football Squad C315 Swimming Team C4-D5 Chairman Class Day Committee C-Hg Cammarian Club tty. ICDWARD Josern IIORRIGAN Providence, R. l. fb K lid Class Baseball CU CZJQ Gym Team CU, hlVI'CStlil1g Team C-tj. DANA MORTIMER HUBBARD VVoburn, Nlass. A Y Dinh Hub Herald Board C21 C35 C-Hg News liditor C315 Chairman Managing Board C-Og Secretary -Treasurer Inter- fraternity Baseball League C3Jg Sphinx C-l-jg Wastebasket C-D5 Class Secretary Cvfj. MORRIS EDVVIN HULTSLANDICR WValden. N. Y. AT A Dutch This is l3rown's gymnast. lfddie has been about as consistent a performer in this line of activit.y as Doc Marvel could wish for. Lately, too, he has taken to high diving and made a success of that also Consistency, in short, is the word that best sums up l'Iddie's whole char- acter. He is always the saute: sincere, hard- working, modest, and stndious. Anyone with these reqnisites cannot stray far. and there is no reason under the blue canopy of heaven why l'iddie should be an exception. Unless he works himself to death at an early age, his pop- ularity will accompany him for years and years. W'hen he was a chubby child, l'iddie began to kick up the dust and strew the alfalfa broad' cast, over the country-side of Nlanton. Then a long time ago, he felt he was cramped for room in a two by four village so he came to Brown. Here he has been bothering the life out of Hardy Cross and llill Kenerson until the great and glorious class of IQIR should come along. licldie is a firm believer in the homely but pertinent saying, If your studies interfere with your business, cnt out your studies. Thus, he has been here, there. and everywhere billiarding with Al johnson. wrestling at the liym, and calling-who knows where. jovial and a good fellow, he has lnade many friends. Once in a while we come across a fellow who is distinctly on the level. lt has happened be- fore and it' happens again in old IQIS. Old Silver-Heels never betrayed a friend, never spread scandal, never was dishonest. His ability as a journalist, for which he is chiefly celebrated on the campus, arises from two lieadsg he is the man who is responsible forthe morn- ing milk , and he likewise is the man who pictures our Rah rah life for one of the local dailies. Dana is a friend worth having. He is like the Bible, he is good. His judgment and moderation in action are only exceeded by his good looks in repose. He leaves college to become a ctlb reporter and make a sweet little girl up in W'oburn very, very happy YVhen the station agent in NValden, N. Y. grew tired of looking at Hultslander's plain honest features, he sold the boy a ticket for Providence. ltidwin manfully coughed up a few stray dimes to the registrar and settled down to make himself comfortable in this nice atmosphere. He has not harmed a soul by his presence. indeed, we rather admire the assiduity with which he has swished his Dur- ham Duplex across his downy cheek once a month or so. He has no had habits worthy of the name, and when he taeks his sheepskin up over the mantelpiecc in his cottage back home, XValden may congratulate itself that it owns at least one quiet, gentlenianly, whiskerless, eddicated citizen. LIBER BR UNENSIS I Rl'IDl'iRlC JOHNSON I'lUN'l' East Providence, R. I. A fb I reddie,' First Presidentis Premium in Latin Cljg First President's Premium in Greek Cljg Liber Board C-IJ. ll.'XRLl'iY CLll l ORD HYDIC Cranston, R. I. A K If 'll liramn Musical Clubs CID CZJ C3J C-ljg Assist- ant Manager C3jg Manager IIAROLD XII'l'CllICl.L AIJXCKSON Brockton, Mass. H X C R. I. Statej jack Sock and Buskin C3j C-UQ Cast C3j C-ID. AIOIIN I.IfiSLIl'I 'IICNNY Pawtucket, R. I 0 A X slack Class Baseball CID C2Dg Captain'C2lg Class Basketball Cllg Second 'I eam Football C-lj. lfreddie walks into town every morning front lfast Providence and he says you get some dandy whifls of salt sea air Coming across the Red liridtle. Ilis presence at Brown has been more persistent than ostentatious. Ile has gobhled up the prives left by Illanchard, Baruch, and Iiliven. and lt2tS made himself pretty solid with the Nlath department. I red- die is one of those fellows it's next to impossible to say anything had about. His lips have nev- er been wet with liquor, or tobacco juice, but when it comes to legitimate fussing, his friends all swear by him. Quiet, unassuming, willing. kind, and hardworking lireddie deserves a lot of credit for the use of his college days, Ile will mould the human mind after june. 'I'l1e ellicieut manager of the Mttsical Clubs, gentlemenl To look at old Hiram you would surely think he had a grouclig but to know him you would he willing to pawn your shirt to get him out of jail. lf, of course, it was necessary. If there ever was a man in this sunny world of ours who would help another it is old Iliram. Once Iliraln aspired to be a social leaderg that was when he was fresh from the old farm, but of late the pressure of other pursuits has caused him to let up a bit on his search fora rich wid- ow and her hand. After all has been said and done, however, you'll have to hand it to Hiram that a warmer heart and better intentions nev- er went hand in hand. May the luck of the road be yours, lliram, old man. Handsome is as handsome does, said we as .lack gave us a box of imported cigars and told us to go easy on the personels. NVC prom- ised we'd go easy on-the how he spends his summers and where he spends his nights. So, now, of course, there ain't much left to say. llut Harold is quite some actor and we're mighty glad Ite got reasonable and came to llrown after seeing the lay of the land down there in Kingston. 'I'hough essentially a man to view life through a philosophical telescope, he has enjoyed enough intimacy with liill Littlejohn and Aliggs O'Donoghue to make :t rattling good car conductor when he gets out. Success to you. ,lack has been getting pretty lat lately as the result of high living out in l':twtucket. You might call him an epicure, but he is more than the mere name can convey. jack didn't al- ways use to lead the pace that kills, however. W'ay hack in the early days, he ttsed to while away the hours he was absent from the de- pressing inllttence of the engineering chain gang by tossing the pill on Lincoln l ield. In fact, jack has been a pretty good athlete until he settled down this year to hard study. But red blood and brains makesa hard combination to beat, jack, so you ought to come along all right. NINETEEN FIFTEEN li- WILLIAM 'l'l'lONlAS JOYCE Worcester, Mass, 21 N lrish', Billl' JOHN EDWARD Kl'Il.l.Y l.eRoy, N. Y. fb A 0 Hliell' junior Cruise Committee C315 Liber Board C31 PAUL JOSICPII KINGSLEY Providence, R. l. A T Pop', Sock and Buskin C11 C21 C31 C415 Ass- sistant Manager lirunonian C315 bflanager C-l15 Chairman Union l.ib- rary Committee C41. HAROLD Cl,ARl:INClfl KINNIC Pawtucket, R. l. 0 A X llarryl' Sock and Buskin C21 C31 C-L15 Publi- city Manager C315 Business Mana- ger C415 Vice President lfngineer- ing Society C315 President C415 'Prea- surer Junior Week Committee C315 Class Basket Ball Manager C315 Secretary Junior Prom Committee C315 Commencement Marshal C315 Celebration Committee C415 Cheer Leader C41. 'l'his dow-ny cove has more nicknames than you have fingers. lle is an excellent exampl of the genuinely Bohemian young buck at col- lege. lrish must have his lling. But despite these wicked tendencies, hc has a good heart, a cheerful stnile that brings gladness to the distressed when it rains, and plcntyof the milk of human kindness. lf vou don't happen lo know either liill or Irish don't be alarmed. He isn't the sort of individual that goes around forcing his company on youg he's just simply what he is-unassuming, yet running over with the joy of living. lie good and you'll he happy, liill. llere is johnny Greene's valet. Kel says he was with M. Micoleau at the Rathskeller when he had his last beer in Providence. 'l'his, in fact, is only one of the litany distinctions old john enjoys. You want to get him to tell you how johnny Greene, Tooker '12, Muzi lfames, and he, went to a hall game in a taxi one day. lt's about as smooth a yarn as you will hear and then some. .lohn's principal activity in college besides his conservative influence on Alohnny Greene. has been his ellicient contri- bution to this year's l,iber. 'l'his inane biog- graphy does not do adequate justice to what has been called by many a distinguished, not to say fascinating, personality. As a captain of industry and a Napeoleon of linance. Pop is the dernier cri-the ultima thule Sthe sine qua non-the ne plus ultra!the last word at least, in the college world. Others may be greater quantitatively but for flawless quality he is there! All that ll. li. G. knows of lfconomics, he has absorbed: and much more although when dabbling in the latter, Norm Duncan is the only one he'll trust. llsually, he is a very serious young man: and if he were six feet two and had a speedy foreign car, what a swath he would cut in the ranks of the fair young things about Providence. Seriously Paul is about as active and energetic as anyone in the class. The advertising lirm that hires him will get a hustling young business man. The worst thing that one can wislt him is that he may settle down in some town where there is no society. Unfortunately or fortunately, as you will, this cut, does not show the Kinniesque smile. NVe show the real thing on page 322. VVithout a doubt those who have not played in its charming radiance orbasked in its glowing warmth have missed something. llarold wears his smile most of the time, and bestows it in- discriminately on every 'l'om, Dick and llarry, not to say Sue, lieth and Mary. lle wears it in all weathersg it is ilnmune to all human kill- joys. liven llerhie Nicholas with a llunk not- ice can't make llarold look like any ordinary guy. XVhen a man can come from Pawtucket and go around grinning about it, well-. Clean cut, and hard hitting, he will make a real addi- tion to the engineering profession. l l t l t t l 1 LIBER BR UNENSIS CLARENCE .IOSICPH l,ANll3 Pawtucket, R. I. fb .K Chubby Liber Board Q31 Q41. HOWARD LANGl.l'ih' Newport, R. l. Claudius GEORGE HENRY ANTI lONY LARGE Providence, R. I. 'IP 2 K Georgie Second l'resident's Premiumg lin- trance Greek Ql1g Class Gym Team Q21 Q31g Varsity Gytn Team Q21 Q31 Q41g Varsity Swimming 'l'eam C31 Q4-15 Sock and Buskin Q11 Q21 Q31 Q41g Cast Q11 Q31 Q41g President Q-t1g Carpenter Prize Speaker Q31g 'l'rea- surer -Innior Prom Committee Q31g Class Day Committee Q41g Glee Club Reader Q31 HERBERT AUSTIN l.ARRAl3l'il'i Peabody, Mass. 'I' 1' A l.arrie l,ammie is one of the men in college who really takes himself seriously! l'le says he toddled in here from Pawtucket to keep ri date with Carrie 'l'ower. However, he looked so roseate and healthy that we could not resist adopting him into our class. l or four years he has heaved dumhells and flooded the gytn- nasmm with perspiration in a vain attempt to increase his weight to eighty-four p0llHllS, so that he could run away frotn home and be- come a jockey. lint 'tis no use' A Lamb of sylph-like proportions would be no more natur- al than l.amb without his rippling. chesty laugh. Deeidedly a man of parts, Clarence ought to make a profound impression as a lawyer. iVithont the slightest donht. lloward is one of the most widely known men in our class. llis native Newport believes in him as a fear- less basehall umpire and a painstaking scorer? lle has repeatedly scorned to accept an nm- pirical position in the New lfngland League, being ambitious to acquire a very line. liberal education which he might use effectually in his chosen life work as instrnctorof the young. Claudius represents the popular type of non- fraternity man in college. lie is thoroughly saturated with the spirit of democracy and brotherly love, and replies to the llippant salute ofa Freshman in the same kind of manner as he does to his most personal Senior friends. We have watched him progress from the third floor of Maxcy to :t shelter under the eaves in U. ll. May he go through life in the same high plane! An engaging young man with an impressive personality. George is a good example of a commuter who, at the Same time can he a ben- clit to the college and the class. If you have never seeen his Venus like form down at the swimming pool, part of your college education is lacking Moreover when he is not high diving for Charlie Huggins' aquarians. he is splashing about in the maelstrom of high soc- iety. Quite a kid glovc lnminary is Georgie- in his way. The reason for his success in this line of student activity is his smoothness. George is so smooth in fact that polished brass isn't to he mentioned in the same breath with him. Ile expects to develop his dramatic ten- dencies down at New York and from what we know of hitn we should say he had the stull'. When llcrbie Nicholas was on library dis- cipline for hiding in the John Hayafter it had closed and was caught getting out of a window at 1.30 one night, liarrie agreed to get books for Nick. W'ell it happened that one of the books Larrie got was one that Prof. Collier had set his lamp on and he nabbed the hapless l.arrie as he was making oll' with it. lvarric took the whole blame for the allair shielding the unhappy Nick. Now this little incident is told here simply to illustrate Larrie's indom- itable spirit of self-sacrifice. I'le has always been ready todo for others and hc is sure, there- fore, to get his reward. llard working and on the level in college, he should win out in life. NINETEEN FIFTEEN III'IRBI'lR'l' JAXIICS LAWSON Clinton, Mass. Herb I.I'lSl.ll'i TORRENCE LI'lvl'Ll'l Picture Rocks, Pa. f'Zip', Little One Class 'liraek Team C113 Varsity 'liraek 'I'eam Q11 C21 C31 Q-I-1. WILLIAM FOWLISR LI'I'I'LEJOI'IN Barre, Vt. 0 X fNorwich1 Bill Class Baseball C215 Class Basketball 1315 Senior Ball Committee Q41. EARL FRANCIS LU'I'I'II'IR Itiztst Providence, R. I. Z tl' IX'Iartin 'I'ubby Sock attd Bttskitt C31 H15 Cast of Farce 131g Vice-President Biolog- ical Society 131. YVhenever we wise a guy decked out with spectacles attd a pompatlour we're puzzled to know whether to classify him as a student or a sport, but Ilerb gives tts no trouble at all on this score-he is both. llc finds it. quite possible to grind away an eight ltottr clay with tlte thermodynamics, wortu gears, attd struc. ttres tltey feed out down at tlte lfngineering Building, attd then doll up fora little party, or spend a quiet evening with .lack Pearse attd a gatne of checkers in ltis Benevolent Street 'I'emple. If it's possible for an earnest indi- vidual to clean up Clinton, Lawson is surely tlte ntan for tlte job. She'll be waiting for you, Ilerbie at tlte statiott. Little began to learn how to lutrdle tlte Picture Rocks down in l'ennyslvania almost as soon as he emerged from swaddling clothes. Ile eatne to Brown endowed with a spirit of rttstie bois- terousness attd tlte Quaker habit of getting up at fottr o'clock every tnornittg. Now attd then Zip has condescended to stretch a leg in the hurdle race, with good results, but early in ltis Sopho- tnot'e year the magic of the Mission fttrnitttre attd tlte great stacks of pretty covered books in the .lohn llay Library began to exert an influence on him, from which lte has since been ttnable to recover. Ile lSll,l goittg to work just yet, but will keep in training by coming back for a few tnore alfalfa courses in lfduca- tion next Fall. If hard work is an alibi, Les, then yott have one. lloot lnonl good old Bill Littlejohn ltitttself, way frae the bonny Hielands of attld Vermont. Yvhen Bill Came to Brown, he left behind tlte bagpipes attd only brought with hint tlte cheery stttilc for which lte is really famotts. If you want any inside dope on Bill, just ask jiggs O'Donoghue, ltis roommate, and you'll get more than plenty. As a functionary at social afliairs I guess you must hand it to lohn as tlte original wufli, wull Ile is one of tlte main stays, they say up there at Miller Hall. Ilow about it Bill? On very rare occasions Bill has been known to play tlte game of flllll- mie, attd when lte wins. tny goodness, how ex- cited lte gets! Bill says he is undecided, but ttntil sotttethittg good tttrns up he will prob- ably eontinue to raise tlte dickeus attd get away witlt it. Shm! Ship! 'l'ha1's tlte musical sound little 'I'ubby's nutnber ttittes tnakc as ltc shulliles over here front ltis stable in Itiast l'rovideuce every morning. Of course lte isn't all feet-not by no means-he is a cott- noisseur of pink lentonade attd Senate Bro- tnoseltzer, attd is one of Pop Gorhams' blood thirsty Bacchantes. Ile shows his great lust for flesh often hy promenading about the Biology tnortuary chapel u'itlt a big scapel in ltis tnitt, jabbing at every ripe feline in sight. Itt fact it must be admitted that Martin is a trifle impulsive in everything he does, but attyway, he means well. After stuffing his little Paunch at tlte Senior Banquet, he will look for a sign most pointing out the easiest way thru life. l.et's hope he finds it! LIBER BR UNENSIS l-- St. hlohnsville, N. Y. flPA0 Bitte Sec. lfnginceriug Society Q-15. RAYMOND Cl.AVl'iRSDAl.E McKAY Youngstown, Ohio. fl' I' A Ray1' Mac Class Basketball Q15 Q25. ROWLAND HAZARD Mcl.AUGIll,lN Chicago, .lll. A A fb Pinky Hhlac' Class Football Ql5g Varsity l oot- ball Squad Q15 Q25 Q35g Varsity 'l'raek 'I'eam Q15 Q25 Q35 Q41-5g Vat'- sity Relay 'l'eam Q25g Varsity Swimming 'l'eam Q15 Q25 Q35 Q-15, Captain Q-15g Captain Class De- bating Team Ql5g Alternate Var- sity Debating 'l'eam Q35g Varsity Debating '11-am Q35 Q-155 Captain Qsl5g Hicks Prize Winner Q-155 2d Prize 1880 Discussion Q-15g Sock and Buskin Q15 Q25 Q35 Q-155 Sophomore Ball Committee C255 Glee Club Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45g Secretary Musical Clttbs C355 President Q45g Sphinx Club Q35 Q-15g President Senior Class 4455 Catnmarian Club Q45. RICHARD l.AXlBll'I Xlcl.lfItXN Boston, Mass 0 A X lilac Dick 1 reshman Banquet Committee Q15g Sub-Freshman Banquet Com- mittee Q15 Q25 Q35g Chairman Q-155 Class Baseball Q15 Q25 Q35. HARVEY BUl,l,lNGl'IR XlcCRONl'I Mae used to be quite a picture man in his younger days, bttt when he became a Senior he took unto himself a wife and began to get busy. ln fact. he has been so busy this year that if we didn't know him pretty well, we would say he was in hiding. 1'le comes to chapel now and then: he lurks around tlte en- gineering building oil' and on: and it is rumored he goes into the Lyman Gym at least once a month to take a bath. A hardworker with a level head is perhaps the fairest way to sum up tlte qualities here represented. ltixcept in calling Bttrnell the supreme ladykiller of mtg he has at all times exercised tlte neces- sary moderation of judgment so characteris- tic of the McCrones ever since their imtni- gration to America. After 'lune he will teach tlte young idea how to shoot. About twenty years ago two fond parents were bending over a cradle, isn't he a beauty! exclaimed the doting mother as the dear little red faced darling ltid his head in pro- test. 'l'he years passed. One day tlte baby, now a great stripling, posed for a picture. llc blushed for a week and vowed never again. Consequently, tlte editor cottld not llnd anything nearer his likeness than tlte opposite. lt is tlte only photograph of hlac in captivity now. This spirit of modesty is characteristic of Mac. But he has won the respect of everyone he has come in contact with by his quiet elutekle and a word or two that sums up the whole situation. He leaves behind him a host of friends, and before him, whatever it may be, is nought but success. llats off to our able president, perhaps the tnost versatile man in the class. Go down to tlte board track and yott will see hint in his B. V. D's.: go into tlte swimming pool and you will see him deporting even as do the nymphs: go up bythe Union and you will hear his clear clarion note issuing from tlte debating cham- bers: go down street at night- but why say more. Besides his versatility, there is ltis personality- the concentrated kind, the kind that juts out all over in crags and crags, the kind that you are always rtttming up against and feeling. '1'o be brief, it doesn'L pay to rullle hitn. for lte is strong on the game of come-backs. Keen, able, and a good fel. low, Mac shottld make a career and ntore friends for himself. Now do you know why girls leave home? Mac is better known oll' than on the campus, for wonten like real guys-the kind who chew gtnu and hop freights, you know. May be it is his looks, tuaybe it is his subtile art, but whatever it is, it must be allowed he gets by in those leagttes he is in and that his fielding average is just abottt 1.000 per centtun. Dick is one of those boys who bristles all over with impetuosity. You couldn't exactly call hitn a hard headed rebel going through life with his lists doubled up, but yott cottld call hint a chap who wonlt let. you slip any funny business over on hitn and who always has a come-back ready. llis honesty and ability should aid him to collect tlte necessary sheckels for tlte high cost of loving. NINETEEN FIFTEEN COLIN GORDON lX'lcl.l'IOD Providence, R. I. A AID Mach Varsity Track Team QD GJ. LICLAND SCO'l l' Mcl.l'fOD La Grange, Mo. K E lXlac', Lefty I RI'1lJlflRlCK WI LIIIANI AIJIJISON Mll.l,liR lvoryton, Ct. Ztl' Chick -lOSI'iI'l'l Mll.l.l'iR Narragansett Pier, R. I. fl' I' A joe Second Football 'l'eam C-Hg Class liasketluall QZQ 132g Captain UIQ Class liaselmall CD3 Varsity Track Squad CZDQ 'I'ennis 'I'eam Gly lylanagcr Q-UQ Cltairman Union Membership Committee C415 Cap and Gown Committee Ujg Class Day Committee Q-lj. Big Mac reminds us of the man who lntried ltis talent in the ground. Powerful in frame, good looking, clever and all that --what a man he could have been in ttndergraduate activity if he had wanted to! You lnight call him lazy. Isnt this would not he essentially correct -not essentially. I.et ns say that Mac is one uf those true aristocrats who would not struggle with the eotntnon ralxhle. He is u'illing to mix with the less fortunate, hut he tloesn't care to contest with them. But Aflac should worry-'good tempered, with a chuckle always ready. and a peculiar charm to fetni- nine olwservers' what tnore do you want ln the u'ords of the poet, he's little, lwnt--- oh my. lt's a pretty good thing. girls. that I.efty only came to Brown last Fall or there would he sorrow in many a one of your sweet little hearts. XYhen he isn't raising the very dickens out in somelwody's hack yard, this ver- italmle little devil is flirting with sotne of Nfr. Shepard's shop girls. The naughty manl lint I guess we've said enough to shou' the rcp a man can get in a few months. lint Mae's energies are directed in other directions. llc is quite a student and a very inter- esting conversationalist. Ask him a ques- tion sometime about I.a Grange and let him hypnotize you with his delightful southern accent. lWac is as loyal as he is unassuming and when he gets to school teaehering out in Missouri he ought to lme the idol of his pupils Pretty sharp looking. eh? YH-ll, Chick is pretty sharp. lle isn't the kind uf a fellow who wastes much time over the non-con- sequentials of our campus life. Ile has spent four years at hard work, having amused hitn- self with large chunks of the Delelwarre lurand of psychology dope. You eouldn't exactly call hitn self-centered, lxnt like the modern philosopher he admits he loves himself. Ile is really quite impressive when he gets going upon sotne of his syllogistic line of reasoning. Even the profs don't like to get into an ar- gument with him. After all has heen said, Chick remains a good example of the tnan who cotnes to college with the idea of getting something out of it. Ile ought to he heard from. If there ever was a man to whom we wanted to give the glad hand it is he who is opposite. -loc has prolmalxly the unique distinc- tion of having eurriculated through our col- lege without making a single enemy. Pop- ularity and Atnialsility are his lxiggest assets. liven the fttmes of the lunch room have not injured his disposition. No matter how loud or hon' long sotne of the little l reshmen will yell orders al hitn across the ltlnchrootn counter, ,loc will maintain his equanimity of mind and his comprehensive expression of good nature. Ile was the commander of thc student company organized last year to light the dirty Mexicans, hut this fact doesn't ap- pear among his college honors. lWe give credit when credit is due., A hard worker, a good colnpanion, and an easy mat'k for some lucky lass. LIBER BR UNENSIS HAROLD CRANSTON MINER East Greenwich, R. 1. A T Sl Sweedy SICTH KIMBALL Ml'1'C1'lELL Bradford, Mass. A T A Mitch Varsity Football C11 C21 C31 C415 Cap- tain C415 Class President C115 Ban- quet Committee C115 Glee Club C11 C21 C31 C415 Varsity Quartet C21 C31 C415 Celebration Committee C21 C31 C415 Chairman Class Social Committee C21 C315 Treasurer Soph- omore Ball Committee C215 Junior Prom Committee C315 Junior WVeek Committee C315 ,lunior hflarshal C315 Class Basketball C215 Com- mencement Marshal C215 Cam- marian Club C41. HAROLD LlfISL111IMY1iRS Morristown, N. J. B 911 Chief', Glee Club C11 C21 C31 C415 Vice Presi- dent C215 Leader C415 Mandolin Club C11 C215 Glee Quartet C11 C21 C31 C415 Mandolin Quartet C11 C215 james Manning Scholar C41. WILLIAM ARTHUR NlQl D1'lAM Providence, R. 1. Aristotle', Sphinx Club C31 C415 1 irst Hicltis Prize C315 Second Prize C415 Class Debating Team C215 First Carpen- ter Contest C415 Alternate Varsity Debating Team C315 Varsity ,lust look at this fellow-a hundred and eighty pounds of healthy bone, flesh, and musclel If Harold had not been brought up in the quietude of East Greenwich Where mem- bers of best society sleep nineteen hours a day, he might have done a manls wot'k on the limwn Football Team. But Harold felt that being joggled around on the seat cushions of a milk train parlor-car every morning was sullieient exercise for him, and so he has drifted gently and not too conspicuously through four pleasant years here. When llarold finds that Utopia where there are no Rusty Phillipses to crab him, he will settle down to do everybody, he says. Probably he will, too, for they say down in Greenwich that all the fish ain't in tlte sea. Seth is a man it is hard to do justice to in a thing of this kind. lu these days you often hear it asked, What are you going to do with our ex-presiclents?', Well, Seth was president of the l9t5ers in their amoeba stage, but he has taken pretty good care of himself ever since. Any one can sing his praises on the field of battle. Four years of the kind of service he has given us on the gridiron ought to inspire the most wayward of Muses, but if you want to get the real inside stuff on Seth go to the Union waiters. They swear by him. It is to be hoped that Mitch will retain his com- manding individuality when he does what they say is the last thing a man is guilty of in his sane senses. How about it, Kitty? Chief Myers is a man who likes to deal in fundamentals. llc is not frivolousg he is seriously inclined. He has filled a large place in musical affairs at Brown, for besides drowning out the choir in Chapel with his fine rich baritone. he has been anchor- man on the Varsity Quartet. The cares of an organiza- tion li e the Glee Club hang heavily on Chief, yet he is withal inclined to be optimistic. lle used to tinkle a mandolin, they say, until liilly Sullivan got afraid someone would think Chief was serenading him. Now Myers uses the mandolin as a paddle for Freshmen. '1'hough undecided what he will do after Com- mencement, he can yodel too well to ever fall in danger of starvation. Bill's manner has a peculiar perfunctory character as though he set himself to the task of cool, calculating, not to say diabolical dignity. By means of an ever ready bubb- ling, effcrveseeut orifice he enjoys a position of euphonious seclusion. Did you ever hear Bill plead a cause, reader? Where were you when he pled for a University Commons overlooking our most branliful campus? Where were you? 1 ask, when he made tts dig in our jeans one morning in chapel to help the homeless, helpless, husbandless Belgiaus? If you're ever up a tree and want to get down, why hire liill as your law- yer. ii NINE TEEN FIFTEEN - IHCNDRIK GABRIICL NELSON Providence, R. I. Z XI' Heinie,' Class Football C255 Class Baseball C255 Class Basketball C25 C35g Sopho- more Ball Committee C255 Chair- man Class Pipe Committee C25g Sock and liuskin C15 C25 C35 C455 Cast C15 C25g Secretary C35g Vice- President C455 Junior XVeek Com- mittee C35g Musical Clubs C15 C25 C35 C-l5g Vice-President C-l5g Sec.- 'l'reas. Celebration Committee C455 Senior Social Committee C455 Var- sity Cheer Leader l'llCRBlQR'l' NEWl'il.L NICIIOLJXS Pawtucket, R. l. fl' 1' A Nicky Sock and Ruskin C15 C25 C35 C455 Cast Cl5g Francis NVaylancl Scholarship C35- JOHN IIICNRY NOLAN Newport, R. I. fll K Sir Lucius WARREN Pl'fRllAlXl NORTON Waymart, Pa. A T Nor1.l' Perhantl' Alternate Class Debating Team C253 llerald Board C25 Quite a versatile man is lleinie. Have you ever seen him lead a Varsity cheer-Athe regular a la Yale kind. you know? llavc you ever heard hiln tell a story or make a speechfthe a la l'lein kind,you know? llave you evergwell if you haveu't what's the use. lt's a long jump from shooting baskets with tlte basket hallcrs and making one night stands with tlte Sock and liuskin to Sunday evening calls, but old llendrick lludson could do it and so can his lineal descendant right here. A man with a sparkle in his eye, courageous, sineere, hardworking, and a good mixer, lrleine will make one of tlte substantial citizens of tlte city as tlte years roll on. Not Saint Nick, but old Nick, girls. All the regular men in college know llcrbie. lle's the son-of-a-gun who writes the summons for the Dean and delivers them, antl is about as welcome for this asa hang nail on your linger. lint if you don't happen to meet him in his ollicial capacity you will lind him a pretty decent sort. llc is a friend worth having. 'l'hough a trifle over-fond of making btuns of his less fortunate class mates by knocking down Ns with apparent, ease, he is a hard worker and deserves respect. lle is another confirmed devotee of tlte tea drinking habit and has tried to create tlte craving, it is said, in our old friend, Billy Mae. llerb intends to 'Abecome a crab on some faculty after june. lle should prove successful. With his hind feet encased in tan luuttoned shoes and his good uatnred map decorated with a well-trained pompadour, this scion of the Newport nobility tneandered in here four years ago. Not being of tltat vicious tempera- ment which seeks keys, Sir Lucitts bought a share in tlte R. 1. N. G. and secured life membership in the Board of Visitors over at St. Maria's Female Asylum. After these rrmpx tllfflll he proceeded to introduce the ancient Phoenician game of ringy'l into ltis castle at 44 U. H. and as the father ol' the science of tossing old checked caps upon convenient gas jets, his lasting fatne is assured. Three years at Harvard Law and an otlensive and defensive alliance with the Queen of liristolswill make his happiness complete. llis quiet charm and dignity of manner, his inimitable pleasantry of mind and spontaneous generosity of heart, have tnade us all love him. What ntore can you say about a man and not have him think you are giving him tlte razz? To be sure. Warren is precise: bitt his love for accuracy in tlte matter of detail has not blunted his appreciation for the fundamental. 'l'u be sure, he is austere: but tltat is because he is a gentleman of tlte old school, Cyou know what l mean,5 then again, Warren is inclined to be neutral Cand you know what Courtney says about such people5 bttt that's all right. There are worse things than neutrality wc philosophize, Drop in and see us anytime l'erham LIBER BRUNENSIS - AIAKIICS FRANCIS CYDONOGI ILY Ii Lowell, Mass. CIAIIFZPISY, 'I'reasurer Phillips Club UD, Class Sta- tistican C-lj, President C. and Q. Q-I-J JOIIN 1XN'l'I'IONY OWEN, Jn. Providence, R. I. 22 X jock First Ifartshorn I'remium CID, W'rest- ling Team GJ. I.I?IS'l'I'lR CURTIS PAGIC Phenix, R. I. ilIACS,, GEORGIII THOMAS PAIN If W'arwick, R. I. Z NI' Telco :X tnan should be inspired to write the biography of General ,Iiggs O'Donoghue and then I doubt if he could do him justice Certainly there has been no more loyal and generous ntan in the class tlutn old jiggs. Per- sistent, persevering, and keen he has achieved results both academically and sociallv. Academically, he has been tlte real savoir. Socially, he was the success of the season. As an organizer, let a word sufliee. fly his personal magnetism he was able to found what has been called the very best little society that was ever formed on the Hill. Witty, honest, and on the level. hc leaves many friends. 'I'here's only one thing we can't. forgive hitn for,that O'I7onoghuen mus- tache. jock is a quiet lad bttt lte Iuts some winning ways that are very popttlar with tlte ladies. For some titne now, however. he has been try- ing to play tlte role ofa tnarried man with dig- nity and at tlte satne titne with honesty. kiverydayabout noon, yott may see hint satlnter- ing gracefully along between tlte Narragansett l'Iotel and the old dirty Providence Opera Ilouse apparently waiting for someone. Ifyou have as much patience as jock you will see who the someone is, and seeing, can you blame hint? lfngineering will claitn his valttable services and if he goes about it witlt as much energy as he does most everything else he tackles he ought to land on top. IIere's hoping. We sympathize with I.ester because lte has gone throttgh life under fearful handicaps. Ile was brought up in the bulrushcs and poultry yards of Phenix, R. I. and spent his yotttlt eros cheting ttnderwear for his father's cows and worrying over the annual cranberry crop. Wlten he eame to Brown, he formed a partnet'- ship with that diabolical Prescott Ilill, and so he lost his only chance of escaping the rural fragrance which lingered about his person. But you mean well, Lester, and we appreciate you for that. We know that your dail ' trips on the choo-choo ears haven't injured your equanimity and if you lutven't been aloud talker, perhaps you've been a good Iistenet' tlur- ing your stay with tts. Les says that pretty soon there'lI be enough pages to make a book. Zowiel lIere's a man that came to Brown to Iose himself front tlte green fields and clull pastures of tlte South County. The far away look in his incandescent eyes and his abhurrence of every species ot' animal resembling an linglish theme corrector, convict him of being an l'ingineer. Of course 'l'ekc's a good fellow, but his judgement. of various matters seems a bit whimsical, even for a Warwickite. Ile dubs Iiurnell an arch-crab, hands a fusser's crown on old Whang I ay, antl boldly petitions that all such people as jiggs Olllonoghne be barred ft'om Brown in the future. Ile will ttse his ed- tlcation in an attempt to exterminate hurdy gurdys in the southern part of Rhode Island, and then will pose as an engineer in a khaki suit. S'long 'I ekel NINE TEEN FIFTEEN VIOHN ALBERT WICLD PICARCIQ New Bedford, Mass. ZZ fb 16 f'blacl: CHARLES STUART PHIQLPS Rockland, Mass. A T Q 'fStu Staley Second Vice-President Q-1-D. ROY CLl'1Vl'Il.AND PH1Ll.lPS Norwich, Ct. Phil Class llymnist C-lj. WILBUR JOHN PHILLIPS Youngstown, Ohio A K lil Rusty Junior NVceli Committee C355 Varsity Track Squad OJ. 13 l ew of ns have the good fortune to be blessed with the amount of dignity supplied by a natne with three handles to it, but ,lack's had the luck to be se endowed and he seems to bear up pretty well under it. Anybody who has never been so unlucky as to be compelled to reside in New Bedford knows that the pres- ence of a few engineers tnight effect a little im- provement in that old whaling station, and .I ack intends to take up the civic reform there for the town-fathers. lf four year's hard labor at an engineering course and the benefits of his companionship with Lawson are worth some- thing, -lack is well fitted for his arduous task. llellol Stuey, old girl. NYhcn the call is issued for all good men to come to the aid of the party, Stuey never fails. ln other words, he is reliable. Not much given to arguing Stuey has probably acquired as many friends in college as the next man. llis urbanity is only exceeded by his very sound sense with which he often astonishes the small cotcrie of fortunates who sport in the warming radiance of his disposition. All in all, Stu is about as square a man as you will meet. After june he will enter business, but, Stuey, who ever heard of business in Rockland! Not Irving lierlin, but Roy Phillips. friends. Phil is the father of more tunes than you or I have lingers and toes. lvhen he has not been performing over in Seth Mitcl1cll's restaurant, he has been advertising thc college at the Brockton Fair, at the Bijou, at Shcpherd's mus- ic department, et cetera. llc is the man who has given usa new Brown song ot' two. NVhen mtg wanted a junior Cruise song it was Roy who had it up his sleeve: he will give us our class song. Une of these days Roy is going to strike something good and get famous in a night. lt's a shame, but space prevents our discussing Royls student proclivities. Sullicc il to say that his hard work has borne results which is reward enough for any man. Listen, my children, Rusty is a student, and if you don't believe it just ask the Dean. Rusty's been here so many years he has cultivated a pretty wide acquaint- ance down town and yet we must com- tnend his remarkable astutencss for he is anoth- er of the guys who has been hanging around for IQIS to come along. Whether it be a minc- ing fox-trot or a run at billiards Rusty exhibits all the sang-froid of long experience-and as far as experience goes Rusty is the last word. W'hen he gives up cigarettes, he will become a railroad tnagnate and get away front liurnell. Yon've got the right dope, Rust, ole kid. r l r 4 l i i LIBER BR UNENSIS CHARLES AUSTIN PIPER Franklin, Me. A 'l' SZ Pipe HONVARD l.l'iWIS QUIMBY South Acton, Mass. E fb lil Quinn ROBERT l'IMMlC'l' QUINN River Point, R. 1. fb K Bob ADAMS 'l'I'lURBlCR RICE Newton Center, Nlass. A T King Rice Property Man Sock and Ruskin Q25 Stage hflanager C31 Q4-jg Cast CZD C31 I Committee for l'reshman-Sopho- more Debate Piper is the grand old man ofthe class, as he confesses to having already weathered thirty- onc terrestial winters. He's rather quiet- somewhat ofa worker-but get him seated in a big armchair with his old black pipe well- kindlcd, and you'll find him mighty interesting. Pipe has knocked about a good deal, for he has run the gamut of occupations from digging po- tatoes up in Friendship, Maine to teaching school down among the cane-brakes of Porto Rico. Nothing has ever bothered him serious- ly except a year at German I and the task of getting up the I-lill in time for chapel every morning. He intends to try his luck at industrial chemistry and if hard work will help a man up the ladder of success, Pipe will surely climb a few rungs. Listen to the birdie singl It came upon a midnight clear that glorious song of Quim's. just get out under his window some warm night and hearken to the sweet strains of music pours ing from his swelling breast. .lust why a man like Quint doesn't make the Glee Club happy is hard to tell. Nlaybe itisbecausc he is so shy. Anyway, he minds his own business and that is more than can be said of some people-not mentioning any names. They swear by him up in South Acton and those who stable near lnm in dear old U. ll. admit he's got a hum- erous turn of mind,ta very humerous turn ol' mind.l VVell Quint, if you want to break rocks after june why then I spose you must. Au resevoir, old top. Voluble, verbose, vociferous, vituperative, vigorous, vivacious,-all these and a million more adjectives describe this purveyor of oratorieal persillage. Quinn comes up from Riverpoint, wherever that is, every morning, wearing a difierent hat, and swaggers through the Brown Union a la Nelson. When he isn't kidding Keville about the possibilities of world peace, he is borrowing mental fodder from W, Arthur Needham and WVilson, buttonholi ng Rosenberg, the last of the Nlohigans, or car- rying Tom Crosby and Pop Htlntington aloft on the wave of his eloquence. But Quinn is far from being satished at having mesmerized these master minds. When the cooling autumn breezes begin to whistle in h s ears, he will dust up to llarvard Law and yell Quinnes- jluelvt llubra,r c'0l'f2ll.f, rl tu, Ifruli, enbirrzmt 111411. Shades of Charlie l rohn1anl This is the budding genius who is booked to stage the great American Drama, that is, after he has committed all of the parts to memory in order to play anything from the cat which strolls across the stage in the third act to the much wronged heroine. For some reason Adams is known to his intimates as the King. King of what we've never been able to discover, al- though the King of Hardwork wouldn't be so far from the target. He wishes that the days were three or four hours longer so that he could get more work done for the Sock and liuskin, in which he has majored since leav- ing Newton High School four years ago.Watch this man, classmates, -4 ' '- NINETEEN FIFTEEN -'i RICHARD DRURY RICE Lynn, Mass. A fb Dude Manager-elect Gym Team C35. WILLIAM KARL RICE Adams, N. Y. fb A O Pinky lkfanager Class Baseball Ql5g Class De-' bate Committee C155 Sock and Bus- kin C15 C25 C35 Q-l5g Farce f25g Soph- omore Ball Committeeg Class Soc- ial Committee f35g Wrestling Team C35 145- FREDRICK JOHN ROGERS Providence, R. I. 111 K Fred SAMUEL GREENE ARNOLD ROGERS Evanston, Ill. X11 T Sam Sock and Baskin C15 C25 Q35 1455 Cast Q15 Q25 H355 Brunonian Q-L55 Waste- basket C35 C453 Art Club C355 Sphinx C4-5g Francis Wayland Scho- larship Q25g James Manning Scho- larship C355 Phi Beta Kappa Q35g Class Poet C4-5. Drury is another vegetarian and unless you knou' him personally as we have lor four years it may be hard for you to separate him l'l'0Ill the rest of the chicken feed. In some respects he is like the Dean: he means well and often it takes him quite a while to tell you about it. but when you linally do understand him you can be pretty sure he is talking straight. Nlodesty and honesty are his prominent af- llictions. though he is inclined to take this col- lege life too seriously and study too hard. Our best wishes have been with you, Dude, all this year, but when you come back next fall just take it easy. Pinky is about as nice a looking boy as we have on our acquaintance list. If you should ever see him made up as a woman in some of those shows be is in, yon'd just have to love him to death. Karl keeps himself in hand pretty lunch all the time. that is to say, of course, he minds his own business and con- iines his person to Brunonia Ilall during the day time. At night he takes Stanley out for protection. Null' said. A good, clean, bright youth and one who will lnake a decided scratch in the world. lle has the bearing ol' a gentleman and mothers tremble at the ap- proach of his shadow. Fred is still quite denmre after his four years at college. Not a bad-looking fellow either, is he? Ile says he waded up to Brown from his native heath to guard the destinies of his old friend Beeltan, and if this is true we opine that his stay here has been productive of much good. Ont in the world fair collecns whisper that he is a pretty clever dancer, and as he told ns not yet when we asked if hc smoked, drank, or swore, we have not the slightest doubt but that he will lease a wull' and run a heady race in the chase ol' shekels after Har- vard Med. has pushed a diploma into his list. Samuel Greene Arnold Rogers-this long aristocratic sounding name belongs to the de- generate scion of a race rich in Brown tra- dition. What would Roger Williams say if he could read the pash plays of his tempera- mental descendent? And a minister's son at lhatl But you know the old saying of course. llowever, as far as absent mindedness, awk- wardness, and absolutely pure downright eussed forgetfulluess goes he has all the ear- marks ol' genius and a future no doubt awaits him. I am sorry, very sorry, but I cannot vouch for Sanunie's private life. Where he gets all the information for those stories of his we would like to know-and it ain't mere curiosity either. However, his tall, willowy friend, Stansbury, says his morals are irre- proachable, so take it for what it is worth. -1- LIBER BR UNENSIS -1-3-L IIANS l'll'iRl5l'iR'lf ROHRBACH Providence, R. l. PI'll.l,lP CARI. SC1'll'iRl'lR, lr. Brooklyn, N. Y. .S T Phil WILLIAM PAINE Sl'llfIl 1 lEl.D, hlr. Newport, R. I. A A fb Bill Class Cross Country Team fljg Cross Country '.l'eam fljglraek Squad ill, Class Nlarshal Commencement QU: Chairman College Nights Com- mittee GD, Class '1'reasurer Gly President Christian Association QU, Nlanager Track Team C415 Chairman of Undergraduate Com- mittee on 150th Celebration Q4-jg Class Marshal in 150th Celebration Cifjg Athletic Board 1415 Sphinx C-fjg Speaker to Undergraduates fsfjg President Cammarian Club MAURICE Sl1 1 St. lfouis, Mo. ClJ'anc7, Speaker 1880 Discussion C-fl. 138 Hans, son of llans Christian Anderson, has had a life that reads like a page from one of his father's books. Born in the grand old chateau of Charlottenburg fnear Berlinl, I don't know how many years ago, he was able by disguise to escape impressment into the Prussian llus- sars. To elude the conscription oflieers he came to this country and entered the Newton 'I'heologieal School. But the hounds of Militarism were still on his trail, and he had to leave in a hurry in his underwear one win- ter morning for Colby. While in Maitie some liritisher- took him for aGerman spy and were going to hang him at sunrise, but Hans gut wise to the plot, escaped in the night, and cattle to Brown last Fall. Ile is fast losing his haunted look now because the War has sort of set them off his tracks. and if it can only keep going long enough, we'll make a good Brown man of him yet. Tell me, oh, tell me, you dear sweet thing, do you know Phil Scherer? Umm,', said Silverheels llubbard ducking up the nearest alley. just between you and Cap Cameron there are few people around town that donlt know our Phil. llc has upheld the the rep- utation of these classic halls at tnany a the dansant, and, of a truth, at a great number of functions where a smooth, graceful, great, big, tall, loquacious, blonde man is needed, ln some ways Phil would remind the observer of Lord Byrong in others he might make you think of a night lunch wagon on apienic: other ways he might recall to your mind memories of the-but why go on! Phil has been a good fellow and so he will continue. All the fellows like hint. Like who? Billy Shef, of course. Bill has more intimate friends than a kid with a stick of candy. By knowing him you can see how it is possible for a man to be a good fellown and still live up to high ideals. His one weakness is procrastination, but Billy is lighting this and if he is as success- ful in the future as hc has been in the past, he should beard the lion in his lair. A man who can be as busy as Bill has been for four years and still retain his remarkable geniality de- serves all the popularity he enjoys. The college has faith in Bill: they know he is as sincere as he is good-hearted. Success will of course crown his efforts. Gentlemen, one moment, if you please. Note the ftne perpendicular ascent, the 'reat 'IP-111-the-air rise, the no-I-wont'L-lay-down configuration of this black mop of shining hair. But Maurice is more than hair. liven though he does come from St. Louis, he is a gentleman of the first water and when it comes to C.lOWllI'lgl1I grit and persistency, why mebbe jane am't therel Did you ever hear of his passionate craving for wet coffee? Well if you never did, get jack Skolnick to tell you about it. Maurrie would be a good debater but his breath is short, he would be a good ae- tor, but he doesn't believe in dissemblingg he would be a good-but what's the use, there's notlnug really the matter with hint. -- rN1NETEEN FIFTEEN JOHN AlOSl'll'I'l SKOLNICK New York, N. Y. 