Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA)

 - Class of 1905

Page 1 of 463

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 463 of the 1905 volume:

TECHNIQUE VOLUME XIX N x if , ,A ,f 'U K g A VV ,, .,...w,..- ff- To SAMUEL CABOT A LOYAL SON OF THE INSTITUTE AND A TYPE OF THE TRUE TECH MAN this VOLUME is DEDICATED jgfafff TECH IOUE IQO Tfae YEAR BOOK Massachusetts Institute Of Technology OARD gf PUBLICATION FOR THE eLAss gf 1905 GRAFTON BROOKHOUSE PERKINS, Editor-in-Chief. W A L D S O T U R N E R, Business Manager. NATHANIEL ATHERTON RICHARDS, Art Editor. GEORGE BAYARD JONES, WILLIAM GREEN and NORMAN LOMBARD, Associate Editors. JAMES MCCLURG LAMBIE, Society Editor. EDWARD THOMAS STEEL, Athletic Editor. ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG and GROSVENORDEWITT MARCY, Statis- tieians. HENRY HOFFMAN KENNEDY and BURTON EDWARD GECKLER, Assistantffrt Editors. CHARLES WISWELL JOHNSTON and WILLIAM DUFEIELD BELL MOTTER, Assistant Business Managers PUBLISHED in JUNIOR WEEK NINETEEN HUN DRED AND FOUR at BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS COPYRIGHT, 1904 BY 'rx-in 'Dxzcmuoym BOARD 1905 X X 'H 1 PRESS OF' FRANK WOOD, BOSTON ofwoostaasaatbeir awn 5 ..-.. 1 WW? tleeiieetzutaate Irina frienda, to aid in his make Siam ones to replace the arwitlttftellilot1rageoust,,t e ,i e ta help Beth? sons to be f lteartygtv itttpress upun berm a r' rougltnez-mtaltringto berlgkawa ers efwater the ggefwtne gg to put auaszb of rctinalinf ert to our life? gray this was our trust e present ourattetttpt at its fulftllmentiii QRFHFFFSSAFHIEAAEEEAEEIEFASISFEFEQ r Cx - gs S x u ' u s 1 fig lg I.ZV'XQ I-.INIFQUEL 153 I Q 0 5 QT c CN 'I' E N 'TQ' gigs: DEDICATION . . Page FOREWORD opposite CALENDAR . . . . . CORPORATION . . . . . ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS . . . . OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGY AT THE WOR THE CLASSES . . FRATERNITIES . . LOCAL SOCIETIES THE TECH SHOW LD,S FAIR . . ATHLETICS . . RECORDS . . . PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES CLUBS . . . DINNERS . . . LETTERS TO A BROTHER PUBLICATIONS . . MUSICAL CLUBS . . MISCELLANEOUS . . THE FUTURE LOCATION OF THE INSTITUTE . . ALUMNI ASSOCIATION . GRADUATION WEEK . JUNIOR WEEK ' . TECH SHOW . V . SUMMER SCHOOLS . CHRESTOMATHIE FRAPPI3 THE SWAN . . GRINDS . . . STUNTS . . STATISTICS . LIST OF STUDENTS . IN MEMORIAM . INDEX . . BUYERS' -GUIDE . 2 4 6 9 10 12 46 50 81 113 119 125 169 173 189 201 204 207 215 223 233 237 243 247 250 253 268 265 269 289 301 321 356 357 363 E51 vw-an-Q-M -d -My , N ' wr A Q '1 flaw at X 4 V JJ - Q' X 1 ' fn- ' I b y 'I N l li 5 1903 Qikpril' 11 Freshman Class Meeting. 13 1905 Class Meeting. 24 Class Games on New Athletic Field. Sophomore Class Dinner. 25 Finals in Class Games at Soldiers Field. 28 Exercises suspended. A Scientific King, dress rehearsal at Hollis Street Theatre. 29 Annual Spring Concert and Dance of Musical Clubs at New Century Building. Freshman Competitive Drill at South Armory. 30 TECHNIQUE 1904, Vol. XIX, issuedg the Tech Tea in Tech oflice. Junior Promenade at Hotel Tuilleries. Wa? 1 Exercises suspended. Tech show, H A Scientic King, at Hollis Street Theatre. Tech Show Dinner at Tech Union. 7 Interscholastic Championship Drill at South Armory. 9 1906 Class Meeting. Dual lVIeet. M. 1. T. tvs. Dartmouth at Hanoverg Won by M. 1. T. Baseball: NI. 1. T. '05 '05, lVI I. T. '06. 1906 Class Meeting. 11 1903 Class Meeting. 16 Baseball: M. I. T. '05 vs. M. 1. T. '0G. 22 Senior Portfolio issued. 25 N. E. I. T. A. Championship Meet. 27 M. I. T. A. A. elections. President G. A. Curtis. 29 1903 Smoker. june 8 Class Day Exercises. H. S. Baker, First Marshal. 9 Commencement Day. Graduation Exercises in Huntington Hall. Tech night at the Pops. End of college year. Dcfoiier 2 Y. M. C. A. Reception to Freshmen. 5 First Convocation. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, speaker. 9 Track Team Meeting. G. A. Curtis elected Captain. 10 1907 Class Meeting. G. W. Qtis, temporary Chairman. 12 1905 Class Meeting. 17 1907 Class Meeting. E01 22 23 2-1 26 28 31 4 7 9 14 19 21 23 1 8 10 11 12 16 17 18 19 25 29 31 1904 4 6 7 8 9 12 13 14 16 bgfofigr- Cozztimzed Fall Handicap Meet. Fall Handicap Meet continued. Dean and Advisory Staff give infor- mal reception to Graduate Students. Fall Handicap lVIeet ended. 1906 Class Elections. President, T. Lawton. 1906 Class Meeting. 1904 Dinner at Union. Football: M. 1. T. '06 fus. Harvard 07. Hare and Hounds Run at Winchester. Chess Club Meeting. 1907 Class Meeting. 1905 Class Elections. A. J. Amberg, President. Qjlobemlier 1905 Class Meeting. Field Day, 19033 won by 1906. 1906 Class Meeting. Cross-Country Race. M. 1. T. ws. Amherst g won by M. 1. T. 1904 Class Meeting. lV1eeting of the Class of 1902 at Union. 1907 Class Elections. President G. W. Otis. Informal 1905 Class Dinner at Union. Qecemlier Annual Dinner to the participants in Field Day. Basket Ball: Boston University fvs. M. I. T. All-Round Contest began. Chess Match: Harvard vs. M. 1. T. Basket Ball : M. 1. T. ws. Holy Cross. Class of 1898 Reunion at the Tech Union. All-Round Contest. Annual Concert of Musical Clubs at New Century Building. Convo- cation in Huntington Hall. Chess Match: M. 1. T. fvs. Harvard. Beginning of Christmas vacation. President and Mrs. Pritchett received at the Union. Christmas vacation ends. Annual Senior Meeting on Rogers Steps to see the New Year in. ganuarg 1906 Class Meeting. Trial for Tndoor Meet in High Jump. Shot Put and Pole Vault. Annual Indoor meet at gymnasiumg won by Class of 1907. Chess Match: M. 1. T. fvs. Boston Chess Club. Basket Ball: M. 1. T. 115. Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Fenc- ing: lV1. 1. T., vs. Harvard. Freshman Battalion Hop at Paul Revere Hall. 1905 Class 1VIeeting to elect Prom. Committee. All-Round Contest. First Trial for Technology Relay Team. Basket Ball: NI. 1. T. vs. N. H. Agricultural College. E71 19 30 1-9 10 13 15 16 17 18 20 25 26 26 29 3 4 8 9 11 14 18 20 25 30 1 2 4 9 25 26 27 28 29 7 K8 ganuary- Cofztilzzzed Semi-Annual Examinations begin. Semi-Annual Examinations end. jjefiruary Mid-Year Vacation. Basket Ball: M. I. T. fus. Brown. B. A. A. Meetg Relay Race between Fencing: M. 1. T. vs. Harvard. Reunion of Class of 1898 at Union. All-Round Contest. Basket Ball: M. 1. T. ws. Amherst. All-Round Contest. 1907 Class Meeting. 1904 Kommers at Union. Reunion of Class of 1901. Class Match: M. 1. T. vs. Harvard. 1905 Class Meeting. 1906 Class Meeting. M. 1. T. and Georgetown. Qj1arc9 ' 1905 Annual Class Dinner at Union. All-Round Contest. Reunion of Class of 1902 at Union. M. 1. T. wins Intercollegiate Fencing Match with Harvard, Yale, and University of Penn. 1906 Class Dinner at Union. Basket Ball: M. 1. T. 115. Worcester Tech. 1907 Class Dinner at Union. Chess Match: M. 1. T. vs. Boston Chess Club. CrossfCountry Association, President, W. K. Major, '07. Chess Match: M. 1. T. fur. Press Club. 1906 Class Meeting. Chess Match: M. I. T. ws. Dorchester Chess Club. Smoker and Reunion of Class of 1903. Qftprii' Reunion of Class of 1902. Election of 1904 Class Day Qfhcersg Currier Lang, First lllarshal. 1906 Class Meeting. Applications for Tech Show Seats received. Rush began at 1 P. lvl. on April 8th. Tech Show Simon Pure Brass at lVIalden. Tech Show, Hollis Street Theater. Annual Concert of Musical Clubs. TECHNIQUE 1905, Volume XIX, issued at noon. The Tech Tea in General Library. Junior Promenade at Hotel Somerset. Tech Show at Hollis Street Theater. QW? Dual Meet with Dartmouth at Newton Athletic Field. fl Q3?4l4flD4.4 JI fi new xwxu vN4.'W,4 'fb WH' THE '-' 1' A CORPORATION . I ' I ,A in a I, 'f gm. ,Q - 5 ' President HENRY S. PRITCHETT Secretary FRANCIS H. WILLIAMS Treaxuror GEORGE WIGGLESWORTH 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 THOMPSON ELLIOT C. LEE JAMES P. STEARNS LUCIUS TUTTLE FREDERICK P. FISH FRANCIS L. HIGGINSON CHARLES A. STONE W. MURRAY CRANE ' On the Part of the Commonwealth HIS EXCELLENCY JOHN L. BATES Governor HON. MARCUS P. KNOWLTON Chief fustice of the Supreme Court HON. GEO. H. MARTIN Secretary of the Board of Education L9 K V. pmwmm lm ! I 5 x Omt v M I 1' ' - x ' 2:12 E- H- '. ' . -. Yami-1 ' ...,... , ' T ' :Q-3 I X' 7. 5 fs' 55.113 ' .- '2 ' 'I E ' v V- 'gg A . - ,... 5 'ff H A A Gp P IU 1 4 uf-2 ADM ST E R Qff? 'V 3 E OIFIFHQGEIQ WN Lgl ' President HENRY S. PRITCHETT Treasurer GEORGE WIOOLESWORTH Secretary HARRY W.TYI.R Dean ALFRED E. BURTON Librarian ROBERT P. BIGELOW Bursar FRANK H, RAND Registrar WALTER HUMPHREYS Recorder O. F.WELLs fx 'xy ev . ,ai ll l X X V, . , ..,. 3, .Y .,,, , an.,- f-,..,.-.. . ,sfifin-.11 -.sz-:,.:5 tv-.,1,,fy Q rt, .:s.-93:52-. - Q, .Wg-'I fat- .',, 1--we ,::f4m1. .- . A?f'E-'f I ,9 T12 J taht .-,- , ya W' 1 if 'Vis 1 W ,isyfg X, 4 fa S v 4 Z N ,ne ff 1 ,a ,Iv J f . r 9,4 4 ,-F5 , 1 , 1 1 7 A' ' W- ff? X . by-at f 1, f uv' 1 wa , f J Q is V 'K 9 .4,,an.,. V .. -V . .nlxdafe 62 0-96-f-M, .Vi ,ll , , ' L Q 4 , ff if 4 . GL. . 1311 fi I 1- l HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT, Ph.D., LL.D., Presi- denzi- Ph.D., Munich, LL.D., Hamilton, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, Yale University, Johns Hopkins, Williams, A.B. and A.lVI., Pritchett College. PRESIDENT of the Corporation, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, made Assistant Professor in the Naval Observatory, Washington, 18785 Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy in Wasliington University, St. Louis, Mo., 18813 Professor of Astronomy in Washington University, 188-lg Chosen Superintendent of the U. S. G. and C. Survey, 1897: President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1900. Report on Observations of the Total Eclipse of July 29, 1878: Observations of Conjunctions of the Satellites of Saturn: A Determination of the Mass of Marsg A Determination of the Diameter of Mars from Micrometric Observations, with a Dis- cussion of Systematic Errorsg Determination of the Longtitude of the Mexican National Observatory, The Transit of Mercury, 1891, Report of Washington University Eclipse Expedition, The Solar Corona of 1899 with Discussions of the Photographs, Eclipses of Saturn's Satellites and Their Use in Determining the Planetls Diameter fwith tableslg Personal Equation in Time Observationsg Meridian Circle Observations, etc., A Plan for an International Arc of the Meridian, and many other papers and reports. Residence, 174 Bay State Road. GEORGE A. QSBORNE, S.B., Walker Professor of Mathematics.-Harvard S.S., '6O. ASSISTANT Professor of Mathematics, U. S. Naval Academy, 1851-65, Professor of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, from 18665 Secretary of Faculty, 1868-713 Walker Professor of Mathematics, from 1902. Author of Examples in Differential Equations C1886D, Dif- ferential and Integral Calculus Cl891D, etc. Residence, 249 Berkeley Street. ROBERT H. RICHARDS, S.B., Professor of Mining En- gineering and flleiallurgy.-IVI. I. T., '68, III. ASSISTANT in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Teclmology, 1868-69, Instructor in Assaying and Qualitative Analysis, 1869- 70, Assistant Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1870-71, Pro- fessor 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, Pro- fessor of Mining Engineering and Metallurgy, from 1884, President of the M. I. T. Alumni Association, 1873-76, Presi- dent of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, 1886-87. Author of Ore Dressing, 1903. Residence, 32 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain. WILLIAM H. NILES, S.B., Ph.B., A.M., LL.D., Emeritzer.-S.B., S.S., '67, Berze- LL.D., Temple, Professor of Geology and Geography Harvard, L. S., '66, Ph.B,, Yale, lius Society, A.M., Wesleyan, '69, '03. PROFESSOR of Physical Geography, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1871-78, Professor of Geology and Geography, Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 1878, Emeritus 1902, Stated Lecturer on Geology, Wellesley College, 1882- 88, Professor of Geology, Wellesley College since 1888, President, Boston Society of Natural History, 1892-97, Presi- dent, Appalachian Mountain Club, 1879, 1882 and 1898. Author of various geological papers, published chiefly in Pro- ceedings of Boston Society of Natural History and American Journal of Science. Residence, Hotel Vendome. CHARLES R. CROSS, S.B., Thayer Professor of Physics and Director of the Rogers Laleoratorjx- IVI. I. T., 170, Sci. and Lit. 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 establishment in 1882 till 1902. Author of many papers on electricity, acoustics, and other branches of physics, published chieliy in the Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Residence, 100 Upland Road, Brookline. Electrical Engineering from its I Q., maya fri: DZWMEJ E141 GAETANO LANZA, C.E., Professor of Theoretical and .ffppiied Mechanics,' in charge of the Department of Mechanical Engineering. INSTRUCTOR, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1871-72, Assistant 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 f1885j , and of many papers in Transactions American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Pro- ceedings Society of Arts, Proceedings British Institution of Civil Engineers, Technology Quarterly, etc. Notes on Mechan- ical Engineering C188Gj. Notes on Friction Q1887j, etc. Residence, 22 VVest Cedar Street. GEORGE F. SWAIN, SB., M., Am. Soc. C.E., Hay- ward Professor of Civil Engineering.-M. I. T., '77, I. STUDENT in Germany, 1877-80, Expert on Tenth U. S. Census, 1880-83, Instructor in Civil Engineering, Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, 1881-83, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, 1883-87, Associate Professor, 1887-88, Professor from 1888, Engineer 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 Educationg Director American Society of Civil Engineers, 1901-0-1. Author of Report on Watei' Power of Atlantic Slope, Notes on Hydraulics and on Theory of Structures, numerous reports on Railroad Bridges, Brake Equipment and other subjects, in the reports of the Massachusetts Railroad Commission, and many papers on Engineering subjects, published in the Tran- sactions of American Society Civil Engineers, Proceedings New England Water Works Association, Technology Quarterly, Proceedings Society of Arts, Journal Franklin Institute, Journal of the Association of Engineering Societies, etc. Residence, 435 Marlboro Street. FRANCIS W. CHANDLER, H. M. Am. Inst. Arch., Professor offfrchitecture. A VVITH Messrs. Ware 8: Van Brunt, Architects, 1864-66, Student in Paris, 1866-68, Assistant with Professor Ware at the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, 1869, Assistant Supervising Architect at Washington, 1870-73g in partnership with Mr. E. C. Cabot of Boston, 1873-88g Professor of Architecture, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, from 18883 Advisory Architect to the Mayor of the City of Boston since 18965 Mem- ber of Art Commission, City of Bostong Honorary Member of American Institute of Architecture. Author of a Few Hints About Drainage f1888l, Construction Details f1892D, Notes on Limes, Cements, Mortars and Con- cretes f1892lg editor of Municipal Architecture in Boston C1898l, etc. Residence, 195 Marlboro Street. VVILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Ph.B., Ph.D., Professor of Biology.-Yale, S.S., ,775 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 Biology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 1879-83, Assistant Professor of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1883-84, Associate Professor, 1884-91, Profes- sor from 1891, Biologist, State Board of Health, 1888-96, Chairman, Pauper Institutions Trustees, City of Boston, 1897- 99, Curator, Lowell Institute, since 1897, President American Society of Naturalists, 1901. Author, General Biology f1886l, New Edition C189Sl, Assistant Editor, Life and Letters of William Barton Rogers, 2 vols., 1896, Author, Principles of Sanitary Science and the Public Health, 1902, 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 and monographs, addresses on Education, etc. Residence, Hotel VVestminster. DAVIS R. DEWEY, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of Efo- nomics and Statistics.-University of Vermont, '79, A '11, CID B K. A.B., University of Vermont, '79, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, '88 TEACHER, Underhill,Vt., 1879-81, Student and Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, 1883-86, Instructor, Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, 1887-88, Assistant Professor, 1888-89, Associate Professor, 1889-92, Professor from 1892, Secretary American Statistical Association, from 1886, Member of Publication Committee of American Economic Association since 1895, appointed member of Board to Investigate Chari- table and Reformatory Interests and Institutions of Massachu- setts, 1896, member Department of Statistics, Boston from 1897, appointed Special Expert Agent on Wages, U. S. Census, 1901, member of Commission on Relations Between Employer and Employees, 1903. Author of a Syllabus on Political History since 1815 C1887l, Graphic Statistics, etc., Editor of Discussions in Economics and Statistics by Francis A. Walker, 2 vols. t1899D, Contribu- tor to Dictionary of Political Economy, Education for Com- merce Q1901l, Contributor to the Literature of American History f1902l, Author of Financial History of the United States, f1903U, Editor of Special Report, Employees and Wages, Twelfth Census of the United States. Residence, 52 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain. WEBSTER WELLS, S.B., Professor of Matheznatics.- IVI. I. T., ,73, I. INSTRUCTOR in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 1873-80, and 1882-83, Assistant Professor of Mathe- matics, 1883-85, Associate Professor, 1885-93, Professor from 1893. Author of Academic Arithmetic, Academic Algebra, Higher Algebra, University Algebra, College Algebra, Plane and Solid Geometry, Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, Logarith- mic Tables, etc. Residence, Lexington. iizraa.. Www from I151 ew Jaya .MCD F, fJz'fe5'4f we W! kia? 3. ff X! f 44 ,eg ff? if' my 2-fYf't'.' , .2 fffffffege . -': f .e f- -f -1 L t . f '- -'fa,Q.,ep?! .,.. . ,, , , nfwf . , W,-,ff-,a ,4 1 , ,.a,,.,, ,gwqqgg fv jf.-:V gigs . ,g Eiiiiiiii? fe - - 4 J 'S':f1d'r' , 'L ' ' W.:---ff . ff e:f .f.p'f ,.-1. ,,. ,?. ,,,,,,54 ' 1 L ,J 'l - fffff : ' 1-'ff 9- 4' I161 CECIL H. PEABODY, SB., Professor of Naval Arehi- tectzzre and Marine Engineering.-M. I. T., ,77, II. WITH the Western Union Railroad, 1878, Professor of Mathe- matics and Engineering, Imperial Agricultural College, Japan, 1878-805 Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Uni- versity of Illinois, 1881-83g Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1883-84, Assistant Professor of Steam Engineer- ing, 1884-89, Associate Professor, 1889-93, Professor of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering from 1893. Author of Notes on Governors and Fly Wheels f1885j, Notes on Valve Gears f1887l, Thermodynamics of the Steam Engine and other Heat Engines f1889l, Tables of the Properties of Saturated Steam C1888l, Valve Gears for Steam Engines f1890l, Steam Boilers f1897J, with E. F. Miller, Papers to Scientific Societies, Manual of the Steam Engine Indicator 119001, etc. Residence, 25 Columbia Street, Brookline. HARRY W. TYLER, S.B., Ph.D., Professor of Mathe- matics, Secretary of the Faculty.-IVI. I. T., '84, V. S.B., M. I. T., ,845 Ph.D., Erlangen, '89. ASSISTANT, lMassachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-86, Instructor, 1886-903 Assistant Professor, 1890-92, Associate Professor, 1892-935 Secretary of the Faculty, 1889-90, and from 18913 Professor of Mathematics from 1893. Author of Entertainments in Chemistry, the Application of Determinant Theorems to a particular case, Ueber die Sylves- tersche und die Bezoutsche Determinanten, Technological Edu- cation in the United States, The Educational Work of Francis A. Walker, etc. Residence, Gray Cliff Road, Newton Centre. ARLO BATES, A.M., Litt.D., Professor of English.- Bowdoin, '76, A A fp, ft: BK. EDITOR of Broadside, 1878-79, Editor of Boston Courier, 1880- 93, Correspondent of Providence Journal, Chicago Tribune, Book Buyer, etc., 1880-83, Professor of English, Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, 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 Philistines, 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 Writing English, Second Series, and The Diary of a Saint. Residence, 4 Otis Place. D. DESPRADELLE, Rotclz Professor of Architectural Design.-Architect, D. P. L. G. 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 Con- cours 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, pur- chased by the government of France, Ofhcier d'Academie, Ofhcier de l'Instruction publique, Assistant Inspector 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 tex-Presidentj, and various other pub- lic and private edilices. Residence, 382 Commonwealth Avenue. PETER SCHWAMB, S.B., Professor of Machine Design and Director of the fllechanical Laboratories.- M. I. T., '78, II. GRADUATE 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, Associate Professor, 1888-96, Professor of Mechanism, 1897, Professor of Machine Design 1901. Author of Notes on the Elements of Mechanism Q188Sj Notes on Gearing Q1888j, etc. Residence, 33 Academy Street, Arlington. x 7 C. FRANK ALLEN, S.B., Am. Soc. C. E., Professor of Railroad Engineering.-IVI. I. T., '72, I. ASSISTANT Engineer, Providence Sewerage, 1873-75, Assistant Engineer, Newton Waterxvorks, 1875-76, Engineer Inspector, Boston Sewerage, 1877, Assistant Engineer, Atchison, Topeka 8: Sante Fe R. R., 1878-80 , Assistant Engineer, Mexican Cen- tral R. R., 1880, Chief Engineer, Las Vegas Waterworks, and general engineering, 1880, Assistant Engineer, Atchison, Topeka Sc Sante Fe R. R., 1881-84, Secretary of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, 1895-97, Presi- dent 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, President, 1903-1904, Member of Executive Committee, New England Railroad Club, 1899-1904, Member of Committee on Roadway of American Railway Engineering 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 Economics of Location, Roads and Road Building, Railroad Building with Reference to Economy in Operating, and several articles in engineering magazines. Residence, Montview Street, West Roxbury. - A . 5 -..mN':.. .. ., as as - 727703 -5- A i . x . K 1 f 'gg wwf! 4 L I f 'i' si 'S' 'ifarrr '. ., E'- A 2.55. V .e , :J I , '- Z EL.. .:'r qv ' . i I ' - mil, .fl-1ff5.f'1'1i?Ei24? iff . tv ,'-1 ,,c'r 0247 iwml I faileee 17 Walffidifi ' of . 181 ALFRED E. BURTON, S.B., M. Am. Soc. C. E., Dean, Professor of Topographical Engineering- Bow- doin, '78, A K E, Q B K. LAND Surveyor, 1878-79, Topographical Draughtsman and Topographer on U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1879-82, Commissioner on Massachusetts Topographical Survey, 1895- 19005 in charge of Scientific Expedition to Umanak, Green- land, summer of 18963 in charge of Eclipse Expedition to Washington, Georgia, May, 1900, in charge of Eclipse Expe- dition to Sumatra, 1901g Instructor in Topographical Engineer- ing, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1882-84, Assistant Professor, 1884-89g Associate Professor, 1889-96, Professor from 1896, Dean from 1902. Author of several articles in Technology Quarterly, Review. Residence, 58 Webster Street, West Newton. DWIGHT PORTER, Ph.B., Am. Soc. C. E., Professor off-Iydraulif: 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 Engineer- ing, 1885-875 Assistant 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 XVarped Surfaces, etc. Residence, 1-19 Hawthorne Street, Malden. HEINRICH O. HOFMAN, EM., Met.E., Ph.D., Pro- fessor of.7VIeta!!urgy.-E.1Vl.,1V1et.E., Prussian School of Mines, Clausthal, '77, Ph.D., Ohio University, 189 PRACTICING Metallurgist, 1877-853 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 Profes- sor of Mining and Metallurgy, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 1889-91, Associate Professor of Mining and Metallurgy, 1891-98, Professor of Metallurgy from 1898. Author of Gold Milling in the Black Hills f1888lg The Dry Assay of Tin Ores C1890Jg Recent Progress in the Treatment of Argentiferous Lead Ores C1892-190213 Metalltirgical Lead Exhibits at the Columbian Exposition f1893j, Some Experi- ments on the Fusibility of Fire Clays f1895lg Further Experi- ments on the Fusibility of Fire Clays Q1895jg The Equipment of Mining and Metallurgical Laboratories Q1896j, The Produc- tion of Illuminating Gas and Coke in By-Product Ovens f1898jg Modihcation of Birchof's Method for Determining the Fusibility of Fire Clays Q1898j, Influence of size of Particles on Resistance of Fire Clays to Heat and Fluxes f1898jg Aluminum as a Reducing and Heat-Producing Agent f1902j, Encyclopedia Britannica Supplement, articles on Lead and on Silver Q1902j. Residence, 88 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain. HENRY P. TALBOT, S.B., Ph.D., Professor oflnorgarzic and Analytieal Chemistrgu- IVI. I. T., '85, V., S.B., M. I. T., ,85, Ph.D., University of Leipzig, '90. ASSISTANT in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-87, Instructor, 1887-88 and 1890-92, Assist- ant Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1892-95, Associate Pro- fessor of Analytical Chemistry, 1895-98, Professor of Analytical Chemistry, 1898-1902, Professor of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, from 1902. Author of Ueber das Verhalten der Tiglinsiiure und Angeli- casiiure gegen Bromwasserstoff und Jodwasserstoff Q1890D, Notes on the Action of Hybromic and I-Iydriodic Acids on Tiglic Acids C1891l, An Index to the Literature of Angelic and Tiglic Acids from 1842 to 1892, Notes on the Properties of Hydrogen Peroxide Solutions Qvvith H. R. Moodyl, An Intro- ductory Course of Quantitative Chemical Analysis Q1897l, A Bibliography of the Analytical Chemistry of Manganese Cwith John W. Brownl C1902D, The Recorded History of the Mern- bers ofthe Argon Group C1902D, and other Chemical Papers. Residence, 273 Otis Street, West Newton. ARTHUR A. Novizs, S.M., Ph.D., Professor of Theo- retical Chemistry. -M. I. T., '86, V., S.M., M. I. T., '87, Ph.D., Leipzig, '90. ASSISTANT in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1887-88, Instructor, 1890-94, Assistant Professor, 1894-97, Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry, 1897-99, Professor of Theoretical and Organic Chemistry, 1899-1902, Professor of Theoretical Chemistry from 1902. Author of A Detailed Course of Qualitative Analysis, General Principles of Physical Science, Laboratory Experi- ments on the Class Reactions and Identiiication of Organic Sub- stances, and many articles in scientihc journals. Residence, 78 Westland Avenue, Boston. A. RAMBEAU, Ph.D., Professor of Moderrz Languages. - B. A., Wittenberg, 1871, Student at Halle, lVIar- burg and Paris, 1871-1874, and during different periods, after 1876, Ph.D., 1877, Licentiate, 1879, Marburg. INSTRUCTOR in English, University of Marburg, 1878-79, Pro- fessor of French and English in several colleges, 1879-92, at last, in Hamburg, Associate in Romance Languages, 1893-94, and Associate Professor of Romance Languages, 1894-99, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Professor of Modern Languages, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, from 1899. Author of some articles upon Egypt and the East, literary and philological studies upon the Chanson de Rolandf' Chau- cer and Dante, Adam de la Halle, a work upon Parisian pro- nunciation, educational studies and books for the use of students and teachers, and a great number of articles in American and European philological journals. Residence, 571 VValnut Park, Roxbury. .!4.a7f-l4z- maeew L 19 1 fem ff ea, wma 20 J THOMAS E. POPE, A.M., Professor of Inorganic Chem- istry.- Harvard University, '69. INSTRUCTOR in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 1874-76, Professor of Chemistry, Iowa Agricultural College, 1876-8-1, Assistant Professor of General Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894-95, Associate Pro- fessor, 1895-1900, Professor of General Chemistry from 1900. Residence, Academy Hill Road, Brighton. WILLIAM BAIRD, Captain U. S. A., Professor of Mili- tary Science and Tactics fRelie'ued February 15, 19041.-West Point, ,75. MEMBER Regular Army and Navy Uniong Loyal Legion, Sons of the Revolutiong Society of Colonial Wars, National Geo- graphic Societyg Graduate, School of Military Signaling and Telegraphy, Fort Meyer, Va., 1881. Service with Sixth U. S. Cavalry, participating in the Chiri- cahua, Chimhuevi, Victorio and Geronimo Campaigns. Ex- plorations and Surveys for Wagon Routes in Tonto Basin, in Moqui and Navajo Country, 18775 Colorado Canon, 1880. Inspector of Supplies, Shoshone Reservation, Wyo., 1891. Garrison Duty at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Infantry and Cavalry School, 1894. Retired, 1897 C Disability in line of duty . Residence, Annapolis, Maryland. GEORGE T. DIPPOLD, Ph.D., Professor of Modern Lcznguagea- Boston University, '83. POSTGRADUATE Student in Sanskrit and Germanic Philology and Instructor in German, Harvard University, 1871-743 Instructor in French, Sanskrit and Anglo-Saxon, Boston Uni- versity, 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, 1895-1901, Professor from 1901. 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, CHARLES F. A. CuR1uER,A.B., A.M., Professor of History.- Harvard University, '87g fi, B. K., A.B., Harvard University, '87g A.M., Harvard University, '88, Fellow of Harvard University studying at Berlin and Paris, 1889-91. INSTRUCTOR in History and Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891-935 Assistant Professor of His- tory, 1893-953 Associate Professor, 1895-1901, Professor of History from 1901. Residence, Winchester. WILLIAM HOVGAARD, Captain Danish Navy, Profes- sor of Naval Design.- Royal Naval College, '86. LXEUTENANT of Danish Navy, 1879-975 Commander from l897g On Technical Staff of the Copenhagen Navy Yard, 1886-94, Sub-Director of Burmeister and Wains Ship and Engine Com- pany, 1895-97, Member of the Danish Transit of Venus Expe- dition to St. Croix, 1882. Member of the Institute of Naval Architects and of the Ameri- can Society of Naval Architects and Mining Engineers. Author of Submarine Boats, and also two books on Physical Exercise. Residence, 17 Winthrop Street, West Newton. LOUIS DUNCAN, Ph.D., Professor of Electrical Engi- neering- Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, '85. 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, President of Board of Judges at International Electrical Exhibition, 18845 Resigned from Navy, 1886g Head of course of Applied Electricity at Johns Hopkins to 18983 Major in the First Regiment of Volunteer Engineers during Spanish-American War, Present Electrical Engineer for the New York Ra id Transit Commission and for several railroad P and telephone companiesg Professor of Electrical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1902. Twice President of American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers, 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. ivruuiiwvbwvve E21 DANA P. BARTLETT, S.B., Associate Professor of Mailzematics.- M. I. T., '86, VI. ASSISTANT in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 1886-875 Instructor in Mathematics, 1888-915 Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 1891-985 Associate Professor from 18985 Assistant in Observatory of Harvard College, 1887. Author of General Principles of the Method of Least Squares. Absent. JEROME SONDERICKER, S.B., C.E., Associate Professor of Applied Mechanics.- S.B., University of Illinois, '805 C.E., University of Illinois, '83. INSTRUCTOR, University of Illinois, 1880-835 Assistant Profes- sor Engineering and Mathematics, 1883-855 Instructor in Ap- plied Mechanics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885- 895 Assistant Professor of Applied Mechanics from 1889-995 Associate Professor from 1899. Author of Graphic Statics, and papers published in Tech- nology Quarterly and other Engineering periodicals. Residence, 170 Oakleigh Road, Newton. flaw-M I ALLYNE L. MERRILL, S.B., Am. Soc. M. E., Asso- eiate Professor of Meelzanism.- M. I. T., '85, II. Ass1sTANT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-875 Instructor, 1887-915 Assistant Professor of Mechanism, 1891- 995 Associate Professor from 1899. Residence, Payson Park, Belmont. 221 EDWARD F. MILLER, S.B., M. Am. Soc. M. E., M. Arn. SOC. C. E., dsrocirlte Professor of Steam En- gineering.- IVI. 1. T., '86, II. ASSISTANT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1886-88g Instructor, 1888-92, Assistant Professor of Steam Engineering, 1892-995 Associate Professor from 1899. Author of a number of articles printed in the Transactions American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Technology Quarterly, Machinery, and other Engineering papers, Steam Boilers Qwith C. H. Peabodyl, Waste Heat Engines CNew England Water Works Association, Engineering News, Engi- neering Recordjg Foreign Technical Schools. Residence, 538 Ward Street, Newton Centre. FRANK VOGEL, A.B., A.M., Associate Professor of Modern Languages. - Harvard University, '87, A Y. PROFESSOR of Modern Languages, Mitchell's Boys' School, Billerica, Mass., 1887-883 Instructor in Modern Languages, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1888-92, Assistant Pro- fessor of Modern Languages, 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, Ill., 1890-92, Student in Germanic and Romance Philology, Heidel- berg, Germany, 1893-945 Member of Boston School Committee, 1901-04, Instructor in German, Simmons College, 1902. Editor and Annotator of Chamisso's Peter Schlernihl's Wun- dersame Geschichte, Hauff's Lichtenstein, Storm's Geschichten aus der Tonne, A Scientihc German Reader, and other publica- tions. Residence, 95 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain. S. HOMER WOODBRIDGE, A.M., dssociate Professor of Heating and Ventilation- Williams College, I73. STUDENT at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1874, Instructor in Physics, 1883-95, Assistant Professor, 1895-1900, Associate Professor from 1900. Residence, 281 Otis Street, YVest Newton. Eciwmoc oflizogyje of .144 fl-mo1,4..7,.. I331 HALLAA.. two, E241 VVILLIAM L. PUFFER, S.B., Associate Professor of Elec- trical Engineering- M. 1. T., '84, III. ASSISTANT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-865 Instructor, 1886-93, Assistant Professor, 1893-1901, Associate Professor from 1901, Member of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, 18933 Consulting Electrical Engineer of the Inspection Department of the Factory Mutual Insurance Companies, 1894. Residence, 198 Mt. Vernon Street, West Newton. WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE, S.B., Associate Professor of Architecture- M. I. T., 191, IV. INSTRUCTOR in Architecture, 1891-96, Assistant Professor, 1896-1901, Associate Professor from 1901. Author of Elements of Shades and Shadows, Principles of Perspective. Residence, 34 Summer Street, Dorchester. WILLIAM O. CROSBY, S.B., Associate Professor of Geology- M. I. T., '76, VII. STUDENT Assistant in Paleontology, 1875-76, Assistant in Paleontology, 1876-78, Assistant in Geology, 1878-80, In- structor in Geology, 1880-83, Assistant Professor of Mineralogy and Lithology, 1883-92, Assistant Professor of Structural and iigipgiomic Geology, 1892, Associate Professor of Geology, Author of Geology of Eastern Massachusetts, Geology of the Boston Basin, Common Minerals and Rocks, Guides to Min- eralogy 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, Trini- dad, etc.g and on Joint Structure, Faults, Origin of Continents, Colors of Soils, Concretions, Drift, Ore Deposits, etc., pub- lished 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 I , l Theoretical Electricity.-NI. I. T., 86, VI., 0 E. ASSISTANT in Physics, 1886-885 Instructor in Theoretical Phys- ics 1888-95' Assistant Professor in Theoretical Ph sics 1895 y y Y , ' 1902g Associate Professor of Theoretical Electricity from 1902g Assistant in Harvard College Observatory, 1887. Author of Notes on Heat, Derived Electrical Units, Elements of the Theory of Potential, and various papers published in the Technology Quarterly, Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, etc. Residence, 20 Crystal Street, Newton Centre. WILLIAM H. WALKER, S.B., Ph.D., CD K E., Associate Professor of Industrial Chemistry.-S.B., Pennsyl- vania State College, '90, Ph.D., Gottingen, '92, INSTRUCTOR in Chemistry, Pennsylvania State College, 1892- 945 Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894- 1900g Member ofthe firm of Little 8: Walker, Chemical Experts and Engineers, 1900-5 Associate Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1902. Author of Neue Beobachtungen iiber das Verhalten der Ses- quiterpene, Concentration Changes in the Electrolysis of Brine, Industrial Preparation of Electrolytic Bleaching Liquor, and occasional other scientific papers. Residence, 613 Walntnt Street, Nevvtonville. FREDERICK H. BAILEY, A.B., A.M., flmstont Profes- sor of Mathmetics.-Harvard University, '87, KID B K. A.B., Harvard University, '87, A.M., Harvard Uni- versity, '89. ASSISTANT in Mathematics, Harvard University, 1889-91g In- structor in Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1891-93g Assistant Professor from 1893. Author of Plane and Solid Analytic Geometry Cwith Professor Woods, 18971. Residence, 75 Wendell Street, Cambridge. at 5-Coawazaff-f I 25 I I261 FRED L. BARDWELL, S.B., Assistant Professor of Inor- ganic Chemistry.-University of Minnesota, '815 M. I. T., '84, V. ASSISTANT in General Chemistry, 1884-86, Instructor in General Chemistry, 1886-94, Assistant Professor from 1894. Absent. AUGUSTUS H. GILL, S.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Technical Analysis.-M. I. T., '84, V. S.B. M. I. T., '84, Ph.D., Leipzig, '90. ASSISTANT in General and Sanitary Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1884-86, Instructor, 1886-875 Water Analyst State Board of Health, 1887-88, Instructor in Gas Analysis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890-94, Assistant Professor from 1894, Assistant Professor of Technical Analysis from 19035 Lecturer at Wellesley College, 1893-94. President North Eastern Section of the American Chemical Society, 1903. Author of Gas and Fuel Analysis for Engineers f1896l, New Edition C1902D, A Short Handbook of Oil Analysis f1897l, New Edition C1903,j and of twenty papers in scientific period- icals. Editor of a Register of Publications of the Institute C1862-1893D, First Supplement Q1893-1898D. Residence, Canton Corner. RICHARD W. LODGE, Assistant Professor of Minizzg ana' Metallargjv.-M. I. T., '79, III. ASSISTANT in Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technology,1879-80, Mining in Colorado, 1880-813 Mine Superintendent in Nevada, 1881-825 Assistant in Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Teclmology, 1882-835 Head Chemist for North Chicago Rolling Mill Company, South Chicago, Ill., 1883-853 Chemist for Sloss Iron and Steel Company, Alabama, 18875 Instructor in Mining and Metallurgical Laboratory of the Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technology, 1889-94, Assistant Professor from 1895. Residence, 99 Colchester Street, Longwood. FREDERICK S. Wooos, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Wlatlzernotics. - Wesleyan University, 1IfY, IDB K. A. B. Wesleyan, '85, A.M., Wes- leyan, '88, Ph.D., Gottingen, '94. ASSISTANT in Physics and Astronomy at Wesleyan, 1885-86, Teacher in Mathematics in Genesee Seminary, Lima, N. Y., 1886-90, Instructor in Mathematics at the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, 1890-95, Assistant Professor, Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, from 1895, Lecturer on Mathemat- ics, Harvard University, 1898-99. Author of Plane and Solid Analytic Geometry Cwith Profes- sor Bailey, 18975, Papers in Mathematical Journals, Editor of Annals of Mathematics. Residence, 21 Church Street, Newton. JOSEPH I. SKINNER, C.E., Ph.D., dssistant Professor of Mathematics. Yale, '69. PhB., '69, C.E., '74, Ph.D., '76, Yale. INSTRUCTOR in Engineering and Mathematics Cand for part of the time in Physics and Frenchj, Sheflield Scientific School, Yale, 1873-81, Computor and Draughtsman, Statistical Atlas of Ninth Census, 1873-75, Manager and Treasurer of the American Electric Company, New Britain, 1881-83, Instructor in Math- ematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1885-96, Assist- ant Professor from 1896. Author of a book on Approximate Computations, and of some papers in scientific journals. Residence, Liberty, Me. GEORGE H. BARTON, S.B., Assistant Professor of Geology.-M. I. T., '80, III. ASSISTANT in Drawing, 1880-81, Hawaiian Government Sur- vey, 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 1896, Assistant in United States Geological Survey, 1888-93, President Appalachian Mountain Club, 1903, Curator of the Teachers' School of Science. Author of Outline of Elementary Lithology, Outline of Dy- namical and Structural Geology, and of various papers on Geol- ogy of Massachusetts, Hawaii, Labrador and Greenland, published in Proceedings of Boston Society of Natural History, American Journal of Science, American Geologist, Science, Technology Quarterly, etc. Residence, 16 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge. ?TWcW.at'f04GC-d4- fiafajwasm 6a,.fZ'f6a,,m I 27 1 cef:l7 w- A424-5.,,-ew.g,, IZS1 ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, S.B., Assistant Professor of Higlzway Engineering.-M. I. T., '86, I. ASSISTANT, Civil Engineering, 1886-88, Instructor in Civil Engineering, 1888-93, Instructor in Highway Engineering, 1893-96, Assistant Professor from 1896. Author of several articles in Technology Quarterly, An Ele- mentary Treatise on Plane Surveying and Navigation. Residence, 60 Webster Street, West Newton. FRANK A. LAWS, S.B., Assistant Professor of Electrical Testing.-M. I. T., '80, VI. ASSISTANT in Physics, 1889-91, Instructor in Physics, 1891-93, Instructor in Electrical Measurements, 1893-97, Assistant Pro- fessor of Electrical Measurements, 1897, Assistant Professor of Electrical Testing from 1902. Author of a number of papers on Electrical Measurements, published in the Technology Quarterly, Proceedings of Ameri- can Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Physical Review. Residence, 81 Essex Street, Salem, HARRY M. GOODWIN, S.B., Ph.D., Hssistant Professor of Physics and Electrical Chemistry.--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 Measure- ments, Notes on Physical Laboratory Experiments, Some Ex- perimental Researches in Acoustics, 1890, Studien zur Voltasche Ifette, 1892, The Fundamental Laws of Electrolytic Conduc- tion., 1899, and various papers in scientific journals. Residence, 232 Townsend Street, Roxbury. JOHN O. SUMNER, A.B., Assistant Professor of History. ' Harvard, '87. INSTRUCTOR, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894, Assistant Professor from 1897. Residence, 225 Marlborough Street. fL.9,e.,...,Q.,,....... HENRY G. PEARSON, A.B., Assistant Professor of English.-Harvard, '93, GJ E, 111 B K. INSTRUCTOR, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1893, Assistant Professor from 1898. Author of the Principles of Composition. - Residence, 96 Beacon Street, Weston. l Q17 AVL-Wfy LOUIS DERR, lVI.A., S.B., Assistant Professor of Phys- irs.-Arnherst, ,89, M. 1. T., '92, VI, AY,f11B 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, Bos- ton Normal 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 publica- tions. Residence, S3 Centre Street, Brookline. T291 4214 14fmn1f7 affms! Mfzmk E301 GEORGE V. WENDELL, S.B., Ph.D., dssistant Pra- fessor ofPhysics.- M. I. T., '92, VIII, A K E, SB., 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 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, studying in Leipzig, 1896-98, Honorary Fellow of Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, 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 Experiments with the Phonograph relating to the Vowel Theory of Helmholtz, Secre- tary of Society of Arts Q1899-19021, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Residence, 39 Cedar Street, Somerville. WILLIS R. WHITNEY, SB., Ph.D., Assistant Profes- sor of Theoretical Chemistry ana' Proxiinate Technical Analysis. M. I. T., '90, V. - S.B., M. I. T., '90, Ph.D., Leipzig, '96. ASSISTANT in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890-94, Instructor in Chemistry, 1896-1900, Assistant Profes- sor 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, Technology Club. 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 Profes- sor from 1900. - Author of Ueber die Oxime der Substituierten Benzophenone f1893j, A Review of Some Improvements in Chemical Industry f189Gj, Inorganic Chemical Preparations C1896j, Outlines of Industrial Chemistry f1898D. Residence, 45 Oriole Street, West Roxbury. CHARLES E. FULLER, S.B., Assistant Professor of Meclzanical Engineering.- M. I. T., '92, II. ASSISTANT in Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892-94, Instructor of Mechanical Engineering, 1894-1900, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering from 1900. Residence, VVellesley. VVILLIAM A. JOHNSTON, S.B., M. Am. Soc. M.E., ffssisfeznt Professor of Mechanical Engineering.- M. I. T., '92, II. . ASSISTANT in Mechanical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892-9-lg Instructor, Mechanical Engineering, 1894-1900, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering from 1900. Residence, Belmont. CHARLES F. PARK, SB., Assistant Professor of Me- chanical Engineering- M. I. T., '92, II. 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. Caeafklseef Zion 94 M Wig! X311 Us?-df .Iwi Jen, N, AZMM E321 CHARLES L. NORTON, S.B., Assistant Professor of Heat flffeasurements. M. I. T., '93, VI., S.B., M. I. T., '93. ASSISTANT in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1893-95, Instructor in Physics, 1895-993 Instructor in Heat Measurements, 1899-19003 Assistant Professor from 19005 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 Illu- mination of Interiors by Ribbed and Prismatic Glass, Electric Furnaces, etc. Residence, Union Street, Manchester. HENRY FAY, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Analyt- ical Chemistry ana' Metaliographgi. A.B., Lafayette College, '89g Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, '95. INSTRUCTOR in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-19005 Assistant Professor from 1900. Author of about fifteen papers on Metallography and Analyt- ical Chemistry published in various journals. Residence, I6 Marlborough Street. JAMES F. NORRIS, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Organic Chemistry. Johns Hopkins University, '92, 112 B K. A.B., Johns Hopkins University, '92g Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, '95. ASSISTANT in Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1895-965 Instructor in Chemistry, 1896-19005 Assistant Pro- fessor 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., XCD, Arm-rant Pro- fessor of flnzzlrtical Clzemisz'ry.- B.A., Amherst, '89, Ph.D., Heidelberg, '93. Ass1s'rANT in Chemistry, Amherst College, 1889-905 Instructor in General Chemistry, Cornell University, 1893-94, Assistant in Analytical Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 189-1-953 Instructor, 1895-19025 Assistant Professor from 1902. Author of occasional scientific papers. Residence, 220 Marlborough Street. CHARLES L. ADAMS, Assistant Professor of rwechanical Drawing- Massachusetts Normal Art School, '79. PRINCIPAL in the Boston Free Evening Drawing Schools from 18805 Principal of the Roxbury Free Evening Drawing Schoolsg Assistant in Descriptive Geometry, Massachusetts Institute of Technologyg Instructor in Freehand Drawing at Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 18863 President of the Association of Teachers of Boston Evening Drawing Schools, 1903, Assist- ant Professor of Mechanical Drawing at Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1903. Pictures exhibited at Boston Art Club and Copley Associa- tion of Boston, New York Academy of Design and Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts. Residence, 23 Burr Street, Jamaica Plain. HARRY W. GARDNER, SB., dsrirfant Professor of Arrlzitecfuro.-NI. I. T., '94, IV. INSTRUCTOR in Architecture, 1896-1903, Assistant Professor from 1903. Author of Shades and Shadow Notes for the American School of Correspondence. Residence, 1150 VValnut Street, Newton Highlands. ,0k -effort QLM1 Jegilligaodwr' I 33 1 X. Jawa' 7rfCf4aL,,A asain 2' A vo- a.f.-ss, ,- fx-f-ew., ...ess .5 . - - 2.8! ,sv wa ' es s-st ,f-A Q-.ii ' .f. f of, .- . - 'af --A.. 1 sg- rapt- n mei- ee X- vis :Azul sea fy?-rp? ,s ,, R:y I gjjjzgg , 2 N S, 'xabea ,Jr 'W ,Nff fsf A ' r 'ff f' rf ,sf t Wi W 0, 611444271 FRANK P. MCKIBBEN, S.B., Assoc. M. Am. Soc. C. E., Assistant Professor of Ciivil Engineering.- M. I. T., '94, I. - ASSISTANT in Civil Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894-1896, Instructor, 1896-1903, Assistant Pro- fessor since 1903, Assistant Engineer, Boston Elevated Railway Co., 1899-1901, Assistant Bridge Engineer, Massachusetts Railroad Commission from 1901, Librarian, Boston Society of Civil Engineers, from 1902. Residence, 42 Newbury Street, Newton Centre. SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT, S.B., Assistant Professor of Industrial Biology- IVI. I. T., '94, V. PRIVATE Assistant to Professor Sedgwick, 1894-95, Assistant in Biology, Massachusetts Institute Technology, 1895-96, In- structor in Biology, Massacliusetts Institute of Technology, 1896-1903, Assistant Professor of Industrial Biology, from 1903, Instructor in Botany, Boston University, from 1903, Secretary, Cggis of '94, Instructor in Bacteriology, Simmons College, 1903- 1 . Translated EFfront's Enzymes and their Applications, 1901. Chief Author of Science and Experiment in Canning, 1903, Elements of Water Bacteriology fwith C.-E. A. Winslowj, 1904, and many articles relating to sanitary and industrial bac- teriology. Residence, 334 Broadway, Cambridge. CHARLES M. SPOFFORD, S.B., Assoc. Mem. Am. Soc. C. E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering.- M.1.T., '93, 1. TRANSITMAN and Computer, Massachusetts and Vermont boundary line survey, 1893, Graduate Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894g with Phoenix Bridge Co., 1895-96 and summers of 1897-1900, inclusive, Assistant, Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technology, 1896-97, Instructor, 1897- 19025 Assistant Professor from 1903, since July, 1901, em- ployed by Engineering Department of city of Boston, as bridge designer and checker. Author of Notes upon the Design of Beams, Girders and Columns and several engineering articles. Residence, 39 Churchill Avenue, Newtonville. PERCIVAL LOWELL, A.B., Non-resident Professor of Astronomy. J: WJ My ELIHU .'1iHOMSON, Non-resident Professor of Applied ff I341 Electricity. l r J 4 ' , l 8 e ve o s l T-T---lgT T J VY 7 Y 7 i f J x . i , .L J RCP 1 if J agree - f. l lL'1jQ'l J . . W' V .Fl , E, p N s nf 'I ' X Q 'l . , 1 P' fl A M 1 HENRY K. BURRISON, SB. . . Instructor in Wfechanical Drawing M. I. T., '75, I. ant! Descriptive Geometry Residence: 26 Lincoln Park, West Newton ELLEN H. RICHARDS, A.l'Vl., SB. . . Instructor in Sanitary Cfzenzistry lVl. I. T., '73, V., A.M., Vassar, '70 Residence: 32 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain PETER S. BURNS, Ph.D .... Instructor in Inorganic Clielnistry Iowa State College, '86 Residence: Milton NATHAN R. GEORGE, JR., A.lVl. . . . Instructor in jlffatliematics Harvard, '90, Theta Delta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa Residence: 137 Newbury Street LEONARD M. PASSANO, A.B. .... Inm-actor in flflarhematics Johns Hopkins, '89 Residence: 7 Lagrange Street, Winchester JOSEPH BLACHSTEIN .... Instructor in flflodern Languages Realschule, erster Ordnung, Hanover, '68, Institution Springer, Paris, '70 Residence: 691 Parker Street, Roxbury ROBERT P. BIGELOW, Ph.D. . . . Instructor in Biologyy 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 flffatlzematics Harvard, '90 Residence: 178 Huntington Avenue SAMUEL P. lVIULLIKEN, Ph.D. . . Instructor in Organic Cfzenzistry S.B., NI. l. T., '87, V., Ph.D., Leipzig, '90 Residence: 51 Bromfield Street, Newburyport E351 GEORGE W. ROLFE, A.M. . . . Instructor in Sugar flnaiysis A.B., Harvard, 'SSg A.M., Harvard, '86: Delta Upsilon, Pi Eta Residence: 322 Harvard Street, Cambridge ERVIN KENISON, S.B. . . . Instructor in Mechanical Drawing lVI. 1. T., ,93, 11. ana' Descriptive Geometry Residence: 14 Baldwin Street, Malden KILBURN S. SWEET, S.B .... Instructor in Civil Engineering M. 1. T., '93, 1. Residence: 31 Allston Heights, Allston W. FELTON BROWN .... Instructor in Freehand Drawing Residence: 35 Glenwood Street, Roxbury JUSTUS ERHARDT, A.B. . . . Instructor in Illodern Languages Residence: 1069 Boylston Street, Boston GEORGE B. HAVEN, S.B. . . Instructor in Mechanical Engineering lVI. 1. T., '94, H. Residence: 64 Warren Street, Needham JOSEPH W. PHELAN, S.B. . . Instructor in Inorganic Clzenzistry M. 1. T., '94, V. Residence: 754 Center Street, Jamaica Plain 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, '913 A.M., Harvard, '92, Ph.D., Harvard, '94 Residence: 3 Albemarle Chambers HARRY C. BRADLEY, S.B. . . Instructor in Meciianicai Drawing M. 1. T., '91, 1. and Descriptive Geometry Residence: 1 Mount Pleasant Terrace RALPH R. LAWRENCE, S.B. . . Instructor in Electrical Engineering M. 1. T., '95, VI. Residence: 34 Sumner Street, Dorchester FRANCIS HAROLD DIKE, A.B. . . Instructor in Modern Languages Columbia, '97 Residence: 66 Chestnut Street GEORGE L. HOSMER .... Instructor in Cifvii Engineering Residence: 153 First Street, Melrose ALPHEUS G. WOODMAN, S.B. . . Instructor in Sanitary Chemistry M. I. T., '97, V. Residence: 35 Highland Avenue, Cambridge fsrsj WILLIAM T. HALL, SB. . . Instructor in Analytical Chemistry C M. I. T., '95, V. 5 q Residence: 91 Court Road, Winthrop 1 IOSEPH C. RILEY, S.B. . . . Instructor in .lllechanical Engineering M. I. T., '98, II. Residence: 13 Spring Park Avenue, Iamaica Plain CHARLES W. BERRY, S.B. . . Instructor in Mechanical Engineering M. I. T., '95, VI. Residence: 5 Center Street, Somerville WALTER S. LELAND, S.B. . . . Instructor in Nu'vulf1rcl1itectzzr'e M. I. T., '96, XIII. Residence: South Framingham CHARLES H. WARREN, Ph.D .... Instructor in Ilfinerulogy Yale Residence: 31 Fisher Avenue, Newton Highlands VVILLIAM I. DRISKO ...... Instructor in Physics M. I. T., '95, VIII. Residence: 159 West Canton Street CHARLES B. BREED, S.B .... Instructor in Civil Engineerzn M. I. T., '97, I. Residence: 54 Hamilton Avenue, Lynn HARRISON W. SMITH, A.B., SB. . Instructor in Electrical Engineering Harvard, '95, M. I. T., '97, II.: Delta Upsilon Residence: 40 Mill Street, Dorchester IVIAURICE DE K. THOMPSON, IR., S.B. . Instructor in Electro-Chemistry M. I. T., '98, VIII: Delta Kappa Epsilon Residence: 3 Newbury Street CHARLES-EDWARD A. VVINSLOW, S.M. . . . Instructor in Biology IVI. I. T., ,98, VII. Residence: Hotel Qxford REGINALD R. GOODELL, M.A. . . Instructor in Illoclern Lcznguczges Bowdoin: Delta Kappa Epsilon Residence: Technology Club, 83 Newbury Street CHARLES E. LOCKE, S.B. . . Instructor in Mining Engineering M. I. T., '96, III. and Metallurgj' Residence: IO Harrison Street, Brookline HENRY L. SEAVER, A.B ..... Instructor in English Harvard Residence: 39 Allston Street, Dorchester HARRISON W. HAYWARD, S.B. . Instructor in Mechanical Engineering M. 1. T., ,96 Residence: 43 Chestnut Street I37l Cecsntque FREDERICK R. KNEELAND, S.B. . Instructor in Analytical Chemistry Columbia, '99 Residence: 192 Dartmouth Street HERMANN R. KURRELMEYER, Ph.D. . Instructor in Modern Languages B.A., Johns Hopkins, '99g Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, '02 Residence: 104 Robinwood Avenue, Jamaica Plain ERNEST A. MILLER, B.S., A.M., . . . Instructor in Mathenzutics B.S., Cornell, '99: A.M., Columbia, '00 Residence: 11 Pratt Street, Allston WALTER H. JAMES, S.B. . . Instructor in Ilffechanicul Engineering ' M. I. T., AQ6, II. Residence: 14 Liberty Street, Waltham LAWRENCE S. SMITH, S.B. . . Instructor in Illechanicul Engineering M. I. T., '00, II. Residence: 64 Andover Street, Peabody CLIFFORD M. SWAN, S.B ..... Instructor in Physics M. I. T.. '99, V.: Delta Upsilon Residence: 91 Babcock Street, Brookline CHARLES F. WILLARD, S.B. . Instructor in Murine Engineering M. I. T., '02, XIII. Residence: Beacon Chambers ARTHUR A. BLANCHARD, Ph.D. . Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry Residence: Hotel Bartol JOHN W. BROWN, Ph.D., S.B. . Instructor in Theoretical Chemistry S.B., M. I. T., '00, Ph.D., Heidelberg, '03. Residence: 68 St. Germain Street BURTON H. CAMP, A.B ..... Instructor in Mathernatics Wesleyan University, '01, Phi Nu Theta, Phi Beta Kappa Residence: 58 Hammond Street, Cambridge CARROLL W. DOTEN, Ph.B., A.M. . . Instructor in Economics Ph.B., Vermont, '95, A.M., '99g A.M., Harvard, '02g Phi Delta Theta, Phi Beta Kappa Residence: 1541 Cambridge Street, Cambridge EUGENE S. FOLJAMBE . . . Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Descriptive Geometry Residence: 78 Robinvvood Avenue, Jamaica Plain FRANK B. JEWETT, A.B., Ph.D. .... Instructor in Physics A.B., Throop Polytechnic Inst., '98, ' Ph.D., Chicago, '02g Delta Upsilon, Sigma Xi Residence: 16 Marlborough Street I 33 I DOUGLAS W. JOHNSON, S.B., Ph.D .... Instructor in Geology S.B., New Mexico, '01, Ph.D. Columbia, '03: Sigma Xi Residence: 6 Follen Street WILFRID E. IVIACDONALD, A.B. . . . Instructor in Mathematics Residence: 20 St. James Avenue CHARLES IVIAX MASON, B.L., Ph.D. . . Instructor in Matheinatics B.L., Wisconsin, '98, Ph.D., Gottingen, '03, Psi Upsilon Residence: 11 Pratt Street, Allston LESLIE R. MOORE, S.B., . . . Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry M. I. T., '94, V. Residence: Newton JAMES R. PUTNAM, S.B. . . Instructor in Mechanical Drawing M. I. T., '01, I. and Descriptive Geometry E Residence: 16 Elmore Street, Newton Centre VVILLIAM O. SAWTELLE, S.B. .... Instructor in Physics M. I. T., '99, VIII, Delta Kappa Epsilon Residence: 259 Beacon Street IVIILES S. SHERRILL, Ph.D. . Instructor in Analytical Chemistry M. I. T., '99, V. Residence: 192 Dartmouth Street HERVEY W. SHIMER, A.M. ..... Instructor in Geology Residence: 4:07 Columbus Avenue LIVINGSTON W. SMITH, M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in Inorganic Chemistry M.A., '00, Ph.D., '02, Washington and Lee, Phi Kappa Psi ' Residence: 279 Dartmouth Street PERCY G. STILES, Ph.D .... Instructor in Physiology ana' Personal Hygiene Residence: Newtonville I. LLOYD WAYNE, S.B. . . . Instructor in Meclzanical Engineering M. I. T., '96, VI. Residence: 25 Highland Avenue, Newtonville E391 be - mutants 'I .. K N1 I-. XX 3 XXXXYX Xxxx x.x ULLD4 .N xxx Aff- S QGDCOIL ie J I f V ks-L ,C . ., .X -g gg X if - - T - ROY G. BURNHAM, SB. . illechanical Engineering ALLEN L. APPLETON, S.B. . CHAUNCY C. BATCHELOR, A.B HENRY A. FERRIN, S.B. . ARCHIBALD GARDNER, S.B. . ARTHUR L. GOODRICH, S.B. CHARLES B. HOLLIS, S.B. . CHAMPION H. MATHEWSON, P NEWELL C. PAGE, S.B. . CHARLES WINTHROP SAWYER ROYAL L. WALES, S.B. FRANCIS C. WARE, A.B. ROBERT S. WILLIAMS, S.B. R. D. WORCESTER . WALTER H. ADAMS, S.B. JOHN T. ALDEN, S.B. . DAVID A. ALLEE, C.E. HENRY W. BUHLER, S.B. VVHAYNE E. BURKHALTER, S.B JOHN W. J. CALNAN, S.B. DURWARD COPELAND, S.B. WILLIAM R. DAVIS, S.B. RICHARD B. EARLE, PH.D. HAROLD A. EVERETT, S.B. HENRY H. FALES, S.B. NIONTAGUE FERRY . EUGENE D. FORBES, S.B. f 40 3 . Naval filrchitectare . . . English . illechanical Engineering . Mechanical Engineering . . Meclzanical Drawing and Descriptive Geometry . lllining Engineering and flffetallurgy . . . Inorganic Chemistry . . . . Phyyicr . Freehand Drawing . Oil and Cas Analysis . Inorganic Chemistry . Alnalytical Chemistry . Militarj' Science . Meclzanical Engineering . Meclzanical Engineering . Civil Engineering . Heat flleaszirenzenif . . . Civil Engineering . . . . Inorganic Chemistry . ilifining Engineering ancl flffetallurgy . . . Civil Engineering . Organic Chemistry . Naval Architecture' . fllechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering . . . Ph ysicr JOHN A. FRENCH, JR. . JAMES M. GAMMONS, S.B. CARLTON F. GREEN, S.B. . JOHN W. HOWARD, S.B. . CHARLES H. L. JOHNSTON, A.B. HAROLD B. LITCHMAN . . GERALD F. LOUGHLIN, S.B. . HARRY R. LOW, S.B. . . GEORGE M. JVIACDONALD, B.Sc., HOWARD S. MORSE, S.B. . JOHN R. ODELL, S.B. . . FREDERIC A. OLMSTED, S.B. HAROLD OSBORN, S.B. . . llleehaniccil Drawing . . . Physics . illining Engineering anfl flffetallurgy . Civil Engineering . . English . fllining Engineering cznel flletczllurgy . . . Geology . .lllining Engineering and flffetezllzzrgy S.B. ROBINSON PIERCE, JR., Ph.B., M.Sc. EDWARD J. RUXTON, S.B. . GEORGE A. SAMPSON, S.B. . GEORGE W. SWETT, S.B. . THEODORE H. TAET, S.B. . WILLIAM H. WHITCOMB, S.B. Meclzanical Engineering . Civil Engineering Jilnalytical Chemistry . Industrial Chemistry . Electrical Testing . . . Physics flffechanicezl Engineering . Civil Engineering fllechnnical Engineering .llfechcznicczl Engineering . . . Physics Xxx! A ZEZ E s Q SS? EDI QTecBnique 1 905 f x ,Hx Hi EC A P 'A :'i,ff1fSi ?f' W zq lf 'ik Ev R-X1 I Sf-Q35 'lI'fx,, t. 1, .. L- . . g - - ., E?z551j'ff f'7 - E 3255f525f5fiEi1EElEEf5' A .gffl .fi Qfff ' .,-um. -. f S ...' f f,i,E.:4wf5.'.1,:.':g-.151.21: ,.:..-3:-E: ja! 