Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) - Class of 1904 Page 1 of 488
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TECHNIQUE VOLUME XVIII €1)10 TBOOfi IS DEDICATED WITH AFFECTION AND LOYALTY TO OUR FIRST DEAN a If vet) €tipr iSurtou M D CCCCI V Uoavti of jJutiUcation GEORGE EDWIN ATKINS Editor-in-Chief GUY WARNER EASTMAN JOHN ARTHUR FREMMER Associate Editors LOUIS GUSTAV BOUSCAREN, Jr. Society Editor CHARLES LOWELL HOMER Athletic Editor GEORGE HARDY POWELL ARTHUR JEREMIAH SWEET Statisticians BERTRAM ALLEN RICHARDSON CHARLES OZRO EGERTON FREDERIC NICKERSON ROBERT CURTIS CUTTING Art Editors WALTER ELBRIDGE HADLEY Business Manager BERNARD BLUM : ERNEST HARRAH Assistant Business Managers CLjjfov ti)t Suniov (Tlass: Massa chusetts Institute of Technology : Boston Massachusetts : Nineteen Hundred Three MEETING HE TECHNIQUE BOARD OF MCMIV FOR THE JUNIOR CLASS PRESENTS THIS, THE EIGHT- EENTH VOLUME OF TECHNI- QUE. CWe hope that the book is a mirror to reflect the life of Tech men, particularly the Junior, as a bright spot of sunshine in the ■« - years to come. tLAnd to you, pro- i V S fessors, instructors, students, and ' Freshmen, who are reflected in J r the grinds ' - attribute any distor- tion you may find to a slight con- vexity of the mirror at this point, and try a grin. C, Finally, we earnestly thank every person who by thought, word, or deed has helped us to make the book less unworthy of good old Tech. TECHNIQUE FECHNia C ONj-T EIsn S Dedication Greeting Calendar Members of the Corporati Administrative Officers Alfred Edgar Burton The Classes Student Life in American Colleges Fraternities Local Societies Athletics A Year ' s Changes at the Institute Professional Societies Clubs The Tech Union Publications Musical Clubs Miscellaneous Alumni Associations Graduate Secretaries Class Dinners Junior Week Tech Show Graduation Week . Summer Schools Technology Views Faculty Saints Grinds Special Club Section The Professors ' Show Verse Statistics List of Students In Memoriam John D. Runkle Index Buyers ' Guide 4 6 9 13 14 48 55 92 97 125 131 173 179 193 201 205 213 221 231 234 237 243 246 249 253 265 269 273 291 295 299 309 326 360 361 363 369 Press of THE F. A. BASSETTE COMPANY, Springfield, Mass. apnl Regular Meeting M. I. T. Y. M. C. A Jones, ' 03, President. Junior Class Dinner; G. B. H. S., 10; ' 04, 16; ' 04, 6. Score: C. M. T ' s., Waltham Mechanic 2; ' 04, 13. I Civil Engineering Society Meeting. 3 Architectural Society Meeting. 4 Tennis Association Meeting; J. R Wood, Toastmaster. 5 Baseball —Melrose High School vs. M. I. T. 1904; Score: M High School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: W. H. S. 11; ' 05, 10. 7 Annual Meeting Cross Country Association. 9 Civil Engineering Society Dinner. 10 Society of Arts Meeting. Athletic Association Meeting; K. C. Grant, ' 02, President. 11 Mechanical Engineering Society Dinner. 12 Sophomore Class Dinner; C. L. Homer, Toastmaster. Baseball Newton High School vs. M. I. T. 1904; Score: N. H. S., Arts High School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: M. A. H. S., 5; ' 05, 16. 16 - Baseball -Cambridge Maunal Training vs. M. I T. 1904; 17 Freshman Class Dinner; F. S Elliot, Toastmaster. 18-19 Spring Vacation, 19 Baseball -Stoneham High School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: S. H. S., 12; ' 05, 19. 21 Opening of Junior Week. 22 Dress Rehearsal of Tech Show Spring Concert of Musical Clubs at Paul Revere Hall. 1904 Technique Electoral Committee announced. 23 Baseball -Harvard Anythings vs. M. I. T. 1904; Score: H. A., 5; ' 04, 4. Maiden High School vs. M. I, T. T9o5; ' ' Score: M. H. S., 14; ' 05, 7. 24 TECHNIQUE 1903 issued. Tech Tea, Tech office. Junior Promenade at Hotel Somerset. 25 Tech Show, Applied Mechanics, HoUis-street Theatre. 26 Spring Interclass Championship Meet at Soldiers Field; Score: Tie between ' 03 and ' 04. 30 Baseball Salem High School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: S. H. S., 9; ' 05, 6. 1 Baseball — Civil Engineers; Score: East-siders, 28; West-siders, 17. 2 1904 TECHNIQUE Electoral Committee Meeting. Mechanical Engineering Society Meet- ing. Competitive Drill, South Armory. 3 Baseball -M. I. T. 1904 vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: ' 04, 7; ' 05, 6. Annual Cross Country Run; E. L. Ovington, ' 04, winner. 4 1904 TECHNIQUE Electoral Committee Meeting. 1904 TECHNIQUE !30av — Continued 6 M. I. T. Y. M. C. A. Regular Meeting. 7 Prize Drill, South Armory 8 Atkins, Eastman and Fremmer elected Associate Editors of 1904 TECHNIQ UE. Mass Meeting in Huntington Hall. Society of Arts Meeting. 10 Triangular Meet -Score: Brown, 22 1-2; Tech, 48; Dartmouth, 64 1-2. 12 1904 TECHNIQUE Elections — C. L. Homer, Athletic Editor; B. Gouscaren, Society Editor; G. H. Powell and A. J. Sweet, Statisticians. 15 1904 TECHNIQUE Elections -Hadley, Harrah and Blum, Associate Business Managers. Naval Architectural Society Dinner; H. Crosby, Toastmaster. 17 Baseball M. I. T. 1904 vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: ' 04, 19; ' 05, 17. 19 First Meeting 1904 TECHNIQUE Board; Atkins elected Editor-in-Chief; Hadley, Busi- ness Manager; Powell, Secretary. 22 Electrical Engineering Society Meeting; J. W. Welsh, ' 03, President. Senior Port- folio issued. 24 Installation of Chapters of J ' J and ' ' A - Fraternities. 26 Annual E, aminations begin. 28 N. E. I. A. A. Meet at Worcester, Mass.; M. I. T. wins fourth place. 29 N. E. I. T. A. Championship in singles won bv F. Bradley Tech ' 02 3iunr 6 Alumni Association Reception to Class of 1902. 7 Annual E.xaminations end. Glee Club Concert to 1902 in Huntington Hall. 8 Baccalaureate Sermon to 1902 by Rev. George A. Gordon, D.D , at Old South Church. 9 Class Day Exercises in Huntington Hall; L. A. Gates, First Marshal. Class Day Spread. Senior Dance in Pierce Building. to Graduation Day. Last Meeting of 1902 at 9.30 a. m. Degrees Conferred Dr. Pritchett ' s Reception to 1902. Tech Night at the Pops. College Year ends. t£ ctobrr I Opening of College Year 1902-1903. President Pritchett ' s Address of Welcome to the Freshmen. 3 Y. M. C. A. Reception to Class of 1906. 4 Electrical Engineering Society Meeting. 6 1905 Class Meeting 7 1904 Class Meeting. E. B. Hill elected Captain of 1905 Football Team. Y. M. C. A. Meeting. 8 Annual Reconnoisance Survey of Junior Railroad Engineers. 9 1903 Board of Directors Meeting. Society of Arts Meeting. 10 Address by Rev. W. Rainsford in Huntington Hall. 1 1 Hare and Hounds Run at Winchester. 13 Institute Committee Meeting. 14 Football Brookline High School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: B. H. S., 5; ' 05,0. Mechanics Arts High School vs. M. I. T. 1906; Score: M. A. H. S., o; ' 06, 5 Melrose High School vs. M. I. T. 1906; Score: M. H. S., o; ' 06, 5. 15 1903 Class Meeting. Cross Country Association Meeting. 16 Walker Club Meeting; M. A, Schwartz, President. Electrical Engineering Society Meeting. 17 Mechanical Engineering Society Meeting. 18 Hare and Hounds Run from West Roxbury. Football Dean Academy vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: D. A., 44; ' 05, o. 20 Civil Engineering Society Meeting. Architectural Society Supper at Technology Club. 21 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. 23 Society of Arts Meeting. 20 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII fi ttobcr — Continued 24 Football -Brookline High School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: B. H. S., 5; ' 05, 11. Hare and Hounds Run from Wellesley Farm. 25 Football Newton High School vs. M. I. T. 1906; Score: N. H. S., 17; ' 06, o. 27 Mandaraan Dinner, Hotel Savoy. Mining Engineering Society Meeting. Mechanical Engineering Society Meeting. 29 Technology Club ' s Reception to College Graduates at Tech. Football — Harvard, 1906 vs. M. I. T. 1906; Score, H. ' 06, 29; ' 06, o. 30 Senior Elections; G. W. Swett, President. Sophomore Elections; R. N. Turner, President. j!5ot)fiiibrr 1 Mandaman Club Meeting. Hammer and Tongs Dinner at Winter Place. Fall Meet at Tufts Oval. 3 1905 Class Meeting. Civil Engineering Society Meeting. Reception to the Faculty at Technology Chambers. 4 Jones, ' 03, beat Langley, ' 04, in the finals of Tennis Tournament. 7 Electrical Engineering Society Smoke Talk at Technology Club. Athl etic Association Executive Committee Meeting. Junior Elections; P. M. Smith, President. Round Table Meeting. 8 Football — Powder Point School vs. M. I. T. 1905; Score: P. P. S.,o; ' 05, 53. Tufts 1905 vs. M. I. T. 1906; Score: T. ' 05, o; ' 06, o. 11 1903 Class Meeting. 12 1906 Class Meeting. 13 Freshman Rules issued. Society of Arts Meeting. 1904 Class Meeting. 14 1905 Class Meeting. Hockey Association Meeting; F. A. Falvey, ' 05, President. 15 Field Day, Charles River Park; Won by 1905; Score: ' 05, 6; ' 06, 3. Tech Night at the Columbia Theatre. 17 Institute Committee Meeting. Jones, ' 03, and Langley, ' 04, beat Winchester, ' 03, and Marsh, ' 05, in Tennis Championship Doubles. 18 Technology Club Smoke Talk. 1903 Class Meeting. 19 Mechanical Engineering Society Meeting. 20 1904 Class Photograph taken. 22 Preliminary Run for Cross Country Championship. Football — Course HI vs. Salem High School; Score: HI, 5; S. H. S., 5. 24 Naval Architectural Society Dinner; P. R. Parker, Toastmaster. 25 Walker Club Meeting. Mechanical Engineering Society Smoke Talk. 26 1906 Class Meeting. Round Table Meeting. 27 Thanksgiving Holiday. 28 Society of Arts Meeting. 29 Cross Country Championship won by Thurber, ' 06. HDfcrmbfr 2 Ladies ' Night at Technology Club. First Indoor Athletic Contest at the Gym. 4 First Concert of Musical Clubs at Peabody, Mass. 5 Architectural Society Meeting. 6 Dinner to Participants in Field Day. 1906 Elections Close. 8 Round Table Meeting. Institute Committee Meeting. 9 Freshmen Elections; C F. Wetterer, President. Y. M. C. A. Meeting. 10 Electrical Engineering Society Smoker. 11 1904 Class Meeting. 1904 Class Dinner ; Dougherty, Toastmaster. Society of Arts Meeting. Reception to the Freshmen by Dean Burton. 12 1905 Class Meeting. Fencing Association Meeting. Civil Engineering Society Meeting. Freshman Military Dance at Paul Revere Hall. 13 1904 Track Team Picture taken. Technology Club Smoke Talk. 15 1903 Class Smoker. Exeter Club Meeting; W. F. Currier, ' 03, President 1904 TECHNIQUE U Drrrmbrr — Ccntmued i6 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Athletic Contest at Gym. 17 1903 Class Meeting. 18 Mechanical Engineering Society Meeting. TQ Reception to Freshmen by Dean Burton. Address bv Major Higginson in Huntington Hal!. Walker Club Dinner. 20 General Dinner at Tech Union. Christmas Hnlidavs begin. 26 Alumni Association Annual Meeting and Dinner. 2Q Christmas Holidays end. 30 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Naval Architectural Supper. 31 Seniors see the New Year in on Rogers steps. ,903 3amiarv I Architectural Society Meeting. 1904 Class Picture re-taken. 5 General Geology Lecture by Dean Schaler. Mining Engineering Society Smoker. 6 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Athletic Contest at Gym. Technology Club Smoke Talk. Archi- tectural Society Smoker. 7 Musical Clubs ' Concert. 1906 Class Meeting. 8 Chemical Society Smoker. Society of Arts Meeting. 9 Fencing Association Competition. Civil Engineering Society Smoker. 1904 Class Directors ' Meeting. 10 First Trials for Varsity Relav Team. Hockev Harvard vs. M. I. T.; Score: H., 4; M. I. T., 3. 12 General Geology Lecture by Dean Schaler 13 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Athletic Contest at Gym. 14 General Geology Lecture by Dean Schaler. 16 Winter Meet at Gym won by 1904. 17 Second Trials for Varsity Relay Team. Senior and Junior Recitations close. 22 Sophomore Recitations close. 24 Freshman Recitations close. 31 First Term ends. J ' -fbniari ' i-io Mid-Year Holiday. 13 Mass Meeting Addressed by President Lucius Tuttle. Electrical Engineering Society Meeting. 14 B. A. A. Meet; Relay Race, M. L T. vs. Bowdoin; won bv M. I. T. (on fouli. 16 Executive Committee of Athletic Association Meeting. Mandolin Club Trials. 1901 An- nual class dinner at Union. 17 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Musical Clubs ' Concert at North Gate Club. All-round Contest at Gym. 18 Basketball M. L T. vs. Harvard 1905; Score: M. L T., 23; H. ' 05, 42. Glee and Man- dolin Clubs ' Concert in Milton. Banjo Club Concert at Hotel Brunswick. 1905 Class Dinner. 19 Electrical Engineering Society E.vcursion. Mining Engineering Society Meeting. 20 1902 Class Reunion at Union. 22 1906 Class Meeting. 23 Basketball M. I. T. vs. Boston Y. M. C. A.; Score: M. L T., 18; Y. M. C. A., 53. Archi- tectural Society Smoke Talk. 24 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Naval Architectural Society Smoker; G. H. Powell, ' 04, elected President. 25 Mechanical Engineering Society Meeting. Fencing M. . T. vs. Boston Y. M. C A.; Score: M. . T., ' 4; Y. M. C. A., 5. Musical Clubs ' C oncert at Lexington. Exeter Club Dinner. 1903 Class Meeting. Society of Arts Meeting. 27 Tech Board Annual Dinner. 28 Meeting to form Chess Club. Basketball — M. I. T. vs. Andover; Score: M. I. T., 12; A., 19. 12 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII awarclj 32. Hare and Hounds 2 Chemical Society Smoker 1905 Class Meeting. 3 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. 4 1904 Class Meeting. Homer, Bouscaren, Powell, Hiller, Haynes elected Prom. Com- mittee. Indoor Meet— M. I. T. vs. Tufts; Score: M. I. T.. 45; T., 21. Basketball- M I. T. vs. Brown; Score: M. I. T., 18; Brown, 28. 5 1904 Class Dinner. 6 Walker Club Dinner. Chess Club Meeting. 7 Basketball— M. I. T. vs. W. P. I.; Score: M. I. T. 9; W. P. I. Run from Chestnut Hill. 10 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. 1 1 Mechanical Engineering Society Meeting. Basketball - M. I. T. 12 Chess Club Meeting. Society of Arts Meeting. Fencing M. M. I. T.. i; H., 8. 13 Architectural Society Smoker. 14 Hare and Hounds Run from Roxburv. 17 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Musical Clubs ' Concert at Lynn. rS Senior Class Dinner at Hotel Lenox; W. M. Drury, Toastmaster. 21 Freshman Class Meeting. Hare and Homds Run from Wellesley Hills. 23 Chemical Society Smoker. 24 Mechanical Engineering Society Smoker. 25 Naval Architectural Society Meeting. 26 Y. M. C. A. Meeting. Electrical Engineering Society Smoker. 27 1905 Class Dinner. vs. Haverhill Y. M. . T. vs. Harvard; C. A. Score: apnl 9 24 27 28 29 30 10- 1 1 Trial Games for Track Team. Class Championship Games. Opening of Junior Week. Dress Rehearsal of Tech Show. Musical Clubs ' Concert and Dance. TECHNIQUE, VOLUME XVIII, issued at noon. Hotel Tuileries. The Tech Tea. Junior Promenade at iil9a ' 1 The Tech Show, Hollis-street Theatre. 2 Dual Meet with Tufts. mm S ir Mm HENRY S. PRITCHETT President FRANCIS H. WILLIAMS Secretary GEORGE WIGGLE SWORTH Treasurer WILLIAM ENDICOTT HOWARD A. CARSON CHARLES J. PAINE CHARLES FAIRCHILD DAVID R. WHITNEY ALEXANDER S.WHEELER JAMES P. TOLMAN HOWARD STOCKTON NATHANIEL THAYER CHARLES F. CHOATE HIRAM F. MILLS PERCIVAL LOWELL CHARLES MERRIAM THORTON K. LOTHROP CHARLES C.JACKSON SAMUEL M. FELTON DESMOND FITZGERALD SAMUEL CABOT FRANCIS BLAKE CHARLES W. HUBBARD THOMAS L. LIVERMORE A. LAWRENCE ROTCH JOHN R. FREEMAN GEORGE A. GARDNER WILLIAM H. LINCOLN J. B. SEWALL CHARLES L. LOVERING A. LAWRENCE LOWELL JAMES P. MUNROE WILLIAM L. PUTNAM CHARLES G. WELD EBEN S. DRAPER ROBERT S. PEABODY ELIHU THOMSON ELLIOT C. LEE JAMES P. STEARNS LUCIUS TUTTLE FREDERICK P. FISH FRANCIS L. HIGGINSON CHARLES A. STONE ©11 the ipai-t Of the Commonwealth His Excellency JOHN L. BATES Governor Hon. MARCUS P. KNOWLTON Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Hon. FRANK A. HILL Secretary of the Board of Education HENRY S. PRITCHETT |prc!jiC ciit GEORGE WIGGLESWORTH Crcaeiirci HARRY W. TYLER Sccrctnr i ALFRED E. BURTON ©can ROBERT P. BIGELOW Xtbrarlan FRANK H. RAND JSiirsar WALTER HUMPHREYS IRcciletrar 0. T. WELLS 1RecorC cr 4 r., VC.v ' . CX i:.- U .-. HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT, Ph.D., LL.D., President. Ph.D., Munich; LL.D., Hamilton, University of Pennsyl- vania, Harvard University, Yale University, Johns Hopkins; A.B. and A.M., Pritchett College.  srPresident of the Corporation, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology; Made Assistant Professor in the Naval Observatory, Wash- ington, 1878; Astronomer in Morrison Observatory, Glasgow, Mo., 1880; Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy in Wash- ington University, St. Louis, Mo., 1881; Assistant Astronomer on Transit of Venus Commission, 1882; Professor of Astronomy in Washington University, 1884; Elected President of the Academy of Science, St. Louis, 1892; Made a Ph.D. in Munich. i8p, ' 5: Chosen Superintendent of the U. S. r,. and C. Survey, 1897; President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1900. Report on Observations of the Total Eclipse of July 29, 1878; Determination of the Rotation Period of Jupiter from Observations of the Great Red Spot; Observations of the Satellites of Mars; Observations of Conjunctions of the Satellites of Saturn; A De- termination of the Mass of Mars; A Determination of the Diame- ter of Mars from Micrometric Observations, with a Discussion of Systematic Errors; Ephemeris of the Satellites of Mars; Observa- tions of Comets; Determination of the Longitude of the Mexican National Observatory; The Transit of Mercury, 1891 ; Report of Washington Universitv Eclipse Expedition; The Solar Carona of 1889 with Discussions of the Photographs 1 illustrated ) ; Report on the Determination of Latitude and Longitude Morrison Observatory; A Formula for Predicting the Population of the United States; Ob- servations of Double Stars and Personal Equation in Double Star Measure ; Eclipses of Saturn ' s Satellites and Their Use in Determining the Planet ' s Diameter (with tablesi ; Personal Equation in Time Ob- servations; List of Observations of Double Stars, Comets and Small Planets in the Ast. Nachrichten, and a large number of publications in various Government Reports containing the results of Latitude, Longitude and Gravity determinations. Meridian Circle Observations, etc.; A Plan for an International Arc of the Meridian. Residence, 9 Roseland Street GEORGE A. OSBORNE, S.B., Walker Professor of Mathe- matics. Harvard S.S., ' 60. «rAssistant Professor of Mathematics, U. S. Naval Academy, 1861- 6s; Professor of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy, from 1866; Secretary of Faculty, 1868-71; Walker Professor of Mathematics, from 1902. Author of Examples in Differential Equations (i886 . Differential and Integral Calculus (iSqi), etc. Residence, 249 Berkeley Street 1904 TECHNIQUE J7 ROBERT H. RICHARDS, S.B., Professor of Mining Engi- neering and Metallurgy. M. I. T., ' 68, III. « Assistant in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1868-69; Instructor in Assaying and Qualitative Analysis, 1869-70; Assistant Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1870-71; Professor of Mineralogy and Assaying, in charge of the Mining and Metallurgical Laboratories, 1871-72; Professor of Mining Engineering, 1873-84; Secretary of the Faculty, 1878-83; Professor of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy, from 1884; President of the M. I. T. Alumni Asso- ciation, 1873-76; President of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, 1886-87. Residence, 32 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain WILLIAM H. NILES, S.B., Pli.B., A.M., Professor of Geol- ogy and Geography, Emeritus.  r Professor of Physical Geography, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1871; Professor of Geology and Geography, Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, from 1878; Lecturer on Geology, Wel- lesley College, 1882; Professor of Geology, Wellesley College, 1888; President of the Boston Society of Natural History, 1892-97; Presi- dent of the Appalachian Mountain Club, 1898. Author of Agency of Glaciers in the Excavation of Valleys and Lake Basins, Zones of Physical Features of Mountains, Some Ex- pansions, Movements and Fractures of Rocks, observed at Monson, Mass. The Causes of the Recent Floods in Germany (1887), etc. ' li-iU ,y ' A6. .-„ Residence, Copley Square Hotel, Boston C ■' CHARLES R. CROSS, S.B., Thayer Professor of Physics and Director of the Rogers Laboratory. M. I. T., ' 70, Sci. and Lit. Course. Instructor in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1870-71; Assistant Professor of Physics, 1871-75; Professor of Physics from 1875, in charge of Department of Physics from 1877; in charge of Course in Electrical Engineering from its establishment in 1882 till 1902. Author of many original scientific papers on electricity, acoustics, and other branches of physics, published chiefly in the Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Residence, Upland Road, Erookline 18 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII y i«-(t- oCc GAETANO LANZA, C.E., Professor of Theoretical and Ap- plied Mechanics; in charge of the Department of Mechanical Engineering. «r Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1871-72; As- sistant Professor, 1872-75; Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics from 1875; also in charge of Department of Mechanical Engineering from 1883. Author of Applied Mechanics (i885 , and of many papers in Transactions American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Proceed- ings Society of Arts, Proceedings British Institution of Civil Engineers, Technology Quarterly, etc. Notes on Mechanical Engineering( 18861. Notes on Friction (18871, etc. Residence, 22 West Cedar Street GEORGE F. SWAIN, S.B., M. Am. Soc. C. E., Hayward Professor of Civil Engineering. M. I. T., ' 77, I. «rStudent in Germany, 1877-80; Expert on Tenth U.S. Census, 1880-83; Instiuctor in Civil Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1881-83; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, 1883-87; Associate Professor, 1887-88; Professor from 1888; Engi- neer of Massachusetts Railroad Commissioners from 1887; Member Boston Transit Commission since 1894; ex-President Boston Society of Civil Engineers; ex-President of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Director American Society of Civil Engi- neers, 1901-04. Author of Report on Water Power of Atlantic Slope, Notes on Hydraulics and on Theory of Structures, numerous reports on Rail- road Bridges, Brake Equipment and other subjects, in the reports of the Massachusetts Railroad Commission, and many papers on Engi- neering subjects, published in the Transactions of American Society Civil Engineers, Proceedings New England Water Works Association, Technology Quarterly, Proceedings Society Arts, Journal Franklin Institute, Journal of the Association of Engineering Societies, etc. Residence, 435 Marlboro Street r Jc FRANCIS W. CHANDLER, H. M. Am. Inst. Arch., Professor of Architecture. HfWith Messrs. Ware Van Brimt, Architects, 1864-66; Student in Paris, 1866-68; Assistant with Professor Ware at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1869; Assistant Supervising Architect at Washington, 1870-73; in partnership with Mr. E. C. Cabot of Bos- ton, 1873-88; Professor of Architecture, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, from 1888; Advisory Architect to the Mayor of the City of Boston since 1896; Member of Art Commission, City of Boston; Honorary Member of American Institute of Architecture. Author of A Few Hints About Drainage 1 18881, Construction Details (1892 ' , Notes on Limes, Cements, Mortars and Concretes (18921; editor of Municipal Architecture in Boston (1898), etc. Residence, 195 Marlboro Street J 904 TECHNIQUE 19 WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Ph.B., Ph.D., Professor of Biology. Yale, S.S., ' 77; Berzelius Society; Ph.B., Yale, ' 77; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, ' 81, «• Instructor in Physiological Chemistry, Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University, 1878-79; Fellow, Assistant and Associate in Biol- ogy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 1879-83; Assistant Pro- fessor of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1883-84; Associate Professor, 1884-91; Professor from 1891; Biologist, State Board of Health, 1888-96; Chairman, Pauper Institutions Trustees, City of Boston, 1897-99; Curator, Lowell Institute, since 1897; Pres- ident Massachusetts Civil Service Reform Association, 1900 and 1901 ; President Society American Bacteriologists, 1900; President American Society of Naturalists, 1901. Author, General Biology (18861, New Edition 118951; Assistant Editor, Life and Letters of V illiani Barton Rogers, 2 vols., 1896; Author, Principles of Sanitary Science and the Public Health, 1002; of numerous reports to the State Board of Health of Massachusetts on Epidemics of Typhoid Fever Caused by Infected Water, Milk, etc., various scientific memoirs or monographs, addresses on Education, etc. Residence, Hotel Westminster , -.-... 7 ■C. T DAVIS R. DEWEY, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of Economics and Statistics. University of Vermont, ' 79; A , I B K. A.B., University of Vermont, ' 79; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 86.  p- Teacher, Underhill, Vt., 1879-81; Principal Hyde Park High School, Chicago, 1881-83; Student and Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, 1883-86; Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 1887-88; Assistant Professor, 1888-89; Associate Professor, 1889-92; Professor from 1892; Secretary American Statistical Asso- ciation, from 1886; Editor of its publications from 1887; appointed, 1894-95, Chairman of Board to Investigate the subject of the Un- employed in Massachusetts; Member of Publication Committee of American Economic Association since 1895; appointed member of Board to Investigate Charitable and Reformatory Interests and Institutions of Massachusetts, 1896; member Department of Statis- tics, Boston, 1897 ; appointed Special Expert Agent on Wages, U. S. Census, 1901. Author of a Syllabus on Political History since 1815 (1887); Graphic Statistics, etc.; Editor of Discussions in Economics and Statistics by Francis A. Walker, 2 vols., 1899; Contributor to Dic- tionary of Political Economy; Education for Commerce, 1901; Contributor to The Literature of American History, 1902; Author of Financial History of the United States, 1903. Residence, 52 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain WEBSTER WELLS, S.B., Professor of Mathematics. M. I. T., ' 73, I.  r Instructor in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1873-80, and 1882-83; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 1883-85; Associate Professor, 1885-93; Professor from 1893. Author of Academic Arithmetic, Academic Algebra, Higher Alge- bra, University Algebra, College Algebra, Plane and Solid Geometry, Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, Logarithmic Tables, etc. Residence, Lexington, Mass. 2 7?. c froUo heM 20 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII CECIL H. PEABODY, S.B., Professor of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering. M. I. T., ' 77, II.  ff ' With the Western Union Railroad, 1878; Professor of Mathematics and Engineering, Imperial Agricultural College, Japan, 1878-80; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, University of Illinois, 1881-83; Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1883-84; Assistant Professor of Steam Engineering, 1 884-89; Associate Pro- fessor, 1880-93; Professor of Naval Architecture and Marine Engi- neering from 1893. Author of Notes on Governors and Fly Wheels (1885), Notes on Valve Gears ( 1887), Thermodynamics of the Steam Engine and other Heat Engines (18891, Tables of the Properties of Saturated Steam (1888), Valve Gears for Steam Engines (1890), Steam Boilers (1897, with E. F. Milleri, Papers to Scientific Societies, Manual of the Steam EngineiIndicator2( 1900), etc. Residence, 10 Columbia Street, Brookline a. - J.y HARRY W. TYLER, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, Secretary of the Faculty. M. I. T., ' 84, V. S.B., M. I. T., ' 84; Ph.D., Erlangen, ' 89.  ■Assistant, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-86; In- structor, 1886-90; Assistant Professor, 1890-92; Associate Professor, 1892-93; Secretary of the Faculty, 1889-90, and from 1891 ; Professor of Mathematics, 1893. Author of Entertainments in Chemistry, the Application of Deter- minant Theorems to a Particular Case, tjeber die Sylvestersche und die Bezoutsche Determinanten, Technalogical Education in the United States, The Educational Work of Francis A. Walker, etc. Residence, Gray Cliff Road, Newton Centre ; 6 ' ARLO BATES, A.M., Litt.D., Professor of English. Bow- doin, ' 76; A A 0, t H K. Editor of Broadside, 1878-9; Editor of Boston Courier, 1880-93; Correspondent of Providence Journal, Chicago Tribune, Book Buyer, etc., 1880-93; Professor of English, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, from 1893. Author of Patty ' s Perversities, The Pagans, A Wheel of Fire, Berries of the Briar, Sonnets in Shadow, A Lad ' s Love, The Philis- tines, Prince Vance, Albrecht, Book o ' Nine Tales, The Poet and His Self, Told in the Gate, In the Bundle of Time, The Torch Bearers, Talks on Writing English, Talks on the Study of Literature, The Puritans, Under the Beech Tree, Love in a Cloud, Talks on Wri ting English, Second Series, and the Diary of a Saint. Residence, 4 Otis Place J 904 TECH N I Q U E 21 D. DESPRADELLE, Rotch Professor of Architectural Design. Architect, D. P. L. G.  sr Received first promotion at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, 1882; many of the prizes at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Institut de France; received diplomas from Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Societe centrale des Architects francais; took part in the Concours de Rome four times, and classed first with title of First Second Grand Prix in 1889; Laureat of the Institut de France; Laureat of the Salon, first medal in 1900, hors concours, purchased by the government of France; Officier d ' Academie; Officier de I ' Instruction publique; Assistant In- spector of State Buildings and National Palaces, and under this title helped in the Building of the New Ministry of Agriculture and Com- merce, National Library, Bank of France, the mansion of M. Wilson and M.Grevy (ex-Presidenti, and various other public and private edifices. Residence, 382 Commonwealth Avenue PETER SCHWAMB, S.B., Professor of Machine Design and Director of the Mechanical Laboratories. M. I. T., •78, II.  «rGraduate Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1878-79 ; Draughtsman, Howe Scale Co., Rutland, Vt., 1879-80; Draughtsman, Hinkley Locomotive Co., Boston, 1880-83; Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1883-84; Assistant Professor, 1884-88; As- sociate Professor, 1888-96; Professor of Mechanism, 1897; Professor of Machine Design, 1901. Author of Notes on the Elements of Mechanism (18851, Notes on Gearing {1888), etc. Residence, 27 Water Street, Arlington C. FRANK ALLEN, S.B., Am. Soc. C. E., Professor of Railroad Engineering. M. I. T., ' 72, I.   ■Assistant Engineer, Providence Waterworks, 1872-73; Assistant Engineer, Providence Sewerage, 1873-75; Assistant Engineer, New- ton Waterworks, 1875-76; Engineer Inspector, Boston Sewerage, 1877; Assistant Engineer, Atchison, Topeka Sante Fe R. R., 1878- 80; Assistant Engineer, Mexican Central R. R., 1880; Chief Engineer, Las Vegas Waterworks, and general engineering, 1880; Assistant Engineer, Atchison, Topeka Sante Fe R. R., 1881-84; Secretary of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, 1895-97; President of Massachusetts Highway Association, 1898-99; President Boston Society of Civil Engineers, 1899-1900; Vice-President of Society for Promotion of Engineering Education, 1898-99; Member of Executive Committee, New England Railroad Club, 1899-1903; Member of Committee on Roadway of American Railway Engineer- ing and Maintenance of Way Association; .Admitted to Practice Law in the Courts of New Mexico, 1885, and of Massachusetts, 1901; Member of Committee of Publication Technology Review, 1899- 1901 ; Assistant Professor Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1887-89; Associate Professor, 1889-96; Professor from 1896. Author of Measurement of the Angular Deflection of Beams Fixed at One End, Railroad Curves and Earthwork, Tables for Earthwork Computation, Railroad Engineering and Econo mics of Location, Roads and Road Building, Railroad Building with Reference to Econ- omy in Operating, articles in Engineering Record, Railroad Gazette Technology Quarterly, etc. Residence, Montview Street, West Roxbury y ii X y7 fii ru t ' - 11 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII i yj C . ' CCC-  i v r ' - ? . - ALFRED E. BURTON, S.B., M. Am. Soc. C.E., Professor of Topographical Engineering; Dean Bowdoin, ' 78; A K K, ' I ' 15 K. sSrLand Surveyor, 1878-79; Topographical Draughtsman and Topog- rapher on U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1879-82; Commissioner on Massachusetts Topographical Survey, 1895-1900; in charge of Scientific Expedition to Umanak, Greenland, summer of 1896; in charge of Eclipse Expedition to Washington, Georgia, May, 1900; in charge of Eclipse Expedition to Sumatra, 1901 ; Instructor in Topo- graphical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1882- 84; Assistant Professor, 1884-89; Associate Professor, 1889-96; Pro fessor from 1896; Dean in 1902. Author of several articles in Technology Quarterly, Review, etc. Residence, 58 Webster Street, West Newton DWIGHT PORTER, Ph.B., Am. Soc. C. E., Professor of Hydraulic Engineering. Yale S. S., ' 80; Berzelius Society. Special Agent, Tenth Census U. S., Report upon Water Power, 1880-83; Instructor in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1883-85; Instructor in Civil Engineering, 1885-87; As- sistant Professor of Civil Engineering, 1887-90; Associate Professor of Hydraulic Engineering, 1890-96; Professor from 1896. Author of Flood Discharge from Small Watersheds, Report upon a Sanitary Inspection of certain Tenement-house Districts of Boston, portions of Vols. XVI and XVII Tenth Census U. S., Reports on Water Power, Water Power Streams of Maine, in Nineteenth Annual Report of the U. S. Geological Survey, Notes on Stereotomy and Warped Surfaces, etc. Residence, 149 Hawthorne Street, Maiden HEINRICH 0. HOFMAN, E.M., Met.E., Ph.D., Professor of Metallurgy. E.M., Met.E., Prussian School of Mines, Clausthal, ' 77; Ph.D., Ohio University, ' 89. ■Practicing Metallurgist, 1877-85; Private Assistant to Prof. R. H. Richards, and Lecturer on Metallurgy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1887-88; Professor of Metallurgy and Assaying, Dakota School of Mines, 1887-89; Assistant Professor of Mining and Metal- lurgy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1889-91 ; Associate Professor of Mining and Metallurgy, 1891-98; Professor of Metal- lurgy, from 1898. Aiathor of Gold Milling in the Black Hills (18881, The Dry Assay of Tin Ores (18901, Recent Progress in the Treatment of Argentifer- ous Lead Ores 1892-19011; Metallurgical Lead Exhibits at the Co- lumbian Exposition (1893), Some Experiments on the Fusibility of Fire Clays (18951, Further Experiments on the Fusibility of Fire Clavs (18951 ; The Equipment of Mining and Metallurgical Laborato- ries (1896); The Production of Illuminating Gas and Coke in By- product Ovens (18981; Modification of Birchof ' s Method for Deter- mining the Fusibility of Fire Clays (1898) ; Influence of size of Parti- cles on Resistance of Fire Clays to Heat and Fluxes (18981; The Temperature at which certain Ferrous and Calcic Silicates are Formed in Fusion and the Effect upon these Temperatures of the Presence of Certain Metallic Oxides; and the Metallurgy of Lead and the Desilverization of Base Bullion (1893-1901); Aluminum as a Reducing and Heat-Producing Agent (19021; Encyclopedia Britan- nica Supplement, articles on Lead and on Silver (1902), etc. Residence, 88 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain 1904 TECHNIQUE 23 HENRY P. TALBOT, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry. M. I. T., ' 85, V. S.B., M. I. T., ' 85; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, ' go. «■Assistant in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-87; Instructor, 1887-88 and 1890-92; Assistant Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1892-95; Asso ciate Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1895-98; iProfessor of Analytical Chemistry for 1898-1902; Professor of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, 1902. Author of Ueber das Verhalten der Tiglinsaure und Angelicasaure gegen Bromwasserstoff und Jodwasserstoff (18901; Notes on the Action of Hybromic and Hydriodic Acids on Tiglic Acids (18911; An Index to the Literature of Angelic and Tiglic Acids from 1842 to 1892; Notes on the Properties of Hydrogen Pero.xide Solutions (with H. R. Moody) ; An Introductory Course of Quantitative Chem- ical Analysis (18971 ; A Bibliography of the Analytical Chemistry of Manganese (with John W. Browni (1902); The Recorded History of the Members of the Argus Group (1902) ; and other Chemical Papers. Residence, 273 Otis Street, West Newton ■y - .a ARTHUR A. NOYES, S.M., Ph.D., Professor of Theoretical Chemistry. M. L T., ' 86, V. S.M., M. L T., ' 87; Ph.D., Leipzig, ' 90. (T Assistant in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Techno logy, 1887-88; Instructor, 1890-94; Assistant Professor, 1894-97; Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry, 1897-99; Pro- fessor of Theoretical and Organic Chemistry, 1899- 1902; Professor of Theoretical Chemistry from 1902. Author of A Detailed Course of Qualitative Analysis; of General Principles of Physical Science; of Laboratory Experiments on the Class Reactions and Identification of Organic Substances; and of fifty articles in scientific journals. Residence, 78 Westland Avenue, Bor.ton UiM i- u li rfS- A. RAMBEAU, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Languages. B.A., Wittenberg, 1871; Student at Halle, Marburg, and Paris, 1871-74, and, during different periods, after 1876; Ph.D., 1877, Licentiate, 1879, Marburg.   Instructor in English, University of Marburg, 1878-79; Professor of French and English in several colleges, 1879-92; at last, in Ham- burg; Associate in Romance Languages, 1893-94, and Associate Professor of Romance Languages, 1894-99, Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, Baltimore; Professor of Modern Languages, Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, from 1899. Author of some articles upon Egypt and the East; literary and philological studies upon the Chanson de Roland, Chaucer and Dante, Adam de la Halle; a work upon Parisian pronunciation; edu- cational studies and books for the use of students and teachers; and a great number of articles in American and European philological journals; assistant editor of a linguistic pedagogic periodical. Residence, 5 F Walnut Park, Roxbury 24 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII THOMAS E. POPE, A.M., Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. Harvard University, ' 69.  r Instructor in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1874-76; Professor of Chemistry, Iowa Agricultural College, 1876-84; Assistant Professor of General Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894-95; Associate Professor, 1895-1900; Professor of General Chemistry from 1900. Residence, Bockland Street, Brighton Vx fl . WILLIAM BAIRD, Captain U. S. A., Professor of Military Science and Tactics. West Point, ' 75.  f Member Regular Army and Navy Union; Loyal Legion, Sons of Revolution; Society of Colonial Wars; National Geographic Society; Graduate, School of Military Signaling and Telegraphy, Fort Meyer, Va., 1881. Service with Sixth U. S. Cavalry, participating in the Chiricahua, Chimhuevi, Victorio, and Geronimo Campaigns. Explorations and Surveys for Wagon Routes in Tonto Basin, in Moqui and Navajo Country, 1877; Colorado Caiion, 1880. Inspector of Supplies, Sho- shone Reservation, Wyo., 1891. Garrison Duty at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Infantry and Cavalry School, 1894. Retired, 1897 ( Disa- bility in line of duty ). Residence, 20 Newbury Street ' - .£: % ' yO ' - ' -y GEORGE T. DIPPOLD, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Lan- guages. Boston University, ' 83.  F Postgraduate Student in Sanskrit and Germanic Philology and Instructor in German, Harvard University, 1871-74; Instructor in French, Sanskrit, and Anglo-Saxon, Boston University, 1874-83; Lecturer, German Literature, Gothic, and Middle High German, Johns Hopkins University, 1883-85; Instructor in Modern Languages, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1886-91 ; Assistant Professor, 1891-95; Associate Professor from 1895-1901; Professor from 1907. Author of the Great Epics of Mediaeval Germany, Translator of Emanuel Geibel ' s Brunhild, Deutsche Litteraturdenkmale des 18 Jahrhunderts, Theories as to the Original Home of the Indo-European Race, Richard Wagner ' s Ring of the Nibelung Explained, and in part Translated, German Scientific Reader, etc. Residence, 5 Verndale Street, Brookline J 904 TECHNIQUE 25 CHARLES F. A. CURRIER, A.B., A.M., Professor of History. Harvard University, ' 87; B K. A.B., Harvard University, ' 87 ; A.M., Harvard University, ' 88 ; Fellow of Harvard University studying at Berlin and Paris, 1889-91.  r Instructor in History and Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891-93; Assistant Professor of History, 1893-95; Associate Professor, 1 895-1 901; Professor of History from 1901. Residence, Winchester c£... ji:Q WILLIAM HOVGAARD, Captain Danish Navy, Professor of Naval Design. Royal Naval College, ' 86. Lieutenant of Danish Navy, 1879-97; Commander from 1897; On Technical Staff of the Copenhagen Navy Yard, 1886-94; Sub- Director of Burmeister and Wains Ship and Engine Company, 1895- 97; Member of the Danish Transit of Venus Expedition to St. Croix, 1882. Member of the Institute of Naval Architects and of the American Society of Naval Architects and Mining Engineers. Author of Sub- marine Boats, and also two books on Physical Exercise. Residence, 17 Winthrop Street, West Newton - Z a. LOUIS DUNCAN, Ph.D., Professor of Electrical Engi- neering. Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 85.  tr Graduate U. S. Naval Academy, 1880; Assisted Professor Rowland in the determination of the Ohm, 1882; Graduate of Course of Torpedo Instruction at Torpedo School, Newport, R. I., 1883; Presi- dent of Board of Judges at International Electrical Exhibition, 1884; Resigned from Navy, 1886; Heart of course of Applied Electricity at Johns Hopkins to 1898; Major in the First Regiment of Volunteer Engineers during Spanish-American War ; Present Electrical Engi- neer for the New York Rapid Transit Commission and for several railroad and telephone companies; Professor of Electrical Engineer- ing, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, from 1902. Twice President of American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Member of Mathematical Society of France, and of the American Philosophical Society; Honorary Member of the Franklin Institute. Author of various scientific papers. Residence, 1770 Beacon Street, Brookline l -a.U SxmA- O U. 2b TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII LINUS FAUNCE, S.B., Associate Professor of Drawing. M. I. T., -77, II. «r Draughtsman for Superintendent of Bridges, P. C. St. L. R. R., 1878-79; Chief Clerk Car Shops, P. C. St. L. R. R., 1879-82; in charge of Waterworks and Signals, N. Y. N. E. R. R., 1882-84; Assistant Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-96; Associate Professor from 1896. Author of Descriptive Geometry, Mechanical Drawing, etc. Residence, Bellevue Street, West Roxbury t s ' i- ' Z -t 0 ' ' ' t J ' €- DANA P. BARTLETT, S.B., Associate Professor of Mathe- matics. M. I. T., ' 86, VI.  «r Assistant in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1886-87; Instructor in Mathematics, 1888-91; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 1891-98; Associate Professor from 1898; Assistant in Observatory of Harvard College, 1887. Author of General Principles of the Method of Least Squares. Residence, 486 Columbus Avenue JEROME SONDERICKER, S.B., C.E., Associate Professor of Applied Mechanics. S.B., University of lUinois, ' 80; C.E., University of Illinois, ' 83.   Instructor, University of Illinois, 1880-83; Assistant Professor Engineering and Mathematics, 1883-85; Instructor in Applied Me- chanics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-89; Assistant Professor of Applied Mechanics from 1889-99; Associate Professor from 1899. Author of Notes on Graphic Statics, and papers published in Technology Quarterly and other Engineering periodicals. Residence, 170 Oakleigh Road, Newton 19 04 TECHNIQUE 27 ALLYNE L. MERRILL, S.B., M. Am. Soc. M. E., Associate Professor of Mechanism. M. L T., ' 85, IL HT Assistant, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-87; In- structor, 1887-91 ; Assistant Professor of Mechanism, 1891-99; Asso- ciate Professor from 1889. Residence, Payson Park, Belmont z: 7 -i-I-K. EDWARD F. MILLER, S.B., M. Am. Soc. M. E., Associate Professor of Steam Engineering. M. I. T., ' 86, II. Assistant, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1886-88; In- structor, 1888-92; Assistant Professor of Steam Engineering, 1892- 99; Associate Professor from 1899. Author of a number of articles printed in the Transactions Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Technology Quarterly, Machinery, and other Engineering papers, Steam Boilers (with C. H. Peabody), Waste Heat Engines (New England Water Works Association, Engineering News, Engineering Record 1 ; Foreign Tech- nical Schools. Residence, 538 Ward Street, Newton Centre Ci Uoa M. r. iVi A x. FRANK VOGEL, A.B., A.M., Associate Professor of Modern Languages. Harvard University, ' 87 ; A Y. «r Professor of Modern Languages, Mitchell ' s Boys ' School, Billerica, Mass., 1887-88; Instructor in Modern Languages, Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, 1888-92; Assistant Professor of Modern Lan- guages, 1892-1900; Associate Professor from 1900; Graduate Student in Germanic Philology at Harvard University, 1888-92; Director of Modern Languages in the Normal Summer School of Languages and Science, Normal, 111., 1890-92; Student in Germanic and Romance Philology, Heidelberg, Germany, 1893-94; Member of Bosto n School Committee, 1901-04; Instructor in German, Simmons College, 1902. Editor and Annotator of Chamisso ' s Peter Schlemihl ' s Wunder- same Geschichte, Hauff ' s Lichtenstein, Storm ' s Geschichten aus der Tonne, A Scientific German Reader, and other publications. Residence, 95 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain 28 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ■Q A. Arr A S. HOMER WOODBRIDGE, A.M., Associate Professor of Heating and Ventilation. Williams College, ' 73. «5 Student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1874; In- structor in Ph ' sics, 1883-95; Assistant Professor, 18Q5-1900; Asso- ciate Professor from 1900. Residence, Otis Street, West Newton fa WILLIAM L. PUFFER, S.B., Associate Professor of Electri- cal Engineering. M. I. T., ' 84, III. «(r Assistant, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-86; In- structor, 1886-93; Assistant Professor, 1893-1901; Associate Profes- sor from 1901; Member of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, 1893; Consulting Electrical Engineer of the Inspection Department of the Factory Mutual Insurance Companies, 1894. Residence, West Newton l7r ' =t5i Ur ui. WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE, S.B., Associate Professor of Architecture. M. I. T., ' gi, IV. tFlnstructor in Architecture, 1891-96; Assistant Professor, 1896- 190 1 ; Associate Professor from 190 1. Author of Elements of Shades and Shadows, Principles of Per- spective. Residence, 34 Summer Street, Dorchester 1904 TECHNIQUE 29 WILLIAM O. CROSBY, S.B., Associate Professor of Geology. M. I. T., ' 76, VII. «r Student Assistant in Paleontology, 1875-76; Assistant in Paleon- tology, 1 876-78 ; Assistant in Geology, 1 878-80 ; Instructor in Geology, 1880-83; Assistant Professor of Mineralogy and Lithology, 1883-92; Assistant Professor of Structural and Economic Geology, 1892; Associate Professor of Geology, 1902. Author of Geology of Eastern Massachusetts, Geology of the Bos- ton Basin, Common Minerals and Rocks, Guides to Mineralogy and to Dynamical Geology and Petrography, Tables for the Determination of Common Minerals, and numerous papers on the Geology of New England, the Black Hills, Cuba, Trinidad, etc. ; and on Joint Struct- ure, Faults, Origin of Continents, Colors of Soils, Concretions, Drift, Ore Deposits, etc., published in Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, American Journal of Science, Geological Magazine, Technology Quarterly, etc. Residence, 9 Park Lane, Jamaica Plain HARRY E. CLIFFORD, S.B., Associate Professor of Theoretical Electricity. M. I. T., ' 86, VI.; =.  (r Assistant in Physics, 1886-88; Instructor in Theoretical Physics, 1888-95; Assistant Professor in Theoretical Physics, 1805-1902; As- sociate Professor of Theoretical Electricity from IQ02; Assistant in Harvard College Observatory, 1887. Author of Notes on Heat, Derived Electrical Units, Elements of the Theory of Potential, and various papers pubhshed in the Tech- nology Quarterly, Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, etc. Residence, Newton Centre WILLIAM H. WALKER, S.B., Ph.D., t ' K :i, Associate Professor of Industrial Chemistry. S.B., Pennsylvania State College, ' 90; Ph.D., Gottingen, ' 92.  )r Instructor in Chemistry, Pennsylvania State College, 1892-94; Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894-1900 Mem- ber of the firm of Little Walker, Chemical Experts and Engineers, 1900—; Associate Professor Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1902—. Residence, 613 Walnut Street, Newtonville MB ■■WP 1 mi 1 1 30 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVlJi McUAAX%7-i fiOduj FREDERICK H. BAILEY, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor of Mathtmatics. Harvard University, ' 87; J ' H K. A.B., Harvard University, ' 87; A.M., Harvard Univers ity, ' 89. ■Assistant in MathematicE, Harvard University, 1889-91 ; Instructor in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891-93; Assistant Professor from 1893. Atithor of Plane and Solid Analytic Geometry (with Professor Woods, 18971. Residence, 73 Wendell Street, Cambridge FRED L. BARDWELL,S.B.,Assistant Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. University of Minnesota, ' 81; M. I. T., ' 84, V. « Assistant in General Chemistry, 1884-86; Instructor in General Chemistry, 1886-94; Assistant Professor from 1894. Residence, 11 Chamblet Street, Roxbury i_ Ja-ia iiy Muai Ci - AUGUSTUS H. GILL, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Gas and Oil Analysis. M. I. T., ' 84, V. S.B., M. I. T., ' 84; Ph.D., Leipzig, ' 90.   Assistant in General and Sanitary Chemistry, Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, 1884-86; Instructor, 1887-88; Water Analyst State Board of Health, 1888; Instructor in Gas Analysis, Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, 1880-94; Assistant Professor from 1894. Author of various papers relating to Water, Gas, and Oil Analysis in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, English Analyst, Fresenius ' Zeitschrift, and Technology Quarterly, Gas and Fuel Analysis for Engineers and A Short Handbook of Oil Analysis. Residence, Canton 1904 TECHNIQUE 3J RICHARD W. LODGE, Assistant Professor of Mining and Metallurgy. M. I. T., ' 79, HI.  (r Assistant in Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, 1879-80; Mining in Colorado, 1880- 81; Mine Superintendent in Nevada, 1881-82 ; Assistant in Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1882-83; Head Chemist for North Chicago Rolling Mill Company, South Chicago, 111., 1883-85; Chemist for Sloss Iron and Steel Company, Alabama, 1887; Instructor in Mining and Metallur- gical Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1889- 94; Assistant Professor from 1895. Residence, 99 Colchester Street, Loug wood, Mass. rfu. 7 - FREDERICK S. WOODS, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Wesleyan University, I Y, 1 B K. A.B., Wesleyan, ' 85; A.M., Wesleyan, ' 88; Ph.D., Gottin- gen, ' 94. « • Assistant in Physics and Astronomy at Wesleyan, 1885-86 ; Teacher in Mathematics in Genesee Seminary, Lima, N. Y., 1886-90; Instruc- tor in Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890-95; Assistant Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, from 1895; Lecturer on Mathematics, Harvard University, 1898-99. Author of Plane and Solid Analytic Geometry (with Professor Bailey, 1897); Papers in Mathematical Journals; Editor of Annals of Mathematics. Residence, 21 Church Street, Newton J-. .i cA ' ' J ' t ' TrtU-. THEODORE HOUGH, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biology. A.B., Johns Hopkins University, ' 86 ; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 93. HT Instructor in McDonough School, Maryland, 1880-89; Instructor in Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1893-95; Assistant Professor of Biology from 1895. Residence, 72 Pinckney Street, Boston T Uyo- ' ic jCfy ' i fy 32 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII JOSEPH J. SKINNER, C.E., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Yale, ' 69. Ph.B., ' 69, C.E., ' 74, Ph.D., ' 76, Yale. «¥ Instructor in Engineering and Mathematics (and for part of the time in Physics and French), Sheffield Scientific School, Yale, 1873- Si ; Computer and Draughtsman, Statistical Atlas of Kinth Census, 1S73-75; Manager and Trea-.urer of the American Electric Company, New Britain, 1881-83; Instructor in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-96; Assistant Professor from 1896. Author of a book on Approximate Computations, and of some papers in scientific journals. Residence, Newton Centre J ' ,- GEORGE H. BARTON, S.B., Assistant Professor of Geology. M. I. T., ' 80, III. • Assistant in Drawing, 1880-81; Hawaiian Government Survey, 1881-83; Assistant in Mineralogy and Lithology, 1883-88; Instructor in Determinative Mineralogy, 1888-89; Instructor in Geology, 1889- 96; Assistant Professor of Geology from i8g6; Curator of the Teach- ers ' School of Science. Author of Outline of Elementary Lithology, Outline of Dynamical and Structural Geology, and of various papers on Geology of Mass- achusetts, Hawaii, Labrador and Greenland, published in Proceed- ings of Boston Society of Natural History, American Journal of Science, American Geologist, Science, Technology Quarterly, etc. Residence, 16 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, S.B., Assistant Professor of High- way Engineering. M. I. T., ' 86, I.  ¥ Assistant, Civil Engineering, 1886-88; Instructor in Civil Engi- neering, 1888-93; Instructor in Highway Engineering, 1893-96; Assistant Professor from 1896. Author of several articles in Technology Quarterly, An Elementary Treatise on Plane Surveying and Navigation. Residence, 60 Webster Street, West Newton J 904 TECHNIQUE 33 FRANK A. LAWS, S.B., Assistant Professor of Electrical Testing. M. I. T., ' 80, VI. wAssistant in Physics, 1880-91; Instructor in Physics, 1891-93; Instructor in Electrical Measurements, 1893-97; Assistant Professor of Electrical Measurements, 1897; Assistant Professor of Electrical Testing, 1902. Author of a number of papers on Electrical Measurements, pub- lished in the Technology Quarterly, Proceedings of American Acad- emy of Arts and Sciences, and Physical Review. Residence, Salem d3r ... 6 ;. HARRY M. GOODWIN, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics. S.B., M. I. T., ' 90, VIII.; Ph.D., Leipzig, ' 93. Assistant in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890- 92; Instructor, 1892-97; studying at Leipzig and Berlin, 1892-94; Assistant Professor from 1897. Author of Laboratory Notes on Physico-Chemical Measurements; Notes on Physical Laboratory E.xperiments; Some Experimental Researches in Acoustics, 1890; Studien zur Voltasche Kette, 1892; The Fundamental Laws of Electrolytic Conduction, 1899; and vari- ous papers in scientific journals. Residence, 232 Townsend Street, Ro.xbury J y . JOHN 0. SUMNER, A.B., Assistant Professor of History. Harvard, ' 87. W Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894; Assistant Professor from 1897. Residence, 158 Mt. Vernon Street -tU_ 34 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII HENRY G. PEARSON, A.B., Assistant Professor of English. Harvard, ' 93; w H, P I ' , K.  r Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technolot;y, 1893; Assistant Professor from 1898. Author of the Principles of Composition. Residence, Weston J.C -j Lm-AA ty LOUIS DERR, M.A., S.B., Assistant Professor of Physics. Amherst, ' 89; M. I. T., ' 92, VI.; AY, ! ' B K. B.A., Amherst, ' 89; M.A., Amherst, ' 92; S.B., M. I. T., ' 92.  ?■Assistant in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892-93; Instructor in Physics, 1893-1900; Assistant Professor of Physics from 1900; in charge of Instruction in Physics, Boston Nor- mal School of Gymnastics from 1894; Instructor in Physics, Boston University, from 1895. Author of Notes on Methods of Telegraphy; Notes on Dynamo Design, and a number of articles in various technical publications. Residence, 83 Centre Street, Brookline : h k. -.-„ LUx. GEORGE V. WENDELL, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics. M. I. T., ' 92, VIII.; A K E. S.B., M. I. T., ' 92; Ph.D., Leipzig, ' 98.   Assistant in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892-93; Instructor in Physics, 1893-1900; Savage Fellow of Mass- achusetts Institute of Technology, studying in Leipzig, 1896-98; Honorary Fellow of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, studying in Berlin, 1898-99; Assistant Professor of Physics from 1900. Author of Ueber die Rotations Dispersion der Weinsaure und des Terpentinols; Paper on some E.xperiments with the Phonograph relating to the Vowel Theory of Helmholtz; Secretary of society of Arts, 1899-1902, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Residence, 39 Cedar Street, Somerville 1904 TECHNIQUE 35 WILLIS R. WHITNEY, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry and Proximate Technical Analysis. M. I. T., ' go, V. S.B., M. I. T., ' 90; Ph.D., Leipzig, ' 96.  (r Assistant in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 18Q0-Q4; Instructor in Chemistry, 1896-1900; Assistant Professor of Theoretical Chemistry from 1900; studying in Leipzig, 1894-96; studying in Paris in 1896. Translator of Le Blanc ' s Electro-Chemistry and Author of several papers in Scientific Journals; Electro-Chemist for the General Electric Company. Residence, Hotel Nottingham FRANK H. THORP, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Industrial Chemistry. M. I. T., ' 89, V. S.B., M. I. T., ' 89; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, ' 93. Assistant in Industrial Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1889-91; Instructor, 1894-1900; Assistant Professor, 1900; Experiments on the Production of Boiled Linseed Oil (18901. Author of Ueber die Oxime der Substituierten Benzophenone (1893); A Review of Some Improvements in Chemical Industry ( 18961 ; Ignorganic Chemical Preparations (1896); Outlines of Industrial Chemistry (18981. Residence, Oriole Street, West Roxbury A j x.-M - -. CHARLES E. FULLER, S.B., Assistant Professor of Mechan- cal Engineering. M. I. T., ' 92, II.  r Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892-94; Instructor of Mechanical Engineering, 1894-1900; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering from 1900. Residence, Wellesley ' -fe O fuUii r 36 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII WILLIAM A. JOHNSTON, S.B., M. Am. Soc. M.E., Assist- ant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. M. I. T., ' gi, II.  «! Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, i892-g4; Instructor, Mechanical Engineering, 1894-1900; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering from igoo. Residence, Belmont .. ' U -  uzc- CHARLES F. PARK, S.B., Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. M. I. T., ' g2, II. r Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892-94; Instructor of Mechanical Engineering, 1894-1900; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering from 1900. Residence, 21 Prospect Street, Taunton ( Jjl S ■il Ut J[ CHARLES L. NORTON, S.B., Assistant Professor of Heat Measurements. M. I. T., ' 93, VI. S.B., M. I. T., ' 93. ««r Assistant in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1 893-95; Instructor in Physics, 1895-99; Instructor in Heat Meas- urements, 1899-1900; Assistant Professor from 1900; in Charge of the Insurance Engineering Experiment Station, 1902. Contributed to various publications, papers on Fire Protection, Heat Conduction, The Protection of Steam-Heated Surfaces, The Application of X-rays to Medicinal Diagnoses, The Illumination of Interiors by Ribbed and Prismatic Glass, Electric Furnaces, etc. Residence, Union Street, Manchester ' A 19 04 TECH N I Q U E 37 HENRY FAY, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Analyti- cal Chemistry and Metallography. A.B., Lafayette College, ' 89; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 95. r Instructor in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-1900; Assistant Professor from 1900. Author of the Action of Light on Some Organic Acids in the Pres- ence of Uranium Salts; The Effect of Annealing upon the Physical Properties and the Microstructure of a Low Carbon Steel; The Nature of Lead Amalgams, and various other papers. Residence, 16 Marlboro Street JAMES F. NORRIS, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Organic Chemistry. Johns Hopkins University, ' 92 ; t B K A.B., Johns Hopkins University, ' 92; Ph.D., Johns Hop- kins, ' 95. «r Assistant in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-96; Instructor in Chemistry, 1896-1900; Assistant Professor from 1900; Secretary of the Society of Arts; Secretary of the Johns Hopkins Club of New England. Author of about twenty papers on Chemistry published in the American Chemical Journal. Residence, 124 Anawan Avenue, West Roxbury F. JEWETT MOORE, B.A., Ph.D., X 4 , Assistant Professor of Analytical Chemistry. B.A., Amherst, ' 89 ; Ph.D., Heidel- berg, ' 93.  «r Assistant in Chemistry, Amherst College, 1889-90; Instructor in General Chemistry, Cornell University, 1893-94; Assistant in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894-95; Instructor, 1895-1902; Assistant Professor from 1902. Author of occasional scientific papers. Residence, 220 Marlborough Street 57% ' ' i-,. 38 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII JAMES LOCKE, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Inor- ganic Chemistry. A.B., Yale, ' go; Ph.D., Heidelberg, ' 95; A K K, Yale. srinstructor in Chemistry, Sheffield Scientific School, 1807-1902; Assistant Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology since 1902. Author of papers on Inorganic Chemistry and Mineralogical Chemistry published in the American Chemical Journal and Zeits- chrift fur anorganische Chemie, 1892-1902 Residence, 23 Dudley Street, Brookline ( .i i,w- fLo- Aj. PERCIVAL LOWELL, A.B., Non-resident Professor of Astronomy ELIHU THOMSON, Non-resident Professor of Applied Electricity HENRY K. BURRISON, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing M. I. T., ' 75, I. and Descriptive Geometry Residence : 26 Lincoln Park, West Newton ELLEN H. RICHARDS, A.M., S.B. Instructor in Sanitary Chemistry M. I. T., ' 73, v.; A. M., Vassar, ' 70 Residence: 32 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain CHARIES L. ADAMS Instructor in Freehand Drawing Residence: 256 Lamartine Street, Jamaica Plain PETER S. BURNS, Ph.D. Iowa State College, ' 86; Delta Tau Delta Residence : Milton NATHAN R. GEORGE, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry Instructor in Mathematics Harvard, ' 90; Theta Delta Chi; Phi Beta Kappa Residence : 208 Huntington Avenue LEONARD M. PASSANO, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics Johns Hopkins, ' 89 Residence : 5 Cottage Avenue, Winchester JOSEPH BLACHSTEIN Instructor in Modern Languages Realschule erster Ordnung, Hanover, ' 68; Institution Springer, Paris, ' 70 Residence: 691 Parker Street, Roxbury ROBERT P. BIGELOW, Ph.D. Instructor in Biology; Librarian S.B., Harvard, ' 87; Beta Theta Pi; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, ' 92 Residence : 72 Pinckney Street BENJAMIN E. CARTER, Jr., A.M. Instructor in Mathematics Harvard, ' 90 Residence: 176 Huntington Avenue SAMUEL P. MULLIKEN, Ph.D. Instructor in Organic Chemistry S.B., M. I. T., ' 87, V. ; Ph.D., Leipzig, ' 90 Residence: 51 Bromfield Street, Newburyport M. I. T., ' 86, V. 40 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII GEORGE W. ROLFE, A.M. Instructor in Sugar Analysis A.B., Harvard, ' 85; A.M., Harvard, ' 86; Delta Upsilon; Pi Eta Residence: 322 Harvard Street, Cambridge L. KIMBALL RUSSELL, S.B. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry I. Residence: 128 Medford Street, Arlington ERVIN KENISON, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing M. I. T., ' 93, II. and Descriptive Geometry Residence: 109 Magoun Avenue, Medford KILBURN S. SWEET, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering M. I. T., ' 93, I. Residence : 33 Coolidge Road, Allston W. FELTON BROWN Instructor in Freehand Drawing Residence: 35 Glenwood Street, Roxbury JUSTUS ERHARDT, A.B. Instructor in Modern Languages Residence: 10 Arlington Street, Boston HARRY W. GARDNER, S.B. Instructor in Architecture M. I. T., ' 94, IV. Residence : 90 Corey Street, Roxbury GEORGE B. HAVEN, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering M. I. T., -94, n. Residence : Needham FRANK P. McKIBBEN, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering M. I. T., ' 94, I. Residence : 42 Newbury Street, Newton Centre JOSEPH W. PHELAN, S.B. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry M. I. T., ' 94, V. Residence : 754 Center Street, Jamaica Plain SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT, S.B. Instructor in Biology M. I. T., ' 94, V. Residence : 334 Broadway, Cambridge ARCHER T. ROBINSON, A.B. Instructor in English Harvard, ' 96; Phi Beta Kappa Residence: 14 Biltmore Street, Jamaica Plain ARTHUR W. WEYSSE, Ph.D. Instructor in Biology A.B., Harvard, ' 91; A.M., Harvard, ' 92; Ph.D., Harvard, ' 94 Residence : 3 Albemarle Chambers, Boston HARRY C. BRADLEY, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing M. I. T., ' 91, I. and Descriptive Geometry Residence: 103 Gainsboro ' Street, Boston 1904 TECHNIQUE 41 CHARLES M. SPOFFORD, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering M. I. T., ' 03, I. Residence : 39 Churchill Av enue, Newtonville RALPH R. LAWRENCE, S.B. Instructor in Electrical Engineering M. I. T., ' 95, VI. Residence : 34 Sumner Street, Dorchester FRANCIS HAROLD DIKE, A.B. Instructor in Modern Languages Columbia, ' 97 Residence: 21 West Cedar Street GEORGE L. HOSMER Instructor in Civil Engineering Residence: 100 Green Street, Melrose Highlands ALPHEUS G. WOODMAN, S.B. Instructor in Sanitary Chemistry M. I. T., ' 97, V. Residence : 4 Union Park Street WILLIAM T. HALL, S.B. Instructor in Analytical Chemistry M. I. T., ' 95, V. Residence : 366 Commonwealth Avenue JOSEPH C. RILEY, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering M. I. T., ' 98, II. Residence: 15 Spring Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain WILLIAM D. COOLIDGE, Ph.D. Instructor in Theoretical Chemistry M. I. T., ' 96, VI. Residence : 166 West Canton Street, Boston CHARLES W. BERRY, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering M. I. T., ' 95, VI. Residence : 6 Center Street, Somerville WALTER S. LELAND, S.B. Instructor in Naval Architecture M. I. T., ' 96, XIII. Residence: South Framingham CHARLES H. WARREN, Ph.D. Instructor in Mineralogy Yale Residence : 74 Buckingham Street, Cambridge WILLIAM J. DRISKO Instructor in Physics M. I. T., ' 95, VIII. Residence : 24 Park Avenue, Maiden CHARLES B. BREED, S.B. Instructor in Civil Engineering M. I. T., ' 97, I. Residence: 17 Oakville Street, Lynn HARRISON W. SMITH, A.B., S.B. Instructor in Electrical Engineering Harvard, ' 95; M. I. T., ' 97, II.; Delta Upsilon Residence : 40 Mill Street, Dorchester 42 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII MAURICE DeK. THOMPSON, Jr., S.B. i Absent i Instructor in Electro-Chemistry M. I. T., ' 98, VIII; Delta Kappa Epsilon CHARLES-EDWARD A. WINSLOW, S.M. Instructor in Biology M. I. T., ' 98, VII. Residence : Hotel Oxford, Boston REGINALD R. GOODELL, M.A. Instr uctor in Modern Languages Bowdoin; Delta Kappa Epsilon Residence : Technology Club, 83 Newbury Street CHARLES E. LOCKE, S.B. Instructor in Mining and Metallurgy M. I. T., ' 96, III. Residence: 16 Concord Street HENRY L. SEAVER, A.B. Instructor in English Harvard Residence : 39 Allston Street, Dorchester HARRISON W. HAYWARD, S.B. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering M. I. T., ' 96 Residence : 79 Milton Avenue, Hyde Park GEORGE W. FIELD, A.B., Ph.D. Instructor in Economic Biology A.B., Brown, ' 87; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, ' 92 Residence: Sharon, Mass. ROBERT G. VALANTINE, A.B. Instructor in English Harvard, ' 96 Residence : i Willow Street, Boston CHARLES W. HASKINS, Ph.D. Instructor in Mathematics S.B., M. I. T., ' 97; S.M., Harvard, ' 99; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard, ' 00 Residence : New Bedford, Mass. FREDERICK R. KNEELAND, S.B. Instructor in Analytical Chemistry Columbia, ' 99 Residence : Technology Chambers, Boston HERMANN KURRELMEYER, Ph.D. Instructor in Modern Languages B.A., Johns Hopkins, ' 99; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, ' 02 Residence, Boston ERNEST A. MILLER, B.S., A.M. Instructor in Mathematics B.S., Cornell, ' 99; A.M., Columbia, ' 00 Residence ; 7 Claremont Park, Boston OSCAR W. PICKERING WALTER H. JAMES, S.B. . EDWARD E. BUGBEE, S.B. TIMOTHY C. O ' HEARN, S.B. LAWRENCE S. SMITH, S.B. FRANCIS E. C.ADY. S.B. FREDERICK G. CLAPP, SB. HARRY E. DART, S.B. CLINTON M. DEARDEN, S.B. HARRY R. WHITE, S.B. ROY G. BURNHAM, S.B. . CLIFFORD M. SWAN, S.B. ALLEN L. APPLETON, S.B. CHAUNCEY C. BATCHELOR, A.B. LEWIS P. CHAPIN, Ch.E., Ph.D. ARTHUR ELSON. A.B., S.B. HENRY A. FERRIN, S.B. ARCHIBALD GARDNER, S.B. ARTHUR L. GOODRICH, S.B. KENNETH C. GRANT, S.B. WALTER S. HANNA, C.E. CHARLES B. HOLLIS, S.B. S. COLVILLE LIND, A.B., S.B. BENJAMIN G. MACINTIRE, S.B. CHAMPION H. MATTHEWSON, Ph.B. ARTHUR T. NELSON, S.B. NEWELL C. PAGE, S.B. FRED C. RANDALL, S.B. . WILLIAM H. REED, Jr., A.M. . IRVING W. REYNOLDS, S.B. CHARLES A. SAWYER, Jr., S.B. CHARLES WINTHROP SAWYER HERBERT L. SHERMAN, S.B. CHARLES H. SISSON, A.B., S.B. CLARENCE D. STOOR, S.B. ORLANDO S. STOCKMAN, S.B. WILLIS H. TOWNE, S.B. ROYAL L. WALES, S.B. HERBERT S. WALKER, A.B. FRANCIS C. WARE, A.B. CHARLES F. WILLARD, S.B. ROBERT S. WILLIAMS, S.B. DAVID L. WING, S.B. Inorganic Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Mining Engineering Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Physics Geology Electrical Engineering Electro-Chemistry Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Physics Naval Architecture English Inorganic Chemistry Mechanical Drawing Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Drawing Civil Engineering Civil Engineering Mining Engineering . Analytical Chemistry Industrial Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry Civil Engineering Physics Physics Modern Languages Physics Mining Engineering Freehand Drawing Geology Mining Engineering Mechanical Engineering Heat Measurements Mechanical Drawing Oil and Gas Analysis Analytical Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry Marine Engineering Analytical Chemistry Economics CflANlC ACTS THEODORE B. MERRICK JAMES R. LAMBRITH ROBERT H. SMITH . JAMES F. LEARY CHARLES E. LITTLEFIELD EUGENE S. FOLJAMBE, S.B. JEREMIAH F. O ' NEILL Instructor in Woodwork and Foundry-work Instructor in Forging Instructor in Machine-Tool Work Assistant in Forging Assistant in Machine-Tool Work Assistant in Machine-Tool Work Assistant in Woodwork and Foundry-work IReOical aoviser, Xccturcv on personal Ibvgfcnc FRANKLIN W. WHITE, S.B., M.D. Ilnstructor in Ovninastlcs WILLIAM SKARSTROM, M.D. 44 HOMER ALBERS, LL.B. JOHN ALDEN, S.B. . WINTHROP ALEXANDER TRUMAN H. BARTLETT LOUIS BELL, Ph.D. GEORGE W. BLODGETT, S.B. S. EVERETT DOANE . A. V. GARRATT CHARLES M. GREEN. DAVID A GREGG HAMMOND V. HAYES, Ph.D. JOHN F. HAYFORD, C.E. . ELEAZER B. HOMER, S.B. JOHN GEORGE JACK CHARLES D. JENKINS, S.B. MARSHALL O. LEIGHTON, S.B. ARTHUR D. LITTLE JAMES W. LOVELAND, S.B. GUY LOWELL, A.B., S.B., Grad. SAMUEL W. MEAD FREDERICK H. NEWELL, S.B. WALTER E. PIPER, S.B. Business Law Textile Printing Modern Systems of Fireproofing ModeUng The Electrical Transmission of Power The Application of Electricity to Railway Signaling Incandescent Lamps The Governing of Turbines Electric Arc Lighting Pen and Ink Drawing Telephone Engineering Geodetic Surveying Architectural History Horticulture Illuminating Gas and Pottery Pollution of Streams Paper Manufacture of Soaps Landscape Architecture Architectural Design Hydrography Rubber 45 Ecole des Beaux Arts 46 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ODIN B. ROBERTS, LL.B. A. H. SABIN, M.S. W. LINCOLN SMITH . JOHN STONE STONE ELIHU THOMSON ROSS TURNER GEORGE F. ULMER, S.B. W. LYMAN UNDERWOOD C. HOWARD WALKER JASPER WHITING, S.B. S. W. WILDER, Jr., S.B. The Nature and Function of Patents for Inventions Paints and Painting Interior Illumination The Application of Electrical Oscillations in Telephony Recent Developments in Applied Electricity Water Color Sugar Public Health Problems History of Ornament The Manufacture of Cement Alumina and Alumina Compounds Ifnetructors in ©colociv from tbc llnetnictinci Stafi of fbatvarO tlnlvcrsitv THOMAS A. JAGGAR, Jr., Ph.D. MOTTE A. READ NATHANIEL S. SHALER, S.D. ROBERT DeC. WARD, A.M. FREDERICK M. WILDER JAY B. WOODWORTH, S.B. General Geology Physiography General Geology Climatology Climatology Glasciology HENRY S. PRITCHETT HARRY W. TYLER GEORGE A. OSBORNE ROBERT H. RICHARDS WILLIAM H. NILES CHARLES R. CROSS GAETANO LANZA GEORGE F. SWAIN FRANCIS W. CHANDLER WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK DAVIS R. DEWEY WEBSTER WELLS CECIL H. PEABODY ARLO BATES D. DESPRADELLE PETER SCHWAMB C. FRANK ALLEN ALFRED E. BURTON DWIGHT PORTER HEINRICH 0. HOFMAN HENRY P. TALBOT ARTHUR A. NOYES ALDOLPH RAMBEAU THOMAS E. POPE WILLIAM BAIRD GEORGE T. DIPPOLD CHARLES F. A. CURRIER V ILLIAM HOOGARRD LOUIS DUNCAN PERCIVAL LOWELL ELIHU THOMSON LINUS FAUNCE DANA P. BARTLETT JEROME SONDERICKER ALLYNE L. MERRILL President Secretary EDWARD F. MILLER FRANK VOGEL S. HOMER WOODBRIDGE WILLIAM L. PUFFER WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE V ILLIAM O. CROSBY HARRY E. CLIFFORD WILLIAM H. WALKER FREDERICK H. BAILEY FRED L. BARDWELL AUGUSTUS H. GILL RICHARD W LODGE FREDERICK S. WOODS THEODORE HOUGH JOSEPH J. SKINNER GEORGE H. BARTON A RTHUR G. ROBBINS FRANK A. LAWS HARRY M. GOODWIN JOHN 0. SUMNER HENRY G. PEARSON LOUIS DERR GEORGE V. WENDELL WILLIS R. WHITNEY FRANK H. THORP CHARLES E. FULLER WILLIAM A. JOHNSTON CHARLES F. PARK CHARLES L. NORTON HENRY FAY JAMES F. NORRIS F. JEWETT MOORE JAMES LOCKE 48 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Ifvth eijpr 33uitou IR ISAAC NEWTON, IT IS SAID, WAS SO MUCH MORE MASTER OF SCIENCE THAN COMMON SENSE THAT HE MADE A BIG HOLE IN THE WALL FOR HIS CAT TO GO THROUGH, AND A LITTLE ONE for the kitten. Whatever the truth of this story may be, it is certain that a scientific bent of mind too often crowds out the complementary characteristic — the ability to manage the commonplace problems of life. When a man knows by experience the trials and troub- les of a young engineer, and also possesses the tact, patience, and personal ability to handle every-day affairs, he is fitted to be dean of a large technical school ; and that is why Alfred Edgar Burton was, in 1902, made the first dean of the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Dean Burton was born in Portland, Maine, in 1857. His father was a wholesale flour merchant, and afterwards treasurer of the Maine Savings Bank in Portland. On the father ' s side the family were English and settled in Virginia in colonial times. His great-grandfather, who was a farmer, fought in the Revolution, and at the close of the war came to Gorham, Maine. On the mother ' s side, the earliest ances- tor in this country was a French Huguenot refugee, who settled at North Yarmouth, Maine. He was killed by the Indians. During Burton ' s boyhood the family lived on Munjoy Hill in Portland. After a short session at a private school, he attended the North Grammar School, and then the Portland High School. He graduated from the High School class of 1874, and entered Bowdoin College the same year, taking the examinations for the engineering department, which had been established in 187 1 under the direction of George L. Vose, afterwards Hayward Professor of Topographical and Civil Engineer- ing at the Institute. The engineering department at Bowdoin con- tinued in existence for ten years, and during that time there have been some twenty-five or thirty graduates. Perhaps the best known 1904 TECHNIQUE 49 SOPHOMORE AT COLLEGE of all these graduates is Robert E. Peary, Civil Engineer, United States Navy, and Arctic Explorer. Burton and Peary were close friends in their High School and College life. Burton gradu- ated in 1878, with the degree S.B., and was elected a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. In 1881 he was given the degree of C.E. After struggling along as a land surveyor for about six months he took the competitive examination for the position of Topographer on the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. This competitive examination was one of the first steps taken in the reform of the Civil Service in the government depart- ments. The first condition for candidates was that they have the degree of some scientific college in good standing. They were then required to submit specimens of their skill in topographical drawing. The specifications for these drawings made it necessary to give at least a month ' s time to the competition. Of the twenty-five candidates who applied, only four were to be finally chosen. A second step in the competition was a six-months ' trial in the Coast Survey Office in Washington. For this trial six candidates were selected with the understanding that at the end of that time only four would be retained. The pay during this period of trial was forty dollars a month. The colleges represented by the candidates were Bowdoin, Cornell, Lehigh, University of Virginia, and Dartmouth. It may be imagined how fierce the rivalry, how keen the competition among these young college graduates. It was not a question of just getting through with an L in a three- hour examination; each man ' s aim was to be one of the four best out of twenty-five in a six-months ' crucial trial, — truly the survival of the fittest! At the end of the six months, the four men chosen were Alfred E. Burton and Robert E. Peary, from Bowdoin, and one each from Dartmouth and the University of Virginia. This six-months ' competitive trial was the plan of Superintendent Carlisle P. Patterson. He desired to develop a corps of American Topographers who were 50 TECHNIQUE Vol xvni to be put through a regular form of instruction in the office and field before being placed in charge of work. In the slang of the Coast Survey Office, they were known as Patterson ' s Pets. Unfortunately for the development of this plan, Superintendent Patterson died in the latter part of 1880. Four men were retained in the office, but his plans were not carried out as originally intended. In the spring of 1880, Superintendent Patterson detailed Burton for special work in Memphis, Tennessee, to assist Col. George E. Waring, who found it difficult at that time to get engineers to go to a city twice afflicted with yellow fever. Burton acted as draftsman for Colonel Waring, who was then putting in a system of separate sewerage which saved the life of Memphis as a municipal corporation. This acquaintance with Colonel Waring is valued by Dean Burton as one of the most interesting experiences of his life as an engineer. In the spring of 1882, Burton went into the field as an aid to Assistant Edward Hergesheimer, who was engaged in the re-survey of Long Island Sound. The party made a plane table survey of Fisher ' s Island in the Sound. Mr. Hergesheimer was considered one of the best topographers in the Coast Survey Service; it is his work that is represented in the sheets of the conventional signs adopted by the survey. In the fall of the same year. Burton was offered the position of Instructor in Civil Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with the understanding that he should pay special at- tention to the teaching of topographical surveying. He accepted the offer. Two years later he was made Assistant Professor, and in the same year he married Miss Gertrude Hitz, daughter of the Swiss Consul-General at Washington. In 1886 he made a topographical BOWDOIN COLLEGE CaMPUS 1904 TECHNIQUE 51 OME IN LEYSIN, SWITZeRLA survey of Mount Moosilauke, N. H., for the Appalachian Mountain Club. For this work he employed two of the engineering students of the Institute as assistants. The following year Professor Burton organized the summer school of the Civil Engineering Department. Such schools have been held every summer since that date, in Massa- chusetts, in the Adirondack and Catskill regions of New York, at the Delaware Water Gap, and at various points along the coast of Maine. With a few exceptions they have been conducted under the direction of Professor Burton. On account of the failing health of Mrs. Burton in 1890, it was thought desirable to move the family to Switzerland. From that date until the death of Mrs. Burton in 1896, the family lived among the mountains of Switzerland, excepting two winters spent in the Adiron- dacks. During this period. Professor Burton spent the long Institute vacations each year in Switzerland. In 1894 he was sent by the com- mittee of citizens of Beacon street, then opposing the Charles River dam, to investigate the Alster Basins at Hamburg, Germany. Two years later he was made Professor of Topographical Engineering, and in the spring of the same year, at the suggestion of Lieutenant Robert 52 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII E. Peary, he organized a scientific expedition to North Greenland. The pendulum and magnetic observations taken that summer are among the most valuable determinations that have ever been made in the Arctic Regions. Some of the problems encountered on this ex- pedition, however, could not strictly be called scientific. Lieutenant Peary, in an inter esting article in St. Nicholas, tells of the capture of two bear cubs. At one time, one of the cubs attempted to escape, but was stopped just in time by Professor Burton, who fell upon him in a Greco-Roman embrace. And so the matter was arbitrated. In 1895 Professor Burton was appointed a member of the Topographical Survey Commission, by Governor Greenhalge, to succeed Professor N. S. Shaler, resigned. He held this position until 1901, when the Commission was discontinued. During this time the principal work of the Commission was the location by triangulation of the town boundary monuments; the re-running and establishing of the New York and Massachusetts State boundary line; the re-location of the Massachusetts and Rhode Island line. An important improvement in the course of instruction in Geodesy at the Institute is due to the efforts of Professor Burton. In 1899, the geodetic observatory at Middlesex Fells was completed. The object of this observatory is to instruct students for the career of observer in geodetic work. The introduction of work of this character into the course gives the student an insight into the practical side of geodetic operations, and it creates an interest in the subject and gives a reality to it which class work alone could never do. It will enable the Institute to send out men who have that confidence in their own power which laboratory work of the right kind is able to give. This obsevatory, while well removed from vibra- tion disturbances, such as railroads and heavy team- ing, is still within easy reach of the other build- ings of the Institute, about a mile from Maiden. It has been equipped with the best apparatus, and OATS AND ESKIMO. GREENLAND EXPEDITION ' J 904 TECHNIQUE 53 will become an important station in the Massachusetts system of triangulation. In 1900 Professor Burton organized an expedition to observe the total solar eclipse visible in the Southern Atlantic States in May. The particular point chosen for this expedition v as Washington, Georgia. The party was successful in accomplishing the work planned. The following winter a final trial was made by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey of a base line apparatus which had been invented and developed by students working under the direction of Professor Burton. This base line apparatus was the direct result of field work in the Summer Schools. The final trial was made in connec- tion with the measurement of a base line near Alice, Texas. The result may be regarded as favorable to the future adoption of the essential features of the Institute apparatus. In January, 1901, Professor Burton organized an eclipse expedition to the Island of Sumatra. This eclipse was remarkable for the long duration of totality. The members of the party, all from the Institute, were Mr. George L. Hosmer, Civil Engineering Department; Mr. Harrison W. Smith, Department of Physics; and Mr. Gerard H. Matthes, ' 95. After carrying out their plans most successfully, the party returned to Boston, in August, 1901, having made a tour of the world. The photographic work of this expedition was entrusted to Mr. Smith, the pendulum observations to Mr. Hosmer. So reads the plain, unvarnished chronicle of the life of our new Dean. In these days of sensationalism, that pen-killed phrase success in life too often is regarded as meaning to start life in a hovel, pen- niless and unknown, and to continue it, wealthy, and in big type on the first page. Dean Burton ' s life has been simple, straightforward and suc- cessful. His course at school has been much like the school-life of most of us — from grammar school to high, and then to a 54 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII scientific college. Thousands pursue the same routine of study, and in the effort to secure a highly specialized scientific training, go through college as through a funnel and come out narrow, well- trained in one direction, and poorly educated. No technical school succeeds so well in making its training broad and comprehensive as does Tech; and Tech does because of such men as Dean Burton. vlu fe ♦ ♦ W| i ' f ' j i: ' i HK TF v_ PRIMARY TRIANGULATION STATION i IASSACHUSETTS TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY MOUNT GREYLOCK THE PKESHMlAM 1904 TECHNIQUE 57 Class (i ffircrs flinctccu JL uutireti auti ix lPrc3i ent CHARLES FREDERICK W. WETTERER l ' icc=lPrc6i cnt ANTHONY PAUL MATHESIUS Sccvctnvv JOSEPH THOMAS LAWTON, Jr. Treasurer CHAS. EATON HAMILTON 5)iicctor5 NUGENT FALLON JULIAN MAY WRIGHT Unstitutc Committee J. WILLIAM WILLIAMS, Jr. HERBERT JAMES MANN 58 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII (Cvtract from tljc Cbroniclcs of t )t Jdmocrnts CHAPTER I= = ARLING INNOCENTS ARRIVE AND ARE MUCH IMPRESSED BY THE STRANGE PEOPLE AND THEIR CUSTOMS AND MANNER OF WORSHIP- PING AT THE TEMPLE a. A suburb o 1 Chelsea 1. Now on the first day of the tenth month of the year nineteen hundred and two it came to pass that there appeared in the land of the chosen people of Boston , a mighty host of Innocents ' ' who were yet b ciass of ipofi to be trained in worldly ways. 2. And they dwelt therein ' ' . 3. Every day did they take their way b. Columbus Avenue boarding houses PS: C -C v-r 1 into some certain wonderful temples ' where they did worship at the shrines of the high priests of wisdom ' ' . 4. The mighty host of Innocents was ■iM -- very ignorant of the ways of the world 5. And great was their awe at all the magnificent things ' which they saw and heard in the great city. 6. Especially were they fearful of the host of Philistines who worshipped ' ' at higher shrines in the same temple. 7. For these Philistines considered themselves of great importance and looked down upon the host of the Innocents as if from a high place. 8. For lo, had they not worshipped at the temple for many ' years? c. Rogers, Walk- er and Lowell d. Faculty e. Plugging, cutting, etc. f. Tech gym. g. Sophs, h. Doubtful 1. More or less These notes have been collaborated by Heavy Thinkers 1 904 TECHNIQUE 59 CHAPTER II THE COUNCIL OF HIGH PRIESTS LISTENS TO AN INSPIRATION OF THE EVIL ONE. 1. It came to pass that in the reign of one of the j Probawy wished to Duv previous most high priests that all the high priests were some tags for very avaricious. 2. Yea, in their desire for filthy lucre with which meeting to adorn the temples ' they listened to an inspiration of the evil one. 3. Behold, much worldly goods was offered them , Baird if they would educate all Innocents in the ways of war. 4. And in the secret councils of the high priests knownm7re ' thly they decided upon a certain famous captain ' of soldiery, would have • ' stayed away 5. Thereupon he called the host together™, saying, 6. Oh, children and slaves of the most high priest! n. children of Know ye that on the middle day of every seven days ye sia ' ves ' of Lmus must arm yourselves and practice in the ways of war. 7. And then there was weeping, and wailing and gnashing of teeth among the host of the Innocents. Fre shmaThas 8. Furthermore, he said unto them: On the last eHui ' tiln day of the seven will I read from a printed slip which may be had at the portal of the temple, nor will the host be numbered. L ukent 9. Behold, a wonderful thing happened. For it ' ' came to pass that on the day when the Innocents were to be trained in the ways of war, that many fell sick of divers deseases d t hrtL 10. But when the fourth hour of the day came ' recuperation were they cured as if by a miracle. CHAPTER III CONCERNING WHAT THE INNOCENTS THOUGHT OF OF THEIR PRIESTS I. Now the Innocents were from all parts of the land, but they had never before worshipped with such priests as they did now. 60 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII a. 43 Rogers s. Linus b. Discript. c. L, F, FF d. Burry e. Butterflies, bugs, etc. f. C, P, L g. Blackstein h. German j. Webster k. Ask Went- worth I. Nancy Hanks 2. Behold, there was one priest who taught them at the shrine of despair . 3. And he was a bold, bad priest ' . 4. For did he not teach an abomination and were not his reports abominable ' ' . For his exams came the day after vacation. 5. Another priest also taught at the shrine of despair, but he also taught hope. He loved all good creatures ' and if one of the Innocents talked of these creatures his reports were not abominations but a great source of delight . 6. There was also a priest who tried to overcome the effect of the tower of Babel , for he taught the Inno- cents to speak a strange language . 7. He also was a source of joy for he was very witty and humorous, although he did not INTEND to be so. 8. There also was a priest who was much set up over his own importance ' . For he had written a book which he thought needed no explanation . 9. And so at each meeting he would copy off a page or two of the book and declare the next lesson explained. 10. And again another priest taught the history of the land. But his tongue was so swift that the Inno- cents were confused and remembered not what he said. 11. Howbeit the Innocents derived much benefit and amusement from their priests and contrived to thus make their worship bearable, even unto the time of affliction yet to be chronicled. CHAPTER IV THE INNOCENTS CHOOSE A TEMPORARY LEADER I. On a certain afternoon it came to pass that presiden of he host of Inuoceuts had assembled that a certain 1904 one of wide experience in the ways of the world ad dressed them and told them what they should do. 1904 TECHNIQUE 61 2. He spake unto them: Choose ve a leader who «. a mighty -t J shout was possi- will direct your path until ye know the ropes. we as the inno- - - - ' cents had not 3. Then arose a mighty shout ' and from the host st a ' r a from came many cries, every man crying for his favorite, ciass Meetings 4. Thus it happened that a certain man ' of great ' ' n Amdnge presence from the tribe of a well-known school was temporary leader of the flock. 5. After this, this man of great presence frequently called the host together and they decided ' on many ' ■when they - ' - ' knew what it thmgS. was all about 6. And many of these things were concerning a certain battle which the Innocents were to wage with - Fi« ' i ay the Philistines. CHAPTER V THE INNOCENTS HAVE A MIGHTY BATTLE WITH THE PHILISTINES 1. It came to pass on the fifteenth day of the a. it wasiotsot eleventh month of the year nineteen hundred and two ' that the Innocents and Philistines had a mighty battle ' of strength. b. Charles River 2. At the appointed time all gathered at a certain c. some excite- place and the contests began ' ' . ment the night ' ° before ; not 3. Behold, by the aid of the Evi One, the Philistines ' ' ' ° ° were victorious in two of the contests. bee unu ' s ' ' 4. When it came to the third the Philistines were much puffed up over their success e.— i.e., Had the swell head 5. Indeed it seemed as if they would win again but the Innocents were undismayed and by a mighty effort succeeded. 6. Now after this when some of the worshippers ' ■J n ' ors at the temple of the High Priests who were of wide ex- perience, had marshaled the Innocents Itogether, lo, the Innocents in battle array attacked the Philistines. 62 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII g Nobody was y g he Philistincs resisted them and after a fierce faght both drew off and charged again. hj co-eds, prob- g jyj j y times they charged each other and the i. Nobody had ones who were watching were fearful. cxDcctcd so much of the Q. Indeed it seemed as if neither side could win ' Philistines jj j g Philistines were getting tired before the terrible weTe ' ' bJavrmen onslaught of the Inuocents ' and were finally defeated. 10. Now the lust for battle had come into the hearts of the Innocents. k. Tug-of-war rope 11. So they took hold of an enormous cable which had been used in one of the contests and carried it all 1. Rogers j g y q j g grand temple ' , although the scattered Philistines fought fiercely to stop them. 12. All the way the Innocents shouted their battle m. street organ (.j-jgg g j j saug sougs of victory, to sweet music™. 13. And it was decreed that the day was a success and there was great rejoicing among the Hosts of the Innocents. CHAPTER VI THE INNOCENTS ENGAGE IN FESTIVITY a. Some had j. Let it be kuown unto you that some of the schools ' ' Innocents had had a little previous experience in the ways of war . swds ' i ' ™ ' 2. Soon they were set up above the other Innocents and allowed to carry swords ' ' , c. Would some 3. And they felt very proud ' ' and handsome. faver the giftic - ' j r d. Cadet Dance gieus, etc. gQ j gy gQ yp g ygj.y grand affair ' ' and were enabled to show off their shapes before the fair sex. 5. And they danced until morning, and their vanity was satisfied. 6. Behold, how pleasant it is to be great. J 904 TECHNIQUE 63 CHAPTER VII THE INNOCENTS HAVE A VERY SERIOUS TIME AND MANY FALL BY THE WAY 1. Now the Innocents had been having a very grand time and much pleasure but the days of affliction - D ' ' were at hand. 2. For as the first season of worship was ending the priests began to put to them many questions which were to be answered in script . f- These exam- inations are 3. And many could not answer them for, lo, they awfui things had not worshipped in sincerity and truth. 4. But the priests were very merciful, and unto NO MAN of all the Innocents was it said, Hence, get thee gone, but all were allowed to continue their wor- ship in peace. 5. And in all the history of the temples of the priests had such a miracle never been dreamed of before. 6. Now the rest of the acts of the Innocents which s- Next year ' s ,. , -ii 1 . . r ii -1 Technique they did will be written in the book of Chronicles at another time . TH OPH 1904 TE C H N I Q U E 65 Class (Dfftrcrs iinctcf n J)uut)rcti auti jri )c lPre6i5ent ROBERT NATHANIEL TURNER jfirst li)tce=lprcsi?ent GEORGE BAYARD JONES Sccoll Uicc=IPrctiii ciit WILLIARD EASTMAN SIMPSON Sccrctarx? ROBERT HOWARD WILLIAM LORD Crcaeurcr CHARLES WISWELL JOHNSTON Sircctor THEODORE GREEN THOMAS EDWARD JEWETT Knstitutc Committee ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG FRANK MILTON CARHART 66 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ilrttcrs from a U}alf italic Contractor to Ijis on at Ccd) Harlem, Oct. 30, 1902 Dear Champion ,HERE, I NEVER WRITE THAT WORD BUT I THINK OF HOW YOUR DEAR MOTHER NAMED YOU AFTER A CAN OF PEAS WITH A PICTURE ON IT OF SOME DAGO IN A TIN SHIRT RIDING A HORSE WITH A CLEAVER IN HIS HAND. I think there must have been maleria or some other disease in the neighborhood as the ground was all strowed with corpses. I wanted to give you the good old New England name of Mike but the mother persuaded me. She had a great gathering here yesterday of the Daughters of Emigrants and they elected her Queen or something. She was reading them the letters you wrote her last year when you was at Tech. When she finished the one about your Drill, Jim Brophys wife jumped on the piano stool and played that sweet — « — little French ballad Drill Ye Tarriers Drill. They all enjoyed your story of the Field Day and old Miss Maguire said it made her think of some of the pleasant ructions the boys had at Kil- kenny. Her brother Dinny lost all of his ears but one when he tried it. But what hit them best was your description of the Class Dinner. Your mother read it just before she fed them and it made your friend Mae Learys old lady so hungry that they had to tie her to a chair so she wouldnt break into the dining room before the gong rang. Its great goings on we are having since we sold the pig and broke into society. As the Markee of Tallyrang says Its better to be mintioned in the papers even if you have to git arrested than to live forever by the world unknown. Thats all now Your Father, MURTHA CLANCY P. S. I send the money you ask for. P£C-Ci W-T 1 904 TECHNIQUE 67 Harlem, Nov. 27, 1902 Dear Champion I think now is a good time to write you as everybody has gone out but me and the stove. I have before me your letter telling about the Sports you had Field Day and how you did something so your class got their name on a cup again. I suppose its a great thing to have their name twicet on the same cup but I dont knew why, so Im glad of it. I was pleased to hear you had such a nice time with the boys who tried to do you at football but slipped up, but why oh why Champ didnt you fellows eat Force before you begun the tug of war. Speaking of Force I must tell you about your mother. Shes got a new idea in her head that we ought to eat healthfoods. Healthfoods, by the holy Moses, I come down to my breakfast today with a room to let in my stomach that would hold two pies and what did I see in front of me but a little dish of sawdust. What is it says I. Driernell says she. Whats it for says I. To ate says she. By who says I. By you says she. And why says I. Twill do you good says she. So I ate it Champ at least I tried to but it stuck in my throat and I near coughed my face off. Dont you like it says she. No, but tis well named says I, pass the tripe. Speaking of coughing, Champ Im sorry the last bunch of money I sent you was delayed. I told the truckman to send it by Express but when he found it would cost $4.00 he sent it by freight. Your mother told me to ask how you was feeling and to tell you she and the girls was having a lovely time now they were members of the Higher Education of Females. The whole gang came here yesterday and taught little Adele to spell CAT. Your mother is a great woman Champ. Thats all now Your Father MURTHA CLANCY Harlem, Feb. 15, 1903 Dear Champion Well my boy we miss you since you went back after vacation, but I was reminded of you today when I got the little card your pro- fessors send round telling what you was studying but I didnt see many of your own initials on it. I thought at first it was for some 68 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII boy named Frank. But tell me Champ what has Physics got to do with Electricity. Are you studying for a Doctor or a Engineer. I wish you could see the pup what Hortenses young man left here last week. He has a stub tail and a face on him that looks like hed been shut in a door. Hortense calls him Pansy but the iceman called him something else this morning when Pansy was chewing the rag. The joke was on the iceman, so was the rag. But Pansy is a good dog when he is a sleep, which is often seldom. He dont like to be alone, so I sat up with him last night and sang to him to keep the neighbors from pulling the house down. I think we ' ll plant Pansy in the garden when the ground thaws. We had a maskerade here Monday night and Jim Foley wore his own face. The game was to guess what every one represinted. Somebody guessed Foley was a rail road accident and then your mothers piano lamp got broke. But we had a good time and the new carpet and furniture looks beautiful. Its a great thing Champ, to take things fillesofical. Dont worry. Dan Maguire was always worring for fear hed die and now since lies married the Widdy Dolan hes worring for fear he wont. Its hard to please some people. Your mothers well and hearty. Shes joined the Every other Tuesdey afternoon except Fourth of July Whist Club, and I can hear her now studying the rules in the library. She has two phonografs going beside her so it will seem like the Club. Im still playing fortyfives. Thats all now Your Father MURTHA CLANCY P. S. Why dont you have a rubber stamp made about sending you money. Im sending a bundle in to you by Bill. St. Augustine, Fla., Feb. 25, 1903 Dear Champion This is a great place Champ for a man who has nothing to do because it keeps him busy all day doing it. The Ponce where we are stopping is a fine large hotel with a band and a fountain playing all the time but I dont care for the food. It makes me think of eating peas one at a time, it takes so long to fill up and the soup is thin. Augustine is a funny town. All the stores is kept by dagos and when you inquire the price of anything they ask you how much money I 904 TECHNIQUE 69 you have with you and thats the price, so every time you buy any- thing you have to go back to the Hotel and tear out another check before you can shop any more. Hortense is a great favorite here and theres a King or a Count or something imported, what follows her round so much that your mother and I are both worried. Im worried for fear she ' ll marry him and your mothers worried for fear he wont ask her. I got your letter about your Class dinner and how Blachie (Hortense says that must be his pom de tare or something like that) told you boys about a lad what was took sick in the cars on the other side. I bet if the boy was paying for his board here he wouldnt give up so easy. And you beat Harvard playing games in your Athletic Meet — well Im glad to hear it. Its taking lots of money to get you through Tech but I dont mind so long as youre learning so much. Some people do say though that theres many a good hod carrier spoiled through going to college. I must stop now as I have to get on my red vest and take your mother over to the golf Unks. Im learning to play. It aint so much fun as throwing rings at canes but its more style and Champ your father is right in the swim down here. Theres lots of the very best people borrowing money from me. Thats all now Your Father P. S. Ive sent it. MURTHA CLANCY Harlem, Mar. 8, 1903 Dear Cham.pion We just got home yesterday and I tell you the old clay tastes good. I couldnt get a whiff at it in Florida for your mother said it was tayboo. You remember the Count I was telling you about what was fooling round Hortense. Well he was getting so thick I begun to feel scared so one night I invited him to go out with me and look at the fountain and when I got him alone I asked him if he liked to travel. I do says he. Where says I. Anywhere says he. For me? says I. For you says he. How m.uch says I. Thirty dollars a day says he. Can you start tonight says I. I can says he. You will? says I. I will says he. So Champ I hired him to go to Africa to look for a green elephant and told him to stay 70 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIH there till I wrote him to come back. The mother and Hortense dont know where he is so keep mum my boy. But say Champ aint your old father a great dippleomat. So you boys have your canes and pipes. I dont know what pleases you with the canes but the pipes is all right. Theys better than them little tissue paper capsules you was smoking last vacation. I must tell you about little Adeles cat — but speaking of cats, before I forget it, your grandmother on your female side is here with us and she sends her love to you and hopes you will be home soon. I wouldnt hurry Champ you aint missing much and Im used to it. Shes Donegal bred and we had a row this morning when she saw oranges on the table. But theres one thing I must say for the old lady, every time she makes us a visit I always feel better after she goes away. I remember at your grandfathers wake how everybody spoke of the contented look he had. Thats all now Your father MURTHA CLANCY P. S. Ive sent it in by the man whats hauling bricks for the new jail. Harlem, April 15, 1903 Dear Champion Since I wrote you last I have entered public life. I was appointed Chief of the Goat Statisticks Department of Harlem and I have a desk at City Hall. I didnt care much about those things but the mother and Hortense did. They said it could help them in Society so I put myself in the hands of my friends and got the job. The whole ward was with me and the night of the election they had to put up cots outside of the Police Station it was so crowded. So you are going to be in the Tech show. You didnt say what youll have to do but I know youll do it well for your grandfather Clancy in his time was the best jig dancer and fiddler in the County Malone and Ive sung Nora McCrea myself and not had many people leave the room at that. I think Hortense is getting over the Count for Jim Noonan s oldest boy Dan what works in the Harlem Bank is coming here regular now. Hes always bringing her violets and to theatres and Automo- biling. Dans a good boy but his freckles and his old man will cut up 1 904 TECHNIQUE 71 handsome. Your mother gave me a surprise party the other night. She invited all her friends and had a beautiful time with dancing and feeding. I had a great time too for little Adele told me about it in the morning and I didnt go home till it was all over. You wont know the house when you get home. Its been papered and painted inside and out. I wanted to advertise for bids but your mother is Chairlady of the Stranded Artists Free Lunch Coffee Parlor Committee and she stuck out for hiring some of that push to do the work. Well Champ she has that winning way with her, I let it go. You ought to seen them. Every one had his own style and the others were no good. I went home one afternoon and there was more than twenty of them in the parlor with your mother and all talking, so I slipped upstairs got my bag and left a note that I wouldnt be back for thirty days and I didnt. But I wont tell you any more till you see the place. I believe its painted in every language in the world and several new families have moved away lately, but Hortense says its uneek. I havent seen the bills yet so I dont know. Thats all Your Father MURTHA CLANCY P. S. Ive sent it in larger bills this time. P. S. Jr. There are 14,719 goats in Harlem. 1 s Q THE J VTM I O 1904 TECHNIQUE 73 Class (9ffirrrs, iliuctrrn i[)untivfti nnti jTour lPrcsi cnt PRESTON MORRIS SMITH Secretary CURRIER LANG Crcaeurcr REGINALD ANDREW WENTWORTH Uicc=lPrc6l ent JOHN FORD CARD 5 ircctor WALTER ELBRIDGE HADLEY HENRY WOODBURY ROWE Ifnetitute Conimtttcc WILLIAM WALTER CRONIN LOUIS GUSTAVE BOUSCAREN, Jr. MjUA - ' Z ' -i-i ixp--r ' --- — r ii) •— M Jllsig tl = SSS IS MJ JjHi ft fe)® S r - : . ' ' i ' - ' : 7. r. ' 7. ' 7. • O - ' - ' ' - if 1;- L; ' ' ' ' ■■■- ' - ' ■' - ' : X X X =; H c; = £ Sl ? ? 6 z I a. i;— — - s-x ; - ?s ' -- ' 7; f ? ir J ' 4 rJl -;;.f: :@5D® o o H O ___„„„„ .„ sy r v c ? Zj JSS tt5I-7 5F i H - X  i ' • Vl ■■SXQ d6 :=Z! S ' l£MW ' ' ' ■' ' ' ' ' • ' V- i X i n 5 = i = . X o i4i4 ti- : I, ' ' ® © CSV ® ' ®J)®© . 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' . — ■■: J.- i ' - ' ' 1 ? it|- i r. = — ;i rt tt !-■: :;- v: :r. o — Ti ri -f ■- - i- v: — . o -- ?i - -f ' - — ' r rl rJ = i- i- - cc = 71 -f - — ' ' = ri r. f -t- ■- z l- 1- r :; r. -r. — i — = 1- — v: - - : ' .q jS t.r X « q: £; IJ 4: 1 : L 4 5 , ' ;r ;y j: -C jS ;-s J; , , - S ti-; 1 15 Sr X ■-f X :i n : M Ti r -r -r -r — — -t i. rt ' - - — — ■• X — - r. -r. -z -v ■:■•. ir. c: - ri Lt -t- ri i- -f — r. r : -ti r : — — x x -f - i: = U ' H - ' a — -J z-. -J i u- X -1 1- T. 7i c X ' ; M :■! ?!l 1 I- r- i-H C-l -- r- 1-1 : : . X r-. I- u: -j o r. r. n - n ; 76 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII (Bxtv ttB from a Co rb ' 0 BiaiP ■• - C Of- EPT. 26, 1900. WELL, WELL, HERE I AM IN BOSTON, A REALLY TRULY STUDENT OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY. AND NOW THAT I ' M HERE, I DON ' T SEE HOW I ever had the courage to come, to study four years among men; — me, almost a man hater. At least I think girls who go off and get married are very foolish, if they have any brains. That sounds para- doxical, but it ' s so. I ' m sure I ' ll never be so foolish. I love science and study and I ' m going to learn all I can, even if it is among all these horrid gawky men. . . . I ' m going to keep a diary all through my college years. . . . Oct. 26. Just a month today since I became a Co-ed . . . . Some of those horrid men have been getting familiar up in the Mechanical Drawing Room. Why, there was a Mr. Homer who walked right up to me this afternoon, put his arm on my desk, and began talking — without ever having an introduction! and Mr. Dougherty were almost as bad — only they The former was telling me about our Mr. Burnham began a little more gradually. first class meeting. Not the one we tried to have in Huntington Hall but the one we did have in the Armory. I asked him who was elected, and he said Emerson was, just a temporary chairman, you know. .... I like that Mr. X, opposite me in Chem. Lab. He doesn ' t talk much, but I ' ve caught him looking at me in an interested way several times. He always looks around when Prof. Bardwell drops around and helps me with my experiments. Nov. II. Went to see our soldier boys drill in the Armory. Miss W. and Miss M. with me. A few of the fellows have uniforms. Mr. Homer has one with white stripes and looks perfectly fine in it. . . . There was a whole row — a company, I suppose — right in front of the balcony, and when we came in they began to pound their guns on the floor. It was awfully embarrassing. I know I blushed to the roots of my hair. I 904 TECHNIQUE 77 Nov. 12. Exams this week. Mr. Erhardt told me I had a C in German. Lots of the fellows had L , so I must have done quite well — or else — as Miss B. suggested the other day at the Cleofan Reception, he thinks I ' m — well — er — rather nice looking. How fool- ish of her! ....... Jan. i8, igoi. Our first semi-annuals begin today. We co- eds have only one. Mr. Jones, a Junior, whom I met today, told me he had thirteen. Just think of it ! How can he ever live through them ! Jan. 24. Algebra exam over. . . . Going home for vacation. Feb. 7. Back again. All C ' s on my report, and I don ' t know a single man who did as well. Maybe some grinds did, but I don ' t know many of that kind. Mch. 31. ' 04 had its class dinner last night, at the Thorndike. Homer told me he had to give a spiel . Wish I could have heard him I think its mean we co-eds can ' t go to class dinners. We have lots more class spirit than most of the men. . . . However, if all they tell me about that dinner is true, I guess it ' s a good thing we can ' t go. Apr. 3. vSame old grind of work, work, work. . . . Asked Mr. X. to call on me sometime. He is a very interesting young fellow I think. Apr. 5. Mr. X. called this evening. He looked perfectly stunning. Apr. 20. Next week Junior week. Mr. Jones asked me for the Junior Prom, but — I — er — told him I couldn ' t go on account of studies. Mr. Jones is what I think the fellows would call a fusser , and, well — I don ' t want to be called a fusseress . . . Am going to the Tech show with Mr. X. The Tech says its going to be fine. May 3. Tech Show with Mr. X. Perfectly lovely time. The play, The Grand Duke, was a grand success. Girls ' costumes perfectly killing. Mr. Paine, a friend of Mr. Holbrooks ' , made a great hit as one of the leading ladies Mr. X. seemed to enjoy the after- noon, — ' twas good of him to take me. May 30. Anna Lyt exam through with this noon and trunk packed tonight. Off for home tomorrow. After all, it ' s been a very pleasant year, and I ' m not sorry I came to Tech, in spite of all the men. Sopbomore )il)ear Oct. 2, 1901. Back again, as a Sophomore, and glad to be here. Attendance cards, tabular views. Bursar, etc., etc. 78 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Oct. g. A week gone already. I find several new and interest- ing studies. Have Mr. Charles Henri Louis Napoleon Bernard in French. I used to hear lots about him last year, but never realized before what a perfect circus he is of forehead, mouth, mustache, hands, and legs. It was all Miss F. and I could do to keep from giggling right out every time he tried to touch his ears with his mouth corners. .... Prof. Currier in Europeon History. I thought his express train jabber disturbing the atmosphere reminded me of something, but for a long time I couldn ' t think what. I know now — a Cleofan Tea. Oct. 12. Our French class found a notice on the door today, referring us to a new instructor. It is rumored, and with such per- sistence I fear it must be true, that Charlie Henri Louis Napoleoni has started on the downward path— in plain English gone to Har- vard. It ' s understood that Tech uses Harvard as a dumping ground for flunks, but why for Charlie? It makes me almost sad to think that our class is the last on whom Charlie ' s effulgunt pronun- ciatory smile has beamed; our class the last to admire his baggy trousers and graceful gait You haf before you not only ze pronunciation in black and white, but in black and white and red! . . . . Dear, diabolish looking Charlie! With our class and our Technique even memories of him will vanish from the familiar scenes of Tech, and make them seem monotonous and cheerless. . . . Nov. 19. Field Day. Very exciting and successful, I suppose the Freshmen consider it And Mr. Fairfield told me we were sure of that football game! I saw Mr. X. in the rushing afterwards with no hat and a torn coat, but evidently enjoying it. He looked so handsome. Dec. 19. Went with Miss M. and Miss W. to the Winter Meet at the Gym. ' 04 way ahead Georgie Curtis is a pretty pole vaulter. Dec. 20. Dr. Hale spoke to us today. He is a fine old patri- arch. Told us to rub elbows with the rank and file. My! if we co-eds did that, what dreadful things they would say of us! What a reception Li — I mean Professor Faunce gets at those mass meet- ings, and Bla — Mr. Blackstein, and Arl — Professor Bates. . . . Poor Prof. Bates! He does seem to have such a hard time. I think our class treats him abominally. He took a radical step today, however, and the improvement was noticeable. Informed us he had a list of dis- orderly students and would hold them as hostages! Pretty cute of him, wasn ' t it? 1 904 TECHNIQUE 79 Dec. 21. Cleofan Smoke Talk. Jan. I, 1902. New Years. Mr. X. called. Feb. II. Attend. Cards — Bursar, etc. Roll Slips, first appear- ance. If they would only let us do all the Secretaries ' work wouldn ' t it be nice for our reports. Feb. 13. Pres. Hadley of Yale addressed a mass meeting today. What a funny eye roller he is — not a bit like our Prexie. Mch. 2. Mr. Holbrook was telling me about our Kommers last night at the Technology Club. Said they couldn ' t get in till they were about starved, and when they did, it was so crowded that even he could hardly find room to stand up in. Mch. 9. Mr. X. called and asked me to go to evening service at the Old South. Went. Apr. 3. It was very embarrassing for us co-eds this morning in English Lit. Arlo was characterizing a 17th century novel. Every once in awhile a subdued Oh-h-h would run around the room and the fellows would turn around and look at us. Finally Arlo got disgusted, and said sarcastically, Well, gentlemen, I shall say no more, only, when you grow up, I advise you to read it! Later in the lecture, Mr. Fairfield, the horrid thing! came way down from the back of the hall and sat down right between two of us co-eds! Mr. Haynes said this afternoon he did it on a bet. I did think Mr. Fairfield was pretty nice, but now I just detest him. Apr. 12. While I was doing the Boyles law experiment this p.m., Mr. Blum told me about the class dinner last night at the Gym. Doc and Harry C. were there. Afternoon Smith waxed quite eloquent on Tf.chnique. Mr. Blum thinks Smith is one of the ris- ing men of the class. Wouldn ' t be surprised to see him our next class president, he said .... My first memory of Smith, it occurs to me just now, was his laboring over Casco Bay, Maine, up in 53 Rogers, trying to make an artistic looking arch out of it. Apr. 24. Junior Prom tonight. I had six chances to go. Am going with Mr. X. to Applied Mechanics. He said, after taking me last year he should miss me if I wouldn ' t go again. Nice of him to put it that way, wasn ' t it? ... . Miss B. F. W. and I watched the Technique rush today, from Rogers stairs. It was awfully exciting! Why, one man didn ' t have left on him what I would call a respectable bathing costume! 80 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Apr. 25. Tech Show with Mr. X. Enjoyed it even more than last year. I recognized several classmates Gunnie , our English- man; Paine, with his dulcet accents, and Bary with his pretty ahem limbs. Most wonderful, however, was the metamorposis of Trilby Haar into a really beautiful young maiden. I don ' t believe even Harry Clifford could have recognized his familiar questioner. May 27. Recitations over for another term. Nothing more! but a few exams. June I. Sunday. Mr. X. Arlington St. Church. Gardens, Common. Up by Jay St. he pointed out Holmes ' long path and started to take it. I thought, as I glanced quickly at him, there was the glimmer of a mischievous smile on his handsome face, so I suggested keeping right on down Beacon St Wonder if he thinks I don ' t know the story of the schoolmistress as well as he does. June 7. Just back from Riverside. Canoeing with Mr. X. River, sky, moon perfectly, perfectly lovely. I think I shall never forget it Home tomorrow. 3unior l car Oct. I. Almost like home to walk on Copley Square once m.ore. Miss M. thought I was frightfully freckled. No wonder after such a summer at the seashore Attendance cards, petitions, etc. Oct. 4. Have dear old Prof. Rambeau in French. He informed us, as Mr. Dougherty told me he would, that there were no fin ' l exemna ' tions in mod ' rn languages. Oct. 20. Work for this term is the real F times S, ' j MV , and no mistake. Have Dr. Hashthings in Math. Whew .... it almost takes my breath away to think how he circumnavigates the black- board walls of 30 Lowell. Holds an eraser in front of his chalk and just goes round and round. The following little parody on Lowell ' s Vision, which Mr. C. composed on the flyleaf of his notebook during one of these lectures, fits Dr. Hashy to a T. Over his chalk the musing calculist Beginning doubtfully and far away First lets his ideas wander where they list, And draws a curve from dreamland for his play, Then as the touch of his loved instrument Brings hope and fever, nearer draws his theme First guessed in fierce blackboard rushes. Etc., Etc. 1904 TECHNIQUE 81 Harry Clifford talks to us now, in Heat. I could listen to him for hours I think (If I didn ' t have to take notes i. Such a voice! deep, rich and penetrating, but sweet and soothing with all. He can quiet the room better with a rising inflection than Charlie Cross could with his little hammer. . . . Then there is that other Harry, Dr. Goodwin. What a little dear he is. Collar, necktie, haircomb every- thing just so just simply chic you know. He was explaining a cal- orimeter to me today, and he got so interested, I ' m afraid I paid more attention to him than to what he was saying. I feel when I see him handling delicate apparatus, that a touch of those dainty fingers would quiet an unruly machine as a trained nurse ' s hand a fevered patient And speaking of Phys. Lab. Mr. Cady told me he got an L when he took it; didn ' t use to speak of it last year when he was assistant — thought he could get a C in it now! Nov. 25. No diary for a week nothing but work, work. Mr. X. called this evening. Thought he looked a little pale. Hope he isn ' t working too hard. Dec. 21. Christmas Holidays. Welcome, too, if ever they were. Feb. 7. Report. Safe! Feb. II. Usual formalities, plus Bursar ' s Attendance Card. Apr. I. I have been asked to write a Class History from a Co-ed ' s point of view for Technique. I am so glad I have kept this diary. I hope none of my classmates will think me silly, foolish or sentimen- tal, for what I have written is word for word just what I thought and felt at the time except except all that truck about Mr. X., which I put in just now to make each of several fellows wonder if he was Mr. X. mm. T 1904 TE C H N I Q U E 83 Class € ffircr6, J inctccu I)untirftJ antj ' Cljrcf IPreei ciit GEORGE WRIGHT SWETT Secretary CLAUDE PENDLETON NIBECKER JTrcasurcr EDWARD JAMES RUXTON ffir t Uicc=IPrc9ir cnt HEWETT CROSBY Second l ' icc=lprc!3i?cnt RALPH BROWN WILLIAMS Directors OLIVER PORTER SCUDDER THOMAS EVERETT SEARS Unstitutc Committee HORACE SINGER BAKER HOWARD SCOTT MORSE 84 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Cljr )iQ;l)xmtrr of 1903 ' By Somefelloiv INTRODUCTION SHOULD you ask me whence this history Whence these legends and traditions, With the odors of the chem-lab., With the martial days of drill, With the curling smoke of Kommers, With the rushing done on Field-Day, With the rousing yells and cheerings, With their frequent repetition And their wild reverberations As of thunder in the mountains? I should answer, I should tell you, From the ancient town of Boston, From the Institute called Tech. Here I sing of nineteen-three. Sing the song of nineteen-three. Sing its wondrous birth and being, How it lived and toiled and suffered, That the ' Stute of Tech might prosper. In the Here and the Hereafter. Stay and read this rude inscription, Read this song of nineteen-three. CANTO I Clir ilnfancv of jiimrtrrn ' liirr On the stone steps of old Rogers, In its lofty, classic halls, Roamed one day a tribe of Freshmen, Freshmen long and Freshmen short. Some were fat and some were slender. Some were shy and few were bold. Laughing, came the upper-classmen And beheld this funny sight. In his newborn might and glory 1 904 TECHNIQUE 85 Proudly walked the haughty Soph, Looked upon them with compassion, With paternal love and pity. But for him and upper-classmen Cared the Freshmen not a whit, For within them stirred a spirit Former Freshmen never felt; Stirred a spirit deep, rebellious, That, before the year was over, Made that class above all others Famous, feared and loved at Tech. Shall I tell you of the troubles That befell its Freshman lot, How it met with him called Linus, Linus Faunce of fiendish fame; How it helped to fill the coffers Of friend Mac across the way; How it listened in deep silence To the mellow voice of Tommy, (Tommy Pope, whose genial smile Makes the Freshmen dream of C ' s), How it wrote out themes for Harry, Harry Pearson, coy and young; How it bearded Harry Tyler, Harry Tyler, mighty, awful In his den of many flunks; How it met with dashing Jimmy, Jimmy Hamilton of fame ; How from his great lips of wisdom Learned it much of martial lore. And enthused by his orations Gave it vent to feelings strong. And in heat of its excitement Dropped torpedoes on the Soor? Shall I tell you how on Wednesday To the Armory it went. Proudly decked with trappings martial. Loudly crying Tech in Hell ? Shall I tell you how it shouted. Shouted loud and clapped its hands When from out of its great number Jimmy chose a gallant youth - Bashful youth he was and modest — Chose this youth to be the major? Major Bridges, we salute you, 86 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Mocking yelled the Freshman host. Down with Bridges, shouted Robbie; Down with Bridges, echoed Pell. Then there stirred a deep rebellion In the breasts of nineteen-three. Death to drill, they cried, and forthwith Hung their Jimmy o ' er the gate; Took a heavy chain and padlock — Wieldy chain and padlock strong. Locked within his den of glory Jimmy madly shook the bars. Then the ' Stute got mad and huffy. Jimmy, hot about the collar. Swore, and threatened nineteen-three. But the class had had its fill, Taunting Jim and Jimmie ' s pup(peti. Penitent it was and sorry, Resolutions wrote, and sent to Jim. When the bleak month of November Entered with its bracing blast. Said the upper-classmen, Freshmen, You must gird yourself for battle. Paint and arm yourself for battle, Then upon the war-path go. Seek the wigwams of the Soph ' more, Battle with your might and main. Let your war-cry ring the loudest, Clear above the frightful fray. Painted, armed and seeking battle Came the tribe of nineteen-three Gathered round the cane in circles. Gathered round in circles strong. Shouted loud and deep its war-cry At the tribe of nineteen-two. As before a storm in nature There is oft a fitful calm, Came there o ' er that field of battle All at once an awful hush. Then, throughout the stillness ringing, Came the crack of pistol shot ; Then began the greatest battle In the annals of the race. That the sun had ever looked on. That old Tech had ever seen. When at length the fray was over Twilight ' s gloom had come apace. Then the haughty upper-classmen 904 TECHNIQUE 87 Pulled the braves from off the heap — Braves in rags and braves in tatters Pulled from off the gory heap. Down, deep down upon the bottom Of that heap, they found the cane In the darkness fast approaching. Blindly counted upper-classmen, And alas! in their confusion Gave the rush to nineteen-two. Bravely heard the news the Freshmen, Took the error and defeat with grace. CANTO II (Tlif Ji ' otitl) of Otnctrrn JTljirr Once again the tribe assembled On the stone steps of old Rogers. Sophs they were now, and in wisdom Had they learned an awful lot. Still within its ranks were numbered Robbie, Pell and Peaslee, bold. Ready once again to conquer Anything that came along. Shall I sing you of the studies That the tribe now wrestled with, How it listened up in Walker To the voice of Charlie Cross, Heard him, through its golden day-dreams, Nodding, crack his yearly jokes, Or, in wrapt and pensive silence Heard dear Arlo read a poem? Some perchance in wild confusion Tried to follow Nancy Hanks. Some took Dutch with Herr Von Blachstein, He of scintillating wit, He of puns and hat so famous, He immortalized at Tech. Came one night a great procession Of the tribes called G. 0. P. Tribes from Tech and tribes from Harvard Through the streets of Boston town. When at length the march was ended, When the torch ' s oil was low. When the voices raised in cheering Had become too hoarse to yell, On the stone steps of old Rogers Gathered round the Harvard host. 88 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Saw the sight so awful, madding, Saw the desecrating sight. And with war-cry loud and awful Madly rushed the tribes of Tech. Led of course by those brave warriors, Led by valiant nineteen-three. Need I sing of that great battle On the steps of Tech that night? Gentle reader, do but visit Any Senior ' s room today; O ' er the gas jet or the mantle See a Harvard gown or cap, Bearing on it, I will warrant, Pat and caustic, forceful, comment. CANTO III (Tlir tl aiiliooo of Oiuftfrn ' lirrr Now upon its Junior year Started forth old nineteen-three. It was proud and it was haughty With its dignified position. But its pride did take a tumble Yes, an awful headlong tumble When it ran against Applied, Ran against Applied Mechanics, Vainly tried its best to figure Where it should apply a load. Some decided on the Chapel; Others went for Jacob Wirth. After many calculations It was settled in the end,— The resultant load determined By the loads at separate joints, Starting with a beer at chapel, Ending with a pousse-cafe. Frequent loads at Jake ' s and Charlie ' s, Or perchance at Hayward Place - These determine bending moments Taken round a friendly post. ;■: :;: :!: ,i :fl Jj: But indeed the greatest happening Of the tribe ' s great Junior year. Was the issue of its Technique, Technique, nineteen hundred three. It was bright and it was witty, Full of merry, pleasing jokes, 1904 TECHNIQUE 89 Some on profs and some on students- Mostly on a favored few. Then each brave became a fusser, Fussed all through the Junior week, Fussed at teas and fussed at theatre, Fussed at Junior Promenade. CANTO IV (Eljr [ii ilgr of jUinrtrru «nirrr Spring had come and spring had vanished, Soon the Junior year was passed, Now the tribe once more assembled For its last, long year at Tech. Of its doings, reader, since then I need sing to you but little, For the class is quiet, sober; No more rough-house now for them. Gone the days of naughty conduct In the lecture-room or lab. ; Gone the days of dear old Robbie, Gone the mischief done by Pell; Sports have given up to study. Given up their erstwhile pace. Fussers, too, have learned their lesson. Learned that Tech and fussing jar. All are grinds, all with one purpose, All with hopes set on the goal Which looms up so near, yet distant. Gentle reader, should you ask me What this object of attainment Which has wrought the magic spell. Which has brought both sport and fusser Back into the narrow path. I should answer, I should tell you, As I close this lengthy song. That this goal so much desired Looming up so near, yet far, Is no prize of gold or silver. Is no potent life elixir. Is no wondrous gift of power. Is no longed-for word of lover — None of these things much desired. None of these, though good they be. But a simple Scroll of Parchment, Just the BATCHELOR ' S DEGREE - 90 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Cljc 6ixi ou ixuoto ILL up the bumpers, — that ' s the ' stuff! Stand forward like men in a row, And I ' ll give you a toast, a very good toast ; Are you ready? — all