,.j . .-x V . 5 ff ,, ,', . 11219 1Agi5 VOLUME SIXTY-THREE DARTNIOUTH COLLEGE 1920 ,H LL. V fi-2.9 I 'yqrl ...HI X 41 mv SQ. H ,-,F ,QQ L xg, THE ANDOVER PRESS ANDOVER, MASS- JAMES PARMELEE RICHARDSON l mil Elames Barmelee Binbarhsun Q Ulirue Eattmuutb Man, this, the sixtghtbith hulumz uf the Qzgis s is respectfully hehinateh, DARTMOUTH HALL TOWER Jguarht uf 6!E7Jiturs' The 1921 Qegis Eclfitor-in-chief Qlfreh jllilnrgan Green E- Business Manager warren 1Bumerup Qilark Advertising M anager V3Ku'be,rt Murray Macbnnalh q q An Editor Buhulph Pickett Mesh Associate Editors Raul Qtarpenter Belknap i itiemp Guuhlue :lfuller fdihtnarb Simpson Brice kenneth lynn Srater !JBunaIh flfreherirk Sawyer THE CHAPEL WALK I , A .. ,O , esee R ' . . , V Y If r e ,O EI h e - S. Trustees nf Eartmuutb Qlullege ' ERNEST MARTIN HOPKINS, Litt.D., LL.D., PRESIDENT JOHN KING LORD, Ph.D., LL.D ..... Hanover, N. H. Clerk Of the Board V I-IIS EXCELLENCY JOHN HENRY BARTLETT, AB. Ce:v-ojicioj Portsmo11th,N.H. FRANK SI-IERWIN STREETER, LL.D. Concord, N. H. BENJAIVIIN AMES KIIVIBALL, A.IVI. . Concord, N. H. LEWIS PARKHURST, A.IVI. . . W'inchester, M ass. HENRY BATES THAYER, A.IVI. New York, N. Y. ALBERT OSCAR BROWN, A.IVI. . , Manelzester, N. H. JOHN MARTIN GILE, A.IVI., IVLD. . Hanover, N. H. HENRY LYNN MOORE, A.IVI. . . . MirLneapoZis,NMinn. EDWARD KINIBALL HALL, AQIVI. . M ontclair, N. J. SANFORD HENRY STEELE, LLJNI. L . .V New York, N. Y. QEx:QBffittu Ulrustees uf the Qllullege in Relation tu Jfunhs when hp the State uf Elaetn Zlaampshire Conn efillors I HON. STEPHEN W. CLOW .. . . HON. ARTHUR G. YVHITTEMORE . HON. JOHN G. WHELPLEY . HON. YVINDSOR H. GOODNOWV HON JOHN H. BROWN ...... The President of the Senate HON. ARTHUR P. MORRILL ....... The Speaker of the House of Representatives HON. CHARLES W. TOBRY ....... The Chief Justieeeof the Supreme Court HON. FRANK N. PARSONS ..... 9 Wolfeboro Dover Dlancheister Keene Concord C'oncord Temple Franklin F, F, C, . W gl v was es , '-:eR.,,, , , , K I IQ !! . I r , 'la' ' L ei ' . A 3 I 1 of it 1 Q Visitors on the Glibanhler jfuunhatiun DAYVIS HERBERT ANDRENVS, A.M. . . . . I . Newton Centre, Mass. DANIEL BL.-XISDELL RUGGLES, B.S., LL.B. . Boston, Mass. ' 0Bherseers uf the Ebayer bcbuul THE PRESIDENT OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE JONATHAN PARKER SNOW, C.E. . Boston, M ass. PROF. GUSTAV JOSEPH FIEBEGER West Point, N. Y. OTIS ELLIS HOVEY, C. E. . . I. . New York, N. Y. PROF. ROBERT FLETCHER, Ph.D., D.Sc. Hanover, N. H. Qireasuree uf the Culullege . HALSEY CHARLES EDGERTON, BS., M.C.S. . . Hanover, N. H. btanhing Cuiummittees uf the Trustees . Committee on Education The President CChairInanj, Nlessrs. Gile, Moore, Hall, Lord, Steele. Committee on Business Administration Mr. Parkhurst Cflhairmanj, The President, Messrs. Streeter, Kimball, A. O. Brown, Thayer. E Committee on Degrees lVIr. Streeter CChairmanj,' The President, Messrs. Moore, Lord, Professors Foster, Poor, Childs. Y V 10 I 59 ' .-Q. m,,, - , ' , . t 1 W 'fl .. su f me , .1-' la in M, I, .1 -ff ,, , 7 I 1 2 ,gl 4 S N 5 ' . .7 ,r ff Q J i... .f f Y if 1 , g Zllumni Qssutiatiuns ' . we Dartmouth Qllumni Glounttl Founded in 1913 Clarence B. Little, '81 ..... President Homer E. Keyes, '00, Hanover, N. H. . . . S ecretary 3J9.etn Qfnglanh States Albion B. VVilson, '95, 208 Kenyon St., Hartford, Conn. Edward H. Trowbridge '81, 28 Pleasant St., VVorcester, lVIass. Lafayette R. Chamberlin '05, 30 State St., Boston, Mass. 4IjB'IihlJIe anh Southern States Henry P. Blair '89, 801 Colorado Bldg., Washington, D. C. Randolph McNutt '71, 45 Swan St., Buffalo, N. Y. A Edward VV. Knight '87, 1208 Kanawha St., Charleston, W. Va. , C Qlzntral States John C. Wallace '07, The Cleveland Metal Products Company, Cleveland, O. Henry A. Haugan '03, State Bank of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. Robert L. Burnap '94, 112 W. Adams St., Chicago, Ill. , western States Edgar A. De'Witt '82, 411 Main St., Dallas, Tex. Robert F. Leavens '01, 5113 Cass St., Omaha, Neb. James A. Vaughan '05, 1311 lVIerchants National Bank Building, St. Paul, lVIinn. ilkntkp jlliluuntain ants ijeatifit States Selden C. Smith '97, 20 Second St., San Francisco, Cal. Clinton H. Moore '74, 329 E. Broadway, Butte, Mont. David J. Main '06, 607 Colorado Building, Denver, Colo. jfur the .faculty Eugene F. Clark '01, Hanover, N. H. 11 1 sf -3l1? v S imrx Y H Q,., fn, i . g I' i n I 1, AQ 5 . - x W' 1' . X , 1 .- 4. , E? A ' . A X I - 'g gi -,:,, Tix' ' N , . i ffy? I- -gyfl a Qfilznteh hp Glass Senrztaries William D. Parkinson '78, 22 Howard St., Waltham, Blass. Nlorton C. Tuttle '97, 27 School St., Boston, lVIass. Natt YV. Emerson '00, 10 State St., Boston, Nlassf Members hp Virtue uf Q9fficiaI Relation tu the Qlumni Edward K. Wfoodworth '97, 121 Center St., Concord, N. H. Homer E. Keyes '00, Hanover, N. H. Joseph YV. Gannon '99, 135 VVilliam St., New York City. C!EIenteh hp the Qluumzil Clarence B. Little '81, Bismarck, N. D. VVesley G. Carr '84, 6112 Howe St., Pittsburgh, Pa. VVilliam M. Hatch '86, 221 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. The c15enera1 Qssnciation Founded in 1854 1 William T. Abbott '90 . . . . . Presiclent Guy A. Ham '00 .... . Vice-President Lafayette R. Chamberlin '05 . . . . V ice-President Homer E. Keyes '00, Hanover, N. H. . '. Secretary John lVI. Comstock '77, Chelsea, Vt. . Statistical Secretary Perley R. Bugbee '90, Hanover, N. H. . . . . Treasurer Qlixenutihe Qllummittee Edward K. Woodworth '97, Chairman George G. Clark '99 Otis E. Hovey '85 George C. Agry '05 Ernest S. Gile '95 Maurice C. Blake '10 Charles R. Cabot '12 The General Association of the Alumni includes in its membership all graduates of the College, the Thayer School of Civil Engineering, the Chandler School of Science and Arts, the lVIedical School, and the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration and Finance. Membership without the right of voting is granted to all others who receive an Honorary Degree from the College or who are elected at an annual meeting of the Association. 12 L,- Q ' ED 5 1 'Z l- 'l ' ' f . -ff .1 , ,--- f ,, ' 5' L 'U V -Q' 11 5 - .,, The Annual lVIeeting is held on Tuesday afternoon of Commencement Wee The Annual Dinner occurs on VVednesday, Commencement Day. V The Alumni- of the College who are of three years' standing elect upon nomina- tion five of the Trustees of the College, one vacancy occurring in the Board at each Commencement. The nomination of these Trustees is by ballot, usually in ratification of a single candidate whose name is proposed by the Alumni Council. Additional can- didates may, however, be named on petition of alumni. Efincal Qlssuciatinns i mm ulinglanu Giunnenticut The Dartmouth Club of Hartford, Conn., Founded in 1911. Ernest J. Eddy '01 ....... Presicleni Edward NI. Stone '94, 327 Trumbull St. . Secretary Connecticut Association, Founded in 1901. Dr. Edward A. Herr '06 ...... President Herbert S. VVoods '10, 233 Maple St., New Britain, Conn. i Secretary The Dartmouth Club of New Haven, Founded in 1916. Nathaniel G. Burleigh '11 ..... President Everett C. Lamson '15, 1 Pendleton St. . Secretary The Dartmouth Lunch Club of VVaterbury, Founded in 1912. Dr. Edward A. Herr '06 ...... President Arthur B. Bucknam '10, 123 Cooke St., Vifaterbury, Conn. Secretary Maine The Dartmouth Association of Maine, Founded in 1911. Nathan C. Redlon '06 ....... President John B. Thomas '10, 493 Cumberland Ave., Portland, lVIe. Secretary 13 'W . a '. 19 135. 'W .1 Av I V 'N'-.XI I A X - Q , . P l ' 12 l ' N f 1 y A 5 1 X gilt'-1 ' f 2 2 we f 'N 2 N . K x ' I , . 1, sw sf .1 -J .L R . X, A if 1- I W Nu F 1 Qllzlzfifffiz 512. ' 0,f'gi'.y, 'J' . . Xxwillli' TJ .5 massachusetts D 0 Boston Association, Founded in 1864. Morton C. Tuttle '97 . . . VVarde Wilkins '13, 141 Milk St. .... . Dartmouth Club of Boston, Hotel Bellevue, 21 Beacon St. James' L. Barney '99 ....... VVarde VVilkins '13, 141 Milk St. ..., . The Dartmouth Association of 'Hyde Park, Founded in 1896. Eliot R. Howard '09 . . . ' . . . . . Dr. Joseph K. Knight, Jr., '08, 1323 River St. . . The Dartmouth Association of Lawrence, Founded in 1909. John C. Sanborn '91 ....... Walter A. Sidley '09, 58 Nesmith St ..... Dartmouth Club of Newton James P. Richardson '99 . . C. Raymond Cabot '12, Newtonville . . u . . . The Dartmouth Club of Pittsfield and Vicinity, Founded in 1907. Rev. Leon D. Bliss '83 ....... Louis B. Hopkins '08, 16 Glenwood Ave., Pittsfield . . . The Dartmouth Lunch Club of Springfield, Founded in 1907. Charles J. Weston '05 ........ James M. Healey '14, 31 Elm St. . . . . VVestern Massachusetts Association, Founded in 1892. Elmer W. Barstow '99 ...... ' Horace E. Allen '12, 179 Long Hill St., Springfield . Dartmouth Club of Waltham Orlando C. Davis '07 . . . Dwight O'Hara '15, Greenwood Ave. . 14 President Secretary President Secretary President S eeretary President S eeretary President S eeretary President Secretary President S ecretary President Secretary President S eeretary I5 . ' ' . .1 - 1 ,1 ,.xV..:. r. , .e ,- f 7 ' 1 1 . .. V1A . N 'A ' i' , as , .W ' V W W E V L WV::y ? : :-' Q The Dartmouth College Club of Worcester, Founded in 1904. ' Matthew Gault '90 f .,...... President Howard W. Cowee '08, State Mutual Building . . . Secretary 3122111 Efbampsijire Concord Association, Founded in 1891. Charles Duncan '98 ......,. President Joseph VV. Worthen '09, Shawmut Bank Bldg., Boston, . Secretary Cheshire County Dartmouth Alumni Association, Founded in 1911. Charles E. Adams '99 ........ President Chester B. Jordan '15, Keene . . ' Secretary Manchester Association, Founded in 1881. y James A. Wellman '89 ....' . President John R. lVIcLane '07, Amoskeag Bank Building . . . Secretary The Dartmouth Association of Nashua and Vicinity, Founded in 1919. Thomas D. Luce '75 ........ President Alvin A. Lucier '18, 70 Arlington St., Nashua .... Secretary The Dartmouth Alumni Association of Portsmouth and Vicinity, Founded in 1915. V . J ohn.H. Bartlett '94 ..... President Julius M. Dutton '07, 21 High St., Portsmouth Secretary 3KIJu7Je Zislanh The Rhode Island Dartmouth Association, Founded in 1907. Nathan W. Littlefield '69 ...... President Fletcher P. Burton '10, 31 VVeybosset St., Providence Secretary 'Vermont Vermont Association, Founded in 1893. U VVi1liam H. Taylor '86 . . . President Adolph B. Lane '01, Barre . . Secretary 15 A . 4 l E 21, . eai: ' X 'g 1 b l ' , 3 ff? an 92 ' f 5' 6 I il 1 1? B -Y Z '51, lf. P Q., 1 ' AA Qi.. ER ' J . , ' ' ' -f fs,,,, ,minute ann Eaouthetn Estates ZBistrint uf Qlulumhia 1Vashington Association, Founded in 1876. Samuel R. Bond '55 ...... George M. Morris '11, 886 Union Trust Building . . Marplanh The Dartmoutli Club of Baltimore, Founded in 1915. Chester VV. Nichols '08 ...... H. W'inn Buswell, 2113 Callow Ave. . ilietn Burk I President Secretary President Secretary The Dartmouth Alumni Association of Northern and Eastern New York. Joseph VV. Manion '00 . . i .... . . Russell D. lVIeredith '10, 3 Terrace Place, Troy . . . Association of Central and Wlestern New York, Founded in 1910. VVilliam H. Middleton '98 ....i . . . Elmer Robinson '14, 55 Darwin St., Rochester . New York Association, Founded in 1866. Alfred A. Wheat '89 .... . . Manvel Whittemore '12, 149 Broadway . . Secretary and Pennsylvania Philadelphia Association, Founded in 1902. Edward N. McMillan '01 ..... Dwight Conn '14, 1Q5 W. Lancester Ave., Wayne, Pa. The Dartmouth Club of 1fVestern Pennsylvania. Wesley G. Carr '84 ...... Edgar R. Cate '00, 1620 Farmers Bank, Pittsburgh, Pa. . 16 President 'Secretary President Secretary President Treasn-re'r President Secretary President S ecretary D' E7 ,Z . ' . i . Ag 7 x,,. .,.,b ' l 1.5.2, A N- V llff V .A I 'J D V Q ,,,. ' Qlentral Stateii ifillinuis Chicago Association, Founded in 1876. Guy H. Abbott ,oe .......o . John R. Childs '09, Care Stevens Davis Co., 638 Federal St., Chica Bnhiana The Dartmouth Club of Indiana, Founded in 19111. lvilliain A. Ketcham '67 ' ..... Herbert G. Parker '02, 719 Law Building, Indianapolis :Michigan Detroit Association, Founded in 1895. Robert J. Service '77 ....... Stanley F. Nute '08, Suite 810, Dime Bank Building, Detroit . QBIJUJ Cincinnati Association, Founded in 1875. George Goodhue '76 . . I .... . . Albert H. lVIorrill '97, Provident National Bank Bldg., Cincinnati The Dartmouth Club of Northern Ohio, Founded in 1907. Jo'hn H. Watson, Jr. '04 ...... Robert B. Keeler 11, 713 Cuyahoga Bldg., Cleveland . western Qtates Eflutna Association of Iowa, Founded in 1915. William K. Ferguson '86 ...... Charles F. Luberger '07, 5041 Mtdlin Bldg., Cedar Rapids . 17 gO I President Secretary President Secretary Presficlent Secretary President Secretary Presiclwzt Secretary President Secretary 4 ' A gf 1 A -1 fi ' A xl' A ' . .y ell-.,X,N Q, ,7 LJ 9 an X-16 Qi.:..5 . is s :, 1 'kansas The Dartmouth Association of Kansas, Founded in 1915. Rev. Wlalter H. Rollins 5941, Fairmount College, VVichita . Pfzwidevzi . Minnesota Northwest Association, Founded in 1880. Albert C. Heath 191 ........ Presiclent Warren S. Carter '10, 151Q Nlerchants National Bank Bldg., St. Paul Secretary :Missouri . VVestern Nlissouri Association, Founded in 1918. Francis M. Hayward '80 ....... Presiclemf Charles F. McKnight 104, Ingham Lumber Co., 1017419 Long Bldg., Kansas City ...... - . . Secretary St. Louis Association, Founded in 1876. James A. Burns ,07, 5909 Kennerly Ave. . Presiclent glizhraska Of the Plains' Association, Founded in 1898. Frank D. Field 194, 126 South 31st Ave., Omaha . Presficlent Robert F. Leavens '01, 5113 Cass St., Omaha . Secretary Texas Dartmouth Alumni Association of the Southwest, Founded in 1915. Edgar A. DeVVitt ,8Q ........ President vvllllillll A. Green, Jr. ,14, Care W. A. Green 81 Co., Dallas . Treasurer itiociay jmnuntatll ann pacific States Ciialifurnia Pacific Coast Association, Founded in 1881. I Charles D. Milliken ,87 ...... President Harold M. Prescott '10, Pacific Tel. Sz Tel. Co., San Francisco , Secretary 18 L! , '2' - i '4A-- 9 ,, 5 rr, Y V Southern Pacific Association, Founded in 1904. John T. Gibson ,64 ....... P7'0S7:CZ67lf Roland B. Ahlswede '12, 4827 Huntington Drive, Los Angeles . Secretary Clllulurahu A T he Great Divide' Association, Founded in 1895. Richard C. Campbell ,86 ..... President Frank Kivel '02, Q08 Gas and Electric Bldg., Denver Secretary - montana Rocky Mountain Association, Founded in 1895. Oliver S. WVarden '89 ..... President George M. Lewis '97, Manhattan . Secretary QBregun The Dartmouth Association of Oregon, Founded in 1912. John A. Laing '05 ..... r . . President Claude R. Simpson ,09 . , . Secretary ' Mklasbingtun Association of the State of VVashington John F. Pratt ,71 .... President Robert H. Hatch ,11 . Secretary Roy H. Dodge, Acting ' Qranana Association of the Dominion of Canada, Founded in 1913. Joseph R. Colby '01 ....... President VValter H. Russel 304, Port Arthur, Ont. . Secretary 19 , 5 ASL 1 YT 9 . 2 1' 1 bm C . . eva A Qvperial Qazmriatinnn iltlebical Svcbuul Qssnciatimin Founded in 1886 Ell11C1'I'I. Carleton, lVI.D., ,97 . . . Howard NI. Kingsford, lX1.D., ,98, Hanover, N. H. . Qihapnzr Society uf Qfinginezifs Founded in 1903 Ainasa B. Clark '89 ....... George C. Stoddard '81, 215 VV. 125th St., New York, N. Y. Qssuniatinn uf benrztaries A I Founded in 1905 lvilliam S. Dana '71 ..... Eugene F. Clark ,01, Hanover, N. H. . . Qllaaa Svrrztariw 71:6 Dr. J. Wfhitney Barstow, 4:3 VVest 58th St., New York City. 354 M1'. Benjamin A. Kimball, Concord, N. H. '55 S. R. Bond, Esq., 13 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C. 557 Samuel E. Pingree, Esq., Hartford, Vt. 359 M1'. James H. Newton, 1766 Northampton St., Holyoke, Mass. ,61 Major' E. D. Rudington, 1905 Harris Trust Building, Chicago, Ill. '62 Luther VV. Emerson, Esq., Q06 Broadway, New York City. ,63 Mr. M. C. Lamprey, Concord, N. H. '64 Mr. Charles E. Swett, Winchester, Mass. '65 Rev. Henry I. Cushman, Q6'Pitman St., Providence, R. I. '66 M1'. Henry Whittemore, 417 Worcester Lane, Waltham, Mass. ,67 Rev. Charles H. Me1'rill, St. Johnsbury, Vt. ,68 Prof. Charles F. Emerson, Hanover, N. H. '69 Mr. Charles P. Chase, Hanover, N. H. '7 0 Prof. Lemuel S. Hastings, Hanover, N. H. 20 Presidevzt Secretary Pres-iclent S ccretary Presficlent Secretary .1 A '-'- - 5 v1 J . 1 4: i f, 52 5 ' Q- '- - -1 '. . ':-4 C 6' ,fl it :fit A Nr-'-9, , , ' Z ...il M t ...J 1 A 'ra 571 '72 ,73 ,74 ,75 ,76 Dr. ,77 Nlr ,78 1VIr '79 1VIr. '80 lVIr. 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 lVIr 00 lVIr. 01 .lVIr 02 Mr ,03 lVIr '04 Mr ,05 '06 ,07 U25 X2 KN! Q I William S. Dana, Esq., Wfoodstock, Vt. George B. French, Esq., 75 Concord St., Nashua., N. H. Rev. Samuel W. Adriance, Winchester, lVIass. Dr. Charles E. Quimby, 9278 West 86th St., New York City. Henry W. Stevens, Esq., Concord, N. H. Henry H. Piper, 411 High St., VVest Medford, Mass. . John M. Comstock, Chelsea, Vt. . Wfilliam D. Parkinson, Waltham, Mass. C. C. Davis, Wfinchester, N. H. Dana 1VI. Dustan, 340 Main St., VVorcester, Mass. Rev. lVIyron W. Adams, Atlanta University, Atlanta, Ga. Luther B. Little, Esq., 1 lVIadison Ave., New York City. Alfred E. YVatson, Esq., Hartford, Vt. Mr. Louis Bell, 120 Boylston St., Boston, 1VIass. Edward A. Bayley, Esq., Kimball Building, Tremont St., Boston, Blass. ' lfVilliam M. Hatch, Esq., Q21 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. Mr. Emerson Rice, Hyde Park, Mass. Rev. William D. Forbush, 44 East 23rd St., New York City. Dr. David N. Blakely, 16 Beech Road, Coolidge Corner, Brookline, Mass., Charles A. Perkins, Esq., Q01 West 57th St., New York City. lVIr. Frank E. Rowe, 20 Vine St., VVinchester, Mass. A Mr. Arthur M. Strong, 50 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. . Mr. H. C. Pearson, Concord, N. H. Rev. Charles C. lVIerrill, 83 Brooks Ave., Burlington, Vt. Mr. Ernest S. Gile, 183 Essex St., Boston, Mass. Carl H. Richardson, Esq., Tremont Building, Boston, lVIass. J. lVIerrill Boyd, Esq., 32 Central St., Boston, lVIass. Herbert W. Blake, Esq., Gardner, Mass. Kenneth Beal, 55 Botolph St., Melrose Highlands, Mass. N att VV. Emerson, care George Batten Co., Inc., 10 State St., Boston, Mass . James H. Kimball, Hingham, lVIass. . William Carroll Hill, 7 Wheatland Avez, Dorchester Center, Mass. Edward H. Kenerson, 15 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass. Harry B. Johnson, 4 Glendell Terrace, Springfield, lVIass. Lafayette R. Chamberlin, Esq., 30 State St., Boston, Mass. lVIr. Harold G. Rugg, Hanover, N. H. lVIr. Robert D. Kenyon, IQ4 Wilmington Ave., Dorchester, Nlass. 21 Ma- Laurence M. symmaa, 115 Broadway, New York city lVIr. Emile H. Erhard, The Stafford Co., Readville, lVIass lVIr Mr WVhitney H. Eastman, Box 4164, lVIilWaukee, VVis. CACt1HgD Richard F. Paul, 98 lVIilk St., Boston, Mass. 932 Stevens Building, Chicago, Ill., actingl. QlVIr Malcolm G Rollins Conrad E. Snow, Esq., Rochester, N. H. Wright Hugus, Esq., P. O. Box 493, Wheeling, W. Va. CM1 VVarde WV1lk1ns Mr Mr lVIr lVIr lVIr lVIr 141 Milk St., Boston, Mass., actingy Clyfton Chandler, 30 State St., Boston, Nlass. Leo M. Folan, 14444 Duane St., New York City. Richard Parkhurst, VVinchester, Mass. Clifford L. Meredith, 1926 5th Ave., Troy, N. lVIaX A. Norton, 15 Mechanic St., Hudson Fall 522 William Sewall, 200 Clifton St., Malden, Mass. Y. s,N ' AQ if Eat' 5 ..aH i2?f il' isa . f' e.d7? 'Q 11515 Ciullege Clialenhar 1919-1920 September Q5 November Q6 College year begins - 9 A. M. llecenzber 1 December 18 January 6 February Q-7 Thanksgiving recess begins - 1 P. lVI. Thanksgiving recess ends - '7 145 A. M Christmas recess begins - 1 P. lVI. Recess from December 18 to January 6 Christmas recess ends - 7:45 A. M. First Semester Examinations. February 9 Registration for the Second Semester. February 10 Second Semester begins - 7:45 A. M. M arch 9 Town election - a Holiday. April Q Easter recess begins - 1 P. M. Recess from April 2 to April 13 April 13 Easter recess ends - 7 :45 A. Mp. lllay 30 lVIemorial Day - a Holiday. J une 10-17 Second Semester Examinations. June 20 Baccalaureate Discourse. June 221 Class Day Exercises. J une QQ lVIeeting of the Alumni Association. Presidentls Reception. J une 23 COMMENCEMENT DAY I Summer Vacation of T welee Weeks September 14-18 Examinations for Admission. September 21-QQ Registration. September 23 College Year begins - 9 A. M. 23 MASSACHUSETTS ROW Y , , n swlv ' 7' ' 7 Y - PRESIDENT ERNEST MARTIN HOPKINS 0 vA A 19 st, A A c 2 't . Qhffiners uf Zlhministratiun The Qtollege A Ernest lilfartin Hopkins, A.B., A.M., Litt.D., LL,D., P 'cl rest ent of Dartmouth College AKE, KIDBK, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus, Arts. V Dartmouth, A.B., 1901, A.M., 1908, Amherst, Litt.D., 1916, Colby, LL.D., 1916, Rutgers, 1916, Brown, 1919. Editor-in-Chief of THE AEGIS of 1901, Editor-in-Chief of The Dartmouth, 1900-01, Graduate Manager of Athletics, 1903-05, Secretary to the President, 1901-05, Alumni Representa- tive, Athletic Council, 1905-07, Secretary, Dartmouth College, 1905-10, Established and Edited Dartmouth Alumni rrlagazine, 1905-10, Engaged in various forms of Work having to do with indus- trial organization, 1910-16, Member Dartmouth Alumni Council, 1913-16, President of Alumni Council, 1913-15, Author of various articles on industrial employment, Assistant to the Secretary of War in Charge of Industrial Relations, 1918, President of Dartinouth College since 1916. mutational Qnminietration Craven Laycock, A.M., Dean of the College. R1Ch3.1'd VVellington Husband, A.lVI., A.ssociate Dean. John lVIartin Gile, A.M., lVI.D., Dean of the Medical School. Charles Arthur Holden, B.S., C.E., Acting Director of the Thayer School. VV1lliam Rensselaer Gray, B.L., MCS., Acting Director of the Tuck School. Nathaniel Lewis Goodrich, A.B., B.L.S., B91-l, Librarian. Amherst, A.B., 1901, New York State Library School, B.L.S., 1904, Reporter Utica Press, 1901-02, Librarian, West Virginia University, 1907-09, Librarian, University of Texas, 1909-11, Editor-in- Chief, Literary Monthly QLD. Present position since January 1, 1912. Howard Nlurray Tibbetts, A.B., Registrar, KIJBK. Dartmouth, A.B., 1900, Assistant to the Dean of Dartmouth College, 1900-02, Registrar of Dart- mouth College since 1902. . Colin Campbell Stewart, Ph.D., Secretary ofthe Meclical School. Howard Nelson Kingsford, A.M., M.D., lllectical Director. 26 r . Ar at . I '1fVlf MQ 1 9Jsqif'i-- f--. -E' . ri -ll Q. Z ttt . . .-.Q ff E r NX N . - ,- R gg. SEQ ex ,J . A ., I 2' N' ii- l ree... 2 1 -1 - .f '--f. 5-ff:-': z-- 1 . rf f 21 :af . ff ' . .111-fgf' f, .411 X zglr -X tg, .4 U K-ef We 1':5w','.f . -1-wfgffetav-Liiaqe., 5 .1 .1-1' - I 1 ....., ., w 4:4431--1'-M.-W . 7J5u5ine55 Qnministratiou Homer Eaton Keyes, B.L., ANI., Business Director, LFT, CDBK C 1 . , asque and Gaunt- et, Palaeopitus, Arts. Dartmouth, BL., , . ., 191EZg Instructor in English, Dartmouth, 1900-05g Assist ant Professor of Modern Art, 1906-135 Editor of Danals Two Years before the Mast g Managing Editor Alumni Magazine since 19095 Secretary Dartmouth Alumni Association and Alumni Councilg Member College Art Association, American Archaeological Instituteg Trustee New Hampshire Historical Society. Present position since 1913. B' 19005 Princeton A M Halsey Charles Edgerton, B.S., M.C.S., C.P.A., Treasurer, CDBK. Norwich Universityg Dartmouth, B.S., 19065 Amos Tuck School of Administration and Finance, M.C.S., 19075 Secretary Alumni Committee on Alumni Gymnasium, 1909-125 Treasurer Mary' Hitchcock Memorial Hospital since 19195 Treasurer Dartmouth College Athletic Council since, 19163 Supervisor of Dartmouth Outing Club Cabins and Trails since 1918 g Auditing Clerk Dart- mouth College, 1907-095 Auditor, 1909-165 Assistant Treasurer, 1915-165 Treasurer Dartmouth College since 1919. ' Harry Artemas Wells, B.S., C.E., Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, CDBK, PA. Dartmouth, B.S., 1910g Thayer School, C.E., 19115 Present position since 1912. .B., Manager of the Hanove I r nn and Comptroller ofthe e Dartmouth Dining Association. Arthur Perry Fairfield, A I 27 - rx r JAMES FAIRBANKS COLB A ,I I 19 1 I it jfacultp Qtmeriti W I LLIA M CHARLES FRANKLIN EM JEXVETT TUCKER, D.D., LL.D. P'7'8-9?jflG?1f, E-meritus ERSON, A.M. Dean, E zneritus 6 Occom Ridge 30 North lVIain Street CHARLES PARKER CHASE, A.M. 5 Clemeht Road Treasurer, Erneritrls JOHN ICING LORD, Ph.D., LL.D. . 37 College Street Daniel Webster Prqfessor Qf the Latin Langrtatge cmd Literature, Erneritus' THOMAS WILSON DORR VVORTHEN, A.M., BP. 11 Webster Avenue Clzerzey Professm' Qf Mathematics, Emeritus GABRIEL' CAMPBELL, M.Pd., D.D. 48 College Street Stone Prqfessor Qf Intellectual and Bl ' I ' ' ' ora Phrzlosoplzy, Emerrtus b Y, A.lVI., LLD. I I Q Elm Street Parlcer Profc.ssor rj' L ' ' ' 4:2 mv and Polztrcal Scwrzce, Eme Q8 ritus . C? y A . F, ' Al . 1 wg 013132 Zlnahemin jfanultp Craven Laycock, A.B., A.M., Dean, AKE, CIDBK, Casque and Gauntlet, Arts. Dartmouth, A.B., 1896, A.M., 1910. Admitted to New Hampshire Bar, 19043 Practised Law in Hanover, 1904-10. Present position since 1913. Edwin Julius Bartlett, A.B., A.lVI., lM.D., New Hemp- ' shire Professor of Clzemfistry, llf'Y', CDBK. A Dartmouth College, A.B., 1872, A.M.g Rush Medical, M.D., 1879g ' Doctor of Science QHon.D, Dartmouth 1918. Member American Chemical Societyg Fellow American Association for Advance- ment of Scienceg Honorary Member of New Hampshire Med- ical Societyg Honorary Member of Palaeopitusg Member ' New Hampshire Historical Soeietyg Moderator, Town of Hanover, 1906-12, New Hampshire Legislature, 1913, Charter Member f Ourobo1'os Chemical Club, President of Trustees Mary Hitchcock Nlemorial Hospitalg New Hampshire Constitutional Convention, 1918-20. Present position since 1878. I George Dana Lord, A.B., A.M., Professor of Classical Archaeology, AKE, CDBK. Dartmouth, A.B. 1884-, A.NI. 1886g Ame1'ican School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1895-96. Tutor in Greek, 1887-913 Assistant Professor, 1891-995 Associate Professor of Greek and Greek Arch- aeology, 1900-08, Member, American Philological Associationg Archaeological Institute of America, its Boston Societyg Vermont Historical Society. Present position since 1908. 1 'K' ff fi inn, ,ng .-3,:, ' Fr ' .14 515. 'S ,gj:,f5' . 2 A , ' ..-4 f 4, -.':f QQ 'V --f ,L 1 251:-'Eli-::f'?Fzf1? - 2 .4 H 1-fa tg f. e ff-.-ww 3 ,gg-'jiagc-:, 1. 1:9 wr l as an 29 A F3 ' . 1 ,, 599 6. 1 , ' 4 I . -, Charles Darwin Adams, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Lawrence Professor of Greek Language and Literature, SAX, 41-JBK, Arts. A - . Dartmouth, A.B. 1877, ANI. 18815 Ph.D., University of Kiel, 1891. Instructor in Greek and Physics in Cushing Academy, 1881-843 Professor of Greek in Drury College, 1884-93. President of the Classical Association of New England, 19065 Member American Philological Association, Member of Editorial Board of Classical Journaln, 1907-13 g Author: Lysias, Selected Speechesl' and K'The Speeches of Aeschinesn CLoeb Classical Libraryjg Author of Papers in the Transactions of American Philological Association and in Classical Philologyu. Present position since 1893. VVillia1n Patten, B.S., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Biology CZoologyj, CDEK, IIUBK, Arts. i Harvard, B.S., 1883g Leipzig, Germany, A.M., 1884, Ph.D., 1884. Zoological Laboratory of University of Vienna, Triest, 18853 Naples Zoological Station, 1886g Parker Fellowship, Harvard, 1883-865 Assistant in Lake Laboratory, Milwaukee, VVis., 1886-89 3 Professor of Biology, University of North Dakota, 1889-935 Author of numerous papers on Invertebrate Anatomy and Embryology, Structure of Eyes, Color Vision, Origin of Vertebrates, Davonian Fishes, in various scientific journals. Trustee Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, -lNIass.g Member American Zoological Society, Vice-President 1906g Association of American Anatomistsg Honorary Member Imperial Society of Naturalists of Petrograd, Russiag American Naturalistsg Palaeontological Societyg President Section F, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1918-19. Present position since 1893. Herbert Darling Foster, A.B., A.M., Litt. D., Professor of History, SAX, CIUBK, Arts. Dartmouth, A.B., 18855 A.M., 1888g Harvard, A.M., 18923 Litt.D., University of Geneva, 1909. Teacher of Greek, English and His- tory in Worcester Academy, 1885-91g Fellowship in History, Har- vard, 1891-933 Study and Travel in Europe, 1893-94, 1901-02, 1908-09g Member of the Committee on History in Schools of the American Historical Association, and of the American Executive Committee of the Reformation Movement in Genevag Secretary of Class of 1885, 1905-153 A Syllabus of European History , eight editionsg The Records of the Town of Hanover, 1761-1816 g A History Syllabus for Secondary Schoolswg Various Historical Articles on Reformation and Colonial History. Director of In- struction in History, American E. F., 1919. Present position since 1893. 30 ...gl ,, XX , , :5f'I: if K 53. ' I 'A ' . P K 2: -r f , 1 g X if V jr! fy :X Q 'sf l 5 X X 1 fi f 'W -1 w,-:-'fw Ha G,'5.g.,,, .f-Nfl Q'.7F7577:f.'Qc- '5 1 ' ,, Fred Parker Emery, A.B., A.M., Professor of English, KKK, CIJBK sphinx, Dartmouth, A.B., 18875 A.M., 18905 University of Paris, 1891-923 University of Berlin, 1892-93. Instructor in English, M. I. T., 1887-915 Assistant Professor of English, Pennsylvania State, 1893- 943 Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory Dartmouth 1894' Author: Notes on English Literature . Present position since 1895. ' John Hiram Ge1'0uld, Litt.B., A.B., A.lVI., Ph.D., Professor of B'iol0yy, KKK, Casque and Gauntlet. Dartmouth, Litt.B., 18903 Harvard, A.B., 18925 A.M., 1893g Ph.D., 1895. Managing Editor of the AEGIS, 1889, Editor of the Dart- mouth Literary Monthly, 1890. Vice-President American Society of Naturalistsg Member American Society of Zoologists and of the American Genetics Association, Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science. Present position since 1894. I Louis Henry Dow, A.B., A.M., Tuck Professor of French, AY, QJBK, Arts. Harvard, A.B., 1890, A.M., 1894-g Sorbonne, Paris, 1898-99. In- structor in Greek, 1895-963 Assistant Professor in French, 1896- 1900. Present position since 1900. 31 ,mf fi f Ziff 4 f 0 f fig!!! . '. . .- Q -.- J 1-APPX 51' fit! ill 1 Q L gg . 7 ' I D W S. .. , CI-'X 1' K 5 7 fi I 3-'Q -Q? W 51.9 lx., A H K Harry Edwin Burton, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Latin, Arts. - . Harvard, A.B., 1890: A.M., 18933 Ph.D., 1895. Instructor in Latin, Dartmouth, 1896-97 9 Assistant Professo1', 1898-1903g Justice Muni- cipal Court of Hanover, Published Selections from Livyn, A Latin Grammar , The Aeneid of Vergilu, Various Articles. Pres- ent position since 1903. Ashley Kingsley Hardy, A.B.-, Ph.D., Professor of German and Instructor in Old English, AACIU, QJBK, Sphinx, Arts. A Dartmouth, A.B., 189-Lg Leipzig, Ph.D., 1889. Instructor in German, Dartmouth, 1897-1902, Assistant Professor and Instructor in Old English, 1902-15g Associate Professor, 1915-17. Member Modern Language Association of America, American Dialect Societyg Author of Die Sprache der Bli king-Homilenng Editor, Das Edle Blutwg Compiler CGerman Partj A Bibliograph of Useful Books for the Library of Teachers in Secondary Schools , Associ- ate Editor Dartmouth Alumni Magazine, 1907-11, Editor, 1894 AEGISQ Business Manager Dartmouth Literary Zllonthly. Present position since 1917. John Me1'1'ill Poor, A.B., Ph.D., Profosso-7' of Astronomy, GJAX, CIDBK, PA. 1 Dartmouth, A.B., 1897, Princeton, Ph.D., 19039 Chicago, summer of 19093 Lund University, Sweden, 1911. Instructor in Astronomy and Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1898-19003 Instructor Astronomy, 1903-19063 Assistant Professor, 1906-153 Associate Professor, 1915-17. Present position since 1917. 32 0 - Av , , , 'f ' -2113 if S., VJ , ' ,. i ,113 ,-E 1 S1 4.1. .ff 4 9' fffi-Sf-i-21: 4 ' 259 if 'fs ' -5 .11 ' 1 ' 1 tb aw ? 031, . . - , .M W - - bg,-,, Warren Austin Adams, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of German. Yale, A.B., 18869 Ph.D., 18959 Universities of Berlin and Munich 1887-89. Instructor in Latin at Kenyon Military Academy, 1886- 879 Instructor in Languages at Monclair Military Academy, 1889- 91, Instructor in German, Cornell, 1891-939 Instructor in German, Yale, 1893-999 Assistant Professor of German, Dartmouth, 1899- ,19019 Editor Goetlieis Hermann und Dorotheahg Gottfried Kel- ler's Romeo und Julia auf dem DOYfC,,Q Rogge's Der Grosse Preussenkonigu. Present position since 1904. Gordon Ferrie Hull, A.B., Ph.D., Appleton Professor of Physics, Arts. Toronto, A.B., 18879 Chicago, Ph.D., 1892, Cambridge, England, 1897, 1905-06. Fellow in Physics, Toronto, 18992-959 Fellow and Instructor, Chicago, 1895-989 Professor of Physics, Colby, 1898-999 Assistant Professor of Physics, Dartmouth, 1899-1903, American Physical Societyg Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Major in Ordnance, 1918-19, Scientific Expert of Dy- namic Department of United States of America, 1919. F Present position since 1903. On leave of absence. I William Kilbourne Stewart, A.B., A.M., Professor of Comparative Literature, AT, Arts. ' Toronto, A.B., 18979 Harvard, A.M., 1898g University of Leipzig, summer of 1901, University of Berlin, 1904-05, 1912-139 Univer- sity of Paris, 1913. Assistant in German, Harvard, 1898-99, In- structor in German, Dartmouth, 1899-1907, Assistant Professor of German, 1907-149 Professor of German, 1916-19. Member of Modern Language Association of America, and of Society for Ad- vancement of Scandinavian Study. Present position since 1919. Baseball Teams C1, 219 President of Sophomore Classg President of Modern Language Club Giang Editor Board of College Paper Q-U. . 33 3 A7fr7f If X! aff! V A f fy f ! 'yi 1, fer ,ij f ,. rj ,, ZZ? uf If eff ff .. ...., . .,., A2-S44 V' ---. 1 :fg':.f.'e,4,g.g.'g1,.'ne.-5,1 .3 V':?f'1'M1,c MZ 1 uiqegg.: A e rr Hr ' A 4171 - I., 9 4, ,,w,f ,V - ,-i,::,,,A5:,, x f i V f 90' . ,vzrvzw '- wi ng35: 31:qgf : f .5- ., 4 V ' 1. ez:aa11:1.-1-e-:- vm-af -. .Q ,'-.12fif:::f:f12, 4143431-,'xgga.1f -'ge-,g4f:1',,Q4':,4, s ' n .M fy-w ,g ,:.,:'-'J.- 1 f 1- M . fy-nf wry:-1'-1 . '- 22, , ' ' f 'ir , , 4972 ' fb ian , Mr , A New Y ,f fxff nl , f 7 nf 4 5, SQA ' F0 F f, ,A ., , bt ,gmfg XZ nr lpgngx X .,S lb. ng r Q 19 . la 1- 21 Q xlib., f ,lj 2 if ?.' Xxx liliivr-NSW ffrw'2 af? w.iPxXXXNk ' A I 1 ii' N Al' 'if ii I .x,.., N , P , 1: Richard Wellington Husband, A.B., A.M., Associate Dean, DDE, CIJBK. Leland Stanford, A.B., 1895, A.'M., 1896, University of California, University of Toronto, University of Leipzig. Assistant in Greek and Latin, University of California, 1898-99, Instructor, Leland Stanford, 1899-1900, Instructor in Greek, Dartmouth, 1900-03, Assistant Professor of Classical Philology, 1903-15, Professor of Classical Languages, 1915-19, Member ol American Philological A ssoriationg Simplified Spelling Board CAdvisory Councilj, New England Classical Association, President New Hampshire Branch, 1911-12, Author of articles and reviews in Transactions of the American Philological Association , Classical Philologyu, ' 'Clas- sical Journal , School Review , Dartmouth Press , Clas- sical Week.ly , American Journal of Theology , Author: The Prosecution of Jesus , Secretary New Hampshire Committee on Public Safety, New Hampshire State War Historian and Compiler of Military and Naval Records, Office Manager New Hampshire District Board, 1917, Member American Academy of Political and Social Science, American Economic League. Present position since 1919. L Prescott Orde Skinner, A.B., A.M., Professor of Romance Languages, QIJBK, Arts. Harvard, A.B., 1896, A.M., 1897, University of Paris, 1899-1900. Instructor in Romance Languages, Harvard, 1897-99, Instructor in Romance Languages, Boston University, 1897-99, Instructor in Romance Languages, Dartmouth, 1900-06, Assistant Professor, 1906-12, Taught, IVI. I. T., summer,1915 , Columbia, summer, 1919. Present position since 1912. Charles Ernest Bolser, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of Organic Chemistry, ZX, IIA. ' Dartmouth, A.B,, Gottingen, Ph.D. Member of American Chemical Society, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Ouroborous Chemical Club. Present position since 1914. ' 34 ee--- f 5' - 7 f P,i if 4' John Wfilliam Bowler, M.D., A.M. CHonora1'yl, Pro- fessor of Hygiene and Physical Education and Director ofthe Gymnasium, AKK. Dartmouth Medical School, M.D., 1906g A.M., Dartmouth KI-Ion.j, 1910. Assistant to Doctor Sargent at Harvard, 1889- Pg Charge of the CharlesBank Gymnasium, 1893-19013 General Superintendent of the Public Gymnasia, Boston, 1899-1901g Director of Gymnasium and Athletic Coach and Trainer, 1901-05g Assistant Professor, 1905- 07, Coach and Trainer of Track Team, 1901-083 Trainer of Foot- ball Team, 1901-15. Member American Medical Associationg American Moral and Sanitary Prophylactic Societyg American School Hygiene Associationg Society of Directors of Physical Edu- cation in Colleges. Present position since 1907. Leon Burr Richardson, BL., A.M., Professor of Chemis- try, AXA, CTJBK, PA. Dartmouth, B.L., 1900. Pennsylvania, 1901-05g Cornell, 1917. In- structor, University of Pennsylvania, 19023 Assistant Professor, Dartmouth, 1910-18. Present position since 1918. Nornian Everett Gilbert, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Physics, ATA, PA, CDBK. Wesleyan, A.B., 1895g A.M., 1896g Johns Hopkins, Ph.D., 1901. Teaching in Secondary Schools, 1896-98g Professor of Physics, Hobart, 1901-033 Assistant Professor of Physics, Dartmouth, 1903- 1916g Associate Professor of Physics, 1916-18g Assistant Astron- omer, United States Naval Observatory, Solar Eclipse Exped- ition to North Carolina, 1900gto Sumatra, 1901g to Algeria, 19055 Temporary Assistant, Astronomical Observatory, Smithsonian Institute, 190Qg Studied at Cambridge University, England, 19103 Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Scienceg Member American Physical Society, and of Astronomi- cal Society of Americag National President Gamma Alpha, 1917, 1918, 1919. Present position since 1918. 35 4 Q., , 4,-1 f :mf-5 --. , ?. A9 1 - 1 .e ,X . ' 1 I . I . yiismuiiii 1 Pl T i 92 El fi lj! E Q f wr' W' I ff fn ,,. 4, . , . f . 5 ' I rjlggffgfxjxfiv -W! ff 2 P52141 f r . . . 1sz71'z'ff'fr'11 ff - ' ' A. if V s ' V .w,,5:-V., ,f,wt::' , V-.f'.'Is1'4-rw,r,f, -' nf ,I , '1 ,f ' -' ,4f'f'Lf.w:f. uf' hm. 2'..,,. f14,.ff'51 4 ' my' 1 .- rm ,-.,:p1:s1:-avg.. .,1,LWa,, -.:,.g,ff1ff, L1 ly of fl' my ,-vffjrf7,:4.mr-2 nf iff nl' 'frf' 4 1 1 1 f 4 f 1 J 1 ,ff y w, f,,,f,, v' ,fix , 'yo ,, f f Q WH' rl f Q ,ff Q79 M , If sf , 1 1 rv f fifjvif, ' , ff fff fi f f ,- .,,, ,ffl for ,V V QW! V' W' ar- Els. . - i WS ff '-' sd .5 'Aw Colin Campbell Stewart, A.B., Ph.D., Brown Professor of Physiology, FA, CIDAZ, EE. A Toronto, A.B., 1894, Clark, Ph.D., 1897. Scholarship i11 Physiology, Clark, 1894-95, Fellow, 1895-97, Instructor in Summer School, 1895 and 1897, Assistant in Physiology, Harvard, 1897-98, Tutor in Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia, 1898- 19003 Demonstrator of Physiology, Pennsylvania, 1900-03, In- structor in Summer School, 1903, Assistant Professor, 1903-04, Associate Professor of Physiology, Dartmouth Medical School, 1904-07, Professor of Physiology, Dartmouth, 1907-08, Member American Physiological Society, Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science. Present position since 1908. A Charles Albert Proctor, A.B,, Ph.D., Professor of Physics, AKE, HDBK, FA, EE, Sphinx. Dartmouth, A.B., Chicago, Ph.D. Parker Fellowship, 1901-OQ, Fellow and Assistant in Physics, Chicago, 1902-03, Instructor in Physics, University of Missouri, 1903-07, Assistant Professor Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1907-09, Assistant Professor Physics, Dartmouth, 1909-18, Fellow of American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, Member American Physical Society, Ameri- can Optical Society. Present position since 1918. Charles Ramsdell Lingley, B.S., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of History, f1Jl A. Worcester Polytechnic Institute, B.S., Columbia University, A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in History, Dartmouth, 1907-10, Assistant Pro- fessor, 1910-19. Present position since 1919. Class Baseball and Football, Christian Association, Cross Country Running, Editorial Work. 36 o . Q 8- Eugene Francis Clark, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Secretary of Dartmouth College, WT, Arts. Dartmouth, A.B., 19015 A.M., 19053 Harvard, Ph.D., 1915, Graduate Student University .of Marburg, 1906-073 Harvard, 1907-083 Uni- versity of Freiburg, 1912-133 University of Marburg, 1913. Teacher, De Meritte School, Boston, 1902-06, Chairman Council on Student Organizations, 1913-175 Assistant Professor German, 1908-18 5 . Member Modern Language Associationg American Dialect Societyg Directing Editor Dartmouth Alumni Blagazirzeg Member of Alumni Councilg Contributor to Educational and Philological Periodicals. Present position since 1918. Class Track Team C213 Grimes Prize Mjg Plattsburg O. T. C., July to September, 19189 Adjutant and Personnel Officer, University of Rochester S. A. T. C., September to December, 1918. James Walter Goldthwaite, A.B., A.lVI., Ph.D., Hall Professor of Geology, CDBK, EE, PA. Harvard, A.B., 19023 A.M., 1903g Ph.D., 1906. Assistant in Geology, Harvard and Radcliffe, 1901-043 Assistant Professor, Northwestern, 1904-069 Assistant Professor of Geology, Dartmouth, 1908-11. Present position since 1911. Wilmoii Henry Sheldon, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Stone Professor of Philosophy, Arts. Harvard, A.B., 1895, A.M., 18963 Ph.D., 18993 Dartmouth, A.M., 1910. Tutor in Columbia, 1903-05, Preceptor in Princeton, Mem- ber American Philosophical Societyg Member Executive Com- mittee, American Philosophical Society, 1910-115 Vice-President. 1913-14. Present position since 1909. 37 Q 19 31 1 Charles Nelson Haskins, BS., IXIS., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of M athemattcs on the Chandler F ounctation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, B.S., 18973'Harvard, NLS., I899Q A.M., 19003 Ph.D., 1901. Assistant in Physics, M. I. T. 1897-983 Student at Harvard, 1898-19013 Student at Gottingen, 1901-UQ, Instructor in Mathematics, M. I. T., 190Q-033 Instructor, Yale, 1903-041 Instructor, Cornell, IQO4-06, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Illinois, 1906-09g Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1906-163 Member American Math- ematical Societyg Fellow American Association for the Adxance- ment of Science, Author of Various Articles in Mathematical Journalsf Present position since 1916. Curtis Hidden Page, A.B., A.lVI., Ph.D., Wtnkley Professor ofEnglisl1,, AY, KIJBK, Arts, Round Robin. Harvard, A.B., 1890, A.M., ISQIQ Ph.D., 18945 University of Paris, 18941-953 Institute of Higher Studies, Florence, Italy, 1900. In- structor in French and Lecturer in English Literature, WVestern Reserve, 1891-92, Instructor in French, Harvard, 1893-943 In- structor and Professor in the Romance Languages, Columbia, 1895-19093 Professor of English Literature, Northwestern, 1909-IIQ Trustee of Gilmanton Academyg Editor: Cyrano de Bergerac's Voyage to the lVIoon,,' with life of Cyranog f'The Lives, Heroic Deeds and Sayings of Gargantua, and his Son Pantagruelw by Francis Rabelais, with Introductory Essayg British Poets of the Nineteenth Century g 'iThe Chief American Poets 3 Translator: Songs and Sonnets of Pierre de Ronsardg lVIoliere's Chief Playsg Anatole France, The Man who Married a Dumb 1Vife. Present position since 1911. On leave of absence. Highest Second Year Honors in Classicsg Highest Final Honors in Modern Literatureg Honorable Mention in Frenchg Bowdoin Prize3 Sohier Prize, Prizes in Middle Distance Running and Tennis. John VVesley Young, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D., B. P. Cheney Professor of M athemattcs, FA, CIJBK, EE, Arts. Ohio State, Ph.B., 1899Q Cornell, A.M., 1901, Ph.D., 1904. In- structor, Northwestern, 1903-053 Assistant Professor, Princeton, 1905-083 Assistant P1'ofessor, University of Illinois, 1908-IOQ Professor and Head of Department, University of Kansas, 1910-113 Professor University of Chicago, summer 1911: Member, American Mathematical Society3 Member, Council since IQIOQ Committee on Publication since I9I3Q Mathematical Association of America CCouncil 1916-19193, Deutsche Mathe- matiker Vereinigung, and Circulo Matematico di Palerma3 on leave of absence 1919-20 as Chairman National Committee on Mathematical Requirements3 Chief Examiner in Geometry, Col- lege Entrance Examination Board, 1915-17 3 Special work for Educational Bureau of the National VVa1' IVork Council for the Y. M. C. A. and for the Committee on Education and Special Training of the VVar Department, Washington, 1918g Author of Projective Geometry , Volume I, Qwith O. VebleuD3 Fundamen- tal Concepts of Algebra and Geometryng Plane Geometryf, Cwith A. J. Schwartzjg Elementary Mathematical Analysisf' Cwith F. M. Morganjg Plane Trigonometry, Qwith F. IVI. Mor- ganj. Present position since 1911. 38 v. f J X if Lf N. 5 NNW WX 5 . 0 ji 4? fdg ,fc fi? 19 131 . ,, s lil l ' 'I ' tf 5 5 r lair' , A,A, ,AA,, 7 I Erville Bartlett Woods, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of So- ciology, 1219, -CIJBK, AEP, Turtle Mound. Beloit College, 19019 University of Chicago, Ph.D., 1906. Professor Political and Social Science, Hamline University, 1906-11, Expert United States Immigration Commission 1903-103 Assistant Professor of Sociology, Dartmouth College, 1911-19g Secretary of New Hampshire State Childrenis Commission, 1913-15g Chief Administrator, National War Labor Board, 1918-19, Author of Articles and Reviews, American Journal of Sociology, and other periodicals. Present position since 1919. Chester Arthur Phillips, A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College, and Professor of Banking and Finance, T he Amos Tuck School of Arl- ministration and Finance, CIDZK, CIJBK, Arts. Central College, A.B., 1904-3 Yale, A.B., 19083 A.M., 19093 Pl1.D., 1919. Assistant Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College, 1913-185 Editor, Readings in lVIoney and Banking , Author, Bank Creditug Contributor to American Economic Review and other Publications. Present position since 1918. Frank Maloy Anderson, A.B., A.lVI., Professor of His- tory, BDU. University of Minnesota, A.B., 18943 A.M., 1986 3 Harvard, 1896-97: Paris, 1909. Managing Editor of the Gopher,' Qunior Annualig Member of the Executive Committee of the Minnesota Voters' League, 1908-123 Member of Minneapolis Charter Commissiong Instructor in History, University of Minnesota, 1895-985 Assistant Professor, 1898-1905, Professor, 1905-143 Specialist on Diplomatic History with The Inquiry organized by the State Department, 1918, and with the U. S. Delegation at the Paris Peace Conference, 1919, Member Army Educational Corps, 1919, Author: Outlines and Documents of English Constitutional History during the Middle Ages Cjoint authorjg Constitutions and Documents Illus- trative of the History of France 1789-1902,'g Handbook for the Diplomatic History of Europe, Asia, and Africa, 1871-1914 Cjoint authorj. Present position since 1914. 3 39 S., fi Sf' -Rx 9 1 1 5 '1 lx 5 e1f+ - . ' ' 7119 91 '- I A T-J M Wgiysiiix fgml . 22 .A., W NX ?f i:iy.AS U -J J r Henry Thomas lVIoore, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, BQH, GQJBK, Arts. University of Missouri, A.B., 1903, Yale, A.M., 1907, Harvard Ph.D., 1914. Assistant in Phychology, Harvard, 1912-14, Lec- turer in Psychology, Simmons, 1914-15, Assistant Professor in Psychology, Dartmouth, 1915-17, Assistant Professor ol Psychology, University of Minnesota, 1917-19, Member American Psychological Association, American Association for the Advance- ment of Science, New Hampshire Academy of Science. Present position ,since 1919. James Parmelee Richardson, A.B., LL.B., Parker 'Professor of Law and Political Science, KKK, GQJBK, ClDAflD, Dragon, Arts. A Dartmouth, A.B., 1899, Boston University, LL.B., 1902. President of the Dartmouth Club of Boston, 1913, Member of the Alumni Council of Dartmouth, 1911-16, Vice-President of the Alumni Council of Dartmouth, 1915-16, Member Nlassachusetts Consti- tutional Convention, 1917, Member Executive Committee of New Hampshire Committee on Public Safety, 1918-19, Faculty Rep- resentative on Athletic Council, 1919. Present position since 1917. William Hamilton WVood, A.B., B.D., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Biblical History and Literature, 1211 Toronto, AB., 1901, Victoria, B.D., 19045, Yale, B.D., 1905, A.M., 1966, Ph.D., 1909. Student in American School of Arehaeologbf, Jer- usalem, 1906-07, Student in Germany in Gottingen and Berlin Uni- versities, 1907-08, two months Spring of 1908 in University of Paris, Professor of Biblical Literature, Birmingham, 1909-10, Pastor of Ridgeheld, Conn.,M. E. Church, 1910-13, Pastor of Hedding Memorial M. E. Church, New York City, 1913-14, Professor of Biblical Literature, Alleghany, 1914-15, Professor of Biblical Literature, Hamline, 1915-17, Contributor Various Magazine Articles, Member Religious Educational Association, American Oriental Society. Present position since 1917. 40 - -- Q . , 5 .-,wh , 5 4. A 5 j It Y I , J 1 A f X ,,, 52. I 5 K H ' ,,- -:Xi x J fi X, 3 king V di.. 1 , . ..., A I 'Ei f 1 f V, 1 xx I at ii? -1 z ' ' tt-f - ' ' 3,3 Leonard Beecher NIcVVhood, A.B., Professor of Illicsic, CIJBK, Arts. Columbia, A.B., 1893. Fellow in Psychology, Columbia, 1896-983 Assistant, Tutor, and Adjunct Professor of Music, Columbia, 1897-19105 Instructor of Music, Vassar, 1902-075 Instructor in Music, Drew Theological Seminary, 1907-165 Director of Music in Newark, N. J. High School, 1913-185 Director of Music, Dart- mouth, 1918-195 lVIember International Music Societyg Music Teachers' National Association, etc. Present position since 1919. Albert Henry Washburn, Ph.B., LLB., Professor of Political Science, BQII. Cornell, Ph.B., 18895 Georgetown, L.L.B., 1895. U. S. Consul at Magdehurg, Germany, 1890-935 Private Secretary to Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, 1893-965 Assistant U. S. Attorney for Dis- trict of Massachusetts, 1897-19015 Special U. S. Treasury Counsel in Customs Cases, 1901-045 Private Practice 1904-19. Present position since 1919. www. 'N i 1 ,i YZ 9 of Q-eds Riverda Harding Jordan, B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Professor of Education, KIJPA, CIJBK. Yale, B.A., 18935 M.A.,'19135 University of Minnesota Ph.D. 1919 Princ1pal Central High School and Director Normal Training School, St. Joseph, lVIissouri, 1904-115 Principal West High School, Minneapolis, Nlinnesota, 1911-175 Instructor in Education and Rhetoric, University of Minnesota, 1917-195 Author Nationality and School Progressn. Present position since 1919. 41 as M t Wlilliam Alexander Robinson, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Political Science, KE, CIJBK. Bowdoin, A.B., 1907, University of Wisconsin, A.lVI., 1910g Yale, Ph.D., 1913. Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Idaho, 1913-145 Assistant Professor of Political Science, YVash- ington University, 1914-173 Associate Professor, 1917-19. Present position since 1919. of Economics, CIJKE, EPZ. 1919. omics, XIF, QIDH. 1919. 42 Howard Douglas Dozier, AQB., A.M., Ph D Professor Vanderbilt, A.B., 19083 Yale, A.M., 19165 Ph.D., 1919 Taught in Public and Private Schools in Tennessee, 1908-12 Tome School 1919-14, Head of the School of Commerce, University of Georgia 1917-19, Author History of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad lVIe1nber American Economic Association. Present position since Malcolm Keir, B.S., A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Econ 1 1 PhD Vi l Pennsylvania, B.S., 19115 A.M., 9 3g . ., 1916, les eyan 1905 07. Assistant in Economics, Pennsylvania, 1911 12 Instructor 1912-14g Assistant Professor, 1914-18g Labor Investigator and Arbitrator for the Industrial Relations Branch of the Office of the Quartermaster General, 19185 Chief of the Contract Accounts Division of the Business Depa1'tment of the S. A T C 1919 lVIember American Economic Association. Present position since 7 'x-A ,, - Lemuel Spencer Hastings, A.B., B.D., W illarcl Assistcmt Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, l-lf'Y', CIDBK, Arts. Dartmouth, A.B., 18705 Yale, B.D., 1876. Principal of Stevens High School, Claremont, N. H., 1881-891 Principal of Nashua High School, Nashua, N. H., 1889-1905g Instructor in English, Dart- mouth, 1906-10. Present position -since 1910. Class Secretaryg Baseball Team C3,-D, Associate Editor of The Dar!- fmouth CLD, Theological Society Q3, -L13 Salutatory Address at Com- mencement. Arthur Houston Chivers, A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Biology, IIA. Dartmouth A.B., 19093 Harvard, A,M., 190-lg Ph.D., 1910. Grad- uate Student, 1904-06g Instructor, Laboratories of Brooklyn In- stitute of Arts and Sciences during summers of 1905-06, Instructor, Dartmouth Summer School, 1908-15, Instructor, Dartmouth, 1906- 113 Member American Association for the Advancement of Scien- cesg Botanical Society of Americag Torrey Botanical Club of New Yorkg Society for Protection of New Hampshire Forests, Amer- ican Phytopathological Societyg American Forestry Association. Present position since 1911. ' I Leland Griggs, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biology, -QDBK, PA. Dartmouth, A.B., 190Qg Ph.D., 19075 Cambridge, England. Instruc- tor in Biology, Dartmouth, 1908-191-1-. Present position since 191-L. 13 gf fi, ., 12 A -sh -. f x? , g . + r-- 5 its 157 -1 gg. X Y Kg' X .EO 'YXWWN A S tl ,. -I Mgr 9 XL' 3 F Arthur Herbert Bayse, A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of History, fIJBK, Arts. I , University of Kansas, A,B., 19045 A.M., 1906g Yale, 1906-08, 1916-173 Ph.D., 1917. Instructor in History, Dartmouth, 1908-145 Lecturer in History, University of Minnesota, first semester 1917-18. Pres- ent position since 1914-. Francis Joseph Neef, Ph.B.,- Assistant Professor of German. IIPY. c University of Chicago, Ph.B., 1905g Student Universities of Lau- sanne, Berlin and Leipzig, 1905-073 Fellow, University of Chicago, 1908, Instructor in German, Brown, 1908-093 Instructor, Dart- mouth, 1909-15, Member Modern Language Association of Amer- icag American Dialect Societyg New England Modern Language Association. Present position since 1915. Ralph Dennison Beetle, A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Matherrzattcs, AFT, CIJBK, FA. Dartmouth, A.B., 1906g A.M., 1911g Princeton, Ph.D., 1914. In- structor in Littleton High School, Littleton, New Hampshire, 1906- 075 Instructor in Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1907-12, 1914-15g J. S. K. Fellow in Princeton, 1912-Mg Member American Mathe- matical Society, and Mathematical Association of Americag American Association for the Advancement of Science. Present position since 1915. 441 W A9 y F e r WWW 5 5 iw , 1 . a 5 - s - A f4' - cmfgs ' . , el x '6 1 rgt , . 2 Ll, ?N Ernest Roy Greene, A.B., A.lVI., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. Harvard, A.B., 1901g A.M., 1907. Instructor in Spanish, Simmons. 1906-079 Instructor in French and Spanish, Dartmouth, 1907-09, Assistant Professor in French and Spanish, 1909-10g Instructor in Romance Languages, Tufts, 1910-12. Present position since 1912, Francis Lane Childs, A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English, CIJBK, Arts, Round Robin. Dartmouth, A.B., 19065 A.M., 19173 Harvard, Ph.D., 19173 Parker Fellow of Dartmouth at Harvard 1907-09, Willard Scholar of Harvard, 1913-14. Instructor in English, Dartmouth, 1909-13g Member Modern Language Association of Americag American Dialect Society, New Hampshire Historical Societyg New England Historic-Genealogical Society, Associate Editor of Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. Present position since 1913. A A l I V l Raymond Watson Jones, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of German, AY, QDBK. Cornell, A.B., 1905g Ph.D., 19103 Marburg Universityg Berlin Uni- versity. Instructor in German, Princeton, 1907-085 Assistant. University of VVisconsin, 1909-10. Present position since 1910. 45 A95 9 f 19 ... M li ,Za fl, . ,rt V ..., ,.,- .4 ,L 'V l IV is , 1 ' Harry Livingston Hillman, Assistant Professor of Physical Education. ' ' Member Knickerbocker Athletic Club, New York City, 1900-01g New York Athletic Club, 1902-09g American Olympic Team, St. Louis, 1904rg American Olympic Team, Athens, 1906g American Olympic Team, London, 1908g 1st Lieut, Air Service CAeronautsJ, U. S. A., 19183 Instructor in Physical Education, Dartmouth, 1910- l918. Present position since 1918. Arthur Bond lVIeserVey, A.B.,B.Sc., AssistantP7'0fesso1' of Physics, QJAO, AEP, PA.- Dartmouth, A.B., 19063 B.Sc., Oxford, England, 1911, Demon- strator in Physics, Oxford, 1910-113 Instructor in Physics, Dart- mouth, 1911-1916. Present position since 1916. . Class Football Teamg Varsity Debating Teamg AEGIS Boardg Com- mencement Speakerg Oxford Varsity Lacrosse Team. War1'en Choate Shaw, A.B., A.lNI., Evans Assistant ' Professor of Public Speaking, KKK, AEP. Dartmouth, A.B., 19101 A.M., 1916. Instructor in History and English, Lowell High School, 1910-11g Instructor in Public Speak- ing, Dartmouth, 1911-1-L. Present position since 1914. 'ed 46 z ' H iii 4 X , V f f 0 7 .f cf 1 9 5 51 2 ce 'A'A' 5 1 if S' 'U 2' - f I 1 ff? , I U' , 3 as .9 I we K ..eesf is Peter Staub Dow, C.yE., Assistant Professor of Engineer- ing and Graphics, CIDFA, FA. Thayer School of Civil Engineering, C.E., 1911g University of Ten- nessee. Field Assistant in Surveying, Thayer School of Civil Engineering, 19105 Assistant Superintendent with the Hastings Pavement Company, 19115 Instructor, Stevens Institute of Tech- nology, Surveying Supplementary Term, 1912-13, 1913-145 Con- crete Highway Inspection with the Association of American Port- land Cement Manufacturers, 1914-5 Instructor in Railroad Con- struction, Thayer School of Civil Engineering, August and Septem- ber, 19175 Instructor Dartmouth Training Detachment, N. A. 19185 Instructor in Engineering and Graphics, Dartmouth, 1911- 19175 Associate Member American Society of Civil Engineersg Member of'American Genetic Associationg Society for the Promo- tion of Engineering Education. Special Class Basketball Teamg Glee Club, Choir5 Varsity Afternoon German Clubg Tennessee Cotillion Club, University of Tennessee. Present position since 1917. a Earl Gordon Bill, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of M athernatics, AI-'lIf', QJBK, EE. Acadia, A.B., 19025 Yale, A,B,, 19055 A.M., 19065 Ph.D., 19085 University of Bonn, 1910-11. Taught at Yale, 1908-105 Purdue, 1911-125 Member American Mathematical Societyg Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung5 American Mathematical Association. Present position since 1912. I Foster Erwin Guyer, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor of French, CDBK. Dartmouth, A.B., 19065 A.M., 1908. Instructor in French, North- western, '1909-115 Fellow, University of Chicago, 1912-13. Pres- ent position since 1913. On leave of absence. -L7 few , li ' . li Z el f ae! .f f P 7 .' . I A. -...., ...J l :ff ' :E ' Q? Sox - X fi-' - li 1 J . , ,,,, f ,G , , s 'ev 4 1 3 6 ,ff 2 f as , sc 4' LM is 1 gif 1 '26 94, ,Q 1 Q, if f ' f ' f, ' is 9 f f 1 f A I ,A QQ? f ffl' t3a4ff..f '. f Lift XZVQ, f iw f 7 I 37 Sf 4 was Ag fs A V 9543511 A - ff, -me-L f..g,??iHf 1 ., L3 8,545.4 f',.':i'i:i,,-1,.JF-i'L-:'4Z: tiiiifl. -.Ui 13:2'fs.:3gg, ,. 'E V 1.'.51z3Qf,1,,,,f- ,147 21. f .9 yn' ' ' .fs 1 A ef:- 4,g,-3,:Q.g.5fn' 741-1-, 42fng,1--1f.f-- 1- ' At-1 3 5 1 f at f 5' M f M ' ,W . Z J 14 1 A f 5 , , f , ,gg A ff 3,YfQ,.,,.f 'af P-Luiz. -, ' ww-r--1,':..-wi. 5 .547 Q .gr lg, A9 A . 1 A er News A 21 1 rw 'X ,W 5 i lg? 119 5 , 4 , li 1 . fi ,k,:.. ,., Q Y Frank hlillett Morgan, AIB., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of lllathematics, AXP, CIJBK, ECE, PA. Cornell, AB., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Instructor in Mathematics, Cornell, 1911-12, Instructor, Dartmouth, 1912-155 Member of American Mathematical Society: Mathematical Society ofAme1'ica. Present position since 1915. . George Breed Zug, A.B.,AssistantProfesso1' of Modern Art, XCIJ, Arts. Amherst, A.B., 18933 Harvard, 1893-9-1. Assistant Professor of the History of Art, University of Chicago, 1903-13g Member of the Staff of The University of Chicago Extension Departmentg Euro- pean Art Correspondent for the Chkago Record-Herald, 1912g Art Cr1t1c for the Chicago I nie-r-Ocean, 1912-13. Present position since 1 9 1 3. David Lainbuth, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor of English, AKE, Arts, Round Robin. Vanderbilt, A.B.g Columbia, A.M. Assistant in English, Vanderbilt University, Fellow in English, Columbia, Assistant Editor The Far East g Professor of English Literature and Philosophy Collegxo and Gymnasio do Granbery, Brazilg Reviewer, Special Article writer. Present position since 1913. -18 t 1 A 1 ' ,as ia 1 ,,V, ' . A Ao if -, 3 . - 1 , 5 19 , 0 ,721 ' f ff lf 1 , .ff -'-' U s 1 bf ' , i Louis Clark lVLathewson, A.B., A.lNI., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of M atltematics, ATQ, EE, Arts. Antrim County CMichiganD Normal School, 1904: Albion College, AB., 1910, A.NI., 1911, University of Illinois, A.M., 1912, Ph.D.. 1914. Principal of Ellsworth School, Ellsworth, Mfichigan, 1905- 1906, Teacher of Mathematics, Sioux City, Iowa, Second Semester, 1911, Fellow in Mathematics, University of Illinois, 1912-14, Instructor in Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1915-17, Member Ameri- can Mathematical Society, Mathematical Association of America, Fellow in American Association for the Advancement of Science. Present position since 1917. Shirley Gale Patterson, A.B., A.lVI., Ph.D., y LL. B., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, CID IIA , QIJBK. Amherst, A.B., 1906, Columbia, 1906-08, Cornell, A.M., 1908, Ph.D., 1911. Business, 1899-1902, Amherst, 1904-06, Teacher in Modern Languages, New York City High School, 1906-08, Graduate Student in Romance Languages, Columbia, 1906-08, Student in New York Law School Cnightj, 1907-08, Resident Fellow, Cornell, 1908-09, Foreign Fellow from Cornell to University of Paris and Madrid, 1909-10, Instructor in Modern Languages and Student of Law, University of Chicago, 1910-11, Professor and Head of Ro- mance Language Department, University of Idaho, 1911-15, Special Lecturer in Law of Evidence, University of Idaho, Assistant Pro- fessor of Spanish, Columbia University Summer School, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920. Present position since 1915. I Andrew Jackson Scarlett, Jr., A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Clhemistrr 2 XE F11 f1DAT, EE.. ,fa 1 s f 3 Dartmouth, A.B., 1910, Columbia, A.M., 191-L, Ph.D., 1917. In- structor in Chemist1'y, Dartmouth, 1911-13, Assistant in Chemis- try, Columbia, 1913-17, Instructor in Chemistry, Dartmouth, 1917-18. Present position since 1918. -I9 wx NSN' iss N - ' -'4 ,ya - . , M N I I Z I 1 6 'V 4 X Xxx ? va fl . 4355-.ff' f' J 1 ull Tl pf fyifjilifz..-J , '91 ,W W j 4 f p84 X ,f 1 W i9? f', x , ,, 1,-,sf Kaiba ' as MQ, f Q. If A g 1 - ,, - E? Q.. A 1 X A . xii' ' nl: WN 'llfrvlwgjll 70-if U , is Q . 33 I J vi fw YAY 0 I5 f V , ,fm S H Q it i s Kenneth Allan Robinson fessor of English, AIR, CIJBK, Arts, Round Robin. Bowdoin, A.B., Harvard, A.M. 1916-19. Present position since 1919. , A.B., A.M., Assistant Pro Instructor in English, Dartmouth 5 V F' 'f ft n H 1 , M s w VVilliam Kelley Wriglit, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Profes- sor of Philosophy, fIJl A, fDAK, Arts. '. U iversity ofChicaio AB 1899 PhD 1906 s n g , . ., 5 . ., 5 tudiecl at Freiburg in Baden, Summer Semester, 19093 Oxford and University of London, 1912-13. Instructor in Philosophy, University of Texas, 1906-073 Associate in Philosophy, University of Chicago, 1907-093 Instructor in Philosophy, University of Wisconsin, 1909-12g Acting Associate Professor of Philosophy, Indiana University, 19125 Instructor in Philosophy, Cornell, 1913-16, Author: The Ethical Significance of Pleasure, Feeling and Happiness in Modern Non-Hedonistic Systems , and of Articles and Reviews in The Philosophical Reviewu, Journal of Philosophy , Inter- national Journal of Ethicsn, and American Journal of Theologyf' Member American Philosophical Associationg Western Philosophi- cal Assocxation. Present position since 1916. Chester Hume Forsyth, A.B., A.lVI., Ph.D., Assis- tant Professor of M athematics, ATA, PA. Butler,-A.B., Cornell, University of Illinois, A.M.g University of Michigan, Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1916- 18, Author of Valuation of Bondsf, Logarithms and Anti- Logarithmsf' Introduction to Mathematical Statistics , Member A . . . . . . merican Mathematical Society, and American Statistical Asso- ciation. Present position since 1918. 50 I a , 9 , ' , .,,- ,. .,,, W- .,,.., ,,.4 , B. 16 V. all id Louis Lazare Silverman, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of lllatlzematics, CDMA, EE. Harva1'd, A.B., A.M.g University of Missouri, Pl1.D. Instructor in Mathematics, University of Missouri, 1907-093 Instructor in Mathematics, Cornell, 1910-173 General Electric Company, 1917- 18. Present position since 1918. Leonard Dupee White, B.S., A.M., Assistant Professor of Political Science, CIDBK, AEP, Cosmos. Dartmouth, B.S., 191445 A.M., 19153 University of Chicago, 19153 Clark, 1916-185 Harvard, Summer of 1917 and 1919. Inst1'uctor in Government, Clark, 1915-183 Instructor in Political Science, Dartmouth, 1918-19. Present position since 1919. I VVill,iam Stuart MGSSCl', AB., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Latin, KIJBK. Columbia, A.B., 19053 A.M., 1909g Pl1.D., 1918, Yale. Head of De- partment of Latin and Greek, Barnard School, 1905-093 Univer- sity Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1909-10g Gotsberger Fellow in Classics, Columbia, 1910-113 Instructor in Classical Philology, Columbia, 1911-19. Present position since 1919. 51 1 A l 7 IU :. -ell, 1 -. I 22' 1 6 w - X i C .-,..4' Wlaldo Shumway, AB., A.M., As.s'isto.nt Professor of Biology CZoologyD, QIJBK, EE, FA, Amherst, A.B., 1911g Columbia, Ph.D., 1916. Member Amherst Biological Expedition to Patogonia, 1911-12, University Scholar in Zoology, Columbia, 1913-11, Assistant in Zoology, Columbia, 191-L-151 Instructor in Biology, Amherst, 1915-1'7g First Lieut- enant 103rd U. S. Infantryg Member American Association for the Advancement of Scienceg Marine Biological Associationg New York Academy of Sciencesg AmateurFencers' League of Amer- ica, American Legiong Contributor to scientific journals. Pres- ent position since 1919. Royal Case Nemiah, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Latin, ZIV, CIJBK. Yale, A.B., 19123 Ph.D., 1916. Present position sincc 1919. Elden Bennett Hartshorn, B.S., Instructor in Clwmfistry, B91-I, PA. . Dartmoutl1, B.S., 1912. Present position since 1913. O11 leave of absence. 52 Q aux, E . , me 6755 J 5' A 6 f S fi ,P' -2 I ' 2 2 'f , ' . '- 'f fi .:I? ff, f 5 2 - Q- ,V , .1 ., .',. V af f -ff' up l g 1' i1f,:i.,f.Z1,,..,ff .ff fi ' --'faC1311Z-i1'iif'1Q2-rr:-.. X H- Q as i .. QM rack... . Q '31 Jules Claude Roule, Instructor in Romance Languages. Ecole Pratique de Commerce, Boulogne-sur-Mer, France, Harvard Summer School, 1913 and 1914-. Teacher of French, Berlitz School of wlaanguagesg Portland Schools of Languagesg Cony High School, Augusta, Me.g Instruct D- ' or, artmouth Summer School, 1916-17. Present position since 19111. Patrick Joseph Kaney, I nstfructor in Physical Education. Special Instructor, Y. -M. C. A. Union, Boston M , ass., 1906-10? Assistant Physical Director, Y. M. C. A., Lynn, Mass., 1910-12, Assistant Physical Director, Y. M. C. A., Boston, Mass., 1912-133 Member American Physical Education Association. Presemt position since 1914. I Frederick Smyth Page, B.S., M.S., Instructor ZCIDE, PA. in Biology, Dartmouth, B. S., 19135 University of Vermont, M.S., 19141. Instruc- tor, University of Vermont, 1913-15. Present position since 1915. 53 ffifff .fu-:ew-:Li W S ' . . , ,f.,.,,.f,j ? t z . u . ' .,..., 1 f I 1 ,JI id f if! j fx , I 5 ,.,.., .5 f ff , 4 f ww' -c i J M25 if mi- 5 . 1 ff ,ff K 1 A3 9 9 'Q 9 ..rr I eb .. r Howard Floyd Dunham, A.B., A.M., Instructor in French, CIJEK. l Dartmouth. A.B., 19113 University of Montpellier QFrancej, 1911-123 Dartmouth, A.M., 1919. Instructor in French and English, Ohio VVes1eyan, 1912-13, Instructor and Graduate Student in French, Ohio State, 1913-143 Instructor in French, Dartmouth, 1914--153 Instructor, Dartmouth Summer School, 1918. Present position since 1916. Harold Edward VVashburn, A.B., A.M., Instructor in French. Dartmouth, A.B., 1910, Harvard, A.M., 1916. Instructor in French, Dartmouth, 1914-15, Present position since 1919. Fletcher Low, BS., A.M., Instructor in Chemfistry, KKK, fmr, Sphinx. Dartmouth, B.S., 19153 Columbia, A.M., 1917. Dartmouth Baseball Team, 1913 and 1914g Member American Chemical Society. Pres- ent position since 1917. 54 'P Courtney Bruerton, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Instructor in Romance Languages, CIJBK. Tufts, A.B., 1912, Harvard, A.M., 1913, Ph.D., 1915. Editor-in- Chief Tufts W eekly, 1911-12g Graduate Student, Harvard, 1912-159 John Harvard Fellow, 1914--1915. Present position since 1915. -'ss .511ilvffffzzfsfmmzzy A 'ow V i ff ' 9 D. . t SQ fa . , 1 it :XE fn' i-gixix-mmm Qfwwsxsww 71' .pxsirf ? Lewis Dayton Stilwell, A.B., A.M., Inszfrnctor 'Ln His- tlyrya Amherst, A.B., 1913, Harvard, A.M., 1914. Instructor in History, Dartmouth, 1916-17. Present position since 1919. 5152! :':fI-:E- 139, ' 2 ef' 1415 -,Q P- ' -- 1 :l'E1'l--'I-Q25 ,1.1.2-1-:rw-:ev-I-41-sw .- . LsE'2:,21': rZf1.2 11.51 -' :.:., I ,- jf.-1 Lw1g:::r1.e3i512? +2'1'.?f'.-' ri' pr lf?5.'f-- Z , ':r1f':11r.f-114: . '- .'':'+1f:4:4js,:,L,:,zg,- I- g , :., .N f ,.5, 'ep ,1 '.15-.sz-.f,,-a:::::::-.1-yI 1114211-'I-er V fu z-Ly: ,, -'1::26E:::---,-:,'5Cm- V fr--:L.:,,: . .a-ma-21,-,.':-.4:n 455312.--3' . 1i . - , . aa, ,gee V -ur 1.5.f'1.::,:,,fg::+.., Jef fm., ,,.sse2:2.2'1E121:f.51:1::m: 1.-1:11:13-515.2121-2:1 ' 111521.-Zf24'2f33fiZE:2.E- ' arf' P1i1231r11EfE'2,? - ' ,, Gr, 79 I if 46 4 Z2 I William Bolster Pierce, BS., I nstructor in Physics, AKE QDBK. Dartmouth, B.S., 1913g Graduate Student, Harvard, 1914. Present position since 1918. 55 Ag EDF -xr - g 1 E7 7liIf??' fl Sw v 9:5 N Nw so 4 ,,A.. 5- f if 5 ,,.. UW r lm Q 9 rl s S' WVarren Edward Montsie,- B.S., Instructor in German Dartmouth, B.S., 19153 Harvard, 1917. Instructor in German Dartmouth, 1915-175 Teacher of German, Berkshire School, 1918 19. Present position since 1919. Charles LeonardStone, A.B., Instructor in Psychology, AFT, KIJBK. Dartmouth, A.B., Columbia. Grade School Principal, 1908-14. Present position since 1917. X John Joseph Sexton, A.B., Instructor in Romance Lan- guages. Harvard, A.B., 1918... Spanish Master, St. Mark's School, Spring Term, 19183 Auxiliary Teacher, Boston High School System, Winter Term, 1918. Present position since 1919. 