Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) - Class of 1913 Page 1 of 436
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mt 1913 Cpitome 3 JAN 20 19U H )t fear Pook of HeJusf) ®mberfittp ubligfjeb gnnuallp bp tfjc Junior Clasfei Volume xxxvn Poarb of debitors! Editor-in-Chief Henry Lloyd Rooney, . Rhode Island .4 ssistant Editor- in-Chief Albert Kemmer Cosgroye, . Pennsylvania Business Manager Joseph Louis Clarke, New York Assistant Business Managers George Edward Harris, Jr., Maryland Morris Kent Petty, . Pennsylvania Art Editor James Herbert Sheppard, Michigan -4 ssoc ia te Ed itors Robert Campbell, Pennsylvania Daniel Kinsman Evans, . Pennsylvania Alan Bowen Gorman, Maryland George Diller Herr, . Pennsylvania B0IATBB B7 ztcla cLs Dedication 5 Foreword • 7 Board of Trustees 10 Faculty and Instructors 14 Administrative Officers 39 The Classes 43 Fraternities 99 Societies and Clubs 196 Lehigh Publications 224 Technical Societies 241 Social 254 The Dormitories 263 Pot-Pourri 1 275 Musical and Dramatic 282 Memorabilia 298 Athletics 304 Quotations 360 Gags 3 6 7 Calendar 37 J Advertisements 375 i t J So Cfjarles M- g cf)toat) tins (Epitome is corbiallp bebtcateb in recognition of f)is balueb serbices to Hefjicjt) Unibersitp as a trustee anb fjis interest in tfje toelfare of our Slma ffflater. GEfjiS offering is meant as a tribute from fcefjigf) men to one tofjo fjolbs pre=eminent standing as an engineer in tf)e great industrial interests of our Country anb of tuiiost official connection toitfy Heijigli ®nibersitp toe are proub. ■§mmm g one mbo from a bisitant planet bietosf, g toimming in space, tfjifl rolling spfjere of oura, J|om bark, noto gleaming brigbtlp a tbe fjour jforeber sifjift anb turn it changing buefii, fringing alternate sea anb lanbtf to aigbt, nb $lan, impriaoneb on tf|i£t rolling ball, Wit ) jlfflan ' a acbiebementa goob or bab, anb all €ngulfeb at last in one o ' ermbelming nigbt; o me, entfjroneb apart, aebatelp sfit, Clab in a little brief autboritp, {Eo cbronicle tbe actions anb tbe toit 8nb life of fcebigb Uniberaitp; (Eo furniab fortb, a full? as map be, i all tbia life a true epitome. {Efje lma Jfflater Words by John J. Gibson, ' 95 Quartet. , j Tenors. (Melody in 2d Tenor.) 1 EE HR=E :i — Sr tf , — 1 5?— r — r 1. Where the Le - high ' s rock - y rap - ids rushjfrom out the West, ' Mid a grove of 2. Like a watch- mau on the nioun- tain stauds she grand - 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. 1 PI 1 ,. . p ,J. f — 1 J r-l ±-4 - A - —. - -= 1 = = § m ■5-V j-- =- - (fej E fi E jg g P r spread-ing chest -nuts walls in 1 - vy se - cret ' s seek - ing, hoard - ing them like gold, lives add lus - ter to her glo - rious fame. m  - r t FEWWf On the breast of Old South Mountain, All she wrests from na - ture ' s storehouse, Let the glad notes wake the ech - oes, - — -i m mm = y- y i r- , -e ; w m reared a-gainst the sky naught es-capes her eye joy - ful . ly we cry Stands our no Gives she glad Hail to thee =±=i J — 1- m mm m ble Al - ma Ma - ter, stand. ' tour dear Le - high, -ly to her dear sons,; while ' we bless Le - high, our Al - ma Ma - ter! Hail! ' ail hail, Le - high! Melo-iy used by permission of Oliver Ditson Company, owner ot the copyright. 8 kt • x ' % fc A l ' ,f %M Jflotto Homo Minister et Interpres Naturae College Colors: Seal Brown and White College £ells: 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! Lehigh ! Ray! Lehigh ! Lehigh ! Ray! jj Henry R. Price Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot William A. Lathrop Rembrandt Peale Warren A. Wilbur Charles L. Taylor Albert N. Cleaver John Fritz . Charles M. Schwab David J. Pearsall 38oarb of trustees . Brooklyn, N. Y. . South Bethlehem, Pa. Wilkes-Barre and Philadelphia , Pa. New York, X. Y. . South Bethlehem, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. . South Bethlehem, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. . South Bethlehem, Pa. Mauch Chunk, Pa. J onorarp Zxuittt Rev. Marcus A. Tolman Bethlehem, Pa. onorarp Alumni QTrusfteea ZEerm Cxpire Francis R. Dravo . .1912 Pittsburgh, Pa. Alfred E. Forstall . . 1913 . . . New York, N. Y. Thomas M. Eynon . 1914 . . . Philadelphia, Pa. Harlan S. Miner . 1 91 5 . Gloucester City, N. J. (Officers William A. Lathrop President R. Morris Gummere ..... Secretary and Treasurer H. S. Kitchel Assistant Secretary and Treasurer Cxecutibe Committee Warren A. Wilbur, Chairman Charles L. Taylor Albert N. Cleaver Henry R. Price William A. Lathrop Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot Charles M. Schwab Committee on Puilbinga anb rounb Warren A. Wilbur, Chairman Albert N. Cleaver John Fritz Rembrandt Peale David J. Pearsall Committee on Jfinance anb 2lnbeatment$ Charles L. Taylor, Chairman William A. Lathrop Warren A. Wilbur Jfacultp 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; Sec- retary of the Alumni Association, ' 76, and President. ' 79; elected President of Lehigh University, 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 Solicitor of Lehigh Valley Railroad Com- pany 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 Telegraph Laws of Pennsylvania, ' 84; member Century Club, New York; University Club, New York; University Club, Phila- delphia; 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 Engi- neering Education; American Association for the Advancement of Science; His- torical Society of Pennsylvania; honorary member Tau Beta Pi; honorary member Arcadia; LL.D., Lafayette College, ' 05; LL.D., Franklin and Marshall College, ' 09; LL.D., University of Pennsylvania, ' 11. 14 Natt Morrill Emery, M.A. Vice-President and Registrar 38 .South Centre 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, ' 71 ciety of Mechanical Engineers. American So- 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; Fel- low of the American Association for Advance- ment of Science; Phi Beta Kappa; Beta 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; Student, University of Gottingen, ' 79- ' 8o; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, ' Si; 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. 16 William Suddards Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. Professor of Physics 127 Wall St., Bethlehem M.S., ' 87, University of Kansas; Assistant Pro- fessor of Physics, University of Kansas, ' 87- ' c)o; Student, University of Berlin, ' cjo-qi; Morgan Fellow, Harvard University, ' 91— ' 92; Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Iowa State College, ' q2- ' q7; Student, Cornell Univer- sity, winter terms ' 92- ' 96; 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; Mem- ber of the American Astro-Physical Society; Member of the American Electrochemical Society; Phi Delta Theta; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi ; Tau Beta Pi. John L. Stewart, A.B., Ph.B. Professor of Economics and History 678 Ostrum St., South Bethlehem 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 Penn- sylvania; Assistant Professor of English in the Philadelphia 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 Re- ligion (American Oriental Society); American Academy of Political and Social Science; Ameri- can Association for the Advancement of Science ; Phi Beta Kappa. J 7 Robert W. Blake. A.B.. A.M. Processor 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, ' 9o- ' 94; 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 Ber- lin; Professor of Greek, Cornell College, Iowa; Professor of Greek, St. Stephen ' s College; Mem- ber American Philological Association; Alpha Delta Phi. William Esty, B.A., S.B., M.A. Professor of Electrical Engineering 318 Market St., Bethlehem B.A., ' 89, M.A., ' 93, Amherst; S.B., ' 93, Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology; Member Amer- ican Institute Electrical Engineers; Member So- ciety for Promotion of Engineering Education; Instructor in Electrical Engineering, ' 93-95; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 95-98; Associate Professor of Electrical Engi- neering, ' 98-01, 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, Philadel- phia High School; M.S., ' 90, Ph.D., ' 93, Lehigh University; Tau Beta Pi; Past President and at present Secretary of the American Electrochem- ical Society; Vice-President American Institute of Mining Engineers; Deutsche Bunsen Gesell- schaft; Faraday Society; Societe Electrochimique de France; Iron and Steel Institute of England; Member and Professor of Electrochemistry of the Franklin Institute; Member of the American Society for Testing Materials; Institute of Chem- ical Engineers; Chemists ' Club, New York City. 19 Howard Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. Professor of Mining Engineering 438 Seneca St., South Bethlehem B.S., ' 95, E.M., ' 96, Lehigh; Member American Institute of Mining Engineers; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Tau Omega. Arthur E. Meaker, C.E. Professor of Mathematics 415 North Linden St., Bethlehem C.E., ' 75, Lehigh; ' 75-77, with P. R. R. ; Instruc- tor in Mathematics, Lehigh, ' 77— ' 97 ; Assistant Professor, ' 98- ' o6; Professor of Mathematics since ' 06. Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., M.A. P rofesso r of Ma thematics 215 South Center St., Bethlehem B.A., ' 83, M.A., ' 91, Lehigh University; Instruc- tor in Mathematics, Lehigh University, ' 84— ' 97, Assistant Professor, ' 98— ' 06; Graduate Student, Germany, ' q3- ' 94; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member Ameri- can 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. William B. Schober Absent on leave B.S., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry 820 Bishopthorpe St., South Bethlehem B.S., ' 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 So- ciety (London); Member Societe Chimique de France; Member Society Chemical Industry; Theta Delta Chi; Honorary Member of the Tau Beta Pi. Bexjamix LeRoy 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 So- ciety of America; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Society for Pro- motion of Engineering Education; American Institute of Mining Engineers; Geologist, Mary- land Geological Survey; Assistant Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey, Professor in Penn Col- lege. ' 97- ' oo; Associate in Geology in Bryn Mawr College, ' 03— ' 07; Sigma Xi. Frank Pope McKibben, S.B. Professor ' of Civil Engineering 817 St. Luke ' s Place, South Bethlehem S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 94; Assistant in the Department of Civil Engineering, ' ()4- ' ()C); Instructor, ' ;6- ' 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 ' q8; 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 Engineering 56 Church 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; Admitted to Bar, Second Judicial District of Md., ' 94; In- structor in Civil Engineering, Lehigh University, ' q8- ' oi; Assistant Professor in charge of Civil Engineering, Tulane University, ' 01-04; Assist- ant Professor of Civil Engineering, Lehigh Uni- versity, ' o4- ' o7 ; ' 07 to date, Professor of Railroad Engineering. 23 B. DE SCHWEINITZ, M.E. Professor of Machine Design 313 Church St., Bethlehem Graduate Royal Polytechnic School, Stuttgart, ' 74; six years Teacher of Mechanical Engineering at Western University of Pennsylvania, ' 74—80; Mechanical Engineer for Colorado Coal and Iron Company, ' 8o- ' o2 ; Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers, ' 8o- ' 95 ; with Bethle- hem Steel Company, ' 92- ' oi; with Pennsylvania Steel Company, ' 01-07. Robert W. Hall, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology and Lecturer on Forestry i?2 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. 24 Percy Hughes, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy and Education 36 North Center St., Bethlehem A.B., Alfred University, ' 99; Teacher ' s Diploma, Teachers C ollege, New York City, ' 97; A. M., Col- umbia University, ' 02; Ph.D., Columbia Univer- sity, ' 04; Teacher and Principal, Secondary Schools, ' q6- ' oi; Instructor in Philosophy, Alfred University, ' qS- ' qq; Fellow in Philosophy, Colum- bia University, ' o2- ' o3 ; Assistant in Philosophy, Columbia University, ' o3- ' os; Instructor in Phil- osophy and Psychology, University of Minnesota, ' o5- ' o6; Acting Professor of Philosophy, and Di- rector of Extension Courses for Teachers, Tulane University, ' o6- ' o7; Member of American Philo- sophical Association; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Association of Col- lege Teachers of Education. Charles 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 of Gottingen, ' q7 ; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, ' 98- ' 99; Student, University of Berlin, ' qq- ' oo; Instructor, Morgan Park Academy, 01- ' 03; Graduate Student, Harvard, ' 03— ' 05; Ph.D., Harvard, ' 07; Psi Upsilon. Howard R. Reiter, B.A., M.A. Professor of Physical Education 727 Seneca St., South Bethlehem B.A., M.A., Princeton; Graduate of Harvard Summer School of Physical Education. Barry MacNutt, E.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Physics 928 OstrurrTSt., South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh, ' 97, M.S., ' 98; Beta Theta 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 of Electrical Engineers. 26 Harry M. Ullmann, A.B., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry 148 South Main St., Bethlehem A.B., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University; Member of American Chemical Society; Member Deutsche Chemische Gesellschaft; Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science; Theta Delta Chi. JOHX HUTCHESON OGBURX, C.E. Associate Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy i8 Fourth Ave., Bethlehem C.E., Vanderbilt University, ' 92; Fellow in Engi- neering, ' 92- ' 93; Assistant Astronomer Dudley Observatory, ' 93 ' -95; Instructor Mathematics and Astronomy, Lehigh University, ' 95-06; Beta Theta Pi. Walter Savage Laxdis. Met. E., M.S. Associate Professor of Metallurgy 146 South Linden St., Bethlehem Met.E., Lehigh, ' 02; Assistant in Departments of Mineralogy and Metallurgy, ' o2- ' o4; Instructor in Departments of Metallurgy and Mineralogy, ' 04- ' 05; Student in Heidelberg, ' os- ' o6 (Returned to Lehigh University, ' 06— ' 07; Graduate Student, Lehigh, ' o4- ' o5, ' 05— ' 06); Degree of Master of Science, Lehigh, ' 06; Assistant Professor of Metal- lurgy and Mineralogy, June, ' 07; Student Tech- nische Hochscule, Aachen, ' 09; Member of Amer- ican Chemical Society; American Electrochemical Society; 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. Klein, M.E. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering 224 South High St., Bethlehem M.E., ' 99, Lehigh University; Member of Ameri- can 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. 28 Leon D. Conkling, C.E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering 419 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem C.E., Cornell, ' 00; Assistant City Engineer, ' 00- ' 02, City Engineer, ' 02-04, Elmira, X. Y.; Esti- mator and Draughtsman, L.S. and M.S. Ry., ' 04- ' 06; Associate Member American Society of Civil Engineers. Vahax S. Babasinian, A.M., Ph.D. Associate 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. 29 Myron J. Luch, M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Absent on leave B.A., ' 02, M.A., ' 03, Lehigh University; Instruc- tor in English, Lehigh, ' 04— ' 05; Teaching Fellow and Assistant in Greek, Tulane University; Ph.D., ' 05— ' 07; Phi Beta Kappa. James Warren Miller, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Fourth and New Sts., South Bethlehem 5 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. 3° 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, ' 97-98; Phi Beta Kappa. 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, ' 05— ' 08; Member of American Association for Advance- ment 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. 31 James H. Wily, E.E. Assistant Professor in Physics 1007 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 05; Associate Member of American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Associate Member of American Physical Society ; Member of American Society for Advancement of Science; Member Illuminating Engineering Society; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Chari.es K. Meschter, B.S., B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor in English 27 North New St., Bethlehem B.Sc. University of Pennsylvania, ' 96, M.A., ' 07; Student, Harvard, ' gcj- ' oo; B.A., Harvard, ' 00; Graduate Student, University of Pennsylvania, ' o4- ' o7, ' 09- ' 10; Professor of English and Ger- man, Perkiomen Seminary, ' 96-05; Professor of English in Moravian College for Women, ' 10. 32 Edward L. Jones, M.E. Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering 824 Tombler St., South Bethlehem M.E., Stevens Institute, ' 92; Student at Columbia University Summer, ' 08. Ralph Justin Fogg, B.S. Assistant Professor in Civil Engineering 205 North High St.. Bethlehem B.S.. Tufts College, ' 06; Member of Society for Promotion of Engineering Education ; Delta Tau Delta. 33 Harry A. S. Howarth, Ph.B. Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering 1 38 South New St., Bethlehem Ph.B., Sheffield Scientific School, Yale Univer- sity, ' 99; Member of American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers; Sigma Xi. Edgar Theodore Wherry, B.S.JPh.D. Assistant Professor of Mineralogy 460 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem B.S., Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, ' 06; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, ' 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 Mineralo- gical Club; Sigma Xi. 34 instructors; Emil Gelhaar Instructor in Freehand Drawing 148 South Main St., Bethlehem Alpha A. Diefenderfer, A.C., M.S. Instructor in Quantitative 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, ' 00-02; Assistant Professor, Colorado College, ' 03— ' 04; Beta Theta Pi. Sylvanus A. Becker, C.E., M.S. Instructor in Civil Engineering 103 North St., Bethlehem C.E., Lehigh, ' 03; M.S., Lehigh, ' 09; Phi Sigma Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Borough Engineer, Nazareth, Pa.; Associate Member A. S. C. E. 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. Rollin Landis Charles, B.A., M.A. Instructor in Physics 744 Seneca St., South Bethlehem A.B., Lehigh, ' 07; M.A., Lehigh, ' 10; Member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Associate Member of American Physics Society; Phi Beta Kappa. 35 Edward S. Foster, E.E. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 308 E. Broad St., Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 07; Associate Member American Institute of Elec- trical Engineers; Sigma Phi Epsilon. Kearney E. Hendricks, B.S., S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering 451 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem B.S., Guilford College, 00; S.B., Haverford College, ' 02; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University, ' 03— ' 04. Howard D. Gruber, E.E. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 417 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh University, ' 09. J. Hunt Wilson, B.S., S.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry 531 Cattell St., Easton, Pa. B.S., Lafayette College, ' 05; S.M., Harvard, ' 07; Ph.D., Harvard, ' 08. C harles R. Cressy, B.S. Instructor in Chemistry 308 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem B.S., Minnesota, ' 08. Howard M. Fry, E.E. Instructor in Physics 319 North Seventh Ave., Bethlehem E.E., Lehigh, ' 10; Tau Beta Pi. Frank G. Perley, E.M. Instructor in Physics 430 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem E.M., Lehigh, ' 08; Alpha Tau Omega. Charles H. MaGuire, B.S. Instructor in Chemistry 409 North Linden St., Bethlehem Frank E. Haskell, M.E. Instructor in Electrical Engineering 106 North High St., Bethlehem Associate Member of American Institute of Electrical Engineers. 36 Harry P. Hammond, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering Wyandotte Hotel, South Bethlehem B.S. in C.E., University of Pennsylvania, ' 09. Herman P. Smith, E.M. Instructor in Mining Engineering 443 Seneca St., South Bethlehem E.M., Lehigh, ' 10. Ralph L. Bartlett, S.B. Instructor in Mining Engineering 443 Seneca St., South Bethlehem S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. William F. Odom, B.S. Assistant in Quantitative Analysis 308 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Christian L. Siebert, B.S. Assistant in Biology 334 East Broad St., Bethlehem Joseph R. Dawson, El. Met. Assistant in Metallurgy 420 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem El. Met., Lehigh, ' 10. Edward L. Estabrook, E.M. Instructor in Geology 468 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem E.M., University of Pittsburgh, ' 11. George S. Chiles, B.M.E. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering 138 South New St., Bethlehem B.M.E., Iowa State College, ' 06; Member of American Society for Testing Materials; Member of International Association for Testing Materials; Member of Western Railroad Club. Robert C. Gowdy, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Physics 432 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem University of Cincinnati, B.A., ' 06, M.A., ' 07, Ph.D., ' 09; Delta Tau Delta. Earl A. Saliers, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Accounting Birkel Ave., South Bethlehem B.S., Heidelberg University (Ohio); M.A., Ohio State University; Ph.D., Uni- versity of Pennsylvania; Member American Economic Association. 37 Raymond W. Walters, B.A. Instructor in English 423 East Broad St., Bethlehem B.A., Lehigh University, ' 07. Carl W. Mitman, B.A., E.M. Assistant in Geology 907 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem James C. Kimball Assistant in Physical Education Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Conference department Director Preston A. Lambert, M.A. Mathematics, Professor Lambert Modem Languages, Professor Palmer Physics, Mr. Charles Chemistry, Mr. MaGuire Hecturertf Edward Higginson Williams, Jr., B.A., E.M., A.C., F.G.S.A. Lecturer on Mining and Geology Woodstock, Vermont 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 Surgeons; Member Northampton County Medical Society; Phi Gamma Delta. 38 gfomintetrattoe (Officers; Henrp turgta Brtnber $reBibent iJatt fll. Cmerp tTice-fJresiibent anb Registrar ©ean Cfjarlea i. £f)ornburg g ecretarp of Jfacultp 3Tofin l. tetoart Director of Hiurarp Jfrebertcfe . gtefcbaugf) jBurtfar £tbrarp Jotjn 3L tetoart ©(rector $eter Jf. gauffer Cataloguer packer JWemorial Cfjurcf) ftfje eb. tetoart «. pitman, $b. Ctjaplain £. Cbgar tiicltis ©rganiBt 39 -JO d£Cuwmn hm 41 §rabuate tubents Jfor 3©egrte G. F. Alrich, B.S. M.S. Easton, Pa. F. H. Baker, Ph.B. M.E. 915 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem J. E. Bauman, A.B. C.E. 399 Turner St., Allentown W. C. Carson, C.E. M.S. 541 Seneca St., South Bethlehem R. L. Charles, B.A. M.A. 628 Broadway, South Bethlehem J. R. Curtis, A.B. M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem R. B. Dayton, A.B. C.E. 454 Vine St., South Bethlehem E. L. Estabrook, E.M. M.S. 450 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem J. P. Faherty, A.B. C.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem E. A. Florian, B.S. M.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem E. S. Foster, E.E. M.S. 524 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem H. M. Fry, E.E. M.S. 319 N. 7th Ave., Bethlehem H. D. Gruber, E.E. M.S. 417 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem A. R. Hartzell, A.B. Spl. Chem. 130 N. 9th St., Allentown H. D. Kerr, B.A. C.E. 601 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem A. G. Loxdoxo, E.M. Spl. Met. 446 Elm St., South Bethlehem W. B. Mexefee, A.B. C.E. 155 S. Mam St., South Bethlehem C. W. Mitman, B.A. Spl. B.S. 907 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem W. F. Odom, B.S. M.S. 308 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem C. W. Raese, B.S. E.E. 338 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem J. L .Reiter, A.B. M.E. 918 5th St., Allentown C. A. Schulz, B.A. M.E. 422 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem J. I. Vela, M.E. Spl. C.E. 511 Seneca St., South Bethlehem R. W. Walters, B.A. M.A. 423 E. Broad St., Bethlehem E. D. Wuxder, A.B. E.E. 449 Vine St., South Bethlehem a sv? T iHE writing of class history is indeed a pleasure as well as a duty, especially when that history has been one crowded with anecdotes and events to which every loyal member can refer in after years with pride and pleas- ant memories. Such a one is the history of the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Twelve. The record of works accomplished by our organ- ization as a body has been given in detail by former scribes, and it only remains for the present writer to review some of the things that have marked our progress from the raw material to a more finished product. We have suffered a slight de- crease in numbers since our first enrollment. Some have given up the race; some have left college for divers reasons, while a few have sought refuge from college cares at the marriage altar. We are still, however, well represented in every department of the University, and all are striv- ing toward that Mecca of a college man ' s career — a diploma and degree. 45 kRDS, President During the four years that are drawing so rapidly to a close we have exhibited a class spirit that has been irresistible. As Freshmen we fought desperately for our place in the University life, and never shirked a con- test where the honor of the class was at stake. As Sophomores we were more firmly banded, and we exercised our power with judgment and discretion. In the capacity of Juniors our task was to deal out advice to the incoming class, and we strove to do it in a way that would promote the general welfare of the college at large. Now as Seniors our visages assume a graver aspect, and our thoughts naturally turn to the time when we shall again become freshmen in a school whose lessons are learned by harder knocks, and whose paths are not nearly so flowery as those which we have been treading at old Lehigh. But no matter how difficult the task that the world sets before us, or how far from the old campus we may stray, the associations formed here, and the scenes of our class gatherings, will be the subject of our fondest recollections. Thus far this year nothing remarkable has transpired to disturb the dignity of our onward march toward a coveted goal. Hopes and ambi- tions are running high, and every nerve is strained in preparation for that final test which means so much to a Senior. There is a time, however, to reflect on what these four years have meant to us. We have learned how little we know, and how much there is to know. Above all we have found that Lehigh stands for conscientious endeavor, and every man has developed a love for her that time can never lessen. When we have left these dear old halls and are battling with the world for recognition, may it be our privilege to perform some work that will reflect honor and credit upon Lehigh, the college beautiful. Historian. 46 Class of 1912 Colors: Dark Green and Gold Motto: Conatus non praemium virtus est. Officers! President Vere Buckingham Edwards .... Vice-President Ira Alfred St. John ...... Walter Irving Nevius Tn Secretary George Jacob Shurts Athletic Representative Lester Bunn Knox Warren Fuller Ha dsali William Nyce Rorer Historian Marshal m Hullabaloo ! L! U! One! Nine! One! Two! Pennsylvania New Jersey- Pennsylvania New Jersey Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania 47 Jtlember Eugene H. Austin E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Toms River, X.J. John Earle Bacon Ch.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 521 Grant St., Camden, X. J. James Bailey, ZQE M.E. ZQE House, So. Bethlehem 15 Halsey St., Brooklyn, X. Y Ralph P. Baird, 0JQ B.S., Geo. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 1522 Oliver Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. Arcadia; ' Varsity Track Squad, ' oq- ' io; Sophomore Relay Team; Calculus Cremation Committee; Assistant Manager Baseball Team, ' io- ' ii; Manager Baseball Team, ' n- ' i2; Vice-President Y. M. C. A., ' n- ' i2; Hustling Com- mittee, ' 11; House Committee, Drown Hall; Sword and Crescent. Charles H. Bender E.M. 715 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Harry M. Benjamin C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 95 X. Vine St., Hazleton, Pa. Mandolin Club, ' io- ' i2; Luzerne County Club; Civil Society; L. U. Orchestra, ' io- ' ii ; Leader, ' 12. A. Glenworth Birdsall E.E. 316 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Toms River, X. J. Tau Beta Pi; Sophomore Wrestling Team; Wrestling Squad, ' io- ' ii, ' n- ' n; New Jersey Club; Politics Club; E. E. Society, Vice-President, ' n- ' i2; Y. M. C. A. Clotworthy Birnie, Jr., SAX E.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Taneytown, Md. Robert H. Boas, KI M.E. 618 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 1536 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. Chesleigh Arthur Bonine,0J E.M. 116 Market St., Bethlehem 146 W. 52nd St., Chicago, 111. Richard M. Bryce, IX M.E. 334 E. Broad St., Bethlehem 208 Darragh St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Herbert Asbury Camp, Jr. ,4 AS B.S., Geo. (PAS House, So. Bethlehem Hattiesburg, Miss. Glee Club, ' oq- ' io, ' io- ' ii, ' n- ' i2; Minstrel Show, ' 09; Triskaideka; Sword and Crescent. Carlton D. Cann, IN C.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 704 W. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. Royden Wersler Catanach E.E. 518 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Devault, Pa. Maurice Thomas Coakley.A ' J Ch.E. 618 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 200 E. Coal St., Shenandoah, Pa. Sophomore Cotillion Club; Sword and Crescent; Chemical Society. Ernest S. Colling, XW A.B. XV House, So. Bethlehem 144 W. 3rd St., Oil City, Pa Glee Club, ' o8- ' og, ' oq- ' io, Leader, ' io- ' ii, ' u- ' i2; Minstrel Show, ' o8- ' o9, End Man, ' o9- ' io; Interlocutor, ' n- ' n; Manager Minstrel Association, ' 1 1- ' 12 ; Mustard and Cheese Chorus, ' oS- ' og, Cast, ' og- ' io, Musical Director, ' io- ' ii, ' n- ' i2; Brown and White Board, ' o8- ' oq, ' oq- ' io, ' io- ' ii, ' n- ' i2; Junior Oratorical Contest, 2nd, ' 11; Sophomore Cotillion Club, Secretary, ' 09; Junior Prom Committee, ' 10; June Hop Committee, ' 1 1 ; Scimitar Club; Arcadia, ' n- ' i2; Lehigh Song Book, Editor; University Quartette, Leader, ' io- ' ii, ' 1 1 - ' 12; Cheer and Song Leader, ' 11 ; Arts and Science Club, President, ' 1 i- ' i2 ; 19 1 2 Class Book Committee. Eber Waddell Cook, 0JX M.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Xew Castle, Pa. Freshman Basketball Team; Marshal Sophomore Class; Sophomore Basket- ball Team; Captain Sophomore Football Team; Sophomore Athletic Repre- sentative; ' Varsity Basketball Squad, ' 09; ' Varsity Basketball Team, ' 10, ' 11; Captain, ' 12; Hustling Committee, ' io- ' ii; Toast Sophomore Banquet; M. E. Society; Triskaideka; Tau Beta Pi. Herbert L. Cooper, ±(PE C.E. 518 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 312 Springfield St., Chicopee, Mass. Freshman Track Team, ' 08; Class Lacrosse Team, ' 10, ' 11; ' Varsity Lacrosse Squad, ' 10, ' 11; Tennis Team, ' 10, ' 11, Captain, ' 12; Treasurer Tennis Asso- ciation, ' 10; President Tennis Association, ' 11; Chairman Y. M. C. A. Hand- book Committee, ' 11; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 11; Vice-President Lehigh-Xew England Club, ' 10; Secretary C. E. Society, ' 11. John R. Crellin, 6 AX E.E. 60 1 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 65 N. Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa. J. Edgar Culliney, DIK M.E. 4 IK House, So. Bethlehem Lebanon, Pa. J as. Earl Cunningham, B6 FI B.S., Geo. 326 Wyandotte St., S. Bethlehem 1423 Quarrier St., Charleston, W. Va. Mustard and Cheese; Kappa Beta Phi. Frank W. Davis, Jr., 4 IK El. Met. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Milford, Del. 49 Walter H. Davis M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Spring City, Pa. George M. Donaldson, AT C.E. JT House, Sayre Park Huntington, N. Y. Football Team, ' oS, ' 09, ' 10; Lacrosse Team, ' 10, ' 11; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Toast, Freshman Banquet; Toast, Junior Banquet; Junior Athletic Representative; Athletic Representative-at-Large, ' n- ' i2; Arcadia; Sword and Crescent; Chairman 19 12 Class Book Committee. Wheaton Douglass M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Cape May Court House, X. J. Cheer Leader; President M. E. Society; New Jersey-Lehigh Club; Toast at Junior Banquet; Junior Coach of Freshman Baseball Team; Sophomore Baseball Team. Henry Eagle El Met. 446 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 606 Walnut St., Pottstown, Pa. Vere Buckingham Edwards C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Glenburn, Pa. Tau Beta Pi; Arcadia; President of the Senior Class; Chairman L. U. Athletic Committee, ' n- ' i2; Secretary of the Junior Class; Manager Wrestling Team; Treasurer L. U. Politics Club; President Lackawanna County- Lehigh Club, ' n- ' i2; Class Lacrosse Team, Lacrosse Squad, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Chairman Section E, Taylor Hall Dormitory, ' 11. Frank Fahm, Jr. C.E. 431 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Laurel, Md. Clarence J. Flayhart C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1438 X. Eden St., Baltimore, Md. Horace S. Fowler M.E. 516 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Raymond C. Fuller, 8E C.E. QE House , So. Bethlehem Sussex, X. J. Glee Club, ' 10, ' 11; Minstrel Show, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Manager Gym Team; Secre- tary Intercollegiate Association of Amateur Gymnasts of America; Politics Club; Sophomore Football Team; President Lehigh-Hermon Club; C. E. Society; Xew Jersey-Lehigh Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Chester A. Gauss E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 221 5th St., S. E., Washington, D. C. Richard Goldberg C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 40 W. Lemon St., Lancaster, Pa. SO James Gore, Jr. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Reisterstown, Baltimore Co., Md. President of Maryland Club; Junior Lacrosse Team; Lacrosse Squad, ' 10, ' n, ' 12; Tennis Association, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11, ' 12; C. E. Society; Y. M. C. A. Devo- tional Committee. Nevin H. Guth M.E. 527 Liberty St., Allentown, Pa. Cheer Leader. Warren Fuller Hadsall C.E. 522 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Forty Fort, Pa. William Krebs Hancock, ATA E.E. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 11 W. Market St., Danville, Pa. Brown and White Board, ' 11, ' 12; Minstrel Show, ' 10, ' 11; Treasurer, ' 11; Mustard and Cheese Association, ' 11; Scimitar; B. U. X.; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Sword and Crescent; Business Manager 191 2 Class Book Committee. Samuel Ryland Hanger A.B. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Florence, N. J. Thomas Philip Harris, WT E.E. WT House, So. Bethlehem 639 W. Diamond Ave., Hazleton, Pa. John A. Hart, ATQ E.E. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Mayfield, Pa. Toast, Freshman Banquet; Toast, Sophomore Banquet; Toast, Junior Ban- quet; President of Sophomore Class; Founder ' s Day Hop Committee, ' 09; Freshman, Sophomore and Junior Lacrosse Teams; Varsity Lacrosse Squad; Varsity Lacrosse Team, ' 10, ' 11; Football Squad, ' 10; Hustling Committee, ' 10; President Lackawanna-Lehigh Club, ' io- ' ii; Treasurer Lackawanna- Lehigh Club, ' 09- ' 10; Electrical Society; 191 2 Epitome Board; Cheer Leader. Burton Hartley, X0 E.M. XQ House, So. Bethlehem 40 Hampton Terrace, E. Orange, N. J. Class Lacrosse Team, ' 09, ' 11; Minstrel Show, ' 08, ' 09; Mustard and Cheese, ' 09; Mining and Geological Society; New Jersey-Lehigh Club; Skull and Heart Club; Scimitar Club. Milton B. Hartzell C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Fayette ville, Pa. Raymond J. Hauk, SAX B.S., Chem. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Lehighton, Pa. Glee Club, ' 10; Mustard and Cheese, ' 10; Mandolin Club, ' 11, ' 12; Manager Musical Clubs, ' n; Recording Secretary Tau Beta Pi. John F. Herr Ch.E. 436 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Strasburg, Lancaster Co., Pa. Second Prize Mathematics, Freshman Year; Wilbur Scholarship; Treasurer Tau Beta Pi; President Chemical Society; Hustling Committee; Politics Club. 5i Lyman F. Hill, Jr. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 843 Carteret Ave., Trenton, N. J. Henry J. Horn C.E. Taylor Hall. So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. James Martin Jenkins E.M. 219 E. Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 634 Greene St., Germantown, Pa. Daniel Thomas Jerman C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 207 Dyckman St., New York, N. Y. William M. Johnson E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Freeland, Pa. Andrew Milliken Kennedy, B8IJ C.E. 326 Wyandotte St., S. Bethlehem 292 Madison Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Arcadia; ' Varsity Football Team, ' 10, ' 11; ' Varsity Lacrosse Team, ' 10, ' 11, Captain, ' 12; Chairman Drown Hall House Committee; Sword and Crescent; B. U. X; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Scimitar Club; Captain Freshman Foot- hall Team. Carl Daniel Kester, IN E.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Spencer, N. C. Lester B. Knox, AT El. Met. AT House, Sayre Park Christiana, Pa. Class Football Team, ' 08; Class Track Team, ' 08, ' 09; ' Varsity Football Team, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; ' Varsity Track Team, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Penn Relay Team, ' 09, Captain, ' 11; Treasurer Freshman Class; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 10, ' 11; Finance Committee, ' 09, ' 10; Senior Class Athletic Representative; Sword and Crescent. Preston Albert Lambert, Jr. ,KA M.E. 215 S. Center St., Bethlehem Glee Club, ' o8- ' i2; Minstrel Show, ' o8- ' io; Mustard and Cheese, ' o9- ' i2; Junior Prom Committee, ' 11; Junior Hop Committee, ' 11; Treasurer Musical Association, ' n- ' i2; Manager Band and Orchestra, ' n- ' i2; Tau Beta Pi. Allen V. Laub A.B. 118 North St., Bethlehem Edmund B. Lehr, PTJ B.S., Geo. 1430 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. C. E. Loane, Jr., XW M.E. XW House, So. Bethlehem 710 West First St., Oil City, Pa. Frank S. Lubrecht, SJX C.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 731 W. Diamond Ave., Hazleton, Pa. Allen Gerard Martin, WY E.E. WT House, So. Bethlehem 261 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 52 John Traylor Martin, IX E.M. IX House, Bethlehem 909 Ave. C, San Antonio. Texas Freshman Baseball Team; Sophomore Baseball Team; Captain Junior Base- ball Team; ' Varsity Baseball Squad, ' 09, ' 10. ' 11; Skull and Heart; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Scimitar Club; Calculus Cremation Committee; B. U. X.; Junior Banquet Committee; Sword and Crescent Club; Varsity Football Squad, ' 11. Alexander J. McKenzie, ATQ E.M. ATQ House, So. Bethlehem P. O. Box 346, Yonkers, N. Y. Frank Bernard Miller C.E. 431 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 205 E. Grove St., Scranton, Pa. Joseph Willard Milnor E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1 5 15 Walnut St., Williamsport, Pa. First Honors in Mathematics, Freshman Year and Sophomore Year; Lehigh- Williamsport Club, President, ' n- ' i2; Mandolin Club, ' io- ' i2; Chairman, Section D, Taylor Hall, ' u- ' i2; Secretary Dormitory Committee, ' 1 i- ' i2 ; Tau Beta Pi. Walter R. Moore, I(PE M.E. I PE House, So. Bethlehem Sussex, N. J. Walter Irving Nevius E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 5252 Jeffer son St., Philadelphia, Pa. Tau Beta Pi; President E. E. Society; Treasurer Senior Class; Hustling Com- mittee; Junior Banquet Committee; President Philadelphia Central High School-Lehigh Club. Willard Levi Newman E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Blairstown, N. J. John W. Nusbaum E.E. 455 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 5029 Springfield Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Henry H. Otto E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 11 St. Clements St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Class Secretary, ' o8- ' o9; Chairman Dues Committee, ' 09- ' 10; Toast, Sopho- more Banquet; Business Manager 1912 Epitome; Y. M. C. A.. Chairman Missionary Committee, ' io- ' ii, and Devotional Committee, ' 11, President, ' n- ' i2; Hustling Committee, ' n- ' i2; Mining and Geological Society, ' o9- ' i2; Lehigh-Luzerne County Club, Vice-President, ' io- ' n; Secretary Politics Club, ' n- ' i2; Arcadia. Raymond W. Over, IX E.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem Haysville, Pa. ' Varsity Baseball Squad, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11 ; Sophomore Cotillion Club; E. E. Society; B. U. X.; Scimitar Club. 53 Raymond V. Parker M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 300 N. Court St., Portsmouth, Va. Sophomore Football Team; Wrestling Squad, ' 10, ' 12. Joe Baxter Parks, I4 E E.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Concord, N. C. Howard F. Perry E.E. 546 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 2440 X. 33rd St., Philadelphia, Pa. S. Cameron Peters, KI C.E. KI House, So. Bethlehem Middletown, Dauphin Co., Pa. Scimitar Club; Sophomore Cotillion Club; B. U. X.; Minstrel Show; Glee Club; Freshman and Sophomore Basketball Teams. Horace Wray Porter E.E. 520 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 101 Waverly Place, New York, X. Y. Class Football Team, ' 08; Class Lacrosse Team, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Mustard and Cheese, ' 11; Minstrel Show, ' 10, ' 11; University Band, ' 11; Brown and White Board, ' 10, ' 11; 1912 Class Book Committee. Kenneth Mills Raynor, A E.E. KI House, So. Bethlehem 139 Belmont St., Carbondale, Pa. Edward H. Robb M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 219 S. Xinth St., Lebanon, Pa. William Nyce Rorer E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 4320 X. Carlisle St., Philadelphia, Pa. Chairman Taylor Hall Committee, ' n- ' i2; Football Squad, ' o8- ' o9; Class Marshal, ' 12. Arthur P. Rutherford, d J6 E.E. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem P. O. Box 129, Harrisburg, Pa. Ira Alfred St. John C.E. 516 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 593 State St., Perth Amboy, N. J. Tau Beta Pi; Captain Sophomore Wrestling Team; ' Varsity Wrestling Team, ' 10, ' 11, Captain, ' 12; First Honors Junior Civil; 1912 Epitome Board. Irving Hoffman Samuels E.E Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 831 Linden St., Allentown, Pa. Pedro E. Sanchez C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem San Pedro, Coahuila, Mexico Andrew T. Schultz, IX E.E. IX House, Bethlehem 52 Elm St., Morristown, X. J. Freshman Relay Team; Freshman Executive Committee; Scimitar Club; Sophomore Relay Team; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Toast, Junior Banquet; ' Varsity Track Team, ' 10, ' 11, Captain, ' 12. 54 Charles F. Sencenbach M.E. 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Bath, Pa. Warren R. Seyfried Ch.E. 544 Goepp St., Bethlehem George J. Shurts E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 146 West End Ave., Somerville, X.J. Wilbur Prize Sophomore English; Calculus Cremation Committee; Toast, Sophomore Banquet; Assistant Business Manager 1912 Epitome; Secretary E. E. Society; Treasurer New Jersey-Lehigh Club; Secretary Senior Class; Cheer Leader. George Nathan Sieger El. Met. 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Slatington, Pa. Harold M. Smyth, (PTd E.M. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem ' 702 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Arcadia; Manager Football Team; Sword and Crescent; Sophomore Cotillion; Scimitar Club; Glee Club, ' oS- ' ock Minstrel Show, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Mustard and Cheese, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11, ' 12; Sophomore Banquet Committee; Junior Committee; Art Editor 1912 Epitome. Charles Stephen Snyder C.E. 524 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Luther T. Snyder C.E. 449 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Kimberton, Chester Co., Pa. Walter C. Solly C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 4819 Penn St., Frankford, Pa. Tau Beta Pi; Arcadia; Executive Class Committee, ' o8- ' o9; Second Honors Sophomore Physics; Toast, Junior Banquet; Class Treasurer, ' io- ' ii; Y. M. C. A. Industrial and Finance Committee, ' og- ' n; Y. M. C. A. Treasurer, ' ii- ' n; Junior Committee, ' n- ' i2; Politics Club; C. E. Society, Treasurer, ' io- ' ii, President, ' n- ' i2. Frederic R. Speed, B8II B.S., Geo. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Catonsville, Md. ' Varsity Lacrosse Team; Business Manager Brown and White; B. U. X.; Sword and Crescent; 191 2 Class Committee Book. Merle Ivan Terwilliger, AT E.M. JF House, Sayre Park 1207 Providence Road, Scranton, Pa. Arcadia, President; Tau Beta Pi, President; Freshman Football Team; Sopho- more Football Team; Vice-President Sophomore Class; Chairman Sophomore Banquet Committee; Secretary Lehigh-Lackawanna County Club, ' 09- ' 10, Treasurer, ' io- ' ii; Minstrel Show, ' 09, ' 10; Glee Club, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Mustard and Cheese Chorus, ' 10; Treasurer Mining Society, ' io- ' ii, President, ' n- ' i2; Manager Lacrosse Team, ' 11, ' 12; 1912 Epitome Board; Chairman Junior Committee, ' 11; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' n- ' i2; Triskaideka; Sword and Crescent. 55 Henry Belin Tinges, A0 M.E. 915 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 122 1 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. Class Track Team, ' 11; ' Varsity Track Team, ' 11; Minstrel Show, ' 11; Pro- gramme Committee Politics Club. Edwin Walter Trexler, DTA M.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 1 1 15 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. Sophomore Cotillion Club; Mustard and Cheese Chorus, ' 11; Sword and Crescent Club; B. U. X.; M. E. Society; Politics Club. Charles T. von Konecny Ch.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem ,Scranton, Pa. William Herbert Waddington, 6E C.E. 0£ House, So. Bethlehem 848 Ave. C, Bayonne, N. J. Minstrel Show, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10; Mustard and Cheese, ' 09, ' 10; President New Jersey-Lehigh Club; Manager Lehigh University Calendar, ' 11, ' 12; C. E. Society; L. U. Choir; Junior Rushing Committee; Junior Cap Committee. Carl E. Wagner C.E. 456 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 409 Lincoln St., Ft. Morgan, Colo. Joseph Paul Walker, AS B.S., Geo. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Birmingham, Ala. Chairman Junior Prom; Sword and Crescent; Triskaideka; B. U. X.; Kappa Beta Phi. Chester H. Warrington, B0IJ B.S. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 33 1 1 16th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Minstrel Show, End Man, ' 10; President Senators Club, ' io- ' ii; Junior Cap Committee, ' 10; Mustard and Cheese Cast, ' 11; President Inter-Fraternity Bowling League, ' io- ' ii, ' n- ' i2; Senators Club, ' n- ' i2; Kappa Beta Phi. Ralph Schaffer Wenner,ATQ E.E. ATQ House, So. Bethlehem 540 N. 6th St., Allentown, Pa. Ezra A. Wheaton, AT Met. AT House, Sayre Park Montrose, Pa. Class Lacrosse Team, ' 00, ' 10. ' 11; ' Varsity Lacrosse Team, ' 11; Vice-Presi- dent Y. M. C. A., ' io- ' ii; Hustling Committee, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Vice-President Politics Club; Vice-President Tau Beta Pi; Sword and Crescent. Clifford R. Whyte, 0IK E.M. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 2503 14th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Harold Jacob Williams M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Annville, Pa. Freshman Relay Team; Price Prize for English Composition, Freshman Year; Sophomore Relay Team; First Honors, Sophomore Physics; Second Honors, 56 Sophomore Mathematics; First Williams Prize for English Composition Sophomore Year; Witness for Defense, Calculus Cremation; Class Track Team, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; First Substitute ' Varsity Relay Team, ' 10; Junior Prom Committee; June Hop Committee; First Prize Junior Oratorical Contest; Y. M. C. A.; M. E. Society; Tau Beta Pi. Ralph Bradford Williams, AT E.M. AT House, Sayre Park 614 S. Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. Sophomore Football Team; Calculus Cremation Committee; Class Lacrosse Team, ' 09, ' 10, ' 11; Lacrosse Squad, ' 09; ' Varsity Lacrosse Team, ' 10, ' 11; B. U. X.; Triskaideka; Sword and Crescent. William May Wilson, PA6 E.E. 4 AQ House, So. Bethlehem Riverdale, Md. Donald B. Wood M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Ardmore, Pa. Arthur F. Wotring E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Schnecksville, Pa. Earle Emmons Wright, ATQ E.M. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 252 Main St., Bristol, Conn. Calculus Cremation Committee; Vice-President Junior Class; Toast Junior Banquet; Assistant Manager Track Team, ' 11; Manager Track Team, ' 12; Hustling Committee; Arcadia; Sword and Crescent; 19 12 Class Book Com- mittee. Elmer Ellsworth Yake, (PTA E.M. 1 55 S. Main St., Bethlehem Annville, Pa. Arcadia; Tau Beta Pi; Sword and Crescent; Brown and White Board, Asso- ciate Editor, ' o8- ' o9, ' o9- ' io; Assistant Editor, ' io- ' n; Editor-in-Chief, ' n- ' i2; Editor-in-Chief 1912 Epitome; Delegate Intercollegiate Civic League Convention; President Lehigh University Politics Club; Class Secretary, Sophomore Year; Toast, Freshman Banquet; Banquet Committee, Sophomore Year; Hustling Committee, Sophomore Year; First Honors in Mining Course, $25 Prize, Junior Year; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Junior Year, Chairman Bible Study Committee; Mining and Geological Society, ' o8- ' n, Secretary, ' ii- ' i2; Basketball, Assistant Manager, ' io- ' n, Manager, ' n- ' i2; House Committee, Drown Hall; 19 12 Class Book Committee. Franklin Weems Youry, IX C.E. IX House, Bethlehem 248 X. 7 th St., Newark, N. J. Freshman Lacrosse Team; Sophomore and Junior Baseball Teams; Minstrel Show, ' 09, ' 10; Assistant Editor-in-Chief 191 2 Epitome; Mustard and Cheese ' 10, ' 11, ' 12; Assistant Manager, ' 11; Manager, ' 12; Cheer Leader; Sophomore Cotillion Club; Scimitar Club; Kappa Beta Phi. 57 58 LEI 111 1 1 J U HO R 9C [Extracts from a paper read before The Imperial Archaeological Society in A. D. 5013-! A FEW years ago, as you probably know, at the ex- press command of Emperor Theodore XXIII, I undertook the excavation work in the Valley of the Punxaripon River. Digging down a few hundred feet we came across, in the strata of the Mus- tabin Era, the remains of the town of an old nation, the Pennsylvania Dutch. Only the holes in the Swiss Cheese remained, and these together with the remains of beer steins, which we also found, en- abled us to verify the authenticity of the ruins. In a fine old build- ing, Die Alte Brauerei, evidently a former place of worship, as the remains of old books of worship, labelled Hydraulics, Steam Engines, Mining Engineering, etc., proved, we came across in the room of one Clarke, evidently a great chieftain, a record of the doings of his clan, number One Thousand Nine Hundred and Thirteen. This clan migrated there in the year of 1909- Hard pressed at first by their enemies, they came to their own in the following year and filled the hearts of the rival clan, One Thousand Nine Hundred 61 W. J. Dugan, President and Fourteen, with terror. They were indeed a warlike elan, for on all great occasions there were hardly enough sound warriors left to carry the wounded to their retreat along with their own loads — of plunder. Dur- ing this year they hanged Calculus VI, their King, for treason, and made merry while his body roasted over the gaily leaping flames. To further terrify their enemies, the less warlike, they grew fierce moustaches. On one occasion a picked band of these warriors invaded Wilkes- Barre, where a queen from Gawgia nearly kidnapped one of the sturdiest of the band. Then, to spread terror among the cringing villagers, the band on a night raid painted the town a gory red. As time went on these warriors grew tired of constant warfare and laid aside their rough sports. They delved more and more into the secrets and mysteries of the clan, and with the aid of their medicine men, slowly prepared themselves for the time when the cane should replace the sword. Historian. 62 Class of 1913 Colors: Black and Gold. Motto: Mens sana in corpore sano. ' (Officers! President Walter John Dugan Pennsylvania Vice-President Case Broderick Rafter District of Columbia Secretary Joseph Patrick Stokes Pennsylvania Tn George Cooper Hill District of Columbia Athletic Representative Alan Bowen Gorman Maryland Historian Alfred Ulman Sn Utah Marshal Robert Campbell Pennsylvania 63 iWembers O. B. Ackerly. Jr., XW M.E. 430 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 146 E. 34th St., New York City Edward A. Aurand, SE C.E. 338 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 106 W. Broad St., Tamaqua, Pa. Frank J. Bartholomew Chem. Fullerton, Pa. Jesse F. Beers M.E. Boyer Building, So. Bethlehem Bath, Pa. Harold R. Blackmax C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 167 W. 49th St., Xew York City Ezra Bowex, 4TH, WY B.S. WY House, So. Bethlehem Burlington, N. J. Donald Bowman, SAX E.M. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Brooklyn, N. Y. Emmett Fraxk Boyer C.E. Boyer Building, So. Bethlehem Bowmanstown, Pa. Charles P. Brixtox, AT.Q C.E. ATQ House, So. Bethlehem Gap, Pa. Thomas A. Bryant, 0AS B.S. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 164 Xew York Ave., X. Y. City Alexander Wilsox Butler, WY E.E. WY House, So. Bethlehem Mauch Chunk, Pa. Arthur S. Callex, SAX El. Met. 453 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 414 High St., Pottstown, Pa. Robert Campbell, SAX C.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 543 Chestnut St., Pottstown, Pa. Lawrence Everett Carpenter, J? Chem.E. AT House, So. Bethlehem Xewburgh, X. Y. Chimix Chu-Fuh C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Xanziang, Kiang Su, China W. Kixg Chux M.E. 454 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Hankow, China Joseph L. Clarke E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Mineville, X. Y. Willis B. Clemmitt E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1015 Harlem Ave., Baltimore, Md. Reginald F. Clewell, IN M.E. Moravian Seminary, Bethlehem 64 BENJAM , N Ely Cole, rr M.E. , V22££ John L. Conner E.E. 5.6 Pawnee BJ S Theodore Henry Cook, J,, 2 M.E. , 3 , P-Ker Ave Bethtehem Jehu P. Coop EE , (UX Met. 60. Delaware Ave., Sa Bethlehem Alb EET K. Cosorove, M B.S.,Geo. 510 Seneca St., So.MjUfem „ - C E Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Henry R. Cox UJl. Harrington Park, N. J r, r. y, f C E Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Harry P. Croft, J f E C.E. Federal St., Camden, N. J. R C D E Nyse C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem K. U DB 1NVSB g Branchport Ave Long Branch, N. J. E,.Met. Taylor Hall So Beth.ehem Mo-sD.Do.otas,,. . M.E. S™ 2;£  £Z C.E. 54. Seneea St., Bethlehem t F V Tavlor Hall. So. Bethlehem Walter John Dugan E.E. layior Hazletonf Pa . Douglas McD. Dunbar, BBU E.M. 3 2 6 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Valley Cottage, N. Y. T rF 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Thomas L.Dunn C.E. St , Fall River , Mas, St E wa E t Cla.r DuTot, SJX Chem. 60. Delaware Ave. o. Bethlehem Robert T. Dynan E.M. 503 W. Broad St., So. Bethlehem Charles L T. Edwards, jr Met. M House, Sayre Park CHARLES L,. w Abriendo Ave _ p u eblo, Colo. Alvin Evans C.E. Taylor Hall. So. Bethlehem Hazle Brook, Pa. Daniel K. Evans, AT E.M. AT House, Sayre Park 15 Washington St., Carbondale, Pa. Roy Jackson Fahl, I0E M.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 437 Chambers Ave., Camden, X. J. Charles A. Fellencer E.M. 113 S. Madison St., Allen town, Pa. Ernest E. Finn, Id E M.E. 21 E. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. Sydney H. W. Ford, XV M.E. XV House, So. Bethlehem 2513 Broadway St., San Francisco, Cal. Charles Wellman Francis, OTA E.M. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 342 Spruce St., Steelton, Pa. John M. Fritz C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 820 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. William Clinton Fry, Jr. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 118 W. Greenwich St., Reading, Pa. Ira Fuhrmann C.E. 450 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Roebling, X. J. Francis J. Gerhard, A® M.E. 915 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 165 Harrison St., East Orange, X. J. A. Stanley Gery Chem. Coopersburg, Pa. Joseph M. Gonder, ATQ Chem. ATQ House, So. Bethlehem Strasburg, Pa. Alan Bowen Gorman, Bfin El. Met. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Catonsville, Md Henry R. Griffen, A® E.M. 915 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem George E. Harris, Jr. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 204 W. Fayette St., Baltimore, Md. Alexander Harrison C.E. 463 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Ardmore, Pa. John Wert Helfrich, IAE El. Met. 542 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 202 X. Lisbon St., Carrol ton, Ohio George D. Herr M.E. 436 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Strasburg, Pa. 66 George C. Hill E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Naval Observatory, Washington, D. C. Frank I. Hirshberg E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1013 Milwaukee Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Augustin S. Horcasitas E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 154 3rd St., Chihuahua, Mexico Andrew Douglas Jamieson. JTA ' El. Met. 511 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Lawrenceville, N.J. Price W. Janeway, Jr., JO E.E. 915 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 218 Edgemont St., Media, Pa. Hjalmar E. Johnson M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 133 N. Munroe St., Titusville, Pa. Alexander Kalajan C.E. 323 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 14 Palmer St., Providence, R. I. Walter Robert King, OIK C.E. OIK House, So. Bethlehem 147 Washington Place, Passaic, N. J. Ralph N. Kocher A.B. Eagle Hotel, Bethlehem Flicksville, Pa. Robert S. Krause M.E. 516 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Richland Center, Pa. August J. Kutzleb C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Cor. Garrison and Bateman Aves., Baltimore, Md. Herbert Will Lamb E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 32 Front St., Adrian, Mich. Harold Edwin Lenker, 0.TJ E.M. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Daniel Hayden Levan, ATQ E.M. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 505 Oley St., Reading, Pa. Frank Hall Lewis C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Jerusalem P. O., Md. Garrett B. Linderman, Jr., 10 E.M. 10 House, So. Bethlehem Cynwyd, Pa. James Scott Long Ch.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 20 S. Beaver St., York, Pa. Joseph Immel Lyon C.E. 468 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 344 E. Queen St., Chambersburg, Pa. 67 Alexander Charles MacHardy, KI E.M. KI House, So. Bethlehem 525 Green St., Greensburg, Pa. William E. McComas, Jr., I4 E C.E. I0E House, So. Bethlehem 1610 X. Carolina St., Baltimore, Md. Peter J. McMenamin M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Jeddo, Pa. Leon Thomas Mart M.E. 21 E. 4 th St., So. Bethlehem Hammonton, X. J. Leslie Goddard Matthews.J.i Ch.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 401 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, X. J. James Watts Mercur. Jr., 10 B.S., Geo. 10 House, So. Bethlehem Wallingford, Pa. Frank C. Messenger, Jr. E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 31 Boston St., Maiden, Mass. Charles Walter Miller C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. John L. Montgomery, 0IK C.E. 0IK House, So. Bethlehem South Amboy, X. J. James F. More C.E. 509 Main St., Bethlehem Harry W. Motter E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 261 X. Hartley St., York, Pa. Stanley E. Muthart, ATQ E.M. ATQ House, So. Bethlehem 1652 Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pa. Alfred L. O ' Brien E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 118 Franklin Ave., Chelsea, Mass. Alfred E. Olson, BE E.E. 338 Vine St., So. Bethlehem no S. Orchard St., Wallingford, Conn. Walter F. Perkins C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1702 Harlem Ave., Baltimore, Md. Morris K. Petty E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 42 Creighton Ave., Crafton, Pa. Ferdinand Henry Plack C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 901 Bennett Place, Baltimore, Md. Edward F. Price, SAX M.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Market St., Danville, Pa. Edmund Quincy, AT C.E. AY House, Sayre Park 9c West St., Xew York City 68 Thomas John Ouinn, X P B.S. X4 House, So. Bethlehem 624 Main St., Johnstown, Pa. Barton B. Quirk, ld E C.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Hatboro, Montgomery Co., Pa. Case Broderick Rafter C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 3105 1 6th St., X. W., Washington, D. C. William Clifford Rehfuss E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 141 7 S. Broad St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Raymond J. Rems, (PTA C.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 1430 Turner St., Allentown, Pa. Joseph C. Robell M.E. 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Hazle Brook, Pa. Henry Lloyd Rooney, ATA M.E. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 7 Mt. Vernon St., Newport, R. I. Hayden Kemble Rouse C.E. 505 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Newton, N. J. Harry Smith Rowland, IQE B.S., Chem. I®E House, So. Bethlehem Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Guy Rupp C.E. 109 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Mechanicsburg, Pa. Robert P. Sanborn, WT E.M. ¥T House, So. Bethlehem 39 Fisher ' s Lane, Germantown, Pa. Leonard B. Savastio C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Waltonville, Pa. William James Schmidt, ATA E.M. ATA House, So. Bethlehem Dresser St., Newport, R. I. Conrad Andrew Schneider M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 415 Elmer St., Trenton, X. J. William Seguine, Jr., 4 ZK El. Met. 4 IK House, So. Bethlehem Rosebank, N. Y. Bentley S. Shafer A.B. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. M. Maurice Shaw M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Newtown, Pa. James Herbert Sheppard, B6IJ M.E. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 99 Morris Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Alfred U. Siegel E.M. 450 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem 630 E. 1 st St., Salt Lake City, Utah Fletcher B. Speed, Jr., B6IJ E.M. 326 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Beech wood Ave., Catonsville, Md. 69 Benjamin H. Spencer M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Granville Summit, Pa. Joseph P. Stokes E.M. 219 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Carll R. Streets, BS A.B. BE House, So. Bethlehem 205 E. Commerce St., Bridgeton, X. J. Morton Sultzer E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 415 E. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. Walter Walton Thompson, IX E.E. IX House, Bethlehem 2200 X. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. Herbert W. Tile E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Trexlertown, Pa. Alberto Trujillo C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Matanzas, Cuba Collins Wallace Van Nort C.E. 468 Vine St., So. Bethlehem 410 Colfax Ave., Scranton, Pa. Donald F. Wallace, X4 E.M. X0 House, So. Bethlehem 31 Chestnut St., East Orange, X. J. Arthur Thomas Ward El. Met. 440 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Bellefonte, Pa. Roswell M. Watrous, ATQ E.M. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Montrose, Pa. Robert C. Watson, TV C.E. ¥) ' House, So. Bethlehem 3301 1 6th St., X. W., Washington, D. C. Earle Fellencer Weaver E.E. 116 W. Broad St., Bethlehem Frank I. Wheeler, Jr. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Towson, Md. Andrew K. White, 2 ' 0 E Chem. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Chicopee, Mass. F. Carey Williams C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. Sidney David Williams Chem.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 885 X. Holly St., Philadelphia, Pa. Edward C. Wilson, CiJX E.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem St. Paul, Minn. Laishley Palmer Wragg B.S. 523 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 125 S. Fairmont Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Robert Wylie, Jr., KA Kappa Alpha Lodge, So. Bethlehem 558 High St., Pottstown, Pa. 7o SOPHOMORE T ' HERE comes a time in the lives of men which behooves us to record those deeds of merit performed by all such illustrious bodies as the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fourteen, in order that they may live and be remembered as a part of the history of our Alma Mater, and such a time has now come to this noble class. It is to be remembered in con- nection with our Freshman year, how ably we performed our part of those events attending our intro- duction to college life, and how, as a suitable finis to such a notable year, we won the Interclass Track Meet. We now entered with a zest into the duties of our Sophomore year, the principal one being the installation of spirit into the Freshman Class. With this worthy object in view, our class assembled one dark September night in front of the Library and awaited the approach of the enemy. On a hotly contested field in front of Packer Hall, we succeeded in the third rush in so completely demoralizing the Freshman forces that they melted away as does the snow before the summer sun. Despite their ability to run when scared, many were corralled and royally entertained at their own expense, while attending a little party given in their honor at the Dorms. All that night Sophomore and Sophomore posters were much in evidence, but, owing to a retiring nature, little was seen of the Freshmen. 