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Page 18 text:
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1 .og1...i A , ta , ', 1 ll . rtlll 1 lt 5 L E' - ' l ., P li-' I xiii' aa psalms. HE foundation of T1-IE Psi UPSILON took place at Union College in 1833, the original group of members being eight undergrad- 15 x :il I 51 L, .tit ill t l 4 il l W ii i' 4 l li' I si Il A , 'w i I , l F31 i ' X N I iii it 5. ,. .- P -1- 1 i lt., '5ir'ii llflu l lid!!! ,nuvlfl . ,.,.,., -iiiql-I W1 t mig- ' 1 f 2i:i ' . 1 . 1 lg In gt' , ll 7 ' if ll +4 , 1 12 1 1... J -I Av. uates of the classes of 1836 and 1837, of whom the following five are 1- N ' still living:-the Rev. SAMUEL GOODALE tFremont, Neb.l, the Hon. 83.353, S4-ERLING G. HADLEY QVVatei-loo, N. YJ, Dr. CHARLES W. HARVEY ' 5, ,, , fBuft'alo, N. YJ, the Hon. EDWARD MARTINDALE fNew York Cityl, 'Q i L ,113 and Mr. GEORGE W. TUT'r1.EfBinghamton, N. Vg The Fraternity , J K was greatly strengthened, in its earlier years, 'by the sterling charac- ter of its members in the classes of 1837 and 1838, of whom two . K 1 especially, the late Hon. JOSEPH W. GOTT and the Hon. WILLIAM ' ll ,gil TAYLOR fMiddletown, N. YJ, greatly contributed to the proper de- ii-15 iffli velopment of the new organization. Its growth was rapid, ten chap- ff' . W ,', ters having been established at the anniversary of its first decade in if 'lt' 1843. The chapters were instituted in the following order:-1833, N 'H the Theta, at Union College 3 1836, the Beta at Yale Cellege g 1840, 'I I i n 1 the biglzzrz at Brown University g 1841, the Gamma at Amherst Col- 7 Y legeg 1842 the Zeia at Dartmouth College, and the Lambzia at the 1 College of the City of New York g I843, the Ifappzz at Bowdoin Col- iii list lege, the Pri at Hamilton College and the Xi at Wesleyan University: 'gift ' 1851, the Alyifuz at Harvard Collegeg 1858, the Upsilon at the Univer- il 'fy in ity of Rochester: 1860, the Iam at Kenyon College g 1865, the Phi at the University of Michigan 5 1868, the Omega at the University of ' I , I U. U Chicagog 1875, the Pi at Syracuse Universityg 1876, the Chi at Cor- ll' if nell University. The Fraternity has no inactive or dead Chapters ' illl: -a fact which is to be ascribed to the cautious conservatism that has ,ir generally influenced its action in considering applications for Chapter ii, l I Charters. Annual Conventions of the Chapters have been held since I jf l . 1836, these general rellnions taking place with the Chapters in the - I' 7: i?,1.j,g. order of their establishment. Since 1869 the administrative affairs s' '- A ',.'u:3 ' . .. i . E?'i'-' i A ' iff'-1 ' ,. -V .- - ----:, - - .L I J g . Y ,.Lp5,+:4',. '. V I, .. ::,,.'.3:,5,g:lu,,,5v.A!. ,-A A, --g, 1 ll . I. L!
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Page 17 text:
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. I ' I v lb I .-1 I I . 5' I- Jiri 'I' V 53' , ' '- 5 J ' M ' W AP MF R- 4-. f f' . E' PM I- W -W I if :I WI . gr ,TF . M III 'f ' ' I A X I - .- .., -I-, 2 A A - K If if f P I H Q I+ .Nffi I. Ili, F3 -f , F 2' J? x,., fr. I fl' , M , 1 ,Hg 1,2 if l, RESIDENT GRADUATES. 'fy 5, qgg A I I' 11. ,iii VI R' In Fqcuitate. ' N 'JAMES EDWARD OLIVER, Harvard, '4g. TRACY PECK, Yale, '6I. 5' X lf' ' , In Urbe. ' M' I ALBERT HENRY ESTY, Yale, '68. ' ,V , 5, CLARENCE I-IOUGHTON ESTY, Cornell, '76. W ' ,iii SAMUEL DAMONT HALLIDAY, Cornell, '7O. ,MMI ,. ,H .,,.., Qggiii fifif MARCUS LYON, Yale, '52, ' SW Eiga, 'SEN CALVIN DANIEL STOWELL, Yale, '68. Ixxk , - WY ll -L N! .vi ROGER BUTLER WILLIAMS, Yale, '68. XE, 5 jg ', I POST GRADUATE. Y RL THEODORE LUQUEER MEAD. l, I ii- 1 2 f UNDERGRADUATES. -, ,Q .i . I . , 'viii Illh li I379' 'Ill X 1 ah 'Qi' WILLI,AM SEYMOUR EDWARDS, EDWARD COLE IIOXVLAND, IM. HAROLD GIFFORD, I WHITNEY NEWTON, ' I Ig ALFRED MILLARD. ,4 . 