'ljawnn ICDWARD ROWIQAND SMl'l'll Providence, R. l. Sutithie EDGAR .lONA'l'l'lAN S'1'Al 1 Brockton, Mass. 0 A X Spike Varsity Football Squad QU f2jg Var- sity 13D C-U5 Class Football CD5 Class Basketball CD C25 Ujg lst Vice President Class f3jg Vice Presi- dent Biological Society Q3jg Presi- dent f-H5 Vice President Art Club C3jg Liber Board C31 C455 Art lfditor 649. RICHARD BOARDMAN S'l'ANLl'lY Plymouth, N. ll. fb E K Dick W'e like .lawn immensely,-indeed, every- one likes him. .lawn is the greatest living ex- ponent of the Beatt-Brtnnmelsky, mile-a miuttte life. After securing a mighty thorough edttcatiou at the Bronx Zoo and the Gotham Dressntaking Dispensary, he whirled into llope College with a few scented Milos, a complete tronsseau, :tml a bundle of De- lineators. Sitting nightly beside a rose shaded latnp in ltis fastidiously festooned houdoir, he has listened patiently to Sammy Workutan's impressive bushwah. and sagely counseled tlte amorous Sill. Skolnick has also found time for his bi-weekly shave and frequent tt'ips to the tttftsl fashionable the- dansants and pure-food shows ltereabonts. His popttlarity is attested by the faet that Sydney fears to speak to him without first asking permission. The tnan who never speaks, but merely frowns and frowns aml frowns. Why does he do it? l don'l know. l'le has been here quite a spell now but nobody has ever heard him speak except jack Scholnick. lt ltap- pened in chapel. l'rt-xy was in the midst of an eloquent appeal to the students to direct their steps along the higher paths when Smitltie, who had been studying the pt'o and con of the head of hair in front of him, ae- eidently knocked a hynm hook on the floor. Oh, Fudge, the gt'eat man is reported to ltave said. Well, kiddie, seeing as how it isn't, we'll let it go at that attd leave you to your melan- choly meditations. W'e'll have to hand it to Spike when he says that tlte liiber has the best. Stall' of liditors in the cottntry, but probably he is going an inch or two further than he should when he adds the good editor of the lirtmonian belongs in the jug. The remarkable exectttive ability of the virulent viking is what we want to emphasize most at this moment. Though personally Spike drew few of the designs that decorate or deseerate this book, he did exercise wonderful supervision of the whole at't department. Quietly and without ap- pat'ettt effort fthis is good, he would pttll this string or push that button until, lol you had the wltole tlting accomplislted. He will cleave insects in baetcriology a couple of years ttntil he feels ready to go out after the original lady- bug. A ntan witlt iron in the blood, granite in the bone, and gold-filling in the tooth, Mr. Richard B. Stanley of Plymoutlt, N. ll. fformerly l'lymeuth Rockl. Dick is a typical example of the large hearted country boy at college in a big city. Though better known trtlt of college than in it, he has absorbed enough of the Kultur to overcotne his native loutishness and has become a person of poise, ttot to say address. Among the inner circle of his closest friends, he is ttoted for his pttrity of speech and his affability of manner. 'I'here's only one thingabout Dick-kie ripe! how lte do like his billiards. LIBER BR UNENSIS 1-1-4 IXIILTON HAMMOND STA N S BU RY West Chester, Pa. tl' T Banty Sock and Buskin Society QU QD C32 C-ljg Cast Cllg Glee Club CU C21 C33 Q-Hg Pianist QZJ Gig iVastebasket C32 Q-Q3 l.iber Board GJ Q-lj, Brunon- ian Board C413 Francis Wayland Scholarship QD. ELIOT Sl IIPPISN S'l'.fXl'l.l'IS ' Burlington, Vt. A 'lf S2 l'Stapc Liber Board C31 WAl.l.ACl'i GICAR S'1'l'iWAR'l' lfiast Orange, N. A fl' Wally SIIISRRIAN MICRRILI, STRONG Chicago, Ill. A K If Mt: Strong Sophomore Ball Committee fllg Com- mencement Marshal Q55 junior lVeelt Committee OJ. No one would ever dream to look at these apparently placid features that they belong to a youth fairly glowing with temperament, But. yott never can tell, that's all. llc is one of those disciples of art for art's sake, most frequently expressing himself through the medium of the piano. Naturally, anyone who can express himself on the piano mttst be quite a musican. W'ell Banly really is. lle's right there on tlte deep stull. Of his munerous af- fairs with the fair sex, the writer, obsessed with the milk of human kindness, will make no mention, except that sometimes when his temperament gets tlte better of him he is tempted to go to extremes, tmless restrained by his plump, phlegmatic little friend Sammie Rogers. 'l'his young thine has just one claim to dis- tinction and that is he is tlte best little chapel monitor Bill Crolius ever had. It would really be quite impossible to give Stape ltis due if we ltad not rested beside him for a whole year between 9 and 9:20 A. NI. Ile is about as inoll'ensit'e as one of -Ionnie .fXbbot's Milos and about as modest as a certain Mary l an- tan of which more later. llc too has the rosy cheeks that grow red without warnting and he can kid the queen to her own taste when, of course. it is necessary. No biography of l'illie would be complete without a word of his val- uable services to tlte l.iber. Unforttmately, however, space does not permit of this. See you later. lillie. Stop for a moment, gentle reader, and view tltis tzentleman's checkered necktie. lt cp- ilfttltllt-SS muchly well our Wally's checkered earcer. All tlte way front liast Orange where tlte New Jersey mosquitoes whistle tuncfully, c:tnte this serene little siren in a side-door llull- man to old Brown. Ile has not ltlespite his pictured posej kept his hands clasped nor have his brain and feet been idle. Wally has studied a bit, for Freddy llunt has inspired him to intellectual gymnastics now and then, but he has also caperetl, skated, attd fox- trotted often over tlte polished, boards of Churchill llouse. A man might starve at pink teas all his life but not so iVally-when he has drained his last seidcl at tlte Senior Banquet, he will betake himself to the best job in sight. Quite so! I l uIl of harmless plcasantry and funny Jokes is one way to characterize this handsome spectmetyof the Windy City. Probably no one tn the class, unless it be lleittie Nelson, has such a splendid collection of little anecdotes fllltl lllcilsllltl Duns as dear old Merrill. Ile has bothered the life out of the poor editors of the Brown .lug and tlte Liber all this year with his tnlultttudinous, choice bits of delicate, subtle Wil: fNo wonder he is such a bear witlt tlte ladteslj Under tlte circumstances it may be well to close with an excerpt of this httmourous well-poised mind: it is one of those crackers yflll.l5llC on. l.isten - Got a large check for Lltrtstlntasf' You did? Who sent it? Oh, tt was anonymous. Bang! Whatever happens Sherm won't be an undcrtaker. So here got-sr 4 l l -1 NINETEEN FIFTEEN PARKE HARDY S'1'RU'1'I'IERS Townsend, Mass. WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN Lowell, Mass. B 9 H Bill,' Class Baseball C11 C2Dg Junior VVeel-: Committee QD, President Inter- fraternity Baseball League GD. LOUIS MORENCI SWEIQNY Poughkeepsie, N. Y. A A fb Lou .Iiraft IQLIAS CI-IARLISS SYDNEY Providence, R. I. tcsidn Sock and Buskin CU Q25 C35 HD. YVC used to hall'-believe that Townsend, Mass., was a regulat'old-fashioned cluster of cottages gathered around the town ptunp and inhabited by a few dozen bluemouldy Silases and llirams. But this year we've seen old Dad Strnthers, and his well-brushed pompa- dour and immaculate shave have prevented us from looking for a sprig of timothy behind his ear. Struthcr's front uatne is not the only individualistic tendency he displays--for he showed nerve enough to migrate from Clark University last fall jttst to participate in our celebration festivities and cop a degree. l'le says the movies are his worst atlliction. This shouldn't interfere with you becoming a school-teacher, Dad. VVhen Doc l'lverett used to Curl his sidetops, forget his ethical problems, and slouch in a ring-side seat while the mighty John L. ca- vorted in the squared circle, he little dreamed that ottr W'illic would ever be upon these green campuses. But W'illie kissed his mama good bye up in Lowell four years back and ensconced his three hundred pounds in a Caswell sttite. llere he stayed comfortably, poking his smil- ing faee out of windows occasionally to whistle at the birdies, cast a bag of water, or yell lustily in honeyed accents at Mr. Billy Beehau. Sully is as lutmorous as lfalstalli, a dyed-in-blood sport, and a man who scorned even to be Class l'oet. IIe's a good mixer and whether he becomes an alderman or a bar- tender, he'll be on top of the heap someday, if not sooner. Bottoms up, Sully. Lou Sweeny's good points don't show so much on the surface, but believe me, they are there. Not one to push himself forward, not one to meddle with other people's alliairs, Louis has unjustly been blatned of aloofness, not to say hauteur, by those who are not familiar with his stnile. As a matter of fact, the college has no more loyal supporter or the engineering society a more interested member than old tliraft. Lou says May :oth has im- pressed him about as much as anything since his pilgrimage from Poughkeepsie and judging from what we know of the atlair, we are not greatly surprised. Next year he will break rocks somewhere up in New York State. Good luck to you, Lou, old boy. Sidney is one of those kind-hearted gentle- men who shamble onto our catnptts each morning at exactly 8:58. lu cold or foul weather, he is usually aceotnpanied by his faithful red sweater. which serves well as ulster, mufller, raincoat, umbrella, and gloves besides being a sweater. I'lis cheery smile has won him thousands of friends here at college, and ,tis echoed abroad that countless cheers ring ottt for him when he flip-llaps down the smooth Urms Street pavement on pleasant mornings. Be that as it may, lflias is yet undecisioned whether to enter medicine, bttsi- ness, or vaudeville, but even if he ttevcr gets to work, success cannot escape him. A man who has met and overcome obstacles: one whotn we congratulate. L- -LIBER BRUNENSIS:- -l IIAROLD XIURIJOCK 'l'.XYl.OR Xleshanticut Park, R. I. 'DER k'Cap 'kllukel' ltlerald Board CI5 C25 C35 C-I-55 News Iftlitor C355 Managing Board C-I-55 Brunonian Board C35 C-I-5, lfditor l.ittle Brown .lug C455 Varsity Cross Country C15 C35 C455 Class Cross Country C155 Sock and Buskin CI5 C25 C455 Cast C255 Chairman Sophomore - I reshman Debate C255 junior kVeek Com- mittee C355 Commencement Klar- shal CI55 Class Auditing Committee C35 C455 Carpenter Prize Speaker C255 Wastebasltet C35 C455 Sphinx C-l-55 Senior Ball Committee C455 l.ibcr Board C35 C45, I'lditor-in- chief C-I5, CARI. ANTHONY 'I'l'IRRY l all River, Klass. AK li I7oc'I Manager Class Basketball 'l'eam C255 Manager Varsity Debating 'l'eams C25 C35 C455 Herald Board C25 C35 C455 Debating Union C35 C-I55 ,lun- ior YVeek Committee C355 Class Secretary C355 Christian Associa- tion Cabinet C35 C455 'l'rcasurer C455 Ifditor-in-Chief Brown lland-book C35 C-I-55 Treasurer B. Nl. C. Durfec Club C355 President C-I-55 Treasurer 150th Celebration Committee C35 C455 Sphinx C-l55 Cammarian Club C45- IIAROLD WlN'l'I'IROP TUCKICR Providence, R. I. ATA jim Shaphat', Tuck Glce Clttb C255 Second Team Foot- ball C35. GICORGIC CLARK VAl,l'IN'I'INlfI Ballston Spa, N. Y. tl' T Val Banquet Committee C155 Assistant Football Manager C355 Manager C455 .lunior Marshal C355 Chair- man -Iunior VVeek Committee C355 Chairman Senior Social Com- mittee C45g Athletic Board C455 Catnmarian Clttb C-I-5. And now we come to the obituary of the genial editor himself. Pause for a moment if yotl will in your reckless haste and gave for a moment upon these placid features. llere is the corner on the literary productions of ottr college, a man with a thousand cares,a man with a thousand smiles. 'I'here is no hypo- crisy about Cap. Ile says what he thinks and lets it go at that. Ile says he has been a sent all during his college days5 he has until this year when he has enjoyed all the pleasures of an autocratic, not to say aristocratic, boss 'l'hough essentially unassuming he has enough of the pleasing personality stull' to make his his presence felt wherever he tnay be. Success to you, Cap! Success! Doe has been a pretty conspicuous Iigure around the college, especially during his first three years, Pnnctuality in keeping ap- pointments. faithfulness in whatever he at- tempts, and painstaking accuracy combine in some way or another to make up Doc's per- sonality. Ile is a seriouslad, asa glance at his portrait opposite will disclose, but withal he maintains in all weathers a certain ttrbanit ' that makes us trust him and call him fricntl, Ilis greatest set'vice to Brown has been that of pttblicity agent. ln one wav or another he has spread his alma mater's fame e'en tothe borders of his fair I all River. No one can hold a grudge against Doc. He will Continue to contribute to the support of the ttniversity for a few years IIIUTC. And then watch out. What a clamm shame.to call this man I'Iar- old. It doesn't lit him any better than Romeo, Percy, or Christine would. Shaphat is a man's man twenty-live hours a day-'if you don't. be- lieve it look at the way he wears his eravat or listen to the exaust valve of his basso pro- fnndo voice. Oft-times when we have heard him rumble soulfully at a Glec Clttb concert or seen him floundering about in a scrimmage on Andrews l ield, we have held our breath and thought What a might' male child is this Shaphat,son of Noahll' Vldhen he has marched down yonder hill forthe last. time Tucker will hitch up his girdle securely and hire out as a side-show spieler at Crescent Park. What more could you desire, llarold- me-ladl It isp't generally realized that Val was borne tn Ballston Spa, but when it is, donbtlessrmany puzzling things tvill be cleared up. During his stay on the Hill he says he has been most impressed with the beautiful ceil- ing effects of some of the Providence hospi- tals. We know what he means and he had our 5YH1D:ttlties. When on his sea legs, however, Val can't be beat when it comes to endurance tests. Preeminently a leader among men witlt an attractive, not to say fascinating, per- sonality, he has made many friends both on and around the campus. Fearless, and true to his ideals. is Val. Ile is a kind of man we like to hayc come to Brown. llis executive abil- tty will vent itself in some form or another, probably the coal business. NINETEEN HFTEEN IIOMICR ICKISIJCY VAN D If RW ICR KIQN Aliddle Granville, N. Y. E X Van IFIDWVARD ROBlCR'l' XVALSH, Ju. Roslindale, Nlass. fl! K Serapper Chairman Celebration Committee C-lfjg Varsity Track C21 Q35 GEORGE WILLIS WA'l'IfiRMAN Providence, R. I. fl' K Nl' Doc Varsity Baseball C31 C415 Wrestling Team G55 Francis lVayland Schol- arship MD. WILLIAM RANDALL WVATILRMAN Providence, R. l. fb K tl' Randy,, Cross Country Team CID QZJ C3j C-lj, Captain Chg Varsity Track QU QZJ GD Q-Hg I rancis lVayland Scholar- ship Born in 'I'roy and named Homer' llow could such a combination help producing ex- ceptional results? Ile tirst landed in Prov- idence on a milk train from his parental dotni- cile, Ile found a room in Maxcy his first year, hut true to his name. was clever enough to see his mistake and to change his Lart-s to Hope, Ile Iirst came into l'roviclence after having sherilled the visiting hraneh of the Springfield Y. NV. C. A. to their respective ahodes. With all due fortitude and courage, he was noticed hy friends singing wildly and raucously, ln my I'larem -- a pean chanted hy his ances- tors before each hattle. Van is a good scout as scouts go and has heen a valuahle man to the .Iohn Ilay l.ihrary. It is to he hoped that after .Iune he will not attempt any more llying trips to liurope. Here I am,-- Scrapper NValsh, all the way from Roslindale with my checked cap hung atop my dome at a very ultra lvlassachusetts angle. No white man has ever phased me, not even the mighty Beehan. l've worn the Welcome oll' the doormats at Miller Ilall. dug lmge chunks out of the Lincoln Ifield hoard track with the spikes in my ruhher hoots, kidded everyhody in the Iingineering Depart- ment' If-om l'iddie Irlorrigan to Ansel Brooks, and infused a few injections of Gaelic pep into the Celehration Committee with my youse guys stulli. Next year l'm going to he an alumintnu of this college, and even ifl will miss the spurring inspiration of little Saturday matinee parties at Keith's. l'll sure have an exciting time turning raw leather into Roslin- dale shoes. Tutti frutti, Scrapperlu Look at that, said Doc Marvel proudly, that's the way for an athlete to go through his courses. Nothing hut A's anti B's. Somewhere and time hack in the dim years of the Ordovician period George learned how to eomhine work and play. lle learned his little lesson so well that for four years he has heen pointed out with pleasure hy Brown men as an example of the athlete who was a good stu- dent in addition to heiug ahle to shoot thetn across the diamond or plant a pair of shoulders down to a wrestling mat. Ile really doesn't enjoy hasehall or wrestling, however. lt's all a sham, merely apparent pleasure. Geor- gie's real delight is in the Biology Lah toying with the sinewy streptococci or ogling outlaw oysters with an opera glass. Ile has a good head and is willing to workfWell, what more do you want? Primarily, Randy is an harrier. Anyone with a speaking acquaintance with that de- lightfully diverting sport of eross country knows what this means as no one else can. An 'one who has staluina enough to chase up and down the crags and jutties of the Seekonk for four years is entitled to the respect and admiration of the crowd, But, gentle auditor, he is not only an harrier. lle is one of the hest regular little students that we happen to know. When it comes to going at a suhject in earliest and knowing it through and through you'd hest get a tip front Randy if you want to lind out how it is done. Loyal, conscientious, and true, he will graduate with lionors with the approhation of his class. What more can you say of a man. LIBER BR UNENSIS HAROLD ISARLE WATSON Cranston, R. I. A T A Sammie,' Banquet Committee Q15 . BYRON LILLIBRIDGEWl'1S'l,' Edgewood, R. I. A X A XVesty Mau Class Football Ql5g Second Football Team Q25 Q35 Q-l5g Captain Q-45g Class Swimming Team Ql5g Var- sity WVrestling Squad Q15 Q25g Sock aid Buskin Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45g Cast Q15 THIQODORIC PETERS WHI'I'I'I:IMORl'l WVest Roxbury, Mass. fb I' A Ted Cap Celebration Committee QI5g Swimming Squad Q25 Q35g Liber Board Q35 Q-I-55 junior Week Com- mittee Q35. HAROLD LESLIE WILSON Youngstown, Ohio A A fb Luke Glee Club Q15 Q25 Q35 Q4I5g Varsity Quartette Q35 Q45g Varsity Gym Team Q25 Q35 Q45g College Gymnast Q455 Class Social Committee Q15 Q25g Banquet Committee Q25g Class Re- lay Team It'S rather a hard thing to wax eloquent over a guy when you've been around with him very much. .Yet there's nothing so very had about Sammle that the wide world ought not to know about. He started out very well: made a speech at our freshman banquet which made a most profound impression, you may be sure, upon those present. Then he used to play billiards with more or less success but by the end of our sophomore year he had al- most entirely disappeared from the naked eye of the lay observer. You might have said he had just passed away, but really this was not the ease. He was absolutely converted to the pursuit of science and what he doesn't know about bugs and all their habits, we feel sure is not worth knowing at all. Among other things, Sam must have his pipe, his beer, and his movies. No man can lay claim to a liberal education who has not come in contact with the per- sonality here exhibited. Probably no more big souled, honest, benevolent man can be found in our whole class. VVhat would IOIS be, or for that matter what would this college be, without the expansive, not to say, lagu- brious Ma Westian smile. We haven't known Byron four years for nothing: we haven't fol ou'ed his career in johnny llucher's factory of pots, test tubes and bad smells ever since he came to these campuses as a bashful, hang- dog freshman to no purpose. Indeed we have derived considerable satisfaction in watching his evolution. Now that he has blossomed out into a man of culture and penetration, we shall expect great things of him. NVithout a doubt the chem iirrn that gets you, Ma, may consideritsclflueky. Not for a moment would we think of saying aught but kinds words to old Theodore Pe- ters. He is the one par excellence of what sorrows a mortal may endure without bedew- ing his cheeks with salt tears. We would swear the most damnable oaths if we left lov- ing brothers and sisters in the depths of West Roxbury for an atmosphere pervaded by Ioe Miller and Red Campbell. But Theodore has obe ed the spurs of ambition which bade lnm stud,y and worry not. and he has plunged faithfully, stopping seldom even to hold hands with Ray McKay He has acquired the great quality of being able to work hard always, and if this key docsn't open the door of success to bint, then we miss our guess. Why here is good old Luke YVilson, the Man From Home. In him you see the last of the famous Wilson brothers, and probably the most goodlooking of them all. QAnd that is going some.5 Luke has considerable acumen when you come right down to brass taeks. He called Sherm Strong a crab, and said his worst fault was giving Seth Mitchell the right note when the quartetters perform. But, tell me Luke, on the level now, werenit you kiddin' us a bit when you voted for jonnie Abbott as the most fetching man in IQIS with our gentle sis- ters? We shall be very sorry to have Luke turn his back on New lfngland after gradua- tion, but if he will ever send any little Wilsons back to old Brown, why you can just bet your shirt we won't kick. 1-l NINE TEEN FIFTEEN -M- RUSSELL MILLS WILSON Providence, R. I. ZXI' Russn Sock and Buskin CI1 C21 C31 C415 Cast Annual I arce C31g Celebration Play 449. MIJWARD 11AnR1soN wmson Providence, R. I. K E Cap't Dickn Cross Country Team SAMUEL HENRY WORKMAN Providence, R. I. Skim', Sock and Buskin C11 C21 C31 C-11g Cast CI1 C-l1g Class Debating 'l'eam C11 C215 Hicks Prize Debate C21 C313 Second Prize C31g Carpenter Prize Speaker C315 Secretary-'l'reasurer Debating Union C31g President C415 Varsity Debating Team C31 C415 Captain C415 Hicks Prize Winner C-11g Sphinx C-11g Class Auditor C31 C41g Senior Ball Committee 145 When Russ was a little boy, he admired men with mustaches very much. After a long pro- cess of fertilization, he last year managed to raise a scrubhy looking hlond hedge on his upper lip, but he was forced to singe it oll' be- cause it interfered with his breathing appar- atus. Ilis friends gave him a vote of thanks and a gold-headed ivory cane when he removed the hirsute disfiguration from his map, and on sunny afternoons he often takes his eane for a little walk to lvoonsocket or Block Island. Judging the younker by the company he keeps, we reckon he has a remarkably appreciative sense of beauty. Ile's going to grab the first job he sees: here's hoping the Employment Bureau eloesn't hand him a quince. This is Winsor, ailas Cap'n Dick. Anytime you desire a little inexpensive amusement. just put some salt on Dick's tail and let him nncurl a batch of his underworld jokes in your ears. As a real punster, old Winsor has Il. Ouinine Dealey and kVeber 8: Fields crying for help-indeed, the lad is so coyly humourous thathe sometimes harely escapesheingpatlietic. 'l'he kinks in his ex-golden thatch savoir, mark him of Olneyville ancestry, but Eddie is a very white man, and likewise very pure. lf he were a cake of ivorv soap, he would float. Ile belongs to the good old school of natural-born fussers and is idolized by countless kVest- minster Street janes. 'l'he cross-country team will feel his loss next yearg but Dick should worry,-he's going to look over the Radcliffe menagerie. Whom do you eonsider the biggest crab among the undergraduates?,' Sammie says. 'l don't know. I avoid lish. Sammie is a man who has made his lnark at college. He is essentially a man of vivacity,-bubbling all over with a copiousness of expression that radiates and beams in every direction. Ile has his share of honors, too. Ile doesnlt smoke, he doesn'L drink, but Cand he admits it1 he is some fusser. This is the only line o- aetivity, Sammie says, you can get by in witlij out doing hard work. YYell, we don't know, but we have our suspicions. kVhether it be the law or business, Skim should gather enough iron men before very long to help Prexy in his next l'indon'inent campaign. I I 'M .Ig N- I ' . HAVVAA 'sg i,Iaf5f1i15:+.f,, 'QT c.,.: -' 5 V- ' I -Z ' PW' H' 4,-111-fi, 7 - .. ngfgfvjqg-1 jim- -34,1 . ,V Ka ..-.. ':. I l M .ggi ,...4 .- F-EJ ICDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS .... PAUL OLIVICR CUR'l'IS ...... GICOROIC IIPINRY ANTHONY LA ROI5 JO RALPH BROWN GRAHAM. . . I Rl'IDl'IRICK IIARTWELL GRI'II'INl'l. . . SICPII MILLER SAMUICL GRICICNIC ARNOLD ROOICRS ..,.. FRANKLIN BLAINIC FROST .......,, . . AARON IfII,MlCR GO'I l'SI'IALL. . . WILLIAM PAINIC Slll'1I 1 IlCLD, -Ir... RALPH LEON BLANCHARD ,... . JAMES FRANCIS O'lJONOGIIljl'I ..., CICCIL MISRNIC PUTNAKI CROSS .... ROY CLICVIBILAND PHILLIPS ..... SHARON OSBORN BROWN 146 . . . .Cfmirnlzln ..,..................Tl'ua,f1m'r WILLIAM CLINTON CROLIUS, Ju. . . . . l'1u',ffrlr11l Clary Suppfr . . ...... Clan' Ornlor ...,.....,.....ClnJ,v Port , , . .Fz'r.vl S pvakrr Cl11,r,r Trm' . . . .Sccond Sprnlerr Clary Tm' , . . . I-ldd1'4'.v.f In 0,71l!L'l'gl'll!!1llllL'.V . . . , , , . . . .Cla.v.r llz'Jlo1'z'af1 . . . I .Clan SllIfiJ'liL'1.l1lI . . . . .Clan Prophfl . , . ,Clzzu lfymzzixz . , . . ,Clzlfx Ozffxt - 5 I I - LIBER BR UNENSIS n EEJEZZZ4 53263 gL?diZgZ:g U U Q CLASS YELL E3-E Sixteen, rah, rah, . :j 95- Sixteen, rah, rah, QQ Sixteen, rah, rah, my an A QB, Brown, Brown, Brown! YN tt it it W QQ Sewage WEE? 5262534 smzfzgffw 148 l V 1 J , l As -W will lm! ll I il Ohi Puh- Shaw! A '- - 51 - - Why htm-my? l I The Junior Ginks Q ' 'g FOX-TROTTILD into Sayles Hall early and got a crotch hold on 52, E the coat lapel ofthe alabaster guard of the chapel door. Good U n u - Z E morrow, Penelopeli' I cooed I'CSpCCt1VClylI'ltOl1lS eardrum. Are E 77 3Immmmmnmmm,E you still wearing your winter underdrawers? 2 2 Naw , he snorted eontemptously, Hbut, say, tell me quick 5'''' 5 How do you like being off the water wagon F Oh, said I, Qfor I was in amazing spiritsj I feel better off.- Now then, old toppie, my fine boy, letis to business. Slip me some dope on them JuniorGinks-not Buzz Andrews, or Ormsby, or Jerry Curtis, but some of the lesser luminaries, you know. ' Oh, the Junior Ginksl Sure, Iill show them guys up for fair - especially that Julia Ferguson, the boy with about as much pep as a Philadelphia funeral directorf, Alright, old man,,' I encouraged him, '4l ergie,isjust like Underwood, Sinclair, and Dwyer-so damn noiseless that every time he wakes up he gets excited and falls asleep again. Proceed. Lemme see. There's Arnold, who walks like a gouty race-horse and says 'helloi as if the ellort strained his liver. Next comes Fullbaek Dresser- plays the guitar like a wop barber and thinks he's niceQ?j cause he parts his hair in the middle and Hunked Argumentation. Oh, yes and weivc got Feiner, lightweight champion fourllusher, and Duck-work Sanford who thinks he can earn a degree in the pool-room. Then comes Ophelia Ilall that resembles an actress as close as Bill Crolius resembles Gaby Deslys. After him comes Y. M. C. A. Rosenberg, a geezer with enough verbiage to cover the State of Texas with a beautiful lawn, and Amasa WVilliston whois ruined a fair reputation by rooming with Carl Terry. Then 1here's Hazlett, who's sure to get the job of Class Poet, and Heathcote, a geezer that thinks he's vicious when he visits the Bijou and talks like Billy Sheflield-as if he swallowed a German cruiser. And thereis Davis, a crab what owes Carlo Russo lifty cents since l912. 149 LIBER BR UNENSIS Are you a member of the Anvil Chorus? I interrupted, blowing my nose carefully after the manner of Ted Ballou. Oh, wait! he pleaded nervously, Lemme tell you about Maxwell-he plays football as gracefully as Mother West would chase fleas. Then there's Skull Johnston who's always trying to sell chances on a pink elephant or a red goat and that MacNeill guy who looks like an Arrow Collar man in spite of a shifty engineered expression. And there's Johnnie Nloore, whois afraid to wash his face for fear he'll erase his mustache. Class him with them old Hi- bernian triplets-Lozovitxsky, Feinstein, and Shoul. Only one trio beats them, -Senator Metcalf, Healy, the Cuban Venus, and lVlcGinn, the Sherlock Holmes of George Street. Whewl Did you get that formaline aroma disseminating from that 250 pound kewpie. That's Yeakel, the hopelessly incurable biological bug. Then we've got Jeffrey, the Prohibitionist monster and Affleck getting a shut eye on Apollinaris water. There's Bud Goodwill , usually vigorously en- gage in resting and exhibiting a thousand dollar ischgabibble smile while nonchalantly blowing smoke rings from his l6lst. daily Piedmont coffin nail. There's Saunders who has the same speed as a runner, as Rusty Phillips had before the war as a student, and there's Stacy Bearse, a boy wearing a rut in old Westminster Street daily. I canit forget Bud Smith steerin, clear of the Library like it was a pest-house and Warren Blue nominating Kehoe as an en- try for the Fall River Dog Show. But here's the Dean. Beat it before he spots you for a politician? Thanksl I muttered, slipping into Sayles as the great political reformer hove into view, and sitting down, I .began to write. 1,50 nik Oiiicers HAROLD PATTERSON ANDREWS .............,. HAROLD DUEL SCOTT ............. ALLEN GUY MAXWELL .......... CLAYTON LEROY PHILLIPS .... IOHN JOSEPH RILEY .......... Class Yell Sixteen, rali, rah, Sixteen, rah, rnli, Sixteen, rah, rah, Brown, Brown, Brown! Class Roll Name Residence MAURICE ADELMAN Pf0i'1'df1lCF WII.I.IAM RUSSELL AFI-'LECK NPT ARVID AxEL ALM fIJI'A Yovzlcrrf, N. Y. Pfabody, Jllm-,r I'IAROLD PATTERSON ANDREWVS AK E I'rovide11rr GEORGE RALPII ARNOLD EX Providrmu- LINCOLN RICHARDS ARNOLD AYP Providmm' JESSE MITCIIIiLL BAILEY AT Provirlfnn' FLOYD I-IALL BAKER Hazard, Ky. FREDERICK ALLAN BALLOU, JR. 'PT 1,f0'Uflll'HCf IRICIIARD DAVIS BANIGAN AT 1'rovidf-ozrr ITAROLD CIIESTER BARNEY ZNII 1'roz'idrncv Louis EARL BAUER AXA Linwood, N. l 151 . . . . .Firxt I iu'-I'rr:idcnz ...Sf-60111 'H - ' ' Prfxidcnt lm' Prvxidcnt I . . . . . , Sfcrffary . . . . Tr1'a.rurer Room l2 Camp 4 Rflllfllllllg Hope 12 65 College Hope 25 North Slater 100 Waterman University 52 4 Manning 100 Waterman 3 I'IaI'v:1I'd Ave. University QI -1-AL LIBER Name CTEORGE STACY BEARSE BQH EDWARD NVARREN BLUE 11122K JOIIN BAORTON BOOTH AK E ELLIOT I'IARR1S BOSWORTII B611 FRANCIS JAMES BRADY ATA LEON WXLLIARI BROWER EX JOSEPH RICHARD BROWN KIDK ABRAHAM JACOII BURT 1'lARRY I'lUNTER BURTON QAX NA'F1IAN BIQNEDICT BURTON HOWARD DEIBERT BUTTERWECK SENVARD GROVES ISYABIEX CTEORGE JOSEPH ALOYSIUS CAIRNS JOHN JOSEPH CASIIMAN fIPK NVILLIAM CURTIS CHASE AK E ITENRY LEON COHEN JOHN STUART COLEMAN ALIIERT BULLOCK COOPCIPKNI' ISDMOND PATRICK CORCORAN TK JOSEI-II AfIIiRRIT'1' COUSE ATA EDWARD INGISILSOLL CRISTYfI711A GEORGE BURTON CUMERFORD AXA GERALD IJNVIGIIT CURTIS ATS2 SAMUEL IREED TJAMON KZ? ELMER FREMAN DAVENPORT CDAO TIERMAN NIANTELI. DAVIS NVILLIAM T'lE1SEL IJICK OAX RICIIARD DRESSER AACIJ JOIIN BERNARD IDUNN AK E l'IENILY DURSIN, JR. ATU FRANCIS DTICIIAEL IDWYER fIPK GEORGE AR'I'IIUR EAMES f1PA9 JOHN LAMSON ICDDY AT CLAUS EMMANUEL EKSTROM GORDON BANIIAM IEWINO AT ARTHUR WAIKIKICN FAIRCIIILD AT 1'lORACIi JANNEY FARLEE PHILIP AARON FEINER I'lERMAN 1'llilNS'l'liIN NVILLARD WAIRE FERGUSON AT l RI5DERlCK LUM FIERRIS AK E CIIARLES CURTIS FIELD ATA '11IlEODORli RICHARD FORD B011 JOSICPII JOAQUIM FRAGA 1'iARL LRUSSHLL 1 liI5'I'ZSDA9 PIIILLIP PADDOCK GOOIDXVILL JR., SAX NVILLIAM AUGUSTUS GIlAIIAh1CI7Ii ITAROLD RAYMOND .HALL AT BR UNENSIS Residence Dofclzestrr, 111 ass. Nz'wlo1I, rllass. Fall River, Mass. Chicopfz' Falls, Mass. Providnzrc Proaidrncf Provincetown, Mass. lvovidenre New Bedford, Mass. Woodbury, Ct. flllrntown, Pa. Norllz Adams, Mass. Proaidmzre Providence l'rovz'rle1Icf 1'rovidencf Providence Providence Rorlevillr, Ct. zlsbury Park, N. j. Providmcz' Providmzce Warwirk Nrrle Kingston Shelburm' Falls, Mass. 1'rovidencf New Bedford, Mass. Providrncc Providesrce Woousocket Providencz' Loudon, England Proaidmzra l'rovidr1Ice Newton Canter, Mass. Nrwlowu, Ct. l.ambe1'lI1illz', N. f. I'rovidmIcz' I'roai1Ic1zcz' B'Ilfl171.gl01l, Vt. East Oraugf, N. j. 1:'xz'Zz'r, N. II. Morristown, N. j. Proaidmzcc Ollsvillr, Pa. Bramwfll, W. Va. Proaidz'11cr Ilnckrllslowsz, N. 152 Room Caswell 3 Maxcy 43-1 65 College -ll George 9-1 Angell Hope 25 221 Thayer 58 Lippitt 81 Waterman 3-1 Benevolent 144 Benefit Hope 26 680 Chalkstone Ave 109 George 65 College 96 W. Clifford 2-10 Brown 108 Waterman 109 George 94 Angell 102 Wayland Ave. Hope 2 Caswell 16 127 Angell 175 Thayer 39 Quaid Caswell 34 54 College 65 College Caswell 15 90 Newark 114 George 52 Taber Ave. 70 SeanIan 100 Waterman 100 Waterman Maxcy 431 14 Star 106 Olney Hope 44 05 College 9-l Angell 41 George 101 Transit Caswell 11 81 Waterman 37 Glenham 100 Waterman NINETEEN FIFTEEN Name ERNEST PIALLIWELL fb KXI' JOSEPH FRANCIS I'lALLORAN fI1K CLARENCE THOMAS l'lAMILL WAI.'I'IiIi SUMNER IIAYVVARD JOIIN CLARK I'lAZI.lC'l'T ACD FRANCIS CARMODY 1l'EAL1EY fI1K CI,l1fl'OIiD DAVliNPOIi'F I'l1iA'l'IICOTl:I Afll CHARLES JAMES HILLKPAG PLOYER PETER I'l'ILL EN GUSTAVE :DESIRE TIOUTMANN AXA 'FIIOMAS MAYNO HULL ZXII WILLIAM LIENRY I'lURLlN AT WILLIS HOERON JEFFERY AUSTIN JENISON GEORGE FRANKLIN JOIINSTON SAX BARCLAY LINCOLN JONES GAX EDWARD LAWRENCE KEIIoEfI1KNI' ROGER S'l'URTIiVANT IQELLEN NPT THOMAS BARTIIOLOMAE IQEVILLE fI2K JOSEPH AUBREY LANDSCIIOOE NEWTON PECKIIAM LEONARD 21111 E VINCENT WASIIBUIKN LEONARD Zlfll E CIIARLES ALICK LEVIN ATO I'IERBERT ROYAL LINDBLOM I1AROLD IRVING LONG MYER JOSEPH LOzOvI'rsRY BURTON LOREN LUCAS AXA PAUL CROUSIE LYALL AT STANLEY HOWARD LYONS WILLIAM RHODES LEROY MCBEEYIIT JAMES JOSEPH MCGINN CIDK CIIARLES BERGER lVIACl4AY EN HUGH STANFORD MCLEOD ACID ROGER LAURENCE MAIKBLE KE ERNEST FREEMONT MATTISON 11122K ALLEN GUY NIAXWELL CIJAG ALBERT EDWARD MAYOII EX I'IAROLD MADISON MESSEIK AT PAUL BARNEY METCALFAAT LIERMAN MICIIEIISON PAUL PETER MILLEIK JOHN WESI.EY MOORE KZ HENRY AVERY MORGAN EX WILERED MCCULLOUGII MURCII KE JAMES ANTHONY MU1ll'IIY fIfK DAVID WILSON NEILL, JR. FRANCIS JOSEI-II O,BRIEN KPK VVILLIAM NICIIOIIAS OllMSliY fI1K Residence Fall River, Maxx. Fall River, Marr. Holyoke, 1lla.r,r. Rorlzcmw, N. Y. Kanleakef, Ill. Cuba, N. Y. Prooidrrzcr Syrnqlur, N. Y. Newburyport, Maxx. Alarzvillf lfaxt Providrrzcz' Antrim, N. Il. Prooidrrzcf Larzxirig, Mirh. Long Brarzclz, N. j. Souih China, Alf. Naugaluck, CI. Cohaffrt, Maxx. Providrme Dunkirk, N. Y. Providvrzcr Fairhaven, Mary. Norwich, Ct. Providence Sharon, Maxx. Providrrzcv Rurnford Lawrfrzcr, Marr. Providfrzcr Providerzrf Prooiderrcv I rovidr1zce Providerm' Brockton, Alll.f.S'. Edgfwood Slaiirzgtou, Pa. Pawtucket Newbury, N. H. W'irkford New York, N. Y. Sterling. Ct. Fall River, Maxx. Niagara Fallr, N. Y. P1'ovidf11c4' Wliimzarz, Maxx. Berrzardwillc, N. f. 1,I'O'Ui!iL'11L'K Dorchr.rlr1', 1lla.r.r. 153 Room 108 Waterman 109 George 94 Angell Caswell 10 North Slater 109 George 51 BarIIes Brnnonia 1 110 Waterman Caswell 15 Slater 1 157 Williams 85 Potter Ave. Caswell 31 81 Waterman 81 Waterman 108 VVaterman 261 Thayer 109 George University 33 Caswell 24 Caswell 23 Caswell 18 89 Chester Ave. University 18 21 Goddard Hope 1 Hope 46 Hope 37 4 Manning 109 George 110 Waterman 81 Waterman University 4-1. Brunonia 9 University 4 Hope 25 Hope 48 54 College Caswell 20 Sterling Ct. 127 Angell Hope 27 127 Angell 109 George Hope 47 109 George 109 George -: LIBER Name HENRY BACHELLER OsDoRN EX FRANK EUGENE PAINE, JR. ZNII JoIIN PITKINS PALMER KIJZIK CLAYTON LEROY PHILLIPS fI1ZK RALPH NVILLIAMS PRATT B911 RUSSELL BILLINGS QUIMEY ZRIDE VERNON IQICE GAX JOHN JOSEPII RILEY 'DK JACOB ROSENEERG PAUL LEWIS RUSSELLAACP CARLO CANIO RUsSo JoIIN ALEXANDER RYRIE ACID EARL IJUCKWORTH SANFORD B911 PERCY WATERMAN SARLE AK E WILIIOUR EDDY SAUNDERS ATA FIAROLD GEORGE SAXTON fIDK EARLE WINSLOW ScHooNMAKER AAG FIAROLD DUEI. SCOTTYIIT AERAIIAM SHOUL ABRAHAM WILLIAM! SIDKOWSKY PAUL FOSTER SINCLAIR 4122 K JAMES EDWARD SKANE fI2K FRANKLIN CHAPMAN SMITH ACID FRANK RUSSELL SMITH WPT WILIIUR JoIIN SNYDER K2 FRANK ELMER STARRETT B911 DAVID STEEL EKIJE JOSEPH LAYCOCK STRICKLAND EDMUND JAMES SULLIVAN ZWII WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN, 2D CIJK FIENRY WEEDEN UNDERWOOD, JR. EDWARD FERDINAND WALDRON GUY WILLIAHI WELLS CIJAG JOHN FREDERICK WENDT GEORGE MORRILL WHITE EN IRVING CLOUGII WIIITE AKE AMASA FITCH WILLISTON EDWARD TAI.PEY WILLSON, JR. AT FIENRY PARKER WITTE, JR. SAX EARL FRANKLIN WooD CIIZK GEORGE FIENRY Woon, JR. ZFIDE STUART EDSALL YEAKEL EN BR UNENSIS Residence Prabody, Maxx. W arwicle Slorkbridgr, Maxx. Nrw Haven, Ct. Nfwlou Center, Jllaxf. South Acton, Maxx. Williamfporl, Pa. New Bedford, Maxx. Fall River, Man. While Plainf, N. Y. San Fele, Ilaly zlllou, Ill. Prooiderzcr Providencf Providfrzn' Brorkton, Mau. Newark, N. f. Crarwille, N. Y. Newburyport, Mau. Providence Undrrhill, Vt. Providence Wexlerly Norwirh, Cl. Buzzard: Bay, Mau. flthol, Maxx. fluburrz Lawrrnre, Maxx. Providence Wellrrley Ilillf, Ma.r.r. Narraganfell Pier Dighlon, Maxx. Morzlrofr, Pa. Providencr lfrovidrnre Lynn, Marx. Tiwrlorz Farmington, N. H. Morriftown, N. j. Danirlxon, Cl. Pawluckrt 279 Pr Ea!! Orangr, N. f. 154 Room Hope 32 Slater 1 Brunonia 10 Brunonia 10 41 George University 48 81 Waterman Caswell 34 Caswell 7 54 College University 58 North Slater 41 George 65 College 94 Angell 109 George 54 College 4 Manning Maxcy 433 42 Orms Maxcy 431 109 George North Slater 4 Manning 127 Angell 41 George Caswell 24 Hope 39 Slater 3 109 George 34 Benevolent 118 Williams 175 Thayer 58 Lexington Ave. 110 Waterman 65 College University 10 100 Waterman 81 Waterman Brunonia 12 ospcct, Pawtucket 110 Waterman N! Vx av' I I fr- Ql- s 953531111 I3 xf Lg 5 WVJZ. 'L y' ER 65515527 Q1 gy' ij QGEUJLLQ RH ' FT? QQ 1465 ZA F 4 f-CZ gg CLA mvjgya' LN SS 4693139552 Q Br YE Fo 'Si gig Rah! rownx EE QE- S Rah! Brow S PS? even Rah D! W AQJL tee ! M YUP,-g?- H! l J Lg?J? gg QWSL ' fV, - 'fs 4212 SN 6625? HQ giiqlba Q5 .mi Wm a a. a. W : -B!! l K Yea !'! Watch my dust! c X l I The Modest Sophomores 9'''' 9 'hil a powerful member of the Sophomore class-not quite import- 5 E . . 5 g ant enough to be a class oflicer or sufliciently beautiful to make 11 9 5 the Sock and Buskin or the Chapel Choir, but still Ilm an awful E,II,m,,,,,,n,mmmmB wise gimmick. If I told you my name you'd guess who I was E E right away. But Ilm intensely modest and so when Cap Taylor 5' ' a came to me sort of friendly-like and says, Claudie-feller-me-lad, give me a 1917 write up for the Liber I eouldn't refuse. I'll do it unanimously without knocking anybody-Iill be kind of humerous or else foolish, because Cap says all the people that read the Liber don't like deep stuff like psychology dope or plain vulgarity. Much disguised in a clean haircut and a close collar, I got mislaid in the clubhouse up at Andrews Field one afternoon last Fall. I crawled up to where the second assistant football nine manager was kicking a trunk instead of shin- ing Seth lVIitchell,s shoes and uncurled a question into a swain's ear, Sell you an inscription to the Brunonianfm I whispers. Jeff smiled wanly. No,', he flivvers back, most of it's too heavy for my medulla oblongata, and the Brown Jug hasn't enough sprit to float a German Cruiserf' iiH,1H,,, I sneers, I wonder if you, as champion water-bag tosser of Cas- well Hall, have any impressions you could express? The 1917 fellows impress me quite a lot, he chuckled . You ought to like them all, even Grasshopper Jimmy Murphy who can thumb his nose at any quarterback east of Pascoag, and line-plunging Fraser, the chap that wears pumps for water on the knee. There's Harvey Sheahan all the way from IVickford with one cotton suspender and his hair parted in the middle, then there's Asahel Stultz Dillon and'Theophilus Dimmick, the boys with names like you read in a joke book. We own one lXfIcQuaid, who sure can rattle the slats of a piano and our Appleget and Sackett are no ham-actors, not by no means. Then there's that man Fishel who made the Herald Board 'cause he took the editor to the Sink. Ljunggren is there with the wallop even if he 157 l--L1 LIBER BR UNENSIS does nod to you after the style of a Tuskegee Institute barber, our Jimmy Powers is some doughnuts in this Vernon-Castle Highland-Fling stuff, and when Roger Allard's riveted into his Misfitzky suit with the Nile green plaid effect, the campus pickups can't resist himg Dave Gallison plays the Huteg and for swimmers, Ingersoll and Tobelmann are as clever as if they got their ele- mentary education in a bath-tub. Bob Foote the elongated hashslinger ofthe Senior Table, strolled up here from Gettysburg to exhibit his form and basket- ball ability. The Gym Team hasn't suffered much since Jap Wight and Arthur Finch dropped down to college for a four year's visit, and when it comes to roping in a Hock of golden A's our Spalding has half the Sharks in college looking like the remains of a Salvation Army cheese-sandwich. Hughes, Reese, and Feinberg moosied in here to show the natives of these diggings how to orate and they surely have accomplished their purpose. But listen! Do you hear that heavy, rumbling noise in the distance? No, it is not Ken Flanders getting sections of his hair chopped off-it's Ward Butler and Iron- dome Olch wrestling down on Lincoln Fieldf' When I heard this, I coughed back the chunk of proud emotions which was rattling around in my modest chest and galloped out into the fresh air. No wonder Dean Randall stopped the class rushes last Fall , I told myself, what chance would those Freshmen have against the mighty men of 1917 ? Not the chance of a Portland Cement dog in the flames of Gehennal-whatever that is. 158 Pau? I A . I Name .Z',f',' . :QA 'L' 34 7 x . ,, . Q NY 'ill f ' ' ' ' ' ' 'UBL Oflicers JAMES PATRICK MURPHY.. . ..,......... ..........,... I ,I'L'Jid6'7ll JASPAR WIGI-IT ............. ..... F irxz Vicf-Prffz'dr11l BISSELL LAMONT WADE . . . .... Srcond lf1'cf-Prrfidmzl HARVEY SHEAHAN ............. . . . ...... Secretary SOLON CHESTER KELLEY, JR. . . . .............. 