73 The following day, after the formal opening of college at the chapel, the Freshmen were given a course in practical gymnastics, while passing under one of our banners, and later on led to their Waterloo on the Athletic Field. There, after a brief struggle, we succeeded in pushing the banner back and winning the day, after which we devoted our time to hastening the departure of the Freshmen from the immediate vicinity. During the interval between Opening Day and Founder ' s Day, we dedicated ourselves to the task of instructing the Freshmen in those elements of ethics concerning their deportment toward their superiors. At the same time many banners were raised, which only the wind could lower, and many pleasant parties were held at the Dorms with the Freshmen acting as the honored guests. Owing to the desire on the part of the faculty that our class be small and select, many of our best men were among the missing when candi- dates were called for the Founder ' s Day sports. It is due to this that we were defeated by very small scores in each of the events of that day. Not at all daunted by this turn of fortune, we again met the Freshmen in athletics and defeated them in both basketball and wrestling. Having now recounted t hose incidents of note which have thus far occurred in the life of the Class of 1914, we close this brief annal with the conviction that we have executed, to the best of our ability, those duties accompanying our position in college life. Historian. 74 Class of 1914 Colors: Maroon and Gray Officer President William Francis Bailey . . . . Vice-President Charles William Pettigrew Simon Harry Ash Edward Beisel Snyder Robert Eli Mickel Secretary Treasurer Historian George Paul Flick John Paul Dobbins, Jr. A thletic Representative Marshal m Hipa! Ripa! Zipa! Zore! L! U! One! Four! New Jersey New York Washington Pennsylvania New Jersey Pennsylvania New Jersey 75 a; Frank Roderic Abbott, XW B.S. XW Lodge, So. Bethlehem Soo Riverside Drive, Xew York City Simon Harry Ash, 6JX E.M. SJX House, So. Bethlehem Roslyn, Washington Daniel S. Aungst E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Landisville, Pa. Clifford Burton Backes, KI M.E. 618 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 199 S. Main St.. Wallingford, Conn. William Francis Bailey C.E. 35 S. New St., Bethlehem 67 Tulip St., Summit, X. J. Russell I. Baker, KI Chem. 618 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 108 E. Market St., Lewistown, Pa. Howard Denton Baldwin, ±d E E.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 143 Chicopee St., Chicopee, Mass. William Graham Bell, Jr.,4 J6 C.E. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Xew Bethlehem, Pa. Fred Bianco, ttJX E.M. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Cor. Dakota and 1st Sts.. Roslyn, Wash. Creighton D. Bickley, IX M.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 81 X. 9 th St., Xewark, X. J. Ira J. Bleii.er M.E. 38 N. 12th St., Allentown John B. Bowman M.E. 109 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Mechanicsburg, Pa. Richard M. Brady C.E. 118 E. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Alan Falconer Bristor, SI E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 214 E. 20th St., Baltimore, Md. William Clement Brooke, Jd M.E. 915 Delaware Ave.. So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. 76 W. Roger Browne, ftlX C.E. 60 1 Harold L. Burdick E.M. Stephen W. Burns C.E. Glenn M. Cameron, (PAS M.E. Eneas Cosme Castellanos C.E. John Charles Chaffe, KA M.E. Edward W. Chandler, 4 A8 E.E. Percival Roger Charnock C.E. Owen B. Church E.E. Thomas M. Clarke C.E. Alfred Clapp Cooper, l ' d E : Met. John Russel Danner E.E. Howard E. Degler M.E. John H. Diefenderfer A.B. J. Willcox Donaldson, J4 M.E. 9 Thomas Watson Downs, 0 ' J El. Met. Frank Edgar Driscoll, IN E.M. 77 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 47 Elm St., Westfield, N. J. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 825 Quincy St., Scranton, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 140 Latrobe St., Grafton, W. Va. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Houtzdale, Pa. 520 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem Havana, Cuba KA Lodge, So. Bethlehem 133 W. Jersey St., Elizabeth, N.J. 510 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem Harriman, Tenn. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 548 Third St., Butler, Pa. 459 New St., So. Bethlehem Oxford, N. Y. Hokendauqua, Pa. 446 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 312 Springfield St., Chieopee, Mass. 29 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Siegfried, Pa. 29 W. 4th St., So. Bethlehem Womelsdorf, Pa. 438 Goepp St., Bethlehem [5 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 3rd and Conestoga Sts , Steelton, Pa. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Somerville, X.J. William Rothermel Duncan, ATA E.M. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 1835 X. 27th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Wylie B. Ewing, WY E.E. WY House, So. Bethlehem Wheeling, W. Va. Harry C. Faust, IN E.M. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 1000 X. Shamokin St., Shamokin, Pa. George P. Flick, KI E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Tarentum, Pa. George Foster E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 2631 Fillmore St., Bridgesburg, Pa. Irving Frank C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 126 E. Clay St., Lancaster, Pa. Mariano I. Galainena M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Agramonte 52, Guanajay, Cuba Robert Rankin Galloway M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Takoma Park, D. C. F. Talbott Gatch, IN C.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Raspeburg, Pa. J. Swartz Gemmel E.E. 410 Walnut St., Catasauqua, Pa. Richard Haight Gifford, IN C.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 5209 Ridge Ave., Phillipsburg, Pa. Robert A. Gift M.E. 37 S. Eleventh St., Allentown Robert William Gilroy,2 0 B.S., Geo. 10 House, So. Bethlehem 126 Elm Ave., Mt. Vernon, X. Y. Andres Gomez C.E. 548 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Havana, Cuba Eckley B. C. Goyne, ATQ M.E. 338 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem Xorfolk, Va. Herbert W. Graham, 6E E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 633 Linden Ave., Johnstown, Pa Dore White Grazier E.E. 446 Elm St., So. Bethlehem 510 Vine St., Johnstown, Pa. 78 Leroy Seeman Green, 0TA M.E. 155 s - Main St - Bethlehem Howard Park, Baltimore, Md. Harvey Conrad Griffith, d TJ E.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 431 First St., Conemaugh, Pa. Seymour Hadaway, WY C.E. ST House, So. Bethlehem New Rochelle, N. Y. John Law Harkness M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 109 William St., Pittston, Pa. Carl Hartdegen, Jr., IX C.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 362 Summer Ave., Newark, N. J. Thomas Weston Hearne, KA E.M. KA Lodge, So. Bethlehem Wayne, Pa. William M. Hettler C.E. 417 Wyandotte St., So. Bethlehem 5456 Norfolk St., Philadelphia, Pa. Raymond C. Hohl Ch.E. 524 Pawnee St., So. Bethlehem 2963 Salmon St., Philadelphia, Pa. James Thomas Horn, WT M.E. WY House, So. Bethlehem Catasauqua, Pa. William Edward Howard, 2 t ,ATA C.E. AT J House, So. Bethlehem Park Place, Chester, Pa. Henry D. Jay, AT M.E. AT House, So. Bethlehem 817 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Theodore Tyler Johnson, Jr, X0 Chem. X0 House, So. Bethlehem 525 Westminster Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. R. Dudley Jordan, BE Ch.E. 541 Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 321 Mortormer Ave., Rutherford, N. J. David J. Joseph M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 37 Parish St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Joseph Fielding Kerbaugh, KA M.E. KA Lodge, So. Bethlehem Bryn Mawr, Pa. Walton Barr Killough E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 468 Monroe Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. L. L. Lacombe, BE E.E. BE House, So. Bethlehem 633 S. 49th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 79 Robert Auguste Laedleix, JTJ E.E. A TA House, So. Bethlehem 1023 W.. 4th St., Williamsport, Pa. Charles E. Lawall, Jr. E.M. Catasauqua, Pa. Verxer T. Lawshe, IX Ch.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 365 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Newark, X. J. Arthur B. Leonard M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 281 1 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Luciax McCutchex Lesesxe, ATQ B.S. 338 Wyandotte St., S. Bethlehem 11 Gibbes St., Charleston, S. C. George Lewis Ch.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 54 I St., Washington, D. C. Johx Orth Liebig Met. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 505 C. St., Sparrows Point, Md. Christopher Earle Loos C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 524 X. Pine St., Baltimore, Md. Hector Lopez C.E. 315 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Granada, Xicaragua Edward Johx McCaffrey E.E. Lehigh Home Club, Bethlehem 1 Beale St., Dorchester, Mass. Hiram Strobridge McCauley, ATQ C.E. ATQ House, So. Bethlehem 338 Georgia Ave., Atlanta, Ga. James H. McKay C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 3044 Dillow St., Baltimore, Md. Erwin Robert McLoughlix E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Gilmor and Franklin Sts., Baltimore, Md. Henry H. Mayers, AT Ch.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 806 X. Third St., Reading, Pa. Miles Hexdersox Merwix, I4 El. Met. ± P House, So. Bethlehem 6328 Howe St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert E. Mickel, 61 E.M. 532 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem P. O. Box M, Wildwood, X. J. Johx Hamiltox Morse, OF A A.B. 419 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Troy, Pa. 80 George P. Nachman M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 2044 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md. Russell M. Neff M.E. 414 N. 9th St., Allentown George Fred Nordenholt M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Stapleton, N. Y. J. Lawrence Orr C.E. 926 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem 761 Prospect Ave., Buffalo, X. Y. William J. Orr, ZQE Chem. KDE House, So. Bethlehem Chicopee, Mass. Gerald M. Overfield C.E. 631 N. Main St., Bethlehem Wilfred C. Owen, IN M.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 914 Orange St., Shamokin, Pa. Charles Lee Packard, AJ4 C.E. 523 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 806 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Vincent J. Pazzetti, AJ 454 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Wellesley Hills, Mass. Richard Peale E.M. 315 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem St. Benedict, Pa. Charles Frederic Penniman, J(P M.E. 915 Delaware Ave., S. Bethlehem Asheville, X. C. David McKelvy Peterson, ld E C.E. 821 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Honesdale, Pa. Charles W. Pettigrew, SAX C.E. 601 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Hotel San Remo, New York City Benjamin R. Pittenger E.M. 928 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Oxford, X. J. Milton A. Polster E.E. 657 Locust St., So. Bethlehem 200 t Boone St., Baltimore, Md. Herbert M. Poust E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 351 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, Pa. Stanley Gordon Prickett E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem qoo Franklin St., Wilmington. Del. 81 Raymond J. Protzeller E.M. 1221 3d St., N. Catasauqua, Pa. David H. Rees B.A. 152 North St., Bethlehem William Galloway Richardson, Jr. M.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 1 518 Hollins St., Baltimore, Md. Charles Preston Richmond E.M. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Bethel, Conn. Alfred N. Rosenbaum E.M. 407 Northampton St., Easton, Pa. Frederick William Ryder, AT M.E. AT House, Sayre Park 65 Wright St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Adolfo R. Sanchez Chem. 221 E. Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem Camaguey, Cuba Percy Sanderson, XQ B.A. XQ House, So. Bethlehem Wyncote, Pa. J. Homer Sanford, Jr., AT E.M. AT House, Sayre Park Carnegie, Pa. John J. Santry, KI M.E. 618 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem New Brighton, X. Y. Samuel H. Sauber B.A. 419 N. 2nd St., Allentown Joseph J. Scatko M.E. 517 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem 15 Highby Ave., Xew Hartford, X. Y. Frederic Donald Schreiber, 10 Ch.E. 10 House, So. Bethlehem Ocala, Florida Walter A. Schrempel C.E. 470 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Thomas G. Shaffer M.E. 426 Walnut St., So. Bethlehem 214 Second St., Pittsfield, Mass. John Shoolbred, Jr. E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 2829 Parkwood Ave., Baltimore, Md. Gustavus Sailer Simpson, ATA C.E. ATA House, So. Bethlehem 1477 Columbia Road, Washington, D. C. 82 54i Seneca St., So. Bethlehem 1017 X. 11th St., Reading, Pa. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem 103 X. 50th St., Philadelphia, Pa. ATA House, So. Bethlehem Hazleton, Pa. 450 Birch St., So. Bethlehem Richland Center, Pa. Harvey Louis Street, 2nd, WT El. Met. WT House, So. Bethlehem 89 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, X T . Y. C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Leroy J. E. Sindel, BE M.E. Willard Kendall Smith E.M. Edward Beisel Snyder, ATA E.M. William H. Sterner M.E. William F. Tapking, Jr. Perry M. Teeple C.E. Lewis Thornburg C.E. William Booth Todd, ATA E.E. Baltimore, Md. 448 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Dover Road, Glyndon, Md. Lehigh University Park ATA House, So. Bethlehem 926 First Ave., Williamsport, Pa. Chem. AY House, Sayre Park Baltimore, Md. M.E. 618 Delaware Ave., So. Bethlehem Olyphant, Pa. Clarence Reinoehl Wagner B.A. Leonard Hall, So. Bethlehem 532 X. Tenth St., Lebanon, Pa. C.E. 468 Vine St., So. Bethlehem Woodstock, Va. E.E. 454 Chestnut St., So. Bethlehem Tientsin, China George Hunt Weber, WT C.E. WT House, So. Bethlehem 1735 Q St., Washington, D. C. Morris M. Western, X® B.S. X House, So. Bethlehem 161 Trowbridge Ave., Detroit, Mich. Peter Joseph White, VTA E.E. 155 S. Market St., Bethlehem 227 Market St., Johnstown, Pa. 83 Lewis F. Turnbull, AY Karl G. Van Sickle, Kl Luther Sommer Walker Hung Chueh Wang Campbell Riley Williams, I P C.E. 10 House, So. Bethlehem 1675 31st St., Washington, D. C. John S. Williamson, 2 ' iV E.E. 232 Packer Ave., So. Bethlehem 2638 E. Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md. L. Earl Wilson C.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Homeland Ave., Govans, Baltimore, Md. Ralph H. Woelfel C.E. 757 Cherokee St., So. Bethlehem Freeland, Pa. George F. Wolfe C.E. 517 E. Bishopthorpe St., Bethlehem Youngwood, Pa. Ting Shien Yeh E.E. Taylor Hall, So. Bethlehem Lealing, Hunon, China Carl D. Zimmerman, JV E.E. AY ' House, Sayre Park 125 Norwood Ave., Buffalo, X. Y. 84 H. A. Crichton, President AT the foot of old South Moun- tain on the night of Septem- ber, 19, 191 1, the gallant Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen first assembled as a body. Shortly after 11.45 P- M- we marched to the road in front of Packer Hall, where the Sophomores had already assembled. Three times did the Sophomores hurl them- selves against the Freshmen ranks, and twice did we hold them, but at the third rush we were defeated. During the remainder of the night the Sophomores made a vain at- tempt to cover the town with post- ers, but few indeed were the posters that lived to see the dawn of Open- ing Day. On that notable occa- 87 sion, our rivals were fortunate enough to win the banner rush by a slight margin. During the month that followed, the Sophomores sent out many kind invitations to members of our noble class to attend the various parties given at Taylor Hall, but few were they who accepted. On the night before Founder ' s Day we enjoyed ourselves indoors, while the Sophomores awaited us in the rain. When we finally came out we participated in several strenuous fights, in all of which we were victori- ous. From four o ' clock until daylight we posted our opinions of the Sophomores on every available pole and tree. On Founder ' s Day we truly made an honorable record for ourselves, but we had anticipated the results of the day — in fact we had predicted on our posters, that on the following night we would be the proud wearers of flannel shirts and corduroy trousers, and this anticipation was certainly realized. Yea, in football we beat them 6-5; in baseball we showed our superiority, and on the track we beat them decisively. The courage of the eleven, when fighting for every inch of ground; the nerve of the nine in that close contest, and the grit of the track team in their easy victory, clearly demonstrated that good material is not lacking in the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen, and especially when we marched off the field after the sports, instead of being thrown off. But after all, it is in the future and not in the past that the class must seek its fame; nearly a year has already slipped by, and it is hard to tell where it has gone. Our college days, the happiest of our lives, will be over before we realize it, and the characters which we form now will remain with us through life. In everything that we do, be it work or play, let us strive to be honest, honorable and loyal to ourselves and to our Alma Mater. Historian. Ate Cla S of 1915 Colors: Dark Purple and White Motto: Semper Fidelis. Officers President Harry Allen Crichton William Kennedy, Tr. ■Henry Carlton Steele Carleton Schwab Wagner Leigh Chandler Walter Cosgrove Dickey Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Historian Marshal Sell Hip! Ray! Zip! Zive! L! U! One! Five! Pennsylvania New York New Jersey Pennsylvania New Jersey Pennsylvania 89 jHemberss Joseph W. Albright Chem. 518 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem Albert J. Ambrose C.E. 454 Vine St., South Bethlehem 15 Nelson St., Springfield, Mass. David L. Baird C.E. 454 Vine St., South Bethlehem Freehold, N. J. Joseph Wickerham Baker, Xd E.M. X4 House, South Bethlehem 529 E. 29th St., Paterson, N. J. Joseph P. Ballixger C.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 644 Newark Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. Neil J. Bast E.E. 1338 Hamilton St., Allentown, Pa. Johx M. Bausman M.E. 711 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem Bausman, Pa. Joseph S. Bexxett, Jr., XW M.E. 61 Church St., Bethlehem, Pa. Walter P. Berg, WY M.E. WY House, South Bethlehem 18 Carson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Harold F. Bergstresser E.E. 105 W. Fourth St., South Bethlehem 328 Main St., Emaus, Pa. Victor G. Bloede, Jr., AY B.S. JY House, Sayre Park- Station D, Catonsville, Md. Alfred V. Bodixe M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Lambertville, N. J. Ray H. Bogert E.M. 436 Cherokee St., South Bethlehem 566 Upper Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. Charles W. Borgmax, SAX B.S. 601 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem 162 W. 54th St., New York City Richard N. Boyd Ch.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 915 Webster Ave., Scranton, Pa. Herbert E. Bradley E.E. 152 Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. 67 Richmond Place, West Haven, Conn. Johx H. Braux E.E. 618 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem Branford, Conn. Francis C. Brockmax E.E. 3 N. Main St., Nazareth, Pa. Earl H. Brown B.A. 252 Second St., Slatington, Pa. 90 Harold A. Brown, ATA M.E. ATA House, South Bethlehem 2 Wayne St., Carbondale, Pa. Leonard T. Buck, BSIl E.M. 217 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Clifton L. Butler, 2 ' 4 E C.E. 821 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem Beach Haven, Conn. Daniel R. Cahill C.E. 707 Oak St., South Bethlehem Adolfo L. Cerdan E.E. 316 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Jalapa, Mexico Leigh Chandler, OIK B.S. 511 Seneca St., South Bethlehem 49 Highland Ave., Jersey City, X- J- Garland C. Chewning, KI M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 1039 W. Grace St., Richmond, Va. J. Stanley Clark, IQE C.E. ld E House, South Bethlehem Richland Center, Pa. G. Wilt Clinton, Jr., JTJ E.M. J TJ House, South Bethlehem Cumberland, B.C., Canada Robert Bell Collier, PIK E.E. 511 Seneca St., South Bethlehem 398 Twelfth Ave., Paterson, N. J. Thomas Wrenne Connette, IX C.E. 334 Broad St., Bethlehem 181 5 Newkirk Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Donald S. Cox M.E. 720 Freytag St., South Bethlehem 837 Potomac Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Harry A. Crichton, J 9 B.S. 236 S. New St., Bethlehem Delozier Davidson, KA M.E. 250 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem 657 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, X. J. Jarvis DeGroot M.E. 626 Walnut St., Catasauqua, Pa. Philip G. DeHuff E.M. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 139 S. 9th St., Lebanon, Pa. Thomas J. DeLaney, ATQ C.E. ATQ House, South Bethlehem Wilkinsburg, Pa. Emil H. Della Valle C.E. Lehigh Home Club, Bethlehem 672 State St., Bridgeport, Conn. Walter C. Dickey, Uf9 B.S. 510 Seneca St., South Bethlehem Houtzdale, Pa. Harry James Dilcher M.E. 32 S. Madison St., Allentown, Pa. Qi Jesse Richard Dilley M.E. 918 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem Alexander S. Diven, III., WY C.E. WY House, South Bethlehem 205 College Ave., Elmira, N. Y. J. Watson Dowxes B.S. P. O. Box 176, South Bethlehem Keyser Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Norman Dunning, KA E.M. KA House, South Bethlehem 15 S. 21st St., Philadelphia, Pa. George R. Elder, Jr., WY M.E. WY House, South Bethlehem 510 Cattell St., Easton, Pa. Fraxz J. Emmerich, B8TI B.S. 326 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem 37 W. Broad St., Hazleton, Pa. Albert F. Exxis Met. 614 Third St., Catasauqua, Pa. William L. Epler, Jr. E.E. 731 W. Broad St., Bethlehem Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md. Ovid W. Eshbach E.E. 452 Vine St., South Bethlehem Pennsburg, Pa. William H. Esery, Jr., 01 K El. Met. 01 K House, South Bethlehem Atlantic City, N. J. J. Louis Eyaxs, SE E.M. 541 Seneca St., South Bethlehem 201 Main St., Johnstown, Pa. William Fairhurst, IX M.E. 334 Broad St., South Bethlehem 546 E. 29th St., Paterson, N. J. Elmer Roy Frey E.E. Coplay, Pa. Lixwood H. Geyer, KA E.M. 250 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem 44 Morningside Drive, New York City Alfred F. Glass, 0TA M.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 683 Shepard Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Louis G. Glesmaxx, ATA Ch.E. ATA House, South Bethlehem 415 N. Madison St., Rome, N. Y. Wayne A. E. Goldsmith M.E. Catasauqua, Pa. Fred W t . Green M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Wllbraham, Mass. James T. Greenhalgh B.S. Catasauqua, Pa. 92 Otto Ernest Hager C.E. 326 Vine St., South Bethlehem 16 Linden St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Julius Frederick Harder C.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 154 N. 9th St., Newark, N. J. John F. Hauser, ATQ B.S. 338 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem White Haven, Pa. Edwin Ray Hazen, 0J® B.S. 510 Seneca St., South Bethlehem 650 W. 8th St., Erie, Pa. Emerson C. Higgins, Jr., IN Chem. 232 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem 54 E. 33rd St., Bayonne, N. J. John Bosley Hiss, 0TA C.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 2017 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. Holland A. Hubbard, J0 B.A. 915 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem 541 Nicholas Bldg., Toledo, Ohio George R. Hukill, Bdll C.E. 326 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem Middletown, Del. Effingham P. Humphrey, 0TJ M.E. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem Centralia, Pa. Leopold R. Hussa, 0IK E.M. 511 Seneca St., South Bethlehem Rockaway, N. J. Wharton G. Ingram, 0IK C.E. 511 Seneca St., South Bethlehem 952 N. Franklin St., Philadelphia, Pa. Elisha B. Keith, 10 B.A. 10 House, South Bethlehem 45 Cedar St., New York City William H. Kelchner, KI C.E. KI House, South Bethlehem 19 West 8 1 st St., New York City William Kennedy, Jr., ¥T C.E. WT House, South Bethlehem 103 Park Ave., New York City Clarence E. Keyes, KA B.S. KA House, South Bethlehem 400 W. 1 1 8th St., New York City William Seth Kirby C.E. 323 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Oxford, Md. Erwin Swoyer Kutz E.E. 40 N. Franklin St., Allentown, Pa. S. Wilson Laird, 10 C.E. 10 House, South Bethlehem Williamsport, Pa. Clarence J. Lentz Ch.E. Allentown, Pa. 93 George H. Lixke M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 227 W. Front St., Plainfield, N. J. Ming Yixg Loo Ch.E. 452 Vine St., South Bethlehem 2021 Kalorama Road, Washington, D. C. Gilbert V. McGurl B.A. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Minersville, Pa. James H. McKee, WY M.E. WY House, South Bethlehem Catasauqua, Pa. Franklin H. Madden E.E. 463 Birch St., South Bethlehem Tuekahoe, N. J. Niel F. Matheson, KI E.E. 618 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem W. Main St., Middletown, Pa. Charles E. Merkel B.S. Lyon Station, Pa. Jacob Meschter Ch.E. 452 Vine St., South Bethlehem E. Greenville, Pa. Wellington Metzger E.E. 453 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem 280 Columbia Ave., Cumberland, Md. August H. Miller M.E. 451 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem 819 Market St., Zanesville, Ohio Jay C. Miller. I IK M.E. 511 Seneca St., South Bethlehem 205 Broadway, Bangor, Pa. Oscar E. Mills E.E. 659 Locust St., South Bethlehem 107 Garfield St., Waynesboro, Pa. Samuel Thomas Mitmax M.E. 907 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem William Stauffer More B.S. R. F. D. Xo. 2, Bethlehem W. Butler Xeide, KA M.E. KA House, South Bethlehem 3821 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Johx E. Nicholas M.E. Eckley, Pa. Percy L. Norton, ATQ E.M 338 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem Lake Ave., Bristol, Conn. Pedro X. Ospixa, Jr. E.M. 450 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem Colombian Legation, Washington, D. C. M. Nelson Owex B.A. 452 Vine St., South Bethlehem 533 W. Second St., Hazleton, Pa. 94 Jose T. Parodi M.E. 20 W. Fourth St., South Bethlehem Ajacucho, Peru, S. A. Russell Mason Pierson,-;V C.E. 232 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Morristown, X. J. Thomas James Priestley, I0E C.E. IQE House, South Bethlehem 194 Front St., Chicopee, Mass. Thomas B. Prosser, Jr., WT M.E. WT House, South Bethlehem 127 Pelham Road, Mount Airy, Pa. I. William Pugh C.E. 446 Elm St., South Bethlehem Oxford, Pa. Robert McB. Purvis, AT C.E. AT House, Sayre Park Lihue, Hawaii Joseph W. Raixe, ATQ E.M. 338 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem Evenwood, W. Va. Raymond A. Rank E.M. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Palmyra, Pa. Kenneth H. Read El. Met. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 78 Prospect St., E. Orange, N. J. Evan H. Reisler C.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 234 Albany St., Buffalo, N. Y. Charles M. Ritter Chem. Allentown, Pa. Dudley E. Roberts, X0 E.M. X0 House, South Bethlehem 18 Pleasant St., Stamford, Conn. Nelson McF. Royall, BU1I Ch.E. 326 Wyandotte St., South Bethlehem Arcadia, Fla. George LeRoy Schmutz, AT El. Met. AT House, Sayre Park Somerset, Md. Karl G. Schumax, SAX B.S. 601 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem 44 Prospect St., Newark, N. Y. Arext H. Schuyler, WT Met. WT House, South Bethlehem 404 Riverside Drive, New York City Hexdrick M. Search, KA C.E. KA House, South Bethlehem 202 St. Mark ' s Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. Henry W. Shockley M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem 1 107 W. 4th St., Wilmington, Del. 95 Harold G. Shoemaker, SB B.S. 6- House, South Bethlehem Bridgeton, N. J. Ralph Emerson Shoemaker, 0TJ B.S. 155 S. Main St., Bethlehem 225 E. Commerce St., Bridgeton, N. J. Charles M. Schriver, 10 M.E. 20 House, South Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. E.E. Coplay, Pa. Charles M. Sieger Harry R. Smith, I0E Clarence H. Snyder Edward Solano Richard H. Sproul, X¥ M.E. I0E House, South Bethlehem E. Coal St., Shenandoah, Pa. Ch.E. 452 Vine St., South Bethlehem Pennsburg, Pa. M.E. 315 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Colombia C.E. XW Lodge, South Bethlehem 4617 Woodland Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Henry Carlton Steele, IN M.E. 232 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Washington Ave., Palisade, N. J. William A. Stickel C.E. Charles W. Tanner C.E. Samuel Paul Taylor, KI B.A. Louis V. Townsend, 10 Met. Hirst M. Trexler B.S. 465 Vine St., South Bethlehem 63 Hudson St., Newark, N. J. 331 Vine St., South Bethlehem KI House, South Bethlehem 141 5 Twelfth St., Altoona, Pa. 10 House, South Bethlehem Negaunee, Mich. 118 N. 4th St., Allentown, Pa. Clarence W. Trumbore Chem. 450 Walnut St., South Bethlehem Paul Trumbower M. Graham Tull Cecil Russell Uhl Charles F. Vance, IN M.E. Cor. Linden Goepp Sts., Bethlehem Passer, Pa. M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem P. O. Box 121, St. Davids, Pa. C.E. 453 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem Mount Savage, Md. B.S. 232 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Winston-Salem, N. C. 96 D. Roland Vanneman E.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Havre-de-Grace, Md. Harry L. Vitzthum E.E. 446 Elm St., South Bethlehem Baltimore, Md. Harold F. Vogel E.E. 1005 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem Carleton S. Wagner, SAX E.M. 601 Delaware Ave., South Bethlehem Philadelphia, Pa. James L. Ware E.E. Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem Drifton, Pa. Milton C. White, AT M.E. AT House, Sayre Park Larehmont, N. Y. Daniel S. Whiteman, Xti E.M. X(P House, South Bethlehem 827 S. 49th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Robert C. Wickersham E.E. 323 Packer Ave., South Bethlehem Steelton, Pa. Irving M. Wickham, AT E.E. AT House, Sayre Park 27 Mahl Ave., Hartford, Conn. August J. Wiegand, 83 E.M. OS House, South Bethlehem 816 S. 49th St., West Philadelphia, Pa. Eugene W. Wilcox, Jr. B.S. 540 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem 26 W. Park St., Albion, N. Y. Earle C. Williams E.E. Slatington, Pa. Charles A. Wolfe B.A. 127 N. 8th St., Allentown, Pa. Harry Wolfe B.S. 129 W. 4th St., South Bethlehem 881 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Chin Wong Ch.E. 454 Chestnut St., South Bethlehem Chekiang, China Richard F. Wood C.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Pelham, N. Y. Lewis A. Wright M.E. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem Kensington, Md. Stanley A. Wuchter M.E. 103 S. Madison St., Allentown, Pa. Edward H. Zollinger, AT M.E. AT House, Sayre Park 602 North St., Harrisburg, Pa. 97 Special g tubent£f Alex. G. Black, J) ' J. Marshall Carroll, I ' d W. A. E. Goldsmith A. E. Greanoff F. Percy Houghton, AT Saosan K. Huang William H. Lazarus, AT J. G. McCoy, KA C. K. McFetridge D. F. SCHUMAN J. A. Solomon Albert P. Spooner, ATA J. B. P. Williams Jfor Begree Chem. Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem C.E. l ' d House, South Bethlehem M.E. E. Catasauqua, Pa. B.A. 322 W. Broad St., Bethlehem B.A. Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem E.M. Taylor Hall, South Bethlehem C.E. AY House, Sayre Park M.E. 453 Lehigh St., South Bethlehem Chem. 106 S. Madison St., Allen town B.A. Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem M.E. 32 Wall St., Bethlehem Met. ATA House, South Bethlehem B.A. Leonard Hall, South Bethlehem 98 99 W$t reefe letter Jfratermttes; epreaenteb at Hefjigtj WimSitxZitv 3ln tfje ©tbtx of tfjeir € tat)liaf)ment Date Establishment Fraternity Chapter at Lehigh Chi Phi .Psi .... 1872 Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Rho 1882 Delta Phi . . Nu .... 1884 Psi Upsilon . Eta .... 1884 Theta Delta Chi Nu Deuteron 1884 Delta Upsilon Lehigh .... 1885 Sigma Nu .Pi 1885 Phi Gamma Delta Beta Chi 1886 Sigma Phi . Pennsylvania Alpha 1887 Phi Delta Theta Pennsylvania Eta . 1887 Sigma Chi . Alpha Rho 1888 Delta Tau Delta Beta Lambda 1888 Beta Theta Pi . . • Beta Chi 1890 Kappa Alpha Pennsylvania Alpha 1894 Chi Psi Alp ha Beta Delta 1894 Kappa Sigma Beta Iota 1900 Phi Sigma Kappa . Nu .... 1901 Theta Xi . . . Eta .... 