Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)

 - Class of 1912

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 446 of the 1912 volume:

L378 E64 F The I9I2 ' APR 10 1911 The Year Book i p  . of Lehigh University -= — Published Annttally by the Junior Class Volume XXXVI WNITED ll ALi f . BOARD OF PUBLICATION for the CLASS OF I9I2 Elmer Ellsworth Yake, Editor-in-Chief. Franklin Weems Youry, Assistant Editor-in-Chief. Henry Habel Otto, Busi- ness Manager. George Jacob Shurts, Assistant Business Manager. Harold Morgan Smyth, Art Editor. John Edgar CuIIiney, John Ambrose Hart, Arthur Parke Rutherford, Ira Alferd St. John, and Merle Ivan Terwilliger, Associate Editors. Published in April, Nineteen Hundred and Eleven at South Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Eschenbach Printing Company, Easton, Pennsylvania Frontispiece 4 Dedication 8 Preface 9 Board of Trustees 12 Faculty and Instructors 15 Administrative Officers 41 The Classes 43 Fraternities 96 Societies and Clubs 195 Lehigh Publications 231 Technical Societies 237 Social 251 The Dormitories 259 PoT-PouRRi 271 Musical and Dramatic 281 Memorabilia 296 Athletics 301 Football Dinner 349 Statistics 352 Why Did You Choose Lehigh? 354 Calendar 367 Prize Awards 37 1 Advertisements 373 3n (Tttemoriam El isba p. Milbur Treasurer of the Board of Trustees from July, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, to October, nineteen hundred and one, and a Trustee of the University from June, eighteen hun- dred and seventy-one, to the time of his death, June four- teenth, nineteen hundred and ten. A constant and steady friend of the student body. Donor in eighteen hundred and eighty-tv o of our Athletic Field, and thereby father of the development of modern athletics in the University, and ever, to the time of his death, a generous, helpful friend, and most valued counselor of the University. To the service of the University he brought the ripe wisdom and good judgment of one who was recognized as a finan- cial leader. Lehigh owes him a great debt of gratitude and love, and the student body pays this tribute to the memory of one who loved and served Lehigh, and cared for the wel- fare of Lehigh ' s sons. 934 9 4 0 xtcoxb JOtC (Alma Jy i iet Wr :)f TJcr - nyf Ike Stttrii oi kt , to sir4?njgik)eifx IK4? hovtb oi ii iicfxosixvp vctonof Wntck kttib xxs io jchticfix, iiCK cx i ilix ' C ik;e :pljea$- txfijs oi K:aUcG[e ixijc , t y ii4?je« alivjo ike  t«H0 2 xai ra xie Mxb ttxHtvtuijc frici xiski p o£ our coiic c iai s. yKts k kjcje x otxir irusi, jc i xitQ ' Cni out aitjctixyt at it$ f ulfiUu jCnt. The Alma Mater I Words by John J. Gibson, ' 95 V UARTET. u Tenors. {Melodij iti 2d Tenor.) 1 1 ' tt=H=F=g=« 3=3: -F :7« •- T— r- ■F 1. Where the Le - high ' s rock - y rap- ids rushjfrom out the West, ' Mid a grove of 2. Like a watch- mau ou the mouu- tain stauds she graud -ly bold, Earth and Heav- en ' s 3. We will ev - er live to love her, live to praise her name; Live to make our Basses. .4s — I — 5i__ — — , — ,__,. j j — } ,. _ — ,4 — - -j — - r=E m— - z V=V- :t:=t: s tr- 2 -S : :r-j«=i : EE EE n :i 3S NSEE ' ' ' t=t= fEE i £=§ -  Si III I I Chorus. spread-ing chest -nuts walls in i - vy dressed, se - cret ' s seek - ing, hoard - ing them like gold, lives add lus - ter to her glo - rious fame. Ifg ' -EJEEJ r= - -j- -- ii=.t=- On the breast of Old South Mountain, All she wrests from na - ture ' s storehouse, Let the glad notes wake the ech - oes, :t=t :t= - -| — r- i r- 1 r-r 1 1 1 ' 4= ' - 1 -t =1:25:11: =fc=z : ,i|_j__J _4 ?z: P -t= :t: -f=it reared a-gainst the sky, naught es-capes her eye, joy - f ul - ly we cry, r- Stands our no - ble Al - ma Ma - ter, stand si our dear Le - high. Gives she glad -ly to her dear sons,; while ive bless Le - high. Hail to thee, our Al - ma Ma - ter! Hail) ' ail hail, Le - high! = ri :=:=J V=J S==]=: T- j i — ' 1-ES5=rf ==== ;f=:i=r _-fc ==ji= =E3z=3z:=J=z EE gj =r=e: -- =- : z:= T=E E :t: Melo-Jy used by pennieeion of Oliver Ditson Company, owners of the copyright. College Yells: Hoo, Rah, Ray ! Hoo. Rah, Ray! Ray, Ray, Ray! Lehigh ! Lehigh ! Lehigh ! Lehigh! Lehigh! Lehigh! Lehigh! Le-Hi! Le-Hi! Le-Hi! Hi Hi Hi Hi Lehigh ' .! ! ! Ray! Lehigh! Lehigh ! Ray! iS) Hexrv R. Price Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot William A. Lathrop Rembrandt Peale . Warren a. Wilbir Charles L. Taylor A. N. Cleaver John Fritz Charles M. Schwab (O Brooklyn, N. Y. South Bethlehem, Pa. Wilkes-Barre and Philadelphia, Pa. New York, N. Y. South Bethlehem, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. South Bethlehem, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. South Bethlehem, Pa. XE Vacaxcv) Rev. Marcus A. Tolmax Garrett B. Lixder.man Francis R. Dravo . Alfred E. Forstall Thomas M. Eynon . Honorary Trustee Honorary Alumni Trustees Term Expires . 1911 . . 1912 . . 1913 . . 1914 . Bethlehem, Pa. . Cynwyd, Pa. . Pittsburg, Pa. New York, N. Y. Philadelphia Officers William A. Lathrop ........ President R. Morris GummerE ...... Treasurer and Assistant Sec ' y H. S. KiTCHEL ......... Assistant Treasurer Executive Committee Warren A. Wilbur, Chairman Charles L. Taylor William A. Lathrop A. N. Cleaver Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot Henry R. Price Committee on Buildings and Grounds Warren A. Wilbur, Chairman A. N. Cleaver Charles L. Taylor Rembrandt Peale John Fritz Committee on Finance and Investments Charles L. Taylor, Chairman William A. Lathrop Warren A. Wilbur 13 ' ■■.II- ' ' W;- ' ■ « - . ' ■. ' ' ' i . ; mBSSSm ' .. j-.;n . jSHk t i fl i :; f 1 1 ,,,..s --p.. 1 ■i , - ' Henry Sturgis Drinker, E.M., LL.D. President of the University University Park, South Bethlehem Dr. Faires ' School, Philadelphia, ' 67; Lehigh University, School of Mines, ' 71; Secretary of the Alumni Association, ' 76, and President, ' 79; elected President of Lehigh Uni- versity, June 14, ' 05; installed October 12, ' 05; admitted to the Bar of Philadelphia, ' 77; admitted to Pennsylvania Supreme Court, ' 80; admitted to the Courts of New York State, ' 99; General vSolicitor of Lehigh Valley Railroad Company for a number of years prior to election to the Presidency of Lehigh University; published Treatise on Tunnelling, Explosive Compounds and Rock Drills, ' 78; also Treatise on Explosive Compounds and Rock Drills, ' 82; author of various papers read before the American Institute of Mining Engineers; published enlarged edition of Ball ' s Railroad and Tele- graph Laws of Pennsylvania, ' 84; member Century Club, New York; University Club, New York; University Club, Philadelphia; Past Manager of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, and one of the founders of the Institute; member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; American Association for the Advance- ment of Science; Historical Society of Pennsylvania; honorary member Tau Beta Pi; honorary member Arcadia; LL.D., Lafayette College, ' 05; LL.D., Franklin and Marshall College, ' 09. 16 Natt MorrilIv Emery, M.A. Vice-President and Registrar 125 South High Street, Bethlehem A.B., ' 95, Dartmouth; M.A., ' 99, Lehigh; Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa. Joseph Frederick Klein, Ph.B., D.E. Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Dean of the Faculty 357 Market St., Bethlehem Ph.B., Yale, ' 71; D.E., Yale, ' 73; American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers. 17 Charles Lewis Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy and Secretary of the Faculty University Park, South Bethlehem Graduate of Marshall College, Huntington, W. Va., ' 76; B.S., ' 81, B.E., ' 82, C.E., ' 83, Ph.D., ' 84, of Vanderbilt University; Fellow in Mathe- matics, ' 8i- ' 82, Graduate Fellow, ' 82- ' 84, In- structor in Engineering Department, ' 84- ' 86, Assistant Professor Engineering and Astronomy ' 86- ' 95, at Vanderbilt University; Member of American Mathematical Society; Member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Educa- tion; Engineering Association of the South; Fellow of the American Association for Advancement of Science; Phi Beta Kappa; I5eta Theta Pi. William C. Thayer, M.A., L.H.D. Professor of the English Language and Literature 59 Market St., Bethlehem B.A., ' 76, Columbia; M.A., ' 84, Williams; L.H.D., ' 00, Hobart; vStudcnt, University of Gottingen, ' 79- ' 8o; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, ' 81; Professor of Mathematics, Hobart, ' 82- ' 83; Fellow, ' 84 and ' 88, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity; Instructor in Modern Languages, Balti- more, ' 88 ' -9i; Professor of Modern Languages, Pennsylvania State College, ' 92- ' 95. 18 William Suddards Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. Professor of Physics M.S., ' 87, University of Kansas; Assistant Pro- fessor of Physics, University of Kansas, ' Sy- ' go; Student, University of Berlin, ' go- ' gi; Morgan Fellow, Harvard University, ' gi- ' gi; Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Iowa State College, ' gi-g-j; Student, Cornell Univer- sity, winter terms ' ()2- ' ()6 Sc.D., Cornell Uni- versity, 1 901; Honorary Member of the Kansas Academy of Science; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and Past Vice-President of the Section of Physics; Member and Past President of the Iowa Academy of Science; Member of the American Physical Society; Member of the Society for the Promo- tion of Engineering Education; Member of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Member of the American Astro-Physical Society; Member of the American Electrochemical Society; Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi; Tau Beta Pi. 127 Wall St., Bethlehem John L. Stewart, A.B., Ph.B. Professor of Economics and History 678 Ostrum St., South Bsthlehem B.A., Philadelphia Central High School; Ph.B., ' 89, University of Pennsylvania; Wharton Fellow in History and Economics; Graduate Student, Department of Philosophy, University of Pennsyl- vania; Assistant Professor of English in the Phila- delphia Central Manual Training School, ' 90- ' 92; Professor of History and Economics, Philadelphia North East Manual Training School, ' 92- ' 98; Member of American Economic Society; Society for the Historical ' Study of Religion (American Oriental Society) ; American Academy of Political and Social Science; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Phi Beta Kappa. 19 Robert W. Blake, A.B., A.M. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature St. Luke ' s Place and Ostrum St., South Bethlehem A.B., Princeton, ' 87; A.M., ' 88; Classical Fel- low, ' 87- ' 88; Princeton Theological Seminary, ' 88- ' 9o; Instructor in Greek, Princeton, ' go- ' g ; Universities of Leipzig and Erlangen, ' 94- ' 95; Professor of Latin, Washington and Jefferson College, ' 96- ' 99; Member American Philological Association; Delta Upsilon. Charles J. Goodwin, Ph.D. Professor of the Greek Language and Literature 118 Church St., Bethlehem A.B., Bowdoin College, ' 87, A.M., ' 90; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, ' 90; Student, University of BerHn; Professor of Greek, Cornell College, Iowa; Pro- fessor of Greek, St. Stephen ' s College; Member American Philological Association. WiivUAM EsTY, B.A., S.B., M.A. Professor of Electrical Engineering 2 1 South New St., Bethlehem B.A., ' 89, M.A.; ' 93, Amherst; vS.B., ' 93, Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology; Member Ameri- can Institute Electrical Engineers; Member Society for Promotion of Engineering Education; In- structor in Electrical Engineering, ' 93- ' 95 ; As- sistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 95- ' 98; Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 98- ' oi, University of Illinois; Tau Beta Pi; Psi Upsilon. Joseph William Richards, A.C, M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Metallurgy University Park, South Bethlehem A.C, ' 86, Lehigh University; M.A., ' 87, Philadelphia High School; M.S., ' 90, Ph.D., ' 93, Lehigh Uni- versity; Tau Beta Pi; Past President and at present Secretary of the American Electrochemical Society; Vice-President American Institute of Mining Engineers; Deutsche Bunsen Gesellschaft ; Faraday Society; Societe Electrochimique de France; Iron and Steel Institute of England; Member and Professor of Electrochemistry of the Franklin In- stitute; Member of the American Society for Testing Materials; Institute of Chemical Engineers; Chem- ists ' Club, New York City. Howard Eckfeldt, B.vS., E.M. Professor of Mining Engineering Absent on leave 15. vS., ' 95, E.M., ' 96, Lehigh; Member American Institute of Mining Engineers; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Tau Omega. Arthur E. Meaker, CE. Professor of . Mathematics 415 North Linden vSt., Bethlehem C.E., ' 75, Lehigh; ' ys- ' yy, with P. R. R.; In- structor in Mathematics, Lehigh, ' yy- ' gj; Assistant Professor, ' 98- ' o6; Professor of Mathematics since ' 06. Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., M.A. Professor of Mathematics 215 South Center St., Bethlehem B.A., ' 83, M.A., ' 91, Lehigh University; Instructor in Mathematics, Lehigh University, ' 84- ' 97, As- sistant Professor, ' 98- ' o6; Graduate Student, Germany, ' 93- ' 94; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member American Mathematical Society; Member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Phi Beta Kappa; Psi Upsilon; Member of American Philosophical Society. Philip M. Palmer, A.B. Professor of German University Park, South Bethlehem A.B., Bowdoin; A.B., Harvard; Phi Beta Kappa; Theta Delta Chi. 23 William R. vSchober, B.S., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry 820 Bishopthorpe St., South Bethlehem B.vS., ' 86, A.M., ' 90, St. John ' s College; Ph.D., ' 92, Johns Hopkins University; Member American Chemical Society; Fellow American Association Advancement of Science; Fellow Chemical Society (London); Member Societe Chimique de France; Member Society Chemical Industry; Theta Delta Chi; Honorary Member of the Tau Beta Pi. Bexj.ami.v LeRov Miller, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Geology 672 Ostrum St., South Bethlehem A.B., University of Kansas, ' 97; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 03; Fellow Geological Society of America; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Society for Promotion of Engineering Education; American Institute of Mining Engineers; Geologist, Maryland Geological Survey; Assistant Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey; Professor in Penn College, ' gj- ' oo; As- sociate in Geolog ' in Bryn Mawr College, ' o3- ' o7 ; vSigma Xi. 24 Frank Pope McKibben, S.B. Professor of Civil Engineering 817 St. Luke ' s Place, South Eethlehem S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 94; Assistant in the Department of Civil Engineer- ing, ' 94- ' 96; Instructor, ' 96- ' o3 ; Assistant Professor, ' o3- ' o6; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, ' 06 till September, ' 07, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Assistant Engineer, New Bedford Bridge, ' 97 and ' 98; Assistant Engineer, Boston Elevated Railroad Company, ' 99- ' oi; Assistant Engineer, Massachusetts Railroad Commission, ' 01 till September, ' 07; Librarian, Boston Society of Civil Engineers, ' o2- ' o7 ; Member of American Society of Civil Engineers; American Society for Testing Materials; Society for Promotion of En- gineering Education; Engineers Society of Central Pennsylvania; Tau Beta Pi; Theta Xi. Winter L. Wilson, C.E., M.S. Professor of Railroad Engiuccring 29 Market St., Bethlehem C.E., Lehigh University, ' 88; M.S., Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 01; Member of the American Society of Civil Engineers; Member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Admitteci to Bar, Second Judicial District of Md., ' 94; In- structor in Civil Engineering, Lehigh University ' 98- ' oi; Ass ' t Professor in charge of Civil Engineer- ing, Tulanc University, ' oi- ' o4; Ass ' t Professor of Civil Engineering, Lehigh University, ' o4- ' o7 ; ' 07 to date Professor of Railroad Engineering. B. DE SCHWEINITZ, M.E. Professor of Machine Design 313 Church St., Bethlehem Graduate Royal Polj-technic School, Stuttgart, ' 74; six years Teacher of Mechanical Engineer- ing at Western University of Pennsylvania, ' 74- ' 8o; Mechanical Engineer for Colorado Coal and Iron Company, ' 8o- ' 92 ; Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers, ' 8o- ' 95; with Bethlehem Steel Company, ' 92- ' oi; with Pennsylvania Steel Company, ' 01 - ' 07. Robert W. Hall, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology and Lecturer on Forestry 152 South Linden Street, Bethlehem Ph.B., Yale, ' 95, A.B., ' 97, A.M., ' 98: Ph.D., ' 01, Harvard; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member American Zoological Society. 26 Percy Hughes, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor oj Philosophy and Education 36 North Center St., Bethlehem A.H., Alfred University, ' 99; Teachers Diploma, Teachers College, New York City, ' 97; A.M., Columbia University, ' 02; Ph.D., Columbia Uni vcrsity, ' 04; Teacher and Principal, Secondary Schools, ' 96- ' oi; Instructor in Philosophy, Alfred University, ' 98- ' 99; Fellow in Philosophy, Columbia University, ' o2- ' o3; Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia University, ' o3- ' o5; Instructor in Phil- osophy and Psychology, University of Minnesota, ' 05— ' 06; Acting Professor of Philosophy, and Director of Extension Courses for Teachers, Tulanc- University, ' o6- ' o7; Member of American Philo sophical A ssociation; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Association of Col- lege Teachers of Education. Barry MacNutt, E.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Physics 841 Seneca St., South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh, ' 97, M.S., ' 98; Beta Thcta Pi; Mem ber of the American Electrochemical Society : Fellow of the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science; Member of the American Physical Society; Member of the National Geo- graphical Society: Associate Member American Institute Electrical Engineers. 27 Harry M. Ullmann, A.B., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry 148 vSouth Main St. Bethlehem A.B., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University; Member of American Chemical Society; Member Deutsche Chemische Gesellschaf t ; Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science; Thcta Delta Chi. John ' Hutcheson Ogburx, CE. Associate Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 462 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem C.E., Vanderbilt University, ' 92; Fellow in En- gineering, ' 92- ' 93; Assistant Astronomer Dudley Observatory, ' 93- ' 95; Instructor Mathematics and Astronomy, Lehigh University, ' 95- ' o6; Beta Thcta Pi. 28 Charlks S. Fox, A.B., LL.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Romance Languages 222 Wall St., Bethlehem A.B., University of Rochester, ' 91; LL.B., Union University, ' 93; A.M., Harvard, ' 03; Admitted to Bar, State of New York, ' 93 ; Student University Gottingen, ' 97; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, ' 98- ' 99; Student, University of Berhn, ' 99- ' oo; Instructor, Morgan Park Academy, ' oi- ' o3; Graduate Student, Harvard, ' o3- ' o5; Ph.D., Har- vard, ' 07; Psi Upsilon. Frank W. White, M.D. Professor of Physical Education 820 Broadway, South Bethlehem Dean Normal School Temple University, Phila- delphia; Professor Physical Education Temple University, ' 07-09; M.D., Tufts College Medical School; Graduate Harvard LIniversity School of Physical Education, 1908. 29 Walter Savage Landis, Met. E., M.S. Associate Professor of Metallurgy 2 1 1 South New St. Bethlehem Met. E., Lehigh, ' 02: Assistant in Departments of Mineralog} ' and Metallurgy-, ' o2- ' o4: Instructor in Departments of Metallurgy ' and Mineralogy, ' o4- ' o5; Student in Heidelberg, ' o5- ' o6; (Returned to Lehigh University, ' 06-07; Graduate Student, Lehigh, ' 04- ' 05, ' o5- ' o6) ; Degree of Master of Science, Lehigh, ' 06; Assistant Professor of Metal- lurgy- and Mineralogy, June, ' 07 ; Student Technische Hochschule, Aachen, ' 09; Member of American Chemical Society : American Electrochemical vSociety ; Deutsche Bunsen Gesellschaft; in charge of chapters on Bituminous Coal, Manganese and Chromium of Carnegie Institution ' s Economic History of the United States; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Sigma Kappa. Arthur W. Kleix, M.E. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering 158 South New St., Bethlehem M.E., ' 99, Lehigh University; Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Member of Society for the Promotion of Engineering Educa- tion; Member of American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science; Tau Beta Pi. 30 Leon D. Conkling, C.E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering 419 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem C.E., Cornell, ' 00; Assistant City Engineer, ' oo- ' o2, City Engineer, ' o2- ' o4, Elmira, N. Y. ; Estimator and Draughtsman, L.S. and M.S. Ry., ' o4- ' o6; Associate Member American Society of Civil Engineers. MvRON J. LucH, M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Absent on leave B.A., ' 02, M.A., ' 03, Lehigh University; Instructor in English, Lehigh, ' o4- ' o5 ; Teaching Fellow and Assistant in Greek, Tulane University; Ph.D., ' o5- ' o7 ; Phi Beta Kappa. 31 James Warren Miller, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics 453 Walnut St., South Bethlehem B.S., ' 97, Pennsylvania State College; M.A., ' 99, Columbia; Ph.D., ' 01, Columbia; U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, ' 02; Fellow at Columbia; Phi Kappa Phi. John Eugene Stocker, B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 321 North Center St., Bethlehem B.S., Lehigh University, ' 95; M.S., Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 08; Instructor in Mathematics, Western Military Institute, Alton, 111., ' 95- ' 97; Graduate Student in Mathematics, University of Chicago, ' gy- ' gS; Phi Beta Kappa. 32 Stanley Sylvester Seyfert, B.S., E.E. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering 456 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 04; Instructor in Electri- cal Engineering, Lehigh University, ' o5- ' o8; Mem- ber of American Association for Advancement of Science; Associate Member of American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Member of American Electrochemical Society; Member of the Society for the Advancement of Science ; Tau Beta Pi. Frank R. Ingalsbe, B.S., S.B. Assistant Professor of Geology 29 North New St. Bethlehem B.S., Middlebury College, ' 03; S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 06; Instructor in Geology, Lehigh University, ' o6- ' o8; Assistant Professor of Geology, ' 08; Assistant Geologist on U. S. Geo- logical Survey, March, 1908; Delta Upsilon. 33 Joseph Daniels, S.B., M.S. Assistant Professor of Mining Engineering Corner Third and Seneca Sts., So. Bethlehem S.B., ' 05, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; M.vS., ' 08, Lehigh; Member American Institute of Mining Engineers; Engineers Society of Pennsyl- vania; Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education; American Association for the Advancement of Science. Vahan S. Babasinian, A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor in Chemistry 460 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem A.B., Anatolia College, ' 95; A.M., Brown Uni- versity, ' 03, Ph.D., ' 06; Member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Sigma Xi. 34 James H. Wily, E-E. Assistant Professor in Physics 1007 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 05; Associate Member of American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Associate Member of American Physical Society; Member of American vSociety for Advancement of Science; Member Illuminating Engineering Society; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Charles K. Meschter, B.S., B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor in English 526 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem B.Sc, University of Pennsylvania, ' 96, M.A., ' 07; Student, Harvard, ' gg- ' oo; B.A., Harvard, ' 00; Graduate Student, University of Pennsylvania, ' o4- ' o7, ' 09- ' 10; Professor of English and German, Perkiomen Seminary, ' 96- ' o5 ; Professor of English in Moravian College for Women , ' 10. 35 Edward L. Jones, M.E. Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering 826 Tombler St., South Bethlehem M.E., Stevens Institute, ' 92; Student at Columbia University Summer, ' 08. Lecturers Edward Higgixson Williams, Jr., B.A., E.M., A.C., F.G.S.A. Lecturer on Mining and Geology Andover, Mass. B.A., Yale, ' 72; A.C., Lehigh, ' 75; E.M., Lehigh, ' 76; F.G.S.A. (Original Fel- low) ; Honorary Member Phi Beta Kappa, Zeta Chapter (New York) ; Member American Philosophical Society; Fellow American Association Advancement of Science; Member American Institute of Mining Engineers; a Founder of Tau Beta Pi; Psi Upsilon. William L. Estes, M.D. Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene Delaware Ave. and St. Luke ' s Place, South Bethlehem A.M.. Bethel College; M.D., ' 77, University of Virginia; M.D., ' 78, University of City of New York; Fellow American Academy of Medicine; Fellow American Surgical Society; Permanent Member Pennsylvania State Medical Society; Charter Member American Academy of Railway Surgeons; Member Lehigh Valley Medical Association of Railway vSurgeons; Member Northampton County Medical vSociety; Phi Gamma Delta. 36 Instructors Emil Gelhaar Instructor in Freehand Drawing 148 South Main St., Bethlehem Alpha A. Diefenderfer, A.C, M.S. Instructor -in Ouantitatire Analysis and Assaying 636 West Broad St., Bethlehem A. C, Lehigh, ' 02; Tau Beta Pi. George C. Beck, A.C. Instructor in Chemistry 510 Seneca St., South Bethlehem A. C, Lehigh, ' 03; Phi Delta Theta. Charles F. Woods, Ph.D. Instructor in Modern Languages 22 South High St., Bethlehem A.B., Johns Hopkins, ' 91, Ph.D., ' 97; Instructor in Modern Languages, Rich- mond College, ' 97- ' 99; Instructor in Modern Languages, Swarthmore College, ' 99- ' oo; Acting Professor of German, Pennsylvania College, ' oo- ' o2 ; Assistant Professor, Colorado College, ' o3- ' o4; Beta Theta Pi. Sidney J. Lockner, A.M. Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy 526 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem A.B., Union College, ' 90; Assistant at Dudley Observatory, Albany; A.M., Union, ' 93; Senior Fellow in Physics at Clark LTniversity, ' 94; Assistant at Harvard College Observatory, ' 95; Chi Psi; Sigma Xi. Sylvanus a. Becker, CE. Instructor in Civil Engineering 103 North St., Bethlehem C.E., Lehigh, ' 03; Phi Sigma Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Borough Engineer, Naz- areth, Pa.; Associate Member A. S. C. E. 37 Joseph Benson Reynolds, B.A., M.A. Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy 732 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem A.B., ' 07, M.A., ' 10, Lehigh University; Phi Beta Kappa. RoLUN Landis Charles, A.B. Instrtictor in Physics 628 Broadway, South Bethlehem A.B., Lehigh University, ' 07 ; Member of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science; Associate Member of American Physics Society; Phi Beta Kappa. E. S. Foster, E.E. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 449 Walnut Street, South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 07; Associate Member American Institute of Elec- trical Engineers; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Kearney E. Hendricks, B.S., S.B. Instrtictor in Civil Engineering Cherokee and Seminole Sts., South Bethlehem B.S., Guilford College, ' 00; S.B., Haverford College, ' 02; Graduate vStudent, Johns Hopkins University, ' o3- ' o4. Ralph Justin Fogg, B.vS. Instructor in Civil Engineering 732 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem B.S., Tufts College, ' 06; Delta Tau Delta. Harry A. S. Howarth Ph.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering 13S South New St., Bethlehem Ph.B., Sheflfield Scientific vSchool, Yale University, ' 99; Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Sigma Xi. Edgar Theodore Wherry, B.S., Ph.D. Instructor in Mineralogy University Park, South Bethlehem B.S., Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, ' 06; Ph.D., University of Penn- sylvania, ' 09; Member of American Association for Advancement of Science; Member of American Chemical Society; Member of Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences; Member of the Philadelphia Mineralogical Club; Sigma Xi. Chester G. Gilbert, Ph.B. Instructor in Geology Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Ph.B., University of Rochester, ' 05; Alpha Delta Phi. 38 H. D. Gruber, E.E. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 457 Chestnut vSt., vSouth Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 09. S. R. SCHAELER, E.E. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 29 W. Fourth St., South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 09; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa. S. IvERoy Brown, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Physics A.B., Indiana University, ' 05, A.M., ' 07; Ph.D., University of CaUfornia, ' 09; Assistant Instructor Purdue University, ' os- ' oy; Member of the American Physical Society; Sigma Xi. Alfred Copeland Callen, E.M. Instructor in Mining Engineering 453 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem E.M., Lehigh, ' 09; Member American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member National Geographic Society; Member Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Tau Beta Pi; Theta Delta Chi. Chester A. Pierle, A.B. Instructor in Chemistry 505 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem A.B., DePauw University, ' 09. S. H. Inberg, C.E., M.S. Instructor in Civil Engineering C.E., University of Minnesota, ' 09; M.S., University of Illinois, ' 10. Walter L. Leighton, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in English A.B., Harvard, ' 01; A.M., Harvard, ' 02; Ph.D., University of Virginia, ' 08; In- structor in English Composition, Washington University, St. Louis, ' o5- ' o7 ; Instructor in English Literature and Composition, Ohio State University, ' 08- ' 10; Kappa Gamma Chi. J. HuxXT Wilson, B.S., S.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry ?. ' iV ( 531 Cattell St., Easton B.S., Lafayette College, ' 05; S.M., Harvard, ' 07; Ph.D., Harvard, ' 08. Charles R. Cressv, B.S. Instructor in Chemistry 505 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem B.S., Minnesota, ' 08. 39 R. H. Galt, Jr., A.B., Ph.D. Instructor in Physics A.B., Johns Hopkins, ' 07, Ph.D., ' 10; Phi Beta Kappa. Howard M. Fry, E.E. Instructor in Physics E.E., Lehigh, ' 10; Tau Beta Pi. Otto B. Niesen, M.E. Instructor in Physics M.E., Lehigh, ' 10; Tau Beta Pi. Charles H. MaGuire, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem B.S., Clarkson School of Technology, ' 10. Robert P. More, B.A. Assistant in German B.A., Lehigh, ' 10; Phi Beta Kappa. WiLUAM J. ROBBINS, B.A. Assistant in Biology B.A., Lehigh, ' 10; Phi Beta Kappa. Conference Department Director Preston A. Lambert, M.A. Mathematics, Professor Lambert Modern Languages, Professor Palmer Physics, Mr. Charles Chemistry, Mr. PierlE 40 Administrative Officers Henry Sturgis Drinker President Natt M. Emery Vice-President and Registrar R, Morris Gammere Treasurer John L. Stewart Director of Library J. F. Klein Dean Charles L, Thornbttrg Secretary of Faculty Frederick R, Ashbattgh Bursar Library- John L. Stewart Director Peter F, Statiffer Cataloguer Packer Memorial Church The Rev. Stewart U. Mitman, Ph.D. Chaplain T Edgar Shields Mtis. D. Organist 41 Graduate Students A. C. Callex, E.M. R. L. Charles, B.A. JOAOCiM G. DeAxdrade, M.E. H. M. Fry, E.E. H. D. Gruber, E.E. S. J. LocKXER, A.M. R. P. More, B.A. C. A. PlERLE, A.B. J. B. Reynold , B.A., M.A. V. J. RoBBixs, B.A. S. R. vSchealer, E.E. J. L. Smith, B.S. For Degree M.vS. 453 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem M.A. 628 Broadway, South Bethlehem C.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem M.S. 109 W. Fourth St., vSouth Bethlehem M.S. 417 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem M.S. 526 Cherokee vSt., South Bethlehem M.A. Clearview, Bethlehem M.S. 505 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem M.S. 732 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem M.A. 224 South High St., Bethlehem M.S. 29 West Fourth St., South Bethlehem E.E Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 44 TE SA S ' I [T is next to impossible to realize that four years have all but passed since the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eleven entered Lehigh as Freshmen. When we entered we looked forward to these years with antici- pation which, in some cases, was not unmixed with dread. It then seemed to us as if those four years would never end, and the coveted goal of our college course loomed, very indefinitely for some of us, in the dim distance. From a retro- spective viewpoint these last four years ha e flown, we know not where. It seems but a few short President D. R. Lowry months since we entered, we admit rather timorously, to face the then considered invincible Sophomores. Preceding historians of the class have very fittingly told how we gained overwhelming v ictories over the Sophomores in our first year, and as Sophomores in turn held the entering class in subjection throughout their first year. At the end of our Sophomore year we had, for the most part, passed off that stumbling block to all technical students — Calculus. Even those who had not done so cooperated with us in our plans for the 45 cremation of Calculus. But all our work counted for naught, for the weather was so unsettled during the entire Commencement Week that it was impossible to carry out our carefully arranged program. Somewhat diminished in numbers, we returned as upperclassmen to take up the work of our Junior year. The most important events of the year were the Junior Oratorical Contest and the Junior Promenade, both of which were up to their usual standard of excellence. After a summer of strenuous work, those of us who had survived were back again to take up the privileges as well as responsibilities of Seniors. There have been no events of extraordinary interest during the present year, and we are calmly awaiting that time so long looked forward to — Commencement Week. The record of the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eleven is one of which we can justly be proud. In all college activities, in athletics as well as in all the social events, we have very creditably shown our ability during the past three years. We all realize that we have learned infinitely more than was contained between the covers of our text-books. We have learned to know our classmates, we have had all the rough corners of our dispositions and characters worn off, and last but not least, there has been instilled in us that quality so far-reaching in its effects — true Lehigh spirit and love for our Alma Mater. We all realize that we shall leave here in June well fitted to take up our life ' s work; but no matter what success we attain, we shall never forget that our achievements have been to a very great extent due to no other factor than our beloved Alma Mater — dear old Lehigh. May we ever live to love her, live to praise her name; Live to make our lives add luster to her glorious fame! Historian. 46 Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eleven Officers Donald Randolph Lowry President John Mtisgrave Bley Vice-President Daniel Merritt Flick Treasurer Joseph Ralph Dawson Recording Secretary Robert Farmer Wood Financial Secretary George Reid Wood Athletic Representative Raymond Floyd Crump Historian Charles William Ratich Marshall 47 Members Carl Samuel Albright, J N Moses Appel Earle Aaron Ball E.E. El. Met. E.