right, let her go! Here ' s to the girl that helps you win, To the girl that is frank and true ; To the girl that is kind, of thoughtful mind. To her heart that is pure as the dew. When your troubles are coming, black as night. Rush ' em and tackle low ; Work with a will and a might, but fight! For the sake of the girl you know. i m r if K - 1 92 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Cl)r Cost of tuticut itifc in nnxitm CoUcjjc 5 BELIEVE THE TIME HAS COME,, PARTICU- LARLY IN NEW ENGLAND, WHEN INSTITUTIONS OF LEARNING SHOULD SET BEFORE THE EYES OF STUDENTS THEIR OWN IDEALS OF A wholesome, democratic, and simple college life. Any student of the conditions of American college life can but be alarmed at the increasing sum which is required to send a boy through college; and it is ' M H time that some institution should deliberately set ' ™ ' '  itself to work to solve the problem of setting forth a college life that should give to the poor student the opportunity of economical living, and at the same time the opportunity of social intercourse with his fellows. College life has been set at such a pace that the poor student is practically barred from participa- tion in social life, unless, he be perhaps, an athelete and finds his expenses met by his athletic abilities, a state of affairs not wholly desirable. To my thinking there is no better problem to which the Institute can devote itself than to that of furnishing to its students such facilities as will make the student life economical and simple, yet attractive to rich and poor alike. Should the Institute adopt a plan of removal, I hope that it may undertake to deal with this problem; and in order to do so a system of dormitories or student houses would need to be erected upon the new site. To accomplish the end in view, these dormitories or student houses must be maintained in a different way and upon a 1904 TECHNIQUE 93 different principle from those ordinarily adopted. They must not be counted on as a source of revenue, but must be used to furnish the best means of living at little more than cost. I would suggest as an experimental plan some such arrangement as the following: Two quadrangles, consisting of four buildings each, each quadrangle accommodating approximately five hundred students, the lower floor of each building to be devoted to sitting rooms and dining rooms, and the upper floors to bedrooms and occasional suites for those who desire more expensive quarters. I should call these houses, rather than dormitories, as they will in their essential features be more akin to the English University Houses than to the American dormitories. Each house would form a union, its students meeting in the dining hall and for social intercourse. The entire group of houses would be lighted and heated by a central power plant, in which would be located the central kitchen, a refrigerator plant, and a laundry. With such a plant I believe we might successfully undertake to solve the problem of the economical housing and feed- ing of students. With proper system and with business methods, buying provisions at wholesale, I have no question but that we could offer the student lodging and food at prices far less than our students now pay for uncomfortable lodgings and for unsanitary food, with the additional advantage that the general mass of students would be thrown together under the influence of a simple and democratic social life. I am satisfied that few appreciate the economic and hygienic waste which comes in the housing and feeding of a body of students taking up their work in a new, and to most of them, unknown city. Boston is an expensive place as American cities go. The student who comes here from a distant place, particularly if his means are limited, undertakes to house and feed himself as cheaply as possible. In his effort to do so he not only isolates himself from his fellows, but he oftentimes finds himself in quarters which are morally and physically undesirable. A number of students eat unwholesome food and insufficient, and pay for it prices which, under such a plan as 94 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII that I have outlined, would furnish wholesome and sufficient food. The entire lack of any plan for the housing and feeding of students involves a moral, economic, and social waste, and I know of no better problem with which an institution like this may deal than that of stopping this waste. How much the economic waste alone amounts to in the matter of food may be judged from a comparison of the prices paid by our students with the cost of food for the West Point Cadets. The Cadets are, perhaps, the best fed student body in the world. Their meals are simple and wholesome, but are chosen from the best material that the market supplies, and they are cooked after modern sanitary methods. The cost of food and service amounts to but fifty cents a day per man, or $3.50 a week, which is just what the cheapest boarding houses charge Boston students for food far from satis- factory. This question is worth considering, not only from the stand- point of the student and of his social and physical needs, but also from that of the educational interests of Boston and New England. Boston is not only interested in the work of education, it is interested also in the business of education, and it seeks to encourage by every right means the coming to it of men seeking education. Such exchange increases in the best way the ties which bind New England to the other states, ties which we desire in all ways to foster. Our New England institutions were begun and have prospered as private insti- tutions, without large grants from the state, and they have therefore always been conducted on the theory that a fairly high charge for tuition could rightly be made. The great Western institutions, like those at Madison and Ann Arbor, have grown up under a different theory. In those states the Commonwealth itself undertakes to furnish a free education of the most complete sort, and the State University forms the apex of the state educational system. The incomes of the state universities are growing year by year, and the facilities which they offer are rapidly becoming comparable with 1 904 TECHNIQUE 95 those offered by the strongest New England institutions. Tuition is free, or at most is but a nominal sum ; living is cheap, and a student may go to one of these great Western institutions and live for a whole year for the sum required for his tuition alone at the Institute. All these considerations are making, as time goes on, stronger reasons why boys from Texas and California and Missouri and Georgia and other distant states should consider these institutions rather than those of New England, as places of residence for their student life. Any intelligent plan under which the coming of the student to Boston may be made easier and less expensive, and partic- ularly any plan which will free the stranger from the uncomfortable task of finding quarters in unknown surroundings, which will offer to the student of limited means an easy and direct choice of his student home, and which will make the problems of that home simple, will act as an offset to the considerations which I have mentioned, and will make easier the way of the student to a New England education. The man who can afford it will always come from distant states to New England, so long as our institutions maintain their high standing, so long as their faculties are composed of great teachers, and so long as their facilities are better than those of other regions; but the burden of a high tuition and of expensive living will become a continually increasing barrier, a sort of educa- tional tariff, erected against the student of limited means. The son of the clergyman, of the teacher, of the clerk, of the man of small income, will find it each year harder to obtain an education from us, and will be forced by reason of the increasing cost to turn elsewhere. An increasing number of students is being attracted each year from New England, from the states of New York and Pennsylvania, and from the Southern states to the great universities of the central West. No true citizen of the Union regrets this. It will be a fortunate day for our country when the colleges of Louisiana and of the Carolinas are so strong in teachers and equipment as to 96 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII attract students from Massachusetts and from New Hampshire. But I should be sorry to see the time come when the cost of education in Boston was so great as to limit the number of those who come to us from distant states to the families of the well-to- do, or to those who receive aid from the college endowment. HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT Gvcek Uctttv ;jf raternittf at tbr JHassadjufictts gnstitutc of Crrftnologj) 5n tl)c orDcr of tlKtv cistablisljmcnt 1904 TECHNIQUE 99 tgma € )i 1855 Gamma 1857 Eta 1858 Lambda I85Q Xi I85Q Omicron i860 Psi 1863 Theta 1864 Kappa 186=; Rho 1866 Zeta 1868 Mu 1869 Omega I87I Chi 1872 Sigma Sigma 1874 Gamma Gamma 1875 Delta Delta 1876 Zeta Zeta 1877 Theta Theta 1882 Zeta Psi 1882 Alpha Theta 1882 Alpha Gamma 1882 Alpha Zeta 1883 Alpha Epsilon 1883 Alpha Iota 1884 Alpha Lambda 1884 Alpha Xi 1884 Alpha Nu 1886 Alpha Omicron 1886 Alpha Pi 1886 Alpha Beta 1888 Alpha Sigma 1889 Alpha Upsilon 1890 Alpha Phi I89I Alpha Chi I89I Alpha Psi I89I Alph a Omega I89I Kappa Kappa 1892 Alpha 1892 Alpha Alpha 1893 Eta Eta 1893 Lambda Lambda 1893 Alpha Rho 1894 Nu Nu 1895 Mu M u 1896 Phi Phi 1896 Tau 1896 Xi Xi 1897 Omicron Omciron 1899 Beta 1899 Phi 1902 Rho Rho 1902 Alpha Eta Cliaptrr UoU Ohio Wesleyan University University of Mississippi Indiana University De Pauw University Dickinson College University of Virginia Pennsylvania College Bucknell University Butler College Washington and Lee University Denison University Northwestern University Hanover College Hampden-Sydney College Randolph-Macon College Purdue University Centre College University of Michigan University of Cincinnati Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ohio State University Beloit College . University of Nebraska Illinois Wesleyan University University of Wisconsin University of Kansas University of Texas Tulane University Albion College University of California University of Minnesota University of Southern California Cornell University Pennsylvania State College Vanderbilt University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Illinois Miami University Hobart College Dartmouth College Kentucky State College Lehigh University Columbia University West Virginia University University of Pennsylvania Roanoke College Missouri State University University of Chicago University of Wooster Lafayette College University of Maine University of Iowa Delaware, Ohio University, Miss. Bloomington, Ind. Greencastle, Ind. Carlisle, Pa. Charlottesville, Va. Gettysburg, Pa. Lewisburg, Pa. Trvington, Ind. Lexington, Va. Granville, Ohio Evanston, 111. Hanover, Ind. Hampden-Sydney, Va. Ashland, Va. Lafayette, Ind. Danville, Ky. Ann Arbor, Mich. Cincinnati, Ohio Boston, Mass. Columbus. Ohio Beloit, Wis. Lincoln, Neb. Bloomington, III. Madison, Wis. Lawrence, Kan. Austin, Texas New Orleans, La. Albion, Mich. Berkeley, Cal. Minneapolis, Minn. Los Angeles, Cal. Ithaca, N. Y. State College, Pa. Nashville, Tenn. Palo Alto, Cal. Champaign, III. O.xford, Ohio Geneva, N. Y. Hanover, N. H. Lexington, Ky. Bethlehem, Pa. New York, N. Y. Morgantown, W. V. Philadelphia, Pa. Salem, Va. Columbia, Mo. Chicago, 111. Wooster, Ohio Easton, Pa. Orono, Me. Iowa City, Pa. J 00 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII igma € )i ALPHA THETA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED MARCH 22, 1882 Edward Taylor Barron William Johnston Bay Maurice Bredin Sydney Atmore Caine Charles Stinchfield Cole John Charles Daly George Robert Eckel Charles Wickersham Elmer William Burder Ferguson, Jr. Theordore Victor Fowler, Jr. Thornton Meriweather Gilmer Edward iFratirs Charles Hallack, Jr. Ralph Curtis Jordan Norman Frederick Kerr Herman William Lackman Elbert Emerson Lochridge Leon Gilbert Morrill Mortimer Livingston Nagel Albert Senior Prince William Clements Rinearson, Jr. Henry Harding Russel James Smith Sheafe Cutter Thompson -ratrrs in Uibr Winthrop Alexander Arthur Francis Bardwell Harle Oren Cummins John Andrew Curtin William Worcester Cutler Winthrop Dahlgren John Ashley Highlands Rhodes Greene Lockwood James Stuart Newton Arthur Sewall Percy Lucius Spalding Tyler Edward Payson Whitman 1904 TECHNIQUE lOI ClKta l t Chaptrr Uoll , Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute I) Sheffield Scientific School ' Stevens Institute of Technology J Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Columbia Schools of Engineering Troy, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. Hoboken, N. J. Boston, Mass. New York, N. Y. 102 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Cljrta ¥t DELTA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1885 j ratiTs tn J actiltatr Harry Ellsworth Clifford Henry Greenleaf Pearson j ratrrs John Ross Bates Erwin Ferdinand Bender David Wills Bridges Arthur De Witt Clark Enrique Cuesta Harold Coburn Fish Paul Hansen Roy Guthrie Kennedy Benjamin Madero Harold Kay Merrow j ratirs m Urbr Arthur Humphreys Alley William Cornell Appleton Albert Farwell Bemis Alfred Miller Blinn Edward Lyman Brown Morton Eddy Cobb Henry Marshall Crosby Henry John Conant Nathan Brown Day Franklin Whitney Doliber John Cowper Edwards Horatio Southworth Frazer Charles Hayden Edwird Johnson, Jr. Frederick Wait Lord Henry Adams Morss Herbert Sturgis Potter James Henry Reed, Jr. Clifford Hopkins Shivers Timothy Wilson Sprague John Watson Tarbox James Winthrop Tewksbury Walter Bacon Trowbridge Harry Hayward Young ' 1904 TECHNIQUE 103 Bclta si Cliaptrr UoU . Columbia College .... J University of Pennsylvania F. Trinity College .... I Williams College ' ' University of Mississippi r University of Virginia Sheffield Scientific School Massachusetts Institute of Technology New York City Philadelphia, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Williamstown, Mass. Oxford, Miss. Charlottesville, Va. New Haven, Conn. Boston, Mass. 104 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Bclta 3st TAU CHAPTER i ratrrs Harry Walker Donald Charles Jewell Mcintosh Allan Seymour Andrew Hopewell Hepburn Hans Frederick Schaefer Charles Stillman Sperry, Jr. George Bates Harrington Charles Wetmore Kellogg, Jr. Louis Gustave Bouscaren, Jr. Benjamin Nields, Jr. Melville Bryant Bowman Norman Leslie Snow Julian May Wright Kenneth Hulbert Disque Edward Thomas Steel, 2d Charles Emerson Hovey Robert Edward Lee Taylor I ' ? 04 TECHNIQUE 105 € )i mi Clmptrr Uoll . University of Virginia ; Massachusetts Institute of Technology ' Emory College ... J Rutgers College . ' Hampden-Sydney College Franklin and Marshall College University of Georgia ' ■) Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Ohio State University -I University of California .1 Stevens Institute of Technology . University of Texas E Cornell University U Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University ' Lafayette College Wofford College ' ' Amherst College Dartmouth College ' Lehigh University Charlottesville, Va. Boston, Mass. O.xford, Ga. New Brunswick, N. J. Hampden-Sydney, Va. Lancaster, Pa. Athens, Ga. Troy, N. Y. Columbus, Ohio Berkeley, Cal. Hoboken, N. J. Austin, Texas Ithaca, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. East on, Pa. Spartansburg, S. C. Amherst, Mass. Hanover, N. H. South Bethlehem. Pa. 106 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII € )i m BETA CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1890 Carl Thompson Bilyea Laurance Montjoy Buck Walter Lorrain Cook Francis Woodward Davis Neil Davis Emerson Mortimer Yale Ferris Alrfed W. Geist, Jr. Frederick Bertine Guest Robert Stavely Hamilton Sidney Morgan Henry Edwin Bruce Hill John Hampden Holliday, Jr. Charles Lowell Homer Edwin Rowland Humphrey James McClurg Lambie Lewis Bowen McBride Samuel Alfred McClung, Jr. Silas Clarence Merrick Theodore Parker Moorehead Frederic Nickerson Henry Augustus Pemberton George Hardy Powell Russell Peter Raynolds Edwin Lawrence Smith Merrick Eugene Vinton, Jr. Milford Wortham ,r .= v 1904 TECHNIQUE 107 ©cita i appa Cpstlou Clmptri Uoll Phi Yale University 1844 Theta Bowdoin College 1844 Xi Colby University 1845 Sigma Amherst College 1846 Gamma Vanderbilt University 1847 Psi University of Alabama 1847 Upsilon Brown University 1850 Chi University of Mississippi 1850 Beta University of North Carolina 1851 Eta University of Virginia 1852 Kappa Miami University 1852 Lambda Kenyon College 1852 Pi Dartmouth College . 1853 Iota Central University of Kentucky 1854 Alpha Alpha Middlebury College 1854 Omicron University of Micliigan 185s Epsilon Williams College 1855 Rho Lafayette College 1855 Tau Hamilton College 1856 Mu Colgate University 1856 Nu College of the City of New York 1856 Beta Phi University of Rochester 1856 Phi Chi Rutgers College 1861 Psi Phi De Pauw University 1866 Gamma Phi Wesleyan University 1867 Psi Omega Renssalaer Polytechnic 1867 Beta Chi Adelbert College 1868 Delta Chi Cornell University 1870 Delta Delta Chicago University 1870 Phi Gamma Syracuse University 1871 Gamma Beta Columbia College 1874 Theta Zeta University of California 1876 Alpha Chi Trinity College 1879 Phi Epsilon University of Minnesota 1889 Sigma Tau Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1890 Tau Lambda Tulane University 1898 Alpha Phi University of Toronto 1898 Delta Kappa University of Pennsylvania 1899 Tau Alpha McGill University 1 90 1 Sigma Rho Leland Stanford, Jr., Univers ity 1902 108 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Bdta i appa Cpsilon SIGMA TAU CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1890 Alfred Edgar Burton J -iatrrs in -acultatr George Vincent Wendell Charles Waldo Adams Arthur John Amberg Sidney Young Ball John Ford Card Theodore Augustine Dissel Emmet Joseph Dwyer Henry Douglas Eaton David Elwell Charles Joseph Emerson Edward Chester Grant Galen Moses Harris Philip Edward Hinkley Robert Rishworth Jordan i iatirs William Jared Knapp Currier Lang Norman Lombard Mitchell Mackie Louis Henry Maxfield Andrew Otterson Miller Blaine Heston Miller Waldron Page Schumacher Ernest Maxwell Smith Preston Morris Smith Percy Alexander Staples Herbert Mygatt Wilcox Clarence Benton Williams George Babcock Wood William Stuart Forbes Frederic William Freeman Isaac Brewster Hazelton Walter Humphreys Allen Winchester Jackson i ratrcs m Uvbt Henry Orlando Marcy, Jr. Leonard Metcalf Benjamin Franklin Winslow Russel John Alden Trott David La Forest Wing Austin Clarence Wood • ' iit ' ..i.iwr I 904 TECHNIQUE J 09 P)i iScta Cpsilon LOCAL AT TECHNOLOGY 10 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII )i Beta epsilou FOUNDED I N 1890 j -ratiT5 Louis Winfield Adams Ogden Ross Adams George Edwin Atkins Francis George Baldwin James Salsbury Brown John Tyrrell Cheney Maxwell Alanson Coe Edgar Bailey Cooper Philip Grenville Darling John Pickman Davis William Franklyn Englis Ralph Stowell Franklin Harold Staniels Graham Ernest Harrah Walter Austin Hopkins Richard Mack Lawton Clarence Arthur Lord Richard Oglesby Marsh William Coolbaugh Marsh Anthony Paul Mathesius Albert Manton Read Bertram Allen Richardson LeBaron Turner William Martin Van Ameringe George R. Anthony Harry N. Atwood Stephen Bowen Richard B. Derby Henry Fisk Sumner H. Foster Andrew D. Fuller DuRelle Gage David E. Gray George W. Hayden f ratiTG in Urbr Sheldon L. Howard Harry G. Johnson George W. F. Reed Thomas P. Robinson Charles A. Sawyer , Jr. Ralph E. Sawyer Walter M. Stearns William Thalheimer J. Gifford Thompson William E. West Henry Thornton Winchester Hr ifttt J ' AiJa 1904 TECHNIQUE HI Bclta apsilou FOUNDED AT WILLIAMS COLLEGE IN 1834 Cljaptrr Uoll 1834 Williams 1838 Union 1847 Hamilton 1847 Amherst 1847 Adelben 1852 Colby 1852 Rochester 1856 Middlebury 1857 Bowdoin 1858 Rutgers i860 Brown 1865 Colgate 1865 New York 1869 Cornell 1870 Marietta 1873 Syracuse 1876 Michigan 1880 Northwestern 1880 Harvard 1885 Wisconsin 1885 Lafayette 1885 Columbia 1885 Lehigh 1886 Tufts 1887 De Pauw 1888 Pennsylvania 1890 Minnesota I89I Technology 1893 Swathmore 1896 California 1896 Stanford 1898 Nebraska 1898 McGiU 1899 Toronto I90I Chicago Williamstown, Mass. Schenectady, N. Y. Clinton, N. Y. Amherst, Mass. Cleveland, Ohio WaterviUe, Me. Rochester, N. Y. Middlebury, Vt. Brunswick, Me. New Brunswick, N. J. Providence, R. 1. Hamilton, N. Y. New York City Ithaca, N. Y. Marietta, Ohio Syracuse, N. Y. Ann Arbor, Mich. Evanston, III. Cambridge, Mass. Madison, Wis. Easton, Pa. New York City South Bethlehem, Pa. West Somerville, Mass. Greencastle, Ind. Philadelphia, Pa. Minneapolis, Minn. Boston, Mass. Swathmore, Pa. Berkeley, Cal. Palo Alto, Cal. Lincoln, Neb. Montreal, Canada Toronto, Canada Chicago III. 112 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Bdta Hpstlou TECHNOLOGY CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1891 Frank Vogel J-ratrfs in i -artiltatf Louis Derr Miguel Ahumada, Jr. Joseph Wheeler Aylsworth Rutherfurd Bingham Arthur William Blake Franklin Sawyer Bradley Claudius Howard Cooper Robert Henry Doepke James Duane Ireland Frank Baldwin Jewett Philip John Kearny Hubert Merryweather J rat If 6 William Duffield Bell Hotter, Jr. Robert Porter Nichols Louis Ballauf Rapp Charles Loring Rodgers George Beach Seyms Robert Wyndham Seyms Donald Argyle Stewart Sidney Talbot Strickland Maurice Crawford Tompkins Everett Pendleton Turner Howard Chubbuck Turner Waldso Turner i ratrrs m Uibr Joshua Atwood, 3d George Phillips Dike Charles Dunn Charles Warren Hapgood Albert Lincoln Kendall Arthur Samuel Keene John Winslow Horr Walter Elbridge Piper Thomas Gleason Richards Miles Standish Richmond Gardner Rogers John Carleton Sherman Clifford Melville Swan Alfred Ball Tenny Harry Warren Upham William Cortelyou Whiston NURASKa TORONTO .CMtCiSoJe iP J 904 TECHNIQUE 113 FOUNDED IN 1856 AT ALABAMA STATE UNIVERSITY. TUSCALOOSA, ALA. Maine Alpha Massachusetts Iota Tau Massachusetts Beta Upsilon Massachusetts Gamma Massachusetts Delta New York Alpha New York Mu New York Sigma Phi Pennsylvania Omega Pennsylvania Sigma Phi Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta Pennsylvania Zeta Pennsylvania Delta Pennsylvania Theta Virginia Omicron Virginia Sigma North Carolina Xi North Carolina Theta South Carolina Gamma Georgia Beta Georgia Psi Georgia Epsilon Georgia Phi Michigan Iota Beta Michigan Alpha Ohio Sigma Ohio Delta Ohio Epsilon Ohio Theta Indiana Alpha Indiana Beta Illinois Psi Omega Illinois Beta Illinois Gamma Kentucky Kappa Kentucky Iota Kentucky Epsilon Tennessee Zeta Tennessee Lambda Tennessee Mu Tennessee Kappa Tennessee Omega Tennessee Eta Alabama Mu Alabama Iota Alabama Alpha Mu Mississippi Gamma Missouri Alpha Missouri Beta Nebraska Lambda Pi Arkansas Alpha Upsilon Cljaptrr Uoll University of Maine Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston University Harvard University Worcester Polytechnic Institute Cornell University Columbia University St. Stephens College Allegheny College Dickinson College Pennsylvania State College Bucknell University Gettysburg College University of Pennsylvania University of Virginia Washington and Lee University University of North Carolina Davidson College Wofford College University of Georgia Mercer University Emory College Georgia School of Technology University of Michigan Adrian College Mount Union College . Ohio Wesleyan University University of Cincinnati Ohio State University Franklin College Purdue University Northwestern University University of Illinois University of Chicago Central University Bethel College Kentucky State College Southwestern Presbyterian University Cumberland University Vanderbilt University University of Tennessee University of the South Southwestern Baptist University Universitv of Alabama Southern University Alabama Polytechnic Institute University of Mississippi University of Missouri Washington University University of Nebraska University of Arkansas Orono, Me. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Ithaca, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Annandale, N. Y. Meadville, Pa. Carlisle, Pa. State College, Pa. Lewisburg, Pa. Gettysburg, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Charlottesville, Va. Lexington, Va. Chapel Hill, N. C. Davidson, N. C. Spartansburg, S. C. Athens, Ga. Macon, Ga. Oxford, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Ann Arbor, Mich. Adrian, Mich. Alliance, Ohio Delaware, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Columbus, Ind. Lafayette, Ind. Evanston, 111. Champaign, 111. Chicago, 111. Richmond, Ky. Russelville, Ky. Lexington, Ky. Clarksville, Tenn. Lebanon, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Knoxville, Tenn. Sawanee, Tenn. Jackson, Tenn. Tuscaloosa, Ala. Greenboro, Ala. Auburn, Ala. Oxford, Miss. Columbia, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. Fayetteville, Ark. U4 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Texas Rho Colorado Chi Colorado Zeta Colorado Gamma California Alpha California Beta Louisiana Tau Upsilon Louisiana Epsilon Minnesota Alpha Wisconsin Alpha Chaptrr Uoll — Continued University of Texas University of Colorado Denver University Colorado School of Mines Iceland Stanford, Jr., University University of California Tulane University Louisiana State University University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin Austin, Texas Boulder, Col. Denver, Col. Golden, Col. Palo Alto, Cal. Berkeley, Cal. New Orleans, La. Baton Rouge, La. Minneapolis, Minn. Madison, Wis. tgma Slplja Cpstlon MASSACHUSETTS IOTA TAU CHAPTER irratrrs; Roland Hunnewell Ballou Donald Minor Belcher William Brenton Boggs Charles Reid Boggs William Winslow Burnham Frank Gardner Cox William Eager Nathan Jackson Gibbs Lee Faulkner Goldthwaite Carl Herman Graesser Alexander Healey Harold Garfield Hixon William Green Simon Jonas Martenet, Jr. Alfred Richard Beddall Wallace Clark Brackett Cardella Drake Brown Harold Chase Buckminster Luzerne Simeon Cowles Charles Spencer Crane William Wyman Crosby John Wallis Fleet Charles Mussey Fosdick William Thomas Hall Herman Hormel Clarence Atkins Neal ' Mo. Alpha) George William Prentiss Edward Farnum Rockwood Scott Clark Runnels Henry Christian Schaeffer James Utah Nicholas Henry George Nicholas Lawrence Hosmer Underwood Jean Philip Varian (Col. Zetai George Daves Wilson (Penn. Zeta) Lewis Gamaliel Wilson iPenn. Zeta) Frederick Bertholdt Saegmiiller Carl Alfred Houck [(Va. Omicron) Ralph LeRoy Segar jTratifs 111 Grbf Harrington Mack Carl Leon Morgan Walter Robert Phemister Myron Everett Pierce Clarence Howard Walker Robert Sidney Wason William Wright Walcott Winslow Abbott Wilson Howard Parker Wise Robert Vaughan Brown Leslie Walker Millar 1904 TECHNIQUE 115 i (Samma Bclta ESTABLISHED 1848 Alpha Lambda Nu Beta Deuteron Omicron Xi Pi Tau Epsilon Psi Omega Alpha Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Zeta Deuteron Theta Deuteron Zeta Delta Deuteron Nu Deuteron Omicron Deuteron Beta Pi Deuteron Delta Lambda Deuteron Rho Deuteron Sigma Deuteron Sigma Zeta Phi Delta Xi Theta Psi Delta Chi Gamma Phi Iota Mu Kappa Nu Mu Sigma Rho Chi Beta Mu Kappa Tau Pi Iota Nu Epsilon Alpha Chi Tau Alpha Chi Mu Phi Iota Lambda Nu Chi Mu Omega Mu Sigma Tau Delta Nu Sigma Nu Chapter Uoll Washington and Jefferson College De Pauw University Bethel College Roanoke College University of Virginia Pennsylvania College Allegheny College Hanover College City College of New York Wabash College Columbia University Illinois Wesleyan University Knox College Washington and Lee College Ohio Wesleyan University Indiana State University Hampden-Sydney College Yale University Ohio State Universitv University of Pennsylvania University of Kansas Bucknell College Denison Universitv Wooster University Lafayette College Wittenburg College William Jewell University of California Colgate University Lehigh University Pennsylvania State College Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cornell Universitv University of Minnesota Richmond College Johns Hopkins University of Tennessee Worcester Polytechnic Institute New York University Amherst College Trinity College Union College University of Wisconsin University of Illinois University of Nebraska University of Missouri University of Maine University of Washington Dartmouth College University of Syracuse Washington, Pa. Greencastlc, Ind. Russelville, Ky. Salem, Va. Charlottesville, Va. Gettysburg, Pa. Meadville. Pa. Hanover. Ind. New York, N. Y. Crawfordsville, Ind. New York, N. Y. Bloomington, III Galesburg, 111. Lexington, Va. Delaware, Ohio Bloomington, Ind. Hampden-Sydney, Ind. New Haven, Conn. Columbus, Ohio Philadelphia, Pa. Lawrence, Kan. Lewisburg, Pa. Granville, Ohio. Wooster, Ohio Easton, Pa. Springtield, Ohio Liberty Mo. Berkeley, Cal. Hamilton, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. State College, Pa. Boston, Mass. Ithaca, N. Y. Minneapolis. Minn. Richmond, Va. Baltimore, Md. Knoxville, Tenn. Worcester, Mass. University Heights, N.Y. Amherst, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Schenectady, N Y. Madison, Wis. Champaign, III. Lincoln, Neb. Columbia, Mo. Orono, Me. Seattle, Wash. Hanover, N. H. Syracuse, N. Y. 116 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Theta Tau Delta Xi Delta Alpha Iota Pi Rho Chi Epsilon Alpha Theta Cljaptrr UoU — Continued University of Alabama University of Texas Adelbert College Purdue University Brown University Chicago University University of Michigan Tuscaloosa, Ala. Austin, Texas Cleveland, Ohio Lafayette, Ind. Providence, R. I. Chicago, 111. Ann Arbor, Mich. i (gamma Bclta IOTA MU CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1889 Arthur Benjamin Allen Edward Sherman Baker Sumner Edwin Brown Everett Shackleford Cason Harold Douglas Church Frederick Clark Durant, Jr. Quincy Pierce Emery Percy Allen Goodale Frederick Lyle Higgins Elmer Allen Holbrook Ralph Osborne Ingram Elliot Walker Knight Frederic Schuyler Krag Alfred Ernest Lang H. J -iatirs Joseph Thomas Lawton, Jr. Ben Edwin Lindsly Harry Raymond Low Alpheus Lyon Mark Graham Magnuson Addison Haynes Nordyke, Jr. Paul McClary Paine Thomas Coulson Pinkerton Lane Schofield Walter George de Steigner Harold Clapp Stetson Winfred Albert Taylor Raymond Ware Walter Pervoort Wyman WiUard Hiss S. Cabot B. S. Clark J. C. Cobb W. W. Dow -latiTs in Uibr R. F. Whitney W. F. Evans A. W. Friend E. J. Proulx A. J. Sweet J,, . ■-- Pf.lhl- 1904 TECHNIQUE 117 )i tpta ixappa Clif Uoll of Cliaptrrs 1873 Alpha 1888 Beta 1889 Gamma I89I Delta 1893 Epsilon 1896 Zeta 1897 Eta 1897 Theta 1899 Iota 1899 Kappa 1899 Lambda 1900 Mu 1 90 1 Nu 1902 Xi 1902 Omicron Massachusetts Agricultural College Union University Cornell University West Virginia University Yale Univer sity College of the City of New York University of Maryland Columbia University Stevens Institute of Technology The Pennsylvania State College The Columbian University University of Pennsylvania Lehigh University St. Lawrence University Massachusetts Institute of Technology a:i)f Uoll of Clubs The New York Club The Boston Club The Albany Club The Connecticut Club The Southern Club 1889 1897 1900 1 90 1 1902 118 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII OMICRON CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1902 Harold Gilliland Crane Arthur Nelson Hastings William Strachan Goninlock Jacob Brum Reinhardt Homer Olsen Page Ralph Nims Whitcomb John Delaney McQuaid Harry Tebbetts Rollins Eugene Haines Russell, Jr. William Walter Cronin Walter Abbe Smith Harold Eugene Webb William Arthur Kemper j ratrrs in ailrbr Frank L. Packard Phanor J. Eder Albert G. Rich Adolph F. Haffenreffer 19 04 TECHNIQUE M9 A II (P hi: lU-l lii BE nr nil BK nil BP nr Br BQ rA FB B J E A ' .1 A ' BA BB B ' . B0 nr A r I ' r !_) BA BM BN BO B. rr I ' K ry. Bclta Can Bclta ESTABLiSHED AT BETHANY COLLEGE. 1859 (Eljr ilctitor Cliaptrre SOUTHERN DIVISION Vanderbilt University University of Mississippi Washington and Lee University Emory College University of the South University of Virginia Tulane University WESTERN DIVISION University of Iowa University of Wisconsin University of Minnesota University of Colorado Northwestern University L eland Stanford, Jr., University University of Nebraska University of Illinois University of California University of Chicago Armour Institute Technology NORTHERN DIVISION Ohio University University of Michigan Albion College Adelbert College Hillsdale College Ohio Wesleyan University Kenyon College Indiana University De Pauw University Butler College, University of Indianapolis Ohio State University Wabash College University of West Virginia EASTERN DIVISION Allegheny College Washington and Jeffers ' ' .n College Stevens Institute of Technology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute University of Pennsylvania Lehigh University Tufts College Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cornell University Brown University Dartmouth College Columbia University Wesleyan University 120 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Bclta Can Bclta BETA NU CHAPTER ESTABLISHED MAY 18. 1889 i ratrrs Fred Hathaway Abbott Clem Clare Carhart Frank Milton Carhart Frank Spencer Elliott Robert Morse Folsom Frank Emmons Guild Henry Francis Lewis Elliott Lum Frederick Ebenezer MacMillan Williston Canfield Rich Arthur Scott Thomas Fremont Nelson Turgeon William Henty Prentiss Wright Ralph Benjamin Yerxa Bartolette Artman Yoder Horace Singer Baker (Beta Pi) Arthur Gibson Bixby Francis Minot Blake George William Bryden William Louis Creden i?iatrfs in Urlir Henry Bodge Pennell George Batcheller Perkins Frederick Pond Simonds Francis Fay Hill Smith Clifford Molineaux Tyler 1904 TECHNIQUE 121 Cljcta € )i FOUNDED AT NORWICH UNIVERSITY. 1856 Cliaprrr Uoll Alpha Norwich University Beta Massachusetts Institute of Technology 122 T E C H N I QUE Vol. XVIII Cl)eta € }i BETA CHAPTER ESTABLISH E D. 1902 Charles Morton Hutchins Edward Ruddock Hyde Charles Edward Johnson Burton Warren Kendall Patrick James Kennedy, Jr. James William Kidder Henry Delano Loring Roland Everett Page Ralph Omer Reed Clarence Hale Sutherland Paul Baron Webber N )-V ALPHA DELTA PHI ALPHA CHI RHO BETA THETA PI DELTA PHI THETA DELTA CHI KAPPA ALPHA SIGMA CHI SIGMA NU PHI BETA KAPPA PHI DELTA THETA PHI KAPPA PSI PHI PI EPSILON CHI PSI PSI UPSILON [R FINITE I IM OTTO Fernando Moreno Blount Austin D. Jenkins T. M. Pease J. V. Rathbone . H. C. Smith Omar Swenson G. W. C. Whiting Edward H. Lorenz Alf red Bruton W. J. Sneeringer, Jr. Stuart L. Walcott Montague Ferry Paul G. L. Hilken Raymond M. Hood John Armistead Spilman Charles H. Porter T. P. Bedford William P. Cross William P. Bentley Edward H. Lorenz Grant Ford William L. Gillett Clyde Webster McCornach Walter Ray McCornach Reginald Monsurrat Charles B. Moseley Byron Clingerman J. W. Welsh E. R. Ray Joseph H. Bakewell Harold Haskins Ernest William Pelton Clark D. Simonds Eugene W. Mason Theodore A. Sammis Frederick B. Thurber Yale University Williams College Kenyon College Kenyon College Adelbert College Dartmouth College Johns Hopkins University Trinity College Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University Wahash College Yale University Lehigh University Brown University Virginia Military Institute Brown University Central College University of Rochester Trinity College Trinity College Amherst College University of the South Knox College Knox College Ohio State University Brown University Wittenberg College Harvard College Lake Forest University Cornell University University of Wisconsin Amherst College Middlebury College Brown University University of Minnesota Brown University Sigma Chi 23 Theta Chi 12 Delta Psi 17 Chi Phi 26 Phi Gamma Delta 30 Delta Kappa Epsilon 27 Phi Beta Epsilon 24 Delta Upsilon 23 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 28 Delta Tau Delta 16 Phi Sigma Kappa 13 Other Fraternities represented 35 Total 274 prrrnuagf of f-ratrrnitv tl rn ar STrrlmologv Year No. of Men 1885-86 52 1886-87 42 1887-88 42 : 888-89 45 1889-90 93 1890-91 158 1891-92 184 1892-93 207 1893-94 191 1894-95 201 1895-96 192 1896-97 189 1897-98 173 1898-99 189 1 899- 1 900 216 1900-01 . . 213 1901-02 ... 245 1902-03 ... 274 Per Cent 8.5 8.9 6.1 5-4 10.8 16.0 17. 1 18.8 16.5 16.9 16.2 15-8 14.4 16.1 18.4 17.9 17. 1 16.9 126 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Warren F. Currier Stanley A. Foster Albert A. Haskell i . ESTABLISHED 1883 iVicmbtrs 1 003 Arthur S. Martin John R. Odell Frederic A. Olmsted George R. Spaulding Stuart W. Benson Walter E. Hadley Reginald Hazeltine 1 004 Charles R. Haynes Marquis E. Benson Guy C. Riddell 1 003 Robert L. Young BonoraiT f)cmbcv0 John Alden Fred L. Bardwell Samuel Cabot Henry Carmichael James M. Crafts Charles R. Cross William S. Davenport Thomas M. Drown Thomas Evans Henry Fay Augustus H. Gill Heinrich O. Hofman G. Russel Lincoln Arthur D. Little Richard W. Lodge F. Jewett Moore Samuel P. MuUiken James F. Norris Arthur A. Noyes Thomas E. Pope Henry S. Pritchett Robert H. Richards George W. Rolfe William T. Sedgewick John W. Smith Henry P. Talbot Frank H. Thorp William H. Walker Wilis R. Whitney J?n-J a PJti n € fficcr0 JAMES DUANE IRELAND FRANCIS WOODWARD DAVIS WALTER MAYNARD DRURY . CHARLES JEWELL McINTOSH President Vice- President Secretary Treasurer f)cmt)cr!Ei Edward T. Barron Franklin Sawyer Bradley Garrit Samuel Cannon Claudius Howard Cooper Francis Woodward Davis Walter Maynard Drury William Burden Ferguson, Jr Mortimer Yale Ferris John Lawrence Gilson Robert Stavely Hamilton Sidney Morgan Henry Andrew Hopewell Hepburn James Duane Ireland J. Russell Jones James Metcalfe Charles Jewell Mcintosh Benjamin Nields, Jr. Lewis Bowen McBride Henry Augustus Pemberton Louis Ballauf Rapp George Beach Seyms Henry Stoddard Sherman John Armistead Spilman Floyd Thomas Taylor A. Philip Wadsworth Stuart Lanier Walcott George Babcock Wood 128 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII HouuU Caftlr KING ARTHUR QUEEN GUINEVER MERLIN MELVILLE BRYANT BOWMAN WILLIAM DUFFIELD BELL MOTTER, Jr. WALDSO TURNER SIR GALAHAD SIR LAUNCELOT SIR GAWAIN UmgDts HARRY WALKER DONALD JOHN HAMPDEN HALLIDAY HOWARD MAURICE EDMUNDS Ferdando Moreno Blount Melville Bryant Bowman James S. Brown Harry Walker Donald Howard Maurice Edmunds Edwin Bruce Hill John Hampden Halliday Robert Howard William Lord Theodore Parker Moorehead William Duffield Bell Motter, Jr. Samuel Seaver Robert Wyndham Seyms Edwin L. Smith Sidney Talbot Strickland LeBaron Turner Waldso Turner 0 k Chief . Chief ' s Daughter Medicine Man RENSHAW BORIE SAMUEL SEAVER E. T. STEEL, 2d JOHN HOLLIDAY, Jr. Council of B ar W. deB. MOTTER, Jr. T. MORRIS POTTS Renshaw Borie M. Bryant Bowman John H. Holliday, Jr. H. W. Donald jH embers 1905 Robert Lord W. deB. Motter, Jr. T. Morris Potts H. F. Schaefer E. T. Steel, 2d Louis E. Robbe Sidney T. Strickland Waldso Turner Robert W. Seyms Samuel Seaver Miguel Ahumada, Jr. Laurance M. Buck Donald A. Stewart R. Bingham 1906 H. K. Disque Edgar Clark Ballou Allan Seymour Arthur W. Blake M. E. Vinton, Jr. Julian M. Wright R. H. Doepke Nugent Fallon Harold Street Wilkins 130 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII mm HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT ALFRED EDGAR BURTON iH embers George Edwin Atkins Louis Gustave Bouscaren, Jr. George Alden Curtis Merton Leslie Emerson Walter Elbridge Hadley Charles Rogerson Haynes Charles Lowell Homer George Hardy Powell Preston Morris Smith Arthur Jeremiah Sweet Clarence Benton Williams ATt: TICS 132 TECHNIQUE Vol. xvm !atl;lrtif0 WHEN Varsity football was abolished at Technology in the fall of 1902, it was predicted that in the other branches of athletics, principally the track team, a decided improve- ment would be noted. This predicted improvement has not as yet been very marked as regards Varsity athletics, but as regards the class teams it is realized to some extent. The interest seems to be centered on the track team and it has been proved beyond a doubt that only in track athletics can Technol- ogy be placed with other colleges. The Hare and Hounds Club has been dropped and less interest is now shown in the Cross Country Team. The track team, principally through the efforts of two men, secured fourth place at the New England Intercollegiate meet at Worcester. In the four previous years the team got fourth, seventh sixth and fifth places respectively; while in 1894, it won the champion- ship. In the triangular meet with Dartmouth and Brown, we got a good second to Dartmouth. At the B. A. A. indoor meet Technology secured more points than any other college represented, the relay team winning on a foul. An indoor meet with Tufts was easily won, 45 to 21 points. 19 04 TECHNIQUE J33 In tennis Tech came out on top in the singles, and showed up well in the doubles. To F. Bradley, ' 02, belongs the distinction of having won the New England Intercollegiate Tennis championship for Tech. After three years ' play the relative standing of the clubs is: Brown, 3; Tech, i 1-2; Amherst, i 1-2; Bates, i; Dartmouth, 1-2; Wesleyan, 1-2; Tufts, 1-2. A fencing team has been organized during the year and in the matches shown up ket-ball and have had a porters, and of these not very en It is in class however , played has well. Bas- il c k e y few s u p- the records teams are couraging. athletics, the i m - provement has been most noticed. The class baseball teams of last spring met with more success than any other class teams have had for some time, and there was no little interest manifested. In two hotly contested games 1904 won the champion- ship for the year. The past fall brought out two very creditable class football teams. The last teams have had com- petent coaches over them and the result has been 134 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII G. A. CURTIS a marked improvement. 1905 again won the championship in football by defeat- ing 1906. In summing up the situation of ath- letics in general at Technology we can not but help thinking that there is chance for vast improvement. We have now only one Varsity team and that should be a star, as everything is concentrated towards it. The good showing of the class football tsams gives some hope for believing that there is material enough and therefore a chance to warrant Technology again offic- ially recognizing football. There is plenty of opportunity for great things in athletics, but it will have to be the result of hard, consistent efforts on the part of the under- graduates. H. S BAKER A TriK[iL,iETrn( Officers FRANK H. BRIGGS, ' 8i Chairman HARRY L. MORSE, ' 99 Treasurer CHARLES A. SAWYER, Jr., ' oJ Acting Secretary UrprrsrntattVirs from n . J. (T. Jlluinni assoriatton Thomas Hibbard, ' 75 Frank H. Briggs, ' 81 John L. Batchelder, ' 90 UriJirsriuatiur from institiitr Committrr Charles Lowell Homer, ' 04 Urprrsnuatiur from .ltl)lrnr Jlssonation Henry T. Winchester, ' 03 135 THE M. I. T. Athletic Association was founded in 1897 and has managed the athletics at the Institute since that time. Under the rulings of this association three meets are W held, open only to students in M. I. T. ; one in the Fall, one in the Mid-Winter, and one in the Spring. Only points obtained by men in the Winter and Spring meets are counted towards the class championship. Officers KENNETH CROTHERS GRANT, ' 02 President GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, ' 04 Vice-President WILLIAM WALTER CRONIN, ' 04 Secretary RICHARD OGLESBY MARSH, ' 05 Treasurer HENRY THORNTON WINCHESTER, ' 03 Representative Advisory Council THOMAS EDWARD JEWETT, ' 05 Manager of Track Team HERBERT JAMES MANN Assistant Manager Cvcaiti )C Committer GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS HENRY THORNTON WINCHESTER JOSEPH WARREN CROWELL THOMAS EDWARD JEWETT HERBERT JAMES MANN Captain Technology Track Team Captain 1903 Track Team Captain 1904 Track Team Captain 1905 Track Team Captain 1906 Track Team THE New England Intercollegiate Athlet I f ic Association was organized in 1886, with Amherst, Bowd psP oin, Brown, Dart- mouth, Tufts and WiUiams as charter members. The Association is governed by an executive council consisting of a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and three committeemen. These officers convene in Boston the third Saturday in February and arrange for the annual Field Day which takes place the Saturday preceding the last Saturday in May. The committee also elects officers for the insuing year. Technology became a member of the association in 1894 and that year took the championship by a good margin of points. J. B. ELY, Williams President J. L. MITCHELL, Bowdoin Vice-President H. T. WINCHESTER, M. I. T. Treasurer A. T. FOSTER, Amherst Secretary cfiTcutivic Comiuittfc Chairman, J. B. ELY, Williams H. T. Winchester, M. I. T. L. L. Parker, Wesleyan R. J. Cleeland, Amherst A. N. Pope, Brown J. B. Walther, Dartmouth A. T. Foster, Amherst ai rmljfrs of the Association Dartmouth College University of Maine Amherst College Brown University Wesleyan University Bowdoin College Williams College Trinity College Tufts College Massachusetts Institute of Technology Worcester Polytechnic Institute M. I. T. Cliampionslnp U innrrs BOWDOIN, I WILLIAMS, 2 AMHERST, 5 DARTMOUTH, 7 Cccljuolosp tCrach Ccam A ' ■- « LINDSLEY GANNETT KRUSE MORRILL PEMBER WINCHESTER GRANT RILEY H.S.BAKER MAHON, Coach EMERSON E.S.BAKER GLEASON CURTIS BOGGS AVERY EDWARDS I arsttj) ZxiiilK €cam 1003 Officers GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, ' 04 Captain THOMAS EDWARD JEWETT, ' 05 Manager JOHN MAHON Coach HERBERT JAMES MANN, ' 06 Assistant Manager €cam, 1002 Francis Deane Avery Horace Singer Baker George Alden Curtis Ralph Dammarell Emerson Robert Louis Kruse Ben Edwin Lindsley Francis Bradford Riley Edward Sherman Baker William Brenton Boggs Robert Seaver Edwards Kenneth Crothiers Grant Leon Gilbert Morrill Walter Purton Ross Pember Henry Thornton Winchester 139 40 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII lOti) annual ittcct ft. €. J(, a. . Event Winners T me, Ht , Distance lOO-yard Dash W. D. Eaton T. P. Hubbard H. L. Gutterson Amherst Dartmouth V illiams 10 1-5 sec. One-mile Run . H. S. Baker . . . F. L. Doughty C. W. Bean . M. I. T. . . Brown Amherst 4 min 30 3-5 sec. 440-vard Run F. I . Thompson H. E. Smith . H. G. Haleck Amherst Dartmouth Dartmouth 51 I -5 sec. 880-yard Run H. S. Baker H. E. Taylor Nulter . M. I. T. Amherst Rowdoin . i min. 59 sec. 120-yard Hurdles E. S. Wilson P. P. Edson E. V. Lewis . . Amherst Dartmouth Williams 16 sec. 220-yard Dash W. D. Eaton H. E. Smith G. K. Pattee Amherst Dartmouth Dartmouth 22 3-5 sec. 220-yard Hurdles . P. P. Edson R. W. Neal . R. S. Edwards Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. 26 . -5 sec. Two-mile Run F. L. Doughty C. A. Campbell R. W. Handy Brown Dartmouth Brown 10 min. 12 sec. Putting Shot . . . . R. E. Rolhns Denning J. W. Park . . Amherst Bowdoiri Amherts . 42 ' 6i., 39 ' 4 ■39 ' 3 ' ' 4 Running Broad Jump H. C. Van Welden L. G. Blackmer A. T. Foster Trinity Williams Amherst . 22 ' 5l 2 . 2 1 ' I I ■' 4 21 ' 9 2 Pole Vault . . G. A. Curtis n ' . S. Phillips W. Squires . M. I. T. Amherst Williams 10 ' 8 10 ' 412 10 ' 4 ' ■_. 1904 TECHNIQUE HI Throwing 1 6-pound Hammer Throwing Discus Two-mile Bicycle Race Denning Bowdoin , . I34 ' 2W G. W. Patterson Dartmouth 123 ' 6 W. C. Flliot Maine 121 ' 14 A. M. Watson Maine . . ii6 ' o J. W. Park Amherst . . no ' 1 14 F. Eumke Brown no ' 0 A. A. Dennico Brown 5 min. 7 1-5 sec. H. E. Brown Brown G. B. Francis Brown New N E. I. A. A. Record established Running High Jump L. G. Blackmer . R. H. Ernst . H. E. Smith . . H. C. Van Welden Williams 5 ' 7 4 Williams 5 ' 7 ' i Dartmouth ..... 5 ' 6 Trinity 5 ' 6 ' ■' s uinmarv of tlir points Event Amh. Dar. Bro. M.I.T. Will. Bow. U.of M.Trin. loo-yard Dash 5 3 I 220-yard Dash 5 4 440-yard Dash 5 4 880-vard Run 3 S I One-mile Run I 3 5 Two-mile Bicycle Race 9 120-yard Hurdle Race 5 3 I 220-yard Hurdle Race . 8 I Putting 16-pound Shot . 6 3 Running High Jump oi. 8 o ' -i Throwing 16-pound Hammer 3 5 I Running Broad Jump I 3 5 5 Throwing Discus 3 I 5 Pole Vault 2 .=; 2 Two-mile Run 3 6 Totals 36 28 1 2 19 lA 15 S ' i 142 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII !auuual Spring iWcct Spnl 20, 1002 loo-yard Dash One-mile Run 1 2n-yard Hurdle Half-mile Run 2 20-yard Dash 220 Low Hurdles 440 vard Run Running High Jump Running Broad Jump Pole Vault Throwing the Hammer Throwing the Discus Shot-put W. B. Boggs, ' 04 . J. W. Crowell, ' 04 H. T. Winchester, ' 03 H. S. Baker, ' 03 .... E. F. J ' . nkins, ' 04 P. R. Pritchard, ' 05 R. D. Emerson, ' 05 .... R. L. Kruse, ' 03 E. S. B aker, ' 02 H. S. Baker, ' 03 .... G. B. Manson, ' 03 C. M. Hardenherg, ' 03 W. B. Boggs, ' 04 J. W. Crowell, ' 04 L. F. Goldthwaite, ' 05 D. B. Bary, ' 04 . L. V. Fuller, ' 05 A. L. Magnitzky, ' 03 W. B. R. Pember, ' 02 C. M. Hardenburg, ' 03 S. B. Manson, ' 03 H. Baetjer, ' 02 .... G. A. Curtis, ' 04 R. D. Emerson, ' 05; H. F. Schaefer, ' 05 R. S. Franklin, ' 02 . . D. B. Bary, ' 04 K. C. Grant, ' 02 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 . G W. Eastman and F. Gannett, ' 02 (tied) B. E. Lindsley, ' 05 D. S. Wilson, ' 03 W. S. Gowinlock, ' 05 H. T. Winchester, ' 03 L. G. Morrill, ' 05 W. S. Gowinlock, ' 05 H. T. Winchester, ' 03 . . . L. G. Morrill, ' 05 B. E. Lindsley, ' 05 10 3-5 sec. 4 min. 56 1-5 sec. 17 2-5 sec. 2 mm. I 2 4-5 sec. 23 3-5 sec. 2g sec. 37 3-5 sec. 5 7 10 ' 3 ' 98 ' 6] 100 ' 1 1 lo 904 TECHNIQUE 143 Jluuual Jfall S?auliicap Icct l-intjrmliri 1, ' -?02 loo-yard Dash . . C. F. Northrup, ' 06 (7 yards) 10 3-5 sec. C. R. Haynes, ' 04 (3 yards) E. J. Hurley (4 yards) One-mile Run . K. Tsuruta, ' 05 (80 yards) . .4 min 56 sec. F. B. Riley, ' 05 (scratch) S. W. Sprague, ' 05 (45 yards) Running High Jump R. F. Farrington, ' 05 i6 inches) 5 ' 7 2 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 (scratch) C. R. Burleigh, ' 06 (3 inches 1 120-yard Hurdles R. D. Emerson, ' 05 .... 18 sec. C. R. Haynes, ' 04 880-yard Run R. P. Nichols, ' 05 (scratch) 2 min. 15 sec. E. L. Wilson, ' 06 (scratch H. H. Nelson, Jr., ' 05 (20 yards) Two-mile Run . R. H. Bourke, ' 05 (40 yards) . 10 min. 34 sec. E. H. I.oren?, ' 05 (70 yards) ' F. B. Riley, ' 05 (scratch) 220-yard Run . . R. D. Emerson, ' 05 ... . . 25 sec. T. E. Jewett, ' 05 ' C. R. Haynes, ' 04 440-yard Run . . E. T. Steele, ' 05 ...... 58 sec. H. L. Williams, ' 06 E. J. Hurley, ' 04 Hammer Throw B. E. Lindsley, ' 05 ... 103 ' H. S. Kendall, ' 04 Pole Vault . . C. R. Burleigh, ' 06 (I ' m feet) 10 ' 1 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 TRlAiMCULAR TwEET iDartmoutl), IM ' oUm nuD . ' J.€. TRACK EVENTS 440-yard Run I 20-yard Hurdles 880-vard Run Two-mile Run 220-yard Hurdles 220-yard Dash 100-yard Dash G. K. Pattee W. B. Hoggs T. P. Hubbard One-mile Run H. S. Baker F. L. Doughty R. W. Handy H. E. Smith G. K. Pattee W. P. R. Pember P. P. Edson R. D. Emerson R. L. Kruse H. S. Baker L. R. Hill . Pierce F. L. Doughty C. A. Campbell R. W. Handy R. W. Neal P. P. Edson R. S. Edwards H. E. Smith D. L. Jackson W. B. Boges Dartmouth M. I. T. Dartmouth M. I. T. Brown Brown Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. Dartmouth M. 1. T. M. I. T. M. I. T. Dartmouth Brown Brown Dartmouth Brown Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. ficiD evicuts h Jump , . H. E. Smith G. A. Curtis H. Baetjer . F. W. Greene Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. Brown New Tech Record 10 2-5 sec. 4 mm. 43 1-5 sec. 54 4-5 sec. 16 4-5 sec. ■2 min. 3 sec. 10 mm. 35 sec. 25 2-5 sec. 22 1-5 sec. 5 ' ft ' . 19 04 TECHNIQUE 145 Hammer Throw Pole Vault Shot-put Running Broad Jump Throwing Discus Two-mile Bicycle G. W. Patterson H. B. Sandborn B. E. Lindsley G. A. Curtis G. W. Eastman D. C. Colesworthy F. Gannet L. G. Morrill H. T. Winchester S. E. Newman M. W. Bullock E. K. Smith H. E. Smith H. T. Winchester Ehmke N. M. Place A. A. Denico G. K. Terrien F B. Riley Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. M. I. T. Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth Brown Dartmouth M. I. T. Brown Dartmouth Brown Dartmouth M. I. T. 113 9 10 ' 81 38 ' 3 108 ' 4 5 min. 44 sec. s uiiunarv ' Event 100-yard Dash One-mile Run 440-yard Run 120-yard Hurdles 880-yard Run Two-mile Run 220-yard Hurdles 220-vard Dash Tec. Dar. Bro. 360 504 I 8 o 4 .S o 5 3 I 036 T 8 o I 8 o Tec. High Jump Hammer Throw Pole Vault Shot-put Running Broad Jump Throwing Discus Two-mile Bicycle Totals 4 ' -j I 8 i 8 o 5 I Dar. 4 8 I ' I 6 I 3 Bro. 48 64 1. J fe umniarv of tl)r tl rn luljo 0ainri) |3oturs; for (Tcrli Men Points Won Men Points Won H. S. Baker . 10 B. E. Lindsley I W. B. Boggs 4 F. Gannet . ' 4 W. P. R. Pember I G.W.Eastman ., 3 R. D. Emerson 3 L. G. Morrill 5 R. L. Kruse I H. T. Winchester 8 R. S. Edwards I F. B. Riley I G. A. Curtis 9 H. Baetjer Vi Total 48 146 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ! muial Jlulioor iWcct Record Broken Forty-yard Dash Potato Race 35-yard Low Hurdles Shot-put Running High Jump Pole Vault J. R. Crowell, ' 04 C. R. Haynes. ' 04 H. L. Willi ams, 06 H. H. Needham ' 04 E. L. Ovington, ' 04 H. S. Kendall, ' 04 R. D. Emerson, ' 05 E. L. Ovington, ' 04 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 L. G. Morrill, ' 05 H. T. Winchester, ' 03 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 R. D. Farrington, ' 05 R. D. Emerson, ' 05 G. A. Curtis, ' 04 G. F. Clay, ' 06 R. D. Farrington, ' 05 4 4-5 sec. 54 2-5 sec. 5 2-5 sec. 38 ' 2I, 38 ' I ' . 34 ' 4 5 ' 7 ' - 5 ' 5 ' - 5 ' 5 2 ' lo ' 3 ' m 8 ' Urlav Uarr ?i ' on bv Class of 1904 (i r a 111 J. R. CROWELL A. W. BEE C. R. HAYNES H. S. KENDALL A. L. MAGNITSKY W. A. EVANS H. M. FLINN D. K. KELLER C. LANG H. H. NEEDHAM E. L. OVINGTON 1904 TECHNIQUE 147 INDOOR DUEL MEET Won by M. I. T., 45-21 40-Yard Dash . . ist. Williams, ' 06, M. I. T. . 2d. Murphy, Tufts 3d. Van Amringe, ' 06, M. I. T. 4th. Lang, ' 04, M. L T. High Jump . . ist. Emerson, ' 05, M. L T. 2d. Curtis, ' 04, M. L T. 3d. Nason, Tufts 4th. Farrington, ' 05, M. I. T. Shot-Put . . . ist. Morrill, ' 05, M. L T. 2d. Kennard, Tufts 3d. Harkin, Tufts 4th. Lindsley, ' 05, M. L T. 40-Yard Low Hurdles Potato Race ist. Murphy, Tufts 2d. Emerson, ' 05, M. I. T. 3d. Van Amringe, ' 06, M. 1. T. 4th. Ovington, ' 04, M. L T. ist. Ovington, ' 04, M. L T. . 2d. Mass, Tufts 3d. Nason, Tufts 4th. Kendal, Tufts Pole Vault Tie ( Mackie, ' 06, M. L T. ) I Curtis, ' 04, M. L T. I 3d. Eastman, ' 04, M. L T. 4th. Mullen, Tufts 4 4-5 sec. 5 ft. 7 1-2 in. 37 ft. 5 1-5 sec. 52 4-5 sec. . 10 ft. 3 in. MILITARY RELAY RACE -Won by M. I. T. tiimnarv Events Tech. Tufts 40-Yard Dash 8 3 High Jump 9 2 Hurdles 6 5 Shot-Put 6 5 Pole Vault 10 I Potato Race 6 I Totals 45 Cross Couiiti)) Cram ' f €3-yM Jp! £ 5 0 i S , ,Al. l 4c Ef ' -- fe i t- ' RICHARDSON BARUD OVINGTON SWEET PORTER FRASER EDMUNDS TSURUTA PALMER HUNTER RILEY BURKE PULSIFER HAYNES THURBER LORENZ __ HOLCOMBE L - .v IwMSt--- ■.%. CR05 S COUNTRY AT the beginning of the college year the management of the Cross Country Team and of the Hare and Hounds Club decided to merge into one, under the name of Technology Cross Country Association, the purpose of this Association being to give the men who are out trying for the Cross Country team of the coming year a better chance for training. The runs of this year have been conducted more on the style of the Cross Country run than a Hare and Hounds chase. Officers F H. HUNTER, ' 02 C. R. HAYNES, ' 04 H. B. PULSIFER, ' 03 G. P. PALMER, ' 04 President and Acting Captain Secretary Manager Chase Captain Spring l anDicap luicc 1902 fall l anDicap Hace Name Handicap ■Ovington 5 m Hunter Jewett Hammond Palmer Haynes Eraser Scudder Richardson 6 m Edes 8 m m m m m m m m Fin- ished I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Elapsed Time West Roxbury Course Distance, 8 miles ( Men receive right to Elapsed Time Fin- Time Order Name Handicap ished 54 m 25 s I --Thurber i m i 49 m 20 s 55 m 57 s 2 Casey 4 m 2 52 m 20 s 56 m 42 s 4 Baird 6 m 3 54 m 37 1-2 s 57 m 55 s 7 Lorentz i m 4 49 m 51 s 57 m 2 s 6 Riley o m 5 49 m 44 s 56 m 21 s 3 ' Sweet o m 6 50 m 10 s 56 m 45 s 5 Ovington i 1-2 m 7 51m 512-55 59 m 33 s 8 Wald 6 m 8 57 m 12 s 63 m 2 s 9 Pulsifer 4 m 9 56 m 5 s 65 m 22 s 10 Hunter 2 1-2 m 10 54 m 23 s Porter 8 m 11 60 m 28 s Jewett 3 1-2 m 12 64 m 35 s wear cTc on cap and jersey) 149 Time Order I 6 8 3 2 4 5 10 9 7 1 1 12 1004 Crach Cram ij.- ' ■• J?l-Tt. ( ■I! DEWIS MAHON, Coach HOMER STEBBINS BOGGS CURTIS JENKINS CROWELL CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM Captain JOSEPH WARREN CROWELL M. I. T. Coach JOHN F. MAHON Zmm WILLIAM BRENTON BOGGS JOSEPH WARREN CROWELL GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS CLIFFORD SAYRE DEWIS GUY WARNER EASTMAN CHARLES LOWELL HOMER ERNEST FOSTER JENKINS CHARLES HENRY STEBBINS 15 - x .- - i M- 3. C. aadaj) Ccam m -w «,-«--a:. iA:!Si i__j!itif i- 4 MAHON, Coach NICHOLS EMERSON WILLIAMS COE T viy iH. 3. C. jRcIaj) Cram Captain RALPH DAMMARELL EMERSON Ccam MAXWELL ALANSON COE RALPH DAMMARELL EMERSON CHARLES ALBERT NICHOLS JAMES RICE WILLIAMS IB. 2. % d amcsi M. I. T. vs. BO WDOIN Won by M. I. T. 153 i : FRANCIS DEANE AVERY HORACE SINGER BAKER WILLIAM BRENTON BOGGS GUY WARNER EASTMAN ROBERT SEAVER EDWARDS KENNETH CROTHERS GRANT BEN EDWIN LINDSLEY FRANCIS BRADFORD RILEY HOWARD BAETJER EDWARD SHERMAN BAKER GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS RALPH DAMMARELL EMERSON FARLEY GANNET ROBERT LOUIS KRUSE LEON GILBERT MORRILL HENRY THORNTON WINCHESTER 1 54 1904 TECHNIQUE 155 Crdjnologi ' jFirllj Baj) THE Field Day this year was characterized by good enthusiasm and clean, manly contests. Although the Sophomores had little trouble in winning the football game and relay race, yet the Freshmen were game to the finish, and never showed any signs of quitting. The tug-of-war was a wonderful exhibition of pluck and endurance on the part of 1906, for after the Sophomores had pulled the marker on the rope within a few inches of the point , which would give them the victory, the Freshmen braced and grad- ually pulled the Sophomores past their goal. A number of class songs and yells were composed by both classes for the occasion, and there really seemed to be some real college spirit called out by the occasion. The Field Day has now come to be a regular feature of Tech life, and more interest is being taken in it each year. With the cup, which has been so generously donated by one of our Alumni to strive for, we look for still greater interest and enthusiasm in this event of the year in time to come. ccouD .Annual ficlD IDav Charles River Paik, Nov. 15, 1902 Football Game Tug of War Relay Race 1905 1906 4 3 2 -J-X MM fOOl MlL IIAM Line up of €cam REDDING, Right end WILLIAMS, Right tackle SIMPSON, Right guard BREITZKE, Centre TERRY ) ARMSTRONG i uard HENDERSON, Left tackle 1906 TAYLOR I Left end CLAY ABBOT, Quarter-back GEIST, Right half-back VAN AMRINGE HERTZ ) KNAPP, Full-back Left half-b. Coach, HARRY BALL 1906 j ootball (Eram UrroiD Score Oct. 14 Mechanics Arts High School vs. 1906 0-5 Melrose High School vs. 1906 0-5 25 Newton High School vs. 1906 17-0 2g Harvard ' 06 vs. 1906 29-0 Nov. 8 Tufts ' 05 vs. 1906 0-0 15 1905 vs. 1906 18-0 Games won, 2. Games lost, 3. Games tied, i. Per cent won, 33 1-3 1906 played one-half with each of these teams 157 1905 JTootball Ccam Eji fid P ' 4 m ' r .ml % ' 1 . ' r T  __ - to -.: LOMBARD BOYNTON WELLS LINDSLEY EASTHAM PAYNE STRICKLAND LAMBIE SCHONTHAL GUINLOCK STEVENS WHITNEY FULLER STEBBINS BOGGS DWYER HILL TAYLOR ABBOT DEAN GREEN CROWELL 1 9 5, FOOT RAIL TEAH Line up of tlK Cram0 BLOUNT 1 , ., . GREEN , Left end IQO SCHONTHAL  „.,,, , , LOMBARD 1 ig ' ' ' LINDLEY 1 GOUINLOCK I ' ' 1 Uj HOGGS Id-.. STRICKLAND i ' WHITNEY I T .. EASTMAN , Left guard HILL, Quarter-back CROWELL, Left half-back PAYNE 1 „ , LANE iC TAYLOR 1 T, „ . , WELLS 1 Full-back BOYNTON, Right guard Captain Coaclirs FULLER 1 D- u. u .r u , DEAN 1 ' 1 half-back E. R. PERRY L. B. SMITH 1005 J ootball (Trani UrcoiD Oct. 14 Brookline High School vs. 1905 18 Dean Academy vs. 1905 24 Brookline High School vs. 1905 Nov. 8 Powder Point School vs. 1905 15 1906 vs. 1905 Score 5- O 44- o 5-1 1 0-53 0-18 Games won, 3 Games lost, 2 Per cent won, 60 1905 Bclap Ccam 1 Jewett (Captain) 2 Fisher 3 Riley 4 Dickerman 5 Webster 6 Ingalls 7 Goldthwaite 8 Snow g Steele 10 Turner, L. 11 Nichols 12 Emerson, R.D. Cug of Wax Ccam 1 Page 2 Rathbone 3 Perry 4 Barlow 5 Bennett 6 Nabstedt 7 Simpson 8 Barnes 9 10 1 1 12 13 14 15 i6 Eaton McLane Turner, W. C. Eaton, W. M. Thomas Curtis Spaulding Rogers 17 Motter 18 Pick 19 Ayers (Captain) 20 McManus 2 1 Morrill 22 Seaver 23 Prentiss 24 Abbot Anchor, Paquet ' 1906 Bclap Ccam 1 Howe 2 Guest 3 Libbey 4 Clark 5 Kelley 6 Moffat 7 Williams 8 Mann Captain) 9 Steele 10 Emerson, C. M. 11 Coe 12 Wilson 1 Lawrence 2 Howes 3 Gibbons 4 Stewart 5 Coen 6 Ross 7 Tripp 8 Wright Cug of W x Ccam 9 Rausch 10 Simmons 1 1 Spencer 12 Kane 13 Soule 14 Knight 15 Fallon 16 Fletcher Anchor, Moore 17 Hammett 18 Stoddard 19 Hutchins 20 Hayes 21 Friend 22 Polhemus 23 Hursch 24 Methesisieus (Captain) 1004 Baseball Cram «E Siinmpv -pm- i_ ?-, ' f y■' ■. ' W-f - p%y, !; ' 1« , i ' 5 ■■' ■!; «■f . ? J J ' Vt: - i. i« --::A45?W«lfit._ ,.i - - ■-.•VI- -. -. EMERSON LANGLEY SIMONDS DONOVAN CARD CRANE LANG SANBORN POWELL BATES CHANDLER GREY v-yj 1904 iSascball Ccam Champions Sophomore Year CURRIER LANG, Captain George Warren Sanborn Jeremiah John Donovan Arthur Hooper Langley James Garrison Metcalfe John Ford Card . Curtis Rockwell Grey . Currier Lang George Martin Bates Clark David Simonds Harold Gilliland Crane Charles Joseph Emerson George Hardy Powell R. H. Rogers  llb6tltutr6 A. C. DOWNES, Manager Pitcher Pitcher Catcher First Base Second Base Short Stop Third Base Left Field Center Field Center Field Right Field Right Field D. B. Barv 1904 l=?c1jSCbaU litCOVD April 5 Melrose High School vs. 1904 12 Newton High School vs. 1904 16 Cambridge Manual Training vs. 1904 23 Harvard Anythings vs. 1904 May 3 1905 vs. 1904 ..... 17 1905 vs. 1904 ... Games won 4 Games lost 2 Per cent won 67 Score lO-II 16- 6 2-13 5- 4 6- 7 17-19 i ■■' -■m W Pi ' tJ ' ■' ' ::,, llklk.  i INGALLS SWEETSER SNOW GOLDTHWAIT NICHOLS SPRAGUE GARDNER DICKERMAN EMERSON JEWETT RILEY TURNER WEBSTER FISHER _i.A,« r 166 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII 3 CC0VtJ5 WORLD 9 3-5 sec. A. Duffy, 1902 N. E. I. A, A. 100-Yard Dash 10 sec. A. Austenius, Amherst, i8g8 M I. T. A A. 10 2 5 sec. R. W. Carr, ' 95 21 sec. B. J. Wefers, 1897 47 sec. M. W. Long, 1900 220-Yard Dash 22 1-5 sec. H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin, 1900 440-Yard Run 50 1-5 sec. G. B. Shattuck, Amherst, 189 1 23 sec. R. W. Carr, ' 95 51 1-5 sec. J. A. Rockwell, ' 99 I min. 53 2-5 sec. C. H. Kilpatrick, 1895 880-Yard Run I min. 59 sec. H. S. Baker, M. I. T., 1902 I mm. 59 sec. H. S. Baker, ' 03 4 min. 15 3-5 sec. T. P. Conneff, 1895 One-Mile Run 4 min. 24 3-5 sec. A. L. Wright, Brown, 1898 4 mm. 37 4-5 sec. G. Clapp, ' 95 9 min. 17 2-5 sec. W. G. George, 1884 4 mm. 27 3-5 sec. J. G. Heil, 1897 15 1-5 sec. A. C. Kraenzlein, 1898 Two-Mile Run 10 min. 3 4-5 sec. 0. N. Bean, Brown, 1898 Two-Mile Bicycle 4 min. 36 4-5 sec. R. Murray, M. I. T., 1900 120-Yard High Hurdle 15 3-5 sec. S. Chase, Dartmouth, 1895 10 mm. 44 4-5 sec. D. M. Pray, ' 99 4 min. 36 4-5 sec. R. Murray, ' 01 16 3-5 sec. B. Hurd, Jr., ' 96 23 3-5 sec. A. C. Kraenzlein, 1898 220-Yard Low Hurdle 25 4-5 sec. G. P. Burch, M. L T., 1898 25 4-5 sec. G. P. Burch, ' 99 I 904 TECHNIQUE 167 Running Broad Jump 24 ft. 4 1-2 in. 22 ft. 5 1-2 in. A. C. Kraenzlein, i8gg H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin, igoo 6 ft. 5 5-8 in. M. F. Sweeney, 1895 47 ft. G. R. Gray, 1893 173 ft. 6 in. J. Flanigan, 1902 122 ft. 5-8 in. R. Sheldon, 1899 Running High J u m p 5 ft. 9 3-4 in. I. K. Baxter, Trinity, 1896 Putting Shot lib Ibs) 43 ft. Rollins, Amherst, 1902 22 ft. I 1-2 in. A. W. Grosvenor, ' 99 6 ft. 1-2 in. C. D. Heywood, ' 93 40 ft. 1-4 in. H. P. McDonald, ' 01 Throwing Hammer (16 Ibs) 134 ft. 2 1-2 in. 107 ft. 10 1-2 in. Denning, Bowdoin, 1902 H. W. Jones, ' 98 Discus Throw 1 16 ft. 109 ft. 4 in. A. M. Watson, U. of Maine H. T. Winchester, ' 03 pccicil Ctotntgi of tlir jH. % C a. 2, E ent 20-Yard Dash 35-Yard Dash Potato Race 35-Yard Low Hurdle Standing Broad Jump Fence Vault Indoor Pole Vault Relay Race (1560 yards 1 Relay Race ( 140 yards) T. W. Lord, ' 94 A. W. Grosvenor, ' 99 J. A. Rockwell, Jr., ' 96 J. W. Horr, ' 02 L. Burnett, ' 96 A. H. Greene, ' 96 G. A. Curtis, ' 02 M. W. Hall, ' 00 j H. M. McMaster, ' 00 ' R. P. Priest, ' 00 W. W. Garrett, ' 01 ' F. D. Avery, ' 02 j K. C. Grant, ' 02 ' N. E. Borden, ' 02 R. V. Brown, ' 02 ) Time, HciRht nr Distance 3 sec. 4 sec. 50 1-5 sec. 4 3-5 sec. 10 ft. I 1-2 in. 7 ft. 2 1-4 in. 10 ft. 6 in. 3 min. 14 2-5 sec. 15 4-5 sec. r - gl(gAopi y-. i s, r OfllCCV!3 B. B. VINCENT LYON, Williams President ROSCOE PAINE, Bowdoin Vice-President ARTHUR U. POPE, Brown University Secretary and Treasurer -(Hcmbcrs of tl)c association Amherst College Bates College Brown University Colby College Dartmouth College Technology Trinity College Tufts College University of Vermont Wesleyan University Williams College ClitrD .Annual Coiivnamcut of tl)c 0nv englanD ' JntcrcoUcsiatc Lawin Ccnms .association LONGWOOD, MAY o , 1902 Singles -Won by F. BRADLEY, M. I. T. Doubles— Won by PLIMPTON and COLLESTER, Amherst (Trclinologv Urprrsmtatitirs Singles — F. Bradley, ' 02 Doubles E. H. Cutler, ' 02, D. M. Belcher, ' 02 THE Technology Tennis Association was organized in 1895, and since that time has grown in importance until in this year it was recognized by the Advisory Council on Athletics by awarding the old football T to the winners in the N. E. I. T. A. Oflficcrg R. A. JONES, ' 03 President A. H. LANGLEY, ' 04 Vice-President R. HAZELTINE, ' 04 Secretary and Treasurer Representatives to New England Intercollegiate Tournament in igo3 J. R. JONES, ' 03 A. H. LANGLEY, ' 04 fall Cournamciit Singles J. R. Jones defeated H. A. Langley .... 