56 ei c .D A 9 A L ,. ' f' 'f ' . ' --:.q.gz..,.g:91,, A '-4' e - ELIQLL5 .X n George Raffalovich, B. es L., Lecturer in French. Nancy Universit France B. es L. 1896' Harvard 1917-18. Frenc . y C J. , , h Correspondent of La Reforms Sociale, London, 19029 Foreign Edi- tor Vanity Fair QLondonJ and other periodicals, 1910-133 T ravelled through Galicia, Roumania, Turkey, etc., 1913-1914: French In- terpreter QQnd Lieutenant, Englandj, 191-Lg Harvard S. A. T. C., 19183 Lecturer in French, Arlington High School, 1918-19. Pres- ent position since 1919. V Leonard Chester Jones, B.S., A.M., D. es L., Instructor in H istory. I Princeton, B.S., A.lVI.g University of Geneva, D. es L. Special Fellow in History, Princeton, 1908-09 and Fellow 1909-10g Teacher in Latin, Haddonield High School, New Jersey, 1912-14, Served with WVar Relief Commission of the Rockefeller Foundation at Berne, August 1916 and April 19173 with American Red Cross overseas, 1917 3 Serving with commission for France, Belgium and Switzerland CDirection of Department of Civil Affairsl, 1919, CFirst Lieutenant, later Captain and Majorj. Author Simon Goulait, 15413-1628 , Parisg Honore Championug Contributor of articles in French on the work of the A. R. C. published in La Revue International de la Croix Rouge . Present position since 1919. I if 1 to , X. IV vi 1 Thomas Edward Steward, A.B., Instmctor in English, KKK. Dartmouth, A.B., 1910. In journalistic work, 1911-1919. Present position since 1919. 57 0 A, . . . WX: 1 I 'ff ,M-1 i ::': - M. 9 , A-. U 1J!111Jm11un L , NM 'A' f ffiiiiwitzitifg is-1 z- 'Af xx KW William Doty lVIaynard, AB., A.M., Instructor in Romance Languages. Dartmouth, A.B., 19113 Harvard, A.NI., 1913: Suffield School, 1914- 163 University of Nebraska, 1912. Present position since 1919. Hewette Elwell Joyce, B.A., A.M., Instructor in Eng- lish, BQH, Elizabethan Club CYalej. Yale, A.B., 19125 A.M., 1915. Assistant Instructor, Yale, 1913-153 Master, Groton School, 1915-183 head of English Department, Noble Sz Greenough School, Boston, 1918-19. Present position since 1919. Joseph William Tanch, B.S., Ph.D., Instructor in M atheffnattcs. Acadia College, B.S.g Yale, Ph.D. Present position since 1919. 1 58 ,Q r, ,fl W , AQ N fs we ns K Robert Otheo Conant, A.B., Instructor in Romance Languages. Dartmouth, A.B,, 1913, Yale, 1913-14. Instructor in French, Alle- gheny, 191-L-15g Instructor in French, De Pauw, 1915-165 Master Harrisburg Academy, 1916-173 Instructor in French, Allegheny, 1917-19. Present position since 1919. Adam Raymond Gilliland, A.B,, A.M., Instructor in Psychology, Acacia, CIDAK. Muskingum, A.B., 1913, Ohio State, A.M., 1916, University of Chicago, 1916-18. Superintendent of High School, Malta, Ohio, 1911-123 Graduate Assistant in Psychology, Ohio State, 1915-16g Fellow in Psychology, University of Chicago, 1916-183 Instructor in Psychology, Muskingum, summers of 1917 and 1918. Present position since 1919. John Brooks Moore, A.B., A.M., Instructor in English. Harvard, A.B.g University of YVashington, A.M. Present position since 1919. A.llen Pierce Richmond, Jr., B.S., C.E., Instructor in Graphics and Engineering, PA. Dartmouth, B.S., 1914g Thayer School Civil Engineering, C. E., 1915. Coach Rifle Team, Scientific Association: Thayer Society Civil Engineersg Junior Member Society Civil Engineers. Present position since 1919, 59 A si, l E ' . - .. if ix 3 755: ir. 7 f, all - ' 'W-. FF 5- ' ', . ' M A, gi . H 3-5 - 15.5113 K,,. f r J .,,,1 ., 'A at ...Q as ., i 9 ts -so 9 1 -.-' . VValter Earl Spahr, A.B., A.lVI., Instructor 'in Econo- ? Earlham College, A.B., 19145 University of California, 19155 Uni- f , versity of Wisconsin, A.M., 19173 Columbia, 1919. Instructor in History and Political Science, Pacific College, 1914-15g Instructor in History, Manual Training High School, Indianapolis, 1915-165 Assistant in Political Science, University of Wisconsin, 1916-17 g Head of Political Science Departnient, Muskingum College, 1918- 5 11.123 19. Present position since 1919, Bancroft Beatle-y, A.B., A.M., Part-Time Instructor in Education, CIDBK, fIJAK, CIDKE. Harvard, A.B.-, 19155 A.M., 1916. Principal High School Northbor- ough, Massachusetts, 1916-17g Instructor in Coast Artillery,0Hicers Training School, Fort Monroe, Virginia, and at Brown S. A. T. C., 1918g Head Master Hanover High School, 1919. Present position since 1919. Ray Victor Leffler, AB., A.M., Instructor 'in Econ- orntcs. University of Michigan, A.B., 1915, A.M., 1917. Instructor in Econ- omics, University of Michigan, 1916-19, Summer School, 1919. Present position since 1919. 60 A ' -5 mx L I ,,.: ', -. ,E ' FX . , , ,- . U. U E T 'NNXN li 'L' .lAA' N NTAS-J K ,L ,.. fi-'N G- i X W 1 l 7 la 1- ,.A.. 4,,,.., U E -3 f is V X ..,,AA M Leslie Peiguson Mu1'ch, AB., Instructor' in Plzysfics, AKE, KIPBK. Colby, AB., 1915. G1'aLclua.te Student :Lt DiL1'tIll0l1Lll, 1915-17. Present position since 1919. VVillizLn1 Benfield Pressey, AB., A.1V1., Ivwtmcftoz' in English, l1f'1'. ' '1'1'inityg Hm'v:ird. First Lieutenant United States Marines. Present position since 1919. Irving Chellis Story, B.S., A.Mi.,' Ivzstructor in English, New Hampshire College, ILS., 1915g Cornell, A.M., 1919. Present' Q position since 1919. Jacob Garabrzint Neufie Blitclicll, A.B., A.M., 'In- .stmctor in English, Allf. ffrinity, A.l3., 19163 A.M., 1917g P611I1SylVZLl1l2L, 1916-17. Blilitzljry Coxnniandant and Instructor in English, Grove City College 1917-183 Executive Officer, U. S. Naval Unit, Princeton, S. A. T. C., 1918. Present position since 1919. ' 1 Anton Adolph Raven, AB., A.1W., Instructor in Eng- lish, Zllf. ' Rutgers, A.B., 19169 Harvatrcl, A.M., 1919. Instructor in Englisli, University of Maine, 1916-17. Present position since 1919. Percy Austin Fraleigh, A.B., A.M., ln.strz1.ctov' in M ath- emaltics, CDBK, EE. Cornell, A.B., A.M. Present position since 1919. 61 Q A' E I rg fry- ' -f ..,1.. W D5 ' il X ,fy ,. if V ' ,,1, -5? . f 41 .... . , ,,,, c' s' PV Vlb. i A at 3,9 Harris Ma1'shall Chadwell, BS., Instructor 'LIL Chezmstry AXA, PA. Dartmouth, B.S., 1919. Member American Chemical Society Pres ent position since 1919. Harwood Lawrence Childs, AB., Instructor in Publzc Speaking, AXP, AEP. . Dartmouth, A.B., 1919. Present position since 1919. John Emil Rosnell, B.S., Instructor in Ch.enListry, AXP FA. Dartmouth, B.S., 1918. Present position since 1919. riff IAHN E Orestes Vera, Teaclmlng Fellow in Spcmisla. Graduated from University of Santiago do Chile, 19173 Professor of Q I f English in Chile, 1918-19. Present position since 1919. V-i.Vv' . f wa, A . 62 A9 .,. Q ', ,,-' , i I vi ,MJ fi-'li A 6 XX sl' C' .- T nfs.: ' T'- i X x ,v,. ., A ! if-..xgw in f'-.2 ,Kgs .ii 5 1 4 ' 1 ' Wi! x.,. - iii Il . Q Robert 'Fish, B.S., Teaching Fellow in Economics AAQD, CIJBK, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus. Dartmouth, B.S., 19183. Junior Prom Committeeg President College Clubg Lieutenant CJ. g.j United States Naval Reserve- Present position since 1919. Charles Raymond Cronham, Assistant in M usic, Arts. Orgauist, VVestrninster Preshyterian Church, Jersey City, N. J 1916-1917 g First Presbyterian Church, Madison, N. J., 1917-19i Present position since 1919. Paul Edward Boucher, A.B., Assistant in Physics, PA. Boker University, 1914-15, Colorado, A.B., 1918. Instructor in Physics, Colorado, 1919. Present position since 1919. Iwoa Fukushima, A.B., Assistant in Physics, A. I. I. E., EEA, PA. Colorado, AB. Assistant Chemistry Instructor at Colorado 1916- 18g Instructor Colorado Radio School, 1918-19. Present oosition since 1919. 63 D, Q. , Y . ,wh W ' ' MEDICAL SCHOOL I The jllilehical :Faculty ERNEST MARTIN HOPKINS, Litt.D., LL.D., PRESIDENT JOHN MARTIN GILE, A.MI, M.D., Dean COLIN CAMPBELL STEWART, Ph.D., Secretary CHARLES BEYLARD GUERARD DE NANCREDE, M.D., LL.D., Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Emeritus ' Ann Arbor, Mich. GEORGE ADAMS LEYLAND, A.M., M.D., Professor of Otolaryngology, Emeritus 354 Commonwealth Aveue, Boston, Mass. TILGHMAN MINNOUR BALLIET, A.M.,' M.D., Professor of Therapeutics, Emeritus 3709 Powelton Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. EDVVIN JULIUS BARTLETT, A.M., M.D., Professor of Chemistry 8 West Wheelock Street WILLIAM PAT TEN, Ph.D., Professor of Biology CZoologyj 15 Webster Avenue 64- 0 1 , Av 5 ' 4 E ,Lvu A ll I Ayril in 11' ' it 3 r 1 T Q 3 ' f l I sr 214' X I ' Islumx- f ' gl: fr ii ese iie et i i,f f1 sa ' . V. ,, V H , i t bl 3 GILMAN DUBOIS, FROST, A.IVI., MD., Professor of Clinical M eclicine Q 13 East Wheelock Street JOHN IVIARTIN GILE, A.M., M.D., Professor of Clincial Surgery Q 3 Mayna1'd Street PERCY BARTLETT, A.B., M.D., Professor of Surgery 8 Parkway COLIN CAMPBELL STEWART, Ph.D., Brown Professor of Physiology 4 Webster Avenue CHARLES ERNEST BOLSER, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry CAcaclemic Depart- rnentj. 4 ' 15 East Wheelock Street HOWARD NELSON KINGSFORD, A.M., M.D., Professor of Pathology lantl Bacteriology I 6 Clement Road FREDERICK POMEROY LORD, A.B., M.D., Professor of Anatomy 37 College Street KENNETH NOEL ATKIN S, A.M., Assistant Professor of Bacteriology I ' A A . ' t 3 Occom Ridge OSCAR BOWEN GILBERT, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Pharmacology ' H l A Q3 North Main Street XHARRY TAPLEY JOHNSON FRENCH, NLS., Instructor in Anatomy BART LETT CHAUNCEY SHACKFORD, B.S., M.D., Instructor in Anatomy I 27 Lebanon Street ? On leave of absence 65 THAYER SCHOOL 015131: Zllibaper Snhnul janultp ERNEST MARTIN HOPKINS, Litt.D., LL,D., 'PRESIDENT CHARLES ARTHUR HOLDEN, B.S., C.E., Director A ROBERT FLETCHER, Ph.D., D.Sc., Director, Emeritus CHARLES ARTHUR HOLDEN, B.S., C.E., Professor of Civil Engineering 10 Occom Ridge FRANK EUGENE AUSTIN, B.S., Professor of Electrical Engineering 11 South Park Street RAYMOND ROBB IVIARSDEN, B.S., C.E., Professor of Civil Engineering , 1 Sanborn Road ALLEN PIERCE RICHIVIOND, JR., B.S., C.E., Assistant Professor of Civil En- gineering. 33 Musgrove Building SIDNEY LEE RUGGLES, A.B., C.E., Instructor in Civil Engineering 6 Sargent Street 66 TUCK SCHOOL The Turk School fD'acuItp ERNEST MARTIN HOPKINS, Litt.D., LL.D., PRESIDENT WILLIAM RENSSELAER GRAY, B.L., IVI.C.S., Dean GILRERT HUTCHINSON TAPLEY, B.S., M.C.S., Secretary PHARLOVV STAFFORD PERSON, Ph.D., Professor of Business Organization and .Management VVILLIANI HENRY IVIURRAY, A.B., Professor of Modern Languages 18 Maple Street IVILLIAIVI RENSSELAER. GRAY, B.L., IVI.C.S., Professor offlcconnting - 9 North Park Street CIPIESTER ARTHUR PHILLIPS, ANI., Professor ofBanking 15 North Park Street G7 W Q ' 'Q L M '11fQ T A T. his 1 A rv A i s A HARRY RICHMOND WELLMAN, A.M., Professor of Marlceting . , The Hanover Inn NATHANIEL GEORGE BURLEIGH, A.B., M.C.S., Professor of Business Organization and Management ' P 1 Webstel' Terrace ROY BRACKETT, A.B., M.C.S., Assistant Professor of Commercial Law Bridgman Block GILBERT HUTCHINSON TAPLEY, B.S., M.C.S., I nstractor in Statistics and Commerce 5 Maple Street JAMES PADDOCK TAYLOR, A.B., Lecturer and Supervisor of Field Worley Corn- rnercial Executive Practice - HOWARD DOUGLAS DOZIER, Ph.D., Professor of Economics CAcadernie De- partrnentj . Lyme Road MALCOLM KEIR, Ph.D., Professor of Economies Cflcadeinic Departinentj 17 North Park Street 4On leave of absence 'is of 4 5 68 x --V ' 'fe' J ng, egs's'Ai3 1. 1. J ,fi I - ' , Q-gs:-ar: :,.-Nw.. ' - '-area f , .'- 7955132-:'fL 'IDF ' ' ' . 2- jazgg-'-','1i5? Z - ' - Q W, , lfawf : R Q Y:-1:95 hr wig 4 7 F . 59- 0 A W W X ,v 1 -, N if K 1 A It 2,3 Q M255 ' A ! 92 ,k 55 xlgx . Q W, 5, ,ii ,, my SQ, 8 'Q XP ,Q 9?-gf 125295 :, .1 vp., W5 1, 3 ,. W ,vi'..-v1 sa- f., ff'-.::.Es 1 J 1. g it W ., as E aging: ' J ,,,X Z X N N, f X . .,,..... .. R 'Y 34 g in KX X 3 W f N x I x 9 . ,wi x ff A 1 , ,fx P H f- N 1 'f 'T' Q. N rv-'N' M vs v- G THE COLLEGE-SPARING OF 1919 w X f l w A J Y Y w I i 1 f 1 5 . I '-- :-' .. 'UQ . N X ' x1'- 4. , , E lf.f .' . -151' '- A 5 2 5 E ,,,,,,,, , V , 1 , I i I 1 W N I K N 1 I . A r i 5 ! w x A 1 I SENIGRS CLASS OF 1920 A 7 -' MXN p L qs. - f is T9 ,Q XA' ,A -ax .,., Y V. 7 A rw M Q X , f 2 ' 2 2 f 7- , ' i S E13 -A-. F C 2 ' Z ' 'S ., Eg , , f P V , ',,.,-r Q in- , .I . H' 1 'f 511,552 'g -'fa ' XX N' V'F':f1lf if 3725 .- E xx ,f X-.J-A ' L. lsr' . s. f J - Q f QE? . f .J 9 N --www fp:-W. .- -f-.. . . . . H U Glass uf 1918 1 Edward Francis Healey VX C , Q , , f.. , asque and Gauntlet SpringHeld, Nlassachusetts i ' Springfield High School, Football C3, -LD. ' Casque and Gauntlet House Wentzle Runil, Jr., SAACID Cedar Rapids, Iowa Phillips Andover Academy, Dramatic Association CD. Alpha Delta Phi House. William John Ryan, Tl North Chelmsford, Massachusetts Lowell High School. Psi Upsilon House Richard Thomas Sisk, XCD Lynn, Nlassachusetts Lynn Classical High School. SQ lVIusgrove Block' Rolf Christian Syvertsen, Cosmos Taunton, Massachusetts Taunton High Schoolg Cercle Francais. Cosmos House. i Harold Ashley White, EX Springfield, Massachusetts Cathedral High Schoolg Transfer from Catholic University. 51 Fayerweather. Adolf Frederick Youngstrorn, CIJEK, Casque and Gauntlet f - . ' . Whtlthain, lwassachusetts Waltliain High School: Football CQ, 3, 453 Track C3j. Casquc and Cftuntle 1 1. it House ' A I 71 .4 AQA Q ,. . i fl fr 'T HB7 - 2 . .J119 f'Ui ' - - A f' - IH, U N , ,.--' . ...fag v.,.. .7 1'- ,y i Ti, A ' i cc ek' Percival lVIaXon Allen, AXA ' Petersburg, New York Peekskill Military Academy. Lambda Chi Alpha House. Harold Coburn Avery, QJKIF, Casque and Gauntlet Bradford, Vermont Bradford Academyg Cross Country CQ, SD, Captain f4jg Track C2 3, 41, Class Secretary CSD. asque and Gauntlet House James Nliller Bailey s Massena, New York Massena High School. 10 Pleasant Street. Frederick James Bear, Arts . Detroit, Michigan Detroit University Schoolg Detroit Central High Schoolg Circulation Manager The Dartmouth Q3, 4jg Business Manager The Third Rail CS, 41, Proof and Copy. 5 South Fayerweather. Charles Wesley Biddle, SAX Campton, New Hampshire Plymouth CN. HJ High Schoolg Rake and Roll. Theta Delta Chi House. Leland Curtis Bixby, ATA, Dragon WVatertown, Massachusetts VVatertown High School. 35 Musgrove Block. Frederick Augustus Blanpied, EAE Framingham, Nlassachusetts Framingham High Schoolg Choir CQ, 453 Glee Club f4jg Cercle Francais, Secretary C41 f 22 New Hampshire. James Bernard Bradley, QJEK Manchester, New Hampshire Manchester High School. 44 College St1'eet. Chandler Woolsey Brown, ATA Montpelier, Vermont Montpelier High School. Delta Tau Delta House. Henry Nelson Browne, KKK Barre, Vermont Spaulding High School, Freshman Baseball Qljg Freshman Basketballg Varsity Baseball CQDQ Varsity Basketball, Captain MD. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. James WVhitcomb Buckley VVorcester, Massachusetts South High Schoolg Varsity Track CQDQ Cross Country CQD. 13 East VVheelock Street. Jackson Livingston Cannell, AKE, Sphinx, Palaeopitus Everett, Massachusetts Everett High Sehoolg Captain Freshman Footballg Captain Football Q41 Delta Ka ppa Epsilon House. 'TQ 1 , J A 1 , f , . .A a s P I A N 1,.' t - '1,,. :QQ ,.v, , E J 9- 1- -V P - '-,, John Edward Carr, AXA I C Hopkinton, Massachusetts Varsity Baseball N Lambda Chi Alpha House. Hopkinton High School, Cercle Francais, Freshman Baseball, Frederick William Celce, AKE Holyoke, Massachusetts Holyoke High School. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. 1 V Paul Winthrop Clark, XKIJ Holyoke, Massachusetts Bordentown Military Institute, Track CED, Orchestra Cl, 2, ALJ, Quartette CLD, Choir C1, 3, LD, Class Relay. , Chi Phi House. Frank Paul Clements, EX, Dragon Ticonderoga, New York Ticonderoga High School. 3 Lebanon Street. Guy Edward Cogswell, AKE, Sphinx Henniker, New Hampshire VVorcester Academy, Varsity Football CLD, Varsity Track CQD. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. VVallace Raymond Crumb 'FT , C A Forestville, Connecticut A Phillips Andover Academy. Psi Upsilon House. Elijah VVilliam Cunningham, KTJAO, Casque and Gauntlet, Round Robin, Arts Dallas, Texas Terrill School, Vice-President of Class CD, President CD: Choir C1, Q, 4-D, Glee Club Cl, Q, 4-D, Freshman Football CD, Football Squad CQD, Football CAO. 4 Davison Block. Hugh Grosvenor Curran, Jr., TT, Dragon Pelham, New York New Rochelle High School, Rake and Roll. Psi Upsilon House. . Louis rancher- cody, AKE, sphinix Cleveland, ohio Shaw High School, Freshman Football Squad CU, Freshman Hockey Squad CD, Freshman - Track Squad CD, Varsity Football Squad C225 Varsity Hockey Squad CED. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. William NIcKinley Damm Swanville, Maine Hebron Academy. 3 Thornton. Chester Whiting Demond, ECIDE Leominster, Massachusetts Leominster High School, Orchestra Cl, 2, 3, 4-J, Dramatic Association Orchestra C1, 2, S, 4-D, Band CQ, 3, 40, Mandolin Club C3, 4-J. ' ' ' Sigma Phi Epsilon House. Joseph Harold Dolson, EX B oston, Massachusetts Boston Latin School, Golf Team C215 Varsity Football Squad Sigma Chi House. Laur.ence Edwards Eastman, X113 Portland, lVIaine Exeter Academy. , Chi Phi House. '73 f' f 5 i rf 'I E -.: ' . -Q ,fling ,.,,1 4 pf. , Eff f lui, 'wi 51, A XX -f. , ,..-.fi , V' -'KEEP DAN 7 U LJ -'ay-'Q-:iEk'f'::-,, .-.f-- 2:13 .-f.fr., ., i i 'f has-f DX, ' Q Daniel Francis Featherstone, Jr., KDZK, AKK, Dragon Deal Beach, New Jersey Asbury Park High School, Press Club QI, 2, 3, 41, The DIlTi7fL07lflL Board C3, 45, Manager of Tennis CSD, Rake and Roll, Proof and Copy. - ' ' Isolation Hospital. Hebert Paul Fleming, CDFA Melrose, Miassachusetts Melrose High School, Varsity Football Squad QQ, 4-D, Basketball Squad CQD. - - ' Phi Gamma Delta House. Rowland Barnes French, Cosmos Haverhill, Massachusetts Haverhill High School. 5 South Park Street. Chester Ormsbee Gale, AKE, Sphinx VVilson, New York Freshman Baseball: Varsity Hockey C2, 3, LQ, Delta Kappa Epsilon House. .Lafayette High School, Freshman Hockey, Varsity Baseball Q3j, Tennis Champion QLD. Stanley Small Gerrish ' Portland, Maine Portland High School, Glee Club C3, Q. 3Q North Massachusettss William Victor Goldberg I 'N ew York, New York Ethical Culture School. 1 Maple Street. John Aubrey Gordon Barre, Vermont Spaulding High School. 2 College Street. VVilliam Chase Grant, KKK Contoocock, New Hampshire University High School, Jack 0' Lantern Board Cl, QD, Publicity Manager Bema CQJ. 28 Hitchcock. Jack Ward Gray ' New York, New York M Street High School. 33 Fayerweather. Briard Noble Greeley, WT, Casque and Gauntlet New Rochelle, New York New Rochelle High School, Freshman Football Squad. Casque and Gauntlet House. David Sherman Green, ATA, HAE Hartford, Connecticut Hartford Hi h S h l' 19 4 ' ' g c oo , 19 ADGIS Board, The Dnrfmouth Board Cl, 2, QU. Delta Tau Delta House. Harry Estie Reynolds, KKK New York, New York Lawrenceville School, Dramatic Association Cl, QD. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. lVIaurice Aiken Hall, EAE lVIarshfield Hills, Massachusetts Thayer Academy. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. 74 l . ssgg A cl st gon i 121 E eww, Horace Gilmour Hawks, GJAX Newton High Schoolf Ralph Severson Hayes, CIJKLP' Phillips Exeter Academy. 'William Vincent Higgins, EX, Sphinx Peekskill Military Academy. Homer B. Hill ' Steele High School. Ray Andrew Hinds Keene High School. ' lVIanning Winslow Hodgdon, WT Hartford High School 3 Freshman Basketball Team CU 9- Assi Cfijg Rake and Roll. Ora Nlorse Huntoon Hopkinton High School. Richard VVestervelt Hutchinson, B91-l, Dragon Central High Schoolg Class Se retary QU, Freshman Footbal Clark Edward Ingraham, DAX, Sphinx Dolgeville High School, Freshman Basketballg Rake and Roll. Frederick Parson Ives, TT, Casque and Gauntlet Peekskill Military Academy, Glee Club QI, QD, Class Secretary Hubert Edward Johnson, Cosmos Hartford Public High School. Alan Porter Jones, ZX Fort Atkinson High School. Philip Tracy Kohl, AAIID, Round Robin, Arts Wayne High School, Cheer Leader QS, sltlg Rake and Roll. Ernest Rudolph Leonhard, CIJAD, Dragon ' Yeates Schoolg Tome School. '75 x -yiibllui Qi? lvlrlllffffi ,I : W tgwiirxu A - T A X il NA fs W1 A Q 'j.kxrrNw,Hx?5r xx -Q, A ff' N ! gig I Newton Center, Massachusetts Theta Delta Chi House. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania c-o Dr. A. R. Fogg Lawrence, Massachusetts Sigma Chi House. Dayton, Ohio 3 Sanborn Road. Keene, New Hampshire 41 Occom Ridge. WVest Hartford, Connecticut stant Manager Basketball CElectD - Psi Upsilon House. Contoocock, New Hampshire 16 Sargent Street. St. Paul, lVIinnesota l. Beta Theta Pi House. l Dolgeville, New York Theta Delta Chi House. Montclair, New Jersey CQDQ Prom Show CQD. Psi Upsilon House. West Hartford, Connecticut Cosmos House. Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin Sigma Chi House., VVayne, Nebraska Alpha Delta Phi House. Haledon, New Jersey Phi Delta Theta House. A ,Q 51 . ,ff 3 . A 'N .N Byron Long, BGJH Evanston Academy. Evanston, Illinois Beta Theta Pi House. Ralph Alden Loring iHingha1n, Massachusetts Hingham High School g Third Honor Group CU, Second Honor Group C2Dg First Honor Group CSJQ Second Thayer Mathematics Prize C3Dg Departmental Honors, Physics and Mathematics. 29 New Hampshire. Eldin Dewitt Lougee Plymouth, New Hampshire Plymouth High Schoolg Transfer from Ames University. 19 Richardson. William Grogan McMahon, KE, Dragon North Adams, Massachusetts Drury High Schoolg Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball Squad CQD. Kappa Sigma House. Henry Edward Maroney, GJAX, Sphinx VVest Medford, Massachusetts Phillips Andover Academyg Dramatic Association Q1, Q, 3jg President MD. - Ralph Irvan Meader Lynn Classical High School. ' Lawrence Drake Milligan, AKE, Round Robin fTheta Delta Chi House. Lynn, Massachusetts Shattuck Observatory. La Grange, 'Illinois Lyons T ownship High Schoolg Freshman Football Squadg Dramatics Cl, QD, Business Manager Gfreen Book CQDQ Dlrector Dramatics CSD. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. John Francis Moriarty, K2 Holyoke, Massachusetts Holyoke High Schoolg Freshman Track Team: Varsity Track Team CQ, 3Dg Varsity Basketball Team 28 Fayerweather. Victor Daniel Moulton Bridgeport, Connecticut Bridgeport High School. 15 New Hampshire. Everett Warren Moxon Cambridge, Massachusetts Dorchester High School. Hugh Gordon Mullen, GJAX, Dragon, Round Robin Horace Mann High School. Frederick Lee Nolan, EX Milford High Schoolg Commencement Committee OU. Charles Henry Norris, KE Salem High School. 76 9 Pleasant Street. New York, New York Theta Delta Chi House. Milford, Massachusetts 3 Maple Street. Salem, Massachusetts 8 Lebanon Street. , . 0 A Q 'T i t lil .ia is.- .imfk ,V QL ,,,,. 1 .J K - - ,N f. . ,,r ' 1 George Vlladsworth Owen, XfIJ Portland Hi h S l Portland, Maine g c ioolg Freshman Cross Country Team, Freshman Mandolin Club. ' Sigma Chi House. Robert James Paisley, CIFFA, Sphinx lVIelrose, Massachusetts lVIelrose High Schoolg Freshman Cross Country Teaing Freshman Hockey Team, Captain Varsity Hockey 140. Phi Gamma Delta House. Arthur Irving Palmer, EN Stamford, Connecticut Stamford High Schoolg Freshman Football Teamg Freshman Basketball Team. Sigma Nu House. Elmer Joseph Palmer, EN Akron, Uhio Central High School. 4 Hitchcock. James Sedgley Pelletier, EX Troy, New York Lansingburg High Schoolg Freslnnan Basketball Team. Sigma Chi House. K Williaiii Lewis Phinney, Jr. VVest Roxbury, Massachusetts Boston English High School. 19 Lebanon Street. Elmer Knapp Pillsbury, ZX Somerville, Massachusetts Somerville High School, Glee Club. Sigma Chi House. Rowland Parker Pollard, AXA Proctorsville, Vermont Black River Academyg Cross Country CQ, 31g Second I'10110F Group CQD. - ' - Lambda Chi Alpha House. g Russel Hayward Potter, Jr., AKE Buffalo, New Y ork Phillips Exeter Academyg Freshman Footballg 1919 Green Book. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Arthur Dana Powers, KZ Danvers, Massachusetts Danvers High School. S Lebanon Street. Charles Greif Raible, BGH Cleveland, Ohio YVest High School, Culver Nlilitary Academy. Beta Theta Pi House. Maurice Richard Robinson, ATA Wfilkinsburg, Pennsylvania VVilkinsburg High School. Delta Tau Delta House. John A. Shelburne Boston, Massachusetts lEnglish High School. .Freshman Football, Freshman Trackg Varsity Football C403 Varsity Track CQ, LQ. 7b Thornton. 77 AVA E, I ff1 , sn' frwgin-by A. .9 .llgflll .1 5 ' 1 s 19 21 so lv a . ,ff LJ 5. ,-,', if 'J . f..g . , 2 .ff 5 B we 0 r A 5. ml 01-C Kenneth Dudley Smith Staten Island, New York Curtis High School, Photographic Editor of Bama C351 Staff Photographer The Darimmzllz. C353 Executive Committee Outing Club C3, 45g President Camera Club C3, 45. 5 WVest South St1'eet. Frederick Norris Spaulding Mancllester, New Hampshire Manchester High School. 40 Fayerweather Albert Rudolph Stewart, TAG, HAE, Dragon, Round Robin, Arts A VVilmington, Delaware Wilmington High Sehoolg Editor-in-chief Jack 0' Lantern C45. Phi Delta'Theta House. Eliot Frost Stoughton, EN Claremont, New Hampshire Stevens High Schoolg Freshman Football Squad C15. ' Sigma Nu House. Ralph Merrill Towle St. Paul, lVIinnesota Central High School. 14 Reed. Edward Simpson Townsend, EX Berkeley, California Evanston High Sehoolg Freshman Basketball Squad C153 Varsity Basketball Squad C45. Sigma Chi House. William Graves Townsend, KKK Burlington, Vermont Rutland High School, Carnival Committee C25. 3 Lebanon Street. Milton Tucker i Milton, Massachusetts Milton High School. 20 College. Alexander Scott Warden, LFY, HAE, Casque and Gauntlet, Round Robin, Arts, Palaeopitus Great Falls, Montana Phillips Exeter Academy, The Dartmouth Board Cl, 2, 3, 459 Editor-in-Chief C453 The Bama. Board CQ, 3, 45, P1-oqf and Copy. Casque and Gauntlet House. John Kleber Wetherby, Jr., EN , Minneapolis, Minnesota St. John's Academy, Golf Team CQ, 35, Golf Championship C1, 2, 35. Sigma Nu House. Russell Whitney, IET Goshen, New Hampshire Central High School. Q7 New Hampshire. John Robert VVilliams, CIJBK Buffalo, New York Lafayette High School. Q0 College. Albert Francis Wylde, ZX, Dragon Lawrence, lVIassachusetts Lawrence High Schoolg Property Manager Dramatic Association C453 Assistant Floor Director of Commencement Ball C45. 3 Maple Street. 78 vA . rv, ,- ' C ., .'. . ' 44 N? , C J y W , at r , 1 P P irti v A C6 r rs no .- ' 22 Glass nf 1920 Llewellyn Sherman Adams, BAE, Arts, Palaeopitus A East Dover, Vermont Hope High Schoolg Glee Club Cl, Q, SJ: Leader CLD: Choir C1, Q, 3, 455 Dramatic Association C1, Q, 3, 41g Outing Club C1, Q. 3, 41: Publicity Committee CQJ1 Secretary C313 President C432 Christian Association Cabinet C3, Mg Camera Club Treasurer CSDQ Secretary C413 Board of Governors of the Artsg Sophomore Smoker. . 9 South Massachusetts Tlionias Hobart Ainsworth, BQH, AKK, Casque and Gauntlet Utica, New York Utica Free Academyg Freshman Basketball Cljg Freshman Baseball Cljg Representative to thc College Club CQJQ Varsity 'Basket.all CQ, 3, 40. y Beta Theta Pi House Francis Gerauld Allen, CDA9- Kenilworth, Illinois New Trier High Schoolg Freshman Cross Countryg Cross Country CLD. Phi Delta Theta House ' James Eben Allen, Jr. APLP' New Bedford, Massacliusetts New Bedford High School, Third Honor Group C1, SJ. John Greenleaf Allen, CDFA Delta Gamma Psi House Council Bluffs, Iowa Council BluHs High School, Dramatic Association C3jg Third Honor Group CD5 Second Honor Group CQ, SD. John Page Amsden, Cosmos, CDBK Concord High! School. ' Oscar Frederick Anderson, l-FT' Phillips Andover Academy. Salvador Antonio Andretta, CIJEK, Dragon Hartford High School, Junior Prom Committeeg Glee Club CQ, 3 Stanley Antrim, CIJAGJ Jack 0' Lantern Board C3, My Band Cl, QD. Vernet Arthur Arnold, QIJEK Passaic High School. Benjamin VValdo Ayres, Jr., EAE Worcester North High School. 79 Phi Gamma Delta House l Concord, N. H. Cosmos House Forestville, Connecticut. Psi Upsilon House Hartford, Connecticut , 4:13 Mandolin Club C3, Mg 19 Hitchcock. Freeport, Illinois Phi Delta Theta House. Passaic, New Jersey 44 College Street. lVorcester, lVIassachusetts Sigma Alpha Epsilon House 0 , AA , F, 2 -A , we -1 - 1 1 , , : -Dv .ff A at - 19 21 . . Jiri Iii' Il J fr.. --f.-n :':,- .,,- -.,-' 5 ...V- ,, li if I if i -PM iii - I I fa . Q mf Harry Sheridan Baketel, Jr., BCH, HAE, Arts, Sphinx New York City Peekskill Military Academy, Rutgers Preparatory School, .Business Manager' Green Book Cl, QD, The Dartmoulh Board fl, 2, 3, 40, Varsity Baseball Squad CQ, 3, LQ, 1920 AEGrs Board, Junior Prom Committee, Proof and Copy, Commencement Usher QSD. Beta Theta Pi House Aldrich Brarnhall Barnes, CIPAQ I 'Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts ' Phi Delta Theta House John Hoge Bedford, EN New York City Jamaica High School. 5 South Fayerweather. Philip Edwin Bennet Lynn, Massachuset'ts Lynn Classical High School. Q 921 Crosby. John George Beranek La Crosse, Wisconsin La Crosse High School. 18 Thornton. Harold Eisman Bernkopf, AEP, CIDBK, Round Robin, Arts -A ' n Providence, Rhode Island Providence Classical High School, Second Honor Group C1, 31, Third Honor Group CED, Debating Team CQ, 3, 40, 1920 AEGIS Board, T he Bama Board C493 The Jack 0' Lantern Board MJ. 20 Massachusetts. Harold Frederick Bidwell, AXP Hartford, Connecticut West Hartford High School. 5 Massachusetts. Irving Edwin Blaine Newport, Rhode Island Rogers High School. 3 Richardson Edmund James Bowen, GAX Huntington, Indiana East High School, Rochester, N. Y. Theta Delta Chi House. James Philip Bower, AKE Arlington, Massachusetts Worcester Academy, Transfer from Middlebury. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Paul Bowerman, PICIJE, Round Robin, Arts Detroit, Michigan Detroit Central High School, Bama Board C3, 45, Secretary Arts 44 College Street. Ralph Shephard Bradley, XCIJ Gloucester, lVIassachusetts Gloucester High School. Chi Phi House. Tudor Whiton Bradley, Cosmos Bloomfield, Connecticut West Hartford High School. 5 Massachusetts. 1 80 1? . Q ' ' fff?WEi . e 27 . - f f: ' - 'm5f- l ? ff N R , 1 fgglf, if - 7' N-5 X- I Vw! -Mix' iii: P J --f.f.f: .1Ii-H1251.co. K 1---efaw.. W' 'gf' 17 .. 74 9 ' to . gf' t Vincent Anthony Breglio, BCH, Dragon Springfield, lVIassacl1usetts Central High School, Musical Clubs QQ, 3, 4jg Leader Dartmouth Jazz Band. Ashbel Hotel. K Joseph Hillyer Brewer, HAE, Round Robin, Arts Grand Rapids, lVIichigan Grand Rapids High Sehoolg Jack 0' Lantern CQ, 3, -LJ, Editor-in-Chief Bama Mjg Secretary Arts C3jg Counsellor Dramatics QQ, 3, 45. ' 7 Hitchcock. John Oliver Brotherhood, AKE Brooklyn, New York Brooklyn Polytechnic Preparatory, Varsity Track CQJ. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Earl Harrington Bruce, BGH, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus Portsmouth, New Hampshire Lawrence Academy, Freshman Baseballg Varsity Baseball CQ, SQ. Beta Theta Pi House. John Frederick Buschmann, EN Westheld, Massachusetts Westfield High Schoolg Third Honor Group QD, Band Cl, Q, 3, 42, Orchestra Cl, QD. , ' 37 Hitchcock. Ralph Emerson Campbell, ZAE, AKK i Ilion, New York Ilion High School. n Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Paul lVIcArthur Canada, AXA Barrington, Rhode Island Colt Memorial School. 18 Thornton. John Carden, APT' Lawrence, lVIassachusetts Lawrence High School. 54 New Hampshire. ' Wesley Gould Carr, Jr., EX Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania G. H. Thurston School, Varsity Football Squad CLD. Sigma Chi House. Joseph Emerson Carter Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland East High Schoolg Transfer from Kenyon College. 37 New Hampshire. William Ambrose Carter, CIJEK Sherborn, Massachusetts F h. ' . ' - . . . '. 1 - ramlngham High School, Varsity Cross Country 125, Class Basketball CSD. Phi Sigma Kappa House Allan lVIiles Cate, EX Belmont, llflassachusetts Belmont High School, Manager Tennis 131. Sigma Chi House. Samuel Richard Center Nlanchester, New Hampshire Manchester High sohooi. 22 School Street. Sl f 0 k AvA F7 Q '? rv . 7 -1 f. gf E, 5 Xlvi ll 3 Q: ,-. if i 2 .22 'ff f ' X. 4345, Z rr 1 A. , , ' .., Warren Miller Chamberlain, LPI' Worcester, Nlassachusetts Worcester Academy. Psi Upsilon House. Horatio Henry Chandler, AKE, Arts Kenilworth, Illinois New Trier High School. 20 Richardson. Richard Wesley Charlock, BOII, AOP, Dragon. Brooklyn, New York Erasmus Hall, Track C2, SD, Football C3, LD, Business Manager of Dramatic Association CQ, Footlights. Beta Theta Pi House. Elliot VVard Cheney, IZT' Orange, Massachusetts Orange High School, Camera Club MO. 1 20 South Fayerweather. James Coe Chilcott, KKK, Sphinx ' Bangor, Maine Bangor High School, Chairman 1920 Prom Committee, Glee Club C1,,2, 3, 45, Footlights. I Kappa Kappa Kappa House. Harold Edward Clark, EAE, AKK, FA ' r IVIalone, New York Franklin Academy. 51 VVheeler. Lawrence VVormsted Clarkson, AXA Newburyport, Massachusetts Newburyport High School, Football Squad C3, 41, Choir C3, 41. Lambda Chi Alpha House. Franklin Nichols Corbin, Jr. Chicago, Illinois New Trier High School. 49 New Hampshire. Russell Murray Cotner, KIJFA, Arts Detroit, Michigan f Detroit Central High School, Stage Manager Dramatic Association Q3, LD, Soccer CQD, The Players, Footlights. ' Phi Gamma Delta House. Charles Frank Hill Crathern, Jr. EN Mason, New Hampshire Worcester Academy, Freshman Cross Country Team CU, Varsity Two-Mile Relay Team C3D, Track Team CSD, Captain Varsity Cross Country C40. 9 Crosby. Edward lVIunroe Curtis, AKE, IIAE, Arts, Round Robin . Grant Park, Illinois lVIorgan Park Academy, Editor-in-Chief of Jack 0' Lantern QSD, 1920 AEGIS Board, Director of Drarnatics OU, President of Arts QQ . Delta Kappa Epsilon House. William Holland Dale, ZAE Whitinsville, Massachusetts Worcester Academy, Freshman Football Squad CID, Varsity Squad CQJ. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Benjamin Reuben Davidoff, AKK WVaterbury, Connecticut Waterbury High School 9 West Street. ' se ' A3 'A- ' X' V ,. wr- i1.,,' tw 6. N . 1. ,4 5 .,f.-- . D KT , ,,,,V ,,-,. M f - . - ' A ' Thomas Burleigh Davidson, OAX, Sphinx. South Berwick, Maine Berwick Academy, Freshman Football C113 Football Squad C3. 41. Theta Delta Chi House. Lendall Evans Davis Penacook, New Hampshire Penacook High School. 21 Crosby. LeRoy Stetson Davis Falmouth, 'Massachusetts Moses Brown Schoolg Varsity T1'ack CQ, 31. Ashbel Hotel. Philip Sheridan Deane,,Jr., Xfll Melrose, Massachusetts Dean Academy, Cushing Academy, Basketball CQ, 55, 41. Chi Phi House. Henry Wesley Dearborn , Groveland High School. Groveland, Massachusetts 49 New Hampshire. lVIaurice Adams Dewey, TT, Dragon Toulon, Illinois Phillips Andover Academy, Mandolin Club C3, 41. Phi Upsilon House. ' John Francis Dorney, AKE Newtonville, Massachusetts Newton High School, Freshman Hockey C113 Varsity Football C41. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Robert Bruce Dow, Arts Contoocook, New Hampshire Hopkinton High School. Q5 Massachusetts. Thomas Minot Dudley, KKK, AKK, CIJBK, PA Concord, New Hampshire Concord High School: Second Honor Group C11g First Honor Grou p CQ, 31. 541 Wheelerls Herbert Smith Duify, CIJKT' Columbus, Ohio Aquinas High School, Transfer from Ohio State University. Phi Kappa Psi House. ' Harrison Winthrop Dwight, DIPE Dorchester, Massachusetts Dorchester High School. '7 Massachusetts. Dana Hopkins Eaton, KKK, Sphinx Littleton, New Hampshire Ligllegoff High School, Manager Cross Country C31g Manager Freshman Football C41g Rake 3,11 O . Kappa Kappa Kappa House. Roscoe Osborne Elliott, QJPA, AOP, Casque and Gauntlet. West Somerville, Nlassachusetts Somerville High School, Freshman Hockey, Prom Show C315 Varsity Hockey Squad C41. Phi Gamma Delta House. Kenneth Pike Emory, OAX Honolulu, Hawaii Punahou Academy, Mandolin Club C11g Chairman Outdoor Carnival Committee C31g Treasurer D. O. C. C41. ' 1 Richardson. 83 Q , , , Ava gif E l Ii ,E X hifi . I I 'xl M 1 1, f ' E if 5, X . N-.4 ix 1X f xfTjQ.ffgigfP all 7 J i ...z.. . X , ,.1A .. .. -Xia. ,sp In., K 9 G ,, ! A . VVilliam Horatio Farnham, Jr., K2 Spokane, YVashington Lewis and Clark Schoolg Runner-Up Freshman Tennis Tournainent CUQ College Fall Tennis Championship QQJQ Tennis Team CQ, 3-D, Captain QLD. Kappa Sigma House. Benjamin Brown Mason Farnsworth Portland, Maine Portland High School. V 7 Richardson. Robert Reo Farwell, IEY' Lynn, Massachusetts Lynn English High Schoolg Third Honor Group H31 . S 6 New Hampshire. Kendrick Elwell Fenderson, KE Dover, New Hampshire Dover High Schoolg New Hampshire State College, College Orchestra C3, 4115 Dramatic Asso- ciation Orchestra K3, LD. Kappa Sigma House. YValker Fielding, Xi? Greenwich, New York Greenwich High School. Chi Phi House. Earl Edward Fipphen, Cosmos, AKK Concord, New Hampshire Concord High School. 9 West Street. Allen Richard Foley Framingham, lVIassachusetts Framingham High School, Second Honor Group CQDQ D. C. A. Cabinet C3,i4D. 8 North Fayerweather. John Gardner Fowler, CIJFA Lynn, Massachusetts Lynn Classical High School. Phi Gamma Delta House. Joseph Fraser, QUFA Salem, Massachusetts Powder Point School, Freshman Football Team Cljg Gym Team CD3 Varsity Football Squad C49 3 Cercle Francais. 'L 29 Sanborn. Albert Wesley Frey, XGJJIDBK, Casque and Gauntlet, Arts Lynn, Massachusetts Lynn Classical High Schoolg Manager lVIusical Clubs C415 Class Treasurer Q4-jg Non-Athletic Council CD3 F ootllghts. Chi Phi House. James Whitney Frost, IZT Newburyport, Massachusetts I Groveland High Schoolg Tilton Seminary. 41 New Hampshire. William Dallett F uguet, EN Montclair, New Jersey Montclair High School g Third Honor Group C3j. 12 South Fayerweather. Wilbur Morse F ullaway, CIJFA Cmaha, Nebraska. Central High School. Phi Gamma Delta House. 84 V AVI V 1 e I f ,li Z Z l ' 1 1 ' ff Charles Truman Garnsey, ZAE Joliet High School. Z, gi lift an xx -uiEmia..,.i.. ..,,, ,C uzmmwd lll ll , f ,..l, 5 M, '5- G A, lg p, ' ' i h, A fipiiimmx ' ' .. .ff K Qfgffsq Q em I Joliet, Illinois Sigma Alpha Epsilon Housei W7arren,Stetson Gault, KKK, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus WVorcester, Massachusetts Worcester Academyg Freshman Baseballg Manager of Baseball C41g Glee Club C413 Rake and Roll. James Ralph Gibson, CIJAC Hudson Falls High School. Paul Sheldon Giffin, ZAE Casque and Gauntlet House. Hudson Falls, New York Phi Delta Theta House. Keene, New Hampshire Keene High Schoolg Jack rf Lantern Board CQ, 3, 41g Circulation Manager C3, 41. Thomas Jefferson Glines, AXA Granville High School Richard Halsey Goddard Bulkeley School Augustin Victor Goldiere Berwick Academyg Cercle Francais. Arthur Faitoute Gooding, WT, Arts Shattuck School. Charles Hastings Goodnow, SAX Sphinx Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Granville, New York Lambda Chi Alpha House. . Winthrop, Massachusetts 55 Wheeler. Methuen, Massachusetts 4 Occom Ridge. p Rochester, lVIinnesota Psi Upsilon House . Kennebunk, Maine Phillips Exeter Academyg Varsity Football Squad CQ1g Varsity One-Mile Relay Race CQ, 31. w I Theta Delta Chi House Maurice Gordon Manchester, New Hampshire Manchester High School. 4 Thornton. Stephen Mantor Graves New London, Connecticut Bulkeley High School. V 52 College Street. Philip Herzog Greeley Washington, District of Columbia Central High Schoolg Third Honor Group C119 Second Honor Group C213 Thayer Prize in Mathematics C213 Honorable Mention in Mathematics and Graphics C31. Francis Philip Gross, KIJBK Central High School. i 85 34 Davison Block St. Louis, lVIissouri 25 Massachusetts Hall. v V A -'ns George Albert Haas, ZCIJE Erasmus Hall High School. Arthur Crosby Hale - Roxbury Latin Schoolg Dramatic Association CU. Frank Kenneth Hardy, AXA Phillips Andover Academy. Murray Cheever Harvey, WT, Dragon Phillips Andover Academy, Freshman Hockey Squad CU. Edward Francis Hasbrook, Jr., AKE Lyons Township High School. Richard Lovejoy Hayes, Arts Farmington High School, Debating CQD. Russell Baxter Henderson, XfID Gloucester High School. Edward Atton Higgins Calais High School, Freshman Baseball. Carroll Eugene Hill, EAE Pittsfield High School, Freshman Baseball. Howard Alfred Hitchcock, I2 Y VVest Hartford High School. Orsamus Lee Hodvkins, EN lim .N Ulmmul E gijiax WRX , Quai X l X ,, fllilllmnw 1 fi J C -.rixxivi 1, - V - ..- er YH 'Q1'11xB2X-125, fi ii KWSN, N ,ll .4 i. all rip Y Brooklyn, New York Sigma Phi Epsilon House. Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts X Musgrove Building. Andover, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha House. Wellesley Hills, lVIassachusetts Psi Upsilon House. Hinsdale, Illinois DeltaiKappa Epsilon House. Farmington, New Hampshire 19 South F ayerweather. Gloucester, Massachusetts Chi Phi House. Calais, lVIaine 7 Wheeler. Pittsfield, New Hampshire Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. West Hartford, Connecticut 2 South Massachusetts. g Roslindale, Massachusetts Roxbury Latin School. Sigma Nu House. Caryl Francis Holbrook, CDEK, Casque and Gauntlet Keene, New Hampshire Mount Hermon School, Freshman Football: Freshman Track, Varsity Football CQ, 4Dg Varsity Track CQ, 413 Mandolin Club fl, QD. Casque and Gauntlet House. John Wolcott Holt, ATA Hartford High School. SG Hartford, Connecticut Delta Tau Delta House. 1 O AV 3 f A f. ' o . is I 'A '2 ' A! n DX fl 'A ' 'axial J W I I, t Lowell Hoyt Holway, IZY' Hyde Park, Massachusetts Hyde Park High School. 7a Thorntonf Roger Ashton Horton, ATA Claremont, New Hampshire Stevens High School. Delta. Tau Delta House. Pao-Tien Hsieh Canton, China Tsing-Hua College, Peking. Francis Irvi 4 Massachusetts. ng Hutchins, CTPEK, AOP, HAE, Arts Palmyra, New York Palmyra High School 3 Freshman Basketball, Business Manager of The Dartmouth C4-jg Second Honor Group Cl, 253 Footlightsg Proof and Copy. Phi Sigma Kappa House. Paul Lockhart Hutchinson, Cosmos Dracut, hlassachusetts Lowell High School, Dramatic Association Band CQ, 31. Cosmos House. Franklin Dana Johnson, LPT, Casque and Gauntlet Portland, Maine' Portland High School 5 Secretary of Class CD9 Football Squad CQDQ Basketball CQD. , ' Casque and Gauntlet House. VVesley Russell J ones, Cosmos New Haven, Connecticut Lowell High School g Second Honor Group CD3 Cercle Francais C1, Q, 3, LU, President C3, 41. Cosmos House. John Zachariah Jordan, LFP, Casque and Gauntlet Denver, Colorado East Denver High School, Class President C1, 2, 3, 403 Freshman Football, Track CQ, Mg Baseball CQDQ Football,C4fj. Casque and Gauntlet House. ' Paul Duckworth Kay, CIDZK, Arts Framingham, Massachusetts Framingham Academyg Business Manager of Dramatic Association C315 Third Honor Group 1 Cl, 2, Sjg F ootlights. Phi Sigma Kappa House. Richard Shepard Kimball, BCH Pawling, New York Yvorcester Academy, Manager Basketball Call. Beta .Theta Pi House. Philip Hooper Kitield, BCH Swampscott, Massachusetts Swampscott High School. Beta Theta Pi House. Charles Le Boutillier, DIY' , Wayne, Indiana Abbott Preparatory School, Camera Club Cl, QD, Vice-President CSD, President CQ. Q Wfheeler. Francis Henry Lee Nashua, New Hampshire Nashua High School. ' 1 Sanborn. S7 AA .11 ll 4 1+ . 4 . . 9 Q' lif i- ,lg X K 'M N. ,,l D .J X rt. S f L 'V tk ' Q e a 'S Eugene Stone Leonard, OAK, HAE, Arts, Palaeopitus Bellows Falls, Vermont Bellows Falls High School, The Dartmom'h Cl, 2, 3, -11, 1920 AEGIS Board, Treasurer of Chris- tian Association Q31, President C4-1, Proqf and Copy. Theta Delta Chi House. Edwin Blair Lindsay, CIJX, CIJBK, Round Robin, Arts s Davenport, Iowa Davenport High School, First Honor Group Cl, Q, 31. 410 North Massachusetts Joseph Bridges Lindsey, Jr., KKK Amherst, Massachusetts Amherst High School, Phillips Exeter Academy, Freshman Baseball Team, Varsity Baseball Squad CQ, 31. ' 10 Hitchcock. Clarence Albert Lloyd, DDE Oneida, New York Nlaynard High School, Glee Club C3, 41, Mandolin Club CQ, 31, Band Cl, 2, 3, 4-1, Leader C31, College Orchestra Cl, 2, 3, 4-1, Dramatic Orchestra C1. 2, 3, 4-1, Choir Q3, 41. Sigwna Phi Epsilon House. lVIarsha1l L. Lombard, KKK Colebrook, New Hampshire Phillips Exeter Academy. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. Grant Lucas, Jr., O2 ' VVashington,'District of Columbia M Street High School, Lockwood Rhetorical Prize C31. 30 South Massachusetts John Parker lVIcAllaster, CDEK, PA lVIanchester, New Hampshire Nlanchester High School. 33 North Massachusetts. Frank Edward McGlynn Nashua, New Hampshire Nashua High School, Second Honor Group QI, 31, Third Honor Group QQ1, Cercle Francais, Choir Cl, 21, Orchestra Cl, 2, 31. 5 New Hampshire. Charles Fraser McGoughran, QPPA, Sphinx VVest Orange, New Jersey VVest Orange High School, Freshman Track, Freshman Cross-Country, Captain Varsity Cross-Country Team Q21, Varsity Track QQ, 3, 41, Varsity Relay CQ, 3, 41. Phi Gamma Delta House. Donald Clew MacKay, AKE, Sphinx Chicago, Illinois University High School, Baseball Squad Q31, Rake and Roll. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Charles VVilliam McKenzie, ECIDE lVIilford, New Hampshire Milford High School, Cercle Francais. 441 College Street. Raymond Francis McPartlin, ATA, HAE, AOP, Arts Framingham, Massachusetts Framingham High School, The Dartmoufh Board CQ, 31, Managing Editor C41, Press Club CQ, 3, 41, Proof and Copy. Delta Tau Delta House. SS .-1 1, O r. 1 ,,A. 5 was ff Donald Ogden McLeran, CIPKIF Lewis Institute, Soccer C45, Glee Club C45. Selwyn Rogers lVIack, ZAE Medina High School, Freshman Baseball. George Humphrey Macomber Nashua High School. Frederick True Nlarden, EX Concord High School, Glee Club CQ, 3, 45. Frank Dewey Mayer University High School, Second Honor Group Leroy Evans Maynard, QIJKLF' Turners Falls High School. Robert Troxell Meads Lyons Township High School. lVIelville Tettengill Merritt, EX, Sphinx Hinsdale, Illinois Phi Kappa Psi House. Medina, New York Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Nashua, New Hampshire Musgrove Block. Concord, New Hampshire Sigma Chi House. Chicago, Illinois C15, Third Honor Group C35. 12 South Fayerweather. lVIillers Falls, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Psi House. La Grange, Illinois 4 North Massachusetts. Danvers, Massachusetts Dean Academy, Freshman Football, Varsity Football C45, Varsity Baseball C35, Captain C45. Erwin Curtis Miller, EAE, AKK, FA Franklin Academy. Herbert Herman Mills Sigma Chi House. lVIalone, New York 25 IfVheeler. New York City Hartford High School, Dramatic Association C1, Q, 35, Freshman Basketball C15. Theron L. Millspaugh, 2nd 41 East Wheelock Street. Walden, New York Malden High School, Irving School: Orchestra C15, Second Honor Group C153 Third Honor Group 125. Robert Jaquith lVIiner, 1213 Bellows Falls High School, Glee Club Q35. 11-12 College. Bellows Falls, Vermont 6 New Hampshire. John Joseph Moore, Jr.,ATA,HAE, AOP, Dragon, Arts Newport, Rhode Island Rogers High School, The Dartmouth Board C1, 2, 3, 45, Editor-in-Chief 1920 AEGIS, Bevna Board QQ, 3, 45, Press Club CQ, 3, 45, Proof and Copy. Delta Tau Delta House. S9 :U .', 4 , ,IVV , iffimirgvgui f s X R p ff Ji 1155 2 f fi1. 'i 5 .,fV. 'gl1If2-T -:5l- ' I 4 - Wifi-2' A ' W 'uv '52 f ' P , ' if In ii'-Mit' QF . ,jg . ,,.'Fim qxuu p I qlq. Frank Brockett lVIorey, BCH, Dragon F Utica, New York Utica Free Academy, Varsity Football Squad C21g Manager Cross-Country C413 Manager Freshman Track C413 Commencement Usher C315 Junior Prom Usher C313 Rake and Roll. , Beta Theta Pi House. Olney Smith lVIorrill, EN X Newport, Vermont Newport High School. 18' South Massachusetts. Robert Flint Morse Bangor, Maine Bangor High School. 18 South Massachusetts. Francis George Moulton, EAE, AEP Lisbon, New Hampshire Lisbon High Schoolg Varsity Debating Team CQ1. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Stanley Muller Munroe, EAE , , A ' Joliet, Illinois Joliet Township High School. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Edwin Earle Mye1's, AKE, Sphinx ' A Hinsdale, Illinois Lake Forest Academy, Freshman Football Teamg Freshman Track Teamg Varsity Football Team Cl, 2, 41, Varsity Track Team C1, 2, 313 Captain C41. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. VVilliam Holbrook Nelson, EN East Swanzey, New Hampshire Central High Schoolg Glee Club Stanley Jacob Newcomer, ATA, AOF, Sphinx, Palaeopitus Sigma Nu House. Monroe, Michigan Monroe High School, Manager Track C413 Junior Prom Committee C315 Rake and Roll. Delta Tau Delta House. Herman VVilson Newell, CDACPD, AEP, Arts Bellefontaine, Ohio Bellefontaine High School. 13 VVest 'Wheelock Street. Carl Elbridge Newton, ZIV, Casque and Gauntlet, Arts, Palaeopitus Somerville, Massachusetts Somerville High School, Glee Club CQ, 4-15 Jack ol Lantern Board CQ, 413 Vice-President of Class C41. Casque and Gauntlet House. Theodore Michael Nichol Proctor High School, Freshman Baseball Team. Proctor, Vermont 36 Fayerweather. George Everett Page, Jr., XCID Bellows Falls, Vermont Bellows Falls High School, Rake and Roll. 90 Chi Phi House. r WUI? ... of , S s i , r' i Y Alton Staples Palmer, EN Stamford, Connecticut Stamford High School. Sigma Nu House. Benjamin Pearson, Jr., QJEK Byfield, Massachusetts Dummer Academy. Phi Sigma Kappa House. Dana Edmund Pearson, K2 Northampton High School. Kappa Sigma House. Richard Metcalf Pearson, ATA, AOP, CIYBK, HAE, Dragon, Arts Northampton, Massachusetts Concord, New Hampshire Concord High School, The Dartmouth BoardC2, 3,453 1920 AEGIS Board, First Honor Groupfl, 21, Pressb Club C1, QD, President C3, 45, Undergraduate Editor of Alumni Magazine C3, 41, Proof and opy. ' Delta Tau Delta House. Reuel George Phillips, KZ, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus Spokane, Washington an Lewis and Clark High School, College Club Representative CQ, 33, Manager Basketball Q3j, . Vice-President of Class C3j, Rake and Roll. Kappa Sigma House. Roger YVells Pope, X119 Swampscott, Massachusetts Swampscott High School. Chi Phi House. Ben Hurst Potter, fIJPA Rock Island, Illinois Rock Island High School. 4-0 North Massachusetts. Waldo Butman Potter, BAE Pittsfield, New Hampshire Manager The Bama QQ. ' V 11 Richardson. Newport, Rhode Island 16 Hubbard. Pittsfield High School, Orchestra Cl, 2, 3D, Band C353 Business James Congdon Powell, KE Rogers High School, Massachusetts Agricultural College. John William Prentiss, CIJEK, AOP, C Phillips Exeter Academy, Track CQ, 41, Junior Prom Committee CSD. Casque and Gauntlet House. Cleveland, Ohio asque and Gauntlet Keene,New Hampshire Allen Barnard Prescott The Haverford School. 7 Richardson. Howard James Pullen Battle Creek, Michigan Battle Creek High School. 411 East Wheelock Street. George VVilson Rand, AKE Hanover, New Hampshire Phillips Andover Academy, Head Usher QQ. 5 Prospect Street. 91 . 2 , ' 'V' 519 ,il YP Qi 5 I F S 5' ' 'ivmu ?' 'flir- U lnzmwuzmi if 'Q Jig, 6 N5 ff vw fvlllai-gf, Xiiliiigfiipxixix ie, . Jie:-A YNW 2' ,-,4 if V N in li? 4 CXXX x xx ff ,., A Y.. W fx X N 'M' James Valentine Reber, WT Reading, Pennsylvania Reading High School, Mandolin Club C1, Q., 3, -15, Leader C45. T lNorman Byron Richardson, IVY, AOF, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeoptius Psi Upsilon House. X New York City West Philadelphia High School, Third Honor Group C1, 25, Class Treasurer CQ, 35, Second Honor Group C35, Vice-President Outing Club C45, Temporary Class Marshal C45. Casque and Gauntlet House. Dorchester, llflassachusetts 1 South Fayerweather. Hibbard Richter, KKK P aul Gordon Richter, KKK, Arts Dorchester, Nlassachusetts Boston Latin School, Freshman Mandolin Club, J ack 0, Lantern Board CQ, 3, 45, Business Manager C3, 45, Christian Association C3, 4-5, Treasurer C45, Business Manager 1923 Hand- book. . 1 South Fayerweather. James Earl Robertson, AKE Somerville,'Massachusetts Football, Freshman Hockey, Var- Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Somerville High School, WVorcester Academy, Freshman sity Football C35. . Henry Brock Rollins, AKK I Granby, Connecticut Hartford High School. 13 West Wheelock Street. Jason Almus Russell Mason, New Hampshire Dean Academy. Q9 New Hampshire. Scott Vititow Rutherford, BOH Lewis, Colorado Beta Theta Pi House. YVinsted, Connecticut Sigma Phi Epsilon House. George Solomon Sackett, ZWIDE Wlilbraham Academy, Soccer Team C25, Captain C45. Paul Starrett Sample, AKE, Casque and Gauntlet Montreal, Canada New Trier High School, Kenilworth, Ill., Freshman Football Team C15, Freshman Basketball Team C155 Freshman Track Team C15, Varsity Football Squad CQ, 45, Musical Clubs CQ, 45, Varsity Basketball Team C45. Casque and Gauntlet House. Harry William Sampson Hanover, New Hampshire Woodstock High School, Choir CS, 45, Orchestra C35. 11 College Hall. Charles Henry Sargent, Jr., ECIJE, Dorchester, Massachusetts Dorchester High School, Manager of Hockey C45. Sigma Phi Epsilon House. William Patrick Shea Holyoke, Massachusetts Holyoke High School. 12 South Fayerweather. 92 it H Cp s A kfL- 5 ' -H. , ill 'l ' 4 5 e - 2 ' L ,. ll l ',': I V vi if ,'. ' cl la -T A' - A X. .., l-'vv 4 J. ,gp . .rix g , , .4 U Samuel Sheldon, Jr., BOH Brooklyn, New York Pauling Academy, Freshman Basketball: Freshman Track. Beta Theta Pi House. - Ned Shnayerson, AKK, Arts Paterson, New Jersey Paterson High Schoolg J ack 0' Lantern Board Cl, 2, 3, lj, 1920 AEGIS Board. 9 VVest Street, Wendell Prugh Sigler, EAE Dayton, Ohio Stivers High Schoolg, Advertising Manager T he Dartmouth CSD. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Williain Hewetson Sinclair, ATA Amsterdam, New York Amsterdam High Schoolg Glee Club C3, 4-D. 40 VVheeler. Lyndon Frederick Small ' Needham, Nlassachusetts Needham High School, Rifle Team CED. 1 Richardson. Arthur Frederick Smith, AXP Clarendon, Vermont Rutland High School. 5 Massachusetts. Albert Kelvin Smith, KKK, KIJBK Cleveland, Ohio East High School. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. Lloyd Emerson Smith, Cosmos Brooklyn, New York Springfield High School, Third Honor Group QD, Cercle Francais QQ., 3, 45. Cosmos House. Spencer Snedecor, EAE Blue Point, New York Patchoque High School. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Richard Cheever Southwick, CIDPA, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus B T Beverly, lVIassachusetts Beverly High Schoolg Editor of Green Book CQ, Class President CQDQ Class Treasurer CD, Man- ager of Football OU, President of Palaeopitus MJ, Rake and Roll. Casque and Gauntlet House. Faber Lyon Southworth New York City Lewis and Clark High School, Band Cl, QD. 3 Richardson. Kenneth Woodman Spalding, XfID Brooklyn, New York Brooklyn Boys' High School, Third Honor Group QU, Business Manager 1920 Anais, Represen- tative to College Club C3jg Dartmouth Scientific Society, Footlights. Chi Phi House. Eric Camp Stahl, ZAE Toledo, Ohio Scott High School 3 Dramatic Orchestrag College Orchestra. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. 93 Q Av 2? , ,. ,, V ,- s Ja1nes William Stark, QJZK Brighton, Massachusetts Brighton High School, Freshman Baseball, Soccer Team 141. Phi Sigma Kappa House. Charles Henry Stevens, Jr., AFT' Dorchester, Massachusetts Boston Latin School, Second Honor Group Cl, 2, 31, El Centro Espanol. Delta Gamma Psi House. Paul Colby Stevenson Caroleen, North Carolina Richmond Academy. 26 South Massachusetts. Elmer VVadsworth Stewart, ZX Hanover, New Hampshire Hanover High School, Transfer from New Hampshire State College. 43 West Wheelock St1'eet. John VVinsloW Stickney, AKK, PA , Ludlow Vermont Vermont Academy, Freshman Football Squad Q11, Varsity Football' Squad iC21. 13 VVest Wheelock Street. Allen Pratt Stillman, HIDE ' Fairhaven, Nlassachusetts Fairhaven High School, Band CI, 2, 3, 41, Orchestra Q1, 21, Dramatic Association Orchestra QQ, 3, 41. Sigma Phi Epsilon House. Arthur Warren Stockdale, fPKllI',AOF, HAE, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus, Arts Toledo, Ohio Scott High School, The Dartmouth Board Cl, 2, 3, 41, Secretary of Class CQ, 3, 41, President Interfraternity Council C41, Proof and Copy. Casque and Gauntlet House. Gerald Starr Stone, AKE, Dragon Spencer, ltflassachusetts Worcester Academy. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Samuel Sommerville Stratton, AXA, AEP Newburyport, Massachusetts Newburyport High School, The Dartmouth Board QQ, 3, 41, Debating Team C21, Lockwood Prize C21, Proof and Copy. Lambda Chi Alpha House. William Bergen Sullivan, APT' Danvers, Massachusetts Holten High School. 37 Hitchcock. John Edgerly Sunderland, AACIJ, GJBK Omaha, Nebraska Central High School, First Honor Group Cl, 21, Associate Manager of Track C41, Rake and Roll. Alpha Delta Phi House. Ralph Adams Sunergren, KKK Hanover, Massachusetts Arlington High School, Varsity Hockey Cl, 31. Kappa, Kappa, Kappa House. 94 C7 A' Q -' ' C T, - ., yy .V 'I E ' . i f Ural at I Q Q. ' V I C - ,X 1 si f' ' Q 55 51 - -ig., , ' A , 'A J 3 J U 1' Carroll Middleton Swezey, XT, HAE, Arts Patchogue, New Y ork Patchogue High School, The Bama CQ, 3, 4113 Secretary Christian Association C41Q Advertisings Manager 1920 AEGIS1 Property Manager Dramatics C4-13 Footlights. Chi Phi House. Arthur Drew Thomson, EN West Roxbury, Massachusetts Roxbury Latin School. Sigma Nu House. Earl Thomson, AKE, Casque and Gauntlet Long Beach, California Long Beach High School 3 Track Team C1, 41. Casque and Gauntlet House. Ernest Francis T illson, ATA Plymouth, Massachusetts Plymouth High School. Delta Tau Delta House. llVilliam Edward Tracy, AACD Bristol, Connecticut Phillips Andover Academy. h 6 College Street. Francis Elmer Trent, K2 A Toledo, Chioi Scott High School 3 Jack 0, Lantern Board CQ, 3, 41. Kappa Sigma House. ' Charles Winslow Tucker, EAE Ilion, New York Ilion High Schoolg Mandolin Club C21. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. Warren Osborn Turner, AXA Claremont, New Hampshire Claremont High School. Lambda Chi Alpha House. Leo Maurice Ungar 1 Council Bluffs, Iowa Council Bluffs High School, Circulation Manager of The Dart-mouth C4513 Proqf and Copy. 20 Massachusetts. - James' David Vail, Jr., fme, Aor Evanston, riunois Hartford Public High Schoolg Freshman Track Squad C113 Manager of Hockey C313 Manager of Freshman Baseball C413 Rake and Roll. Phi Delta Theta House. Thomas Durland Van Orden, EX, FA Pompton Lakes, New Jersey Montclair High School. 9 West Street. George Frank Vincent, X115 Lynn, Nlassachusetts Lynn Classical High Schoolg Manager of Tennis C411. Chi Phi House. Clayton Morey Wallace, AXA Wolfeboro, New Hampshire ' Brewster Free Academy3 D. C. A. Cabinet CQ, 3, 4-13 Vice-President C413 Choir C31. 27 Fayerweather. 4 95 if lifg ffigs 'A M y rf A i fr the as A Eben Wallace, OAX, Casque and Gauntlet Rochester, New Hampshire Phillips Exeter Acadernyg Football Squad CQ, 31g Track CQ, 329 Musical Clubs QQ, 3, LD. Casque and Gauntlet House. Richard Prosser VVatts, IVY, Casque and Gauntlet Adrian, Michigan Adrian High School. Psi Upsilon House. Erwin Theodore Weis, ATA Toledo, Ohio Scott High School. Delta Tau Delta House. Richard Edwin Welch, CIJEK Newburyport, Nlassachusetts Newburyport High School. Phi Sigma Kappa House. Burdette Earlton VVeymouth, 121' Orange, Massachusetts Orange High School. 20 South,Fayerweather.' Howard Willoughby whitaker, emi ,sqniei-ville, ivrassaehuseas Somerville High School, Cross Country CI, 2, 413 Track ' Theta Delta Chi House. Nathaniel Henry Whiteside, J r., fIJK1lf', AOP f S Hinsdale, Illinois Lyons Township High School, Manager of Soccer C453 Proof and Copy. Phi Kappa Psi House. Ralph Kimball Whitney, I2 T Goshen, New Hampshire Central High Schoolg Dramatic Association fl, QD, D. C. A, Cabinet C3, 4fj. 27 New Hampshire. John Vrooman Wilkie, ECIJE Amsterdam, New York - Amsterdam High School, Dramatic Association QD, Circulation Manager The Bama QLD. Leslie Trott Willard, Cosmos North High School. Basil Lee VVinslow, Xfli, FA Good Will High School. George Felicks . 'Winter Norwalk High School. ' Robert Clark Winters, CIJEK Ridgewood High School. Irving Harry Worth, BAE High School of Commerceg Fresh Squad QLD. man Football CU, Varsity Tra 96 Sigma Phi Epsilon House. Worcester, Massachusetts Cosmos House. Larone, lVIaine Chi Phi House. Norwalk, Connecticut Wfheelock Street. Brooklyn, New York Phi Sigma Kappa House. New York City ck CQ, 313 Varsity Football Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. :ruNloRs W Ah NWN 5- A S .' ans? -r 1'-, ' elf ff:f,,.. ' css, 1 Q llg glll 22? f ,G .S 'esJ E52 ' x 9 2' H xref ,f ' fi 5' .g- 5 2' Q , , , f' ' X n ' ,,,,- ' l fic V ' 1'1 ff14ri-.Q i:i 7!f' '5 . ,.ffP1ff 5 E: l ' 'f' if ' W P!h ' Q,Qf-- ' 2, ' 'Zz-,MQ 4 ' 015132 lass uf 1921 Bhnbnlpbus Rutter Qlget, EN Midclleboro, Massachusetts D0zp1f' 1 Middleboro High School. Sigma l u House Qrthur Vinnent Qnherzun, BQH ' Brooklyn, New York r Polytechnic Preparatory. Beta Thet Pi House john ilaillis Qnhersnn KKK Wakefield Massachusetts Andy Wakefield High School Q Third Honor Group KD. ' Kappa Kfippa. Kappa Housc Ziantnarh Qibarles Qnger X AE - Troy, New York Lansingburg High School. 41 South Main Street 99 X f f fi ' x ,af 'fav ffww X ,fa f 1 X ffs ff 1 M7 ,M I f jff 4M 7, 7 ,f Vi yffff fu- fff mmgwff f f f if wat gf? ,ff A ,i ,, W I 52 ff ff ff I X 541' ew f ,6 ,ew Q f If nfmfffjf f f ff, Xfl I ,f fl 6 W fa' f f ff 1 -7 X X ffa ,I ff f fw 1' 4 ff' 4 ff Q Vlig Q A -. ef. .. -. EJ A E sr I 's e ' A N K . . i' - f. -'Y 1'y'fj'frrf':S-fora. V. Q. 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Q Phi Sigina Kappa House 100 Qibarles Ruger Bailey, AXP Gardner, Massachusetts A Petey Gardner High School: Second Honor Group CQD. Lyme Road Sliuzzell Bailey, IET Wells River, Vermont Russ St. Johnsl Jmlr y Academy. 10 Crosby Zlngbam Qliigamlmerlain Maker, G-JAX Springfield, Massachusetts Bake Centrrfl High Schoolg Transfer from Amherst. 17 VVest Wlheelock Street Ralph Greenleaf Baker, QDPA Leominster, Massachusetts I Bake Leominster High School: ,Class Baseball QI, 313 Assistant Manager Tennis C355 Rake and Roll, Phi Gamma Delta House 101 ww w HW? Q 'alll - ' e ' ,F f'W , ' 2 H ,' ii X Lf, kgs M A me A M1i111fy1ag114paW 5--4 i L-'xaiiillf ., ff-.E 1 U ff ffl 1 ' iight ff' JW few gf! if ff ff' I VW f ff 314' fn Q74 iff ffb 1 aff 479 'ge If rf f 5 'ef 22,24 fefgfyigl 4 M f , ffdr 'W ,W I ! .1 46 ff W f ff f ZW gee W' fee f 1227! fV,g47 1 ff ,X Z W ,QW ff f Avy za wr 7FffffyZfffZ3ff3 ff l Q vff W e gffv fof, W, X , I ,ax f fi 1 7 f'? 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WE: HS E BD A .E l N , . 5 I ' iff: A gf fi x til N lim ff. ' 'J-iQ'f1 ' 'S Q1 n . gh . ' ...f 11' pl 21 A 1- . w' f, 1 A11 Af 27 fagf' ,ff , f f cf? arles lewis Z8a1ftIJuIumetn Zlr Minneapolis, Minnesota ff f A , 1 1 4 jf I ,fy-5 ffv f 103 fvfy' wi fn Bart Minneapolis Central High- School. 8 Lebanon Street 1 X0 , I f 4' if Wm M.m.l5!4fJ AJWeWfMWW Aff, Qatar: Mark Baath 5 ' Winchester, New Hampshire 1, Winchester High School. 23 Rope Ferry Road z bf! X 7116914 of! , 151 24 -W1 75? 4 x44 fin f f I f'f f'!l'9'M f .4 11 MZKZQ ,,f?:,,fy-ar fvfvffnm-47427157419 vg wi fffdwfg ,1 4 Cllllarke Rams Bassett AAIID Aberdeen, South Dakota r f ,ff Lake Forest Academy. Alpha Delta. Phi House V V I ' L7Z3iE5fl.:3Z:Z.,2ilo, :,iC,!::22E: . ,6 'f1.' 3KnIaniJ QIZUBSUJBII Zmtchelher AXA ' 'QQ Manchester, New Hampshire H ,, Manchester High Schoolg Band Cl, 2, 3j' College Orchestra ' zfi Dramatic Association Orchestra CQ, 31. Lambda Chi Alpha House . i ,,f V 2 1 1-,ef 4 .4 1 95? 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Somerville High Schoolg Third Honor Group KID: The Dartmouth ROHM CQ, 33- 24- Richardson Eietemiab lee iganshet, ZAE Reading, Pennsylvania 'Dutch' ' ' Phillips Exeter Academyg Third Honor Group Qljg Christian As- sociation Cabinet CQ, 3Dg The Bama Board 'f3D. 11 Richardson iiienriek Qlilark Zgean, Qflosmus Franklin, New Hampshire 4iCaSey7! Franklin High School: Christian Association Cabinet CSD. 8 North Fayerweatliei Gurhun Babson Beattie, KKK, Qrts Oldtown, Maine Con Oldtown High Schoolg Choir Cl, 2, 31g Glee Club Cl, 2. 313 Mando- lin Club Cl, Qjg Orchestra Cl, Q, SD: Dramatic Association Orches- tra C1, 2, 31: Rake and Roll. Kappa Kappa Kappa House 104 , W : , K Raul Glarpenter Belknap, QAX, UAE Bellows Falls, Vermont ' Bellows Falls High Schoolg Choir C1, 2, Sbg Glee Club CQ, 355 The Dm-imowllh Board CQ, 31: 1921 Aegis Boarclg Proof and Copy, , 5 South Fayerweather Benjamin iles Bishop, LFT' Hartford, Connecticut i'B'iSh Berkshire Schoolg Musical Clubs CQ, 31. 17 Wheelock Street QEharett Qliatlple Bishop Littleton, New Hampshire B1'slL,' Littleton High School. Q6 South Fa,yerwe:1ther Buhulpb iBirkztt Blesb, CDM, Qtts Oklahoma City, Oklahoma X ' R'udie Oklahoma High School: iTlze Jack-0'-Laintern Board Cl, Q, 311 Art Editor C323 The Benin Board CQ, Sjg 'Art Editor IQQIAEGIS. Phi Gamma Delta House 105 n gk 'N Y ,fc-v f-.fll li L -' ii . Cx O fQN'x'xlN!2f!mwmwmx 'O ' 57 L i l AN ., WW :Q i E C , . Q it it A ' 'X 1 :fir AF . 2 Y: Q ., .i -i i i Z i If 2 k X- 'V 'if' T2 ' ' if + N V 4. M 41251 f 4 53 ,-as ff,4j.3w fF'?J 1 J! V fv riff Z , W , ,ff fwfr? 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'i9f. .1.,:j-gig, 5g,f5j:gI:2:1.'Z4:5-' fl' H.: ag.: 17 fi .. , , 53 , - 1' f ff' ffzjgf? -' if' J, ,- Pai . Qi 1 fi f' Iaurente Sluhsun iguarhman Wakefield, Massachusetts Larry wvakeaeid High School. 6 North rayerweahei- luke 3. Engggsag' KE Carthage, Missouri Luke ' Western Military Academy. Kappa Sigma House Zlaarulh Qtnbinson 3801121 GJAX 4 Wilbraham, Massachusetts . Hal Worcester Academyg Representative to the College Club Ciljg Var- sity Track CQ, 315 Varsity Cross Country C313 Freshman Basket- ball Captain. Theta Delta Chi House jfreherick ZBanieI5 Wutuman, CIJKW' Detroit, Michigan Fritz Detroit Central High Schoolg Peddie Instituteg Mandolin Club Q1, Q, 3j, I K Phi Kappa Psi House 106 Q3 5 , s in 'iiQv ' .,vf fp l Wm 'Xml L + 'iE2A Q l 2-.1 N: N W F if MN. Y C '- st z.. A W gc mx vin N, .- vs fy...-5 14 C Qi 4,3 0 ffjff 4 ZIBahiZ1 Cliiummings Zgutnen, QJEK Somerville, Massachusetts uDaUeu Somerville High Schoolg Huntington School. 20 South Massachusetts Qllen Gilbert Brailep, Qiusmus South Royalton, Vermont Jac7c' Woodstock High Schoolg Choir C1, 2, 355 Freshman Cross Country Qcluadg Second Honor Group C25g Christian Association Cabinet C35' Q7 Fayerweather Iibarnlti jfrehzrinix Zgraman, Qliusmus Torrington, Connecticut , Hal Torrington High Schoolg Band C155 Orchestra Cl5g Dramatic Association C155 Glee Club CQ, 355 Choir CQ, 353 Christian As- sociation Cabinet C35. Cosmos House QEIHS QBrm5hze Briggs, EQIJE, Qrts Riverdale-on-Hudson, New York I :AEI-s The Dartmouth Board Cl, Q, 353 Press Club CQ, 353 Outing Club Council CQ, 353 Treasurer C253 Secretary C355 Gun Team C2, 353 Manager C253 Captain C353 Proof and Copy. 6-'7 South Massachusetts i I ,f WHWWYRXY warms :wax W x N Ss X X s X X gf Cs X Y-N, Q A 93' s S X E S X X sl 0: swiss ' ff ff X Q4 af f Qf gf Vx G! ff, fl X ff!! 1 yf7f ffg f 'f 'fzt, J 'Ir .fvsfffwrv lfwfw' ff' i 'S 555- j--41:4-ar: V .,1:.f,:.,-f :naw an-2:-:- 'P f - 'v ,' f-,am :gf , 4543-f-1 Wai, ,, 1' ' 3 22 - 1345 , N , 1, J ,4fM,,?-- . .-'F 14. .- fij fiifil l . 2- Q 4. 1- ,KV 31 fl -2:i-rw '- EL 2 W eg, -A ' V,-,,4,ggg1,:-f -- g ty, 5, 4- 'v:r:1::2 fr 5 , f i 4,7 'i'--Qf . 12: if 32425 ' . ., V I A Sill 'FZ2l2? i 11 3 ':Z'1' ' Lai :mar ffmg: -:ff-.--:in e 'ze-1- --izgze, 4,,- fag? '- .- ff' ' 1,1 42-2711 - ' -f .. wr' ' ,-rf, . f 7,40--., . 24 .2 -' 1 - 1-1-ai 9 ,Y 5- ., ,fl .1-eg :. .,5,,. 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K af -f A1 Q Q ' Ziaetrink Zwutnn, UAE Troy, New York Bmwriie Albany Academyg T he Dartmouth Board CQ, Slg College Orchestra CD3 Proof and Copy. 14 Hitchcock ilkuhert Phillips Zgumqnugbzfg KKK Manchester, News Hampshire I HBOF, Manchester High Schoolg Class Tracll: Team CD5 Varsity Track Squad QU: Varsity Football Squad QSQ. 1 Kappa Kappa Kappa House Ziaarhepl Burton, AKE Hanover, New Hampshire Ha1'11ey Worcester Academy. 34 Hitchcock ilailtnn Sliutnlep- Qtamphell, ECIJE Hastings-on-Hudson, New York H1flZ Peabody High Schoolg Varsity Baseball Squad Cl, 21. 20 Sanborn 108 AQ ii 'X fi, 'f 1' 211,--L 2:5 -1., -f ' f X ' 'X ffafifig 7:39 ffl fi? ::1V.' . , 1 49 X A. ,w'- ian: -1f,:, A '55 K - , gal X, Elnbn filiffutb Qlamphzll, KE Portland, Maine Jack Manchester High Schoolg Phillips Exeter Aczujlcmy. - V 1 South Massachusetts 6lEarIe weston Cularher, Xfb Lynn, Massachusetts Nick, Lynn English High Schoolg Dl'3.H1Z1,tlCS Ui, 32. 18 Massachusetts , Harman Jfrannis Garber, AXP Newburyport, Massachusetts ' Norm7' Newburyport High Schoolg Second Honor Group Cl, QD. Alpha Chi Rho House Qilintnn iBa1fttiiJge Qlarp, EX St. Johnsbury, Vermont ' cm St Luke,s School 25 Hubbard 109 i f r S, 19 , L K UW S s 1 Q i A Pi vll: E2:,,.l.fii 1 'k' ' Alll glam Bean Cdlattetall, CDM Brooklyn, New York NAI-- Erasmus Hall High School. , Phi Gamma Delta House Ezurge Zlaarrp Qihamhfrtaimz, BGJH Washington, Districtiof Columbia ccHaTTywv Western High Schoolg Class Basketball CQDQ Mandolin Cluh Cl, 2, 31. ' Beta Theta Pi House Ernest iiaarhzp fnlhapman Springfield, Massachusetts Hchappia' Springfield High School. Pleasant Street C!EIJatIz5 3Kan7JaII Qibilhs, KKK Manchester, New Hampshire Fat K Manchester High School. 1 South Massachusetts ' 110 Jima iffii: 1. 2 E J, J x f:.:.s,,- fl' ,z -1' -,Q .V -,f -1 K 2-V ' . M- N -1, , ,V . .,,, , , .,., .-W, ' ., ,.,,,A , ,.V,,. , ,, , A . ., , , , 15 4' 5: f ' f- Q, ' ' -' ,, fw ' .!g 19 'f - f 15 2, be -'N' 'i Y ,avr Jw f :sr i ., Q 1. , , r f , S5 2 14. 1 it , fx, , A f f R s SQ : -1...n4ffffi'2-1 F 'w1'r:fff1s1.,. i f f ' '1 -4 V 4 ' if 4, ,j ',f,:-1 - w7,f,c 2 . 5 '52 Q ' V, . - fffaf -.15 I am ' g , . ,,,. , , I, , A , 4 5 gf, H X 4 K NJ 1 ,Q , .., b- K no 4 1 'fi . -f V- ' Yin- , , ,fi i i K .1. Vanta Qlllark New York City Evanston High Schoolg Dartmouth Plaque Cljg The Dartmoutlz l30al'd fl, 9, 33- Q9 Hitchcock warren ipnmerup Qllark, ATA, UAE f Burlington, Iowa Warrie Burlington High Schoolg Business Manager 1921 AEGIS. Delta Tau Delta House A Emmet 3llJlJl'I Qllleurp, QIJIOIJ' Marion, Ohio Univefsity School: Dramatic Association fl, Q, 31g Cercle Fran- gaisg The Jack 0' Lantern Board CQ, Sjg Players. Phi Kappa Psi House Thomas Vase Qlllehelanh, AACD Haverhill, Massachusetts ' I Tom Huntington Schoolg Representative to College Club C353 Rake and Roll. Alpha Delta Phi House 111 3 KN K., fva f' ,J wb f gy -s A-2333, A K 4 sary zffmfm Maw ffgrfzf A9 s E Y El wvcfv Gm wqewms,-W ef .sg mszx-Qxfsf--mx.. X x4 VfWf 5f'3:iWW152Wif3'5 7 Zee of f 2 Zi' M if :ff gif,-ff 1- 1' J ' mm' ff, 'W XXQ X x WQQQSTK 1 1 aff f f f ff MW4Jfw!Vi5?' f we 9' ffr 14 s ffv 1 :df l 2 f V 42 W Wa,-y Y f 3 NMWI '?-'iR'wE'-PQ? I r 1 1 K ,ff uf 4 'Y .irsffidfammff-Q 2 ' - -- -uf 1-- 1- exam?-is 5 :i H-'-er-1.-1.,1:vff'f..:f,-ribsfwz.'-:--.-r-f'-View:,- 2X:2ffs1s:1N-Xi-.--:IQ :ew.'-sf.,'A--f:e:ii.sffr'12'1ff f:-::.s5r:-'f-.2-re.-1. f 1-.1-:-1 Y-1 f. ...4 ...Wx xx .t,,.,. .-owls! A.. ,rn ., .f,.-,.-.-M. ,.m,..,, ., .,,+,:.x.., x. W, 1 ,,,,.,, ,. .. ,,..t .sw . . , wa- v- rff - i . vs- ..':-'-r vsvzf. - 1:--si:-f' -. 'f2r2f5:':5.-:. ,M?::-A:-It . 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'fS.i5vi:gQRew??',rag.g ':f1Er5gig,ff's2'.:,3:Z1. 3 -YP - -SSW, -M 4- h- . tu.- u A . h h-:':+::g- if':'g'iggj5 Q--5--3-5-3gX,:f:5,g,52- 3--5'-jj-,, 'H-efft--f'i X Sf . .3 Z SE rr!-lv T: ?-Tm' ai CD V99 3:1 923' gf? 319. .ma gd 5-U 0'0- 5: QQ g. 'DM M i lk if K 5 X -x 5. - Q39 imlllvuvl FN V Wi A-fjvzk -,.-ww X t, O 76 - 4 as .1S'9,2:'3YEf x Y J Xxshmlh X , Bill North Attleboro High Schoolg The DllI't'lfL0'IlilL Board CQ, 31. Sigma Chi House lunell Zfagmirr C!EUiifi,N1iE Mexico, New York C'o0kie', V Mexico High Schoolg College Hand Cl, Qjg Assistantliusiuess RIRHZUCI' J ack 0' Lcmiern C313 Assistant Business Manager Dramatics C313 Eootlights. - Kappa Sigma House Qllliffnrh Qtule Qllurhet, KE Spokane, Washington C'liI7l' ' Phillips Exeter Academy. 27 South Massachusetts QEmnrp Qllurtirs Cllnrhin, ECDE New Britain, Connecticut Carb New Britain High School. 20 Sanborn 112 'fm .XS Q .X ,mal ,... 