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 303 E. Main St., Middlctown, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 2337 Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 400 Juniper St., Quakertown, Pa. Edgar Foster Baumgartner, I A H M.E. 510 Seneca vSt., So. Bethlehem 600 Third Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Arcadia; Tau Beta Pi; Calculus Cremation Committee; Toast, Junior Banquet; First Honors, M.E. Course, Junior Year; M.E. Society, Secretary, ' lo- ' ii; Sophomore Lacrosse Team; Assistant Manager, Football Team, ' 09-10; Manager, Football Team, ' lo-ii; Sophomore Cotillion Club; B. U. X.; Triskaideka; Sword and Crescent. John L. Becker, 6 S C.E. 6 S House, So. Bethlehem 349 13th Ave., Newark, N . J . Editor-in-Chief, 191 1 Epitome; Assistant Editor, Brown and White, ' og- ' io; Editor-in-Chief, Brown and White, ' lo- ' ii; Assistant Manager, Track Team, ' 09- ' 10; Manager, Track Team, ' lo- ' ii; Chairman, Calculus Cremation Com- mittee, ' 09; Chairman, Hustling Committee, ' 10; Last Founder ' s Day Hop Committee, ' 09; Arcadia; Secretary and Treasurer, Tau Beta Pi; Sword and Crescent. C. E. BiLLHEiMER M.E. C. B. Bishop E.E. Alexander G. Black, A T Chem. 229 S. New St., Bethlehem 451 Chestnut vSt., So. Bethlehem 1631 N . Second St., Harrisbnrg, Pa. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Fort McKavcit, Texas. Marshall, Freshman Class; Football Team, ' o7- ' o8- ' o9. Captain, ' 10; Sopho- more Athletic Representative; Treasurer, Chemical Society, ' 09- ' 10; Arcadia; Sword and Crescent; House Committee, Drown Hall; Toast, Junior Banquet. 48 H. D. BlEILER John Musgrave Bley E.M. 502 Broadway, So. Bethlehem Frackville, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 116 Essex Ave., Narberth, Pa. Gymnasium Team, ' oS- ' og, ' og- ' io, Captain, ' lo- ' ii; Class Secretary, Sopho- more Year; Chairman, Junior Banquet Committee; Vice-President of Class, Junior Year; Vice-President, C. E. Society; Vice-President, Y. M. C. A.; Winner of L in Gym. Contest, ' 09- ' 10; Vice-President of Class, Senior Year; Tau Beta Pi. Frank S. Borden, A 6 C.E. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Tunkhannock, Pa. Arcadia; Vice-President, Sophomore Class; ' Varsity Baseball Team, ' 09, ' 10; Assistant Editor-in-Chief, 191 1 Epitome; Junior Banquet Committee; Hust- ling Committee, ' 09, ' 10; Freshman Baseball Team; Sophomore Baseball Team; Chairman, Drown Hall House Committee; Toast, Junior Banquet; Gymnasium Team, ' 08; C. E. Society; Sword and Crescent. Edison Allen Buckley, 6 A X M.E. d A X House, So. Bethlehem West field, N. J. New Jersey Club; M. E. Society; Glee Club, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Minstrel Show, ' 10; Triskaideka; Cheer Leader, ' 10; Song Leader, ' 10; B. U. X. C. R. Bully, KA Grover Butz John J. Cannon Walter C. Carson, 8 Carlos L. Cespedes C. H. Chapin Elmer M. Conover El. Met. K A Lodge, So. Bethlehem 800 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. M.E. 211 S. New St., Bethlehem Schuylkill Haven, Pa. C.E. 522 Tilghman St., Allentown, Pa. C.E. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 3153 Frankford Ave., Phila., Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Havana, Cuba C.E. 534 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 721 Humboldt St., Brooklyn, N. Y. M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Lambcrtvillc, N. J . 49 William Howard Corddrv C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Snow Hill, Md. Secretary, Tau Beta Pi, ' lo- ' ii: C. E. Society, ' oS- ' og, ' og- ' io, ' lo- ' ii; Y. M. C. A. Hand-book Committee, ' 09- ' lo; Y. M. C. A. Social Committee, ' lo- ' ii; Democratic Club, ' oS- ' og: Mandolin Club, ' oS- ' og, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; Tennis Club, ' lo- ' ii; Maryland Club, ' o8- ' o9, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; Vice-President, ' lo- ' ii; Chairman, Section A, Dormitory, ' lo- ' ii; Chairman, Dormitory Committee, ' lo- ' ii. George Corbett Craver M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 35 Stuyvesant St., Binghamton, X. ) ' . R. F. Crawford, A 1 ' Met. E. A r House, Sayre Park 5441 Black St., Pittsburg, Pa. Raymond Floyd Crump, A 7 ' A M.E. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 931 -V. Xegley Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. Tau Beta Pi; Class Historian, Senior Year; Mechanical Society, ' o8- ' o9, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; President, ' lo- ' ii; Manager of Basketball Team, ' 11; Hust- ling Committee, ' lo- ' ii; Calculus Cremation Committee, ' 09; Junior Banquet Committee; Founder ' s Day Hop Committee, ' 09; Class Historian, Sophomore Year; B. U. X.; Skull and Heart. Thomas Russell Davies, l ' (l E M.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 30 Maple St., Montrose, Pa. Tau Beta Pi; Treasurer, ' lo- ' ii; Sophomore Baseball Team; Class Lacrosse Team, ' 09- ' 10; Lacrosse Squad, ' 10; Vice-President, M. E. Society, ' lo- ' ii; Wrestling Team, ' 10; Captain, ' 11. Joseph Ralph Dawsox, (p K I El. Met. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Washington, Pa. Tau Beta Pi; Arcadia; Sword and Crescent; B U. X.; ' Varsity Track Team, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11, Captain, ' 11; Freshman Relay Team; Captain, Sophomore Relay Team; Calculus Cremation Committee; Founder ' s Day Hop Committee; Junior Banquet Committee; Class Secretary, Senior Year; Cheer Leader. Harry A. Dunstax, I (P E William E. Fairhurst M.E. E.M. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 52 Canaan St., Carbondale, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 733 E. 2jrd St., Paterson, X. J. Sophomore Class Basketball Team; Sophomore Lacrosse Team; Tennis Association; Treasurer, Mining and Geological Society, ' 09- ' 10; Junior Ora- torical Contest; Junior Prom Committee; Lacrosse Squad; President, Mining and Geological Society, ' lo- ' ii; New Jersey Club; Junior Hop Committee. 50 Robert Leroy FatzingER Raymond W. Faust A. W. Fisher, X¥ Jeremy Fisher, I D E Henry H. Fithian Daniel Merritt Flick Chem. Ch. E. C.E. E.E. E.E. Ch. E. 320 Goepp St., Bethlehem 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Belvidere, N. J • 430 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Macomb, III. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 500 Main St., Lewiston, Me- Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Bridgeton, N . J. 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Dushore, Pa. Class Treasurer, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; Prize in Sophomore English; Manager of L. U. Band, ' lo- ' ii ; Manager of L. U. Orchestra, ' lo- ' ii ; President, Chemical Society, ' lo- ' ii; Tau Beta Pi. Arthur C. Frey Fred Earley Galbraith Philip M. Ginder M.E. E.E. Ch. E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Richland Center, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 721 Fourth Ave., Williamsport, Pa. 431 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Rock port. Pa. Tau Beta Pi; Wilbur Scholarship; Williams Prize, English Composition, Sophomore Year; First Honors, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Courses, Junior Year; Treasurer, Chemical Society, ' lo- ' ii. Samuel D. Gladding George E. Goeppert Harry W. D. Goldsmith Maurice Good E.E. E.E. C.E. El. Met. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Cr is field, Md- 530 Broadway, So. Bethlehem Freeland, Pa. Catasauqua, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Havre de Grace, Md. 51 O. L. J. Graham, ATS M.E. 732 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem New Castle, Pa. ' Varsity Track Team, ' 09, ' 10; Football Squad, ' 09, ' 10; Junior Oratorical Con- test; Hustling Committee; Cheer Leader; Mechanical Engineering Society. John Haldeman Graybill, S E.E. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 801 Elmira St., Williamsport, Pa. Brcrwn and White Board, ' oy- ' ii, Assistant Editor, ' oS- ' og, Editor-in-Chief, ' o9- ' io; Class Secretary, Junior Year; Lehigh-Williamsport Club, ' o6- ' ii; Secretary, ' 07-08; Vice-President, ' o8- ' o9; Treasurer, ' lo- ' ii; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' og- ' io; Finance Committee, Drown Hall, ' og- ' io; E. E. Society; Arcadia. John Griffen, A (P Ch. E. 727 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Tau Beta Pi; Junior Prom Committee, Chairman; Sophomore Cotillion; Phi Club. Harry A. Haas M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 134 E. Broad St., Tamaqtia, Pa. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' lo- ' ii; Chairman, Y. M. C. A. Hand-book Committee, ' lo- ' ii; President, Lehigh-Hermon Club, ' lo- ' ii; Secretary, Tennis Associa- tion, ' 09- ' ! I ; M. E. Society. Carl G. Harwig, A T .Q Carl W. Hasek Columbus J. Hellen E.E. Clas. C.E. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 168 Chamber St., Phillipsburg, N . J . 517 Bishopthorpe St., So. Bethlehem 1030 Buffalo St., Franklin, Pa. 624 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 828 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore, Aid. Maryland Club; Member and Vice-President, Tennis Association. Charles W. Hendricks, (1 I K E.E. Waldemar S. Herr.mann E.E. A. A. Hesser, Jr., I E C.E. Albert K. Hohl C.E. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 142 1 Poplar St., Phila., Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 105 E. High St., Detroit, Mich. 211 S. New St., Bethlehem Pottnnlle, Pa. 524 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 2963 Salmon St., Phila., Pa- Tau Beta Pi; Basketball Squad; Lacrosse Squad, ' lo- ' ii. 52 D. HORCASITAS C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Chihuahua, Mexico George Richey Horner, 1P A (9 M.E. 510 Seneca vSt., vSo. Bethlehem 528 V. Jefferson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Gymnasium Team; University Band; Freshman Lacrosse Team; Sophomore Lacrosse Team. HiNG TsiNG Hu Saosan K. Huang C.E. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Kiashin, Chekiang, China Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Shanghai, China, A. Elws Hunt, d A X C.E. 9 A X House, So. Bethlehem 726 Scott St., Stroiidshurg, Pa. A. K. Hunt, X¥ D. H. Hunter, XW Roger W. Jannus, 0K¥ M.E. X ¥ House, So. Bethlehem 207 Third Ave., Asbury Park, N . J. E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 5850 Center Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem President, C. E. Society, ' 11; Gymnasium Team, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Devotional Committee, Y. M. C. A., ' 09; Membership Committee, Y. M. C. A., ' 10; Chair- man, Section D, Dormitory, ' 10. D. C. Keefe R. O. Keiser R. W. Kempsmith, K I M.E. M.E. M.E. 730 E. Third St., So. Bethlehem New Merchants Hotel, So. Bethlehem 508 nth St., AUoona, Pa. 239 Church St., Bethlehem 75 Broad St., Bethlehem Sophomore Baseball Team; ' Varsity Baseball Team, ' 10; Sword and Crescent. Horace D. Kerr, (9 A J A.B. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem TitusT. illc, Pa. Arts and Science Club, ' 07, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; President, ' lo- ' ii; C. E. Society, ' lo- ' i I ; Mandolin Club, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Calculus Cremation Committee; Assistant Manager, Gymnasium Team, ' oq- ' ig; Manager, ' lo- ' ii; Y. M. C. A. Social Committee. 53 J. S. KlESEL Charles Koch Thomas C. Kraemer Shelby L. Kring William Hill Lazarus, A F M.E. American House, Bethlehem 2329 Broad St., Altoona, Pa. M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 6632 Woodland Ave., West Phila., Pa. 123 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem no A ' . George St., Pottsville, Pa. 415 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 708 Highland Ave., Johnstown, Pa. C.E. A r House, Sayre Park Mt. Carmel, Pa. El. Met. M.E. Clifford Franklin Lincoln, (P F C.E. Pedro N. Lopez E.M. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 115 £. Mount Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy, Pa. 502 Broadway, So. Bethlehem Bogota, Colombia, S. A. Donald Randolph Lowry, B tf IJ M.E. B ft 11 House, So. Bethlehem 230 West Second St., Berwick, Pa. Arcadia, President; President of the Senior Class; Tau Beta Pi; Sword and Crescent; Junior Promenade Committee; Business Manager of 191 1 Epitome; June Hop Committee; Brown and White Board, ' oy- ' oS, ' o8- ' o9, ' og- ' io, ' lo- ' ii, Assistant Editor, ' og- ' io, Editor-in-Chief, ' 10; 18 Club; Chairman L. U. Athletic Committee, ' lo- ' ii; M. E. Society; Sophomore Cotillion Club, Treasurer and Executive Committee; Skull and Heart; Founder ' s Day Hop Committee, ' 07; B. U. X. Club. J. G. McCoy, KA M.E. 453 Lehigh St., So. Bethlehem W. H. McCreary L.S. 9 N. High St., Bethlehem Class Secretary, ' 09; Class Historian, ' 10; vSccretary, Arts and Science Club, ' 09; Second Prize, Oratorical Contest, ' 10. C. K. McFetridge Walter L. Merkel, .4 T .Q Elwood Meschter, I N Chem. 106 S. Madison St., Allentown, Pa. M.E. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 244 A ' . Tenth St., Reading, Pa. M.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem East Greenville, Pa. 54 C. C. MessingEr H. Lou Miller, I N W. H. MOHR E. L. Morgan Rogue G. M. Munoz Bernard Munter, Jr., IN William C. Peterman El. Met. C.E. C.E. M.E. C.E. E.E. E.E. 546 N. 7th vSt., Allcntown, Pa. I N House, So. Bethlehem 3231 Brooklyn Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Ouakertown, Pa. Prospect Ave., Bethlehem Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Honduras, Central America 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 1533 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 652 Main St., Royersford, Pa. James Cameron PoFFENBERGER, ATA C.E. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 418 Boas St., Harrisburg, Pa. Sophomore Cotillion Club; Minstrel Show Chorus, ' 08; End Man, ' 09, ' 10; Cheer Leader, ' 10; Sword and Crescent Club. John Moir Price, A T Alfred Prie.stley, 2 0E M.E. C.E. A r House, Sayre Park Leaksville, N. C. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Chicopee, Mass. Freshman Football Team; Freshman Lacrosse Team; Sophomore Football Team; Sophomore Lacrosse Team; Junior Lacrosse Team; Toast, Sophomore Banquet; Sophomore CotilHon Club; Minstrel Show, ' 09; Mustard and Cheese, ' 10; Vice-President, Lehigh-New England Club, ' og- ' io; Minstrel Show, Interlocutor, ' 10; Treasurer, Minstrel Association, ' lo- ' ii; President, Mus- tard and Cheese, ' lo- ' ii; Chairman, Song Book Committee, ' ro; Chairman, Lehigh-Haverford Smoker Committee, ' 10; Arcadia, ' lo- ' ii. Herbert T. Quin, I N Harold Edwin Ramsey M.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 122 II ' . River St., Wilkcs-Barrc, Pa. E.E. 463 Birch St., So. Bethlehem 813 Mass. Ave., N. E.. W ' ashnigloii, D. C. 55 F. E. Rasmers C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 3201 Prcsbury St., Walbrook, Baltimore, Md. Sophomore Lacrosse Team; Member, L. U. Band, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Leader, ' lo- ' i i ; L. U. Orchestra, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii. Charles W. Rauch E.M. L. R. Pfoutz Reese, 1 P E C.E. 57 Spring St., Bethlehem 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Gwynnbrook, Md. Freshman Football Team; vSophomore Football Team; Football Squad, ' 08; ' Varsity Football Team, ' 09, ' 10; Y. M. C. A. Executive Committee; Epitome Board. Louis A. Rehfuss E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1417 5. Broad St., Phila., Pa. Member, Football vSquad, ' 09, ' 10; First Prize, Junior Oratorical Contest; First Honors, Mining Engineering, Junior Year. Henry Reimers C.E. George H. Reussner C.E. Gerald vStaats Rinehart, WT C.E. Charles Lester Rittenhouse C.E. C. E. ROMINGER E.E. James Arthur Rose, A. 8 E.E. Walter G. Schall M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem New Brighton, N. Y. 706 Fiot Ave., So. Bethlehem ¥ r House, So. Bethlehem 29 Broadway, New York City Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Clinton, N. J. Moravian College, Bethlehem 2528 Ashland Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. 510 vSeneca St., So. Bethlehem 533 ir. Chestnut St., Lancaster, Pa. 312 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Minstrel Show, ' o6- ' o7 ; Freshman Lacrosse Team, ' 07 ; Sophomore Lacrosse Team, ' 08; Junior Lacrosse Team, ' 09; Sophomore Baseball Team, ' 08; Sopho- more Basketball Team, ' 08; Glee Club, ' 08- ' 09, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; Glee Club Octette, ' o9- ' io; Glee Club Quartette, ' lo- ' ii; President, Musical Association, ' lo- ' ii; M. E. Society, ' o8- ' o9, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; Treasurer, M. E. Society, ' lo- ' ii; M. E. Bowling Team, ' o9- ' io, ' lo- ' ii; University Choir, ' oS- ' og, ' og- ' io, ' lo- ' ii; Y. M. C. A. 56 Othello H. Schroedl, i ' CP CE. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 2220 E. Lombard St., Haliimorc, Md. Tau Beta Pi; Manager, Wrestling Team; Secretary, C. E. Society; President, Maryland Club; L. U. Band, ' 09- ' 10, ' lo- ' ii; Y. M. C. A. Finance Com- mittee (entered September, 1909). C. A. vSCHWARZWALUER, A ' ¥ M.E 430 Seneca vSt., vSo. Bethlehem 117 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, N. ) ' . Archibald Robert Shaw, (■) A .Y A.B. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 3 ir. 8ist St., New York City Brown and White Board; Arts and Science Club, ' 09, ' 10; Minstrel Show, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Glee Club, ' 10; Tennis Club. J. H. Sl. te M.E. Lewis W. Smith Met. E. Oliver Hobson Smith, AT Q M.E. Clayton Edward Snyder, K I E.E. Paul R. Snyder Met. E. J. A. Solomon M.E. Stanley O. Solt M.E. John A. Sosnowski CE. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 338 Campbell St., Williamsport, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1309 Scott St., Williamsport, Pa. AT Q House, So. Bethlehem 80 A ' . Hanover St., Potistown, Pa. 239 Church St., Bethlehem 236 Fisk St., Pittsburg, Pa. 21 Old York Road, Bethlehem 22 Wall St., Bethlehem 427 North St., Bethlehem 530 Broadway, So. Bethlehem Freeland, Pa. Sophomore Football Team; ' Varsity Football Squad, ' 09; C. E. Society; Lehigh-Luzerne Club; Baseball Squad, ' 10; Coach, 1913 Football Team, Sophomore Year. Hugh Gybbon Spilsbury, B d H E.M. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 23 Park Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. Albert P. Spooner, ATA Met. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 117 Locust St., Ilarrisburg, Pa. Minstrel Show, ' 08, ' 09; Brown and White Board, Assistant Business Manager, ' 09- ' 10, Associate Editor, ' lo- ' ii; Vice-President, Mining and Geological Society, ' lo- ' ii; Manager, Baseball Team, ' 11; Sophomore Cotillion Club; B. U. X.; Sword and Crescent; Arcadia. 57 Jacob Stair, Jr., X¥ E.E. 430 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 258 E. Market St., York, Pa. Brown and White Board, ' o8- ' io. Business Manager, ' lo- ' ii; Sophomore Cotillion Club; E. E. Society, Secretary ' lo- ' ii ; Gun Club. M. R. Sutherland Glee Club; C. E. vSociety; Washington-Lehigh Club. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Washington, D. C. R. F. Tarbell C.E. C. C. Thornburg C.E. Joseph H. Throm C.E. Frank F. Trotter E.M. Jos6 Ignacio Vela, I K M.E. Manuel L. Vicente C.E. Lester B. Walbridge, K I M.E. C. C. Walters Met. E. Sayre Welles, X¥ E.M. Arthur Wells M.E. Paul A. Witherspoon C.E. Leon Wittgenstein E.M. 519 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 15 Maple St., Chicopee Falls, Mass. University Park, So. Bethlehem 534 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 139 Burnham Ave., Pater son, N. J. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 625 TV. 4th St., Albuquerque, New Mexico I K House, So. Bethlehem Amhato, Ecuador, South America Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Saw Juan, Puerto Rico 239 Church St., Bethlehem 177 Rugby Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. loi N. New St., Bethlehem X ¥ House, So. Bethlehem 861 College Ave., Ehnira, N. Y. 511 Seminole St., So. Bethlehem 61 18 Baynton St., Germantown, Phila. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Mooresville, North Carolina Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 736 W. Market St., Louisville, Ky. Junior Oratorical Contest; Mining and Geological Society; Poster Prize, Mining and Geological Society. 58 George Reid Wood, (P ' A E.M. 155 South Main St., Bethlehem 700 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. ' Varsity Football Team, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Class Presi- dent, Junior Year; President, Tau Beta Pi; Sword and Crescent Club; Mem- ber, Arcadia; Class Athletic Representative, Senior Year; Treasurer, Y. M. C. A.; Mining and Geological Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Robert Farmer Wood, F A E.M. 155 South Main St., Bethlehem 700 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Sophomore Cotillion Club; Sophomore Football Team; ' Varsity Football Team, ' 10; Sword and Crescent; B. U. X.; Knights of the Christmas Tree; Arcadia; Tau Beta Pi; Athletic Representative at Large; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Class Financial Secretary, Senior Year; 191 1 Epitome Board. Robert Hall Woods Luther Chase Wright E.M C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1323 Park .Ave., Baltimore, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. Civil Engineering Society, Treasurer, ' o9- ' io; President, Y. M. C. A., ' lo- ' ii; Arcadia. 59  l . ■ SINCE the Class of 19 12 entered the life of Lehigh many impor- tant and interesting things have happened to it; and in order that the world may understand these happen- ings it is necessary that a brief summary of them be written and preserved in the archives of the University. It is the purpose of this history to rescue the daring and laudable feats of the class from oblivion and give them their merited place in the annals of the University. It was back in September of 1 90S that the class was first heard of. On a certain dark night about midnight a potent band of youthful enthusiasts could have been seen gathering on the hillside overlooking the campus. At first it seemed but a disorderly mob; but quickly their spirit began to show itself and soon the Class of 191 2 appeared as a single unit. The object of this first gather- ing was to show the ability of the class as a fighting machine. At the President W. J. Maguire. 61 given signal the whole strength of the unit was thrown against the Sopho- mores, and then started the first famous rush of the class. It is well known how creditably the class acquitted itself that night, and in that first clash may be found the keynote of the spirit it has shown ever since. Later, on Founder ' s Day, the superiority of the class in ath- letics was plainly shown and its skill in rushing was again called into play to fight a way off the field of victory. On returning to college in the Fall of 1909, there was more work to be done, as a large and powerful class had entered and had to be dealt with according to the time-honored custom. The old spirit was again called forth, and in the opening rush the strength of 19 12 was found irresistible. From then until Founder ' s Day the class was busy disciplining the Fresh- men, and in the Founder ' s Eve rush another signal victory was gained. The next day on the athletic field the class closed its underclass events, maintaining the enviable record of not having lost a single Founder ' s Day sport. On our return to college this year we were numbered among that privileged set known as upperclassmen. Our first duty was to organize the Freshmen for the rushes and give them that advice which all entering classes need. After this entertainment was over, we were free to settle down to our newly found dignity. Some of the more venturesome spirits started to look around for some means of making our class unique in the University, and it was suggested that we adopt a class hat. This was a radical idea, but it found instant favor with the class and our class cap has resulted from this action. And now as we draw near the end of the Junior year, we begin to look forward to graduation which will come in one short year, and we begin to realize, as we never did before, how much Lehigh means to us, and how many opportunities have been offered us in the past and are still being offered us. And as our Alma Mater has given us her best, may we, while in college and after graduation, do all in our power to increase her prestige and add to her fame. Historian. 62 Class of Nineteen Hundred and Twelve Officers Walter John Maguire President Earle Emmons Wright Vice-President Walter Cleveland Solly Treasurer Vere Buckingham Edwards Secretary George Maclennan Donaldson Athletic Representative William May Wilson Historian David Davies Marshall 63 Members David C. Ainey, A T .Q M.E. H, J. Althenn Chem. Eugene H. Austin E-E. J. EarIvE Bacon Ch. E. James Bailey, I E M.E. R. P. Baird, ( a (9 B.S. Ambrose Baker M.E. Charles H. Bender E.M. Harry M. Benjamin CE. A. Glenworth Birdsall E.E. Clotworthy Birnie, Jr., 6 A X E.E. Robert H. Boas, K I M.E. Chesleigh Arthur Bonine, (P A d E.M. Richard M. Bryce, I X M.E. H. A. Camp, Jr., A 9 E.M. C. D. Cann, in C.E. Royden Wersler Catanach E.E. AT Q House, So. Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. 539 Pine St., Catasauqua, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Toms River, N . J . Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 521 Grant St., Camden, N. J. I E House, Fountain Hill 15 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N . Y . 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 1522 Oliver Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 518 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 253 Walnut St., Holyoke, Mass. 715 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 95 N. Vine St., Hazleton, Pa. 316 W. Fourth St., So. B thlehem Toms River, N. J. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Taneytown, Md. 239 Church St., Bethlehem 1536 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Chicago, III. 334 East Broad St., Bethlehem 208 Darragh St., Pittsburg, Pa. A d House, So. Bethlehem Hattiesburg, Miss. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 704 W. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. 518 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Devault, Pa. 64 Thomas M. Clarke Maurice Thomas Coakley, A ' 1 ' Ernest A. Colling, X¥ Eber Waddell Cook, 6 A X Herbert L. Cooper, I (l E Henry R. Cox John R. Crellin, 6 A .Y J. Edgar Culliney, I K James Earl Cunningham, B 8 FI David Davies Frank W. Davis, Jr., ( I K Walter H. Davis George M. Donaldson, A ] Wheaton Douglass RoMEYN S. Dunn, A ' J Henry Eagle Vere Buckingham Edwards Frank Fahm Clarence J. Flayhart Horace S. Fowler CE. Hokendauqua, Pa. Ch. E. 239 Church St., Bethlehem 200 E. Coal St., Shenandoah, Pa. A.B. X¥ House, vSo. Bethlehem 144 W. 3rd St., Oil City, Pa. M.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem New Castle, Pa. CE. 518 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 312 Springfield St., Chicopee, Mass. CE. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1451 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y . E.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 65 A ' ' . Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa. M.E. I K House, So. Bethlehem Lebanon, Pa. E.M. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 506 Grove Ave., Johnstown, Pa. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 147 Gay lord Ave., Plymouth, Pa. El. Met. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Milford, Del. M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Spring City, Pa. CE. A Y House, Sayre Park Huntington, N. Y. M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Cape May Court House, N . J . CE. A ' I House, Bethlehem Scott svillc, N. Y. El. Met. 446 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 606 Walnut St., Pottstown, Pa. CE. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Glenburn, Pa. CE. 431 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Laurel, Aid. CE. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1438 A ' . Eden St., Baltimore, Md. M.E. 516 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem W ' ilkes-Parre, Pa. 65 Ci-RTis T. Franklin, ([ A Charles Wellman Francis, (? T A Raymond C. Fuller, ■) Wilson N. Gambrill Chester A. Gauss Richard Goldberg James Gore, Jr. Nevix H. Guth W. F. Hadsall William Krebs Hancock, A 7 ' A Samuel Rvland Hanger Thomas Philip Harris, ' ' V John A. Hart, . T Q Burton Hartley, X P Milton B. Hartzell Raymond J. Hauk, 6 A X John F. Herr Lyman F. Hill, Jr. Henry J. Horn James Martin Jenkins M.E. I A H House, vSo. Bethlehem 127 ]] ' all Si., Bethlehem E.M. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 342 Spruce St., Steclton, Pa. C.E., ■ House, vSo. Bethlehem Quarryvillc, N. J. E.E. 452 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Ellicoit City, Md. E.E. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem 221 5th St., S. E., Washington, D. C. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 45 11 ' . Lemon St., Lancaster, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Rcisters ' own, Baliimorc Co., Md. M.E. 527 Liberty St., Allcntown, Pa. C.E. 522 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Forty Fort, Pa. E.E. A 7 ' A House, So. Bethlehem II ir. Market St., Danville, Pa. L.S. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Florence, N . J . E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 639 W . Diamond Ave., Hazlcton, Pa. E.E. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem May field. Pa. E.M. 443 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 248 William St., East Orange, N. J. C.E. 523 Cherokee St., vSo. Bethlehem Fayefierille, Pa. B.S., Chem. Ch. E. C.E. C.E. E.M. 66 601 Delaware Ave., vSo. Beth. Lehighton, Pa. 436 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Strashurg, Lancaster Co., Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 843 Carteret Ave., Trenton, N. J. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Glen .Ave., .Arlington, Md. 119 E. Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 634 Greene St., Germantown, Pa. Daniel Thomas Jerman C.E. HjALMAR R. Jo hnson M.E. William M. Johnson E.E Alexander Kalajan C.E. Andrew M. Kennedy, B (-1 Fl C.E. Carl Daniel Kester, N E.E. Lester B. Knox, A T El. Met. Preston Albert Lambert, Jr., K A M.E. Allen V. Laub A.B. Edmund B. Lehr, P F l E.M Joseph Huber Letzer M.E. C. E. LoANE, Jr., XW M.E. Frank S. Lubrecht, B A A ' C.E. Walter John Maguire, f) A X M.E. Allen Gerard Martin, ' ] ' E.E. John Travlor Martin, I X E.M. J. L. Matamdros C.E. Frank Bernard Miller C.E. J. Willard Milnor E.E. Walter R. Moore, I E M.E. James E. Murphy M.E. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem 207 Dychman St., New ) ' ork, N. Y. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 133 A . Munroe St., Titu.srillr, Pa. 129 S. Madison St., Allcntown, Pa. F Iceland, I ' a. 323 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 14 Palmer St., Providence, R. . 326 Wyandotte St., vSo. Bethlehem 292 Madison Ave., ' oungstown, Ohio 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Spencer, N. C. A 2 House, Sayre Park, So. Beth. Christiana, Pa. 215 S. Centre St., Bethlehem 118 North St., Bethlehem 1430 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 532 N. Calhoun St., Baltimore, Md. X ¥ House, So. Bethlehem 710 West First St., Oil City, Pa. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 731 II ' . Diamond Ave., Hazleton, Pa. 251 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem ¥ r House, So. Bethlehem 261 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y . I X House, Bethlehem 909 Ave. C, San Antonio, Texas 431 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem San Jose, Costa Rica 457 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 205 E. Grove St., Scrauton, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1315 ]] ' alniit St., Williamsport. Pa. I (P E House, Fountain Hill Sussex, N . J . 520 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem White Haven, Pa. 67 Walter Irving Nevius E.E. WiLLARD Levi Newman E.E. John W. Nusbaum E.E. Henry H. Otto E.M. Raymond W. Over, I X E.E. Robert E. Palle; E.E. Raymond V. Parker M.E. J. B. Parks, I E E.E. Howard F. Perry E.E. S. Cameron Peters, Jr., K I C.E. Horace W. Porter E.E. James Bruce Price, A ' I E.E. Kenneth Mills Ravnor, A ' I E.E. Jacob Luther Reiter M.E. Edward H. Robb M.E. William Nvce Rorer E.E. Arthur P. Rutherford, 6 E.E. Ira Alferd St. John C.E. Irving Hoffman Samuels E.E. Pedro E. Sanchez C.E. Nelson S. Schmidt E.E. Andrew T. Schultz, I X E.E. C. A. Shulz M.E. 68 Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 5252 Jefferson St., Philadelphia, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Blairstown, N. J. 455 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Lehighton, Pa. 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem II St. Clements St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem Haysville, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1709 Windsor Mill Road, Baltimore, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 300 A Court St., Portsmouth, Va. 229 S. New St., So. Bethlehem 546 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Philadelphia, Pa. K I House, So. Bethlehem Middletown, Dauphin Co., Pa. 520 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem loi Waverly Place, New ' i ' ork, N. V. 239 Church St., Bethlehem Leaksville, N . C. K House, Bethlehem 139 Belmont St., Carbondale, Pa. 918 N. 5th St., Allentown, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 219 S. Ninth St., Lebanon, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 4320 Carlisle St., Phila., Pa. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem P. O. Box i2g, Harrishurg, Pa. 516 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 593 State St., Perth Amhoy, A ' . . Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 831 Linden St., Allentown, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem San Pedro Coahuila, Mexico 108 N. Ninth St., Allentown. Schwenksville, Pa. I X House, Bethlehem 52 Elm St., Morristown, N . J . 422 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Charles F. vSencenbach Warren R. Seyfried Alex. C. Shand, Jr., c ' A George J. Shurts George N. Sieger R.AYMOND C. Silvers Harold M. Smyth, F Charles Stephen Snyder Luther T. Snyder Carlos A. Soler Walter C. Solly Frederic R. Speed, B H FJ Merle Ivan Terwilliger, A 2 Basil M. Thompson, «P A 6 H. B. Tinges, A J. W. Tremlett, a r Edwin W. Trexler, ' A W. Howard Ti ' rpin, (■) E Wilbur Nicholas Van Sant, (P F A Charles T. von Konecny William Herbert Waddington, 6 E Carl E. Wagner Chester Henry Warrington, B 6 n M.E. Ch. E. C.E. E.E. El. Met. E.E. E.M. C.E. C.E. C.E. C.E. B.S., Geo. E.M. C.E. M.E. E.M. M.E. E.E. M.E. Ch. E. C.E. C.E. C.E. 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Haih, Pa. 544 Goepp St., Bethlehem 155 S. Main vSt., Bethlehem Narhcrth, Pa. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Hampton Junction, N. J. 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Slatington, Pa. 455 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 1910 Pacific Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 702 Mahantonga St., Pottsville, Pa. 524 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Kimberton, Chester Co., Pa. 452 Vine St., So. Bethlehem San Juan, Puerto Rico Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 4819 Pcnn St., Frankjord, Pa. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Catonsville, Md. A T House, Sayre Park 1207 Providence Road, Scraniou, Pa. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Buffalo, N. y. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Drown Hall, So. Bethlehem 220 Mitchell St., San .Antonio, Texas 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 1115 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. 8 E House, So. Bethlehem Link-wood, Dorchester Co., Md. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 411 Hawthorn Row, Roland Park, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Scran ton, Pa. 8 E House, So. Bethlehem 848 Ave. C, Bayonne, N. J. 456 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 409 Lincoln St., Ft. Morgan, Col. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 331 1 Sixteenth St., Washington, D. C. 69 Ralph Schaffer Wenner, ATS E.E. Ezra A. Wheatox, A F Met. Caleb Clarence Wheeler, I E CE. Frank Ignatius Wheeler, Jr. M.E. Clifford R. Whyte, I K E.M. Harold Jacob Williams M.E. Ralph Bradford Willi. ms, A T E.M. Frederic W. Wilson, d S CE. William May Wilson, A e E.E. Donald B. Wood M.E. Arthur F. Wotring E.E. Earle Emmons Wright, ATS E.M. Elmer Ellsworth Yake, F A E.M. Franklin Weems Youry, I X CE. ATS House, vSo. Bethlehem 540 A Sixth St., Allcntoun, Pa. A T House, Sayre Park Montrose, Pa. I E House, Fountain Hill Tremont, Pa. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Towson, Md. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 2503 14th St., N . V., Washington, D. C. 520 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Annville, Pa. A r House, Sayre Park 614 5. Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 4734 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 1ft House, So. Bethlehem Riverdale, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Ardmore, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Schnecksville, Pa. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 252 Main St., Bristol, Conn. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem Annville, Pa. 2 X House, Bethlehem 248 2 A . 7th St., Newark, N. J. 70 , ' co j umnmi President J. L. Clark. R lEALIZING the advantage of an early start, the class of 1 9 13 began hostilities with a rush that boded ill to the Freshmen. On opening night they assembled at the Gymnasium and forming a column of fours, descen ded to the drive in front of Packer Hall. Ahead ranged the column of Freshmen. At the firing of the gun the classes met with tremendous impact, and for five minutes the scene of conflict was a vortex of surging and rushing men, all pushing madly as often in the wrong direction as in the right. At the second gun the forces drew off to collect themselves for the next onset, which followed after a brief interval. At the beginning of the third rush, all hands realized that as the preceding two had been more or less indecisive, this one would tell the tale of victory or defeat. Nerved by the resolution to do or die, 19 13 charged into the fray with a might that could not be overcome and the Freshmen fled pell-mell, pursued by the victorious Sophomores, who made captives right and left. These, number- ing fifteen, were taken over to the Library steps, numbered, tagged and 71 filed for reference later when the paste buckets should come into use. The rest of the night was spent in putting up posters in the Bethlehems. On the next day, the formal opening exercises were held in the Chapel, before and after which the Freshmen were royally entertained by the Sophomores. The Freshmen were then marched by the Juniors down to Lehigh Field where they found their conquerors of the night before await- ing them. Many are the versions of the numbers on each side in this banner rush, but all agreed in giving 19 14 a numerical advantage of from a quarter to one-half. Borne back by the force of numbers, 19 13 lost the only rush of the year, but the speedy ejection of the Freshmen from the field was a partial compensation. From this time until Founder ' s Day nothing enlivened the tedium but banner-stringing, an art at which 19 13 showed themselves pastmasters. On Founder ' s Day Eve, 19 13 assembled in the shadow of the Chemical Laboratory and sallied forth to put up posters. After this had been successfully done the forces of the Freshmen were encountered at five o ' clock on Fountain Hill, and after a vigorous fight, thirty-three Freshmen were tied up. The next afternoon came the Founder ' s Day sports. Until the very last, the relay race seemed lost for i9i3but brilliant running at the finish turned defeat into victory. The baseball game was won by 19 14 in extra innings, and every one looked forward to the football game to decide the day, but in vain, for neither side was able to score. However, 19 13 rejoiced, for the Freshmen must win a majority of the sports to wear flannel shirts and corduroys. The class of 19 13 now lays down the tasks of properly subduing the incoming Freshmen, and hands this duty over to 19 14 with the feeling that next year they will be fully able to carry the burden of this responsibility. Historian. 72 Class of Nineteen Hundred and Thirteen Officers Joseph Louis Clarke President William James Schmidt Vice-President Edmund Quincy Treasurer Henry Lloyd Rooney Secretary Herbert Will Lamb Marshall Edward Foley Price Athletic Representative James Herbert Sheppard Historian Members O. B. AcKERLV, Jr., X¥ M.E. Edward A. Aurand, ft E C.E. F. J. Bartholomew Chem. Richard Bassett Bayard, ' T E.M. Jesse F. Beers M.E. Harold R. Blackman C.E. Alvin M. Bland M.E. Jacob Blaustein E.M. Ezra Bowex, IV, TV M.E. DoxALD Bowmax, S a X E.M. E. F. BOYER C.E. Charles P. Brixtox, A T Q C.E. Thomas A. Bryant, 0X6 B.S. Alexaxder Wilsox Butler, ' ' T E.E. Arthur S. Callex, 6 A J Chem. Ramox Camba M.E. Robert Campbell, H X C.E. L. E. Carpexter, A ' ? ' Chem. E. 430 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 146 E. J4th St., New York City 338 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 106 TI ' . Broad St., Tamaqua, Pa. Fullerton, Pa. ' ' Y House, So. Bethlehem Harrishurg, Pa. Boyer Building, So. Bethlehem Bath, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 167 11 ' . 4gth St., New York City Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Philo polls, Md. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 2312 Callow Ave., Baltimore, Md. ¥ r House, So. Bethlehem Burlington, A . 308 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Brooklyn, . Y. Boyer Building, So. Bethlehem Bowmanstown, Pa. AT Q House, So. Bethlehem Gap, Pa. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem New York Tribune Office, N. Y . City W T House, So. Bethlehem Mauch Chunk, Pa. 453 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 414 High St., Pottstown, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Guadalajara, Mexico 308 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem X T House, So. Bethlehem Newburg, N. Y . 74 LoKiNG TowNsEND CARPENTER, i ' X Chcm. E. W. K. Chun M.E. Joseph L. Clarke E.M. Willis B. Clemmitt E.M. Reginald F. ClEwell, I N M.E. Benjamin Ely Cole, WY M.E. Thomas Bell Coleman, B 6 FI B.S. John L. Conner E.E. Theodore Henry Cook, Jr., IN M.E. Jehu p. Cooper Met. A. K. CosGROVE, D f) B.S. H. P. Croft, I E C.E. John Raymond Curtis M.E. Lee S. Dilley C.E. M. D. Douglas, A M.E. Reginald Drant, S E C.E. Walter John Dugan E.E- Douglas McDonald Dunbar, B S II E.M. William Rothermal Duncan, ATA E.M. T. L. Dunn C.E. Stewart Clair DuTot, 6 A .V Chem. Robert T. Dynan E.M. August Frederick Eberly, Jr., A V El. Met. 334 Broad vSl., Bethlehem Wheeling, W . Va. 454 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Hankow, China Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Mineville, N. Y. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1015 Harlem Ave., l altimorc, Md. Moravian vScminary, Bethlehem. ¥ r House, So. Bethlehem j Market St., Bethlehem 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 58 II Wellesley Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 516 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Richmond Center, Pa. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Donaldsonville, La. 518 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Red Bank, N. J. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Hastings, Pa. 518 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 622 Federal St., Camden, N.J. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Ellicott City, Md. 918 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 115 Maple St., Phillipsburg, Pa. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Montgomery, N. Y. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Hazleton, Pa. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Valley Cottage, X. Y. A 7 ' A House, So. Bethlehem 1835 A . 27th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 323 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 1 14 Hamlet St., Fall River, Mass. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Stroudsburg, Pa. 503 W. Broad St., Bethlehem A y House, Sayre Park 1822 Biltmorc St., Washington, D. C. 75 Charles L. T. Edwards, A 1 ' Alvin Evans Daniel K. Evans, A ] ' Roy Jackson Fahl, I E Charles F. Fellencer E. E. Finn, I (p E James Henry Fogg, P f Sydney W. Ford, A ' W John M. Fritz W. C. Fry, Jr. Ira Fuhrmann Francis J. Gerhard, A (I A. Stanley Gery J. M. GoNDER, AT.Q Alan Bowen Gorman, B 8 U Joseph K. Goundie Henry R. Griffen, A c Henry vStevens Haines, 2ND, X G. E. Harris, Jr. Alexander Harrison A. K. Hegemann, A ' ' ■ George D. Herr Met. A r House, Sayre Park 213 W. Abriendo Ave., Pueblo, Colo. C.E. 514 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Hazle Brook, Pa. E.M. A r House, Sayre Park 15 W ' ashitigton St., Carbondale, Pa. M.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 437 Chambers Ave., Camden, N. J. E.M. 113 So. Madison St., Allentown M.E. 26 S. Center St., Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 525 TV. Main St., Greensburg, Pa. M.E. A ¥ House, So. Bethlehem 2513 Broadway St., San Francisco, Cal. C.E. 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 820 5. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. C.E. 520 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 118 ir. Greenwich St., Reading, Pa. C.E. 450 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Roebiing, N. J. M.E. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 165 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. Chem. Coopersburg, Pa. Chem. A T Q House, So. Bethlehem Strasburg, Pa. El. Met. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Catonsville, Md. E.M. 1426 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. E.M. 727 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem C.E. 443 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 32 11 ' . 40th St., New York City C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem no W. Fayette St., Baltimore, Md. C.E. 463 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Ardmore, Pa. E.M. 430 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 135 William St., New York City M.E. 436 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Strasburg, Pa. 76 George C. Hill Frank I. Hirshberg Augustus S. Horcasitas Andrew Douglas Jamieson, d) I K P. W. Janeway, Jr., A William D. Kelly, Jr., T A W. R. King, P I K R. N. KocHER Robert S. Krause Walter B. Krause August J. Kutzleb Herbert Will Lamb Harold Edwin Lenker, (l F A Daniel Hayden Levan, A T Q F. Hall Lewis G. B. Linderman, Jr., I (l J. Scott Long Joseph Immel Lyon Alexander Charles MacHardy, KI William E. McComas, Jr., I E E.M. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Naval Observatory, IVashington, I). C. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem igi3 Milwaukee Ave., South Milwaukee, Wis. E.M. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem 154 rd St., Chihuahua, Mexico El. Met. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Lawrenceville , N. J. E.E. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 218 Edgemont St., Media, Pa. E.M. C.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 120 Cliveden Ave., Germantown, Pa. I K House, So. Bethlehem 147 Washington Place, Passaic, N. J. A.B. 323 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Flicksville, Pa. M.E. 516 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Richmond Center, Pa. Chem. E. 436 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Lebanon, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Cor. Garrison and Bateman Aves., Baltimore, Md. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 32 Front St., .Adrian, Mich. E.M. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem Schuylkill Haven, Pa. E.M. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 505 Oley St., Reading, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Jerusalem P. ()., Maryland E.M. I House, So. Bethlehem Cymvyd, Pa. Ch. E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 20 S. Beaver St., ' ork, Pa. C.E. 468 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 344 E. Queen St., Chambersburg, Pa. E.M. 239 Church St., Bethlehem 524 Green St., Grcensburg, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1610 N . Carolina St., Baltimore, Md. 77 p. J. McMenamin George Arthur Mark Leon Thomas Mart Leslie Goddard Matthews, I X Edward Clayton Meiswlnkel, 6 A A ' Walter Biggers Menefee, F . James Watts Merci-r, Jr., I P F. C. Messenger, Jr. Charles Walter Miller George S. Mitchell, A ' W John L. Montgomery, I K Alfred E. Moore James F. More Harry W. Motter W. J. Murdock vStanley E. Mithart, .} T Q AouiLA R. Norwood, I X Alfred L. O ' Brien Alfred E. Olson C. L. Packard, .( A (l Morris K. Petty M.E. 514 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Jeddo, Pa. C.E. 440 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 711 Capitol St., Harrisburg, Pa. M.E. 315 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem H amnion ion, N. J. Ch. E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 401 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. B.S. f-) A X House, So. Bethlehem g N. 6th St., Pottsville, Pa. C.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 1129 Rivermont Ave., Lynchburg, Va. B.S., Geo. I House, So. Bethlehem Wallingford, Pa. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 31 Boston St., Walden, Mass. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. C.E. 430 vSeneca St., So. Bethlehem 803 Mo. Pac. Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. C.E. 511 vSeneca St., So. Bethlehem M.E. 31 N. Center St., Bethlehem 286 Main St., ]] ' insted, Conn. C.E. 509 Main St., Bethlehem E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 261 N. Hartley St., York, Pa. M.E. 150 S. Linden St., Bethlehem E.M. A T Q House, So. Bethlehem 1652 Min. Spr. Road, Reading, Pa. E.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 185 Park Ave., Paterson, N . J . E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 118 Franklin Ave., Chelsea, Mass. E.E. 338 Vine St., So. Bethlehem no So. Orchard St., Wallingford, Conn. C.E. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 207 A . Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 42 Creighton Ave., Crafton, Pa. 78 3I05 F. H. PUACK C.E. E. F. Price, H A A M.E. Edmund Quincv, A V C.E. Thomas John Quinn, A ' (I) B.S. Barton B. Quirk, i ' £ C.E. C. B. Rafter C.E. William Clifford Rehfuss E.M. Joseph C. Robell M.E. Henry Lloyd Rooney, ATA M.E. Hayden Kemble Rouse C.E. Harry Smith Rowland, I E B.S., Chem. Guy a. Rupp C.E. Fred W. Ryder, A Y M.E. Robert P. Sanborn, ' T E.M. J. Homer Sanford, Jr., A T E.M. Leonard B. Savastio C.E. William James Schmidt, ATA E.M. C. A. Schneider M.E. William Seguine, Jr., (P I K El. Met. Bentley S. Shafer A.B. 79 Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 901 Bennett Place, Baltimore, Md. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Danville, Pa. A r House, Sayre Park 90 West St., New ' ' ork City 443 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 624 Main St., Johnstown, Pa. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Hathoro, Montgomery Co., Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem i6th St., N. ]] ' ., Washington, D. C. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1417 So. Broad St., Phila., Pa. 421 E. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Hazle Brook, Pa. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 7 Mt. Vernon St., Newport, R. I. 505 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Newton, N. J. I E House, So. Bethlehem Schuylkill Haven, Pa. 109 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Alec ha nicsburg. Pa . A ] ' House, Sa Te Park 65 Wright St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. ¥ V House, So. Bethlehem 39 Fisher ' s Lane, Gcrmantown, Pa. A Y House, Sayre Park Carnegie, Pa. 514 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Waltonville, Pa. ATA House, So. Bethlehem Newport, R. I. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Trenton, N. J . I K House, So. Bethlehem Rosebank, N. Y. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. M. Maurice Shaw James Herbert Sheppard, B H 11 Alfred U. Siegel LEROY J. E. SiXDEL, f E David Rahm vSmith Fletcher B. Speed, Jr., B 8 fl B. H. Spencer Atox Mac Stewart, I N Joseph P. Stokes Carll R. Streets, 6 £ David Thomas, Jr. Walter Waltox Thompsox, I X Herbert W. Tice Alberto Trujillo Colli xs Wallace Vax Nort J. P. Walker, (l A ff DoxALD F. Wallace, A ' ( R. M. Watrous, a T Q Robert C. Watsox, W T Chandler Weaver, -Y Earle F. Weaver M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Newtown, Pa. M.E. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 99 Morris Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. E.M. 450 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 630 E. 1st South St., Salt Lake City, Utah M.E. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 1 101 X. nth St., Reading, Pa. E.E. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Towanda, Pa. E.M. 326 Wyandotte St., vSo. Bethlehem Catonsville, Md. M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Grartville Summit, Pa. B.S. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Lansford, Pa. E.M. 219 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem A.B., C.E. e E House, So. Bethlehem 205 E. Commerce St., Bridgeton, N . J . M.E. 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Burnham, Pa. E.E. I X House, Bethlehem 2200 .V. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Trexlertown, Pa. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Bolondrou Matanzas, Cuba C.E. 468 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 410 Colfax Ave., Scranton, Pa. B.S., Geo. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem E.M. X D House, So. Bethlehem 31 Chestnut St., East Orange, N . J . E.M. 26 S. Center St., Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. M.E. ¥ T House, So. Bethlehem 3301 i6th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. E.E. 443 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Foxchase, Philadelphia, Pa. E.E. 116 W. Broad vSt., Bethlehem 80 Robert P. Weil E.M. 128 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem A. K. White, J (? £ Sidney David Williams Chem. Chem. E. Edward C. Wilson, A J E.E. Frederick W. Wright, Jr., (p F A E.M. Charles Robert Wiley, Jr., A ' A E-M. 438 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Chicopee, Mass. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem 885 N. Holly St., Phila., Pa. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem St. Paul, Minn. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem Bonnie Blink, Cockey smile, Md. Kappa Alpha Lodge, So., Bethlehem 558 High St., Pottstown, Pa. m mm 81 11 TTID a grove of spreading chest- ■••Vl nuts on a starlight night, September 21, 19 10, we met and were formally introduced to the classic walls of dear old Lehigh, and our friendly foes the Sophomores. From far and near the men, who were to enter Lehigh as Fresh- men the next day, were rounded up at about 1 1 p.m. in Sayre Park by the friendly Juniors. There we stood in the coolness of the night, with our hearts in our mouths waiting for the stroke of twelve, when we should meet the Sophomores and try to force them down the embankment, from the carriage-way below Packer Hall. On the stroke of twelve in the language of the melo-dramatist, we marched down the hill, six abreast, singing, The Gang ' s All Here and, at the crack of the pistol, we met the Sophomores. In the three rushes, neither side was able to claim victory. President H. R. Shellenberger. 83 After the third rush we all ran back to a rendezvous, where the Juniors met and divided us into squads in order to see that the Sophomore posters would be well taken care of. When six o ' clock came the next morning, there were few posters to be seen in the Bethlehems and not a single one on the Athletic field. Probably the most interesting event of the night was the scrap in front of the dormitories when about thirty Sophomores and Freshmen engaged in a bout. It lasted for half an hour and when it was over both sides were much fatigued. In the banner rush we scored a decisive victory. It was a great fight and when the five minutes were up, we had forced the Sophomores some distance back of their line and the bunting was ours. After the rush we made a speedy exit, although not as speedy as the Sopho- mores endeavored to make it. After the opening of college there were few Freshmen to be seen on the streets after dark, because the Sophomores had decided that it was unhealthy before Founder ' s Day, for us to be out late at night. If any Freshman was caught, the Sophomores gave him a bitter pill to swallow and it was said to be a sure cure. On the eve of Founder ' s Day the Freshmen were again corralled by the Juniors and the different poster squads outlined their routes. While almost every squad was captured and tied up by the Sophomores, a number of posters are still staring the Sophomores in the face, especially on Foun- tain Hill. In the Founder ' s Day sports we had decidedly the better of the argu- ment, even tho.ugh the sports ended in a tie. We won the baseball game by a large score and though the football game ended in a o-o score, we had the ball in the Sophomores ' territory the greater part of the game. We lost the track event by a close margin, being in the lead until the last lap. Although we have not been able to do much in the furthering of Lehigh ' s interests, because of the short time we have been at Lehigh, you had better watch us grow and develop. We hope to help keep up the pace which other classes before us have made. May our class ever be an honor to its Alma Mater! Historian. 84 Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen Officers Henry R. Shellenbergcr President Eckley B, Coxe Goyne Vice-Presiden t Frederick Percival Houghton Secretary Charles William Pettigrew Treasurer Clarence Reinoehl Wagner Historian 85 Members F. R. Abbott, XT B.S. Alvin Levis Ambler Ch. E. SiMox Harry Ash, (9 A .Y E.M. LeRov R. Atkins CE. Daniel S. Aungst E.E. Levis C. Babcock, Jr., A ft El. Met. Clifford Burton Backes, A ' I M.E. William F. Bailey CE. Donald G. Baird, ' 11 ' B.A. Russell L Baker B.S., Chem Howard Benton Baldwin, I E E.E. Milton Baldwin Bates, Jr., A T B.S. John Z. Bayless, B S U M.E. William Graham Bell, Jr., A CE. Fred Bianco, h A X E.M. Creighton D. Bicklev, I X M.E. A W Lodge, So. Bethlehem 3609 Broadway, New ' ork City 219 E. Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Drumore, Pa. 6 A -V House, So. Bethlehem Roslyn, ] ' ashington 517 Cherokee vSt., So. Bethlehem 2 12 5. Ninth St., Lebanon, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Landisville, Pa. 87 E. Broad St., Bethlehem 239 Church St., Bethlehem 199 5. XIain St., W ' allingford, Conn. 338 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 77 Boulevard, Summit, N . J . ¥ T House, So. Bethlehem Beverly, N. J. 31 N. Center St., Bethlehem 108 E. Market St., Lewistown, Pa. 446 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 143 Chicopee St., Chicopee, XI ass. A r House, Sayre Park Coraopolis, Pa. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 2221 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Aid. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem New Bethlehem, Pa. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Cor. Dakota and ist Sts., Roslyn, Wash. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 162 A ' . Seventh St., Newark, N. J . 86 Frederick William Binzen, Jr., .V P E.M. Albert S. Blank, AT Q C.E. Ira J. Bleiler M.E. BrcE Bowman C.E. Loris H. Bover C.E. A. M. Brady C.E. W. Roger Browne, (■) A X C.E. Harold L. Burdick E.M. Stephen W. Burns C.E. Glenn M. Cameron, M M.E. E. C. Castellanos C.E. Percival Roger Charnock C.E. John Charles Chaffe, KA M.E. Edward W. Chandler, P 1 H E.E. Chimin Chu-Fuh C.E. Owen B. Church E.E. Barnes Compton, I ME. Alfred Clapp Cooper, 1 ' E Met. Harold D. Crammer C.E. John Russel Banner E.E. Howard E. Degler M.E. 443 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem i ' arringto 2 Place, East Orange, X. J. 380 Linden St., Allcntown 38 N. Twelfth St., Allcntown 35 S. New St., Bethlehem 823 A ' . 6ih St., Allcntown, Pa. 736 Broadway, So. Bcthlehemi Crcssona, Pa. 118 E. Fourth St., So. Bethlehem 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 521 ir. iiith St., New York City Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 825 Qujncy St., Scran ton. Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 140 Latrobe St., Grafton, W. Va. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Houtzdalc, Pa. 517 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Havana, Cuba Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 101 Lainc Are., Punxsutawncy, Pa. K .i Lodge, So. Bethlehem 133 11 • Jersey St., Elizabeth, N. J. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Harriman, Tenn. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Washington, D. C. 450 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Oxford, N. y. 1 House, So. Bethlehem 219 Woodlawn Road, Baltimore, Aid. 446 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 312 Springfield St., Chicopcc, Mass. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 450 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Siegfried, Pa . 450 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Womelsdorf, Pa. 87 John H. Diefenderfer Clas. J. P. Dobbins, IN M.E. J. WiLLCox Donaldson, A C.E. Thomas Watson Downs, P A El. Met. Frank Edgar Driscoll, S N M.E. J. B. Edwards M.E. Stephen Elliot, ' ' F C.E. Franz Josef Emmerich, B 9 U B.S. Wylie Ewing, ¥r E.E. Harry C. Faust, IN E.M. Theodore B. Fitz Simons, AT Q M.E. G. P. Flick E.E. George Forster E.E. Irving Frank C.E. Mariano Galainena M.E. Robert Rankin Galloway B.S. F. Talbott Gatch C.E. J. vSwARTZ Gemmel E.E. R. H. Gifford C.E . Robert A. Gift M.E. E. B. C. GOYNE M.E. Herbert Graham E.E. 88 438 Goepp St., Bethlehem 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 132 IF. State St., Trenton, N. J. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem jrd and Conestoga Sts., Steelton, Pa. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Somerville, N . J . 1409K Turn St., AUentown ¥T House, So. Bethlehem 60 A ' . Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 201 A ' . Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa. W ) ' House, So. Bethlehem ]] heeling, 11 . la. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 1000 N. Shamokin St., Shamokin, Pa. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Adams Run, South Carolina Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Tarentum, Pa. 123 Church St., Bethlehem 2631 Fillmore St., Bridgcshurg, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 126 E. Clay St., Lancaster, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Agramontc 52, Guanajay, Cuba Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Takoma Park, D. C. 467 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Raspehurg, Md. 410 Walnut St., Catasauqua, Pa. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 5209 Ridge Ave., Phillipshurg, Pa. 37 S. Eleventh St., AUentown 532 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Chester, Va. 425 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 633 Linden Ave., Johnstown. Pa. Harvey Conrad GRirinTii, ( . ' A Seymour Hadaway, ¥ F A. R. Hagner, Jr. John Law Harkness Frederick Twining Harris Carl Hartdegen, Jr., I X Thomas Weston Hearne, K A Lewis Edwards Hersh, I X William M. HettlEr Cameron Hoffman Raymond C. Hohl James Thomas Horn, ¥ r Percy ' F. Houghton, A T William E. Howard, ATA Emory Williams Hukill, B 6 U Amos W. Huyett, A T Q Walter G. Iles Verne H. Jackson Henry D. Jay, A r Theodore Tyler Johnson, A ' ( A.B. 425 Chestnut vSt., vSo. Bethlehem 431 First St., Conemaugh, I ' d. CE. ' ' ■ House, .So. Bethlehem 276 Spri igdalc Ave., East Orange, N . J . B.S. 509 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 231 Prospect St., Hagerstown, Pa. M.E. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem 109 William St., Piflsloii, Pa. B.S. 453 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Susquehanna, Pa. CE. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 362 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J . E.M. K A Lodge, So. Bethlehem Wayne, Pa. Ch. E. 34 S. Sixteenth St., Allentown CE. 417 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 5456 Norfolk St., Phila., Pa. CE. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Park Heights, Arlington, Md. CE. 524 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 2963 Salmon St., Phila., Pa. M.E. ¥r House, So. Bethlehem Catasauqua, Pa. B.A. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Jcrmyn, Pa. CE. 450 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Park Place, Chester, Pa. CE. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Middle town, Del. E.M. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 727 A ' . Fourth St., Reading, Pa. E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Hazleton, Pa. E.E. 109 W. Fourth St., So. Bethlehem Pen Argyl, Pa. M.E. A r House, Sayre Park 817 iV. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Ch. E. 443 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 525 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth, N . J . 89 Dudley Jordan, S E David J. Joseph William Herman Katfmann William Haves Kelchner, A ' J K. Thurman Kent Joseph Fielding Kerbaugh, A ' A Walton Barr Killough Sam. Young Knight, A ' A John D. Krause, I A Henry D. Kurtz, Jr., TV L. L. Laco.mbe, H Z Robert Auguste Laedlein, A J A Charles E. Lawall, Jr. Verner T. Lawshe, I X Lucian McCutchen Lesesne, a T !2 Lee C. Leslie, H I Grover C. Lesser George Lewis John Orth Liebig Donald S. Light, (P I K Ch. E. E.M. M.E. C.E. Clas. M.E. E.E. C.E. El. Met. A.B. E.E. E.E. E.M. C.E. B.S. E.E. E.M. Ch. E. Met. B.S. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 321 Mortormer Ave., Rutherford, N. J. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 315 Lehigh St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 29 West Fourth St., So. Bethlehem 1018 Elm St., Reading, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 19 West 8 1 St St., Xeu ' York City Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 738 Brock St., Ashland, Pa. K A Lodge, So. Bethlehem Hryn Mawr, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 468 Monroe Are., Elizabe ' Ji, X. J. A A Lodge, So. Bethlehem 1938 Calvert St., Washington, D. C. I K House, .So. Bethlehem 723 Chestnut St., Lebanon, Pa. T } ' House, So. Bethlehem 448 School Lane, Germaniown, Pa. S E House, So. Bethlehem 633 S. 49th St., Phila., Pa. A r A House, So. Bethlehem 1023 ] ' est 4th St., Williamsport, Pa. Catasauqua, Pa. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 365 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N . J . 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem II Gibbes St., Charleston, S. C. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 51 Avenida Paulista, Sao Paula, Brazil 757 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Upper Lehigh, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 54 Eye St., Washington, D. C. 427 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 505 C. St., Sparrows Point, Md. (p I K House, So. Bethlehem Lebanon, Pa. 90 A. Lopez Hector Lopez, I J ' A ' P. F. McFadden John J. McNamara William C. Mayer, - I Henry H. Mayers Miles Henderson Merwin, I Robert E. Mickel C. B. Miller John Hamilton Morse, F A Caleb Temple Murphy, A $ Lewis J. Musser George P. Nachman Russell M. Neff George Fred Nordenholt William S. O ' Gorman, A 7 ' A J. Lawrence Orr William J. Orr, I E Gerald M. Overfield Wilfred C. Owen, I X Richard Peale E.M. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem II Broadway, New York City C.E. 526 vSeneca St., So. Bethlehem 4 Stone St., Sew ) ' ork City Chem. 608 Front St., Allcntown B.S. 421 Linden St., vSo. Bethlehem M.E. - House, So. Bethlehem 189 Montague St., Brook yn, N. i . B.S., Chem. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 806 A ' . Third St., Reading, Pa. El. Met. i House, So. Bethlehem 6328 Howe St., Pittsburg, Pa. E.M. 532 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Wildwood, N. J. E.M. 457 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 205 E. Grove St., Scranton, Pa. A.B. 419 Cherokee St., vSo. Bethlehem Troy, Pa. E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Charlestown, V . Va. M.E. 31 N. Center St., Bethlehem 202 S. Main St., Yeagertown, Pa. M.E. 518 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 2044 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md. M.E. 414 N. Ninth St., AUentown M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Stapleion, N. Y. E.M. A 7 ' A House, So. Bethlehem 215 Doyle Ave., Providence, R. I. C.E. 926 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 761 Prospect Ave., Buffalo, N. Y . Chem. 446 Pawnee Street, So. Bethlehem Cliicopee, Mass. C.E. 631 N. Main St., Bethlehem M.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 914 -V. (hangc St., Shamokin, Pa. E.M. 523 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem St. Benedict, Pa. 91 C. F. Pexximax, a (P David McKelvv Peterson, I W E Charles W. Pettigrew, 6 A A ' Stanley Gordon Prickett William Edward Pritchard Raymond Protzeller David H. Rees Charles Preston Richmond Alfred N. Rosenbaum Adolfo R. Sanchez Percy Sanderson, X John J. Santry, A ' I Samuel H. Sauber E. E. Saunders, X W Joseph J. vScatko George Schlager F. D. Schreiber, -V I Walter A. Schrempel Thomas G. Shaffer Henry R. Shellenberger, I .V Carl Edward Siebecker, A T William Howard Skinner, B 8 II M.E. Leonard Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. CE. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Honesdalc, Pa. CE. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 165 Madison Ave., New York City E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 900 Franklin St., Wilmington, Del. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Bramwell, W. Va. E.M. 122 1 Third St., N. Catasauqua, Pa. B.A. 152 North St., Bethlehem E.M. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem Bethel, Conn. E.M. 407 Northampton St., Easton, Pa. B.S., Chem. 221 East Packer Ave., So. Beth. Camaguey, Cuba B.A. 320 Market St., Bethlehem M.E. 239 Church St., Bethlehem New Brighton, N. V. B.A. 419 N. Second St., AUentown CE. X W Lodge, So. Bethlehem Westfield, N. J. M.E. 517 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 15 Highhy Ave., New Hartford, N. Y. CE. So. Bethlehem 848 Quincy Ave., Scranton, Pa. B.S. X House, So. Bethlehem Ocala, F lorida CE. 470 Birch St., So. Bethlehem M.E. 426 Walnut St., So. Bethlehem 214 Second St., Pittsfield, Mass. Ch. E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Middlctown , Pa . CE. A r House, Sayre Park 720 Clay Ave., Scranton, Pa. E.E. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Mt. Washington, Md. 92 Edward B. Snyder, A 7 ' A Harold Burton Staab, ft E R. W. Stem Hugh S. Sterling, (P A 6 William H. Sterner M. W. Sterns Harvey Louis Street, 2ND, WT Morton Sultzer Victor Francis Swenson L. Thornburg William Booth Todd, ATA H. V. Treglown, a T L. F. TURNBULL Karl G. Van Sickle, A ' I C. R. Wagner Hung Chueh Wang James D. Warlick George_Hunt Weber, WT Peter Joseph White Campbell Riley Williams, I John S. Williamson E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Hazleton, Pa. C.E. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 302 Elm St., Northampton, Mass. M.E. Fourth and Broad Sts., Bethlehem B.S. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 57 Prospect Ave., Ingram, Pa. M.E. 450 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Richland Center, Pa. E.E. Sun Inn, Bethlehem El. Met. ' f T House, So. Bethlehem 89 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, N . Y . E.E. Taylor Hall, vSo. Bethlehem 415 E. Eajayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. B.S. 453 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 430 Grand St., Susquehanna , Pa. C.E. Lehigh University Park E.E. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 610 Park Ave., Williams port. Pa. E.M. A r House, Sayre Park 723 Prudcntiul Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y. E.E. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Mt. Royal Apartments, Baltimore, Md. M.E. 239 Church St., Bethlehem Olyphant, Pa. B.A. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 532 N . Tenth St., Lebanon, Pa. E.E. 454 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Tientsin, China M.E. 452 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Reepsville, N . C. E.E. WT House, So. Bethlehem 1735 St., Washington, D. C. E.E. 536 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 227 Market St., Johnstown, Pa. C.E. i I House, So. Bethlehem 1675 31st St., Washington, D. C. E.E. 323 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 2638 E. Baltitnore St., Baltimore, Md. 93 J. Robert Wiss, T M.E. Ralph Woelfel C.E. George F. Wolfe C.E. M. Walter Young, Jr., K A C.E. Carl D. Zimmerman, A T E.E. 155 South Main vSt., Bethlehem 171 Fairmount Ave., Newark, . J. 757 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Freeland, Pa. 323 W. Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Youngwood, Pa. K A Lodge, So. Bethlehem Overbrook, Pa. A T House, Sayre Park 123 Norwood Ave., Buffalo, N. i ' .  -x 94 special Students For Degree John Blair Met. E. Samuel Croll, Jr. Special Nelson M. Downs, (P 7 ' A El. Met. L. Roy Eltingham i B.A. Nelson J. Ewing, ' IT M.E. Albert E. Greanoff B.A. A. R. Hartzell, (P K I Spc. Chem, H. A. S. HOWARTH M.E. Carl W. Mitman E.M. J. E. Platt Special Donald F. Schumann B.A. Lewis B. Sheen B.A. James H. Smith, Jr., A ' I E.M. Alfred J. Standing, B f) II E.E. Christian J. Umble E.E. William H. Wolfe B.A. Ting S. Yeh E.E. E. D. WUNDER E.E. 6,3 North St., Bethlehem C Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Weatherly, Pa. 155 So. Main St., Bethlehem Third and Conestoga Sis., Steelton, Pa. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Ashland, Pa. ¥ T House, So. Bethlehem Wheeling, 11 ' . I ' a. 322 West Broad St., Bethlehem 130 N. Ninth vSt., Allentown 138 South New St., Bethlehem 907 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Drown Hall, So. Bethlehem 517 Halts Ave., Norrislown, I- ' a. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 99 Central Ave., Montclair, N . J . Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem South Montrose, Pa. 239 Church St., Bethlehem 114 West Ave., Mt. Carmcl, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Carlisle, Pa. 459 New St., So. Bethlehem R.F.D. No. 5, Lancaster, Pa. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem Camba, Pa. 454 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem China 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Woodstock, Va. 95 =3 -7 LTC The Greek Letter Fraternities Represented at Lehigh University In the Order of Their Establishment Fraternity Chi Phi . Alpha Tau Omega Delta Phi Psi Upsilon Theta Delta Chi Delta Upsilon Sigma Nu Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Phi Phi Delta Theta Sigma Chi Delta Tau Delta Beta Theta Pi Kappa Alpha Chi Psi Kappa Sigma Phi Sigma Kappa Theta Xi Sigma Phi Epsilon Date of Establishment Chapter at Lehigh Psi ... . 1872 Alpha Rho . 1882 Nu 1884 Eta 1884 Nu Deuteron 1884 Lehigh 1885 Pi 1885 Beta Chi 1886 Pennsylvania Alpha 1887 Pennsylvania Eta 1887 Alpha Rho . 1888 Beta Lambda 1888 Beta Chi 1890 Pennsylvania Alpha 1894 Alpha Beta Delta 1894 Beta Iota 1900 Nu . . . . 1901 Eta .... 1904 Pennsylvania Eps lon . 1907 98 w K X rV Chi Phi 1 Psi Chapter Cor. Third and Wyandotte Streets, South Bethlehem George Rodney Booth AuBERT Brodhead Resident Members Charles Minor Dodson Rev. B. F. Sanderson Active Members Burton Hartley Donald Franklin Wallace Henry Stevens Haines, 2Nd. Chandler Weaver Thomas John Quinn Percy Sanderson Theodore Tyler Johnson, Jr. F. William Binzen, Jr. Chi Phi Continued Roll of Active Chapters Alpha University of Virginia Beta Alassachiisctts Institute of Technology Gamma Emory College Delta Rutgers College Epsilon Hampden-Sidney College Zeta Franklin and Marshall College Eta . University of Georgia Theta Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Iota Ohio State University Lambda University of California Mu . Stevens Institute Nu . University of Texas Xi . Cornell University Omicron Sheffield Scientific School Rho Lafayette College Phi . Amherst College Chi . Dartmouth College Psi . Lehigh University Omega Georgia Institute of Technology iQiM Alpha Tau Omega Pennsylvania Alpha Rho Founded 1882 338 Wyandotte Street, South Bethlehem In Faculty Howard Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. Resident Members M. L. Horn, A I Dr. R. J. Yost, A I F. N. Fritch, a I Dr. E. S. Mantz, A I H. J- Fritch, a I R. M. Wolfe, AP F. J. Perley, AP Active Members I9II Walter L. Merkle ( Carl G. Harwig ( Earle E. Wright David C. Ainey Stanley E. Muthart Joseph M. Gonder I9I2 I9I3 H. M. Fry, E.E. L. L. Bentley, B Malcolm Metzger, A I W. C. Dietrich, A P Oliver H. Smith Oscar L. J. Graham Ralph S. Wenner John A. Hart Charles P. Brinton Roswell M. Watrous Daniel H. Levan I9I4 LUCIAN M. Lesesne Amos W. Huvett Theodore B. Fitz Simons Albert S. Blank Roll of Active Chapters Beta Delta Xi . Pi . Omega Alpha Beta Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta . Tau Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Mlt Alpha Nu Washington and Lee University University of Virginia Trinity College, North Carolina Tennessee University University of the South University of Georgia University of North Carolina Alabama Polytechnic Institute Mercer University University of Pennsylvania Emory College Muhlenberg College Colu m bia U n ive rs ity A dria n College Mt. Union College 105 , ' % i 0 1 ... llgll jftMl «.J K t$ .||4 Alpha Tau Omega Continued Altha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Tau . Alpha Upsilon Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Beta Alpha . Beta Beta . Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Epsilon Beta Zeta . Beta Eta Beta Theta Beta Kappa Beta Iota Beta Lambda Beta Mu Beta Xi Beta Omicron Beta Pi Beta Upsilon Beta Omega Beta Tau Gamma Alpha Gamma Beta Gamma Gamma Gamma Delta Gamma Zeta Gamma Theta Gamma Eta . Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Xi Gamma Omicron Gamma Rho . Gamma Pi Gamma Tau . Gamma Upsilon Gamma Phi . Si. Lawrence Vniversity Washington and Jefferson College Lehigh I ' niversity Southwesiern Presbyterian Vniversity Pennsylvania College Wittenberg College University of Florida Simpson College Southern I ' niversity Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Alabama Tulane University University of Vermont Ohio Wesleyan University Cornell I ' niversity Hillsdale College Georgia School of Technology University of Michigan University of Wooster Charleston College Albion College Vanderbilt College University of Maine Ohio State i ' niversity Southwestern Baptist University Colby University Tufts College Rose Polytechnic Ins ' J ' .utc Brown University University of Illinois University of Nebraska University of Texas University of California Western Reserve University University of Colorado University of Kansas University of Minnesota University of Chicago Purdue I ' niversity University of Missouri University of Washington University of Wisconsin Iowa State College University of ihegon 107 Delta Phi Nu Chapter Founded 1884 Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem In Urbe Alan Craig Dodson In Universitate John Griffen H. B. Tinges Francis J. Gerhard Henry R. Griffen Morris D. Douglas Price W. Janeway J. W. Donaldson C. F. Penniman 1 08 Delta Phi Conti Ro II of Active Chapters Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Eta Lambda Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho Union College Brown University New ) ork I ' niversitv Columbia College Ru gers College Universi y of Pennsylvania Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Lehigh University Johns Hopkins University Sheljield Scientific School Cornell University Universi y of Virginia .►- r ► ,. ► . i .- I I in Eta Chapter -t Psi Upsilon Founded 1884 Broadhead and University Avenues, South Bethlehem In Facultate Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., M.A., H William Esty, LL.B., A.M., A Charles Shattuck Fox, A.B., LL.B., A.M., Ph.D., r In Urbe The Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, A.M., D.D., Z Robert Sayre Taylor, B.S., H Harvey Pettibone Barnard, H In Universitate Nelson James Ewing Gerald Staats Rinehart Allen Gerard Martin Richard Bassett Bayard Robert Clement Watson Ezra Bowen, 4TH Robert Pierce Sanborn Alexander Wilson Butler Benjamin Ely Cole Thomas Philip Harris Donald Galbraith Baird Stephen Elliot WvLiE Barker Ewing Seymour Hadaway J. ' MEs Thomas Horn Henry Keller Kurtz, Jr. Harvey Louis Street, 2ND George Hunt Weber 5 Psi Upsilon Contintjed Roll of Active Chapters ' Theta Union College Delta New York University Beta ' Sale University Sigma Brown University Gamma Amherst College Zeta Dartmouth College Lambda Columbia University Kappa Bowdoin College Psi Hamilton College Xi . Wesleyan University r Upsilon University of Rochester Iota Kenyan College Phi . University of Michigan Pi . Syracuse University Chi . Cornell University Beta Bet i Trinity College Eta Lehigh University Tau University of Pennsylvania Mu . University of Minnesota Rho University of Wisconsin Omega University of Chicago Epsilon . University of California , Omicron . .University of Illinois ii6 ' F.T.T.rnT ' r P rrTj Theta Delta Chi Nu Deuteron Charge Founded 1884 6oi Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem In Facoltate William B. Schober, Ph.D., A ' A Harry W. Ulmann, Ph.D., A ' A Eugene G. Grace, A ' A T. George Lehman, A ' A Harry T. Morris, A ' A Charles E. Pettinos, I B. I. Drake, A ' A Philip M. Palmer, A.B., H A. Copeland Callen, E.M., A A In Urbe Archibald Johnson, iVA Horace A. Luckenbach, .VA Frank T. Meyers, A A Paul J. Luckenbach, A ' A Andrew J. Farabaugh, A ' A In Universitate 1911 Edison A. Buckley Archibald R. Shaw Eber W. Cook Raymond J. Hauk Walter J. Maguire Robert Campbell Edward F. Price Arthur S. Callen Charles W. Pettigrew Simon H. Ash I9I2 I9I3 Horace D. Kerr A. Ellis Hunt John R. Crellin Clotworthy Birnie, Jr. Frank S. Lubrecht S. Clair DuTot E. Clayton Meiswinkle Edward C. Wilson Donald Bowman I9I4 Frederick Bianco W. Roger Brown 119 Theta Delta Chi Continued Roll of Active Charges Beta . Cornell University 1870 Gamma Deuteron University of Michigan 1889 Delta Deuteron University of California 1900 Epsilon College of William and Mary 1853 Zeta . Brown University 1853 Zeta Deuteron . McGill University . ■ . 1 90 1 Eta . Bowdoin College .... 1854 Eta Deuteron . Leland Stanford, Jr., University . 1903 Theta Deuteron Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1906 Iota Harvard University 1856 Iota Deuteron . Williams College 1 89 1 Kappa Tufts College 1856 Lambda Boston University 1877 Mu Deuteron Amherst College . 1885 Nu Deuteron Lehigh University 1884 Xi . . . Hobart College 1857 Omicron Deuteron Dartmouth College 1869 Pi Deuteron College of the City of New ) ork . 1 88 1 Rho Deuteron . Columbia University 1883 Sigma Deuteron University of Wisconsin 1895 Tau Deuteron . University of Minnesota 1892 Phi Lafayette College 1867 Chi . University of Rochester 1867 Chi Deuteron George Washington Universit V . 1896 Psi . Hamilton College . 1868 Kappa Deuteron University of Illinois . 1908 Nu . . . University of Virginia 1 857 -1 Delta Upsilon University Park, South Bethlehem In the Faculty Robert W. Blake, A.M., N. Y. Frank R. Ingalsbe, M.S., My Resident Members Joseph W. Adams Robert M. Luckenbach Sinclair W. Childs Undergraduate Members 1911 Robert Fulton Crawford Alexander Gordon Black John Hall Dillon William Hill Lazarus John Moir Price I9I2 Lester Bunn Knox George Maclennan Donaldson Ralph Bradford Williams Merle Ivan Terwilliger Ezra Almon Wheaton James White Tremlett I9I3 August Frederick Eberlv Daniel Kinsinan Evans Edmund Quincv Charles Lewis Taylor Edwards Milton Baldwin Bates, Jr. Jesse Homer Sanford, Jr. Frederick William Ryder I9I4 Frederick Percival Houghton Carl Edward Siebecker Henry Davis Jay Harry V. TrEglown Carl D. Zimmerman 125 Delta Upsilon Roll of Active Chapters Williams Union Hamilton Amherst Western Reserv Colby Rochester . MiDDLEBURY Rutgers Brown Colgate New York . Miami Cornell Marietta Syracuse Michigan Northwestern Harvard Wisconsin . Lafayette . Columbia Lehigh Tufts DePauw Pennsylvania Minnesota . Massachusetts BOWDOIN Swarthmore Leland Stanford California McGiLL Nebraska Toronto Chicago Illinois Ohio State Washington Williams College Union College Hamilton College Amherst College . Western Reserve University Colby University Rochester University Middlebury College Rutgers College Brown University Colgate University New York University . Miami University Cornell University Marietta College . Syracuse University University of Michigan Northwestern University Harvard University University of Wisconsin Lafayette College Columbia University Lehigh University Tufts College DePauw University University of Pennsylvania University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bowdoin College . Swarthmore College Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of California McGill University University of Nebraska Toronto University University of Chicago . University of Illinois . Ohio State University . University of Washington 1834 1838 1847 1847 1847 1852 1852 1856 1858 i860 1865 1865 1868 1869 1870 1873 1876 1880 1880 1885 1885 1886 1890 1895 1895 1899 I goo 1905 1906 1910 126 Sigma Nu Pi Chapter 232 Packer Avenue, South Bethlehem Resident Members Richard L. James, ' 08, 77 Active Members 1911 Elwood Funk Meschter Carl Samuel Albright Herbert Thickens Quin Harry Lou Miller Bernard Munter, Jr. 1912 Carlton DeVerE Cann Carl Daniel Kester 1913 Theodore Henry Cook, Jr. Aton Mao Stewart Reginald P ' rancis Clewell 1914 John Paul Dobbins, Jr. Harry Cockill Faust Henry Shellenberger P ' rank Edgar Driscoll Wilfred Campbell Owen Richard Haight Gifford Roll of Active Chapters Division I Lehigh University Cornell University University of Pennsylvania Syracuse University University of Vermont Stevens Institute Lafayette College Dartmoitth College Columbia University Penn State College Division II Vanderbilt University State Univ. of Kentucky 129 1 Sigma Nu Continued Division III University of Georgia University of Alabama Howard College N. Georgia Agricultural College Mercer University Emory College Alabama Polytechnic Institute Georgia School of Technology Division IV Bethany College Univeiisity of West Virginia Ohio State University Case School of Science MT. Union College Western Reserve University Division V Northwestern University Albion College University of Wisconsin University of Illinois University of Michigan University of Chicago Lombard University Division VI State University of Iowa Iowa State College University of Minnesota University of Nebraska Division VII Kansas State University Missouri School of Mines Missouri State University Washington University William-Jewell College Oklahoma University Division VIII University of Texas Tulane University Louisiana State University University of Arkansas Division IX Colorado School of Mines University of Colorado Division X University of Washington University of Oregon University of Montana Division XI Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of California Division XII University of Virginia Washington LEE University University of North Carolina N. Carolina A. M. College Virginia Military Institute Division XIII DePauw University University of Indiana Purdue University Rose Polytechnic Institute 131 1 Phi Gamma Delta Beta Chi Chapter 155 South Main Street, Bethlehem Natt Emery, M.A., B X In Factiltatc William L. Estes, M.D., In Urbe Fred a. Johnson, B X Charles R. Ellicott, -T A William D. Keiter, E A J. P. WOODRING, E A In Universitate A. G. Rau. M.S., BX W. R. Shimer, i A, BX L. F. WeddigEn, E a L. D. Lazarus, E A Nelson Miller Downs George Reid Wood Robert Farmer Wood Clifford Franklin Lincoln Harold Morgan Smyth Alexander Cappie Shand, Jr. Edwin Walter Trexler Charles Wellman Francis Elmer Ellsworth Yake William Dunham Kelly, Jr. Frederic Willets Wright, Jr. James Henry Fogg Harold Edwin Lenker Walter Biggers Menefee Thomas Watson Downs Wilbur Nicholas Van Sant J. Robert Wiss John Hamilton Morse 135 Phi Gamma Delta Continued Roll of Active Xi Deuteron Theta Pi Alpha Chi Nu Pi Rho . Delta Delta Xi Chi Upsilon . Omega Kappa Nu Theta Psi Chi Sigma Delta Nr Lambda Deuteron Lambda . Xi Tau Chi Iota Alpha Deuteron Zeta Alpha Iota Beta Mu Pi Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Sigma Deuteron Beta Chi Lambda Sigma Omega Mu Iota Mu Alpha Phi Chapters Adelbert University of Alabama Allegheny Amherst Bethel Brown Bucknell California Ch icago Columbia Cornell Colgate Colorado Dartmouth Den is on DePauw Gettysburg Hanover University of Illinois Illin ois IT ' esleyan Indiana Iowa State Johns Hopkins Kansas Knox Lafayette Lehigh Lcland Stanford, Jr. Maine Massachusetts Institute University of Michigan 136 Phi Gamma Delta Continued Nu Sigma Chi Mu . Lambda Nu Nu Epsilon Omicron Deuteron Theta Deuteron Gamma Phi Beta Lambda Iota Rho Chi . Sigma Nu Kappa Tau Tau Deuteron Tau Alpha Chi Omicron . Psi Alpha Zeta Deuteron Sigma Tau Zeta Phi Mr vSigma Rho Deuteron Pi Iota Nu Dei teron Minnesota Missouri Nebraska New ' ork University Ohio State Ohio Wesleyan Pennsylvania State University of Pennsylvania Purdue Richmond Syracuse Tennessee University of Texas Trin ity Union Virginia Wabash Washington and Jefferson Washington and Lcc University of Washingto)! William-Jewell Wisconsin Wittoibcrg ' oostcr Worcester ' ale 137 Sigma Phi Alpha of Pennsylvania Established 1887 Warren Abbott Wilbur Resident Members Elisha Packer Wilbur, Jr. Robert Eldredge Wilbur Undergraduate Members John Marshall Carroll James Watts Mercur, Jr. Frederic Donald Schreiber Miles Henderson Merwin Garrett Brodhead Linderman, Jr. Barnes Compton Campbell Riley Williams William Conrad Mayer 138 Sigma Phi Founded at Union College, 1827 Alpha of New York . Beta of New York Alpha of Massachusetts Delta of New York . Alpha of Vermont Alpha of Michigan Alpha of Pennsylvania Epsilon of New York Alpha of Wisconsin . Roll of Active Chapters Union College 1827 Hamilton College 1831 Williams College 1834 Hobart College 1840 University of Vermont 1845 University of Michigan 1858 Lehigh University 1887 Cornell University 1890 University of Wisconsin 1908 141 - Phi Delta Theta Pennsylvania Eta Chapter 510 Seneca Street, South Bethlehem In the Factilty William S. Franklin, M.S., SeD. George C. Beck, A.C. Resident Members George M. Harleman, C.E. Samuel T. Harleman, M.E. Howard D. Megary Herbert J. Hartzog, B.A., LL.B John S. Hageman, M.E. Wi lliam A. Schneller Frank Brunner Frank C. Heard Edgar Foster Bai ' mgartner James Arthur Rose Herbert Asbury Camp Chesleigh Arthur Bonine Curtis Titus Franklin Arthur Park Rutherford Thomas Almeron Bryant Hugh Samuel Sterling Edward Williamson Chandler Levis Clement Babcock Active Members 1911 Frank Spaulding Borden George R. Horner 1912 1913 1914 Ralph P. Baird Basil Marshall Thompson Joseph Paul Walker William May Wilson Albert Kemmer Cosgrove William Graham Bell, Jr. Glenn Mark Cameron Caleb Temple Murphy 145 Phi Delta Theta Continued Roll of Active Chapters Ohio Alpha Indiana Alpha Kentucky Alpha Indiana Beta Wisconsin Alpha Illinois Alpha Indiana Gamma Ohio Beta . Indiana Delta Indiana Epsilon Michigan Alpha Illinois Beta Indiana Zeta Ohio Gamma Missouri Alpha Illinois Delta Georgia Alpha Georgia Beta Iowa Alpha Georgia Gamma New York Alpha Pennsylvania Alpha California Alpha Virginia Beta Virginia Gamma . Nebraska Alpha Pennsylvania Beta Pennsylvania Gamma Tennessee Alpha Mississippi Alpha Alabama Alpha . Illinois Zeta Alabama Beta Pennsylvania Delta Vermont Alpha . Pennsylvania Epsilon Missouri Beta Minnesota Alpha Iowa Beta . Kansas Alpha Tennessee Beta Ohio Zeta . Texas Beta Pennsylvania Zeta Miami University Indiana University Center College W ' abash College . University of Wisconsin Northwestern University Butler University Ohio Wesley an University Franklin College Hanover College . University of Michigan University of Chicago . DePauw University Ohio University . University of Missouri Knox University University of Georgia . Emory College Iowa Wesleyan University Mercer University Cornell University Lafayette College University of California Universit ■ of Virginia Randolph-Macon College University of Nebraska Gettysburg College Washington and Jefferson College Vanderbilt University . University of Mississippi University of Alabama Lombard University Alabama Polytechnic Institute Allegheny College University of Vermont Dickinson College Westminster College University of Minnesota University of Iowa University of Kansas . University of the South Ohio State University . University of Texas University of Pennsylvania 146 Phi Delta Theta Continued New York Beta Maine Alpha New York Delta New Hampshire Alpha North Carolina Beta Massachusetts Alpha Texas Gamma New York Epsilon Virginia Zeta Pennsylvania Eta Massachusetts Beta Rhode Island Alpha Louisiana Alpha Missouri Gamma California Beta Illinois Eta Indiana Theta Ohio Eta Ohio Theta Washington Alpha Kentucky Epsilon Quebec Alpha Colorado Alpha Georgia Delta . Pennsylvania Theta Ontario Alpha . South Dakota Alpha Idaho Alpha Kansas Beta Union University 1883 Colby University 1884 Columbia University 1884 V Dartmouth College ' 1884 University of North Carolina 1885 Williams College 1886 Southwestern University 1886 Syracuse University 1887 Washington and Lee University 1887 Lehigh University 1887 Amherst College . 1888 Brown University 1889 Tulane University of Louisiana 1889 Washington University 1891 Leland Stanford University . 1891 University of Illinois . 1893 Purdue University 1893 Case School of Applied Science 1896 University of Cincinnati 1898 University of Washington 1900 Kentucky State College 1901 McGill University 1902 University of Colorado 1902 Georgia School of Technology 1902 Pennsylvania State College . 1904 University of Toronto . 1906 University of South Dakota . 1907 University of Idaho 1908 Washburn College 1910 147 Sigma Chi Alpha Rho Chapter 334 Broad Street, Bethlehem Fratres in Urbe W. B. Meyers G. R. Radford E. T. Lipps William A. Hauck Fratres in CoIIegio Raymond W. Over Loring TownsEnd Carpenter John Traylor Martin Aquila Rich Norwood Andrew Thompson Schultz Richard Marion Bryce Franklin Weems Youry Lewis Edwards Hersh Leslie Goddard Matthews Carl Hartdegen, Jr. Walter Walton Thompson Verner T. Lawshe Creighton Daniels Bickley Roll of Active Chapters Miami University UnirersHy of Wooster Alpha Beta Gamma Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Kappa Lambda Mu Xi Omicron Rho Phi Chi Psi Omega Ohio Wesleyan University George Washington University Washing ' on and Lee University University of Mississippi Pennsylvania College Bucknell University Indiana University De n iso n Un iversity DePauw University Dickinson College Butler College Lafayette College Hanover College University of Virginia Norihu ' cstcrn I ' nivcrsitv 151 Sigma Chi Continued Alpha Alpha Alpha Beta Alpha Gamma Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Alpha Eta Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu Alpha Xi . Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi . Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma Alpha Upsilox Alpha Phi Alpha Chi Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Beta Gamma Beta Delta Delta Delta Zeta Zeta Zeta Psi . Eta Eta Theta Theta Kappa Kappa Lambda Lambda Mu Mr Nr Nu Xi Xi Omicron Omicro Rho Rho . Tau Tau . Upsilox Upsilox Phi Phi Psi Psi Omega Omega Beta Theta Delta Chi Beta Epsilon Beta Zeta Delta Beta Eta . Hobart College University of California Ohio Slate University University of Nebraska Be la it College State University of Iowa Massachusetts Institute of Technology Illinois Wesleyan University University of Wisconsin University of Texas University of Kansas Tulane University Albion College Lehigh University University of Minnesota University of S. California Cornell University Pennsylvania State College Vanderbilt University Leland Start ford, Jr., University Colorado College University of Montana Purdue University Central University University of Cincinnati Dartmouth College University of Michigan University of Illinois Kentucky State College West Virginia University Columbia University University of Missouri University of Chicago University of Maine Washington University University of Washington University of Pennsylvania Syracuse University University of Arkansas University of Pittsburg Wabash College University of Utah University of North Dakota University of Georgia Case School 152 Delta Tau Delta Beta Lambda Chapter Third and Cherokee Streets, South Bethlehem In the Faculty Ralph Justin Fogg, B.M. Resident Members George Alexander MacLean Richard Ferkier Taylo ' Edward F. Gray, X Active Members Raymond Floyd Crump Albert Poole Spooner Kenneth Callow William James Schmidt Edward Biesel Snyder William Edward Howard James Cameron Poffenberger William Krebs Hancock William Rothermel Duncan Henry Lloyd Rooney Robert Augusts Laedlein William Slocum O ' Gorman William Booth Todd Roll of A ctive Chapters Alpha ...... A llegheny College Beta Ohio L ' ni ' versity Gamma Washington and Jefferson College Delta Universi ' .y of Michigan Epsilon Albion College Zeta Western Reserve University Kapp. Hillsdale Colley Mu Ohio Wesleyan University Nu . Lafayette College Phi Washing ' on and Lee [ ' niversity Chi . Kenyan College 155 -1 Delta Tau Delta Pi Lambda Rho Upsilon Omega Omicron Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Gamma Beta Epsilon Beta Zeta Beta Lambda Beta Iota Beta Mu . Beta Nu . Beta Xi Beta Omicron Beta Pi Beta Rho Beta Tau . Beta Upsilon Beta Phi . Beta Chi . Beta Psi Beta Theta Beta Eta . Beta Kappa Beta Omega Gamma Alpha Gamma Beta Gamma Gamma Gamma Delta Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Theta Gamma Eta Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Xi Psi Gamma Omicron University of Mississippi Vanderhilt University Stevens Institute of Technology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute University of Pennsylvania University of Iowa Indiana University DePauw University University of Wisconsin Emory College Butler College Lehigh University University of Virginia Tufts College Massachusetts Instihde of Technology Tulane University Cornell University Northwestern L University Leland Stanford University University of Nebraska University of Illinois Ohio State University Brown L ' n iversiiy Wabash College University of the South University of Minnesota University of Colorado University of California University of Chicago Armour Institute of Technology Darthmouth University of ]] ' est I ' irginia Columbia University Wesleyan University Baker University George Washington University University of Texas University of Missouri Purdue University University of Washington University of Maine University of Cincinnati University of Woostcr Syracuse University 157 Beta Theta Pi Beta Chi Chapter 526 Wyandatte Street, South Bethlehem In Facoltate Chari.es L. Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D., B A John Hutcheson Ogburn, C.E., BA Barry MacNutt, E.E., M.S., EX Charles F. Woods, A.B., Ph.D., AX In Urbe George Francis Pettinos, A I Wadsworth Doster, X In Universitate 1911 Donald Randolph Lowry Hugh Gybbon Spilsbury 1912 Frederic Rice Speed James Earl Cunningham Andrew Milliken Kennedy Chester Henry Warrington 1913 James Herbert Sheppard Fletcher Barnes Speed, Jr. Douglas McDonald Dunbar Thomas Bell Coleman Alan Bowen Gorman 1914 William Howard Skinner John Z. Bayless Franz Joseph Emmerich Emory Williams Hukill 158 Beta Theta Pi Continued Beta Iota Chi Psi Upsiuon . Beta Sigma Kappa Lambda Kappa Epsilon . Beta Theta Alpha Alpha Beta Delta Alpha Omega Phi Alpha Alpha Eta Delta Alpha Sigma Zeta Iota Sigma Rho Pi . Alpha Beta Tau Sigma Alpha Epsilon Alpha Chi Beta Alpha Alpha Xi Beta Chi Lambda Sigma Alpha Rho Beta Kappa Theta Theta Delta Alpha Upsilon Beta Mu Beta Gamma . Sigma Beta Zeta Beta Epsilon Nu Omega Lambda Rho . Roll of Chapters Amherst College Beloit College . . Bethany College Boston University Bowdoin College Brown University Case School of Science Central University Colgate University Columbia University Cornell University Dartmouth College Davidson College Denison University DePauw University Dickinson College Hampden-Sidney College Hanover College Illinois University Indiana University Iowa Slate College Iowa State University Iowa Wesleyan University Johns Hopkins University Kenyan College Knox College Lehigh University Leland Stanford University Miami University Northwestern University Ohio University Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio State University Pennsylvania State College Purdue University Rutgers College Stevens Institute of Technology St. Lawrence University Syracuse University Union College University of California University of Chicago i6i Beta Theta Pi Continued Beta Nu Beta Tau Alpha Zeta Alpha Nu Beta Eta Lambda . Beta Pi Zeta Phi Alpha Tau Eta Beta Phi Beta Omicrox Theta Zeta Omicron Beta Omega Alpha Pi Alpha Lambda Beta Lambda Tau Gamma . Alpha Iota Mu Epsilon Beta Alpha Delta Beta Psi Alpha Gamma Phi Chi . Gamma Phi Beta Chi Beta Phi Beta Rho University of Cincinnati University of Colorado University of Denver University of Kansas University of Maine University of Michigan University of Minnesota University of Missouri University of Nebraska University of Xorth Carolina University of Pennsylvania University of Texas University of Toronto University of Virginia University of W ' ashifigton State University of ] ' isconsi i University of W ' ooster Vanderbilt Un iversity Wabash College Washington and Jefferson College ashington Un iversity Wesley a n Un iversity Western Reserve University Westminster College West Virginia University Wittenberg College } ale University Oklahoma University Tula ne i ' n iversity Colorado School of Mines University of Oregon 162 KA Kappa Alpha Pennsylvania Alpha Wyandotte and Third Streets, South Bethlehem Resident Member Robert Montgomerv Bird Undergraduate Members Charles Reginald Bulley Preston Albert Lambert, Jr. Sam Young Knight Thomas Weston Hearne John Gibbon McCoy Charles Robert Wylie, Jr. John Charles Chaffe Joseph Fielding Kerbaugh Milton Walter Young, Jr. 165 Kappa Alpha Continued Roll of Chapters New York Alpha Union College . 1825 Massachusetts Alpha Williams College • 1833 New York Beta Hobart College . 1844 New Jersey Alpha Princeton University 1852-55 Virginia Alpha . University of Virginia 1857-60 New York Gamma Cornell University . 1868 Ontario Alpha . Toronto University . 1892 Pennsylvania Alpha . Lehigh University . 1894 Quebec Alpha McGill University . 1899 166 Chi Psi Alpha Beta Delta 430 Seneca Street, vSouth Bethlehem In the Faculty Sidney J. Lockner Resident Members Arthur West Horace W. Pfahler G. H. Blakely Undergraduate Members C. Allen Schwarzwalder Jacob Stair, Jr. Sayre Wells Arthur Kellog Hunt Archie Warren Fisher Ernest Shaffer Colling David Harrison Hunter Charl es Edwin Loane, Jr. Orville Burnell Ackerly George Spencer Mitchell Lawrence Everett Carpenter Alanson Kerr Hegeman Sidney Waterloo Ford Elmer Edwin Saunders Frank Roderick Abbott 169 Chi Psi Continued Alpha Pi Alpha Theta Alpha Mu . Alpha Alpha Alpha Phi . Alpha Epsilon Alpha Chi . Alpha Psi . Alpha Nu . Alpha Iota Alpha Rho Alpha Xi . Alpha Alpha Delta Alpha Beta Delta Alpha Gamma Delta Alpha Delta Delta Alpha Epsilon D elta Active Alphas Union College Williams College Middlebury College Wesleyan University Hamilton College University of Michigan Amherst College . Cornell University University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin Rutgers College Stevens Institute . University of Georgia Lehigh University Stanford University University of California University of Chicago . 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1845 1864 1869 1874 1878 1879 1883 1890 1894 1894 1895 170 ■ I SJ l 1 0 Kappa Sigma Beta Iota Chapter 239 Church Street, Bethlehem Fratres in Urbe Oran C. Snyder, B I C. N. Wyant, Z John J. Shonk, Jr., BI W. Jerome Sommers, BI Charles H. Riegel, A E Active Members James Humble Smith S. Cameron Peters Clayton Edward Snyder Romeyn Sibley Dunn Lester Borden Walbridge Maurice Thomas Coakley Ralph Winfield Kempsmith Alexander Charles MacHardy Kenneth Mills Raynor Karl Gardner Van Sickle Robert Hendel Boas James Bruce Price Clifford Burton Backes Beta . Gamma Delta Zeta . Eta . Eta Prime Theta Iota . Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Xi Pi Sigma . Tau . Upsilon Phi Chi Psi Omega Roll of Active Chapters University of Alabama. Louisiana State University Davidson University of Virginia Randolph-Macon College Trinity College Cumberland University. Southwestern University Vanderbilt University . University of Tennessee Washington and Lee Williams and Mary University of Arkansas Swarthmore College Tulanc University University of Texas Hampden-Sidney College Southwestern Presbyterian Univ. Purdue University University of Maine University of the South 1867 1887 1890 1865 1888 1873 1887 1886 1876 1880 1904 1890 1902 1888 1889 1884 1883 1882 1885 1886 173 w Kappa Sigma Continued Alpha Alpha L ' nivcrsiiy of Maryland 1873 Alpha Beta Mercer University 1875 Alpha Gamma University of Illinois 1891 Alpha Delta Pennsylvania State College . 1892 Alpha Epsilon University of Pennsylvania . 1892 Alpha Zeta University of Michigan 1892 Alpha Eta . . ' George ] ' ashington University 1892 Alpha Kappa Cornell University 1892 Alpha Lambda . Vermont University 1893 Alpha Mu . University of North Carolina 1893 Alpha Pi Wabash College . 1895 Alpha Rho Bowdoin College . 1895 Alpha Sigma Ohio State University . 1895 Alpha Tau . Georgia School of Technology 1895 Alpha Upsilon Mi 11 saps College . 1895 Alpha Phi . Buckncll University 1896 Alpha Psi . University of Nebraska 1897 Alpha Chi . Lake Forest University 1880 Alpha Omega William- Jewell College 1897 Beta Alpha Brown University 1898 Beta Beta . Richmond College 1898 Beta Gamma University of Missouri 1898 Beta Delta Washington and Jefferson College 1898 Beta Epsilon University of Wisconsin 1898 Beta Zeta . Lcland Stanford University . 1899 Beta Eta . Alah(i))i(i I ' )iivrrsit] ' of Tcch)iolug 1900 Beta Theta Indiana University 1887 Beta Iota . Lehigh I ' niversity 1901 Beta Kappa A cw Hampshire College 1901 Beta Lambda University of Georgia . 1901 Beta Mu . University of Minnesota 1901 175 Kappa Sigma Continued Beta Nu . Kentucky University 1901 Beta Xi University of California 1901 Beta Omicron University of Denver . 1902 Beta Pi Dickinson College 1902 Beta Rho . University of Iowa • 1905 Beta Sigma Washington University • 1903 Beta Tau . Baker University • 1903 Beta Upsilon N. C. A. and M. College 1903 Beta Phi . Case School of Applied Science 1903 Beta Chi . Missouri School of Mines 1903 Beta Psi University of Washington 1903 Beta Omega Colorado College . 1904 Gamma Alpha University of Oregon 1904 Gamma Beta University of Chicago . 1904 Gamma Gamma Colorado School of Mines 1904 Gamma State Massachusetts State College . 1904 Gamma Epsilon Dartmouth .... 1905 Gamma Zeta New ) ' ork University . 1905 Gamma Eta Harvard University 1905 Gamma Theta University of Idaho 1905 Gamma Iota Syracuse University 1906 Gamma Kappa University of Oklahoma 1906 Gamma Lambda Iowa State College 1909 Gamma Mu . Washington State jCollege 1910 Gamma Nu . Washburn .... 1910 176 Nu Chapter Phi Sigma Kappa 511 Seneca Street, South Bethlehem Founded 1 90 1 Fratres in Facultate Walter S. Landis, Met.E., M.S. Sylvanus A. Becker, C.E. Fratres in Urbe Henry Radclyffe Walters Elmer Frederick Shaffer Clarence Mather Fratres in Universitate Jos Ignacio Vela Charles Wilbur Hendricks John Edgar Culliney Frank Wilson Davis Andrew Doiiglas Jamieson John Lippincott Montgomery William Seguine, Jr. Donald Smith Light John David KrausE Walter Robert King AouiLEs Lopez Clifford Riddle Whyte 179 : 1 Phi Sigma Kappa Continued Roll of Chapters Alpha Massachusetts Agricultural College Beta Union University Gamma Cornell University Delta West Virginia University Epsilon ) ' ale Universiiy Zeta College of the City of New York Eta University of Maryland Theta Columbia University Iota Stevens Institute of Technology Kappa Pennsylvania State College Lambda . George M ' ashington Universiiy Mu . University of Pennsylvania Nu . Lehigh University Xi . St. Lawrence University Omicron Massachusetts Institute of Technology Pi . Franklin and Marshall College Rho Queen ' s College (Canada) Sigma St. John ' s College Tau Dartmouth College Upsilon Brown University Phi . Swarthmorc College Chi . Williams College Psi . University of Virginia Omega University of California Alpha Deuteron University of Illinois Beta Dei TERor vT University of Minnesota i8i . l Theta Xi Eta Chapter 541 Seneca Street, vSouth Bethlehem In the Faculty Frank P. McKibben, S.B. Resident Member Walter Jacob Ammer Active Members 1911 Walter Cornelius Carson John Louis Becker John Haldeman Graybill 1912 Frederic Willcox Wilson William Herbert Waddington 1913 Reginald Drant Carll a. Streets 1914 Lee C. Leslie Harold B. Staab William Howard Turpin Raymond Chester Fuller LEROY J. E. SiNDEL Edward A. Aurand R. Dudley Jordan L. L. Lacombe 185 Theta Xi Continued Alpha Beta . Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Roll of Chapters Rensselaer Polytechnic Institt ite . 1864 Sheffield Scientific School . 1865 Stevens Institute of Technolo ' ,} ' ■ 1874 Massachusetts Institute of Tec -hnology 1885 Columbia University . 1899 Cornell University • 1903 Lehigh University . 1904 Purdue University • 1905 Washington University • 1905 Rose Polytechnic Institute • 1907 Pemisylvania State College • 1907 Iowa State College 1909 University of California 1910 186 I Vy iS l r J: 6i Sigma Phi Epsilon Pennsylvania Epsilon Chapter 821 Delaware Avenue, South Bethlehem In the Faculty James Hunter Wily, E.E. Edward vStaniford Foster, E.E- Resident Members James Alton Seacrest William John Priestley Ira David SchnellER Undergraduates Lewis R. P. Reese Harry Dunstan Thomas Russel Davies Alfred Priestley Othello Henry Schroedl Walter Robert Moore James Bailey Caleb Clarence Wheeler Herbert Leonard Cooper Barton Burd Quirk Jeremy Fisher Joseph Harry Smith Rowland Roy Jackson Fahl Ernest Erastus Finn Andrew Keness White Harry Pinkerton Croft William Edwin McComas David McKelvy Peterson William James Orr Howard Denton Baldwin Alfred Clapp Cooper Albert Augustus Hesser Baxter Parks 189 Sigma Phi Epsilon Roll of Active Chapters Virginia Alpha West Virginia Beta Pennsylvania Beta Pennsylvania Gamma Pennsylvania Delta Illinois Alpha Colorado Alpha Virginia Delta Ohio Alpha . North Carolina Beta Indiana Alpha New York Alpha . Virginia Epsilon . Virginia Zeta Georgia Alpha Delaware Alpha . Virginia Eta . Arkansas Alpha Pennsylvania Epsilon Virginia Theta Ohio Gamma . Vermont Alpha Pennsylvania Zeta Kansas Alpha California Alpha . Richmond College W ' est Virginia University Jefferson Medical College Western University of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Medical Department, University of Illinois University of Colorado College of William and Mary Ohio Northern University North Carolina College of A. and M. Purdue University Syracuse Un iversity Washington and Lee University Randolph-Macon College Georgia School of Technology Delaware State College University of Virginia University of Arkansas Lehigh University Virginia Military Institute Ohio State University Norwich University Allegheny College Baker University University of California 191 Members of Fraternities Having No Chapters at Lehigh Joseph R. Dawson Phi Kappa Sigma Arthur R. Hartzell Phi Kappa Sigma Roger W. Jannus Phi Kappa Psi Charles Lee Packard Alpha Delta Phi 192 ►T) W— tZi ►Tl W ■-i O C 2 P rt rt O 3 3 O c 1 o ' §■ E, a 3 3 r j 4- - O O 4- V ) 4. o, 4- .. 5 . ' ? ' - lo 4- o - A (  00 ON IJ lo OJ OJ ' -f 4. 4-4- O ' ' A .1 Cn J C Cn lo ' - ' J A ON - ' Cyi O 2 ' . ' V ' 4- Cyi Cn 4- iJ 00 r A j Cn U O O ' - J (? 0 ij 00 4 lo 00 (p A ' ' ■ ' 4.4.O1 O 04- -A 4-4-- ' - ' ATA 4. en 4- u 4- - ' li H II o, _ « I. A ' .J 10 c 1 ij ON - oj Y u « ON 4- O tyi 2 ' - 4- ' I- .- -- (l I K 1 4- 4 4- ' - -■ (■} ' £ I 4- -J Cyi - J lo - 1 ' E I O - - 1-1 O O No Chapter. CO c 3 3 193 : ' T-- . .. •.-. ' .-lis - -, ' -.. i mii li (lis i« « Tau Beta Pi Alpha of Pennsylvania Founded 1885 Officers G. R. Wood J. R. Dawson W. H. CORDDRV R. ¥. Crump T. R. Dav.es Advisory Board Joseph BarrELL, ' 92 Henry B. Evans, ' 93 President Vice-President Recording Sccrdary Corresponding Sccreiary Treasurer E. H. Williams, Jr., ' 75 R. C. H. Heck, ' 93 Trustee Members John Fritz R. H. Savre Faculty Members Henry vS. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. W. S. Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. C. L. Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D. P. McKlBBEN, S.B. E. Meaker, C.E. S. Landis, Met. E. W. Klein, M.E. S. Seyfert, B.S., E.E. A. A. DiEFENDERFER, A.C. S. A. Becker, C.E., M.S. O. B. Niesen, M.E. H. M. Fry, E.E. Deceased. F. A. W. A. S. Joseph F. Klein, Ph.B., D.E. Jos. W. Richards, A.C, M.S., M.A., Ph.D. John L. Stewart, A.B., Ph.B. W. B. ScHOBER, B.S., A.M., Ph.D. W. EsTY, S.B., M.A. Howard Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. E. H. Williams, Jr., B.A., E.M., A.G. F.G.S.A. H. M. Ullmann, A.B., Ph.D. A. C. CallEn, E.M. S. R. SCHAELER, E.E. 197 Undergraduate Members Carl Samuel Albright Edgar Foster Baumgartner John Louis Becker John Musgrave BlEy Carlton Hart Chapin William Howard Corddry Raymond Floyd Crump Thomas Russell Joseph Ralph Dawson Robert 1911 Daniel Merritt Flick Philip McLean Ginder John Griffen Albert K. Hohl Daniel Charles Keefe Thomas Claude Kraemer Donald Randolph Lowry Othello Henry Schroedl George Reid Wood Farmer Wood Pennsylvania Alpha Michigan Alpha Indiana Alpha . New Jersey Alpha Illinois Alpha . Wisconsin Alpha Ohio Alpha Kentucky Alpha New York Alpha Missouri Alpha Michigan Beta . Colorado Alpha Colorado Beta . Illinois Beta New York Beta Michigan Gamma Missouri Beta . California Alpha Iowa Alpha New York Gamma Iowa Beta Minnesota Alpha New York Delta Massachusetts Alpha 1912 John Ferree Herr Roll of Active Chapters Lehigh University 1885 Michigan Agricultural College 1892 Purdue University 1893 Stevens Institute of Technology 1896 University of Illinois 1897 University of Wisconsin 1899 Case School of Applied Science 1900 State College of Kentucky 1902 Columbia University 1902 University of Missouri . 1902 Michigan College of Mines 1904 Colorado School of Mines 1905 University of Colorado . 1905 Armour Institute of Technology 1906 Syracuse University 1906 University of Michigan 1906 Missouri School of Mines 1906 University of California 1906 Iowa State College. 1907 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 1908 University of Iowa 1909 University of Minnesota 1909 Cornell University 1910 i Worcester Polytechnic Institute 1910 198 Tau Beta Pi ■ I ■ ' HHRE exist in the college world three well-known societies, membership in which signifies college honor, in the manifestation of high scholarship. They arc Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi and Tau Beta Pi. The first of these finds its membership in the men pursuing literature and the arts. The second selects its men from those who have shown distinction in the sciences and who have performed some research work. The last, Tau Beta Pi, of which we write, enrolls the honor men in engineering courses. Of the three Phi Beta Kappa is the oldest, having been founded in 1776, while the dates of founding of the other two were separated by only one year — Tau Beta Pi, 1885, and Sigma Xi, 1886. The existence of Tau Beta Pi is owed to Prof. Edward H. Wil- liams, Jr., an alumnus of Yale and of Lehigh where he became Professor of Mining Engineering and Geology. The motives leading to and the circumstances attending the formation of this society are interesting and worthy of record in a book of this nature. As valedictorian of the class of 1875 at Lehigh, Prof. Williams had been elected an honorary member of the vSigma (New York) chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, and was anxious for the establishment of a chapter of that society here. There were, how- ever, two obstacles standing in the way, first, the fact that the council, in whose hands the granting of charters lay, met only once in six years, and, second, the strong ob- jection in Phi Beta Kappa against the admission of technical men into its membership. Owing to the highly technical character of Lehigh ' s courses the likelihood of an estab- lishment of a chapter here was very slight and even with a charter granted the mem- bership would be confined to a very small number. Prof. Williams was aware of the necessity for the recognition of a man ' s ability other than the diploma which he received, and further that the recognition should be given while the man was still at college, and not as he was just passing out through her portals. The attitude which some men had towards a diploma can best be shown by the following incident: As the valedictorian of one of the ' 80 classes came from the stage after graduation Prof. Williams congratulated him, to which he received the I ' eply ' s got one too. The fellow in question had flunked every examination in his four years of college. There was no limit to re-examinations in those days and he had taken enough until he had passed. These were the motives leading to the formation of the society. The details of organization arc briefly given as follows: Prof. Williams ' conception of the society was that its membership should be taken from those men whose grades showed them to be in the first quarter of the class. Their rating must be above 75% and they must have no conditions. In practice this was to work as follows: At the end of their Junior year the men standing in the first eighth of their class became eligible for election and at the beginning of the Senior year the first quarter of the class became eligible. The election of these men, however, was not to be on the basis of scholarship alone but in addition the men must possess high morals, qualities of good fellowship, and manifest a healthy interest and rational participation in college activities. To start such a society so that election into it would be sought and so that its estab- lishment would be firm and give promise of vigorous growth was a matter requiring much careful work. How this was accomplished is best told in Prof. Williams ' own words, and we quote from a letter from him on the subject, giving the Editor of the Epitome this information on request. 199 Now, too many cooks spoil the broth of society building; so I decided to take nobody into my confidence. I knew what I wanted and I went to work alone. I first drew up a constitution and provided for granting new chapters, for an executive council, and for alumni advisers to act as a balance wheel to keep things going in line, and I made it hard to amend this instrument. I then drew up By-laws for Lehigh. Next, there must be a body of alumni behind the affair before the first under- graduate was let in. I delivered the valedictory for ' 75 and so was eligible to the society. I took the old faculty records and calculated the standing of every man who graduated, during his four years; drew up a list of the men in the order of their stand. They must be in the first fourth of the class and also have a gen- eral average of 75. Having the eligible men of the past, I had Edwin G. Klose, of the Moravian Book Concern, buy a series of special fonts of type, which are now in the possession of the society, a lot of electrotypes of the society key, and some other matter and print a lot of diplomas I signed them as secretary, to which office I elected myself. The answers I received from th e boys were refreshing. One valedictorian said he would value it more than his diploma. Then I had my friend Newman, of John St., New York, file out a society key, to see how the thing looked. Then I was ready for the undergraduates. I went slowly, however, and it was May, 1885, before I told Irving A. Hcikes, the best man in ' 85, to stop after recitation, one morning, and asked him if he would like to be the first undergraduate to join a society. He wanted to think it over, and finally said ' Yes, ' so I initiated him. He took post-graduate work, I think, and in the fall he and Professor Meaker, who helped me initiate the classes for several years, and Duncan, ' 80, initialed the men from ' 86 and the Wilbur man from ' 87. For several years I was elected president of the society and directed the body till it began to have a good number of alumni and many representatives in the Faculty. It took like hot cakes and soon its elections were looked for. I wanted to have Tau Beta Pi in full blast before Phi Beta Kappa came, as it would not then be looked upon as an imitation by a lot of men who could not get into the latter. In deference to the general tradition I limited the mem- bership in Phi Beta Kappa to students in the liberal courses, and I had the charter given to a council of a few graduate members, Mr. Kitchel, Albert G. Rau, myself and a few others. This is the way Tau Beta Pi came to Lehigh. It was the culmination of a lot of work covering four years. I could not give as much time to it as I wanted, owing to the growth of my department. Breckenridge was elected an honorary member. Heck became president and a member of the advisory board, and then it began to form chapters outside. While the founding is wholly my own unassisted work, the spread is due to others In June, 19 10, the society had a membership of 3680 divided among J4 fiourishing chapters, located at institutions of acknowledged leadership in the instruction of engi- neering. The twenty-fifth anniversary was celebrated here at Lehigh last June and the attendance and enthusiasm in connection with the convention gave every evidence of the solidity and prestige of Tau Beta Pi. J. L. B. Phi Beta Kappa Beta of Pennsylvania Charles J. Goodwin, Ph.D. ........ President Preston A. Lambert ......... Vice-President Albert G. Rau ........... Secretary Geo. R. Booth, Ph.B. ......... Treasurer The Chapter Cotincil Geo. R. Booth Albert G. Rat Charles J. Goodwin Robert vS. Taylor Harvey S. Kitchell Edward H. Williams Preston A. Lambert Resident Members of Other Chapters Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, D.D. Natt. M. Emery, M.A. Charles L. Thornburg, Ph.D. Philip M. Palmer, A.B. William S. Franklin, Sc.D. Robert W. Blake, M.E. John L. Stewart, Ph.B. The Chapter 1871 W. H. McCarthy 1878 1880 Frank P. Howe Thomas H. Hardcastle 1882 Charles C. Hopkins 1883 1884 John Daniel Hoffman Robert Grier Cooke Preston Albert Lambert Robert Packer Linderman Rembrandt Richard Peale Augustus Parker Smith H. Allebach Porterfield Lewis Buckley Semple 1885 William H. kvey Cook 1886 1887 George Rodney Booth Milton Henry Fehnel George Arthur Rltddle Garrett B. Linderman Charles Ellsworth Clapp Harvey Sheafe Fisher William Patterson Taylor Wade Hampton Woods M. Anthony deW. Howe, Jr. Alfred Kramer Leuckel Harry Toulmin Charles Frederick Zimmele Phi Beta Kappa Continued Charles Lincoln Banks William Lynville Neill Albert George Rau Charles McComes Wilkens Aaron Howell Van Cleve Frederick C. Lauderburn 1890 1891 Samltel Irwin Berger Edgar Campbell William Dollaway Farwell Sylvanus Elmer Lambert Ellis Anstett Schnabel Ira Augustus Shimer William Sidney Topping 1892 William N. R. Ashmead Walter Joseph Dech Charles Malcolm Douglas 1893 1895 Alfred Earnest Spiers George vStern Elmer Augustus Jacoby Fayette Avery McKenzie William Allen Lambert John Eugene Stocker Robert Sayre Taylor 1896 Warren Joshua Bieber Joseph Wharton Thurston Robert Edward Laramy A. Q. Bailey David Bean Clark Francis Donaldson Foster Hewett 1898 C. E. Webster, Jr. 1900 NiMSON ECKERT I90I 1902 Percy Lamar Grubb Edwin Benton Wilkinson William Frank Roberts Myron Jacob Luch 1903 Arthur Simon Gilmore Elmer Clinton Pearson Bodewine Bertrand Van Sickle Canby Guy Lord Nicholas Hunter Heck Harry Earnest Jordan Alfred John Diefenderfer John Joseph Cort Phi Beta Kappa Conttnufd 1904 Oliver Jacob Hallek Lester Bernstein Herbert Joseph Hartzog Thomas Archie Morgan Ralph Lucas Tally 1905 W. L. EsTEs, Jr. M. H. Kuryla S. H. Fleming N. N. Merriman Alan de Schweinitz 1906 C. F. GilmorE R. J. Van Reenen N. G. Smith R. L. Charles R. W. Kinsey L. J. Freedman E. Haldeman Finnie 1907 1908 T. A. H. Mawhinney P. A. Vockrodt M. R. Beck J. B. Carlock J. F. Hanst J. B. Reynolds Cajetan Morsack R. F. McElfresh 1909 Charles Howard Jennings Samuel Raymond SchealEr William Jacob Robbins James Owen Knauss 1910 Clyde Uptegraff Shank WiLBURT Robert Walters Robert Pattison More John Milton Toohy 203 RCADlf D. R. LowRY J. L. Becker President Sccrc ' .arv and Treasurer E. F. Baumgartner A. G. Black F. S. Borden J. R. Dawson R. S. Dunn Jeremy Fisher John Graybiuu Alfred Priestley C. E. Snyder A. P. Spooner B. M. Thompson G. R. Wood R. F. Wood L. C. Wright Young Men ' s Christian Association Officers L. Chase Wright, E. A. Wheaton, ' i L. P. Knox, ' 12 . Geo. R. Wood, ' 1 1 J. Platt . President . Vice-President Recording Secretary Treasurer General Secretary R. H. Wood, ' 11, Chairman G. O. SCHOREDU, ' i I H. L. Miller, ' ii, Chairman L. D. Hess, ' 12 E- E. YakE, ' 12, Chairman D. C. AiNEY, ' 12 G. M. Cresswell, ' 13 13 H. H. Otto E. H. RoBB ' 12, Chairman Advisory Committee Prof. C. L. Thornburg, Chairman Rev. F. S. Hort Bishop Ethelbert Talbot Robert M. Bird Prof. John L. Stewart Harry S. Gay, Jr. R. E. Laramy, ' 96, Secretary and Treasurer Finance L. A. Rehfuss, ' i I W. C. Solly, ' 12 G. A. Mark, ' 13 Membersfiip T. R. Davies, ' ii L. E. Carpenter, Bible Study W. C. Carson, ' ii W. F. Hadsall, ' 12 G. A. Mark, ' 13 Missionary J. H. Graybill, ' i I B. M. Thompson, ' 12 A. E. Olson, ' 13 Devotional H. R. Cox, ' 11 R. S. Dunn, ' 12 D. K. Evans, ' 13 Hand-Book F. E. Galbraith, ' 11 H. L. Cooper, ' 12 Masic D. Gibson, ' i i B. M. Thompson, ' i Industrial L. W. Smith, ' i i W. P. Ste vart, ' 12 F. W. Wright, ' 13 Social E. F. Baumgartner, E. A. Wheaton, ' 12 E. Quincey, ' 13 L. R. P. Reese, D. Davies, ' 12 J. Gore, ' 12 ' 11, Cha irnia n H. A. Haas, ' ii. Chairman C. A. Gauss, ' 12 E. S. Colling, ' 12, Chairman R. F. Wood, ' ii, Chairman C. F. Sencenbach, ' 12 H. M. Smyth, ' 12 B. M. Thompson, ' 12 W. H. Corddry, ' i I Chairman h. P. Knox, ' 12 R. J. Fahl, ' 13 R. W. Jannus, ' h R. C. Sahlin, ' 13 G. R. Wood, ' ii H. J. Williams, ' 12 E. E. Finn, ' 13 S. C. Miles, ' 12 H. E. Ramsey, ' 12 B. H. Spencer, ' 13 C. Koch, ' i i H. G. Birdsall, ' 12 H. P. Croft, ' 13 W. L. Newman, ' 12 R. C. Fuller, ' 12 H. Reimers, ' i i R. S. Dunn, ' 12 W. C. Solly, ' 12 Prof. Percy Hughes 1 1 H. D. Kerr, ' ii W.H.Waddington, ' 12 207 Members E. F. Baumgartxer F. S. Borden- J- L. Becker A. G. Black R. F. Crawford J- R. Dawsox A. A ' . Fisher N. J- EWIXG C. W. , Hexdricks R. ' . Kempsmith D. R. Lowrv A. C. Morris J. C. Poffexberger J. A. Rose H. G. Spilsburv A. P. Spooner C. E. Snyder J. H. Smith J. I. Vela G. R. Wood R. F. Wood L. B. Walbridge J. M. Carroll A. Parr A 208 Members IQII E. F. Baumgartner C. W. Hendricks E. A. Buckley A. E. Hunt R. F. Crawford 1912 J- I. VELA H. A. Camp A. G. Martin E. W Cook J- P. Walker T. P. Harri R B. Williams. 209 Resident Members J. R. Campbell A. C. DoDsox C. A. Schwa RZWAELDER J. G. McCoy C. R. BULLEV F. J. Gerhard M. D. Douglas G. B. LiNDERMAX, Jr. J. W. Mercur, Jr. 1510 1 51 1 1913 T. M. DODSON R. E. Wilbur S. Wells A. W. Fi-,cher J. Griffex D. F. Wallace C. R. Wiley, Jr. A. K. Hegemaxn J. L. Packard C. Weaver B. U. X Foanded by Asa Packer Antebellum Freres en la Un iversite E. F. Baumgartner R. M. BrycE . E. A. Buckley R. F. Crump . J. R. Dawson W. K. Hancock T. P. Harris . C. W. Hendricks A. M. Kennedy D. R. Lowry A. G. Martin J. T. Martin . R. W. Over . S. C. Peters . F. R. Speed . A. P. Spooner E. W. Trexler J. I. Vela L. B. Walbridge R. B. Williams R. F. Wood . BE BT AB BP B A BB AM BI AT B 11 BZ B A B r B I A W B n A I A B (P BK Frere en Urbe A. C. Morris BA Scimitar E. S. Colling J. E. CULLINEY W. K. Hancock T. P. Harris B. Hartley A. M. Kennedy Richard Bassett Bayard Thomas Almeron Bryant loring townsend carpenter Benjamin Ely Cole Thomas Bell Coleman James Watts Mercur, Jr. A. G. Martin J. T. Martin R. W. Over A. T. SCHULTZ H. M. Smyth F. R. Speed F. W. Youry Leslie Goddard Matthews Thomas John Quinn William James Schmidt Fletcher Barnes Speed, Jr. DO.NALD Fr. NKLIN WALLACE Charles Robert Wylie, Jr. Members W. J. Schmidt R. P. Sanborn F. W. Wright C. B. Rakter J. H. Fogg G. E. Harris A. S. Horcasitas E- BowEN J. L. Montgomery R. C. Watson A. W. Butler R. B. Bayard J. L. Clarke. 213 Ancient Order of Nutzmaiers Dolce for Niente Kneedlebender Chapter Founded in Siam Members Not Living Adam (Smith) Mephistopheles Honorary Members Morpheus Bacchus Officers Most Worthy Grand Exalted Noise Worthy Keeper of Hair Oil Exalted Keeper of Atmosphere Most Worthy Knight of Sunshine Administrator of Divine Influence All American Davie s Count Derby de Jenkins Dr. Edgar T. Bonine Aeroplane X. Bender Original Theory Williams Members without Gravestones Fuzzy Davis Polar B. Camp Reading Eagle Sprint Knox Two Speed Otto Serpentine Hartley High Gear Speed Bones Cunningham Joyful Wheaton Senator Whyte Adviser- Dead Shot Pete Tremlett Step and Fetch It Walker Nightingale Baird Whiskey Tenor Terwilliger Musical Smyth Gabriel Martin The Only Yake in College Whiskers Wright Sweitzer Sieger Oh Gee Whizz Lehr. -Michael Caruso Henley 214 Alumni Association Officers R. E. Laramy, Phoenix ville, Pa. . S. D. Warrixer, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. John Fuller, New York, N. Y. . Howard Eckfeldt, Bethlehem, Pa. P. A. Lambert, Bethlehem, Pa. . President Vice-President Vice-President - Archivist Secretary and Treasurer Honorary Alumni Trustees Garrett B. Lixderman, South Bethlehem, Pa. (Term expires June, 191 1) Francis R. Dravo, Pittsburg, Pa. (Term expires June, 1912) Alfred E. Forstall, New York, N. Y. (Term expires June, 19 13) Thomas M. Eyxox, Philadelphia, Pa. (Term expires June, 19 14) Executive Committee R. E. Lar. mv, Chairman S. D. Warrixer Alfred E. Forstall John Fuller Thomas M. Eyxox Garrett B. Lixdermax Howard Eckfeldt Fraxcis R. Dravo Prestox A. Lambert 216 Local Alumni Clubs The Lehigh University Club of Greater New York R. B. HONEYMAN, ' 8 C. J. Parker, ' 88 G. L. Robinson, ' 03 T. Merriman, ' 97 M. H. Putnam, ' 97 President First Vice-President Second Vice-President . Third Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer 90 West vStrect, New York City. The Northeastern Pennsylvania Lehigh Club G. E. Shepherd, ' 94 G. W. Barager, ' 00 T. Archer Morgan, ' 04 W. A. Lathrop, ' 75 ] Arthur Long, ' 89 . W. H. Dean, ' 86 j Charles Enzian, ' 01 . . President First ' ice-President Second ' ice-President . Advisory Board Secretary and Treasurer 375 South River St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The Philadelphia Lehigh Club Robert S. Perry, ' 88 President Claude M. Daniels, ' 07 - ' Jce-President T. N. LacEY, ' 07 Second Vice-President Wm. C. Carnell, ' 94 Trustees Henry DeHuff, ' 95 MoRiz BERNSTEIN, ' 96 Secretary and Treasurer 4344 Gcrmantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Lehigh University Club of New England W. D. Hartshorne, ' 74 President H. M. Daggett, ' 98 Vice-Presid?nt L. A. OlnEY, ' 96 Secretary and 1 reasurcr Lowell Textile School, Lowell, Mass. Southern Lehigh Club Wm. Bowie, ' 95 President James A. Watson, ' 84 Vice-President W. Albert Draper, ' 07 Secretary and I reasurer 325 A Street, S. E., Washington, D. C. Executive Committee Wm. Bowie, ' 95 S. S. Voorhees, ' 88 James A. Watson, ' 84 H. C. Eddy, ' 92 W. Albert Draper, ' 07 L. N. Gillis, ' 93 T. C. J. Bailey, ' 90 T. N. Gill, Jr., ' 07 7 J. B. HiTTELL, ' 87 J. W. Thi ' rstox, ' 96 E. R. Morgan, ' 03 H. D. Wilson, ' 01 Timothy Burns, ' 01 Paul A. Degener, ' 03 Winter L. Wilson, ' I W. F. Roberts, ' 02 WmJ. Priestley, ' 08 W. R. ScHNABEL, ' 05 The Chicago Lehigh Club Old Colony Building, Chicago, 111. The Pittsburg Lehigh Club 810 Empire Bld ' g, Pittsburg, Pa. The Lehigh University Home Club President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer . President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer . President Vice-President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer 315 7th Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. The Northern New York Lehigh Club A. W. Henshaw, ' 94 H. G. Reist, ' 86 . W. P. White, ' 00 | E. E. Valk, ' 06 ]- G. M. Baker, ' 07 ) A. D. Badgley, ' g6 President Vice-President Entertainment and Reception Committee Secretary and Treasurer 22T, Parkwood Building, Schenectady, N. Y. The Central Pennsylvania Lehigh Club G. C. Leidy, ' 00 . H. N. Herr, 96 . B. T. Root, ' 96 . J. W. Fisher, ' 04 C. E. Barba, ' 01 George R. Morrow, ' go H. S. HOUSKEEPER, ' 7: W. A. Megraw, ' 97 W. T. De Baufie, ' 07 Highspire, Pa. The Lehigh Club of Maryland President . First Vice-President Second Vice-President Third Vice-President Fourth Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer . President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, Baltimore, Md. Executive Committee H. S. Houskeeper, ' 72 S. S. Martin, ' 90 W. A. Megraw, ' 97 W. M. Person, ' 05 W. L. De Baufie, ' 07 218 M ■ Jr JL 5 L.-« B jl M ft) ii n T r i P Lehigh- Williamsport Club Officers L. W. Smith, ' ii J. W. MiLNOR, ' l2 R. A. Laedlein, ' 14 J. H. Graybill, ' 1 1 G. C. Beck, ' 03 E. B. Wilkinson, ' 01 G. G. Lord, ' 03 A. S. GiLMORE, ' 03 G. C. Beck, ' 03 J. W. Fisher, ' 04 H. F. Campbell, ' 04 W. U . Mussina, ' 04 R. D Kavanaugh, ' 04 W. T MacCart, ' 04 R. L. Talley, ' 04 Alomni Members S. O. Lemdy, ' 05 H. L. Pentz, ' 05 C. F. GiLMORE, ' 06 E. S. Adams, ' 06 W. S. Watson, ' 06 J. J. Young, ' 06 R. J. GiLMORE, ' 07 R. MacMinn, ' 07 M. H. Ulman, ' 07 F. P. Bates, ' 09 R. vS. Clinger, ' 09 President Vice-President . Secreiary . Treasurer Alumni Adviser R. N. Jaggard, ' 09 C. U. Shank, ' 09 J. H. Young, ' 09 C. A. Foust, ' id L. P. GiLMORE, ' 10 H. C. MacDon ' ALD, J. F. McClain, ' id R. L. Riley, ' 10 G. R. Waltz, ' 10 J. E. Person, ' u F. E. Galbraith, ' ii J. H. Slate, ii J. H. Graybill, ' ii L. W. Smith, ii R. a. Laedlein, ' 14 Members in College J. W. MiLXOR, ' 12 W. H. Kelchxer, ' 14 W. B. Todd, ' 14 219 The Senators Club C. H. Warringtox, ' i2 R. C. Watson-, ' 13 Offi . Pre side tit Secretary and Treasurer Members C. H. Warrington W. M. Wilson C. R. Whvte G. C. Hill C. B. Rafter A. F. Eberly R. C. Watson G. H. Weber S. Y. Knight C. R. Williams Honorary Members Hon. Edwin Warfield, Ex-Governor of Maryland Dr. Henry S. Drinker Prof. William B. Schober Prof. William C. Thayer Prof. Winter L. Wilson Dr. Charles F. Woods Othello H. Schroedl, ' ii Robert E. Pall6, ' 12 Officers President Secntary and Treasurer Members 1911 M. Appel W. H. CORDDRY S. D. Gladding M. Good C. J. Hellen D. H. Hunter B. MUNTER F. E. Rasmers L. R. P. Reese L. C. Wright J. Blaustein W. B. ClEmmitt J. R. Curtis A. B. Gorman G. E. Harris, Jr. A. J. KuTZLEB 1912 A. M. Bland C. D. Cann F. Fahm, Jr. C. J. Flayhart W. N. Gambrill J. Gore, Jr. H. J. Horn F. R. Speed W. H. Turpin W. N. Van Sant 1913 R. H. Woods J. H. Lewis W. E. McComas C. W. Miller F. H. Plack F. B. Speed W. W. Thompson J. H. Letzer New Jersey-Lehigh Club Officers W. H. Waudington E. H. Austin W. R. King G. J. Shurts . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer Members 1911 E. F. Baumgartner J. L. Becker E. A. Buckley E. M. CONOVER W. E. Fairhurst E. H. Austin J. E. Bacon A. F. BiRDSALL R. C. DeNyse W. Douglass R. C. Fuller S. R. Hanger B. Hartley E. BowEN, 4th H. P. Croft R. J. Fahl I. FUHRMANN F. J. Gerhard A. D. Jamieson W. R. King L. T. Mart W. F. Bailey D. G. Baird C. D. Bickley F. W. Binzen, Jr. N. R. Browne J. C. Chaffe J. P. Dobbins, Jr. F. E. Driscoll S. Hadaway J. H. Throm 1912 1913 S. D. Williams 1914 R. W. Faust H. F. FiTHIAN C. G. Harwig A. K. Hunt C. L. Rittenhouse L. F. Hill, Jr. W. R. Moore W. L. Newman I. A. St. .John G. J. Shurts R. C. Silvers W. H. Waddington F. W. YOURY L. G. Matthews J. L. Montgomery A. R. Norwood W. H. Orr H. K. Rouse C. A. Schneider C. B. Streets D. F. Wallace C. Hartdegen, Jr. R. D. Jordan W. B. Killough V. T. Lawshe R. E. MiCKEL B. R. Pittenger E. E. Saunders D. F. Schumann J. R. Wiss --3 Lackawanna-Lehigh Club Officers John A. Hart, ' 12 Charles Von Konecnv, ' 12 . Verb B. Edwards, ' 12 Merle I. Terwilliger, ' 12 . . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer Honorary Member Dr. Henry Sturgis Drinker, ' 71 Active Members 1911 H. Dunstan 1912 V. B. Edwards K. M . Raynor J- A. Hart M. I. Terwilliger F. B. Miller R. B. Williams 1913 C. T. Von Konecny D. K. Evans 1914 C. W. Van Nort K. G. Van Sickle H. L. Birdick C. E. SlEBECKER D. M. Peterson 5 New England-Lehigh Club Honorary Members Dr. Henry S. Drinker Prof. Wm. Esty Prof. P. M. Palmer R. J. Fogg Prof. F. P. McKibben Prof. R. W. Hall Natt M. Emery Alfred Priestley Hebrert L. Cooper Andrew K. White Alfred E. Olson Officers . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer A. Priestley J. Fisher Members IQII A. Baker F. C. Heard R. F. Tarbell H. L. Cooper 1912 E. E. Wright 1913 T. L. Dunn F. C. Messenger A. L. O ' Brien A. K. White A. E. Olson A. M. Moore H. L. Rooney ' W. J. Schmidt A. Kalajan J. W. Mercur, Jr. 1914 W. J. Orr H. Baldwin A. C. Cooper T. G. Shaffer W. S. O ' GORMAN C. B. Backes H. B. Staab T. L. Dunn 226 Lucerne County-Lehigh Club H. T. Qi ' iN President H. H. Otto Vice-President J. R. CrEL,l,in ........ Secreary and Treasurer IQII G. E. GoEPPERT H. T. OuiN J. A. Sosnowski 1912 H. M. Benjamin H. S. F owler W. Johnson J. R. CrELLIn W. F. H. d;s. i.l F. S. Lubrecht D. D.wiEs T. P. Harris J. E. Murphy H. H. Otto H. W. Porter 1913 Walter Dugan J. M. Fritz J. Robell Alvin Evans P. McMenamin 1914 F. W. Ryder F. J. Emmerich W. ILES D. J. Joseph E. B. Snyder Stephen Elliott J. L. Harkness G. Lesser R. WOELFEL 227 Bucks County-Lehigh Club Officers Stanley Gery, ' 13 . President Arthur C. Frey ........ Secretary and Treasurer Honorary Members Dr. Henry vS. Drinker, ' 71 Howard A. Foering, ' 90 Alumni Members Samuel E. Berger, ' 89 Ira D. Fulmer, ' 97 Henry M. S. Cressman, ' 95 Raymond E. Ozias, ' 92 Hon. Warren F. Cressman, ' 92 Thomas K. Smith, ' 03 William Walters, ' 08 Associate Alumni Members John B. Fretz, ' 09 Penrose D. Snyder, ' 08 Tobias C. Harr, ' 08 Harold E. Watson, ' 09 John Yardly, ' 72 Hysler J. Zane, Jr., ' ii Members in College Earle a. Ball, ' ii Maurice M. Shaw, ' 13 Arthur C. Frey, ' ii John L. Conner, ' 13 William H. Mohr, ' ii Ralph Funk, ' 13 Stanley Gery, ' 13 Robert S. Krause, ' 13 William H. Sterner, ' 14 Lehigh-Hermon Club Officers H. A. Haas, ' ii . R. C. Fuller, ' 12 E. A. AURAND, ' 13 A. E. Olson, ' 13 H. A. Haas, ' ii R. C. Fuller, ' 12 A. E. Olson, ' 13 E. A. AURAXD, ' 13 . President ' ice-Prcside it . Secn ' hii) . Trcti surer Factilty Member E. S. Foster, ' 07 Active Members W. F. Bailev, ' 14 B. Bowman ' , ' 14 E. Castellaxos, ' 14 R. D. Jordan, ' 14 J. J. SCATKO, ' 14 229 ®fl 1 (ty T o The 1912 Epitome The College Annual Published by the Junior Class of Lehigh University Elmer Ellsworth Yake Editor-in-Chief Franklin Weems Yo«ry Assistant Editor-in-Chief Henry Habel Otto Business Manager George Jacob Shurts Assistant Business Manager Harold Morgan Smyth Art Editor John Edgar Ctilliney John Ambrose Hart Arthur Parke Rutherford Ira Alferd St, John Merle Ivan Terwilliger Associate Editors 232 The Brown and White Issued Twice a Week during the College Year by the Students of Lehigh University John Louis Becker Editor-in-Chief Elmer Ellsworth Yake Assistant Editor Jacob Stair, Jr Business Manager Frederic Rice Speed Assistant Business Manager Donald R. Lowry, ' I I Albert P. Spooner, l Archibald R Shaw, ' U Ernest S. Colling, 2 William K. Hancock, ' 2 Horace W. Porter, ' 12 Fletcher B, Speed, ' 3 Alanson K. Hegeman, 1 3 James H, Sheppard, I3 Alan B. Gorman, ' 13 Leroy J, E, Sindel, ' 13 T, Watson Downs, ' 14 Franz J. Emmerich, ' 14 Emory W. Hukill, ' 14 Robert A. Laedlein, ' 14 Associate Editors 235 - X a o U o o C 3 o 00 I The Civil Engineering Society R. W. Jannus, ' ii O. H. SCHROEDL, ' l W. C. SOULY, ' I2 Officers President Secretary Treasurer Member Prof. Mansfield Merriman, C.E., Ph.D. In the Faculty Dr. H. S. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. Prof. F. P. McKibben, S.B. Prof. W. L. Wilson, C.E., M.S. K. E. Hendricks, S.B. Prof. L. D. Conkling, C.E., M.S. S. A. Becker, C.E., M.S. R. J. Fogg, S.B. S. D. Inberg, C.E., M.S. Undergraduate Members W. C. Carson J. A. SOSNOWSKI R. M. Sutherland L. C. Wright C. C. Thorn BURG G. H. Reussner J. H. Throm A. E. Hunt H. D. Kerr 1911 P. A. Witherspoon D. Horcasitas C. J. Hellen L. R. P. Reese R. F. Tarbell W. H. CORDDRY O. H. Schroedl R. W. Jannus F. E. Rasmers 39 M. L. ViXCEXTE H. Reimers C. F. Lincoln R. G. M. Mrxoz H. L. Miller H. T. Hr J. M. Blev G. E. RiNEHART 1912 W. F. Hadsall M. B. Hartzell H. M. Benjamin B. M. Thompson C. C. Wheeler L. T. Snyder J. Gore, Jr. I. A. St. John C. H. Warrington R. S. Dunn C. S. Snyder W. H. Waddington F. W. Wilson W. C. vSOLLY E. A. Avrand G. E. Harris, Jr. H. K. RorsE H. P. Croft W. R. King F. H. Lewis J. M. Fritz H. R. Blackman C. P. Brinton C. W. Van Nort Ira Fuhrmann Edmund Quincy ' A. Harrison E. F. BoYER P. E. Sanchez A. Kalajan F. B. Miller H. J. Horn H. L. Cooper L. F. Hill V. B. Edwards R. C. Fuller C. A. SOLER R. Goldberg D. T. Jerman C. J. Flayhart F. Fahm PL R. Cox C. E. Wagner 1913 A. Trujillo W. C. Fry, Jr. R. Campbell J. F. More B. B. Quirk W. E. McComas A. J. KUTZLEB J. L Lyox F. H. Plack A. Evans C. B. Rafter G. A. Mark L. Savastio C. W. Miller G. A. Rupp 240 Mechanical Engineering Society Officers R. F. Crump, ' ii . . . . . . . . . . President T. R. Davies, ' ii . . . . . . . . Vice-President E. F. Baumgartxer, ' ii . . . . . . . . Secretary W. G. ScHALL, ' ii . . . . . . . . Treasurer H. T. Qnx, ' ii . . . . . . . . Librarian Honorary Members Prof. J. F. Klein, D.E. Prof. E. L. Jones, M.E. Prof. A. W. Klein, M.E. Mr. H. a. S. Howarth, Ph.B. Prof. P. B. de Schweinitz, M.E. Graduate Members O. B. NiESEN, ' lo S. W. Croll, id C. A, Schilz, B.A., ' lo C. J. Umble, ' 09 Undergraduate Members lOll E. F. Baumgartner N. J. Ewing C. Koch C. A. Schwarz- C. E. Bilheimer a. C. Frey S. L. Kring waelder E. A. Buckley O. L. J. Graham D. R. Lowry J. H. Slate G. BuTz H. A. Haas J. G. McCoy J. A. Solomon E. M. CoNovER G. R. Horner W. L. Merkel O. H. Smith G. C. Craver a. K. Hunt E. F. Meschter S. O. Solt R. F. Crump D. C. Keefe E. L. Morgan J. I. Vela T. R. Davies R. O. Keiser J. A. Price L. B. Walbridge H. A. DuNSTAN R. W. Kempsmith H. T. Quin A. Wells J. S. KiEsEL V. G. Schall 1912 D. C. AiNEY J. E. Culliney P. A. Lambert C. A. Schulz J. Bailey W. H. Davis C. E. Loan C. F. Sencenbach A. Baker W. Douglas W. J. Maguire H. B. Tinges R. H. Boas H. S. Fowler W. R. Moore E. W. Trexler R. M. Bryce N. H. Guth J. E. Murphy H. J. Williams E. W. Cook H. E. Johnson J. L. Reiter D. B. Wood O. B. Ackerly J. F. Beers A. M. Bland E. Bo VEN W. K. Chun R. F. Clewell B. E. Cole T. H. Cook M. D. Douglas R. J. Fahl E. E. Finn F. J. Gerhard G. D. Herr R. S. Krause J. H. Letzer 1913 P. J. McMenamin L. T. Mart A. E. Moore E. F. Price J. C. ROBELL H L. RooNEY F. W. R T)ER C. A. Schneider M. M. Shaw J. H. Sheppard B. H. Spencer D. Thomas W. N. Van Sant R. C. Watson F. I. Wheeler my Lehigh University Branch Electrical Engineering Society Officers Henry H. Fithian, ' ii C. W. Hendricks, ' ii Jacob Stair, Jr., ' ii W. S. Herrmann, ' ii W. S. Franklin, M.S., Sc. Prof. William Esty, S.B. Prof. S. S. Seyfert, E.E. E. S. Foster, E.E. D. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Adviser C. S. Albright E. A. Ball C. B. Bishop J. Fisher H. H. Fithian F. E. Galbraith S. D. Gladding G. E. GOEPPERT E. H. Austin A. G. Birds all C. BiRNIE R. W. Catanach J. R. CrEllin C. A. Gauss W. K. Hancock T. P. Harris J. A. Hart W. M. Johnson A. W. Butler J. L. Conner W. J. Dugan W. N. Gambrill Honorary Member Dr. He.vry S. Drinker In the Faculty , M.A. Prof. W. S. Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. , M.S. Prof. J. H. Wily, E.E. S. R. Schealer, E.E. H. D. Gruber, E.E. Member D. M. Petty, E.E. Undergraduate Members 1911 J. H. Graybill C. G. Harwig C. W. Hendricks W. S. Herrmann D. H. Hunter B. MuNTER, Jr. W. C. Peterman H. E. Ramsey 1912 C. D. Kester A. G. Martin J. W. Milnor W. I. Nevius W. L. Newman J. W. NUSBAUM H. F. Perry H. W. Porter R. E. P. lle; K. M. Raynor W. N. RORER 1913 P. W. Janeway R. W. Over H. W. Motter D. R. Smith A. R. Norwood A. W. TicE A. E. Olson E. F. Weaver C. E. ROMINGER J. A. Rose C. E. Snyder J. Stair, Jr. A. J. Standing C. T. Umble E. D. Wunder A. P. Rutherford I. Samuels N. S. Schmidt A. T. Schultz G. J. Shurts R. C. Silvers W. H. Turpin R. S. Wenner W. M. Wilson A. F. WOTRING 244 The Mining and Geological Society Officers W. E. Fairhurst, ' ii President A. P. Spooner, ' ii . Vice-President C. W. MiTMAN, Secretary M. I. TerwilligER, ' i2 Treasurer Charles W. Rauch, ' ii Curator of Museum Prof. Joseph Daniels .......... Adviser Faculty Members Prof. Howard Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. Prof. J. Daniels, S.B., M.S. Prof. B. L. Miller, A.B., Ph.D. Prof. F. R. Ingalsbe, B.S., S.B. Prof. J. W. Rich.ards, A.C, M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Mr. E. T. Wherry, B.S., Ph.D. Mr. a. C. C. llen, E.M. 245 C. W. Rauch L. A. Rehfuss F. F. Trotter L. Wittgenstein G. R. Wood S. K. Huang W. E. Fairhurst Active Members IQII C. W. MiTMAN Maurice Good J. W. Dawson J. I. Blair A. P. Spooner C. C. MessingER H. G. Spilsbury C. H. Bender E. E. Yake H. M. Smyth B. Hartley James Tremlett H. H. Otto R. B. Williams J. T. Martin 1912 C. A. BONINE H. A. Camp J. P. Walker F. W. Davis D. DaviEs L. B. Knox E. B. Lehr C. R. Whyte M. I. TerwilligEr 1913 D. K. Evans J. L. Clark C. A. FellEncer P. H. Cosgrove H. J. Griffen R. T. Dynan C. W. Francis R. P. Weil F. W. Wright A. L. O ' Brien W. C. Rehfuss W. B. ClEmmitt 246 Arts and Science Club Officers H. D. Kerr, ' ii . . . . . . . . . . President C. W. HasEk, ' ii . . . . . . . . . Vice-President A. V. Laub, ' i2 . . . . . . . . . . Secretary C. R. Streets, ' 13 . . . . . . . . . . Treasurer A. R. Shaw, ' ii . . . . . . . . . Member-at-Large ' ' Jim Myers ......... Maitre-dc-Cuisine Honorary H. S. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. W. C. Thayer, M.A., L.H.D J. L. Stewart, A.B., Ph.D. R. W. Blake, A.B., A.M. C. J. Goodwin, Ph.D. W. S. Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. C. S. Fox, A.M., LL.B., Ph.D. C. F. Woods, Ph.D. R. W. Hall, A.M., Ph.D. P. Hughes, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. P. M. Palmer, A.B. P. A. Lambert, M.A. C. K. Meschter, B.Sc, M.A. M. J. Luch, M.A., Ph.D. Wm. Robbins, A.B. R. P. More, A.B. C. A. ScHULTz, A.B. Active Members C. W. Hasek H. D. Kerr 1911 W. H. McCreary A. R. Shaw E. S. Colling A. E. Greanoff 1912 S. R. Hanger A. V. Laub 1913 R. N. KocHER E. C. Meiswinkle C. R. Streets 1914 F. R. Abbott M. B. Bates, Jr. D. G. Baird J. H. Diefenderfer F. P. Houghton B. S. Shafer A. M. Stewart K. T. Kent J. J. McNamara C. R. W. gner S. H. Sauber L. B. Sheen L. R. Eltringham 248  5 t . Founded in 1871 Offi ' 10 D. M. Flick, ' 11 R. L. Fatzinger, J. Griffen. ' 11 P. M. GiNDER. ' 11 Prof. H. M. Ullmann, A.B.. Ph.D. President V ice-President Secretary Treasurer Adisory Member Honorary Member President Henry S. Drinker. E.M. Associate Members WlLLI, M B. .SCHOBER, Ph.D H. M. Ullmann. A.B., Ph.D. V. S. Babasinian, Ph.D. A. A. Diefenderfer. A.B.. Ph.D. C. R. Cressy. B.S. Active Members J. Hunt Wilson. Ph.D. G. C. Beck. A.C. C. A Pierle. A.B. C. H Maguire, B.S. A. G. Black J. E. Bacon R. J. Hauk F. J. Bartholomew A. S. Gery A, L. Ambler R. D. Jordan 1910 R. L. Fatzinger 1911 R. Faust C. K, McFetridge 1912 J. H. Herr C. T. VON Konecny 1913 W B. Krause A. K. White J M. GONDER 1914 R. I Baker L. K Hersh P. F. McFadden H. H. Mayers A. R. Sanchez 249 D. M. Flick P. M. GiNDER M. T. Coakley W. Seyfried S. C. DuTot L. G Matthews J. Griffen H. J. . lthenn L. E Carpenter L. T. C. RPEN ' TER T. T. Johnson W. J. Orr June Hop Drown Memorial Hall June 13, I9I0 Committee D. R. LowRv E. L. Morgan John Griffex, Chairman W. H. Lazarus E. M. Conover W. E. Fairhurst J. G. McCov G. F. Hartmax 252 iwfSlWT S aj -M g s a i Drown Hall April, 1911 J. Walker, Chairman E. S. Colling P. A. Lambert, Jr. R. S. Wenner T. p. Harris K. M. Raynor E. H. Robb H. J. Williams 253 Sophomore Cotillion Club Officers Leslie Goddard Matthews Alanson Kerr Hegeman Alexander Charles MacHardy Donald Franklin Wallace Frederick Willets Wright, Jr. Executive Committee President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Thomas Almeron Bryant Loring Townsend Carpenter Benj. Ely Cole Thomas Bell Coleman James Watts Mercur, Jr. Henry Lloyd Rooney Members o. B. Ackerly, Jr. J H. Fogg A. R. Norwood R. B. Bayard S. H. W. Ford C. L. Packard E. BowEn, 4TH F. J- Gerhard T. J. QUINN T. A. Bryant A. B. Gorman H. L. Rooney K. Callow H. R Griffen W J. Schmidt L. E. Carpenter A. K. Hegeman J- H. Sheppard L. T. Carpenter G. B. LiNDERMAN, Jr. F. B. Speed, Jr. B. E. Cole A. C. MacHardy W W. Thompson T. B. Coleman L. G. Matthews D. F. Wallace M. D. Douglas J- W. Mercur, Jr. C. Weaver D. McD. Dunbar G. S. Mitchell F. W. Wright, Jr W R. Duncan A. E. Moore 254 • Class of 19 U ' Don Lowry, Toastmaster March 3, 191 1 Toasts ' The Class Gridirox ' Athletics Diamond I Cinder Path ' Girlies ' Domestic Brew ' Faculty Harmony ' The Last Car ' Stories I Have Heard Bill McCreary Tex Black . Jerry Fisher . Joe Dawson Hannah Buckley Joe Vela Pat Tarbell Mugs Crawford Baumy Baumgartner Committee R. W. Kempsmith, ChairnuDi E. M. Conover J- a. Rose W. E. Fairhurst O. H. Smith J. C. POFFENBERGER O. R. WoOD 255 : ' Class of 19 J 2 W. J. Magoire, Toastmaster March 9, 1911 Toasts ' The Occasion- . . . . . . . , M. I. Terwilligek ' Temperance J. R. Crellin ' The Class W. C. Solly ' The 1 2. id Car . . . . . . . . . A. T. vSchultz ' Athletics . . . . . . . . G. M. Donaldson ' The Hoop-skirt or the Hobble? ...... W. Douglass ' Why is Lehigh? J- A. Hart ' The Hell of It E. E. Wright Committee F. R. vSpEED, Chairman E. H. Austin W. I. Nevius J. Bailey A. C. Shand J. T. Martin W. H. Turpin 256 Class of J9J3 March 16, 1911 Toastmaster, J. L. Clarke Toasts •Athletics . . . . C. R. Wvlie ' Electricals . . . . . . . . . . W. J. DroAN ' Mechanicals .......... D. Thomas ' CiviLs C. B. Rafter ' Miners . . . . . . . . . . F. W. Wright ' Our Future . . . . . . . . . . A. B. Gorman Committee W. J. vSchmidt, Chairman A. S. Horcasitas A. L. O ' Brien W. J. DUGAN H. Bowen G. E. Harris T. A. Bryant 257 tw Class of t9J4 H. R. Shellenberger, Toastmaster Toasts ' Class . F. P. Houghton W. F. Bailey ' Athletics . j c. W. Pettigrew ' Our Neighbors H. C. Faust ' Woman ......... W. E. Howard ' Morality J. D. Warlick ' Prophecy C. R. Wagner Committee H. C. Griffith, Chairman P. J. White J. P. Dobbins W. H. Kelchner 258 Taylor Hall Dormitory Section A W. H. CoRDDRV, ' ii, Chairman 1911 W. H. CORDDRY W. S. Herrmann J. R. Dawson L. A. Rehfuss W. E. Fairhurst H. Reimers H. H. FiTHIAN I9I2 M. R. Sutherland E. H. Austin E. H. RoBB T. P. Harris W. N. Van Sant J. H. Letzer F. I. Wheeler 1913 C. T. Vox Konecny A. K. KuTZLEB H. W. MOTTER J. vS. Long W. C. Rehfuss W. E. McCoMAs, Jr. H. W. TicE 1914 F. W. Ryder G. F. NORDENHOLT C. P. Richmond 261 Im ' 3  - m ||iS {QS Taylor Hall Dormitory Section B L. C. Wright, ' ii, Chairman M. Appel E. M. CONOVER I9II L. C. Wright H. T. Hu P. A. WiTHERSPOON H. M. Benjamin R. C. De NYSE C. J. Flayhart 1912 I. Samuels C. A. Gauss R. Goldberg H. J. Horn J. Blaustein G. C. Hill F. I. Hirshberg F. H. Plack 1913 F. H. Lewis F. C. Messenger A. L. O ' Brien M. K. Petty D. S. Aungst J. L. Harkness C. Hoffman D. Joseph 1914 C. Chu Fuh Post- Graduate W. B. Killough T. Lewis W. E. Pritchard E. B. Snyder J. G. DE Andrade, ' 01 263 Taylor Hall Dormitory Section C A. C. FrEv, ' ii, Chairman E. A. Ball C. L. Cespedes A. C. Frev F. E. Galbraith A. M. Bland S. R. Hanger L. F. Hill W. J. DUGAN H. W. Lamb H. L. Burdick I. Frank 1911 M. Good H. A. Haas D. H. Hltnter R. G. MuNoz L. Wittgenstein 1912 D. B. Wood W. I. Nevius P. E. Sanchez G. J. Shurts 1913 S. D. Williams 1914 S. G. Prickett Post-Gradoate S. W. Croll, ' id C. A. Schneider M. M. Shaw R. P. Galloway H. H. Mayers 265 • ...vsSf-i „ X fc.V Taylor Hall Dormitory Sectic •D R. W. Jannus, ' ii, Chairman 1911 J. M. BuEY S. A. Gladding D. HORCASITAS R. W. Jannus C. Koch W. H. MOHR F. E. Rasmers C. L. RiTTENHOUSE F. F. Trotter M. L. Vicente 1912 D. T. JERMAN J. W. MiLNOR H. R. Blackman R. Camba J. L. Clarke G. P. Flick J. H. Fogg P. R. Charnock W. B. Clemmitt W. L. Newman R. V. Parker A. F. Wotring 1913 1914 M. Sultzer G. E. Harris A. S. Horcasitas C. B. Rafter B. H. Spencer A. Trujillo M. Galainena W. H. Kelchner 267 Taylor Hall Dormitory Section ' E A. J. Standing, ' io, Chairman IQIO A. J. Standing IQII G. C. Craver W. C. Peterman S. K. Huang L. W. Smith 1912 J. H. Slate J. E. Bacon J. Gore H. R. Cox H. E. Johnson D. Da VIES R. E. Palle; W. H. Davis W. N. Rorer W. Douglass D. R. Smith V. B. Edwards R. H. Woods 1913 W. C. Solly J. R. Curtis B. S. Shafer 1914 C. Miller S. W. Burns C. T. Murphy 2CU) y r J i ; v.i ------- -j --J- --- JJJ 1 P ' l V. BLz-i ' ' i i ' WiS :! ' - ' ' mI BSBHI S P- ' ? !J UH H M- ' ' ifc ift w Sfl fi ffiNN Hi CttvfHEi i Order of Exercises Scene — The Court of His Satanic Majesty, the Ruler of Hades MUSIC PROCESSION OPENING OF COURT TRIAL MUSIC VERDICT MUSIC CREMATION Musical Program 1. March, Naval Brigade 2. Overture, The Beautiful Galathea 3. Gems from The Prima Donna 4. Concert Valse, Casina Tanze 5. Reverie, Traumerei 6. Fantasia, Gipsy Life . 7. Southern Sketch, Down South 8. Scenes frorn Faust Clarke Suppe Herbert Gungl Sc human Le Thiere Myddleton Gotinod 273 Dramatis Personae Judge .11  1I , R 2 j 2 j k p ' cos ' ' 9 cos(l (id (I p Attorney for Prosecution J X ' rf.[ .. rXjjx X, Jx + c ] Attorney for Defense  ii ..II r R 2 j 2 j k p ' COS dcf dOjlp Foreman of Jury JA-6 r —0° j P pcosO p dO dp u-4f. Jurymen CX.dx X, dx + C ] Bailiff 2i Witnesses du du dx I dx I dx U 1 M- —a- '  ■ 2 •y I flS — M The Land of Hades Tune — Next to Your Mother Whom Do You Love? Down in the shady land, Crafty and cunning, With cloven hoofs and tails. Demons are running; Peevish and sore, Thirsty for gore, They wait for calculus. Imps keep the fires hot ; Pots are a-boiling; Torture machines are got Ready for oiling; For every flunk, One great big hunk Dragons will tear from him. chorus: Next to the hottest fire he ' ll sit And they will roast him till he is fit — Fit for the torture of the versed sine. With tears of brine, His eyes will shine. And he will yell with agony From now until infinity. That limit is too small, indeed, For that fiend Calculus. H. K. P., ' i2 The Soph ' s Lament Tune — ' ' Trans-mag-n if-i-can-ba m-u-ality. When I first came to college, I confess I was quite green. The math thrown at me my first year Was the hardest ever seen. My Sophomore year I saw the book That made my hair turn gray, And after close relationship My lips would only say — CHORU.S. C-a-1 cal c-u- calcu 1-u-s With might and main I ' ve racked my brain For naught I must confess. While Thorny, Jack and also Sid Have nearly taken oiT my lid Because I can ' t get C-a-1 cal c-u-1-u-s. A view of hell in future time I have no doubt will be The math department integrating On a boiling sea. They swim around a cycloid curve To find the origin; Then take a dozen circles and Find where they begin. C. S. K., ' lo 4 The Thorny Path Tune — Rings on My Fingers. With fiendish yells and shouts of glee All Hades will resound When his Satanic majesty Finds out that Hellward bound We ' ve sent old Calculus in haste To join the horn-ed throng. We hope he ' ll hear our song That he may stay there long Enough to feel the wrong That he tried to do to us. Sure he ' ll be half-baked and parboiled They ' ll roast him well. The imps will tear his eyes out; He surely will get hell We know that he deserves it For all he did to us At last we ' re rid of Old King Calculus. H. K. P., ' The Victory of the Sophs Tune — Put on ' our Old Gray Bonnet. From the land of integration And of differentiation We have passed to better days; From the rule of Squirt and Thorny Dutchy, Sid, and Pop, and Jack, we Now come forth to sing our praise: That we need not fear Pop Meaker Who with E ' s and F ' s made weaker All our chances to get free from Thorny ' s wrath. For it ' s he that we left stranded, And in Juniordom we ' ve landed, And we ' re free at last from Math. chorus: Put all your books on the fire And make it leap higher To proclaim to the heavens our delight That all pain is over And in fields of clover We shall have sweet dreams to-night. H. K. P., ' i2 Committee J. T. Martin G. J. Shurts R. B. Williams E. E. Wright R. P. Baird J. E. Person, Chairman 275 University Sunday June 12, 19 10 The Baccalaureate Sermon was delivered by Rev. A. B. Kinsolving, D.D., of Baltimore, Maryland. Class Day Exercises Jane 13, I9I0 Program March — Commencement . . . Overture — On Songs by Schubert President ' s Salutatory ...... Lover ' s Duet — from the suit Pierrot and Pierrette . Class Poem ....... Gems — from A Trip to Japan Presentation ' .Oration . . . . . Seren.ade — from Ballet Les Millions d ' Arlequin Cup Contest Class Prophecy ...... Grand Tarentelle, No. 2 in A Flat Tablet Oration . . . ,. . M.arch — Guard of Honor Ivy Or. tion March — ' ' Comrades ' ' Last Roll Call At Drown Hall Alma Mater . H. Clarke Suppe Lloyd Burton Tre.a.t Burgman Geoffrey Arthur Caffall Klein Henry Meyer Riley Drigo William Jacob Robbins Heller John Linsley Mosher Chambers William Ziegler Price Teike Class Day Committee Chester B. Lawson, Chairman John Ross Hall Henry P. Smith Samuel P. Hess William E. Sturges, Jr. Franklin P. Lawrence Warren C. Van Blarcom 276 University Day June 14, I9I0 Order of Exercises MUSIC PRAYER Oration — The Commission Plan of Municipal Government. William Jacob Robbins awarding of prizes and honors CONFERRING of DEGREES Alumni Address to the Graduating Class — Henry R. Price, C.E., M.D., Class of 1870 benediction Prizes and Honors Award of the ] ' ilbiir Scholarship of $200 lo John Ferree Herr, of Strasburg, first in rank in the Sophomore Class. The Williams Gold Medal to William Jacob Robbins, of Bethlehem. The John B. Carson Prize, for the best thesis in the Civil Engineering Department, to Joseph Henry Baiighman, of Bethlehem The Alumni Prizes of $25 each, for first honor men in the Junior Class in various De- partments, were awarded to Philip McLean Ginder, of Rockport, in the Departments of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, and Carlton Hart Chapin, of Brooklyn, N. Y., in the De])artment of Civil Engineering. The Price Prize of $25 for English Composition, open to members of the Freshman Class, was awarded to Sidney David Williams, of Philadelphia. The Williams Prizes of $10 and $5 for excellence in English Composition, open to mem- bers of the Sophomore Class, were awarded to Chester Arthur Gauss, of Washington, D. C. Allen Victor Laub, of Bethlehem. George Jacob Shurts, of Hampton, N. J. Harold Jacob Williams, of Annville. RoYDEN Wersler Catanach, of Devault. VerE Buckingham Edwards, of Glenburn. Basil Marshall Thompson, of Buffalo, N. Y. Arthur Francis Wotring, of Schnecksville. The Wilbur Prizes of $10 for excellence in the studies of the Sophomore year were awarded as follows: In Mathematics to Joseph Willard Milnor, of Williamsport. In English to Chester Arthur Gauss, of Washington, D. C. ht Physics to Harold Jacob Williams, of Annville. The Wilbur Prizes of $13 and $10 fo,r excellence in the studies of the Freshman year were awarded as follows: In Mathematics to First — George Diller Herr, of Strasburg, Pa. Second — Alan Bowen Gorman, of Catonsville, Md. In German to Jesse Franklin Beers, of Bath. In French to Augustin Segismund Horcasitas, of Chihuahua, Mexico. In English to James Herbert Sheppard, of Grand Rapids, Mich. 278 Honor List Senior Honors Arts and Science Course. First: Robert Pattison More, of Bethlehem. Second: James Owen Knauss, of Coopersburg. Civil Engineering Course. First: Joseph Henry Baughman, of Bethlehem. Mechanical Engineering Course. First: Homer Christian Gerwig, of Pittsburg. Second: Charles Aloysius Gosztonyi, of South Bethlehem. Electrical Engineering Course. First: Richard Edmund Brown, of Summit vStation. Second: Jacob Bright, of Hamburg. Jttnior Honors Civil Engineering Course. First: Carlton Hart Chapin, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Second: William Harry Mohr, of Quakertown, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Course. First: Edgar Foster Baumgartner, of Asbury Park, N. J. Second: Daniel Charles Keefe, of South Bethlehem. Mining Engineering Course. First: Louis AllgaieR REhfuss, of Philadelphia. Chemical Engineering Course. First: Philip McLean Ginder, of Rockport. Sophomore Honors Mathematics. First: Joseph Willard Milnor, of Williamsport. Second: Harold Jacob Williams, of Annville. English. First: Chester Arthur Gauss, of Washington, D. C. Second: Nevin Homer Guth, of Allentown. Physics. First: Harold Jacob Williams, of Annville. Second: Walter Cleve- land Solly, of Philadelphia. Freshman Honors Mathematics. First: George DillEr Herr, of Strasburg. Second: Alan BowEN Gorman, of Catonsville, Md. German. jEssE Franklin Beers, of Bath. French. Augustin Segismund HorcasiTas, of Chihuahua, Mexico. English. James Herbert Sheppard, of Grand Rapids, Mich. 279 Junior Oratorical Contest Class of 1 9 12 Wednesday, February 22, 191 1, Packer Memorial Chapel Oration Oration Program Ernest Shaffer Colling Industrial Efficiency ' Was Napoleon Great? David Davies Music, March . Oration Rogers Harold Jacob Williams The New Standard of Living and High Prices Oration Robert Hall Woods. Robert Fulton: Engineer and Inventor Music, Gavotte ' Deethier Judges Frederick W. Robbins Superintendent of Schools, Bethlehem, Pa. The Rev. Francis S. Hort Pastor of the Presbyterian Church, South Bethlehem, Pa. Robert E. Laramv, ' 96 Superintendent of Schools, Phoenixville, Pa. First Prize, $25 Second Prize, $15 Third Prize, $10 Fourth Prize, $5 . Harold Jacob Williams . Ernest Shaffer Colling David Davies Robert Hall Woods 280 •I ' ! !► m lF«s 1 ftH - iti: ' •JS a l ll. 1 MUSTARDcxCHEE5E ' I ' he season of 19 lo will always be looked upon, by those who took part in the play and by those alumni and undergraduates who had the good lortune to see it, as one of the best that our Dramatic Association has ever had. This success was due to the very efficient coaching of C. L. Downing, of Mask and Wig fame; the able manage- ment of R. N. Williams and C. S. Kenney; and the hard work done by those in the show. Although no trips were taken, and there were only two performances at home, during Junior and Commence- ment Weeks, the season was a most successful one financially and other- wise. This year we look for a repetition of the good work. The play was ' ' King Popocater- pillar, VII, an Aztec comic opera in two acts. It contained fifteen musical numbers, seven of which were written by members of the association. It was a light, humorous, catchy, enjoyable play giving ample opportunities to show the histrionic abilities of such stars as Tommy Bryant, as the King; Tom F. Hickey, as Monte; C. vS. Kenny, as Dorolan, the Princess; and W. B. Davies, as Hans, the German Scientist. The other parts were as creditably filled. The chorus of sixteen showed the best dancing and singing that has been seen in a Lehigh show for some years. 283 R. N. Williams, President The Mustard and Cheese Dramatic Club Officers Roy N. Williams Caleb S. Kenney George F. Hartman M. L. Jacobs Donald Gibsox . President . Manager Assistant Manager Stage Manager Musical Director King Popocaterpillar VII An Aztec Comic Opera in Two Acts Book by Harold Snyder Lyrics by Horace Dawson and Harold Snyder Original Music and Lyrics by R. N. Williams, ' 10, E. S. Colling, ' 12, and J. R. Gousha Presented at the Grand Opera House, South Bethlehem, Saturday, April 30th, I9I0. Monday, June 1 3th, 19 10. The Cast King Popocaterpillar VII . T. A. Bryant, ' 13 Monte, Prime Minister .... T. F. Hickey, ' 12 The Queen .... . E. S. Colling, ' 12 Dorolax, the King ' s Daughter . C. S. Kenney, ' 10 CoRTAX, Lord High Chamberlain . R. W. Jones, ' 12 Hans, A German in search of idols W. Blaine Davies, ' 10 Gretchen, Hans ' daughter .... W. A. vStaab, ' 10 •; ' Young American Adventurers Hill ) C. L. Downs, B. M. Thompson, ' 10 ' 12 The Chorus Girls J. Ross Hall, ' io J- E. CULLINEY, ' l2 M. L. Jacobs, ' io H M Smyth, ' 12 G. F. Hartman, ' ii F. W. YOURY, ' 12 W. H. Waddington, ' i2 D. M. Dunbar, ' 13 Men S. E. Page, ' io A. Priestley, ' 1 1 C. E. Loane, Jr., ' 12 P. A. Lambert, Jr., ' 12 Act I — Throne room of King ' s Palace. Act II — Courtyard of Palace, showing prison. M. I. Terwilliger, ' 12 D. F. Wallace, ' 13 A. D. Jamieson, ' 13 C. R. Wylie, Jr., ' 13 284 Musical Numbers 9- 13- 14. 15- 16. Act I (a) Opening — Gala Day ........ Chorus ( )) It ' s Good to be Home .... Bryant and Chorus Queen of Hearts .... Kenney, Colling and Chorus (Words and music by E. S. Colling, ' 12) The Only Girl for Mb ..... Kenney and Chorus (Words by C. S. Kenney, ' 10. Music by R. N. Williams, ' 10) The Girl from Rotterdam . . Davies, Staab and Chorus (Words by J. R. Gousha. Music by E. S. Colling, ' 12) The Land of the U. S. A. Downs, Kenney, Staab, Thompson and Chorus The Girl Who Laughs at You . . . Staab (Words by J. R. Gousha. Music by R. N. Williams, ' 10) If Columbus Should Discover Us Today Finale ........ (Words and music by E- S. Co Act II (a) Opening .... {b) Hail Popocaterpillar Student Land (Words by J. R. Gousha. Music by Idol Love Advertisements I ' m Going to Live on Papa Descriptive — The Play I Love You Mister Man . Medley ..... Bryant and Colling Entire Company ling, ' 12) Chorus Bryant and Chorus Jones and Chorus 3. S. Colhng, ' 12) Kenney and Chorus . Davies and Chorus Downs Entire Compa.ny Staab, Thompson and Chorl ' s Entire Company Coach Downing 285 nw ffltnstr l The Minstrel Show, 1 9 10 Fifteenth Annual Performance, Lehigh University Minstrel Association, Grand Opera House, Saturday, December 3, I9I0 Officers Basil M. Thompson Franklin Youry Frederick W. Wilson Harold M. Smyth Alfred Priestley Hunt, ' ii Hunter, ' ii Shaw, ' ii Lambert, ' 1 2 Moore, ' 12 Francis, ' 12 Porter, ' 12 Birnie, ' 12 lubrecht, ' 12 Wheeler, ' 12 Hancock, ' 12 TURPIN, ' 12 Peters, ' 12 Stewart, ' 12 Fuller, ' 12 CULLINEY, ' iJ Davies, ' 12 Smyth, ' 12 Terwilliger, Youry, ' 12 Borden, ' ii Schroedl, ' i Fisher, ' ii Wood, ' ii Chorus Jamieson, ' 13 Coleman, ' 13 Hegeman, ' 13 Rowland, ' 13 Weaver, ' 13 Wallace, ' 13 AuRAND, ' 13 Quirk, ' 13 OuiNN, ' 13 Ushers Lowry, ' 1 1 Snyder, ' ii Kerr, ' 11 EwiNG, ' 11 Manager Assistant Manager Musical Director Stage Manager Treasurer Sheppard, ' 13 ACKERLV, ' 13 Kurtz, ' 14 Baird, ' 14 Compton, ' 14 Skinner, ' 14 Saunders, ' 14 Hartdegen, ' 14 Staab, ' 14 Hendricks, ' ii Spooner, ' ii Maguire, ' 12 287 BONES Warrington, ESCOLL, ' l2 Dunbar, ' 13 Program — Part I Interlocutor, Mr. Alfred Priestley TAMBOS 12 ) C POFFENBERGER, I Thompson, ' 12 y END MEN J ( Pianist, Fred Wilson, ' 12 Opening — The Calcium Moon Bryant, ' 13 ' ' poffy ' ' poffenberger Dunny Dunbar Tommy Thompson Billy Escoll King Bryant 1. The Barber Shop Chord 2. Angle Worm Wiggle 3. Lovesick . 4. Honolulu Rag . 5. Dublin Rag 6. You ' re Gwine to Get vSomethin ' What You Don ' t Expect Chet Warrington Finale — The Alma Mater Program — Part 2 Rusty and Artie — The Rustic Artists Giving their Random Pictorial Reminiscences of Campus Celebrities The Baseball Cranko or Doctor Kill ' Em . . . . Mr. vStrike ...... Mr. Fowl ...... A Visit to a Sanitarium B. M. Thompson, ' 12 C. M. Warrington, ' 12 D. McD. Dunbar, ' 13 The Mandolin Club Under the Leadership of J. R. Crellin, ' 12 Over-Study — or Beer A sketch in two scenes, written and staged by Billy Escoll, ' i CAvST OF CHARACTERvS Henry Flunk, a student .... DORiNDA, an Earth-girl .... GuG, a Martian ...... Mr. Steps, of the Brown and White bored Chorus of students and Martians. Scene i— The Earth, near Shanty Hill. MUSICAL NUMBERS 1. Champagne Moon ....... Dorinda and Chorus 2. The Villain Still Pursued Her ....... Henry The musical numbers were written especially for this sketch by E. S. Colling, ' 12, and J. R. Gousha. . T. A. Bryant, Billy Escoll, B. M. Thompson, D. McD. Dunbar, Time — The present. Scene 2 — The planet Mars 13 13 Lehigh University Choirs 1 9 1 0- ' H H. Reimers W. G. SCHALI. R. Catanach E. S. C01.UNG D. Davies A. V. Laub F. W. Wilson E. A. AURAND W. B. Clemmitt J. W. Fritz A. D. Jamieson 1911 1912 1913 C. C. Thornburg M. R. Sutherland R. W. Woods W. H. Waddington J. H. Milnor F. B. Miller W. H. TURPIN J. S. Long C. W. Miller F. C. Messinger A. S. O ' Brien B. B. OUIRK O. Church D. Joseph 1914 W. Kelchner C. B. Miller 289 F. E. Rasmers C. C. Thornburg. D. M. Flick Conductor Secretary and Librarian Business Manager Members IQII F. E. Rasmers, Solo Cornet O. H. SCHROEDL, Alto W. S. Herrmann, Bass Drum C. C. Thornburg, Solo Alto M. Good, Second Cornet C. S. Albright, Baritone 1912 L. T. Snyder, Clarinet R. E. Pall6, Trombone F. I. Wheeler, Bass Horn 1913 D. Thomas, Snare Drum and Traps F. J. Bartholomew, Tenor B. B. Quirk, Second Cornet C. W. Miller, Cymbals 1914 H. D. Crammer, Cornet F. T. Gatch, Trombone H. D. Kurtz, Snare Drum V. F. SwEnson, Second Cornet O. B. Church, Second Cornet 291 Lehigh University Musical Association Season I9I0-I9II Honorary Members Dr. H. vS. Drinker N. M. Emerv a. C. Callen ' ' 09 Officers W. G. SCHALL, ' II . R. J. Hauk, ' 12 M. I. Terwilliger, ' 12 Glee Club E. S. Colling, ' 12, Leader First Tenor R. C. Fuller, ' 12 H. A. Camp, ' 12 S. C. Peters, ' 12 M. R. Sutherland, E. S. Colling, ' 12 First Bass C. W. Mitman, ' ii A. R. Shaw, ' ii F. W. Wilson, ' 12 P. A. Lambert, Jr., H. B. Staab, ' 14 First Mandolin W. H. Corddrv, ' h J. R. Crellin, ' 12 J. W. Milnor, ' 12 H. K. Kurtz, ' 14 R. Camba, ' 13 F. B. Miller, ' 12 J. H. Sheppard, ' 13 First Violin H. M. Benjamin, ' 12 . Piesidoit . Manager Assistant Manager Second Tenor E. A. Buckley, ' ii D. H. Hunter, ' ii M. I. Terwilliger, C. W. Francis, ' 13 B. COMPTON, ' 14 Second Bass W. G. SCHALL, ' l I O. B. ACKERLY, ' 13 L. C. Atkins, ' 14 ! L. C. Babcock, ' 14 B. Bowman, ' 14 Mandolin Club R. Crellin, ' 12, Leader Second Mandolin R C. H T. J. Hauk, ' 12 C. Wheeler, ' 12 R. Blackman, ' 13 T. Johnson, ' 14 Guitar J. F. Kerbaugh, ' 14 H. Rowland, ' 13 M. M. Shaw, ' 13 Second Violin K. G. Van Sickle, ' 14 293 Orchestra D. Thomas . D. M. Flick First Violin D. Thomas H. M. Benjamin G. BuTz Members Second Violin J. L. Harkness R. Camba T. T. Johnson, Jr. Conductor Manager C. HartdegEn, Jr. Cello S. Had.away Cornets F. E. RasmeRS C. S. Albright Clarinet L. T. Snyder Piano R. W. Faust H. S. Rowland Trombone R. E. Pall6 Drums and Traps H. K. Kurtz, Jr. 295 Lehigh University . Incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania in 1866 Founder ........... Asa Packer Christmas Hall First used as a building for recitations, chapel and dormitories Competition Scholarships ..... Awarded from 1866 to 1870 Foundation Scholarships The First Literary Society, The Junto . Observatory ..... Packer Hall Tuition made free and scholarships annulled Chemical Society .... Wilbur Scholarship and Engineering Society Saucon Hall ..... Athletic Association .... First Epitome, appeared in 1875 . Library ...... The Burr ...... First Junior Oratorical Contest Gymnasium ..... Chemical Laboratory .... Wilbur Prize ..... Packer Memorial Chapel Electrical Engineering Society 296 Erected by R. From 1867 to 1879 Established in 1868 H. Sayre, Esq., in 1869 Completed in 1869 In 1 87 1 Established in 1871 Established in 1872 Erected in 1873 Founded in 1874 Issued by Class of 1878 Erected in 1878 Established in 1881 Opened in i 83 Completed in 1885 Established in 1887 Completed in 1887 Established in 1887 ntcrclass Contest The Henry S. Haines Memorial vScholarship Lacrosse Championship The Lehigh Ouartcrly Free Tuition Cane Rushes Physieal Laboratory First Freshman-Sophomore I vSupply Bureau Lacrosse Championship Brown and White Honor System Athletic Advisory Committee Fraternity Night The Lehigh Quarterly Students ' Club Room Lacrosse Championship Lacrosse Championship Week-day Chapel The Forum Lacrosse Championship The Burr Christmas Hall Week-day Chapel Physical Laboratory New Physical Laboratory Mechanical Laboratory Williams Hall Honor System The Burr Field House The Cage The Forum Andrew Carnegie Dormitory System College Commons Drown Memorial Hall Conference Department John Fritz . Sayre Park ' 78 Flag Pole Mining Laboratory Presidents of Henry CoppeE, LL.D. John M. Leavitt, D.D. Robert A. Lamberton, LD.D.. Henry Coppee, LL.D. WiLLiAM H. Chandler, Ph.D. Thomas M. Drown, LL.D. WiivLiAM H. Chandler, Ph.D. Henry S. Drinker, K.M., LL.D. . ctiiig President Donation of $ Univ Established in P ' ounded in Abolished September, Abolished in . Erected in 1892- Establishefl in Established in Adopted in Organized in Established in Suspended publication in . Opened in ersity Abolished in Established in Suspended publication Closed Resumed Burned . Opened in . Opened in . Opened in Resumed Publication resumed . Built . Built Discontinued 100,000 towards Dormitory System Completed in Completed in Completed in Established in Donation of Testing Laboratory Presented Presented Completed in 1889 1890 1 89 1 1892 1892 189, 1892 1892 1893 1894 1894 1894 1894 1894 1895 1895 1896 1896 1896 1897 1897 1897 1898 1900 1 90 1 1902 1903 1904 1904 1904 1905 1906 1906 1907 1907 1909 1909 1909 1910 1865-1875 1875-1880 1 880- 1 893 1893-1895 1895-1895 1 895- 1 904 1 904- 1 905 1905— 297 Wilbur Scholars 1874. W D Hartshorne 1886 J. K. SuRis 1899. E. G Grace 1875. A. E. Meaker 1887 H. S. Fisher 1900. A. W Bayard 1876. C. L. Taylor 1888 S. W. Frescoln 1901. E. B. Wilkinson 1877. H. S. JACOBY 1889 J. Lockett 1902. W F Roberts 1878. L. J. Parr 1890 A. H. Van Cleve 1903. P. T. Krause 1879. R. H Tucker 1891 W Forstall 1904. O. J. Haller 1880. M. M Duncan 1892 A. E. Lester 1905. S. H. Fleming 1881. A. P. Crilly 1893 H. B. Evans 1906. S. J. CORT 1882. C. C. Hopkins 1894 J. L. Neufeld 1907. R. L. Charles 1883. P. A. Lambert 1895 W B. Keim 1908. J H. Clewell. Jr 1884. L. B. Semple 1896 W J. BlEBER 1909. R. P. Heller 1885. W H . Cooke 1897 w E. Brown 1910. R. P. More 1898 H. J. Horn 1911. 1912. P. J. L. F. GiNDER Herr Presidents of the Altimni Association 1876- ' 77 C. E. Donaldson 1887- ' 88 W. M Scudder 1899- ' 00. W R Butler 1877- ' 78 C. E. Donaldson 1888- ' 89 Chas. Bull 1900- ' 01. A. Jo hnston 1878- ' 79 W R Butler 1889- ' 90 Chas. Bull 1901- ' 02. J. A. Jardine 1879- ' 80 H. S. Drinker 1890- ' 91 G. A. Jenkins 1902- ' 03. H. A. Porterfield 1880- •81 c. w. Haines 1891- ' 92 R. P. Linderman 1903- ' 04. H. A. FOERING 1881- ' 82 c. L. Taylor 1892- ' 93 W. H . Baker 1904- •05. R. G. Cooke 1882- ' 83 R. W Mahon 1893- ' 94 T. M. Eynon 1905- ' 06. F. R. Dravo 1883- ■84 H. E. J. Porter 1894- ' 95 F. P. Howe 1906- ' 07. H. H Stoek 1884- ' 85 E. H, Williams, Jr .1895- ' 96 H. B. Reed 1907- ' 08. H S. Miner 1885- ' 86 E. H. Williams, Jr .1896- ' 97 L. O. Emmerich 1908- ' 09. L. R. Zollinger 1886- ' 87 W M Scudder 1897- ' 98 R. P. Linderman 1909- ' 10. E. G. Grace 1898- ' 99 H. J. F. Porter 1910- ' 11. R. E. Laramy Baseball Captains 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1889 1890 1891 J. McK. Graeff, ' 85 C. A. Junken, ' 85 H. H. Bowman, ' 85 B. A. Cunningham, ' 87 B. A. Cunningham, ' 87 H, H. McClintic. ' 89 W. Butterworth, ' 89 C. Walker, ' 89 H. W. Biggs, ' 91 E. O. Robinson, ' 91 1891. C. W Throckmorton, 92 1901. F. W. Parsons, ' 02 1892. B. E. Woodcock, ' 92 1902. J. K. LiLLEY, ' 03 1893. c. W Gearhart, ' 93 1903. H W. Eisenhart, ' 03 1894. J. G. Petrikin. ' 95 1904. W . W. Brush, ' 05 1895. c. H. Thompson, ' 94 1905. F, B. Snyder, ' 05 1896. vS. P. Senior, ' 97 1906. P. Mackall, ' 07 1897. J. W. Gannon, ' 98 1907. P. Mackall, ' 07 1897. c. F. Carman, ' 99 1908. L. F. Galbraith, ' 08 1898. E. G. Grace, ' 99 1909. T. M. Uptegraff, ' 09 1899. E. G. Grace, ' 99 1910. J. Anderson, ' 10 1900. W . T James, ' 01 1911. J. Fisher, ' 11 Football Captains 1884 J. S. Robeson, ' 86 1893 1885 H. W. Frauenthal. ' 86 1893 1886 W R. Pierce, ' 87 1894 1887 W Bradford, 88 1895 1887 c. W. CORBIN, 89 1896 1888 c. Walker, ' 82 1897 1889 s. D. Warriner, ' 90 1898 1890 D. Emory, ' 91 1898- 1891 W W. Blunt, ' 92 1900 1892 M. McClung, Jr., ' 94 1901 ' 94 M. McClung, Jr. G. Ordway, ' 94 C. E. Trafton, ' 95 C. E. Trafton, ' 95 F. H. GuNSOLus, ' 98 F. H. GuNSOLus, ' 98 J. C. HOLDERNESS, ' 99 1907. ' 99. M. Chamberlain, ' 00 1908. F. B. Gearhart, ' 01 1909. J. T. Fuller, ' 03 1911. 1911. 1902. 1902. 1903. 1904. 1905. 1906. A. L. Dornin, ' 03 A. J. Farabaugh, ' 04 A. J. Farabaugh, ' 04 R. K. Waters, ' 05 P. H. Herman, ' 06 F. E. Troutman, ' 08 E. R. Olcott, ' 08 G. DeF. Speirs, ' 09 L. B. Treat, ' 10 C. B. Lawson, ' 10 A. G. Black, ' 11 1886. C. P. Coleman, ' 86 1887- ' 90. A. K. Reese, ' 89 1891. H. C. Banks, ' 92 1892. C. T. Mosman, ' 92 1893. T. H. Symington, ' 93 1894. G. Ordway, ' 94 1895. J. C. Dicks, ' 95 Resigned. Lacrosse Captains 1896 F. Bartles, ' 96 1903. C. I. Lattig, ' 03 1897 T. Merriman, ' 97 1904. G. Bailey, ' 04 1898 E H. Symington, ' 98 1905. W L. ESTES, ' 05 1899 W . H. GUMMERE, ' 99 1906. J. B. Carlock, ' 07 1900 J. K. Digby, ' 00 1907. J. B. Carlock, ' 07 1901 J. E. Symington, ' 01 1908. W C. Duncan, ' 08 1901 A. R. Young, ' 01 1909. w R. Morris, ' 09 1902 C, I. Lattig, ' 03 1910. 1911. A. R. S. OSBOURNE, ' 10 S. Dunn, ' 12 The Brown and White Editors W. C. Anderson, ' 94 William Warr, ' 95 J. W. Thurston, ' 96 John Boyt, ' 97 J. R. Farwell, ' 98 M. C. Benedict, ' 99 E. B. Wilkinson, ' 01 D. Smith, ' 03 R. L. Talley, ' 04 T. R. Angle, ' 05 N. M. Merriman, ' 05 J. B. Carlock, ' 07 L. Heck, ' 08 J. H. Graybill, ' 10 D. R. LowRY, ' 11 W. S. Merrill, ' 94 M. W. Pool, ' 96 B. O. Curtis, ' 97 G. D. Heisley, ' 98 J. B. Lindsey, Jr., ' 98 J. A. SCHULTZ, ' 00 R. E. Thomas, ' 02 R. P. Hutchinson, ' 04 P. G. Spilsbury, ' 05 W. C. Benedict, ' 06 C. F. Gilmore, ' 06 R. J. Gilmore, ' 07 C. U. Shank, ' 09 L. P. Gilmore, ' 10 J. L. Becker, ' ii Business Managers E. A. Grissinger, ' 94 D. H. Kautz, ' 95 J. B. Given, ' 96 C. W. Thorn, ' 97 W. E. Underwood, ' 97 H. M. Daggett, Jr ' , ' c J. B. Reddig, ' 98 O. C. Hannum, ' 99 C. Evans, Jr., ' go S. T. Harleman, ' 01 R. E. Thomas, ' 02 C. F. Carrier, ' 03 D. J. Packer, ' 04 R. C. Kautz, ' 05 J. G. Small, ' 06 A. W. Hesse, ' 07 J. S. Bayless, ' 08 G. W. Hain, ' 09 S. P. Hess, ' 10 J. Stair, Jr., ' ii 299 The Epitome Editors H. F. J. Porter, ' 78 E. P. Spalding, ' 80 C. C. Hopkins, ' 8j A. P. Smith, ' 84 R. H. Dav.s, ' 86 L- R. Zollinger, ' 88 C. H. Miller, ' 90 W. W. Blunt, ' 92 A. Weymouth, ' 94 W. S. Ayres, ' 96 J. B. Lindsey, Jr., ' 9: D. G. McGarock, ' 00 R. xM. Bird, ' 02 R. L. Talley, ' 04 C. F. GiLMORE, ' 06 A. Oram Fulton, ' 08 G. A. Caffall, ' 10 R. H. Wilbur C. F. ZiMELE A. Johnson G. S. Hayes F. P. Fuller C. H. Vans ANT C. W. Thorn G. R. Jackson G. G. Underhill E. T. Miller A. S. Clay R. MacMinn A. P. S. Bellis D. R. LowRY M. M. Duncan, ' 79 B. F. Halderman, ' 81 W. Briggs, ' 83 C. M. TOLMAN, ' 85 G. T. Richards, ' 87 U. D. Farwell, ' 89 A. T. Morris, ' 91 C. H. DuRFEE, ' 93 F. Baker, Jr., ' 95 E. R. Hannum, ' 97 G. L. Robinson, ' 99 E. B. Wilkinson, ' 01 H. S. Chamberlain, Jr., ' 03 G. L. Street, Jr., ' 05 R. J. GiLMORE, ' 07 W. R. Walters, ' 09 J. L. Becker, ' ii E. E. Yake, ' 12 Business Managers H. A. Luckenbach A. G. Rau R. S. Mercur R. J- Snyder W . c. Anderson J- B. Given H. M. Daggett, Jr. A. R. Parsons W. , L. Fleming E. M. Mack F. G. Wrightson, Jr C. c. Thomas G. F. Murnane H. H. Otto 300 T H L T 1 Lehigh University Athletic Committee Officers D. R. LowRY, ' l I Chairman W. L. Wilson, ' 88 . . . Committee Secretary W . A. Wilbur R. M. Bird, ' 02 J- L. vStewart D. R. LowRY, ' 11 F. W. White G. R. Wood ' ii W . L. Wilson, ' 88 R. F. Wood, ' ii vS. D. Warriner, ' 90 G. M. Donaldson, ' 12 vS. T. Harlemax, ' 01 E. F. Price, ' 13 H. S. Drinker, ' 71, ex-officio 302 rOOT-BALL Football Season 19 10 A. G. Black, ' ii E. F. Baumgartner, ' ii H. M. Smyth, ' 12 H. R. Reiter Captain . Manager Assistant Manager Coach Capt. Black H. K. Rouse, ' 13, left end R. F. Wood, ' ii, left end J. I. Vela, ' ii, left tackle L. R. P. Reese, ' ii, left guard C. R. WyliE, ' 13, center N. M. Downs, ' ii, center C. G. Harwig, ' ii, right guard Line-«p R. S. Dunn, ' 12, left half-back A. G. Black, ' ii, right tackle G. R. Wood, ' ii, right end E. F. Price, ' 13, quarter-back H. R. Cox, ' 12, full-back ly. B. Knox, ' 12, right half-back J. P. Dobbins, ' 14, right half-back A. M. Kennedy, ' 12, left half-back Squad 1911 L. A. Rehfuss J. H. Throm 1912 G. M. Donaldson R. Goldberg C. D. Cann 1913 R. C. Watson 0. B. ACKERLY W. J. Schmidt I9I4 W. F. Bailey W. S. O ' Gorman G. P. Flick E. B. C. Goyne C. R. Wagner 305 Mgr. Baumgartner ' VY ' HILIi all the games played did not result in victories for Lehigh, the football season of 19 lo was a successful one from many standpoints. The squad began work under the new rules, which meant practically learning the game anew. Under the excellent instruc- tion of our new coach, Mr. Reiter, in spite of the absence of a cap- tain, the team gradually rounded into shape, although progress at first was necessarily slow. After the Swarthmore game, the team work and spirit rapidly improved. As a result, the pluck and courage displayed by the team against Lafayette was of such cali- bre as to win unanimous laudation. We were unfortunate in losing several valuable men through- out the season, on account of college work and injuries, which no doubt weakened the team materially. We are losing through graduation five of our line men, but with the backfield intact and promising material in the other classes, we should look forward to a very successful season forligii. Capt. Elect Wylie Record [ Games September 28 — Western Maryland 0; Lehigh October 8 — vStevcns 0; Lehigh October 15 — Haverford. 5; Lehigh October 22 — Army 28; Lehigh October 29 — Swarthmore 15; Lehigh November 5 — Navy 30; Lehigh November 12 — Carnegie Tech . 0; Lehigh November 19 — Lafayette . 