4.,. Y 'rmnlrer Class Yell ABRAHAM LINCOLN ABEL ROGER UPIIAIMI IXLLARD IIPKXII RALPH CARLETON ALLEN THOMAS BAIRD APPLEGET ACID RALPH AVERY ARMSTRONG EX IQENNETH NELSON ATWATER JOEL MEAD AUSTIN ATA HUGH BAIN ALFRED WITHINGTON BAKER IPI' EUGENE LEROY BAMFORTII NELSON BARLOW EKIJ E ELMER ELSWORTH BARNES YIJKXI' PIENRY AUGUSTUS BATCHELOR A ALEXANDER PECK BATES IPAQ EDGAR OTIS BENSON ZRIJE RAYMOND CLARKE BLANCIIARD ARTHUR EDWARD BRECKICNRIDGE A K Brown! Brown! Brown! Rah! Rall! Rah! 7 Seventeen! Class Roll Residence Room Lawrmzuf, Mau. 129 Prairie AVC. l,7'0'U1.d6'1lCt' 108 Waterman Abington, Jllaxf. New York, N. Y. University 44 University 18 Franklin, Ct. Hope 27 Nfwark, N. Caswell 29 Cairo, N. Y. 94 Angell P1'ovz'dz'11u' 54 Pekin flllfton, fllnsx. Hope 45 Providmcf 226 Broadway Pawtuflcfz 16 Paisley l'rovidc1m' 108 Waterman Drlroil, Mich G5 College Wert G7'l'L'7Z?0if1l Cfnlr: 175 Thayer .Juburn -101 Wellington Av. Providmrv -41 Hudson Proclidfnce Slater 6 159 -: LIBER Name BANCROI-'T TIUNTINGTON BROWN KIJAG EDWIN LESLIE BROXVN AKE JOHN FRANCIS BROWN WPT JOIIN RUSSELL BROWN ACID MALCOLM WIXIGPI1' BURNHAM AT HAROLD ABBOTT BUTLER WARD ELSMERE BUTLER SAX ANOI-:LO ANTHONY CALDARONE FRANK CAESAR CALKBIO ANTIIONY CAPUTI GILBERT CONGDON CARPENTER, JR. AACIP PAUL CARTWRIGHT BGII PERRY NIORELAND CHADWICK CIPKNII WALLACE RHODES CHANDLER NPT WXI.I.IANI r11HOMAS MANNING CLEARE LEON EUGENE CLOSE CIDAQ FVREDERICK WILLIS CONOVER EN WALTER AUSTIN COOPER GEORGE COPELAND HOWARD IDAVID CORKUMQIPFA BERTRAND MUNROE CROMACK, JR. fI7I'A ADOLPII CURTIS AXA CARLETON HEIKBERT IJAY AT RALPH '1'ILLINGIlAS'I' DENISON CIJFA ARTHUR JOHN DE NOMME RALPH DI LEONE ASAHEL STULTZ DILLON AACIP TIIEOPIIILUS DIMMICR AK E DONALD KELSEY DOBBS ACID DAVID BARNEY FEINBERG JAMES GORDON FERNALD AT ARTIIUR BARDEN FINCII B911 NORhiAN LINCOLN FISHEL KENNli1'lI AINSWORTII FLANDERS EN ALBERT LIENILY FLINT, JR. ROBERT NATHANIEL FOOTE QAX IRVING SCOTT FRASER ATA NVALTER GORDON FRAUENIIEIM AK E JOSEPH OTIS FULLER OI.lVI'2li ADDISON FULLER ZX IDAVID rYIlAYl5R GALI,ISON ACID LORY IIQALMAN GARDNER, 2d ZNII RODOLPIIE ARMIDAS GLADUE WlLl.IAM JOIIN GRACE JOSEPH DANIEL 1'IAGGl5R'I'Y 11322K LIENRY THEODORE :HAGSTROM 21411 E BICKNELL IHALL, JR. CIJFA .JOHN IIOBIZRT NVIIEATON LIALL SAX BR UNENSIS Residence llydf Park, Maxx. Medio, Pa. Proaidc1Icz' Morgan Park, Ill. Ilopedalr, Maxx. Illaarrifld, Alan. Provident: Providenrr Protridmm' l'rooidcncc Prooirlerrfz' Wakryifld, Illaff. Tufcola, Ill. ProUz'dr1Irf Fall Riwr, Maxx. Jllorfwia, N. Y. Point Pleaxanl, N. f. fllllfkoro, Maxx. New London, Cl. Lt'01Il77lJ'lf7', Marx. Colrain, Illaff. New York, N. Y. llfaltlram, Illaff. Mooxup, Ct. Arclir Prooiderrcf Youngrtown, Ohio Staatxberg, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Lake Placid, N. Y. Uppzr Montclair, N. Providence Roxbury, Ma.f.r. Providcrrcz Brirlol New York, N. Y. Prorfideucr' Pitlxburg, Pa. Prorzidevfcz' Provz'de'1Ire Frarrklin, lllaff. Provirlmzcc Woonforkrt Brrvzarrlfville, N. Pouglrkerpxic, N. Y. Youngrfown, Ohio Taumorz, Marx. Warren 160 Room 175 Thayer 65 College 4 Manning Slater 17 Hope 43 14 Summit Ave. 81 Waterman 64 Almy 22 Africa S9 America 233 Medway University 25 108 Waterman 341 Brook 432 Maxcy 175 Thayer 110 Waterman Attleboro 3 Aplin Court Hope 13 Hope 45 University 53 Hope 46 Hope 15 Arctic 334 Atwells Ave. Caswell 30 65 College North Slater Hope 37 100 Waterman 41 George Hope 37 110 Waterman Hope 14 81 Waterman 122 Benefit 65 College 283 Brook Hope 23 North Slater Slater 5 219 Grove Hope 47 Brunonia 12 7 Cushing 78 Winthrop 81 Waterman l l I 1 I I 1 E ----'- NINETEEN FIFTEEN Name 1'IERBERT PERCIVAI. PIALVORSON ROBEIi'F WARREN :HAMILTON AACIP WILLIAM PIARSIIOWITZ ORvILI.E BYRON IIAYWARD KE MAURICE WIIITCOME HOLTON AKE AR'I'IIUR BARTLETT HOMER AAfI1 ARTHUR ARIEL I'IOPKINS AXA WILLIAM STANLEY I1OWARD SAX I'1ARRY ARDEN 1'lUGHES ROWLAND IQOBERTS HUGIIES BGH WILLIAM NEWTON 1'1UGl-IES EX OLIVER WEEKES INGERSOLL. JR. AKE WENDELL EvERET'r JAMES EX BRUCE MONAT JEEERIS NPT 1lAYMOND EARL JORDAN CIIARLES BIRD IQEACII Efll' E SOLON CIIESTER IQELLEY, JR. AAKD PAUL HOMER KEOUGII A119 EDWIN MUNROE KNIGIITS ATQ CI-IAUNCEY BEMIS LADD B911 WILERED JOSEPII LA PIERRE JAMES WILLIAM LEIGIITON VICTOR LE VALLEY B911 HENRY DAVID LEVINE JULIUS LOUIS LEVINE ROBERT GUSTAV DANIEL LJUNGGREN MELVILI4E MORIKIS LOWE E9 E ELIOT HORTON LUTIIER MORTON PERRY lN1CLEOD EN HUGH WILSON MACNAIR ZNI' STEWART TXLTON NIACNEILL SAX JOHN THOMAS McQUAIDfIP 1' A .JOHN HENRY NIAGINN .JOSEPH EDWARD MAGUIRE CIDK ' PIOWARD BENNETT MARBI.E Aflv ALFRED JOSEPII MARRON fb FA ERIC ALEERT MONROE ZNI' SAMUEL MOIKEIN .JAMES PATRICK lVlURPIiYcIJIc WALTER VINCENT lVIURPIIY EN ALBERT REGINALD NICIIOLS GEORGE ARNOLD NORTIIIKOP ISAAC YALE OLCII ROBERT CLYDE PADLEY KE EARL MOORE PEARCE f1JA9 :REGINALD lVlARCII PHASE EN CHARLES PECKERMAN EVER15'1'T GRANVILLE PERKINS EN Residence Pawturleet Providmzcr Nrw London, Ct. Chicago, Ill. MarIrht'.rtrr, N. 11. Providence Jldrrwillf, Pa. Providence Providfrm' Wert Long Branch, Manton Brooklyn, N. Y. Providrrzce, R. I. jarzrxville, Wir. Pawtuclert Providrncr Stamford, Ct. New York, N. Y. Rivfrfidf St. Louix, 1110. Crixwoldvillr, Mo. Phenix Long Brarzrh, N. Waterford. Ct. Roxbury, Maxi. Wert Nrw Brighton, Ifrfrx, Illarr. Providrnct' Lafayette, Iloughtorz, Mirlt. N. J. N. If Wrft Newton, Jllarr. Pawturket Proaidrnct' Providence Plairwillr, Marx. Mfdia, Pa. Iiriftol, Cz. Providrrzcr Nrw Bedford, Marx. New Britain, Ct. .4-uburrz Prose Dale Providrrzrr Providfvtcf Providrrzrc Proaidrncr 1'rovidMzcc Nrwburyport, Ma.r.r. 161 Room 42-1 West Ave. 54 College Maxcy 322 127 Angell 65 College 54 College University 27 81 Waterman 4 Europe University 28 22 Greenville Ave. 65 College Hope 23 -1 Manning 174 Park 23 Earl Caswell 30 North Slater Caswell 17 Caswcll'3 Hope 48 Phenix 41 George 306 Benciit Caswell 7 Maxcy 436 Hope 30 13 Benevolent Lafayette Slater 5 81 Waterman 397 Lonsdale Ave. 33 Burnett 109 George North Slater University 46 Slater 6 14 North Davis 109 George 110 Waterman 30-1 Doric Ave. Hope 12 306 Dudley 127 Angell 175 Thayer 5 West Park 62 Doyle Ave. 110 Waterman LIBER Name LESLIE LOVIELL PERRY EN JOHN GEORGE PETERSON KE JAMES STEPHEN POWERS fI1K LESTER WARE PRESTON HOWARD HEPSON QUINIXAM WILLIAM PIAILRIS REESE K2 GERALD REYNAR B911 JOIIN WESLEY RIIOADS AXA JOHN GREENE RICE 22112 E LAWRENCE :HENRY RICH LIARTLEY FOREST ROBERTS ZX HENRY CARLTON ROBERTSON AXA RALPH LESTER ROBINSON I'IAROLD WILLIAM RYLEY RUST SCOTT f1JI'A HARVEY SHEAI-IAN AAKIP EDMUND LAWRENCE SHERIDANq9IC IRVING GORDON SMITH CIDFA THOMAS BRYANT SMITH DANIEL PARRIIURST SPALDING RICHARD LIOBART SPEAR ATS? WALTER KENNETII SI-RAOUE AT JAMES CUNNINOHAM SPRINGER ROBERT 'FAFT STAPLES ATO WALTER JOSEPH STEIN LESLIE EDMUND STONE K2 JOHN STORER, JR. AT JOSEPH WOODBURY STROUT, JR. AXA PAUL NICHOLAS SWAFFIELD AT HENRY ELDRIDGE SWEET KZ LESLIE RAY 'YABER SAX EGBERT FOSTER 'FETLEY CIJKWI' ELLIOTT LADD TIIURSTON NPT LIERBERT TUTTLE 'TINKER K2 GUSTAV HENRY 'FOBELMAN AACIJ RUSSELL LYMAN TOMLINSON DAVID NEWELL TORIKANCE ZXII FRANK BAKER VYUCKERMAN RICIIARD I'lENRY VAN HORN BISSELL LAMONTE WADE ACD WILLIAM WALLACE WADE AfIJ RAYMOND JOSEPII WALSH NPT RAYMOND BELCIIER WARD AACP STANLEY AYRAULT WARD NPT ALBERT ESTES WATJEN ATA HERMAN WILLIAM WATJEN, JR. ATA ROBERT MCKAY WATSON WIl.1.1AM LEROY WEDEMEYEIKQFA BR UNENSIS Residence Providence Providence Providence Providence Lonsdale Parronr, Pa. Boonton, N. j. Edge Ilill, Pa. Pawtucket flmrtcrdarn, N. Y. lllexico, tide. Lakewood, N. f. Providence New London, Ct. Rutland, Vt. lyickford Providence Leorninrter, Mau. Long Branch, N. f. Providence Burlington, Vt. North Earl, Pa. Providence Burlington, Vt. Chicago, Ill. Providence Providence Rehoboth, Marr. Lawrence, Marr. Providence Auburn, N. Y. North Chelmsford, Marr. Providence Narhua, N. Il. Newark, N. Providence Derby, Ct. Media, Pa. Lambertville, N. Le Roy, N. Y. Trenton, Tenn. Providence Newark, N. j. Newport Warren Warren Pawtucket Lakewood, N. f. 162 Room 379 Hope 74 Arnold 238 Ives 45 Pitman 37 Grove University 45 41 George University 27 so Clyde 498 Broadway Hope 22 University 41 63 Bridgeham Hope 52 6 Rutland Caswell 30 242 Morris Ave. Hope 13 University 28 299 Vermont Ave. Caswell 16 309 Olney 627 Challcstone Ave. Caswell 16 Caswell 1 9 Cooper , 100 Waterman Rehobot h Hope 43 127 Angell Caswell 5 108 Waterman 4 Manning 127 Angell 54 College 58 Seaman Slater 3 30 Forest Maxcy 432 North Slater North Slater 4 Manning Caswell 29 4 Manning Warren 94 Angell 44 Hancock Hope 15 l I ll i -ii NINETEEN Name IosrI'R BEAL WIIITEIILAD CIJAQ ROUSE BABCOCK WILCOX IRANK VALENTINE WIIIARD AK E FIFTEEN Resxdence Palmyra N 1 Stomnglon Cl Clucago Ill Room 175 'l haycr UHIVCFSIEY 31 Go College 3 ' u ' ' 7 , . 7. 1 .IASPAR WIQIGIIT SAX Lakewood, N. j. 81 Waterman Q , . , . . . 1' 1 ' 4 1 l , a F lf.DWARD 'IHOMAS WILLIAMS A113 HARIJING DE CAu'rILLoN WILLIAMS fIJA9 l'lOWARD DWIGHT WII.I.IAMS ROGER WILLIAMS GEORGE ALBRO WILLIAMSON AAFP CLARENCE I'lENRY WOODMANSEE B911 CARLOS GREELEY WRIGIIT BENJAMIN I'1ORACE XIERXA AT New lork, N. Y. Dayton, Fla. Rockland, lllafx. Cenlral Fall: Newark, N. j. Providence Prooidenre New London, N. H. 163 North Slater University 55 260 Medway Central Falls 54 College 71 Sumter 71 Whitmarsh 100 Waterman ' n 1 u I Q k ug Q LIBER BR UNENSIS A 355512315255 55563 255553513 f55MZfpZ3 5 A F .HL gg CLASS YELL Q5 Kgs, W Ms Ray! Ra ! fx? Xu Y Nw Q33 Bru-no-ni-a. QE QE Ray! Ray! Eg SQ Br?-no-ni-a. E1ghteen! CW Q1 . , A RS E1ghteen. ml QQ Eighteen! WV M , - Q Q-S5513 EETMZZLS 32225-1 5J 5225531 fL5fZf4'?'?ZZZFS?iLg! I 166 - - QE UE 1 gi l .T T Sainied Pete ll Bul: il'3 a lon lon wat ll! This Little Pig Said Wee, Wee, Wee Q ' '9 S THE day dawned dull and gray, and Xanthippe, the goddess of E E mist and rain hitched on her holiday chemise and donned a frosty E E smile, old Yumyum Gordon rolled olii his downy couch, alternate- E,Imummummmm,5 ly trembling with fear and chuckling with delight. What a 5 Q triumph for the 1918 yearlings if they could outwit the scurvey 9'''' 5 Sophs and enjoy most Epicureanly the excellent Waldorf Lunch banquet scheduled for the evening! And thru the long hours of the day Gordon, Norcross and Teets remained in the Watchtower of 21 U. H., sneering at those 1917 Murphyites prowling vainly about with coils of rope like stranded life-guards or Keystone Comedy cowboys. Then when the mysterious, snow perfumed shadows of evening began to settle like a vaporous blanket over our campuses and Xanthippe tucked her Ford chairot away in her vest pocket, Babette Strauss and Joe Cummings ilit- ted down the hill disguised as kitchen mechanics, while Vaughan, Murray, Fay, and Ted Sullivan walked down George Street backwards so that Sophomore smellers would think they were coming up. Bud Harrington and Earl Sutton, having never attended a banquet before, brought Well filled dinner pails and pur- chased round trip tickets for the Rhode Island Hospital before going down to the wharf where the good craft Tennessee lay. Once aboard things began to happen immediately. Little Hull began to cry for his mother, Kimball was sorry because he had forgotten to kiss Barney Feinberg good-bye, and Chauncy Langdon wished he had remembered to Wear old garters and bring smelling salts. Donovan and Mark Farnum began to iight about the captaincy ofthe Varsity Football Team in 1917, and Ely kept shouting that he was captain Kidd from Kiddville and didn't want to be seasick. Riddock and Isaac went up in the hurricane deck to practice hun- dred yard dashes undisturbed, while Garside and Quart Murphy did their best 167 - LIBER BR UNENSIS to ladle soup with a penknife and fork. Cannon made a loud noise, Huggen- vig and Brooks refused to eat clams for fear they would be accused of canni- balism, and Ray Bagley saved three oyster shells to bring back to Sadie Cohen. Tom Hull, the ancient mariner from the Fruit Hill Reservoir in North Provi- dence, made a wicked pretence at singing the Armenian folksong entitled Peeping thru the Knotholes in Kaiser Willie's Wooden Leg but he desisted as soon as Grimes threatened to crown him with a cuspidor. Daisy Parker lost his appetite when someone whispered to him that he looked like Dickey Dresser, and Cleveland and Moriarty began toikid Waddell about his chances of making the Varsity Baseball Team. Meanwhile Belden was occupying himself between courses of the dinner by Crocheting a checker colored necktie for Hiram Beauvais, while Butncr, amidst loud cheers, held Flannelmouth Hackett over the stern and told him that if he didn't close his yap, he'd have to digest a street-cover after the boat landed. Of course Heidt and Gurney Edwards had to apologize for eating so much in the long winded after-dinner speeches, and then Billy Sheffield, the President of the Brown Christian As- sociation and guest of the occasion, urged all the men to make a membership in some fine organization like the C. and C. the goal of their ambitions in college. E Finally late in the dark evening, the gay company toddled ashore and let out lusty Freshman cheers until the welkin whistled. Then performing the historical function with the thumb and nose in the defiance of the Sophomores they withdrew unostentatiously to their couches and cradles. ' 168. I I I i I I I I I I wwf .L .- i.-. HARRY RALPH GORDON ............. FREDERICK BILLINGS BROOKS.. .. KENNETH BRODIE MACLEOD ..... PAUL MARVELL SMITH ........ PIERRE EVERETT TEETS ..... Name WALTER ADLER ELIS PETRUS AHLQUIST JAMES DUNCAN ALLAN :HOWARD I'lORACE ALLSOPPAACIJ ROBERT Joi-1NSoN AMES AAT HOWARD BARTIIOLOMEW ARNOLD 'DKW17 CIIARLES WAL'FER ARTHUR ATA I'lAROLD ADAMS BACKUS RAYMOND FRANCIS BAGLEYQIK OCTAVE PETERSON BISAUVAIS AAKIY :RICHARD CLARK BELDEN BOH JAMES VAN BENSCIIOTEN BENNETT KE Oiiicers N Class Yell Ray! Ray! Bru-no-ni-a. Ray! Ray! Bru-no-ni-a. Eighteen! Eighteen! Eighteen! Class Roll Residence Providmm- W'ilcox, Pa. Glfaxoudalf, Maxx. Newark, N. f. Cortland, N. Y. Providmzcf .Z!ld'lLCllL'.YfL'7', N. Il. Providmzce Providence Boylan, Maxx. Hartford, Conn. Cmmcdalf 169 ............Pre:idc1zt . . . . . .Firxt Via'-Prexidmzt . . . . .Sccoml Vina-Prefidem . . . . .Secretary . . . . Trmrurff Room 11 Olney 149 Benefit 127 Wendell Caswell 29 University 13 48 Montague 33 Angell 354 Hope 77 Knowles Caswell 22 Hope 28 33 East Ave. -: LIBER Name ROY WKLMONT BENTON QKNI' ROSWELL BOSWORTII VERNON AUBREY BOWMAN ATA DAVID BROMSON NORMAN BROMSON FREDERICK BILLINGS BROOKS 'PFA FRANKLIN COOLIDGE BROOKS A111 EDWARD CIIOATE BROWVN KENNETH LIVINGSTON BURDON EDWARD JAMES BUTLER AXA JOHN COLVIN BUTNER, JR. BSU LIERBERT BUTTEREIELD PETER LEO CANNON CIJK ARMAND LAURIER CARON CIPKNII JOIIN SIIARI-E CIIAFEE AAfIJ ALBERT I'1ARVEY CHAMBERLIN ATA CHRISTOPIIER ALLEN CIIAMPLIN AK E WILLIAM WATTS CHAPLIN AT IIERBERT WVINFIELD CHAPPELL REUBEN ROGERS CHASE, JR. ATA WINN WILLARD CHASE LESLIE RUSSELL CLARK NPT EDEN STEVENS CLEVELAND SAX JACOB COIIEN DWIGIIT TOWNSEND COLLEY SAX HAROLIJ EVERETT COLLINS EX WILLIAM TIENRY COLLINS EARL 'IIIOMPSON Cox CIPKWI' LESTER RAY CRAIG K2 HENRY CARL CRAMER, JR. PAUL SCIIRODER CRANDAI,L JOIIN IVAN CROUCH QAX JAMES ALBERT CRUMBEY, JR. ZXI' RAYMOND EDWARD CUEIIE ATATTHEW JOSEPH CUMMINGS, JR. CITK LEMUEL FLORENCE PATTERSON CURRY ROGER DERING AK E FRANCIS COLT DE WOIIF ZNI' ALBERT EDWIN IDILLINGIIAM CIJFA EDWARD JUDSON DILTS AT MARTIN JOSEPII DONOVAN B911 JOIIN lVlARSlIALL DOWE CIDZIK CHESTER MILIIEIK DOWNING CHARLES I'll'INRY EDEN, JR. CIIARLES GURNEY EDWARDS AACIJ IRWIN CORRELI. ELMER WILLIAM ELY, JR.1I'T CLIFTON ROY ENTWIIISTLE ZEN BR UNENSIS Residence New Bedford, Mars. Brirtol Springfield, Marr. Providence Providence St. Albam, Vt. Colorado Springf, Colo. Marblehead, Marx. Providence Wefterly Winthrop, Mars. Providenee Providence Southbridge, Man. Providenee flhington, Maxx. Block Ifland New Yorle City Weeleapang Marion, Marx. Fall River, Mau. Detroit, Mich. Webfter, Marr. Providence Nayatt Proaidenee Bondrville, Marr. Providence Danielron, Conn. Eart Hartford, Conn. Groton, Conn. Edgewood Warwiele Providence Providence llfilloughhy, Ohio Chicago, Ill. Briftol Saxton: River, Vt. Lowell, Man. Salem, Marx. Danielfon, Conn. Providence Providence Providence Providence Prooidenee Providence 170 Room Maxcy 316 Bristol University 26 48 Doyle Ave. 48 Doyle Ave. Maxcy 428 North Slater University 53 102 Mitchell University 34 195 Benefit 147 Clifford 73 Hendrick Caswell 33 5 Cooke 22 TlIayer 119 Benefit Hope 4-1 32 Custom House 94 Angell A University 60 4 Manning Caswell 31 52 Charles Caswell 14 - Hope 22 University 22 249 Doyle Ave. University 17 122 Benefit Hope 16 81 Waterman Slater 1 59 Clarence 77 Taber Ave. Maxcy 428 Caswell 1 Bristol Hope 11 Hope 40 41 George 12 Brunonia 23 Standish Ave. 144 Taber Ave. Caswell 22 106 Wesleyan Ave. Hope 8 61 Lowell Ave. 1 NINETEEN FIFTEEN Name 1DANI1EI. FIOFFMAN ERICKSON, JR. EN RAYMOND EARIIE FARNSWORTIIYIDFA MAIKK FARNUM FLOYD CERELLIE FAY, ul R. KPKNI' WILLIAM MI1.Ll5ll 1'lAY CIJKYII CYRUS GLENN l'lI.ANDERS EN LAWRENCE GUSTAV FLICK ATA I'1AROLD FRANCIS FOGERTY 1'lMERY M1L'l'ON FOSTER STANLEY JARDINE FRASER ALBERT hflOOR15 FREEMAN WILLIAM BflCKI.INLEY GAFAIfERfI1KNI' SIDNEY RUSSELL GAI1lSI7IixIl FRANCIS VINcEN'I GARSIDE PAUL FRANCIS GILES CIJAQ WILLIAM AL1 llED GOGGIN ATA 1'lARRY RALPII GORDON XIIT ATTMORE 1'lDWlN GIQIFFIN VINCENT BERNARD 1'lACKETT FRANK CIIARLES HADDLETON TIIOMAS NVATKINS 1'lALL BURTON FRANCIS l-IARRINGTON 111K ERNEST CLIFTON il'lA'l'1IAWAY GEORGE JULIUS I'IEID'I' NVILLIAMS 1'lORAN I11GGINS lVlASON COLE l'lII.I. HARVEY ScOTT I'1lNCKS f1'A9 ALFRED ROUNDS 1'lOI.DEN fI12K WIIEATON GRIENVILLE 1'1UDSON AT 1'1l:INRY OLSICN 1'lUGGENVIG Af11 GEORGE CLIFTON l'lUL1. Zxlf A'lALCOI.M CLIEVELANIJ l'lYLAN EN .IOIIN FRANCIS lSAAC QAX ll0IiACIC CARI-ENTIQR AIICFFERS 21115 E A'lANUEL -IAMES KIEMAIL 1I1I'A BERT AIIRAIIAM JOIINSON EN 'I'IIOMAs CAI.vIN JONES, JR. AK E Xl O RRI LL P1III.1.1I'S bl OSS ELYN HARRY NVALDliM15RIi IQALLSTROM CIHZJK NORMAN LU'l'l1ER liIELLli1iqJA9 RONALD NlAC1JONA1.D KIMIIALI. A115 IIOSEPII ANTIIONY liING 113K l.oUIS liRAMIiR CIIAUNCEY 'FAFT LANGDON AACIP l'1IENRY COLE LANIIIIER AAID CARROLL BURTON IIARRABEE AT JOIIN IQICIIARD L15E1Vl1NG,JR.fI7A61 NVARDWELI. COLES LEONARD HYIP E Residence Lcfxburg, N. j. Ayer, Maxx. Cforgizwillf FrzI1zlcli11.villr, N. Y. f17'!l1ll311i'7112iUL', N. Y. Prot'I'dMInr SaylI:,rI11'llz' 1,1'02JlAdl'11L'6' lVatvrlow1I, 111015. l,I'0Z11dl'7lL'c' Providmzrf jfrxfy Cily, N. j. Oak Park, Ill. 1j1'0Ui!!6'7lt'L' LeRoy, N. Y. IllmIclIr.rl1'r, N. II. Earl Cle've!a1zrl, Ohio llfzzkffrld l 1'0vidf1I0f 1,I'0YJidK'7ll'L' Norih Providfncc Providmzu' North Tivcrzo1I Nrw York City Providence Pl'0ZJ1dl'71L'L' 1'rovz'dcIm' l,7'OZ1idL'1lL'6' llariforri, Conn. New York City lfaxl l'I'oviduIIcf I1lfdf1'fld, lllayy. liallflozl Spa, N. Y. Crulrzll Fallr Nrwporl lfdgrwood IllcKv1',rporI, Pri. liriflgrwalrr, Maw. RI'idgrp0rl, Conn. lfI'1i1IIivI.I'lvr, Pa. Norwiclz, C011 II. l'I'ovidmIm' Prozridcmf 1,I'U'Ui!Zl llC'L' Glen Ridge, N. f. l?raa'ford, Pa. Fall Rivfr, Zllan. PI'0UiIiL'7l6L' 171 Room 110 Wznterman Hope 11 81 NVaterman Caswell 35 Caswell 35 110 NVZltC1'1T121l1 94 Angell 220 Hamilton 155 Benefit 14 Freclerick 108 Waterman Caswell 12 42 Angell 726 Potter Ave. 175 'l'h:IyeI' 33 Angell -1 Manning WalceHeld 595 SInitlI 101 Corinth High Service Ave. -l-16 Broadway 137 Governor 155 Benefit 16 Norwich Ave. 23 Bzirrows S19 Brown 18 Constitution Hope 40 North Slater South Slater -188 l'IIlIliC University 21 Central Falls Hope 5 78 l5aII'tle1t Ave. Xlaxcy 315 Nluxcy -133 B1'l111OI1lE1 10 Caswell 11 University 5-l 13 Greenwood 8 Doiglas Ave. 815 Upton Ave. Caswell 31 Caswell 36 Caswell 26 200 Waldo LIBER Name CLARENCE EUGENE I41G1l'l'1 OO'1' EX LEROY IJEXTER LINCOLN ATA ARTHUR BANCROET LLOYD B911 CHARLES WILLIAM AlCCI.15LI.ANfI3liq! JAMES lRVING ATCDOWELI. ATA NVALTER RAYMOND MCGINN 'YHOMAS ALOYSIUS ATCCTUIRIE 'THOMAS lVlClN'l'YRE, JR. TIAROLD ALLEN NICKAY ATA RUssELL ELWOOD NICKENZIE CDFA IQENNETH BRODIE NTACLEOD AAKIJ WILLIANI ANTHONY NIAGUIRE CIDK W1l.I.IAM CHESTER NTALENFANT VERNON CHARLES MANLEY HENRY RUSSELL MANNEx BOH JULIAN BREWER MAIKSHALL ECI? E FRANCIS NIETCALF A415 I ALAN WOLITRAM NIILCKE EX ALLISON MILLER AT JOIIN GORDON MORIAIKTY AK E TNTAURICE MOSKOL WESLEY I-IEREERT MOTT CLIFTON IRVING MONROE EN WILIAIAM ALLENVVOOD MUIKIKAY fI1K WALDON CHARI.Es NASON P1-IILIP ICZRA NEWHALL AXA LEONARD ITULIT NORCROSS JOHN CHAMPLIN NOYES A119 JAMES ICDWARD PAIOE GORDON LANCASTER PARKER AK E RAYMOND PIENRY PARKER FRANCIS IROBERTS PARSONS Afll ARTHUR CALLISTUS PATRICK KIPK ALBERT EDWARD PEARSON EDWARD MALCOLN1 PHILLIPS AXA W11.FliED PICKLES CLARENCE CROMIIIE IO ALBERT SANGEK PRATT AXA LYLE MISTON PROUSE TJANA RICE ZNII WII.BUR LAMPREY RICE A111 CHARLES READ RICHARDSON NPT JOHN BROWN RIDDOCK WILLIAM JOIIN Ross ARTHUR TROTHSTEIN GEOIQGE CLEMISON SCOTT TRODNEY Houus SCOTT DUDLEY RICHARDSON SIBLEY EX J BR UNENSIS Residence Brooklyn, N. Y. zlflilon Providrnee Fall River, Jllafx. Providenre Providence WlI1'finwz'!le, Maxx. Pawlueler! llazferhill, Il1a,r,r. Foxboro, Mays. Providrrzee Providence Providence Ludlow, Vt. Quincy, Man. flrhion Franlelin, Maxx. Wallingford, Conn. New York Cily Woodhaven, N. Y. Providence Foxboro, Maxx. Providence Ilardwiclv, VI. Providence Cumberland Milla, Ille. Iliglulown, N. j. Norwifh, Conn. Peabody, Marr. Providenfe Providence Providence Prozvineetown, Maxx. Edgewood Taunton, Marx. Providence I?a.r.rein, Burma, India Pomfret Centre, Conn. Fayelleville, N. C. Prwidence Providenee North fldamr, Maxx. New Bedford, Mary. Providence New York Cily Newport Uxbridge, ll'lKl.f.1'. Proeidenre 172. - l Room Hope 28 Ashton 64 Whitmarsh Caswell 25 166 Eastman Ave. 140 Oxford 71 Common 155 Benefit University 26 Caswell 19 290 Irving Ave. 230 Morris Ave. 182 Althea 121 Angell 41 George Ashton North Slater Hope 21 Hope 42 University 25 319 Chalkstone Ave. Caswell 24 242 Alabama Ave. Maxcy 434 128 Ontario , University 46 309 Olney Hope 42 Hope 32 98 Meeting 18 Elmhurst Ave. 28 Mawney Caswell 7 110 Waterman Taunton 56 Dartmouth Ave. Maxcy 436 39 Benevolent 40 Angell 151 Sessions 420 Angell University 12 University 12 244 Plain Maxcy 322 University 34 81 Waterman Hope 21 NINETEEN FIFTEEN Name JAeoII IVIIICOIJORIII SIDKOVVSKY ISIHVAIUJ l'lAVlLLli SIEE SAMUEL lSAlJORli SII.vERMAN NVILLIAM lflYRI'1 SISSON AACIJ BENJAMIN llONVARD SI.ADE C-DAX .lSAAC f?ALLUI' SMI'r1I Afll PAUI. NlARVIiLI, SMI'rII AT NVARREN lVlAYlII'IXV SNIFFIN AKE FRANK CASPER SPECK, JR. BQH 'HAROLD ROSENEIELD S'I'RAUss ZNII CHARLES ARTHUR S'rUAR'r GEORGE RODGER STUR'I'EVAN'1'cI,IixI, AI.IfRI-:D JAMES SULLIVAN QPK ICARL HOWARD SU'I rON ZII' JOIIN SwEE'rLAND SAX PIERRE EVERIiT'1' 'llEE'l'S AK E :l'lARLEIGlI VAN SLYCK rl1INGLEY ZW EARL I'lOLLIER 'FOMLIN CIDAG FREDERICK NICALE VFOMPKINS ECI? E .l'lLDRED lVlALCOI.M VAN RIPER KE GEORGE WIiEA'l'ON CARR VAUGIIAN NPT CHARLES HENRY VEI-IESE CHARLES BERRY WAIlDbII.I., JR. fI'FA NVILLIAM LEWIS WADDELL IIJFA IQALPII lDEWI'F'F WEEE QAX EDWARD CLARENCE WELCl'I GAX RAYMOND BROOKS WES'I' AK E PIAROLU FAIRFIELD COIT VVILCOX TFA RAYMOND LOUIS WILDEIQ I'lIRAM l'lERBERT WILLIAMS ATA JAMES l'lAROLD WILLIAMS ZW JOHN ROLES WILLIAMS JAMES WALTER WIIISON KE I'IERMAN AARON WINKLEIQ l'IAROLD PAGE WIKIGIIT SAX GEOIQGE PIENRY x7ERECK CECIL GEORGE STRATTON YOUNG EN NVILLIAM l'lOVVARD YOUNG Residence 1J7'0'C'id!'1I6't' Sl. Lozmlr, Mo. 1,l'0IJidl'Ilt'f Providrncz' PI'0ZJidl'1ll't' W' fi-If rl y COIIHIIQIU, Ohio l itt,rb1n'g, Pa. fluburn 1gI'0OfC!ilII', Jllayf. 1'la!l,rlmrg, N. Y fllflrbora, .7lla.r.r. Fall Rizw, Jllmzr Proizfidmlcr l,7'0Uidz'7ICL' Tucknlior, N. Y. Bristol Sy!'!IClt.fl', N. Y. l'awtIIrkI't Ixlrrnardfziillr, N. Proziidf-:wir Alpponaug Foxboro, Mary. Foxboro, Marx. 1 rozf1'dI'1Ic'f Lynn, JWu,r,r. Fall Riwr, lllaxs Tiverton Palmvr, Marx. Putnam, Conn. Providnzu' Ballimorf, lllzi. Manclznsffr, N. fl Providrncc Proz1idz'ncf 1,l'0?21.dL'7lL'1' Foxboro, Mau. 1,7'0Z'it1l'7Il'l' 173 Room 42 Orms Hope 20 12 Princetoii Ave. 458 Hope 81. Wziterxnzzn North Slater Caswell I4 65 College Auburn Slater 5 Hope 31 105 South hlaiu Fall River 39 Benevolent Sl NVZllLCI'I'l1?lll University 2l Bristol l3 Brunonizl Pawtucket Hope 38 23 Waterman Apponaug Caswell 21 Caswell 19 262 Cranston Caswell 5 Caswell 26 Tiverton University 22 303 Benefit 125 lilrngrove Ave 65 Weymouth University 17 235 Blackstone 81 Waterman 40 Shiloh Caswell 21 16-I Angell ,ng PECI L l , l l :gfilimgmlfgwh ,' Illlllllllg A 5 Lil Name FRANK ROBERT AMES, 'ID I' IQICIIARD FREDERICK AUST CLYDE FERDINAND BELL FU-SUN BIEN ALFRED COOKMAN BLAKE AIiI REI7 JOIIN BRASSARD A X A :HENRY ZDEWEICS CADY B 9 II ANGEI.O AMERICO CALDARONE SILVESTRO CAPPIELLO 1llCIIARD BURTON CARTER B 0 PIZRCY GORDON CL11-'E B G H NIESIIiXN DESDEOULIAN XVILLIAM BARBOUR FARNSWORTH PAUL JOSEPH GRIMES fb K IRVING 'PURGLE GUMB l'lERl!I5R'I' GORDON PIIGGINS EPHRISM ADELARD I'IUDON GEORGE AVIYAURICE INGALLS PVILLIAM JOEL JONES NrXTlliXN GARDNER IQINGSLEY HENRY BLAINE IQULP 0 A X Residence Room Providfure 298 W'ashington Ave, Provideuff 957 Maiitoii Ave. Newport Nfwf, Va. ' 273 Thayer Shanghai, China Hope I7 Eart Providfnce East Providence Pawlurleet T Pawtucket Warrevz University 2 Providmzce 64 Almy Providence 145 Sutton Richmond llill, N. Y. 41 George Writ Somervillf, .Marr 41 George Providmzcc 371 Admiral 1J?'0UidE7ZC6' North Slater Pawtucket Pawtucket Lowfll, Marx. University SI Prozfidmzce 22 Carlisle Providevzcf 234 Federal Providence 1348 Broad P1'0vide1zcf 43 Saclgett Provideucc 605 Hope Potulown, Pa. University 4 174 I LSL- NINE TEEN Name JOSEPH HENRY MOORE JAMES RUSSELL MURPHY CD K IQENNETH SAFFORD PARKER XI' T HARRY ELLSWORTH RAHMING WALTON SPENCER REDFIELD WAYLAND WILBUR RICE A fb PAUL CURTIS RICHARDS AT A CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL JOSEPI-I EUGENE ST. LAURENT PHILIP RAYMOND SISSON A CID WILLIAM SIMPSON SPATCIIER CID K XII WILLIAM MARTIN TILTON E X EDWARD ERNEST WILDE ARTHUR HENRY WILKINSON, JR. DANIEL HALE WOOD A T NPT Summary of Students Seniors .... . . . Juniors ....... Sophomores .... Freshmen ...... Special Students. Subtraction of Names Counted Twice ..... Total .....,.... FIFTEEN - Residence Room Providence 377 Broadway Providence 27 Landor fanesville, Wir. 4 Manning New Bedford, Maxx. 24 Benefit W. Newlon, Maxx. 707 Grosvenor Bldg. Providence North Slater Gofxtown, N. H Q4 Angell Lowell, Maxx. University I6 Woonxocket Woonsocket Providence Slater I Attleboroi, Maxx. Attleboro, Mass. Dalton, Maxx. Hope 26 Providence IIQ George New London, Ct. 4 Manning Providence 445 Elmwood Ave. . 151 . 173 . 194 36 33 I I I I I ' I I I I I I I I I I I E I I I I I I I I I I Class of l'1l.All'lR FRANK :ADAMS .IOIIN .AIIIQXANIJICIL 'IJ I' A CARII IIIINRY ANGI-:I.I. A K E BARNEY WII.cox BARIQR K 22 ROYAL BUCHANAN B0Nc:AR'I'Z ZW 'IOIIN XVAIRIDSXVQILTII BANKS ICRIC NI-LWIQLI. BARIxoIIR A K E IIINIJON FRANCIS BARNl'1'I I' E47 E III-:WIS BARRlNcs'I'0N fb K Nl' PII-:RcIc 'HILL BIil'2Rli'I'ON Xl' T HARRY DANl 0R'l'II BRICIQ B 0 II lIU'l'1ll'1R IIAVIIN BURILI, l RIf:I:IaRIcIi BURNS A 'I' A -IOIIN .lAIxIIf:s CARROLL XYll.l Rl'IlJ AVARIUZN CIIANIILI-:R BYRON ICIIWIN CIIAIIIIIAN A fl? IIIQZIQRIAII NI-:I.soN CONANTXII 'T' HARQLII VIARHIJ CONI-3 Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen CIIARI.I:s WI':sI.IIY GIJIIIJARII QAURRIICR A 'I' A lloRAcI-: ALLIIN IDAVIS A K E AVIIIIIIS DAY DONNOXV A A fl! 'IOIIN AI,III1:R'I' lDliOl'lGl'I, wlll. RIII-'us AI.IxI4:R'I' IJYICR K Z2 'I IARRY l':I,Ml'2R I'ImIoNs, bl R. A T A AIIINROI-: HILKSINIQ l AczAN fl, Z2 K AAIA'I'IIs l':I7W'ARD l I':I':NI4:YfIP K I RI1:II XVAI.'I'I-:R UI.AssIcI. A T A 4losIcI-II c:0'I I'S'l'lCIN -IOIIN III-:RAIAN flRl'1IiNI'1, AIR. AI.III':R'I' III-LONARII CIRINIJY Z2 X 176 CI.AIil'1NCIi AlAAIIf:s GRINNI-:LL GI-LIIRIQII: KIAILNHIL CPUINNESS WAI:I'I1:R PoN'I'IIIs GIINN Z1 N VIIJIIN ICIIIII-:NII 'lIAR'I' B 0 Il AIORGAN BUCRI-:I,I-:Y 'llAvI:N K 12 PAIII. PALIIII-:R llIcNs0N 'Il E K I.oRINc: SI'AUI.mNcI IIRIIIQNWAY ZW CI.IIfIfoRII -HARRISON VllIc:c:INs B U II ICDWVAILD WAsIIINo'I'oN 'IIILL A fl? IQAYMOND CAIIII-'IIeI,Im lloI-RINS AXA YIc'I'oR l'l0VVARlJ CTVICORGE BRIN'I'oN KIOIINSON A 'l' Sl RoIsIf:R'I' YVYIIIAN .IIINI-Ls A K E I,IcwIs CI.IIfI-'oRIm KI-:NYON X 'IP CARROLL XVILSON KNOWLIQS A A fl, CARI. I RANRI.IN IIAIII-LR A fl! WALLACI-1 AllilllLl'I I' AICNAIRIIIT B 0 II IIIIGII AlAR'I'IN XII-:Nmcs PIQRCIVAII Af1II,I.l'IR Z XI' ICIILYN YINAIID AlI'I'cIII-:I.LNl' T PARKICR ICIIWARIJ AIONRIII-1 Z Nl' AIIIIRI-:Y -IOIIN NIORGAN IIIINRY SCIIISCIIRI-:R NIIWCUAIII FRANK AN'I'IIoNY PARI-:N'I'Ia Rm' l,I':oN PARIQIIR WIII'I'NI'1Y IIAYIIIQN PRI-:s'I'oN 'I l0I,IIIaN R I4:AIINI:'I'oN A 'I' S2 ROHl'lll'I' SCIIIIYLI-:R RIIOIII-Ls 'IP A 0 c:l'10llGl'2 ICINVAIQIJ IQICIIARDSON fb E K .IAxII4:s CAVINI-:ss RICRNIIR A 'T' NINETEEN FIFTEEN Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen-fcontinuedj ADAM ANDREW SUTCLIFF A K E LIAROLD BURTON TAIIT GREGORY 'I'I'IOMAS SCATTERGOOD A K E DAVID '1'AYI.OR SIIAW B 9 H 1'IUGll BRUCE SIIIPLEY GEORGE SILVERMAN XIVILLIAM IVIOLUS SISTARE, JR. E X DANIEL SMITII :HAROLD ST. CLAIRE STARIN ROLAND LUCIUS STICKNEY A T A RAYMOND PARKIIURST STICKNEY A T A EVERETT LINDSCOTT TIIORNTON A T PARKER GILLESPIE rI'ENNEY B 9 H VVILLIAM GORDON WARD LEONARD MAIKSIIAIIII NVRIGHT KALIJII IQNIGIIT WENTWOIl1'lI B O II IQUSSELL I'IENRY WICN'l'Z K 22 GRENVILLE WIIITNEY, JR. ffl K YI' WILLIAM FIARLE NVILLIAMS A T A 1 Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen IREGINALD ODIISORNE BRACKETT K RODERT ELMER BRIGGS JOIIN ROY BROKENSIIIRE CII F A LOUIS WILLIAM CAPELLI fb K VFIIOMAS HODGES CASWELL fb I' A XIVILLIAM JAMES CLARK A A KP 'ROIIERT JOIIN IRANIELS VFIIOMAS HENRY DONAIXUE, JR. A K E ITARRY ICDWARD DOW B G II EDWIN RAYRS H A X STANLEY SMITII ICMERY E N ALBERT EDWIN ICVANS E CIP FRANK ALEXANDER FARNIIAM, 2D.NIf T HENRY BOOTII FLINN K 2 JOSEPII EDWARD FOY CIP K JOIIN I'IENRY GIIODEY 9 A X AERAIIAM GLICIIOIISE MAX VFIIOMAS GREEN LUCIUS KNOWLTON I'IAl.E HARLEY JOSLIN A K E PIIILLIP STUR'I'EvAN'I' IQELLEN Nl' T I'IUGO ALSEN IQENYONXII T CIIARLES IQUSSELL ITINNEY A A fIJ LEWIS CLIEI-'ORD IQINYON LIAROLD SPENCER LITCIIIIIELD sg LJ 'FSUNG FAII IIIU ALLEN GOODWIN NICIQINNON fl? I' A FRED MCIIEAN B 9 H NIORTON PERRY MCLEOD E N DANIEL LEO IVTORRISSEY fb K JOSEPII DONALD NIURPIIY A T Q RICIIARD JAMES OIBRIEN A T A WVILLIAM SLOCUM O,GORMAN A T A ATILTON COIIURN PAIGEKI7 K NI' FRANCIS AIVILLARD ROLLINS A T A RICIIARD WILMIER TQOWAN A T A LE ROY SUMNER ROWI.EY B 9 H PIERRE PAUL SAUNIER A K E ORRIN SIIEPARD CID A G FREDERICK LEE SMITII, JR. A T A EDWARD STEINIIAUSER E N GEORGE UNGICIK PETER VASILEIEE JAMES MARK WAIJE A ffl -HOWARD BURT WIEBB B G II DONAI.D LYON WlIl'F'FERIORE CIP 1' A 'FIIEODORE WILLIAMS AX A NVILLIAM IRICIIARD WVIRTNER 'IF K XI' AVILLIAM LEVETT YEATON 22 N WILLIAM :HOWARD YOUNG Z1 N SZ II II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I Q LIBER BR UNENSIS Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen WALTER BAIINSEN Z NI' EDGAR POTTER BLACK A T S2 PETER BLASSBERG FREDERICK ITOLDREGE BONTECOUAI, T HERBERT ALAN BROWN 2 X HAROLD ADAIR CARPENTER A K E EDWARD ROBERT CASEYQ K ROBERT EMMETT CROTTY A T FRANK WESTCO'F'F DAVIS A K E LORIMER :HAROLD DIXON K 2 DAVIS EISENBERG JOIIN TIIOMAS ANDERSON ELY HAROLD F ITTS TIIOMAS MILTON GOODIIALL Z NI' STEPHEN ALBERT GREENE 2 'IJ E CLARENCE DEWOLE ITEIKRESHOFF CHARLES BARTLETT I'IIGGINS A T A CALVERT HOLTNII T WALDO PERKINS ITOUCIIIN B 9 II LEROY IRONS STAN LEY LOGAN Y Us ITENRY SAVAGE JKENYON A K E ' FRANCIS ANDREW KING A T A THEOPIIIIIUS PERSSE MCCLORY A K E DONALD EVANS TVICINTIRE B 9 II BERNARD HARRY MILLER ELBRIDGE JOIINSON NEWHALL A T A JOHN JOSEPII O,NEILL ALFRED ALAN OVEREOGII A K E ITAROLD LEIGIITON PORTER 2 N MYRON STEPIIEN POWERS A T A EMERY ROLLER A T Q NELSON BENSON SACKETT A 119 RAYMOND WILINIONT SIIELDON 9 A X MARTIN THOMAS TEVLIN fl, K DANIEL SAWIN 'FOLMAN B 9 II WILLIAM PERCY rI1RASK B 9 H GIRARD BLAKESLEY TROLAND K 22 IRVING RUSSELL WALKER WALTER LOCKE WILIIIAMS A K E LUKE AUGUSTUS WOODEURY AXA ONCE B 9 H i 1111 jllilemumam Ziaenrn jfzlxx 41-Bllculeau beptenuhsr 9 1914 iiaarulh leanher jfltts 1917 Qbctuher 14 1914 QEhtnar1J Eiuhsnn Q 51-111 EB B Qbctuher 23 1914 Robert 311.125 Gammell Q31-111 ilanuarp 12 1915 Eames Zirhmg jllilanatt Bb B IIB jfzhruarp 13 1915 . I I I 1 , , f 1 y o oy Q o 1 y o o , 1 f 7 o oy o I 1 . M 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 W f 1 5 1 I i 1 1 1 1 1 1 K 1 1 W1 11 1 V , 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 . if ' L . nil l f 1 JOHN CARTER BROWN LIBRARY I I I I I ...i. - NINETEEN FIFTEEN I I I A lr I Athl t' A ' t' Oficers I JOHN BLAIR ABBOTT '15 .... ...... . .' ....... .... ...,, C I mirman ' EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15 ...... ........ .... S c crvlary FREDERICK WILLIANI MARVEL '9-I ..... .... S nprwifor of .flthlvticf I Board of Directors I RALPH BROWN GRAHAM '15 ELMER FREMAN DAVENPORT '16 WILLIAM PAINE SHEFFIELD, Jr. '15 HAROLD DUEL SCOTT '16 I I GEORGE CLARK VALENTINE 115 FRANK RUSSELL SMITH '16 I HARRY HUNTER BURTON ,I6 I I -I Managers and Captains I Football Baxfball . GEORGE CLARK VALENTINE 'IS GEORGE FRANKLIN JOHNSTON '16 I SETH KIIXIBALL MITCHELL '15 HAROLD DUEL SCO'I'I' '16 I I Trnflc LAWRENCE HALL 'IS WILLIAM PAINE SI'IEI I 1ELD, jk. 'IS I Q 183 V JL LI ...qv GEORGE CLARK YVALICNTINE, I RxsmzR1cK ALLAN BALLOU W. N. ORMSBY 'Ili J. NI. BAILEY '16 R. B. XVARD '17 A. E. CEOTTSIIALL '15 S. K. J. P. NIURPIIY '17 H. P. ANIJREWS 'IIS J. M. BOOTH 'IG 15. VV. BLUE '16 J. C. BUTNER, JR. '18 CHANDLER '15 T. SIETII IQIMBALL BXIITCIIELL '15 ...... , - III nnu,,I f' .Captain 15 ....... ............. M anager , JR., 'Hi ..... ..... A ffixlanl Ma1zagfr Ends XV. R. L. MCBEE '16 Tackles M. FARNUM 'IS H. O. IJUGGENWIG 'IS Guards A. G. MAXWELL '16 E. S'1'AF1f '15 Center IVIITCIIELL '15 Cllczjntaivzj Quarter-backs L. R. CLARK 'IS Half-backs H. R. GORDON '18 Full-back I. FRASER '17 Substitutes M. J. DONOVAN 'IS L. H. NoRcROss '17 W. K. SPRAOUE '17 JV. XV. XVADE '17 186 212 NINETEEN FIFTEEN urn-r f' Xxruf n An. ' , n :L- -- -N, , .5 givzgaiffffgie .foe W- Qi. f all Y I 4 l r VARSITY SQUAD a 'A A Huggenvig Maxwell Huggins Farnum Bailey I Trazner Y Ward Valentine Gordon Andrews Mitchell Gottschall Staff McBee Mgr. Capt. I A if Ormsby Murphy Fraser Clark 45g 6 Mzezfffsiffl fn 15 Z?iETT7 1'1EET?'f3WL'f lif r an f .f rr 1:62205 187 FOOTBALL SEASON OF 1914 In many respects, the season of 191-1 was one of the most successful in the history of Brown football, for the eleven, averaging only 169 pounds to the man and composed almost entirely of players who had not yet won their B, tied Harvard 0-0 and held Yale to a 1-1-6 score. The greatest praise is due Coaches Robinson, Whittemore, and Sprackling for this remarkable showing. With the aid of many old football stars who visited Andrews Field often, Robby and his assistants produced a machine which nearly equalled the great team of 1910. Their efficient work, however, could not have failed to begct results, for every candidate for the team went into practise with the spirit and determination to make good. On the opening day of practise, September fourteenth, fifty men reported to the coaches, forming the largest squad of candidates which ever appeared for a Brown team so early in the season. A successful season seemed to be assured from the start. The newspapers could not say enough about the fast Hill men, and when Norwich was defeated 24-0 in the first game, their remarks appeared to be justified. Another easy 20-0 victory over Rhode Island State made the team and its supporters a little overconfident, with the result that Amherst was able to hold the Brunonians to a 0-0 tie on October tenth- 1 Five days later, during the One Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration, the team braced and trounced Wesleyaii by a 16-0 score. On October twenty- fourth, the Cornell game was played on the Polo Grounds in New York. As this was the first time in years that Brown met the Ithacans, the contest aroused much interest. To our disappointment, Brown was defeated 28-7. 'The fighting spirit of the men was dulled tempo- rarily by this setback, and on the following Saturday, Vermont held the Brown team to a 12-9 score. After this, however, hard work began again, and the team was in excellent fighting trim for the game with Yale at New Haven on November seventh. The result, 14-6, hardly shows how close Brown came to wresting a victory from the wearers of the Blue. Only in the last few minutes of play did the Yale warriors rally sufficiently to rush the ball fifty yards for their second touchdown. None of the Brunonians were seriously injured in this contest, and a week later 188 , .ll -Y' -Y- Y i l l , '-in 1 l NINE TEEN FIFTEEN p l they gave Harvard her third surprise of the season, hold- ing the Crimson to a scoreless tie. A Boston paper com- ll mented on the game as follows: The Brown eleven played great football-wonderful football. It was a ll unit with tremendous power on the defence, undreamed ,l of, even by the coaches. Not only were the lines A reinforced concrete when subjected to the supreme test, but the backs and wing-men were towers of . strength. This expresses very adequately how well the team played. The contest was spectacular, to say the least, and those who stayed away from the p r Stadium to avoid seeing Brown's colors trailed in the i dirt, were disappointed that they had not witnessed the game. '1 MANAGER VALENTINE After a few days' well-earned rest, the men went rl to work in preparation for the Carlisle game on Thanks- giving Day. The usual throng of football enthusiasts filled the stands at Andrews Field, and were delighted to see Captain lwfitchellis men wipe out the defeats of the two previous years, by trouncing the Indians 20-14. y Taking into consideration the fact that many green men had to be developed l for positions on the Varsity, 1 think that the season of 191-L may be remembered as one of the most successful in the history of football on the Hill. As few B l men will be lost by graduation this year, we may well feel that the 1915 team will be able to maintain the high standard set for it this past season. I GEORGE C. VALENTINE, Kfanager for 1914-. ll i Scores: Season of 1914 ir HROXVN OPPONICNTS September 26 Norwich 2-L 0 l October 3 Rhode lsland State 20 0 . October 10 Amherst 0 0 V October l5 NVesleyan Ili 0 . October 2-L Cornell 7 28 1 October 31 Vermont 12 Sl W November 7 Y2llC li 14 ' November 1-L 'llarvard U 0 November 26 C1l1'liSlC 20 14 1 Totals .... .... l O5 G5 i 189 l A R. l.. BURNICIJ. '15 J 1 II NNI Y 'li . 4. . . . C. M. P. CROSS '15 -I M. BOOTI1 '16 B. 1.. VVEST QCap!11z'11j, 'IS Ends Tackles P. 15. '1'l'IF'I'S 'IS Guards C. 1'l. ICDICN, jr. '18 Center A. H. Cl'IAMBl'lR1.IN '18 Quarter back li. R. CAMPBICIJ. '15 S. A. WARD '17 R. D. WEBB '18 A. P. BA'1'l'IS '17 A. 15. WATQIICN '17 V. A. BOWMAN 'IS Half-backs J. MIIJLER '15 R. J. WALSH '17 H. DURSIN, jr. '16 I, A. KING 113 M. J. j1f:MA1l. 'ls ' Full-backs H. G. SAXTON, jr. '16 '1'. C. JONES, jr. '18 190 if fi-. 'f Q ex , X - Q A mx xx N' 3 . lm W ' '- ' , 14421: I' ' Nh, , ifggg3.fiag?fQ3a1f1XX X . , l X ,- N , x, xx. :VI-:SK-Z4 .L:-I::.gj'-:f.Hj,T'1llf' , N f V-419, .A,f:4M,! f1 flfllXi',..'. f4'lijM'lfA l Ezfgijf ffijj? 1 - ' i g! U S Q, gfff- . l N 'll 1, , , , W . 1 1 , ' xx I 'f ' ' BROWN 1 I fi X x L Q A Y x , VVLJI J, ,H . wiv' f AQ-' '23-yfwfili-' . ' :mi- ' 9f'--::1',- 2-1-f . .mfr uf ivy yr- , ,Q ,QQ-Qf'f A W n' U f -r1 ,h o,Vi-'XX , gl AL .' '- , 75-1 my ---- - 1 1 WMWWI f ' ' .fair JM N 'M girl, rs , ' ' I VN'5xXYfx'WYixSxxxxxQf5't:f 'ff I -T 'fr i X - .J A 4 ' aj rl. 4 , .K ,W Wurml + f uw f EQNL X N K at n I -s afd 40 ' .emgmfkg + IIALSICY RICGINALD NASH .... MICLYIN EUGIQNIS SAWIN ..,, CYRUS GATICS ALLICN 'l5. . J. C. 11.xz1,1':'1 1' '16, C. D. 11. 111':N1z1' '14, p. K. 11. 1-'1,,xND1':1zs '17, p. M. J. C1aoW'1cL1, '15, p. 11. W. CRAXI ,l5, p. A. D. DU1zc:1N '14,ll1. W. lf. '1'1-:W111L1. '14, 211. . . . . .Czzplzlin ..........M111mgvr . . . .-lf:z'.rlant Mzzzzagur C. P. 1s111s1NG'1'oN '15, 511. G. 1-'. Jo11Ns'1'oN '16, 4. 4. 11. 11. 11ND1z1cWs '16, 1. 1. W. N. oumslay '16, 1-. 1. 11. 11. Nfxs11 '14 C. 1. 1. 11. DUNN '16, C. 1. D. 111111: '15, 1 .1. 1 1 11 11 11 11 11 1 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 3 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 if 12 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 BASEBALL SEASDN OF 1914 Although the 1914 baseball team was unable to repeat the enviable record established in 1913, the season was far from being a failure. Brown won fifteen out of a total of twenty-two games, including two victories over Yale and one each from Princeton and Pennsylvania. These four contests gave our team a majority of wins in its games against the Big Four. Holy Cross succeeded in gaining two victories, each by a margin of a single run, but Harvard ran up the only large score made against the Brunonians during the season. The Crimson won the Memorial Day game to the tune of 12-l. Great credit is due Coach Harry Pattec, '06, for his work in developing the team. His task was not easy, for he began without the services of six 19l3 veter- ans - such men as VValt Snell, Eddie Eayrs, Reilly, Dukette, Crowther, and Loud. However, by the time of the first Yale game, capable substitutes for these stars had been found, and the players were working together in great style. Dave Henry's work stamped him as one of the best college pitchers of the year, and no small credit is due him for the nineis fine showing in many of the big games. Captain Nashis timely hitting and heady base running were big factors in scoring runs, and the consistent all-round work of Babington, Ducky Ormsby, Hazlett and Captain-elect Johnston was a source of satisfaction to all Brown supporters. The schedule was a rather hard one on the whole, but its good arrangement enabled the players to be at their best in almost every game. New York University opened the season at Andrews Field, but proved to be a very poor match for the Brunonians as they suffered an overwhelming 16-0 defeat. A game was played with the Providence International League Team on the following Saturday, Brown losing by a 9-6 score, and on the next Wednes- day the preliminary schedule was completed with a victory over Maine. On April eighteenth, Princeton defeated the Bru- nonian Team in the first of the big games by a margin of 6-2. The New Hampshire Team, which followed on April twenty-second, proved to be a rather difficult proposition, but the return of Johnston and Hazlett to the game gave the team a renewal of confidence, and on the twenty-fifth Yale 194 NINETEEN FIFTEEN was downed by a score of 3-2, '4Reggie', Nash break- ing up the contest with a home-run drive. 1Vesleyan and Virginia next were defeated, but Holy Cross proved to be a stumbling-block for Brown, defeating our team in two hard-fought pitchers, battles by the margin of a single run. Six victories then followed in rapid succession - two over Amherst, one each over Trinity, Rhode Island State, Yale, and Princeton. This last game was viewed with especial satisfaction, as it evened up for the li-2 defeat given us by the Tigers earlier in the season. l The Nfemorial Day game with Harvard ended rather disastrously with Brown on the short end of a 12-1 score. MANAGER SCOTT l After a victory over Tufts, however, the team went The to Cambridge prepared to wipe out the defeat of the previous Saturday. game was a hard-fought eleven-inning struggle, finally ending in Harvard's favor by a score of 4-3. The season closed with two defeats - Tufts winning an exciting 8-7 game, and the Alumni winning a farcical, five-inning contest from the Varsity on Commencement Day. . HAROLD D. SCOTT, Nlanager for 1915. Scores: Baseball Season of 1914 BROWN OPPONENTS BRONVN 01'l'ON1iN'I'S April 8 New York University 115 0 hffay 16 Amherst ti 4 11 Providence lnt. League 6 9 20 Yale 2 1 15 hdaine 2 1 23 Amherst 2 1 18 Princeton 2 G 27 Princeton 10 4 22 New llampshire -1 3 30 Harvard 1 12 25 Yale 3 2 June 3 Tufts -1 3 29 Wesleyan 7 3 li Harvard C11 inningsj 3 -1 May l University of1'irginia 8 3- 12 Pennsylvania 10 2 2 lloly Cross U 1 13 Tufts T 8 6 lloly Cross 1 2 15 Alumni Q5 inningsj 2 5 Sl Trinity U U --- - 13 Rhode lsland State 8 O Totals. . . , . 1111 7-1 195 I ff vll AI ,IAMICS PA'I'RICIi MURPIIY. .. DAVID BARNICY I I'1INBI'IRCl. . . D. Iif I I'IINIiI'IRG, c. R. W. siiicinox, II. R. ii. scca'r'1', p. J. WIGI'l'l', P. 1. ln. 11,xc:c:icR'1'Y, lb. II E A BALL . . . .Capmiu C. H. DAY, 2b. P. XIURPIIY, 3b. R. li CRO I I'Y, s. s. IC. I,. SIIIWIRIDAN, 1' II. 'I'. 'I'INKl1lR, I. I. D . ., , . . l'. MQIN I IRI',, m .I- IIROWN, ulil. inf. Nluy RIILII' X I :xy May -func Ii. R. CASICY, lla. Ii. L. Scores : Season 1917 OI'l'0NIiN'I'S April IS Iiry:111L :mal SlI'ZllIOII'S 5 2 April 22 IJCZIII Aczulcmy 6 Zl April Z5 Durfcc Iligli School 2 I April 29 Classical Iligli School Cancelled May 2 NVOFCCSICI' Acuclcmy -I 9 May In Kloscs B1'ow11 7 U May 'I Sl. George- 0 7 196 of 1914 IUI7 I3 I'Iill'Y2lI'LI I9I7 3 I6 Cushing Aczlnlcniy I 20 Morris Ilciglmls Il 23 Iizlst Grccuwicli Aczlclcnly I9 I Iirown I9Ifm 7 'I'ol.:lIs. . . ..... 1:5 .llanagrr ovi'oNr:N'1's I-I 3 5 7 2 77 5 it I7-Sb ill P Miata ., ,.,,. 1 3 'ifi-iff? 2' . I 1 '-'-f'1fef,'fzz-viii?-11 an12,'2.1-3:1-.-:efaf-gf5aff: . 'if-24:5-:-gszi'-2.1 -2,:e-12-5f'.--:fav-.:fs Q s rg n . 5 I i ,. x l - A ..... -if , . ' D A 7 fm F,fif.4.f?'1- ' 55.-:-is-1.1.t'ir-311E-.'-:fgrc-, .-.-'z-5-.: , , 1? . E2-Z'1'-- -. s :'-:Q-'ff2:Z-r.'::'- -E:'.':,-::.+,11f:I1-: 'Fai 1,Va1f1 f7 P . ' ' .., -iqr?-ff I- 4 'tifrfift-jff1'g1-E,'51'.1.'.f:-g-j-ei,-,-252-'flu ii:':'7'i-i1 Iif:?' 1 it 53 .i??ffE1i'7431355-I.1jifi':'. .3i2ii4:r'f5f5'-Eif555515TE'-'.1.'551fi5E':11.1f:3555.gf.f2-:LE-me-11,3 ' 2335.21iI2:3iiE'1'5.f,ii2i :iff-152?ffE.f4Ef'.215232223 1562? fSIf55i:??f955:f'5'f'5i'I25f5?3ii:EEfiifsiiii5EPj?F15?f5F?If':E5fi???.- -Q.- at -as..-t-.-?:i'11'f?55'5:iff1'5a's5?1?:i'f'-EEf5?f:'f.-A-'fl -2--1--1-If-3'-.-.'ig-1-P11 , 1.'.'.11j,:'-1i.',e'.' , ff.5:f,-13313.1-Ef:.1:'.1f.-E':'.-EEF' g'.E,E',315?,fgg'::,i'sggf:--3-'-'-' IQ:-.1-Q'-Q-2'J5::' ,2.'f:j1.,3-f:53f-':-Z-:Z 1 i1-' .- - Ie ggieifi I : J . i t U tif ww 1 Season of 1914 WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN ...........,....,,. DANA IVIORTIMISR IIUBBARD .... Division A Delta Upsilon 7, Psi Upsilon 3 Delta Upsilon III, Sigma Nu EI Delta Upsilou I, Phi Sigma Kappa 2 Delta Upsilon I-I, Beta Theta Pi 2 Phi Sigma Kappa 3, Beta Theta Pi ii Phi Sigma Kappa 3, Psi Upsilfm +I- Phi Sigma Kappa 6, Sigma Nu 7 Iieta Theta Pi G, Sigma Nu 7 Beta Theta Pi IO, Psi Upsilon I. 'Sigma Nu 7, Psi Upsilon li Division C Delta Phi 9, Lambda Chi Alpha S Delta Phi I, Theta Delta Chi II Delta Phi 1, Phi Gamma Delta 3 Delta Phi 6, Alpha Delta Phi 0 Alpha Delta Phi -I, Phi Gamma .Delta 7 Alpha Delta Phi I, Theta Delta Chi 28 Alpha Delta Phi 3, Lambda Chi Alpha 4- Theta Delta Chi I3, Phi Gamma Delta 5 Theta Delta Chi 8, I,amhcIa Chi Alpha 2 I.amhcla Chi Alpha 4, Phi Gamma Delta I3 .,.........Pf. .I'I!fl'lIf . . . . . . , . . . . . .St'l7l'4'l!U'j'-TI't7lI,VllI'l'f DiViSi011 B Phi Kappa 2, Delta Tau Delta 0 Phi Kappa I1, Delta Kappa Iipsilon I Phi Kappa I2, Zeta Psi I Alpha Tau Omega forfeited to Phi Kappa Alpha Tau Omega forfeited to Zeta Psi Alpha Tau Omega forfeited to Delta Kappa Epsilon Zeta Psi ii, Delta Tau Delta -I Zeta Psi 4, Delta Kappa lipsilon 7 Delta Tau Delta I8, Alpha Tau Omega I Delta Tau Delta EI, Delta Kappa Iipsilon S Division D Phi Kappa Psi S, Sigma Phi Iflpsilon II Phi Kappa Psi I, Kappa Sigma S Phi Kappa Psi 3, Phi .Delta Theta -I Phi Kappa Psi forfeited to Sigma Chi Sigma Chi 0, Kappa Sigma 3 Sigma Chi -I, Sigma Phi Iipsilon I2 Sigma Chi 7, Phi Delta Theta li Kappa Sigma 4, Sigma Phi Ifpsilon 2 Kappa Sigma 12, Phi Delta Theta SI Phi Delta Theta IO, Sigma Phi Iipsilou I Division Champions DIVISION A-Delta Upsilon DIVISION Ii-Phi Kappa DIVISION C-Theta Delta Chi DIVISION D-Kappa Sigma Semi-Finals Phi Kappa I5 ar. Kappa Sigma I Theta Delta Chi li tar. Delta Upsilon I Finals Phi Kappa 7 zur. Theta Delta Chi 2 Winner of Cup Phi Kappa 197 N uw. mln 0 ' Cv? 3,590 E 1 X lnlf J 1 lm 5113, X Q '14, in. Y- QW --f xgffkxg- I . H Nj, , ' Lt'q,'1' , I . 1 fi q 7 .N cralsh ii? .