3... FUlfm1u11gwini9 gjgxigx -:..:sJ X ,Q-V-'jf-ri'-A 5 A ' T rc:.':l so 'ii lf il1XlE',!f3SXpi3XxixxiQq X 5 Haw' f , Q it . . -:mn xx is or-N '1 S M513 F, fi ,i,, , 1731 -if x, 'NYJ 'Winton Qlbatles Qllnttnin, fIvK1If Chelsea, Vermont Vi-rf' Goddard Seminaryg Baseball Squad CI, 23. Phi Kappa Psi House Jfrancis' 31 usepb Cllnsgruhe Marlboro, Massachusetts Clone Marlboro High School. 16 South Massacliusetts ' jliurman William Qlltisp, KKK ' Needham, Massachusetts Crip Needham High School: Football Cl, SD. 17 Crosby laugh Gilbert Qhuikshank Concord, New Hampshire , Crook Concord High Schoolg Third Honor Group CHQ HCDll0l'H,lJlG Men- tion in French CQDQ Cercle Frangais. 33 Hallgarten 113 ff! f ffjyf 'ff ' 'Y f f ff, f 1 , rf f ff f' hy fwffff 6? Z 'ff if ,f x fd f E i 2 ww MNA ff! iff 1' f NP-ws'2Axwzs-vm'-semsx ,,,f ,, ,f I ' V ffnffs 'V'A0'1.1! I WA, , ff, ffl dawg -Qs 5 g ss? W x Q xx was ff +11 if J fl? 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'31 :gV. 7fov ,. 415, :L- f- L -.,Vf ,4'5 1 4 Q V ,A Q AVA 2 5' .lil .2 A .155-,f gf' - F- - ' S. 65' -. , . rl 5 X , r. :f, , ,I 1' - 1. f- .lf -4 ' ' ' , 0 E ., f as X. .,k5Qf1f '--- A 7 . ' gil. 11' ' 51- 'T ' S ...era ff,-.1-:aff ' Geralh Qliuggenz Cllutler, AKE, Qlrtz Adnan, Mwhlgan if 17' f :isis s' ' : HJ6, ,, , gg Adrxan Hlgll bchoolg Assistant Dxrector of Dl'3,Hl8.t1CS Q3D. .-'52 :f:iif'5'.i25:?f2g::Z' -fi'-f'S51QQff5fIEfEf5 - 41 Hltchcock , a s ..., - ' Eusbua Bala, BAE ziwykfaza .-44Ef6?21:3 '.1:g :ri ,--' 5 ' ' ' - , Whxtlnsvllle, Massachusetts , Worcester Academyg Soccer CU. blglllil. Alpha Epsllon House V 5 f ilanrauz QEatnn Balrpmple L, Mxllbury, Massachusetts 1 Dal . f' Qushmg Academy. 2 College Street 'f ' f' v f'f'W - A 5 Hubert Ulbvmrw EMP, MLP' Hartford, Connectlcut as u I, Q -1 -. Aryan' Bob 4.-::1:41x5fw v W L,'ffp3:!:gg . 43 Hartford Hiffh School: Track S uacl Q g. Cercle F ran -ais. -r 6115, V. ' 5 q Q 5' Delta Gamma.Psi House 114 u fi N' 1 .mn 1 f:,,v,m El George Eteeh Bahia, IET Hartford, Connecticut ' ' 'Dowd' Mount I-Iermon School. , 39 Fayeiwvczitliei' ZBurtnan:iJ Qcijaufler ZBe6ruff', EfbE Amsterdam, New York ' MDW, , Amsterdam High School, C1'OSS Country Squad CD3 F1'CSllI'I12LIl Basketball Squad. Sigma Phi Epsilon House Sith Qlhett Bensmnre, DDE Hanover, New Hampshire :cDenyn Hanover High Schoolg Second Honor Group CD3 Rufus Choate Scholar CQD g Orchestra. Q1, 255 Cercle Fraugais CQ, 31. 3 VVest 'Street Robert Wilkins ZBerhp A Peterborough, New Hampshire A . fCDarbl7 Peterborough High School. 9 New Hampshire 115 Fill:- Q rm 7 N N xxx J ,iijfiym F! S ,f , QW J QNX, - fixgfziiw Mg 4.4113 ,, 'E gift' X N . gx Q.xXXmXw' Q v 1 A , . 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I A 1 ' 1 'ii mason Qhams ZBir:kinsun, Bit., Xllf' Amherst, Massachusetts HDick' ' Amherst High School. 10 Hitchcock ClEIme1f Qtbristiantkrehaes Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ' CCEZ77 West Philadelphia High School. 4 Pleasant Street Qllisun han Tffliet ZBUIII1 Washington, District of Columbia UAF, estern High School. QS! Wlheeler Qrtijur Glilliarren ZBurpea, AY, AKK Roslindale, Massachusetts .LAWN I Roxbury Latin School. School Street 116 n 4 ,, W :F ..., ' hi A ,,: i -'vf, ' is I 'V I MF? 19- X r is e Qttbur Zmihges Eastman Berlin, New Hampshire Eustis Hebron Acarlemyg Ski Team QU. 3 Pleasant Street warren Qtilsun QEge, AM: Omaha, Nebraska c:Redss Omaha Central High School g Mandolin Club Cl, Q, 315 Second Honor Group flbg Assistant Manager of Cross Country and Freshman Track C359 Vice-President of Class C359 Rake and Roll. Alpha Delta Phi House ftliherett Evziliblitt Cfggintun Brooklyn, New York, .1 EU-, Boys' High School. +1-0 Hitchcock Blkuhert Zllflklilliam QEIsa55et, XCIJ, Qrts New York, New York -'KB01f'e Morris High Schoolg Rufus Choate Scholar CD5 Band Cl. Q, SJ: Band Leader 4339 Orchestra QU: Glee Cluh Cl, Q, 353 Class Treas- urer fl, 223 Chorister Cl, QD. 15 Sanborn . i' V . W 1' . nerr. A- ,.. .f2E? ' ' Es. ', .' 1 i ' V 1 ..'. ,. ., gs' 117 CJ lllanihlgl QL- it QQSQMESL nf ' Lf ff V1 ' 'hllltlliliilx vt i ,3-3 - iiiwm if xxfgi- WX is tr Bluhn william Cllimhtenz, Elf., AKE Chicago, Illinois ' 'GBill . University High School. 39 Hitchcock ' Marshall 519121112 QExniciqs, B911 Washington, District--'of Columbia - -I nEIa: Central High Schoolg Track Squad QI, Q, Sjg Footblall Squad 121g Footlights. Beta Theta Pi House george washington jfergusun, fUr., KE Lenox, Massachusetts ..Ferg,, Lenox High School. 6 Crosby CEEIIFJJUDFJ Zbuff Jfiiihzt, BQH Cleveland, Ohio nElZxs l West High School. Beta Theta Pi House . 118 we .IX - 3I1112:l1g4l1g4ggM .,,. 2 HJ! J . C . .A i15?S f fa t 1' Q, i ,- 3gg.iY5:x:XL,QQQmyN . - Q-4 Qfliiriww . r at l.: ff f 5: QS? El QEIa1:ence Qbauper jflzet GAY Cutchogue, New York Speedy wWi'Ltt1lZl1Clx High School Cross Countly CSD Theta Deltfm Chl House Justus 51-Iflnllarh Jflemmg XCIJ Qrts f i Elkhart, Incllana f, ,Q Doc 0 5 Elkhart High Schoolg Dramatic Association 1 2 31 Glee Club QQJ 7 Hltchcoclx j Ziauhaarh ?LIup7J jflztnellmg KKK Needham, Massachusetts Flew f gjflffs 4 Needham High Schoolg Third Honor Gioup C1 QD 18 Crosby ffiusepb Zsutler Jfulger 311: CIDEK Nantucket Island, Massachusetts O6 Phillips Exeter Acmlems 24- RlCllaIKlSOI1 Q i 4 1 Q. ,.,f. U9 Av. ,- . 1 . 4 , v ' ' ' I1 'Q -. . U -. , , -. ,. K N . .- .X . ' .A . 1 . . -1- , -:gr:s:q:.p1::::::ff::z-sfrtzxzzzu:sixrssfrli-1 .4'Ia'-.tg'-:ifr1:s1 'f11-.11 rr: ,nV.Q-:Nf-r:emu'2's.r7fff1fQ111S1'1. ' 5.24-Rf''fiff''ff1ffNfSFCff?fifi'fffifffffif2fWRfTF'RXRffSS . 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A 1' ,,:Z3,,: '31, -gff-4,2 - Q Q, ,J- :gf .if-xvfia ,gy.,ff-,L fzffg, -' 5' 1353:-'adff,, :,'QQ-vj .zsrqqi-.-:I: -,'2.sf:':':- , ,5.f:,yfV 545,34 J 11315597 'cg '-f a. ' I ' - . - . ,: -3- -,:zr . A it is- :'2g.51:i:31t 2 ' ' .T TY Ei A :11.1W::-1 va f. 5i 'i5i r 5 fifl?-'lg iff? :,- we 4 ,,,, t I I, Q, A 25, -, gi , f 45 3 , , gn' . 4 5: . fi U 7-J: -2:-Ulf Hz'-,iii Ea: i --a-Af f-222 wi , V. Q'-iljhzr-gl. . . ' ' .,..f -.,-.4,..f,A,e 4 . 44 .I ,A - f f'2 '31- -Qf ' .' Z, ,C fizjiffffl- ' ' j4,yfZ,?.' mifiii' 'fm-af V 'z 'Jx. 4,,.. 14+ I . f?:'f 3.21531 f ,1,:1 f'jj-4'-:EEF . 1 :arg 33 IWW. 1-1-1. ,. r 5-,, 1' V.-'.,f'?1,il7-a-' VLW' -'2zz:1:Lvf f ' ij.,l.j:,::f 541- .' ,Avo '.,3g,: -5-3 5 3 . , 5 5 , ' ' i .V . -frzifz'-2 -I-I w I . '-'2:f1'g2f'f 1' 'Q ii 1--4 .,,.. mf- ' :iail-E gf-ffiiffJ'2?1f1 '.i?J 1.,: qi: . ' ji 5:4-7 V. . P 9 45222. .4 .21 a is 1' 4: . 'A-.aria ' jf? 12- 0 -zyifsazfszi-f'-:V '. f ,.g- . ' ': 4,12--r:5i-g:1:,111 1 ,fa 1 :- 2 fs' I1 -zggwcr, n . 2.5.0 11-15 fail fl A N -4273 .1-,. H V' - , Q , 1 if ,z:3.wwum:'...,.2.::a:z:i J 'W I 41 ii: ' ' ' t f 1- ' A ., 53: 1 41 .- 515121 -: ' N ff' V-aw:-:.::z:.:..-:.:.. . zf ' 'ns X , . ., , . . .x ,. N P' 1. - sw ' 4 H-gy 'T nfs! N K :ii I L3 T6 r I? 'lv 7 f W ' 1, iifmix M if-ww -lffra We v Q l ' .aw , U r f 1. 3BeiI jfitch Jfuthez, ATA Astoria, Long Island, New York Neil . Kelvin School. 18 'South Fayerweather Gznrge Qibristuphnzr jfdrnian, BQH Detroit, Micihigan Detroit Central High School 5 Assistant V Circulation Manager of The Dartmouth CSDQ Second Prize Thayer Mathematics XCEZD. 11 North Massachusetts jfreheridz Zgearhslep glfnster, Bit. Stamford, Connecticut Fos,' Stamford High School. 3 School Street william Plummer jfotnlzr Boston, Massachusetts Flower Roxbury Latin Schoolg Second Honor Group Cljg Outing Club Trip Committee CSD. 22 Richardson 120 .. . S . 'U 9' O if- .iw Q Z2 3 2 5, E E ,ff 'Xi-' .. 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EUUUIUB Iifuufff 'ZX Summit, New Jersey :e.: Q ' Kemp 21 Stevens Preparatory School: The Bema Board CQ, Sjg A ' fi 'lq' I I 1921 AEGIS B0fl1'd im- X W V V 7 40 Massachusetts leeee eletee ig 'h, .. gig Eiannh Eatfem V-5: Bridgeport, Connecticut 'v',, - New Rochelle High School g Third Honor Group Cljg Freshman ' ' V Trackg Track .Squad QQD. 55 New Hampshire ',r, 4 K ,gf Hifi ieV,ii - te ' 1 A lii 92 n ga, Q ' 1 Zlaartp Baxter Garlanh, CIJEK i q , 7 ' Nashua, New Hampshire Jil 41, ' no -e V- Hf1ffy', '.., - f Q Nashua, High School, Varsity Football Squad CHQ Second Honor 1. V -V ' Grgup 18 CI'0Sl'Jy A. 'i e'r,i 122 r Ak . N Q- X. 'W B GET? U tllllllllllbl U 57 fins' fax-ixygf xx Q5 tvvsllkl-ff ,Z Wliiifi. X 149 - ' -ig Q X , N... Q N.lillI'il,llixQ xxx :l....,,,,,,9m Q iilmllil l-1 -hui Q. 2 Q3-J 1 NN' I. fe ,1 w-fir: fx? llhl. ,ij X , X, 7 if H Zbarulh Bahih Geilirb Brockton, Massachusetts , HHUF, Brockton High School. 34- New Hampshire Qttbur flllliarh gilbert Dorset, 'Vermont .1 A rf, Burr and Burton Seminary: Third Honor Group fljg Second Honor Group CQJQ Glee Club CSD: Choir CSD. 9 New Hampshire Qllharles 3Backar7J Qilsnri, AXP Portland, Mains i Gil Portland High Schoolg Band Cl, 2, Sig Orchestra CI, Q53 Track CU. Alpha Chi Rho House Russell Blarhis' Gnuhnutn, Sir., ZX Brookline, Massachusetts - Russ Brookline High Schoolg Hand Cl, 2, Sjg Dramatic Association' Orchestra CQ, 35. Sigma Chi House 123 fWWf,Mv VMf9 1 2555 X gf XX YNXMN QE. . A .4 . ,ir , 35'-kg, 4' l'QTQQf55,,Q: . ' , 4 ' ff 1 4' 4 4 K I ' 'ff I Q-I '-'iftgdrigi1'a:f.'-1'.'4E 1f?i?',ffii'f 'Q.'lA'-Q id ' , 4 or 1 21'-we in .1 Ni-.vii Q -'11-Nfl?-'rf15NmfaQ'P. pa W ,ein ' mfs,4.-f-N-.iwflf-5 at l am F A 2 mifgi v T IFES ,Sr ' . 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Sigma Chi House Q 1' ' H 125 V n A o 1 ,, . J , t e f, K -fwvfweaaaavs JV' 63 3, 7 flGHaIIa:e 3Kmmzp iiaathnng ZCDE 41510 53 ew we , 24 'W' if Ab f , lf' 2 West Lebanon, New Hampshire Wally West Lebanon H1g,h School blglllib P111 Epsilon House Qflmer Brute Ziaarper CDN K Dorchester, Massachusetts -Lb Nw Hampshire george iglancijarh Zbams Ein OAR Allston, Massachusetts f'eorqc HUI1l1Hgt0I1 bchool liascb Lll C1 21 Mandolm Club Clj 4 Sanborn Qlllmffurh jfranuz Ziaart LN Brooklyn, New York C1 BVIOOklb1l College Prcpamtoly bchool Rlflv. lc LTI1 CD Vlvll1llGI' of Malksmanshl G ld M d l ' p o e a CU Q9H1tcl1cock 'Q:-24,sfiai'i,- ,f4t::1f:xf55a:i,. , F Hai 2 , ' ' fiqwef- ,W uf H : ' . ' 1 fz.f a,.:: '-ff . feiiesif f - 'frfu-' -1 S- 1 52122, A '-'v- , za-I 4.1:-,-Lf:-1 , A K' 'H l fe 2.1-Q, . law sfifiefz - .11 ,,,. 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Beta Theta Pi House Eiubn han Qmhetg Zlaashtuuk, Znh, AKE Hinsdale, Illinois ' .Iohnn'ia Lyons Township High Schoolg Football Squad CU. Delta Kappa Epsilon I-louse Qnrhen iiaelmer, X111 New York, New York , 'cBord Jamaica High School: Rifle Team fljg Captain CQJQ Cercle Fran- gais 133. 8 Crosby 127 . vwfcp f 44:2 157125 '2l'k'5i ' V? 5. ff: .il X fi' N Xu V5 4 ' ' t--f 'f,' C 52422.4 7 f f f , I! ,Q f X Gai X ff' f mf f Wx ff 1 2' 1 ffiwff 4,94 Hffmw fx! X,-fwf 15 f 1 f f ,off ll! 4,f ff!! 1 ff rj!!! f ggi! 'wllgff f ff V af f ,y ff WZ Z ff! 5 f? wMWW,4fefazw,ffv,,hwzmv 7, I X f J I lf! KF ff 41 IV' nav: IE 1 L .... . 5 3g:1: '5: s 5: :-:' : - . , 5. -' 'V' f '-ffm,-w:,. '.' ' ' . 41 -' -7-:fy -11.1. .,rf4,, . - . , Xftwa-' ,.,La,a1r 1-af. t M4 ,,.0f,c'.: , -'gf' ,f m V, . 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' ' 9 6 ' 5 w . walter Rogers Ziaensghatn, Qflusmus - l Suflcield, Connecticut uII6IL7I!1i0n Suffield School: Colgate University. 5 Thornton fynbn Z!-Qzrhett, Eiti, AXA Somerville, Massachusetts UJOILI'L7L7:H,, X Somerville High School. -L Richardson Q9ttnn Ziaahergal Zlainks, QJFA, UAE Minneapolis, Minnesota HUM, Shattuck School: Class President Cl, 215 Senior Captain Dartmouth Regiment Cljg First Honor Group CD5 S. A. T. C. Football Team QQDQ The Dartmouth Board QQ, 355 Christian Association Cabinet CQ, Sig Assistant Manager Fresliman Football C3D3 Proof and Copy. Phi Gamma Delta House Grasp iiaiggins Brooklyn, New York :A Trayn 1 Brooklyn Friends Schoolg Lincoln-Douglas Society Cljg The Dart- mouth Board CQ, 313 The Bama Board QQDQ Assistant Circulation Mana- ger CSO. 40 Massachusetts 128 fx .f , AQ 1 'xc' ' J, an . ,- -nuff: Q, H Q 21 ' E2 xl Q V V jfrank Bicbarh ?!aiII, CDEK Dorchester, Massachusetts Dick Boston English High Schoolg New Hampshire State Collegeg Foot- ball Squad 131. 17 Massachusetts 6. yllljfi Qlihetett ZENII, fi:-EK - Dorchester, Massachusetts Buttons,' Boston Latin Schoolg Choir fl, 2, 35g Glee Club Accompanist QQJQ Manager of Fencing Team 9 Pleasant Street walter william ibult Ashburnham, Massachusetts ' Walt,' Cushing Academy. 8 College Street Glilllarren Qtinsun Zlaumer -fi 3 , Q.: - V 1 if fv xx' A Xxvxl' M is ...T WN 9-'i 'xV'RSi-'S W! ,,,, VV , WZ! f K If f 'ef' WA!!! ff' f J ! ..-V. -is-.Rivet I fr Z-'54 lx .f 1' QQ! 65 ff QW , ff ffff xi W7fZFWW!FMK7 WMYWWM I f 1 X M J ff um was S A xv. 'X 9: f , f' 5 if 1 X A? ? 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A 5 wp 1 - U 'll 2 19 21 is sv is 51 Vi 3 4' , 'll ii'-2 ' H ' ' , -ff U --.. ' my-Nil .55l 3P1' i m fi . . I Eiubn william Zlauhhell, CDIOP' in , - 1 ,I New York, New York :iz jig: Jack . Germantown High Sehoolg Representative to the College Club 1 Q1, QDQ The Dartmouth Board CI, 2, 3Dg Assistant Manager Baseball :EQ ..'- 'f1 I 'I V Q3Dg Secretary of Class C355 Rake and Roll. 'E' V1 fl 2.5, ,,,' Q- Phi Kappa Psi House 2 i l s,. H -'.v'- f ' f ' as l - CEIIIUQ iIB12S52r iiaunt ' 1 ' Greenfield, Massachusetts -ji-gl. ' - '-755 -' 1- '-gjgpqffzfglzzgggj - Greenfield High bchool. 9 North l+aye1'weather 2- 'ijlL3g'. ' ,, as D 'A ---r ,. -'r'r 1 '--i ,Z1-,3,,QI's1fZ fr, if Zi 7 I' ,7f3Z75'g If . '-, e H --., GE arltnn Jfrust ffin nsun, AXA sl D Haverhill, Massachusetts ' 2 Haverhill High School. 2 Reed as, - 'ff f, v A 5 e I illilalrulm Jfisbzr Enbnsnn, BAE 523 Franklin, Massachusetts 'illlaci' F ' Dean Academyg Dramatic AssoeiationVO1'ehestra Cl, 2, 355 College Orchestra Q1, 2, Sjg Mandolin Club C3j. 4 Crosby 130 f- Stepbzn williams Elnbnsun, KE Cambridge, Masszichusetts Johnny ' w N.. 'flaw ' AX E. X, Qxfgxiw fx g1r1.xn1fgQV wi frrlp- J vmmkj' I N - .-:V fw- L5figxu'i. ol-N ,154-S '- 21 Q . P. 4-Vl X. 4x liiia. hr- J if 53. cz., -hx N 552 'N ,. 1 I A I A f,k ,V 4 www ff'4f4,!, .. J 'Z M f ff fvff ff ' 44. 1 1 ff lvfd W1 1 f 1199 f,, I Cambridge Latin Schoolz 55 New Hampshire Eames Eault Zones, MD Kittanning, Pennsylvania uJimmy,, Kittanuing High School. 8-9 North M Berry QEiJbJar7J Eluslin 1 i South Lyndeboro, New Hampshire ..J0S,, l Milford High School. 50 South M jliurman kabisun, EN New York, New York Kadfly Horace Mann Schoolg Varsity Football Squad. CI, 31. 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If:-Cy Q2 , ',.'g.:f 'fi' 41 :- , if? ,iffy: '..i1f:L-.f1?Q -T3'5.r'2'E-E95 4 V- ' fT'?:'i' - '. -31' 1:- -- -fs 41:22 --3 -.rf - f. -wee' -- mf ' . ii -5 - 'P 1L Vi!-ii J ' l '.e...-L:-.-,, - vfigsgpgg ' fii'ff-f1iifi-'f - -- ,- -55-15.1 -Q-'iffi ' -Vie w .j1-155223-g-5.21155 .- an-1 1 Q.:-13-f-flu,I.'2..-i12-2-:fI-.z..:.-is -, f i.21:si---if 1- .. .22 . '- wk-ggi-.liwgg ' f?'l5?'f--6 3 '. fi gifzimlt' . 1,11-... 211 1' ,532-455. ' .11w.:--.I Q-4315, .v ' ek' f?f 1f'.f , gig Q- ,, -af f?.i.21..1f.f l . 2::'gg .L-5135 ' 4. - .. --V-. . ...'- .- f- sg.. M .1151-r:.,+z . '- Q: ew.-.1 f A- -- .- CQ N . W 3 Q5 .-- ip -- .14 il: A ff'-3542. ' f - X N J ,- 5 so 21 X .3 P -in 1 . ehxfkilxia xxx I I 'V :Q-.gf - , W - ' sqghzx ,A-'N X William jframis Kearns, Er., CIJZK Dorchester, Massachusetts Bill - St. John's Acadelnyg Varsity Football Squad Cl, 3jg S. A. T. C. Football CQD. Phi Sigma Kappa House C!E7Jga1t Qiillshauftb-Zkzllp, AKE Sodus, New York N UKEF, V1 Phillips Andover Academy. N F534 Hitchcock ikkapmnnh Whitman ikelsep, CIJZK Claremont, New Hampshire Kels', Stevens High Schoolg Dramatic Association Cljg Vars Cl, QD. Phi Sigma. Kappa House ity Track Robert Qnulhing 3Ken7JaII, XCIJ - Worcester, Massachusetts V i6Bob!! F . North High School. ' 8-9 North Massachusetts 132 I , fa - g., fill. ff if if fi A I . ., 1 : 2 ' Q fs --n 2 .-s . 1- : :,. ..-.fff-1 ,fzfrr-M.. .7 K , , V y so I .i , sfef Q 'iiebais Blames Berlin, KE Bradford, Pennsylvania Q Radu University Schoolg D1'a,ma,tic Association CD5 Varsity Track Squad CD3 Footlights. ' 25 South Nlassacllusetts Qllan Baum .Berman A Tiffin, Ohio HAZ., Tiffin High School. 32 Wheelei' f Qllbarles Qliarlin kertnin, EAE, UAE Stoneham, Massachusetts P Chuck Worcester Acaclemyg Assistant Business Manager The Da1'Lmouth C3Dg Assistant Stage Managei' Dramatic Association CSL Foot- lightsg Proof and Copy. 4- Crosby Qliunrab 'Qaxe iiiepez, IFT X Wollaston, Massachusetts Connie Quincy High School. 35 South Massacluisetts 133 X Xix a t is f I Lv' l X X 1 2 fix he wg E Q51-'LQQN 2 llif'IIi.ffrvn3m,,,,,V xr G , ,VJ Y N-fi1x1 -M., Q:l'1'Q,Q-'f-. . 3 85' QQ ... 9 1121.2 E. ' fi '3j5,,'f ,'P-iii-Qlggpxixisgmga e e 1 1,-gg 1:-fW'f', V 35915 A ' 2 .. fi M. Z-VFR V69 Nm WNWA aw!-mga -qw, mmm jf., 1 5 X CN w S if X .M S . V ' N - ' ,,5Ef5-'liisfI-A152215'it!5fi? i5 af.-TZ.: 'I .ref ' :Ziff-555:52 Q- Iiifi-. 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Summit High School. 19 Reed jfrank lestet 3Lainhert, AFT Atlantic, Massiaichfxsetts KLM, , X Boston Latin Schoolg Cerule Franqais fl, EZ, Second Honor Group CU: First Honor Group CQD. Delta Gamma Psi House Elusellfl ?9iIIiarl1 lane, KKK Concord , New Hampshire Joe Concord High Schoolg Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 313 Asistant Manager Track KSU: Rake and Roll. Kappa Kappa Kappa House Biuhn Zbargrahz Hiappin Portland, Maine Jack Portland High Schoolg Varsity Football Squad 134 CQD. Beta Theta Pi House .- : ,, Mag. Y . . 3 5 Ji. 17151: M , V A lg- ,. ' .. ,,,,, J , , ff, V i it ? , . . .: 'T -.si V. :f VV 4 ' - -ff -2 'f , 1 ' -' A A--.max .,.- ,., , - '25 :J no , h K ILL : - 'Z l ,ig I L ' 0 -. .V ,V ...ggqgn Stanley ZBunaIh lamrenne, IIDEK East Braintree, Massachusetts ' NJQH-as Huntington School. ' 33 North Massachusetts Eugene Webster iieunarh, WT Bismark, North Dakota Genre Shattuck Schoolg Rake and Roll. Q8 South Massachusetts ikkinbarh Qrmstrung Ziihiap, AXP Portland, Maine 4 Dick,' I Portland High School: Freshman Track Squad CU. 28 hlaplc Street Ulilliilliam lies, Er., ZAE YW fn ffgfff riff, f WmWv, 3-eff' ,dh 1-fffjff ,X f f fi ff 545 Wvffff ff, I y K J fit Q ff 41 ,Gig 'ff 93x 'L Q? y Y Q X W 59232251612 WW 'Q ry, if fy az ff!! 'kk is x if sam f?5' ae ff 1' X 7 , 'V f ff f 1 ff 71'76v' ff fi 45,4 1,1 I xi ff ' no Zfdjyro if if VW 14Q'rZ2 WY, ' M f frffff Wg! fff if iff? 4 if QW? f ff ar fl 1 MQW! I jfff Q I fi 'g ff if W A926 J? ff! 5 df' ff! ff f 9' f X f AM f ff X f gf? f X! ,, J Qfweafwfiimzflgff fxfy, GMM, WMM 2 O yy' mfjfx ' if ,h if11f2Lf29t'IQfE?2?ff .1 f '. f., 1-,gr 1- w r. is , 4,.-,, .?2-5:4520 43423 'Wav' I., ',:9c,.,.i'5:Ce ': . V.,: .' yin: 3 f , l. ',',:V.-:Lai-,iz-, 541. 1,5 r'i'- 557 5 421151 ,' gf, 4Vs::':,v:2V:-Vf z, V . 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V- sg., ,zV:V:'1!w iffy 'Lp -1 Vw 21 3+ -' 'V V ,1,.,, ,,,A V.,V.f,,,44, VV..-, 1 W ,.,. 4.5 .Vzj ,9'L-jv ,, I ff ,AY ,I wl. . 4 . .V,. ,-f.W ,f:f, - f wpf Q3L,.,f5iz:.V,',LqfCl,.V 312391 15 f f fuypaf -, ,,,,.gy,',f,f --a,-an-,::,--.W 1, ,-1,-, 1. 'z - .9-:,':-iff:-:' who -vw: , ff V . 1-'ic f ig 'tiny ft '1-I 4:12 1' - g, 2 if .1 xzfgg-i f V . 1 Q -1 i Vlgffg Az,--14Q3J.ffv 'ffl Y! , --:Vw :-'fp-:cf , , f V - ffe:, t,,p'5i:'feeA-.. 1' Ng , ' z4g-. '.,fn,ygo,Q4'- :' My- 1V I : L -. 'Liu -,j 1 5, 5.0 1 V V- 2 ' 1' 57 75 Brooklyn, New York -A E , f'BizV ' f Y Polytechnic Preparatory School: 'Choir Cl, 2. SJ: College Orches- X -- h tra fl, 2, 31: Dramatic Association Orchestra Cl, 2, 35: Rifle Team - -V-- Q CU: Soccer Team CSD. 8 Thornton , ,Q J 'ff 1 N I 9 'fair 1 ai X- J l35 CJ v 1, 4, 2-5' 1 :1 - 5 J 5 l 1 - if - 'MT W, H' - - e ' - - A ff - 1' ! -E L: .QI ' f F X ' 3 QF'-1 - J ' V r 4 9 1 X Qliurphun kart ?Litn:IJar7J, fI3Klp F - A311 Y Springfield, Massachusetts ' Mtch Central High Schoolg Mandolin Club Cl, 31. ,,,g-:-- . e we . . . . Q 4-1235, Phi Kappa PS1 House 77 3 151 -, v' 121116, :1-:gn,-11.12wsvagza-iz.-..-an-4,c-e1-1-.4551.241-z..-zs,-:-: 'azz-::.-1::., .5 14 V Q15 1-1,-,f.l.'.Lf . i1i7 M' 1 1 ?fQii Robert- 'ieupulh lush. IEY Zz:-:f 11532, '. ., .-:-.1112 New York, New York HB bu Townsend Hams Hall: Second Honor Group Q, 21. 'ii'-fl f r? x. 'AA' 1 ., ,f 40 Massachusetts 9521- A ' Li l9LljQlg.i . l5I 'f'7Q?i' 'fl 'pdf' . Ralph Stanley 3Luum1s' I Greenfield, Massachusetts 10 Sanborn ' .fx 11',4:-'mas'.q,'gq.,4 ,...-.,-U 2ZffgEf2:f3:Zg5jf3 ' eff . 1 1, f 2: -e1'iff'ZP!fi.- . 1 , ?LInpiJ ClEImzr Zintnz, QDEK Brooklyn, New York ji? ,, ,, '- -f? '7f?55 5 : Z I2'g:r2E:: Qff?f?laQz5?Q'5-5' Erasmus Hall High School: Track Squad Cl, QD. if ' ' . qg -,lqfsm L ai W 17 Massachusetts ' ' ty. 2 -53:5 Qf51iv:?5??'55?'7: I 3 136 A . . A IIN Q b r 1- , 44 f Kale 3 11 X 2 W' , Q 5 ,u ff fat f my C f -'-' ,1..' f - -- F of N. ' U i . .. , v.... if -- ,Ko f A .4 L , . 'go I U4 , . I 7 , g . jliurman Qhram Eiuhae, Qiusmus Ryegate, Vermont GsN0T7n,, St. Johnsbury Academy, 10 Crosby QE7JtnariJ Qlhticb luehke, Er. Milwaukee, !Nisconsin Duke', Saint John's Military Academyg Second Honor Group CU. V 5 North Fayc-:1'weathe1' walter Tristram Qiunhegren, EX 1 ' Boston, Massachusetts Boston Latin School. Sigma Chi House Qfihtnarh Stanley lynn X Lowell, Massachusetts Bangor High Schoolg Bangor Seminary. 35 Recd 137 f 5 . 2 ' f U l f, - . . f A 5' 51 ff Q , Qfw, ,A My W I, ,fr U . !7,V4,?,2nf :Q L1 W -- W gZ77?'fcf7 1 , fy' ,,'Wx,:1 - 1-1 4 ' f f ,125 4 1? ,- .fm Y 1 1 V . 7 Kfiwzf V-,J 1 I Q' LQ-0,4 '1g'32:E' gf., ,rf , ff ff, fy - . 1-'4ff-ff f ,mmf ' ,Www .- ,,,: ,fg-Q3.,,f.' Y I I ,, -. 4 yvgy J. .ffxf-1. - M, W if-fwwf ,WA .fp -frg A t 2 v-1,4 L., ruff 152, v,,.2f 'v , L 16' 21 1' ':1mif921:,1-:'f :-LQ , V '13g1,g1-'iff 1 -.3,'i f' ' QQ. 5-1 av:-:ff .2 .IL --:-r f-f'y--v-gaffw ij , M my I 'M 2 - ga, . xg, A A ' il if 2 I V , .uf V-.- f CQ QF ,145 .'fg255ra-Q3 i l f 1 - f il ,'3 '?-',f' 1','f. Vf Q 2 1, 34-'av ' , Z. Win71, 1 N 311' LZ,. 'w2i7 ' 1. ' f ,rp-.y rf, 9:31--Q , . .43 ,-',-,',.f4Qyf-.,,fv.,:..v ,.,-v-mlfasaf , . .qi ff'gi'r7r.f ?::fiZ fy 1 2, 5 '. H 115 V- WAP V-'fi .':a,'2za2m' 1-is 'wi-cf :12 -'fl V I W, h ?.,,,,, an .WN -f'-,Q-f . Z in A Z 1.7374 f' ,ffM:fgEffLZ:,-15,2421: Zm121'Y, iz? .fibiwvii :Qfy,ff zv.'-1 '.f14f,-wffymai 4, 4- Maw' 1 .ff 4--.4, f wi.-45 ,3.j7 f f.-, 1-. 7' 5,32 JE 1 27' 3' wif' 'E ,,,,jL:5f!g3-,y 2 .59 Vg' 4 -, ' E2-fig? -.1 -1- -f,'4fsf:Q4f1 f I ' -. ' fue 41141:--' ,zz ffL?1.1. r4g',f4,-412: -,..g:r-Q4 , -' .f-my 1-42 f 1 ,mzlwia . ' W' 'zf 17 V' ?'253Q'22'E345f53 ' . , hiv . L ' fiifzzii- .V ' PE Zviiff. -' QQ ' y y , f c n,,3'i -vc-f 'U ,Y 1.- ', c- HY . .a ' fi - , Q-5:c4Z:Zg,, M-Zz 115525:-s 'V : TZ fV 2?'?Tfi an . , , '65 51 A f - -' '- -,Lf-Y'-:-4.1-,,,f.1.y 14 ' g'Q. .i,pff'51, fj L- U 1-if eff --4 ' If-1 f 1. , 1-, . .1 .,,. 3 5,92 , lv 'j 1: x ' . .2 .L-..:f.f - . ' . 'tr'-J.-. ,- O P- Y- f s .- .1.. ' E NWN s Xllllllilfwllinmnlll Rift K qghxh-u My . Ii- '.-V 3 M .113 -'li' i Wig l william Qierrp illklrgiiams, Elf., X111 Metuchena New Jersey - if Te'I'TyS3 i A Saint Paul's School. 8-9 Nofth Nlassachilsetts william Qtarrettijllflnzmiritneiii 3Ir., EX , X Kansas City, Mi'SSOLil'i D 3 c:Macss x Topeka High Schoolg Band CSD. 4? North Massachusetts V- . iknhert fllilurrap illilacmnnalh, ATA Roslindale, Massachusetts fSB0b!, Roxbury Latin School: Advertising Manager 1921 ,AEGISQ Junior Prom Committee. Delta Tau Delta House franklin illiicmuffee, Zirts Rochester, New Hampshire FGMGCSJ The Bama Board QQ, 35g Cercle Frangaisl 14 College 138 Q g 1 .- , 7, ,:,: , if ' P 2 ei ,. E-gg ff- fv -Q, laugh ilillihhletun jwlciiap, AM: Rochester, New York Bloom East High School: Third Honor Group Cl. Qjg Winter Carnival Committee CQDQ Assistant Manager of Basketball 139. Cheer Leader C311 Rake and Roll. Alpha Delta Phi House Zkent Schuyler fllllcikinlep, AACIJ Buffalo, New York Mac Lafayette High School: Dramatic Association Cl, Q, SD. Alpha Delta Phi House 'Thomas Qllarletun jlliicjlilankin, BAE , ' Brookline, Massachusetts Brookline High School. 15 South Massachusetts isetmun Qezurge jllllnjlllillan, CIJEK Mt. Hermon, Massachusetts . ..Muc,, Moiint Hermon School. Phi Sigma Kappa House 139 Ezacp A A cola lca cf 1 NVQ .xl K ' . ' .AJ i 1 .2 ' ff ' e s 1 Q . HX vi '43 il ' 1 .Q 9 KNAW W I IH Ss A X if WW ki, 6 I , z y ffff f Q 1 -67fcdv1,?-4' 1,-ff,' 7!'2fM'g,,,4,, My 1 W iff fn jg! V jf f ffffgff' fn 1611 f ! ff 4' 5, ,i ff ,41 f f ff f 1 14 I, ' ff ' G fnf 1 f fyfff lffz g X ,V 4 fl ew w W' Z igi 1 vff ff f 51 5 5! f 'ff A' W' Q 1 Vt f, 1 ,,f fr 1 lf' J iff C M641 1 fwff Jffw mwffwf M fff f f ,aff MMM faq, fl aff fri f' 7 Y f MW' Wu :WJ r f 'f 1 ff, f' ffl' f W fa nv ' fim- !,i Q f 4- : 1,4 I 5li21'Wf19'I' ' .if 'f 1:1519 wma-'f f:.-.f1:'- 1311, 'f .vi , I-.,'fff'M'fq 7 W f ,wf'4g,f., 2,- :,,. .uw -3,..,,ggg41,..,.A.-'-.- 4-inn,-: ff. if 54 1, ,f ,4i'5c1.'-' .Zo-ggi., M3431 1. 1 76 Q, , ., - 2 I 'a. 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IiFat!l Y Springfield Central High Schoolg Dramatic Association Cl, 2, SJ: Players Cl, 2, 31g Class Treasurer C211 ,Varsity Football Squad C31 6 Crosby Ziaarlanh frank gllilannhester, APPT' Orford, New Hampshire Manny , Phillips Exeter Academyg Cross Country Cl, 323 Jack o' Lantern Board QSD. - Delta Gamma Psi House Ulifliilliam HL. Marcy, 3712, EX Buffalo, New York c:B7:Zlss Nichols Preparatory Schoolg The Dartmouth Boardg Proof and Copy. 33 Hitchcock x 140 0 .gig .WF Uv, K X Uli lijfhzw ig! -.A' V11' 1 ' V A V V ' Zlantnarh Qnhetsun 51-Blathen New Boston, New Hampshire Bla rdw New Boston High Schoollg Cushing Academyg Christian Associa tion Cabinet CSD. 16 New Hampshire Zlllklllluam Ziaupt jfilatshen SAX Arlington, Massachusetts Zilarsw Abbott School. - 35 N ort 1 BlId,S5df.lll.1SLtt5 Robert ikhzbhetg Marian Larchmont, New York B0 J awling School: Cercle Prmigaisx 13 Sanborn ilkuhert Bahia Mapu Laconia, New Hampshire o Laconia, High School. -L Wheeler 141 , , ,f ,V . 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' X 11 South Massachusetts Uibeuhnre Games jllilerriam, AXP Fitchburg, Massachusetts ffTed,, Fitchburg High Schoolg Orchestra CD3 Third Honor Group QQDQ Dramatic Association 132. 46 South Main Street Marie he jllilzsquita, CIJAG Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Slccets Dean Academyg Soccer CI, 31. ivlfhi Delta Theta House 142 G . -. ' ' 5 Af :lu Z M 'A' ' ' A e ,,q.,E ,lax gf i X, ., 6172 if Mr, fi D 5 fe 1, c EI ., .., ,, - M an ' ls- Z!-patulh ?Lin:uIn jjlililler, ECIJE Woodhaven, New York Dizzle Richmond Hill High School. Sigma Phi Epsilon House ilkeginalh iguhlzp jlilliner, ATA Franklin, Massachusetts SGRGHSB Boston Latin Schoolg Orchestra Cl, 2, 33: Dramatic Association fl, 2, 3b. 54 New Hampshire 1 Bjubn Retry jlflitnbell, 3Ir., BAE I Sterling, Massachusetts Milch,' Leominster High Schoolg First Honor Group Cl, QD. 15 South M2LSS2LChUSt'ttS ZBunaIiJ Guernsey Mix, KKK Worcester, Massachusetts A ..D0n,. Worcester North High School. 5 Hubbard 143 ls 5 ' AvA I , 5 N , - . , 2 2 2 1 1 -5 .f-f.- . ar. S A ihfgx f 4 19 UN r ' if r iff fy: 5' Q 'xqli f i ,,.2:,5.,:i:J:v..1 vlhv I k i . X 'Hz aaaaa Q Quia 1 'i f Qlllarenre Zllillullarh flllluure, EAE Omaha, Nebraska i?'fif Skmny l A ' .522'-2E 7 Omaha Central High School. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House ' ilaetmtt jfalez jlllllunre i3ff7'1:f?46V' ' .4511-.Ef' ':5i5?3.::f-'i.,- V-17:5 ' . 1, Pompef, Vermont f St. J ohusbury Academyg Thayer Mathematicxal Prize. - . S Musgmve Building 51 --f 1 -,-' ' - Clllijarlez GEIIIS Hlurzau, AXP ?'fAf1L27. 'f' .a,.' 5. . ',.,-M1915 I Freehold, New Jersey :Er ' , , , . 3 Freehold High School. 46 South Main Street 2,145 -, 'i V ,.., Z V 'hll ' o ., ibarrp Rubens flllluwr Chicago, Illinois Semi High Schoolg Kenyon College 0,7 QD. ' A4 -- 27 South Main Street 144 , , ,AAW KW h2 h' he 5 il 2? QE iBauI QE7Jtnarh Mutt, AKE Adrian, Michigan Adrian High School. -L-L Hitchcock Znsepb Zllbgumas Murphy, AKE Manchester, New Hampshire Hcuddyn Keewaten Academyg Varsity Football Cl, 3D g Varsity Baseball Team CQDQ Varsity T rack C253 Class Basketball QQD. Delta. Kappa Epsilon House Raphael 3Hurtbep fllilurrap Greenbush, Massachusetts I :cRaVyaa Somerville High School. 22 Mussacllllsetts lawrence Blubn jiarhi, ECDE New York, New York l Lrm-y Dwight Preparatory Schoolg Bama Board CSD. Sigma Phi Epsilon House 9 1-L5 Q ? NX 5 f X V' ,'-7:1 . .V -f-we 7 .af -V 'mapa Y ' f 5 , ,,,. , , , M E Hella awefa ? i I I , ,i 3 , . V . - -aff ,4 .. f .- , ' 14 - ff- f- 9 - fx' . -3:2-1 ff -if 'f ' e -1.1.52 ff s -MPM ai! 1 ll 5- '-P' auf K 1 Znffew 5922? 1 45 If 14 ,4 1 ef meffff Aww f.W4zjf7KafJ'f35',6435KWf,9'.W ? f f' X fpygyw .f ff 1 f 1-Q, 1' 44 Q? 9 f , eff' , 1 fm f f ' 4 5 1 f if f 'W ,ef fffgf 2 fan fff Aff W' ,I ? 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Kappa Kappa Kappa House 1146 J-S Aria . ra a sia , 1 .. - V ,,,A .4 li. 1 -, A .2 ,,-it j .:.,, .,, ., N. ,-2 Q 3 1BIJiIIips Qllen Hopes, AXA West Somerville, Massachusetts Phil', Somerville High School. ' Lambda Chi Alpha House william Zmpan 6'QKnnnur, QAX West Orange, New Jersey West Orange High School. Q0 Hitchcock . Qttljur lawrence Gppenbeimer Springfield, Massachusetts ' Kioppieil Technical High Schoolg Soccer Squad CSD. 18 South Faycrwcatllcr Ulilliilliam Zlaenrp Gwen, Er., EAE Troy, New York Bi I NW Lansingburg High School. -L1 South Main Street ' Ze 5. .fi 1.: 'V' r .,.V ,' . xi v,A. 'I fi 'qv , 'l-L7 i IE' -.A D C . . e UQ iii NWN I if X ff no ax 5 F V -. - ': ' I , lff I ' e ,AS g ,I 5 ,A- ' f .5:, f- f e x K if ,, ,fp .r ff ,Q .231 iff- 'vfff if uyrffff 1 1 ' L,jPgf,, WW 23 , Qtr 1 r, f lisp! 4 f 1 f A fp! 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' QV 2, 5 1 ' 14 ' 1,1 5 4 , fy, .. 4 5,- , 1 4 44 ,Q , 4 , , , 4 QQ f f 452145 , , L? 39 ,M ' ir I Y. n-,,. -,451 3 5' 1 1,1 11- . 'af ' 1: , 'P ,Q 4 5 I 1' if if P ug , 1 f, c ff 1 f J f W ,, Qlihhnm warren little age Laconla, New Hampshire Ldcoind H1gh School -L Wheeler Ziasnrp Jframzw 1BaImer Eh Mlddleboro, Massachusetts Palm Mlcldlebolo High bchool Bend C1 2 31 College Orchestra. CI, QDQ Dlarnatlc O1 chestra. C1 QD Atherton Greek Prize QD. 30 Whculer btanlep Mliilham Barker Union Village, Vermont Stan baint Johnsbury Acadelny. 925 Musgrov Building Beginalh Blap Baths, EN ' Brooklyn, New York .ARWHW A Brooklyn Preparatory. School. Sigma Nu House W K. x X .- -qw X . 133, 'Q N:-eq? '5,.sf::,j,-X-,Aa.-ggqfm-f.,--M-we ' J .egg-:X tQ'm--eLw:1:rC1t2Q.q02'R- -me 4 f.-:1 'f'1'??J:i'YM:3i A Lex w , .QQ 1 x X N T, - , 'gaze-rw. . Sify' Q: ix!!-.eg Sees?-.aqfynii-K-:Ofp:,' ME Sv 9 Q bww is lm ii 'Q xevx . -KN N X if-Q. .Lim -'t ,vw '-XS?.qs5:39?iqaSmt,qQgR1.'f..,-:'--N '.'x:,i.,:g.-.x. A, 4. 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Alpha Delta Phi House i Clliaprun SK: iBa'p5un Attleboro, Massachusetts I Red', Attleboro High School: Stetson University, De Land, Florida. 30 Wheeler ' I laugh iBennep Sharon, Vermont Presbyterian Collegeg McGill University. 35 Reed 14-9 S3 I f, Q f ff f H , ff I ff f I I 1 if fy , ff fy 1 1 any ff 1 , fo 0260 'Wf 155 1,1 f f 24 f f fi ,, , ., , ,gy Y, jk 1 AP '44 f X, ff' .eff-fswmwmwfdmww fwwgywmfmwfffvefiyfff ,,, ,, W 14 1 , , f, eff X x f X fp ffe 1 1 927 7 7 fwy 1 f ff f 'ffl ffrfvffy f 2 'E it B. KX? eco ff! ff f X.. C593 f W v. NXX 21? if W N-NW' V rt- ,api J! I f V :wet 4' -::.L11f'f'- -- :M-Qs--1l:.+'-1 Xnseessqfw' rw-1f'.if'i1f1r -MQ-4-Q-2'Wf'-sf::t . . fif? 'Nw-1-. -1 Q: ta- v 4: fi-'14Ws1f.:-V. ff 111 rv? . t':r.xxfs. fs--:vm X-X. asc, ' wsSjNsQ-if .----'Iwi'-2'-vw -2 .c 'i it . 2 f':.f- I V .-1 I 'Q-' X- -v-T N:--ySsLQe::,.1.. 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' -53 2-52 ' 'f f :.?f-335 12,5-f 'i dfgylv ,. giiifgzglii' ' 1 ,.f' '5 xfiifi- :. .'YP'Q.2fEg'26'g ' '3.E,'I3.vF57 1 1 3 12.2 'Tiff 73? li 52 bumner Qugustus iperkirif, Glusmus Danvers, Massachusetts V 'fPefk Holten High School, Cosmos House william Ziaatttnell Retry, ATA West Somerville, Massachusetts scgillsx K Somerville High Schoolg Mandolin Club QQ, 355 College Orchestra CQ, Sjg College Band CQ, 3jg Dramatic Asiociation Orchestra CQ, 35. Q 4 Delta Tau Delta House Samuel Zllillialtet iblumh, Er., GJAX Streator, Illinois Sa.mmie Streator High Schoolg Dramatic Orchestra CQJQ College Band Cl, 2, 3D3 Assistant Manager Hockey Qfijg Rake and Roll. 20 Hitchcock Bahih Qrutt Blume, Qiusmus Albany, New York Dave Crawford Hgh Schoolg A Third Honor Group Cljg Lincoln-Douglas Debating Society Qljg Rifle Club CSD. Cosmos House 150 Bop bale iBuIIariJ, AXA Proctorsville, Vermont . Gi-Polly!! Black River Academy. V Lambda Chi Alpha House Glihhaarti Simpson Brice, EX, UAE Evanston, Illinois - ..Ned,, Evanston Township High Schoolg The Dartmouth Board fl, 2, 31: Third 'Honor Group CD5 Second Honor Group 629g Jfwk 0' Lan- tern Board CQ, 359 1921 AEGIS Board CSJQ Assistant Property Mana- ger, Dramatics C325 Proof and Copyg Footlights. 6-7 South Massachusetts walter dbuuhtnin 1Brince, QAX Duxbury, Massachusetts ' fKWalt?, Cushing Academyg Freshman Basketballg S. A. T. C. Football. 4 Sanborn George lautiat Bepnnlhs, Eh., EN Dover, Massachusetts , Laurie Hyde Park High Schoolg Junior Prom Committee. ' 13 South Fayerweather 151 it-N. -... . 5 1-'TSE Ar s-.. , y ,tv 1 . S ' fm D EQ '14I,:55Y T-1, QN f , 471LNll!?fTS9iriSi-m. ' Q - W il. YU! f M' ,944 .aw xx , . is 4, 4, -M:-. 54-x--QMLJAQ .- Q.. 4, -3- 4-457,-ig, ,ap-:,4-4.,-1 Y ,.,,,,,tA - . 4. .5 51, Fmthhq, .W TU. .t.5:.-.,-.,gss.:.q. s..,...,-:.4.,..-ig. - :-- 495, -Q--4-fr N .--fsf----1-N-ww-:'1-f--N... ti.. 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Qjgfq-1 I 17- ,f - 1 'ffm f' f:.- ii -, '21- --in-:iz-25E1:5:' 1-ff' -1:jq '? -5' - V-1-222. ,. -f'?ElE27'5i'E23 +55 'Sf L.'S '4 gf1'3-ff 5'22i?1V i5Q 5: ff aws.-Q1:f -fs? -- ejfr,-' -nggli, .ipglji-' fyyfs, ,E V5-Lfif-ew :-1. ' .1- . 94 324-2 - .. . 1 i walter Zgrahfurh Bicbarhsun Fairmount, Minnesota i5BTadl7 Fairmount High School. 45 New Hampshire william Rufus asifnarr, gn., rr Elizabeth,..New Jersey , ffBud,7 v Bznttiu High School. x Psi Upsilon House 4 - Gartner Binh Bihlun Gorham, New Hampshire CiR,ld77 Gorham High School. 16 Reed BTUIJI1 iiaentp 3RiIep, ZX . Fall River, Massachusetts ifilackm ljhillips Exeter Academyg Freshman Track. 14 Sanborn 152 ..'-QM, V fx .EX fH'Ql1!xnmv,aw I ii? '- Qliigsamiasfiffiihl Q. :A WF.: . i, i 2 15' x- 1' .F iflgyigixxmx . 2' ff. - wiwxxim ' Q9 55 .1 .ff E., XX M. L Zlauhert George Bipltep, ZX, Zlrts p Newtonville, Massachusetts 1 CCRiP'7 ' Newton High School. 29 South Masszrchusetts Ralph Sinha Roberts, AKE, UAE. ,Y A East Cleveland, Ohio , Shaw High Schoolg The Dartmouth Board Cl, 2, Sl: Dramatic As- sociation. CU. Delta Kappa. Epsilon House 1 ZlBu7JIep 38211 Buhinsun, EX g Columbus, Ohio ' 'fR011bw'f North High Schoolg Ohio State College. 39 East Vllheelock A Bunalh Qustin Rogers, AMD Moorestrom, New Jersey V SKDOTLSS X William Penn Charter Schoolg Freshmzrn Football: Varsity Soc- cer CD5 Third Honor Group CD. Alpha Delta Phi House 153 7' Fifi f 5 :gf W iffy, 4 f QS M 4 r f QM, ,Z J 1 MA fl mf gi, , f f 1 ff 1 Vs 2:55 ,W-'gp vi '35 7 1 ,f 1 f 4 2' -W zen ff ,if 2 if, lg 1 ' Wwqfe f s wi, ,V ,fn of I ,J 1 I 4 41 cf ff- vw .V ff ,f df Q K6 'Q f 4 ,mf 1 11.44 fo, ff 0 I 6! cf, '0 V V ' I if 1 C? ,fl f x rffgp I 450, 1, Vp! :OX 41-' y ew 2' ff cf few! f 1 f 4 'U52 ff kwa? 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'Z' I , l f . . ff' 12 , : .E : H . .- 3, 2 I - E . : - , , , l -5,3 -fx 1,11--A few .. .A-:yn--sz -.- '. df-4: .- 'E , 4.92351 '- . if , . Jew--.-f f--f-f--:g. sw- 1 7 1- '64 ' -W' ' 152 , fi: 1 ' if in vi iifl-F5 ' 1 -I 52 2 'S-12 f egg - - 11' --iii 31' 4f36ffEL5'3':11sf'f- 'V i' ' 1 .ezV:I1-me-xl:-1:.:m,e:-:-:,.-..:-.::-:2. f,L z- L15-Ei-fi me-1:1 'iifliiff 7 31 ,-:iiifl -. ' - s '- . -V ' ' ge i as: rffs '-1:-y ':3:.- .5:s.':...f '-gf,.QE-1:41--1 if-255- -3: - - -f. -1-ff 1 ::f-V::-'- wa,-211. ' r. :-. - -Tiff:-2 2 ' ' 4171. I'-ff: ' zeiiiff-if5'5 ' fall - ,351 .,.,l:,5. Ri., Q so SM so 2, Ab K. ,, V5 xl - Q i L1 ff -V qv We 1 H - :gc-3 nrll If H I E., li' x 3 iff' ' -V3-Q 3 ?:,,.Z. Stanley Zfaankins Rogers, EAE Tenafly, New Jersey ffstanf, Englewood High School. 52 Wheeler Birharh Qpmnnhs Rolfe, BAE Penacook, Newlflampshire Dfw Penacook High School. 17 Crosby Qtthut Zfaenrp Bose Calais, Maine KCSWHW-3, Calais High School. 26 Wheeler - jfrank Qrtell 33055, Er., fIvFA Melrose, Massachusetts nspikev Melrose High Schoolg Hockey Cljg Baiseball fl, Qjg Junior Prom Committee. Phi Gamma Delta House 154 , Z A ll?-z9 ill ' A,-N7 q5.r Q5Wfyu5.1ftF 2w. gig N. NNY J' 1 , xy -5. N X. A? F3 2 sl if El A ,, 2. A ,,,A , Z F F Q A,AA ,f f awaahsaafvd,,,X.. ,,, .,, Mohave af if . - 'f1- rg.. -5. D K '- A' ' 5 ilkplanh julian ilkutbsnbilh, AACIJ St. Paul, Minnesota . Ryuie', Shattuck Schoolg Hockey QUQ Golf QU. Alpha Delta Phi House Ralph Emerson BUUBI, Limo Hamilton, Ohio ' R'ud1'el' Hamilton High School. Phi Delta Theta House Etmiel Zglaishell Buggies, Bit., BGJH, UAE , ' ' Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts fiDan3l Roxbury Latin Schoolg The Dartmouth Board CI, 2, 3Dg Press Club C313 Proof and Copy. 12 North Massachusetts Banizl jfranklin Bpber, AACID ' Bellows Falls, Vermont .fDfm,, Bellows Falls High Schoolg Phillips Andover Academyg Baseball Squad fl, 233 Football Squad Cl, 2, SJ. Alpha Delta Phi House 155 -f--nw' f Q 5 1 X ,k,l,,x, i llllllllli -Al ivllulwwz l L' ww 1 1 , :ml A C AQWZ, ff 2, 1 Z :'f ' in m -- 1 i' 'rli'i . ,,,.. ss ff . Eames jliurtb Sabin, EX Denyer, Colorado Y 529532 Z GCJIim!7 ,V East Denver High School. 9 Hitchcock cf 44 34,25-f , . . gif? 37 jfzrhinanh Zlaarqlti Sahuutin Malonei New York Duke X Franklin Acaclemyg Musical Clubs Cl, 3j. 41 New Hampshire 'YV WTA? In-. Bnnalh jlilahhen Sample, AKE Montreal, Canada WV D'i1mie QW New Trier High Schoolg Freshman Basketball Teamg Mandolin ' Club C31 ' 44 Hitchcock ff mwwmmlfmdvwmf gpmwixwwmwaamwp meg iBauI fgrahes Svanhersun, fIvK1If'. Springfield, Massachusetts A Sandy I Springfield Technical High Schoolg Chairman 1921 Prom Commit- teeg Mandolin Club CQ, 33g Varsity Football Cl, 2, Sjg Varsity Track 0,213 Footlights. Phi Kappa Psi House rf ' 4 ,gf M ,ag WM K 'F'f .T'72 11: 'J Y- :' 5 :2 1- -IVF' 'SF' :7'i3'L1'Zf:i:i'CE1if'Y2fQf .f fi'-:' 49' .4,.-ii5F:1i,'3fi' 91f'31-.t A f' vfil lm .1:::e.- f'd,-.A-:ft . f .fi f' ' J?E9- mSaS55::.f25:i-.Em 5:2 in-Jrffmz 4:Q55:2:fsfi23f.s-f:s.z:::1.112 1' ef '.2::f5:fs:::-::z:1:E1:1-fre' 315111: 21 'IE-9 ' ii if -' i- S'-'Li J' ---- V 53.'rE1!:1 'fc-3E2E1f23:E2?'if-ii' ' . 1,9 .' w f1f.ff,g'-. -11:-:,:-:iq ,-.,.-:xc , 1:-11:5-ics: rxnfeezlz - ' .ffifiiiiiiiii -- i??fi5 7 - i' -1-sea1:f5f1:s.1:51-z:2p':1 14-Q::s1:5z:2:2zQ'21a:3f9 3 ? . I.,. tnaw.. .,..V ,L ..,.,, ,,,. . L- rf- f : if , ' :-2 1- :Q 1 ,f f 1.54, , ,,., 11 we-5-ef -V 'asa' vii -wafer'-192:51 1 f Q ' 1 if: . V . 32252: z:5g'-iariefifmf: . if 252. 1-Z-zfi'-27'-' .- -'si i'.,15J:E2E?.5?: , ' - - . ' ,,: 21592. f'- Z 1. :5552:5ffEEi1.:Q2ZfQf2ff5z22:1 .'1f:Q.,49y:s'2,112,:-rggm ' - .z::rs:z4r:Er'r32: '1 7 : .V :ws'-,q.,.:,-mfr:-1.f' ::.-.-.-1.-41:-:J1:'sS41-law:--f: www.-.Q 5 a. :f..,.:..: A-aw ::v:i4::, 1 .M - I ,- .,:1 s: A fi -1 A -5 35 ,:1f'i'S5 f ' - we-a:aa:z'15 'N . f if '- sEaIE.51E2EE2E2?:'.IZ525 12114 -5: 1' fisfrafsff ..51f221s2,4aE1H ..u! -:I:'g1:2E1E2E5:I'j9:1rl:-MFT:5:21 if . 4 if 2 ,, W ., ,.., ,,,'4. g3.1iT,.Q' 1: ,ifffk QQ? 523225-252-fri . ii.:-'f11gf22:f2 f-':.-7 :S:' ' ' 'Z I,:v:',f-I-7.97 ,Vfff-:E--2'2 ' i ' 1 ,vgfqzq -'Wi g..:jfjeQ'5L'j-If N ., ' f if F ' ff 'LFE 1923535-. :. ..:a5-if.,fZ::a352 yfsv 1 ':f:f ::fifE',:-f:211fs.2f- .1'.f-f:j?1i?31,lf5. 2 -r 1'f3ZfI3?5-2, ' '.f?52i5ii?55:3f'5'i? 156 N i1 WN ,gl x A K ip. ca 'mx LQ NW .W 2 0 5 1 ,- - f' 7- 9 f ,--, 5 7 li? H x '- ,j 1, Jw W 4 JE X AA Q 0 ' H D U' iknznnetb lynn Qatar Columbus, Ohio LGK67L73 Columbus North High Schoolg 1921 AEGIS l502Ll'El. 14 Hitchcock Eunalh jfreheritk Sawyer, Xfb, HAE Milford, New Hampshire Do-nn Cushing Academyg Glee Club fl, 2, 3Dg Choir Q1, 2, 3Jg The Dart- mouth Board CI, 2, 313 19Q1 AEGIS Boardg Proof and Copy. 18 Massachusetts william jftehzrinh Schmitt , Hoboken, New Jersey Newark Academy. Q1 Wheeler Berman william Scbulttngf Et., CDEK Passaic, New Jersey ..Hoy,, Passaic High Schoolq Football Squad Q1, 2, 3D: Class Basketball Cl, QD. Phi Sigma Kappa House 157 14 f oft A5 Vw 4 X ,af N 4, X mi' j 1 ff ,ff f f: f -.0 I,-ff 95 . t 42 z?3?sf'Qf1'.af E' 'ili1Q's,'23?'?Z 1 A ' EZ1' P 'af' ,f -v -fill, . i's'gg xv, 1.92, , :gf -I Li ,Q in ,414 vi 351 44,2 I 12 M2515 ,Zi 41, .-1-'V . 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V- , il l ,I A ,M , ,.,l in S 453 2 f ,fy Buss Qlmnre Sbeparhsun GJAX Somerville Massachusetts f S' zep , Somerville High School. Theta Delta Chi 'House Bluhan Gorham Shepberh AACIJ Oak Park, Illln0lS Shep I 4,4 Z' Oak Park High Schoolg Varsity Football Cl, SD 46 f Alpha Delta Phi House M640 Marlon Elllinlep bbertnnnh V if Great Falls, Montana Sherry WW? Great Falls High Schoolg J ack 0' Lantern Board 2, Sjg Assistant W Manager Musical Clubs C313 Footlights. 23 Hitchcock 4 by fffw Merrill ffhgar Sbnup AKE Colorado Springs, Colorado M zclc Colorado Springs High Schoolg Football Squad QU. 39 Hitchcock I KA if ' 1 f 4 :J ff sy., X 5 I r f P . 1 2 Z , r f 2 2 V I ,, 3 E 6 0 , 2 1 ,fl 1 ' ,N 1 4 ff, 4. 1 Q- Q Y' vw .,, ' I 1 1 3 S1 1 NN , e f 1 x 23, if ff P- f,,q,b5:'1i P i th 13's N . ,J , . , 1 3 N4 Wim, vw 4 l E Q':1:f1ff1I: 1-fi? T?'if?i'fvV2W1fW3WE2? 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' E32 ' .4 'i-f N 22 ' 49 Av f I , 9' 1l ' 3l2lfK4-K' I , Q. ' f 1 .iffy I as V 'S-f--ll: g, 5.5 J ig, 'v , J fr yy, 4- ..,,, , , , i G , , ?LIetneIIpnVBe Uldtlulf Smith, AXP Nashua, New Hampshire - I Smithy Nashua High Schoolg Choir CQ, 325 Chess Team QI, QD. 4 College Street jaelsun lee Smith, EX Ardmore, Pennsylvania ccNelSn ' West Philadelphia High Schoolg Dramatic Association Cl, 2, 313 Third Honor Group CED. 22 North Massachusetts 'iBauI Qlthaus Smith Keene, New Hampshire ' Smitky,' Lancaster Academyg Band Cl, 2, 3Dg Orchestra Cl, 21 g Dramatic Association Orchestra C2, spg Second Honor Group CD. 5 Sargent Place illiltiahe warren Smith, X411 Lebanon, New Hampshire , Wade Lebanon High Schoolg The Dartmouth Board C2, 319 Proof and Copy. Chi Phi House 161 iff If f WW Qi 3. 4, 'E 1 : .j,,,7f 1 1 -11 4:,wgyz z'efzg-hazy? if ff ' ffl, .- M , ' 1, ' .T 73? ' 'Z , if L., Z : f- 'A ' 4 LE wwf f 1 r. ,:- 'iflilikk A1265 4-' 4. V5 ' . 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' f '-4 ., H as .V --', ,111 , . fi fl .,Q, f, V Zlihenhure Sunnenfelh '.-,' 1 :' :ez Albany, New York Ted ' if' ' Albany Academyg Drainatics CI, 2, Sjg Mandolin Club Cl, 31. 18 Massachusetts . -. 5 l 's 1' aff.: n Ulfliillam henry bgiznnzr, ATA 'P La.wr'erice,'Massacl1usetts 513 f,Qf ,.. ' 1, .'., f-f' V ' 51 ,:s ' ' in M BMV X j fi- Lawrence High Schoolg Third Honor G1'oup,C1, Qjg Glee Club CQ, 313 il: - . ll:V,- 2 Q ' Cercle Frangais. 54 New Hampshire ii' - n?il,-- +27 ,.v, .. F .l... Ulibumas Glilielhun btalep, KE Carthage, Missouri 5 f- ' , A 1,5 51' ., Zyl c:T0mss ' 1 I' Western Military Academy. Kappa Sigma House ' 'l-' Q I 3? Eamon Story Stanley, EN Needham, Massachusetts .l M M n Needham High School. A' Sigma Nu House Ty .- '32 162 i - .EN -. 1, 4 lylrql 'V ' ,V,, ' 7 it ai 1 s.. l rr ' . 2? Q bw: ' ,W:1 .f 4---A , ' Zz .l.. X Iff , li ' - 4f Qlhett ibenkel Stzinbrenijzr, AFIP' Detroit, Michigan Cl-A175 Detroit University Schoolg Culver Military Academyg Mandolin Club fl, Qjg Orchestra -Cl, 213 Band CD5 Dramattic Association Orchestra Cl, QD. Delta Gamma Psi House Qrtbur Ralph Svteimzt, Qtts Cleveland, Ohio Steinee Glenville Highg Dramatic Association Qljg Camera Club Secre- tary CQJQ Vice-President C313 Pictorial Editor Bama Board CQ, 313 Slides and Photo Committee Outing Club QFD. Q1 Richarclson Maurice Zlaalhzrt Stetson, AWP' ' Greenfield, Massachusetts CKDOCD7 Greenfield High School. Delta Gamma. Psi House Glbatles Qlpijeus btinknep, 3712. New York, New York ' Stick Francis W. Parker School. 29 Massachusetts 163 ff 4 ffnwfyae, W7 1 4' 4 ff Y x if f f?M3,,Z4f,'Q! ?i'6 V '93 . My ff' M ! 4-AA! 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Class Vice-President CQDQ Basketball Ciljg Assistant Manager Freshman Baseball QSJQ Runner-up College Termis Tournament Q3Dg Rake and Roll. , 11 North Massachusetts , . . wilher Glratnfurh Varian, BAE Pelham Manor, New York ulV'illuV , Pelham High Schoolg Orchestra C3jg Choir 42 Hitchcock george Earhart Zllflllalker Cleveland, Ohi'o Il ' University School. 21 Hitchcock ibaztings Ziautnlanh walker, KIJAQ, AKK New York, New York scpudu Phillips Exeter Academyg College Orchestra. llljg- Dramatic Or- chestra QQJ. 13 West Wheelock Street l68 169 U2 -- Ne' mm 2 Q 5 E Q E N Q 5-1 E1 B 'E ra, E-:IN D Q4 5 zo rv- Fl bi 0 :rg Eff . Us Q Q3 rr - , ff . 5:1 gg 7 rv- h 4 f . ,N U3 gp Q- , im N .1 JJ . Q .... , , x .mam ml, zo vb fb 0 Q ' ,N .1 o gl 5 3' 3 D if-, rf- E. O ? Q i 5 E8 Mllufwvllwlvll 5 0 , - ggi: w E 93 w 5 ' 3 7 V1 U1 5 S E- .11 5 Q4 Kg 2 3 Q rf 2' gl QF B -f-EM , SH 9' ' Z 5 W 5 5' 2 G' 1-Q 22 ISD Q Q pd -- Q Q f. m 2 Q F Q Q 05? E: 39 3 5 S N ' .24 2. 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' Phi Gamma Delta House Stanley fllilllillarh whiter Qlnsmnz Bristol, Connecticut Sta1L,' Manual Training High Schoolg Freshman Basketball Squadg Third Honor Group CU. - Cosmos House Russell ifspurh Whittier, fIvKlI1' Springfield, Massachusetts vrf1m: p Springfield Central High Schoolg Freshman Trackg Varsity Track fl, 213 Rifle Club Q1, 2, Sjg Treasurer 121g Soccer C3j. Phi- Kappa Psi House 170 , ,..,, , ,K s -l ' l mms , Q If i , 'fp ' f f f st , , 1 J 5 WWE, ,g s 22, ix ,S , E W fi I 1, X, ,N , S. X ff N, ff N we A G? .4 .Y f' f ,v 1. - . - - .,',., -.2 , .J 1 Q V ,fy My- inc' .mv 7 ' .,-C ' it t - - gg, . , Q , , . , 1 . -1- 4, wx , Eames Qtumptun wicker, GJAX Winchester, Massachusetts 'xnmv Hanover High School. ' Them Delta, Chi House f!Etniz5t Zbatcb Zllilllilrux, AKK Pleasantville, New York W'illcy,' - 3 Crosby f - Ruger QEunantZ'lQHiIIJe, KKK 1 Winchester, Massachusetts CEROHU Phillips Andover Acaclemyg Jack 07 Lantern Board QQ, 3jg Manager Gym Team CSD. 5 Kappa Kappa Kappa House Robert jftamzis wilson, AXP Fitchburg, Massachusetts IIBOIJU Fitchburg High Sc-hool. 9 Wheeler 171 K ' ffl -V X r ' J awww, ,!dq,,,f, Vw f, 3 ff .A ff Wu 'Cf Vrffgfffff ffvif-ff it , ' iff' MC' 1 ,iQ f fr,v 1 mf Z ffff , ggfwgfw ff f f ff ,ffl , I4 'ff 1 f 4, 7 sc ff fi ff-f V541 f 1155 'W 1 M? VZ 'S 'V aa W fry f ff f 2 f ff f 1 yr' fffwf I 1' wifi? 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Vf, M 4' W gf Ulilllaltet Bevan Wlliulfe St. Louis, Missouri Gwooiieil Soldan High Schoolg Debating Squad Cl, 2, 315 Third Honor Group Cljg Forensic Union QQ, 313 Jack 0' Lanfern Board CQ, 3D. 1 Hitchcock Elnbn Qiratnfuth Glillluuhljuuise, AFLP' New Bedford, Massachusetts ccwoodyasx New Bedford High Schoolg Second Honor Group CI, 255 Depart- mental Honors in Chemistry CQQQ Honorable Mention in French CQD. ' Delta. Gamma Psi House Qlexanher Buungerman Allston, Massachusetts Aleck Somerville High School. South Street Ralph william Quill, AND Cedar Rapids, Iowa scFuzZssl Cedar Rapids High Schoolg Freshman Basketball QU. 52 Wheeler 172 :1 won D X I -Q1 Q., .A,, K . .P I if 512 ' .. , . 21,1 -' n1 1 '24 f-., , S Jmsf -',- Q U ..,, , ats A william Qllbristian Beers, BGJH Waterbury, Connecticut ' Bill Crosby High Schoolg Football Squad Cl, EZDQ Baseball Squad CDS: Class Basketball CD5 Track CI, QD. Beta Theta Pi House . Roger ibarkburst Miro, time Brooltline, Massachusetts .,RDg,, Brookline High School: Dramatic Association Cl., Q, spg Glee Club C1,2,3Dg Choir C1,2,3j. J ' I hi Delta Theta House Uliilillarh wilson Bixby, Xllf' Y St. Paul, Minnesota , Biz St. Paul Central High School. 38 South Main Street U Ransom jllllortimer Gaszoigmz, CIJAQ Putnam, Connecticut UGHSH U University School. 30 Lebanon Street louis Qugust blush, ATA ' Minneapolis, Minnesota Louis Shattuck Schoolg Transferred from University of Minnesota. 4 Hubbard Ransom Ietnber Hanover, New Hampshire New Mexico Military Institute. 7 Allen Street ,ilietnzll Clllounb Svmith, CMG Bridgeport, Connecticut - Smit15y,' 11 'll' 11 ips Andover Academy. Phi Delta Theta House 173 5 f 1 I. 5 i SOPHOMORES I-PC6105-f'01V '54, Qtlass but 1922 Aborn, John Russell, GJAX Acker, Albert Clayton, Alu? Adams, Clarence Vlligton Adams, Ralph, BAE Akey, Clifford Joseph Xfli Allen, Ned Bliss, KKK Alley, VVilliam NIcKinley Almon, Howard Power, ZCDE Almy, Robert Forbes, EKIJE Anderson, Gaylord VVest Anderson, Troyer Steele Ardiilf, Elmer Francis, Alwllf' Aschenbach, VValter Joy, Jr., EX Atherton, Blaylock, KKK Auger, Ulice ' Austin, James Anthony Babigan, Samuel Baldwin, Robert Arthur, Jr., CIJEK Ball, Leroy Fallis, WY' Barnard, Williain Lloyd Bartlett, Robert Learned, Llfl' Barton, Russell Campbell, EX Boston, M ass. 14 Hallgarten Methuen, lllass. . . 14 lNIaple Street Omaha, Neb. 10 South Massachusetts Arlington, Mass. Sargent Place Greenfield, Mass. 8 Crosby Valley City, N. D. 38 VVheeler Ornaha, Neb. 36 New Hampshire M ontpelier, Vt. 14 North Massachusetts Fairhaven, Blass. , Q Hubbard H anover, N. H. Parkside H anover, N. H. Parkside Boston, Mass. 19 Sanborn East Orange, N. J. 1Q Sanborn ' 10 Massachusetts 17 New Hampshire Nashua, N. H. New Bedforrl, Mass. New York City 36 South Massachusetts Lowell, Mass. ' 30 Wheeler Springheld, Mass. Q3 South Massachusetts Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 15 North Massachusetts Elizabeth, N. J. North Massachusetts Peace Dale, R. I . Q5 Sanborn Uniontown, Pa. QQ Hitchcock 174 A A .-, . 4 , Q icce - at 19 .21 fl QQ X Win 1 UV, je ff 'f I f-,. ,,.,. 1 W + ' xV ' ..,.. i,, ggi, A Q V Y ,Z UE Bates, Edward Graham, AXP ' Bates, Sherrill Pettigrew Bernache, VVallace Jeremiah Bernheim, Leonard Henly Berry, Bailey Dawson, Jr., TAG Bingham, Sylvester Hinckley, CDKLP' Blunt, John Ellsworth, 3rd, EX V Booth, Robert Blues, AACID Boyd, Augustus Pollack, GAX Boyer, Wendall Edward Bradish, Robert Francis, C15 FA Brauenlich, Arthur Richard, Jr. Brisbin, Lansing Gaylord, EX Bristol, Clark Bill, AACD Brooks, Charles Granden, Jr., BCH Brooks, George Edward Brower, John Eaton Brown, Dalton Munroe Brown, Joseph Regan Brucker, Ralph Vincent, Cosmos Budnitz, Max Barney Bull, Earle Carrington, Jr., AXP V Bullen, VVilbur Warren, KKK Bunnel,l, Wilbur James, CIDKW' Bunting, Roy. Burgess, Robert, Jr., ATA Burnham, Cecil Albertus, BAE Buscher, George Dewey, XCID p Buswell, Frederick VVilliam Byrne, Thomas John, KKK Caldwell, Kenneth Richardson, AXP Caldwell, Wellington Lord, GAX Camp, David Manning, CIJKLII' Campbell, Laurence Carrol, 12 T Canfield, Charles Elliott, GDEK - Canty, Godfrey Lawrence Carleton, John Porter, AKE Springfield, lllassf 2 North Eayerweather Pittsfield, M ass. 24 VVheeler 56 WVheeler QQ South Fayerweather Leeds, M ass. New York City Lexington, Ky. g Lyme Road CIJKl1f' House Q2 Hitchcock 16 Hitchcock lllanchester, N. H. Evanston, Ill. Omaha, Neb. Chattanooga, Tenn. Q9 hiassacliusetts Waterville, Me. 17 Sanborn St. Albans, V t. 18 North Fayerweather New York City 3 Crosby Ornaha, Neb. , ZX House West H artforcl, Conn. 1 North Fayerweather Cincinnati, O. 21a School Street Lynn, M ass. 419 VVheeler Toronto, Ont. 12 South hflassachusetts lllilforcl, N. H. 10 College H anoeer, N. H. 4 Prospect Street North Brookfield, Blass., Cosmos House Newport, N. H. East Wheelock Street Buffalo, Ia. 31 Massachusetts Tieoncleroga, N. Y. 5 Hubbard Akron, 0. 4 CIJKIF' House Nangatnek, Con.n. 18 VVheeler Newton Centre, M ass. ' 12 Crosby Jackson, Minn. 141 Crosby New York City 41 North Faycrweather Ansonia, Conn. Q Hallgarten M arlboro, M ass. J ' 1 Sanborn Calclwell, N. J. Q5 Sout!Fayerweather Winchester, M ass. 17 West VVheelock St. Newport, Vt. CDKIII' House Barre, Vt. 34 South hflassachusetts Pleasanteille, N. Y. 30 North lVIassacliusetts North Arlarns, M ass. 33 Wheeler Hanover, N. H. 30 Hitchcock 175 Carpenter, Thomas Sanders, Jr., KKK Attleboro, M ass. is 8 Hitchcock 1 Q, A125 g A Qfgxx ,... -. f-N - f' 5 F 1 EI as 3 1 ara or r Carlisle, Herman Locke, CIJKW' Springfield, M ass. Carmody, George Edward, BCH lllt. Vernon, N. Y. Carpenter, Robert Leland, ZX Trinidad, Colo. Carroll, James Vincent Carter, 'William Edgar, Jr., KKK Cary, Clinton Partridge Cassin, Matthew James Cavis, George Chandler, ZX Chadbourne, Harlan Alfred, AXA Chevalier, Samuel Louis, EN Clark, Robert Judson, BCH Clarke, Malcolm Dexter, KKK Clewell, George Livingston, EAE Clifford, Chester Baldwin Clogston, Perley Walter Coakley, Arthur Joseph, KKK Cohen, Joseph Sidney, Cosmos Cohn, Haskell Hieman Cole, Albert Edward Cole, Donald Packard Cole, Richard John Cook, George Francis Covalt, Byron LeRoy, KE Crampton, Alfred Remick, ATA Cranton, Edward Allen Crane, Norman Tompkins, CDFA Fall River, M ass. Swarnpscott, M ass. St. J ohnsbary, Vt. Wallingford, Conn. Concord, N. H. Windsor, Vt. Naugatnck, Conn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brighton, M ass. ' Plymouth, Pa. . Oak Park, Ill. Bradford, Vt. Wakefield, M ass. Gardner, M ass. Concord, N. H. V ergennes, Vt. Hillsboro, N. H. Vergennes, Vt. 10 Massachusetts 5 Hubbard 25 Hubbard Q45 Wheeler 19 Wheeler 1 New Hampshire 15 Richardson . 44 Massachusetts 11 Crosby 16 North Massachusetts 37 South Massachusetts 57 VVheeler 6 North Fayerweather 20 New Hampshire 1 115 Massachusetts 31 New Hampshire 10 School Street 31 New Hampshire M inneapolis, lllinn. 9 South Fayerweather Wilkingsburg, Pa. Newton Center, Mass. St. Johnshury, Vt. Mahopac, N. Y. Cummings, William Warren, Jr., ECIDE Woburn, M ass. Curtis, Alonzo Griflin, AKE Dalton, John Theodore Dana, John Grosvenor Daniell, Warren Fisher Davidson, Alfred Edward, Jr., TTL Decker, Harold Conrad, K2 Dennett, Richard Campbell Dettenborn, Lewis Franklin Jr., QIJFA Dewey, Robert Manson Grant Park, Ill. New York City Newark, N. J. Greenland, N. H. 49 Fayerweather - 12 Crosby 26 Hallgarten 30 New Hampshire , 45 Hitchcock 20 Richardson 52 Rope Ferry Road 24 Hitchcock 52 Rope Ferry Road New Rochelle, N. Y. 21 North Massachusetts Haskell, N. J. M adison, N. J. , 5 Crosby 27 Hallgarten Hartford, Conn. 1 North Fayerweather Dorchester Center, M ass. 43 New Hampshire 176 A V 119111 V' A'--.mi , X-Y, -fi . f H E: Y ag 3 ti ,':'-f .17 ' - 1 le -f 1 4233 ' Y 'r.lQv'f1i ? ep ? E f if -a I . Q, 'is 211- rf 4 2 X 1' 5 :J .. ' ff' E ie JHFXJQZ, i .5 Q fi 1 - f - 1. X Q3 c Mig 9 QWQL,-'ff k lr GH Dexheimer, John Philip, 3rd Dodd, John Doty Dodds, YVilliam Gray, GJAX Dodge, Nathaniel Clarence Donavanik, Visuddhi Douglas, James Dow, Franklin Hazelton, EAE Ducro, George Edward, Jr., KTJFA Dwight, Carroll, ECIJE Earle, Charles VVood, KE Eastman, Roger lVIoore - t Eiseman, George Elder, Jay Charles, BCH Fancher, John Holcomb Farnham, Lawrence Putnam F auver, King Earl Ferguson, Hardy Smith, Jr., CPAC Fitts, Dana Wheat Fleming, George Thomas Fogg, Lloyd Clark, Cosmos Fraser, Harold Emerson Fredericks, Earl -Wethei'ston, XCTJ Gallagher, VVilliam Franklin Garst, Clatlin Garst, Webster Garvey, Michziel Francis, Jr., AKE Georgio, Nicholas Antony . Glennie, John Orrin Goldbeck, Cecil Hamilton, AXA Gove,.Philip Babcock , ,,,, x Bedford Hills, N. Y. East Orange, N. J. Paterson, N. J. 30 New Hampshire 12 Sanborn 29 Massacliusetts Dlanckester, N. H. 36 Massachusetts Bangkok, Siam Utica, N. Y. Barnard, Vt. 6 Prospect Street 725 School Street 23 Richardson Street Ashtabula, I a. QIPFA House Dorchester, Mass. 7 Nlassachusetts Hyde Park, Mass. 10 South Fayerweather We.st Concord, N. H . 17 Wheeler' Far Rockaway, N. Y. 13 Hallgarten Frederick, Md. MM South Main Street Hartford, Conn. 417 New Hampshire Woodsoille, N. H. 47 New Hampshire Elyria, O. 24 South lVIassachusetts New York City 22-23 North Fayerweather M anckester, N. H. 7 Reed Street Worcester, Blass. Dancers, M ass. 9 Pleasant Street 19 Lebanon Street Concord, N. H . 15 East Wheeloclc Street Buffalo, N. Y. 19 North Fayerweather Jamaica Plain, Mass. 2 Richardson Worcester, Mass. Worcester, Mass. New York City H artford, Conn. Newark, N. J. New York City Concord, N. H. Grainbs, Granville Wlentworth, CIPFA Bismark, N. D. Grandfield, Ralph Edgar Grant, Philip Robert Green, Harold Wlesley Greenwood, Harold Moore Griflin, Donald Carr, ATA Grifhn, Gerald Gordon, Jr., ATA Winooslci, Vt. Somerville, M ass. Bangor, Me. Lyme, N. H. New York City New York City 177 7 Hallgarten 3 Hallgarten 8 Sargent Street 5 Wheelei' 4 Richardson 10 Pleasant Street 13 Massacliusetts CIDFA House 6 Richardson 26 South Fayerweather 28 South Nlassachusetts 48 New Hampshire 48 New Hampshire A25 A , XQQA l 7 fl CTW VW I ef 'X E7 fy, 4 l g 1 I fl! si il 5 X , I fi 15 3 ' 2 . r 'flil . - f o f' , Y ' ' - ' Griswold, Harry Myers, EAE Gunnison, Arvin, CAX Haas, William Gregory, ZYDE Hall, Gardner Sewell Hall, VVilliam Winston, KE Hamilton, James Alexander, KKK Hanlon, Francis Anthony, KE Hardy, John Alexander, ATA Hare, Sheldon Tolles Harmon, Russell Sanborn Harris, Wilbur Ellsworth Hart, Charles Edwin, EN Hauser, Bertram Julius, ATA Hayes, Kent Birch, KIJAC Hazeltine, Jack, AFT Healey, Clyde Lawrence, K2 Heath, Andrew McClary, X413 Henderson, Laurens Livingston, Higgins, Arthur John, AXA Hight, Robert Ellsworth, CAX Hill, Roy Wesley Hodgdon, Frank Trowbridge, BCH Holland, Henry Osgood, Jr., AAC? Hopkins, Charles Stephen, IFY' Horan, Francis Harding, KKK Horne, Samuel Philip, K2 Hotchkiss, Eugene, WT Howard, Clarence Beachmont Hoyt, Carter Harriman, fDK1lf' Humphreys, Philip Collis, AXA Hutchins, Frank Asbury, CIJEK Inghram, John Thomas, IEY Innes, Templeton Martin, ATA James, Alden Jensen, Clyde Reynolds Johnson, Edwin Hoyt, 1lf'1' I lion, N. Y. Rochester, N. H. Brooklyn, N. Y. Marlboro, N. H. Carthage, Mo. Lawrence, M ass. Adams, M ass. his ' Q1 Hitchcock Q5 Richardson 15 New Hampshire 12 Massachusetts 5 Crosby 9 West Street 11 North Fayerweather Whitestone Landing, N. Y. 16 Sanborn M anchester, N. H. 34 Massachusetts Manchester, N. H. 21 Reed Lebanon, N. H. - 14 Massachusetts Boston, Mass. 3 14 Richardson Richfield Park, N. J. Crosby Oklahoma City, Ohla. Prescott, Ariz. QQ-23 North Fayerweather 51 Fayerweather East Orange, N. J. 5 North Massachusetts M anchester, N. H. 341 Massachusetts BCH Indianapolis, I nd. 9 Hitchcock Meriden, Conn. AXA House Winchester, ll! ass. 25 South Massachusetts F ryeburg, Me. Hannibal, M o. Bnjalo, N. Y. Brookline, M ass. S axtons River, Vt. Bradford, M ass. LaGrange, Ill. Worcester, M ass. Lowell, Mass. Madison, Me. Palmyra, N. Y. Quincy, Ill. Cleveland, O. Dorchester, Mass. Omaha, N eb. Sioux City, Ia. 178 2 Rope Ferry Road BCH House AAflD House 28 Massachusetts 2 Hubbard 21 Fayerweather 20 North Massachusetts 15 Wheeler 8 Hitchcock AXA House 3 South Fayerweather 6 Hitchcock A Lyme Road 10 Richardson 22 North Nlassachusetts 28 lVIassachusetts , I ,V ' ,H Q n in' ' ' 7 , 5 1 yu 4 'V' , ' . ' me ,,24 f i-S J 'J ,,,,, ,.,,,V , , .... , Johnson, John Stearns, ATA M iddlehoro, Mass. 21 New Hampshire Johnson, Paul Aaron, IFY' Sioufc City, I a. WY' House Johnson, VVilliam Glidden Clarkesburg, W. Va. 1 Massachusetts Jones, Clinton Story Norwich, Conn. 5 VVheeler Judie, James Albert, CIJZK South Bend, Ind. 9 South F ayerweather Kaplan, Edward Everett Ware, Mass. 10 VVheeler Kattwinkel, Egon Emil, 121' Stamford, Conn. '7 South Fayerweather Keltner, Bernard Afford Kenyon, Stephen lVIaslem, CIJEK Kilmarx, Sumner Dudley, CIJAQ Kimball, Philip Griflin, SAX Kingsbury, Thayer Kopf, Walter Henry, KKK Kristeller, Frederick Vaughn Lane, Edgar Charles, Jr. Lawler, Carroll James, Cosmos Leith, Eaton, KKK Lenci, Thomas Alonzo, Jr., Cosmos Leverone, Lawrence Paul, Jr. Liao, Harry Francis Libbey, Kenneth Pray, CIJEK Lichtenstein, Richard Charles, Jr. Lindsay, Kenneth Wiggins, DDE Livermore, Frank Leroy Livermore, Richard Moses Livermore, Shaw, AXP Loring, Julian Capen, APT' Lyford, Amos Cogswell Lyon, Albert Thomson, ECIJE lVIcCaskey, Ralph Patterson, BCH McCoun, Leonard Preston, CIJFA lN4acDermott, George Victor, ZX McDuffee, John, KE lVIcKay, Lewis Pound McKoan, John William, Jr. lNIacLaine, Edwin VVellington South Bend, Ind. Q2 School Street West H aryford, Conn. 20 North Massachusetts New York City 4 North Fayerweather Malden, Mass. 16 Hitchcock Keene, N. H .N 17 West Wheelock Street New Britain, Conn. 9 VVest Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Brookline, M ass. Greenfield, M ass. Lancaster, N. H. Murray Hill, N. J. Keene, N. H. Greenwich, Conn. 40 Hitchcock Q1 Massachusetts 20 New Hampshire 13 Massachusetts A Cosmos House Sargent Place f Q3 New Hampshire H enniker, N. H. 5 Sanborn Dorchester, lllass. Q8 Wheeler Arnsterdarn, N. Y. EQJE House Brooklyn, N. Y. J 3 Crosby Colorado Springs, Colo. 14 Massachusetts Chicago, I ll. Q North Fayerweather Hinghaon, M ass. . 19 Sanborn New Boston, N. H. Q8 New Hampshire Barre, Vt. 34 South Massachusetts Chicago, Ill. 25 College Omaha, Neb. 28 North Massachusetts Uxbridge, Mass. EX House Rochester, N. H. Wlieaton, Ill. Worceste-r, M ass. Hyde Park, M ass. 21 Thornton 6 Hitchcock 35 Fayerweather 5 Sargent Place McNamara, Edward Francis, Cosmos North Brookfield, M ass. 11 Sanborn 179 AQ . p . - f ste ph A ' . - C, I e E A -raft-z9Q .f:. A .1 .,:. 1 i J A hlalmquist, Eric Carl, BCH lVIann, William Dewey, WT Nlarean, Ralph Brewster, Jr., ATA Nlarshall, Andrew, Qnd, WT Nlartin, James Maze, James Samuel, KIJK'-lf' Nlillemann, Raymond Joseph, KE 1VIiner, Stanley Pingrey, CIDAGJ Moore, George Thomson, WT Morrell, William Alfred, WY' Morris, Raymond Barlow Morrissey, Leonard Eugene, EN hlorse, Edward Dunnahoo Moses, Harvey Holley lVIountcastle, Wlilliam VVallace Muhlenberg, Heister Henry, CDFA Murphy, Gerald Francis Naylor, Shepard Alexander N eary, VVilliam James, Jr. EN - Needs, Robert Weile, ATA Nelson, James VVi1liam ZAE Nichols, Philip Robinson Nicholson, Will Faust, AACD Norton, John Nathaniel, XQJ Noyes, Frederick Willis, AXA Nutten, Wesley L., Jr., GJAX Oliver, Herman Schoenau, AXP Olsen, Herluf Vagn, QJFA Orr, Clifford Burrowes Orth, Leonard James, AKE Perkins, Joseph Staniford,12 Y' Perry, William Richard, BAE Peters, Paul Seward, AXA Petot, Edward Everett, AKE Pfeiffer, Edward Furman, AXP Pierce, William Brown, PYT' Pinney, Thomas Harold, WY 44 Massachusetts 36 Hitchcock 4 Massachusetts New London, Conn. Q1 North hlassachusetts Hanover, N. H. Wallingford, Conn. Quechee, Vt. Dalton, M ass. 8 Parkway Peru, Ill. 4Q Massachusetts Brooklyn, N. Y. 37 SouthMassachusetts Brooklyn, N . Y. Q7 Massachusetts Elizabeth, N . J. 9 Massachusetts Plainfield, N . J. 15 North lVIassachusetts Burlington, Vt. 17 North Fayerweather .Waterbary, Conn. 11 North Fayerweather South Bend, Ind. J Ticonderoga, N. Y. Cleveland Heights, O. Reading, Pa. Boston, Mass. Pelham, N., Y. Nangatuclc, Conn. Cleveland, O. Q7 Wheeler 43 hllassachusetts 43 Fayerweather 5 Sargent Place QQ Lebanon Street 15 Richardson 1Q Crosby 6 Richardson 46 South Main St. Q0 Crosby Q6 Richardson Newport, N. H. Mount H ermon, M ass. Omaha, Nell. Vergennes, Vt. West Somerville, lllass. Detroit, Mich. AXA House Q4 Occoni Ridge Bujalo, N. Y. 31 Massachusetts Omaha, N eb. Q9 North hlassachusetts Portland, Me. 37 North Massachusetts Wilmette, I ll. 19 Crosby Salem, M ass. 16 South Fayerweather Omaha, Neh. 14 Crosby West Roreburg, Mass. V AXA House East Cleveland, 0. 3 Hitchcock Brooklyn, N . Y. g Q5 South Fayerweather Chicago, I ll. ' 9 Massachusetts New London, Conn. 34 North Massachusetts 180 l , l ' X , f 1 4 5 5 W g J X '11 F J e f X 4 '. ,-.-ff' ' V23 jf' 'J J Plowman, Edward Grosvenor Plumb, Gordon Dresser, OAX Porter, Cedric VVarren Powell, Donald Adams Powers, Henry Thomson Putney, Russell Gordon, ZAE Rambach, Raymond Leon, EN Ranney, 'Winthrop Rodgers, KKK Rassieur, Benjamin Franklin, AXA Reed, Howard William, AXA Reid, Ralph Thurston, AKE Rice, Oscar Raymond, Jr., OAX Richwagen, Lester Edmund, ECDE Robie, Theodore Russell Ross, Joseph Killit Rowe, Edgar Cecil, AXA Rubins, Ralph Edward Sanders, Clarence Whitney Jr., CIDPA Sands, VValter Edgar, AAflJ Saunders, lVIaurice, Jr., AKE Sawyer, Willard Gilbert, QJAO Schulte, Matthew lVIoralee, ATA Seiler, Eugene Oscar, AXA Shattuck, George Everitt, ZAE Shattuck, Howard Will, AFL? Shea, John Joseph, CIJAO Shem, Van Alan, ZAE Shepard, Horace Leon, Jr., IEY Sherburne, Lester Ames Sherman, Lucius Booth, Jr. AKE Shipton, Waldo Harvey, KE Shoup, Verner Reed, AKE Seigfried, Nehemiah Osborne, EQJE Smith, Earle Dow Smith, Spencer Franklin Snow, Lawrence Forristal, OAX Sparhawk, Sam, Jr. XCID A Newark, N. J. Streator, Ill. M attaynan, Mass. Fairhaven, Vt. East Lynn, Blass. Keene, N. H. Boston, Mass. Pittsfield, Vt. St. Louis, Mo. Manchester, N. H. Glenn Ridge, N. J. Waban, Mass. 55 Wheeler 8 South Fayerweather 413 Fayerweather 16 North Fayerweather 2 Richardson 12 Massachusetts 13 South Fayerweather 11 Crosby AXA House Q1 Reed 3 Hitchcock 8 South Fairweather Needham Heights, Mass. ZCDE House Baldwinsville, Mass. 52 Fayerweather Albany, N. Y. 35 East VVheelock Street Newton, N. H. 11 Prospect Street Minneapolis, Minn. 45 Massachusetts Mahtornedi, Minn. CIJPA House Cambridge, Mass. Q2 Sanborn New York City V E20 Richardson Cleveland, O. Q4-25 North Fayerweather Dollar Bay, Mich. 2 Crosby Jamestown, N. D. AXA House North Attleboro, Mass. 923 Richardson Lyndonoille, Vt. Worcester, Mass. Aliance, O. Bethel, Conn. T yngsboro, lil ass. 11 Sanborn 35 Fayerweather Q5 Fayerweather 7 South Fayerweather Q8 New Hampshire Winnetka, Ill. Q0 Crosby Pittsfield, Mass. 5 C1'osby Colorado Springs, Col. 31 Hitchcock Bujfalo, N. Y. 17 Hubbard Littleton, N. H. 26 South Fayerweather Springfield, Mass. 8 South Massachusetts Malden, Mass. Burlington, Vt. 181 13 Choate Road .26 Richardson A 1 i T 3, it Y 'rt' N- ' f xg ' B1 ff ' Tri. U. 'Q -- v X X E.-5 5355 . G' leg.:H,. -fAX ' K' . --'J Spaulding, Donald Cyril Spaulding, Ernest Wilder Spiegel, Modie Joseph, Jr. Spiel, George Ferdinand, CIJKLP' Spiers, Paul Harmon, EX Spotts, Ralph Lewis, Jr., BCH Sprague, Morrill Goodwin, KKK Sprague, William Wentworth Springborn, Ralph Callow, APT' Stanley, George Aloysius, Jr., ATA Stearns, Stewart Persons, QTEK Steele, Bernard M. Steen, Harford Kirke Steinberg, Abraham Benjamin Stetson, Richard Pratt, CIDKLF Stevens, Edward Rand Stevens, Rufus LaCroix, B91-I Stewart, Arthur Porter Streng, George William, ATA Sturdevant, Crispel Basten Sullivan, Horace Vincent Sussdorff, William Henry, Jr., ATA Sweet, Donald Adams, SAX Sweet, Willard Hamilton, Jr. Talbott, Joseph Edward Taylor, John Leveridge, WY' Taylor, William Dodge Thomas, Louis Albert Thompson, lVilliford Napoleon Threshie, Philip Henry, SAX Throop, Charles Carroll, BAE Tobin, Donald Jerome, CIJPA Townsend, Charles Edward Tredennick, Stephen Hamilton, Tucker, Harold Williams Turnbull, Robert Parker, CIJPA Vogel, Frederick William E Salem, N. Y. . Arlington, NI ass. Kenilworth, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Cambridge, Mass. 43 Massachusetts Q5 Richardson 13 Lebanon Street , fDK1P' House 45 Hitchcock New York City 38 South Massachusetts H aroard, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. New Bedford, M ass. 38 Wheeler 43 New Hampshire 4 Fayerweather Lawrence, Mass. 6 Crosby Brattleboro, Vt. CIDZK House New York City 6 Sanborn Walden, N. Y. 12 College Manchester, N. H. 10 Reed Sharon, Mass. 8 South lVIassachusetts Lisbon, N. H. 9 Fayerweather Swarnpscott, Mass. 18 North Fayerweather H anooer, N , H. 43 Wlest VVheelock Street Pittston, Pa. Danbury, Conn. Brockton, WI ass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Rochester, N. Y. Peekskill, N. Y. N augatuck, Conn. Mount Vernon, N. Jackson, Mich. Manchester, N. H. Portsmouth, N. H. Brookline, Mass. Montclair, N. J. Springfield, Mass. M ontclair, N. J. Roslindale, Mass. N ewtonville, Mass. Detroit, M ich. Wes't Lynn, Mass. 182 4 Massachusetts Q5 School Street 4 Prospect Street ATA House 13 Wheeler 8 Wheeler '7 Pleasant Street 20 Crosby 5 North Fayerweather 36 Massachusetts 18 Hallgarten 36 North Massachusetts 1 Massachusetts 8 New Hampshire I Q7 Hallgarten 14 Richardson 24 Hallgarten g Q9 North Massachusetts 23 New Hampshire 1 gs. ,? 23: 1- 1 . ,VAV J ,a1.aN. , P ei H57 lg. it AAQE' ll ' r i 5 1 .r. . .V V r ps A V.vA , J ,f'f vQ'v - Q , . .A,1, . Q .. ,.,, p 1 --as A -. ,,V,1 D . ,,.., '1 , wdawg Vos Burgh, Van Vleck Hempstead ATABeacon, N. Y. 13 Wheeler Vose, Charles Alden, TAC Oklahoma City, Okla. Q3 North Fayerweather Wagner, Leslie, WT Evanston, Ill. 13 North Massachusetts Warbass, James Francis Brooklyn, N. Y. 45 New Hampshire VVarren, William Alfred Dorchester, Mass. 19 VVest Wheelock Street Wasson, Raymond Brookline, Mass. 9 Hubbard VVaterman, Sterry Robinson, AFT' St. J ohnsbnry, Vt. Q1 New Hampshire Weare, John Stephen, AXP N ewburyport, Mass. 18 Lebanon Street Wellman, Harold Keith, AXA Windsor, Vt. 1 New Hampshire Wilkinson, William Beardsley, Jr. New Brighton, N. Y. ' 17 Reed WVillard, Mount Stephen, XClJ Brookline, Mass. XCD House Willis, Richard Thomas ' Manchester, N. H. 6 North Massachusetts Wilson, Benjamin WVild, BCH White Plains, N. Y. Q5 New Hampshire Winkler, Charles Joseph, Jr., EN Springfield, Mass. EN House WVood, John Clark, EAE Montclair, N. J. 9 South Massachusetts Wood, Richard George Randolph, N. H. 5 New Hampshire Woods, Joseph Blair, EAE Huntington, Pa. 16 North Massachusetts Woodward, Evan Albro, DIPE Marlboro, Mass. 5 Hallgarten Younglove, Norton Robert, ZX Tacoma, Washington ' Zuckerman, James Harvey Dew Harrison, N. Y. .22 South F ayerweather 183 A... , w,,,,,,,,.., DELTA ALPHA 1919 X A Ackerman John J 'Lcob CIJEK eaCmALmy,un.sf CURSE uf 1923 , C , Brookline, Mass. 46 New Hampshire Adams, John Pelham Topeka, Kans. 17 Reed Akin, Charles Gardner, Jr. New Bedford, M ass. 31 North Nlassachusetts Albee, Arlon Dadmum, QJIJA Beverly, Mass. 1 48 Fayerweather Alcorn, Howard Wells Sajtelcl, Conn. 4 Reed Allen, Elijah Henry, Jr. Washington, D. C. QQ Reed Allen, John Carlin, TT - Denver, Colo. Q4 Thornton Almy, Frank Sanford, EN Fall River, M ass. 1 Q7 College Alpaugh, Chester Theodore, CDAGJ Plainfield, N.J. ' Ames, David 1V1orse, Cosmos Worcester, M ass. Q North Nlassachusetts Andretta, Nicholas Albert, CIJZK H artforcl, Conn. ' 19 Hitchcock Andross, William Berton East H arzjorcl, Conn. 17 Hallgarten Aschenbach, Cyril Gaffy, ZX East Orange, N. J. QQ Sanborn Austin, Nathaniel , Summit, N. J. ' 19 Reed Bailey, Frederic Starr Worcester, M ass. 40 New Hampshire Baker, Harold Dean, Jr. Attleboro, Mass. 13 Crosby Baker, Henry James, Jr. H olyolce, Mass. 33 Nlassachusetts Baker, Waltei' Dutton F ond clu Lac, Wis. '7 College Baldensperger,Arthur Freda-:rick,AXP Bujfalo, N. Y. ' 41y3 South Main Street Baldwin, E. Joseph, 'New Bedford, M ass. 8 Lebanon Street Baldwin, Sherman, AACD Brookline, Blass. 54 Fayerweather Baldwin, Vincent Curtis, BAE Chicago, Ill. 6 Massachusetts 185 Cambridge, Mass. 4 41 f K .A . so M 31 4 Q91 YP Q Barnett, Harold Lincoln, CDZK Barnett, Lawrence Theodore, AKE Barney, Howard Victor Barrett, Henry Robertson, Jr. Barstow, Theodore Smith Bartlett, Augustus YVilliam, Jr. Bartlett, Howard Russell Baum, Joseph Gabriel, Jr. Beach, Francis Joseph, AXP Beggs, Morrison Smylie, flDl'A Behan, Herbert Gregory Behringer, George Alfred Bernard, Nicholas Bertch, John Wlidman, AKE Beveridge, Wendell Haselton, BAE Billings, George Morton, AWP' Billings, Raymond lVIacKoy Billings, Roger, EX Bird, George Warren, CAX Pepperell, Mass. Bird, Major Bishop, Charles Hudson Bishop, Harold Hutchinson Bixby, Blake, Blake, Blake, Chesley Tasker, AXA Kenneth Davidson Wilson Cushing VVilfred Kennedy, QDAQ Blauner, Eugene Blauner, lVIilton Bliss, Gorham, CIDKYU' Blood, VVilliam Newton Bomeisler, Eugene Alfred Booth, John Dibble, LET Bourne, Henry Thayer, KE Bowen, Carl Herbert, BAE Bowker, Philip Griggs Bowler, Richard, AKE Branch, Guy Franklin Breen, Thomas George, Jr., QDZK Ag ,X fr J. ea Easthampton, Wlass. 