6-4,1-6,6-4,0-6,6-4 Doubles— Jones Langley defeated Winchester Marsh 6-1, 8-6, 6-1 169 ' «4 JFcuciug Club i- r GODDARD HUBBEL F. LAGE LEH G. LAGE FUENTES J unuame dhm Captain HAROLD M. LEH Manager RICHARD O. MARSH a ciubcvs CAMPOS A. FUENTES ERNEST HARRAH FREDERICO LAGE GEORGE LAGE HAROLD M. LEH RICHARD 0. MARSH LeBARON TURNER Contc0t!3 Boston Y. M. C. A. vs. M. I. T. F. C. Harvard vs. M. I. T. F. C. 5-4 8-1 171 . ! VX ■' 9v. V «V, ' L.- rf THIS year Tech started out in a branch of sports into which she has hitherto never ventured, and has put a team in the field which, although they played but one game, bade fair to be a winning team. It is to be hoped that this start will be fostered until the Golf Association will put out a team that will successfully cope with some of the large colleges. H. A. STILES, Secretary ' 03 fliccrs R. B. WILLIAMS, President ' 03 F. M. BLOUNT, ' 04 Manager F. S. KRAG Treasurer evccutiiic Committee JAMES G. METCALFE, ' 04 W. M. VAN AMRINGE, ' 06 F. H. HUBBEL, ' 06 Captain F. A. FALVEY, ' 05 iaouorarp yl9ember0 Pres. HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT Prof. F. H. BAILEY Prof. H. E. CLIFFORD Prof. D. R. DEWEY iteam F. A. Falvey, ' 05 W. M. Van Amringe, ' 06 S. P. Emery, ' 06 R. B. Williams, ' 03 H. A. Stiles, ' 06 J. G. Metcalfe, ' 04 F. H. Hubbel, ' 06 T. M. Gilmer, ' 04 B. Poole, ' 06 L. G. Bouscaren, Jr. , ' 04 H. S. Wilkins, ' 06 Deceased. 1904 TECHNIQUE 173 9 §m ' 5 Cljanars at tljr 3n6titutf N LOOKING OVER THE YEAR 1902 -1903 WE FIND MANY CHANGES AT THE INSTITUTE. THESE HAVE BEEN SO RADICAL IN THEIR EFFECT ON THE AFFAIRS OF TECHNOLOGY, ON THE CHARACTER OF THE COURSES AND ON THE STANDING OF THE STUDENTS AT LARGE, AS TO MERIT MORE THAN PASSING NOTICE IN THIS VOLUME OF TECHNIQUE. Accordingly, the board decided that an article dis- cussing these changes and commenting on them from the point of view of an undergraduate would not be out of place here. The total number of men attending the Institute in the year 1901-1902, was fourteen hundred and fifteen. This number has increased in a single year to sixteen hundred and eight, showing a gain of almost two hundred men. The total number who registered last fall for the first time was considerably over five hundred, of whom four hundred and seventy- nine were Freshmen, and the others mainly graduates or under- graduates of other colleges. These figures place the Institute first in the list of American schools of technology. Passing from the increase in the student body itself, we come to the changes in the administration which were made at the begin- ning of the first term of this year. Change there was, as every under- graduate has had reason to discover. Strolling through the corridors of Rogers building, as some of us are wont to do at times, one no longer sees the simple inscriptions of President on the door at the left and Secretary on the door at the right, but on both right and left over the many doorways are posted large placards bearing sym- bols, such as Recorder, Registrar, Bursar, President ' s Secretary, Dean, and if one is perseverant and continues on his way through many small entrances, passing clerks and typewriters, he may still recognize over a doorway in a secluded portion of the hall that old f - C ■C= w 174 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII sign, Secretary. Ask the reason of these changes from the keeper of the cage and this is what you will learn: In years preceding, the Secretary of the Faculty, Prof. Harry W. Tyler, beside having to attend to his duties as Secretary, had charge of the entire system of recording, registration, and of the consultation with students. The pressure of all this work on one man was enormous, and accord- ingly this year the offices of Recorder and Registrar were created, and given respectively to Mr. 0. F. Wells and Mr. Walter Humphreys, while Doctor Tyler was relieved of all duties ex- cept those of Secretary to the Faculty, and was made head of the Mathe- matical department. The work of consultation with students is now done by the Dean, and this all- important office, to the delight of everyone con- nected with the Institute, was given to Prof. Alfred E. Burton, whose tact and ability in dealing with men has long made him beloved by all the stu- dents, and to whom this volume of Technique is humbly dedicated. Another important change which was decided on this year, and which will not come into effect, however, until next fall, is the raising of the requirements for admission, and the increasing of the tuition fee to two hundred and fifty dollars. The first of these steps was taken with the idea of excluding men who are mentally or physically too weak to pursue the rather difficult courses which the Institute offers. The second will appear reasonable on consideration of the fact that Technology is not heavily endowed, and that each year the actual running expenses per student amount to more than three hundred and fifty dollars. In the Faculty, we find that the passing year has wrought several changes. During the summer vacation. Doctor Runkle, that most excellent and venerable professor and ex-president of the Institute, passed away at his summer home. It is not for us to LOWE LL BUI LDI NG 1904 TECHNIQUE J 75 remind the undergraduate body that in the death of Doctor Runkle they lost the most genuine, the most open-hearted of friends. All those who knew Doctor Runkle are sufficiently aware of that fact. We will but say that few men have departed this life as much revered and loved by those beneath them as Doctor Runkle by the students of Technology. Another great loss to the Institute was the resignation of Professor Niles. For thirty-one years he had been a professor of geology, and his smihng, benevolent face was always a welcome and a cheering sight. Professor Niles has been made Professor Emeritus, and spends much of his time in lectures and con- ferences in different cities throughout the country. The most important alteration in the courses has been the separation of the course in physics from the course in elec- trical engineering. Lec- ture rooms and labora- tories have been prepared for the latter in the new Lowell building, to which we will have occasion to refer later on. Dr. Louis Duncan has been called from New York, where he was stationed, to act as its head. Doctor Duncan graduated from the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1880, and for six years remained in the service of the government. In 1886 he resigned from the navy to begin a course in applied elec- tricity at Johns Hopkins, and while engaged in teaching there, under- took a great deal of outside engineering work, such as the building of large power and lighting plants, transmission and telephone systems. Doctor Duncan, therefore, not only comes to the Institute with the reputation of being one of the best professors of electricity in the country, but he comes with the distinction of being a practical busi- ness man and a successful electrical engineer; and this is the reason why he inspires such absolute confidence and trust in all those who are so fortunate as to come in contact with him. Doctor Duncan at present is consulting engineer for the New York Rapid Transit Com- WESTINCHOUSE ENGINES AND DYNAMOES LOWELL BUILDING 176 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII pany. He has twice been president of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, and is a member of many scientific societies throughout the country. Early in the year 1902 the Faculty realized, from reports of pre- liminary examinations, that unless some radical step be taken im- mediately, the Institute would not be able to accommodate the great number of students ex- pected in the fall. Ac- cordingly it was decided to build on the present site of the Lowell build- ing, a structure, which, though temporary, and only intended to satisfy an immediate want, vi ould still be substantial and spacious enough to accommodate the electri- cal laboratories and lec- ture rooms, together with many recitation rooms for the use of classes in mathematics, chemistry, and the lan- guages. The result was, as Professor Clifford expresses it, a structure whose top view is a diffraction grating, and whose side elevation is a cross-cut saw. A glance at the illustrations will convince one of the truth of this statement. It is said that Professor Despradelle and the fourth-year architects, who from their drawing- room command a capital view of that remarkable building, are seized with violent spasms whenever they look out of the windows on the east side of the room. The story of the erection of the Lowell building is too interesting to be passed over. The time between the signing of the contract and the completion of the building was two months and a half, of which only sixty days were working days. Excavations were begun on the 30th of June. On July ist the foundations were commenced. On July nth the floor was being laid, and on September 15th the build- ing was ready to be furnished. The interior is fitted up simply and effectively; the electrical laboratory is thoroughl y equipped with ELECTRICAL LABORATORY. LOWELL BUILDING 1904 T E C H N I QUE J 77 modern electrical machines, and furnished with tracks overhead for a travelling crane for transporting heavy pieces of machinery to and fro. The lecture room is also a model one. The lecturers ' desks are mounted on tracks leading to preparation rooms on either side. At the end of one lecture, the desk used is rolled into a room to the right where it is unloaded of apparatus; in the mean- time the desk for the next lecture is rolled out from the left, all prepared beforehand, thus saving much time. The Lowell building, with all its new equip- ments, will enter large- ly into the graduate school of engineering research, which is to be established next year. We have briefly considered the changes J. .1 , • il. LECTURE ROOM, LOWELL BUILDING of the past year m the Faculty, the courses of study, and the administration of Institute affairs. During the year, however, there has been a change far more important far more effective than any of which we have men- tioned. We refer to a change which has taken place, and is still taking place, in the character, in the mode of living, in the point of view of the average Tech undergraduate something which Doctor Pritchett has been trying to bring about ever since the first days of his administration, and the signs of which have come out strongly for the first time this year. Tech is known pretty generally throughout the country as a place of grind ; and in the sense that it is a place of hard and steady work, it is a grind. But its reputation is even worse than this. A great many people imagine that when a man enters Tech, with the intention of graduating, he must form a resolution to abandon all idea of sociability and amusement; that he must read over the grim doorways of the Institute buildings: Abandon ye all the human nature ye ever had, who enter here, Become a steam engine as soon as possible, or get out. It is toward the elimination of this feeling that the change spoken of is showing itself. The 178 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Technology Chambers and the Tech Union have done much to estab- lish a closer bond of sociability among the students of the Institute. The grind is gradually coming out of his shell and discovering that good scholarship and good fellowship are perfectly compatible. He is learning that the faculty of making friends will be worth far more to him in future life than a little extra knowledge in the theory of least squares. Now that we have rightly finished what was to be said of the changes at the Institute, let us mention in conclusion just one all- important matter. In a recent address of Doctor Pritchett to the Junior class, the President has suggested the possibility of establish- ing the honor system in examinations. We believe that such a step would not only meet the full approval and co-operation of all the classes, but that it would increase remarkably the public confidence, great as it now is in the character and integrity of the Technology graduate. It would form a new epoch in the history of the Institute. Let it be the privilege of the class of 1904, in their senior year, to see the honor system at Technology firmly established. DURING CONSTRUCTION OF LOWELL BUILDING OlBccrs 1002 03 President, R. F. JACKSON Vice-President, A. E. LANG Secretary, 0. S. SWENSON Treasurer, A. W. RICHARDS (iPrccuti 3C Committee R. M. HOOD L. R. KAUFMAN E. F. RICKER Catalogue Committee R. M. HOOD F. H. C. GARBER, Jr. F. C. HIRONS E. F. RICHER A. J. SCHOLTES Dr. Henry Smith Pritchett Prof. F. H. Chandler Prof. D. Despradelle Prof. J. 0. Sumner Prof. W. H. Lawrence Bonovavv ylr)em tiers Mr. E. B. Homer Mr. Ross Turner Mr. T. H. Bartlett Mr. D. A. Gregg Mr. H. W. Gardner Mr. S. H. Mead Mr. C. L. Adams Mr. E. F. Brown Mr. C. H. Walker Mr. Guy Lowell Mr. Sawyer 181 182 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII I. R. Adams L. H. Asbury J. M. Baker H. E. Bartlett C. J. Bilyea F. M. Blount W. A. Beaton G. W. Briggs G. H. Buckingham F. M. Chace N. Chamberlin A. R. Cobb C. G. CruU G. P. Carmicheal L. C. Clark R. D. Emerson R. S. Foulds H. Figyelmessy Otto Faelton F. H. C. Garber, Jr. W. R. Greeley M. H. Goldstein A. H. Hepburn F. C. Hirons 3ctiDr jH embers R. M. Hood F. H. Hunter G. G. Hall H. K. Harris E. E. Hoxie A. H. Howland C. Howes R. F. Jackson A. H. Jacobs A. D. Jenkins L. R. Kaufman H. F. Keyes A. E. Lang I. P. Lord G. N. Magee E. W. Mason W. R. McCornack F. Nickerson W. A. Paine W. P. R. Pember E. R. Ray A. W. Richards B. A. Richardson F. L. W. Richardson E. F. Richer E. C. Riebel H. W. Rowe H. C. Schaefer H. A. Sherrer A. J. Sholtes H. G. Simpson S. T. Strickland R. E. Sherlock Leon Schwartz L. H. Smith 0. S. Swenson G. A. Truelson G. Townsend R. E. L. Taylor Wm. Topper A. P. Wadsworth H. A. Whitney R. P. Whitney C. A. Whittemore A. P. Wyman G. N. Wheat 0. M. Wiard L. G. Wilson C. B. Woodward LlXftt It tt nXIXTXCKTS ,, ' _■■Office V0 HORACE S. BAKER . President SHELDON K. BAKER . Vice-President CURRIER LANG Secretary FRANK H DAVIS PAUL HANSEN • Treasurer Chairman Programme Committee ilBcmbcvjS 1003 F. G. Babcock R. A. Cook J. W. Howard A. P. Baker C. B. Cox L. L. Hunter E. S. Baker H. N. Cross Frank Johnson H. S. Baker J. A. Cushman R. M. Lawton S. K. Baker F. W. Davis G. D. Lenth S. Y. Ball W. R. Davis Emmett Littlefield C. L. Bates H. P. Drake C. W. McCormack J. R. Bates B. G. Fogg W. Y. McMerrimen C. W. Beverstock C. J. Griffin H. S. Morse C. A. Bryan C. N. Haggart C. P. Mulherin W. W. Burnham Paul Hansen R. R. Newman C. E. Chase W. A. Harrigan C. P. Nibecker E. A. Comer F. D. Hayden H. M. Hickok S. G. Porter 183 184 TECHNIQUE Vol. xvm S. E Armstrong S. E. Baxter A. W. Bee, Jr. F. A. Biggi Bernard Blum H. G. Chapin R. V. Collins W. W. Cronin J. E. Cunningham G. A. Curtis F. H. Davis C. S. Dewis D. F. Dow E. L. Edes M. L. Emerson G. A. Fairfield H. H. Groves F. S. Wilson 1 004 R. K. Hale C. O. Harrington R. E. Havens H. A. Hill A. R. Holbrook C. L. Homer L. T. Howard N. M. Johnson W. A. Kemper H. S. Kendall W. H. Koppelman H. Kramer Currier Lang A. H. Langley 0. C. Merrill F. K. Merriman F. W. Milliken W. D. Murray G. P. Palmer H. L. Pierce A. P. Porter M. C. Richardson J. W. Roland G. W. Sanborn F. J. Severy G. H. Shaw E. F. Smith E. E. Stetson W. F. Tenney 0. G. Thurlow M. C. Thompkins A. P. Weymouth J. E. White G. W. C. Whiting B. A. Yoder C. R. Adams Chester Allen John Ayer W. U. C. Barton R. S. Beard F. G. Bennett R. H. Burke F. M. Carhart 0. W. Fick Henry Fleisher H. W. Kenway L. J. Killion E. F. Kreigsmann W. H. Lalley C. A. Lord H. W. Mitchell Vincente Molina 1 005 J. A. Murr L. F. Myers H. M. Nabstedt Halsey French George Fuller N. P. Gerhard Theodore Green H. J. Guerin R. S. Hadley H. L. Hardy G. A. Hool C. A. Houck T. E. Jewett William Tufts LeBaron Turner J. F. Urguidi H. S. Walker, Jr. E. C. Weaver S. H. Parker R. R. Patch P. H. Physeck G. A. Quinlan L. E. Robbe W. E. Simpson H. S. Spaulding C. S. Sperry, Jr. R. E. Tarbett W. A. Taylor R. N. Whitcomb B. N. White J. A. White Kilborn Whitman, Jr. H. L. Whitney R. E. Wise LE(ST! CiML 3 ■2. ' - in Officers JAMES W. WELSH, President RALPH W. EATON, Vice-President W. M. GILKER, Secretary and Treasurer L. H. LEE crvccutiDc Committee G. H. CLARK S. A. FLETCHER President H. S. Pritchett Dr. Louis Duncan Prof. C. R. Cross i onorarv jVUmbcvjcS Prof. W. L. Puffer Prof. L. Derr Prof. F. A. Laws Prof. H. E. Clifford Mr. R. R. Lawrence Mr. H. W. Smith R. H. Ballou J. H. Brown F. E. Brown H. C. Burdick A. W. Bruton G. H. Clark J. A. H. Colgan F. B. Crosby J. J. Dooley R. W. Eaton K. W. Endres W. 0. Eddy S. A. Fletcher W. Ferry i VI embers Claee of 1903 R. S. Franklin J. M. Gammons G. H. Garcelon C. F. Gardner A. S. Gibbs W. M. Gilker C. S. Glenn L. B. Gould J. Hall J. L. Jones L. H. Lee J. A. Mears R. J. MacGregor W. E. Mitchell 185 F. P. Montgomery A. M. Morley H. Osborn G. B. Obear A. W. Pearson R. B. Pendergast C. H. Porter A. A. Potter F. C. Reed P. B. Rice D. A. Smith F. T. Taylor J. W. Welsh D. S. Wilson 186 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII T. P. Bedford W. P. Bentley L. G. Bouscaren, Jr. C. R. Gary B. H. Clingerman W. R. Crowell H. T. Denham W. H. Eager D. Elwell W. D. Emerson A. Feny D. L. Galusha W. J. Gill, Jr. W. F. Goodwin S. Haar H. M. Haley G. Hill Claeo of 00-i J. A. Haraden H. Haskins W. E. Hodge H. F. Jacobson G. K. Kaiser H. F. Kalmus C. D. Knowlton R. D. Marley A. J. Manson B. C. Mooers A. O. Miller E. E. Morrison H. H. Needham E. W. Niles J. C. Nyce E. L. Ovington R. Palmer K. E. Peiler R. M. Proudfoot J. B. Rapier E. B. Rich H. K. Richardson J. H. Rogers L. A. Russell J. R. Sanborn P. M. Smith P. S. Sweetser R. Stresau H. W. Stevens W. N. Todd L. A. Wallon W. Whitmore W.G.H.Whitaker, Jr. S. G. Ward assofiatf il rinbrr from 1005 H. B. Harvey P £)fflCCV0 ALEXANDER HEALY, President WALTER M. DRURY, Vice-President and Treasurer ROBERT S. HAMILTON, Secretary Cvcciitiiic Committee A. HEALY W. M. DRURY A. F. BENNETT R. S. HAMILTON H. V. DOHERTY ] onovarv iVUmbcris President Henry S. Pritchett Prof. R. H. Richards Prof. William H. Niles Prof. A. E. Burton Prof. H. O. Hofman Prof. H. P. Talbot Prof. Henry Fay Prof. R. H. Lodge Prof. G. H. Barton Prof. A. G. Robbins Prof. William 0. Crosby Prof. F. J. Moore 2am jHcmbcrg W. F. Cook J. D. Ireland 1902 A. T. Church E. W. Knight F. D. Rathbun 187 M. C. Dunham M. L. Nagle 188 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII F. G. Babcock R. D. Babson G. A. Barnaby A. F. Bennett M. Brown, Jr. H. W. Buhler C. H. Cooper D. Copeland W. M. Drury G. R. Gaenslen E. G. Goodwin C. F. Green R. E. Adams W. B. Boggs W. S. Brown C. C. Carhart J. F. Card A. L. Coupe H. V. Doherty R. C. Reed J. P. Buckley C. Hay ward H. W. Estey G. M. Bates R. Faulkner F. S. Elliot S. E. Brown A. J. Amberg 1 003 A. Healy J. R. Jones F. D. Kehew R. J. King R. Livermore H. R. Low R. F. Manahan G. B. Manson A. S. Martin H. L. Norton B. Nields, Jr. H. F. Peaslee UUH 0. D. Fellows, Jr. R. S. Hamilton E. A. Holbrooke F. W. Horton R. Hayden M. R. Magunsen H. Merryweather R. Hazeltine F. N. Bull W. E. Hadley 1905 R. H. Allen C. W. Johnston B. F. Johnson J. S. Dolan R. C. Reed E. Varian H. G. Hixon E. T. Barron L. B. Rapp C. A. Schmidt L. E. Smith F. A. Sherman H. A. Stiles L. H. Underwood E. Wasstcoat R. B. Williams R. B. Yerxa A. E. Eustis J. A. Eustis G. C. Riddel H. F. Noyes P. M. Paine W. P. Schumacher J. W. Shaw R. J. Sullivan F. N. Turgeon F. H. Wilder A. W. Wells G. B Harrington W. Z. Whittemore G. G. Wald E. Burton A. D. Smith W. G. Ball E. T. Barrow H. W. Donald Officcrjs President, GEORGE HARDY POWELL Vice-President, CALVIN PERRY BASCOM Secretary, CHARLES LEONARD STEINROK Treasurer, AUSTIN Y. HOY Prof. C. H. Peabody Bonoravv iJl tiubcrji Prof. William Hovgaard Mr. W. S. Leland Mr. C. F. Willard Mr. A. L. Appleton G. E. Atkins A. H. Baker S. R. Bartlett C. P. Bascom W. J. Bay G. S. Cannon E. J. Cronenbold W. L. Cronin H. Crosbv W. P. Cross F. C. Durant C. F. Edwards C. 0. Egerton C. J. Emerson F. R. Farnham W. B. Furguson H. Fitzler Miss L. 3l9cmbcr)S W. B. Fogarty J. A. Furer A. Gardner J. E. Harlow S. M. Henry A. H. Hepburn F. L. Higgins A. Y. Hoy G. E. Kershaw R. Lage A. C. Lyon L. B. McBride W. McEntee A. M. Merrill R. B. Morse T. Nelson W. A. Nelson G. Weld H. R. White A. J. Ortseifen P. R. Parker G. H. Powell R. G. Rice F. B Saegmuller E. C. Scofield R. Schulte J. E. Simmons R. B. Simons H. A. C. Small L. P. Sperry J. A. Spilman C. L. Steinrok 0. P. Scudder G. S. Taylor H. C. Turner L. Wehner 189 JOHN F. ANCONA, ' o.:! . . President REGINALD A. WENTWORTH, ' 04 Vice-President CHESTER S. ALDRICH, ' 03 . . Secretary WALTER H. ADAMS, ' 03 Treasurer Crrrutiur Coiuiuittff JOSEPH W. AYLESWORTH, ' 03 EDWARD J. RUXTON, ' 03 LOUIS W. ADAMS, ' 03 Prof. G. Lanza Prof. E. F. Miller, ' 86 Mr. C. D. Starr, ' 02 Mr. H. L. Coburn, ' g8 Mr. E. W. Rutherford, ' 98 Donoraiv tl fiiibrrs Mr. I. H. Kaufman, ' 98 Mr. T. G. Richards, ' 94 Mr. 0. Roberts, ' 88 Mr. R. E. Simonds, ' 01 Mr. A. Gardner, ' 02 Mr. R. L. Williams, ' 01 Mr. C. H. Smith, ' q8 Mr. J. C. Riley, ' 98 Mr. C. T. Main, ' 86 Mr. M. E. Taylor, ' 98 I riubrrs 903 J. F. Ancona G. M. Harris K. D. Jewett G. W. Swett D. Wemyss J. S. Joseph P. J. Kearney S. R. Bartlett W. H. Adams C. M. Hardenburgh W. C. Rott H. H. Fales I. F. Atwood T. L. Lyon R. R. Jordan H. E. Raymond C. S. Aldrich E. J. Ru.xton B. W. Latham L. L. Thwing L. W. Adams T. E. Sears I. Williams W. L. Gillett E. W. Pelton G. E. Sibbett J. W. Aylesworth G. MacDonald F. G. Co.x R. H. Nutter C. J. Mcintosh R. C. Tolman J. T. Cheney W. H. Donovan V. M. Palmer S. N. Mason G. B. Bradshaw I 904 R. A. Weiitworth A. S. Courtney A. W. Munster E. J. Wilson E. W. Calkins, Jr. E. L. Rupf E. F. Rockwood H. H. Cerf E. W. Charles J. W. Crowell L. Phillips N. R. Potter A. M. Holcombe W. D. Chandler J. D. McQuaid T. A. Samis, Jr. W. L. Doten E. B. Cooper J. A. Fremmer L. T. Bushnell E. Harrah W. DeW. Vosbury F. M. Pierce W. H. Edgecomb P. M. Arnold C. F. Barrett F. C. Durant, Jr. G. Proudfoot A. F. Holmes J. H. Harnett H. E. Thompson J. C, Baker M. W. Dole F. A. Pirie A. B. Allen L. Clough E. CockriU C. R. Scheafe W. A. Eyans F. Goldthwaite R. 0. Ingram W. L. Cronin P. G. Hill A. W. Burnham S. L. Bradley H. T. Rollins C. Y. Ferris G. E. Libbey C. C. Esterbrooks E. T. Wood E. 0. Hiller W. F. Rech T. A. Keenan E. P. Tripp J. Bakewell C. R. Haynes A. C. Willard C. King M. A. O ' Connor I 905 R. D. Farrington C. D. Klahr G. DeW. Marcy H. R. Sweetser H. M. Flinn George Thomas J. H. Flynn, Jr. E. L. Hill E. H. Lorenz W. T. Keene A. Freeman J. A. Pitts ilDfficcrs; President HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT Secretary JAMES F. NORRIS Cr,vccuti )c Committee GEORGE W. BLODGETT, Chairman Edmund H. Hewins James P. Munroe The President Desmond FitzGerald Charles T. Main The Secretary l oarD of publiCiition WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Chairman 191 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Officers M. H. CLARK, ' 03 A. D. SMITH, ' 04 W. H. WHITCOMB, C. F. SAMMET, ' 03 ' 03 Member of Executive Committee F. A. OLMSTED, ' 03 R. C. Tolman, ' 03 S. N. Mason, ' 03 W. E. Sumner, ' 03 A. H. Barrows, ' 03 H. D. Strong, ' 03 D. C. Picard, ' 03 A. A. Haskell, ' 03 G. M. Greene, ' 03 J. S. Bridges, Jr., ' 03 H. B. Pulsifer, ' 03 J. A. Robinson, ' 03 G. R. Spalding, ' 03 S. A. Foster, ' 03 J. W. J. Calnan, ' 03 W. P. Regestcin, ' 03 H. C. Merrill, ' 03 S. J. Martenet, Jr., ' 04 W. D. Lynch, ' 04 iHQriubris S. Robinson, ' 04 H. H. Needham, ' 04 H. K. Richardson, ' 04 E. W. Niles, ' 04 R. D. Mailey, ' 04 A. C. Downes, ' 04 R. S. Phillips, ' 04 F. S. Farrell, ' 04 K. M. Baum, ' 04 H. M. Brown, ' 04 J. R. Marston, ' 04 W. R. Crowell, ' 04 F. W. Farrell, ' 04 A. H. Kellino, ' 04 S. Skowrouski, ' 04 J. B. Finnegan, ' 04 C. Hoy, ' 04 C. R. Haynes, ' 04 M, Cline, ' 05 J. G. Riley, ' 04 L. M. Bourne, ' 04 H. W. Gallup, ' 04 M. E. Mason, ' 04 E. W. Washburn, ' 05 S. H. Ayers, ' 05 F. W. Guibord, ' 05 W. Burns. ' 05 F. M. Eaton, ' 05 F. J. Eraser, ' 05 A. Merrill, ' 05 F. S. Beattie, ' 05 H. K. Merrow, ' 05 H. R. Sweetser, ' 05 S. W. Benson, ' o? W. H. Keen, ' 05 ' C. A. Butman, ' 05 G. B. Perkins, ' 05 Prof. R. H. Richards Prof. H. 0. Hofman Prof. H. P. Talbot Prof. J. M. Crafts Prof. A. A. Noyes Prof. T. E. Pope Prof. W. O. Crosby Prof. F. L. Bardwell Prof. A. H. Gill Uonoiaiv il rinbrrs Prof. R. W. Lodge Prof. H. M. Goodwin Prof. W. R. Whitney Prof. F. H. Thorp Prof. Henry Fav Prof. J. F. Norris Prof. Moore Prof. Locke Mrs. E. H. Richards Mr. G. W. Rolfe Dr. P. S. Burns Dr. S. P. MuUiken Dr. W. H. Walker Mr. J. W. Phelan Dr. Chapin Mr. A. G. Woodman Mr. W. T. Hall Dr. Coolidge Dr. C. H. Warren 92 .°MASSIN5TTECK ■y4b ,r 9 ' Officers FRANK H. DAVIS President HERBER J. MANN .... Vice-President CLARKE E. WARREN . Secretary and Treasurer evcaiti )c Committee RALPH H. BURKE JOHN V. RATHBONE jH embers 1 9o: Horace S. Baker George C. D. Lenth John T. Cheney Walter M. Drury Leroy L. Hunter J. Russell Jones, Jr. William Waterman Lawrence H. Underwood 1004 John F. Card George M. Proudfoot Bernard Blum Frank H. Davis Roland B. Pendergast 1003 Ralph H. Burke Arthur J. Amberg Thomas F. Geraghty Le Baron Turner Clarke E. Warren 1 00(3 Herbert J. Mann William J. Knapp John F. Norton 194 John V. Rathbone William F. Becker C. V aldo Adams Chadwell S. Peirce George M. Winne HJi lihrr CltA Office V)S MELVIN HUMBERT SCHWARTZ President ALFRED PEABODY Secretary and Treasurer fncultv - cmbcrsi Prof. Arlo Bates Mr. Charles Beardsley Mr. Joseph Blackstein Prof. Alfred E. Burton Prof. Charles R. Cross Prof. C. F. A. Currier Prof. Davis R. Dewey Prof. George T. Dippold Prof. H. Nies Prof. Henry G. Pearson Pres. Henry S. Pritchett Prof. William Z. Ripley Mr. Archer T. Robinson Prof. William T. Sedgwick Prof. John O. Sumner Prof. Harry W. Tyler Prof. Frank Vogel cmbrrg Paul Ale.xander Blair Carroll Gary Curtis Alden Glover Drew Joseph Kittridge Elliott Campos Andres Fuentes Louis Wilbar Hammett Arthur Nelson Hastings Edwin Bruce Hill Dennie Kelley Keller Roy Fisk Lovejoy Benjamin Madero Edward Francis Parker, Jr. Alfred Peabody Melvin Humbert Schwartz Clark Davis Simonds Everett Pendleton Turner 195 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Officers EDNA D. STODDARD FLORENCE L. WETHERBEE ALICE F. BLOOD LUCY M. STEVENSON Edna G. Bailey Sarah E. Bates Mildred Blodgett Alice F. Blood Katharine Blunt Anna M. Ciderhohm Ibara Culver Katherine Dexter i VI embers Jessie G. Gibson Marion Hibbard Beulah C. Hill Helen R. Hosmer Laura M. Lundin Eleanor Manning Agnes T. Marmey Elizabeth Middleton Eleanor P. Rathbun Mary J. Ruggles Lucy M. Stevenson Ava M. Stoddard Edna D. Stoddard Julia Weld Lydia G. Weld Florence L. Wetherbee Mildred F. Wheeler Elizabeth L. Williams 196 mif Officcvji President, GUY HILL Business Manager, N. T. LOWRIE Secretary, M. CLINE evccutiuc Committee p. S. CROV ELL H. M. EDMUNDS C. T. Bartlett R. Bingham M. Cline S. Cohen C. B. Cox P. S. Crowell jViembersi H. M. Edmunds 0. D. Fellows A. C. Ferry N. P. Geshard N. S. Gouinlock M. Helpern F. J. Van Hook Guy Hill H. Lord N. T. Lowrie E. T. Henius C. B. Morey T. Niditch 197 ■19 HALL OfflCCl ' jS President WALTER S. BROWN Vice-President GEORGE E. ATKINS Secretary and Treasurer ANDREW KERR H embers I. Rayne Adams Jose Hilario Aguilar George Edwin Atkins John Ross Bates Walter S. Brown Enrique Cuesta David L. Davis Henry Lawrence Dean Ralph Stowell Franklin Campos Andres Fuentes Leon Edward Hirt Joseph Russell Jones Andrew Kerr Harold Keyes Lowry Phillip Prada Manta Leon Gilbert Morrill Leonard F. Myers James R. O ' Hara, Jr. Adolph J. Ortseifen Andrew A. Potter Charles Abel Raymond Arthur Louis Sherman Bertram Austin Thompson Henry Thornton Winchester 198 m Officers President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer WARREN F. CURRIER, ' 03 PHILIP E. HINKLEY, ' 05 HAROLD N. CROSS, ' 04 LOUIS E. ROBBE, ' 05 M. Ahumada, Jr., ' 06 Charles T. Bartlett, ' 06 Arthur W. Blake, ' 06 Shields Burr, ' 06 H. P. Charlesworth, ' 05 Harold N. Cross, ' 04 Warren F. Currier, ' 03 jH embers H. C. Elliott, ' 06 Harry V. Fletcher, ' 06 Frederick J. Eraser, ' 05 Philip E. Hinkley, ' 05 Sidney R. Lamb, ' 05 Robert J. Lyons Edward A. Mead, ' 05 Harry M. Nabstedt, ' 05 Arthur P. Porter, ' 04 Louis E. Robbe, ' 05 Fremont M. Scales, ' 06 Ellsworth Sperry, ' 06 LeRoy Thwing, ' 03 Bertram N. White, ' 05 William A. Young, ' 06 l onorarv jH embers Prof. Robert H. Richards Prof. Charles F. A. Currier Mr. Nathan R. George 199 200 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Offtccrs MITCHELL MACKIE President HAROLD HASKINS Vice-President A. H. KELLING Secretary and Treasurer jHcmbcrg John Blatz E. D. A. Frank J. A. Purer Harold Haskins A. H. Kelling W. R. Kreimer F. C. Lutze Mitchell Mackie M. E. Mason Charles B. Mayer E. S. Manson F. A. Naramore C. Noble E. L. Smith 1 904 TECHNIQUE 201 t!Dl)c Crdj mnion HE NEED OF A SUITABLE PLACE WHERE THE STUDENTS OF THE INSTITUTE CAN MEET, AND ONE WHICH THEY CAN USE FOR ALL PURPOSES AND AT ALL TIMES, HAS LONG BEEN FELT. UP TO THE PRESENT TIME THE TECHNOLOGY CLUB AND THE GYMNASIUM HAVE BEEN USED ON OCCASIONS, BUT BOTH of these places have been found to be entirely inad- equate to the demands made upon them. In conse- quence of this and of the necessary delay in the building of the Walker Memorial Gymnasium, Doctor Pritchett has utilized, in a most excellent way, the rooms over the Mechanical Laboratories (commonly known as the shops). These rooms he has set aside for the exclusive use of the students for student gath- erings of all kinds ; and considering its purpose to bring the men into closer touch with each other, the best name for the rooms seemed to be the Tech Union. Minute descrip- tions, at best, are tiresome, perhaps because they bring back the memories of our Freshman days when we described the scene out the window for a one-page theme; but it seems only right to enter somewhat into details in describing the place where many pleasant memories of our college days linger, and where many of us have formed and strengthened friendships that will last the rest of our lives. The Tech Union is made up of one large room, one small one, a kitchen, coat-room, and toilet. The two main rooms are provided with high-back benches which, built into the wainscoting, run around a considerable portion of the wall, thus providing comfortable as 202 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIH well as well-appearing lounging places. Above this wainscoting and on the sides of the room where it does not run, the wall is covered with a neat burlap of red in the large, and green in the small room. Curtains of the same material to match add much to the appearance of the rooms. The woodwork, except the wainscoting which has been stained, is painted white, giving a light ceiling in pleasant contrast to the darker color of the walls. A large number of chairs, as well as several tables, have been provided for use at dinners, lectures, and the like, while a piano stands ready to help in making merry with songs and other music. Light is obtained in the day time through large sky-lights and windows, and at night a large number of well-distributed Welsbach ' s give ample illamination. The get-up of both rooms is so simple, and yet so tasteful and pleasing, that they have already attracted a large number of the students, and are attracting more every day. The kitchen and coat-room may perhaps be said to form a part of the large room, though they have been separated by very adequate partitions. The kitchen has been fitted up with all the modern appliances for cooking, including a cooking range of large dimensions, cooking utensils, dishes, and so forth in large quan- tities. Especial pains has been taken to make this feature of the Union as complete and yet as simple as possible, and those who have partaken of the dinners and suppers served there can testify con- cerning its efficiency. A capable man has been engaged to preside over the culinary department and to take charge of the meals served. Of the remaining rooms little is left to be said except that, like the rest, they have been fitted up with the greatest possible sim- plicity, but with great completeness and this has most certainly been obtained. The Union was formally opened on Saturday night, December sixth, when the President of the Institute and members of the Advisory Council on Athletics met the participants of the Field Day at dinner there. Since that time the Union has been growing tremendously in popularity, and the general dinners which are served there every I 904 TECHNIQUE 203 Saturday night have been well attended by an enthusiastic crowd. The many societies of the Institute as well as the classes have found in the Union an excellent place to hold their dinners, smokers and meetings. Outside of the set occasions for special objects, we find the fellows dropping in at all hours to spend a pleasant hour or so in the afternoon with the men who are following the same path that they are. This is perhaps the most important feature of the Union, that the men learn to know and feel some interest in the other members of their class or college, and thus form what is more important than what has been bluntly called book learning, and that is firm friendships and an intimate knowledge of men. If the Union succeeds in this, and there seems to be no doubt that it will, it will be the point around which Technology student life will take a turn for the better, and will form the basis of a true college spirit which eventually will equal the spirit shown at any other college in the country. 204 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Clost Call for tlje Jfacultp I ONCE was burning the mid-night oil, With a difficult problem to do; And I cursed the pen, and the paper, and ink, And I cursed the Faculty, too. I prayed for the power, and longed, my dear, To seize this miserable earth. To hurl it at once to the place that boasts Neither coldness, nor comfort, nor mirth. I ' d vowed to do all this when low! A vision of you I met. So the world is moving still, sweetheart. And the Faculty ' s faculting yet. .r-- % r. r- f ; A H ' CI)r Ccd) Boaiti 4 « 1 V 1 K ' ' ' ' ' 1 1 BSi ' Ti - - H ' ' JfcM E- l V f H - ' ■■■H HB t : ' VII hI H i K 1 H mH I Hh I B - f.%.j GS - . v ■« SfelUMi,v ' :. fesSi«« i .y -:. ' ' S -jas t FREMMER MORSE GREELEY WENTWORTH EASTMAN SMITH GODDARD GREEN MARSH PERKINS PENDERGAST TURNER JOHNSTON GRAESSER DANIELS ' -.if- ■ r ■' . ' 1 The weekly paper published by the undergraduates Editor-in-Chief ROLAND B. PENDERGAST, ' 03 Assistant Editor-in-Chief G. B. PERKINS, ' 05 Secretary H. W. GODDARD, ' 04 Alumni Editor C. H. GRAESSER, ' 05 Associate Editors R. C. TOLMAN, ' 03 G. E. ATKINS, ' 04 G. W. EASTMAN ' 04 J. A. FREMMER, ' 04 W. GREEN, ' 05 R. 0. MARSH, ' 05 J. DANIELS, ' 05 Art Editor W. R. GREELEY, ' 02 Business Manager WALDSO TURNER, ' 05 Assistant Business Managers R. A. WENTWORTH, ' 04 C. W. JOHNSTON, ' 05 207 TEX HXIGtUE The College Annual published by the Junior Class Editor-in-Chief GEORGE EDWIN ATKINS ' Associate Editors GUY WARNER EASTMAN- JOHN ARTHUR FREMMER Society Editor LOUIS GUSTAV BOUSCAREN, Jr. Athletic Editor CHARLES LOWELL HOMER ' Statisticians GEORGE HARDY POWELL ARTHUR JEREMIAH SWEET ' Art Editors BERTRAM ALLEN RICHARDSON ' FREDERIC NICKERSON ' CHARLES OZRO EGERTON ' - ROBERT CURTIS CUTTING ' Business Manager WALTER ELBRIDGE HADLEY- Assistant Business Managers BERNARD BLUM ' ERNEST HARRAH NOTE: The numbers refer to the photographs on opposite page f - ' ' ' - — ' L. - . iT ' fc . g :: - (02 iRnrEiR THE TECHNOLOGY QUARTERLY was founded in 1887 by undergraduates. After two years ' publication the editing was taken in charge by a Faculty committee. The Quarterly is the medium in which the original researches and scientific acheivements of members of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology and graduates are published. Since 1892 the proceedings of the Society of Arts have been published in it and the board of editors elected by that body. l oarD of publiciitiou WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Ph.D., Chairman CHARLES R. CROSS, S.B. DWIGHT PORTER, Ph.D. A. LAWRENCE ROTCH, S.B., A.M. ROBERT P. BIGELOW, S.B., Ph.D. Editor ROBERT P. BIGELOW, S.B., Ph.D. 210 THE TECHNOLOGY REVIEW is published by the Association of Class Sec- retaries. Its articles pertain mainly to Institute affairs, both graduate and under-graduate. It reports the actions of the Corporation, the Faculty, the Alumni Association, the under-graduates and the social organizations of the Institute. The occupations and activities of the graduates are most carefully collected and published by the Secretaries of the various classes. Besides the articles connected with the Institute, subjects are treated pertaining to educa- tional advance. With its object of the promotion and advancement of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, its influence is felt and its success assured. Committee on publication JAMES FINNEY MUNROE, ' 82 ARTHUR AMOS NOYES, ' 86 WALTER BRADLEE SNOW, ' 82 LEONARD METCALF, ' 92 WALTER HUMPHREYS, ' 97 211 HoQTFOUog US J w ,.,o ,j; ' ...i., ? %««« ' ; mM 1003 portfolio Committfc HEWITT CROSBY, Chairman RAY MATHEWSON HOOD RALPH HERBERT NUTTER FREDERIC ARTHUR OLMSTED RICHARD CHASE TOLMAN 212 igjgfiilgjigjiijijgiiiiiii -; I !i P ' , % ■Ik i- - ' 4 if: if M m (Slcc Club BLOUNT ESTERBROOK FELLOWS GRABER PRENTISS BARROWS GILBERT KING SWENSON HIGGINS BARNES WILSON SIMONDS JACKSON NUTTER ROBBE TURGEON ? aS.- .- JAMES P. BARNES, ' 05 RALPH H. NUTTER, ' 03 Leader Manager i irst (Tenors R. J. KING, ' 03 OMAR SWENSON, ' 03 THOMAS W. ESTERBROOK, ' 05 R. C. JACKSON, ' 06 S rronD (Trnors FREDERICK L. HIGGINS, ' 03 CLARK D. SIMONDS, ' 04 RALPH H. NUTTER, ' 03 G. HERBERT BARROWS, ' 05 FERNANDO M. BLOUNT, ' 05 j?iist ISassrs JAMES P. BARNES, ' 05 G. W. PRENTISS, ' 05 A. C. GILBERT, ' 05 LOUIS E. ROBBE, ' 05 rcoiiD IBassfs LEWIS G. WILSON, ' 03 0. D. FELLOWS, ' 04 HOWARD T. GRABER, ' 03 RALPH L. SEGAR, ' 05 FREMONT N. TURGEON, ' 04 215 MANDOim CL CHARLES B. MAYER, ' 05 R. HAZELTINE, ' 04 Leader Manager ili anDolins WILLIAM M. DUNCAN, ' 04 R. HAZELTINE, ' 04 PAUL McC. PAINE, ' 04 HERBERT M. WILCOX, ' 04 EDWARD L. DAVIS, ' 05 CHARLES B. MAYER, ' 05 W. C. RICH, ' 05 KENNETH H. DISQUE, ' 06 JOSEPH T. LAWTON, ' 06 3iutar6 STUART W. BENSON, ' 04 PHILLIP E. HINKLEY, ' 05 ADDISON NORDYKE, ' 06 CLAUDE McGINNIS, ' 06 5BanDola H. HAMMET PALES, ' 03 flutr EDWARD DeWOLFE PERRY, ' 05 217 m]o Club m[ ' -:, = ' WTiilirTTi I - - -■■R. C. JACKSON, ' 06 PHILLIP S. SWEETSER, ' 04 Leader Manager 15nnifaunnrs CARL EDWARDS, ' 04 HERBERT GODDARD, ' 04 15anio6 PHILLIP S. SWEETSER, ' 04 LOUIS J. KILLION, ' 05 G. B. JONES, ' 05 FREDERICK R. BATCHELDER, ' o6 CLARENCE H. SUTHERLAND, ' 06 Crllo tl anuola R. C. JACKSON, ' 06 Guitars STUART W. BENSON, ' 04 A. P. GILSON, ' 05 CLAUDE McGINNIS, ' 06 219 220 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII iHusical Club omccrgs LEWIS G. WI LSON, ' 03 Uitr pirctBtnt OWEN S. SWENSON, ' 03 0rnrral ifianapr anH draetirrr Srtrrtarp CLARK D. SIMONDS, ' o4 CHARLES B. THAYER, ' 05 3B0ictant iSrnrral ittanapr anH CrraBurrv LOUIS E. ROBBE Jlustitutc Commtttcc : limgsBimL ' CARHART CRONIN irm, TURNER BOUSCAREN. Jr. AMBERG WETTERER MANN WILLIAMS, Jr. MORSE SWETT BAKER SMITH E. J. Mann THE INSTITUTE COMMITTEE is composed of the presidents and two representatives from each class, the representatives being elected by popu- lar ballot. Its office is to serve as a medium be- tween the Faculty and under-graduates upon all matters of consequence arising between them. The presidents of the Senior and Junior classes serve as president and vice-president respectively of the Institute Committee. GEORGE WRIGHT SWETT, ' 03 PRESTON MORRIS SMITH, ' 04 ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG, ' 05 President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Harry W. Tylei, Secretary HOWARD SCOTT MORSE, ' 03 Representative to Association of Class Secretaries CHARLES LOWELL HOMER. ' 04 Representative to Advisory Council on Athletics WILLIAM WALTER CRONIN, ' 04 Custodian of Trophy Room 1903 George Wiight Swett, President Howard Scott Morse Horace Singer Baker 1904 Preston Morris Smith, President William Walter Cronin Louis Gustave Bouscaren, Jr. 1905 Robert Nathaniel Turner, President Arthur John Amberg Frank Milton Carhart 1906 C. F. W. Wetterer, President [ tbr J ' acultP Henry Smith Pritchett, President J. W. Williams Alfred E. Burton, Dean 223 SUB ' INSTITUTC COMMITTCC | FOR the last two years it has been customary for the president of each class at the begin- ning of the year to appoint a committee of ten men, representing the various courses, to act with the Institute Committee in serving as a medium between the Faculty and the students. I 9 ,:; I H. S. Baker VI A. S. Gibbs II G. W. Swett X F. A. Olmsted III A. Healy XI C. P. Nibecker IV L. R. Kaufman XII G. F. Loughlin V W. H. Whitcomh 1904 XIII H. Crosby I Currier Lang VI C. B. Williams II T. C. Baker VIII H. T. Kalmus III W. B. Boggs IX D. K. Keller IV A. W. Richards X A. C. WiUard V A. C. Downes I Q 5 XIII G. H. Powell I H.L.Whitney VI A. E. Freeman II R. W. Morse VII VIII H. A. Wentworth III J. F. Dickie IX X P. S. Crowel! IV R. D. Emerson XI A. 0. True V G. E. Dunham XII XIII V. H. Paquet I Q 6 John G. Barry Bruce R. Honeyman Rutherford Bingham Clarence H. Sutherland Stuart E. Coey Herbert J. Mann Harold S. Graham Percy E. Tillson Alfred W Geist, Jr. Louis H. Tripp 22- fe £ _ p. fg ELECTORAL COMMATT THE TECHNIQUE ELECTORAL COMMITTEE consists of twenty-five men elected by the Sophomore class from its own members. This Commit- tee is elected toward the end of the year, and it immediately begins to hold its meetings for the purpose of selecting the Board of Editors of Technique, this plan of double election being intended to insure fairness and good judgment in choosing the Board of Editors. The committee elects three associate editors, a society editor, an athletic editor, two statisticians, and three business mana- gers. The artistic staff is chosen by outside judges, appointed by the committee, from a competition open to all members of the class. After this is done the com- mittee disbands, the new board elects its own editor-in-chief and chief business manager, and begins its work at once. 1004 Clrrtotal Comimttrr L. P. BURNHAM Chairman R. A. WENTWORTH Secretary G. E. Atkins B. Blum L. G. Bouscaren. Jr. C. E. Broad L. P. Burnham T. F. Card A. C. Downes G. W. Eastman C. J. Emerson M. L. Emerson H. W. Goddard W. E. Hadley E. Harrah C. R. Haynes E. 0. Hiller C. L. Homer R. O. Ingram C. Lang J. G. Metcalf P. M. Paine G. H. Powel! C. Saville, Jr. P. M. Smith A. J. Sweet, Jr. R. A. Wentworth 225 TI.CWHO .OCY C A « THE object of this club is to promote the welfare of the Institute and the common social interests of its past and present officers and students. The Club house is at No. 83 Newbury street, nearly opposite the Rogers building, and its membership is at present over six hundred, including graduates and other former students, members of the Corporation and of the instructing staff, and a limited number of under-graduates. C fflCCV)3 ]ivten1icx[t JAMES P. MUNROE, ' 82 Ditr prroilrnt FRANCIS H. WILLIAMS, ' 73 Srcrrtatp WALTER HUMPHREYS, ' 97 (TrraQiurr ANDREW D. FULLER, ' 95 Chairman of r)oii6r Committer SETH K. HUMPHREY, ' 97 Chairman of itlrmbrrcbip Cnmmittrr FREDERICK H. BAILEY The Executive Committee includes the above and the Secretary of the Institute ex-officio 226 1904 TECHNIQUE 227 Co € prratibc ocictj) THE CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY has for its object the furnishing of finan- cial aid to students in need of such. The scholarship fund for this purpose is obtained by the sale of membership tickets and by the profits on books and drawing instruments sold in the supply rooms. Since organization, the Society has distributed in scholarships seven thousand eight hundred and twelve ($7,812 I dollars, and has assisted fifty-nine students to complete their courses at the Institute, the students thus aided now occupying responsible positions in engi- neering and educational work. tJI fftcrrs Presiderxt, LAWRENCE HARGREAVE LEE, ' 03 Vice-President, HEWITT CROSBY, ' 03 Secretary, FRANK GARDNER COX, ' 03 Treasurer, ANDREW D. MACLACHLIN, ' 96 Oirrrtors; For the Faculty President HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT Dean ALFRED E. BURTON HEWITT CROSBY 1903 FRANK G. COX LAWRENCE H. LEE 1904 JOSEPH CHENEY BAKER 1905 HARRY MARTIN N ABSTEDT BERNARD BLUM RICHARD WARREN SENGER 19 04 TECHNIQUE ll JO. i . £. a Officers of tl)c .Association jJrcBitirnt GEORGE B. BRADSHAW, ' 03 nice [Jrfsitifnt JOHN R. SANBORN, ' 04 §rrirtaii ROBERT J. KING, ' 03 (Firacuirr ALEXANDER W. RICHARDS, ' 04 Cljairmcn of Committees Student Meetings Membership Bible Study Local Settlement Missionary Church Affiliations ARTHUR W. BARTLETT, ' oj E. B. HILL, ' 05 OLIVER M. WIARD, ' 04 JAMES W. WELSH, ' 03 JOHN R. SANBORN, ' 04 JOHN W. ROLAND, ' 04 Colonel, F. S. ELLIOTT, ' 05 Staff Adjutant Capt. J. G. BARRY Quartermaster Capt. A. KERR Commissary Capt. A. H. KELEHER Band Master Lieut L. S. WHIPPLE ( ' 04) j ' 5on-Coiiuiu66ionrD taflf Sergeant Major Drum Major Color Sergeant Color Sergeant Band Sergeant Signal Sergeant J. G. WALKER, Jr. P. V PERKINS A. DeW. TAYLOR C. H. SUTHERLAND H. V. FLETCHER A. P. GILSON ( ' 051 COMPANY A COMPANY B COMPANY C Captain C. F.W.Wetterer Captain C. E. Fogg Captain E. E. Hamilton Lieutenant J- G. Shepard Lieutenant W. H. Hoyle Lieutenant C. W. Mowry Lieutenant S. R. Spinney Lieutenant F. A. Kelley Lieutenant C. E. Tucker ist Sergt. F. E. Dixon ist Sergt. R. L. Dyer ist Sergt. E. 0. Christiansen Sergeant R. W. Rose Sergeant H. W. Beers Sergeant P. R. L. Hogner Sergeant E. B. Rowe Sergeant E.L.B.Trenthardt Sergeant E. F. Searle Sergeant C. M. Emerson Sergeant C. E Johnson Sergeant W. N. Messenger Sergeant G. C. Young COMPANY D COMPANY E COMPANY F Captain W . H. Foster Captain F. E. Earle Captain G. C. Simpson Lieutenant E. T. Henius Lieutenant H. M. McCue Lieutenant F. W. Hinds Lieutenant R N. Hoyt Lieutenant A. A. Hayward Lieutenant R. E. Terry ist Sergt. C. E. Abbott ist Sergt. L. F. Bedford ist Sergt. C. M. Hutchins Sergeant A M. Chidester Sergeant R. Bingham Sergeant S. C. Wolfe Sergeant H V. Coey Sergeant R. C. Jackson Sergeant C. H. Shapleigh Sergeant C. C. Stevens Sergeant B. W. Kendall Sergeant E. M. Smith Sergeant R. J. Barber Sergeant A. G. Bruce Sergeant Sergeant F. A. Armstrong J. W.Williams, Jr. 230 1 ■psSi 1 M c l ALYmH X :5a 232 TECHNIQUE Vol XVIII 9ilumni associations tIcchnolociB Blunini association President, FREDERICK H. NEWELL, ' 85 Vice-President, WALTER B. SNOW, ' 82 Secretary, ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, ' 86 Executive Committee AZEL AMES, ' 95 WILLIAM B. THURBER, ' 89 Member of Advisory Council on Athletics JOHN L. BATCHELDER, Jr., ' 90 Che ' Western association, m. II. Z. President, EDWARD W. ROLLINS, ' 71 Vice-President, BRADFORD H. LOCKE, ' 72 Secretary and Treasurer, FRANK E. SHEPARD, ' 87 924 Washington Avenue, Denver, Col. Zbe ttecbnoloci? Club of IHcw L ' ork Board of Governors C. D. POLLOCK, ' 94 H. D. HIBBARD, ' 77 ROBERT S. ALLYN, ' 98 WALTER LARGE, ' 78 ALEXANDER RICE McKINN, Secretary and Treasurer 106 East Twenty-third Street, New York, N. Y. XLbe Connccttcnt ll ' allc i association, ll . 11. Z. Executive Committee GEORGE L. MUNN, ' 88, Chairman, Easthampton, Mass. HENRY SOUTHER, ' 87 HENRY A. FRANCIS, ' 83 JAMES S. NEWTON, ' 88 ARTHUR B. DEAN, ' 95 Zbc Jlech Society of iPbilaDclpbia Secretary-Treasurer, BENJAMIN ADAMS, ' 95 ExecutiveCommittee AMOS J. BOYDEN, ' 75 D. A. LYLE, ' 84 SAMUEL A. NEIDICH, ' 98 SAMUEL S. SADTLER, ' 95 1904 TECHNIQUE 233 2bc Iptttsburci association, Ifi. 11. C. President, DAVID S. BISSELL Vice-President, ARTHUR B. BELLOWS, ' 89 Secretary and Treasurer, HOWARD K. JONES, ' 96 Che IHortbwestcrn Bssociation, US. 11. CT. President, H. F. BALDWIN, ' 84 Vice-President, T. W. ROBINSON, ' 84 Secretary and Treasurer, EDWARD M. HAGAR, ' 93 1060 The Rookery, Chicago, III. Executive Committee The PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY AND TREASURER MORTIMER FRANK, ' 97 ERNEST WOODGATT, ' 97 W. G. ZIMMERMAN, ' 98 Cbe JTccb Socictfi of lUcatern IHcw L ' orh Executive Committee MAURICE B. PATCH, ' 72 EDMUND HAYES, ' 73 GEORGE A. RICKER, ' 86 HARRY L. NOYES, ' 90 HENRY A. BOYD, ' 79 (Secretary and Treasurer) 125 Erie County Bank Building, Buffalo, N. Y. lUasbincitou Socictv of Cbc Ws. II. C. President, H. A. PRESSEY, ' 96 Vice-President, P. L. DOUGHERTY, ' 97 Secretary, WINTHROP COLE, ' 87 Bureau of Steam Engineering, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. Treasurer, F. O. STETSON, ' 88 Executive Committee PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY AND TREASURER W. J. RICH, ' 84 l . II. C Club of Cincinnati President, J. S. NEAVE Vice-President, JAMES B. STANWOOD Treasurer, GEORGE W. KITTREDGE Secretary, CHARLES G. MERRELL Executive Committee A. 0. ELZNER R. W. PROCTOR W. E. HOPTON 234 TECH NIQUE Vol. XVIII YE 2 CHAD- VATLi 5ECRE- ABIE. CHUSETT IIWSTITUTEI Of TECHI INOLOGY 18681 190X1 il=)fiiibfr6 anD Class UrprrsmtattUfs Secretary, FREDERICK H. FAY ' 68 Prof. ROBERT H. RICHARDS, Secretary Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 6q Mr. HOWARD A. CARSON, Representative 2o Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. ' 70 Prof. CHARLES R. CROSS, Secretary Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass_ •71 Mr. EDWARD W ROLLINS, Secretary iQ Milk Street, Boston, Mass. ' 72 Prof. C. FRANK ALLEN, Secretary Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 7.:i Mr. SAMUEL E. TINKHAM, Secretary City Hall, Boston, Mass. ' 7.1 Mr. CHARLES R. READ, Secretary 01(1 State House, Boston, Mass. ' 7S Mr. E. A. W. HAMMATT, Secretary %}, State Street, Boston, Mass. ' 76 Mr. JOHN R. FREEMAN, Secretary 4 Market Square, Providence, R. I. •77 Mr. RICHARD A. HALE, Secretary Lawrence, Mass. ' 78 Mr. LINWOOD O. TOWNE, Secretary Haverhill, Mass. ' 7Q Mr. HARRY H CAMPBELL, Secretary Steelton, Pa. •70 Mr. EDWIN E. MILLER, Representative 88 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass. ' 80 Prof. GEORGE H. BARTON, Representative Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 81 Mr. FRANK E. CAME, Secretary !7 Place d ' Armes Hill, Montreal, P. Q. I 904 TECHNIQUE 235 ' 82 Mr. WALTER B. SNOW, Secretary Watertown, Mass. ' 83 Mr. HARVEY S. CHASE, Secretary V 8 Congress Street, Boston, Mass. ' 84 Dr. AUGUSTUS H. GILL, Secretary Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 85 Prof. E. B. HOMER, Secretary Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R. I. ' 86 Prof. ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, Secretary Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 87 Mr. EDWARD G. THOMAS, Secretary 4 State Street, Boston, Mass. ' 88 Mr. WILLIAM G. SNOW, Secretary 245 Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ' 88 Mr. ALFRED H. SAWYER, Representative Care of B. F. Sturtevant Co., Jamaica Plain, Mass. ' 89 Mr. WALTER H. KILHAM, Secretary 9 Park Street, Boston, Mass. ' 90 Mr. GEORGE L. GILMORE, Secretary Lexington, Mass. ' 91 Mr. CHARLES GARRISON, Secretary Lexington, Mass. ' 92 Prof. SEVERANCE BURRAGE, Secretary Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. ' 93 Mr. FREDERICK H. FAY, Secretary 60 City Hall, Boston, Mass. ' 93 Mr. CHARLES M. SPOFFORD, Representative Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 94 Mr. C. S. PRESCOTT, Secretary Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. ' 95 Mr. GEORGE W. HAYDEN, Representative - 493 Warren Street, Roxbury, Mass. 236 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ■96 Mr. EDWARD S. MANSFIELD, Secretary 3 Head Place, Boston, Mass. •q7 Mr. JOHN A. COLLINS, Secretary 55 Jackson Street, Lawrence, Mass. •98 Mr. C. E. A. WINSLOW, Secretary Hotel Oxford, Boston, Mass. 99 Mr. WALTER 0. ADAMS, Secretary 1776 Massachusetts Avenue, North Cambridge, Mass. •00 Mr. GEORGE E. RUSSELL, Secretary 25 Broad Street, New York, N. Y. ' 01 Mr. ALBERT W. HIGGINS, Secretary Saylesville, R. I. ' 02 Mr. CHARLES W. KELLOGG, Jr., Secretary 51 St. Paul Street, Brookline, Mass. President of the Senior Class Mr. GEORGE W. SWETT 1851 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. Representative of Institute Committee Mr. HOWARD S. MORSE 260 Ames Street, Dedham, Mass. President of Technology Club Mr. JAMES P. MUNROE 179 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass. Secretary of the Institute HARRY W. TYLER Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. President of Alumni Association FREDERICK H. NEWELL United States Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. Secretary of Alumni Association Mr. ARTHUR G. ROBBINS Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. BlNIOl DlNNEli -4 ■3 -. i ' vS ' s T  Y S ' V T f ' (ToaBtmaetfr WALTER MAYNARD DRURY Move on, O ship of state PAUL REVERE PARKER ' As unto the string the bow is So unto man is woman RENAND LAGE Should old acquaintance be forgot And never brought to mind BENJAMIN NIELDS, Jr. All work and no play Makes Jack a dull boy ' WILLIAM B. FERGUSON, Jr. My fancies like the flames aspire, I dream of fame and fate, I see my future in the fire, And, oh! it ' s simply grate R. R. NEWMAN Held at Hotel Lenox, March i8, 1903 238 i :2% JiNiOR Dinner : -t .. ._. — . YALE U. S. NAVAL ACADEMY THE FACULTY TECHNIQUE igo4 iZToaBtmaBtrr L. G. BOUSCAREN, Jr. M i s i c N. L. SNOW L. B. McBRIDE C. B. WILLIAMS W. E. HADLEY Music Held at the Union, March 5, 1903 On December 12, 1902, a Class Dinner was held at the Union at which H. V. Doherty was toastmaster 239 Sophomore DmnER I J£ Cna6tm i6trr S. T. STRICKLAND W ' S : e«W 1905 ANCIENT HISTORY CLASS EMBLEMS JOKES BETTER JOKES Music Music R. N. TURNER N. LOMBARD W. D. B. MOTTER W. GREEN R. H. W. LORD Held at The Union, February 18, 1903 On December 31, 1Q02, there was another dinner held at the Union at which R. H. W. Lord was toastmaster 240 Freshman Dinner (Toaetmaetrr U. J. NICHOLAS THE CLASS C. F. WETTERER Music DRILL R. C, THAYER ATHLETICS J. W. WILLIAMS, Jr. Music FUTURE OF 1906 E. M. SMITH Held at Tech Union, April 27th, 1Q02 241 PR® CM A.Srf , OF qJIJ .MBUifj y fi- Pu . Tuesday After ' n, April 28 Tech Show, Dress Rehearsal at Holhs Street Theatre 4 at Wednesday Ev ' g, April 29 Musical Clubs ' Spring Con- cert and Dance at New Cen- tury Hall Thursday Afte ' n, April :■TECHNIQUE. Volume XV issued. The Tech Tea the Tech Office Thursday Eve g, April 30 Junior Promenade at the Ho- tel Tuilenes Friday Afternoon, May i The Tech Show at the Hollis Street Theatre Saturday After ' n, May 2 Dual Athletic Meet with Tufts ai  .L «i « • i ' if iftfl Hole! Tuileiies, Thursday Evening, April 30, 1Q03 Committee GEORGE HARDY POWELL, Chairman Louis Gustave Bouscaren, Jr. Everett Osgood Hiller Charles Rogerson Haynes Charles Lowell Homer iHntvons Mrs. Henry S. Pritchett Mrs. Samuel J. Mixter Mrs. J. William Smith Mrs. William T. Sedgwick Mrs. Clipston Sturgis 245 348 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII fittl) !3muuil Cccl) ljoUi Merton Leslie Emerson, ' 04, 1, un-.i m.um -i-} Reginald Andrew Wentworth, ' 04 ihtsm.ss .} ,n .n:r William Walter Cronin, ' 04 S nt r Mnnn rr A sf. AVv -j,i J ,rr iiC ' ' ' ' GeufgC Carlyle Thomas, ' 05 .-inf. .Sdii c A ann et Attwood Eugene Rippey, ' 05, ' ;,«« l ,pr,-st-vt,itt:;- I ' Lll ' l A Scientific King rrr. AN ORIGINAL COMIC OPERA IN TWO ACTS I.IISRF. r 10 h ' (; K I Ill IN. ■,.-, Ml SIC Ar W. I. 1; w ■,,-,. F. S Faiiiim I ' ,,,, I ; F I ,or. ,H i i N ' - ,;. I,, (. ' . Wnii-vi F V.j cBiDrn lit tbr bnlliB tvrrt tZTbratic on tbr Sftrrnoons of 3pnl 2Stb anB itlap let KINd ALIilTE (A niiiiia be cientilic king, ruler (il the Inland (if Metasilicatia) JOSEPH 11ANIEI.S PRINCE PHVLI.ITE (his son) 1-REnERICK I ' .VI.E HI(;i;iNS WII.T.EMITE (his secretary) ROSWEI.L DAVIS PKIXCESS H EKVI.E (liis niece) KciBERT JOSHUA KI. (; PRINCESS MAKIiARll ' E (Pliyllites Ix-tnitlieil 1 . . . THOS. WINTHROP ESTAHKOOK I ' dPAZ ( Roblwr Chief) lAMES PHILLIPS BARNES PSILOMELANE I „,i, , ie tenmts) ' RTHCR HOOPER LANCiLEV LEl ' IDOMELANE I ' ' .... VILLL M JAMES SNEERLNGEK I ' EDRO (an Inn-keeper) I ' ERNANDn MORENO HLOl ' NT nl.o SUMPKINS (a host ) EnWARI) MA ■COFFIN JASPER (a bell l)oy) HARKV WALKER DONALD POKER JIM CHARLES HORACE CLAPP CREPP ■D. N I . . . . HERBERT ARTHl R TERRELL K. (iTniE BII 1 IIARRV V.XRNL ' M FLETCHER WILEY WILLIE ]■1) HENR ' i ' KRAMER FOXEV WOXEV ( ' ' ' ... JOHN EDGAR SIMMONS SAMMY SL ■CHARLES STILLMAN SPERRY (■ERNN THE KID I NORMAN LOMBARD WILLIE BOUNCE NUGENT FALLON I ' OLI. ' CON (an enterprisin.g C(i-ed) U. JAMES NICHOLAS ANA I.ITT lOSEPH S. WEIL AI.(;Y BRAY I WILFRED N. OLIVER CESSIE BUCE LFRED CLARK FERRY 05 °i °i 05 04 05 °i 05 °5 05 06 06 04 06 05 5 06 06 ' 06 06 ' 04 ' 05 06 05 06 C5 ' 05 I ARRIE O-KENESIS ' LOUIS J. KII.LION MATTIE M. T1CS Co eels HENRY DELANO LoRlXG . nDiE sLi ' M (;eor(;e carlyle thom. s PKIM. RE I I ( .... HAROLD STANIELS GRAHAJI MET. MORFIX EKWIN FERDINAND BENDER MISS DEAL (Chaperon 10 Cii-eds) (iORHAM CROSBY C I O R r S MAIDS OF HONOR— NWildnm Giisline L.iwrciire, Kdw.ird Benj.Tiiiiii Rii li, Win. J.mies t ' .idy, Samuel Shapir.i. COURT LADIES— Miltiin l.iclitenstein. Bernard Fnsler Wliitt.iker, Jnstph Hall Freenister. Louis Ernest Robhe. Pierre Kuli.0.1 I.. H ' i,ener. Herbi-rt .l.imes Mann, Win. Tults, Sidney Taylor C ' arr. BALLET — Butterfly and Flower Dance (Poppies)— F.dward Oscar Welch. Percy Richmond Finer. Ralph Staples (iiffnrd. H.ir ev Baxter ()ri.iUl. Honrce J.inies Maclntire. Francis George Baldwin. John Edward Lynch. Walter Tl.id.Eri- llav.il. THIEVES DANCE — Rhoderick l)hu, Earl (ieorge (- ' risty ; Capt. Kidd. W.ilttr Philip Regcstein ; Robin Hood, Eduard F.niiuin Rdckwnod; Dick Tiirpin. . lhert Edwin .Swcetser. COURTIERS— H,o-ry Hall Cook. Daniel .Austin l.noinis, Henrv Kvcrelt harliiiK. Frederick Gardner Heiinelt, .Arllnir (;,ivl ird Slinum. Jr.. James F.dward (iriffin, tk-n. .Milrhcll Henderson, Robert Sidney Clark. I!erli.iiii . iislin Tlinnipson. Howard Payne Shaw. MERCURY (..SW,. yi.7mci ,.j- F ,mvr ?,iw,-) — l-has, (1. K,eerlcm. ORIENTAL WALTZ (.SV o ),i«c -r) — Walter Matthews Butts. DANCERS — I iirce Pav.iid Innes. Francis FIdward Drake. Robert Munis Phinnev, Aldeii Glover llrew. Ch.is. Whitney H.i«ki-s, W.ildsn Turner GYPSEY DANCE AND FLOWER DANCE tSun-FlOwersi -l lusler Allen. Henry Michael Flinn, Percy Flhan Tillson, F.rnesl Maxwell Smith. John C hurLhcll Damon, C.irletun Murray Emersun, Franklin James ' an Hook, Henry l)oviglas Katon. CSraOiiatiou £Ub6 of J-iinftrrn IninUrcB anU (Tnia J U N E 6 Annual Reception by Alumni Association to the Members ol the Graduating Class, Hotel Brunswick, at 8 p. m. JUNES Baccalaureate Sermon, preacheti by Rev. George A. Gordon, D.D., Old South Church, at 4 p. m. J U N E Q Class Day Exercises, Huntington Hall, at 2.30 p. m. Class Day Spread after exercises JUNE 10 Graduation Exercises, Hunting- ton Hall, at 2.30 p. m. ( H,. muicQU ' Held in Huntington Hall, Monday, June g, 1902, at 2.30 p. m. l voQvam Address by the President of the Class Address by the First Marshal History . . Statistics .... Prophecy ... Oration HAROLD YOUNG CURREY LOUIS SHATTUCK GATES WALTER HAVENS FARMER WILLIAM JASON MIXTER CARLTON BRIGHAM ALLEN ISAAC RAYNE ADAMS Class SDav tfi ffirrrs First Marshal Second Marshal Third Marshal President of the Class Orator Statistician Historian Prophet LOUISE SHATTUCK GATES CHARLES ADRIAN SAWYER, Jr. ALBERT EATON LOMBARD HAROLD YOUNG CURREY ISAAC RAYNE ADAMS WILLIAM JASON MIXTER WALTER HAVENS FARMER CARLTON BRIGHAM ALLEN Class S av Comimttrr HAROLD OTIS BOSWORTH MATT BRODIE ROBERT VAUGHAN BROWN HAROLD YOUNG CURREY JOHN CLYDE FRUIT STEPHEN A. GARDNER, Jr. HENRY KEENE HOOKER CHARLES WETMORE KELLOGG, CHARLES GALLOUPE MIXTER EDSON THOMPSON POLLARD REDFIELD PROCTOR, Jr. FRANK AMBROSE ROBBINS, Jr. GEORGE TILLEY SEABURY KENT TIIIINGHAST STOW Jr. and CLASS DAY OFFICERS 250 Held in Huntington Hall, T uesday, June lo, igc2 program READING OF ABSTRACTS OF THESES ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT CONFERRING OF DEGREES PRESIDENT ' S RECEPTION abstrarts of (EhrsfS Tests of Bridge Rollers . . Tests on Steel Rivets A Study of Calumet Slimes Design of a Museum of War .... An Analytical Investigation of the Products of Hydrolysis of Starch by Acids Test of the Generating Plant of the Brockton Plymouth Street Railway Company . An Investigation of the Relationships of Bacillus Coli Communis and Certain Lactic Acid Bacteria The Operations of European Terminal Top Markets The Study of Mercerization of Piece Goods The Study of the Bacterial Action of a Sceptic Tank A Launching Experiment HENRY McBURNEY, A.B. JAMES DUANE IRELAND, Ph.B. WALDO HUNTER COMINS LeROY E. KERN HERCULES W. GEROMANOS GARDNER ROGERS WILLIAM JASON MIXTER EVERETT L. UPHAM FRANKLIN TINKER ROOT DONALD M. BELCHER EVERETT OWEN EASTWOOD 251 Cl)c Cfst She disagrees on politics, On questions of shadowy gods; On many things of small-talk kind We ' re fearfully at odds. She ' s prim, and many a lark of mine She judges too bizarre. But what of that? She says she likes The smell of a good cigar! 254 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Cl)c Cibil engineering: Rummer eljool of 1902 ti : iy!€ .HE PHRASE SUMMER SCHOOL IS RESPONSIBLE FOR A VARIETY OF EMOTIONS IN THE TECH MAN; BUT THE BODY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS WHO AT- TENDED THE SUMMER SCHOOL OF 1902 COULD CONSUME A SCHOOLGIRL ' S vocabulary of extravagant terms in expressing the general satisfaction that prevailed. That was the keynote of the school — complete satis- faction and not a kick coming from anybody. After trying various localities for the sum- mer schools, the Maine coast has been settled upon as possessing the essential points — excel- lent opportunities for topographical and hydraulic work and a com- fortable climate in the month of June. The school of 1902 was located at Ellsworth, a city of at present about 4,000 inhabitants, situated on the Union River and an entirely new territory for Institute parties. The hackneyed adjective of uneventful would hardly pass as descriptive of the trip to Ellsworth. The cycle-styled sheet supplied to students innocently held forth as follows : Arriving at Rockland at 5 a.m., the party will transfer to steamer of the Rockland, Blue Hill and Ellsworth Co., arriving at Ellsworth at 3.10 p.m. Tuesday, June loth. (Barges will transfer the party from Surry, the steamboat land- ing, to Ellsworth.) Dean Burton, in charge of the school, selected this route because, as he told Professor Robbins, although there were several ways to reach Ellsworth, this one was far the most preferable because of the delightful all-day sail along the Maine coast. If you do not believe in the term eloquent silence consult Professor Robbins on the delightful -ness of the above-mentioned sail. The work of the school was mainly the making of a plane-table survey and hydraulic measurements, with a little geologic field work. As the ground was new to everybody, instructors included, the first day 1904 TECHNIQUE 255 at Ellsworth was spent in reconnois- sance. During the course of the day a site for a base-line for the topographi- cal survey was selected and two signals marking triangulation points were erected. This base-line was later measured, amidst many trials and tribulations. Upon the accuracy of this measurement depended the value of the survey. A tide gauge was placed at a suitable point on the river about two miles below the city, in order that, by daily observations, mean low water could be determined. In the three weeks following, a plane-table survey was made, extending down PLANE TABLE WORK river to the tide river about the including both Roads, located by traverse plane- ferred to the fairly complete country in the ity of the city was work, although for at least one school. Ellsworth opportunities for DRAULIC STATtON gauge and up same distance, banksoftheriver. meansof the road table, were trans- larger maps. A survey of the immediate vicin- the result of this there is plenty left more summer offers exceptional hydraulic work. The means for propulsion of the wheels of many an industry are running useless in the Union River. A hydrauhc measuremen t station was chosen just above the town. Here soundings were made, and velocities measured by the running of sub -surface floats and by several types of water meter. The results from this field work were plotted and computed during the winter term at the Institute. The school made its headquarters at the American House, having the entire third floor for chambers. This HELIOTROPE SIGNALLING. GREEN MOUNTAIN arrangement was entirely compati- 256 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ble with our disposition, but proved rather disastrous to the peace of the establishment. The suicide on this floor the night of the observ- ations on stars for time, etc., never reached the newspapers; but it was none the less interesting. Nelson was at first apparently the responsible party; but mysterious stories quickly shifted the burden to the shoulders of H. S. Baker. As he did not appear disposed to deny the accusations the matter was hushed up as well as possible. Those THE CIVIL ENGINEERING SUMMER SCHOOL mid-night carnivals in the room of Littlefield and Cox are also memor- able events certain of a place in the Encyclopedia Britannica. The three meals of each day were by no means a minor part of the program. With the exception of Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer and Mr. and Mrs. Sweet, the party was seated at one large table and a merry table it was! Deacon Cox, in his role of mock tragedian, was at his best at these times. His pathetic appearance in wet rain-clothes with one lone fish, with the grand climax of the entrance of Fogg, and Littlefield with a bag of the kindred of elasmo-branchs will go shrieking down the annals of time forever. The sings in the hotel J 904 TECHNIQUE 257 parlor on Sunday and other evenings, with Mrs. Sweet at the piano and Cox at the vioUn, with an occasional rendition of Sailor Beware by Seabury, were an important part of the social life of the party. If any of that summer school, in the life ahead, reaches the point where he is hard up for a smile, let him sing Jonah and he ' ll be all right. There are other little incidents to be remembered, such as Baky Baker ' s Bottle, Bates ' numerous baths, Davis ' imitation of Jim on the roof, the weekly vaudeville show in the town hall and Maizie. Oh! what would we have done without Maizie! Altogether, despite the fact that the residents of Ellsworth were slightly remiss in the social hospitality which naturally might have been expected of them, the school did not suffer. Itwas suffi- cient unto itself. While we were occupied i n plane- table and hydraulic work, Professor Barton was scouring the coun- try for geologic feat- ures. He gave us the results of his search- ings in two or three interesting talks. Also one forenoon was devoted to a geological field trip investigating a very well defined esker and delta which Professor Barton had discov- ered. There is one picture of the Professor which every student will remember — as he delivered a lecture on eskers while he and the whole party were slowly sinking to their waists in the waters of a swamp. A very interesting portion of the work of the school was the heliotrope signalling, in order to complete the triangulation and con- nect the survey with the rest of the world. Two days were devoted to this work. The three points of the triangle were Ellsworth Fair Grounds, Blue Hill and Green Mountain, Bar Harbor. The two latter points are Coast Survey triangulation points. Blue Hill is about fourteen miles from Ellsworth and Green Mountain about twenty miles from both. We were fortunate in finishing this work in two GEOLOGICAL FIELD WORK 258 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII days, as it is unusual to have weather over so large an area sunny enough at one time to permit of heliotrope signalling. The school ended its work with a ball game, with the Ellsworth Eurekas, in accordance with a custom of summer schools, but this game differed from the others in one respect, — we won it. Five of the team had never played the game before; but under the lead of Captain Granger the team had done some steady practice noon hours and evenings, and we certainly deserved the victory. Mul (variously dubbed Mule-heim, Mul ' rin, Mulheerin, etc.i was easily the star of the team. Fogg ably fi lled the capacity of catcher, although he disliked his job intensely. Three pop flies to Mul, Johnson and Nelson and out! with a cake at the hotel bearing a 12 to 11 on its frosting! No man who attended that summer school will ever regret it. We came to know our professors differently and better, to know each other and incidentally to learn a little more about ourselves. When seemingly more important things are dead and buried, we ' ll remember well those few happy days at Ellsworth. 