'I I L 16? f -v:15y,.. . Q 1 . H Q A as 4 THEODORE B. MERRICK JAMES R. LAMBRITH . ROBERT H. SMITH . CHARLES E. LITTLEFIELD JAMES F. LEARY . EUGENE S. FOLJAMBE S.B , . . JEREMIAH F. O,NEIL . fissiszan GEORGE E. BRADLEY . . FRANK A. BROWN OSCAR W. NORTHRUP . I 1 . Instructor in Wooclu'or'k ancl Foundry Work . . Instructor in Forging Instructor in fllackine -Tool l'Vork Instructor in Chipping and Filing . Alssistant in Chipping and Filing . Alssistant in .llffaclzine -Tool Work t in Woodwork and Foundry Work . Assistant in ,lllachine-Tool Work . . Assistant in Forging . flssistant in Machine-Tool kyork Instructor in Gymnastics. WINFIELD C. TOWNE, A.B. Medical ddwiser, Lecturer on Personal Ifygiene. FRANKLIN W. WHITE, S.B., M.D. I 42 J , ess f , aff, . X -an , . A. 3,3 , I L- ' v , 1, ww f-2 VE K' Staf of the Research Lalroratory of Physical Chemistry. ARTHUR A. NOYES, PH.D., Professor of Theoretical Chemistryg Director HARRY M. GOODWIN, PH.D., Associate Professors of Physics and Electro- Chemistry WILLIS R. WHITNEY, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Thoeretical Chenzistry VVILLIAM D. COOLIDGE, PH.D., Research Associate Physical Chemistry JOHN CHARLES BLAKE, PHD., Research Associate Physical Chemistry HERINiON C. COOPER, PH.D., Research Associate Physical Chemistry ARTHUR C. MELCHER, S.B., Research Assistant Physical Chemistry CHARLES S. BRYAN, JR., B.S., Research Assistant Physical Chemistry RAYMOND HASKELL, S.B., Research Assistant Physical Chemistry CLAUDE S. HUDSON, M.S., Research Assistant Physical Chemistry YOGORO KATO, S.B., Research Assistant Physical Chemistry Staf of the Sanitary Research Laboratory and Sewage Experiment Station WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, PH.D. . Professor of Biologyg Director SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT, S.B. . . Assistant Professor of Industrial Biology CHARLES-EDWARD A. VVINSLOXV, SJW., Instructor in Biologyf Biologist in Charge EARLE B. PI-IELPS, S.B. Research Chemist and Bacteriologist ANNE F. ROGERS . . . . Research Assistant E431 SFF-A UAL IIFEAOHEEIS LEOTUEIEHS HOBIER ALBERS, LL.B. JOHN ALDEN, S.B. . JOSEPH B. BAKER, S.B. TRUMAN H. BARTLETT LOUIS BELL, PH.D. . GEORGE W. BLODGETT, S.B., JOHN BALCH BLOOD, S.B. HOWARD L. COBURN . ALLEN H. COX . . JOHN 0. DE WOLF, S.B. A. V. GARRATT . CHARLES M. GREEN . DAVID A. GREGG . ELEAZER B. HOMER, S.B. JOHN GEORGE JACK . CHARLES D. JENKINS, S.B. MARSHALL O. LEIGI-iTON,PiS.B. ARTHUR D. LITTLE . JAMES W. LOVELAND, S.B. . Business Law . . Textile Printing ,-lzztonzatie Telephone Svstems . . . . llloeleling . The Electrical Transmission of Power The Alpplieation of Electrieity to Railway Signaling The Design of dlternating Current . . . Steam Piping . . . drelzitectural Design . Elertrie Drifzfing in Cotton Hlills The Governing of Turbines Electric fire Lighting Pen-and-fnh Drawing . flrchitectaral Histor,1' . Lanflseape hlorticulture Illuminating Gas and Pottery . The Pollution of Streams . . . Paper . . . The flffaniifacture of Soaps GUY LOWELL, A.B., S.B., Grad. Ecole des Beaux-Arts, LOHKl.YE!1j56J!I'ClIlfl'L'fZl7'K ARTHUR N. NIANSFIELD, S.B. SAMUEL W. MEAD . . . Telephone Line Construction drelliteetural Design WALTER E. PIPER, S.B ........ Rzihher QDIN B. ROBERTS, LL.B., The Ndf7l7'6 a111lFi1nftion of Patents for lnfzfentions W. LINCOLN SMITH, S.B ...... lnterior Illumination TIMOTHY O. SPRAOUE, S.B. .... Electricity in fllining JOHN STONE STONE, The flpplieation of Electrical Osrillations in Telephone MII Ross TURNER . . GEORGE F. ULlX'IER, S.B. W. LYMAN UNDERXVOOD FRANCIS S. VIELI2, S.B. S. M. VAUCLAIN C. HONVARD WALKER . HENRY E. WARREN, S.B. ll. LLOYD WAYNE, S.B. . . Water' Color Sllglll' 'I . . General Biology . Gables and Gable lllaniifaetzzre . Historgi of Ornament Water Wheel Governors . Telephone Engineering FREDERICK A. WOOD, M.D. . ..... Histologvi' S. W. VVILDER, JR., SB. fllurnina and Alumina Compounds lnstruftors in Geology from tlze Instrizciing Stal? of Hflrvard Unifuersity 'l.PHOh'1AS1A. JAGGAR, JR., PH.D., Assistant Professor of Geology, General Geology NATHANIEL S. SHALER, S.D., Professor of Geology, General Geology ROBERT DE C. WARD, A.lVI., Assistant Professor of Climatology, Climatology . ll . A. --'f Wie- wif ? EA '-sIg,...,4fu-.L.N .4 Q 'Ni -Y v fi- A ,X 5, pf- of P' ., -,.,- .,.,EE-f-f 1-J ' :Tuff l45l . -46 -'P Yam 53.55 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 O. HOFMAN HENRY P. TALBOT ARTHUR A. NOYES ADOLPH RAMBEAU THOMAS E. POPE WILLIAM BAIRD GEORGE T. DIPPOLD CHARLES F. A. CURRIER WILLIAM HOVGAARD LOUIS DUNCAN DANA P. BARTLETT JEROME SONDERICKER ALLYNE L. MERRILL EDWARD F. MILLER FRANK VOGEL S. HOMER WOODBRIDGE E451 . President . . Sefretary WILLIAM L. PUFFER WILLIAM H. LAWRENCE WILLIAM O. CROSBY HARRY E. CLIFFORD WILLIAM H. WALKER FREDERICK S. WOODS HARRY M. GOODWIN JOHN O. SUMNER FREDERICK H. BAILEY FRED L. BARDWELL AUGUSTUS H. GILL RICHARD W. LODGE JOSEPH J. SKINNER GEORGE H. BARTON ARTHUR G. ROBBINS FRANK A. LAWS 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 CHARLES L. ADAMS HARRY W. GARDNER FRANK P. MCKIBBEN SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT CHARLES M. SPOFFORD Qfeclinofogy af flie 'IDorFb's air HE INSTITUTE has been fittingly represented at the last two International Expositions, and intends to sur- pass its previous records by its complete and artistic exhibit at the World's Fair this year. The location of the exhibit in the Education building is very convenient, Tech- nology having secured one of the best spaces allotted to any college. The Education building itself is in the center of the main picturef' being located in the central court at the very foot of the cascades, which are the feature ofthe Exposition. The work of arranging for the exhibit has been done by a committee composed of Professors Derr, Gardner, Lawrence, Norris and Park, with Dean Burton as chairman. This com- mittee decided that the ornamental booth to contain the entire exhibit should be designed by the Architectural Department. This was accordingly done, and resulted in a design which not only has an individuality, but is also typical of the work of the Architectural course. The booth is 9.6 by 38 feet, and the walls show the Insti- tute colors, gray predominating, with the names of the courses, and a few other lines in red. On the outside wall, along the main aisle, will be shown a series of photographs, drawings and blue prints, the work of graduates. Withiii is found work representative of every T471 I a ' E . I Y-, ,W . 'il wil ' f'w,,1ua ' wifi 1 V b LROGEFIS my u MASSACHUSETTS JVJALBXER- .ID T W 7' E' INSTITUTE-oF 'sis Y ' 'W mg Jaw ', ' -gg, - TECHNOLOGY , 1 ll'- TJ- Q-,!!g.. E ..e gig I ' , 'COURSES' COURSES I QF .- mule: - , gf n-uma 2221122 W ' cnrffrirm' - ,nzcmnmt L X ARCHll'ECfU'Z -'GCCHANICAL ' fu' NAVAL. Arlo CIVIL 55 I 'E :I-YGl!:1RlNG 1 i -31.22 mga, N f f F77 W? 11,7 Y in-I B l UI l llill Q A. --.- ul fl Jr m i I -hid'- TZn u E-22 11'-' V E- 1 l V . - E , , I 1 , I , .nw FRONT ELEVATION sun.: 5 apo' department of Institute activity. Each course has an album con- taining photographs and descriptive text. There is also a large album of student life, showing cuts of the various athletic teams, musical clubs and other organizations. Cn the walls are large photographs of all the Institute buildings and laboratories. Draw- ings chosen at random from the courses in Civil and Mechaiiical Engineering, Architecture and Naval Architecture, as well as models of ships made by the Naval Architects, are exhibited. The Archi- tectural Department is represented in part by the booth itself, but in addition to this one entire Wall is covered with their Work. During the Fair different Institute men, first one professor then another, with now and then a student, will have charge of the exhibit. I4Sl 75 t - ii s--l g+a,fQ,W.., .,,,n 4 ' ' nu, . ll 5: ' ' , ' RUNKLE ' 'CRA-mg' Kilim milvil m.ssAcHusE1-rs new H l , , ' Q!! H5GT ' . N . l L ' ' i E H i L -- -! ,mn ya a i r , V , it fi L ' . . , ' 1 ,W ' 5 IDE ELEVATION e:,.1.Lg'. 1-9- The great prominence given to the educational department- this being the first International Exposition to devote an entire building to educational purposes-gives special significance to the exhibit of the Institute. In this day of rapidly changing ideas Technology has many formidable competitors, but it is certain that the energy expended in showing to the World, side by side with other colleges, the methods and results of the Institute, will tend to strengthen its already firmly established reputation for thorough and efficient Work. E491 J U 54 F Q J 7 A Q SYQHLX 0 j yf Q Q Q QU APffff1w'f Q Q Q Q LL 1 E .ma ,f - X V X mf 1 r ':igf! fY 1 I,.1A f 'XI', , f 1 1111 1111 11111 11 1111f, 1 '11 175 11 . 1 f 11 111ff, 11' -Y J 1.1 111 115,11 J 7 'WW Ni' 11 ' N M1111 'Qin' fWb11'1 X 07 f Q fn , 1 V , X11 1 f L 1111 O 1 n'11 fj1!'5f1 XX KX 1 11 H7111 'f if X 1 M7 11 if mf f 1 91111 J 1 1 f j 1 f ...f- fp Y ? ' V l f N ff' if A7 fi VF 24 Q 1 f V f fiiff ?kM Aviv V . X , r b sffyiy i - F W ' ' S 11 5 'fmfjf vf11 11 1,1 If 1- 11AqVV47A1 , , 11 -, , 1 HIM Z! Z? 1 1 17 X! J 1 -X E 1 AW L11 , 1 2 1- .1.f'1f 1' 12 :. f W1 1 Wf 111 f ' 1 'QL 1131 'U W g.f'11?Q1 1 1'1 ' t Y ' ' if , ,I ., .1 1 ' ' -ff: UH-eg LZ 'HI' f 'W Q ' Jimi? Y '1111f?f f f l Ww w 1 I I , f , 1 M 111 , f T rf! e 1 4' ' s L K.-i91111'I ' X K? ,XJ 11151, M 'lWW'41fff ff X X '1 1? 1 X fl '11 111 , fl X il r 11 1 1, 1 fi 1 f 1 X1-xly 1,711 1 if 5 ' ' 7, ffrpf KX X 'Z 1. W - U! XG L, ,Q px 1 1 , : , N 1 1 1 ' 1 11 -1 ' 5'1'1',111, , X. 11127f1 W1 21 1 W'Y11K1M11M1 11 I f I jj: X I E EQ 41 1 1 L1 1 ,fe '1'A WH .1 1 Mk K, 'I X - 1 ,ZQN f V 'A tm ff 1 gbtt -,- CG' 2 f n 1 I f J ja f 4 xt KK 5: -3 ' 13 Cfams of Qlinefeen unbreb anb our E521 Officers WALTER ELBRIDGE HADLEY P resi 11 en t GUY WARNER EASTNIAN ' First Vice President ALFRED WORCESTER BURNHAIVI Second l7ice President ARTHUR WARREN BARTLETT Secretary GEQRGE ALDEN CURTIS Treasurer Ek Qgoarb of Qirecfors GEORGE EDWIN ATKINS CHARLES ROGERSON HAYNES 'Em Jnsfifufe Committee LOUIS GUSTAVE BGUSCAREN WILLIAM HOSMER EAGER enior Bass 15isforg St Being a difjronicfe of some of we events anb Qoings of tfje dlfaaa of 1904 T was the morning of the twenty-sixth of September, 1900, When the sun, rising on the steps of Rogers Building, found VValter Cronin waiting for the Institute to open its doors to receive me, the Co-eds, and the Class of I904,H311d hid its face at the sight. Such might have been the unpropitious entrance of Dr. Pritchett and the present Senior Class, but Walter was im- patient, and wandered off in quest of other laurels. So the game was spoiled. As it Was, We registered With the usual trials and trib- ulations, and started on our Institute course, which can only be likened to a rocket soaring, with ever-increasing brilliancy, upward and upward, until at last, with one supreme effort, it bursts,- spreading its magnificent fire over the heavens, and dies out,-leav- ing only the memory ofits short, but brilliant career. After forcing the Sophs to beat a hasty retreat in our first rush, We organized, with Mat. Emerson at the helm, until the permanent class elections placed Charlie Homer in the lead for our Freshman year. Then we began. The reverses and sad memories of that first Field Day and last Cane Rush Were put aside, and We Went after the traclc championship,-landing tie with 1902 for that place. But-unlike the B. and M. R. R.-We are running ahead of sched- ule, and have omitted to tell of the times we helped lick Harvard after the political Parade, and assisted Tommy Pope and Phos- phorusn Burns in their research for chemical phenomena. The phenomena-though not exactly chemical-proved to be the Lszsj ecllnique 1905 twinsf' Haar and Kaiser, and our envoy to Wellesley, Peacham Paine. We came through the effects of Christmas in time to pass our mid-years, breaking all records for the time spent on a military science exam, and fell over the line into the second term. The monotony of English themes was broken by drill, Analyt. and Descript.g and we passed the time away till Major Briggs fnot the Advisory Councilj showed up at our exhibition drill with thir- teen Qactual countj silver medals draped in graceful patterns across his manly chest. That was too great a shock for some of us to survive, and, strange to say, it affected our soldier boys, Short Burrows and VVeaver, so much that they were not on hand in the fall to help us beat the Freshmen into shape. Sophomores at last, and who knows the joyous thrill of such a name until they have slept through one of Charlie Cross's lectures, and heard Arlo thunder out his dissertation on Have Beans to the assembled populace. lt was necessary for Porter to show up late at one lecture, and to get stuck at 'K lVlac's again in order to realize we were back at the same old place. Things journeyed along, and we dug Calculus and all the rest of it till Field Day came to relieve the monotony. After making 1903 look like that smile of Dana Pfs, we let the Freshmen win the Field Day, and then took up our way again with L. P. Burnham in the band wagon. Our success in the Winter Meet, and the result of the exams, which came only too soon afterwards, left us with a mixture of feelings hard to describe. But with the coming of the second term we found Joe Crowell trying to invent that machine to do his work without any effort on his part. Doc. Weiidell queered all that, though, with one of his straight-forward questions that beat the Devil around the bush , and the smoke cleared off to Hnd Fats Rupf building an auto to run by electricity, gas, and hot air. I-le found its eiiiciency-using 'C Charlie as a standard-was .oi per cent, and gave up in disgust. TECHNIQUE elections were upon us, and great was the disappointment of 'C Dmit Bary when he lost out on being elected to the Electorial Committee. Once more, to our glory, we had no Dick Croker, no ring, to boast oi but it was the survival of the fittest. We won the championship l54l in track, cleaned up the Freshmen in baseball, and then turned our attention to the spring exams-giving Pluggern Peiler a chance to get in some good licks. We returned fwhat there was left of usi after a strenuous summer, juniors, upper-class men-pretty much the whole show. Some celebrities had left us. Bary, of the long hair, had sought other conquests. Gould, noted for the Cane spree and his affection for a sweater, no longer graced our classes with his presence. And our erstwhile President, L. P. Burnham, preferred climes less warm than those connected with the Institute. We found Jerry Sweet and Gould, Downes, Lang, and the rest of the gang seated on the ledge of the Bursar's window as we came into Rogers 5 while Harry T. and Little 'l Humphreys Qlooking a perfect miniature of Harryj rushed around, trying to distribute scrap paper termed rollslips. Politics were hot this year with the ring all for Pret Smith, who was eventually elected. A quiet, studious life, once in a while inter- rupted by Harry CliH?ord's lectures on The Manufacture of Liquid Air for Commercial Uses, or The Equation of a Perfect Gas as illustrated by Peabols Thermo, characterized the first term. Applied and Thermo presented new fields to conquer or not, as the fortunes of war fcommonly known as Profs? decreed. But all was leading up to that period in the Junior Year known as Junior Week, to which every Tech man had been looking forward in the fond expectancy that 1904 would turn out the best yet. And their hopes were realized. The 1904 TECHNIQUE came out with a rush in more senses than one, and made all previous TECHNIQUES fade into dim insignificance in comparison! On the same day we put aside engineering and literary feats, found some hot fussers in Tammy H Rockwood and Billy Cronin, and held the Prom. Again 1904. showed its versatility by pushing through the best Prom. ever held, so those that were in a position to judge declared. The following day the other classes helped us make the Scien- tific King a tremendous success. Senior Year brought to our friend Boris the thought I shall conquer the world, as he walked up Rogers steps that bright morning last September. VVhat the rest of us thought is not 5 ss 1 Qieclhxique 1905 Qcgnfque recorded in the book! Once on the last lap we found many pace- 1905 makers. Zeus Roberts started out to kill the bunch, but the Tech Chambers training table went back on him, and it was all off Theses to the right of us, theses to the left of us I Who can imagine the benefits to mankind arising from the investigations of our Class? When I-laar gets his insoluble substances dissolved, when Cap Curtis gets that suspension bridge from Eng. A. to Rogers, when ff Chick Emerson and Cal Bascom get an engine running by using the CO2 from the air, then you, O Reader, will understand the likeness of our great and glorious Class to the before- mentioned rocket. We've passed the first term with nothing to disturb us but class elections, which only resulted, as has always been the case with us, in the best man getting the job, when Walter Hadley got the Presidency. We've held our last Kommers, which was a repetition of the many joyous occasions we've spent around the festive board. Qur class dinners and Kommers will always hold a bright place in our memories of pleasures here,-especially when we think of Volts 0vington,s tricks, Freddie U Pierce on the box, those long-winded harangues of Jerry Sweet's, and blush at some of the jokes told by Benny Blum at our Freshman din- ner. How well we can hear dear old Blackie make his puns at our expense, and cheer him as he says, The Class of 1904 is the first and foremost of the century. Now we,re on the home stretch, and as soon as the disturb- ance of Class Day elections is over everything will be serene until we have that elusive article known as our degree in our hands, and then-for us only the future remains. Our book is nearly closed, and these will be the last chronicled events of our Class's career. To finish out, we leave our Alma Mater, the places that have grown familiar to us through the past four years, early in June. What our Class will be twenty years from now is hard to say, and it is not in the historian's province to try. But, in spite of all, we'll always be in the Class of 1904 of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 3 and as for the rest, - Trust no future, howe'er pleasantg Let the dead past bury its dead: Act! act in the living present, Heart within, and God o'erhead! 55133 f - ixf' Y. M- f ff- f ,,q.1qf':NXx - 'N T f V' '15 lff'Qf X-X 1 1 1 ' -'Q .ix , 4 H X 'Qi 4 QV 7 ,Z gzf -QW, ff, I, K ,. 1 fy!! 17 -i-I Lf! 'ff ff ff ' --,-J K-M4 M Il - f F ' M1 Al fggf , gg :WJ Q W , ,4 - ' 'E NH ' - f , X .x I f- w X fl X , R X-.H Q 1 X 'f g -if Z, y XI V 'NIM 7 ki,-L NNEETNXX f wf Q W? A 5,ffk QXN Q QL ' ii WJ, NS VQ X W , ff!! f . I ,7 V W!! : , F-LT Y Y, ,mu ,huh ,k M hi, liff4f 1 . 9 A:--,::?Z. ,.,ff, 4h7 X x ff :A . li -'Qfffrffi . X i e - M y 4 NN 6 V QXNW- xx? gf Ol 4. f .. f -up iugky x xx , lk 'Hx .Elgar-gd in Zjfwff l .N.l X! X --Q? 1-A ,,jfj wh 3, 1 I , W - V --V W K K V Qcgnfque recorded in the book! Once on the last lap we found many pace- 1905 makers. K Zeus H Roberts started out to kill the bunch, but the Tech Chambers training table went back on him, and it was all off. Theses to the right of us, theses to the left of us I Who can imagine the benefits to mankind arising from the investigations of our Class? When Haar gets his insoluble substances dissolved, when Cap H Curtis gets that suspension bridge from Eng. A. to Rogers, when Chick Emerson and Cal Bascom get an engine running by using the CO., from the air, then you, O Reader, will understand the likeness of our great and glorious Class to the before- mentioned rocket. We've passed the first term with nothing to disturb us but class elections, which only resulted, as has always been the case with us, in the best man getting the job, when Walter Hadley got the Presidency. We,ve held our last Kommers, which was a repetition of the many joyous occasions we've spent around the festive board. Our class dinners and Kommers will always hold a bright place in our memories of pleasures here,-especially when we think of Volts 0vington's tricks, Freddie Pierce on the box, those long-winded harangues of Jerry Sweet's, and blush at some of the jokes told by Benny Blum at our Freshman din- ner. How well we can hear dear old Blackie make his puns at our expense, and cheer him as he says, The Class of 1904. is the first and foremost of the century. Now we're on the home stretch, and as soon as the disturb- ance of Class Day elections is over everything will be serene until we have that elusive article known as our degree in our hands, and then-for us only the future remains. Our book is nearly closed, and these will be the last chronicled events of our Class's career. To finish out, we leave our Alma Mater, the places that have grown familiar to us through the past four years, early in June. What our Class will be twenty years from now is hard to say, and it is not in the historian's province to try. But, in spite of all, we'll always be in the Class of 1904 of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 3 and as for the rest, - Trust no future, l1owe'er pleasantg Let the dead past bury its dead: Act! act in the living present, Heart within, and God o'erhead! 5553 T ?Z , ff JZ 5 fr X ,- If 'gy' I ,ff wx fig!-b-:-,,,:.sTl-l'NX Y -fh- ,xf f K WN R 1 A! X126 I K f - f wllwwv wif, 'Z f ff f fieb X I 'J Q- - 1 'fi z ,QV - ,fy Lk Li, , x 58 ' , JL Vw Q X X N xWvA Q N xi- ' n , Q , Xu K K Q0 Lf , X E . f - gf X r Qsgff x - 1-: gg A E- 'X fi L, ml, M - .- f mv:M xi- if Q 7 ,ig .Jfphk -NHx. xQ,., Nj L, L mwx, Q 1-, Ali x . I' nj M-Q .V ,1e M ' wean, XY1'X? . f Hal ,. Zi. 1 ll. ll. XX 111.11 1.v v1.1-1010 1'11v1uunr-1r'1'1 NUlVlt:l1lL1Hl.I.YRHHI-XNUl:1.1 1 Ainlrerg, .X.,I. 37 Abbott, A. I-I. 72 Stevens, S. S. 1117 Ba.1'tlctt,sG. M. 1.12 Nichols, R. P. ISIS Poole, F. P. 219 Murrow, II. K. 255 XVl1itney, H. L. 2 Lilmlll01 .l- MCU- 33 DWYCV1 E' .l- 73 Spalding, XV. L. 10S Eaton, F . M. 143 Brown, H. Y, 184 XX l11tn1ore, AILB. 220 SlI1l17ll'll., S. 256 Houck, A. 3 Hinkley, P. E 39 Xyl11f!'I1?l.ll, K. 7.1 R1cl1, C.,I. v 109 XVclls, A.YW. 144 SChI'l'lC1SSC1',E. G. 185 Tarbett. IL. 22.1 Xlyells, P. II. 257 Boggs, L.. R. .1 Dean, C, L. 40 Ixeen, XV. H. 75 Marcy, G. D,XX .I IIC Lalley, XX. H. 14.5 Balkam, A. F. 186 Atwood, C. ,E. 222 Giant, IL. L.. 258 li1ggs,A.J. 5 Daniels, ,I. 41 Lewis, XV. K. 76 Moorehead, T. P. 111 Crarer, F. S. 140 Harvey, I-I. li. 187 Blxhy, XV. P. .523 Schoneld, I.. 259 IXITBQISIIIILII, 6 XX'eaver, Ii. C. 42 S111ith, C. 77 Hill, E. B. 112 Motter, XV. D. B, 1217 Simpson, XV. Ii. 138 I-Ioxie,,E. E. 224 Rolmlnns, H, P. 260 Sm1tl1, I.. 7 Innes, G. B. .13 MacBriar, XV. N. 78 Lutze, F. C. II3 Paquet, V. H. 148 Ea.clie,,I. C. IS9 Spaulding, H. S. 226 Stetson. H. C. 261 Casey, G. A. N Rohlwe, I.. li. 44 Machado, NI. M. 79 Nicholson, D. H. 114 Burns, XV. 149 Washburn, B. XV 190 Helpern, M. .227 DU1'll11g, P. GJ 262 XValker, H. L. 9 xvlIltIU2ll'Sl1, A. L. 45 Dean, A. M. So Young, R. L. 115 Becker, XV. F. 150 Clarke, VV. A. IQI Prescott, A. G. 228 Russell, A. I1 , 263 '1aylor,,I. XV. I0 Butts, W. M. 46 Cain, XV. B. S1 Klahr, C. D. 116 Dam0n,I. C. 151 Ed111uncls, ll. M. 192 Geraghty, T. F. 229 Ganimons, H. '1. 264 Ca ell, T. B. Il Guerin, II .I. 47 Bushnell: L. T. S2 Green, T. 117 Delano, XV. P, 152 Perry, G. XV. 193 Thomas, G. C. 230 Graesser, C. II. 265 Abhott, F. II. I2 McLean, R. XV. 48 Humphrey, C. T. S3 Barrows, G. H. IIS Parker, L. II. 153 Stebbins, R. P. 194 Boy11ton, A. 231 Barrier, E. A. 266 Smltll, C. H. I3 Gladcling,j. N. 49 Blount, F. M. S4 Kelling, A. H. 119 Buff, H. A. 154 Coilin, E. M. 195 VVebster, F. DeXV. 232 Bent, XV. G. 267 Pease, L. M. 14 Gardner, R. S. 50 Schwartz, F.,I. S5 Gage, C. E. 120 Gerhard, N. P. 155 Fisher, A. 196 Buell, L T. 233 Turner, XV. 268 Landers, M. B. I5 Gl'2lllfl11l, E. MQL. Sl Davis, L. S6 Hyde, S. T. 121 Chesterman, F.,I. 156 Donald, H. XV. 197 XVeaver, M. E. 234 Niditch, I. 269 Bedford,,I. P. 16 Sarratea, R. IS. 52 Keith, I-I. H. XX'. S7 Hadley, R. E. 122 Charlesworth, H.P. 157 Mitchell, H. C. 198 Houskeeper, XV. G. 235 Lovejoy, R. F. 270 Warnock, XV. 1' Allen, 53 Steel, E. T. SS Richards, N. A. 123 Brownell, F. XX'. ISS Seaver, S. 199 Marsh, E. H. 236 Beard, R. 271 Taylor, XV. A. lg Poor, I1I.,I. 54 Caine, S. A. S9:lOl'lI'lStO1'l, C. XV. 124 Tebbetts, I. H. 159 Cole, S. L. 200 Allen, R. H. 237 XV11ite,I. A. 272 Clapp, C. II. I9 Adams, C. R. 55 Lo11gl1lin,j. Q0 Danforth, C. E. 125 Donglas,,I. F. 160 Saville, C. 201 True, A. O. 238 Tufts, XV. 273 Funk, G. C. 20 Sugar, R. Lell. 56 Johnson B. L. UI Stevenson, H.I. 126 Nelson, H. H. 161 Lindsly, B. E. 202 Castleuian, P. 239 Barlow, E. 274 Hill, E. L. 21 Payne, F. Ii. 57 Mer1'ill, A. 92 Briggs, E. N. 127' Daly, ,I. C. 162 Nabstedt, H. M. 203 Cline, M. 240 XVlIlt1Ilg, H. 275 Bender, E. F. 22 Gerry, A. P. 58 Eisele, II. 93 Wiggins, E. B. 128 Bar1'on, E. T, 163 Joslin, G. B. 204 Mayer, C. B. 24.1 Green, XV. 270 XV1lc0x, H. M. 23 Gilbert, A. C. 59 Bell, R. E. Q4 Rippey, A. E. 129 Drake, F. E. 164 Freeman A. E. 205 Shaw, T. 242 Rogers, I. IE.. 277 Files, T. I-I. 24 Eicliler, XV. G. 60 Dean, II, L. Q5 Senger, R. W. 130 Turner, XV. C. 165 Whitczomh, R. N. 206 BX1l'tO11, E. 243 Gregson, R. B. 278 Whiting, G. 25 Seyms, R. XV. 61 Anderson, C. A. 96 Ibziderzlyfcd 131 Gale, R. F. 166 Cowdrey, I. I-I. 207 Gilmore, L. E. 244 Urquidi, I. F. 279 Folsom, R. M. 26 Mnnroc, XV. N. 62 IIolliday,,1-, II. 97 Cowper, H. M. 132 Humphrey, XV. H. 167 Mountanus, P. A. 208 Rhodes, G. I. 245 Prentiss, G. XX . 280 Lyon, XV. V. 27 Cartagena, II. 63 Winship, . C. 9S Gouinlock, VV. S. 133 Geckler, B. E. 168 Gunn, T. M. 209 Dunn,,I. F. 2.16 Davis, R. 281 Flynn, I. H. 28 Parsons, G. F. 64 Killion, L. DI. QQ I-Iool, G. A. 134 Payne,I. H. 169 Sn1itl1, A. H. 210 Hart, H. P. 247 Gilman, XV. C. 282 Crosby, G. 29 Luce, R. F. 65 Strickland, S. T. 100 Leavitt, C. E. 135 XVISC, R. E. 170 Greely, S. A. 211 Foster, A. C. 248 Bnrkhardt, E. H. 253 Carliart, F. M. 30 Tower, G. 66 Foulds, R. S. 101 Whittemore, XV. L. 136 Starr, F. C. 171 Ayers, S. H. 212 L0ngl1lin,,I. S. 249 Smith, S. A. 2S4 Lowe, E. C. 31 Read, A. M. 67 NICNlIllll.lS,J. H. 102 Molina, V. 137 Tsuruta, K. 178 XVa1'e, L. 213 Siehrecht, I-I. B. 250 Perkins, G. B. 285 Bennet, F. G. 31 Riclnnonml, XX'. S. 68 Manson, A. -I. 103 U1z1'rt'e11lMed 138 Davis, J. 179 Lombard, E, 214 XVentw0rth, H. A. 251 Macintire, H.I. 286 Iewc-tt, T. E. 33 Fnllcr, G. 69 Smith, L. Ii. 104 Belding, A. F. 139 P1'ltCll2ll'il,C. R. ISO Lewis, H. F. 216 Glidden, DI. T. 252 Loomis, XV. XV. 287 XVarren, C. E. 34 TTZXYCS,-I. 70 Sliaw, C. R. 105 Ba1'tlett,E. H. 140 Foley, L. II. 181 F0ul1y,I. F. 217 Elliot, F. S. 253 Ball, XV. G. 288 Kibliy, R. 35 Ilzunrneg, I.. XV. 71 Field, -I. C. 106 Lamb, S. R. 141 Babcock, C. XV. 182 Snow, E. B. 218 Lord, R. H. XV. 254 Ayer, I. ZYSQ XVald, G. 36 liill'llCS, . P. 290 Curtis, C. '. KEY TO CLASS PHOTOGRAPH-ALPHABETICALLY ARRANCED 37 Almlwolt, A. II. 119 Bull, H. A. 60 Dean, II. L. 247 Gilman, VV. C. 7 jones, G. B. 204 Mayer, C. B. 242 Rogers,I. E. 124 Tehbetts,I. H. 3115 Alwhotl, F. ll. 24.8 Burkliardt, E. II. 117 Delano, W. P. 207 Gilmore, L. E. 163 Ioslin, G. B. 57 Merrill, A. 228 Russell, A. E. 193 Thomas, G. C. IQ Adznns, C. R. 114 Burns, W. 156 Donald, H. XV. 13 Gladcling,-I. N. 40 Keen, XV. H. 2i9 Morrow, H. K. 16 Sarratea, R. B. 30 Tower, G. S. 17 Allen, C. 206 Burton, E. 125 Douglas, -I. F. 216 Glidden, T. 52 Keith, H. H. W. 157 Mitchell, H. C. 160 Saville, C. 201 True, A. O. 'loo Allen, R. II. 47 Bushnell, L. T. 129 Drake, F. E. 98 Gouinloc 1, XV. S. 84 Kelling, A. H. 102 Molina, V. 144 Schmeisser, E. G. 137 Tsuruta, K. 1 .A.llll'DL5l',Lf, A.,I. IO Butts, XV. M. 209 Dunn, NI. F. 230 Graesser, C. H. 288 Kibbey, R. 167 Montanus, P. A. 223 Schofield, L. 238 Tufts, VV. 111 Anderson, C. .-X. 264 Cabell, T. ll. 38 Dniyer, E. I. I5 Grahani, E. MCL. 64 Killion, L. I. 76 Moorehead, T. P, 50 Schwartz, F, I. 233 Turner, XV. 1:46 Atwood, C. Ii. .16 Cai11, XV. B. 148 Ea ie,I. C. 222 Grant, E. C. 81 Klahr, C. D. 112 Motter, W. D. B. 158 Seaver, S. 130 Turner, XV. C. 254 Ay1:1',-I. 5.1 Caine, S. A. 108 Eaton, F. M. 170 Greeley, S. A. 259 Kriegsnlan, E. F. 26 Munroe, XV. N. 20 Segar, R. LeR, 2.14. Urqnidi,-I. F. l7I Ayers, S. ll. 283 Carliart, F. M. 151 1Zllll1LlIlLlS, H. M. 82 Green, T. 110 Lalley, XV. H. 162 Nabstedt, H. M. Q5 Senger, R. XV. 289 VVald, G. G. 1.11 llalvuofk, C. XV. 27 Clll'ULgC1l11,J.-I. 2.1 Eichlcr, XV. G. 241 Gree11, XV, 106 Lamb, S. R. 126 Nelson, H. I-I, 25 Seynis, R. XV. 262 XValker, H. L. 253 Hall, XV. G. 261 Casey, G. A. ir! Eisele, H. 243 Gregson, R. B. 2 La1nbie,,I. MCC. 142 Nichols, R. P. 220 Shapira, S. 178 XVare, S. L. 2311 ll1lI'lHW, ,l. lf. 2112 CilSllCl1l2lll, P. 217 Elliott, F. S. II Guerin, H.,I. 268 Landers, M. B. 79 Nicholson, D. II. 70 Shaw, C. R. 270 iXX72l1'1l0Cli, XV. 311 Barnes, ,l. P. 122 Cll2ll'lUSXX'Dl'lll, II. P. 71 Field, I. C. 168 Gu11n, T. M. 100 Leavitt, C. E. 234 Niditch, I. 205 Shaw, T. 257 XVf11'1'E3l'1, C. E. .531 ll:11'1'i1-V, li. A. Ill Cl'lCSlC1'lllZ1l1, F.,I. 2,77 Files, T. H. 87 Hadley, R. E. ISO Lewis, H. F. 113 Paquet, V. H. 213 Siebreeht, H. B. 149 XV1lSl1l71ll'lI, Ii. 128 ll:11-ron, IC. 'I'. 272 Clapp, C. II. 155 Fisher, A. 35 I-Iammett, L. XV. 41 Lewis, XV. K., 118 Parker, L. H. 1.17 Simpson, XV. E. 6 XVeaver, E. C. S3 lilll'l'UXVS, G. II. 150 Clarke, XV. A. 281 Fly11n,,I. II. 210 Hart, H. P. 161 Lindsley, B. E. 28 Parsons, G. F. 169 Smith, A. H. 197 XVeaver, M. E. 1115 linrtlclt, IE. II. 203 Cline, M. l40 Foley, L. H. 146 Harvey, I-I. B. 179 Lombard, E. 21 Payne, F. E. 260 Sn1ith, A. L. 195 XVehster, F. DeXX 1117 li:11'tl1:tt, G. M. 154. Collin, E. M. 279 Folsom, R. M. 34 Hayes,.I. 252 Loomis, XV. XV. 134 Payr1e,I. H. 42 Smith, C. 109 XX'ells, A. XV. 236 licnrzl, R. 159 Cole, S. L. 211 Foster, A. C. 196 Helpern, M. 21S Lord, R. H. XV. 267 Pease, L. M. 266 Srnith, C. H. 221 XVells, P. L. IIS lluckcr, XV. I . 166 Cowdrcy, I. II. 181 l1'0lll'IX',.I. F. 77 Hill, E. B. 212 LOllgl1liH,I. 250 Perkins, G. B, 69 Smith, I.. E. 214 XVCDtXVOTtll, H. 269 lludlord, 'l', P. 07 Cowpcr, II. M. M Fonlds, R. S. 274 Hill, E. L. 235 Lovejoy, R. F. IQ2 Perry, G. XV. 249 Smith, S. A. 165 XVhitc01nb, R. N 1011 ll'-flflillll, A- F. 111 Cl'1lVCT.F. S. 164 Freeman, A. E. 3 Hinkley, P. E. 284 Lowe, F.. C. 13 Poole, F. P. 182 Snow, E. B. 21,7 XVhite,-I. A. io Bull, Il. li. 282 Croshy, G. 33 Fuller, G. 62 Holliday, ,l. 11. Z9 Lure, R. F. 18 Poor, E. I. 73 Spalding, XV. L. 278 XVhiting, G. XV. C 175 HCINICY. IC. lf. 390 Curtis, C. C. 273 Funk, G. C. Q9 Hool, G. A. 78 Lntze, F. C. 221.5 Prentiss,'G. XV. 180 Spaulding, H. S. 240 XVl1iting, H. 255 llunnctt, lf. G, 127 Daly,,I. C. 85 Gave, C. li. 256 Houck, C. A. 284 Lyon, W. V. 191 Prescott, A. G. 136 Starr, F. C. 39 XVhit1r1an, K. ..,I,L Bent, XV. G. 16 Danion. I. C. 131 Galzr, R. F. 198 Housekeeper, XV.G. 43 MaeBriar, XV. N. 139 Prichard, C. R. 153 Stebbins, R. P. 9 XVhitmarsl1, A. L 258 lllI.fFS, A. ,l. lljll llillll'Ul'lll, C. li. 2211 ci1l1lllIlO1lS, II. 'I'. 188 I-Ioxie, E. E. 44 Macl1ad0,j. M. 31 Read, A. M. S3 Steel, E. T. 184 VVl'lit1'l.'I01'6,-I. B. 197 llix wy, XX', P. 5 lllllllblli,-I. I4 Gztrdner, R. S. 48 I'Tll1UI1ll1'C3',C. T. 251 Macintire, H. I. '08 Rhodes, G. I. 22.5 Stetson, H. C. 255 Whitney, H. L. 19 lllonnl, F. M. 227 Ijllfllllff, P. G. 133 Geekler, B. E. I52. Hnn1pl1rey,W. II. I2 McLean, R, XV. 74 Rieh, C. I. 72 Stevens, S. S. 101 Whittexnore, XV. 257 UOHQIS. C. li. 1,18 U11riS,,l. 102 Ge1':1gl1ty,T. F. 86 Hyde, S. T. 67 McManus, I. II. S8 Richards, N. A. 91 Stevenson, II. I. Q5 XX7iggins, E. B. 11.: ll1'iLg'1,fs, li. N. QI Davis, I.. 120 Gerhard, M. P. 286 Icwett. T. E. 68 Manson, ALI. 32 Richmond, XV. 65 Strickland, S. :IX 276 XVilcox, H. M. 11,1 Ilrown, l. ll. 216 Davis, R. 22 Gerry, A. P. 56 johnson, B. I.. 75 Marcy, G. D'XX'. Q4 1iTI117CX',A. li. 185 Tarhett, R. li. 63 XVinship, I.. C. 123 llroxvm-ll, F. XV. .15 Dean, A. M. lj Gilbert, A. C. 89 JOl'lllSt0l!, C. XV. 199 Marsh, E. H. '8 Rohhe, L. E. 263 Tavlor, I. XX'. 135 XVise, R. E. 11141 llH0ll1 I-. 'll .I l7L'lll1. C. I.. 224 Rohl1ins,II. R. 271 '1'.1g11f11-,'w. A. So Young, R. I.. 111. F XV . L A I Cfass of Qlineteen unbreb :mb I Dfficers JOHN AIVIBERG ' Presieien t ARTHUR IANIES IVICCLURG LANIBIE First Vice President PHILIP EDWARD HINKLEY Second Vice President CHARLES LAKE DEAN Secretary JOSEPH DANIELS, Treasurer 'N Qixecutibe Committee ROBERT WILBUR MORSE EARLL CHASE WEAVER 'Em Jnstitute Committee WILLIAM DUFFIELD BELL MOTTER THOMAS EDWARD JEWETT ll Qfecfinofogicaf Gxperimenf I-IE night before the exam in Applied Mechanics I was returning up Boylston Street from the house of a friend, where we had been cramming together. When I reached Rogers Building I paused to consider an idea which had occurred to me. It was twelve by the clock in front of Met- calf's. The night was dark, and the huge structure before me looked unusually gloomy. Everything was perfectly still and quiet, save for the occasional hoot of an owl from the Natural History Rooms. An oppressive sense of dread came upon me, for indeed I was in a bad fix. The building recalled thoughts of the cuts that had been, and the flunks that were to come, and especially of that great catas- trophe which the morrow was to bring forth. It is the only hope there is. ' To do or not to do ' F said I, and then added grimly, Or, rather, 'to do or to be done,' that is the question g and the thought brought me courage. I crept cautiously to the back of the building, climbed the fire escape, found a window unlocked, and crawled in. I made straight for the room where the Faculty hold their meetings. Oh! if I can only find them, they must keep them here somewhere l And, sure enough, after a long search I found a closet filled with shelves, on which were bottles of all sizes and descriptions g little bottles and big bottles, blue bottles and green bottles, long-necked bottles and short-necked bottles, bottles innu- merable. H Now ifl can only find the right one g and visions of Cs dazzled me, and made me tremble with anxiety. Then I read the following labels, and many more besides: Blacky's Dutch Concoction, Cross's I-Iair Invigorator, Popels Soothing Syrup, Dewey's Corn Cure, The Old Doctor Tylerls Extract of Flunks, I61l Cecbnique 1905 Dippy's Non-alcoholic Cordial, Arlo's Bitters, Crosby's Spirits of Defunct Fossils, Baird's Soothing Syrup, Wendell's Universal Physic, Osborne's Elixir of Youth. They all sounded well, but I did not know which would have the desired result. So I reasoned that ifl took them all, then it would directly follow by the process of elimination that I should get the right one,-Q Ii. D. I took a drink from all, and started home with expectations of coming triumphs in the exams. But I did not get far. I began to feel the most unusual and extraordinary inter- nal sensations. I felt like a set of complete chemical reactions,-the kind that Tommy Pope used to give us. My brain began to whirl. I reeled, the sidewalk came up and hit me, and I lost consciousness. Then a wonderful thing happened. It was again last October, and I was standing in the center of, a Vast and barren plain, which stretched away to plus and minus inhnity, and then back on the other side. Near me was a large hole in the ground, beside which stood this sign: ALL HOPE ABANDON YE WHO ENTER HERE. MASS. INST. OF TECH NO L OG Y capyfwffff 1904. 0. L. ADAMS. All 'writer fffef Wd. The place looked familiar, so I descended and knocked at a door which bore the sign Registrar's Officef, The door opened, T621 I and before I could speak a little red demon rushed out with a whole pile of attendance, Bursar and registration cards, a fathom of roll slips, Y. IVI. C. A. notices, and the rest of the outfit. Assum- ing my most supercilious air, which I have learnt from the janitor at the Gym., I spoke. Excuse me g I come not as a student,', and I handed him my card, on which I had written as many degrees after my name as space and imagination allowed. With each degree his chilliness thawed a little, until his manner seemed 300 C warmer. Bowing low, he asked in humble tones what he could do for me. I told him I had come to observe the history and experiences of the Class of 1905 for the ensuing term. I-Ie bowed again and conducted me through a long, dark pas- sage to where thirteen doors led ofii the ninth bearing the sign No Admittancef' These, he said, are the doors Where the different courses enter, each has its own guardian fiend, who oversees the torture of the victims, the routes are diiiicult and beset with pitfalls and exams, and each has its own particular torments. These fiends are assisted by other fiends and imps known as Destructors and Assistants I will first show you those fiends who torment the Class of 19o5. We entered a spacious room which was wholly lighted by the luminaries who were seated within. The room was frescoed with F's and L'sg in the centre was the Herian spring of knowledge, whose waters welled out into a small C, from which the water was carried in sieves to the students. The only pieces of furniture were hard wood logarithmic tables, upon which the Iiends were inclined in various postures. In one corner Professor Dewey was conducting a monoply sale of syllabuses at twenty-five cents, marked down from a quarter, payable in U. S. or Bursar,s bonds. Professor Norton, with his head in a water jacket and his feet in a hot mustard bath, was determining the thermal equivalent of two pints of Chapel's Delight. C. Frank had a like a halo, around his head, to keep the train of his being sidetracked on his own theorems. Peabo was railway curve, thoughts from all snarled up in a discussion of whether the curve of metacenters really met anything, and if not, why not? Dr. Moore was trying the effect I teai Q5ec5nique 1905 Qfecijnique 1905 ofa mixture of I-ICN and I-IAQI-I on Ethyl Acetate. I saw, also, many other familiar faces. Now, said my guide, I will show you some of the rooms where the torments of the class takes place. We now entered the Chemical Laboratories, where the smoke and fumes were so thick that nothing could be seen. I asked my guide if the fumes were not injurious to health. No 5 quite the contrary, he assured me. Nothing better could be imagined. It is so admirably fumigated that no germ can live here. We then ascended and descended innumerable flights of stairs, which, my guide told me, in strict con- fidence, were arranged by him and Dr. Tyler so that a student might get enough exercise to keep himself on the verge of sickness until the end of the term, when a judicious arrangement of exams is sup- plied to lay him up for the vacation. The severity of the exams are adjusted to the length of the vacation. We now entered a room where drawing tables stretched away as far as the eye could see, and over which students were suspended fby Faculty vote, from the ceiling in a horizontal position by an ingenious arrangement of pulleys and ropes. It keeps them tied down to business, commented my companion. We again descended to where machinery of all kinds was mak- an unearthly din, and where a tremendous dynamo was supplying the F for Maj to operate a monstrous machine called the Lanza Improved I-Iigh-Pressure Three Phase Triple Flunk 5.60 Plunk Differentiatorf' into one end of which students were fed head first as V, and from the other were ejected as dV. Finally we came to a hole in the ground, through which smoke and flame were issuing, and looking below, I beheld the glow and roar of countless fires, and felt the hot rush of gases on my cheek. My guide looked at me. Is your courage good ? he said. This is the Mining Lab., the worst torment we have yet devised. My heart failed me, but I replied, Proceed. I cannot describe the horrible sights and agonies that I beheld below. In front of roar- ing furnaces, from which issued dancing jets of flame, stood those whom a terrible fate had consigned to this gruesome place. The heat was unbearable,-even above the highest limit of a Siebeck IG-ll pyrometer. My hair was singed, and before I could turn and Hee I was beginning to sizzle and boil. As I regained the outer air, I noticed a pleased smile on the face of my guide. This is our chief joy and delight. When life seems dull, when flunks are coming slow, and C's are coming fast, when students seem con- tented with their lot, we always have this as a resort. I-Iere we can always find comfort, and gratification. Now, he said, I must leave you. Yonder on the right are the members of the Junior Class, and you may accompany them for the rest of the term. I must return to keep an eye on Powers, to write the President's opening address, and to invent new ways for establishing the importance of my position. And turning a double back somersault, he disappeared in a cloud of sulphur and brimstone. Then, before the phantasmagorical retina of the dreamatory cavities of my brain, hovered sundry incongruous and incoherent visions of the events of last term. The first thing I noticed was that an annual malady, known as Class Elections, affected the Class. Each member had a mental delusion that he wanted an office for himself or for some particular friend. The effect of this disease was to give those that sought office a swelled headf' and the oHice was to go to him who devel- oped the largest. The trial was made, the candidates placed back to back, and, lo l Amberg towered far above the rest 1 The next scene I beheld was in a large field beside the river Charles. Crowds of students had come to see Field Day, the annual contest between the Sophs and Freshmen. The Juniors have won the day twice, and now did their best to help the Fresh- men to victory, but the Freshmen were defeated. The Sophs are an inferior class, who, from intellectual incapacity, or willful igno- rance, made the fatal mistake of coming to Tech a year too late or too soon, and both the juniors and Freshmen endeavor to show them their folly. Then I beheld Tech night at the Columbia. The crowd helped out the management by kindly offered suggestions, and showed their appreciation by cheers and comments, till I was reminded of some of Arlo's or Crosby's lectures. IGSI Qfeclinique 1905 ecBnique Then the scene changed, and I beheld the Class Dinner at the 1905 Union. Fond as Tech men are of eating, We all were Willing to stop to Witness the efforts of Whittemore to absorb his cigar or of the cigar to absorb Whittemore. Whittemore Won on a foul. Next, in rapid succession, and with kaleidosocopic effect, fol- lowed phantoms and phantasies of the Week of Christmas fussing, the Tech hop, and concert, and the Weeks of plugging before the exams. And then came the exams themselves,-those terrors alike to the sport and grind. Now, I am not a psychologist, and do not even ride a bicycle, yet, for some reason, psychological or Lodge- ical, the Very thought of exams must have jarred some of the sub- vacuum cells of my superexaminated brain, forI regained conscious- ness and looked around. I was in my room at home, with many anxious faces about the bed. The doctor, looking very serious, wasjust saying : I-Ie must be kept very quiet. No, he will not be able to return to Tech this year. ,W -ij - 'i ' I V w --V W L-I...lf ,'71T 7'33J:'fl.2l I Tl- ':g,,, Jigga! 'ii -J: xlfj-is ,...is - 4 ff -U VA, -TF ix M -fi ' V V, g,.'g --' ,JY- b . -' ju, ' N, ,wx -- :L1g?.Tf '- .,,.., f, , ,1,- -W .L f ,, , Z -:J--.2 - amy, ,I ,,- Y V :QL 2,11 -VIJ1 'L L 2'?rxfQ43L,- ip: ', ,'7g3g , - --fr -- -1- wif Q -u A in-it x.. - ,Ins fm- 7 1 ,- , , W- ..-:- 1' - - 1 f .-. eiifif -ww wf '--' 'A--1-4-an-:ww--1 1,715--f , . ... I v. .IA .74 iff, , 1- . hi - . fi ,I1,7.pf-Y--m1.f.r,, -1,,,1.g5 - ,.:,.,,,,gg,: ,-ki WMV, ' - ---- ,,' f' '-'-- f 'T J' T ' Y Q-, , -,rv 1:11 -L-2 'T 74:5 V-V . .A -' .,-ffl' -,,l1e:-- x, -Li--,.,.'-?'m , -,--::-- L . A Y - 1auL , ' ' Y ,, ggriiz l-V W , - , 7 - -Qiilg Y ,.,, ' - E661 -. j 1 fr Lf: 2 f Q. ,X SN fyjg V! fl 1 r JW ' -5 ' 1 X f ' f J: X cf Us f f f j f 'W-f 1 QA J 6 54, 4 f m 34, iff f 42 1 ffywrgjf' W1 wi , U +' 3 f wb- any f , FL ilk Jfffif f. L, Mil? J n Q f f w .1 wx KX479! fvfffb' if 1 We f ' T 531133 fd 'ff L f 1 'W lf I f Q0 ffffiif ji xxk'-WY . fi!! - - w2::Vjl4 1 If f f,,, MK 5 , J'l'1 'Wi!1 .- ,X If If A XYU W ff If L Kxj L Q, , iff '9 '1R5'W ff'f 1 R - X 'J X f 4'?Mf'f94w'f' 'WY N M- 5 f 35 A ? :yy Pr , ,,,' ,-,if ,4 X ww l 3 U -M X ' I I f X 1 5 Q ,,,f V! N ,lf x SQ, if 'Qi f QNX!! QV 1 ,f FXS!!! X l f I L j,f K w X I H g, 5 , xfrff f X' ,qs X ,A ,A . fn- lfxi K ,fff, ' iw ,, A- fix f gif ffgzgf f 5 X f + f ' Qiif-gy?-QQ? ,- x Biff, 4 Q K 4 1 f LEA' jj!-,r f ef - el gg LZ A' L, 'fn 1: f 68 Chas of ineteen unbreb anb Six Officers JOSEPH THOMAS LAWTON, IR. President MAXWELL ALANSON COE Vice President ANTHONY PAUL MATHESIUS Secretary ANDREW HAMILTON KELEHER Treasu rer 'N Executive Committee GUY CARLETON SIMPSON HERBERT JAMES MANN 'fm Jnstitute Committee CHARLES FREDERICK W. WETTERER ERNEST MAXWELL SMITH I A DETAILED COURSE OF QUALITATIVE TECHNOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF 'OG SUBSTANCES, WITH EXPLAN ATORY N OTES. PREFACE. THE author desires to express his great indebtedness to Prof. A-th-r A. N-y-s, P. D. Q., for his valuable services in regard to the general features of the work and for his numerous suggestions, which have been of great service. THE PROCESS OF ANALYSIS. REDUCTION OF THE SOLUTION. Proceflurr.-To the original solution add one year's experience at Tech, dilute with a summer's vacation after several rigid examinations. Add F until the solution has begun to decrease rapidly in volume. If it decreases 70 T1?EATAIE1VT OF BASEBALL AJVD EP1CU1?EA1V GRO UPS. too rapidly try a petition. Add L until the solution turns pale, P to one half the volume, C sparingly. Filter and wash, adding the washings to '07, Notes.-1. If F is added in excess a great deal of trouble is caused in further work, and in some cases the student must begin over again. 2.--The petition is very seldom successful 3 too much reliance must not be placed upon it. 3.-The original solution is usually green, but it gradually loses its color in the process of analysis. SEPARATION OF THE BASEBALL GROUP. Prorezlzzre.-Treat the C1 P2 L4 FOO precipitate with a mid-year vaca- tion. Return and add a class meeting. Produce a letter from the Advisory Council allowing no class baseball teams. Add immediately a vote of 515100 for baseball. IVoz'fr.-1. At this point the baseball element appears to be exceed- ingly prominent. 2. After neutralizing with a few days' practice this element may be readily reduced, leaving a precipitate which combines, forming a team. 3. The superiority of this compound was easily proved in the spring of 1903. PRECIPITATION or THE EPICUREAN GROUP. Prorcdzzre.-After the 33100 treatment add several weeks, a Sophomore dinner, and a vote not to molest the Freshmen at their dinner. Add a trip to Gloucester in an auto, in search of a class president and toastmaster. Add a successful 1906 dinner. Discard disgusted 1905. Notes.-1. The following reaction takes place: '05 dinner-P member of Faculty : vote not to hinder '06 dinner. '06 dinner-P trip to Gloucester : disgusted 1905. 2.-Any Tech dinner -l- Prexy: dissertation on German student life. SEPARATION OF THE ROUGH HOUSE GROUP. Prornlzzrrf.-Allow the solution' to work for several weeks. Then to a dark night add a 1906 flag and some patriotic spirits. The next day add A1VAL TSIS OF FIELD DA T GROUP. 71 the whole undergraduate body and some bags of Hour. Then add some rushes, the Dean, a broken wire, a Tech editorial and two lawsuits. Col- lect the residue. Notes.-1. At this point in the procedure great care should be used to avoid the watchman. If the experiment is correctly carried out the spirits should not be detected. 2.-It should be noted that the action of the flour is simply catalytic, causing greater muscular activity. 3.-The Dean is added to prevent, as far as possible, too much effer- vesence. 4.-It is to be observed that nothing could go on without a Tech editorial. Procedure.-After collecting the residue allow it to settle down a little, then subject it to some rigid examination, filter and wash, discarding the washings as before. Spread out the residue all over the country and leave it for several months. Collect, add Sir Walter, roll slips, attendance cards, etc. Add practice for Field Day, a tie score with the Harvard Freshmen, class meetings, assessments and an excess of Arlo. Wait until November seventh. Notes.-1. The settling down process is by way of preparation for the examination. If some of the lighter elements do not settle down, the examinations are not so satisfactory. 2. In that case make a more complete washing. 3. Sir Walter is a rather unpleasant compound to deal with, and should be put under the hood: 4. The practice for Field Day will be severely criticised by the Tech. ANALYSIS OF THE FIELD DAY GROUP. Procedure.-Add Charles River Park, acidify with a 1906 bannerg warm to boiling point. 1. This precipitates a 1906 victory. 2. The following reaction takes place. lVI. I. T. '05 'l' football : 17 72 PRECIPITATIOIV BQ' TECFI NIGHT. IVI. I. T. '07-l-football: 0 M. I. T. '06 l-relay: IVI. I. T. '06 ffirstl 'l' - M. I. T. 206 -l- Tug 0' War: same reaction. Adding, M. I. T. '06-l'Field Day: IVI. I. T. '07-victory. 3. It is evident at this point that the Tech's argument is forcibly refuted. TECH NIGHT PRECIPITATION. Procedure.-Remove to the Columbia Theater. Add 1906 enthusiasm. Then add dainty chorus girls with '06 flags. Add more enthusiasm and some class cheers. If Hush, adjourn to Charlie Wirth's. Nates.-I. The Solution at this point becomes more or less cloudy. PRECIPITATION OF TECH EDITORIALS. Procedure. After considerable time has elapsed, subject to more exam- inations, return, and add another Tech editorial to neutralize the above. Notes.-1. The effect of physics and calculus should be carefully noted in the report. 2.-The editorials are for the purpose of arousing interest in the elec- tion of the 1906 TECHNIQUE Electorial Committee. This experiment proves very effective. Check up lab. drawers and go home. . 1 N . 1 . ,-.WH...,.,..,,...f.,.,...,., .... .,.....f-mn,V.,.,,,m,,..,,m,,HWNW,wfffffffffwmffmmm W2 --2211 : 'lf Mff, ? F. ww 2 2' . W X ,ff 1' , X ' -1 ,5 5 ' 2, 'hill' ff :WZ Gm-X5 W Vx 4 S M 11.-A.I ff 1 M , wx. W ff' . -Q 4 2' 5 .eul 1. . wk V V 1- . m . -51:41 1 I f 11 My ',.:f.i fZ1'1ggf4N1, W ' fy - . ml m l-7 J ' Af' . ' ff J f ' 2- i,V: f 'J Tr I 43 5' I i 5. L ' -14' -H 5 'rm' , ff XM 1. K.. 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Q?f!' f , w 1 , JiH, N1 Hwl J Aw 'L JJ J N 4 13'- F 'bp Hg - 31: ' - WI.'IJA ' .iii yi Q, --nm . 3 Q ,. mm. .1 J V, C N' N +R ,P S 41 hfjfkk 1, X f 'N , W .AL Wy Jr , I w f X - : X6 5 ff f , I , 41' Lftigg Q' -T255 J ri H fi! TW fi' f y YQ 5 ' I1 Wm .4514 ' H 4 YN! ,ly S1 UI. V4 ,eff ,' Q '1 A 'W MN XX '51 'U niv '1 Xx X 1 :N g 1 in X I 0 9 I N, YN X ,fy R' ly, l. Y . x 1, sl yn -, , , - N ' 1 - , gi. L, wf. .. ..-.v .t , ' '. X N 1, 'n'. 5' Q x C: ,41 1 - fm f Q A X ,:f1L f: Cfams of inefeen unbreb cmb fgeben bfficers GEORGE WILLIANI QTIS President ALEXANDER MACOMBER Via' President JAMES HQLLAND IVIULCARE Secretary GEGRGE APPLET ON GRIFFIN vTrea5urer 'N Qirecfors ' ERSKINE PHILLIPS NOYES ORRIN VVILLIAM POTTER N Jnstifufe dlommiffee RICHARD CHESLEY ASHENDEN ERSKINE PHILLIPS NOYES E741 fjresljman Bass Eisforg XXX UST when the history of the Class of 1907 began is an un- known quantity. The first time that we cameitogether was when we took the Prelims, which had been held up to us during the previous year, and for which we had been working nearly as hard and worrying more than if they had been the final trials for a place on the relay team of our prep 'I school. Next year we again met, and tried to establish the reputation of our old teachers. In September we wrote again with those who were taking all the examinations at once, we then tried to avoid conditions, and thoughtfully strove to fool the instructors by passing OH: first term's work, about which we knew nothing. On the 29th of September, 1903, those of us who had received notice that we were admitted to the first class, began our real acquaintance with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. I think that my experience of the first day or two is not very different from that of the other fellows, so with due respect to them I will tell what happened to me. The afternoon before the school year began I walked into Rogers corridor, and after gathering an armful of subject lists, roll slips, tabular views, attendance cards and other registration stuijr, started to find a place where I could puzzle out what was required of me. I got hopelessly tangled up, and was just about to give it up as a bad job when an upper-class man, out of the kindness of his heart, offered to help me. Together we worked out a program until we came to chemistry, and then he sent me chasing all over the 'Stute to find Tommy Pope, and ask him if I knew enough to know that copper gains weight when it is burned. After a few other such difiiculties were settled we had it arranged, I75l eclinique 1 905 and I went home satisfied that in four years I would have an S.B. after my name and a dozen positions awaiting me. That night some one told me that I could take shop-work, and as I wanted to get my money's worth I rearranged my program, and the next morning handed in a new set of cards. About a week later I received a notice that my program would be accepted when I had changed the greater part of it. Through many mistakes and changes I had, by the time it was satisfactorily fixed, visited nearly every Math. instructor, and was grateful for having escaped Miller and Vvells, and was quite content to settle down with MacDonald. Tech opened September 30th, and that afternoon we learned who f'Free Hand Charlie was. I-Iis reputation was sustained and his popularity assured when he told us that we could have a portfolio of his Letter Plates for f2.00, and that old ones were of no use to us, also to pay 31.50 fora coupon,'and when we had learned to use our instruments and materials he would give us Notes on Mechanical Drawing, covering what we already knew. After this lecture was over we paid about 525.00 for our materials, and were ready to commence work. The Hrst week was an interesting one. We decided that Tech was a cinch, got mad at Sawyer when he said that our work was rotten, but laughed when he told the next fellow that his plate was a curiosity, the next that he ought to stop dreaming about the South Sea Islands, the next that he didn't know anything g and so on. We cursed the stairs that we had to climb to reach Chemistry and Drawing, and wished that the bannisters were free from knobs, so we could slide down. We decided that Blanchard did not know anything, that Talbot was all right, that the little instructorn in Chemistry was easy g that the language teachers would do, and that Foljambe was the best man in the drawing rooms, we found that dodging cars on Boylston Street could be made to furnish some ex- citement, and that we had three Co-eds. We learned the pleasures of sitting on Rogers steps and found where Chapel was, and the uses and location of the U Cage. In short, in a week we had learned for thought we had, which is the same thingy all the little points ofinterest about our class and section. I76l The Y. M. C. A. gave us an invitation to come to the Union one night to hear some people talkg meet our classmates and pro- fessors, have something to eat and become acquainted with the Tech songs. We went, and although we missed our Co-eds we left our bashfulness outside, and had a pretty decent time. We were glad to know our fellow-prisoners better, and to find that the pro- fessors could take off their class-room manners and have a good time with the boys. We heard President Pritchett for the second time, and were won by his simple, sensible talk. We knew that he was our friend, and we vowed that we would work for such a President. About this time we had a class meeting. Most of us did not know the candidates, so they stood up in a row, and the class voted for the ones they thought best fitted for the positions. Otis was elected for his good looks 5 Middleton for his business-like mannerg Rood because he seemed to have the self-assurance necessary to collect money, and the Constitution committee for their pugilistic appearance. The call for money and for candidates for the teams came at about the same time. I donlt know whether or not there is any connection between the two, but the fellows who don't play have to pay, and the ones who play generally have the better time., Wood- ward was the busy man where football was concerned, while Wonson called a roll every afternoon to see how many strong men had taken a bath. Noyes, however, was the energetic man, failing to find a coach for the relay team he decided to save the money for the Class, and did the work himself Daily he stood and watched the candi- dates as they ran around the Gymnasium or the track at Charles River Park. '07 bravely entered into the Fall games, and won enough points to show that in an all-round meet they could give a good account of themselves. On October Illtll we had a jolly good time at our dinner. The various things in which we should be interested were presented by the upper-class men, while each person gave us enough of his history to make us know our Class better. It was an enthuiastic gathering but our spirit had largely disappeared before Field Day. l77l Yieclinique 1905 Qieclinique 190 5 Field Day was sad. Briefly, the record was: ,06 flags were displayed on the field, they won the football game 17-0, the relay race by Hfty yards gy the tug-of-warin less than a minute, and easily beat us. After the last event was over both classes marched back to Boston, and by the brilliant scheme of running through Beacon Street, 707 gained possession of Rogers steps. They could have held them easily if their natural politeness had not forced them to allow some side of the In the enjoyed ,O7,S weak attempt at making a noise. The football men sat in one place, the tug-of-war team in another, the runners in still another, while the remainder of the Class was scattered. The result was that any feeble burst of cheering was entirely drowned. Kid fashion, ,O7 delighted in the use of bean-blowers and other things indicative of their inclinations. ,O7 was certainly badly beaten in everything that day, but the experience and the criticisms women to come out of the building, thus leaving one steps defenseless. evening everybody went to the Columbia Theater and will certainly be of benefit to us. About a week after Field Day we got our first reports, and they were almost as encouraging as the contests had been. The F's were particularly prevalent in Chemistry, and one section swears that the papers were never examined at all, but simply marked F in wholesale lots. Rather frightened by this report we settled down to work and to save money for Xmas, when we knew that we would have one whole glorious week in which to loaf. Thanksgiving Day was a short one, and we spent it largely in eating and sleeping. Christmas came, and although we would have preferred the next week we made the best of it, and spent it in fussing and other innocent diversions. We were given a royal welcome at home, and the good people were much surprised to know that we had not changed during our con- tact with the dreadful Institute of Technology. After Xmas came the Indoor Meet, and the glorious victory of '07 went a long way toward cleaning up Field Day. ,O7 got a first or second in every event but one, and beat all classes in the military T781 relay race. Noyes and Barrows were the mighty Freshmergzecgjlfquk Noyes winning six points and Barrows five. With our eleven points from the team race we defeated '04 by twelve and a half points, '05 by thirteen and a half while the poor little Sophs were left behind to the tune of thirty and a half to twelve and a half Looking back on the first half of our course we find that it has, atleast, been a splendid experience for us. We came from C' prep school, where we had done well in studies and athletics, and were rather inclined to have swelled heads. This feeling was increased when we were told that the entrance examinations for us had been harder than ever before, and that we were 'fa survival of the fit- test g we thought that if we had done well previously, without doubt we could get through Tech all right. The half year has taken such ideas Hom our heads, and has shown us rather eH'ectively that we must work, and work hard, if we expect to succeed. We have found that there is a gap between prep school and college, and that very different methods are used in the latter from those in the former. lt has shown us that Chemistry does not consist in making beautiful color combinations, but that it means hard work. VVe have seen that the work is going to be severe, but we know that others have done it, and why cannot we? During the half year we have not met all of our classmates, but we know some of them, and are glad to call them friends. On the whole we have enjoyed it, and shall remember with very pleasant feelings the first part of our course at the Massacliusetts Institute of Technology. 1 I l7Ul 1905 Q Arwen is D2 il .f-3 'iff xxiv 3 XX Z 'Q I :S S4454 'Q T 1? If -2- vi' 1 'E -'W 'Q A- 5 .Ly P -Qjt5e qgreefz Better fraternities REPRESENTED AT Qifje QYtamsacBu5etts jmstttute of Ceclinoliogg . IN THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTABLISHMENT 1855 1857 1858 1859 1859 1860 1863 1864 1865 1866 1868 1869 1871 1872 1874 1875 1876 1877 1882 1882 1882 1882 1883 1883 1884 1884 1884 1886 1886 1886 1888 1889 1890 1891 1891 1891 1891 1892 1892 1893 1893 Gamma Eta Lambda Xi Omicron Psi Theta Kappa Rho Zeta Mu Omega Chi Sigma Sigma Gamma Gamma Delta Delta Zeta Zeta Theta Theta Zeta Psi Alpha Theta Alpha Gamma Alpha Zeta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Xi ' Alpha Nu Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Beta Sigma Alpha Alpha Upsilon Alpha Phi Alpha Chi Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Kappa Kappa Alpha Alpha Alpha Eta Eta Lambda Lambda ,gigma CIN dwapter Qloff' Ohio Wesleyan University University of Mississippi . Indiana University . . . De Pauw University . . Dickinson College . . . University of Virginia . . Pennsylvania College . . Bucknell University . . . Butler College .... Washln 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 I . Mass. Institute of Tech. . 