1 Q IS8o. - ,Y i. lfgiigl WALTER HOWARD FOX, ROBERT TUTTLE MORRIS, E f',It5 ,, ' L4 CI-IARLES EDWARD MANIERRE, WILLIAM CIIANNING RUssEL, JR. If -,gif QUENTIN WOODBURY BOOTH. GEORGE SHIRAS, JR., QS' 'j Iggy ROBERT PIENRY CARTVVRIGHT, JAMES HENRY SKINNER, 173 IQ gffg. ' EDWARD MANDLE HOUSE, HENRY HPAMILTON STAMRAUGI-I, 5 fi' 595,191 ROBERT MURRAY PARMELEE, CHARLES LOCKARD SAUNDERS, 4. .Q it OSCAR LIVINGSTONE TAYLOR. ff' ll ,Vi tem, 1882. yi l A g rd' FREDERICK MILES CATLIN, OLIVER TI-IROCK MORTON, V, Hgh 51 ITENRY PLATT CUSHING, WVINFIELD KENNEDY SIIIRAS, 1' , ftp ' FRANK RANNEY LUCKEY, DELANO EUGENE SMITH, I FRANK SHERMAN YVASHBURN. 4, A, M ALE- ..V,... - gf- Y:-- .L - . -,,...,.L. ,1 , Ag- ,,. Y ,.-. f - - .LW-. '?-:-'Q' - 1 f' nm:
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Page 19 text:
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. .isis liiiiii 5. 'ing . 6. 'irgsg .si ,V it it B I n tl . ii I --9.-. ' Q . w 'f . 5.5 .1 1.5. n,-- .. 2' aa-. ilmiii iiii ft -'ll wail .r in 1 1 , .. l. ll -4, , -i 'Z Til, 1 i .,, HZ! V i 'i. ,. M . I. I r . 2, digs an rx i v it . li Ut 7 if i '!. ,. ,x 1 1 5 K, l.. 5 - N.. if t ... N , Ei s if Ei -i r 5 . ,lik . . vifil vig- il , Ili, I '. 5, I 9, wi ilk, ' V., , is ' 3 . ,-..,. 'E if 1. .. 4. It n -4 I ti. 9 1 V- , h Q - , ' K A ,L Rt u .,, A fy-. P 413 ' 3 2 - fi' FMEA. A 1 Wil , figs: of the Fraternity have been successfully entrusted to an Execuiive .- ..: . iii . . vs-- Mi vt . P. - l Council of five graduate members, resident in the City of New York, L and elected annually by the Convention. .5 In the course-of its growth the PSI UPSILON has built up a consid- 1 I l erable literature, consisting principally of obituary orations and re- X 1 . cords, -addresses and poems at its Conventions, catalogues of its Li members and collections of its songs. The first General Catalogue was issued in 1842 5 the eighth and ninth, in quarto, bear the dates ' 1870 and 1879 respectively. The last one fI879j is avolume of near- ly 1500 pages in quarto g but it has never been excelled in accuracy and completeness by any American collegiate publication, being the result of three year's assiduous labor and having cost upwards of lx 331300. Of the Songs of lk6'F7dfE17Ziljl seven editions, in octavo, have appeared, the last two, those of 1870 and I876, being publish- N ed with music and comprising Ioo songs. The Clzi Chapter of Cornell was organized in 1875, and received IJ! its charter in I876. On June 12th of that year its formal institution Liifilfy. took place. The Address was delivered by Rev. M. VAN RENSSEL- L .lp AER, D. D., LL: D., of the Them Chapter, and lately President of ' L' jj Hobart College, and the Poem by Professor H. W. PARKER, of Am- 4 herst, a member of the Gamma Chapter. The ceremonies were at- QI tended by a large number of graduate and undergraduate members 1 1 of the various Chapters. -I The XLVIth General Convention of the Psi Upsilon meets May N 6 and 7 at Yale,.under the presidency of His Excellency Governor ANDREWS fAmherst 18581 of Connecticut. The Orator is the Hon. - FF, Q, BENJAMIN K. PHELPS CYale 18535, District Attorney of New York g E 33,7 the Poet is Dr. G. HOLLAND fAmherstl, editor Scribner? Monthbfg lla. j xi the Chaplain is the Rev. HENRY M. DEXTER, D. D. fYale I84OJ, ed- ' ,,,. itor of T he Cangregationalirt ,' the Song-Writer is the Hon. FRAN- V F CIS M. FINCH tYa1e I84QD, author of The Blue and the Grey 5 and ' I, the Toast-Maker is the Hon. CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW QYale 18362, formerly Secretary of State of New York and now one of the Regents li of the State's University. On the evening of the Convention fMay 7, ,H 'll Banquet reunions of Psi U's will take place as usual in the larger lil ' cities of the Union. i .Jo ! ' J-IL' - 5 T U i 5 7 . 4 . - W 1 . . . - 1. g,.'fgf.5L'. Y . ' ' '41 +4 .f 4 ' !VL.u- 'T'1j:'.:-rj- ' H 13-af g i. -5 -' ' g -- -- T ' 'U'-'r ' v
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