- - W, - ' ' jf- rg ' 152717 , gg zretlh ' rmrrmi cm A Easzh all I , A51 ' A? ' :rf , tif i, l ig 1111-11 IN ,ff ' 17, fy?1,,Z 7':Ev':.h-f 1 ,624 ' f iaf rf Brunonian BLIVEN, c. f. BROWN, 3b FILES, lb. MOF1-'ETT, s. s. WALKER, p. I'IA72ARD, p. BLANCHARD, 2b. KEVILI.E, l. f. FORWARD, r. f. Nlay 223, Nfay 10, Nlay 25, Niay 20, May 20, Nfay 20, Nlay 27, May 21, Lincoln Field May 21, 1914 Brzmonian 8 Herald 37 Umpire IJEAN OTIS E. IQANDALL Scores I 007 ....... lJJ7'1HL07L'id7L 1008 .... .... B Mmonian 1000 .... Iirunovziavz 1010 .... B1'u1zo1zia1z 101 l .... Iirunonian 10112 .... Bruuovzian 1013 .... Brunoniau 1014- ....... Bruuonian A 198 Ilerald LYALL, Bb. EDINGER, c. HUBBARD, c. KELLY, c. f. A1'1 LECK, 1b. GREENE, 1. f. f. DIMMICK, s. s. CROSS, 2b. HURLIN, 1'. f. R. AEELECK, GIELIN, p. Herald 4 Herald 2 Herald 4 Herald 5 Ufrald l IIeraZd14 Herald IO Ileralzl 37 r.f C K .. , 4 X,,,,,,m fins-I-. ff? ARTHUR ICLLIOT I5AR'l'I,l'I'I I', '1-I ,.... STICPI-IICN AIl'II l ERSON PA'I'l'IiN, 'I-I... WILLIAM PAINFI SHI'fI 1 II'1I,D, jr., 'IS ..... ....., . . A. IC. BAR'I'l,l'I'l l', 'I-I A. N. COOIi,'I-I W. R. BURWICLI1, 'IS Ii. J. CORCORAN, 'IS P. CROSS, 'IS C. M I.. T. I,1'I l'I,IE, 'IS R. H. MeI.AUG1II,IN, 'IS C. G. MACLISOD, '15 H. M. TAYLOR. 'IS IC. R. WALSH, -I R., 'IS W. R. WA'l'I'2RKI1XN,'IS IC. H. BOSWORTH, 'IG A. B. COOP, 16 1, 11. DUNN, '14, J. 11. 1-1111.1,o1a1xN,'1a. W. M. MURCH, '16 W. s,xUN1JE1zs, '16 1. C. W111'1'1-:,'1z. 1' B. 1s1aoo1is,'1s J. 1-1 1s,11xc, '1s A. 1v111,1,1cR, '1s J. G. 1x1o1u111a'1'Y, '18 W. A. x1U1z11,xY, '18 -1. 11. RIDDOCK, '18 ..........Caplu1'n . ........... Alafmgifr . . . . ..fl,r,ri.rl1111l dfmzagrr llainmer and Discus ilillI'OXVCI'Q Sl1otP11tg il ligli jump. S80 Yard and One-Mile Runsg Cross Country IIICZIIII. Discus and HHIIIIIICI' 'l'l1row. Cross Country 'l'eam. I I2O and 220 Yard Hurdlesg High -Itnnp. Broad .lump and Low Hurdles. Pole Vaultg 220 Low Hurdles. lIan1mera11d Discus 'I'llI'OIVQ High llurdlt s. Cross Country 'l'e:1n1. 440 Yardsg Varsity Relay VIICZIIII. One and 'l'wo-Mile Runsg Cross Country iliiflllll. SSO Yard Dash and One Mile Rung Relay 'l'ean1g Cross Country Team. 880 Yard Daslig CJIIC and 'l'wo Mile Runsg Cross Coun- try 'IlCEIIII. -I-I0 Yard Rung Relay IISCZIIII. -I-40 Yard Rung Relay 'ISCIIIIL Pole Vault. SSO Yard Daslig Cross Country Team. lligll Jump. l'll'CSllIIlllIl Relay 'llCHIII. l rcsl1n1an Relay 'VCZIIIIQ Broad and Iliglm jumps. l'll'CSllI11ZlIl Relay VFCZIIIIQ 440 Yard Dash. One and 'l'w0 Mile Runsg Cross Country VIICZIIII. I'il'CSlIllIZlll and Varsity Relay Teanls. l I'CSllI1l1lII Relay illlfillll 200 I NINETEEN FIFTEEN :ozzezi I VA I r ll lv I F t U vs SJ. , 5725925 4' Sheffield Mg1'. Bosworth Riddock f -3' , 1 'ul EM? TEOZL, ' --'TEOZL 'fl Q is i TRACK TEAM M no Coop Starrett Cross Walsh O'Connor I Asst, Mgr. Coach W Saunders Halloran Hall Dunn White WI Capt. IW' I Isaac V Murray Brooks Moriarty wi o ini. 'sauztq iam: Eli a o 201 TRACK SEASON OF 1914 The track season of 1914 opened with considerable success. The college was not represented by a relay team on February 26th at the Afassachusetts Coast Artillery Nleet but entered a number of men in the open events. In the heats of the 440 yard open handicap, Dunn and Halloran led the field. The final heat was won by Dunn, and Halloran was a close second. In the half mile open handicap, Coop ran a great race, finishing first, with Bosworth close behind. The relay team made fast time against Amherst the following week at the B. A. A. games. defeating their opponents in the time of 3:12 3-5. In thc open events Lang- ley, who was running seventh in the mile finished third after a sen- sational sprint. The next meet was at the Providence Armory when Brown easily won from 1Vesleyan in the relay. Langley again placed in the mile. Dillon was second in the hurdles, and Bartlett secured second place in the shot put with a throw of fifty-nine feet. On March 9th the team ran at the annual meet of the ltlmmett Guards in 1Vorccster. Halloran won the -1-10 yard dashg Coop Hnished third inthe two mile, and in the one mile Waterman and and Langley came in second and third respectively. ln the first meet of the outdoor season, Brown met and de- feated Amherst on Andrews Field. The teams were evenly matched as is shown by the score of 60-65. Bartlett was the great' est point winner of the meet, for with three first.s and a tie for first, he piled up a total score of nineteen points. The next Saturday Brown defeated Wesleyan at Middletowng , the score was 7-1-52. Brown scored heavily in the distance runs MANAGER SHEFFIELD and field events, winning the mile and two mile, pole vault, discus, hammer, shot put, and broad jump. Mcl.aughlin broke the Brown record in the pole vault which had tood for a number of years. In the N. E. 1. C. A. A. A. meet at the Harvard stadium Brown was represented by only a small group of men, although three of them placed. Bartlett was first in the discus, White tied for fourth in the high jump, and Coop took fourth place in the two mile run. In the 1. C. A. A. A. A. meet which followed the next week, Coop who was the only Brown man able to score, won fourth place in the two mile. Although his time was not official, he bettercd the Brown two mile record by several seconds. The fall season opened with a two mile relay race in connection with the 150th Anniversary Celebration in which Brown defeated Wesleyan in fair time. On October 31st the cross country team de- feated W. P. 1. by a elose score of 26 to 31. Coop's sensational sprint at the end was a feature of the meet. On the fourteenth of November the team entered the N. E. l. A. A. A. cross country run and finished in seventh place. A week later they ended the season by running in the I. C. A. A. A. A. cross coun- try run at New llaven. W. P. S1'Ili1 l llfILD, jr.. Manager. 202 Moriarty O'Co11nor Saunders Coop Sheffield Coach Mgf-. Winsor Taylor Waterman Keough Bosworth Capt. SUMMARY OF THE CROSS COUNTRY SEASON OF 1914 October 31, 191-1. Dual lX'1ect at Providence, -1 1-2 miles ' 'l'eznn Scores: Brown 26, NV. P. I. 31. lVon by Coop. Brown. Brown men who scored finished in Lhe following places: lst A. B. Coop 1165 -1111 xl. G. N1'ori:x1'Ly 'lfig litli li. ll. BosworL11 ,Mig 7111 VV. R. xvlllCI'IIHl11 'I5g 81111 li. ll. lVinsor 115. November 1-1, 191-1. N. lf. 1. C. C. Run :il Boston, Bl.1lSS.,5I1l1lCS. 'l'eam Scores: Nlziine 6155 RI. 1. '1'. 651: Dzntmonlb T-15 Xl. JK. C. 115: Williams 13133 Colby 145: Brown 1-165 XY. P. l. 1555 Amherst 218. lVon by Preli of Maine. l Brown men who scored linislied in Lbe following places: IXLI1 A. B. Coop ,165 22ml W. R. xVl1lC1'1ll1ll1 ',15g28t11 P. ll. liCOll1.l'l1 '17g ZESLI1 bl. G. lX'lori:n'Ly '18g -1111.11 11. NI. 'l'z1ylor '15, November 21, 1211-1. I. C. C. C. R. at New llzwen, Conn. 'l'ez1m Scores: Cornell 355 ll2ll'V2lI'C.l T75 Yule E115 Xl. l. '1'. 1135 Pennsylvamizi 11-1g Princeton 1221: Colby 15115 Dznirnoutli 171g Brown 12153 CC3lllI11l3li1L2l-iQ C. C. N. Y. 251. Brown men who scored Iinisbed in the followinu places: 2341 XX. B. Coop 'llig 23341 XV. R. XVIIICVIINIII '15g -10th l'l. ll. Bosworth ,llig 411th lf. ll. Winsor ,155 52d P. ll. Keongli '1T. 203 O'Counor Murray Walsh Shelield Coach Mgr. Halloran Bosworth Hall Dunn Capl. Indoor Meets january 23. Annual lndoor Meet ol the Nl2lSSZlCllllSCtIS Coast . Xrtillery, South Boston, Xlass Relay Race, Brown vs Bowdoin. Won by Bowdoin. l ebrurary 6. Annual Kleet of the Boston Athletic Association, Xleehauies llall, Boston, Klass Relay Race, Brown vs NVilliatns. NVon by Brown. 'l'imc, new college record of 3 min., 10 2-5 seconds Febrnrary 19. Annual Xleet of the Providence Artnory Athletic ilssoeiation, State Armory Providence, R. l. Relay Raee, Brown vs Dartmouth. XVon by Dartmouth. Nlarch 6. lndoor Nleet ol the International Amateur Athletic Association, Madison Square Gar- dens, New York City. ln the medley relay race with Pennsylvania, Cornell, Dartmouth, Michigan New York University, l ordhatn, and Columbia, Brown finished Iilth. 204 1 -E-I-A-7 28th Annual Field Meeting of the N. E. I. A. A. HELD AT HARVARD STADIU,M, MAY 22 AND 23, 1914 Standing of the Teams DA R'1'MOIj'l'I-I . . ' A IAIN Ii ...,,..., ... ...,.. 571-2 '79 .. ...n TI'lCHNOl.OGY .... . . 25 5-6 COLBY ,.... ..... . . 15 BROWN ........ .... 9 1-3 Summary of 100-YARD DASH 1 C. A. Rice, Maine, 10 sec. 2 I . P. O'I-lara, M. I. T. 3 A. S. Lewellyn, Dartmouth 4 C. O. Olson, Dartmouth HIGH HURDLICS 1 G. A. Brown, Dartmouth, 2 K. Royal, Colby 3 W. Hay, Williams 4 I . A. 1 rcnch, IVIaine 440-Y ARD DASII I C. I . W. O'Connor, Dartmouth, 51 2-S sec 2 IC. C. Riley, Dartmouth 3 A. I . Peaslce, M. 1. T. 4 1. Merrill, Colby HIGH JUMP 1 G. C. Palmer, Maine, 5 ft. 9 in. 2 L. K. Little, Dartmouth, lu Tied at W. A. Sullivan, M. I. T. l 5 ft. S l-4 in. 16 sec. 3 I. C. White, Brown .. V , If fx '1'ccSm. M 1 T Ped 'W 1'I1lll1SIClI1:II', Aniherst 5 ft' 6 14 m' BROAD JUMP 1 P. G. Nordell, Dartmouth, 23 ft. 2 C. S Reed, M. I. T., 21 ft. 10 in. 3 J. P. Warren, Dartmouth, 21 ft. 9 3-4 in. 4 I . A. French, 1XIaine, 21 ft. 9in. POLE VAULT 1 C. IC. Buck, Dartmouth, Iltft. 4in. , 2 I.. W. Lawrason, M. I. I. , , I . P. McKenney, Bowdon lllidfgu J. King Williams S80-Y ARD RUN . - 1 W. R. R. Granger, Dartmouth, 1 nnn., JS sec. 2 R. YV. Bell, Nlainc 3 -I. T. Higgins, Holy Cross 4 C. T. Gucthing, M. I. 'I . 'Indicates a new record. BOWDOIN ...,, .. Q wn.L1.xx1s ....,, ., J '1'RINI',I'Y .......... .. 4 no1.Y cnoss ..... ..., 2 .mi-1ERs'1' ...... ..., 1 -3 Events 2 20-Y A RD DA SH 1 C. A. Rice, Maine 221' 2 I . P. O'l'lara, M. I. T. 3 C. 0. Olson, Dartmouth 4 A. S. Lewellyn, Dartmouth LOW IIIQRDLISS 1 K. Royal, Colby, 26 sce. 2 ll. C. Hudson, 'Trinity 3 T. H Huff, XI. I. T. 4 VV. Hay, Williams TWO MILE RUN I I . L. Cook, AI. I. T., 9 min 2 S. S. Saltmarsh, Dartmouth 3 I . If. Preti, NIaine 4 A. B. Coop, Brown ONE M 11.151 RUN 1 I . R. Mzlrceau, Dartmouth, 2 Al. Thompson, Colby 3 H. S. Benson, M. I. T. 4 K. D. Tucker, Dartmouth SHOT PUT 1 I.. A. 1fVhitney, Dartmouth, 46 lt. 2 3-4 in 2 A. E. Bartlett, Brown, 41 ft. 9 1-3 in. 3 P. D. Smith, Dartmouth, 41 ft. 4 in. 4 I . H. Leslie, M. 1. T. 41 ft. 2 1-2 in. DISCUS THROW 1 A. If. Bartlett, Brown, 126 ft. 6 1-2 in. 2 I.. A. 1Vhitney, Dartmouth, 125 ft. 2 in. 3 1..NV.Lcadbetter, Bowdoin, 124 ft. 3 1-2 in 4 Il. P. Bailey, Alnine, 121 ft. 6 I-2 in. ., 37 4-5 see. 4 min., 28 sec IIAMMER THROW I Il. P. Bailey, Maine, 164 ft. S l-4 in. 2 Il.. Murchie, Colhy, 137 ft. 1-2 in. 3 L. W. Leadbetter, Bowdoin, 136 ft. 5 in. 4 C. Hudson, Trinity, 136 ft. 2 in. TEqu:1ls record. 205 Brown Records IUII-YARIJ DASH-I0 I-5 sec IC. I I. XAKYCCICS, ,533 D. I . O'I3ric11, ,118 bl. IV. Mayhew, 'OSI 220-YA1m IJASII'-22 3-5 soc IC. Il. Wcclcs, '93 I . IIUYIIS, I15 4-IU-YARD RUN-51 I-5 sec. I . Ii. Taft, '98 880-YARD RUN-I min. my .3 N. S. 'I.1bu, I-5 1' Ny. - D SCC. Om:-NIl1.li: RUN--I min. Ili 2-5 sec. .wry I IX. S. labor, '13 'I'wo-Mlm-1 RUN--SJ min. 23 A. Ii. Coop 'III 120-X7ARIJ I IU1zn1.l-:s-I5 4-5 J. NV. Affzlylicw, ,UID 220-X'ARlJ I IU lu: Lies--25 l-5 -I. W. AIIIIYIICIV, 'OSI IIIUII LIUINIPA-5 Il.. N17-8 in. S. A. A IiCCCJlllI3Cl', '96 Iiuofxn JUMP---22 IL. 7 I-2 in I. XV. XIz1yI1uw, '09 Sum' I'u'r'---I5 IL. 8 in. A. If. Iizlrtlcll, 'I-I ., lr- -I-5 soc SCC. SCC IIAMMHIL 'I'xmoW--l.I,Z IL. .m in. A. If. Iiz11'I.Iclt, 'I-I Discus 'I'u1v.0w-139 ft. II in. N. E. I. A. A. Records 100-Ymm IJAs1l--Ill sec. A. CHVLCIIILIS, Amherst I I. II. Cloudman, Iiowcloin G. I.. Swzxzcy, Dzulmouth 220-Ymum DASH-22 sec. C. IV. Crum, M. I. 'I'. -I-III-YARD DASH-IU 3-5 sec. AI. ID. I.c-star, Williams 880-YARD RUNA1 min. 55 3-5 sec. N. S. 'I':ubcr, Brown - UNI-1-XIILIQ RUN-I min. I8 2-5 soc. N. S. 'I':1Iwc1', Brown VIVNVO-A'IlI.I'I RUN-II min. 35 3-5 sci R. IV. Atwater, 'I'uI1,s l20-YARD I IURm.1cs-15 IZ-5 sec. A. Ii. Shaw, IjZll'lII1OlltIl 220-XIARD I IURDl.l'lS--2-If 3-5 sec. A. I.. CILlI,I.Cl'SOll, University of Ycrrnoiii, QI. XYCIILICII, IVcsIcy:m IIIGII KIUMP--Ii Il.. 7-III in. P. NV. Ilzilrymplc, M. I. 'I'. II. Ii. I'Im'igIi1, Dzu'l.111ouLIi BROAD ,IUMP-23 Ii. SI 3-5 in. A. I.. Cuttcrson, University OIx'0I'IllOI1I. Suoi' I'U'r--IG IL. 3 l-8 in. I.. A. IVI1iLucy, Durtmoutli IIAMMIQR 'l'1mow-148 ft. 8 I-2 in. II. IC. A IZll'CICl1, Dzwtmoulli A. IC. Iizirilcu, ,14 Discus 'IvIlROVVfI:I5 fix. 5.9 in. I,OI.I'1 VAUI.'I 'I0 IL. 3 I-2 in. I.. A. Whitney, Dzirtmoutli G. 'I'. Iluxforil, 'USP POL!-1 VAUIXI'---I2 ft. Ii I-4 in. AI. S. NVrigI1L, IJZIVIITIOIIIII .1 Is-4271, Ia dll' 'Wg 1- Imffm 21 H I '- X 'X I 431212 je,-JI if ,Q-. R, 'iv ir I r ii dp-5.1 4 5-'l 7' U l. 'T Y-N 'I 1 3 I I' gms. .. gk ,ID ax I3 wmhw menu -m.. ',.4m mm. f..mw fi:'mQ..wm ms. .mm rmfmu -m. ..w.,: nsmimww frm Ca pf' . .1 3 I .I . V I -l.3:1.:'l N . I. I-1..::yi5??wE,. at . IiZ?'R:ki:. mu rib. mmm.-u ,fl Jafsewi. um I .-.r :YQ '. '1 -E1 if. -59' 'il :Ha1::': . 2' . I 1? E . :..,,:.,i3f. E- mi, I- .I-: -. ma., gg: -in-,I51A::fg-,-.Q 'igilir .4 .g1::1,.4: xx., If .zf..g:. wg S 1, :exrme 115 1.:, H. my-za: urs: .limi-5 -af page -ar 514'iine.::,W affirm. w.5:.1 Ifmg gasrgfg pg: 5fa:gig. 4'!s- ffilzrfti 'zsz-'fifff' WF ifflfifih 15112 515 Mrlhflslrri Wim.. Eb4:s!a:e 'smhff :Hi 25131-Meal 1 .- e 65 'I-.-,. ,, ff -51.4 fiJI,2?'fg iirwiixwf 'Lia 'Qi' 'fiie f:-1 -1 112 fl M: E:-'-MQW: ijsix 'wig :..i-59, ::',g::,,. .nz 25115 , 111I,l,-.1 iii E:-9-. . -I-iii. ' :' .: I :'i ' .'i:+ ' ' 3 iifiil .15 IP IS' li' ' vN 5 2 iw 1,4 .gn infix., ,..::g. fill ,flare ilga g S ,- , '. -, ,, rw, ,-..,,f.:f.1.I. 4--.-S.i.agf55:-M.,5.3:iff.iQrgf.gi:--Wg---.54435 ...ziiff-iii-FAQ 21-'g?S1uE:'..-ffl-5:.1:'5!f.51iQ.. ,..5.:'1,I 'wr'-5'1.A-2' 13. 'ir.-'f:E1:12v.5-'fi--, ,fs:2x1.. .A- mi-, mgszi . 1 If :' 9v12mza1aaaa1I2f:evf:-1-zfwfvei-aIsE1:1:nsaa?ie11fZ'1'-iiii-.ff-Sheri.-., Ir . .,J!?i-11:-iw-HFfrfz-ff-fili5.ri3 .-'Iam' -nz: c . ,,4. 4,.,.,,,,,..,.,, ,,,, . , . ,1,,,.,,A.,., ,,,. ,,,,, .,,. . .,...... -. . ..... ,. --.,..,. ....-,......... . ., .,... . .. .,,. . . .. . Q 1 ,,j..g,.-IH,.,g.1g,..,- 'l-I.-1,,Q:Eini:.i::?I.:,-bi:-fvfiligf4' ' W 4,53 ' ' iflizhmiu sqfzliiihigqi 5ia5f-Fifi Elf, -1-1 ' '-'?l'fQg1QHg,-,f1ci:ej3,.,l-5:12 -4-' ':.,f, .:,.:1-:rl -ali? .en rf- .-...5:--:-T ' .-11:-v.,-I -.-: --A-: ..:m,,:z: 1- 'g:::- '- ,z ,. y ..ff:.,.,. ,n'-' 'r'-::-115. 4 . . r . ., ... .1.. I 1 x,. X .-..,...,... . .v.+.I.. xi. ., ,,,4I,g...,. Q , ' fl Alter.: X51 H Mg, BENQ' Kills , fx ZR T !i'Qh xr llqfg, feta f 'lt ui ,N 7 2 lf, , N Q I :L .ni III! iw 4 All , mr ,. me :I-'QL' 6.:1g,fS,s! F nl I rripj grxikig X if , . x-.,, . I, 21 I .P 3 I . 5 3? ' I -.px Iwi-ii Q J,-xgwhiiji by . . , . . , .. 'I ff I x ,' 1 I M 'X 2 ' A 1 ,f I+ 7: -'l'A'1ii lv i vii' 0 I 'if' I i N 1 ' I 2 rs' I I I 1 I U l'll I I 1' v:'l1u-'ul' ,f x lr. f- ,I f, ,, .uw Q Lv if lux, ,N dv? 'W-9N 'm llb? 4EnF'qI 'l9Qf4,Wl.9QF 4 Ns..'U Ql 0'Q2!!J5 'fi. lh3QP 4aWw.'P S!M g m1 MOP', '59Rl ,, Q!9 GD 45. Brown University Interscholastic Track Meet Association Andrews Field, May 30, 1914 Records ofthe B. U. I. T. A. I'1Vl'IN'I' 100-YARD IDASII-'l'inie I0 sec. flat. 220-YARD DASH-'l'ilnc 22 2-5 sec. 4-I0-YARD DASH-'llinle 51 1-S sec. 880-YARD llUN1'lliIIIC 2 inin., -l-S sec. ONIC-MILE RUN-'l'ilnc -I inin., 29 4-5 sec. TWO-Mll,Ifi RUN-'lliine I01nin., I3 l-5 sec. 120-YARD IIURDLICS-'l'ime 16 3-5 sec. 220-YARD HURDLIBIS-'l'imc 26 sec., Hut. BROAD .IUMP-21 ft. 2 I-2 in. HIGH -IUMP-5 ft. 11 1-4 in. POLIC VAULT-ll ft. 1 in. SHOT PUT-51 ft. 5 in. 12 LB. HAMMICR THROW 171 fi., 5 I-2 in. DISCUS THROW-115 IL. 6 in. Scores by NVorccster ACIlLlCIIIy .... .... 5 7 1-2 Taft School .............-A4--- - .--- 20 1-2 Huntington School .,..,...,......, . . I2 Boston High School of Connnerce .... . . ll Cranston High School ............. . . I0 NVillis1on Acadclny ...,.....,.... ..... I 0 Providence Teclniical High .... ..,..,, 9 S. Llewellyn, Colby Aczrdeniy li lilncluner, IVorccstcr Classical High I S. Llewellyn, Colby Academy C. O'Connor, WVorcester Academy Burke, IVorccsLer Acadcniy Iiallzwcl, Providence 'l'cchniczxl High P. Forsyth, Providence Teelinicul High Parsons, Providence Hope High Meanix, Legatc School Sherniun, Boston Iinglish High johnslon, Worcester Academy Wliitliey, VVorces1er Academy IVhitncy, IVorcestcr Acudeiny l'Ioward, lVorcestcr Aczldeiny Bartlett. NVorccsLcr Acnclciny Points Kingston High School ..... . Vollclnnn School ............... lVcllcslcy High School. Providence Classical lligh School ....,.. Pziwtucket High School ........ Dean Academy .,,........ . NVilbrnhzun Academy ..... . l Wakefield High School .............. 207 6 5 -I 21-2 21-2 2 1 l Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen C. li.XlSING'l'ON, lmrrball A. IC. GO'l l'Sll,Xl,l., Foolball C1'IANDl,ICR, Foolball I.. llAI.I,, Trark W. CRANI, l?a.vrball I.. 'l'. l,l'I'l'l.l'I, Trarl' M. P. CROSS, Track R. Il. MCIAUGIIIJN, Foolball, Track DIKIC, l3a.rrball S. li. MI'l'CIlI1II,l,, Fonlball A. GARDINICR, Football lil. J. S'l'lXFl , Foolball W. R. W,'X'I'I'IRNIiXN, Track Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen P. ANDRICWS, Foolball, Baxrball G. I . JOHNSTON, llaruball M. BAILICY, Foolball A. G. MAXWl'II.l,, Football II. BOSWORTII, Trafk W. R. McBIjI'I, Football IS. COOP, Trark W. N. ORMSISY, l?a.u-ball, Foolball li. DUNN, Trafb W. IC. SAUNDIQRS, Track AI. I . ll1XI,l,OR.fXN, Travis - Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen B. WARD, Foolball S. 'l'. MacNI'1ILI,, Foolball 1 RASl'IR, Foolball AI. P. MURPHY, Foolball Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen R. CIARK, Foolball II. R. GORDON, Foolball IHXRNLINI, Football li. O. HUGGICNWIG, Foolball 208 INTER CLAS 1915- S :YV V ,, o ff' 'o s,u,g,, 9110. 00417 xm xsxxxszmw x xv xux lk I 4 A 5 VOQAOMQ q ' 5 0-wrzfi f 'i1'Y133'W g 5'-57'-3,4 'Ca ' Champions-Class of 1 9 1 8 Line-up of Teams ETBALL K11I1erQCup1.j, S1z111',1.g.g 1iurne11, Ne1son,r. g.g R1C11C!l11, hlenney, c.g C1l111I511L'11,1.1.Q Mcliuv, r. 1. 1916--lollnslon, QCnpl.D, GI'Zl11ilIl1, 1.f.g liwing, Urxnsby, r.1'.g X1e1i:1y, c.g Dnrsin, Saxton, r.g.g Blue, Dxek, 1. g. 1917-Klurphy CC:1p1.D, Foote, 1. 1.3 111lg2gCl'11', r. 1.5 Swz1I11e1L1, c.g 1V1g111, r. 12.5 Dennison, 1 g 1918-Jemuil CC:npl.D, r. 11. Q11OWI11IlI1, 1 g.g Ridcloek, e.g Dowe, Brooks, r. f.g 1gC!11lVll1S, Yl1llg11i111, 1. 1. 1 ebruz1ry 13, '15. Sophomores 20-Seniors 19 lfreslnnen 18-juniors 12 1 ebru:n'y 17, '15. Freshmen 36-Seniors 21 Sophomorcs 3-1-juniors S Februxlry 20, 115. 1 res1nncn 22-Soplloxnores 21 Juniors 35-Seniors 18 1 reslnnen. . . Sophoxnores. . . .1uniors,. . .. Seniors . . Seasons Scores Standing 209 1 e1aruz1ry 2-1, '15, lfreslnnen 36-Juniors 23 Soplmmores -1-1-Seniors 18 1 e1n'uzn'y 27, 115. Soplmomores -10-Juniors 10 1 res1nnen -13-Seniors 22 1X 1Z1l'C1l 3, '15. 1 res1nnen -16-Sophomorcs Seniors 53--luniors 21 11'on Lost . , . 6 O . . . -1 2 . 1 5 . 1 5 P. C. 1 .666 . 166 .166 ,Q-. ' rX,- , '---... .X gy -sh, - N. C, .Ni 1 '51 W. Hincks '16 H. A. Lalloe '15 H. McLaughlin '15 C. Scherer '15 R. Smith '16 I. Long '16 A. hV1lliIllIlSOIl '17 Swimming Team Rowland Hazard Nlcliaughlin Captain John Blair Abbott Manager b Charles Huggins Coach Dives Dives Relay, 100 yards, 220 yards Relay, 220 yards Relay, 50 yards, 100 yards Plunge Relay, Plunge, 50 yards 212 SWIMMING SEASON GF 1915 .'l'he record of the swimming team for the 191-1-1915 season was exceedingly disappointing, particu- larly in view ol the fact that during the early weeks ol practice it appeared that Brown would he rep- resented by one of the strongest, best balanced, aquatic teams which had ever worn her colors. ln spite of the loss of Smith '14 by graduation, the team could still claim the services of last, experienced men in almost every event. The relay team in practice, after a few weeks of training, negotiated 220 yards in faster time than it had ever been covered by a Brown team. Prospects were bright and Nlan- ager Abbott arranged an attractive schedule on which appeared several ol' the strongest teams in the east. With the advent of the mid-year examinations, however, all hope for a successful season vanished. 'l'he team was deprived of the services ol live ol its most experienced swimmers. l'rineeton, upon being in- formed ol' tl1e state of alliairs cancelled the meet scheduled with her. Amherst, ata later date, took similar action. hleets with llarvard, Cor- nell, and the Providence Y. hl. C. A. still remaining on the schedule how- ever, it was necessary for Brown to organize as fast a team as possible from the material still available. ' Coach Huggins called upon his sadly depleted aquatic resources and the three remaining meets were run oil. The Providence Y. XI. C. rl, was defeated by a score of 34-11 but the team sullered a 33-20 defeat at the hands of Cornell and fell before Harvard by a score of 30-l-l-. In these meets our small inexperienced team did its best to stem the tide of defeat. F. R. Smith '16, a new man, swam consistently and promises to be a valuable man next year. Williamson '17, drafted from the plunge did his share of the swimming as well. llinclcs and l.aRoe in the dives put up line exhibitions and did much to strengthen Brown's minority representation on the score board. WVitl1 this yearis team as a nucleus and the return of the ineligibles to scholastic convalescence, Brown should be represented by a strong team next year and should emerge from another season with a more creditable record. Scores Brown, . . . . 3-1 Y. M. C. A.. . . ll Brown. . . . . 20 Cornell .... . 33 Brown ....... . .... ........... 1 -1 Harvard .......,....,..,....,,... . 39 A meet with Princeton and the 'l'riangular Kleet with .'Xmherst and 1Villiams were cancelled. 213 lf. XV. Hiuvks 'IS Il. l,. Wilscm 'lg IC. 'l'. Xlzltlisrm H, l.. Alum-s 'lb .. , .X. li. l'1nch I7 lf. l':1i5:c'lS C..'X,SIuz1l'l 'IS VARSITY GYMNASTIC TEAM ICDWQXRIJ WINSLOW IHNCKS, ffrlfvlrlfrl l:,x1zcl,. xY l.lNco1,N .yum-zs, A11f,,,f,,q,-,- , fjllllfll Ml-1'4n111dC'v1nn.m '. Flying Rings llorizcmlzll Hur, l':u':ullnl H11 RIIIL5 umm Siclc- llm-sv Clulm Swinging Sidc llursv llorizunlul Bill ,'l'umlw g GYM TEAM SEASGN OF 1915 Although but few meets were won by the Gym Team, more interest than ever before was shown in the work and all of the meets were more closely contested than the scores indicate. Though Brown was defeated by both Harvard and Yale, the local team won an easy victory over Dartmouth, the first single public event to be given since the two colleges resumed athletic relations. The Brown men also showed wonderfully well against Eli's gymnasts, but as Yale has one ofthe foremost teams in the country, Capt. Hincks's men succumbed to a 35-19 defeat. In the Dartmouth meet, however, the local team made the best appearance of the entire season, every man winning a first with the exception of the rings which was lost by half a point. Besides the re- gular intercollegiate meets, several excellent exhibitions were given. For the first time the Brown Gym Team participated in the annual intercollegiate amateur gymnastic meet held at Columbia University on March 26. The teams entered in the competition represented Amherst, Brown, Columbia, Haverford, Harvard, New York University, Princeton, Rutgers, Yale and the University of Pennsylvania. Owing to an injury which Capt. Hincks received in his hand at the Dartmouth meet, the leader of the Brown gymnasts could not be entered as was anticipated. This fact caused a great loss to the Brown team as Hincks stood an easy chance of winning the tumbling and the all around championship. Asa result, the local squad failed to score, Yale winning first honors, while Wiss of Princeton bore away the allaround championship. Capt. Hinclcs during his college year has been one of the most valu- able men on the squad. Holder of the college championship for three years, captain of the team for three, Hincks has been the most consistent point winner of the team. In every meet of the season, he won first honors in the tumbling, easily defeating Chism of Yale, holder ofthe intercollegiate title. Wilson has been a faithful man on the rings as has Jones on the side-horse. Mattison, and Finch have also shown up well and with the last three as a nucleus, Brown CAPT. HINCKS should be well represented in the season of 1916. Summary of the Season Exhibitions at Bristol, Moses Brown School, and lfairhaven, Mass. Scores Brown. . . . . 19 Harvard. . . , 35 Brown. . . .. 16 Yale ..,..... . . 38 Brown. . . . . 351 Dartmouth. . . . ISK' 215 LIBER BR UNENSIS - My If' f GEL- 2' 1 1 1 r153:L.' 15122 944 - ff' EF i'1'9'i32 W l 1 WRESTLING TEAM Q Davis Maxwell Armstrong Storer I1 Rice Bliven Wells Davenport Blue Caplain Mzzrxagel' l, A ,H Crandall 'N l A W Y Q33 :GL v l J 4: 'OMB 216 fx 3 113, O PTIIRKIR X' i f A-sk W f Officers f -I. MILLER, 115 ...,,.. . . . llmmgfr VV. C1iAND1.ER, '17 ..., -... ' lnlxfaplf Illglplglyr ix X IrF.'l', Members of Team for Spring, 1914 W. I . BUI'Il'1LER '14 H. .IOSI IN 16 I . H. GRl'I1'2NE,15 W. CHJXND1 ER 17 J.M1l.I.lf:R'1: Winner Annual Fall Championship Tournament, 1914 W. CHANDIJCR '17 Scores May 1 Brown Holy Cross Qcanccllcdj May 2 Brown 0 Amherst 6 May 4 Brown 1 XVCSiCyZlI1 5 May 9 Brown Trinity Qcanccllcdj May 13 Brown S Conn. Aggies 1 May 15 Brown 5 Spriuglicld Y. M. C.A. 1 217 THE LAST CAR DOWN THE HILL THE HILL AS IT LooKs TODAY 218 1l +-.- 5 t. ....,..,...4..-rv ., . ...... ..-..- , NRA.. f uv 'MV -i v -U -N kk N 'WL' ng' M . V A ,,,,.. O h y . N . A ...A-ff'NA 3Ti,Tf' iii il A ' ' ' '13 I .V - ' .' ' ' 'W , 5 , 1 ,, F x,I 'N 'E ' 'N 'TJ -5 ' A-. .'1 QR I 'M Ti' 5 Q PIAROLD XXIURDOCK 'l'AY1.oR fb E K Editor-in-Chief :' 4 5 B WAI.TE1i RussE1.L BURNIIAM 22 X Managing Editor A K B Q EDGAR JONATHAN STAFF 9 A X flrz Editor Q Q C4 U 'H 9 'W fi? an Associate Editors 5 A H F U U 'TF' J. I. GREENE A A 111 R. B. GAI.LAN'F A T A 'if' L 1 If. J. HUN1- A fb 0. A. BROWN K Z 5 4 5 Q M. H. STANSBURY WI' T C. J. LAMB fp K Q B B 5 W. F. SULLIVAN B 9 H H. F, DRAKE11? I' A ' Q 5 W. R. BURWELL ZNII M. L. EDINGEILSI7 K XII Q v N. L. DUNCAN A T S. W. ALLISON A X A Qi B Q J. E. IQELLY fb A 9 G. E. HIEIBNEIR 21 N . E 5 E. S. STAPLESAT Q J. A. PEARCE 2419 E f Y Q Q A L W Y B V L 1 Q S Junior Editors Q Q 1 r P. B. METcAL1fA A fb G. D. CURTIS A T S2 Q Q K A l . C. SM1'ru A-'IJ W. SAUNDERS A T A ' Q V 1 U 5 .QL W. R. AFFLECKXII T W. M. MURcu K 2 +---- B K G. S. BEARSE B 9 H T. B. IQEVILLE fl? K E U Y 1 F. L. FERRIS A K E A. A. ALMSIJ F A Q B -ea-' H. C. BARNEY ZNI' E. L. ICEIIOESI9 KNI' 'ii' : 1 B. L. JONES ca ATX E. F. Wofmfb Z K : 1 G.B.E A B.L.L FXA jk fa- G. R. Again 22 X N. P. Lggffilm 2 fb E 'f Q : 1 c. J. HILL fl: A 9 P. P. HILL 22 N 'Q Q 4 K ...-4.5. P U ul' U hx' . .. 5 '54 L' 555,72 FU 5595572 U9 DFUFQUUDFU - UU Ui QQUU UL' TAP UL' 'HL' HUULWUUI 1 NINETEEN FIFTEEN I Il It - I l -'il 1 17 1 ' ' 5Oaa0ag,, :wk 1 5aa0ak. HAL ' l ,, 75323 a0I E62 7 ! X X, I i f LIBER BGARD an A ,B ' Waldron Lamb Blanchard Burwell Hebner Hunt Staples Kelly f rl Allison Duncan Burnell Taylor - Staff Gallant Pearce 5' !! l .92 MEOELQE fi' . , N TEOZL. EEL. k 1 N 1 'f 75525 221 ggggpdlllullllnallllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlnlulllll lllu I'II-II-IllIIIIIIIIIII.--I---ll---ll-.IllIIIIIIIIII --I-I-.'l7ll lllllllllllllllllllllllIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllzllllI:nlllllllll5llllllllllllllilllulllllllllllllllnll .lllllll ll.lllllllllll-lll-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDI--Ulf... , ,. -, ,. . ,I 1 .- ,, .4 . -- , .. Q lllll' lllll -- 'f 'I . - - .1 V . -- --im , ,, Af- ,IX 1 lllll lllll V Q. V P . fl L I -,fag-. lllll lllll If - ' , kv X- -1' -if ' J -' , 4, lllll lllll A a. , . ', 'L I 1 In 5 -,-gsgp, A 3, -'- ? . '- Ig-3, lull. lllll ' ..- -- I! ' ,xi , -' Q '+L ... I ,g , 1 'I I., .llll lllll .L ,W ,. Y , ., ,I-, I 1.1 .1 .,.... .I - 1.1 - , gl lllll lllll A- 4- . 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' 'ilrflllll ...gum-unuunlnznlunlu..haul:unrrr-llllullllmm. .,1'--- A,-,'.,,,. ::::gllllllllllllllllllllllllllvanvlllllllllllllllllllllllllm:::gl . I 'Ill' lllll 322: lllil 2:33 2:-sf: 'gym' EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT ln, S I :::::: . ,W lllll Manag1ng Board ...NI lJAxA XIORTIMIER I'Iuu1mRn '15 . . Clmirman 'EIU' llllll i Y I. gi. XICDONALD Low IUIJINGER '15 ly-sul IIAROLIJ Muxmocx 'I'Avl.ou '15 'Ill' ':'.'55 . -liiill News Ed1tOfS lblilil Il... 1 . , , , -D llllrl lglgg XI.1l.l.1Ax1 Tl. I'IUlu.1N lb PAUL C, 1,vM,I, '15 Ill.. ICARI. I Wool: '16 I---.gg lllll ' umm ggggg . t E . E25-'13 urs. Assocxa e ci1Itors F222- ?::i': S. CI.1I l 0IiIJ '15 Y Ili. B. Ax-v1.1-zum' '17 'Eu.1: NI. P. Claoss, 'Bn I. IDIMIIIKCK '17 y lllz: X. l,, IJUNCAN 1.1 B. D. :I'1iINlIIZRG 17 -,--, :::'Il W. P. Nola'roN '15 I. G. 1 1av,NA1,D '17 .l' C. A. 'I'l-:mw '15 N II. I l9HI I '17 WIFI lllnl , 7 , , , H um. Cy. R. ARNOLD 10 I'. I. IXILLIAMS '17 :final l:::: B. L. joxlas '16 C II. WoomuANsI-:lc '17 lflgff: :llll II. M. Nllcssmx '16 B I-I. XrliRNA '17 'Tiff' ' I C W 'll' . . I1I'l'li I WAI: Ill!! B . D :gpg usmess epartment lnlzl '. ,- , , , l. I. . l. v r' lillll 52555 iv CIW 7 ' ' ' '. W2 . .1 -rmacx 1 . , .'5,Ilf1UiH - --- .-.-- Y V . .am lllhl : S. C. Ix1s1.1.1av, Ju., '17 . . Sammi A:,ri,rzrmt lll.5l 'Nil gf. .llll 55155 2222: ll ll llllllllllllllllllllllllll-L. U Ile--I.-I--ll--lllllll-lllllllllIl:::::::::::::::.. -..'.... '. ' lllllllullllllllllllllllllllllllulunlmnuullll::::: lll--ll--lll-l-llllllllllllllllI-ll!!ll-llllllIll-ll---:....--.-gn. ,lllll llllllllllllllnlllllllllllnlug..--5 ll-- I NINE TEEN FIFTEEN - A EOIIOZE. ' ' ' 'TZOIL 'TEOZL 'Till 502 7 5 ,Q R LD B RD 1 HE A OA V V1 Hurlin Messcr Lyall Jones White Kelley Arnold Feinberg Allleck Wood fi Clifford Duncan Norton Taylor Hubbard Greene Edinger Cross Terry .4 , , ' Fishcl Williams Fernald Yerxa Appleget Dimlnick Woodmansee ! le 101 E, I -... ...1 , . . .,.. EOHOIL. ' ra0m. 401: E lil- 223 Editor-in-Chief SHARON OSBORN BROWN '15 RALPH LEON BLANCHARD '15 . . . . Literary Editor . Literary Editor . Art Editor SAMUEL GREENE ARNOLD IlOGERS '15 . RALPH BROWN GRAHAM '15 . . Little Brown Jug HAROLD MURDOCK TAYLOR '15 Associate Editors GEORGE FREMONT BLIVEN '15 OSCAR ANTHONY BROWN '15 MILTON HAMMOND STANSBURY '15 THOMAS BARTHOLOMAE KEVILLE '16 FRANCIS JOSEPH OYBRIEN '16 Business Department PAUL JOSEPH KINGSLEY '15 . . . N. . . Manager WILLIAM LEON BROWER '16 . . Circulation Managzr 'sl 1 5 1 11:5- ww A, t., 512 ' Is' ,wt 23191 ,' a .I I 4 1 ' J 5 NINE TEEN FIFTEEN gggzwzr 1 , , Q . r 75035532 :JA H 1 f r 71 r ' N 4 1 'N il .,, A H 'W BRUNONIAN BOARD 'mr 11 if ' W W Stausbury Brower O. A. Brown Rogers Bl2l1lCl1Zll'd O'Brieu M N ,, , Kcvillc Kingsley S. O. Brown Graham Taylor ik , 1 4 , J' HF' EJBZEEL. 1 X 1 1 1503592 225 ,Q Y . . Y A X .. a C0rhm'n+-H: 0.- 1B.Pd6u+ Q:.h..rmwq HAT Ov-uwell guerurafjp K- B-Graham s. 'e.a:mver-5 5-C.ClfH'urd n SQQ I I 4 , .gif R-W- Cr-pm 5. E. C-ulvvr P- 0' Cv-grin? lf. FAU I 9'A9'0fpg, X x J.I-Grbuvu w.aL.nIeJ.hn WN-Tau lor- 5- K- WM-Kmqn rn- 1 fs -Jgfggxqx J SOPHOMORE BALL COMMITTEE 11. R. llucslllcs CIIIIIUVIIHIM 'I'. li. .Xl'I'l,l'XPI'1'l' Sl'l'I'1'IIIl'y I. S'I'0Rl'IR 7'rm.f1u'fr' Ap. 1-'. lmcnvm w. ns. 1-',x1aNswoR'1'l1 ua. W. 'lIAMlI,'I'UN S. C. KlCl.I,l'IY, Qlu, I-1. M. l'l+:,fxRclc ll. w. xvfx'1'j11:N, Alu, Al. WIGIVI' fx. 1l.w1 mi lNscm,tuR. I-'. xx WlI,l,ARIJ L., .1 .H . 'L I 5 . - V -g J . ,X f' 2 5-x . Z I fx ' M Q 1 xl lfxp' I .NK 'kxuf' I xl af A xy F I 1 'I' K .J. R. H. McLAUGHL1N,f'cImffmf.,. , H. , I' xm H. P. ANDREWQ -HQ., . '- x - H. Buss . X, Y f' E. H. FALK K. jf c. D. HEATHCCf'E fi, ,f' 6 T. M. HULL .A .-v.-.. - RR xx, gf If Xl Xf- x Ry x '- -k Gf-KNELSQNI xsqc, and Trcas. . yi, , A. .- -Ny gl 3 lg c. n 'HLL ILLLPS L E. w. OHCSOISEMAICER R. MITH H. ANSBURY s EWART - X AK mi 'IX NM E 123 111 GLEE CLUB Oiicers ROW LAN D HAZARD MCLAUGHLIN '15 ...... .,..... I ,l'L'.fidL'IIl HENDRICK GABRIEL NELSON '15 ..,...... ..... I 'ld'-l'r4'xidwLt FRANK RUSSELL SMITH '16 ....,... ...,.... I Sfcn'zary HARLEY CLIFFORD HYDE '15 .... .........,.. I Ianagvr JOSEPH NIERRITT COUSE '16 .......,....... . . ..I.vri,fla11l zllanagrr HAROLD LESLIE MYERS '15 ...... .....,...............,............ L radrr First Tenors ARTIIUR EARL BARNARD '15 HAROLD RAYMOND HALL '16 WALTER RUSSELL BURNIIAM '15 HENRY AVERYMORGAN '16 ROWLAND HAZARD MCLAUGIILIN '15 SETH KIMBALL MITCHELL '15 HENDRICK GABRIEL NELSON '15 RUSSELL ELWOOD MCKENZIE '18 WILFRED PICKLES '18 Second Tenors HAROLD LESLIE WILSON '15 EARL MOORE PEARCE '17 JOSEPH IRVING GREENE '15 WILLIAM HARBOUR FARNSWORTH, Sp. WALLACE GEAR STEWART '15 RAYMOND -IOSEPH WALSI1 '17 FRANK RUSSELL SMITH '16 HAROLD IRVING LONG '16 First Basses HAROLD LESLIE MYERS '15 GERALD DWIGHT CURTIS '16 GEORGE RALPH ARNOLD '16 THEODORE RICHARD FORD '16 EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15 JOHN MORRIS DAVIS '15 WALTER KENNETH SPRAGUE '17 HARRY ARDEN HUGHES '17 HERMAN WILLIAM WATJEN, ju. '17 Second Basses IOSEPH NIERRITT COUSE '16 CHARLES NIYRON CLEGG '15 JOHN YVESLEY MOORE '16 IIAROLD XVINTHROI' TUCKER '15 CARL DEWITT EVERINGHAIVI '15 ARTHUR 13AR'I'LE'1 lf IIONIER '17 JOIIN HENRY NIAGUIRE '17 Quartette ' SETII KIAIBALL MITCIIELL '15, Fifi! Tflmr IIAROLD LESLIE WIIJSON '15, Sffond Tcuoz' A HAROLD LESLIE MYERS '15, Fin: Ban CHARLES MYRON CLEGG '15 Second Bax: Readers I RALPH BROWN GRAHAM '15 GEORGE HENRY ANTHONY LAROE '15 Pianists . MILTON HAMMOND STANSBURY '15 -IOIIN THOMAS MCQUAID '17 SAMUEL GREENE ARNOLD ROGERS '15 GEORGE RALPH ARNOLD '16 232 ' Q sf 'dawg z 5 if z adv! . 1 f i.. 6 .- v af VI ' 11101 1 N U23 1:1 g an CLEGG 'IS ..,. CHARLES MYRON First Mandolins ,... Ii I 5.4 T 9 , .-4 ,v -4 CII Q Q4 E fo -4 L-. ... ,w L4 .-Y U1 Lmdfr EDGAR AI.I,EN 'IS HOWARD BAR'l'IIOI,OMEW ARNOLD 'IS FRANK CASPER SPECK, jr. 'IS CHARLES MYRON CIIEGG '15 WALLACE GEAR STEWART 'IS GEORGE WIIEATON CARR VAUGHAN 'IS Second Mandolins LINCOLN RICHARDS ARNOLD '16 FRANCIS ROIBERTS PARSONS 'IS ARTHUR BARDEN FINCH 'I7 JOHN STORER, jr. '17 S WILLIAMS '17 EDWARD I IIOMA Bass Mandolin DAVID THAY ER GALLISON '17 Cello ARMAND LAURIER CARON 'IS Guitars 'T I-IOMER '17 ARTHUR BARTLE1 RICHARD DRESSER '16 233 f f xg DAVID 'l'IlAYI'IR GALLISON '17 ..... ,,,.. I .f'Illl1.'I' Piano ROY CI.I'IAX'I'II.ANlJ PIIILLIPS '15 I5I'INI'IDIC'I' MAX OLCII '15 First Violin ' IIAROLD 'IIIONIAS I'IXI'ON '15 LINCOLN RICHARDS ARNOLD 'IG WILLIAM IIARSI'IOWl'I'Z '17 Second Violin I EARL FRANKLIN WOOD '16 PHILIP ICZRA NEWHALL '18 WILBUR LAMPRICY RICE '18 Flute DAVID 'FHAYER GALLISON '17 BERTRAND MUNROE CROMACK '17 ROUSE BABCOCK WILCOX '17 First Cornet ROBERT CLYDE PADLICY '17 RAYMOND LOUIS WILDICR '18 Second Cornet DAVID STEEI. '16 SCIIUYLICR VICTOR HAYWARD '15 Trombone WALTER KENNETH SPRAGUE '17 Drums LYLE METON PROUSE '18 I 234 ' MUSICAL CLUBS Although the number of concerts given by the combined musical clubs was less than usual the season as a whole was very successful. Under the able coaching of Mr. Gene Ware, 'o6 and H. li. Myers, '15, the ensemble singing of the Glee Club excelled that of recent years. Under the direction of C. M, Clegg, '15, the Mandolin Club also made a very creditable showing. liarly in November the initial appearance of the clubs was made at the Technical High School where their varied program was well received. The first out-of-town engagement fol- lowed in December ut Bristol where the Clubs scored another success. ln accordance with the opinions of the majority ofthe men, no trip was made during the Christmas vacation, all energies being devoted to preparations for a longer tour during the lfi2lStCI' recess. Immediately following the examination period in February, two concerts were given in rapid successsion at Pawtucket and Peabody, Mass. Later in the month the clubs appeared at Xlarion, Mass. Early in March another concert was rendered in Providence and shortly be- fore the l'laster recess the combined clubs made their annual appearance in the Union Auditor- tum. VVithout doubt the feature ofthe season was the series of concerts given during the spring holidays when the combined clubs made a tour of New York, Pennsylvania, District of Colum- bia, and Connecticut. The lirst concert of the trip was given at Washington, D. C.,'fI'Ol'll which the men left for Pittsburg. Later two concerts were given in New York City on the return trip, the last concert of the tour being presented in Norwich, Conn., en route to Providence. 235 ww: Q Q gym W I7 UIIW4' -4- L WCS v 53 C3152 W mmm :ummm .IMI . I 'Z..u12.T.r1a.ua.nn..E lcnmrvrrnsunawam - ,- W -1- . ,,,.,, . ,. - -...- -- - J: -+A . -' -'-- - uv. Cf,XfTS2'N ' , . 1: 1.-.H ' r '. ' II J 1 :if Q f fs' W If.:-fI:2..f II l , ,.-' .ww 7 .': I ?5f:3,.'.31f,7-IQ 5 fl Q'-ji I T ELL' Q P T11 x.: . . 4 ' fv2'2:iL.:w - X -H . ' - AI, 1 .J f -, .e'7f'f'Vi 1.- Isiz- :if V .1 HE. J SI' ' .,v.. -, . .r-.f1'f--Q'-Mp,-1 '. -. -'J--, ,: . ' '--a'y'-::.:- ' nf- z .1 fl' 41 f 'W j. -'v '7'f5.-L'Y1:17ff,::.:1E11-'g.-,.'--Q'F,t,5g'.'.'jQ-'T1'1-I'- '- '. :f'4,i-'f-.'.1.i-1 . -A S-' ' 5 J L' 'f .. l.,..3-,-,L,.',,,-:- A-..,3. .,-.1,-f.5:- ' ,- A -5.4, A 4-1 '.g 'Q':.'32.-,.- .f 5-ENVH 5, - -Avi fu .. n,u.,x I . JY.. . . A'.:'l, .Q 3 lg-qi. . . . .- H f ipjil 15 P 'I 1 4-5: .--I':-1.3'f-f:'.542 .' 5 a 4, ef . i'.r,'- ..'J '.f'fjz-1.':f'1,'f1'Q'.I. -if ' 1' ' - sei' -11:-s-2.f.'Q.3.,' -ge I - ie v I Q ,--.V ,,' -1-z -' 3. ,L-' N ' , .,, .',,'g, .- f- ,' ff ,- ' ,ii.j:QjjVfj.1Q-Liffyi 5'-'fzl ff: gn: Y'-q'2f:jf'Prff:?Q , tj - - fig 51. i .31-'Y ft ff 153- if' 4.51 I A vqufwzsaysg. ,, , , I . . 3 W- .wc-f---'-'L,' w Q ,gfv 7 1' .- .Y I f1.....- ... - -V -LH -...M -.gm v Q . Ti L ' - T . ll- nMM - - GIIORGII IIIINRY XYIHONY I AROII 1' . . . , . ....,., ....... P fc'.f1.dl'IlZ Ofiicers 1 1 4 A I l 7 'J HENDRICK GABRXIEL NELSON '15 ......,................ .... lf' iw'-I'rffi1lf1zt HAROLD RAYMOND HALL 'Ili ..........,,.........,.........,........ . .... Sven-tary Executive Committee PROFESSOR TIIOMAS CROSBY, Ju., AND 'rms FIVE MAJOR OFFICERS W. R. BURWELL S. CLIFFORD C. M. CLEGG W. C. CROLIUS C. M. P. CROSS H. F. DRAKE H. T. EATON W. II. EICKE E. H. EMERY C. D. EVERINGHAM W. A. GANNON A. E. GOTTSHALL F. A. BALLOU, JR. L. W. BROWER H. H. BURTON T. B. APPLEGET E. E. BARNES B. II. BROWN W. B. FARNSWORTH D. T. COLLEY W. M. FAY G. C. HULL Production of 1914 YOU NEVER CAN TELL Members 1915 II. GREENE J. I. GREENE IIARCOURT F. H. E. W. IIINCKS Il. M. JACKSON P. J. KINGSLEY H. C. KINNE C II. A. LAROE F. F. LUTHER II. MCLAUGHLIN Ii. H. N. NICHOLAS II. G. NELSON S. H. WORKMAN 1916 A DDY W. W. 1-'l+:RGUsON. H. R. HALL J. L. EI F. R. SMITH 1917 R. N. FOOTE L. T. GARDNER O. B. HAYWARD R. W. HAMILTON E. T. WILLIAMS 1918 R. M. KIMBALL H. C. LAMPHER L. I-I. NORCROSS R. B. WF ST - 236 H A. 'I'. RICE W. K. RICE S. G. A. ROGERS W. P. SHEFFIELD, JR. W. G. STEWART M. I-I. STANSBURY P. IL STRUTIIERS E. C. SYDNEY II. M. TAYLOR G. W. WATERMAN B. L. WEST R. M. WILSON A. JENISON T. B. KEVILLE P. W. SARLE A. B. HOMER R. R. HUGHES P. II. KEOUGI1 J. S. POWERS H. R. STRAUSS E. Il. SUTTON G. W. C. VAUGHN J. H. WILLIAMS vw-x Junior Week Attraction SOCK AND BUSKIN DRAMATIC SOCIETY of Brown University presented YOU NEVER CAN TELL BY GEORGE BERNARD SIIAW. AT THE COLONIAL THEATRE THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 14, 1914 VAl.EN'l'INE ...,........,.. ...,. The Cast DO ROTI IY CLANDON ................,....,......, .....AflE1.VIN E. SAWIN . . . . . . . .IIAiao1.n R. I'IA1.1. . . . . .Nl-:1.soN B. SACKl'1'l I' NIAID .................................,.. PIIILIP CLANDON, Dor0thy's brother ....... , , MRS. CLANDON. an anthorcss from Xlzideiru .......,............... GEORGE Il. A. I.ARoE GLORIA CLANDON, her eldest daughter ..,,........................ SAMUEL G. A. Romans MR. CRAMPTON, a rich yacht builder and Vulcntinds landlord ............. -I. I.AMsoN Ennv MR. M'COMAS, Mrs. Clznndon's solicitor ....,.....,....,,...., ,.... IIAROLD M. JACKSON WILLIAM, head waiter :it the Marine Ilotel ......., . .,,.... . ASSISTANT WAITER .................................. BO! IUN, ll Barrister ...........,....................,...., MORGAN WI'l I'ER ROGERS ADAMS 'VIIURBER RICE '15 Management '1-I ................. 1iA1zo1.D CI.AR1+:NC1-1 K1NNil: '1l3'. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ADAMS '1'1lURmf:1z RICE '15 ........ FRANK A. FARNHAM A16 ......... ....., PERCY W. SARI.l'I '16 ....... 238 .. .. . ...,.. . .PAUL J. KINGSLHY ......P1sTr:R I . IDUGAN .....,,....lXDAMS T. RICE . . . . .W. Russian. Buuwi-:LL . . , .1?u.ri1zfxf Mmmgvr . . . . .Szagv lilmmgn' . . . . . . , ....l'ubl1'c1'ty zIla11r1gfr .................PropL'rlyAlan fIJ'I'l..fld7Ll !J,lt.f'i7Zl'J'J' Almmgfr . . . . . .fl.r51'fla11z Stage Alavzzlgfr 4--+1 BROWN UNION Officers and Committees EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15 .......,,.............. ........... I 'nu-ifirui FREDERICK ALLAN BALLOU '16 ...........,.....,... ....,... I 'icy-1'rr.vidr1zl ELLIOT TOWLE BUGBEE '14 ..........,.....,....... ...,. S cfrclaly-T1'ra.furfr Board of Management ARTHUR NI. ALLEN '97, C1I!Iil'1llll7l CHARLES C. MUMFORD '81 PROF. THOMAS CROSBY, Jn., '11-1 G. EDWARD BUXTON, Jn., '02 EDWARD WINSLOW IIINCKS '15, fx-officio House Committee FREDERICK DAVIS '1-I, cx-ojfifio, Chairman RALPH GIBNEY HURLIN '12 GEORGE FRANKLIN JOHNSTON '16 MCDONALD EDINGER '15 WALTER KENNETH SPRAGUE '17 ELLIOT TOWLE BUGBEE '14, rx-ojifio EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15, rx-officio Membersliip Committee JOSEPH MILLER '15, C1l!I1'l'77l!I11, ROWLAND HAZARD MCLAUGHLIN '15 HAROLD PA'I'I'ERSON ANDREWS '16 WILLIAM PAINE SHEFFIELD, Ju., '15 HARRY HUNTER BURTON '16 SETH KIMBALL MITCHELL '15 ROWLAND ROBERTS HUGHES '17 GEORGE FRANKLIN JOHNSTON '16 JAMES PATRICK MURPHY '17 ELLIOT TOWLE BUGBEE '14, ax-ojirio EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15, ax-ojcio Trophies Committee JOSEPH IRVING GREENE '15, Clzairmzuz WILLIAM PAIN E SHE1 F1EI.D, Ju., '15 FRANK ELMER STARRE'l l' '16 GEORGE CLARK VALENTINE '15 RAYMOND BELCI-IER WARD '17 HAROLD DUEL SCO'I'I' '16 EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15, rx-ojicio Library Committee PAUL JOSEPH KINGSLEY '15, Chairman MARION KENNETH FORWARD '14 SAMUEL HENRY WORKMAN '15 SHARON OSBORNE BROWN '15 ELMER FREMAN DAVENPORT '16 DANA MORTIMER HUBBARD '15 ROWLAND ROBERTS HUGHES '17 EDWARD WINSLOW HINCKS '15, fx-officio 239 Officers SAMUEL IIICNRY WORKMAN '15 .......... .,.........,,.......... I ,I'. Jl'c1r'7ll WILLIAM ARTHUR NIQEDIIAM '15 ..... .... K Ilzairnzan, 11'.Yt'L'ull.1'7l' Commillee ISMAR ISARUCII '15 ................. .................. S vcrrmry-Tn'af1m'r XVILLIAXI RUSSICLI. BURNVICLL '15 .,... .... 1 1lvmbrr, Llxffllffw' Com m ilfvf' at Large FRANCIS JOSICPII CTBRIICN '16. 4.., . , .J1lrmbrr, 1fxz'c1cl1'11z' CONl1IIl'Ut'l' at Large Varsity Teams, 1 91 5 Brown vs. Dartmouth ROWLAND HAZARD MCLAUGHLIN '15, Caplain QI'Iicks Prize-Varsity Trialsj ISMAR BARUCII '15 FREDERICK IIARTWICLL GRICICNIC '15 CIIARLICS JAMES HILL '16, Alternate Brown vs. Williams SAMUEL HICNRY WORKMAN ,15,Captm'n Q1'Iicks Prize--Varsity Triulsj WILLIAM AR'l'I'lUR NICICDI IAM '15 FRANCIS JOSICPH O'l3R'llCN '16 ICDXVARD INGERSOLI, CHRISTY 'l6,'Altcrna1c Standing of the Teams in the Triangular League Won Lost P.C. Brown ,..... . . . 15 5 .750 Dartmouth .... . . . ll 9 .550 Williams .... ........ u . . 4 16 ,zoo 240 ' NINE TEEN FIETEEN VARSITY DEBATERS Victors over Dartmouth F. H. GREENE '15 R. H. MCLAUGHLIN '15 I. BARUCH '15 lCaptain9 Victors over Williams t NV. A. NEEDHAM '15 S. H. WORKMAN '15 F. J. O'BRIEN '16 CCaptainJ 241 l9l7'l9l8 Qs x ,-vs X 'I In - 5 A ,ff ,m x - .NI 5 n, ,f 5 22 If X Q f I Qulraulnmilifwhf- f X, A l1ll!llllllllllll'E? FOURTEENTH ANNUAL INTERCLASS DEBATE IIICLD IN BROWN UNION AUDITORIUM IJICCICMISICR WON BY I RICSI'IMI7lN Committee of Arrangements For the Sophomores NORMAN I,. I ISHIiI.I, For the Freshmen RICHARD C. BICLDEN q Question RIQSOLVICD: YIIIIIIL Russia xx IS more responsible for the pI'CSCl Sophomore Team, Afiirmative DAVID B. FEINBISRG, Caplniu. JAMES G. I I'IRNAI,D JOHN W. RHOADS Cfllfernazfj Freshman Team, Negative Glfzouolfz J, Hmm, Caplainl wv1L1fR15n P1cK1,1':s CHARLICS G. EDWARDS qfzzfmmffy 242 ll XVIII' 10, 1914 HARVICY SI l ICAHAN WINN W. CHASE than Gcrmum WILISUR II. RIIIISSIZ JOHN B. RIDDOCK THE CABINET BROWN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Graduate Advisory Committee l'ROI l'ISSOR -IAXIICS Q. D1CAl,111Y '90 .........,........,.,,.., ...,. I flmfrnmn, WILLIAM A. SPICICR, Ulu., '05 .,,..... .,..,,,...,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,....,,,,A,, Y 'r,-a,r1mv- l'RO1 l'ISSOR IIICNRY 'I'. IVOWLICR .... ...............,................... S 1-crrrary 'kSI'I1CBl'fR ICDNVARDS ,111 JOHN D. ROCKl'Il lC1,1.I'lR, ju., '97 W. S. RICHARDSON '11-1 Al,B1'IR'I' L. SCO'l I' '00 -IOIIN ll. Wl'II.I.S '09 Officers WILLIANI PAINIC S1'l1Cl l llC1.lJ, jx., '15 SIDNICY CI.lI FORD '15 .....,......,,,... WAL'1'I'IR KI'INNl'l'I'II SPRAGUIC ,I7 ..... CARL ANTHONY 'VICRRY 1.15 ....... . I Rl.'I.Dl'IRlCK DAVIS 'I-1 ......,.......... Chairmen ICDXVARD IVINSLOIV IIINCKS '15, ,...,. . l Rl'IDI'IRlCIi l1AR'l'Wl'Il.l, GRICPINIC '15.. RICHARD DRURY RICIC '15 ..,..,.,... CICCII. MICRNIC PU'1'NAfX'1 CROSS '15. .. Wll.I.IAM RUSSICLI. l3URWl'II.1. '15. .. 1 Rl'IDl'IRICK ALLAN l3Al,I.OU 116 .... IRVING CLOUGH W1II'l'I'I ,113 ....,.. WALLACIC 1.1'IS'1'l'IR GA1.1.Ul' '15 .... CARL AN'l llONY 'l'l'IRRY '15 .... . SIDNICY C1.Il l ORD '15 .....,,.. W Duucusud of Committees 243 . . . .Prr,r1'dfr1l I , . . . .l'i1'f'-I f'f'.v1'rle'1zl . . . .Srr'r1'f1l1'-V . . . Trrafzlrfr . .lh'1n'r11l Sffrrla1'y . . .llfnllrgr lvl-gllfy Rrlzgmux lfdlH'IlflA07I , . . . . . . . .1'u!:l1'C1'iy .....,....,..S0c'11Il . . . . . . . .Dfpulrll1'or1,v . . . . . . lfmploymrlll . . . .Clmrrlu .'ljlili1ll1'n11J If Il,f1'llt'.F.Y M . ..,. , ..1l1A.f,fimzary lndzlor Q! llandbonk flflflgfl' rg! llarulbook Af' ' 4,1 4. uv? s y -f - , r, FACADE OF THE JOHN HAY LIBRARY LIBER BR UNENSIS QZEZOEL- 1 1 WL. 'WEL NOEL. NL. , , 'W H 'TZDFE lf y W 7 CAMMARIAN CLUB F' a Wu l ' Graham Mitchell Cram McLaughlin Hincks 'rmy A ,L M Cross Greene SheFHeld Burwell Valentine H' vb !5?fzoxaz ' . I fu: NOSE. - 1 7510!L. . , . 'Haifa 246 PI KAPPA Delegation of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen IIOIIN BLAIR ABI3O'l l' I'ILLIO'l l' I-IAROLD IVALK IIARLICY CI.II l ORD IIYDIC COLIN GORDON NICLICOD Sl'I'I'II KINIBALL IX'll'l'Cl'Il'II.I. RICHARD DRURY RICIC WILLIAM PAINIC SlIlCI I II'1I.D, xc SIIIQRNIAN MICRRILL STRONG ISDMUND AIANIICS SITLLIYAN GICORGIC CLARK YALI'IN'l'INl'I IIAROLD LI'ISLII'I WILSON Delegation of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen IIAROLD l'A'l'I.'l'IRSON ANDREWS I Rl'IDI'IRICK ALLAN BALLOU, -lu. RICIIARD DAVIS ISANNIGAN RICIIARD DRIQSSICR 'IOIIN BICRNARD DUNN 'VIIONIAS XI.