1904 TECHNIQUE 259 iFliutng uginrcnng Summer cbool ' NDER THE GUIDANCE OF PROF. R. H. RICHARDS A PARTY OF TWENTY-TWO OF THE SECOND, THIRD AND FOURTH YEAR MINING ENGINEERING STUDENTS TOOK A THREE-WEEKS ' TRIP TO NOVA SCOTIA AND CAPE BRETON ISLAND. The ob- ject of the summer school was to show by actual examples the mining and milling of gold ores, and the different methods of mining, sizing, washing and CDking of bituminous coal; also, the Nova Scotia blast furnace practice and the manufacture of steel from pig metal. By way of emphasis, the smaller and more incom- plete plants were visited first, so that the impressions made by the larger plants were so much the more marked by a later comparison. The party left Boston Saturday, June 14, 1902, bound for Halifax, N. S., on the former United States transport Olivette. The gentle ground swell induced over half of the crowd to seek the welcome seclusion of their staterooms. Gurza needed the most sympathy, while the rest enjoyed the novelty of a night at sea. Arrived at Halifax Sunday afternoon, the party was at once conveyed by barge to the little gold-mining town of Waverley, a distance of some twelve miles. Hotel accommodations being scarce, some of the party were quartered at the different houses and some in an old hotel. Unwelcome visitors at the Hotel caused all, save Dunham, to resort to a midnight plunge in the icy waters of Ten Mile Lake. Dunham was puncture proof. Although Wastcoat is always reticent about it, they say he 260 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII afterwards found the needed repose in a comfortable hayloft. The next morning the party, dressed in old clothes, went into the mine of the Waverley Gold Mining Company and inspected the methods of sinking the shaft, mining, tramming and hoisting the gold-bearing barrel quartz; also the ventilation, mine drainage, and use of com- pressed air. This was supplemented by a study of the geology of the adjacent country and its bearing on the method of working the mine. The generalities of mine management were also explained. The next day opened auspiciously with a genuine dog fight which delayed operations for more than an hour,™after which the power plant and mill were examined. MINING ENGINEERING SUMMER SCHOOL A 98-inch Pelton water wheel (73 feet head) was used to drive the air compressor, and a 15-inch Crocker turbine furnished the power for the 60 -stamp mill and four Wilfley tables, for crushing, amalgamating and concentrating the ore. From Waverley the party went to New Glasgow, which was to be headquarters for the next five days. A visit was made to the Drummond Colliery, Mr. Charles Fergie general manager, at West- ville. Here the students were given an excellent opportunity to study the details of a modern direct-connected hoisting engine, with its winding drums, clutches, etc.; also the ventilating (Walker fan) and air-compressor plants and boiler-rooms. The party went into the 1 904 TECHNIQUE 260- mine and saw the coal mined by the so-called long wall method. From the workings the coal was traced to the sizing and washing plant. The one-quarter-inch coal product from the sizing and hand- picking house was followed to the washer house, where it was fed into a Robinson washer, thence to the draining sieve and finally to ten pairs of beehive coke ovens, from which 6o to 72-hour coke was obtained. The first blast furnace was seen at the plant of the Nova Scotia Iron and Steel Company at Ferrona, where there was also a Stein jig-system coal-washing plant and a bank of Otto Hoffmann coking ovens. The theory of the hot blast for the iron furnace was here practi- cally illustrated, the air from two 1,000-horse-power blowing engines being sent through one of three, 3-pass hot-blast stoves, in which the temperature of the air was raised to about 1050° F. before it entered the bustle-pipe of the furnace. As modesty compelled the party to travel 3d class the return trip had to be made en freight. The most comfortable places were found on the train, the fellows being scattered from the engine to the caboose roof, while Professor Richards had things his own way inside the swaying lookout. A day was spent at Trenton visiting the steel works of the same company. Twelve Smythe and five Fraser-Talbot mechanical gas pro- ducers furnished the gas necessary to heat three brick open-hearth furnaces, having a total capacity of about 100 tons of metal, and one 50-ton Wellman tilting furnace used as a mixer. The steel when finished was cast into five-foot ingots, and transferred to soaking pits to equalize the temperature in each mass of steel. From the soaking pits the ingots were taken to the blooming or rolling mill and there rolled and cut into billets, which were re- heated and again rolled into rails, fish and bed plates, angle irons, etc. Soft steel with 0.09 per cent of carbon was used for rivets. Hot and cold rolling is carried on in this plant, the best shafting being hot- drawn and double-reeled. 260 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII It is interesting to note that the Canadian government pays a bounty of S3.00 per ton on steel made from over fifty per cent of pig iron. This insures better steel, and indirectly causes a larger pro- duction of pig than would otherwise be the case. From New Glasgow the party went by rail to Sydney, Cape Breton, where it was quartered at the Sydney Hotel for the remainder of its stay on the island. Here Specimen found what he thought to be the fossilized vertebra of the now extinct mammoth of the 1 species Elephas primigenious. Unfortunately, however, the find proved to be a few mud ripple marks. On Monday, June 23, the party visited the comparatively new plant of the Dominion Iron and Steel Company, of which Mr. David Baker, M. I. T., ' 85, is general manager. The plant was found to contain, in addition to its four 85-foot blast furnaces and its steel- making plant of ten tilting open -hearth furnaces, a complete coal- sizing and washing plant; also eight banks of fifty Otto Hoffmann ovens each, from which 40 per cent of the gas was used in other parts of the works after the tar, ammonia, naphthalene, etc., had been removed in the gas-washing house. An interesting feature in 1904 TECHNIQUE 260 c connection with the washing or purification of the gas was the manufacture of sulphuric acid from very pure Spanish pyrites, for the precipitation of the ammonia as ammonium sulphate from the wash water through which the gas had passed. The four Campbell- designed blast furnaces, together with the sixteen-battery Babcock and Wilcox boiler plant, the Allis 1500 horse-power vertical blowing engines with Julian Kennedy air valves, the 2-pass Cowper-Kennedy hot-blast stoves, the ore and flux heaps with the conveyors, etc., gave an excellent idea of modern blast furnace practice. In the open- hearth plant the students were given ample opportunity to study the construction and operation of the Campbell 50-ton open-hearth furnaces, together with the regenerative system of heating the air for combustion. Several trips were made to the company ' s coal mines at Glace Bay, where the total daily output is in the neighborhood of 13,000 tons of bituminous coal. The coal was found to be mined almost entirely by the pillar and stall method, in which it was aimed to extract all of the coal in each seam. At the Dominion No. 2 mine was seen the largest vertical shaft in that part of the country, and one which, when completed, will have a daily output of 6,000 tons of coal. The shaft measures 37 by 1 1 feet, and extends vertically downward 995 feet from the axle of the hoisting pulley. Two days were spent at Glace Bay in learning the 260 ' TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII CLINKER BOY elements of mine and plane-table surveying, and also the laying out of simple railroad curves. A slip caused Shorty Holbrook to take to his heels, and they say he outrivals the fleet-footed Achilles when he gets started. An entire morning was occupied by a six- mile inspection tour through the workings of the old North Sydney mines. Here Beulah and Norton balked. The pace of the past two weeks had begun to tell, and it was necessary to leave them in a coalpocket while the party proceeded to explore the mine. The mining is done by both the pillar and stall and long wall systems, and at present the workings extend a mile and a half under the sea and twelve thousand feet vertically beneath the ocean bed. This ended the practical work of the summer school, and the next day the party broke up, some going to Halifax by way of the Bras d ' Or Lakes, so noted for their scenery and its colorings. The rest of the party returned by way of Truro, in order to see the much-heard-of bore or incoming rush of water from the tide in the Bay of Fundy. A position was selected at South Maitland, near a bend in the Shubenacadie River, and at the proper time the bore appeared, though of much less magnitude than had been expected. The bore made its way up-river with an estimated velocity of about nine miles an hour, the water rising ten feet in fourteen minutes. After a day of sightseeing in Halifax, the party left for Boston on the steamship Halifax. This time Spider Burr was the only one to be pitied. He didn ' t mind the rolling so much, but strenously ob- jected to the pitching. The hospitaUty with which the members of the party were everywhere received, and the interest which the different managers showed in throwing open their plants and mines to the students. 1904 TECHNIQUE 261 have made an impression on the men which will not be readily for- gotten. This, together with the untiring efforts of Professor Richards in the arrangement and carrying out of the interesting itinerary, has made the Summer School of 1902 what is probably the most success- ful one in the history of the Institute. 262 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII i abal architects dtp N A PLEASANT SATURDAY OF NOVEMBER, A PARTY OF NINE FUTURE NAVAL ARCI- TECTS FROM THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY MET AT the pier of the Merchant Miners line on Atlantic Avenue. Professor Peabody and Admiral Schofield were to be our guides, one the scientific and the other the moral, on our course of inspection through those shipyards of the Atlantic coast that we had planned to visit. Crosby, the noble president of the Naval Architectural Society; Parker and Cross, two solid and remarkably intelligent beings; Schofield, Jr., semi-clergyman of the party; Turner, the great joker; Egerton; the little f usser ; and Lage, the great fusser ; together with the two nobili- ties, composed the famous party that was to give their nod of approval to the eastern shipyards. On leaving the Atlantic Avenue pier on the good ship Howard, the sea, the clouds and the wind were at peace; but with Boston light astern, the elements disagreed. The chasing clouds hid from us the poetic moon. The wind, surging in our ears; and the sea and our lunch, seemingly never wishing to reach its own level ; kept our party from being too hilarious. Hold fast, Eggy, was the joke of the hour; but no one had nerve enough to approach the rail and call for fish. For obvious reasons our party retired early to spend a night of troubled dreams. The following morning was remarkable for the fact that the sun shone a few hours and that Lage lost his hat overboard. Cross and Parker fussed from q A. M. to 12 P. M., with the time and angle 1904 TECHNIQUE 263 of rolling of the Howard. After a very elaborate calculation, the accuracy of which can be doubted, as the computation was done by head by a very doubtful system, the following results were arrived at: Time, 7 minutes and 15.035 seconds; angle of rooling, 30° 20 11.5 . In the evening, after a visit to the engine room, we all dashed into Crosby ' s room to make friends with a certain box that was to be opened for the occasion. Our Professor joined the meeting, and we certainly enjoyed the evening. Everyone, of course, told a little sensible story, and the Professor himself did not scorn them, for he laughed: mercy, how he laughed! The following day at seven o ' clock, we landed at Norfolk, and with our two guides in the lead, we started. Fort Monroe was visited and a lecture on U. S. history given. We were allowed to visit the fort more or less in detail; but our interest was mostly confined to the famous 24-inch disappearing gun. After visiting Hampton Institute, the party took electrics to Newport News shipyard. We were rather unfortunate as regards the weather, for the first vue d ' ensemble of the yard was in the pouring rain. Then we visited the different parts of the yard in detail. The mould-loft, the machineshop, the boilershop, etc.; nothing escaped our observation. We also had an opportunity to inspect a U. S. gunboat in the process of construction. Back on the Howard that night, we slept the sleep of the just. Next morning everyone, except the lazy Lage, was up early to take the train to Sparrow ' s Point where the Maryland Steel Company is located. The treasurer of the company met our party and proceeded to explain the main features of the yard; and nothing was spared to make us enjoy this most profitable visit. As a side attraction, we inspected a tramp steamer that had been damaged by fire. During lunch, Eggy disappeared, and, although we inquired and hunted for him, he was not to be found. After lunch, the iron works and blast furnace were visited, and Professor Hofman ' s lectures appreciated. At four o ' clock, while waiting for the train to Baltimore, our friend 264 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Eggy hove in sight and explained that (prepare for the worst) he had got a shave. At Baltimore a train was taken to Washington, where we visited the experimental tank and the gun factory in the Navy yard. Much to our disappointment, repairs were being made to the tank and no test was run. The afternoon of that day was free to us, and each one drifted at his own will to see the sights. It is worthy of note that Eggy remained the whole afternoon at the railroad station, watching the trains go in and out. The New York Ship Building Company was next on our program. This shipyard is situated at Camden, near Philadelphia, and is to my mind the most remarkable of all those we had seen. One is most impressed by its grand appearance, and the most orderly and compact way in which the work is carried on. In this yard, the principle of bridge construction in shipbuilding is being applied with success. We were getting to the end of our trip with only the Elizabeth yard near New York to be visited. This yard is small compared to those we had already seen. We had a chance to inspect in detail two cruisers for the Mexican government, as well as a monitor for the U. S. Navy. When we arrived at New York, we certainly felt sorry to end our most delightful trip; but Tech could not stand it any longer without Course XIII. So with the determination to pursue our studies to a better advantage and to prove whenever we had the chance that the Naval Architects ' trip is by far the best means of broadening one ' s ideas, we returned to old Boston. !1 7-m I A O CECIL H. PEABODY ■Cecil Hyprise Pea- body was born in Steamville, Conn., in 1845. Noticing, one day, that the steam issuing from his mother ' s kettle was wet and hot, he saw at once the market value of dramatizing it in book-form. At the age of ten, he constructed his first valve-gear out of a tomato-can, and some sawdust, but finding it did not meet with general favor, he compiled a medley of catalo- gue-cuts entitled Steam Indicators. While an extremely useful little book for its author, the price did not cover the ground thoroughly, a few square inches being still exposed to view. Accordingly he published a number of other books, among those not presents being Thermodyamics, price, S3. 75; Illustrations of Steam Engines, price, $1.25; and Valve- gears, price, $2. 60. They all filled a long-felt want and purse. He was the originator of the Peabody Method of teaching. The memory of Cecil Hyprise Peabody is ever green. ARLO BATES While the exact date of the birth of Arlo Florence Bates, like that of Shake- speare, is not known, it is generally conceded that it must have taken place at some time previous to the extermination of the English sparrows. Of his early life we know little, except that he had a noble love for the good and the true, and, an ingrowing artistic temperament concealed somewhere on his person. After hav- ing received the rudiments of his education at Bowdoin College, he became the editor of the Woman ' s Column of a Boston monthly, which position he held with high honor for several days. His first book, Thoughts I have Thunk, while lacking the maturity and finish of his later efforts, show unmistakable signs of genius in the reader who understands them. The best known of his works are Love in a Crowd, The Puritans, The Pagans, The Philis- tines The Hoodlums, and an introduction to the Principles of English Decomposition. A , CHARLES CROSS W Charles Ohm Cross first saw the light of day through the diffraction- grating of an incubator, and immediately be- gan to calculate its velocity. Many children have cut open their rattles to find whence the sound comes; but not so with Charles Cross. He knew that it was merely a sensation caused bv the momentary vibration of the air-mole- cules beating against the tympanum of the ear, and besides he had no rattle, but a tuning- fork instead. From the first, he was a firm be- liever in the theory of the rectilinear propa- gation of light, for he discovered when still in his teens that he could not see around a corner. His talk, though light, was often sound. It is claimed by some that Newton, seeing an apple drop, immediately grasped the idea of gravitv. Charles Ohm Cross, however, when still a child went a step farther and picked up the apple, thus demonstrating the law of the conserva- tion of matter. E i a '  . ' . 1%; W0 r Sjw,t.= -H GEORGE SCHLITZ ZIPPOLD «r In the beau- tiful little German village of Anheuser-on- the-Eis was born George Schlitz Zippold, the German Napoleon. His likeness, in his early days, to Bismark, was marked by everybody who had a grudge against Bismark. While at- tending school, he and Goethe were warm friends. Out of this friendship, there grew the following verses which the immortal Goethe penned in honor of his friend: Du bist wie ein Kartoffel, So hock, so schon, so rein Mein luff fur dich ist awful Ach golly, ain ' t you fine? Among the most famous of Zippold ' s works are How to Look a Joke without Words, German Made Easy for Beginners, and Ab- sence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder. George Zippold is famous, not for what he has done, but for what he would have done had he done something else. •Q ft s4m •: ■' ••;i«. ' ■■' : i: , Sita,j: ; 274 TECHNIQUE (Svtutis Vol. XVIII Let us laugh and be merry while we live, for we shall be dead a long time. Mr. Blachstien i about to ask Doherty, ' 04, if he SDlit sections) : Good morning, Mr. Doherty, do you split? Doherty: 0 nevaire, Mr. Blachstein,nevaire! IN SALON AND SALOON Roberts, ' 04 lin Political Economy 1 : Shorter working hours would increase the distribution of wealth, because men would have more time to spend the money. USE WET WATER W. A. Evans ito Mr. Lambirth, who is tempering springs in water) : Is it necessary to use spring water? MR. ERHARDT HAS A SPASM Student in Mr. Erhardt ' s class (trying to translate Letzte Nacht hatte ich das folgende Traum 1 : Last night I followed a dream. ASK THE COW Freshman (to Mr. Russell in Chemistry 1: Is whipped cream an allotropic form of milk? Mr. Erhardt : This is the only legend of the heroic age that remains with us, and we have lost it. HE FORGOT FLATIRONS Professor Hofman : There are three kinds of iron — cast iron, wrought iron and steel. .: r ' ..:5K£,s ifettiasP 1904 TECHNIQUE 275 «V ' What is the critical point? It is the point at which Dana P. Bartlett ' s smile ends and his frown begins. First Freshman : Say, I can ' t find out what A is? Second Ditto : Never mind, old man, you ' re equal to it. COME ON, BOYS! Said one hair in Charlie Cross ' beard to another which was vainly trying to make room for itself to grow: There ' s plenty of room at the top. STRUCK BY A THOUGHT MAY RECOVER P. G. Hill , ' 04, was recently found in the mechanical laboratories leaning against an anvil in a trance. He was wondering how they made the first pair of tongs without a pair of tongs to hold them with. TECHNIQUE IS NOT THE ONLY GRINDER SECRETARILY SPEAKING Freshman (to Harry Tyler in Trig, i : Will the exam, cover only the last five weeks? Secretary Tyler (cautiously) : Primarily I cannot authentically state whether it will be exclusively on the last five weeks. i ' 4 WORSE THAN TWINS A lo Bates (in English lecture): Wordsworth, Coleridge, Scott and Lamb were all born about the same time — in fact , history shows that great men are born in B bunches. ki BLIND IN ONE EAR Mr. Dike ( hearing a loud noise issue from the ventilator) : It looks as if it came from that hole. .: ,f ' fit ffv f f My} ' f ' ■... , . i I ' t ' X i MS M.A w , y rrrri LLU ' ■; f , : : s M u. Si . TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII HE KNEW IT WAS SOMETHING BIG Professor Wells (making the sign oo ): And what does this sign mean? Freshman: Eternity. A ONE-ACT MONOLOGUE Scene : The Drawing-room Cast of Characters: Calkins, ' 04, and a New Instructor Calkins is busy drawing, when the New Instructor walks up to him and watches him draw. Calkins does not know he is the New Instructor, and being naturally of a sensi tive nature, he dislikes being watched by one whom he thinks a Freshman.) Calkins i looking up at the New Instructor ) : Say, sport, what would you do if you were tired? ( The New Instructor remains silent.) Calkins: I ' d go lay down. (Prolonged silence.) Calkins : And by the way, if a hen and a half can lay an egg and a half in a day and a half, how long will it take a bald-headed rooster to lay a batch of buckwheat cakes? (Painful silence.) Calkins: How long will it take a hen to lay a carpet? (The New Instructor walks away, and Calkins continues drawing, well satis- fied with himself.) v ' mm- . ' I A SUGGESTION TO YOUTHFUL INSTRUCTORS 190 4 TECHNIQUE 277 HE GOT IT Peiler i excitedly rushing round to find the Heat lecture-room ' : Where can I find Heat? Bystanders in unison i: Go to h- I! After writing on three questions in PoHtical Economy class, the papers were passed to the front. Cooper, ' 04, left a blank space against the question, What is wealth? and the man to whom it was passed wrote in this space for him : Gosh darned if I know. J. C. Baker, ' 04 1 to Professor Peabody in Thermo. 1 : Will you please tell me where we can see one of these ,Carnot engines working? Professor Peabody : I don ' t intend to take the time of the class to answer questions that are asked in a humorous vein. Baker who comes from Syracuse, N. Y. : Ahnest, Professor Peabody, I didn ' t mean it humorous. CHARLIE ' S JOCULAR SIMILE Professor Cross ( showing the effects of eddy-currents on a silver dollar : You see they stick to the silver dollar like — like — Bryan. REPARTEE Rollins, ' 04 I coming from forging 1 : Hello, Mac, where are you going? McQuaid, ' 04 i coming from lunch): 0, I ' ve been foraging and now I ' m going to forg- ing. Where are you going? Rollins: 0, I ' ve just been hammering some bolts and now I ' m going to bolt some ham. H AN INSIGNIFICANT FIGURE ' JUST LIKE BURRIE Mr. Burrison discovering a Freshman trying to draw a circle with an irreg- ular curve i: No, no; you mustn ' t do it that way; use your triangles. Mr. George: Mr. Weaver, how did you do this example? Weaver, ' 05 : I did it the impossible way. Haar, ' 04 : Does the explosion in the cylinder of a gas engine take place between the head end and the crank end? ' J ' ' iFJT - ' fe ' S ' f4;t5 ' y ' - s? ' . ' s:- 278 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ' . ' i v METAMORPHOSIS Freshman lin the lunch-room i : ■■' iJ( % i!j %Jf%7J — What Course II Prof, is that coming in the door? Junior: He ' s Park, now, but when he goes out he ' ll be Fuller. — HE NEEDS IT IN HIS OWN — SYSTEM - mmmwmmi Instructor in Physics Laboratory : r rv Why did you not express t=TT f in the metric system? ' g Student : I didn ' t know the value IT in the metric system. A REDUCING AGENT ' RATTLED Professor Sondericker lin Applied) : In what terms is the stress expressed? Cerf, ' 04: In feet-inches. I Great applause, i Cerf (making another tryi: In foots-pound. SOMETHING WOULD DROP Haar (in Theoret.): If I touched the two terminals of a 2,000-volt arc machine, would there be a drop in potential? Professor Clifford: No, not at the instant you touched them. Haar (persistently): Would there be an instant later? Professor Clifford : You wouldn ' t care. m A. R. Holbrook, ' 04, indulges in the weed, and takes Business Law and Topographical Drawing. It looked appropriate, therefore, when he had on his tabular view the 1 1 abbreviations B.L. and T.D. J, } | A JOINT AFFAIR Professor Albers (in Business Law): If three men go out and have a joint celebration. THROWING IN THE CROSS FEED ' . .■.■i: ai ' .iife ' jtkas? jt ' -.-LS ri-;. 1904 TECHNIQUE BE ON THE SAFE SIDE Professor Miller (giving first instructions in Engineering Laboratory work i : When making engine tests, you should wear gog- gles to protect your eyes. We avoided an accident by doing this last year. Five glass tubes exploded into a man ' s face and pep- pered it full of glass. It might have been serious if he hadn ' t protected his eyes. WHAT ' S THE USE Professor Fuller: The problem says to omit the rivet holes; that means to take account of them. No, I am wrong; the problem says to take account of them; that means to omit them. AIN ' T IT? Getty Lanza : Mr. Fitzler will please explain what he did and how he done it. i ' , A DEFINITION Mr. Dike (in French class i : The neck is that part of the bottle you break when you can ' t get the cork out. _ A SAFE WAY Mr. Carter (in Analyt. recitation i : Has anyone solved this problem? (Hamilton, ' 04, holds up his hand. 1 Mr. Carter: Well, Mr. Hamilton, you may explain. Hamilton: Why, I just assumed the book was correct and put down the answer. WILD FLOWERS I HAVE MET Gouldis Mouthibus This night blooming weed, of the common or garden variety, was discovered by a deaf Indian, so the story goes, who heard it coming two miles away. It belongs to the genus Butcherum Cabbagensium, and no attempt has ever been made to cultivate it. Its rough growth thrives on swampy ground. It cannot be grown successfully in a hothouse, it being essentially a roughhouse plant. It grows in any old soil, the more so, the better. It has recently been transplanted with great success. - ' • jiil ■i 280 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Maiden-Haar Fern — No bouquet to give to dear teacher should be without a spray of maiden-Haar fern. No class-room is complete without one. It is a hardy little plant, it will grow and grow, unfolding each tiny petal of thought until you begirt to wonder where it is all coming from. Harry Clifford, the botan- ist, says: It is a delight to me, and furnishes me with my chief reason for my belief in a Deity. I would like to have a pressed specimen in my dictionary. Sudden changes in temperature do not affect the maiden-Haar fern, and it blooms from early spring until further notice. Kalmustard plant A beautiful flower, growing upon two long, slender stalks. No further description is necessary. Cartyola Duplex — One of these handsome Cartyolas is so like another that it is only with difficulty that one tells them apart when they are together, or together when they are apart. They thrive best in a secluded spot, and require little attention. S%. Chickedee Emersorium — A sort of sea-weed growing on the bottom of vessels. Is a day blooming as well as a night blooming serious. With very little thought it can radiate intelligence to a remarkable degree. Can be found thriving in the drawing room. Dorhertyus Smilax - A hard little perennial plant growing in all climates. It is claimed that flies will not stay in a room where it is grown if they can con- veniently escape. It is sure to please everybody. It blooms in the evening and is generally found in double mixed colors. Crowellwort, or Robin-run-over-the-ground This little plant, if planted in one corner of a garden, will soon be found all over the place. It requires but little care, and is not particular as to sun. Price thirty cents per package. Vosbury ' s Best Flower — This belongs to the genus moustachio tryhposa, and would be excellent for a hanging plant. Sweet Williams - Belongs to the genus Slickasday Makum. Put up expressly for the fine trade. A. E. Holbrook Clematis - A trellis is required for the proper culture of }:{jfjt;Hfeyj_ this plant. It is rather peculiar in its ways, and should not be confounded with f ;3j , Wt the cheap showy articles offered by other dealers. Sold by the foot. Whittaker Lily A finer, purer plant could not be found. It has been sug- gested as a suitable emblem for the Y. M. C. A. It requires nothing but water and little of that. Downes Palm best sell. An excellent parlor plant with pipe attachment. It is our ■x. :. - ' 1 19 04 TECHNIQUE 281 Holcombe Potato Flower - This handsome garden ornament is the result of much digging. While other gaudy flowers are spreading out their tendrils and petals, this plant is sending down its thousand little roots to absorb the deep- ness of the depths of Nature. Hoy Morning Glory - A substantial plant that has been likened to a heavy gust of wind coming down a mountain side. Just the thing to keep chickens away. No fertilizer needed. Mason Easter Lily The delicacy and beauty of the lily have made it emblematic. This lily must be grown in the finest quartz pebbles and filtered and triple-distilled spring water. Nothing further need be said. Sent in sealed, plain package. me, Professor Bates, a Soph, told One morning came to Tech, And, strange to say, he had no tie Around his manly neck. I felt like telling Arlo Bates, (I would have, but I dursn ' ti. That there is nothing quite so bad But what it might be worsened. It would have been more neglige If he had taken fancies. And started absent-mindedly To come without his pantsies. . THINGS ARE NOT WHAT THEY SEEM Professor Peabody: A door-check closes a door because you have first given it the power by opening the door and thus compressing the spring; so that when you open a door you are really closing it. NO LOOPHOLE HERE Professor Albers (in Business Law): Law is that which every- body is presumed to know, which nobody does know, and which the Supreme Court is paid for having the last guess at. l-DE PARK ' •tvS TECH N I Q U E ' U ' Vol. XVIII OVERHEARD IN ENGINEERING ALLEY First Junior: Was Peabo ' s lecture clear to you? Second Junior: Clear as mud. First Junior: Well, that covers the ground. AN INFINITE SERIES Professor Peabody (when the automatic temperature regulator has failed to work properly) : What we need is a regulator to regulate the regulator. HE WANTED TO LEARN, CROWELL J. W. Crowell, ' 04 (to bystander who is watching him build a fire at a forge 1: Is this your forge? Bystander (who, unknown to Crowell, is an instructor) : No. Crowell: Then what the h 1 are you rubbering for? VERY ADVANCED FRENCH Mr. Dike: The problem of the con- -y- , cierge in France is more momentous than ' that of the servant girl in this country, as any of you will know who have had experience with servant girls. A LITTLE LATIN IS A DANGEROUS THING Mr. Frizzell (to student who has made a mistake in turning a doughnut- shaped piece of wood on a lathe in the shops) : Ah, I see you have made a bull. Key to Joke. Geometrically, a doughnut has the shape of a torus, pronounced exactly like taurus, which is the Latin word for bull. P. J. Sullivan, ' 05 (describing a Freshman soldier): He was so bow-legged they had to cut his drill pants on a circular saw. 1904 TECHNIQUE 283 SHOULD HAVE WAITED Professor Cross i in Physics lecture ) : This thermopile can be used to measure the heat from a man ' s face a mile away. (At this point, Rhodes, ' 05, hastily leaves the room. 1 Professor Cross 1 blandly 1: I was going to add that it has been used to measure the heat coming from stars. I WONDER WHY! Professor Peabody : The Pratt and Whitney company found they couldn ' t make a perfect cylinder, so they decided to stop making them. ,::S ' -Vr- HE ' LL HAVE TO TAKE A LATCH-KEY When Noughty Four is here no more, But exists in a gaseous state, And all the class has grimly passed Beyond the pearly gate, I bet St. Peter ' s words will be : Mr. Porter, you are late. iHERE LIES THE LATE ik; ap Porter A POKER JOKER Professor Johnston ito B. H. Miller in Applied) : I ' ll have to raise you ten, Mr. Miller. A quiet young fellow named Leh, Met a bull in a pasture one deh With a nerve quite immense He showed be could fence. But when up against Harvard, Oh seh! YOU WILL SEE IT BY DEGREES Professor Hofman (in fourth-year Met- allurgy): The conver ter is then turned through an angle of 180 degrees Centi- grade. ■: ' ' ?sxy . mkr •■i Ji TO SUPERSEDE PEBO (Special despatch to TECHNIQUE by Associated Press) W. A. Nelson has just discovered a method to calculate the weight of a pound of steam by Thermo. TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII FAMILIAR Professor Dewey ( after waiting for the students to find the price of a commodity under certain con- ditions): Well, has anyone got the price? WHAT THOUGHT DID Professor Dippold (in German class i : Have you prepared this lesson? Atkins, ' 04 (who has just made a poor recitation 1: I thought I had. Professor D. : Well, you ' d better take a deeper thought next time. Barlow, ' 04 1 writing from Mr. Dike ' s dictation) : How is that word spelled? Mr. Dike : It is spelled exactly as it is written. Doctor Wendell (in Physics): In Leipsic a pro- fessor gave the following illustration to show the action of + and — ions. Before separation they may be likened to a lot of men and women swimming around in the water; they all keep together by mu- tual attraction. But if on one bank of the river there appears a sign, Free Beer, and on the other, Bar- gain Sale Here, the two will separate, the men going to the first and the women rushing for the second, by attraction. THE FACULTY CALENDAR First Year Weeding out of students that are — irrevocably hopeless. Second Year Another chance for the doubtful ones. Third Year- Weeding out of those who have failed to use the chance. Fourth Year Graduation of the survivors. ■. righth vnoed couple ' Sii : C - ' :-- 904 TECHNIQUE 285 QUESTION IN POL. ECON. EXAM. How are National Bank notes secured? N. L. Snow, ' 04, thinks this is as good a way as any. RECITATION BY PROXY A One-act Farce Mr. Lawrence (unfamiliar with the students 1: What is an achromatic lens, Mr. er (looking at his list 1 Mr. Ballou? Mr. Ballou keeps his peace. 1 Mr. Lawrence; Well, is Mr. Ballou present? Weaver, ' 04 (slightly hard of hearing) : I beg your par- don, what was that? Mr. Lawrence : What is an achromatic lens? (Brilliant recitation by Weaver, and the villian escapes. Curtain.! I DON ' T KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN Mr. Albers: Now when you hire a team, the implied contract presumes you will take reasonably good care of it, and in case of accident you will not be responsible- -that is if you use two hands in driving. vm f ' A THIS IS SO SUDDEN Holbrook, ' 04, coming down the Walker steps, put his arm absently around a Co- edu- cational, thinking it was Ingram, who was side of him but a short while before. A breach- of-promise suit may follow. PROFESSOR ALLEN ' S COMPETITOR Professor Robbins: Has anyone a piece of wedgewood to wedge this axe-head on? Langley, ' 04 : Here ' s a piece of wedge- wood china; will that do? Professor Robbins: That ' s just about as good as some of Professor Allen ' s jokes. im -««44i g; iv--ia£. r j;i ■i 286 TECHNIQUE PECULIAR, ISN ' T IT J. W. Crowell, ' 04 1 calmly chewing a chocolate- covered piece of soap 1 : Very peculiar taste this choco- late has. Vol. XVIII TYLER ' S READY BITS Student (inspecting his envelope of roll slips); What ' s this — a sample package of breakfast food? f-il UNITED STATES ENGLISH SHOULD BE PERFOHMEO UNDER THE hOOO Professor Dewey (in Pol. Econ. ) : This can be changed by slapping on a tax onto the land owners which will slice off the tax from the poor people. I DIDN ' T QUITE CATCH IT Professor Swain: A word to the wise is sufficient. Gentlemen, if I have to repeat a thing fifty times, draw your own inferences. m From NEW YORK ADAMS EXPRESS COMPANY TECH HAS CHANGED ITS NAME J 904 TECHNIQUE ON THE RO D TO V Lang thinks it is a long way to Wayland. WHATEVER YOU DO, DON ' T DO IT Mr. Harrison W. Smith (lecturing on Dynamos i : It is perfectly safe to take a live wire in one hand that is, it ' s a very foolish thing to do. Mr. Dike: What is the similarity between a gorge and a man who has gorged himself? Langley, ' 04 : They both have a slant on. Doctor Moore : Will anyone attempt to explain how we can obtain a sub- limate of arsenic by heating a substance in a closed tube? S. E. Brown 1 excitedly 1: If you put arsenic in the tube you ' ll get arsenic out. ABOUT APPLIED Not good I think my marks will be, But one thing I know well. That be it F or be it C, I know Applied is — L! HARD ON BOSTON Gold is brought from the Klondike to the lower regions Boston, for ex ample. — Cross. TRANSLATIONS UP TO DATE BY DOCTOR KURRELMEYER Sie die Schonste sei She was the whole thing. Unbeschreiblichen Rausch — A jag. Zueifelnden Blickes — Goo-goo eyes. TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII WALTER L. CRONIN Without me and the co-eds the class picture is a failure. THE CAMEL AND THE NEEDLE ' S EYE Professor Miller lin Thermo.): Tomorrow we will go through the barrel calorimeter. NEVER USED IT i First Freshman: I don ' t see why they want to ! learn us English here for. Yc Second Freshman: Neither do . It ain ' t no use t- ' for engineers. H- ' WE DOUBT IT Mr. Dike (in French): There are only two feminine ' (f forms. 5fei,dgi.«.u. ?y . ;::. . ... ■J: si ' : ' :J isi is!u 19 04 TECHNIQUE OUR JACK With Apologies One shade the more, one ray the less Had half impaired the nameless grace Which waves in every raven tress Or softly lightens o ' er his face, Where thoughts serenely sweet express How pure, how dear their dwelling-place And on that cheek and o ' er that brow So soft, so calm, yet eloquent, The smiles that win, the tints that glow But tell of days in goodness spent, A mind at peace with all below, A heart whose love is innocent. WILSON THAT ' S ALL Professor Sondericker fin Applied) : The same thing causes beams to slant, and it don ' t look well to see beams slant. 1 saw Archibald Mears home un ., short vacation lectritly. Htr wil giailu- ate this year £] cm tiie famous ' J ei li- ni --al School, at Boston, wheie they say 4. uer centJ, of tlie freshmen frfil to pass their xams. and are sent home. Mr. Mears. 1 understand, is third from the top. on the list of a thousand .students, and last Summer, dming bl£ vacali ' in had full i-hxite of a big electrical uuik m New YoiK. Mr. ilpars is thf- rinest ookijig specimen .of American manhood 1 liave ever ■een. Over six feet tail and liiuilt i r propor- tion, and a remarkaijly strong and handsome face. ;He is a great- favorite at the school, and one of ahe 1. adlntr athletes. If J am a prophet, .in. I Mr .Mears lives, he will inaUe hi-; -mark in the elei-trical eu. iiiecririg void OBJECT: The object of this Society is to promote Woman Suffering. PETTICOAT OF ARMS: Rampant jackass surmounted by a wreath of violets and a bottle of hair-oil. CLUB FLOWER: Lady ' s Slipper. Cbtrf f dBBfv CHARLES LOWELL HOMER li)arr=prrBnm))tti)f to tl)c (Tbroum ARTHUR CALDWELL DOWNES Cnijop Crtraorliinarii tD S fllrtslfp PAUL PEACHAM McCLEARY PAINE Committrr on (Embroiljrring: fHonog;ram6 ADDISON FRANCIS HOLMES ©n tbr l atting: Liot HERBERT WILLARD GODDARD Smong; tljoBc JJrfBtnt Charles Stillman Sperry, Jr. Currier Lang Arthur Osborne Roberts Everett Osgood Hiller John Earl Cunningham Evarts Wilson Charles Ralph Osborne Ingram Late Mirror Tester with the Paine Furniture Company. 291 ncaiHnr OBJECT: The object of this Club is to raise the standard by means of oxidization of oil. MOTTO: We ' re oil right. CONSTITUTION: Section i, Article i. In order to become eligible to this organization, a member must spend as much time in study as is required according to the catalogue, plus a constant. Section i, Article -,; 3. To the member making the best record, a copy of the log. tables will be given. tl rmlirrs of tlir Corporation Amasa Maynard Holcombe Harry Herman Cerf Carl King Fred Hall Wilder William Newman Todd Harry Fordham Noyes Walter Stanley Brown Chaplain DON LOOMIS GALUSHA 0uar5ian of tljftDratutnffKoom WILLIAM LESLIE DOTEN 292 pun Qricci OBJECT: The object of this Club is to prove to the world that we have found the Fountain of Eternal Youth. CLUB FLOWER: Grass. CLUB COLOR: Grass. President Vice-President Secretary JOEY CROWELL WILLIE CHANDLER ERNIE CALKINS jH embers Allie Courtney Charlie Broad Ernie Rupf Emmie Cockrill Ralphy Hayden Eddie Cooper Georgie Fairfield Georgie Bates Coiiunittrr on iJ ' liroUiimj Crasfis Ernie Calkins Willie Chandler 293 [Name founded in 1570 by Sir Francis Drake. J OBJECT: Original research. MOTTO : Whatever is worth seeing at all is worth seeing well. CLUB FLOWER: Sunflower CONSTITUTION: Our constitution shall follow the Tech flag. £l)trf jttoJiiliio nf euitsticitu HAROLD HOWARD GOULD- FREDERICK SANFORD ANDERSON := Ltttif itloBiili Joseph Cheney Baker Alden Glover Drew Charles Henry Drew, 2d Herbert Percival HoUnagel John Howard Draper ■Otis Dwight Fellows, Jr. Committer on holUntg; iDoiun thr LJogrie S ' trpo HERBERT KINSLEY DRAPER ' Absent. ittiooionari) to forrign Lanflc DMITRI ALEXANDER BARY- 294 1904 TECHNIQUE 295 From The Chelsea bladder LAST night a small but appreciative audience witnessed the initial performance of Wagner ' s immortal opera, Longreen , or Money is no Object to Us , as played by the professors of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The performance which is staged under the direction of Jack the Janitor, was in aid of Poor and Needy Students Who Have Become Impoverished by Buying Books and Notes at Canal Street Prices. The Tech Press Club occupied two boxes on the right; the other boxes were filled with faculty parties. Promptly at eight o ' clock the rest of the audience came in and seated himself and the curtain was immediately rung up. In all the writer ' s experience as a theatrical critic he has never seen such enthusiasm on the part of the actors to carry out the plot. Each and every one on the stage did so well, that it would be treason to single out any one for special praise. The subtle and scathing sarcasm of Arlo Bates was truly great in that magnificent and tremendous scene in which he tells Esmeralda that she must act more like a lady. Billy Baird as the Little Corporal showed us what he really could do when goaded to desperation. The tiry humor of Theodore Dippold in his Stein Song was actually hygro- scopic. But the hit of the evening came when Cecil Peabody gave his great rendering of See the Little Angels. The shells were afterwards swept up. The chorus was composed principally of members of the instruct- ing staff. The French Ballet by Dike and Erhardt was very chic! and the duet Be My Queen by Henrietta Burrison and Linus was very well received. The music was exceptionally good and when Harry Clifford sang his great Love Song in F flat without once touch- ing C, he received such tremendous ovation that he repeated it in double F. Getty ' s sweet voice, aptly called mezzo-soprano-basso- profoundo-graino-hello with just a tinge of canary in it, added to the excitement. The flying ballet piked from Sleeping Beauty was beautiful. When the last curtain went down, the delighted audience left, a better man for having seen the show. Score of the opera can be procured at Mac ' s at regular prices. 298 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII r , — J ' — , — J =i 300 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII SHALL TECH LEAD OR FOLLOW? There ' s a whisper in the air, you can hear it everywhere : The Institute is soon to move away from Copley Square. In the country it will rise to an unexampled size, With a beauty and completeness that will win a world ' s surprise. There ' ll be student-houses, then, made to fit a thousand men. And a hundred things beyond the mere description of a pen. There ' ll be storage-houses new, and a real gymnasium, too, And a laundry, and a Union, and a thousand things to do. The Walker building here will be sold and disappear And in its place a business block the purchasers will rear. The Rogers building ' s walls will be gutted of their halls And refitted in a manner to respond to modern calls. The antiquated gym will be put in railroad trim; The shops will be devoted to an automobile whim. Engineering, Lowell, Pierce, in the money-making hearse Will be carried to the graveyard of a factory or worse. But the new Tech will regale all the hearers of the tale — ' Twill be twice as large as Harvard, and three times as large as Yale. There will be a campus wide, and a training field beside. And everything that makes the Institute a fellow ' s pride. And the population there will be quite beyond compare With the meagre fifteen hundred now allotted as our share ; And each course as big will be as the present M. I. T., And a Bachelor of Science may become a Ph.D. In the comprehensive look, everything is brought to book — All are destined to improvement from our Prexy to the Cook. The Lunch-room Sovereign ' s in, and Thompson ' s bound to win, Even Israel Spinoza ' s bread is buttered far from thin! Now it all seems pretty nice it seems cheap at any price — Yet there is a point on which we ' d like a little more advice. The thing we have in mind is the students ' plug and grind ' Tis that which makes Technology -it must not be left behind. 1904 TECHNIQUE 301 If expansion means decay, we must turn the other way — ' Tis quality, not quantity, that makes this business pay. If it ' s possible to plan to preserve the real Tech man, We ' ll move faster than the earth does but we mast be in the van. Mv Cltcti )e I work like the devil from nine till four. For I ' m taking the regular course; And when I get home I study some more ' Bout physics and lines of force. My tabular view is so arranged That I haven ' t an hour to spare. For though it contains some blanks, I get Some Physical Lab. in there. The effect of this grind is narrowing, As culture it is punk, For you ' re apt to forget there ' s something yet Besides C and a P and a flunk. But I have a way of broadening it, I take an elective, I do, I go to see Mollie (just once in a while), Though she ' s not on the tabular view. I never think of taking notes (Though I often take some Huyler ' s), Her lessons I never would willingly cut (Though I once in a while cut Tyler ' s). I think I ' ll come out with a good report In my elective new. For of all my studies I like it best. Though it ' s not on the tabular view. 302 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII cptcmljfr In a cool little cove, not far from the sea. Where low, drooping houghs shield the sky, And fioat o ' er the wave ripples, playful and free, My boat and I tranquilly lie. I hark to the sound of the soft-blowing breeze As it lingers above, and I hear The laughter of birds and the secrets of bees, Unconscious of evesdropper near. And now in the forest a quick, passing tread And animal panting I hear; And again ' tis the chatter of squirrel o ' erhead. Or the rush of a fleet, timid deer. And ever the quarrel of wave with my boat. Or the laughter of wave with the shore, Come ceasless and musical where, as I float. The sea brings its far away roar. And happy, contented in Paradise, I Lie deep in contentment ' s domain, ' Till sunset bears message, with wavering sigh — Technology calls me again. 1904 TECHNIQUE 303 !3rlo ' 6 Bravti The youngest of his heirs and yet by far the most ferocious; His junior by full thirty years, but fearfully precocious! Upon the face of it we see what brought it to its ruin: Shear recklessness most plainly was the cause of its undoing. And when it went, ' twas bit by bit- though ' twas not bit all at. Oh stay, cried Arlo : it declined: hence its decline and fall. This epitaph should grace its stone, enduring age and weather : United we hang, divided we fall: would we had hung together! It would have been immortal, had it been a little stronger; The longer that it lived, we knew that it would live the longer. Now Arlo ' s said a lot, we knew how much depended on it. For all his chin, we never thought how much depended from it. We thought his beard excelled ; but no ' twas exiled for its showing. ' Twas not becoming, so he thought, and so it must be going. His barb to barber Arlo brought, and told him what to do. The barber took the hint and thought it was a barber-cue. It was with greed he slew that beard, and Arlo had agreed, That barber was too barberous to barber us, indeed ! It was a pang that Arlo felt when it was parted from him — Quite different from the feeling when he had it parted on him. A superstitious thought was ours, since first we thus had seen them : The beard is gone; ' tis plain to see, a knife had passed betqveen them. We saw it Fail, we saw it Low; Deficient, too, we read it. And now at last we see it Pass; and Arlo has the Credit. For many years it lived its life: then, cut down in its prime. It went to faces of the dead, who know eternal time. Perchance it rests upon the chin of Caesar, now, or Cato ; Perchance it graces Xenophon, or trims the face of Plato. However that may be, we pray the Shade may kindly spare it. And Arlo have a mind again to shade himself and wear it. 304 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII 5)01110 haptens Or, What SMilton Ivould Hdbe Written Had He Come to Tech Dedicated by the Manufacturers to PROFESSOR SEDGWICK Man, wondrous creation, noble and sublime, Of structure strange, of tissues differentiate, Protoplasmic culmination, morphologically divine, Proteid stuff, by death coagulate. What mighty physiological agent Rules thy vast material conglomeration? What reaction, preponderously potent Propels thy metabolismic consummation? Not on precious stones and metals rare Is thy priceless structural anatomy founded ; Of the earth thou ' rt earthy, truth is bare. Clay thou eatest, and of that compounded; For the ante-mortem peck of dirt ' s not fiction, And cabbage is but dirt glorified past contradiction. What l ichard Lovelace Tvould HaVe Writlen Tell me not. Sweet, I am unkind. That from the company Of thy sweet self and quiet mind To Tech and Mac ' s I fly. For this inconstancy is such As you, too, shall adore ; I could not love thee, dear, so much Loved I not B. S. more. 19 4 T E C H N I Q U E 305 CUiot ' 05 Should you ask me whence these stories? Whence these truths stranger than fiction, With the oders of the cod-fish, With the dew and damp of Freshmen, With the curling smoke of rifles, And their wild reverberations As of Thunder in the Armory? I should answer, I should tell you, From the land of the tin soldier, From the great city of Gloucester, From the land of fish and sailors. From the land of F. S. Elliot, Where the cod-fish. Bay State ' s symbol, Feeds among the rocks and ledges. I repeat them as I heard them From the lips of the tin soldier, F. S. Elliot, the SOLDIER. The class of ' 05 was formed Soon into a great battalion, And they drilled on every Wednesday, In the Irvington street Armory. And the mighty Elliot saw then A great chance for his ambitions. Then he went to Captain Baird, Colonel over all the Freshmen, Colonel of the great battalion. And a captain in the army. And he said, 0 Captain Baird, Let me take your place of honor, I am well equipped and able. And can do the work, I know it! For in Gloucester, where I came from, I was lord o ' er all the High School, Mighty in the eyes of all men, And can take your place with credit! Then spoke Baird, the great commander : You ' re but one in this great number Of unheard-of Freshmen children. And I must observe your merits, Therefore in a squad I place you. And the Gloucester king was humbled. 306 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Soon the Freshmen had a banquet, And the Captain with the moustache Gave himself the place of honor, Toastmaster was he that evening. On the day before the dinner, Out upon the street he wandered. With a wish for fame within him; For he wished it known to all men That he was honored among Freshmen. Then his well-laid plans succeeded. He was seized by several Soph ' mores, Right into a cab they threw him, Out of reach of all the Freshmen, To be safe until the morrow. Then his knees beneath him trembled, And he whimpered like a woman. While the Soph ' mores there before him Taunted him in loud derision. Spake disdainfully in this wise: Hark you, Elliot! you ' re a coward And no captain as pretended, Else you would not cry and whimper Like a miserable woman! And still later, when the spring-time Came, it found him then a major, Major of the Tech battalion, Major of the M. I. T. corps. Then the corps came from the Armory, Wandered out upon the streets then There to have their picture taken. To the beauteous Walker building. Then he turned to the battalion. Speaking with a voice majestic. Warning, chiding, spake in this wise • 0 my children, my poor children. Listen to the words of wisdom, Listen to the words of warning. Steady, fellows, do not move now. And the Major faced the camera. Speaking to the operator, With a look of pride upon him. With his chest adorned with medals. With a voice no less commanding, Let her go now, am ready! 1904 TECHNIQUE 307 % )t 33ol)cimau tutirut I dreamed that I went to Technology With Tyler and Profs at my side, And of all who assembled within those walls That I was the hope and pride. I had C ' s too many to count could boast That flunks to me never came. And I also dreamed which charmed me most- That Faunce loved me still the same. I dreamed that Maclachlan put books in my hand, That Rand upon bended knee And with vows that no real engineer could withstand He pledged all his money to me. And I dreamt that one of this noble host Was the cause of my undying fame ; Yet I also dreamed -which charmed me most — That Faunce loved me still the same. A miss is as good as a mile, they say — If she ' s pretty and young I a gree; But a Co-ed ' s as good as a thousand miles — If the miles are between her and me. There ' s many a slip ' twixt the cup and the lip, Is an ancient and obsolete law; A close application of logic will show That the moral is plain use a straw Learn to say No, and see that you say it When answ ' ring a question as such: How many beers will you stand for, old sport? Say it — but say it in Dutch. 308 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII The eyes are the windows of the soul, you know Is brimming full of allegory rare; If it ' s true that her eyes are only windows, Jack, May she never hang the ice-card there. Bread cast on the waters returns again, You may sometimes declare tommyrot; But cast it on soup in some cheap restaurant, And you ' ll readily see that i t ' s not. Faint heart never won fair lady, May be true as truth itself and yet What matters it how faint your heart is When your Juliet ' s a dark brunette? Haste makes waste, I ventured to say. As I lingered yet longer with Sue. If that ' s the case, she quickly replied, I wish it would make me a few. ' Tis better to give than receive, perhaps. And not only better, but best. Methinks I imagine a reader yell out, Then for heaven ' s sake give us a rest. m m TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Sustvuctiug: taff for tbc J3car 1902-1903 subjEcrs i ' i ? t S 7 - 3_-_5 — — _ _ -t :— _■!--{_- Architecture Biology, Zoology, etc. Chemistry Civil Engineering Drawing and Descriptive Geometry English, History and Political Science Language Mathematics Mechanic Arts Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics Military Tatics Mineralogy and Geology Mining, Engineering and Metallurgy Naval Architecture Physics and Electrical Engineering Gymnastics Total 1902-1903 28 12 25 54 47 166 18 184 1901-1902 29 9 25 49 36 148 42 190 2 I I 4 8 12 15 I I 5 7 I 8 13 3 I 8 10 8 30 7 37 32 4 I 6 4 15 15 14 I 5 4 10 10 10 3 2 4 2 1 1 II II 2 I 5 I 9 Q 7 3 I 3 5 12 12 II 3 4 7 7 7 2 4 3 3 8 20 20 19 I I I 2 I I I I 2 6 I 7 5 2 I I 4 8 8 9 2 I 2 5 5 4 2 2 5 3 8 20 I 2 I 31 I I I I 1904 TECHNIQUE 31: umntarj) of ( valiuatrs h}j Courses .- n c 1= c J2 J; - := c: - c s •A • -z 1868 6 I 6 I 14 i86q 2 2 I 5 1870 4 2 2 I I 10 1871 8 2 5 2 17 1872 3 I 5 3 12 1873 12 2 3 I 7 I 26 1874 10 4 I I 2 18 1875 10 7 6 I I I 2 28 1876 12 8 7 5 I 2 3 4 42 1877 12 6 8 4 2 32 1878 8 2 2 3 3 I IQ 1870 6 8 3 I 3 I I 23 1880 3 3 I I 8 1881 3 5 6 3 8 I 2 28 1882 2 5 5 3 6 I I I 24 1883 3 n 5 I 3 19 1884 5 6 13 12 36 1885 4 7 8 2 4 2 I 28 1886 Q 23 7 I 7 ID I I 59 1887 10 17 8 I 9 8 I I 3 58 1888 1 1 25 4 5 10 17 3 I I 77 1889 14 24 5 3 8 17 I I 2 75 i8qo 25 28 3 5 13 18 3 2 6 103 1891 18 26 4 6 1 1 23 3 3 I 7 I 103 i8q2 22 26 4 13 7 36 6 I 7 4 6 I 133 1893 25 30 5 2 8 41 2 6 8 2 129 1894 21 31 4 14 II 33 I 3 5 12 3 138 1895 25 30 3 15 14 33 2 4 1 1 4 5 144 1896 25 34 10 24 17 48 3 3 7 7 4 3 5 189 1897 25 40 7 16 20 33 2 3 7 12 4 I 9 179 1898 32 41 7 29 26 33 3 4 6 9 3 7 200 1899 30 38 9 22 21 32 2 2 1 9 I 8 173 1900 32 33 20 21 16 22 3 3 5 I T 4 9 184 1 90 1 37 39 17 21 17 25 I I 16 14 4 I 16 199 1902 24 46 15 18 14 35 5 3 3 9 7 14 193 Totals 498 ( 5o6 220 236 291 I 466 45 39 88 113 40 9 73 2,725 Deduct names counted twice 14 Net Total 2,711 Deducting names counted twice 3J2 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII trccntast of (Sratiuating; to Cutcring tutjcnts CLASS OK 1869 1870 187I 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 I 1881 I 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 189I 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 I9OI 1902 Average iiinlicr KnterinK Number (Iraduat- ii Recular int with I ' crtiTitiiCf I ' irst-Nt.ir Student- Same Clif (irinliiiitini; 58 5 8.6 54 10 18.5 50 17 34-0 63 12 19.0 71 26 36.6 82 18 22.0 112 28 25.0 59 42 71.2 35 32 91.4 65 19 29.2 31 23 74.2 47 1 8 I ( 28+ 1 76.6 34 24 70.6 34 19 55.8 62 36 58.1 86 27 31-4 114 59 51.8 140 58 41.4 186 77 41.4 177 75 42-3 190 102 53.8 229 103 44.8 245 133 54-3 255 129 50.6 234 138 58.9 258 144 55.8 303 188 62.1 301 179 59-5 271 200 73-9 266 173 65.1 263 184 70.0 277 199 71.8 301 193 63.8 ?e 50.4 per cent. The percentages are somewhat high, due to the number of students entering from other colleges in the second, third and fourth years. ' Graduated under Three-Year Course + Graduated under Four- Year Course 1904 TECHNIQUE 313 3trm0 of 3utriT6t THE WALKER MEMORIAL FUND now amounts to Siio,- 071.50, of which $69,226.92 has been paid in. Of the classes, ' 87 has contributed the most, ' 85 second, and ' 01 a close third. In all, 1,956 persons have subscribed to the fund. The increase of students this year over last is 659. Four hundred and eight were admitted to regular first-year standing; and of these, 316 were admitted clear, 75 with one condition, and 17 with two conditions. Of the 1,608 students registered this year, 935 are from Massa- chusetts, or 58 per cent of the whole. Forty-one states, one territory, the District of Columbia, and sixteen foreign countries send men to the Institute. The ratio of instructors to students is i to 9.7. Course II leads in the number of students in any course, with 133 enrolled. Course I has 129 men, and Course VI 118 men. There are 161 graduates of the Institute or other colleges attend- ing the Institute this year. The average age at entrance is 18 years and 10 months this year. Three men were between 16 and 16 1-2 years on entrance last fall, and 2 were between 20 and 20 1-2 on graduation last spring. There are 63 co-eds this year, 46 being special. There are 12 regulars in the upper classes. Courses VII and IV are the favorites, though V has a number of adherents. The libraries of the Institute contain 60,727 volumes and 16,682 pamphlets, a net increase of 3,309 volumes and 403 pamphlets over last year. The division of the students is as follows, 28 per cent, of the whole being special: Class Regular Special Total Fellows and Graduates of the M. I. T. Fourth Year Third Year . Second Year First Year Total 17 17 195 95 290 230 130 360 278 184 462 433 46 479 153 455 1,608 314 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII 04 Statistics THE list of questions and sta- tistics which was sent to each member of the Junior class met with a warm re- ception and ready answers. In a number of cases, such as class sport and worst grind, the vote was extremely scattered, and the man who received the highest vote received per- haps only ten or fifteen votes, while there were twenty or more candidates for the position. The averages can be counted on as fairly satisfactory, with the exception of the rising and retiring hours, where answers of , C, ,□ j , and the like had to be taken into con- sideration. In age we average 2 1 years, 6 months, 12 days, 4 hours, 38 minutes 3 surei, with Howard at a maximum of a minimum of 18 years, 11 months. © CURTIS CR( iSiNG ENGINEERING ALLEY I DO NOT GIVE TOU THIS WORK BECAUSE I THINK IT IS WILDLY EXCITING, BUT JUST TO KEEP YOU BUSY IN YOUR SPARE MOMENTS seconds (corrected for barometric pres- 28 years, i month, and Kid Powell at The weight ranges from our fat man. Wood, at 210 pounds, down to 1 18 pounds, making an average of 147.4 pounds. The Carty brothers ' weight varies with temper- ature and pressure, while Cockrill ' s changes after each bath and haircut. The height starts with Hollnagel as high man at 6 feet 4 inches, and ends with Fred Pirie, who has 63 inches to his credit; the av- erage being 5 feet 8 inches. The average retiring hour is 1 1.9.7 p. ni.; though Kemper doesn ' t go to bed at all, but gets up at 7 a.m. The average rising hour 19 04 TECHNIQUE 315 ii is 7.26.20 a.m. -notwithstanding the fact that Farnham doesn ' t get up until kicked out. Porter gets up at 6 a.m. to make a nine o ' clock on time. Evidently there are four most popular professors, for Professors Clifford, Burton, Merrill and Wendell received practically the entire vote, which is exactly divided between them. The Statisticians do not feel competent to referee this contest, and can only express their opinion that each is a good man and true and well worthy of the title. Professor Clifford seems to be considered the handsomest professor by the majority, though several men in the class claim they haven ' t discovered one yet. Kaiser thinks they all look handsome (in the darki, while Haar votes for Tommy Pope. The most efficient gas producer was, for a time, a close race between Pro- fessors Currier, Bates and Cross, but on the home stretch the former won out by a long distance. Reactions are : CO . • H .S + KCN+SO.,+K..S [H,,S« O,, K — .