14; Lehigh November 24 — Georgetown University 6; Lehigh Total: Opponer Its, 98 Lehigh, 46 307 Baseball Team Season 1 9 10 J. Anderson, ' io G. F. MURNANE, ' lO G. F. Hartman, ' ii BvRON W. Dickson Captain . Manager Assistant Manager Coach Captain Anderson Team B. R. Rebert, ' i2, center field] F. H. Wolfram, ' 12, pitcher C. E. BiLLHEiMER, ' 11, pitcher F. S. Borden, ' ii, left field J. Anderson, ' 10, second base J. Fisher, ' ii, third base R. C. Sahlin, ' 13, first base R. W. Kempsmith, ' ii, first base R. H. Richards, ' ii, right field S. Croul, ' 10, short-stop R. D. King, ' 12, catcher Substitutes 1910 J. H. Pierce 1911 J. A. vSoSNOWSKI I9I2 J. T. Martin 1913 A. E. Olson M. M. Shaw A. E. Moore G. C. Hill 3 Manager Murnane I ' HE 19 lo baseball season was not as successful as it might have been, owing to the loss of two- thirds of the 1909 team by graduation, and the lack of efficient material to fill the vacant positions. A summary of the games played shows that Lehigh won three and lost eight. As a nucleus for the 191 1 team, we have J. Fisher, Captain, Borden and Rose of the Varsity team, J. T. Martin, A. E. Olson, M. M. Shaw, A. E. Moore and G. C. Hill of the substitutes. With Ralph Caldwell as our new coach, a more successful season is anticipated. Captain-Elect Fisher Record of Games March 30 — Princeton . 16; Lehigh 2 April 2 — Stevens 9; Lehigh April 9 — Rutgers I ; Lehigh 5 April 13 — Penn State 6; Lehigh 2 April 22— Tufts 5; Lehigh I May 4 — Albright . I ; Lehigh 2 May 7 — Swarthmore 9; Lehigh 3 May 14 — Lafayette . 13; Lehigh May 1 8 — Pennsylvania 15; Lehigh 4 May 21 — Franklin and Marshall i; Lehigh 5 May 28 — Lafayette . 8; Lehigh I Total: Opi Donen ts, 84 Lehig h, 25 312 of =f ' vW- — Lacrosse Team Season I9I0 A. S. OSBOURNE, ' lO C. S. Kenney, ' io A. C. Morris, ' ii W. G. Crowell Captain Manager Assistant Manager Coach Capt. Osbourne Team R. S. Dunn, ' 12, in-home J. S. Rowan, ' io, out-home A. S. Osbourne, ' io, ist attack J. G. McCoy, ' ii, 2nd attack R. B. Williams, ' 12, 2nd attack N. J. EwiNG, ' 10, jd attack G. W. BotelER, ' io, center O. B. NiESEN, ' 10, jd defense R. B. SwoPE, ' 10, 2d defense G. M. Donaldson, ' 12, ist defense A. W. Kennedy, ' 12, cover point J. C. Gorman, ' io, point G. A. Caffal, ' io, goal J. A. Hart, ' 12, goal Substitutes C. N. Schaffner, ' io E. A. Wheaton, ' 12 Mgr. Kenney 315 Captain-Elect Dunn ' ' I ' hough the season of 1910 in Lacrosse cannot be called a complete success, the showing made was exceptionally good under the circumstances. The team opened the season with a dash that promised a winning team, but the unfortunate absence of a competent trainer soon affected the physical condition of the men on the team. The regrettable absence of Captain Osbourne, owing to injuries, from the line-up in some of the games, no doubt. took some of the spirit out of the men. Q,Half of last year ' s Hnc-up remains for the coming season; and much promising material is on hand, so that under Captain-Elect Dunn it is hoped to develop a championship team. Record of Games April 9 — Indians • ■ • 2 ' Lehigh • 3 April 16 — Columbia . I ; Lehigh 8 April 3 — Navy 4: Lehigh 2 April 30 — Johns Hopkins . 6; Lehigh 3 May 7 — Swarthmore 9; Lehigh . 4 May 13 — Stevens I ; Lehigh 6 Totals: Opponents, 23 Lehigh, 26 GEMTLE G ME 317 TRACK TEAM F-rlMh Track Team Season 1 910 H. M. Riley, ' io F. P. Lawrence, ' io J. L. Becker, ' h Alfred J. Standing, H. M. Riley, ' lo H. DeS. Kennedy, G. H. Crocker, ' lo Lovell Lawrence, ' ic W. C. VanBlarcom, O. H. Smith, ' ii J. R. Dawson, ' i i J. H. Slate, ' ii . Captain . Manager Assistaiii Manager Coach Team O. L. J. Graham, J. J. Cannon, ' i i A. T. Schultz, ' i2 L. B. Knox, ' i2 R. P. Baird, ' 12 H. J. Williams, ' i H. R. Cox, ' 12 C. W. Van Nort, Captain Riley 13 Captain -Elect Dawson NE of the brightest chapters of Lehigh ' s athletic history of the past year is undoubtedly the record of the 1910 Track Team. Considering the fact that the team had the advantage of a student coach only, the results of the season are very satis- factory. With diligent and consistent work the team succeeded in administering decisive defeats to Haverford and Rutgers, and tieing the strong Swarth- more team. The meet conceded to be one of the most interesting held at Lehigh for some years was the one with Lafayette College in which Lehigh was defeated by a few points. With only a few entries Lehigh won seven points in the State Intercollegiate Meet held at Harrisburg, and our Relay Team won third place in the University of Pennsylvania Meet. We have lost only four men from the team by gradua- tion, and with the proper coaching there is no reason why the coming season should not be a successful one. Manager Lawrence 321 Record of Meets Event 100 Yard Dash 120-Yard Hurdles Mile Run 440- Yard Dash 220- Yard Hurdles Two-Mile Run 880 Yard Run 220-Yard Dash Shot Put Hammer Throw Pole Vault Broad Jump High Jump 100-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash 440 Yard Dash 880-Yard Run Mile Run Two-Mile Run 120-Yard Hurdles 220- Yard Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump Shot Put Hammer Throw Pole Vault Rutgers VS. Lehigh May 14, I9I0 First Second Record Havens. R. Williams, L. 10 V.5 sec. Havens, R. Graham. L. 16 Vs sec. Winnie, R. Cannon, L. 4 tnin. 40 Vo sec. Silvers, R. Kennedy, L. 53 Vs sec. Havens. R. Schultz, L. 28 sec. Dawson, L. Morrison, R. 10 min. 27 V.5 sec Kennedy, L. Winnie, R. 2 min. 5 sec. Havens, R. Van Blarcom. L. 23 -v., sec. Crocker, L. Slate. L. 37 ft. 9 ' 2 in. Crocker, L. Hambrock. R. 120 ft. 8V2 in. Graham, L. Van Nort, L. 10 ft. 6 in. Graham. L. Silvers. R. 19 ft. 5 in. Cox. L. R iLEY. L.. and Johnson . R.5 ft. 5 in. Lafayette VS. Lehigh May 18, 1910 Shand. Laf. Williams. L. 10 1 5 sec. Shand, Laf. Van Blarcom. L. 22 Vs sec. Shand, Laf. Thomas, Laf. 52 Vs sec. Kennedy, L. Spear, Laf. 2 min. 6 sec. Spear, Laf. Cannon, L. 4 min. SSVs sec. Dawson, L. Goodwin, Laf. 10 min. 14V5 sec. JAHN. Laf. Pardee. Laf. 17 ' A sec. Jahn. Laf Schultz. L. 27V.-, sec. Thomas, Laf. Riley. L.. and Cox. L. 5 ft. 4 in. Shand, Laf. Lawrence. L. 20 ft. 10 in. Crocker, L, Jones. Laf. 38 ft. 3 in. Crocker, L. Cox. L. 118 ft. 4 in. Graham, L. Darlington. Laf. 11 ft. Rutgers . Lafayette Haverford Swarthmore Intercollegiates U. of P. Relav Races Scores 43 . 50 points Lehigh 55.66 points Lehigh 40.00 points Lehigh 52.00 points Lehigh Lehigh Lehigh 60.50 points 48.33 points 72.00 points 52.00 points 7.00 points Third place 322 :rziR ' kv ! :=L zi ' C H o (= j= aw = v Basketball Team Season 1910-1911 i V. R. Merkle, ' h R. F. Crump, ' ii E. E. Yake, ' i2 Captain Merkle Team Forwards W R . Merkle, ' h P. J- White. ' 14 Guards E. W . Cook, ' 12 B. E. Cole, ' 13 Center S. E. MUTHART, ' 13 H. R Shellexberger, ' 14 Substitutes A. K White, ' 13 E. F. Price, ' 13 C. A. ScHULz, ' 10 L. J- E. SiNDEL, ' 13 H. C. Griffith, ' 14 Captain . Manager Assistant Manager Mgr. Crump 325 A NOTHER link has been added to the chain of Lehigh ' s successful basketball seasons. Capt. Mcrkle ' s team made a very consistent showing throughout the season, and had it not been for the absence from most of the games, due to illness, of one of last year ' s stars, it is certain that we would have even a larger percentage of victories to our credit. Swarthmore, represented by one of the strongest teams in her history, defeated us twice, only by a small margin, in two exceptionally fine ex- hibitions of basketball. The defeat by Penna. State College was due, in a large measure, to the illness of two of the ' Varsity men at that time. The Freshman class contributed considerable promising material, and with the loss of only one man from the team by graduation, a strong nucleus for next year ' s team remains. Record of Games Jan. 7— Albright .... 21 ; Lehigh 38 Jan. 14 — Brooklyn Polytech. Institute 17; Lehigh 37 Jan. 21 — Navy .... 31; Lehigh 24 Feb. II — Swarthmore 26; Lehigh 19 Feb. 18 — Swarthmore 35; Lehigh 30 Feb. 22 — Penna. State College . 34; Lehigh 13 Feb. 25 — Susquehanna 23; Lehigh 53 Totals: Opponent 5. 187 L ehigh . 214 326 C3YM TEAM cita gprnr T Gymnasium Team Season of I9I0- ' n J. M. Blev, ' ii H. D. Kerr, ' ii R. C. Fuller, ' i R. W. Jannus, ' ii J. W. TremlETT, ' ii G. R. Horner, ' ii J. M. BlEy, ' ii James Bailey, ' 12 C. D. Kester, ' 12 Captain Manager Assistant Manager Team E. R. BowEN, ' 13 Stephen Elliot, ' 14 W. B. EwiNG, ' 14 G. P. Flick, ' 14 T. B. FiTz Simons, ' 14 C. W. Pettigrew, ' 14 W Capt. Bley ' ITH the graduation of Beitzel, Johnson and Sturgis, the gymnasium team lost three point-winners, and, at the opening of the season, faced the problem of developing the new material in the lower classes to fill the vacant positions. The improvement in form and ability that has been shown by the old men, and the wealth of available raw material is very gratifying. The schedule for the present season is given below: Schedule of Meets Pennsylvania vs. Lehigh, at Philadelphia, February 25, 191 1. Rutgers vs. Lehigh, at South Bethlehem, March 4, 191 1. Haverford vs. Lehigh, at Haverford, March 1 1, 191 1. New York University vs. Lehigh, at vSoutli Hetli- lehem, March 18, 191 1. Columbia vs. Lehigh, at South Bethlehem, March 25, 191 1. L Contest, April i, 191 1. Mgr. Kerr 3 9 WRESTLING O f — lo.«=-F -i : r Wrestling Team T. R. Davies. O. H. SCHROEDL V. B. Edwards Captain Manager Assistant Manager Capt. Davies 125 pounds I. A. St. John, ' 12 145 pounds W. H. MOHR, ' 11 175 pounds L. R. P. Reese, ' h Team 11 5 pounds G. D. Herr, ' 13 135 pounds T. R. Davies, ' ii 158 pounds H. W. TicE, ' 13 Heavy Weight H. R. Cox, ' 12 TOURING the past year wrcstHng has been grad- ually gaining a foothold at Lehigh. Last year after a brief period of training, our team met the Navy and the Cornell teams and made a strong showing against them, although we were defeated in both cases by a score of 5-2. At a recent meeting of the Athletic Committee it was decided to rec- ognize wrestling as a minor sport for a year, the continuance of this recognition to depend on the success of the sport during the present season. Meets are scheduled with Princeton, Cornell, Penn State and Lafayette. The efficient services of the professional coach that has been engaged, coupled with the consistent work of the squad, makes it prob- able that wrestling will soon win a place among Lehigh ' s minor sports. 333 Mgr. Schroedl Best Lehigh Records Event Holder Date 40-Yard Dash H H . GODSHALL. ' 93 Feb. 27. 1891 100-Yard Dash M M Duncan. ' 80 May 12. 1879 220- Yard Dash P R. Van Duyne. ' 06 June 3. 1903 440- Yard Dash P. R. Van Duvne. ' 06 Tune 3. 1903 Half-Mile Run M L Smith, ' 07 Mav 16. 1906 One-Mile Run J- T. Waddill, ' 07 May 16. 1906 Two-Mile Run J. R Dawson. ' 1 1 Mav 18. 1910 Half-Mile Walk F. R. Coates. ' 90 Feb. 28 1890 One-Miie Walk F. R. COATES. ' 90 May 18 1891 Two-Mile Walk L. O. Emmerick. ' 82 Mav 3. 1879 Three-Mile Walk R B. Reed. ' 70 May 26. 1877 120- Yard Hurdle C. L. Am AN. ' 09 May 15 1909 220- Yard Hurdle C. L. Aman. ' 09 Mav 12 1909 Standing High Jump w . S Murray. ' 95 Mav 16 1895 Standing Broad Jump ■ . J McXULTY. ' 80 Oct. 11 1876 Running High Jump H M . Riley. 10 May 23 1908 Running Broad Jump H L Pentz. ' 05 Mav 31 1902 Hammer Throw G H Crocker. ' 10 May 14 1910 Shot Put T. H Sheridan. ' 08 Mav 16 1907 Pole Vault o L. J. Graham. ' 11 Mav 18 1910 Running High Kick J F. Symington. ' 01 Mar 9. 1901 Fence Vault w . S Murray. ' 95 Mav 16 1895 Record 4 4 sec. lO ' A sec. 23 1 .-, sec, 54 sec 2 m, 4- .!, sec, 4 m, 42V, sec. 10 m 14V.-. sec. 3 m. 28 sec. 7 m. 18 sec. 17 m. 2 sec. 27 m. 46 sec. 16 sec. 27 sec, 4 fc, 9 in, 9 ft, 10 in, 5 fc. 7-y i in, 21 ft, 6 in. 120 ft. 8V2 in, 39 ft. 6 in, 11 ft, in, 9 ft, I ' s in, 6 ft. 10 in. 334 Football A. G. Black, ' i i H. R. Cox, ' 12 N. M. Downs, ' ii R. S. Dunn, ' 12 J. P. Dobbins, ' 14 C. G. Harwig, ' ii L. B. Knox, ' 12 A. M. Kennedy, ' i. E. F. Price, ' 13 L. R. P. Reese, ' n H. K. Rouse, ' 13 J. I. Vela, ' ii G. R. Wood, ' ii R. F. Wood, ' ii C. R. Wiley, ' 13 G. R. Rinehart, ' ii F. S. Borden, ' ii J. Anderson, ' 10 S. Croll, ' 10 Baseball J. Fisher, ' ii R. D. King, ' 12 R. W. Kempsmith, F. H. Wolfram, ' i A. E. Olson, ' 13 R. H. Richards, ' 10 B. R. Rebert, ' 12 G. W. BOTELER, ' 10 G. A. Caffal, ' 10 G. M. Donaldson, ' i: R. S. Dunn, ' 12 Lacrosse N. J. EwiNG, ' 11 J. C. Gorman, ' 10 A. M. Kennedy, ' i; O. B. Niesen, ' 10 A. S. OSBOURNE, ' 10 J. S. Rowan, ' 10 R. B. SwoPE, ' 10 J. G. McCoy, ' ii G. H. Crocker, ' 10 H. R. Cox, ' 12 J. J. Cannon, ' i i J. R. Dawson, ' ii O. L. J. Graham, ' i i Track H. De S. Kennedy, ' 10 W. C. Van Blarcom, ' 10 LovELL Lawrence, ' 10 H. M. Riley, ' 10 O. H. Smith, ' ii A. T. SCHULTZ, ' 12 H. J. Williams, ' 12 J. H. Slate, ' ii J. W. Tremlett, ' 12 A. Wells, ' ii J. Bailey, ' i. ♦Season 1909 Gym J. M. Bley, ' ii 335 Interclass Track Meet Event 100 Yard Dash 120- Yard Hurdles 220- Yard Hurdles Two-Mile Run 440-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash One-Mile Run 880-Yard Run Pole Vault High Jump Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Broad Jump First Williams. ' 12 Cox. ' U SCHULTZ, ' 12 Dawson. ' 1 1 Kennedy, ' 10 Williams, ' 12 Cannon. ' 1 1 Baird. ' 12 Graham. ' 1 1 Riley. ' 10. and Cox. Slate. ' 1 1 Crocker. ' 10 Slate. ' 1 1 Graham. ' 1 1 May 11, I9I0 Second Trotter. ' 1 1 Graham. ' 1 1 Bear, ' 13 O. H. Smith. ' 11 Knox. ' 12 Van Blarcom. ' Herrmann, ' 1 1 Kennedy, ' 10 Van Nort. ' 13 ' 11, tie. Rasmers, Crocker, ' 10 cox, ' 11 Cox, ' U Lawrence, ' 10 10 Third Van Blarcom, ' 10 Lawrence, ' 10 Seager, ' 12 W. T. Smith, ' 13 Levan, ' 13 Trotter. ' 1 1 Dunning. ' 10 Hegeman, ' 13 Bear. ' 13 ' 11. and Hirshberg. ' Wells, ' 11 Smith, ' 11 Wells, ' 11 Rasmers, ' 11 Record 10.3 sec. 17. 4 sec. 27.3 sec. 10 min. 52 sec. 55.1 sec. 24 sec. 4 min. 58.4 sec. 2 min. 10.4 sec. 11 ft. 1 in. 13, tie 5 ft. 4 in. 30 ft. 5 in. 115 ft. 7 in. 108 ft. 6V2 in. 19 ft. 6V2 in. Score 1910 Thirty-one points 1912 Twenty-five points 1911 Fifty-nine and one half points 1913 Ten and one-half points. 336 Tennis Association Officers CharIvEs Koch, ' i i C. J. Hellen, ' ii H. A. Haas, ' ii H. L. Cooper, ' 12 President Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer Lafayette vs. Lehigh Lafayette vs. Lehigh Juniata vs. Lehigh Swarthmore vs. Lehigh Season of 1 910 April 23 April 27 May 18 May 28 Lehigh 4 4 5 3 Opponents Total : Lehigh, 16 Opponents, 4 University Tennis Tournament October, 19 10 Championship Round. H. L- Cooper, ' 12, defeated. J. H. Sheppard, ' 13, 3-6, 6-2, 8-10, 6-1, 6-4. 337 Founder ' s Day Sports October 13, 1 9 10 ■ I O the main body of Lehigh men the annual Founder ' s Day sports are of considerable interest, and this year was no exception, all three of the contests having been full of vigor and enthusiasm. The relay race looked like an easy victory for the Freshmen until the last lap when the Sophomores finished strong and won out by a few yards. In the baseball game the Freshmen, with their strong battery, had the Sophomores at their mercy and easily won the contest. The football teams were evenly matched, and although both sides fought vigorously neither goal line was crossed, and with the dying echoes of the final whistle disappeared the Freshmen ' s visions of the coveted flannels and corduroys. Summary I9I3 1914 3-35 Relay Race 3.38 1 Baseball 7 Football 339 Sophomore Football Team Fahl, left end White, left end Van Nort, left tackle Evans, left tackle Finn, left guard Gerhardt, center vSiEGEL, right guard Rafter, right guard Ford, right tackle Harris, right end Horcasitas, right end Matthews, quarter-back Cook, quarter-back Moore, left half-back DuGAN, right half-back Cole, full-back 340 Sophomore Baseball Drant, pitcher SiNDEL, catcher Hill, first base EbeRLY, second base McMenamin, second base Thomas, second base MacHardv, third base Watson, left field Jamieson, left field Wright, center field Stokes, center field Shaw, right field Olson, short-stop 341 Sophomore Relay Team Seguine Mercur Savastio Gorman Levan 342 ,, r liB % h f If;; MM 1 ,dWS lj. li If ' ■ ■ w 1 .z::m m: ' ,. ' ■ ' i ' ■ ' ■ W , f , l. ' 1 s , Wi I f s J Afi.... ,. •.•■■;!|as ,J la w ■P B Sophomore Basketball Team Cole, guard Thomas, forward MacHardy, forward MoTTER, guard MuTHART, center Fahl, forward White, forimrd 3A? Freshman Football Team Lopez, left end PETTigrEw, left end Mayer, left tackle Hagner, left guard Treglown, center Charnock, right guard Bianco, right tackle Leslie, right tackle Wagner, right end Young, quarter-back Baker, quarter-back White, left half-hack Williams, right half-back Jay, right half-back GoYNE, full-back 344 Freshman Baseball Team GaTH, catcher Kurtz, first base O ' Gorman, first base Driscolu, second base EwiNG, second base Howard, third base HartdegEn, third base CoMPTON, short-stop SlEBECKER, short-stop Brady, left field Mayers, center field Galloway, center field Brown, right field Bell, right field SheLLENbergeR, pitcher 3,45 Freshman Relay Team Todd Murphy Weber Chaffe Morse 346 Freshman Basketball Team Brady Griffith Hartdegen Pettigrew vStreet Siebecker White 347 Football Dinner TT is probable that never before in the history of the institution has there been anything that has so unified the interest of the Trustees, Alumni, Faculty and undergraduate body in athletics at Lehigh as the dinner given on December 3rd at the University Commons by Dr. Drinker and the Trustees in honor of Coach Reiter and the Football Squad, to which the Alumni, Faculty, and undergraduate body were invited. Not only was the dinner an excellent means of tendering the coach and the football squad a fine tribute, but it also gave every element that makes up the uni- versity an opportunity for the expression of its attitude toward athletics at Lehigh. The dinner being given essentially in the interests of athletics, the themes of the speakers were in keeping with the occasion. Dr. Drinker very efficiently acted as master of ceremonies for the evening, and those called upon for speeches were Mr. R. E. Laramy, ' 96, President of the Alumni Association; Mr. W. A. Wilbur, Chairman of the Executive Committee; Prof. W. L. Wilson, ' 88, Secretary of the Athletic Com- mittee; Prof. J. L. Stewart, one of the Faculty representatives on the Athletic Com- mittee; Prof. J. F. Klein, Dean of the Faculty; Coach Reiter; Mr. E. G. Grace, ' 99, past President of the Alumni Association; Mr. W. R. Butler, ' 70; Mr. D. R. Lowry, President of the Senior class; Ex-Captain A. G. Black and Captain-Elect C. R. Wylie of the football team. The Dean of the Faculty, Prof. Klein, favored athletics in technical schools pro- vided they were coupled with the maintenance of a high standard of scholastic work. He said : As regards the members of the Faculty, I feel sure that they will continue their policy of consideration and cooperation that they have manifested in the past. I feel sure all students ' interests are their interests and they sincerely desire Lehigh ' s success in athletics. Both Prof. Wilson and Prof. Stewart spoke in a similar vein concerning their attitude tow-ard athletics. Mr. R. E. Laramy, ' 96, after speaking of the work the alumni are doing for Lehigh, made a strong plea for the continuance of the loyalty, enthusiasm and clean sportsmanship that is being manifested by the 349 teams and the student body. He said: We want the spirit and enthusiasm at Lehigh to be directed along the very best channels, so that we may always have true sports- men and successful athletics. Coach Reiter, who has made a careful analysis of the athletic situation at Lehigh, said in part: The spirit which prompted this dinner I believe to be in recognition of the true sportsmanship and the genuine loyalty of the undergraduate body. Personally, I feel this occasion to be unique from the fact that it is not a tribute to a winning team so far as scores go, but it is to a winning team so far as spirit goes. It is to a team which developed those qualities which you and I are proud of and which will remain long after the scores of the present year have been forgotten. Men of Lehigh, you are doing a great deal to place sport on a more rational and sportsmanlike basis. I know of no college in the East which is liv- ing up to its obligations to the Intercollegi- ate Association in the same spirit as Lehigh. Lehigh is going to keep up her scholastic standard and maintain her position of sportsmanship, but if she desires a larger number of victories something must be done. It is conceivable that your alumni and your undergraduates can be brought to the view that interclass sport is the best thing. The question arises, can you aiTord this? In the second place, is it advisable to take a subordinate place in athletics? If you decide that the two former proposi- tions are not possible, what is there left to do? Nothing except get together and make a united efTort to better the situation. Mr. E. G. Grace, ' 99, past President of the Alumni Association, Captain of the ' 98 and ' 99 baseball teams, and now General Manager of The Bethlehem Steel Company, answered very rationally the question What ' s the matter with Lehigh ' s athletics? He held that there has not been the necessary close cooperation among the Board of Trustees, Faculty, President, Alumni and students to bring about the desired success in this matter at Lehigh. The Faculty has not made the student body and alumni feel that they really have a consideration for athletics at Lehigh. The student body has not taken the opportunity to cooperate with the Faculty and Board of Trustees. After speaking on the value in the practical world of a competitive experience and train- ing received in college, he said regarding athletic material: We have not the com- petitive material at Lehigh. Desirable athletes come here, but they do not always remain long. I think it is the duty of the men in college to legitimately help keep such men in college. I believe there has started among the alumni body a movement that will help you get good men and keep them here. I know Dr. Drinker will do his share of the work, and the Trustees will do theirs. Coach Reiter 350 Practically the entire student body and teaching force of the university were present at the dinner. Among the Trustees in attendance were: W. A. Wilbur and A. N. Cleaver, of South Bethlehem; Dr. H. R. Price, ' 70, of Brooklyn; Rembrandt Real, ' 83, of New York City. Among the Alumni present were: E. G. Grace, ' 99, of Beth- lehem; H. A. Porterficld, ' 83, of Pittsburg; R. S. Perry, ' 88, President of the Philadelphia Lehigh Club; F. S. Smith, ' 87, of New York City; R. M. Bird, ' 02, of South Bethlehem; S. T. Harleman, ' 01, of Bethlehem; H. J. Horn, ' 98, of Trenton, N. J.; C. A. Buck, ' 87, of South Bethlehem; E. L. Bevan, ' 87, of Scranton; H. R. Walters, ' 03, of Bethlehem; W. R. Butler, ' 70, of Mauch Chunk; R. A. Laramy, ' 96, of Phoenixville. The student body deeply appreciates the attitude of the Trustees and Dr. Drinker in this matter and most of all values this opportunity given for the discussion of Lehigh ' s athletic situation. It is certain that Dr. Drinker ' s efforts could not have served a better purpose than to have brought every one together in this manner to clear away much concerning Lehigh ' s athletics which has been misunderstood in the past. 35 ' Geographical Distribution of Alumni Country Number United States 3952 (See map on opposite page.) Alaska 3 Argentine i Asia Minor i Brazil 6 Canada 14 Cape Colony 4 China 6 Columbia 4 Costa Rica 8 Cuba 29 Ecuador i England 9 France 2 Germany 4 Country Number Guatemala i Hawaii i Holland i Japan 5 Mexico 44 Nicaragua 3 Panama 3 Peru I Porto Rico 1 1 Philippine Islands 9 Russia 2 Turkey i Venezuela i Wales i Total 4128 Residence of Students Country Number United States 598 (See map on opposite page.) Brazil 2 China 6 Columbia i Costa Rica i Ct ' BA 5 Country Nunlb Ecuador i Honduras i Mexico 4 Porto Rico 2 Total 621 353 Why Did You Choose Lehigh? iV MANUFACTURER would give much to know how men come to hear of his wares and what induces them to buy. To a university it is no less important to know why its good men come to her. And, since her interest is theirs, a full and candid answer from the students may with reason be expected to such an inquiry as that which Dr. Drinker and Prof. Hughes recently made: Why did you choose Lehigh? The answers to this question cannot well be summarized until replies have been received to more detailed inquiries in the second circular, which was made possible only by the answers to the first. None the less from those first answers some conclusions may be drawn with considerable assurance. Proximity to home or to friends attracted 30%, but was the chief motive with but 15%. A study of the courses offered here had weight with many, but seemed to count only about one-fourth as much as the reputation of the university, which attracted 70%, and was the chief inducement with six in every ten men. The comparatively low expenses seem to have influenced 15%, but only one-third of these would grant that this motive ranked first with them. The location of the university with respect to mines, manufacturing, etc., helped to bring one-fourth of our men, but with only 5% was this argument the one of greatest weight. An ardent band of two in every hundred sought hard work above all things; others counted this an incidental charm. The fact that Lehigh is just the right size appealed to one-fifth of all that came, and nearly five in every hundred placed this factor first. From these answers we may judge that nearly half our students seem to come here through the influence of alumni. And the answers show that our present students may claim an influence almost half as great. Here let us greet the Lafayette school principal who advised his pupil that Lehigh is the best technical school in the country; and also the Philadelphia newspapers : for when four of these were asked to name the best civil course in the country, three hailed Lehigh, and only one dared whisper Penn. Surely we do not violate a confidence in mentioning the man who first heard of Lehigh when he saw its pennant suspended in the room of a young woman, who, for all further information concerning us, was obliged to refer him to the World Almanac. No less fortunate was the western student, who, returning from travel to enter his home university, was advised to look in upon us, and went no farther. We assume that the youth whose ' ' high personal regard for the faculty ' ' brought him here still retains some of his illusions, and also he who mentions the friendly feeling which I noticed between students on my visit. They all seem to know each other and speak to every one. But happiest is the man all of whose relatives are Lehigh alumnae. The constant reference to our alumnae has exicted some concern within the faculty, but the reference to Mass. Tech. as the first circumstance to lead a man to Lehigh can be appreciated thoroughly by all but one or two of that body. 354 The Lehigh Engineer This poetn was written by Mr. W. Griffith, ' 76, aad was read by him at the recent dinner at Scranton, of the I ehigh Club of N. E. Pennsylvania THE TRANSIT. With apologies to Mr. Ivongfellow. I stood by the transit at noon-day, My stomach suggesting the hour, And the cloud hanging low on the moun- tain Presaged an approaching shower. I could feel my ears a freezing, Like the water that soaked my feet, And I felt for the empty bottle, In the pocket at my seat. Through the tall gray poplars And shivering oaks hard by, The blast of the cutting March wind Would whistle and moan and sigh. But whirling and eddying past me, Rose the belated storm. And my view of the distance vanished As darkness at early morn. And like those chilly snowflakes, As they rushed among the trees, A flood of thoughts came o ' er me While I stood prepared to freeze. How often, oh, how often, In the winters passing by, I had stood by the same old transit, When cold and tired and dry. My feet were cold and restless And would improve most every chance To practice waltz or polka In circum-transit dance. I thought of the olden days, And many a weary sigh, Of the picnic we had surveying The campus at Old Lehigh. And far in the hazy distance Of that cheerless day in March, I watched to see my foresight Wave forth like a flaming torch. And as the snow fell faster. And I was warming up a bit, I thought of the other fellows Who were also being it. 355 Now, whenever I see a transit On its slender, tri-legged stand, Symbol of a great profession In this progressive land. I think of the several hundred Of Lehigh ' s engineers, Each bearing his portion of burden Through our nation ' s advancing years; Each having his share of trouble As he dances round and round. Swinging partners with his transit O ' er the cold and frozen ground. And forever and forever. As long as this nation lasts, Adding his share to her greatness. And breasting her stormy blasts. Helping the whole world onward. In future it will appear, A mighty agent of progress Is the Lehigh Engineer. This is a proverb true and old. By ancient seers and wise men told, The absent are forgotten. But not for me does the maxim hold, Or how account for the manifold Absences that I ' ve gotten. Why Not ? May I take your charming daughter To attend the theatre, pray? Said a youth who thought ' twas proper To ask pater old and gray. Said her sire, Why yes, of course, — er- Either night or matinee, But I fear you hadn ' t better Let the girl select the play. H. I. Whose is the name well-known to fame? Who makes us dig for hard-earned glory? And tests our stuff when we would bluff? The flunkers moan Professor Thorny. Just So They played at cards together, he and she, A game of hearts they played quite leisurely ; His lovesick soul soon tired of the game, And the pretty maiden promptly felt the same. The lover sighed. Her hand he tried to kiss; No, no! she cried, You do not under- stand. ' I never, never will let you do this. Dear heart, I can not let you kiss my hand. Ye Gods! ' Tis o ' er! the fellow sadly cried. No, no! the maiden hastily replied. She drew quite near. You do not understand. I could not, would not let you kiss my hand. R. O. 356 Be cool, my friend, and hear my muse dispense Some sovereign comforts drawn from common sense. Jim Myers — How various his employment, Whom the world calls idle. LOANE, ' l2 — ' I am sorry Heav ' n made me so comely. Mr. Emery — The words of his mouth were smoother than butter. Mr. PiERLE — Beauty is excelled by manly grace. Fahm, ' i2 — Can there be so fair a creature Formed of common clay? Prof. McKibben — An I-turn-the-crank-of-the-universe air. Porter, ' 12 — I would that my tongue could utter the thoughts that arise in me. Prof, de Schweinitz — Then he will talk — good gods! how he will talk! Hanger, ' 12 — Has any man seen him at the barber ' s? 357 Prof. Esty — My voice is common as the ivy leaves, Plucked in all seasons — bears no price. MiLNOR, ' l2 — A reading machine, wound up and going, He mastered what was not worth the knowing. Smith, ' id — A name not unrecorded in the rolls of fame. Slate, ' ii — I was as virtuously given as a gentleman need be. Wittgenstein, ' ii — Thou art wondrous strong, but lovely in thy strength. Sheppard, ' 13 — Isn ' t she a glorious creature? B. U. X.— Making night hideous. Waddington, ' 12 — O, ma, may I be a dude, too? Slate, ' ii — So wise, so good, they say, do ne ' er live long. Jack Ogburn — You must knot him to prevent him from slipping through his collar ' ' Dutch Gery, ' 13 — Cursed be the man, the poorest wretch in life, The crouching vassal to the tyrant wife. Mr. Ingberg — What? BrycE, ' 12 — He could with either side dispute. Confute, change hands, and still confute. MosE Appel, ' ii — When a poor devil does his best. Glee Club — Of singing thou hast got the reputation. Bethlehem Fairies — Persuasive speech and more persuasive sighs, Silence that spoke, and eloquence of eyes. CULLINEY, ' 12 — And in short measures life may perfect be. 358 Thompson, ' 12 — His highest conception of innocent fun Finds its source and its end in a villainous pun. Spilsbury, ' ii — Ere on thy chin the springing beard began To spread a doubtful down and promise man. Gauss, ' 12 — I am reckless in what I do to spite the world. BuLLEY, ' 11 — Oh woman, perfect woman! What distraction Was meant for mankind when thou was ' t made! Williams, ' 13 — I wept when I was born and every day shows why. Cox, ' 12 — ' Tis quality, not quantity. Mr. Conkling — The tartness of his face sours ripe grapes. WalbridgE, ' ii — I am a stranger here, Heav ' n is my home. Oratorical Contestants — My blood ran back, My shaking knees against each other knocked. Dutchy Stocker — I am native here, and to the manner born. The BethlEhems — God made the country, but who made this town. The Band — One omnipresent damned eternal noise. Bethlehem Prep. Crowd — We know it all. Goldberg, ' 12 — Cheat him, devil, if you can. 1913 Banner Watchers — Alack the day! they come not, And our goodly sleep is lost in vain. Prof. Charles — Perhaps he ' ll grow. Blaustein, ' 14 — Too fresh to keep, too green to eat, throw it away. 359 Don Lowry, ' ii — The noblest Roman of them all. Y. M. C. A. Reception — In that day seven men shall take hold of a woman. Dr. Drinker — He was my friend, faithful and just to me. Van Sant, ' 12 — All Gaul seems to be at last united. Mr. Hendricks — Little lamb, who made thee? Railroad Lectures — Talk, talk, talk, much talk and Httle to it. HellEn, ' ii — An angel face that flits through all my dream . Doc White — And oh! the prettiest foot! Laundry Bills — Base is the slave that pays. Mr. Brown — Thou living ray of intellectual fire. Post-Graduates — The older you grow the less you know, Until you don ' t know nothin ' at all. Mr. CrEssy — Something between a hindrance and a help. Windy Wilson — All is not gospel that comes out of his mouth. EwiNG, ' 10 — . j Greater men than I have Uved, but I doubt it. Prof. Lambert — A merrier man. Within the limit of becoming mirth, I never spent an hour ' s talk withal. GindER, ' ii — ,. He never flunked— I reckon he never knew how. Hartley, ' 12 — I ' m a masher, I am. Faculty Meeting — Fools rush in where angels fear to tread. 360 Mk. Niesen — I am not in the roll of common men. Freshman Banijuet — All hell broke loose. That A — I saw thee once — only once — years ago. ShurT,s, ' i2 — I know a story. Total Exclusion — This was the unkindest cut of all. Brown and White — Words, words, words. CiVILS — They toil not, neither do they spin. Prof. Franklin — Genius is oft to madness near allied, And thin partitions do their bounds divide. Sanborn, ' 13 — Like a drum, noisy but empty. R. H. Woods, ' ii— How beautiful water is! Dids ' t ever think of it? ' BuLLEY, ' 11 — The greatest of faults is to be conscious of none. Herr, ' 12 — Him, for the studious shades Kind nature needed. Galbraith, ' ii — He has a shell like any other lobster. Lincoln, ' ii — All discourses but mine own afflict me. Rehfuss, ' 13 — Fresh by nature, not by name. The Knockers — It is easier to be critical than correct. Prof. Stewart — Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. 361 To hold as ' tuere. the mirror up to Xatiire. — Hamlet. Harris, ' 12 (in Allentown station) — What time is it anyway? Friend — Half past four. Harris, ' 12 (looking at weighing machine) — Why, this thing says six o ' clock. Baird, ' 12 — Say Wright, what does that E after your name on the Petrology bulletin board mean. Wright, ' 12 — Oh, that stands for Earle. Mr. Ch.arles — I hope if that Epitome Board does try to gag me, they won ' t get off that old one about my being always taken for a Freshman. Prof. Richards — The two best books on Metallurgy are these three. P. rker, ' 12 (picking up the Vassar annual) — I know several fellows who go to Vassar. Prof. L. mbert — How can you find the center of mass of this chair? Sheppard, ' 13 — From the equation of the chair. 