12 Thornton Glencoe, Ill. 13 Lebanon Street Lowell, Vt. Q6 Hallgarten Katonah, N. Y. 26 Hitchcock Rochester, N. Y. 22 Crosby Denver, Colo. 5 Hitchcock Auburn, Me. r 60 Wheeler Brooklyn, N. Y. 10 North Fayerweather Dorrnont, Pa. Glenxltidgje, N. J. 14 Sanborn 20 North Fayerweather Springfield, M ass. 43 Wheeler Elmhurst, N. Y. New York City ' A 1 Wheeler 47 WVheeler Grand Rapids, Mich. 13 Thornton Omaha, Neb. Deerfield, Mass. Dorchester, M ass. 38 New Hampshire 10 Hallgarten Q9 WVest Wheelock Street Tewksbury, Mass. 46 South Main Street Adrian, M ich. Cleveland, Ohio Winona, Minn. Haverhill, M ass. Bradford, Vt. Wollaston, Blass. Morristown, N. J. New York City New York City Springfield, Mass. New York City Danbury, Conn. 17 Wlest VVheelock Street 23 Hubbard 8 Fayerweather '7 North Massachusetts 1 Hubbard 51 New Hampshire Ashbel Hotel Q4 North Fayerweather 22 Hallgarten 22 Hallgarten 3 Wheeler 19 lVIaple Street 15 Thornton 16 Hallgarten Cleveland, 0. 17 Richardson Medina, N. Y. 11 South Fayerweather Brookline, Mass. 12 Hubbard Hanover, N. . Q South Park St. Champlain, N. Y. A 21 Sanborn Wollaston, Mass. 186 39 Massachusetts O A' s K 1 NX , Briscoe, Ronald Broadley, George Harold Bronner, Leonard, Jr. Brooks, Karl, IPAQ Brooks, Lawrence Bickford, SAX Brown, Howard Bryden, CDKW' Brown, James Noel, CIJEK Brown, Leonard Chapman Brown, Leroy Taylor, KE Brown, Marshall Wright, Jr. Brown, Robert Sidney Bruning, Joseph Henry, X419 Bryan, Frederick Conger Buckley, Robert James Buell, Harold Clark Buffett, George Marshall Bundy, Charles Le Grand, IPAQ Burch, Thomas Louis, AXA Burke, Charles Francis, CIJAC9 Burroughs, John Hamilton, KKK Calder, Charles Alexander, AKE Caldwell, Hartley McMullin, XCD Callan, Luke Francis Camp, Edwin Tom Campbell, Fred McKee Cannon, Victor lVIarshall Carbaugh, Eugene, Jr., EN Carlton, Roger Conant, ZCIJE Carpenter, DuPree Allen Carpenter, Harry Bartleson, Jr. Carpenter, Russell Phelps Carter, Macauley, CIJKT' Carver, Nathan Pendleton, CIDEK Carver, Paul Francis Caswell, Frederick Harrison, ZX Catlin, Clarence WVilfred Cereghino, Harold Louis Chaloner, Reginald Gardner ff re c Orange, N. J. Salern, Mass. New York City Pocatello, Idaho Wheaton, Ill. S pringfield, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. West H artford, Conn. New York City Nyack, N. Y. Grand Rapids, Mich NX 'N in DN n ag ' WW?-' uk, ..A. .K ,GNL llmiixv 131, ,Q V F il N9 Em! lu 'ifiixlf nxxfx Q, Q' - W ' 46 Fayerweather 15 Hitchcock 3 North Fayerweather 3 Sanborn 6 Crosby 20 Thornton 17 Thornton 292 Fayerweather Q6 Fayerweather Wheeling, W. Va. 6-7 South Massachusetts Washington, D., C. Q New Hampshire Natick, Mass. Q4 Reed Lake Geneva, Wis. 27 South Main Street Omaha, Neb. Q3 Thornton Syracuse, N. Y . 27 Hubbard Asbury Park, N. J. 23 Reed Natick, Mass. Q4 Reed Manchester, N. H. East Cleveland, O. Pomona, Cal. M iddleboro, Mass. Newport, Vt. Salem, O. Cleveland, O. Kansas City, Mo. Milford, N. H. Denver, Colo. Montclair, N. J. Oak Park, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Brookline, Mass. 27 New Hampshire 46 Hitchcock 8 North Massachusetts 7 Fayerweather 21a School Street 18 Richardson Qla School Street QQ College 6 Reed I 46 Wheeler 19 South Fayerweather 1 Fayerweather Beverly, Mass. 9 Sanborn Lawrence, Mass. 31 Fayerweather West Hartford, Conn. 19 1VIassachusetts Salem, N. Y. 27 South lVIain Street Stephentown, N. Y. Q0 Fayerweather 187 Ag .N Chamberlin, John Randolph, AKE Chambers, Thomas Parker Chapman, Bertrand VVilliam Charles, Robert Fletcher Chun, Kan Leong Churchill, Kenneth Austin Clark, Frederic Perkins Clark, Ralph Badgley Clough, Sherman Nlain, KKK Coaker, George VVatson Cobleigh, Donald Edwards, KKK Coe, James Low, ZAE Coffin, Charles Carleton Cohn, Solon Davis Coller, Robert Landreth, BCH Collins, George Francis Conley, Harold Harvey, SAX Connelly, James Bartley, K2 Conrad, William Lindsay, QJAC Cook, Vllarren Ayer Cooke, George William Cooley, Charles Byron, CIDEK Corrigan, William Botsford, EN Couch, Clifford Duval, Jr., EX Coulter, Craven Houghton Cousins, Willard Charles Coyle, John Alfred, X113 Craemer, George Herman Cravens, James Rorick, K2 Crawford, Donald lVIcKenzie Creighton, John Turner Crook, Howard Earl Crowley, Edwin David Crump, George Curtis Crunden, Schuyler VVilliam Cuffari, Antonio Joseph Felix Cullen, Thomas Henry, Jr., BCH Cunningham, Bruce Thomas, ZX Springfield, Vt. Concord J unction, Mass. H onolnln, Hawaii Claremont, N. H . Salem, M ass. Lakewood, O. Boston, Mass. NW gyltnmlw .. awe:-NRE'--1-A ii m Q' I3!lllL4J-M, Sp W1 J ,,, lt 6X'Q,H,3i , , ,N N J gmhi:2Ll..u--ZLL .Q xX WYNN 6 T5 2 Yx SS SQ is QE' Es VD Q2 s-F ?. +P- rn O : 4-0- :- +1 D 14 S2 A e-' H- rs' 2 15 Massachusetts 34 Fayerweather 7 Hubbard Q8 Reed 21 Hitchcock 6 Fayerweather 17 College 48 Hitchcock West'lSomeroille, M ass. 6 Fayerweather Templeton, Mass. it South F ayerweather Niagara F alls, N. Y. 5. 8 Richardson Manchester, N. H. ,. 37 Fayerweather New York City 6 Hubbard Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 Thornton North Andover, Mass 27 Hubbard Wheaton, Ill. 3 Sanborn Spokane, Washington 36 Wheeler Stillwater, lllinn. 3 College Street Greenfield, Mass. 9 North Fayerweather Bristol, R. I. 10 Pleasant Street Springfield,,Mass. 3 North Massachusetts Mt. Vernon, N. Peekskill, N. Y. Clinton, M ass. Salem, Mass. Wilder, Vt. Hartford, Conn. H oitston, T err. Bufalo, N. Y. T homaston, Me. Y. Dorchester, Mass. Lynn, M ass. New York City Grand View, N. New York City Brooklyn, N. Y. Omaha, Neb. 188 Y. 30 Hitchcock 32 Reed 1 Crosby 28 Hallgarten Q9 Reed 17 College 29 Richardson 32 Hallgarten 13 Fayerweather 9 Hallgarten 241 Sanborn 5 Fayerweather 16 Thornton 27 Sanborn f 8 College Street 5 North Massachusetts . 1 AL Q f ,. if -:- if. xr . 6 ' x EN ..,4 I ' ': -W I, 'fy S lA1- J 1 . 1 rir r Y i 1 1 -w e 4 .,.f- I 9 6 Curran, Arthur Patrick Curry, Frank Douglass, Jr., EN Curtis, David Pierce Curtis, Laurence Morse, AFLP' Curts, -Charles VVilson Cutler, Henry Miles, KKK Daley, VVilbur Stanislaus, EKTPE Dame, Paul William Damon, Frank Gerald Davis, Frederick Amasa Davis, VVilliam Carl, ECDE DeBerard, Philip Edwin Deering, Philip James, Jr. Dempsey, John Edward Dickinson, Roger Henry, AXA Dillon, Frank Arthur Dixson, Ira Milburn Dodge, James 'Walker Dodge, VValter Clarence, APT' Donahue, Hugh Carroll, KE Donovan, Francis Bakeman Doton, Franklin Ford, CIJPA Downes, Randolph Chandler Doxsee, James Blair Doyle, James Sherman Drown, Wendell Harrington Duffy, Ralph Edward, AACD Dunton, Ralph Earle Durham, John Franklin, QEK Durivan, Thomas Paul, BCH Durkin, John Charles Dyer, Frederic Wilbur, CIDAC Eager, VVilliam Lawrence, 1192 K Eaton, Austin Choate, CAX Eising, Robert Emanuel Ekberg, Bert Elias, CAX Elliott, Glendon Mandeville, ATA Elliott, Luther Hill, CIJAGD Rumford, Me. H arrodsburg, Ky. Brooklyn, N. Y. Winchester, Mass. Paterson, N. J. Barton, Vt. Hamilton, M ass. North Andover, Mass. Council Blafs, Ia. H artford, Conn. Falmouth, Mass. Q4 School Street 41 Wheeler 920 Hallgarten 50 Fayerweather Q3 Maple Street Q7 Richardson Q4 Sanborn Q6 Hubbard 44 Fayerweather 39 New Hampshire Ashbel Hotel Brooklyn, N. Y. 5 South Massachusetts Portland, 'JM e. New Rochelle, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Holyoke, Mass. 13 College 38 Hitchcock 41 Massachusetts 11 Hitchcock Bugfalo, N. Y. 18 Sanborn Manchester, N. H. 42 Wheeler Newton, Mass. Q6 Sanborn Haverhill, Mass. 7 North Massachusetts Newton Centre, Mass. 34 Wheeler Somerville, Mass. 19 College East H artford, Conn. 292 College Islip, N. Y. 1 1 Hallgarten Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 3 South Massachusetts Barre, Vt. 27 South Main Street Worcester, Mass. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Belfast, Me. New London, Conn. Troy, N. Y. South Weymouth, Mass. F ramingham, Mass. Auburndale, M ass. New York City St. Paul, Minn. Haverhill, Mass. Newton H ighlands, Mass. 189 28 Fayerweather i Q3 College 1 F ayerweather 22 Lebanon Street 42 Fayerweather Q7 Massachusetts 8 Sanborn 9 Pleasant Street 5 Reed GJAX House 1 Hubbard 8 Hubbard , 4. , Q il t FE IV 4 if s... or . . 3 so E-sa r . u. ' i ff' 'L C367 . '1f, ' .ef '. ' seq i r sas? Ellis, Roy Alexander W ashingtoln, D. C. Q3 Hallgarten Ellis, Richard VVindiield Chicago, Ill. 30 Reed Emerson, Albert Louis Warrensburgh, N. Y. Q0 Thornton Emerson, Howard Patten Emerson, Ralph Herman Esmond, Robert Wellington Esquerre, Edmond Macdona, EAE Estes, Henson Farrell, EX Evans, Edgar Paul Evans, Willis Calvin, CIJAQ Everit, Arthur Mansfield, KE Fairbanks, Edmund Plummer Farnham, John Ripley, CIJEK Fay, Charles Norman . Fenn, Robert Clark Ferguson, George Wells, CDKIP' Fermoyle, Norman Francis, CIJFA Feuerlicht, Adolph Fields, Russell Joseph Fine, VVilliam Andrew, Jr. Fisher, Frederic Alec Fisher, George Gordon Fiske, George Adams Fitts, Lloyd Eaton Fitz, Harold Salisbury Flanigan, Sidney Joseph, IPAQ Fletcher, Morton Woodbury, fIPFA Fletcher, Sumner Grimshaw Flickinger, Frederick Rodgers Flindell, Edwin Frederic, Jr. Fogg, Lawrence Wilcox Forbush, Dallas Harry, AXP Ford, Burton Lincoln, KDKT' Fortune, Kenneth Everett Foster, John Edward, llfln Frankel, Ferdinand, Jr. Frederick, Harold Waldron, IFY' Freeman, Charles Wendell lllanchester, N. Y. Dover, N. H. Roundlake, N. Y. 7 New Hampshire 26 New Hampshire 16 lVIaple Street Pittsburgh, Pa. 23 Sanborn Fort Leavenworth, Kans. 141 Hubbard Coalton, 0. 925 Hallgarten Grand'Rapids, Mich. 13 Thornton New Haven, M ass. T A 58 VVheeler W'estboro, M ass. Q4 South Massachusetts Portland, Me. J 34: Reed Watertown, M ass. Middlebury, Conn. Springfield, M ass. Revere, M ass. Rockaway Park, N Athol, M ass. Yonkers, N. Y. Quincy, M ass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Detroit, M ich. M anchester, N. H. Pawtucket, R. I . 19 South Massachusetts 9 Thornton 12 Hitchcock 18 Reed . Y. 21 Lebanon Street 25 School Street 13 Hubbard 101 New Hampshire 3 College 3Q South Massachusetts 50 South Main Street 16 Fayerweather Long Branch, N. J. 18 Lebanon Street Andover, M ass. Washington, D. C. Toledo. O. Summit, N. J. Hartford, Conn. Gorham, N. H. Sioux City, Ia. Holyoke, Mass. Montclair, N. J. New York City Seattle, Wa.9h. Vlfashington, D. C. 190 20 North Fayerweather QQ Reed 19 Massachusetts 41 East VVheelock Street 411 Massachusetts 3Q New Hampshire 2 New Hampshire 33 Nlassachusetts 15 Hubbard g6 South Fayerweather 36 Hitchcock 23 Hallgarten . Q6 North Massachusetts 1 -11-.. ' ' 1 ..s, -, ' 2' W ' 2 jf! V : .V -ei: Gmc f- ,,-fv 1 ,fy f. -Q. 5 ,JK f- Q., f V. ' .25 L.. 'Cy' i 23.155 - , -' ' '- , , -V... . ,-wb 15, 5 1 If . ' N ff l. ' ,.f 1 , 5: ge.. . f R -V ? 'fl N- . . . KI , J' - M., ka ta-,L W ,A s s'tt Freeman, Henry Edmund - Friedberg, Adolf Friedman, Leon Louis Friend, VV alter Alonzo, AT A Frothingham, Arthur Pennell Fuller, Asa Warren Fuller, George Spencer, GAX Fullerton, George MacFarland F urey, Edward Raymond Gallagher, Donald Groy, QDEK Galletly, James Arthur Gardner, Elmer Valentine, AACIP Gates, Wlalter Crane Gauss, Erwin WVood, KE Gaver, Donald Paul Gibson, Cornelius George Gilbert, Joseph Everson Gilliland, John Morris Girouard, Louis Paul V Giroux, Archie Ralph, CDFA Gladstone, Warren Hamilton, Goddard, Carey Frank ' Golde, Sydney Richard Goldman, Joseph Goldrick, William Bosley Gordon Gordon Gordon, Gordon Arthur Ernest, Jr. Cecil Fitzhugh, EKIJE John Wood, ZQPE Norman Seaver Goss, Clarence Edward Goss, Parker Sprague, CIJFA Goulet, Benoit Joseph Granger, Carl Victor Granger, Dwight Luther, ECDE Gratz, VVilliam Jacob Gray, Carl Albert . Gray, Frank 1fVilliam, Jr. Grevatt, Edward Moll me Ravenna, O. New York City Milwaukee, Wis. M elrose, M ass. Portland, Me. Summit, N. J. Brighton, M ass. Plainfield, N. J. New Rochelle, N. Y. Summit, N. J. West Roxbury, M ass. M inneapolis, Minn. Orange, M ass. N ewark, N. J. St. Paul, Minn. Waterbury, Conn. Englewood, N. J. Waterbury, Conn. Pittsfield, N. H. Somerville, M ass. New Yorlc City Malden, M ass. New York City Milford, N. H. Syracuse, N. Y. Worcester, M ass. Washington, D. C. Belle Vernon, Pa. Barre, Vt. Berlin, N. H. lllelrose, M ass. Claremont, N. H. N ewark, N. J. Randolph, Vt. Willmar, Minn. Worcester, M ass. Alton, N. H. Newark, N. J. 191 E if x . 19 New Hampshire 6 Hubbard 447 Fayerweather 44 Fayerweather 13 Fayerweather 3Q Hitchcock 29 Massachusetts 10 Hallgarten 26 Hubbard 19 Reed 7 Fayerweather. 24: New Hampshire 17 South Fayerweather - 11 Thornton 38 New Hampshire 8 Hubbard 18 Fayerweather 1 17 North Fayerweather 341 Reed 63 Wheeler 12 Hallgarten 6 Pleasant St. 42 New Hampshire 19 Hallgarten 245 College 29 Richardson 31 Hallgarten 92 College Street 10 Hubbard 18 Hubbard 33 Fayerweather 52 New Hampshire Q0 Reed 40 New Hampshire 30 Occom Ridge 24 Massachusetts , cf A95 f 'X 5 572- W TI' ' 7 9 t ff -'-.. 'L' 'T r ' :- 1' X1 . ...M H, 511' -. z -Afz ' 1, 1 Q59 Hx f H if 'S , I f ll l al f 2 1 f Q S, J , Lfflxi r if .Z as as . , l Grimn, John Lane Grimm, James lVIadison Grimn, Grimn, John Thomas, APT' Orville Thompson Gumaer, Edward Bennett, Jr. Gunnell, Robert Chappell, BCH Guppy, John Warren Gutterman, Lester Strauss Gwinn, William VValter, KIDPA Haggart, John Roberts Haigh, Dwight, CIJKT' New York City Smithville, Ga. Wellesley, Mass. Hudson F alls, N. Y Allenhurst, N. J . Galesburg, Ill. Melrose, M ass. Brookline, Mass. 418 New Hampshire 7b Thornton 3 Fayerweather 4 College 9 WVest Street 13 South lVIassachusetts Q0 Fayerweather 19 South Massachusetts Columbus, O. F argo, N. D. 27 South Main Street Toledo, O. 31 South lVIassachusetts Hallott, Ronald Paine, XCID Hamilton, George Williiam, CIJKIP' Hamilton, Silas Edwin, CIDEK Harding, Lyman Curtis, CPEK Harkins, John Harmon, Nathaniel Palmer Harold, Millbourne Prime, AXP Harris, Arthur Self Hart, George Andrews Harvey, Ellis Marshall, Jr., KIPAGD Haubrich, Bernard Page Haviland, Charles Herbert, BCH Hawes, Valentine Peyton, KE Hawkins, Dudley William Lloyd, XCD New York City Hayes, Roy John, ECDE Heath, Howard Lawton Heep, Francis Xavier, ATA Heeson, George Engfer, CDKW' Height, Robert Leroy, CIJZK Hellwig, Theodore Augustus, Jr.,ClJAS Brooklyn, N. Y. Henderson, George Victor, CIJZK Henderson, William Contee Hennessy, James Joseph Henry, William Mills, EQDE Herbert, Thomas George, CDZK Hertzberg, Reinhold Frederick Herz, Adolf 13 North Fayerweather H' 17 Richardson 1Q New Hampshire Gloucester, M ass. N ewport, Vt. Brattleboro, Vt. Framingham, M ass. 8 Sanborn Jamaica Plain, M ass. 418 Hitchcock M anchester, N. H. 2 South Fayerweather Bujalo, N. Ya 3Q lVIassachusetts Stoughton, M ass. 1Q Hubbard Toledo, O. 10 North lVIassachusetts Media, Pa. g QJAGJ House Claremont, N. H. 18 Reed Purchase, N. Y. 25 New Hampshire Spokane, Wash. 39 Wheeler 31 Reed 17 Hubbard Davison Block 21a School Street Q0 Hallgarten 15 Hitchcock Q0 Hubbard 53 New Hampshire . 9 College 23 Thornton E27 South Main Street 24 Fayerweather 28 College New Rochelle, N. Y. 19 Thornton Bugfalo, N. Y. Trenton, N. J. Yonkers, N. Y. Toledo, 0. Lakewood, N. J. Asbury Park, N. J. New York City Lake Placid, N. Y. Bugfalo, N. Y. Denver, Colo. , Stamford, Conn. 192 U . , v ' - H . 2352519 ,,,. -v 1 g :Pnl W , , , , lil ' -'., ,, if , t -V 1 1 Hess, Robert Gordon Leominster, M ass. 3 North Fayerweather Hexter, Richard Cleveland, 0. 12 Richardson Hilton, Ward Hale Hoag, Edgar Davis, SAX Heckenson, Oscar Randolph, Xfll Holley, Closson Perry Holmes, VValter Robbins, ATA Holt, Kerchival Rogers, AACIJ Hopkins, Edward Baldwin, ZAE Horan, George Horne, Herbert Quimby, KE Horowitz, Arthur Houston, Joseph Clarke, Jr., IVY' Hovey, Almon Guion Howard, Charles Nicholas, BCH Howard, Charles Rawson Howarth, Andrew John Howe, VVallis Eastburn, Jr., KKK Hubert, Malcom Doisy, ATA Hudson, Henry William, Jr., AKE Huff, Richard Sherman Hughes, Ermond Taylor , Hurd, Charles Kenneth, K2 Hurd, Kenneth Badger, EX Hurley, James Edmund, KDE K Hussey, Luther VVilliam Hutchins, Paul Aiken, EX Hyde, Paul Adams Jackson, Paul Girard Jackson, Stanley Sayer, AKE Jacobs, Samuel Myron Jaeger, George Joseph, Jr., WT J armon, Walter Herbert Jederson, Roland Alfred, AACIJ Jellison, Philip Colburn Jennings, John Henshaw Jetter, Frank i Johnson, Richard Freeman Evanston, Ill. M onson, M ass. 416 VVheeler 14 Hallgarten West Somerville, M ass., 33 Reed Danbury, Conn. Q5 School Street Newton Center, M ass. South Massachusetts H arzjord, Conn. Ayer, M ass. Waterbury, Conn, Bradford, Blass. Worcester, M ass. Denver, Colo. Bridgeport, Conn. New York City Ludlow, Vt. Oxford, M ass. Bristol, R. I . Yonkers, N. Y. Bujalo, N. Y. Kennebiink, Me. Cranbnry, N. J. 39 New Hampshire 31 Wheeler 13 Richardson 21 Fayerweather Ashbel Hotel 13 Lebanon .Street 15 Hallgarten 10 Thornton 18 College 12 Richardson 25 North Massachusetts , 21a School Street 3 Massachusetts 11 South Fayerweather 6 Pleasant Street Cleveland, 0. 20 Wheeler Concord, N. H. 8 Crosby Holyoke, M ass. 50 New Hampshire lllelrose, M ass. Q2 Hubbard North Stratford, N. H. 12 YVheeler Malone, N. Y. Westboro, N. C. Lebanon, N. H. Q5 Hallgarten 50 South lVIain Street AKE House Far Rockaway, N. Y. 47 Wlheeler Chicago, I ll. New York City Omaha, Neb. Peterboro, N. H. St. Louis, Mo. Boston, Mas.s'. Lexington, M ass. 193 28 Richardson 18 Hitchcock 36 North Massachusetts 38 Fayerweather 14 Fayerweather 15 Fayerweather 10 South Fayerweather wwf o s aw - 19. T . . A9 5 ' 'f El 6' 8 , ii 1 7 U I Yi I 'S Y ,, Ss. 'sag 1 in 'lk 1 5 1, . , fff XX .51 - in IiE tW if s e Fl X 'GW ' 4 X s. 1 kb Johnson, Thomas Herbert Johnston, John VValter, Qd Jonasson, Robert Leon, Jones, Charles Henry, Jr., Xfll Jones, Hugh Brandon, CDPA Jones, Matthew Grant, XCIJ Jones, Payson Angell, CAX Jones, Vlalter Leland, AKE Jorgensen, Roswell Stephen Judd, Philip Sedgwick J uergens, VVilliam Fred, Jr. Kavanagh, Ja.mes Orville, BCH Keavney, VVilliam Thomas, Jr. .Keef, Dwight Lawrence I Keefe, Kenneth Maurice Keigher, Philip Joseph, ZCIJE Keith, Henry Meiggs, 3d, EN Kelly, William Powers, Jr., QAX Kepner, VVade Hull Kershaw, Richard Bement Kidder, Harold Vincent Kilmartin, Thomas Joseph, Jr., EN Kimball, Philip Edwin, fl3ZK Kimball, William Wallace, AKE King, Donald Baldwin King, Lyman Beers, CIJAEJ Klaren, Karl Otis, AXP Knight, Frederick Stewart Kraft, James Barry Kurtz, Wlalter Hazelton, AKE Landauer, James Dittman Lanphear, Roy Higinbotham Laventall, Edward Samuel Leach, VValker, llfl' Leaycraft, John VVilson Lee, John Henry, AKE Leighton, Philip Henry, Cosmos 'A Blontpelier, Vt. 7 College Washington, D. C. 31 South Main Street Long Branch, N. Y. 16 Hallgarten Wellesley F arms, Blass. 16 Crosby Montpelier, Vt. 10 Hubbard Malden, Blass. Q9 Reed Newton Highlands, Bl ass. 33 South Nlassachusetts Newton Centre, Mass. 26 Massachusetts H aydenville, Blass. 50 Wheeler Wallingford, Conn. 3 Reed Chicago, Ill. 19 South Fayerweather Blt. Vernon, N. Y. H' Q2 Lebanon Street Waterbury, Conn. J 192 Thornton Lawrence, Bl ass. 2 College Rochester, N. Y. 22 Crosby West Orange, N. J. 49 Fayerweather San Jose, Costa Rica 27 Hitchcock New Brunswick, N. J. 26 Reed Wheeling, W. V ai. 4 College New Rochelle, N. Y. 6 College Beverly, Blass. Q1 East Wheelock Street Waterbury, Conn. 6 VVheeler Bradford, Mass. 16 Crosby Highland Park, Ill. 19 North Massachusetts New Rochelle, N. Y. 35 New Hampshire Cleveland, 0. 10 North Massachusetts New Bedford, M ass. Q Fayerweather Brockton, Bl ass. 25 Hitchcock Bujfalo, N. Y. 4123 South Main Street East Cleveland, O. 46 Hitchcock 31 Reed 16 College 6 South Fayerweather 9 Richardson South Nyack, N. Y. 16 Thornton 12 New Hampshire New York City Windsor, Conn. Albany, N. Y. Taunton, M ass. Brighton, Blass. Blclndoos Falls, Vt. 7 North Fayerweather 194 Levine, Solomon Charles Levy, Robert Plant Lewinsohn, Louis, AKE Lewis, Gordon Crooks Lewis, Robert King, llfln Little, Arthur Foster, llfl' Little, John Lee, Jr., AKE Lockwood, Harold Kenneth Lohnes, Carl Wlillard Lombardi, Joseph Claude Love, Donald Burt Ludington, Jesse Permin Lundberg, Karl Wesley Lundquist, Almon Gustavus, AAT Lyle, Edgar Reginald ' Lynch, Edward Bernard, AACIJ MacBain, Walter Duncan McCabe, James Milton, CIJKW' lWcCarthy, George VVilliam, KE lVIcCausland, Samuel Garver lVIcClintock, Theodore McClure, Howard Edward, CIJEK McConnel, Thomas Stokes, BCH McDermott, Laurence Francis McKee, George Robert, 2flJE lVIcKelvey, Robert Wlakefield, CIDAQ McKenna, Harold Augustus McKnight, Thomas Harlan McKown, Paul Freese, AKE McLaughlin, George Alexander McMillan, Robert Livingston, ATA NIcPherson, Carroll VVright, EX hlacaulay, Robert Edward Maclcedon, Francis Donald Joseph Mairs, David Kelso Nlalmquist, Harold Carl, BCH hlalone, Joseph Lawrence hlanning, Bernard George .1 ,,,. .. Q 5 Q x mv! jim iii- iili- .. 'Q -an W ' . iXXWl'!!?BixxixKxxm is miss 'Q15v F',s,...c Stamford, Conn. 22 Thornton New York City 15 Thornton Montclair, N. J. 15 Hubbard J ersey City, N. J. 64 VVheeler Honey Brook, Pa. Pawtucket, R. I. 23 Wheeler Chicago, Ill. 3 Pleasant Street Lawrence, M ass. 26 North lV1assachusetts Valley F alls, N. Y. 42 Fayerweather Brooklyn, N. Y. 3 Hubbard Lexington, M ass. 2 Reed New York City Rockford, Ill. Bujalo, N. Y. 22 Eayerweather 16 Massachusetts 22 Fayerweather West Somerville, M ass. 25 Reed Aberdeen, S. D. J South lVIain Street Summit, N. J. 26 Hitchcock Duluth, Ill inn. 12 North Fayerweather K2 House 10 Pleasant Street 42 North Massachusetts 53 New Hampshire Lebanon Street 31 Davison Block Naugatuck, Conn. Chicago, I ll. p Kansas City, M 0. Allenhurst, N. J. Beaver, Pa. Chicago, Ill. Montpelier, Vt. A Q0 Reed Whiteheld, N. H. CDAG House M anchester, N. H. 18 College 18 Sanborn 3 New Hampshire Sewickley, Pa. St. Paul, Blinn. Nfinneapolis, Minn. 2 Thornton Brookline, M ass. 9 Hubbard Brookline, M ass. 30 Massachusetts Beverly, M ass. . 27 Reed Brockton, M ass. 24 North Massachusetts Waltha'7n, M ass. 29 VV est VVheelocli Street Wallingford, Conn.. 28 Sanborn East Lynn, M ass. East Wheelock Street Northampton, M ass. 46 South Main Street 195 . p . , r ..g A ' 6 P A -X, 1 , ix , I 2 eb i f B ff 1 ll - 3 . 2 f -I 1' ,X ,h V' . V N ,Q -s....f 6 lVIanson, Douglas Colton Marden, Charles Frederick Marden, Earle Rollins Maroney, VValter Keef, GAX Marsh, George Henry Clay, KZ Marshall, Arthur Leonard, K2 Martin, Walter Winchester, ATA Mason, George Harold Matthews, Ernest Lewis Matless, Leonard Ingalls Maxwell, Robert Evans May, Jay Mitchell, CIYAG Maycock, Joseph Farwell Maynard, Hall Platt, KKK Meehan, John Ryder, CIDFA Meier, Mahlon Martin, EX Meleney, George Leher, X111 Meloy, John Young, Jr. Merchant, William Alexander, BCH Merriam, Francis Nixon, Jrq, AXA Merridith, Robert Phares, WT Merrill, John Lamprey Merritt, Alfred Illingworth Metzel, Truman Thwing, 1152K Miles, John Lawrence New Rochelle, N. Y. Newport, N. H . Short Falls, N. H. West Medford, lil ass. 5-8 College 57 New Hampshire Q3 Hubbard Q1 South Nlassachusetts Springfield, Mass. ' 21 Thornton Toledo, 0. 2 Reed Grand Rapids, Mich. 50 Fayerweather Worcester, Mass. 4 Hallgarten Long Island City, N. Y. 16 Wheeler Keokuk, Ia. 33 Reed Winona, Minn. - A 11 Reed Brooklyn, N. Y. I 16 Wheeler Bufalol N. Y. Q3 Fayerweather Providence, R. I. Q5 North Massachusetts Amesbury, Mass. , 31 Davison Block Glen Ridge, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Q3 Maple Street 10 Fayerweather Chicago, Ill. A 21 South Fayerweather New Brunswick, N. J. 5 South Street Newburyport, Mass. 145 North Fayerweather Denver, Col. , Laconia, N. H . Hartford, Conn. Highland Park, Ill. Lexington, Mass. Millar, Joseph Ambler Shoemaker, BGHAsbury Park, N. J . Miller, Aubrey Frederic Miller, Frank Austin Mills, Halsey Huxham Mills, Miles Moe, AACIJ Miner, Theodore Richardson, Molla, John Monger, Wendell Godfrey Monroe, Donald Langdon Montague, Richard Hageny Moody, James Alfred, AACIJ QJAGJ Moore, Donald Robinson, ATA Dayton, 0. H averstraw, N. Y. Cleveland, 0. Minneapolis, Minn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Barre, Vt. Elkhart, Ind. i West Hartford, Conn. New Rochelle, N. Y. Cambridge, Blass. Pittsburgh, Pa. 196 13 Lebanon Street 37 Wheeler 59 Wheeler 10 Thornton 11 Massachusetts 33 New Hampshire Q3 Massachusetts 43 VVheeler 13 New Hampshire 12 Hitchcock Q6 Nlassachusetts 6 College Street 5 Hitchcock 17 Thornton 5-8 College 19 Crosby 6 Massachusetts ZPA 'A I , at r f ' ,K i A ..., L 'V Cf IA if zunl gm, ev J l lVIoore, Harold Quentine, EAE lVIoore, Henry Sproat, OAX Moore, John Edward Morand, Laurence Thomas Morgan, Field Paul Nlorgan, Wlilliam Moss, Jr., KKK Morrell, George Alfred Morrison, Charles John, EN Morse, Arthur lVIetcalf, Jr., KKK Morse, Donald Cushing, AXP Morse, Leonard Henshaw, KDZK Muehleck, Frederick Adolph, KKK Murphy, Starr Jocelyn, Jr. Musk, George Henry Myers, John Volkert Nay, Hartford Avery Neale, Darrell Roberts Neidlinger, Lloyd Kellock, IVY' Noble, Ralph Edward Norris, Whitton Evans Norstrand, Leif Behrend, XCD Norton, Thomas Lowell Obermeyer, Charles Benjamin, O,Brien, Arthur Francis O'Brien, John Walter, BOH O'Connell, Richard Daniel Olson, Hobart Osborne, James Morris, AKE Oxley, Radcliffe Morse Paisley, John Stohl, flDPA Palmer, Brooks, XCIJ Palmer, Charles Albert, X113 Parkes, William Miller, EX Parsons, Ellsworth Arris Patterson, Donald 'Gillis Patterson, William McKay Pelton, Edward Avery Pennock, Robert Haines Ag .. 5 'B Omaha, N eb. 41 North Massachusetts Newton, M ass. 9 Pleasant Street Waterbury, Conn. Chicago, Ill. g 7 Pleasant Street Claremont, N. H. 18 Hubbard Brookline, M ass. 43 Hitchcock Ottumwa, Ia. 18 North Massachusetts Dorchester, Mass. 10 School Street Montclair, N. J. 19 Fayerweather South Portland, Me. 46 South Main Street 39 Massachusetts 34 F ayerweather 19 Fayerweather 17 North Massachusetts 11 New Hampshire Wellesley, Ill ass. Hoboken,kN. J. Montclair, N. J. Lawrence, M ass. Camden, N. J. . West Milan, N. H. North Main Street Omaha, N eb. 37 Massachusetts East Orange, N. J. 16 Massachusetts Bethel, Vt. 52 New Hampshire Staunton, Va. 16 Reed Greenwich, N. Y. 39 North Massachusetts Brockton, Mass. 21 College Chicago, Ill. 30 Reed 4Q New Hampshire 30 F ayerweather 17 Hallgarten 31 Davison Block Brooklyn, N. Y. Waterbury, Conn. East Hartford, Conn. Chicago, Ill. Cleveland, O. 32 Hitchcock Reading, Mass. 21 Hallgarten Melrose Highlands, Mass. 23 Sanborn Bradford, Mass. 14 South Fayerweather Bedford, M ass. 23 North Massachusetts Evanston, Ill. 33 Hitchcock Springheld, Vt. 1 Hallgarten Washington, D. C. 41 South Main Street Rochester, N. Y. 13 Crosby Louisville, N. Y. 6 College Street Cleveland, O. 43 Hitchcock 197 A Q1 1 t f l A i.,f 1'f Perkins, Henry Johnson, IZT Perley, John Russell, EN Peters, Edward Wells, SAX Phillips, Elmer Isaac, XCD Pianca, Alvin Louis Pick, Joseph Richard Pierce, Alfred Jr., BCH Pierson, Ralph VVillener Piper, Winthrop DeForest, ZAE Plant, George Landerdale, TT Pletke, Paul Edward Plohn, Charles Pollard, Joseph Greeley, AACD Pope, Elmer Donald, CDPA Pope, Ernest Everett, CIUPA ' Pratt, Edward Summer, KKK Pratt, Lyndon Upson Prouty, Charles Burton Putnam, Lewis Adrian Pyott, James Middleton, AACD Quencer, Kenneth Carleton Quinn, Thomas Bernard John, ATA Rahmanop, Walter Boudinot, CIJEK Raynor, Clinton Stuart, AFT' Read, John Miner, X119 Reed, Carl Norton, AKE Reed, David Clifford, ATA Reed, Frederick Homer, AXA Reeve, Raymond Towner, EN Reinthal, Albert Emanuel, Jr. Reynolds, Elbert Leroy Rhodes, Lennox Forsythe Rice, Charles Burroughs Rice, William Foster, Jr. Richardson, Donald Paul, AKE Richardson, Everett Gordon, CIJPA Richmond, Stanford, Church CIJKIP' Z . -,.A ,- 1- A, 1 Ms .- 'li i ,ren A 1 3' 7 X Salem, M ass. Laconia, N. H. H aeerhill, Mass. New Castle, Pa. Milford, Blass. Chicago, Ill. Lexington, Mass. Normal, Ill. Keene, N. H. Washington, D. C. Winona, Minn. New York City Omaha, Neb. Springfield, Mass. Springfield, Mass. M iddleboro, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Newport, Vt. . Dancers, Mass. Oak Park, Ill. Yonkers, N. Y. Utica, N. Y. Berlin, N. H. Winchester, lllass. 16 South Fayerweather 14 South Fayerweather 33 South Nlassachusetts Ashbel Hotel 17 South lVIassachusetts 41 South Massachusetts 22 South lVlassachusetts 14 Maple Street Sargent Place 37 Fayerweather 13 Reed . 9 South Street J 37 lVIassachusetts 12 Fayerweather 12 Fayerweather ' 1 Crosby 444 New Hampshire 16 Richardson E28 West Wheelock Street Q9 Wlheeler 5 South Massachusetts Q Crosby 18 New Hampshire 8 Nlassachusetts Phillips Beach, Blass. V 19 North Massachusetts Bafalo, N. Y. Rocky River, O. Manchester, N. H. Kenwood, N. Y. New York City Greenwich, Conn. Brookline, Mass. New York City Jamaica Plain, Blass. Grand Rapids, Mich. Leominster, Mass. Stoughton, Mass. 198 3 Massachusetts 35 New Hampshire Q South Fayerweather 11 Hallgarten 37 Fayerweather 24 Hitchcock Q5 Sanborn 38 Hitchcock 8 Fayerweather 18 Hitchcock '13 North Fayerweather 6 North lVIassachusetts D 5 5 .5 cl ' A. f fe. K 7 A ,FE 1 R r Riddle, Hollis Lee, Jr. Riley, Gerald Edwin Rippel, Julius Alexander, K2 Roberts, Henry Steele Roberts, Russell Colby, AXA Robes, Kenneth Hooper, Robinson, Henson Charles, EX Robinson, Jere Long, fIDK1If Robinson, Stuart Leese, BCH Roby, Frank Clinton Rockefeller, Howard, APT' Roe, Edward Gaynor Rogers, Francis Edward Rounseville, Ralph Lloyd Rubens, Richard Victor Rubin, Emanuel Henry Ruder, Lucius Scott Ryan, Augustine Joseph Ryan, WVilliam Andrew Sackett, George Leslie, KE Salmonsen, John Rector, QJZK Sammis, Howard Duryea, WT Sanchez, Charles Albert, X415 Sargent, Leon Frank Sawyer, Charles YVilton, QJAQ Sawyer, Frank Earl Scaling, Charles William, XCIJ Scammon, George Richard, EX Schaaf, Hubert Haslup Shiffenhaus, Joseph William Schiller, Mlaurice Benjamin Schmidt, Emil George, J r. Schryver, Albert Plumb Schultz, Erwin Herman Scullion, Arthur Anthony, KKK Segal, Philip Aron Seymour, Gordon Victor Seymour, VValter Elliott Winchester, Mass. North Attleboro, M ass. 8 Massachusetts 8 Richardson Newark, N. J. 17 South Fayerweather Brooklyn, N. Y. 4 South Nlassachusetts West Haven, Conn. 35 Massachusetts Hanover, N.H. Springfield, Ill. Akron, O. Akron, O. Decatur, I ll. Butte, Mont. Pleasantville, N. Y. New Rochelle, N. Y Rochester, M ass. New York City Brockton, Mass. H arnilton, 0. Lawrence, Mass. Chicago, Ill. Holyoke, Mass. F arrnington, Conn. Huntington, N. Y. 6 Pleasant Street 43 North Massachusetts 42 Massachusetts MM South lVIain Street 4 College Street 35 Hitchcock 30 North Nlassachusetts 6 College Q41 Hubbard 5 Richardson 45 Wheeler 1 Reed Q1 Sanborn 15 Massachusetts 10 North Fayerweather Q4 School ,Street 24 School Street Guatemala City, C. A. 411 South Miain St. Dayton, O. Q3 Mfassachusetts Cleveland, O. 22 North Fayerweather Greenville, N. H . 16 Maple Street Fort Worth, T ex. 411 South Main Street Exeter, N. H . 25 Fayerweather New Rochelle, N. Y. 8 College Street Newark, N. J. Lawrence, N. Y. Des Moirtes, Ia. 5 Parkway 12 Hallgarten Ashbel Hotel Wheaton, Ill. 21 South F ayerweather Cleveland, 0. 10 Lebanon Street Grantwood, N .J. KKK House Winthrop, lVIass. 17 West Wheelock St. Charles City, Ia. QQ Davison Block Charles City, I a. '7 Sanborn 199 - Shapleigh, Theodore Delmont Sharp, Edward Leslie, AKE 7 Shaw, Perry hlason ' Sherman, Howard Franklin, CIJZK Shirley, YVilliam Pickens Shirley, VVilliam VVayne Short, Victor Bernard Siemon, Robert Wlinthrope Silberman, Sidney Slate, Justin Reynolds ' Sloat, John Gregory , 119 aa W ... r i:-we :fl I x . ' 4EyXiimw wi fa N25 XXX ef -ll W' W i 6 East Milton, M ass. Chicago, I ll. Berkeley, Cal. Dorchester, M ass. New York City Franklin, N. H. Chicago, Ill. Willcinsburg, Pa. Cleveland, C. Holyoke, M ass. H arnilton, 0. Smith, Ernest Clement, AXA Smith, James Francis, EN Smith, Leland Reed, BCH Smith, Owen Milliken Smith, Philip Franklin, KE Smith, Robert Adams, X42 Smith, Raymond Henry Smith, Taylor, AKE Smith, Walter Bradlee, EX Snider, Ralph Emanuel Snyder, Edward Courtland, CDAO Soley, Paul John Sollitt, Sumner Shannon Sonnenberg, Gustave, K2 Sprague, 'Kimball Dearing Stadlinger, Karl Peter, AXP Staley, Ralph Brown, WT Stanley, James Prescott, ANI? Stern, MO1'tOH Samuel Stevens, Lester Fayette, Jr. Stevens, Philip Ellis Stewart, Colin Campbell, Jr. Stewart, Kenneth Robert Stewart, lVIead, AACIJ Stewart, Sam Taylor Stocker, Edgar Parks Stone, Lawrence Boardman Manchester, N. H. Waterbury, Conn. Cleveland, 0. 11 Fayerweather Q Hitchcock 21a School Street 17 Hitchcock 50 South 'lVIain Street Q College 24 Hubbard Q8 Hubbard 17 Hitchcock , 1 Reed I 7 New Hampshire 11 Thornton 20 Hubbard Portland, Me. L11 North lVIassachusetts East Cleveland, C. Q0 Wheeler Arlington, M ass. Q3 North Nlassachusetts Brookline, M ass. Toledo, C. Brookline, Ilifass. Roxbury, lVIa.s's. Oklahoma City, Ckla. New York City Chicago, I ll. M arquette, Mich. Chelsea, hfass. Bafalo, N. Y. Denver, Colo. Brookline, M ass. Berlin, N. H. Brookline, Blass. Nashua, N. H. Hanover, N. H. Ravenna, O. Bafalo, N. Y. Bradford, Pa. Cleveland, 0. Hartford, Conn. 200 . 26 Reed 30 Richardson 54 Fayerweather 36 Reed 14- North Fayerweather 926 College Q College KE House 3 College 38 South Massachusetts 24 Thornton 11 Hubbard 5 Parkway Q1 Nlassachusetts 11 Hitchcock .4 vVVebster Ave. 19 New Hampshire AAG? House 11 School St. 30 Nlassachusetts 10 New Hampshire 6: ow -. . ,A A ., .. , , . .., f w f it ill l 9 ' 'W 5 -S7 Fl gf 61 ill' N Q 1 r ' 1 2 Z 1 Z F -5 -as A . . I .. N. f , of 1 51 Fx 'fl A . E72 5 Z ' wi .4 .2 S fi ' i TH '---- 9.1 5 v ' '- A . . x f... 1... f . 1 rf ' 1 fffsf' ki' - .f vf' . X N 1 1,1-1 f . f, ...,.g' , ,, Q X I -', .J V Y Q by M .1 we fb l 'rx 'IA 1 X Q. e 1 Stoneman, Edwin Harold Stotz, Alfred Ernest Strauss, Jack Hecht Streight, Harold Henry, AACIJ Strong, William Charles, AXA Sulliyan, Henry Anthony Sullivan, Thomas Power Summers, Stuart Sutphen, Charles Knight Suttmeier, Christopher Emil, ECIDE Sutton, Paul Stuart Suydam, lVIartin Johnson Swartz, Philip Kinsell Swartzbaugh, Ted Blackford, CDKW' Sweney, Chesley Leonard, ATA Swett, Cedric Wlellington Taber, Rae Kingsley Alson Proctor Horace Frederick, AAKIF Herbert Halliday, Jr. . John Devel, AACIJ James Thomas, CIJKLP' , William Howland Taylor, Taylor, Edward Wing Taylor, Taylor, Taylor Taylor Taylor Teagle, Brereton Temple, Winfield Leroy, ATA Teter, Howard Bush Thompson, John Adams Thompson, Remick Goldsmith Thompson, Richard Havlee, Jr. Tifft, Eugene Whiting Gay, AXP Titcomb, Jonathan Ross Tonis, Frank Joseph Townsend, James Richard, EX Tracy, Francis Vincent, AACIJ Truesdell, Leonard Wlinslow Tryon, Warren Stenson Turgeon, Ford Wlesley A3 ., Boston, lllass. 36 Reed Turners Falls, Mass. 26 Fayerweather Boston, lVI ass. 34 New Hampshire Omaha, N eb. 36, North lVIassachusetts West H aven, Conn. 35 lVIassachusetts Worcester, lllass. 19 lVlaple Street Dancers, Mass. 10 Sargent Street Omaha, N eb. Freehold, N. J . 12 Wheeler New York Oity 14 North lVIassachusetts Omaha, Neb. 15 Reed Brooklyn, N. Y. Q7 Reed Upper M ontclair, N. J. 32 New Hampshire Toledo, O. ' 31 Fayerweather St. Paul, Minn. 4 3 New Hampshire Portland, lVI e. 15 North Fayerweather New Bedford, Mass. 8 Lebanon Street Manchester, N. H. 6 Sanborn Wollaston, Mass. Ashbel Hotel Biqfalo, N. Y. 47 Hitchcock Chicago, Ill. 16 College M exico, N. Y. 59 1fVheeler J ohnstown, Pa. 13 Hallgarten New Bedford, Mass. 31 North hlassachusetts M inneapolis, Minn. 2 Thornton M arlboroagh, llifass. 11 Wheeler Oleveland, O. 8 Reed St. Andrews, Scotland Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 15 Hubbard Bufalo, N. Y. 17 Sanborn 38 lvlassachusetts 39 North Massachusetts Q1 College Q Hitchcock 6 College Street 45 Fayerweather Hartford, Conn. 44 New Hampshire Bajalo, N. Y. Bnfalo, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. Brockton, Mass. Berkeley, Cal. Bristol, Conn. St. Albans, Vt. 1 32 Nlassachusetts Q01 wt 5 Z eff. . Turnbull, Leonard Ferguson, CIJPA Udall, Richard Maurice Ungar, Stanley Fireman Upjohn, James Robert Vanderbilt, George Vanderhoef, TY Van Orden, Louis Jackson, EX Veit, Herbert Henry ' AQA Jw NU 5 fr 19 Detroit, Mich. F arrnington, N. H. New York City Kalamazoo, Mich. Greenville, N. Y. 48 Fayerweather 50 New Hampshire 19 Thornton 13 Hubbard 13 New Hampshire Pornpton Lakes, N. J. 9 West Street Lawrence, Mass. Wackerhagen,Edward Northrop,AACIJ Raeine, Wis. VVadleigh, Winthrop Wadsworth, John Baker, APT' VVagner, Lloyd Henderson Wagner, Philip Theodore VValker, Howard Raymond, K2 Wallace, William Healey, AACID Wanamaker, Percy Weston, CIJFA Watson, Clifton Edwin, CDPA VVatson, Henry Brock, Jr., AFT' Watson, Nathan Whitney, ECIDE VVaugh, Arden Burton Weaver, James VVilliam, ZAE Webber, Benjamin White Weed, Ellsworth Samuel Weed, George, AKE Mafofd, N. H. 14 Fayerweather 3 College Street 56 New Hampshire Council Blujfs, Ia. Q3 South F ayerweather M inneapolis, Minn. , Q9 Hallgarten Richmond Hill, N. Y. H' 9 Reed Greenwich, Conn. 5' Q9 Fayerweather Oak Park, Ill. Q9 Wheeler Melrose Highlands, ass. Q3 Sanborn Leicester, Mass. Newton, Mass. Oak Park, I lli Pittyield, Mass. East Liverpool, O East Bridgewater, Lynn, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. VVeinseimer, Philip Charles, Jr., KKK Bloonyield, N. J. Welch, VVilliam Bernard Wells, Clinton Ayers Werner, Jerome Weser, Winfield Scott, Jr., EN Wleston, George Fred, CDKIP' VVeymouth, Douglas French, 1210 Whaley, Albert Gray, Jr. Beverly, Mass. Pittsburgh, Pa. New York City New Rochelle, N. 8 New Hampshire Q41 Nlassachusetts 30 Fayerweather 5 Richardson 50 South Main Street Mass. 30 Hitchcock 56 New Hampshire 15 Crosby 17 Fayerweather 57 New Hampshire 28 Reed 11 South F ayerweather Y. 5-8 College 7 Sanborn Springjield, Mass. Orange, Mass. South Orange, N. Whipple, William Clement, Jr., B911 Armonk, N. Y. Whitcomb, Pemberton, AAKD White, Henry Carleton White, Samuel Charles, X43 Whitelaw, Graham, B911 Whiteside, George Watson, CIJKW' Whitman, M3I'CHS J. Q4 New Hampshire 16 Richardson 25 New Hampshire Evanston, Ill. 11 Hubbard Bujalo, N. Y. 37 Wheeler Rutland, Vt. 19 North Massachusetts Maplewood, N. J. Hinsdale, Ill. Jessup, Pa. Q02 13 Hitchcock 48 Wlheeler 4 College Street Whittinghill, Robert Wilcox, Louis Van Inwegen, AXA Wild, lVIaXwell MacLennan Wilder, Robert Holmes, XCIJ Wile, George Ernest Wilkinson, Ralph Burleigh, AFLP' Vililkinson, Roger Melvin, KE VVilliams, James McKinley, AXP VVilliams, Karl Cedric VVilner, Ellis Henry Winchester, Reuben Stockwell Windsor, George Sherman, W1 VVindsor, John Farist, WY Wise, Crile Nicely Wlolfe, lVIilton Gardner, AAC19 Wolff, Frederic Oscar YVood, James Lounsbery Woodruff, Louis VVheeler, EAE VVoodruff, Robert Coventry, EAE Wormcke, Henry Arthur 'Wylie, John Hunter, CDKLII' Y af-fe, Samuel Young, Ivan 1VIer1-ill, BC-'DH Young, John Potterton Young, Leon Henry, Jr., SAX 1 Zantzinger, John Shc-:aff Zatkin, Nathan Zeller, VVarren Slater, CIJKIP' Ziegler, August Howard, Jr., ECIJE Zimmerman, Charles Joseph Zimmerman, John Charles, Jr., QJEK Zone, Joseph Packtor ,, 1:1 ea, :H ss 3 l Q' Qs Q N. Y ' Tx ..,, V RQ if .X'5B'55uiwuxi 3141Pimffllaffmsaail 141 7 1 Q .3-1-sz?-5 2 I9Cq-..xi- Aw?-xii.--is S-Mhxznl. wy- ' - f .Q 1 5 iv f XK N , 'Q M5 333 i t 994' , ..,, ,4 ..., . 14.1.4 Newton Center, M ass. 26 Sanborn Asbury Park, N. J. 23 Reed Sherburne, N. Y. 9 Sanborn Montpelier, Vt. 1 Thornton New York City 25 Reed illetlzuen, lllass. 14 Maple Street West M edford, M ass. 19 College Ambler, Pa.. 32 Reed Rockford, Ill. 2 North Fayerweather New York City 30 Richardson South Hadley, M ass. 9 Thornton Bridgeport, Conn. Bridgeport, '1Conn. Akron, 0. i Bujalo, N. Y. Lawrence, N. Y. 6 Hallgarten 18 Hallgarten 18 Fayerweather 47 Hitchcock 32 Fayerweather Norwalk, O. 1 Wheeler J oliet, I ll. 21 Hallgarten Joliet, Ill. 9 Hallgarten New H aven, Conn. 1 61 Wheeler Wilkinsburg, Pa. 12 North Fayerweather Brockton, M ass. 19 Hubbard BCH House 15 Hallgaiiten New York City New York City Melrose H ighlands, Iklass. 21 South Nlassachusetts New York City 12 North Fayerweather Stamford, Conn. Philadelphia, Pa. Huntington, N. Y. New Rochelle, N. Brooklyn, N. Y. Stamford, Conn. 22 Hubbard 8 Thornton 19 Thornton 62 Wlheeler 22 Thornton Y. 203 l X 4-lcmmoogursf X If EDI cm. lt - l ?.f Campbell, Clarence James, B. S. Campbell, Ralph Emerson Davidoff, Reuben Benjamin Dudley, Thomas Minot Featherston, Daniel Francis, J r. Felton, Lester Mahan, B. S. Fipphen, Earl Edward Miller, Erwin Curtis lVIunson, Robert Phillips, B. S. Rollins, Henry Brock Shnayerson, Edwin Stickney, John Winslow Van Orden, Thomas Durland Wlethey, Francis Van V echten, Ainsworth, Thomas Hobert Clark, Harold Edward Duyea, Arthur Warren Scedecor, Spencer Storer, Douglas Frederick VValker, Hastings Howland Wilcox, Ernest Hatch ,QBEUUU Esau' M anchcster, N. H. - Ilrlon, N. Y. Waterbury, Conn. Concord, N. H. Deal Beach, N. J. Worcester, M ass. Concord, N. H. M alone, N. Y. Medina, N. Y. Granby, Conn. Paterson, N. J. Ludlow, Vt. Pornpton Lakes, N. H anover, N. H. first Hear Utica, N. Y. Malone, N. Y. Newport, N. H. Blue Point, N. Y. New York City New York City 18 Lebanon Street EAE House 9 West Street 54 YVheeler Isolation Hospital 9 WVest Street 9 West Street 25 Wheeler .13 West Wheelock Street 13 West Wheelock Street 9 West Street 13 West Wheelock Street J. 9 West Street Q The Tavern BCH House 51 Wheeler 25 'School Street EAE House 9 West Street 13 West VVheelock Street Pleasantville, N. Y. 3 Crosby Q04- .fx X X 43 W' 4. ,- E 4 A Q ' l p HQMQLNLYUISK Adams, Robert Emerson, B. S. Arakelian, Joseph, B. S. Ashley, Heber, B. S. Babcock, Carl Arillons, B. S. Clarke, Harold Varney, B. S. Gerrish, Paul Herbert, B. S. Halloran, Paul James, B. S. Ingersoll, Harold Barrett, B. S. Miller, Rudolph Nelson, B. S. Montgomery, William James, B. S. Rayner, George Allan, B. S. Smith, Victor Collins, B. S. Taylor, VValter Napoleon, B. S. Wright, James Howard, B. S. French, Robert Fletcher Kitfield, Philip Hooper McAllaste1', John Parker Winslow, Basil Lee THAYER distant: Bear H cmover, N. H. N ewburyport, M ass. Cheever, N. H. M ilforfl, Conn. Dover, N. H. Haverhill, M Bogota, N. J. English Creek, N. J. New York City New York City Springfield, M ass. H cmover, N. H. Derry, N. H. H olyoke, M ass. ,First Esau? Worcester, M ass. Swampscott, lllass. 1 North Park Street 4 Prospect Street eNorWich, Vt. Bissell Hall 4 Prospect Street AFT' House ECIPE House Bissell Hall Bissell Hall 41fProspect Street 3 College Street 5 Sargent Street 4 Prospect Street 4 Prospect Street E X House BQH House Alcmchester, N. H. 33 North Massachusetts Larone, Me. 205 Xfll House tv 3 - L, . 5, ,-tt, 3. 5.9 5 555-.4 5Q?F12f.Ei'a3 ' 5 95:1 it fi 55 :5-v 421:22-Ra:-11'-fx -,L-:', ': :5::x 'gf'll'3' ' iff, 2 7 1 'I 3 5:2-1. fm 3. ' . A 2 :.,,5E,5.5: Efi5ff?i5f1E:?? , 2 ' Z 22:25-.:.-.Q l 'SSIEYEHIESS 1 Z 5-1-fE::Z1I1:: V 2 A 52211155-55 '.?::s?i511g5z3 i f i :5'2,'?'ggf:Z3,. ww.. 1 Z 1 2, 1 -N-- T ' -, Q-P.f-Zmoxmgguvsif ,, 3 QBEDUU ,Fear Adams, Forest Ray, A. B. Alderman, VVillard VV. Stearns, B. S. Allen, VVilliam VVillsey, A.B. Bliss, Don Carroll, Jr., A.B. Brown, Mott Debilloe, Jr., A.B. Cameron, Henry Madison, B.S. Carleton, Fred Billsbury, A.B. Cohen, Louis Albert, B.S. Crosby, Alden Porter, B.S. Davis, Bradley Nelson, B.S. Emmons, Albert VVoodbury, A.B. Foss, Roland Chester, A.B. i Glover, WVilliam Curtis, A.B. Goss, John Arthur, A.B. Gregory, George, Jr., B.S. Hayes,'RosCoe Arthur, A.B. 4 Keating, John Raymond, A.B. Larmon, Russell Raymond, A.B. Martin, Edward Everett, A.B. Noyes, Edward Roland, A. B. O'Gara, John Edward, B.S. Springfield, Vt. Springfield, M ass. Valley City, No. D. Montclair, N. J. North Troy, N. Y. 35 Albany, N. Y. M inneapolis, M inn. Nashua, N. H. Danoers, M ass. . Newport, Vt. Kennebanh, Me. 35 Rochester, N. H. Lawrence, M ass. Berlin, N. H. New Y orlc City East Pepperell, M ass. West Lebanon, N. H. Chicago, Ill. - North Attleboro, M ass. TUCK 41 South lVIain Street Casque and Gauntlet 41 South lVIain Street 41 South Main Street East VVheelock Street 21a School Street Q7 West Wheelocli St. 34 lVIusgroVe Building 3 lVIaple Street Lyme Road East Wlheelock Street 41 South lVIain Street EX House Q College Street 5 Sargent Place 23 lVIusgrove Building VVest Lebanon, N.H. 10 School Street V Nlaple Street Whitinsoille, M ass. 17 South College Street Hanover, N. H. 27 206 West Wlheelock Street Q1 . Q iq ? vbl. gp 5 RileyLJohn Francis, B.S. Riley, Thomas Joseph, Jr., BS. Sawyer, Sewell Chase, B.S. Sears, Charles Ma1'shall, B. S. Sleeper, Newman Tourtillotte, A.B. VVallis, Robert Norcross, A.B. E , Nashua, N. H. Nashua, N. H. Atlcinson Depot, N. H. Lenox, Mass. Plaistow, N. H. F itchburg, Mass. ,Spatial Qbne igzar Qlnurse Bennett, Homer Carter, A.B. Fish, Robert, B.S. ' Frost, Castleton Pennington, A.B. Gleason, Howard Folsom, B.S. Hesse, Henry Rudolph, B.S. lVIcBride, Robert Steele NIcDonough, Hubert Boniface, Mztlz, Erhardt Fred, A.B. Wloodman, Paul Davis, B.S.,' Allen, Francis Gerould Allen, James Eben, Jr. Allen, John Greenleaf Anderson, Oscar Frederick Andretta, Salvador Antonio Angell, Cyril Nichols, A.B. Arnold, Vernet Arthur Barnes, Aldrich Bramhall Bennett, Philip Edwin Beranek, John George Bernkopf, Harold Eisman Biddle, Charles Wesley e Blaine, Irving Edwin Bradley, James Vernard Brotherhood, John Oliver Buckley, James Wlhitcomb BS. N. my Ffgm-31 lima .57 f it as is L W - .refs - ,FM yn , .,g, Ffalhl 1 um, Q NNW -Paw .f.4 -A: 57-,.'..' l N 9 Wlest Street 9 West Street 4 Prospect Street 3 lVIaple Street 4 Prospect Street Q3 Lebanon Street Medina, 0. Casque and Gauntlet House New York City Casque and Gauntlet House Hanover, N. H. VVest Wheeloclc Street Gleasondale, M ass. 10 School Street New York City 5 VVest South Street Denver, Col. 1Q Reed Manchester, N. H. I Cleveland, 0. 1 North Nlassachusetts Haverhill, Mass. 15 East Wlheelock Street first Fear Kenilworth, I ll. New Bedford, Ma.s.s. 15 Council Bliqfs, I a. F orestville, Conn. - Hartford, Conn. Randolph, Vt. Passaic, N. J. Wellesley Hills, M ass. Lynn, Mass. La Crosse, Wis. Providence, R. I. Carnpton, N. H . N ewport, R. I. 111 anchester, N. H. Brooklyn, N. Y. Worceste'r, M ass. 207 TAC House South Fayerwcather CIJFA House 11910 House 19 Hitchcock Q1 School Street 44 College Street flJAGl House Q1 Crosby 18 Thornton Q0 hlassachusetts SAX House 3 Richardson 44 College Street AKE House 21a School Street AL xxx 3 grgggri g, l.mr Eiggfg SZQM 'TS'---5, ,lnmmwnz ' f' New-gl in Cisrru - . ' f '-,l'x3XMMXYxr wh W .5 up may Q Carr, John Edward Carr, Leslie Gould, Jr. Carter, Joseph Emerson Carter, Wlilliam Ambrose Cate, Allan Miles Crumb, VVallace Raymond Curran, Hugh Grosvener, Jr. Dale, William Holland Davis, LeRoy Stetson Dearborn, Henry Wesley Eastman, Harold Albert, B.S. Eastman, Lawrence Edwards Eaton, Dana Hopkins Farnham, VVillian1 Horatio, Jr. Fielding, VValker Frey, Albert Wesley Fullaway, 'Wilbur lVIorse Gale, Chester Ormsbee Gault, VVarren Stetson Gibson, James Ralph Giflin, Paul Sheldon Hardy, Frank Kenneth Hill, Carroll Eugene Hodgkins, Orsamus Lee Holt, John Walcott Howard, Russell Spencer, RS. Hulbert, William Chester, A.B. Hutchins, Francis Irving Hutchinson, Paul Lockhard Ives, Frederick Parson Johnson, Franklin Dana . Kay, Paul Duckworth . Kilpatrick, Ralph Missel, B.S. Lee, Francis Henry Leonard, Eugene Stone Lombard, lVIarshall Lyman McGougl1ran, Charles Fraser Hoplcinton, Blass. Prfzftsburgh, Pa. Cleveland, O. Sherborne, M ass. Belmont, M ass. F orestville, Conn. Pelham, N. Y. Wllittinsville, M ass. Falmouth, M ass. Groveland, M ass. Berlin, N. H. Portland, Me. Littleton, N. H. Spokane, Wash. Greenwich, N. Y. Lynn, M ass. Omaha, N eb., Wilson, N. Y. Y as so ww -1 .12 Z Q Fgp in 9: lid 'G' Smgpifimmm 59:c'DE 4 ilP4Wg Crm: HE'mimHm5 qggooogqolg weefaeae: 23.53-gomcooci ,. . ,, . AXA House EX House Xfli House KKK House KE House Xfll House X111 House CIDFA House AKE House 'Worcester, M ass. Casque and Gauntlet House Hudson Falls, N. Y. CIJAQ House Keene, N. H. Andover, M ass. Pittsyield, N. H. Roslflndale, M ass. Hartford, Conn. Oslcaloosa, Ia. Springfield, M ass. Elmira, N. Y. Dracut, M ass. BAE House AXA House BAE House EN House ATA House 23 Musgrove Building 411 South Main Street 3 South Fayerweather Cosmos House lllontclair, N. J. llfl' House Portland, Me. Casque and Gauntlet House Framingham, lVIass. QJZK House Oslcaloosa, Ia. .225 Thornton N ashna, N. H. 1 Sanborn Bellows F alls, Vt. Colebroolc, N. H. We.9t Orange, N. J. 208 QAX House .41 South lVIain Street TFA House, 9 1l9?11u 1 5? h e :B , , A ., . 6 . , tiring., V Q my asf?-'N ' f R. . A f' ' S f g., A, Av.. ' 2 . i 4 - ' it il: 'A U -f.f22cA ia:.wf-., ' ,.,, n Q i fl J 'B 5 J Q' . 95 f . xx. ' Black, Selwyn Rogers NIacKay, Donald Clow Nlacomber, George Humphrey Marden, Frederick True Milligan, Lawrence Drake Miner, Robert Jaquith Moore, John Joseph, Jr. Morrill, Olney Smith Nlorse, Robert Flint hlunroe, Stanley lVluller lVIyers, Edwin Earle Newcomer, Stanley Jacob Bl edina, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Nashua, N. H. Concord, N. H. LaGrange, I ll. Bellows Falls, Vt. Newport, R. I. Newport, Vt. Bangor, Ble. J oliet, Ill. H insdale, Ill. Blonroe, M ieh. ZAE House AKE House 34 Musgrove Building EX House . AKE House 6 New Hampshire ATA House 18 South Massachusetts 18 South Massachusetts EAE House AKE House ATA House Newell, Herman 'Wilson Newton, Carl Elbridge Paisley, Robert James Pelletier, James Sedgeley Phillips, Reuel George Pollard, Roland Parker Pope, Roger Wlells Potter, Waldo Butman Powell, James Congdon Prescott, Allen Barnard Richardson, Norman Byron Sackett, George Solomon Shea, VVilliam Patrick Sigler, VVendell Prugh Smith, Arthur Frederick Smith, Lloyd Emerson Southwick, Richard Cheever Spalding, Kenneth lVVOOCll112t11 Stillman, Allen Pratt Stockdale, Arthur VVarren Stoughton, Eliot Frost Sunderland, John Edgerly Sunergren, Ralph Adams Towle, Ralph lVIerrill Tracy, VVilliam Edward Bellefontaine, O. 13 VV est Wheelock Street Somerville, Blass. Casque and Gauntlet House Melrose H ighlands, Blass. 10 School Street Troy, N. Y. ' ZX House Spokane, Wash. Casque and Gauntlet House Proctorsville, Vt. AXA House Swarnpscott, Blass. Xfll House Pittsfeld, N. H. A 11 Richardson Newport, R. I. 16 Hubbard Cleveland, 0. 7 Richardson New York City Casque and Gauntlet House Winsted, Conn. ZClJE-House Holyoke, Blass. 12 South Fayerweather Dayton, 0. KZAE House Clarendon, Vt. 5 Massachusetts Brooklyn, N. Y. Cosmos House Beverly, M ass. Casque and Gauntlet House Brooklyn, N. Y. X111 House Fairhaven, Blass. ECDE House Toledo, O. Casque and Gauntlet House Claremont, N. H. EN House Omaha, Neb. AACIJ House Hanover, M ass. KKK House St. Paul, Blinn. 14 Reed Bristol, Conn. 6 College 209 A? XX x I f , 5-7 liv I I ,.,. I V .1214-.zgae 4I,. W .-., : VUAL G? FE X H ' D ' llli e .ge-. Trent, Francis Elmer Turner, VVarren Osman Ungar, Leo Maurice Vail, James David, Jr. ,, fl , 1 Q,,Q ll' ,. K ' . V .F , H Toledo, O. 1 KZ House Claremont, N. H. AXA House Council Blufs, Ia. Q0 lVIassacl1usetts Evanston, I ll. CDA House Lynn, M ass. Xfll House Vincent, George Frank VVallace, Eben White, Harold Ashley Whitney, Ralph Kimball Whitney, Russell Willard, Leslie Trott Rochester, N. H. Casque and Gauntlet House Springfield, M ass. V 62 North Massachusetts Goshen, N. H. A 27 New Hampshire Goshen, N. H. Q7 New Hampshire Worcester, M ass. Cosmos House 210 ,ry - 1.91 fl 2 , 34 2 1 '52, 5' A ' V i ? U A .:- , ., , P' 'ii '1 s o .ff fraternities at Eartmnuth 3511 QBriJet uf ffstahlisbmznt at ZBartmuutb Psi Upsilon Delta Tau Delta Kappa Kappa Kappa Chi Phi Alpha Delta Phi Phi Sigma Kappa Delta Kappa Epsilon Kappa Sigma Theta Delta Chi Phi Delta Theta Beta Theta Pi Sigma Chi Phi Kappa Psi Phi Gamma Delta Iota Sigma Upsilon ilural Sunietp Cosmos Club P fflllehttal Society Alph Kappa Kappa ZBehatii1g Qncietp Delta Sigma Rho Svcientifin Qutietp Gamma Alpha - Euurnalistic Qnrietp Pi Delta Epsilon 211 Sigma Nu Sigma. Alpha Epsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon Lambda ChiiAlpha Alpha Chi Rho Delta Gamma Psi First row: Ball, E. H. Johnson, Anderson, Ives, Terry, Barber, Frederick, Hopkins. Second row: Pierce, Richardson, Nlorrell, Davidson, Ankeny, Marshall, Harvey, Leonard. Third row: Crumb,vF.'D. Johnson, Curts, Dewey, Ryan, Jordan, Reber, Gooding, Warden Fourth rowg Hotchkiss, Bartlett, lVIa.lla.ry, Mann, Chamberlain, Richart, Curran, Moore. Fifth row: P. A. Johnson, Bishop, E. B. Taylor, VVa,gner, J. L. T aylor, Kingsbury, Keyes. PSI, UPSILON K , ,199 Utlpsilnn Zeta Qlbapter ' Qlieaitaiulissbeh 1842 bk Lum S WMWW I-0694+ 4 TSW 'soma 47 'mfg , . . . 4 x ' 1 - f -'-'45 aff, ,. - , Y 11 ,Q 5- , Jvh. H- .J1w'yE 'fha 114' .51 A 1 . iw , , - 1 Fi .Q .':-DL 'I' ' iz? 15: A. .. r . 4' v, Q- r-..::..w.:...-.-.1-...xi E ff-. ll '- f A 19 ,li , W. ., , I ' ...QW ,q I -f- 5, f77fIEZ90b9 Wallace Raymond Crumb Hugh Grosvenor Curran, Jr. Oscar Frederick Anderson Warren Miller Chamberlain Maurice Adams Dewey Arthur Faitoute Gooding DeWalt H0smer,Ankeny W'illiam Hodgkinson Barber Benjamin Lee Bishop Leroy Fallis Ball Robert Learned Bartlett Charles Wilson Curts Alfred Edward Davidson, J1'. Harold Waldron' Frederick John Carlin Allen James Philip Deering, J1'. James Sherman Doyle John Edward Foster Joseph Clarke Houston, Jr. George Joseph Jaeger, Jr. Jfratres in Buntutihuz' Prof. E. J. Bartlett Prof. C. P. Clark Prof. E. F. Clark . Prof. R. Fletcher Prof. L. S. Hastings Mr. H. E. Keyes Prof. F. J. Neef Dr. YV. J. Tucker Inst. W. B. Pressey :lfratres in Zflinihersitate 1919 Briard Noble Greeley Frederick Parson Ives Thayer Kingsbury 1920 Nlurray Cheever Harvey Franklin Dana Johnson Paul Aaron Johnson I 1921 Conrad Saxe Keyes Eugene Wlebster Leonard Raymond DeWitt Mallary 1922 Charles Stephen Hopkins Eugene Hotchkiss Edwin Hoyt Johnson William Dewey Mann Andrew Marshall, Qnd George Thomson Moore 1923 Walker Leach Arthur Foster Little Robert King Lewis Robert Phares Merridith Lloyd Kellock Neidlinger Robert Phillips Munson Alexander Scott VVarden John Zachariah Jordan James Valentine Reber Norman Byron Richardson' VVilliam John Ryan William Rufus Richart, Jr. William Erwin Terry Everett Bailey Taylor lVilliam Alfred Nlorrell WVilliam Brown Pierce Thomas Harold Pinney John Leveridge Taylor, -3rd Leslie WVagner T George Lauderdale Plant Howard Duryea Sammis Ralph Brown Staley Stuart Summers , George Vanderhoef Vanderbilt John Farist lVindsor , ZZ. QI3 First row: Wilde, Flewelling, Byrne, Clough, Morgan, Grant,eSn1ith, Noyes, Townsend, Upjohn Second row: Hamilton, Carpenter, Carter, Bullen, Kopf, Lombard, Dudley, Coakley, Leith, Allen, Howe. Third row: Trull, Burroughs, Cobleigh, Chilcott, Brown, Hall, Atherton, Sunergren, Clark, Crisp,'S1nitl'v Fourth row: Gault, Burroughs, Childs, Sprague, Lane, Lindsey, VVerden, Mix, Anderson, Beattie. KAPPA KAPPA. KAPPA F Zfiappa kappa kappa J ESTABLISHED me K K fl :Ifratres in Eucturihus M06 4auM ' pi H 2.91 fe f 'V x. ff' ,P57'Tifa:..'.fQf .La ' .39 efril f i - 1. , f - ,uw-f:,:, if-J . 1:53 - o difii . I. 1,4 S V 4 . nr-Q f- -L' ' ' ' ' ' ,,'l,-M4-Vr fa.. 1 nz- :wee -25 A We 1 4 -M, ,A U ,' , .,, Q' K , ,v TL.. -x .tow 7 8342, 4 :W aa 'f :sew ' ow:i'.,.f1.: -1, William Willsey Allen Ralph Royal Britton James Cunningham Bingham Henry Nelson Browne James Coe Chilcott Thomas Minot Dudley Dana Hopkins Eaton John Hillis Anderson Gordon Dobson Beattie Robert Philips Burroughs Charles Randall Childs Norman VVilliam Crisp Ned Bliss Allen Blaylock Atherton V Wilbur VVarren Bulle11 Thomas John Byrne Thomas Saunders Carpenter, Jr. John Hamilton Burroughs Donald Edward Cobleigh Henry Miles Cutler Prof. F. P. Emory Prof. J. H. Gerould Prof. J. NI, Gile Prof. J. P. Richardson Prof. W. C. Shaw Prof. T. W. D. WVorthen Mr. F. Low Mr. T. E. Steward jfratres in Yltinihersitate Fred Pillsbury Carleton Harold Varney Clarke Edward Everett 1VIartin 1920 Warren Stetson Gault VVilliam Chase Grant Harry Estie Reynolds Hall Joseph Bridges Lindsey, Jr Marshall Lyman Lombard 1921 Howard Lloyd Flewelling Thomas Hope GriHEith Joseph Hilliard Lane Dayton Barnet 1VIiller Donald Guernsey Mix Hermon Bemis Noyes 19292 William Edgar Carter, Jr. Malcolm Dexter Clarke Arthur Joseph Coakley Hiram Bedford Crosby, Jr. James Alexander Hamilton 1923 Sherman Main Clough ' 1fVallis Eastburn Howe, J1'. Hull Platt Maynard Frederick Adolf Muehleck 215 John Francis Reilly Thomas Joseph Reilly, Jr. Paul Gordon Richter Hibbard John Richter Ralph Adams Sunergren Albert Kelvin Smith l lfVilliam Graves Townsend Gerald Edward O'Shea Harold Holmes Smith Harold Avidia Trull VVade Werden Roger Conant Wilde Frank Harding Horan Walter Henry Kopf Eaton Leith Winthrop Rodgers Ranney 1VIorrill Goodwin 'Sprague William Moss Morgan, Jr. Edward Sumner Pratt James Robert Upjohn First row: Jegerson, Lundquist, Baldwin, Straight, VVl1ll1COIIfb, Wackerhagen, Lynch. Second row: Ryder, Rogers, Sunderland, Kohl, Tracy, Ege, Yuill, Nicholson. Third row: Booth, Gardner, Freeman, McKay, Bristol, Shepherd, Rothschild, Tracy, Sewall Fourth row: Stewart, McKinley, Cleveland, Patterson, Holland, Moody, Bassett, Smith. Fifth row: Pollard, Mills, Stanley, Wallace,'Pyott, Duffy, Holt, VVolfe, J. Taylor, H. Taylor ALPHA DELTA PHI 1' 5 19 1 li X Ni' .4 . ara-L,q. -.,: ,,-, P . iEQgQL?T,J H y a:+Z?g:wil '1iiiEi5ag, ' 5 H ' Qlpba Brita bi . Q ZlBartmuutiJ Gbapter QEstahIisIJelJ 1846 x 'B 'Gill I 1 L 'Q-QQ J 4 f N N w x 3 , , . , Y f ' p QL, '1g,:, -1.- 4 mag. LX A 'D 1-: . X , 1 , , av- if I . egg. . 1.3 'J i ,., Q, LQ Qjy,-v ' .Y f Q3 Y- q '-'ui co' J ,fb 3 1 I W :LH-I N' :lx :Ifratres in Eucturihus rl-Of. G. Campbell Prof. C. F. Emerson Prof. W. R. Gray I Prof. A. Hardy Jfratres in Qlirhe Edmund Hendershot Booth Robert Fish Jlftatres in Zltinihersitatz Philip Tracy Kohl Wentzle Ruml, Jr. Donald Austin Rogers Clark Davis Bassett Thomas V ose Cleveland Warren Stilson Ege Charles Robert Freeman Robert Plues Booth Clark Bill Bristol Sherman Baldwin Ralph Edward Duffy Kerchival Rogers Holt - Roland Alfred Jefferson Almon Gustavus Lundquist Edward Bernard Lynch 1920 John Edgerly Sunderland William Edward Tracy 1921 Elmer Valentine Gardner Hugh Middleton McKay Kent Schuyler McKinley Robert Henry Patterson Daniel Franklin Ryder IQQQ Henry Osgood Holland, Jrl James Alfred Moody lVill Faust Nicholson 1923 Miles Moe Mills Joseph Greeley Pollard James Middleton Pyott James Prescott Stanley Harold Henry Streight 217 Ralph lvilliam Yuill 1 Ryland Julian Rothschild Julian Gordon Shepherd Eli Cole Smith -Byron Owens Sewall Nlead Stewart Francis Vincent Tracy Horace Frederick Taylor, Jr. John Deuel Taylor Edward Northrop Wackernagen Wlilliam Healey Wallace Pemberton Whitcomb Milton Gardner Wolfe l First row: Richardson, Smith, Reed, Bertch, McKown, Little, Hudson, Lewinsohn,-Jones, Kimball, Lee, Chamberlain, Osborne, Calder. Second row: Saunders, Garvey, A. Curtis, Bowler, Sherman, V. Shoup, Orth, Jackson, Reed, YVeed, Petot. Third row: Storer, Shaw, D. Sample, Mott, Burton, J. Hasbrook, Embree, Haight, Kelly, Barnett, Carleton, Sharp. Fourth row: Cutler, Murphy, Gorham, Tenney, Merriam, hi. Shoup. ' ' Fifth row: Band, Gale, Caunele, Robertson, Potter, Thompson, Myers, Sample. l Sixth row: Dorney, Brotherhood, Bower, Cogswell, Malz, MacKay, Curtis, Roberts, Milligan, Cody, Celce, Chandler, Gruenhagen, E Hasbrook. ' DELTA KAPPA EPSILON 1 ., X -- 4-'ff--1 Iv -.lxxxex ,of X X' X xx 1 alta kappa QEp5iIun . 1'Bi Qlibaptet Qlistahlishelm 1852 F jfratrzs in Eunturihus Dr. E. M. Hopkins Dean C. Laycock Prof. G. D. Lord Prof. F. P. Lord A . A 1' 'o o - Dr. P. nor-uoa P1-of. C. A. P1-oorof 45, Prof. J. F. Colby Kretireclb Prof. H. R. 'Wellman :fy K pq, .jg Dr. G. D. Frost Inst. L. F. Murch Lf? I gjlff A Prof. D. Lambuth Inst. VV. B. Pierce GJ ..,' ' -..-' - ul.. f . ' 'J A , f . , ,L A.A.. , .gf jfratres m Tllirhe 5 - D1-. H. col-loooo V, I C. P. Chase ' ' 49.96. 6461 F. F. Parker V 59 C. W. Spears- Jackson Livingston Cannell Frederick 1fVilliam Celce Lewis Faucher Cody John Oliver Brotherhood Horatio Henry Chandler Edward Munroe Curtis , John Francis Dorney James Philip Bower Harvey Burton Gerald Eugene Cutler .John William Embree, Jr. Standish Bradford Gorham Laurence Theodore Barnett Richard Bowler - John Porter Carleton Alonzo Griffin Curtis J olm WVidman Bertch Charles Alexander Calder John Randolph Chamberlin Henry William Hudson, Jr. Louis Lewinsohn .ilftatres in Mnihersitate Erharcl Fred Nlaltz 1919 Guy Edward Cogswcll Cllester Ormsbee Gale 1920 Dewey Frederic Gruenhagen Edward Francis Hasbrobk, Jr. Donald Hugh Clow MacKay ' Edwin Earle Nlyers 1 Ralph Sceva Roberts 1921 Sherman F urber Haight John Van Arnberg Hasbrook, Qnd Edgar Ellsworth Kelly V ' Gordon Phelps Merriam Paul Edward Mott John Thomas Murphy 1922 Stanley Sayre Jackson Leonard James Orth Edward Everett Petot Ralph Thurston Reid Maurice Saunders, Jr. 1923 John Lee Little, Jr. Paul Freese McKown Halsey Huxham Mills James Morris Osborne Walter Leland Jones VVilliam VVallace Kimball W ro sf! W 'Ml-up if 520 ac -va-4: Hrs- '--...1-- ........,.----1 - PM H154-'-:neo ' 1 A ' 'V' S ,wr H.-fa -Q-:,4q.j., 1 -33 ' ,n j-1-or-fri - Life v,1:M5': -1-' , -J. '!f:' 2- A . . s . 2 . 'A 4-1.1-':ffu:.,.f f -2 -x .vr-A-4.1 1 vw . -,'-'uw 2,1 ,La -lf.-:'fhy7f.' . 1 'r . ' 5:32,--,s',o wg-S f:: 1'-,....1.'-L, .CH Y'-4'fy 1i.- .ro .J-GLS' 1 Q A131 'i1J'CT'1 no -mr'--1, A - mf:fe.'f.f.1H .- 4,-of 'wi '1,go.x':2.: -5. -1 'L' 5 -I P , -' e our . 5. -mg. Q , 1 ' ' ff :f r --'cj -we 'E .1 - :faux - lr ,oe - or V' , l- .- . ' ' vfafila -'V an 14 VL 1'-af - . V q a-vw-gi 14 5 . me-.-.ir -.s...o het - .M X Y. I ... f.-e-1,L:-o- 'i--ff' qt 219 Lawrence Drake Milligan Russell Hayward Potter, Jr. George VVilson Rand, Qnd James Earl Robertson Paul Starrell Sample v Gerald Starr Stone Earl Thomson Donald Madden Sample .Joseph Shaw Merrill Edgar Shoup ' Douglas Frederick Storer Benjamin Tenney, Jr. Lucius Booth Sherman, Jr. Edward Leslie Sharp Verner Reed Shoup George WV. 1Veed ' Walter Hazelton Kurtz John Henry Lee Carl Norton Reed. Donald Paul Richardson Taylor Smith First row: Bowen, Harris, Emory, Davidson, Leonard, llV3.ll3,C6,-.G0OdHOWX', Whitaker, Hight. X Second row: G. Plumb, Austin, Gunnison, Baker, Sweet, Eaton, Caldwell, Belknap, Fleet, S. Plumb Third row: Moore, Maroney, Fuller, Young, Frost, Aborn, Hart, Boyd, Prince. Fourth rowg 0'Connor, Brooks, Fay, Bird, Bolles, Kimball, Conley, VViCker, Marsden, Nutten. ' THBTA DELTA CHI 1920 Edmund James Bowen UIIJ.-zta alta fllbi QEstahIisiJeh 1869 jfratres m Euctutihusr Prof. C D. Adams N- 1 rof. H. D. Foster A 1 AL ja Prof. J. M. Poor jfratet IU Tllirhe QBmi:run Bauman libarge ' ' fx if as . P i -ii? ' ,1 N IJ f xl . A 5 ! V Q1 , Q Q C 'V John P. Bowler frzkglggujk Rim, TES.. ,, ff exam' U Charles WVesley Biddle Horace Gilman Hawks Thomas Burleigh Davidson Kenneth Pike Emory Ingham Chamberlain Baker Paul Carpenter Belknap Harold Atchinson Bolles Bert Elias Eckberg Clarence Cooper Fleet John Russell Aborn James Anthony Austin Augustus Pollack,Boyd Wellington Lord Caldwell George Warren Bird Lawrence Bickford Brooks Harold Harvey Conley Austin Choate Eaton Charles Norman Fay jfratres in illinibersitate ' Henry Edward Maroney Hugh Gordon Mullen Clark Edward Ingraham George Adams Fiske Charles Hastings Goodnow 1921 Owen Carlisle Frost George Blanchard Harris, Jr. Richard Hubbard Hart 1fVilliam Hoyt Marsden VVesley L. N utten, Jr. 1922 VVilliarn Gray Dodds Arvin Gunnison Robert Ellsworth Hight Philip'GriHin Kimball Gordon Dresser Plumb 1923 George Spence Fuller Edgar Davis Hoag ' John VValter Johnston, 2nd Payson Angell Jones Eugene Stone Leonard Eben Wallace Howard VV hitaker v VVilliam Jennings Bryan O'Connor Samuel VValter Plumb, Jr. Walter Goodwin Prince Ross Almore Shepardson James Compton Wicker Oscar Raymond Rice, Jr. Lawrence Forristall Snow Donald Adams Sweet Philip Henry Threshie VVilliam Powers Kell, Jr. VValter Keefe Maroney Henry Sproat Moore Edward Wells Petersk Leon Henry Young 221 First row: Hellwig, Flannigan, Smith, Gibson, Antrim, Vail, Leonharol,,Gascoigne, G. Sawyer. Second row: Boyer, Snyder, Walker, Dyer, L. Ruder, Cunningham, Harvey, R. Ruder, Goulding, Ferguson Third row: King, Bird, Norcross, Mays, Gladstone, K. Hayes, Blake, Kilmarx, McKelvey, Perry. Fourth row: R. Hayes, Nlesquita, Shea, ,Conrad,'Allen, Barnes, Stewart, Howard, McKoan, llflontgomery, Fifth row: Newell, Burke, Billings, Nliner, Evans, C. Sawyer, Bundy, Brooks, Alpaugh. PHI DELTA THETA bi Belts Qliheta Alisha Ziaampsbire Qlpba Qihapter ..s. .. . vu .. , ,-.. K . 1, J J ,,, ,X 11, , '-.,fa+..f, -11 . 'A fi' fs 1-f. ,N--,-is p gil F R? ,rfigif A Francis Gerould Allen Elijah VVilliam Cunningham H. Stanley Antrim Aldrich Bramhall Barnes Roger Parkhurst Bird Raymond Mortimer Gascoigne Lorin Daniels Goulding, Jr. Bailey Dawson Berry, Jr. Wilfred Kennedy Blake VVendell Edward Boyer Karl Brooks , Fredericlc Wilbur Dyer Chester Theodore Alpaugh Raymond MacKay Billings Charles LeGrand Bundy Charles Francis Burke William Lindsay Conrad jfratzt in Bnrturihuz Prof. A. B. llfleservey jfratres in Ulirhe A. P. Fairfield E. H. Hunter F. A. Nlusgrovc jfrattes in Tllinibersitate Roscoe Arthur Hayes ' 1 Russell Spencer Howard Ernest Rudolph Leonhard 19.26 James Ralph Gibson 1921 Robert Steele McBride Robert 'Wakefield NIcKelvey Mario de Mesquita Thomas ,Colburn Norcross 1922 Hardy Smith Ferguson, Jr. Ellis Marshall Haryey, Jr. Kent Birch Hayes Sumner Dudley Kilmarx John William McKoan, Jr. 1923 Luther Hill Elliott Willis Calvin Evans Sydney Joseph F lanigau VVar1'en Hamilton Gladstone Theodore Augustus Hellwig, Jr. QE5talJIi5lJe7J 1884 William James Montgomery Albert Rudolph Stewart Herman Wilson Newell James David Vail, Jr. , Ralph Emerson Ruder A Newell Couch Smith Hastings Howland Walker Stanley Ringfree Miner Lucius Scott Ruder Willard Gilbert Sawyer John Joseph Shea Charles Alden Vosc Lyman Beers King Gay Mitchell May V Theodore Richardson Miner Charles ,VVilton Sawyer ' Edward Courtland Snyder l Y ' ff . ' ' -K -x. . Q .fin . .-.,. wwf, . ,.,. .,: ,,-fi .e. -. Li a- J ' 'l 'il fuf -1' 'A l' 2:5 1 ff' . ' . f yj '. . W K: - ---.. -..WA .- ,' '. - ' I. ..,. 1 3 3:51-' , . '--+ - 'lwfe . ,,L. ' QUT if . . .' 223 First row: Malmquist, Whitelaw, Whipple, Haviland, Durivan, Kavinaux, Howard, O'Brien, Cullen, Collar, Millar Second row: Wilson, Henderson, McConnell, Spotts, McCasky, Young, Malmquist, Robinson, Brooks. Third row: Stevens, Elder, Anderson, Forman, King, Hartshorn, Hodgdon, Clark, Ruggles. V Fourth row: Chamberlain, Exnicios, Vance, Fisher, Breglio. ' Fifth row: Charlock, Ainsworth, Baketel, Bruce, Morey, Kitfield, Sheldon. Sixth row: Kimball, Rutherford, Raible, Hutchinson, Long. ' BETA THETA Pl Qlpija QBmzga Qllbapter at .TF -. 5. sal . if , . g 2. fi. 1 s ,,l,l'ii lin 3 1 rl, lhfw W IL Eg . -rw! .usf.'s..,gfW,,u,, DQ, L fi. 9. v H N i'1 i 1 li rl fu ,.,,v .sf ,, Q r , ,gy . Richard WVestervelt Hutchinson Byron Southland Long Thomas Hobart Ainsworth Harry Sheridan Baketel, Jr. Vincent Anthony Breglio Arthur Vincent Anderson Wilson Christian Beers George Harry Chamberlaine ' Charles Granden Brooks, Jr. George Edward Carmody Robert Judson Clark Jay Charles Elder Robert Chappell Gunnell Thomas Hen1'y Cullen, Jr Robert Landreth Coller Thomas Paul Durivan Esta Ulibnta i9i -Jftatrzs in Euctrihus Prof. F. NI. Anderson Prof. N. L. Goodrich Prof. H. T. Moo1'e Prof. A. H. Washburn Jfnsttzs in Zllirhe S. Chase H. G. Pender Dr. A. H. Ranney A. D. Storrs Jfratres in Tllinihersitate Charles Grief 'Raible 1920 L Earl Harrington Bruce Richard Wesley Charloek 1921 K Ma1'shall Orme Exnicios ,Y Ellwood Huff Fisher George Cristopher Forman Theodore Dunlap Hartshorn 19292 Laurens Livingston Henderson Frank Trowbridge Hogdon, lr. Daniel YVhite Kincaid ' Eric Carl lVIalmquist Ralph Patterson McCasky , 1923 James Orville Kavanaugh Harold Carl Malmquist ' Thomas Stokes lWeConnell VVilliarn Alexander Nlerchant Joseph Ambler Shoemaker Millar Charles Herbert Haviland Charles Nicholas Howard 4. Gistahlisbeh 1889 Scott Vititow Rutherford Samuel Sheldon, Jr. Richard Shepard Kimball Philip Hooper Kitlield Frank Bprockett Morey ' Lloyd S. King Daniel Blaisdell Ruggles, Jr. Joseph Anderson Vance, Jr. Stuart Leese Robinson . Rufus LaCroix Stevens Ralph Lewis Spotts, Jr. Benjamin VVild Wilson Ivan Merrill Young John Walter O'Brien, Jr. Alfred Pieree, Jr. Leland Reed Smith VVilliam Clement VVhipple, Jr Graham VVhitelaw '. .. 1' ' X ,111,4'j':11??- 1 yi 4 ' 4 ' AML! EX - '. -. i 'if i171Zf '4Q fi l f V 5 - , , fe' 45 1-- .-.., r S . - , - fu QT - ii 5 -V .Ff Y-. Z 2-T Z' '. I , I . -.-7. ,.,,.v , J H -..-W. pa. ' ..,, - , , , ,. - fp:-e f-' rf ,X 225 First row: Cary, J. R. Townsend, Codding, N. L. Smith, Higgins, 'Mille1', Cavis, Price, Brisbin, YV. J. Aschenbach. Second row: Meier, Estes, Carr, H. C. Robinson,--Clements, Healey,.Tho1nas,.Carpenter, Caswell, Pelletier, L. J. Van Orclen. Third row: Hurd, YVylde, Ripley, Halsey, Younglove, French, Blunt, Parke-s,lSixiers, Merritt. Fourth row: Hutchins, Jones, Couch, Lundegren, E. S. Townsend, Sabin, C. G. -Ascheiibach, White, Marden, McClintock, Pilsbury Fifth rows: Riley, Gooclnow, Noyes, NIcPherson,fFuller, Scammon, Billings, Nleans, YV. B. Smith Sherwood, Cate, Nlarcy. ' B SIGMA CHI 1 Gifts Gita Qllbapter 'HT' af' my ima nit sex ', ' 1 ev: ., 1g -' .N A, as Eiaail QEZEH' H5193 ,ZETEQI Y-ff .news ..:..1-fs or ggam magma f - '-24' . - 5 T, 'Q' f 1' 'J 'J E.4 w I7 Wat! 'Z' . Frank Paul Clements Robert Fletcher French Edward Francis Healey Wesley Gould Carr. Jr. Alan Miles Cate Clinton Partridge Cary George Chandler Cavis William Arthur Codding Kemp Goodloe Fuller Russell Jarvis Goodnow, Jr. Walter Tristram Lundegren Walter Joy Aschenbach. Jr. Russell Campbell Barton John Ellsworth Blunt, 3rd Cyril Gaffy Aschenbach Roger Billings Frederick Harrison Caswell Clifford Duval Couch, Jr. Sigma Qibi :Ifratres in Bucturihus Prof. F. E. Austin Prof. C. E. Bolser Prof. C. A. Holden jfratres in iltlrhe J. Pelletier P. R. Bugbee Wi. C. Glover E. R. Noyes R. N. Miller :lfrattes in Utlniherssfitate William Vincent Higgins Alan Porter Jones 1920 Frederic True Marden lllelville Mei'1'itt l9Ql A Edward Gosman Halsey, Jr. VVilliam Lake lVIarcy, J1'. Wfilliam Starrett Mc-Clintock, John Ringo Means Edward Simpson Price John Henry Riley Hubert George Ripley, Jr. IQQQ Lansing Gaylord Brisbin Robert Leland Carpenter Thomas Rowan Coughlin Edward Arthur Laycock 1923 Kenneth Badger Hurd Paul Aiken Hutchins Carrol YVright McPherson William lVIiller Parkes J QEstah Iisbzh 1893 Frederick Lee Nolan Elmer Knapp Pilsbury Edward Simpson Townsend Thomas Durland Van Orden Harold Ashley White Dudley Bell Robinson James North Sabin Nelson Lee Smith Elmer Wadsworth Stewart Marion Wiley Sherwood 1 Kenneth Henry Thomas George Victor MacDer!mott Paul Harmon Spiers Robert Norton Younglove Henson Charles Robinson George Richard Scammon Walter Bradley Smith 5 James Richard Townsend 227 First row: Zeller, Dodd, Richmond, VVhiteside, McLeran, Corwin, Stockdale, Litchard, Duffy, Stetson. Second row: Bennett, Carter, Hamilton, Bornman, Buell, Haigh, '1'a5lor,, Carpenter, Hubbell, Heeson. Third row: Smith, Wylie, Bingham, NIcCabe, Brown, Robinson, Weston, Ford, VVhittier, Bliss. Fourth row: Swartzbaugh, Whiteside, Spiel, Carlisle, Sanderson, Maze, Maynard, Ferguson, Cleary, Hoyt, Bunnell - PHI KAPPA PSI I 1921 . i9bi kappa si 53611 ilaampfbirz QIPIJH Qlihaprer misrahlisbeh 1896 f x jtattes in Eucturihus J fini ,gi-.1- GDT ' iii 'ifZ7l.A7E 'iE:5v Oscar Bowen Gilbert -I 3f , : W , : 1 z Raymond Robb Marsden Louis Dayton Stilwell , Jffafef in mth? j Charles Howard Dudley jfratres I11 Zllinlbersltate William Wakefield Stearns Alderman Harold Coburn Avery John Edward O'Gara Homer Carter Bennett 1920 Ralph Severson Hayes Donald Ogden McLeran Herbert Smith Duffy Nathaniel Henry Whiteside, Jri . s. Frederick Daniels Bornman Homer John Cleary Vinton Charles Corwin Sylvester Hinckley Bingham V Wilbur James Bunnell David Manning Camp Herman Locke Carlisle Gorham Bliss Howard Bryden Brown Harold Clark Buell Russell Phelps Carpenter Macauley Carter George Wells Ferguson John William Hubbell Corydon Karr Litchard 1992 A John Doty Dodd Carter Harriman Hoyt James Samuel Nlaze . 