-XYNO HULL WILLIAM RIIODICS L1-:ROY NI PAUL BARNEY MI'I'l'CALI I-IAROLD DUICI. SCO'l l' X FRANK RUSSICLL SNII'l'II FRANK ICLNIICR S'I'ARRI'I'I I' IRYING CLOUGII WIIITIC c' I5 Members in Good Standing .., .yawq C AND C CLUB OH-icers 'IAMICS FRANCIS O'DONOGHUI'I. ,,.. .........., ...,. I ' l'L',fidL'Ill RALPII WALDO CRAM .........,. ,...,.. .,....,. ,... ..... S I ' a rrzary PAUL OLIVICR CRAM ..,.......,....,...,.....,.. ..... .,,. 7 ' rvaxurfr Honorary Members PROF. COURTNICY LANGDON WILLIAM P. SIII'IFFIICI.D '78 DICAN OTIS I5VI1IRI'I'I I' RANDALL WILLIAM MACCORMICK Faculty Members JOIIN CORLISS DUNNING PROF. JOHN FRANCIS GRI'lI'INI'1 .IOIIN BLAIR ABBO'I I' ALFRICD WYA'l I' ANTI-IONY ICDWARD R 'XYMOND CAMPI3I'II.I WILLIAM CLINTON CROLIUS, ,Inj MINOT -IOY CROWICLL NORMAN LICROY DUNCAN MACDONALD EDINGICR ICLIOT IIAROLD FALK FRANK BLAINIC FROST RAYMOND BISSIC'l l' GALLANT RALPH BROWN GRAHAM FRICDRICK IIAR'I'Wl'ILL GREEN I AIOSICPH IRVING GRICICNIC IIOIIN RUSSICLL IIAIRIC 2 DANA MOR'I'IMI'fR HUBBARD IIARLICY CLIFFORD IIYDIC HAROLD CLARICNCIC KINNIC WILLIAM FOWLICR LI'I l'Ll'1jOIlN ROWLAND IIAZARD MLCAUGIILIN .IOSEPII MILLICR IIICINIQ GABRIICL NICLSON ' CIIARLICS STUART PIIDZLPS WILLIAM PAINIC SHI+II I II'1I.D, ju. WALLACE GICAR S'I'IiWAR'I' WILLIAM FRANCIS SULLIVAN IIAROLD MURIDOCK TAYLOR GICORGIC CLARK VAI,I'IN'l'INIfI IIAROLD LUKE WILSON ASTE BAS T CLUB I Oiiicers SHARON OSBORN BROWN .........,...... .... I 'rwirlem RALPH LICON BLANCHARD ..... ..... S fcrrmry GICORGF FRICMONT BLIVEN ..... , . . . Trrafurrr Faculty Members PROF. GEORGE WYLLYS BICNEDICT ROY FOI.I,F'I I' PROF. THOIXIAS CROSBY PROF. IIARRY LYMAN KOOPMAN PROF. LINDSICY 'I'ODD DAMON PROF. ALBICRT KNIGHT PO'I'Tl'IR Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen RALPH LICON BLANCHARD DANA MORTIMIQR HUBBARD SHARON OSBORN BROWN SAMUICL GRI1Il,'INE ARNOLD ROGERS GEORGE FRIEMONT BLIVEN HAROLD MURDOCK TAYLOR HAROLD THOMAS ICATON MILTON HAMMOND STANSBURY FRANK BLAINIC FROST Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen FRANCIS JOSEPH BRADY FRANCIS -IOSEPH OTBRIEN THOMAS BARTHOLAMAIQI KIfIVILLI'I Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen THOMAS BAIRD APPLEGl'1'I' Q ROUSIC BABCOCK WILCOX Graduate Students BI'lNjAMIN CROCKICR Cl.OI'GH Kl'INNl'1'I'H MARION FORWARD 249 wuuwldiv- ..- I' ROFICSSOR I' ROIVICSSOR PROIVICSSOR I'ROI I'2SSOR PRICSI IJENT PROIVICSSOR PROIVICSSOR R. C. COIM' I . IXXYIS I. IMRUCII CK JI.I.I If R DANION DI'1I,ABARRIi ICVERI'I'l'l' FAUNCIC GREICNIC I lAS'I'I NGS I'.I.l. SOLVIT 'Q' l ...--Qili SOLVITUR PROFIIISSOR VON .Kl.I'INZI'I Graduate Students Ii. S. I.I'1VINI Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen R. I.. IZIJXNCIIARD S. O. BROWN W R. IiL'RWI'1I.l. S. CI.Il I ORIJ C XI. I'. CROSS R. Il, GR.'X'IIiXkI I' II. GRICICNIC Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen bl. xl. la.x11.1-ix' lf. fx. la,xr.1.oLi, JR. W. I-3. SALJNDIQRS 1- C. SNII'I'II 250 PROFICSSOR jONI'IS PROFICSSOR NIMDON XI IJ PROI I'ISSOR MICAD DOCVOR MI.'I'CI IICLI. I'ROl I'ISSOR XIO'I'I,I'IY P ROFICS SO R PO' I 'TIC R DOCTOR STICRN M. Ii. IIORWJXRIJ R. G. IIL'RI.IX D. NI. IICISISARIJ R. II. NIcI.JXUGlll.IN W. A. NFIICIJIIAKI S. G. A. ROGICRS W. I'. SIII'II. I II'II.IJ, ju II. M. 'I'AYI.OR C. A. 'I'l'1RRY S. Il. WORIQXIIXN I . IC. S'IHXRRIC'luI' G. NI. WHI'I'I'I I. C. WIIITIC Ii. 'I'. WILLSON, Alu. I '35 'Im-r,k , 1 II III III' I,lIIIII'1 I . I .III I I. I I I H.. I.f..f1I.H Vi f,-.I IN .f 1 ....... If H u ' r' I-- I I-I I.. . MII . . I I MIIII. I ICI We fu lf? QI .IJ ' JI II, ' V W-mi. I 'S W MIUDIBI' run MTW, Q T l II l 1g H Il H g 'I l I l ., AI T2 4- XF I I ' Officers EDGAR ,IONATHAN STAI l ..... ............... .,..... I ' rrxidfni EARI. FRANCIS LUTIIIER ....,, . ..., Vice-Prcxidmt STUART IiDAI.I. YICAKLIS ..... , ....... Srrrftary HICNRY PARKICR WITTIC, .I R.. . . ..... Treaxurfr Members Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen P. P. GOODWII.I,,jR. I . W. A. MILLER W. P. SI'II'II I II'II.D, -IR. W. T. JOYCE S. K. MITCI'II'ILL IC. j. STAl I IC. I . LUTHER W. K. RICIC E. C. SYDNICY H. I.. WILSON H. Ii. WATSON Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen j. M. BAII.I'1Y T. R. FORD G. W. WI'II.I,S H. I.. COHEN W. H. ,IIiI l I'1RY II. P. WITTE AIR. R. DRIESSER A. SHOUI. G. H. WOOD, hIR. P. A. FEINER I . E. STARRI'lTT S. IC. YICAKLIC Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen W. I-IARSIIOWITZ Ii. H. YICRXA R. Ii. WILCOX Graduate Student P. D. IYIISADISR 251 LIBER BR UNENSIS :l-2--: Engineering Society Oflicers HAROLD CLARENCE KINNE '15 .... .......... ......,... P r z'.ri:1'rut PLOYER PETER HILL '16 ............. .. ...........,..... V1'ff-1'rf1irlf11f IIARVIIIY BULLINGIER MCCRONE '15 .... .................. R ecording Srcrclary PROP. YV. II. KICNICRSON ....,........... .. .Corrr.rpo11di11g Smrrtary and Treaxurer Members Faculty MR. F. C. BLAKE MR. L. T. BOI-IL PROP. J. A. BROOKS MR. H. D. CADY S. W. ALLISON A. W. ANTHONY W. T. BRECKENRIDGE R. L. EURNELL 1. R. CARLSON R. 11. COPELAND 1-1. O. DEN1-1AM W. A. CANNON R. D. BANIGAN 1-1. I-I. BURTON W. C. CHASE A. 11. COOP H. DURSIN 1. 1. FRAGA H. BAIN M. W. BURNHAM A. CAPUT1 O. C. CARPENNER O. COPELAND A. CURTIS J. D. HAGGIERTY J. D. ALLAN A. H. CHAMBERLAIN H. C. CRAMER W. ICLY P. CRIMES M. C. H11.1. B. 11. JOHNSON PROP. H. CROSS MR. R. P. PIELD MR. P: I-I. PRANCIS Nineteen Hundred and M. IC. HULTSLANDISR L. JENNICY H. C. KINNIC H. J. LAWSON . H. B. MCCRONE ' 1. A. OWEN J. A. W. PEARCE H. L. QUIMBY Nineteen Hundred and P. P. HILL P. S. KELLIQN H. B. KULP V. W. LEONARD E. F. MATTISON H. MICHELSON PROP. W. H. KENERSOIN MR. P. B. PERKINS MR. T. C. SHEDD PROP. A. IE. WATSON Fifteen J. J. SKOLNICK IC. j. SSLLIVAN Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen R. N. FOOTE J. O. FULLER H. A. HUGHES M. KNIGHTS R. M. PEASE 1.. W. PRESTON 1 PERKINS . E. MAGUIRIC E. G. I Nineteen Hundred and W. C. MALENFANT M. MOSKO1. W. C. NASON J. R. MURPHY 1. C. NOYES A. PATRICK C. R. RICHARDSON 252 L. M WLENPY E. R. WALSH S. F. PAY S. W. POSS E. J. I-IORRIGAN Sixteen I H. A. MORGAN R. W. PRA'I'I' R. B. QUIMBY I . C. SMITH G. M. WHITE W. V. MURPHY H. H. QUINI-IAM H. C. ROBERTSON G. H. TOBELMAN R. L. TOMLINSON R. H. VAN HORN L. WEDEMEYER G. A. WILLIAMSON Eighteen B. H. SLADE I. G. SMITH . G. R. STURTEVANT F. N. TOMPKINS E. M. VAN RIPER C. H. VEHESE W. H. YOUNG A -11 B. M. C. Durfee High School Club Ofhcers CARI. ANTHONY TERRY 'l5. . . ....... ..... ........ I ' F'l'J'I.flI'IIf FRANKLIN ISLAINE FROST 'I5. .. ......... .... I 'iff-l'rrfidfnt AMASA FITCH WlI.l.lSTON '1G. ., ....... Srm-fury -IOIIN MORTON BOOTII 'IU ..... ..,,.,. 4 ..,,.... ..... 7 ' rnaxurrf Members Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen FRANKLIN ELAINE FROST -IOIIN AI.BER'l' WELD PEARCE CARI, ANTI IONY TERRY Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen .IOHN NIORTON BOOTH -IOSEPH FRANCIS IIALLORAN ERNEST HALLIWELI. ' .IACOB ROSENBERG AMASA FITCH WILLISTON Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen WILLIAM TI IOMAS MANNING CLEARE Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen WINN WILLARD CHASE CHARLES WILLIAM NIcCI.I'ILI,AN ERNEST CI,II 'I'ON HATI-l'AWAY ALFRED ,IAMICS SULLIVAN -IOHN RICIIARD LEENIING, ju. RAYMOND BROOKS WEST Graduate Students A SAMUEL TOMLINSON ARNOLD WALTER IIOFF SPRAGUE 253 -- LIBER BR UNENSIS Phillips Club Officers SETH KIMBALL MITCHELL '15 ,..,......... ........ P rvfidmt WILLIAM PAINE SHEFFIELD, JR. '15 ...... ...Vice-Prefident RAYMOND BISSETI' GALLANT '15 . ..... ..,........,.....,,,.... S ecretary JAMES FRANCIS O'DONOGHUE '15 ...........,.................... Trfafurcr HAROLD DUEL SCOTT '16 ....,........., ,.... C orrexponding Secretary lo P. A. fl. CHARLES CURTIS FIELD '16 ..... . . , .... C0rrz.rpo1m'1'ng Sfcreiary to P. E. fl. Members Class of Nineteen Hundired and Fifteen RAYMOND BISSETI' GALLANT. ..........,,........,.............., .... 1 '. E. HARVEY BULLINGER MCCRONE ...,. .... P .A. SETH KIMBALL MITCHELL ......... .... P . JAMES FRANCIS O'DONOGHUE ...,. .,.. P .I'I. WILLIAM PAINE SHEFFIELD, JR .... .... P . A. Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen RICHARD DRESSER ..........,............,........................, .... P . E. CHARLES CURTIS FIELD ....... .... P . E. HAROLD DUEL SCOTT ............. .... P . A. EDWARD TAPLEY WILLSON, JR ..... .... P . E. Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen ROBERT JOHNSON AMES ........................ Q ............,....... ..,. P .A. PERCY GORDON CLIFF ........ ..,. I 3. A. MARTIN JOSEPH DONOVAN ..... ,,.. 1 P, CHAUNCY TAFT LANGDON ...... .... I 7. E. 254' NINETEEN FIFTEEN The I-Iill Club OHicers WALLACE LESTER GALLUP ...,........... ......., I 'rfxidenz DAVID BARNEY FEINBERG ..... . , . . Viv:-Prexidenl MAURICE SIFF .....,..........,, ........ S ecrrtary ISMAR BARUCI-I .... . . . Trcaxurer Members Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen ISMAR BARUCH RALPH LEON BLANCHARD FRANCIS CI-IAPIN BRECKENRIDGE WILBUR TOBIAS BRECKENRIDGE CHEN CHONG CHEN WILMER HUGHES EICKE WALLACE LESTER GALLUP IRVING TURGLE GUMB PRESCOTT WILLIAM HILL .IAM ES FRANCIS O,DONOGI-IUE MAURICE SIFF JOHN JOSEPH SKOLNICK Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen NATHAN BENEDICT BURTON .IOHN STUART COLEMAN CLAUS EMANUEI. EKSTROM PIIILIP AARON FEINER Class of Nineteen Hundred ABRAHAM LINCOLN ABEL RAYMOND CLARKE BLANCI-IARD ARTHUR EDWARD BRECK ENRIDGE GEORGE COPELAND 2 WILLIS HOBRON .I EFFERY HAROLD IRVING LONG CARLO CANIO RUSSO AMASA l ITCI'l WILLISTON and Seventeen DAVID BARNEY FEINBERG HENRY DAVID LEVINE DANIEL PARKHIQRST SPALDIN x K THE PEDDIE CLUB Officers V PIERRE EVERE'l'I' T EETS ................... ......,.... P rexident CARROLL BURTON LARRABEE .... ..... S fcrflary-Treaxurer Members Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen FREDERICK LUM FERRIS PAUL CROUSE LYALL Class of Nineteen Hundfed and Seventeen OLIVER WEEKES INGERSOLLJ11. WALTER KENNETH SPRAGUI PAUL NICHOLAS SWAFFIELD Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen 4 CARROLL BURTON LARRABEE ' LEONARD HULIT NORCROSS PIERRE EVERETT TEETS 256 MENORAH SOCIETY OBicers MAURICIC J. SII .l ,..... ............. ..,....... I ' I'L'.f1.liA'71l PHILIP A. FEINER ..... ....... ..... I ' fn'-Prf.ridf11t ABRAHAM J. BUR'l' .... ......., S ncrctary JOHN J. SKOLNICK ......................... ..,. 7 'r1'a.rurz'r Advisory Board DR. NATHAN STERN, CCluzz'rmanJ PROFESSOR Il. T. FOWLER PROFESSOR J. C. DUNNING DR. SAMUEL BERNSTEIN DR. ISAAC GERBER MAURICIC J. SIFF Members Graduate B. S. LEVINE Class of Nineteen Hundred Fifteen ISMAR BARUCH J. J SKOLNICK SAMUEL BENJAMIN E. C. SYDNEY M. J. SIFF S. H. WORKMAN Class of Nineteen Hundred and Sixteen M. ADELMAN P. A. FEINER A. J. BURT M. J. LOZOVITSKY H. L. COHEN S. H. LYONS H. M. DAVIS A. SHOUI. H. FEINSTEIN A. W. SIDKOWSKY Class of Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen A. L. ABEI. H. D. LEVINE W. IIARSHOWITZ S. MOREIN Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen WALTER ADLER J. T. SIDKOWSKY J. COHEN E. I . SIFF x I.. KRAMER S. I. SILVERMAN M. MOSKOL H. A. WINKLER 257 l Officers and Committees for 1914-1915 EDWARD OTIS STANLEY, '76, New York ,.,,....................,.... ....... P fl-ffd6'71l CHARLES CARNEY MUMFORD, A. M., '81, Providence. .... Vice-Prexidenl CLARENCE HART LINGHAM, '97, Boston ..... . ....... .... V ice-Prefidenr ALBERT KNIGHT POTTER, A. M., '86, Providence .... ....,.. S rcretary ROBERT WENDELL TAFT, Ph. B., '91, Providence ......... ..... T Tfflfufff Executive Committee HORACE PAUL DORMAN '96 ARCHIBALD CLAFLIN MATTESON, A. B. '93 WILLIAM CHACE GREENE, A. M., '75 WALTER LEE MUNROE '79 BYRON SPRAGUE WATSON, A. B., '97 Advisory Board GEORGE FREMONT BEAN, LL. B., '81 WALTER CCQRNELIUS WYCKOFF, A. B., '9 ALBERT KNIGHT POTTER, A. M., '86, fx-QU,iCiO And representatives chosen by the Alumni Associations Alumni Associations BOSTON-President, Professor George Grafton Wilson, '86.Secrctary, Ralph B. Harris, '97, 2 Piekman Street, Salem Mass. NEWPORT-President, Dr. Clarence A. Carr, '87. Secretaryland Treasurer, Alfred G. Langley, '76, 1 School Street, Newport, R. I. WOONSOCKET-President, Anthony A. Mulligan, '96, Secretary, Frederick Earle Whitaker, '88, 9 Longley Building, Woonsockct, R. 1. . FALL RIVER-President, Dr. Ralph W. Jackson, '89. Secretary, Harry Smalley, '04, 611 June Street, Fall River, Mass. , WORCESTER COUNTY SONS OF BROWN-President, George A. Gaskill, '98. Secretary and Treasurer, Clarence S. Brigham, '99, American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass. 258 - NINE TEEN FIFTEEN CONNECTICUT VALLEY-President, William C. Hill, '9-4. Secretary and Treasurer, Arthur S. Gaylord, '02, 362 Chestnut Street, Holyoke, Mass. NEW BEDFORD-President, Edmund Wood, '76. Secretary and Treasurer, William O. Devoll, Jr! '07, 44 Chestnut Street, New Bedford, Mass. WASHINGTON AND NEW LONDON COUNTIES-President, Henry R. Palmer, '90. BRISTOL-President, Hon. Augustus O. Bourn, '55. Secretary, Howard R. Newman, '08, 110 High Street, Bristol, R. I. ' NEW HAMPSHIRE AND VERMONT-President, George I. Hopkins, '75. Secretary, Dr. Henry W. N. Bennett, '97, Manchester, N. H. WESTERN MAINE-President, George Dudley Church, '99. Secretary, Newton C. Reed, Evening Express, Portland, Maine. NEW YORK CITY-President, Clarkson A. Collins, '76. Secretary, Herbert B. Keen, '07, 44 West 44th Street, New York City. , ALBANY-President, Alexander H. Abbott, '03. Secretary and Treasurer, Frank C. Hulse, '05, 423 Brandywine Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y. CENTRAL NEW YORK-President, Frederick R. Hazard, '81, Secretary and Treasurer, Warren G. Bullard, '92, 613 South Crouse Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. ROCHESTER-President, Clarence A. Barbour, '88. Secretary and Treasurer, Henry C. Peeples, '8l' 188 Harvard Street, Rochester, N. Y. PHILADELPHIA--President, Richard M. Atwater, '65. Secretary, Dr. William H. Bennett, '79. Assistant Secretary, Pierson T. Fort, ex- '95, 14 West Stafford Street, Germantown, Pa. PITTSBURG-President, William E. Lincoln, '68. h MARYLAND AND DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA--President, Hon. Henry Kirke Porter, '60, Secre- rtary and Treasurer, W. Clayton Carpenter, '06, 902 Hibbs Building, Washington, D. C. CLEVELAND--President, Newton S. Calhoun, '79. Secretary and Treasurer, Charles J. Foskett, 1315 East 82nd Street, Cleveland, Ohio. CINCINNATI-President, Eliab W. Coy, '58, Secretary, Samuel W. Smith, '80, Madison Road, Cincinnati, Ohio. CHICAGO-Secretary and Treasurer, Leslie L. Falk, '06, 4346 Grand Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. INDIANA-President, John M. Judah, '67. Secretary, Herbert H, Rice, '92, The Waverly Company, Indianapolis, Ind. MINNESOTA-President, Lucius P. Ordway, '83. Secretary, Harry W. Jones, '82, Lumber Exchange, Minneapolis, Minn, PUGET SOUND-President, Claude E. Stevens, '0l. Secretary, Moncrielfe Cameron, '00, 304- Cen- tral Building, Seattle, Wash. ST. LOUIS-President, David S. H. Smith, '62. Secretary, Augustus L. Abbott, '80, 417 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo. ROCKY MOUNTAIN-President, William Harris, '83. Secretary, Charles P. Bennet, '79, Colorado Springs, Col. JAPAN-Secretary, Walter B. Bullen, '99, 38 Uchimaru, Morioka, Japan. NONI REAL-President, Arthur R. Cameron, '0-4. Secretary, W. Randolph Burgess, Y. M. C. A Building, Montreal, Canada. 259 TP? 3 ,.. TWV X gs,-PM E -ees Eeee fe EC I X I I ACADEMIC IL JJI COLLEGE fs PRIZES Y '44 ,J,mmwmggwmfwwwwyfgyfgggwfwq, S : Il - I For Excellence in Preparatory Studies The President's Premiums in Greek The PresicIent's Premiums in Latin Iintrance Premiums in Ifreneh Ilurtshorn Premiums in Klathematics Entrance Premiums in German lst 22d I -J st ...CI lst BCI Ist 2d lst 2d GEORGE JULIUS IIICIDT CIAIARLICS GURNEY EDWARDS ALBIfIR'I' SANGICR PRA'I I' WALTER ADLIER ARMAND LAURIICR CARON CIIAUNCEY TAI 'l' LANGDON HAROLD ADAMS ISACKUS JAMES WAL'I'I'1R WILSON WALTER ADLICR CHARLES HENRY VEIIESIC ' For Excellence in University Studies The Carpenter Prizes for Iiloeution The Ilicks Prizes for Excellence in Debate QI ntercollegizltej lst 9 C1 1 Sd Clnterclassj ISL 2d -- The Dunn Premium in English The Carpenter Prize for Ability and Character The Howell Premium in Mathematics The Class of 1873 Prize The Foster Premium in Greek The Lucius Lyon Premiums in Latin 2d 260 WILLIAM ARTHUR NICICDIIAM HARRY EDWARD DOW ROBICRT EMMI'1'I I' QUINN JAMES JOS ICPII MCGOVE RN NAIIUM MORRILL FRANCIS JOSEPH O'BRIEN SAMUEL HENRY WORKMAN WILLIAM ARTHUR NEICDIIAM SHARON OSBORN BROWN JAMES JOSEPH MCGOVERN ARTIIUR WILLIAM CA'I'E RAYMOND FRANKLIN BORDEN NO AWARD I NO AWARD NO FIRST PREMIUM AWARDICD IRVING THAYISR BOARDMAN -------: NINETEEN FIFTEEN Thc Class of 1880 Prizes fDiscussionj Ist - 2d - Clifssayj Ist - 2d - The Society of Colonial Dames Prize in American History Isi- 2d - The Bishop McVickar 'Prizes The William Gaston Scholarship The James Manning Scholarship 1915 1917 The Francis Wayland Scholarship 1915 1916 1917 Appointments for Commencement JAMES JOSEPH MCGOVERN SYDNEY CLIFFORD JAMES JOSEPH MCGOVERN ISMAR BARUCH ELISHA CHESTER DURFEE EDWARD IRVING EVERETT ARTHUR WILLIAM CATE ISMAR BARUCH ISMAR BARUCH HAROLD LESLIE MYERS SAMUEL GREENE ARNOLD ROGERS BANCROFT HUNTINGTON BROWN DANIEL PARKHURST SPALDING RALPH LEON BLANCHARD GEORGE FREMONT BLIV EN WILBUR TOBIAS BRECKENRIDGE HERBERT NEWELL NICHOLAS GEORGE WILLIS WATERMAN WILLIAM RANDALL WATERMAN ABRAHAM JACOB BURT JOHN STUART COLEMAN CLAUS EMMANUEL EKSTROM FRANCIS JOSEPH O'BRIEN HARRY WEEDEN UNDERWOOD AMASA FITCH WILLISTON THOMAS BAIRD APPLEGET GILBERT CONGDON CARPENTER, JR. ARTHUR WILLIAM CATE JAMES JOSEPH MCGOVERN RAYMOND ABNER PRESTON Final Honors ARTHUR WILLIAM CATE, Eduration, Englifh, Germanic Language: and Literalunav, Romance Lan- guagef and L1'lz'ral1cre.r. HERBERT ELLIOTT FOOTE, Chemiftry, Malhemat1'c:. MARION KENNETH FORWARD, English. CHESTER LEWIS KNOWLES, Cheminry. JAMES JOSEPH MCGOVERN, Economiar, Englifh, Germanic Languagznr and Lilzraturff, Sofia! and! Poliliral Sfience. HALSEY REGINALD NASH, Chemixlry. RAYMOND ABNER PRESTON, Englirh. CYRIL CARPENTER SMITH, Biology, Chemiftry. 261 Uffflf Tho K 'Wk .V TMJ Now H Loaffd' Lflfz Tfllul 'N' I THE ENGINEERS' EASTER VACATION :F f-1.'.'xx':vt: L'.,. 1 '- - -, J. . 1-5-V fy ,nn -'. , ,- 5 X,-' M131 Pwmwmrfwrrf f b .1fTu t fr D2 inf f l ,Q Q, 1 5 f l- s M .1 I Q . is 'FEP OF TH' f0UNDINl OF BROWN UNIVERSITY ti12::f.i1z'Y 6f6'5I' T012 Will you believe us when we say that the Celebration was a success, a glorious and stirring success- dignilied, boisterous, impressive, spectacular, as the occasion demanded? Vfe were mighty pessi- mistic about the Celebration before it began. VVe felt that any kind of a festive affair arranged by a lot of staid professors and other old boys would be a pretty slow affair. But we were mistaken. lfVhether it was Brown songs, the white haired-alumni, the distinguished guests, the decorations, the oratory, the academic atmosphere, or whether it was all of them together-the campus reeked with Brown spirit. It began on Sunday afternoon, October ll, when the University sermon was delivered by President Ifaunce at the First Baptist Meeting House. The old church had been completely renovated for the important part which it was to fill during the live days of the Celebration. The gleaming white of the exterior contrasted pleasantly with the russet leaves that covered the lawn, and threw the spire into sharp relief against the clear October sky. The sermon sounded several notes which were repeated and emphasized by succeeding speakers during the Celebration. Foremost 'of these was the necessity for the largest sort of idealism in modern colleges, the idealism of service, humanizing and vitalizing the search for truth. A further point developed in the President's sermon and recurred to by later speakers was the singular breadth of religious liberty enjoined in the Brown charter of 1764 and more effective today than ever before. Monday was devoted to a review of the religious history of Brown-at least we read that in the next day's paper but, since recitations were not suspended-for some unaccountable reason-until Tuesday noon, we could hardly be expected to attend these religious conferences. The evening saw the first of three performances of the Celebration play. Although the events of the week were so various that it is impossible to characterize one as more interesting than another the play surely held its own with the other features. Everybody went, at any rate, and the house was filled at each performance, a fact which makes it the less necessary to relate here the story of the play. A possible lack of proportion between the play and its setting might, perhaps be noted. To be sure it was not so painfully apparent to us for we sat among the gods, from which point of vantage we could see and hear whatever happened upon the miniature stage, but those who were more comfortably seated below had to content themselves with studying the backs of the mock audience and with such fragments of the dialogue as some especially good voice brought to them. Small wonder if they thought that history was repeating itself and that the production of the fine old play was again suppressed as effect- ually, if not as intentionally, as a hundred and fifty-two years ago. At dusk Tuesday afternoon, a chorus selected from the glee clubs of to-day and yesterday gave a reunion Singh on the terrace of the Union. Football songs, marching songs, Brown songs, old and new, followed each other for three quarters of an hour, ending with Alma Mater -funereal, sentimental, but hallowed by impregnable tradition. 264 - NINE TEEN FIFTEEN --- Unlike the other events ofthe Celebration, the Nlagniliecnt,l' the Spectaeular,,' the Mammoth torchlight procession-to quote various reports of it-did not start at the time scheduled, 'l'uesday evening, but spent an impatient, intensely exciting half-hour forming and re-forming in the semi-dark- ness of the middle campus beneath the class-day festoons of small orange lanterns, lugged out especially for the occasion, and reinforced at intervals-doubtless to fairly overwhelm with the ostentation of the alliair-with larger red, gold, and green lights. Several times before the procession really got under way tlte torches were lighted, waved flaring about witli much show of class spirit, and then extinguished to save keroseneg frotn time to time the band blared ragtime selections to keep up the spirits of the waiting classes, and red- ' cloaked indians, lfrench pirates, and Continental 1 soldiers in blue and bull' could be seen dancing in N ... . . . -- X quite typically Rhodesian 7 manner, aimed doubtless ' D s -1 to. .let oil' their surplus 5 K - I lx' - .1 . .. spirits and keep each other 'I I -J - - l- I-I ill lt warm. From the view- point of the mere ob- server, we should say that they accomplished both those ends with a rare degree of elfeetiveness. When, however, the parade really got under way, the air of festive dignity-'or perhaps of digni- lied festivity-so characteristic of the whole Sesquicentennial Celebration of the Founding of Brown University, was resumed. ln the lirst division, composed of mounted police, Coast Artillery, First Light Infantry, and Varnum Continentals, clad in buffs, blues, and whites, dignity was the prevailing note, the alutnni in brown and white mortar boards served as a transition to the more distinctly festive character of the second division in which marched the undergraduates as Continental soldiers of 1312. French Sailors, and Narragansett Indians, most of them with sputtering torches of red lire and Roman candles. Perhaps the event in the whole procession which-with its appeal to tradition, to dignity, and at the same time to a certain joyful thankfulness-struck tnost distinctly the keynote of the cele- bration, was the junior Burial, a hearse draped in black erape and drawn by two ancient horses. After a march through the East Side, the procession moved down College l'lill-with the exception of the Junior Burial which for some reason went down W'at.erman Street, bound perhaps for the Meet- ing Ilouse--thereby illustrating another observed tendency of tlte Celebration itself. At ltixchange Place the parade was reviewed by the Mayor, whence it proceeded in a glare of red-fire between vast. admiring throngs-many of whom realized for the lirst time the true importance of the University- to Cathedral Square, and then counter-marched back XVeybosset Street. Perhaps it will be more tactful to omit here the relation of how the undergraduate division, quite forgetting the respect and reverence due their Alma Xlater, broke away from the procession and marched up through the new 'l'rolley 'l'unnel. The characteristic cleverness, originality, and pure damn-foolislmess of the idea alone excuse it. The brightness of the conception will be better understood when it is recalled that kerosene torches give oll' a profuse smokeg the result is that the parade barely succeeded in issuing through the eastel'n ttumel-portal, half sulfocated and exceeding grimy of face. As the lirst survivors looked back and saw the smoke pouring from the portal in pungent black clouds they abandoned all hope for the Freshmen tail-enders. But Freshmen are notoriously hardy so that everybody finally showed up safely for the bonfire, which, like the procession, was itself a bit late in gettingxstarted, and manifested by their leaping and running, their howling and singing Qthere is nothing invidious intended in the coupling of these two lastb that they wished, by entertaining the throngs of gnests,to atone for their recent indiscretion. 265 2- + LIBER BR UNENSIS li- Wednesday morning the students who room on the front campus were waked by the sound of brass bands beneath their windows. As it was quarter of ten they got up, in most cases. The bands continued to play, sometimes by turn and sometimes in competition and the gamut of tunes was weird indeed! lyfarches, Brown songs, lullabies, ragtime, and hymns followed one another with startling irregularity except when the band got stuck, apparently, on a single tune, such as the 'fCommencement March , and continued to play it, like a phonograph with one record, until the action must have be- come automatic. The fine old campus strewn with rich brown leaves which lluttered down momently front the half-bare elmsv . I I I A' 1 Rouu, of tgrigh hgh Q AIQYLJQQ- lggvlnim Campus, he deltg1tes,gucsts,aml V .-- -. -, f.. - ps 'N faculty in brilliant robes J: '. 'Q-sg..-7 f Xlx ,-fyx ' , ' 5 'S-- , ' , ' 1 f , , 4 5 N and hoods, the Senior 'f ,..,x -il--..I x x f K I.: K I y l .I JC' X 1,1 , - ' ' ,' N. WT S ,I V class in cap and gown, 1 ..' ga 1' 1 I I , , J' 51' ij. ,' 1' 'X Q ' lg' , --- 1' iff throngs of alumni, hard- ---- r-- -.1 , , 1 s ... f y ' l. I' jk. -' S., ro' y' ,V ' , working brass bands, -l 1 5 .,- 1 I 1' JL- - C N 71 - - - ' 1 ?4f'f Pi, and all bathed in the 5' - -s I I o flf' 7, NSN J , , ILC-, ' 4 f f Ii tv, warm, mellow sunlight rs -4 ,I - 5 ' 1 I V , ' H 1 .':..,' lc, 1 N'---ff I ,f' N ' 'N-A' ofa fair October morn- Xl Y ' ing--well, as we have already remarked, you had to believe in college spirit then, if you never did before. At ten o'cloek the procession got under way. The Women's College led the line, followed by the Senior Class of the men's college-the largest class, incidentally, which ever survived to the fourth year, and the first to appear in cap and gown before Spring Day. Then followed a few miles of alumni-surely the greatest gathering of Brown men ever seen, for most of the classes back to 1842 were represented- The invited guests followed and immediately the vivid colors of academic regalia began to be evident. Ilere, too, were all the public officials who could be persuaded to take a day oil'-diplomats, judgCS, bishops, millionaires, Congressmen, city fathers, and so forth. The next division comprised delegates from a dozen foreign univeristies and from a majority of American universities. College presidents, men of letters, and famous educators were included in this section, and the display of colors-salmon, orange, scarlet, blue, purple, with dashes of gold and ermine-was such a spectacle as only an academic procession affords. lfinally the officers and faculty of the University brought the long line to a close- Down College llill the pro- cession crawled sedately to Y I, gut the music of OnwardChris- g '3 SW F yimtmp ! tianSoldiers, Ki-Yi-Yi, 3 1 3 M .. it Bye Low, My Baby, and X f f other inspiring and dcvo- Q 1 , ,O tional tunes. It took over ' iv ' half an hour to reach the D Meeting House, and more 'U' ' ' than one student COllgl'Zltu- Q. g uma himself that it didn't 2' -4 '4 - ' take that long to run down . to the Waldorf for an unpremeditated dropped-on. Justice Hughes ofthe Supreme Court ofthe United States, to whom this book is dedicated, delivered the main address of the morning. The subject matter ofthe address included a careful history of the University's growth under each administration, rccurred more than once to the important principle of religious freedom, and included a very complete list of famous graduates. No name in this list, by the way, aroused more tumultuous applause than that of Benny Andrews, who, though he is only a 266 NINETEEN FIFTEEN --- heroic tradition to undergraduates, must have been a very real memory to many in the audience. At the conclusion of the address there was an uncomfortable half-minute of squirming, and then, though nobody said All up for the lucky seventh! everyone stood up and chatted with his neighbor-and circumspectly stretched himself. Then followed the presentation of delegates, a long and interesting ceremony. It became pa1'ticularly entertaining when some portly old scholar in a flowing kimona effect, colored like Italian fireworks, tripped on it as he ascended the steps to the platform. By one o'clock the procession had sailed its way back to the campus and everybody partook of a free lunch. The events of the morning had given everyone a powerful appetite which displayed itsel in a rush for refreshments that threatened to overthrow the tables. Everyone was served, however sooner or later-some, two and three times-so there was enough to go around. Of the after-effects- but that is distinctly not a part of the Celebration. NVednesday evening thC -1- guests of the University were bf' the fortunate auditors ofa concert by the famous Men- -, delssohn Glee Club of New York. 'l'he program was the usual glee club program, but the rendition of it was far fI'0l1l L1Sll2ll. The last day of the Cele- bration began with a special chapel service for the stu- dents. To most of us the special thing about it was its earliness-fully fifteen minutes before the usual timel Of course, there were some other special features, such as Mr. Taft and Mr. Rockefeller. 'l'he whole affair was exceedingly informal and each speaker acted as though he hadn't meant to do it and didn't know what he was expected to say. .ln such a situation speakers inevitably have recourse to Sunday-school sentiments. llowever, we must credit Mr. 'l'aft with cracking some very worthy jokes, and we must thank hflr. Goodnow for enlivening the occasion by pointing out the difference between empires and republics. And whether we were particularly edilied or not-and if we had been it would have been a special chapel service-at least we enjoyed ourselves by clapping, stamping, and cheering, which always gives one an appetite for breakfast. The old Baptist Church K was again in the limelight Mi' ACADEMIC REGALIA Thursday morning, when , , 3 the University address was ' uh delivered by Principal Pe- V terson of McGill. l'le be- Q ,, gan by telling us what good I. A 5 MTLMA fellows we were at Brown. Ki Then, getting serious, he re- 2 06 urred to the favorite topic of '76 Lf I 6, idealism in education and its importance in a commercial community. Another climax was reached in the afternoon when the Brown- Wesleyan game, set forward from Saturday, was played and the spectators-there must have been thousands of them-were given an opportunity to see football a la historic pantomime, folk dancing, and relay races. Long ranks of Indians, Scots, Irish, Celts, ltalians, and early Colonial settlers stretched 267 LIBER BR UNENSIS 1- :tml ettrvetl over the tlttsty green lielcl in lines of britzltt. color-:ill in tuiniztture, of cottrse---antl nu tlte sicle-lines picturesque groups of Buy Scouts and trztelc men lilletl up tlte gztps between tlte crowded grztntl stztntls. lt will be only nceessztry to mention ltere the results of tlie contests, lot' they are :tlrezttly ltistory-tlte litmvtt victory :wer Wt-slcyztn in tlte two-mile relzty in tlte time of eight minutes, twenty- eiglit :intl two-liftlis seconds, and the football score: lirotvn 16, VVesleyztn 0-wat szttisfaetory outcome, to stty the least. 'l'l1e Celebrzttion eonclutletl witlt at University LllllIlCl'H ut Cltttrcliill llouse, to wllicli, being neitlier delegates nm' guests, but just tttttlergi'adtttttes, we cnultln't get at ticket, so tltztt we c:tn't tell you :my- tliing :tbout it. lint we avert-n't ltttnyry ztnywzty. - 75' 1 ' 9 C' 1' 1 . Q 2524! 035 ' W 1' L1 ,p ,' ' . Q 7' L4 y V 5 Vi 4 I Q Q 1. . . A 268 7 , 'X-4 i x nlaqfst f 'gb f r' 4. - ,,.,. , .... 1li, ,i f'x55, A ' ' XII' ,. TMNT? ' I . tlliiaaitlaiatattllta ts ..... 1 all . if C t it m 1 ' .1. l.j.i- fl..- 713. .,.., S q 1 e llnlal i ra t it tt al 't' :uf -- s- ...A,' fiisrefig M55-T.- 4 l5f7-5-55.1 i. 4? - -ii -.f.t.., ' 'T' ' ' 1 ,M I ' .en ' .,,, lg, 5 JUMBO Jumbo UMBO our Jumbo, has a country-wide, if not a World-wide reputation. Meet an alumnus on the Pacific coast and get to talking with him of Brown and one of the Hrst things heill do will be to ask you if jumbo Jefferson is still making pies to sa- tiate the carniverously inclined on the Hill. Only the other day in fact, Prexy received a letter from one of the younger boys in China asking if Jumbo could not be persuaded to cross the water and cook for the heathen. He wrote there is an exceptionally broad field in the Orient, one of great opportunity, opening up many avenues of approach, for the man that can cook. When a man has seen college presidents come and go he surely deserves respect. Jumbo can remember the college in the days of old Doc. Robinson. It was just like a great big prep choral, he said with a gesture that explained everything What wouldn't we have given to see Theron Clark or the Dean running round town as freshmen! Jumbo remembers themg but all he would do was smile and smile.when questioned as to some of their capers. When Benny Andrews was leading chapel, Jumbo used to-go around the campus with a basket filled with the most tempting of goodies. The fact that he never had to go to more than one dormitory to dispose of his wares is pretty good substantiation of the old adage the proof of the pudding is in the eating. No picture of jumbo would be complete without a word concerning his personality. No one, un- less he has actually come in contact with him, can appreciate his remarkable power of expression. His enunciation is perfect. Combine with this quality his cheery, illuminating smile and it isn't hard to account for the reputation he has won in the-I was about to say, stomachs-in the hearts of thousands l MAC THE BARBER Mac the Barber ERE is one of the greatest institutions this college has-Billy Mac, Barber by appointment and haberdasher to Brown men for years. Loyal to the very core is Mac, loyal to the teams and loyal to Brown tradition. There is probahly no man on the camp that has done more to foster Brown spirit in all possibleus ways, from urging support of athletics to keeping Freshmen away from the pool room, than this little man right here. Let Mac give you.a shave sometime and harken to about the smoothest line of rhetoric that ever came across the water. Whether he be describing Washingtonls passage through the city in 1775 or explaining to some assistant the ideals of the C. and C. or trying to sell you some of his excellent assortment of dry goods, you can't but be impressed by his imperturbable charm of man- ner, and the crescendo and dimuendo of his sotto vocc. Whether it be tipping off the sportive editorial writers of the Ilfrald, or giving a prof the kind of dope he needs to get by with his students, Mac is always the same, smiling and wise-looking. Born just off the Campus, Mac has been around here all his life. He grew up so to speak, with the college, but he has at the same time kept young and in spirit with the students. He is not one of those pessimistic souls who believes the good old daysl' are past, .hut he revels in the present. His optomistim is unquencliable. ' The college without little Mac'would be like a picnic without anything to eat. NINE TEEN FIFTEEN - l l Cap. Cameron EXRN yuh, Cap?'l Hey, Cappie, old boy, Great night, ap. ' If these words don't suggest to you a kindly old man with a cheery smile and a hearty comeback, then youlve never been on the 1'lill at night. Everybody knows Cap and Cap knows every- body,-leastwise, most everybody. Saunter up to him some night as he is complacently smoking his faithful old pipe fthe one he gets blowcd out' down to the boiler room, and ask him a question or two. Youlll find he hasn't been around here eleven years coming Christmasl' for nothing and you'll find he comes pretty near knowing who's who and why. He knows who comes up the Hill late at night or early in the morning, and how often they do itg he can tell you who is burning the midnight oil and who uses his room just to sleep in. He knows the red- doggersn and he can differentiate between the rummyists and the john I'layists. ln a word, Cap has a line on youg if you've got anything to get, then he's got it. Cap has seen a good many come and go in his time. He's saved many a man front the precipitant wrath of the Dean and has at the same time turned the student's footsteps from wander- CAP. CAMERON ing ways to those more certain. If a Freshman wants any solid fatherly advice, let him drink deeply of Cap's words of wisdom. Cap has a tieklish job too-one that requires all the tact and diplomacy there is. Yet he is beloved by the boys and at the same time performs his duty with scrupulous faithfulness for the Admin- istration. One of the first things an Alumnus does when he gets back to Brown is to stop and see Cap, and the reason isn't hard to find. Sweet-tempered, ruddy checked, dry, and still not easily imposed upon, old Cap has a warm place in the hearts of the boys which time will never remove., Father Kendrick A'l'Hl'iR Kendrick's claim to immortality rests upon his ability to mix with those whom he sticks for books. Though he is the newest among the most conspicuous figures around college, he is one of the best. To look at l ather you might be guilty of what is called a snap judgment, you would probably be awed into silence by his apparent dignity of demeanor. But Father was a boy once and he hasn't forgotten all about it yet. He eats with the fellows in the Brown Union, he turns out with absolute regularity to every mass meeting. and he is present among the most true-blooded rooters at every game. llc has won the undying regard of the commuter element by his generosity in supplying free ink and a pencil sharpening machine. To see Father at his best you must tell him a story. Then, and you may depend upon it, he'll come back with one of his own. Another one of yours and Father is started, and then, may the good liord have pity on yotn' struggles as you twist and double in paroxysms of unadulterated mirth, for Father has discarded his cloak of imperturbility and become one of the fellows. , KENDRICK 271 - LIBER BR UNENSIS l T n , 'fvizavf A ' '- BROWN UNIVERSITY GLACIER This picture, taken by Miss Keen in 1914, shows the Brown University Glacier in the upper center. This is the main source of the Harvard Glacier. The party followed the dotted line, the spot marked by the X being the furthest point reached. Here the danger from.snowslides and hidden crevices in the ice made futher progress fool hardy. On the return the expedition deviated slightly, as shown by the arrows, from the course followed on the first lap. 'The figures in the fore ground are the sourdoughsu or guides, who led Miss Keen in her explor- ation. - 272 NINE TEEN FIFTEEN BROWN UNIVERSITY GLACIER NIONG other things we have a real live glacier 4 . , A g Z now, and the chart of the University Grounds in A the back of the next catalogue ought to includenit. A , - W f' Five thousand miles from Cap Cameron's beat lies this newest addition,-far to the northwestward Nm' of the North American continent. For ages had g this dazzling creation of nature been secure from the ravages of man until it was explored in the latter part of August 1914, by Miss Dora Keen, daughter of W. W. Keen of the class of 1859. The facts are these. Miss Keen in company with two sourdoughs , or old timers, and a photographer, succeeded on August 21 in making a landing near the 350 foot ice cliff of the Harvard Glacier and started to discover its source. For the first seven miles of the journey, the only method of travel was over the boulders in the troughs between the steep sides of the mountains on the one side and the glacier on the other. When at last the main ice stream was found smooth enough for travel at a point of 2200 feet above tide-water, progress forward was greatly hindered by innumerable crevasses and bottomless fissures. Soft snow concealed endless holes and made it necessary for the party to be roped together. Every step from this point on had to be traversed three times to and from, in order to relay up food, fuel, camp and mountaineering outfit. To further hinder the party, rain or snow fell almost continually. With these difficulties to overcome, it is not to be wondered at that it took Miss Keen and her party three weeks and a half to reach the sources of the glacier at a point 16 miles from the fjord and 6100 feet above sea level. Here great yawn- ing crevices and the danger from snow slides compelled the expedition to stop. Before them lay the main source of the Harvard Glacier, dazzlingly beautiful in the sunlight, haunting and inspiring in its grandeur. It was named the Brown Uni- versity Glacier. The ice of the Glacier fell like a frozen cataract into the main stream and extended at least ten miles further up the valley, probably reaching the height of 7500 feet. The picture on the opposite page only gives a partial idea of its beauty and extent. Observations were taken at this point where the party was forced to turn back and considerable data, valuable for geographical purposes, obtained. Miss Keen, who has donated the Glacier to the college in memory of her father who is a member of the Corporation, is one of the most intrepid of women mountain climbers. She has made thrilling mountain ascents on three continents and has led parties into trackless wilds. That she was the only human being to succeed in scaling Mt. Blackburn C16140 feetl in 1912 is sufficient proof of her bravery and daring. That Brown in 1915 should include an Alaskan Glacier among its endow- ment is a cold but certain testimonial of 150 years of expansion. 273 - - LIBER BR UNENSJS 1915's JUNIOR CRUISE ES, it happened about a year ago. But who of those well-seasoned marines who went on that fam- ous Cruise has forgotten it? From start to finish it was a glorious time, and had the Ancient Mariner himself been counted as among those present he would have scoffed in derision at his Painted Ship and shouted '15 forever with the best of us. May 29th. was the day, but that doesn't count much. Ralph Brown Graham was in charge, but that didn't make any dif either. The whistle blew, the band played,and away went the Juniors down the Bay. Without temporizing-it was a fine sail, for it was a perfect day. Some of the more exuber- erent, to be sure, got exicted as the boat struck the swell of Field's Point and began to rock. To overcome the fear that was gnawing at their vitals, they began to organize a fire line. Bucket after bucket was filled with sweet salt sea water, while the sturdy men went round soaking everyone in sight from head to foot. The boat landed and Abbott immediately began to take pictures. The men repaired to the banquet hall and proceeded to Ciaccoize on clams, fish and fruit till the bell rang for the memorable ball game. As usual, it was a renewal of the old struggle between brains and brawn, between culture and science, between real in- telligence and fancied ingenuity, and as usual, brains and culture, and real intelli- gence won out. Burnell pitched a heady game for the losers but the result was of course inevitable. A brief lull in the program now afforded a slight respite, of which all partook with liberality. Then, the warning whistle sounded ' V and the valiant 1915ers boarded with dispatch. The return trip was clev- 'r'- erly negotiated, harmless revelry dispelling the mo- V notony of the scene in a most agreeable , fashion. New friendships were pledged, old friendships renewed, and the founda- tions laid for a class spirit that has never been beat. On that Junior Cruise of . the l9l5ers, says the keen historian, was born that idomnitable spirit of cam- meradie that made the class as Seniors an organization of good fellows-not crabs. Long live Fifteen l 274 - - NINETEEN FIFTEEN 1915 JUNIOR CRUISE SONG CWorrif and Mufic by Roy C. Phillipfj gal 5'5 FQ M A ig 5 .ue 1 Thu surely del -e- glnon -Greatest wuts nn all our nnhon- ln the ,lun lon, the ' - ' 7 . - Q57 E 1 Ll? lag P55954 Ju? lon gif- I W:-ve lured An n - celn lin - QI And with weather ICVU gif 3 f.ff.....,n -5 1 2 ftnu We will ull. owi-1-5' te' bn I FU' lil 5 Sn 4 Hi PM Q in ,ff-,fx H ll way: luv wuth - er When Nineteen fifteen I . . -g v iv lellowx get I0 - geth er Be :ure there: somethnng brewing And that f' I ' 5, E Q H QT - - - n J ' 'ig , . ' . , ' c blhflfll be plenty do1ng1' On our bug uune lo - dny To- ! P '.-'- '- '--F: ::!1!i1-Ih -THQ 11 f ? . I otl on our ,lum v RCRA Al eye: ur bnght And beam ue light As we gs , li::E L-: 4, , 4, i E 'Hb 'U' .11Y: '- ignr 1 .t .I i-in..-qi-u 4:......::::n4gQl::.j1: .z:::: ' .z::e..1-.::1.