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 . Univ. of Southern Cal. . Cornell University . . . Pennsylvania State College Vanderbilt University . . Leland Stanford, Ir., Univ. University of Illinois . . Miami University . . . Hobart College .... Dartmouth College . . Kentucky State College . Delaware, Ohio University, Miss. Bloomington, Ind. Greencastle, Ind. Carlisle, Pa. Charlottesville, Va Gettysburgh, Pa. Lewisburg, Pa. Irvington, Ind. Lexington, Va. Granville, Ohio Evanston, Ill. Hanover, Ind. Hampden-Syd.,Va. Ashland, Va. Lafayette, Ind. Danville, Ky. Ann Arbor, Mich Cincinnati, Ohio Boston, Mass. Columbus, Ohio Beloit, Wis. Lincoln, Neb. Bloomington, Ill. Madison, Wis. Lawrence, Kan. Austin, Texas New Orleans, La. Albion, Mich. Berkeley, Cal. lVIinneapolis,Minn Los Angeles, Cal. Ithaca, N. Y. State College, Pa. Nashville, Tenn. Palo Alto, Cal. Champaign, Ill. Oxford, Ohio Geneva, N. Y. Hanover, N. H. Lexington, Ky. L83 J 1893 1894 1894 1895 1896 1896 1896 1897 1899 1899 1902 1902 1903 1903 Alpha Rho Nu Nu Epsilon Mu Mu Phi Phi Tau Xi Xi Omicron Umicron Beta Phi Rho Rho Alpha Eta Tau Tau Upsilon Upsilon Lehigh University . Columbia University . Columbian University . West Virginia University University of Pennsylvania Roanoke College . . Missouri State College University of Chicago . University of Wooster . Lafayette College . . University of Maine University of Iowa . . Washington University University of Washington ,sigma Clif Bethlehem, Pa. New York, N. Y Washington, D. C Morgant'n, W. Va Philadelphia, Pa. Salem, Va. 4 Columbia, Mo. Chicago, Ill. Wooster, Qhio Easton, Pa. 4 y Orono, Me. Iowa City, Iowa St. Louis, MO. Seattle, Wash. ALPHA THETA CHAPTER Established 1882 Sratres EDWARD TAYLOR BARRON SYDNEY ATMORE CAINE FRANK STEELE CRAVER JOHN CHARLES DALY, JR. JOHN DONALDSON CHARLES WICKERSHAM ELMER CHARLES ALVIN EMERSON, JR. LEROY BERNARD FAYMONVILLE WILLIAM BURDER FERGUSON, JR. THORTON MERIWEATHER GILMER FRANK DAVID HALL 1 CARL MARTIN WILLIAMS RALPH CURTIS JORDAN JAMES ALLEN KANE HERMAN VVILWLIAM LAVCKMAN WILLIAM HUGH LALLY MORTIMER LIVINGSTON NAGEL ALBERT SENIOR PRINCE . GEORGE AUSTIN QUINLAN , WILLIAM CLEMENTS RINEARSON, JR JAMES HAMPTON ROGERS ROSS PELTON SCHLABACH CLAYTON MILLER SIMMERS Srafres in llrlie LEON GILBERT MORRILL WINTHROP ALEXANDER ARTHUR FRANCIS BARDWELL JONH ANDREW CURTIN WILLIAM WORCESTER CUTLER WINTHROP DAHLGREN JOHN ASHLEY HIGHLANDS l84l JAMES STUART NEWTON ARTHUR SEWALL PERCY LUCIUS SPALDING TYLER EDWARD PAYSON WHITMAN EDWIN RUTHVEN STILWELL RHODES GREENE LOCKWOOD 311 Beacon Street ' V' V: E Vqfvyrgpv N A - H I'-W: 4, ' - . ,Z S if-. ' 'ff 15 X V 113. .,.N,x--xy-,E .. -Q , x XT V ,z 7 x f , X A W , , wxcwwgx x . W N VQ V Y QTWJQ' , 3 , ?7..x.5,5,iL ff hmmgm 5 1f?' ' , . 11-QA-.,,-' af ,x -tiff x if y , K 4,..,Il , J D f 5 1,f x I K ty x fs X t X :szzx..x,sx-xxu.. f Qfliefa 36 Cwapter Qigofl' A Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . B Sheffield Scientific School . I' Stevens Institute of Technology . . A Massachtisetts Institute of Technology . E Columbia Schools of Engineering . Z Sibley School of Engineering . Troy, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. Hoboken, N. J. . Boston, Mass. New York, N. Y. . Ithaca, N. Y. ISSJ Q:Befa Xi DELTA CHAPTER Established 1885 giraffes in facuffafe HARRY ELSWORTH CLIFFORD HENRY GREENLEAF PEARSON ERWIN FERDINAND BENDER CARROLL CARY CURTIS ARTHUR DE WITT C CURTIS ROCKWELL G CHARLES EDWARD HOWES ROY GUTHRIE KENNEDY ARTHUR HUMPHREYS 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 ESGJ Srafres FREDERICK ELLWOOD LANGENHEIM ROY FISK LOVEJOY HAROLD KAY JVIERROWV BENJAMIN MADERO JULIO JVIADERO CLARKE EDWARD WARREN LARK RAY Srafres in Zltfie CHARLES HAYDEN CHARLES BURTON HOWE EDWARD 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 ALLEY 137 Coolidge Street, Brookline 1711-0:41, PJ11iJf1 Qeffa Q9 Slwapfer Qoff A Columbia College .... A University of Pennsylvania . E Trinity College . . A Williams College . CD University of Mississippi Y University of Virginia . E Sheffield Scientific School . . . T Massachusetts Institute of Technology . New York City Philadelphia, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Williamstown, Mass. . Oxford, Miss. Charlottesville, Va. New Haven, Conn. . Boston, Mass. lS7l Qelffa mai TAU CHAPTER LOUIS GUSTAVE BOUSCAREN, JR. KENNETH HULEERT DISQUE HARRY WALKER DONALD HENRY LINCOLN GREEN GEORGE BATES HARRINGTON ANDREW HOPEWELL HEPBURN BRADFORD BUTRICK HOLNIES CYRUS HENRY LOUTREL KENNETH OLWELL MAJOR BENJAMIN NIELDS, JR. ORRIN WILLIAM POTTER JOHN RANDOLPH REYBURN EDWARD MINOR RICHARDSON WILLIAM HAMPDEN SAGE, JR. ALLAN SEYMOUR NORMAN LESLIE SNOW EDWARD THOMAS STEEL, 2D. ROBERT EDWARD LEE TAYLOR JULIAN MAY WRIGHT 6 Louisbzzrg Square T851 x - .'x:,.x'1- .TNI ' 4, W . , , w,f.gv..knx-NNLyLli3u.x V, I .77 Jing.. 5 .eff f A B I' A E Z H GJ I A M N O P Y -4 CID X YI' 435i Q36 Gljapfer 3043? University of Virginia . . . llflassachusetts Institute of Technology . Emory College . . . . Rutgers College . . Hampden-Sydney College . Franklin and Marshall College . University of Georgia . . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . Qhio State University . University of California . . Stevens Institute of Technology . University of Texas . . . Cornell University .... Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University Lafayette College . . . Woffo1'd College Amherst College Dartmouth College Lehigh University . Charlottesville, Va. . Boston, Mass. . . Oxford, 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. . . Easton, Pa. . Spartansburg, S. C. Amherst, lylass. . Hanover, N. I-I. South Bethlehem, Pa. ISUI Bi QQBI B E T A C H A PT E R Established 1890 JAMES LEE ACKERSON LAURANCE MONTJOY BUCK NEIL DAVIS EMERSON JOHN EVANS JULIUS AUGUSTUS FURER ALFRED W. GEIST, JR. VVILLIAM CLARKSON GIFFING FREDERICK BERTINE GUEST LUCIUS FELT HALLET ROBERT STAVELY HAMILTON SIDNEY MORGAN HENRY EDWIN BRUCE HILL JOHN HANIPDEN HOLLIDAY, JR EMORY GILFILLAN HUKILL EDWIN ROLAND HUIN'IPHREY JAMES MCCLURG LAMBIE CHARLES GREELY LORING LEWIS BOWEN JNICBRIDE NATHAN ATHERTON JVIIDDLETON THEODORE PARKER MOOREHEAD FREDERIC NICKERSON GEORGE HARDY POWELL RUSSELL PETER RAYNOLDS EDWIN LAWRENCE SMITH JVIERRICK EUGENE VINTON, JR. 261 Newlzurhm' Street K90J 'I X 17 J 'o.f.,7v5f1q?5, ' ffl' 1 . z.. F f f m Phi Theta Xi Sigma Gamma Psi Upsilon Chi Beta Eta Kappa Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau lXfIu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Chi Delta Delta Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epsilon Sigma Tau Tau Lambda Alpha Phi Delta Kappa Tau Alpha Sigma Rho Qeffa rffiappa Clgpsifon dwapfer C3035 Yale University Bowdoin College Colby University Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Brown University University of Mississippi . . University of North Ca University of Virginia lVIiami University Kenyon College Dartmouth College rolina . Central University of Kentucky Middlebury College University of Michigan Williains College Lafayette College Hamilton College Colgate Universit College of the City of University of Rochester Rutgers College De Pauw University Wesleyan University Renssalaer Polytechnic Adelbert College Cornell University Chicago University Syracuse University Columbia College . University of California Trinity College . Y N evv York Institute University of lvlinnesota . Ivlassachusetts Institute of Technology . Tulane University University of Toronto University of Pennsylva lVIcGill University Leland Stanford, Ir., U nia . niversity 1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 1850 1850 1851 1852 1852 1852 1853 1854 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1870 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1898 1898 1899 1901 1902 i911 effa .Rappa psiI?onJ SIGMA TAU CHAPTER Established 1890 giraffes in Sacuftafe ALFRED EDGAR BURTON ARTHUR JOHN AIVIBERG CHARLES LYMAN ANSON JOHN FORD CARD ROBERT KEEP CLARK CHARLES WOLSTON COFFIN THEODORE AUGUSTINE DISSEL EMMET JOSEPH DWYER HENRY DOUGLAS EATON DAVID ELWELL CHARLES JOSEPH EMERSON EDWARD CHESTER GRANT WHEATON IRA GRIFFIN PHILIP EDWARD HINKLEY ROBERT RISHWORTH JORDAN GEORGE VINCENT WENDELL giraffes WILLIAM JARED KNAPP CURRIER LANG NORMAN LOMBARD ANDREW OTTERSON IVIILLER BLAINE HESTON MILLER GEORGE WILLIAM OTIS STEPHEN KENDALL POOLE EARL HOWELL REED, JR. WINSLOW DAVIS ROBINSON WALDRON PAGE SCHUMACHER ERNEST MAXWELL SMITH PRESTON MORRIS SMITH HERBERT MYGATT WILCOX CLARENCE BENTON WILLIAMS Sratres in llriie THOMAS BUTLER BOOTH HOWELL FISHER WILLIAM STUART FORBES ISAAC BREWSTER HAZELTON WALTER HUMPHREYS ALLEN WINCHESTER JACKSON HENRY ORLANDO IVIARCY, JR. LEONARD METCALF BENJAMIN F. W. RUSSELL WILLIAM OTIS SAWTELLE MAURICE DE KAY THOMPSON, JR. JOHN ALDEN TROTT EDWARD AUSTIN TUCKER RALPH SPELLMAN WHITING 21.5 Newburgv Street I92J x , . J 2' ,f 1 rffiff' 1 EQ ,jifff w1?5!1IQ1Wgfj,1, 7 ,nf iM1fanpg::sEs R-I WWII ,....,... WW ff . JA Z IW fplii Qgefa Gpsifon LOCAL AT TECHNOLOGY E931 Q96 RICHARD CHESLEY ASHENDEN GEORGE EDWIN ATKINS FRANCIS GEORGE BALDWIN MAXWELL ALANSON COE EDGAR BAILEY COOPER PHILIP GRENVILLE DARLING WILLIAM FRANKLYN ENGLIS SAMUEL ARNOLD GREELEY ERNEST HARRAH WALTER TURNER HOOVER GEORGE RUTHERFORD ANTHONY HARRY NELSON ATWOOD STEPHEN BOWEN RICHARD BAKER DERBY GEORGE ISAAC FISKE SUMNER HATHERLY FOSTER ANDREW DANIEL FULLER DURELLE GAGE DAVID EDGERTON GREY GEORGE WELLINGTON HAYDEN i , G efa Gpenfon Established 1890 Sratres WALTER AUSTIN HOPKINS MILTON TURNLEY LIGHTNER WILLIAM COOLBOUGH MARSH ANTHONY PAUL MATHESIUS ALBERT MANTON READ BERTAM ALLEN RICHARDSON LEBARON TURNER WALTER HAYWOOD TRASK, JR. WILLIAM MARTIN VAN AMERINGE JOSEPH DAMON WHITTEMORE giraffes in Zlrlie SHELDON LEAVITT HOWARD HARRY GEORGE JOHNSON GEORGE WHITEEIELD FAY REED THOMAS PENDLETON ROBINSON CHARLES ADRIAN SAWYER, JR. RALPH EDMUND SAWYER WALTER MULLIREN STEARNS WILLIAM COOLIDGE THALHEIMER JOHN GIFFORD THOMPSON WILLIAM EATON WEST HENRY THORNTON WINCHESTER E941 237 Beacon Sireet TH.-yy 1834 1838 1847 1847 1847 1852 1852 1856 1857 1858 1860 1865 1865 1869 1870 1873 1876 1880 1880 1885 1885 1885 1885 1886 1887 1888 1890 1891 1894 1895 1895 1898 1898 1899 Qeffa upsifon Founded at Williarrzs College, 1834 Williams . Union . Hamilton Amherst . Adelbert . Colby . Rochester Middlebury Bowdoin . Rutgers . Brown . Colgate . New York Cornell . Marietta . Syracuse . Michigan Northwestern Harvard . Wisconsin Lafayette . Columbia Lehigh . Tufts . De Pauw Pennsylvania Minnesota Technology Swathmore California 41Z5apfer Soft' Leland Stanford, lr. . Nebraska . lVIcGill . Toronto . Williamston, Mass. Schenectady, N. Y. Clinton, N. Y. Amherst, Mass. Cleveland, Qhio Waterville, Me. Rochester, N. Y. Middlebury, Vt. Brunswick, Me. New Brunswick, N. J Providence, R. I. Hamilton, N. Y. New York City Ithaca, N. Y. Marietta, Qhio Syracuse, N. Y. Ann Arbor, Mich. 1 Evanston, Ill. Cambridge, Mass. Madison, Wis. Easton, Pa. New York City South Bethlehem, Pa. West Somerville, Mas Greencastle, Ind. Philadelphia, Pa. lvlinneapolis, Minn. Boston, lvlass. Swathmore, Pa. Berkeley, Cal. Palo Alto, Cal. Lincoln, Neb. lllontreal Canada Toronto, Canada t95l effa psifon TECHNGLOGY CHAPTER Establi.fl1edl891 Srafres in Sacuftafe FRANK VOGEL LOUIS DERR gratres MIGUEL AHUMADA, JR. RUTHERFORD BINGHAM ALBERT SHIRLEY BLACK ARTHUR WILLIAM BLAKE FRANK STEPHENSON DANFORTH ALBERT HENRY DONNEWALD CHARLES DEAN KLAHR FRANCIS FIELDING LONGLEY HUBERT JVIERRYWEATHER WILLIAM DUFFIELD BELL IVIOTTER, JR. HOWARD J. JVIORTON ROBERT PORTER NICHOLS CHARLES LORING RODGERS ROBERT WYNDHAM SEYMS DONALD ARGYLE STEWART SIDNEY TALBOT STRJCKLAND GILBERT SANDERS TOWER WALDSO TURNER JAMES RICE WILLIAMS GEORGE MORRIS WINNE EDWARD THRASHER WILLIAMS giraffes in Urfie JOSHUA ATWOOD, 3D. GEORGE PHILLIPS DIKE CHARLES DUNN CHARLES WARREN HAPGOOD JOHN WINSLOW HORR WILLIAM SPENCER HUTCHINSON FRANK BALDWIN JEWETT PHILIP JOHN KEARNEY ARTHUR SAMUEL KEENE ALBERT LINCOLN KENDALL WALTER ELBRIDGE PIPER THOMAS GLEASON RICHARDS MILES STANDISH RICHMOND GARDNER ROGERS JOHN CARLTON SHERMAN V CLIFFORD MELVILLE SWAN ALFRED BALL TENNEY EVERETT PENDELTON TURNER HOWARD CHUBBUCK TURNER HARRY WARREN UPHAM WILLIAM CORTELYOU WHISTON 264 Neu'b71r5' Street 5963 ,YHOGDKD fiiiqxg, 5 AQ, f M44 f J 9 Q milfs M f Q f favfgyflg Q? Eg:-7' ea, ' f ff' RQQAQI' M gf ',. sfr' 2 X X W' f WED W ff K 21' , ig: N-., V, -' g ,Q 4.1 'if ' . 55, Aki, -' 41, 1 F' 'V 'A ?5i 4u V 3, '1 'Ji 1' Y if X' M W TY if f 4, 3 , -. f if ,L -' ' .VV L, ZS: IiY':..iV , 'fb Q: 1 1 7? 115X'k 'Z iii? igi wi , I 'U X, T p :QA ,A ', 25:5 '.. , - v 'M R4 1 -' - -, !'?J V ,j 'iw v- FH- f' igma Fplla pefifon Founded in 1856 at fillabama State Uzzizfersity, Tuxralo Maine Alpha Massachusetts Iota Tau Massachusetts Beta Upsilon Massachusetts Gamma lvlassachusetts 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 Cljapter Qjoff 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 . om, Alla. 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, Ill. Champaign, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Richmond, Ky. Russelville, Ky. Lexington, Ky. Clarksville,Tenn. Lebanon, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Knoxville, Tenn. Sawanee, Tenn. f97l Tennessee Eta Alabama Mu Alabama Iota Alabama Alpha Mu Mississippi Gamma Missouri Alpha MissouI'i Beta . Nebraska Lambda Pi Arkansas Alpha Upsilon Kansas Alpha Texas Rho Colorado Chi Colorado Zeta Colorado Gamma California Alpha California Beta Louisiana Tau Upsilon Louisiana Epsilon hlinnesota Alpha Wisconsin Alpha Southwestern Baptist University University of Alabama . . Southern University .... Alabama Polytechnic Institute . University of Mississippi . University of Missouri . Washington University . University of Nebraska . University of Arkansas . University of Kansas University of Texas . University of Colorado . Denver University . . Colorado School of Mines. . Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of California . . Tulane University .... Louisiana State University University of Minnesota . University of Wisconsin . WILLIAM HAROLD WARNOCK igma fplja psifon Jackson, Tenn. Tuscaloosa, Ala Greenboro, Ala. Auburn, Ala. Oxford, Miss. Columbia, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. Fayetteville, Ark Lawrence, Kan. Austin, Texas Boulder, Col. Denver, Col. Golden, Col. Palo Alto, Cal. Berkeley, Cal. New Orleans, La Baton Rouge, La Minn'Olis, Minn Madison, Wis. MASSACHUSETTS IOTA TAU CHAPTER ROLAND HUNNEWELL BALLOU CHARLES Ross LITTIG ASA JONES BIGGS fTenn. Etaj WILLIAM NEILSON HERMAN OTTO BLATT WILLIAM BRENTON BOCOS CHARLES REID BOOCS WILLIARII HOSMER EAGER JOSEPH HALL FEEMSTER, JR. WILLIAM GREEN NATHAN JACKSON GIBBS . CARL HERMAN GRAESSER JOSEPH KENTIGERN HEYDON HAROLD GARFIELD HIXON CARL ALFRED HOUCK HENRY GEORGE NICHOLAS UTAR JAMES NICHOLAS CLARENCE A. NEAL ENIO. Alphal OCTAVIUS LIBBEY PEABODY FRANK EDWARD PAYNE GEORGE WILLIAM PRENTISS EDWARD FARNUM ROCKWOOD HENRY CHRISTIAN SCHAEFER RALPH LEROY SEGAR JEAN PHILIP VARIAN LEWIS GAIIIALIEL WILSON fTenn. Zetail flvlass. Delmj msg 263 Newbzzrgi Street Q Nx 7 f rv A X N , 1? -'g W K XM-ff 4A .X 1 I Mug fyflar pf, ,fa X , f 0 f 7 4 f L, 'jx 4 A6 Hum 0 ll Z 'N X 1.5.1, . - - f 717 V ff f lf. ' Li I 'IMI L' qw Wall u X I Xxx f ' ' Wu L 5 x f E x i 4 I f SYS E 2 , , f-g if' 'jx . -' 1 - ffgx X2 X . ga V X XfJ N !! IN W Em X - A 27 'Z Z 5 X WW' JW' E '-in WY X 7 by x. '- M 5 w QW , v +A- U. MOU ay, W 'H' ' - Nc-.lm ' K, 'kv Q! X sa W x flnww f gif X I N A42 w 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 liplii amma Qeffa E,vt11L!i.rh ed 1 848 dltjapter Qloft? 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 . . . Wasliington and Lee College Ohio VVesleyan University . Indiana State University . Hampden-Sydney College . Yale University . . Ohio State University . . University of Pennsylvania . University of Kansas . Bucknell College . . Denison University . VVooster University . Lafayette College . Wittenburg College William Jewell . . University of California Colgate University . Lehigh University . . Pennsylvania State College , Mass. Institute of Technology Cornell University . . University of Minnesota Richmond College . Johns Hopkins . . . University of Tennessee . Vlforcester Polytechnic Institute New York University . . Amherst College . . . Trinity College . VVashington, Pa. Greencastle, Ind. Russelville, Ky. Salem, Va. Charlottesville, Va. Gettysburg, Pa. Meadville, Pa. Hanover, Ind. New York, N. Y. Crawfordsville, Ind. New York, N.Y. Bloomington, Ill. Galesburg, Ill. Lexington, Va. Delaware, Ohio Bloomington, Ind. Hampden-Sydney,Va New Haven, Conn. Columbus, Ohio Philadelphia, Pa. Lawrence, Kan. Lewisburg, Pa. Granville, Ohio WOOStC1', Ohio Easton, Pa. Springfield, Ohio Liberty, Mo. Berkeley, Cal, Hamilton N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. State College, Pa. Boston, Mass. Ithaca, N. Y. Minneapolis, Minn. Richmond, Va. Baltimore, IVId. Knoxville, Tenn. VVorcester, Mass. Univ. Heights, N . Y. Amherst, Mass. Hartford, Conn. 5991 Chi Mu Phi Iota Lambda Nu Chi Mu Omega Mu Sigma Tau Delta Nu Sigma Nu Theta Tau Delta Xi Delta Alpha Iota Pi Rho Chi Epsilon Alpha Theta 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 . University of Alabama . University of Texas . Adelbert College . Purdue University Brown University . Chicago University . University of Michigan iplii amma . Schenectady, N. Y . Madison, Wis. . Champaign, Ill. . Lincoln, Neb. . Columbia, MO. . Orono, Me. . . Seattle, Wash. . Hanover, N. H. . Syracuse, N. Y. . Tuscaloosa, Ala. . Austin, Texas . Cleveland, Ohio . Lafayette, Ind, . Providence, R. I. . Chicago, Ill. . Ann Arbor, Mich effa IOTA MU CHAPTER WALTER GEORGE DE STEIGUER HAROLD CLAPP STETSON WINFRED ALBERT TAYLOR RAYMOND WARE WALTER BREVOORT WYMAN JAY WILLIAM WILLIAMS, JR. ERNEST GAIL SCHMEISSER MERRITT BEACH MERWIN ROBERT RAND JAMES BENIDICT PACKARD EMIL WILKINSON EVERETT SHACKELFORD CASON FREDRICK CLARK DURANT, JR. QUINCY PIERCE EMERY FREDERICK LYLE HIGGINS ELMER ALLEN HOLBROOK RALPH OSBORNE INGRAM FREDERICK SCHUYLER KRAG JOSEPH THOMAS LAWTON, JR. BEN EDWIN LINDSLY ALPHEUS LYON MARK GRAHAM MAGNUSON HERBERT JAMES MANN ROBERT EUGENE KEYES PHELPS NASH SWETT 74 Marlborouglz Street L 100 1 PAUL MCCLARY PAINE THOMAS COULSON PINKERTON LANE SCHOFIELD i'OX 1 vi. 'WPH U F - M 6 4 2,-f ELu EITT. PHD.:-I 1873 1888 1889 1891 1893 1896 1897 1897 1899 1899 1899 1900 1901 1902 1902 1903 1903 1903 qflji ggfigma Rappa dlfjapter Qgoff Alpha 1VIassachusetts Agricultural College Beta Union University Gamma Cornell University Delta West Virginia University Epsilon Yale University Zeta College of the City of New York Eta University of Maryland Theta Columbia University Iota Stevens Institute of Technology Kappa The Pennsylvania State College Lambda The Columbian University lV1u University of Pennsylvania Nu Lehigh University Xi St. Lawrence University Qmicron 1VIassachusetts Institute of Technology Pi Franklin and Marshall College Rho Queens University Sigma St. Johns College Qloff' of dlfufiaa A The New York Club 1889 The Boston Club 1897 The Albany Club 1900 The Connecticut Club 1901 The Southern Club 1902 101 HAROLD GILLILAND CRANE Q93 fgigma Kappa OMICRON CHAPTER Esfablislzed 1902 1-iratres WILLIAM ARTHUR KERIPER WILLIAM STRACHAN GOUINLOCK THOMAS BARLOW HOLMES RALPH NINIS WHITCOMB JOHN DELANEY MCQUAID ' HARRY TEBBETTS ROLLINS WILLIAM WALTER CRONIN fIo2J CHARLES LAKE DEAN GEORGE CHOATE FURNESS EDWARD MASON READ, JR. FREDERICK EUGENE BANFIELD, JR FRANKLIN RIPLEY, JR. Srafer in Zlrfie ARTHUR NELSON HASTINGS 197 Longwood Avenue, Brookline Qeffa Qian Qeffa Established at Bethany College, 1859 CBapter Qlofl' SOUTHERN DIVISION Vanderbilt University University of Mississippi Washington and Lee University Emory College University of the South University of Virginia Tulane University . . Columbian University WESTERN DIVISION University of Iowa University of Wisconsin University of Minnesota University of Colorado Northwestern University Leland Stanford, Ir., University University of Nebraska University of Illinois University of California University of Chicago Armour Institute Technology Baker University 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 Uhio State University Wabash College University of West Virginia EASTERN DIVISION . . Allegheny College . . Washington and Jefferson College 103 P Y Q BA BM BN BO BX IT FE FZ Stevens Institute of Technology Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute University of Pennsylvania Lehigh University Tufts College Nlassachusetts Institute Of Technology Cornell University Brown University Dartmouth College Columbia University Wesleyan University Qeffa Qian Qeffa BETA MU CHAPTER FRED HATHAWAY ABBOTT ROBERT HARBISON BOOTH CLEM CLARE CARHART FRANK MILTON CARHART FRANK SPENCER ELLIOTT ROBERT lVIORSE FOLSOM ARTHUR PETERSON GERRY FRANK EMMONS GUILD GEORGE FOSTER HOBSON ARTHUR GIBSON BIXBY FRANCIS MINOT BLAKE GEORGE VVILLIAM BRYDEN VVILLIAM LOUIS CREDEN HENRY BODGE PENNELL iiratres HENRY FRANCIS LEWIS ELLIOTT LUM FRANK LEE NILES EUGENE PHELPES WILLISTON CANFIELD RICH ARTHUR SCOTT THOMAS FREMONT NELSON TURGEON VVILLIAM HENRY PRENTICE WRIGHT BARTOLETTE ARTMAN YODER giraffes in Z.1r13e GEORGE BATCHELLER PERKINS FREDERICK POND SIMONDS FRANCIS FAY HILL SMITH WALTER SOHIER CLIFFORD MOLINEAUX TYLER RALPH BENJAMIN YE RXA 21 flflarlba rough Siren' 51043 ' . . 1U' QMYX 1541 ff' NXNf'XWfFf 4252417 , , Y! ff! ,- 3 ?- 2 .Nw Q9 . fm H Il u. M V N my X F' ' 1, ew YH x , W 1 JM Qfliefa C51 Faunded at Norwich University, 1856 Cbapfer Qljloff' Alpha Norwich University Beta Massachusetts Institute of Technology IIOSII Gsm Bi B E T A C H A P T E R Establisbfd 1902 CHARLES MORTON HUTcH1NS EDWARD RUDDOCK HYDE CHARLES EDWARD JOHNSON BURTON WARREN KENDALL PATRICK JAMES KENNEDY, JR JAMES VVILLIAM KIDDER CLARENCE EMMET LASHER HENRY DELANO LORING ROLAND EVERETT PAGE RALPH OMER REED PAUL BARON WEBBER EJOGJ Alpha Chapter Beta Chapter Gamma Chapter Delta Chapter Epsilon Chapter Zeta Chapter Eta Chapter Theta Chapter Iota Chapter Kappa Chapter Lambda Chapter Mu Chapter Nu Chapter Xi Chapter Omicron Chapter Pi Chapter Rho Chapter Sigma Chapter Tau Chapter Upsilon Chapter Phi Chapter Chi Chapter Psi Chapter Omega Chapter Alpha Alpha Chapter Alpha Beta Chapter Alpha Gamma Chapter Alpha Delta Chapter Alpha Epsilon Chapter Alpha Zeta Chapter Alpha Eta Chapter Alpha Theta Chapter Alpha Iota Chapter Alpha Kappa Chapter Alpha Lambda Chapter Alpha Mu Chapter l Alpha B u Chapter H951 RGPPG Sfccma dlijapter Qioff University of Pennsylvania . College of New Jersey . . Lafayette College . . . Washington and Jefferson College Dickinson College . . . Franklin and Marshall College University of Virginia . . Centenary College of Louisiana Columbia College . . . Lake Forest University . . University of North Carolina . Tulane University . . Cumberland University . University of Mississippi Centre College . . Harvard University University of Illinois . Lehigh University . . Randolph Macon College Northwestern University . Richmond College . . Racine College . . Pennsylvania State College . Haverford College . . . VVashington and Lee University University of Toronto . . West Virginia University . University of Maine . . Armour Institute of Technology University of Maryland . . College of Charleston . University of VVisconsin . Vanderbilt University . University of Alabama . University of California . . Mass. Institute of Technology Georgia Institute of Technology Philadelphia, Pa. Princeton, N. I. Easton, Pa. Washington, Pa. Carlisle, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. Albemarle Co., Va. Jackson, La. New York City Lake Forest, Ill. Chapel Hill, N. C. New Orleans, La. Cumberland, Tenn. Oxford, Miss. Danville, Ky. Cambridge, Mass. Urbana, Ill. South Bethlehem, Pa Ashland, Va. Evanston, Ill. Richmond, Va. Racine, Wis. State College, Va. Haverford, Pa. Lexington, Va. Toronto, Can. Morgantown, W. Va Orono, Me. Chicago, Ill. Baltimore, Md. Charleston, S. C. hladison, XVis. Nashville, Tenn. Tuscaloosa, Ala. Berkeley, Cal. Boston, Mass. Atlanta, Ga. I I fplii ,Kappa ,giqma ALPHA NIU CHAPTER frafer in Sacuffafe WILLIAM H. WALKER giraffes FLETCHER HAMILTON BURKE CHARLES FRANCIS UNDERHILL THOMAS BRECKINRIDGE CABELL ARTHUR CUTTS WILLARD EDWIN THOMAS WOOD frafres in llriie J. E. BEARD W. E. BENSCOTER G. G. CROCKER f108:I Qlfplia Qeffa Q25 'SSRN ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONI fl091 QU3pBa effa qglli Alumni Afssaciation at Technology ARLO BATES . . FERNANDO MOREND BLOUNT JAMES lXfIARTIN DE NIALLIE . AUSTIN DICKINSON JENKINS . FRANCIS HENRY KALES . LEON MURRAY PEASE . . CHARLES HUNTINGTON SMITH FRANK LAMONT SNOW . GHMAR STEPHEN SWENSON . GEORGE WILLIAM C. WHITINO I 110 1 Bowdoin College Yale University University of Rochester Williams College University of Wisconsin Kenyon College Western Reserve University University of Rochester Dartmouth College Johns Hopkins University P i oiriiiueia raiaptirreiaiaiririueei 5 ieaaiaiai 531 eiyrri ab 6 s,3,'?j: N - ,, V .., X5 i Y. 'l-N' : X . if-111.1-.v'1' si-fi :if-' 2 ' ,' I T. , u Alpha Chi Rho Beta Theta Pi Dflta Kappa Epsilon Theta Della Chi Kappa Aflpha Kappa Sigma Sigma Xi Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Phi Bam Kappa Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Pri Phi LNYII Them Chi Psi Edward H. Lorenz, Robert Calvin Bisbee, William Dexter Clarke, Frank Logan . Stuart L. Walcott, Albert W. Wells . Grant Ford . . Edward F. llfloody, William W. Ammen, John A. Spilman . Allen Ashley . . H. B. Thornson . William G. Houslceeper, Clarence B. Powell, T. P. Bedford . William P. Bentley, Grant Ford . . Edward H. Lorenz Elmer W. Wiggins, Byron H. Clingerman, Arthur S. Douglass, Nlaurice B. Landers, Clark D. Simonds . Eugene YV. hilason, Jr., Trinity College Bowdoin College Amherst College Indiana University Wabash College Dartmouth College Amherst College Bowdoin College Johns Hopkins University Virginia llflilitary Institute University of Louisiana University of Pennsylvania Kansas University Central College Trinity College Amherst College Trinity College Amherst College Wittexmberg College VVesleyan University Hamilton College hdiddleburg College Brown University 51113 w o ' w - f N 1 ia, ,ff-Pig?j 4' 'FRATEENITIE5o e M4 ,EX .1 f .. No. of Members Sigma Chi . . . . 23 Theta Chi 12 Delta Psi . 19 Chi Phi . . . 25 Delta Kappa Epsilon 28 Phi Beta Epsilon . 20 Delta Upsilon . . 19 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 26 Phi Gamma Delta . 28 Delta Tau Delta . 18 Phi Sigma Kappa . 13 Theta Chi . . . 11 Phi Kappa Sigma . . 5 Other Fraternities represented 18 Total . 265 PERCENTAGE OF FRATERNITY MEN AT TECHNOLOGY Year No. of Men Per Cent 1885-86 52 8.5 1886-87 42 8.9 1887-88 42 6.1 1888-89 45 5.4 1889-90 93 10.8 1890-91 158 16.0 1891-92 184 17.1 1892-93 207 18-8 1893-94 191 16.5 1894-95 201 16.9 1895-96 192 16.2 1896-97 189 15.8 1897-98 173 14.4 1898-99 189 16.1 1899-00 216 18.4 1900-01 213 17-9 1901-02 245 17.1 1902-03 274 16.9 1903-04 265 17.3 51123 3 I gwwmhxaiv M49 .ibmwra 'Q-has W 51 Q' firm- ima' My ' M WARREN ULYSSES CHASE BATON STUART WELLS BENSON WALTER GREGORY BENT MOSES BROWN, JR. HENRY POPE CARRUTH EDWARD MAY COFFIN FRANK EUGENE DIXON ROBERT FAULKNER QTIS DWIGHT FELLOWS, JR. WALTER ELBRIDGE. HADLEY Established 1 883 Cwlemiiers CHARLES ROGERSON HAYNES REGINALD HAZELTINE CHARLES WISWELL JOHNSTON WILLIAM HERBERT KEEN CLARENCE RONALD LAMONT MARQUIS EDGAR MASON JAMES HIGBIE POLHEMUS GUY CROSBY RIDDELL JOHN WHITMAN SHAW ROBERT LIBBEY YOUNG Eonorarg QQ1emBe1-5 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. HOFIXIAN G. RUSSEL LINCOLN ARTHUR D. LITTLE RICHARD W. LODGE F. JEWETT MOORE SAMUEL P. MULLIKEN JAMES F. NORRIS ARTHUR A. NOYES THOMAS E. POPE HENRY S. PRITCHETT ROBERT H. RICHARDS GEORGE W. ROLFE WILLIAM T. SEDGEWICIQ JOHN W. SMITH HENRY P. TALBOT FRANK H. THORP WILLIAM H. WALKER WILLIS R. WHITNEY 51143 X .711-Ira. PMI. LEWIS B. NICBRIDE FRANK D. HALL . GEORGE W. C. WHITING SIDNEY MORGAN HENRY Officers President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Cmemliers JAMES LEE ACKERSON EDWARD TAYLOR BARRON HARRY WALKER DONALD CARL FRANCIS EDWARDS VVILLIAM BURDEN FERGUSON, JR FRANK DAVID HALL ROBERT STAVELY HANIILTON SIDNEY MORGAN HENRY ANDREW HOPEWELL HEPBURN EDWIN BRUCE HILL JOHN HAMPDEN HOLLIDAY, JR. LEWIS BOWEN NICBRIDE BENJAMIN NIELDS, IR. GEORGE AUSTIN QUINLAN SAMUEL SEAVER ROBERT WYNDHAM SEYMS HENRY S. SHERMAN CLAYTON MILLER SIMMERS JOHN ARAIISTEAD SPILMAN VVALDSO TURNER ALEXANDER PHILIP VV.-XDSWORTH A. W. WELLS GEORGE WILLIAM C. WHITING fllij J ,f.l- K , . EEE If JI WEI ER P L,-r 1 fu x R-1 my in J K R: . 1 5- 1 p I -. 5 J , Wi - n ' ji, , .xii i f J! gl. HQ E 111 - A --A :EW 'M - A -1 Aw . 1 1. I D If N, , rua ffr w' .2-1' ' , A 11 .mi 1: 5 , . 2 . ,A I .-I, 2 .-.- N i if 'N X . .-f.,'.. 5ffE35f QA,h - -ff . I -1 , ,f , . AIX ' M' 313119: W 11, - ,QA WS ,JGQSSQ f-MQ,,v .QQ 1,133 1135 1 ., . , r 0 V ' 1' L I 5- AWE WQRWGAMRN GUY? Chief . . Chiefs Daughter Mfzlicine Man RENSHAW BORIE SAMUEL SEAVER E. T. STEEL, 2D. Council of War JOHN H. HOLLIDAY, JR. W. D. B. TVIOTTER JR. l T. MORRIS POTTS MEMBERS RENSHAVV BORIE M. BRYANT BOWMAN H. W. DONALD JOHN H. HOLLIDAY, JR. ROBERT H. W. LORD W. D. B. NIOTTER, JR. T. MORRIS POTTS 1 9 0 6 MIGUEL AHUMADA, JR. EDGAR CLARK BALLOU R. BINGHAM ARTHUR W. BLAKE LAURANCE M. BUCK H. K. DISQUE L 116 J 1905 LOUIS E. ROBBE H. F. SCHAEFER SAMUEL SEAVER ROBERT W. SEYMS E. T. STEEL, 2D. SIDNEY T. STRICKLAND WALDSO 'FURNER R. H. DOEPKE NUGENT FALLON ALLAN SEYMOUR DONALD A. STEWART HAROLD STREET WILKINS JULIAN M. WRIGHT M. E. VINTON, JR. KS 1 V, x g ff V T X- nies . i 2 ' - A, ff T 2. X M I-QT' Q Q , f - '1J 'f,, ffl ' , .- -'49 - - 'IQII.IL,t ,,,,, IJDDXNJW .. ..-. .Wx mgugff' I I . l1. r1,,.. , ,Q u- I T . X- R A,,,...,.I.n i .aw T'- 1- ., '-L fr EEN King Arthur . . . -. Q D LQ I ID? A I . MELVILLE BRYANT BOWMAN ,Queen Guinever, WILLIAM DUI-'FIELD BELL MOTTER, JR. Merlin . . Sir Galahad . Sir Launcelat . Sir Gawain . FERDANDO MORENO BLOUNT MELVILLE BRYANT BOWMAN JAMES S. BROWN HARRY WALKER DONALD HONVARD IVIAURICE EDMUNDS EDWIN BRUCE HILL JOHN HARIPDEN HOLLIDAY, JR ROBERT HOWARD WM. LORD . . . WALDSO TURNER KNIGHTS . HARRY WALKER DONALD . JOHN HANIPDEN HOLLIDAY, JR. . HOWARD MAURICE EDMUNDS '54 THEODORE PARKER NIOOREHEAD WM. DUFFIELD BELL IVIOTTER, JR SAMUEL SEAVER ROBERT WYNDHAM SEYMS EDWIN L. SMITH SIDNEY TALBOT STRICKLAND LE BARON TURNER WALDSO TURNER Img 18 T842 qgamneb Qing HERE lived in the west land A young man who knew his love for Science, Nature's foster daughter. Straightway, he sought his Love, Journeying eastward. The roar of wheels, the onrush challenge of bells, And the low-keyed retreat of the bells passed by, Were the music that told him of his Love, And of her ways with men. For a time he sought and wooed, And in the ending Meii shouted, for they said he won, But he knew he lost. His eyes once could see his Love's splendor openly, but now His vision was darkened by a veil of close-printed pages. It was with bitterness That he found he prized the luster Of the thirty pieces of silver above the radiance Qt' the Pawned Bridels Ring. l Be QMS Sfjom N view of the fact that the Tech Show has in five years grown to be one of the big events not only of Junior Week, but of the entire year, and since no record, aside from the programs, has ever been kept of the Show, a short history of its begin- ning and subsequent growth may be of interest at this time. Mr. Allan W. Rowe, '01, one of the originators of the Tech Show, in response to an invitation of the TECHNIQUE Board to tell of the Show, says :- The Tech Show was not, as is sometimes now taken for granted, the unlooked-for outcome ofan accidental condition. It was the realization of a long-cherished l dream, made possible by an oppor- tunity. I have asked the friend whose dream it was, before yet it had the smallest beginning in fact, to tell Tech of the origin of our ' Show.' The following is the an- swer received to my request :- 'For many years there had been a growing realization and re- gret in the minds of the friends of Tech as an all-round place of edu- cation, that the school had no social center, little social inter-relation among its students, and next to no social standing in the eyes of the community in which it was situated. The scientific and educational stand- ing of Tech were beyond question from the first, but the students of wi I 11111 Qfecljniqu 190 5 6 Tech were unquestioningly classed as grinds U by youthful Boston at large, -as men neither fitted for nor desir- ous of social opportunities. It is true that the fraternities, the musical clubs, 4 the teams, gave occasion for a few of the men to meet otherwise than on a scholastic basis, but these occasions were few and limited. Socially Tech was inchoateg and this fact could not be without serious effect on youth the most plastic of whose years were passed at Tech, and whose so- cial ideals and social manners were largely formed by the opportunities of those years. By social opportu- nities is not meant occasional chances to enjoy a dance or to eat a dinner. There is meant the natural mingling of the youth who are transient visit- ors to a city with the everyday sports and pleasures of young life of the residents of that city, a mingling that is possible only when the visitor has some power of returning the pleasures offered him by other pleasures distinctively in his gift. Tech has no dormitories. The merry, chaperoned afternoon teas or informal musicales of other colleges were impossible to the men lodged in boarding houses. True, the musical clubs and the fraternities offered limited facilities for this sort of entertaining, but how about the immense majority of men who lack musical talent,-or, what is as much to the purpose, the occasion to make its possession known,-and the men whose pecuniary limitations make fraternity life a forbidden luxury? Nor was this all. No college which lacks at least a temporary social centralization ever fully develops that april de corpy which means, among other things, material prosperity, since the gifts of the materially suc- cessful among its old grads come largely from the sentiment born KIZOJ and fostered by the social associations of the undergraduate career. 'For all these reasons social centralization at the Institute seemed, to one friend of the Institute at least, a thing worth striving for. A proposed Minstrel Show in 1899, concerning whose details this friend chanced to be consulted, furnished the opportunity for at least experiment with social centralization. The experiment was tried. The result was the first Tech Show.' ff Such is the account given by the friend of Tech of the Show's inception. From my own knowledge I may add a few details. The opportunity for the first great Show was a minstrel. show proposed by a few students in 1899. The opportunity-it is not too much to say, perhaps, the howling need-of this minstrel show, was the acute crisis in the chronic impecuniosity of the Athletic Association. Like Mr. Richard Swiveller, the ofiicers of the Association were obliged to go out of town in order to cross the street, such was the importunity ofthe creditors from whom the Association had bought its medals in the past, and of the athletic young gentlemen to whom medals were long overdue in the present. It was purposed to give a minstrel show in Huntington Hall for the modest admission fee of twenty- five cents. A suggestion to charge fifty cents was voted down, as involv- ing liability to a suit for obtaining money under false pretences. The friend above quoted was consulted as to the details of this scheme. The final outcome of that consultation was the giving of the first Tech Show in the I-Iollis Street Theatre on the after- noon ofthe 1Qth of May, 1899. The tottering reason of the student man- agement of the first Show at finding itself in the I-Iollis Street Theatre, with some thousand dollars' worth of liabil- 51213 CecBnique 1905 receipts for about a thousand dollars V tai et' ities waiting for immediate settle- ment, was only saved by the knowl- l 0 tlteaa. . 9 5 1:' wggeggag :Q 5 edge that a blank check was in the ma sie an ia :Af Qnzyg 0-ffz,s5Zgi9,4,J, 5553 AXV W't A12f Shaw zijn lf 25 598 9,74 312 ,,, f X ,ffiz an 5 , t, Ze 9 fa r wr ai 3 v Q2 'WEEM ,WE ,av 1 ye hands of the manager in chief, re- sponsibly signed, waiting the event of failure of the Show to meet ex- penses-so great faith did the friend of Tech have in the resources of Tech, competently handled. What the feelings of the management were on waking next day to find Tech ranked, in the phrase -of an inhu- ential newspaper, 'in the front of the front rank of college entertainers,' and to find in its trembling hands ,:. -arf are a:zSQ,,i.JQ, rag :ggi ,., ,,,,' A 'egg av ig' 555: ' Ts .- -- ca. A... 1 M, ,, T334 . 1:-viyfaf-nr 'H' t ,t-- wwf fgi1!5?.Lw esp' 1. -QA. ms, .Y- T 'aaa Q ' ,-za' ' ,. . s , .Y f , 1 3 w t,- . , . ',.y,:n,,f A-, , , , , , 2- ' .,, f' 53 ' . ' ffs v--fQ '-. - g , - , v- ,j.j:2' nQ. H -.gf -.F 1 -:-2' .- .M 2:' y f f X. ' . 3 'cf Y ,,:-1,:Qg,,gf' if - - .-' ' ' V ' . -. ,ii ,fr , 4 1 1 5 :' 4 az---'ew a-as 2 . 5 1' ' ' lg swf- , '- - ri: J ' -figix . f f gig:-1-,T 3, :-'-.a'sf:'4zQ1:5q1- :arise-' 4-am A . 13521.-5x.z93,ig:ag 1 W 'f-1--aw, . w.fa-'12-7:-1.g-'-'.-,mfr 1. -:.1f,r'12f::az-sw - , .JF ' l ,iz 1- .v.a.-1-:f-,.p:f:f,:- o c:-.,,:,Q, -' .5 -.. afa:., . f ,- 3 l 'M W, V ' 2 , ' ' . f' -13 '- . ' - k ,433 gjlw afxpm- . X , '- -' vat Ma and a check for several clean hun- dreds over and above all bills, may be left to the imagination. Tech also came awake on that day to several other matters of importance, namely, that it had in its undergraduate ranks, singers, dancers, actors, who compared favorably with any talent that any of the show-giving colleges had to boast, also, that among one's classmates and fellow-students in general there were a hundred or so gifted and likable men who, up to the first rehearsal of the Show, had been to their fellows merely names in a catalogue, but henceforth would rank as friends and fellow-workers and record-breakers. Discoveries, these, worth to Tech at large far more than the hundreds of dollars to the agonized Athletic Association. It may be added that these dis- coveries are made anew year by year, and that their value does not diminish, also that they will be made so long as there obtains, in the conduct of the Show, the policy inaugurated by its founder,- absolute democracy in its handling the best part to the best man, impartial outside expert judgment deciding who is the best man. The first Tech Show took the form of a minstrel performance, -plus, the 'plus' being the very unusual value of the musical H1221 selections written for the Show by distinguished Boston composers, and then given their first public hearing. I y No one, I am sure, more vividly remembers or more gratefully acknowledges than do the members of the Tech Show undergrad- uate committee of 1899, under what close and accurate direction of the founder of the Show, its coaches and its pecuniary advisers, the committee brought the occasion to such a memorable success. The Shows of 1900 and 1901 were, respectively, ' THE MEDICINE MAN,, a comic opera whose characters were with one exception, ' Indians with the bark on,, and ' THE GRAND DUKE,' by Gilbert and Sullivan, on this occasion given its first presentation in America. It remains to be added that the coaches of the Show have been, from the date of the 'Medicine Man' to the present,- Mrs. Janet Edmondson-Walker, Stage Director, Mr. John Mul- laly, Musical Director, Mr. John Coleman, Master of the Ballet. Mr. Rowe does not give the name of the friend of Tech,', but we feel that it is only right that every Tech man should know who was the real founder of the Show, the one to whom our respect and appreciation is due,-Mrs. Evelyn Greenleaf Sutherland. The show for 1902 was HAPPLIED MECHANICS,,, by Mrs. Janet Edmonson- 'iii W S ii T S i CC Walker. It was distinctly different from -A its predecessors in that it was written for the occasion, and contained many ideas 1 and songs of Tech men. The 1903 Show was even more local and approached more nearly the ideal Tech Show. It was a U A SCIENTIFIC KING,,, by Gerald Francis Loughlin, log, and was unanimously considered the most suc- cessful performance held up to that time. This year's show, however, by John A. Fremnier, '04, is the best typical show yet presented, as it is practically all the work of Tech students. HPr1I28l0g'5f3L 1 0 s K . BGIEKTIFIG KIH6 , Mat1nce,HoI11s-Strcci 'lihcgtre 51233 Cecljnique 1905 Qieclinique 1905 51244 The Tech Show has grown not only from a Minstrel Show to an original comic opera, but the business management has im- proved to such an extent that in the same theatre and with the sarne two performances the profits of the Show have increased from several clean hundreds to more than a thousand dollars. Such has been the develop- ment of the Tech Show. As Mr. Rowe says, Its history has been one of continual and waxing suc- cess, and such will be its history so long as the original policy holds sway over its fortunes,-'The best place to the bestmanf H sam w ge Qfw .fy u ' M Cv 1 x T J, 'TLV 'V' -arg' F5 LQ 5 Brawl, asf if -if xl if 'Cnr-1.K. fI5Befics ECHNOLOGY has succeeded in Athletics during the past year. Though its teams have not all Won championships, they have been victorious in many contests and have failed in none. 'The Track Team has done far better than in recent years, and the Cross-country, Basket Ball, and Fencing Teams have made good records. Despite the fact that the 1903 Field Day fell short of former standards, and that the Freshman- a Sophomore Baseball Games last spring Were G' ,r,.BUC,mG,,,,M poor, there has been a great improvement both in the teams and in the interest taken in them. This im- provement has been due chiefly to the management of the Athletic Advisory Council. Its policy has often been criticised, but results J. B. RILEY E. F. JENKINS R. S. FRANKLIN L 126 J IE. L. OVINGTON have already vindicated both its conservatism and econ- omy. By any other course the Track Team could have had neither coach, training table, nor athletic rieldg and without these our victory at Hanover and our success at Worcester last spring would have been impossible. Also the victory of the Cross- county Team over Amherst J . F. MAHAN last fall may beqpartly attributed to the same cause. Furthermore, during the past year, the Advisory Council has approved the M. I. T. A. A.'s taking charge of the All-round Athletic Con- test g and has promoted the purchase by the classes of a new class-championship cup. Another impetus to the general interest in athletics has been the issuing of certificates by the Advisory Council to those men entitled to wear Technology emblems. The Athletic Advisory Council has devoted the main part of its resources to track athletics, and it is of our record in this branch of athletics that we have most cause to be proud. Though the class games last spring showed that we had good material out of ATA L B TURYER which to make a team, our victory in the Dual Meet at Hanover was a surprise both to Dartmouth and to many Tech men. It was the vic- tory of an evenly developed, carefully trained team, con- taining few stars, and made up mainly of great men-one for which both the men and coach Nlahan deserve great credit. R D ENIFRSON L 127 J QfecBnique 1905 QfecBnique 1905 Q The same is true of ' the team's record in - the N. E. I. A. A. Meet at Worcester, in which it gave Wil- liams a hard race for second place. The Winning of the Cross-country Race With Amherst was - 'P - START - CROSS-COUNTRY RACE XYITI1 AMIIERST there are men at Technology who can and will run, if they are given only a chance to train, and are backed by a little enthusiasm from the rest of us. The loss of' the Relay Race with Georgetown at the B. A. A. Games this Winter was a disappointment, but it must be realized that the Technology team ran a good race, and that its defeat Was to some extent due to lack of experience in indoor running. The Work of the Fencing Team has been good. Indeed, considering the number of naval cadets at Tech, there is no reason Why it should not be. The Basket Ball Team has had a splendid record. It has proved that basket ball can be played at Technology, and that it deserves the recognition and support of the Advisory Council. The 1903 Field Day lacked enthusiasm. The Freshman Class apparently did not realize that its contests with the Sopho- mores constituted one of the most important events in Technology athletics, and it shirked. Never- theless, the Field Day was not a failure, except for 1907. The Freshman-Sophomore B a s e b a ll Games last spring were poorly played, and aroused but little gen- eral interest. They showed that even class enthusiasm will not -1 - EMEKSON 51283 stomach class baseball in an open lot tecgflfqlle . played to the hoots of the losing 1905 side. Let either the two classes ob- tain proper fields and proper coaches, , or let Freshman-Sophomore base- I ball be dropped. For the coming year the out- look is encouraging. In track athletics We have lost several valu- able men, but the fall and Winter meets have given promise ofa larger squad in the spring from which to i draw recruits. Therefore, 'though We may not be able to fill the places of those who have left, We should be SPRINGNIEET'-RILEYXVINNINGTHE2MILE able to balance their loss devel- . l oping good men in other events. That the other teams will continue their good Work, and that the next Field Day Will be a success, there is every reason to expect. Q , .KJ I 1512: . .wills . R. D. FARRINGTON, 11.-xNovEu, 1903 51291 .. 'Q sig - , ' yo f' ll ' it of if IW TXSGFZTW ' V, E-L TUX ' fx If UN llpi My Sf gf 2 WHS RY HE Athletic Advisory Council regulates all NI. I. T. athletics, and has Supervision over the management of all llfl. I. T. teams. OFFICERS Chairman FRANK H. BRIGGS, '81 Secretary and Treasurer HARRY L. lVIORSE, '99 Representatives from IW. I. T. Afluinni Association THOMAS HIBBARD, '75 FRANK H JOHN L. BATGHELDBR, JR., '90 Representative from Institute Committee WILLIAM HOSMER EAGER, '04 Rejzresentatizie from Athletic Hssofiation WILLIAM M. VAN AMRINGE, '06 I Iso 1 BRIGGS, '81 ,v-W, I ., ,. - 'i v 4. PM .- 1 , ,L--'Z5,3':'f 'T-.,,, f f X V ., , ' ffffzf . -' S '- FM x?'1 '-?gT'2i5f?z'7?:ff'7 '0 B S- - ' I. I W 'A 'A - -'i ,1 -' QS' -'if ' V .V :'.: .'1ii4af . -: . -. 1. -. - - Jw' I V I VA' '2 I- :. f '.AA ','A. :'1 1- Vf 'sf 'Hr-fra. -- A '- fi .,.... 2 - .:.VV:- f I I ,,-' ..QQA, V -I ' v 1 ' . K Ig , E, , I L I my Q f f 4 ff X 5 ,f gf, Q A s ,. V590 265: c an M 2 S.. M f S 4,9 r A f 1 , 3 , A , , f 1? Q 3 Eg 5 If 1 , Y :N , 4531 fx rg ff! f N ii' 4 sm Y 14' ofa ec 'mga 'G Y, H5 Q 9, S S ,V-1 Ji' ,,,, Hr I -- sm X, M ,f J, , ,tx Y E 1 :V V1 f ,, Q A ,,,, Sy -, + V ' I, I 'W L , -4 ,ga A, A 4- 1 f '4 e x. A ,f A, 2 ' , '21 ,,. . ,, . .. K .L,- .1.,,, V, ., ,. . '53'-'Ig T23 ? :f,,f .V.z.1'1' ?:?2.,.- ' 1: 'Z-if fi A 'ian V' .145 'ffzz Q 'I' w....f,:-5:1 ,- .,:5.Q: . V, . I , . ,I AR SQ , Qmyi - I V V .ff-:-:E , ,r-E',::,:- - 1 I,V1,-',- .:..:-fl , ,-.:r,.V:-,: --me z-:Q ,::,f.:-,S,.:: gm.-I .nf ' . A'T'5. ':,,l '. G V fiifu 'G-.52 , -' I- f ,A 5 1 1'3'7' .'1. -2- QLI. ' ,. , ' 215,11 E ' 9:45:71 'IT' '- ' .- ,.5I'?-Y' ' fi 5 gl-ff5': ,J A-' ia: ' V. 29219, ':' , 1E1:.i?r:f:P,,'.' :iq ' .,'sf5:j. rr-'ang-, f41,m:.' 111512-:F 4 7.4-:fgxffj-.fr-'--'rye - 72'- -'zf ' Y V , , DANIEL ADAMS JOHN WINTHROP ACER HOWARD COLBURN BLAKE WILLIAM BRENTON BOGGS CHARLES RANDALL BURLEIGH GEORGE HOBART CHAPMAN MAXWELL ALANSON COE GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS BARRY CANFIELD EASTHAM GUY WARNER EASTMAN RALPH DAMMARELL EMERSON ROBERT DOUGLAS FARRINGTON RALPH STOWELL FRANKLIN DUNCAN GATEWOOD CHARLES ROGERSON HAYNES ERNEST FOSTER JENKINS JOSEPH RUSSELL JONES, JR. JORGE LAGE CURRIER LANG ARTHUR HOOPER LANGLEY BEN EDWIN LINDSLY EDWARD HENRY LORENZ KENNETH OLWELL MAJOR GROSVENOR DE WITT MARCY WILLIAM E. H. MATHESON LEON GILBERT MORRILL ROBERT PORTER NICHOLS EARLE LEWIS OVINGTON FRANCIS BRADFORD RILEY LEWIS ADAMS RILEY, 2D. ARTHUR OSBORNE ROBERTS KATSUZO TSURUTA LE BARON TURNER ELMER WESLEY WIGGINS HERBERT LAWRENCE WILLIAMS EDWARD LOWELL WILSON LISI3 X 1 W A jf . I Q. A 4 EEK-l , ' ll A we Q 9 9 . Q 50 isis U - 419 .AXA A A L c s 1 - er or L. n s . 1 3 F 'Pe Q? HE New En land Intercolle iate Athletic Association was arran ed in . g 5 . . g 1886 with Amherst, Bowdoin, Brown, Dartmouth, Trinity, Tufts and Williams as charter members. The Association is governed by an 'executive council consisting of a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer and an executive committee of three. This council meets in Boston once a year to transact the business of the Association, to arrange for the Annual Field Day, and to elect officers for the coming year. Technology became a mem- ber of the Association in 1894. OFFICERS-1904 President W. I. HAMILTON, Amherst Vice President Secretary R. E. HALL, Bowdoin H. J. MANN, M. 1. T. Treasurer C. J. GOODWILLIE, Williams Exefutifue Committee C. H. HULL, Brown T. E. JEWETT, M. I. T. T. R. BARRETT, Vermont Members 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 University of Vermont Winners of the Championship Amherst, 1888, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1902, 19035 Bowdoin, 18995 Dart- mouth, 1887, 1889, 1893, 1895, 1896, 1897g M. I. T., 1894. Tie between Amherst and Brown, 1898, Williams, 1900, 1901. f 132 1 .. 1 :Lg .. ,,,Q'f,Q, -- 5 1 ' 11 'fe . ,.-,-' , I mai In A ik UU- iw Im I if 4 47. . 'buff - ne- at f. .VAZCQAI 3.1.1. Q 1 l .1 !:'i4 rf- I X Q: Qt lt ' rl? as TQ ' 95' 'T' 'IEW' X K A? ff milf! we 1' 'N' 4,3 WH' fr i -'I j we-, , X Q if' ', 'if' ' ? 5 82,0 A 'ff X W V' 2? 1 I vw. -. I ef .,,,,. ph , iw lg I 54 , E I pe, , , -o E, E-ef.':-'va 5 ,I . 'Fai 1 n-I :inn in X aff I maya . A I ag , Q , 071: iz.-4 v - :I A I if A. e - 1 V , NG f A .Lv al! X in I R cf' a nd , . , A ' ' HE M. I. T. Athletic Association has charge of track athletics at the Institute, subject to the approval of the Athletic Advisory Council. During the past year the Association has held three annual closed rneets,- the Spring Meet in May, the Fall Handicap Meet in November, and the Indoor Meet in January. It has also taken charge ofthe All-Round Athletic Contest, inaugurated last year by Dr. Skarstrom. O F F I C E R S President GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, '04 Vice President Secretary ROBERT PORTER NICHOLS, '05 WILLIAM WALTER CRONIN, '04 Treasurer LE BARON TURNER, '05 Representative to fldfvixary Council RALPH DAIIIMARELL EMERSON, '05 flflanezger of Track Team HERBERT JAMES lVlANN, '06 H1331 v . . E -45115241-P. .-he -qw.,-5 um.- .,, .. ,, :.-7.55m .a-:rl P1672 -in Q-'SEE 133- .v- I SSACNUS all N' 5 S I U Q, -.: , . -1 5 1. U' . L-3 r I se 1:3 -.4 'K + 2 -, Gr -rv! 4 'Q-J' c 9.5 N .J 4,5 'r 5 MSW 1--1-, WFS Hz-fa: 1f7r.1L,a- :wisp .-.f'afe:'fQ?':.w-fy,5:J?.1.,mm lfhfl,-1-Qg1y5'S.S'.4 x2'i5?EfUvG ' - ' chycqv- gggZi11lZ4f f'5Ef ii' x 9 -1 fcgvfr' -41.15 VQM gL9'LLQ,gfi I,-qw-3 LM X 1:5 -43,4 is-r 15. '-1? LESS ' ' cv-ws vast QA Pb. P 5 J Q' f yca K eam 2, H 9 :Ha , fr -91 eu- 4, ,.+ vu? -A 'fond A lo-2 '-nr f wifi' vf'w+2S- S cr L51 ' rfilfifafs X ---X-49 9.2151 wa.-E .gg - gc-.-w. ,L ..g. 5,1-Q. N0 ,?.-N24-'iyggyqa 3-j.:yf.xH-:Q L f ' 'r 4 XI ,., N 1 1 w 1 w . -m r- 'N' ' ' ' ' ' v ' 345-1.' 15:23, L L L L L L ' 53215 :HE sys 155583 Buclcmcx-IAM TSURUTA GIBBQNS KNAPP MAHAN HAYNES MACKIE . W. WILLIAMS ff.: , fm.. Coach Ill 'JWS ' :rn LINDSLY EMERSON FRANKLIN OVINGTON Cuxvrxs TURNER LANG H. L.W1LL1AMs EAST:-IAM ggi? YI: 3,135 RILEY CoE NICHOLS ENKINS gp 'as-r 55:15 R523 3252 L ' LL L L 15:5gfQ:sfgsxgewagwpx-sg::'3f::pd-239ga33e'Lf:Gy:1gfzs:skimWi1R1a11fwmne3m:.'-vifsm.-,Q-,Ga . ' 2 -u :- -,.'4-an ' 'L'---:.T-'f fir- 2. '-'-g:'::..-.v-uf -:'-x- ap.: '4-Q-T'i L 1 X -wav: f . :,:q--oh.. 3.l.:n',-,vat-,.4.. 4..-,-.E puff- :-3...-,.1,1' 4.x : 1Ff'j:':E1 S1 ?w 'f'351'u1:- Mlf.-2'.--.tarzfab-351:Q1-gl-4-+'.f'i'a-If film f: 5:',5r..1J.,'sn-r ,Env .flvxw S3753q.42.!.xQ11-Q-4411, ,1,5g,q:1r:--.:p4Jg':'.,g-1-.Lu 'hyx m.AMAiLl .Mi 11341 - 9' fl I f I Urqvwll I I' if ' -X Rig! X I jf, X Nf N ali?-9 ' I I- IEW I TM I T EAM L LV'- Q ' ' 3 ' Sb ffxvf agp C7 ,.Gi2n I ff-EZ, Nj! RJ QQ PTP V-E9 I: T5 O F F I C E R S Captain Manager GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, '04 HERBERT JAMES MANN, '06 Coach JOHN F. MAHAN T E A M GEORGE H. BUCKINGHAM, '05 GEORGE AUSTIN CASEY, '05 MAXWELL ALANSON COE, '06 GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, '04 HENRY LAWRENCE DEAN, '05 BARRY CANFIELD EASTHAM, '05 RALPH DAMNIARELL EMERSON, '05 ROBERT DOUGLAS FARRINGTON, '05 RALPH STOWELL FRANKLIN, '04 MICHAEL JOSEPH GIBBONS, JR., '06 CHARLES ROGERSON HAYNES, '04 ERNEST F. JENKINS, '0-L WILLIAM JARED KNAPP, '06 CURRIER LANG, '04 BEN EDWIN LINDSLY, '05 MITCHELL MACKIE, '05 LEON GILBERT MORRILL, '05 EARLE LEWIS OVINGTON, '04 FRANCIS BRADFORD RILEY, '05 KATSUZO TSURUTA, '05 LE BARON TURNER, '05 HERBERT LAXVRENCE WILLIAMS, '06 JAMES RICE XVILLIABIS, '06 EDWARD LOVVELL VVILSON, '06 I 135 1 -4- v QI Ilfk QEIIH 1763 Qnnual meet 9 Sim L! ,-Wi, f B O V . E f TTm :MI I 9 fi i t 1 . Q fi 3,5 'S , 15 ' mi- f - . .ff e mir? J VX 2 5539 -W5 M 1' i t - Www AJ QC? av? Held at Worcester, Maj' 23, 1903 I-Event VVinne1's 100 -Yard Dash . F. L. THOMPSON, Amherst G. L. SWASEY, Dartmouth R. S. FRANKLIN, M. I. T. C. F. JENKS, Bowdoin 220 -Yard Dash . F. L. THOMPSON, Amherst G. L SWASEY, Dartmouth R. S. FRANKLIN, M. I. T. H. L WILLIAMS, M. I. T. 120-Yard High L. G BLACKMER, Williams Hurdles .... E. L. GVINGTON, M. I. T. C. R HAYNES, M. I. T. E. V LEWIS, Williams 220- Yard Low W. P. HUBBARD, Amherst Hurdles .... H. J. HUNT, Bowdoin E. L. OVINGTON, M. I. T. R. W. NEAL, Dartmouth 440-Yard Run . . H. E TAYLOR, Amherst R. E. MARTIN, Wesleyan E. H LEANING, Williams C. R BLYTH, Amherst 51363 Jlm Time, Height, or Distanc . 10 1-5 sec . 22 3-5 Sec . 16 sec . 26 1-5 Sec . 51 4-5 sec E 880-1 ara'Run . . One-Mile Run . . Two-Mile Run . Running Broad Jump Running High Jump Puttiing 16-Pound Shot ..... Throwing 16-Pound Hammer. . . Dixcus Throw . . Pole Vault . . 'f IW. I. T. Record. H. E. TAYLOR, W. A. NEWELL, R. F. PATTERSON, R. E. LEWERS, E. F. JENKINS, C. A. CAMPBELL, B. MEARS, SAUNDERS, F. B. RILEY, H. W. DYE, Amherst . 2 min. 7 sec. E. BENSON, C. F. CORNER, W. P. HUBBARD, A. T. FOSTER, H. G. VAN WEELDEN, L. G. BLACKMER, L. G. BLACKMER, H. E. TAYLOR, R. N. ERNST, J. E. GRIFFIN, R. E. ROLLINS, A. C. DENNING, J. W. PARK, V. M. PLACE, A. C. DENNING, J. W. PARK, B. E. LINDSLY, E. A. DUNLAP, F. E. EHMKE, J. VV. PARK, V. M. PLACE, L. G. lVTORRILL, W. H. PEABODY, G. A. CURTIS, F. P. FLETCHER, W. SQUIRES, M N. E. 1. A. A. record- ot allowed on l1CC01lHIDf d Williams Vermont Dartmouth M. 1. T. 4 min. 41 2-5 sec. Dartmouth Williams Williams M. I. T., 10 min. 40 4-5 sec. Williams Wesleyan Wesleyan Amherst M522 ft. 7 ' Amherst 22 ft. 1-2 Trinity . 21 ft. 3 Williams . . 21 Williams Amherst 5 ft' 8 3-4 Williams 5 ft. 7 1-2 Dartmouth 5 ft. G 1-2 Amherst . 42 ft. 3 Bowdoin 41 ft. 1 1-4 Amherst . 40 ft. 3 Dartmouth Bowdoin 129 ft. 6 Amherst 120 ft. 8 NI. 1. T. . . 117 Bowdoin 114 ft. 4 Brown 115 ft. 3 Amherst 109 ft. 4 Dartmouth 108 ft. 7 lvl. I. T. 107 ft. 9 Williams 11 ft. 1-2 IVI. I. T. Wesieyan 10 ft. 9 1-2 Williams 51373 1905 Two-Mile Bicyrle E. W. SCHNIDT, Wesleyan 5 min. 5 3-5 sec. 1905 Race ..... K. TSURUTA, M. I. T. H. N. COULTER, Brown F. C. LYSETT, Trinity SUMMARY OF POINTS BY COLLEGES Amherst 51 Williams 31 NI. 1. T. 30 Dartmouth 15 Bowdoin 13 Wesleyan 13 Brown 7 Trinity 3 University of Vermont 2 SUMMARY OF Po1NTs BY EVENTS Amh. XVi11. M.l.T Dar. Bow. 'VVes. Br. Trin. U. V. 100-Yard Dash . 5 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 220-Yard Dash . 5 0 2 1 3 0 0 0 O 120-Yard Hurdles 0 6 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 220-Yard Hurdles 5 0 2 1 3 0 O 0 0 440-Yard Run . 6 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 880-Yard Run 5 3 0 1 O 0 0 0 2 One-Mile Run . O 3 5 3 O 0 0 0 0 Two-Mile Run . 0 3 5 0 O 3 0 O 0 Running Broad Jump 8 1 0 O 0 0 0 2 0 Running High Jump 4 6 O 1 0 O 0 0 0 Putting 16-lb. Shot 7 0 O 1 3 0 0 0 0 Throwing 16-lb. Ham'r 3 O 2 0 6 0 0 0 0 Discus Throw . 3 0 1 2 O 0 5 0 0 Pole Vault . . 0 7 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 Two-Mile Bicycle Race 0 O 3 0 0 5 2 1 0 Totals 51 31 30 15 13 13 7 3 2 L 133 1 ualy rrtR KrI1.5ags.QarI1fmoutI1 'ff-4-G --Wass- Held at Hanover, May 9, 190.3 Dartmouth, 71 Points M. I. T., 91 Points Event Winners Time, Height or Distance 100-Yard Dash G. L. SWASEY, Dartmouth 10 2-5 sec. R. S. FRANKLIN, M. I. T. C. LANG, M. I. T. S. P. WARNER, Dartmouth 2.20-Yard Dash R. S. FRANKLIN, M. I. T. 23 1-5 sec. H. L. WILLIAMS, M. I. T. S. P. WARNER, Dartmouth D. L. JACKSON, Dartmouth 120-Yard High E. L. OVINGTON M. I. T. 16 2-5 sec. Hurdles R. D. EMERSON, M. I. T. C. R. HAYNES, M. I. T. R. W. NEAL, Dartmouth 220-Yard Law J. H. BUELLE, Dartmouth 26 1-5 sec. Hurdles E. L. OVINGTON, M. I. T. C. R. HAYNES, M. I. T. VV. P. EMERY, Dartmouth 440-1 'ard Run G. L. SVVASEY, Dartmouth 50 3-5 sec. LE B. TURNER, M. I. T. M. A. CoE, M. I. T. S. P. WARNER, Dartmouth 'M f 4 Durtmo I. T. Record nth Rec d H1301 880-Yard Run . . 1905 One-Mile Run . . Two-Mile Run . . Running Broad fump Running High Jump Putting 16-Pound Shot Throwing 16-Pound Hammer Throwing the Discus Pole Vault 'W Dartmouth record at M. I. T. Record. 51401 D. THRALL, L. WILSON, P. NICHOLS, E. LEWERS, A. CAMPBELL, F. JENKINS, G. H. BUCKINGHAM, H. JOHNSON, A. CAMPBELL, B. RILEY, F. JENKINS, G. A. CASEY, LANG, S. FRANKLIN, . W. BULLOCK, M. HOBART, G. A. CURTIS, D. FARRINGTON, M. W. BULLOCK, J. E. GRIFFIN, M. PLACE, G. MORRILL, . C. COLESWORTHY, JEFFREYS, E. LINDSLY, M. PLACE, W. J. KNAPP, J. W. GAGE, G. MORRILL, M. PLACE, JEFFREYS, . LANG, . A. CURTIS, B. HAZEN, D. FARRINGTON, M. MACKIE, Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. M. I. T. M. I. T. . M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. . Dartmouth M. I. T. Dartmouth IVI. I. T. . Dartmouth Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. . Dartmouth M. I. T. M. I. T. 2 min. 3 .2-5 sec. 4 min. 46 1-5 sec H10 rn. 21 1-5 s . 21 ft. 2 in 5 ft. 6 1-2 in M39 ft. 5 1-4 in 'E 118 ft . 105 ft. 7 in X10 ft. 6 1-2 in Two-Mile Bifycle Race .... 100-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash B. C. EASTHAM, W. H. WATSON, P. G. FAVOR, E. BRENNAN, M. I. T. Dartmouth V Dartmouth Dartmouth SUMMARY Dartmouth. M.I.T. . 6 5 . 3 8 120-Yard High Hurdles 1 10 220-Yard Low Hurdles 6 5 440-Yard Run 880-Yard Run One-Mile Run Two-Mile Run Totals, . 6 5 6 5 6 5 5 6 o F P o IN T s Dartmouth . 5min.17 sec. . M.I.T. Running Broad Jump . 3 8 Running High Jump . 3 8 Putting 16-pound Shot 8 3 Throwing 16-pound Hammer4 7 Throwing the Discus . 5 6 Pole Vault ,. . 3 8 Two-Mile Bicycle Race 6 5 71 94 COC 51411 1905 A. . ,. . A w?:'5iZ1:'-We ,122 -3.-51?sQ :g 112182, , . .ziggggf fig M. .-- A 590106 H C354 P' 45 'fel' 0 : 3 5 L A gh E 5' A iii 5- ' ' ' 5' -PF K e- ' -, Q Or -ref' N .A . - :ri U r :SR ff- 4 'il hc' - .+L -u ' 53:3 A f' few :ji . -:naw , :IwQL'1Q2+.:a-.wfl-.1?,1u:?3f 1T '1-'2gQglj5'Q3f'A'iQ'C'J arm Yi, Cross Country eam lgf-:3vf 1Y-1 ,ASA 1!,15f.:- b ' .559:51f:6:s:?,:2rg-'fSf.???7 Rav' can 1' '- -12 ak iiiref V ',w.,,, '2' 4' fr-A 9-X .E .5 A .-. , for-K6 - - K Y .2 Q I 5 fx . 6' 9 3 for + - , ,.,. 0? 3 24- . i-5233 mf Q- A'-WJ 1.1-12 4::f'F 229 -: :n9SK5LJ5,Jyqw -yfgfph-46 T' A W P l 1 A I V , u- , - - A f J ..- ' 'Sri--' .E ASW'.- r ,-hiftlga-11:9 '- wg:-sf' f',:',r-:urs--' 'Amit A5-MG2' -ua fa'-44? -1-ax 5-za: -:qw infer. -5L:'.g.:.,. V . ,-A.-.'.:-wa,-1: . -me--. , -p..-:-:L-.,1,: rf f3?3,?:kgf.:fv,f3 fAE21:?.f!im xii-m'f:1fa-fm -4--'f4512'4sf.'evfifsiwsffwSe-25:fS453f.a5EE::A4:A?fFk:fV-.-1,:f1',m:ka +Q14:..:.-2.gL6Q,,L'fr',:: f:'Q--1f7A1g:'5yy,:,1S.',G:-::.wf-.fish ff,--2i ,.Y-1-:-z -Q1-F:-A +1--1 ,Mm-1-:Q ',f.::2q'w::.:4.iP2,vQ:a1JJA5::W,rzfgl-512,-:xangaf:aa55,1g'55.e33y:1'.5IiAE: may rg 'uw - Y f ga,- Q75 Y 'Ziff we 'gm rug- . .Sr .fm -5951 frat: -X551 kim: ah' , .511 TSURUTA MAHAN, LORENZ ADAMS MAJOR MARCY MEYERS CHAPMAN .pf- 'ti .1 ' 'JY' if Conrlz Jldmager l-E35 We wr . 15532 F93 Ta:-3 fig. vii. 'Rh -.,.. . .-yum-.N .- H-f. -- Ti-, , . .,.. ....k. ... . . ,. , , ' , ,.. . 'E-'L .Aw .iv .nm -- .-,cm-1 ,4,,,,.J '. . .,,,,z,,. ,, - fa- ,, .6 -..g1.f,,, -- .. L... zgh Efsfsfff-I-grpf:ffvwzivv::4P.1fw351an,F-s.,f:f,?.1sLffufe-QL'Sera-Ef:i:4f55e+-IRQ? M:fftaiaxbvzwlfkv-:AE41:1-wif:-'.L:A95-a1k1f1Qorf.f,,-Qgi,gs-it -1:w.-ai3f?2f-1355: . X A -----1 - -vw. :--4. vzvv .V--:A-v-: 4-A---uf-.1-edkevsr-,w-.1c.rsw:. 1 ,mv-Wv4-y:rg,:a4.f1wf.Qgf-J-15154gqqhqgerf-g::4i.L c cafe-:A1'Zw'w.-.44aQM ...M L1421 OEIOOO Qwwmmm UEAEJC u ' M kw a? 11.1. XX' E -Ni-A-W- i ':f:' M I I gl-L, f'i,,1,,T I U OFFICERS OF CROSS-COUNTRY ASSOCIATION, 1903-1904 President Captain A. J. SWEET, '04 E. H. LORENZ, '04 Secretary Manager C. R. HAYNES, '04 L. F. MYERS, '04 Chase, Captain A. M. HOLCOMBE, '04 CROSS-COUNTRY RACE WITH AMHERST Franklifz Park November 14, 1903 Course, 4 3-4 miles, Time, 27 min. 42 Sec. Amherst, 32 points Technology, 23 points TEAMS IN ORDER OF FINISHING 1. E. H. LORENZ, M. I. T. 6. G. D'W. NIARCY, M. I. T. 2. D. ADAMS, M. I. T. 7. F. E. A. LEWIS, Amherst 3. C. W. BEAN, Amherst 8. F. G. THAYER, Amherst 4. G. H. CHAPMAN, M. I. T. 9. H. E. TAYLOR, Amherst 5. R. FREEMAN, Amherst 10. K. O. MAJOR, M. I. T. K. TSURUTA, Subrzimre, M. I. T. Coach JOHN F. NIAHAN I 143 1 'I -: Kr rx '15, ,..w- :ee--Ex 54313411-?..v,q,:-...:, v '. -2-2' .,..,,,e rp-,L SACHU 5 602, Q , g I N' Q ,V , L. ,. 5 ' ' 6 Cl 601111 4, Ng 1 J 01-11: v P- 'V 7 -. ?. 'iiwi-' 52, 4..,1im,, .- -is ' .f5.,,A ,I -59:1-L -1 ...gf j1::f'.T 1,:.,..--,-,f. .5 Jw., 1 AP 11' mam: sf -Huh' 'iifk . -. .tiff 7' Agnus ff? We E71 3?