364 Freshman (in Chapel, frantically clutchinj, Wittgenstein, ' ii, from behind as he rises to leave) — Say, sit down. Don ' t you know the Freshmen don ' t leave until the Seniors have gone? Freshman — Is the Lacrosse Association one of the literary associations at Lehigh? Dynan, ' 13 — Must wc ink this tracing in lead pencil first? Good, ' ii — Say Cravcr, what car did you come over on last night? Craver, ' ii — The last one. Good, ' ii — I thought the last car only ran Saturday nights. Professor S — Mr. Warlick, please change the tone of your voice, it makes me think I have a young lady in the class. Professor M — (awaiting an opportunity to speak to A. T. Schultz, ' 12) — Mr. Schultz, are you engaged? Schultz (blushing and much embarrassed) — Oh-ah-yes-no-ah. Do you mean to ask if you can speak to me a moment? Oh, I ' m not engaged. Prof. Franklin (to waiting Freshman) — Very sorry, but by faculty ruling you are dropped from college. Just a minute please — here ' s fifty cents; would you mind going up to Drown Hall and getting us some cigars? Junior— The best example of class spirit that I have ever seen is shown by those few Sophomores who will persist in wearing those detestable class hats. Herr, ' 12 — I know I ' m not liked by all the boys, but then I have an awfully high reputation with the faculty. Junior — Here comes Bishopthorpe. Freshman — Are his girls with him? Dr. Woods — With what case do you express definite time? Brilliant Scholar — Subjunctive 1914. Mr. Fry (in Sophomore Physics) — What docs the intensity of the field of a dynamo depend upon? Wilson, ' 12 — The smallness of the width of the wire. Dutchy — What ' s in a name? Limburgcr called b} ' any other name would be odoriferated just the same. Dr. Hall — What kind of a tree, gentlemen? BoNiNE, ' 12 — A dogwood. Dr. Hall — How do you recognize it? BoNiNE, ' 12 — By its bark. Harrison, ' 13 (at the Commons) — Pass the mufflers, please. Dr. Woods — Where was Schiller born? German Shark — In Goethe. 365 Wheatox, ' i2 (in Ore Dressing) — How much are we supposed to get out of this lesson to-day? Prof. Daxiels — You ask a question that would stagger a wise man. Bacox, ' i2 (after failing to get a precipitate from a solution) — Dr. Ullmann, don ' t you think this opens up a great field of investigation? Prof. Richards (lecturing) — A producer producing producer gas produces CO2, etc. Shurts, ' 12 (in Construction) — Are those temples on the east side of the river going up or coming down? J. D. Krause, ' 14 (in Laboratory) — (A very perplexing situation having suddenly dawned upon him, where the experiment required the use of a silver ten cent piece, waved for Dr. Babasinian and with an unhesitating voice inquired:) Is it all right to use two nickels in this experiment? IxsTRUcTOR (in English) — Can you give me an example of personification using the word ' ship? ' LiXDERMAX, ' 13 — You might call the ship a she. Voice ix Rear — Hold the ship, boys. D. B. Woods, ' 12 (at the Commons) — Hey there, seconds on beef, young feller. ' Prof. (?) Ashb.augh — Don ' t you know, Mr. Pierle, this world wasn ' t made right. Mr. Wherry — Mr. Blaustein, don ' t bite me when you talk to me. Blausteix, ' 14 — I won ' t bite, it ' s against my religion. Prof, de Schweixitz (a tacit assumption in Senior Machine Design) — I can do no more than lead you to the trough, but if you won ' t drink — Chorus of M. E ' s — Lead us to it. LixcoLX, ' 11 (with an oratorical delivery, nightly on the telephone) — I ' m sorry to bother you, but can you give me the lesson in Sanitary for to-morrow? Very much obliged to you. Thanks very much. Sorry to bother you, old chappie. So long. Mr. Pierle (in reproving the Freshmen, intending to say zeal and vigor ) — You should put more veal and zigor in your work. 366 I9I0 February 26. — Lehigh defeats Swarthmore in Basketball, 29-24. Haverford, 26-2 2. Navy defeats Lehigh in Wrestling, 5-2. Gym. team loses to March — Senior dinner at Wyandotte Hotel. — Lehigh defeats Cornell in Basketball, 29-17. — Gym. team loses to Columbia, 32-21. — Junior dinner at New Merchants Hotel. — Gym. contest, U. of P., 43; Lehigh, 11. — Sophomore dinner at New Merchants Hotel. — L contest, Gym. team. — Tau Beta Pi banquet at New Merchants Hotel. — Beginning of Easter holidays. — Close of Easter holidays. — Baseball team defeated by Princeton, 16-2. 367 April 2. — Stevens Institute defeats Lehigh in baseball, 9-0. 7. — Freshman dinner at Wyandotte. g. — Baseball, Lehigh, 5; Rutgers, i. Lacrosse team defeats Indians, 3-2. 13. — Penn State baseball team defeats Lehigh, 6-2. 16. — Lehigh defeats Columbia in Lacrosse, 8-1. 23. — Baseball team loses to Tufts College, 5-1. Lacrosse team defeated by Navy, 4-2. Tennis team defeats Lafayette, 4-1. 27. — Lafayette again lowers its colors in tennis to Lehigh, score 4-1. 28. — Junior Week opens. Sophomore Cotillion dance. 29. — Junior Prom. 30. — Lacrosse team loses to Johns Hopkins, 6-3. Mustard and Cheese presents King Popocaterpillar VII. Relay team takes third place in U. of P. meet. May 4. — Lehigh defeats Albright in baseball, 2-1. 5. — Baseball, Swarthmore, 9; Lehigh, 3. Lacrosse, Swarthmore, 9; Lehigh, 4. II. — 1911 wins Interclass Track meet. 13. — Lacrosse team defeats Stevens, 6-1. 14. — Baseball, Lafayette vs. Lehigh. Track team defeats Rutgers, 60V2-43V2. 18. — Baseball, University of Pennsylvania vs. Lehigh. Track meet, Lafayette, 55 Vs! Lehigh, 48 ' g. Tennis team defeats Juniata College, 4-0. 20. — F. W. Rane, State Forester of Massachusetts, speaks on Forestry. 21. — Baseball, Franklin and Marshall, i; Lehigh, 5. Track team defeats Haver- ford, 72-40. 25. — Baseball, West Point vs. Lehigh. Rain. Track team ties with Swarth- more, 52-52. 26. — Arcadia dinner at Sun Inn. 28. — Baseball, Lafayette vs. Lehigh. Tennis team defeats vSwarthmore, 3-2. June 3. — Examinations commence. 10. — Calculus Cremation. II. — Phi Beta Kappa oration. President ' s reception to Senior class. Meeting of Alumni Association. Alumni Day Exercises. Opening of Fritz Engineering Labora- tory and the Eckley B. Coxe Mining Laboratory. 12. Baccalaureate Sermon by Rev. A. B. Kinsolving. 13. — Baseball, Lafayette vs. Lehigh. Class Day Exercises. 14. — University Day Exercises. 368 13 sports. 14 15 22 28 29 September Football practice commences. Arrival of Coach Rciter. Opening cxerci.ses. Freshmen win banner rush. 23. — College meeting. — Football, Western Maryland, o; Lehigh, 10. 30. — Dr. Rstes lectures to Freshmen. October — Tennis Association meets. Dr. Drinker gives address. — Dr. Estes gives lecture to Freshmen. — Football, Stevens, o; Lehigh, o. — Founder ' s Day exercises. Freshmen and Sophomores tie in Founder ' s Day — Havcrford smoker. —Football, Havcrford, 5; Lehigh, o. Y. M. C. A. Freshmen. — Football, West Point, 28; Lehigh, o. — Swarthmore smoker. — Football, Swarthmore, 15; Lehigh, 8. November — Mr. H. J. Hadfield gives readings from Kipling. — Football, Navy, 30; Lehigh, o. — Football, Carnegie Tech, o; Lehigh, 25. — Lafayette smoker. Lecture by Dr. H. M. Wiley. 19. — Football, Lafayette, 14; Lehigh, o. 23. — Thanksgiving recess begins. 24. — Football, Georgetown, 6; Lehigh, 3. 28. — Thanksgiving recess closes. December 2. — Dr. J. T. Rothrock lectures on Forestry. 3. — Trustees ' dinner in honor of football squad and Coach Rciter. Minstrel show. 9. — Dr. N. C. Schaeflfer speaks on Has the Voice of Conservation Been Heard in Our Public Schools? 10. — Combined Musical Clubs give concert at the Moravian College for Women. 21. — Governor Guild lectures in chapel. 22. — Christmas vacation begins. 369 i9n January — Christmas vacation ends. — Basketball, Albright, 21; Lehigh, 38. — Basketball, Brooklyn Polytech, 17; Lehigh, 37. — Lecture in chapel by Mr. Fullerton Waldo. — Examinations start. February 4. — H. R. Reiter appointed Professor and Director of Physical Education and Athletics. 7. — Second term begins. 21. — Basketball, Navy, 31; Lehigh, 24. 10. — Dr. Roth lectures on Forestry . II. — Basketball, vSwarthmore, 26; Lehigh, 19. Wrestling meet, Penn State, 5; Lehigh, 2. 18. — Basketball, Swarthmore, 35; Lehigh, 30. Wrestling, Cornell, 7, Lehigh, i. 22. — Junior Oratorical Contest. 370 Awards and Acknowledgments The Board of Editors wish to express their gratitude to those who have, by their assist- ance, made it possible for them to issue this book. For the embellishment of the Foreword we are indebted to Goth, ' 12; for sketches, to Snyder, ' 12, Speed, ' 12, Miller, ' 12, Carpenter, ' 13, Hoffman, ' H, and Bleiler, ' 14; for photo- graphs, to Lawrence, ' 10, Rominger, ' H , Huang, ' n. Hartley, ' 12, Norwood, ' 13, and Motter, ' H. AWARDS ARTISTIC: Hoffman, ' H, $5.00; Car- penter, ' 13, $5.00; Snyder, ' 12, $5.00; Bleiler, ' 14, one cloth-bound Epitome. COVER DESIGN : Guth, ' 1 2, one leather- bound Epitome. 371 To Our Readers The support of owr advertisers has made possible the publication of this book, and the Board of Editors respectfully ask every reader to express his appreciation of their support by patronizing, as far as possible, the firms represented in our advertising section. MITMAN ' S SHOP FOR CORRECT COLLEGE STYLES lai e hj c: ; Ej Cj ejp;, ,,„- rw, ,c Made to Order SUITS, OVERCOATS, TROUSERS, FANCY WAISTCOATS hxehisive Liite of GENTS ' FURNISHINGS HATS CAPS t a tai M ca gj ca yCr, u tS C2) I t tfi Who ' s Your Outfitter? MITMAN ' S Foarth and Ncw Streets, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PENNA. MEN OF V IM AND DASH CO) mz osiry FIND in our garments vigorous outlines and swagger drape-THAT FINAL TOUCH OF 5TYLL that never oversteps good taste -:- -:- KOCH BROTHERS Tailors Clothiers Haberdashers Hotel Allen Building, - - ALLENTOWN Telephone 28=R RICHARD THIEL CLEANING, PRESSING, REPAIRING. Suit-Pressing Club for Students. 506 Dakota Straet S. BETHLEHEM, PA. DOUTRICH G(s T P£) 94=96 BROAD STREET, BETHLEHEM, PA. ilatiies ' Cailorins 96 BROAD STREET Quality Shop News Your Aspect is your Asset l99 i9J GOOD appearance is a pass-key to promotion and a passport to favor. It ' s the biggest shove that any man can have. It makes friends and opportunities. Cultivate it! Ours is a public service shop, we don ' t run it to suit us, but to suit you. Here you will find the most handsome patterns of Foreign and Domestic Woolens, for made=to=measure suits; these include the guaranteed Shackamaxon Fabrics. Unquestionably the finest cloth in the world. In ready=to=wear we are prepared to show you the best fitting clothes in the market— High Art suits and Alfred Benjamin New York clothes. In Hats we have the very newest Knox and Crofut Knapp; in caps, the only acknowledged College Cap — the Heid Cap. Manhattan, Cluett, and Wilson Bros. Shirts; Red=Man and Arrow and Frisbie Coon Collars, in fact anything in Men ' s Furnish= ings you may ask for. We would also remind you that we are sole agents for Fraternity Hat Bands and Ties in the Bethlehems. 10% discount to Students and Professors. Schneller Snyder ' ' Quality Shop ' ' 5 EAST BROAD STREET BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. SHANKWEILER LEHR, Men ' s, Young Men ' s and Boys ' High=Grade Clothing r Furnishings CENTRE SQUARE, ALLENTOWN. COLLEGE PENNANTS A ITino GIFT UMBRELLAS---CANES iP-;, ■ LEATHER GOODS |J J Mt rrhnnt Tnilarin TRAVELERS ' REQUISITES luercnoni 1 aiiorins Ihe (IJollege (Jailor A. P. RITTER, JR., Merchant Tailor 134 South Main Street, Bell ' Phone OPPOSITE EAGLE HOTEL Bethlehem, Pa. The Bethlehem Consolidated Qas Company 111 South Main street, BETHLEHEM, PA. 506 East Third Street, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. Supplies all the Bethlehems with illuminating gas. Fine reading lamps and gas fixtures. The most appro ed burners. Heating and cooking ranges. BOTH PHONES J. W. MURDOCK, Mgf. YOUNG THE CeiebB $3hats HATTER FINE HATS, SHOES AND MEN ' S FURNISHINGS REGISTERED J MAIN STREET BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. Jacob Reed ' s Sons If You Hnve A Clothes Ideal Reeds ' are more than likely to be able to fill it for you. Or if uncertain as to just what you should wear to be entirely correct. Reeds ' are excellent advisers and providers. Prices are never excessive. Suits and Overcoats $15 and u pward. (Elfltlitrrs m h (§ixtfxttna fat f oung Mm Jacob Reed ' s Sons 1434- 1420 CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA. Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume COTRELL LEONARD, ALBANY, N. Y. Greeting to 191 1 and 1912 Wholesale Makers and Renters of The Caps, Gowns and Hoods to the American Uni er= Sities. To Lehigh, University of Pennsylvania, Cornell, Columbia, University of Chicago. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, University of California, and the others. Illustra ted Bulletin, Samples, Rental Propositions, etc., upon application. GRAINS OF COMFORT MAKE YOU FEEL WELL. TAR AND CHERRY RELIEVES YOUR COUGH AND COLD. DR. JAY ' S HEADACHE POWDERS GIVE IMMEDIATE RELIEF. These are all the year round articles and are sold ONLY AT JACOBY ' S DRUG STORE at Cor. Fourth and New Streets, SO. BETHLEHEM, PA. ESTABLISHED 1865 E.Keller Sons College and Fraternal Jewelry, Prize Cups Trophies of all descriptions. 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JWassactjusietts Jlutual 3Life 3?nsurancr Company Old, Clean, Conservative, Strong J. L. POTTEIQER, Manager, Welles Bldg., WILKES=BARRE, PA. ESTABLISHED 1818 BROADWAY cor. TWENTY-SECOND ST. NEW YORK.. Fine clothing, ready=made and made=to=measure, riding suits and separate breeches. Garments for Golf, Tennis, Polo and other outdoor sports. Motor clothing and Furs. English Haberdashery, Hats, Shoes, Trunks, Bags, and Traveling cases. Send for illustrated catalogue. A. M. PlERRO :: TAILOR :: 326 WEST FOURTH STREET, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. The New Merchant House W. E. HOCH, Proprietor T{ates $2.00 per T)ay ' S American Plan ' PHONE 168-R2 Corner Fourth and New Sts., South Bethlehem, Pa. UHL ' S Celebrated Vienna Lager Porter THE STANDARD Brewers and Bottlers Brewery Both ' phones Ti t f hi t ht m T O. Corner Union and Monocacy Sts - - da IF YOU ARE A CIVIL ENGINEER you will find the ENGINEERING RECORD of vital interest and real value in your work. Its articles describe engineering works which ex= emplify the best practice in design and construction. They furnish a store of valuable information on the actual conditions which you will meet in the practice of your profession. There is another reason why it will pay you to subscribe now. The half yearly volumes of the RECORD contain an immense amount of technical and practical information which you will need some day. You cannot begin too soon to accumulate your own file of the paper. The ENGINEERING RECORD is published weekly and contains during the year over 2000 pages of valuable reading matter. The regular subscription price is $3.00 a year, but special rates are quoted to students on yearly orders and on trial subscriptions. WRITE TO-DAY FOR SAMPLE COPY AND SPECIAL TERMS Engineering Record 2?9 West Wth St., New York, N. Y. f ' ' - IK ■•• - ' - ■ . t-i . - P ■■ ' ' ' - ' IP ■1 JliiTfHrn IT v k ' P ' tt SKJia Wh p v - - ■r mmBMissm = s tsz jjmm. k ■ ■ ' •f , r - --A jflrv -::; ' ' : ' P j||  h|8H ' J Hi.-,«. ' ..v-i« «lpi J( ' ™ ' lJ ' ' l ' t ' J - ■ .;- ' l| (51i : folngli : 3lim .Has. iBurkliart. grnpriplor ji.j . RIGHT NEAR COLLEGE Jacob Widman iS: Company Monocacy Brewery BREWERS AND BOTTLERS Bethlehem, Ta. ines MineraIs A mining journal for up-to date mining men. Recognized as The Authority o current mining methods and mining appliances. Edited by Eugene B. Wilson, Yale, 1879. and George F. Duck, E.M., Lehigh, 1883. H. H. Stoek, E.M., Lehigh, 1887, special contributor $2.00 per year, sample copy free. Editorial Offices Scranton, Pa. Denver, Colo. Publication Offices Scranton, Pa. Clie Book €icl)ange PLTER 0. KOCH, Proprietor. UNIVERSITY TEXT BOOKS, EITHER NEW OR SECOND= HAND, BLANK BOOKS, DRAWING MATERIAL, COLLEGE STATIONERY, MOORE ' S NON=LEAKABLE, WATERMAN ' S IDEAL AND SAFETY FOUNTAIN PENS ALWAYS IN STOCK. 12 EAST FOURTH STREET, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. moravian Seminary and College for Ulomen Preparatory and Collegiate FOUNDED 1742 The oldest school of its kind iu America, with a century and three-quarters of history and experience, yet furnished with all modern equipments, and pursuing the latest im- proved methods. Our course of study, which is both preparatory and collegiate, is planned to give a complete and solid education and make our graduates broadly cultured and truly refined women, fit to meet all the duties and demands of the best modern society and a useful active life. Our thorough schola.stic instruction is only half our work. We give equal care and attention to the training of the characters of our pupils, the formation of right habits of thought, feeling and conduct, and the development of all those qualities, virtues and graces, that enter into a self-respecting, strong and true Christian womanhood. For full information as to the management, course of study, cost, etc., send for de- scriptive circular to J. H. CLEWELL, PH.D., Pres. BETHLEHEM, PA. Wm. F. Danzer Isaac W. Miller W. F. DANZER CO. Contractors and Builders JOBBING A. SPECIA LTY All Kinds of Cement Worl , Concrete Building Blocks, Walks, Curbs, F avements Office and Residence: Shop: 518 SKNECA STRKKT SEMINOLE ST., NEAK SENECA TELKPHONK COXNECTIO.NS SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. F. J. GROMAN T. H. GROMAN 0. H. GROMAN GROMAN BROTHERS BRICK M ANUF ACTURERS l —i 35,000 iBIM — = DAILY 1 = General Contractittd. BricKlaying and Plastering Office: 342 Broadway _ Yards: Bethlehem Heights SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. GROSS Conffcttoutr 109 WEST 4TH ST. SO. 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Yards at Brodhead Ave., So. Bethlehem, and Canal Street, Bethlehem. xo. 1- CUocctincj ?) l cxcbatil (?3 aiiot€€ 9 to. A tfi §t , tBcirilcllcm U .. THE DRAVO CONTRACTING COMPANY PITTSBURG, PA. DIFFICULT FOUNDATIONS SUBMARINE AND PNEUMATIC CAISSON WORK LOCKS DAMS SHAFTS TUNNELS DRAVO -DOYLE COMPANY PITTSBURG : PHILADELPHIA CLEVELAND : CHICAGO Representing ERIE BALL ENGINE CO. HARRISON SAFETY BOILER WORKS DE LAVAL STEAM TURBINE CO. COMPLETE POWER PLANTS AND WATER WORKS We X , . _ Alternating Current LOIj, Portable and Switchboard Ammeters 4 Voltmeters Are absolutely dead beat. Extremely sensitive Practically free from tem- perature error. Their indications are practically independent of frequency and also of wave form. Weston Eclipse Direct Current Switchboard Ammeters 4 Voltmeters (Soft Iron or Electro-Magnetic Type) are remarkably accurate, low-priced instruments. Ad- mirably adapted for general use in small plants. Correspondence regarding these and our standard Laboratory. 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Y. City LIDGERWOOD Hoisting Engines BUILTTO OAUQEON THE OUI ' LICATE PART SYSTEM. QUICK DELIVERY ASSURED. Over 34,000 in Use. STANDARD lor QUALITY and DUTY STEAM and ELECTRIC HOISTS. Cableways, Hoisting and Conveying Devices. Soul I ' .ir Culiii ' gui ' . Lidgerwood Mfg. Co. 96 Liberty St., New York. CONTINUOUS JOINT WEBER JOINT The Rail Joint Company VVOLHAUPTER JOINT Catalog at Agencies BTltimore, Md, Pittsburg, Pa Boston, Mass. Portland, Oregon Chicago, III. San Francisco. Denver, Colo St Louis, Mo. New York, N.Y. Trou. N Y. GENERAL OFFICES: 185 Madison Avenue, New York City. Makers of Base-Supported Rail Joints for Standard and Special London, E.C., Eng. Montreal, Can Rail Sections, also Girder, Step or Compromise, Frog or Switch, and Insulating Rail Joints, protected by Patents. HIGHEST AWARDS— Paris, 1900: Bjifalo. 1901 S:. Louis. 1904. Wii.son-Snyder Mfg. Co. MANUFACTURERS OF PUMPING MACHINERY Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. New Coal Preparation Machine ry OUR KEYSTONE RIVETLESS CHAINS are the only Straight Line rivetless chains made for convey- ing and elevating materials of all kinds. They are unexcelled. Let us figure with you on your requirements. WE DESIGN AND BUILD Coal, Ore and Ash Conveying Elevating Equipment PARRISH SHAKING SCREENS GREATEST CAPACITY, CHEAPEST. MOST DURABLE, LIGHTEST Note the Resilient Arm rigidly bolted to frame of shaker. This construction eliminates vibration. Lloyd ' s Compound Gear Driven ROLLS The very latest Word in coal preparation STANDARDIZATION OF ALL THE PARTS INSURES- MAXIMUM OUTPUT OF PREPARED SIZES MINIMUM LOSS IN BREAKAGE OF COAL Segments interchangeable, guaranteed not to come loose in service, and and almost indestructible For descriptive bulletins and prices write Wilmot Engineering Co. HAZLHTON, PE NNA., U. S. A. Shops Foundry. WHITE H VE , PA. The Standard Wire Rope Made by John A. Roebling ' s Sons Co., Trenton. New Jersey. |f ceo C Equipments for Coal mmCB J l_ l 1 rVl_ 1 Cipplc0 and Was )cvics Jeffrey lo-tou electric locomoiive in mine ol the Duncan Coal Co. COLUMBUS Electric Locomotives, Coal Cutters, Drills, Elevators, Conveyors, Screens, Crushers, Dump Cars, Mine Cages, Ventilating Fans, Car Hauls, Coal Tipples, Washenes, Etc. WRITE FOR CATALOG ON SUBJECTS OF INTEREST TO YOU CfteSfeffrepJttfgXo. OHIO .. ELECTRIC AND STEAM HOISTS All types and sizes Also builders of Locomotives, Cement Machinery, Large Shaft and Slope Hoisting Engines, Mining Machinery CATALOGUES FURNISHED UPON REQUEST VULCAN IRON WORKS, WILKES-BARRE, PA. Products TRANSFORMERS INSLLATINQ VARNISHES INSLLATINQ CLOTH AND TAPE GAS ENGINE IGNITION CABLE RUBBER FRICTION TAPES The Packard Electric Co. Warren, Ohio. Danville Structural Tubing Company MANLFACTLRERS OF High Carbon Steel Structural Tubing FOR Fencing, Railings, Special Shapes, Mattress Side Rails, Trolley Bracket Arms, Agricultural Implements, Bedstead Pillars, Fence Posts, Cot Bends. DANVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA. FORT PITT BRIDGE WORKS OF PITTSBURG, PA. STEEL BRIDGES- MILL BUILDINGS. STRUCTURAL STEEL WORK. GREY IRON CASTINGS. D. L. W. R. R CO , BRIDGE. NO. 2. jiCRANTON DIVISION. BUILT BY FORT PITT BRIDGL WORKS. OF PITTSBURG. PA. Main Office: Nos. 510-19 House Building, PITTSBURG, PA. Works CANONSBURG, PA. New York flffice, 45 Broadway, NEW YORK. Chicago Office, Fisher Building, Chicago. ESTABLISHED 1863 Phillips Mine and Mill Supply Co. MANUFACTURERS OF MINE AND COKE WORKS EQUIPMENT SOUTH 23RD. 24TH. MARY AND JANE STREETS, PITTSBURGH, PENNA.. U.S.A. ONE OF OUR SPECIALTIES IS THE Phillips Patent Automatic Cross Over Dump THE MOST COMPACT AND STRONGEST DUMP MADE GUARANTEED NOT TO GET OUT OF ORDER CAPACITY PRACTICALLY UNLIMITED THE ENTIRE COAL OUTPUT OF THE WORLD COULD BE HANDLED B Y THE PHILLIPS DUMPS ALREADY INSTALLED IF RUN TO THEIR CAPACITY Let Us Submit Plans and Estimates McCLINTIC-MARSHALL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY STEEL BUILDINGS, BRIDGES, Etc. Annual Capacity, 150,000 Tons Steelwork W hejv You W ant It PITTSBURG, PA. Works: POTTSTOWN, PA. CARNEGIE, PA. NEW YORK COLUMBUS, O. ST. LOUIS Contracting Offices: PHILADELPHIA DETROIT SAN FRANCISCO PITTSBURGH CHICAGO POTTSTOWN, PA. FINE INKS EADHESIVES For those who KNOW Higgins ' Drawing Inks Eternal Writing Ink Engrossing Ink Taurine Mucilage Photo Mounter Paste Drawing Board Paste Liquid Paste Office Paste Vegetable Qlue, Etc. Are the Finest and Best Inks and Adhesives Emancipate vourselffrom the uje ot cor- rosive and ill-smelling inks and adhesives and adopt the Higgins Inks and Adhesives. They will be a revelation to you. they are so sweet, clean, well put up, and withal so efficient At Dealer.s QeneralK CHAS. M. HIGGINS CO., Mfrs. 271 Ninth St., Brooklyn, N. V. Branches: Chicago, London. [3B2S§uiD[®][S] WEBSTER ' S NE ' SV INTERNATIONAL- DICTIONARY The Only Xew unabridged dictionary in many years. Contains the pitb and essence of an au- thoritative library. Covers every field of kno-wledge. An Encyclopedia in a single book. The Only dictionary with the New Di- vided Page. A Stroke of Genius. 400,000 Words Defined, 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. Cost $400,000. Post yourself on this most re- markable sin- k1 c volume. Write for sample pages full par- ticolara, etc. The Eynon=Evans Mfg. Co. Condensers : 3loWers : Syphons Injectors : Exhausters Valves The most completely equipped pattern jobbing shop in Pennsylvania BRONZE. CASTINGS UP TO lO.OOO LBS. PHILADELPHIA, PA. BARE AND INSULATED COPPER WIRES AND GABLES FOR ANY SERVICE Annunciator Wire Magnet Wire Automobile Wire Mining Machine Cable Bare Copper Wire Motor Boat Wire Brewery Cord Manhole Frames Bridle Wire Messenger Strand Canvasite Cord N. E. C. House Wire Car Wire Office Wire Copper Rods Ozite No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3. Cable Hangers Packing House Cord Cable Supports Pothead Wire Cambric (Varnished Cloth) Power Cable Deck Cable Signal Wire Dredger Cable Slow Burning Wire Drop Wire Switchboard Wire Elevator Cable Submarine Cable Fixture Wire Telephone Cable Insulating Compounds Telegraph Cable Insulating Varnishes Trolley Wire Insulating Tapes Theatre Cable Junct on Boxes Terminals Lamp Cord Varnished Cloth (Cambric), etc. Lighting Cable Weatherproof Wire COLONIAL COPPER-CLAD WIRE STANDARD UNDERGROUND CABLE CO. PITTSBURGH Boston New York Philadelphia St Louis C hicago San Francisco Established 1867 William H. Taylor Go. engineers ant Contraetors 3For doraplptp Isomer piaute Electric Lighting. Heating, Ventilating, Automatic Sprinklers, Machinery, Tools and Supplies. ALLENTOWN, PENNA Established 1785 OTTO HESSE Bctblebcm BooK Binaery Books of Every Description Bound, Rebound and Repaired. Maps, Drawings and Sketches Mounted. Portfolios Made to Order, Ltc. Estimates Given. 144-146 So. Main St.. Third Floor BETHLEHEM, PENNA. Tamaqua Manufacturing Co. C Manufacturers of IMPROVED MACHINERY FOR COAL PREPARATION JIGS AND WASHLRS, CRUSHLRS , SCRE. LNS, LLLVATOR5, CONVEYORS, m chiZy ' POWER TRANSMISSION MACHINERY °an5 ' prep ara- ■ tionofcoal TAMAQUA, PA. JESSOP ' S STEEL THE BEST FOR TOOLS, DRILLS, DIES, Etc T All sizes carried in stoclc. Manufactured in Sheffield, England. Jessop ' s ARK High-Speed Steel is the best on the market. WM. JESSOP SONS, INC., 91 JOHN ST., NEW YORK. The Guerber Engineering Co. MANUFACTURERS AND CONTRACTING ENGINEERS Kailuisg g-trurlural S ' tppl Hark BRIDGES BUILDINGS STAIRS ROOFS TANKS (Srnrral iHarljirtP g-linjj Mark SPECIAL MACHINERY PATTERNS CASTINGS FORCINGS PIPE FITTING FROGS SWITCHES CROSSINGS SIGNALS STANDS Angles, Channels, Beams, Plates, Bars, Rails, Etc., carried in stock for prompt shipment Office, works and Stock yard: BETHLEHEM, PA. J. i y TitgC ' j ' hmr tu ] i ■ J J MILTON LAUFER, PrOPRI EJOR • Most convenient and pleas- antly located hotel in the city • Electric Lights and Steam Heat • Rooms en Suite or single with baths • American Plan South Bethlehem, Pa. Compliments of tegmaier £ 7 ewing { ompany IVILKES-BARRE, TA. Flickinger Portraits JUST A LITTLE DIFFERENT 17 voad Street, BETHLEHEM, PA. A COMPLETE LINE OF ALL THAT A LEADING CIGARIST AND TOBACCONIST SHOULD CARRY ( feo Coffegc Cpennante, (JUaga(jinc6, oefcre, Bic. 63 SOUTH MAIN STREET BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA H. B. EGOERX PORTRAITS Studio: 53-55 Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PA. THE BE«-D I5) DEC©[F(( TB1N1 C©c WALL COVERINGS of every description. ARTISTIC PICTURE FRAMING. Specialties in FINE INTERIOR DECORATING. WALL PAPERS Sketches and Estimates cheerfully furnished. BOTH TELEPHONES 7 N. Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PENNA. ■T. OC u z CI : 0- Hen E oL S«: • i-f w w ■M U D- u I- t -f-r z. f J i K . U H X r P3 • I— -f E r- I ' Tr f- U5 ; - D U5 = ■ W - 10 c : i: = c Cri X H H - ;: a? - w. w c. Geary Company ©atcP)inahci Hn Jcwctci i ani) i Kiva n-i LEHIGH FOBS , SEALS, H ATPI N S, ETC. 415 Wyandotte St. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. ESTABLISHED l890 GREINER 99 The Students ' Jewei er COLLEGE SEALS. PINS, FOBS. SPOONS, ETC. OEAVRLKR. SILVERSMITH AND OPTICIAN 150 SOUTH MAIN ST. BETHLEHEM, PA. THE ELEGANT C. W. ANTHONY. - - - Proprietor BAR AND RATHSKELLER NOTHING TOO GOOD CARVE YOUR NAME ON YOUR CLASS TABLE Piers Beer on Drau bt 343 W. Fourth St., SOUTH SIDE A. J. MOYER TOBACCONIST A Ianufacturer of Kine Hand-Nlacle Cigars Student ' ' Headquarters for B. B. Pipes, Poi(clie :, Cis:,ars, Tobacco and Smokers ' Articles 433 W anciotte St., BETHLEHEM, PA. Weils Restaurant OY5TLR5 IN ALL 5TYLL5. BLUE POINTS A SPECIALTY. MEALS AT ALL HOURS. ICE CREAM AND SODA, CIGARS AND CIGARETTES Corner Fourth Street and Brodhead Avenue SOUTH BETHLEHEM. PENNA. Eschenbach Printing Company Printers of High-Class College Publications 207-209-211 Church 5treet, LA5TON, PLNNA. DRINK THE HOME FAVORITE S u p R E M E_ So. Bethieiiem BREWING COMPANY W. ft. WILBUR. rRESlDENT flRNON P. MlLLEf?. UlCE-FRESIDENT Wn. U. KNftUSS, Trebsurer ■ CHAS. T. HESS, SECRETHRr ELDREDCE ?. WILBUR. ftSSlSTPNT Trehsurer (B. (p. T}?if6ur txmt Com|?an CAPITAL. SURPLUS. $500,000 $500,000 out QBetWefem, (|)enn6gft anta DIRECTORS W. A. WIL5UR R. M. CUMMERE A. N. CLEBUER HRNON 7. MILLER wn. U. KMAUSS M. L. CONNOLLY H. 5. DRINKER wn. n. SAYRE E. P. WILBUR. Jr. ANTHONY £? FACHSBINNER wmmm u wmmmr AND DEALERS GENERAL IN SUPPLIES Both Telephones No. 12 Broad Street, BETHLEHEM. PENNA. FINEST ICE CREAM BREAD, CAKES AND CONFECTIONERY AT Raucb$ 42 Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. THE COLLEGE LAUNDRY CeMdb Steam Caundrv W. H. QOSNER, Proprietor. Telephone 79 320=322=324 New Street, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. H. E. RICKSECKER wmmi ■ -™ wmmi FOR SALE RENTED TUNED, REPAIRED AND POLISHED n SK and all Musical HMST MHIEINIT 52-54 East Broad Street. BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. The Moravian Book Store Publishers, Booksellers ana Stationers 146 South Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. DAVID M. EHST Wholesale and Retail Manufacturer of SUPERIOR ICE CREAM AND ICES. ALSO OF HOME-MADE CANDIES Ice Cream Sodas and Sundaes the year round. All our goods are made of strictly pure materials. Best line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco. 506 Broadway (Five Points), SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PENNA. Ti H AND T The College Newspaper Published every TUESDAY and FRIDAY Subscription $2.00 per year Alex. Taylor Company ' s Jitbletic 6oods Are Sold by W. E. FAIRHURST. •! I H. H.OTTO. ' 12 TAYLOR HALL. IE mi H. ELLIIITT i ' D. ll ' . . y E LARIIEST COLLEliE EXGRAVING IIOI ' SE IN THE WORLD (Commntrrmrnt JnmtalinttH Class Sag Programs anil Class 53tns U Dance Programs! Mr Fraternity and , . ., . w W and Invitations •■ , J ■ Class Inserts Menus Leather Dance (f for Annuals Fraternity Cases and l and Class Covers J Stationery HIriitixnn 3Inuttatiotts anii CaUtng (Tariis Works: 1 7th Street and Lehigh Ave. PHILADLLPHIA, PA. xl FARR BROS. CO. LNTIRL BUILDING 739-41 HAMILTON 5TRLLT, ALLLNTOWN, PA. The Lehigh Valley Cornice Works GflLVflNIZED IRON AND COPPER C0RNICE8, SKYLIGHTS. IRON. TIN, SLAG AND GRANITE ROOFING. THE KEL8EY WARM AIR GENERATOR. 62 BROAD STREET, BETHLEHEM, PENNA, J. M, SCHNABEL BRO. Th« Leading SHOE HOUSE SNAPPY GOODS. SMART SHAPES. EXCLUSIVE STYLES. POPULAR PRICES. Exclusive Sale of the A. E. NETTLETON SHOE. 53 Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PA. xli OYSTLRS IN ALL 5TYLL5. ICL CRLAM AND SODA ALL YEAR ROUND. : ' . eimomco MEAL5 AT ALL HOURS. FRAT HOUSES SUPPLIED FOR SMOKERS AND SPIELS. 80 Broad St., BETHLEHEM, PA. College Printing of every] description. Fraternity Stationery and Registers, Dance Programs, Menus. Printers of Y. M. C. A. Hand. Book, Official Athletic Program and Other College Work. Quinlan Printing Company 319 New St., between 3rd 4tli Sts. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PENNA. BARBER TRANSFER LINE CAB, BUS, BAGGAGE AND LIVERY BOTH ' PHONES Office at Union Station, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. and Sun Inn Livery, BETHLEHEM, PA. StelnberQ ' s MAKLR OF fine Portraits in Platinum Only SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS 728 Hamilton St., Allentown, Pa. 306 New St., So. Bethletiem, Pa. Bell ' Phone xlii Organized 1898 TORPEY ' S ORCHESTRA Orsdiii ccl 1898 Brass or Strtiui A complete standard and up-to-date organi alioii of first-class musicians. We are pre- pared to furnisli any numlier of men for any occasion at short notice, and reasonable prices. Address all commirnications to M. J, TORPEY, Leader, 321 East Third St., SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. Penha. ' Phione Estimates Cheerfully Given O crkn r ' ' iTr -l- [- I P ' Theatre, Bethlehems ' Dancing OeaSOn or i9jj Wlin Academy, Colosseum Skating Rink £aglc IHotel oOo oOo oQo jOv oOo ouo ouo oQo oQc oOo ooo oOo oOo JBetblebcm iPcimsv lvania CHARLES DUFFY. Proprietor Automobile Garage in connection ■with hotel accessible at all hours New Grill Room a Specialty CTHE EAGLE HOTEL has been completely renovated, and newly-furnished throughout, telephones installed in every room and other improvements vhich appeal to the comfort of guests, individual desks in writing room, and other conveniences that make the Eagle Hotel rank amongst the most elegant and attractive hotels in the state. ADAM BRINKER W C. LAZARUS TRAVELING GOODS You will find the largest and finest assortment of Trunks, Traveling Bags, Dress Suit Cases, Purses, Razor Strops and Razors, Shoe, Cloth, Hair Brushes. Shawl and Trunk Straps, Telescopes, Etc., to be found anywhere in the Lehigh Valley. A. BRINKER COMPANY, 119 East Third Street, South Bethlehem, Penna. xliii FOR CLEAN, WHITE WORK TRY THE LECTRIC LAUNDR B15HOPTHORPL CHLROKLL 5TRLLT5, 50UTH BLTHLLHLM, PA. SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS A. M. HOLLLNBACH. ' Prop. Telephone Connections Bethlehem Preparatory School Founded in 1878 oOo oQo o Q o oQo oQo oQo oQ o oOo 0 0 =Tr= ' T - ' Hr- -Hr- ' -Tr- - tt - X oQo oQo oQo oOo oOo oQo oOo oOo Exclusively a Kecommended by the President of Lehigh University and the Professors comprising the Faculty For efficient and thorough work it cannot be excelled It has admitted over thirteen hundred men to college, it has a summer school preparing for any college Catalogues and particulars can be had on application to HtMci {Master H. A. FOERING, B.S., Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Index to Advertisers axthony, c. w Anthony Fachsbinner Barber Transfer Line Bethlehem Consolidated Gas Co Bethlehem Preparatory School Beck-Davis Decorating Co. . Brinker, a., Company Brooks Brothers Brown - Borhek Limber Coal Co Brown and White, The Cotrell Leonard Danville Structiral Tubing Co Danzer, W. F., Co Delmonico Cafe doutrich Dravo Contracting Co Dravo-Doyle Company Dressor, Drs Eagle Hotel Eggert, H. B Ehst, D. M Electric City Engraving Co. Electric Laundry Elliott, The Chas. H., Co Eynon - Evans Manufacturing Co Eschenbach Printing Co Farr Bros Flickinger Fort Pitt Bridge Co Geary, W. W. C, Co Page. Page XXXV GrEiner xxxiv xxxviii Groman Brothers xiv xiii Gross, Abner H xv Guerber Engineering Co xxxi y Hesse, Otto xxx HiGGiNS, Chas. M., Co xxviii , Hinds, Noble Eldredge .... xviii xlv Horsman, E. L, Co xv xxxni Jacoby ' s Drug Store vii xliii Jeffrey Mfg. Co xxm Jenkins Bros xvu jEssop, Wm., Sons xxxi Keller, E., Sons viii xxxix Keuffel Esser Co ix ■ii Knouss viii Koch Bros ii xxiv Koch, Peter O xiii xiv Krell, Fredrick A xxxiii xlii Lidgerwood Manufacturing ii Co xix xvi Lehigh Inn xii xvi Lehigh Laundry xxxviii xxxiii Lehigh University xlix xliii Lehigh Valley Cornice xxxiii Works xli xxxix Massachusetts Mutual Life 1 Ins ix xliv McCaa xlvii xl McClintic - Marshall Con- struction Co xxvii xxix McGraw Publishing Co xi xxxvi Merchants House, The New. . x xli Merriam, C. C, Co xxviii xxxii Mines Minerals xiii XXV Mitman i xxxiv Moravian Book Store xxxix xlvi riHioTO iii riiiiT ETC tuUa IlNi CMIEF T@ TttHE yiNiIWEiJITY ST y!l EINlTS JUS MK n JTKEET ™ iETIHILEIrllEn, FEINIINIi c Page. Moravian Seminary and Col- lege FOR Women xiv Mover, A. J xxxv Packard Electric Co., The.. . xxiv Phillips Mine Mill Supplv Co xxvi PlERRO, A. M X QUINLAN xlii Rail Joint Co xix Rauch, J. T xxxviii Reed ' s, Jacob, Sons vii RiCKSECKER, H. E xxxviii RiTTER, A. P., Jr v Roebling ' s J. A., Sons Co xxii ScHNABEL, J. M., Bro xli ScHNELLER Snyder iii Shankweiler Lehr V South Bethlehem Brewing Co. xxxvi South Bethlehem Supply Co. viii Standard Underground Cable Co xxx Page Stegmaier Brewing Co xxxii Steinberg xlii Tamaqua Mfg. Co xxxi Taylor, A., Co xxxix Taylor, Wm. H., Co xxx Thiel, Richard ii ToRPEY xliii Uhl ' s Brewery x Veeder Mfg. Co xviii VixcAN Iron Works xxiii Weil, p. C xxxv Weston Electric Inst. Co ... . xvii WiDMAN, J., Co xii Wilbur, E. P., Trust Co xxxvii WiLMOT Engineering Co xxi Wilson-Snyder Mfg. Co xix WOODRING, W. J XV Wyandotte Hotel xxxii Young vi dviii Lehigh University South Bethlehem, Pennsylvania The University offers the following courses: 1. The Courses in Arts and Science. 2. The Course in Civil Engineering. 3. The Course in Mechanical Engineering. 4. The Course in Metallurgical Engineering. 5. The Course in Electrometallurgy 6. The Course in Mining Engineering. 7. The Course in Electrical Engineering. 8. The Course in Chemistry. 9. The Course in Chemical Engineering. For further iiifonnatioii, for Registers of the University and for Descriptive Circulars of the Different Courses, address THE REGISTRAR xlix a Electric C f Engraving Co. Buffalo, NY we MADE THE ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK, •TH Hy isn-


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