-::::......-:.' fiE ':Lf3: 1 '1: 2l:1:tfE:- E: ' . . '. 3 . I ' lla ll. P 352'-gffl':nl2::'u.':F::-Il-::iIr2:H:?l::I:I:1'I:iZ -I .mid .M We' mgnaongAnw nil n- ng Fo: BfuwnnndCl:.FiI ' -- i r.! I' llllll J I I I lf' m . I, l- n :Sea Y ' 'n ' ' 5- as --fs 275 LIBER BR UNENSIS THE BROWN BEAR OI' Who Put the Bruno in Brunonia? Billy Rogers didn't do it. He was too busy fuctioning as the entire student body. Gee whizlums, man, when you think of it, that Billy boy must have been some busy fellow. In the first place he was carrying about 91 hours of work, then he had to play the Harvards and the Yales single handed and all that, he had to keep the Senate going, take all the cus- sin, of the profsg run the Libfrg wait on table, tend furnaces, and I don't know what all. Obviously he didn't have time todope outamascot for the college. So it went along till Billy's great, great grand nephew, Ted Francis Greene ,87, came up smiling. In a word, though Bill wasn't able to do it, his relative Ted was. Ted put the Tj- Bruno in Brunonian in auty five, and it was a good thing he did. The boys were getting pretty tired of having to give long Browns for the burro that didn't bring good luck. And then, too, a burro is too close a relative to another animal for the boys to get very enthusi- astic over. ki Thus Bruno came into his own. Ted was hit with the idea that Bruno was Brown's best bet. By nature the animal is peaceful, l1Ot to say jovial, but when aroused, kie ripe, he is ferocious and well nigh invincible. If this didnft symbolize Brown spirit about as well as anything could, thenTed said he'd eat his socks. Accordingly, when they were fitting up the Union, Bruno was placed in a conspic- uous place and suitable rites were held, duly installing him as official mascot. Since that time Bruno has been a favorite theme in verse and song and a journal- istic writeup without the name of Bruno or Bruin would now be sacrilege itself. And this is as it should be. -Bruno, the Big Brown Bear, just simply can't be beat. 276 k- NINE TEEN FIFTEEN Theres tu nth Ernnu! Theres tn nth Eirumn! i5ere's tn nth Ernnn nnh mlillllllll All np tu the rnllege, the nerg hest rnllege, All hrink tu Iyer fame nnh renmnn! Mer banners are flging, Iyer rnlgnrts are trying En gine ns ai rhnnre fur a tuastg Ljer spirits nnhging, tIgere's nu use henging, All brink tu the une me tune must! ii'et's mnssail anh iunrhle, it's nn time in sqnnhle All sing nun hnrn np the mlgnle tnmn! Qinnhhge tn unr classes. all np with the glasses.- Rnh brink tn nth Ernnu sinh iirniun. 277 l L12 Ill I . LIBER BR UNENSIS fffllilllllllll P iilllllllllllv' l l I .lllll , f , ' , 1 , , fl f FLF ... According to George Ade ONCIC upon :1 Time there was a class of Young Bloods who had wished on them the unfortunate Handle of l reshmen. They were now Ready for their Banquet. Accordingly, after bidding their Dear ones an affectionate llarewell they embarked with much liclat on the Tub that nocturnally plys 'twixt here and Gotham. The cityls Coppers were present and they YVatched the Yearlings 'l'humb their Noses at the Thwarted Soph- omores. ' After an lIour's Run they had assimilated their Banquet on the Providence Drop and had won for themselves thus early int heir Careers the popular Sobriquet of Old Salts. They landed at Newport where is situated the New- port A. C. of which the Hon. Howard Langey is President where they Bearded special Trains for New l'ingland's Southern Gateway. With success written all Over their Mugs and Eggs all over their Clothes they Assembled on the Nliddle Campus and let the VVelkin ring. NIORAL:-lt's a Long NVay to Tipperary, but it's Longer to the First Baptist hleeting llouse. As Robert Chambers Saw It ORl'1OYl'iR, the sky was over cast-ominous. 'l'he man was leaning nonehalently against the ticket takerls wicket, surreptitionsly studying the throng of excited 1918-ers about to set out on their banquet cruise. Drawn by some sudden impulse he turned . , . At his elbow amid the yearlings boarding the New York boat stood a girl, a vision . . . 'HI have a home, she said, but how can l find it? A quick thought and then mannishly- lvknow, we return by eleven. Will you wait? But without waiting for the reply on the beautifully formed upturned lips, he piloted hcr through the jostling crowd to the rear of the ticket-taker's wiclcet-desertetl-- 278 z -,M Z, , 4:3 4 XXW 2 'Sn 2 D1 'Nl U1 P11 2 '11 'Nu '11 'Nl E11 D1 2 The sun was slowly setting on the Aegean banks of the Scekonk .... but a dull, heavy vapor rose from the river . . . dusk was unostentatiously descending. The lfrcslnnen had by this time boarded the vessel .... the boy and girl were silent. Suddenly she started. I must go. He started . . . Whynot? . . . Whieh! . Rather, but probablyf' No, a thousand times no. I would- with clumsy lingers he unclasped his newly won fraternity ping then impulsively, Yvonne, here. S 2 She looked at the pin . . . at lnm . . . nodded, sighed . . .started up ' . . . started down . . laughed . . '1'iIlclcven?U Gixfcq 33 V The whistle blew, the bell rang, the eggs flew. He started and boarded the churning vessel without a word . . . l'le ate no supper, but sought the cool air of the dark evening, allowing the clanimy breeze to play indiscriminatelyupon his high, handsome forehead . . . He leaned far over the rail . . . staring out into the dark night. The shouts of the ribald laughter sounded in the salon below, but kenneth Parker, of Janesville, VVis. heard them not . . . a few hours . . . eleven . . . then- The clammy breeze blew into a wind whistling raucously abeam. lt seemed to murmur Yvonne and the waves softly lapping oll Commicut Point echoed, f'Yvonne . . .Yvonne . . . Yvonne . .U So Said Jack London The morning of the fourth day came-dark, dull, depressing. There was no change in t.he situa- tion. At noon the sun came out for a moment, only to disappear in the next under a great black cloud from the northern equinoctial. The men partook as usual of their rations, and nought but occasional moody, morose glances betrayed the presence of suppressed emotion. The trouble began in the middle of the afternoon. Small gangs of heavily cloaked men armed with saplings were seen passing here and there with averted looks. A dull roar--so low at lirst it could not be heard, was pervading the campus. A chilly breeze was blowing up from the vicinity of the great Bear. The first fracas broke out down by Caswell, where a bunch of Scanclinavians, headed by Jimmie Murphy, got to brawling with some recently recruited Italians. For a time sticks and hsts ilew rapidly, but the men became passilied and no blood was drawn. Later, a violent collision occurred between the warring factions in the vicinity of Manning. The Italians had backed up against the cold cement of the Grand old Grecian ruin and were defending their own. Blood shone in their eyes. In bayed fury, they taunted the encircling Scandics. Fraser, a powerful Norwegian, led the onslaught and was met by a crushing list in the eye from the gnarled right of Boss jermail. But numbers counted, and soon the Italians weakened and were secured and tied, During the melee, little Nlark 1 Zll'l1lllN, the water boy, had contrived to escape. Other encounters took place, but by nightfall the scene shifted to the water front. One lively tilt took place when Blue Bill l'ily tried to get his men on board the Tmnf.rJff by means of a scow. l'le was hotly pursued by a large number of the Swedes in a powerful launch, but by audacious pluck he held the pursuing dogs at range with preserved eggs until escape had been made. Altercations continued until Chief Gordon arrived in a taxi, when the Italians embarked en masse for new lands. But it was not a Swedish victory. The hunger cry of a flu' wolf rent the silence, but the llalians heard it not. 279 LIBER BR UNENSIS - THE FAC T5 Bare facts are often interesting Cask the Union Potwallopersl, and figures nev- er lie, but a space left blank may cause all kinds of trouble. The decision for the oldest man in the class hangs fire because Fay refused to state his age. With all due respect to his noble and shiny brow we are therefore forced to announce a tie between Bill Needham and Bennie Grossman. How Babington, McLeod, and WVorkman ever reached their high state of civilization at the early age of 19 is be- yond us, but that is the age they plead guilty to, gentlemen, and you may take it for what it is worth. The bad habits of the class seem to run mostly to smoking, drinking and swearingf, but Baruch demurely admits that he sometines indulges in rough fuss- ing',-a new one on us-and CapH Taylor has at last admitted that he wastes too much time on women. CWhy the plural Capfj Poor old Bill Littlejohn con- fesses that he has attended Pembroke dances . Cheer up Bill, true penance has saved many a hardened sinner! The Example set by 'Cap' Cameron toward those returning after one oiclock is Burnham's idea of the origin of the so-called distrust of the campus,while Blanch- ard opines that it is simply due to the fact that a lot of men haven't enough to do. Old Rube Cram comes nearer to the mark fin our opinionj when he declares that it is caused by the desire of certain astute individuals to grasp all of the college honorsf' and just notice the old boyfs diplomacy! No namesg just certain indi- viduals . Procity Curtis comes across with the information that it is due to the failure of fraternities to fraternize with other fraternitiesw, Csome alliteration P. O.l Some alliterationlj S, Kffwrites that '4Cap Crowell effectually closes the argument with the remark that it is a question for graduate study in Sociologyf' QWe suppose that he means that there ain't no answer.j lVe were proud to see that no man received more than four votes as college crab, although Dana Hubbard voted for himself Qconscientious boyj and Nemo,' Harcourt declared he was that, and that he was proud of it. W. K. Rice gently rebuked us with the remark that he bore no grudge. WVe're with you W. K. Billy hIac's class in history fl. 2. J voted en masse for their professor as big- gest crab on the faculty. That means every one but the engineers so, of course, Billy won. Some few men Changing by the skin of their teeth, we supposej didn't dare to express themselves. CVVC have no use for a man of the fencej Jackson shook our faith in human nature with the statement that it was the prof who apologized for cutting his classes. CWVhy didn't you let us in on itg Jack? We can keep a secret.l V The hospitals of the City of Providenceu have impressed Valentine most during his stay at Brown. Felicitations, old chappie, may you have seen the last 280 NINE TEEN FIFTEEN - such place. Bill Shefiield feels That students Cas a wholej have no conception of doing things for the good of the college alonef, QThem Sociology courses do make a man pessimistic, eh Paine?j Luke Wilson Qartistic soulj has bee11 inspired by the interior decorating and wonderful lighting facilities of the Economics Lib- rary. Johnnie Abbott has been most impressed by May 29th., especially May 29th, 1914. CFunny how that boy likes to be on the water It most always makes us sick, especially the water they keep in 'fire bucketsj The Liber is unanimously conceded' to be the best little publication put forth for the delectation of Brownses Boys. The Brunoniani' is considered to be trying hard, while The Herald is endured as a necessary evil. By a good sized majority the Dean is hailed as a good scout, earnest , sincere and eflicient , but there are enough pleasant little digs in the batch QFD to make us feel sure that he is on the job all the time. We have nearly as many best liked men in the class as we have men, and that is as it should be. Bill Sheffield was the biggest favorite with Hubbard a close second. Pinky,' McLaughlin, Rube Cram, Luke W'ilson, Eddie Hincks, Eind Ralphfgiraham won honorable mention. QGraham was modest enough to vote or himsel . The ladies man contest was pretty hot, Nemo', Harcourt winning by a scant two votes over little Bill liicke, Johnnie Abbott, Phil Scherer, and Howard Lang- ley tied for third place and P. O. Curtis drew the Booby. QThis last was a mistake but then that's a secretj ' As a last request before leaving Brown, Fay begs that the catalogue be revised so that everyone can understand it. CW'e suspect that he meant to say someone How about it, Ignatz? Q Oscar Brown believes that Courtney Langdon should be given a cap and gown and a locker to keep it inf, Crolius wants to see Improve- ment in the registration system and - -Cdeletedjg soft pedal on the rough stuff, Billj. We received this request by wireless from Hubbard, For Gawd's sake, go easy on me in the Liberf, QThat's all right Dana, but have you told the folks about that trip into South County?D Stu Phillips says, Pm an Owlf, QStu is one fine fellow but he's apt to talk right over your head.j Mac ljdinger leaves his last can of P. A. to White Haire . CRequest, Mac, request. This is no last will and testament stuFf.D Russ,' Burwell wishes us a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Yearf' QWC suspect Russ was in high spirits when he wrote his slip.j Sam Workman makes a plea that the debating union be a little better supported in the future. QWe'll use our infiuencef?j old top.j Cap Taylor intends to become a street car conductor after graduation. CWe wonder Whether it is the nickles or the brass buttonsothat attract him.j Success to you Cap . Gannon intends to batch it with Fayv, while Fay intends to Gohomeandraiseafamilyv. CThere must be a mistake somewherej Paine and Lawson . re going to spend a few years in research work trying to invent a pool table with a larger side pocket. But weive kept the cream of the story till the last. Our fair haired President is going to be the chief advisor in the adminisration building next year, and he has confided to us that he is going to work like Hell! Success to you, Nlac, old boy. You have the biggest and best class ever, right behind you all the time. 281 ,Q ELL, once upon a time there was a Worthy Senior who had a trusty roommate and a brill- iant idea. The worthy Senior was P. O. Cur- tis, and the trusty roommate was R. W. Cram, and the brilliant idea was that it would be a good stunt to get better acquainted with some of the other 1915ers. YVhen the idea first struck P. O, he was somewhat staggered by its brilliancy, but he called his trusty roommate to his side and with their combined intelligence they were able to master the details. They proposed to give a house Warming to their more intimate friends and disclose to 'them for discussion and possible approval of the recent idea. On a chilly night in October the stage was set and a group of seniors wended their devious ways to 4 Caswell to be received with unbounded hospitality and gen- eral good cheer. Towards the close of the session Jiggs O'Donoghue arose and with totally unexpected, but nevertheless exceedingly welcome, good sense, proposed that the boys continue to meet and enjoy their senior year in a proper comrad- ly fashion. Bill Shefheld went a step further and pro- posed thati they continue to meet not only during the senior year, but annually at every commencement from 11oW until we die . Then Dana Hubbard got up and suggested a name for the club or society and he offered the g'CQramD and Cfurtisj Clubn. Jiggs, taking upon himself the duties of temporary chairman, put the mo- tion and it was unanimously carried. Then Dana, elated by the success of his maiden eflort put up Jiggs O'Donoghue for Presidentg and again Dana met with unanimous success. f ' 282 NINE TEEN FIFTEEN Jiggs now called for nominations for Secretary and Treasurer and Rube Cram and P. O. Curtis were immediately given these important posts respectively. Then followed in rapid succession the unanimous election of the following: Jonnie Abbott Confidential Agent, Joe Greene, Theatrical Critic, Hartwell Greene, Legal Advis- or, Dana Hubbard, Publicity Agent, Harold Kinne, Official Engineer, Bill Little- john, Assistant Purchasing Agent, Pinky McLaughlin, Ofiicial Intermediatory, Stew Phelps, Purchasing Agent, Bill Sheffield, Spiritual'Advisor, Cap Taylor, Literary Critic, Bill Sullivan, Transportation Agent, and Val Valentine, Interpreter of Hoyle. Thus was the C. and C. Club founded, its sole purpose and aim being to develop good fellowship and lasting friendships among the members of 1915. The Club has met regularly ever since its inception. After mid-years the Club enjoyed the hospitality of 1VIr. W. P. Shef- field, Sr. and Jr. down in South County on the shores of Yawgoo Pond. During the past semester the Club has expanded con- siderably. Any Club with a purpose as broad as C. and C. with a class like 1915 to draw from must expand considerably, so that in addition to the original mem- bers and officers, the club now includes liddie Campbell, Clerk of Course, Bill Crol- ius, Official Belcher, Cap Crowell, Athletic Advisor, Wyatt Anthony, Secret Ser- vice Agent, Norm Duncan, Outer Sentinel, Mac Edinger, Keeper of the Sacred Archives, Stubby Gallant, Director of Enter- tainment, Ralph Graham, Ofiicial Predcstidig- itator, Elly Falk, Keeper of the Goat, Frank Frost, Weather Prophet, Hiram Hyde, Musi- cal Director, Knob Haire, Inner Sentinel, Joe Miller, Club Steward, Heinie Nelson, Financial Advisor, Wally Stuart, Hoodoo Wrecker, Luke Wilson, Choir Master, Mr. W. P. Shefiield '78, Host, Doctor Dunning, Faculty Advisor, Dean Randall, Reformer, William MacCor- mick, Poet Loriot, Prof. Jonnie Greene, Roman Advisor, Prof. Courtney Langdon, In- i terpreter of Romances. , . The spiritual triumphs of the Card. C. are many, but its material aspects have also cropped forth. Did they not put a 5-O crimp in the blue banner of the honored Phi Beta Kappa? Yes. Such is the story of the C. and the C., the best little regular organization seen in these parts for a long time.', Whatever may be the judgement of the college, Whether other classes ever try to emulate the seniors or not, it is a fact that C. and C. has made friendships and that these friendships will stand the test of years. Down the 'frat holef' to C. and C. x 283 Ye elms and grass and walls around The halls of this old college! Fair may ye be, as ye were to me, When I came to you for knowledge, T'was here I met with many a lad I n'er before had seen, And learned it was no passing fad To doll to Johnny Greene. How pleasantly he'd bend 'his head To nod in my direction! And then pass by with twinkling eye, Good Horace to perfection! Yet not so bald nor short as he, But fair, o'winning mien, A man with whom you like to be,--' Genial Johnny Greene. I see him now at the banquet board, With his cup of Falernian wine, Passing a jest with a smiling guest, And praising the fruits of the vine. So in saying farewell to the halls of old Brown, Ye men of old Fifteen, Drink a bumper all brimming to one who deserves 1t,! The health of lln' Johnny Greene. 4 NINETEEN FIFTEEN 1 1915 CLASS ODE We shall leave thee with a song, Mother Brunonia, With a song upon our lips Mother Brunonia- Stepping firmly, stepping freely, Facing outward buoyantly, With a dream to lead us on- Mother Brunonia. Through the gates without regret, Mother Brunonia, To the world that lies below, Mother Brunonia- We shall pass but, in our passing, Walk thc pathway learned of ther., Children ever, led by thee- Mother Brunonia. 285 LIBER BR UNENSIS f in ' as ,I fx K3 A efggxggx I g ful' 1 2 I 'pg ' I- L7 4 J. RUSSELL A1-'1fLECR, JR. PHILLIP T. BERKER 1fRANKL1N C. BROOKS HARRY H. BURTON LESTER B. CARPENTER CHARLES A. DONELAN CATHERINE A. DONOVAN JOHN T. DORAN FREDRICK L. EERRIS RALPH B. GRAHAM NORMAN R. HALL BURTON. F HARRINGTON ROBERT B. JONES LOUISE J. MASSICOTTE EARLE B. PIERCE FRANKLIN C. SMITH ISAAC G. SMITH EDGAR J. STAFF ROLAND F. STICKNEY RAYMOND P. STICKNEY HAROLD M. TAYLOR 286 WW LIBER BR UNENSIS AM the wiggy Wag who prologues, Cl'ni sure there's no objection, l've heen about Lo tzzttlier straws, For the liiht-r's comic section,- 'l'o tickle your ribs. Sure, l lu1veu't minded much This noble OCClIPZlllOllQ. Where l got the provocation To rnztke ye lull. Whyinot grin and stand the tickling? This straw manipulation? 'Tis deftly done or fdeftly incztutj Avoid the connotzttion Of u shell. ' Buried in Fifty Fathoms Burnrll at the Blackstone--Szxy, Rusty, sec those four mcn over thcrc. Well, l them's a .... Plzillipf-llolcl on there. NVhznt four men? Bzcrurll-'l'liose four over there. I'hillifz.r-Wliy l only sec one, Bunny. Say John! ' IlL'i7lbt'7'g-I should think you'd catch cold easily. flllbolt '15-Why! Ffinbcrg-'l'licre's so much of you on thc ground. Cl'istol shot up in Fowncs' Allcy.j 288 'Vhough oft Lhc straws were sttunpy stuhlilc think one -hs., -,- ,--vzfvlc-'J :fu-::-:::: -A: - - - gf- -- -Ja- Pembroker ii 'I If . . . li 4' lzchtor of the lnlJer , I V lJl'f1l'S1'I'-, A t QQ 4L il Please consider the following joke. lt is t' 1, not original. 4 .E It lg F1'r,vl l'rn1bl'olcr'r--llitl you hear about the 'lt ll German sulnnzirine sinking :tn lrish battleship? 4? il 'r Srrmlzf I,I'!lIbI'Clt'1'I',-llOlV perfectly tlreutl- li lt lull :Xml were :ill the sailors drowned? ft ft if tj Fir. x'.' l'fnzbrflv'1'-No, it seems they were :ill Cork men. 4 'T I 4, t 4 1 . . . . . . l ' flvote to l3egtnners: Lork is at city in lrelzlntl, 1' lt :intl eork is at sulwstztnee whieh, like Ivory Soup, li I llo:tts.l 4, i' , 1 4' Yours truly, ,P W i, 4' 4 n 1 4' 4--.V HJ Shertn Strong, 'l5. W 'llhznnks for the joke, SllCl'Ill.'l'l' lfrf. Of course we know that, under orclinztry cir- cumstances, you never saw at glass of port fozim uwuy like this, but therein lies one of the deft ll1C wlol' 'll ml' 'WSC' touches of our cleft tnintl. We refuse to point out the other three touches in the :above idea for after all what good is at pun if you have to punish yourself to explain it? ji,f1g.f-Say, Doe, what can l take to retluee Doe.Cf1n,rrM'l'zllie nothing for 3 months, old l iddo. There's a. Law Against This This Little Scene is lrztid in the Corridor of Blztxcy llztll E! ' WGST iv 31 Uyufon A Prof. ?0lIIl C. Dullnlllly-3l'liere's at 13 4 - . I lztw :tyzunst that, Nlr. Stanley. 2, Pun. v1. - Nu. s7u-L13-l-g4-S!- PR - FWZ- Ki' - .. .. E M it . , QM 1 1 . . . . -- LQ , S , 2 ' C' 'D ' .uf-.sm,,1,'y,f11m,t- Dirt- Dmfl lm- DIPILUV- 114,011 f l l'nn not smoking, professor. QW 'lghmu-V, tffQ,g.n,A UZQAM UJ'UVxsA ld-fl QNYWYV-flf0YK3lVVlla ' - 'dial-L, Prof. K.. IJ.-Well, you have your lwit 'lj Qt,c,n7l' 'P ' 'D I i l'1l'liU1A!'0llf1, AA, dVl, Jiifvvn, , pipe in your mouth. V'M' C4rtrvt.Q,U , amd 4l.QafJ7m4,-.tibe . Aholau - , , , ClU4t'v1.Q.0ll J ' v ,ll1'. -S.,.I1lI!I.l' D. 17. lx.-klfell l know 'By-pq. GYULMAT l tt, and l ve got my foot tn my shoe: lbffff24,:5ss55,f5 5g:5:,,., D03 lfjff? but l'n1 not w:tlking.s 'fsssss-fsssfsfffsfffr 4 l gg:::3,ESaS -' -. -: 289 FOR DI PERA ws-tene 0H,LET3 so TSE 5 TMS RM. TO T WE TAK EM NQER -ro TH ON UT S I C B TAT +1.11-- ' LAST SEPTEMBERE ' LET3 go T0 EITHS OR' STATION AGENT NEXT SEPTEMBER, STATIC Q ASK Tue NEW Q2 organ recital this aternoon NINE TEEN EIFTEEN What is Pi Kappa? It is :1 farce. Going to the Symphony to- night? Nopeg going to Prof. Gorham' Look Here, Cap. Crowell, How About This? There was a young man from Melrose, XVore tan' on the end of his noseg When asked why he done it, l le said for the fun it All'o1'tlt-d the girls ol Melrose. Flf GETTFNG A CUT FROM CLASS LETTERS WE FORGOT TO SEND lily rlrar tllarDormlrl.A Owing to outside influences l have not been able to arrive at the history class for several months now. Of course, l am very sot'ry to have been :tbsent for l :tm told that you have been at your best, but you know how it ts. As l feel l am pretty low to the ground in your course, having been away so long, would you mind dropping around to the room to-night, if convenient, at say S o'elock, and give me a brief but thorough resume ofthe lectures I have missed? X ou will have to be well prepared, as l expect Doc Marvel around at 8:20 to help me make up a little gym. Sincerely yours, etc. Dear Draft,- Sorry not to have answered your note sooner, but' the truth is l haven't had time to attend to it. l hope you will not consider it as at personal atlront, my not calling to see you, but if you will believe me, 1 make very few calls these daysg my health will not permit it. I will try to get over to see you about the iirst of the week. lf, however, the matter is very urgent, and your note led me to think it was, eoulcln't' you just step over to the room some night just after supper? l'm generally in about that time. Very sincerely yours, etc. 291 LIBER BR UNENSIS Even So 1917-Yes, I have a brother at Yale Who's in the Skull and Bones. 1918-VVell I don't want to brag, but I'm in the Sock and Buskin, myself ISH AWRIGHT 1 Stucy Phelps Qfelicitouslyj-I hear Harold Kimie is badly burnt. Curlis Qi. e. p. o.D-VVhy yes, he is, Stug you sec Spike Staff told him ll Liber 'ok d ' ' ' ' J c an .1 smile lit up his whole face. 292 THUS IT WAS 01' Everytime the Clock Ticks The Senior was amajoring, About the Senate bar, His beer was Wet as Wet could be:- And so was my cigar. I ought to bef, I heard him cry, Quite far from here, quite farf' And he was right. As you may guess He ought have been instead, Asenioring, astudenting To cop the golden med. Oh give me of your bark, O birch,', Ctreej VVas all the poor boy said. The birds were buzzing in the trees, It was a curious sight, The semest was semestering, QI hope you get me rightj And this was odd, because, you know, It was the dead of night. The Theron and the Registrar Were taking in the cash, They clapped at it, they snapped at it, My word but they were rash- Nleaning to say of course, you know, That they were rather pash. me W7 V m x , 0 - . 5? . 2 293 :fo Xb '4Oh stewdents, come and talk with us, The C. R. did beseech, 1 A pleasant chat, all through your hat, A schedule that s a peach lVe'll hand to every hally one And every single each. l ' 'X 2 c The Senior came and saw, and heard, Salt tears were in his eye, Oh, give to me, my dear degree, CI'1n sure l heard him sigh.j I'll pass the thirty hours I need, l'll do it if I die, -JG -X- -X- -X -X- -X- The Dean was cleaning in his chair, His mustache on his ee-ah, VVhere Deans are wont to hang them up VVhen no one else is ne-ah- The while he Uskunn at, solitaire And sipped the Deaner's bee-ah. There came a knock upon the door, And underneath it. ran A stream of water, senior tears, lVept by our manly man, The Dean did hide the telltale cards, His pocket hid the can. 294 - 77 Come in, come inll' and with a grin The Dean felt of his nose To certify that his mustache Was there in sweet repose. A lovely day, it seems like May, Last night I froze my toes. Oh can the wceps and spill the dope,', I think the great man said. Oh give to me my dear degree, QThe Senior bowed his headj l'll pass the thirty hours l need Or you may damn me dead. X 'JG if 'XA 'X -X The Stenog and the Prexy Prex VVere holding forth in state, CThe things they did were awful things Which 1 cannot relate.j Said he, 'flf this cold weather holds, Then we can have a skate. I've had a good time in my life, For instance, in New Yorkg f W They say I fell down in a faint VVhen I got up to talk, V Instead of that--oh, yaasl oh! yaasff f 73 I tripped upon a fork. 451 Cocamooonsr f - - -oo-ooo fl LIBER BRUNENSIS - Then came the knock upon the door, The conversation shockedg The dismal brine came under fine, The while the Stenog moekedg The birds were buzzing in the trees,- The Carrie Tower clockedg And so the tale runs on and on. The Senior wailed his woe, The Prexy Prex did listen well, He said, I think it so, But just the same the time has come .is ,Lf-ss., 'f Y 498 When frogs should learn to crow. l weep for you,', the Prexy said, I deeply sympathize, ' But men may come and men may go So dry your streaming eyes. It was a funny thing to say, But it was wondrous wise. f!!' .xnn- Jig' -Tan- I. ' 5 6 J 5?- 9 The semest was semestering, No cloud was in the sky. No birds were flying overhead-- CThere were no birds to flyl The Senior seniored down the Hill, A cast was in his eye. 296 X, ' x I ll! f f -f . fl W ! i f X ff X if XX X! N H ' X W sock' , i f ' '79, x - X rn! - 010 0 Xxx XXX f fl Qi X ! f xX .x 5 W f ep . S, ' POWN L g!! K Q43 Eh! Z: . 32 xx-. , ' Nl ' '-,fy ? if wffmwliui Alt' ir' 5 .twlYMmifvZj'i 'ii-5kx.,-gig DAQTMOUTH 2+ - X N if' 1 n 1111 'if ' f,:L:Jf- Kidz? - Hfke if ff: Juv' ffff, '7fEfJff, l Ji f f not 'an-dl -Q.-::: ll ,I i::El?:!g::i,35- X, I mg 1 LL ' fgz' F II lil' El: - Qvx .vie ws ' I Il ll ll! ll 1 1 : Q0 Wm ?-, 1 A PRO! IIR 'PHINL1 TI-IE HEIGHT OF ABSENTMINDEDNESS The man who cleans his fingernails With his gloves on. Sharon Brown does this sort of thing in his quest for the literary blasc. Honest!!! 297 LIBER BR UNENSIS How is it Anthony knows so much about automobiles F just by listening. He was at bartender for years and years. Q. l'5l'N 'Mfr' SURE ENUFF, ANOTHER BROWN UNLON An OP'1'IMIS'I' is a man who throws a summons from the Dean into the wastebaskel. without looking at it and pays no attention to it and thinks he can get away with it. - 298 I u 6 Strong-Graham's going with Herman, the great I ' magician, after he graduates. - I ' I' ,W t ' - .X -' Stansbury-Why I thought Herman was dead! . -. Strong-Ile is. QQ I - 'iw ' .xX! X S 1 l N Q 1 I 1 M nu- x X 4,6 V f X V+ P A -N, 1 ' U I ist.. ,ms i X ti l Q N , fi- :F f'i'SY'N' f -L . ' A .- A ttf- Yi -:At 3-tliilxjw, rx V.. Wh ' I , 'W 15' 'Ntbt , . . , it 1.230 I -':'-s .,-l,x,- Doc Dunnmg Told Thls 111 Class and .5 1 tilt f - .sis .- .Nil X ii N Sald It Was True X vis? I 5 U l I3ernhrolter-What, do you think of women who I 5 ifit - Q nnnntate men? A N ', 'W ' 1 Student-l should say they were damned fools. WAQ A Pcmbrolter-Then you'll have to admit the imita- NWC - 5 tion's a success. H. -ri, ' ' 'U 'ti L9 . , I .J lt. 'lt 7.52 ' 1 4 -N f ' ill, t 1 lt .yt 1' V. Y I SPIKUS STAFFUS 1915 A. D. BIOLOGICAL CLUB LANGLEY CAUGHT N SHAMEFUL I CT Jealousy the Motive llead of Newport A. C. Disgraeefully Scratches Cheek ol' john llenry Nolan the lVelllcnown Sporting Man in Nlad Burst of l renzy.-liyewitnesses of Foul Deed Call It Klost Ileinous in the llistory of Crime.-Langley A Sad Yietim of Personal Pique. One man lies bleeding and f?l'l'll!lP.Y dying, and over ten men sit shocked beyond description as the result of what has been called one of the most vicious attacks in the annals of assault. 'l'he outrage was perpetrated when Mr. Nolan, the be- nevolent l ight Promoter, questioned Klr. I,angley's prerogative and then de' manded that his perquisites of ofliee be shown. Itis not: known what Mr. Nolan would have gone on to Sily, for at this critical moment he was rudely interrupted by the infuriated President.. ln a transport of rage the head ot' the Newport A. C., oblivious to the clignitics of olliee, hotly denied the implications and in a burst of wild frenzy positively llew from the rostrum and tore open the fleshy part of Mr. Nolan's eheel: with his sharp Iingernails. Before the infuriated man could be parted from his prey. Mr. Nolan had swooned dead away. 'l'hc shocking xmair, in the words of one ol' the prominet elubmen, has stirred up a bitter feeling among the members. 'l'he esprit de Ieorps :has been destroyed. Not only may NIV. Nolan die as the result of a dread infection that has set in, but there is a current belief gaining ground that Mr. Langley may not only lack the prero- gative ol all presidents but also the perquisites so essential . . , . . 299 -ms Evra-103 FLM Co.,INc. FEATURING I ADARNE FULE QD m UN , .ALL In A LIFETIME PROVIDENCE APLAY warn A momu.. 0FFucE Sdlmww 47 Ew HACH. CaR,a 0 E 3.M-STPONNQ HE Goes To con.u.ec-:E How ARE Y'xm? in 52 . W ? I y g xX WWW 5 N' W A 7 I- 5 i f FW HE ATTEND5 cuxsses HE s-rubves HE Mens A Gum. ig- Q DOWEGETANG 6 1 QW, E-5 E., 1 x- X J w NJ CRACKEQ3 ww!-0 Tms? E E Q 112135 . H llullllml n HE gash s-rum HE MEETS A EEL,-ow EHE oossrirmeno cussfs su ou! mv coo, Q y l l PASSED By THE 0 ' IRRA1-noNAu. BOREU 1 To 0 Ssusnessness Geo. FoR1'uNE,Cr4AnRMAN. HE NEETS THE DEAN HE DOESNQT ATTEND 'COLUSGS PAT!-IOS FLM Co - NINE TEEN FIFTEEN BLITZEN OF THE BREADLINE Blitzen wished that he might wear his raincoat and overshoes into the reception room, for overshoes always made him look and feel important. But he contented himself with polishing his shoes with his handkerchief, powered his nose, and crossed the threshold. Miss KIcGoogles of the Swan Point Seminary trembled at the sight of his impressive figure, and stood where the sun might glint upon her gold tooth as she smiled ecstatically, quizzically, and questioningly. Blitzen looked at her mas- terfully and murderously from beneath his nondescript pompadourg then he licked his shapely lips. Are you the real Blitzen of Brown F' began the spinstcr tremulously. Yessir, madam, I is! G. Peemont Blitzen! he retorted, his voice rasping like a fourteen carat steel saw. HG. Peemont! Oh, isn't that a 'funny name!,,' giggled the lady gently. Damn romantic, I thinklli' bellowcd G. Peemont wrathfully. Certainly, sir,'l cried Miss McGoogles rapturously. lt,s odorously romantic! But why would you teach school?', Well, I want to have a plea for the exceptionally intellectual man. Also, I am profoundly interested in beautiful young girls-preferably those of female gender! Is money no object to you?', she queried timrdly. Don't be so damned impertinent! I prefer not to sayin he thundercd, wagging his left ear furiously. The lady shuddered at the resonance of his voice. I shall now consider your qualifications, she breathed, as serious as Dana Hubbard. Were you active while in college? Yes-no-well, somewhat. She smiled knowingly-that is to say, Theron Clarkishly at him. Did you play baseball, football, pool, or chess? ,Were you .a runner, actor, sin er swimmer or ohtician? Did ou bclon Y to the C R C, Socialist, Plnloso uh- g , , rg Y s r ical, Art, or Durfec Clubs? Were you a member of the Student Volunteer Band or your Class Pipe Committee? Tell me, were you a member ofthe Sphinx?,' fC0'lLlf1L1t6'd on page 306D Hubbard: I thought youid cut out smoking. Dzmran, Ihr Scoffirh Sphinx: I did until I- found I could, then I began again. PoTAsH AND PERLMUTTER I 301 LIBER BR UNENSIS H gncq E P+ T 'Hmmm Mass von F5752 UI ll, ,-'a-470' -s 5 fx i '23 Q .5 'S A IU -Q f-NN . Q -Q -, fs A 'N -5-EN-N A-R 'K 'x fn'-s'3s - ,- j,f- fs g Ig -Q Q. f fs'-Vx 'N 'N - fs,-X P' -s ,-C' .-. 1-sfg 'fs,,. A .5 fx ,Q fs Prexy in chapel after his visit to New York: Why, I saw men in line wh waiting for a loaf of bread for four years. Ode to a Theatre About to Be Torn Down O thou dazzling crypt of vain iniquity, Reeking hall of subtle passions and strange thrills, Many a golden hour, unwisely passed, is spent ln gazing spell bound, on thy stage arrayed With blithe? young? dancers? sea-ntily adorned. Ah! Hence, thou sinful thing, vile and hell born, Thou misinterpretor of virtues, pure, sublime, Foster-mother of all vice that men e'er dreamt, Depart whence thou didst come! , Hell fire awaits Thy crumbling timbers, hence, be gone! be gone! 302 o had been M ID 1355 mg . 5? 6 - :DI l X- P Z lj' z '4 ' f,-, M . li. Q' i---1 -V-.- I v 1 ' -Wi -T- ,- ' H.. HE us EITHER ' GUILTY OF A Gnoss ms- s, . 3 -.- Rsvnsssnmmu X N W ' I I 0R 11- L x it mf I ' wg 'E ..-2. A 1 . .... ii E ' f1 ' ' . -l' i I A l- Q 1. X :I W , l Ai qggxxvivww. c' ' ' CAN 1 nAvg -rug NEXT DANCE ? xv I ' 1 on TWO ? Q4 X-IH. 1 Q A 513 :ine 1 ' :ASF 2 : I T f I f-I+-LERE ISNH- Muon THAT HNK-fZCArJ1 D5 l SAYL T l N10 THE 62 TH RV ME. :S AP. QJYNO 63,0 17 'Z HALL. THRV NF. I5 THE WAY INTO THE 7 EXAM Ll ECW.. ETERNAL WGE Jvs I MOVED LOFTQ ramen 'THE DREA Tue LO ST OPLE. AMONG I OF ,zaowwfs ATHLLTE3 ' CNITH Avotonxas 'rg 'DANTEJ R'B'Q '5f LIBER BR UNENSIS - I -....-- , . ' ' ' Tig -' ' 'Y U - . N :I XM . -I ' ' 'ff-V U U . . L AE -N--s -as .- ' N I Y T , H- -, I t 'EVERY 'I 52003 - , 'Lt-s . HEATRE X' X31 all fl.: Late! V, if Y- df ff-- ,, I A-fx-4 if 'M':Z2',:'7 --.. I -,NL W l ' rg .i . I' I Zoo -..X .,,. 'l Q t . ' fl-5f '5'? '.x X ' 0 . , ,li '---- ' kill'-' I --L 5 il ul- li I ,, lik ocoggo A ' X x M L. r W A4 1' lr 04,0000 :T i 1 f 4' : 1. -f 1 A ,A 0 001, 00 X-1 A - I ,A z ii 'I 0 OU U0 IM' 255.153 ,-4- c00000f, . 1. 5' I' Qfisf-.1, P 0 offoooow 9 f 'ij-'S-fif' U of' 00 uf' if 1 I 1,1-fziff 0 U - ,.4, f - --I. j 0 U U 0 U0 U31 il A il- 4 I , 0002015100 61 , I X ' 0 ' ff i l Q I2 U li Q 2 N X Hill ii ' I ,l . fff f 1 ill? ' Isn't this a pretty picture? I should say it was,-a very pretty one, but what is the moon doing in the distance? Oh that is to show it is late at night, that it is 10:55 P. M. Who is the little lady? She is a actress and she acts in the swell theatre which you ought to see in the background. Who is the nice looking boy? I-Ie is a stage door Johnnie, but he is known to his friends as Irv Greene. Oh my! Isnlt his hat funny? You bet cha! And his pants are funny, too. Look at lem! NVhy do his feet seem so big? Because the moon is shining on fem, you dear sweet thing. Is he digging in his trowsers for money? Oh, of course not! He forgot that he had his hand in his pocket. Now he is taking it out so as to shake hands ' ' ' ' Sl kes hands with her? By golly, I don't with her. What will he do after he sua knowg but he says he knew her motherf, 305 BLITZEN OF THE BREAD LINE Kfontinuedfrom page 3015 No, he faltered, striving to hide his confusion. Did you drink, smoke, swear, edit the Herald or Brown Hand Book? What did you do? Heavens to Betsy! Damn you! I mean Damme! he stuttered wildly. I made CIP B K, Brunonian, Waste-basket, Circle Francais, and extra man on the wrest- ling team, until I got canned for breaking a guy,s neck. I know everything from Algebra to Zoology. Good Lord, woman! I got a B in History 13! The lady's face was now immobile in its native grandeur. Ugh! fb B K, she hissed petulantlyf' 'cThat's an awful admission. You must have made a terrible mess of your college course. I wanted a needlework in- structor. You're shape is prepossessing enough, but you're ignorant. Good day! Blitzen went to pieces. He grovelled on the floor, tears caroming off his cheeks to the carpet, as he feverishly kissed the buttons on the lady's shoe. Plc-ease don't send me out to starve! he begged. Miss McGoogles bent over and kicked him conpassionately in the jaw. Poor wretch! she whispered dramatically and magnanimously. Hike down cellar and chaperone my furnace for a space. You'll be no worse off than many other flb B K men. And among the ashcans Blitzen found I ' his life work, often grappling mind to mind with the janitors. Why Isn't This a Good Idea ? About this time of the year many busy seniors are harrassed almost to death by well meaning people by such questions as what are you going to do next year? In accordance with its usual philanthropic policy of the public he pleased the Liber has got out a very atlrac- ' tively embossed Vermillion card, blank on one side and inscribed or engraved on t'other. You wear the card around on the lapel of your coat, blank side uppermost. When some dear creature meets you and puts the ques- tion, then you reverse the card, smile, and await con- sequences. While the card may be inscribed with any- thing you jolly well please, the Liber is suggesting little phrases like, Take up p. g. work in Chem, Ro- mance Languages, History, Bib. Lit., Math. and Art. Sureg go to Harvard Med or Columbia Law. None of Your Damned Business, etc. etc. V THE LAST OF THE MOHEGANS 306 OH DEAR, I'M DED! The Truth About C and C, or a Night in the Hole of. Holies BY MYSELF First, let me say a word about myself. I am a tall handsome young fellow, well knit, where it is really most essential, broadshouldered, deep-lunged and all that sort of stuff, combining my native supplety of movement with remarkable christianity, modesty, brain power and an indescribable charm of manner. Whenever I appear upon the street, whether with or without, I am immediately the object of admiration of countless numbers of harmless young fiies. Add to this, the fact that I am one of the smoothest young chaps with one of the finest voices you will find and you may get some sort of a con- ception of the kind of a guy I really am. Now my story happened this way. I entered the Union one fine afternoon and cast about. It was with no little feeling of satisfaction, you may be sure, that I saw my reflection mirrored in the smooth white balls in the Pool Room, or be- held it in a hot, rich bowl of oyster stew in the Lunch Room. I was in a fine fettle, I was eager for any adventure. Nondescriptly emerging from the Union, I espied a handkerchief lying on the sidewalk. At once I was all alert, for I knew something dirty was afoot. Things rapidly went from bad to worse, but I merely waited for something to happen. The trouble started when Rube Cram began thumbing his nose :inf qui non at Carrie Tower, while old reciprocity Curtis went around with averted eyes and a very shifty expression. Obviously, the situation was becoming desperate. It was terrible ....... To relieve the tension of the moment I conceived the idea of introducing a little harmless horseplay. Without disturbing the expectant hush that seemed to have settled down here and there, I unostentatiously approached General Jiggs O'Donoghue from behind and kicked him a stinging blow in the jaw. Under cover of the hearty merriment that followed, I drew near to Jonnie Abbott and filling his hat with clear running water, I jammed it down tightly over his ears, then wheeling promptly, I simultaneously engaged Ralph Brown Graham ,15 in conversation. Catching him off his guard, I cleverly grabbed him by the scruff of his neck and shook him violently in mid-air until his teeth rattled playfully in nervous agitation. The climax now came. The conspirators withdrew without a word to a dark room in which there was no light at all except that furnished by the usual electric fixtures. Hubbard, who had by this time been able to disguise himself as a dachshund, was crouched be- neath a table, nonchalantly smoking a cigarette butt. There were others present too, but I could not distinguish them for the room was so blue with tobacco smoke. Fortunately, I was not observed. The talk was at first of this and that, but presently it became concentrated. There was a great hum drum, followed by the senatorial cry of order,,' and this cry was repeated between five and six times. The meeting had begun. By this time I had become all attention, eagerly, I rested on the very edge of my chair. It was suggested that every bartender in town be made an honorary member, but Falk rose in protest, maintaining it would be making the organization too damned cosmopolitan -those were his very words. ' 307 LIBER BR UNENSIS Ah, hah I cried drawing my muHIer tighter, here is mystery! I must sec this throughi' and I waited with breath baited. The mystery thickened and all looked askance. Hartwell Greene proposed an adjourned meeting at the Senate, wherever that is, and then the light started. The tumult was awful. Above the deafening din Irv Greene shouted at the top of his voice, I knew her mother but he was not heeded, for there was pressing business to be done. And the men knew it. Then came the denouement. I was for shooting the son-of-a-gun, and doing it on the spot, but Nell demurred CNell was of Southern originj. ThenI waved my arms and sang the national an- them and challenged any man present for a hors de combat. In a word, I was be- side myself with fury. Presently, mid the din, came the choking voice of Billy Shef. It seems to me, he said, that we have an informer present, one who has not felt our hidden mysteries. And all the time Bill said it, he kept looking at meg I tell you it was one of the most disconcerting moments I have ever passed through. Then he said point blank, Are you an informer? Well, I'll leave it to any of you, what could I do in a case like that? Why yes, I amf, I said, hoping he would let the matter drop where it was. Have you learned any of our sacred secrets P he asked. Sure, I replied, for the discussion was boring me. At this point, Abbott broke into the conversation. He said, Do you know what we do with informers ? I parried skillfully, I think so, I said, that is to say, I don't think sof, Abbott up to this time had taken no part in the conversation whatsoever, you may well consider my surprise at his intrusion. W'ell,,, said Abbott continuing, we drown 7cm.77 'X' -up 'X- 'X' 'X' -X- As they were drowning me in P. O. 's bathtub, in order to stall for time, I sug- gested drawing lots. Well, Sheffield held the lots and I drew the shorter. Does that mean I am to drown, I asked, scanning the faces about me for a ray of hope. It does, said Valentine courteously and that ended the argument. So, I drowned and they all stood around laughing as though their hearts would break. But I gave up the ghost like a gentleman, even though the next morning I had to cut my eight oielock. WHAT: ANOTHER GYM BALL 308. ---l NINE TEEN FIFTEEN l QQ L i THIS IS ALL THAT A FRATERNITY HOUSE MEANS TO SOME OF OUR FAIR PROVIDENCE FRIENDS YES! UNDOUBTEDLY You'RE RIGHT. 309 5 1 . ----:Z LIBER BR UNENSIS - WHY MEN FAIL FITTY FITTY lst. Gent-Wlu1L's El Nlonologuc, old top? 2nd Gent-NVcll, for instance, if you and the Dean wcrc conversing, it would lic :L Mcvriologilc. lst G.-I tliouglit Llml was ai Dialogue. 2nd G.-A Dinloguc is when Iwo pci'- -sons :irc talking. Goodfellowshiponthe campus Hello, Rubcy, you old x?-lx . , 'x? . . z . . ??. How Lo x.!! ?z arc you?' ctc. By Jing! Val Valentino! and when did you get brick and liow is cvcry '7 ' . . . ? little thing down in tlic big city? ctc. Why if Llicrc :1in'L my olc friend lfllic Falk. By xxxxxx zzZzzz???'l' but l'n1 ggg??--...zxl glad to scc yur etc. E'E f A JV I LE: .t A V 7 ' A: , Q '310 A UV? on P05 JVNJQR -u mga warms Z' ' - W F N gr is ,X X- . ,Cant WED: C R ACKE R BOWL ILL UWFFIQLD TAYL Q R To bite, NW Hafy A bfibif Pas - .P 2i.,Q.pmr:s. 'SE YWG, BY A SPY 0- ?RES.Jl fibougguvc T9 You f 11 np. 11 0 'Vo Q' g 9 I' ,,x7 r-1, ,L i SQDQXCQ -. Lufilg Iqhu J i evvad Yo! Res!