-x :iii 1- -sf uw: 5 jr .fn Q I 5 E21 fa ,+o 3. feofff i .5-'H 'Lk .. -W . 2-S :J gp .LQA-gy.. my . . 'rfawasmecx lsf-f giwwigiy-if T- , . N , 1 X, ' w , I , , , I 1 , , . 1 , 1 , w H- , v 'Sf-'11'::'f-EIEH-P 'f :5f: -:r-.uafhrf -'wwf f.-v e.1..s,-- 1: mm gr- :-1--:sn I:2-whiff'-'45-.'-'mf-'41--1'Qi'f--?f0LP2N!f'w!'QS1'-1-WE-4'1hFMY.'4-'WE 53.-151.-L-'1.f..g.4,:-41--Ik.1451,:.:Jphg,ggm.-4-3,1.-,-,,,,,51-.3-,.....-,M-,.,,..,ubgw .-5.1 ,gn-.-,-,,,,1..lq 1114,-..5gg4-fr-Iv-.lffzh1535-L--:M-----1 1-,m.1..--fs.-1 .2555 ' f -Fbx 5-:rg 2145. aiu- Ziglar' M AHAN .Ni Conch mpg., fab- sd.: YE? aff 4? GOULD WILLIAMS W 1LsoN Howl! Sli: 32131 ,fag SSW 'figflg 133: , , ,315 hifi .,- .. . , - ., , . - - -V 75213 rsh: 1 rv' - x -A-rf. .4 -r -: feww::1: Q:-wig-if-2-L+wwwf: sf-,emu-we-: E'-Ynrs-uf: L-1-asxwwzwfeq -f paw 291-:PiIi?-:S':.feQ31'9?.:''1-.7 nm manga-fstlzmvv 51441 N XA X' , 'TH' F1 117 '-.. LEX 'ff .MJ V XM Ax Q! ' X X 1735 RELAY RACE WITH GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Run at the Boston Athletic Association Games, Feb. 13, 1904 Won by Georgetown. Time, 3 min. 14 sec. T E A M s Georgetown I. F. SULLIVAN H. M. ETCHISON C. J. MCCARTHY J. V. IVIULLIGAN IM, I. T. HERBERT LAWRENCE VVILLIAMS, '06, Captain EDWARD LOWELL WILSON, 'OG ROBERT HOWE, 'OG GARDNER SABIN GOULD, '07 fl-ISI X., .:, i.. . ,AA,,A, ,, ,T 'a j .. ., -. 4.4 -V ..v.a.X'?4:1-'..n4 .11 ta- gn.L-5: gp' fy. ug' 1.-L---4-i Vu K-. f ,,3' 5- ' ' if' Wiltt 1 1-22-.2-f PIJJ: ' 7.11-'Sn ' ra April 23, 24 and 25, 1903 SUMMARY OF POINTS BY CLASSES 1905-'73 1904-37 1906-18 1903-7 Event XVinners Time, Height or Distanc 100-Yard Dash . . J. W. WILLIAMS, '06 10 2-5 sec LE B. TURNER, '05 R. S. FRANKLIN, '04 220-Yard Dash . . LE B. TURNER, '05 122 3-Slsec R. S. FRANKLIN, '04 H. L. WILLIAMS, '06 120-Yard High Hurdles E. L. OVINGTON, '04 . 17 Sec R. D. EMERSON, '05 R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 220- Yard Low Hurdle: . E. L. OVINGTON, '04 26 4-5 SCC R. D. EMERSON, '05 C. R. HAYNES, '04 440-Yard Run . LE B. TURNER, '05 . 54 sec 'ff M. I. T. Record. 51463 M. A. COE, '06 E. T. STEEL, 2D., '05 880-Yard Run One-Mile Run Two-Mile Run Running Broad Jump Running Higfz Jump . Putting 16-Pound Shot R. P. NICHOLS, '05 . 2 min. 9 Sec. E. L. WILSON, '06 H. L. MARSH, '06 E. F. JENKINS, '04 4 min. 44 2-5 Sec G. D'W. MARCY, '05 G. H. BUCKINGHAM,' 05 F. B. RILEY, '05 10 min. 36 3-5 sec. E. H. LORENZ, '05 F. B. THURBER, '06 C. LANG, '04 . 20 ft. 9 in R. S. FRANKLIN, '04 C. F. NORTHRUP, '06 R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 . . 5 ff. 7 1-2 in G. A. CURTIS, '04 R. D. EMERSON, '05 L. G. MORRILL, '05 . 38 ft. 3 in J. B. BAKER, '04 B. E. LINDSLY, '05 Throwing 16-PoundHammerB. E. LINDSLY, '05 . 111 ft. 9 in Throwing the Disrus Pole Vault . Two-Mile Bicyrle Race I' chnology Record W. J. KNAPP, '06 W. S. GOUINLOCK, '05 L. G. MORRILL, '05 C. LANG, '04 W. S. GOUINLOCK, '05 G. A. CURTIS, '04 L. PHILLIPS, '04 M. MACKIE, '05 K. TSURUTA, '05 B. C. EASTHAM, '06 H. L. DEAN, '05 H1471 . E110 ft. 2 1-3 in. . 5 min. 13 Sec. Qfeclhmique 1905 FALL MEM' Event 75-Yard Dash . 80-Yard High Hurdles . . . 80-Yard Low Hurdlex . . . 440-Yam' Run . 880-Yard Run . One-Mile Run . L 148 3 October 22, 23 and 24, 1903 Winners W. B. BOOOS, '04 C3 yds.j A. FISHER, '05 C6 yds.j R. D. FARRINOTON, '05 C5 yds. E. P. NOYES, '07 C4 yds.D C. R. HAYNES, '04 fscratchb E. B. SNOW, JR., '05 C6 yds.j G. A. CURTIS, '04 C5 yds.j J. V. SANTRY, '06 C6 yds.j J. J. THOMAS, '07 C20 yds.j M. A. COE, '06 C16 yds.j R. HOWE, '06 C19 yds.j E. L. WILSON, '06 Cscrarchj C. R. BOOOS, '05 Q16 yds.j M. A. COE, '06 C20 yds.j G. D'W. MARCY, '05 C40 ydsj F. W. HORTON, '04 C50 yds.j E. H. LORENZ, '05 C45 yds.j . ifffrk' V Xfixx fi? XX' 4' HAN DE CAP ' ,f' 2 :lain ,':ii:'?: V, 1? x f' x ' 12551f:7.'f. fT9-.., 1 ' X N R ' ff ro X s l RPM kr :R . Af- . -1.92. -:pin F:- ,. . - L4-531111. N. fi fnff 5,15-vzagfl. lu ...X . w:'EeE,1Ea':f-5' 2:- 4' ..- ..- ,. -. 6' v, T1me, Hexght Or Dlstanc . . . Ssec . .104-Ssec . 9 3-4 sec . . 54 4-5 sec 2 min. 11 4-5 sec 4min.54 4-5 sec Two-Mile Run . Running High Jump . . . Running Broad Jump .... Putiing 16-Pound Shot .... Pale Vault . . E. H. LORENZ, '05 fscratchj D. ADAMS, ,05 C60 yds.j B. B. HOLIVIES, 307 Ql10 yds.D R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 Cscratchj F. W. BARROWS, '07 CG in.j G. A. CURTIS, '04 Qscratchj LUTHER, '07 C11 in.j KELLER, '04 Q1 ft. 3 in.j C. Hoy, '04 Q1 ft. 6 my G. D. K. D. D. C. SCHONTHAL, '05 C1 ft.8ir1 J. C. BAKER, '04 C1 ft.j V. H. PAQUET, ,05 C3 fr.j C. R. BURLEIGH, '06 C2 ft.j H. P. FARRINGTON, '07 C2 fr.j H. G. MCVAY, '07 C1 fr. 8 in.j gn 1 Wx ,vu ' as If At- f 1- 5:51715 . kip 1 . Ea f ,L : muh .U vxi' '.-RQ' L . g i . ' EI rt' ' 1 g .1 ,H 2. 1 L :if- f .-. S14 X ,vue c' QT f-1 ..: 5 -D 11 min. 13-5sec. 5 ft. 9 1-4 in . 5 ft. 7 in 5 ft. 6 1-4 in 19 ft. 10 in . 19 ft. 7 in . 19 ft . 36 ft. 1 in . 35 ft. 9 in . 35 ft. 3 in 10 ft. 6 in . 10 ft. 2 in ' 149 j L Qfeclinique 190 5 t J - .. T: 5 - 12' 5 Q 2 .Air , 5.2, .Q wvciiv 'i'g-r.1:19f.w.e .. A if3l'E5'H. +4 '.L'ETz5g 1.'f:j::i ' ' 'A . .. M.-: , x if 4555- X s- nga WWA ' ' - 5:11-' 1' ' .I l .4-' FL. january 7, 1904 SUMMARY OF POINTS BY CLASSES 1907 1904 24 18 Event 35-Yard Dash . . 35-Yard Low Hurdles Running High Jump Putting 16-Pound Shot 51501 'XVinnerS M. T. LIGHTNER, '06 C. LANG, '04 E. P. NOYES, '07 H. W. RICHARDS, '07 E. P. NOYES, '07 C. R. HAYNES, '04 A R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 H. H. NEEDHANI, '04 1905 17 R. D. FARRINGTON, '05, G. A. CURTIS, '04 R. D. EMERSON, '05 C. R. BURLEIGH, '06 F. W. BARROWS, '07 V. H. PAQUET, '05 G. A. CURTIS, '04 J. C. BAKER, '04 1906 15 Time, Height, or Distance . 4 2-5 sec. . 5 sec. 5 ft. 7 3-4 in. . 34 ft. 3 in. .A.CURT1s,'o4 . .Mo feet Catcgnique Pole Vault . . G N. FALLON, '07 1905 R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 H. W. KENWAY, '06 Potato Race . . R. HOWE, '06 . 53 4-5 sec. G. H. CHAPMAN, '07 G. D'W. MARCY, '05 E. H. LORENZ, '05 Military' Relay Race Won by 1907-second 1905 'F Technology Record CLASS CHAMPIONSHIP, 1902-1903 Champions, Class of 1905 The class championship is held by the class Winning the greatest num- ber of points in the Annual Indoor and Annual Spring Meets. SUMMARY OF POINTS 1903 1904 1905 1906 IndoorTMeet, Ian., 1903 3 41 15 4 Spring lVIeet, lVIay, 1903 7 37 73 18 Totals 10 78 88 22 51513 'TP 'X xi I, f1T'lf1'f',v '-, .-f- . -:III '51, ' . 534 3 K f V X njlfx ti-ff. Q f in '-aj E 13. E ' Q . Y fp p 1:-iq.-f. 15 N A - A - '5 ' 1,13-said -K-1, 9 ,f 1.1-A -If x 'I 15225 5 l fl . 1 A lx U, fi 5 L, ff A I A ', 'egg-E . 'K 4 'ip . 3 FOR the purpose Of encouraging a more general practice of athletics among the students, there is held each Winter, in the gymnasium, an All-Round Athletic Competition. E V E N T S 1 903 -1 904 Running High Jump Pole Vault Putting the 16-Pound Shot 40-Yard Low Hurdles 35-Yard Dash Potato Race CONTESTANTS IN ORDER OF POINTS WON Name Points N1 1111 e Point G. A. CURTIS, '04 . . . 50 F. L. SNOW, '05 . . R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 . 39 LE B. TURNER, '05 . F. W.. BARROWS, '07 . . 36 3-4 H. B. CANOVER, '07 . E. P. NOYES, '07 . . . 28 1-2 G. D. LUTHER, '07 . J. C. BAKER, '04 . . . 25 1-2 R. HOWE, '06 . . . 4 1 K. W. RICHARDS, '07 . . 24 A. FISHER, JR, '05 . . 4 1 C. R. HAYNES, '04 . . . 21 1-2 J. TETLOW, '07 . . V. H. PAQUET, '05 . . . 17 -12 E. H. LORENZ, '05 . D. C. SCHONTHAL, '05 . 16 W. S. MOORE, '07 . R. D. EMERSON, '05 . . 13 1-2 J. J. THOMAS, '07 . . R. C. ALBRO, '07 . . . 11 B. BULLARD, '07 . . . G. C. YOUNG, '06 . . . 10 A. W. GEIST, JR., '06 . f152j W. A. T. MOFFATT, '06 . . Qfliirb Qlnnual? :Sfiefb Qing O the main body of Institute men the 1903 Field Day was a disappointment, because its contests lacked enthus- iasm and vigor. The football game, relay race, and tug- of-War were all one-sided, and all were Won with equal ease by 1906. The Freshman teams were not trained, and this, at least in the case of the football team, was not due to lack of effort on the part of the Juniors, but to the indilference of the men themselves. In ' 3 M H Q if L 4 addition, the cheering from both grand stand and bleachers Was poor, and the band had apparently not even thought of attending. Nevertheless, though the Field Day suffered badly from comparison with its predecessors, it was by no means a failure, and the Sophomores should be given full credit for their victory. Let this year's expe- rience only be a warning to 1907 FOOTBALL GANIE and 1 908 next year. SUMMARY OF POINTS 1 906 1 907 4 Football Game 0 3 Relay Race 0 2 Tug-of-War 0 9 O START OF RELAY RACE 51531 iihw:-:fg.E,wf,,-maxi? 55Lrgga 11f5G:31f .gm 52- . 'R -z 5127? Lilfrisi r r 0 fu Iv- 1:21:21 .-d.g,4-.1759 HF. , , :QSM ,1 .'! ,'J:'f:a.'c --. mf, 11423-zfiw? eff, 21133 R, jr, 5 5 ----ru. ... . 453 f 2:5524 ' sMr1u ' envy PFS ebb :E v 5k 573 QA - A' P 5 V' m v m I A If I1 fi ,. I 5 LQ -EI If 3' in Km, A o ne. 'Eu A 54 4-2 -0 + 1-I wg. 1, 4- .119 4' N' 1' o IK '- X H of 'Y'-C . Q I '4'or-rf' nf. 4-sa. Q n... - 1 .rm .. 4' 'ev' 'J --'. . -:TQDER-. . .. Vg? ' .mr -:ff Fsfwl' ffsfbm -1,119 5523553- : --'Igiffiv-mgrMli4'q:?e1T4G Y N Lr- - f I ',... 135: VINTON BARBER TAYLOR HENDERSON HARDY LORING WILLIAMS MATHESIUS SANTRY SOULE FRIEND GEIST MooRE REED COEY LAsI-IER EATON MANSON GRIFFIN lk'-.IZ vii All :f,5,gL--,-,.4,.7,., fr-,A :f.I:,. ..,,.,,plnp:I-,,,L'.5.I1.4,fIT?'Z-R17,r:.!..,...1a,1f ,gn y3-,.q,1.,R-n.- .K ., ,... ,,,q.,,.v.. wc.,-5. - -'gTj l I M- I-'J f1-f7m-,I,,-.-.- .1-,'J,- 2'lr-..--Q-J'--I,':m.If.,p'-321.1-:rr -'-,'1:,ff-J.e'f:2. 1:.-vig.-:..a'.:-pax: A-. W,-1-1-'.f'2,-'S-p:':f.my -1.-,.3:y .mg y.'1T,7.-:y. .-'-.,f1,4,.' N-f 5-E J53'ff'lQE1'4'AS 3'1l'v'1 fax'25:1-g!:1::1v:I-1-4:-'Jif1'ef2?ewr.- sf-,QI-J-wwf 5:-6 pw-:fe cf519253-Ji'!IaN'1'v,-' wel: Iuka,yf:-fa.fQu:1f:'Q:fI-:iII..1.E:4-. -.. va 1.21 51543 G'-gram r w A---0 W .,c.. Ar r: 3 E' A .annex cu:-Lnlllyf f'f - QM .,- -I f . ' IAAAAA Captain ALFRED W. GEIST, JR Champions 1903, Field Day Manager MERRICK EUGENE VINTON RALPH OMAR REED ALLYN CHANDLER TAYLOR RALPH NELSON SOULE CLARENCE EMMETT LASHER . FRED MOORE . . CHARLES GREELY LORING ANTHONY PAUL MATHESIUS . FRANK WALDO FRIEND GEORGE MITCHELL HENDERSON JAMES EDWIN GRIFFIN ALFRED W. GEIST, JR HENRY DOUGLAS EATON . RAYMOND JENNESS BARBER JOSEPH VINCENT SANTRY . . WILLIAM ABBOTT HARDY . HERBERT LAWRENCE WILLIAMS STEWART CLARK COEY ALFRED October October October October October W. GEIST, JR. S Date 17, 1906, 'UJ 21, 1906, Us 2-1, 1906, w 28, 1906, 'Us 31, 1906, 'ur November 7, 1906, for Games won 1 Left End Left End Left Tackle Left Tackle Left Guard . Centre Centre Right Guard Right Tackle Right End Quarter Back Quarter Back Left Half Back Left Half Back . Right Half Back . Right Half Back . . Full Back . . . . . Full Back CHEDULE OF GAMES S Dedham High School . . 0-10 Mechanic Arts High School 0-0 Boylston A. A. . . 0-0 Harvard, '07 . 0-0 Lowell Textile School . . . 0-5 1907 .... . . 17-0 Games tied 3 Games lost 2 f155j fi! Wye-fast' L 51-51 ,y,,.-avg? A ,vw R 'sfnux ,fn-Y 4: gYy.xz,iG.Ei 'X Krauss? JE-if saaeifyklf ca AJ o ' --, I . If-' .1 I V1 1' I ,' .w ' -' F' 4' pie-wg 51 ' ' W. 'Liflf 7 '-:.,v'2::Eg,E.1...,.1:::'1e:1 -,IM tP7T'1E,,-,f,-1Il'5'A'i3f'?If 4 5 , .' 2i', 'H - 'N- ' ' ri. ' 2.:3E1f1. . '-13:5 V '-ef .3 52111 ,. ff-- -surf 11- Eff 21151332 T112 fi-52' 55-ii: ,-2:2 L39 4717 ',f-4 f.,1'14'-'NTL' f? Jaffa -ll:-vi lrf- ii- 4.15 , J. ... ,, 1.., HX IE . . ws., 1 N.. . . . -- :.'.---r, .:--.1-..-4-.... fc., - -.. .- .. X--1-:.I ..+.. .Y 4 -1, x -: E. :-2-.1:-111.,-L-x:':.:11-fa:-.':--::..f.5a.,'1.-I-film-wi .f w. -.. .1F-mf-1,,?r,7,i',,-:A-71.-.fra.,-eg-r,mg.,y 114, -f N -' I ,I5.pjZ::g-.-r.-1,:,':I-,gz.uyf,-15.255-.1-:J-51:51-1175.1-,'.:::n . Q1-gays. -. -:SLGQ-.fi-'3:?-5:51-:5:::1.155,grn.'-R?-in-7-yi: ., . L 1 ., I .. .:5,.,..w J.: .... T551-,is -551,152 .ls I .. M. ' ' ..:.:. 'bs' Y-.1 if 4.1.1.1 .top-, .MA ' sir:-5 ages-it We U ' i Y ,fl .N nj, ' Q4 1 I Captain JAMES HOLLAND MULCARE OSCAR HENRY STARKWEATHER VERNON STONE ROOD JOHN BROTHERLIN HOWARD J. MORTON GEORGE APPLETON GRIFFIN HARRY RUTLEDGE HALL . GEORGE HOBART CHAPMAN . JAMES HOLLAND MULCARE CLARENCE RONALD LAMONT CYRUS HENRY LOUTREL . Manager WILLIAM LYSANDER WOODWARD . Left End . Left Tackle . Left Guard . Centre Right Guard Right Tackle . Right End Quarter Back . Left Half Back . Right Half Back PAUL FREDERICK . Full Back JOHN PRENDERGAST . . Full Back SCHEDULE OF GAMES Date Score October 14 1907 Newton High School . 4-15 October 17 1907, Lawrence High School . 0-0 October 21 1907, Brookline High School . 0-0 October 24 1907, Salem High School . . 0-12 October 28 1907, Haverhill High School . 0-32 October 31 1907, Medford High School . 12-5 November 7 1907 1906 . . . . . . 0-17 Games Won, 1 Games tied, 2 Games lost, 4 l:156j fix 2-flcqi 4- ,f-ix d vw W 'A YQ W EA: 7 TJ X 9 1 bd 5 CQ -'- - 7 B H-, 1,1 : -d il i W- W W A Captains HERBERT JAMES MANN, '06 ERSKINE PHILLIPS NOYES, '07 Managers UTAR JAMES NICHOLAS, '06 ERSKINE PHILLIPS NOYES, '07 T E A M - 1 9 0 6 ROBERT HOWE WILLIAM ANDREW G. MOFFATT NATHANIEL ALDRICH WHITE WILLIAM FRANKLIN ENGLIS FAY WILMOTT LIBBEY TEAM FREDERICK WILLIAM BARROWS ROLAND HOWARD WILLCOMB GEORGE DILLEN LUTHER KARL WILLIS RICHARDS JOHN JOSEPH THOMAS GEORGE ROCKWELL GUERNSEY HERBERT JAMES MANN FREDERICK BERTINE GUEST MAXWELL ALANSON COE EDWARD LOWELL WILSON -1907 ERSKINE PHILLIPS NOYES HUGH BEDH CONOVER GARDNER SABIN GOULD EMORY CHASE NOYES WILLIAM S. VVILSON f157J .I TUG R W I KR , M f A Q XX L . A .-6...Zl KYB? .GTS ,,:M 'W -- A NUGENT FALLON, '06 JOHN EDGAR SIMMONS, '06 J. W. JOHNSON W. L. ROWELL G. F. HOBSON H. A. TERRELL W. G. LAWRENCE C. F. WETTERER W. J. WALKER F. H. BENTLEY J. D. WHITTEMORE M. MCLEOD J. A. DAVIS C. C. BARKER M. B. LANDERS S. HANIILTON E. H. MARSH L. A. FREEDMAN fl58j Captains RALPH GORTON HUDSON, '07 Managers HAROLD SAYWARD WONSON, '07 TEAM-1906 A. B. SHERMAN J. H. POLHEMUS C. A. FARWELL H. F.. YOUNG Q. P. EMERY C. C. RAUSCH W. H. P. WRIGHT J. A. KANE R. J. ROSS H. V. 0. COES L. H. TRIPP W. A. SHELDON H. B. HALLOWELL H. P. CARRUTH N. FALLON E. C. STANTON R. HURSH, Anchor TEAM-1907 F. C. JACCARD L. F. HALLETT H. R. CROHURST A. POPE W. P. MONAHAN S. R. MILLER E. G. HUKILL A. ZUEST, JR. R. H. HALL R. W. PARLIN L. C. HAMPTON F. W. GORDON F. E. BANEIELD, JR. R. G. HUDSON J. F. REHN H. S. WONSON J. P. HINCKLEY, Anehor - . f V I Hy . . 'f :-- A . -S 0 If Q .BJ ' y i I-Q., . , - ' ' 2 ' 1 V .45 i g V ' . L T- ? ', xi X fl 1 Adi: 3 --1 - sl! .. i?T1 E- m1 O F F I C E R S President RALPH BROWN WILLIAMS Secretary Trmxurer FERNANDO MORENO BLOUNT FREDERICK SCHUYLER KRAG EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE RALPH BROWN WILLIAMS FREDERICK SCHUYLER KRAG HENRY SIMONDS HUBBELL Captain FREDERICK SCHUYLER KRAG JOSPEH MULLIN BAKER HUDSON BRIDGE HASTINGS TEAM QUINCY PIERCE EMERY HENRY SIMONDS HUBBELL FREDERICK SCHUYLER KRAG EDWARD FARNUM ROCKWOOD RALPH BROWN WILLIAMS HONORARY MEMBERS HENRY S. PRITCHETT FREDERICK H. BAILEY J. M. BAKER Q. P. EMERY H. B. HASTINGS F. S. KRAG B. POOLE W. M. VAN AMRINGE HARRY E. CLIFFORD DAVIS R. DEXVEY MEMBERS L. G. BOUSCAREN, JR. T. M. GILMER H. S. HUBBELL M. LICHTENSTEIN F, ROCKWOOD H. S. VVILKINS E. R. B. VVILLIAMS I 159 J 412-,tvmfvi rin? .-Q.v:2?5' '-'W' '- HRV WAX--grf-L '-:UG Uh ,, W wa., wi Ei: .Ja i ., 544-an YT wif-.ix Sekwf' 'EULK W '-24 'if' Sic? 'QS 5 'SW ' Sucr-ms ' Eknnvse f' .. W ff 's .a - . N- -f -:- Q- - 4, 5 4. - f wp 5 x ' 2 K I L .. f f encmg eam 1, H 5 'Ed N ff V Q35 'f fo gf e f or -rag' pi W ' , of: D,-16' ,., . . . ,. - :F c QEQW-Y M-' A Vikigii . efksmeu 'fifffii' 4:1fi'r 'QT Af- Eff'-Y-'F 'i'1' Sk.. 5111-gg' e'f'wW'f ,iw , 1L.u,,-411, ,mx .fzqxiq -nmu-.'f:m,,1.-A m-,111--4:-u rrvwaxm-,gba :fist-Q-Lie k'L2IiiIf52w4a3Wf4faz29ffn Y g?s2'1Sifg:,V-iwixfwfu T- - w L 1 1 ,M ,.., . , ...,.,.. .- W y V pr Y Y - v 1 - xc. gap Ax 5-,qu :p yvfgfr 1.11, 59:3 I: -.h , A449 :-, 55-3 App- Vi, 53. Agghle' gn, wager: :.:-V: 3.114 5- !:11g-5:4:H.1'.'cQ4,ry,- ::.':.-.,:.1'Q,'Y ?fZ -HA' 2FE?'.Y'3.S '-- 1 ESFZS R2-HrZ3v '5?2b3a1.:65ff74fh,:553151-ew: :ai wir- wnaEfm'ffzf:.:-ee' -'Q1vf1qs24:i.::.4.-.x4sf:.u1sQagQ552Fxr,Sq.a:?Zfy3:cki?55.k-:.wp,:::.g:SS Q-.14r,f2'5.QLfE,i?f '-cf Q13-'rar.::14yy,:ee'S.fi:-sr.-f'' -9-f::r,,gE-Q--'-.a-4:':,Eg Q-e--1 M1-5:4wgf:-fu-v-'Jww.-1 2-.ffxz-Nrfri-wr:.f,usqiy.'.::aff-'14ss1fv!,54:c.1.ie-xi' mf- 'Wh' - -- - -aw : nm- GATEWOOD LEH VVARREN 132' 9,--X Z- ujjl Jlla 72 agar E41 J. MADERO LACE FOURNON B. MADERO FOGARTY im. .il 'Q . :QQ Coach 2155: :wi- Qffi-:1 new Y cj!frA-pf-'15-1rw.-rf,-,cruz-Fx-J.-5 c. 1931Ltffy,v5:TQ,ev-13:slEQ'f-12722.12 f 5 rfaqzr ,S 'QW r-qw f-11'-4Efe:?kQay-2:-af: 154: 1 Fe s 975 13 LW. m-':'-. if-'2 -iff' -'Q-If-r-. '1Gp '..1-H1-54-'.a: if - ,-:.2'g.f1-,',:f'fQ'?:1'PL1, Ifdrvffff'2:-',, ,5'-'awk rf :1.:117f5Ls'5 . E .ff--LII:-:'f Q ,g'-,J.-:ng .x 'A-gL ,:,,'ft54. ,JM-L,: -.za ,gf,,.g - ,-.' .ff- Qy fi:rs'fs-L-K'-.ff-:':'f.-,f:rw Ta-:L-31:75 J.,1,.q:.:L. has may P T-,L-.-.:wL1..w : kQ ,nzrsxrf Ja5,,.M,J3,!1iv1.f--WLg.bir4g..,:L12e1:3 QL,.-1-,pg-:XR-.:.:4r'42AggNu1y pmol mv FM I FE C NG LVB ,'Isjf1 A , 'E'3?? ' i iq i Taffy' I Tu' L 1: Qzgahx -fe- 1 '-1,4 'Tl -4- E ' .5-. -pf ' 'I '- if A .Ek-S 1 -J Captain JORGE LACE DUNCAN GATEWOOD LEWIS ADAMS RILEY, 2D. Substitutes WILLIAM BAILEY' FOGARTY HAROLD MARCUS LEH BENJAMIN MADERO JULIO MADERO Manager, CLARKE EDWARD WARREN M A T c H E S Score January 15 . Technology 115. Harvard . . 4-5 February 10 . Technology 115. Harvard . . 4-5 QUADRANGULAR MEET Hemenway Gymnasium, llflareh 4, 1904 ' between Harvard Pennsylvania M. I. T. Yale Won by NI. I. T., 18 points Zd, Pennsylvania, 14 points, Sd, Yale, 12 points, 4th, Harvard, 10 points FIRST FIVE lV1EN IN ORDER or INDIVIDUAL HONORS N: IIIIE :uid College Bouts won Bouts Lost LAGE, M. I. T. . . 9 O GATEwooD, M. I. T. 8 1 FRICK, Pennsylvania . 7 2 HOWLAND, Yale . G 3 HOLMES, Harvard . -L . 5 51611 I L.. .1 . Q -'SS'Nf5ef r - - 41'-mmf' qs. .una-. .ve A WA' ' Mffvf- vgflfiiififq 22159. :'l:5Z? i '4'. -zpzrsf-' Wii- ' XGA 'GwiL'1.LZ!v P5631 :ki 493-' ' Iwi' 6232? fb- ciih. a 142. SW? -:QQ-:gr :gtg K -' ips , ' sACP1u ' www ,ms 645 11, ,45 19 fr-A 5-.X 'W' v L' fi: ' ly -, -r :EX Q -. 5 - - -' Q J ' . L - w e 5 GSR f QW eam :A I 5 + wsx. ff .P X e fof -ff ' xl ofeufxf' I vin r fSi 55'T1 , Q21 Ziff ,. 1:'i-121 . -.,., ', .. - ,sz- 'mfwfgg Skim- ,M-,, ,. 2534.12 , ' .gm -vm: wafqbkfv- nmar: wear: GV,--a - , if q'm'iPfx..41E5?6?Z . :a4?Lf7Pw- :.f'k.fq-f?'wu-' -.Eu-..-Y., , dui-11-rakqlf-. 4 -:fx-Sw v ::ii12?Iv4a.i! f2-:1?S1f'fG J J 3-SWLHQVGQ ,Y , W , Y W , , N , W , 4 W Y - - Y -f 7 w L FX?w215'f1'f2FE5ik?41VfMcf LM: f+1Z.'Pf?1H1!v?:Z1l:Y-5-P1-h!EfA2f51i4Qf'.-155: 'ffdifa' 7211-I Y - ' f Q21 4 '-- .5-rv SQ. 'GIF 5,155 , W IGGINS GOLDTHWAU' 5325: ,f : .-,. . 'F' CARLIN, MATHISON BLA KE BURLEIGH SCHONTHAL gn' ga Coach 'VMS Jf? :ggi AGER BARTLETT 93121 . .,,. M.- 7q:gf F, '1 R321 mf! pi: , wt 2-X-Q 'mv --W,-121 ff---.M ML--mm p--Napewi. . . . N.. :Ph '14--Nw-'M'-n'if'w16-1-c-1. fan-fr:--EY'.f.-1-:LM:aff-wi'-f1r?:e:L'::-!B25. fff,z'e-125311 'uv E-ef'-ws-41:11mm -waklpvvf,-,-:v.:s .ww- :!1f.f:91.:??X:9.:c-if --f K.-.xffmm-ww: 5-BW!M'?451-334-'-'r'91'f?S2lvbwgkfslixfsfeQLrf5rs5.h?fiaLmr4F-bes'29Lw.-camel,.E-SAmicuse292-zs:3ir1:wa'q1wpak555555:-2:L195511'eww-55m.iw.miTzXrGum, fl62j lf BASKET A NW 'li if A ALL if Captain Manager HOWARD COLBURN BLAKE, '06 FRED WARREN GOLDTHWAIT, '05 T E A M HOWARD COLBURN BLAKE, '06 . . . . Left Forward VVILLIAM E. H. MATHISON, '06 . . Right Forward CHARLES RANDALL BURLEIGH, '06 . . . Center ELMER WESLEY WIGOINS, '05 . . Right Guard JOHN WINTHROP AGER, '04 ...... Left Guard Substitutes STEWART CLARK COEY, '06 PAUL FREDERICKS, '07 G A M E s Date score December 8, Technology ws. Boston University . . 35-18 December 12, Technology vs. Holy Cross . . 16-12 December 16, Technology tus. Boston Y. lvl. C. A. . . 23-8 January 9, Technology fur. Worcester Polytechnic 18-22 January 16, Technology fur. N. H. College 29-16 February 10, Technology uv Brown University . . 2-1-22 February 17, Technology zu' Amherst College . . 28-25 llflarch 9, Technology fur. Worcester Polytechnic 17-34 lvlarch 12, Technology wr. Andover Academy . . 17-3-L 51631 3f1T5:'E37 f:fi513llif 539213 Ili- ff? Iii f -1-'Si'-I 3 'ffl -A 9' 33- Fi 5 if '7-5 if 35'i'-3155-3'f 5 '-'FfE51'?: ii If-'IE' if Iiiiiiitiifili E535 5f2i51E3i ':,:'-.azz . f-.LLIZI '-g-f3'f1'f'f r'FfE!:?? ts . ,Li '.',f .3 f.-.2 53,5 Q-:If i-F if P.: f,i.'f11fQ:'- te 1 v Ziff? 1E11'ffiai'fj.E,ff'2Ef :1 K I gjjg-Z'gQ 3i1f..3if3ij:fJf:?f:E5 ,L I I HE New England Intercollegiate Lawn Tennis Association holds one I tournament in May of each year, in which each college is represented by two Single teams and one double team. O F F I C E R S President Secretary and Treasurer L. T. WALLIS, Dartmouth ARTHUR W. POPE, Brown IVIEMBERS or THE ASSOCIATION Amherst College Colby College Tufts College Bates College Dartmouth College University of Vermont Brown University Trinity College Wesleyan University lVIaSsachuSetts Institute of Technology Williams College FOURTH ANNUAL TOURNAMENT Longwood, Mag' 26, 1903 SEMI-FINALS Singles- TURNER, Amherst, defeated JONES, lVI. I. T. . . 7-5, 9-7 L Y o N, Williams, defeated, WILLIAMS Amherst . G-4, 6-3 F I N A L s LYON,Williams defeated TURNER, Amherst 7-5, 1-6, 6-2, 6-0 SEMI-FINALS Doubles-LIBBY and DANA, Bowdoin, defeated JONES and LANGLEY, M. I. T. . . 6-3, 6-4 WALLIS and STEVENS, Dartmouth, defeated WISE and KNIGHT, Tufts, default F I N A L S LIBBY and DANA, Bowdoin, defeated WAL- LIS and STEVENS, Dartmouth 6-2, 7-5, 2-6, G-2 Technology Representatives JOSEPH RUSSELL JONES ARTHUR HOOPER LANGLEY LIGLIJ , ' X Aff tx. EUUEIUAS in A 'Q gif , I. f f t N ssoe . R9 . ,fx L 45 ti X f2 .x ll R Z l THE Technology Tennis Association holds one tournament, open to all Technology students, in the fall of each year. O F F I C E R S President ARTHUR HOOPER LANGLEY, '04 Vife President Secretary and Treasurer REGINALD HAZELTINE, '04 ELLIOT WRIGHT NILES, '04 FALL TOURNAh'IENT,1903 The tournament Was not completed in the fall on account of the early Winter. The matches to be played in the spring are:- Semi-Finals Singles, R. HAZELTINE ws. S. M. HENRY Finals Singles, W. A. HOPKINS ns. XVINNER OF ABOVE Doubles, R. C. REED and C. J. RICH, fur. A. H. LANGLEY and R. HAZELTINE 5 165 E QAM D lax L Q? fM,.S2.lz il O , mY J- A,,. U3 Captazn Manager 1252 ffl ' I 5 'A I I ll MI , iz: illl '7 1R' . 5'I'?gQj, . XII ,II , .dl , ' wil Q 1 xf T j'5 HENRY LAWRENCE DEAN EARLL CHASE WEAVER EDWIN BRUCE HILL EMIL STEINBERGER . . HENRY LAWRENCE DEAN THEO. AUGUSTINE DISSELL . ALFRED DENNET SMITH . . GEORGE MERRILL BARTLETT . First Base Second Base Short Stop Third Base Right Field Center Field HERBERT MYGATT WILCOX . Left Field PERCY LEONARD WELLS ' Catchers WALTER BURNS WILLIAM HUGH LALLEY 2 Pitchers ROBERT BURTON GREGSON S Subxtitutes RALPH KAY FORSYTH PHILIP EDWARD HINKLEY ROBERT SHERMAN GARDNER OTTO WILLIAM FICK I SCHEDULE OFGAMES DME Score April 18 1905, vs. Malden High School . . . 13-18 April 20 1905, tus. Stoneharn High School . . 16-10 April 28 1905, 115. Tufts, 1905 . . . 9-5 May 9 1905, fw. 1906 . . . 12-4 May 16, 1905, 115. 1906 . . . 11-12 May 19 1905, ws. 1906 . . . . . 9-10 fl66J Games won, 3 Games lost, 3 A SE E ALLNLIL. 1 QEI ME L'--.I 19 fy -et it L EE TET, ,, U 'lf' W -F AW CLASS CHAMPIONS-1902-1903 Captain Manager GEORGE lV1ORRIS WINNE WALTER BREVORT WYMAN . ROWLAND PARKER DAVIS . WILLIAM ALLEN REDDING, JR. . PATRICK JAMES KENNEDY . GEORGE MORRIS WINNE . HAROLD STREETER . . ABRAHAM LAMPIE . . ARTHUR SCOTT THOINIAS . JOHN FRANCIS HALEY . SIDNEY TAYLOR CARR . Szzbstitzr tes BRUCE HONEYAIAN BURNELL POOL . . JAMES ALLEN KANE Dail April 18, April 20, April 22 April 23 9 NI 21 y 111 ay NI ay NI E1 y 11 16 19 1906 1906 1906 1906i 1906 1906 1906 1906 3 H Q SCHEDULE OF GAMES Us, Harvard, 190-1 , . . vs. Franklin Athletic Club . tw. Bates College . . zur. Harvard, 190-1 . tw. 1905 . . . wr. Tufts hfledical College , tu: 1905 . . . . . zur. 1905 ...... Games won, -1 Games lost, -1 WILLIAM ALLEN REDDING, JR. . Pitcher Pitcher Catcher First Base Second Base Third Base Left Field Center Field Right Field Short Stop In Field Score . 3-12 . 1-1-11 . 0-19 . 2-2-1 . -1-12 . 1-l-6 . 10-9 . 12-11 I 1437 J ,lllll J We - N Ea . Co A I I , U W THE New England Intercollegiate Golf Association was formed in May, 1903, with Amherst, Bowdoin, Brown, Technology and Williams as charter members. The Association holds one tournament in the fall of each year. O F F I C E R S President M. A. JONES, Williains Vice President Secretary and Treasurer C. D. NIERCER, Brown W. A. LUNT, Bowdoin Executive Committee M. A. JONES, Williams W. A. LUNT, Bowdoin S. F. JONES, Amherst C. D. MERCER, Brown R. B. VVILLIAMS, M. I. T. FIRST ANNUAL TOURNAMENT Wannamoisett Club Links, Providence, Qctober, 1903. SUMMARY or POINTS Brown, 21 M. I. T., 17 1-2 Amherst, 3 Bowdoin and Williams were not represented M. I. T. TEAM QUINCY PIERCE EMERY, '06 I-I. B. HASTINGS, '07 HENRY SIMONDS HUBBELL, '06 FREDERICK SCHUYLER KRAG, '06 RALPH BROWN WILLIAMS, '04 fic-ssl llniteb grtates Coffegiate 9 3-5 sec. A. DUFFY Georgtown 211-5 sec. B. J. WEFERS Georgetown 15 2-5 sec. A. C. KRAENZLEIN Pennsylvania 23 sec. A. C. KRAENZLEIN Pennsylvania 47 sec. W. BAKER Harvard 51703 ecorbs Q1.afs.J.Q4L.Q5c. 100-Yard Dash 10 sec. A. E. CURTENIUS Amherst H. H. CLOUDMAN Bowdoin 220- Yard Dash zz 1-5 sec. H. H. CLOUDMAN Bowdoin 120- Yam' High Hurdles 15 3-5 sec. S. CHASE Dartmouth 220-Yard Low Hzzrdlesii 254-5 see. G. P. BURCH M. I. T. P. P. EDSON Dartmouth 440- Yard Dash 50 1-5 suc. G. B. SHATTUCK Amherst 011. 5. GZ. QL 10 1-5 sec. R. S. FRANKLIN 22 3-5 sec. LE B. TURNER 16 2-5 sec. E. L. OVINGTON 25 4-5 sec G. P. BURCH 51 1-5 sec. J. A. ROCKWELL 1 min. 53 2-5 sec. C. H.' KILPATRICK Union College 4 min. 2-5 sec. G. W. ORTON Pennsylvania 9 min. 51 sec. ALEX GRANT Pennsylvania 24 ft. 4 1-2 in. A. C. KRAENZLEIN Pennsylvania 41 11. 4111. W. B. PAGE Pennsylvania 11 fr. 131-2 111. J. L. HURLBURT Wesleyan 44 ft. S 1.2 in. F. BECK Yale 1115 ff. 1 1.2 111. A. PLAW California 880-Yard Run 1m1n. 59 sec. H. S. BAKER M. I. T. One-Mile Run -1 min. 25 3-5 sec. A. L. WRIGHT Brown Two-Mile Run 10 min. 3 3-5 sec. 0. N. BEAN Brown Running Broad Jump 22 ft.51-1 In. H. C. VAN WEELDEN Trinity Running High Jump 5 ft. 9 3-4 in. I. K. BAXTER Trinity Pole Vault 11 ft. 61-2 in. J. L. HURLBURT Wesleyan Putting 16-Pound Shot 42.11 I1 1.1 111. S. R. E. ROLLINS 1 min. 59 sec. H. S. BAKER, '03 4 min. 30 3-5 sec. H. S. BAKER, A03 10 min. 36 3-5 sec. F. B. RILEY, '05 22 ft. 1 1-2 in. W. GROSVENOR, '99 C. D. G. 6 ft. 1-2 in. HEYXVOOD, A93 10 ft. SJ 1-2 in. A. CURTIS, '04 40 ft. 1-4 iu. H. P. MCDONALD, '01 Amherst Tfzrowing 16-Pound .Plummer 134 ff. 2 1.2 In. 115 fr. A. C. DENNING B. E. LINDSLY, '05 Bowdoin 51711 Zec6nique 1905 72ZecBnique 190 5 Th rowing the Disrus 116 fr. 116 fc. 110ft. 2 1.2 in. A. M. WATSON A. M. WATSON L. G. MORRILL,' 05 Maine Maine Two-Mile Bicycle Race 4 min. 36 4-5 sec. 4 min. 36 4-5 sec. 4 min. 36 4-5 sec. R. MURRAY R. MURRAY R. MURRAY, '01 M. I. T. M. I. T. SPECIAL EVENTS OF THE M. I. T. A. A. Event Holder Time, Height or Distance . . . 4 Sec. 55-Yard Dash .... A. W. GROSVENOR, '99 55-Yard Low Hurdles . J. W. HORR, '02 . 4 3-5 Sec. Running High Jump . . R. D. FARRINGTON, '05 . . 5 ft. 7 3-4 in. Putting 16-Pound Shot . F. W. BARROWS, '07 . 34 ft. 3 in. Pale Vault ..... G. A. CURTIS, '04 . 10 fr. 1-2 in. Potato Race . J. A. ROCKWELL, IR., '96 . . . 50 I-5 Sec. RECORDS ESTABLISHED DURING THE PAST YEAR hvent Holder Record 100-Yard Dash . . . 10 I-5 Sec. 220 -Yard Dash . 120-Yard High Hurdles .... S RALPH STOWELL FRANKLIN, '03 LE BARON TURNER, '05 . . . 22 3-5 sec. EARLE LEWIS OVINGTON, '04 . . . 16 2-5 sec. Two-Mile Ran . . FRANCIS BRADFORD RILEY, '05 10Qmin.36 3-5sec. Throwing 16-Pound . . . 118fr. Hammer .... BEN EDWIN LINDSLY, '05 . . Throwing Disras . LEON GILBERT MORRILL, '05 . 110 fr. 2 1-2 in. Pale Vault . . . GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, '04 . . 10 fr. 9 1-2 in. Pole Vault findoorj GEORGE ALDEN CURTIS, '04 . . 10 ft. 1-2 in. f172j Wk! J 5 . L I ' , 1 .1,'5,g1 f !',. , , , .. ., - V ,f,'.-, 17.1, , , iv--.1 v,, ' 5 ' Z '-' .?f5r' J. L 14,5 ,g,:m'f', ,,.. T, If , 1. i I . .,-, 4,52 I ,HV--:,1 1X ,, -W ' ff:7p,'L ' jr .,. :l .l i.-- W 1 lfjg 1 K 45' 'b 'i --' E 1,917-M gg fl :.,:. , Z 1 X iw V 5 fa ., xx N- , 7- ,1 , W, f N 'I I 41 k P I K KY N W., - -if -'sig' 2'-. ,xxx-'QP ., ,L ,Z ,S , , ,M ,W N1 ,1. a- r Af M ERT 'Q' N ,,Q. 'iClECJC,E J mmccccmv xiiv 5 .,iEf32iVWWm ifwl . ,....,...,. ,, ,.u.,, . . ...... .... 5. R i. , . 1 .... mw-.-.-m--m..v--W-w-mW-----'T Engage!!! :ggrvmn-r-gr .Q 4v1IJI1:u:lJL'.euv.mmv.- ga' lx V lallfallv i... 'I 4 -- iii 'T' -w 1 Nr - .,..--,vu -.-- I XL X 5 Q l in -uf V - E' h ., - ' gm - gy N :SQ Q. . E 5' F' Ji- C Z F-Jxiiislii 1 S 4 E .qu , JUL . MAROHHEOTVRALSOQETY O FFIC E R S A. W. RICHARDS R. E. L. TAYLOR . J. MCF. BAKER . S. T. STRICKLAND . F. NICKERSON H. W. ROWE B. A. RICHARDSON HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. C. L. ADAMS Mr. T. H. BARTLETT Mr. E. F. BROWN Prof. F. W. CHANDLER Mr. A. H. COX Prof. D. DESPRADELLE Prof. H. W. GARDNER . President Vice President Secretary . Treasurer Executive Committee Mr. D. A. GREGG Mr. E. B. HOLIER Mr. S. W. NIEAD Mr. GUY LOWELL Mr. C. W. SAWYER Prof. J. O. SUMNER Mr. ROSS TURNER Mr. C. H. WALKER I 175 zecgnique ACTIVE MEMBERS 1905 I. R. ADAMS G. R. AINSWORTH J. MCF. BAKER G. H. BARROWS W. A. BEATON G. W. BRIGGS F. M. CHASE N. CHAMBERLIN A. R. COBB G. P. CARIXIICHEAL L. C. CLARKE W. H. CROWELL W. P. DELANO, JR O. FAELTON R. S. FOULDS F. W. FRIEND G. FUNK W. C. FURER B. E. GECKLER M. H. GOLDSTEIN II763 G. G. HALL H. M. HATHAWAY A. H. HEPBURN E. L. HIGGINS E. E. HOXIE A. H. HOWLAND C. P. HOWES A. H. JACOBS H. F. KEYES E. C. LOWE L. LUGNER F. C. LUTZE G. M. NIAGEE E. W. MASON F. NICKERSON G. C. NORTON L. A. PARKER A. VV. RICHARDS N. A. RICHARDS B. A. RICHARDSON Q Ogg 5 Rf L. W. RICHARDSON . W. ROWE A. J. SHOLTES SWARTZ . G. SIMPSON T. STRICKLAND R. E. SHERLOCK . S. SHERMAN SCHWARTZ H. SMITH W. F. SMART R. E. L. TAYLOR P. WADSWORTH . A. WHITNEY . H. WHITEHOUSE R. WYMAN O. M. WIARD G. WILSON S. WILCOX fig? -Arif . '5'iR:3l'-. -I Mg 2 Eg DISC ,,,,e'F'fQ.f I fxyy: Ie: , z - Fil I-A3 .fzfg rx' 1 ,AS I cv- 1 ffl'-'Hi-I Tl .1 .pf .fn :+I-I-ix f'J:lfH?211'iEfN1:TFkx ff .'i5p4':5f '314?0!5'B5 --'- 1' 11. I - maj 5 :f.:,r3'ps:1?-'1 FIR + R n f F : .39Qf JT5g'i' :5::5f?fI3 nfff'! '.,I.'j:J'f5?::Eii If - f'2ff.'3:31if-7fE'?1 J R':?fi'i '1 A ., ' -w ' f . - - -4- I-7 .fr A .' - CURRIER LANG . . President WILLIAM A. KENIPER . Vice President HARRY M. NABSTEDT . Secrefary FRANK M. CARHART . . . . Treasurer M. L. EMERSON E. F. ALLBRIGHT W. U. C. BATON A. W. BEE, JR. F. A. BICCI L. BIXBY B. BLUM R. V. COLLINS W. W. CRONIN J. E. CUNNINGHAM G. A. CURTIS F. H. DAVIS D. F. DOW H. P. DRAKE E. L. EDES M. L. EMERSON B. G. FOCC H. FRENCH C. R. ADAMS C. ALLEN J. AYER . Chairman of Program Committee MEMBERS 1904 C. J. GRIFFIN H. H. GROVES, JR. R. K. HALE W. A. HARRIGAN R. G. HARTSHORN H. A. HILL L. T. HOWARD A. R. HOLBROOK N. M. JOHNSON W. A. KEMPER H. A. KENDALL W. H. KOPPELNIAN C. LANG A. H. LANGLEY H. LEVINE W. V. MCMENIMEN F. K. JVIERRIMAN 1 9 0 5 J. E. BARLOW R. S. BEARD F. G. BENNETT B. H. MILLER W. D. MURRAY G. P. PALMER H. L. PIERCE A. P. PORTER M. C. RICHARDSON J. W. ROLAND F. J. SEVERY . G. H. SHAW E. F. SMITH E. E. STETSON O. G. THURLOW R. P. WEYMOUTH J. E. WHITE G. W. C. WHITINC F. S. WILSON B. A. YODER E. G. BILL R. H. BURKE F. M. CARHART Lmj Ceclinique 190 5 N. M. CHIVERS W. D. CLARKE E. L. DAVIS C. A. EMERSON, JR. F. H. FILES G. FULLER N. P. GERHARD S. A. GREELEY T. GREEN H. J. GUERIN R. E. HADLEY R. M. HARDING J. H. HAYES, JR. L. 0. HOPKINS G. A. HOOL C. A. HOUCK C. T. HUMPHREY T. E. JEWETT E. F. KRIEGSMAN H. P. BARNES C. T. BARTLETT F. A. BENHAM L. G. BLODCETT C. F. BREITZKE C. E. CARTER E. S. CHASE H. B. CHESS, JR. G. L. DAVENPORT, JR. K. H. DISQUE J. F. DORSEY H. C. ELLIOTT W. F. FARLEY C. A. FARWELL T. M. GILMER G. R. GUERNSEY 51781 W. H. LALLEY R. F. LUCE H. M. LYNDE O. C. MERRILL H. C. MITCHELL V. MOLINA E. P. MOOREHEAD J. A. MURR L. F. MYERS H. M. NABSTEDT D. H. NICHOLSON L. H. PARKER G. A. QUINLAN F.. M. READ, JR. W. S. RICHMOND L. E. ROBBE H. R. ROBBINS C. SAVILLE, JR. F. W. SIMONDS 1906 F. HALEY J. F. HALEY T. L. HINCKLEY G. F. HOBSON E. R. HYDE J. F. JOHNSTON, JR. R. D. KELLEY H. W. KENWAY W. H. LINCOLN H. E. LORING C. LYNDE J. R. MCCLINTOCK J. W. MCKERNAN P. W. MACK J. E. L. MONAGHAN T. A. NOLAN H. B. ORCUTT W. E. SIMPSON C. H. SMITH H. S. SPAULDING F. C. STARR R. E. TARBETT W. A. TAYLOR A. O. TRUE W. TUFTS L. B. TURNER J. F. URQUIDI A. W. WALKER H. S. WALKER, JR W. H. WARNOCK E. C. WEAVER R. N. WHITCOMB J. A. WHITE K. WHITMAN, JR. R. E. WISE R. R. PATCH C. PIERCE M. H. PLACE E. B. POLLISTER W. RANNEY S. M. RIVITZ W. C. ROCHELEAU R. E. SHEDD A. L. SHERMAN G. C. SIMPSON R. C. SPRAGUE H. W. STREETER G. A. WALL S. C. WOLFE D. M. WOOD W. A. YOUNG ..-.,..--.A--....fS.e,fY ,M .iw N 5 S .1....- .. , ... - ... - - -A BIIAF EAEA IB BYRON H. CLINGERMAN . President J. CRAWFORD NYCE . . . Vice President ROBERT PALMER . Secretary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE J. CRAWFORD NYCE , BEN C. MOOERS Pres Prof Prof Prof Prof THOMAS P. BEDFORD HONORARY MEMBERS HENRY S. PRITCHETT CHARLES R. CROSS LOUIS DUNCAN WILLIAM L. PUFFER HARRY E. CLIFFORD GRA Mr. NEWELL C. PAGE Mr. IVIONTAGUE FERRY Mr. JAMES M. GAMMONS SENIOR IVIEMBE WILLIAM P. BENTLEY L. H. GUSTAVE BOUSCAREN, JR. JOHN S. BRIDGES CHARLES R. CARY BYRON H. CLINGERMAN WILL R. CROXVELL WILLIAM H. EAGER GUY W. EASTMAN DAVID ELXVELL Prof. LOUIS DERR Prof. FRANK A. LAWS Mr. RALPH R. LAWRENCE Mr. HARRISON W. SMITH Mr. FRANK B. JEWETT DUATE MEMBERS Mr. HAROLD OSBORN Mr. GEORGE H. CLARK Mr. CHARLES H. PORTER RS NIEL D. EMERSON ALBERT C. FERRY GRANT FORD DON L. GALUSHA WALTER I. GILL, JR. SELBY HARR HUBIPHREY M. HALEY JOSEPH A. HARADEN JOHN HALL 51791 Ceclinique 1905 GUY HILL HENRY K. HOOKER WILLIAM A. HYDE GEORGE K. KAISER HERBERT T. KALMUS PHILIP J. KEARNEY ROYAL D. MAILEY BEN C. MOOERS EDWARD S. MORRISON HARRY H. NEEDHAM ELIOT W. NILES J. CRAWFORD NYCE ROBERT PALMER CARL E. PEILER ROLAND B. PENDERGAST ROBERT M. PHINNEY GORDON MCI. PROUDFOOT JOHN B. RAPIER EDWARD B. RICH HENRY K. RICHARDSON LESTER A. RUSSELL JOHN R. SANBORN HENRY W. STEVENS RICHARD STRESAU PHILIP S. SWEETSER WILLIAM N. TODD GEORGE S. WARD WILLIAM G. H. WHITAKER, WALTER WHITIVIORE CLARENCE B. WILLIAMS A JUNIOR MEMBERS ARTHUR H. ABBOTT FRED H. ABBOTT CARLTON E. ATWOOD COURTLANDT W. BABCOCK JAMES P. BARNES WILLIAM F. BECKER THOMAS R. BEDFORD FRANK W. BROWNELL WALTER M. BUTTS THOMAS B. CABELL HARRY P. CHARLESWORTH FRANCIS J. CHESTERMAN HAROLD G. CRANE GORHAM CROSBY JOHN C. DAMON JUNIUS DAVIS, JR. JAMES M. DE MAILLIE JOHN F. DUNN JOHN C. EADIE A AUGUSTUS C. FOSTER ROY F. GALE ALFRED W. GEIST WILLIAM GREEN FRANK E. GUILD HAROLD B. HARVEY HENRY F. JACOBSON CUTLER D. KNOWLTON 51803 HENRY F. LEWIS EDWIN M. LINES WARREN W. LOOMIS ELLIOTT LUM WALDO V. LYON ARTHUR J. MANSON WALTER N. MUNROE GALT F. PARSON HARRY S. PERCIVAL FREDERICK P. POOLE GEORGE I. RHODES JAMES H. ROGERS ERNEST G. SCHMEISSER FREDERIC J. SCHWARZ RALPH L. SEGAR ROBERT W. SEYMS CHESTER R. SHAW THOMAS SHAW HENRY B. SIEBRECHT SIDNEY A. SMITH FRANK L. SNOW EDWARD T. STEEL, 2D. HAROLD C. STETSON LEWIS A. WALLON MAURICE E. WEAVER HENRY A. WENTWORTH RAY H. WHITE LOUIS C. WINSHIP J ,-5 f . . . Z 4 , v ABQ... Y- ' X 3 egg? U S:-gf glggg, t A 'fa fsgbigf. A. ..Q'if?-2 I F 1, ,rip-lpxrff .::gJ?fQ,S .4 ,.-1. -,-P. . .-'xr -.4-L. .swfm-S 'fi-TE' ,-. ' 1 zfwfvw 3. O F F I C E R S RALPH BROWN WILLIAMS .... Prerident FREMONT NELSON TURGEON Vife President and Treayurer ROY HUTCHINS ALLEN . Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE R. B. WILLIAMS R. H. ALLEN F. N. TURGEON E. BURTON HONORARY MEMBERS President HENRY S. PRITCHETT Prof. HENRY FAY Prof. R. H. RICHARDS Prof. R. H. LODGE Prof. WILLIAM H. NILES Prof. G. H. BARTON Prof. A. E. BURTON Prof. A. G. ROBBINS Prof. H. O. HOEMAN Prof. WILLIAM O. CROSBY Prof. H. P. TALBOT Prof. F. J. MOORE Prof. WILLIAM H. WALKER ACTIVE NIEMBERS 1 9 O -L R. E. ADAMS M. BROWN JR. R. E. DIMOCK l G. M. BATES J. F. CARD R. FAULKNER W. B. BOOOS C. C. CARHART O. D. FELLOWS, IR. I 181 J Qieclinique 1905 L. G. GILLETT W. E. HADLEY C. A. HARDY R. HAYDEN C. R. HAYWARD R. HAZELTINE R. H. ALLEN A. J. AMBERG W. G. BALL E. T. BARRON H. A. BUFE E. BURTON C. H. CLAPP H. M. COWPER F. S, CRAVER C. E. DANFORTH J. BARRIE L. M. BUCK 51823 F. W. HORTON G. B. MANSON H. MERRYWEATHER H. F. NOYES R. C. REED G. C. RIDDELL 1905 J. DANIELS C. L. DEAN H. W. DONALD F. S. ELLIOTT J. T. GLIDDEN W. S. GOUINLOCK E. S. GRAHAM H. G. HIXON F. R. INGALSBE B. L. JOHNSON C. W. JOHNSTON 1906 E. K. CHASE H. E. DARLING C. HUTCHINS .fX 'X,R . Nxt ' If 2.-QU-XX f 'I K 1' 5-.. ' F-7 fl? , , ' 3 ,ff . 1 ' ,f-. AHA. kv-A-Nw., rr ,-L j ,WED fn . W. P. SCHUMACHER J. W. SHAW F. N. TURGEON E. WASTCOAT F. A. WILDER R. B. WILLIAMS R. KIBBEY B. E. LINDSLY W.D. B. MOTTER, JR A. E. RIPPEY M. RUBEL R. B. SARRATEA R. W. SENGER S. SHAPIRA W. L. SPALDING G. G. WALD A. W. WELLS F. W. LIBBEY M. E. VINTON A. P. WATT ..I, ..:x. N 4'-.- fn f'..: .m1Ews.wezyEf1eIzeeQf.f.s1PE.:-I: -:x- . - G -va. S we ..Mre'+SE ,. 40 'Sf I ' I, .. h ,A ' N AE' fi! BRAKE.. S f ,.,,,,,,....,, .,,, ,, .,,,,1., . ...,.,..- 5 .. -- M ww f:-r .. ., 5 '.., f- ., -.:,'..f,:sQ2- 'ifw -1 15215315gigyg-.,:s3g,5:y12QQ.4 , Wag... e., I ' .I - .. t,Q,: 5r-Qi' -- '- -'131i1.if:f.g:.3 ' -' 'A'A QM 'A-A - ' .- M' ,. vw .-.t '?mmaxr,,,.m5.,.,.:,2,k-:4,,,y,,dIgf414-. iw I I -ff4.w.mPmx.mmvr1mw mwmwam:5'Wif??: j O F F I C E R S S. ATMORE CAINE . . President ROGER P. STEBBINS Vice President CLAUDE A. ANDERSON . . Secretary ALBERT H. SMITH . Treasurer MEMBERS J. L. ACKERSON CHARLES J. EMERSON W.WETHERALLSAMMEN EDW. C. GRANT C. A. ANDERSON GEO. E. ATKINS RALPH H. BAKER CALVIN P. BASCOM W. H. BLAKEMAN EDW. A. BURKHARDT W. B. CAIN S. ATMORE CAINE W. A. CLARKE ROSWELL DAVIS H. LAWRENCE DEAN CARL F. EDWARDS HERMAN EISELE T. M. GUNN AUSTIN Y. HOY J. A. KEENAN HENRY H. W. KEITH C. E. LEAVITT EUGENE LOMBARD A. C. LYON AMBROSE MERRILL ROBERT B. MORSE RALPH H. NESINIITH KVM. A. NELSON V. HUGO PAQUET F. E. PAYNE GEO. W. PERRY GEORGE H. POWELL PAUL J. RALPH ROWLAND G. RICE A. O. ROBERTS ARTHUR E. RUSSELL ROSS R. SCHULTE CHARLES L. STEINROK RUSSELL B. SIMONS HARRY A. C. SMALL A. H. SMITH N. L. SNOW ROGER P. STEBBINS GILBERT S. TOWER KISSJ E, OCIET K 2 I. 11IuI........... illlllll .pw A ... mm-'E V22 ,,iQ.-55591 .ff-i'1EE55.'?!i'lf2' ami - 'rl-IB - 'hr 'We' B ir, 3 , A -. A . ir, A 1 A 'D A . f - .. , N f'..l a A . f ,. . If . i Wg..-.'..1-qi ,dn gm -- - A W, . .,.-- .. I lfwfn- , - .Jw -'eh . I . ' .-Jo' HH Ve, 5 'T 1.- i n-' '.'.'..:.L::fxr:T:Y' f'- Jr 5,221j,'..L1IZ.ZL.IZ?.5Z'.LZf7l7 -'-:T 'Ii' ' ' 1 1 lm 1 Q A nz- sz' A -. I 1- A f -A ,A Y -J -M g ' E ,.m-:I me .na-I Im 1 I ,-Q-,la x , M K' Li mann . -,,.,.....-r 3 w--A-e .., S -r I 'T'-I-F' 7 , u I4 'T I . .... ,A 1 1- Ar. .ev -.v 1 fur ni? e .v ue -'iv ,I Esmwen v 7 1. SAL... I S . -: ' J A LQ, A... , -... :L by WT, IH P I' I' F' A 'H T Q' 'Sf 'F lk 5- 'L mf. 'V K 5 ,J ,, -, ,, 'gr . A .. .. V ,... O F F I C E R S EVERETT OSGOOD HILLER . . President RALPH OSBORNE INGRAM . Vice Preyident AMASA MAYNARD HOLCOMBE . Secretary WILLIAM ARCHIBALD EVANS . . . Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE CLIFTON C. EASTERBROOK ALFRED W. BURNHAM PERRIE M. ARNOLD HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. GAETANO LANZA Prof. EDW. F. MILLER, '86 Prof. ALLYN L. MERRILL, '85 Prof. CHAS. F. PARK, '92 Prof. PETER SCHWAMB, '78 H. L. COBURN ..... Graduate Secreiezry GRADUATE TVIEMIBERS W. H. ADAMS, '03 H. L. COBURN, '98 H. H. FALES, '03 ARCHIBALD GARDNER, '02 IRVIN H. KAUFMAN, '98 H. S. KIMBALL, '91 G. M. MACDONALD '03 3 7 CHAS. T. MAIN, 76 HARRY L. MORSE, '99 J. R. PUTNAM, '01 P. M. ARNOLD J. C. BAKER H. O. BLATT S. S. BRADLEY C. E. BROAD A. W. BURNHAM H1841 THOMAS G. RICHARDS, '94 J. C. RILEY, '98 ODIN B. ROBERTS, '88 E. W. RUTHERFORD, '98 R. E. SIMONDS, '01 CHAS. H. SMITH, '98 G. W. SWETT, '03 GEO. TAYLOR, '94 MARK E. TAYLOR, '98 R. L. WILLIAMS, '01 I 9 0 4 C. F. BARRETT E. L. CLIFFORD F. J. CARTY L. CLOUGH M. W. CARTY E. B. COOPER E. W. CALKINS, JR. E. H. COX H. H. CERF W. D. CHANDLER W. L. CRONIN J. W. CROWELL A. S. COURTNEY M. W. DOLE W. L. DOTEN W. H. EDGECOMB C. C. EASTERBROOKS W. A. EVANS C. Y. FERRIS J. B. FINNIGAN J. A. FREMMER E. HARRAH C. R. HAYNES J. L. HECHT E. O. HILLER A. M. HOLCONIBE D. ADAMS C. H. AVERY A. F. BELDING S. W. BENSON W. P. BIXBY W. F. BENT J. H. BROWN T. H. BROWN A. M. COFFIN S. C. COLE A. M. DEAN F. S. DRAKE W. G. EICHLER R. D. FARRINGTON J. H. FLYNN F. H. FOLEY A. F. FREEMAN A. P. GERRY W. F. GERRY W. C. GILMAN L. E. GILMORE J. W. GLADDING F. W. GOLDWAITE F. H. BENTLEY H. V. COES E. A. FRANK F. M. FULLER C. A. HOWARD A. F. HOLMES W. G. HOUSEKEEPER A. Y. HOY E. R. HUMPHREY R. O. INGRAM J. A. KEENAN C. KING M. LEH G. E. LIBBY J. L. LYON E. H. METCALF A. W. MUNSTER A. W. O,CONNOR M. A. O,CONNOR F. M. PIERCE 1 9 O 5 R. B. GREGSON J. A. HARNETT W. F. HARRINCTON C. W. HAWKES E. L. HILL P. E. HILL E. S. HINKLEY P. E. HINKLEY J. H. HOLLIDAY S. T. HYDE G. B. JONES W. T. KEEN C. D. KLAHR J. M. LAMBIE M. B. LANDERS J. S. LAUGHLIN N. LOMBARD E. H. LORENZ J. E. LYNCH W. N. JVIACBRIDE H. J. BJACINTIRE G. D'W. JVIARCY R. W. NICLEAN 1906 P. J. KENNEDY, JR. VV. J. KNAPP J. T. LAXVTON, JR. H. J. JYIANN C. A. JVIERRIAM C. H. SH.-XPLEIGH F. A. PIRIE L. PHILLIPS W. F. RECH E. L. ROCKWOOD H. T. ROLLINS E. L. RUEE C. R. SHEAFE H. E. THOMPSON H. E. TRIPP W. D. VOSBURY R. A. WENTWORTH A. C. WILLARD E. J. WILSON E. T. WOOD M. G. MERRIANI P. A. MONTANUS R. MORSE J. H. PAYNE J. A. PITTS T. P. POOLE G. W. PRENTISS A. G. PRESCOTT C. R. PRICHARD W. C. RINEARSON C. E. SMART T. L. SMITH H. J. STEVENSON A. E. SWEETSER J. W. TAYLOR J. H. TEBBETS G. THOMAS H. L. WALKER F. D. WEBSTER HORATIO WHITING A. L. WHITMARSH J. B. WHITMORE H. M. WILCOX A. C. TAYLOR D. M. TAYLOR F. A. TARR L. H. TRIPP VV. F. XVALKER 51353 Qieclinique 1905 e. .. I A CHEMICAL I f , I IM N, 'D , 5 I - , ,J x,Hj .III 7 ': EI AQ? 1 We 'K I T WMHWQ A 1 f 'I x I II ' 'S , 'Eva 3 ' .I ffm., , N3? 1'i A -hx 9 .9 H JA nt-ff: -I. X ,, K, 5 fLg . X rr is ,L 3 I f .. 1,- ,i l - I 4' f ' . fi5if'23. R. f A ii' ifi fv ax ,pi m-:fwJg.f , - S A I , - -...ge 1 : r j - 1. Iwlitilmi-4i 1'4'. A ' ' ' T cam.-NH -f.Mw - vue... will 'f-H0 ' :I-Lat.:---II-I---n nnu.nYn-gun --I I I.: - ' :n sm. mm OFFICERS A. D. SMITH . A. W. BURNHAM W. H. KEEN . F. S. FARRELL . W. W. DUNCAN M. H. CLARK K. M. BAUM J. S. BRIDGES, JR. L. M. BOURNE A. W. BURNHAM W. R. CROWELL A. C. DOWNES W. W. DUNCAN F. S. FARRELL F. W. FARRELL IISGJ . President . Viee President Secretary . Treasurer Meinber of Executive Board MEMBERS 1903 1904 J. B. FINNEGAN H. W. GALLUP C. R. HAYNES CHAS. HOY W. D. LYNCH R. D. MAILEY J. R. MARSTON M. E. MASON H. H. NEEDHAA'I W. T. REGISTEIN E. W. NILES R. S. PHILLIPS H. K. RICHARDSON S. SKOWRONSKI A. D. SMITH R. B. SOSMAN E. W. WHITE R. H. WHITE S. H. AYERS G. M. BARTLETT S. W. BENSON A. C. BISBEE W. BURNS C. A. BUTMAN M. CLINE G. CROSBY F. M. EATON R. W. BABE 1905 R. S. GIFFORD F. W. GUIBORD M. HELPERN H. L. JACKSON W. H. KEEN A. H. KELLING A. C. LONG A. MERRILL E. F. MOODY I. NIDITCH G. B. PERKINS E. C. SMITH E. STEINBERGER E. W. WASHBURN H. A. WENTWORTH E. W. WIGGINS H. K. MERROW I 906 C. B. MOREY J. E. SIMMONS D. BLOOM SHERLEY P. NEWTON P. TRENTHARDT H. P. CARRUTH J. F. NORTON TUCKER A. KERR E. B. ROWE WILLCOX R. N. SARGENT YOUNG may nf mi -- fgiifn . 22222: H1871 Qleclinique 1905 nag., 6 X X eg, Et X -229 X E529 u?ft5fEw.. if . FN ,gr n . ew- 8' l 'eq I ll v - J5., .ns Lamhgn - - Q '-'. H. R, 0 HE Society Of Arts aims to awaken and to maintain an interest in the practical applications of the sciences, and to aid in their advancement. Meetings are held semi-monthly from October to May, at Which reports of inventions, discoveries and matters of scientific and techincal interest are presented. Graduates of the Institute and other persons interested in the aims Of the Society are eligible to membership, and its meetings are open to students. O F F I C E R S HENRY SMITH PRITCHETT . . President JAMES F. NORRIS . Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GEORGE W. BLODGETT, Chairman EDMUND H. HEWINS A. LAWRENCE ROTOH JAMES P. MUNROE CHARLES T. MAIN The President The Secretary BOARD OF PUBLICATION WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, Chairman DWIGHT PORTER A. LAWRENCE ROTOH ROBERT P. BIGELOW Editor Technology Quarterly ROBERT P. BIGELOW' fissi X5 ix V' s-KN,-H CMM S 1-. . A NK ,ff I f Tk ' x Q A K 1 Q I X J, 1 A X fwvk , f Z fm Qs I f XI P 9383, r ' . vid .f Q ff 'g??7xA,' 'bf I QX : K N f X? J, 1 'i, .. FI' if, '. 5, ' L ' , A -bf 1 n if Xxx my UNT4, , . f j X I ', A f .f f l f I Alix ff X ,XR ix X. ' j x 4' ry. ' ' - 1 IJ F' if ,Q 9 X, ', ffl! J X' TN NJ , iff, IM xx J . NXT? jffb Y ,lf 1 -'11 .v X -fri X 'ff , in 1 'ff V A XC N246 Q X4 NT- 'Xfwi f , 5 .1 1,012-,S ,f DL W 'D D .g4+ K f fy! Q, -f i H WALKER QLUB. l L fi!! ,J N L6 1 ' 553 ' fi. xxsgi l-L - Ii gfx k 11. yl 4.-. A 1: J Sr Q-S - A L?-5 - 4 girly? ima-' ff .. Ir 'I,e -W , YI 1 .X S Q a 'l,. A - ' I. 5 V bfi ff - X,-,QQ MER, I ' 1, ' lj, 'My -E I ,fn F 'till f 5 i . Q-Eizwi, rf -5,3 , O F F I C F. R S MELVIN HUMBERT SCHWARTZ . . . Preridenf ALFRED PEABODY . . . Secretary and Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS Prof. ARLO BATES Mr. JOSEPH BLACKSTEIN Prof. CHARLES R. CROSS Prof. C. F. A. CURRIER Prof. DAVIS R. DEWEY Mr. CARROLL W. DOTEN Prof. GEO. T. DIPPOLD CARROLL CARY CURTIS ALDEN GLOVER DREW JOSEPH KITTREDGE ELLIOT LOUIS WILBAR HAMMETT EDWIN BRUCE HILL Prof. W. H. NILES Prof. HENRY G. PEARSON Pres. HENRY S. PRITCHETT Mr. ARCHER T. ROBINSON Prof. WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK Prof. JOHN O. SUMNER Dr. HARRY W. TYLER Prof. FRANK VOGEL M E M B E R S DENNIE KELLY KELLER WILLIAM COOLBAUGH MARSH EDWARD FRANCIS PARKER, JR ALFRED PEABODY MELVIN HUNIBERT SCHWARTZ CLARK DAVID SIMONDS 51901 , Nino-oooauoqdbc H.. .. ,.,.,., . Q- -3- 3.15.40 . . . .,o,a . . . . . .' 55 - 4 l YKJOOOOOOOVOUK i . I -tv -. .- .14-:e.'. ,- J :df 'cz 3 if . , If A Egg 1 55 X x H E : 'Qfff 5 4' I -.'!.. ..'..g,.,. 'S Q, ' 1 ' no-I . - .-.- O F F I C F. R S FLORENCE LOUISE WETHERBEE . . President HELEN Ross HOSMER . . Vice President ELEANOR MADELENE MANNING . Secretary EDNA GREENWOOD BAILEY Treasurer EDNA G. BAILEY EIJITI-I A. BECKLER ALICE F. BLOOD MILDRED E. BLODGETT ANNA M. CEDERHOLM MAUDE F. DARLING KATHERINE M. DEXTER SARAH L. BATES LLORA R. CULVER BEULAH C. HILL M E M E E R s HELEN R. HOSMER ELEANOR M. MANNING LAHVESIA P. C. PACKWOOD JANE B. PATTEN MARY J. RUGGLES ELORENCE L. WETHERBEE MILDRED F. WHEELER ISABEL WORTHINGTON SORORES IN URBE LAURA M. LUNDIN AVA M. STODDARD EDNA D. STODDARD 51913 .. . .. . L. ,. , mf- . ...Q ' - : ' 'M 1 r:, . P' iff .QFQQ-tQ'z'-12 I 3- -,.. :3,,-.:'g- .-.Q- ' ' '. -- ff ' 3- ' Jil... .-, ' E' . A - ' . ,. -' .L f A I' 'QQ .-31:4 6.5 3 ., I f f . PM 1 , ,gqf . ' gf .' ' 2: -fi -. . ff SE' 'f' 5 t , ., .5252 --,1Z'- :E-. -JE? . ft, ' 1 ' U . fi 91' Ll .zxiltws-Cal. . . .' 3-31 --51 ' ' ' '11 - 'i'-'-I5 1 i f 5 ' H' 1 ' Q 15:1 .EJ ff S J J ,C LJ ff J NJ -- 1 . - - . -,- mmm A - Y iv T mu umm mu m ' m,, Y- - ml UIIIL 1,7 .A i E mruullrnlu Lunm -mn.-. 5- Q- .5 l'! ' 1uuu.,:' Hi f 1. 251014 - --,,.. W E1 ,,..,---'j. 'ff' X . ff- ----- f ff ----- N PM' F' F' ff - l mpgge WM P ff' fn rf. WP , .-,-. fx- - I .P ' .- 4 , V ga R My 3' f f WWW ' ff E M M' WI L' M ' 1 A ,E X 'I '- YM- 'fm . L ll Fx Q 1, Y E L H J 9 0 SH QQN QXYZ: . F fm! V 4 V ,I .- 3 A ei' 7,15 -1 LL, ,X Ja ,. mf M5551 W Mmm. 5, Q ff f 'J ' E- R lx5S,',J' ,VW x ' 06.-.QSC W f ,Jw OFFICERS f F J - L E W ,Q L, . N2 .1 ' FLox'ED A. NARALIORE .... President I J ,5 f 9 5x W ALFRED H. KELLING . . Wee Presidem' YN X AA U EDWIN A. FRANIC . . . Secf'ez'a1'y- Treasurer 6 CL, xx '7 Q . PIONORARY MEMBER fl! L iii, DR. MASON I 4. Ld f M E M is E R s L4 M CHARLES LYMAN ANSON FRED CLEMENS LUTZE -f +2 CHARLES ALVIN EMEIiSON EDWARD S- MANSON .gg EDWIN A, FRANK CHARLES B. IYIAYER 43.1 I Q VVILLIAINT C. FUKEIQ GEORGE C. NOBLE ' 'uf' Q JULIUS A. :FURER FRANCIS LIENRY IQALES J VVALTER KIRKLAND GILLETT FLOYD A. NAIiAB1OIiE W K 4 M 55- FRANK E. PIAMILTON MARK H. PLACE l 'A' , ALITIZED H. KELLING EDWIN L- SMITH X,VALDAM1R KIRMER RICI-IAIQD STRESAN I -hfiifn 5 - ..... .... . X E eff 2 -- f See . -1 - R , F, . , I .- F' IZ , ,.. ? E' JS E ' N E 3 a,-ry--F ,f fl - ,R - ' fi ' 2 ' V , SQ:--' S - WWW' J Q ' 'J' E ' X' 'l 1T cr 51921 ma ix TI-Ia www si P OI-IU 4239. 'V75F7 if f -iff' 5 -gilt-.Jw JG, SW f SP' S fff M E Q O .9 ,37- 1 .1 EI L. .IL - of .. ,. .W-,. A, A aa .. - ' ,sf ., to ...La 152535-Enlg-5-, .e3QiZf'.fagWf,aff S59 wi 75, 41 Ai f - Qi?i?4Q4 f 1 I Z' E io .-ig. if Frgggf igigifws ' f . A33 a E E I 5 MEMS E E ' 5 f lil .i. E ' x Q -2 mwriff 2 7 ' 1171, . . f if ' M if ' K ' if UF Y'Y3 -- ,,,,..:4- ' O F F I C E R S HENRY S. PRITCHETT . Honararyf President GEORGE B. JONES . . President WILLIAM D. B. MOTTER . . Viee President LAURENCE G. BLODGETT . Secretary and Treasurer THOMAS P. BEDFORD LAURENCE G. BLODGETT ROYALL D. BRADBURY EVERETT S. CASON . ALBERT H. DONNEWALD EDWARD M. ELIOT . SELBY HAAR . JOHN B. HARLOW . HERMANN C. HENRICI ALFRED W. HERTZ . FREDERICK C. JACCARD GEORGE B. JONES . BEN E. LINDSLY . NORIVIAN LOMEARD . WILLIAM D. B. MOTTER CLARENCE A. NEAL 'CLARENCE B. POWELL MEMBERS Fayette Kansas City Kansas City Carrollton St. Louis St. Louis Kansas City St. Louis Kansas City Kansas City Kansas City St. Louis Kansas City Kansas City St. Joseph Kansas City Kansas City EDWARD M. READ . Sr. Louis JOHN R. REYBURN . St. Louis JOHN A. ROOT . . St. Louis RUTHEREORD BINGHAM WALTER G. DE STEIGUER WALTER H. TRASK, JR. JOSEPH S. WEIL LIQSJ B luv-ummm is DXQETEH CLU BII A - I f lei I P F D I P. E. HINKLEY . . . President H. M. NABSTEDT . First Vice President B. N. WHITE . Second Vice President E. A. MEAD Secretary and Treasurer M. AHUMADA, JR. F. R. BATCHELDER A. W. BLAKE MEMBERS J. H. LEAVELL R. J. LYONS S. A. MARX E. A. MEAD H. M. NABSTEDT A. P. PORTER L. E. ROBBE E. SPERRY B. N. WHITE E. F. WHITNEY E. S. WIRES W. A. YOUNG HONORARY MEMBERS C. T. BARTLETT H. P. CHARLESWORTH C. S. DEAN H. C ELLIOTT H. V FLETCHER J. M. FRANK H. B HASTINGS P. E. HINKLEY S. R. LAMB C. F. A. CURRIER I 194 I R. H. RICHARDS N. R. GEORGE, JR -1 gf- 'xx , XX W7 , I I N I f A?W'! AMW f A A f S I 'iikgrrfz GLU X XS F' ,E-.N ...az-,L 1-T -f--- iii, ! - 'nf O F F I C E R S HOWARD MAURICE EDMUNDS, '05 . . President WILLIAM ISAAC LOURIE, '06, Vice President ES' Business Mgr. ISADORE NIDITCH, '05 . . Serretary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE HOWARD M. EDMUNDS, '05 GUY HILL, '04 FRANKLIN J. VAN HOOK, '06 M E CHARLES TERREL BARTLETT, '06 MAX CLINE, '05 HOWARD IVJAURICE EDMUNDS, '05 IVIYRON HELPERN, '05 EMIL THEODORE HENIUS, '06 JOSEPH KENTIGERN HEYDON GUY HILL, '04 HAROLD LORD, '06 VVILLIAM ISAAC LOURIE, '06 FRANKLIN JAMES VVILLIAM ISAAC LOURIE, '06 ISADORE NIDITCH, '05 MBERS CHARLES BURROWS MOREY, MERRITT B. MERWIN, '07 HARRY HAINIPTON NEEDHAM SHERLEY PURL NEWTON, '06 ISADORE NIDITCH, '05 HIOXVARD LEROY PIERCE, '04 PHELPS NASH SWETT, '07 LEONARD ERNEST SCHLEMM, FRANKLIN JAMES VAN HOOK, I 7 '06 '04 '05 '06 195 IRENN ILA OLUB OFFICERS ROBERT STANLEY BEARD . . KENNETH HULBERT DISQUE . CHARLES LAKE DEAN . CHARLES HENRY SHAPLEIGH . . President . V ice President . Secretary Treayurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GEORGE DILLER LUTHER FLOID MERRILL FULLER W. G. ABBOTT, JR. R. S. BEARD R. H. BOOTH J. BROTHERLIN H. H. H. B. A. M. H. V. E. H. C. L. F. G. K. H. F. M. CERF CHESS, JR. CHIDESTER O. COEs COX DEAN DEMPWOLF DISQUE FULLER W. B. GONDER W. G. HOUSKEEPER E. G. HUYKILL R. G. KANN 51963 M E M B E RS P. R. WHITNEY R. J. KARCH C. D. KLAHR J. M. LAMBIE H. M. LEH G. D. LUTHER H. MARVIN L. B. MCBRIDE H. MOCREADY V. S. ROOD M. RUBEL D. E. Russ P. B. SADTLER C. H, SHAPLEIGH C. L. STEINROK D. M. TAYLOR C. J. TRAUERMAN L. A. THOMPSON v K.- Nr KIM .f 1. ' - may A All. . EL flmlllll N Ilvylnffnfmf I YIW i, hw H IrmmInmffmffmvnnme 1 QW , .... lfmh J-I I - ,1'F I'H Mf nig h NT: JSA ie.. 1. - U xfxi--:i'!i.' II --F lv ,Wu - '.U'Wll'W,' - I H 'C ' ' T'- ' N in .I JF - l WWI' 1 f'.4nl7i'a' '- 5- ' , ',i'jg24' ' N. ',vq,1dfr ' ,fi ff 'Q -fe!-f1fE'121 gg, CLARK E. WARREN W. J. KNAPP . HERBERT J. MANN EXE C U A. J. AMBERG B. BLUM J. F. CARD F. H. DAVIS R. B. PENDERGAST S. G. WARD H. A. WHITNEY J. W. WOODRUEF W. F. BECKER . K. CLARK R F. S. CRAVER C. E. WARREN E. T. HENIUS W. I. KNAPP H. J. NIANN J. F. NORTON G. M. WINNE . President . Vice President Secretary and Treasurer TIVE COMMITTEE R.H.BURKE MEMBERS C. PEIRCE A. J. AMBERG R. H. BURKE E. L. CLIFFORD J. E. FLORENTINE F. H. KALES M. T. LIGHTNER E. C. LOWE T. C. OEHNE, JR. E. PHELPS J. PRENDERGAST G. M. PROUDFOOT W. F. RICH H. K. POOLE O. W. POTTER E. H. REED I 19 GEOLOGY JOURNAL l cl.uB ..f: f ai THE Geology Journal Club was Organized in October, 1903, for the purpose Of becoming familiar with the latest Work and literature of economic, mining, and stratigraphic geology. Membership is Open to students in the mining and geology courses. Meetings have been held Once a Week, and at these meetings reviews Of current literature and original papers have been presented by the students and members of the instructing staff of the geology department. O F F I C E R S DR. D. W. JOHNSON . . . . President G. F. LOUGHLIN . . . Secretary MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY PROF. W. O. CROSBY PROE. W. H. NILES H. W. SHIMER C. H. WARREN MEMBERS R. H. ALLEN W. G. BALL A . R. BAYNE H. A. BUFF L. T. BUELL E. BURTON C. H. CLAPP J. G. BARRY H. W. BUKER LIQSJ C. E. DANFORTH J. DANIELS F. S. ELLIOTT J. T. GLIDDEN M. HODGKINS B. L. JOHNSON C. W. JOHNSTON R. KIBBEY NON ACTIVE ME H. E. DARLING E. S. GRAHAM P. M. PAINE M. RUBEL R. W. SENGER S. SHAPIRA W. L. SPALDING G. G. WALD W. L. WHITTEMORE MBERS F. W. LIBBEY C. M. HUTCHINS Q51 X KJFQN SW A C3 M1393 if Q Y JF , .. QT fc ,MII ,fy g,FAfW 192 I -fur , OFFICERS . 4 President LESTER ASA RUSSELL . . Vire President WILLIAM LIVINGSTON SPALDING . . d Treasurer HER ELMER GILMO RE . . Secretary an LUT MEMBERS 1 9 0 4 LESTER ASA RUSSELL ROBERT FAULKNER HERMAN ELLIS THOMPSON GRANT FORD 1905 LMORE ROY FISK LOVEJOY LUTHER ELMER GI INGSTON SPALDING WILLIAM LIV 1906 HENRY MICHAEL MCCUE WILLIAM ANDREW GAL TT THOMAS JOHN FRANCIS HALEY GEORGE FOSTER HOBSON STEPHEN KEARNEY ARTHUR SCO 1907 FREDERICK WILLIAM BARROWS JOHN NIATHER R. LPH BARTON SANDERS CLARENCE ALLEN BOWEN A VEY STEVENSON ROBERT PE BRAITH MOFFATT F1991 11 . . ' L' WEBB EBBF I WEBBEB WEBE R. gy ,K-0 o :w CSFQEJE' E Q CONSULTING OF FICERS OF THE VEREIN Consulting Managers Pres. HENRY S. PRITCHETT Prof. ROBERT H. RICHARDS Consulting Engineers Prof. RICHARD W. LODGE MR. CHARLES E. LOCKE Consulting Geologist Prof. WILLIAM O. CROSBY Consulting Mineralogist Dr. CHARLES H. WARREN REGULAR OFFICERS OF THE VEREIN Gene FRANK ral Manager STEELE CRAVER Superintendent ALBERT WARREN WE LLS Time Keeper RICHARD WARREN SENGER Walking Delegates EDWARD TAYLOR BARRON HOWARD MONTGOMERY COWFER JOHN CHARLES DALY, JR. MEMBERS OF EDWARD TAYLOR BARRON HOWARD MONTGOMERY COWPER FRANK STEELE CRAVER JOHN CHARLES DALY, JR. WILLIAM STRACHAN GOUINLOCK L zoo 1 THE NIGHT SHIFT WILLIAM D. B. MOTTER, JR. ATWOOD EUGENE RIPPEY RICHARD WARREN SENGER WILLIAM OLIVER TUCK, JR. ALBERT WARREN WELLS I. . I, 1 , '. , IQQ I' w E, , V. I I . i W N , , v i . mj- , V, f, Y . I v V . -f H904 - H ...... ...f ........... Toastmaster WILLIAM HOSMER EAGER Welfome . WALTER ELBRIDGE HADLEY Class Day GUY WARNER EASTMAN M U s I c Senior Portfolio . GEORGE HARDY POWELL Class Spirit . . DAVID ELWELL Held at Terh Union, February 25, 1904 in fi Toastmaster JOHN HAMPDEN HOLLIDAY, JR. The Tech Kommers ...... The name is a talisman, banishing care, And setting good fellowship free. Prof. ARLO BATES The Elusive S.B. ..... LEONARD THEAKER BUSHNELL The fickle scroll We long to clasp, But ever it eludes our grasp. Nostri Cari Patres in Facultate . . . Prof. H They guide our footsteps, apt to roam, And frequently direct them home. HARRY W. TYLER In Cupiavs Realm . . . . . . NORMAN LOMBARD Ye maiden faire upon ye streete Doth Smile, and saye, Oh, ain't he sweete. Reminiscenses ...... HOMER ALBERS Of all the cases I've tried up to date, Here are a few I may Well relate. Whar's the Ure . ..... CHARLES DEAN KLAHR Eat, drink, and be merry, For to-morrow we Hunk. Grouclzes and Grin: .... Prof. HARRY E. CLIFFORD The more seriously you take yourself, The less seriously the world will take you. The Projfv. ....... EARLL CHASE WEAVER L' Think what and be advised, You are but young yet. The Wizard of the Forge . . Strike light when you miss. Held at Tech Union, flffarch 3, 1904 JAMES A. LAMBRITH fzoij 2 feggggiget Toastmaster RUTHERFORD BINGHAM On Behalf of the Pig . . JOSEPH THOMAS LAWTON, JR. Technique . WALTER ELBRIDGE HADLEY, '04 Physio: MERRICK EUGENE VINTON, JR. Athletics . MAXWELL ALANSON COE Margaret Clzeeney . ANTHONY PAUL MATHESIUS Impromptu Held az' Tech Union, flfltzrefz 8, 1904 L 202 J Q SVI? W v ' Q I g F H E ' Toastmaster NATHAN ATHERTON MIDDLETON PVeIcome . . . GEORGE VVILLIAM OTIS Union Informal Afairs . . DEAN BURTON Mzzyif . . . . . ORCHESTRA Class Affair-s . . GEORGE APPLETON GRIFFIN Flofculent Precipitates . . . PROF. TALBOT Solo . RALPH BARTON SANDERS Held at Terh Union, flflarch 11, 1904 12031 Beffeycs fo a rofller DEAR JIM:- As an older brother who also has had hopes of carrying a spear in the fourth act, I should advise you to put your best foot forward and make your relay team if you Can, that is what your father and I sent you to Yale for. Between you and me, your older brother lived on the Sound for four years just to get his name into a certain list of editors, and I had to be content with only an A.B. for all my trouble. You'd better try to knock around with everybody. Thatls the way a cue ball is one among the whole bunch of sixteen. This keeping indoors with no company but next year's summer reading and an object in life may have advantages, but it's way out of focus for my seeing it. Now, for instance, there's Tige's room- mate this year. He's a sticky mess yclept N. Gillespie something- or-other, and he sure knows no carelessness. With him nothing ever did or does, for all his doings are cash-accountable. I-Ie watches papa Lewando, mamma Lewando and all the little Lewan- does, lest they take along his sofa pillows and chiffonier drawers for increments to the bill-collector's graft, and even his Tux is not stuck-up, for it has never been kicked over his closet floor slivers. I-Ie goes in for the weighty, and spills the light like a total reliecting prism. I-Ie's most always asleep at the switch, and anybody can give him a steer that would sidetrack a way freight. I-Ie slushes on poetry writing. I saw some the other day, and it had a meter like a worn-out preceder of a burnt gasoline odor trying to scan a hill. I know he's poor leather, and I'm all agog to try putting him under the pump and see if he Won't harden when he dries. Your brother, November fhirfy. Lou. 52041 DEAR JIM :- Say, I'm in love. Smother it. For this time I'm way in with only my longest toe touching bottom. Did I knock 'I'ige's roommate in the last letter? Well, it was my mistake. I have made fast friends with him. You ought to see his sister. She has each .vine gunz nan -of none-such young girlhood,-beauty, brains and bullion. She lives about two drives and a putt up an ill- nurtured branch of the B. 85 M., the last train into town leaves at 9.12, and the only places to put up at are the Eagle Hotel and the Union House. I know well enough why I am staying with the game, but then, again, it seems sort of odd, for every time I go up there I worship afar off, fearing frightfullyg and the two times I have had her down here for matinees you would have put me on the census as an officiating undertaker. Well, the other day I drew trumps in the shape of cards for a dance at the girls, school she takes up with in her home town, and along with them her mother gave me an excuse for a future bread-and-butter letter. I suH:ered through all but three of the dances with a line- up of maidens not old enough to know better, but those three dances and the careless raid we two made on the pantry afterward seemed good to your kinsman Louis. And the provisions I drew -well, that high-life pie-smiting so put these sad Bostonese hand- outs to the bad that I am filled with a huge hankering for the nearly here hiking home. When I left I tried to work a sweet sorrow of parting stunt, but there was about a yard to gain. Your brother, Lo U. December eigh teen. KQOSJ Ceclhmique 1905 ZecBnique 190 5 DEAR JIM :- For making resolutions give me all day New Year's or an early morning in spring when the first hurdy-gurdy is a few doors down the street. I have cut all day that I might dream of a very future very strenuous life. It's been a case ofloafing on the home stretch, for years may come and years may go, but Tech runs on forever. Even I am betting that it's the faculty that breaks the tape on midyears, and then I see where they enter me for a heat . July 11 c l in fummer fchool. Such an event will put off our European June 10 FF knockabout act until after next year's curtain, but when I do get out we'll prove half a loaf' about infinity per cent better than none. At present, with exams so near, they are working us like the last hours of a six-day race. Uur being penned up under a green lamp- shade makes us Techers narrow, but we are getting good things after all. Just now, while we fellows seem to be having a hard time lifting around the heavy scenery, perhaps it is to smile for you people behind the grease paint, but I have noticed that when the show breaks up the college man gets a place on the brakerods and is cussed, while the Tech man takes a position as brakeman and is paid. When you were up to the game last fall I half agreed to your sundry Caddie cracks about the average Tech man. Now, seriously, Jim, anybody can become a gentleman at college. The readymade article is there, to be had for the asking-and it is worth only what it costs. At Tech it takes much more of a man, and the man must work far harder to live up to the better things, and as the cost is greater, so is the result. We have many a man to whom Tech is giving good gifts. It is to him who, while learn- ing to make real drawings, sometimes cuts the leaves of a real book with one blade of' his right line pen. Your brother, jfzznuafgf 0116. LOU. r2o6J . 