1923 f Burton Lincoln Ford Frederick Dwight Haigh George William Hamilton George Engfer Heesen James Milton h1cCabe Stanford Church Richmond Leroy Evans Maynard Paul Graves Sanderson Russell Hurd Whittier Jere Long Robinson Spencer Franklin Smith George Ferdinand Spiel Richard Pratt Stetson Lester Fayette Stevens, Jr. Ted Blackford Swartzbaugh James Thomas Taylor George Fred VVeston John Hunter VVylie George Watson Whiteside - 229 First row: Potter, Cotner, Catterall, Southwick, Fowler, Fullaway, Elliott, Allen, Whelden, Grunclman, Fleming. Second row: McGoughran, Olsen, Bradish, Crane, Parker, Dettenborn, Sanders, Gwinn, Albee, Stiles. Third row: Grarnbs, Baker, E. E. Pope, Fletcher, E. P. Pope, Fermoyle, Turnbull, Tobin, lVIcCoun, Watson, Nluhlenburg Fourth row: Meehan, VVanamaker, Paisley, Leverone, Goss, Turnbull, Jones, Ross, Beggs, Doten, DllCI'0. ' FHI- GAMMA DELTA 'l John Greenleaf Allen I ZJBeIta Eu Qlibapter if I in ' 1 I fl lf' 1 : ms - 5.1.1 - -:-ff 'M ki' '-af'-1-.-.ef re!-. 1 4-13 ', H955 Gliu Q-911' ',-1.3-3' -I 4261, 3.1 lf fl 1 ,ffl ff' , f M at f Jai 1,-ff lug I 2.5-1: . ::f,1'..' W '--Q-,Q-Z fzfg-iff' ,Q 1 ,Q or 4 'ls 5' P fXvKo1'df'0 Russell Murray Cotner Roscoe Osborne Elliott Ralph Greenleaf Baker Rudolph Pickett Blesh Alan Dean Catterall Joseph Arnold Fraser Robert Francis Bradish Norman Tompkins Crane Lewis Franklin Dettenbo1'n, Jr. George Edward Eucro, Jr. Arlon Dadmun Albee Morrison Smylie Beggs Franklin Ford Doten Norman Francis Fermoyle Morton Woodbury Fletcher i,BIJi gamma alta :Ifr attes in Bnctutihus X Prof. P. S. Dow Prof. R. H. Jordan Prof. C. R. Lingley Prof. W. H. Murray Prof Prof . S. G. Patterson . W. K. Wright Jftatet in Ulirhe Russel Raymond Larmon jfratres in Ulinihztsitate 19Q0 4E5tahIi5hzb 1901 Herbert Paul 'Fleming John Gardner Fowler Wilbur Morse Fullaway war Valentine Rock Grundnian Orton Havergal Hicks Ben Hurst Potter IQQQ Granville Wfentworth Grambs Lawrence Paul Leverone, Jr. Leonard Preston McCoun Henry Hiester lifluhlenberg Herluf Vaugh Olsen 1923 Archie Ralph Giroux Parker Sprague Goss Wlalter Yvilliam Gwinn Hugh Brandom Jones John Ryder Meehan Charles Fraser McGoughran Robert James Paisley Richard Cheever Southwick w Frank Artell Ross, Jr. SClarence Whitney Sanderson,Jr. Charles Noyes Stiles Benjamin Marsh Whelden A Everett .Gordon Richardson Donald Jerome Tobin Robert Parker Turnbull Clifton Edwin Watson John Stahl 'Paisley Elmer Donald Pope Ernest Everett Pope Leonard Ferguson Turnbull C Percy VVeston VVanamaker , if fvgjiy if H H .zwww-s sf My M Eg fe.,,v -i, 1 , mi-4' ll? 4 i 1 ' 'XE ' . f ,M ,,.,: f 1,,,1- f' +44 N ,- X .' A I Eff' I- 1. 7. Q i w X X l 'LK T' . rg. , N w 'f If f .- ,, wwf- ' . 1. ,322 'T 1' f Q! ,: 'f.--r- J '. '- ,' . ,. Vw. f- -.,..,.,' .11 Av Et 1.1 --2L'1F,3f5 i'?. . , A, A .J ff' 55 ' ,Q 1 - ' --- .. : - vw4g:7:A....r,,,m N is-L, -7 .Q -HV U ., . 1' .f 'g ' .11 f' Trim Sigftfzisr f I -' fill ' , . an -J-Wim 2.1. gal. 55. 4. , 4 1 ., -4 25 r- N'f2. ,:,Liifz2'.- ' '1 gi. .4 TX I '? C 'E?F 'A' f ar , ' f '-fir, .L ll s .1 Q.. , . f, .- f ,, 14 41555 , H '34 M55 . I lfh -. -:,ssm.1:L '-- ,W H . - ll 5,52 . - sth--N- - - 1' 231 First row: Spencer, Newcomb, A. Green, Brown, Sinclair, Tillsong McPa,rtlin, Robinson. Second row: Holt, Bixby, SussdorH, Pearson, Newcomer, J. Moore, VVeis,, Horton, S. Green, Needs. Third row: Perry, D. MO01'G, Temple, Harcly, Heed, Forbes, Schulte, Elliot, Heep, VosBurgh. Fourth row: Burgess, Patch, MacDonald, Marean, D. Griffin, Clark, F riencl, Gluek, Fuller, Holmes. Fifth row: Streng, Hubert, Mine1', G, Grif'HnL Crarnpton, Sweney, Nfartin, Innes, Hauser, Stanley, hIcMillan 1 DELTA TAU DELTA alta Qian alta . Gamma Qeamma Qflbaptzr Qggfahlggbgh 1901 Z iuhtglil S rr 1 1 V , Xfh iu .',efQN3E6.?fw. lx 1.1-Elfll ' -li' iiifigg E'- f 3 T5q.FESra,QS' S 4 ' g 3 Leland Curtis Bixby John Wolcott Holt Roger Ashton Horton Raymond- Francis McPartlin Warren Pomeroy Clark Neil Fitch Forbes Darwin Jay Fuller Robert Burgess, Jr. Alfred Remick Crampton Gerald Gordon GriHin Donald Carr Griffin Louis August Gluek Glendon Mandeville Elliot Walter Alonzo Friend Francis Xavier Heep Walter Robbins Holmes Jfratres in Bucturihus Prof. N. E. Gilbert Prof. C. H. Forsythe jfratres in T11-inihzrsitate Chandler Woolson Brown David Sherman Green 1990 John!Joseph Moo1'e, Jr. Stanley Jacob Newcomer Richard Metcalf Pearson William Hewetson Sinclair 1921 Alfred Morgan Green Robert Murray MacDonald Reginald Bodley Miner 1VIillard VVa.rner Newcomb L 1929 John Alexander Hardy Bertram Julius Hauser Templeton Martin Innes John Stearns Johnson Robert Weile Needs 1923 Malcolm Doisy Hubert Walter Winchester Martin Robert Livingston McMillan Maurice Richard Robinson VVilliam Henry SussdorH Ernest Francis Tillson ' Erwin Theodo1'e Weis Roger Dean Patch V William Hartwell Perry William Henry Spencer Thomas Bernard John,Quinn Matthew Nloralee Schulte George Aloysius Stanley, Jr. George VVilliam Streng Van Vleck Hempstead Vosliurgli Donald Robinson Moore David Clifford Reed f Chesley Leonard Sweney ' Wlinfield Leroy Temple l Q33 .,. , First row: Bruning, Scaling, Read, Sanchez, VVhite, Sparhawk, C. Palmer. Second row: M. Jones, Willard, Busher, Page, Kendall, C. Jones, Carder, Alley, Fielding, Frederic-ks Third row: Helmer, Akey, Barnes, YV. Smith, Lindsay, Swezey, Hockenson, Hallett, J. Jones Fourth row: Henderson, Winslow, VVilder,lHawkins, Pope, Owen, Eastman, Phillips, Spaulding. Fifth row: McAdams, Meleny, B. Palmer, Heath, Frost, Frey, Norton. Nicholson, Gregory. 1 CHI PHI ' Cllbi iBIJi Qllbi Qlfjapter QE5tahIi5iJnz7J 1902 , , , V - Jfrater m Bunturxhus 'm?E,idH5?5iMQ :fQ?QH, .x'v P.f G B 7 , ,J ' 10 ' ' ' Jug , 4: ' 'f-11 , ':im 4-M '--:11- - -:ver -2 ' a .594 Lawrence Edward Eastman Walker Fielding Albert Wesley Frey Russell Baxter Henderson Edwin Blair Lindsay William McKinley Alley Richard Moses Barnes Robert William Elsasser Earl Weston Carder Justus Millard Fleming Clifford Joseph Akey George Dewey Busher Hartley Caldwell Theodore Smith Barstow Joseph Henry Bruning John Alfred Coyle Dudley William Lloyd Hawkins Oscar Randolph Hockenson Charles Henry Jones, Jr. Jfratres in Tlkiniheraitate George Gregory A Mount Stephen WVillard 1920 George Everett Page, Jr. Roger VVells Pope Kenneth Woodman Spaulding 1921 Steffen Midclleboe Frederiksen George Loring Frost Borden Helmer James Gault Jones IQQQ Earl Weatherston Fredericks Andrew MeClary Heath Donald Payne Hallett 19223 Matthew Grant Jones George Leher Meleney Leif Behrend N orstrand Brooks Palmer Charles Albert Palmer George Wadsworth Owen Wade Warren Smith' Carroll 1V1iddleton Sw ezeyw George Frank Vincent Basil Lee Wvinslow Robert Goulding Kendall William Terry McAdams Paul Nicholson Donald Frederick Sawyer Jolm Lawrence Sullivan C John Nathaniel- Norton Charles Wfilliam Rivoire Sam Sparhawk John Miner Read Charles Albert Sanchez Charles VVilliam 'Scaling Robert Adams Smith , 7 Samuel Charles White Robert Holmes Wilder Elmer Isaac Phillips 1 235 First row: Carter, Stark, Metzel, Breen, Carver, Hamilton, Andretta, Carter, Thyberg. Second row: Kenyon, Baldwin, Stearns, Jpdy, Hurlburt, Prentiss, Hight, Hurley, Hutchins, Youngstrom. Third row: Garland, Mairs, Cooley, Barnett, Gallagher, Henderson, Morse, Durham. , ' ' Fourth row: Lowe, Kelsey, VVelch, Hill, Bacl1elVViig, Winters, Hutchins, Folger, Canfield, Lawrence. Fifth row: McClure, Rahnanop, Bowen, Holbrook, McAllaste1', Farnham, Kimball, Harding, McMillan, Schulting 'I , . PHI SIGMA KAPPA fbi Sigma kappa Qian Qllhaptet Qhitahlisijeh 1905 I ,. , grey Jfratres in Encturiteus' Daniel Francis Featherstou Salvadore Antonio Andretta Vernet Arthur Arnold James Bernard Bradley William Ambrose Carter John Everett Hill Carl Oli Bache-Wiig, Jr. David Cummings Bowen Joseph Butler Folger, Jr. Harvey Baxter Garland J ohn Jacob Ackerman Robert Arthur Baldwin Charles Elliot Canfield Nicholas Albert Andretta Harold Lincoln Barnett Thomas George Breen, Jr. James Noel Brown Dupree Allen Carter Nathan Pendleton Carver Charles Byron Cooley John Franklin Durham 1 Prof. C. A. Phillips Mr. W. Patten N r. H. F. Dunham :Ftattzs in Tllinihersitate 1920 Caryl Francis Holbrook John Browning Hurlbut Francis Irving Hutchins Paul Duckworth 'Kay John Parker McAllaster Hermon George McMillaii 1921 Elmer Pruce Harper Frank Richard Hill William Francis Kearns, Jr Raymond Whitman Kelsey Stanley Donald Lawrence 1992 Frank Asbury Hutchins James Albert Judie, Jr. Stephen Maslen Kenyon f 1923 John Ripley Farnham Donald Groy Gallagher Silas Elwin Hamilton Lyman Curtis Harding Robert Leroy Height George Victor Henderson Thomas George Herbert James Edmund Hurley El 5535. Adolf -'l rederick Youngstrom Benjamin Pearson, Jr. John William Prentiss James William Stark Richard Edwin lfllelsh ' Robert Clark Winters Lloyd Elmer Lowe Herman William Schulting George Jonathan Thyberg Harold Lincoln Weld Kenneth Play Libbey John Rector' Salmonseu Stewart .Persons Stearns Philip Edwin Kimball David Kelso Mairs Howard Edward McClure Truman Thwing Metzell Leonard Henshaw Morse , Walter Boudinot Rahmanop , Howard Franklin 'Sherman John Charles Zimmerman, Jr 9237 First row: Btu-kef, Marshall, Decker, Hall, Phillips,,Pearson, McMahon, Sonnenberg, Connelly, Hawes. Second row: Fenderson, Farnham, Wilkinson, Millemann, Sliipton, Campbell, Earle, Covalt, Hurd, Staley- Third row: Sackett, Bruckner, Norris, Walker, Moriarty, Brown, Powers, Marsh, Trent, Prof. Tapley. Fourth row: Corbet, Boggess, Rippel, Gauss, Bourne, Johnson, Cravens, S., Horne, H. Horne. V Fifth row: Donahue, Kerlin, Cook, Ferguson, McCarthy, Hanlon, Healy, Smith, Everett, McDuHee 7 ' KAPPA SIGMA Gamma Epsilon flihapter fi Q, X , Mg '-51141121 Naymwifwmmwrufw we ,.-' HF- :f's'iff f t X ghMMvWMW4W m'ww'Wwa 3 753, wr2..Hf- .-,,. g isl9'Q:g5.f' , .. ,Q . J :fi ,. 'Lf l !'L ' ,. kk vfzlwfwfgf. f a s HW LWL. If . ,qw - ..?-l,,fu:1. XX .ra ,aww ,ff..'5. J -sa '1WWWNQdW 4ff! e 9 J ,,, , . .- . Lili ,XX - W 'il' J Rf if .fmffll-1 ' X .- fdlltafiiillk- XX, jf X11 in--.s..,,.:f iff? N-53 K 'AB- ' William Horatio Farnham, Jr. Kendrick Elwell F enderson Stephen VVilliam Johnson VVilliam Grogan MCMZLl1Oll Nelson Waite Barker Luke Boggess John Clifford Campbell Harry Bruckner Byron LeRoy Covalt James Rorick Cravens Harold Conrad Decker Charles Wood Earle .Howard .Russell Bartlett Henry Thayer Bourne Leroy Taylor Brown James Bartley Connelly ' Hugh Carroll Donahue Ziiaprpa Qigma Jfratres in Eustnribus Prof. W. A. Robinson Mr. G. H. Tapley Jfratres in Qlirbe A. P. Crosby C. M. Sears, Jr. jfratrzs in illinihersitats John Francis Moriarty Charles Henry Norris Dana Edmund Pearson Reuel George Phillips 1921 Lovell Hewitt Cook Clif'l'ord Cole Corbet George Wlashington Fergus 1922 VVillia1n lvinston Hall Francis Anthony Hanlon Clyde Lawrence Healey Samuel Philip Horne V George VVilliam McCarthy .,19Q3 Arthur MansfieldQEverit Erwin Wood Gauss Valentine Peyton Hawes Herbert Quimby Horne Charles Kenneth Hurd on, Jr. 239 egrahlisnen 1905 James Congdon Powell Arthur Dana Powers Gustave Sonnenberg Francis Elmer Trent Lewis James Kerlin Joseph Johnston Schultz Y Thomas Weldon Staley John McDuffee George Henry Clay Marsh 4 Raymond James Millemann George Leslie Sackett Waldo Harvey Shipton Arthur Leonard Marshall Julius Alexander Rippel Philip Franklin Smith Howard Raymond Walker Roger Melvin WVilkinson First row: Stoughton, Morrill, A, Palmer,,Tho1'nso115Hodgkins, Craqthern, Buschmann, Second row: Parkes, Winkler, C. F.'Ha.1't, Kadison, Alger, Stanley, E. Palmer, Wetherby Third row: Kilmartin, Carbaugli, Norton, Almy, Curry, Keith, Neary. Fourth row: Mor1'issey, Morrison, Corrigan, Broadley, Kershaw, WVeser, C. E. Hart. SIGMA NU bigma u ZBeIAta Meta Qllijapter p QE5tahIisbe7J 1908 REV' '.'1 xx- ,.,, X -- mf V t s ale W ' 1' Elmer Joseph Palmer Arthur Irving Palmer John Hoge Bedford John Frederick Buschmann Charles Frank Hill Crathern, Rudolphus Porter Alger Clifford Francis Hart Samuel Louis Chevalier Charles Edwin Hart Frank Sanford Almy George Harold Broadley Eugene Carbaugh, Jr. lVilliam Botsford Corrigan Jr. Jfratres in Mnihersitate John Kleber Wetherby 1920 Vtlilliam Dallet F uguet Orsamus Lee Hodgkins Olney Smith Morrill 1921 Norman Kadison Edwin Warren Little Page Reginald Sylvester Parks 1922 Leonard Eugene Morrissey William James Neary, Jr. Raymond Leon Rambach 19Q3 Frank Douglas CLu'ry, Jr. Henry Meiggs Keith, 3rd Richard Bement Kershaw Willard Francis Smith Eliot Frost Stoughton William Holbrook Nelson Alton Staples Palmer Arthur Drew Thomson George Lauriat Reynolds, Jr. A Gordon Storey Stanley f Stephen Hamilton Tredennick Charles Joseph Winkler, Jr. Thomas Joseph Kilmartin, Jr. Charles John Ntorrison , Thomas Lowell Norton lrVinfield Scott WVeser, Jr. 241 First row: Blanpied, N elson, Freeman, Rogers, Mack, Hopkins, Putney, Clewell, Moulton. Second row: Kerwin, McMackin, VV. Dale, Varian, Bowen, Munroe, J. Dale, Anger, Coe, Woods. Third row: Dow, Bausher, Emmons, WVorth, Hall, Sigler, Snedecor, Campbell, Miller, Wood, H. Q. Moore Fourth row: Piper, Mitchell, Beveridge, C, YV. Moore, Rolfe, Hill, Lies, Burnham, Stahl, Ayers, WC3gV6I'. Fifth row: Shattuck, Stewart, Garnsey, Shem, lVI. F. Johnson, Owen, R. F. Johnson, Gifhn, Potter, Perry. 1 l- A SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Y Sigma Qlpba QEpsiIun ,asm aaampgnire alpha angapra emhlignen woe 27--lm: fr' Rini fx, X 1 Q. jab? d9.N. ev lfgiq AQ jftater in ZIBm:tnrihuz ss-ff, ,15 5- ',:,i,' : -atm.: , Prof. A. J. Scarlet t. Jr. 3 A . -- OM ki gh, f. wil If ' on 4. Z -yjfnr-wi gf gqr J 1 elifmay gawo l+'rede1'ic'k Augustus Hlanpied Mott Devilloe Brown Llewellyn Sherman Adams Benjamin Waldo Ayres, Jr. Ralph Emerson Campbell Harold Edward Clark William Holland Dale Charles Truman Garnsey Howard Charles Anger Jeremiah Lee Bausher Joshua Dale Malcolm Fisher Johnson Ralph Adams Franklin'Hazelton Dow Harry Myers Griswold ltiehard Freeman Johnson Wendell Hazelton Beveridge Carl Hulbert Bowen J ames Low Coe T1 ' in 'lil' A-ff 'Sgr ,r'pf 92. WWE? , ,ggi Fig! 52 legpwy jftattess in Tllinihersitate George Eugene Clark Albert Woodbury Emmons 1920 Paul Sheldon Giffin Carroll Eugene Hill Selwyn Rogers Mack Erwin Curtis Nliller Francis George Moulton Stanley Muller Monroe Waldo Butman Potter 1921 Charles Carlin Kerwin lvilliams Lies, Jr. Clarence Vllillarrl Moore Thomas Carleton Elmore M 1922 James William Nelson Wlilliain Richard Perry Yvinthrop DeForest Piper Russell Gordon Putney 1923 Edward Baldwin Hopkins Harold Quentine Moore James VVilliam Wleaver Maurice Aiken Hall Ralph lylissel Kilpatrick Stanley Hankins Rogers lVendall Prugh Sigler ' Spencer Snedeeor ' Erie Camp Stahl Charles Winslow Tucker Irving HarryWorth John Perry lllitchell lVilliam Henry Owen, Jr. Richard Symonds Rolfe eMaekin Wilbur Crawford Varian George Everett Shattuck Van Alan Shem John Clark lvood Joseph Blair VVoods Lewis Wheeler fvlloodruff Henry Edmund Freeman Kenneth Robert Stewart 243 First row: YV. Haas, Lloyd, Sargent, Sackett, Stillman, Bowerman, McKenzie, Demond, Al1non,,G. Haas Second row: Tayntor, Davis, Lindsay, Waite, Bray, Briggs, Taylor, Nardi, DeGroH:. Third row: Richwagen, Densmore, Dwight, ,C. Dodge, Suttmeier, Lyon, Almy, Livermore. Fourth row: Hayes, Henry, Siegfried, Ziegler, Daly. Trainer, Dix, Keigher. ' , T SIGMA PHI EPSILON Sigma fbi Epsilon 313.2533 iiaampsbire Qibapter Qistahlisbeh 1909 i' aafggjdfx. i, ,!iEjfl. I ll I t ' M459 si . i-'4e,:,i.:r 5 , F-2 'I.,l.':.-f,i-llziiifflll , lg ,1,T:n,I3if13laif!f?3iLall .Y , ,, we., .,4, - , 542, 'WX' Efygili lfvfii Paul Bowerman Chester Whiting Demond Harrison Winthrop Dwight Durward Schaufler DeGroHi Ellis Ormsbee Briggs Emory Curtis Corbin Howard Power Almon Robert Forbes Alrny John Campbell Bray William Warren Cummings, William Gregory Haas Roger Conant Carlton Wilbur Stanislaus Daley James Walker Dodge Cecil Fitzhugh Gordon Jfrattes in ZIBunturihusz Associate Dean R. W. Husband Professor H. N. Kinsgford Mr. F. S. Page Mr. B. C. Shackford jftatrzs in Tltlrhe Harold Barrett Ingersoll Victor Collins Smith Don Carrol Bliss, Jr. Harold Albert Eastman William Chester Hulbert Paul James Halloran Jftattes in Tlkinihersitate 1920 George Albert Haas Clarence Albert Lloyd Charles Wallace McKenzie George Solomon Sackett 1921 Hilton Rowley Campbell Seth Albert Densmore VVallace Kinney Harding Harold Lincoln Miller 1922 Carroll Dwight Kenneth WViggins'Linclsay Albert Thomson Lyon Lester Edmund Richwagen Nehemiah Osborne Siegfried 1923 , John Wood Gordon Dwight Luther Granger John Harkins ' Roy John Hayes Charles Henry Sargent, Jr. Allen Pratt Stillman John Vroornan Wilkie Lawrence John Nardi A James Werneken Taylor David Woolsey Trainer, Jr. K' Christopher Emil Suttmeier Harold Hutchins Tayntor Evan Albiro Woodward August Howard Ziegler, Jr. Law1'encc Albert Waite W-illiam Mills Henry Philip Joseph Keigher ' George Robert McKee Nathan Whitney Wlatson 245 I First row: Rassieur, Turner, Higgins, Herbert, Bixby, R. G. Pollard, Rowe, Carr, P. Noyes, Roberts. Second row: Chadbourne, Smith, Canada, Allen, Hardy, Jolinspnulylerrialn, Dickinson, Wlilcox, F. Reed. Third row: Clarkson, Seiler, H. Reed, Burch, R. P. Pollard, Glines, Wlallacre, Humphreys, F. Noyes, Peters LAMBDA CHI ALPHA A 7 C Zllbeta Qibapter lUHmfI , N .Q J Ll?-L,.-.,..,-.fj'f.,, A .1Mif sxfQ J4 If .,. J, .,. .W 5 .W 'mf' ' 1 1 l'i,,.4v. . M.- -fn Q.: ,'1fqf-'lyfxpfwgg' lv illlyid, .ga '4 ,wifjmfll-' Q . -'rigs'-.1 y--.iv-,Q V 3 7-3. Gly if E741 lg? 1? J '--': .--wif ' jf-fi . 1 it ., .,., il' Q , ..-,--A John Howard Carr Paul Mc-Arthur Canada Lawrence Wormsted Clarkson Roland Cheswell Batehelder Charlton Frost Johnson Arthur John Higgins Harland Alfred Chadliourne Ceeil Hamilton Goldbeck Philip Collis Humphreys Chesley Tasker Bixby Thomas Louis Burch Roger Henry Dickinson Efiamhha Qibi Qlpba Jfratrez in ZlBunturihu5 Prof. L. B. Richardson H. M. Cllarlwc-ll :Ifratres in Ulirhe Sewall Chase Sawyer Newman Tourtillot te Sleeper glfrattes in Qtlniherzitate Percival Nlazon Allen l9Q0 Thomas Jefferson Glines Clayton Morey Wallace Frank Kenneth Hardy 1921 John Herbert, Jr. 1922 Frederick Willis Noyes Paul Seward Peters Benjamin Franklin Rassieur 1923 Francis Nixon Nlerriam, Jr. Frederick Homer Reed Russell Colby Roberts Qhitahlisbeh 1914 Rowland Parker Pollard Samuel Somerville Stratton Warren Osmon Tnrneiz Philip Allen Noyes Roy Gale Pollard Howard xVilllZ1IH Reed Edgar Cecil Rowe Eugene Oscar Seiler Harold Keith Wellman William Charles Strong Ernest Clement Smith Ijouis Van Inwegen Wilqox 217 First row: Livermore, Merriam, Bates, Libby, Childs, Oliver, Caldwell, Vllilson. Second row: Bailey, Stadlinger, Klaren, Harold, Carver, Gilson, Baldensperger. Third row: Rayner, Moreau, Morse, Bull, VVeare, Rosnell, A. F. Smith, Tifft. Fourth roui: Bidwell, Stoner, Williaihs, VValkers, Forbush, Wallis, Beach, Felton, Pfeiffer 2 ALPHA CHI RHO 1991 , il' ., A ' 4- ni ,M FIN!!! , . mm ..:,.! iwlf' V, A flgp, iii' it X1 ixximx X X N all ,' W E -f tx.. ' Mi YU QSFESQQ i 1 ' A K W N l , I M' ,- f it 5 , 4-' X L 4' n- .f ' 5 of 'V 1' 35:1 N ,gi fi- . '- j1,1, 'f,f,,',,:1 ' ei, .iw 'X 1, -' hu , h .V 54' if n I n e '5 Zllpba Cllbi ilkbu iam gan euapm A egrahlfsmn 1919 J t-H if .7 :lfratres in Burturihus Prof. Frank M. Morgan Inst. Harwood L. Childs Inst. John E. Rosnell I 1 . .. Ve as , 5: X . Q T '1'H,A, ' 52. 1.9 5.j :i1.J-K2 1 , - I. , . , A A 5 f mv xv at an 1 ,Xb f ,, ,W 1 A 5 5 Aw 1 2 wi s W i ,A 65, X4 J .5 as gt? . ' '- 1 EQ ' ' . x-fe r ' l fs, .J 1 fgx. ' ,ix h , V! E135 ,. . Q ij hw, glfratres in illinihzrsitate Lester Mahan Felton George Alan Rayner Robert Norcross Wallis, Jr. . 1990 ' Arthur Frederick Smith Harold Frederick Bidwell Charles Roger Bailey Norman Francis Carver John Hubbell Fitzgibbon Charles Packard Gilson Edward Graham Bates Edward Carrington Bull, Jr. Arthur Frederick Baldensperger Francis Joseph Beach Dallas Harry Forbush Richard Armstrong Libby Theodore Eames Merriam Charles Ellis Moreau 1922 ' Kenneth Richardson Caldwell Shaw Livermore b Herman Schoenau Oliver 1923 Melbourne Prime Harold Karl Otis Klaren Donald Cushing Morse 249 Lowell French Stoner 1 Lewellyn DeVVolfe Smith Joseph Alcott Walker Robert Francis VVilson, Jr, Edward Furman Pfeiffer John Stephen Weare Karl Peter Stadlinger Eugene Wliiting Gay Tifft James McKinley Williams First row: Riddle, -Woodhouse, Ardiff, Steinbrecher, Loring, Curtis. Second row: Hazeltine, Lambert, Stevens, Stetson, Billings, Rice, Wilkinson. Third row: Gerrish, Acker, Rockefeller, Allen, Sullivan, Shattuck, Daly, Fullerton Fourth row: Dodge, Wfatson, Springborn, Raynor, Griifm, Townsend, Wadsworth, DELTA GAMMA PSI NA NW Q A f , . he . V 1- .fvvfc i,'44' ' ' ' f f X, f l -' 2 ' -Ana:a2.3fi5?3i2m..N ' ,,..Af-fgzyww. - ' 2 .James Eben Allen, Jr. Robert Thomas Daly Frank Lester Lambert Albert Clayton Acker Elmer Francis Ardiff George Morton Billings Laurence Morse Curtis Walter Clarence Dodge George MacFarland Fullerton alta Gamma 1593! Esmisrrsrren 1919 Jfratres in Enntnrihus Prof. B. D. Beetle Prof. G. Bill Harold Goddard Rugg, Inst. Charles L. Stone jfratres in Qlinihzrsitate Paul Herbert Gerrish 1920 William Bergen Sullivan 1921 Harland Frank Manchester Albert Henkel Steinbreeher Maurice Halbert Stetson 192Q John Criley Hazeltine Julian Capen Loring Howard Will Shattuck 1923 A John Thomas Griffin Clinton Stewart Rayner Charles Burroughs Rice V , ugjri ' f 'f1 2,1 I ' D M ggi! .,,. i .,.. -VNV - if I Q51 Charles Henry Stevens, Jr. Maurice Brainerd Toivnsend John Crawford Wfoodhouse F Ralph Callow Springhorn John Baker Wadsworth Hollis Lee Riddle, Jr. Howard Rockefeller 'Henry Brock' 'Wats6n, Jr. Ralph Burleigh Wilkinson First row: R. K. VVhitney,'Loeb, Weymouth, Professor Wood,.lJeBoutillier, Campbell, Shepard Second row: Holway, Cheney, Smith, Miner, Farwell, Hitchcock. ' Third row: Kattwinkely, Bailey, R. WVhitney, Davis, Ingrahm, Frost, Perkins. ' IOTA SIGMA UPSILON K A35 19 Elliott Ward Cheney Robert Reo Farwell James VVhitney Frost Russell Bailey George Breed Davis Lawrence Carroll Campbell John Thomas Ingram, Jr. Wk NN W X i glllllllllll I , gf . i'1aQ.,jlY 'lv' ll. xx J' . k- maxim I , ?5iiQ:ii'. 'U .J fb A i Q. Q1 ' 5 , A c f at ,II r'i 'Q M, f5WhWUQguxwm X , AN 'AD Egg f 1. LJ - fee H i v ,v Elura Sigma Epsilon ESTABLISHED 1920 frater in Bucturihus William Hamilton Wood n glfratres in Yilinihersitate 1920 'Charles LeBoutillie1' Robert Jaquith Miner 1921 Howard Alfred Hitchcock 1922 Egon Emil Kattwinkel Joseph Staniford Perkins 253 Burdette Earlton Weymouth Russell VVhitney Ralph Kimball VVhitney Lowell Hoyt Holway Robert Leopold Loeb ' Horace Leon Shepardf Jr. Merritt Louis Smith x First row: Amsden, Hutchinson, WViIlard, Professor Vifhite, Jones, Fipphen, Syvertson, Bradley, Davis, Smith Second row: Johnson, Perkins, Bean, Bradley, Lawler, Plume, Brucker, Smead. V Third row: French, iVIa,CNa,1nara, Ames, Braman, Lenci, Leighton, Fogg, VVhite, Severance. i . COSMOS o ? x if L for it in it IV Na f tlt x .. ,. -' ,.f'h - H V -J .,f,.. ,Q ,,.,,,, ' Yi jf ' . - LJ BXX 6 V , , f BUG' John Page Anisden 'l'udor Whiton llrzulley Lcndzill livnns Davis Rowland llarnes French Kcuriclc Vlzxrlc llczxn Harold l?l'C'1ll'I'lCli lIl'2I,lllill1 Allen Gilbert limiley llnlph Vincent llI'llI!liC1' Joseph Sidney Cohen David Morse Ames: Cinszmus Iuh ES'1'AI3LISIfI14ZD 1915 Jftater in Buntnrihus Leonard Dupee White fifratrez in Urine RZ1,j'lT10I1f.l Lathrop llzu'rcl.t Mortimer FI'C1I10l1t, Coon jfratres in Tflinihersitate 1920 l'f:u'l Eclwaml Frippcii lllisley Henry Jones Hubert Edward Johnson 19521 lVul Lei' Rogers Hellsliau' Sumner Augustus PK1'l'lill1S David Scott Plume lem C,'zu'roll Jzunes Lawler Lloyd Clark Fogg Paul LoL'l4zL1'L i'II,ltCl1i1'1S0l1 Lloyd lflmerson Smith N Roll' Christiztn Syvertscn Lesley Trott Wlillzlrd V' . Otis Chase S0vcrz1.11c'c Jnnies Lawton Sinead Stanley Willard White ,lll101112lS Alonzo Lenci. Jr Etlwzircl Francis lNlcN iLl1liLl 1 1 Philip Henry Leighton 1923 - 5 'C af? A A if 1 if .1 if Q J , ....1 ifwllfi , czf l ti v-, ,' ,.5',.l',., l - 4 - ' '-Lk r v- . 'f :5T'.2 2 - fgelfr 32, 255 4 Eg. ' . ' o , 4 i. 'i' '1' I ' t d b' i s f, , Qlpba Qllbapter F . J' ' st '91,-:T vflaal 'iffggl l,,:g , nf. -' I ll' 1: 'firm if , , 4, Asif? ' W V v Vail QP 5 J EW .V iii? i 'Z 1 .,- 9: Embm . A Ire:-A.. Ralph Emerson Campbell Reuben Benjamin Davidoff Thomas Minot Dudley Thomas Hobart Ainsworth Harold Edward Clark Qlpha kappa Zkappa jfratres in ZBnctnrihus Percy Bartlett, A. B., M.D. Edwin Julius Bartlettg A.M., M.D. John William Bowler, M.D. Elmer Howard Carleton, A.B., M.D. Gilman Dubois Frost, A.B., M.D. John Martin Gile, A.M., M,D. Howard Nelson Kingsford, A.M., M.D. Jfrater in lllirhe Charles Howard Dudley jftatres in Tltinihftsitate 1922 Daniel Francis F eatherston, Jr. Erwin Curtis Miller 1923 Arthur VVarren Duryca Spencer Snedecor Douglas Frederick Storer 256 flfistahlisijzh 1888 Henry Brock Rollins Edwin Shnayerson John VVinslow Stickney Hastings Howard W alkcr Ernest Hatch Wilcox , - . a . . f aiel 1 , ,A,, ' ,, 31BartmuutiJ Gligapter 'mb . 1 Harold Eisiman Bcrnkopf Troycr Steele Anderson llaskcll llieman Cohn Betta Sigma SKIJU Jfratres in ZJBucturihu5 Dean Vravcn Laycock Prof. Arthur Bond Mescrvey Prof. Warren Choate Shaw Prof. Leonard Dupce Wlhitc Inst. Harwood Lawrence Childs flftater in Tllirhe Ralph Richardson ,fratres in Qlinihetsitatz ' 1920 Francis George Moulton Herman Wlilson Newell 1921 Standish Bradford Gorham 1922 George Ftlward llrooks 19Q3 Hartley Mchlullin Caldwell 257 Qlistahlizdbeh 1910 5 Samuel Somerville Stratton George Erlwarcl Carmodx' Thomas Harold Pinncy AvA JS- ll an jipi M 1 , 3331. Ruhr in W in ,l Q . lb Q Qlpha 319.11 Qllhaptcr David SllCl'lll2il'l Green 1iIil,1'1'.Y Sheridan Bal-zctel, Jr Edward Munroc Curtis Francis Irving Hutchins Paul Carpenter Belknap Rudolph Pickett Blesh Herrick Brown Daniel Blaisdcll Rug I , get :air-gl ' ffl' ' W YQ iBi alta Epsilon l Jfrater in Qlelrhe Tom Groves Qifitahliiijeh 1918 Jfratres in Qlinihersitate Albert Rudolph Stewart 1920 Eugene Stone Leonard R2lyl110llKl Francis McPartlin John Joseph Moo1'c, Jr. Richard Metcalf Pearson 1921 Warren Pomeroy Clark Alfred Morgan Green Orton Havergal Hicks Alexander Scott lvarden Ralph Sccva Roberts' Arthur NVELITCI1 Stockdale Carroll Middleton Swezey V CllHl'lCS Carlin Kerwin Gordon Phelps Merriam Edu d Q' J . far . nnpson 1 rice gles. Jr. Donald Frederick Sawyer 258 Sfninr Snriviiw fi?- W gf?-H+-:ii W' ,erggf 4. A M E .V..r,,, J . ga m y ' A' 4 . i' ' J ' ' - H Sphinx J X754 I nf 1-its jg JW' f f2aQ , E 1.,,v . M tg. my ,,1 ,gf1'mH .J ,,. :5, ' ' l.v:g4g.1,- :ff ,. ':VH:1,,, -.3 14, Ii' if .ii 5 32' '7 ' 51 w- Wgvy ,, , ' 472' fF4j,'-gfw.:4-..,, , . ,CZ- -i'1'f ' ?e1...,f 'Q ' -2' A-1 ' M i?' Sifffi-?f3.'1ff3H5 i'L'55ifl'?'-5l- W. '- '- -r , ' JJ' J '5'-1i63E2?',u7ETc3:-ff1...i if-.' - , - . 1- ' wif--J4-fl 55,127 - Wg! 5.474317 ,W X, ,- 7E'wi'fiW:'Fg.-1. .f, we Jr,-:ff f 4 2 ff. ' .mg K ' .,,u2'3::2:g.gQQ1 -E -' , .1 L Harry Sheridan Baketel, Jr. Jackson Livingston Cannell James Coe Chilcott Louis Faucher Cody Guy Edward Cogswell Thomas Burleigh Davidson Dana Hopkins Eaton .Chester Ormsbee Gale Robert James Paisley 261 Charles' Hastings Goodnow William Vincent Higgins Clark Edward Ingraham Charles Fraser McGoughran Donald Hugh Clow MacKay Henry Edward Maroney Edwin Earle lVIyers Stanley Jacob Newcomer , .,AQ . .,:--,,, zgksw , A 'L ' ' ' 'A 'Q ' '1 ' A ' '9 , i il f :A ,L Z 5 l,q . if V.5 ZQ3s,Xj ,S f. yy ,A1,l:A E, ai! M A Qiasque anhbauntlet Thomas Hobart Ainsworth Harold Coburn Avery Earl Harrington Bruce Elijah VVilliam Cunningham Roscoe Osborne Elliott Albert Wesley Frey Warren Stetson Gault Briard Noble Greeley Frederick Barton Hamm Edward Francis Healey, Jr. Caryl Francis Holbrook Frederick Parson Ives Franklin Dana Johnson vm 3 F if 0 A wt,g J 31191 fwgd Vg 5 f ' 1, 7' +aaraan - 1' ,q qfnf V' pf.. ' ,fm yi 1 ,.' j--.gg -rug: 3 if ,,awtarmnai I f iw sf ., f,raawaaaaUa+ -LMI I. ,, N 111 f31?'l4?'7Lfrfy.,,,IE,,v -is F ,uf-'r,,:,,,-,aft .awgvv-y,. , ' 'i,'sv '-fl ,rffrlfafiw , 1 3 2 . 17- f ,aa'W , his -hi w t i 'ji f- vim,-4: John iachariah Jordan Carl Elbridge Newton Reuel George Phillips John William Prentiss Norman Byron Richardson Cyrus Cole Rounseville, Jr Paul Starrett Sample Richard Cheever Southwick Arthur Wlarren Stockdale Earl Thomson Eben WVallace Alexander Scott lVarden Richard Prosser Watts Adolph Frederick Youngstrom 263 J A3 ,s , A A 19 1 ' ' N Et- ff f is f a A isi , b t'ef-'fs X ,ish , -. ,awffaa ia li i , 545 'w,-q.s',.w .,,p- i-me F 9 , YM Jigs 'J 3' 1' 344 I .3 iw ,L Q wr' wb 3.035 Salvadore Antonio Andretta Leland Curtis Bixby Vincent Anthony Breglio Richard Wesley Charlock Frank Paul Clements Hugh Grosvenor Curran, Jr. Maurice Adams Dewey Daniel Francis Featherston, Jr. Murray Cheever Harvey Roscoe Arthur Haye Richard VVestervelt Hutchinson x,XN4!mMaZff Sf L John Hargrove Joseph Lappen Ernest Rudolph Leonhard William Grogan MCMah011 John Joseph Moo1'e, Jr. Frank Brockett lVIorey Hugh Gordan lVIulleh Richard lVIetcalf Pearson James Valentine Reber Richard Thomas Sisk Albert Rudolph Stewart Gerald Starr Stone Albert Francis VVylde 265 1 v. Q ' l - , l E i i xl' Buuenh iliuhin M,4 Nl mf W X ofa I yr g I' I , 5 fini asf- 1 .f f' A W 2 fr-'Wm N f if'3VNE ,V 194 jg Mg., Q . -1 ,I -.,,3f,u. f 5 334- If . 1, 'f ', . ,- .ff ,nz A, . .- . 1 vi.: 1 ,, Lf.,45f,- 4 - 1 if ,. , . ff. fl. f - . ' V , fbi, ' ' A Q 'Q E, X- , , X W ieniur literary iucietp Harold Eisman Bernkopf William Paul Bowerman Joseph Hillyer Brewer Wiarren lVIille1' Chamberlain Elijah Wlilliam Cunningham Alexander Scott lvarden , Q66 Edward lVIunroe Cnrtis Philip Tracy Kohl Edwin Blair Lindsay Lawrence Drake Milligan Albert Rudolph Stewart ji' r , F' Q w B Balm Harold Eisrnan Bernkopf Richard Wlesley Charlock .James Coe Chilcott Dana Hopkins Eaton Roscoe Osborne Elliott Francis Irving Hutchins Raymond Francis lVIcPartlin John .ioseph Moore, Jr. Qminrnn gamma CQ ' IF' A' 26 7 Stanley Jacob Newcomer Richard Metcalf Pearson John William Prentiss Norman Byron Richardson Richard Cheever Southwick Arthur Wa1'ren Stockdale James David Vail, Jr. Nathaniel Henry Whiteside ,. I fax -A V, :. Q..i, A - Q , , J, if M fl i f J , im J W gh 'I 0 Q Q via? 'S Ralph Greenleaf Baker Gordon Dobson Beattie Thomas Vose Cleveland Warren Stilson Ege Charles Robert Freeman Thomas Hope Griffith John William Hubbell Bake ants Bull Zfaunurarp Member Horace G. Pender n Joseph Anderson Vance, J Lovell Hewitt Cook Gerald Eugene Cutler Marshall Orme Exnicios Lewis James Kerlin John Russell Aborn Gaylord West Anderson Robert Plues Booth Philip Babcock Gove Frank Trowbridge Hodgdon, Frank Harding Horan Carter Harriman Hoyt Jfnntligbts iBrunf anh Kopp Enurnalistin Sunietp Zfannutatp member J Edward Albert Boyle C99 I lil . ,W Donald Jerome Tobin Q68 Joseph Hilliard Lane Eugene Webster Leonard Hugh lVIiddleton McKay Samuel Walter Plumb, Jr. Eli Cole Smith Charles Noyes Stiles William Erwin Terry I'. Charles Carlin Kerwin Edward Simpson Price Paul Graves Sanderson Marion VViley Sherwood Frank Asbury Hutchins Edwin Hoyt Johnson John Stearns Johnson Stephen Maslen Kenyon William Dewey Mann Will Faust Nicholson Oscar Raymond Rice, Jr. I 'J Q Q ,, A Pf'X 'lil ilq U Y 2 X X? .',, 2 E 'x Ll - V .- 2 - -::, , . 7. 1, 23 f f - H1 I 1 is .cr , f r .ff .4- , f 5 , 6 2 ,ay P, 'X Qtbletin Qlnumil uf Eartmuutb Qllullege J fwffiners Joseph W. Gannon, ,99 . ....... President Horace G.. Pender, 97 . . Secretary and Graduate Manager Zlllumni Joseph T. Gilman, '05 Joseph W. Gannon, ,99 ,-llanultp Harry E. Burton , Arthur B. Meservey James P. Richardson P f lanhergrahuates Richard C. Southwick, ,20 . . lllanager of Football VVa.rren S. Gault, '20 . Stanley J. Newcomer, '20 . . Manager of Baseball Manager of Track Qbairman uf Ellhhisutp flllummittmz James P. Richardson . . . Football, Basketball, Tcrzmfs, W restlfing Harry E. Burton . Track. Hockey, Gun, Rifle, Gym, Fencing Artliur B. Me servcy . . . Baseball, Soccer, Golf' 269 ALUMNI GYMNASIUM wearers ui the B jlfunthall H. B. lVIcDonough '18 J. L. Cannell '20 G. E. Cogswell '20 E. VV. Cunningham '20 J. F. Dorney '20 J. A. Gordon '20 E. F. Healey '20 C. F. Holbrook '20 J. Z. Jordan '20 NI. P. Nxlerritt ,eo E. E. Flyers '20 Baseball E. E. Nlartin '19 T. J. Reilly, Jr. '19 H. N. Browne '20 F.. H. Bruce '20 J. Z. Jordan '20 W. H. Kopf '22 o Trask J. O. Brotlierhood '20 R. W. Clmrloek ,QU P. YV. Clark '20 G. F.. Cogswell '20 C. F. H. Crathern, Jr. '20 L. S. Davis ,eo C. F. Holbrook '20 J. Z. Jordan '20 C. F. McGough1'an '20 J. F. IVIoria.rty '20 E. E. Mye1's '20 J. XV. Prentiss '2-0 J. A. Shelburne 320 J. A. Shelburne '20 G. Sonnenberg '20 A. F. Youngstrom '20 N. NV. Crisp '21 B. E. Eekberg '21 XT J. J. J. G. . R. Grundman '21 T. lVIur1 hy '21 E. Robertson '21 G. Shepherd '21 W. Streng '22 P. H. Threshie '22 NI. P. Blerritt '20 Y. R. Grunclman '21 G. B. Harris, Jr. '21 J. T. Mu1'phy '21 F. A. Ross, Jr. '21 E. J. Thomson '20 E. Wlallzree '20 A. F. 'YOl1I1gS'L1'0ll1 '20 VV. C. Beers '21 H 'A. Bolles '21 i' B. E. Eckberg '21 J. T. Murphy '21 . R G. Pollard '21 L. H. Weld '21 R H. Whittier '21 A. J. Coakley '22 K G P. Libbey '22 YV. VVeed '22 271 1919 VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM GOTBHLL Qeasnn uf 1919 4-a.c.maLmlQ161' K an Dartmouth's 1919 football team, brought to perfection from a wealth of mater- ial of unknown value but of known potentiality, went through a season quite without an equal in Green football annals from the standpoint of closely fought contests and a mad scramble for the football crown of the East. At the season,s end Dartmouth was conceded by all critics to be in the front rank with Colgate as couter-claimant. Starting in rocky fashion and constantly gaining momentum, Coach Fat Spears' men went through the toughest of schedules in impressive fashion. -The first call for candidates early in September brought to Hanover some fifty men of whom seven were D H men from the 1917 season. Cannell, Healey, Hol- brook, Murphy, Myers, Shepherd, and Youngstrom comprised the list of letter men, and from these and others at hand Coach Spears moulded an eleven which was to take the measure of many aggregations. A backfield combination consisting of Captain Cannell, quarterback, Robertson and Eckberg, halfbacks, and Jordan, full- back, was early settled on and the only change made was the increasing- use of Hol- brook who played a sterling game the whole season. Ends were a problem for the coaching staff, but the work of Myers, Cogswell, Threshie, and Streng was about on a par, and all were in action at different times. Sonnenberg and Murphy formed a dependable pair of tackles. Youngstrom, later to be picked All-American, and Crisp, held berths at the guard positions, with Cunningham as pivot. Both line and backfield showed great power throughout the schedule, with the greatest strength from tackle to tackle. On the defensive the eleven was Without an equal, and to the remarkable ability of the various Green forwards at breaking 273 1 I 1- , fi E. N ef' ' X ' ' ' ' 7' ' .. . .. ' I if 5 f, , .- - . - - y 2 i - - -.-. -r-'cwQ:--1r-r-.:.:- -J,-a.s.:,::g:-c - 1-.-:,.g::s.v.i ' ' 1 Q ' 1 -- ' ,A I z -A VL r f 8 ,El I H :ill-553i-3Q:5g35gg,::::::::1 ,K A gia? . av- inf... ,y'QJv,:fg:,.'- Y. -A , g-'f'--.spislfirg 1 5, -P235 ' -+.j.y-' - +125-1,:g1g::g!g5gL-,A Qsliggfgyi. if ge j f , l. Llfiigf' .. , L.. ,LT . ul.: Haig, -gg. . 3, . AY-!,'.:.1. ..,i?5,, m y A ,l y : fn. '21, I - gf V, .DTE ,: .1 -' . ,ii gf: .,':'.q?-m. .-is , tv 5-sf-5pga.L,..v-, :V - .' ,:,?,,,.' 1' , .gf 3,-fi.. ,,,, . 3-gg.,-. :- gj -. 9' faf Q.. ', G ' fm. .3-TI! avi ' -Q r ' ' E'-f-zl. '- TY -1 1--ai Y - Lf. -' 'KQV -1-5 . - . 5 H P 'N '555gg.g,':g.gsgp.. ,E V 1.1,-.5 ,f f j K- ' .. , ff-incl' f' - 4- W 1?uf7': ' 2:2 .1-if- '. .. ffl... vf fw - - . ' '- L ' - M ,AZ?2,g4,.H1, 1 4: ,IL cf. ., t,, Q, Y , Q- g - 3 . I 4 . f' ffpf' ..-, 1 -' A . N 1 t- , V -' -' E 12:5655- ' sf: '11 , . -z, Q, ' Q. 11355:-5-5.,-' 11-51 , . ' 'i7:p5If ' -f?'E33i5E4Eg ,g, fi' mzq 4 Jaan Avigl' 1 I ,. ' . 1- ' ..11f,2i2:,:zz:1 5 .-'-,- fd:5f5pf?2si-f'-4.':.a-- .1 5--xr ,,. .. Algal, -1- 5- '--.-.-...fam-2:-:::.gf' -1 .1-1, 1-,,..s.. .:r-'. -V 11. z! f ,. ' , , . .. -V . , t V.,., - -uf: .1 f p ,- 'f -9:,g,'-f.52wgQz4g,:-- -14 . 1 , Us . if--. '.s1fg 11-'F:::.sf2aQ1ag-1,-2'-1 -V 'V -fc - - -- ps. 'E A .Q A- 1.. - i:1f'512'a1:'f ' Swede Youngstrom Opens Up a Hole in the Penn State Line for Eckberg through must be attributed in a large measure the success of the season. Young- stromwas a tower of strength and his sterling game at guard featured, Captain Cannell as pilot ran his team with ine judgment and won fame asf a broken-field runner. Robertson was perhaps the best backfield man, with a powerful plunging style and uncanny ability to circle the ends, as well as to out-punt the majority of kickers. In both departments of the game Dartmouth proved to be well drilled and won fair claim to a New York eXpert's characterization, the best bal- anced team in the countryn. f EARLY SEAsoN GAMEs PROVE STRENGTH OF GREEN Six touchdowns and four goals told the story of the opening game of the season when Springfield Y. M. C. A. College jour- neyed to Hanover to be snowed under 40 ,to 0. In spite of the top-heavy score the Green eleven showed ragged work at times, with a conspicuous tendency to fumble. Dartmouthfs fast charging line found little trouble in opening up big holes in the lighter line, and Springield was unable even to stem the rush of third-string men. Robertson, by virtue of his splendid punting and clever carrying of the ball, was easily the star of the fray. Despite the raggedness common to early season contests the Green showed all kinds of power, and promised to develop into one of the best of Dartmouth machines. Norwich, in the second game of the season, played on Alumni Oval, proved a tartar, and it was only after the most strenuous milling that Dartmouth scored 13 points while blanking the cadets. The Visitors showed a brand of football seldom seen in early October, and this, coupled with a Green tendency to fumble at inopportune moments, led to one of the closest and most ex- Cuddy 274 . .n...lQsI.Q4..Ag. , t 17, Youngstrom,lCunningham, and Murphy Smear Wlay After a Penn State Fumble citing battles of the year. The Dartmouth backfield found the going tough through the strong Norwich line, and only in the second half were the backs' able to register effective gains. Youngstrom staved off a Norwich score by a spectacular tackle on the Dartmouth four-yard line of a Maroon back, running with a fumble. Cannell, Robertson and Holbrook were the mainstays who were tried in the backfield com- binations. T Minus the services of Robertson and lVIyers, Dartmouth ground out a 27-'7 victory over the Massachusetts Agricultural College eleven in the third home game. A large number of substitutes were thrown into the game to save the regulars for the coming clash with Penn State, and the Aggies were able to push across their first score on Dartmouth in ten years. Holbrook took first honors and pierced the visitors' line with pleasing regularity. PENN STATE,S CHAMPIONSHIP Horns CRIMPED As the premier athletic attraction of the Sesqui-centennial observance, the Green's battle with Penn State the following Saturday first made evident the power of the Dartmouth eleven. Heralded as the premier team of the country, Penn State at no time showed the strength displayed by the Green, and but for two fortunate runs from kickoff by the fleet Way, Penn State would not have scored. The 19-13 score hardly tells the story of Green superiority. Only two first downs were allowed the State team by the mighty Dartmouth forwards, and the backfield plunged through for steady gains. The big crowd of alumni were electrified by a Penn State halfback's runback with the kickoff for a score. The Green eleven ,..L Q 15: ' Nor u mu 275 One of the Many Trick Tackles in the Penn Game then buckled down and gave a peerless exhibition of straight football. For Dart- mouth, Sonnenberg at left tackle played a surpassing game, and Jordan, Robertson and Holbrook were backfield stars. For Penn State, Captain Higgins, All-American end, put up a fine brand of wing play. A- CORNELL GAME ADDED TO GREEN VICTORIES In Dartmouth's first out-of-town struggle Cornell fell, 9-0, before the powerful Green machine. Twenty thousand spectators at the Polo Grounds saw the Hano- verians outclass the Ithacans, best eHorts in every department of the game. The victory marked the arrival of the Dartmouth team as an outstanding aggregation, and demonstrated that the sterling work of the week before was no fluke' Time and again the crashing Green backs W, fr . - made their way to the Cornellian goal-posts, and were only . I:J':Q a5 ' ,.- -' '2 prevented from several scores by heroic stands of the Ithacan line. Dartmouth's touchdown came directly as the result of Youngstrom's breaking through and blocking a punt, a feat which characterized his play in the remaining games. Robertson achieved a spectacular field goal from the fifty- yard line for the remaining points. The whole Green team played as a unit, and demonstrated a smooth working attack and defense, in which both branches were equally ethcient. if-.z - ' 'f 9 WM' . im if 43 -3 l Agia, ' E, 35.1 , ...,,.. .. T95 -'jf' iw- . .- vi: , Img- . 3' '-.i 'i' ' ' '. - -, ' K+ Zia , , ,gy .' -2 . .L Shep- COLGATE D1v1DEs HONORS IN '7-7 TIE Colgate came to Hanover the following Saturday, and before a huge crowd of 5000 the two admittedly premier teams of the East fought to a 7-7 tie in the most thrilling battle ever fought on Alumni Oval. A spectacular 276 i Q 'V f r C if I X 4 1 W' 5 f 1 f 'F Q - , . ,g f Z Q fx ,- ' . ,,4. . f -- A A'AA ' it e -- 2 t A A ' U My if' MJ blocked punt by Youngstrom in the last minute of play, and a scarcely less exciting goal from touchdown by Robertson brought the Green up to a tie with Colgate, at a time when even the most loya.l were losing hope. The Colgate eleven, much touted and equal to their reputation, scored in the first quarter on a forward pass from the ten-yard line whence it had been brought by the sterling plunging of Gillo, aided by a powerful line. Throughout the first half the Maroon team showed the greater strength, but in the last half Dartmouth came back and gave a wonderful exhibition of football. . . - ' C In spite of the wet and muddy field, Robertson, Jordan, Cannell and Hol- brook tore through the enemy line, and Youngstrom's great scoring feat was a logical result of a powerful attack. At the conclusion of the sensational deadlock it was evident that the two elevens had equal' claim to first Eastern honors. V x Q0-19 VVICTORY ovER PENN Pnovizs COSTLY Penn at New York the following Saturday was a costly victory for Dartmouth because of the loss of Eve regulars, and the 20-19 victory indicates the fierceness of the milling. The Red and Blue eleven were conident -of a win, and the contest seesawed back and forth between the two machines. Jordan and Hol- brook by spectacular long open field runs were the determining factors in the bitter struggle. A crowd of Q0,000. viewed the clash, the biggest game in New York for the season. The Red and Blue effectiveness with the forward pass nearly spelled de- feat for the Hanoverians, but -Green alertness determined the result. Captain Cannell's wonderful open field running frequent- ly thrilled the stands. Injuries to valuable regulars proved costly in the Brown game the following week. Robertson, star half back, suffered a broken leg, Myer-s' collar bone was fractured, and Youngstrom, Jordan, Eckberg, Merritt and Cogswell were severely handled. Sandy BROWN SPo1Ls DARTMoUTH's RECORD At Boston the following week, Brown was able to dim the Dartmouth record through a fortunate break, the final count being 7-6. The loss of Robertson's fine punting and plunging coupled with the generally shattered condition of the Green regulars, proved fatal to Dartmouth. Although the Dartmouth backfield outclassed the Bruins and made many first downs, a touchdown in the second period was the 277 XM N54 X .. . ,..,. 3553Z.gvE,:5 .Q fxsizrvszm.,-f4 ,,, .1 , . COACH SPEARS I Breaking Up One of Penn's Long End Runs total of Green scoring. In the third quarter, Captain Nichols of Brown broke through, snatched a punt off Grundmanls toe, and made a touchdown handily. The kicked goal decided the game, although a game comebackxseemed almost cer- tain of success. A. Because of Colgateis loss to Syracuse the same afternoon the Eastern cham- pionship was left in a maze, with no team with a valid claim to the crown. Dart- mouthis Hghting team was everywhere placed by experts in the first rating, together with Colgate. Six victories, a tie, and a loss summed up one of the best seasons in Dartmouth football history. i l ' Robertson Hits a Stone Wall in an OH'-Tackle Play, Penn State Game 279 CAPTAIN CANN ELL A' ' f , '. ' 'T ..,,.,,,., -, I NQLXLXKW A -f 19... 1 ,,, f J .... . . Q 1 ... l1. , , . , g - I , jfuuthall Sveasun uf 1919 Southivick, '20 Football Manager E. E. Myers '20, lVI. P. Merritt '20, G. 'W. Streng, '22 . G. Sonnenberg '20, E. F. Healey, '20 . N. W. Crisp '21, J. F. Dorney, '20. . E. W. Cunningham., '20, J. G. Shepherd, '21 . A. F. Youngstrom., '20 .... J. T. Murphy, '21 .... G. E. Cogswell, '20, J. A. Gordon, '20, P. H. Threshie, '22 .. F J. L. Cannell, '20 ...... . Clarence W. Spears, 11 . . . Coach Jesse B. Hawlev, '19 . Frank A. Liewfiiiyn, '14 ' Asmtm Coaches Richard C. Southwick, '20 . . , M anager Charles R. Freeman, '21, flSS7i.S'2ffl?'llf Dlanager Jackson L. Cannell, ,eo . . , Cayatarin James E. Robertson, '21 .' Cczptaizfn-elect 4 -:,f.Lj::f4..f Freeman, '21 I' B Nlg '.. .Ass. 1' r Lefi End Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle Right End Quarterbaclc f K fx. J. E. Robertson, '21, V. R. Grundman, '21 . C. F. Holbrook, '20, B. F.. Eckberg, '21 . J. Z. Jordan, '20, J. A. Shelburne, '20 . Seotember 27 Left Halfbach Right Halfback Fullhach ,Summary ui ,mason ' . at Hanover Dartmouth Springfield Y. M. C. Af o October 4 at Hanover Dartmouth Norwich 0 October 11 at Hanover Dartmouth lVI. A. C. '7 October 18 at Hanover Dartmouth Penn State 13 October 25 at New York Dartmouth Cornell 0 November 1 at Hanover Dartmouth Colgate 7 November 8 at New York Dartmouth Pennsylvania 19 November 15 at Boston Dartmouth 281 Brown '7 COACH TESREAU AND CAPTAIN MERRITT my Bl-XSEBI-lLL i 1 5 f--. T X Qlluarb Zliesreaus Jfurerast I HC,MALMlUl6f Since my arrival in Hanover about three weeks ago, daily workoutsxin the cage have been in order in preparation for the coming baseball season. So far the sessions have consisted chiefly of batting practice and the conditioning of the battery Candidates. The biggest problem this season is the development of a capable pitching staH. Among the candidates who have been showing up well are Willard, Wallace, Aschenbach and Blake., Ross, of two seasons' varsity experience, and Miner' appear as the best bets for the catching position. In the infield, Captain Merritt has been working out at third base and Kopf has been switched from shortstop, where he played last year, to second. lVIaynard, at shortstop, and Robertson, at first, are likely men for the other positions. Bruce, Browne, Reese, and Grundman, are all veteran outfielders who are seeking berths this year. K The 1920 schedule calls for games with all the leading colleges of the East and the University of California. With a fair amount of veteran material available as a nucleus, we may hope for a team which will successfully cope with the schedule arranged. ' . CSignedj CHARLES NI. TESREAU lVIarch Q4, 19Q0 Dartmouth Baseball Coach 283 1919 VARSITY ABASEBALL TEAM 193 , if 7 2 6 D C , fl x 1: 4 3 0 V f . 2: 2 1' X :Lv 5:1-1 f ' . .lag J I K .4 ,. vtll, 5 le :,, ,1 3, , ieasehall Season ,uf 1919 , Under the tutelage of Coach Jeff', Tesreau, ex-Giant star, the Green 1919 varsity nine went through an in-and-out season with the balance ever tipping in favor of the Dartmouth aggregation. On the road, the team showed far less strength than was evidenced before its Hanover stands, and the season ended with twelve victories offsetting ten defeats, most of which were sustained on foreign fields. Faced at the outset by . a hard schedule the nine at times showed form which warranted championship aspirations, and at other times verged on medio- A, .L crity. Weakness with the stick played a major part in the Green reverses, but the invincible defensive form displayed saved ,3, V several contests. C - fy' it At the first call for candidates almost an entire team of veterans reported to Coach Tesreau. Cuddy Murphy, although y ffl new to collegiate baseball, had won fame as a pitcher in service 1 ' games, and was easily the most dependable fzlinger on theistaff. , X J ack'Ross and Harris, the 1918 twirlers, were both handicapped , throughout the season with sore arms, and failed to show true form at any time. lVIerritt, an all-round man, alternated with Murphy in the box, and won a fair average of games pitched. X 9 Frank Ross behind the bat proved one of the steadiest players on the team, his pegging to the bases being of high calibre. Three of the 1918 infield were on hand at the outset, Captain Grey at first base, and J. H. lVIurphy and Martin at second and third respectively. Kopf, a freshman, although an erratic fielder at times, was a steady hitter, and filled in the shortstop position in good style. Bruce was the regular occupant of the center garden, with Merritt, one of the heaviest sluggers on the team, in left. Grundman, a new man, won a regular berth in right field, and Reilly filled in as a fielder when Merritt was called upon for mound duty. The season opened with a trip to Springfield and Amherst on April 25, Spring- .. v- - w k Frank 285 M. A. C. Game. Ross completes a Double Play 1 , field Y. hi. C. A. winning the first game 5-4. lVIurphy was representing the Green at the Penn'Relays, and as Ross and Harris were out of form, Aschenbach was sent in to the slab in the irst contest. The next day, with Murphy back in fthe box, Amherst fell an easy W H victim, 5-1. . University of Maine was the Green,s first opponent on Alumni Oval, and was defeated by Coach Tesreau's nine by a 3-2 score. On May 1, the Hanover outfit took a jaunt to Burlington to oppose the University of Vermont aggregation, but failed to fathom the delivery of Kibbe, and lost 5-Q. Two iai days later the lVIass Aggies team was defeated at Hanover 6-2. - n1'r . On lVIay 8, the team went to Boston to face Boston College, A in 2 Tufts, and Harvard on three successive days. The Arlington k .,.' Heights nine possessed a crew of wicked sluggers and an invin- .'--.N cible twirler, Fitzpatrick, with the result that Tesreau's men MG I L H were beaten in a one-sided contest, 11-3. The Green batters came back strong the next day and overwhelmed Tufts in a slugfest, IQ-3. Saturday the team played one of its best games of the season and shut out the Harvard nine, 9-0, at Soldiers Field. The contest was held in a drizzling rain, which forced cessation of activities at the end of the seventh inning. Nlurphy had the Crimson batters at his mercy with his smoky delivery, and not a safe bingle was chalked up against him during the seven innings. The following Monday, Nlurphy returned to the mound-and fanned twelve Columbia batsmen, winning his game 5-2. The next game for the Hanoverians was 286 l l Boston College Gamer Murphy Safe at Home not until lVIay 20, when Pennsylvania wasfeliminated by a 4-Q score at Philadelphia. Ross did the twirling, and although touched for eleven safeties, managed to keep them well scattered. The next day the Green nine was nosed out by the Tiger outfit at Princeton, three runs to four. T i Dartmouth broke even in the two Prom games at Hanover. The Friday game with Boston College was played through intermittent showers and the Green lost 5-O. lVIurphy had somewhat the better of the pitching argument but his teammates were unable - to turn their hits into runs. Saturday Pennsylvania was again beaten, 6-41, in a game replete with errors and loose fielding. On May '27 the University of Vermont team came to Hanover and for several innings it looked as if Kibbe would dupli- cate his performance at Burlington. But the much-heralded slabster cracked in the eighth and the Green batters pounded out Ev a 6-41 victory. ' The team took a decided slump on its next trip and dropped all three games. Columbia was the first to take the measure of the Green nine, winning a close contest at New York 3-2. The next ' i t' day the Hanover team was completely outclassed by Holy Cross '1 r r at Worcester, the Purple batters piling up nine runs to their oppo- -george-1 nents' two. Again in the inal game of the trip Wesleyan pulled a close game out of the ire, 8-7. . Coach Tesreauis men again hit their stride at Hanover oniJ une 4, when Amherst was sent back with a 4-2 defeat. Three days later the Tufts team journeyed to Hanover, and Murphy's superb pitching, coupled with a multitude of Tufts errors, resulted in a 12-3 victory for the Green. - W MA ' ff -af- n- F -'7'7 iQ-55:7 -V 1 ff: .... 3'l5fkQ1 '-fgf . .41 1.3.25-.,,':-5 gf '-f ' 45. 287 Meany of Columbia out at Home ' During examinations the team, minus three regulars, opposed Brown at Providence, and fell a victim to Knightls clever pitching, 3-4. In the final game of the season at Hanover during Commencement, the train-weary Cornell nine fell easy prey to the home team, 6-0. Dartmouth played errorless ball in the field, gathered nine safeties off the Cornell pitcher, and pilfered eleven -bases. .. ...A . . ' . 4 . ff - W Amherst Game. Grundman Caught off First 288 A N? J E ' ,'-le . . Ff., , 2. 5 5' . . ' rsee ' 4 , ' ,,1AQ li 1 1 9 JJ V ' I ,V Ei J 'Zap ,V.- - f 2 f1 ' 'll VVAA ' vb lyn n' U ,v.,: 1 r., .:,,n . A .1-fa: .1:..':., 1 glia l T ... A: :L'l1lf'f zfv Baseball beasun uf 1919 1919 3 1920 Charles lVI. Sears, Jr., ,19 lllanager VVar1'en S. Gault,'20 JM Warren S. Gault,'2O Asst. Manager John W. Hubbell,,Q1 ' Charles Tesreau Coach Charles M. Tesreau 7 Percy A. Grey,,19 Captain Melville P. MQerritt,'20 Gault '20, - H bell ' 1 Baseball Mgr. F. A. Ross, Jr.,'21 , J. T. Murphy,,21, G. P. A. Grey,'19 J. H. Murphy,'19 E. E. Ma.rtin,,1A9 . . VV. H. lKopf,,2Q . . M. P. Merritt,,20, T. E. H. Bruce,,Q0 . . V. R. G1'u11d1113H,,Ql Date April 25 at Springfield April 26 at Amherst April 29' at Hanover Team . Y. -M. C. A. Dartmouth Dartmouth Amherst Dartmouth U. of lVIa.ine y Qlbz fflleam B. Harris, J1'.,,21 . J. Reilly, Jr.,,19 Ass. Mgr. B. .season uf 1919 R. H. College 5 1 1 4 6 5 6 1 6 3 5 2 7 289 Catcher , . Pitchers First Base Second Base Third Base Short Stop Left F ield Center Field Right Field E. Battery 3 Carlson and Atkinson 4 Menitt, Aschenbach and Ross 1 Murphy and Ross 2 Clark, Zink and Davison 0 Murphy and Ross 3 Ziegler and Reardon CAPTAIN MERRITT 5 5njfT:f'se SJ: C. in ' ' - , A :- -. AA' I 4 .lf u 1 f . 5 l as ' R 7 X l . s at - . .J Q May 1 U. of Vermont 5 6 Kibbe and Tryon at Burlington Dartmouth 2 -L Merritt and Ross May 3 Dartmouth 6 7 Murphy and Ross at Hanover M. A. C. 2 . Collins and Faxon May 8 Boston College 11 10 Fitzpatrick and Urban at Boston Dartmouth 0 1 Harris, Aschenbach and Ross May 9 Dartmouth 12 16 Merritt and Ross at Medford Tufts 3 G Weafer, Ballou and Callahan ltlay 10 Dartmouth U 6 hlurphy and Ross at Cambridge Harvard 0 0 Johnson, Hardell and Gannnack Nlay 12 l Dartmouth I 5 9 hlurphy and Ross at Hanover Columbia Q 8 Meaney and Ackerman May 17 Dartmouth vs. Brown Qffancelledj . at Hanover May 20 Dartmouth -L 7 J. Ross and F. Ross at Philadelphia Pennsylvania Q! 11 Titzell and Warwick May 21 Princeton LL 9 Margetts, Kirkland and Trimble at Princeton Dartmouth 3 8 Merritt and Ross May '23 Boston College 5 5 Fitzpatrick and Urban at Hanover Dartmouth 0 LL Murphy and Ross ltfay Q4 Dartmouth 6 8 lVTerritt and Ross at Hanover Pennsylvania 11 S Harvey, Mitchel and Warwick M ay 27 Dartmouth 6 10 Murphy and Ross at Hanover ' U. of Vermont -L 6 Kibbe and Tryon May A229 Columbia 3 5 Nleaney and Ackerman at New York Dartmouth Q -L Merritt, Harris and Ross May 30 Holy Cross 9 15 Gill and Martin at Worcester Dartmouth 2 7 Harris, J. Ross and F. Ross May 31 VVesleya.n 8 12 Connelly and Boote at Middletown Dartmouth 7 13 Merritt, Carter and Ross June 4 Dartmouth +1 11 Murphy and Ross at Hanover Amherst 2 8 Clark and Davison June 7 Dartmouth 12 10 Merritt, Murphy and Ross at Hanover Tufts 3 3 Colueci, Kirshsin and Callahan June 18 Brown LL 8 Knight and Erickson at Providence Dartmouth 3 5 J. Ross and Merritt Iune Q4 Dartmouth 6 9 Murphy and Ross at Hanover Cornell 0 5 Olson, McLeod and Estes 291 COACH HILLMAN AND CAPTAIN MYERS 44S N :75'!i' . ., V f V' f i TRHCK Q rsaiia 1 9 easun uf 1 I -fQ 1919-1920 Q. eb ' '- HC-mmlw, 2519 flinanb ilaillman CROSS COUNTRY Due to war conditions, inexperienced material, and perhaps lack of instruction, the cross country team had rather a poor season. The Freshman team was medi' ocre. Dartmoutlfs location is ideally suited to cross country running and there is no reason Why fairly good teams should not be developed. More interest is needed to develop this sport. V INDOOR TRACK O 'Three Dartmouth Relay Teams competed at the Boston Athletic Association Meet. on February 8th. The One Mile Team Won from Brown. The Two Mile Team Won from Nlassachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Freshman quar- tet Won from Holy Cross. 1 1 T At the lVIillrose Games held in New York, February 10th, the One lVIile Varsity dropped their batons and finished Well back. The One Mile Varsity competed against Harvard and Cornell at the Triangular lVIeet on February 28th and Hnished one yard behind Harvard and defeated Cor- nell. The team ran a very good race considering one of the Dartmouth runners fell during the race. The Freshman One Mile Team ran second to Harvard and defeated Cornell in the same meet. TRLXNGULAR MEET Harvard, Cornell and Dartmouth met in a three-cornered meet at lVIechanics Hall, Boston, on February 28th. Dartmouth's chances of winning were not con- sidered very good, but the boys showed that with proper spirit, enthusiasm, and 293 Y Ag a l'f if 19 5 1 . 3 willingness to do some hard work, victories are often Won. Dartmouth scored 37 pointsg Harvard 31, Cornell 12. In a special 40-yard race for freshmen of the three institutions, Dartmouth's representatives won first and second places. The point winners in the imeet were as follows: Shelburne, Thomson, lVIc- Goughran, Prentiss, Jordan, VVallace, Moriarty, and Fullaway of the class of 1920, and Coakley '22. Varsity Relay Team - Prentiss, Jordan, Goodnow, and Thomson of the class of 1920. The point winners in the Pfreshman competitions were Allen and Moore in the sprint and Allen, Lewis, Behringer, and lVIoore in the relay. Earl J. Thomson, Dartmouth's premier hurdler, has won special hurdle races in all his starts to date, having defeated the best hurdlers in the country. He twice equaled the 45-yard High Hurdle Wo1'ld's record, established a new world's mark for the 70-yard Low Hurdles and also won the '70-yard High Hurdle race at the Millrose Games. A One novice meet and two handicap indoor meets in Alumni Gymnasium were well contested and the means of giving the candidates needed experience in compe- tition. SPRING FORECAST ' The forecast for the spring is rather a difficult proposition. Entries will probably be sent to the Pennsylvania Relay Carnival at Philadelphia on lVIay lst. Dual meets have practically been arranged with the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia on May 8th, and with Columbia University at New York on May 15th. Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale, lVIichigan, Cornell and Dartmouth should be the contenders for the positions in the Intercollegiate lVIeet to be held at Phila- delphia on lVIay 28th and 29th. Notwithstanding Cornellis defeat at the triangular meet, their team will be a much better one at this meet. Probably this year's Tntercollegiates will be one of the closest contests in years with at least six colleges fighting for the honors. At this writing if the material now at hand is available, the 1920 Track Team under the leadership of Captain E. E. Myers should experience a fairly successful season. ' Freshman meets are now being arranged with several colleges and preparatory schools. , The regular Interscholastic lVIeet will be held on May 22nd on Alumni Oval after a lapse of several years. CSignedj HARRY L. HILLNIAN, lV1arch 27, 1920. Dartmouth Track Coach 294 A X 6 ' , . 1 WN '59 gases p-BW, Se... 1 1 f 1 ' . , ff'- J ,ff ' f' 1, L.. . 1: 1 Rf w ,,,, J IW' ,7 ff ,1.x it Q X H We ii, ., 5,5-'- ?'-'Jv51zPS5s,.F.,S.g,,. f illiratk Qnzasun uf 1919 In spite of a most serious handicap due to the scholastic difficulties of two champions, Dartmouthis 1919 track season may be called a success in as much as Coach Hillman put out a team which scored twice as many points as Technology in its only dual meet, cans-.e a close second to Penn in its triangular meet with Penn and Columbia, and ranked fifth out of a large number of colleges at the intercollegiates. The G1-een's greatest weakness lay on the cinder path, for Coach Hillman's runners, both in the sprints land long distances, were outclassed in practically every meet. On the other hand, Dartmouth had, in Weld and Murphy, two as capable weight men as any college in the country, and was well represented in nearly every Held event. The relay teams met with mediocre success, the one-mile quartet having a win over M. A. C. to 1 -- its credit, and Captain lVIurray was barely nosed out by a i Syracuse runner for first place in the relay race at the lVIeadow- , brook games. . p Two of the 1919 intercollegiate cham- pions were representatives of the Green. riij Laddiel' Myers led all intercollegiate com- y lp' 'W 4' in fi petitors in the pole vault when he cleared the 'f ,.V ' Q 'lt ' bar at 12 feet, 6 inches. lVIyers was headed in but once in this event throughout the entire r i, season, a flip of a coin giving the decision to if 2. it ' Breckley of Rutgers in the Penn Relays, li' li 'UJC'i when both were tied at 12 feet. VVeld hung TQ Z' up a first in the hammer throw at the Inter- Aj collegiates with a toss of 143 feet, Q 3-44 inches, and was closely fi followed by Cuddy M lVIurphy, Dartmouthis all-round athlete. ln the Penn Relays, lVIurphy threw the 56-lb. weight a yard t farther than his closest rival but stepped out of the ring on all Hsin three tries, there being a 1-inch foul chalked up against his longest throw of 31 feet. Tommy Thomson, who won the National A. A. U. championship in the high hurdles while in service in the Royal Flying Corps, and Beers, the 1918 intercollegiate champion in the shot put, were both lost to the team after the second term, and Jordan, a valuable all-round man, failed to return for the third term. 295 CAPTAIN MYERS Q ' 1 .,,,, A 'K W r b T f i . . . vijxxf., S95 .. aim'- Fiivlffffa T7 . Wigisfi.. - C lffl , -QT-I , E E lf j'w,,,w ,f ' : '2- :wi-157' Track practice got under way the last of January with the appearance of Harry Hillman in Hanover after six months' service in the Sanitary Corps. For two weeks previous to that time, candidates for the one and two smile relay teams had been limbering up in the gymnasium, and with the return of the veteran coach, the men began training in earnest in preparation for the lVIillrose A. C. games the latter part of February. The two mile team was also scheduled to run in Boston, March 1, but this date was cancelled later, owing to the inability of the B. A. A. to secure an opponent for the local runners. Coach Hillman sent a quartet composed of Jordan, McGoughran, Davis and Macomber to represent Dartmouth at the Millrose A. C. in New York on February 25, and McGoughran, anchorman for the Green, finished just at the heels of the Penn runner who won they race. Thomson, the Green's crack timber topper, was scheduled to compete with Bob H Simpson and Captain Erdman of Princeton for the world's title, but the local athlete was forced to withdraw at the last moment owing j f to office troubles. The same relay team journeyed to Boston C D 'f j- 1 March. 1 for the B. A. A. games, and ran the fastest race of the ,V evening with M., I. T. but was unable to overcome the lead f zzjzgfe opened up by the Tech flyer in the first lap. They came back A , , strong in their second race, however, and ran away from M. A. C., T ' . . but Goodnow, who replaced Jordan as lead-offiman for the Green, A ' collided with the Aggie man, and although the decision was given to Dartmouth at the time, Coach Hillman returned the prizes the following week. At this meet Thomson was pitted against Bob' Simpson from Missouri and led the title holder to the tape by a foot, covering the distance HQ 1-Russy, Ka 1 :' 'ff .fl , in one-fifth second slower than the World's record. The Y ,e wf 5,--- next event was the New England A. A. U. meet, when w the Green repeated its race with M. A. C. and this time won a decisive victory. The general call for candidates was issued lVIarch 5, and Coach Hillman began his struggle with inexperience in an effort to put out a capable team. Nothing much could be accomplished before exams, and immediately after vacation the first of the annual series of interclass handicap meets was held. The juniors had no trouble winning the meet, Thomson contributing Q1 points. The second indoor 297 ' START OF THE HIGH HURDLE RACE, SPRING INTERCLASS MEET V ' . ,..Nm:szQ68b. DM CAPTAIN MURRAY WINS THE 440, SPRING INTERCLASS MEET . EARL THOMSON, '20 k xi meet a week later featured the Interfraternity relay race for the Livermore cup, which was won by Theta Delta Chi. The 56-lb. weight event was also inaugurated at Dartmouth at this meet, and Murphy set the record at 28 feet, 3 inches. Thom- son was listed among the record breakers, clipping a Hfth of a V second from his own mark in the indoor high hurdle event. In an attempt to establish a record in the pole vault, Myers cleared rf 1' 12 feet 9 inches, only to knockeoff the bar in falling. Coakley, T 1,, R later to be one of Dartmouth's stellar performers, broke into the limelight at these meets, by running an exceptionally fast half K mile for that time of year. The last of the interclass series was a 25 13, ,llt scratch meet on the Oval, May 3. Two more freshmen of iaei . promise were unearthed at this event, Libbey in the pole vault ' . '-1: T . , f and Wfeed in the high hurdles. Thomson won the annual cen- 1 T If tuiy dash for the Tilly Nlemoiial Cup finishing just ahead of Prentlss and Davis PFNN RDLAYS Da1'tmouth's athletes at the Penn Relays, April Q5 and 26, u U made a very creditable showing considering their small number. A1 I ' Eckberg showed up especially well in the Pentathlon, winning fourth place from a Held of 22 competitors, by taking the 1500-meter run and placing fifth in the discus throw and broad jump. The sprint medley team composed of Carto, Goodnow, Davis, and Coakley, was headed only by Penn and Penn State of the fourteen colleges entered. lVIurphy led the field of 56-lb. weight tossers, but fouled on three successive attempts. Bevan and Weld captured second and third 299 1 'fi . - iz: E A . if if ,iv A 'HK M , , . , 19 lg K fi f T: - if N4 5 N ,lg LIN 1 K Q E y . A , ., ,,., x -3: -,T - . f , , , . ,f Q' A: ef . e' X f , --swf , 1 ...,,. ' .. il i .A,, L -1,,,,A,,.zY K x :JJ ' . ' 5- sf: 1 5 , f 4,1 f' places respectively. Myers tied at 12 feet in the pole vault with Breckley of Rut- gers, but lost on the flip of a coin. The one-mile relay quartet was forced to be con- tent with last place in that event as Carto, first man for the Green, was pushed outside by a Penn runner on the first turn. ' , DUAL MEET WITH TECHNOLOGY Coach Hillman's stars literally ran away from the corps of Tech athletes in their dual meet on Alumni Oval, lVIay 10, scoring 85 points to the engineers' 440, and allowing the Red and 'Gray only two firsts. As usual Dart- mouth was strongest in the field, winning every one of these events. The feature of the meet was a blanket finish in the g quarter mile between Captain Murray of Dartmouth and ,gal Downey of lVI. I. T. VVeld led all comers in both the hammer . , D throw and the discus. Weed showed his best form to date, and -- e ' ,A was the first man to clear the 120 yards of high barriers. Libbey V , M finished just behind Myersein the pole vault, and Coakley gftve lVIcGoughran a haid race for honors in the half mile DARTMOUTH PENN COLUMBIA MEET tg: 1,7 - , Q . Dartmouth ranked second to Penn in the triangular meet tj of the newly formedqathletic alliance on lVIay 17th, owing to I i l' the inefficiency of the Green on the cinders. The events were HHH held in a drizzling rain and the track was submerged beneath an ankle-deep covering of mud. The local huskies monopo- lized the hammer throw, VVeld, Murphy, and Bevan leading the field in the order namedi. Bolles ran a fast race over the two mile course in spite of the heavy going, and annexed Eve points for the Green in that event. Myers could get no higher than 10 feet, 8 inches over the muddy runway and tied with Libbey and Landers of Penn for first place. Murphy was high scorer for Dartmouth with a first in the shot put and second in the hammer throw. Both lVIcGoughran and Coakley were below par and failed to land a place in the half mile and the Green milers also failed to score a point. NATIONAL INTERCOLLEGIA TES Sixteen wearers of the Green were chosen to represent Dartmouth at the intercollegiates in the Harvard Stadium on May 30 and 31, and totaled 14 points, leading Yale for ifth place by one half point. Nine of the Hanoverians qualified 300 Q . ,, A f 5 . .... , l. .V,:.. gs n 4 ..1. A 5 1 ,, '. ' k j r , in the preliminaries on Friday, Davis in the century, Coakley and MCGoughran in the half mile, VVeed and Holbrook in the high and low hurdles respectively Myers C and Libbey in the pole vault, and Weld and Murphy in the hammer throw. Libbey was eliminated in the pole vault on Saturday but Meyers sailed over the stick at 12 feet 6 inches, thereby becoming in- tercollegiate champion. Coakley circled the track in fast time and added a point to the Green total by finishing fifth in the half mile. Dartmouth's standing was not determined until the Hnal 'event when Weld and Murphy scored eight points in the hammer throw, winning first and third places respec- tively. iy' . 3 NIEADOWBROOK GAMES 5 7,55 The final event of the 1919 season was the Meadowbrook M games, attended only by the one mile relay quartet, composed of lVIcGoughran, Coakley, Davis, and Captain Murray. The lead .H i throughout the race alternated between Dartmouth and Syra- j K-. cuse, the Orange anchor man leading Captain Murray of Dart- Jake mouth to the tape by inches. Thomson, running unattached, found no real opposition i th h' h h exertion. 11 e ig urdles, and carried off first honors without 301 1919 VARSITY TRACK TEAM 42. X 1 1 ' 'l 2 -IK Av QW 4v B TIN' ' 'Eg E ' .J if ' W 44241, ' 2 . ,A, f Wi , e os' 1 Ulirank Season uf 1919 , 1919 1920 . 9 , Manager V Dflzrx A. Norton, '19 Stanley J. Newcomer '20 B 1 14.8-S7:.SiCL7lf M anager ' Stanley J. Newcomer, '20 Joseph H. Lame, '21 - , foach Harry L. Hillman . Harry L. Hillman . I f'clpiafi1'L ' , John M. Murray, '19 Edwin E. Myers, '20 Q, , . Newcomer '20 , Lune '21 'l'l'ilf'l'C Alilllilglil' Ass. Mgr. 'l'r:ufk Dartmouth fiiullege Wrath ann 3FieII1 ilienurbs X F Evcni Record Holder Blade Record 100-Yard Dush G. 1VIc-Dztvitt, '00 1899 10 see - L. Swusey, '06 1904 10 sec ' A. Sherman, '10 1908 10 see J. Coakley, '16 1916 10 sec 220-Yard Dash L. Swasey, '06 1905 22 sec 440-Yard Dash C. Riley, '16 1916 49 4-5 sec 880-Yard Run' 1V. Gorton, ,QQ 1917 1 min. 56 4-5 sec One 1X4ile Run S. Harmon, '13 1913 4 min. 18 4-5 sec Two hlile Run R. lVIarceau, '14 1914 9 min. 47 sec 120-Yard High Hurdles B. Shaw, '08 1908 15 1--5 sec' 220-Yard Low Hurdles B. Shaw, '08 1908 24 4-5 sec High Jump B. Enright, '13 1912 6 ft. 1 3-4 in Broad Jump T. 1Vorthington, '1 1916 24 ft. 1-4 in Pole Vault S. 1Vright, '13 1912 13 ft. 2 1-4 in 16-lb. Shot A. W'hitney, '15 1914 48 ft. 1-2 in 16-lb. Hammer Throw E. lVIarden, '12 1912 157 ft. 7 in Discus Throw A. Whitney, '15 1913 135 ft. 5 9-10 in 303 'A 1- Eu iy et e KWNN . D ' A.