1904 Sigma Phi Epsilon Pennsylvania Epsilon 1907 p Cfn mi i)si Cliaptrr Cor. Third and Wyandotte Streets, South Bethlehem George Rodney Booth Albert Brodhead ftesitbent Jflembera Charles Minor Dodson George Topping Fonda gctibe JttemberS Burton Hartley Donald Franklin Wallace Thomas John Quinn Percy Sanderson Theodore Tyler Johnson, Jr. Morris Myron Western Joseph Wickersham Baker Elisha Boudinot Keith Dudley Emerson Roberts Daniel Swab Whiteman 103 Cfn Mi CoiUinurb oll of cttbe (Cfjaptcrg Alpha University of Virginia Beta . Massachusetts 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 Xu 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 Alpha Chi Ohio Wesley an 104 IJennaplbania Slpba IMjo jfounbeb 1882 338 Wyandotte Street, South Bethlehem 3ln Jfacultp Howard Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. F. G. Perley, E.M. H. M. Fry, E.E. M. L. Horn, .4 F. X. Fritch, .4 I H. J. Fritch, .4 egibent Jflember Dr. R. J. Yost, .4 Dr. E. S. Mantz, .4 R. M. Wolfe, A P gctiue Mtmberi L. L. Bentley, B Malcolm Metzger, A I W. C. Dietrich, A P Earle E. Wright Alexander J. McKenzie 1912 Ralph S. Wenner John A. Hart 1913 Stanley E. Muthart Charles P. Brinton Joseph M. Gonder Roswell M. Watrous Daniel H. Levan Lucian M. Lesesne Eckley B. C. Goyne 1914 Cleon W. Raese Hiram S. McCauley 1915 Joseph W. Raine Percy L. Norton Albert S. Blank John F. Hauser Thomas J. DeLaney Beta Delta Xi Pi Omega Alpha Beta Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Tau Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Mu Alpha u oll of gcttue Cfjaptera Washington and Lee University University of Virginia Trinity College, Xorth Carolina Tennessee University University of the South University of Georgia University of Xorth Carolina Alabama Polytechnic Institute Mercer University University of Pennsylvania Emory College Muhlenberg College Adrian College Mt. Union College 107 - ,lp tP J , € • %y ' 2t glpta au 0mega Com tmurb Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Tau . Alpha Upsilon Alpha Psi Alpha )mega Beta Alpha Beta Beta . Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Epstlon Beta Zeta . Beta Eta Beta Theta Beta Kappa Beta Iota Beta Lambda Beta Mu Beta Xi Beta Omicron Beta Pi Beta Epsilon Beta Psi 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 Sigma Gamma Rho Oamma Pi Gamma Tau Gamma Upsilon Mu Iota Oamma Phi . Oamma Chi St. Lawrence University Washington and Jefferson College L i 7 igh U niversity Southwestern Presbyterian I ' niversity Pennsylvania College Wittenberg College I ' niversity of Florida Simpson College Southern University Massachusetts Institute of Technology f ' niversity of Alabama Tulane University ( ' niversity of Vermont Ohio Wesley an University Cornell University Hillsdale College Georgia School of Technology University of Michigan University of Wooster Charleston College Albion College Vanderbilt College University of Maine Leland Stanford, Jr., University { hio State ( ' niversity Southwestern Baptist I ' niversity Colby University Tufts College Rose Polytechnic Institute Brown University University of Illinois University of Xebraska University of Texas University of California Western Reserve University University of Colorado University of Kansas University of Minnesota University of Chicago Purdue [ ' niversity Worcester Polytechnic Institute University of Missouri University of Washington University of Wisconsin Iowa State College University of Kentucky University of Oregon Washington State U niversity 109 Belta Bfit u (Chapter jfounbeU_l834 915 Delaware Avenue, South Bethlehem M Wrbt A 1. ax Craig Dobson Kit Umbersitate Francis H. Baker Henry B. Tinges Francis J. Gerhard Henry R. Griffen Morris D. Douglas Price W. Janeway J. W. Donaldson C. F. Penniman William C. Brooke Holland A. Hubbard mm Belta $f)t Contnuirb oll of gctibe Chapters Alpha L ' nion College Beta . Brown University Gamma New York University Delta Columbia College Epsilon Rutgers College Eta . University of Pennsylvania Lambda Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Nu Lehigh University Xi Johns Hopkins University Omicron Sheffield Scientific School Pi Cornell University Rho University of Virginia 3 ii4 $£t psitlon (Eta Cfjapter Broadhead and University Avenues, South Bethlehem jfounbeb 18S4 3ln Jfacultate Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., M.A., H William Estv, LL.B., A.M., -I Charles Shattlck Fox, A.B., LL.B., A.M.. Ph.D., Y M Wixkt The Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, A.M., D.D., Z Robert Savre Taylor, B.S.. H Harvey Pettibone Barnard, H M aamtoemtate Allen Girard Martin- Robert Clement Watson- Ezra Bow-en, 4.TH Robert Pierce Sanborn- Harvey Louis Street, 2ND George Hunt Weber Walter Philip Berg Thomas Brown Prosser, Jr James Harper McKee Alexander Samuel Diven, . Thomas Philip Harris Alexander Wilson Butler Benjamin Ely Cole Wvlie Baker Ewing Seymour Hadaway James Thomas Horn Henry Keller Kurtz, Jr. Arent Henry Schuyler William Kennedy, Jr. George Reuben Elder, Jr. $ t WLpxilon Conttnueb oll of Scribe Chapter Theta Delta Beta Sigma . G A M M A Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi Xi Upsilon Iota Phi Pi Chi Beta Beta Eta Tau . Mu Rho Omega Epsilon Omicron Union College New York University Yale University Brown University Amherst College Dartmouth College Columbia University Rowdoin College Hamilton College Wesleyan University University of Rochester Kenyan College U niversity of Michigan Syracuse U niversity Cornell University Trinity College Lehigh University University of Pennsylvania University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin University of Chicago University of California University of Illinois 118 GTfjeta IBelta Cf)t fiu ©eutcron Charge 60 1 Delaware Avenue, South Bethlehem jfounbcb 1884 Sn Jfacultate William B. Schober, Ph.D., A ' J Harry W. Ulmann, Ph.D., A ' J Philip M. Palmer, A.B., H 3fn Wixbt Eugene G. Grace, A ' J T. George Lehman, A ' J Harry T. Morris, A ' J Charles E. Pettinos, - B. I. Drake, A ' J John Lilly, A ' J Archibald Johnson, NJ Horace A. Luckenbach, NJ Frank T. Meyers, A t J Paul J. Luckenbach, NJ Andrew J. Farabaugh, NJ John Grace, A ' J 3)n Umbersttate (grabuatt Umbers Horace D. Kerr 1912 Eber W. Cook Raymond J. Hauk Carl W. Mitman Robert Campbell Edward F. Price Arthur S. Callen John R. Crellin Clotworthy Birnie, Jr. Frank S. Lubrecht 1913 Jehu P. Cooper S. Clair DuTot Edward C. Wilson Donald Bowman 1914 Charles W. Pettigrew Simon H. Ash Frederick Bianco W. Roger Browne Carleton S. Wagner 1915 Charles W. Borgmax Karl G. Schuman • ■n . •1 1 |$ r fceta Belta Cfji Continue!) oll of actttoe Ctjarges Beta Gamma Deuteron Delta Deuteron Epsilon Zeta Zeta Deuteron Eta Eta Deuteron Theta Deuteron Iota Iota Deuteron Kappa . Lambda Mu Deuteron Xu Deuteron Xi Omicron Deuteron Pi Deuteron Rho Deuteron Sigma Deuteron Tau Deuteron Phi Chi Chi Deuteron Psi Kappa Deuteron Nu Cornell University . . 1870 University of Michigan . ■• 1889 University of California 1900 College of William and Mary 1853 Broivn University . i%5Z McGill University . . ■.1901 Boivdoin College . . . ■-1854 Leland Stanford, Jr., University i9°3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology i9° 6 Harvard University . . ■1856 Williams College . . . • .1891 Tufts College . . . ■-1856 Boston University . . ■I 7 Amherst College . ■.1885 Lehigh University .... 1884 Hobart College 1857 Dartmouth College .... 1869 College of the City of New York 1881 Columbia University .... 1883 University of Wisconsin . . 1895 University of Minnesota . ■■1892 Lafayette College . . . .1867 University of Rochester . ■• 1867 George Washington University . . 1896 Hamilton College 1868 University of Illinois .... 1908 University of Virginia .... 1857 123 124 JCn! - Belta Upstlon University Park, South Bethlehem 3ln tfje Jfacultp Robert W. Blake. A.M., X. Y. esitbent Jfflembers; Joseph W. Adams Robert M. Luckenbach J. Moir Price Sinclair W. Childs Clarence S. Hickling Untiergrabuate Jfflemberg 1912 Lester Bunn Knox Ralph Bradford Williams Ezra Almon Wheaton George MacLennan Donaldson- Merle Ivan Terwilliger William Hill Lazarus 1913 Edmund Quincy Daniel Kixsinan Evans Charles Lewis Taylor Edwards 1914 Frederick Percival Houghton Lewis Ferdinand Turnbull Henry Davis Jay Henry Horace Mayers Carl D. Zimmerman Jesse Homer Sanford, Jr. Frederick William Ryder 1915 Robert McBride Purvis Irving Morris Wickham Milton Chase White Victor G. Bloede Edward Zollinger George Li: Roy Schmutz Belta Bpsalon Continueb Williams Union Hamilton- Amherst Western- Reserve Colby Rochester MlDDLEBURY Rutgers Brown . Colgate New York Miami . Cornell Marietta Syracuse Michigan- North western- Harvard Wisconsin- Lafayette Columbia Lehigh Tufts De Pauw Pennsylvania Minnesota Massachusetts BOWDOIN s ' art hmo re Leland Stanford California McGill Nebraska Toronto Chicago Illinois Ohio State Washington Penn State ftoll of 3cttbe Chapters 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 De Pauw University University of Pennsylvania University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology Bowdoin College . Swarthmore College Leland Stanford, Jr.. Um University of California McGill University University of Nebraska Toronto University University of Chicago . University of Illinois Ohio State University University of Washington Penn State College 128 1834 1838 1847 1847 1847 1852 1852 1856 1858 i860 1865 1865 1868 1869 1870 1873 1876 1880 1880 1885 1885 1885 1 88 5 1886 1887 1888 1890 1891 1892 1894 1895 1899 1900 1905 1906 1910 1911 sm£ g igma J2u $i (Chapter 252 Packer Avenue, South Bethlehem Carlton DeVere Cann Theodore Henry Cook, Jr. Frederick Talbot Gatch Wilfred Campbell Owen John Sheffield Williamson Russell Masox Pierson Henry Carl Steele Sktioe Jttemberg 1912 1913 1914 1915 Carl Daniel Kester Reginald Francis Clewell Harry Cockill Faust Frank Edgar Driscoll Richard Haight Gifford Charles Fogel Vance Emerson Carson Higgins, Ji ftoll of ctiue Cfjaptera DiOisioit 1 Virginia Military Institute University of Virginia Washington Lee University Vanderbilt University Division 2 University of North Carolina X. Carolina A. . M. College Delaware State College State University of Kentucky J 3 ] ;■■■! g tgma J2u Continue!) Oiuisioii 3 University of Georgia Mercer University University of Alabama Alabama Polytechnic Institute Howard College Georgia School of Technology N. Georgia Agricultural College Oiuisioii 4 Bethany College University of West Virginia Ohio State College Case School of Applied Science Mt. Union College Western Reserve University Oiuisioii 5 Northwestern University University of Michigan Albion College University of Chicago University of Wisconsin Lombard University University of Illinois Oiuisioii 6 Iowa State University University of Minnesota Iowa State College University of Nebraska Oiuisioii 7 Kansas State University Missouri School of Mines Missouri State University Washington University William-Jewell College Oklahoma University Oiuisioii 8 University of Texas Tulane University- Louisiana State University University of Arkansas Oiuisioii 9 Colorado School of Mines University of Colorado ©ibision 10 University of Washington University of Montana University of Oregon Washington State College Oiuisioii 11 Lei.and Stanford, Jr., University University of California Bitoisfion 12 Lehigh University Cornell University University of Pennsylvania Syracuse University- Lafayette College Pennsylvania State College Oiuisioii 13 De Pauw University University of Indiana Purdue University Rose Polytechnic Institute 33 ty tp ft • 1$$: ;0fe. 34 Ptt arnma Belta $eta Cf)i Cfjapter 155 South Main Street, Bethlehem Xatt Emery, M.A., B X Fred A. Johnson, ? X Charles R. Ellicott, _ J William D. Keiter, El J. P. Woodring, E J Harold Morgan Smyth Edwin Walter Trexler Harold Edwin Lenker Leroy Seeman Green Raymond John Rems Peter Joseph White John Hamilton Morse Albert Frederick Glass M facilitate 3)n Urbe 3)n Uniberaitate William L. Estes, M.D., O A. G. Rau, M.S., BX C. B. Langstroth, B X L. F. Wedbigen, E J L. D. Lazarus, E J Elmer Ellsworth Yake Edmund Bruce Lehr Charles Wellman Francis Walter Biggers Menefee Thomas Watson Downs Harvey Conrad Griffith Ralph Emerson Shoemaker John Bosley Hiss Effingham Perot Humphrey 37 $fn amma Belta Continuri) fcoll of Sctibe Chapters Xi Deuterox Theta . Pi Alpha Chi Xu Pi Rho Delta . Delta Xi Chi Upsilox Omega . Kappa Xu Theta Psi Chi Sigma Delta Xu Lambda Deut Lambda Xi Tau Chi Iota Alpha Deute Zeta Alpha Iota Beta Mi- Pi Deuterox Gamma Deuterox Sigma Deuterox Beta Chi Lambda Sigma Omega Mi- Iota Mi- Alpha Phi Adelbert University of Alabama Allegheny Amherst Bethel Brown Bucknell California Chicago Columbia Cornell Colgate Colorado Dartmouth Denison De Pau-u. ' Gettysburg Hanover University of Illinois Illinois Wesleyan Indiana Iowa State Johns Hopkins Kansas Knox- Lafayette Lehigh Leland Stanford, Jr. Maine Massachusetts Institute University of Micliigau 138 $in amma ©elta Continueb Nu Sigma Chi Mi- Lambda Xr r Epsilon . Omicron Dkl ' teron Theta Deuteron Epsilon Omicron Gamma Phi Beta Lambda Iota Rho Chi Sigma Xu Kappa Tau . Tau Deuteron Tau Alpha Chi Omicron Psi Alpha Zkta Deuteron Sigma Tau Zeta Phi Mu Sigma Rho Deuteron Pi Iota Nu Deuteron Minnesota Missouri Nebraska New York University Ohio State Ohio Wesley an University of Oregon Pennsylvania State University of Pennsylvania Purdue Richmond Syracuse Tennessee University of Texas Trinity I ' uiou I ' irginia Wabash Washington and Jefferson Washington and Lee University of Washington William- Jewell Wisconsin Wittenberg Wooster I I ' oreester Yale !39 gugrna Pfn aiptui of $rnnsplbama establisiftbll SS7 e ibent iUcmberg Warren Abbott Wilbur Elisha Packer Wilbur, Jr. Robert Eldredge Wilbur Unbergrabuate Jflembera John Marshall Carroll James Watts Mercur, Jr Frederick Donald Schreiber Miles Henderson Merwin Garrett Brodhead Linderman, Jr. Campbell Riley Williams Robert William Gilroy Charles Mayer Shiver Louis Van Rensselaer Townsend Samuel Wilson Laird 140 g tgma $fn jfounbeb at 3Bnion College 1827 fcoll of cttue Chapters 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 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 M3 rPennsplbania €ta Chapter 510 Seneca Street, South Bethlehem 31n tfje Jfacultp William S. Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. George C. Beck, A.C. esitbent Jtlemberg George M. Harleman, C.E. Samuel T. Harleman, M.E. Howard D. Megary Herbert J. Hartzog, B.A., LL.B. William A. Schneller Frank Brunner gctibe Jtlembera 1912 Herbert Asbury Camp Chesleigh Arthur Bonine Arthur Park Rutherford Thomas Almeron Bryant Edward Williamson Chandlei 1913 1914 Ralph P. Baird Joseph Paul Walker William May Wilson Albert Kemmer Cosgrove William Graham Bell, Jr. Harry Allen Creighton Glenn Marr Cameron 1915 Walter Cosgrove Dickey Edwin Ray Hazen 147 $f)i Belta fjeta Continued oll of actibe 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 Xebraska Alpha Pennsylvania Beta Pennsylvania Gamma Tennessee Alpha Mississippi Alpha Alabama Alpha Illinois Zeta Alabama Beta Pennsylvania Delta Miami University . . . 1848 Indiana University . 1849 Center College . . . .1850 Wabash College . . .1850 University of Wisconsin . . 1857 Northwestern University . . 1859 Butler University . . 1859 Ohio Wesleyan University . i860 Franklin College . . . .i860 Hanover College . . .i860 University of Michigan . . 1864 University of Chicago . . .1865 De Pauw University . . 1868 Ohio University .... 1868 University of Missouri . . .1870 Knox University . . . .1871 University of Georgia . . 187 1 Emory College . . . .1871 Iowa Wesleyan University 1871 Mercer University . . . 1873 Cornell University . . 1872 Lafayette College . . . .1873 University of California . . 1873 University of Virginia . . . 1873 Randolph-Macon College . . 1874 University of Nebraska . 1875 Gettysburg College . 75 Washington and Jefferson College 1875 Vanderbilt University 1876 University of Mississippi 1877 University of Alabama . . . 1877 Lombard University . . . 1878 Alabama Polytechnic Institute . 1879 Allegheny College . . . 1879 148 $f)i ©elta Cfjeta Continued Vermont Alpha Pennsylvania Epsilon Missouri Beta Minnesota Alpha Iowa Beta Kansas Alpha Tennessee Beta Ohio Zeta Texas Beta . Pennsylvania Zeta 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 ( )ntario Alpha South Dakota Alpha Idaho Alpha Kansas Beta 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 Union University Colby University . Columbia University Dartmouth College University of North Carolina Williams College . So utlnve stern U n iversity Syracuse University Washington and Lee University Lehigh University Amherst College . Brown University Tulane University of Louisiana Washington University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Illinois Purdue University Case School of Applied Science University of Cincinnati University of Washington Kentucky State College . McGill University University of Colorado . Georgia School of Technology Pennsylvania State College University of Toronto . University of South Dakota University of Idaho Washburn College 149 1879 1880 1880 [883 [883 [884 [884 [884 [885 [886 1887 1888 1889 1889 1891 [896 [898 1900 1901 1902 [902 [902 [904 [906 [907 1908 [910 5° tgma Cfji aipfta fjo Cfjapter j4 Broad Street, Bethlehem V. B. Meyers Jfrater in Jfacultate Christian L. Siebert, B.A. Jfratres in WLxbt G. R. Radford William A. Hauck E. T. Lipps Jfvatrzti tn CoIIegio Raymond Wilbur Over John Travlor Martin- Andrew Thompson Schultz Franklin Weems Youry Richard Marion Brvce Leslie Goddard Matthews Walter Walton Thompson Carl Hartdegen, Jr. Verner Thatcher Lawshe Creighton Daniels Bickle William Fairhurst Earl C. Williams Thomas Wrenn Connette E. Andre Florian Alpha Beta Gamma Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Kappa Lambda Mu Xi Omicron Rho Phi Chi Psi Omega 3SaolI of gcttbe Chapter Miami I r niversity University of Wooster Ohio Wesleyan University George Washington University II ashington and Lee University University of Mississippi Pennsylvania College Bucknell University Indiana University Denison University De Pamt ' University Dickinson College Butler College Lafayette College Hanover College University of irgi)iia Northwestern University r 53 tgma Cfjt Conttnueb Alpha Alpha Alpha Beta . Alpha Gamma Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta . Alpha Eta . Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Xu Alpha Xi Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma Alpha Upsilon 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 Mu Nu Nu . Xi Xi . Omicron Omicron Rho Rho Tau Tau Upsilon Upsilon Phi Phi Psi Psi Omega Omega Beta Theta . Delta Chi Beta Epsilon Beta Zeta Delta . Beta Eta Hobart College University of California Ohio State University University of Nebraska Beloit 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 California Cornell University Pennsylvania State College Vanderbilt University Leland Stanford, 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 Pittsburgh Wabash College University of Utah University of North Dakota University of Georgia Case School 154 .Jlhfcit! , , Belta GTau Bella JScta lUmbba Chapter Third and Cherokee Streets, South Bethlehem 3)n tfje Jfacultj Robert Clyde Gowdy, ' X Ralph Justin Fogg, B M eatbent Jflemtjera George Alexander MacLean Richard Ferrier Taylor Edward F. Gray, N SJctibe iWcmtjersf Albert Poole Spooner William James Schmidt Edward Biesel Snyder William Edward Howard Harold Augustus Brown Louis George Glesmann William Krebs Hancock Henry Lloyd Rooney William Rothermel Duncan Robert Auguste Laedlein William Booth Todd Gustavus Sailer Simpson Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Kappa Mr Xr Phi Chi George Wilt Clinton, Jr. oll of ettue Chapter Allegheny College Ohio University Washington and Jefferson College University of Michigan Albion College Western Reserve University Hillsdale College Ohio Wesleyan University Lafayette College Washington and Lee University Ken yen College 157 A iiiiiiiiiiiii !i!i! Iili fe. i .«•  ! 158 Bclta au Belta Continueb Lambda Rho Upsilon Omega . Omicron Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Gamma Beta Epsilo Beta Zeta Beta Lambda Beta Iota Beta Mu Beta Xu Beta Xi Beta Omicroi Beta Pi Beta Rho Beta Tau Beta Upsilox 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 ( )micron Gamma Pi Beta Delta . University of Mississippi ' anderbilt University Stevens Institute of Technology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute University of Pennsylvania University of Iowa Indiana I University De Pauw University University of Wisconsin Emory College Butler College Lehigh University University of Virginia Tufts College Massachusetts Institute of Technology I ' ula ne University Cornell University Northwestern University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Xebraska University of Illinois Ohio State University Brown University Wabash College University of the South University of Minnesota University of Colorado University of California University of Chicago Armour Institute of Technology Dartmouth College University of West Virginia Columbia University Wesleyau I ' uiversity Baker University George Washington University University of Texas University of Missouri Purdue University ( ' uiversity of Washington ( diversity of Maine I ' uiversity of Cincinnati University of Wooster Syracuse I diversity Iowa State College University of Georgia 159 Peta Cijeta $i J8eta Cfji Chapter 126 Wyandotte Street, South Bethlehem 3)n Jfacultatc Chari.es L. Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D., B A John Hutcheson Ogburn, C.E., B A Barry MacXutt, E.E., M.S., B X Charles F. Woods, A.B., Ph.D., .4 X 3ht mxbt George Francis Pettinos, A 2 3)n Hniber£(ttate 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 Franz Josef Emmerich 1915 Nelson McFaden Royall Leonard Jerome Buck George Raymond Hukill 160 Peta Gtyeta $t Continueb Beta Iota Chi Psi . Upsilon Beta Sigma Kappa Lambda Kappa Epsilon Beta Theta Alpha Alpha Beta Delta Alpha Omega Phi Alpha Alpha Eta Delta Alpha Sigma 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 ftoll of Chapters Amherst College Bcloit 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 De Pauw University Dickinson College Hanover College Illinois University Indiana University Iowa State College Iowa State University Iowa Wesleyan University Johns Hopkins University Kenyon College Knox College Lehigh I University Leland Stanford, Jr., University Miami University Northwestern University Ohio University h io 1 1 ' esleya n Un ivcrsity Ohio State University Pennsylvania State College Purdue University Rutgers College Stevens Institute of Technology St. Lawrence University Syracuse i ' n ivers ity t ' nion College University of California I diversity of Chicago 63 Mtta ftijeta $t Continue!! Beta Nv Beta Tau . Alpha Zeta Alpha Xu . Beta Eta . Lambda Beta Pi Zeta Phi Alpha Tau Eta Beta . Phi . Beta Omicron 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 North Carolina University of Pennsylvania University of Texas University of Toronto University of Virginia University of Washington State University of ' isco)isin University of Wooster Vanderbilt University Wabash College Washington and Jefferson College 1 1 ' ash ingto n Univers ity Wesley an University Western Reserve University Westminster College West Virginia University Wittenberg College Yale University Oklahoma University Tulane University Colorado School of Mines University of Oregon 164 KA 2£appa lpfja IJennssplbania 9lpfja Wvandotte and Third Streets, South Bethlehem e tbent iWcmfaerg Robert Montgomery Bird William Lawrence Estes, Jr., M.D. Unbergrabuate Jtlembers Preston Albert Lambert, Jr Sam Young Knight Thomas Weston Hearne Delozier Davidson Linwood Hirsch Geyer Wilson Butler Neide John Gibbon McCoy Charles Robert Wylie, Jr. John Charles Chaffe Joseph Fielding Kerbaugh Norman Dunning Clarence Edward Keyes Hendrick Monroe Search 167 app lpfja Conttnucb oll of Chapter 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 r„S 0m Cf)t $St aiptja ©Eta Belta :3o Seneca Street, South Bethlehem Arthur West JXesitbent Jflemberg G. H. BLAKELY (Hnbergrabuatc Jflembers Ernest Shaffer Colling Orville Burnell Ackkrlv Lawrence Everett Carpenter Sidney Waterlow Ford Charles Edwin Loane, Jr. Frank Roderick Abbott Richard Harrison Sproul Joseph Bennett 7i ci)t m Continueb act be aiplms Alpha Pi ... . Union College 1841 Alpha Theta Williams College . 1842 Alpha Mi- Middlebury College 1843 Alpha Alpha Wesley an University 1844 Alpha Phi Hamilton College . 1845 Alpha Epsilon University of Michigan 1845 Alpha Chi Amherst College . 1864 Alpha Psi Cornell University 1869 Alpha Xu University of Minnesota 1874 Alpha Iota . University of Wisconsin 1878 Alpha Rho Rutgers College 1879 Alpha Xi Stevens Institute . 1883 Alpha Alpha Delta University of Georgia 1890 Alpha Beta Delta Lehigh University 1894 Alpha Gamma Delta Stanford University 1894 Alpha Delta Delta University of California 1895 Alpha Epsilon De lta University of Chicago . 1898 r 7 2 m Eappa tgma It 7 - c t .i Sota Chapter Ai8 Delaware Avenue, South Bethlehem Oran C. Snyder, B I John J. Shonk, Jr., B I C. N. Wyant, Z Jfratres! in Urbe Ralph W. Kempsmith, B I Charles H. Riegel, A E Ario Wier, X gcttbe JWembera Kenneth Mills Raynor Robert Hendel Boas S. Cameron Peters Maurice Thomas Coakley Alexander Charles MacHardy Karl Gardner Van Sickle Clifford Burton Backes Russell Ingram Baker John Joseph Santry George Paul Flick William Hayes Kelchner Garland Carpenter Chewning Niel Francis Matheson Samuel Paul Taylor ftoll of ctibe Chapter Beta ...... University of Alabama . 1867 Gamma Louisiana State University . 1887 Delta . Davidson College . 1890 Zeta University of Virginia . 1865 Eta Randolph-Macon College 1888 Eta Prime Trinity College 1873 Theta . Cumberland University 1887 Iota Southwestern University 1886 Kappa . Vandcrbilt University . 1876 Lambda University of Tontessee 1880 Mu Washington and Lee University 1904 Nu William and Mary 1890 Xi University of Arkansas 1902 Pi Sivarthmore College 1888 Sigma Tulane University 1S89 Tau I diversity of Texas 1884 Upsilon Hampden-Sidney College 1S83 Phi Southwestern Presbyterian I ' uivcrsi 175 y 1882 •v tl n 176 l appa g tgma Continueb Chi Purdue University 1885 Psi I ' niversity of Maine 1886 Omega . University of the South 1882 Alpha Alpha University 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 Washington 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 Mil I saps College . 1895 Alpha Phi Bucknell I niversity 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 . 1S98 Beta Delta . Washington and Jefferson College 1898 Beta Epsilon University of Wisconsin 1898 Beta Zeta Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1899 Beta Eta Alabama University of Technology 1900 Beta Theta . Indiana I ' niversity . 1887 i 7 Eappa igma Contintieb Beta Iota Beta Kappa Beta Lambd. Beta Mu Beta Xu Beta Xi Beta Omicro: Beta Pi Beta Rho Beta Sigmj Beta Tau Beta Upsilon Beta Phi Beta Chi Beta Psi Beta Omega Gamma Alpha Gamma Beta Gamma Gamma Gamma State Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Eta Gamma Theta Gamma Iota . Gamma Kappa Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu Gamma Xu Gamma Xi Lehigh University New Hampshire College University of Georgia University of Minnesota Kentucky University University of California University of Denver Dickinson College University of Iowa Washington University Baker University N. C. A. and M. College Case School of Applied Science Missouri School of Mines University of Washington Colorado College University of Oregon University of Chicago Colorado School of Mines Massachusetts State College Dartmouth College Xew York University . Harvard University University of Idaho Syracuse University University of Oklahoma Iowa State College Washington State College Washburn College Denison University 178 $fjt H igma l appa J2u Chapter Jfounbeb 1901 511 Seneca Street, South Bethlehem Jfratreg in Jfacultate Walter S. Landis, Met.E., M.S. Sylvanus A. Becker, C.E. Henry Radclyffe Walters Jfratrea in IBvbt Clarence Mather Elmer Frederick Shaffer Jfratres in ®nibersitate Jose Ignacio Vela John Edgar Culliney Frank Wilson Dayis Clifford Riddle Whyte Andrew Douglas Jamieson John Lippixcott Montgomery William Seguine, Jr. Walter Robert King William Hawkins Esrey Leigh Chandler Jay C. Miller Robert Bell Collier Wharton Gerard Ingram Leopold Richard Hussa 81 40 3 U ■%%t . ;Pf)i g tgma appa Continue!) oll of Chapters Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho Sigma Tau Upsilon Phi Chi Psi Omega Alpha Deuteron Beta Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Massachusetts Agricultural College Union University Cornell University West Virginia University Yale University College of the City of Xew York University of Maryland Columbia University Stevens Institute of Technology Pennsylvania State College George Washington University University of Pennsylvania Lehigh University St. Lawrence University Massachusetts Institute of Technology Franklin and Marshall College Queen ' s College {Canada) St. John ' s College Dartmouth College Brown University Sivarthmore College Williams College University of Virginia University of California I ' uh ' crsity of Illinois I ' nii ' crsity of Minnesota University of Iowa i«3 flfigra GTfjeta Xt £ta Chapter 541 Seneca Street, South Bethlehem William Herbert Waddi Reginald Drant Carll A. Streets Lee C. Leslie R. Dudley Jordan L. L. Lacombe Josiah L. Evans M tfje Jfacultp Frank P. McKibben, S. B. l esfibent jWember Walter Jacob Ammer rabuate ffltmbtv Walter Cornelius Carson 1912 1913 Alfred E. Olson 1914 James H. McKay 1915 Harold G. Shoemaker 187 Raymond Chester Fuller LeRoy J. E. Sindel Edward A. Aurand Alan F. Bristor Robert E. Mickel Herbert W. Graham August J. Wiegand Gtyeta i ColltlHUtO Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Roll of Chapters Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . 1864 Sheffield Scientific School 1865 Stevens Institute of Technology . 1874 Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1885 Columbia University ■1899 Cornell University • 1903 Lehigh University 1904 Purdue University i9°S Washington University 1905 Rose Polytechnic Institute 1907 Pennsylvania State College 1907 Iowa State College 1909 University of California 1910 H tgma $fn €p£tlon cnnsplbania €pSilon Chapter 821 Delaware Avenue, South Bethlehem 3)n tfjc Jfacultp James Hunter Wily, E.E. Edward Stamford Foster E.E. JXesiibent ffltmbtx James Alton Seacrest William John Priestley Ira David Schneller (Hnbergrabuates Walter Robert Moore James Bailey Barton Burd Quirk Herbert Leonard Cooper Harry Smith Rowland William James Orr Roy Jackson Fahl Howard Denton Baldwin Ernest Erastus Finn Alfred Clapp Cooper Andrew Keness White Joseph Baxter Parks Harry Pinkerton Croft Jewell Stanley Clark William Edwin McComas Thomas James Priestley David McKelvy Peterson Clifton Linford Butler Harry Russell Smith iqi t ' l 192 igma $fn Cpstlon oll of acttue 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 K vnsas Alpha California Alpha Nebraska Alpha . Richmond College West Virginia I diversity 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 University Washington and Lee University Randolph- Macon College Georgia School of Technology Delaware State College University of Virginia University of Arkansas Lehigh University Virginia Military In st it u te I hio State I Hiversity Norwich University Allegheny College Baker University University of California University of Nebraska J 93 iRember of fraternities; i abing j£o Chapter at Hefngi) Arthur R. Hartzell ...... Phi Kappa Sigma John Wert Helfrich ...... Sigma Alpha Epsilon Charles Lee Packard ...... Alpha Delta Phi Vincent Joseph Pazzetti, Jr. ..... Alpha Delta Phi 94 T) w - tn j 3 ■§ § 5 g ? S s § § g 7 | . CM K M O 4 X | vi 4- v. 4- to O AT Q S | H «- « O H J (P Os | -J OS Oi to ' Oj ¥ r Os | Lo 4- -J -J r — M ft J X 00 | Os -J Oo Os m ' -a j r + I 4 Os to to O O I N -j |. 4. ui • to Co r j 8 I ° I N r a c- I A ft S3 3 2 ■I X -ATA B ft II  K A  X ¥  A I - ±- A h 5 E No CO 1 CO Os Chapter 4? • J Totals 195 VIEW OF SAVRE PARK 196 e n a 197 198 ZEatt peta $i aipfia of Pennsplbania M. I. Terwilliger E. A. Wheaton R. J. Hack . P. A. Lambert, Jr. J. F. Herr . Officers jfounoeb 1885 President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Joseph Barrell, ' 92 Henry B. Evans, ' 93 3tt t)tgorp $oarb E. H. Williams, Jr., ' 75 R. C. H. Heck, ' 93 John Fritz rusteeliWembcrs R. H. Say Jfacttltp jWemberg Henry S. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. W. S. Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. •C. L. Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D. F. P. McKibben, S.B. A. E. Meaker, C.E. W. S. Landis, Met.E. A. W. Klein, M.E. S. S. Seyfert, B.S., E.E. A. A. DlFFENDERFER, A.C. S. A. Becker. C.E., M.S. H. M. Fry, E.E. Deceased. v 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., EM., A.G.. F.G.S.A. H. M. Ullmann, A.B., Ph.D. J. R. Dawson, El. Met. 199 to Peta $t Continued Hnbergrabuate JWembens Charles Harry Bender Amos Glentworth Birdsall Chesleigh Arthur Bonine Eber Waddell Cook Vere Buckingham Edwards Raymond John Hauk John Ferree Herr Preston Albert Lambert, Jr. Allen Gerard Martin [91: 1913 Chimin Chu-Fuh Walter Irving Nevius Ira Alfred St. John Walter Cleveland Solly Merle Ivan Terwilliger Harold Jacob Williams Ezra Almon Wheaton Caleb Clarence Wheeler Arthur Francis Wotring Elmer Ellsworth Yake ftoll of gctiue Chapters 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 Deceased. Lehigh University . Michigan Agricultural College Purdue University Stevens Institute of Technology University of Illinois University of Wisconsin Case School of Applied Science State College of Kentucky Columbia University University of Missouri . Michigan College of Mines Colorado School of Mines University of Colorado Armour Institute of Technology Syracuse University University of Michigan Missouri School of Mines University of California . Iowa State College . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute University of Iowa University of Minnesota Cornell University Worcester Polytechnic Institute 1885 1892 1893 1896 1897 1899 1900 1902 1902 1902 1904 1905 1905 1906 1906 1906 1906 1906 1907 1908 1909 1909 1910 1910 $f)t iSeta appa IBtta of flriuioi-iu.iiii.i Charles J. Goodwin, Ph.D. Preston A. Lambert, M.A. Albert G. Rau, Ph.D. . George R. Booth, Ph.B. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer George R. Booth Charles J. Goodwin Harvey S. Ketchel Cfje Chapter Council Preston A. Lambert Albert G. Rau Robert S. Taylor Edward H. Williams egtoent Jflemtiera of ©tfjer Chapter Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, D.D. Charles L. Thornburg, Ph.D. William S. Franklin, Sc.D. John L. Stewart, Ph.B. Natt M. Emery, M.A. Philip M. Palmer, A.B. Robert W. Blake, M.A. Efje Chapter 1871 W. H. MacCarthy 1878 Frank P Howe 1S83 John Daniel Hoffman Preston Albert Lambert Rembrandt Richard Peale H. Allebach Porterfield 1886 George Rodney Booth Charles Ellsworth Clapp M. Antony deW. Howe, Jr. George Arthur Ruddle William Patterson Taylor Harry Toulmin Deceased. 1882 1880 Thomas H. Hardcastle Charles C. Hopkins 1884 Robert Grier Cooke Robert Packer Linderman Lewis Buckley Semple Augustus Parker Smith 1885 lliam Harvey Cooke 1887 Milton Henry Fehnel Harvey Sheafe Fisher Alfred Kramer Leuckel Garrett B. Linderman Wade Hampton Woods Charles Frederick Zimmele ${)i Ikta appa Continue ) 1888 1889 Charles Lincoln Banks Samuel Irwin Berger William Lyxville Xeill Edgar Campbell Albert George Rau William Dollawav Farwell Charles McComes Wilkins Sylvanus Elmer Lambert 1890 Aaron Howell Van Cleve 1S91 Frederick C. Lauderburn Ellis Axstett Schxabel Ira Augustus Shimer William Sidxey Toppixg 1892 William X. R. Ashmead 1893 Walter Joseph Dech Alfred Erxest Spiers Charles Malcolm Douglas George Sterx 1895 Elmer Augustus Jacobv Fayette Avery McKexzie William Allex Lambert Johx Eugene Stocker Robert Sayre Taylor 1896 Warrex Joshua Bieber Robert Edward Laramy Joseph Whartox Thurstox 1898 A. Q. Bailey C. E. Webster, Jr. 1900 Ximson Eckert 1 90 1 David Beax Clark Percy Lamar Grubb Francis Doxaldsox Edwix Bextox Wilkixsox 1902 Foster Hewett Myron Jacob Luch William Fraxk Roberts Johx Joseph Cort Harvey Ernest Jordan- Alfred Johx Diefexderfer Caxby Guy Lord Arthur Simox Gilmore Elmer Clinton Pearson Xicholas Hunter Heck Bodewine Bertrand Van Sickle Decea ed. pjt peta Eappa 1904 Lester Bernstein Herbert Joseph Hartzog Oliver Jacob Haixer Thomas Archer Morgan Ralph Lucas Tallev [905 V. L. Estes, Jr. N. N. Merriman S. H. Fleming Alan de Schweinitz igo6 M. R. Beck X. G. Smith C. F. Gilmcre R. J. Van Reenen T. A. H. Mawhinney F. A. Vockrodt J. B. Carlock R. J. Gilmore R. L. Charles J. F. Hanst I. J. Freedman R. W. Kinsey J. B. Reynolds E. Haldeman Finnie R. F. McElfresh Cajetan Morsack 1909 Charles Howard Jennings Clyde Updegraff Shank Samuel Raymond Schealer Wilburt Robert Walters James Owen Knauss William Jacob Robbins Robert Pattison More John Milton Toohy hi 1 Carl William Hasek 203 204 M. I. Terwilligkr President H. M. Smyth . Secretary and Treasurer R. P. Baird A. C. MacHardy A. G. Black H. H. Otto E. S. Colling W. C. Solly J. E. Culliney A. P. Spooner G. M. Donaldson J. I. Vela V. B. Edwards E. E. Wright A. M. Kennedy E. E. Yake 205 206 §?oung Jfflen ' S Christian association € iiitzx II. H. Otto, ' [2 . R. P. Baird, ' 12 . V. C. Solly, ' 12. C. W. Miller, ' 13 J. E. Fl.ATT gbbtsorp Committee President Vice-President Treasurer Recording Secretary General Secretary Prof. C. L. Thornburg, Chairman Prof. Bishop Ethelbert Talbot R. E. Rev. F. S. Hort H. D. H. T. Morris, ' 91, Secretary and Treasurer John L. Stewart Laramy, ' 96 Kerr, ' ii Jfinance V. B. Edwards, ' 12 E. A. Wheaton, ' 12 E. H. Robb, ' 12 W. C. Solly, ' 12, Chairman R. J. Fahl, ' 13 R. M. Watrous, ' 13 jWemberafjip W. B. Clemmitt, ' 13 F. S. Gatch, ' 14 J. O. Liebig, ' 14 W. F. Hadsall, ' 12 W. B. Menefee, ' 13 C. D. Kester, ' 12. Chairman M. M. Shaw, ' 13 H. W. Tice, ' i 3 ilJlr g tubp J. L. Orr, ' 14 T. G. Shaffer, ' 14 R. N. Kocher, ' 13 Reginald Drant, ' 13 C. W. Miller, ' ' 13, Chairman Morton Sultzer, ' 13 F. J. Emmerich, ' 14 i-Hission £ tuop W. F. Bailey, ' i 4 F. H. Lewis, ' 13 B. B. Quirk, ' 13 A. Kalajan, ' 13 E. E. Finn, ' 13, Chairman G. P. Flick, ' 14 H. R. Blackman, ' 13 Bebottonal H. C. Griffith, ' 14 W. B. Killough, ' 14 L. B Knox, ' 12 H. J. Williams, ' 12 A. F. Wotring, ' 12 L. F. Hill, Jr., ' 12 R. M. Watrous, ' 13, Chairman I. A. St. John, ' 12 T. B. Coleman, ' 13 H. K. Rouse, ' 13 A. K. White, ' 13 T. W. Hearne, ' i 4 R. D. Jordan, ' 14 J. H. Morse, ' 14 W. B. Todd, ' i 4 A. G. BlRDSALL, ' 12 C. A. Gauss, ' 12 H. L. Cooper, ' 12, Chairman H. W. Tice, ' 13 R. N. Kocher, ' 13 iffluste A. K. White. ' 13 T. G. Shaffer, ' 14 E. A. Aurand, ' 13 B. S. Shafer, ' 13 R. C. Fuller, ' 12, Chairman J. O. Liebig, ' 14 W. H. Sterner, ' 14 3lnbus!trial W. F. Bailey, ' 14 C. J. Flayhart, ' 12 C. D. Cann, ' 12 C. F. Sencenbach, ' 12 A. E. Olson, ' 13, Chairman B. S. Shafer, ' 13 H. E. Lenker, ' 13 W. F. Perkins, ' 13 E. B. C. Goyne, 14 R. E. Mickel, ' 14 H. ' D. Kerr, E. E. Yake, Prof. Percy Hughes Social M. I. Terwilligfr. ' 12, Chairman F. R. Speed, ' 12 A. F. Schultz, ' 12 207 J. H. Sheppard, J. C. Chaffe, ' 1. iilcmfaers R. P. Baird R. H. Boas H. A. Camp, Jr. M. T. COAKLEV J. E. CULLINEY G. M. Donaldson R. S. Dunn W. K. Hancock A. M. Kennedy L. B. Knox J. T. Martin R. M. Raynor H. M. Smyth F. R. Speed E. W. Trexler M. I. Terwilliger J. P. Walker E. A. Wheaton R. B. Williams E ; E. Wright E. E. Yak i iilcmbcrs J. I. Vela @rabuateg J. R. Daw son T. P. Harris A. G. Martin- E. W. Cook IQI2 J. P. Walkej H. A. Camp, Jr. R. B. Williams M. I. Terwilliger A. K. Cosgrove J. L. Montgomery I). K. Evans 209 A. D. Jamieson Ezra Bowen, IV 18 CLUB estbent Jflemtoer W. A. Wilbur 191 1 J. M. Carroll Ezra Bowex, IV Garrett Brodhead Linderman, Jr. Thomas Bell Coleman Charles Lee Packard Francis Johnston Gerhard Charles Robert Wylie, Jr. (Officers E. E. Yake . . . President E. A. Wheaton, Second Vice-President E. W. Cook . First Vice-President H. H. Otto . . . Secretary V. B. Edwards .......... Treasurer gfobtsorp Committee Dr. H. S. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. J. L. Stewart, A.B., Ph.D. W. L. Wilson, C.E., M.S. Cxecuttbe Committee E. E. Yake, Chairman H. H. Otto V. B. Edwards ffltmbtxx E. W. Cook E. A. Wheaton R. Campbell C. Chu-Fuh A. G. Black H. D. Kerr R. P. Baird A. G. BlRDSALL C. A. Bonine H. A. Camp E. W. Cook G. M. Donaldson V. B. Edwards J. F. Beers E. F. Boyer R. Campbell C. Chu-Fuh W. J. DUGAN D. K. Evans J. M. Fritz J. S. Clark H. W. Graham 1912 R. C. Fuller S. R. Hanger J. F. Herr H. E. Johnson H. H. Otto C. A. Shulz H. M. Smyth 19 1 3 W. C. Fry H. R. Griffen H. W. MOTTER W. E. McComas C. B. Rafter W. C. Rehfuss H. vS. Rowland 1914 J. L. Harkness G. P. Xachman 1 015 E. R. Hazen W. C. Solly H. B. Tinges E. W. Trexler E. A. Wheaton H. J. Williams E. E. Yake J. H. Sanford M. M. Shaw M. Sultzer F. I. Wheeler F. C. Williams S D. Williams G. F. Nordenholdt T. G. Shaffer P. M. Teeple eaibent JHembers J. K. Campbell A. C. Dodson J. G. McCoy 1911 T. M. Dodson R. E. Wilbur J. M. Carroll F. J. Gerhard M. D. Douglas G. B. Linderman, Jr. J. C. Chaffe S. Y. Knight T. W. Hearne C. R. Williams J. W. Mercur, Jr. 1914 P. Sanderson D. F. Wallace C. R. Wiley, Jr. C. L. Packard M. H. Merwin F. D. SCHREIBER J. W. Donaldson C. F. Penniman B.U.X Founded by Asa Packer Antebellum Jfrerea en la Uniberstte Jose I. Vela Albert P. Spooner Thomas B. Harris Alan G. Martin . William K. Hancock Frederic R. Speed William J. Schmidt John L. Montgomery Ezra Bowen, IV Joseph L. Clarke Joseph P. Walker Walter R. King William R. Duncan Alexander C. MacHardy Alexander W. Butler George E. Harris, Jr. Albert K. Cosgrove Robert P. Sanborn John A. Hart AUGUSTIN S. HORCASITAS A I A ¥ BE BE B A B 1 r A r b r r L J rE r e ri rK r w rw r- v IT I ' ll rep Joseph R. Dawson Jfrere en Urbe b p 213 Scimitar Clu6 Jfflemtjera William Graham Bell, Jr. Edward Williamson Chandler Franz Josef Emmerich James Thomas Horn- William Edward Howard, 2nd Henry Keller Kurtz, Jr. Percy Sanderson Frederic Donald Schreiber Edward Beisel Snyder Campbell Riley Williams 214 iWemfaersi W. J. Schmidt R. P. Sanborn F. W. Wright C. B. Rafter 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. Clarki 215 KAPPA BETA PHI 1912 J. Edgar Culliney Walter J. Maguire J. Earle Cunningham Basil M. Thompson Frank W. Davis C. H. Warrington- Thomas Harris Frederic W. Wilson Frank S. Lubrecht James P. Walker John T. Martin Franklin W. Youry 1913 Orville B. Ackerly. Jr. Reginald Drant Richard B. Bayard Sidney W. Ford Ezra Bowen. IV Andrew D. Jamieson Thomas A. Bryant Leslie G. Mathews Thomas B. Coleman John L. Montgomery Albert K. Cosgroye . Edward F. Price William R. Duncan Thomas J. Quinn Douglas McD. Dunbar William J. Schmidt S. Clair DuTot Charles R.Wylie. Jr. 216 0liictti C H. Warrington J. E. CULLINEY President Secretary and Treasurer dinner of Cup (Reason 1910-1911) Psi Upsilon Fraternity ffltmbtvi of Winning (Eeam A. G. Martin R. C. Watson H. K. Kurtz R. B. Bayard G. H. Weber dinner of $igf) £ core Tropfjp C. L. T. Edwards (Delta Upsilon) Jfratermtte ftepreaenteb in totaling league Alpha Tau Omega Psi Upsilon Theta Delta Chi Delta Upsilon Si cm a ' r Phi Gamma Delta 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 217 miumut lUssoctattcm Officers, 1911 = 1912 President Samuel Dexter Warrixer. ' go. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Vice-Presidents Henry G. Reist, Schenectady. X. Y. Fraxklix Baker. Jr., Philadelphia. Pa. Archivist Howard Eckfeldt, South Bethlehem, Pa. Secretary and Treasurer P. A. Lambert. Bethlehem. Pa. Honorary Alumni Trustees Fraxcis R. Dravo. Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas M. Eyxox, Philadelphia, Pa. (Term expires June, 1912) (Term expires June, 19 14 Alfred E. Forstall, New York, X.Y. Harlax S. Mixer. Gloucester City, X. J. (Term expires June, 191 ; (Term expires June, 1 Executive Committee S. D. Warrixer. Chairman Henry G. Reist Franklin Baker Francis R. Dravo Alfred E. Forstali Thomas If. Eyxox Harlax S. Mixer Howard Eckfeldt Prestox A. Lambert 218 local Alumni Cluba fttje ILehtgb Unibemtp Club of Greater Jleto §ork R. B. Honeyman, ' 88 I S. Smith, ' 87 W. K. Okeson, ' 96 G. F. M urn am:, ' ic M. II. Putnam, ' 97 President First Vice-President . Second Vice-President Third Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer West 60th Street, New York City. {Efje Jlortheaatern ennsiplbama ftehtgf) Club Charles Enzian, ' 01 President Henry Kemmerling, ' 91 . . . - - First Vice-President W, C. Anderson ' 94 • Second Vice-President E. H. Lawall, ' 82 . Advisory Board h. H. Lawall, 82 Walter BRlGGs 83 [ K. R. Harvey, ' 95 J F. J. Demmer, Jr., ' 08 ...... Secretary and Treasurer 73 West Xorthampton St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Cfje $fjtlabelpfua Uefjigf) Club Charles Wetherill, ' 70 ....... President R. S. Perry, ' 88 . . . . . First Vice-President J. C. Barth, ' 08 . . . . . . . Second Vice-President T.MEynon ' 8i( Tnistees G. D. Speirs, 09 Moriz Bernstein, ' 96 ...... Secretary and Treasurer 189 Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, X. Y. Uefjtgtj ?Hmber0ttp Club of j£eto Cnglanb W. D. Hartshorne, ' 74 ........ President H. M. Daggett, ' 98 ........ Vice-President L. A. Olney, ' 96 ....... Secretary and Treasurer Lowell Textile School. Lowell, Mass. Southern Uehigh Club L. X. GlLLls 93 .......... President T. C.J. Baily, Jr., ' 90 ........ Vice-President W. Albert Draper, ' 07 .... Secretary and Treasurer 325 A Street, S. E., Washington, D. C. Ehe Cfjicago llehtgb Club J. B. Hittell, ' 87 ......... President J. W. Thurston, ' 96 ....... . Vice-President E. R. Morgan, ' 03 ..... Secretary and Treasurer Old Colony Building, Chicago, 111. 219 tEtjc $tttsburgf) ILefjtgf) Club J. C. Cornelius, ' 89 ......... President H. W. Eisenhart, ' 03 ....... . Vice-President R. G. Johnson, ' 04 ...... Secretary and Treasurer University Club, Pittsburgh, Pa. HL )t lleingt) ©mbersittp J ome Club W. F. Roberts, ' 02 ...... President S. T. Harleman ....... Secretary and Treasurer 315 7th Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. H )t Jfrortfjern j£eto §orb iLefjifff) Club A. W. Henshaw, ' 94 ........ . President H. G. Reist, ' 86 . Vice-President W. P. White. ' 00 ] E. E. Valk, ' 06 [ Entertainment and Reception Committee G. M. Baker, ' 07 J A. D. Badgley, ' 96 . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer 223 Parkwood Building, Schenectady, X. Y. tEfje Central fknnsiplbama Hefnsb Club G. C. Leidy, ' 00 H. N. Herr, ' 96 . B. T. Root, ' 96 J. W. Fisher, ' 04 C. E. Barba, ' 01 . George R. Morrow, ' 00 Highspire, Pa. President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Third Vice-President Fourth Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer (Etje Uefngfj Club of Jllarplanb H. S. Housekeeper. ' 72 ....... President W. A. Megraw, ' 97 ....... . Vice-President W. T. De Baufre, ' 07 . Secretary and Treasurer Baltimore Polytechnic Institute, Baltimore, Md. (Executiue Committee H. S. Housekeeper, ' 72 S. S. Martin, ' qo W. A. Megraw, ' 97 J. C. Little, Jr., ' 05 W. L. De Baufre. ' 07 {Etje 3)nter=iWountain ILefjittfj Club M. b. Hanauer, so J. C. Dick, ' 9s ...... Executive Committee T. H. Siegel 96 i J. E. Talmage, ' 91 ........ President J. H. Wolfe, ' 05 ....... General Secretary M. S. Hanauer, ' 86 J. H. SlEGEL, ' 96 Headquarters, Salt Lake City, Utah 220 Hefngf) tlltamsport Club Officers J. W. MlLNOR, ' 12 W. B. Todd, ' 14 . R. A. Laedlein, ' 14 W. H. Kelchner, ' 14 G. C. Beck, ' o; . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Alumni Adviser G. C. Beck, ' o, G. G. Lord, ' 03 A. S. GlLMORE, ' o.} H. F. Campbell, ' 04 J. W. Fisher, ' 04 R. D. Kavanaugh, ' 04 W. T. MacCart, ' 04 W. U. Mussina, ' 04 R. L. Tallev, ' 04 E. B. Wilkinson, ' 01 S. (). Lemdy, ' 05 H. L. Pentz, ' 05 iUlumni Jtlembers E. S. Adams, ' 06 C. F. GlLMORE, ' 06 J. J. Young, ' 06 W. S. Watson, ' 06 R. J. Gilmore, ' 07 R. MacMinn, ' 07 M. H. Ulman, ' 07 F. P. Bates, ' og R. S. ( linger, ' oq R. X. Jaggard, ' oq C. U. Shank, ' og J. H. Young, ' og C. A. Foust, ' 10 L. P. Gilmore, ' 10 H. C. MacDonald, ' 10 J. F. McClain, ' 10 R. L. Riley, ' 10 G. R. Waltz, ' 10 F E. Galbraith, ' ii J. H. Graybill, ' i i J. H. Slate, ' i i L. W. Smith, ' i i J. E. Person, ' 12 R. A. Laedle . V. Laird, iHembersi in College J. V. MlLNOR, ' 12 W. H. Kelchner, ' 14 W. B. Todd, 14 tEtje Senators ' Club C. R. Whyte, ' 12 . R C. Watson, ' 13 19114012 (Officers President Secretary and Treasurer JWemberS C. H. Warrington W. M. Wilson C. R. Whyte M. R. Sutherland G. C. Hill C. B. Rafter R. C. Watson G. S. Simpson G. H. Weber C. R. Williams S. Y. Knight R. R. Galloway George Lewis K. H. Read L. A. Wright j. P. Faherty onorarp Jflembers 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 James Gore, Jr. Donald B. Wood Morton Sultzer . C. Birnie Jr. C. D. V. Cann F. Fahm, Jr. W. B. Clemmitt F. H. Lewis F. H. Plack J. R. Curtis A. F. Bristor H. 1). Jay M. A. POLSTER P. M. Teeple W. C. Brooke A. B. Leonard J. B. Hiss W. Metzker ®iiittv Jtlemtierg igi2 C. J. Flayhart J. Gore, Jr I Q I 3 W. E. McComas M. Sultzer G. E. Harris, Jr. W. F. Perkins iqi 4 W. G. Richardson W. W. Thompson J. S. Williamson F. T. Gatch J. O. LlEBIG J. Shoolbred 1915 G, A. SCHMUTZ C. R. Uhl President V ice- President Secretary and Treasurer H. J. Horn D. B. Wood F. I. Wheeler, Jr. A. J. Kutzleb C. W. Miller F. C. Williams L. F. Turnbui.l L. E. Wilson L. S. Green G. P. Xach.man W. F. Tapkin E. R. McLaughlin H. L. Vitzthum R. F. Wood 223 Participant in Connubial pliste Ernest S. Collixg, ' 12 Clarence J. Flayhart, ' 12 Ambrose S. Gery, ' 13 John L. Montgomery, 13 John S. Williamson, ' 14 Charles W. Borgman, ' 15 John F. Chatfield, ' 15 What God hath joined together let not man put asunder. ' 224 iSeto Jen3ep=£efngf) Club Officers H. P. Croft R. C. DeNyse F. E. Driscoll R. E. Mickel Jim Myers . President r ice-President Secretary Treasurer Marshal iHemfaersi E. H. Austin 1912 S. R. Hanger A. G. BlRDSALL W. L. Newman W . Douglass G. J. Shurts R C. Fuller W. H. Waddington E. BOWEN, 4TH 1913 F. J. Gerhard H P. Croft W. R. King R. C. DeNyse J. L. Montgomery E. S. Dewey H. K. Rouse F. E. Driscoll 1914 R. E. Mickel D. L. Baird 1915 J. F. Harder A. Bodine V. A. Stickel J. H. Madden 225 226 £acfeatoauua=1Uf)tgi) Club (Officers Vere B. Edwards, ' 12 C. W. Van Nort, ' 13 D. K. Evans, ' 13 Chas. Von Konecny, ' i President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer onorarp iHember Dr. Henry Sturgis Drinker, ' 71 V. B. Edwards J. A. Hart F. B. Miller D. K. Evans K. G. Van Sickle etibe jWembers 1912 R. B. Williams 1913 1914 D. M. Peterson 1915 H. A. Brown K. M. Raynor ' M. I. Terwilliger C. T. Von Konecny C. W. Van Xort H. L. Burdick 227 jgeto CnglanbiUbtgb Club i onorarp JflemberS Dr. Henry S. Drinker R. L. Bartlett Prof. J. F. Klein Xatt M. Emery Prof. Wm. Esty Prof. F. P. McKibben Prof. P. M. Palmer Prof. R. W. Hall Prof. C. J. Goodwin Prof. V. S. Babasinian Prof. H. A. S. Howarth Prof. R. J. Fogg H. P. Hammond Officers; Herbert L. Cooper ......... President William J. Schmidt ..... Vice-President H. Lloyd Rooney ......... Secretary Andrew K. White ......... Treasurer ifflembers H. L. Cooper E. E. Wright 1913 T. L. Dunn A. E. Olson F. C. Messenger H. L. Rooney A. L. O ' Brien W. J. Schmidt A. K. White A. Kalajan 1914 W. J. Orr E. J. McCaffrey H. Baldwin C. B. Backes A. C. Cooper T. L. Dunn T. G. Shaffer V. J. Pazzetti T. G. Shaffer A. J. Ambrose E. F. H. Della Valle H. E. Bradley P. L. Norton J. H. Braun F. W. Green J. T. Priestley 228 %u}tvnt Counti =3lef)tgt) Club J. R. Crellin President W. J. DUGAN V ice- President John Fritz . Secretary and Treasurer J C. ROBELL 1912 Marshal H. M. Benjamin H S. Fowler Johnson J. R. Crellin YY . F. Hadsall F. S. Lubrecht H. H. Otto T. P. Harris 1913 H W. Porter V. J. DUGAN J. M. Fritz J. C. Robell Mahoney Evans P. J. McMkxamin 1914 F. V. Ryder F. J. Emmerich D J. Joseph R Woelfel E. B, Snyder J- L. Hark ness 1915 J. E. Nicholas M N. Owen J- L. Ware 229 2 .3° M)tgJ)=Jflt Sermon Club ®ttittv R. C. Fuller ......... President A. E. Olson ...... Vice-President E. A. Aurand ......... Secretary W. F. Bailey ...... . . Treasurer Jfacultp JWember E. S. Foster, ' 07 1912 R. C. Fuller M. R. Sutherland 1913 A. E. Olson E. A. Aurand 1914 R. D. Jordan E. C. Castellanos W. F. Bailey J. J. Scatko 231 A 233 poarb of €bttorsi € )t 1913 Cpitnme Ctir College Annual ubltstitb bv the junior Class of Iletjigt) {Hniuersitp Editor-in-Chief Henry Lloyd Rooney Assistant Editor-in-Chief Albert Kemmer Cosgroye Business Manager Joseph Louis Clarke Assistant Business Managers George Edward Harris, Jr. . Morris Kent Petty Art Editor James Herbert Sheppard Robert Campbell Daniel Kinsman Evans . Alan Bowen Gorman George Diller Herr Associate Editors 234 Rhode Island Pennsylvania New York . Maryland Pennsylvania Michigan Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Maryland Pennsylvania 2 35 236 Z )t proton aub Wtytt Ilssueb Choice a OSIeefe During the College ©ear lip tfje g tubent s of ILehigf) ?HniberSitr Editor-in-Chief Elmer Ellsworth Yake, ' 12 Assistant Editors Alan Bowen Gorman, ' 13 Fletcher Barnes Speed, Jr., ' 13 Business Manager Frederic Rice Speed, ' 12 Assistant Business Manager Henry Lloyd Roonev, ' 13 Associate Editors Ernest S. Colling, ' 12 Horace W. Porter, ' 12 T. Watson Downs, ' 14 Herbert W. Graham, ' 14 Le Roy J. E. Sindel, ' 14 Effingham P. Humphrey, Nelson M. Royall, ' 15 IS William K. Hancock, ' i. James H. Sheppard, ' 13 Franz J. Emmerich, ' 14 Robert A. Laedlein, ' 14 Edward B. Snyder. ' 14 Niel F. Matheson, ' 15 Samuel P. Taylor, ' 15 23 23« r j y «K 1 f y j B Ife P Hl 1 yWk % B ■— jw LM « ik U H K KtKi §HKj 239 240 Ctbtl engineering otittp W. C. Solly H. L. Cooper W. E. McComas Officers! President Secretary Treasurer Jtlember Prof. Mansfield Merriman, C.E., Ph.D. I)n tfje Jfacultp 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. Asst. Prof. R. J. Fogg, S.B. S. A. Becker, C.E., M.S. H. P. Hammond, S.B. H. M. Benjamin C. D. Cann J. M. Carroll H. L. Cooper H. R. Cox G. M. Donaldson V B. Edwards F. Fahm C. J. Flayhart R. C. Fuller E. A. Aurand H. R. Blackman E. F. Boyer C. P. Brinton R. Campbell H. P. Croft R. C. De Nyse T. L. Dunn A. Evans J. M. Fritz W. C. Fry I. Fuhrman Unbergrabuate Jfflemberss 1912 R. Goldberg J. Gore W. F. Hadsall M. B. Hartzell L. F. Hill D. T. Jerman A. M. Kennedy F. S. Lubrecht F. B. Miller S. C. Peters 1913 G. E. Harris A. Harrison A. Kalajan W. R. King A. J. Kutzleb F. H. Lewis J. I. Lyon W. E. McComas W. B. Menefee C. W. Miller J. F. More I. A. St. John P. E. Sanchez C. S. Snyder L. T. Snyder W. C. Solly W. H. Waddington F. W. Youry C. E. Wagner H. D. Kerr J. I. Vela F. H. Plack E. Quincy B. B. Quirk C. B. Rafter H. K. Rouse G. Rupp L. B. Savastio A. Trujillo C. W. Van Xort R. C. Watson F. I. Wheeler 241 ?Hnbergrabuatc JHembers W. F. Bailey W. G. Bell, Jr. R. M. Brady W. R. Browne S. W. Burns E. S. Castellanos P. R. Charnock T. M. Clarke R. Drant I. Frank F. T. Gatch R. H. GlFFORD 1 9 14 S. Hadaway G. F. Wolfe J. E. Bauman R. B. Dayton J. P. Faherty C. Hartdegen W. M. Hettler W. E. Howard S. Y. Knight H. Lopez W. J. Orr L. E. Wilson G. M. Overfield C. L. Packard D. M. Peterson W. A. Schrempel L. Thornburg C. R. Williams R. H. Woelfel C. E. Loos H. S. McCauley J. H. McKay P. M. Teeple A. J. Ambrose D. L. Baird J. P. Ballinger C. L. Butler D. R. Cahill J. S. Clark T. W. Connette T. J. Delaney A. S. Diyen O. E. Hager J. F. Harder 1915 J. B. Hiss G. R. Hukill W. G. Ingram W. Kennedy W. S. Kirby S. R. Knight S. W. Laird C. E. Merkel E. W. Peters R. M. Pierson T. J. Priestley I. W. Pugh R. M. Purvis E. H. Reisler H. M. Search R. H. Sproul W. H. Stickel T. W. Tanner C. R. Uhl G. H. Weber R. F. Wood L. Weisenburg 242 243 Jflecfjamcal engineering octetp Officers; W. Douglas, ' 12 . D. B. Wood, ' 12 . N. Guth, ' 12 . E. H. Robb, ' 12 Prof. H. A. S. Howarth, Ph President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Advisory Member J onorarp ffltmbzxs Prof. J. F. Klein, D.E. Prof. A. W. Klein, M.E. Prof. P. B. de Schweinitz, M.E Prof. E. L. Jones, M.E. Prof. H. A. S. Howarth, P h.B. G. S. Chiles, B.M.E. J. Bailey R. H. Boas E. W. Cook W. H. Davis W. Douglas H. S. Fowler X. H. Guth H. E. Johnson P. A. Lambert W. R. More J. L. Reiter H. B. Tinges E. W. Trexler H. J. Williams E. H. Robb D. B. Wood J. F. Beers B. E. Cole J. R. Curtis P. J. Fahl E. E. Finn i9M S. W. Ford G. D. Herr L. T. Mart H. L. Roone M. M. Shaw L. J. Sindell J. H. Sheppard B. H. Spencer I. J. Bleiler J. B. Bowman W. B. Brooke M. I. Galainexa R. R. Galloway L. S. Green 1914 J. L. Harkness D. J. Joseph A. B. Leonard G. P. Xachman R. M. Xeff G. F. Xordenholt W. G. Richardson J. J. Scatko T. G. SCHAFFER W. H. Sterner CHIkA E . L ZiP K V ' ' l M IB! -V 7 ■E V 1 s fl w •? 1 E ySsajSw A L kL. W - M E N G I N E E f N G 245 Clectrtcal engineering ocietp Walter I. Xevius, ' 12 A. G. BlRDSALL, ' l2 G. J. Shurts, ' 12 . W. L. Newman, ' 12 Prof. W. S. Franklin ®iiitzv J onotarp iflember Dr. Hexry S. Drixker President ' ice-President Secretary Treasurer Advisor Jfaeultp iHembers Prof. William Esty, S.B., M.A Prof. S. S. Sevfert, E.E. E. S. Foster, E.E. E. H. Austin A. G. BlRDSALL C. Birxie, Jr. R. ' W. Catanach J. R. Crellix C. A. Gauss W. K. Haxcock T. P. Harris J. A. Hart A. W. Butler J. L. Conner W. J. Dugan E. R. McLaughlix D. S. Auxgst H. B. Baldwin A. L. Cerdax E. W. Chandler O. B. Church J. R. Daxxer W. L. Epler W. B. Ewing G. P. Flick G. Forster Prof. W. S. Franklin, M.S., Sc.D. M.S. Prof. J. H. Wily, E.E. H. D. Gruber, E.E. F. R. Haskell, M.E. dlrabuate Jflember D. M. Petty, E.E., ' oq fHnbergrabuate ffltmbtvi 1912 W. M. Johxsox C. D. Kester A. G. Martix J. W. Milxor W. I. Xevius W. L. Xewmax J. W. XUSBAUM H. F. Perry H. W. Porter 1 9 13 H. W. Motter A. E. Olsox R. W. Over K. M. Rayxor 1 9 14 J. S. Gemmel H. W. Graham H. C. Griffith W. B. Killough L. L. Lacombe R. A. Laedlein H. M. Poust S. G. Pricket C. W. Rease W. X. RORER A. P. Rutherford I. H. Samuels A. T. Schultz G. J. Shurts R. S. Wexxer W. M. Wilson A. F. Wotrixg E. D. Wuxder M. Sultzer H. W. Tick E. F. Weaver W. B. Todd L. F. Turxbull H . C. Wang E. J. McCaffrey P. J. White J. S. Williamson E. C. Wilsox T. S. Yeh C. D. Zimmerman 246 Jfltuiug aub (geological g octelp (Officers M. I. Terwilliger ......... President C. H. Bender ......... Vice-President E. E. Yake Secretary W. H. Lamb Treasurer Jfacultp Jilembers Prof. Howard Eckfeldt, B..S., E.M. Prof. J. W. Richards, A.C., M.A., M.S., Ph.D. Prof. B. L. Miller, A.B., Ph.D. Asst. Prof. E. T. Wherry. B.S., Ph.D. E. L. Estabrook, E.M. R. L. Bartlett, S.B. H. P. Smith. E.M. H. H. Otto C. R. Whyte R. B. Williams W. B. Clemmitt A. L. O ' Brien J. L. Clarke cttbe ffltmbtxi R. T. Dynan D. K. Evans C. A. Fellencer F. Hirshberg G. C. Hill F. C. Messexgei M. K. Petty W. C. Rehfuss W. J. Schmidt R. Mickel C. P. Richmond Jr. 247 ====== JmM J iM L. y OSQUE.R4 ' n 2 rt!5 attb Science Club (Officers! E. S. Colling, ' 12 R. N. Kocher, ' 13 B. S. Shafer, ' 13 P. Sanderson, ' 14 J. H. DlEFENDERFEl Jim Myers, ' 64 President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Member-at-Large Maitre-de-Cuisine J onorarp H. S. Drinker, E.M. 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. LL.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. R. M. Walters, A.B. E. S. Colling A. E. Greanoff gcttbe ffltmbtr ICJI2 S. R. Hanger A. V. Laub T. A. Bryant A. K. Cosgrove R. N. Kocher 9 3 T. J. Quinn B. S. Shafer C. R. Streets F. R. Abbott J. H. Diefenderfer F. P. Houghton H. K. Kurtz, Jr. J. H. Morse E. B. Keith J. W. Mercur, Jr. 1915 G. W. Clinton, Jr. 249 D. H. Rees P. Sanderson S. H. Sauber C. R. Wagner C. R. Williams K. V. Morse R. N. Taylor ) v ' JfaunOfb in 1571 (Dffteers J. F. Herr, ' 12 A. K. White. ' 13 V. R. Seyfried, ' 12 A. G. Black, ' ii . Prof. H. M. Ullmanx. A.B.. Ph.D. President ' ice-President Secretary Treasurer Advisory Member i onorarp iflember President Hexry S. Drinker. E.M., LL.D. associate Members William B. Schober. Ph.D. H. M. Ullmanx. A.B., Ph.D. V. S. Babasiniax. Ph.D. A. A. Diefexderi-er. A.C. M.S. J. Hunt Wilson, Ph.D. G. C. Beck. AC. C. H. Magi-ire. B.S. C. R. Cressy, B.S. M I 1.1 M, B.S 2 0 gctitoe iWemfaerg A. G. Black K. McFetridge J. E. Bacon R. J. Hauk 1912 M. T. COAKLEY W. Seyfrieo J. F. Herr C. T. Von Konecny F. J. Bartholomew L. G. Mathews R. D. Jordan R. I. Baker P. F. McFadden 1913 A. S. Gery S. C. Du Tot 1914 V. T. Lawshe T. T. Johnson W. {. Orr A. K. White J. M. Gonder L. E. Carpenter A. R. Sanchez A. R. Hartzell 251 252 253 E. S. COLLIXG R. S. Wenner K. M. Rayxor June Hop Qrotun Memorial 5)all lunt 12, 1911 Committee J. P. Walker, Chairman H. J. Williams 254 P. A. Lambert, Jr. T. P. Harris E. H. Robb Junior $rom Broton all 3pnl 26, 1912 D. McD. Dux bar A. S. HORCASITAS H. W. Lamb A. K. Cosgrove, Chairman F. C. Messenger, Jr. H. L. Rooxey H. S. Rowland 2 55 John Charles Chaffe Franz Josef Emmerich James Thomas Horn F. R. Abbott Wylie Baker G. M. Cameron J. C. Chaffe E. W. Chandler J. W. Donaldson F. E. Driscoll F. J. Emmerich W. B. Ewing Seymour Hadaway Carl Hartdegen, Jr. ££ opf)omore Cotillion Clul) (Officers Frank Roderic Abbott . . President Frederic Donald Schreiber First Vice-President Edward Williamson Chandler, Second Vice- President Theodore Tyler Johnson, Jr. . . Secretary Charles Frederic Penniman . Treasurer (Executive Committee Vincent Joseph Pazzetti, Jr. Maurice Myron Western Campbell Riley Williams ifflemberg J. T. Horn W. E. Howard, 2d. T. T. Johnson R. A. Laedlein V. T. Lawshe M. H. Merwin J. H. Morse V. J. Pazzetti, Jr. Richard Peale C. F. Penniman C. W. Pettigrew 256 Percy Sanderson F. D. Schreiber G. S. Simpson R. H. Sproul E. B. Snyder K. G. Van Sickle H. L. Street, 2D Lewis Thornburg G. H. Weber M. M. Western C. R. Williams Mentor panquet Claas of 1912 iflartf) 7, 1912 V. B. Edwards, Toastmaster ' What We Have Coming ' ' The Faculty . ' Athletics . ' 1912 ' To Lehigh! (Toasts M. T. COAKLEY F. R. Speed M. I. Terwilliger E. S. Colling E. E. Yake Committee H. M. Smyth, Chairman A. M. Kennedy G. J. Shurts C. A. Bonine S. C. Peters E. W. Cook A. G. BlRDSALL 257 Junior panquet Class of 1913 Mavtb 15, 1912 W. J. Dug ax, Toastmaster Coasts The Class . H. W. Lamb Athletics . A. C. MacHardy Life- R. M. Watrous Tit Bits . . T. J. Quinn Woman Suffrage Alexander Harrison 258 i opf)omore pauquet ClaS of 1914 iflartf) 21, 1912 ' The Class ' Woman Suffrage ' Bethlehem Police ' Class Scraps ' Temperance W. F. Bailey, Toastmaster Coasts R. E. Mickel E. J. McCaffrey H. C. Faust P. J. White H. D. Kurtz A. F. Bristor S. W. Burns Committee R. H. Gifforo, Chairman W. C. Owen T . G. Shaffer 259 RESHlYjAtt AM QUE Class of 1915 iflartt 2S. 1912 H. A. Crightox, Toastmaster Coasts College Spirit . Wm. Fairhurst Faculty . J. F. Harder Ladies C. S. Wagner Our Future Committee L. J. Buck, Chairman H. G. Lixke E. W. Wilcox L. R. Hussa S. W. Laird H A. Brown C. L. Butler D. S. Whit em an 260 26l 262 ftaplor Hall Bormitorp Section M H. H. Otto, Chairman 1912 E. H. Austin E. H. Robb H. M. Benjamin I. Samuels R. Goldberg M. R. Sutherland H. H. Otto C. T. Von Konecny 1913 J. M. Fritz W. R. Smith J. S. Long P. I. Wheeler H. W. Motter F. C. Williams W. C. Rehfuss S. D. Williams 1914 J. L. Harkness G. F. Nordenholt D. J. Joseph H. M. Poust J. O. Liebig C. P. Richmond G. P. Nachman W. H. Sterner 26- 264 Kapler i all ©ormttorp Section W C. J. Flayhart, ' 12, Chairman 1912 C. J. Flayhart H. J. Williams H. R. Blackman E. R. McLaughlin C. Chu-Fuh P. J. McMenamin R. C. DeNyse F. C. Messenger, Jr. E. S. Dewey A. L. O ' Brien A. E. Evans W. F. Perkins W. C. Fry, Jr. M. K. Petty G. C. Hill F. H. Plack F. I. Hirshberg M. M. Shaw A. J. Kutzleb W. F. Tapking, Jr. 1914 P. R. Charnock J. Shoolbred, Jr. G. Forster L. E. Wilson W. B. Killough T. S. Yeh J. P. Ballinger M. G. Tull E. H. Reisler H. Wolf 265 266 aplor SMI ©ormttorp Section C W. J. Dug an, ' 13, Chairman 1912 S. R. Hanger H. J. Horn W. M. Johnson 1913 J. R. Curtis H. W. Lamb W. J. Dugan J. D. Kavanaugh L. B. Savastio Alexander Kalajan C. A. Schneider H. W. Tice 1914 D. S. Aungst C. G. Loos S. W. Burns S. G. Prickett W. F. Ouast A. B. Leonard E. C. Seibert Ralph H. Woelfel 1915 A. O. Bodine R. A. Rank G. C. Chewning G. L. Schmutz J. F. Horder H. W. Shockley 267 •£  - IjHuS Wife, m ' 268 C. A. Gauss M. B. Hartzell D. T. Jerman J. W. MlLNOR J. L. Clarke H. R. Cox G. E. Harris A. S. HORCASITAS L. R. Atkins J. P. Faherty P. G. DeHuff G. H. Linke F. H. Maddex Taylor Hall ©ormttorp Section 3© J. W. Milnor, ' 12, Chairman 1912 A. F. Wotring 913 1914 1915 W. L. Newman R. V. Parker P. E. Sanchez M. SULTZER F. H. Lewis C. B. Rafter B. H. Spencer A. Trujillo M. J. Galainena W. G. Richardson B. V. McGurl K. H. Read L. A. Wright D. R. Vanneman 269 7° {Eaplor 2|all ©ormttorp Section € W. N. Rorer, Chairman 1912 J. E. Bacon H. E. Johxsox W. H. Davis F. B. Miller W. Douglass W. I. Nevius V. B. Edwards W. N. Rorer Frank Fahm G. J. Shurts James Gore, Jr. C. E. Wagner D. B. Wood 1913 W. B. Clemmitt C. W. Miller H. C. Croft B. S. Shafer 1914 A. F. Bristor R. R. Gallowav H. L. Burdick H. W. Graham George Lewis 1915 R. N. Boyd R. F. Wood 271 ittantela in Broton $all Ir-i- J — J Z. JJ, □ r3 r I? T7S IT BJTtJ 273 2 7 4 vbtv of €xerci£eg Scene — The Court of His Satanic Majesty, the Ruler oj Hades. MUSIC PROCESSION OPENING OF COURT TRIAL MUSIC VERDICT CREMATION et sic de similibus ©ramatts $ersonae Judge J J k C0Sl 6c ° S t d6 d P o o v o Attorney for Prosecation f x , r r f Xidx 1 dx _J e X 2 dx + C Attorney for Defense 2 J o 2 J k C ° S 6 d f d$ - d P Foreman of Jury _ $o J k p pcosd p dO dp Jurymen : f Xl , r r f Xidx 1 dx U e X.dr+CJ Bailiff 1 ( etX tx ) 21 Witnesses du du « '  |« 2 -a 2 J a +u t J , j- M 2 275 oob=bpe, Cfjornfaurfl Tune — Winter Packer Hall is a grand old dump. Like it better than the lump, Hear those Sophomores ball ! Thorny with his Yankee twang, Snotty, Pop and all the gang, They run Packer Hall. Hear the students shout Why do we flunk out ? CHORUS Thornburg, Thornburg, How we love your damned department ! Snotty and the crew, Googy Reynolds, too, Calculation, Integration, Logs and Differentiation. Thornburg, Thornburg, Oh, but you ' re a gay old party! Don ' t endeavor to deceive us; It will grieve us When you finally leave us, Dear old Thornburg. Thorny likes to vent his wrath By giving us a quiz in math Every day or so. Some one passed his Analyt, See Pop Meaker throw a fit. What an awful blow! Hear the Freshmen yell Calculus is Hell! Calculus! Tune — Casey Jones Come, boys, gather ' round and give a cheer, We lads every one of us an engineer, Old Calculus has