1' V. Y , .x . 1 if ffl' 5325-gi-' ..-,n '1' 'MVK L' '1.. . ..-Lf.-,.r..-'J 4- -1..,jg-.44 ,-- :-a x- ' f -gf jf-E..-fig! 1 41, S-l.L.1E Ju ': , ', u I .1-I-., -fv f' gi .lf wg .- . - :gsm ,,- .' .L',+...5'-...:-l:.1:?ff'S ' ' 1 :'af'f'a:5-:sis-m?2fM 'E:. in-1-'7?sfffi'4 RS, ' 'hiihiaeslfgfsaz'-: f- M W' fo' , Eiigs-wi: FW' ip G.-T-fn?-,fa .v.- 1'.'j-': ' , viii!!! L f ' ' L -' -. gf: 11,41-,f'zfi. 27F1f2f'i'fQI:f5fiflf'7'51 5 I f f- ' . ' I.'.I sA:.-'2'v. i.-:N- '.' 5 Y 1 ,E fa' f 'y fi ,L 1 fg-ff5J.,Z1'Lf-5-34'',i1fJv32f -'i'f 70 If fi I -4 w 1 . .fp - ...f I -fum! I ,W Fi. F H, Ill X ' I lm' I ' . 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X f ' .. x l wx, ' xx X 1 l I 93. - ., . .,.,.--nfl .IfJ:s':a':, ,,gL,,,,,....,-.5., .- !fi1:13'W l .:. 1-5i:Pw .' 'N -J:'f:S'1.'5- W'-11.. ' :Lf f 1 ' ar-5:m1 '54r ff ,Is -? W frA QA . v 'U' I S' - J :EN -.: 5 5 . 5 7 J X K - H ' 5' 66 oarb I I S 'la A ,sb ff' f, N' y e e or -rn' .N , ofewyf' N 45:55-E-., QUIT? 'Tn -I . 5 -'Q'713'5G 79575: 4u3:.f9gpz' fmff:'zT 2925? MAE' r 'lfui-IGM. .GWIEQ-5 .N if :gleam q:'w51qy:3,N.,,... -II2'Q'531.vG W :Q-,my5,Jy.,rg P Y ,, L H 4. I I I N I I 1 1 , I lr Y - A -V Y V J I . TRASK TURNER PERKINS LOMBARD ROBBINS MERRILL GRAESSER GREEN BENI-IAM AHUMADA BUSHNELL BARTLETT LORING If R- -' sur DANIELS DONNEWALD ,In - -1.3: :g.,1: Em if? ' -4, 'im 'DW' 'VW- 4' ' 'U'2 'W FW fm 7 5'Qf 'v'73n' WL' -Iv :II-I-swf-:iff I-935--4191245 f 1?H--:Ffi8If'k:?E,fffm-E5hE.'..? ' 130',.?.f:'.:a7:l'2:ff -IQ TH: 2.'f4?-.fi--iff,i-'Lx'-3-aff:1.I:-:-'Sz 5? 1.I .i qiw7,,:,.g. .f mf ra' -..ff.- - -. ' riwr 15-'5' fs -331---'S M -L':IAQ-21-.wI.4i1::I-I.-urn-::.5'fhvff2wwQ :ff-.1-I-:waive 5:6 Axf-2!4'SaYQ:.-fqwi-:Mgrwi-:p,i5L gzi55ra5h:a?:EQAg'uP5g'fI-.rfkwwtw-'ma:41e'nEN6t5:':IllI 52081 -vi n IJ - n ,I cg A 'Mm H, 3 7 . I- ' I - 9 7 Q : I JSII Qt I ' ' g ' ' .' ff . - , ffm Q J . tl 'tw B - fx K ! .. . ,, X , . , B, Editor-in-Chief LEONARD T. BUSHNELL, '05 Managing Editor CHARLES T. BARTLETT, '06 Secretary H. EVERETT DARLING, '06 C. H. GRAESSER, '05 J. DANIELS, '05 W. GREEN, '05 A. MERRILL, '05 G. B. PERKINS, '05 W. H. TRASK, '06 N. LOMBARD, '05 A. H. DONNEWALD, '07 Art Editor C. G. LORING, '06 Business Ilflanager MIGUEL AHUMADA, JR., '06 Assistant Business .flflanagers F. A. BENHAM, '06 D. G. ROBBINS, '07 M. MCLEOD, '07 I 209 1 4 fi f QA J ' 'P 2-xii' X' 'E 'WL vw 15 . E333 N5 Q , f 1 - X , H f 4 Q, A - r N I T5A,X.fx 1 ttf J zJi.ff'f' yt. ' 5-Q . . iisfnw-vtsi?ii'?i?4SK -HR,!-a?f' Eoffof-in-Chief JJ V ie' GRAFTON BROOKHOUSE PERKINS H Eb' Business Manager 1 x f w 1 X 1' I f 5 A X WALDSO TURNER Art Editor NATHANIEL ATHERTON RICHARDS Associate Editors GEORGE BAYARD JONES ' WILLIAM GREEN NORMAN LOMEARD Society Editor JAMES MCCLURG LAMEIE Athletic Editor EDWARD THOMAS STEEL, 2D. Statisticians ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG GROSVENOR DE WITT MARCY Assistant Art Editors HENRY HOFFINIAN KENNEDY BURTON EDWARD GECKLER Assistant Business fllanagers CHARLES VVISWELL JOHNSTON WILLIAAII DUEFIELD BELL MOTTER, JR. 52113 was P ef-If fee ---P e -Te if- -' TGCYZHULUGY LLQQQHIITQRLX I Gif, HE TECHNOLOGY QUARTERLY was founded by students of the Classes of 1887 and 1888, William S. Hadavvay, Jr., '87, being the first Editor. In two years a Committee of the Faculty took charge of The .Quarterly and Mr. James P. Mtinroe was appointed Editor. Later, in 1892, the Society of Arts undertook its publication, and combined with it their proceedings. It is now conducted by that Society through an Editor and a Board of Publication. It has become the official journal of the Institute for the publication of the results of research by ofhcers, gradu- ates, and students. 'St BOARD or PUBLICATION WILLIAM T. SEDGWICK, PH.D., Chairman DWIGHT PORTER, PI-I.B. A. LAWRENCE RoTcH, S.B., A.M. ROBERT P. BIGELOW, S.B., PH.D. E D I T o R ROBERT P. BIGELOW L 2121 ecbnoloq If evsew -- , NiIi-'- 'IN 'illlll lllllll lllllll HE TECHNOLOGY REVIEW is ublished uarterl b the Asso- P fl Y Y ciation of Class Secretaries. Its Object is to promote the welfare and advancement of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology by keeping its graduates and others interested in its progress in touch with it. In its articles are discussed the growth and expansion of the Institute, the general problems of education that pertain to it, and the important achievements, both in engineering and science, Of its past students. It also reports in an informal way the actions taken by the Corporation and Faculty, the meet- ings of the Alumni Associations, and the news relating to the Technology Club to student Or anizations and to the social life of the Institute in I g a eneral. It resents also the ersonal information obtained b the Class 3 P P Y Secretaries in re ard to the occu ations and activities Of former students. 8 P It has alread a lar e circulation, and is an im ortant factor in extendin Y 3 P g the knowledge of the Work that the Institute is doing. 'St COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATION JAMES P. MUNROE, '82 ARTHUR A. NOYES, '86 WALTER B. SNOW, '82 LEONARD IVIETCALF, '92 WALTER HUINIPHREYS, '97 L 213 J J If I ffflll ffwllfflfl ff! X POMHFOHHO . wx 111 111 1 Xl ff! f , T , 5 'Til 5 J N OMHOJP U E 'lx PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ' 'M GEORGE HARDY POWELL, Chairman H2141 'WALTER LOUIS CRONIN CHARLES ROGERSON HAYNES AMASA MAYNARD HOLCOMBE ARTHUR CUTTS WILLARD r - , 3.54 Z.. 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QI, T-nf.-:rm -f ffl . -- v- N - -I v::j?'f 3Qi:' fag:-fgwjlaea, I 2 -5711:-ff' 'L si.-N 12.165215 , 'af -:I I I ' ' UH- gifs f ' U iff QU NN 155: gig K ' 5 ,I-. , ' Q. - h -L' LN. ,Ah Q, - 5.52 2 I J ,- Q- '- -'J' 14-5 D H X G, J- If I jig, K JS: Ei., , ' -.3 PZ'-!f'?' -v,v.'li1: 'Emir-mfr: rv - - M, , If-H33 wqxf-'5.'u ffggl- ja-. .FQLI , r . -Q:1:f.'1w2- 3 ,5-1,11 :gm d3,+3,:5,.,x,k M Igxsflwkmggif- W' I I , If J I ' I L I I I ' , . 'N , I , I I I I H I I I N L L 1 L q f L . 'W'-ff-? ' 'iw-: :NPS-f'5fgf'ffF-4'-1-'-:ers-ImMs?-fs' -'cvvxnffwfw -rrffw:-'zfezzz -. -swHHr-v'-2w1w'af:isvG::-sa-I-?w.1ff I-fi Wie' 19372559 Egfe:254?ii7+ZIEf5f.iEEYQ55512:1.::.'2ff3'5?2'iifiiuffag.-,:ax:9Ib31gsifgi?sS3'E:, kia Esigsilgigktfsij.1?-57,1,Jia55:-Izfzixaer5:IehI:?asC.fik.Isqy:Iii22455 ft-Q E792 :hw .Qff in ,Fifi .J 1 ,fl-I NOYES FELLOWS COOK gag I . JV. Qt BELDING NICHOLS PRENTISS CLARK BABCOCK KILLION : ve A-.. , ,53- LIVERMORE BARROWS HIGGINS ROBBE WILSON UPHAM JACKSON faq fpiif 234 f.' Y 2:51 IEP-H:.'2FC'.f-112'-K'nfra5F.I-'.fGw5'?-'air-25:13-:Ewa--'7'.':4'-21MT. ---f 15g' E5 'HI'-::2i'3IiiFI iw--1 W .: -?S:'F ':4'v'-:?-!f1'1 ?i252?5'f-A'Fl 24f2?iS1Z1SFi3'?GS215-:?5'hf'f:-1-'If--z if:z':1,f:1v-11.-'322.-'?5:E'i:?-AG M134 in A ,avi eivfelmzf: M265 S'E':'1Z'P: ,slivf:'9:-211114-:14143:-.-e'f-fwr Q'-wa cf- I1- 52163 COURTLANDT W. BABCOCK . Leader LOUIS E. ROBBE . . Manager F I R s T T E N O R S FREDERICK L. HIGGINS OMAR S. SWENSON RALPH C. JACKSON G. HERBERT BARROWS LOUIS E. ROBBE GEORGE W. PRENTISS LEWIS G. VVILSON OTIS D. FELLONVS ERSKINE P. NOYES SECOND TENORS SAMUEL SEAVER ROBERT S. CLARK FIRST BASES HARRY H. COOK U. JAMES NICHOLAS SECOND BASES COURTLANDT W. BABCOCK LOUIS J. KILLION 217 t: i:'f-f' v. 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T' MCGINNIS CLARK HAWKINS FALES 57,15 gf.- :?23 F19 , KILLION JACKSON HAMILTON in 35:71, mlj' -ui 2365: 13325 -Zire 'ibm Zvi? 112. PM 3-avs,:f:-2Efs?f1.-:Z'E1g9-q,:f-f1:.'9-fi-'i?it211f?izaigcg- .1--1ff1Y'w'f?G3a2'ffL'Q'-P612-' Mi Fava: : G+fiv 1:'f'zw-,- Im, f.vq:'.1.,-v':a-'1-w.- fzzoj Imhtq. ..,.. , ..,.. J, ., - ' V .7f7 AfMT7 ff.' ,. gxgmxiyxngg LLL. .-3 LILEEAJ. .I.1C::I4I.E,,--L.AL - A Ri.3..L.a,.V.,3..1I.a.. ..,.. jgiifji , 'fi ' , K f, 9 -5144 I f 2 , , I. .-A-A A A W ml A R I - EIA jf , JM: ,' I , If ' E , CKQ :-, fb. L yi ,QQ .H - I . vi , A .C-,Q-,Ji-.:,.f.l-I, ,3 .A ,A , .If.5:, - - :Isl . - . .. ,CK-3:5 -. SJ. A .,.. . , .-.A .,!, 5.153 ...,, ,. ..., gn,-f.,,-.,,:-fb:zf,.,z x., . ,:. RALPH C. JACKSON . Leader LOUIS J, KILLION . . Manager LOUIS J. KILLION PAUL D. HAWKINS BANJEAURINES FRA OTIS G. FALES B A N J 0 FRED. R. BATCHELDER GUITARS NK E. HAMILTON RALPH C. JACKSON CLAUDE MCGINNIS CELLO MANDOLA ROBERT S. CLARK L22I1 . . 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'JL '?.':'1-. , 2562? Q. A ,-ssffffvsbi' fr gy, e Q.: 5 -1' 5? UL 3 f f rf ' 115 1 ll C 07111111 CC 'a s' Afi- e 4'or 'rv-J ,A 22513-.I a .5,-'5 iii? sw. . Wifi? Mm. 41. Q---1 fu'-'-'fy Kimsf. .:f:4kw', qifzv cmmawwsv H2-:wfrfen .,,:vA gr. ,f.:F:.- . N236 .1-457:55-1!f'5x N153 mf-4 ers:--21551 34-.s QA QL V, HU .f . ,us .ffx vnu. ' ,Q -- Q53 'A X, 4 'PN' 'rfb A 6' 'fr 15 5 1 -2. 1- I 5 ga 553 4, 6' 4.9 'v--' 1,7 J' :. 2 P wif A , .. SP ! ,inf ', y-- . . W N . . N W 4 W 1- Y ' 7' ' Iwi 'fFi-Ei:'Him9ra+C:P?hi2Ee'4f'ff:T145!l7 ai? fZ'iE9i1?'L? 5E? WTTY7 qc- Y V ' X 'Q 551: ASHENDEN JEWETT LAWTON W ETTERER MOTTER NOYES OTxs ' I- 'J- :1 N-'ff QL AMBERG BOUSCAREN HADLEY EAGER SMITH 1. vi' ' I - Lil sf? -11. S95 15,5 :fag 17 ea -uv: Y , W . :.v.---1-:-1-f UBZ-W174xf.2z:':--a:nxx'7f?g- 4.1-fhffq':gat-I-,ya'fm'i5'Fm-fr4::.11'ni.r1x:n'v .car Affam--an---Q:-'7'-:r'!!'5'!?i:x.:z-lFF5r?v:af:ff: .4 - .1 ,ze A .f -r I. 1 --. P-r'. 1' -f. 1. .,1..:rt av Q... .Jr J 5- - V-:ln ':1-. .f-- ,1,--.1 1, v x 4--1-Sf:-'bw .::..- -1---: -, 4: -.: ' , .- .11-.1 -. nv?-P 'fn - ' zzifiwfiaiauwa'effsa-fu45m'l.a:zmslh'f24 52243 wnma agnasw ' UQQIMUTE OEEEEEM-firaenf sv? CDP A in In LIE ft V. ' ff? H 'W r ' fi? L Trix. iifiif' 132 if g Sf :R 2.135 ffl.. FF? QE.. fi F31155 -Q5- fi WH5iYWw:HH3E 57WiNNMQa!NWf iff:-.if 24519352 ' 1:-,5 y ' X 3- sing -+1?3.3-,915 1-.ff ',fZ'f k. 153 .-. 5154 p A -S rl H- L Hx 1 . .fd 1.1-an 5.5.1-g?::.3-3: 53:-. X . J .f., . 1 .fr M. 5 A. -P' fu' ffizf--11'f:-11 ---if ' i O F F I C E R S WILLIAM E. HADLEY . President ARTHUR J. AMBERG . . Vice President ERNEST M. SMITH . . Secretary and Treasurer VVILLIAM H. EAGER . Representative to Advisory Council WILLIAM D. B. MOTTER, JR. Custodian ofthe Trophy Room M E M B E R s 1 9 0 4 WILLIAM E. HADLEY GUSTAVE BOUSCAREN WILLIAM H. EAGER 1 9 0 5 ARTHUR J. AINIBERG WILLIAM D. B. MOTTER, JR. THOMAS E. JEWETT 1906 THOMAS J. LAWTON, JR. CHARLES F. W. WETTERER ERNEST M. SMITH 1 9 0 7 GEORGE W. QTIS RICHARD C. ASHENDEN ERSKINE P. NOYES 52253 THE TECH IQUES E A ELECTORAL COMMIIILL I. Lum ,pil Iv' li , wi ffifa . , 'i 5 ':,qN V. .L soClivfi'? ':f-' ...Ie--gfpffflae' .-no-:fav OWARD the End of the Sophomore year the class 'ph , ' elects twenty-five of its own members to serve as an Electoral Committee. This Committee elects the Editorial and Business staff of the TECHNIQUE Board. The Art Staff is selected by Competition. ., ll - , - ,st THE CQMMITTEE OF 1905 Chairman WALDSO TURNER ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG CHARLES REID BOOOS FRANK MILTON CARHART JOSEPH DANIELS FRANK SPENCER ELLIOTT THEODORE GREEN WILLIAM GREEN THOMAS EDWARD J EWETT CHARLES WISWELL JOHNSTON GEORGE BAYARD JONES JAMES MCCLURG LAMEIE NORMAN LOMBARD IZZGJ ROBERT HOWARD WILLIAM LORD GROSVENOR DE WITT MARCY RICHARD QGLESBY MARSH WILLIAM DUFFIELD BELL MOTTER, JR GRAFTON BROOKHOUSE PERKINS WILLIAM JAMES SNEERINGER, JR. EDWARD THOMAS STEEL, 2D. SIDNEY TALBOT STRICKLAND WILLIAM TUFTS LE BARON TURNER ROBERT NATHANIEL TURNER MILDRED FRANCES WHEELER l 3 fiance Fez. I Qooww ooov ,I GSU ,...,-,-M- :Figs :-1. HE purpose of the Technology Club is to provide and maintain a suita- ble place for reading rooms, libraries, and for social meetings of its members, and to promote the Welfare of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the common social interests of its past and present officers and students. Undergraduate membership is opened to members of the Junior Class after the first of April. President JAMES PI-IINNEY MUNROE, '82 Vice President FRANCIS HENRY VVILLIAMS, '73 Secretary WALTER HUMPI-IREYS, '97 TTZHJTJTFV SETH KING HUINIPHREY, '97 Chairman of House Committee JosEPH WARREN PHELAN, '94 Cllairman of flflerrzbership Committee FREDERICK HAROLD BAILEY H2271 ,4 'Zim NX hm in 42. 6 -L.,,ff4,' Uwe i ' Q WR TIIWE F ,. ff ig A J Giga Soeiieev THE Co-operative Society succeeded in again giving the sum of nine hun- dred dollars in scholarships, thus keeping up to its record of last year. The Society has for its object the furnishing of financial aid to needy students. The funds are raised by the sale of text-books and instruments at the co-op- erative branches and the sale of membership tickets. The Society has given assistance to seventy-one students to complete this course of study at the Institute, and has distributed eight thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars. O F F I C E R S BERNARD BLUM . . . . President JosEPH CHENEY BAKER . Vice President HARRY MARTIN NABSTEDT . Secretary ANDREW DOUGALD MACLACHLAN Treasurer D I R E c T o R s HENRY S. PRITCHETT from the Faculty 1 90 4 BERNARD BLUM JOSEPH C. BAKER EVERETT O. HILLER 1 90 5 HARRY M. NABSTEDT RICHARD W. SENGER SIDNEY A. SMITH 1 90 6 FRANCES G. BALDWIN FREDERICK B. GUEST tzzsj TECH HEUINIHQJN June 6, 7, and 8, 1904 THE graduation of the Class of 1904 and the end of the current school year are to be marked by the first general reunion of Institute men from all parts of the country and from other countries. The program now in preparation by representatives of the Alumni Asso- ciation, the Technology Club, the Class Secretaries' Association and the Faculty, will include a Reception to the Class of 1904, Tech Night at the Pop Concert, class dinners, spreads, and excursions, a Harbor Excursion and a final Banquet, with distinguished speakers. More than one thousand are expected to participate. GENERAL COMMITTEE S. J. MIXTER, '75 ..... Chairman J. P. MUNROE, '82 . Vice Chairman A. G. ROBBINS, '86 . . Secretary E. G. THOMAS, '87 . . Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE THE OFFICERS Chairmen of Suh-Committees F. H. FAY, '93 . . . Class Dinners I. W. LITCHFIELD, '85 . . Excursions W. B. SNOW, '82 . Hotels ana' Accommodations J. P. NIUNROE, '82 . . . Programme H. W. TYLER, '84 . . Puhlieity and Correspondence AZEL AMES, IR., '95 . . . Transportation f2291 VX tg wif OFFICERS ARTHUR W. BARTLETT, '04 . RALPH NIMS WHITCOMB, '05 . JOHN R. SANBORN, '04 ALEXANDER W. RICHARDS, '04 . President Vice President Secretary Treasurer CHAIRMEN OF THE COMMITTEES M. G. MERRIAM, '05 .... WALTER H. TRASK, '06 . OLIVER M. WIARD, '04 . RALPH N. WHITCOMB, '05 J. W. ROLAND, '04 H. B. QRCUTT, '06 CHARLES R. CARY, '04 . 52303 . Student Meetings .Wfenzbersbip Bible Study . Sofia! Settlement . Missionargf . Church Ajiliutions Student House Gigi! 1 Pi. .I -.3 :aff X. , M X XX : COMMITTEE DAVIS R. DEWEY LEONARD METCALF MEYERS BLOOMFIELD RESIDENTS 1903-1904 KELLOGG DURLAND, Head Worker R. S. BEARD, '05 C. L. DEAN, '05 W. GREEN, '05 W. W. LOOMIS, '05 T. L. SMITH, '05 R. N. WHITCOMB, 'OS N. C. WILLEY, '06 52311 A. THORNTON Corporal A. RIACONIBER . A -5.1 J ex 1 brps adets i x KX 'kfffh Ike rx. of ,i w XR. T A E Y STAFF E. DEXTER BoLEs . J. A. DAVIS Qlst Lieut.j L. S. NORDSTRUM Qlst Lieut.D C. W. GAMMONS Qlst Lieutj L. L. ALLEN f2d Lieut.D J. C. BRADLEY H. R. CHASE W. P. MONOHAN . R. B. SANDERS C. H. LOUTREL R. W. LINDSAY B.N1cHoLs . . S. I-LMARSH . . R. C. AS1iENDEN H.G.SP1sAR . . E. I-I. PACKARD . DPW 7 rwg E55 322 ,711 F 9 Q PM w 5 A A bmWF P12 J. M S. RIACGREGOR R. lVERY . . .C.LEE . . . . F. BANCROFT . S. WoNsoN . . H. XVING . . L. VVALSH . . JV. SAGE . . A. E. HfXRTYVELL C. W. 52321 . . Captain Ist Liezetenarzt 2:1 Liezetenant lst Serlfeant Z . Sergfeant . . Captain JS! Lieutenant 2d .LZ.E1lfE7llI7lf . lst Sergearzt . . Sergeant . . Cajntain Isl Lfezetermrzt 211' Lieuterzant Ist Sergeant C a pta in lst Liezzten ant 211' Lieutenant . lst Sergeant Sergeant GrX1IMONS . . S. qi-., v-1. 'T I' E. :Qu Alahr . Adjutant .Quartermaster Signal Offer Aide-de-Camp Sergeant Major Quartermafter Sergeant Color Sergeant Color Sergeant Drum Major U l z Q '6- sm 'S E m 2 5. N. m m COMPANY A F. B. BARNARD . . . Sergeant H. B. ALVORD Sergeant NV. T. JOHNSON Sergeant H. S. DUNCAN Corporal E. A. XVIGGIN Corporal COMPANY B Qpaom W. CLARK . S. I-IAMILTON H. STAKRXVEATHER 5 WFPEH FORD mrwsw r-4 'r-'. N mpQoF Beww mFwAs im fo' Smog ur 'Q R'-4 3594? more Q:-gi, SQ cmr9w0 HQWQO xfeoz az gwwgo Zwzzzo A2525 Eb, F7 Wg gzpgg EA F7 -.. ,.1. .. ', 'cl O M1191 ' tr by E. tp O 111 z o .- Z LO Z .. . fp: K1 '41 A 0 F3 ?????U 3333 9933? rv 21230502 Viosusoi QQWE03 5 Egess sees 33552 5 iN-'lla naar.. iinzqr, Z FFQF FUEUFP-1 VFW! ' WFS O00 www . .1 ,' r4.,T,. N mffm F095 EEUU 1- Om, wo 0 A221 N QQSF E322 210: 2' A52' -2:1155 -E553 Q Ewa. 'Wow ,qgz E JE.. HSS r 2 ' 90- -1.n Corforal Corporal Corporal Corjroral Corporal Corporal Corporal Corjroral Corporal Corporal C07fj707'Hl Corporal Corporal Corjzoral Corporal Qflie future Bocafion of fBe 5-nsfifufe S TECHNIQUE goes to press the suit of the Natural His- tory Society against the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is still held under consideration by the court, decision being reserved until after trial of the suit which the abutters have brought against the Institute. As this latter cause may require some time for settlement, a brief review of the case may not be out of order here. After considering the law of the question we will pass on to a review of the various plans proposed for increasing the capacity of the Institute buildings. By the grant of 1861 the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology was given, with certain restrictions, the use of the westerly two thirds of the block on Boylston Street which is now occupied by Rogers and Walker Buildings. The only two of these restric- tions which are of interest to us now are: that the Institute shall build on but one third of its allotted ground, and that the square shall be reserved from sale forever, and kept as an open space. The General Court, by an act passed in May, 1903, withdrew these restrictions, whereupon the Institute immediately began the erection of a new building on the hitherto forbidden ground between Rogers and Walker. Now come the Natural History Society and the abutters on Newbury Street suing in equity to restrain the Institute from erecting said building. They say sub- stantially that their lots were sold at a higher figure than others not facing on the square, their value having been enhanced by assurances given, by plans and otherwise, that the square was to be perpetually maintained as an open space and a sort of public park, and to be planted and maintained in a manner satisfactory to the 12331 zecgniqlle Governor and Council. They claim, therefore, an equitable 1905 easement, and base their case on this claim. Such, in brief, is the present status of the title of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology to this land. The decision of the court will be heard with interest. Now let us suppose for a moment that the Institute secures this land absolutely free from restrictions other than customary set-back provisions. What should it do? Should it build on the now unoccupied land, or should it move to larger and more com- modious quarters? Many arguments are advanced both for and against moving, but it is generally thought that those arguments in favor of this radical step greatly outweigh those opposed to it. The land on Boylston Street is worth on the market about two million dollars. This, with the square occupied by the Engineer- ing and Lowell Buildings, would furnish enough money to secure land and to erect suitable buildings in some outlying quarter of the city, so that now we must concern ourselves with deciding which land should be secured. ln selecting a site for the Institute cer- tain principles should be kept in mind, in order, so far as possible, to defer to the arguments of those opposed to moving. We should not go outside of the limits of the city of Boston, as by so doing we sacrifice the moral support due to our location in the intellectual center of America. Furthermore, it is to be doubted whether any city or town government would be as willing to exempt the Institute from taxes as Boston is. The new site must be convenient of access, and should be capable of being made architecturally beautiful. Several sites have been suggested, all fulfilling, to a greater or a less degree, the above requirements. The plot of land on the Cambridge side of the Charles River near Harvard Bridge is one which would admit of an imposing display of buildings when the Charles is improved as is now planned, boat houses, dormitories, and fraternity houses could be built along the river front, and would add materially to the beauty of this proposed lake park. The site is readily accessible, being more convenient to the North Station than the present location on Boylston Street. f234j Another plot of land is that directly across the street from the athletic field, so generously presented some time ago by Samuel Cabot. Though the field itself is in the town of Brookline, and therefore serviceable for only such uses as athletics and surveying practice, there is directly across the street from it a large, unoccupied space, which is in the city of Boston. This location is convenient to way stations of the Boston 85 Albany and the New York, New Haven 85 Hartford Railroads, and though now rather inaccessible from Boston it might readily be made less so by the extension of the street railway system. The Allston Golf Links, as well as the space in Watertown, both of which have been thought oi offer opportunities for archi- tectural display. Both are fairly convenient, and the Allston site has the further advantage ofa beautiful view and situation in the city of Boston proper. But the location that seems now to be most favorable is that on the Boston side of the Charles River, at a point about opposite Harvard Square and directly across the street from Soldiers' Field. There are here available for use about sixty-five acres of land bordering for some distance on the river. The prop- osition to locate the Institute here has many points in its favor. When the Charles River Commission has carried out its plans it will have made of the Charles a beautiful little park, and this park would form a suitable setting for the Institute buildings. The site is conveniently reached from any point in Boston, and the space is large enough to accommodate the Institute for many years to come. It has been objected that this location is too near to Harvard, but we feel that this very proximity is an argument in its favor. Law- rence Scientific School and the Institute are as much competitors in education as doctors or lawyers are in business. Therefore we must, like doctors or lawyers, seek our competitors and not avoid them. We must carry the war into the enemy's country. When we have our Augustus Lowell Laboratories of Electrical Engineer- ing within reach of Harvard students, Lawrence will have no excuse for giving an electrical course. Technology has so ably demon- strated its ability to teach the applied sciences that Lawrence would, in the event of our occupying this site, have no excuse for continu- 52351 Qfecllnique 1905 QZec8nique 1905 ing courses in them. Then, too, by moving Tech out near Harvard an ideal arrangement and compromise is made possible. An arrangement between the two institutions might be made by which Tech would deal with all purely scientific subjects, such as Applied Mechanics, Physics, and Thermodynamics, While Law- rence Would have supervision over all semi-professional courses, such as the Languages, Political Economy, and Law. Some men would thus be attending both Lawrence and Tech. Those consid- ering the engineering courses more especially than the academic courses would still call themselves Tech men, and would be as hostile as ever to the spirit of easy indolence believed to be mani- fested by the students across thelriver. Harvard men taking courses at Tech would still havepto pass our hard examinations, and a degree from the Institute Would mean as much hard, sensible Work as it does now. Tech,s individuality Would be maintained, and her reputation would remain as great as ever. It can be seen that this proposition is merely one of several. Which site will be chosen finally it is impossible to predict, but of one thing alumni and undergraduates may rest assured, the Insti- tute Will lose nothing by any change it may make, for the future of Technology is in loyal, reliable hands. The men Who are shap- ing its course are moving cautiously, holding sacred above all things the honor and integrity of the Institute. Nothing will be done which is incompatible With traditional standards of thorough- ness and assiduity, or which will sacrifice anything of that pre-emi- nence which Tech now holds among the educational institutions of the World. f236j F41 ALM SUCK 5 FTW' 4 LJ ...A 5 Q-, W ' wa J, 1 , ' up X5fQ'. l l' Y , ' Q4 M HS 5' L W wjffmgx 'h,, Nfl--fl -TQ Y vf vsa 2 X 1W5ZW I U k QSWA Wulf F wy NHPF HL Umm- W M Temp! ' ' I! M, A5 Wfmalrx W' 'L Mm fW1. l .'.s' gx x :yu Aly. EN ,Q .3 fil ,QV '1Vb 3' I E5 MWxm1 S l lx ' W M 5 fm H X 1 E , P N u r N N. w VI. W frf xfx 111 5 . 1 ' ' H Sf' WU? R . KkW7 pw NX M 44 I f23 w fff' X - Qfvlfif J: Lf ' ' , i w ' m mwmw ' I f y X Y i nr1T1 ?? f , W-N ifU5Wmp?WJf l ilfwfvjw-'f,6k,fh' Wffl- f, 'Mund i i -wx:-url 1,1 Efifqx- 1 ff M Q W m' 1vrl1EEm6f'ff 'H FDMVNGQ ?-mill ' '7'W-N x-r..,- N GLS -X I x'5j1,x :' ....A X NX R .. , 'f ' - X X' 1 1 W 2 v'rW UU M Xa U V 'H -' P? ,K a Q MM! 15+ ?5ifL,i1:lf2F':fff5' X f 'X Z Qigqxffl, V I I H X .Xb Y I, X1 ,,!'l1? f 1 UW X SW V' ' X ff, XC N ' X' XX '- fly! JLU , X -. , WH . ' :- gif'-I ,'1f f , I W F: 7, SL H, 0 .f W. -.VF N , Z, 43 , 7 - ,X-J .-X II, :iff I, fx, 4f W wQ xW! ,W 'f fffL-'S f If wi X 'nf 1 '+N f :1x FV:12ff., f' l l i WN V' f ' Z if f K W fiff 4594 9 f Wf KW my WW5 ,, ., X M W m 2f ',,?vZE f , ,fff2f f5f4f2 -Aff! Q f -V f-,- Wu ' X-X , LM - 'X Q 7e f i i-1 QXX .3 '- SQ lg X 0 577 Pumni asociafion RRR O F F I C E R S SAMUEL J. MIXTER, '75 . Prexident WALTER B. SNOW, '82 . . , I ALEX. RICE MCKIM, '86 . VW Prmdwm ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, '86 . . Seeretnry EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The President, Vice Presidents, and Secretary AZEL AMES, JR., '95 HARVEY S. CHASE, '83 WILLIAM B. THURBER, '89 EDWARD G. THOMAS, '87 Qtortljwesfern gleeoeiation of Cm. 5. Z. F. W. CLARK, '97, President C. M. WILKES, '81, Vice President CONRAD H. YOUNG, '96, Secretary 177 La Salle Street, Chicago, Ill. 'western Qlssociafion of Cm. J. 25. EDWARD W. ROLLINS, '71, President BRADFORD H.LOCKE, '72, Vice Pres FRANK E. SHEPARD, '87, Secretary and Treasurer 921 XV:IshingtorI Avenue, Denver, Colo. Ziecfjnofogy difuii of Qlew flgorfi City ALEX. RICE MCKIM, '85, President CLARENCE D. POLLOCK, '94, Trens CLYDE R. PLACE, '02, Seeretnry 31 Nassau Struct L 238 I Connecticut Ogaffeyg Qjssociation, QQ1. J. EZ. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GEORGE L. MUNN, '88, Cbeiirmaiz E1lStl1fl11l15tOH, Mass. 7 HENRY SOUTHER, 87 HENRY A. FRANCIS, '83 JAMES S. NEWTON, '88 ARTHUR D. DEAN Eectj grociefg of qwifabefpijia BENJAMIN ADAMS, 95, Secretary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE SAMUEL A. NEIDICH, '98 DAVID A. LYLE, '84 SAMUEL S. SADTLER, '95 lpittsliurg Qlssociation, Cm. 5. QS. , '95 - Qieclimque DAVID S. BISSELL, '81, President ARTHUR B. BELLOWS, '89, VieePre.f. HCSWARD K. JONES, '96, Secretary and Treasurer Geoff Qocietg of 'western Qlew flzorik EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE FRANK W. LOVEJOY '94 EDMUND HAYES '73 J i NIAURICE B. PATCH, '72 GEORGE A. RICKER, '86 PROCTOR L. HENRY A. BOYD, '79, Secretary and Treasurer 125 Erie CO. Bank Bldg , Blll:l711lO, N. Y. ftbasgingfon gaociefp of flje Qjl. 5. 47. DOUGHERTY, '97, Pres. WINTHROP COLE, '87, Vice President MARSHALL O. LEIGHTON, '96, Seri-emry Geological Survey, XX41lSlllIlgf0ll, D. C. VVILLIAM J. RICH, '84, Treezszzrer 52391 zecgnique Zechofogvg dlfuii of we Qglerrimac Qaffey 1905 EARLE B. PHELPS, Lawrence, President LINWOOD O. TOWNE, Haverhill, Vice President JOHN A. COLLINS, JR., Lawrence, Secretary W. O. HILDRETH, Lowell, Treasurer Qji. 5. Z. dlfufi of Gincinnafi JOSEPH S. NEAVE, '86, President JAMES B. STANWOOD, '75, Viee Pres GEORGE W. KITTREDGE, '77, Treats. CHARLES G. MERRELL, ' Qyterrimac Qgaffey diecijnofogg Qgssociation 88, Sec. FRANCIS H. SILSBEE, '74, President LINWOOD O. TOWNE, '78, Viee Pres JOHN A. COLLINS, JR., '97, Secretary 79 Tremont Street, Lawrence WILLIAM O. HILDRETH '87, Treasurer I 4-Kang, 3 P, 1 7 . - A ,... In ,.,,,,,,g' W ., I ,, ef, H , 'aj , , ' 3 ..,,,.7..: 'sl j .gk I ...,. I L .,.t .r 'f 1.51.3 4,2 -' , . ff ,. '- '?,jg? ::,2j5,., ' ' V1.+ 73.V5i?fr?f 53317 w A '- ':L'11:'z' V 3 2f:L.2:?CIs?- . .2'5 fwfde ef-fieztz. Tim- 'LK f I 'Q '7z.,.1L3Mf. f'tr,-wer 'v'- , . 1-ft: ,f A A A .' Y wx 13' XQ M ' ',', I 'Q-.,3ff'?:Qyt, 1,- KJ g i . I w- 8. if r..' gfsgf ...f 52403 o f A rr D oes are f ,. , ...---.-----,D-,,,, I-My - AVP? xi ff . . 'ii' X51 . ' ' 6 gin XZ! 7' ' '-41 XX, I, AE, U I x,N M., ,IA -N 1' ' . --H K If- -, 737 X P T p A -- ' Y T . YT--' wx-.. 4.1 Fuauswnns - HND , qua-res!-4 Rsvlnw ' K.. , , ,rw a E' :- I - ' , ' IA IS DFI 'N ' fi' - A ll. I 2 ,I 4, a la , 4' .. ' .'. , I 1 I - I 4 . . ,,, Q. sq., I C 7 A 7 1' ' A 5- 31? NX XI ' W1 .. ' X ff K 1 l' - X 1 - T5 , N .1 W , -7 i we I- Y iv 1 ' - fr' - .f- ' ECHNOLO Y 5 1 - A V ' P - ,T Tc 5 '93 Mr. FREDERIC H. FAY, Secretary, 60 City Hall, Boston, Mass. 68 Prof. ROBERT H. RICHARDS, Serrefary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. 69 Mr. HOWARD A. CARSON, Representative, 20 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. 70 Prof. CHARLES R. CROSS, Sefretary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. 71 Mr. EDWARD W. ROLLINS, Secretary, 19 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. 72 Prof. C. FRANK ALLEN, Secretary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. 73 Mr. S. E. TINKHAM, Secretary, 60 City Hall, Boston, lVIass. 74 Mr. CHARLES F. READ, Sememry, Qld State House, Boston, Mass. 75 Mr. E. A. W. HAMMATT, Secretary, Hyde Park, Mass. 76 Mr. JOHN R. FREEMAN, Secretary, 814 Banigan Building, Providence, R. I. 77 lV1r. RICHARD A. HALE, Secretary, Lawrence, Mass. 78 llflr. LINWOOD O. TOWNE, Secretary, Haverhill, Nlass. 79 Mr. HARRY H. CAMPBELL, Serremry, Steelton, Dauphin County, Pa. 80 Prof. GEORGE H. BARTON, Secretary, 16 Lexington Avenue, Cambridge, lvlass. 81 lVIr. FRANK E. CAME, Secretary, 17 Place d'Armes Hill, lVIOntreal, P. Q. 82 lVIr. WALTER B. SNOW, Secretary, Russell Avenue, Watertown, Nlass. L2-L11 Zec6nique 190 5 '83 '84 '85 '86 '87 Mr '88 lVIr '89 Mr '90 Mr '91 Mr '92 '93 '94 '95 Mr. '96 Mr '97 Mr '98 Mr '99 Mr '00 Mr '01 Mr '02 Mr '03 Mr. 52423 Mr. HARVEY S. CHASE, Serremry, 27 State Street, Boston, Mass. Prof. WILLIAM L. PUFFER, Secretary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston Mass Prof. ELEAZER B. HOMER, Secretary, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R I Prof. ARTHUR G. ROBBINS, Secretary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston Mass EDWARD G. THOMAS, Secretary, 4 State Street, Boston, Mass. WILLIAM G. SNOW, Secretary, 245 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. WALTER H. KILHAM, Secretary, 9 Park Street, Boston, Mass. GEORGE L. GILMORE, Secretary, Lexington, Mass. HOWARD C. FORBES, Secretary, 4 State Street, Boston, Mass. Prof. WILLIAM A. JOHNSTON, Secretary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston Mass Mr. FREDERIC H. FAY, Sm-emry, 60 City Hall, Boston, Mass. Prof. SAMUEL C. PRESCOTT, Secretary, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston Mass GEORGE W. HAYDEN, Sec?-em:-y, 493 Warren Street, Roxbury, Mass. EDWARD S. MANSEIELD, Secretary, 70 State Street, Boston, Mass. JOHN A. COLLINS, JR., Sefremry, 79 Tremont Street, Lawrence, Mass. C. E.-A. WINSLOW, Secretary, Hotel Qxford, Boston, Mass. MILES S. SHERRILL, Secretary, Mass. Institute of Technology, Bosto GEORGE E. RUSSELL, Secretary, 25 Broad St., New York, N. Y. EDWARD B. BELCHER, Secretary, Quincy, Mass. CHARLES W. KELLOGG, JR., Secretary, 51 St. Paul St., Brookline, Mass. - CLAUDE P. NIBECKER, Sefremry, Glen Mills, Delaware County, Pa. n, Mass ilu i 'Q '70 is ll 'l W, W W IW ? 'llaw g.ii.iii'ii,,, llli ' li - f t T'K 7 . i is V t ' ii , Q. 12 lv 1.45-. t.. l i l VJ - , X , ,X H X ., . -.. f la CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND THREE Friday, June 5th. Annual Reception to Graduating Class by Alumni Association, Hotel Brunswick, 7 P. M. Saturday, fune 6th. Concert tendered to Graduating Class by Musical Clubs of the Institute, 8 P. M. Sunday, June 7th . Baccalaureate Sermon by Rev. Leighton Parks, D.D., Trinity Church, 4 P. M. fllonday, June 8tlz. Class Day. Class-Day Exercises in Huntington Hall, 2.30 P. M. Class Reception and Spread on the Lawn at 4.30 P. M. Tuesday, func 9th, Graduation Day. Graduation Exercises in Huntington Hall, 2.30 P. M.g President's Reception in General Library, 4.30-G P. M. 52433 ,.,. 'qi ' ' V xy.. 'I I .,,.. .VVV2 iII Huntington Hall, Mandajf, June 8, 1903, 2.30 P.M. PROGRAM Address by the President of the Class . . Address by the First Marshal . History .... Statistics Prophecy . Qration . . Poem . GEORGE WRIGHT SWETT . HORACE SINGER BAKER . GALEN MOSES HARRIS . JOHN FINN ANCONA . . RENAUD LACE RICHARD CHASE TOLMAN GEORGE HOWARD CLARK CLASS DAY OFFICERS First Marshal . . . Second Marshal . Third Marshal . President of Class . Qrator . . . Statistician Historian . Prophet . . Poet . . . HORACE SINGER BAKER HOWARD SCOTT MORSE . PAUL REVERE PARKER GEORGE WRIGHT SWETT RICHARD CHASE TOLMAN . JOHN FINN ANCONA . GALEN MOSES HARRIS . . RENAUD LACE GEORGE HOWARD CLARK CLASS DAY COMMITTEE HORACE SINGER BAKER ROLE RAYMOND NEWMAN GEORGE BABCOCK WOOD HEWITT CROSBY PAUL REVERE PARKER RALPH HERBERT NUTTER LAWRENCE HARGREAVE LEE GEORGE WRIGHT SWETT LAWRENCE HOSMER UNDERWOOD LOUIS WINFIELD ADAMS GEORGE BEACH SEYMS JOHN TYRRELL CHENEY WALTER MAYNARD DRURY GALEN MOSES HARRIS HOWARD SCOTT MORSE 52441 'S.WS4f'W F571-2 Nt ?42? '--iwgil' W '99 ' ' Q!-itll In Q f4 ' Y '-if f , E IE Y :Tx 5,1 4-. jvend ifEi:.f 1 1e1- 5 Ewa.. 5 , ,J Y mu ' 'ufffww ,. .- .E 1'1VniQ7Iax1 -w.7Wam?2' 1 N-'i Ef 5. : iii: , ' . E. 5 ,V I W4 21 C-'E-.7 i21EL A-E fp R A EESES it I X- Em , .L uu C fg1inI.'g - X f ,f .- hr ul! 2 A-:Egg A - f ff' 5- - 'L X 'X f -+-1t.-f.--- ' '53 25 ' A-. E 272+ '-- q,. ei - fr 5 gf:-1 - - .5 Huntington Hall, Tuesday, func 9, 1903 'Sc PROGRAM READING OF ABSTRACTS OF THESES ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT CONFERRING OF DEGREES PRESIDENT,S RECEPTION ABSTRACTS OF THESES An Investigation of the Bond of Union between Concrete and Steel for Con- MORTINIER YALE FERRIS erete-Steel Construction . . . and FRANCIS WOODWARD DAVIS A twenty-four hour Duty-test on a Ten Million Gallon Leavitt Pumping Engine STEPHEN R. BARTLETT, B.A. at New Bedford .... and PHILIP JOHN KEARNY A Laboratory Study of the Different RALPH BENJAMIN YERXA Stages in the Refining of Copper . . and CARLTON FRANCIS GREEN 52451 Qfeclinique 1905 A Design for a Marine Observatory AUSTIN DICKENSON JENKINS, B.A. The Cathodic Reduction of Gold Tel- luride Ores ..... WILLIAM CHAILLE MARTIN, M.S. The Unbalancing of Scott Trans- formers ...... An Analytical Study of the Fresnel Wave Surface ..... The Determination of the Temperature- Pressure Curve of Sulphurous Anhydride Tests of the Efhciency of the Filter of the Biddeford and Saco Water Company The Building Stones of Boston and Vicinity ...... An Investigation of the Launching of a Schooner .... JAMES WINFIELD WELSH, B.A. and CHARLES I-I. PORTER, A.B. ELIZABETH LANGDON WILLIAMS DAVID D. MOHLER WILLIAM WINSLOW BURNHAM GERALD FRANCIS LOUGHLIN H EWITT CROSBY 52461 -9 ..- '1' ..v,p,f f' +- 1:.ff-1 ffm f ' , 1' f, 1 gt A ,, w- H. nA , ,,,3::1+.fA 1 .V W ,T , fl w b .- ff.. f f v 1 ' ix ' x ,- A Y: .f-,ig Q i L. ,U f4f f 2' fl 3 ' WK K H . Y f J' f l ' 'A X,-QGAX K 5 ,. X I I X ix G9 l n f l l l f f 2 4 JN, l ll l ff ff M l ' H v l X kg, -.l ., ll .Mg l'fIVl1l 'VN I in K MQ ll , R . f Q lg ' , h s Q. 'Z' fm X , ---- 'E M X l 1 NF- l l - zz : i -v'- :2g55f-:,'-Q,Q f ?:-Tiif - 2- ' . -- ' ix ,S F ' '-. ' 1 ' 'F: T1'--3- li l ji, ---- ze'- xi 41-'. 1f ' 3.MlZ X .1 Xxx C -Il:-1-' ,lu-Jilr. ,K l '-I I. . L ' l l 2 , K -XX - X- ' ':114::5LN'-fs, :-,3 'j:.fgr ? .- lui: xi, .E N-65,2 grits, ix.. N -U.-tlzgvv-'gas'-iff, ,,.,. ,nf as :1 5-LE if Q ' ff-:fu 'ff '..',:gixA+x,5,, 'f. ' ...... - ' -fir..-Q xx I A- ...V st :A '-.X ',.,, vu. J -ii.. . ' i. up f -- -x. . ' I - . T -'LTQ-L K -. ' 5,.f:-': '-'f' - ' - -- :fi ' x 4- Q, 5f,1 KX x f . .,.-.---- '5?vi?sf,-'5-H - .iT n 5 1- '25 . A6511 MMM H, .':.:,N I N.. . H, -.lvg -v- Y-, : E . ,,:-. f'f:'1'.g. 1- Y ' .' Nw?-, ' ,4-.isf ' x. . ,.-L' .. .-SW '-fjffj- fI'!E'5Qx I' 55, J' - -A .., , ' 'f.,3qf:f- .Q K 1 ,. I-'.g.-lgmgff.-1'p'.' ' -' :i7sf+ u' ii '-f N -fa' l ' .s', :-:'.4' .- +3 t , f: i f , . M ,,,..5-.,-,- I ,' , g f QL - 5, ,' - W . 1' T3 L 1-7 ' R 1 -' -il 211'-:tiii-:H ' WP: s fgjyii. ' ' ::L5??Es.w- - ' ,. .-' 5-i X ax. -+:Q:f1s1.f - .--fiw1'f.1- .W 4 .. 13215. - ' -..,.:2'1.s+5xx:,1.,-wr' 1+---0-- ,.-' l- X L . VM. Jill.: :SQ -:l K-T I is TUESDATAFTE1-ENOOM APRIL 20 THURSDAK APRIL 28 Y H d twoon First Performance of Tech Show at Hollis TECI-xN10MUE, Volume XIk,1sS11f' .51 1 Street Theatre Aiternoon, Tech Tea in General Llbrary PVEDIVETSDA Y E VLYVIZVG, APRIL .27 TQIIURSDA Y E VENING R'I'l'lSlC2llCIl.1lJ,S Sprmg Concert and Dance at A d t Hotel Somerset , New century 1-11111 Jumof Pfomeml e 3 I t , , ' L S - FRIDA YAFTERNOOM APRIL 29, Second Performance of Tech Show .lt Holl1s Street T 161 r v - Z I f Y- SXT. TQEF-., . R55-Ai . ' R NW XII j ew we AI ff' - O . 2 FMU! Ulf TFIIV E I f!f!Tl.T fnC6 A H f If f .- 0 - Hotel Somerset Thursday Evening, April 28, 1904 N M A T R O N S MRS. THEODORE J. AMBERG MRS. GEORGE H. SEYMS MRS. SAMUEL J. MIXTER MRS. GEORGE V. WENDELL MRS. WILLIS R. WHITNEY RRR C O M M I T T E E Clzairman WILLIAM DUFFIELD BELL MOTTER, JR. ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG GROSVENOR DE WITT TVIARCY NORNIAN LOMBARD WALDSO TURNER EDWARD THOMAS STEEL, 2D. I 249 J E, if ,, 12.4 F -.--.N-.,-M--.-A W2 4 , 'Wg V . .., if fu 3613 AJ Y fITf2Ilf f'I11fZ M'f'.i4 ,giycfli umm? CEB fgliow PRESTON MORRIS SMITH, '04 . . . . . General jlfnlzagzr ERNEST HARRAH, 'O4 ..... . . . Business Jlfamzger FRANK SIDNEY HANIILTON, '07 2 - - , RAYMOND WASHINGTON PARLIN, ,O7 5 . Assistant Buszness Mnrzagefs PHILIP EDWARD HINKLEY, '05 . . . . . Stage jllalzager ERLEEPEI ,'g7ERRY' JR ,O6 . . Assistafzi Slzzge Mafzngers LEONARD THEAICER BUSHNELL, '05 . . .. . Press .126-f77'6SE7lftIfl L'E HENRY EVERETT DARLING, '06 . . . Assistant Press Represeazlathe imon ure rags QA Comic Opera in Two Actsj LIBRETTO BY Joi-IN ARTHUR FREMMER, '04 MUSIC BY FRANK SHERIDAN FARRELL, '04 GEORGE I'IERBERT SHAW, '04 JOHN ART!-IUR FIQEMRIER, '04 ARTHUR JOHN AMBERG, 'O5 PIERBERT IXIYGATT WILCOX, '05 ENIERSON I'IURD PACKARD, ,07 RALPH BARTON SANDERS, '07 Given at the Hollis Street Theatre On the afternoons of April 26th and 29th. THE CA S T SIMON PURE BRASS fthe ballonistj ..... J. QUINCY GRANITE fa millionaireb , . I . PATTY GRANITE gms daughter-3 . JACK HAZARD Cherloverj . . GLYCERINE CPatty's friendj . . MARSII MALLOYV fher loverl . . BICCLOSKY Qinn keeperj . . . . MISS PRIWIROSE . . . . . LADY FROM PHILADELPHIA . LUNATIC ...... CI'IINANIAN . . . . . LOUNGER . . . FIRST STUDENT . SECOND STUDENT . . . IKOSNVELL DAVIS, . PAUL IIICCLARX' PAINE, . U.JAMEs NICIIOLAS, . FREDERICIK L. HIGGINS, . ALBERT FITCH BANCROIIT ARTIIUR LIOOPER LANGLEY, . JAMES EDXVIN GRIFFIN, ALBERT IIENRY DONNEXVALD, . . . RINI-:ER KIBBEY, . . . JOSEPH DANIELS, . JOHN NIISOROON MORRIS . RUTHERFORD BINGHAM, . RALPH BARTON SANDERS, . CYRUS HENRY LOUTILEL, . . . . . JOHN ALLEN DAVIS, , , . WILLIAM PATRICK MONAI-IAN, . ORRIN YVILLIAINI POTTER, EMERSON HUIID PACKARD, STUDENTS . EDYVARD CHURCH SMITH, . . SAIVIUEL SEAVER, . DOUGLAS BENNE-rr TURNER, . . STARR Tauscofrr, . ALBERT LEXVIS BURWELL, . EDWARD BURROXVES EVANS, . CHARLES 'WHITNEY I'IAXVKES, . . LOUIS JO!-IN ICILLION, , . IIOBERT EUGENE KEYES PRI MOSE G-lRLS . ALFRED GEORGE LANGZ . XVALTER STONE IVIOORE, . . SEYNIOUR MOSES RIVITZ, . . FIIANKLIN RIPLEY, JR., . SAMUEL ROGERS TAYLOIC VERY, CAT . . . . . . WALTER THOMAS KEEN, MONKEY . , . . . . WALTER BIANTON READ, v . . . IERNEST MAXWELL SMITH, GOLD DUST TYVINS . . CHARLES VVOLSTON COFFIN, HARLECLUIN ...,. . . JOHN EDXVARD LYNCH, JR., COLUMBINE ....... . . .XVILLIAM GEORGE ABBOTT, JR., Solo Dance.-XValter Matthews Butts, 'o5. 1 105 ,U4 '06 304 07 YO4 '06 !07 zgs 102 'o6 ,O7 907 107 '07 ,O7 107 305 107 07 '07 107 '06 :OS :OS ,O7 07 7 107 104 13 107 ,OS 'oo 107 05 ,Ol 1 Cowboy Qxartet Qballetj.-Francis George Baldwin Qgirljg Earl George Christy Qmanjg Alden Glo- ver Drew Q manl g John Edward Lynch fgirly. Orange Pickers.-Leon Lincoln Allen, Joseph Hall Feemster, Jr., Harold McCready, Harold Douglas Reed, Vkfilliam Wallace, YVilliam Hampden Sage, Jr. Ranch Girls.-George Fuller, William Frederick Farley, Alfred George Lang, VVarren Hastings, Henry Joseph Kent, Claude Amelius Anderson. Mandolin.-George Henry Bryant, Ralph Haney Burke, NVilliam James Cady, Hubert XVight Hill, Bradford Butterick Holmes, Joseph Thomas Lawton,-Jr., Charles Benajah Mayer, Gardner Armstrong Murfey, Clarence Brewster Powell. Guitar.-Harry Eugene Walker, Frederick Stratton Wilcox, John Cazeneuve WVilson, Stuart VVells Benson. Chorus fmenj.-Benjamin Bullard, George Lyman DavenpOrt,Jr., Ralph Herbert Hall, Horace Sinclair Holt, Charles B. Hamilton, Frederick Constant Jaccard, Ralph Putnam Lowe, Phelps Nash Swett, Edward Hincks Squire, Harold Sayward Wonson, Edward Munroe Eliot. Sea Shell Qballetj.-Edwin Witthaus Bonta, Horace James Macintyrc, Howard Leslie Obear, Russel Bissel Simons, Frederic Becker Schmidt, Charles Henry Shapleigh. Indians Qballetj.-Floicl Merrill Fuller, Leroy Porter Henderson, Herbert Ruttrickl Hosmer, Ralph Curtis Jordan, Alexander Macomber, Bertram Allen Richardson, Donald Goodrich Robhms, Herbert Gay Spear, James Lawrence NValsh, Frank De KV0lf NVebster. Tumblers.-Benjamin Karl Sharp, Alfred Kellam Tylee. f252J SUM Sfwoff? ming Gngineering Summer Seiko? HE members of the Summer School of Mining and Metallurgy left Boston the tenth of last June, headed for Mineville, N. Y. The trip up was first by train, along the west shore of Lake Champlain, and then through the mountains on the end of an ore train by caboose. It took till the middle of the eleventh to reach the jumping-off place, and till the morning of the twelfth to become acclimated. June 12th was spent in a systematic examination of the well known magnetite mine of the Witherbee Sherman Company. In a country, rock consisting chiefly of Archaean gneiss, light acid on hanging wall and dark basic on foot wall, the magnetic iron ore occurs in high lenticular masses of Variable thickness. Open pit workings excavated the upper outcrops, but now long shafts 800 to 1,ooo feet in depth tap this im- mense metallic reservoir. i June thirteenth was spent A, studying the excellent magnetic concentrating plant of the same company. Here by means of elec- tro-magnetic attraction the iron bearing particles are extracted from the crushed ore. Blake multiple jaw-breakers crush the ore down to three fourths of an inch, and a series of passes through Allis Chal- mer rolls brings it down to the required thirty mesh. In the after- noon we were afforded an excellent opportunity to examine the con- BROVVN COAL CONVEYORS 5 254 J struction and operation of a dia- mond drill, which at that time was y down to a depth of some 1,200 feet. The party was rather loath to leave its comfortable quarters in Mineville, but early Monday morning we boarded our private train for Port Henry. This lux- urious private train, by the way, consisted of a single engineless, rickety caboose. When all was ready the brake was loosened, and gravity did the rest. We might have coasted at a most glorious rate all the way down to Port ON BOARD THE IVIAID-Ol-THE-MIST Henry if an ore train ahead had not necessitated slower speed. At Port Henry we were initiated into the mysteries of blast furnaces and iron smelting by a thorough examination of the plant of the Northern Iron Company, where we spent the entire forenoon. The remainder of the day was consumed in journeying to Syracuse, where we were quartered at the Empire Hotel. Professor Hofman had been at this hostelry some dozen years before, and remarked on again ascending its hospitable steps that it apparently hadnlt been altered or painted since, some one added an aside of Nor cleaned, either, which was probably near the truth. By judicious bribing, however, we did manage to get a little to eat. The first place inspected was the Straight Line Engine Works, unique chiefly for an inscription over the entrance proclaiming, Visitors always welcome. Mr. Sweet, the head of the industry, takes even more than paternal pride in the establishment, and almost overwhelmed us with graciousness and courtesy. At the works of the Crucible Steel Company we learned of the processes of manufacturing high 'grade tool steels, such as tungsten, molyb- denium carbon, and chrome steels. The elaborate processes of annealing were of particular importance, since the finest grades of steel are used for such articles as razors, knives, drills, etc. Most 52551 QT ec Bnique 1905 QTecBnique 1905 of our interest in Syracuse, however, centered about the famous Semet-Solvay Process Com- pany, at whose plant we spent June seventeenth. The processes and apparatus of this company are kept secret, so that we felt highly Hattered at being :':Q - - allowed the unusual honor of inspecting the 4? 31? -,', . . . .:l. lant. First we examined their well-known y af.. ,f-...,. -.V ... . fsv. .., 3 coking ovens, forty of which furnish the establish- ment with coke and gas. The loading is done by overhead tram- ming, and the discharging by an electric ram. The secondary products, such as tar, ammonia, etc., pass through an intricate sys- tem of scrubbers and washers before their final refining distillation. Every Freshman knows the chemical reactions incident to produc- ing sodium carbonate by the Solway Process, and when one recol- lects that this company turns out one hundred and fifty tons of it per day, it is easy to imagine the proportions of this chief industrial establishment of Syracuse. The next three days were spent in Buffalo, where Burke and Cowper temporarily deserted our camp for more desirable quarters at home. Everyone felt especially glad for Burke, since We knew that he would now, for a few days, at least, get food in quantities proportional to his gigantic appetite. He had been aptly nick- named Hungry, and richly deserved the name, Burke not desiring food would be almost as difncult to imagine as Burton not sleepy. Our headquarters were at the Mansion House, where we were served with the characteristic constituent of chop suey travel- ing under an assumed name. We spent June eighteenth at the copper smelting and electro- lytic refining plant of the Calumet and Hecla Company, which proved to be a model of its kind. Here the concentrates from the C. and H. Superior Mines are first smelted and run into pigs or casts, these impure moulds are then made anodes in vats of blue vitriol solution, through which a current of 1800 amperes at 9.10 volts is sent. The resulting kathodes are practically pure copper, while the mud which accumulates on the bottoms runs some twenty- six per cent in silver. IZSGI June nineteenth was occupied with the Lackawanna Steel Co., whose apparatus and processes Were on such gigantic scales as to be at first bewildering. After seeing such plants as these one need no longer marvel at the supremacy of America in the iron and steel trade. Saturday afternoon, being a half holiday, was devoted to amusements, which consisted of a most novel athletic contest. Dimock, Burke, and Cowper essayed to stuff Buff's back with pea- nut shells, which aggression our Little Giant H naturally resisted. Yerxa said it was the best battle royal he had seen since he left Boston. Dame Rumor says that Dimock and Rubel saw and did things that night which Were not on the oliicial schedule, at any rate, their customary countersign since then became W- H-g that's all. R- R- Si, ask the man behind the counter. Sunday was devoted to admiring the stupendous beauty of the Niagara Falls, poets, orators, and artists alike have failed in its description, so a miner Will attempt none. Some informal dis- cussion concerning the geology of the phenomena elicited startling theories and conjectures from versatile Buff Who has original ideas in all the sciences from anthropology straight down the alphabetical list to Zoology. We rechristened the Maid of the Mist Eter- nal Showerbath, Which, though a less fanciful title, is far more appropriate. Dimock, on deck in the regulation oilskin Water- proofs, looked like a Walrus in swaddling clothes. A night trip down the lake brought us to Cleveland, Where the last week of the session was spent investigating the manu- facture of iron and steel. June twenty-second was devoted to open hearth Work at the Otis Steel Company. Siemens-lVlartin type furnaces, provided with underlying regenerative chambers, Foster butterfly valves, and charged by lfVellman Seaver loaders, furnish material for the steel foundry, forging shops, and plate mills. June twenty-third found us at the works of the American Steel and Wire Company, Whose Bessemer department attracted our especial attention. It was here that Bufi who had never before seen a converter, gained notoriety by trying to explain to f257j Ceclinique 1905 ecBnique 1905 Professor Hofman, Who has Written volumes on the subject, how the air blast really enters through the tuyersg Buffs genius hardly met an enthusiastic reception. That night all hands turned out to the theater. Alas, for Burton! 'tvvas there he met his fate. A demure young maiden Wailed, with orchestral accompaniments, Have You Seen My Captain? in style so exquisitely pathetic that Burton's Warm, Southern heart simply melted away, even now the hazy outlines of a sweet, feminine face which he sees in the curling Wreaths of his tobacco smoke suspiciously resembles this Variety queen. On June twenty-fifth We patronized Tom Johnsonls three- cent trolleys, getting out to the Lorain Steel Works, Whose 312,000,000 plant was a real treat to examine. Gigantic blast furnaces one hundred feet in height and twenty-two feet in bosh consume single charges of 4o,ooo pounds of ore, 9.o,ooo pounds of coke, and 1o,ooo pounds of limestone, 550 tons of Bessemer steel per furnace a day is a running record to be proud of The last topic investigated Was puddling at the Union Rolling Mills on June twenty-sixth. For a full hour We sweltered before one furnace Watching 'carefully the full process, from charg- ing to rolling. Dimock said if that heat was any criterion of what might be expected in the hnether land of fire and brimstone, he intended reforming without delay. That night the session adjourned, each man going his solitary way home, or to some destination farther West, but our verdict Was unanimous in thanking our directors, Professors Hofman and Locke, for the interest they had manifested in making the session the enjoyable success Which it Was. p . f2581 Civil? Gngineering grammer ,5cBooI3 EAN BURTON in speaking of the Civil Engineering Summer School of last summer, which was in his charge, said, In many Ways this school has been dif- ferent from previous summer schools, and I think that without a doubt it has proved the most successful. The 1903 school, which was larger than that of any previous year, was composed of twenty-four students from the Class of 1904. and fifteen from 1905, under a corps of eight instructors. The party left Boston June Ioth on the steamship St. Croix, bound for East- port. Some of the members became at once quite popular with other passengers, and as a result enjoyed the moonlit evenings. THE SURIBIER SCHOOL PARTY L 259 3 Qieciinique 1905 ' t Not so Robbe and White, they preferred the seclusion of their staterooms. Thurlow thought that he did not want any breakfast one morning, but we persuaded him to have something. He evidently knew better, however, for he im- mediately left the dining room for the deck. After arriving in East- port a few hours were devoted to sightseeing, after which we took the Washington County Railroad to East Machias, destined to be the scene of our labors and the theater of many strenuous DEAN BURTON AND PROF. ROBBINS performances. Many of the fellows found lodging at the tavern, but some were accommodated at other houses. As for Johnny Howard, why-er-eh, the post office quite suited him! We arrived at East Machias just in time to attend the dance at the graduation exercises of the Washington Academy, the oldest school in that section of the country, having been founded during the latter part of the eighteenth century. Washington Academy owes its fame partly to the fact that here Arlo Bates received the rudiments of his education. Yes, Arlo Bates was born and bred in East Machias, and for that reason, if for no other, the AIQO3 Summer School should be famous. The principal work of the school consisted in making a com- plete topographical map by the plane table of an area of about one and a half square miles, including the town. The map was con- structed on a scale of one in five thousand, and with a contour interval of ten feet. The first step in the g work was the selection of a suitable base line and the erection of prominent signals. The establishment of the base line became an exciting experience when swamps were encountered. The method of base-line measurement is one that has been devel- PLANE TABLE XVORIC I:260j oped and improved by former summer schools, and has received the approval of the United States Coast Survey Bureau, and will likely be adopted by the Bureau in all its triangulation work. The apparatus consists of a one-hun- dred-meter steel tape, supported at points ten meters apart, and stretched uniformly tight by a weight at the forward end. The temperature is obtained by measuring the electrical resist- ance of the steel tape as determined by a Wheat- stonels bridge. Several exposed points around the village were chosen and coast survey signals built. With twenty-five men we had difficulty in erecting our first one, although Professor Rob- bins still insists that it is customary for two or three men to build them in one half the time. The tide gauge was set up at the mouth of the Macllias River, THE POSTMISTRESS about two miles below the town. Daily observations were made to determine the mean level of the sea, and lines of levels were run up to the base line. In the meantime a party under Mr. Sweet was securing a good location up the river for a hydraulic measurement station. Here the river bed was cross sectioned, and the flow of water determined by several forms of Hoats and water meters. Soundings at the mouth of the river were made by aid of the sextant. One evening was devoted to astronomical observations, but as the hour was late the attendance was proportionately small. Road traverse and stadia surveying were taken up, and good results obtained. ln triangulation helio- trope signaling was employed, and flashes of light were easily sent and received distances of fourteen miles. Professor Barton, in charge of the geological work, proved a capital companion and able leader, but there were few of the men who could keep up with him on a day's tramp. Toxy Dow on returning from his first trip with Professor Barton ROAD XVORK L 261 3 Qieciinique 1905 Ceclinique 1905 remarked, He,s a wonder, he ran up the hill, and then jumped off! Naturally, we heard a great deal about Professor Bates which was not entirely complimentary to him. One informant told us that Arlo sat right behind me in school and spent most of his time in pulling my hair. Another native said that Arlo's sister was living in the town, but that she was quite different from him, In fact she is a perfect lady, which may be construed in various ways. There is one man in East Machais, Mr. Fred Hovey, whom the fellows will always remem- ber with the kindliest of feelings. Mr. Hovey's tally-ho ride and his Hoat party on the river were the features of the trip. Means of entertainment were not lacking. There were two or three dances a week, and Mr. Hovey's cotillion proved a mint of fun. Bobby Wise wanted to go, but he was too bashful to ask the fair recipient of his favors. Finally, two fellows helped him out of his dilemma and asked her for him, and he was happy. Another source of enjoyment was our attempt at baseball. Practice took place each evening, and, contrary to the usual phrase, had we practiced less we would have played better, for by the time of the game with Washington Academy every man on the team had thrown his arm out, and to this fact we attribute the loss of the game. Nevertheless, Captain Dow deserves credit for the able manner in which he led the team-back home on the tally-ho. Many en- joyable evenings were spent around the piano, Mrs. Sweet playing for us, except on such occa- sions as when Blum brought forth his abominable quartette. Much rivalry took place at the ROAD TRAVERSE cotillion for the favors of the fair elements. For the postmistress it was a draw between Johnny Howard and Carhart, but by all odds Hadley was 52621 if A 1 I ,fm 1 ,1 3 1 11 ,aff-l '- I , .,:f1.':,g',-'f :1 f L' ,gf ani Mia Q ' F ,,, ,a,,.,.. , -2-1 f 1 43.1, viatzif-A L 7 . fatff 'Q , ,rrEff.f-ace ' LEX EL XVORK the chief fusser, and sad havoc he wrought. The show at the townhall will be long remembered by all the fellows, for the first two rows were taken up by the Summer School, and every advan- tage was taken of the favorable location. Gne rainy day two bold spirits were out searching for a cobbler, whom they finally found on the outskirts of the town. On their return they were told that they should never go down that road, because at one house liquor was sold. The fellows looked quite guilty, but said nothing. Maine, by the way, is all for prohibition. The waters of Eastern Maine are a trifle cold, but still a few of us managed to get some good swims in the river and in the the lake. One of our most interesting souvenirs is a beautiful silken banner picturing A Tech in East Machais, presented us by the ladies of the town. Mrs. Hooper's cat and parrot proved of peculiar interest to Molina and Urquidi, and many an hour did they lie in the hammock endeavoring to teach the parrot new tricks. July second saw our departure for Boston. It was a glorious sail down the beautiful Penobscot and along the rugged coast, and although we made the most of our time that night on the top deck, yet there was not a man but felt a little saddened to think that the morning would bring to a close a trip that had proved so profit- able and enjoyable to all. 52631 Qiechique 1 905 BMD AFTER DDNNER CHAT 35475 f 'fffvz Pl PXA u.fx'V'O'W T' Fl. F 1 WOQJCIC3 D X, K.: 15 L!iU0??fK I'.iI'Z'f ENGINE TESTIN ASSOCIATION TECHNIQUE INTERNATIONAL OHRE TOMATHIE ERAPPE MORCEAUX GHOISIS DE HAIR CHAUD AVEC PRONONCIATION FIGUREE A INUSAGE DES FRESHMEN PAR EMILE ZOLA ET PASSY RAMBEAU UNPRECEDES UUNE INTRODUCTION SUR LA METHODE TECHNIQUE DERNIERE EDITION REVETU ET INCORRIGIBLE BOSTON A. D. MACLACHLAN dz CIE 46 SALEM STREET PARIS ALFRED DREYFUS MME. HUMBERT 17-1 BOULEVARDE CINQ, SOUS 1 33 RUE D135 VIELLES FROMAGES 1904 266 g can iuglns veue d lwc parr! yn ffbbra Sarni. ai 1'1a'za sez HINDZ, i s apfbswk v le tirwanr dg sa picizd ks mgP ne af XII sm 6 W ahj? pabkci ava e plOa yi. 0 p1'op,1ij6tSr, il etuoyxm - lkop cixlfdy wry: e Odf3n. Ukkg hyp-go 119 mrsq Big -Klfid hmrsydmv dlfpm Qdgeshp Owkqm, 1'A.ITl'Q ? Q p Q osawxlfmk S E ply sdcp phi' Mnlmz Wdr ntfib? :,:4:,:GJ hy U-: Wrd. meytsrq nmt oeyfms, 1,W,w- ahonedmyphzi,-ci-12 pd Qpywj? gotsm -pd. i-Ti wmsbg 111 poddo ? Qfj N: :Nm Whmnh. f1'z2'zz ue 55 UZEYXQ An,.og wnmll adyl , WVIIW Nllgdym Jdtyd, whe5.w yuuuyi 1 oeyouwpmdt iuyzitc p-d--q! hl o! gzwg rsuccalxswsy, mE:dyq6 u ptzllftra gout 8 pap, mem-hr dir, dhe6h0 lephln 1'fLAYIfh ke lae-zi8, 6cin9d mucddly. Wh de soup--? Nedyzm 2'y1fhO Semloh mi. EXE imdy Whuhnydg. ama ad C9 . . 1611, igi, S61Z1Il1O serty pm 5 wswma. fof E bt- te 1'eS4d? if GD ha? ha? fliofiio : yu Whanhw tuqinlnlerkdr -I sis6 6 W1'-hocuhoxxllf ohelyd llfoi, Insist, wru peeweefs best' wxA X cdelo ehvlusi- Cpspj 0:iN-omw, vr Qymdm 2lG112'63.lDC1'IS3. cE5cf1D sbuqld bxzlmr-dsy wulcuy1If fggwmdy mol--h III mo ec ::: CD Q .... j sm!hycp hot..coHe6wIf hhdcpm, III Ilpyod xmr phyamg atwnyl QE: oh nrstvwdg Oyxlf hlbw, ysfg M021 C GJ GD Q hystvhmy, ohAohW 42-fzmx huczxqlkn wy e1'St:mh1'a5,i ' dumdy6srzfID ifdhus, cvu6hah Oiha. 11vX-:A h:h:my0rly hsuMaq, esiV0pa61Il my ifyhw emlz xyX,6S0 CGEILRFZIIJQ fb 11tuz,wy hucmci Emsyfi. 