-. - NX A9 . Lygx A. ,Q 5- Hx X I M .ni -'-: af: Event 100-Yard Dash Q20-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run Mile Run Two-Mile Run 120-Yard High Hurdles 220-Yard Low Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump Pole Vault 16-lb. Hammer 16-lb. Shotpnt Discus Throw 1'Tie 3119. El. QI.-ibartmnutb ffllrania ,litem 1 AlU111111c,ViLl, May 10, 1919 F irst Second Third Rollins CTD J. C, Davis CDD Spitz CTD J. C. Davis CDD Rollins CTD Spitz CTD 1'Murray CDD Carto CDD 'kDowney CTD 1VIcGoughra.n CDD Coakley CDD Bardes CTD Crathern CDD Purcell CTD Stone CTD Murray CTD Bolles. CDD Avery CDD VVeed CDD Scranton CTD Anderson CDD Holbrook CDD Scranton CTD Mills CTD ?Mcade CDD L. S. Davis CDD 1'Allen CTD W 1 VVhittier CDD Prentiss CDD Dipple CTD ' Myers CDD Libbey CDD bklfletcher CTD ' 1cWalton CTD Weld CDD Bevan CDD Raymond CTD Wallace CDD Rollins CTD Cummings CTD Weld CDD Eckberg CDD Hayes CTD Score: Dartmouth 85, M. 1. T. 40 A -V' L .. -Q X X Time or Distance 10 Q-5 sec. Q3 1-5 sec. 52 3-5 sec. Q min. 3 3-5 sec. 4 min. 43 4-5 sec. 10 min. 17 3-5 sec. 16 92-5 sec. 26 1-5 5 ft.k8 in. 20 ft. 8 1-4 in. 12 ft. ' 129 ft. 38 ft. 11 1-2 in. 110 ft. 11 in. Event 100-Yard Dash E220-Yard Dash 4440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run Mile Run Two Mile Run 120-Yard High Hurdles Q20-Yard Low Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump Pole Vault Hammer Throw Shot Put 1cTied Bartmuutb- ann-Glulumhia Triangular illileet First Haymond CPD Haymond CPD Gustavson CPD Gustavson CPD Turner CCD Bolles Smalley CPD Smalley CPD 1:Hampton CPD 1'Thibault CPD as South Field, New York, 1VIay 17, 1919 Second T lmffd, Davis CPD Wettels CCD J. C, Davis CDD Sibley CCD Smith CPD Murray CDD Shaw CCD Huelsenbeck CCD Huelsenbeck CCD lVIcHale CPD X Cummings CPD Knox CCD Weed CDD Anderson CDD , Eckberg CDD . Holbrook CDD 1'Nichols CPD L. S. Davis CDD 'kPiper CDD I Davis CPD Vvhittier CDD Smalley CPD 'kLanders CPD :k1VIyers CDD 5Libbey CDD Weld CDD Nlurphy CDD Bevan CDD 1VIurphy CDD VVall,ace CDD ' Bartels CPD Pennsylvania CPD 70 1-3, Dartmouth CDD 51 Q-3, Columbia I F ourtlz J. C. Davis Davis CPD Staub CCD Granger CPD Price CPD Sarlin CCD VVar1'en CPD Frazier CPD Prentiss CDD Bullock CPD Barlels CPD Calder CPD CCD S 21. CDD C Time or Distance 10 1-5 sec. 22 3-5 sec. 52 4-5 sec. 2 min. 5 1-5 sec. 4 min. 36 sec. 10 min. 18 1-5'sec 16 sec. D 27 sec. Y 5 ft.'6 in. ' Q0 fn. 6 in. I 10 ft. 8 in. 1114 ft. 11 3-4 in. 40 ft. 5 3-4 in. Event 100-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run Mile Run Two-Mile Run 120-Yard High Hurdles 220-Yard Low Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump Pole Vault Hammer Throw Shot Put sFTied Cornell CCD Pennsylvania CPD Nlichigan CMD Harvard- CHD Dartmouth CDD atiunal Zfntereullegiate illrack jllileet First Haymond CPD Haymond CPD Mayer CCD Mayer Harvard Stadium, Cambridge, Mass., May 30-31, 1919 Second Third - F ourth Fdth Time or Distance Johnson CMD Moore CHD Cook CMD Rollins CTD 10 sec. Moore CHD Clark CPrD Co6kXCMD Davis CPD 21 3-5 sec. Terrill CPrD Rice CRD Stewart CYD Souder CSD 49 4-5 sec. Gustavson CPD Shaw CColD Turner CSD Coakley CDD 1 min. 56 2-5 sec O'Connell CHD Crawford CLD McDermott CCD O'I2eary CCD Raymond CPrD 4 min. 23 3-5 sec Dresser CCD Goodwin CBD Sedgwick CMD Hutchinson CHD Dudley CYD 9 min. 22 2-5 sec Smith CCD Watt CCD Trowbridge CPrD Savage CBD Bellerjeau CRD 15 1-5 sec. Smith CCD Watt CCD Savage CBD Frazier CPD' Trowbridge CPrD QA 1-5 sec. Landon CYD 1'Hamton CPD I , 'kRa.msey CCD 6 ft. 2 in. ' 'Johnson CMD 'kKrogness CHD Johnson CMD , LeGendre CGD 1 Flower CHD Landers CPD Smalley CGD 23 ft. 10 1-5 in. Myers CDD Newstetter CPD Harwood CHD Landers CPD Breckley CRD 12 ft. 6 in. WVeld CDD Dandrow CTD Bflurphy CDD Smith CMD Stevens 143 ft. Q 1-4 in. Allan CMeD Braden CYD Baker CMID Clark CHD Smith ClVID '44 ft. 6 1-8 in. Quite hp Cululleges D 39 1-9: Yale CYD 13 1-2 M. I. T. CTD 5 29 Princeton CPrD 12 Georgetown CGD 44 25 1-Q Bowdoin CBD 9 ' Lafayette CLD ' 4 Q3 Rutgers CRD 5 1-2 Syracuse CSD 3 145 Maine CMeD 5 Columbia CColD 3 2 A 5,7 A e 1 . f . .9 1 - X Fx , f. , -'.,' A 5, L--.Y re if 1' J ' K ss. ,f, -334 Grass Qtnuntrp Dartmouthis hill and dalers were unable to cope with their speedier opponents during the season of 1919 and failed to finish in a favorable position in any of the three meets. The Green has not been represented in this sport for two seasons and consequently Coach Hillman was obliged to pick his squad almost entirely from inexperienced men. Captain Crathern proved the most consistent performer, leading his team-mates to the finish in every meet. Coakley and MCGOHgh1'HH, both fast halfmilers, gave promise at the start but were forced to retire from the squad before the first trip. A The sea n opened on October Q5, when a team composed of Crathern, Bolles, lVIacomber, erburne, Dow and Allen journeyed to Syracuse to compete in the Syracuse invitation meet. Princeton unexpectedly turned in the lowest score of the eleven colleges entered, and Simmons, the fleet-footed Syracuse runner, carried off individual honors. The local harriers rolled up a total of 271 points and were forced to be content with the cellar position. Crathern was the thirty-seventh runner to cross the line and was followed by Sherburne, who finished in Bfty-fourth place. f Two weeks later the Green runners were pitted against the experienced men from Penn and Columbia in a triangular meet at Van Cortlandt Park, New York, and finished in third position. Cummings of Penn and Higgins of Columbia were nip and tuck at the Hnish, Cummings winning by 3-5 of a second. Penn easily won the meet, scoring the surprisingly low total of 21 points. Crathern in tenth place was the first man in for Dartmouth and was followed in order by Dow, lVIanchester, Porter, and MaCO1Hb61'. - Syracuse was the winner of the I. C. A. A. A. A. championships over the Van Cortlandt Park course on November QQ, Dartmouth placing ninth out of the eleven colleges entered. Simmons, the winner of the Syracuse invitation meet, was the first of the '74 harriers to cross the line, his time being ust a few seconds slower than the record set by John Paul Jones in 1908. Princeton came in second in the meet, scoring 69 points, as compared with Syracuse's 49. Captain Crathern finished in 241th place, with Sherburne close behind in Q7 th position. Dow, Porter, and Fleet were the other runners to count in the Green score. 307 VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY TEAM 1919 AA O . V lg 2' l J Ji? 3 .fy Hwy f f QJMTM K9 X, .,r,V .,. QD.. 5? I . -P QR-dydf Q .1, Q LQ Qllrnss Cinuntrp Season uf 1919 Frank B. Nlorey, '20 . . . . M anager Warren S. Ege, '21 . . Assiszfant M anager Harry L. Hillman . . Coach C. F. H. Crathern, J r., '20 . . . Captain , The fflisam C. F. H. Crathern, Jr., '20 G. H. Nlacomber, '20 H. A. Bolles, '21 C. C. Fleet, '21 H. F. lVIanchester, '21 F. H. Dow, '22 C. VV. Porter, '22 L. A. Sherburneg '22 iummarp nf the ieasun Syracuse Zlntercullegiate Zlnhitatiun Meet at bitanuse, QBctuhet 25 1. Princeton 49 5. Pennsylvania 12,1 8. Wlilliams 7194 2. Syracuse 78 6. Cornell 122 9. Columbia 199 3. -M. I. T. 107 7. Harvard 191 10. Colgate 224 4. Yale 116 11. Dartmouth 271 Triangular Meet at 'Wan Qlluttlanht Bark, Huhemher 8 Pennsylyania 1 3 4 6 7 21 Columbia 2 5 8 9 13 37 Dartmouth 10 1 1 14 15 1 6 66 iintetcullzgiate Qlhampinnsigip jllileet at W. QE. Spark, jliuhzmhet 22 1. Syracuse 49 5. Yale 119 8. lVI. I. T. 182 2. Princeton 69 6. Columbia 176 9. Dartmouth 202 3. Cornell 80 7. Lafayette 179 10. Harvard 213 4. Pennsylvania 117 11. C. C. N. Y. 335 309 1919-1920 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM J l 49'-'bi .. Q, ie' I ,I X X X . fr , Q., 1, - ' T75 fl' ,N l 1 I 5' X96 :Q 94' HSKETBHLL Season nf 1919-1920 Although winning but five of the twenty-ive I F l 1 f r Sf-JCffY7Q1m!goLS'f! games scheduled, the 1920 basketball team was a decided improvement over the last five to represent t.he Green two years ago. Dartmouth faced the best teams in the East, and several games were dropped by the narrowest of margins. Captain Browne at left guard was picked by the N ew York T ribune as guard on the second intercollegiate team. Further improvement may be hoped for next year as Coach Zahn succeeded in developing a fast freshman quintet, which will add valuable material to next season,s varsity. K Captain Browne's men won but one league contest, that A with Columbia on the home court on March 3. Perhaps the best 5 A i I 9 f Q cm UJOCH game of the season was the Princeton clash at Hanover March 19, when the Tiger five was forced to the limit for a 35-31 win. The season opened with a six-game trip which resulted in six reverses for the local basket-tossers. Nliddlebury was the first opponent on the home floor, and Coach Zahn's five annexed its first victory 36-18. The fast Cornell five came to Hanover, J anu- ary 17, and put over a Q6-22 victory in spite of a desperate rally by the Green in the second half. Then came a long list of eight defeats, among which was the Carnival game in which the Green five was overwhelmed by the league- leading Pennsylvania outfit. Two victories on the Alumni Gymnasium court were next in order, the first a close match with Columbia, and three days Harry later a one-sided game with New Hampshire State. Yale, Penn, and Columbia 311 f Q n I f-V ji , V 1 JSE: i-.,T,. ix J ' - 'xii A - f fl' 11 'Q took turns in defeating the local Eve on its final trip. The remaining home games with Yale, Norwich, Brown, and Princeton, resulted in wins over Brown and Norwich. , I A Captain Browne at guard was fourth highest scorer in the league, having 23 field goals to his credit and 467 points on shots from the foul mark. McDer111ott filled the other guard position in the majority of the games, and Schulting was also used frequently on the defense. Yuill and Akey in the forward positions led the attack, and Chamberlaine and Sample alternated at center. SOPHOMORE FIVE, INTERCLASS BASKETBALL CHAMPS 312 A3 1 .. 1- ' ' ' . A'-' 'l Ll Q- -. . -it :.f 'f gf' . i ' iV.V ,,,A, , U V. zA I Qzlnli X I ?' 4 1 ji g - W. J 1 igaskethall Season uf 1919-1920 .5 - Q Richard s. Kimball, '20 . . . Manage-r E Hugh 1VI. McKay, '21 . Asnstant Manager George W. A. Zahn . . . Coach , H. Nelson Browne, 120 I . Captain ' 'llv Z 1 , ' Baslsaizntiziillliolgr. C. J. Akey, 322 ..... . Left Forward R. W. Yuill, ,21 .,... Right Forward G. H. Chamberlaine, '21, P. S. Sample, ,20 . . Center H. N. Browne, '20, H. W. Schulting, '21 . Left Guard G. V. McDermott, 122 ....W . Right Guard January 5 January G January. '7 January 8 'January 9 Uanuary 10 January 14 Uanuary 17 January 19 January 20 Uanuary 21 January 24 January 27 : Februa.ry 14 February 19 February 20 tFebruary 21 February 24- tFeb1-uary 27 tFebruary 28 3 2cMarch tMareh 6 March 10 March 16 tMarch 19 'fLeague games Qvuniniarp of the S-season at Brooklyn at Brooklyn at Philadelphia at Swarthmore at Baltimore at Princeton at Hanover at Hanover at VVilliamstown at Schenectady at Ithaca at Hanover at Hanover at Hanover at Amherst at Springfield at Hanover at Hanover at New Haven at Philadelphia at New York at Hanover at Hanover at Hanover at Hanover D artmouth Dartmouth Da1'tmouth D artmouth D artmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth 313 12 Crescent A. C. 22 Brooklyn Polytech 30 Temple College 21 Swarthmore 19 Johns Hopkins 8 Princeton ' 36 Middlebury 22 Cornell 21 Williarns 7 Union 9 Cornell 28 Colgate 31 Stevens Tech 14 - Pennsylvania G Amherst 25 Springfield Y. M. C. A. 27 Columbia 22 New Hampshire State 21 Yale 10 Pennsylvania 25 Columbia 21 Yale 50 N orwioh 33 Brown 31 Princeton VARSITY HOCKEY TEAM, 1919-1920 V HEIIIKEY Season of 1920 After getting away to a whirlwind start, the 1920 hockey seven went through its season with moderate success, winning six of the ten contests scheduled. Two of the four defeats, however, were sustained at the hands of the fast Dartmouth Club team of Boston, Harvard and St. Paul's School of Concord being the other teams to take the measure of the Green septet. , Q Practice got under Way the first week in December with Coach-Captain Paisley in charge of the workouts. Of the forward candidates, Paisley, Cody, Ross, Roths- child, and Perry figured in the majority of the games. Dorney, Fiske and Threshie were the outer defence men to remain on the squad. Gale guarded the Green net in every game, and after Paisley's graduation in February, was chosen to lead the team for the remainder of the season. Captain Paisleyis team made its first appearance against the Dartmouth Club at the Cambridge Ice Pavilion on January 9, and it was only after a sensational shot by Johnny Murphy in the Hrst overtime period, that the alum- ni registed a 3-2 win. The next game was that with Tufts on January 17, when the varsity rolled up a 5-0 score in spite of the thick covering of snow on the rink. A week later the local seven again blanked Tufts 3-0 R,,L,,schUd, Captain Elect at the Cambridge Pavilion in the first contest of its two- game trip. Paisley was as usual the individual star, his repeated dashes down the rink being the feature of the game. The next night 315 AA at 6 Q' e 1 gy am 553 ylllllilwmlumm f If L . ': liVYxiQag ag .P 40 cm WI J' ' LN Ni liqxxxxxx ty vm D l ., 5 Y-sf '?' M. W the team suffered a 4-2 defeat in its match with games staged in the Pavilion. Threshie, with both goals to his credit on shots from midrink, figured prominently for Dartmouth while Bigelow was the mainstay of the Crimson attack. Harvard in one of the roughest In one of the fastest and roughest games ever seen in Hanover, the varsity nosed out a 1-0 victory over M. A. C. on February 12. The superb work of both goal tenders featured the game, in which real hockey Was made impossible by the poor condition of the ice 4 In the annual Carnival gameithe Dartmo th Cl b d f Y u u e eated 'the varsity for the second time 41-Q. Mui-phy and Paisley faced each other at the center position and gave a good exhibi- tion of fast skating and clever stick Work. Withoiit the services of' Paisley, the team was shut out 4-0 by St. Paul's at Concord, February '1'7. Only the excellent Work of Gale in the net kept down the score. In their final appearance on the home rink the Hanover seven completely out- classed Springfield Y. M. C. A. takin 'V an , 8 easy game 6-0. V, Dartmouth Wound up the season With - H victories over Penn and Princeton at the Frankl' Philadelphia Ice Palace. The count was 5-0 at the end of the Penn game, but four overtime periods were necessary before the Green gained a 3-1 decision over the.Tiger seven. Bill 316 f 2. A fa 19 . 2 2, S .Y,,, iii - fi A . Q f ff Zfgz S i . ' ' 1,AA F 5 2 Q f a J 1 Ilauckep Qeasun uf 1920 I H97 Charles I-I. Sargent, Jr., '20 . . . Manager Samuel W. Plumb, Jr., '21 . . Assistant Manager . Robert J. Paisley, '20 Captain and Coach ' '4Chester O. Gale, '20 . Captain and Coach l 5iii2il'Jiiil'. TU? mam Emil' A R. J ..Rothschild, '20 .... Left Wing L. F. Cody, '20, W. H. Perry, '21 . Center R. J. Paisley, '20 . . . Rover F. A. Ross, Jr., '21 . , . K . Right Wing J. F.'Dorney,, '20 .... Point P. H. Threshie, '22, G. A. Fiske, '20 . . Cover Point C. O. Gale, '20 '.... J , . . Goal Summary of the season January 9 at Cambridge Ice Pavilion Dartmouth 2 Dartmouth Club 3 January at Hanover Dartmouth Tufts January at Cambridge Ice Pavilion Dartmouth Tufts January at Cambridge Ice Pavilion Dartmouth Harvard February at Hanover Dartmouth M. A. C. February at Hanover Dartmouth Dartmouth Club February at Concord Dartmouth St. Paul February at Hanover Dartmouth Springfield March at Philadelphia Ice Palace Dartmouth Pennsylvania March at Philadelphia Ice Palace Dartmouth Princeton 'FElected following Paisley's graduation in February. 317 ,AX f I 1 , I 2 TE N15 Q-mm ieasnn nf 1919 p The 1919 tennis season -was the most successful the Green net men have enjoyed for years. Out of the eight matches played, Harvard and Columbia were the only opponents to defeat the local stars. In addition to this, Larmon and Carleton captured the New England Intercollegiate doubles championship at the Longwood courts. i The season opened Nlay 3 on the Alumni Gymnasium courts when the Green quartet composed of Larmon, Ranney, Farnham, and Carleton took every match from VVilliams. On the initial trip of the season, the team easily won the first match with Tufts 6-0, but on the following day was overwhelmed by the Harvard racquet stars 5-1. The contest was held infa drizzling rain and little real tennis was displayed. Larmon and Carleton were entered in the Intercollegiate Championships at Longwood, May 13-15. Carleton drew Barron of Tech as his opponent in the first round and was put out in straight sets, 4-6, 6-7. Larmon won 'from Hartzmark of Trinity in the first round but was himself eliminated by Captain Hendrickson of Amherst. Broockman of IVI. I. T. won the singles championship, and his teammate Barron was runner up. In the doubles, Larmon and Carleton easily defeated Bow- doin but were hard pressed by Bates in the semi-finals. The Green pair were pitted against the fast Tech men, Broockman and Barron, in the finals and it was only after the hardest match that the Hanover players emerged victorious, -L-6, 10-8, 6-3, 6-41. The Green was again brought against the clever Tech net men in a dual match at Prom on the Hanover courts. The outcome was in doubt throughout, Farnham ' sis ' .3 AL 1 i f' C 1. '- f 'V,, .. . fs 13 . fri. . ' 19 .. ' . and Ranney's victory in the final match deciding the contest. Carleton made up for his defeat by Barron in the intercollegiates, by besting the M. I. T. man in Straight sets, 6-4, 6-2. On the final t.rip, the team Won three of the matches played. Amherst was defeated 4-2 at Amherst and the hitherto undefeated VVesleyan aggregation failed to furnish any real opposition, losing 5-1. However Columbia continued its winning streak and dealt the Green its second defeat of the season 4-2. In the final contest, Fordham was conquered with little difficulty, 5-1. Uliennis beasnn, 1919 1919 1920 Allan M. Cate, '20 Manager Q George F. Vincent, '20 Assistant lllcmagcr Ralph G. Baker, '21 Russell R. Larmon, 319 Captain Wfilliam H. Farnham, Jr., ,20 The fileam R. R. Larmon, ,19 VV. H. Farnham, Jr., '20 A. H. Ranney, '19 J. P. Carleton, '22 Summary of the 92515011 May 3 at Hanover Dartmouth 6 VVilliams 0 May 9 at Medford Dartmouth 6 Tufts 0 May 10 at Cambridge Dartmouth 1 Harvard 5 May 13-15 New England Intercollegiates at Longwood Singles Won by lVI. I. T. Doubles Won by Dartmouth Nlay 24 at Hanover Dartmouth 4 lVI. I. T. 2 Nlay 28 at Amherst Dartmouth 4 Amherst 2 1NIay 29 at Nliddletown Dartmouth 5 Wlesleyan 1 lV1ay 30 at New York Dartmouth 2 Columbia 4 Nlay 31 at New York Dartmouth 5 Fordham 1 4 ' 319 A e E , ri an II Q EIIX ig' ' ., ,' 1 .A,., KJ ,,,A . f if gif 3 I ,,A, ... ,I.. E. M. Purington CBatesj H. D. Henson CTrinityj J. P. Pollard CWilliamsj G. A. Partridge Uiowdoinj YV. Barron CM. I. TJ J. P. Carleton CDa.rtmouthD R. J. Davis CAml1erstj R. T. Steele Cwesleyanj R. R. Larmon fD3,FtII10lltl1J J. Hartzmark QTrinityD E. H. Hendrickson CAmherstD C. Fraker fwilliamsj C. T. Chin CBowdoinJ R. D. Swift CVVesleyanj H. Broockman QM. I. TJ J. H. Powers QBatesj em Cdinglanh Zinternullegiates at ilungtnuuh may 13-15, 1919 Singles tillgamptnnship Purington 6-3, 6-1 Pollard 6-3, '7-5 Barron 6--1, 7-5 Davis 6-2, 6-3 ' Larrnon 6-3, 6-2 Hendrickson 6-4, 6-2 Chin 6-3, 6-4 Broockman 6-3, 6-1 N I I I F I I L I Semi-Finals F inuls Cha-mpwn Purington I 6-3, 4:-6, 7-5 Barron 3-6, 7-5, 6-3, 6-2 Barron 6-3,6-41 I Broockman 5 6-4, 6-3 6 3 I ' I Hendrickson 8-6, 7-5 Broofkrnzmn . 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 11-9 Broockman 6-2, 6-4 320 54 , E A - V. H9 iw. ' 7 A' 'A .-,, 1. ,.,, .. , L V i P i A' ji' 1.1 li 5 'QQ 1? 3 - '-' ' 1 ' R Purillgton-Powers CBQIGSJ Swift-Ott fvvesleyauj La,rmon-Carleton CfDart1nouthJ Chin-Partridge CBOwcloinj Hendrickson-Davis CAmherstj Fraker-Pollard ' Cwilliamsj Broocklllan-Barron CM. I. TJ Hartzmark-Hensen CTri11ityj .1'f ' .. . A 1,-,Q ' 1? Btn Cllfnglanh Zintercullegiates at lnngmunh may 13-15, 1919 Zboublez Olbampinnships X Semi-Finals l i-rmls ' ' -Bates f 6-1, 6-1 I P - Dartmouth I 6-3, 6-8, 6-EZ F Dartmouth , fs-4, 6-2 , J P E V Amherst '7-5, 6-4 j M. 1. T. N ' 6-4, 6-4 L M. I. T. , 6-3, 6-2. 1 J Champion Dzwtmouth 6-4, 8-10, 6-3, ! CAPTAIN-ELECT FARNHAM 391 VARSITY SOCCER TEAM, 1919 ER HCFX 1 Season uf 1919 George S. Sac-kett, 'Q0 . . Captain Nathaniel H. VVhiteside, ,Q0 . . . . . Manager Charles N. Stiles, 'QI I ..... . Assistant Manager Wfilliain C. Glover, ,18, VVilliam C. Hulbert, ,18 . . . Coaches The Qleam D. J. Tobin, ,QQ . . . . . . Coal K. H. K. Thomas, ,QI . Right F allbaclc R. J. Clark, 'QQ . . . Left F ullbach C. O. 'Bache-Wiig, Jr., 'Q1 . . A. . Right H alfback J. Dale, 'QI ..... . Center H alfback G. S. Sackett, 'Q0, lVI. Saunders, Jr., 'QQ . Left Hatfhack J. VV. Stark, JQO, VV. Lies, Jr., 'Q1 . . Right Out Forward R. H. VVl1ittier, 'Q1 ..,. . Right In Forward lVI. VV. Fletcher, ,Q3 . . Center Forward S. F. Smith, 'QQ . Left In Forward F. H. Caswell, 'Q3 . Left Out Forward iummarp ut the izasun October 17 at Hanover Dartmouth 1 Springfield Y. M. C. A. 5 November Q0 at Springfield Dartmouth 1 Springfield Y. lVI. C. A. 0 November QQ at Philadelphia Dartmouth 0 Pennsylvania 5 323 1 VARSlTY GOLF TEAM, 1919 A Parsitp bali 52515011 of 1919 John K. Wetherby, ,19 . . . Captazn Stanley lVI. lVIauk, ,19 . . . illanaqei D. H. Ankeny, ,21 A. Gunnison, ,922 A. P. Boyd, '22 O. R. Rice, Jr., 'QQ Qummaff of tb? QEHZDU May 2 at Nassau Country Club Dartmouth 4 Princeton lVIay 3 at Scarsdale Country Club Dartmouth Q Pennsylvania May 5 at Belmont Springs Dartmouth 12 Harvard lVIay 17 at North Adams Dartmouth-'Williams CCancelledj lVIay 31 at Amherst Dartmouth 5 Amherst June 2 at New Haven Dartmouth 2 P Yale 324 James W. Buckley, ,eo Ellis 0. Briggs, '21 J. WV. Buckley, '20 E. O. Briggs, '21 GUN CLUB 2 , 4151111 Team H . . . . . Captaih . . . . L . Manager 455132 Qieam W. VVerden, '21 A. B. Turner, '22 R. L. Spotts, Jr., '22 Giummarpinf the ieasun lVIay 21 at Princeton Dartniouth 282 Princeton 242 May 31 at New Haven Dartmouth 424 Y ale 448 Ellis O. Briggs, '21 R. L. Spotts, J1'., '22 J. YV. Buckley, '20 E. O. Briggs, '21 November 7 a.tN JFHII 1920 . . . . . 'Captain . . . . . . Manager The Glieam R. L. Spotts, Jr., '22 J. H. Burning, '23 R. C. Gunnell, '23 ew York A.C. Dartmouth 421 Yale 448 325 1919 Borden Helmer, '21 R. Ransom Wells, '21 Russell H. 1fVhi'ttier, '21 Borden Helmer, '21 F. D. Johnson, '20 J. K. WVetherby, '20 B. Helmer, '21 D. S. Plume, '21 R. R. Wells, '21 J. S. Douglas, '22 J. T. Inghram, '22 S. D. Kilmarx, '22 RIFLE CLUB Rifle Qiluh President Secretary Treasurer Team Captain members H. W. Reed, '22 H. L. Shepard, '22 D. NI. Ames, '23 G. M. Buffett, '23 J. W. Guppy, '23 R. F. Hertzberg, '23 R. B. Kershaw, '23 H. Q. lVIoore, '23 326 1920 Borden Helmer ' R? Ransom Wells, ' Franklin D. Johnson ' F. A. Nluehleck, ' H. A. Nay, '23 D. R. Neale, '23 L. U. Pratt, '23 O. M. Smith, '23 C. L. Sweney, '23 J. R. Titcomb, '23 H. C. White, '23 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM Gym Qleam, beasun uf 1920 Roger C, Wilde, ,QI ......... M anager Dr. John WV. Bowler, Patrick J. Kaney . . Coaches Joseph A. Fraser, '20 ..... . Captain GLUE mam J. A. Fraser, '20 ....... Tumbling W. 'R. Homer, ,21 . Parallel Bars and Sflcle H orse R. C. Wilde, ,921 W. Garst, '22 H. V. Olsen, ,292 B. F. Rassieur, March 12 lVIarch 13 'Q Qsnumnlary of the Eeason at Boston Da.rt1noutl1 Q9 at Cambridge Dartmouth 26 327 . T zmnbling anal Rings Club Swflnging Side Horse Parallel Bafrs M. I. T. Q5 I-Iarvard 27 . . A . 2 , ,f , 2 gi 5 xxx. 3 ma s Q if if XE .. 2 wrestling fllzam Harold L. lVIiller, 121 . . VValter B. Ralimanop, '23 . J. lVI. 1fVilliamS, H. D. Sanimis, '23 lVI. S. Stern, '23 . H. J. Richter, '21 . ' . W. B. Rahmanop, '23 . G. R. Scammon, ,23 . f Manager . Captain 'Uwe Zlleam . e , 1 15-pound class . 125-pound class . 135-pound class . 145-pozmd class . 158-pound class . 1 7 5 -pound class W. M. Henry, '23 . . .... , . . heavyweight class glllillildfy of the Season . February 21 at Northfield Dartmouth 4 'iNorthiield 23 Nlarch 6 at Boston Dartmouth 41 M. 1. T. 21 lVIarCl1 7 at Springfield Dartmouth 7 Springfield Y. M. C. A. 19 lVIarcl1 21 at Springfield New England Intercollegiates CVVon by Spring field Y. 1VI. C. A.g Harvard, second, M. I. T., third, Brown, fourth, Dartmouth, fiftlrl 328 e FENCING TEAM K :Fanning Season 1920 John E. Hill,' '21 ........ . Manager Waldo Shumway, George Raffalovitch . . Coaches Lincoln H. Weld, ,921 ..... . Captafin The Zlleam L. H. Weld, 321 H. F. Liao, 'QQ G. W. Cooke, 'Q3 R. F. I-Iertzberg, ,QS bummarp nf the Qeasun February Q1 at New Haven Foils Dartmouth 0 Yale 9 ' Epee Dartmouth 1 Yale 0 February 27 at Boston Foils Da.rtmouth 0 lVI. I. T. 4 Epee Dartmouth 1 lVI. I. T. 0 February Q8 at Cambridge Foils Dartmouth Q Harvard '7 Epee Dartmouth 1 Harvard 0 lVIarch 13 at Hanover Triangular Meet F oils Eyoee 1. Dartmouth 11 Dartmouth 1 2. Bowdoin 10 lVI. I. T. 0 3. M. I. T. 6 329 Kappa Sigma Basketball Team, Intel-fraternity Champions Zlnterfratzrnirtp Zgasknzthall Every fraternity at Dartmouth was represented in the 1920 interfraternity basketball series, which was Won by the Kappa Sigma five. The regular league schedule was completed the first week in Ma1'ch with Kappa Kappa Kappa, Kappa Sigma, Delta Tau Delta, and Sigma Phi Epsilon leading theirhrespective leagues. Delta Tau Delta put Sigma Phi Epsilon out of the running 11-6 in the first game of the semi-Hnals, and Kappa Kappa Kappa was eliminated in the race for the crown by Kappa Sigma 17-16. In the Hnal game, Kappa Sigma took a Well-played game from Delta Tau Delta, 16-11. izasun nf 1920 . S emi-F 'inals F 'inals Champion League A Kappa Kappa Kappa? Kappa Sigma N League B Kappa Sigma 17-16 f ' Kappa Sigma League C Sigma Phi Epsilon l Delta Tau Delta I f 16-11 League D Delta Tau Delta I 11-6 J 330 f , AWLEHCS 1 - r l 1923 FOOTBALL TEAM X 1 . 1923 freshman gfuuthall Seasun After dropping the irst game of the season to Exeter by a lone touchdown and goal, the 1923 eleven went through the remainder of its schedule without a setback. At the end of the season, Neidlinger at center, and Burke, left halfback, were picked by the N ew York Sun for the All-Eastern Freshman eleven. .Captain Taylor, left guard, although hampered by injuries throughout the season, also received mention. The week after the Exeter defeat, the yearlings bested the Worcester team 13-7, and in their first home game completely outplayed the Springfield Y. M. C. A. seconds and registered an easy win 19-3. November 1 the New Hampshire State freshmen were swamped 32-0 at Durham. Two scoreless ties with Dean Academy and Coburn Classical Institute completed the season. 3312 1 , A A WI 1 ill9 .f1', ' Qb f 1 1 , 1 . lil T 21 -,,. A , A Damn. H. Eaton, 'QU Orton H. Hicks, 121 Archie B. Gile, 117 A freshman :Football 52515011 uf 1919 J ames T. Taylor, '23 ' 1 H. R. VValker . UEIJB Team lVI. D. Hubert, L. J. Van Orden , . J. T. Taylor, J. G. Pollard, L. F. lVIcDermott . L. K. Neidlinger K. B. Hurd, C. G. Ascheubach G. R. Scammon, G. S. VVinSdor . . J. E. Foster, C. N. Reed . . . C. A. Calder, H. H. A. R. Giroux. . lVIills, T. B. Swartzbaugli . C. Fu. Burke, J. C. Allen . E. D. Hoag, H. P. TVI2Ly112L1'Cl . . Summary uf the Sveasun All A F f E 2 fig , NMC, jgig' 1.3 ,, X , .. A an 111 anagcr M anage-r Coach Captain f1S.Si.b7fCl71.f Left End Left Tackle Left Guard . . Center . Right Guard . Right .Tackle . Right End Quarterback . Lqft H alfbach . R1ZghtHaUI1ack . Fullbaclc 1923 Opponents October 11 Exeter at Exeter 0 7 October 18 1VorceSter at 1Vorcester 13 7 October F25 Springfield Y. 1VI. C. A. CSCCOIICD at Hzmovci 19 3 November 1 New Hampshire State H9231 at Durham 312 0 November 8 Dean Academy at Hanover . 0 O November 11 Coburn Classical Institute at VVa.terville, NIEL1116 0 0 333 ' , 1923 BASKETBALL TEAM 1923 :freshman Basketball Seaman In contrast to the season experienced by the varsity, the 1923 quintet was outpointed only by Cushing and VVilliston, both of which were later defeated on the home court. In spite of the loss of Doyle and Heep after the first trip, the yearlings presented a Well-rounded outfit and were victorious in the remaining four contests. Captain Millar at right guard Was the mainstay of the defense throughout the fS62l.SO1'1. The freshmen opened with a Walk away from Lebanon High 105-7, January 19. On a three-game trip beginning January Q2,the team lost its only two games, but also won a close match with Dean at Franklin. Cushing, Exeter, Goddard Seminary, and YVil1iston were easily defeated in the inal contests. 334 1 5 ' 1,45 ' - , fgxr 5' ' Q 1 7' .,,.,A , ,, A .,,.,, . A freshman Zgaskethall Season nf H1920 Hugh M. Mc1iay, '21 . ' . l1lu.1'1c1gcf1' George XV. A. Zahn . Coach Joseph A. S. lllillar, '23'. C'a.pta'i11 Ghz Team T. I-I. Cullen, Jr., J. S. Doyle .... Loft I orwurcI H. H. Conley, H.fRockefe11er . . R-ight l mjwafrcl J. D. Landauer ' . . . . Center F. X. Heep J. A. S. Nlillar Jan ua ry 1 9 January 22 January Q3 January 241 February 1 8 February Q1 February Q4 Feb ruary. Q8 . Lqft Guard . .... Right Guard .Svummarp nf Seasons Q 1923 Opponents I.eb.m0lu High at Hanover 105 7' Cushing Academy at Ashburnhaln K Q0 29 Dean Academy at Franklin 34 31 VVilliston at Easthampton 31 All Cushing Academy at Hanover 22 12 Exeter at Exeter 52 Q7 Goddard Seminary at Hanover 41 5 Wfilliston at Hanover 22 1fl1 335' K HOCKEY TEAM C 1923Jfrsz5IJn1an iiauchszp Season Although winning but two of its five games, the freshman hockey team was nevertheless a fast aggregation. Eaton and VVanamaker formed an offensive pair such as is seldom seen on a first year seven. In the opening fray, the Green plebes lost a hard game to the Harvard yearlings 2-1 at Cambridge. Pomfret School and Arlington High were easy victims, 5-1, 5-O. On February 12, the freshmen were pitted against the fast St. Paulis team at Concord, and were outpointed 4-1. lVIinus the services of Eaton and Wfanamaker, the team dropped its final game with Exeter at Exeter, 2-0. E I 336 E 1 ' K x 7 1, l LA' I V A J! . ,,,,,,m , ..,... , I 1 l ' :Freshman Iiauckep W beasun nf 1920 Samuel VV. Plumb, Jr., ,QI . . Zlfanager R. J. Paisley, ,Q0 . Coach P. W. VVanan1a.ker, '23 . . . Captain f 1111132 illieum R. A. Slnllll . , Left lfffjylg A. C. Eaton . . . Center P. VV. VVana1naker . , Rglmgr J. S. Paisley, E. R. Furey Right Wing J. E. Foster .... . P0inQ L. K. Neidlinger, C. A. Calder Cover Point JV. R. Holmes, R. Bl. Billings .... . God! Summary of Qeasnn . A 19523 Opponents January 17 ' Harvard 1923 at Cambridge 1 2 January 19 Pomfret at Pomfrer 5 1 January 24 Arlington High School at Hanover 5 0 February 12 St. Paul at Concord C 1 4 February Q3 Exeter at Exeter 0 Q 337 i ,V V . A' k A W , f in 1A.v . Q il 19. A - P Q.. w e W f ff -4 1 .1 rag. 1923 Jfreshmah Clirnss fdlnuntrp bzasun Owing to lack of experience the freshman cross country runners were unable to keep pace with their opponents last fall. In the Yale Invitation Nleet at New Haven, November 15, the yearlings opposed Harvard, Yale, and M. I. T., and ran up a total of 90 points, finishing in last place. A Week later the local harriers ran in a dual meet with the M. I. T. freshmen at Boston and Were, defeated by a QQ-33 score. Season nf 1 91 9 Warren S. Ege, '21 . . ' . . M wriager Harold C. Avery, ,19 . . Coach Carl A. Gray, '23 . . . . Captain Ghz Cham H. R. Barrett I R. P. Levy R. I-I. Dickinson D. K. Mairs D. I-I. Forbush R. E. Nlaxwell C. A. Gray F. N. Merriam, Jr. S. C. White bummarp uf the Season Yale Invitation Meet at New Haven, November 15. I-Iarvard 38 - M. I. T. 52 Yale 39 Dartmouth 90 Dartmouth vs. M. I. T. at Boston, November QQ. M. I. T. 22 . Dartmouth 33 ' 338 f , Cannell 4 Newton Newcomer Phillips Gault Stockdale Leonard Warden Southwick RlCl1a1'dSOI1 Bruce PALAEOPITUS ,l KN , A? , ' is it - Q XRMX at A--Q X Uflunpv A f him rx X AX, 1 2' 7 Tf l 5 lf, fgl Vx N ll I :gigs . , E .ll h gtg , ,,.,, , A 1 5 Y -it -.Z ' , if' -Xl -1 ' . , if 1,1 ,EJ NFQL? ,,,, . , ff X. K 4 C.. Q '39 In l5fa:21.5 an .NK ibalaeupitus Originating twenty years ago as a secret senior society, Palaeopitus has come to stand as the representative of the undergraduate body, as the-medium between the students as a whole and the College Administration. It was founded by a number of prominent alumni, who, in their seeking after the welfare of Dartmouth, believed they saw a possible danger in the growth of numbers. After existing for two and a half years in an atmosphere of secrecy and mystery, in the fall of 1902, The Palaeopitus, as it was originally called,,finding that it could serve its purpose better as an open organization, published its constitution and declared itself a non-secret society. As such it has continued to the present day. t u I ' Y According to the original constitution, the object of the organization is to bring into close touch and working harmony the various branches of college activity, to preserve the customs and traditions of Dartmouth, to promote her welfare and to protect her good namef' Although lacking in official power, Palaeopitus, by the nature of its membership and by the tacit acceptance of the college, stands as the voice of the students and as the champion of the ideals of Dartmouth. Two important changes that have been introduced during the past year are the enlarging of the body by admitting the president of the Dartmouth Outing Club in an ex-officio capacity, and the establishing of an auxiliary group known as the Occom Council. In its present status the membership of Palaeopitus consists of twelve seniors, of whom seven are appointed ex-officio, and Eve are chosen by bal- loting of the class. Those who become members by virtue of the offices which they hold, include the captain of football, the managers of football, baseball, and track, the editor-in-chief of The Dartmouth, the president of the Dartmouth Christian Association, and the president of the Dartmouth Outing Club. ' The newly established advisory body, Occom Council, is made up of fifteen men, the respective oHEicers of the three lower classes. Its purpose, as stated when it was created, is to act as the means of direct communication between Palaeopitus and the undergraduate body, as well as to aid Palaeopitus in executing its purposes as set forth above. In filling a need arising from the constant growth of the college, the Occom Council possesses functions similar to those of the established Palaeopitus and has like powers, although remaining at all times under the supervision of the senior group. ' 340 f... I Y 5 A my 5 3. , K V V- 3, My 'fy gy I 1 - L,,'-k'v.-'. X :Q -,f, , - .4 feb, .1 my N f Z ' I fa ,J A i t fa g ig? -. Members uf Balaenpitus Cayvtafin of Football Manager of Football Manager of Baseball Jackson Livingston- Cannell Richard Cheever Southwick . Wlarren Stetson Gault Manager of Track .... Stanley Jacob Newcomer Editor of The Dartmouth . . President of the Christian Association President of the Outing Club . . I Elected by the Class of 1920 . . Alexander Scott Warden . Eugene Stone Leonard . Llewellyn Sherman Adams Earl Harrington Bruce Carl Elbridge Newton . Reuel George Phillips Norman Byron Richardson Arthur Warren Stockdale 3-ll g. Ak 19 , 5 f XXX I ql ,. ,i Bartmuuth Cfnllegr 3Bun:QtbIetir Cllnunril 015131: Qlluunril un btuhnznt Grganigatinns A QBffire1t5 f Professor Francis Lane Childs ....... Chairman Horace Gibson Pender . . , Secretary and Graduate M cmager jfacultp Bepresentatihesg - Qlumni iltepresentatihe Professor David Lambuth Natt Wfaldo Emerson, '00 Professor Henry Thomas Moo1'e fllinhetgrabuates ' B' ' Edward Munroe Curtis Albert Wesley Frey K Paul Graves Sanderson beaznn uf1919-1920 . To supervise and watch over the non-athletic organizations, a council similar in makeup and functions to that controlling the athletic policy of the College, directs the majority of the organized activities of the students. Composed of three members of the faculty, a graduate manager, one alumnus, and three undergraduates, the council has a directing influence over practically all non-athletic organizations representing the College, except the publications. It arranges schedules, supervises funds, and, if need be, limits the activities of these groups. This year it controls the Dramatic Association, the lVIusicalfClubs, Junior Prom, Debating, and the Band. The undergraduate members holding their positions ex-officio, are the director of Dramatics, the manager of the Musical Clubs, and the chairman of the Junior Prom Committee. , Having fully recovered from the effect of the war in curtailing their work, the various organizations under the control of the Council have extended their activities this year even more widely than ever before. The band accompanied the football team to its three out-of-town games, the Musical Clubs resumed the long western tour to which they were accustomed before the war, and the Dramatic Association revived an old policy of sending its productions out of town to play in a number of important cities. Shortly before Spring vacation, Oh, Doctor! the successful Prom show of a year ago, staged four performances among metropolitan centers of lVIassachusetts and New Hampshire. 1 3-12 Q7 2' ..f' T . ' ' .f ,..,., gl in X 4 mf .5 Q.:-.Egg 0 9 if . T. X,-A wf i i.- A 1 X Kiwi i my if W s E i ' .reg .V 1 4 ' 5 , I 7 V ,X - 1 . ,, ,-,,A . , U , , -rlll 5,5 A ,,4F.?,,' A- .V -1'-- . ' .,Y, 1, ':i ,,f, v ,f, I jnrerast nf the 1921 rum The 1921 Prom promises to be one of the largest and most successful social functions that Dartmouth has ever seen. Of course, predictions as to the size of an affair two months oHf are always uncertain, yet this year, more than ever, everything points to an unusual Prom. The number of guests that were invited to Winter' Carnival may well be taken as an indication of the growing popularity of Dartmouth,s two festival week-ends. Add to this the fact that many of the guests were unfortunately quarantined at the womenis colleges and unable to come to Hanover, and we have a fairly sure sign of a large Prom. Those whose hopes were disappointed will make up in May for what they lost in February. Little can at this early date be promised as to the exact nature of the functions. What is new must be withheld and what is old hardly needs mention. As usual, Prom will start with the Dramatic'Association performance, and officially ends with the Musical Clubs concert. The Prom Ball, two baseball games, a tennis match, and a tea dance will be the other big attractions of the gala three days. Looking at things as best we may, it seems that it is a safe assertion to say that the Prom of the class of 1921 will be at least the equal in every respect of all those Proms that have preceded it. ' T P. G. SANDERSON, lVIarch 8, 1920 Chairman 1921 Prom Committee 343 1 -1 ' L u A .1 4 .x X . r I Harper ' ' N MacDonald , 5Sandersop , , ' Ross ' Reynolds V .JUNIOR PROM. COMMITTEE,.CLASS OF 1921 1 X P P P f M Zigi Euan ljga.f',d qqgwgihg mfqkulo , iL +,i:iE?a, e..-, H .V Qmwf' legi iig Q Cfgg il .wmg m Tha Kumar Brom, Qilass uf 1920 QEun1n1Utee A M1-. Chilcott a Mr. Andretta Mr. Newcomer Nlr. Baketel Nh: Prentiss ibattunzzsks Nlrs. Ernest M. Hopkins lVIrs. Craven Laycock John M. Gile Homer E. Keyes lVIrs. Nlrs. IVI rs. Mrs lVIrs Mrs UH5bers fMr. Davis Horace G. Pender Chester A. Phillips James P. Richardson William H. Wood lVIr.. Hayes lVIr. Nlorey Mr. Larrnon I lVI1' Sanderson lVIr. Bruce ' Mr Trull Mr. MeGoughran lVI1'. Vance 345 if .. .Tlx x- 3 lmgau-1 1- 5' 1111111111 X . R Y we Ew1i .Q' b ,-531. J' . if L , 491 .eh . ai ' 1' 1 Nil Qxlwqimgg' . ' 'W J I1 i V-W. 1 , .,.. 1199 1 pp p p 1 , 1 111 , 11 . U 11 W p, H ' AAA' I in M di iluniur from iBrug1fam A Zliburshap, illilap 22 8:15 p. m. The Prom Show, Oh, Doctor! presented by the Dartmouth Dram atic Association, at Wlebster Hall. 10:30 p. m. Fraternity Dances. jlffihaia may 23 2:30 p. m. Baseball Game: Dartmouth vs. Boston Collegeaat Alumni Dval. 4:00 p.m. Fraternity Teas at their respective houses. ' ' ' 6:30 p. m. Hum on the Campus. ' A 9:00 p. m. The Promenade Ball, in Alumni Gymnasium. 5atur1Jap, may 24 1 p 1 1:30 p. m. Tennis Match: Dartmouth vs. Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Gymnasium Courts. - 2:30 p.m. Baseball Game: Dartmouth vs. Pennsylvania, at Alumni Cval. 4:00 p. m. Tea Dance, in Alumni Gymnasium. 8.15 p. m. Musical Clubs' Concert, at Webster Hall. ,fraternity jlfunpctiuns Banner: 'dlibursbap jlaigbt, may 22 At the Trophy Room, Alumni Gymnasium: Phi Kappa Psi, Delta Tau Delta, Chi Phi, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. fll the Little T heatre, Robinson Hall: Kappa Kappa Kappa, Theta Delta Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa. At Wooflstoolc, Vermont: Psi Upsilon, Alpha Delta Phi, Delta Kappa Epsilon. At their respective houses: Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Alpha Chi Rho, Cosmos. S 3416 3 .NN Qc. q aiglg Ente' srl ff W Q-. v f-3 P Q ' Q .QE - f -:-2..,,, H. ' gl :I :xxx yr, . 'M AI V I, ,,., 5 f. Y I 1 ,'.' - V Q ,i 5 1 f ' 35 1+ ' x V 2 VV V. ' . es, 57 w.xv t, ,,2 A Q ' f I Webster Hall, Junior Prom, lVIay 22, 1919 WJ, Doctor! CAST OF CHARACTERS Harry . ..... . t' , CC1 , R. O. Elliott, '20 Larry ...... R. W. Elsasser, '21 Jerry . D . H. S. Ferguson, '22 Terry . . . . . R. T. Reid, '22 Betty Valentine . . J. H. D. Zuckerman, '22 Percy . . . J. L. Sullivan, '21 Alexander .... . . B. M. Steele, '22 Johnny Brown . g . . . H. F.. Maroney, '19 Mrs. Montgomery Spifiington . . R. P. Bird, '21 Archibald Arlington . . . M. Saunders, Jr., '22 Wilbur VVinkle . . . J. M. Fleming, '21 Mrs. WVinkle . . Gwendolyn Winlde D. Marmaduke Blue . . Cymbeline Sims . i . H. J. Cleary, '21 L. Finlayson, C '19 . G. L. Frost, '21 19 . W. W. Allen, ' Jake . . . J. W. Ernbree, Jr., '21 Polly . . J. R. Aborn, '22 Molly E. G. Bates, '22 Lolly, . - . G. L. Clewell, '22 Dolly ...... , .... W. G. Haas, '22 l L- . CAFE SCENE, OH, DOCTOR! 347 Qs. . bpnupzis uf Scenes Act I-Dr. Brown's Office, New York. lVIorning. Act Hi-The Cafe Diabolique. That Evening. Act HI-Dr. Brownis Office. Three Days Later. jliiiwairal jlaumhers ACT 1 ' iifN-ugh...-1. ., Fllllnhy J ggixjjenwx 4 J fo .gif l' ie... lifflYii9.:yuv,Q, 5-is N X 1 F4-'-za Ililllilwl f' , 4 , -9nifY:A'i ill ' WL 0 F35 :ti 5 YU 6,1115 . .J '- A Opening Chorus .... Betty and Reporters My H eartls with American Girls . . . Johnny I Love to Dance . . . . lVIrs. Spiffington Oh, Doctor! . . Harry and Chorus ACT II A Opening Chorus ....... Jake and Waiters CLyric by E. M. Curtis, 'QCD Them Was the Happy Days . . AMrs. VVinkle and lVIar1naduke Blue The Older They Get, the Younger They Get 'Em . Mr. Winkle and Chorus Finale ......... Johnny and Chorus ACT III Opening Chorus ..... Stenographers and Old lVIen CLy1-ic by F. lVIcDuffee, ,QU Everything Has Been Pleasant Up Tflll Now . . . Johnny The Illovies Are a F airy Lancl to Me . . Archibald Finale ...... .A Ensemble 348 I dr 1 . ',.,.: 1 .,'f ., L llll f' N 52iLe:f,., -fi Wfcbstcr Hall, Junior Pl'0111, 1Wu.y 2-L, 1919 The Dartmouth jllilusinal Qlluhs 1. CZLV2l.11CI' Song 2. The Entry of the G1 3. Melodic Modulaiions 4. Syncopated Abberzxtion S. A. AND '5. Cil1'111C11iL 6. 1113.110 Solo' 7. A Little Story 8. 1'1'cstidigit.zm111111oVzLtio11s 9. Roses of Piczrrdy . . 10. Dartmouth Song . . iBrugram GLEE CLUB zLdia.to1's . . . NIANDOLIN CLUB R.. P. Bmw, '21 RETTA, '20, and V. A. B GLUE CLUB VVERNE R JANSSEN, '21 BIANDOLIN CLUB C. E. NEXXVTON, '20 R. W. ELSASSER, '21 COMBINED CLUBS 349 REGLIO, ,QU H 'C7I'I'6ILl'fltll Fucilr H 'l'l-SUI! Odell ll uyzlml Segur . AQ Ip 5 1 31 ,fb -' ' F J' ,p- ,1-.' 2 ,1'- 5 E I i i- .A jfall ilanuse Parties jfrihap, QBctuhet 31 6:45 p. m. Supper Dance, Boyd's Restaurant. 8:15 p. m. Football Mass Meeting, Alumni Gymnasium. 10:00 p. m. Informal Dance, Little Theatre, Robinson Hall. Saturhtaf, jihhemher 1 3:00 p. m. Football Game, Colgate vs. Dartmouth, Alumni Oval. 8:15 p. m. Specialty Act Concert, Webster Hall. ' . iiauuse iBaetie5 Phi Delta Theta p 1 Phi Gamma Delta Beta Theta Pi , Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha Webster Hall, Fall House Parties, November 1, 1-919 2 Specialty get Program 1. Peter Gink - Nlandolin Club .... C0190 2. A Wee VVarbler in Original Hits - R. P. Bird, ,21 Violin Solo - P. W. Clark, '20 4. Song and Dance + T. Sonnenfeld, '21 5. Ikan Throwem, Russia? - A F. P. Ives, '19, S. A. Anclretta, '20, V. A. Breglio, '20, VV. E. Terry, '21 6. Prestidigital TrmoVations'- C: EQ Newton, '20 7. Roses of Picardy - R. VV. Elsasser, '21 8. The Jazz Baby - N. Bernard, '23 9. Syncopated Abberation - P. S. Sample, '20, D. M. Sample, '21, T. H. Pinney, ,22, G. D. Plumb, '22, and the Dartmouth Jazz Band 350 ,f7Q52ffigi ,ff,,:?fs,, 5? f aw- -MeSw.w,Qf54f,gu nf J WSL Eff ,A v-W ww 1 1um uIH'Hfw w ffl Q ?.'li.? w 351151, lwf' fc? '2 ff' HI, L11iifijilfmzfUIQIM f!:fInYl!?ifL,fp,, K ' m fm, as Q a cm l fd Eg' Q is E B B Y' - if V I X 7 ,aim Y A. ,,.-....,,.,.- W' K4Eff?'-:5..?,:.-.zz-, ' Q .4 ' ' - - i Uli- X x, 1. ,- f ' f f h 'QQn xy ,,, 4 'am , , Q 1 'IH w,5g2 ,. , ' or f ff fe .. y W - f t -F .,.. - ' 'Q ' - ,AY f ' , ' M H ' IEW U V , f , l l W m '3il 1 ni27mm n f 2 X If - - iw- K mi x A 'mwmw .J WEII Q 5 I ' il' 1 - - V Wlm lallg if i lgillg ilwllgz t .. 1 512 , .5-V 1- I imc mahnquus r SESQUI-CEN TENNIAL CELEBRATION, 1769-1919 - 1 A -A, I .Max -f aa. . E912 F .H 1 'ffQ:4 x A ., siviii... Qxwt i fiwigixi M.-.F 'Q 3 .Q V W Wx . J r V X ' M. f ,, f . 2' 1 ' Q T ' ' f ,ff , . ,, E F y . ,. , . .15 5 -.4 fi- H. ' ' w l V W i.. . 4 - 7,1 ., .i I, . V I, ,.-.E -,. 4 ' .1272-'LE ' ii' u , A ' za . f fe--U ' , 'fr-' . , , . .. . , '-133, wr- 1, -V it J ff f , 1 ' o- 1 , L A. v V AIRS' I 41 i L at A Sesqubfllentennial Qnnihersarp F Dartmouth celebrated from October 17 to 21 the 150th anniversary of its founding in 1769 by Eleazar VVheelock. Five hundred loyal sons of the College returned to attend the birthday party of their alma mater, while one hundred delegates from other institutions came to represent their colleges at this great festival. XThis particular week-end' saw Hanover in gala array. No effort had been spared to have everything look its best. Following tradition a mammoth tent was set up on the southeastern corner of the campus, a tent capable of holding 3000 persons. Every building in Dartmouth Row was draped with flags. Over every door were the stars and stripes, while from the windows hung the flags of the Allies. The pillars of Webster Hall, College Hall and the Inn were draped with bunting, while above the entrances of the buildings in the Administration Row hung the American flag. At either end of the campus flags were fastened to the stone posts, and on Main Street a small flag floated from every window. mt night everything was resplendent with light. The- lights on the Row were all aglow, the tower of Dartmouth Hall was illuminated, and a string of hanging lights extended down Main Street. Already overcrowded, Hanover was taxed to its limit to accommodate the 600 visitors who were here for the occasion. Middle and North Nlassachusetts Halls were vacated in favor of the older alumni -by the regular occupants, who doubled up in the other dormitories. Younger graduates slept on cots which were set up in Alumni Gymnasium. Inns and hotels in nearby towns were crowded with alumni who came here with their cars. Th ffl ' l dated in the faculty homes. e o c1a guests and delegates were accommo- ' The events began Friday evening with the celebration of Dartmouth Night. A torch light procession formed with over 2000 in line and paraded up to President Hopkins, home, returning by way of Occom Ridge, to the campus, where it entered the big tent. A large platform was set up on one side to accommodate the faculty and speakers. Here the freshmen were formally welcomed into the fellowship of Dartmouth men, and instructed in the meaning of the Dartmouth spirit. After the exercises, there was an exhibition of Hreworks on the campus. 353 , .Vi ,Q Yr tg. sv . Av mmm Nlvmn Lift Nw W ...N J .9 ,MPN rlhlvwnzl FT 53:3 ' Wfitix 4 1 Zig ral PT. f fglqf t fgtixiwtiliy x .xiii I , . I . Q. Q 55, - Q fu'-X, YJ: The following morning, the College plant was open for inspection by alumni and other visitors. At noon, the Outing Club served a roast-pig dinner to many alumni who had made the eight-mile trip to the Moose Nlountain cabin. The party returned to Han ver in time for the football game between Dartmouth and Penn- sylvania State College, resulting in a 19-13 victory which will be long remembered in the annals of Dartmouth football. In the evening, The Foundersv, originally the Prom show of 1906, was again presented by the Dramatic Association. The exercises of Sunday and lVIonday were more serious in their nature. In the morning, the Rev. Ozora S. Davis, '89, preached a truly remarkable anniversary sermon in the College Church. tDuring the afternoon, the delegates from other colleges arrived. Regular Vesper services were conducted by President Hopkins, in the Chapel, after which the guests and their hosts adjourned to Robinson Hall for a buffet supper. Following this was an organ recital by Professor Harry B. Jepson of Yale. I . Q Monday morning broke clear and warm, a perfect day forthe Hnale. Morning prayers attended by the senior class, faculty, delegates and guests, were held in Rollins Chapel. Theacademic procession formed outside and marched around the campus. At the door of Webster Hall, the senior class split ranks according to custom, allowing the procession to pass through. The program consisted of felici- tations, the singing of the Anniversary Ode, and addresses by Judge Stafford of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, President Burton of the University of Minnesota, and President Hopkins. c After the exercises, a pageant depicting phases in the growth of Dartmouth was staged on the campus, followed by a luncheon to the guests, faculty and stu- dents. During the luncheon, toy balloonswvere distributed among the crowd, and at a given signal let loose. In the midst of the gay scene, with the big tent, the large crowd, and the many colored toy balloons, an aeroplane appeared in the sky, and performed many spectacular stunts. I I Round-table discussions of educational topics, one of the chief attractions to the visitors, occupied the afternoon. The celebration was ofhcially brought to a close by a formal dinner to the delegates, guests and faculty, in College Hall. Five hundred alumni who returned to show their loyalty and affection for Dart- mouth, left Hanover lVIonday with renewed allegiance, inspired by a spirit of de- votion to the ideals of the College. Such was the prevalent tone of the historic four days that were spent in October among the granite hills of New Hampshire. 354 7:15 p. n1. 8:00 p. m. All morning 12:00 noon 3:00 p. 111. 8:15 p. 111. 11:00 a. 111. 5:20 p. 111. 6:15 p. in. 8:15 p. 111. 9:15 a. 111. 9:30 a. m. 10:00 a. 111. 1:00 p. 111. 3:30 p. n1. 7:30 p. 111. A 119 U M l21 G?-f.251a:.:ffa,.,.....m . .X 'D' ,A .zum willll!Ii,':yJigja411g9gl .Z 1' 'i ff . ix. A I I, 49 - . if Tn - .a ,hfzl -I A ...EJ pf's.,?.g3ii,, ,lR4l ' T .lt Xl- lf 'J ffxsiwxxxxim aa?-TQ., .. WWW. by X, ...J X-. besquizfltentennial Qtelehratinn Rrugram jftihap, Butcher 17 g Torch Light Procession. Dartmouth Night Celebration i11 the Te11t. baturhap, Q9ntuher 18 College open for inspection. Outing Club Roast Pig Dinner, lVIoose Nlountain Cabin. Football Ga111e: Dartmouth vs. Pennsylvania State, Alumni Oval. Presentation of The Foundersj' by the Dartmouth Dramatic Asso ciation, VVebster Hall. P Sunhap, Gctuher 19 Anniversary Sermon by the Rev. Ozora Stearns Davis, ,89, College Church. , ' Vesper Service, Rollins Cl1apel. Buffet Supper Served to the Oflicial Guests a11d their Hosts, Robin- son Hall. T Organ Recital by Professor Harry Benjamin Jepson of Yale Univer- sity, Rollins Chapel. jlflunhap, Q9rtnt1er 20 Blorning Prayers, Rollins Chapel. Academic Procession, College Green. Anniversary Exercises, VVebster Hall. Luncheon and Incidental Pageant, College Green. Educational Conferences, College Buildings. Dinner to Official Guests and Faculty, College Hall. 355 -51 A A C 5 'f-i ii i 9 ' .- 2 e- f' T, 'EPT- Ei' f-gk z - jmg alwx A V .L:. Qin,-ip , 5 1 1 ' t ' -.,:A::Q 3 ' . t 'P s a ll Ein the illient Eartmuutb jiiigbt Program Presiding Officer: Ernest Martin Hopkins, '01 President 'of Dartmouth College Reading of Felicitations Speakers: Samuel Leland Powers, '74 Former United States Congressman from Massachusetts Matt Bushnell Jones, '94 ' ' President of the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company David Joseph Maloney, '97 ' 1 p - Benjamin Tinkham Marshall,' '97 ' President of the Conne?3ticutfiCollege for Women Ernest Martin Hopkins, '01 ' President of Dartmouth College THE TENT-SESQUI-CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION ' 356 A, ,LAY 'Q ' LJ Q wi me AV Qrmihzrsarp Bay QEEUEI uf Qbcercises in Zllilliehster itaall Overture, lVIignon ........ Thomas Invocation Felicitations Nevers' Regimental Band The Rev. Francis Edward Clark, D.D., LL. D. President of the World's Christian Endeavor Union Herman Wilson Newell, '20 For' the Undergraduate Body Edwin Julius Bartlett, 372, A.htl., NLD. New Hampshire Professor of Chemistry For the Faculty Wlilliam Tucker Abbott, Esq., ,90 President of the Association of Alumni For the Alumni ' Frederick Sheetz Jones, LL.D. Dean of Yale College For the Fellowship of Colleges His Excellency John Henry Bartlett, 594, A.lVl. Y Governor of New Hampshire I For the State of New Hampshire Anniversary Ode r , Address - The College a Training School for Public Service lVIusic VVendell Phillips Stafford, LL.D. Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia N evers, Regimental Band Address - VVhat lVIust the Colleges Do? , Epilogue lVIarion Le Roy Burton, Ph.D., LL.D., D.D. President of the University of illinnesota Ernest hflartin Hopkins, Litt.D., LL.D. President of Dartmouth College Singing of Milton's paraphrase of Psalm CXXXVL tune N urembu-rg Benediction The Reverend Wlilliam Hamilton VVood, Ph.D., B.D. Professor of Biblical Literature 357 THE CAMPUS DURING THE SESQUI-CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION ASA 'uf-..f,' 35155. f-53 1 Qty X . 2,1 f Yx ' I J Q iv is 1 'Ni izilfiiu, xy fy, A 'titfiffii we SM 1. ' pw wwe Ulige Pageant un the Qllullege Green ze Fpzfsofles ' The Aborigine Dartmouth, Occom, and Whitaker Samson Occom and Nathaniel Whitaker, raising funds in England for VVheelock,s Indian Charity School, were the means of interesting the Earl of Dartmouth in the project. Monday, Febru' 10th Q1766j, Mr. White- field took M1'. Whitaker and I in his Coach and Introduced us to my Lord Dartmouth, and he appear'd like a worthy Lord indeed lVIr. YVhitetield says he is a Christian Lord and an uncommon onef'lOccom's Diary Eleazar Wheelock Eleazar Wheelock, accompanied by Sylvanus Ripley and Dr. John Crane journeyed from Lebanon, Connecticut, in an ox-cart, arriving in Hanover early in August, 1770. lVIadam Wheelock ' Madam Wheelock, attended by students and her personal slaves, reached Hanover in September, 1770. She brought with her the celebrated barrel of New England rum. Governor Wentworth Governor John Wentworth, accompanied by gentlemen from Portsmouth, rode on horseback to Hanover to attend the exercises of the first commence- ment, August 28, 1771. At this time he presented to YVheelock the historic 'silver punch bowl. John Ledyard John Ledyard, who afterward left Hanover in a dug-out canoe built on the banks of the Connecticut, to begin his famous explorations that ultimately led him around the world, came to college from Hartford, Connecticut, in a sulky, in the spring of 17 72. He returns to Dartmouth, appropriately, by airplane: but approaches the College Green in his ancient sulky. Daniel Webster and Rufus Choate In 1819, the year of Choate's graduation from the College, Webster won the Dartmouth College Case before the Supreme Court of the United States. QThe chaise used in this episode was once the property of Daniel Webster and is now in the possession of the Collegej 359 Ag fl -i yrs , ,, -fe A . i Q . 8. The Birthday Cakeu The alumni of Dartmouth have been assisting the College through the medium of the Dartmouth College Fund on the Tucker Foundation, an income fund supported by annual contributions. Gifts to this fund during the past year, as listed by classes, together with various capital gifts for buildings and endowments, are indicated by candles on the cake. 9. Patriotic Dartmouth W A. The Revolutionary War B. The Civil VVar C. The VVorld lvar 4 Qlihunatinnal Qllunferennefi g Divisions of Ancient Languages and Literatures, Modern Languages and Literatures, and Fine Arts L In the French Roorn, Robinson Hall N . Conducted by Charles Darwin Adams, Ph.D. Lawrence Professor of the Greek Language and Literature General Subject: The Humanities Old and New in College Education Leaders of the Discussion: VVilliam Allen Neilson, A.NI., Ph.D. President of Smith College Irving Babbitt, A.M. ., Professor of French Literature, Harvard University Arthur Fairbanks, Ph.D., Litt.D. Director of the Boston M nseurn of F ine Arts 360 2. Divisions of the Mathci iv we 1' - , ge' , t tf . .,., , pf A, -we ,J aww 1 lr' 1,4 - P511 1- If-52:91 ga, 4,.. f 1 f M 1 rf? Us I ,yi ff' ...dv natical, Physical and Natural Sciences In Room P, Wilder Laboratory Conducted by Edwin Julius Bartlett, A.lVI., M.D. New Hampshire Professor fyt' Chemistry General Subject: The Place of Science in the American College Leaders of the Discussion: ' Frank Baldwin Jewett, Ph,D. Chief Engineer of the Western Electric Company, New York City Alfred Edgar Burton, Sc.D. Professor of Topographical Engineering and Dean of the F ac lt . ' U Ill, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ' William Francis Magic, Ph.D.,' LL.D. Dean of the F acnlty and Vice-President of Princeton U nioersity Division of the Social Sciences 1 I n Room D, Bartlett Hall A Conducted by Herbert Darling Foster, Litt.D. Professor of History G . - . eneial Subject. The Duty of the College in Training for Citizenship Leaders of the Discussion: Felix Frankfurter, LL.B. 1 , l ar aw School K enyon Leech Butterfield, ANI., LL.D. - President of the Massachusetts Agricultiiral College Alexander Meiklejohn, A.lVI., Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of Law H are d L President of Amherst College 361 f 1 s Presiding Officer: The Speakers : A945 W :qs nffl, 5'-ff al NJ Q . ,. :xl WB ..,, N. 4-44335, K e ,fr Z 1 n iff. .Qi ??1f,.'y F icsxx ll JF Q. .4 fm :I ' 3 Z , ix X I ,l 5 , . N N riixw 3 X ww ew ,4 ,WM3 The Binmzr in flllullegz 195111- William Tucker Abbott, Esq., '90 Q ' , President of the Association of Alumni Ernest Fox Nichols, Sc.D., LL.D., 1 Professor of Physics, Yale University Frederick Carlos Ferry, Ph.D., ScD., LL.D., President of Hamilton College George Higgins lVIoses, A.lVI., United States Senator frorncN ew H arnpshire William Herbert Perry Itlaunce, D.D., LL.D., President of Brown University Felix Frankfurter, LLB., Professor of Law, Harvard Law School Craven Laycock, A.lVI., Dean of Dartmouth College 362 7:15 p 8:00 p 9:00 p. 5 :Q0 p. 8:00 p. 11:00 a 5:30 p 8:15 p 9:00 a 2:30 p 44:30 p 6:45 p 8:15 p 10:415'p 8:30 a 10:00 a 1:30 p 2:00 p 3:30 p 5:30 p 8:15 p 10:00 p 9:30 a. 12:00 m. 9:00 p. Program Saturhap, Eiune 7 Public Initiation of Palaeopitus at the Old Pine. VVet-Down Ceremonies. Award of John Barrett All-Round Achievement Cup. Smnhap, 3111112 8 Sing-Out, Rollins Chapel. Saturhap, Zum 21 ' Speaking in Dartmouth Hall for the Class of 1866 Prize. , bunhap, gunz 22 Baccalaureate Sermon by the Rev. Ozora Stearns Davis, D.D., of the Class of 1869,President of the Chicago Theological Seminary. Memorial Vesper Service in Rollins Chapel. Organ Recital in Rollins Chapel by William Churchill Hammond, Professor of Music at Mount Holyoke College. jlflunhap, 3111112 23 Alumni Council Nleeting in WVentworth Hall. Class Day Exercises. Reunion of Greek Letter Fraternities and College Societies. Band Concert, College Hall Terrace. 1VIusical Comedy, Oh, Doctor! U, presented by the Dartmouth A Dramatic Association, VVebster Hall. Undergraduate Dance in Little Theatre, Robinson Hall. Promenade Concert, College Yard, Nevers, Band. . Qluzshap, Zuma 24 lVIeeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association, Dartmouth Hall. Parade to Alumni Oval. Baseball Game: Dartmouth vs. Cornell. President and Nlrs. Hopkins At Home. Band Concert, College Hall Terrace. Concert, Dartmouth Musical Clubs. Promenade Concert, College Yard. Mlizbneshap, Eune 25 Commencement Exercises, 'Webster Hall. Luncheon, Alumni Gymnasium. Commencement Ball, Alumni Gymnasium. 363 CLASS OF 1919 1, Ai' - E J E: ' '- V'1 .. ' A' in A . .. 3 aee esltr U r aft - Q s'r Q . i I. II. Qtommencment Ebay Qbther uf Clixereises in Webster 395111 -Prayer. -Singing of lVIilton's paraphrase of Psalm CXXXVL tune Nuremburg. III.-Commencement Addresses : , IV V VI VII. 1. Science and Destruction? VVilliam Thompson Smith 2. The Neva? Outlook for Americanization Wallace Wright 3. The Railroad Problem Roger Atherton Clark 4. Literature and Ideals Frederick Hoyt lVIcCrea 5. Industrial Democracyzm Robert Joslyn Bard 6. Justice and Palestine Harwood Lawrence Childs -Singing of 'gMen of Dartmouthvg Words by Richard I-Iovey, 385g music by Harry Wellnian, '07, -Conferring of the Bach:-:lor's Degree. The Candidates presented by Dean Craven Laycock. -Conferring of the Masteris Degree in Course. The Candidates presented by Professor John Hiram Gerould. -Conferring of Honorary Degrees. The candidates presented by Professor Frank Haigh Dixon. VIII.-Singing of the Doxology. IX. Benediction. pkof Salutatory- Rank :k7kOf Valedictory Rank 365 A g . D g :1Q. , f O A T? Z Q0 C2 gawi 'w A Q5 Eegrees Qiunferreh in Giuurse In accordance with a vote of the Trustees, the bachelor's degree was awarded to the following men: D Meedy Shields Blish, A.B., with the class of 1879. Frank VVilliam Cavanaugh, A.B., with the class of 1899. Alvin Goodnow VVhitney, A.B., with the class of 1907. Raymond Henry Dart, A.B., with the class of 1918. Edward Raymond Dwyer, A.B., with the class of 1918. Chauncey Richards Hood,-A.B., withthe class of 1918. Paul Carl Howley, A.B., with the class of 1918. Charles Thomas lVIcCarthy, A.B., with the class of 1918. Arthur VVilliam French, B.S., with the class of 1891, f , 1 John Walker, B.S., with the class of 1891. in Daniel Charles Gray, B.S., with the class of 1918. J it Louis Hall Comstock Huntoon, B.S., with the class of 1918. George Clement 'McBride, B.S., with the class ofr1918. William James Montgomery, B.S., with the class of' 1918. Josiah Edmond Quincy, B.S., with the class of 1918.9 Allan J. Zabriskie, B.S., with the class of 1918. s ' Igarbslur uf Qtts IForest Ray Adams, Springfield, Vt. Fred WVinthrop Alden, Wfhitman, Mass. William Wilsey Allen, Carbondale, Ill. Hildreth Mason Allison, Dublin, N. H. yFLouis Apteker, Haverhill, Mass. VVilliam Jennings Brown, Littleton, N. H. Fred Pillsbury Carleton, Minneapolis, Minn. Chester Freeland Caswell, Worcester, Mass. XHarwood Lawrence Childs, Rangeley, Me. 1fRoger Atherton Clark, Princeton, Ill. Howard Ware Cole, Salem, Mass. Clark WVilkins Collins, Manchester, N .H. iFrederick Matthew Daley, Hamilton, Mass. ICharles Stanley Dearstyne, Albany, N. Y. Harry Austin Deferrari, Stoneham, Mass. Frederick Rudolph Dixon, Bethel, Vt. Samuel Dicken Ewart, Pittsburgh, Pa. Roland Chester Foss, Rochester, N. H. Kenneth David Gilchrist, Franklin, N. H. Roger Walter Goodnow, Keene, N. H. TJohn Arthur Goss, Berlin, N. H. Harvey Douglas Gray, Burlington, Kan. TPaln1er Wilbur Griiith, Danby, Vt. IWilliam VVallace Harper, Cleveland, O. Roscoe Arthur Hayes, East Pepperell, Mass. Samuel Frederick Jenkins, Englewood, N. J. IJames Jewett, Hartford, Conn. TJerome Gregory Kerwin, Albany, N. Y. Russell Raymond Larmon, Chicago, Ill. Tze-Chuan Lo, Hankow, China. ,TVVilliam Hill McCarter, Topeka, Kan. VVilliam Nlallery McConnell, Aspinwall, Pa. IFrederick Hoyt McCrea, Alexandria, Minn. John VVilmarth lVIcCrillis, Newport, N. H. Dale Strong McQuis'ton, Paxton, Ill. Edward Everett Martin, North Attleboro, Mass. Stanley Nlorris Nlauk, Toledo, O. Charles Sherman Mills, Bennington, Vt. THarold Everett Nichols, Hanover, N. H. Arthur Joseph O'Neill, Brooklyn, N. Y. Aurel Courtney Parker, Dalton, Mass. XFrancis Aloysius Pedlow, Albany, N. Y. Elmer Herbert Phelps, Somerville, Mass. TRobert Proctor, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Archibald Howard Ranney, Hanover, N. H. Paul Dorsey Schriber, St. Paul, Minn. Newman Tourtilotte Sleeper, Plaistow, N. H. Dennis Edward Sullivan, Jr., 1Vestfield, Mass. Russell Sage Turner, Billerica, Mass. Robert Norcross Wallis, Jr., Fitchburg, Mass. 366 .hay Cf Am.. U n WWW 5 l . , .w2Er m . ,. r-5 W fa-J., if.. 4' 1. ' 4. rf 1- ,e ra- f' a' . 'V :Egan . V Q -A-A fu-sg 1.2 i if . '-T-av... . 7 ' 2. E - - f f ' df - . ..- 9? 'ESX tj l ff .I V ' ,ag , f ' .- 2 . , .J 2:51 ' I- ,' .2 il 2 ' -.51 ' if 13? 47 af r 2 f Gi' Q .. 'f i' J 2'l' af'. , sftegf df - 1' - -11 -LLL , f , ' -35-Eg . 4'i.2 ':. 4' ff' , 4 L' Q, ff' , 2 I ' it :Q . . :W A ' M2151 . ' -' I7 ,jr, u:m.,., eff ' 1 . - V- L . 1 1 . fig.. -na: . , . - 1-:iam-. , W ,., - ,F x 13 .. , - -f -. V' , 549-4 . , .- , - . vi.: f '1 f - in 2.1, ' . .--- 1' f ff. .2 -. H +11-im , X , ,,'i -Q... . n f ,.,,. , .1 i- K Horace Gaylord Hitchcock, Philadelphia, Pa. Norris Lowell Hodgkins, Ellsworth, Me. : Henry Orson Holley, Springfield, Mass. x Ralph Budd VVelsh, Hackettstown, N. J. TWallace Wright, Rochester, N. H. Eacbelnr uf Summa VVillard VVakefield Stearns Alderman, Springfield, Mass. Uoseph Arakelian, Newburyport, Mass. Heber Ashley, Cheever, N. H. Carl Arillous Babcock, Milford, Conn. IIIRobert Joslyn Bard, Youngstown, O. Windsor Charles Batchelder, Hampton Falls, TFrederick Reed Bates, Duluth, Minn. Kenneth Charles Bevan, Newtonville, Mass. F raneis Faulkner, Lynn, Mass. 1 tLester Mahan Felton, Worcester, Mass. Donald Lord Finlayson, Rye Beach, N. H. Paul Herbert Gerrish, Haverhill, Mass. Arthur Scott Gilson, Jr., Portland, Me. 'l'Percy Allen Grey, Salem, Mass. i'Paul James Halloran, Bogota, N. J. Lawrence Vincent Hanlon, Jr., Stapleton, N. Thomas Layley Hapgood, Springheld, Mass. William Murray Hawkins, Cleveland, 0. William Augustus Hooven, Englewood, N. J. Kenneth Bowen Johnson, Franklin, Mass. Ralph Missel Kilpatrick, Oskaloosa, Ia. Will I. Levy, Paducah, Ky. :kRobert Maurice Lewis, Bethlehem, N. Ronald Lodge, Albany, N. Y. Gordon Arnold Meader, Wolfeboro, N. H. Howard Carpenter Boulton, Spencer, Mass. James Gallagher Capps, Jr., Jacksonville, Ill. William Jerome Carto, Amesbury, Mass. 9FHarris Marshall Chadwell, Amesbury, Mass. 'l'Charles Lancaster Clay, Littleton, N. H. TAlden Porter Crosby, Danvers, Mass. N.H. Donald Charles Davis, Newport, Vt. William Martin Eads, Fort Smith, Ark. 'kJoseph Reamer Eisaman, Jr., Greensburg, Pa. Max Alonzo Norton, Hudson Falls, N. Y. 3Ernest Crossley Rautenberg, Kenmore, N. Y. fGeorge Alan Rayner, Springfield, Mass. Louis Henry Rector, Glenshaw, Pa. John Francis Reilly, Nashua, N. H. Thomas Joseph Reilly, Jr., Nashua, N. H. Kenneth Harrison Rice, Florence, Mass. John Ross, Melrose, Mass. Amos Pease Rowell, New York, N. Y. Nichol Main Sandoe, Washington, D. C. Sewall Chase Sawyer, Atkinson Depot, N. H., TCharles Marshall Sears, Jr., Lenox, Mass. Henry Siegbert, New York, N. Y. IVVilliam Thompson Smith, New Bedford, Mass. Robert Morgan Stecher, Cleveland, 0. u Denis Timothy Sullivan, Concord, N. H. Howard Simpson Webster, White Plains, N. Y. Chauncey Dean Merrill, Dorchester Center, Mass. William Allen White, Jr., Roxbury, Mass. Avedis Avedis Miridjanian, Aintab, Turkey. Harold J arnes Morse, Fitchburg, Mass. Robert'Phillips Munson, Medina, N. Y. John Henry Murphy, Malden, Mass. John Milne Murray, Concord, N. H. iSumma cum laude TMagna eurn laude :Cum laude Henry Fielding Wilkinson, Hartford, Conn. James Henry Wilson, Salem, 0. James Howard Wright, Holyoke, Mass. James Renwick VVylie, Jr., Wilkinsburg, Pa. JHEIBWI3 of Q05 Howard Floyd Dunham, A.B., 1911. William Ralph Srnythe, A.B., Colorado College 1916. Gtibtl cllingineev Ralph Royal Britton, B.S. Mortimer Fremont Coon, B.S. John Hart Dessau, B.S. Ellis Johnson Hatch, B.S. Percy Hale Howland, A.B. Charles Carroll Jones, B.S. Alexis Chapman Proctor, B.S. Frederick Louis Rau, B.S. Edward Anton Wiesman 367 , ' , ' . WS ., 0 V gh Rx ..'1, i fy . .f' 525 1 J 5 X 6 W if ' YN x rril , X ,, a Zf i , if EDUUYHVY ZBBQYPBB jliflaztzr uf Zltts His Excellency John Henry Bartlett, '94-, Governor of NewfHan1pshire, Concord, New Hampshire. , George Levi K'bb 4 ' 1 ee, Editor, Mancheste1', New Hampshire. it Enntur nf Z1Bihinitp - VVillian1 Palmer Ladd, '91, Dean, Berkeley Divinity School, Middletoxvn, Con- necticut. 