had his day; And now he is going on the long, long way. When first we saw him he was young and gay, Just look at him now, how old and gray! He will be tried, he ' s about to die, Come, boys! we ' ll give him the battle cry. CHORUS Calculus — Going to be a dead one; Calculus — Give him the yell; Calculus — Going on his journey; Going on his rocky, thorny trip to Hell. 276 g atan on tfje Win Tune — .4 Alone Hello, central! hello, central! Give me Hades, quick! Cycloids rattle through my brain, Other curves put me to pain. Hello, Mephistopheles! Please to learn you ' re in. Well, now that I ' m for blood, not E ' s, Let ' s get down to b-i-z, Fix me up a red hot stew, For Math Profs I do send to you — go CHORUS Shovel coal, shovel coal! Thorny, he heads the bunch, Dutchy with his stick in hand, Jack and Squirt are in the band. Have a red hot radiator There for Sidney; Shovel coal, shovel coal! Snotty will get his share, Pop is black and grimy, Squid is hot and shiny, How our Profs do love to shovel coal ! jWuStcal program March, Xiebelungen Overture, ' Barber of Seville Bits of Popular Hits Madame Sherry Waltz, Wedding of the Wind? Intermezzo, Le Secret American Patrol Coronation March from Folkunger A. B. Gorman F. C. Messinger, Jr. Commttte H. W. Lamb, Chairman R. P. Sanborn J. P. Stokes Wagner Rossim R. Becker Hoshna J. T. Hall L. Ca at hie r F. W. Meacham Kretshman D. F. Wallace F. W. Wright, Ir. 277 Umbergttp unbap June 11, 19U The Baccalaureate Sermon was delivered by the Rt. Rev. Charles David Williams, D.D., LL.D., Bishop of Michigan. Clagg 2Bap (Exercises 3Tune 12, 1911 program March — Col. Thornton ' s March Overture — Xabucodonosor President ' s Salutatory Waltz — Barcarole Waltz Class Poem Chanson Joyeuse Presentation Oration Koronation March . D. W. Reeves . G. Verdi Donald Randolph Lo-jury . Offenbach William Harold McCreary . H. Ravina James Cameron Poffenberger E. Kretschner Class Prophecy Intermezzo — Le Secret Tablet Oration . Cup Contest Fred Earley Galbraith . L. Gantier Louis Allgaier Rehfuss The Love Dance Uast oll Call K. Hoschna Ivy Oration at Droum fyall Oscar Lawrence Jackson Graham aima JHater March — Regimental March .... Claste Bap Committee Jacob Stair, Jr., Chairman Althouse John Louis Becker John Musgrave Bley Joseph Ralph Dawson Daniel Merritt Flick Alfred Priestley Robert Farmer Wood 278 Umbersttp Bap ijune 13, 19U ©roer of (Exercisers MUSI C PRAYER MUSIC Alumni Address to the Graduating Class — James E. Talmaoe, A.C., V, Ph.D. awarding of prizes and honors conferring of degrees benediction :Prt?es anb honors Award of the Wilbur Scholarship of $200 to Chimin Chu-Fuh, of Xanziang, China, first in rank in the Sophomore Class. The Williams Gold Medal to Chester Hagar Rhodes, of Stroudsburg, Pa. The John B. Carson Prize, for the best thesis in the Civil Engineering Department, to Othello Henry Schroedl, of Baltimore, Md. The Alumni Prizes of $25 each, for first honor men in the Junior Class in various Departments, were awarded to Preston Albert Lambert, Jr., of South Bethlehem, Pa., In the Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Elmer Ellsworth Yake, of Annville, Pa., In the Departments of Mining Engineering, Metallurgical and Elec- trometallurgy. The Price Prize of $25 for English Coynposition, open to members of the Freshman Class, was awarded to Brice Bowman, of Allentown, Pa. The Williams Prizes of $10 and $5 for excellence in English Composition, open to mem- bers of the Sophomore Class, were awarded to Ralph Xorman Kocher, of Flicksville, Pa. Thomas Leo Dunn, of Fall River, Mass. Thomas John Quinn, of Johnstown, Pa. Sidney David Williams, of Philadelphia, Pa. Edward Austin Aurand, of Tamaqua, Pa. William Clinton Fry, Jr., of Reading, Pa. Harry Smith Rowland, of Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Bentley Sayre Shafer, of Montrose, Pa. 279 The Wilbur Prizes of $10 for excellence in the studies of the Sophomore year were awarded as follows: In Mathematics to John Lambert Conner, of Richland Center, Pa. In English to James Herbert Sheppard, of Grand Rapids, Mich. In Physics to Joseph Patrick Stokes, of South Bethlehem, Pa. The Wilbur Prizes of $15 and $10 for excellence in the studies of the Freshman year were awarded as follows: In Mathematics to First — -George Philip Nachman, of Baltimore, Md. Second — Lewis Thornburg, of South Bethlehem, Pa. In German to George Forster, of Philadelphia, Pa. In French to William Francis Bailey, Summit, N. J. In English to Wilfred Campbell Owen, Shamokin, Pa. ouor Ht£t Senior honors Arts and Science Course. First: Carl William Hasek, of Franklin, Pa. Civil Engineering Course. First: William Henry Mohr, of Quakertown. Second: Carlton Hart Chapin, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Mechanical Engineering Course. First: Harry Alter Haas, of Tamaqua, Pa. Second: Edgar Forster Baumgartner, of Asbury Park, N. J. Mining Engineering Course. First: Louis Allgaier Rehfuss, of Philadel- phia, Pa. Electrical Engineering Course. First: George Emanuel Goeppert, of Freeland, Pa. Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Courses. First: Philip McLean Gin- der, of Rockport, Pa. Second: Daniel Merritt Flick, of Dushore, Pa. STuntor honors; Civil Engineering Course. First: Ira Alfred St. John, of Perth Amboy, N.J. Mechanical Engineering Course. First: Preston Albert Lambert, Jr., of Bethlehem, Pa. Second: Nevin Homer Guth, of Allentown, Pa. Mining Engineering Course. First: Elmer Ellsworth Yake, of Annville, Pa. Chemical Engineering Course. First: John Ferree Herr, of Strasburg, Pa. £3 opf)omore honors Mathematics. First: Chimin Chu-Fuh, of Nanziang, Kiang Su, China. vSecond: John Lambert Connor, of Richland Center, Pa. English. First: James Herbert Sheppard, of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Second: Bentley Sayre Shafer, of Montrose, Pa. Physics. First: Joseph Patrick Stokes, of South Bethlehem, Pa. Sec- ond: William Clinton Fry, Jr., of Reading, Pa. Jfresfjman honors Mathematics. First: George Philip Nachman, of Baltimore, Md. Sec- ond: Lewis Thornburg, of South Bethlehem, Pa. English. Wilfred Campbell Owen, of Shamokin, Pa. German. George Forster, of Philadelphia, Pa. French. William Francis Bailey, of Summit, N. J. 281 Junior Oratorical Contest Clasfg of 1913 ICfjursbap, Jfebruarp 22, 1912 packer iHemonal Cfjapel program Oration ....... Donald Bowman Thomas A. Edison Oration ........ Chimin Chu-Fuh The Present Revolution in China Oration ...... William Clinton Fry, Jr. Arbitration as a Remedy for War Music — Gavotte . . . Detkier Oration ...... Henry Ramsey Griffen The Short Ballot Oration ...... William Clifford Rehfuss Economic Significance of the Panama Canal Oration ...... Sidney David Williams The Regulation of Trusts Music — Finale from Fourth Organ Sonata . Guilmant Alma Mater HTubges Rev. Paul de Schweinitz Secretary of Missions of the Moravian Church Rev. Francis Hort Pastor of the Presbyterian Church, South Bethlehem, Pa. William C. Sampson Superintendent of Schools First Prize, S25 .... Chimin Chu-Fuh Second Prize, Si 5 . . . Sidney David Williams Third Prize, Sio . . . Henry Ramsey Griffen 282 DRAMATI C 283 284 o NE of the most successful seasons in the history of the Mustard and Cheese Club was that of 191 1. The play, The College Widowers, was but moderately good, although full of witty lines and ludicrous situations. This was, however, offset by the clever acting of the cast, the more than excellent dancing of the chorus, and the tuneful, catchy music. The first performance was given on the Saturday evening of Junior Week, April 29th, at the South Bethlehem Opera House, before a large audience. Everything went very smoothly and the show scored a big hit. Later in May a complimentary performance was given in the Odeon.the beautiful theatre on the campus of the National Park Sem- inary, Forest Glen, Md. The troupe left South Bethlehem on Friday noon and arrived in Washington that evening, and immediately dis- persed to the different theatres and entertainments tendered them. Saturday morning was given over to sightseeing in the Capitol City. Shortly after noon the amateur Thespians left for Forest Glen and re- hearsed at the theatre there. They were entertained at dinner by tin- girls of the seminary, and were afterwards shown about the campus and through the charming sorority houses. The performance was a great 2S5 success, the girls being chiefly interested in the actions of the ladies in the company. After a short dance in the gymnasium the troupe returned to Washington, and left there the next day. The final performance was in South Bethlehem on Alumni Day, Monday, June 12th. The extremely inclement weather accounted for the rather small audience. The play was very well presented and the players deserve a great deal of credit for their work. €be Jffluatarb anb Cfjecge dramatic Club A. Priestley . . . . . . . . . President J. E. Culliney ........ Business Manager £• ™ ' y OURY X Assistant Business Managers D. W. Dunbar J lS Prof. P. M. Palmer Faculty Advisors Prof. Joseph Daniels j ®f)e College tbotoers Jfflustcal Comebp in tEtoo cta Jflclobiee; bp C. £ . Colling Hibretto bp Chost. J . ©onalbsfon tageb bp C. H. JBotoning SUipmeS bp 3Tosf. SI. (fcouetha, £. § . Colling. (Ethos!. W. ©onalbson, C. H JBotoning $re«enteb at the (granb ©pera ouge, outf) IBetfjlefjem £ aturbap, prtl 29tf), 1010 Jfflonbap, lune I2tf), 1910 anb at Rational $arfe Seminar?, asifjittgton, B. C. aturbap, iflap 13tf), 1910 W z Cast (In the order of their appearance) Jack Leavitt, a Senior at Boodle College H. M. Smyth, J E. Cunningham, ' 12 . D. McD. Dunbar, ' 13 C. H. Warrington, ' 12 J. E Culliney, ' 12 Larry Fitzgerald, ex-Champion Pug Winifred Colt Randolph Poe, President of Hi Pi Hi Dorothy Poe .... Juan Ascencio Hidalgo Bolivar, President of Gamma Goo A. Lopez, ' 14 Philip Poe, Class of ' 64, father of Dorothy and Randolph . T. A. Bryant, ' 13 Jared Colt, Class of ' 64, Winifred ' s father . . H. M. Poust, ' 13 H. Y. Bilder, President of Boodle College P. A. Lambert, Jr., ' 12 Silvermann Goldenstein, Treasurer of Boodle College . J. O. Liebig, ' 14 Penelope Parry, an ancient college widow . . . D. G. Baird, ' 14 286 Act. I. — Library in Poe ' s home. Time — The present g cene Act II. — Campus of Boodle College. F. W. Youry, ' 12 W. R. Moore, ' 12 W. K. Hancock, ' 12 H. S. Rowland, ' i ftfje Ctjorussea •girls A. D. Jamieson, ' 13 D. F. Wallace, ' 13 F. J. Emmerich, ' 14 H. B. Baldwin, ' 14 E. W. Trexler, H. W. Porter, ' j C. R. Wiley, ' 13 A. F. Eberly, ' i ffltn F. J. Gerhard, ' 13 W. B. Todd, r 4 K. G. Van Sickle, ' i 4 R. A. Laedlein, ' 14 Jflusiical J umberg act 1 Opening Chorus — The Camera Man . . Mr. Smith and Choruses That ' s the Time to Let Me Know Messrs. Culliney and Lopez Around the Town . . Messrs. Bryant, Poust and Choruses Come, Tell Me That You Love Me Messrs. Warrington and Dunbar . Choruses Messrs. Lambert, Bryant and Liebig Choruses Messrs. Bryant, Poust and Ensemble The Hi Pi Hi . Sign! Sign! Sign! (a) College Days Are Over (b) Back to Yesterday 9tt II Opening Chorus — Rita A College Widow Wise Reuben and Susan College Bells The Rah-Rah Boys The Real Champeen There ' s a Meaning to It All Choruses Mr. Baird and Choruses Messrs. Bryant, Poust and Choruses Mr. Buckley and Choruses Messrs. Bryant, Poust and Baird Mr. Cunningham and Choruses Mr. Cunningham and Male Chorus Finale . ...... Ensemble 287 2 88 Efje Jtttttstrel g f)oto, 1911 Fifteenth Annual Performance, Lehigh University Minstrel Association. Broton Memorial all Sfcaturbap, December 16, 19U @liittv E. S. Colling, ' 12 Manager D. M. Dunbar, ' 13 Assistant Manager W. K. Hancock, ' 12 Cfjorufii Treasurer F. B. Miller, ' 12 R. W. Gilroy, ' 14 L. P. Wragg, ' 13 J. H. Sheppard, ' 13 R. M. Xeff, ' 14 D. F. Wallace, 13 H. S. Rowland, ' 13 J. J. Santry, ' 14 S. H. W. Ford, 13 C. W. Francis, ' 13 H. A. Brown, ' 15 W. B. Todd, ' 14 B. B. Quirk, ' 13 S. T. Mitman, ' 15 J. 0. LlEBIG, ' 14 T. J. Quinn, ' 13 H. B. Tinges, ' 12 R. A. Laedlein, ' 14 H. D. Baldwin, ' 14 F. J. Gerhard, ' 13 J. R. Danner, ' 14 A. C. Cooper, ' 14 F. J. Bartholomew, ' 13 J. S. Gemmel, ' 14 L. R. Hussa, ' 15 Msfjera Culliney, ' 12 Kennedy, ' 12 Terwilliger, ' 12 LOANE, ' 12 Youry, ' 12 Carpenter, ' 13 Speed, ' 12 289 program Captain of the Lehigh First Mate of the Lehigh Captain of the Marines . Mutt i _ • Two renegade negroes . Jeff ) A Stowaway Scene: Deck of the good ship $art I Cast Lehigh. E. S. Colling, 12 H. W. Porter, 12 A. C. Fuller, 12 t T A. Bryant, l 3 C. L. Packard, 14 Lee Chandler, J 5 Time Early Morning. fflustcal lumbers Opening Chorus — Introducing songs of the sea from Pinafore, Mikado, Sailing, Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep, When the Bell in the Lighthouse Tolls, and Fair on the Mountain Side. Oceana Roll ........ Mr. Liebig Good Xight, Dear ....... Mr. Wragg King of the Bungaloos ...... Mr. Chandler I Want a Girl ........ Mr. Fuller Cancel That Wedding March ..... Mr. Packard Deck-hand Dick Messrs Wragg, Packard, Hussa and Colling Good-bye ......... Mr. Colling That Mysterious Rag ....... Mr. Bryant Finale — Introducing We ' ll Travel Back to Old Lehigh, Written especially for this performance by E. S. Colling. The Alma Mater Dancing $art II Refreshments 290 iUfngfj ©mbersitp Cfjoir, 1911=1912 1912 J. W. MlLNOR M. R. Sutherland J. S. Long J. M. Fritz B. H. Spencer A. L. O ' Brien 1913 M. M. Shaw E. A. AURAND H. W. MOTTER W. C. Fry F. C. Messenger C. W. Miller F. C. Williams W. B. Clem mitt 0. B. Church 1914 P. M. Teeple J. 0. LlEBIG J. W. Albrecht 1915 S. T. Mitmax A. V. Bodine 0. E. Mills D R. Vanneman H. W. Shockley C. W. Trumbore 291 292 L. T. Snyder P. A. Lambert, Jr. H. W. Porter, Cymbals E. A. Aurand, Snare Drum F. J. Bartholomew, Cornet ©tlittvi ifflcmbera 1912 1913 Conductor Business Manager L. T. Snyder, Clarinet C. W. Miller, ass Drum F. I. Wheeler, fiass Horn F. R. Abbott, Snare Drut O. B. Church, Baritone S. W. Laird, Cornet F. H. Madden, Cornet R. M. Pierson, Piccolo F. T. Gatch, Trombone H. S. McCauley, 4 to orn W. A. Schrempel, Cornet 1915 C. M. Schriver, Cymbals L. V. R. Townsend, Snare Drum C. F. Vance, Clarinet 293 H. M. Benjamin, ' 12 P. A. Lambert, Jr., ' : Jftrfit Violin H. M. Benjamin, ' 12 K. G. Van Sickle, ' 14 J. C. Miller, ' 15 S. Hadaway, ' 14 Cornet F. J. Bartholomew, ' it, O. B. Church, ' 15 H. S. Rowland, ' 13 ©rcfjestfra 1911 = 1912 Mtmbtri Cello fiiano Urumsf anb QTraps E. A. Auraxd, ' i ? Conductor Manager £ econb Violin O. B. Ackerly, Jr., ' 13 J. L. Harkness, ' 14 H. Bergstresser, ' 15 F. C. Brockman, ' 15 Clarinet L. T. Snyder, ' 12 C. F. Vance. ' 15 P. A. Lambert, Jr., ' 12 205 cAb 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 The Henry S. Haines Memorial Scholarship Lacrosse Championship The Lehigh Quarterly Free Tuition Cane Rushes Physical Laboratory First Freshman-Sophomore Interclass Contest Supply Bureau ..... Lacrosse Championship .... Brown and White ..... Honor System ..... Athletic Advisory Committee . . Fraternity Night ..... The Lehigh Quarterly .... Students ' Club Room .... Lacrosse Championship .... 296 879 868 86 9 869 871 871 872 From 1867 to Established in Erected by R. H. Sayre, Esq., in Completed in In Established in Established in Erected in 1873 Founded in 1874 Issued by Class of 1878 Erected in 1878 Established in 1881 . 1883 Opened in 1883 Completed in 1885 Established in 1887 Completed in 1887 Established in 1887 Established in 1889 [890 Founded in Abolished September, Abolished in Erected in 1892 n 1892 2-1893 Established 92 . 1893 Established in 1894 Adopted in 1894 Organized in 1894 Established in 1894 Suspended publication in 1894 Opened in 1895 . 1895 Lacrosse Championshi] Week-day Chapel . The Forum . Lacrosse Championshi] The Burr 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 Coxe Mining Laboratory Die Alte Brauerie Compulsory Athletics Donat: ot $ . 1896 Abolished in 1896 Established in 1896 . 1897 Suspended publication 1897 Resumed 1898 Burned 1900 Opened in 1901 Opened in 1Q02 . Opened in 1903 Resumed 1904 Publication resumed 1904 Built 1904 Built 1905 Discontinued 1906 00,000 towards Dormitory System 1906 Completed in 1907 Completed in 1907 Completed in 1908 Established in 1908 Donation ol Testing Laboratory 1909 Presented 1909 Presented 1909 Completed in 19 10 Remodeled in 19 12 Inaugurated in 191 2 $3rr9iornts of fclmurrsih ' Henry Coppee, LL.D. . John M. Leavitt, D.D. Robert A. Lamberton, LL.D. Henry Coppee, LL.D. William H. Chandler, Ph.D. Thomas M. Drown, LL.D. Willtam H. Chandler, Ph.D. Henry S. Drinker, E.M., LL.D. Acting President 1865-1875 1875-1879 1880-1893 1893-1895 1895-1895 1S95-1904 1904-1905 1905 297 Wilbur g cfjolars 1874 W. D. Hartshorne 888 S. W. Frescoln 1 90 1 187s A. E. Meaker 889 J. Lockett 1902 C. L. Taylor 890 A. H. Van Cleve 1903 1877 H. S. Jacoby 891 W. FORSTALL 1904 1879 R. H. Tucker 892 A. E. Lister 1905 1880 M. M. Duncan 893 H. B. Evans 1906 1881 A. P. Crilly 894 J. L. Neufeld W. B. Keim 1907 1882 C. C. Hopkins 895 1908 1883 P. A. Lambert 1896 W. J. BlEBER 1909 1884 L. B. Semple 897 W. E. Brown 1910 1885 W. H. Cooke 898 H. J. Horn E. G. Grace 1911 1886 J. K. Surls H. S. Fisher 899 1912 1887 900 A. W. Bayard 1913 E. B. Wilkinson W. F. Roberts P. T. Krause O. J. Haller S. H. Fleming S. J. Cort R. L. Charles J. H. Clewell, Jr. R. P. Heller R. P. More P. L. GlNDER J. F. Herr Chimin Chu-Fuh iPresibents of tfje Alumni Association 1876- 77 1877- 78 1878- 79 1879- 80 1880- 81 1881- 82 1882- 83 1883- 8 4 1884- 85 188s- 86 1886- 87 1887- 88 C. E. Ronaldson i 888- 89 Chas. Bull 1900- ' C. E. Ronaldson 889- 90 Chas. Bull 1901- ' W R. Butler 890- 91 G. A. Jenkins 1902— ' H S. Drinker 891- 92 R. P. Linderman 1903- ' C. W. Haines 892- 93 W. H Baker 1904- C. L. Taylor 893- 94 T. M. Eynon 1905- ' R. W. Mahon 894- 95 F. P. Howe 1906- H F. J. Porter H. Williams, Jr. 895- 96 H. B Reed 190 7-] E. ,S t ,f, 97 L. 0. Emmerich 1908- ' E. H. Williams, Jr. 897- 98 R. P. Linderman 1909- ' W M. Scudder 898- 99 H. F. J. Porter 1910- w M. Scudder S99- 00 W. R Butler 191T- A. Johnston J. A. Jardine H. A. Porterfield H. A. FOERING R. G. Cooke F. R. Dravo H. H. Stoek H. S. Miner L. R. Zollinger E. G. Grace R. E. Laramy S. D. Warriner 1883 J. McK. Graeff, ' 85 1 892 1884 C. A. JUNKEN, ' 85 893 188s H. H. Bowman, ' 85 894 1886 B. A. Cunningham, ' 87 89s 1887 B. A. Cunningham, ' 87 896 1888 H H. McClintic, ' 89 897 1889 W BUTTERWORTH, ' 89 897 1889 c Walker. ' 89 898 1890 H W. Biggs, ' 91 899 1 89 1 E. 0. Robinson, ' 91 900 1891 C. W. Throckmorton, ' 92 90 1 baseball Captains B. E. Woodcock, ' 92 C. W. Gearhart, ' 93 J. G. Petrikin, ' 95 C. H. Thompson, ' 94 S. P. Senior, ' 97 J. W. Gannon, ' 98 C. F. Carman, ' 99 E. G. Grace, ' 99 E. G. Grace, ' 99 W. T. James, ' 01 F. W. Parsons, ' 02 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 °3 J. K. Lilley, ' 03 H. W. ElSENHART W. W. Brush, 05 F. B. Snyder, ' 05 P. Mackall, ' 07 P. Mackall, ' 07 L. F. Galbraith, ' 08 T. M. Uptegraff, ' 09 J. Anderson, ' 10 J. Fisher, ' ii A. C. MacHardy, ' 13 Jfootball Captains J. S. Robeson, ' 86 H. W. Frauenthal, ' i W. R. Pierce, ' 87 W. Bradford, ' 88 C. W. Corbin, ' 89 C. Walker, ' 82 S. D. Warriner, ' 90 D. Emery, ' 91 W. W. Blunt, ' 92 M. McClung, Jr., ' 94 M. McClung, Jr., ' 94 1893 G. Ordway, ' 94 1902 1894 C. E. Trafton, ' 95 1903 1895 C. E. Trafton, ' 95 1904 1896 F. H. Gunsolus, ' 98 1905 1897 F. H. Gunsolus, ' 98 1906 1898 J. C. Holderness, ' 99 1907 i898- ' 99 M. Chamberlain, ' 00 1908 1900 F. B. Gearhart, ' 01 1909 1901 J. T. Fuller, ' 03 191 1 1902 A. L. Dornin, ' 03 191 1 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, ' ii C. R. Wylie, Jr., ' 13 1886 C. P. Coleman. ' 8 1887- ' 90 A. K. Reese, 1891 H. C. Banks, 92 1892 C. T. Mosman, ' 9. 1893 T. H. Symington 1894 G. Ordway, ' 94 1895 J. C. Dicks, ' 95 F. Bartles, ' 96 1896 Resi gned Hacrosse Captains 1897 1898 1899 1900 1 90 1 1901 1902 1903 T. Merriman, ' 97 1904 G. Baily, ' 04 E H. Symington •98 1905 W L. Estes, ' 05 W H. Gummere, 99 1906 J. B. Carlock, ' 07 J. K. DlGBY, ' 00 1907 fc B. Carlock, ' 07 J. E. Symington, ' oi 1908 C Duncan, ' 08 A R. Young, ' 01 1909 W R. Morris, ' 09 C. I. Lattig, ' 03 1910 A. S. Osbourne, ' i c. I. Lattig, ' 0.; 191 1 R. S. Dunn, ' 12 1912 A. M. Kennedy, ' i 29S Zi)t Proton atto WtyU Cbttora W. C. Anderson, ' 94 W. S. Merrill, ' 94 William Warr, ' 95 M. W. Pool, ' 96 J. W. Thurston, ' 96 B. O. Curtis, ' 97 John Boyt, ' 97 G. D. Heisley, ' 98 J. R. Farwell, ' 98 J. D. Lindsey, Jr., ' 98 M. C. Benedict, ' 99 J. A. Schultz, ' 00 E. B. Wilkinson, ' 01 R. E. Thomas, ' 02 D. Smith, ' 03 R. P. Hutchinson, ' 04 R. L. Talley, ' 04 P. G. Spilsbury, ' 05 T. R. Angle, ' 05 W. C. Benedict, ' 06 X. M. Merriman, ' 05 C. F. Gilmore, ' 06 J. B. Oarlock, ' 07 R. J. Gilmore, ' 07 L. Heck, ' 08 C. U. Shank, ' 09 J. H. Graybill, ' 10 L. P. Gilmore, ' 10 D. R. Lowry, ' 11 J. L. Becker, ' i i E. E. Yake, ' 12 justness Jflanagera E. A. Grissinger, ' 94 D. H. Kautz, ' 95 J. B. Given, ' 96 C. W. Thorn, ' 97 W. E. Underwood, ' 97 H. M. Daggett, Jr., ' J. B. Reddig, ' 98 O. C. Hannum, ' 99 C. Evans, Jr., ' 00 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., ' i i F. R. Speed, ' 12 299 Hi)t Cpitome Cbttorfi F. J. Porter, ' 78 P. Spalding, ' 80 C. Hopkins, ' 92 P. Smith, ' 84 R. H. Davis, ' 86 L. R. Zollinger, ' 88 C. H. Miller, ' 90 W. W. Blunt, ' 92 A. Weymouth, ' 94 W. S. Ayres, ' 96 J. B. Lindsey, Jr., ' D. G. McGarock, ' o R. M. Bird, ' 02 R. L. Talley, ' o-i C. F. GlLMORE, ' 06 A. Oram Fulton, ' o G. A. Caffall, ' 10 E. E. Yake, ' 12 R. H. Wilbur C. F. Zimele A. Johnson G. S. Hayes F. P. Fuller C. H. Vansant C. W. Thorn G. R. Jackson G. G. Underhil E. T. Miller A. S. Clay R. MacMinn A. P. S. Bellis D. R. Lowry 98 M. Duncan, ' 79 F. Haldeman, ' 81 Briggs, ' 93 M. Tolman, ' 85 T. Richards, ' 87 D. Farwell, ' 89 T. Morris, ' 91 H. Durfee, ' 93 Baker, Jr., ' 95 R. Hannum, ' 97 L. Robinson, ' 99 B. Wilkinson, ' 01 S. Chamberlain, Jr., ' 03 L. Street, Jr , ' 05 J. Gilmore, ' 07 R. Walters, ' 09 L. Becker, ' ii L. Rooney, ' 13 business Jfflanagers 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 J. L. Clarke 300 I ATHLETICSI II9IH9I2I 3°i lefngf) Umbergitp atretic Association Officers V. B. Edwards, ' 12 W. L. Wilson, ' 88 Chairman Secretary Committee H. S. Drinker, ' 71, ex-officio W. A. Wilbur J. L. Stewart W. L. Wilson, ' 88 H. R. Reiter S. D. Warriner, ' 90 E. G. Grace, ' 99 S. T. Harleman, ' 01 R. M. Bird, 02 V. B. Edwards, ' 12 G. M. Donaldson, ' 12 L. B. Knox, ' 12 A. B. Gorman ' 13 G. P. Flick, ' 14 302 FOOT -BALL 3° 3 C. R. Wylie, Jr., H. M. Smyth, ' 12 T. A. Bryant, ' i 5 Jfootball Reason of 191 1 Himup J. I. Vela, ' ii, left end R. B. Dayton, ' 14, left tackle L. B. Knox, ' 12, left guard C. R. Wylie, Jr., ' 12, center F. Bianco, ' 14, right guard H. A. Crichton, Captain Manager Assistant Manager W. F. Bailey, ' 14, right tackle G. P. Flick, ' 14, right end V. J. Pazzetti, ' 14, quarter-back M. M. Western, ' 14, left half-back E.J. McCaffrey, ' 14, right half-back 5, full-back O. B. Ackerly, Jr., 13, guard T. F. Hauser, ' 15, tackle E. B. C. Goyne, ' 14, end Substitutes; A. M. Kennedy, ' 12, full-back E. F. Price, ' 13, quarter-back C. W. Van Xort, ' 13, end crut)£( R. Goldberg 1912 J. T. Martin A. McKenzie H. R. Cox G. E. Harris, Jr. H. K. Rouse W. J. Schmidt M. M. Shaw H. W. Tice E. C. Wilson F. W. Green G. L. Schmutz E. W. Wilcox, Jr. 30S 3° 6 Capt. C. R. Wylie, Jr., Cer Pat is a resident of Wellesley Hills, Mass., and preped at Wellesley High School. He is 21 years old, 5 ft. 10A in. in height and weighs 158 lbs. He is noted for his good judg- ment in running the team, besides his wonderful ability to carry the ball in a broken field. Pat ' s punting was a feature in many of the games. A resident of Pottstown. Doc was center of the Hill School team for three years. He is 21 years old, weighs 164 lbs., and is 5 ft. ; in. in height. This is Doc ' s third season on the ' Varsity team, and he is one of the most consistent players that ever came to Lehigh. Capt. -Elect V. •tti. Jr.. Quarterback 3°; Joe is 21 years old, weighs 173 lbs., and is 6 ft. 1 in. in height. His residence is in Quito, Ecuador. He was a star at Bethlehem Prep before coming to Lehigh, where he has had an equally brilliant career on the gridiron. J. I. V Date preped at Marietta Acad- emy and lives at Xew Martinsville, W. Va. He is 20 years old, 5 ft. 10 , in. tall and weighs iqi lbs. Date proved to be one of the most aggres- sive men in the line, both on the defense and the offense. R. B. Dayton, Left Tackle 30! L. B. Knox, Left Guard Tony hails from Roslyn, Wash., and received his early training at the Bethlehem Prep School. He is 21 years old, 6 ft. tall and weighs 175 lbs. Much is to he expected of Tony next fall after his commend- able work on the ' Varsity during the season just past. Bunny is an even 6 ft. in height, weighs 175 lbs. and is 2.} years old. He lives at Christiania, Pa., and he was one of F. and M. Academy ' s stel- lar attractions before he became a member of the Brown and White team. Bunny has the distinction of being the only member of this year ' s team who has played on a win- ning team against Lafayette, which was in 1908, when Lehigh won, 1 r-5. 3°9 Fred Bianco, Right Guard W. F. Bailey. Right Tackle Flicker came here from Borden- town Military Institute. He is 21 years old, 5 ft. 9 in. tall, and weighs 153 lbs. Besides playing his regular position at end, he frequently played in the back field, where he proved to be a most consistent ground-gainer. His tackling was most spectacular. Bill is 23 years old, 6 ft. 1 in. in height, and weighs 182 lbs. He preped at Mt. Hermon School and lives at Summit, N. J. Bill played much more consistently this season than during his freshman year, and should prove to be one of our most valuable linesmen next fall. 310 G. P. Flick. Right End Wees is 21 years old, 5 ft. 11 in. in height and weighs 170 lbs. He is a resident of Detroit, Mich., and preped at the Detroit University School. His dashing style of play, especially in the open field, won him many admirers. H. M. Western. Left Halfback Mac preped at Exeter and lives at Boston, Mass. He is 23 years old, s ft. ni in. in height and weighs 169 lbs. His playing throughout the entire season was hard and con- sistent, which made him one of the most relia ble men in the back field. E. J. McCaffrey. Right Halfback 3 11 Harry weighs 175 lbs., is 6 ft. 1 in. in height and is 19 years old. He is a resident of Bethlehem, and was at Bethlehem Prep School be- fore he came to Lehigh. Harry played a brilliant game in the back field all fall, and even greater achieve- ments are expected from him on the ' Varsity next season. H. A. Crichton, Fullback Bunny is iq years old, 6ft. 1 in. in height and weighs 196 lbs. He received his early training at Borden- town Military Institute, and is a resident of Yonkers, X. Y. Xext season should find Bunny a regu- lar in the line, judging from his good work during the past season. Ackerly, Guard 312 F. Hauser, Guard Eck came here from Bethlehem Prep School, and lives at Schenec- tady, X. Y. He is 23 years old, weighs 146 lbs. and is 5 ft. S in. in height. Eck is a very aggressive player, and proved his worth in every game he played. Tubby hails from White Haven. Pa., and preped at Staunton Military Academy. He is 19 years old, weighs 188 lbs., and is 5 ft. 9 in. in height. In the several games played Tubby always gave a good account of himself, and he should be a valu- able man to next year ' s team. 3 1 , Van hails from Scranton and preped at Scranton High School. He is 20 years old, 6 ft. 2 in. in height and weighs 160 lbs. Van proved to be one of the finds of the sea- son by his hard, consistent work in several of the games. He is ex- pected to be one of next year ' s regulars. Andy is 21 years old, 5ft. q 2 in. tall and weighs 175 lbs. He preped at Rayon High School, and lives at Youngstown, ' . During his four years at Lehigh, Andy has played a back field position in many ' Varsity games, although oftentimes handi- capped by an injured ankle, but always putting up a strong, aggres- sive game. ft- PS B Is Van Nort, Center 314 H. M. Smyth, Manager Bosy has now been at Lehigh for two seasons and was recently made Professor ol Physical Educa- tion. Under his care and direction athletics have taken a wonderful boom, which can readily be seen from the records of the teams, and even better results are anticipated next year. Besides his ability as a coach, Bosy has displayed no small amount of oratorical powers, usually present- ing themselves at college meetings. Pinky is a resident of Pottsville, Pa., and attended Bethlehem Prep School before entering Lehigh. Ib- is exceptionally popular among his fellow-students, and has taken a prominent part in many of the col- lege activities. It is through his efforts that the team had such a good schedule arranged for them, and the careful attention they re- ceived during the entire season was obtained only by his able manage- ment. R. Reiter, Coach 3 5 JfootMl Reason of 1911 THE season of 191 1 opened with brighter prospects than usual, owing to the amount of good material entering College and the return of more L men this year than in previous years. Practice began September 1st, under the able direction of Coach Reiter and Captain Wylie. The large number of men reporting for practice so early in the season made things look bright for a winning team. The first two games of the season were easy victories, but the third game, which was played with Bucknell, was lost in the last few minutes of play, Bucknell kicking a goal from the field. One of the big surprises that the Big Brown Team pulled off was the game with Princeton, which resulted in a tie score. The team journeyed to Princeton, backed by some 400 students in a special train to give Princeton what they thought would be a midweek practice game. The showing of the men in this game certainly reflected great credit on the team. The 45-yard run for a touchdown by Bunny Knox was the sensational feature of the game. Great was the joy of the students when entering the football field to see the score in favor of Lehigh, and the reception given the team on its return by the whole student body was typical of the loyal support given to all Lehigh teams. The score, while a tie, was really a victory for Lehigh. We lost to Swarthmore and West Point, but some of the first expectations of the season were realized when we defeated the strong Ursinus team; then, later, Franklin and Marshall, and Haverford, thus securing revenge for the defeats Lehigh suffered from these teams last season. We lost to our ancient rival, Lafayette, by the score of 1 1 to o, owing to the superior playing by Lafayette at the critical moment. The game put up by The Big Brown Team is a memory to be cherished by the whole student body as well as the large number of alumni who were present. In the first half Lehigh outplayed Lafayette, but was unable to score. In the second half both teams came back strong, but Lafayette at two critical moments of the game succeeded in scoring. While the result of the game was a deep disap- pointment, it was a clean, well-fought exhibition of football. In this connection we do not wish to detract any credit from Lafayette, for a team that can win against the fight that the Lehigh team put up deserves no small amount of credit. The playing of Joe Vela at left end was one of the main features of the game. Time after time Joe not only broke up the interference but got the man with the ball. It is to be regretted that Joe will not be with the squad again next year. The last game of the season was played with the strong Georgetown team, and resulted in a defeat for Lehigh. There is little to be said of the playing of our 316 team other than that every man, ably led by Captain Wylie, played the hardest game that he was capable of, and very often under adverse conditions. While quite a few L men will be lost by graduation, the return of the bal- ance of the squad, which was an exceptionally large one this year, makes very bright the prospects of a more successful season in iyi2. ecorb of amesi September 27 Lebanon Valley . Lehigh 44 September 30 Western Maryland s Lehigh 11 October 6 Bucknell 3 Lehigh October 1 1 Princeton 6 Lehigh 6 October 2 1 Ursinus Lehigh 5 October 28 West Point 20 Lehigh November 4 Haverford . Lehigh 12 November 1 1 Swarthmore 9 Lehigh 2 November 18 Franklin and Marshall Lehigh 8 November 25 Lafayette 11 Lehigh November 30 Georgetown 28 Lehigh 3 Total — Opponents 82 Lehigh 9i 317 3i8 BASEBALL 3i9 3 2 ° eam Substitutes 1911 F. E. Rasmers J. I. Vela 1912 J. T. Martin R. W. Over 191 3 G. C. Hill 1914 F. T. Gatch Reason of 1911 Jeremy Fisher, ' 11 Captain Albert P. Spooxer, ' ii Manager Ralph P. Baird, ' 12 Assistant Manager Ralph Caldwell Coach eam J. Fisher, ' ii, third base R. W. Kempsmith, ' ii, right field F. S. Bordex, ' 11, left field J. A. Rose, ' ii, short-stop H. R.Shellenberger, ' 14, pitcher W. G. Bell, ' 14, catcher F. E. Driscoll, ' 14, center field H. S. Sterlixg, ' 14, first Ikisc A. C. MacHardy, ' 13, second base Manager Sf L EHIGH ' S 191 1 baseball season opened at Frank- lin Field on March 2Qth, when Lehigh held the strong Pennsylvania team to a 3-0 score on a cold March day. The next game was played at West Point, where Lehigh, through her timely hitting, beat the Cadet representatives, 