267 I will now call the- roll as soon as possible. Mr. Absent-Nlr. Absent is present? Mr. Brown-Mr. Black-and Blue. Mr. Blue you were absent last time? No? Oh! You were tardy! Why did you not speak to me about it? Remember the recitation begins at nine o'clock Hve minutes. Mr. Meek-present? Mr. Meek you did not do Well on your last exlemnation test. You must do better Work, oderwise I gif you the lowest possible mark. Mr. Noel-lVIr. Noel is present. Mr. Ore? Mr. Ore why do you not answer? I don't like to call you Ore and Ore. I am not used to it. Mr. Punk-Your mark on the test was not good. What was it? No, I cannot tell you. It is useless to ask me. Mr. Queer-Mr. Queer is always present. lVIr. Seldom-Absent? Is there anyone Whose name I have not called? What lesson have we to-day? Lesson 82? Did We not have that last time? No? Well Mr. Queer you will write the sentences on the board? Have you the sentences Mr. Queer? Mr. Brown you must not lend Mr. Queer the sentences. You will hurt his interest. Have you your copy books? I will now give you some verbs to learn. You will write them in your copy books. Mr. Queer you must hurry with the sentences as we must have some practice in pronunciation. But we must first have it more quiet. I am not used to it. Have you all got H Chrestomatie with you? Only three? Well, please distribute the books so that everyone may have a copy. Read with me on page 15 Le petit Dikef' Please cover the right hand page. Pronounce together: Oh ! Francis Dike pourquoi, Oh l Francis Dike pourquoi, Oh ! Francis Dike, pourquoi you like To hear yourself talk tout soir. Oh I Francis Dike c'est bien, Oh l Francis Dike c'est bien, Oh ! Francis Dike, c'est bien you like To Hunk all your third-year men. We have no more time for this now. I will correct the sentences on the board. Next time you IHLlSt do better Work. This has been a poor recitation. I have done most of the reciting myself. Klr. Black you will see me after the recitation about your registration card. The class is now dismissed. f-,J-.qgai-.V-.V-v,.q-at-,,., If ,fav-EM Q N Q ' ,f-ages.-eaagacszsa, - MH'-fa. ,162 ' 1 A-as e Amwmm, ,H x as 'aff' . if , '-. a'f6q.,vf+4g99fy l. xx JT Q Q. JA 'KTREEN' ' Z f 1 li if unnafuraf 512-'forg 1 'K ll T!! ij T H E S W A N f E E2 The Swan sits 1-dly in his chair, . ,W And there he stays, nor does he dare To walk about and rof-fer aid . P To those who from the truth have strayed. f 55 We often see in Phys. Lab., men i ,Q Who know not what to do, or when. Then does the Swan rush up to see Si If he can help some one find g, 1 EX-plain the Air Ther-mom-e-ter, Or An-e-roid Ba-rom-e-ter? Q gg Oh! not at all. In-stead he stays T Right at his desk and lets his gaze Eg Roam i-dly up and down the aisle With stu-dents rav-ing all the while. t 5? . fgg Should you but ask him what to do, I-Ie'll turn his swan-like neck toward you 43, And say, Look in the book and see Be-fore you come and ques-tion me. . Qs. . . MEA' Such, chil-dren, IS the house-hold Swan. 517 if . 151' Take warning, all, ere you pass on. V 24,5 X ultra itil? i-'lg :Wim XQl2lM'l'?,?:5f.,T,Z ,llrn ' T 'brig ..,,W,,Zmi5.zfZ'e4:Q0HQ.,:,..-. rl I- 4.1 D- X. 2 W. f 1-ki .W-Quay-La.,.,3l,,,3,,3,3w,Ew5a2 U, B. '1f'Kf7T,i ??w!.S If Tzu., U Fm. ,A Tlsxiiaill, lmtfikaa 331:11 Qs, A K 1, V Z 1 5,5 w Rah 'w X' , X :rm ,QM K-lm , 'sagggf if VH- f-- X ' F s- 3!irwl 'i,4 435, ig--151' '15 -i.gf'1-'--'f-gf . 7 f iii if fix-:W .. . of-L. all I:-han!-J, page 7? .N E 23 wre V, L H '. 3' 2 Ti Zi ' . W? Y fail i in U I lx A -A ' - -,KS .L av ....,-6:-Wf. ..... fm- 1-W1 .f AM X V I U If ' I, ff L. I , f:jm::::5f if1ff . X -.-4', l,-'L , pf Q ' ,X 2 VV! X 9' ' r A 4 A ' ' . g-,L QQ 6: 3 -1-T, .f . 51:13-w 1 'wiwfh ' rr? A-we-.-mf ':0Xi7La0Jdi5v!,f',r ,Q 'WJ' ' .P 1' wsmmmsaam-mrs-rem, 'Par -' E faawwsmwvamfmmuc'-' ' - M WL ' y , , N f J A Q I K u 1 L-A1 1' 1'4 V I W A 1 N mx 4. i . SE . . 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' - - -- Q 1, . . 1. ,, EXTRACT FROM THE TECH MARCH 24, '04 The larger part of the Institute exhibit for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition left Boston last Tuesday for St. Louis. Professor Gardner is to follow Within a few days ..... VERY VOLATILE INDEED DR. THORP-H Wood alcohol is very volatile, I have had several samples evaporate in the last few years, and generally the bottles go with them. SUCH IS LIFE AT THE TECH MISSION PROF. ERHARDT-K' Mr. Beard, Why are you not prepared to-day? HONEST BEARD, '05- We had company last night. ik .X J DR. WENDELL- If I were running from Walker to Lowell at the rate of ten feet a second, my velocity would be ten feet. This is true of all bodies, it makes no difference Whether they are heavenly bodies or not. LE B. TURNER ftranslating La femme ezwzit Ie meme agenj- His daughter was the same age as he himself. Et pieds nur qui pezrtezit ezllegrement . . 7' H And without feet he followed quickly? WHAT DID HE MEAN? DR. THORP-it You find arsenic in the milk of magnesia that they feed to babies when they have sour stomachs, but you needn't be afraid if you are using it. C. F. ALLEN fas Hill lounges in latej-H Hm! It would be better for one coming late to Walk kind of briskly, Wouldnlt it? y HILL-H All right, I'll make up for it going out. 52701 THEY WERE GIANTS IN THOSE DAYS Qfecljnique F. H. CHARLIE- WhyI if you fellows go out in the corridor you can see letters drawn by students three feet thick. WORSE AND WORSE MR. BURRlSONTllTh2.f tint is not dark enough. STUDENT-'fWhy! I put on three coats. BURRY- You should have put on an ulster. PROF. MILLER-'llGCt a Thermodynamics before next timeg last edi- tion. It doesn't matter which thousandg the mistakes are the same in all of themf' DR. THORP-ILYOU can't extract much from old bottles. f ilf'-'ilag '--W is was-' m S iff.. TURGEON, '04- If the belt is smooth, J 1 Why donlt the particles slip? ' ' N I lin ,I X PROF. RICHARDS-Ulf my aunt has Wheels, E 0 ' M is she an automobile? -ll X gp QE ENCODRAGING OUTLQOK It Q SMITH fin Chem. lab., referring to the .ii ,N crowded condition of the hot closetj-U There ought to be more room in the hot place.'l SO NIUCI-I THE WCRSE FUR THE DOG PROP. SWAIN fto Thurlow, ,045-ff Why, I could teach my dog thatf' BAKER, '04 fafter Smith's one hour explanation of the planerj- I suppose he couldnlt say less and make it plane. .2510 14' !Zq,.,1,2,J7 WJ? MJ .- I 9 af. aaa., 'aiu G!R4aeZ,, MM W-f-4h 7a.,..,.f.7, aaa fog aff' 610426 4.fJfZV.,-.44 dl, A' WHICH ONE VVAS RICHARD? 52713 1905 PA CHANDLER Qin his only Arch. His. lecturej- The taking of 1905 Constantinople by the Turks Was the l1m1t. DR. WALKER-it Solid CO2 is now used to kill prairie dogs. They find the hole Where the dog lives, stop it up With solid CO2, and thus kill the dog and bury him automatically. LALLAY, '05 Qtranslating ' Ich Iiehe ihn ja ich werde gelieht, und jetz war getern nicht zu erst- I love him and am loved, and this is not the Hrst timef' V PROF. Voom.- This isn'r Chicago. M255 lx l l Z X N' LEAHDA X .-29' e mf f f W Hi Q Q 55 L i f 53 f V if iyti p figfbm, P 12564 - 4 -. n 1-il , ml I .5 J, - ld -M-M E -l-l xeLJr'm1ol'1ES Seem by 5 3ir'r1rr1Ol'lS Girl. MR. BATCHELDER-H Barrels are made round to make them strong. NOW what other articles are round for the same reason H. B. CANOVER, '07-H Cheesesf, 'pil SONDY COULDN'T PROF. SONDERICKER-HI don't understand how you proved that. E. G. BILL, '05- Why, anybody can see that. THE FIRST FEW WEEKS PROF. MILLER Cin Thermoj- You men Want to be thoroughly grounded in this subjectf' JOHN LYNCH, '05 fasidel-H Well, I ground for two Weeks, and now I'm Hooredf' f272j EXPLICIT Qfecgnique PROF. PEABODY-U The 'I' in this equation means the moment of inertia. It is not the ordinary moment of inertia, however, in fact it is not the moment of inertia at all. ROOM 6 ENG. C. Dr. C. H. Warren opens large Dana's Mineralogy. URCHIN foutsidej- Look at the kid teacher. S ECOND URCHIN-H Gee, he's going to read the Bible. THE VILLAGE BLACKSMITH Under a spreading cloud of smoke The Course II smithy stands. The smith, a tired man is he, With blisters on his hands, And the coal dust on his bright young face Appears in streaked bands. His arms are limp, and black, and long, His hair resembles hay, His record book is full of Hunks, And growing day by day. He gladly grasps at every straw To help him on his way. Week in, week out, from two to four, You can hear him cuss and swear, You can see him drop the flaming iron And rave and tear his hair. The weld he is making falls apart, And fills him with despair. Thanks, Mr. LAMBIRTH, worthy friend, For the lesson thou hast taught, For the weld which now so firmly holds The weld by thy own hand wrought. Thy language is, Oh, George! Oh, George!! But thy life is with good deeds fraught. NEW DEFINITION OF A CENTRIFUGAL DRYER A circular plate with perforated holes in it. CARRUTH, '06- Since we are engaged -thus stops translating. PROF. VOGEL--U Oh! Mr. Carruth, don,t stop thereg go further. MR. APPLETON- This space here is reserved for cargoes of lumber, cattle, passengers, and other merchandise. 52731 Cetgnique ff FACTS FROM WORCESTER H 1905 MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY FIRST YEAR, SECOND TERM FINAL REPORT IN MILITARY SCIENCE NAME ...,,,.. .......,. Q 9lflllNY..,F5l??flll4,5ll ......,,.. CREDIT DEBIT 3 times excused from drill Q 5012 15W 3 times shoes blacked CQ VZ SW Learning General Orders CQ ZOOW QOOLZQ 20 times bringing girls Q 5? IOOW 1 times stamping gun QQ 256 25W 3 Cigars for Lieut. Worcester C59 W sm Credit on Examination 515 22265 140W 140W Final mark BQQ .gfmmf cQef0W4hM,gm Wwedzw, Headquarters, Corps Cadets Commandant Mass. Inst. Tech PRETTY POOR Some Course Imen were one day perched on the roof of English A ftheir feet resting on the gutterj Watching operations in the rear of the building. Prof. Swain looked up at them and said: See the gutta perchas rubber. l , MINERALOGY MAN Cro Course II, spec- QQU ix ialj- What do you Want to take Mineral- ,f i X 1 o for? my A A fe A W - lg !i 'p ,a?fL71-7 COURSE Il MAN- Ch, you can never Xt. g ' 9 3'E tell When you'll run up against 21 rock. 47113 ' f27-Ll -'I ri N Tim T X K N K A FEW SUGGESTED V 1 IMPROVEMENTS FOR Jak' STAY TECH r x WX U 'X EH 1 X - 1- .l b W WW T, 1, BEER IN THE PHYS. LAB. S? f, 0'x5lx9 X A , ,. , Q., 'f A X Lt zqis Xxwi x 'J' N .af- ' ' f CHAFING DISHES IN Auf g mx x CHEM. LAB. K? A SA N1 Af X 1 .5.- X-. ' 1' ' ' v Im -. X 2 V , H. Yu T N Nl , W- ,G X ' 1 HPS, W M3 A' 1' Six 5 ff? ' J . , .if-, 5 ' ' C , LOUNGES IN .10 sgffkgf W , M, Bib xg - f- --L .'19,, Z CI-IARLIE'SJ LECTURE A5214 42- 45' 74 ,giy w , ' ,xii f BCCM ' Jf SST x. I X .. A - ,Zy l ' If , F xl my-W - 1 , - XA I 275 Qieclinique 1905 Qiechique 1905 ABSENT-MINDED ROXY CROSBY foffering a half to street car con- ductorj- How much? H. H. NELSON, JR., '05, on October 2, 1901, to O. F. WELLS, the Recording Angel - Professor Wells, are you willing for me to use your University Algebra instead of the College Algebra which is specified ?'7 Followed by modest explanation of O. F. that he is not the great Webster. A real treat to see Sprague, '06, blush when seated next to a Co-ed in Spanish I. An unheard of occurrence with the usual matinee idol. ' I FREEHAND CHARLIE Cto the W. ' i i ,f departing shade of Linusj- After you my dear L. Fauncef' .f -. MADE IT UP OUT OF HIS OWN HEAD ll HARRY T. fExplaining Inte- 'MI' grationj- We will imagine that my hat contains a small block. W P ! 1 ll x u I Q Q., i l v ' I llll ll i l GERRY, '05 Qto Lynch, '05, who is drawing a Hancock Inspiratorl - What is that queer-looking thing you are drawing? LYNCH-U Oh, that's an inspirationf, SHAKESPEARE IN THE MINING LAB. Parting is such sweet sorrow. SO SAY WE ALL OF THERMO PROF. MILLER-ll We will take up the adiabatic curve, as it is really the only hard line we havef' TOM KEENE, '05- It seems to me the whole subject is hard lines.', OVERHEARD IN PEABO'S LECTURE Gentlemen, my new book on 'Theoretical Naval Architecture will soon be on sale. Every man should have a copy, in fact it is absolutely essential that he should get one because the text is purposely enough differ- ent frorn that of the free notes to make it necessary. NOTE.-Price, 37.50. 52763 'H r THE TRUE TECH SPIRIT. 3 C. E. ALLEN- You men have too l easy a time. I am going to give you more I s work, and may the devil take the hindmostf' ' l i DR. JAGGER fin Geology, -U One more Word before leaving the atmosphere. I A NEW ROLE Fon Anno V I ST. LOUIS MAN Cto Prexyb- Of course we understand that this book QTECHNIQUED is published by the faculty, but we consider it a good one just the same. OVERHEARD AT THE TELEPHONE lVIRS. RICHARDS- You know my sentimentsg when women have pockets,-then it's time for them to vote. R. W. SENGER, '05- I looked over some old Pol. Econ, exams and I could only answer four questions in the last five years. QUERY-H How long would it take Senger to pass an exam of nine questions? E. M. EATON, '05 fafter the first Japanese victoriesb-'K Yes, Russia is rapidly developing a fine fleet of submarine boats. Dr. Dewey recommends the De Long Hook and Eye. HARNIQNIC DISPLACENIENT OF THE CRQSS-HEAD 12771 Q5ecBnique 1905 PROF. DEWEY fLecture, Mediums of Exchangeb- v 1905 , wg. It is to be noted that at this time the oxen did not pass ,I X from hand to hand. X3 ff i' filx' QD Y, P I in RATHER HARD ON CHARLIE MR. GEO. KUNTZ fLecturing on Radiumb- I myself remember the time when aluminum was worth sixty dollars a pound, and there are some present, doubtless fturning to Charlie Crossj, who remember when it was discovered. PROF. MILLER fpointing to sketchj-This tends to make a partial vacuum as I showed a few minutes ago in my narrow neck. The Class of 1904 1-2 has organized and elected itself to the following ofhcesz- T. C. PINKERTON, President C. FIELD, Vice Prexidenl PAUL M. PAINE, Secretary and Trearurer AN ACTUAL OCCURRENCE IN y N ,yi f ONE OF ROXY'S LECTURES if CROSS SECTION OF STEEL T ii A THORP'S CLASSICS DR. THORP-H The spelling and English that this class uses is simply abominable. QUOTATIONS FROM DR. THORP'S LECTURES The neighbors kick if gas gets into the air. Chuck in calcium sulphate. They had a pollution committee to yank him up. That was nuts for the manufacturer. H It cut: no ice what the size of the crystal is. The thing worked slick. When it comes to output, the Grifiin mill is right in it. Arsenic acts very nine in glass. f278J DRAWING ROOM TERMS R Q:?C6WfCIW M 1 .ff f .-, ez . all over Q x means finish 1 y A GROWING IMPRESSION FRESHMAN- I didn't like that dragon on the TECHNIQUE poster. JUNIOR- You may not appreciate it now, but as you get older it will grow on youfl FRESHMAN- Fd hate to have a thing like that grow on me. f ,gg ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF THE all S., f' s fs ANEROID BAROMETER j Can be used where ordinary baromerer cannot, but llmlgmxm it is necessary to take along an ordinary barometer to cor- ' ' Xf rect it. W fs Aldehyde is a good disinfectant. fSurely no relative to Stanley Hyde.j A SOPHOMORE WANTS TO KNOW 1 What made Charley Cross? 5 Why was it Peter Schwarnb? Someone made A. Noyes. Because it was Dewey. 2 What made Arthur Weysse? 6 Why did Benjamin Carter? He is always looking for Moore. Because he eouloln't fad D. Porter. 3 What made Joseph Riley? 7 What turned W. Felton Brown? He dia'n'tfnel Kilburn Sweet. He saw Charles Fuller. 4 What is the Charles B. Breed? 8 Is there anything Arlo Bates? C. Frank Allen. No one knows. NUCKOLLS- But I don't see the point. INSTRUCTOR SAWTELLE fas his pencil makes a big 0 in his bookj- The point is describing the arc of a circle, Mr. Nuckollsf' SEGAR, 'OS- Is this arrangement your idea, Prof. Derr?'l PROF. DERR- No, but I think it's a good one though. PUZZLE: FIND THE AUTHOR Somehow, I've forgotten for the moment just how that proof goes but its so anyhow. You'd find it was if you looked in the book. f279j 1905 Qieclinique 1905 'QT NB X U PM ITT PP I Dr. Victor Hugo takes u 'w-Q-H ' 'X gl! 7 pleasure in announcing the ex- esfur.-. ff - I ' tended engagement of Prof. Burton-Holmes Paquet in his I i, celebrated illustrated lectures. THE '--- - - J Et. , The subject will continue to PATQLET T' my be, as during the last three l'f'5- years, Oregon: Past, Present UC' S' ff and Future. G - D .I I In MR. LAMBIRTH fin forgingj - Here! Here! you can't do anything with that iron, its too cold. BUSHNELL, '05 - That's why I'm trying to put a scarf on it.', HOW PEABO'S STEAM BOILERSH WAS WRITTEN Miller sent for the catalogs. Peabo paid the postage. Riley wrote the book. JEWETT Qnew instructorj- If a frog in a pail of Water generates heat by kicking, how long would it take him to parboil himself? Data: g : 980 c. m. cu. ft. HZO : 62.2 lbs. After these long Weeks of anxious Waiting the ice gorge broke and carried away a small suspension bridge. Can you put that in simpler lan- guage, Mr. Bonta? BONTA, '07- The ice got away and broke the suspense. HE DOESN'T LOOK IT, DOES HE? MR. LAWRENCE Qin Industrial Electricity, pointing to 7 1-2 H. P. motorj- I brought this in to show youf' etc. CHORUS IN HUNTINGTON HALL-4' Where is Linus? H SECOND CHORUS- Been projected into H. BLACKIE fro Lambie, '05, who has not recited for four Weeksj-We long to hear your melodious voice, Mr. 5 Lambie. L 280 3 A 4 EMERSON, '05 fproving a reversed curve proposi- tion with a very distorted Hgureb-H Now We can ' easily see from figure that AB I XY. 1 PROF. ALLEN fin a sepulchral voicej- And IQ 1- , .l X the greatest of these is faith. elm.- - -'jl-KY. X 5.1,--I MAY BE AND MAY BE NOT DR. THORP Cspeaking of plate glassy- I'll now take up the plate which I dropped a moment ago. ' MARSH GAS Symbol for daily themes of Marsh, 'O7: CH4. AN EVERY DAY OCCURRENCE PROF. MILLER- Now are there any questions? C. E. WARREN, '05 fthe ever readyb -H Why do you call it the 'D' slide valve? Oh yes, but itls lying down. I see, and-a-which is the crank end of the piston? the end toward the crank? Oh! and the other end is the head end? I see now, I never quite understood that before. The crank turns around, you say, and that little cover-slide valve, Cuts off the steam from-Oh yes! and that's Why you call it the cut-off. Thank you. Will We have to hand in the problems next time? , vaglfflvldxl i , Q GEOLOGY OUTING ' V PROP. CROSBY, pointing to ledge U X ' and to golf girl of whose presence he is 'A Tl? ' f nqi, oblivious-H There, gentlemen, is a very I Q i V' I I ' interesting and instructive formation. A , ' e I - .4 f' 1 Load Ol Nllddle -supporled al ends. FULLER KNEW LOMBARD, '05 ftrying in vain to resolve forces into componentsl- There's an '17, comes in here some place but I don't know where. fTakes his seat and Prof. Fuller puts the F in his record book.j 52311 Qiecllnique 1905 Qecgnique D MR. SWEET- What is the ob' t f h ' 1 905 Jec o aving such a joint structure in an arch? HOOL, '05- That's what I've been wondering myself. DR. WENDELL funconsciously pointing to assist:ant's headj- We have here a high vacuum. ' QUITE TRUE E. C. GRANT, '05- Why is it that the angle is laid off backward? V R. S. V. P. LORD, 'OS- Why, that's the point in using Zeuner's dia- gramg everything is laid off in the opposite way from what you'd ex ect. P GRAESSER, THE FUSSER, IN I-Irs ELEMENT STEAM OR HOT AIR MR. BATCHELDERQUYCS, Mr. Creidenberg, you can produce more steam than you can handle. THEY MAY GET OVER IT LATER FIRST FRESHMAN- Say, lim, do you know your German? SECOND FRESHMAN- Gee, no! I've only been over it twice. PROF. DIPPOLD fto Wood, ,OSD- When I was young I used to cut wood, and now Wood cuts me. 32821 LALLEY, '05- A distributed load is a load in which one foot weighs as much as the other. HARD TO TELL H Who are you going to take to the Prom., Warren? '7 WARREN, '05- Oh, I don't know. I've asked three girls already, and two of them have accepted, but I think I'll take someone else. THERE ARE GTHERS H. A. HILL, '04-'KI can tell by looking at a beam whether it is ' tension ' or ' compressionf 7' PROF. SWAIN- You would make more money in a dime museum than as an engineer, Mr. Hill. J. C. Baker, '04, went to the tool room and asked for stock to make a key-way. The ever-willing slave supplied him with everything necessary. A TRIFLING INCIDENT DR. THORP-it The vegetation was killed and incidentally the inhabi- tants. ' HAD HEARD ENOUGH BLODGETT, '06 Ctranslatingj- I'm in love with the inn-keeper's wifef' MR. GOODELL-'K That will do. SCENES OF THE REVQLUTION FRESHMAN-K' The carriage turned into a little triangular square. NABSTEDT, '05 ftranslating Eve lines ahead of the correct placeb- It was now noon-H DIPPY-H Not yet!! PROF. OSBORNE fin Differential Equa- tionsj- Now if the body should fall from infinity it would never get hereg and when it did, it would have a velocity of nearly seven miles per second. aff,-Y' ' ,X wr ' In J' -fs... -' 'TT' it -. Xllfl x- in A SECOND TOlVIlVIY PQPE F. M. EATON Cin Gas Anaiysisp-if Of N Q 1'-A-if course you can't smell it 5 it's colorlessf' 3 FIELD GEOLOGY .rr SING S :C L2s3J ?Zec6nique 1905 Qieclhmique 1905 DR. SHERRILL- Now you have the Fe, Al and Sn in solution, what is the next step? BARRIER, '05- Break your beakerf' HUNTED H. MANN, 'OG fro MARCY, 'OSD-MYou fellows on TECHNIQUE have to work awfully hard, don't you? I'm going to try mighty hard to keep off our board. STUDENT Cjoyouslyb- Oh! Mrs. King! I found an oyster in my soup. MRS. KING fhurriedlyy- I can't help it. tix V ,, Ml -N . . rg H Borrowed from Exam Papers- Political Economy is the science which teaches us to get the greatest benefit with the least possible amount of honest laborf' . Gravity was discovered by Isaac Walton. It is chiefly noticeable in the autumn, when the apples are falling from the trees. ll R , XM lj fflzliiili I If aaa ,iff 62' ,V 0'd - 4 ' 'rf fr by EVEN A W'oRM IVILL TURN PROF. ALLEN flate of the legal department of the Atchison, Topeka 86 Santa Fe of New Mexico, giving an assignment for preparation,- I have carefully, comprehensively and precisely analyzed my ideas toward you, and the result is substantially as follows, to wit :- I respect, admire, adore and love you, and purely grant, give and convey to you the following lesson with all my possessions and emoluments, otherwise inherited, or in any other manner acquired, gained, anticipated, or expected in regard to same, with full and complete power to use, expend, utilize, give away, bestow, or other- wise make use of the same, anything heretofore stated, expressed, implied, or understood in or by my previous condition, standing, walk, attitude or actions, to the contrary, notwithstanding, and I furthermore -H The class had gone. EXTRA DRY PROF. NoRToN's INTRODUCTORY HEAT LECTURE- This subject is drier than some you study. 52843 DR. SHERRILL'r6Wh3t is the cause of the precipitation - 0 Wa er , Dr. Johnson's classifications of topographical forms: Con- i , struetional destruetional and Waist formsf, W Re' lf r xgh MAY BE so, MAY BE NOT WR that READ, '05, CTranslating l'Herrzen fran -wife of my heartj-- Ch, 7 's some foolish thingf , PROF. VOGEL-You may change your mind some day, Mr. Read. 25:5 DR. NORRIS fvvhose Organic Chemistry section was -- crowdedj- I shall have to move this room before next RN ma fMWg 1 Y NEITHER DO WE HARRY CLIFFORD-I may measure my ability by the amount of salary I get per year, but I hope I don't. MOTTER, '05- What does ' coquelicots ' mean?', MARCY, ,05-H Wild poppies. MOTTER fwrites on exam. paperb- She filled a large vase With Wild puppies. ' ' lar I ly DR. WENDELL- What other examples of Opalescence have We? L. B. TURNER, '05- Watery milk, Venetian glass? DR. WENDELL- Yes, but there is one other, though, that is particu- interesting to me.', TURNER-it Blue eyes? DocToR ROLFE Cro Dr. Walker, who is looking through a spectroscopej There, you see that glass cuts out the D lines. DR. WALKERLiiThC D lines! I don't know the D lines from a rag baby I YL -if -Tc'-T.l PEEER BURNS UNKIND -l:w:- -- v -.n X DR. WENDELL:- Those of you I' X ,kg 3X.XxJ.x.gx..iv Agudhpg, fy 220 jyill take Applied hleehanics, zfgozz 7' ..... 52353 Qfec Bnique .U STEAM ENGINEERING , Equalization of the Cut-off. I . , . ,4 - -- 15 ' gg i wry' I' V . ! , 5 XX., s A -Q Q X. 9 rf? E it Cf? DOUBTLESS DOC DEWEY- Many of the people who lived a hundred years ago would, in spite of the charitable organizations of that time, have been dead long ago. NEW JUNIOR-U What does the C. F. of Prof. Allen's name stand for? OLD TIMER1'K Why, Cut and Fill, I suppose. DID HE MEAN OPAQUE? A Freshman wrote in an examination paper: Rubber triangles are not as good as Celluloid, as they make the paper dirty and are invisible. E. L. SMITH ftranslating fl changcz la !f,-N I X f -RU I is-I fvisagewj His face hung down. JUST LIKE IVIAC GREGSON, '05, happened along one day just 'I in time to prevent a man from breaking into Mac's supply room in Eng. A. Mac learned of the affair and the next time Gregson went to the Co- op the following ensued. GREGSON-HI want some co-ordinate paper. MAC fto assistantj- How much is the co- ordinate paper? f - Q rf .Ewa . NITE-um 'viii :E-3:1514 iq ZW ' ' x n . I Y I . yi ZW. Nlllflvl I jf f r: I I ' :n-.ht u. A ' 1:y0 iJ,'fS2Q'f f x I -1-ffsgylw wwf' ASSISTANT-H Seventeen cen ts. MAC- Let him have it for tenf' PRONOUNCING GAZETTEER OF PROPER NAMES Gaetano Lanza Cget-6-lanzal-An engineering authority of the sixteenth century. Author of Torsional Tests on the King's English, also of a pamphlet called Applied Mechanics. PEABO-H In fact liquid loads always tend to produce instability. .Tones and Perkins attend church in Perkins' home town, gentleman approaches, shakes hands and says, H Are you two strangers, here ? H f286j ROOMMATE fto T. E. Jewett, 'OSD- Going fussing to-night ? P 7, JEWETT- What do you suppose I am taking a bath for. HEARD IN TECH CHAMBERS WARREN, '05 fbeating the boxj- Am I disturbing you? BUSHNELL, '05- Obi no, I like any kind of music. 5,,,,. INDIAN I What the National Educational Association thought of Harry T. DR. WENDELL-H What are the three kinds of vibration. I. V. BARND, '05 -'K Longitudinal, transverse and oriental. PRETTY GOOD FOR AN ENGLISHMAN EDMUNDS, '05 Qto friendj- You see Gale made some HEADQUARTERS 1 I 5 IW 4 I D! mistake in the Electrical Lab. and Smith gave him an awful blowing up. It was funny, too, to see Smith blowing up a galef, There, little boy, don't cryg They have roasted you hard, I know. You felt quite blue with the laugh on And your dignity suffered a blow 5 you, But y0u'll look back, And laugh, too, bye and byeg So there, little boy, don't cry. 'x. -v, xi: 9 .f .- ij: M x Q T '-N'x- I' ' ' .fi x f .gg 3 T . X . '.- ' '. . ...-.....:x N ' f N I ix x- '-. lf --i '7 H2871 Ar':I2'. f5? A QY83 . lr .uguQfr'QJ .M im . :ug '4 gn. ..,':., , . ,su-L ff. .--.4 :. ,gr ,xy 1-,KZ 11,115 Em. 'n-L-,I , r 1 ' 17'- .--. , m, ,JJ .'f - ca EQ? . M .L ,A N 4 U HV? X 142' 4. af 'iw VW'- N ...N . :F-52' gr:-L KNO .151 .1-c x Q an A . Sv U E, Pa I + m. . 'VI -. V - - -. 4' P f. '-Q ' Eagitf Bk axe - q 0 E72 'v -E ., 1- . N ' . if x , --rf '.' XFN f - . V 11 ' -. ig :L , 1 'J iz Sign : N H 1. 5 5-F . 2 Q ' '- -wx.. 4 Q 1?f '15 fm 5' . 32:3 45 fry H' 'L , ' , , 1 , . , ' . . 4' ish' l 'zz ' i' 3: - 1. QQ, nw n 1 I if , A Q W ' f, ' ff' ,Af T 5256. J G. 2 wr G-JC: 2,4 'R+ ' 15 ig! l -fr-5 . 291 -22 ef- nd X :-14 fr L , ' U15 455: ,Q. .- rw if-K ' . 4 2 K ki., fikl- P2 ' 4 YY O xr gfla Er. :QU Q. F J 'J Vi- :iff 2-:,ffL-4 .4 -- ,. - ' Q-:L -.. A . 1 J - v frm, -aw - ff v 7 ' X J 'Q 'en-'ff lfiff YE? '- iq 1 - K . if 'C-GMES' '1' : , 5, ' , ' 'lf ' K 4.4Lf i.. W ' . ii 4 k ' , '- ' f 1 A ,W :f. : .5 .- qg X5 A W ,Qev! waw- X ,F . X V. - ht: 1 ,f.,:' 5' 'Z '. LY' .. J' -Q52 xi if Q' ' x -' 11,5 5 I I -..:5 I vs-:I A i 'WD' VF v J ., I x i Y' X1 I L 5 3 I 5 x ,J ' HIL.- 5.'1f - E711 H 'i ! HT-.. .. -,ya ig SH. i F- I ff I ' ' , 1 I 1 1 g. v .3 Q ff . 'sf . l.' X ff: 'Ez f... m 1 1, I - 1 x f f 4. 'I'-, ,VJ ' 1 s 1 1 'fl r 5 'lb A 1- f W s L . if 7 4 YN' . ah.-: ' . .1773 -1222! . KLM' ' .'s-: :tn . -6- q.: H - , 'n -. - n ' . 5, fi-'4 lr' ' .- ff! ' '- 1.21 C . .. V. . . 1 .-1' Irv ' 5:5 13. ,- A . . . 4 f , , f IE, N x : ' -5 Z 'x1'- . . uf' -wtf. I . H'3'P 9 9 'G Fiastsezqnmvla nrlxwxqavtmebtrl EnI.l.EEf as fn owl .. eff , 25 Uwpf QR-I Diglmlvyas-IQNXQL 'Z 3 'lfxC1Ylw '-ffxvkjiillis E ftltiori A n N QE 'F' BUETQN ERXqEfgmL'A A AJ an R K Tstcnxci- Mr. Talcmehomea found the four principal buildings-devoted to Archi- tecture, Naval Architecture, Electricity, and Mechanical Engineering-in a state of good preservation. Chryselephantine statue in foreground supposed to be of Tylah, the American god of Vengeance-some think Zeus. Hole in extreme left, Hrst thought to be a sewer, was almost certainly used for mining engineers and sulphuretted hydrogen. X marks the spot Where the Geological Department was found. Details from Restoration. The mili- tary memorial to Captain Bayad is shown completely restored. The two figures, one on either side, are supposed to be famous military characters, closely associated in history with the great War god. The so-called Mausoleum de Linus 7' Mr. Takmehomea considers a tribute to some dear departed friend of the Instructor Burry-possibly that sweetheart of his made famous by Bayte's immortal poem, Love in a Shroud. No sketch can show the subtle lines of the building. It is the d ll l li , H2891 RESTORATION intersection of a cylinder and a conoidal hyperboloid revolved into H and projected upon the fourth dimension. P The odors coming from burning rubbish and Noyes Analyses made it impossible to approach the glue factory. V At a distance the chemical earyatis on the porch looked like Talbot and Pope. The fragment of the Baccha- nalian Frieze includes the portion devoted to the gods Rom Bow Tylah, Baytes, and Desprayt Dyll, prominent figures in American mythology. Early evidence seemed to show that the buildings were constructed about 1905, but authorities now agree that they could not have been built prior to 1958 A. D. -1, ., l w - -s .93 Q, A.V, W , 3,1 , gli-.. ..,. . 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A M- -Q -'f- - W L z- ,iffj .,. f Q DETAILS L 291 J Qieiclhmique 1905 earf to gearf Qfafiis fWith Apologies to LIFE, NNN .BY F. H. Bioos DEAR LITTLE BOYS AND GIRLS:- It is a great thing to be a great man like me, but it is greater still to hear what a great man like me has to say. Now I am going to talk to you as if there were no one else present, and tell you a great big secret. Can any little boy or girl guess my secret? Probably not, for it is a very hard one to guess. Dear children, I am the Advisory Council. Doesn't that surprise you? Wouldn't you like to be in a position like me? Why, the leader of Tam- many Hall has to consider the public a little bit, but I don't have to con- sider anybody. All the little boys at Technology must have my permission before they can exercise. I don't let them exercise much, however, unless they want to try for the Track Team. I do let some of the younger ones play something else in the fall. They make quite a little money. I give them enough to pay for part of their expenses and take the rest for my beloved Track Team. Children, you are too young to know what love is. The Track Team is my only love. Several years ago when I abolished all exercise but Track, I told them that it was done with the object of having one good team here. Per- haps you will hear people whisper that it is not much better now than it was then. But never mind. These mischief-makers will leave soon, and new little boys will come who won't know so much. Now little boys follow my example, and perhaps some day one of you may be a big fish in a little puddle, too. 52923 obern alifcmf COMEDY IN ONE ACT QDedicated to C. L. D., 'OSD PLACE: West Roxbury. TIME: A winter's efvening. SCENE: Ahigh- way traversed by cars, and intersected by a typieal suburban street. Snow- drifts lie fence-high abofue the pavement, seriously troubling city folk-natifves heep to the middle of the road. Abofue the lzighway, 100 yards, a house. Lights burn bright in the lower windows. A young and eager FACE presses hard on an upper pane. Behind the face another,-older,-perhaps the MOTHER. THE FACE : At last the ear. He comes. Yes, yes 5 'tis he l THE MOTHER: The Gallant? THE FACE: The Knight. But see. His face turns elsewhere. He looks not here. He is lost. THE MOTHER: Patience. Presently he Will return. One-two-three-four minutes elapse, when out of the shadow steps the KNIGHT. He mofues quiclzly, as one whose heart is light. THE FACE: Alas! Those fatal drifts. THE KNIGHT plunges deep. THE MOTHER: He strays from the middle. Poor helpless! THE FACE : Mother! The KNIGHT struggles free. All unconscious of tlze anxious FACE turned toward lzim, he mahes no attempt to conceal the wrath lze feels. Seehing an open but shadowy corner he laboriously brushes tlze wet snow from his clothes. He brushes, brushes, brushes. Eventually he mounts tlze steps of the house and rings for admittance. THE MOTHER: So glad to see you. But you are Wet ! You fell into the drifts ? THE KNIGHT: Drifts? What drifts? I have seen none! THE FACE : None? Why, We saw you-- THE KNIGHT: Must he some mistake. 'Twas another you saw. Perhapsf- QQ11ich Curtainb Wrhen tlze KNIGHT dropped of the car he had not seen tlze FACE turned to tlze NIOTHER, nor heard the bright exelamation, hahfdelight, half zuelcome, Mft is MR. DEAN ! 52931 0 X ' ASSOCIATE FA Uma if 6 ll l ' .ir 'Pri 'l 4 . it . p . L 7 2 1 Q' ' v ' V w.... Wwiibvnw l 1. 71 -LC rfaffizfnhhlf, f29.iJ WALTER L. CRONIN, A. O. H., Professor of Inter-class Law-South Boston High School, 'O0. Slappa Kappa Frappa, M. L T., '04, FIRST Assistant Examiner of Mellin's Food,', 1883-855 Mem- ber of Committee to select a Class Flower, Jimson Grammar School, 1895, Member of Committee to supply the Lemonade for Class Day, South Boston High School, Receiver of Medal for Good Work Done, given by W. L. Croninq President of the Cronin Mutual Protection and Admiration Society since birth. Author of 1904 Class Picture and The Determination of the Refractive Index of Rock Candy. Residence, 30 Engineering A. WALTER L. WHITTEMORE, A.M., P.M., Professor of Pugilism-Boston Normal School of Gymnastics '97, Quincy H. S. '01, Otta No Bettag M. I. T., '05. ASSISTANT to Nancy Hanks in a series of personally conducted tests on Flow of Air Through an Orifice, 1902, Professor since the Whittemore-Lindsly Scrap. Author of the Wliittemore Bill introduced in the State Legis- lature 'for the Protection of Short Lobsters, White Vests I Have Worn, My First Cigar, Confessions of a Pugilist, Shove in a Crowd fwith Arlo Batesl, On Original Investigation on Frank- furts, published in two volumes by the Mass. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Vol. I. The Missing Link, Vol. II. One Thing Leads to Another. Residence, Lovers' Lane, Chelsea. HENRY S. SPAULDING, Eta Pi, Professor of ,Very An- cient History! and Argumentafion-Boston Cooking School, '99. ASSISTANT in Argumentation, M. I. T. Drawing rooms, 1902- 03, Instructor in Argumentation, 1903-04, Head of the depart- ment during 1904. In charge of entrance exams for Mass. State Bughouse, 1899-03, twice nominated for President of the Y. M. C. A., Applause Starter for the Glee Club, 1902-04. Author of a complete history of the Japanese-Russian War with explanatory notes, How to be an Athlete, a series of papers on How Old is Ann? and a number of articles not published in THE TECH. Residence, 62 Pierce Building. HARRY V. FLETCHER, NG., Professor of Genera! Information.-Squeedunlc H. S., '99, Whi Cara Rappa. Exeter, '0?, M. I. T., '06, Fellow of Squeeclunk H. S. Studying at Simmons College and the M. 1. T. OFFICIAL Speaker at class meetings, 1903-04, Associate Passen- ger on the Twentieth Century Limited, Consulting Wall Flower at Cadet Hop, Dec., '02, Head Coach, Ping Pong Squad of Girls Latin School, 1900-02, Expert Adviser for the Faculty When in Doubt, Prominent Member of the Tesh Club at Exeter. Author of Tests on a 160 foot rope, conducted at Charles River Park, How to be Happy Though Famous, Report on the Total Eclipse of '07, Nov., '03, and a Treatise on Head End Expansion. Residence, Mulligan Boulevard, Harlem. FRED W. TUPPER, JR., C.E., Dr. Slug's School for Backward Boys, '03, A.B.C., M. I. T., '07. PROFESSOR of Theoretical and Applied Fussing, Vice President American Society of Free Lunch Grabbers, Linesman for the Marconi Co., 1893-99, Member of Commission sent from Har- vard Observatory to Rogers Steps to Observe the Transit of Venus, Report on Sunday School Attendance, 12th U.S. Cen- sus, Member of M. I. T. Co-op Society, 1903, Employed by M. I. T. Lunch Room on Hash Analysis, 1899-02 Results published fnine volumesl under title All Things Come to Him VVho Waits. Author of the Efhcency of Oil Lubricants on a Military Bear- ing, 'WVhy I Came to Tech and VVild Oats I Have Sown, published in Cereal Form. Residence, Chapel. 1 5 - 5 f ' - , f . 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A Q - -'Ah' 'Q ,,,.,, Ei- Cllorresponbence cmb Clippings SUPERFLUOUS HAIR REIVIOVAL WHILE YOU WAIT BY MY SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT Especially prepared for each individual case I suffered for years with a humiliating growth of hair on my face, and tried many remedies without success, but I ultimately discovered the TRUE SECRET for the permanent removal of hair, and have been applying my treatment to others. I have thousands of testimonials from prominent men and women everywhere, among them Prof. I-I. M. Goodwin of the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, with whose permission I print the following : . DEAR SIR :- A Before using your treatment I was ' HAIRY Goodwin. Now I am Professor I ' 135' Goodwin. 5 - 'ia' . BEFORE AFTER A-,SI - i if i- HIGH RANK IN EXAMINATIONS Pied Simonds, M-. I. T., 1905, son ofrMr. and Mrs. Silas E. Simonds, Shawmut ave., is to be heartily con- gratulated upon his excellent record in the semi-annual examinations just ' closed at the Institute of Technology. y In the diiferent studies he took'the highest mark in three, the second ' highest in six, and the third highest intwo. In mechanical engineering one of the severe tests of a students ability. he received the highest mark- mg. 19 Concorb gvquare DEAR UNCLE PAUL :- I want to thank you ever and ever so much for that dear little safety razor you and Auntie sent meg it is just what I have been wanting for a long time. Your loving nephew, Derember twenty-:ix FRED POOLE. 52981 APPLIED IIRAIIIATICS ROGERSA VVALKER LOVVELL UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE THE CLASS OF '06 PRESENTS FLETCHER AS IIIIIYH IZIIITIEIIS UEIIIQQIIIBI SPEUAL ENGAGEMENT Harry Tyler Presents Walter Humphreys, as SECOND IN COMMAND One Performance Only CHAS. R. CROSS PRESENTS KLAHR, '05 iN THE ONLY WAY NEXT wssx A. LEF. .DERBY THE OFFICE BOY EXTENSIVE ENGAGEMENT The Techiuque Board PRESENTS BILL GREEN A SON OF REST FQLLQWED BY THE SPRING CONCERT IIIUGII AIIU IIIIUIII NUIIIIHQ LEADING TIIEATRES OF BOSTON ENC.'IA ENG. B ENC. C SHOPS Two WEEKS F. S. ELLIOTT LIMITED ENGAQEMENT J. R. AS The Classwof '07 LA5fE1?1ilE3xH As CAPTAIN AAAS 553332 FHIZASESTANT A GENTIEWIAN WORCESTER - -ASROWN UF AAAAUA if AAAWAAAASAAVA FOLLOWED BY MAISEARILAN Q PRO . L f h S NEXT WEEK WM. H. RIILES A FOGL IIIITIIIALCEXAQAIIETDH EDMUNDS, '05 AS AND AS AS AUXY GRANUPA HIS MONEY THE CRISIS An English Daisy I 299 53001 n fflbgf 30654 - ED BOLES stood by the Bursar's door Whence all had fled but he, Save one, a lass of comely mien, And he did Wait for she. At last she came from the sacred room, Joined her Edward fresh and bold, And listened there with eager ears To the story never old. They do the same thing every day, And talk, and stand, and sigh. The breeze moans through the folding doors, And the trolley cars roll by. They have no fear of late at all, For both are fresh and youngg But he'll set a pace for the Marathon race When papa buys a gun. Stage 9 1? IT'-W 9 X, K 9 Af V fx A, KR S W 'T . :Qtr R9 . 1' . ,ar I kd 'Y 4+ 5. f. X ' 1 1' a . k ., ff , 2 1 ' 0 E C ' - ,T V V3 ' ' , I X 1 I X 1 R ky .K K . 5 N4 J T , Z ' V2 I flf Vfviun D-vw.-.gl - - ' v -li-,.i. .4 K' 5 ' F A-- ' ,lu-J' ,,.n- '-,..- ' K 'il I4f'f . 5, 5 ' i355 .gh H ,z. '1 'J 5 , 2 I 5.5 2 1 .., ! F 3 at . I . . J I 4- 4. ga -w- -- -222 ,.1 , -' - L12-iii H- ' 5. f - -H31 'Vs3.'i'3 '-.11 23.2 Q1 f 1i -xg' -A ' , 6 x-4 ' X 1 i Ll- f' F k - D gf' 1 'T .- I r N1 x H 1 ' 5- X: img' E1 5 'I S 5 -'Z' 2: .5 s ' Q7 7 W -? fm N,-1 4, .46 f.:-gn QQ.. ' T2 . N ' 4 3 V i4,,,...T. Cialis gfafisfics, 1 90 5 A list of questions Was sent during the term to each 1905 man. Many objected to answering, on the ground that the questions were entirely too personal. From the great majority of the class the questions met with ready replies. The results are set down below. Age? Average age: 21 years, 2 months, and 3 days. The maxi- mum age is 27 years, with 5 over 25 years. The minimum age is 19 years, claimed by 12 men. Weighi? Average weight: 145.5 pounds. Our heavyweight tips the scales at 190 pounds. Light-weight balances the beam at 105 pounds. Height? Average height: 5 feet 8.5 inches. Tallest man, 6 feet 3.5 inches. Qur midget is 4 feet 10 inches. Size of Shoe? Average size of shoeI7.16. We have an extra large number of small feet. The smallest belong to George Gustav Adolph Wald, who wears shoe size 4 1-2. The largest shoe is worn by Earl G. Bill, size 11 1-2 D. We had hoped a Co-ed would win the small-foot contest, but, alas ! Hat? Average size:7 1-8. The maximum size of hat is worn by Charlie Mayer-only 7 3-4. Kriegsman gets along very well with a hat as small as 6 1-2. Rising Hour? Average : 21 minutes after 7. E. T. Steel, 2D gets up at 5 to start the fire. V Retiring Hour? Average : 32 minutes after 10. Barron, our night owl, turns in at 1.30 A. M., While our good little boy is tucked away in bed when the clock strikes 9. He lives at home under mother's protecting wing. Most Popular Man in Class? There were thirty-one men voted forg Marcy and Amberg were tied for first place, with Motter running a close second. Lombard secured third place. Who Thinks He Is Most Popular? Twenty men voted for, with Amberg, Thomas, Poole and Jones rated in the order named. fsozq Best-looking Man? The judges have been unable to decide between Payne and Socrates '7 Spaulding. Fifty-six received notice that they had been considered. Brightest Man in Class? The general concensus of opinion is that Lewis is the star, but not a few favor A. H. Smith. Most Likely to Succeed in Life? It is to Waldso Turner we must look in future years as 'O5's most successful member. A. H. Smith again has a strong following. Worst Leg-puller? f'Billy Green is alone in his glory. A few have had dealings with W. Turner and N. Lombard. Typieal Freshman? The great majority agree that Whittemore was our Typical Freshman. Spaulding and Gardner received some attention. Worst Grind? Answers to this question were more scattered than those to any other. One J. F. Douglas carries off first honors, with Spaulding, Gage, Wentworth, Eisele and Daly trying hard to impress the faculty. Done the Most for Teelznology? The votes here were confined to a comparative few. N. Lombard comes out on top, with W. Turner and G. B. Perkins next. Spinoza was not forgotten. Most Popular Professor? Nineteen were voted for. Dr. Wendell, Professor Merrill, Professor Clifford and Dean Burton, in the order named, are most in favor. Professor Most Valuable to Institute? There were twenty-hve voted for. Dean Burton received the highest number of votes, closely followed by Professor Cross and Dr. Tyler. Professor Lanza is fourth in favor. One of our friends says, Excuse me for being late in handing in my report, but I have been thinking all this time to find out which of the professors is the most valuable to Tech Cif anyjf' He finally decided on Professor Lanza. The Best Lecturer? According to the returns Dr. Wendell is the best lecturer. Professor Dewey comes second, with Professors Clifford and Smith tied for third place. Professor Thorp is fourth. Expenses? Average: 3798. Thirty-three spend over fl?-1,000, while We have three spending over s1,500. One man, not living at home, gets along on 3450. The average for those living home seems to be about 35400. 'Dial You Ever Use a Pawn Tirleet? Fifteen per cent of the class have used pawn tickets. Four have been sorely tempted, While two didnlt know what a pawn ticket Was. H3031 Ceclinique 190 5 CecBnique 190 5 Are You a Fusser? Fifty-three deny the charge, eighty-five believe they are, twenty-nine are dead sure of it. Blount is the star fusserg he makes everything else secondary. The average man fusses about three hours a week. Light or Darh? We have a preponderance of light heads. Seventy- three per cent are blondes, eighteen are brunettes, the rest don't know what the color of their hair is. Dinner at the Union? Forty-seven per cent of the class have been to a Saturday night dinner at the Union. Some emphasize the word once. Favorite Magazine? It is surprising to find how few read any magazine except THE TECH. Of those who do read other magazines, 16 like the Ladies Home Journal, 8 Harpers, 7 Life, 6 Scientific American. Do You go to Chareh? According to the results 61.8 per cent attend church and only 23 per cent go to Chapel, Rather surprising, if not doubtful. Shoztla' Tech Move? Yes, 46.1 per cent. No, 10.5 per cent. The rest don't seem to care what happens to Tech. Hours Dewteel to Exercise? Average25 hours per week. One man spends 15 hours a week. Fourteen per cent of the class do not spend any time at exercise. Do You Srnohe, Drinh or Chew? Fifty-seven per cent of the class smoke. Forty-nine drink. Thirteen per cent chew. Political Parties? Returns show that we have 63 Republicans, 10 Demo- crats, 9 Prohibitionists, 8 Mugwumps, 8 Independents, 5 Socialists, 3 Popu- lists and 2 Single Taxers. About one third of the class are too young to take any notice of politics. Fafvorite Drinhs? Forty-five and four-tenths per cent favor soft drinks. 54.6 per cent take intoxicants. Milk and water are the favorite soft drinksg Beer leads the other brigade. Y Have You a Froeh Coat? Yes, 21. Ten expect to have one by H Junior Week. Have You an Opera Hat? Yes, 26. Do You Wear Pajamas? Yes, 51. No. 96. What Dia' You Pay for Drill Suit? What Did You get for Drill Suit? If members of '05 can make transactions in future years such as they claim they made in buying and selling their drill suits, they need have no fear of the future as to financial conditions. One such transaction on a large scale and they would be considered 'KA Captain of Industry. The average '05 man made three on his drill suitg some fifteen by not get- ting any. 53041 Working Your Way Through Tech? There are nineteen men who are working their way through the Institute. Sixteen are partly working their way. Not a few are plugging their way. Work during Vacations? Yes, 58 per cent. No, 48.5 per cent. 3.5 per cent of the class forget theylre alive. Vacation Work along Professional Lines? Yes, 45.4 per cent. The rest of those who work take any old thing to do. How Soon Do You Expect to Marrgi? As was expected, the answers to this question were most indefinite. Over half the class say that they will marry as soon as they make their Hpilef' J. H. Rogers is looking for an heiress. Clarke Warren hopes to fix things this coming summer. CGood luck Clarkej. W. L. Spalding is despondent over the outlook. H. L. Dean in answer to this question replied, Very soon. We have since learned that Dean has fulfilled his threat. QCongratulations, Henryj. Of those who answered definitely five said they expected to marry within one year, one in two years, one in three yearsg two in four yearsg Five in five years, one each in six, seven and eight years respectivelyg seven in ten years and two in fifteen years. Are You Glad You Came to Tech? Nearly everyone is pleased. Some are tickled to death. Paquet is positively wild with joy, but Waldso Turner is H not shouting. By actual count 78.3 per cent are glad, 4.5 per cent are not glad, the rest are in doubt. Would You Advise Your Little Brother to Come to Teclz? Yes, 44.0 per cent. No, 17.5 per cent. Others either haven't got a little brother or they're perfectly indifferent to his fate. Where Do You Take Your Lunch? One hundred and five eat at Tech Lunch, two own up to Petit Lunch, seven to Oak Grove, two to Vege- tarian. The rest eat anywhere that suits their fancy. Times a Montlz at Theatre? Average is about twice a month. One man claims to go eight times fcan't give him awayb. Five men go only once a year, and then to the H Tech Show. Style of Play Preferred? Of those who expressed any preference the majority lean toward Comedy. Drama is next in the list, with Comic Opera third. Burlesque, Vaudeville, and Nlelodrama have a goodly number of followers. R. H. W. Lord prefers Tag. Opinion of Co-operative Society? A tOSS-up. The class is usually divided for and against it. Victor Hugo Paquet says, 'K The Co-operative Society is an admirable institution. Geckler says, A good thing if one cares to take advantage of it. R. Davis answers, 'illve often wondered. C. Allen says, First year thought it was O. K., second year I was suspicious, and now I -- Lsosj QZecBnique 1905 Bumni ,gfafisfics During the last year a list of questions was sent to over two thousand six hundred alumni. The following statistics were compiled from the replies received. Present Salaries. The plot below shows the present salaries averaged for each class from 1902 to 1882. Beyond that date the alumni became too reticent to make the data regarding present incomes of much value. S sooo' iiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiqiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiii 5 ii : i i : .iiii i i 'ii ii i : :::.ii:. i :ii i 'i:.i :i ii :::iii iii' : I E: iiiiig i sri I :H nigga? :i:::: :ii 'iii is i -56000, midi ii E i E :ia ini.: I :I ii E 'siilsi I : H. I: sa i,.:::.!' : : .::::: r- aiigEiaaaaaa5sa.a.aa..s., aaa!isaaaaaaiiiaaai:sais:..aag5s-iiissiiasasaaaiaaaaslagagiEssa..:IHaIgaa5f:as :-'::'-ii::i:: :ii:::i.i:::i':'i5:: :'ii':E:i::E:::: : :ii::::5::::::::::.. ::..:::::'5::::::ii:i-:iii :::' iiiiiiii:iiii:iiiisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii III!!IIIIIl-III!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII!IIIIIIEIIiiiIIIlIIIIIHIESIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II IlII.l I ...-EEIIEIIIII II.. IEEE-Hill aaasaaaaaaaaaaaaaasaassaassa'asasiaassi5asiaasafaasas'asa'Isaws:easesaaaaaa:..aaa..:smsiaaaaaaaasaaaasaaaaaaaaa -9 afaasaaaaaafiaaaaaaasasaasaaiaassessasaaasaaaaaisaaaaiaaaiiasiiaiasaaaaaaasie:eiasiasaisflaisaaasaaassaaaaaaaaaaaaa I F' I -52000 sul: ::: iiiiii: -I: H : iq' .iii In ' all E E '02, 'oo '98 '95 '94 '92 '90 '56 '86 '34 '52- The curve shows the probable increase of a man's earning power with the years after graduation. The largest income was thirty-five thousand six hundred dollars, for a member of the class of '93, For the younger men, ten thousand dollars from a graduate of five years ago was the best report. Number of Positions Held. The usual graduate is promoted twice the first year, once the second year, and again the ninth year. The majority hold but four positions, but about forty per cent change again fifteen years after graduation. The total number of years' service of graduates, divided by the total number of positions they have held, gives the average length of one position as two years and six months. f306j First Salaries Reeeiwed r U Year Axera e Graduated First Szdary 1868 to 1882 . . 33701 1883 to 1892 . . 681 1893 to 1902 ....... 623 The largest salary received upon graduation was two thousand five hundred dollars in 1890. The smallest reported was, Nothing for six months. Eleven and four-tenths per cent of graduates are paid over one- thousand dollars the first year. Pjifgfnff Do You Owe Your Present Position to Teeh? 61.0 do owe their present position to Tech. 14.7 do not owe their present position to Tech. 24.3 owe their position partly to Tech or did not answer the question. What is the Proper length for a Course at Tech? Per Cent of Alumni 67.2 advocate four years' course. 16.3 advocate Hve years' course. 16.5 advise three years as a post-graduate course after an academic course at some other college, or disregarded the question. Should Tech Move Outside of Boston to .deeommodate Growth? Per Cent 62.2 yes. 14.3 no. 23.5 not until absolutely necessary. What ls the Proper .Yearly Allowanee for a Tech Student, Including Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars Tuition? Eight hundred and thirty-eight dollars was the average allowance recommended. Sixty-three per cent of the alumni of the Institute are married. XVl1en Graduated Per Cent lllarried Before 1892 .,...... 81.6 After 1892 ........ 50.4 The descendants of graduates of the Institute number approximately nineteen hundred and sixty-five. Number of Children XVlien Graduated per Hundred Families Before 1892 . . 160 After 1892 77 Number of Years Per Cent of after Graduation those XVlien Married Married Graduation Year . 2.8 One Year . . 6.3 Two Years . . 14.6 Three to Ten Years ...... 64.8 After Ten Years ....... 11.5 The average length of time between graduation and marriage is five years, six months and two days. 53073 1905 Qfecljnique 190 5 Occupations of Graduates, 1868-1902 Number Per Cent of Employed Alumni Engineering Practice ..... 470 17.3 Manufactures . . 467 17.2 Electrical Business . . 246 9.1 Teachers .... 215 7.9 U. S., State, or City Employ 151 5.5 Railroads .... 144 5.3 Architects .... 89 3.3 Draughtsmen . 76 2.3 Engineering Business . 67 2.5 Students . . 51 1.9 Naval Architects 45 1.6 Metallurgists . 30 1.1 Chemists . 19 0.7 Insurance . 14 0.5 Biologists . 13 0.5 Assayers . . 11 0.4 Contractors . . 10 0.4 Construction Work . 7 0.3 Astronomers . 6 0.2 Geologists . . 2 0.1 General Business 121 4.5 Other Professions . 255 9.4 Unassigned ..... 85 3.1 Deceased ..... 116 4.3 Total Number of Graduates, 1368-1902, 2,710 100.0 The Value of Exact and Systematic Work. The following opinion of the value of the Tech training was written by a graduate of '71, Course III, in answer to the question, Wl1at subject in your course has been rnost use- ful to you? The direct application of my work at Tech has been in the line of railroad engineering and electrical propositions. I cannot say that any one course has been of more benefit to rne than another. I followed civil engineering in connection with one of our Western railroads for five years after my graduation, and then drifted into the banking business, which I have followed ever since. Our business, however, consists in financing railway, gas, electric and power properties, and the practical use I have derived from my education at Tech has been the ability to exarnine and size up properties, and I should credit this more to the exact and sys- matic work required of me while at Tech, than to the knowledge obtained from any one course. I do not think, as a rule, a man with the education derived in one of our colleges would be nearly as well fitted for exact prac- tical work in the lines I have followed, as a man who had been educated at Tech. The nature of the work there, in my opinion, fits a man to more quickly grapple with the problems of practical life, if be chooses a strictly business career. L 308 J SUMMARY OF GRADUATES BY COURSES Teclinique The following table exhibits the number of persons who have received the Bachelor's Degree in each of the several courses since the foundation of the Institute. bib A an 5 , 1 7,20 Ha ,D A 2 -E 'EE WE U 5 an EE R Su: RE bn E R ,-4 as r: U ,E an D J: Z .J cu Q, if --1 na +3 Q1 O Q U -1-' YEAR 'S 'E RE-5 .EE 'E 'E E 3-5 5 5 E 'E 'E E' E 3.93 5 USD 32 EE? 2 2 2 if-2 UO SEB :Kin ID ze F5 A Ld Id SC 0 a fri is 5 ,Q 1868 6 1 6 - - - - 1 - - - - 14 1869 2 2 - - 1 - - - - - - - - 5 1870 4 2 2 - 1 - - 1 - - - - 10 1871 8 2 5 - 2 - - - - - - - - 17 1872 3 1 5 - 3 - -- - - - - - - 12 1873 12 2 3 1 7 - - 1 - - - - 26 1874 10 4 1 , 1 - - - 2 - - - - 18 1875 10 7 6 1 1 - - 2 - - - - 28 1876 12 8 7 - 5 1 - 4 - - - - 42 1877 12 6 8 4 2 - - ------ 32 1878 8 2 2 3 3 - - 1 - - - - 19 1879 6 8 3 1 3 - - - -- - - - 23 1880 3 - 3 - 1 - - 1 - - - - 8 1881 3 5 6 3 8 - - 2 - - - - 28 1882 2 5 5 3 6 - - 1 -- - - - 24 1883 3 7 5 1 3 - -- ------ 19 1884 5 6 13 - 12 - - - - - - - - 36 1885 4 7 8 2 4 - 2 1 - - - - 28 1886 9 23 7 1 7 - 10 1 - - - - 59 1887 10 17 8 1 9 - 8 3 - - - - 58 1888 11 25 4 5 10 - 17 1 - - - - 77 1889 14 24 5 3 8 - 17 2 - - - - 75 1890 25 28 3 5 13 - 18 6 - - - - 103 1891 18 26 4 6 11 - 23 1 7 - 1 - 103 1892 22 26 4 13 7 - 36 7 4 6 1 - 133 1893 25 30 5 2 8 - 41 6 8 - 2 - 129 1894 21 31 4 14 11 - 33 S 12 3 - - 138 1895 25 30 3 15 14 - 33 4 11 4 - 5 1449? 1896 26 34 10 24 17 - 48 7 7 4 3 5 19034 1897 25 40 7 16 20 - 33 7 12 4 1 9 179 1898 32 41 7 29 25 - 33 6 9 3 - 7 199 1899 30 37 9 22 22 - 32 1 10 1 - 8 1739? 1900 32 34 21 21 19 - 23 5 11 4 - 9 185 1901 37 39 18 21 17 - 25 6 14 4 1 16 200 1902 24 46 14 18 14 - 35 3 9 7 - 14 192 1903 26 37 27 15 13 - 39 1 10 4 1 12 190 Totals 525 643 248 251 307 1 506 89 124 44 10 85 2,9168 Deduct names counted twice . . .... 16 Net total . . . . 2,9006 4 Deducting names counted twice 53091 1905 Q:6CB11ique GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF GRADUATES 1905 IN THE UNITED STATES Eqg9a'!'3 I l hg,-Q 'Sw-'Aw H' :Iii-6 Philippine Islands-2 Porto Rico-1 RESIDENCE OF STUDENTS IN THE UNITED STATES UL1' Q' I SGS Hawaii-1 Porto Rico-2 I 310 I GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBU Country United States qsee Map Australia . Brazil . Canada . China Cuba . England . France . Germany . Guatemala Italy . Japan . Korea . Mexico Country United States QSee Map Armenia . Australia Bermuda . Brazil Chili . China 'Cuba . . Denmark . England . 'Germany . India . G R A D U A T E S Number Country 2,458 Persia . Opposite Page! Peru . 3 Scotland . 2 South Africa 30 Switzerland . 2 Syria . 6 Turkey . 11 11 13 1 Unreported . 1 5 Deceased . 3 12 Total . 355551 RESIDENCE GF STUDENTS Number Country . 1,478 Ireland . Opposite Pagej Japan D I ' ' 325 Malta, Island of . ' ' Manitoba . . 1 Mexico . . 3 New Brunswick . 1 Nova Scotia . ' Ontario 3 Quebec 1 Scotland . 4 Syria . 2 1 Total . T I 0 N 0 F Qfechique 108 2,566 29 ,ii- 2,595 115 2,710 Number 1 2 1 1 8 1 9 2 1 1 1 -ii . 1,528 53113 11905 Ceclinique 1905 Percentage of Entering Students. Year 1865-66 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 1872 1873 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 13121 : O 13 N .. .E bn GJ M T6 .. o E-1 - 72 - 137 - 167 '-' 172 - 206 '- 224 - 261 - 348 - 276 - 248 - 255 - 215 - 194 - 188 - 203 - 253 - 302 - 368 - 443 - 579 - 609 - 637 - 720 - 827 - 909 937 011 T 1, - 1,060 - 1,157 - 1,183 - 1,187 - 1,198 - 1,198 - 1,171 - 1,178 - 1,277 - 1,415 - 1,608 - 1,528 REGISTRATION ber of Graduate dents present EE DUI Z 5 3 15 13 14 9 5 21 10 22 9 11 15 14 15 14 20 31 19 21 23 34 50 48 50 48 79 72 80 82 73 68 79 101 129 170 173 Trofah 25,921 1TotaL 1,645 Iiverage, H .E U U Q V9 rn Q 6 : 0 go-Q 53 um an u 5-4 cu D-4 12.5 19.7 25.7 39.5 39.8 36.2 31.0 27.6 34.0 23.0 21.2 22.8 23.2 45.2 44.7 44.7 45.7 40.5 38.6 36.5 31.9 30.4 27.8 28.7 28.3 29.9 30.1 27.0 28.9 29.4 28.3 27.3 27.7 26.3 25.1 27.0 29.2 28.3 32.1 31.4 CD 'U CD Q. EL U1 r-r C O- FD D f-f w SJ I3 O- 'U FD 1 0 CD IJ r-r N UQ CD O g v-+- Q N O- Cf SD LT. I3 UQ 1-r Graduatin in I-1 UJ L E z 2 14 5 10 17 12 26 18 28 42 32 19 23 8 28 24 19 36 28 59 58 77 75 103 103 133 129 138 144 190 179 199 173 185 200 192 190 P E I1verage, 5 w 'UG .- 585' OES E 0 E Uv: MON 4- ': ' 'ga-ff QB: Eg 3 5,-0-I m 8 8.6 18.5 34.0 19.0 36.6 22.0 25.0 71.2 91.4 29.2 74.2 22.2 57.1 70.6 55.8 58.1 31.4 51.8 41.4 41.4 42.4 53.7 45.0 54.3 50.6 59.0 55.8 62.1 59.5 73.8 65.1 70.0 71.8 64.1 58.1 ? 51.3 facts NRM The Walker Memorial Fund is now 5B83,466.70. Three hundred and eighty-two students receive instruction in the Mechanical Laboratories. Two hundred and fifty-eight students attended Summer School last year. One hundred and forty-nine students were sick during the last year. There are sixty-four alumna' of the Institute. Cf these nineteen are married. In the table of Registration Statistics on the opposite page notice in '79 the increase in per cent of special students from 23.2 to 45.2 and the drop a year later in the per cent receiving a degree from 74 to 22. This has the geological indications of a Ngreat catastrophe. The percentages of those graduating to those entering with the same class are high, because of the number of men entering during the course from other colleges. THE INSTRUCTING STAFF The following table gives a comparison between the Instructing Staff for this year and last:- 1902.o3 1903-04 Professors . . 28 30 Associate Professors . 12 14 Assistant Professors . 25 25 Instructors . . 54 66 Assistants . 46 51 Lecturers 39 41 Total ..... 204 227 STUDENTS BY CLASSES 1903-1904 Class Regular Special Total Fellows and Graduates of the M. I. T. . 18 - 18 Fourth Year . 238 84 322 Third Year 238 144 382 Second Year 289 169 458 First Year 255 93 348 Total 1,038 490 1,528 53131 Name Alabama Polytechnic Institute . Albion .... Allegheny College Amherst College . Armour Institute . Barnard . . Bates College Beloit College . Boston University . Bowdoin College . Brown University Bryn Mawr . . Buchtel College . Bucknell University . Case School of Applied Science . Central University . Clailin University Clark University . Colby University . Colgate University . College of the City of New York College of the Holy Cross . . College of William and Mary . Colorado College . . Columbia University . Columbian University . Cornell University . Cumberland University Dartmouth College . De Pauw University . Dickinson . . Drake University . Fisk University . . Franklin and Marshall Georgetown University Girard College . . Hamilton College Harvard University Hobart College . Howard College . . Illinois VVesleyan University , Indiana University . Iowa College , Iowa State College 53143 Location Auburn, Ala. Albion, Mich. Meadville, Pa. Amherst, Mass. Chicago, Ill. New York, N. Y. Lewiston, Me. Beloit, Wis. Boston, Mass. Brunswick, Me. Providence, R. I. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Akron, Ohio Lewisburg, Pa. Cleveland, Ohio Richmond, Ky. Orangeburg, S. C. Worcester, Mass. Waterville, Me. Hamilton, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Worcester, Mass. Williamsburg, Va. Concermng Founded President 1872 1861 1815 1821 1893 1889 1864 1843 1869 1794 1764 1880 1870 1846 1880 1874 1872 1889 1818 1819 1847 1693 Colorado Springs, Col. 1874 New York, N. Y. Wzishington, D. C. Ithaca, N. Y, Lebanon, Tenn. Hanover, N. H. Greencastle, Ind. Carlisle, Pa. Des Moines, Iowa Nashville, Tenn. Lancaster, Pa. Washington, D. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Clinton, N. Y. Cambridge, Mass. Geneva, N. Y. Washington, D. C. Bloomington, Ill. Bloomington, Ind. Grinnell, Iowa Ames, Iowa 1754 1821 1865 1879 1769 1837 1783 1891 1866 1853 1789 1848 1812 1636 1822 1867 1853 1820 1843 1858 Charles C. Thack, B.E., A.M. Samuel Dickie, A.M., M.S., LL.D. William H. Crawford, D.D., LL.D. George Harris, D.D., LL.D. Frank Wakeley Gunsaulus, D.D. Laura D. Gill, A.B., LL.D. CDeanj George C. Chase, D.D., LL.D. Edward D. Eaton, D.D., LL.D. William E. Huntington, Ph.D. William De Wm Hyde, D.D., LL.D. William H. Perry Faunce, A.M., D.D M. Cary Thomas, Ph.D., LL.D. A. B. Church, A.M., D.D. John Howard Harris, Ph.D., LL.D. Chas. S. Howe, B.S., Pl1.D. Lindsay I-I. Blanton, A.M., LL.D. Lewis M. Dunton, A.M., D.D. G. Stanley Hall, Ph.D., LL.D. Charles L. White, A.lVI., D D. George Edwards Merrill, D.D., LL.D. John 1-I. Finlay, D.D., LL.D. joseph F. Hanselman, SJ. Lyon G. Tyler, M.A., LL.D. YVil1iam Fred. Slocum, A.B., D.D., LL D Nicholas M. Butler, Ph.D., LL.D. Charles W. Needham, LL.M., LL.D. jacob Gould Schurman, D.Sc., LL.D., A M David E. Mitchell, A.B. William Tucker, D.D., LL.D. Edwin Holt Hughes, A.M., D.D. George Edward Reed, S.T.D., LL.D. Hill M. Bell, A.M. James G. Merrill, D.D. john S. Stahr, Ph.D., LL.D. Jerome Dougherty, SJ. A. H. Felterolf, Ph.D., LL.D. Melancthon W. Stryker, D.D., LL.D. Charles William Eliot, A.M., LL.D. Langdon C. Stewardson, A.lVi., LL.D. john Gordon, A.B., A.M., D.D. Edgar M. Smith, B.A., M.A., D.D. William L. Bryan, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Dan Freeman Bradley, D.D. Albert Boynton Storms, M.A., D.D. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 2 1 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 4 0 41 42 43 44 e Coffeges Bldgs. Stud'ts Inst'rs College Colors S 436 Orange and Blue 7 442 26 Pink and Green S 229 16 Blue and Gold 24 411 42 Purple and White 4 1,400 60 Yellow and Black 1 459 50 Blue and White 8 340 18 Garnet 13 450 28 Gold 1,336 144 Scarlet and White 11 377 46 White 18 935 83 Brown and White 13 445 47 Yellow and White 6 280 16 Gold and Blue 12 710 45 Orange and Navy Blue 5 453 28 12 1,320 44 Cardinal and Blue 12 485 32 Orange and Maroon 13 197 15 Pearl Gray 8 222 33 Maroon 4 2,263 121 Lavender 390 27 Purple and VVhite S 243 16 Orange and White 14 537 39 Gold and Black 21 4,557 585 Light Blue and White 4 1,400 165 Orange and Blue 25 3,000 400 Carnelian and Vilhite 6 648 66 Green, White, Blue 25 870 70 Dark Green 9 617 33 Old Gold 12 246 17 Red and White 6 1,687 101 Blue and White S 517 30 Blue und Yellow S 180 15 Blue and 'VVhite 1 750 125 Blue and Gray 13 1,510 66 Steel and Garnet 16 190 20 Buff and Blue 64 4,328 550 Crimson 14 105 16 Orange and Royal Purple 16 S66 90 Blue and XVl1ite 4 1,465 34 Green and VVl1ite 10 1,469 60 Crezuu and Crimson 7 524 40 Scarlet and Black 21 1,400 97 Co.educa. Annual tional Glomerzzta Yes Yes K al d ron Yes Olio No Iulegral Yes The Mortarboard No Bulletin No. I Yes Codex No The Hub Yes The Bugle No Liber Brzmensis Yes The Lantern No The Buchtel Yes L'Agemt'a Yes Dfferential No Cardinal and Blue Yes Bulletin Yes Colby Oracle Yes Salm agundi No Register No The Purple No Colonial Echo No The Tzlger Yes Columbian No Columbian No The Cornelliau Yes Phfenix No Aegis N0 The Jlhrnge Yes The hhcroeosrn Yes Quan: Yes Yes O7'f7id1ll77l2 Yes Hodge Podge No No HH7lII'Zl07ll.H7Z No No Echo of the Seneca No Yes Argus Yes Arlfulus Yes junior Annual Yes The Bomb Yes Tuitio None 30 51 110 120 150 50 56 125 75 105 150 40 100 100 50 60 60 60 None 60 35 35 250 100 150 150 125 15 6 49 15 None 150 None I0 150 S0 None 50 None 55 4 Il Val. P1'op'ty incl, Endw't 200,000 500,000 030,000 2,500,000 5,000,000 720,700 500,000 1,380,000 1,700,000 1 ,S20,000 4,496,900 2,275,810 400,000 1,000,000 750,000 175,000 050,000 2,225,000 1,655,300 250,000 1,475,000 1,300,000 12,000,000 514,000 3,500,000 035,000 450,000 500,000 400,000 345,000 1,450,000 10,504,050 1,250,000 23,000,000 703,594 2,000,000 250,000 1,000,000 000,000 1,731,332 I .4 - .7lJ il Name johns Hopkins University . . Kentucky University . . . Knox College . . . Lafayette College . . . Lake Forest University . Lehigh University . . . Leland Stanford, Jr., University Manhattan College , Marietta College .... Mass. Institute of Technology . Mount Holyoke .... New York University . . Northwestern University . . Oberlin College . . . Ohio State University . . . Ohio Wesleyan University . . Pennsylvania State College . Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn Pratt Institute .... Princeton University . , Purdue University . . Radcliffe ..... Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Richmond College . . . Rose Polytechnic Institute . . Rutgers College , . . Shaw University . . Smith College . . . Southwestern University . . State University of Iowa . . Stevens Institute of Technology Swarthmore ..... Syracuse University . . . Throop Polytechnic Institute . Trinity College .... Tufts College . . Tulane University . . . Ulysses S. Grant University . Union University .,.. United States Military Academy United States Naval Academy . University of Alabama . , University of Arizona . . University of Arkansas 53161 Location Baltimore, Md. Lexington, Ky. Galesburg, Ill. Easton, Pa. Lake Forest, Ill. South Bethlehem, Pa. Stanford University,Cal. New York City Marietta, Ohio Boston, Mass. South Hadley, Mass. New York, N. Y. Evanston, Ill. Oberlin, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Delaware, Ohio State College, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Princeton, N. J. Lafayette, Ind. Cambridge, Mass. Troy, N. Y. Richmond, Va. Terra Haute, Ind. New Brunswick, N. Raleigh, N. C. Northampton, Mass. Georgetown, Tex. Iowa City, Iowa Hoboken, N. I. Swarthmore, Pa. Syracuse, N. Y. Pasadena, Cal. Hartford, Conn. Tufts College, Mass New Orleans, La. Chattanooga, Tenn. Schenectady, N. Y. West Point, N. Y. Annapolis, Md. University, Ala. Tucson, Ariz, Founde 1876 1836 1837 1832 1855 1866 1891 1853 1835 1865 1837 1831 1851 1833 1872 1844 1859 1854 1887 1746 1874 1879 1824 1832 1874 1766 1866 1875 1869 1847 1870 1869 1871 1891 1824 1855 1834 1867 1795 1802 1845 1831 1885 Concerning d President Ira Remson, A.B., LL.D., M.D,, Pl1.D. Burris A. Jenkins, A.M., B.D., D.D. Thomas McClelland, A.M., D.D. Rev. Ethelbert D. VVar1'ield, D.D., LL.D. Richard D. Harlan, A.M., D.D. Thomas Merringer Drown, LL.D. David Starr jordan, LL.D., Ph.D., M.S. Brother Jerome, F.SC. Alfred Tyler Perry, A.lNI., D.D., Henry Smith Pritchett, Pl1.D., LL.D. Mary E. Woolley, A.M., L.H.D. Henry M. MacCracken, D.D., LL.D. Edmund Janes james, A.M., Ph.'D. Henry C. King, D.D. William O, Thompson, D.D., LL.D. James W. Bashford, A.M., Ph.D., D.D. Geo. VV. Atherton, A.B., LL.D. Henry Sawyer Snow, A.B., LL.D. Charles M. Pratt, A.B., A.M. Wooclroxv WVilson, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D Winthrop E. Stone, A.M., Ph.D. Le Baron R. Briggs, A.M., LL.D. Palmer C. Ricketts, C.E. F. M. Boatwright, M.A., LL.D. C. Leo Mees, Ph.D. Austin Scott, Ph.D., LL.D. Charles F. Neeserve L. Clark Seelye, D.D., LL.D. R. S. Hyer, A.M., LL.D. George E. MacLean, M.A., LL.D. Alexander C.Hu1nphreys, M.E.,Sc.D.,LL D Joseph Swain, LL.D. james R. Day, S.T.D., LL.D. VValter A. Edwards, A.B., A.M., LL.D Havel S. Luther, B.A., Ph.D. Elmer H. Capen, A.M., D.D., LL.D. Edwin Anderson Alderman, LL.D. john H. Race, A.M., D.D. Andrew V. V. Raymond, DD., LL.D. Albert L. Mills, Colonel, U. S. A. Captain Bronson, U. S. N. john W. Abercrombie, LL.D. Kendric C. Babcock, B.L., A.M., Henry S. Hartzog, LL.D. Be Bldgs. 12 10 5 30 9 14 38 6 S 20 12 14 16 22 11 17 2 7 57 28 7 6 10 5 10 11 24 5 19 3 8 11 2 5 18 20 14 15 10 12 16 Coffeges Stud'ts I11st'rs College Colors 714 158 Black and Old Gold 1,200 66 Crimson 636 29 Purple and Gold 422 30 Maroon und White 1-L1 16 Red and Black 625 56 Brown and VVhite 1,216 130 Cardinal Red 294 26 Green and White 301 23 Navy Bluc and 1Vhite 1,528 227 Cardinal Red and Silver Gray 764 Light Blue 2,177 274 Violet 3,225 197 Royal Purple 1,600 94 Crimson and Gold 1,800 146 Scarlet and Gray 1,201 72 Black and Red 729 58 Blue and VVhite 195 22 Blue and Gray 3,435 124 Cadmium Yellow 1,431 109 Orange and Black 1,438 98 Old Gold and Black 453 90 Red and Wl1ite 370 22 Cherry and White 215 16 Crimson and Blue ' 210 20 Old Rose and White 225 32 Scarlet 500 45 Cilrdinal and VVhite 1,033 so XVhite 417 22 Lemon and Black 1,442 130 Old Gold 322 25 Silver Gray and Crimson 225 25 Garnet 2,222 189 Orange 520 30 125 20 Dark Blue and Old Gold 932 175 Brown and Blue 1,379 95 Olive and Blue S09 63 Blue :md Gold 539 06 Garnet 460 S0 Black, Gray and Gold 435 Blue :Incl Old Gold 420 41 Crimson and Xxllllfkl 205 23 Blue and Red 1,250 75 Cnrdilml Co-educ Annual tional The fhzllnlzaloo No Crimson The Gale Yes The Jllelange No The Forester Yes Epitofne N0 Stavyford Quad Yes No jllarietiana Yes Technique Yes Llrzmarada No The Wblet Yes The Syllabus Yes Hz'-0.I11' Yes Alalzfo Yes Bijou Yes La Vie Yes The Polyzuog No Yes B1'z'e-a-Brac No Debris Yes No T ranxfzf No The Spldef' No The Mozizclzzs No Smrlet Leiler No Yes No Sazfwester Yes The Harukeye Yes Link No Halcyofz Yes The 0n0lZdHgU7l Yes Palyteeh II ic Yes 11-LV No The Brown and Blue Yes Jambalaya Yes Yes The Garnet No No The Lucky Bag No The Corolla Yes Yes Cardinal Yes 11+ Tuition 200 30 120 100 40 125 20 100 50 250 125 100 80 75 None 46 100 200 75 160 25 200 200 70 100 75 15 100 60 75 225 150 125 75 100 100 S5 50 75 None None None N o n e None Val. Prop'ty incl. EndW't 5,000,000 300,000 500,000 1,150,000 1,000,000 2,500,000 30,000,000 500,000 1,776,117 1,200,000 3,500,000 6,761,250 2,350,000 3,668,876 1,730,120 1,770,000 000,000 4,000,000 1,240,000 000,000 1,100,000 1,000,000 100,000 2,005,000 300,000 2,000,000 1 ,250,000 1,500,000 2,150,711 200,000 050,000 2 ,000,000 2,000,000 417,700 1,500,000 1,500,000 225,000 50,000 L 317 1 Name University of California . University of Chicago . University of Cincinnati . University of Colorado University of Denver . University of Georgia . University of Idaho . University of Illinois . University of lviaine . University of lviichigan University of Minnesota . University of Missouri University of Nebraska . University of North Carolina University of North Dakota University of Notre Dame . University of Oklahoma . University of Omaha . University of Oregon . . University of Pennsylvania University of Rochester . University of South Dakota University of Tennessee . University of Texas . University of the South University of Utah . University of Vermont University of Virginia . University of Wisconsin . University of Wyoming . Vanderbilt University . . Vassar College . . . Wash'n and jeff'n University Wash'n and Lee University Washington University . Wellesley College . Wells College . WVesleyan University . Western Maryland . Western Reserve . Williams College , , Worcester Polytechnic Institute NVooster University . . Yale University . L 818 J Location Berkeley, Cal. Chicago, Ill. Cincinnati, Ohio Boulder, Col. Denver, Col. Athens, Ga. Moscow, Idaho Urbana, Ill. Orono, Me. Ann Arbor, Mich. Minneapolis, Minn. Columbia, Mo. Lincoln, Neb. Chapel Hill, N. C. Grand Fork, N. D. Notre Dame, Ind. Norman, Okla. Bellevue, Neb. Eugene, Ore. Philadelphia, Pa. Rochester, N. Y. Vermilion, S. D. Knoxville, Tenn. Austin, Texas Sewanee, Tenn. Salt Lake City, Utah Burlington, Vt. Charlottesville, Va. Madison, VVis. Laramie, Wyo. Nashville, Tenn. Poughkeepsie, N. Y Vifashington, Pa. Lexington, Va. St. Louis, Mo. VVellesley, Mass. Aurora, N. Y. Middletown, Conn. Westminster, Md. Cleveland, Ohio Williamstown, Mass. Worcester, Mass. XVooster, Ohio New Haven, Conn. Concerning Founded President 1868 Benjamin Ide Wheeler, Ph.D., LL.D 1 1891 VV. R. Harper, D.D., Ph.D., LL.D. 2 1858 Howard Ayers, B.S., Ph.D., LL.D. 3 1877 james H. Baker, M.A.,LL.D. 4 1864 Henry A. Buchtel, A.M., D.D., LL.D. 5 1801 Walter B. Hill, A.M., LL.D. 6 1892 james Alexander MacLean, M.A., Ph.D. 7 1868 Andrew Sloan Draper, LL.D. 8 1865 George Emory Fellows,Ph.D.,L. H.D.,LL.D. 9 1837 james B. Angell, LL.D. 10 1868 Cyrus Northrop, LL.D, 11 1839 Richard H. jesse, LL.D. 12 1869 E. Benjamin Andrews, D.D., LL.D. 13 1789 Francis P. Venable, Ph.D., LL.D. 14 1883 Webster Merrifield, M.A. 15 1842 Andrew Morrissey, C.Sc., A.M. 16 1892 David R. Boyd, A.M., Ph.D. 17 1880 David R. Kerr, Ph.D., D.D. 18 1878 P. L. Campbell, A.B. 19 1740 Charles C. Harrison, LL.D. 20 1850 Rush Rees, A.M., D.D., LL.D. 21 1882 Garrett Droppers, A.B. 22 1794 Charles W. Danbey, A.B , Ph.D., LL.D. 23 1883 VVilliam L. Prather, LL.D. 24 1868 Benjamin L. VViggins, M.A., LL.D. 25 1850 J.-1. Kingsbury, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc. 26 1791 Niathew H. Bucham, D.D., LL.D. 27 1825 J. M. Page, M.A., Ph.D. 28 1848 Charles R. Van Hise, Ph.D. 29 1886 Charles W. Lewis, B.A., M.A., D.D. 30 1873 J. H. Kirkland, LL.D., Ph.D., D c.H. 31 1861 james Munroe Taylor, D.D., LL.D. 32 1802 james David Moffat, D.D., LL.D. 33 1749 George H. Denney, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D. 34 1853 W. S. Chaplin, A.M., LL.D. 35 1870 Caroline Hazard, M.A., Litt.D. 36 1870 George M. Ward, B.A., M.A., D.D., LL.D. 37 1831 Bradford Paul Raymond, D.D., LL.D. 38 1867 Thomas H, Lewis, A.M., D.D. 39 1826 Charles F. Thwing, D.D., LL.D. 40 1793 Henry Hopkins, D.D., LL.D. 41 1865 Edmund Arthur Engler,A.M.,Ph.D.,LL.D. 42 1869 Louis Edward Holden, D.D., LL.D. 43 1701 Arthur T. Hadley, LL.D. 44 Be Bldgs. 30 34 10 13 12 14 4 16 32 19 35 25 16 16 8 28 7 6 9 30 5 4 13 11 10 7 12 17 31 9 20 20 7 20 20 15 6 12 18 15 20 S 9 55 Colifeges - Studlts Inst'rs College Colo1's 3,291 408 Blue and Gold 4,463 325 Maroon 1,300 162 Scarlet and Black 581 103 Silver and Gold 1,311 190 Red and Gold 360 25 Red and Black 350 25 Silver and Gold 2,665 334 Orange and Blue 539 63 Light Blue 3,800 233 Maize and Blue 3,800 275 Maroon and Old Gold 1,547 105 Gold and Black 2,560 172 Scarlet and Cream 613 58 Blue and White 666 35 Pink and Green' S50 70 Gold and Blue 450 31 Crimson and Cream 203 23 Purple and Gold 497 76 Lemon Yellow 2,692 316 Red and Blue 264 21 Dandelion Yellow 425 40 Vermilion 726 92 Orange and VVhite 1,360 110 Orange and White 467 45 Royal Purple 789 42 Crimson and Silver 350 36 Green and Gold 655 62 Orange and Blue 3,051 227 Cardinal 225 19 Brown and Yellow 725 100 Black and Gold 931 S0 Rose and Gray 345 2-6 Red and Black 305 28 Blue :md YVhite 2,210 196 Myrtle and Maroon 931 90 Deep Blue 125 22 Czirclinzil 335 36 Cardinal and Black 250 00 Old Gold :md Olive Green 765 153 Red and XVl1ite 442 35 Royal Purple 272 32 Crimson and Steel Gray 480 24 Black and Old Gold 2,963 384 Blue Co.educa- Val. Prop'ty Annual tional Tuition incl. Endw't Blue and Gold Yes None The Cap ana' Gown Yes 120 18,000,000 Cz'ncinnaiz'an Yes 75 Coloradoan Yes None 400,000 .Kynewisbols Yes 30 750,000 .Pandora No 50 562,844 Gem of the Mouvztairzs Yes None 325,000 The Ill io Yes 105 2,750,000 The Prism Yes 30 1,000,000 1lh'chz,g'anensian Yes 45 2,900,000 The Gopher Yes 100 2,000,000 The Savilof' Yes 10 2,600,000 The Sombrero Yes None 1,000,000 Yarheiy- Yank Yes 75 600,000 The .Dacolah Yes None 400,000 No 400 3,000,000 News Letter Yes None 200,000 Old Elk .Hill ' , Yes 50 140,000 1VeI:fool Yes None The Record No 200 11,191,187 Interpres Yes 75 1,400,000 Coyole Yes 50 370,000 The Volunteer Yes 60 1,013,291 Cactus Yes None 3,000,000 Cap and Gown No 100 750,000 Annual Yes 10 433,000 The Ariel Yes 60 1,407,950 Corhs and Curls No 100 1,800,000 The Badger Yes None 1,368,806 Yes None 2,000,000 Comet Yes 100 2,500,000 Vassarian No 100 2,600,000 Pandora No 60 700,000 The Calyx No 50 1,000,000 The Halclzet Yes 150 7,774,000 Legenda No 175 2,076,000 The Cardinal No 100 Olla Podrida Yes 75 2,250,157 Aloha Yes 45 250,000 Reserve Yes 125 2,824,300 No 105 No 150 1,400,000 The Index Yes 60 750,000 Tale Banner No 155 l 319 1 I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII XIII IV . - N .XIf' I-hx Y ' 'I' ,X I Y X 'TSW'-,K I 'I' VE S31 l I xxl! ,Jlj1 f,,. Q6 1 1 . ,ff: X ' .QE I .IIIIM IS, ii ii' 1 ' 1 S - 'EN 1, - . . .. , X , V 'Z COLWSGK ' L! DW . I-fX-I -5' ' E' in 4 V -IN SQ A Q YW IVIL . ENGINEERING I I MECHANICAL 3- ' ENGINEERING Ax ' sim , MINING X Y 5 i ENGINEERING If x ARCHITECTURE W f CHEMISTRY I I I ELECTRICAL V . ' , - iv ENGINEERING I its I BIOLOGY I I ' 4. ', '. ul. PHYSICS . ' 4 5.99 U GENERAL I 'T' ' STUDIES ,. vl CHEMICAL .I I 1 , ENGINEERING , SANITARY .V 7 I ENGINEERING fi EOLOGY -wx J! JS: NAVAL ' ARCHITECTURE Ralph Emerson, 4,57 x ,, ,w- r -I 7 'X . cg LE ST M f Algal . storms AAAQ, ,A .51 , HJ - .A .5 28 fbi' S, Special Studen Name and Society Class Abbott, Arthur Howard, ,05 Abbott Charles Edward, 6 Abbott Abbott Abbott Ackerson, Iames Lee, X CID, Adams Charles Robert, Adams, Howard Pratt, Adams, Daniel, Adams, Fred Hathaway, A T A, Russell Chandler, William George, Ir. Ager, John Winfred, B S, Ahumada, Miguel, Jr., A Y, Ainsworth, George Raymond, Albro, Robert Clifford, Allbright, Edwin Francis, Allen, Charles Everett, Allen, Chester, Allen, Lawrence, Allen, Leon Lincoln, Allen, Roy Hutchins, Alvord, Henry Bissell, Amadon, Frederick Webber, Amberg, Arthur Iohn, A K E, Ammen, William VV., A.B., K A, 5 5 7 6 5 5 7 5 4 4 6 S.B.4 7 4 7 5 7 7 5 7 7 5 Anderson, Alf Edward, 6 Anderson, Claude Aurelius, 5 Anderson, John Wallace, 6 Angus, Robert Alexander, 7 Anson, Charles Lyman, A K E, 6 Applegate, Thomas Ely, S.B.,1 6 Armstrong, Fritz Albert, 0 Armstrong, Harry James, i, 6 Arnold, Albert Heber Bailey, 4 Arnold, Perrie IVIorgan, 4 ts, G, Graduate Students. Course Home Address VI S 1 Center St., Clinton, Mass. XIII S 21 Athelwold St., Dorchester, Mass. VI S 1138 C'nw'lth Av., Brookline, Mass. I Andover, Mass. VI 1525 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. XIII A Middleville, Mich. I 23 Burr St., Iamaica Plain, Mass. II S 114 Winter St., Fall River, Mass. II Wellesley Hills, Mass. III 91 Arl'g'ton St., S. Fr'g'h'm, Mass. VI 296 Carlton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. III S Guadalajara, Mexico. IVA G 531 W'sh'gton St., Brokline, Mass. I 377 St. Iames Av., Springfield Mass. I 24 Virginia St., Dorchester Mass. I 249 Main St., Spencer, IVIass. I 203 Temple St., W. Roxbury, Mass. VI East Freetown, Mass. I 209 W'sh'gton St., Brookline, lVIass. 19 Stevens St., Winchester, IVIass. I South Weymouth, Mass. III 63 Union Av., S. Framingham, Mass. I III S 1820 lVIelrose St., Chicago, Ill. XIII 1212 Madison Ave., Baltimore, Md. II 89 Evans St., New Dorchester, IVIass. XIII S Austin, Minn. II 95 Jason St., Arlington, IVIass. 110 Calc St., Hartford, Conn. XIII 535 Marshall St., Ivlilwaukee, Wis. II Hightstown, N. I. I 220 W. River St., Hyde Park, llflass. VI 1013 Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md. III S 31 Waumbeck St., Roxbury, lVIass. II 140 Vine St., Hartford, Conn. VI 53211 Course II I Name and Society Class B nt que Ashenden, Richard Chesley, 112 BE,'07 6 1905 Ashley, Allen, B.S., K E, Ashmore, Morse Breckenfeld, Atkins, George Edwin, Q B E, Atwood, Carlton Elliot, Avery, Charles Henry, Ayer, John, Ayers, Samuel Henry, Babb, Roger Willis, Babcock, Courtlandt W., Ph.B., Bachmann, Frederick, Bailey, Baker, Baker, Baker, Baker, Baker, Baldwin, Francis George, Edna Greenwood, Charles Everett, Jr., James McFarlan, Joseph Mullin, Joseph Cheney, Ralph Hubert, Balkam, Arthur Thomas, Ball, Herbert James, Ball, William Gilbert, Ballou, Edgar Clark, Ballou, Roland Hunnewell, EAE, Banash, Ira James, Bancroft, Albert Fitch, Banfield, Frederic E., Jr., CD 2 K, Barber, Barber, Barber, Barber, Clarence Eugene, Earl Huntington, Raymond Jenness, Waldo Austin, Bardwell, Earl Smith, Barker, Clinton Carter, Barker, James Madison, Barlow, James Evans, Barnaby, George Albert, Barnard, Frederick Brainard, Jr. Barnd, Barnes, Barnes, Jules Verne, Howard Parker, James Phillips, Barrett, Charles Frederic, Barrier Barron ! Y Edward Andre, Edward Taylor, 2 X, Barrows, Allan Hanscom, Barrows, Frederick William, Barrows, George Herbert, Barry, John Gerald, 53221 GBE, Home Address 127 Oakleigh Road, Newton, Mass VI Ruston, La. VI 38 West Newton St., Boston, Mass 1047 Waln't St.,N'wt,n H'l'ds,Mass XIII VI Chelmsford, Mass. II S 346 Crafts St., Newtonville, Mass. I Belmont, Mass. VII S 40 Lincoln Ave., Portsmouth, N. H V S Natick, Mass. VI Stonington, Conn. 677 W.Bal'tm're St., Baltimore, Md XIII V 727 Marquam Bldg., Portland, Ure XI 47 Elm St., Melrose H,l'ds, Mass IV 310 Greene Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. II 27 Clinton St., Watertown, N. Y. II S 332 Delaware St., Syracuse, N. Y. XIII 177 Pleasant St., Winthrop, Mass. II 205 W. 106 St., New York, N. Y XIII S 55 Green St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. II 2 Cambridge Terrace, Allston, Mass III 7 Qtisfield St., Roxbury, Mass. IV S 83 Niagara St., Providence, R. I. VI 16 Harris Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. VIII 5 Fayston St., Roxbury, Mass. XIII 93 Mt. Pleas. St., New B,d'fd, Mass II 19 Alden St., Newton Centre, Mass II S 259 Laurel Hill Av., Norwich, Conn I 17 Maple Ave., Newton, Mass. III 19 Maple Ave., Newton, Mass. VIII S 21 Gardner St., Allston, Mass. III 122 Pine St., Florence, Mass. II S 1361 Osgood St., N. Andover, Mass I 61 Henry Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. I S 274 Methuen St., Lawrence, Mass III 25 Oak St., Peabody, Mass. III S Groton, Mass. III Melrose Highlands, Mass. I 6 Carver St., Plymouth, Mass. VI Syracuse, New York. II Waverley St., Belmont, Mass. V 89 Hancock St., Cambridge, Mass. III S 1132 Murray Hill Av., Pittsburg, Pa V S Reading, Mass. III 646 Gorham St., Lowell, Mass. IV S 99 Somerset Ave., Taunton, Mass III 5 Buffum St., Salem, Mass. Name and Society Bartlett, Bartlett Bartlett Bartlett Bascom Arthur Warren, Charles Terrell Edward Hale, George Merrill, Calvin Perry, Batchelder, Frederick Russell, Bates, George Martin, Bates, Oric, Baton, Warren Ulysses Chase, Battles, Donald Raymond, Baum, Kenneth Michael, Bayne, Alonzo Rudolph, Bearce, William Pitt, Beard, Robert Stanley, Beaton, William Alexander, Becker, William Frederick, Bedford Thomas Pa ne B.S. EN Q Y 7 9 7 Bedortha, Alfred Calvin, Bee, Albert Wilson, Ir., Beers, Harold William, Beers, William Herbert, Belding, Arthur Field, Bell, Lowthian Lambert, Bell, Raymond Edwin, Bender, Erwin Ferdinand, E, Benharn, Frank Arthur, Bennett, Frederick Gardner, Benson, Stuart Wells, Bent, Leavitt Newell, Bent, Walter Gregory, Bentley, Fred Harold, Bentley, William Perry, B.S.,fIJ B K, Berliner, Edgar Maurice, Bigelow, William Walter, Biggi, Frederic Anthony, Biggs, Asa Iones, 2 A E, Bill, Earle Gordon, A.B., Bingham, Rutherfurd, Bisbee, Robert Calvin, A.B. , AX P, Bissett, David Milton, Bixby, Llewellyn, B.L., Bixby, William Peet, Black, Albert Shirley, AY, Blackwell, Otter Bernard, Blake, Arthur William, A Y, Blake, Howard Colburn, Course Home Address X 41 Monroe St., Newburyport, Mass. I Fortress Monroe, Va. X 11 Parker St., Newburyport, Mass. V S 68 St. Germain St., Boston, Mass. XIII 21 Champlain St., Rochester, N. Y. VI Hampton, N. H. III Windham, Conn. IX S 4 Otis Pl., Boston, Mass. XI Whitingville, lVIass. XIII AErie, Penn. V Claremont, N. H. III S 182 Buckman St., Everett, Mass. I S 1 Yeaton Pl., Haverhill, Mass. I 38 So. Beaver St., York, Pa. IV S 1 Juniper St., Roxbury, Mass. VI 43 W. Washington St., Chicago, Ill. VI Fayette, Mo. V S Windsor, Conn. I Cupertino, Cal. I 52 Cedar St., Taunton, Mass. VII S Watertown, Conn. II 29 Pleasant St., Fitchburg, Mass. III ComptonHouse,C.,Winchester,Eng. II S Portland, Conn. XIII S 433-Sd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. I Mitton, Vt. I Southampton, Long Island, N. Y. X 160 West Canton St., Boston, Mass. X Framingham, Mass. P. O. Box 314. X Framingham, Mass. II Plainville, Conn. VI Plainville, Conn. II 1717 P St.,N. W., Washington,D.C. II 624 State St., Springheld, Mass. I 166 Salem St., Boston, Mass. IV S 216 Institute St., Jackson, Tenn. I Wolfville, Nova Scotia. VI Hotel Touraine, Buffalo, N. Y. V S Bethel, Maine. 1 Laurel St., Charlestown, Mass. I Claremont, California. II 55 Elm St., Woburn, IVIass. III 16 Hanover St., Lynn, Mass. VI Bourne, Mass. II S 54 Eastern Promenade, Portland, Me. I S 184 West Canton St., Boston, Mass. 53233 Qieclhmique 1905 Qiecljnique 1905 ame an ocie Add' - N d S ty Class Course Home iess Blakeman,William Hildreth, A.B.'05 XIII S 148 W. 4th St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y 4 Blatt, Herman Otto, E A E, Blodgett, Albert Alden, Blodgett, Laurence Gould, Blodgett, Mildred Eleanor, Bloom, David, Blount, Fernando Moreno, A A CID, Blum, Bernard, Boardman, Wallace Eugene, Boggs, Charles Reid, 3 A E, Boggs, William Brenton, 2 A E, Boles, Edwin Dexter, Bonta, Edwin Witthaus, Booth, Louis La Baum, Booth, Robert Harbison, A T A, Bourne, Lyman Murphy, M. Sc., Bouscaren, L. H. G., Jr., A. B.,A1I1, Bowen, Clarence Allen, Boynton, Augustus Swaine, Boynton, Guy Emerson, Bradbury, Royall Douglas, Bradley, John Clement, Bradley, Stephen, Breitzke, Charles Frederick, Bridges, John Samuel, Jr., Briggs, Ernest Nathaniel, Briggs, George Wright, Broad, Charles Edward, Brock, Lester Wellington, Brooks, Alfred Austin, Brotherlin, John, Brown, Brown, Harry Wheeler, Howard Hayes, Brown, Joseph Henry, Jr., Brown, Moses, Jr., Brown, Wilton Gardner, Browne, Frank Atwood, Brownell, Frank Wilbur, B.A., Brownlee, Richard William, Bryant, George Henry, Buck, Laurance Montjoy, X CID, Buell, Lloyd Thomas, Buff, Henry Arthur, Buker, Harry William, Bullard, Benjamin, Burden, Frederick Evans, 53243 II Lead, South Dakota. IV 28 Greenville St., Roxbury, Mass. I 3523 McGee St., Kansas City, Mo XII 407 Central St., Auburndale, Mass V S 377 Broadway, So. Boston, Mass. IV Pensacola, Florida. I 3245 Groveland Ave., Chicago, Ill VI 54 Pleasant St., Wakefield, Mass. V 1719 G St., Washington, D. C. III 1719 G St., Washington, D. C. II G0 Pleasant St., Marblehead, Mass IV Frick Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. II 26 Garfield Pl., Poughkeepsie, N. Y II S Linwood, Pa. V Oxford, Ohio. fCincinnati, Ohio VI 1800 Josephine St., Mt. Auburn II 43 Gates St. Lowell, Mass. II 268 Main St., Groveland, Mass. I 18 Crafts Ave., Northampton, Mass I S 807 Forest Ave., Kansas City, Mo VIII 11 Dell Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. II Webster St., West Newton, Mass. I 282 Langl'y Rd., N'Wt'n Cr., Mass VIII 15 S. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. XIII S 31Rhode Island Ave., Newport, R. I IV 86 Winthrop St., Taunton, Mass. II 53 C'n'w'lth Av., N'wt'n Cr., Mass II 496 Cambridge St., Allston, Mass. II 2 Woburn St., Medford, Mass. III S Hollidaysburg, Pa. II 118 Brighton Ave., Allston, Mass. XIII 27 Elm St., Penacook, N. H. II 72 Winthrop St., Charlestown, Mass III Newburyport, Mass. XII S Helena, Montana. XIII 19 Spring St., Westboro, Mass. VI Northport, N. S. II S 747 Trumbull Ave., Detroit, Mich XI 4 Lincoln St., Haverhill, Mass. III S 1228 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. III S Cerrillos, N. M. III 23 Cheshire St., Jamaica Plain, Mass III 8 Mt. Vernon St., Salem, Mass. VI Garden City, Finney Co., Kansas. VI S North Attleboro, Mass. Name and Socieiv Class Burhans, Harry Newton, Burke, Fletcher H., A.M., QDKE, Burke, Ralph Haney, Burkhardt, Edward Arthur, Burleigh, Charles Randall, Burnap, George, Burnham, Alfred Worcester, Burns, Walter, Burnyeat, William M. Brownlie, Burton, Eugene, Burwell, Albert Lewis, Bushnell, Leonard Theaker, B.A., Butler, Chester Mateland, Butman, Chester Arthur, Butterfield, George, Butts, Walter Matthews, Cabell, Thos. Breckinridge, CID K E, Cady, William James, Cain, Walter Bicknell, Caine, Sydney Atmore, 2 X, Caldwell, Statira Preble, A.B., Campbell, Charles, A.B., Campbell, Edmund Schureman, Card, John Ford, A K E, Carey, Francis Vincent, Carhart, Clem Clare, A T A, Carhart, Frank Milton, A T A, Carr, Sidney Taylor, Carruth, Henry Pope, Cartagena, Juan Jose, A.B., Carter, Benjamin Franklin, Carter, ,Clarence Elmore, Carter, Pulaski, Carty, Francis James, Carty, llflaurice Walter, Cary, Charles Reed, B.S., Casey, George Austin, Cason, Everett Shackelford, 41? I' A, Castleman, Philip, Causebrook, Henry Fitzgerald, Caypless, Willis Smith, Cederholm, Anna lVIargaret, Cenedella, Attilo Horace, Cerf, Harry Herman, Chace, Franklin lVIurphy, Chadbourne, Walter Everett, Course Home Addres X 1423 So. State St., Syracuse, N. Y III S 35 Cleveland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. I S 759 Adams St., Chicago, Ill. XIII 6 Parley Vale, Jamaica Plain, Mass II 53 Washington St., Malden, Mass. IV 37 Mill St., Dorchester, Mass. X 249 Bacon St., Waltham, Mass. V 25 Beacon St., North Adams, Mass S 1 Wind. Ter., Princes Pk, Liv., Eng III 1620 Floyd St., Louisville, Ky. V 639 Main St., Winsted, Conn. II S 4 Qrchard St., New Bedford, Mass VI Avon, Mass. VIII S Rockport, Mass. 140 Summer St., New Bedford, Mass VI South Dartmouth, Mass. VI S Bowling Green, Ky. VI 97 University Road, Brookline, Mass XIII 10 Bates Av., E. Weymouth, Mass XIII 505 Equitable Bldg., Louisville, Ky V S Braintree, Mass. XI S 5801 Stanton Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. IV 4 Broad St., Freehold, N. I. III 4850 Washington Ave., Chicago, Ill II Percival St., Dorchester, Mass. III S Salt Lake City, Utah. I 163 Sth St., E. Salt Lake City, Utah VI 18 Tahyer St., Quincy, Mass. V S Beaumont St., New D'rch'ster,Mass VI Mayaguez, Porto Rico. VI 9 Hawthorne St., Lynn, Mass. I S 19 Grand St., Reading, Mass. II S 616 Linden St., Scranton, Pa. II 6 Kensington St., Roxbury, Mass. II 6 Kensington St., Roxbury, lVIass. VIII 621 W. North Ave., Baltimore, lVId VI S Lee, Mass. VI S Carrollton, IVIO. V S 44 Barton St., Boston, Mass. V S Island Pond, Vt. III S 1740 Williams St., Denver, Colo. V 251 Pearl St., Cambridge, hflass. I 115 East hfIain St., lVIilford, lVIass. II 361 S. Fairmount Av., Pittsburg, Pa. IV S 31 Wales St., New Dorchester, lXfIass. XIII 41 Newport St., Dorchester, lXfIass. rmsi Qfecfjnique 1905 1 W5nfwa.,2f35?5t'ff.gfr.ityP..,.., Ci 1905 Chadwick, Louis Robinson, Chaffee, Emory Leon, Chamberlin, Noel, Chandler, Edward, Chandler, Frederick Worthington, Chandler, Willard Dalrymple, Chapman, George Hobart, Charles, Evarts Wilson, Charlesworth, Harry Prescott, Chase, Charles Henry, Chase, Edward Sherman, Chase, Edwin Kirke, Chase, Eugene Preston, Chase, Howard Root, Cheney, Arthur Morton, Chess, Harvey Buchanan, Jr. Chesterrnan, Francis John, Chidester, Arthur Mercer, Chipman, Kenneth Gordon, Chivers, Norman Moore, A.B., Christiansen, Eugene Glaf, Christy, Earl George, Chuchian, Avedis Melkon, Clapp, Charles Horace, Clapp, Lucy J., Clapp, Prescott Jones, Clark, Arthur De Witt, GD E, Clark, Dana Wright, Clark, George Howard, S.B., Clark, Guido Roscoe Clark, Jesse Redman, Clark, Robert Keep, B.A., A K E, Clark, Robert Sidney, Clarke, Lewis Cutler, Jr., Clarke, Ralph Scudder, Clarke, Walter Ayer, Clarke, Wm. Dexter, A.B. , B C9 II, Clifford, Ernest Lowell, Clifford, Walter Baker, Cline, Max, Clingerrnan, Byron H., A.B. ,CID K 111, Clough, Leslie, Cobb, Andrew Randall, S.B., Cockrell, Clarence Marion, A.B., Codd, Eliza, f326j Course Home Address XII S Saco, Maine. XIII 103 Gak St., New Bedford, Mass. VI 109 Pearl St., Somerville, Mass. IV S 42 Wait St., Roxbury, Mass. XIII S 670 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. XIII Newburyport, Mass. II 45 Jaques St., Somerville, Mass. VI S 58 Eliot St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. II S 96 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. VI I-Iotel Thorndike, Haverhill, Mass. II 15 Westfield St., Dedham, Mass. XI Merrimac, Mass. III 1450 Williams St., Denver, Colo. VI 84 Spring St,, Portland, Me. I 41 Boston St., Malden, Mass. II 542 Cooper St., Camden, N. J. I S 816 Aiken Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. VI 10 Garden St., Newburyport, Mass I 2321 Madison Sq., Philadelphia, Pa III Berwick, Nova Scotia. I 750 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y. XIII S 15 Dilworth St., Boston, Mass. XIII S 2924 Collingwood Ave., Toledo, 0 I S Van, Armenia. III 18 Atlantic St., So. Boston, Mass. VII S 18 Atlantic St., So. Boston, Mass. II 169 Boston St., Dorchester, Mass. II S 124 W. 123 St., New York, N. Y II 23 Summer St., Andover, Mass. 383 Broadway, Everett, Mass. III Oregon City, Ore. II 63 Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Mass. II 460 Dearborn Ave., Chicago, Ill. Derry, N. H. XIII IV 264 Green St., Cambridge, Mass. VI 35 Rock'w'l St.,NewD'ch'ster,Mass 15 Everett St., Biddeford, Me. XIII I S 388 Fifth St., Portland, Ore. II S 5474 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, Ill II 94 Summer St., Fitchburg, Mass.. V 139 Leverett St., Boston, Mass. VI Springfield, Ohio. II S 23 Avon St., Wakefield, Mass. IVGGreenwich, Nova Scotia VI S Denton, Texas IV Nantucket, Mass. Name and Society Class Course Coe, Maxwell Alanson, fb B E, '06 XIII Coes, Harold Vinton Gtis, 6 II Coey, Stewart Clark, 6 Collin, Charles Wolston, A K E, 7 II 5 4 VI CofIin, Edward May, X IV S Codin, Marian Cruger, Cohen, Simeon, 6 V Cohn, Allan Frederick, Ph.B., 5 XIII Cole, Sidney Lovett, 5 II Collins, Richard Vincent, 5 I S Colvin, Percy Johnson, 6 IV S Comstock, Daniel Frost, 4 VIII Conover, Hugh Bedh, 7 VI S Cook, Harry Hall, 6 II Cooper, Edgar Bailey, CIP B E, 4 II S Coupal, Joseph Samuel, 7 III Courtney, Allan Seymour, 4 II S Cowdrey, Irving Henry, 5 II Cowen, Everett Russell, 7 I Cowper, Howard Montgomery, 5 III Cox, Erskine Hazard, B.S., lVI.E., 4 II S Crane, George Arthur, 7 I Crane, Harold Gilliland, CD 2 K, 5 VI Crane, Jasper Eliott, A. B., 4 V S Cranston, Raymond Earl, 6 II Craver, Frank Steele, Ph.B., 2 X, 5 III Creidenberg, Julius, 7 V Crohurst, Harry Rounseville, 7 VI Cronin, Walter Louis, 4 II Cronin, William Walter, '12 2 K, 4 I Crosby, Gorham, S VIII Crosby, Ralph Haskell, 7 VI S Crowell, Joseph Warren, 4 II Crowell, William Hamblin, 5 IV S Crowell, Will Ranson, 4 VIII Cullimore, Allan Reginald, 7 I Cumings, Paul Leander, 7 IV Cumming, Silas Pierce, S II S Cunningham, John Earl, 4 I Currier, James Swasey, 4 XIII Curtis, Carroll Cary, GD E, 5 IX S Curtis, George Alden, 4 I S Cushman, Robert Ellis, 6 II Cutting, Spencer Alexis, G V S Daly, John Charles, Jr., E X, 5 III S Damon, John Churchill, 5 VI Home Address 43 Ashland St., Medford, Mass. 6102 Boynton St., Germantown, Pa 156 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 103 Francis St., Boston, Mass. 102 High St., Newburyport, Mass. New York, N. Y. 6 Margaret St., Boston, Mass. 815 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y 13 Lincoln St., Somerville, Mass. Medway, Mass. 1 Jackson St., Worcester, Mass. 102 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey 27 Larnartine St., Jam. Plain, Mass 4 Akron St., Roxbury, Mass. S21 E. 4th St., So. Boston, Mass. Concord, Mass. 33 Goodrich St., Fitchburg, Mass. ll Cooke St., Fairhaven, Mass. 453 Richmond Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 1219 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa. 13 Charles St., Taunton, Mass. 40 Front St., Adrian, Mich. 20 Central Ave., Newark, N. J. 305 Dudley St., Providence, R. I. Harvey, Ill. 74 Barton St., Boston, Mass. 146 Clifton St., Malden, Mass. 56 P Street, So. Boston, Mass. 723 Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y. Centreville, Mass. 58 Albion St., Wakefield, Mass. 11 Copley St., Newton, Mass. 64 Chandler St., Boston, Mass. Santa Paula, Cal. Belmont School, Belmont, Cal. 121 Summer St., Fitchburg, lVIass. 183 Cross St., Central Falls, R. I. 615 St. Paul St., Baltimore, lVId. 18 Chapel St., Newburyport, llflass 5 Beals St., Brookline, Mass. North Hanover, lVIass. Kingston, lVIass. Oak Knoll, VVinchester, llflass. 47 Townsend St., Roxbury, Mass Concord, lN'Iass. ISZTI Cecllnique 1905 Qfeciinique 1905 Name and Society Class Danforth, Carl Eugene, '05 Danforth, Frank Stephenson, A Y, 7 Daniels, Joseph, 5 Darling, Henry Everett, G Darling, Maude Frances, 7 Darling, Philip G., A.B., C15 B E, 5 Davenport, George Lyman, Jr., 6 Davenport, Llewellyn Dana, 7 Davenport, Sumner Godfrey, A.B., 5 Course Home Address III 98 Cumberland St., Bangor, Me. XIII Yonkers, N. Y. III 1342 Washington St., Boston, Mass III Danvers, Mass. IV 59 Highland Place, Fall River, Mass II 15S Central St., Somerville, Mass. I Cohasset, Mass. I Hanover, Mass. IV S So. Framingham, Mass. VI Ludlow, Mass. V 84 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. I S 224 L'coln St., N'wt,n H'l'ds, Mass I 1703 Chicago Ave., Evanston, Ill. 712 Market St., VVilmington, N. C III 1021 Jones St., Sioux City, Iowa VI Wilmington, N. C. ' I S Somerset, Mass. I 215 Elliott St., Beverly, Mass. XIII S 185 Temple St., W. Newton, Mass XI S 62 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. VI S 19 Bartlett St., Charlestown, Mass II S Saxonville, Mass. II Canton, Mass. VI Waverly, Pa. III S Edgewood Park, Pa. XIII Canton, Mass. Davis, David Cady, 6 Davis, David Lincoln, 5 Davis, Edward Lester, 5 Davis, Frank Howard, 4 Davis, Guy Randolph, 7 Davis, John Allen, 7 Davis, Junius, Jr., 5 Davis, Leon Howe, 6 Davis, Roland Parker, 6 Davis, Roswell, 5 Davis, Sidney Lincoln, 6 Davol, Walter Dodge, S Dawson, Alfred Ernest, 5 Dean, Arthur Malcolm, 5 Dean, Carroll Sisson, 7 Dean, Charles Lake, CI? E K, 5 Dean, Henry Lawrence, 5 Dean, Herbert Welton, 6 Decary, Louis Joseph Thomas, 5 Delano, Ward Parker, Jr., 5 DeMallie,JamesMartin,PhB. ,A A CD S Dempwolf, Fred Greiman, 7 Denmark, Clayton Rhey, 6 De Steiguer, Walter George, CIDFA, 6 Dexter, Katharine, 4 Dickerman, Albert Cornell, 5 Dickinson, Leon Arthur, 7 Dimock, Roy Ernest, 4 Disque, Kenneth Hulbert, A XII, Dissel, Theodore Augustine,A K E, Dixon, Frank Eugene, 6 Dodge, Parker Van Patten, 7 Dodge, Perley Kennison, 6 Dole, Myron Wilkinson, 4 Donald, Harry Walker, A 111, 5 Donaldson, John, E X, 7 Donlan, Laurence Edward, 7 6 5 H3281 VI 63 Highland Ave., Cambridge, Mass IV St. Jerome, Canada IV 18 Channing St., Worcester, llflass VI 9 Cambridge St., Rochester, N. Y. IV 701 South George St., York, Pa. II S Quitman, Ga. III S 71S So. 14th St., Lincoln, Neb. VII 393 Co'nwealth Ave., Boston, Mass XIII S 21 Mill St., Dorchester, Mass. III S 24 Vane St., Norfolk Downs, Mass III S 77 N. Montello St., Brockton, Mass I S 238 W. Tenth St., Erie, Pa. XIII 701 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. V Gloucester, Mass. II 134 B St., N. E.,Washington, D. C VI 24 Federal St., Beverly, Mass. II 104 Pearl St., Fitchburg, Mass. III S 262 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y III 807 Grovela'dTerr,e,Mi'eap'l's,M'n XI S 14Oakview Terr'e,J'm'ca Pl'n, M'ss Name and Society Class Course Home Address Donnelly, Richard Grant A., Jr. '07 Donnewald, Albert H., A.B., KY, 7 Donovan, John Joseph, G Dorsey, Thomas Francis, 6 Doten, William Leslie, 4 Doucette, Ellis John, 7 Douglas, John Frederic, 5 Douglass, Arthur Sylvester, fb N G, 7 Dow, Daniel Frederick, 5 Downes, Arthur Caldwell, 4 Drake, Bradford Winslow, Jr., 7 Drake, Francis Edward, Jr., 6 Drake, Henry Philkins, 4 Draper, Clifton Nathan, 7 Draper, Harry Reed, 7 Draper, Paul Augustus, 7 Drew, Alden Glover, 4 Drew, Charles Henry, 6 Drugan, Edward Andrew, 7 Dubois, Gustavo Adolfo, 7 Dudley, Henry Harrison, 4 Duncan, Harold Stephen, 7 Duncan, William Wheeler, B.A., 4 Dunn, John Franklin, B.S., 5 Dwight, Joseph, 6 Dwyer, Emmet Jos., A.B., A K E, 5 Eadie, John Charles, 5 Eagan, Sylvester B., A.B., G 4 Eager, William Hosmer, E A E, Eames, David Darby, 6 Earle, Frederic Edward, 6 Easterbrooks, Clifton Clark, 4 Eastman, Guy Warner, 4 Eastwood, William Firth, 6 Eaton, Charles Albert, 7 Eaton, Frederick Malcolm, 5 Eaton, Henry Douglas, A K E, 6 Edes, Edward Louis, 4 Edgecombe, William Hendrik, 4 Edmunds, Howard Maurice, 5 Edwards, Carl Francis, B.S., 5 Egan, Seymour Joseph, 7 4 Egerton, Charles Ozro, Eichler, Walter Gottfried, 5 Eisele, Herman, Elder, Flint Cummings, 7 5 VI 523 E. State St., Trenton, N. J. III S 3709 Finney Ave., St. Louis, Mo. IV 34 Sargent St., N. Hanover, Mass. I 93 Clarkson St., Dorchester, Mass 143 Court St., Plymouth, Mass. North Wilmington, Mass. II VIII VI Bucksport, Maine I 162 Grove St., Auburndale, Mass. I S 53 Emerson St., Melrose, Mass. V 5 Washington Sq., Gloucester, Mass II S 212 Bacon St., Waltham, Mass. II S 20 N. 21st St., Columbus, Ohio XI Monument St., West Medford,Mass V 108 River Ave., Norwich, Conn. I Ayer, Mass. II Canton, Mass. IX S 70 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. II S 70 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. III S 47 Chestnut St., Charlestown, Mass I S Matanzas, Cuba VI 198 No. Main St., Natick, Mass. III 90 Walton P'k,Melrose Hglds.,Mass V Chatham, N. Y. VI 1529 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md IV 235 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. II S 692 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mich. VI S Glasgow, Scotland III S 757 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. VI 526 Oak St., Syracuse, N. Y. II 45 Hollis St., So. Framingham,Mass II 8 Downer St., Dorchester, Mass. II Peace Dale, R. I. VIII 102 Huntington Ave., Boston, lVIass XIII S 177 Ruggles St., Boston, Mass. II 62 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. V 45 Charlotte St., Dorchester, lVIass VI S 324 West 83d St., New York, N. Y I Bolton, Mass. II S 18 Chestnut St., Waltham, Mass. VI Antron 71,UplrTulseH'l,L'd'n,Eng XIII S Santa Barbara, Cal. XIII 223 Seymour St., Syracuse, N. Y. XIII 103 No. Main St., Springfield, IVIass II G Greenheys St., Roxbury, lVIass. XIII 7 Belvidere Ave., Cleveland, Ghio. V S 52 Maple St., llflalden, lVIass. L 329 I Ceclinique 1905 g Home Address - 5468 Maple Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 4 Name and Soeiet Class Course Eliot, Edward lVIunroe, '05 VI 4 1905 Elliott, Joseph Kittredge, Elliott, Erank Spencer, A TA, Elliott, Harold Clifford, Elwell, David, A K E, 5 6 Elmer, Charles Wickersham, E X, 4 4 6 Emerson, Carleton Murray, Emerson Chas. Alvin, Jr.,B.S.,2 X,5 Emerson Charles Joseph, AKE, 4 Emerson Merton Leslie, 4 Emerson, Neil Davis, X fb, 4 Emerson Ralph Dammarell, 5 Emery, Quincy Pierce, flv 1' A, 6 Emilio, Shepard Gilbert, 7 Englis, William Franklyn, LID B E, 6 Estes, Walter Dalton, A.B., 4 Evans, Edward Burrows, 6 Evans, Ernest Cleveland, 6 Evans, John, X fb, 7 Evans, William Archibald, 4 Faber, Thomas William, 6 Faelton, Otto, 4 Fabyan, Isabel, 4 Fales, Otis Gerry, 7 Fallon, Nugent, 6 Farley, William Frederick, G Farnsworth, Frank Calvin Farrell, Frank Sheridan, Farrington, Harold Phillips, 6 4 Farrell, Frederick William, 4 7 5 Farrington, Robert Douglas, Farwell, Carroll Andrew, 6 Faulkner, Robert, 4 Fay, Ralph Brooks, A.B., 5 Faymonville, Le Roy Bernard, E X, 7 Feeley, Arthur Edward, 6 Feemster, Joseph Hall, Jr., E A E, 6 Fellows, Otis Dwight, Jr., 4 Fenner, James Howland, 6 Ferguson, William Burder, Jr., 2 X, 4 Ferris, Cyrus Yale, 4 Ferry, Albert Clarke, 4 Field, Charles 3d, B. S., 4 Field, Joseph Conrow, C.E., 5 Figyelmessy, Waldeman, 4 Files, True Herbert, 5 53301 IX 4 Dunreath St., Roxbury, Mass. III 3 Co'onwealth Ave., Gl'cester, Mass I 11 Ruskin St., West Roxbury, Mass VI 1701 W.LafayetteAve.,Baltim'e,Md VI 14 Pelham Terrace, Arlington, Mass II Braintree, Mass. XI 736 Church St., Beloit, Wis. 133 Cottage St., Pawtucket, R. I. XIII I 20 Mt. Vernon AVe.,Braintree,Mass VI S Wilmington, N. C. IV 6 Paine St., Worcester, Mass. XIII S 452 Columbia Rd.,Dorchester, Mass. III S 5 Oliver St., Salem, Mass. XIII 327 West 86th St., New York, N. Y. III Hamilton, N. Y. IV 116 Cedar St., Malden, Mass. II S 277 Princeton St., E. Boston, Mass. VI 1300 So. 14th St., Denver, Colo. II 1615 Washington St., Boston, Mass. II 128 Trenton St., E. Boston, Mass. IV S 71 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. VII S Warren St., Brookline, Mass. II 39 Circuit St., Roxbury, Mass. I S 489 Walnut Ave.,Jamaica Pl'n,Mass. I Waltham, Mass. IV Canton Junction, Mass. V Stoughton, Mass. V Stoughton, Mass. II S Bellevue St., West Roxbury, Mass. - II Bellevue St., West Roxbury, Mass. I Ponkapog, Mass. III Norwell, Mass. II S H The Griswold, Elyria, Ohio VI 401 California St.,San Francisco,Cal II S 23 Elizabeth St., Pittsfield, Mass. VI Glendale, Ohio III 142 Homer St.,Ne'ton Centre,Mass VI 425 Friendship St., Providence, R. I XIII AWaynesville, N. C. II Waban, Mass. IMHSS VI 57 Pleasant St., Newton Centre V S 106 College Ave.,W. So'erville,Mass VI Hightstovvn, N. J. IV S 930 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. I 14 Chestnut St., Everett, Mass. Finnegan, Joseph Bernard, Fisher, Andrew, Jr., Fisher, Harry Ernest, Fletcher, Harry Varnum, Fletcher, Herbert Lawrence, Florentine, Joseph Fletcher, Jr., Flynn, John Henry, Jr., Fogarty, William Bailey, Fogg, Benjamin Greely, Fogg, Charles Eugene, Foley, Leonard Harding, Folsom, Robert Morse, A T A, Ford, Grant, B.S., A K E, fir B K, Forsyth, Ralph Kay, Foster, Augustus Clark, Foster, John Harold, S.B., Fouhy, James Francis, Foulds, Roberts Shepherd, Frame, Harry Allan, Frank, Edwin Diederich A., Frank, John Mayer, Fraser, Linda Susan, Freclenall, Lloyd Ralston Frederick, Paul, Freedman, Louis Arthur, Freeman, Arthur Emery, Fremmer, John Arthur, French, Halsey, Ph.B., Friend, Frank Waldo, Fuller, Archibald Prescott, Fuller, Edwin Sherman, Fuller, Floid Merrill, Fuller, George, Funk, George Charles, Furer, Julius Augustus, X 111, Furer, William Charles, 7 Furness, George Choate, KID E K, Gabriel, Harry Richard, Gaenslen, George Ralph, Gage, Clarence Edward, Gale, Roger David, Gale, Roy Fellows, Gallup, Harry Wallace, Galusha, Don Loomis, Gambrill, George Thomas, Jr., Gammons, Clifford Warren, HSS 0111 Name and Societ Cl C 'se Home Address I y 04 X 69 Franklin St., Stoneham, Mass. X S 180 E. River St., Hyde Park, Mass. II Shirley, Mass. II S 383 Spring St., Portland, Me. VI S 57 Abbott St., Lawrence, Mass. III S 5908 South Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. II 31 Marcella St., Roxbury, Mass. XIII A Cincinnati, Ohio I 22 Toppan St., Newburyport, Mass. I S 129 William St., Portland, Me. II S 52 West Central St., Natick, Mass. X S 30 Esmond St., Dorchester, Mass. VI 187 Nesmith St., Lowell, Mass. XIII S 41 Pearl St., Kingston, N. Y. VI S 34 Essex St., Beverly, Mass. V S 87 Maple St., Waltham, Mass. I 21 Wall St., Charlestown, Mass. IV 225 High St., Taunton, Mass. III Shubenacadie, Nova Scotia II 2300 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. VI 310 N. Pearl St., Natchez, Miss. IV 119 Lauriat Ave., New Dorchester 170 Summer St., Boston, Mass. VI 376 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. II 135 West 86 St., New York, N. Y. II 14 Court St., Arlington, Mass. II S 375 Haverhill St., Lawrence, Mass. XI S 312 E. Church St., Marshalltown, Ia. IV Duxbury, Mass. I East Milton, Mass. I S Readville, Mass. II 920 Electric St., Scranton, Pa. I S 83 Adams St., Rochester, N. Y. IV 58 Aspinwall Ave., Brookline, Mass. XIII A Sheboygan, Wisconsin IV Sheboygan, Wisconsin VIII 220 Ash St., Manchester, N. H. I 2454 W. Sth St., Cincinnati, O. III San Antonio, Texas II 8 Sherman Place, Woburn IVIass. VI 6 Franklin Sq., Gloucester, IVIass. VI Pittsfield, Mass. V 180 Laurel Hill Ave.,Norwich, Conn. VI South Royalton, Vt. III S 1419 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, iVId. VI 1290 Wash. St., W. Newton, lVIass. f331j l905 I Name and Societ Gammons, Hernilan Trafton 1905 3 Gardner, Chester Warren, Gardner, Horace Leonard, Gardner, Robert Sherman, Garratt, James Ernest, Garrigan, Philip Joseph, Gates, Warren Austin, Gatewood, Richard Duncan, Gaylord, William Waterman, Geckler, Burton Edward, Geist, Alfred W., X KID, 7 Class 05 Geraghty, Thomas Francis, A.B., Gerhard, Norman Paul, Gerry, Arthur Peterson, A T A, Gerry, William Franklin, Gibbons, Michael Joseph, Jr., Gibbs, Nathan Jackson, 2 A E, Giesecke, Frederick Ernst, M.E., Gifling, William Clarkson, X 115, Gifford, Ralph Staples, Gilbert, Albert Champion, B.Agr., Gill, Walter Josiah, Jr., Gillett, Lewis Goode, Ph.B., Gillett, Walter Kirkland, B.S., Gilman, Wesley Clifton, Gilmer, Thornton Meriwether, EX, Gilmore, Luther Elmer, Ginsburg, Henry Abraham, Gladding, James Nickerson, Glidden, John Tinker, Goldstein, Moise Herbert, B E, Goldthwait, Fred Warren, Gonder, Walter Braton, Goodnow, Frank Edward, Gordon, Fred W., Gouinlock, William Strachan, IIDEK, Gould, Gardner Sabin, Graesser, Carl Herman, 2 A E, Graham, Errett McLoed, A.B., Graham, Edwin Smith, B.S., Grant, Edward Chester, A K E, Gray, Curtis Rockwell, GJ E, Gray, Wilford Drury, Greeley, Samuel Arnold, AB., QIJBE, Green, Henry Lincoln, A 111, Green, Theodore, f332j Course Home Address II S 43 Frost St., Middleboro, Mass. VI 13 Warren St., Peabody Mass. X 201 Harold St., Roxbury, Mass. XIII S Bulkeley Sq., New London, Conn. XI 17 Temple Ave., Winthrop, Mass. VI S 12 So. Walker St., Lowell, Mass. IV Coxsachie, N. Y. XIII A 1817 Q St., Washington, D.C. II Torringford, Conn. IV 229 No. Main St., Grange, Mass. VI S Merced 229 Guadalajara, Mexico III 464 Elm St., Chicago, Ill. I 39 Strong Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. II Franklin Falls, N. H. II S Lynnfield Centre, Mass. VI S 239 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio I S 25 Slater Ave., Norwich, Conn. IV College Station, Texas 78 Main St., New Rochelle, N. Y V 560 County St., New Bedford, Mass V Gilead, Conn. 21 Montrose St., Roxbury, Mass. VIII III S Colorado Springs, Colo. V S 3014 Wells St., Milwaukee, Wis. II North Abington, Mass. I S Riverbank Court, Cambridge, Mass X 167 Howard St., Lowell, Mass. VI 19 Clinton St., Cambridge, Mass. II S 1107 Plymouth Ave., F. River, Mass III 9 Ashton Place, Cambridge, Mass. IV S 1736 St.Charles Ave.,N. Orleans,La II 115 Central St., Peabody, Mass. V Strasburg, Pa. VI Forest Park, Adams, Mass. II S Hartford, Conn. III Warsaw, N. Y. I 1206 Boylston St., N. U. Falls, Mass II 951 Lafayette Ave., Buffalo, N. Y I Winnipeg, Canada III S Graham, Texas XIII 520 Greenup St., Covington, Ky. II S 1808 Beacon St., Brookline, Mass. I 21 Chestnut St., Woburn, Mass. XI Winnetka, Ill. I S 6 Louisburg Sq., Boston, Mass. I 216 E. St. Joseph St., Louisville, Ky. Name and Society Green, William, 2 A E, Greenburg, Max Abraham, Greene, Albert Edwards, Greenman, Elizabeth, Greenwood, Phil Prescott, Gregson, Robert Burton, Griffin, Charles James, Griffin, George Appleton, Griffin, James Edwin, Griffin, Perley Kimball, Class Course Home Address VI 157 Bleecker St., Gloversville, N. Y. III 14 Decatur St., Boston, Mass. VIII S 318 Central Block, Pueblo, Colo. V S Mystic, Conn. VI 18 Upham St., Malden, Mass. II S Fiskdale, Mass. I 3 Mead St., Everett, Mass. I 2007 Kalorama Ave. Wash., D. C. I S 130 Temple St., W. Newton, Mass. II 180 Walnut St., Neponset, Mass. Griffin, Wheaton Ira, A K E, Groff, James Stephen, Groover, Francis Barton, B.S., Groves, Harry Hunt, Jr., Guerin, Harry Joseph, Guernsey, George Rockwell, Guest, Frederick Bertine, X 112, Guibord, Fred Willis, Guild, Frank Emmons, A T A, Guilford, Irving Morse, I 3 West St., Utica, N. Y. X S 18 Meeting St., Newport, R. I. II S 91 Appleton St., Boston, Mass. I S Greenwood, Mass. I S 23 Dalton St., Boston, Mass. I 27 Eaton, Winchester, Mass. XIII S 59 Lafayette St.,New Rochelle, N.Y. V Plattsburgh, N. Y. VI S 117 Pine St., Attleboro, Mass. West Cheshire, Conn. Gunn, Selskar, Gunn, Thomas McCheyne, M.A., Gupta, Birendra Chandra, Haar, Selby, Hadley, Ralph Edgar, Hadley, Walter Elbridge, Hale, Richard King, A.B., Haley, Frank, Haley, Humphrey Matthew, Haley, John Francis, Hall Hall Hall Hall Hall Hall Hall , Frank David, E X, George Garfield, Harry Rutledge, John, Ralph Herbert, Ralph Nickerson, Wallace Ralph, VII Granville Place, London, England XIII S Mission, Washington VI Cuttack, Orissa, India VI 1614 Charlotte St., Kansas City, IVIO. I 968 Essex St., Lawrence, Mass. III 7 Greenough Ave., Cambridge, Mass. I Chestnut Hill, Ave., Brookline, Mass I S 9 Adams Ct., Lynn, Mass. VI 4 Pratt St., Salem, Mass. I 50 Blossom St., Lowell, Mass. XIII A G Navy Dept., Washington, D.C. IV Stony Creek, Conn. VI 770 Broadway, So. Boston, Mass. VI 820 Princess St., Wilmington, N. C. II 50 Summer St., Natick, Mass. II East Milton, Mass. UVIass. Hallett, Lucius Felt, X CID Hallowell, Henry Bartlett, Hamilton, Albert Scott, Hamilton, Charles B., Hamilton, Charles Eaton, Hamilton Frank Edverse Hamilton Hamilton Frank Sidney, Robert Stavely, Hamlen, Gertrude Loring, X I 127 Winchester St., Newton H'gh's, VI 900 Logan Ave., Denver, Colo. III Belmont, lVIass. VI Eliot St., Milton, Mass. fMass. VI S 1679 IVIass. Ave., North Cambridge, VI 2 Cordis St., Charlestown, lVIass. VI 471 Nlarshall St., IVIilwaukee, Wis. III South Blue Hill, lVIe. III S Helena, lVIont. VII S 246 Beacon St., Boston, Nlass. 53331 Qieclinique 1905 Name and Society Class Course Home Address 05 1905 Hammett, Louis Wilbar, ' Hampton, Lawrence Charles, Hanford, Jesse War1'en Griggs, Haraden, Joseph Allen, Harding, Reynold Munroe, Hardy, Charles Ashley, A.B., Hardy, George Bradley, Hardy, William Abbott, Harlow, John Brayton, Harnett, James Harold, Harrah, Ernest, db B E, Harrigan, William Augustine, Harrington, Elmer Ellsworth, Harrington,George Bates,S. B.,A 111 Harrington, Willis Fleming, S.B., Hart, Edward Pendleton, Hart, Harold Pillsbury, Hartshorne, Richard Gardner, Hartwell, Arthur Edward, Harvey, Harold Brown, Harvey, Herbert Winthrop, Haskell, Raymond, S.B., Hastings, Hudson Bridge, Hastings, Warren, Hathaway, Herbert M., Hathorn, George Wilmer, Hawkes, Charles Whitney, Hawkins, Paul Darwin, Hayden, Ralph, Hayes, James, Ir., Hayes, Lawrence Warner, Haynes, Charles Rogerson, Hayward, Albert Arthur, Hayward, Carle Reed, Hayward, Marden Warner, Hazeltine, Reginald, Hecht, Julius Lawrence, Heckman, Alfred Raymond, Helpern, Myron, Hemphill, Albert Weimer, Henderson, George Mitchell, Henderson, Leroy Porter, Henius, Emil Theodore, Henrici, Hermann Charles, Henry, Sidney Morgan, X CD, Hepburn, Andrew Hopewell, A XII, f334j IX 3 Tyler St., Newport, R. I. III Hollywood, Los Angeles, Cal. VI 905 E. Haley St., Santa Barb'ra, Cal VI S 20 Essex St., Charlestown, Mass. I 42 Youle St., Melrose, Mass. III Auburndale Mass. III S Bangor, Me. II 17 Maple Ave., Andover, Mass. VI S St. Louis, Mo. II S Hamilton, Bermuda. II S 27 East 64th St., New York, N. Y I S 236 Lexington St., E. Boston, lVIass III 167 Maple St., Malden, Mass. III 6 Louisburg Sq., Boston, Mass. X Farmington, Del. V 46 Elm St., Westerly, R. I. fMass VI 110 Franklin St., So. Framingham I 129 Pembroke St., Boston, Mass. II S 1217 Webster Ave., Houston, Tex VI S Lynnfield, Mass. XI Haverhill, Mass. G Indianapolis, Ind. I Walpole, N. H. VI Lancaster, N. H. IV S Stoughton, Mass. V S 65 Third St., No. Andover, Mass. II S 15 Euclid St., New D'rchester, lVIass II S 68 Westland Ave., Boston, Mass. III S 14 Bowdoin St., Cambridge, lVIass. I 404 Main St., Brockton, Mass. II 46 William St., Cambridge, Mass. X 74 Beacon St., Hyde Park, Mass. V S 6 Winthrop St., Stoneham, Mass. III 233 Goffe St., Quincy, Mass. III 233 Goffe St., Quincy, Mass. III Belfast, Me. II 1459 Addison Ave., Chicago, Ill. V Hyatt Ave., Bradford, Mass. V 45 Lagrange St., Boston, Mass. II S Haverford, Pa. III North Duxbury, Mass. II S 65 Dodge St., Beverly, Mass. U11 V 2576 Magnolia Ave., Edgewat'r Chi. II 1013 Park Ave., Kansas City, Mo. XIII A G Navy Dept., Washington, D. C. IV S Avondale, Pa. Y Name and Society Hertz, Alfred William, ' Heuter, Royal Robbins, Heydon, Joseph Kentigern, 2 A E, Heywood, Angelo Tilton, Hicks, Alexander, Higgins, E. Leander, Higgins, Frederick Lyle, -12 I' A, Higgins, Warren Sneden, Hill, Edgar Logan, Hill, Edwin Bruce, X KID, Hill, Guy, Hill, Herbert Wight, Hill, Hiram Augustus, Hiller, Everett Qsgood, Himmelman, Edward Laurence Hinckley, James Phillips, Hinckley, Thomas Lesley, Hinkley, Philip Edward, A K E, Hirt, Leon Edwin, Hixon, Harold Garfield, 2 A E, Hobson, George Foster, A T A, Hogel, William Eflingham, Hogner, Per Richard Leonard, Holbrook, Arthur Raymond, Holbrook, Elmer Allen, CID I' A, Holbrook, Foster Webster, Holcombe, Amasa Maynard, Holliday, Iohn Hampden, Ir., X CID Hollnagel, Herbert Percival, Holmes, Addison Francis, Bradford Buttrick, A XII, 7 Holmes, Holmes, Thomas Barlow, db 2 K, Thomas Jefferson, Holmes, Holt, Horace Sinclair, Honeyman, Bruce Ritchie, Hooker, Henry Keene, I-Iool, George Albert, Hoover, Walter Turner, Hopkins, Leonard Otis, Hooven, Arthur Tillson Hopkins, Walter Austin, CD B E, Horton, Frederick Waters, Hosmer, Helen Ross, Hosmer, Herbert Buttrick, Hotchkiss, Walter Alvin, Houck, Carl Alfred, E A E, SBE, 7 Class 06 Course Home Address IV S 2121 Benton Boul. Kansas City, Mo. II 130 Ash St., Waltham, Mass. V S Mary St., Sydney, Australia. III SS Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass. II S 98 Hillman St., New Bedford, Mass. IV S 6 Locust Lane, Bar Harbor, Me. XIII S 6 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. VI S Riverhead, N. Y. II S Lincoln, Ill. IX S 5502 Margaretta St., Pittsburg, Pa. 41 High St., Everett, Mass. VIII XIII 22 Clarendon St., Springfield, Mass. I 711 Beech St., Manchester, N. H. II 454 Met. Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. V S 136 W. 91st St., New York, N. Y. VI S 254 School St., Somerville, Mass. XI 745 Osceola, Ave., St. Paul, Minn. II 57 Deering St., Portland, Me. III 3672 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 123 So. Penn Ave., Denver, Colo. XI 26 Hanks St., Lowell, Mass. III S 144 W. 16th St., New York, N. Y. III 434 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. I Ashland, Mass. 61 Clinton St., Fitchburg, Mass. III III I 20 Charles St., Waltham, lvlass. III 13 Wildwood St., Winchester, Mass. II 1121N.MeridianSt.,Indianapolis,Ind. VI S 2164 Couler Ave., Dubuque, Ia. II 41 Ruggles St., Boston, Mass. III Navy Yard, Mare Island, Cal. III S 216 Main St., Keene, N. H. VI S 46 Everett St., Everett, lVIass. X 362 Mass. Ave., Arlington, IXfIass. IV 63 North 20th St., Portland, Ure. VI Wellesley Hills, lVIass. I 29 lVIanchester St., Lawrence, lVIass. I 233 Harvard St., Brookline, lVIass. I S South Framingham, lvlass. III 909 lVIulberry St., Scranton, Pa. III S Winthrop Road, Brookline, hflass. III 150 School St., Somerville, lXfIass. V Billerica, Mass. Concord, lVIass. Naugatuck, Conn. VI VI I 97 High St., Buffalo, N. Y. Lsssj Qiecljnique 1905 Qfecljnique 5 1905 Name and Society Class Houghton, George Euclid, Houskeeper, W. G., B.S., 2 E, Howard, Charles Alton, Howard, Lewis Thomas, Howe, Chester Lewis, Howe, Clarence Decatur, Howe, Robert, Howes, Charles Edward, Q E, Howes, Cyrus Pierce, Howland, Arthur Hathaway, Hoxie, Edward Ely, Hoy, Austin Young, A.B., Hoy, Charles, Hubbell, Henry Simonds, Hudson, Ralph Gorton, Hukill, Emory Gilhllan, X CID, Humphrey, Carl Thomas, Humphrey, Edwin Roland, X 119 Humphrey, William Henry, Hunnewell, Julia Overing, Hunt, George Fessenden, Huntington, Charles McKay, Hurley, Edmund Joseph, I-Iursh, Robert, Hutchins, Charles Morton, GJ X, Hyde, Edward Ruddock, C9 X, Hyde, Stanley Taber, Hyde, William Albert, Ph.B., Ingalsbe, Frank Richmond, B.S., Ingram, Ralph Osborne, Q7 F A, Ireland, George Preston, Ph.B., Isenberg, Hans Otto Carl, Jaccard, Frederick Constant, Jackson, Henry Louis, Jackson, Ralph Hahnemann, Jackson, Ralph T. C., Jacobs, Alfred Henry, Jacobson, Henry Forsberg, Jansson, Arthur Harold, Jealous, Arthur Rowney, Jenkins, A. D., B.A., S.B., A Jewett, Thomas Edward, Johnson, Bertrand Leroy, mp, Johnson, Charles Edward, C9 X, Johnson, Charles Henry, Johnson, Joseph Warren, f336j '05 5 Course Home Address II S 30 Copeland St., Roxbury, Mass. II 3508 Baring St., Philadelphia, Pa. II 9 Park Place, Portland, Me. I 76 Erie St., Brockport, N. Y. VI 59 Davison St., Hyde Park, Mass. I 43 Stearns St., Waltham, Mass. VI S 236 Bolton St., Marlboro, Mass. II 9 Warren Sq., Jamaica Plain, Mass. IV So. Yarmouth, Mass. IV 49 5th St., New Bedford, Mass. IV S 225 Longwood Ave., Boston, Mass XIII 461 N. State St., Chicago, Ill. X 349 W. Sixth St., Elmira, N. Y. III S 25 Highland Ave., Fitchburg, Mass VI 175 E.Haverhill St., Lawrence,Mass VI S 216 Reed St., South Oil City, Pa. I 431 Middle St.,E. Weymouth, Mass II S 11 Wadsworth St., Allston, Mass. IV S 50 Chestnut Ave.,Waterbury, Conn VII S Wellesley, Mass. IV 22 Beckett St., Portland, Me. XIII S 18 St. Stephen St., Boston, Mass. II S 100 Lebanon St., Malden, Mass. III 186 Upland Road, No. Camb. Mass III Rockland, Mass. I 38 Pinckney St., Somerville, Mass. X 33 Harris St., Waltham, Mass. VI S North Haven, Conn. III S Oakheld, N. Y. II 90 Knox St., Lawrence, Mass. I S 149 Central St., Somerville, Mass. II S Honolulu, Hawaii III 915 E. 29th St., Kansas City, Mo. V 2 Jewett Place, Utica, N. Y. VI S 335 Centre St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. IV S 33 Oak Sq. Ave., Brighton, Mass. IV 204 Sansome St., San Francisco, Cal. VI S Hastings, Neb. XIII Mt. Pleasant Ave., Malden, Mass. II No. Vassalboro, Me. IV G24 Alveston St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. I 72 St. Stephen St., Boston, Mass. III Park Road, Stoneham, Mass. II 119 Trenton St., East Boston, Mass. II 13 Orchard St., Haverhill, Mass. II S 30 Sumner St., Dorchester, Mass. Name and Society Johnson, Natt Madison, Johnson, William Trimble, Jr., Johnston, Charles Wiswell, Johnston, John Frederick, Jr., Jones, George Bayard, Jordan, Ralph Curtis, 2 X, Jordan, Robert Rishworth, A K E, Joslin, Gilman Burt, Jeungling, Karl Frank, Kahn, Isa Wolfner, Kaiser, George Karl, Kales, Francis Henry, A A QD, Kalmus, Herbert Thomas, Kane, James Allen, EX, Kann, Ralph G., Karch, Ralph James, Karnan, Warren Winchester, Kasson, Charles LeBaron, Kearny, Philip John, S.B., Kearney, Stephen, Keeler, Warren Irving, Keen, Walter Thomas, Keen, William Herbert, Keenan, Joseph Augustine, Keith, Henry Hiram Wheaton, Keleher, Andrew Hamilton, Keller, Dennie Kelley, Kelley, Daniel Patrick, Kelley, Ralph Dudley, Kelling, Alfred Herman, Kemper, William Arthur, CD E K, Kendall, Burton Warren, CHD X, Kendall, Harry Stillman, Kennedy, Henry Hoffman, A.B., Kennedy, Patrick James, Jr., 8 X, Kennedy, Roy Guthrie, A.B., G E, Kenrick, Jeannie B., Kent, Henry Joseph, Kenway, Herbert Winthrop, Kerr, Andrew, Keyes, Eva B., A.B., Keyes, Henry Francis, A.B., Keyes, Robert Eugene, GD I' A, Kibbey, Rinker, Kidder, James Hathaway, A.B., Kidder, James Williain, QD X, Course Home Address I Albany, Vermont V 7 Claybourne St., Dorchester, Mass. III 1 Copeland Place, Roxbury, Mass. I 16 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. II 4337 Wash. Boulevard, St.Louis,Mo II S Columbus, Ga. II S 290 Danforth St., Portland, Me. XIII S 46 Burroughs St., JamaicaPl'n, Mass. II The Nefffl Cleveland, Ohio VI S 319 Moss Ave., Peoria, Ill. VI 171 Bank St., New London, Conn IV S 65 Randolph St., Chicago, Ill. VIII 186 Hamilton St., Dorchester, Mass XIII Long Green, Md. II 156 Dithridge St., Pittsburg, Pa. II , 710 Cumberland St., Lebanon, Pa. V 38 Arlington St., Hyde Park, Mass VI 78 Bloomfield St., Dorchester, Mass VI GU. S. Navy Yard, Charlestown,Mass XI 312 Market St., Lowell, Mass. VIII 58 Fairview Ave., Malden, Mass. II S Jewett City, Conn. V 67 Newhall St., Malden, Mass. II S0 W. Sth St., So. Boston, Mass. XIII 139 North St., New Bedford, Mass VI Washington, D. C. IX Canton, Mass. I 109 Kenwood Road, Roxbury, Mass I S So. Yarmouth, Mass. V 910 North Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. I 19 W. Granite St., Butte, Mont. VIII 62 Winter St.,Sta.A.,Gardner, Mass. I 361 Chestnut St., Gardner, Mass. IV Freedom, Md. II 464 Maple St., Holyoke, Mass. II 65 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. VII S Eliot Road, Newton, Mass. VI 34 Elmont St., Dorchester, Mass. II 85 Lombard St., Newton, lVIass. VII S 317 Forest St., lVIedford, lVIass. IV S 62 Chestnut St., Oneonta, N. Y. IVS G 15 Bishop St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. I 91 Newbury St., Boston, lVIass. III S Nlarshfield Hills, Blass. V S 5 lXfIt. Vernon Place, Boston, Blass. VI 41 Franklin St., Somerville, Nlass. L3371 Qieclinique l905 ilieclinique 1905 Name and Society Class Kieffer, Stephen Ephraim, '04 Killion, Louis John, 5 Kimball, John, Kimball, Walter Everard, S. B., Kimball, William Francis, King, Carl, Kingman, Edward Dyer, Kingsbury, Harold Avery, Kinnear, John Charles, Klahr, Charles Dean, B. S., A Y, Knapp, William Jared, A KE, Knight, Ralph Frank, Knowlton, Cutler Dean, Kolatschevsky, Andre T., Koppelman,William Howard,A.B., Krag, Frederic Schuyler, QI' A, Kremer, Waldemar Rudolf, Kriegsman, Eugene Frederick, Lackman, Herman William, Z X, Lage, Jorge, Lalley, William Hugh, E X, Lamb, John Edwin, Lamb, Sidney Rivers, Lambie, James McClurg, X db, Lamont, Clarence Ronald, Lampie, Abraham, Landers, Maurice B., A.B., X, 111 Lang, Alfred George, Lang, Currier, A K E, Langenheim, Frederick Ellwood, Langley, Arthur Hooper, Lasher, Clarence Emmett, Q X, Lawrence, Edmund Kent, A.B., Lawrence, Waldron Gustine, Lawton, Joseph Thomas, Jr., QD I' A, Leavell, John H., Leavitt, Charles Evans, Lee, Edward Guild, Lee, John Josiah, Leh, Harold Marcus, Leland, Henry Forrest, Levine, Harry, Levy, Earnest Coleman, M.D., Lewenberg, Harry Louis, Lewis, Henry Francis, A T A, Lewis, Henry M., Jr., 7 5 6 4 7 6 6 5 6 6 5 7 4 6 4 5 5 6 5 6 6 5 7 6 5 7 4 7 4 6 6 6 6 7 5 7 5 4 6 4 4 6 5 7 H3381 Course Home Address I S Fairoaks, Cal. I 49 Crawford St., Roxbury, Mass. I Easton, Mass. VI S 1 Robinhood St., Roxbury, Mass. VI 166 HighlandAve.,Middletown,N.Y. H 185 Davis Ave., Brookline, Mass. X111 55 Lincoln St.,So.Framingham,Mass. X 26 Pearl St., Westfield, Mass. 111 S 10 Piedmont St., Salem, Mass. - II S Clarion, Pa. 11 249 East 49th St., Chicago, Ill. V1 49 Church St., Hudson, Mass. V1 S Rockport, Mass. V1 The RussianConsulate,Malta,Europe I S 605 N.CarrolltonAve.,Baltimore,Md. II 465 Washington St.,Brookline,Mass. VJG679 Marshall St., Milwaukee, Wis. 1 22 Stanwood St., Providence, R. 1. H S Glendale, Qhio II Box 1082, Rio de Janeiro 1 S 1448 Park Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. IH Spencer, Mass. II S 18 East 40th St., New York, N. Y. II 549 East Chestnut St., Wash. Pa. III 22 Holyoke St., Malden, Mass. I S 28 Greenwood St., Dorchester, Mass. II S 179 Front St., Binghamton, N. Y. II S 72 Winthrop St., New Britain, Conn. 1 215 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 1 Ardmore, Pa. 1 S 253 High St,, Newburyport, Mass. VI North Adams, Mass. 1GCatonsville, Md. X111 S 34 Sargent St., Roxbury, Mass. I1 Clifton Av.and 10thSt,Baltimore,Md. H1 Temple, Texas X111 30 Broad St., Weymouth, Mass. 1 Greenwood, Mass. 1 S Bucksport, Maine. 