31Buctur uf Qciemzg Raymond Pearl, ,99, Biologist and Profesgor, Johns Ho k' . more, Maryland. p ins University, Balti- Enrtnr nf letters Irvin Shrewsbury Cobb, Author, Ossining, New York. 368 . , A9 , . J 5,. J A 1 J W5 J ' 2, . gi -1i' A.1A:A f L W J i ' rr ' ia! at 1911525 ann Ilannurs Qlllass nf 1919 lfargc Gold Dledal - Orzigzbml Orrzzfiovzs Harwood Lawrence Childs, 4 Class of 1866-0rig'i1'Lal Urazffions First Prize -A Harwood Lawrence Childs, Q . Lockwood-Debating Finst Prize - Harwood Lawrence Childs, Q, 4 Second Prize Ray George Metcalf, 2 Grimes-Englrfslz 0077?,190S1if7:07L First Prize - Fred Pillsbury Carleton, 4 Second Prize - r Frederick Hoyt lX4cCrea, 4 Pm yfllloclern Lcm.gmLge.s' Xvllllkllll Wallace Harper., 4 Tlzaiyer'-'IVIa1fl1,e1naf'ic.s Second Prize - Ralph Alden Loring, 3 Haselline-Scievz ce v lVillia1n Thompson Smith, 4 - Read-De.scr1iptfive Geomezfry Harold .Everett N iehols, Q Vlfilliarn Thompson Smith, 3 IJll1P0llf-L 'lzemzfstry Sclz0la1'.vlz'ip VVillian1 Thompson Smith, 4 The figures following the names indicate i11 369 Nathan .fenlrs lllemorial - Biology Arthur Scott Gilson, Jr., 4 l'V0Odb'LlJI'Qj-,LCHU Scholarslziyns Harwood Lawrence Childs, 4 John VVilmarth NIcCrillis, 4 Francis Aloysius Pedlow, 4 . Bennett-Political Science Harwood Lawrence Childs, 3 Howard VVare Cole, 4 Grfimes-General Improvement Samuel Frederick Jenkins, 4 LVQ7'T6'VL-137426 Scholarshfip Robert Joslyn Bard, 4 A-rc7L'ibald - Atliletics V John Henry Nlurphy, 4 Powers + Athletzfcs First Prize - Edward Everett hlartin, 4 Second- Prize - Wlill I. Levy, 1 Third Prize - Robert llflorgan Stecher, 1 Tirrell M eclal-Physical Improvenwnzf First Prize - - Arthur Scott Gilson, Jr., 1 Robert Morgan Stecher, Q Barrett .Medal - All-Rozmcl Aclziezfc- ment Percy Allen Grey, 4 ' which years the honor was awarded. SACHEM ORATION COMMENCEMENT' 1 , ,K f DARTMOUTH-CORNELL BASEBALIL GAME QA. l XS r.. XXX Ea X Yi 4, -2 xp'-'M fifyllvsfwmmp gr, F fm 'Eff 5 Z1 'lj s 1 .ggi- . X , , ST S if A Qxxllfxfii smiling, i riff' kazaa: i ' v A X N W if -Nl X ,M 'N KX? Qllnmmencement ivtanhing The following members of the class, having received a standing of 2.8 for the entire course, are granted their degrees with distinction: Forest Ray Adams Louis Apteker Joseph Arakelian Robert Joslyn Bard Frederick Reed Bates Harris Marshall Chadwell Harwood Lawrence Childs Roger Atherton Clark Charles Lancaster Clay Alden Porter Crosby Frederick Matthew Daley Charles Henry Dearstyne Joseph Reamer Eisaman, Jr. Lester Mahan Felton John Arthur Goss Percy Allen Grey Palmer Wilbur Grillith Paul James Halloran WVilliam Wallace Harper Henry Orson Holley James J ewett Jerome Gregory Kerwin Robert Maurice Lewis VVilliam Hill McCarter Frederick Hoyt McCrea Harold Everett Nichols Francis Aloysius Pedlow Robert Proctor Ernest Crossley Rautenberg George Alan Rayner Charles Marshall Sears, Jr. VVilliam Thompson Smith Denis Timothy Sullivan VVallace Wright p 3 Rufus Qllbuatz Snbularsu An honor awarded to those who attain a standing of 3.6 for the year designated by the Hgures. Forest Ray Adams, 1, 2, 4 Palmer Wilbur Griflith, 1 Fred VVinthrop Alden, 4 VVilliam Wallace Harper, 2, 3, 4 Robert Joslyn Bard, 1, 2, 3, 4 James Jewett, 1, Q, 4 Frederick Reed Bates, 1, Q Jerome Gregory Kerwin, 2, 3, 4 A Harris Marshall Chadwell, 4 Russell Raymond Larmon, 4 Charles Lancaster Clay, 3, 4 Frederick Hoyt McCrea, 3, 4 Frederick lVIatthew Daley, 4 Robert Proctor, 2 Charles Stanley Dearstyne, 2, 3, 4 Archibald Howard Ranney, 4 Joseph Reamer Eisaman, Jr., 3 Charles Marshall Sears, Jr., 3 Lester Mahan Felton, 3, 4 W7illiam Thompson Smith, 2, 3, 4 John Arthur Goss, Q, 3 VVallace VVright, Q, 3, 4 Percy Allen Grey, 4 371 ,V AQ 9 x ' S , ,e 1 . t lt A so 9 ' 1 be A + 41 1 e a iri 1911525 aah Itaunnrs Zltnarheh in 1918-1919 g ibriges Barge Gold Medal - Original Orations - Seniors Harwood Lawrence Childs, '19 Class of 1866 - Original Orations - J uniors, Sophorno-res First Prize - Earl Kenneth Smiley, '21 Second Prizes: No Award ' Lockwood - Debating - Candidates for Varsity Debating 'Team First Prize - Harwood Lawrence Childs, '19 Second Prize - No Award ' - 1 Grimes - English Composition - Seniors First Prize - Fred Pillsbury Carleton, '19 Second Prize E- Frederick Hoyt lVIcCrea, '19 Lockwood - English Composition - Juniors 1 First Prize - M. Grant Lucas, Jr., '20 7 Second Prize - No Award Atherton - Greek - J nniors No Award Class of 1816 - Latin - Juniors No Award Perkins - Literature No Award Pray - Modern Languages - Seniors VVilliam Wallace Harper, '19 Thayer - Mathematics First Prize - Hewitt Fales lVIoore, '21 Second Prize - George Christopher Forman, '21 H aseltine - Science William Thompson Smith, '19 Nathan Jenks Memorial - Biology Arthur Scott Gilson, Jr., '19 Read - Descriptive Geometry Alfred lVIorgan Green, '21 Tied Frank Richard Hill, '21 ' 372 1 V ,A,l X J of so I M irss ft J c 1 . i 'tt an f s Pickering - History No Award Woodhitry Law Scholarships F S eniors Harwood Lawrence Childs, ,19 John VVilmarth lVIcCrillis, '19 Francis Aloysius Pedlow, ,19 Bennett - Political Science Howard Wlare Cole, '19 Story - Philosophy - Seniors I N o Award I Grimes - General Improvement - Seniors Samuel Frederick Jenkins, l19 Warren - Prize Scholarship - Seniors Robert Joslyn Bard, '19 l Archibald - Athletics - Seniors John Henry Nlurphy, '19 Powers Medal - Athletics y Edward Everett lVIartin, 319 Tirrell Medal- Physical Improvement No Award ' Barrett llleda Percy Allen Grey, ,19 s l - All-Round Achievement - Seniors DuPont - Chemistry Scholarship - Seniors William Thompson Smith, ,19 C1918-19D Albert Kelvin Smith, '20 Q1919-QOH Great Divide Association - Freshmen N 0 Award ' Bepartmental itaunnts English - Wallace Wright Chemistry - Harris 1VIarshall Chadwell, Palmer Wilb G TH ur ri th, William Thompson Smith Economics - Forest Ray Adams, Robert Joslyn Bard, Charles Stanley Dearstyne, John Arthur Goss, Percy Allen Grey, VVilliam VVallace Harper, Frederick Hoyt McCrea, Wallace Wright 373 A9 y Q, 2 A ., ' 4 .1 ,. A' ' A , ' ,- A 1 If r s it at ' ' Q J ii' Y. A--J' 1 la i 'ii'I'Ek5s-, M' i'MQwwf A ' Fi iiigglig ANNFXQ' 1920 Chemistry--Francis Philip Gross, Jr., Albert Kelvin Smith I 1921 Chemistry - Roy Gale Pollard, John Crawford Woodhouse ibuuurahlz jllllentiun 1919 English - Fred Winthrop Alden ' German - Charles Stanley Dearstyne,'Jerome Gregory Kei-win . Chemistry - Lawrence 'Weld Aldrich i Biology - Arthur Scott Gilson, Jr. 1 History - Jerome Gregory Kerwin, Elmer Herbert Phelps, YVallace Wright Political Science - Harwood Lawrence Childs, Jerome Gregory Kerwin Philosophy - Fred Winthrop Alden W L ' V 1920 English-John Greenleaf Allen, Harold Eisman Bernkopf, Robert Bruce Dow, Frank Edward McGlynn, Carroll Middleton Swezey y French - Joseph Hillyer Brewer Chemistry - Robert Reo Farwell, Philip Herzog Greeley, Albert Kelvin Smith History - William Dallett Fuguet, Frank Dewey Mayer, Francis George lVIoulton Political Science - Francis George Moulton 1921 French -Horner John Cleary, Hugh Gilbert Cruikshank, Seth Albert Densmore, William Plummer Fowler, Jr., George? Loring Frost, Franklin NIcDuHee, Millard Warner Newcomb, William Henry Spencer, John Crawford Wood- house German - Robert Thomas Daly, Warren Stinson Homer Mathematics - George Christopher Forman, Warren Stinson Homer, John Perry 1VIitchell, Jr., Frederick Morrison Sercombe Physics - Charles Roger Bailey, James Lawton Smead, Raymond Ransom Wells Chemistry - Nelson Waite Barker, Robert Leopold Loeb, John Perry Mitchell, Jr., Hermon Bemis Noyes, Roy Gale Pollard, John Crawford Woodhouse Graphics - Alfred Morgan Green, Frank Richard Hill, Paul Althaus Smith History - Seth Albert Densmore, Marshall Orme Exnicios, Robert Leopold Loeb 1922 Chemistry - Gaylord West Anderson, Ralph Lewis Spotts, Jr., Frederic William Vogel 374 L. I. if ,,..V,2 f,. .,,.,:1, 4 V. ' H Mi ff 1 ,T 1 . 1 'W : ' 1 u l , Q ... , F .X ,.,,v rg V QI ,I :V A. .v-V:v4. vxll p I in ,,,,. ., wig !! -I fQ.,.7C. M 1 A r 1.1 ' iBiJi Esta ikappa Alpha of New Hampshire founded in 1787 Edwin J. Bartlett, 172 . . . President D M Dunstan, '80 . . Vice-Preszdent Lemuel S. Hastings, ,70 . . . Vice-President Harold G. Rugg, '06 . . Secretcm'yQTo'easurer Charles P. Chase, '69 . . . Audztor Cllfxenutihe Qliummittee Edwin J. Bartlett Howard M. Tibbetts Harold G. Rugg Prescott O. Skinner James W. Goldthwait . class uf 1918 Harold Collins Day Henry Lipman Oppenheim Mayo McKinley Magoon Walter Stuart Ross YHIIHSS uf 1919 Forest Ray Adams Robert Joslyn Bard Frederick Reed Bates Charles Stanley Dearstyne William Wallace Harper James J ewett William Hill MCCH1'tCf Frederick Hoyt McCrea Robert Proctor William Chamberlain Forbes VVilliam Thompson Smith QEIEISE nf 1920 John Page Amsden Thomas lVIinot Dudley Albert Wesley Frey Francis Philip Gross, Jr. Edwin Blair Lindsay 375 Richard lVIetcalf Pearson Lyndon Frederick Small Albert Kelvin Smith John Edgerly Sunderland John Robert Williams p AA H 1 . lm t f A To N K in ar' XE ' .. : 5 vwmum .,, llllllI'UIWlUvlllll X T., N- imyyiilgl, 0.5, ,I ' T5 f 4 Q1 LLL' gf X nXxixxig,y1xml.w5 . X ,X was r i to A wi EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE COLLEGE CLUB The Qiullege Klub izasnn uf 19194920 Althoughpmost of its functions were absorbedpby the Christian Association during the war, the College Club this year resumed its former active part in under- graduate affairs. Hindered in its Work by poor train facilities, it nevertheless suc- ceeded in obtaining the services of lVIajor Arthur Bles, R. W. F., and Professor John A. Lomax of the University of Texas, to deliver a series of lectures. In the fall, a pressing Want was supplied by the College Club in establishing a direct wire communication with the various out-of-town football games. O Qlixerutihe Qllummittee K. W. Spaulding, '20 ..... Senior Class Repre.s'entat'ioe G. C. Forman, '21 . J nnior Class Representative E. C. Malmquist, ,QQ . . Sophomore Class Representatlioe T. T. Metzel, '23 . F reshman Class Representative Russell R. Larrnon, ,19 . . . . Secretary-Treasurer 376 AVA, J in R -gf. Q NIS xx V NX 5, 'N-.,.uma..,... N lllllnlllihllllymm U L f . Qi , F f IT Q9 Q .I ' uHul1':i-r:x,,,y1,W5k 1 ,..,.... Qi xww CABINET OF DARTMOUTH CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Eartmuutb Clllbristian Zlssuniatiun Ralph K. VVhitney, 'Q0 . Clayton M. Wallace, '20 Allen'R. Foley, ,Q0 . Roy W. Hill, ,QQ , . Jeremiah L. Bausher, 'QI Carl E. Newton, '20 . Orton H. Hicks, 'QI Edwin B. Lindsay, ,Q0 . Paul G. Richter, ,Q0 . Robert NI. Dewey, 'QQ . l Joseph A. Vance, Jr., 'QI George C. Forman, 321 Robert W. Elsasser, ,QI . VVilliam VV. Sprague, 'QQ Kenrick C. Bean, ,QI , L. Sherman Adams, '20 Allen G. Brailey, '21 I, Qlabinet . . . . ' Church Relations . Dartmouth in the Near East . . . Deputations . Discussion Groups . Employment Entertainments . Finance ' Freshman Wo1'li . Handbook Lost and Found . lVIembership Publicity Six-40-Fives . Sunday Schools Vacation Yvork . . Vocational Survey 377 t ,I Atal p 2 B We . M . 4 F 2 . ei- V -e es... gi ..A., wr . A . ' 5 ' ' p use ., . . -ft? ' its -YU' - A- ' W 3 -f l .'L' 4 1 .. G -'T it s QBffiu:rs Eugene S. Leonard, '20 . . . . President Clayton M. Wallace, ,20 . Vice-President Carroll lVI. Swezey, '20 . .... Secretary Paul G. Richter, '20 . .... Treasurer R. Ransom Wells, ,QI . . Assistant to Alumni Treasurer Ralph J. Richardson, '09 . . . , . . . Graduate Secretary Jfauiltp Qbhisurp Qliuuncil A e WVilliam H. Wood, Chairman p Arthur B. lVIeservey Francis L. Childs Chester A, Bhillips A Chester H. Forsyth C 1 Erville B. Woods Zllumni Qllnmmittee A A. Karl Skinner, l03, Chairman ' Benjamin T. Marshall, ,97 Arthur B. lVIeservey, '08, Treasurer Carl 0. Miller, '99 David N. Blakeley, '89 Elbert lVI. lVIoffatt, ,09 Eugene F. Clark, '01 A WVallace NI. Ross, ,09 Charles E. Griffith, Jr., ,15 William E. Strong, ,82 The Christian Association seeks to provide in the college a tangible expression of the Dartmouth ideal of service. Men who believe that unselish service is Worth While, are offered through its activities, an opportunity of putting their belief into practice. The service rendered by the Association extends not only to the College and the college community but through the deputation and rural Sunday School departments, to the country districts and towns in eastern Vermont and Western New Hampshire. The college year 1919-20 has been the first normal year in the colleges since the United States entered the war and in common with other undergraduate or- ganizations, the Christian Association has found th one. The unprecedented size of the freshman class has made the year even more strenuous than usual, for the Christian Association tries to specialize in freshmen. The membership for the present year has reached the largest in actual numbers and the largest in percentage of the enrollment of the college, since the organization of the Christian Association. This is due in part to the revised membership state- e present year a very busy 378 . Q - ' ..- if .iilifi ixgfv . . i it f 1 9 .1 ff 'A iiiii 1 f , , be 'A ...M ' 1 f . .. R s , .f . s B9 1, ,, f- . P 5 ,QE gall Q!! .f A. , 0 J Us . U . 5 4 A I J ment which was adopted in the last college year and in part to the friendly contacts created with many undergraduates during the S. A. T. C. period, in the fall of 1918. The membership for the present year is very close to 1400 which is 8Q'Z, of the undergraduate body. After five years lapse due to the World War, the Dartmouth in the Near East project is being reestablished this spring. Walter B. Wiley, of the class of 1918 sailed in February for Marsovan in Asia lVIinor,'there to be on the staff of Anatolia College for a term of three years. The Work is supported jointly by the Alumni Committee and the undergraduate organization and calls for a budget of approximately 5131000.00 a year. It is the hope of those who are backing the re- establishment that eventually the project will become a piece of Dartmouth exten- sion Work overseas, rather than a Christian Association project. The original Dartmouth in the Near East project was started in 1911 when Robbins Barstow of the class of 1913 Went to Mardin, Asia lVIinor, to help in educational Work in that city. The present year is the 119th since the organization of the society which was the ,forerunner of the Christian Association. Though the type of organization and the kind of activities carried on, has changed many times in the 1920 years of its history, the fundamental principles are still the same. The Christian Association seeks to realize those ideals for which Dartmouth was founded. It believes that no man is educated who neglects the religious side of his life, and along with other in- fluences in thetcollege it is seeking to bring men to a realization of this fact. In its early years, the Association depended Wholly upon the election of student oflicers, until 1896 when H. O. Aiken, '87, was employed as the first graduate sec- retary. The following men have served as secretaries: Henry O. Aiken, '87 ...... 1896-1897 Philip C. Walcott, Yale, '00 1900-1901 A. Karl Skinner, '03 . . 21903-1909 Wallace M. Ross, '09 1909-1910 Henry E. Meleney, '09 1910-1911 Henry S. Trask, '11 . 1911-1912 Wallace lVI. Ross, '09 . 1913-1917 Ralph J. Richardson, '09 . . . 1917- 0n leave 1905-1906 RALPH J. RICHARDSON, '09 Graduate Secretary 379 A9 eggs, WX N f x A 1 l: ls' , x 2 ' 1 ir E l f J' 1 5 13:1 V' l 1 ri . 1 A if he A rrr A A QEIea5ar Ebzelnnk Cllluh . Allen R. Foley, '20 . George KB. Davis, '21 VVade H. Kepner, '23 F. V. V. Wethey, '16 K. P. Emory, '20 S. M. Graves, '20 EQS. Leonard, '20 P. G. Richter, '20 C. M. Wallace, '20 H. E. Banton, '21 K. C. Bean, '21 A. G. Brailey, '21 Qbffinzers Members I P. K. Swartz, '23 380 President X. Vice-President J. Herbert, '21 S. VV. White, '21 D. M. Brown, '22 R. W. Hill, '22 S ecretary A. Marshall, 2nd, '22 P. S. Goss, '23 C. F. Marden, '23 J. G. Pollard, '23 J. A. Rippel, '23 XXNXXXNXXN x M Sw K PUB LICATIQ if-' Q! , Y u V K R Price Belknap, l I Sater - W Sawyer MacDonald Green ' ' i Clark ' Fuller , x THE 1921 AEGIS BOARD Am SJ ,Yi ..,, 119 1111 ' sw ' . ' 4 A AV I AE,A,, , .i,, V ,:, , . ,,.A . - , 1 5. K .1 .1 1 1 , I f fl 'f ,g ' ' iQ f 13 1' ,gm ,re fra xx fx j it V Q M! ' 'N 5: YS 015132 Qzgis fe 3? 2,'v:51'f The fkEG-IS, appearing in the second semester of Wm X each year, is the most comprehensive and elaborate E X publication of the College. First published as a triennial, it changed in 1874 to the position that it p now holds. Including statistical records of all athletic and non-athletic activities, as well as faculty and ' undergrdauate information, this book plays an ' important part in preserving the history of the College. Volume Ixiii Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Advertising Manager Alfred Morgan Green 1Varren Pomeroy Clark Robert Murray MacDonald Qssnniate C!Ehitnrs ' . Paul Carpenter Belknap Kemp Goodloe Fuller W Kenneth Lyon Sater Rudolph Pickett Blesh Edward Simpson Price 1 Donald. Frederick Sawyer Jfurmer Managers ant: QEhitnrs YEAR EDITOR MANAGER YEAR EDITOR' ' MIXNAGER 1874 H. F. Chase J. C. Barrett 1897 R. J. Sisk H. M. Thyng 1875 S. B. VViggin W. H. Hart 1898 VV. S. Adams C. E. Carr 1876 S. Merrill W. C. Frost 1899 A. M. Abbott R. P. Johnston 1877 C. D. Adams G. E. Atkinson 1900 H. E. Keyes F. E. Atwood 1878 J. C. Dana F. W. Gregg 1901 E. M. Hopkins . E. H. Hunter 1879 C. A. Babbitt W. W. Broga 1902 B. S. Stevens G.M. Hubbard 1880 VV. F. Furnam G. H. Danforth 1903 R. M. Davis M. B. Wiley 1881 VV. Moore H. B. Johnson 1904 H. H. Ham C. I. Lampee 1882 B. S. Harmon J. S. Thompson 1905 I. R. Merriam E. Gilbert 1883 J. F. Moore H. B. Johnson 1906 F. F. Parker W. B. Smith 1884 L. Bell VV. G. Carr 1907 G. H. Howard R. C. Cochrane 1885 A. L. Fuller S. H. Hudson 1908 H. E. McAllister L. M. Symmes 1886 F. A. Wood E. P. Weeks 1909 E. H. Naylor E. N. Moffat 1887 W. H. Dart C. F. Conn 1910 J. R. Everett A. B. Doggett 1888 D. L. Lawrence A. A. Fisher 1911 A. S. Dunning M. E. Eaton 1889 I. I. Buck C. E. Doane 1912 H. G. Mosier H. E. McElwain 1890 VV. T. Abbott J. H. Fassett 1913 M. H. Cone C. Meleney 1891 F. E. Barnard H. A. Blake 1914 L. K. Little VV. E. Barrett 1892 B. Shirley S. J. Lord 1915 C. E. Griffith, Jr. H. W. Wing 1893 A. D. Arnold C. G. Furnel 1916 C. K. Everett B. V. Emery 1894 S. E. Burroughs P. S. Marden, 1917 H. K. Page R. P. Stone 1895 R. A. Campbell R. NI. Thornburgh 1918 S. B. Jones F. J. Clahane 1896 W. J. Harris H. J. Hapgood 1919 R. A. Clark H. Siegbert 1920 J. J. Moore, Jr. K. VV. Spalding 383 , Y ' THE DAREMOUTH IBOXRD I T E DARTVI U H VOL. XLI. HANOVER, N. H., ivioNnAy ocroxssiz 27, isis NUMBER I5 YEAHLING ELEVEN UUWHS SPHIHBEIELEHIUIHUNISTS FRESHMEN SKIRT ENDS POR LONG GAINS AND WIN BY I9-3 SCORE NEIDLINGER STAB f0R 1923 LOOSE Puwmu AND LACK or TEAM womc MAR EASY vicroiw niwana long ina inn, by inn msn- ninn mm nnnuna me 1921 ninvnn to -:dm muy S9ring6cld Y. M. c. A. ee- ai b ia 1 uni Saturday y A sim of 1 Ainnini om. Loose playing inn MUSICAL CLUBS 'IO' ENTERTAIN GUESIS AFTER COLGAIE GAME Snappy vnnanviu. Program mnnnia If ua radullzs and i-:win br ll :IR - may vimnnn Nm sinnaiy nighl in xvnnmf Hall nba wi u on sn: - me Musical ci ll p r nh p vim and mos! unique vnnamlre nhnw which nn, nm been amd in Hanover. Thus: nnnneinny ms will be presented Primarily Inf inc benefit nf those inn, lernilic A ving nom parm, and u 5 x nn: heday whnn csigmwnnii Hnnmi- to nina inn Big Green min. The Mnnaaiin club, which has been pru- nwa me me mr, will ipiunf inf me nm time ini, man. All or Hnn- mns lnniigm fnvnmn, will vermin 1 nu. the evening n pleasant ' 1 nnd mln 0 in annsi-niion in FIGHTING GREEN MACHINE HUMBLES ITHACANS, 9-0 Robertson Displays Football of All-American Calibre, Making Only Scores of Game -Youngstrom's Star Playing Paves ' The Way for Lone Touchdown - :mi nniiniinninni. , pm of mn fide was in eviaincs 'nie nrnnniii: Associaiion nni several COLGATE GAME MAY DECIDE TITLE STAR GREEN GUARD CORNELL HASSTUBBOHN DEFENSE innnngnnni me entire gs.-ne At nn uinn urns, in pas: mf, given snow, nnni- 1 , ... were Uv: Svrinxiekl vlan: qbie w his lwib-Il games but ini, is the sm w. AND J. Pins SYRACUSE A ., :,a ROBERTSON oU'rDxs'rANcEs hruk up uni slashing nunck nl ni yan- nine nm ui. Music.: uns. uni' mm- om- op, CHAMPION. , CORNELL CAM-Am m linuxmin Aiumngn in 1 hmrm ae- uinna on wen an ixminn. 1:--M :I SHIP RACE -.pl 0 FUN-1-,NG Dum M., ,.. ... .,, .. n. - ,,,,,,.,, .. .. .. I -mum throughout n-if em- , ' Cnmplsuly ouiplnying the mighty Qi.. -nm b aimed ini, V V ' nell nggfngniiun, Dnmnonuiu green- ' ' W 'E , ' ' imma warriors nennnly mnigiinfa , ' 'nh ind innnnmveinni one ur mn Ioremnal fm- : is :pn lo . . sin cvmbinzlions of me mnniny sinn- nnimn LX Stray at inn P010 Gmnnai in New Yann he final count gm Dartmouth nine other ly,-:sf minlx is can--uw nw: - Ln- en-. --A The Dartmouth, the oldest college newspaper in the country, turned to an every-day policy April 19, 1920. The step, which gives to Hanover the Hfth morn- ing newspaper in the state of New Hampshiie, opened up entirely new opportuni- ties to the paper. Made a member of the Associated Press, it now gives the College news of national interest three or four hours ahead of its metropolitan competitors. In addition, the change has given The Dartmouth a chance to carry on more suc- cessful day-to-day recordings of undergraduate activities. The Dartmouth is published by a staff consisting wholly of undergraduates chosen by competitions. The aim of the-paper has always been to present the news in a thorough and efficient manner, and to discuss from a non-partisan viewpoint, all pertinent questions of the day. Its columns are an open forum for the settle- ment of all college questions, notable instances during the past year being the honor system, the presidential primary, and similar matters. Aside from a few interruptions, the latest of which was caused by the intro- duction of the S. A. T. C. into Dartmouth, The Dartmouth has been published continuously since 1839. During its early years, the paper was published as a literary monthly, but in 1875 it became more strictly a news organ of the College, appearing weekly. A change to a three-a-week policy was made in 1910, and this continued up to the present year. For many years the editor-in-chief undertook the duties of both news and editorial departments, but in 1911 the staff was enlarged by the addition of the position of managing editor, who holds a place of equal rank with the editor-in-chief and the business manager. Since the change the managing editor has had charge of the news 385 5 -' - -r, e .,. A9 I c 5 5 . ' If xii I J 5 1, F 'X Q 9 I - - s ,, M 'Q' A .- r ff' i I I it i eiaiii :A : j: ,.4, - columns, while the editor-in-chief has devoted himself -solely to the editorial policy of the paper. In 1913 The Dartmouth was incorporated under the laws of the state of lVIaine at a capitalizationof one thousand dollars, Eve hundred common and IIVC hundred preferred, the common stock alone having voting power. Each member of the board has one share, but the control is vested in a board of directors consisting of the heads of the three departments. JUNIOR MEMBERS OF THE DARTMOUTH EDITORIAL STAFF 386 5, E fue. . I WW 1 f 5' .Mk N ' I1 V Q 5 5: 2 F I vl In 1' 5, l I ep. The Eartmuutb WUI. xlib Alexander Scott Warden, '19 Raymond Francis McPartlin, '20 . . . Francis Irving Hutchins, '20 Business Staff Leo IVI. Ungar, '20 . George C. Forman, '21 . Leon W. Bateman, 21 . Charles C. Kerwin, '21 . A 1 1 E1 Ei l l fi M iligvz S L A X 'W l 2 46 541 H I Editor-in-Chief . Managing Editor . Business Manager K Circulation Blanager . . . Assistant Circulation Illanager Advertising lllanagcr . . . . . . Assistant Business Manager J. R. Aborn, '22 G. W. Anderson, ' R. P. Booth, '22 P. B. Gove, '22 F. H. Horan, '22 J. S. Johnson, '22 22 VV. F. Nicholson, '22 O1 R. Rice, Jr., '22 TV. E. Howe, Jr., '23 , , , Qssnr-nate Qthlturs D. S. Green, 19 P. C. Belknap, '21 H. S. Baketel, Jr., '20 E. O. Briggs, '21 E. S. Leonard, '20 , H. Brown, '21 J. J. Moore, Jr., '20 A. M. Green, '21 R. M. Pearson, '20 O. H. Hicks, '21 R. S. Roberts, '20 T. Higgins, '21 W. W. Smith, '20 J. W. Hubbell, '21 A. W. Stockdale, '20 E. S. Price, '21 S. S. Stratton, '20 D. B. Ruggles, Jr., '21 D. F. Sawyer, '21 jfnrmer Qthuturs ann JI-Managers YEAR EDITOR TVIANAGER YEAR EDITOR 1876 S. Merrill 1894 F C. Allen 1877 G. E. Atkinson 1895 T. Scales 1878 E. N. Hills 1896 Shirley 1879 E. D. Libbey 1897 J. Maloney 1880- W. E. Barnett 1898 F. Marden 1881 L. R. Wentworth 1899 A. Musgrove 1882 G. M. Ward C. XV. McClcarn 1900 E. Keyes 1883 A. E. Wfatson 1901 NI. Hopkins 1884 G. H. Whitcomlm A. H. Xvilliams 1902 NI. Larned 1885 F. Ladd J. A. DeBoer 1903 B. Schlatter . 1886 G. W. Fowler F. O. Loveland 1904 K. Woodridge 1887 E. E. Chalmers I. O. Cummings 1905 R. 1VIusgrove 1888 L. F. English J. W. Kelley 1906 F. Libby 1889 B. F. Ellis J. H. Mason 1907 H. Howard 1890 J. B. Reynolds F. D. Woods , 1908 E. McAllister 1891 C. H. VViley J. Abbott 1909 L. Theller 1892 WV. G. Stoughton A. D. Salinger 1910 C. S. Lyon 1893 H. B. Metcalf J. L. Merrill 1911 A. S. Dunning YEAR EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MANAGING EDITOR 1912 C. E. Snow H. K. Urion 1913 K. H. Fulmer A. H. Dessau 1914 J. T. 1VIarriner E. T. Papson 1915 D. B. Kinne, Jr. D. C. Bennick 1916 R. F. Magill R. S. Steinert 1917 G. K. Page WV. Sewall 1918 H. P. Hood, 2nd H. B. Doty 1919 F. H. McCrea R. A. Clark 387 NIANAGER F. D. Field F. A. Ford H. J. Hapgood H. M. Thyng J. F. Chandler YV. M. Fraser V. R. Salinger H. W. Hall D. B. Keniston D. Cushing K. Robinson H. E. YV. F. Dorothy E. G. Smith A. Dodge L. M. Symmcs C. L. Sheldon R. E. Parker H. Butler BUSINESS RIANAGLR L. WV. Snow T. S. Jewett W. P. Ross K. H. Smith B. V. Emery M. S. Hutchins C. L. Meredith J. H. Wilson e A9 E515 JACK O' LANTERN BOARD ' Zark QB' lantern Jack 0, Lantern, Dartmouthis humorous monthly publication, contains the best of the college Wit and humor. After being confined to a strictly War basis for two years, with a limited number of editions, it has regained its former stride and is now published monthly from October to June, making a total of nine issues. Several special numbers were featured this year of which the Movie Number, containing autographed pictures of national screen stars, the Hush Number of Carnival, and the Idle Rich Number, issued at Junior Prom, proved the most popular. 388 MANAGER ' Liivi mw -ff-GPH-R --1,- ' 2 - -JLL ,- 1, LL. qw., :If -....-.,-,,Y 4-iq, 7 1 , u m,-'...5, fgig 1 5331 301 1 X .151 ty hgqigaf mx wet' CSM JUN? 'ii il I 1 YAVTH 1 ' 1 B ,,-' ig- Wig-.3? ,f '-Q FEW 'Y 51,1 11 Al l l,1 ei.ff+'iif Vim 4 S WJ 1 si.-,,,, . 1 if 15 -9 X OT R N145 V f 5 A 5 Jiigfl it ,,,ilN L K Q? X X is QQQ it :lvl A K si Q A Q-, N fix'-S' ,fx HEr GVFl'l C-JACK0 Awwqq ax 1- 1, ul man 2.-as 1, .Q-f.c..f-4.-A -in-I I' K .wx .ww J 2,1-141 jg ,Q 5,11 I If ,Vg 5 :gi i t -11:-r .. li 1 -4 fi -. .- ' 1- 5'-P ' 1 Q i . 1 . .E W -F. .1 I, f, ,D Q Q51 F.. .I ,Xi wh-.L-L ,Mixing fp., xi me. f fs 1-. ,, ,-.EX M E .- .. H H ix I WHMWW ' vi' '11 'NZM Q l ik 1 : . - .11' ,. , 1 4.13, ,I .. , ,' Q- ..........,..,.,,,, 11.4, -. ,3 -. - B ' ' . .Wil HS-. ' 2 Y' '-f- ' Q - 'lbifl 'I' Tv 'L?+- ' - I 2-61 ak-as ly if if 1 :ies-1:.'i' A ,P ,. 450 1 'ia 453: f -- - ' '- ---'-7 'mf . 1 11: - LTL. .nv . v - X -, S -1 ,rf Q . .. , 'J LJ .?g,5 '1 - X1 Q' el s 1 , 1' N ' ,ii -' 2 iii J' Z is fn. 5 .1 1 .' . 7- 1 f ear: J .. Q ie -in 1 'H - -'V .,.,.y1, ff ,-gag: - . Qgnw-gg A ,ij 1. , f x q-.1 9 + F- 'A 'Y sL..ig' ? ' i':' 71111 fi' 1. ' . 555 so '1 gif? 'an iilg it ff , fy 1 'ftp' 5 4 -J ,,, 1 9, ..- A .igsfk 1 1' Ng, '-.,.-,.-,fr . ,IME : IQ I - . fret- . a I- . -A-. . ' r. f -11:2 -f'-' -Q- -I -.1 EK -f et-.M ll' - ,, - , .1 - I--Xxwh vf W .,,x , G u l ry 'H rn 'X91-AA'-' f?+,, ., N 'G gi - V -- N - 1 1. -. R 1 'ire' .- - X 1 i ., , f .4 we - N - 2,11 5 -Q. Z . Qi-.Jw-ev Axial 1. 3 is :V 29 V7 e N f a -:X-fav' PIER we X, x - 7- ,. .1 52 V3 i- Q, Ji 1 1? 'A ' 'ai' 'W' - -' X X--R . ft 'Q J 'Q 'tl it ' '- - of f .. R -' - --'F fmt - wg... 9 11 . itll A if ex.-if ss. R-. iw will ' ' Q ii 1 ,, X5-' l - A . X ' ' I ' ' s I ..' N 3' O 'X O ,743 1,5 'MCMV111 Albert R. Stewart, '19 Paul G. Richter, ,20 Paul S. Giffin, ,20 Carl E. Newton, '20 VVillard G. Sawyer, ,22 H. F. lVIanchester, '21 J. H. Brewer, ,20 E. lVI. Curtis, ,20 Volume xii Qssuniate QEiJitn1fs VV. B. Wfolf, '21 G. P. lVIerrian1, '21 . Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Circulation Manager -. Art Editor Publicity Manager B. Tenney, Jr., ,21 H. E. Bernkopf, ,20 H. L. Flewelling, ,21 9 Qssistant Business Managers lVI. WV. Sherwood, ,21 F. E. Trent, ,20 lVI. Johnson, ,21 R. P. Blesh, ,21 L. H. Cook, ,21 E. S. Price, ,21 Qrt 9taff Shnayerson, 320 C. N. Stiles, ,21 H. S. Antrim, '20 R. C. Wilde, '21 F. L. Livermore, ,22 H. J. Cleary, ,21 Jfnrmer flihitnrs anti Managers YEAR EDITOR 1909 XV. T. Atwood 1 1910 E. O. Raabe 1911 J. L. Yvillard-Connelly 1912 H. L. Armes 1913 R. J. Powers 19141 C. Kingsley 1915 A. E. Sterling 1916 F. S. Wilson 1917 E. F. Hahn 1918 R. H. Rhodes 1919 E. NI. Curtis 889 J. H. Randerson H. O. Sandberg H. W. Brown H. H. Crowell R. H. Crowdery P. L. Perkins H. G. Rowell F. VV. Spearin F. W. Spearin L. H. Rector H. Siegbert ' ' ' A , ,M P N f -'1 ' 4 NW fp! ag,-V , I A: if if-3 A9 J 13 9 1 ' . 1 N 'K41 ,K F sinh ' A J' X y I xffnf THE BEMA BOARD f The Eartmuufb imma With a View to offering a medium for Writings of a serious nature, The Dart- mouth Bema was inaugurated in 1913 as a literary monthly. As a more liberal policy seemed to be everywhere desired, and as a measure for expansion of the magazine, the composition of the publication was changed in 1917 to an offering of writings in both light and sober veins, including short stories, profuse illustrations of campus life, poetry, and dramatic reviews. The personnel of both the editorial and business staffs is determined by undergraduate competition. 390 S jf 4 -.ff ,. fi. Joseph H. Brewer, '20 Waldo B. Potter, '20 J. Vrooman Wilkie, '20 Lawrence J. Nardi, '21 Jeremiah L. Bausher, '21 Tracy Higgins, '21 . A. A H P J. C YEAR 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 0 . . AA Q N +1--umm.. , A 19- 0953331193 vm.-fa-I.. H- 1. 2 E if-'P f :ui NN CD 1 cz C9 -Aee Q I f ff ' P-3' ..,, - ai fi N,x .ERN f ' . X df X , WJ . A ' . . Editor-in-Chief . . Business Manager . . Circulation Manager . . . Advertising M anager . Assistant Business M anager . . . . Assistant Circulation anager Historia! QEiJitnrs . A I R. Steiner, '21 K. G. Fuller, '21 B. Helmer, '21 Zlssuniate Qihiturs I B. Tenney, Jr., '21 R. P. Blesh, '21 H. L. Flewelling, '21 F. McDuffee, '21 G. P. Merriam, '21 S. Warden, '19 E. Bernkopf, '20 Bowerman, '20 J. Moore, Jr., '20 M. Swezey, '20 jfutmer Qlihitnrs anh Managers EDITOR-'LN-CHIEF MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER C. D. Waterman H. A. Koelsch, Jr. W. P. Ross H. A. Koelseh, Jr. D. B. Kinne, Jr. R. P. DeWitt C. B. Jordan, Jr. B. Ruml P. S. Gibson' E. P. Chase L. YV. Rogers E. L. lVIcFzLlls J. W. Hill W. H. Bemis W. H. Bemis R. Proctor J. H. Wilson J. H. VVilSon 391 at C of my ,fum st i A3 at 51' 6Wj Wi Nm Q lxl 9 P25 3 -A,7 I NN E .1-1-51.1515-ffifllfl-I iiN:xH:N 5:l:: P lui, Q-. 1 -,J Y g Q PRESS CLUB fx V, Clin Eartmuutbekrzss Qllluh anh iBuhIi:itp Qssuniatinn Qbffiners Richard M: Pearson, '20 . . . President Haskell H. Cohn, '22 David Lambuth . Thomas E. Steward Homer E. Keyes, ,OO Eugene F. Clark . Henry T. Claus . Edward C. lVIcKern Jack S. Connolly . . . Vice-Presid ent Iaunurarp 11-Blemhers . English Department English Department . Editor, Alumni Magazine . Secretary of the College College Editor, Boston Transcript . New England Manage1', Associated Press 0 . 392 Boston Herald and Journal 7 63+ 1' f J W . S' .yu D. P Cole 19 Boston Traveller D. F Featherston Jr 19 Boston Amerfzcan New Y or-L frzbune Assoczated Press D. S Green 19 Hartford Courant A. S Warden 19 The Dartmouth F. I HutCh1HS 920 The Dartmouth J. J. R.F RN E.O J.W D.B W.B H.H R.T T.L G.H 3 1 1, K, , ' ., , rf 3 ,,,--A 23.5.5-' Q' -I rj ,- F-,1:.,l, ' 'I I l, , -. v..A , ' A 11 - :fC.S.f L I '- 9 ., DRINKING THROUGH THE ICE TUCKERMAN RAVINE 'P-me A llll-Ilh IIIIIIIU I' U 9 4 4 . lei-L? WF? V. .tif if Q i i l ' Allilm f .: '-'.- ' c '. - 512355159-If f, 11 ::f'f9.iF ' 112: 1 vw' Q-:ja ff 5' 'ii,f- LJ , ,,.v.'f.::3,.-is J nt. .4611-fa'-T1 . il, . f-4.9, .' nf: ' 1 1 IQ . .r Z, 'H . , ' The Bartmuutb Quang Qllluh p Through no other medium does the outside world and the prospective under- graduate receive a more lasting impression of the College than that afforded by the wide publicity which the Dartmouth Outing Club has attracted in the past few years. Founded eleven years ago by a group of enthusiasts headed by F. H. Harris, '11, for the purpose of furthering interest in all kinds of outdoor life, it has grown until in the present year over nine hundred men, - more than half the College, - are enrolled as members. It now owns and administers through undergraduate oflicers and a faculty council, six cabins along a chain of well-marked trails running from the campus north to the White Mountainsg and in the summer of 1918 the first of what may some day be a similar chain into the Green Nlountains was con- structed at Happy Hill, five miles west of Hanover, where the club recently came into possession of a hundred-acre tract named in honor of former President Tucker. Throughout the College year oflicial trips are conducted in charge of ex- perienced upperclassmen which include not only visits to the various cabins but the ascent of many of the neighboring mountains. By far the most important of these week-end excursions is the annual 'White lVIountain trip, usually made to Mt. Washington, but last winter having its headquarters at Randolph on the north side of the, range. In spite of the worst snowstorm of the winter the ascents were made as usual and on the day following the blizzard nearly every man of the Efty-seven who started was able to reach the summit of either Mt. Madison or Mt. Adams by way of the Valleyway Trail of the Appalachian Mountain Club. Interest in climbing has been so great during the past year that the Club felt warranted in running its Hrst fall Presidential trip, and twenty-two men went over the range on October 25, all of them getting back to Pinkham notch in safety by way of the Mt. Washington carriage road. 395 t 'A .f1' 19 31 , l Q Q Y J my XNXW Q? Hlmliufl r ,f y. .. 'mmgt itxgg-tot ,f Qu Q1 4 QV' X t I IVIore guests are attracted to Hanover during Winter Carnival than at any other time and the function which was originally designed as a competitive outdoor affair has now so mingled this feature with the social element as to eclipse even the traditional Junior Prom in undergraduate importance. In order to reciprocate for the competition afforded in the ski and Snowshoe events by the participation of lVIcGill, Williams, Middlebury and Vermont, the victorious Dartmouth team took several trips both before and after Carnival, and for the first time was able to defeat NIcGill at the International Intercollegiate lVIeet held in lVIontreal on February 19 to Q1 by a score of Q2 points to 1'7f Interest in ski jumping has been particularly keen during the past season and plans are already under Way for the construction of a jump in Hanover 'which shall be second to none in the East. , In recognition of the rapid progress of the Club and the' position which it has DARTMOUTH SKI TEAM Densmore Bowler Carleton Trainer Frederiksen Griflith 396 Y.4.R3:: ?f.f:.,7.,':.... k V :,,,.,,,1,1gg1 ,az155:.i:5ff,.l,.:1g,:i..1ilgqsfigr. . NYM. .SVN PM., . if ,,AVA, , .4V, ,..., ,E .1., ,-,T A I W- , D 3 J I W -. ' 'guj , F Q . ' 49.4. QA ', at-5 g I A V, 1,,:,ggLf - Afflf Q., . gf I gif: 2. I .I I A.,,- 7 ,U . ., J, 1, . ,V lim. N . iff ,gp-Q . . ' if . . 1 . 1. ff 5- T CSG' - 'Ir ,A -.ki x xy ' A N Y. Q ' ' f ' Y. ' s fx s, A , .aaa . mf- . ' .. vie? v ' 'K A 49 na . 513 ., s , l, M 933' 9, I J V . -4 'er ' 'QQ f L, f , -fu :W , . . - ...Q f 1 1 ' sfEv?li1'l'5i.i,.,1fb 3' ..52E2f,,, . ' ' ' 'V . ' 55-5 -N 9 3971 ,Vi . .- 1 ' '-I' -' -- ' f 'I f 5' . . , . . ,' - '-Q9 'wwf ' ,-- ' was f:5?:f:i3:Q . . - . v- .- ' 1' - '. -9- .,Z,..A., ., We f , ' - i- . ' 'W ' ff, ' .. 't - .ff A I -- , .Sei ' , ' .P rr. -- .4 ., f -- X is 23 ff . ' 2 rig '- V. .- . 1- ' ' Q: ' t f'- ' --' f-- P25 -. Q 'cr' X7 Qc . .5 A ' ' 'za 'WW - -' 'J 'f ?1ffi:s:.S.a:,f':.2:f.2:f 1f.f2i1f'2:.,.'1 - PM A , VW- VJ.:-. . s .. A - ' ' A. + ' -Q 11.25-3:-.......1 , . ' 1 'J 1 -. WH fr 1 .1 gi.'AQzw-zkweaef . 49,5-,z,'-.5,.,....:,.,, . ' -I ,,- W -Q ,f , .4 .sf-Q af '-ff' A. - - - H V . .. - - .4 :- ' XFN? ' ' Q f- 1 - . '-lsr! .21 .wife - . . .. V. . f . S -- .A - :ay M- , ' ..:5':4i::.'1:QI:a-z1'1'-1 E522-1.'-I.,-Y-V. Q.: 'f9Sff fA iff f- + ik V N' 324' 1 Y:'gg..,'.'j5Zjf: 'f.2.r:.f--:::5-.125 4 '-'z,Q'-,- 1, ' ,. 55' 'waxy I -1 . qv ,Q ' ' 1 .- .. . ':c:s.g.ag12:.L.1,...f:,.z-f. 3 0 ,--is - ... N. W f' ' f ' ' 4 i, . - 4 -Wig: ' ' fs1a2i 'wg....,.. 'wifi-iff , ...Je . 1. , 3 F, ., f' . --1 ' ' 12' a f., . - -. .sh ' '5'- ' E!'iEj:.'1-Yf'1 -' 3 'f'f1' . .. V If --j' If - ' , ' -' - , .- LOOKING DOWN INTO TUCKERMAN RAVINE come to assume among the activities of the College, the membership of Palaeopitus has been increased to include the president, and accordingly L. S. Adams, ,Q0 became the first ex-oH5cio representative. This move has already done much toward stimulating the interest in the competitions for positions on the council wliich 'are oHered to undergraduates. By far the most effective criterion of the popularity of the club, however, is found in the statistics of unofhcial trips which were made by anywhere from Q25 to 75 men every week when weather conditions permitted. This number materially surpassed those .of previous years and makes the consideration of another cabin site within a day,s walking distance of Hanover a matter of present concern. During the fall and spring the cabins are occasionally used for headquarters for ishing and hunting parties in the vicinity. ' e The remarkable growth of the Outing Club in a college whichuntil 1909 had made little or no use of its unlimited opportunitiesfor the cultivation of theoutdoors can best be attributed to the generous financial support of Rev. J. E. Johnson, '66, of Philadelphia Chonorary presidentj, who has furnished the greater part of the funds which have made the cabins and trails possible. The faculty also were instru- mental in getting the project under way and have backed it enthusiastically ever since. Recognition is especially due to the work of Professor Leland Griggs, an ardent hunter and fisherman, and the best camp cook of whom the annals of the Club have record, scarcely a week going by without his visiting one or another of the cabins. The permanence of Winter Carnival has alsobeen assured by the foundation of the Harrison Nlemorial fund by Dr. Johnson, on which the interest each year goes to defray the running expenses of the winter festival. 397 OFFICERS OF THE OUTING CLUB . ' ' The Eartmuutb deuting Killah Qeffirers Rev. John E. Johnson, '66 ...... -Q onorary President L. Sherman Adams, 'Q0 . . . President Norman B. Richardson, 'QU . Vice-President Ellis O. Briggs, 'Q1 Kenneth P. Emory, 'Q0 Frederick S. Page Halsey C. Edgerton L, S. Adams, 'Q0 N. B. Richardson, 'Q0 E. O. Briggs, 'Q1 Is.. P. Emory, 'QU S. A. Densmore, 'QI C. C. Throop, 'QQ E. O. Briggs, 'Q1 . C. LeB'outillier, 'Q0 . Secretary . . . . Treasurer . . , . Auditor . . . Supervisor of Cabins and Trails Council F. S. Page H. C. Edgerton O. J. Frederiksen, '16 Prof. C. D. Adams Executive Committee N. L. Goodrich Prof. C. C. Stewart Prof. P. S. Dow Prof. C. E. Bolser . Chairman Trips Committee . Chairman Trails Committee Chairman Publicity Committee . . . Chairman Photos and Slides Committee L. S. Adams, 'Q0 N. B. Richardson, 'Q0 K. P. Emory, 'Q0 Qlarnihal Qllummittees OUTDOOR INDOOR Prof. C. E. Bolser H. E. Keyes L. S. Adams, 'Q0, Chairman E. O. Briggs, 'Q1, Chairman S. NI. Frederiksen, 'Q1 S. A. Densmore, 'Q1 D. W. Trainer, 'Q1 W. D. Mann, 'QQ C. C. Throop, 'QQ J. S. Pei-kins,'QQ - J. C. Wood, '22 398 uggb Q . ' - 1 1 1 up : 1 .. !'i'i. 41:00 6:00 7:00 8:30 11:00 2:00 3:00 4:00 4:00 8:30 1:15 2:1115 3:00 4:00 7:30 9:00 p. 111. p. 111. p. 111. p. in. p. 111. p. 111. 11. ln. 11. 111. 11. 111. 11. 113. 11. 111. p. m. p. m. p. in. p. m. p. 111. 1920 Program U Ulhurshap, jfehruarp 162 Tea Da11ce, Sigma Chi House. Supper Dances, Beta Theta Pi and Phi Gamma Delta Houses. Informal Dinner, Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Chasin, Aroundu, Dramatic Association Performance in Webster Hall. Group Fraternity Dances i11 Little Theatre, Trophy Room, and Fraternity Houses. jfrihalf, Jfehruarp 13 i Preli111inary Outdoor Events, Golf Links. Tea Dances, Phi Kappa Psi, and Psi Upsilon Houses. Tea Dances, Kappa Sigma and Sigma Cl1i Houses. Reception, Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. ' Carnival Ball, Alumni Gymnasium. Qaturhap, jfshruarp 14 1 Hockey Game, Dartnaouth vs. Dartinouth Club of Boston. Intercollegiate Ski-Jumping Contest, Dartmouth vs. Montreal Ski Club. Junior Exhibition Ski Jump. Exhibition Ski Jumping and Somersaulting. Tea Dances, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, and Chi Phi Houses. 'Eea Dance, Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Intercollegiate League Basketball Game, Dartmouth vs. Pennsyl- vania. COI'1C61'l1 by Dartmouth Musical Clubs, Webster Hall. 399 C 1 it J xx m ,Vs I S' J K6 'fmvluu QHDUH lllmmu 'F g , .C 1 W L 50 :,.?TIQ,1sff' Q 1, ECI '40 li I 4 'Q .,.fY2XWN!Xgxiixw-ani . , C QL A NX my 5, ,pk .V !f '99 Clllarnihal 1301152 Partisan Psi Upsilon - Kappa Kappa Kappa Alpha Delta Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Theta Delta Chi Phi Delta Theta Beta Theta Pi Sigma Chi Phi Kappa Psi Iota Sigma Upsilon 400 . Phi Gamma Delta Chi Phi Phi Sigma Kappa Kappa Sigma Sigma Nu Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon Delta Gamma Psi Cosmos Club Q , A' . , vlly ll'liTiifu ' ' if A ., ft ?i'!iiif:1p12zzU1i ?Ff7lf. 4- - was ig A - 3 r 1,. s 1 , E V K 1 7 1 v c N alt' ' f X f 'A 4 f - I la' C C X Nut- -.6512 , X lk Z' f' 12' A ' 'J 2 f if .1 xx 1 f, f if N 1 i 11. 9,1 f aj winter Cltarnihal VVinter Carnival was never more a success than the ninth mid-winter holiday, February .12-141. With a most complete and all-embracing program of social functions and outdoor activities, Carnival offered the four hundred guests of the College everything that could make up a whirl-windweek-end. Accommodations for the influx of fair visitors were strained to capacity and for the first time it was found necessary to use Hitchcock Hall as an annex to the Inn,,in spite of the fact that fraternity houses had more than the usual quota of guests. Greater interest than ever was manifested in the outdoor side of Carnival activities and the attention of the outer world was focussed, through the newspapers, on Dartmouth,s winter holiday. The widely-extended epidemic of influenza throughout the East threatened for a time to put a damper on the whole affair by confining most of the girls, schools and colleges under the quarantine ban. The plans went right ahead, however, and the only unfortunate consequence was the cancellation of the supper dance scheduled at the Commons for the opening night. A heavy snowfall continuing on and off through the entire four days of the visitors, stay, fixed their impression that Dart- mouth most assuredly is the supreme Winter College. As an overture to the round of week-end pleasures, the Dramatic Association offered on Thursday evening Chasin' Around , a sparkling revue written and produced locally. Clever song hits and comedy, with a local tinge, made the pro- duction take at its first appearance, and brought fame to several of the devotees of histrionic pursuits. To round out the opening dayis festivities, group fraternity dances were held at the Trophy Room, the Gymnasium, and the Little Theatre. Tea dances and outdoor events vied with one another for favor on Friday after- noon's program. Various fraternities were hosts at the tea dances, where the music was largely the product of jazz bands. At the golf links the preliminary ski and snowshoe races were run off, and Dartmouth's well-balanced team carried off major honors over lVIcGill, Williams, and the University of Vermont. Carnivalfs climax followed in the evening when Alumni Gymnasium, dressed in brilliant holiday garb with the St. Valentine note dominant, encompassed the brightest ball in Carnival history. Carnival Ball rightly claimed first place in holiday activities, and the surpassing decorations based on evergreen and intertwined Valentine pen- dants, a jazz band with unexcelled vim and vigor, and the presence of nearly four hundred couples, stamped it as the high point of Carnival social activity. -L01 . 7 -. f pf-X w 1139 U J, .. .1 f 2 Y AX . 'lx X13 22:-. lllllllflfmmlmmll Q' .y 'A .f.f,,.,. , X.-gi,-X, i.,,,, ,-.. -17, , io' f - - I ' I -'ilXl'llRig,ixvin il ig-14.3-.Las X 4. YXXX .LQV 'sv-Q W n',. -'QN ,- if The last day of Carnival, Saturday, was fairly crammed with events in which ozone and saxophone played about an equal part. Hockey in the form of a clash between the Varsity and the Dartmouth Club of Boston Erst claimed attention, when on the Alumni Oval rink the graduates overcame the Varsity sextette 44-Q. Directly after the game, the throng plodded through uncomfortably deep snow to the Vale of Tempe, Where ski-jumping of the sort to produce all degrees of excite- ment took place. Dartmoutlfs skilled representatives again took precedence over their intercollegiate competitors in jumping, whichlacked little of the sensational. As a climax to the feast of thrillg local experts performed that most diflicult of ski feats, the catapulting somersault. Following close upon the outdoor events came more fraternity tea dances. Dartmouth Vs. University of Pennsylvania on the basketball floor was the opening event of Saturday evening, in which the Green fivesuffered a 410-18 reverse at the hands of the league champions. As the last event of formal Carnival, the Nlusical Clubs tendered at VVebster Hall' one of the best programs in memory. Local favorites reasserted their right to generous plaudits and impressed quite markedly the crowd of guests. After the concert the last fraternity dances were held, in which broken clock springs dictated the grand finale. Here ended the 1920 Carnival except for the storm-threatened departures of the morrow. . 402 F! -2 - . 7-Y -rv f if L I YDQOQE. - MUSICAL CLUBS ,, ASB j ? V, 5 ,L , ,I-vm I A 5 E, eiy. c , .,,, V 'tr - -- - - , li ' -fi, X 'f5,. 1 ' . .,,, , :,.1.., ,,,.. ,A,. Yi ,L, - 'f ' 1 gr. ., V: R 'F . G ..,. ,. -. . Bartmnutb jlilusinal Ciluhs Albert VV. Frey . Manager Horace G. Pender . . Graduate Manager lVIarion 'W. Sherwood . . Assistant Manager Herrick Brown . . Publicity Manager Following close on an uneventful season in a war year, the 1919-1920 season of the Musical .Clubs has been unusually extensive. A schedule was drawn up embrac- ing a particularly large number of concerts, and providing for frequent out-of-town trips of greater or less duration. By staging a vaudeville show in the fall for the purpose of trying out prospective specialty acts, the Clubs unearthed a wealth of talent, and were enabled, by laying special emphasis onthe novelty side of their programs, to offer the College someof the most talented and delightful concerts that have been presented in Hanover for several years. The season was opened by a jaunt to New York by way of Vassar and Peekskill that was wound up by a joint concert with the University of Pennsylvania on 'November 8. A second trip during the Thanksgiving vacation included stops at Rogers Hall and Somerville and a joint concert at VVellesley College. Two short trips during the month of January, to Lebanon and Keene, then paved the way for the first home appearance of the Clubs in Webster Hall on the occasion of Winter Carnival. During the long WCSt61'H journey at the time of the Spring vacation a three- fold record was broken: in respect to the mileage covered, the number of concerts rendered, and the total number of men taken on the trip -fifty-one. Several special kinds of entertainment were given during the trip, that lasted from April Q to 14, and comprised concerts in Brattleboro, Vt., Albany, Buffalo, Detroit, Evans- ton, Ill., Chicago, Toledo, Columbus, Cleveland, Youngstown, Pittsburg, Atlantic City, and Springfield, Mass. The program at Pittsburg was combined with the Wfashington and Jefferson Clubs. C An appearance at Mt. Holyoke lVIay 1, and the second local production at Junior Prom, round out the year's schedule, leaving the Commencement date on June 22 for the final concert of the season. O 4-05 9 , L , 'T , .1 9. . e - T 3 if .ar P 'S .l ' Y Program of Concerts rendered throughout the Western trip The Dartmouth lVIedley H A Glee Club Peter Gink ....... Cobb lVIandolin Club a. The Saxophone Trio b. The Campus Quartet The Midnight Sons V This is Shen . f- 4 '. . . Rogers Glee Club Yankee Dandy ..... Weidt Mandolin Club ' Violin Solo 1 'P E. H. Rubin, '23 a. De Sandman . .... . Protheroe b. Elfman . . . . . . Gibson Glee Club The Scrap Iron Four The Dartmouth Song ..... Segur Combined Clubs I 1 THE SCRAP IRON FOUR-Beattie, Cunningham, 'iP1umb, Morgan 406 .- 4 .'adQ,'.:'g 113- -'-f-..-I' 1 1.5. 'Q 2 -. gs PM ,,fu'fi'f?i,gk 'LEf W 4555.51 ' ,. 25632. Jn- , ,,,M.y.:Q5 fa ' 1 ' .L I X ,3?1 ?1?1,Q - gggggji way' ' EYES' .f M ' U 'QM - 1,2132 ' Af' , sl, ' f . Q ' ,. . gag, ,-1,,w4,gv1, Q Pl-QOQ 4 bg x 7 v'f'm .. . ,, 4 -. 1: 45, 4,6 BQ? sr' ff 1 vt 5- 2- N' .,. . 3 'ij..s1? f ,M sw 1 rg..- Lis 'sf' 'VKX V' L. Sherman Adams jfirst Tenurs F. A. Blanpied, '20 S. S. Gerrish, '20 F. T. lVIarden, '20 Leader E. K. Pilsbury, '20 R. P. Bird, '21 R. W. Elsasser, '21 1 H. M. Caldwell, '23 bzrunh illienurs J. C. Chilcott, '20 C. E. Newton, '20 D. F. Sawyer, '21 L. D. Smith, '21 jfiI5f 3535525 D. O. lNIcLe1-an, '20 ' G. D. Beattie, '21 P. C. Belknap, '21 H. F. Braman, '21 Quanta masses L. S. Adams, '20 - S. A. Andretta, '20 VV. S. Gault, '20 F.. G. Halsey, '21 S. M. Kenyon, '22 407 C. B. Bristol, '22 N. R. Younglove, '22 L. E. Fitts, '23 F. Jetter, '23 A. W. Gilbert, '21 W. H. Sinclair, '21 F. H. Dow, '22 ' H. C. Buell, '23 E. A. Maling, '21 H. A. Trull, '21 R. L. Bartlett, '22 J. A. Hamilton, '22 i f V 4 ' 9 ul ' . f A . Ax .- fx. Lizgff- . . f f , 3. ah R +:' W 1-f r ' .- . .r. f i, n by ,yggif - 'S O e..:vNQ A,g J'-f . A 'Q ' I 1' 4 -. in -A A 'QM' iw .WW . ' ' 1 4-, MEF' , 1 .av Q- H. Huong. -. V713 9- .rn , A' K-.J ...r. J . .,- ,L - . Q 'EJ' ,, 17 -1 I if ...egg '33 'EW' James V. Reber Jfirst jllilanhulins T. Kingsbury, '20 VV. S. Ege, '21 E. J. H. Lane, '21 4 P. T. Sonnenfeld, '21 gmunh fllilanbulins S. A. Andretta., '20 F. E. WVa.llace, '20 G. Leader Litchard, '21 Sabourin, '21 Sanderson '21 , . Bornman, '21 1 Charnberlaine, '21 D. H. Ankeny, '21 Q R. P. Booth, '22 Ulhirh jlllanbulins ' lVI. A. Dewey, '20 J. YV. Taylor, '21 D. lVI. Sample, '21 P. J. Deering, Jr., '23 R. A. Jefferson, '23 Guitars C. F. Holbrook, '20 N. WV. Barker, '21 J. S. Nlaze, '22 Svaxupbumz Clllatinet G. D. Plumb, '22 T. I-I. Pinney, '22 Violin jflutnz ZIBrum5 C. VV. Demond, '19 M. F. Johnson, '21 W. H. Perry, '21 408 bpeeialties Ulhe Qliampus Qauartet S. Adams, '20 ' R. P. Bird, '21 . D. Beattie, '21 R. W. Elsasser, '21 Ulbe jllilihnigbt Swans A. Andretta, '20 H. J. Cleary, '21 J. Bowen, '20 ' W. S. Ege, '21 D. Bornman, '21 P. G. Sanderson, '21 H. Chamber-laine, '21 ' B. L. Bishop, '22 G. D. Plumb, '22 The imap litem jfnur W7. Cunningham, '19 G. D. Plumb, '22 D. Beattie, '21 F. P. Morgan, '23 The Svaxupijune Ulbnee B S. Sample, '20 D.M. Sample, '21 G. D. Plumb, '22 THE SAXOPHONE TRIO 409 Q iw? --.x.nYQN,:..1--- . wma--Q mga. 1 4 - ':!'5w:11v Uv 'gg-ILP? ,:gg,,s,gw:. was N. 1' 2 me-. 1 -matt 553' .5 19:31, ,ggi 3590: :wap Mr --' ms' qw : -E, -, ' 'fm' W Wh. df- 1.1.-A H2055 :1EEf5i:.52' V .l'2'Q '21' f.g.,,5fc5, 11.3 A jggq-cikggs. fawff siflfirwi. --I-agffeh' if aww M ,M -'Kiwi .1 - f-Hg: , f .1wfg?'fiQsi1-1ix5rf1f am Q an .- 'Q mf- N .-:hi-if 2 'in' :gg fr v ?f'f1..f9:942s4a' A - . E Clill 1 Um 5' QM? A , ' Y if .Ry Q. H Flo. o RI: fffigif '59 gif Q he 9L5 'A ly i 1 'i2,.f'5 i'Q?Z'2'f5.1.5 4 ef Prof. Leonard B. lVlcYVliood :First Ulennrs F. A. Blanpied, '20 R. S. S. Gerrish, '20 D. F. T. lVIarden, '20 f H. lVL Caldwell, '23 Secunia Uienurs Chilcott, '20 J. C. C. E. Newton, '20 C R. P. Bird, '21 E D. F. Sawyer, '21 L. WV. H. Spencer, '21 F. L. D. Smith, '21 R. :Hirst 38815525 3 E. VV. Cunningham, 19 A C. A. Lloyd, '20 G N. . fi M usical Dm ectov YV. Elsasser, '21 VV. Fitts, '22 R. Y ounglove, '22 A. Baldwin, Jr., '22 R. . B. Howard, '22 A. Woodward, '22 E. Fitts, '23 Jetter, '23 F. Johnson, '23 W. Gilbert, '21 G. Griffin, Jr., '21 D. O. lVICLeran, '20 VV. H. Sinclair, '20 G. D. Beattie, '21 P. C. Belknap, '21 H. F. Brarnan, '21 L. S. Adams, '20 VV. S. Gault, '20 E. G. Halsey, '21 H. A. Trull, '21 R. L. Bartlett, '22 E. WV. Gauss, '23 Secunh Basses 410 J. L. Sullivan, '21 YV. C. Varian, '21 F. H. Dow, '22 H. W. Green, '22 H. C. Buell, '23 C. B. Bristol, '22 S. M. Kenyon, '22 J. D. Booth, '23 J. A. Rippel, '23 R. S. VVinehester, '23 1 ' . - - an . 0:1 -' -- -- ,. ... If 4? - ' il 'lp' u'li5 1. '4,- 1 Q H -fr .+- ' 15-f:-vi ., .. . g2,5'rf5 - -4' rlfigvwef. 1 551, r ,- W4 W' ff ' ' f?zf'L Quglfhig KE gsilgtl rs, 46 ,.j?,,j:4gfQk?w3 if '59 . ., . , . -rss. 35i?'l.'i,, 1n, 1 . me 3 ii e au- ' SU - I, ze A' ,513 1. r - f ve- , y i ' ' - ,, ' r:, ' V' il ff' 313,33 W9 P, fp 1959? 223 A331655 xv sgg'ii22faii5 1325? 35,323 'E3 ilfirst Violins C. YV. Demond, '19 P. YV. Clark, '20 K. E. Fenderson, '20 E. C. Stahl, '20 l Secunia Wiulins W. Lies, Jr., '21 R. B. lVIiner, '21 D. A. Sweet, '22 YV. R. Holmes, '23 ' Wiulas F. E. 1VIcGlynn, '20 Fi. J. Baldwin, '23 QEQIIUS G. D. Beattie, '21 JV. C. Varian, '21 Masses H. VV. Green, '22 :Flutes lNI. F. Johnson, '21 F. T. Taylor, '21 Clilarinets C. A. Lloyd, '20 411 D iq ll J' n 'A Moons Prof. Leonard B. MeWliood . lVIw.sical Duecfor G.-VV. Hamilton, '23 F. P. lVIorgan, '23 E. H. Rubin, '23 E. VV. G. Tifft, '23 VV. P. F. Kelley, '23 A. Segal, '23 A. Shem, '23 1VI. Udall, '23 V. R. YV. H. Sweet, Jr., '22 R. lVI. Dewey, '22 . E. G. Roe, '23 J. W. Dodge, '23 F. H. Dow, '22 rlw . H. Johnson, '23 T. H. Finney, '22 A35 P ' ..- ' if 1 4-. 5 E 1 I 3 3, baxuphnnes G. D. Plumb, 'QQ F. H. Reed, '23 Zfanrnz R. J. Goodnow, Jr., '21 S. W. Plumb, '21 S Qturnets A R. C. Batchelder, ,QI A. P. Taylor, '23 'iiirumhunes , A. P. Stillman. '20 C. A. Palmer, ,23 Qiiprnpani ' ' W. H. Perry, ,Qi String Qauartet jfirst 'Violin C. W. Demond, ,19 P. W. Clark, ,Q0 Sunni: Violin Viola 5 E. H. Rubin, ,253 , WV. H. Sweet, Jr., 'QQ Qilrllu G. D. Beattie, ,QI , VV. C. Varian, ,QI :freshman String Quartet Jfirst Wiulin Secunia Viulin E. H. Rubin E. W. G. Tiflqt Viola QErIIu E. J. Baldwin E. G. Roe 412 . 'Z1f2fF9 ? string? my C'H1,Q,?, 52.5 iid.. 958' ssgiwf B Q ? x 'Iv 'N 4 . - - a this w e Q- H- Q We ' . ,A Q , ff jf- ' f'W -sg-,M sf Avfiliai, ' g J 1' Robert VV. Elsasser, ,Q1 . . Lcuclcr H' l f Frank A. Hutchins, ,QQ . . lllanclgcr Qllurnets H. J. Richter, ,Q0 C. Lloyd, ,Q0 R. C. Batchelder, ,Q1 H. F. Palmer, ,Q1 A. G. Curtis, ,QQ G. C. Cavis, ,QQ R. E. Hight, ,QQ H. Chadbourne, ,QQ F. A. Hutchins, ,QQ lV1. D. Clarke, ,QQ VV. VV. Sprague, ,QQ T. H. Pinney, 'QQ ' A. P. Taylor, ,Q3 E. D. Smith, ,QQ Saxupijnnes W7. S. NICClintoCk, Jr., ,Q1 G. D. Plumb, ,QQ D. F. Storer, ,Q1 F. H. Reed, ,Q3 E. Hotchkiss, ,QQ P. BI. Shaw, 'Q3 C. K. Sutphcn, ,Q3 Qlirumhnnes Masses B. Atherton, ,QQ P. A. Smith, ,Q1 C. A..Pa1mer, ,Q3 K. C. VVillizuns, ,Q3 Zgaritunes A. P. Jones, ,19 H. W. Green, ,QQ Bass QEIarinet F T Taylor, ,Q1 L. S. Ruder, ,Q3 R. 111. Kilpatrick, '19 C. WI. Dcmoncl, ,19 Ziantns J. Goodnow, Jr., ,Q1 S. W. Plumb, 'Q1 T. R. Robie, ,QQ P. Schryver, ,Q3 R. A. Qllpmhals -L13 J. L. Sullivan, ,Q1 3IBrums J. F. Buschmann, ,Q0 C. P. Gilson, ,Q1 VV. H. Perry, ,Q1 E. B. Gumaer, Jr., ,Q3 THE BAND 1 ROBINSON HALL Brown Rand Brewer Swezey Cook Charlock Curtis ' Cutler Maroney Cotner DRAMATIC DIRECTORATE V Eartmnutb Bramatin Qssnniatiun Eirectnrate Edward lVI. Curtis . . . . . Director Gerald E. Cutler . Assistant Director Henry E. Maroney . . F President Horace G. Pender . , . . Graduate Manager Joseph H. Brewer . Counselor to the Director Richard VV. Charlock . . Business Manager Lovell H. Cook Assistant Business lllanager Russell BI. Cotner . . Stage Manager Charles C. Kerwin Assistant Stage Manager Carroll lVI. Swezey . . Proyaerty Manager Edward S. Price . Assistant Property Manager George VV. Rand, 211 . . . Head Usher Herrick Brown . Publicity Manager Clarence A. Lloyd Orchestra Leader Q15 . Mfg 1919-1920 - The real post-bellum rejuvenation of the Dartmouth Dramatic Association came last year with the arrival of good Gene Markey and his show of Oh, Doctor! The music of Janssen, '21, Our Own lVIad Musicizrn, and the lyrics of the estimable Tommy Groves, '18, coupled with the extraordinary directing ability of Ma1'key, made the production one of which the Association can be justly proud, and set a standard at which they have been shooting ever since. After a successful appear- ance in Hanover, Oh,Doctor! was taken to Northampton and Manchester, where it was received on both occasions with great cordiality. Upon returning to Hanover, it was again played for the Commencement show. ' X For the beneit of those Alumni who returned for the Sesqui- centennial in the fall of 1919-20, the Dramatic Association resurrected The Foundersv, a play by Harry VVell1nan, '07, under the guidance of Director Curtis, and advised by the authors. Soon after the Centennial came the call for freshman candidates, and the freshman try-outs were held, revealing a wealth of talent in the incoming '23 class. T. E. Johnson in the role of Kathleen Ni Hoolihann, during these try-outs, showed an ability which promises to delight Hanover audiences as soon as he is allowed to appear. It might be remarked in passing that the standard of the try- out productions themselves was considerably higher than it has been for several years. - ' In c'Ghosts',, the next product of the Dartmouth dramatic workshop, the Association proved that it could turn with equal facility from very light things to those of an unusually serious and difficult nature. The greatest find of the yearwas in the person of P. G. Jackson, 93, who carried the leading role of Ghostsv with a power and ability not found on a Hanover stage in some time. - The Carnival show,' 'Chasini Around , by Ed Curtis, 520, and Hubert Ripley, ,21, Was a success from the financial as well as the dramatic standpoint, and sus- tained well the tone set by the preceding musical production of the year. At present the combined energies of the producing and playing staff of the Association are H. E. Illaroncy, .President 417 '. U if ., . ' ' , , Fi, A 5 'T A l i '- ,. A A W 62 , 19 y A V A is wg e a r lflil directed, - under the leadership of Assistant Director Cutler - toward the repro- duction of Oh, Doctor! which will make a one-Week tour,-playing at Brookline, X, . . Voicester, and Lawrence, Massachusetts, and Concord, New Hampshire. VVorthy of particular mention here is the W 'k f W. M ' ' ' ' Gwendolyn VVinkle. The plans of the Association for the remainder of the year provide for one more show, to be played at both Prom and Commencement Dependin l h . g muc 1 on t e success of the present trip and the calibre of the work done by the Association during the remainder of the season,'a trip extending even as far West as Chicago looms up as a possibility for next-year. oi o . Patterson, 23, in the role of Miss March 15, 1920 J. M. .FLEMING5 ,21 X Homer Cleary i J ii-5. , ,aim- ', .kdm-1 V 'WML .. ,. ..,, -,sw 55335, , , , ,Wi,,. 49 , V as 5 '42rQ4.,:f2 a' ' 31 4392 '5' John Sullivan Roger Bird -118 I f . ? - .ff gf! , I Steve Wilson Antoni Verdi George Brockton Ethel Brolckton Nell Brockton Ira Lazaro . Mrs. Palmer Grace Palmer Toni Palmer Edward Palmer Phil Preston ' Nlorton Hanley Holmes . Act I - Act II - Act IV - N X L-. 311.1 ' ' -Q--X V, ,jf . ,. ' Wfebster Hall, April 22, 1919, Qllbeating Qlheatets By lVIaX lVIarcin 1 Qllast uf Qibatantzrs Synopsis uf 5121125 . ,W , n , 10 -N f 'in' - .fa N Q! A X fi QQXQSMW .l - H. E. Maroney, J. L. Sullivan, R. P. Bird, W. VV. Allen, D. L. Finlayson, G. L. Clewell, H. J. Cleary, J. H. D. Zuckerman, K. S. McIiinley, R. D. lVIallary, . J. A.Hardy, R. VV. Pendleton, F. T. Hodgdon, Summer Home of the Brocktons, Long Island. Sunnner Home of the Palrners, Long Island. Act III - Same as Act I. 119 Onice of National Detective Agency, New York City. f '19 '21 ,21 19 19 ,22 ,21 '22 '21 '21 ,22 '21 '22 5 3 19 'F l L I . Q' Wlebster Hall, October 16 and 18, 19Q0 Ulibs jfnunhers - By J. VV. VVallace, '07, H. R. VVellman, '07, and VV. C. Rogers, '09 Qiast uf Qllbaracters f VVhite Eagle, an Indian Chief . . . G. L. Clewell, 'QQ Mad Wolf, a messenger . gg . . L. S. Adams, 'Q0 Shungoi, a medicine man .J . . . . g . J. A. Hardy, 'QQ Sam Occom, Chieftain of the VVah Hoos . . . J. M. Fleming, 'Q1 Janet, a White girl F . . . J. H. D. Zuckerman, 'QQ John Wheelock ...... g . A. M. Saunders, Jr., 'QQ Lady Sanborn ...' ' .... ' . . R. P. Bird, 'Q1 Lord Helpus, representative of the Earlof Dartmouth . M. S. VVillard, 'Q0 The Dean . I ...... E. Hotchkiss, 'QQ The Maid . ' N. Bernard, 'Q3 The Valet . . . e R. T. Reid, 'QQ Little Big Joke . . Edward Richardson Sammy Occom, Qnd Gordon Phillips Wah Hoo, Jr. . ...... Robert Richardson Personnel uf the Qlbnrus I G. T. Fleming, 'QQ, J. J. Shea, 'QQ, A. D. Albee, 'Q3, F. S. Almy, 'Q3, J. VV. Bertch, 'Q3, D. M. Clough, 'Q3, C. C. Coffin, 'Q3, F. D. Curry, 'Q3, W. C. Evans, 'Q3, J. E. Gilbert, 'Q3, D. L. Granger, 'Q3, O. T. Griiiin, 'Q3, F. Jetter, 'Q3, W. L. Jones, 'Q3, L. F. Stevens, 'Q3, C. F. Marden, 'Q3, H. H. Mills, 'Q3, D. P. Richardson, 'Q3, C. A. Sanchez, 'Q3, H. H. Taylor, 'Q3. A Qpnupsis uf 91121185 Prologue -Sunrise at the Scout's Camp. Act I - Scene 1 -- Sam Occom's Indian Village on the site of what is now Hanover, New Hampshire. Scene Q - Same. D A Act II - Same. , Time - About the middle of the Eighteenth Century. LLQ0 Q1 v 9 A .4 1 ...Q 1 1- S? eg.. X 7.4 x 1 .min ,1 MGI' Jilin 51 W -.ggg 131011. N 9542: ,. A S ' 0 -.53 --ll U n 65 Z L X .. L 155: J f Fm ' 0 ,5 f 'N A gf gala j ,Ml mtg aww ' .. 551' gpm jllilusinal iliumhers Qui i 2 Scene I 1. Opening Chorus . . . . . Braves 2. It Pays . . . .... Occom and Chorus 3. 4' Eleazar Wheelock ...... Wheelock and Chorus 41. Indian Dances Cal Eagle Dance, Cbj Buffalo Dance, Cel Snake Dance 5. Love Like a Flower Grows V .... VVheelock and Chorus 6. Isn't it Nice to Love? . Lady Sanborn and Occom Scene II . 7. A Song Revue. Being excerpts from Dartmouth Comic Operas and Operettas from 1906 4 The Founders 5 to 1919 4 Oh, Doctor! j. Sung by L. S. Adams, '20, G. D. Beattie, '21, R. W. Elsasser, '21, and D. F. Sawyer, '21, accompanied by H. F. Braman, '21, G. D. Plumb, '22, and G. YV. Hamilton, '23. Cal U Cbl CCD Cdl Cel Cfl Cel Chl CD Softly Drifts the Twilight from If I were Dean The Prom Girl from The Promenaders Dear Old Dartmouth from The King of Ukan Virginia from The Pea Green Earl Thinking of You from 'qThe Green Parasol Persia from What Next I Love You, My Dear from The Little Toy Kingdom lVIy Made in America Maid from I Should Say So Dancing Honeymoon from Heave To Cjl I Love to Dance from Oh, Doctor! Qct ii Scene I 8. Clothes Make the Man . 9. Finale . . . . 419075 419095 419095 419105 419195 419155 419155 419165 419185 419195 . Lord Helpus . Ensemble +21 LITTLE THEATRE, ROBINSON HALL ia at r eiee ff .f , lil J . ':' il ' ' TQ, liiiiy. unvl , y H V,,Vv x 2.2.43,,..,- - Little Theatre, December 11 and 12, 1920 QBbu5ts By Henrik Ibsen I . Qllast uf Cllibatacters Regina Engstrand, a maid in lVIrs. Alvingfs service . . N. Bernard, ,Q3 Engstrand, a carpenter ....... J. L. Sullivan, ,21 Mande1's, the Pastor of the parish , . . I . G. L. Frost, ,QI lVIrs. Alving, a Widow . . . . J. H. D. Zuckerman, '22 Oswald Alving, her son, an artist . . P. G. ackson, '23 Svpnupsis The action takes place in Mfrs. Alving's house on one of the larger fjords of Western Norway. I Act I - The living-room in the home of Mrs. Alving. The morning of a dreary day in the rainy season of the year. Act II - The same. The afternoon of the same day. Act III - The same. The early morning of the next day. 423 P A9 T ,A S - e ' K5 '--S P 419 Eg A , , - 5 . ' ,ss HDR K Q lvebster Hall, February 11 and IQ, 1920 7 Qllbasin' Ztruunh A lVlusical Extravaganza in two Acts Book and Lyrics by E. lVI. Curtis, ,Q0 lVlusic by H. G. Ripley, Jr., '21 Synopsis uf Queues Qtr i Scene 1 - Oflice of the Sunday Editor of the Gehenna Gazette, Hades Office Boy . Daniel Defoe, Sunday Editor of the Gazette . . Archimedes . Stenographer Nero . . Socrates Cleopatra . Friday . . John Bunyan He . . She . . Izzy . . lst Employee Qnd Employee 3rd Employee flth Employee John Bunyan Friday . Cleopatra . John Bunyan Friday . . Izzy . . The Spirit of Brooklyn . The Mayor of Brooklyn A Lady Policeman . R. D. O'Connell . lVT. Saunders, Jr., . J. M. Fleming, . . . . J. H. D. Zuckerman, . . H. H. Mills, E. J. Palmer, . V. R. P. Bird, K. B. Hayes, G. L. Frost, Scene Q - An office in the Customs House, New York . F. J etter, J. H. D. Zuckerman, . J. VV. Embree, . W. lVI. Parkes, W. E. Sands, J. E. Gilbert, H. H. Taylor, G. L. Frost, . K. B. Hayes, 1 i f Q 1 S . .R.P.B11-d, Scene 3 - Somewhere in Brooklyn G. L. Frost, K. B. Hayes, J. W. Embree, . R. D. O'Connell, J. M. Fleming, H. H. Mills, 49241 .. . e , f ,' . .fA W m f A' ' . I i Scene 4 - A Cemetery in Boston Tramp X . Tramp Y He . She . Izzy . e John Bunyan Friday . . 1st Policeman 2nd Policeman . 3rd Policeman A Boston Judge . I A Boston.Jury . . Messrs. Cleopatra . . . Qct ii Scene 1 - The Campus at Dartmouth Carnival Girls . Carnival Boys . A Traffic Cop A Taxi Driver Izzy . . Friday . John Bunyan Hee She . . Cleopatra . . A College Boy . A Dormitory Canvasser . . A Bus Driver . . . . Two Lonesome Birds . J . lVI. Fl -1-25 9 ! 7 9 3 ' ,'f Tuff f 'ffl TV.. .J-fi in ' ffm J J. lVL Fleming, '21 . E. J. Palmer, 19 . F. Jetter, '23 J. H. D. Zuckerman, '22 . J. VV. Fimbree, 21 G. L. Frost, '21 K. B. Hayes, 22 -JW. M. Parkes, 23 H. H. Taylor, '23 . J. E. Gilbert, 23 . H. H. Mills '23 paugh and Gilhert . R. P. Bird, '21 Sands, Al Can open winter? Gentlemen of the Chorus Gentlemen of the Chorus 9 7 7 7 J J . J. M. Fleming, '21 E. J. Palmer, '19 J. W. Embree, '21 K. B. Hayes, 22 . G. L. Frost, '21 . F. Jetter, 23 J. H. D. Zuckerman, 22 . . R. P. Bird, '21 . M. Saunders, Jr., 22 H. H. lVIills, 23 . E. J. Palmer, '19 eming, '21 and F. Jetter, 23 AVA F 1I' M ' .A K N f 'NX f L r 3 f ! f . 1 :Q 1-go.: V 2 H J ,,,, A aff' - K' his .X , Scene Q - The Lake Front, Chicago Cleopatra . . A Newshoy . . 1st Plain Clothes lVIan 2nd Plain Clothes Man Friday . . . Izzy . . John Bunyan . Thug A . Thug B . . A Loop Hound . A German Officer . German Soldiers . Seen He . . . She . . John Bunyan . Friday . Izzy . . Cleopatra . . Head Waiter . . R. P. Bird H., H. Mills J. lVI. Fleming E. J. Palmer K. B. Hayes J. VV. Embree G. L. Frost W. M. Parkes VV. E. Sands . M. Saunders, Jr. . . . H. H. Mills lVIessrs. Reid, Taylor and Gilbeit e 3 - The Orient Cafe, San Francisco C' U . . . . . . . F. Jetter . J. H. D. Zuckerman G. L. Frost K. B. Hayes J. W. Embree . R. P. Bird . M. Saunders, Jr. H. H. Mills Norma Talmadge . . iBm:s'nnneI uf the Qliburus T. E. Merriam, '21, B. D. Berry, '22, R. T. Reid, '22, YV. E. Sands, '22, C. T. Alpaugh, '23, J. D. Booth, '23, R. B. Clark, '23, H. E. Freeman, '23, L. L. Friedman, '23, J. E. Gilbert, '23, O. T. Griffin, '23, L. J. Little, '23, W. M. Parkes, '23, W. M. Patterson, '23, D. P. Richardson, '23, H. D. Sammis, '23, H. H. Taylor, '23, E. N. Wackerhagen, '23, 426 A in rrrr f 19 '1 'B J Dx , K ,,,. . 3 if ,illlausinal ,ilaumhers Qui C Socrates . Sands of Nilei' 'cWhen You Smilew . . . . E. J. Palmer, ,19 and Chorus QLyric by G. P. lVIerriam, 'QU . . . . . R. P. Bird, ,QI and Chorus . . . F. Jetter, ,23 NI Wfonder Whichu ..... - J. WV. Embree, '21 Ulf Girls Wlould Only Play Around My Isle' . XV. E. Sands, ,QQ CLy1'iC by R. P. Bird, ,QU - Prelude to Scene 4-. If Every Night Were Saturday Nightv E. J. Palmer, ,19, and J. M. Fleming, ,921 The Ja-Da-Reen ..... R. P. Bird, 'Q1and,Chorus CLyric by C. B. Orr, 'QQD Hut ii Opening Chorus .....- .... C horus QLyriC by T. H. lVIcKnight, 'QSD Somebody Knowsi' . J. lVI. Fleming, ,QL F. Jetter, 'Q3,and Chorus You Gotta Wfatch Your Stepy' .... lVI. Saunders, Jr., '22 'cWhen YVe Build a Homel' F. Jetter, '23, J. H. D. Zuckerman, ,22, and Chorus QLyric by C. B. Orr, 'QQD 'cThat Shameful Teasing Kind of Jazzn R. P. Bird, ,QL and Chorus Finale . CLyrie by R. P. Bird, 'QU . . . . . . . Ensemble 4Q'T A921 'MXN f 7' 3' 4522. lluivvlnn L , 1'Ql3Fl..'i3 X x L' hrlliv- waz, cf '1- CLE 'Ii X i JV! 'Qmluapg l wi ' .mf HW 1 , L- .NXNX If if -W..-.-? X.,A 5, .,., Sufi? Eramatin Qssuniatinn Grcbestra Clarence A. Lloyd, '20 . . . . jlfirst Violins 'K. E. Fenderson, C. W'. Demond, '19 VV. Lies, Jr., '21 F.. V Sunni: Violins R. B. 1VIiner, '22 QEzIIus VV. C. Varian, '21 Wiulas YV. H. Sweet, Jr., '22 ' Bass Vials H. WV. Green, '22 itlilarinets H. F. Palmer, '21 i P. A. Smith, '21 :lflute F. T. Taylor, '21 Saxupbumzs P G. D. Plumb, '22 iulurnets R. C. Batchelder, '21 iiaurns R. J. Goodnow, Jr., '21 Qlirumhnmzs J. R. Williams, '19 Brums W. H. Perry, '21 -1-28 '20 . Director E. C. Stahl, '20 W. G. Tifft, '23 A D. A. Sweet, '22 R. M. Dewey, '22 E. J. Baldwin, '23 J. W. Dodge, '23 T. H. Pinney, '22 F. H. Reed, '23 A. P. Taylor, '23 S. W. Plumb, Jr., '21 A. P. Stillmah, '20 C. A. Palmer, '23 ies WW my , f-Q-,X . 119 Us I A 1 AV:: 4' P 5' g -. ' ' ' i 'MX , . . il ' S 1 .' 'T' 515.12- . , ff.21J',' -. 1 'f' 4??'f5 ' 1? ZBeIta Qlpba bbutn Over one thousand undergraduates crowded into Webster Hall on October 4 for the vaudeville show staged by the freshmen as the grand finale of their initiation into that all-inclusive fraternity, Delta Alpha. The entertainment Was an innova- tion in the customary introduction of the new men to the life of the College, and it revealed much good material in the Way of impromptu stage attraction contained in the class. p l The acts put on included everything from jazz numbers by would-be rivals of Earl Fuller's Rector orchestra to bits from the classics, with attempts at melo- drama sprinkled throughout. Imitation was the rule, and all the favorites from Al Jolson to Ann Pennington had their turn, each one scoring a hit. VVebster Hall, October 4, 1919 Remnants of Belts Qlpha by the Class of 1923 Y CUnder the supervision of ,Palaeopitusj 1. ' Overture - Dartmouth Band. 2. Hubbard Harmony Jazz,'. ' 3. Hell Gate Horror,'. 4. College Hall's Love's Lost Laborn. 5. Plutocratic Nonsense. 6. Selection by the College Band. '7. Rajah Omar from Fayre Sudi. 8. Thorns from Thornton. 9. Muddling Masser with the Dolly Sisters' Only Rival. 10. The Gold Coast Special, or Why Boys Leave Home CMarion Harrisl. 11. WVheeler VVhirlWinds. C 12. Nlellow Bits from North Mass. 13. Giving the Classics a Little Time. 14. VVhat More Do You Want For Your Money? Dartmouth Song. 4-Q9 THE ARTS ROOM, ROBINSON HALL T The Qrts The Arts is a society which stands for the furtherance of the artistic interests of the College by bringing together in one organization of limited membership the leaders of various non-athletic activities, other undergraduates, and members of the faculty who are particularly interested in such activities. it The society strives to accomplish its purpose by the mutual interchange of ideas among members and by bringing to Hanover, whenever possible, the best authorities in the fields of art. Ultimately it aims, first to exercise an advisory but directive iniiuence over all cultural activities by focusing on its members, in their capacity as oflicers of non-athletic organizations, the judgment of those best fitted to adviseg and secondly, to secure a degree of permanence in policy never before attained by the constantly changing personnel of these organizations - a permanence that will show deinite constructive results over a period of years. The Arts does not seek immediate realization of its purposes,but is content to build slowly and surely. Emphasis has been laid on strengthening the society in- ternally as a foundation necessary for any future usefulness Whatever. But the existence of such a body as The Arts has been justiied during its six years of life by the growth of its influence and prestige on the campus, and there is every reason to believe in a large future for the organization. ' 430 . A J - . 1 5 it c. if , , A J . .. 'A t if f ., G -aff - fx QBffin:er5 Edward Nlunroe Curtis . . . . . Presvfrlerzt Carl Elbridge Newton . Vice-Presiflent William Paul Bowerman . . . . . Secretary Horace Gibson Pender . . . f Y . , . I rcasurcr Baath uf Quhernuts Llewellyn Sherman Adams Harold Eisman Bernkopf William Paul Bowerman Edward Munroe Curtis V c Horace Gibso Q Jfanultp 11111 Prof. Charles Darwin Adams Prof. Frank hlaloy Anderson Prof. Arthur Herbert Basye Edwin Blair Lindsay' Carl Elbridge Newton Professor Fred Parker Emery Professor VVilliam Kilbourne Stewart C n Pender zmhers Dean Craven Laycock Frederic Pomeroy Lord George Dana Lord - Prof. Prof. Edmund Hendershot Booth Prof. Leonard Beecher McW hood Prof. Harry Edwin Burton Prof. Louis Clark lVIathewson Prof. Francis Lane Childs Prof Prof. Eugene Francis Clark Prof Prof Henry Thomas lVIoorc Francis Joseph Neef VVilliam Patten Charles Raymond Cronham Prof. Louis Henry Dow Dean-Emer. Charles Franklin Emerson Prof. Fred Parker Emery ' Prof. Herbert Darling Foster Nathaniel Lewis Goodrich Prof. Ashley Kingsley Hardy Prof. Lemuel Spencer Hastings Pres. Ernest lVIartin Hopkins Prof. Gordon Ferrie Hull Horace Gibson Pender Prof. Chester Arthur Phillips Prof. James Parmelee Richardson Prof. Kenneth Allen Robinson Harold Goddard Rugg Prof. VVilmon Henry Sheldon Prof. Louis Lazare Silverman Prof. Prescott Orde Skinner Thomas Edward Steward Asst. Dean Richard Wlellington Husband Hewette Elwell Joyce Prof. Prof. Homer Eaton Keyes Prof. Prof. David Lambuth Prof. Russell Raymond Larmon Jens Frederick Larson Prof . Prof . 