6 to 3. On Easter Saturday the team journeyed to Ithaca, where we met Cornell, and on as cold and disagreeable a day as the previous games were played, met defeat, 5 to 2. It can be said that three of Cornell ' s runs were due to a high wind which our fielders were not accus- tomed to, while the Cornell garden men were sea- soned to the changing blasts from Lake Cayuga. Lehigh auspiciously opened her season at home on the 19th of April, when she met and defeated the fast Tufts team, 1-0, in a seven-inning game, called early because of a heavy rain. The team next met Franklin and Marshall on the 29th of April, on her own field, before a large Junior Week crowd. In this game Lehigh lost, -2, because of loose playing and inability to hit the ball when hits meant runs, having more hits than her opponents did off Shellenberger. On the following Saturday, May the 6th, at Xew Brunswick, the team showed its usual fast, snappy style of play, and shut Rutgers out, 3-0, in a fast, interesting 10-inning game. The first game of the Lafayette series was next played at Easton, where we were defeated, 2-0, by Long ' s masterly pitching, who allowed but one hit Shellenberger pitched no less phenomenal ball, and our rivals succeeded in getting only two hits from him; but errors at critical times enabled Lafayette to defeat us. This defeat by Lafayette started a slump, as the following Saturday, May 13th, we were defeated, 4-1, by Swarthmore on their new Athletic Field at Swarthmore, which was in very poor condition, causing the fielding of both teams to be slow. Fisher ' s home run in the seventh inning was responsible for Lehigh ' s lone tally. In a game replete with arguments and the spiking of Resch, of Pratt, by Mac- Hardy, which rivaled the spiking of Baker, the Athletic ' s famous third sacker, during the World ' s Series, Pratt held Lehigh to a tie, - . The game outside of the mentioned incidents was devoid of interest, both teams playing listless ball, and because of the poor arrangements made by the Pratt management, the game had to be called at the end of the ninth inning to enable the Pratt team to take a special train, which was hired by the Pratt students, who were in Bethlehem on an inspec- tion trip to the Bethlehem Steel Works. Penn State, one of the strongest college teams of the season, crossed bats with our team on Lehigh field, May the 24th. State put the game on ice in the first inning by scoring four runs, while later in the game two runs were scored by each team, Rose and MacHardy contributing Lehigh ' s only points. After the first inning, when our team settled down, the game was as fast and exciting as could be desired by any fan, Lehigh backing Shellenberger up well, and putting up a good, up-hill fight; but State ' s lead could not be overcome. The second game of the Lafayette series was the most brilliant in the eyes of the loyal Lehigh fan. On Memorial Day, before a large crowd on March Field, at Easton, the Lehigh team came to its own, defeating Lafayette 7 to 1. Shellen- berger pitched masterly, allowing the Lafayette batsmen two hits, while Lehigh drove Fager out of the box in the fourth inning, when scoring two runs on three hits. Lehigh ' s first tallies were due to a home run by Borden along the third base line with Rose on first, while the remaining runs were earned by eight timely hits. Because of rain the game with Manhattan had to be cancelled, and the last game of the season was played with Lafayette on June 10th, in South Bethlehem, before the largest crowd that has ever turned out at a Commencement Week game. The stand and new bleachers were completely filled, and crowds gathered in the outfield, necessitating ground rules. Lehigh was shut out, 5-0, due solely to the wonderful pitching of Long, who did not allow the Lehigh men to see the ball, while Lafayette bumped Shellenberger hard, and only fast fielding prevented a larger score. S f)cllcnbcrger $itcfjet) Eacf) € amt iPttcfjer ' si ftecorb GAME Pennsylvania West Point Cornell Tufts (seven innings) Franklin and Marshall Rutgers (10 innings) Lafayette . Swarthmore Pratt Penn State Lafayette Lafayette A.B. S.o. 34 5 36 4 26 1 1 33 9 34 12 3° 6 38 4 3i 10 3 7 3 3 2 7 3 7 4 B.B. YV.P. patting Jftdbtng PLAYER Fisher id Borden if. Driscoll c.f. Kempsmith 1st, r.f Sterling c, 1st MacHardy 2d Gatch c.,r.f. Rose s.s. Shellenberg ER p. Bell C. I. A.B. R. H. B.AV. O. 07 41 6 I I 268 14 07 42 3 9 214 17 98 41 3 8 J 95 8 °7 36 2 6 167 56 95 40 1 6 1 50 107 07 36 3 5 J 39 2 7 22 9 1 1 1 1 10 07 3 s 4 4 105 12 07 39 4 3 077 3 64 23 1 000 47 816 000 Soo 949 9S3 .914 .000 883 S 5 4 easou of 19U March 29 University of Pennsylvania . Away April 8 West Point . Away April 15 Cornell .... Away April 19 Tufts (7 innings) . Home April 22 Fordham .... Away April 29 Franklin and Marshall . Home May 6 Rutgers (10 innings) Away May 10 Lafayette .... Away May 1 3 Swarthmore Away May 20 Pratt Institute Home May 24 Penn State Home May 3° Lafayette .... Away June 3 Manhattan .... Home June 10 Lafayette .... Home Opp. Rain Rain Total 3 2 3 3 3 2 4 LACROSSE 325 326 Hacros;$e ®eam Captain Dunn Reason 191 1 R. S. Dunn, ' 12 Captain Merle I. Terwilliger, ' 12 Manager W. G. Crowell Coach QCeam J. G. McCoy, ' ii, in-home F. B. Speed, Jr., ' 13, out-home R. B. Williams, ' 12, 1st attack H. D. Jay, ' 14, 2nd attack R. S. Dunn, ' 12, 3rd attack E. A. Wheaton, ' 12, center F. R. Speed, ' 12, 3rd defense T. R. Davies, ' ii, 2nd defense K. R. Raynor, ' 12, 1st defense W. C. Carson, ' ii, cover point A. M. Kennedy, ' 12, point J. A. Hart, ' 12, goal gmtjstttutea C. A. Shulz, ' 12 G. M. Donaldson, ' 12 A. G. Martin, ' 12 G. E. Harris, Jr., ' 13 Carl Hartdegan, Jr.. ' 14 Man ser Terwilliger 27 28 Hacrogge ®eam T ' HE 191 1 Lacrosse season opened under very discouraging conditions. On a field covered with mud and swept with a driving rain, the team lost their first game when the Carlisle Indians piled up six tallies in the second half and won by a score of 7 to 1. The second game resulted in a victory for Lehigh, when on the Monday following the In- dian game, the team met and defeated Cornell. The victory over Cornell seemed to give our team a great stimulus. In the game with the Navy, the first away from home, our men were played off their feet in the first half, but in the last half they came back and played their opponents to a standstill. With the same fighting spirit that marked the close of the Navy game, our men enteied the Mt. Washington game, and it was only after an extra ten minutes of play that our team lost what was conceded by followers of the sport in that section to have been the best game played on those grounds for many years. The following Saturday our team played their third home game, and showed great development by the spectacular victory after an uphill fight against the New York Lacrosse Club. Lehigh easily won the first League game against Stevens, and travelled to Baltimore to meet Johns Hopkins with the very brightest of hopes. Not until the blowing of the final whistle was the issue de- cided and Hopkins assured of victory. Quoting from a Baltimore paper: The whole Lehigh team was evenly balanced, and their excellent stick work and effective body checking came close to being the defeat of the Hopkins team. Lehigh ' s attack was as fast as lightning and played complete rings around the Hopkins defense. In the final game of the season Lehigh lost to Swarthmore. inci- dentally dropping into third place in the Intercollegiate Lacrosse League. Of last year ' s team we lose two by graduation and ex-Captain Dunn, who has dropped College for a year. With the rest of the team back, and the excellent material in College at the present time, we should be able to turn out one of the fastest teams that has represented Lehigh in years, and close the 191 2 season with a Championship Banner. Captai Ke: ecorb of ame April 8 — Indians April 10 — Cornell April 13 — Navy April 15 — Mt. Washington 6 Total- . 7 Lehigh 2 . 2 Lehigh 5 . 7 Lehigh 2 n 6 Lehigh 4 April April May May 22— X. Y. L. C. 28 — Stevens 6 — Johns Hopkins 1 3 — Swarthmore 2 Lehigh 3 3 Lehigh q 6 Lehigh 4 6 Lehigh 4 Opponents 59 Lehigh 33 329 CLASS OF 1492 33° 33 1 33- Captain Da vsoi tKratfe eam Reason of 1911 J. R. Dawson, ' ii . Captain J. L. Becker, ' ii . Manager E. E.Wright, ' 1 2 4 ssistant Ma nager J. J. Guiney . . ( ' oach Ceam J. R. Dawson, ' i i O. H. Smith, ' i i A. T. Schultz, ' 12 L. B. Kxox, ' 12 H. J. Williams, ' 12 C. W. Van Nort, ' 13 C. D. BlCKLEY, ' 14 R. E. Mickel, ' 14 O. L. J. Graham, ' ii Arthur Wells, ' ii David Davies, ' 12 H. B. Tinges, ' 12 A. B. Gorman, ' 13 W. F. Bailey, ' 14 F. W. Binzen, ' 14 C. T. Murphy, ' 14 C. E. Siebecker, ' 14 ALTHOUGH the success of the 1911 Track Team was not especially brilliant, it was easily on a par with the successes of the other spring sports. There was not a wealth of track material in College, but the earnest and consistent efforts of Coach Guiney developed what material there was and en- abled the team to gain the success it did. Haverford was defeated, but Rutgers proved a surprise. In the most exciting meet of the season Lafayette was tied, the result of the meet being in doubt up to the last moment. Swarthmore won the final meet. Lehigh had but few entries in the State Intercollegiate Meet at Harrisburg, but scored 17 points. Only four members of the team are lost by gradua- tion, and with the incoming material and good coaching the coming season should be one of the brightest in Lehigh ' s athletic history. 333 Captain-elect Schi JXecorb of fflttt abcrforb bs. ILehtgfj ittap 3, 1911 EVENT FIRST SECOND RECORD ioo Yards Dash Thomas, H. Williams, L. 10 1-5 sec. 220 Yards Dash Murphy, L. Thomas, H. 23 sec. 440 Yards Dash Jones, H. Gorman, L. 54 2-5 sec. 880 Yards Run Falconer, H. Knox, L. 2 m. 8 3-5 sec. Mile Run Wadsworth, H. MlCKEL, L. 4 m. 53 1-5 sec Two-mile Run Dawson, L. Smith, L. 1 1 m. 9 sec. Pole Vault Graham, L. Van Xort, L. 10 ft. High Jump Froelicher, H. Nicholson, H. 5 ft. 3 in. Broad Jump Froelicher, H. Murphy, L. 19 ft. 3 in. 120 Yards Hurdles Graham, L. Wadsworth, H 17 2-5 sec 220 Yards Hurdles Graham, L. Schultz, L. 2 7 3-5 sec - Shot Put Froelicher, H. Wells, L. 37 ft. 9 1-4 in. Hammer Throw Wells, L. Moon, H. 104 ft. 1 in. Discus Throw Bailey, L. Moon, H. 99 ft. 3 in. Halaptttt bsi. Hehtgb iHap 17, 1911 EVENT FIRST SECOND RECORD 100 Yards Dash Spiegel, L. C. Murphy, L. U. 10 sec. 220 Yards Dash Murphy, L. U. Williams, L. L 23 2-5 sec. 440 Yards Dash Thomas, L. C. SWARTZ, L. C. 51 4-5 sec. 880 Yards Run Bannerman, L. C. Ellis, L. C. 2 m. 3 2-5 sec. Mile Run Schock, L. C. Mickel, L. U. 4 m. 35 sec. Two-mile Run Dawson, L. U. LaRue, L. C. 10 m. 20 3-5 sec Pole Vault Graham, L. U. Van Xort, L. U. 9 ft. 9 in. High Jump Rankin, L. C. Thomas, L. C. 5 ft- 3 in- Broad Jump Spiegel, L. C. Graham, L. U. 21 ft. 6 in. 120 Yards Hurdles Spiegel, L. C. Graham, L. U. 16 2-5 sec. 220 Yards Hurdles Spiegel, L. C. Schultz, L. U. 27 1-5 sec. Shot Put Wells, L. U. Bailey, L. U. 37 ft. 8 1-2 in. Hammer Throw Wells, L. U. Bailey, L. U. 119 ft. 1 1-2 in. Scores Haverford 50 points Lehigh 62 points Rutgers 55 points Lehigh 49 points Lafayette . 52 points Lehigh 52 points Swarthmore 58 points Lehigh 43 points Intercollegiates Lehigh 17 points 334 BASKET BALL 335 336 Pagfeetball ®eam Season 1911 1912 Substitutes More, ' 13 Shaw, ' 13 Geyer, ' 15 Griffith, ' 14 Schulz, ' 10 Norton, ' i 5 Buck, ' 15 Bennett, ' i s E. W. Cook, ' 12 . Captain E. E. Yake, ' 12 Manager A. K. Cosgrove, ' 13 . Assistant Manager tEeam jfortoarbs H. A. Crichton, ' 15 P. J. White, ' 14 A. ' K. White, ' 13 uarbs E. W. Cook, ' 12 B. E. Cole, ' 13 E. F. Price, ' 13 Center S. E. MUTHART, ' 13 Manager Yake Reason 1911=1912 NOT for many years has there been a basketball team whose season furnishes so much material for interesting reflection as that of the 191 1-1 91 2 quintette. The season opened early in December, and the schedule of fourteen games, eight at home and six away, was not finished until March 2nd. During the mid-season the team was somewhat handi- capped by the absence of several men from the game, due to sickness and injuries, and owing to these unfortunate incidents at least two games were lost to our opponents. As the season advanced the team developed uniformly and consistently, and when the climax of the schedule, con- sisting of the Brown, Pennsylvania State and Swarthmore games, was reached, the team was in the best of condition. The schedule was arranged so as to move up to a climax commensurate with the develop- ment of the team, and the result as shown in the scores seems to indicate that the plan worked out most successfully. Among the ten victories gained by the team, the ones to which the student body looks with pride are Swarthmore, Pennsylvania State and Brown. The only decisive defeat of the season was the one administered by Swarthmore, at a time when our team missed the services of one of its forwards. The game with Princeton was lost during the last few seconds of play, and was virtually a victory for Lehigh. The spectacular victory over Swarthmore in an intensely exciting game, on March 2nd, was a fitting crowning to Captain Cook ' s successful career of four years ' basket- ball at Lehigh. Eecorb of ameg December 6 Moravian College 19 Lehigh 61 December 13 Princeton. 2 7 Lehigh 26 December 20 Lebanon Valley 12 Lehigh 56 January 6 Albright . 3° Lehigh 37 January 10 Pratt Institute 15 Lehigh 56 January 13 Gettysburg 18 Lehigh 35 January 20 Brown 2 7 Lehigh 26 February 3 Delaware 18 Lehigh 52 February 7 University of Maryland 8 Lehigh 60 February 10 Pratt Institute 2 3 Lehigh 16 February 1 7 Swarthmore 38 Lehigh J 3 February 22 Brown 31 Lehigh 43 February 24 Penn State 33 Lehigh 35 March 2 Swarthmore 28 Lehigh 29 Total Opponents 327 Lehigh 545 GYM TEAM 339 34o Captai services of a good eoaeh. With consistent work a great improvement and ability has been shown by the entire squad, and there is no reason why the coming season should not be a successful one. g cf)ebule of ifleets Haverford vs. Lehigh, at home Feb. 17 Rutgers vs. Lehigh, away Mar. 2 Pennsylvania vs. Lehigh, at home Mar. 9 Intercollegiates, at Haverford Mar. 22 L Contest Mar. 30 (gpmuasrtum (Eeam fetasson 1911 1912 J. M. Bailey, ' 12 . Captain R. C. Fuller, ' 12 . Manager B. B. Quirk, ' 13 Assistant Manager James Kimball . Coach {Eeam J. M. Bailey, ' 12 C. D. Kester, ' 12 W. B. Menefee, ' 13 A. S. Horcasitas, ' 13 G. H. Weber, ' 14 E. S. Dewey, ' 14 P. M. Teeple, ' 14 Through graduation the Gym- nasium Team has lost several good men, and new material had to be developed for nearly every department. The team has been very fortunate in having the diligent and form 34- 342 ESTLI 343 344 Wrestling t t m i ¥ 4 n ► i BHK i Hi Captain St. John I. A. St. John V. B. Edwards R. J. Fahl . W. Sheridan . WRESTLING, a comparatively new sport at Lehigh, was brought into favor from the start, and resulted last year in having Intercollegiate meets at home for the first since its inaugu- ration two years ago. The calibre of the teams met and the outcome of these meets show that the sport was a decided success. Penn State and Cornell defeated our team, 5-2 and 6-1 respectively, but in neither case does the score indicate the evenness with which the teams were matched. In the latter meet two bouts lasted for fifteen minutes, and each time the bouts were lost to Lehigh only by decision. Both ' meets held at home, Princeton and Lafayette, were victories. The victory over Princeton really showed the success of our season, in that Princeton afterwards won the Intercolle- giate Championship. The appreciation of the team ' s good work was shown by the loyal support of the student body, and also by the Athletic Com- mittee in establishing wrestling as a minor sport. Three members of last year ' s team have been lost by graduation, but with the promise of new mate- rial, together with the services of an efficient coach, and meets already scheduled with Prince- ton, Navy, University of Pennsylvania and Lafay- ette, we can expect a most successful season. Captain Manager Assistant Manager Coach eam 115 Pounds G. D. Herr, ' i 3 J. S. Long, ' 13 (Sub.; 125 Pounds I. A. St. John, ' 12 135 Pounds P. T. Gatch, ' 14 F. B. Miller, 12 (Sub. 145 Pounds L. T. Mart, ' 13 G. P. Flick, ' 14 (Sub.) 158 Pounds H. W. Tice, ' is S. D. Williams. ' 13 (Sub.) 175 Pounds R. C. Watson, ' 13 B. B. Quirk, ' 13 (Sub.) Heavy Weight O. B. Ackerly, ' 13 (Sub.) 345 Manager Edwards Pest Hefjigl) Eecorbs EVENT 40 Yards Dash 100 Yards Dash 22(1 Yards Dash 440 Yards Dash Half-mile Run 1 ia- n ile Run Two-mile Run Half-mile Walk 1 iie-mile Walk Two-mile Walk Three-mile Walk 120 Yards Hurdles 220 Yards Hurdles Standing High Jump Standing Broad Jump Running High Jump Running Broad Jump Hammer Throw Shot Put Pole Vault Running High Kick Fence Vault HOLDER H. H. GODSHAI.L. ' 93 M. M. Duncan, ' 80 C. T. Murphy, ' 14 P. R. Van Duyne, ' 06 M. L. Smith, ' 07 J. T. Waddill, ' 07 J. R. Dawson, ' i i F. R. Coates, ' go F. R. Coates, ' 90 L. O. Emmerich, ' 82 R. B. Reed, ' 70 C. L. Aman, ' 09 C. L. Aman, ' 09 W. S. Murray, ' 95 W. J. McNulty, ' 80 H. M. Riley, ' 10 H. L. Pentz, ' 05 G. H. Crocker, ' 10 T. H. Sheridan, ' 08 (). L. J. Graham, ' i i J. F. Symington, ' 01 W. S. Murray, ' 95 346 date RECORD Feb. 27- iSgi 4 3-4 sec May 12, 1879 10 1-4 sec May 3, 1911 23 sec. June 3, 1903 54 sec. May 16, 1 906 2 m. 4 3-5 sec May 16, 1906 4 m. 42 3-5 sec. May 18, igio 10 m. 14 2-5 sec Feb. 20, 1890 3 m. 28 sec. May 18, 1891 7 m. 18 sec. Mav 3, 1879 1 7 m. 2 sec. May- 2(5, 1877 27 m. 46 sec. May 15, [909 16 see. Max- 12, 1909 27 sec. May 16, 1895 4 ft. 9 in. Oct. 1 1, 1876 9 ft 10 in. May 23, 1908 5 ft. 7 3-4 in. Max- 3 1, I()02 21 ft. 6 in. May 14. I9IO 120 ft. 8 1-2 in May 16, I907 39 ft. 6 in. May- 18, igiO 11 ft. 4 3-4 in. Mar. 9- I90I g ft. 1 7-8 in. Mav 16, 1895 6 ft. 10 in. J. I. Vela, ' ii C. R. Wylie, ' 13 G. P. Flick, ' 14 McCaffrey, ' 14 J. F. Hauser, ' 13 H. K. Rouse, ' 13 Jfootball Dayton, ' 14 F. Bianco, ' 14 V. J- Pazzetti, ' 14 Crichton, ' 15 A. M. Kennedy, ' i: E. F. Price, ' 13 L. B. Kxox, ' 12 W. F. Bailey, ' 14 M. M. Western-, ' 14 0. B. ACKERLEY, ' 13 E. C. Goyxe, ' 14 H. R. Cox, ' 13 J. Fisher, ' ii J. A. Rose, ' ii W. G. Bell, ' 14 iLtosrball F. S. Bordex, ' i i A. C. MacHardy, ' i, F. E. Driscoll, ' 14 R. W. Kempsmith, ' ii H. B. Shellexberger, ' 14 H. S. Sterling, ' 14 J. A. Hart, ' 12 T. R. Davies, ' i R. S. Dunn, ' 12 J. G. McCoy, ' ii K. M. Raynor, ' Hatvotet A. M. Kennedy, F. R. Speed, ' 12 H. D. Jay, ' 14 F. B. Speed, ' 13 W. C. Carson, ' ii E. A. Wheatox, ' 12 H. B. Williams, ' 12 G. M. Donaldson, ' i: J. R. Dawson, ' i i A. T. Schultz, ' 12 C. W. Van Nort, ' R. E. Mickel, ' 14 QDractt 0. L. J. Graham, ' i L. B. Knox, ' 12 H. R. Cox, ' 13 W. F. Bailey, ' 14 A. Wells, ' ii H. J. Williams, ' 12 C. T. Murphy, ' 14 pmnagtum R. W. J annus, ' ii Season of 19 1 1 . James Bailey, ' 12 347 fitter Claga ftracfe JWeet EVENT FIRST ioo Yards Dash Murphy, ' i High Jump Bleiler, ' i 880 Yards Run Dawson, ' i 20 Yards Hurdles Graham, ' i Mile Run Mickel, ' 14 220 Yards Dash Murphy, ' i. Shot Put Wells, ' i i Two-mile Run Smith, ' ii 220 Yards Hurdles Schultz, ' i Discus Throw 440 Yards Dash Hammer Throw Broad Jump Pole Vault Bailey, Harris, Wells, ' Graham, Graham, Spril 28, 19U SECOND THIRD record 4 Williams, ' 12 Wampler, ' 14 10 2-5 sec. 4 BlNZEN, ' 14 Howard, ' 14 5 ft. 2 in. :i Tinges, ' 12 Herrman. ' n 2 m. 10 sec. 1 Howard, ' 14 Baird, ' 12 17 4-5 sec. [■Davies, ' 12 Liebig, ' 14 4 m. 54 sec. 4 Williams, ' 12 Wampler, ' 14 24 1-5 sec. Bailey, ' 14 Jackson, ' 14 37 ft. 1 5-8 in. Dawson, ' i i Fowler, ' i 2 10 m. 43 sec. 2 Wampler, ' 14 Baird, ' 12 2t) 1-5 sec. [ Wells, ' ii Graham, ' j :i 107 ft. 5 5-8 in 1 Todd, ' 14 Baird, ' 12 58 2-5 sec. Bailey, ' 14 Smith, ' i i 113 ft. 8 3-8 in 1 SlEBECKER, ' 14 Murphy, ' 14 19 ft. 1 SlEBECKER, ' 14 Van Xort, ' i.3 11 ft. 3 in. Siebecker and Van Xort tied for second place in pole vault. g core 1911 Forty-four points Twenty-three points 1913 Two points 1 () 14 Fifty-four points 348 tennis gtesoctattou H. L. Cooper, C. W. Miller, W. H. Davis, President- Manager Secretary Treasurer jWembera J Gore, Jr. E. D. Wunder A. G. BlRDSALL F. I. Wheeler C. W. Miller A. J. KUTZLEB A. C. Cooper P. M. Teeple J W. Baker H. L. Cooper W. H. Davis W. F. Hadsall 1913 L. E. Carpenter C. W. VAX XORT V. W. Thompson H. R. Griffen 1914 F. R. Abbott H. A. Degler H. M. Smyth H. J. Williams A. F. Wotring A. K. White B. S. Shafer T. G. Shaffer L. F. Turnbull R. X. Boyd j. M. Bausmai F. G. Perley H. A. S. Howarth Jfacultp S S. Seyfert H. D. Gruber ecorb of Jllatetjea F. R. Speed H. Y. Eagle J. H. Sheppard M. D. Douglas D. M. Dunbar J. R. Dannkr C. Hoffman G. F. Wolfe G. W. Clinton, Jr. P. Hughes K. E. Hendricks May 13 May 17 May 24 May 28 Lehigh Lehigh Lehigh Lehigh Haverford Lafayette Lafayette Palmerton Tennis Club 191 1 Tennis Tournament won by H. L. Cooper, ' 12 349 if Jfounber ' g Bap Sports October 7, 1911 EVENT WINNER SCORE Relay Freshmen 3 min. 34 4-5 sec Baseball Freshmen 7-5 Football Freshmen 6-5 35 ' 1 1 mmf£ M h is opl)omore Jfootball ®eam PETTIGREW, t ' fJ J Street, 2- d, fe end Raese, te 7 tackle Horn, left tackle Burdick, left guard Faust, center Faherty, center Charxock. right guard Griffith, right tackle Lesesxe, right end Sanchez, right end Baker, quarter-back White, quarter -back Jay, left half-back Browne, right half-back Williamson, full back 352 g opfjomore pJaseball ©earn Lopez, right field Galloway, second base Bell, catcher Mayers, left field Browne, center field McCaffrey, third base Gatch, first base Howard, short-stop Driscoll, pitcher 353 g opt)omore Eelap ®eam Mickel Bicklev, Captain Schreiber Todd Ash 354 opfjomore aafcetball Utam Forwards ' HITE Center Turnbull Guards Griffith Todd Hohl Sindel Sanchez Mayers 355 • t 1% 1 I : 5  _5tt P m ■f : i S ' $9fe| - 9 ' if ' -■JB Jfregfjman Jfootball ®eam Boyd, right end Kennedy, left tackle Glesmann, right tat kle Davidson, left end Humphreys right guard Greenhalgh, quarter-back Laird, center Hazen, left half-back Collier, left guard LlNKE full back Wilcox, right half-back substitutes HUKILL Purvis VlTZTHUM 356 Jfregljman Baseball GTeam Greenhalgh, catcher Crichton, first base Evans, second base Geyer, third base Linke, right field Dickey, pitcher Albrecht, short-stop Vance, left field J. Miller, center field Chandler, right field Sieger, right field Steele, pitcher 357 Jfresfcman ftelap tEeam Burg Borgman, Captain Conxetti Xortox Keith 158 Jfregfjman pagfeetball GCeam Buck, Captain Geyer Wuchter Norton Royall Burg Bennett 359 Life is a jest, and all things show it; I thought so once, but now I know it. Baldy Stewart — You do not have to follow him far before he will hide behind a fog of words and then dare you to chase him out. Conference School — Miserable comforters are ye all. Joe Dawson — We wonder if he is a bachelor. Danner, ' 14 Degler, ' 14 ' As flies to wanton boys, are we to the gods. Hendricks — Wanted: A Protestant nursery-maid of good habits and character, having excellent recommendations, to take care of me. Dunning, ' 15 — Her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low — an excel- lent thing in woman. Wylie, ' 13 — And I learned about women from her. 360 The Commons — It ' s a good stomach that has no turning. Loane, ' 12 — A bold, bad man. Hanger, ' 12 — A blushing youth. Hartley, ' 12 Matthews, ' 13 ( Better thou hadst not been born than not to have Mervin, ' 14 [ pleased me better. Ingram, ' 15 ) Rafter, ' 13 — Nay, he reserved a blanket, else we had all been shamed. Siegel, ' 13 — As idle as a painted ship Upon a painted ocean. Guth, ' 12 — What could not be cured had to be endured. Messenger, ' 13 — Who thinks too little, and talks too much. Dunbar, ' 13 — A fine, bragging youth. Thorney ' s Office — He who enters here leaves hope behind. Examinations — For many are called, but few are chosen. Sultzer, ' 13 — Quantity, not quality. Gauss, ' 12 — My life is one horrid grind. Colling, ' 12 — His mouth is like sounding brass or tinkling cymbal. Wragg, ' 13 — I am bad, I am wicked, but I hope to be worse bye and bye. Chapel — Medicine for the soul. 361 McKenzie, ' 12 — Much may be made of a Scotchman if he be caught young. Harris, ' 13 — Water, water, everywhere, Nor any drop to drink. McKibbex — A mighty hunter, and his prey was man. Petitions — A gentle lie avoids trouble. Pittixger, ' 14 — God made him, and therefore let him pass for a man . ' ' Economic Lectures — Many are called, but few answer. Cunningham, ' 1 2 ) Sanford, ' 17 ( (lo , , , Sweep on, ye fat and greasy citizens. oULTZER, 13 I Lewis, ' 14 j Williams, ' 12 — The first in virtue as in face. Junior Oratorical Contest — Here was an abusery of God ' s patience and the King ' s English. Thornev ' s Office — For fools rush in where angels fear to tread. Matamoros, ' 13 — A stream of rich, distill ' d perfumes. Ingram, ' 15 — Framed to make women false. Williams, ' 13 ) .,_, ,. „ ,, „ , } Comparisons are odious. Philadelphia Smith, 13 J Prof. Hughes — Accuse not Nature: she hath done her part. 362 Math. Department — Rocks whereon greatest men have oftest wrecked. Dr. Drinker — Thou art my guide, philosopher, and friend. D. V. Wood, ' 12 — Such conceit does not come to ordinary men. Sophomores — Though abundantly they lack discretion yet are they passing cowardly. Charlie ' s — Midnight shout and revelry, Tipsy dance and jollity. Instructors — Ye little stars! hide your diminished rays. Prof. Stewart — Words are like leaves; and where they most abound, Much fruit of sense beneath is rarely found. Prof. Wily — Then sweeten with thy breath this neighbor air. Economics — Mere chaff and chaff, much better burnt. Prof. Wilson — Loud wind, strong wind, fresh wind. Burdick, ' 14 1 w , r From all such devils, good Lord, deliver us! Nachman, ' 14 — What! this gentleman will out-talk us all. Prof. Meaker — Hast thou not the privilege of antiquity upon thee? Mercur, ' 13 — Where did you study all this goodly speech - Sanborn, ' 13 — A very tainted fellow, and full of wickedness. 363 Prof. Estey — A deluge of words and a drop of sense. Williams, ' 13 — When he steps forth, all nature wears one universal smile. Lexker, ' 13 — Methinks I am marvelous hairy about the face. Conner, ' 13 — A wise-looking bird, found generally by night. Clixtox, ' 15 — Unscissored shall his hair remain. Ruxt Charles — Two for a cent, five cents a dozen — cheap at half the price. Hadaway, ' 14 — Speak, if you can! — what are you? Seguixe, ' 13 — Better a witty fool than a foolish wit. Milxor, ' 12 — Not yet old enough for a man, nor young enough for a boy. Bowex, ' 13 — I warrant thou art a merry fellow, and carest for nothing. Edwards, ' 12 — And some have greatness thrust upon them. Simpsox, ' 14 — The clock upbraids me with the waste of time. Rehfuss, ' 13 — They mock thee for too much curiosity. Mercur, ' 13— All, as they say, that glitters is not gold. Waddixgtox, ' 12 — How poor a thing is man! alas, ' tis true, I ' d half forgot it when I chanced on you! Harris, ' 12 — Most glorious night! Thou wert not sent for slumber. 3 6 4 Runt Charles — Now, Jove, in his next commodity of hair, send thee a beard. Pugh, ' 15— With earnest eyes and round, unthinking face. Metallurgy Lectures — Tis now the hour which all to sleep allow, And slumber heavy sits on every brow. 365 3 66 Prithee, forgive us; We do but chide in jest! Sindel, ' 13 (in Calc. Conf.) — Prof. Lambert, is that the middle of that section or the exact center? Hadsall, ' 12 (in Mr. Fogg ' s Bridge Design)— Say, Carroll, did you get anything out of Fogg about that rivet? Carroll, ' 12 — I got just enough out of Fogg to make it clear. Fellow-Instructor in Physics — Mr. Fry, when does the Thanks- giving recess begin ? Mr. Fry (thinking of an important date) — November 23d this year. Prof. Esty — Why, this is the very cream of alternating current machinery. Voice from Rear — It seems to me it ' s getting curdled. Prof. Seyfert— That usage is ' unimperfect ' and you argue around in a circle, so one question wrong and one right neutralize each other, which is zero. W. R. Seyfried, ' 12 — Cornelius McGillicuddy and Hughey Jen- nings are Pennsylvania Dutchmen. Bacon, ' 12 (in Bacteriology) — This bacillus has a turpentine move- ment. Mr. Cressy (on Chemists ' Inspection trip to Philadelphia) — I ' ll be darned if I am going to be a wet-nurse for you fellows. Prof. Schober (having in mind Telluride, Colo.) — Mr. Von Kon- ecny, what town in Colorado is named after the element tellurium? Von Konecny — Denver. ££ tanbarb expressions rounb College Phys. Dept. — Nevertheless the principle remains the same. Prof. Schober — At the end of the last hour. Prof. Esty — Now this is vital. Prof. Seyfert — I, yi, yi, that ' s bad! Prof. Klein — Friend, friend, friend. Prof. Lambert — Huh! Prof. Thornburg — What do you want? Get out! Prof. McKibben — Now, last year the absence record — Prof. Stocker — Chase it out! Dr. Hall — I never saw such a stupid fellow! What was your head made for, any way? Bryant, ' 13 — Er — er — to hold my hat on, I guess. Donaldson, ' 12 (at ' 12 ' s Class Banquet) — Stand aside, classmates! I -have fainted. Mr. Chiles — Mr. Lamb, what arrangements would you use to prevent water from flowing down the side of a boiler? Lamb, ' 13 — Inside or outside? 367 Samuels, ' 12 (at the telephone) — Hello! hello! Other End — Who is this? Samuels — This is Samuels. Other End — Who in the is Samuels? Get off the line! Samuels — It is my personal opinion — ! Dr. Clewell — The girls aren ' t so lonesome now, since we installed electric lights. Subdued Whisper — I wonder how the sparking and candle power were affected? Mr. Pierle — Mr. Petty, while you are waiting for that to filter, you can get your casseroles ready. Petty, ' 13 (a short time later) — Mr. Pierle, what do you use the ' carusos ' for? Philadelphia Smith, ' 13 fin Ore Dressing) — The pulp is taken into the pump by means of an opening. Sanchez, ' 12 fin Const. Notes) — Robert Stephenson was born in Westminster Abbey, being the only engineer to receive that honor. Prof. Conkling (in Hydr.) — Mr. Dugan, what is effective head? Dug an, ' 13 — Effective head is — why — yes — it ' s effective head. Prof. Seyfert — What are wattless watts? Sulzer, ' 12 — What ' s what? Prof. Seyfert — I say, what are wattless watts? Sulzer — They ' re not watts. McCoy, ' 12 (in Metallurgy) — Can you see the slag in wrought iron when you polish it with the naked eye? Prof. Hughes (in Psychology) — Mr. Camp, what would you con- sider a delicate compliment? Camp, ' 12 — The compliment of 89°-59 ' -59 . First Soph (after Exams.) — What did you get, old man? Second Soph. — H — at home. Prof. Eckfeldt — Can I have an interview with you on Friday, Mr. Schmidt? Schmidt, ' 13 — No, sir; I am full on Fridays. Prof. Eckfeldt — Will you be over it by Tuesday? Dr. Woods (in German Recit.) — Will all the gentlemen who are not here please give me their names so I may mark them absent? Prof. MacNutt (lecturing on reflection of light by mirrors) — It is possible, gentlemen, to see any number of moons, provided you take the right kind of a glass. Junior — Let ' s hope Kiski sends us no more problems in nation- ality to solve. In Sophomore Boilers — Professor, how is the smoke disposed of from the fire under the boilers in a submarine boat? Prof. Miller (in Economic Geology) — Mr. Walker, what are the properties of Pozzuolan cement? Walker, ' 12 — Why, it was used by the ancients in Italy. 368 Prof. Lambert (in Prof. Lambert ' s Conference School) — Work this list of problems I ' ve put on the board. Siegel, ' 13, starts with the bottom problem and works up the list. Prof. Lambert — What ' s the matter, Siegel? This isn ' t Hebrew! Chemistry Instructor — What would happen if the two substances combined? Freshman — You would get a very funny mixture. Question in Economics Quiz — What is the law of variety? Duncan, ' 14 — Variety is the spice of life. Prof. Eckfeldt (with the Junior Miners on their inspection trip to Wilkes-Barre) — We ought to take a special man along to answer Siegel ' s questions. Speed, ' 12 (in his paper before the Miners ' meeting) — I heartily agree with the eminent Canadian scientist on this point. Guth, ' 12 (at cheering practice seeing Andy Farabaugh on the field) — Who is that big man? Voice from the Stands — That ' s Walter Camp. Guth — Come on now, fellows! three long ' Lehighs ' for Walter Camp! Prof. Lambert (in one of his Math Sections after Lewis, ' 14, had read aloud a problem to him) — You sound as if you had been eating honey. Sheppard, ' 13 — Would that I were a Houdin, or that I could pick a lock. Prof. Franklin (in Junior Electricity) — Those particles being highly charged are very strongly attracted by my face. Freshman (in English) — Byron was married in 181 5, and the next year he produced ' Childe Harold. ' Junior (at football practice) — Gee, but it ' s fierce on the field to-day! The men are covered with mud. Aungst, ' 14 — Is that why they have scrubs? Mr. Estabrook (in Economic Geology) — Mr. McKenzie, what are the five different methods of coal formation? McKenzie, ' 12 — A tree growing up, dying and decaying five times. Prof. Fox (in French Class) — Mr. Quincy, how do you translate ' I am hungry? ' Quincy, ' 13 — Je suis faim (pronounces it femme). Prof. Fox — Hum — you must be pretty well disguised, then. Schmidt (after a 13 Club spiel) — And we emptied it till it was dry. A Welshman from Wilkes-Barre, an Irishman from New York, a Mexican from Mexico, arrested by a Dutch cop from South Bethlehem at a Jew ball — a chemical compound or a mechanical mixture? 