-Ni C ARVS --2 LIBE-R BR UNENSIS EXTRACTS FROM THE REAL DIARY OF A REAL FRESHMAN ' Sept. 28. I am quite popular already because a boy told me I could use the John Hay Library any time I wanted to if I would buy my blanket tax off him, I said I brought my blankets from home and he laughed. Last night I was invited to join the Brown Union but I guess I can sneak out of paying the fee. Sometimes I can use another fellow's ticket and othertimes I can walk in backwards, then the man at the door thinks I am coming out. The Union is just like a real swell club because there's one room with a piano and regular cuspidors in it and then there is a coat room where you can get your overcoat swiped most any time ..... Oct. 4. -I am even rnor: popular than I was. Everybody wants me to join their frats. There's about seven I wouldn't join for love nor money, they ain't even got a pool table. I'm considering the other offers. We have great chapel scrvicesg none of the profs ever butt in except a fellow called Prexy and they say he has to. He sits up on a platform with three chairs just like a regular referee. I like chapel, yesterday I had a fine nap and this morning I won 17 cents oPf'n the guy who sits next me ....... Oct. 24.-I'm still getting popular. Today at least five bro:.ds, that's what we call girls around here, called me up on the telephone and wanted to make a date with me. I tell you I was pretty busy keeping it all straight. I don't believe jenny would care if she don't know about it. A fellow when he goes to college ought to be able to cut loose, and then, too, these girls are so different from jenny. They are awful lively ....... Nov. 15.-I got a lot of things they call mid-terms today. Even the profs are after me now . . . . . Dec. 2.-Gym started to day. It's a great place, but by jing! it's awful uncon- ventional. Everybody laughed when I brought my bathrobe. Then there's a lady who plays the piano and I shudder every time I have to go past her. My word! I wish you could see the fellow who leads the class. His name is Lucius Gay and maybe he can't do the poker. Say, but he's a card ...... jan. 15.-I am learning all the new words, now. For instance they call the girls who go to Pembroke, that's the womenis college, you know, hams.', Then when you go to the theatre you go to the sink, Also it is the custom of real men to purchase night caps, you can get them at the Senate, last night I had one called Ward S. Then every fellow is supposed to play in several leagues I play in a league up by Randall Square, another one down by Fox Point, anotherxone down on South Main Street, another one over to Miss Wheeler's School, and another over on Smith Street. Ilm awfully busy, too, these days,-going to the movies. playing pool and what not ..... A Feb. 10.-Exams are over now. They were funny things, but I killed all mine all right. ' Feb. ll.-If I had more time I could have passed a better English I exam, but I guess I got by all the others. Feb. 12.-I don't care if I am ineligible,I wasnit going out for football in the fall anyway. I passed Chemistry and I've got a drag with the Dean, so I should worry. Feb. 13.-Mr. Guild wrote me a nice letter today telling me I couldnit come back back to college. I don't care, I know a fine place down South where .... 312 NINE TEEN FIFTEEN E33 ABOLITION QF NIAIC E - UPS SONIEVVHAT OF' A HINDRANCE There was a blond bobbie 'named Mac Went around with a load on his backg When asked how he didit He said, I'11 admititf' So you'1l have to go hand it to Mac. TI IIC MORNING AFTICR 'I'IrII'I NIGHT BI'1I ORI'1 Il was the morning after dass Day. All had gone as well as could be expected-- :1II things considered. IYcII, she siinpered, scratching her hack with her Iefl foot, they have Icfl the dead trunks of the ehns still staiinling. IVhy do they keep up such zi pretense?,' Merely to string the Izinterns next year, I SllPPOSC.,, replied the W.0rlhy Sen- ior slapping zinotlier incisquito. 313 I-IOW TO WIN A COMPETITICN or Scintilating Suggestions for Snappy Scuts By the LIBER Jack Dunning was idly perusing his morning mail, gentleman's fashion, when he came across a chic bit of pale Vermillion. Ah hah, he muttered, snipping open the envelope expectantly, what is tl1is?,' Hardly had the words popped from his mouth than the following lines popped from the envelope:- Halleluja, I'm a scut! Halleluja, scut again' Halleluja, save the pieces! To revive us, Amen. If the indulgent reader will pause a moment in his mad chase after the plot of this piece, let him draw a life sized picture of the good fellow as he read and reread this peculiar invocation, Salutation. not to say hallueination. Consider, if pos- sible, his perturbation as he scanned in vain the mystic verses backwards and for- wards, criss-erosswards and up-side-down-wards for some hidden meaning. Aceordingly,in less time than it takes to say it,Jack had the Liber on the phone at the main office and appealed for an explanation. The little Liber sat right down where it was and decided that the jingle was thc fruit of some demented scutfs brain, and that the only way it could keep scuts from disintrgrating mentally in the fut- ure would be for it to spill a little of the inside dope as to how to win out in a com- petition. There is one thing a scut should always keep before him, he must get a drag with the gents running the competition. lylake them think you are one of them. Treat them with an air of bland familiarity, in other words kid the very pants ofT'n 'em- If this won't get you by, then nothing will for everything else has been tried. Take the following case: . The Varsity is getting walloped by some prep school boys, say from R. I. State, and old Buck Whittemore is telling the team between halves in his cha-racteristic off-hand manner where they ought to go and what they remind him of. Just at the critical moment the football scut should dash-up, clout old Buck on the back and cry, 'At a boy, Buck, ol' kid, bawl 'em out, ol' fellow. Another good way 314 NINETEEN FIFTEEN Z- for the scut after one of the managerial jobs to get in right is to tell Robby or Sprack something about the inside way to play the game. Or better still make Charlie Huggins think you're a man. Say Charlie has a guy like Ormsby on the table and is pulling off some of that adhesive tape and Ormsby is yelling like Hell. Step right up to Bill, slap his slapee, and shout, Close youire trap, you little pupf' If pos- sible, get in right with Dr. Marvel. Go down to the gym with him and watch the poor devils performing on the floor. If you see a guy loafing in the back row, just draw the doctor's attention to it. Thusly can the managerial scut get by. If you want to make the Ilerald, give lfldinger an idea for an editorial, intro- duce Hubbard to a pretty girl, or buy Taylor a cigar. It also helps if you can get some real live news when there's none in hand and the Oxford is calling for copy. One of the first things a scut should learn to do is to make news. Of course this may get you canned from college, but i - N A then it will give some rival scut extra points. A good way to get live dope is to trail, say jonnic Greene or for that mat- X'-. . ter even Doc Dunning. Or go down by Billy Mac,s some night and hurl a brick through his bedroom window and see a 2 what will happen. in and hurl a brick through his window Suppose you wanted to make the Brunoniau. Of course this is purely hypo- thetical, but just suppose you did. All you would have to do would be to go to Brown, Blanchard, Rogers, any of them and say, Yes, lim very much interested in literatur-r-r-reg when I ever get a minuteis time you can just bet, by George, I'll write a story for the Brunonianf' Theyill hold a special meeting and elect you for that. The Liber is the only competition in college in which pure intelligence counts. You just simply can't bluff the Liber gents. You've got to be there, you've got to be able to write something clever like this. 315 -gg-s: LIBER BR UNENSIS HAROLD CLARENCE KINNE 3 months and 7 days Member of C and C Prexy Says Who Wants to hire a man who doesn't know how to butter his bread properly, whose table manners are shocking to the most refinedln Agreed with Prexy to the letter, and having become cognizent lately of the disgraceful etiquette at the Sen- ior Table, We are here publishing some of the rudimentary essentials of :avoir faire at meal time. If your soup is too hot, don't blow or spit in itg this is wry ungentlemanly, and is not usually done by those an regle. ' If a piece of meat escapes your plate, snap at itg 'then playfully Hip it at your vis-a-vis. This will add zest to the general rnerriment and is considered especially chic by the best of folk. If you should miscue and spill your coffee in your IlClghlJO1',S lap, hastily assure him you did not care for it anyway. Such is the Way of the genial sort and those Who know. . It is generally considered poor form to stick your gum on the under side of the table. Put it on the nearest vacant chairg then if you forget it, someone else is sure to remember it. '316 '. '.'.'l fi J T1 'fQ17f'3!Xi'12 A A ' EH, U iff ,41,,, 1 r I I f J I wi 'V' - 1' 3 wk ji X'-V' fi -'T 1 . -,.... 'AY 'R'B'GU'u' 5 ,' .1 ' PORTRAIT OF A MAN TRYING TO GET INTO HELL fDanIuj Conrlnfy Lemgclon lo Ihr Clzm' - I doxft see why everyone thinks this is the front door of thc college. x 317 ,W E199 W lik:-, Q is 1 R A ,N 11 '1 1 X Q 6 , f . N AWS-x1Sxxw:4,.,1l., , ' - '-5 X V - A - .M f Q N AND THIS +4fl, 8 am X QF QQ, WEBB? H ,1 X ANDTHIS' AND-mls? IF'HQA.E,'IS 'A'STIMULUS -To CIVILIZATION ,WHY' ISNI 013115, ? 'J if' gig.: V 4, ..,.. ... ,., L ..,. ,..... ..... .., ..... J T - 71 4 X Z1 '1' A' 4 - -'-:min AND ' THIS Y l I 6 Xu NINE TEEN FIFTEEN TUTORS UNDONE EVERYMAN HIS OWN All Committed Pro Bon by the Good Little Old Liber fThe following, made necessary by the abolition of makeups, is absolutely the :inf qua non in scho- lastic specualtion. The Liber has outlined each and every course in the college curriculum and ascer- tained the probable questions that will be asked on the final exams, so that the thickest skulls may now be able to get by the most cursory of glances. The Liber feels that for this act alone its little claim to immorality is splendidly justifiedj HISTORY 1.3 Complete Resumme of the Course MacDonald's' Documentary Source Book From Jefferson to Lincoln Lectures N0 T THE PROBABLE QUESTIONS 1 If War is a stimulus to civilization, why isn't this? 2. If War is a stimulus to civilization, why isn't this? 3. Compare the rise and fall of the American merchant marine with the Cal first national bank Cbl the second national bank, Cel native thrift, especially in New England. 4. What happened to me when jefferson started on his policy of retrenchment in fab New York, fbl in Przemsyl fel in the body politic, and state in each case why this shows that if War is a stimulus to civilization, why isn't this? DANTE Outline of Course You had better do the outside reading in this course for yourself. Classification of the inferno. Get thix. Important. First Circle Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth ' Seventh Eighth Ninth LIKELY QUESTIONS 1. See above. 2. Write on the Inferno. 3. Why did the streets of Florence run red with blood and what was the allegorical significance of the family tree. of Cal the Guelfs and of Cbl the Ghybbellines? 4. When walking with a young lady on which side should you spit? n. b. fomif any or all, I should worry.j Q'1'he faculty couI'dn't understand this exam, so I'm giving it to you. ENGLISH 34 Synopsis of Reading. About steen novels neither on the reserve shelf nor anywhere else in any library. A PROBABLE QUESTIONS 1. Who said, That is just the point?,' Why is he a great man? 2. Trace the birth of the picaresque novel using either the sceptical or the skeptical methods of ap- proach. flf you have no tracing paper with you, either omit 7 or skip it entirely. s 4. What does Trollope have to say in his Can You Forgive Her? Could you? Who wrote it? 319 LIBER I' N IQ: 1. par Q24 1 lla ly lllllllllll LL l,Lll,ll lil Llllf HUM MH llflll BR UNENSIS i Fl li -z D l ,Z IWNLM ...l-I The ex-College Politician Ain't this a sad picture? lt was painted by a blind girl who lives up over an undertaker's shop down by Fox Point. The scene is Tockwotten Park. ln the foreground are two men, they are twins, they are brothers. Sec the one on the left, the intelligent, happy, prosperous looking man? He was a Phi Beta Kappa man in college and a reformer. See the miserable wretch on the bench with his hair all frowsy, and a turkish towel for his bedclothes? He is an ex-college politician. lf he had not been this, he might now be a professor like his brother. Now, he eanlt even be an ash man, cause no one will trust him. Ain't it sad? l should say it was. In the morning the cop will chase him away. What will he do then? He will go to East Providence, there are no cops there. 320 f' H. ll eq ' , er SN l at lllr lxll f ' 1 THE ALIBI Get the anchor. this is very deep Q .Avlf V YY? I 'I 1 Two Ways of Getting a 119 B K Key 'l'l'll'1 NIGl'l'I' Ol llll I NION V XD ll Vll Orinshy 'Ili-Say, fuller, you want to lactp ,out uw open 'll'0llllLl ltttt Strauss 'lSqXVln'l Urntshy 'lla-Well, it's nothing to nie, hut if xou go lOllI1Cl with cm shut pto ale still tlnnl ion IL a damn fool. BUGS QA Lyrical Epicl 'l'here's hugs and hugs and hugs and bttgl, Thcre's hugs in everything, Tlicrc's hugs with stings and wings and things The 'Ven-Nlile where they spring. Tltcrcls hugs and hugs and hugs and hugs, 'l'lierc's hugs like Sltaron lirmvng TllLNl'C,S hugs with legs and lccgs, fthe elrt-gs,D lVlto sop :tronml clown-town. Thct'c's hugs antl bugf, and hugs ztmlllillfih, :XS you can plainly see, But what are hugs like these with those W'l1o run thc cross countree? PLUG OR PERISH A Utilitarian Tale A man I know, I know him well, Lived alone in a room Cnow waln't that swell?j In old University Hall. A studious lad with a careful head, He locked his door, when he went to bed, He locked his windows and all. Now, it chanced one night, as he lay in bed, With innocent dreams in his careful head, He found he wanted a drink. So what did he do but jump right up, Never stopping to get his cut glass cup, But ran-well, where do you think? As he raised his head he heard a bang- Ilis door had closed with an awful elangg The door he had left so widel The nighl was chilly, the breezes blewg 'l'hcH,loor was fast for the lock clicked true,-- l t our hero stood outside. The hall was bleak, the hall was bare Cap Cameron was-well, who knows where? The breezes whistled with joy. Imagine yourself his ghastly grin, I or he never could possibly ever get in, Poor cold, shivering boy. The night dragged on at a weary pace, And the dawn came round, as is often the case, On the heels of the dragging night. And a frozen corpse, on the wooden Hoor, The eight o'clock class found down by his cloorg Oh, unconventional sight! Another ending I might essay- It's moral, I trust, is clear as day- C'l'hat is, itis easy to see.J Is thisg-he stands on the frigid lIoor And easily opens the bolted door VVith a Phi Beta Kappa key I WWW lllfllllwww V 322 I l RALPH BROWN GRAHAM . . E TERTAINER s ' it ' .WlTH.MAGlC AND VENTRILOQUISM j ' A . Wholesome-Fun Willa an ii ,J ' .Eye to the Wishes bf Peode of Tulle ' N l A - A ADDRESS l ' 1 emu. shea 5: 2: PROVIDENCE. R. I. I A THUS The Prcstidigitator:-I knose a guy what doesnit know enough to go in when lt rains. The Prestidigitatorjs Goat:-Thassa nottini. I know a guy what doesn't know enough to get out of the shower when its off. Art for Art's Sake For instance, here is a poor Liber Artist. He has lost his way in the woods while search- ing for four-leafed clovers and now he doesn't know where he might bc. He is beside him- self in his wrath. Still, though his wandering feet have wandered, he is not without the light of a fair and delicious Providence. If the in- telligent light will only burn long enough the artist may be able to draw this picture of his- self and send it to Ye Liber. But we think 1zol,' the artist is Spike Stall. 323 ffmflgx W, 5 qv xh Q sg - WA 4' 2 if ',--' ' if Cfli yjf f i f X 1 fl! y X V S--1K 57.-.mf LIBER BR UNENSIS if--: 'fr' 325 -1--,A Mmgjfgciiifa Caffe gl- ':'...:- ' .aww sf+awt 5 asia n -ra O Tomas - f N f GENETM .49 f J g f if s , s I I .Q f un D 5 ,J K3 Cl .ll.rf,,,,,Wm Q Cf ,gf 2 - Cali .L U-A? A Q l LL. Q-f 7' if :ai-3. 5 . I i' is ' A gfs' The Choir on Anthem Morning BILL EICKE, THE ESCAPED IMPRESSIONIST, DILATES UPON THE GLORIES OF THE TEN MILE I-Iow charming ..... See it swirl and eddy .... purling stream. Now here, now there, it trickles, up a nearby tree trunk after some mocking squirrel, then pursuing a wanton pebble through the shady woods. I taste it .... Delicious . . . How delightfully salaeious it is, .... or is it saltaceous . . . . . . . or salubrious? 'Tis wonderful. Q Something presses me. I know what it is .... I shudder. What a sensation. The canoe is moored . . . no danger of tipping . . . still, why not'tip-the water is so delicious .... and the sensation .... I will wait. My attention is diverted. Something is moving on shore. Can it be that my secluded retreat had been discovered by a low, confounded East Providence cop? .' . . . I have wronged the cop. It is not he. It is a rabbit approaching through the tangled underbrush, hit or miss. I-low charming to con- sider his approach . . . Club in hand, I beat him back. Sly fellow! .... Sly scintillating, o'Ffl1e goes purring and wagging his tail .... , . Again I am impressed. Oh how unctiousl- .... Man is but mortal . . . I can stand it no longer . . . mortal is man . . , Ah, there it is again . . v. O-o-o-o-o-o . . . Blood-thirsty thing! You must die . . . With one blow I snipgher life . . . One mosquito less . , . . 324 -- i YE LIBER EXPLAINS IT imagine a lean, serawny, wizzenfaeed, dried-up, withered lien. Take :1 snap shot of the Hen. Have it enlarged. Save the negative ofthe picture. Send the negative to the cooks in the Union Dining Room and theylll make six C63 gallons of chicken soup out of it, and use the rest, after straining, for Cleleetilious chicken croquettes. CLASS ROOM SCENES III-Art II Bill Ormsbee Gets in Front of the Lantern at a Rather Inopportune Time Gas Indeed I erris '16. NVassa matter, Bunny, you look pale? Buruell '15, l've just been to the dentist's and he gave me gas. l . What did he give you gas for? B. Sois he could see to pull out the tooth, you poor hone. X F. My word! But you must have suflered awfully. Close '17. Well,-who got elected? Stanley ,l5. llarcourl, of course, and he said he was proud of it. C. Is he a crab? . . I u U I rhZx?gl5rclnFie?cfszf1l?lfeler S. Oh yes. Dreadful. Why it got so he couldn't go out of Brunonia Junior Circus without running down the street. T S FX TU' f K ,R ex 39 ,Qi tv X GT? X ta 0 . X f 5' Warn FWWW X 'si-Q-L l7RfXY DESCRIISING H15 Vl5lT AT Tilf FORD THEY LIGHT THT. GASOJINIQ AND TURN THEM OUT TWO Pill MINUTE CCHfW2L:FI8-10359 325 , LIBER BR UNENSIS li AND THE WAY WAS STREWN WITH ROSES Being an Account of the Itinerary of the Varsity Affirmative Debating Team Thursday, March 25-4:00 P. M.-Team leaves Providence for Williamstown. Sydney gives team his blessing: Workman acknowledges the compliment and orders colleagues to address him as Captain. 11 :00 P. M.-Arrives at Williamstown and takes possession of the best hotel. Friday, 10:30 P. M.-Team wins victory by unanimous decision of the judges. Horseshoe wreath, floral Gates Ajar, congratulatory telegrams and Wireless messages received from Teddy R., the A. O. H., Menorah Society, Mildred Lagerbeer, and the Housewive's League. Saturday, 7:00 A. M.-Combination-clerk-and-bellboy calls team. 7:10 A. M.-Breakfast served by waitress wearing silk gloves in honor of the team. 7:23 A. M.-Breakfast over. O'Brien distributes several Lincoln pennies to hotel minions. 7:30 A. M.-Team escorted to train by two vicious dogs-one is rather affectionate to Christy. 7:44 A. M.-Train for Troy, N. Y. 7:55 A. M.-Pass through Vermont. Conductor announces that this state belongs to Bill Littlejohn. 8:10 A. M.-Team purchases a New York Time: and discovers that negative defeated Dartmouth. Passengers share Brunonian joyousness and pandemonium breaks loose. A panic-stricken lady attempts to embrace Needham, but he repels her with his customary suavity. 9:15 A. M.-Troy, N. Y. Cluett, Peabody Co., gives team a linen shower which proves very refreshing. 9:30 A. M.-Albany. Gov. Whitman and full military staff meet team at train. Capt. Workman languidly addresses the staff upon the decrepit condition of the U. S. Army. 9:45 A. M.-Needham and Christy begin to drop post-cards to --- l0:30 A. M.-Staatsburg, and home of Thcophilus Dimmick. Center of German militarism. Corps of workmen removing Annette Kellerman posters all over the town. Station-agent observed reading Prof. MacDonald's Select Documents for amusement. 11:15 A. M.-Poughkeepsie. Dean of Vassar and flying squadron of Vaselines march to train with keys of college for team. O'Brien feelingly recites Rosetti's Blessed Damozel and graciously declines the Dean's kind invitation to luncheon as train is only making a ten-minute stop. 11:30 A. M.-Needham, passing through a parlor-car, gently pats what he thought was a baby's head, onlg to discover that it was the shiny pate of an irritable old gentleman, who had removed his toupee to ust rt. 11:57 A. M-Hamburg, N. Y. fWhere Harcourts gets onj Team feels hungry., 12:06 P. M.-Garrison, N. Y. The Secretary of War is not at home, but sends cheese-sandwiches and Nabiscos to team. I 12:10 P. M.-Team begins to act rough, starting a game of bid whist. 12:15 P. M.-Playing for the brakeman. 12:30 P. M.-Playing for the train. 12:40 P. M.-West Point. Cadets give salute of twenty-one guns, Hag is lowered and raised: Christy responds with three long Brown's. 1:00 A. M.-Ossining. Team inspects the prison. Workman suggests a few remedies to the management and distributes autographed photos to life-termers. 1:20 A. M.--Tarrytown. John D. arrives at the station all out of breath. Congratulates the team which had practiced for its debates in Rockefeller Hall and sends one of his famous Rockefeller ci- gars to Prof. Huntington. O'Brien plays 18 holes at golf with John D. 1:30 A. M.-Brown songs are sang: a Westinghouse brake carries the air. 1:57 A. M.-New York City. Team meets Dr. Stern. Needham kids the conductor that Doc is the Sterne person who wrote A Sentimental Journey in 11768. 2:35 A. M.-Sumptuous luncheon at Childs on Fifth Avenue. 4:30 A. M-Workman and Christy get homesick and leave the rest of the team in the big town. 5:30 A. M.-O'Brien and Needham after a fruitless search for Easter hats in several Sporty millinery shops, register at The Mills. ' 8:00 A. M.--Team inspects a bread-line, collects data for Prexy, then attends theatre. 11:00 P. M.-Team sets out to lamp the Great White Way. Needham soils his chamois gloves and barely escapes with his life in an ineffectual attempt to make a pick-up. . Sunday, 11 :00 A. M.-On the Bowery. Team looks vainly for Alger heroes and eludes a few fourth-rate pick-pockets. - 1:30 A. M.--More Childr. Team goes sight-seeing via jitney-bus. Needham begins to get cross-eyed but O'Brien is having the time of his life. 3:30 A. M.-Metropolitan Museum. Needham shows a keen interest in mummies. 5:10 A. M.-Team emharks for Providence, waving fond farewells to the Goddess of Liberty. 326 ' ' 41 NINETEEN FIFTEEN llere we have the famous - Nemo A ,HH flfgglm il, l nie z1n1:1t. 'I'herc is something the Em lllu ill In: :E matter with Nemo. Can you tell g : E : i what it is? 'l'he person giving the Il I - I I .- greatest number of correct guesses I1 1 fl I in Y, will win the prize. No one knows the rf Ill' my 72 I ' lj QQN answer but Ye I.iber and he has writ- 'lllll' X N 'Qt X ten it down on a piece ol paper and QXN'QXffq Nxff X .l then eaten it. Read the conditions '6' I X, fiflfxii ge XNXMQ A carelessly. 'I'he contest closes before 'I 1 i' 5Tii' 'MX 'I 'Qi X4 May 3. l ILl, IN 'I'lllS ISIANK Name lil' anyj .... .........,.,........... Address .......... ..., Answer ............. ........ lfVho told you so? .... ............ PRIZES l irst Prize: Picture of Ye Board printed on tinted intermettzo paper de luxe linish and unsuitable for framing. Irv Greene is not in the picture. Second Prize: Neat volume of Poems', by the poet. loriot MaCCormielc, barber by appointment and haberdasher to Brown inen lor years. hluscle bound in young calf. Printed on lleavy sail cant and verv indestructable. Third Prize: Ilalf a dozen jitneys suitably inscribed with Ye l,iber's autograph. Very undesirablt Done up in attractive tissue paper ready for mailing. CONDITIONS just write ineligibly on both sides of the paper in Indian ink. Roll into a tight wad. Isorward to Ye Liber at your own expense. Send congratulations. XJ uf lst Bro. in C and C-Whatta yer think of that boy in chapel whO said youive got to pay the bill. 2nd Bro. in C and C-Hels right: yer can't paint the town red without getting some ol it on your nose. Look at jiggs O'Donoughue. It 327 HEINE DRAKE BIDDING FAREWELL TO OLE BROWN BETTER MAKE THE HOLE LARGER FIRST, so THE HATCHET cAN r GET our SHALL 1 AGAIN Q DQOP HER IN OKS --wr Q FRATERNITY SECRET The Phi Beta Kappa Grip - bioimifig- vikmoum OLD HIRAM PASSETH YE SUMMER ATVYE SEASHORE fFrom the society column of an old daily paper! All Very Good and All 328 FE. 'E ' 13- 1, E g 3 2' . , I , ,E 1 . : v 1 Jfwniiffd viv11' ji :H Pi: Us I iv' 3 L A ll 1 l ' 5 I I f I 1 I FINANCIAL TERM Nz1iionalB:mk Securities Very Funny NINE TEEN FIFATEEN Gleanings from the Orifice of the French Poet Ours is a great and glorious class .... Seth lVIitchell was presented with a handsome med- al for having rescued a woman from one of the most appalling conflagrations that ever devasta- Q ted this fair city . . . Jonnie Ab- bott because of his fondness for water and clean sports . . . rich- CLASS Room SCENE v.-Psychology ly deserves the Inanagcl-Ship of Levine Smokes a Cigarette During the Class the swimming team .... Do we not know Billy Sunday Sheffield, the head of the Brown Christian Association and a worthy man for al that? . . . the patience of Job is not superior to Valentine who has lost innumerable parts . . . but not his genial good nature . . . Despite the many drawbacks of an antiquated gym- nasium, Eddie I-lincks has developed into one of the best gymnasts that ever rubbed rosin on his hands . . . Lies there a man with soul so dead that it never has been thrilled to trancendental harmonious ecstacy by the melodious vocal chords of Luke WVilson or Harold Myers? . . . Then there's Taylor, Hubbard and lidinger, those rising young journalists who never let their Herald Advertisers dictate their Editorial Policy . . . NVere we not pleasantly surprised last fall when our Cam- marian Club, twelve good men and true, contrary to established custom, showed signs of life . . . and grasping the slimy octopus of dirty politics, cast ilt writh- e mg 1I1tO outer c ar mess . . of j sq, And thus, after four years fy, r e of cutting and grinding . . ,QQ this unprecedented class . . takes her place as the H most br?liantJleweRif1 the f crown o our! Hllllf ater. l A 1 ' 'ii !..f f 1, 15 6 1 ' 9 n X-1 A i rfllldlf Will 1 ft! xiii iiii' W I I ' ' l nl ' is ' X -gf 'li' i H :asa A' 1' for. J ', f 1 -.. 1 f !Qf..fff' V YI--af: 1 . .arZ1,f1Al , Q . , Z f f, fm? fIl,WL -'- SPEAKING Ol' '1'I'IIEI FAMILY TRISIC Lyons ,I7--My father was a bloomin' lflnglishmang-I was practically brought up with a cane in my hand. Murphy ,I7-My mither was a Irish womang-I was practically brought up with a brick in me hand. 329 Irv Greene Starts Training for the Ritz-Carlton Affair while McLaughlin Sleepeth f X wi fff N X 9 QQ f?NQ 7 X 1 ff nf ff ff WWW 1 l7f 4f f I f f 4 M7 5 I Z If pl oorvr You f .XZ ,ff W iff A fffv ,4 ' ' ff 4 l5l'1 THAT You ffff if '7 Mf 'L 4 Www , ff! if fe 1 l Wifwfffzy AW WW WWMZWWH I Iii! ' ,141 yl yffifid ,ZMWWW4 ?f'7f,M? 'P' ,,22z4w?41Z' Www lwfv fl in e 6415 ' '11 !4.,4z,rJ 14422 t W? . 1 , ,Ang ZZ. 2 - - f l-gag iqy an , . 3 ' Qi ' ff-Je yew? 2:1 2 1542 ,L 1 7 I F559 I M224 V -' ' ' 1:41 N f ff L i Z W ff ' ' 'K-X . -- l VW 1- 1 f ixri X, --' 5. -e 125ai257'xi ef 5 YQ Ill! 1 :zz -. 1-5-cQwfper31c,f5,.-S BLANC!-IARD ISXIQRCISES NIGHTLY He exerciseth nightly in his room. jolly fellow. He slip- peth oil his heavily hroeadecl chef dlouevre, timed a delicate pink and caught up with a jerk . . . God! He stanclcth naked . . , in his primeval glory , . . Assuring himself hy a discreet glance that no one looketh, he removeth that last vcstige of raiment,-his glasses ....,. ' He eatcheth up his Phi Beta Kappa key and swinget.h it round his head until he thinketh his arms will break ..., He erosseth his lingers .... I-Ie erosseth his toes .... He erosseth his eyes .,.,. But the strain is telling. Not to be outdone, he loeateth his jaw, then he dislocateth it ..., He openeth his mouth. Then he hadth to shutteth it .... H'is stamina is ebbing and flowing like the incoming tide . . . To eappcth the climax, he breaketh matches . . . f rl it la rrl' a ff' jf Q ' j'5'fT?, 'Q ,ff ff, ,Q ,f-A, ' l dig, 3 -l A 5 ll?-EI ,js , w e H OVERCUTTING llc falleth in a dead faint . . . Will he awaketh? No. - NINE TEEN FIFTEEN NEUTRALITY IN NEURASTHENIA Below is the liiberis great NVar picture, as perfect in thought as it s in technique. 'l'he l.iber had hoped to be able to come out without having to take a Crack at war, but all the other noted humorists are doin it and so the l.iber had to what its ra ner and iroduce. The iicture re resents one of the dread- g 1 1 1. P ful German atrocities. On the left is the so-called scrap of paper in the hands of German Kulture which is personified here Qfor the sake of the humour., On the right is German militaristn Qmore comic ltcenscj wearing about his lotus a heautiful towel embroidered with IX, the German symbols for Phi . . . . . Beta Kappa. ln the center is a defenseless Belgian, illustrating i 5045? V .iw flaw '10- 3 the fate of Neutrality in any situation. Note, if you Clon't please, the pensive expression on Neutralityis mapg it makes you think at the same time of the prolile of Liberty on the half dol- lar and of .lap W ght in his Hghting fury. Anyway the picture is a mas- terpiece and we know it. Please omit hacks and llowers, as the dance is ?' strictly inlormal. . 1 O 0 2.5 ll jg AEA l l qaa z it 6' 1 fl, ' ig, Q W M no 555- its ft Q fmt l ,, C2 'VVVN e- ,s 1 ,e e ss: iff: 5' fgf sk?fi r trliE.J'EJr'T?ff'Qffm-1 'it .-' .13 ' cm-4'-r EAT! grmvls Ai.t.RiGH1', ' lCK'QLD Y, IMPPISONED AQT451- HABsN'TT:0irS MGWME sHAn.t. I WAIT YOUR, NUMBER. I Q Foe mcrmwo? . ow HE HA5N'T 4' 655279 GQ? 9 Q tigfjwmwill pffvarwve .spffof-K' 0 ' ' i if In IA I1 ' i Just a Chip from the 2955565 1-H35 5pACE Joke Tree ' ZSELYSAUIQZ. i A V t ITNEY U Mitchell-OI course dear you Q' B MP5 ll5lLl: realize 0lll'CI1jlilgClHCI1t must. he kept secret. l M SIL:-Oh yes. I'll tell every- body that. u BED-:zoom 'rsszm N A seovv DRESSER Q-ro as TAKEN u1'EnAt.t.Y,or coonszQ 331 YE LIBER LEGENDS BEING A RAGIME FAIRYTALE FOR THE SUBMICRGIQD TIQNTII Ah hah! John, soused again, eh?,' Thus chuckled old Cap Cameron as the poor man thus accosted sepositated most of his perfectly good supper on the wellkept sidewalk in front of the Van Wickle gates. Having allowed his statement good time to sink in, Cap re-lit his pipe and spit responsively. Then catching poor John by the lobe of the ear, he led him swiftly but quietly to the rear of the John Carter Brown Library and filled him full of the following line of con:- Once there was a young chap named Pee-wit, just about your size. lie lived alone with his wife in a quiet way in the well known burg of lfast' Providence. l'le took his glass now and then with the best of them, or he was a college boy, but he always as you will see, knew how to handle his Hlodf' One day he was hiking across the Red Bridge on his way to make chapel when he heard someone calling his name. Ile looked around and all hc saw was a bird crying Pee-wit Pee-wit. Pee-wit . Now t.he Pee-wit bird is like the cuckoog it goes around all the time calling its own nameg but of course Pee-wit the stu- dent didn't know this. lle thought the bird was giving him the razz, so he snatched up the lirst thing that was handy and pasted it at the bird a la Charlie Chaplin. The bird flew away and the misscl hit one of Pee-wit's herd of two cows who had just PEE'WlT9 come down to the river to drink. Cl. forgot to say M Z that Pee-wit's home was on the bank ofthe Seekonkj. fr NX . The cow died on the spot but Pee-wit was a phil- fl, Q osopher. What good is an odd cow, he asked W and finding no satisfactory answer he snatched up Jw X Z the next thing that was handy and despatched the D 2 remaining cow. 'l'hen he skun them both, cut cha- + 'L' l ' pel and took their skins to the nearest leather store. -. ' 5 . ' , - E When he hove to near the leather store, he ' ' Hand 311112 Saw Wasa bird Crying Pee'WlfH happened to look in the window. lt was a cheesy sort of thing to do, but he did it. 'l'here he saw one of the clerks in the act of putting a 414. beautiful young maiden, all pink and sweet, into a chest . . .By and by Pee-wit entered the store and offered to swap his cow skins for the chest. Of course the clerk wouldn't fall for this at allg he was in right and he knew it. But the boss happened along as the discussion was waxing warm and as soon as he saw the lay of the land, he piped Pee- wit fora fish and gave him the chest for his skins. The clerk ofcourse didn't dast say a word, cause he had no business mixing business with pleasure, and he knew it too. So Pee-wit shouldered his chest and started home. 6' lin route, Pee-wit thought he'd take a slant at the girl in the chest and so he took her out. Nly w-o-r-dl but she was all to the mustard, all dazzling and smiling, and tantalizing . . . Zowiel NVell just as Pee-wit was in a fairway of becoming absorbed by her beauty, along --, 'i - came a rich prince and he was knocked higher than Carrie 'llower at -Q' hrst glance. Right away quick he oflered Pee-wit ten thou for the vis- it ---- 4. ion and threw in a couple of second mortgages to boot. Pee-wit you may be sure, fairly snapped at: the offer. Then he went home and built a line house, left college, bought a Ford, and hired out as a jitney . . . . ' so Pee-wit shouldered his chest and started home When Pee-wit's friends heard of his prosperity they were filled with pique. NVhen they asked Pee' wit how he made his money he told them frankly by selling his cow skins. Accordingly, Peelwit's friends all left college, killed all the ancestral cows, and tried to sell their pigments. But tliey soon found out that Pee-wit had been shooting them a lot of bull and they gaVe'it out that they were going to get him. Somehow or other Pee-wit was wised up to the situation and so when he cane home from work he asked his wife if she wouldn't put on his clothes, just to humor him, and go out and buv a paper. 'llhe good woman was hardly gone a stones throw when the boys got her and laid her low,' thinking, l suppose. 332' it was Pee-wir himself. t'l'his ofcourse was kind of tough on Mrs. Pee-wit, but it is essential to our legend.j l lah hah, said Pee-Wit, for he had seen the whole thing from the parlor window, iinow l can make some money . ' Next day Pee-wit took his wife down the street in the jit. lle stopped the vehicle at one of the main crossings and slyly slid Otll and entered the VVarldorf. .l'resently, the trallie cop came up to the madam and courteously suggested that she run her car out of the Way. Of course the madam couldn't do this for she was very dead and so the oilicer got wet and sloughed her one in the jaw. 'l'his was what Pee-wit had been waiting for. Out of the Warl- dorf he came, hell bent for election crying. you,ve killed my wife, you've killed my wife, And the ollicer naturally thought he had,-cause the wolnan was. ln a word Pee-wit got a good slice out of the city for damages and he built a liner house and retired from the jit business ..... -S DON 7. E 7. H.-l Xy-A him into the river , BROAD RDGER I s.::1..-rv-'lmyw '1:gg:,4E5i:51,l ...:....:.:::: e if I' J . he stopped the vehicle at one ol' the main crossings But l'ee's friends didn't understand all this prosperity stull, for they thought' they had put the old boy to sleep. But they were just the boys to try a thing twice and so that night they caught Pee-wit making oll' with the free lunch down to l5ill's place and they put him in a barrel and rolled it down to the water front. While the boys were in a nearby barroom whetting their jaded spirits, Pee-wit began to cry, Gentlemen, under no condition will l .accept the nomina- t,ion.', 'l'his peeuliar utteranceemanating from a barrel, at- tracted the attention of a passing coal driver. I don't want to he the Prexy of the eollegeg l'll he damned if l doin yelled the incarcerated Pee-wit. Will they make me Prexv of the College if l get into the barrel? Shure,,' said Pee-wit., using the accent, and the trade was made. Pee-wit got up on the coal team and drove olf while, the dirty old coal man got into the barrel and the boys rolled . they put him in a barrel and rolled it down to the water Front imagine if you will the chagrin of the fel- .5 ,Y lows when they heard that Pee-wit. was running a successful coal husiness. XVhen they asked l him how he got his capital, he smiled in his Pee- witian way and said, ln the riverf, And there's lots more of them down there too, he 'bt V added. So the boys beat it hot foot' for the 'lg.,,, h river and looked over the rail into the water. 'l'hey thought they saw coal wagons there, but F1 , of eourse they couldn't have. They had been ,f drinking heavily, for this Pee-wit business was gif ,QQ ff' getting on their nerves. NVhat they really saw jigs was only the relleetion of their heads in the Qi-1 ,1 l water. But anyway, they thought they saw w-ilk iggdii- coal wagons. 'l'hey all jumped in and were 5. 15. drowned, While Pee-wit lived upon the fat of , Q, ,Q r- the land and was the cynosure of all female ob- tgrik lfk servers, only giving up the ghost at the ripe old .EQ age of I47. .9 SN 13 ' f!'!lMlf1Ilt1'!l on pagr WMD jf i- 'i -1. .. -1 ul -' J , . . he asked her if she wouldn't put on his clothes just to humor him '4Here, said old Cap with a grin, is where my friend Andy left off, but you can figure it out for yourself as well as he couldg Peewit would never have rizz to the place that he got oil at, if he hadn't been able to handle his 'lod.' Just see what happened to Pee-wit's friends. During the ensuing hush, poor John rose shamefacedly to his feet, kissed Cap gently, and then repaired with dispatch to his roof with the light of great joy in his eyes and the mark of a firm resolve on his heart. -ff? fi ll 14 4 f Q ' '52 ,f ' I If! I .Si - N 15-1 i is' s Q, ff' CLASSROOM SCENE VII CLASSROOM SCENE IX History 15 Pol. Sci. 1 Billy Mack kicks Workman out of the course for not having his book 'I' eu! in sl i Q P pp THINK ,tis time to epilogue- 'l'hcrc's api, meaning after, And log, that stands for wood, So nftcrwarcl,- Don't split ycself with lafftcr! The Libcr's out, the proof is liereg Now you can go a dabbin' 6 K In its wells of wit and fum- But tell me, son, What will ye get of crabbin'? 'I If you prefer, call this Classroom Term Giving Him the Foot 334 'J N pfl vu- N I ,eng 1 fi le 1 rw 3 S ld Z1 c Bldg SUFFQLK Engraving M-E--M+-AND--4-H-M Electrotyping C 0 m p a 11 y 394 Affmefic Avenue, Boston, Ma.rs. A fix SEPT SEPT S ia PT S is PT Siu . PT S li PT S t-3 PT Starr OCT. OcT. OCT. . REM o aaa Ha College opens for another year. Prexy discusses 'l'he 1Xbsurdit.y oi the lfuropean XVar Largest 'ootball squad in years reports at. Andrews Field. Annual class rush initiates the Freshmen into a bit ol rt-al martiality. ISHS is easily beaten and the Sophs capture every wrestling bout, but one. Usual glad hand fest in the evening in the Union. 'l'rack practice begins and Seniors hold caucus. l reshmen get regulation top-pieces at reduced rates, despite the high Cost of living. liddie OlConnors calls out his harriers. Brown gives Norwich a glorious 2-l-0 walloping. Day of rest appointed to enable students to recuperate from the strenuous lirst week. Baruch '15 lays plans in his lair in Maxey to cop all the academic prizes of thc year. Dean Randall speaks in chapel on Loyalty, lfllort, and Respect due Brown. 'l'l1e illorning .Ville issues a call for Seuts t.o relieve t.hc hard-working managing editors. Sharon Brown entertains a few friends with tea and harmless chatter. First College Night enjoyed by all who attend. Dr. Faunce ascribes trouble abroad to per- versed Philosophy. Ltnlctt Board considers a constitutional change. Seniors acquire dignilied garb of scholars. Chess Team exhumed by Messrs. Palmer and Cohen, and plans laid for a successful season. lfreshmen enjoy social hour with Dr. and Mrs. lfaunce and some of the more distinguished members and their wives ol our distinguished faculty. Gallup 'l5 gets his Volunteer Band together. linrollment figures, as published in t.hc llfrald, show gain over 19133 with lfreshman Class of lilll. t Brown 20-R. l. State 0. hlcllaughlin chosen leader of Senior Class. Llutctt competition startsg liurnell and Cap. 'l'aylor go around looking important. 3 ADVER T1SEMENTs-:--i-- Comfort willzout extravagance HOTEL WOODSTOCK 43d Street, near Broadway Times Square, NEW YORK 360 Rooms -265 Baths EUROPEAN PLAN Room with Bath . . 352.00 to 53.00 For two .... 3.00 to 5.00 Suites ..... 6.00 to 8.00 HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE COURTEOUS ATTENTION MODERATE PRICES Wire for reservation at our expense W. H. VALIQUETTE, Manager Ocr Oc'r OCT. OCT OCT. OCT. Brunonian Calendar-Continued Johnnie Abbott makes his usual Sunday evening call. Somebody asks somebody if Walsh is as hard as he looks. Doc. Gorham gives annual Smut talk to l reshmen who turn out in large numbers. Billy Mac cuts llistory classes for steenth time. Billy is some busy boy these days arranging our Celebration Program. Celebration plans outlined in chapel. Some heap big time am evidently coming. Proxy said: We will omit the closing hymn and pass at once to the class room. Waste basket holds a very important clinic. Professor Dunning:- The British Parlia- ment can do everything under the sun that it wants to. lt can make a woman into a man - legally speaking, of course. Burnham asks Bowser of the Economies department if he is a Sophomore or a Junior. LIBER does away with services of future managing editor. There's a reason. Prexy said in chapel: We will omit the closing hymn and pass at once to the class room. Monster mass meeting in Union auditorium in preparation for the game with Amherst. ADVER TlSEMENTS-i-- -- ESTABLISHED I8I8 if , ,Q I D s m 52,71 K e H 6353 A f TSX entlemmz 2 muahmg units, BROADWAY COR.TWENTY-SECOND ST. Nvzw vonn. Clothing Ready-made or to Order for Dress or Travel HATS and CAPS from England and the Continent, POLO CAPS :md HELMETS, SHOES for Dress or Sporting Wear, English SCARFS, GLOVES, SHIRTS, DRESSING GOWNS :: 1: SPORTING DEPARTMENT Riding Suits and Odd Breeches, Boots und Leggings, Light and heavy-weight Mackintoslies for Driving, Motor or Saddle Work :: :: :: :: :: Complete equipment for Riding, Motoring, COM Polo, etc. Liueries for House, Stable, Garage or Club BOSTON BRANCH NEWPORT BRANCH 149 Tremont Street 220 Bellevue Avenue Send for illustrated catalogue 5 ADVER TISEMENTS What Cheer Stables and Garage Boarding and Livery. Carriages of all kinds for all occasions. New, absolutely fireproof garage. Autos stored, washed or polished. Automobiles to let by the hour, day or week. Tel 1845 Union Tel. 691 Union 170 BENEFIT, CORNER MEETING Brunonian Calendar-+Continued OCT. 10. Brown 0 - Amherst O. Oc'r Oc'r Oc'r. Oc'r Seniors appear for first time in academic robesg Langley and Gumb make impression upon some NVaterman Street swecpers. Dean Randall announces that there will be no more make-up examinationsg gloom settles over the College honor hog camp. ll. Dr. Faunce opens 150th Anniversary of the Founding of Brown University with stirring address at historic Baptist Meeting House. - 12. Commemoration exercises at Sayles Hall. First performance of Celebration Play at the Opera Houseg a remarkable affair. Six-page Ilfrald appears. 13. Free feed down in the gym. on the University for the Seniors. Second performance of the Celebration Play in the afternoon. All Providence aglow from brilliant torch-light procession. Gay costumes worn by various classes from way back to 1918. Attempt made to smother Freshmen in lfliltlll Side Tunnel. Ormsbee '16 and l ield ,IG make pickups during bonfire ritual. 1-l. University Reception and Concert at Infantry Hall. Many seniors recall yesterday's free feed on the University. Established 1874 ' Telephone, Union 3460-W MANWACTURERS OF 4 PflIIl0f, F11r11i,ffn'e, Carprtf, Oilrlothx, IN SOFT AND HARD RUBBER - 204-212 North Main st. r-Rovmenca, R. 1., u. s. A. I PROVIDENCE. R. '1. DAvoL RUBBER COMPANY JOSEPH MARCUS8r BRO- I HIGH-GRADE RUBBER GOODS L1'll0fL'lNllJ and Home Flll'llf.fhilI'2'J ! 