431 VVilliam Kilbourne Stewart William Hamilton Wood Harry Richmond Vilellman William Kelley YVright John Wlesley Young George Breed Zug Ag flint. r I at 1 1? rj 'R 1, X r Zlaunurarp 41-Blemhnzr Wfilliam J ewett Tucker e Tlklnhergrabuates Llewellyn Sherman Adams Harry Sheridan Baketel, Jr. Harold Eisman Bernkopf Vllilliam Paul Bowerman Joseph Hillyer Brewer f VVarren Miller Chamberlain Horatio Henry Chandler James Coe Chilcott Paul VVinthrop Clark Russell Murray Cotner Elijah William Cunningham Edward lVIunroe Curtis Robert Bruce Dow Albert VVesley Frey Arthur Faitoute Gooding Richard Lovejoy Hayes Francis Irving Hutchins Paul Duckworth Kay 1920 Philip Tracy Kohl Eugene Stone Leonard Edwin Blair Lindsay Raymond Francis McPartlin Lawrence Drake Milligan 1 John Joseph Moore, Jr. Herman Wilson Newell Carl 'Elbridge Newton Elmer Joseph Palmer Richard Metcalf Pearson Wlaldo Butman Potter Paul Gordon Richter James Earl Robertson Edwin Shnayerson Albert Rudolph Stewart Arthur VVarren Stockdale Carroll Middleton Swezey Alexander Scott Warden :Mount Stephen Wlillard Gordon Dobson Beattie Rudolph Pickett Blesh Ellis Ormsbee 'Briggs Homer John Cleary Gerald Eugene Cutler Robert 1fVilliam Elsasser Justus lVIillard Fleming Howard Lloyd Flewelling George Loring Frost Standish Bradford Gorham Alfred lVIorgan Green 1921 Franklin McDuffee Gordon Phelps hlerriain Paul Nicholson Hubert George Ripley, Jr. Daniel Blaisdell Ruggles, Jr. Paul Graves Sanderson Donald Frederick- Sawyer Nlarion Wiley Sherwood Arthur Ralph Steiner John Lawrence Sullivan Benjamin Tenney, Jr. VVade VVerden 4:32 l . I A Pinney Hayes Caldwell ' lVIason Gorham Bernkopf Henshaw VARSITY DEBATING TEAM Eehating Season 1919-1929 ZBuaI Rebate, Qiulgate hs.'ZBart1nnutIJ Resolved, That within a period of 21 months following the declaration of peace, 'Congress should provide for permanent ownership and operation of the railroads of the United States. I . - Qllentral Ilaigb bzbunl 195111, Qpringfielh Mass., QlpriI12, 1919 ' imagining QBffi1:er Rev. James Gordon Gilkey Awarded to the Negative Dartmouth - fljtrrnzatiee , Colgate - Negative E G. E. Brooks R. C. Borden H. H. Cohn J. E. Dempsey H. L. Childs C.'VV. VVilliams Zuhges Professor R. G. Gettell, Amherst Mr. Ralph Boas, Springfield Mr. E. M. Porter, Springfield -1133 Qs 1 ' 2,3196 ' ii A , 'aw -l ' tx 19 1 21 of , AW J 1 i M' Q ' or E inrs E Qlhanp Eaigb bcbunl Zlaall, Qlizianp, 39. Q., Qpril 12. 1919 Rfesibing QBfficer J Honorable Eugene B. Sanford, President of the Boardkof Education, Albany, N. Y. Awarded to the Affirmative I Colgate - Afirmative Dartmouth - Negative F. A. Piotrow H. VV. Newell T. J. Connors H. E. Bernkopf VV. A. Miller, Jr. S. B. Gorham iuhges J' Honorable Harold J. Hinrnan, Justice of the Supreme Court Dean Harlan H. Horner, Dean of the State College for Teachers Dr. C. Edward J ones, Superintendent of Schools, Albany, N. Y. 434 Ga' Q N AA . ii t 1 r S ,. f1lQ .1 R.,,gi' I 1 -fx f E , . 9 g I I 1 HU it 9 Q f f Q e tx I, 9 7 f , ' j -- fs. ' - ' 4' 'E .I 1 . .. fm u ...W ' - 'f .'-, 1.19151 H A ' . - ' Eual Behate, ilaarharh hs. Bartmuutb Resolved, That the United States should adopt the Plumb Plan for the opera- tion of its railroads, as embodied in the Sims Bill QConstitutionality grantedl. hir. Dartmouth iball, iiaanuher, January 16, 1920 Breathing QBffirer Professor VVarren Choate Shaw Awarded to the Negative Harvard - Ajirmcztive Dartmouth - Negative J. J. Tutun J ' T. S. Anderson B. H. Kuhns H. NI. Caldwell VV. S. Holbrook, Jr. G. E. Carmody - Qlternates. E. D. Hutchinson G. H. Nlason Zuhges . Professor A. C. Baird, Bates College Professor B. J. Rees, VVilliams College Professor A. T. Robinson, Nlassachusetts Institute of Technology banners Ulbeatre, QEa1nIJrihge,3anuarp 16, 1920 ' ipresihing QBffieer Glenn E. Plumb, Counsel for the Organized Railway Employees of America and Author of the Plumb Plan Awarded to the Negative Dartmouth - flI?!i7 l71.CLt'i'L'6 Harvard - Negative T. H. Pilllley L. E. Thomas H. E. Bernkopf M. J. Donner . S. B. Gorham L, Dennis Qlternates G. E. Brooks B. F. Jones, Jr. A. lVI. Stoddard Euhgee' Honorable John C. Crosby, Justice of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts Professor Arthur Andrews, Tufts College Professor M. Y. Hughes, Boston University i 435 CERCLE FRANCAIS Elle Cllercle jfransais Le Cercle Francais du College de Dartmouth est fonde depuis 1900. ll est aftilie at l'Alliance Francaise de 1,Amerique et de l'Angleterre, ce qui permet d'en- gager chacque annee un ou plusieurs conferenciers francais eminents. Le but du Cercle est de cooperer avec le Departement de Francais en stimulant l'interet dans l,etude de cette langue et en suppleant aux classes plus ou moins formelles par des reunions intimes, des conferences publiques et des representations theatrales. On peut citer, entre autres, le succes du Medecin malgre lui,' de Moliere, du Voyage de lVIonsieur Perrichoni' de Labiche et de f L,anglais tel quion le parle' de Tristan Bernard. Les reunions donnent l'occasion de converser dans la langue du pays, de lire et d'interpreter les auteurs francais et d'ecouter ou de prendre part a des discussions sur des sujets se rapportant at la France et aux Francais. Cette annee, du a la largesse et a la generosite de Monsieur Edouard Tuck, les membres du Cercle se reunissent dans une salle de Robinson Hall, specialement amenagee, milieu a la fois utile et artistique et veritable petit coin de France qui aidera it cimenter, plus encore que jamais, les liens deja surs d'amitie et diadmiration reciproques unissant les deux pays. Q36 , ' K. 1 E Ear M 4? . N . f 1 2 . . 2 V ' ' ll' . . 2 . . 2 Nlillard W. Newcomb, '21 Roland Auger, '21 . Frank L. Lambert, '21 . Robert R5 lV1artin, '21 . F. A. Blanpied, '20 A. V. Goldiere, '20 W. R. Jones, '20 F. E. 1V1cGlynn, '20 . W. 1V1cKenzie, '20 Smith, '20 R. C. Syvertsen, '20 NI. Tucker, '20 R. Auger, '21 H. G. Cruikshank, '21 R. T. Daly, '21 C les QBfficet F' les if-Blemhrzs B. 1111. Steele, '22 +37 . President . Vice-President S ecretafire Tresorieo' S. A. Densmore, '21 J. A. Fraser, '21 B.,He1mer, '21 F. L. Lambert, '21 F. 1VIeDuffee, '21 R. R. Mar-tin, '21 . 1V1. W. Newcomb, '21 VV. H. Spencer, '21 U. Auger, '22 M. D. Clarke, '22 T. W. Hatch, '22 . '4 j I V F. X 'ru f 7 fl I fagvlt-xx ll . I , ,il . J X fl E lf-3 -f. '- 13 X ' 'A X F V . MIX 9 'Ls f' V ' REEL s 75 'fi A W1 L1 2 , New .,q: X ' 1 QEI Qllentru Espanol El pr6posito de este Centro es poner en Contacto a todos aquellos personas interesadas en Espanol y en viajes de negoeios 6 estudio a los paises de habla Es- panola con sir vida y costumbres. En los reuniones del Centro sus miembros 6 conferencistos de Norte America, Espana 6 America-Latina diseuten las mejores obras y autores como tambien la vida y costumbres de los pueblos dethablar Espanola. Por ahora c'El Centron funciona en las salas del CereleCFranQais galante- mente eedidas nnentras tengan propios. 4 .V A la Mesa ZBirentiha Senor Jack Hazeltine, '22 . Presidente Senor Edward A. Luedke, Jr., 621 ' Vice-presidente Senor Charles H. Stevens, Jr., 320 . Secretario ins 51-Bliemhrus he Ia jfacultall Senor E. R. Greene Senor Orestes Vera A Senor C. Bruerton V Senor W. D. Nlaynard Senor R. O. Conant Senor S. G. Patterson Senor H. F. Dunham 7Senor J. J. Sexton 105 jliliemhrus Cufstuhiantefi Senor C. H. Stevens, '20 Senor F. T. Taylor, '21 Senor H. G. Cruikshank, ,21 Senor N. B. Allen, 322 Senor R. VV. Derby, ,21 Senor J. Hazeltine, '22 Senor F. L. Lambert, ,21 Senor H. F. Liao, ,22 Senor E. A. Luedke, Jr., ,21 Senor A. Friedberg, '23 . Senor P. A. Noyes, '21 Senor H. M. Keith, 3rd, ,23 Senor C. S. Raynor, 323 438 a i r r r - T. -.,, ' i n C T ia? ' 'A Eartmuutbp Qllhess Qiluh Although nominally existing for several D years, not until this season has the Chess Club arranged an extensive program that will place it as a permanent minor non-athletic organization of the College. Among the intercollegiate matches are included those with Brown, Harvard, llflassachusetts Agricultural College, and Tufts. Mr. J. G. N. lVIitcl1ell of the faculty has been appointed as coach. 0Bfficer5 Harry F. Liao, '22 . . President Llewellyn D. Smith, '21 Vice-President Frank T. Taylor, ,QI . . Secretary Frederick VV. Vogel, 'QQ . . Treasurer 4139 A . - A ,ZA C. pgufa fra fax. -- Vllillllmu ggi-:LL H 5 C...-.-g f.. A 'AQ5'2W'WfQxx ig, .X ,sn ,X Dartmouth Gamers Qllluh The Camera Club was originally established for the purpose of promoting interest among undergraduates in the art and science of photography. To accom- plish this aim a suite of rooms has been fitted with an elaborate equipment, and lectures are given by members ofitthe faculty at regular intervals throughout the year. An exhibition of the Work of the members during the past year was put on display at Winter Carnival. QBfficzr5 Charles LeBoutillier, '20 - . . . . President A. Ralph Steiner, '21 f Vice-Presicleni L. Sherman Adams, '20 . Secretary lVIerritt L. Smith, '22 . T1'easm'etr janultp Leland Griggs Allen P. Richmond Einhzrgrahuates R. G. Hesse, '18 A. B. Street, '18 K. D. Smith, '19 , . Whitney, '19 E. YV. Cheney, '20 R. S. Hayes, '20 B. Helmer, '21 R C. YV. Adams, '22 440 L. C. Campbell, '22 R. C. Lichtenstein, '22 J. S. lVIaze, '22 J. WV. Guppy, '23 W. L. Jones, '23 T. lVIcClintock, '23 J. Molla, '23 J. Wlerner, '23 J :-: ,f .4. -'-.- . , -. f, . ,tv- f .fs '19, Y 0 . , e e. , . IA., 1 1 KT ,- JL ' , li V...A L 22 .V,,,, .. , . . A --f e : -ti. 1 521 J . ., , 'i 'W 'I ff '- .V img ll 9.-zctiunal Qiluhs ll Joseph K. Ross, '22 . Howard C. Anger, '21 . Leif B. Norstrand, '23 . V Chester O. Gale, '19 . Russell H. Potter, Jr., '19 Kent S. lV1eKinley, '21 Charles'G. Raible, '19 . Everett E. Petot, '22 . Ellwood H. Fisher, '21 . Zllhanpzilirup Qllluh Buffalo Qliluh Ctllehelanh Qllluh , . President . 'Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer . . President . Vice-President . S ecretary- Treasurer . ' President . Vice-President . . S ecretary flushing Qhahemp Qllluh Donald F. Sawyer, '21 . Samuel C. White, '23 . James L. Smead, '21 . Carroll J. Lawler, '22 . Ralph S. Loomis, '21 . Thomas V. Cleveland, '21 Paul D. WVoodman, '18 . Charlton F. Johnson, '21 William V. Higgins, '19 Albert F. Wylde, '19 . John Carden, '21 Qreenfielh Qliluh Ilaaherbill Qtluh ilatnremze Qtluh -141 President . Secretary- Treasurer President Treasurer S eeretary Vice-President, . President . Treasurer . Secretary Pre.s'ident . Vice-President . Secretary- Treasurer Q A95 , , in ' f Hip? x'i5 , ' 5. ,ft ' ' -fri ,. ,A., ' ... ' Minnesota Cltluh Orton H. Hicks, '21 ..... . . President Fred P. Carleton, '18 . . Vice-President Bert E. Ekberg, '21 . . . Secretary Clarence VV. Sanders, Jr., '21 ..... . Treasurer Eliaugatunk 'Halley filuh Leonard W. lVI0rrissey, '22 . , . 1 ...... President Stanley VV. White, '21 . . ,,.,,, . , .... Vice-President Harold F. Brarnan, '21 ....... 'Secretary-Treasurer A 1BIJiIaiJeIpIJia Qllluhx Donald A. Rogers, '20 - .... , . . . President YVarren S. Zeller, '23 . . . Vice-President Nelson L. Smith, '21 . q . . . . Secretary-Treasurer Phillips Qtxeter Qtahemp Qtluh Clifton E. VVatson, '22 ........ President Robert P. Turnbull, '22 . . . Vice-President Andrew Ma1'sl1all, 2nd, '22 ...... Secretary- Treasurer Shattutk bnzhuul Qtluh e Paul A. J ohnson, '20 . . . .... . . President Ryland J. Rothschild, '21 . . Vice-President Orton H. Hicks, '21 ..... Secretary-Treasurer Qumsrhille Qllluh Ross A. Shepardson, '21 ..... . President John Herbert, J r., '21 . ' . Vice-President Philip R. Grant, '22 . . Secretary Archie R. Giroux, '23 . . . ' . Treasurer Zlmliurtestzr Qcahemp Qiluh Gerald S. Stone, '20 ...... . . President Warren S. Gault, '20 . . Vice-President James E. Robertson, '20 . . Secretary-Treasurer 4-12 Eehinatiun To those regular guys to Whom everyone else is wet, to those Wet guys to Whom everyone else is wet, and to those middle-road birds to Whom everyone else is Wetg to the Bama for the laughs it has given usg to the Jacko for the serious manner in which we leave itg to the 1nen of Montreal, in the hope that We may be more closely asso- ciated with them in the futureg and to anyone and every- one who gets sore because he was picked on or because he Was not picked on, this, the most humorous featurecsection ever contained in an AEGIS, is dedicated. . 443 . o A L f 1 E V A , - . 2 f- . . 57. : ' ' 4' ' ' ' 1 V , ,...., .-.J u ci , M qi Scraps from the Qamzh Small Rst 'ilipsilnn p Brother Head Bar-tender Barber passes the opening round of Manhattans. Brother Bishop refuses coldly. Says heis had too damn much already. Brother Keyes serves the chasers. Advantages of Kappa Beta Phi are set forth by Brother Leonard, who admits he would like to be king of that organization. Brothers in- quire where the club keeps its sacred liquid. Cold hand proposed by Brother Nlallary, who ,rises from his two seats' to address the meeting. Brother Ankeny pleads for athletic talent, including golfers. Put out by Brother Barber. Brother Bishop announces he is leaving college to play in the movies. Brother Terry announces a dance at the Young hflenis Club. Stepped on as brothers tear out. 1 kappa kappa kappa ' , f Chief Pawn Noyes calls the club to order. Reads one of Brother Dan VVebster's speeches. Brother VVilde tumbles in laughing, and tells of a funny one pulled at a Jacko meeting. Brothers faint. Brother Lane urges more brothers to report for track. Says fraternity hasn,t enough D's. Quelled by Brother Childs, who says half the freshman delegation was lost for just that reason. .Brother Beattie invited to report onrbasketball team. Led out weeping. Brother Steward Trull reports that fraternity dining hall is working out O. K. Brother Smith detected passing pash pictures to Brother Knight Noyes. Brother Burroughs confiseates the pic- tures and extends invitation to brothers to visit him anytime and look them over. Brother lVIix announces the purchase of a Liberty motor for fraternity biplane. Brother Nliller excused to attend meetings of his other fraternities. Brother Griffith swears he did his best to get the D. C. A. presidency. Brother Flewelling reads epic dedicated to Brother Rufe Choate, and announces election of Brother Crisp tothe Arts. National convention closes to allow brothers to look over unpledged baseball material. Qlpba Ezlta fbi Meeting opened by Brother Graduate Manager Bassett, who dusts off the new house plans. Brother Gardner reports on recent Cleveland convention, and says it's fifteen a quart out there. Brother Cleveland nominates Brother Cleveland as -L45 A E J 31992. A A . ,fr 5 .? ,1, ' A 4, , ,, .:.. N fr 1.., Q .J 9 l k ' y .. K wing delegate to McGill chapteris initiation banquet. Protested by Brothers Bassett, Ege, Freeman, Gardner, lVIcKay, Rothschild, Patterson, Ryder, Shepherd, and Smith. Voted unanimously to send Brother Boydls Ruml. Brothers Freeman, Ege, and lVIcKay start athletic council meeting, but are halted by Brother Shepherd, who wants to know why the brothers don't get some legitimate letters like they used to in the old days. Brother Rothschild takes advantage of the scrap to announce his election as hockey captain. Asked how he screw-dealed it. Brother lVIcKinley offers to read the brothers a whale of a new musical comedy, with book, lyrics and music by Brother Mcliinley, but is silenced by Brother Smith. Moved and passed that Pledge Sewall be initiated sometime in 1920. Brother Patterson tells of how big he used to be out west. Told to go back there. Brother Mcliay gives Wali- Hoo-VVah,' for Brother lVIcKay. Shows poor form. Brother Freeman, upon invita- tion, reciteslist of his undergraduate activities. Meeting breaks upin time for chapel. Delta Zkappa Qtpsilcm A Brother Imperator Burton reads a page of Livy as the opening prayer. Brother Gorham advances the cause of Brother Hoover. Brother Cutler makes a late, but dramatic entrance. Brother Hasbrook says he knows another man. Congratulated. Brother Kelly says heis-got a good man coming up from Sodus next fall. Brother Atwood innocently enquires where Sodus is. So do the rest of the brothers. Brother Shoup proudly announces he is well on the way to a Phi Beta key. Hissed. Brother Shaw enters in dress suit. Almost breaks up meeting. Brother Din Sample moans the basketball blues. Spirits of gridiron Dekes writhe in their coffins as Brothers Tenney and lVIer1-iam recite forty-verse poem. Brother Haight agrees that he is smoothestlman on the campus. Led away, gibberingp Brother Cuddy Mu1'phy blows in from Hot Springs, and urges brothers to give him a Deke day at Fenway Park. Leaves with Brother Bower to seek Brother Jim Haggerty. Brother Storer explains questions of anatomy which have long been puzzling the brothers. Broth- ers pour out of the chapter hall in a stream. Ulbeta ZBeIta fibi Brother Cupid Frost opens meeting with lecture to the fraternity on political deals. Letter read from Brother VVicker, who says that he is ill in bed. Brother Hart asks to be excused also, as he wants to go to Leb with Brother Wicker. Dis- cussion of new house opened by Brother Prince who canlt see why they need one. Becomes violent, pounds on wall, and his hand goes through. Sits down abashed. 446 'U :V A ,s as 3 .,,, . , -fy ' I - .. a gi' ' ' m y t M ' A Brother Harris says goat room is too dark. Says he canlt see all of the brothers. All of the brothers say they can't see him either. Clever, what? Brother O'Connor quotes Poli Sci department on liberal interpretation of nineteenth amendment. Brother Ekberg cheers loudly. Brother Fleet sent out of chapter hall for making too much noise. Brothers Marsden, Baker, and Shepardson go with him to keep him quiet. Brother Plumb tells of scheme to get it across the line in his French horn. Invited to blow the brothers if he can do it. Brother Belknap told to emulate Brother Freddy NIcCrea and clean up on The Dartmouth. Nlodestly says he couldnit be like Freddy if he tried to. Brother Bolles gives long-distanceitalk on changing words of Come and raise your glass on highv. Fraternity drops off to sleep by twos and threes. - ' Qigma Clthi Announcement of weekly dance made by Brother Finchley Goodnow, as he raps for order. Brother Secretary Thomas reads calendar for the week, Frank Brothers, Monday g Schuman, Tuesdayg etcf, Brother Sherwood called out to get telegram asking the Musical Clubs to come on to Hawaii forleap year concert. Brothers ask how,s for them carrying the grips. Brother Fuller announces his election as assistant secretary of the Camera Club. Fraternity overcome. Brother Price stopped at door by Brother Sabin who says hels never seen him before. ..Brother Price proves his identity, and sits down to shoot cold hands with Brothers Meaiis, Robinson, and Carey. Thrown out for using stage money. Brother lVIarcy sends scented note that he is busily engaged in Boston. Brother Codding wakes up and crabs the chapter for talking too loud. Brother lVIcClintock woos him to slum- ber again with Brother Brooks Brothers Goodnow's gavel. Brother Halsey asks that the less aesthetic brothers stay away from the ball-room VVednesday nights. Broth- er Lundegren seconds the motion. Brother Ripley wheels in the tea-wagon, followed by Brother Smith, carrying the tea-cakes. Brothers MacDern1ott, lVIerritt, Stewart, and Hurd walk out. lVIeeting adjourned to study recipes for nut fudge. Esta Ulibeta iBi Brother Champ Beers waves the smelling salts and the brothe1's snap to. Broth- er Anderson late, having been detained by his valet. Brother Chamberlaine con- gratulated on lining up a speedy freshman basketball delegation. Asked why Brother Vance didn,t function on the DWs. hloodily announces that George Zahn wasnlt a Beta. Brother Forman circulates about the room pledging the cos- mopolites College Club. Brother Ruggles hides in corner tearing off a potent line 4547 A9 'Q . . .. , ' A H- 1 V Izlllvlr gb Avx, :IV ac My .- 5 -scwflll for The Dartmouth. lVlodestly admits that he perpetrates all this wet Sportraits stuff. Brother Hartshorn scents Brother Beers' cough syrup and does twenty laps around the altar. Brother Exnicios announces he is in need of funds for gas and that he will raHtle off the robes. Brother Fisher jumps the meeting to study. Broth- ers withdraw to the porch to advertise the club better. iBIJi Reita illbzta Brother Jazz Baby Bird throws the fat into the club high-chair and the bout is on. Brother Goulding reports he has just purchased the Ad Building and now owns the college. Brothers surprisedg they thought he owned it before! Brother Norcross tells of the advantages of living in Wellesley and says from his room 1. Reso- lution adopted to visit Brother Norcross early and often. Brother lVIesquita crabs the sophomore delegation for not being caddy enough about it, and says they can start another still in the cellar. Brother McBride says he expects to make a name for Phi Doodle on the track in 1924. Brother Smith reads petitions from locals at Nluskegee and Podunk High School. Both are granted without discussion. Broth- ers McKelvey and Ruder hum It is my chief delight and are sent out by Brother Warbler Bird, whose ear isoffended. Brother Pud Walker slides in through the secret passageway in time to walk out again as the meeting ends. r 3513i kappa 155i . Brother Leader Cleary finds chapter hall empty. Train late from Hanover. Junior jazz band comes in just in time for opening chorus. Brother Whittier says Springfield will send up usual gang of good material next fall. Given forty buttons and told to use them judiciously. Brother Sanderson says Junior Prom will be a wonder, and gives Brother Cleary fat contract. Brother Corwin comes in with ball and chain on his leg, and states he is developing speed for baseball. Brother Hubbell assures him of berth, even if it means pledging Jeff Tesreau. Brother Bornman says he can't pay his dues as his check this week was only two hundred. Brother Lit- chard told to get out and meet the boys. Says he knows enough wet birds already. Brothers take offense. Fraternity clears out of goat room to allow Cleary to exer- cise his jazz band in the marble halls.- Rbi f!Ean1ma Eslta J Brother Potentate Hicks waves the olive branch and the sections of the frater- nity declare a half-hour armistice. Letter read from Brother Ransom who is -L48 A e ff N FV .. : - . A. A P 1 , 'f-' V--,W Ax I X Lv at Sf nfs 'N ' ' l . ,A-rf ,. I - .fer xx L 1- 5, .W :W ,!,'., . hm: ?,A- j H A V' ' fi if .. I-,M of it ix Q Wtnff fi ' knocking 'em dead in New Haven. Brother Sanders looks at watch and announces he is going to bed. Personal reminiscences of founding of chapter given by Brother Elder VVhe1don. Brother Stiles detected drawing pictures on the floor. Says he's doing them for the AEGIS. CEd. note - This is meant for a jokej Brother Baker admonished for playing with blocks on the floor. Cries. Brother Grundman says he has come clean from Lebanon for the meeting. Laughter. Brother Ross reads letter from .lawn lVIcGraw offering him a berth with the Giants. Urged to take it. Says he doesn't want to sell peanuts all his life. Brother Blesh writes from Okla- homa that whiskey is the only cure for snake-bite. Adds that he is working on snake farm. lWoved that fraternity have another banquet if they can get it. Voted unanimously as brothers pass out. 'i Belts Uliau Belts lVIeeting called to order by Brother His lVIajesty Patch, sitting on the Sacred Keg. Brother Patch reads standing excuse from Brother Green who pleads over-work on the AEGIS. Brother Green protests and states that he is in thechapter hall. Re- ceives vote of thanks from chapter. Brother Newcomb speaks for two hours on smoothing up. Brother Nliner tells brothers to take heed of Brother Newcomb's words, and to look him over as an example. Thrown out by Brothers Forbes and Fuller. Brother Spencer hums strains of Dardanella',, while Brother Perry beats time with pencils on the golden pews. Brother MacDonald bawls them out, and says he prefers 'cIn the Shade of the Old Apple Tree, anyway. Reports he has an ad for the AEGIS. Cheers. Brother Clark says that brothers will only receive one free copy of the book. More cheers. Meeting adjourns to AEGIS office, where brothers get their taxes back. flibi fbi Stage all set for get-together, with Brother Laugh-Getter Fleming playing the leading role. Brother Fredericksen sends wireless from Cuba where he is now rooming. Brother Sawyer asked how AEGIS is coming. Denies any knowledge of such a book. Brother Kendall says his text-book on How to Get It Overu is coming along fine, and will be on sale in a few days. Brother Elsasser gives short travel-talk, and says Band, Orchestra, Dramatic Association, and lVIusical Clubs are most broadening things in college. Brother Jones denies that he wore a sweater one afternoon. 'Brother Helmar produces photographic evidence that he did. Moved that Brother Jones be expelled from the lodge for conduct not in keeping with 44-9 N 1 I - -,f . Ag gl IXAA f ' A wg . -fn 2., E E ,X wif' Aillgi llll kqvv 44 .ij Z 1 n r ,.1. f. xx E NP' '- A 4 4' r S ' fraternity ideals. Passed unanimously. Brother Kendall says he wears a sweater quite often and swims out with Brother J ones. Brother Barnes excused to attend Proof and Copy meeting. Brother Carder tells of just the most wonderful new things being shown by Camp. Brother Nicholson wants to know why the hell the boys didn't vote for him in the D. C. A. elections. Brother Sullivan ridden by the brothers for being a bad actor. Brother McAdams told about rules in regard to legacies. Brother Frost pronounces benediction as curtain falls. fbi Sigma iliappa Brother Stanley Lawrence perches himself upon the Holy YVindow-Seat, the freshman delegation finds places on the lawn, and the mass-meeting is in full swing. Brother VVeld throws a literary line, which leaves the brothers dazed. Brother Harper says Junior Prom Committee is best gang of boys in college. Adds they ought to be, he picked ,em himself. Brothers Hill and Folger excused to entertain the college at Philis. Brother Kelsey mourns the old days, and ,says that Claremont druggists have gone bankrupt. Resolutions for the passing of Brotl1eriBache-Wiig are voted, and Brothers Thyberg, Garland, and Bowen are named a committee to wait upon him to deliver them. Excused to catch Montreal train. Brother Schul- ting says he is a than-whom basketball player, and wants to see the interfraternity series played over. Meeting broken up by Hanover police force, who says itis against the law to address a mob of this size. ' kappa Sigma Fleeting opens with short yell for the basketball team, accompanied by clinking of Delta Tau Delta and Kappa Kappa Kappa money. Brother Staley modestly blushes as he receives his letter. Brother Barker says it's a stern chase to catch a Phi Beta key. Brother Ferguson announces that next year he is running for treas- urer of the classg thereis no gold in this secretary job. Brother Cook asked to give the house a lot of time during Prom, to give the girls a treat. Brother Corbet says he has gotten his cuts off for a weekis stay at home. Further announces he lives in Spokane, Wa.sh. Brother.Kerlin requested to wear a hat, as he attracts too much attention to the fraternity. Brother Schultz reprimanded for'living at Phi Psi house. Brothers Campbell and Boggess get into scrap over the number of chapters in the fraternity, and it is settled by reading the list. The meeting is put over a day after King Staley has passed the 724ith. .4 451 AQA M 1 P . Q. Z . U ' f f ? - ., k gif, Qigma 3Hu Brother Miler Hart puts on the silken horse-collar and the battle commences. Brothers Hart, Kadison, Schaffner, Stanley, and lVIarx Parkes enter in breath- taking finery. Leave again immediately in order to attend the opera at the Nugget. Brother Reynolds gives out the hottest Junior Prom dope, and says his election is sending the fraternity stock up a few points. Brother Alger tosses Brother Page out of goat room QI-Ed. note - Yes, I know, it, but we'll call it thatj for reading La Vie Parisienne. Queen Hart and Brother Alger decide to call the meeting off. . Sigma Qlpba QEp.s4iInn Brother Benturpin Lies opens hostilities. 1 Brother Bausher offers usual prayer for new barn. Brother Kerwin says that The Dartmouth is in funds again and offers to buy the fraternity orchestra an up-to-date song. Refused flatly by Brother Johnson. Brother Mitchell -reads ten pages of Latin manuscript on how to sink freshmen. , Brother Rolfe moves that Brother Mitchellis life-work be spread upon the fraternity records. ,Brother Owen chins the brothers to deposit more gold in the bank. Says he gets a rakeoff. Brother Anger, fat and lazy from the Avery Club, is awakened by Brother Dale, who pleads for athletes, yes, even soccer players. Brother MclVIackin moves adjournment to parlor where he can play with the ivories. Brother Owen says why not roll 'em here. Fraternity fades. bigma 3Bbi Qlipsilun . Brother Rollo Briggs announces the first event of the evening's Carnival and the meeting commences. Brothers Trainer and Densmore state that S. F. E. badge in future will be ski boots and toques. Brother Taylor says he may start an eating club in the future and asks for support. Brother DeGroff tells him to lay off, and quotes current Avery Club prices. Brother Nardi tries to sell a few Bemas, backed by Brother Briggs, who says it's agoodissue. Brother Briggs admits he wrote one of the articles. Brother Miller reads intercollegiate schedule of S. F. E. wrestling team, and urges that Brother Densmore come out for it. Brother Campbell re- minded of athletic achievements of Brother Bevan a few years back, and is urged to emulate his successes. Brother Corbin says he will have a fleet of smooth busses on hand for Prom, and tells the boys to look their best. Club adj ourns to Moosilauke for initiation banquet. , 452 5 XVJU i ff, lamhha Qllhi Qlpba Brother Athlete Pollard reads scathing address from the pulpit on the doings of the Delts across the way. Brother Johnson says that the fraternity ought not to stand for it, and tells how theyld do it down to Harvard. Brother Noyes says he has convinced the faculty of his undoubted ability, and will probably take PreXy's place after he gets a degree. Brother Herbert congratulated on knicking an office in the Somerville Club. lVIodestly says he feels it his duty to keep the fraternity to the fore in undergraduate activities. Brother Batchelder blows taps as the brothers file out. Zllpijaflliji 313130 Brother Lieutenant Libby demands attention from the jazz band, and the floods come. Brother Carver endeavors to get into the rooms with the boys but the door doesn't match him, and he sits down outside. Brother Bailey urged to get more clubby with his faculty relatives. Brothers Stoner and Fitzgibbon read a letter from S. A. Efs advocating that the jazz band be put in moth-balls when the club moves into the new house. On the other hand, Brothers lVIerriam and Gilson advance a document from Allenis, thanking the brothers for entertaining their patrons. Long debate ensues, with no result. Brother Wilson leaves to catch train for Quechee, where there is a big dance, while Brother Gilson looks on with envious eyes. Brother lfValker gives his usual talk on keeping the fraternity smoothed up. Brother lVIoreau asks gwhatsthematter, isn't he smooth enough for them? Adjournment to Scotty's for midnight meal. Belts Gamma Rai j Brother Around-the-lVIap Manchestei' leads the meeting with a prayer for all cross-country men caught in the wilds this stormy night. Brother Lambert wants to know what Palaeopitus is. Brother Steinbrecher announces that tendency of Hanover is to move toward School Street. Evidenced by the reopening of Hal's. Brother Woodhouse asked to provide the brothers with a formula for the stuff. VVinks knowingly, and says he is developing one now. Brothers Stetson and Town- send propose a rock-throwing bout with the Phi Psis by way of good feeling. Op- posed by Brother Daly, who is afraid a couple of bricks would knock over the Phi Psi House. Nleeting closed early in order to allow brothers to make eight o'clocks the next morning. -L53 621. ' nm ' fi ' nun-,H .... , Huw Ewjifxiu-. Gniltnxi I XXX W. X K I f Elura Sigma Tlipsilun Nleeting called in the vestibule by Brother Loeb, with all present. Brother Davis moves adjournment, and Brother Bailey seconds it. All leave. Qtnsmus Weekly Six-450-Five is opened by President Braman, who throws the usual line on the advantages of an independentorganization. Citizen Severance wants to know why the club doesnit petition some national group, like the Elks or something. Citizen Henshaw debates the matter with himself, and loses. Citizen Perkins says he thinks there is a non-clubman collecting chapel cards, and wants to know if the crowd is losing its Parkhurst drag. President Braman says he will look into the question. Citizens Brailey and Bean tell of the latest deputation trips,and say that sometimes in these little towns, you'd be surprised. Citizen Goddard, for the scholarship committee, says that one freshman is standing C in a course. Fired from his job, and Citizen Smead is appointed to his place. Citizen Lowe invites the fellow-citizens to have their pants pressed at his shop once a week-on him. Citizen Plume asks what he is going to do while his pants are up there. .Is told. Meeting adjourned in time for the organ recital. Sherry took up so much of the editoris time asking if we were going to use his picture in The Aegis that we had the staff photographer take the above snaps to quiet him 4154 l fg,.f ' ,, . 2:5 5--91 -'A 5 ,f - ? 0 Q? owb ,ill IQ: fl AQ In n o 6 Zim ? i ' I V a i, 1 5 any Q IJ cz I an jfragment I look at you And tremble, I am become as a naked swimmer In the summer dawn. I stick around Shivering, Hoping that yo u Colne on in. The Watefs BHC., Will yell 455 -f Vanity Fair -B. L. T. 4 'R I 5 O A KW r ,, ri f ' ' J W. LW r -2 221 W fwbfi 'Q lmhnfa Mlm, Qlnntinuvh Look at John. I see it, R01-lo. I'll say so, Rol-lo. I What does John do? Very much, R01-lo, John isrver-sa-tile. we-aff 13535 2. I- I H 4-,..-. i K .,,A ll. H , Is not John prom-1n-ent? Q ,, if r h ff xt an Here 1S Ort Why is Ort here? By re-quest, R01-lo Did Ort re-quest it? En-ough, R01-lo. f'What is Ort do-ing? He di-rects, R01-lo. What does Ort di-rect? That's it, R01-lo, what does he? il -1- 7 . O -W w al I t 'V v fl fg N f X7 fl , 'K ,f fav l 2 v 4 , f ' 'g 9 ' ' - x p. -sf - N u A . N ff' , , . , . ,. -ff. Kip' I. 3 X ,223 Note this, R01--lo. Who is he? Dan, Why is Dan thus? Q t Be-cause Dan plays with Ort. Was Dan a sol-dier? Q Yes, R01-lo, he was a top-ser-geantf' Where did Dan fight? Be quiet, Rol-lo. Greet Ray. Can I help it, Rol-lo? ls Ray Ort's playmate? Yes, R01-lo, they play With the same chips. ' What do they call Ray? You guess it, Rol-lo. 458 . 4' an ,B i , ,X I f , : E7 e 1. :Q ,V -- - I .f 1,5 . ,JY S 4' 1 fl le- is x 'Nth 2 Z' 1 A -g x , .1 if AJ' ff f +3 Q 5 L ,jf f ,Z , a W ?n i i a It is jeff. Why jeff? No one knows his real name, R01-lo. What is Jeff's real name? Jeff's real name is Stan-ley Don-ald. Is Stan-ley a big man like Ray? See for your-self, R01-lo. Meet Ben, Rol-lo. lVIust'I? Sh-h, Ben is a Ps1 U. What does Psi U mean? Psi U is Greek for Mon-tre-al Club, Rol-lo. 'Does Ben live here? No, R01-lo, he com-mutesf' 49 , x A v i sr X f ,, A-m...,f wages Take off your hat, Rol+lo. l6Why?77 Here comes Charles. Is Charles the pres-id-ent of the CO1-16-ga' N ot yet, Rol-lof' IE Oooh, I saw him. Whom, Rol-lo? The mas-cot. 'That is Ned, Rol-lo. - 'fs Ned ac-tive? Yes, Rol-lo, he thinks so. Can Ned think? Yes, he is em-in-ent, Rol-lo -L60 af' ,-. , , , g 1 -fr . ' , . ,.,,,, ,Q XWW Cf A9 lg w V . 1,l.: ,V k I V'v:,:Y ,vby V . ' . it 'N ., ' M N i ' ' - Exe G ef' V ,f f U 'A i ' l il' 3 '. XXN Qegean Eiarp 25 Prexy hands out the hot dope to an overflowing Webster, after which Craven holds his annual levee for the usual crew of fledglings. Oval mass meeting costs ten bills. Freshmen uber Sophs in rush. September . X1 di- . xlfjiyiii me X - -- -- - , 'L' - ,, L. A5 ,hu '- ,-1. '. I hT3lSTilfsF W-6 T' ,QE ,TF Z J-.111 L nlilldills F lg: lFii'l fi - -lf F is-1' .s ffm- s f ' , . . g:f.Ti?f.fPw 4 if M1112 ' , ii f ff reefs!! e . -WL f ' x...,-fj 4' el., 'A 5 3 1 - ' ' W! 1' E' 4 X ftzfffl -5 it - ef gl .li ,P my X9 Milling ,j., 3x,t ? xIZ: 6 I D- - Q 21:5-: ' iii-4 : ZNACCZYKQ X ff-ucfcusrnss A SEPT. 25-FRESHMEN UBER SOPHS IN FOOTBALL RUSH 26 ' potent. Cider sellers begin their round of the dorms. Furniture sellers prove that demand and supply are Q7 Green athletes, all of them, hold dashes against Springfield, score 4-0-0. McKay invincible with the megaphone. 28 Merely Sunday and nothing more. Q9 30 Walt Prince breaks his collarbone fooling on the football field. Fella he fooled with also laid up. October Cuddy Murphy loses ten pounds at football, and threatens to get to normal weight. 1 Initiations into Delta Alpha begin with the usual trough orations. Pash purplcs common around the campus. Freshman asks Rog Bird to he his faculty advisor. 461 A l A . . . ...Y T HH ll A tor ' Pr .1 X ! . 4, im wx. 'R my -.4 WRX M '95 Q xx tt hx k , L 'vp W Wi in X If f 331MB-A K, ll Fix Hx .95 -A ii ,.'H f'fi N - W 'sh 64 . if Shep Shepherd dons his letter and sells freshmen banners. Mcwhood calls out Glee Clubs, and Sawyer, Elsasser and Beattie yodel above average. Dartmouth 13, Norwich 0. Cavalrymen grab a lot of easy jack on the 30-0 bets. Rumor Prexy bet the endowment. Hank Maroney star of freshman frolic. Ky Frost adds a horse and carriage to Theta Delt rushing equipment. Johnny Sullivan grabs pans and signs up with the band. 1922 shakes lead and enters competitions. 1922 retires from competitions. Dean issues invitations. Harry Hillman adds a wrinkle with 650 freshmen BV Ding around the streets. Bill Terry drops a roll on Cinci Reds. Phi Sigs resolve to pledge some men. ' Zach Jordan fails to understand why Chet Phillips can't get his point. Horace G. Pender, than whom no moreiknickered, mows his own lawn. Herm Noyes begins training for coming season with chess squad. Mass Aggies touchdown after ten years ofrtrying, but the Robertson's win 27-7. Hilda gets away large at the movies. ' Chapel speaker loses out in competition with sophomore alcove. White flannels disappearing except Buddy Richartis. .A Zach Jordan barely wins from J. Z. Jordan in senior elections. Davison shines his Nugget and resolves one no more Hilda. Freshmen score on varsity while Norm Crisp was tying shoestring. Con Beatty has to smile when he hands out the D. YVebster line. Buch Freeman hires Workman to dig hole on Alpha Delt site, and an admiring squad of prospeetives are shown the new house. All four members of Camera Club get offices at annual elections. Ruggles S: Belknap make gold on their Biltmore dance. ' 1 Sesqui-Centennial opens with Dartmouth Night. Big tent rather cold. Bill Perry in fine spirits nearly wrecks Crosby. ' Five thousand spectators at Dartmouth victory over Penn State. Souse Mass has a full evening. Mallary opines that some Phi Doodle started the Sigma Chi fire. Kemp Fuller loses a camera in blaze. Chapter cheers. Free food and balloons amuse sophomores on the campus. Craven grants holiday with a pang. Sesqui closes with a plane exhibition which Don Mix claims was inferior. Dekes unleash three eight-hour ehinning crews. Several dead soldiers interred in rear of Mass Row. Jacko goes the limit with a Free Love number. Ben Tenney frankly admits he is on the staff. Freshman football squad led to the golf links for their afternoon roinpg Oval not large enough. Large Sextette corral freshman with bands and speeches. . Several platoons hie selves to brilliant incandescents. Pre-Cat overflows with Hanover talent, some of the boys get crowned there. Dartmouth beats Cornell in Polo Grounds battle, 9-0. Greenwich Village Follies show a lot. Big papers hand Dartmouth all kinds of credit. Dan Ruggles makes gold on his Biltmore dance. Only 110 heelers show up for freshman competition of The Dartmouth. Phi Sigs acquire several more. Kelseyls line the cause. Jack Hubbell finds out the brothers at Colgate only want 2-1 for coming battle. Cold weather brings out golosh rash. Clocks are set back and we pick up an hour's sleep. Jeff Lawrence unable to understand system ay-tall. Buck Freemans College picture taken. Not a man to mar the row of buildings. Alumni hlow in for Colgate game with lots of liquor. Big mass meeting at Gym. 'Nlovember 1 Dartmouth and Colgate battle to 7-7 tie when Swede blocks punt in last seconds. 462 li. Y . -'f - A ,- 1 my W sa. 4 W W 4' vp 45 r 1 J 5: , 5,9 1 Q .2 . .ff vii , .-VQ 1. V.A . . .VA. ,, , . . ar-QL . : ': , 5:5754 fir. , N il 4 - I i , f r l l f 27 ? if : ff ' 2 , ?' . 59' . ' A 4 I I , ,,.,,, I . 2 House parties break up. Harry Trull declares first dividends on A. A 3 Prexy extends annual invitation to sophomore class to take part in the chapel as if they were regular members of the college. 4 Bill Beers puts his little pellet 50 feet. Juniors fox the AEGIS Board and raise them three. p.. , ' 5 ,lax en decrees no Penn mass meeting because freshmen peeraclers are neglecting subjects. Wade Werden dashes off a sonnet. 6 Big Green team given a big send-off to Penn game. Gang reaches to Lelo. The X-country team also departs to drop another. 7 Musical Clubs combine with Penn musicians and throw a New York concert. Ellis Briggs plays it caddy and holds a shoot for his TEAM in Manhattan. ' 8 Penn brass knuckles don't keep Green from win Q0-19. Tommy Thompson proves superior as a cheerleader for wire crowd at Oval. 'J Team gets back with friendly feeling toward Penn yeggmen. Only about six regulars disabled. 10 Pl1i Sigs add lines to song :- Ill fares the day , f Whose low descending sun Sees not another freshman won. X ly BUT MY i isa Em' PM Paw M illi - ' iiii 'ia l IV if 9 X 4 -,,,. l - , 40 X - SJQH .Z ll. ff m S U CK 571 S NOV. 10-PHI SIGS REVISE CHINNING POLICY +63 1 - if ' NEW E li 'X 160 'Img' X Dlillllwnflzr 1 y V l 1-1 -Qs L xi-vw ,W ,N ei up Q i Q A ' ' , Ir. aff gif-1212+511 s ,A xlhlh Wwilz qt .eaQWV f V.NX wf,X 4 lOlOlQlQ XQIQIO b-is-I L-Av-AP-4 7-lr-4-an-I G5O!vi-CG 19?-46 COG? 9163971 Nl4f,Ol91-1 'w-1'f-17' mo UQ- '-' ' ?s?5e5?22??s???E??i6 ga-vvQd:i ,'39hge.WE59+5+,5Q,:.:L wP1:mm 'am-12195451-,54pS.5g' cn-1,,,44CmH4.,.m: Ngwqai-9,-an 03.05-'-h'UavEL?oW'E: 'OH0f ' Cho 455-Ong, 5'-+-ac'DQO'-'.':!9-920109:-, ... mv-1:95655 5,-.,l,,,tI5 U-,.. gm UQ- f-:..a .57 --fD7mf W mi' 5 O ..-.14 .J -4 P-s WO' 0235-5 lfug-f-1-f- TCH-rrO f-1gSDQ'1mfDQ,.,-3?-7 'HH-0Cg.vff1m'4'CTZ s3awsv'f's2gsEasSe6e ' A W ' .... aamS2wEa?5g2,wwf:wZ3 E 1 'S' O5f OE ra'D.O'OgZg1-1-ow 2U?5sE0a2SeHi5':2F5 ... ... 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'- o .2 ff S- 2.2 2. ' 1-1.' G s , is S 5 Ei Eg c Q 2 5 7 Q1 r-I CII NJ December - 1 Return seems not so good. Lundegren discovers whereabouts of an unclaimed cask of hootch. 2 Wolfe gets Bama gold for shooting his famous line off. Beta dawg sits with the brethren .in chapel. George Forman responsible. 3 Freshmen lay off the pea-greens and begin to lay off the rest of the rules. . -1- Hockey practise on Faculty Pond. Bill Perry concedes that he is goodi Reine Rothschild shakes lead. 5 Ripley and Fleming ably chauffeur the tea wagon at the Inn. 6 Phi Betes select ten more brethren. Ben Bishop passes up a bid. 7 Chi Phis attend chapel in a body to hear Brother Clark play the violin. VValter Camp gives Swede place on what Dan Permission', Ruggles calls the mythical', eleven. 8 Betas hold indignation meeting over muddy street leading to the chapter house. Discussion led by Joe Vance. 9 Stan Gorham declares training on for debating team., 10 Psi U-Beta kicking contest called off and the community football rests after three months. 11 Sandy Sanders rates 38th on National -Tennis books. - 12 Jim Camp tries to kid the College by saying that Christmas is near. 13 Snow. 14 More Snow. 15 Unlimited cut men leave for home. Furb Haight refuses to. 16 Pressing shops work overtime smoothing men for peerade. 17 So long. 464 R55 a ' In ' Vi' ' 'I V -A' - if i l - priest. .A S4 Q 5119 ilk .T ' ff 1. fi , J ' : w fe T A ..., f'-'Y iff Zl. V- V R, ff 'Y'5', ' ,5.., V ,,v,. D X K '..- . ,V -1 ' . ..J January 6 Gang drags back in time to get on Craven7s O.K. list. Frost and Bird draw parts in the Curtis- Ripley revue. Dartmouth i nforms us that Bill Marcy has purchased a diamond, object-maftrimony. Bill Cunningham receives congratulations on his marshmallow overcoat and his triangular chest decoration. A 'N JL Zz GHWO' ' E AI NT HE Q V 6-RAND! ,' Q-' no afif l JAN. 6-BILL CUNNINGHAM CREATES A SENSATION WITH HIS LATEST PARISIAN IMPORTATIONS ' Zufcffsrfzfs 8 Alpha Delts prove athletic by turning up for a battle at the bowling alleys. No opposilion. 9 'Chick Stiles and Rudie Blesh draw a three-colored sigh for the AEGIS. I 10 Rudie gives up and runs off to Oklahoma with the feature section. 11 Gang of Delts hire a taxi from Phil's to their suburban home. 12 lVIore snow. 13 Tom Cleveland referees a bout between the Village Blaeksmil h and another roystering blade. lt is rumored that the fur coats worn by Kent lVlcKinley and others have a history. 14: After a few setbacks, Sehulting and Co. hammer Middlebury at b.b. Nuggett throws awondcrful show on the joys of matrimony. Gorham sprains larynx training for the coming bout with Harvard. 15 College Club holds meeting. Lots of fight. 465 ,, p p , r u e A' te f a Qu Qppreniatiun The editors of the feature section Wish at this time to express their sincere appreciation to those who have in any way contributed to make this section to the feature sections editor, whose unlimited cuts re- sulted in his throwing the Work off onto our shoulders g to the editors of the AEGIS, for letting this stuff ever get into the bookg to Chick Stiles and Rudie Blesh for the many cartoons which should have been included, but which were never drawng to Ort Hicks and Dan Ruggles, for the hot dope on the Phi Grams and Betas, respectivelyg to Ned Price, for his constant sympathy in times of troubleg and last, but not least, to the readers, Who in search of the one funny thing in the Whole book, Were forced to read the Whole mess. as Wetas it is: 471 ARTVI U'll'l HANOVER, N. H., MONDAY, MARCH' 15, 1920 NUMBER 60 N ans .rated :rrow 'more ed by nchool seven :ic of Con- Ralph 'avii-tg gnized ti pic- nainly ?St to career, -est to i Pre- Buifd- Safety turing rt the 1 their is in- ll WEEK 'looms second re an- of Iota r soci- D char- W. H e been boa lr, SENIUHS Hlllll VIITE Fllll GLASS IIFFIBEBS TUUAY ONLY ORGANIZED MEMBERS' OF CLASS ELIGIBLE T0 VOTE BAll0llNG STARIS AT 12:30 NOMINATIONS CLOSE WITH' ONE' POSITION STILL NOT' FILLED Several names have been added to the list -of nominations for officers of the Senior class, which is to'be voted upon today in the Commons. R. L. Hayes is a candidate for the position of .Claes Orator, S. Sncdccor for the Auditing Committee, and G. E. Page for the Ex- ecutive Committe-e. P. G. Richter is running for the Auditing Committee, in'- stead of for the Executive Committee as announced rn Saturday's issue of Tas Darrrxouru. There will be two periods of voting, from 12.30 until 1130 and from 7 until. 9. Each man will fill out three separate ballots: for Executive Otlicers, Com- mencement Officcrs, and Class Day Of- ficers. At a recent meeting of the Class- of 1920 it was decided that only those men who originally entered in the Class or' who. transferred into it would be eligible to vote. Therefore any 1919 men still in college are ineligible. In accordance with the recently adopted constitution of the class, .tellers at the election cannot be utulergraduates, and so members of last year's-Palaeopitus will be in charge. The complete list of nominations is as follows: V Ballot A Executive Oiicns Fon Phssrnsnr Stanley Jacob Newcomer Carl Elhridge Newton' Richard Cheever Southwidt FOR- VICE-PRESIDENT Earl Harrington' Bruce Reuel George Phillips FoR SECRETARY Warren Stetson Gault Raymond Francis McPartlin Arthur Warren Stockdale Fon TREASURER Harry Sheridan Baketel, jr. Albert Wesley Frey Ballot B Commencement Oiicers Fon MARSI-un. VARSITY WORKS OUT While Freshmen Rush Commons For Noonday Meal By Ima Mess lnrfrnflor in Sinrnrtc Grology Vl'et! That is the way that I look at the current How of The Bova, which an enterprisirig' D.xR'r:unurr1 hoc-lor poured out on my desk this afternoon. It is a shame for me to waste trickliug phrases on the board of the publication but suffice it to say that one or two of thc stories were almost worth reafl-. ing. ' ' Thr Bron Certainly is a magazine ol divers' interest. Arts-Meeting today at tea-time. jake Bond will sprak on the later ten- dencies of the college student. Hide and Seek Club-Resume game today at 3. Remember who is it . Basketball-Assistant manager re- port at gym this afternoon. H. A-l. Mttlfav, .'l.rri.rInur .llnnn5,rr. Proof and Copy-Meeting in Welt- stt-r Hall this afternoon. llring col- lege catalogues as new members u-ill be elected at this timc,. Notice-Don'k lcare this out. It's important. 1921-Class meeting in Alpha. Dclt goat room. Corruption in Camera Club Revealed A big exposure ofgraft in the Camera Club was made yesterday afternoon. when Kemp G. Fuller '21 showed some clever double-prints to the admiring trio of jolly tncmbcrs. RESOLUTION Wlmrrnr, God in his infinitc, wtsdomf has deancd it necessary to take from us our beloved brother. Brewing Fast. be it hereby Rrsolwd, that wc. the sophomore members of Phi Delta Nnhand, nnitc in sorrow over his untimely killing. and be it furthel' Rcsolcvd. that a copy bf these reso- lutions be spread upon the campus a-ud :mother be wired to thc Montreal Dqilr Dcspnrcli. For Ihr rhnplrt. 1'HE 1922 -Dlzr,Ec.vrt'uN. -s .as, NOTED MAN ABOUT TOWN DAZZLES MEN OF D. C. A. FEATHERSTON HOLDS BIG CROWD IN RALM OF HAND GREEN VARSITY LOSES 24-27 PHIL'S POPULAR GILDED PALACE scene os DEBAUCH D. F. FEATHERSTON -1 'f 332 V Comely, What Say? Getting a degree is the easiest thing in this college , said Daniel F. Feather- ston. jr. '19 and up, last night, address- ing the members of the D.C.A. Cabinet at their annual banquet in Phil's. Of course , hc- remarked, one must play it caddy, but caddy is my middle name. Mr. Feathcrstou, who boasts Asbury Park as. his residence, is by far one nf the better kriown of Dartmouth tradi- tions. During his stay in Hanover, he has not only secn a number of presi- dents come and go, but he has also,had the distinction of once mceting'GraLlu- ate Manager H. G. Pender when said lfender was without knickers. Mr. Pender did have on trousers, however. Ml am proud to be a Dartmouth man ,. Mr Featherston went on. In fact , he asserted anxiously, I am probably the most Dartmouthcst guy around these parts. Since Benny Mug- ridgc left here to enter legitimate busi- ness, I have been sort ol loncsome, but l-li Croall. on his rcturn from Scotland, brought back sornc good spirits. At the cnd of his talk. Mr. Fhther- stou arltnittcd frankly that he was anxious to cop off his -usual space in the Aegis. and agreed to the raise in thc advertising- rates of me book. The Beva is. lopsc .rgairl Reward for capture, 3.35. --Wjather this truck-Wet. Qnknutnlehgement THE EDITORS OF THE 1921 AEGIS WISH TO EXPRESS THEIR SIN- CERE OBLIGATION TO THE 1922 HEELERS FOR THEIR AID IN COMPILING THIS BOOK: TO W. G. SAWYER QQ, H. C. MALMQUIST '23, AND H. Q. MOORE, ,QS FOR THE ART WORKQ TO L. A. G., AND R. F. M.g TO MR. DEXTER WHITE OF THE WHITE STUDIO AND MISS FLINT OF THEIR HANOVER STUDIO FOR THEIR AID IN PRODUC- ING THE PHOTOGRAPHS WHICH ARE SUCH A NECESSARY PART OF THIS VOLUMEQ TO THE WRIGHT COMPANY, AND ESPECIALLY TO MR. GEORGE WRIGHT, JR., WHO HAD CHARGE OF MAKING THE ENGRAVINGS AND PRINTING TI-IE BOOKg AND TO THE AD- VERTISERS, WITHOUT WHOSE GENEROUS ASSISTANCE THIS BOOK COULD NEVER HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED. ' Elnhrx In Ahurrtimeru ALLEN DRUG COMPANY . BALFOUR JENVELRY . BOGLE BROTHERS .' . BOYDVS RESTAURANT . BRIDGEMAN D. S. . BRIDGXVAY PIOTEL . BROOKS BROTHERS . . BRONVN, C. D. Sz CO. . . CAMPION ...... CANDLE GLOW TEA ROOM . CLARK SCHOOL . . . COLLEGE BOOK STORE . . . COLLEGE PRESSING SHOP . . . CUMMINGS CONSTRUCTION CO. . DARTMOUTH DARILIOUTH DARTMOUTH DARTMOUTH DARTMOUTI-I DARTMOUTH DARTMOUTH DARTMOUTI-I ACE .... BOOKSTORE . . . COLLEGE .... COOPERATIVE SOCIETY NATIONAL BANK . PHARMACY . . . PRESS . . . TAILORING CO. . . DUDLEY ........ FOURTH ATLANTIC NATIONAL BANK. . GREEN MOUNTAIN STUDIOS .. .. GUYER ..... HANOVER INN . X XVII XVIII VI XVI XXIII IX XIV XVII 'III I III XXI XII XIII XIV II V VIII XIV XXIII XV XXI XVIII VIII IV VI HAT!-IAXVAY'S . ' . . HEWINS SL HOLLIS .... , HOWARD WESSON ENGRAVERS HUNTINGTON SCHOOL . . ' HURLBURTVS JEWELRY . JACK O' LANTERN . LIBERTY TRUST CO. LOVELL Sz COVEL . MCCARTHY ..... NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. . . NUGGET THEATRE . . . PINKUS BROTHERS . . PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE CO. RAND, GEO. W. 81 SON . ROBERTS, F. I-I. CO. . SHUMAN, A. . . . . SMITH 81 SON .... TUTTLE CO. PRINTERS. . .. WARD, BAIRD Sz LAUGHTON WARD. THOMAS. PLUMBING . XVASHBURN CROSBY CO. . WEESTER'S DICTIONARY . WHIPPLE J. R. COMPANY . WHITE STUDIO , . WILLIAMS LAUNDRY . . WRIGHT ENGRAVING Co. WRIGHT, E. A. CO. . . XXV XVII XII VI XIII XIII XXV XIII XVIII V X IX VII IX XXIV XXIII XX XII IV XXII XVI IV XXV XI XX XIX XXIV Tl-IE CLARK SCHOOL OF INTENSIVE EDUCATION PREPARES PRIMARILY FOR DARTMOUTH COLLEGE A 141-2 UNITS IN TWO YEARS THE SUMMER SCHOOL - Six weeks, opens August 2 THE PREPARATORY SCHOOL -Thirty-six weeks, opens September 23rd. Number linzilecl fo thirfy selected boys. THE TUTORING SCHOOL - Students may enter at any time. THE CLARK SCHOOL OFFERS: 1:-College Preparation in Two years. 2:-An opportunity to make up Entrance Conditions. 3:-Legitimate help while in college. Tl?-JE AN VE ESS P R I N T E R S ENGRAVERS ISTATIONERS School and College Printing a Specialty ANDOVER lVlASSACl-ILJSETTS D DARTMOUTH COLLEGE FOUNDED IN 1769 , DMISSION to the Freshman class is gainedfiby examination or by certihcate. Can- didates are allowed to take a preliminary examination one year before their matric- ulation. In place of examinations, certihcates will be received from preparatory schools which hold the certificate privilege. No school will be approved that has not an established regular and thorough course in preparation for College. All schools which ide- sire to be placed on the list of 'tapproved schoolsf' should send to the Dean of the Faculty for a printed form of application containing the -conditions for the approval of a school and the requirements whichmust be' met. No certihcate will be accepted from a private tutor' or instructo.r. - Correspondence concerning these subjects and requests for catalogues should be addressed to . CRAVEN LAYCO CK, Dean. Correspondence concerning rooms should be addressed to I-larry A. Wells, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. THE ASSOCIATED SCHOOLS ARE A Graduate School Offering Two Years of Special THE AMOS TUCK SCHOOL OFADMINISTRA TION Preparation for Business Careers. Students of three AND FINANCE years' undergraduate standing admitted to the work of ' ' the first year, which leads to the bachelor's degree. ' The work of this year lays a foundation for the specialized work of the second year. Students with the bachelor's degree admitted to the work of the second year, which leads to the de- gree of Master of Commercial Science. Courses in accounting and auditing, financial ad- ministration, organization and management for production and selling, chamber of com- merce work, commercial languages, foreign commerce, business statistics, etc. A F WILLIAM P.. GRAY, Dean. , ' Established 1871. Offers-a general course of study and practice in Civil Engineering, so developed as to include the essential principles of all important branches. Small classes allow close contact with instructors constantly. Essentially two years of profes- sional preparation, including the final year in College for the B. S. degree and a year advanced work, earning the degree of Civil Engineer. For copy of the Annual giving ad- dresses and positions of its graduates, etc., or other information, application should be made to CHARLES HOLDEN, Director. Established in 1798. Students in Dartmouth College, can- THE MEDICAL SCHOOL A didates for the B.S. degree, may, at the end of Sopho- more year, elect courses in the Medical School. Arrangements have been made whereby after two years more, such candidates shall receive the degree of B.S. and become at once eligible for advanced standing in leading metropolitan schools, which offer hospital and clinical facilities for advanced work. Candidates for the degree of B.A. may make electives at the close of Junior year. 1 Full laboratory facilities are offered in both elementary and practical branches. Quiet surroundings and personal instruction and supervision by the Faculty favor individual work and insure the preparation in the fundamentals necessary to successful specialization or to advanced work in any direction. K C. C. STEWART, Secretary. II ,riff Have you mastered these new words? vitamine Bolsheviki escadrille ace A Taube Freudian camouflage fourth arm tank Boche Rotarian ukulele X Soviet lorry ljrisancc and hundreds of others are dehned and pronounced in Webster's N e w I n te r n ati 0 n al Dictionary 'T he Supreme Authority S I MX l 1' if f Are you still uncertain, and are you embar- rassed when called upon to use these new words, and to pronounce them? Why not overcome this lack of information and class yourself with those who know: those who win success in all lines of activity? Why not lot the New I nfernatio-nal serve you? . ' -100,000 Vocabulary Terms 30,000 Geographical Subjects 12,000 Biographical Entries 6,000 Illustrations and 2,700 Pages Thousands of Other References WRITE for Specimen Pages, Illustrationsuetc. Free Pocket Maps if you mention this Publication. fri' 'W K . N. ,r X ,, ,,.,r. f 'L Liss. -. Lift' I 1 f - , X. , if M 5 -. I A sf Q-M tr ,.fw,- xf if f its fi 'J 'H ',l2 -:. 52. ' ' HP 'f WSJ K fl Q 'rf' '-sf X ' lr .K , yfqtq 1 iit ryg Q H 'r f H.-f..w.J' ' - H f:,-r-rf. . fq , f 1 ,fr ' 'wir .- QQ., .'5gY!2lX vflL5'lr,j5:v.::iQ35-52:12ik 'I . ,I '- ,V in W if. X ef ff 4 . , , ish Q, X T cna t QAM? . .,- , A -MJ? G. 8: C. MERRIAM CO., Springfield, Mass. Coe ME 'S STORE 1 We have FEATURING furnished Neckwear by Cheneyi' feeds 6'Clothing by M0rse', for the hikes f Shoes by Crossettw or 20 years '6Hats by Stetson W. B. 8r L. Shirts Try us again with Reversible Collar 0 A. W. GUYER Some Merchandise - Prices Fair GROCER WARD, Bruin sr LAuGHToN In town IV Eattmnutb Cllluuperatihe buttery Zincntpnrateh Outfitters to Dartmouth Men See Johnny at the '6Co-op Insurance is the FIRST investment most people- SHOULD make. It is the ONLY investment many people DO make. It is the ONE investment self respect REQUIRES OF ALL. I Write for Demonstration Rational life ifnsuranuz Qlnmpanp Montpelier Vermont . For . Text Books YC We B ke Scatloneljy All Academic Accessories V O0 Abbey? and A E hee The College Bookstore, Inc. The Shop of Service O d and Operated by Da tmouffh Men YE CANDLE GLOW INN E L and TEA ROOM 6490069 NORWICI-I. VERMONT TELEPHONE HANOVER 106 ESPECIALLY SUITABLE FOR WEEK-END VISIT-URS s irhe Ilanover Inn at Dartmouth College A Country Hotel of Dfistinetion The growing popularity of the Inn makes it always advisable to secure TG-S'67'7JClIl'iO?'LS in advance of a visit Igngifa HANOVER'5 FINEST RESTAURANT The Huntington School for Boys Prepares for all colleges and technical schools. A Excellent classrooms, laboratories, gymnasium, swimming pool, athletic field. SUMMER SESSION of twelve weeks opens June 21 Unit courses in all college preparatory work com- pleted in twelve weeks. For Catalogues address IRA A. FLINNER, Headmaster 320 Huntington Avenue, Boston When You Classmates Get Together and the subject of a bequest to your Alma Mater comes up- consider Endowment Insurance. There is no safer or easier way to provide a Class Fund. It is equivalent to buying, in instalments, a cash gift for the College. The premiums may be distributed over a period of years-ten, fifteen, twenty, twenty-five, or thirty. The per capita portion of the cost may be brought down to a very small amount. The bequest is accumulated gradually, and without trouble to any member of the class. The exact date the bequest will be made is always known. There is no sud- den scramblelto raise a large fund. The members of the class will not be asked for a large single payment. - ' .And here is another fact worth considering: The plan may be backed by one of the strongest financial institutions in the world, The Prudential. M . Simplicity -4 Strength + Security -these are the three elements you want to guarantee your bequest and a Prudential Endowment will provide them. For rates cmd detailed irrformatfion czcldress the Clomyoany 5 JOHN f 0 The Prudential lnsurance Comparly of America nunEimAL., Incorporated zmder the lates of the State of New Jersey eb:-E-7 IORRFST I' DRYDEY President Ho ie Office Newark, N. J, ff acyl 'all' ' '45 'Z' .f'?ft?':?giI,i' 1. Zimzfgifhi- 1. . ' , ,mmf :ig-,rt lgisrnznavnnr fl 479 ' . ii GIIRILTIR ' ' A l l rv-.1 1 -,ff-'ve A Q 2 -:mlele V- 6 2 4 . . ., ,r . . 4,00 .xv 'V QQ . . i , - n ., . , H - x . WS lallasumlcl ' 1 XII Only Five Miles from Dartmouth T our studios we produce the highest possible grade of college pennants, banners, pillows, and kindred goods in Felt and Leather applique. Nearly 150 Colleges handle our line exclusively. LOOK FOR OUR LABEL sono BY College BookStore, Hanover, New Hampshire Made by GREEN MOUNTAIN STUDIOS, White River Junction, Vermont SAFETY FIRST Bartmoutb national Ennis HANOVER. N. H. YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED ' Capital ' .... 550,000.00 Surplus and Undiuided Profits CEarnedD 575,000.00 OFFICERS CHARLES P CHASE PRESIDENT NEWTON A. FROST, Vic P ' PERLEY R. BUGBEE. C ESTABLISHED IBI8 Ofrfiifajgeww Ceasssiaasesgo W tlzmenlg umislyitxg mhz, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY'FQURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Zllurray Hill 8300 FOR MEN Sf BOYS: -Garments for Dress or Travel English Hats, Furnishings Boots and Shoes Trunks, Bags and Leather Novelties Ready made Gear for all Sports Liveries for Menservants Send for Illustrated Catalogue BOSTON NEWPORT TREMoNTcoR.BoYLs1'oN 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE PINKUS BROTHERS LARGEST MANUFACTURERS IN THE WORLD OF IVIADE - TO - ORDER CIGARETTES I 91 THIRD AVE., NEW YORK OFFER-Two hundred high quality pure Turkish Cigarettes marked in any way for Five Dollars. Special.Boxes for Banquets, etc. Write for Information GEORGE W. RAND ESTABLISHED 50 YEARS WILSON H. RAND GEORGE W. RAND lac SON MAKE A SPECIALTY OF STUDENT FURNITURE Desks, Tables, Chiffoniers, Morris and Desk Chairs, Beds and Bedding, Rugs and Draperies. Electric Lamps in old brass and early English. MAZDA LAMPS FOR COLLEGE DORMITORIES BRIDGIVIAN BLOCK PHONE 55-R OR 55-W HANOVER, N. H, IX Allen Drug Compan DRUGS CONFECTIONERY MEDICINES STATIONERY TOILET ARTICLES CIGARS FLAGS CIGARETTES BANNERS TOBACCO SHIELDS TOBACCO JARS POST CARDS TOBACCO POUCHES SOUVENIRSQ ETC. CIGARETTE CASES , Agents for BBB Pipes Victor Victrolas Whitman's Chocolates Allen Drug Compan HINK OF THE IMPROVEMENT IN MOTION PICTURES DURING THE PAST FEW YEARS. AND REALIZE THE WONDERFUL AMOUNT OF PLEAS- URE THE FUTURE HOLDS FOR THE MOVIE FAN ....... The uggeet Ullbnzatre X QUIPPED WITH MANY YEARS' EXPER- IENCE FOR MAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OF ALL SORTS, DESIRABLE FOR ILLUSTRATING COLLEGE ANNUALS. BEST OBTAINABLE ART- ISTS, WORKMANSHIP AND THE CAPACITY FOR PROMPT AND UNEQUALLED SERVICE 4 Rbutngrapbzrs 1921 Qegis ADDRESS REQUESTS FOR INFORMATION TO OUR EXECUTIVE OFFICES 1546 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY STUDIOS ALSO CONVENIENTLY LOCATED AT 557 FIFTH AVE., N.Y. SOUTH HADLEY. MASS. NORTHAMPTON, MASS. HANOVER, N.H. PRINCETON, N.J. POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. WEST POINT, N.Y. ITHACA, N.Y. XI H. P. CUMMINGS CIINSTRUCTIO COMPANY General Contractors I WARE, MASS. BOSTON, MASS. PORTLAND, ME. WOODSVILLE, N.H. GLENS FALLS, N.Y. BUILDERS OF 'J' Hitchcock Dormitory 5 Dormitory Houses on Webster Topliff Dormitory Terrace Robinson Hall Additions to Rollins Chapel Spaulding Swimming Pool Foundation for North and South College Store House Mass. Halls , Casque Sz Gauntlet House Residence of James P. Richardson 1-Inmarh-mvannn EVhPEu1i1PGlnmpe1ng F Glnmpang COLLEGE ENGRAVERS Qf NEW ENGLAND mnrrezirr fllaaaarhunettn UNEXCELLED ENGRAVING FOR CLASS BOOKS AND OTHER PUBLICATIONS PUBLISHERS OF FINE ILLUSTRATED EDITIONS CATALOGUES AND BOOKS, CLOTH AND LEATHER BINDING OUR ACCUIVIULATED EXPER- IENCE OF EIGHTY YEARS AT YOUR SERVICE iliutlzrnh - - Hermnnt XII Good Nature The secret of friendship is ever present in jack o 'Lantern From 1909 to 9091 you can tell the man who reads the Jacko by his -:Smile: The Ideal Confection O sale nearly everywhere in 5c trial packages and by the pound. Ask for them by name ONCEiALWAYS READ Tl-IE ACE. 10 CENTS A COPY COLLEGE JEVVELRY Hina lirnhania Glhzrrmn DARTMOUTH SOUVENIRS IN GOLD AND SILVER ATTRACTIVE RICH SUITABLE AT I-IIJRI.BURT'S 44My G-enerationw G4Personal Power 44New Reservation of Timew by DR. TUCKER 4GStory History of Dartmouth by WILDER D. QUINT -e. Dartnlouth Songs, Souvenir Albums, and all Dartmouth Publications at 05132 Eartmuutb Ennksture The Dartmouth Pharmacy I prescription Eruggist OLDEST ESTABLISHED HOUSE IN HANOVER FOR YEARS WE HAVE BEEN CATERING TO THE WANTS OF DARTMOUTH MEN OUR MOTTO: THE BEST IN DRUG STORE MERCHANDISE R. J. PUTNAM 49 e n er al iiaarhtnare MAZDA LAMPS ELECTRIC SUPPLIES FLASHLIGHTS POCKET KNIVES A 1 ex M ,X ., vw. XX iz.-qgk ' Copyright I9 I9 The House of Kuppenheimer I CLOTHES OF KNOWN QUALITY THAT IS WHAT IT MEANS WHEN YOU BUY CLOTHES FURNISHED BY THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEINIER AND FITTED BY US WITH THIRTEEN YEARSIOF EXPERIENCE IN HANOVER 7 RTMUUT ,fcAl gJG. XV iR00nnsandJAparhnents TO RENT e Modern Improvements DUN S. BRIDGEMAN V Hanover, N. H. Y xv1 ' Qlampinn Outfitter to College Men If Campion makes it HIt's righti' 4 BALFOUR BLUE BOOK- 1920 The standard referenceifor Fraternity jewelry, to- gether' with Illustrated Badge Price List, will be ' 'mailed on application. V L. G. BALFOUR Co., Aulebm-0, Mass. ' x Badges - Jewelry - Stationery ' A HEWINS 8: HOLLIS M'EN'SlFURNlSHlNG GOODS ' 1 A21 HAMILTON PLACEQ BOSTON, MASS. OPPOSITE PARK STREET CHURCH XVII Che fourlbfditlantic national Bank Q HIS Bank has on its books an inclieasing - number of personal accounts, and it invites all who wish to open such an account to make use of its facilities. It offers to all depositors uniform efficient service, regardless of the volume of their business. Cotal Resources . , S43,000,000.00 Quality Eiehjrirp FINE AWATCHES ' I AND PRECIOUS' STONES THAT A CONCERN SHOULD MAKE GOOD ,CUS'TOMERS, GOOD FRIENDS. AND RETAIN THEM YEAR AFTER YEAR IS NOT LUCK. BOGLE B T RO HERS HAVE BEEN MAKING AND RETAINING FRIENDS FOR F'ORTY-TWO YEARS Engle Brothers SILVER AND GOLDSMITHS SINCE 1878 white Bihar Siunrtiun, Vt. COME TO V jlfflr Qlar thy ' 5 BARBERING AND Pool. AND BILLIARDS Post Qbffirr 25uiIiJing 333333333333 XVIII Wright lllu strating and Engraving Co. Q6 . AsSpecialty of Cuts for lllustrating School and College Annuals n Pocono Building ' 229 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CTTY Telephone Gramercy 41534 A I 216 HIGH STREET, BOSTON 1 Telephone, 3000, 3001 Main ' Boston Massachusetts WILLIAMS LAUNDRY We'll keep your clothes clean and mended I Compliments of ' SMITH Sz soN, Incorporated d I Dartmouth Chocolates Hanover Crackers I ' Manufactured A River Junction, Vermont - ,U ' yllest ill Qualifj' ' 4, tl ? S is as 5796 A 5 5, Gbe STORE l n sToRE . I ryjg, 'll E ' sf , ' I . Qf UALITY I gf'if'? 1 A. SERVICE FEATURING HIGH GRADE Haherdashery Fine Athletic Goods A AND Our Famous Shaker Sweaters CHARLES H. DLJDLEY, INC. QOUTFITTERS HANOVER NEW HAMPSHIRE The College Pressing Shop CLEANING - PRESSING DRY CLEANSING A All our work is done BY HAND and we guarantee you satisfaction. Best work at lowest prices4 . I Special attention to dress suits. Send Us Your Suit and Be Suited MMMMMM TIIOS. E. WARD x ' - A ' a Hardware S Plumbing a. Heating s MMMMMM . E I The artnwntb 191255, ilnc. ' banuher, ,iastn bampsbire 4 F. A. MUSGROVE, '99 Y , ., PRESIDENT AND MANAGER . 'Q Snbuul anti Cllullege -Printing I I A -nur Spmzialtits I' X V THE NEW AND BEAUTIFUL Zlantel ' Zgrihgtnap L. 7 new-I , u 1' QW., '-1 ML I ' .Q ' llllll I,Iu hr i11l.Q,f,4f.-r1 H d 'I I I .IJ ll 4 L ala- 'I . - E Y- J ----1 ' -,f .. miiiza .a:- ' ,affr I - -.111 . - .---,A-f---11.-,.. 1 . 9 ' . 1' 1' ii ::',., f -- ' - -'iii i-P. -1 .'.:w'.'f'f: :z:H1:1.r--fr. ' - illiif-:,, i' Uri -5. ,iff 'S I. ,Vg v-nwfgf -1 , .wg h .-:Wm . - . ' 1- , 5 .--.-R-N. v -my 2.2 IJ.:-'J-'QW FFIQ ISM-.kflfxr f1z.g.',..'aw,.:-' ..5.mvfQpg.llg1z.ii ' ' umffksgg-.,.. .P-,, . ,-412111, il ,nail 2 - Nl'-fafre.. ,-.- 11.1-a1.1'41I1H .:,,,',fHg1ffn2IWfF- . F- , S I I-1' 1:wi'-I,:...1sfwFmHPl'QsL'i,.i4- lj I iq:-S-, -iff -:ifffin-2-11'-QM-,Sf-f-rinan-1 - if--IZl'lf f'JfT. 7'r 3',Q. 255 ' ' If !'- 11,132 i,:E,:f-if S+- Y-., '-av-.PTQ 1,1521 :gn K1 rely- rw-.I ua ' -'IITI-'--1 -Z' -J: FIIVETI' ' ' -I5:'f.'?E7El'1E7I:'ZI'?I'Ei '2 iiiiiigif-iiiaulz IE- 'u l2ls3el2LSi-iii . v- fr .,.,-1-.-lf. J.. 1.-f - . -,::. - j .15-49.0 , 'f-'Elk' 51,-o' 'ca ,R ,- ----, - , 1' I f-T: f, dna, A .,. F2 , I 1, -wl '5vV ,gg ff fe' L ,, Af- M ' 'if' ' ' BRIDGE STREET AND BROADWAY SPRINGFIELD, MASS. The most Modern Hotel in the vicinity'- for Bea.uty..Comtort and Efficient Service. Business Men's Lunch, 12-2.30 .... 754: Dinner, 6 to 8.30 . , .4 .... .. . 81.50 Informal dancing every evening from 10 go mid- night. Excellent music by the noted Bridgway Orchestra. . GEORGE A. LEONARD VICE-PRESIQENT AND RESIDENT MANAGER CLOTHI G for College Men SPORT CLOTHES, I DRESS CLOTHES STETSON SHOES ' FURNISHINGS HATS TO. THE ' SERVICE ' STORE XXIII A fx ' 293, 'Y mm A QF- Villillil ,ff , f ,fe W1 '2M, e mM9 fe 5235 AQHJLQD9 5,pg:iSN og-QQ-Q Q Z.. 0.45, - . LVJ 5 - Q 5 . E 'I E E fhe Czocofafef I 2 7 3 fiat arenjfeirenf 3 F,- 2 The name Apollo is on each piece of chocolate 2' S that you eat for our unqualified guarantee of 2 yv' E purity and wholesomeness. For your own pfotec- E ,H fl!-E tion specify Apollo when you want chocolates. E .7 .7fRoberzfr fb i it , ng BOSTON. MASS. if dx gill!llllllIIIIlllilllllllllllllllllllIIlllllllllIllIllllIIIIIUHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHHHIIIllIlllllllltllllllllllltllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE I - 17: . f 414' ,nfl 'ff ' pg -711,-ee ,ff Q35 A E. A. WRIGHT C0. i of Philadelphia Engravers Stationers Printers Fraternity Stationery Banquet Menus Programs P Calling Cards 4 Invitations Dance Orders JACK HUBBELL, '21, Dartmouth Representative KAI V
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