369 Prof. Lambert (working a problem at the blackboard) — Now, what is the next step ' Voice from the Rear — Go to your tangent. Prof. Lambert — You tell me to go to my tangent! — well, you can go to your asymptote! Instructor Haskall (looking at data sheet) — Where did you get the two speeds, Mr. Harris? Harris, ' 13 — Well, didn ' t the dynamotor have two ends? Wylie, ' 13 (in Mining) — An explosive is a thing which goes off. The B.S. Course — They toil not neither do they spin, yet verily I say unto you, Waddington in all his glory is not arrayed like one of these. Clarke, ' 13 — Say, Raft, they are synchronizing down in the Senior lab. Rafter, ' 13 — What with, iron or steel? Clarke — What are you talking about? Don ' t you know what synchronizing means? Rafter — Who don ' t? It ' s covering the machine with metal. Porter, ' 12 (synchronizing) — The lamps have gone crazy. Prof. Seyfert — Your phase rotation ' s wrong. Schultz, ' 12 — That ' s it, Horace. I ' ve always told you that your wheels ran backwards. Nevius, ' 12 (after four hours of hard work) — These darned instru- ments are no good. Prof. Seyfert — Look at your connections. Oi! Oi! Oi! Die vatt- meter and ammeter in parallel. Ugh! Characteristics of the Gas Estabrook — It is colorless and transparent, with a specific gravity of 1.178. When ignited it burns with a blue flame. Compliments of the Asso. Press — A wedding breakfast was given at the Wyandotte Hotel, March 16th, at 6.3c a. m., by A. U. Siegel to his bachelor friends. All guests made first hour. Bailey, ' 14 (in college meeting)— Why, I had to do all my study- ing at night after working hard all day on the football field; he (his room-mate) used to study all afternoon and night till long after I ' d gone to bed. As a result, he flunked out of college, while I ' m still here. Fahm MilnoR NEvius BenjAmin Krause GausS 37o Calendar 1911 Jfefaruarp 5. Lehigh defeats Susquehanna in basketball, 53-23. Gym Team loses to Penn, 43-11. 37i iHarcij at Eagle Hotel. ' -- stling Team defeats Lafayette, :-: Qtesl Lehigh vs. Rutgers, 24-24. 8. Lehigh defeats Princeton at wrestling 9. Junior banc Hotel. [earn loses 1 Haverford, 29-25. 16. Sophomore banquet at Eagle Hotel. 17. Cornell : ri its wrestling m Lehigh vs. X. Y. D., 29-25. _ 5 • - . Team defeats Columbia. 335-207. 29. Baseball Team loses to Penn. 3-0. SLpril 1. L • . Team. Won by Jannus. ' 11. 5- L tn loses 1 irlisle, 7-1. E Lefeats West Point. 6-3. ; La rosse ream lefeat s Cornell, z-2 12. Easter Holidays begin. : j Lacrosse 1 1 Loses 1 Nfavy, 7-2. 5 B sel 1 I - Cornell. -2. Laer sse I - • - I Mt. Washington. 6-4. 1 7. Easter H li lays I - 19. Baseball T its Tufts. 1-0. E igle Hotel. 22. Lacr • Y. L. C. 3-2. 21. Tau Beta Pi and Phi Beta Kappa hold joint dinner at Eagle Hotel. 27. Junior Week opens. S - homore Cotillion Dance. 28. Interclass Track meet won by Freshmen. Ju: : ■-r . m 29. Baseball Team loses to F. and M.. 3-2. ts Stevens Mustard -•: presents The College Widow rs fRap Tra ' -: ream lefeats Haverford. 60-52. 6. Baseball Team defeats Rutgers. -; Track Team loses to Rutgers. 55-49. Lacrosse Team loses to Johns Hopkins. 6-4. :: Baseball ream loses fcc Lafayette. 2-0. i;. Lacross - loses to Swarthmore, 6-4. all Team loses i Swarthmore, 4-1. The College Widowers. at National Park Seminary. Washington. D. C. Tern ie:ea:= Haverford. ;-2. i7- Track meet, Lehigh vs. Lafayette, tie. 20. Track Team loses to Swarthmore, 58-43. Baseball game, Lehigh vs. Pratt, 3-3. 23. Baseball Team loses to Perm State, 6-2. 27. Lehigh wins 17 points at Harrisburg Intercollegiates. 30. Baseball Team defeats Lafayette, 7-1. STune 2. Examinations begin. 9. Ben Greet players present The Comedy of Errors. Calculus Cremation. to. Baseball Team loses to Lafayette, 5-0. Meeting of Alumni Association. Alumni Luncheon. Alumni Day Exercises. President ' s reception to the Senior Class. 11. Baccalaureate Sermon by Bishop Charles David Williams. 12. Class Day Exercises. 13. University Day Exercises. September 19. Sophomores win Opening Night Rush. 20. Opening Exercises in Chapel. Dr. Drinker addresses Freshmen. Sophomores win Banner Rush on Lehigh Field. 22. First College meeting. Y. M. C. A. Reception, held in Drown Hall. 23. Dr. Estes lectures to the Freshmen on the Conservation of Life. 27. Football Team defeats Lebanon Valley, 44-0. (October 1. Lehigh defeats Western Maryland at football, 11-5. 6. Football Team loses to Bucknell by the score of 3-0. 7. Founder ' s Day Sports is made classic by the Freshmen winning all three events, a feat unequalled since 1905. Politics Club is formed. 11. Lehigh ties Princeton at football, 6-6. 20. First Smoker of year. 21. Football Team defeats Ursinus, 5-0. 27. Henry S. Graves lectures on Rapid Progress in Forestry. 28. Football Team loses to West Point, 20-0. 29. Bishop Talbot speaks at Y. M. C. A. meeting. ilobember 3. Haverford Smoker. 4. Football Team defeats Haverford, 12-0. 10. Dr. H. W. Wiley lectures on Health. 373 n. Swart hmore defeats Lehigh at football, 9-2. 19. Football Team defeats F. and M., 9-0. 25. Lafayette Smoker. 26. Lafayette defeats Lehigh at football, n-o. December 6. Basketball Team opens the season by defeating Moravian College, 61-19. 13. Princeton defeats Lehigh at basketball, 27-26. 16. Minstrel Show held in Drown Hall. 20. Lehigh defeats Lebanon Valley at basketball, 56-12. 22. Christmas Holidays begin. 1912 HTanuarp Christmas Holidays close. Basketball Team defeats Albright, 37-30. Y. M. C. A. Campaign begins. Lehigh defeats Gettysburg at basketball. 35-18. Y. M. C. A. Campaign ends. Basketball Team loses to Brown 27-26. Mid-year Examinations begin. Jfefaruarp Mid-year Examinations end. Basketball Team defeats Delaware College, 52-18. Wrestling Team defeats Pennsylvania, 4-2. Basketball Team defeats University of Maryland, 60-8. Student body passes resolutions making physical exercise com- pulsory. Pratt defeats Lehigh at basketball, 23-16. Wrestling Team loses to Princeton, 4-3. Lehigh loses to Swarthmore at basketball, 38-13. Navy defeats Wrestling Team, 6-1. Gym Team opens its season by losing to Haverford, 29-19. Junior Oratorical Contest won by Chimin Chu-Fuh. Basketball Team wins from Brown, 43-32. 374 375 ;76 377 378 All The World Loves a Royal Tailored Man At work and at play, the Best Dressed Men in America Wear Royal Tailored- to-order Clothes, $20 to $40 T I9U. THE eOVAt TAILORS MITMAN ' S THE MAN ' S SHOP For Correct College Styles Fourth and New Sts., SO. BETHLEHEM. PA. FIRST-CLASS BRANDS OF FUEL The comfort which Professors and Stu- Tt j dents enjoy in their Homes and in their tZ W Oh Fraternity Houses is enchanced by the use of our Special Stock of OLD LEHIGH COAL cn 172 s Place orders for the winter stock in June, before the College Term Closes, or early in Fall, and secure a good bargain. Our stock of Building Material, including reliable LUMBER AND FINE MILL WORK, is always open to inspection. A visit to our yards will repay the student who is interested in the strength of materials. BROWN BORHEK LUMBER AND COAL CO., ltd. Yards at Brodhead Ave., So. Bethlehem and Canal Street, Bethlehem Steinberg ' s -■■THEATRE - MAKER OF Fine Portraits in Platinum Only THE HOME OF Special Discount to Students HIGH-CLASS Vaudeville m AND Photo-Play 728 Hamilton St., Allentown, Pa. 308 New St., So. Bethlehem, Pa. Bell Phone Full Orchestra wmmmmmm M , m J B Wear the Smile that Won ' t Come Off and purchase your Suits and Toggery here. Schneller-Snyder Company R. S. Taylor, ' 95 J. F. Myers, ' 98 R. F. Taylor, ' 01 We start our Suits at $25. Our Haberdashery is up to the minute and our prices will please you. Student ' s discount? Of course. r O Q :©; m W0B:O00Bm00B0 B00n0MOWM MMM @ BEST SERVICE RATES, $2.00 and $2.50 PER DAY W. E. HOCH, PROP. The most centrally located Hotel in the city ..... One block from Lehigh University COR. FOURTH AND NEW STS. SOUTH BETHLEHEM - PENNA. ED El YOU YOUNG FELLOWS With Special Style Ideas come in and see our new Smartly Tailored Models To look well, you must choose well. You can ' t make a mistake here. Made by our skilled tailors means right style, right fit, right prices. KOCH BROTHERS FOREMOST TAILORS. CLOTHIERS AND HABERDASHERS Hotel Allen Building ALLENTOWN, PA. BARBER TRANSFER LINE CAB. BUS. BAGGAGE AND LIVERY BOTH PHONES OFFICE AT UNION STATION, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. AND SUN INN LIVERY, BETHLEHEM. PA. UP-TO-DATE POOL PARLOR LIGHT LUNCH Wholesale and Retail CIGARS, CIGARETTES and TOBACCO BARBER SHOP ELMERJ.GAN6EWERE FOURTH AND WYANDOTTE STS. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. The J. M. DEGNAN COMPANY DEPARTMENT STORES 225-229 East Third St. 320-326 West Fourth St. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. W. W. C. GEARY COMPANY •Hatrltmakrra, dinners anu iEngraurrs Lehigh Fobs, Seals, Hatpins, Etc. 415 Wyandotte Street SOUTH BKTHLKHKM, PA. Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume COTRELL LEONARD, ALBANY, N. Y. Greetings to 1912 and 1913 Wholesale Makers and Renters of The Caps, flowiis and Hoods to the American Univer- sities. To Lehigh. University of Pennsylvania, Cornell, Columbia, University of Chicago, Harvard. Yale. Princeton. University of California, and the others. Illustrated Bulletin, Samples. Rental Propositions, etc , upon application. W. J. Woodring J. BLAWN ( merchant j 1 Cailor J 9 W. 4th Street BETHLEHEM, PA. GROSS Confectioner w 109 West 4th St. SO. BETHLEHEM, PA. Dealer in Fine Cigars and Tobacco 319 New Street Club House Pool Parlors 314 New Street WHEN IN TOWN VISIT FAMOUS OYSTER HOUSE 421 Wyandotte Street So. Bethlehem Stj? Snnk lExrijawj? PETER O. 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 FOR CLEAN, WHITE WORK TRY THE ELECTRIC LAUNDRY BISHOPTHORPE AND CHEROKEE STREETS SOUTH BETHLEHEM PENNSYLVANIA SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS A. M. HOLLENBACH. Proprietor TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS H. J. OPPELT CONFECTIONERY ABEL ' S ICE CREAM 328 West Fourth Street, So. Bethlehem, Pa. On Cigars We have special days. We sell a ten-cent cigar for five cents. Try them. Sold at Fourth and New Streets JACOBY ' S DRUG STORE THE ftjtjg TABLE ELECTRIC f== F==t RANGE THE HOME COMPANY OF THE BETHLEHEMS The Halcyon Electric Light and Power Co. 119-121 West Fourth Street SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. J. M. Schnabel Bro. The Leading SHOT HOUSE Snappy Goods, Smart Shapes, Exclusive Styles, Popular Prices. Exclusive Sale of the A. E. NETTLETON SHOE. 53 MAIN ST., BETHLEHEM, PA WM. F. DANZER Telephone Connections ISAAC W. MILLER W. F. DANZER CO. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS JOBBING A SPECIALTY ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK, CONCRETE BU ILDING BLOCKS, WALKS, CURBS, PAVEMENTS South Bethlehem, Pa. Office and Residence: 518 Seneca St. Shop: Seminole St. near Seneca ADAM BR1NKER W. C. LAZARUS A. BRINKER COMPANY 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. 119 East Third Street South Bethlehem, Penna. ANTHONY FACHSBINNER PAINTERS PAINTERS ' and Dealers in General Supplies Both Telephones No. 12 Broad Street BETHLEHEM, PENNA. ESTABLISHED 1890 GREINER i College Seals, Pins, Fobs, Spoons, Etc. Jeweler, Silversmith and Optician Everything Lehigh First-class Repairing 150 South Main St., Bethlehem, Pa. The Students ' Jeweler The Moravian Book Store Publishers, Booksellers and Stationers 146 South Main Street . ' . Bethlehem, Penna. Sell Phone Frederick A. Krell JTT A complete line of all that a leading Cigarist Jj and Tobacconist should carry. Also Col- lege Pennants, Magazines, Posters, Etc. 63 SOUTH MAIN STREET BETHLEHEM, PENNA. Moravian Seminary and College for Women ' Preparatory and Collegiate Founded 1 742 The oldest school of its kind in America, with a century and three-quarters of history and experience, yet furnished with all modern equipments and pursuing the latest improved 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 dulies and demands of the best modern society and a useful, active life Our thorough scholastic 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 ihousht, 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 lo I he management, course of study, cost, etc., send for descriptive circular to J. H. Clewell, Ph.D., Pres. Bethlehem, Pa. TORPEY ' S ORCHESTRA ORGANIZED 1898 BRASS OR STRING Address all communications to M. J. TORPEY, Leader 321 EAST THIRD STREET SOUTH BETHLEHEM .-. PA. A complete standard and up-to-date organization of first-class musicians. We are prepared to furnish any number of men for any occasion at short notice and reasonable prices. Penna. Phone Estimates Cheerfully Given Season of 1911-12 with Palace Theatre Bethlehem ' s Dancing Academy Colosseum Skating Rink petfjletjem preparatory cfjool etrjlefjem, $a. This school has prepared over one thousand boys for Lehigh. Send for Catalogue H. A. FOERING, B. S., HEAD MASTER The Lehigh Inn Jas. {F$urkhart, ' Proprietor Right Near College New Street, near Fourth South Bethlehem, Penna. South Side Candy Kitchen NICK DAVIS, Prop. MANUFACTURER OF pure confectionery and Superior ice Cream ICE CREAM SODA AND FRUIT DEALER Wholesale and Retail 8 EAST 4TH STREET S. BETHLEHEM PA. Jr(oski. ins ress JACOB WIDMAN AND COMPANY MONOCACY BREWERY BREWERS AND BOTTLERS BETHLEHEM - - PA. DOUTRICH bailor labiesf Tailoring 94 broad Street BETHLEHEM, PA. ESTABLISHED 1865 E. KELLER SONS ( aib ano ilueramtttfa College and Fraternal Jewelry, Prize Cups and Trophies of all descriptions Estimates on Special Work Cheerfully Furnished 711 HAMILTON STREET ALLEIMTOWIM, PA. ESTABLISHED 1785 OTTO HESSE Irtljleljrm T$aak Ituorry Books of Every Description Bound, Rebound and Repaired. Maps, Drawings and Sketches Mounted. Portfolios Made to Order, Etc. Estimates Given 144 - 146 South Main Street Third Floor BETHLEHEM PENNA. 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. Quinlin Printing Company 319 New Street Between 3rd and 4th Streets SOUTH BETHLEHEM. PA. STUDENTS HO are too busy to study that very important question — FASHION— and yet who appreciate the difference between what is correctly stylish and what is ordinary, can safely trust them- selves in Snyder ' s hands. At all seasons of the year clothes ordered at the Custom Tailoring Shop of Morris G. Snyder can be worn with the mental satisfaction that comes from the consciousness of being dressed in good taste and refined style. MORRIS G. SNYDER MtRCHANT TAILOR Broad and New Sts., BETHLEHEM, PA. HOTEL ALLEN American Rlan = = = =: = $2.50 to 5.00 R ESTAURANT MODERN A LA CARTE SERVICE SCHWARZ MASTERS, Proprietors CENTRE SQUARE ALLENTOWN, PENNA. HARRY ' S The P lace ou meet the boys, before and after each game, for what you want. 7 EAST FOURTH STREET THE COLLEGE LAUNDRY TELEPHONE 79 W. H. GOSNER, Proprietor 320-322-324 New Street SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. A. J. MOYER TOBACCONIST Manufacturer of Fine Hand-Made Cigars Students ' Headquarters for B. B. Pipes, Pouches, Cigars, Tobacco and Smokers ' Articles 433 Wyandotte Street BETHLEHEM, PA. BELL PHONL A. P. Ritter, Jr. jflerchatxt bailor 134 SOUTH MAIN STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Lewis L. Anewalt Company LEADING Ratters and furriers IN THE LEHIGH VALLEY Sole Agents for the Knox, Stetson Special and Imperial hats. College caps a specialty. USUAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENT S 617 HAMILTON STREET ALLENTOWN, PEININA SIGN, BIG HAT THE ELEGANT New Sanfor d C. W. ANTHONY, Proprietor BAR AND RATHSKELLER NOTHING TOO GOOD CARVE YOUR NAME ON YOUR CLASS TABLE PieFs Beer on Draught 343 W. Fourth Street SOUTH SIDE FARR BROS, cfe CO. ailentoton ' g jffflobern f)oe department g tore ENTIRE BUILDING 739-41 Hamilton Street ALLENTOWN, PA. THE LEHIGH VALLEY CORNICE WORKS GALVANIZED IRON AND COPPER CORNICES, SKYLIGHTS, IRON, TIN, SLAG AND GRANITE ROOFING THE KELSEY WARM AIR GENERATOR 62 BROAD STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. CONSTRUCTION COMPANY VANDERSTUCKEN-EWING MANUFACTURERS AND ERECTORS OF STEEL BUILDINGS AND BRIDGES WORKS AND OFFICE: BETHLEHEM, PA. The Home of the Rosebud Mrs. MINNIE HAINES WEBER Funeral Designs m Wedding Decorations Cut Flowers T, I A §♦ t t and Potted Plants VI VI I V I Bouquets of all kinds Residence at Store Both Phones 49 East Broad Street BETHLEHEM, PA. M. M. FLICKINGEH MAKER OF FINE PORTRAITS 17 Broad Street BETHLEHKM, PA. DRINK THE HOME FAVORITE SUPREME LIGHT DARK The Beer that makes Milwaukee jealous Cream Ale and Porter South Bethlehem Brewing Company BREWERY BOTTLING SHANKWEILER LEHR CENTRE SQUAKK, ALLKNTOWN, PA. FOR YOUN(i MEN Clothing and FtirniMhiiigN y of (he Highest tirade A MERCHANT TAILORING SERVICE UNSURPASSED Usual Discount to Students The Bethlehem Consolidated Gas Company III 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 approved burners. Healing and cooking ranges. J. W. MURDOCK, Mgr BOTH ' PHONES FOK RKAIHNG Or for Sewing you want a good light— soft, not over- taxing the eyes Know anything better than a good electric lamp? We can put one, two. six, just where you want them— desk, table, ceiling or wall — install everything necessary, do the wiring and supply the style of lamps and globes you fancy. Let us estimate. TELEPHONE CONNECTION J. H. J A COB Y Kl.-ciii.-nl t niii n.-.-r and Contractor WHOLESALE AND RETAIL E ' ectrical Supplies, Dynamos, Motors, Etc. 417 WYANDOTTE ST.. S. BETHLEHEM. PA. H. E. RICKSECKER NEW AND USED PIANOS FOR SALE RENTED TUNED, REPAIRED AND POLISHED MUSIC and all MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 52-54 EAST BROAD STREET BETHLEHEM, PENNA. Cumberland Electric Lighting Co. Limited Head Office, Victoria, B. C, Canada G. W. CLINTON, President Capital, 850,000 HIS Company has the exclusive franchise for Cumberland, British Columbia, and for 10 miles of contiguous territory, being operated by water power with a 956-foot head. Cumberland is the seat of the Comox Mines of the Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir), Ltd., the largest Colliery on the Pacific Coast, producing the famous Comox Coal, that the Oregon used on her world-renowned trip from the Pacific to the Atlantic in the Spanish-American War. fflffl@m PM«M Alberta anu IrittHlj (Unlumbta (tal (Enmpang, ICtiX Capital, $250,000.00 President ..... Vice-President and Managing Director GEO. W. CLINTON STANLEY H. RIGGS Situated at Halkirk, Alberta, on the branch line of the Canadian Pacific Railway running between Lacombe, Alberta and Moose Jaw, Sask. This is undoubtedly the richest inland coal deposit in North America.  ™ ra™ ESTABLISHED 1818 BROADWAY cor. TWENTY- SECOND ST. NEW YORK. SACK, NORFOLK and CUTAWAY SUITS in the widest range of materials DRESS CLOTHES OVERCOATS ULSTERS in rough Homespuns, Harris Tweeds, Shetlands, Kenmares, etc. IMPORTED KNITTED GARMENTS EQUIPMENT for MOTORING, RIDING, DRIVING, POLO and the HUNT TRUNKS, BAGS, VALISES, FITTED CASES ENGLISH HATS, SHOES and HABERDASHERY Send for Illustrated Catalogue ELIMINATING HUMAN DRUDGERY INCREASING PLANT EFFICIENCY REDUCING POWER COSTS with Jeffrey Coal and Ashes Handling Equipment. . PIVOTED BUCKET CONVEYER handles coal from receiving hopper to coal bins, from where it is fed through chules to the stokers. Ashes are handled by same conveyer. A feature of this equipment is the saving of fine coal, which is mixed with the raw coal and used advantageously in the stokers OUR CATALOG No. 32 contains drawings and valuable data pertaining to over 50 different Coal and Ashe Handling Equipments installed by us, and will be mailed free to any student or engineer on request. Jeffrey Manufacturing Company COLUMBUS, OHIO E. P. WILBUR TRUST COMPANY CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, ONE MILLION DOLLARS Commercial Department Conservative, careful management ; the acme of prompt, courteous service — everylhing consistent with good bank- ing — you secure when you open a checking account with this bank. Close inspection by the Government and the largest Capital and Surplus guarantee you the safe return, upon demand, of every dollar deposited here. This, coupled with a desire on our part to aid in every safe and proper way the growth and development of this com- munity, accounts for the wonderful increase in our business and the feeling of local pride among our customers. Savings Department Prosperity dates from the first dollar saved Perhaps the best reason for saving money is that practically nothing can be done without it- You must have it to start you in business, to fur- nish your home and to educate your children, to protect you against sickness or misfortune, and to provide for you a comfortable, independent old age. One dollar will start the account, and now is the right time to begin. Interest is paid at the rate of 3%. Compounded semi-annually. Our Trust Department All assets kept separate and apart from the other departments. Trusts of every description receive wise, safe and economical service. Your will kept free. Our Safe Deposit Vaults are conveniently arranged and abso- lutely Fire and Burglar Proof. Call and inspect them. Boxes for rent at $2.00 per year. 40 Years of Successful Banking Approved Depository for POSTAL SAVINGS By the United States Government Also Depository for (he Funds of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania m The Charles Garvey Diamond Drilling Co Crown Point New York Contractors for all kinds of Diamond Drill Work Deep Holes a Specialty Also Manufacturers of Diamond Drilling Machines Manufacturers of the Aziclinometer used in survey of Diamond Drill Holes. Gives accurately inclination and bearing. J J C r ] IT you have a Clothes Ideal Reeds ' are more than likely to be able w-v wj -fjy - - v 9 to fill it for you. Or if uncertain as to M JLj JLj mJ kJ just what you should wear to be entirely — — — — - — correct, Reeds ' are excellent advisers and SONS p ' ° ders - Prices are never excessive. Suits and Overcoats, $15 and upward. Clothiers and Outfitters for Young Men JACOB REED ' S SONS 1424-1426 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia WC ' UQTiy Instruments A Full Line of Alternating Current Switchboard Indicating Instruments is offered by this Company, comprising WATTMETERS. Single and Polyphase FREQUENCY METERS Power Factor Meters ammeters Synchroscopes Voltmeters New Models of Weston D. C. Instruments to match. This whole group of instruments embodies the results of several years ' exhaustive study and scientific investigation of all the complex electrical and mechanical problems involved in the development of durable, reliable, sensitive and accurate instruments for use on alternating current circuits. Every detail of each of these instruments has been most carefully studied and worked out so as to be sure that each shall fully meet the most exacting requirements of the service for which it is intended. Neither pains nor expense has been spared in the effort to produce instruments having the longest possible life, the best possible scale characteristics, combined with great accuracy under the most violent load fluctuations and also under the many other trying conditions met with in practical work. Every part of each instrument is made strictly to gauge, and the design and workmanship and finish is of the highest order of excellence. We invite the most critical examination of every detail of each member of the group. We also solicit the fullest investigation of the many other novel features and very valuable operative characteristics of these new instruments and request a careful comparison in all these respects with any other make of instrument intended for like service. We offer them as a valuable and permanent contribution to the art of electrical measurement. Their performance in service will be found to justify the claim that no other makes of instru- ments approach them in fitness for the service required from A. C Switchboard indicating instruments Full particulars of design, construction, prices, etc., are given in Catalog 16. Write for it. Main Office and Work.: NEWARK, N. J. Q. C. BONZANO RAIL JOINT . MILLIONS IN USE . New York THE Q. C. CO. Chicago QUINCY AND GILMAN ENGINEERING COMPANY Section of Reinforced Concrel Culvert Pipe 90 WEST STREET, NEW YORK Eastern Representatives of AMERICAN CONCRETE PILE PIPE CO. Reinforced Concrete Culvert Pipes, Chenoweth Reinforced C crete Piles. W. SNOW CON- STRUCTION CO. Engineers and Con- tractors, Steel Towers, Water Tanks, Water Pipe, Water Stations, Coaling Stations, Water Softening Plants. Electric Light Plants. FILLMORE MACHINERY CO. Continuous Batch Concrete Mixers. Sidewalk ) BOLTE WEYER CO. Gasoline Lights for Railroads, Contractors, Fire Departments, Quarries, Dredges Section of Chenoweth Reinforced Concrete Pile f rr H lfT ' f « Transformers. Insulating Varnishes . Insulating Cloth and m Tape, Gas Engine Ignition Cable, Rubber Friction Tapes The Packard Electric Co. w o„ REN OHIO Jessop ' s Steel The Best for Tools, Drills, Dies, Etc. ( All sizes carried in stock. 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 LIDGERWOOD HOISTING ENGINES BUILT TO GAUGE ON THE DUPLICATE PART SYSTEM. QUICK DELIVERY ASSURED. Over 34,000 Steam and Electric Hoists in use. Cableways, Hoisting and Conveying Devices. Send for Illustrated Catalog. Lidgerwood Mfg. Co. 96 Liberty St. New York. FORT PITT BRIDGE WORKS OF PITTSBURGH, PA. Steel Bridges Mill Buildings Structural Steel Work Grey Iron Castings Ohio River Bridge No. 1, Sewickley, Built by Fort Pitt Bridge Work of Pittsbi Pa. rgh. Pa OS Main Office : . 510-19 House Build PITTSBURGH, PA. ing, Works: CANONSBURG, PA New York Office, Chicago Office, - - 45 Broadway, - Fisher Building, xxxiii NEW YORK CHICAGO The Standard Wire Rope M Sf jS jI ' Mf Made by John A. Roebling ' s Sons Co. Trenton, New Jersey McCLINTIC - MARSHALL CONS! RUCTION COMPANY STEEL BUILDINGS, BRIDGES, Etc. Annual Capacity, 150,000 Tons STEELWORK WHEN YOU WANT IT PITTSBURGH, PA. Works: POTTSTOWN, PA. CARNEGIE. PA. Contracting Offices: NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURGH COLUMBUS, O. DETROIT CHICAGO ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO POTTSTOWN, PA. THE DRAVO CONTRACTING COMPANY PITTSBURGH, PA. DIFFICULT FOUNDATIONS SUBMARINE AND PNEUMATIC CAISSON WORK LOCKS DAMS SHAFTS TUNNELS DRAVO-DOYLE COMPANY PITTSBURGH : PHILADELPHIA : CLEVELAND : CHICAGO Jtterefjant engineers Representing ERIE BALL ENGINE CO. HARRISON SAFETY BOILER WORKS DE LAVAL STEAM TURBINE CO. COMPLETE POWER PLANTS AND WATER WORKS r - 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 BY THE PHILLIPS DUMPS ALREADY INSTALLED IF RUN TO THEIR CAPACITY Let Us Submit Plans and Estimates j E. O ' REILLY CO. We Feed ' Em We Clothe Them 2 BUSY STORES Clothing Store Department Store Cor. 3rd CSt, New Sts. 421-5 E. 3rd St. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. The Guerber Engineering Co. MANUFACTURERS AND CONTRACTING ENGINEERS ffiuilutny trurtural trrl (Sntrral fflarhtitp Work Work  l]au Work FROGS BRIDGES SPECIAL MACHINERY SWITCHES BUILDINGS PATTERNS CROSSINGS STAIRS CASTINGS SIGNALS ROOFS FORCINGS STANDS TANKS PIPE FITTINO Angles, Channels, Beams, Plates, Bars, Rails, Etc., carried in stock for prompt Shipment Office, Works and Stock Yard : BETHLEHEM, PS. UHL ' S Celebrated Vienna Lager and Porter THE STANDARD ' Brewers and Bottlers Corner Union and Monocacy Sts. VEEDER FORM C TACHOMETER For registering revolutions per minute of Engines Motors Electric Generators Turbines Shafting, etc, INo springs or pivots; only one moving part. We are makers of CYCLOMETERS ODOMETERS TACHOMETERS TACHODOMETERS COUNTERS SPEED COUNTERS and Fine Castings THE VEEDER MFG. CO. MARTFOKD, CONN. Established 1867 jam H. Taylor Go. Ettgitittra xnb QJnntrartnra Jfor Uauniilrtr iioutrr iUauta Electric Lighting, Heating, Ventilating, Automatic Sprinklers, Machinery, Tools and Supplies. ALLENTOWN, PbNINA, tm m AND The College Newspaper Published every TUESDAY and FRIDAY Subscription $2.00 per year so DEttin io itJittzn 5 Xebtab n TPUiiverstt a tt 8 S3 u South Bethlehem :: :: Pennsylvania -[ffl The University offers the following courses: 1. The Courses in Arts and Science. H . U 2. The Course in Civil Engineering. foil Wl 3. The Course in Mechanical Engineering. J 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. B ft ] i ti For further information, for Registers of the 9 University and for Descriptive Circulars W of the Different Courses, address THE REGISTRAR Xll Photography Portraiture Groups Etc. Photographer in Chief to the University Students Studio xlii STUDIO 310 BIRCH STREET HOl ' TJ I RKTIJKKII KIM, IM v; When in need of VALVES for Steam, Water, Gas, Oils and the like, the highest degree of efficiency will be obtained by installing the genuine JENKINS BROS. VALVES which always bear the Trade Mark shown in the cut. They are made of the best grade of steam metal, in various styles and sizes. They are extra heavy, very strong, well proportioned, handsomely finished, and most durable. Write us when in need of high-grade valves of any kind. NEW YORK JENKINS BROS. BOSTON PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO JENKINS BROS., LTD . MONTREAL AND LONDON Established 1872 Excelled by None |]TCLASS PINS VISITING CARDS E, A. WR1QHT |]f W E D D I N G ™ ANNOUNCEMENTS Engraver Printer Stationer Commencement Invitations, Dance Invitations, and INVITATIONS Programs, Menus, Fraternity Inserts and Stationery. p O D E R N ADVERTISING Complete facilities for turning out College Publications. Special rates to Fraternities and Class Committees. Before ordering elsewhere, compare Samples and Prices. NOVELTIES ART CALENDARS Steel Engraved and Hand-Painted Special Designs Submitted for Special Occasions E. A. Wright Bank Note Co. U| PHOTO- ENGRAVING and HALF-TONE WORK Bank Note and General Engravers Stock Certificates, Bonds and Securities of Money Value (Engraved according to Stock Exchange requirements ' PHOTOGRAVURE Diplomas, Checks, Bills o( Exchange, Drafts, Railroad Passes LITHOGRAPHING 1108 Chestnut Street :: Philadelphia xliii WINDSOR HOTEL W. T. BRUBAKER, Manager European, $1.00 per day and up American, $2.50 per day and up Midway between Broad Street Station and Reading Terminal on Filbert Street The only moderate priced hotel of reputaton and consequence in PHILADELPH IA PARAGON DRAWING INSTRU- MENTS ARE USED ALMOST EXCLUSIVELY IN THE LEAD- ING TECHNICAL SCHOOLS CHICAGO ST. LOUIS FINE DRAWING MATERIALS DRAWING INSTRUMENTS MATHEMATICAL AND SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS MEASURING TAPES OUR COMPLETE CATALOGUE SENT ON REQUEST KEUFFEL ESSER CO. new York, 127 Fulton Street gen. offices . factories, hoboken, n.j. san francisco montreal xliv Electric C fy Engraving Co. Buffalo. NY WE MADE THE ENGRAVINGS TOR THIS BOOK. xlv THE Hoskins Press Jlrtistic ' Printing and Engraving College Catalogs Half-Tones and Line Cuts a Specialty Special Designing o = Class Annuals Class-Day Programs, Commencement Invitations, Class and Fraternity Sta- tionery, Fraternity Cards and Visiting Cards, Menus and Dance Programs 904 AND 906 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA xlvi Snbex to gbberttserss Anthony Fachsbinner Lewis L. Anewalt Co. Alberta British Columbia Coal Brown-Borhek Lumber Co. Barber Transfer Line J. Blawn The Book Exchange . A. Bnnker Co. . Bethlehem Preparatory School Bethlehem Consolidated Gas Co. Brooks Brothers Brown White Cotrell Leonard Cumberland Electric Light Co. J. M. Degnan Co. W. F. Danzer Co. . Doutrich . Dravo Contracting Co. Dravo-Doyle Co. Electric Laundry Electric City Engraving Co Farr Bros. Co. Fort Pitt Bridge Works Elmer }. Gangewere W. W. C. Geary Co. Gross Greiner Chas. Garvey Diamond Drilling Guerber Engineering Co. Halcyon Electric Light and Pow Otto Hesse Hotel Allen Harry ' s . Hotel Windsor Hoskins Press . [acoby ' s Drug Store . J. H. Jacoby Jeffrey Mfg. Co. Wm. Jessop Sons Co. Jenkins Bros. Valves Knouss Koch Bros. Frederick A. Krell Co., Ltd. Co. rCo xlvii E. Keller Sons Keuffel Esser Co. . Lehigh Inn Lehigh Steam Laundry Lehigh Valley Cornice Works Lidgerwood Mfg. Co. Lehigh University Mitman .... Moravian Book Store Moravian Seminary . A. J. Moyer M. M. Flickinger McClintic-Marshall Co. McCaa Studio . New Merchants ' Hotel H. J. Oppelt E. O ' Reilly Co. Palace Theatre Packard Electric Co. Phillips Mine and Mill Supply Co Ouinlin Printing Co. . The Q. C. Co. Quincy Gilman Engineering Co. A. P. Ritter, Jr. H. E. Ricksecker Jacob Reed ' s Sons John A. Roebling ' s Sons Co. Steinberg ' s Schneller-Snyder Co. Sam ' s .... J. M. Schnabel Bro. South Side Candy Kitchen Morris G. Snyder The New Sanford South Bethlehem Brewing Co. Shankweiler Lehr . Torpey ' s Orchestra . Wm. H. Taylor Co. Uhl ' s Brewery . Vanderstucken-Ewing Construction Co Veeder Mfg. Co. W. J. Woodring Jacob Widman Co. Mrs. Minnie H. Weber Wilbur Trust Co. Weston Electrical Instrument Co. E. A. Wright .... xlviii
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1914
1915
1916
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Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.