6 ADVERTISEMENTS Deszgnerf, Creators mm' Buzlders OF DECOKATIONS FOR ALL OCCfi'tS'IONtS' 5 DORRANCE STREET V TEL. UNION 1827-W Brunonian Calendar-Continued OCT. 15. Distinguished guests of University speak at special chapel service. Wealth, Brains, and Beauty unite in holding clown the platformg John D., Jr., Smiling Willie Tait, and Billy Shell. Brown 16 - Wesleyan O. Brown 2d plays Dean Academy a 7-7 game. OCT. 17. Johnston ,IG elected base-ball captain and gleefully Hunks an economic test. Hurrah, we've got a captain at last. Sophomore-Freshman Track Meet. Field 1.16: This fast life is awful. I spent seventeen cents last week. OCT. 19. Saxton '16 borrows a clean shirt and necktie from Walsh to go visiting on South Main Street. OCT. 20. Y. NI. C. A. Cabinet Meeting. Cross '15 speaks on the Relation of Crap-Shooting to the Spiritual Life. Prof. Von Klcnze delights a large audience at college night, and Bechan hatches a foul plot to make Lowell Sulliyan Class Poet. OCT. 21. Examination in Mathematics for Hartshorn Premiums. Rosenberg 'Ilia Why did she call me a bird? Lyons '16: Because you're pigeon-toed, chicken-hearted, and you wear a swallow-tailed coat and collars with wings.'l CO 'P'i m of 1-1. T. HAMMOND THOMAS E. MANNEY PLUMBING and HEATING Somew and C0m'f'erC'al CONTRACTOR Engraver and Printer 164 - 166 South Main Street 72 WEYBossET ST., PROVIDENCE, R. I. PROVIDENCE, R. I. OPPOSITE ARCADE 7 -3--3---A ADVER T15EMENTs GARD ER-LOFD L CO. MAKERS OF Smart Clofbes JOURNAL BUILDING PROVIDENCE 1Oc'r. 4Oc'r. '0c'r. OCT. Brunonian Calendar-Continued . Dean Randall addresses a spiritless mass meeting. Voice Con 'phoneJ: Oh, Georgie, dear - I want to ask you something awful important. La Roe '15: Say it, darling. Voice: Oh, I'm so ashamed. But could you lend me a nickel until Saturday? . Cornell slips over four touchdowns on our gridirouers. Red Campbell pinchcs a ream of letter paper from the Biltmore Hotel. Stansbury '15 chaperones S. G. A. Rogers '15 to Keith's. . Herald betrays the fact that it had a special correspondent at Cornell Game. Ladd Observatory open to visitors. Prexy walks from chapel to the Engineering Studio with Horrigang another appealing instance of mind grappling with mind. ' . Theodore Francis Green '91 entertains at College night. t Wastebasket cabals a conspiracy at Dr. Benedict's house. Eicke '15: They say everything has gone up ,since the dance craze started. Gumb 'l,5: Zasso? How about corsets? COh, Irving! how could you say that?D 8 lr- ADVER TISEMENTS - tff tza .Wm , gi ala-g giant llflgp. Iwt mgigjjag :min N.: :fm 1452252205592 :::::E 335255: 22:15 t'f11teeff.,, dw.. -y! ,lull 1, -I' I E-u., 2. f ,1f2'3b l3:2l'Q1!'ll'l'gf2 . lilll IZ'1' 'liiihu .ikxf-35 in-Q1 whirl lvnh-1 -:HJ nn., ax , if :H1':l.12'e:!qlf!l1: J-:::: rn: we iiiisziflim '- 'S-:ez tg, .E-gf! I ' L .- . . . .: 1 ' :mn-X 0' 0 +44 - ff Ee Mt n - t 1 Vanderbilt and Madison Aves., 43rd and 44th Sts. HE largest and latest of American hotels and the soclal and buslness center of the E Metropolxs. Convement to everythmg, and it m the heart of theatre and shopplng dlstrlcts. P 'K 1' 1000 outside rooms. 950 private baths. X Rates from 32 50 per day I TL. ' ' HIRE.: Fittingly termed The greatest hotel success of A4205 flqlg America. To stop at The Biltmore is to see New York at its best. On the Empire gil? 'Ahh Tour. Illustrated booklet upon request. '.1:ff'2' Egg., JOHN MCE. BOWMAN ' '55-lf x, bl President wgfiotc ' 9 1. ADVER TISEMENTS Y Y Wharf T0 U choose Inrurame, H E pick a pearh The Union Central Life 63:1 'g pytzgv LQ? has Lfifucn Qian ' A Ll'l l'l.E Mom: FOR Lass ., i9'51 ,:l,jf1y,2?'-' .gf sg i 'Gd jg, JOHN E. MARSHALL 'H EQF4 ' .,2f 57','22 'lim-:v1Eif3i9?' -'59-f, 5 '1-1 3i' 'fill' .. -ff Wm 1 X . 11263 - N ' , I ww AW State Manager I WHICH WOULD You CHOOSE P 912 Turks Head Bldg., Providence OCT. Oc'r. Ocr. Oc'r. Nov. Brunonian Calendar-Continued lflxaminations in French for Entrance Premiums. Socialist Society emerges from the ash-heap again. Workman '15 President and Van Der- Werken '15 Janitor. Diclcy Dresser says I'1e1lol to Frank Healy by mistake. Fresh man Class Meeting. Harcourt '15: V11 have to give her a birthday present. She sent me a bunch of forget-me- nots yesterday. Blanchard '15 and Professor Forward of the English Department are seen going into the Pilsener inn. Good Lord, what is the poor world coming to? Brown 12 - Vermont 9. Brunonian hill-and-dalers win meet from Worcester Polytech. The entire second team, consisting of Buck Whitemorc and Saxton '16 play Haverhill High' Sullivan '16 is introduced to a burgler as bln Goldstein. Needham: 1 can say one thing, l'm a sell-made man. F. llartwell Greene: Are you boasting or apologizing, Bill? 501 Turks Head Bldg., Providence, R. I. Pfzblir Simzogrfzphw' and Typift ' Carpenter and Jobber nlscoUNT ron LARGE Jobbing of all kinds promptly attended to okmsks 8 Steeple Street ' Telephone Union 665 V - Telephone Providence, R. I. I Laura M. Kinney S. C. Cruickshank 10 --- ADVER TISEMENTS D. H. VVHI'I I'EMORli 'l'El.EI'HONli UNION 3393 j. G. COLBURN WHITTEMORE 8c COLBURN Good Work-PRINTERS-Fair Prices I NO CHANGE IN LOCATION, BUT- Crawford Street Bridge the new number is 15-old number was ll Pine Street, Providence, R. I., upstairs opposite Brunonian Calendar-Continued Nov. 3. Sixty-one prospective Sotherns and Mantells turn out for the Sock and liusltin trials. Ormsby: lid like to know her. She's pretty as a picture. Nolan 'l5: '1'hat's all right, Duclqfoot, but I opine she's got a bum frame. Pistol shot up in Fownes Alley. Nov. 4. Ye Rose Studio takes a chance on mugging ye Glee Clubbers. Vic Hayward lays initial plans for a trip to Block Island next summer. Entrance examinations in German for President's Premiums. Nov. 5. Wrestling practice begins. Lamb 'l5: Hey, Keville, loan me your dress suit for tonight, will you? Nov. 6. Cammarian Club hangs a razz on the Senior Primaries. First Pembrolcer: I hear this joe Cose is a nut. Second Pembroker: Sure- he's a doughnut, but hels got money. Cheer up, joe, maybe it ainlt tl'llC. Nov. 7. Varsity holds Yale to a 1-l-G score. NlCGinn '16 announces his intention of getting a shave in the near future. EHSIHIQI1 85 COITIDHHY Curran 8 Burton, IHC. Opticians and Optometrists ' ' NG OPT CAL WERYI-HI X 31 Weybosset Street 19 Ahorn Street Providence, R. I. providence, R' 1. 11 -l-- -ADVER TISEMENTS CHARLES B. MAGUIRE Co BUILDERS PROVIDENCE RHODE ISLAND 12 ADVERTISEMENTS- -- Appleton 8c Lee PLUMBERS ---ANn-- TINSMITHS 1827 Westminster Street Providence, R. I. C. G. Brunnckow Co. SHEET METAL WORK FOR BUILDINGS Slate - Asbestos - Copper and Tin ROOFING Compliments of William H. McCormick Union Barber Shop Full line of Men 's Furnishings PROVIDENCE OFFICE OF The H. B. Smith Co. WEs1'Fle1.D, MASS. Manufacturers of Steam anal Hot Water Heating Apparatus O , II So. MIIIII Sl. SH0l'.7 d'JI IS J. M. SMITH, Mnnngcr SCANNEVIN 8: POTTER ELECTRICAL CONTKACTING AND .REPAIRING NEW PORT PROVIDENCE THOMAS o'GARu Joi-:N o'GARR Thomas O'Garr 8z Co. Painters and Decorators 256 South Main Street and 17 Power Street Puovmsucs, R. I. SKF,-CH,-5 SHOWN 'I'ELlil'HONE Bernstein Mfg. Co. PHILADELPHIA, PA. High Grade Sleel Slzelfving, Lockers and Genera! Slee! Eyuipmenf PROVIDENCET0 NEW YORK VIA 31.75 COLONIAL LINE 33.30 f2' A11 High Outside Class Stateroorns Service Twin Steamers A' LEXINGTON and 'i CONCORD ' SAILING EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR AT 7 P. M. FROM COLONIAL WHARF A. S. PITTS, Agent SOUTH WATER ST., FOOT OF TOCKWOTTON ST. Phone, Union 4444 H 4445 Nov Nov Nov Nov Nov. Brunonian Calendar-Continued 9. Professor Bragg of the University of Leeds lectures in Sayles. This is one of a series of lec- tures by distinguished educators in connection with our 150th anniversary. They will continue during the winter months. Freshman Debating Trials. Strong '15: Pm a man who knows my own mindfl Burnell '15: You don't know much, that's true. 10. Sophomore Debating Trials. Babington is not seen in the pool-room all day. 11. Cerclc Francais meets. Charley Huggins looks over his amphibians in the Gym bathtub. Entrance examinations in Latin for President's premiums. Chief Myers vows to kill the new low-life who says that hc combs his hair with a towel. 12. Glee Club visits Butler's. Professor Crosby: Look as nearly alive as possible, Mr. Beeham. This isn't a sanitariumf' 13. Courtney Langdon Qin French ID: Do you believe in co-education, boys? Well, just sneak over to Pembroke and look at them - you won't believe in it any more. Professor Gardner cuts his class in economics for the second time in seventeen years. Bette: cut out those tango teas, sir! .14 ADVERTISEMENTS21- ADVER TISEMENTS- WE ARE EQUIPPED TO SERVE YOU all the way from the foundation of your year's advertising policy to the manufacture of the concrete mediums which make that policy effective. There are men in our organization to plan your campaign, write your copy, produce your designs, and there's a splendid printing plant to turn out the finished product as cheaply as is consistent with effective appearance. EDWARD S. JONES SONS COMPANY Advertising Printers and Publishers 178 UNION AVENUE PROVIDENCE RHODE ISLAND ci-3: 15 ADVERTISEMENTS ll E manufacture Universal Plain and Vertical L S! Spindle Milling Machines: Universal, Plain ' ' ' Surface. Tool. Cutter and Reamer Grinding Machines: Automatic Gear Cutting Machines: Plain, White, Feed and Automatic Screw Machines: Auto- mntlc Turret Forming and Cutting-off Machines: Horizontal and Vertical Chucking Machines, to- gether with a full line of attachments. In addition we mnke over 1000 varieties of machinists' tools. CATALOGUE, showing all, free on request. Brown 8: Sharpe Mfg. Co. - PROVIDENCE, R. I., U.S.A. Nov Nov Nov Nov Nov. Nov. Nov. Brunonian Calendar-Continued Brown plays Harvard to a scoreless tic. Mr. Richard B. Stanley of Brunonia Hall was among those present at thc performance. Howard Langley begins to prowl about Shepard's with the intention of doing his Christmas shopping early. Non-'fraternity men form Hill Club. D Dana Hubbard '15: They say girls have no sense of humor. Can you see a joke? She flooking straight at himj: Oh, yes, very plainly. Doc. Everett cheers up the Sphinx with the Ethics of Warf' Hcathcote '16 leaves college to become an ashman. . Heathcote '16 returns to college. Sharon Brown discovers a fresh corn in the little toe of his left foot. Glee Club Concert at Technical High School. Brown-Yale Cross Country meet at New Haven. Cap. Taylor clidn't get his second Wind in time to finish first. i Landschofi '16 quits going to church. Another gentle soul ruined by the vicissitudes of life in U. H.l Tuxedo, Prince Albert, Over- Opp. Providence Public Market Tel. Union S244-W ALBERT THE TAILOR Formerly for 15 years with Elias the Tailor. LYMAN BUILDING 395 WESTMINSTER STREET Silk and Opera Hats for Rent. RooM 4 PROVIDENCE, R. I. ' and hand your conts, and Black Sack Suits, ' mms to us' A DE VEL OPING PRINTING ENLARGIN G , C. S. BUSH CO. I 212 Weybosset St., Providence, R. I. The Kodak Store of Providence H if A+ ADVER TISEMENTS All Sizes Carried in Stock. Medal at Worlil's Fair, 1893, and Grand Prix, Paris, 1900 ' MANUFACTURED IN SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND l jessop's ARK High-Speed Steel is the best on the market WM. J ESSOP 8: SONS, Inc. 13.53 iiiimiiiqkgiify JESSOPS STEEL 5?E'l'i155m' Brunonian Calendar-Continued Nov. 23. Philological Club meets at Professor l'Iuntington's house. Nov. 24. Professor Walter discusses Eugenies to the College Night audience. Heine Nelson looks worried. Baruch '15 does not visit the John Hay Library all day. Nov. 25. Last scrimmage of the season. Dummy is cremated. The Dean reports that sixteen men have already signed the pledge. Good work! Nov. 26. Varsity scalps Carlisle 20-14. Mitchell and Ormsby star. Pretty good football season, say us. Kelly '17: Why did you take oil' your hat to that girl? You don't know her? Sheahan '17: No, but Dillon does, and this is his hat. Nov. 27. Shepard advertises a sale of orchids in the Ilvrald. Nobody home at Shepard's, we opine. 'l'he Senior Class treasurer buys twelve neckties from Mae the Barber. This is the life' Nov. 28. Freshmen and Sophomores play a 0-O football game. Powers '17 receives a pair of scented red indescribables by mail. Hail, Knight of the Garter! Nov. 29. Dean receives three more signed pledges. 1'l'areourt spends the evening with friends. COMPANY Hairdressing Rooms HORATIO FRASER, l'r0prlCl0r 11 CHAIRS Room 3, Grosvenor Bldg. Branch nt Turks Head Building, Third Floor Canal Sf. Pf0VldeI1CC, R. I. PROVIDENCE, R. I. Telephone, UnionA338-W I PETER MAYNARD I FRASER CATERING . ADVERTISEMENTS COMMONWEALTH HOTEL, Inc. OPPOSITE STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, MASS. I l Offers rooms with hot and cold water for 2131.00 per day and up, which includes free use of public shower baths. Nothing to Equal This in New England Rooms with private baths for 581.50 per day and upg suites of two rooms and bath for 354.00 per day and up. Dining Room and Cafe First Class. European Plan. ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF Strictly a Temperance Hotel Send for Booklet STORER F. CRAFTS, General Manager Brunonian Calendar-Continued DEC. 1. Feed for the football team at the Turks, head Club. Jonathan Stall tips a glass of water, but forgets the waiter. DEC. 2. Preliminary discussion for 1880 prizes. Morris Sill' '15 gets special hair-cut for the occasion. The Ilerairl celebrates its twenty-third anniversary with impunity. Canst beat it? Skane '16 walks home from Pawtucket. DEC. 3. Deutscher Klub gets together. Professor Mitchell entertains with harmonica solos, accordion obligato by Dr. Crowell of the German Department. Nice Christmas Brunonian appears. , I Q DEC 4. Strauss '18 Cafter the dancej: Can we squeeze in this crowded ear? ' Sweet thing: Maybe, but don't you think wcid better wait till we get home?,' DEC. 5. Frank Healy receives the annual issue of the Cuba, N. Y. Globe. Eieke attends the performance at Keith's. 1t's a great life if he don't weaken DEC. 7. Ten years ago today: No issue of the Ilfrald. , One hundred years ago today. No issue of the Herald. 18 with ADVERTISEMENTS HOPE Rl BBER CO. 93-95-97 Westminster Street, Providence, R. I. Snznfner in .fifnerim with fl Mullin.: Canoe Charles River Model - linilt in three lengths 16 Fool Trzle 17 Fool Princeton 18 .Foot Har-vnrd All with Open Gunwnles - Keel - Brass Bang Plates Stock Colors - Green. Red nnd Blue Tlze Mzzllinx .Symnson Canoex Num-Cnpsilnble and Non-Sinknble Designed lor Ladies and Children Very Uvillilblf' for Fly Fiilllllll nr Casting WHEN IEQUIPPED WITH BUOYANCY PADS MULLINS CANOES ARE UNSINKABLE .-'fx-. fi ' ' Ke f - -'i:. ::. r t. Y r -:::..:.-:urge-in W wgsmgmgwaw-H' Crocker System Rubber Stores 19 ADVERTISEMENTS FIFTH AVENUE BOOT SHOP Buzlders of Smart College Footwear -.qf x ,, 224 Fifth Avenue NEW YORK CITY Brunonian Calendar-Continued Dlsc 9. Meeting of Sphinx - Blivcn not present. 1880 Prize Discussion - Baruch and McLaughlin haul down the tutti-frutti. Chen Chong Cheu chins to Student Volunteers. Di-xc. 10. Freshman-Sophomore Debate. Yearlings grab the decision. DEC 11. Davis leads Class in Life Problems at the Union. This is the life, Fweddyl Diac. D i-:c Clark-Peavy Concert at Churchill House. Hathaway '15 appears in dress suit and tan shoes. fNo joked 12. Alliance Francais Meeting. Howard Langley decides not to go out for track practice. ' 14. Wastebasket Meeting visits the underworld of 19 U. H. College night. Professor Crosby reads, If I were King. VVC wish you were, Tom Disc 15. Iiaton '15: Arc you fond of Strindberg? Sullivan 115: Naw, Muenchener's good enough for me. Duc 16. Keville '16. I didn't know it was so late. Are you sure that clock is going? Voice from above: It's going a lot faster than you are, young man. 7 ' ' ' Brooks Restaurant F reder1ck H amilton 85 Westminster Street ' OPTOMETRIST ' VILLERS co.-OPTICIANS 185 MATHEWSON STREET Dining Room Upsmir: hr Parties PROVIDENCE. R. rj A 20 S me - ADVER TISEMENTS 2l: GEO. L. CLAFLIN CO. Chemicals, Chemical Glassware, Scientific Apparatus 56-72 South Main Street , PROVIDENCE, R. I. Retail and Prescription Department-62 and 64 South Main Street Di-:c. Disc Disc. Disc. JAN. Brunonian Calendar-Continued 17. Prexy attends the lirst sybaritic banquet of the Durfec Club in the Union. Professor Von Klenze amuses the Deutsche Klubbers. 18. Sayles is turned into a beautiful Old English garden for the Gym Ball. Professor Gardner not present. Why? Class Day and Freshman elections held. I9 Brunonian Bliven and others engage in a feature wrestling exhibition before a throng of nineteen spectators. Bud Smith. Say, what's a sepulchml tone of voice? Brady 'l.6. That means to speak gravely. 22. 23. Sydney '15 wears his crimson sweater for the lirst time this season. Christmas recess begins and Cap. Palmer sends his Chess warriors to training-table. 5 Bauer illii Why is a small boy like you smoking a great big stogie? Landschoof '16: Oh, 1'm just learning the ropes. H. Beck 85 Co. Book and Job Printers 128 North Main Street Providence - Rhode Island Telephone Union 5010-R Opposite Meeting Street Waldorf Lunches fbi' good thing! la mi Maryland Club Lunches JAN. 6 Menorah Society meets in Manning and adopts one Rosenberg as official mascot. H lffhere all tb: Lo-yr ga ADVERTISEMENTS SPECIAL DISCOUNT 'ro BROWN STUDENTS The presentatation of your Brown Union Card entitles you to a discount at our store on all purchases with the exception of price-restricted merchandise. WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR Watches Traveling Bags Diamonds Musical jewelry Instruments Clocks V and Supplies Umbrellas Cutlery Leather Goods Optical Goods Toilet Goods Phonographs Sporting Goods and Records Watch and Optical Repairing a Specialty 9 vifmcavnzzrbarmraedllfylfgtwjlt Established lS76 The Store ol Reliability The Four Foundation Corners upon which we build our clothes Style Individualibf Quality Service Prices Consistently Moderate Chas. H. Lee Co. Designers and 1Vlalwrs gf .7Vlz'n's Clothes 75 Westminster Street Providence THE CROWN European Plan Exclusively 51.50 up PROVIDENCE RHODE ISLAND Fred Mansfield, Prop. V Compliments of Stiles Optical Company DR. N. C. STILES, MGR. 50 Ahorn Street Providence, R. I. The Boston Bookbinding Co. Edition Binders in Leather and Cloth Special attention given to College Year Books Our constantly increasing patronage makes us claim the hest food in any lunch room in Providence. Y9'y it and :atifffv yofzrfzny' OI-'I-'ICH AT FACTORY AT CO. 15 Beacon Street 10 Arrow Street A BOSTON cfwimuocs 102 Westminster Street - - -ADVERTISEMENTS' - Cox Sons 8z Vining 72 Madison Avenue, NEW YORK f Have the record ,Q , of always giving the hest values, the finest work- manship, correct styles and abso- lute satisfaction. We have made f MYW 537 Wil 'a-.rt . ff ll ll. fmt . f , Caps ff 517 f ZW X Gowns for Harvard, Yale, Columhia, Cornell, Penn- sylvania, Brown, Cincinnati, Minnesota, Colo- rado, Tulane and many others. -..xg - --Fr, '- , l .ll lvsfif, ' . .4 rg f ill rtfizazf-' 1. 1 ' Rod bf- liili 'L'QfiQN::f'5:f': :t .- 1,, ' .7 I A ' N ' , , as f' 'il u- I i , , -. tb ,,-.1 tan .ng im ,Wy ,-51165 : lg s f V? l L lr-if.-f.uu ,M W 'il ,Lili L I s 'ill i l D vlunllyuuilwnt 1 in I l I l l ll 0 . i-iq llIiIHIiIlluullwlllllllllunn -1-- mum-no itiv yq,,,1us8 ' ' . fr o. usllri l .- rl' fl I If N 7 ,Z fi , b ,f L A1124 A mf- Q 1 . me 1-i it -w I' I I ll ' f f s !l -.J Also nmde with single shelf. Typewriters New and Used For Sale and Rent Desks, Chairs, Bookcases, fthat have been nsedj Typewriter Supplies, Dictionary Holder Special Prices to Brown Men We make the Swinging Desk lirncket like thc one in this spruce. which many times will save you the expense of buying a desk or table and save space in your room. OFFICE SUPPLY CO., 26 Custom House Street A. H. SANBORN, Prop. Providence, R. l. Complimemiv Qf 51 Friend Telephone Union 3864 C. G. LAWTON PROVIDENCE CLEANING, PRESSING 8: REPAIRING CO. VVc are the Orizinators and Always at the Front PRICE LIST Pants Pressed .,.... . . .......... l0c. Pants Cleaned and Pressed ..........,.............. 25c. Suits Pressed ............ .. ...... 25c. Suits Cleaned and Pressed ............ . ........ ....50c. Overcoats Pressed ..........,....................... ESC. Overcoats Cleaned and Pressed ............,... .... 5 Oc. Tuxedo and Dress Suits Pressed .................... Oc. Tuxedo and Dress Suits Cleaned and Pressed ..,.... 75e. Velvet Collars ut on O erc t 50 . d d p v oa s, c an upwar Ladies' Skirts Cleaned, Pressed and Re-bound, 51.00 Ladies' jackets Re-Lined We also Clean Ladies' Garments. We do nll kinds of repairing nt lowest prices. OUR STEAM CLEANING CAN'T BE BEAT . 98 WEYBOSSET STREET Room 1, Second Door Below Dorrance Street Open from 7 A. M. Until 6.30 P. M. Opposite New England Grocery Store GlVl-P US A TRIAL ADVERTISEMENTS WILLIAM T. MACKAY MERCHANT TAILOR , I i w y M f Fine Assortment of Scotch Tweeds and Homespuns Dress Suits at Very Moderate Rates Special Attention to Brown Men Come in and Look at my Assortment of Materials GOTTFRID JOHNSON First Class Cutter and Fitter 48 Ab orn Street 1 1. - 4 , l f 'h l f . 4 ,lr l f 2 gi I All ,ll M2 ,fl 1 xg ,i ... . . .-X I 1' ' ?.'. . ' f W iv ,gang . fl,, ,fffya I 1 X 1 I 'fi J Y f'l,7i Z ltxlf I f'1I- lllllll. X . -i tiff. l 5456-1 fl -F5'g.3g . 'ax Il M1 7' ,516 . illll r' VF li. ffl ll 222' nl? l' l l, ... ,f . ul I., . s. l t, l , t. l' ll l fl, 'Ml-l..l'l l 1 1 zl'l'- li lly gf xl. li H ':. v 'f ' ' 1' l. W if l lil M l if tiki , 'fir' U .-1--E-'i?? ill iii 'TX V ' 3 ll if - t i ' NZM' 1 'If Zgiigaibx 3 l' xl! iles l l l,.f.l 'P'i!51 i7 Q1 .l' XJ Jill l f lltllli llll ' .. 4 + Ll jily if PROVIDENCE, R. I. 6 L :U ., A fi - 3 '-' A , '5 I V' Telephone Sfff' rg: l' Brunonian Calendar--Continued AN. 7. Seniors enjoy the luxury of the john Carter Brown Library and the plezisantry of Libr umn john Parker Winship. Mattisoii '16: How's everything? Finch 'lT: Oh, she's all right. AN. 8. Five thousand attend Biblical Institute lecture in Nlanning. F. Claire llealey '16, ex-pool king, pervades the Hope'Reservoir district for his evening, Con stitutional and emerges unscathcd. I AN. 9. Varsity swimmers sink the Y. M. C. A. amphibians in their own indoor otun Liulslz slips distributed. Abbot misses a night at the Senate. AN. 11. President Hum vhrevs of Stevens Institute delivers a lecture in Broader 'I'rainin for the l . g l'1ngineer. Editor of Liniait announces a Shakesperian art exhibit. 24 Randall, The Steel Man, -he Says-- Steel ofhce fur niture, bank, school, vault, , city and town hall equip- ment, properly made, will ., Last a Century 'ITHE STEIEI. MAN It is so nearly impossible to wear it out, ELECTRIC SPOT WELDING that it represents the final limit of economy. MAKING Fll.lNG CABINETS TO LAST A CENTURY The day of wood furniture for these uses is GONE BY. Let us plan the most economical way to file your records. Noyes- Randall Co. Providence, R. I. 25 ADVER T1sEMENTs -?- General Cleaning Contractors 447 WESTMINSTER STREET PROVIDENCE, R. 1. J THE R. I. WINDOW CLEANING CO. Brunonian Calendar-Continued JAN JAN JAN. JAN JAN 12. Philologieal Club holds a great rally. Senior-Soph. dance at the Union. Howard Langley decides to buy a canoe next summer, if the weather permits. 13. Dr. Ferris ,91 of Philadelphia addresses the vesper service. Valentine '15: How is Rusty Phillips' reputation these days? Strong '15: So good that he can wear cuff links with other peopleis initials and get away with it. Some repl 14. Perilous blaze in Mac's barber shop. No lives lost, but many hair-breadth escapes. Dr. Walter addresses the Sphinx on Eugenics. 15. Senior Ball Committee chosen, Johnny Abbott chairman. C. and C. Club hold ratification meeting with General Donoghue in the chair. Varsity football schedule for 1915 announced. Saxon '16 lays plans to make the team. 16. Al Coop ,1G elected captain of the 1915 cross country team. Brunonian mat artists lose wrestling exhibition with M. I. T. grapplers. wants to advertise the fact that for years it has AMERICAN DISHES prepared by my Chinese cooks possess an added Havor-a new deliciousness -that you will like very much :: 1: SPECIAL LUNCHEON Three Courses, 11.30 a. m. to 2 p. m.--45c cl-IIN LEE Co. 193 Westminster Street Providence, R. I. THE SENATE been the first choice of BROWN MEN ARE You A SENATOR? The cleanest and best equipped cafe in Providence , GEORGE J. FORTUNE V 26 -L-T: ADVER TISEMENTS 72 WEYBOSSET STREET . PROVIDENCE, R. I. Telephone 2829 Union FAY'S BAND and ORCHESTRA Brunonian Calendar-Continued AN. 18. University catalogue appears. Needham '15 secures one to see if his name is listed with due prominence. Fair Pembroker: Last night Eddie tried to put his arm around me three times. Some arm, Mr. Walsh! an. 19. Prof. Koopman entertains the Wastcbasket with a talk on verse and a ripping good feed. Dr. john Metz answers the question Is This the Last War at college Night exercises. an. 20. j. Irving Greene explains, I Knew Her Motberf' Rev. Alexander Abbott '03 speaks at vesper services. Rohrbach '15- I found something in my room last night, madame, and- Lancllady Cindignantlyl- There's no such thing in my house! You must have brought it in with you. Rohrbach- Ah, perhaps I did-it was a dollar! an. 21. Sock and Buskin farccs cleverly presented at the regular College Night. Johnny Abbott seen sitting beside a girl in the audience. Y. M. C. A. discusses the Value of Money . How mercenary! CHARLES A. STONE, Proprietor 127 Weybosset Street, Providence, .R I. CRAWFORD SHOES HIGH AND LOW JAS. MEANS SHOES THEY HAVE STOOD THE TEST OF PUBLIC APPROVAL Between Weybosset FOR OVER TWENTY-FIVE YEARS , and Westminster Sts. All the Latest Custom Models Try our Quick Shoe Repairing Crawford Shoe 511019 Heffernan 8z Kempton 27 ADVERT1SEMENTS - 0 Ye Rose Studio il - ,B M 371, fx 'jr for yemav ly ii' Brown? finest lzeadquzzrler: J It for the fvery best in il . Wig! VM Photographs Bert facilities in New England for groups 385 Westminster Street Providence, R. I. A. G. SKONBERG, Prop. jan. 23. Brunonian Calendar-Continued Gym legion gyrates on the apparatus at Moses Brown School. George Lalloe does sword dance but omits the swallowing feature. Brown relayers defeat Bowdoin sprinters at Boston indoor meet. Nice Brunonian appears. Doc. Dunning in company with seven Cam Club roisterers refuses to recognize Prof. Gardiner jan. 25-Feb. 5 Mid-year examinations. S. R O. sign displayed in john Hay Library. l eb 5-10 C. and C. Club hold annual convention as guests of liilly Slief at Mislciania Camp on Lake Yawgoo. l eb. 10. Resumption of Atlieletic relations with Dartmouth announced. Hubbard falls otl the wagon. V Rev. George Gordon of Boston addresses students at vesper services Crolius '15- What do you carry the lantern for, Cap? Cap Cameron- It ligbtens my work a good dealf' Feb. ll. Prof. Quayle Dealey wises the Sphinxites on Social Eutlieniesu. Baseball rookies called out for the initial practice of the season. . 28 ,,l ll.1T..-1- .,l,.i1.1i ---F-2--ADVER T1sEMENTs IZ DAYNs::.Eizfa':.ig. 6033 Seeing the Wonderful Northlanals and Foreign America including all essential expenses, visiting HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA, the land of Evangeline, and ST. JOHNS, NEWFOUNDLAND, the Norway of America. The cruise to these foreign lands on the new steamships H STEPHANO H and FLORIZELH of the RED CROSS LINE will prove the most novel, delightful and health-giving vacation you ever experienced. The foreign cities of Halifax and St. johns, with the beautiful Nova Scotia and grand New- foundlnnd scenery, are sights never to he forgotten. The ships are built especially for touristsg are fitted with every modern device to insure safety :md comfort. Splendid cuisine, orchestra and sea sports. You spend 7 days at sea and 5 days in port, giving ample time for sight-seeing. No hotel hills or transfers. You live on the ship. Send now for handsome booklet. Reduced rates for superior accommodations in May and func BOWRING 8: CO., 17 Battery Place, New York 29 ADVERT1SEMENTS -:-'- Lownu. KENDRICK '12, Prop. and Mgr. er-ms. H. KENDRICK, Am. Mgr. Brown Union . asement COLLEGE BOOK STORE CO B The Suppgf Cezmrr of the Uniwrrity All required text books, New and Second Hand FOUNTAIN PENS THEME PAPER NOVELTIES JEWELRY NOTE BOOKS SUPPLIES BANNERS STATIONERY Spefifzl Ordfrf Salzrited Ill!!! Promptly Exrfurerl' Feb Feb Feb Feb ' Brunonian Calendar-Continued 12. Varsity aquarians lose to Cornell swimxners 33-20. Freshemn toques appear. Sanford '16- Lincoln was born in a log cabin which he helped his father to build. Freshmen hold wonderful banwuet on the New York boat. You've got to hand it to the Freshmen this time. 13. junior-Freshman dance at Union. ' i Roy Phillips '15-- I Wrote my last song in jail. Sammy Rogers- Yes, I noticed the air was bad and the bars were long. Class Basketball season opens with Sophomore and l reshmen victories. Billy Mac gets hysterical over the War in History 1-I-. ' 15 Winter interfraternity pool tournament begins. Red Campbell- Have you noticed anything funny about my girl. joe Miller- Why, yes-l've seen you with her a few times. 16 Mr. Howard White '07 entertains with recital at College Night. O'l5rien '16 Chighhrowishly, between daneesj- Well, did you ever have the ship? Sweet young thing- Yes, you're the fifth lemon I've talked to this evening. E. A. Johnson SL Co. S7 Weybosset Street ' r PRINTERS The L. M. Carr Co. PROVIDENCE, R. I. 30 acid test of friend PHONE UNION 650-W HOME PHONE E. PROV. 287-R-6 g HODGKINS 85 HARRIS Efectriml Cantrzzclom , 45 EDDY STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I. A DVER TISEMENTS --- All kinds of electric wiring and repair work. All work promptly and satisfactorily attended to past fifteen years. We solicit your patronage. at reasonable rates. Mr. Hodgkins has had personal supervision of the Class Day wiring for the Feb Feb Feb Feb Brunonian Calendar-Continued 17 .Rev. Harry Fosdick of Montclair, N. J. addresses the weekly vesper service. Shellield '15 Cin English 145- I don't know just how to express myself. Clegg Cunder his breathj- Why don't you try parcel post, Billy? IS. Memorial service for Dr. james Irving Mannatt of the Greek department. Freshmen Ileralrl scouts get busy. Strong '15.- What would you do if you saw a battleship coming over the hill. Boob-HI'd stop drinking. 19. Varsity debating team finally chosen. Workman begins to snoop around for a eaptaincy. 20. Brown-Dartmouth relay race at Armory meet. Johnny Johnston ,IG- Why am I like a Ford?', She- Every time I Want you to take me out you're brolcefi Feb 22. Wahingtonis birthday. Hon. David .layne Hill delivers eloquent address in Sayles Hall. Feb 23. Junior Class and Herlad Board get mugged for lliber display. Feb. 24. Cast for Junior Week Play selected. The MacDonaldesquc conception of the benefits of war is well razzcd at chapel service Czgareffes . Narragansett Machine Co. 'Y Y 060560 . GYMNASIUM Clgdff OUTFITTERS Pzpej' Geo. F. YOUNG 85 Bao. BUTLER EXCHANGE Providence Rhode Island PROVIDENCE. R. I. 31 ADVERTISEMENTS LOUI OL IER Pboiogmplner 337 Westminster Street 1913-14-15 Class Photographer We Make Nothing But the Very Best Brunonian Calendar-Continued Feb. 25. Thereon Clark gets Prof. Johnny Hill for a temporary boss Feb. 26. Dean Randall addresses the Hill Club. Ballon '16- What is the height of fashion now? Bliss '15- Slightly above the ankles, Teddy, dear. Feb. 27. Freshmen and Sophomorcs win interclass basketball games Mar. l. Workman '15 and McLaughlin ,IS chosen Varsity debating captains 'Ind incidentally drag down hfty joy plasters apiece in the way of Hicks Prizes Sharon Brown entertains several members of the gentle sex in his apartments in U H Mar. 2. C and C holds important meeting, the members wearing cxnts Mar. 3. Pinky McLaughlin made Secretary ofthe University with an oflicc in the admlnlstl ation build ing. Mar. 3. Freshmen win interclass basketball championship. Pinky McLaughlin appointed Alumni Secretary. Stacy Bearse '16- Would you forgive me if I kis She- How can I tell beforehand, you dear nut? A '32 sed you -2---2 ADVERT1sEMENTs HUGH, THE Euzerme Cm ENGRAVING 60 B UFFALO. N.Y Wt' MADE THE ENGRAVINGS FOR 77115 BOOK. x L1- 33 ADVERTISEMENTS Horsman Tennis Rackets if ,!fIi Egg'E !!g! Y 41A A A rx ! lr ,mr . I ,Q--r',' QQ HW ,..,.--,,. .Y... -.. ' - ' 149. A' N WE' i Ti' 'wi new form for 1915. L X ,. :X'i UA. A. A. spells perfection in a .id ii will 're' , . -ff TENNIS RACKET , Do not select a racket for 1915 till you have seen it. If your dealer can't show it, write to us. TENNIS BALL perfection means the HAYRESF' Used the World over by players who know I E- I- HURSMAN CO-, uN11?vinii8:Ks?:ii1'iii5E We SELLlf.QfLi.'ifff1ll'.lI?.Zi'....l?15 BM Brunonian Calendar-Continued Mar. 4. The Brown Rifle Club organizes. Underwood '16 gets half-shot. Mar. 5. Prof. Hardy Cross lectures before the Engineering Society. Burnell '15-- I hope Strong marries a woman of common sense. Ferris '16- Yesl!!?? , Mar. 6. Brown gymnasts lose to Yale aerobats 38--16, despite Eddie Hincks' usual star performance Mar. 8. Baseball squad cut to twenty-four men. Mar 9. Prexy delivers eloquent peace address at Worcester. . Mar. 10. Phi Kappa quartet wins interfraternity relay cup for third consecutive time. Judge Shute entertains at the Senior smoker. Mar. 11. Dr. Charles V. Chapin '76 addresses the Sphinx Club. Bliven '15 absent, as usual. Levin ,I6- I'm broke for money and I haven't the least idea where I can get it. which we carry are selected from the best factories in the country. Superior materials at moderate prices. Always a large assort- ment of Athletic Goods for all seasons. EVERYTHING SOLD UNDER A LIBERAL GUARANTEE JOHN F. cAst-IMAN from me. 54 Exchange Street, Opp. Grosvenor Bldg. THE ATHLETIC GOODS E For twenty-four years we have been placing Brown University Graduates and others in good teaching positions. Shall we place you ? ALBANY TEACHERS' AGENCY 81 CHAPEL s'rREE'r' Send for Bulletin. ALBANY, N. Y. Curtis '16- l'm damn glad to hear that. I thought perhaps you had an idea you could get it '34 li ADVER T1sEMENTs Successors to MORRIS BELLIN HIGH GRADE AND ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAIPHIC WORK oloecizzl Kateyto Brown Men 4 WESTMINSTER STREET THE HOUSE OF BETZ, Photographers Brunonian Calendar-Continued Mar. 12. junior Smoker. Tom Crosby delights the esthetes with Food while a stray Scotch sailor amused others with his near-comedy. Mar. 13. The wrestling team makes a rather sorry showing at Lehigh, Crandall '18 being the only Bru- nonian to win a bout. Mcl.aughlin '15, Sweeney '15, Sheahan '17, and Kelly '17 decide to attend the St. Patrick's Day pcerade en masse. Mar. 14. Courtne Lanfdon discourses interestin l on '1'heFraternit Problem. Y E S Y Y Dick '16- My roommate is woodenheaded sort of guy. He eats plank steak and chews toothpicksf' McLeod '16- Yes, and he was also fussing a telegraph pole on Thayer Street last night at 11:30. Mar. 15. jerry Connor pays the boys his fortnightly visit, bringing cheer and gladness to many a heart. Courtney discusses the Fraternity Problem, the fourth of a series of talks held under the auspices of the B. C. A. ers on The College Man and his Problem. Mar. 16. Some vaudeville show pulled off in the Union. That Murphy boy is soitainly there. Rube Cram is presented with a cabbage by his admiring friends. Rube told an awful joke, but the Dean laughed, so it was all right. TELEPHONE UNION 4608-R Ifyou wont oz becoming mil-T ou wan! to be--rowing--to us HIGH GRADE CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS ROGERS CO. BUILDING EDDY STREETS Gino. P. AHNMR, President Etna J. MONEUSE, Chairman Louis H. HUOT, Trcns. Established over 60 years DUPARQUET, HUOT 8a MONEUSE Co. 43 and 45 Wooster Street, New York Washington, D. C. Boston, Mass. Chicago, Ill. IMPERIAL French Ranges and Cooking Apparatus FOR EVERY REQUIREMENT We can tell you much in advance which will obviate the after thoughts that nrc so expensive. Our vast experience and knowledge of requirements have established us ns authorities on Kitchen Problems. NARRAGANSETTHOTEL coR.wEYaosss'r AND ADVER TISEMENTS-1?--1 EDWARD IE. ARNOLD, PRES. WILLIAM H. HOFFMAN, TRI-IAS. HENRY A. HOFFMAN. SEC. Established 1815 Arnold, Hoffman 81 Co., Inc. PROVIDENCE, R. I. BOSTON, MASS. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHARLOTTE, N. C. PHILADELPHIA, PA. STARCHES, GUMS, DEXTRINES AND SPECIALTIES FOR SOFTENING AND FINISHING Ma1'. Nlar. Mar. Mar. Brunonian Calendar-Continued 17. -Iiggs O'Donoghue sports a yellow neclclie. C and C meet at -I Caswell. Prof. Davis gives it out he will retire from active service in June. Nat has been on the job for 4-l years, he has given his life to the college and the boys appreciate it. Good health to you, Nat, old boy. IS. Faculty to give Freshmen a chance to wise up to this college game by creating a one hour course. Wastebasket eommiserate upon the dearth of intellectual material among the s. b. fstudent body.D V 19. Sherm Strong handed the Liber 4 more funny jokes. Sherm sure is one funny boy. Scotty the Sailor pays a visit. to the Campus.- 20. Varsity gymnasts hands a 35K-1826 decision on Dartmouth. Those New I-lampshire fellers ain't got nothing on us. ' liittlejohn 'lS: Yes, at our last C and C meeting Abbott got up and left the room because somebody tolcl a story he didn't approve of. Sweet young thing: Oh how noble of him.-What was the story? 136 ADVERTISEMENTS DYESTUFFS FOR ALL PURPOSES To Dine Well DREYFUS French CafelRestaurant Q Table d'Hote a la Carte Cassella Color Company Corner of Washington :ln New York Boston Atlanta Bench Street Mnthewson Streets Philadelphia Providence Montreal Boston Providence -A701706 OKI SEIZO If you have trouble with your hair lying smooth-TRY F orztazhefv Hair cutting 25c By appointment SOC Children's hair cutting given prompt attenton Fontaine's Barber Shop 42 Westminster Street, Providence Telephone Union 1449-W Photographer HOME PORTRAITS A SPECIALTY 75 Westminster St., Providence, R. I Telephone Union 4669 -lr: ADVER TISEMENTS-L-i T IS NOT NECESSARY to go half way across the city to find a place where you can get FIRST CLASS PRINTING A'I' REASONABLE PRICES. We are near the foot of College Hill, easy to find and only one flight above the street. We have a line line of Fraternity, Cluh, and Society customers and would like to add you to our list. Come in and see our samples. 43-45 SOUTH MAIN STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I. INDUSTRIAL PRINTING CO. I Brunonian Calendar-Continued Mar. 22. Sir Walter Raleigh delivers the lirst of his four lectures on Chaucer in connection with the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary. Wally shocks thc natives by wearing a plaid cap with his dress suit. Report of Prof. Micoleau's death is confirmed. Sincerest sympathy to Mrs. Micoleau and children. Varsity trims the Rookies at Andy's Field. Mar. 23. Musical Clubs give entertaining concert in the Union. Phi Kappa wins another cup by copping the pool tournament. Feinberg: I want live dollars and I've only got four. Fischel: 'I'hat's easy. Pawn your four dollars for three, and then sell the ticket for twc. Mar 24. Bcchan causes a riot in the Union Dining Room by appearing in a summer suit. Prexy slips it to the Freshmen after chapel. ON THE TEN-MILE RIVER I smug mm ,or p Booksellers and Sfatzoners Waltham, Robertson, and Old Town Canoes 98 Westminster Street' 323 NORTH BROADWAY l PROVIDENCE, In Telephone 233-R E. l'r0v. EAST PROVIDENCE CANOES TO LET, STORED, FOR SALE Richards Canoe Houses I PRESTON Sr RUUNDS ! .38 ADVERT1SEMENTS Brown Men are always welcome al the Lunch R0om open 7.30 a. m. to 7.00 p. m. - Board at the Dining Room, 395.00 per week. Management of MRS. A. GIVEN Brown Union Lunch Room and Dining Room E Mar. 25. Brunonian Calendar-Continued Herald crabs the Phi Beta Kappa requirements at Brown. Sadie: I hear Bunny has a victrola. Rusty: Yes, that's right. Sadie: He ought to have the Toreador record from Carmen. Rusty: Why,s that? Sadie: He's always throwing the bull. Mar. 26. Brown beats Dartmouth and Williams in Triangular League Debates on Resolved, Thar the United States shoulcl increase her standing army to at least double its present numerical strength. Ladd Observatory open at night instead of the daytime. C and C hold a reunion at the Rathslteller. Doc Dunning is taken in. Mar. 27. Mac the Barber is able to shave a person during the course of the day. Herald says the Pembrokers have it on the fellows intellectually. Interfraternity Baseball launches season: H. Dursin chosen president, and C. L. Phillips Secretary-Treasurer. 9 f Schedley s Cafe OXFORD PRESS 183 185 U l S Printers and - 'C t . mon ree Publzshers PROVIDENCE, R. I. 26 CUSTOM HOUSE ST. WILLIAM SCHEDLEY, Proprietor pR0VIDENCE,'R. I. 39 ADVERTISEMENTSi--: -- SIMON KESSLER Merchant Tudor We show you the very latest in Foreign and Domestic Fabrics As to the Workmanship and Style We Absolutely Guarantee 21 RICHMOND STREET, Near Weybosset TELEPHONE Mar 28. Mar. 30. Brunonian Calendar-Continued Cammarian Club present a postponed rushing plan in chapel. There's pep to our Cam Club anyway. Doc Marvel gives the boys a chance to make up gym cuts. Langly '15 and Sullivan '15 mix it up for three rounds over in the Union. Head of Newport A. C. put up a heady battle against bigger man and won out. Chaucer was the father of English Poetry .-Sir Walter Raleigh. Thanks so much, Walt. Faculty give modern version of the Frogs in the Union. Didn't know there was so much aing to our profs. ' . Eight fraternities enter the rushing agreement. Pembroker '1S: It's wonderful, but I had a deaf uncle who was arrested, and the judge gave him his hearing the next morning. Falk 'lS: That's nothing. I once had a blind aunt down in Meriden who walked in a lumber ard and saw dust. , Y Violinist absent form Union Dining Room. 'There is rejoicing in camp. Sir Walter Raleigh secs the Wastebasket and 1'enigs. , 40 - l- ADVERTISEMENTS- ! ig' Where the college man may indulge his individuality of taste in dress with the certain- ty that everything will be held within the hounds of good form ODEN BRQTHERQS' 100- 101- 102 Lziuderdzile Building 144 Westminster Street - Providence FROEBEL HALL Corner Angell and Brown Sts. Suitable for Entertainments of all Descriplions. Especially adapled for College Dances. Evenings up to Midnight, 825.00 Including Dancing Hull, Dressing Rooms, Kitchen and Serving' Rooms. A S25.00 SUIT FOR 5515.00 NO MORE - NO LESS just two profits - yours and ours- no middleman's College hoys who used to pay S25 for their clothes are coming to this store now to save 5810. Dress Suits, Tuxedos, Dress Frocks- everything for just 21515. WOODS 495 to 499 Westminster St. PROVIDENCE PRECIOUS STONES ART GOODS PICTURES STATIONERY ORIENTAL RUGS JEWELRY SILVER CUT GLASS LEATHER GOODS VICTOR VICTROLAS Gifts of Quality and Distinction TILDEN - THURBER ADVER T1sEMENT5 x. 4 ENING D E55 SUITS I f'THE'r TUXEDDS AND PRINCE ALBERT5 U A Q -'SILK AND DPERA HAT5 - 4lL0 212 uNluN sr NEAR wt-:vsnsst-IT. MAKER UFMLNW5 FELIX V. HoFFMANN,PRtJP. FINE CLOTHES. Brunonian Calendar-Continued Mar. 31. Cap Taylor takes Sir Walter Raleigh to the movies. Jiggs O'Donoghue has a ride in a jitney and says they are the best little means of transporta- tion this side of the Acheron. just as you say, Jiggs. Apr. ll. Prof. MacDonald ofliciates at at Y. M. C. A. gathering. I . Davis, the leader, begins prayer God bless the speaker,- Amen say we alll!! Apr. 12. Spring Day. The great and glorious class of l915 unveil a Iitting mascot typifying l50 years of growth. General .Iiggs O'Donoghue outrivals himself. Doe Dunning and Bugbee eapsize while canoing on the Ten Mile. The doctor, though beyond his depth, gave a reniarlcable exhibition of savoir faire and let Iiugbee drown. C and C hold congratulation banquet. Ye .I.iber heaves a sigh of contentment, rolls up in at ball, and goes to celestial rest The faculty will now pass out. JOSEPH ZYLINSKI We can repair anything repairahle. We I Y employ WateInn:1kers,JeweIers, Engravers, Qollegg Strget Dinninnd .Setters, and xi registered Opto- , mer Q vt I I - W I am nearer to the College than any tailor in Providence if yun are in n hurry. Let ns mnke you a . ' J I ' an Re nil-in pair nf the new Varsity Glasses. Clelmmg' I I-essmg d P g rm, rgn om Ile premises c can make II Fair of Glasses, put zu new lense in your eld ones. nr repair them-right away H S TANNER Th T k H d J 1 in all its branches' . . , e ur s ea ewe er r 1 , I5S'I'ABLISHIiIJ 1884 SUI I S T0 ORDER I REPAIR1 The Tailor on the Hin 42 ADVERT1SEMENTS ' TQ. DE PINNA 13 I 4 + P ' FIFTH AVENUE AT 36th STREET i il ' ' - E NEW YORK OUTFITTERS TO YOUNG MEN Norhlk Slain, Coatx, Cf0fh.ffb7't7!L'll1'll,2 zzimr, Mari-izlawf, Tefmif Yramerx, GM' Suitx, Sweaierr, Outing' Shir!! and .Ellglixb Hrzbvrvffulwcry. SEE OUR REPRESENTATIVE AT BROWN I -JM in fr. .Jw - l 'el ' ,li :' .. Svccsssowetaih .V .tx , . ' ,T W' A 5 Q H f 'E og: 22,3 ?l,iilL:E5 egswu,f,3 fl 1 -il, 52, wk' --.Fifiif .---f-A-411'--if-.Ef'. ,T ' . -Qi?..,.,Z'1,. - - T. I fx- -554'-' -- ':q'j.:. gf: 'ff ,PL-1 Q ,j , . ' 5 -, ...nj S. EL'.,,.,1- Q A .. - I .fx 'ai' 1,4 'U ' j ., jwjgfh 45,7-,4.. ,. Y :1'1l0. J 'Qc m,.,, :Jw Fix, Q tgiizr WL.-.E 491' I M12-' 41 H-zs's:azw. X' f',gQf-,rw ' T 1:41, I ' 1' . ,,.f..v Pr: JVIID N . , f I. TELEPHONE 280 AND 28l UNION JOHN W. AUTY C OMMER CIA L PHO TOGRAPHER Developing and Printing for Amateurs Picture Framing 86 Weybosset St., PROVIDENCE, R. I. Brown 8z Co.'s Express Furnilure and Piano Moving Goods Shipped and Guaranteed to all Parts ofthe Country. Furniture Carefully Packed :md Crated. Tel. Union 2105-R OFFICE, 14 COLLEQE STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I. ll vp- -qw . ADVER TISEMENTS Industrial Trust Co. 49 Westminster Street PROVIDENCE, R. I. LARGEST BANK IN RHODE ISLAND Young's Hotel Court Street and Court Square CAPITAL - - 363,000,000 SURPLUS , , 33,000,000 School and Tremont Streets OFFICERS . SAMUEL P. CoL'I' Chairman ofthe Board P k H H. MARTIN BROWN - - President .JOSHUA M. AIJDEMAN - Vice-President , JAMES M. ScoT'I' - - - Vice-President B0Y15f0n 3ndTfem0nt Streets CHARLES C. HARRINCION - Vice-President FRANK C. NICHOLS - Vice-President WARD E. SMITH - - Treasurer H. HOWARD PEPPER - Trust OH'icer HENRY B. CONGDON - - Secretary E. EUGENE CHESEIIRO - - Asst. Secretary ELMER SEABURY - - - A i't , , -l , J. R. WI-IIPPLE COMPANY Acuaunrx, large or small, 'will rcmfvc rarful allcnrmn Everything First-Class A Prices Moderate PERKINS' RESTAURANT 39 WEYBOSSET STREET FOR LADIES AND GENTLEMEN . .. R f Ld. OPEN SUNDAYS Private Dirgllndgpaimgrg or a ICS 44 . ADVERTISEMENTS A. SHUMAN 8C COMPANY DISTINCTIVE College Clothes for the man who would be well dressed Clothes from master-designersg hand-tzulored with all the style and fit and wear of Shuman Corner quality-standards. Prices from E525 up. SHUMAN CORNER, BOSTON Exlabfishcrl 1893 D. B. U P DI K E Gibe errpmuunt Brees 232 SUMMER STREET BOSTON PRINTER OF THE BROWN UNIVERSITY CATALOGUE, IJUBLICATIONS OF THE .IOHN CARTER BROWN LIBRARY 8cc. 840. kc. Qgfrerx mm' Stzzficfllf of B7'0'ZUll Uzliwrfity are izzwited to visit the Prfrff, whirh if dirzvtb appofite the South Stfztiarl, Barton Compliments mf Pawtucket S5156 mm' Bfmz! Company 272 Ma.ron Slreel, Pfrwlufket x
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