-, g- CDN] pr ROT. The reaction was to put me to sleep. Whit- more. Aside from several claims that the wittiest professor non est, Harry Clifford has scarcely any rivals. Leh thinks Charlie Cross is the wittiest. What is his idea of wit? Blackie tries to be the wittiest professor, though he has a close rival in C. Cross. The most imposing fig- ure on the lecture platform is without any doubt Arlo Bates, when he shows his contempt for the tumultuous applause evoked by his remarks. Dewey also is considered imposing by some, as, with one hand in his pocket, he writes 10—8=2. In eccentricity we have a large number of competitors, though Charlie Cross (at last I seems to ' be the favorite. NOTICE! One man declares that the eccen- tricity = 2 , and this accounts for the irregular motion of Charlie ' s head while lecturing. The three Faculty Saints, whose names are immortally stamped on our memories, are the members of the Faculty most dear to us: Professors Faunce, Bates, and Cross. To them we dedicate a window in our HALL OF FAME. Tot Homer gets the most popular man by a tremendous majority. Frankie Farnham thinks he is the most popular man, but, sad to say, nobody seems to agree with him. Peculiar, isn ' t it? WELL. I GUESS HE ' S IT 316 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII W For favorite athlete the best thing we can do is to give the figures. They speak for themselves. George Curtis wins with 99 votes and his nearest competitor has 4 votes. Cy Ferris tried to run an opposi- tion to Curtis, but something missed cue. What struck Lang in this vote? Six minutes after the hour, the same familiar figure is always seen rushing into a lecture. Nobody has ever seen him on time yet. Who? Why, A. P. Porter, the laziest man in the class. The worst grind goes to Wilder with Haar a very close second. The fellows don ' t seem to appreciate Hollnagel ' s efforts to get this enviable position. A B L U E-RI BBON FUSSER IN A NEW ROLE The biggest sport contest was carried on among about every body in the class, and there were not enough votes for any one man to warrant anybody winning. Edes shows up fairly strong. Undoubtedly he has some friends who are jokers (?). Downes and Goddard are tied for biggest fusser, though Charlie Homer and Paul Paine deserve hery honorable mention. We hear Paul has serious leanings Wellesley way, and makes frequent visits there. Charlie has friends all around and has thought seriously of hiring a stenographer to aid in his correspondence. Goddard ' s book on How toWin Girls is recommended as profitable and instruct- ive. There is no doubt about the most conceited man, for our friend Selby Haar wins hands down. One man says, Haar is most conceited. He thinks he knows more than Kaiser. Selby ' s favorite quotation is: Would some power the gift would gie us. To see ourselves as ithers see us! For class heathen there were a number of candidates who made a hard race for the place. Fairfield won out finally with Pete Underbill a close second. Pete has an idol on The class picked about two cane spree. His when he stole the tution, and now it announce to the man, Howard sweater). The best leg- worth, with and Pret Smith Downes seems to place from his heard remark. The Siamese never in any Wellington Street. Freshman was years ago after the place was pinched 1905 ClassConsti- is our pleasure to world our Fresh- Go u 1 d ( his puller is Went- Downes second, aclose third, have gained his already too-often- Got a cigarette? Twins vote was doubt, and Haar I 904 TECH N I Q U E 317 and Kaiser came out smiling (as usual) on top. Three cheers for Corporal Haa! Haar! and Hoch der Kaiser. The member of the class who has brought greatest honor to the class was unanimously declared to be our honored and beloved President, Dr. HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT, 1904. h ' 1 ..,. ' -. |g|r .:=- = - 1 f ' . J HHJ ' JiA . ' ....J I PS M P_ The opinions on the Registration System were to a large extent unfit for a book that ladies read, but they all expressed the same sentiment. One man says, It looks like some pre- historic remains, and that seems to express the sentiments of a good many. Why did you come to Tech? is a question that met with varied answers, but one stands out pre-eminently, So I would not mind going to H— 1. Many fellows seemed insulted at the question, and replied, None of your business an answer which we hardly believe they gave on their Freshman one-page themes. Holcombe says he came because his grandfather would have been a Tech man if he had not died before the Institute was founded. Harvard wasn ' t good enough for me, and Wellesley wouldn ' t have me, says Ferry. Stavely Hamilton ventures the remark, To work. Because of the glory I knew I was going to win here in athletics, is Currier Lang ' s comment. The best thing you have done here was a difficult question to answer for most of the class, but it didn ' t take Pirie long to find out that the best thing he has done is cheated Andrew Maclachlan out of nine cents. Gould agrees with the rest of the class that the best thing he has done is that he won a cane spree (and a sweater which he has worn ever since, day and night). Holcombe bought a fountain pen at Mac ' s, and had it filled free! Bouscaren ' s best was making the Mechanical Engineering Society, and W. L. Cronin got his face in the Junior Class picture. Porter says the worst thing he has done here is to learn to save time by cutting the first five minutes off of every lecture (this is no jokei . Langley smoked Kommer ' s tobacco, and the result was nearly fatal; while Clarence Williams ' worst deed was to subscribe to the Tech. There ' s a fine exhibition of college spirit for you! Kaiser laughed at one of C. R. Cross ' s stale jokes in Physics. Doc Hill says the worst thing he has done is to associate with Tox Dow. A HEATHEN AT WORSHIP 318 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII The best things that are going to be taken away would fill a large volume (Applied, for instance), but a few will suf fice. Charlie Rodgers considers FREE HAND CHARLIE ' S PLATES his most valued possession, but Todd goes to the other extreme and says the best thing he will take away is a co-ed if all others fail me. Clarence Williams redeems his reputation by answering 1Q04 TECH- NIQUE, and he is not alone in giving this answer. Many think their own remains will be the best thing they will take away, but Gould says his is the ability to put up a good bluff. Yoder considers this his best souvenir: u Your r:.nrr- on t ' .e recent inforuai exaoina- tion In Railroad . n.t ' xncerins; is JLi And J. R. Sanborn this: SlSl Seer eiary f the I-acul ) The vote for favorite theatre was very close between the Hollis and the Castle Square, but the Nickelodeon has many admirers. The greatest needs of Tech are many and varied, but a great many agree with Haynes when he says, Moving sidewalks, stairs and elevators. A free coinage of C ' s and a prohibition of F ' s is a sentiment agreed to by many. Porter thinks a clean towel in the toilet-room is the greatest need, while Fremmer ' s vote is for a sweat-shop license. C. B. Williams wants some more pretty co-eds. A large number want more broad-minded men on the Faculty. The majority of the class swear by Dean Burton though Professor Merrill also has a strong following. Most everybody has his own particular favorite Prof, to swear at, and there doesn ' t seem to be any special choice. J. R. Sanborn says he doesn ' t swear, but gets Eager to swear for him at Harry Clifford. A few of the most painful experiences undergone at Tech by some 1904 men are worthy of record : When hit in the eye by a snow-ball when the Prince was here — C. L. Homer. The exam, the day after Thanksgiving G. A. Curtis. Hearing my name pronounced by the Profs, and instructors. L. G. Bouscaren, Jr. 1904 TECHNIQUE 319 Trying to look intelligent during a lecture in Heat. — Walter Whitmore. Waiting for Mr. Smith at the shops to stop talking and say something. — W. M. Carty. The time I picked up a co-ed. — Trying to feel warm during one of Dana P ' s smiles. - G. K. Kaiser. An interview with the Sondericker Phonograph Company. — C. Lang. Eating at Tech lunch. — H. A. Hill. Having been at the Institute a week before learning of the existence of Chapel. B. Blum. Sat on a thumbtack. -- J. A. Fremmer. Digested a Thanksgiving dinner and a Descript. exam, at the same time. — H. L. Pierce. Contemplation of the method of locomotion of some of the co-eds. — E. P. Tripp. 320 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Conccrtttug tl)C College Albion Amherst College Armour Institute Barnard Bates College Boston University . Bowdoin College Brown University Bryn Mawr Bucknell University Case School of Applied Science Clark University Colby University Colgate University College of the City of New York College of William and Mary Colorado College Columbia University Columbian University Cornell University Dartmouth College De Pauw University Dickinson Drake University Fiske University Georgetown University Girard College Hamilton College Harvard University Hobart College Johns Hopkins University Lafayette University Lehigh University Leland Stanford, Jr., University Marietta College Mass. Institute of Technology Mount Holyoke New York University Northwestern University Oberlin College Ohio State University Ohio Wesleyan University Polytechnic Institute of Brookly Pratt Institute ... L.icitic.ii r.iunik ' il Albion, Mich. 1861 Amherst, Mass. 182I Chicago, 111. 1893 New York, N. Y. 1889 Lewiston, Me. 1864 Boston, Mass. 1869 Brunswick, Me. 1794 Providence, R. I. 1764 Bryn Mawr, Pa. 1880 Lewisburg, Pa. 1846 Cleveland, Ohio 1880 Worcester, Mass. 1889 Waterville, Me. 1818 Hamilton, N. Y. 1819 New York, N. Y. 1847 Williamsburg, Va. 1693 Colorado Springs, Col. 1874 New York, N. Y. 1754 Washington, D. C. 182I Ithaca, N. Y. 1865 Hanover, N. H. 1769 Greencastle, Ind. 1837 Carlisle, Pa. 1783 Des Moines, Iowa 189I Nashville, Tenn. 1866 Washington, D. C. 1789 Philadelphia, Pa. 1848 Clinton, N. Y. 1812 Cambridge, Mass. 1636 Geneva, N. Y. 1822 Baltimore, Md. 1876 Easton, Pa. 1832 South Bethlehem, Pa. 1866 Stanford University, Ca .1891 Marietta, Ohio 1835 Boston, Mass. 1865 South Hadley, Mass. 1837 New York, N. Y. 183I Evanston, 111. 1851 Oberlin, Ohio 1833 Columbus, Ohio 1872 Delaware, Ohio 1844 nBrooklyn. N. Y. 1854 Brooklyn, N. Y. 1887 I ' rL ' sirk-nt Samuel Dickie, M.S., LL.D. i George Harris, D.D., LL.D. 2 Frank Wakeley Gunsaulus, D.D. 3 Laura D. Gill, A.B., LL.D. (Dean) 4 George C. Chase, D.D., LL.D. 5 William Fairfield Warren, D.D. 6 William DeWitt Hyde, D.D., LL.D. 7 William H. Perry Faunce, A.M., D.D. 8 M. Gary Thomas, Ph.D., LL.D. 9 John Howard Harris, Ph.D., LL.D. 10 (Vacant ' 11 G.Stanley Hall. Ph.D., LL.D. 12 Charles L. White, A.M. 13 George Edwards Merrill, D.D., LL.D. 14 Ale.vander Stewart Webb, LL.D. 15 Lyon G. Tyler, M.A., LL.D. 16 William Fred. Slocum, D.D., LL.D. 17 N. M. Butler, LL.D. (acting) 18 Samuel H. Greene, D.D., LL.D. (acting) 19 Jacob Gould Schurman, P.Sc, LL.D. 20 Wilham J. Tucker, D.D. , LL.D. 21 Hillary A. Gobin, A.M., D.D. 22 George Edward Reed, S.T.D., LL.D. 23 William B. Craig, D.D. , LL.D. 24 James G. Merrill, D.D. 25 John D. Whitney, S.J. 26 A. H. Felterolf, Ph.D., LL.D. 27 Melancthon W. Stryker, D.D., LL.D. 28 Charles William Eliot, LL.D. 29 Robert Ellis Jones, A. B., S.T.D. 30 Ira Remson, LL.D. 31 Ethelbert D. Warfield, LL.D. 32 Thomas Merringer Drown, LL.D. a David Starr Jordan, LL.D. 34 Alfred Tyler Perry, A.M., D.D. 35 Henry Smith Pritchett, Ph.D., LL.D. 36 Mary E. WooUey, A.M., L.H.D. 37 Henry M. MacCracken, D.D., LL.D. 38 Edmund Janes James, Ph.D. 39 (Vacant) 40 William 0. Thompson, D.D., LL.D. 41 James W. Bashford, Ph.D., D.D. 42 Henry Sawyer Snow, A.B., LL.D. 43 Charles M. Pratt 44 1904 TECHNIQUE 321 ii oucrrmug i m u oucg rs Co-cUuca ' Viil. Prnptrty lllili!-. Stinlts Invt ' rs Culicm- Cohir Annual tional Tiittiuti incl. Endow ' t I 6 490 25 Pink and Green Yes $24 $445,000 2 18 404 34 Purple and White Ohio No 110 2,500,000 3 I 1000 34 Yellow and Black Integral Yes 75 3,500,000 4 I 431 50 Blue and White The Mortarboard No 150 726,700 5 7 293 14 Garnet Yes 50 366,000 6 1336 144 Scarlet and White The Hub Yes 125 1,700,000 7 13 341 34 White The Bugle No 75 1,470,000 8 13 920 75 Brown and White Liber Brunensis Yes 105 3,086,488 9 8 417 45 Yellow and White The Lantern No 150 1,000,000 10 10 363 19 Orange and Navy Blue Yes 50 430,000 1 1 433 31 No 100 2,000,000 I 2 13 13 191 17 Pearl Gray Colby Oracle Yes 60 600,000 14 6 178 24 Maroon Salmagundi No 60 2,160,000 15 843 58 Lavender No None 842,500 i6 8 184 16 Orange and White Colonial Echo No 35 250,000 17 12 515 34 Gold and Black The Collegian Yes 35 356,000 i8 16 4086 384 Light Blue and White Columbian No 200 18,000,000 19 1372 133 No 100 20 24 2980 366 Carnelian and White The Cornellian Yes 150 10,870,200 21 16 789 72 Dark Green Aegis No 1 10 3,200,000 22 7 425 18 Old Gold The Mirage Yes None 250,000 23 12 384 27 Red and White The Microcosm Yes 65 750,000 24 1764 90 Blue and White Yes 45 500,000 25 8 300 22 Blue and Yellow Yes 14 400,000 26 7 546 60 No 100 27 13 1693 67 Steel and Garnet No None 15,987,583 28 1 1 201 21 Buff and Blue Hamiltonian No 75 800,000 29 64 5124 486 Crimson No 150 19,500,000 30 II 92 17 Orange and Royal Purple Echo of the Seneca No 80 426,348 31 13 676 129 Black and Old Gold The Hullabaloo No 200 3,669,126 32 5 419 26 Maroon and White The Melange No 100 1,166,825 33 13 542 44 Brown and White Epitome No 125 2,500,000 34 33 1295 130 Cardinal Red Stanford Quad Yes 20 20,000,000 35 7 300 21 Navy Blue and White Mariettana Yes 30 550,000 36 7 1580 181 Cardinal Red and Silver Gray TECHNIQUE Yes 250 3,313,059 37 16 611 58 Light Blue Llamarada No 100 1,200,000 38 14 1824 186 Violet The Violet Yes 180 3,500,000 39 12 2414 293 Royal Purple The Syllabus Yes 78 5,500,000 40 17 1285 77 Crimson and Gold Hi-O-Hi Yes 75 1,897,000 41 15 1465 130 Scarlet and Gray Makio Yes 45 2,500,000 42 9 974 61 Black and Red Yes 46 1,477,523 43 2 95 22 Blue and Gray The Polywog No 200 600,000 44 6 3121 128 Cadmium Yellow Yes 15 3,665,820 322 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Couccvutug tl)c Colleges Name Princeton University Purdue University Radcliffe Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rutgers College Smith College State University of Iowa Stevens Institute of Technology Swarthmore Syracuse University Throop Polytechnic Institute Trinity College Tufts College ... Tulane University ... Union College United States Military Academy United States Naval Academy University of California University of Chicago University of Colorado University of Denver University of Georgia University of Illinois University of Maine University of Michigan University of Minnesota University of Nebraska University of Pennsylvania University of Rochester University of the South University of Texas University of Virginia University of Wisconsin Vassar College Washington University Wash ' g and Jeff ' n University Wash ' g and Lee University Wellesley College Wesleyan University Western Maryland Williams College Worcester Polytechnic Institute Wooster University Yale University Princeton, N. J. 1746 Lafayette, Ind. 1874 Cambridge, Mass. 1879 Troy, N. Y. 1824 New Brunswick, N. J. 1766 Northampton, Mass. 1875 Iowa City, Iowa 1847 Hoboken, N. J. 1870 Swarthmore, Pa. 1869 Syracuse. N. Y. 1871 Pasadena, Cal. 1891 Hartford, Conn. 1824 Tufts College, Mass. 1855 New Orleans, La. 1834 Schenectady, N. Y. 1795 West Point, N. Y. 1802 Annapolis, Md. 1845 Berkeley, Cal. 1868 Chicago, 111. 1891 Boulder, Col. 1877 Denver, Col. 1864 Athens, Ga. 1801 Urbana, 111. 1868 Orono, Me. 1865 Ann Harbor, Mich. 1837 Minneapolis, Minn. 1868 Lincoln, Neb. 1869 Philadelphia, Pa. 1740 Rochester, N. Y. 1850 Sewanee, Tenn. 1868 Austin, Texas 1883 Charlottesville, Va. 1825 Madison, Wis. 1848 Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 1861 St. Louis, Mo. 1853 Washington, Pa. 1802 Lexington, Va. i749 Wellesley, Mass. 1870 MiddletOA-n. Conn. 1831 Westminster, Md. 1867 Williarastown, Mass. 1793 Worcester, Mass. 1865 Wooster, Ohio 1869 New Haven, Conn. 1701 I ' rtsiiltnt Woodrov Wilson, Ph. D.,Litt.D.,LL.D. i Winthrop E. Stone, A.M., Ph.D. 2 Mrs. Elizabeth Cary Agassiz 3 Palmer C. Ricketts, C.E. 4 Austin Scott, Ph.D., LL.D. 5 L. Clark Seelye, D.D., LL.D. 6 George E. MacLean, LL.D. 7 Henry Morton, Ph.D., LL.D. 8 William W. Birdsall, A.M. 9 James R. Day. S.T.D., LL.D. 10 Walter A. Edwards, A.M. 11 George W. Smith, S.T.D., LL.D. 12 Elmer H. Capen, A.M., D.D., LL.D. 13 Edwin Anderson Alderman, LL.D. 14 Andrew V. V. Raymond, DD., LL.D. 15 A. L. Mills, Colonel, U. S. A. 16 Capt. Bronson, U. S. N. 17 Benjamin Ide Wheeler, Ph.D., LL.D. 18 W. R. Harper, D.D., Ph.D., LL.D. 19 James H. Baker, M.A., LL.D. 20 Henry A. Buchtel, D.D., Ph.D., LL.D. 21 Walter B. Hill, LL.D. 22 Andrew Sloan Draper, LL.D. 23 George Emory Fellows, Ph.D. 24 James B. Angell, LL.D. 25 Cyrus Northrop, LL.D. 26 E. Benjamin Andrews, D.D., LL.D. 27 Charles C. Harrison, LL.D. 28 Rush Rees, D.D., LL.D. 29 Benjamin L. Wiggins, M.A., LL.D. 30 William L. Prather, LL.D. 31 P. B. Barringer, M.D., LL.D. 32 Charles Kendall Adams, LL.D. 33 George Munroe Taylor, D.D., LL.D. 34 W. S. Chaplin, LL.D. 35 James David Moffat, D.D., LL.D. 36 George H. Denney, M.A., Ph.D. 37 Caroline Hazard, M.A., Litt.D. 38 B. P. Raymond, D.D., LL.D. 39 Thomas H. Lewis, D.D., A.M. 40 John Haskell Hewitt, LL.D. 41 Thomas C. Mendenhall, Ph.D., LL.D. 42 Louis Edward Holden, D.D. 43 Arthur T. Hadley, LL.D. 44 1904 TECHNIQUE 323 Comcrutug tljc Colleges t :u-i-iiuc.i .il. Property ItlilKs. stud Is ln f.s College Culors A n 11 11 J I tioniil Tuition incl. tndow ' t I 36 1354 lOI Orange and Black Bric-a-Brac No 160 2 22 1056 79 Old Gold and Black Debris Yes 25 1,009,000 3 6 435 1 12 No 200 600,000 4 240 21 Cherry and White No 200 5 9 222 29 Scarlet Scarlet Letter No 75 6 23 1015 83 White No 100 2,170,480 7 1542 130 Old Gold Yes 75 888,120 8 270 22 Silver Gray and Crimson No 225 985,000 y 6 207 22 Garnet Halcyon Yes 150 900,000 10 8 1806 152 Orange The Onondagan Yes 135 2,815,814 1 1 216 24 Yes 75 175,000 12 6 171 25 Dark Blue and Old Gold Ivy No 100 860,000 13 16 851 137 Brown and Blue The Brown and Blue Yes 100 1,800,000 14 13 1020 60 Olive and Blue Jambalaya Yes 85 2,061,000 15 17 192 20 Garnet The Garnet No 75 1,147,000 i6 464 71 Black, Gray and Gold No None 17 333 60 Blue and Old Gold The Lucky Bag No None i8 13 3144 481 Blue and Gold Blue and Gold Yes None 5,551,852 iQ 20 3520 296 Maroon The Cap and Gown Yes 120 12,364,000 20 12 510 76 Silver and Gold Coloradoan Yes 20 400,000 21 5 878 114 Red and Gold Kynewisbok Yes 33 800,000 22 1884 131 Red and Black No 50 951,995 23 16 2665 334 Orange and Blue The Illio Yes ■05 2,750,000 24 15 411 50 Light Blue The Prism Yes 30 1,960,300 25 19 3800 233 Maize and Blue Michiganensian Yes 45 2,900,000 26 30 3550 250 Maroon and Old Gold The Gopher Yes 100 3,327,866 27 10 2012 129 Scarlet and Cream The Sombrero Yes None 1,000,000 28 28 2573 372 Red and Blue No 200 8,583,093 29 4 273 20 Dandelion Yellow Yes 60 1,346,244 30 12 518 62 Royal Purple Cap and Gown No 100 562,952 31 6 IIOO 97 Orange and White Cactus Yes None 1,000,000 32 17 600 55 Orange and Blue Corks and Curls No 100 1,800,000 33 22 2619 171 Cardinal The Badger Yes None 1,500,000 34 9 798 72 Rose and Gray Vassarian No 115 2,709,000 35 2086 190 Myrtle and Maroon Yes 150 4,609,678 36 253 17 No 20 37 17 222 22 Blue and White The Calyx No 50 900,000 38 23 821 80 Deep Blue Legenda No 175 1,500,000 39 10 322 33 Cardinal and Black 011a Podrida Yes 75 2,089,850 40 16 250 22 Old Gold and Olive Green Aloha Yes 45 150,000 41 22 39 3 34 Royal Purple No 105 1,633,002 42 7 254 32 Crimson and Steel Gray No 150 1,400,000 43 5 800 26 Black and Old Gold The Index Yes 60 700,000 44 40 2685 280 Blue Yale Banner No 150 500,000 326 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Eist of tuljrut0 Name and Society Abbott, Joseph Robertson Abbott, Arthur Howard Abbott, Charles Edward Abbott, Fred Hathaway J T J Abbott, WilUam George, Jr. Adams, Charles Robert Adams, Charles Waldo, Jr. J K , ' Adams, Daniel Adams, Howard Pratt Adams, Irving Elwood Adams, Lo :is Winf eld ' ' . ' ' Adams, Ogden Ross ■I: . Adams, Ralph Emerson Adams, Walter Holbrook Aguilar, Jose Hilario ' I K Ahumada, Miguel, Jr. J ) ' Aldrich, Chester Stanley AUbright, Edwin Francis Allen, Arthur Benjamin ' ' J Allen, Chester Allen, Roy Hutchins Amberg, Arthur John J A , ' Ancona, John Flinn Anderson, Alf Edward Anderson, Frederick Sanford Anderson, John Wallace Andrews, Frederick Huntoon Andrews, William Alvin Anthony, William Stephen Armstrong, Fritz Albert Armstrong, Harry James Armstrong, Samuel Ellsworth Arnold, Albert Heber Bailey Arnold, Perrie Morgan Asbury, Louis Humbert, A.B. Ashmore, P Iorse Buckenfield Atkins, George Edwin ' ' ti A ' Atwood, Carlton Elliot Atwood, Ichabod Francis Ayer, John Course Year I 3 S n 2 I VI 2 I I 2 XIII 2 II 2 S I s XII 3 S II 4 S I in 3 II 4 I 4 S I II 4 I 3 II 4 I 2 III 2 III 2 S II 4 S I XIII 3 S I VI 2 X 3 S VI 2 I I I 3 S III 4 S II 3 S IV 3 S I xin 3 VI 2 II 4 I 2 Home Address Coates House, Kansas City, Mo. I Centre St., Clinton, Mass. 21 Athelwold St., Dorchester, Mass. Everett Ave., Winchester, Mass. 1525 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. 23 Burr St., Jamaica Plain 1326 Monadnock Block, Chicago, 111. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 114 Winter St., Fall River, Mass. 64 Aldie St., Allston, Mass. 61Q Mass. Ave., N. E., Washington, P. C. 267 Otis St., West Newton, Mass. 91 Arlington St., South Framingham, Mas.;. 22 Dix St., Winchester, Mass. Hermosillo, Mexico Chihuahua, Mexico 106 Gushing Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 24 Virginia St., Dorchester, Mass. 34 Ashford St., Allston, Mass. 203 Temple St., West Roxbury, Mass. 7 Stevens St., Winchester, Mass. 1820 Melrose St., Chicago, 111. 222 A F St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 89 Evans St., New Dorchester, Ma ' js. 71 Washington Ave., West Haven, Conn. 95 Jason St., Arlington, Mass. Manchester, Mass. 12 Sargent St., Roxbury, Mass. South Dartmouth, Mass. 220 West River St., Hyde Park, Mass. 2000 Mt. Royal Terrace, Baltimore, Md. 91 Summer St., Somerville, Mass. 31 Waumbeck St., Roxbury, Mass. 140 Vine St., Hartford, Conn. Charlotte, N. C. 38 West Newton St., Boston, Mass. 1047 Walnut St., Newton Highlands, Mass. Chelmsford, Mass. Rock, Mass. Belmont, Mass. J 9 04 TECHNIQUE 327 Name and Society Ayers, Samuel Henry Aylsworth, Joseph Wheeler J Babb, Roger Willis Babcock, Frank Gilbert Babson, Roger Derby Bailey, Edna Greenwood Baker, Edward Sherman ' ' ' Baker, Edward Stuart Baker, Horace Singer, B.S. J 7 J Baker, James McFarlan Baker, Joseph Cheney Baker, Ralph Hubert Baker, Sheldon King Bakewell, Joseph Hunter V ' ' Baldwin, Francis George ' ' fl F, Balkam, Arthur Thomas Ball, Herbert James Ball, Sidney Young J A E Ball, WilUara Gilbert Ballou, Edgar Clark Ballon, Roland Hunnewell 2 ' .( F. Barber, Clarence Eugene Barber, Raymond Jenness Barber, Waldo Austin Bardwell, Earl Smith Barlow, James Evans Barnaby, George Albert Barnd, Jules Verne Barnes, Howard Parker Barnes, James Phillips Barret, Charles Frederick Barrier, Edward Andre Barron, Edward Taylor Barrows, Allan Hanscom Barrows, George Herbert Barry, John Gerald Bartlett, Arthur Warren Bartlett, Charles Terrell Bartlett, Edward Hale Bartlett, George Merrell Bartlett, Stephen Russell, A.B. Bascom, Calvin Perry Bassett, John Henry Batchelder, Frederick Russell Bateman, George William Bates, Charles Lynn Course Year V 2 n 4 s I in 4 s III 4 V 3 I 4 VI 3 S I 4 IV 3 II 3 S xin 3 XI 4 II 3 S I XIII 2 S I I 4 III 2 I VI 4 II 2 S I V 2 I I 2 III 4 S VII 2 I VI 2 II 3 V 2 III 3 S V 4 S IV 2 I X 3 I X 2 V 2 II 4 XIII 3 II 2 I II 4 S I 4 Home Address 14 Lincoln Ave., Portsmouth, N. H. 5 Everett St., Newport, R. I. Worcester St., Natick, Mass. Tolland, Conn. 3 Derby St., Gloucester, Mass. 817-820 Stock Ex. Bid., Chicago, 111. 26 School St. Dedham, Mass. Stanton, Va. 1325 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111. 310 Greene Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 332 Delaware Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. II Sunnyside Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 1728 Columbia Rd., Washington, D. C. Murray Hill Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 205 West io6th St., New York, N. Y. 55 Green St., Jamaica Plain 2 Cambridge Terrace, Allston, Mass. 99 Olive St., Cleveland, Ohio 7 Otisfield St., Roxbury, Mass. 83 Niagara St., Providence, R. I. 16 Harris Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. 259 Launel Hill Ave., Norwich, Conn. 49 Carleton St., Newton, Mass. 21 Gardner St., Allston, Mass. 122 Pine St., Florence, Mass. 274 Methuen St., Lawrence, Mass. 25 Oak St., Peabody, Mass. 59 Ashland St., Melrose Highlands, Mass. 6 Caiver St., Plymouth, Mass. 306 Highland St., Syracuse, N. Y. Waverly St., Belmont, Mass. 89 Hancock St., Cambridge, Mass. 1032 Murray Hill Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. Reading, Mass. 99 Somerest Ave., Taunton, Mass. Salem, Mass. 41 Munroe St., Newburyport, Mass. Fortress Monroe, Va. II Parker St., Newburyport, Mass. 9 Albemarle St., Boston, Mass. 2 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 37 Spring St., Rochester, N. Y. Ware, Mass. (Box 66 Hampden, N. H. Waverly, Mass. 7734 Union Ave., Chicago, 111. 328 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Bates, George Martin Bates, John Ross Baton, Warren Ulysses C. Baum, Kenneth Michael Bay, George Green Bay, William Johnston _ V Bearce, William Pitt Beard, Robert Stanley Beaton, William Alexander Beattie, Frederick Steere Becker, William Frederick Bedford, Lawrence Faxon Bedford, Thomas Payne, B.P. ' Bedortha, Alfred Calvin Bee, Albert Wilson, Jr. Beerman, Bernard Beers, Harold William Beers, William Herbert, Jr. Belding, Arthur Field Bell, James Samuel Bell, Lowthian Lambert Bell, Raymond Edwin Bell, Samuf ' l Robinson Bellows, Robert Peabody Bender, Frwin Ferdinand Benham, Frank Arthur Bennett, Arthur Francis Bennett, Frederick Gardner Benson, Stuart Wells Bent, Leavitt Newell Bent, Walter Gregory Bentley, Fred Harold Bentley, William Perry, B.S. ' ' Berliner, Edgar Maurice Beverstock, Charles Whitney Bickford, Frizt Clarence Biggi, Frederick Anthony Bilyea, Carl Thompson V ' ' Bingham, Rutherfurd J ' Bixby, Llwellyn, B.L. Bixby, William Peet Blackwell, Otto Bernard Blair, Paul Alexander Blaisdell, Albert Chester, A.B. Blake, Arthur William J ) ' Blake, Howard Colburn ; A Course Year ni 3 I 4 XI 3 V 3 n 2 S xin 4 I I 2 IV 2 S 2 S VI 2 I VI 3 s V 2 s I 3 III 2 s VIII I 2 s 11 2 III I 2 s XIII 2 I s IV 4 s XIII 2 s III I 4 I 2 s X 2 I X 2 I VI 3 I I 4 IV 2 s I 3 IV 4 I I 2 s II 2 IX I 2 V 3 I I s Home Address Windham, Conn. 196 Fairmount Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. Whitinsville, Mass. Claremont, N. H. 140 Sixth St., Jronton, Ohio 140 Sixth St., Ironton, Ohio I Yeaton Place, Haverhill, Mass. 12 North George St., York, Pa. 473 Park Ave., London, Ontario 43 Illinois St., Central Falls, R. I. 43 West Washington St., Chicago, 111. 8 Holborn St., Roxbury, Mass. Fayette, Mo. Windsor, Conn. 120 Rosseter S ' ., Dorchester, Mass. 18 Shunleff St., Chelsea, Mass. ,S2 Cedar St., Taunton, Mass. Watertown, Conn. 29 Pleasant St., Fitchburg, Mass. 50 Dana St., Cambridge, Mass. Lynewood Ave., Southampton, Eng. Portland, Conn. 178 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 29 Hereford St., Boston, Mass. Brooklvi?, N. Y. Milton, Vt. Wayland, Mass. Southampton, N. Y. 1526 South State St., Syracuse, N. Y. (Box 314) Framingham, Mass. Framingham, Mass. Plainville, Conn. Plainville, Conn. 1717 P St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 33 Elm St., Keene, N. H. 104 Hutchings St., Roxbury, Mass. 166 Salem St., Boston, Mass. Watertown, N. Y. 1019 i6th St., Washington, D. C. Claremont, Cal. Woburn, Mass. Bourne, Mass. Waterbury, Conn. North Woburn, Mass. 54 Eastern Promenade, Portland, Me. 184 West Canton St., Boston, Mass. 1904 TECHNIQUE 329 Name and Society Blatz, John Blodgett, Albert Alden Blodgett, Laurence Gould Blodgett, Mildred Eleanor Blood, Alice Frances Bloom, David Blount, Fernando Moreno J ' ' Blum, Bernard Blunt, Katherine, A.B. Boggs, Charles Reid I ■. ' Boggs, William Brenton 2 I • ' Booth, Louis LaBaum, Ph.B. Booth, Robert Harbison Bourne, Lyman Murphy, M.Sc. Bouscaren, Gustave, Jr., A.B. J Bowers, Daniel Hix Cudworth Bowman, Melville Bryant J ' Boyd, Helen F. Boynton, Agustus Swain Bradley, Franklin Sawyer J ) ' Bradley, Stephen Lawrence Bradford, Alexander Henry Bradshaw, George Burt, .B. Bredin, Maurice .? ' A Breitzke, Charles Frederick Bridges, David Wills Bridges, John Samuel, Jr. Briggs, Ernest Nathaniel Briggs, George Wright Brigham, Charles Howard Broad, Charles Edward Brown, Frank Zenas Brown, Harry Wheeler Brown, Howard Hayes Brown, Howard Melville, .B. Brown, James Hugh Brown, James Salisbury ' ' ' ' Brown, Joseph Henry, J -. Brown, Moses, Jr. Brown, Sumner Edwin ' ' ' J Brown, Walter Stanley Browne, Frank Atwood Brownell, Frank Wilber, B.A. Bruce, Arthur Garfield Bruce, Malcolm Bruton, Alfred William, A.B. . ' Course Year V I 3 V 4 S V 2 III 3 I I V 3 VI 3 I 3 s VI 2 s V 2 s II 2 s II s II X VI 2 s VIII 3 XIII 2 s IV 3 I 3 II 3 s VI 4 I I s V s VI 4 s II 2 s II 2 III 3 III 3 s III l-l II VI 2 S I II I s VI 4 Home Address 236 Prospect Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 28 Greenville St., Roxbury, Mass. 3523 McGee St., Kansas City, Mo. 135 Pembroke St., Auburndale, Mass. Care of J. B. Blood Co., Lynn, Mass. 377 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. 28 East Wright St., Pensacola, Fla. 3245 Groveland Ave, Chicago, 111. Rock Island Ave., Rock Island, 111. 1527 I St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 1527 I St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 26 Garfield Place, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Linwood, Pa. Oxford, Ohio 1800 Josephine St., Cincinnati, Ohio 36 Pine St., Taunton, Mass. 480 North First St., San Jose, Cal. 13 Ivy St., Boston, Ma s. Groveland, Mass. Dover, N. H. 115 Webster St., West Newton, Mass. 42 South Main St., Raynham, Mass. De Kalb, 111. Franklin, Pa. 282 Langley Road, Newton Center, Mass. 15 South Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 15 South Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 31 Rhode Island Ave, Newport, R. I. 86 Winthrop St., Taunton, Mass. 74 Main St., Marlboro, Mass. 53 Com. Ave., Newton Center, Mass. 408 East Clay St., Richmond, Va. 118 Brighton Ave., AUston, Mass. 27 Elm St., Penacock, N. H. Comstock ' s Bridge, Conn. 6 Stamford St., Boston, Mass. 172 Pine St., Pawtucket, R. I. 72 Winthrop St., Charlestown, Mass. 9 Orange St., Newburyport, Mass. 25 Orleans St., Springfield, Mass. 8g Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Mass. 10 Spring St., Westboro, Mass. 133 Shurtleff St., Chelsea, Mass. 39 Rich St., Gardner, Mass. 267 Stuyvesant Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 309 North Charles St.. Baltimore, Md. 330 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Bryan, Clark Albert Buck, Laurance Montjoy ' ' Buckingham, George H. Buckley, James Patrick, Jr. Buell, Lloyd Thomas Buff, Henry Arthur Buhler, Henry Waldeck Buker, Harry William Bull, Freeman Nelson Burden, Frederick Evan? Burke, Fletcher H., A.B. Burke, Ralph Haney Burkhardt, Edward Arthur Burleigh, Charles Randall Burnap, George Elbert Burnham, Alfred Worcester Burnham, William Winslow 2 I E Burns, Walter Burr, Shields Burton, Eugene Bushnell, Leonard T,, A.B. Butler, Chester Mateland Butman, Chester Arthur Butts, Walter Matthews Cabell, Thomas Breckinridge Cady, William James Cain, Walter Bicknell Caine, Sydney Atmore - .V Calkins, Ernest Wilber, Jr. Calnan, John William Joseph Campbell, Edmimd Schureman Card, John Ford J A . ' Carhart, Clem Clare J ' J Carhart, Frank Milton J T J Carmichael, George Patrick Carpenter, Paul Carr, Sidney Taylor Carruth, Henry Pope Cartagena, Juan Jose VI Carter, Clarence Elmore Carter, Pulaski i Carty, Francis James H 3 Carty, Walter Maurice II 3 Casy, Charles Reed, B.S. VIII 3 Casey, George Austin VI 2 Cason, Everett Shackelford F J Course Year I 4 III I IV 2 III S III 2 S III 2 III 4 I ni 3 VI 2 s III 4 s I 2 XIII 2 I I X 3 XI 4 V 2 I III 2 11 3 S I VIII 2 S VI 2 VI 2 VI I S XIII 2 XIII 2 n 3 V 4 s I in 3 in 3 I 2 IV 4 s VII 2 s 2 s I Home Address 30 Maple St., Springfield, Mas?. 1228 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Rutland, Vt. t6 Devereaux St., Salem, Mass. Cerrillos, N. M. 23 Cheshire St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. II Irvington St., Boston, Mass. 8 Mt. Vernon St., Salem, Mass. 102 Walnut Ave., Revere, Mass. g Church St., North Attleboro, Mass. 35 Cleveland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 75Q West Adams St., Chicago, 111. 100 Mozart St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 53 Washington St., Maiden, Mass. 474 Lebanon St., Melrose, Mass. 249 Beacon St., Waltham, Mass. 297 Main St., Biddeford, Me. 25 Beacon St., North Adams, Mass. 27 Glen St., South Natick, Mass. 1620 Floyd St., Louisville, Ky. 4 Orchard St., New Bedford, Mass. Avon, Mass. Rockport, Mass. South Dartmouth, Mass. Bowling Green, Ky. 97 University Rd., Brookline, Mass. East Weymouth, Mass. 519 Equitable Bldg., Louisville, Ky. North Abington, Mass. 16 East Canton St., Boston, Mass. 4 Broad St., Freehold, N. J. 4850 Washington Ave., Chicago, 111. 175 So. Si.xth E. St., Salt Lake City, Utah 175 So. Sixth E. St., Salt Lake City, Utah 282 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. Milton, Mass. 18 Thayer St., Quincy, Mass. Beaumont St., Dorchester, Mass. Mayaguez, Porto Rico 19 Grand St., Reading, Mass. East Parker St., Scranton, Pa. 6 Kensington St., Roxbury, Mass. 6 Kensington St., Roxbury, Mass. 621 West North Ave., Baltimore, Md. Lee, Mass. CarroUton, Mo. 19 04 TECHNIQUE 331 Name and Society Castleman, Philip Caypless, Willis Smith Cederholm, Anna Margaret Cerf, Harry Herman Chace, Carll Smith Chace, Franklin Murphy Chadbourne, Edward M. Chadboiirne, Walter Everett Chadwell, Elizabeth Dane Chadwick, John Patten Chadwick, Louis Robinson Chamberlain, Noel Chandler, Edward Chandler, Fred Worthington Chandler, Willard Dalrymple Chapin, Henry Gardner Charles, Everts Wilson Charlesworth, Harry Prescott Chase, Charles Edward Chase, Charles Henry Chase, Edward Sherman Chase, Edwin Kirke Chase, Eugene Preston Cheney, Arthur Morton Cheney, John Tyrrell (l B F. Chesterman, Francis John Chidesttr, Arthur Mercer Chivers, Norman Moore Chiistianson, Eugene Olaf Christy, Earl George Chuchian, Avedis Melkon Church, Albert Thomas Church, Harold Douglas ' ' ' J Clapp, Charles Horace Clapp, Prescott Jones Clark, Arthur DeWitt Clark, George Howard Clark, Jesse Redman Clark, Myron Henry Clarke, Lewis Cutler, Jr. Clarke, Ralph Scudder Clarke, Walter Ayer Clay, George Francis Clifford, Walter Baker Cline, Max Clingerman, Byron H., A.B. ' ' K T Course Year V 2 III S II I S IV I S VII S IV s II 3 I 3 II 3 VI 2 I s II VI I III s II s III VI s V IV s XIII V 2 VI 3 Home Address 44 Barton St., Boston, Mass. 1740 Williams St., Denver, Col. 251 Pearl St., Cambridge, Mass. 361 South Fairmount St., Pittsburg, Pa. 31 Wales St., Dorchester, Mass. 31 Wales St., Dorchester, Mass. San Francisco, Cal. 41 Newport St., Dorchester, Mass. 192 South Common St., Lynn, Mass. Saco, Me 103 Oak St., New Bedford, Mass. 42 Wait St., Ro. bury, Mass. 670 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. 45 Jaques St., Somerville, Mass. 20 ' :. Congress St., Greenfield, Mass. 23 Oak St., Springfield. Mass. Hotel Thorndike, Haverhill, Mass. 69 Pleasant St , Dorchester, Mass. 15 Westfield St., Dedham, Mass. Merrimac, Mass. 1450 Williams St., Denver, Col. 84 Spring St., Portland, Me. 542 Coopei St., Camden, N. J. Kenilworth, 111. 10 Gardner St., Newburyport, Mass. 2321 Madison Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. 750 Carroll St., Brooklyn, K. Y. 15 Roosevelt St., Boston, Mass. 2924 CoUingwood Ave., Toledo, Ohio Van, Armenia. Oakland, Cal. West Newton, Mass. 18 Atlantic St., South Boston, Mass. 169 Boston St., South Boston, Mass. 124 West 123rd St., New York, N. Y. 383 Broadway, Everett, Mass. 63 Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Mass. Bedford, Mass. 264 Green St., Cambridgeport, Mass. 15 Wentworth St., Dorchester, Mass. 15 Everett St., Biddeford, Me. 160 South Union St.. Grand Rapids, Mich. 94 Summer St., Fitchburg, Mass. 139 Leverett St., Boston, Mass. Springfield, Ohio 332 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ■: Name and Society Clough, Leslie Cobb, Andrew Randall, A.P Cobb, Freeman Adams Cockrill, Emmet Codd, Eliza Coe, Maxwell Alanson ' ' l! Coes, Harold Vinton Obis Coey, Stewart Clark Coffin, Edward May Coffin, Marian Conger Cohen, Simeon Cole, Charles Stinchfield _! Cole, Sidney Lovett Colgan, James Arthur Herbert Collins, Richard Vincent Comer, Ernest Albert Comstock, Daniel Frost Cook, Harry Hall Cook, Robert Avery Cook, Walter Lorrain ' ' Cooper, Claudius Howard J I ' Cooper, Edgar Bailey ' ' ; ' Copeland, Durward Courtney, Allan Seymour Cowdrey, Irving Henry Cowell, David Holbrook Cowper, Howard Montgomery Cox, Charles Barrows Cox, Frank Gardner _5 .( E Cranston, Raym.ond Earle Craven, Walter Sidney Crawford, James Joseph Cronenhold, Ernest John Cronin, Walter Louis Cronin, William Walter ' ' A Crosby, Fred Bickford Crosby, Gorham Crosby, Hewitt Cross, Harold Newton Cross, William P., Ph.B. ' ' ; l Crowell, Harry Clifford Crowell, Joseph Warren Crowell, Prince Sears Crowell, Will Ranson Crull, Clifton Gustavus Cuesta, Enrique Gallardo ' A Course Year H 3 IV 4 II 3 II 3 S IV 3 I I I X 2 IV 3 I S II 4 s II 2 VI 4 I 3 XI 4 VIII 3 I I 4 III 4 III 4 s II 3 s III 4 II 3 II 2 VI 2 s III 2 I 4 II 4 III I 4 XIII I 4 II 3 I 3 VI 4 VIII 2 XIII 4 XI 4 XIII 4 I 4 II 3 X 2 s VIII 3 IV 3 s V 3 s Home Address 23 Avon St., Wakefield, Mass. Greenwich, N. S. 63 North Main St., Natick, Mass. 911 Scott St., Little Rock, Ark. Nantucket, Mass. 43 Ashland St., Medford, Mass. 6102 Boynton St., Germantown, Pa. 156 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 102 High St., Newburyport, Mass. New York, N. Y. 6 Margaret St., Boston, Mass. 34 Davenport St., Detroit, Mich. 13 Lincoln St., Somerville, Mass. Springfield, N. B. Medway, Mass. 14 Mt. Vernon St., Salem, Mass. 102 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 27 Lamartine St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 93 Prospect St., Woonsocket, R. I. Burlington, Iowa Houghton, Mich. 4 Akron St., Roxbury, Mass. 138 Washington Ave., Chelsea, Mass. Concord, Mass. 33 Goodrich St., Fitchburg, Mass. 21 Monadnock St., Dorchester, Mass. 453 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 106 Washington St., Newton, Mass. 248 Maple St., Holyoke, Mass. 505 Dudley St., Providence, R. I. Kalispell, Mont. I Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass. 155 West Concord St., Boston, Mass. 56 P St., South Boston, Mass. 723 West Genesee Sf., Syracuse, N. Y. Woodville, N. H. Centreville, Mass. 14 Irving Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Exeter, N. H. 40 Boardman St., Rochester, N. Y. 12 Mt. Vernon St., Salem, Mass. Newton, Mass. Woods Hole, Mass. 810 Beacon St., Los Angeles, Cal. Davenport, Iowa Guadalajara, Mexico I 904 TECHNIQUE 333 Name and Society Course Year Cumming, Silas Pierce II 2 S Cunningham, John Earl I 3 Curl, Warren Franklin V 2 S Currier, James Swasey XIII 3 Currier, Warren Franklin V 4 s Curtis, Carroll Cary IX 2 s Curtis, George Alden I 3 Cushman, James Allerton I 4 Cushman, Robert Ellis I Cutter, Edward Philip I Cutting, Robert Curtis 11 3 Daly, John Charles, Jr. _ ' .V III 2 s Damon, John Churchill VI 2 s Danforth, Carl Eugene III 2 Daniels, E. Harley I Daniels, Joseph III 2 Dargan, Samuel Saul I Darling, Henry Everett 1 Darling, Philip Greenville il 1! K II 2 Davenport, George Lyman, Jr. I Davis, David Cady I Davis, David Lincoln V 2 Davis, Edward Lester I 2 s Davis, Francis Woodward A il I 4 Davis, Frank Howard I 3 Davis, Grace Evangeline, B.A. VIII 3 s Davis, John Pickman il B , ' I Davis, Junius, Jr. VI 2 Davis, Leon Howe I s Davis, Myra Louise VII I s Davis, Roswell XIII 2 Davis, Rowland Parker I Davis, Sidney Lincoln I Davis, William Robert I 4 Davol, Walter Dodge I Dawson, Alfred Ernest II 2 s Dean, Arthur Malcom II 2 Dean, Charles Lake III 2 Dean, Edward Hart I Dean, Henry Lawrence XIII 2 Dean, Herbert Welton I de Alvarenga Francisco Bento II 2 s Delano, Ward Parker, Jr. IV 2 Denham, Howard Sumner Vi 3 de Steignei, Walter George J I Dewis, Clifford Sayre I 3 s Home Address 183 Cross St., Central Falls, R. I. 27 South St., Baltimore, Md. 18 Wall St., Concord, N. H. 18 Chapel St., Newburyport, Mass. East Kingston, N. H. 371 Harvard St., Brookline, Mass. North Hanover, Mass. 14 Clifton St., Taunton, Mass. Kingston, Mass. 4240 Hamilton Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Weston, Mass. 47 Townsend St., Roxbury, Mass. Concord, Mass. 4Q Hammond St., Bangor, Me. 45 West Central St., Natick, Mass. 1342 Washington St., Boston, Mass. Darlington, S. C. (Box 97) Danvers, Mass. 158 Central St., Somerville, Mass. Cohasset, Mass. Ludlow, Mass. 27 Albion St., Hyde Park, Mass. 224 Lincoln St., Newton Highlands, Mass. 286 Highland Ave., West Newton, Mass. 1703 Chicago Ave., Evanston, 111. Wellesley, Mass. 35 Huntington St., Lowell, Mass. Wilmington, N. C. Somerset, Mass. 9 Billings Park, Newton, Mass. 185 Temple St., West Newton, Mass. 215 Elliot St., Beverly, Mass. 185 Temple St., West Newton, Mass. 323 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. 19 Eartlett St., Charlestown, Mass. Saxonville, Mass. Canton, Mass. 105 Hawkins Ave., Braddock, Pa. 38 General Cobb St., Taunton, Mass. Canton, Mass. 63 Highland Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 26 Alvaneda dos Brambus, San Paulo, Brazil 452 Main St., Worcester, Mass. East Pepperell, Mass. 718 South Fourteenth St., Lincoln, Neb. 571 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. 334 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Dexter, Katherine Dickerman, Albert Cornell Dickie, John Frederick Dimock, Roy Erne ;t Disque, Kenneth Hulbert J ' Dissel, Theodore Augustine J A ' Dixon, Frank Eugene Dodd, Rebecca Dodge, Perley Kennison Doepke, Robert Henry J f Doherty, Harry Vincent Dolan, James Stephen Dole, Myron Wilkinson Donald, Harry Walker J ' f Donovan, Jeremiah J., A.B. Donovan, John Joseph Donovan, William Henry Dooley, John James Dorsey, Thomas Francis Doten, John Gooding Doten, William Leslie Douglas, Alice Brooks Douglas, John Frederic Dow, Daniel Frederick Downes, Arthur Caldwell Drake, Francis Edward, Jr. Drake, Henry Philkins Draper, Herbert Kinsley Drew, Alden Glover Drew, Charles Henry, 2d Drury, Walter Maynard Dudley, Henry Harrison Duncan, William W., B.A. Dunham, George Eldridge Dunham, Milton Cornelius Dunn, John Franklin Durant, Frederick Clark, Jr. ' ' ' J Dwight, Joseph Dwyer, Emmet Joseph, A.B. J A K Dyer, Ralph Leighton Eadie, John Charles Eager, William Hosmer 11 E Fames, David Darbey Earle, Frederic Edward Easterbrooks, Clifton Clark Eastham, Barry Canfield Course Year VH 3 S XIII 2 s ni 2 HI 4 I XHI 2 I s vn I I I s HI 3 HI 3 s II 3 III 2 s VI 3 1 s II 4 VI 4 I I II 3 VII I s VIII 2 I 3 s V 3 II 2 s XI 4 II 3 s IX 3 s II 3 s HI 4 VI 4 V 3 V 2 HI 4 VI 3 II 4 s IV 2 II 2 I s VI s VI 3 I I II 3 VI 2 s Home Address 393 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 21 Mill St., Dorchester, Mass. 226 Winsor St., Cambridge, Mass. 77 North Montello St., Brockton. M.tps. 138 West Tenth St., Erie, Pa. 701 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. 10 Oswald St., Gloucester, Mass. Norfolk House, Roxbury, Mass. 24 Federal St., Beverly, Mass. 3595 Washington Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 35 Greenwich Park, Bostcn, Mass. Hampstead Road, Forest Hills, Mass. 104 Pearl St., Fitchburg, Mass. Sweetwater, Egvpt West St., Randolph, Mass. 34 Sargent St., North Andover, Mass. 131 Harold St., Roxbury, Mass. 804 Parker St., Roxbury, Mass. 93 Clarkson St., Dorchester, Mass. 143 Court St., Plymouth, Mass. 143 Court St., Plymouth, Mass. Hingham, Mass. Bucksport, Me. 53 Emerson St., Melrose, Mass. 5 Washington Sq., Gloucester, Mass. 50 North Twenty-first St., Columbus, Ohio 94 Monument St., West Medford, Mass. Canton, Mass. 70 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. 70 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. loii Chicago Ave., Evanston, 111. 198 North Main St., Natick, Mass. Chatham, N. Y. Northfield, Vt. 35 North Montello St., Brockton, Mass. 2124 Maryland Ave., Baltimore, Md. 228 Wt. Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia, Pa. 235 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 692 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. 11 Grave St., Winchester, Mass. Glascow, Scotland 526 Oak St., Syracuse, N. Y. 45 HoUis St., South Framingham, Mass. 6 Downer St., Dorchester, Mass. Peace Dale, R. I. Oregon City, Oregon 1904 TECHNIQUE 335 Name and Society Eastman, Guy Warner Eaton, Frederick Malconi Eaton, Henry Douglas J A . ' Eaton, Lewis Dinman Eaton, Ralph Waldo Eberle, John Christian Eckel, George Robert Eddy, William Osgood Edes, Edward Louis Edgecombe, William Hendrik Edmunds, Howard Maurice Edwards, Carl Francis, B.S. Egerton, Charles Ozro Eichler, Walter Gottfreid Einstein, Ruben Eisele, Herman Eliot, Edward Munroe Elliot, Frank Spencer J J Elliot, Harold Clifford Elliot, Joseph Kittredge Elmer, Charles Wickersham Elwell, David J A ' E Emerson, Carleton Murray Emerson, Charles Joseph J A ' Emerson, Merton Leslie Emerson, Neil Davis .V ' ' Emerson, Ralph Dammarell Emery, Quincey Pierce ' ' J Endies, Kenneth Windram Englis, William Franklin ' ' E Estabrook, Thomas Winthrop Estes, Walter Dalton, A.B. Eustis, Augustus H., A.M. Eustis, Frederick A., A.M. Evans, Edward Burrowes Evans, Ernest Cleveland Evans, William Archibald Faber, Thomas William Faelton, Otto Fairfield, George Albert Fales, Henry Hammett Fallon, Nugent Farley, William Frederick Farnham, Frank Rollins Farnham, Frank Skinner Farnham, George Bradford E Course Year vni 3 V 2 I H 2 S VI 4 I HI 2 S VI 4 I 3 II 3 S VI 2 XIII 3 xni 3 II 2 I XIII 2 I III 2 I IX 3 S VI 4 S VI 3 I XIII 3 I 3 VI 3 S IV 2 I VT 4 I V 2 S III 3 III 4 S III 4 S I I II 3 IV 3 I 3 II 4 I I xni 3 VI 3 VI 3 Home Address Vancouver Barracks, Wash. 45 Charlotte St., Dorchester, Mass. 324 Wt. Eighty-third St., New York, N. Y. 701 Smith St., Providence, R. I. 3 Ringgold St., Haverhill, Mass. 2624 Scioto St., Cincinnati, Ohio 515 North Fourth St., St. Joseph, Mo. 23 Webster St., Middleboro, Mass. Bolton, Mass. 18 Chestnut St., Waltham, Mass. Antron, 21 Up. Tuke Hill, London, Eng. Santa Barbara, Cal. 103 North Main St., Springfield, Mass. 6 Greenheys St., Roxbiiry, Mass. 27 Mayo St., Boston, Mass. 3Q9 Kennard St., Cleveland, Ohio 5468 Maple Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 71 Washington St., Gloucester, Mass. II Ruskin St., West Roxbury, Mass. 147 Main St., Andover, Mass. 1701 W. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. 14 Pelham Terrace, Arlington, Mass. Braintree, Mass. 8q Park Place, Pawtucket, R. I. 20 Mt. Vernon Ave., Braintree, Mass. Wilmington, N. C. 6 Paine St., Worcester, Mass. 452 Columbia Road, Dorchester, Mass. 48 Kent St., Brookline. Mass. 327 W. Eighty sixth St., New York, N. Y. 4g West Cottage St., Roxbury, Mass. Hamilton, N. Y. 40 Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Mass. Readville, Mass. 116 Cedar St., Maiden, Mass. 277 Princeton St., East Boston, Mass. : 1615 Washington St., Boston, Mass. 253 Paris St., East Boston, Mass. 71 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. 3 North St., Saco, Me. Pondville. Mass. 489 Walnut Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Lincoln St., Waltham, Mass. 117 Lake . ve., Newton Center, Mass. t Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley, Mass. 336 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Course Year Farnsworth, Frank Calvin I Farrell, Frank Sheridan V 3 S Farrell, Frederick William V 3 Farrington, Robert Douglas n 2 Farwell, Carroll Andrew I Faulkner. Robert ni 3 Feeley, Arthur Edward I Feemster, Joseph Hall, Jr. Fellows, Otis Dwight, Jr. in 3 Fenner, James Rowland I Ferguson, William B., Jr. 1 ' ,V XIII A 4 Ferris, Cyrus Yale 11 3 Ferris, Mortimer Yale A ' ( I 4 Ferry, Albert Clarke VI 3 Ferry, Montague, Ph.B. J i VI 4 Fick, Otto Wilhelm I 2 Field, William Perry VI 2 S Fifield, Edward, Jr. I Figyelmessy, Haldeman IV 4 S Files, True Herbert I 2 Finer, Percy Richmond 11 3 S Finnegan, Joseph Bernard X 3 S Fischer, Adolph Louis VI 4 Fisher, Andrew, Jr. X 2 Fisher, Dana HoUis VI 4 Fitzler, Henry XIII 4 Fleisher, Henry Hackenburg I 2 Fletcher, Harry Varnum I Fletcher, Samuel Adams VI 4 Flinn, Henry Michael 11 2 Flynn, John Henry, Jr. II 2 Fogarty, William Bailey XIII A 3 Fogg, Benjamin Greely I 4 Fogg, Charles Eugene I Foley, Leonard Harding II 2 s Foley, Martin I Folsom, Robert Morse J T J X 2 s Forbes, Eugene Duncan VI 4 Ford, Grant, B.S. ' ' II A ' VI 3 Forsyth, Ralph Kay XIII 2 s Foster, Augustus Clark VI 3 s Foster, Stanley Alfred X 4 Foster, William Henry I Fouhy, James Francis I 2 Foulds, Roberts Shepard IV 2 Fowler, Elbert XIII 2 s Home Address Canton Junction, Mass. Stoughton, Mass. Stoughton, Mass. Bellevue St., West Ro.xbury, Mass. Ponkapog, Mass. Norwell, Mass. 23 Ehzabeth St., Pittsfield, Mass. Glendale, Ohio 142 Homer St., Newton Center, Mass. 421 Friendship St., Providence, R. I. Wainesville, N. C. Windsor Road, Waban, Mass. Windsor Road, Waban. Mass. 57 Pleasant St., Newton Center, Mass. Lake Forest, 111. 581 1 Michigan Ave., Pt. Louis, Mo. 38 Grant St., Lynn, Mass. 430 Ellison St., Paterson, N. J. 930 Spruce St., Phildaelphia, Pa. 14 Everett St., Everett, Mass. 37 Copeland St., Roxbury, Mass. 60 Franklin St., Stoneham, Mass. Salem, Mo. 180 East River St., Hyde Park, Mass. Norwood, Mass. Tiverton, R. I. 2301 Green St., Philadelphia, Pa. 3 3 Spring St., Portland, Me. 107 Pembroke St., Milton, Mass. 2 Morrison St., West Roxbury, Mass. 31 Marcella St., Roxbury, Mass. Cincinnati, Ohio 22 Toppan St., Newburyport, Mass. 129 William St., Portland, Me. 52 West Central St., Natick, Mass. 28 Kingston St., Charlestown, Mass. 30 Esmond St., Dorchester, Mass. South Framingham, Mass. 577 School St., Lowell, Mass. 41 Pearl St., Kingston, N. Y. 34 Essex St., Beverly, Mass. Henniker, N. H. Hotel Bellevue, Boston, Mass. 21 Wall St., Charlestown, Mass. 225 High St., Taunton, Mass. Griffin, Ga. 1904 TECHNIQUE 337 Name and Society Course Year Fowler, Theodore Victor, Jr. S X II 4 Frame, Harry Allen i Frank, Edwin Diederich August i Franklin, Ralph Stowell ' ' . ' E VI 4 Fraser, Frederick John V 2 Fraser, Linda Susan IV 3 Freeman, Arthur Emery II 2 Fremmer, John Arthur II 3 S French, Halsey, Ph.B. XI S Friend, Frank Waldo i Fuentes, Campos Andres ' IK IX 2 S Fuller, Floid Merrill i Fuller, George I 2 Fuller, Lawrence Usher II 2 S Fuller, Percy Wheaton II 2 Funk, George Charles IV 2 Furer, Julius Augustus XIII A 3 Fnrness, George Choate i Gabriel, Harry Richard I 2 Gaenslen, George Ralph III 4 S Gage, Clarence Edward II 2 Gale, Roy Fellows VI 2 Gallup, Harry Wallace V 3 Galusha, Don Loomis VI 3 Gammons, Herman Trafton II 2 Gammons, James Madison VI 4 Garber, Frederick H. C, Jr. IV 4 S Garcelon, George Holland VI 4 Gardner, Charier Francis VI 4 Gardner, Robert Sherman XIII 2 S Garrigan, Philip Joseph i Gaylord, William Waterman i Geckler, Burton Edward IV 2 S Geist, Alfred W., Jr. .V ' ' i Geraghty, Thomas F., A.B. Ill 2 Gere, Alfred Dalton i Gerhard, Norman Paul I 2 Gerry, Arthur Peterson II 2 S Gerry, William Franklin II 3 S Gibbons, Michael Joseph, Jr. i Gibbs, Arthur Sherman VI 4 S Gibbs, Nathan Jackson - A E 1 Gibson, Jesse Gilbert IV 4 Gifford, Ralph Staples V 2 Gilbert, Albert C, B.Agr. V 2 Gilker, William Mansfield VI 4 Home Address 89 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Shubenacdie, N. S. 2300 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 47 Prospect St., Melrose, Mass. Rye Beach, N. H. 102 Talbot Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 14 Court St., Arlington, Mass. 375 Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass. Marshalltown, Iowa Duxbury, Mass. Parras, Coahuieta, Me.xico 920 Electric Ave., Scranton, Pa. 83 Adams St., Rochester, N. Y. 26 Vine St., Lynn, Mass. 639 B St., N. E., Washington, D. C. 83 Brook St., Brookline, Mass. Sheboygan, Wis. 387 Central St., Manchester, N. H. 2454 West Sixth St., Cincinnati, Ohio South Heights, San Antonio, Texas 8 Sherman Place, Woburn, Mass. Pittsfield, Mass. Norwich, Conn. South Royalton, Vt. 43 Forest St., Middleboro, Mass. Long Plain, Mass. 934 Clark St., Cincinnati, Ohio 71 Hall Ave., West Somerville, Mass. 31 Glenwood St., Brockton, Masr. Bulkeley Sq., New London, Conn. 12 South Walker St., Lowell, Mass. Torringford, Conn. 229 North Main St., Orange, Mass. Guadalajara, Mexico 462 Elm St., Chicago, III. 6i High St., Northampton, Mass. 39 Strong Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Franklin Falls, N. H. Lynnfield Center, Mass. 239 North Main St., Dayton, Ohio North Middleboro, Mass. 25 Slayter Ave., Norwich, Conn. 1632 North Penn St., Indianapolis, Ind. 560 County St., New Bedford, Mass. Gilead, Conn. 9 Blackwood St., Boston, Mass. 338 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Course Year Gill, Walter Josiah, Jr. VIII 3 Gillett, Lewis Goode, Ph.B. Ill 3 S Gillett, William Lowry, B.A. ' A J (-1 X 4 Gillis, Thomas Leo i Gilman, Wesley Clifton X 2 Gilmer, Thornton Meriwcather J V I 3 S Gilmore, Luther Elmer X 2 Gilson, Alden Pinus 11 2 Ginsburg, Henry Abraham i Gladding, James Nickerson II 2 S Gleason, Caroline Lillian VII 4 S Glenn, Charles Sewall VI 3 S Glidden, John Tinker III 2 Goddard, Herbert Willard II 3 S Goldstein, Moise H., B.E. IV 3 Goldthwaite, Lee Faulkner J ' K I S Goldwait, Fred Warren II 3 S Goodale, Percy Allen f J V 2 S Goodwin, Edwin Gerrish III 4 Goodwin, William Francis VI 3 S Gouinlock, William Strachan ' ' .1 A III 2 Gould, Harold Howard VI 3 S Gould, LeRoy Boardman VI 4 Gover, Maurice Howell VI 3 S Graber, Howard Tyler, B.S. V 4 Graesser, Carl Herman J ' II 2 Graham, Errett McLeod, B.A. I 2 Graham, Harold Staniels il) I! F. i Grant, Edward Chester J A ' E XIII 2 Gray, Curtis Rockwell III 3 S Gray, Wilford Drury i Green, Carlton Francis III 4 Green, Mary Lynch VII S Green, Theodore I 2 Green, William 1 A E II 2 Greene, Chester Marson II 3 Greene, George Melville V 4 S Gregson, Robert Burton II 2 S Griffin, Charles James I 4 Griffin, James Edwin i Griffin, Perley Kimball i Grovenor, Ransom Conant i Groves, Harry Hunt, Jr. I 3 S Guerin, Harry Joseph I 2 S Guernsey, George Rockwell i Guest, Frederick Bertine A ' ' XIII i Home Address 21 Montrose St., Roxbury, Mass. Colorado Springs, Col. 1006 Upper First St., Evansville, Ind. 8 Moanet St., Boston, Mass. North Abington, Mass. Riverbank Court, Cambridge, Mass. 167 Howard St., Lowell, Mass. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 2 Woodbine St., Roxbury, Mass. 1 107 Plymouth Ave., Fall River, Mass. 46 Brooks Si., West Medford, Mass. 270 West Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Mu, Q Astiton Place, Cambridge, Mass. 30 Marlborough St., Lowell, Mass. 1736 St. Charles Ave., New Orleans, La. Hopkinsville, Ky. 115 Central St., Peabody, Mass. 10 Carruth St., New Dorchester, Mass North Berwick, Me. 5 Mason St., Biddeford, Me. Warsaw, N. Y. 14 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. 17 North Pleasant St., Taunton, Mass. 17 Homestead St., Roxbury, Mass. iioi Perry Ave., Peoria, 111. Q51 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Care of U. S. Consul, Winnipeg, Canada Buttonwoods, R. I. 520 Greenup St., Covington, Ky. 1808 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. 491 Main St., Woburn, Mass. 7 FoUen St., Spencer, Mass. 16 Marcella St., Roxbury, Mass. 545 First St., Louisville, Ky. 157 Blucker St., Gloversville, N. Y. 56 Belmont St., Maiden, Mass. Westminster, Conn. Fiskdale, Mass. 3 Mead St., Everett, Mass. 130 Temple St., West Newton, Mass. 180 Walnut St., Neponset, Mass. South Hingham, Mass. Rochester, N. H. 23 Dalton St., Boston, Mass. Winchester, Mass. New Rochelle, N. Y. 1904 TECHNIQUE 339 Name and Society Guibord, Fred Willis Guild, Frank Emmons J J Gunn, Selskar Haar, Selby Haddock, Isaac Thomas Hadley, Ralph Edgar Hadley, Walter Elbridge Haggart, Cecil Neil, B.S. Hale, Richard King, A.B. Haley, Frank Haley, Humphrey Matthew Haley, John Francis Hall, George Garfield Hall, John, B.S. Hall, Wallace Ralph Hall, Walter Clement, Jr. Halleck, Charles, Jr. 2 ' Hallowell, Henry Bartlett Hani, Clara Eleanor Hamilton, Chailes Eaton Hamilton, Robert Stavely V ' ' Hammatt, Richard Fox Hammett, Louis Wilbar Hansen, Paul Hanson, Raymond Edward Haraden, Joseph Allen Hardenbergh, Clarence M. Harding, Reynold Munroe Hardy, George Bradley Hardy, Henry Lewis Hardy, William Abbott Harlow, Justin Edwards Harnett, James Harold Harrah, Ernest (l B E Harrigan, William Augustine Harrington, Clinton Oakley Harrington, Elmer Ellsworth Harrington, George B., B.S. J ' Harrington, Willis F., A.B. Harris, Galen Moses J K E Harris, Hartman Kuhn, A.B. Hart, Harold Pillsbury Harvey, Harold Brown Harvey, Herbert Winthrop Harwood, Leon Martin Haskell, Albert Adams Course Year V 2 VI 2 S VII 3 S VI 3 V 4 S I 2 in 3 I s t 3 I VI 3 I IV 3 VI 4 S I I XII 4 S I VII 4 I III 3 S VII I S IX 2 XI 4 V 4 S VI 3 II 4 I 2 III 2 S I 2 S I XIII 4 II 3 S II 3 S I 4 S I 3 S I III 3 X 2 II 4 IV 2 VI 2 VI 2 S I VIII 4 S V 4 S Home Address Plattsburg, N. Y. 117 Pine St., Attleboro, Mass. Ailesbury Road, Dublin, Ireland 1614 Charlotte St., Kansas City, Mo. Tiverton, R. I. 968 Essex St., Lawrence, Mass. 7 Greenough Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Salina, Kan. Brookline, Mass. g Adams St., Lynn, Mass. 4 Pratt St., Salem, Mass. 50 Blossom St., Lowell, Mass. Stony Creek, Conn. 820 Princess St., Wilmington, N. C. 127 Winchester St., NewtonHighlands, Mass. 7 Luteman Place, Roxbury, Mass. 1315 California St., Denver, Col. School St., Belmont, Mass. North Middleboro, Mass. 28 Park St., Newton, Mass. 446 Lawrence St., Helena, Mont. 30 Norway Park, Hyde Park, Mass. 6 Mann Ave., Newport, R. I. 704 Seventh St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 52 Bancroft St., Reading, Mass. 20 Essex St., Charlestown, Mass. 625 Ninth St., Minneapolis, Minn. 42 Youle St., Melrose, Mas?. 16 North High St., Bangor, Me. 201 Walnut St., Manchester, N. H. 17 Maple Ave., Andover, Mass. Edgewood Park, Pa. Hamilton, Bermuda 27 East Sixty-fourth St., New York, N. Y. 236 Lexington St., East Boston, Mass. Vinton, Iowa 167 Maple St., Maiden, Mass. 501 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. Farmington, Del. 53 Deering St., Portland, Me. 2622 North Charles St., Baltimore, Md. no Franklin St., South Framingham, Mass. Lynnfield, Mass. John Ward Ave., Haverhill, Mass. 188 Walnut St., Springfield, Mass. Essex, Mass. 340 TECHNIQUE Vol. xvm Name and Society Haskell, Fredrika Christina Haskell, Raymond Haskins, Harold V ' Hastings, Arthur Nelson 1 Hathaway, Herbert Meletiah Hathorn, George Wilmer Havens, Ralph Edgar Hawkes, Charles Whitney Hawkins, Paul Darwin Hayden, Frank Demetrius Hayden, Ralph Hayes, James, Jr. Hayes, Lawrence Warner Haynes, Charles Rogerson Hayward, Albert Arthur Hayward, Carle Reed Hayward, Marden Warner Hazeltine, Reginald Healy, Alexander - A I ' Heckman, Alfred Raymond Heinzen, Karl Prang Helpern, Myron Hemphill, Albert Weimer Henderson, George Mitchell Henderson, Leroy Porter Henius, Emil Theodore Henrici, Herman Charles Henry, Sidney Morgan V ' ' Hepburn, Andrew Hopewell Hertz, Alfred William Henter, Royal Robbins Heywood, Angelo Tilton Hibbard, Marion Hickok, Harvey Martin Hicks, Alexander Higgins, Frederick Lyle ' ' Higgins, Warren Sneden Hilken, Paul Gerhard L. Hill, Edgar Logan Hill, Edwin Bruce A ' (P Hill, Guy Hill, Harry Eaton Hill, Hiram Augustus Hill, Percy Granville Hiller, Everett Osgood Hinckley, Thomas Leslie J ' ' J J Course Year Home Address VH 2 S 1603 Senate St., Columbia, S. C. VHI 4 2014 Ashland Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Vin 3 547 State St., Meadville, Pa. IX 2 26 Dana St., Cambridge, Mass. IV 2 S Stoughton, Mass. I North Andover, Mass. I 3 Littleton, Mass. II 2 S 15 Euclid St., New Dorchester, Mass. II S 68 Westland Ave., Boston, Mass. I 4 150 Shirley St., Winthrop, Mass. Ill 3 S 14 Bowdoin St., Cambridge, Mass. I 2 S 404 Main St., Brockton, Mass. I 46 William St., Cambridge, Mass. X 3 74 Beacon St., Hyde Park, Mass. I 6 Winthrop St., Stoneham, Mass. Ill 3 S 233 Goffe St., Quincy, Mass. I 233 Goffe St., Quincy, Mass. Ill 3 I Court St., Belfast, Me. Ill 4 Buffalo, Wyo. I 52 Pleasant St., Bradford, Mass. I 45 Center St., Roxbury, Mass. V 2 45 Lagrange St., Boston, Mass. I Haverford, Pa. I I Hermon Terrace, Newton, Mass. I 65 Dodge St., Beverly, Mass. I 2576 Magnolia Ave., Chicago, 111. I 1013 Park Ave., Kansas City, Mo. 3 New York, N. Y. 4 S Avondale, Pa. I 2224 Benton B ' lv ' d., Kansas City, Mo. I 130 Ash St., Waltham, Mass. I 467 Broadway, Cambridge, Mass. I II Nottingham St., Dorchester, Mass. I 4 S 822 Fourth St., S. E., Minneapolis, Minn. I 98 Hillman St., New Bedford, Mass. XIII 4 S 10 Mongam St., Cohoes, N. Y. VI 2 Riverhead, N. Y. XIII 4 133 lanvale St., W., Baltimore, Md. II 2 Lincoln, 111. IX 2 S 5502 Margaretta St., Pittsburg, Pa. VIII 3 41 High St., Everett, Mass. I Georgetown, Mass. I 3 711 Beach St., Manchester, N. H. II 3 Wallingford, Conn. II 3 454 Metropolitan Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. I 745 Osceola Ave., St. Paul, Minn. XIII A IV I 904 TECHNIQUE 341 Name and Society Course Year Hinds, Frederich Williams i Hine, Daniel XIII 2 S Hinkley, Philip Edward J A •; II 2 Hinsdale, Kathryn Mills VII i S Hirons, Frederick Charles IV 4 S Hirt, Leon Edwin i Hixon, Harold Garfield J E III 2 Hohson, George Foster i Hodge, William Edward VI 3 Hogel, WiUiam E. i S Hogner, Per Richard Leonard i Holbrook, Arthur Raymond I 3 Holbrook, Elmer Allen ' ' ' J III 3 Holcombe, Amasa Maynard II 3 Holliday, John Hampden, Jr. V ' ' II 2 Hollnagel, Herbert Percival VI 2 S Holmes, Adison Francis II 3 Holmes, Thomas Baclon i Homans, George Morris I 3 S Homer, Charles Lowell A ' ' I 3 Honeyman, Bruce Ritchie i Hood, Raymond Mathewson H J IV 4 Hool, George Albert I 2 Hooven, Arthur Tillson III 2 S Hopkins, Leonard Otis I 3 S Hopkins, Walter Austin li B E i Horton, Frederick Waters III 3 S Hosmer, Helen Ross i Hosmer, William Walter, Jr. i Hotchkiss, Walter Alvin i Houck, Carl Alfred I 2 Hovey, Charles Emerson J ' i Howard, Charles Alton i Howard, John Wardwell I 4 Howard, Lewis Thomas I 3 Howe, Robert i Howes, Charles Edward i Howes, Cyrus Pierce IV 3 Howes, Gretchen VII 2 S Howland, Arthur Hathaway IV 2 Hoxie, Edward Ely IV 4 S Hoy, Austin Young, A.B. XIII 3 Hoy, Charles X 3 Hoyle, William Howard i Hoyt, Robert Nelson i Hubbell, Henry Simonds i Home Address Kirkstall Road, Newtonville, Mass. 54 Vernon St., Hartford, Conn. 57 Deering St., Portland, Me. Yonkers, N. Y. 360 Salem St., Medford, Mass. South St., Brookline, Mass. 123 South Penn. Ave., Denver, Col. 26 Hanks St., Lowell, Mass. 10 Bell Rock St., Maiden, Mass. 144 West Sixteenth St., New York, N. Y. 34 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass. Ashland. Mass. 6i Clinton St., Fitchburg, Mass. 13 Wildwood St., Winchester, Mass. 118 East Market St., Indianapolis, Ind. 2164 Couler Ave., Dubuque, Iowa 41 Ruggles St., Boston, Mass. 216 Main St., Keene, N. H. 26 Berwick Park, Boston, Mass. 926 Church St., Galvaston, Texas 63 North Twentieth St., Portland, Or. 107 Cottage St., Pawtucket, R. I. 2Q Manchester St., Lawrence, Mass. 323 Madison Ave., Scranton, Pa. South Framingham, Mass. Winthrop Road, Brookline, Mass. 150 School St., Somerville, Mass. South Bellerica, Mass. 34 Noble St., Westfield, Mass. Naugatuck, Conn. 97 High St., Buffalo, N. Y. Portsmouth, N. H. Yarmouthville, Me. 147 Grampian Way, Dorchester, Mass. 76 Erie St., Brockport, N. Y. 236 Bolton St., Marlboro, Mass. 9 Warren Sq., Jamaica Plain, Mass. South Yarmouth, Mass. Woodland Road, Brookline, Mass. 49 Fifth St., New Bedford, Mass. 225 Longwood Ave., Boston, Mass. 461 North State St., Chicago, 111. 122 East Hudson St., Elmira, N. Y. I Providence St., Providence, R. I. 40 Oak St., Hyde Park, Mass. 25 Highland Ave., Fitchburg, Mass. 342 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Humphrey, Carl Thomas Humphrey, Edwin Rowland V ' ' Humphrey, William Henry Hunnewell, Mary Peile Hunt, Franklin Livingstone Hunt, George Fessenden Hunter, Leroy Littletield Huntington, Charles McKay Hurley, Edmund Joseph Hursh, Robert Huse, Arthur Wood Hutchins, Charles Morton ' ■' V Hyde, Edward Ruddock H X Hyde, Stanley Taber Ingalls, Roger Philip Ingram, Ralph Osborne ' ' J Jackson, Henry Louis Jackson, Ralph Cushraan Jackson, Ralph Hahnemann Jackson, Robert Fuller Jacobs, Alfred Henry Jacobson, Henry Forsberg Jameson, Sarah Janet Jansson, Arthur Harold Janvrin, Robert DoUiver Jason, George, Jr. Jenkins, Austin Dickinson, B.A. I Jenkins, Ernest F. Jewett, Frank B., A.B., Ph.D. J ' Jewett, Kenneth Dubois Jewett, Thomas Edward Johansson, Frederick Victor Johnson, Bertrand Leroy Johnson, Charles Edward fl X Johnson, Charles Henry Johnson, Frank Johnson, Henry Russell Johnson, Joseph Warren Johnson, Natt Madison Johnston, Charles Wiswell Johnston, John Frederick, Jr. Jones, George Bayard Jones, John Larrabee Jones, Joseph Russell Jordan, Robert Rishworth J K E Joseph, Jesse Strassburger Course Year I 2 S n 4 S IV 2 s VII 4 s II 2 I I 4 XIII 2 II 3 I r 4 I I s X 2 VI 2 II 3 V 2 s s IV 4 IV 3 VI 3 VII I I s VI 2 s ' ' IV 4 s IV 3 s VI 4 s II 4 s I 2 VI 2 III 2 I II 2 s I 4 I I I 3 in 2 I II 2 VI 4 HI 4 II 4 s II 4 Home Address Weymouth Center, Mass. SO Ashford St., AUston, Mass. 50 Chestnut Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Wellesley, Mass. 19 Howard St., Waltham, Mass. 22 Beckett St., Portland, Me. 591 East Forty-third St., Chicago, 111. 18 St. Stephen St., Boston, Mass. 100 Lebanon St., Maiden, Mass. 186 Upland Road, North Cambridge, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. 149 West Water St., Rockland, Mass. 38 Pinckney St., Somerville, Mass. 33 Harris St., Waltham, Mass. Lexington, Mass. Qo Knox St., Lawrence, Mass. 2 Jewett Place, Utica, N. Y. 33 Oak Sq., Brighton, Mass. 335 Center St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 15 Center St., Brookline, Mass. 204 Lansome St., San Francisco, Cal. Hastings, Neb. iS Tremont St., Charlestown, Mass. Mt. Pleasant Ave., Maiden, Mass. Janvrin Ave., Revere, Mass. Cohasset, Mass. 24 Alveston St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 35 Glenarm St., Dorchester, Mass. 139 Bellefontaine St., Pasadena, Cal. 224 Blossom St., Fitchburg, Mass. 72 St. Stephen St., Boston, Mass. 316 Dudley St., Roxbury, Mass. Stoneham, Mass. 119 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. 13 Orchard St., Haverhill, Mass. 167 Broadway, Lawrence, Mass. 155 Forest Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 30 Sumner St., Dorchester, Mass. Albany, Vt. I Copeland Place, Roxbury, Mass. 16 St. Botoph St., Boston, Mass. 4337 Wash. Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. 1871 Forest Ave., Portland, Me. Highland Park, 111. 290 Danforth St., Portland, Me. 815 Federal St., Allegheny, Pa. 1904 TECHNIQUE 343 Name and Society Joslin, Oilman Burt Joyce, Arthur Lee Joyce, Clarence Mason Juengling, Karl Frank Kahn, Isa Wolfner Kaiser, George Karl Kalmus, Herbert Thomas Kane, James Allen Kasson, Charles LeBaron Kaufman, Lewis Rogers ' ( A Kearny, Philip John J ' Kearney, Stephen Keen, Walter Thomas Keen, William Herbert Keenan, Joseph Augustine Kehew, Francis Donaldson Keith, Edwin Keith, Henry Hiram W. Keleher, Andrew Hamilton Keller, Dennie Kelley Kelley, Daniel Patrick G. Kelley, Frank Augustus H. Kelley, Ralph Dudley Kelling, Alfred Herman Kelly, Edward Francis Kemper, William Arthur J ' A ' Kendall, Burton Warren H X Kendall, Harry Stillman Kennedy, H. Anna Kennedy, Henry Hoffman, A.B. Kennedy, Patrick James, Jr. (-) A Kennedy, Roy Guthrie, A.B. Kerr, Andrew - X Kershaw, George EUiott Ketcham, William Chapin Keyes, Henry Francis, A.B. Kibbey, Rinker Kidder, James William ' ■? .Y Kilham, Frances Rogers Killion, Louis John Kimball, Alfred Whitefield Kimball, William Francis King, Carl King, Robert Joshua Kingsbury, Harold Avery Kinnear, John Charles Course Year XHI 2 I V 4 I I VI 3 vni 3 I I S IV 4 S II 4 I II 2 V 2 II 3 III 4 II 2 s XIII 2 I IX 3 I I I V 2 I I 3 I I 3 VII 4 s IV 2 I I I s XIII 3 I s IV 3 s III 2 I VII 3 s I 2 V 4 I II 3 III 4 I Home Address 46 Burrows St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 4 Hubbard Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 19 Park St., Medford, Mass. 518 Kennard St., Cleveland, Ohio 501 St. James St., Peoria, 111. 171 Banks St., New London, Conn. 5 Howe St., Dorchester, Mass. Long Green, Baltimore Co., Md. 17 Wentworth St., Dorchester, Mass. 1609 Fourth Ave., Louisville, Ky. Navy Yard, Charlestown, Mass. 312 Market St., Lowell, Mass. Jewett City, Conn. 67 Newhall St., Maiden, Mass. 8 West Fifth St., South Boston, Mass. 104 Inman St., Cambridge, Mass. Bridgewater, Mass. 139 North St., New Bedford, Mass. 457 Quincy St., Dorchester, Mass. Canton, Mass. 109 Kenwood Road, Roxbury, Mass. 63 Elm St., Stoneham, Mass. South Yarmouth, Mass. 910 North Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 30 Boylston St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 19 West Granite St., Butte, Mont. 361 Chestnut St., Gardner, Mass. 361 Chestnut St., Gardner, Mass. South Weymouth, Mass. Freedom, Md. 464 Maple St., Holyoke, Mass. 65 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 317 Forest St., Medford, Mass. 25 Dell St., Somerville, Mass. (Box 472) Indianapolis, Ind. 15 Bishop St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Marshfield Hills, Mass. 41 Franklin St., Somerville, Mass. 8 Thorndike St., Beverly, Mass. 49 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. 51 Fair St., Newburyport, Mass. 140 Highland Ave., Middletown, N. Y. 185 Davis Ave., BrookUne, Mass. Billerica, Mass. 26 Pearl St., Westfield, Mass. 10 Piedmont St., Salem, Mass. 344 TECHNIQUE Vol XVIII Name and Society Kirby, Arthur Collins Klahr, Charles Dean Knapp, William Jared J A ' Knight, Elliot Walker ' ' J Knight, Ralph Frank Knowlton, Cutler Dean Koppleman, William H., B.A. Krag, Frederick Schuyler ' ' ' J Kramer, Henry Kriegsman, Eugen Frederick Lackman, Herman William A Lage, Frederico Lage, Jorge Lage, Renand, B.S. ' I A Lalley, William Hugh Lamer, Philip P.enker, M.E. Lamb, John Edwin Lamb, Sidney Rivers Lambie, James McClurg V ' ' Lamphier, Marcia Allen Lampie, Abraham Lansy, Leon Karl Lang, Alfred Ernest ' ' ' J Lang, Currier J A ■' Langley, Arthur Hooper Langworthy, Frank Herbert Lasher, Clarence Emmet Latham, Bernard Wilson Lawrence, Ralph Chester Lawrence, Waldron Gustine Lawton, Joseph Thomas, Jr. (p I J Lawton, Richard Mack ' B E Leavitt, Charles Evans Lee, John Josiah Lee, Lawrence Hargreave Leh, Harold Marcus Leland, Henry Forrest Lemner, Cecilia Agnes Lenth, George Casper Doering Leonard, John Kelley Levine, Harry Levy, Ernest Coleman, M.D. Lewenberg, Harry Louis Lewis, Henry Francis J ' J Lewis, Warren Kendall Libbey, Fay Wilmott Course Year I n 2 I HI 4 I VI 3 I 3 I s I 3 s I 2 II 3 I I s XIII 4 I 2 s X 4 I s II 2 s II 2 VII 2 I s II 2 s IV 4 I 3 I 3 s II 2 I s II 4 I I I I 4 XIII 2 I 3 s VI 4 s II 3 I s VII 2 s I 4 VI 4 s I 3 VII 3 I s VIII 2 X 2 I Home Address 54 Ashland St., New Bedford, Mass. Clarion, Pa. 249 East Forty-ninth St., Chicago, 111. 15 Coolridge St., Brookline, Mass. Hudson, Mass. (Box 441 Rockport, Mass. 605 North Carrolton Ave., Baltimore, Md. The Aspinwall, Brookline, Mass. Q7 Florence St., Roslindale, Mass. 22 Stanwood St., Providence, R. I. Glendale, Ohio Rio de Janerio, Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1448 Park Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Augusta, Ga. Spencer, Mass. 18 East Fortieth St., New York, N. Y. Washington, Pa. 120 Hamilton Ave., Lynn, Mass. 28 Greenwood St., Dorchester, Mass. 757 West Market St., Lima, Ohio 8 Green St., Lawrence, Mass. 24 Irving St., Cambridge, Mass. 253 High St., Newburyport, Mass. 94 Hanover St., Lynn, Mass. North Adams, Mass. 18 Pearl St., Willimantic, Conn. 26 Highland Ave., Fitchburg, Mass. 34 Sargent St., Roxbury, Mass. Clifton Ave. and Tenth St., Baltimore, Md. 213 Pawtucket Ave., Lowell, Mass. Weymouth, Mass. Bucksport, Me. 369 Hudson St., Buffalo, N. Y. 1006 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. 483 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. Hingham, Mass. 1215 West Grace St., Chicago, 111. 41 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 6 Morton St., Boston, Mass. Richmond, Va. 40 Linwood St., Roxbury, Mass. 604 Huron St., Toronto, Ont. Laurel, Del. 51 Howard St., Bangor, Me. I 904 TECHNIQUE 345 Name and Society Course Year Libbey, George Eastman II 4 S Lichtenstein, Milton i Light, Hunter Ulrich i Lincoln, Paul i Lincoln, William Hamilton i Lindsley, Ben Edwin ' ' J III 2 Litchman, Harold Bartlett III 4 Littig, Charles Ross ' J E i Littlefield, Emmet I 4 Littleton, Stephen Berton XIII 2 Livermore, Robert, A.B. Ill 4 Lochridge, Elbert E., B.S. A XI 3 S Lombard, Eugene XIII 2 S Lombard, Norman J K I ' , II 2 Loomis, Dan Austin i Loomis, Warren Weston VI 2 Lord, Clarence Arthur ' ' ; ; I 2 Lord, Forrest Wells i Lord, Harold i Lord, Israel Pierre IV 3 S Lord, Robert Howard William II 2 Lorenz, Edward Henry, B.S. . A ' , ' ' ; A II 2 Loring, Henry Delano ' ■' V i Loughlin, Gerald Francis XII 4 Loughlin, John Sherwood II 2 Lounsbury, William C. VII 4 S Lourie, William Isaac i Lovejoy, Roy Fisk IX 2 Lovett, Joseph Lamson I 2 S Low, Harry Raymond ' ' ' J III 4 Lowry, Harold Keyes 3 S Luce, Robert Francis I 2 Lueth, Clarence James i Luguer, Lynch, A.B. IV 4 S Lum, Elliott J • • J - VI 2 Lumbert, William James i Lundin, Laura Marie VIII 4 S Lutze, Fred Clemens IV 2 S Lynch, John Edward, Jr. II 2 Lynch, William Duncan V 3 Lynde, Clifford i Lynde, Harry Milton I 2 Lyon, Alpheus Crosby ' ' J XIII 3 Lyon, James Lawrence II 4 Lyon, Waldo Vinton VI 2 Lyons, Robert Joseph i Home Address 147 Wyoming Ave., Melrose, Mass. 2325 Bush St., San Francisco, Cal. 526 Cumberland St., Lebanon, Pa. 27 Russell St., Maiden, Mass. 413 Cherry St., West Newton, Mass. 2718 Forest Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Marblehead, Mass. loio Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. 60 Maple Ave., Troy, N. Y. Chelsea, Mass. 34 Alveston St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 240 West Newton St., Boston, Mass. Dedham, Mass. 1805 Jefferson St., Kansas City, Mo. 727 State St., Springfield, Mass. Windsor, Conn. 522 South Main St., Woonsocket, R. I. 16 Ashland St., Melrose, Mass. 30 Auburn St., Maiden, Mass. 63 Columbus Ave., Somerville, Mass. 56 Waverley Ave., Newton, Mass. 96 Garden St.. Hartford, Conn. 94 Hudson St., Somerville, Mass. 16 Thornley St., Dorchester, Mass. 16 Thornley St., Dorchester, Mass. 66 Montclair Ave., Roslindale, Mass. 30 Allen St., Boston, Mass. 813 Broadway, Lowell, Mass. 71 Farnham St., Lawrence, Mass. 234 West Elm St., Brockton, Mass. 156 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge, Mass. 12 Stevens Place, Melrose, Mass. City Hotel, Webster, Mass. 1443 Rhode Island Ave., Washington, D. C. Aberdeen, South Dakota (Box 287) Walpole, Mass. 613 Puritan Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 1434 N. J. Ave., Sheboygan, Wis. 10 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. 10 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. 90 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. 90 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. 735 Main St., Bangor, Me. 320 High St., Central Falls, R. I. 21 Providence St., Woonsocket, R. I. 270 Lake Ave., Manchester, N. H. 346 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society McBriar, Wallace Noble McBride, Lewis Bowen ' ' McClung, Samuel Alfred, Jr. ' ' McConnell, Frank William McCornack, Clyde Webster ' ' J ' McCornack, Walter Ray ' ' J H McCue, Henry Michael McEntee, William McGinnis, Claude Stonecliffe Mcintosh, Charles Jewell J 7 McKav, Richard, Jr. McKenna, John Andrew McKernan, Joseph Newall McManus, John Herbert McMenimen, William Vincent McQi.aid, John Delaney ' ' A Macdonald, George M., B.Sc. MacDonald, Howard Jeremiah MacGregor, Roderick James Machado, Joas Martins Macintyre, Horace James Mack, Paul Wardlaw MacMillan, Frederick Fbenezer J T J Madero, Benjamin Magee, George Merrill Magnitzky, . lbert Louis Magnuson, Mark Graham ' ' J Mahar, John Theodore Mailey, Roy Davis Manahan, Robert Fulton Mann, Herbert James Manning, Eleanor Madaline Mansfield, Albert Preston Manson, Arthur James Manson, Edward Scoefield Manson, Gyula Bennett Manta, Philip Prada Manter, Carlton Holmes Marcy, Grosvenor DeWitt Maroney, Agnes Teresa, A.B. Marsh, Howard Lyford Marsh, Richard Oglesby ' ' II I ' . Marsh, William Coobaugh ' ' IS E Marston, John Rufus Marston, William, A.B. Martenet, Simon Jonas . I ' , Course Year II 2 XIII A 3 II 3 S II 2 I 4 IV 4 I XIII A 4 I II 4 XI 2 I 4 S II 3 II I s VI 4 II s II 2 I I IX s IV 3 s X 3 s III 3 I VIII 3 III 4 I I I VI 3 I III 4 II 2 s IV 2 s II 2 VII 3 I s I 2 s I s V 3 s II 3 s V 3 s Home Address 1 Williams St., Brookline, Mass. Columbia, Pa. 261 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 61 Mascot Ave., Dorchester, Mass. 1087 North Broad St., Galesburg, 111. 1087 North Broad St., Galesburg, 111. 781 Broadway St., Lowell, Mass. Montgomery, Minn. 2046 Park Ave., Indianapolis, Ind Racinp, Wis. East Milton, Mass. Brierly Brook, Antigonish, N. S. 70 High St., Westerly, R. I. 2 Winter St., Dorchester, Mass. 82 Otis St., Cambridge, Mass. 134 Dwight St., Holyoke, Mass. Truro, N. S. 87 Somerset St., Bangor, Me. South Lincoln, Me. Nage, Brazil 122 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Roxbury, Mass. Williams Bridge, New York, N. Y. I Grant St., Haverhill, Mass. Parras, Coahuila, Mexico Wenham Depot, Masf. 127 Chestnut Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 1909 Rondo St., St. Paul, Minn. 62 L St., South Boston, Mass. 12 Howard St., Lynn, Mass. 14 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 751 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, 111. 26 Beacon Hill Ave., Lynn, Mass. Rural Del. R. I., Wakefield, Mass. 23 Lindsay St., Dorchester, Mass. 605 Fourth St., Wausau, Wis. 200 Trenton St., East Boston, Mass. (Box 224) Provincetown, Mass. 125 Broadway, Taunton, Mass. 103 Ocean St., Dorchester, Mass. 52 Collins St., Lynn, Mass. 4 lona St., Dorchester, Mass. Warsaw, 111. Warsaw, 111. 98 Mechanic St., Marlboro, Mass. 1205 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. 1503 East North Ave., Baltimore, Md. 1904 TECHNIQUE 347 Name and Society Course Year Martin, Arthur Safford XII 4 S Martin, William Chaille, M.S. V 4 S Mason, Eugene Waterman, Jr. ' ' IV 4 S Mason, Marquis Edgar V 3 Mason, Steven Nickerson X 4 Mathesius, Anthony Paul V ' Ij E i Matteossian, Zenas, A.B. IV S Mayer, Charles Benajah IV 2 Ma.xfield, Albert Preston i Maxtield, Louis Henry - A - ' i Mead, Edward Arnold VI 2 Mens, James Howard VII 2 S Mears, Henry Savier i Mears, Joseph Archibald, Jr. VI 4 Meggison, John Alexander II 2 Merriam, Harry Caleb i Merriam, Marshall Gage II 2 Merrick, Silas Clarence A ' ' II S Merrill, Alden V 2 Merrill, Ambrose Moody XIII 3 S Merrill, Florence VII i S Merrill, Herbert Chandler X 4 Merrill, Oscar Charles, A.B. I 3 Merriman, Fred Knights I 3 Merrow, Harold Kay V 2 Merryweather, Hubert J V I 3 Messenger, Winthrop Norton i Metcalf, Edward Harris, A.B. II 3 S Middleton, Elizabeth Hall VII 2 S Miller, Andrew Otterson J A ' E VI 3 Miller, Blaine H. J K E I 3 S Milliken, Frank Wellman I 3 S Mitchell, Harold Carlyle I 2 Mitchell, William Edward VI 4 Moffat, William Andrew i Mohler, David D. X 4 Molina, Vincente I 2 S Monaghan, John Edward i Monroe, Walter Nathan VI 2 Monsarrat, Charles Reginald ' ' J i-i II 3 S Montanus, Paul Armstrong II 4 S Montgomery, Frank Park VI 4 Mooers, Ben Clayton VI 3 Moore, Fred i Moore, James Gates i Moorehead, Theodore Parker J ' ' I 2 Home Address 224 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. Kyrle, Texas 149 Waterman Ave., Providence, R. I. 45 North Lincoln Ave., Chicago, 111. Wakefield, Mass. 355 West 145th St., New York, N. Y. Constantinople, Turkey 16 West Doty St., Madison, Wis. Wakefield, Mass. 627 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 335 Main St., Milford, Mass. 196 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 721 Flanders St., Portland, Or. 234 South Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. 36 Pearl St., Amsbury, Mass. 175 Prichard St., Fitchburg, Mass. Pepperell, Mass. 1435 Third Ave., New Brighton, Pa. 16 Tremlett St., Dorchester, Mass. 9 1-2 Prospect St., Newburyport, Mass. Andover, Mass. 38 Main St., Peabody, Mass. Auburn, Me. 134 Walnut St., Brockton, Mass. 13 Williams Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. 639 Forest Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio Melrose Highlands, Mass. 282 Berkley St., Boston, Mass. 48 Oak St., Hyde Park, Mass. 97 Sixth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1429 North Penn St., Indianapolis, Ind. 39 Sycamore St., New Bedford, Mass. (Box 317) Ottawa, Canada (Box 141) Milton, Mass. 35 London St., Lowell, Mass. 320 South Sahwath, Colorado Spgs., Col. Merida , Yucatan, Mexico 319 Fourth St., South Boston, Mass. 24 East Cottage St., Roxbury, Mass. 315 East Broad St., Columbus, Ohio 183 South Yellow Springs St., Springfield, 0. Brunswick, Me. loio Fourth Ave., Seattle, Wash. 93 Spangler St., Cleveland, Ohio Savonna, N. Y. I. M. Customs, Foo Chow, China 348 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Morey, Charles Burrows Morley, Herbert, B.S. Morrill, Leon Gilbert Morris, John Misoroon Morrison, Edward Stanley Morse, Howard Scott Morse, Robert Brooks, A.B. Morse, Robert Wilbur Morse, Willard Vaughan Moseley, Charles Bartlett, Ph.B. Motter, William Duffield J f Mowry, Charles William Muhahy, Annie M. Mulherin, Charles Patrick, A.B. Munster, Agustus William Munroe, Harold Knapp Murphy, John Edward Murphy, Louis Sutliffe Murr, Ilias Asaad, B.A. Myers, Leonard Fred Nabstedt, Harry Martin Nagle, Mortimer Livingstone - ' Nash, Alice Mildred Nash, Samuel Aubin Neal, Clarence Atkins 1 ' I . ' Needam, Harry Hampton Neilson, William Nelson, Henry Hawkins, Jr. Nelson, Theodore Nelson, William Andrew Newberger, Wallace Newkirk, Eliza Jacobus Newman, Rolf Raymond Newton, Sherley Purl Nibecker, Claude Pendleton Nichols, Henry George i ' . A ' Nichols, Robert Porter J ) ' Nichols, Utar James ' .1 •. ' Nicholson, Dow Hiram Nickerson, Frederic A ' ' Nickerson, Lester Willis Niditch, Isadore Nields, Benjamin J T Niles, EUiot Wright Nolan, Thomas Alphonsus Nordj ' ke, Addison Haynes, Jr. ' ' ' Course Year VI 4 S V 2 I S VI 3 I 4 XIII 3 II 2 III 3 J H XIII 4 III 2 I S VII 4 s I 4 II 3 I I I I 2 I 2 s I 2 III 4 s VII I I s I 4 s VIII 3 I II 2 XIII 3 XIII 3 I s IV 2 s I 4 I XI 4 I XIII 2 I s I 2 IV 3 V 3 s V 2 III 4 s VIII 3 I J I Home Address loi Depew Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 117 Cedar St., Newton Center, Mass. Norwood, Mass. Ford Getty, Charlestown, S. C. 411 Canal St., Lawrence, Mass. 260 Ames St., Dedham, Mass. 1406 Mt. Royal Ave., Baltimore, Md. 4Q Holbrook St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Aquascalientes, Me.xico Needham, Mass. 711 Robidoux St., St. Joseph, Mo. 63 Warren St., Fall River, Mass. 924 Fourth St., South Boston, Mass. 1 21 1 Green St., Augusta, Ga. 25 Grant St., Waltham, Mass. 43 Warren Ave., Woburn, Mass. Maple St., Framingham, Mass. 4 Thurston St., Somerville, Mass. Lebanon, Syria 267 Glenwood Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 1024 West Ninth St., Davenport, Iowa 311 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. South Weymouth, Mass. Brookline, Mass. 318 Waldron Ave., Kansas City, Mo. 156 Larange St., West Ro.xbury, Mass. 232 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. 16 Myrtle St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 19 Mooreland Ave., ' Newton Center, Mass. Chicago, 111. 763 Sixth St., Louisville, Ky. Wyncote, Pa. 1055 South Figueron St., Los Angeles, Cal. Cyrus, Mass. Glen Mills, Pa. Melbourne, Australia Searsport, Me. Melbourne, Australia 30 Spring Park Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 210 West Arrellaga, Santa Barbara, Cal. 217 Pleasant St., Brockton, Mass. 49 Oswego St., Boston, Mass. 826 Market St., Wilmington, Del. 561 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. 19 Paul Gore St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 1 117 No. Delaware St., Indianapolis, Ind. 1904 TECHNIQUE 349 Name and Society Northrup, Carl Frederick Norton, George Chester Norton, George Roswell Norton, Harolrt Lee Norton, John Foote Noyes, Harry Fordham Nutter, Charles Warren Nutter, Harry Godfrey Nutter, Ralph Herbert Nyce, Joseph Crawford Oaks, Henry Lane Obear, George Barrows Obear, Howard Leslie O ' Brien, James Joseph O ' Connor, Arthur Wellington O ' Connor, Charles Timothy O ' Connor, Martin Arthur Odell, John Ripley Ohene, Theodore Carl, Jr. O ' Farrell, Alphonsus O ' Hara, James Randall, Jr. Oliver. Wilfred Nealy Olmsted, Frederic Arthur O ' Neil, Leo Francis, A.B. Orcutt, Harvey Baxter Ortseifen, Adolph Osborn, Harold Osgood, Tom William, B.S. Ovington, Earle Lewis Paddock, Morris V. Paddock, Orville Wood Page, Homer Olsen ' ' -i A Page, Raymond Felt Page, Roland Everett (■A Paine, Paul McClary ' ' ' J Paine, Wilfred Arnold Palmer, Guy Prescott J almer, Robert Palmer, Virgil Maro Paquet, Victor Hugo Parker, Edward Francis, Jr. Parker, Lewis Adelbert Parker, Lovell Hallet Parker, Paul Revere Parsons, Gait Fayette Patch, Emerette Ophelia Patch, Ralph Reginald Patterson, Juliet Clary Patten, Jane Boit Paulson, Hans Krieger Payne, Frank Edward Payne, James Harvey Course Year I IV 2 I s III 4 I III 3 I VI 4 III 4 8 VI 3 III I S VI 4 1 s I II 3 I s II 3 s V 4 I I I I X 4 VI 2 I XIII 3 VI 4 III 3 s VI 3 s V 3 s VI 3 s TI 2 s V 2 I s III 3 IV 4 s I 3 VI 3 II 4 XIII 2 IX 3 I I 2 XIII 4 s VI 2 s VII 4 s I 2 s I s VII 3 I s XIII 2 X 2 Home Address Bellows Falls, Vt. Care of Taylor Norten Co., Rome, Ga. 73 Hudson St., Somerville, Mass. 27 Pearl St , Medford, Mass. 5832 Washington Ave., Chicago, 111. 251 Auburudale Ave, Auburndale, Mass. 58 Heard St., Chelsea, Mass. 56 Heard St., Chelsea, Mass. Congress St., Lvnn, Mass. 5 Columbus Sq., Boston, Mass. South Framingham, Mass. 640 Western Ave., Lynn, Mass. 145 Hale St., Beverly, Mass. II Prospect St., Charlestown. Mass. West Bridgewater, Mass. 119 Wasliington St., Peabody, Mass. 282 Williams St., Providence, R. I. 581 Class Ave., Detroit, Mich. 5401 Ellis Ave., Chicago, 111. 82 Dustan St., Brighton, Mass. Cottage Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 26 St. Stevens St., Boston, Mass. 13 Rockland St., Roxbury, Mass. 50 Gloucester St., Boston, Mass. 92 High St., Florence, Mass. 514 East Forty-sixth St., Chicago, 111. Columbia, S. C. 1 1 16 Fourth Ave., South Fargo, No. Dak. 55 Rutland Sq., Boston, Mass. St. John, N. S. 3635 Washington Boul., St. Louis, Mo. 27 College Ave., Adrian, Mich. 507 Center St., Newton, Mass. 67 Pleasant St., Clinton, Mass. 422 West Biddle St., Baltimore, Md. 23 Illinois Ave., Central Falls, R. I. 135 Highland Ave., Winchester, Mass. Larchmont, N. Y. 142 Marcus Ave., Willimantic, Conn. 306 Hall St., Portland, Ore. 3 Salem St., Reading, Mass. 1255 West Sixth St., Los Angeles, Cal. Osterville, Mass. 24 Wendall St., Cambridge, Mass. 601 Guard ' n Tr ' t Bid., Baltimore, Md. Lexington, Mass. Stoneham, Mass. 8 Montrose St., Roxbury, Mass. Manchester, Mass. 21 Kastelovej, Kjobenhaven, Denmark 14 Webster St., Winchester, Mass. 108 South Fourth St., Wilm.ington, N. C. 350 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Peabody, Alfred Peabody, Alvin Luther Peabody, Octavius Libbey Pearson, Albert William Pease, Leon Murray A J I Peebles, Elizabeth Steele Peiler, Carl Ernest Peck, Orton Abner Peirce, Chadwell Stuart Pelton, Ernest Williains, A.B. Pemberton, Henry Augustus V Pendergast, Roland Ball Percival, Harry Spaulding Perkins, Arthur Perkins, Grafton Brookhouse Perkins, Park Valentine l-t X. Perry, Edward D. Perry, George Wason Perry, Roland Ambrose Phelps. Fred Sydney Philbrick, Joseph Philhrick, Herbert Shaw Phillips, Lee Phillips, Robert Stanley Phinney, Robert Morris Physeck, Percy Howard Picord, Daniel Charles Pierce, Fred Merton Pierce, Howard LeRoy Pinkerton, Thomas Coulson Pinkham, Robert Sanborn Pirie, Frederick Alexander Pitner, Paul Jerome Place, Adolf Edwin Place, Mark Hopkins Plummer, Harold Cleveland Plummer, Laura Susanna Polhemus, James Higbie PoUister, Edward Barker Poole, Burnell Poole, Frederick Parsons Poor, Edward Joseph Poor, Fred Weed Porter, Arthur Peabody Porter, Charles H., A.B. 1 ' A Porter, Sam Graham, A.B. Potter, Audrey Abraham Potter, Nathaniel, Ph.B. Potter, Philip Pousland, Daniel Potter Powell, George Hardy V ' ' Prentiss, George William J .- Course Year IX 3 I I VI 4 U 2 S I s VI 3 I A ' ' ■II 4 ' ' II 4 VI 3 S VI 2 S I 2 S V 2 I XIII 2 S XIII 2 V 2 S I X 4 II 2 S II 3 V 3 VI 3 I 2 V 4 II 3 I 3 V 3 I II 3 S III 3 I 4 I I VII 4 S I I I VI 2 I 2 S I I 3 VI 4 I 4 VI 4 II 3 I VI 2 XIII 3 E II 2 Home Address IQ Chestnut St., Salem, Mass. Little Neck, Ipswich, Mass. 21 Grant St., Haverhill, Mass. 205 Park St., West Roxbury, Mass. Toledo, Ohio 56 Washington Park, Newtonville, Mass. 56 Allen Place, Hartford, Conn. 3 0.xford Terrace, Boston, Mass. 1300 Davis St., Evanston, 111. 31 Garfield Place, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 230 Woodland Rd., Auburndale, Mass. 5717 Monroe Ave., Chicago, II!. 283 South Union St. Burlington, Vt. 23 Dearborn St., Salem, Mass. 203 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. Bennington, Vt. 5 West Eighty-third St., New York, N. Y. 99 Brooks St., West Medford, Mass. 10 Chestnut St., Medford, Mass. Lowell St., Andover, Mass. 32 Broad St., Newburyport, Mass. 20 College Ave., Waterville, Me. West Hanover, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Barnstable, Mass. St. Louis, Mo. Dutchtown, La. 57 South St., Campello, Mass. Clayton, N. J. Walbrook, Baltimore, Md. 165 Warren Ave., Wollaston, Mass. 48 Bradstreet Ave., Beachmont, Mass. 84 Hunington Ave., Boston, Mass. 55 Sycamore St., Somerville, Mass. Francestown, N. H. Ill Hutchings St., Roxbury, Mass. 1 10 Princeton St., East Boston, Mass. 18 Moreland Ave., Newton Center, Mass. 2 Atlantic St., Portland, Me. 14 Whitby Terrace, Dorchester, Mass. 19 Concord Square, Boston, Mass. 3 Holby St., Salem, Mass. 115 Lowell St., Peabody, Mass. Bath, N. H. 8 Green St., Providence, R. I. 1700 Congress Ave., Austin, Texas 15 Mayfair St., Roxbury, Mass. ! II Spring St., Rochester, N. Y. Concord, Mass. 8 Hancock St., Salem, Mass. 709 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. 207 Elm St., Holyoke, Mass. 1904 TECHNIQUE 351 Name and Society Prescott, Albert George Prichard, Julia Elizabeth Prince, Albert Senior Prodromos, Aristotle H. Proudfoot, Jordon Mclntyre Pulsifer, Harrie Bridgeman Quinlan, George Austin, A.B. Rapier, John Bernard Rapp, Louis Ballauf J ) ' Rathbone, John Valiean, B.S. ' J ' ' Rathbun, Frank DeGraff Rausch. Chester Conrad Ray, Edward Russell, B.A. ' ' . ' Raymond, Charles Abel Raymond, Frank Everett Raymond, Herbert Emmons Rnynolds, Russell Peter V if Read, Albert Mantnn ' ' ; ■■Read, Edward Mason, Jr. Rech William Frederick Redding, William Allen, Jr. Reed, Frank Carleton, A.M. Reed, Ralph Omer ' - ' A Reed, Rtifus Cook Regan, John Ward Regestein, Walter Philip Reinhardt, Jacob Brunn ' ' . A Rhodehouse, Melinda Ann Rhodes, Carroll Rhodes, George Irving Rice, Philip Bernard Rice, Rowland Greenville Rich, Charles James Rich, Edward Benjamin, A.B. Rich, Williston Canfield J J Richards, Alexander Webster Richards, Nathaniel Atherton Richa ' ' dson, Bertram Allen ' ' I! K Richardson. Charles Dana Richardson, Frederick L. W , A.B. Richardson, Henry K. Richardson, Max Currier Richmond, Waldemar S. Ricker, Elmer Francis Riddell, Guy Crosby Riehel, Elroy Clemens Riley, Francis Bradford Riley, James Garfield Rinearson, William C, Jr. J .V Rippey, Attwood Eugene Rivitz, Seymour Moses Robbe, Louis Ernest Course Year II 2 VII s X 2 s VI 3 V 4 I 2 VI 3 s III 4 s X 3 ITI 4 I IV 3 I II 2 II 4 III I II 3 s III 2 s 11 3 I VI 4 I III 3 II 4 V 4 I 2 s VII I s VII 2 s VI 2 VI 4 xni 3 II 4 IV 4 I IV 3 s IV 2 IV 3 I s IV 4 s VIII 3 I 3 I 2 IV 4 III 3 IV 3 s 11 2 s V 3 s II 2 s III 2 I 2 s I 2 j ■' t Home Address 14 Whitman St., Dorchester, Mass. North Cambridge, Mass. 108 West Fourth St., Cincinnati, Ohio Smyrna, Asia 1 741 Briar Place, Chicago, 111. Lebanon, N. H. Houston, Texas 985 Government St., Mobile, Ala. 1339 Chapel St., Cincinnati, Ohio 21 Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Chicago, 111. 424 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass. 37 Huntington Ave., Hyde Park. Mass. 1726 Ridge Road, Evanston, lU. Essex, Mass. Essex, Mass. 84 EUery St., Cambridge, Mass. 1352 Lincoln Ave., Denver, Col. 63 Summit St., Pawtucket, R. I. 5738 Gates .4ve., St. Louis, Mo. 1217 Pratt Ave., Chicago, 111. 275 Clinton Ave., Brooklvn, N. Y. Grove City, Pa. 517 Franklin St., Melrose Highlands, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. 4Q Winchester St., Boston, Mass. 92 Wyman St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 92 Plymouth Ave , Buffalo, N. Y. Scituate, Mass. North Reading, Mass. Andover, Mass. 192 Summer St., Stamford, Conn. IQ2 Summer St., Stamford, Conn. 15 Cottage St., Norwood, Mass. 819 Third Ave., South, Fort Dodge, Iowa Red Wing, Minn. 27 Virginia Ave., S. W., Washington, D.C. Weymouth, Mass. 39 East Eighty-third St., New York, N. Y. 132 Tenth St., N. E., Washington, D. C. Cottage St., Brookline, Mass. ' o Chatham Place, Lvnn, Mass. ■Pelham, N. H. 76 Center St., Adams, Mass. 50 Bigelow St., Quincy, Mass. 229 School St., Somerville, Mass. i68 West Ninth Ave., Cilumhus, Ohio 15 Spring Park Ave., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Fiske St., Waltham, Mass. Hamilton, Ohio San Diego, Cal. 13 Ashland St., Boston, Mass. Peterboro, N. H. 352 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Name and Society Roberts, Albert Arthur Roberts, Arthur Osborne Robinson, John Albert Robinson, Samuel Rockwood, Edward Farnutn I . Rodgers, Charles I.oring J ' Rogers, Anne Fuller Rogers, George Dennison Rogers, James Earl Rogers, James Hampton Rogers, Rutherford Hayes Roland, John Wilson, B.A. Rollins, Harry Tebbetts ' ' _ K Roper, Walter Frederic li B E Ropes, Fanny Root, John Allen Rose, Robert Ware Ross, Robert John Rott, Walter Christian Rowe, Edward Bennett Rowe, Henry Woodbury Rowell, Wiear Louis Rubil, Milton, B.S. Ruggles, Guy Hall Ruggles, Mary Julia Runnels, Scott Clark 1 A E Rupf, Ernest Louis Russell, Arthur Edmands Russell, Henry Harding J .V Russell, Lester Asa Ruxton, Edward James Sadtler, Philip Bridges SaegmuUer, Frederick B.,B.S.,C.E.,: Sammet, Charles Frank Sammis, Theodore A., Jr. ' E V Sampson, Roswell Eustis Sanborn, George Warren Sanborn, John Royal Sanborn, Walter Butler Santry, Joseph Vincent Sargent, Edward Haynes Sargent, Ralph Nelson Sargent, Samuel Peter Sarratea, Roberto Browne Sawin, Frederic Van Buren Scales, Freeman Montague ' Scannel, Roger Francis, Jr. Schaefer, Hans Frederick J ' ' Schaefers, Henry Christian T A E Scherrer, Herman Adolph Schmidt. Caspar Anthony Schnurmann, Harry Nestor Course Year VI 2 XHI 3 X 4 S V 3 n 3 II 3 S VII 3 S VI 4 S XIII 2 VI 2 X 3 S I 3 II 3 il 4 S IV 3 I I I I 4 I IV 3 I III I S I I s VII 2 II 3 XIII 2 VI 2 S VI 3 II 4 I ■.■XIII 3 S V 4 II 3 S I 3 S VI 3 I I I I I III 2 S II 2 S I I III 2 S I 3 S IV 4 III 4 S III 2 S Home Address (Box 68) Rochester, N. H. Winter St., Salem, Mass. Canton, Mass. 47 Allen St., Boston, Mass. 961 Beacon St., Newton Center, Mass. 115 Oak St., Binghamton, N. Y. 126 Newbury Ct , Boston, Mass. 109 Prospect St., Gloucester, Mass. Wrentham, Mass. Maysville, Ky. 477 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass. Aylesford, N. S. 721 Third St., Des Moines, Iowa Hopedale, Mass. 114 Federal St., Salem, Mass. 91 Arlington St., Newton, Mass. 30 Orchard Circle, Clifton, Mass. Belmont, Mass. 4728 Wallingford St., Pittsburgh, Pa. 4 Blynman St., Gloucester, Mass. 185 Jackson St., Lawrence, Mass. 31 Hardy Road, Swampscott, Mass. 1507 North Tenth St., Philadelphia, Pa. 23 Grand St., Reading, Mass. 57 Gorham. St., Cambridge, Mass. 203 North Meriden St., Indianapolis, Ind. 128 Union St., Lawrence, Mass. 2 Franklin St., Medford, Mass. 60 Park St., Brookline, Mass. 331 Wilder St., Lowell, Mass. Ludlow, Mass. 336 West Horler St., Philadalphia, Pa. Cherrydale, Va. 73 Sheridan St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 714 Hawthorne . ve., Minneapolis, Minn. 52 Washington St., Medford, Mass. 31 Austin St., Hyde Park, Mass. Broadway and Powell Ave., Newport, R. I. 17 Benedict St., East Somerville, Mass. 07 Dale St., Roxbury, Mass. II Titcomb St., Newburyport, Mass. 73 Grand St., Lynn, Mass. Littleton, Mass. 121 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. It Windham St., West Somerville, Mass 186 Union St., Jersey City, N. J. 700 Huntington Ave.. Boston, Mass. Luray Ave , Walnut Hills, Ohio 655 Oak St., Buffalo, N. Y. 715 Union St., Indianapolis, Ind. 387 Erskine St., Detroit, Mich. Corinth House, Cheltenham, England J 904 TECHNIQUE 353 }■Name and Society Schofield, Lane ' [ F J Schofield, John Farrar Schonthal, Derso Clarence Schottes, Alexander Joseph Schulte, Ross Russell Schumacher, Waldron P., J K E Schwartz, Frederic Joseph Schwartz, Leon, A.B. Schwartz, Melvin Humbert Scofield, Edward Candee Scudder, Oliver Porter Seagar, Ralph LeRoy A E Searle, Ephraim Frank Sears, Thomas Everett Seaver, Samuel Seiglie, Nestor Manuel Senger, Richard Warren Severy, Frank Joseph, A.B. Seymour, Allan J ' Seyms, George Beach J f Seyms, Robert Wyndham J Shapira, Samuel Shapleigh, Charles Henry Shaw, Chester Roy Shaw, George Herbert Shaw, John Whitman Shaw, Thomas Sheafe, Calvin Richard Sheafe, James Smith i Shedd, Ray Elmer Sheldon, William Adams Shepherd, John Alexander Sherlock, Robert Emmet Sherman, Andrew Bartlett, Sherman, Arthur Louis Sherman, Frank Arnold Sherman, Henry S., A.B. Shuman, Waldo Irving Shurtleff, Ralph Sibbett, George Erving Siebrecht, Henry Benjamin Silverman, Abraham Jacob Simmons, Herman Roswell Simmons, John Edgar Simmons, John Edward Simonds, Clark David X T Simonds, Fred Washburn Simons, Russell Bissell Simpson, Guy Carleton Simpson, Horace Gardner Simpson, Willard Eastman Skowrouski, Stanislaus V Jr- I II 4 XIII 2 I S III 2 I 3 S I II 4 VI 2 III 2 I VI 2 XI 4 S Course Year Home Address III 2 S Alberraarle Road, Newtonville, Mass. I 2 S Bolivar, Mo. II 2 242 West Eight Ave., Columbus, Ohio IV 2 S 22 Orchard Place, Dorchester, Mass. XIII 3 S 523 North Girard Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. III 3 I Beach St., Wollaston. Mass. VI 2 Ballston, N. Y. IV 3 S I4Q Crystie St., New York, N. Y. IX 3 Weston, Mass. XIII 4 S Sound View, Stamford, Conn. XIII 4 60 Wyman St., Brockton, Mass. VI 2 Westerly, R. I. 109 May St., lawrence, Mass. 123 Court St., Plymouth, Mass. Waban, Mass. 9 Marti St., Saguala Grande, Cuba Port Jervis, N. Y. Chase Mills, Me. 364 Charlton Ave., South Orange, N. J. 181 Collins St., Hartford, Conn. 181 Collins St., Hartford, Conn. 80 Green St., Boston, Mass. 228 West Water St., Lock Haven, Pa. Brockton, Mass. Belmont, Mass. 3 Clementsport, N. S. 2 Billington St., Plymouth, Mass. 3 Harvard, Mass. 4 S 1017 Queen Anne Ave., Seattle, Wash. I 212 Highland Ave., SomerviUe, Mass. I Ashby, Mass. 1 350 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 2 S Geneseo, N. Y. I 114 Summer St., Fitchburg, Mass. I West Mansfield, Mass. III 4 96 Granite St., Westerly, R. I. IV 3 S 933 Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio I 377 Walnut Ave., Roxbury, Mass. I 6 Riverside Park, Taunton, Mass. II 4 S 6 Cedar St., Bellevue, Neb. VI 2 S 335 Broadway, Astoria, N. Y. Ill 2 S 36 Paris St., East Boston, Mass. III 3 S 178 Lexington Ave., Providence, R. I. I 34 South Central Ave., Wallaston, Mass. XIII 3 Racine, Wis. IX 3 S Manchester, Vt. I 2 52 Shawmut Ave., Marlboro, Mass. XIII 3 S 12 High St., Greenfield, Mass. I Care of W. L. .Simpson, San Antonio, Texas IV 4 22 Chestnut St., Chelsea, Mass. I 2 (Box 765) San Antonio, Texas V 2 S 38 Falcon St., East Boston, Mass. Ill VI II II IV 354 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII A a; J ' ' K ' Name and Society Slocum, Arthur G., Jr., A.B. Small, Harry Alonzo C. Smart, William Fuller Smith, Albert Howell Smith, Albert Loomis Smith, Alfred Dennett Smith, Arthur Ditson Smith, Charles H., B.L. Smith, Converse Smith, Daniel Arthur, Jr. Smith, Edgar Field, A.B. Smith, Edwin Lawrence A Smith, Ernest Maxwell J Smith, Guy Ormond Smith, Harold Crocker Smith, Horace Miliiken Smith, John Monroe Smith, Leon Hills Smith, Preston Morris J A ' Smith, Sidney Alfred Smith, Theodore Lincoln Smith, Walter Smith, Walter Abbe ' ' A Sneeringer, William James, Jr. U fi Snow, Edwin Bertrand, Jr. Snow, Norman Leslie, Ph.B. J Sohier, Walter Soule, Carleton Manson Soule, Ralph Nelson Spalding, George Riddel! Spalding, William Livingston Spaulding, Henry Seville Spencer, Walter Carpenter Sperry, Charles Stillman J ' i Sperry, Ellsworth Sperry, Leavenworth P., Ph.B. Spilman, John Armistead A .1 Spinney, Samuel Rogers Sprague, Forest Otho Sprague, Ralph Cushman Stanley, Philip Bartholomew Stanton, Everett Cheselro Staples, Percy Alexander J A Starbird, Chester Bates Starr, Frank Charles Stebbins, Charles Henry Stebbins, Roger Pierce Steele, Edward Thomas, 2d, Steinberger, Emil Steinharter, Edgar Clifford Steinmayer, Otto C, A.B. Steinrok, Charles Leonard Stephens, Albert Leslie Stetson, Edward Everett Stetson, Harold Clapp ' ' Stevens, Carl Colton Stevens, Henry Warren Stevens, Howard Leslie Stevens. Samuel Spaulding E J ' ' J Course Year Home Address Kalamazoo, Mich. Jacksonville, Florida Lewiston, Me. 87 Broad St., Maiden, Mass. Hamilton, Mass. 200 West i3Qth St., New York, N. Y. 38 Falcon St., East Boston, Mass. 35 Adelbert St., Cleveland, Ohio 75 Lincoln St., Wa ' tham, Mass. 29 Mary St., Newport, R. I. 107 Gainsborough St., Boston, Mass. 2316 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 1615 West Genesee St. Syracuse, N. Y. 76 Royal St., Newton, Mass. 150 Rock St., Fall River, Mass. Terre Haute, Tnd. Irvona, Pa. 34 Orchard St., Leominster, Mass. 1615 West G,?nesee St., Syracuse, N. Y. 500 East Si.xth St., Jamestown, N. Y. Concord, Mass. 485 Poplar St., Roslindale, Mass. 185 State St., Springfield, Mass. 131 5 North Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Medford, Mass. 276 West 94th St., New York, N. Y. Concord, Mass. East Weymouth, Mass. East Greenwich, R. L 7 Brown Square, Newburyport, Mass. 103Q Middlesex St., Lowell, Mass. (Box 661 Ipswich, Mass. 162 Peace St., Providence, R. I. Washington, D. C. East Windsor Hill, Conn. Waterbury, Conn. loi West Main St., Richmond, Va. 435 Main St., Melrose, Mass. 203 Main St., Haverhill, Mass. 43 Irving St., South Framingham, Mass. New Britain, Conn. I Box 367 ) Sharon, Mass. 215 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 35 Fifteenth St., Buffalo, N. Y. Canning, N. S. 113 Malvern St., Melrose, Mass. 862 South St., Roslindale, Mass. Cappaqua, N. Y. 3-5 Main St., Bradford, Pa. S 692 Glenwood Ave , Cincinnati, Ohio LaSalle, 111. I 217 Warnock St., Philadelphia, Pa. 53 EUery St., Cambridge, Mass. Mattapoisett, Mass. Walpole, Mass. St. Albans, Vt. 14 Kendall St., South Gardner, Mass. II Everett St., Middleboro, Mass. II Liberty St., Salem, Mass. VI 3 XIII 3 S IV 2 S XIII 2 V 2 III 2 s V 3 I 2 I 2 VI 4 I 3 VI 2 I I II I 4 s I 4 IV 3 VIII 3 s VI 2 II 2 I s IV 2 s III 2 s VI 2 s XIII 3 II 4 I I s V 4 III 2 XI 2 I I 2 I s XIII 3 XIII A 4 I V 2 I I I 3 VI 2 I 2 V 3 s XIII 2 II 2 V 2 s VII 2 s V 4 XIII 3 I I 3 VI 2 I VI 3 XIII 3 III 2 s 1904 TECHNIQUE 355 • Name and Society Stevenson, Henry J. Stevenson, Lucy Marion Stewart, Donald Argyle J Stickney, William, A.B. Stiles, Harry AUard Stoddard, Ava Marcella Stoddard, Edna Dwinel Stoddard, Robert Kilburn Stone, Ida Stratton, George Eben Streeter, Harold Warner Stresau, Richard Strickland, Sidney Talbot J I ' Strong, Homer David Sullivan, Patrick Joseph Sumner, Warren Ellis Sutherland, Clarence Hale 6 .V Sutton, David, B.S. Swanson, Grace Marie Sweet, Arthur Jeremiah, A.B. ' ' Sweetser, Albert Edwin Sweetser, Harold Ricketson Sweetser, Philip Starr Swenson, Omer Stephen . J ' ' Swett, George Wright Sykes, Roy Ainsworth Talbot, Arthur Wilbour Tarr, Forace Austin Tarbett, Ralph Edwin Taylor, AUyn Chandler Taylor, DeWitt McClure Taylor, Floyd Thomas Tavlor, Robert E. Lee, B.A. J ' Taylor, Winfred Albert rf ' ' J Tebbets, James Hargraves Ternan, Terence Breifi Terrell, Herbert Arthur Terry, Killey Eldridge, Jr. Thayer, Ralph Carpenter Thayer, Sophie Gifford Thomas, Arthur Scott J ' ' J Thomas, George Carlyle Thomas, Walter Grant Thompson, Bertram Austin Thompson, Edward Cutter 1 ' Thompson, Herman Ellis Thompson, Leigh Adair Thorp, Lambert Thurber, Frederick Butler 1 ' Thurlow, Oscar Gowen Thwing, LeRoy Livingston Tillson, Percy Ethan Todd, William Newman Tolman, Richard Chace Tomlinson, Everett Franklin Thompkins, Maurice Crawford J ) Topper, William, A.B. Tower, Gilbert Sander s Towne, Lillian May ■J .V r Course Year II 2 S VIII 4 I XIII s III 4 s IX 4 IV 4 I II 2 s I 4 I s VI IV 2 V 4 V 2 X 4 I I .1 VII 2 s VI s II 2 V 2 VI 1 IV s II 4 I I I I 2 I I VI 4 IV s I 2 s II 2 III 2 I I I s VII 3 I s II 2 I I II 4 s II .1 VI 2 V 2 I I 3 II 4 I s VI X 4 I I 3 IV 3 XIII VII 3 s Home Address 41 Princeton St., East Boston, Mass. 45 Princeton St., Lowell, Mass. 213 Elm St., Kalamazoo, Mich. 26 West Eighth St., New York, N. Y. .52 Summit Ave., Allston, Mass. 4 Thwing St., Roxbury, Mass. 4 Thwing St., Roxbury, Mass. North Hanover, Mass. Potsdam, N. Y. 25 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mas . 29 Quincy St., North Adams, Mas s. Hohenzollernplatz 48, Frankfort, Ger. Sumner Pond, Brookline, Mass. 30 Walnut St., Winsted, Conn. 155 Saratoga St., Lawrence, Mass. 42 Allen St., Brockton, Mass. 29 Cumberland St., Brunswick, Me. Richmond, Ind. 946 Broadway, Lowell, Mass. (Box 217) Utica, N. Y. 192 Dartmouth St., Boston, Mass. II Akron St., Roxbury, Mass. 77 Griffin Ave., Newton Highlands, Mass. 340 North State St., West Concord, N. H. 1851 Mass. Ave., North Cambridge, Mass. 26 Cherry St., North Adams, Mass. 3 Nottingham St., Dorchester, Mass. 79 Thorndike St., East Cambridge, Mass. 5 Washington St., Stoneham, Mass. 15 AUyn Place, Lawrence, Mass. 310 East Ninth Ave., Homestead, Pa. 120 East 34th St., New York, N. Y. 182 York St., Norfolk, Va. 15 Allyn Place, Lawrence, Mass. Somersworth, N. H. Bedford, N. S. 14 Lowell Ave., Newtonville, Mass. 413 County St., New Bedford, Mass. 10 Hamilton St., Dorchester, Mass. Braintree, Mass. 23 South Walker St., Lowell, Mass. 777 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. 28 Newton St., Wollaston, Mass. Abington, Mass. New Gloucester, Me. 298 Pawtucket St., Lowell, Mass. Manchester, N. H. 512 Prospect Place, Cincinnati, Ohio 229 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. 15 Oak St., Newburyport, Mass. Somersworth, N. H. 51 Barton St., Providence, R. I. 71 Middle St., Newburyport, Mass. 84 Highland St., West Newton, Mass. 17 Beethoven St., Boston, Mass. 99 Decatur St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 159 East 97th St., New York, N. Y. Cohasset, Mass. 89 Surrey St., Brighton, Mass. 356 TECHNIQUE Vol. xvm Name and Society Course Year Trask, Walter Haywood, Jr. ' ' ■' Trenthardt, Ernest L. P. Tripp, Edwin Pool Tripp, Louis Hillman Trowbridge, Arthur Townsend Trowbridge, William Waldo True, Albert Otis Truelson, George Adolph Tsuruta, Katsuzo Tuck, William Oliver, Jr. Tucker, Clarence Eiward Tufts, William Turgeon, Fremont Nelson J J Turner, Everett Pendleton J ' Turner, Howard Chubbuck J } ' Turner, LeBaron 1 I , Turner, Robert Nathaniel Turner, Waldso J ) ' Turner, William Camillo Twieg, William Charles, . .B. Underbill, Charles Francis Underwood, Lawrence Hosmer . ! , ' Upham, George William Urquidi, Juan Francisco Valiquet, Harry Howell Van Amringe, William Martin ' ' I! F. Van Hook, Franklin Jones Varian, Jean Philip -i J L Vaughan, Perry Abraham Vinton, Merrick Eugene, Jr. A ' ' Vonder Horst, Harry Rudolph Vosbury, Winfred DeWitt Wadsworth, Alexander P., A.B. Wagner, Henry Charles Walcott, Stuart Lamer ; i-i II Wald, George Gustav Wales, Frederick Charles Walker, Albert Willard Walker, Henry Samuel, Jr. Walker, Hiram LeRoy Walker, James Greig Walker, William Frederick Wall, George Albert Wallon, Lewis Arthur Walsh, William James Walter, Ernest Elbert Walter, Julius West Ward, Sidney George, B.S. Ware, Raymond ( ' ' J Ware, Samuel Langmaid Warren, Clarke Edward Warren, Mary Eva Washburn, Edward Wight Wastcoat, Roy Washburn Watson, Thomas Bell Watt, Arthur Percy i Weaver, Earll Chase I 2 Webb, Harold Eugene ' ' .; K i Webber, Paul Baron W X i I I n 3 I I ni 3 XI 2 IV 3 S II 2 S III 2 I S I 2 III 3 IX 4 s XIII 4 I 2 I 2 VI 2 II 2 V 4 s X 3 III 4 I I 2 II 4 I s III I 2 I s III I I 2 II 3 IV s V 2 s III 3 s III 2 I 2 s XI 2 I 2 II 2 s VI s VI XIII 2 XIII 2 II 2 VII 3 s V 2 VI 2 I Home Address 845 Pennsylvania Ave., Denver, Col. H13 Washington St., Boston, Mass. Westport, Mass. Westport, Mass. 152 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. 40 Cioss St., West Newton, Mass. 3 Bowdoin St., Newton Highlands, Mass. San Francisco, Cal. 7 gr. Shibu Park, Tokio, Japan Haverhill, Mass. 321 Hyde Park Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. 56 Dwight St., Boston, Mass. 7 Commonwealth Ave., Gloucester, Mass. 239 Pleasant St., Arlington. Mass. 239 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. Geneva, 111. 54 Fiske St., Waltham, Mass. Station A, Dallas, Te.xas Trinidad, Cuba 69 Forest St., Cleveland, Ohio 72 Esmond St., Dorchester, Mass. 2951 Vernon Ave., Chicago, 111. Bellows Falls, Vt. Me.xico, Mexico 28 Baltimore St., Lynn, Mass. 29 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. 20 Ottawa St., Roxbury, Mass. 253 Lincoln Ave., Denver, Col. Pontiac, Mich. 52 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 512 North Carrolton Ave., Baltimore, Md. 73 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y. 526 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 512 Franklin St., Sandusky, Ohio Indianapolis, Ind. 40 Montrose St., Somerville, Mass. 114 Elliot Ave., West Newton, Mass. Marlboro, Mass. 81 Maple St., Maiden, Mass. 21 Wheeler St., East Somerville, Mass. 2016 Franklin St., San Francisco, Cal. 167 Andover St., Lawrence, Mass. Denver, Col. 174 Pleasant St., Winthrop, Mass. 5 Woodville St., Roxbury, Mass. Walters Park, Pa. 225 Front St., Binghamton, N. Y. 823 Foster St., Evanston, 111. II Sayward St., Dorchester, Mass. 103 Thurston St., Somerville, Mass. 18 South Spring Ave., La Grange, 111. Weston, Mass. Beatrice, Neb. 140 Middleboro Ave., Taunton, Mass. (Box 1231 Weymouth, Mass. 176 Forest St., Winchester, Mass. 121 Green St., Syracuse, N. Y. 643 Madison Ave., Scranton, Pa. Bedford, Mass. 1904 TECHNIQUE 357 Name and Society Webber, Thomas Gray Webster, Arthur Stanley Webster, Frances Phillips Webster, Frank DeWolf Webster, Lawrence Burns Wehner, Lewis Weil, Joseph Skrainka Welch, Edward Oscar Welch, William Wells Weld, Julia Bradlee Weld, Lydia Gould Wells, Arthur Edward Wells, Percy Leonard Welsh, Jam ' es Winfield, A.B. ' ' A ' Wemyss, Duncan Wentworth, Henry Azor Wentworth, Reginald Andrew Wetherbee, Florence Louise Wetterer, Charles Frederick W. Wey, James Philip Weymouth, Albert Pierce Wheat, George Neville, B.S. Wheeler, Edith Helen, A M. Wheeler, Mildred Frances Whipple, Leyland Clement Whitaker, William G. H., Jr. Whitcomb, Ralph Nims il A Whitcomb, William Henry White, Edward W. White, Frederick Sanford White, George Frederic White, John Aloysius White, Jules Edward White, Nathaniel Aldrich White, Richard B. Whiting, Bertram Nash Whiting, George WiUiam C. I J ' ' Whiting, Herbert Stockwell Whiting, Horatio Whitman, ICilborn, Jr. Whitmarsh, Alfred Lamson Whitmore, James Bryant Whitmore, Walter Whitney, Harrie Lawrence Whitney, Harrison Allen Whittemore, Charles A. Whittemore, Walter L., Jr. Wiard, Oliver Martin, A.B. Wick, James Lippincott, Jr. Wiggin, Harry Wiggins, Elmer Wesley, B.S. Wight, Malcolm Gardner Wilcox, Herbert Mygott A K E Wilder, Fred Hall Wilder, Sylvanes Wells Wilkiemeyer, Frederick J., A.B. Wilkins, Harold Street Willard, Arthur Cutts Willcomb, George Edward Course Year I II 3 s S I 2 I s XIII 4 I s II 2 s III 4 IX 2 s XIII 4 I s I 2 VI 4 II 4 VIII 2 II s V 3 I I I 3 IV 3 V s VIII 2 s V 3 s VI 3 s I 2 V 4 V 4 I 2 I s I 2 s I 3 I VIII 3 s I 2 I 3 I s III 2 I 2 II 2 II 2 VI 3 I 2 s IV 2 IV 4 III 2 IV 3 I II 2 s V 3 I X 2 III 3 I II 2 s X 3 XI 3 s Home Address 179 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. 25 Greenville St., Roxbury, Mass. 824 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 15 Chapman St., Greenfield, Mass. 926 South Washington St., Marion, Ind. 171 West Newton St., Boston, Mass. II Broadway, New York, N. Y. 1 Collins St., Salem, Mass. Robertson St., Quincy, Mass. Hingham, Mass. Falmouth, Mass. South Framingham, Mass. 83 Hall St., Waltham, Mass. 156 S. Yellow Spr ' gs St., Springfield, Ohio 29 Ames St., Somerville, Mass. 104 Chatham St., Lynn, Mass. 121 Raymond St., North Cambridge, Mass. 2 King St., Worcester, Mass. 14 Summer St., Gloucester, Mass. 253 Forest Ave., Atlanta, Ga. 25 Mather St., Dorchester, Mass. Rock Springs, Texas 36 Union Park, Boston, Mass. 122 Elm St., Marlboro, Mass. Wellesley, Mass. 117 Brownell St., Providence, R. I. 3 City Hall, Keene, N. H. 13 Windsor St., Roxbury, Mass. 47 Whittier St., Andover, Mass. South Coventry, Corm. Franklin Park, Mass. II PhiUips St., Salem, Mass. 26 Florence Ave., Arlington Heights, Mass. 30 North State St., Concord, N. H. Winchester, Tenn. Machias, Me. Merchants ' Bank Bldg. Baltimore, Md. 274 Seaver St., Roxbury, Mass. 2 Gleason St., Dorchester, Mass. 109 Walnut Ave., Roxbury, Mass. Abington, Mass. 1050 East Market St., Akron, Ohio 236 Merrimac St., Newburyport, Mass. South Framingham, Mass. 1569 Harvard St., Chicago, 111. 329 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa. 415 Newport Ave., Wollaston, Mass. New Britain, Conn. Youngstown, Ohio 154 Mountain Ave., Maiden, Mass. Warsaw, N. Y. 32 Webster Court, Newton Center, Mass. Norfolk Rd., Euclid Heights, Cleveland, Ohio 610 Main St., Bennington, Vt. 20 Lake St., Cambridge, Mass. S 735 Saratoga St., Newport, Ky. Wallingford, Conn. 1813 13th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 134 Chestnut St., Chelsea, Mass. 358 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Course Year VI 3 VIII 4 I II 4 I Name and Society Willcox, Frederick Hartwell Williams, Clarence Benton J A ■, ' Williams, Elizabeth Langdon Williams, Herbert Lawrence Williams, Irving Williams, James Rice Williams, J. William, Jr. Williams, Ralph Brown Willis, Charles Francis Wilson, Daniel Scott Wilson, Edward Lowell Wilson, Emery J., A.B. Wilson, Frank Stetson Wilson, George Davis, A.B. 1 A F. Wilson, Lewis Gamaliel, A.B. 1 ' A E Wilson, Wilbur Thomas Winchester, Henry Thornton ' B K Winne, George Morris Winship, Louis C, Ph.B. Wise, Robert Emmet Wolfe, Sylvester Cuthbert Wood, Dana Melvin Wood, Edwin Thomas Wood, George Babcock J A £ Woodbury, Ira Vaughan Woodward, Clifford Brooks Wortham, Milford .V ' ' Wright, Frank Wright, Julian May J ' ' Wright, William Henry P. J T J Wrinkle, John Timothy Wyman, Alanson Phelps, B.S. Wyman, Walter Brevoort ! I ' J Yer.xa, Ralph Benjamin J T J III 4 Voder, Bartolette Artman J T J I 3 Young, George Chester i Young, Harold Eugene i Young, Robert Libbey V 2 Yrizarry, Herminio i III 4 VI 4 I II 3 I 3 S I 4 IV 3 I 2 S VI S I VI 2 I 2 I I II 3 II 4 I IV 4 s III 4 S I I I I IV 2 s Home Address Smyrna, N. Y. 5 Kemble St., Utica, N. Y. 59 Clark Ave., Chelsea, Mass. 85 Washington Park, Newtonville, Mass. 77 Arlington Ave., Providence, R. I. 196 South i8th St., Quincy, 111. 23 Otis St., Medford, Mass. 89 Federal St., Salem, Mass. 5 Gates St., South Boston, Mass. Concord Junction, Mass. 14 Russell Ave.. Watertown, Mass. Bellefontaine, Ohio 209 Dudley St., Roxbury, Mass. 318 South First St., Clarksville, Tenn. 318 South First St.. Clarksville, Tenn. 74 High St., Woburn, Mass. 237 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 463 Elm St., Chicago, 111. 1400 South 9th Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. South Lancaster, Mass. 128 Boston Ave., West Medford, Mass. Mvrtle St., Belmont, Mass. 5 South Main St., Concord, N. H. 7 Florida St., Dorchester, Mass. 72 Lothrop St., Beverly, Mass. Glendale, Ohio 145 East 6ist St., New York, N. Y. 301 Overton St., Newport, Ky. 2022 G St. N. W., Washington, D. C. 172 Jackson St., Lawrence, Mass. 135 Pine St., Holyoke, Mass. Manchester Center, Vt. Crown Point, N. Y. 32 Pemberton St., N. Cambridge, Mass. 614 North 22d St., Omaha, Neb. 10 Rawson St., South Boston, Mass. 41 Rutland Square, Boston, Mass. 496 Main St., Haverhill, Mass. San German, Porto Rico (.• ratitiatr ©tuDrnts Adams, Isaac Rayne, S.B. IV Bartlett, Homer Eugene, S.B. IV Belcher, Donald Minor, S.B. A E VII Greeley, William Roger, S.B. IV Hunter, Frederick Huston, S.B. IV Ireland, James Duane, Ph.B., S.B. J ' II Kellog, Charles Wetmore, Jr., S.B. J ' VI Kremer, Waldemar Rudolf VI Lockridge, Elbert Emerson, S.B. Pember, Walter Parton Ross, S.B. IV Townsend, Gilbert, S.B. IV Whitney, Philip Richardson, S.B. IV North Cambridge, Mass. 9 Albemarle St., Boston, Mass. 14 Prospect St., Winchester, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. 8 Harris St., Newburyport, Mass. 15 East 47th St., New York, N. Y. 51 St. Paul St., Brookline, Mass. 679 Mars hall St., Milwaukee, Wis. 240 West Newton St., Boston, Mass. 6 May St.. Needham, Mass. 42 Carleton St., Newton, Mass. 74 Waban Park, Newton, Mass. 1904 TECHNIQUE 359 9:cl uo nIcljg:ntcuts THE Board of Editors of Technique, 1904, wishes to acknowl- edge its indebtedness to the following for assistance in the editing of this book : IN GENERAL- The members of the Faculty, President Pritchett, Dean Burton, W. Humphreys, 0. F. Wells, J. T. Scully, Jr., Miss Runkle. LITERARY — President Pritchett, I. Rayne Adams, E. H. Davis, Charles A. Sawyer, Jr., H. S. Morse, G. B. Perkins, R. Lage. ARTISTIC — I. R. Adams, F. G. Baldwin, H. E. Bartlett, E. B. Bird, E. A. Colby, F. N. Emerson, W. R. Greeley, I. B. Hazelton, H. K. Harris, A. H. Hepburn, R. M. Hood, R. F. Jackson, L. R. Kaufman, E. F. Lawrence, I. P. Lord, F. B. Masters, W. A. Paine, J. B. Reinhardt, C. A. Sawyer, Jr., R. Sawyer, H. Sherrer, P. R. Smith, W. DeW. Vosbury, W. J. Wellman, Wilby, A. C. Wood. BUSINESS - A. C. Burnham, D. F. Dow. 360 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Uu iWrmoriam JOHN DANIEL RUNKLE Died August 17, 1902 ALBERT MAYNARD KNIGHT Died December 28, 1902 CLINTON MERRILL DEARDEN Died January 13, IQ03 tuticnts ELIOT GRANGER, ' 04 Died November i, 1902 RAYMOND ABNER LAUFFER, ' 04 Died November s, 1902 FRANK WILLIAM McCONNELL, ' 05 Died January 7, 1903 FRANCIS ALEXANDER FALVEY, ' 06 Died January 14, 1903 1904 TECHNIQUE 361 31oI)u Banirl l unhlr IN the death, last summer, of John Daniel Runkle at Southwest Harbor, Maine, not only the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, but all those who have ever been fortunate enough to come in contact with Doctor Runkle, sustained a severe loss. Although Doctor Runkle at the time was out of active life at the Institute, his spirit was ever in the work and the overwhelming sense that more than half of this noble man ' s life was spent in the upbuilding of Technology, augmented in a great degree the sorrow of a personal loss. John D. Runkle was born at Root, New York, in 1822. During his early youth his struggle for education was embarrassed by work on a farm, and it was not until 1847 that he entered the Lawrence Scientific School to pursue a course in mathematics. He graduated in 1851 with the degree of Master of Arts, besides the degree of Bachelor of Science. During his last years in college he was as- sociated with the Nautical Almanac, and in 1858 he founded the Mathematical Monthly. Mr. Runkle ' s connection with the Institute of Technology was commenced in i860, when he was a member of the committee to act in behalf of the movement to organize an Institute of Tech- nology. In 1862 Mr. Runkle was first Secretary, and in 1865 Presi- dent Rogers and he began to meet their classes. On the resignation of President Rogers in 1870, Doctor Runkle was made second President. For eight years he held this post, and to chronicle his life through this period would be to give the story of the Institute ' s struggle and growth against the many adverse conditions. Perhaps among the most noted steps in advance that President Runkle instituted during this period, can be cited the 362 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII recognition and founding of courses of instruction in the mechanic arts after the principles applied in Russia; the encouragement to summer schools and professional field work; the increased efficiency in military instruction and the encampment at Philadelphia; and the commencement of the engineering laboratories. In 1878 President Runkle tendered his resignation and was granted a leave of absence for two years. After these two years of profitable travel he returned with renewed health to resume his seat as Professor of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. Here he took up the class-room exercises with his old-time zeal, and it was not until 1901 that, on account of his failing health, he was relieved at his own request. IND MitKtUSO Acknowledgments Administrative Officers Advertisements Alumni Associations Architectural Society Assistants . Athletics Athletic Article Athletic Advisory Council Athletic Association, M. I. T. PAGE 359 14 385 331 181 43 131 132 135 136 364 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Athletic Meets and Games Annual Cross Country Run Annual Fall Handicap Games Annual Field Day . Annual Indoor Meet Annual Spring Games N. E. I. A. A. Triangular Meet Tufts vs. Tech Banjo Club Burton, Alfred Edgar Buyer ' s Guide Cadet Battalion . Calendar Chauncy Hall Club Chemical Society Chess Club Chicago Club Civil Engineering Society Civil Engineering Summer School Class Day Exercises Classes, The The Senior . The Junior The Sophomore The Freshman Class Articles Senior . Junior Sophomore . Freshman Cleofan Class Statistics Clubs PAGE 140 149 146 142 144 218 opp. 5 and 48 369 230 8 198 192 197 194 183 254 250 55 82 72 64 56 84 76 66 58 196 314 193 1 904 TECHNIQUE 365 Concerning Colleges Co-operative Society Corporation, The Courses of Study Cross Country Team Dedication . Dinners Senior . Junior Sophomore . Freshman Electrical Engineering Society Faculty, The Fencing Club Fraternities . Chi Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Psi Delta Tau Delta . Delta Upsilon Phi Beta Epsilon Phi Gamma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Theta Chi . Theta Xi Other Fraternities Represented Fraternity Summary Items of Interest Glee Club, The . Golf Club, The . Graduate Secretaries Graduates bv Courses PAGE 320 148 4 237 238 239 240 241 185 47 171 97 105 107 103 119 III 109 5 117 3 99 121 lOI 123 124 313 215 172 234 3 366 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Graduation Exercises Graduation Week Greeting Grinds Hammer and Tongs In Memoriam Institute Committee Instructing Staff for year Instructors . Instructor in Gymnastics Instructors in Mechanic Arts Junior Class Photograph Junior Class, Key to Photograph Junior Promenade, Class of 1904 Junior Week List of Students . Local Societies Hammer and Tongs K2S .... Mandaman Club Round Table Osiris ... Mandolin Club Mechanical Engineering Society Mining Engineering Society . Mining Engineering Summer School Miscellaneous Musical Clubs Banjo Club . Glee Club Mandolin Club Officers Naval Architectural Society Naval Architects ' Trip . N. E. Intercollegiate Athletic Association N. E. Intercollegiate Tennis Association Nineteen Hundred and Five Football Team Nineteen Hundred and Six Football Team Nineteen Hundred and Four Baseball Team Nineteen Hundred and Four Track Team PAGE 249 6 273 127 360 223 310 39 44 44 74 75 245 243 325 125 127 126 129 128 130 217 190 187 259 221 213 2 19 215 217 220 189 262 137 168 159 157 163 151 I 904 TECHNIQUE 367 Nineteen Hundred and Five Relay Team Officers of Instruction Phillips Exeter Club Professional Societies Professors . Professors Show . Publications Records Relay and Tug of War Teams Relay Team, Class of 1905 Relay Team, M. I. T. Runkle, John Daniel Senior Portfolio . Society of Arts Special Club Section Statistics Sub-Institute Committee Teachers and Lecturers Tech Show Tech Union, The Technique Board Technique Electoral Committee Technology Club Technology Quarterly . Technology Review Technology Views Technology Track Team Tennis Association The Tech Board . Walker Club Wearers of the T Y. M. C. A. Year ' s Changes at the Institute, A Verse .... PAGE 164 15 179 16 205 165 161 160 361 212 191 291 224 45 246 201 209 225 226 210 211 26s 139 169 207 195 154 229 173 299 11 tt Z-- nn ?r?- V T — r I r 370 ' TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII Classiftrt) Hist of !Stil)rrti5rv$ TECHNIQUE DIRECTORY OF MERCHANTS AND MANUFACTURERS Please mention TECHNIQUE in writing our Advertisers ANILINE COLORS: H. A. Metz Co., New York City; Kuttroff, Pickhardt Co., New York City; New York and Boston Dyewood Co., Boston. AIR COMPRESSORS: Mackay Engineering Co., Boston. BANKERS: National Shawmut Bank, Boston; Old Colony Trust Co., Boston; City Trust Co., Boston. BATTERIES: Leclanche Battery Co., New York City. BELTING: Bay State Belting Co., Boston; Shultz Belting Co., St. Louis, Mo. BLOCKS: Boston Lockport Block Co., Boston. BOILERS: Atlantic Works, East Boston; Charles River Iron Works, Cam- bridge, Mass. ; Roberts Iron Works, Cambridge, Mass. BOLTS: Buffalo Bolt Co., Buffalo, N. Y. BOOKS: Old Corner Book Store, Boston; A. D. Maclachlan, Boston; G. C. Merriam Co., Springfield, Mass. BOOK-BINDING: Alex. M oore, Boston. BORING-TOOLS: Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago; Morse Twist Drill Machine Co., New Bedford. BUILDING: Hanley Construction Co., Quincy, Mass.; Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston. CAFES: Oak Grove Creamery Co., Boston. CASTINGS: Homer F. Livermore, Boston. CEDAR POLES AND TIES: Maltby Lumber Co., Bay City, Mich. CHEMICALS: Baker Adamson Chemical Co., Easton, Pa.; Cochrane Chemi- cal Co., Boston; Kuttroff, Pickhardt Co., New York City; Roessler Hasslacher Chemical Co., New York City; Eimer Amend, New York City. CHEMICAL APPARATUS: Eimer Amend, New York City. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: Little Walker, Boston. ESTABLISHED 1842. HIGH PRESSURE VALVES, PIPE AND FITTINGS. WALWORTH FLANGED OVER JOINT (WILL NOT WEEP UNDER 200 LBS. PRESSURE) GENERAL OFFICES, 132 Federal St., Boston. NEW YORK OFFICE, PARK ROW BUILDING. Insert [A] 1904 TECHNIQUE 373 CLOTHING: George H. Lane, Boston; F. L. Dunne, Boston; Smith Smullen, Boston; E. R. Smith Co., Boston. COAL: Blake, Sampson Co., Worcester, Mass. COAL HANDLING MACHINERY: (See Conveying Machinery.) CONDUITS: National Conduit Cable Co., New York City. CONVEYING MACHINERY: John A. Mead Mfg. Co., New York City; The Jeffrey Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio; Rawson Morrison Mfg. Co., Cam- bridge, Mass. ; A. Leschen Sons Rope Co., St. Louis, Mo. ; Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. CORDAGE : Samson Cordage Works, Boston, Mass. CORE OVENS: Millett Core Oven Co., Brightwood, Mass. COTTON MACHINERY: Textile Finishing Machinery Co., Providence, R. I.; Mason Machine Works, Taunton, Mass. ; Whitin Machine Works, Whitins- ville, Mass. CRANES: Niles-Bement-Pond Co., Philadelphia, Pa. DRAUGHTING INSTRUMENTS: The L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass.; A. D. Maclachlan, Boston. DRAUGHTING BOARD AND PAPER : Mittineague Paper Co., Mittineague, Mass. DRY GOODS: C. F. Hovey Co., Boston. DRILLS AND DRILLING MACHINERY: Hill, Clarke Co., Boston; Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co., New Bedford. DYES: Kuttroff, Pickhardt Co., New York City; New York Boston Dye- wood Co., Boston; H. A. Metz Co., New York. EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS: Stone Webster Boston. ELECTRICAL GENERATORS AND MOTORS: Holtzer-Cabot Electric Co., Boston (Brookline) Mass.; Ridgway Dynamo and Engine Co., Ridgway, Pa. ELECTRIC HEATING: Simplex Heating Co., Boston. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES: Simplex Electrical Co., Boston; Weston Electric Instrument Co., Newark, N. J. ; Mackay Engineering Co., Boston. EMERY WHEELS: Norton Emery Wheel Co., Worcester, Mass. ENGINES: Mackay Engineering Co., Boston; Vilter Mfg. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. ENGINEERS: Holbrook, Cabot Rollins, Boston; Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston; American Bridge Co. of New York, New Yor k. 374 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII ENGINEERING JOURNALS: Engineering Record, New York. ENGRAVING: Suffolk Engraving and Electrotyping Co., Boston. FIRE BRICK: Evens Howard Fire Brick Co., St. Louis, Mo. FLAGS: Bent Bush, Boston. FLORISTS: Albert Scott, Boston. FOUNDRIES: Textile Finishing Machine Co., Providence, R. I.; Barbour- Stockwell Co., Cambridge, Mass. FOUNDRY EQUIPMENT: Millett Core Oven Co., Brightwood, Mass. FOUNDRY FACING: Springfield Facing Co., Springfield, Mass. FORCINGS: Midvale Steel Co., Philadelphia, Pa. FUEL ECONOMIZERS: Green Fuel Economizer Co., Matteawan, N. Y. FURNISHING GOODS: Hewins HoUis, Boston; C. F. Hovey Co., Boston; The T. H. Lane Co., Boston. GAS APPARATUS: The United Gas Improvement Co., Philadelphia, Pa. GAS AND GASOLINE ENGINES: Mackay Engineering Co., Boston. GLUE: Baeder, Adamson Co., Boston; American Glue Co., Boston. HARDV ARE: A. J. Wilkinson Co., Boston. HEATING AND VENTILATING APPARATUS- Albert B. Franklin, Boston; Huey Bros., Boston. HOISTS AND HOISTING ENGINES: Rawson Morrison Mfg. Co., Cam- bridge, Mass.; Lidgerwood Mfg. Co., New York City. HOTELS: Brunswick Hotel, Boston; Parker House, Boston; Touraine Hotel, Boston; Young ' s Hotel, Boston; Technology Chambers, Boston. ICE CREAM: Oak Grove Creamery Co., Boston. INDICATORS: L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass. INSURANCE: Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn. INJECTORS: Jenkins Bros., Boston; Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. INSPIRATORS: (See Machine Shop Equipment.) IRON AND STEEL: George F. Blake, Jr., Co., Worcester; Midvale Steel Co., Philadelphia, Pa. JEWELERS: A. S. Adams, Boston; Bent Bush, Boston; Shreve, Crump Low, Boston. THREAD MILLING MACHINES TXT ' E predict that the ' ' lathe will go out of use for thread cutting. OUR MILLING MACHINE cuts to the full depth of the thread at one opera- tion with a very slight heating of the work, leav- ing the side of the thread as smooth as if polished. PRATT cS WHITNEY COMPANY 136-138 LIBERTY ST., NE.W YORK CITY WORKS: HARTFORD. CoNN. OFFICES BOSTON, 144 Pearl Street PHILADELPHIA, 21st and CallowhiU St . PITTSBURG, PA., Friok Bidg, CHICAGO, 46 South Canal St. ST. LOUIS, MO., 516 North Third St. NILE.S ELECTRIC TRAVE.LING CRANES THE illustration opposite shows three Niles Cranes installed in shops of the P. R. R. R. Co. at Reading, Pa. ' The first crane is of 120 tons capacity, with two 60-ton trolleys and 5-ton auxiliary. The other two are of 35 tons capacity each, with two 17 ' 2-ton trolleys. NILES -BEMENT- POND COMPANY Crane WorKs : O F NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA BOSTON PITTSBURGH CHICAtiO ST. LOUIS LONDON : Philadelphia, Pa. F I C E S 136-138 Liberty Street 21st and CallowhiU Streets 144 Pearl Street Frick BuikUne Western Union Building: 516 North Third Street 23-25 Victoria Street, S.W. Insert [B] I 904 TECHNIQUE 377 LATHES: iSee Machine Shop Equipment.) LATHE AND PLANER TOOLS: Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago. LOCOMOTIVES: Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, Pa. LUBRICATORS: Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. LUBRICATING OILS: Leonard Ellis, Boston; Vacuum Oil Co., Rochester, N. Y. LUMBER: George W. Gale Lumber Co., Cambridge, Mass.; Maltby Lumber Co., Bay City, Mich. MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT: Simonds Mfg. Co., Fitchburg, Mass.; Jones Lamson Machine Co., Springfield, Vt.; Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago, 111.; Pratt Whitney Co., Hartford, Conn.; S. A. Woods Machine Co., South Boston, Mass.; A. J. Wilkinson Co., Boston; Hill, Clarke Co., Boston; Niles-Bement-Pond Co., Philadephia, Pa. MACHINISTS SUPPLIES: Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston; A. J. Wilkinson Co., Boston. MARINE RAILWAY: Hanley Construction Co., Quincy, Mass. MEASURING TAPES: L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass.; Lufkin Rule Co., Sag- inaw, Mich. MILLING MACHINES: (See Machine Shop Equipment.) MODEL MAKERS: Hurd Co., New York City. MOLDING MACHINES: The Tabor Mfg. Co., Philadephia, Pa. PACKING: Jenkins Bros., Boston. PENCILS: Joseph Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City, N. J. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Charles W. Hearn, Boston; Notman Photo. Co., Boston. PIPE: National Tube Co., Pittsburg; Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston. PLATE AND SHEET IRON AND STEEL : Atlantic Works, East Boston, Mass. ; Charles River Iron Works, Cambridge, Mass. ; Roberts Iron Works, Cam- bridge, Mass. PLATINUM: Eimer Amend, New York City. PLUMBING: William H. Mitchell Son, Boston; Huey Bros., Boston. PRINTING: The F. A. Bassette Co., Springfield, Mass. PUBLICATIONS: The Technology Review, Boston; Engineering Record, New York. RAILROADS: Boston Albany, R. R. ; Boston Maine R. R.; Norfolk Western R. R. 378 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVm RAILS: Barbour-Stockwell Co., Cambridge, Mass. RECORDING PRESSURE GAUGES: United Gas Improvement Co., Phila- delphia, Pa. REFRIGRATING MACHINERY: Vilter Mfg. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. ROOFING: Ludowici Roofing Tile Co., Chicago, 111. ROPE: Samson Cordage Co., Boston, Mass.; A. Leschen Sons Rope Co., St. Louis, Mo.; Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. RUBBER HEELS: The Pneumatic Cushion Rubber Heel. SAWS: Simonds Mfg. Co., Fitchburg, Mass. SEWER PIPE: Evens Howard Fire Brick Co., St. Louis, Mo. STAINS: Samuel Cabot, Boston. STATIONERS: F. W. Barry, Beale Co., Boston; A. D. Maclachlan, Boston. STEAM GAUGES AND VALVES: Chapman Valve Mfg. Co., Indian Orchard, Mass.; American Balanced Valve Co., Jersey Shore, Pa.; Jenkins Bros., New York City; Roe Stephens Mfg. Co., Detroit, Mich.; Mason Regulator Co., Boston; Ashton Valve Co., Boston; Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Ohio; Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston. STEAM PUMPS: Mason Regulator Co., Boston. STEAMSHIP LINES: Merchant Miners Transportation Co., Baltimore. STEAM SPECIALTIES: Julian D ' Este Co., Boston; Lunkenheimer Co., Cin- cinnati, Ohio. STEEL: U. S. Steel Co., Everett, Mass.; Midvale Steel Co., Philadelphia, Pa.; William Jessop Sons, Ltd., New York City; George F. Blake, Jr., Co., Worcester. STRUCTURAL STEEL: American Bridge Co. of New York, New York City. SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS- C. L. Berger Sons, Boston; Young Sons, Philadelphia, Pa. SWITCH BOARDS: S. B. Condit, Jr., Co., Boston. TAILORS: F. L. Dunne, Boston; Smith Smullen, Boston; E. R. Smith, Boston; George H. Lane, Boston. TECH EMBLEMS: Bent Bush, Boston; A. S. Adams, Boston. TEXTILE MACHINERY: Textile Finishing Machinery Co., Providence, R. I. TIRES FOR LOCOMOTIVES AND CAR WHEELS: Midvale Steel Co., Phila- delphia, Pa. 1904 TECHNIQUE 379 TOOLS: A. J. Wilkinson Co., Boston; L. S. Starrett Co, Athol, Mass.; Arm- strong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago; Hurd Co., New York. TRUST COMPANIES: City Trust Co., Boston; Old Colony Trust Co., Boston. TUBING: National Tube Works, Pittsburg. VALVES: American Balanced Valve Co., Jersey Shore, Pa.; Ashton Valve Co., Boston; Jenkins Bros., New York City; Mason Regulator Co., Boston; Roe Stephens Mfg. Co., Detroit, Mich. ; Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston; Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. WIRE ROPE: A. Leschen Sons Rope Co., St. Louis, Mo.; Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. WOODWORKING MACHINERY: S. A. Woods Machine Co., South Boston, Mass. WRENCHES: Goes Wrench Co., Worcester, Mass. YACHT DESIGNING: Hanley Construction Co., Quincy, Mass. 380 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII 3:lpl ibctical JIulicv to aDbcrtiscmcuts PACE PACE Adams, A. S. . 36 Chapman Valve Mfg. Co. . 55 American Balanced Valve Co. 48 Charles River Iron Works 22 American Bridge Co. of New York 3 City Trust Co. . 33 American Glue Co. . 5 Cochrane Chemical Co. 46 Armstrong Bros. Tool Co. . 4 Coes Wrench Co. 34 Ashton Valve Co. 24 Condit, Jr., Co., S. B. . ■34 Atlantic Works 45 D ' Este Co., Julian . II Baeder, Adamson Co. 25 Dixon Crucible Co., Joseph 31 Baker Adamson Chemical Co. 18 Dunne, F. L. . . 384 Baldwin Locomotive Works 12 Eimer Amend 2 Barbour-Stockwell Co. 49 Engineering Record . 50 Barry, Beale Co., F. W. . 9 Evens Howard Fire Brick Co. 46 Bassette Co., The F. A. 54 Franklin, Albert B. . . 8 Bay State Belting Co. 25 Gale Lumber Co., Geo. W. . 28 Bent Bush . 36 Gilbreth, Frank B. . 53 Berger Sons, C. L. 46 Green Fuel Economizer Co. 5 Blake, Jr., Co., George F. 49 Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection Blake, Sampson Co. 49 and Insurance Co. 42 Boston Albany R. R. 33 Hanley Construction Co. I Boston Maine R. R. 51 Hearn, Charles W. . 29 Boston Lockport Block Co. 50 Hewins Hollis 28 Brunswick Hotel 50 Hill, Clarke Co. . 27 Buffalo Bolt Co. 8 Holbrook, Cabot Rollins 6 Cabot, Samuel 34 Holtzer-Cabot Electric Co. . 14 Cabot, Cabot Forbes 41 Hovey Co., C. F. . 36 The Midvale Steel Co. Locomotive and Car-wheel Tires Forgings Cast- ings, Bar Steel Nickel Steel Forgings for Marine Engine j Ordnance Forgings and Castings l -V Office and Works: PHILADELPHIA, PA Insert [CJ 19 04 TECHNIQUE 383 Huey Bros. Kurd Co. . Jeffrey Mfg. Co. Jenkins Bros. . Jessop Sons, Wm., Ltd. Jones Lamson Machine Co. Kendall Sons, Edward Kuttroff, Pickhardt Co. Lane, George H. Lane Co., The T. H. Leclanche Battery Co. Leonard Ellis Leschen Sons Rope Co., A. Lidgerwood Mfg. Co. Little Walker Livermore, Homer F. ■. Ludowici Roofing Tile Co. Lufkin Rule Co. Lunkenheimer Co., The Mackay Engineering Co. Maclachlan, A. D. . Maltby Lumber Co. . Mason Machine Works Mason Regulator Co. Mass. Institute of Technology Mead Mfg. Co., John A. Merchants Miners Transportati Co Merriam Co., G. C. Metz Co., H. A. . PAGE 26 26 37 37 26 7 22 2g 12 6 49 32 37 26 56 25 24 8 23 40 9 25 43 18 21 12 )n 45 44 2 PACE Insert [C] Midvale Steel Co. Millett Core Oven Co. Mitchell Son, Wm. H. . Moore, Alex. Morse Twist Drill Machine Co National Conduit Cable Co. National Shawmut Bank National Tube Co. New York Boston Dyewood Co. 31 Niles-Bement-Pond Co. Insert [B] 23 47 42 4 10 20 13 Norfolk Western R. R. Norton Emery Wheel Co. Notman Photo. Co. . Oak Grove Creamery Co. Old Colony Trust Co. Old Corner Book Store Parker House . Pneumatic Cushion Rubber Heel 22 19 20 48 38 52 14 51 Pratt Whitney Co. Insert [B] Rawson Morrison Mfg. Co. 24 Ridgway Dynamo Engine Co. 16 Roberts Iron Works . 42 Roessler Hasslacher Chemical Co. 32 Roe Stephens Mfg. Co. Samson Cordage Works Scott, Albert Shreve, Crump Low Co. Shultz Belting Co. . Silver, Burdett Simonds Mfg. Co. 31 18 6 51 5 52 44 384 TECHNIQUE Vol. XVIII PACE PACE Simplex Electrical Co. • 19 Trenton Iron Works • 17 Smith Co., E. R. . • 9 United Gas Improvement Co. • 31 Smith Smullen Co. ■9 United States Steel Co. . 6 Springfield Facing Co. ■14 Vacuum Oil Co. . 28 Starrett Co., L. S. . ■44 Valvoline Oil Co. ■32 Stone Webster ■38 Vilter Mfg. Co. • 24 Suffolk Engraving Electrotyp- Walworth Mfg. Co. . Insert |A| ing Co. • 39 Weston Electrical Instrument Co. 18 Tabor Mfg. Co. ■17 Whitin Machine Works • 15 Technology Chambers • 41 Wilkinson Co., A. J. ■35 Technology Review . 10 Woods Machine Co., S. A. • • 30 Textile Finishing Machinery Co. 40 Young ' s Hotel • 14 Touraine Hotel • 14 Young Sons • 4 Jf, it, Bunnc MAKER OF MEN ' S CLOTHES Crcltisttir tvlrs onlv wpottins ilLlotlirs a s prcialtv TRANSCRIPT BUILDING BOSTON : MASS. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Hanley Construction Co. QUINCY, MASS. Yacht lUiilding, (icneral Repairini -, Storage, Haul inn, and Towini . Sail Boats, Power Boats, Row Boats, Yawls, Launches, Life Boats, (iasolene Tenders and Gasolene Launches. Storage Basin Noo ft. x 5(10 ft. :o ft. Deep at Low Water. C( mpleteiv I.ainl Locked. Free fntm All Currents. Machine Shop. Full E(iuipment. Four Marine Railways Capacity uii to Noo Tons. Boats Hauled at Hi li or Low aler, Day or Nitrlit. WORKS AT QUINCY, MASS. Telephone I63 ' 2. Quincy BOSTON OFFICE: 185 SUMMER STREET Telephone 1107. Oxford I ' yol ' . Charles R. Cross endorses Drisko ' s Hair Oil. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER H. A. ME,TZ S CO. Successors to DYESTUFF DEPARTMENT VICTOR KOEICHL 6 CO. Anilines, Alizarines, Indigo MLB Sole Agents for Farbwcrkc vorm Mcislcr Lvcius and Brucning NEW YORK. 122 Hudson Street BOSTON PHILADELPHIA PROVIDENCE CHICAGO CHARLOTTE, N. C. ATLANTA, GA. MONTREAL. CAN. NEWARK. N. J. FRANKFURT. GERMANY t 1 A B I, I .s H E IJ 1851 e ' .ir. riiird Ave. ir Eighteenth St., E f )VRK IMPORTERS A N U M A N U F A C T L ' R E R S () V Cl)rmiral6c ' Ci)cmital !3pparntus We keep eonstaiith ' on hand the most complete and most up-to-date line of All Kinds ot Testing Instruments So if A e tts for C. A. F. KAHI.BAUM ' S C. P. CHEMICALS ami REAGENTS JJurcBt liammriTt) )Jlatinum at Lnuiret iflarUrt Katro SalantcB anU il righto C Complrtr Lafaoratoip ©ittfite L ' t cXi ' - ) Yi .!■( ' (V (i i r t7 vin-yiai s ' loaf. ' THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER C MACHINE SHOPS OF WILLIAM CRAMP SONS SHIP AND ENGINE BUILDING COMPANY. PHILADELPHIA. PROBABLY ONE OF THE LARGEST AND MOST COM- PLETE SHOPS IN THE WORLD. STRUCTURE SUPPLIED AND ERECTED BY THE AME.RICAN BRIDGE. COMPANY OF NEW YORK ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS STRUCTURAL STEEL FOR E,VE,RY PURPOSE, BUILDINGS, BRIDGES. ROOF TRUSSES ' v . Peabody savs of his T ienitcdv nji iiiis, i on ' sir lioic 1 i id it. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER ARMSTRONG 20th Century TOOLS Straislii Sliank, R.and I,. H.uul ( iff-;et ( T 1 Sizes Kacln Ciitting-uff Too! Straight and Offset Shank t,7 Si fS Earh ' For Lalhc Planer Work Using inserted cutters ot SELF- HARDENING STEEL. SAVE time and trouble, 70 per cent grinding, go per cent tool steel. All forging and temper- ing dispensed with. PurdLie University, Lafayette, Ind. Aioi-iKONi, Bi; s. Tom. (_■..: i ' lfiiileiiicn : Some lime a,eo yoir sL-nt u.s for trial one of your No. m liovingTools. It has proved very satisfactory, more than taking tlu place of the ordinary forged horint; tool, and in some instances far sm - passing it. 1 am much pleased with yovir tools, nd have siiowii ihein til a miniber of visilurs, who have appreciated their vaUie. and said ihe ' l)o ' ed to .eive them a trial. Knclo.sed please find another order fi)r tools, which kindly send at onit antl nhlitce. Kespectfiillv V. v. Tl ' KNKK, InslriKtor in Machine Work M.i !.; !.,■!:,,, -J mil ■;] Armstrong Bros. Tool Co. (The Todl-HnJdc ' i- I ' eoplel 599 Austin Ave. Chicago, III., U. S. A. New Tools£?Keep Posted Write for Catalog YOUNG AND SONS ESTABLISHED 1820 MANUFACTURERS OF mcinrranc- • nininc m- • mvEYinc in!)TRynmT5 45-nORTH7™-5T PniLADCLPniA- -V-S-A 1 go get a leaf ot brass, And with a gad ot steel will write these -ords. 7 7; . . ' indroint ui. [p j Use Genuine Morse Goods whenever the occasion demands. ' ' ' ' .U. T. D. M. Co. MORSE TWIST DRILL MACHINE CO. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. U. S. A. Makers of Drills, Chucks, Reamers, Cutters, Taps, Dies, and Machinists ' Tools Rules foj- Acijiiirini ,j ' ,-r i - Cmiplrxion ' ] ' ' Ji i- I ' .. IMiih- THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER • YXAMO DoilK ' stir vV Iiii|Hil1i ' (l ni ' Krr LEATHER GENUINE RAWHIDE LACE LEATHER. SHULTZ ' S PATENT IPULIEY CO ER. BELT DRESSING = AND 4 5::Bi ' -T CEMENT, ffii for(Trcijlar5- Main Driving: Belts, and BeltinK for Hig li Speed and Hard Serv- ice a Specialty 114 HIGH STREET BOSTON, MASS. U. S. A. Hmrrtrain lur (to. MANUKACTURERS OF ALL GRADES OF GLUE Flint, Garnet and Emery Paper and Cloth B ' nloll, Muss. ; Chiiiigo, in. ; Ne-!C Tork, N. r. ; Philn- delpkui. Pa. ; St. Louis, Mo. F. ' CrORlEi:: Pf.iboih, Mass. ; Maiden, Mass. ; E. K ' dlpole, Mass. ; Rockport, Mass. ,• Hal o-we l, Me. ; Spriiigdale, Pa.; Chicago, 111. Green ' s Economizer t standard of Econo ,n Decreases the COAL BILL, Increases ihe BOILER EFFICIENC ' } ' No steam user tail afford to he loithout one Before designing neiv steam plants or remodeling old ones, CONSULT US Over JO, 000, 000 boiler horse power now in use Write us fur an - further inlormation uu iii.n require , ;:;::;:: Cljc (Bxm fm Ccouomnrr Co., ittattrai an. j .ii. Hades liii li nil fuiv like Ike Kei;islrar ' s seoi ii. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER TheT. H. LaneC o. i cn ' 0 Outftttrrg . ' iS4 WASHINGTON STREET, CORNER FRANKLIN BOSTON, MASSACHrSETTS BOSTON ( ' ami5kid(;e sroi ' (iH roN FREDERICK. HOLBROOK Wll.l.lAM B. CABOT [AMES W. ROLLINS, Jr. WILLIAM S. PATTEN, Special Partner Jupiter HOLBROOK Steel Castings CABOT £ Still hold their lead ROLLINS against all competition KNGINEERS CONTRACTORS ■Telrphoitf I SI 7 Hayruirlct 1 140 TREMONT BUILDING BOSTON, M.-JSS. U. S. STFFL CO. EFERETT, MJSS. 82 93farou t. T K L K P H N E Jflunst Boston, iHass. CONNECTION ' ' vt ' i -iY It ill till- Sun. it ' s ,f(J .■if villi sfi- it ill tlir Ti ' cli, ifs so-so. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Hartncss Flat Turret Lathe !! ngmal in Drsujn C, Cliorougli in Construction C, Unri-crllrO in C utptit ■iiwia -. . Limr anD jHoncv a jcr tl)at I0 cU VJoyU) ' Jnximigmnq, Designed tor the rapn and accurate production of general lathe work from the rough bar of stock. Working capacity from the bar, 2 inches in diameter by 24 inches in length. Small forgings can also be machined to advantage. JONES St LAMSON MACHINE CO. British Offices : Exchange liuildings. Step)ienson ' s Place. Birmingham. England Germany, Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria-Hungary and Italy: M. Kovf.mann Charlottenstrasse 113. Dusseldorf, Germany France and Spain : I ' n. Uonvillian. 6 Hue Blanche, Paris. France SPRINGFIELD, ERMONT, U. S. A. 117 1 ' IS Teili like all alplialh-ls Rciaiisc F ' s loine after E ' s (ease). THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER s T E A M ESTIMATES FURNISHED FOR Warming and Ventilating Apparatus Steam Depaitmenl Teic phone 2466 ALBERT B. FRANKLIN SCIENTIFIC WARMING AND VENTILATION OF SCHOOLS, CHURCHES, OFFICE BUILDINGS, RESIDENCES, ETC. SHEET METAL WORK A SPECIALTY SOLE MANUFACTURERS BARNEY VENTILATING FANS Shet-t Metal Depariment Telephone 1231 165 AND 167 FORT HILL SQUARE - BOSTON, MASS. w A T E R Buffalo 9i5i3(t OTompatt BUFFALO. NEW YORK SEND FOR CATALOGUE Our Goods Are Handled by All First-Class Dealers Lufkin Measuring Tapes ARE THE STANDARD TAPES OF THE WORLD Unequaled for Accuracy and Reliability LUFKIN RULE CO., Saginaw, Mich., U.S.A. . ; : (■, :.■, ■•■Tlu-oiv 0 LftiU W ' oil; I ' lh,- lliiitvsrvni rents, .lotli-lwniid. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Saprr for ilotcs, Colirv6 jfoimtain l tm anti U tationrn ' supplies F. W. Barry, Beale £ Company loS 1 lO U ishingto i St. Corner of Elm B S T X: M A S S A C H U S E T T S Compani ' Cailovs w TKLE PHONE 12! . 10 u in luc r Street 1 r a V iy a 6 I) t n 5 1 n 1 1 n J. D. Maclachhni Importer of an J Dealer in Drcizving Material Manufacturer «f School iUid (jollcrc Supplies 214 CLARENDON STREET RosroN 2j Per Cent Saved E. R. Smith Co. TJILORS The scores oi Tech students that ue clothe are our best advertisement 77 BEDFORD STREET BOSTON L ' s,- r. Mcore ' s - Elfer- ' e. ' scejil fn i ets- 10 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER COMPLIMENTS O V %i)t iiational Contmit anl) Cable Companj CiTruriur (JPffirrs, (Tiinrs i5uilDing, p.r n V ' orU T jc Technology Review A QUARTERLY MAGAZINE, Devoted to the Interests of The Massachusetts Institute of Technology AND PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATION OF CLASS SECRETARIES 83 Newbury Street, Boston ' I HK Riviru- aims to de elop closer relations among Institute men, and to stimulate their interest in the work of the college. CL It is in no sense an engineering magazine, but deals broadU ' with the problems of Techncjlogical Education and the responsibilities of the professional man. SUBSCRIPTION, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR SINGLE COPIES, THIRTY-FIVE CENTS CN ' olumes I, II, III and I ' , hiieU bound m half morocco, are ready for delivery at S.i.oo each, or will be exchaJiged tor unbound sets, pro ided thev are in good condition, at Si. 00 each. (If sent bv mail, 30 cents extra. ' , ' : llarllttt wnr Iwiiis. would he thoi be u Birr ,- ' ,; . ' THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER n CURTIS ENGINEERING SPECIALTIES DAMPER REGULATOR LIST OF SPECIALTIES WE MANUFACTURE Improved Pressure Regulator Improved Pump Regulator Water Pressure Regulator Relief Valve for Steam Water Combined Separator and Trap Tank Governor and Pump Air Spring Pressure Regulator Expansion Trap Return Steam Trap Balanced Steam Trap Damper Regulator Temperature Regulator Cellar Drainer U. S. Ball Cock Gauge Cock IMPROVED PRESSURE REGULATOR t ;.- BALANCED STEAM TRAP Julian D ' Este Comp ' y 24 CANAL STREET, BOSTON, MASS. RETURN STEAM TRAP made Mil:,uiiik,;- in,l •• Ilip ' V famous. 12 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Baldwin Locomotive Works SINGLE EXPANSION AND COMPOUND LOCOMOTIVES Cable Address BALDWIN Philadelphia Cable Address BALDWIN Philadelphia C. i!. A L . ATLAXTIf T T 1 ' I Broad- and Narrow-Gauge I.ocomotu es ; Mine and Furnacu Locom()ti ' es ; Compressed Air Locomoti es; Traniwav Loconioti es ; Plantation i.ocomotives ; Oil-Burning Locomotives ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES, WITH WESTINGHOUSE MOTORS ELECTRIC CAR TRUCKS, WITH OR WITHOUT MOTORS All important parts made accurateh- to gauges and templates, after standard designs or to railroad companies ' drawings. Like parts of different loconioti es of same class perfectly interchangeable BURNHAM, WILLIAMS CO., Philadelphia, Pa., U. S. A. JOHN A. MEAD MFG. CO. II BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY COAL HANDLING MACHINERY Clam Shell Shovels, McCaslin Overlapping Gravity Bucket Con- veyor, Cable Railways, Automa- tic Railways, Harrison Conveyor ELECTRIC CARS COAL AND SAND HAND- LING PLANTS DESIGNED AND EQUIPPED SEND FOR CATALOGUE § pnng Innouuccmrnt 3 Complrtr Linrof f orcirrn anti mrrttan (Scorgc J?. Eaiu C a i 1 V 1 8 13 V 1 s 1 n  t r r r t 13 s t n (Trn (irr Crnt iTiocotint to (Trchnolog:!) S ' tiiBrnts I [ arf i(-si-i-: ' i i iiiih-tiiiitrly fur tlir •• I ' rili Soiii -book- ' THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 13 NATIONAL TUBE CO. M ™ Wrought Merchant Pipe Boiler Tubes, Casing, Tubing and Drive Pipe, Gas and Oil Line Pipe a s ' V ' Yr ' h r ' r hr es ' H-irich to o-inch NATIONAL department: M C K E E b 1 ' (1 K T , !■A . Water and (jas Mains Fitted with Converse or Matheson Joints Seamless Cubes auli jBtstrUaucous JForgtus 6a 5 LOCAL SALES O F F I C E S New Yokk: Haveinever Building Chicaco : Western Union Building Philadelphia: 267 South Fourth Street San I RANc■ISCO : 420 California Street Pittsburg : Frick Building London, K. C, Fngland : Dock House, Billiter Street A ' ' .v cs iliapi ' i ' im is her dioii lOiiiiiuni (Citts, 14 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER OUR SPECIALTY IS MOTOR GENERATORS DYNA MOTORS For Charj ing Batteries, Ringing Bells, Energizing Induction Coils. Supplying Telephone Circuits Testing of Various Kinds, Etc. Either Direct or alternating Current Primaries SEND FOR BULLETIN NO, no OTHER LINES Gas Engine Igniters Direct and Alternating Current Motors Plating Dynamos Dental Lathe Motors Elevator Motors Interior Telephone Sys- tems i |t OTHER LINES Annunciators Watchman ' s Time Detectors Gas Lighting Apparatus Telephone Magnetos Etc., Etc. Portable Testing Sets a mm k r— SP ' -MANUFACTURED BY- THE HOLTZER-CABOT ELECTRIC CO., Boston, ' l f . CHICAGO, 395 397 Dearborn Street NEW YORK, 143 Liberty Street itT l l I J W 1 Flunked at Tech still has made a success of life , can be said of many who have worked hard and at the time have apparently Parker House School and Tre.mont Sthekts ELIROPKAX Pl-A.V failed. Many superintendents of foundries have really tailed because Hotel Toirainp: they have not paid enough attention J50YLST0N AND TKEJIONT STRKETS to little things. Facing is a small EI ' ROPEAX Pl.AN ' item, but one cent ' s worth ot good facing may save a big casting, thus saves dollars. Many say we make Youngs Hotel CorHT Street the best — Just try a barrel and see EDHOPEAN PLAX what yoii think. a Springfield Facing Co. :?). itv. fflsaijippir vV ijro. L. S BROWN I ROPRI KTORS CHARCOAL, Lump and Manufactured FOUNDRY FACING, all (§:ood) kinds ■■H islorv repeats ilu-ll : Uki ii ' isc does J ' rnJ. ■■.W Hanks Ciirner. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 15 The W h i t i n Machine Works W H 1 T I N S V 1 L L E, MASSACHUSETTS Build o f Cotton Machinery j Cards, Railway Heads, Combing Machinery, Drawing Frames, Spinning Frames, Spoolers, Twisters, Reels, Long Chain Ouillers, Looms Southern Agent, Stuart W. Cramer Trust Building, Charlotte, North Carolina Kquitable Building, Atlanta, Georgia (2iie ' Y : J ' or hin . tnaiiv little brotlicis cfliild one cut up J ' lof Ei ianit ' s pants 16 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER ' T lIMiafl CI LlJ ' Wfimvn Zi _ t -JL Wi tm.Mii mmmt si 9 R! • -. i rx lib ' . , ■ . TELEPHONE MAIN-3856-3 THOMPSON RYAN DYNAMO AND McEWEN AUTOMATIC ENGINES Factories Ridgway, Pa. A Few Plants Near Boston Ci ' iiipliiiu-iits i f Helt-ii iimi i , i-r- ' o . THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 17 nf- ir s :?ie ■_, WIRE ROPE FOR ALL PURPOSES Wire Rope Tramways r.leiclierl Tramway oi Liiclwij; Monti, ' icioria Mines. hitario, Canada The Trenton Iron Company TRENTON, N. J. Manufacturers, Engineers and Contractors, and sole licensees in North America for the Bleichert System of Wire Rope Tramways. Also, Wire Rope Equipments for Cable Hoist-Convevors, Surface and Under-ground Haulage, Etc. Iron and Steel Wire of all kinds. llluitrated book upon apptuiitioii. New York Office — Cooper, Hewitt i Co., i - Burling Slip. Chicago Office — i i 14. Monadnock Building The Tabor l ibrator Molding Machines Combine all that is best in mold- ing machines, every improvement skill and science suggests. They do speedy, accurate work; cast- ings; are always uniform. Alost economic moldinsj machine in use The Tabor Manufacturing Company i8th and Hamilton Streets _ _ - Philadelphia, Pa. Machinery Trust, Ltd., 189 Fleet St., E.G., London, England Dominion Radiator Co., Toronto, Ont., Canada Schuchardt Schutte, Berlin, Brussels, Vienna, St. Petersburj: Tlicnnodviiamiis is ii so i o( iiv y rcalnhty. 18 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER The Baker Adamson Chemical Co. Maiiutacturers ot Cliemicallv Pure Muriatic, Nitric and Sulphuric Acids and Ammonia Chemically I ' ure Salts. Ashless Filter Papers Easton. Pennsylvania The WESTON Standard Voltmeters and Ammeters PORTABLE, ACCURATE RELIABLE For Laboratory Use Our Instruments are RECOGNIZED as STANDARD, throughout the civilized world Weston Electrical Instrument Company Waverly Park, Newark, N.J. SAMSON SPOT CORD ' 4 Well known by our trade-mark — THE COLORED SPOT. It is all inspected and we can thus guarantee it free from flaws. «? tS N Sash Cord, Curtain Cord, Clothes Lines, Chalk Lines Mason ' s Lines, Shade Lines, etc. SAMSON CORDAGE WORKS BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS i!i£ Mason Reducing Valves ARE THE WORLD ' S STANDARD VALVES For automatically reducing and absolutely maintaining an even steam or air pressure. They are adapted for every need, and guaranteed to work perfectly in every instance. Write for full information and splendid references The Mason Regulator Co. BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS. U.S.A. .1 liiii c ill lime iiiav siii ' i nine. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 19 NORTON EMERY WHEELS Walker Universal Tool and Cutter Grinder Emery Wheel Machinery Corundum Wheels India Oil Stones A Gold Medal Highest Award for Emery Wheels Paris Exposition, 1900 Trade ltMH||iHtl Miik Gold, Silver and Bronze Medals at the Pan-American Exposition Buffalo, 1901 Quick-Cutting Uniform Quality Wonderful Durability Waterproof Catalogue Free Norton Fernery Wheel Company OFFICE AND WORKS AT WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS Chicago Store 25 S. Canal Street a a a Agencies - ' •All over the World C. A. MORSS, PRESIDENT EVERETT MORSS. vice-president C. A. MORSS. JP.. TREASURER I. H. MASON. GENERAL MANAGER no State Street, Boston, Mass. Manufacturers of INSULATED WIRES AND CABLES, INTERIOR, AERIAL, SUBMARINE AND UNDER GROUND Simplex Electric Heating Company All sorts of ELECTRIC HEATING APPARATUS, ENAMEL RHEOSTATS, Unit System, CARHEATERS I ' sc Bhicksteiii ' s ' Jokvlct.s - Htir n rss, tas r ess. (h or tws and footless. 20 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER DEPOSITORS OK rHK LINITKD STAIKS, COMMONWEALTH O F M A S S A C H U S I. F I S AND CITY OF BOSTON The National Shawmut Bank OF BO S T .y Capital .... $3,500,000.00 Surplus and Profits 2,918,127.04 OFFICERS: lAMES P. STEARNS, President E. HAVWARD FERRY, Vice-President FRANCIS B. SEARS, Vice-President ABRAM T. COLLIER, Vice-President FRANK H. BARBOUR, Cashier ' ALLACE S. DRAPER, Asst. Cashier HEXRV F. SMITH, Asst. Cishier ARTHUR P. STONE, Asst. Cashier Tech Men will hnd the best platinum and carbon portraits at the NOTMAN STUDIOS SPECIAL RATES GIVEN 384 Boylston Street . 3 Park Street, BOSTON (7 so 1286 Massachusetts Avenue, CAMBRIDGE . Ii ir ' s [xttt-i- ridles — Miiiii f ' di uiid rt-ss v for lis bv llw Adaiiis ' lixpicss Co. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 2I_ Zr c Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Boston HENRY S. PRITCHETT, LL.D., President HE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY ofters courses, each ot four years ' duration, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science, in Civil, Mechanical, Mining, Electrical, Chemical and Sanitary Engineering, in Architecture, Chemistry, SyJIfevSr- S i Physics, Biologv, Geology and Naval Architecture. To he admitted to the tirst-year class, applicants must have attained the age of seventeen, and must pass satisfactory examinations in Algebra, Plane and Solid Geometry, English, History, French and German, and must present certificates for one of a series of elective subjects. A division of these entrance subjects between two successive years is permitted. Entrance examinations are held at the Institute in June and September of each year. In June applicants may be examined also by the College Entrance Examination Board in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and many other cities in America and Europe. A circular stating times and places is issued in advance, and will be mailed on application. Graduates of colleges and scientific schools are admitted, without examina- tion, to such advanced standing as is warranted by their previous training. A Graduate School of Engineering Research will be established in October, 1903. PUBLICATIONS ' I he Annual Catalorue, the Report of the President and the ' Treasurer (issued in December), and anv of the following descriptive circulars, will be mailed free on application: Massachusetts Institute of Technology : an illustrated pamphlet describing the labora- tories of the Institute. Circulars of the Departments of Civil Engineering; Mechanical Engineering; Mining Engineering; Physics and Electrical Engineering: Architecture; Chemistry ; Chetnical Engineer- ing; Biology; Naval Architecture. Circulars in regard to Admission of Graduates of other Colleges; The Massachusetts School of Design; Summer Courses. H. W. TYLER, Secretary 491 Boylston .Street, Boston, Mass. Good coffee sliould be sliviit; us Love, sweet as Life, black as Deattt, and hot as Hell. — LiiiicIiRoom Philosophy. 22 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER N- W NORFOLK AND WESTERN RAILWAY COMPANY SHENANDOAH VALLEY ROUTE NORFOLK ROUTE NEW YORK AND NEW ORLEANS SHORT LINE W. B. BEVILL, , ,w ■„-„„„-.• „■„,. Av„w,.. ;,-. NEW ENGLAND PASSENGER AGENCY L. J. ELLIS, .,su,-„ ■„,„.„,.,. .;„■,.. ,,. Br.,.,Jn.a,. .V. V. _ _ SUMMER STREET C P. GAITHER, .Wit ' Iiiit;ui ' Hi Af t ' it Boston, Mass. To Tech Men : ' For your homeward journey, we would respectfully ask your favorable consideration for one of our routes. Sea and Rail The Norfolk route offers a delightful sea voyage of forty hours, Boston to Norfolk by the palatial steamships of the M. M. T. Co., and thence Norfolk and Western Railway. All Rail The Shenandoah Valley Route, made famous by Luray Caverns and Natural Bridge. The Washington, Lynchburg, Bristol, Chattanooga Route, old and reliable. The region traversed is wild in scenic beauty and famed in history. We reach all points South and West. Please call or write for rates and schedules. Yours respectfully, C. P. GAITHER, J. H. McCORMACK. new England agent TRAVCLINC AGENT TEL. 2891 MAIN CHARLES RIVKR IRON WORKS ESTABLISHKI) i860 Edward Kendall Sons MANUFACTURERS OF tcam iSoilcrs, Canl 5 auli 3Iatc 3ron orU of € txy) Bcscripttcin End West Boston Bridge CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS. I -i7 .! (■ajid Mv Cnursi-, hy Prof. Si ' aiti (C ' licii ' i Engineer). THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 23 THE LUNKENHEIMER SPECIALTIES Honestly made and always of good value ; . wherever exhibited invariably carry off the highest honors. Specify Lunkenheimer make and order from your dealer. Write for catalogue of Superior Brass and Iron Valves, Whistles, Injectors, Lubricators, Oil Pumps, Oil and Grease Cups, etc. All goods tested and Inspected, and warranted to satisfy. THE LUNKENHEIMER CO. CINCINNATI, OHIO, U.S. A. Branches! ' ' O ' : 6 Cortlandt Street, orancnes London : 35 Great Dover St., S. E. M illett ' s Paten t Core Oven DOUBLE DOORS — ONE CLOSING THE OVEN WHEN THE OTHER IS OPEN NEARLY ONE THOUSAND IN USE SAVE FUEL SAVE TIME WILL SAVE YOU MONEY E.very one a reference Write us for Catalogues and Terms MILLETT CORE OVEN COMPANY BRICHTWOOD; MASSACHUSETTS: U . S . A 1 1 ' uu rsi- . ' Certdiiilv . ' A bow all . ' a i 24 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Cross Compound Curliss e-iij ine with Heavy DuLy Fiaint ' . Direct Connected to Duplex Compressors TheVilter Mfg Co. 1018 Clinton Street. MILWAUKEE, WIS. High Grade «- Corliss Engines High Pressure, Compound and Compound Condensing, Girder or Heavy Duty Bed, Ice Making and Refrigeratmg Machinery Jim Conn RoGnneTiLE A KjN.MKN r with ad anced thought ami practice in building construction, ct)ni- pels the rertectix e enguieer to con- sider and ultiniateh ' adopt The Modern Fruposition for Roofs, viz. : Steel and Terra Cotta No Leaks or Drip of Condensation Nothinsj else so ettective nor ultimateK so ine. pensi e tor ni- dustrial buildnies of all kinds. Ludowici Doofing Tile Co. 508 Chamber of Commerce CHICAGO Ashton Pop Valves Guaranteed to give Peiiect Satisfaction Made of Best Material Insuring greatest Efiiciency and Durability Send lor Catalogue T Specify Ashlon Pop Valves and Gages Ashton Steam Gages Have Non-Corrosive Movements and Seamless Drawn Tubes: Are Accurate, Durable and Strictly High Grade THE ASHTON VALVE CO. Branches : 271 Franklin Street, BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO LONDON RAWSON MORRISON MANUFACTURING COMPANY Originators and Builders of Automatic Coal Handling Machinery STANDARD AND EASTERN HOISTING ENGINES ELECTRIC HOISTS, CABLEWAYS SPECIAL MACHINERY Cable Address MORRISON Works and Executive Offices 31-45 Main Street NEW YORK, 11 Broadway BALTIMORE. 3-5 German CHICAGO, 48-50 Lake Street PHILADELPHIA, 333 Bourse Cambridgreport, BOSTON, MASS. Long Distance Telephone lh jr l ' (iht . hi ' ut ' nvnr vi ' iir I ' hi ' ! ini iiiv t ' y ' :K ' ' ie in pthn sliij it ' .A ' Tt ' t im t ' ,rw ] ' t r ' iitv lini li THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 25 CEDAR POLES CEDAR TIES All our business converges to and concentrates itself on these two Michigan products. In these we are specialists. Don ' t you think our experience in them should be worth something? Every year we furnish hundreds of companies, from the smallest country telephone line to the largest steam railroad. CTake down our address for future reference if you are not in line now. MALTBY LUMBER CO., Bay City, Michigan Baeder, Adamson Co. ESTABLISHED 1828 1828 75 Years — 1903 Manufacturers 0 G L U F. , CURLED HAIR, FLINT PAPER, GARNKl PAPER, EMERY PAPER AND EMERY CLOTH, GROUND FLINT EMERY, HAIRFELT for Covering Boilers is ' PIPES for Lining Refrigerators Graiiuiiti-s of the- Institute of Technology are invited to acquaint thentsehes ivith the manufacturei of the above firm. STORES Philadelphia : : New York : : Boston : : Chicago FACTORIES Philadelphia Newark, N. J. : Woburn, Mass. BAY STATE BELTING CO. Bo s xot ' Mfr BRANCHES: New York Philadelphia Atlanta Memphis TANNERIES: Salem, Mass. FACTORY: South Boston TANNED Trads M.irk Sole Tanner ' .iru.l NLiiuitactuif is nt tlif Genuine Indian Tanned Belting and Lacing Leather « Homer F. Livermore 85 and 87 Pearl Street, BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS W a till I lie man wi ld « ■? ' ' ■kills an e.vai r 26 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER HUKI) tV Co. r.Tor.Tii Ks r Broadway NKW YORK LIDGERWOOD m Hoisting Engines Wsf- ■TANI)AKI) LIlU.F.KWdiU) HOISTiNfi ENt Nli Are bui It to gauge on the duplicate part system. Quick delivery assured OVE.R 21,000 IN USE. steam and Electric Hoists Send for Latest Catalogue Lidgerwood Mfg. Co. . 6 Liberty Street, N K W - () R K JESSOP ' S Awarded Grand Prix at Pans Nineteen Hundred Awarded Gold Medal World ' s Columbian Exposition STEEL Best Circular and Band Saw Plates. Best Annealed Tool and Die Steel. Double Shear and Sheet Steel, Truss Spring and Blister Steel. Annealed Die Blocks Wm. JESSOP SONS L ited Chief American Office, 91 JOHN ST., NEW YORK W. F. WAGNER, General Manager Manufactory, SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND OPERATING Jcssop Steel Company WASHINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA MANUFACTURERS OF Cruclble Shcct Steel FOR SAWS AND OTHER TOOLS Geo. Huey D. S. Huey. T. J. Huey W. Q. Huey HUEY BROS. Engineers and Contractors FOR ALL KINDS OF Heating Plumbing 35 Hartford Street Boston, Mass. TELEPHONE Riuiii • ' r if ;■, W ' ilty iiihl sparkliii; . THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 27 The Chicago Speed Lathe ,__ is piovided with selt-oiling bearings which are absohitely dirt and dust proof. The only attention they ever need is to be filled every three months or so, and, as the oil is put in below the spindle, no dirt or grit can reach the bearings even then. Tail stock is the cutaway pattern, with both screw and lever motion. Levers on the front ot the machine clamp both tail stock and tool rest rigidly in place. Chicago ' Hand Miller is fitted with the same sort ot self-oiling bear- ings to the spindle as the speed lathe shown above. Its ranges of motion are unusually large Longitudinal Motion, to table, 10 ' inches Cross Motion, 3 Vertical Range of Knee 5 ' 4 The addition of the vertical spindle to its equipment greatly increases its capacity over former types, and enlarges the variety of work it will perform. Each machine is furnished with an overhanging arm, a finished arbor, and a special quick-acting vise. IV rite tor circulars and prices. HILL, CLARKE COMPANY 14 South Canal Street Chicago Machinery Merchants Main Office, 156 Oliver St., Boston 123 Liberty Street New York Can be seen in the Philadelphia Bourse at the Stand of THE J. R. VANDYCK CO l c true to youiself. a)id yon can not t icn he fntsf to e ery man. 28 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER VACUUM OILS Are used in every part of the world because they are the most economical. Made only at Rochester, N. Y., and Olean, N. Y. VACUUM OIL COMPANY ROCHESTE.R, N. Y. Hewins Hollis M en ' s Furnishing Goo SHIRTS TO ORDER ds 4 HAMILTON PLACE BOSTON Did you ever see a Board Walk? also Dancing Floors ? WE HAVE. THEM AND OTHERS . Geo. W. Gale Lumber Co. 640 Main Street. CAMBRIDGE, M A S S A C H U S E, T T S (iriJiiii tiiiif civii v , (istar,- ( :i ' ,iik ir ii r run J, if) THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 29 Kuttroff, Pickhardt Company nl K IMI ' i IK 11 l UK Fill ' : l ' k( il M( ' 1 ■- M A M F ( 11 K 1 1 ' l; BADISCHE ANLIN- SODA-FABRIK Lud vigshafen o Rh., Germany 128 Duane Street, NEW YORK Branch Ojjices : Boston I5J Milk. Street Providence 80 So. Water Street Philadelphia 207 Chestnut Street Chicago 207 Michigan Street Aniline and Alizarine Dyes Colors, Chemicals, and Indigo Technical Chemicals, Liquid Chlorine Anhydrous Sulphuric Acid, also Fuming, all strengths THE PHOTOCJRAPHER to M. I. T. or i 90 1 — 1 902 — i yo 394 BOYLSTON STREET.BOSTON IS We make a SPECIALTT of HIGH GRADE work in Carbon, Black and Sepia, Platinum, and in Carbonettes. ([[ Special rates to Tech Students MHDAI.S AWAKHKO WHENEVER I COMPETITION WITH OTIIER PlinTOnRAPHIC ARTISTS •■Etfiiiciils of l- ' onc iil I.iuii iuige, In ' ■' ' ' ' A ' I ' luicrhill. 30 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER WOODS No. 302 VERTICAL AUTOMATIC HOLLOW-CHISEL MORTISER ADAPTED TO WORKING TIMBERS 12 INCHES WIDE BY 17 INCHES HIGH TAKES CHISELS UP TO i ' _. INCHES SQUARE WOOD WORKING MACHINERY FOR INSTITUTES. TRA NING SCHOOLS, ENGINEERING PLANTS, CAR AND SHIP-BUILDING PLANTS PLANING MILLS, BOX FACTORIES, ETC. S. A. WOODS MACHINE CO., Boston, Mass. WOODS r iii spiiLc- n-sci-i ' cd for lliv .liin Bates Collar Company. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 31 THE UNITED GAS IMPROVEMENT COMPANY STANDARD DOUBLE SUPERHEATER LOWE WATER GAS APPARATUS GAS ANALYSIS APPARATUS tr BAR PHOTOMETERS SPECIAL RECORDING PRESSURE GAUGES ' cohere the merii-f of niVnM ' C American UlAUIl O Graphite PENCILS have hft ' ii trNlnl no otlni - arc i-rii. THEY ARE BUILT FOR BUSINESS- Notliintr I ' Vit the W t ui wnod ami graphite tised in tlirir niake-iip. T! ey give service. Tlie grades never vary. ' hen n.-.t .It ■' ' ■Tlrr , I ' li Tituni tlvs ni.T n.-nn-, nml ' ;end 10 ' . for H:iiiipli s vorlli double. JOSEPH DIXON CKUCIBLE C).. Jersey City. N. J. ROE STEPHENS MANUFACTURING CO. DETROIT, MICHIGAN Aianufa. turc-n of SCOTT ' S Gate, Globe, Radiator, Angle, Check, Pop Safetv cf Relief, Back Pressuie VALVES Flower ' s Cushion Check Valves Goldsmith Throttle Valves ' ' e make a line ot extra-heavv brass and iron Gate, Globe, Angle and Check Valves that cannot be surpassed. •; Wrttf for Catalogui SCOTT VALVE COMPANY Western Agents CHICAGO, ILLINOIS NEW YORK AND BOSTON DYEWOOD COMPANY U ' orlis : 13rootelvn auD L ostoii Manufacturers of DYEWOODS and EXTRACTS for Tanning and Dyeing Importers of INDIGO and ANILINE COLORS NEW YORK, 156 William Street BOSTON, 115 and 117 Hig:h Street PHILADELPHIA, 122 anJ 124 Arcli Street As you seii ' , si shall yu ' ' p 32 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER -s Bleaching with Peroxide of Sodium CXPLANATORY PAMPHLET ON PRINCIPAL ON RESULTS ADVANTAGE.S OBTAINABLE SlMPLICl l Y J IS WHIIE ' I ' liiX ' c Baths Sf 0 ithnui tinting (VLTICKNESS Oiif to h L- hiiurs McHsl EFFECT No (- ' llo vin i with asje CKRIAIN r kjj F I ' EREAE As strong as before Results .il va s anu ' ■Vj?f - SAVING PERMANENCY Color tutalU ri-nioM ' d Of time and labor Of freight and Storage The Roessler Hasslacher Chemical Company Chemical Works PERTH AMBOY. N. J Office, NEW YORK I-eroxide Works NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. Valvoline Oil Company LEONARD ELLIS DEPARTMENT: SOLE MANUFACTURERS OF Cylinder 6 Lubricating Oils, Kerosene Gasolene and Naphtha w. H. dresse:r a Local Manager 27 State Street : BOSTON, MASS. •■77 , ■Sw A- Ihal W ' l ' ii ' l C ' liic t )Jf — c. J-. I ' dih. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 33 PULLMAN VESTIBULE LIMITED TRAINS OVER New York Central Lines THROUGH COACHES BUFFET PARLOR CARS SLEEPING CARS DINING CARS HROUGH EXPRESS TRAIN BETWEEN BOSTON AND HARTFORD, NEW HAVEN AND NEW YORK, via SpringSield Line. Leave Boston, South Station, 9 a.m., 12 m., 4 p.m., 11. 15 p.m. Leave Boston, Trinity Place, 9.04 a.m., 12.04 m., 4.04 p.m., 11. 19 p.m. Arrive New York, Grand Central Station, 3.30 p.m., 5.40 p.m., 10 p.m., 6 a.m. C, Daily service to Albany, 9 trains ; to Buffalo, 8 trains ; to Chicago, 7 trains ; to Cincinnati, 3 trains ; to Detroit, 5 trains ; to St. Louis, 3 trains ; through the famous Berkshire Hills and the Albany Gateway, which is al-wa ys open. Seats in Parlor Cars, or Berths in Sleeping Cars, may be reserved any number of days in advance, on application to Parlor Car Agent, South Station, Tele- phone Oxford, 957; or J. L. WHITE, City Passenger Agent, 366 Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts, Telephone Boston 1611. H. S. HANSON, G. P. A. £) a Boston, Massachusetts Cit| rust Comijanj) INCORPORATED 1900 40 STATE STREET, BOSTON, MASS. CAPITAL, $1,000,000; SURPLUS, $1,000,000. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS PERSONAL AND CORPORATION AC- COUNTS SOLICITED. ACTS AS TRUSTEE UNDER RAILROAD AND GENERAL MORTGAGES. AND AS REGISTRAR, TRANSFER AND FISCAL AGENT PHILIP STOCKTON, President CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS, 2nd, Vice-President Dtrrttors GEORGE S. MUMFORD, Secretary GEORGE ■W. GRANT. Treasurer Charles F. Adams, 2nd Orlando. H. Alford John S. Bartlett T. Jefferson Coolidge. Jr. Charles E. Cotting George A. Draper Frederick P. Fish Robert F. Herrick Francis L. Higginson James R. Hooper George E. Keith Maxwell Norman Robert T. Paine, 2nd Charles E. Perkins William A. Russell Howard Stockton Philip Stockton Nathaniel Thayer W . Seward Webb Sidney W. Winslow Wj ' jV jiicli c a man by llu loal if u ' t-ars - he may have borrouied it for !hf occasion. 34 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER GOES Genuine ' K.nife=Handle Trade WarK Registered WRENCHES STANDARD FOR ALL USE.S Cut of Our New Metal Handle for Mines and IVailroads Write for Lists, E,tc. For Sale Everywhere GOES WRENCH COMP ' Y, Worcester, Mass. CABOT ' S SHINGLE STAINS For Houses, Barns, Stables, Sheds, Fences and all rough woodwork, especially shingles. They are softer and richer in color, easier and quicker to apply, wear better, look bet- ter and are fifty per cent, cheaper than paint. Creosote, the chief ingredient, is the best wood preservative known. Twenty-four San ples of Stained Wood, with Chart of Color Combinations, sent on application SHEATHING QUILT ' ' Better than BacK-Plaster SAMUEL CABOT, 70 Kiiby St., Boston, Mass. AGENTS AT ALL CENTRAL PO I NTS S.B.CONDIT,JR. CO. Designers and Manufacturers of High and Low Tension CIRCUIT BREAKERS AND SWITCHES Special Attention Given to Designing and Building HIGH TENSION SWITCH- BOARDS, OIL CIRCUIT BREAKERS SWITCHES FOR ALTERNATING HIGH TENSION WOCK 63 Oliver Street - - Boston . Ei ' tii a Jill : iiii iTii las i s hi iiilit side. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 35 A. J. WILKINSON 6 CO. IMPORTERS, MANUrACTURERS AND DEALERS IN Hardware MACHINISTS ' AND MANUFACTURERS ' SUPPLIES E.lectrical Supplies Automobile Supplies 180 to 188 Washington and 19 to 25 Devonshire Streets BETWEEN STATE STREET AND DOCK SQUARE BOSTON .1 i ' ini III liw uiiii i. woilii Iwo in liir pii. ii. 36 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER C. F. HOVEY COMPANY IMPORTERS, JOBBERS AND RETAILERS OF !f (Tfrntlnnrn ' s jFuvni!:.l)ini]i (T.ootis !tU!3tom=Hflatic 3t)nts a S ' prrialti) BOSTON, MASS. 33 Summer Street - - 42 Avon Street BENT 6 BUSH 387 WASHINGTON STREE.T Boston, Mass. S ' cci) Pins, Flags, Spoons Clasps, Buckles and Stationery A. S.ADAMS Maker of the Official M. I. T. Pin 106 Tremont St., Boston The only Jeweler in the M.I.T. Co-operative Catalogue. Any member wearing this Pin will be allowed ten per cent, discount on all purchases. We now have the above Pin in a new half size ; also M. I. T. Football Hat Pins, Link Cuff Buttons, Pencil Tips, etc. Silver Enamel, Plain Monogram $ .75 Silver Enamel, Raised Monogram 1.00 10=Karat Gold, Plain Monogram 2.25 14=Karat Gold, Raised Monogram 3.00 Small Silver Scarf Pin .50 14=Karat Gold Scarf Pin 1.75 r i- cluirltv thai ,-i; .i at honit is too fi-cble to tjt-t out. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 37 CSTAFiLISHEO 1857 ALESCHEN L SONS ROPE Ca H«...c.o.,c. 920-922 NOKTH 1 ST ST.LOUS. O. WIRE ROPE OF LVERY DESCRIPTION FOR MINES QUARRIES ELEVATORS ETC. AERIAL WIRE ROPE TRAMWAYS I SINGLE AND DOUBLE ROPE SYSTEM i EHTRE ST E V ' lORK ; 137 LAKE ST, . A CHICAUO . ' N ; 65FRtH0NT 5T ■' ' SAN fSANClSCO. , ! Mv ' ft JENKINS BROTHERS Valves and Packing PUMP VALVE,S AND DISCS WERE AWARDED THE HIGHEST HONORS AT THE PAN = AMERICAN EXPOSITION. We believe this speaks volumes fur the merits of OUR SPECIALTIES. To insure getting JENKINS BROTHERS ' goods, insist on their bearing the DIAMOND TRADE- MARK, ji ji . None others are genuine. JENKINS BROTHE.RS BOSTON, 35 High Street NE.W YORK. 71 John Street CHICAGO. 31 North Canal Street PHILADELPHIA, 133 North Seventh Street LONDON. E.C.. 62 Watling Street, Queen Victoria Street III} lid (iijf i hitttr tliiiii 110 ' ciaiii ro i iit nil. 38 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER CAPITAL $1,000,000 SURPLUS $3,000,000 (Dltr Cdlouy STrust Company Ames Building and 52 Temple Place Boston, Jiflass, a Transacts a General Banking and Trust Company Business. Allows Interest on Daily Balances of $500 or Over, Subject to Check. i ' trrttoiB T. JEFFERSON COOLIDGE, JR., Chaiiman Gordon Abbott, Oliver Ames, C. W. Amory. Samuel Carr, B. P. Cheney. T. Jefferson Coolidge, Charles E. Cotting. Philip Dexter, Eben S. Draper, George F. Fabyan, Frederick P. Fish, Reginald Foster, George P. Gardner. Henry S- Howe, Walter Hunnewell, George V. L. Meyer, Laurence Minot, Richard Olney. Henry R. Reed, Nathaniel Thayer. Charles S. Tuckerman, Lucius Tuttle. Stephen M. Weld. Henry C. Weston. ©fficfce GORDON ABBOTT, President C. S. TUCKERMAN. Vice-President and Treasurer GEORGE P. GARDNER. Vice-President FRANCIS R. HART. Vice-President JAMES A. PARKER. Vice President E. A. PHIPPEN, Secretary and Assistant Treasurer F. G, POUSLAND. Assistant Treasurer JOSEPH G. STEARNS. Assistant Secretary E. ELMER FOYE, Assistant Secretary JULIUS R. ■WAKEFIELD, Trust Officer STONE. S WE,BSTE,R ILlectrical E.xperts and ELngineers 93 FEDE.RAL STREE-T BOSTON. MASS. . man is knoiuii hy the coiiipaiiy lie keeps out of THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 39 MANY YEARS EXPERIENCE IN ILLUSTRATING COLLEGE ANNUALS HAS GIVEN US A THOROUGH KNOWL- EDGE OF THEIR REQUIREMENTS WE HAVE ILLUSTRATED THE AFTERMATH — THE PRISM— THE ECHO — VASSARION — VIOLET — ANDOVER CLASS BOOK— THE HUB— TECHNTQUE- GARNET- THE ORACLE — BRIC-A-BRAC— THE PURPLE — SMITH COLLEGE CLASS BOOK —SALMAGUNDI — THE INTERPRES— TRINITY IVY — HARVARD ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE — TECH. QUARTERLY PO NOT CLOSE Y . livrf orr f rst see .vg rs SUFFOLK ENGRAVING a7zd ELECTROTYPING COMPANY Nos. 234-236 CONGRESS STREET, SUFFOLK BUILDING BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS ENGRAVING ELECTROTYPING F.tenuil ' , ' ii ilaiice is the price of an miihrelhi. 40 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Mackay Engineering Co. 149 Broadway NEW YORK 100 Boylston St. BOSTON WALRATH GAS AND GASOLINE ENoINES Direct Connected to Any Generator EASTERN AGENTS Walrath Gas Engines Reeves Steam Engines Akron Electric Mfg. Co. Reilly Ptimps and Air Compressors Technique ' s Puzzle Was-ist? The Textile Finishing Machinery Co PROVIDENCE, R. I. Controlling Plants Formerly Operated by GRANGER FOUNDRY AND MACHINE CO. Providence, R.I. THE THOMAS PHILLIPS CO. Providence, R.I. THE RUSDEN MACHINE CO. Warren, R.I. PHENIX IRON FOUNDRY Providence, R. I. MANUFACTURERS OF Bleaching, Dyeing, Drying, Printing and Finishing Machinery FOR ALL KINDS OF TEXTILE FABRICS Also Finishing Machinery for Fine Papers I ' lif iiihhr jaw liflt ' s all the woil:. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 41 TECHNOLOGY CHAMBERS Irvington Street, Near Huntington Avenve Furnished rooms for Technology students at reasonable rates, arranged in suites of one, two or three bedrooms and study. Price, $2.75 a weeK and upwards. Absolutely fireproof. Passenger elevator, shower, and tub baths, with hot and cold water on every floor, steam heat and electric light. Long distance telephone. Club-room, billiard-room, news-stand, cigar-counter, swimming-tank, gymnasium and first-class restaurant. APPLY TO SUPERINDENDENT AT BUILDING, OR TO CABOT, CABOT FORBES, 70 state street, Boston, Mass. O ii ' ' ( ui t ' c , it- -, ' ei aiiolhii . 42 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER BOBERTS IRON WORKS COMPANY J. M. BEMIS, President G. B ROBERTS, Treasurer Manufacturers of STEAM BOILERS AND PRESSURE TANKS Plate and Shed Steel Work of Every Description TELEPHONE: 121 CAMBRIDGE 180 to 198 Main Street : : CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS. ESTABLISHED IN 1850 BOOKBINDING In Every Style Binder to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Museum of Fine Arts, Etc. ALEX. MOODE No. 3 School Street At the Old Corner Doslon J. M, ALLEN - - - - President WM. B. FRANKLIN Vice-President F. B. ALLEN Second Vice-President J. B. PIERCE - - - - Secretary L. B. BRAINERD - - Treasurer L. F. MIDDLEBROOK, Asst Secretary I ' liiii is iiiinity, ivi, I iiiiiiiy people pay their dehls 7i ' illi it. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 43 MASON MACHINE WORKS TAUNTON, MASSACHUSETTS Builders of Cotton Mill Machinery iirfr,; ' [ wjt Revolving Flat Cards, Combers, Drawing Frames, Spinning Frames, Mules, Plain and Fancy Looms, and Dobbies 7. ;; ■. I , ' 2i ' ,- 7Mif ,1 , ,x. Ii ' ic, iil,l l,;in hi.s head a diuit a wall l« l ,irL 44 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER STEEL TAPES IN STEEL CASES In our tapes the figures denoting feet are smaller than those denoting inches. Two reasons for this : This dissimilarity of figures materially lessens I in fact ought to entirely prohibit i the liability to erroneous readings that frequently occurs through the uniformity of all figures in steel tapes of other makers. The smaller figures denoting feet also allow the graduation line under each to be plainly visible, in- stead of being obliterated by the usual larger figure. Special attention is called to our push-button handle opener, a slight pressure on which, on the side opposite the handle, will instantly open it. This can be done with a thick glove on as well as with the bare hand. No. 505 are graduated in feet, inches and eighths of an inch. No. 506 are graduated in feet, tenths and hundredths of a foot. PRICES 2Sft. in case 2 4 in. diam., . each, $4.00 50 ft. 3 ' 4 in. 4-65 75 ft- 3-4 in. 5-75 100 ft. 4 ' 4 in. 7.00 Send for Catalogue A ' o. 17 The L S. Starrett Co. ATHOL: MASSACHUSETTS: USA. SiMONDS Mfg. Co. ESTABLISHED 1832 5aU s anb iMadjiuc iinil cs of m Our House is Old Our Reputation the Best FITCHBURG. MASS., NEW YORK, CHI- CAGO, NEW ORLEANS, SAN FRANCISCO. PORTLAND, ORE , SEATTLE df SeriilesTt ' WEBSTER ' S INTERNATIONAL Die IB Enlarged f Recently By the addition 25.000 New Words, etc. IMucdby V, T. HARRIS. Ph.D..LL.I )., V , . C ' ni[nissii ner of Educalion. New Plates Throughout. Rich Bindings. 2364 Quarto Pages. 5000 Illustrations. Will readily settle questions about wurds, notc ' t.l persons, places, scientific subjects, etc. Should be in Every Home, School, and Office. Also Webster ' s Collegiate Dictionary. 1 100 Octavo Pages. 1400 Illustrations. IIlu trate .l paiiiplilcts free. G. C. MERRIAM CO.. Publishers, Springfield, MaSS. Good for tilt- Cartv taw ' iis ' ij iit ' a man saw t iem and then sii ned ilw pledo e. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 45 -QUEEN OF SEA ROUTES iWcrd)«ints aub iWincrs Transportation (to, Steams!) ip Cincs BETWEEN BOSTON, PROVIDENCE, BALTIMORE, NORFOLK, RICHMOND and WASHINGTON. C, Finest Coastwise Trip in the World. Steamships New, Fast and Elegant. ACCOMMODATIONS AND CUISINE UNSURPASSED. SEND FOR PARTICULARS. ETC, A. M. GRAHAM, Agent W. P. CORIA, Agent •laooton, iHaoB. PiouUrncf, K. 3. W. P. TURNER, General Passenger Agent ■Baltimorr, ifln. ATLANTIC WORKS Border, Maverick and New Streets incorporated 1853 EAST BOSTON, MASS. BUILDERS OF Stationary BOILERS PLATEl AND SHEE.T IRON OF EVERY DE.SCRIPTION Steamships, Towboats, Yachts and Heavy Machinery ■■' aiicty IS thr ipm- i ' jlij ' hid iiiosi iiu-ii sliU us,- . !,•: , , 46 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER COCHRANE CHEMICAL COMPANY 55 KILBY STREET, BOSTON, MASS. MANUFACTURERS OF OIL VITRIOL MURIATIC ACID NITRIC ACID AQUA FORTIS ACETIC ACID TIN CRYSTALS MURIATES OF TIN GLAUBER ' S SALT EXTRACT INDIGO AQUA AMMONIA SULPHATE AMMONIA SAL AMMONIAC SULPHATE SODA BISULPHATE SODA ELECTROLYTE OR STORAGE BATTERY SOLUTION BUSINESS FOUNDED 1849 BISULPHITE SODA HYPOSULPHITE SODA SULPHluE SODA STANNATE SODA ALUM POROUS ALUM SULPHATE ALUMINA OXY. MUR. ANTIMONY 4ND OTHER CHEMICALS WORKS AT EVERETT, MASS. CHLORIDE ALUMINA WOOL CARBONIZERS NITRATE IRON NITRATE COPPER CHLORIDE ZINC IRON LIQUORS SEWER PIPE 36, 30 and 27-inch our specialty. Also smaller sizes, 3-foot lengths. Deep sockets. Corrugated ends. WRITE FOR PRICES EVENS HOWARD FIRE BRICK COMP ' Y SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI, U.S.A. HARD LUCK! He fell down on an exam. MngineL-rini;. as ■II ns tiinse made (or ' I ' n.iiijiuiatii.in _ii- l ' (iinigniiilii(.,il W •• I: .1 C . L. BERGER SONS SUCCESSORS TO BUFF BERGER Surveying, Engineering, Astronomical Instuments of Precision : o7 Williams Street, Boston Tliey secure in their instruments : Accm-acv uf Division, Sinijilicity in Manipulation. Lightness comhined v itii Strength, a t ' hromatit; Telescope witli Higli Power, Steadiness of Adjiistmenl.s under VaiT- ing TempeiTitures, Stiffness to Avoid Any 1 remor, even in a strong wind, and ' riiorougli Woikmansliip in Kveiy Part. TI Their instru- ments are ingenei-al use hy the United States (Government Engineers. (ieologists and Surveyors, and the range of instruments, as made by them for Hivei ' . H.uhor, City, I ridge, ' i ' unnel. Kaih-oad and Mining 1 Land Surveying, etc.. is larger than that ol anv other tirm in the (.ountrv ILLUSTRATED MANUAL AND CATALOGUE SENT ON APPLICATION Course III lectures ' Xiitritious ' Lhikuuis . ' THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 47 WM. H. MITCHELL WM. L. MITCHELL WM. H. MITCHELL SON l[Mumbei6 I Province Court : Boston, Mass. SOME, OF OUR PLUMBING CONTRACTS Hotel Touraine Masonic Building Parker House Young ' s Hotel Warren Chambers Y. M. C. A. Dover Street Bath House American Bell Telephone Boston Athletic Ass ' n Youth ' s Companion Bldg. Equitable Building Cornelius Vanderbilt Fred Vanderbilt O. H. P. Belmont Mrs. J. G. Holmes Mr. Drexel Mr. Pulitzer Mutual Life Bldg. Mr. H. H. Rogers Masonic Bldg. Mr. W. D. Sloane Milton Academy Masonic Building Boston, Mass. Newport, R Pittsburg, Pa. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Bar Harbor, Me. Des Moines, Iowa New York New Bedford, Mass. Lenox, Mass. Milton, Mass. Newton, Mass. Dr. McBurriey Stockbridge, Mass. Y.M. C.A. Cambridge, Mass. Dunster Dormitory Fogg Art Museum Westboro Insane Asylum Westboro, Mass. Maiden Hospital Maiden, Mass. McLean Insane Asylum Waverly, Mass. B. P. Cheney Wellesley, Mass. Dedham Court House, Dedham, Mass. Manhansett Hotel, Shelter Island, L.I. Medford Armory Medford, Mass. Marshall Field Library, Conway, Mass. C. G. Rice Ipswich, Mass. A. M. Coatts Providence, R. I. Groton School Groton, Mass. Architectural Building Cambridge, Mass. Geo. A. Draper Boston, Mass. Albany Building A. C. Burrage Andover Gymnasium, Andover, Mass- Ihi not hiDiniu Imiihii ; it is iiettci to i ii ' i tiuni io ttkeii ' i. 48 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Thirteen Years as Main Valve Specialists We don ' t yet know it all, but we know a good bit. Per- haps we can serve you. Our high- pressure valves are guaranteed up to 250 pounds. ' Ci ' i ifr stop and think ; then investigate. You will then write to us ; if not, we are satisf i ed. We also make and sell the NIXON SAFETY STAY- BOLT SLEEVE and AMERICAN METALLIC PACKING Most Perfectly Balanced Slibe Valves Automatic Plug 6nAPR|N , Pi5T( N Valvl THE J. T. WILSON HIGH-PRESSURE VALVE A flat valve with double admission and double exhaust openings, and perfectly balanced in all positions of stroke. Balanced on a new principle balanced area chances . Balancing feature is stationary ; think of that ! Address izJ EASTERN WORKS, Jersey Shore, Pa. J. T. WILSON, General Manager Sptciiil Jtdtitc to )t ® ' cd)nology itulrtnts «r We wish to announce that we have enlarged our lunch-room, and equipped it with all modern improvements for quick service, and are prepared to serve everything the market affords, well cooked and perfectly served, at reasonable prices.  r Below is a fac simile check worth $5.50 which we sell for $5.00. OAK GROVE CREAMERY CO. 5 5 5 5 5 5 10 10 10 15 15 15 o CO OAK GROVE CREAMERY CO. o 445 Boylston Street o CO Lnnct)ean o No. OVER 30 30 25 25 25 25 25 25 20 25 OAK GROVE CREAMERY CO.  r We also serve the regular dairy lunches, pure milk and cream, fresh-churned butter, fresh- laid eggs and creamery cheese. All our products come from our own dairy, and are of the best quality and freshness. OAK GROVE CREAMERY COMPANY ?r 445 Boylston Street, Cor. Berkeley N. L. MARTIN, Proprietor I ' ei h Slioi. The hest r . THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 49 Special Work for Street Railways TEE AND GIRDER RAIL. BRAKE SHOES SPECIAL WORK OF EVERY DESCRIPTION BARBOUR-STOCKWELL COMPANY Machinists and Iron Founders 205 BROADWAY CAMBR1D6EP0RT, MASS. ' ' r Ji.i ' ! y THE STANDARD OPEN-CIRCUIT BATTERIES OF THE WORLD Gold Medal and Tighest Awards, Paris, 1878, 188t ; Chicago, 1893 T The batteries bearin;- the well-known trade-mark Gonda are beyond qiiestii n the best made m the world, and are everywhere regarded as the standard. Do not be imposed upon by inferior batteries. See that every cell you buy bears the trade-mark Gonda . THE LECLANCHE BATTERY CO. I I I to M 7 East I 31 St Street - NEW YORK GEORGEF.BLAKEJR. COMPANY Iron and Steel Supplies for Blacksmiths zrnd Carriage Makers Office and Storehouse : Junction of Bridge, Mechanic and Foster Streets - WORCESTER, MASS. Telephone Nos. 524 and 1160 BLAKE, SAMPSON COMPANY D. L. W. and Wilkcs-Barre COAL WOOD KINDLINGS General Office : : 26 Pleasant Street Yards: Webster Street, 195 Union Street WORCESTER. MASS. Telephone ■■; a ■' C you could coi ' er up the J iislitiile. and uuth an •■i put yourself in a hole. 50 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER Hotel Brunswick AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLANS BARNES y DUNKLEE H. H. BARNES, Manager Opposite Institute of Technology BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Boston Lockport Block Company 160 Commercial St.. BOSTON 33 South St., NEW YORK piimpjs auD Crucfcgi SEND FOR 1902 CATALOGUE. Contains 140 pages. Free on Application N_ — TB - Uur Ntw Kxtra Heavy I ittt.Tn Wire Rope Sheaves Dock Truck BUILOI«0 RECORD ■HfHfc Sanitary Emqiheer FOUNDED 1877 Is the recognized authority upon the subjects which interest Civil E,ngineers Municipal ELngineers City E,ngineers Superintendents of Waterworks Architectural Engineers Industrial Plant Superintendents Contractors Consulting Engineers E.tc., Etc. Covering THOROUGHLY the fields represented by these men Send for Sample Copy. The Engineering Record 114 Liberty Street. NEW YORK iiiii lit be a mutual advantage to mention Teclinique wlien writing aiiiU-i tisers. THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 51 SIll$BOR£.I]lK£ l [OimiAIiyP g flnEKNSKOIOHERN 1(£WEH6IIUa) ' S l«ARIIIME PROVHCEf oston  S Maine I Railroad. lios: y us rate c . (confalnin comp efe 7!i7 s) Aaoe Iieen ssuec o under f ie oirinp 4 ' - upo ireceip o 2 n s amps (Z) fir eac jbooki rOR ALL PUBLICATIONS APPLY TO PASSENGER DEPARTMENT. B. M.R.R BOSTON.MASS. D.J.rLUMDiRS.Oenir ' ----- ' - ' — ' -• NEW ENGLAND LAKES. KIVERS OF M.W ENOLAND. MOUNTAINS OF -KEW ENGLAND. SEASHORE OF NEAV ENOLAND. PICTURESQUE NEW ENGLAJCD. HISTORIC — MISCELLANEOUS THE CHARJLES RTVnER TO THE. HUDSON. — Will be sent upon receipt of 6 cents 3X s. for each book Summer Toukist OIVINOLIST OF TOURS AND RATES. HOTEL AND BOARDING MOUSE LIST. AND OTHER VALUABLE INFORMATION. FREE. Also COLORED BIRDS tYE. VIEW FROM MT WASHINGTON SENT ON RECEIPT OF 6E2 IN5TAMP5 h ia ya sac iilsec f: The Pneumatic Cushion That Greatest Comfort and Safety in Walking SHREVE, CRUMP t LOW CO. JEWELERS 147 Tremont Street CORNER OF WEST Boston Don t i ii; up till fxist of a tnist llial ' i [irospciniis iiinv. Kiiost ie Oil Philosophy. 52 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER THE OLD CORNER BOOK STORE Inciirporateil 283 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. A Full Line of Text and Reference Books at Special Prices to All Tech Students. NE.W TEXTBOOKS GOVERNMENT ; ITS ORIGIN, GROWTH AND FORM IN THE UNITED STATES, bv Robert Lan- sing, Atrorney-at-Law, and Gary M. Jones, Principal of Watertown, N. Y., High School. 259 Pages. In- troductory price, 72 cents. BUSINESS LAW. by Thomas R. White, L.L.B., Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. Introductory price, Si. 25. In use at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. THE FIRST YEAR OF LATIN, hy W. B. Gunnison, Principal of Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, N. Y., and V alter S. Harley, Instructor in Latin, Erasmu. Hall High School. 328 pages. Introduc- tory price, Si.co. THE SILVER SERIES OF MODERN LANGUAGE TEXTBOOKS, under the editorial supervision of Adolphe Cohn, L.L.B., A.M., Professor of Romance Languages and Literature in Columbian University. A systematic, comprehensive and rapidly expanding series of grammars, te.xt and other works for the study of French, German, Italian and Spanish. Sri. ' J (  ■Kt ' .tii ' Kf ' itihi liftulitrs ti ' ittaintji texts ' u itliiiost nil , , ,-• ' ■• •rnfy SILVER, BURDETT 6 CO. 221 Columbus .- ve.. Pope Building BOSTON New York Chicago Atlanta San Francisco Ml -Z — . A TECHNOLOGY SOCIAL . III:-,! silv I ltd in,- i III-. ' , THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 53 J. W. BUZZELL, M.E. WM. H. LARKIN, Jr. General Manager Chief Mech. Eng. Frank B. Gilbreth Rii ' ild ' inz Contractor Solicits Contracts xil)crc Cimc of Construe tion is itimitcl) CHE MAINTAINS A PERMANENT FORCE OF CIVIL, MECHANICAL CONCRETE ENGINEERS, A COM- PLETE MODERN PLANT, AND THE LARGEST EQUIPMENT OF CONCRETE MACHINERY Weld Building Park Row Building Boston New York . i!Y- iiiiJ,a:i - it ii ( ' : hut it tiikes a h: aiui bra-, ' - ii:,n; t, ' jliiiik i iatcl ' iilh . 54 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER H College Hnnual IS A BREEZY THING. It has an identity and an individuality, both of which are unique. d Handling a college annual in the midst of other business is like coming to the oasis in the desert. (H Has it a value as an advertising medium? A manufacturer standing at the writer ' s desk this week (March 5th) said We advertise in a number of college annuals and consider them first-class channels be 3f. B. Basscttc Company SpriuiificlC , IDa5sacbu5ctts PRINTERS, PLATE MAKERS AND BINDERS COMPETENT ARTISTS RENDER YOU EFFICIENT ASSISTANCE WHEN NECESSARY ' The end is to build well A splciuiid hifdlcfa.tl hHui ii i clieoy limnl iiinriiiiii THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER 55 CHAPMAN VALVE MFG. CO. MAKERS OF VALVES FOR ALL PURPOSES AND PRESSURES FIRE HYDRANTS VALVES Operated by HAND, AIR, WATER and ELECTRICITY Send for Catalogue MAIN OFFICE AND WORKS INDIAN ORCHARD, MASS. BRANCH OFFICES BOSTON CHICAGO NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO LONDON PARIS i i ' es not JolUnv tliat tin-  uin wlio liogs the iiiagaziiies in the lihraty iciil some ifny be at tlie ilea d of n trust. 56 THE TECHNIQUE ADVERTISER A . D . LITTLE W. H. WALKER LITTLE WALKER Clxmical Crprvts anli Cngiuccn £) 19 Exchange Place Boston, Mass. r 2 n ■in ( w- r- ' ■k H D y TECHNOLOGY CAMPUS ' hert 7viU iit ' t y be a thoKsaiul vcars twiu m m
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