11 S 1006 Walnut St., Allentown, Pa. 11 432 5th St., South Boston, Mass. 1 6 Morton St., Boston, Mass. V11 S Richmond, Va. X 40 Linwood St., Roxbury, Mass. V111 Toronto, Canada IH S 109 East 18th St., New York, N. Y. Name and Society C1355 Lewis, Lily Maud, '04 Lewis, Warren Kendall, 5 Libbey, Fay Wilmott, 6 Libbey, George Eastman, 4 Libby, Harold Clifton, 7 Lichtenstein, IVIilton, 6 Light, Hunter Ulrich, 6 Lightner, Milton T., A.B., fIDBE 6 Lincoln, Paul, 6 Lincoln, William Hamilton, 6 Lindsay, Roy Wallace, ' 7 Lindsly, Ben Edwin, 112 I' A, 5 Line, Frederick Chester, 6 Lines, Edwin Morehouse, Ph. B., 5 Littig, Charles Ross, 2 AE, 6 Littleton, Stephen Berton, 5 Logan, Frank, A.B., BCD II, 6 Lombard, Eugene, 5 Lombard, Norman A KE, 5 Long, Arthur Channing, B.A., 5 Longley, Francis Fielding, A Y, 5 Loomis, Dan Austin, 6 Loomis, Warren Weston, 5 Lord, Harold, 6 Lord, Harry Chester, 7 Lord, Robert Howard William, 5 Lorenz, Edw.H.,B.S., A XP,1IvBK,S Loring, Charles G., A.B., X CD, G Loring, Henry Delano, GD K, 6 Loughlin, Iohn Sherwood, 5 Lounsbury, William C., 4 Lourie, William Isaac, G Loutrel, Cyrus Henry,,A XII, 7 Lovejoy, Roy Fisk, Q IE, S Lovett, Joseph Lamson, 6 Lowe, Elmo Cameron, G Lowe, Ralph Putnam, 7 Lucas, Jose Goncalies, 7 Luce, Byron Peakes, 7 Luce, Leroy Winthrop, 7 Luce, Robert Francis, 5 Lucey, William Sylvester, 7 Lueth, Clarence I., 6 Lum, Elliott, A T A, 5 Luquer, Lynch, A.B., 4 Luther, George Dillen, 7 Course Home Address IX S 267 Newbury St., Boston, lVIass. X Laurel, Delaware III II 51 Howard St., Bangor, IVIe. 147 Wyoming Ave., IVIelrose, Mass I Littleton Common, Mass. San Francisco, Cal. II 526 Cumberland St., Lebanon, Pa. II S Highland Park, Ill. III S 27 Russell St., Malden, Mass. I 413 Cherry St., West Newton, Mass X 47 Summer St., Andover, Mass. III 2718 Forest Ave., Kansas City, Mo III S 50 Rowley St., Rochester, N. Y. VI Box 161, New Haven, Conn. VI 1010 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md XIII 9 Linden Street, Brockton, Mass. IV G Pierceton, Ind. XIII S Dedham, Mass. II Kansas City, Mo. II Sharon, Mass. XI 135 Elm St., Kalamazoo,IMich. XIII S 727 State St., Springfield, Mass. VI Windsor, Conn. IV 30 Auburn St., Malden, Mass. IV II 22 Tower Ave., Lynn, Mass. X 56 Waverly Ave., Newton, Mass. II 96 Garden St., Hartford, Conn. IV 8 Otis Place, Boston, Mass. I 94 Hudson St., Somerville, Mass. II 16 Thornley St., Dorchester, hflass VII S 66 IVIontclair Ave., Roslindale, IVIass. II 30 Allen St., Boston, Mass. XIII 157 Raymond Ave., So. Grange, N.I IX S S13 Broadway, Lowell, Mass. I S 71 Farnham St., Lawrence, IVIass. IV S 226 East 53d St., Chicago, Ill. X 22 Charles St., Fitchburg, IVIass. Box 163, Para, Brazil Vineyard Haven, Nlass. 115 lVIagnolia St., Roxbury, Rflass. I 12 Stevens Place, Nlelrose, IXfIass. VI VI VI IV S VVashington, D. C. III Ashland, Pa. VI XIII G2 VVashington Ave., Natick, hflass. City Hotel, VVebster, Blass. Aberdeen, S. D. L 339 J Tfecllnique 190 5 QIecBnique 1905 Name and Society Class Lutze, Fred Clemens, 105 Lynch, John Edward, Jr 5 Lynch, William Duncan, Lynde, Clifford, Lynde, Harry Milton, Lyon, Alpheus Crosby, B.S., 119 I' A, Lyon, James Lawrence, Lyon, Waldo Vinton, Lyons, Robert Joseph, MacBriar, Wallace Noble, McBride, Lewis Bowen, X CID, McChesney, Howard Hazen, McClintock, James Robinson, McCready, Harold, McCue, Henry Michael, Macdonald, William Harrison, McElroy, James Aloysius, A.B., McEntee, William, McGarry, James Henry, McGinnis, Claude Stonecliffe, McGregor, Frank Sanderson, McGregor, Milton Emery, Machado, Joas Martins, Macintire, Horace James, Mack, Paul Wardlaw, McKay, Richard Vincent, Jr., McLean, Robert Walter, McLeod, Malcolm, McManus, John Herbert, lVIcMenimen, William Vincent, McMillin, John Milton, Macomber, Alexander, McQuaid, John Delaney, fb 2 K, lVIcVay, Howard Guy, A.B., Madero, Benjamin, GD E, Madero, Julio, CD E, lVIagee, George Merrill, Magnitzky, Albert Louis, Magnuson, Mark Graham, Mahar, John Theodore, Mahler, James John, Jr., Mahr, Herman William, Mailey, Roy Davis IVIajor, Kenneth Qlwell, A '11, Makino, Kiyo, 5 6 5 4 7 6 7 6 7 6 4 7 6 7 7 6 5 6 6 McKernan, Joseph Newall, 6 5 7 5 4 7 7 4 6 6 7 4 5 qv F A, 4 6 7 7 4 7 4 f340j Course Home Address IV 1434New Jersey Av. ,Sheboygan,Wis. II 10 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. V 10 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. I 90 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. I S 90 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. XIIIG735 Main St., Bangor, Me. II 320 High St., Central Falls, R. I. VI 21 Providence St., Woonsocket, R. I. XIII 270 Lake Ave., Manchester, N. H. II 1 Williams St., Brookline, Mass. XIII A Care Navy Department, Wash.,D. C. VI 110 Walnut Place, Syracuse, N. Y. XI S 574 Averill Ave., Rochester, N. Y. VI 33d St.andLiberty,Ave.,Pitt,burg,Pa. I 781 Broadway, Lowell, Mass. XIII 7 Stevens St., Peabody, Mass. II S 307 Golden Hill, Bridgeport, Conn. XIII A G 413 Ruggles St., Boston, Mass. V 8 High Rock St., Lynn, Mass. VIII 2046 Park Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. VIII 78 West St., Hyde Park, Mass. VI 189 Fairmount Ave.,Hyde P'k,Mass. II S Rio Grande do Sul, Bage', Brazil II S 122 Mt.PleasantAve.,Roxbury, Mass. I S Williams Bridge, New York City III East Milton, Mass. I 73 High St., Westerly, R. I. II 419 Cross St., Malden, Mass. II 251 Newbury St., Boston, Mass. 2 Winter St., Dorchester, Mass. XI I 1578 Cambridge St., Camb., Mass. III VI 327 Cabot St., Newtonville, Mass. 18 Copley St., Newton, Mass. II 134 Dwight St., Holyoke, Mass. II 204 Fifth St., Yankton, S. D. X S Parras, Coahuila, Mexico III Parras, Coahuila, Mexico IV Wenham Depot, Mass. fMass. II S 127 Chestnut Ave., .Jamaica Plain, III 1909 Rondo St., St. Paul, Minn. II 68 L Street, So. Boston, Mass. VI S Grafton, North Dakota VI 179 Heath St., Roxbury, Mass. VIII 12 Howard St., Lynn, Mass. XIII 139 West 76th St.,New York, N.Y. VII S 33 Hikawacho,Akasaka,Tokio,Japan Name and Society Class Course H II Mann, Herbert James, CD I' A Manning, Eleanor IVI adelenei, Mansfield, Albert Preston, Manson, Arthur James, Manson, Edward Schofield, Manson, Gyula Bennett, Marcy, Grosvenor De Witt Marsh, Edward Harvey, Marsh, William Coolbaugh, CID B E, Marston, Iohn Rufus, Martin, William Henry, Marvin, Howard, Marx, Samuel Abraham, Mason, E. W., Ir., A.B., XXII, Mason, Marquis Edgar, Mather, John, Mathesius, Anthony Paul, CID B E, Mathison, William E. H., A.B., Mayberry, Edward Leodore, B.L., Mayer, Charles Benajah, Mead, Edward Arnold, Mears, Henry Savier, Meggison, John Alexander, Mellish, Murray Holman, Meriam, Marshall Gage, Merriam, Charles Allen, Merriam, Harry Caleb, Merrill, Alden, Merrill, Alonzo Powers, Merrill, Ambrose Moody, Merrill, Jason Leslie, Ph.B., Merrill, Oscar Charles, A.B., Merriman, Fred Knights, lVIerrow, Harold Kay, QE, IVIerryWeather, Hubert, AY IVIerWin, lVIerritt Beach, KID FA, Mesmer, Louis Francisco, Metcalf, Edward Harris, A.B., Middleton, Nathan Atherton, X QD, lVIiller, Andrew Otterson, A K E, lVIiller, Blaine Heston, A K E, Miller, Stuart Read, Milne, William Durant, Miner, Ernest Abbot, Mitchell, Harold Carlyle, Moffatt, William A. G., IV VI VI VI III 751 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, Ill. 26 Beacon Hill Ave., Lynn, Mass. Wakefield, Mass. 23 Lindsay St.,New D'chester,lVIass. 605 4th St., Wausau, Wis. 200 Trenton St., East Boston,Mass. 281 Ashmont St., Dorchester, Mass. II XIII S 448 9th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. IX S Warsaw, Ill. V S 98 Mechanic St., Marlboro, Mass. IV 41 Plain St., Taunton, Mass. II Meadville, Pa. IV Natchez, IVIiss. IV S 149 Waterman St., Providence, R.I. V 45 No. Lincoln Ave., Aurora, Ill. III 112 Fort Hill Ave., Lowell, Mass. XIII 355 W. 145th St., New York City X S0 Ingersoll Grove,Springfield,Mass. IV Long Beach, Cal. IV 16 W. Doty St., Madison, Wis. VI 33 South Main St., Milford, Mass. III 721 Flanders St., Portland, Qre. VI 26 Arlington St., Amesbury, Mass. I 8 Forster Place, Salem, Mass. II S Pepperell, Mass. II S 240 W. Newton St., Boston, lVIass. V V XIII V I I 175 Prichard St., Fitchburg, Mass. 16 Tremlett St., Dorchester, Mass. Skowhegan, IVIe. 9 1-2 Prospect St.,N'wb'yport,Mass. 139 Silver St., Waterville, Me. Lisbon Falls, Me. 134 Walnut St., Brockton, Mass. X S 13 Williams Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. III 639 Forest Ave., Avondale, Cin., 0. II S New Milford, Conn. I 3500 ManitowAv. , SanFrancisco,Cal. II G The Aubry,N'wb'ySt.,Boston, NIass. XIII 4VI 4 I II I I I The Severn, Baltimore, hid. 97 Sixth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1429 N. Penn St., Indianapolis, Ind. The Wilhelm, Avondale, Cin., O. 2 lVIeriam St., Lexington, iX'Iass. 127 Summer St., lVIalden, lXfIass. Grand Union Hotel, Ottawa, Canada I S 35 London St., Lowell, R-Iass. 53411 omwdd fess Qfeclhmique 1905 Qiectfnique 1905 Name and Society Class Molina, Vincente, '05 Monaghan, John E. L., 6 Monahan, William Patrick, Montanus, Paul Armstrong, 7 5 Moody, Edward F., A.B., GJ A X, 5 Moody, Harry Lawrence, 7 Mooers, Ben Clayton, 4 Moore, Fred, 6 Moore, James Gates, 6 Moore, Stanley Dennett, 7 Moore, Walter Stone, 7 Moorehead, Theodore P., X db, 5 Morey, Charles Burrows, 6 Morley, Herbert M., B.S., S.B., 4 Morrill, Fred W., 7 Morrill, Raleigh Dudley, 7 Morris, John Missroon, 6 Morrison, Edward Stanley, 4 Morse, Harold 6 Morse, Robert Brooks, A B 4 Morse, Robert Wilbur, 5 Morton, Howard J., A Y 7 Moses, Frederick Taft, 7 Motter, William D.B., Jr. A Y 5 Mowry, Charles William, 6 Mulcare, James Holland, 7 Munroe, Harold Knapp, 6 Munroe, Walter Nathan, 5 Munster, August William, 4 Murfey, Gardner Armstrong, 7 Murphy, John Edward, 6 lVIurr, Ilias Asaad, B A 5 Murray, William Donaldson, A B 4 Myers, Leonard Fred, 5 Nabstedt, Harry Martin, 6 Nagel, Mortimer Livingston, EX 4 Naramore, Floyd Archibald, 5 Nash, Samuel Aubin, 6 Neal, Clarence Adkins, E A E 4 Needham, Harry Hampton, 4 Neilson, William, EAE, 6 Nelson, Charles Horace, 7 Nelson, Henry H., Jr., 5 Nelson, William Andrew, 4 Nesmith, Ralph Howard, B.A., 5 Newberger, Wallace, 6 L3421 Course Home Address I S Merida, Yucatan, Mexico I 319 Fourth St., So. Boston, Mass. VI 155 Ruggles St., Boston Mass. IZO. II S 183 S.Yellow Springs St.,SpringHeld, 97 Emery St., Portland, Me. 7 Garden St., Newburyport, lVIass. 1007 Baren Ave., Seattle, Wash. 93 Spangler Ave., Cleveland, O. Savona, N. Y. Lancaster, N. H., So. Columbus Ave., Sandusky, O. VG X VI VI S IV S VI VI I Foochow, China VIII 101 Depew Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. VIG 119 Cedar St., Newton Centre, Mass. XI 240 Main St., Haverhill, Mass. II S Gardner, Mass. VI Presidio, San Francisco, Cal. VI 200 Parker St., Lawrence, Mass. VI S Newton Lower Falls, Mass. XIII The Cecil,'7 Baltimore, Md. II 49 Holbrook St.,Jamaica Plain, Mass. III 76 S. Union St., Grand Rapids, Mich. V Ayer, Mass. III 711 Robinson St., St. Joseph, Mo. II 63 Warren St., Fall River, Mass. III S 255 Houghton St., N. Adams, Mass. VI 43 Warren Ave., Woburn, Mass. VI 56BowdoinAve.,NewD'chester,Mass H 25 Grant St., Waltham, Mass. I 894 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio Maple St., Framingham, Mass. III I Mt. Lebanon, Syria IG Ocean Ave., Newport, R. I. I S 317 Andrew St., Rochester, N. Y. I S 1024 W. 9th St., Davenport, Iowa III S 311 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. XIII 722 N.MichiganAve.,Mason City,Ia. H S 77 Toxteth St., Brookline, Mass. I 318 Waldron Ave., Kansas City, Mo. VIII 156 Lagrange St., W. Roxbury,Mass. III 8 Cumberland St., Boston, Mass. II S Downpatrick, Co. Down, Ireland II S 16 Myrtle St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. XIII S 474 Mass. Ave., Boston, Mass. XIII 265 WashingtonAve.,Brooklyn,N.Y. II S 763 6th St., Louisville, Ky. Name and Society Class Newkirk, Eliza Jacobus, B.A., '05 Newman, Rolf Raymond, 4 Newton, Sherley Purl, 6 Nicholas, Henry George, E AE, 6 Nicholas, Utar James, E A E, 6 Nichols, Bryant, 7 Nichols, Prescott Raymond, 7 Nichols, Robert Porter, A Y, 5 Nicholson, Dow Hiram, 5 Nickerson, Frederic, X CIP, 4 Niditch, Isadore, 5 Nields, Benjamin, Jr., A XII, 4 Niles, Eliot Wright, 4 Niles, Frank Lee, A T A, 7 Noble, George Curtis, 6 Nolan, Thomas Alphonsus, 6 Nordstrum, Ludwig Sanger, 7 Northrup, Carl Frederick, Norton, George Chester, Norton, George Roswell, 6 Norton, John Foote, Noyes, Emory Chase, Noyes, Erskine Phillips, Noyes, Harry Fordham, Nuckolls, Hopkins, A.B., Nutter, Charles Warren, Nyce, Joseph Crawford, Gbear, Howard Leslie, 6 O,Connor, Arthur Wellington, 4 0'Connor, Martin A., 4 O,Conor, Charles Timothy, 6 Oehne, Theodore Carl, Jr., 6 O'Farrell, Alphonsus, 6 O'Hara, James Randall, Jr., 6 Qliver, Wilfred Nealley, 6 Orcutt, Harvey Baxter, 6 Ortseifen, Adolph I., 4 0'Sullivan, Jeremiah, 7 Otis, George William A K E, 7 7 7 7 6 4 6 7 7 4 5 6 4 Packard, Emerson Heard Packard, James Benidict, CD 1' A, Packwood, Lahvesia P., Page, Rowland Everett, QDX, Paine, Paul McClary, CID I' A, Palmer, Guy Prescott, 4 Palmer, Robert, 4 G 4 Course Home Address IV S 650 North 15th St., Phil'a, Pa. I Los Angeles, Cal. V VI 87 Queens St., Melbourne, Australia VI 87 Queens St., Melbourne, Australia II 169 Shurtleff St., Chelsea, Mass. VI 66 Prescott St., Reading, Mass. Cyrus, Mass. XIII S Searsport, Maine. fMass. I 50 Spring Park Av., Jamaica Plain, IV S Commonwealth Av.,Boston, Mass. V 49 Qswego St., Boston Mass. III S S03 Broome St., Wilmington, Del. VIII 561 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. VI S 111 E. S.Temple, Salt Lake City,U IV S Eau Claire, Wis. fMass. I S 19 Paul Gore St., Jamaica Plain, VI S Raton, New Mexico VI 18 Cherry St., Bellows Fall, Vt. IV S Rome, Georgia XIII 73 Hudson St., Somerville, Mass. V 5832 Wash. Ave., Chicago, Ill. I 39 Porter St., Malden, lVIass. II 60 GreenwoodAv.,W.Newton,Mass. III 36 Empire St., Allston, Mass. V S Pine Bluff, Arkansas II 58 Heard St., Chelsea, Mass. VI S3 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass. VI 145 Hale St., Beverly, Mass. II West Bridgewater, Mass. II S 282 Williams St., Providence, R. I. XI S 119 Washington St., Peabody, Mass. VI S 5401 Ellis Ave., Chicago, Ill. XIII S 82 Dustin St., Brighton, lVIass. II Cottage Ave., Winthrop, Mass. II 26 St. Stephen St., Boston, lXfIass. I Florence, Mass. XIII S S14 E. 46th St., Chicago, Ill. 105 Mt. Wash. St., Lowell, Mass. I Warsaw, N. Y. X 180 Belmont St., Brockton, llflass. III S10 Cooper Bldg., Denver, Colo. IV S 701 Twiggs St., Tampa, Florida II S G7 Pleasant St., Clinton, llflass. XII S 422 W. Biddle St., Baltimore, llld. I 135 HighlandAve.,Winchester,ll'Iass. VI S Larchmont, N. Y. 53431 Qfecllnique 1905 QZec5nique 1905 Name and Society Class Course Home Address Paquet, Victor Hugo, '05 XIII 286 14th St., Portland, Ore. Parker, Edward Francis, Ir., 4 IX 3 Salem St., Reading, Mass. Parker, Louie Adelbert, Parker, Lovell Hallet, Parlin, Raymond Washington, Parsons, Galt Fayette, Pastoriza, Hugh Girard, Patch, Emerette Qphelia, Patch, Ralph Reginald, Patten, Iane Boit, Paulsen, Hans Krieger, Payne, Frank Edward, E A E, Payne, James Harvey, Peabody, Alfred, Peabody, Alvin Luther, Peabody, Qctavius Libbey, E A E, Pease, Leon Murray, A A 211, Peck, Sumner Stevens, Peiler, Karl Ernst, Peirce, Chadwell, Pendergast, Roland Ball, Percival, Harry Spaulding, Perkins, Grafton Brookhouse, Perry, George Wason, Phelps, Earle Benard, S.B., Phelps, Eugene, AT A, Phelps, Fred Sydney, Philbrick, Herbert Shaw, A.B. Phillips, Lee, Phillips, Robert Stanley, Phinney, Robert Morris, Pierce, Fred Merton, Pierce, Howard Leroy, Pinkerton, T. C., A.B., CDI' A, Pirie, Frederick Alexander, Pitkin, Iames Sherman, Pitts, Henry Sullivan, Pitts, Iames Albert, Place, Mark Hopkins, Plummer, Harold Cleveland, Poland, Frank Webber, Polhemus, James Highie, Pollister, Edward Barker, Polsey, Chester Alanson, Poole, Burwell, Poole, Frederick Parsons, 53443 IV 1255 W. 6th St., Los Angeles, Cal. I Osterville, Mass. II 19 Winthrop Ave., Wollaston, Mass. VI S 1623 N. Colvert St., Baltimore, Md. VI 304 Main St., Houston, Texas VII S Lexington, Mass. XI 28 Lincoln St., Stoneham, Mass. VII S 21 St. Iames Ave., Boston, Mass. VI S 21 Kastelsvej, Copenhagen, Denmark 14 Webster St., Winchester, Mass. XIII X 108 So. 4th St., Wilmington, N. C. IX 19 Chestnut St., Salem, Mass. Little Neck, Ipswich, Mass. X 2 Grant St., Haverhill, lVIass. II S Toledo, Ohio 506 Main St., Lewiston, Me. VI 56 Allen Place, Hartford, Conn. I 936 Hinman Ave., Evanston, Ill. VI 5717 Monroe Ave, Chicago, Ill. VI S Burlington, Vt. V 203 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. 99 Brooks St., West Medford, Mass. XIII XIII VIIG Lawrence, Mass. II S 220 E. 60th St., Chicago, Ill. II Lowell St., Andover, Mass. II S 20 College Ave., Waterville, Maine II West Hanover, Mass. V Amherst, Mass. VI Barnstable, Mass. II 57 South St., Brockton, Mass. Clayton, N. I. Walbrook, Baltimore, Md. II S 48 Bradstreet Ave., Revere, Mass. IV S 61 Sewall Ave., Brookline, Mass. IV S 81 Pinckney St., Boston, Mass. II S Quincy Mansion, Wallaston, Mass. I S Fryeburg, Maine III S 111 Hutchings St., Roxbury, Mass. II Nahant, Mass. UVIHSS- III 18 Moreland Ave., Newton Centre, I 2 Atlantic St., Portland, Me. I 154 Summer St., Somerville, Mass. VI 3 Victoria St., Dorchester, Mass. VI 19 Concord Sq., Boston, Mass. I VS Name and Society Class Poole, Stephen Kendall, A K E, '07 Poor, Edward Joseph, 6 Poor, Fred Weed, Pope, Ahrend Qliver, Pope, Allen, Porter, Arthur Peabody, Potter, Eugene Voorhees, Potter, Qrrin William A III, Potter, Powell, Sarah Emeline, Powell, George Hardy, X CID, Prendergast, John, A.B., Prentiss, George William, E A E, Prescott, Albert George, Prichard, Charles Rollins, Prince, Albert Senior, 2 X, Proudf oot, Gordon llfIcIntyre, Prouty, Gardner Edward, Pulman, Qscar Stoddard, Jr. , B.A., Quinlan, George A., A.B., 2 X, Quinlan, John Vincent, Radfor Ralph, Rand, d, George Stanley, Paul Justus, C.E., Robert, fb I' A, Ranney, Willis, Rapier, John Bernard, B.S., Rausch, Chester Conrad, Raymond, Charles Abel, Raymond, Frank Everett, Raynolds, Russell Peter, X CID, Read, Albert Manton, fb B E, Read, Edward Mason, Jr., CD 2 K, Rech, Williani Frederick, Redding, William Allen, Jr., Reed, Earl Howell, Jr., A KE Reed, Harold Douglass, Reed, Ralph Qmer CHD X, Reed, Rufus Cook, Regest Rehn, ein, Walter Philip, John Franklin, Renton, Ralph Waldo, Reyburn, John R., A.B., A XII, Rhodes, George Irving, Rice, Roger Leavitt, Rice, Rowland Grenville, Rich, Charles James, Clarence Brewster, E X, course Home Adm-ess V 6 nique X S 116 Harrison St., Chicago, Ill VI S 3 Holly St., Salem, Mass. VI S 115 Lowell St., Peabody, Mass. VI 36 Cliff Ave., Winthrop, Mass. II 34 Dorchester St., Springfield, Mass. I Sherborn, Mass. I 157 Walnut St., Somerville, Mass. I 4800 Ellis Ave., Chicago, Ill. IV S Acworth, N. H. VI S Kansas City, Mo. XIII 709 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. I S 534 Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. II 207 Elm St., Holyoke, Mass. IMass. II 14 Whitman St., New Dorchester, II 17 Sagamore St., Lynn, Mass. X S 2915 Reading Road, Cincinnati, O. VI 1741 Briar Place, Chicago, Ill. II Littleton, Mass. X 372 Hamilton St., Albany, N. Y. I S Houston, Texas 52 High St., Brookline, Mass. XIII A 74 E. Hancock Ave., Detroit, Mich. XIII S 2881 Broadway, New York City II 1073 Center St., New Center, Mass. I St. Paul, lVIinn. VI 985 Government St., Mobile, Ala. II S 37 Huntington Ave.,HydePark,lVIass. XII Essex, Mass. II S Essex, Mass. III 1352 Lincoln Ave., Denver, Colo. II S 63 Summit St., Pawtucket, R. I. I S 5738 Cates Ave., St, Louis, lVIo. II 1217 Pratt Ave., Chicago, Ill. II S 412 West End Ave., New York City IV S 4758 Lake Ave., Chicago, Ill. VI 105 Green St., hflelrose H'l'ds, llflass. III 517 Franklin St., ll4el. I-I'l'ds, Nlass. III Newburyport, llflass. V 92 Wyman St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. III S 10 Lee Ave., New London, Conn. V 112 High Rock St., Lynn, hflass. VI S 4599 Lindell Ave., St. Louis, RIO. VI 64 Chestnut St., Andover, il-Iass. VII S VVilliamstown, llflass. XIII 192 Summer St., Stamford, Conn. II S 15 Cottage St., Norwood, Blass. I3-151 1905 Qiecilnique 1905 urse Home Address Name and Society Class Co Rich, Edward Benjamin, A.B., '04 VI S 158 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass. 7 Rich, Waldo Alton, Jr., Rich, Williston Canfield, A T A, 6 Richards, Alexander Webster, 4 Richards, Karl Willis, 7 Richards, Nathaniel Atherton 5 Richardson, Bertram Allen, 112 B E 5 Richardson, Charles Dana, 6 Richardson, Edwin Cole, 7 Richardson, Edward Miner, A CID, 6 Richardson, Frederic L. W., A B 4 Richardson, Henry Kneeland, 4 Richardson, Max Currier, 4 Richmond, Waldemar Spaulding, 5 Richter, John Ludwig, 7 Riddell, Guy Crosby, 4 Riebel, Elroy C. 4 Riley, Lewis Adams, Jr., A K E 6 Rinearson, William C., Jr., E X 5 Ripley, Franklin, Jr., FP 2 K 7 Rippey, Attwood Eugene, 5 Rivero, Manuel 6 Rivitz, Seymour Moses, 6 Robbe, Louis Ernest, 5 Robbins, Donald Goodrich, 7 Robbins, Hallet Rice, A B 5 Roberts, Albert Arthur, 5 Roberts, Arthur Osborne, 4 Robinson, Samuel, 4 Robinson, Winslow Davis, A K E 7 Rocheleau, Walter Claver, A B 7 Rockwood, Edward F., E A E 4 Rodd, George Henry, 7 Rodgers, Charles Loring, A Y 5 Rogers, James Earl, 6 Rogers, James Hampton, 2 X 5 Rogers, James Smith, 7 Roland, John Wilson, B A 4 Rollins, Harry Tebbetts, if 2 K 4 Rood, Vernon Stone 7 Root, John Allen, 6 Ropes, Fanny, 4 Rose, Robert Ware, 6 Ross, Robert John, 7 Rowe, Edward Bennett, 6 Rowe, Henry Woodbury, 4 53461 III Dedham, Mass. VI S Red Wing, Minn. IV 410 7th St., S. W., Wash'gton, D.C I 22 Regent St., West Newton, Mass IV 362 Front St., Weymouth, Mass. IV S 39 East 83d St., New York City VI 132 10th St., N. E.,Wash'ton, D. C II S 239 Hilton Ave., Redlands, Cal. II S 47 Walnut St., Natick, Mass. IV S Warren St., Brookline, Mass. 10 Chatham Place, Lynn, Mass. VIII I Pelham, N. H. I 76 Center St., Adams, Mass. IV 1040 No. American St., Phila., Pa. III 90 Myrtle St., Somerville, Mass. IV S 180 W. 9th Ave., Columbus, Ohio II 1109 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa II S Hamilton, Ohio II Troy, N. H. III 86 Powell St., Brookline, Mass. II S Fabrica El Porvenir, Mexico I S 13 Ashland St., Boston, Mass. I Peterboro, N. H. II 33 Mulberry St., Springfield, Mass. I 290 McGregor St., Manchester,N.H VI S Rochester, N. H. XIII 32 Lynde St., Salem, Mass. V S 21 Oakley St., Dorchester, Mass. XII S Harrison St., Stapleton, L. I., N.Y I S Woonsocket, R. I. II 961 Beacon St., Newton Cn'r, Mass VI S 23 Warriner Ave., Springfield, Mass II S 115 Oak St., Binghamton, N. Y. XIII S Wrentham, Mass. VI S 140 East Third St., Maysville, Ky. II S Byfield, Mass. I Aylesford, Nova Scotia II 1611 Arlington Ave., Des Moines, Ia II Jeanesville, Pa. III Raymond Ave., St. Louis, Mo. IV 114 Federal St., Salem, Mass. 3 Orchard Circle, Clifton, Mass. XIII III S Belmont, Mass. VIII 4 Blynman Ave., Gloucester, Mass. IV 185 Iackson St., Lawrence, Mass. Name and Society Rowell, Wiear Louis, Rubel, Milton, B.S., Ruggles, Guy Hall, Ruggles, Mary Julia, Runey, Charles Francis, Rupf, Ernest Louis, Russ, Donald Edwin, Russell, Arthur Edmands, Russell, Clifford Barstow, Russell, Lester Asa, Russell, Leonard Pomeroy, Ryan, 1da Annah Sadtler, Philip Bridges, Saegmtiller, Fredlk B., B.S., C.E., Sage, Merton Wilfred, 7 Sage, William Hampden, Jr., A '11, Sammet, Charles Frank, S. B., Sampson, Roswell Eustis, Sanborn, John Royal, Sanders, Ralph Barton, Santry, Joseph Vincent, Sargent, Edward Haynes, Sargent, Harry James, Samuel Peter, Sargent, Sargent, Ralph Nelson, Sarratea, Roberto Browne, Saville, Charles Jr., Sawin, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Scannell, Roger Francis, Jr., Schaefer, Henry Christian, E AE, Schapira, Hersu, Schlabach, Ross Pelton, 2 X, Schlemm, Leonard Earnest, Schmeisser, Ernest Gail, CP I' A, Schmidt, Frederic Becker, Schofield, Lane, CP 1' A, Scholtes, Alexander Joseph, Schonthal, Derso Clarence, Schulte, Ross Russell, Schumacher, Waldron Page, A K E, Schwartz, Leon, A.B., R Schwartz, Melvin Humbert, Schwarz, Frederic Joseph, A.B., Scofield, Edward Candee, Seaver, Samuel, Segar, Ralph Le Roy, 3 A E, Class Course Home Address II 31 Hardy Road, Swampscott, Mass. 111 S 1507 N. 10th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 111 23 Grand St., Reading, Mass. V 23 Wendell St., Cambridge, Massf V Belmont, Mass. 11 128 Union St., Lawrence, Mass. V 12 Hone Ave., Oil City, Pa. Medford, Mass. X111 2 Franklin St., 11 West Hanover, Mass. VI 331 Wilder St., Lowell, Mass. 77 Wendell St., Pittsfield, Mass. 19 Hammond St., Waltham, Mass. X 336 W. Horter St., Philadelphia, Pa. XIII S Cherrydale, Va. VIII 18 Bradshaw St., Nledford, Mass. 1 83 Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Mass. G73 Sheridan St., Jamaica Plain, 1V1ass. 111 52 Washington St., Medford, Mass. VI BroadwayandPowel.Av.,Newport,R.1 II 475 Westford St., Lowell, Mass. VI S 97 Dale St., Roxbury, Mass. VIII ll Titcomb St., Newburyport, Mass. X111 24 Rockingham St., Lynn, Mass. VIII S Littleton, Mass. X 73 Grant St., Lynn, Mass. 111 S Valparaiso, Chile X1 Waban, Mass. 111 38 Taylor St., Holyoke, Mass. 700 Huntington Ave.,Roxbury,Mass. 1V S S55 Oak St., Buffalo, N. Y. V111 S Kronenstrasse 51, Karlsruhe, Ger'y. X111 Alvledina, Ohio 1 S 81 Francis St., Brookline, Mass. V1 2401 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. 1V S 26 King St., Westfield, Mass. 111 S Newtonville, Mass. IV S 259 Park St., Dorchester, 1N1ass. II S 242 W. Sth Ave., Columbus, Ohio X111 S 523 GirardAv.,N.lV1inneapolis,Nlinn. 111 17 Beach St., Wollaston, 1N'1ass. IV S 45 Delancey St., New York, N. Y. 1X Weston, Mass. VI Ballston Spa, N. Y. X111 Sound View, Stamford, Conn. X111 S Waban, hflass. VI S 7 Granite St., Westerly', R. 1. V1 L 347 J ?Iec5nique 1 oo 5 Ceclinique 1905 Name and Society Class Course Home Address Seiglie, Nestor Manuel, Sellew, Francis Leo, Senger, Richard Warren, Severy, Frank Joseph, A.B., Seymour, Allan, Ek '11, Seyms, Robert Wyndham, A Y, Shapira, Samuel, Shapleigh, Charles Henry, Sharp, Shaw, Shaw, Shaw, Shaw, Shaw, Benjamin Karl, Chester Roy, George Herbert, Howard Payne, John Whitman, Thomas, Sheafe, Calvin Richards, Shedd, Ray Elmer, Sheldon, William Adams, Sherlock, John George, Sherman, Andrew Bartlett, Jr., Sherman, Arthur Louis, Sherman, Henry Stoddard, Shurtleff, Ralph, Siebrecht, Henry Benjamin, Simmers, Clayton Miller, E, X, Simmons, Herman Roswell, Simmons, John Edgar, Simonds, Clark David, XXII, Simonds, Fred Washburn, Simons, Russell Bissell, Simpson, Guy Carleton, Simpson, Horace Gardner, Simpson, Willard Eastman, Skowronski, Stanislaus, Slack, Small, Small, Smart, Smart, Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, Smith, H3481 Edgar Percival, Gilbert, Harry Alonzo Campbell, Charles Edwin, William Fuller, Albert Howell, Albert Loomis, Arthur Ditson, Charles H., B.L., AA KID, Converse, Edgar Field, A.B., Edward Church, A.B., Edwin Lawrence, X CD, I Sagua la Grande, Cuba III 38 Worcester St., Natick, Mass. III Ball and Cole Sts., Port Jervis, N.Y I S Chase Mills, Me. I 122 Arlington St., E. Orange, N. J VI 181 Collins St., Hartford, Conn. III S SO Green St., Boston, Mass. II S 228 W.Wate1'St.,Lock Haven, Pa. XIII Nantucket, Mass. VI 14 Tremont St., Brockton, Mass. XI S Belmont, Mass. I Bucksheld, Me. III S Clementsport, Nova Scotia VI Billington St., Plymouth, Mass. II Harvard, Mass. I 212 Highland Ave., Somerville,Mass III Ashby, Mass. II S Blue Hill Ave., Mattapan, Mass. VI Fitchburg, Mass. I Mansfield, Mass. I S 933 Prospect St., Cleveland, Ohio II 6 Riverside Park, Taunton, Mass. VI S 335 Broadway, Astoria, N. Y. XIII A G 6 Phoenixville, Pa. II S 30 Humbolt Ave., Providence, R. I X S 34 SouthCentral Av.,Wol'ston,IVIass IX S Manchester, Vermont. I S 52 Shawmut Ave., Marlboro, Mass. XIII S 12 High St., Greenfield, Mass. I San Antonio, Texas. IV 22 Crescent St., Chelsea, Mass. I San Antonio, Texas. V 2 Claremont Park, Boston, Mass. VI North Abington, Mass. II 428 Lexington St., Waltham, Mass XIII S 23 Norman St., Salem, Mass. II Greenheld, Mass. IV S Lewiston, Maine 5 Elmwood Park, Malden, Mass. XIII V Hamilton, Mass. V 38 Falcon St., East Boston, Mass. I 35 Adelbert St., Cleveland, Ohio I Lincoln St., Waltham, Mass. I 107 Gainsboro St., Boston, Mass. V 25 College St., Amherst, Mass. VI S 2316 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis Name and Society C1 Smith, Ernest Maxwell, A K E Smith, Horace Milliken, Smith, Lemuel David, Smith, Leon Hills, Smith, Lillie Collamore, Smith, Lowell Eldridge, Smith, Preston Morris, AKE, Smith, Sidney Alfred, Smith, Theodore Lincoln, Snow, Edwin Bertrand, Ir., Snow, Frank L., Ph.B., A A QD, Snow, Norman L., Ph.B., A 111, Sosman, Robert Browning, B.S., Soule, Carlton Manson, Soule, Ralph Nelson, Souther, John Glendon, A,B., Spalding, George Riddell, Spalding, William Livingston, Spaulding, Henry Seville, Spear, Herbert Gay, Spencer, Walter C., Sperry, Ellsworth, Sperry, Simon Willard, Spilman, John Armistead, K A, Spinney, Samuel Rogers, Sprague, Ralph Cushman, Squire, Edmund Hincks, Stanley, Philip Bartholomew, Stanton, Everett Cheselro, Staples, Walter Allan, Starkweather, Oscar Henry, Starr, Prank Charles, Stebbins, Roger Pierce, Steel, Edward Thomas, 2d, A XII, Steideman, Theodore William, Steinberger, Emil, ass Course Home Address II 1615 W. Genesee St., Syracuse, N.Y. II S Terre Haute, Ind. XIII S Spokane, Wash. IV Leominster, Mass. XII S 163 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. III S 187 Chestnut St., Chelsea, Mass. X S 1615 W. Genesee St.,Syracuse, N.Y. VI S 500 E. 6th St., Jamestown, N. Y. II S Concord, Mass. VI Medfield, Mass. VI 33 Rowley St., Rochester, N. Y. 276 W. 94th St., New York, N. Y. 204 Vine St., Chillicothe, Ohio XIII VIII VI 70 Putnam St., E. Weymouth, Mass. VI East Greenwich, R. I. II S Allandale St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. V Newburyport, Mass. III 1039 Middlesex St., Lowell, Mass. XI S Ipswich, Mass. X 49SWatertown St.,Newt'nville,Mass. I S 162 Peace St., Providence, R. I. VI S East Windsor Hill, Conn. II S Saulito, Cal. XIIIA G Richmond, Va. VI 435 Main St., Melrose, Mass. XI S 43 Irving St., So. Framingham, Mass. II 16 Magnolia St., lVIalden, Mass. II New Britain, Conn. VI Sharon, Mass. VI S 130 Princess St., St. Iohn, N. B. IV Needham, Mass. I Canning, Nova Scotia S62 South St., Roslindale, Mass. XIII VI 255 Steuben St., Brooklyn, N. Y. IV 4110 N. 11th St., St. Louis, lVIo. V S 75 Congress St., Bradford, Pa. Steinharter, Edgar Clifford, Steinrok, Charles Leonard, Stephens, Albert Leslie, Stetson Stetson Stevens, Stevens Stevens, Stevens, Stevens Edward Everett, Harold Clapp, KID I' A Carl Colton, Henry VVarren, Herbert Alfred, Howard Leslie, Samuel Spaulding, Stevenson, Albert Fletcher, VII 692 Glenwood Ave., Cincinnati, O. XIII 1217 Warnock St., Philadelphia, Pa. III 53 Ellery St., Cambridge, lXfIass. I lVIattapoisett, h'Iass. VI Walpole, lVIass. X S St. Albans, Vt. VI South Gardner, lXfIass. II 142 Cedar St., Haverhill, Klass. XIII 11 Everett St., lVIiddleboro, Nlass. III S 11 Liberty St., Salem, Blass. II 41 Princeton St., East Boston, Blass. l349j Qfecllnique 1 905 Qfeclhzique 190 5 Name and Society Class Course Home Address Stevenson, Charles Joseph, Stevenson, Henry Joseph, Stevenson, Robert Pevey, Stewart, Morris Archer, S.B., Stewart, Donald Argyle, A Y, Stilwell, Edwin Ruthven, Stoddard, Robert Kilburn, Stokely, George Susong, B.S., Stone, Edward Jonas, Story, Edward Carleton, Stow, James Pomeroy, Streeter, Harold Warner, Stresau, Richard, Strickland, Sidney Talbot, AY, Sutton, David, B.S., Sweetser, Albert Edwin, Sweetser, Philip Starr, Swenson, Umar Stephen, A A 112, Swett, Phelps Nash, fl? PA Sykes, Roy Ainsworth, Talbot, Arthur Wilbour, Tappan, Robert, Tarbett, Ralph Edwin, Tarr, Forace Austin, Taylor, Allyn Chandler, Taylor, De Witt McClure, Taylor, Grant Sterne, Taylor, John Hart, Taylor, John Wallace, A.B., Taylor, Robert Edw. Lee, B.A. , A 111, Taylor, Robert Kellogg, Taylor, Winfred Albert, HDI' A, Tebbets, James Hargraves, Ternan, Terence Breifni, Terrell, Herbert Arthur, Terry, Killey Eldridge, Ir., Tetlow, John, Thayer, Ralph Carpenter, Thayer, Robert Ellis, Thomas, Arthur Scott, A T A, Thomas, George Carlyle, Thomas, George Gillette, Jr., Thomas, John Joseph, Thompson, Herman Ellis, Thompson, Lewis Arnett, Thomson, Henry Bowers, B. S., Thorndike, Allston Kinsley, I 350 I X 31 Woodville St., Roxbury, Mass. II 41 Princeton St., East Boston, Mass. II 45 Princeton St., Lowell, Mass. VG9 Alston St., Somerville, Mass. II 213 Elm St., Kalamazoo, Mich. II S 301 Grafton Ave., Dayton, Chio. VI S North Hanover, Mass. ' II S French Broad, Tenn. VI Sherborn, Mass. VI 10 Cypress Place, Lynn, Mass. II 179 College St., Middletown, Conn. XI 29 Quincy St., North Adams, Mass. VI Hohenzollernplatz 48, Ekfurt, Ger. IV S 455 Audubon Road, Boston, Mass. I Richmond, Indiana II S Metcalf, Mass. VI Newton Highlands, Mass. IV 340 N. State St., W. Concord,N.I-I. I 1851 Mass. Av., N.Cambridge,Mass. V 26 Cherry St., North Adams, Mass. VI S 3 Nottingham St., D'chester, Mass. I Sharon, Mass. XI S 5 Washington St., Stoneham, Mass II 75 ThorndikeSt.,E.C,rr1bridge,Mass. II 15 Allyn Place, Lawrence, Mass. II 310 E. 9th Ave., Homestead, Pa. XIII Newport, R. I. IV 17 John St., Chelsea, Mass. II 211 North Professor St., Oberlin, O. IV 182 York St., Norfolk, Va. I So. Glastonbury, Conn. I 15 Allyn Place, Lawrence, Mass. II S Somersworth, N. H. III S Bedford, Nova Scotia II 14 Lowell Ave., Newtonville, Mass. VI S 413 County St., New Bedford,Mass. V 111 Friend St., Adams, Mass. III 10 Hamilton St., Dorchester, Mass. II 28 Tudor St., Chelsea, Mass. II 111 Stevens St., Lowell, Mass. II 777 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. Wilmington, N. C. VI 114 Taylor St., Waltham, Mass. II 298 Pawtucket St., Lowell, Mass. VI S 504 Third St., Warren, Pa. IV S 1508 Rio Grande St., Austin, Texas XIII 68 Harvard St., Medford,Mass. Name and Society Class Thornton, Edmund Abiel, 307 Thurlow, Gscar Gowen, 4 Tillson, Percy Ethan, 6 Todd, William Newman, 4 Tomlinson, Everett Franklyn, 6 Tompson, William Randall, 7 Topper, William, A.B., 5 Tower, Gilbert Sanders, A Y, 5 Towle, Freeman Eugene, 7 Trask, Walter Haywood, Jr., fl? B E 6 Trauerman, Carl Joseph, . 7 Treuthardt, Ernest L. P., 6 Tripp, Edwin Pool, 4 Tripp, Louis Hillman, 6 Trowbridge, Arthur Townsend, 6 Trowbridge, William Waldo, 4 True, Albert Otis, 5 Trull, Alden Harold, 7 Tresnon, John Ewart, 7 Truscott, Starr, 7 Tsuruta, Katsuzo, 6 Tuck, William Oliver, Jr., 5 Tucker, Clarence Edward, 6 Tuckerman, Louis, 6 Tufts, William, 5 Tully, Edward Joseph, 7 Tupper, Fred William, Ir., 7 Turgeon, Fremont Nelson, A T A, 4 Turkington, Everett Esten, 7 Turner, Douglas Bennett, 6 Turner, Le Baron, QBE, 5 Turner, Waldso, A Y, 5 Turner, William Camillo, G Tylee, Arthur Kellam, 7 Underhill, Charles Francis, CID K E, 4 Upham, George William, G Upton, Fred Paul, 7 Urquidi, Juan Francisco, 5 Van Amringe, William IVI., CP B E, 7 Van Brunt,Charles Gershom,A.B., 6 Van der Stucken, Frank Ryland, 7 Vanl-look, Franklin James, 6 Varian, Jean Philip, E. A E, G Vaughan, Perry Abraham, 6 Vaughan, Ritchie Walton, 6 Venn, George James, 7 Very, Samuel Rogers Taylor, 7 Course Home Address I 7 Pearl St., Stoneham, lVIass. I Newburyport, Mass.. 1 VI VI 71 Middle St., Newburyport, lVIass. XIII 12 Sea Foam Ave.,Winthrop, Mass. I Wakefield, Mass. 115 E. 100th St., New York City. Cohasset, Mass. 51 Barton St., Providence, R. I. IV XIII I 91 Vernon St., Waltham, Mass. II 845 Pennsylvania Ave.,Denver,Colo. 910 Beech Ave., Allegheny, Pa. III V 1413 Washington St., Boston,Mass. II Westport Mass. II Westport, Mass. II 152 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. III 40 Cross St., West Newton, Mass. XI 3 Bowdoin St.,Newton High's, Mass. III S Spafford Road, Milton, Mass. VI XIII 32 Ashfield St., Roslindale, Mass. II S S Shiba Park, Tokio, Japan III S 57 Portland St., Haverhill, Mass. V 321 Hyde P'kAV., Hyde Park, Mass. II 901 6th St., Greeley, Colo. I 56 Dwight St., Boston, Mass. VI 22 ChestnutAve.,JamaicaPlain,Mass. I S 79 Chestnut St., East Grange, N. J. III Gloucester, Mass. VI 56 Sheafe St., Malden, Mass. III S 24 Pelham St., Newton Centre,lVIass. I Geneva, Ill. VI S Station A, Dallas, Texas II S Trinidad, Cuba VI 7 WashburnTerrace,Brookline,'Mass. X 72 Esmond St., Dorchester, Mass. 20 Atkinson St., Bellows Falls, Vt. 32 Broadway, Beverly, liflass. I lVIexico City, Mexico X 29 Crawford St.,Roxbu1y, Nlass. V S Dedham, lVIass. I Cincinnati, Ghio I 40 Sherman St., Roxbury, Nlass. S Dalton Sq., Lancaster, England VI III 253 Lincoln Ave., Denver, Colo. VI Cole, lVIich. VI Ashland, Va. VI S 37 Ledyard St., Detroit, liflich. IV 2811onadnockRoad,NewtonC.R'Iass. ' 1 I 331 William Frederick, CecBnique 1905 Name and Society Vinton, Merrick E., Ir., X CID, Vonder Horst, Harry R., S.B., Vosbury, Winfred De Witt, Vose, Chester Andrew, Wadsworth, Alexander, P., A.B., Wald, George Gustav, Walker, Albert Willard, Walker, Harry Eugene, Walker, Walker, Walker, Walker, Walker, Walker, Henry Samuel, Ir. Hiram Le Roy, James Grieg, Laurence Tidd, Philip Bangs, Wall, George Albert, Wall, Iohn Richard, A.B., Wallace, William, Wallon, Lewis Arthur, Walsh, lames Lawrence, Walsh, William Iames, Walter, Ernest Albert, Walworth, George Roberts, Ward, Sidney George, B.S., Ware, Raymond, CP I' A, Ware, Samuel Langmaid, Warnock, William H., 2 AE, Warren, Clarke Edward, QE, Washburn, Edward Wight, Wastcoat, Edward, Watt, Arthur Percy, Weaver, Weaver, Webber, Webber, Earll Chase, Maurice Edgar, Paul Baron, Q X, Thomas Gray, Webster, Arthur Stanley, Webster, Frank De Wolf, Weil, Joseph Skrainka, Welch, Edward Gscar, Welch, Geoffrey Wheaton, Wells, Albert Warren, B Q II, Wells, Arthur Edward, Wells, Percy Leonard, Wells, Sidney Deeds, Wentworth, Henry Azor, Wentworth, Reginald Andrew, West, Harry Hyde, Wetherbee, Florence Louise. 53523 Clas '06 s Course Home Address III S 52 Broadway, New York City fMd. 6 III S 512 N. Carrollton, Ave., Baltimore, 4 II 73 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y. 7 I Marion, Mass. 4 IV S 526 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 5 III 40 Montrose St., Somerville, Mass. 5 XI Marlboro, Mass. 7 5 5 6 7 7 6 6 5 7 5 7 6 6 4 4 6 5 5 5 5 4 6 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 5 6 5 7 5 4 6 4 II S 304 South Park Ave., Austin, Ill. I 81 Maple St., Malden, Mass. II 21 Wheeler St., E. Somerville,Mass. III S 2016 Franklin St.,San Francisco, Cal. XI 230 Main St., Stoneham, Mass. I Needham, Mass. II S 167 Andover St., Lawrence, Mass, I S 7 Claremont Park, Boston, Mass. IV S 717 Cabell St., Lynchburg, Va. VIII S 35SpringParkAv.,IamaicaPlain,Mass. VI 174 Pleasant St., Winthrop, Mass. I 421 Meridian St., East Boston, Mass. X 5 Woodville St., Roxbury, Mass. IV Walter's Park, Pa. fMass. VI 931 Centre Street, Newton Centre, VI S23 Foster St., Evanston, Ill. 11 Sayward St., Dorchester, Mass. 103 Thurston St., Somerville, Mass. XIII XIII I S 275 Elm St., Northampton, Mass. II 128 S. Waiola Ave., La Grange, Ill. V Beatrice, Nebraska fMass. III 140 Middleboro Ave., Taunton III 176 Forest St., Winchester Mass. I 121 Green St., Syracuse, N. Y. VI 2405 32d St., Washington, D. C. II Bedford, Mass. II S 179 Lafayette St., Salem, Mass. II 25 Greenville St., Roxbury, Mass. II S 15 Chapman St., Greenfield, Mass. II S 11 Broadway, New York City II S 1 Collins St., Salem, Mass. VI Fergus Falls, Minn. III 335 S. 16th St., Quincy, Ill. III 61 Union Ave., S. Fram'gham,Mass. I S 83 Hall St., Waltham, Mass. X 23 Selwyn St., Roslindale, Mass. 104 Chatham St., Lynn, Mass. VIII II 121 Raymond St., N. C'bridge,Mass. III S 20 Plympton St., Woburn, Mass. V 2 King St., Worcester. Mass. Name and Society Wetherill, John Price, Jr., Wetmore, Laurence, Wetterer, Charles F. W., Wey, James Philip, Weymouth, Albert Pierce, Wheeler, Mildred Frances, Whitaker, William G. H., Jr., Whitcomb, Ralph Nims, CIP 2 K, White, Bertram Nash, White, Edward Wallace, White, George Frederic, White, John Aloysius, White, Jules Edward, White, Nathaniel Aldrich, White, Ray Hill, A.B., Whitehouse, Morris I-Iomans, Whiting, George W. C., A A Q, Whiting, Herbert Stockwell, Whiting, Horatio, Whitman, Kilburn, Jr., Whitmarsh, Alfred Lamson, Whitmore, James Bryant, Whitmore, Walter, Whitney, Erle Francis, Whitney, Harrie Lawrence, Whitney, Harrison Allen, Whitney, Parker Richards, Whittemore, Joseph D., '52 B E, Whittemore, Leslie Clifford, VVhittemore, Walter L., Jr,, Wiard, Qliver lVIartin, B.A., Wick, James Lippincott, Jr., Wiggin, Albert Edward, Wiggin, Harry, VViggins, Elmer W., B.S., db A GD, Wight, llflalcolm Gardner, Wilcox, Frederick Stratton, Wilcox, Herbert llflygatt, AK E, Wilder, Fred Hall, VVilder, Sylvanus IVells, Wilkiemeyer, Frederick Joseph, Wilkins, Harold Street, Wilkinson, Emil, fl? I' A, Willard, Arthur Cutts, fb K E, lfVillconib, George Edward, Willcomb, Roland Howard, Willcox, Frederick Hartwell, Class Course Home Address 2014 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. II Winthrop St., Essex, Mass. VI 61 Middle St., Gloucester, Mass. I 253 Forrest Ave., Atlanta, Ga. I 25 Mather St., New D,chester,Mass. XIII S 122 Elm St., Marlboro, Mass. VI 117 Brownell St., Providence, R. I. I 171 West St., Keene, N. H. V I Machias, Maine V S 47 Whittier St., Andover, Mass. V Franklin Park, Mass. I S 11 Phillips St., Salem, Mass. fMass. I 36 Florence Av., Arlington Heights, XIII 30 North State St., Concord, N. H. VIII S 83 East Ave., Rochester, N. Y. IV S 175 Fourteenth St., Portland, Ore. I S Baltimore, Md. VI 274 Seaver St., Roxbury, Mass. III 2 Gleason St., Dorchester, Mass. I 109 Walnut Ave., Roxbury, Mass. II Abington, Mass. II 840 E. Market St., Akron, Qhio VI 236 Merrimac St., N'wb'yport,Mass. VI 612 Washington St., Natchez, Miss. I S South Framingham, Mass. IV Chicago, Ill. I 55 Pearl St., Bradford, Pa. VI 70 Hunnewell, Ave., Newton, Mass. XI West Pine St., IVIilford, Mass. III 415 Newport Ave., Wollaston, Mass. IV New Britain, Conn. II Youngstown, Qhio. I 17 Park St., Wakefield, Mass. II S 154 Mountain Ave., Malden, Mass. V Warsaw, N. Y. I 32 Beacon St., Newton Centre, lXfIass. IV S 2 Lowell Ave., Newtonville, llflass. X Cleveland, Ohio III 610 llflain St., Bennington, Vt. II 20 Lake St., Cambridge, hflass. V S 735 Saratoga St., Newport, Ky. II Wallingford, Conn. IS 151 Watson St., Buffalo, N. Y. X 1813 13th St., N.VV., VVash., D. C. VII 134 Chestnut St., Chelsea, llass. III S Ipswich, lX'Iass. V Smyrna, N. Y. 53531 Qieclhxique 1905 QfecBnique 1905 Name and Society Class Course Home Address Willey, Nahum Clark, '06 XIII 315 Garfield Ave., Aurora, Ill. Williams, Carl Martin, E X, 7 X Piermont, N, Y, Williams, Clarence Benton, A K E, 4 VI 5 Kemble St., Utica, N. Y. Williams, Edward Thrasher, 7 I S 388 Hamilton Ave., Columbus, 0. Williams, Herbert Lawrance, 6 III S5 Wash. Park, Newtonville, Mass. Williams, James Rice, A Y, G II 196 South 1Sth St., Quincy, Ill. Williams, Ralph Brown, 4 III 89 Federal St., Salem, Mass. Williamson, John Hall, AY, 7 508 Garfield St., Kansas City, Mo. Willis, Charles Frances, 6 III 5 Gates St., South Boston, Mass. Wilson, Edward Lowell, 6 II 14 Russell Ave., Watertown, Mass Wilson, Emery J., A.B., 4 II 213W.Chilli'theAv.,Bellefontaine,O Wilson, Frank Stetson, 4 I S 209 Dudley St., Roxbury, Mass. Wilson, John Cazeneuve, 6 VI S Pass Christian, Miss. Wilson,Lewis Gamaliel,A.B.,2 AE,4 IV 318 So. 1st St., Clarksville, Tenn. Wilson, Wilbur Thomas, Wilson, William Samuel Wing, Edward Howland, Winne, George Morris, A Y, Winship, Louis Clarence, Ph.B., Wires, Ephraim Stanley, Wise, Robert Emmet, Wiseman, John Maurice, Wolfe, Sylvester Cuthbert, Wonson, Harold Sayward, Wood, Dana. Melvin, Wood, Edwin Thomas, EI? K 2, Woodbridge, Richard George, Jr., Woodbury, Ira Vaughn, Woodruff, John Williams, Woodward, William L., AKE, Woodworth, Ernest Temple, Worthington, Isabel, Wright, Frank, Wright, Julian May, A XP, Wright, William H. P., A TA, Wrinkle, John Timothy, Wyman, Alanson Phelps, S.B., Wyman, Walter Brevoort, 111 FA, Wyner, Maurice Edward, Yoder, Bartolette Artman, A T A, Young, George Chester, Young, Harold Eugene, Young, Robert Libbey, Young, William Augustus, Youngerman, Conrad, Yrizarry, Herminio, Zuest, Adolph, Jr., 53543 4 7 7 6 5 7 5 7 6 7 6 4 7 6 4 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 5 6 7 4 6 6 5 6 7 6 7 I S 74 High St., Woburn, Mass. V XIII 155 Ashland St., Roslindale, Mass. 37 So. 6th St., New Bedford, Mass II S 463 Elm St., Chicago, Ill. VI S 79 Elm St., No. Woburn, Mass. IV I 34 Claflin St., Milford, Mass. South Lancaster, Mass. I S 4 Gore St., Cambridge, Mass. I 128Boston Ave. ,WestlVIedford, Mass XIII 110 E. Main St., Gloucester, Mass I Myrtle St., Belmont, Mass. II 11 Auburn St., Concord, N. H. V 13 Pleasant Ave., Somerville, Mass III 72 Lothrop St., Beverly, Mass. XIII A 5735 Monroe Ave., Chicago, Ill. II S 408 Westl45th St.New York, N.Y VI 81 Aycrigg Ave., Passaic, N. IV Bird Hill Ave.,Wellesley Hills, Mass XIII 301 Overton St., Newport, Ky. XIII 2022 G.St.,N.W.,Washington, D.C XIII 172 Jackson St., Lawrence, Mass. IV 23 Suffolk St., Holyoke, Mass. IV S Manchester Centre, Vt. XII S Crown Point, N. Y. VI S 235 Magnolia St., Dorchester,Mass I S 614 No. 22d St., Omaha, Neb. II 10 Rawson St., Dorchester, Mass. VI 41 Rutland Sq., Boston, Mass. V S 496 Main St., Haverhill, Mass. I S Exeter, N. H. IV S 525 W. Third St.,Des Moines, Ia. I San German, Porto Rico VI S 215 Shillita St., Cincinnati, Qhio. i A -P ri :'f-'ff-. 1 ' '-f' ' I ., . , I .V yr 11 V' g , . ' Hara .V . ,a x 'Ex 4 wgugigf 64.1.31 I-2: -1 . f . gg.: , -,-- 4 Wa- 'H ' V, . '-Mfaa. -,Q mm - we V 1 E 1 fi-5 1? 41 Zwfil' . , . P-: QQ: i,-2J:5i5'.- w: rv' E r '- 'Q - . H fhiyairgkf' '.T.3l'1..f2-P., -'-- -132 ' f , 1 it NIJ' .aE1't- -xl 'fly.-41.21. -vi-f-iii'iff V' ' . 1 - .f.... . H 'Ll ' . La- 1 J T' Q :LJ -.Iii f-1423.5 -.zszlz e.+125Zz224.:.g-. , ' , , - ' -'. C, .yn -4 , - -wg, 5, 1 V . - .. , . f .. ,A .,.-1.1, W, 4 -i ff :f y iw' 1451, ,fr 9 -L .-g.. fp . 1 :F ' g. A , - ' . V fi '11 13-. 41 0 gg ...,.,.,1,gr2 , -il 21-4511-f',Z- VW ,-1' ., V x ' -1- ' ' . -- -. .. ,, -1. -. ' ' e' -..4 E. -. ' .- salvff .-W HE Board of Editors wish to express their gratitude to those who have, by their assistance, made it possible for them to issue this book. IN GENERAL: many members of the Faculty, especially President Pritchett and Dean Burton, and also Mr. Powers. LITERARY: Frank H. Briggs, James P. Munroe, Robert P. Bigelow, Alan W. Rowe, John E. Mahan, George H. Powell, Bernard Blum, Milton Rubel, Eugene Burton, William L. Spalding, Merrick E. Vinton, and K. G. Chipman. ARTISTIC: C. A. Anderson, G. R. Ainsworth, E. W. Bonta, J. H. Brown, S. A. Caine, Crowell, Campbell, L. J. T. Decary, C. O. Egerton, C. F. Farnsworth, A. H. Hepburn, S. M. Henry, A. W. Hertz, R. F. Jackson, R. E. Knight, E. F. Kriegsman, E. C. Lowe, C. G. Loring, S. A. Marx, C. B. Mayer, F. H. Merrill, Miss E. J. Newkirk, G. C. Noble, H. S. Pitts, J. L. Richter, B. A. Richardson, E. C. Riebel, H. J. Simpson, A. J. Scholtes, S. T. Strickland, and J. T. Wrinkle. The Technology Club for furnishing them with a place of meeting, and the many whose drawings, for one reason or another, we were unable to use. Lsssj f35S1 'ju Memoriam ALFRED WILLIAM BRUTON, '03 DIED MAY 1, 1903 HAROLD RICKETSON SWEETSER, '05 DIED JUNE 15, 1903 THOMAS BELL WATSON, '06 GEORGE ELDRIDGE DUNHAM, '05 DIED JANUARY 24, 1904 I .REITS 'I' W E A I Q . 1 I- L'u.c.-iff S R, 1' ff 1Q,5i5,:,:. - . L. 7 .A-, 1 . ,1f 'lt' 51f.f,, M ' 4 aa '. 1 i '- Org .f.- ' I 1 . 3 a. . , I f ' ' - ' ' 'A :'f55f9 f'iI5 fh: ' . ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . Page 355 ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS . . . 10 ALL-ROUND CONTEST ..... 152 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF ALPHA DELTA PHII 109 ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS ..... 237 ALUMNI STATISTICS . 306 APPLIED DRAMATICS . 299 ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY 174 ASSOCIATE FACULTY . 294 ASSISTANTS . . 40 ATHLETICS .... 125 All-Round Contest . . . 152 Dual Meet with Dartmouth . 139 Fall Handicap Meet . 148 Field Day, 1903 . . , 153 Indoor Nleet ..... 150 N. E. I. A. A., 17TH ANNUAL lV1EET 136 Spring Meet ..... 146 ATHLETIC QAI-ticlej . . 126 ATHLETIC ADVISORY COUNCIL . 130 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION, M. I. T. . 133 BANJO CLUB . . . 220 BASEBALL TEAM, 1905 . 166 BASEBALL TEARI, 1906 . 167 BASKET BALL TEAM . 162 BUYERS' GUIDE . 363 CALENDAR . . 6 CHEMICAL SOCIETY 186 CHESS CLUB . 195 CHICAGO CLUB . . 197 CHRESTOMATHIE FRAPPE . 265 CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY . 177 CIVIL ENGINEERING SUMMER SCHOOL . 259 351 1 J QfecBnique 1905 CLASS DAY EXERCISES . ACLASSES, THE . . Senior . . Junior . Sophomore Freshman . LCLASS HISTORIES Senior . . Junior 4 . Sophomore . . Freshman . . CLASS STATISTICS, 1905 'CLEOFAN . . . CLUBS ..... 'CONCERNING THE COLLEGES . 'CONTENTS . . . CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETY . 'CORPORATION . . . ICORPS OF CADETS .... 'CORRESPONDENCE AND CLIPPINGS . fCOURSES .... . CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM . . DEDICATION . . . DINNERS Senior Junior . Sophomore .... Freshman .... DUAL MEET, M. I. T. ws. DARTMOUTH ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY . END ...... EXETER CLUB FACTS . . . FACULTY, THE . FALL HANDICAP MEET . FENCING TEAM . . FIELD DAY, 1903 . . FOOTBALL TEAM, 1906 FOOTBALL TEAM, 1907 F OREWORD . . . FRATERNITIES . . Chi Phi . . . Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Psi . . Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon . f358j Page 244 . 50 51 57 67 73 53 61 69 75 302 191 189 314 5 228 9 232 298 320 142 2 201 202 203 139 179 362 194 313 46 148 160 153 154 . 156 opposite 4 . 81 . 89 91 87 103 95 FRATERNITIES- Continued Phi Beta Epsilon . Page 93 Phi Gamma Delta . . 99 Phi Kappa Sigma . . 107 Phi Sigma Kappa . . 101 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 97 Sigma Chi . . 83 Theta Chi .... , 105 Theta Xi .... . 85 Qther Fraternities Represented . . 111 FRATERNITY SUMMARY . . . . 112 FUTURE LOCATION OF THE INSTITUTE . . 233 GEOLOGY JOURNAL CLUB . . A . 198 GLEE CLUB ..... l . 216 GOLF CLUB . . . . 159 GRADUATE SECRETARIES . 241 GRADUATION EXERCISES . 245 GRADUATION WEEK . . 243 GRINDS . . . . 269 HEART TO HEART TALKS . 292 IDYL, AN . . . . 300 HAMMER AND TONGS . . 115 INDEX . . . . 357 INDOOR MEET . . 150 IN MEMORIAM . . . 356 INSTITUTE COMMITTEE . . . 224 INSTRUCTORS .... . 35 INSTRUCTORS IN MECHANICS ARTS . . 42 K2 S ...... . 114 JUNIOR PICTURE . . . . 58 JUNIOR PROMENADE . 249 JUNIOR WEEK . . . 247 JUNIOR WEEK PROGRAM . 248 LETTERS TO A BROTHER . 204 LIST OF STUDENTS . . . 321 LOCAL SOCIETIES . . . 113 Hammer and Tongs . 115 K 2 S . . . . 114 Round Table . . . 117 LOWELL CLUB . . . 199 NIANDAMAN CLUB . . . 116 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY . 184 MINING ENGINEERING SOCIETY . . . 181 lV1INING ENGINEERING SUMMER SCHOOL . . 254 MISCELLANEOUS .... . 223 MISSOURI CLUB . . 193 C3591 Qieclinique 1905 Qieclhmique 1905 M. I. T. A. A. . . MODERN GALLANT, A . MUSICAL CLUBS . Banjo Club . Glee Club . Mandolin Club . . Qfficers' ..... NAVAL ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY . N. E. I. A. A ..... N. E. I. A. A. 17TH ANNUAL MEET N. E. I. G. A ..... N. E. I. T. A ..... OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION . PAWNED RING, THE . PENNSYLVANIA CLUB . PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES PROFESSORS . . . PROFS' PICNIC, THE PUBLICATIONS . . . RECORDS .... RELAY TEAMS, 1906 AND 1907 . RELAY TEAIVI, M. I. T. . . . RESTORATION OF AMERICAN COLLEGES RESEARCH STAFF .... ROUND TABLE .... SENIOR PORTFOLIO . . . SOCIETY OF ARTS .... SPECIAL TEACHERS AND LECTURERS SPRING MEET .... STATISTICS ..... SUMMER SCHOOLS . SWAN, THE . . TEAMS: Basket Ball . Baseball, 1905 Baseball, 1906 Cross-Country Football, 1906 Football, 1907 . Golf Team . . . Relay, 1906 and 1907 . Relay, M. I. T. . . Track ..... Tug-Of-War, 1906 and 1907 . TECH BERGWERKER VEREIN . . TECH, THE .... f360j Page 133 293 215 220 216 218 222 183 132 136 168 164 11 118 196 173 12 296 207 169 157 144 289 43 117 214 188 44 146 302 253 268 162 166 167 142 154 156 159 157 144 134 158 200 208 TECH HOUSE . Page TECH REUNION TKECH SHOW CArric1ej . TECH SHOW, 1903 TECH SHOW, 1904 TECHNIQUE BOARD . . . TECHNIQUE ELECTORAL COMMITTEE . TECHNOLOGY AT THE WORLD's FAIR TECHNOLOGY CLUB . . . TECHNOLOGY QUARTERLY . TECHNOLOGY REVIEW . . TRACK TEAM TUG-OF-WAR, 1906 AND 1907 TENNIS ASSOCIATION . . VIEWS . . . WALKER CLUB WEARERS OF THE T . WISCONSIN CLUB Y. M. C. A. I XF 4 .-'X-A XX f! D N 54,521 pi JEOJ? ZR Q if 7 I 75, In WS WSJ JM V185 L 231 229 119 250 252 210 226 47 227 212 213 134 158 165 264 190 131 192 230 1 3131 J Qfecljnique 1905 T ? I i . I I l W. I A 1 Y 1 , 5 w v Cfassifieb Biaf of Qlbberfisers ALKALIES: Solvay Process Co., Solvay, N. Y. ANILINE COLORS: H. A. Metz 85 Co., New York: Kuttroff, Pickhardt 55 Co., New York: New York 85 Boston Dyewood Co., Boston. BANKERS: National Shawmut Bank, Boston, Old Colony Trust Co., Boston. BATTERIES: Leclanche Battery Co., New York. BELTING: Bay State Belting Co., Boston, Schultz Belting Co., St. Louis. BLOCKS: Boston 86 Lockport Block Co., Boston. BOILERS: Atlantic Works, East Boston, Roberts Iron Works, Cambridge: Edward Kendall 56 Sons, Cambridgeport. BOOKS: Old Corner Book Store, Boston, A. D. Maclachlan, Boston: C. 56 G. Merriam, Springfield, Mass. BORING TOOL: Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago: Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co., New Bedford, Mass. BRASS AND BRONZE SUPPLIES! J. H. MaCafferty 8: Co., Boston: C. E. Rogers, Boston. BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION: American Bridge Co., New York. BUILDING: Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston: L. D. Willcutt, Boston. CABLES: National Conduit and Cable Co., New York, A. Leschen 86 Sons Rope Co., St. Louis: Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. CAFES: Qak Grove Creamery Co., Boston. CASTINGS: Homer F. Livermore, Boston, American Tool and Machine Co., Boston. Ibl ESTABLISHED 1342- E ' ,E ,Y,,,,, 1951: f M Z f I A X 4 .nz 2.5, . A NS., f1 ,, f ,vff wx, I W. 0,--,fq,.,4f. f css- 'tw H ,Wffaf , 441 iW,I5'J ., I W 'f I , III-I III If I III III ,fy I III I v - -I-Q I III I, 'I I I I I In In, ,ls I III II 'I III III '- I 1-If II Iii IMI 'PH I PIIIIIIIIIII I IllIIIIIIl I GENERAL OFFICES, 132 FEDERAL ST, BosToN NEW YORK oFFlcE, PARK ROW BUILDING Ap, ' pwvfv . -J XX Z J X S XXX ' 43f'J-- ' 'S I In ,Wm ,mp If mg - MIN: W A' BENT PIPES :III REDUCE I, I A XI I II I ' I I nw X, , WH ,I FRlc'rloN, I I I :M I I wh' -' I' I I' SAVE JOINTS, If N AND If II II If V 14. ,I PROVIDE FOR If :L I- I IMI KI 1 .5 I: I IW EXPANSION AND II ,, .II ' I I 1 5 'In CONTRACTION. I 'II TTx IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII HIGH PRESSURE VALVES PIPE AND FITTINGS WALWORTH FLANGED OVER JOINT CWILL NOT WEEP UNDER 200 LBS PRESSURE? 2 i m i L EF :E E Q....-- I-D225 I I I XI 1 I IIN 'I A III, 4 II I In EI 'I fssuws I I IW I II '3 IT I I '1' I In IIIIIHIIIWIIIIIIIUQ W HIIHU11Wil-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII41 '1HIII!!l,- ' I I I .-K-------EE AEEEEEAFAQQZE .S,. ,. UE- I gif 2 , E ' 5.2 Q i 'PE ' 2 I V2 5' If-E JI i , ., ,,,,. . ,,,, -3 If nn 25625 I Insert A CHEMICALS: Baker 85 Adamson Chemical Co., Easton, Pa., Cochrane Chemical Co., Boston, Kuttroff, Pickhardt 85 Co., New York, Roess- ler 85 Hasslacher Chemical CO., New York, Eimer 85 Amend, New York, Merrimac Chemical Co., Boston, Avery Chemical CO., Boston, H. A. Metz 85 Co., New York: Solvay Process Co., Solvay, N. Y., Schoellkopf, Hartford 85 Hanna, Buffalo, N. Y. CHEMICAL APPARATUS: Elmer 85 Amend, New York. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS: Henry Carmichael, Ph.D., Boston. CHEMICAL TESTING LABORATORIES: Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, Pitts- burgh, Pa. CLOTHING: George H. Lane, Boston. COAL: Curran 85 Burton, Boston. COAL HANDLING MACHINERY. CSee Conveying Machineryj CONDUITS: National Conduit 85 Cable Co., New York. CONTRACTORS: Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston. CONVEYING MACHINERY: John A. Mead Mfg. Co., New York, Jeffrey Mfg. Co.,-Columbus, O., Rawson 85 Morrison Mfg. Co., Cambridge, A. Leschen 85 Sons Rope Co., St. Louis: Trenton Iron Works, Tren- ton, N. J. CORDAGE: Samson Cordage Works, Boston. CORE OVENS: Millett Core Oven Co., Brightwood, Mass. COTTON MACHINERY: Textile Finishing Machine Co., Providence, R. I. DRAUGHTING INSTRUMENTS: A. D. Maelachlan, Boston, L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass. DRY GOODS: C. F. Hovey 85 Co., Boston. DRILLS AND DRILLING MACHINERY: Morse Twist Drill Co., New Bed- ford, Mass., Hill, Clark85 Co., Boston. DYES: Kuttroff, Pickhardt 85 Co., New York: New York 85 Boston Dye- wood Co., Boston: H. A. Nletz 85 Co., New York, Schoellkopf, Hart- ford 85 Hanna, Buffalo. EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS: Massachusetts Institute of Technology: American School of Correspondence, Chicago: Chauncy Hall School, Boston. ICJ Yliecllnique 1905 Cecfjnique 1905 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS: Stone 8: Webster, Boston. ELECTRICAL GENERATORS AND MOTORS: Ridgeway Dynamo and Engine Co., Ridgeway, Pa.: Holtzer-Cabot Electric Co., Boston fBrooklinel, Mass. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES: Simplex Electrical Co., Boston: Weston Electrical Instrument Co., Newark, N. J. ELEVATORS: Morse, Williams 86 Co., Boston. EMERY WHEELS: Norton Emery Wheel Co., Worcester, Mass. ENGINES: Vilter Mfg. Co., Milwaukee: Wis.: Otto Gas Engine Co., Boston. ENGINEERS: Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston: American Bridge Co., New York: Dean 55 Main, Boston: Densmore 86 LeClear, Boston: French 85 Bryant, Boston: G. H. Barrus, Boston: Arthur F. Gray, Boston: Huey Brothers, Boston: Henry Carmichael, Ph.D., Boston. ENGINEERING JOURNALS: Engineering Record, New York. ENGRAVING: Buxton 85 Skinner, St. Louis: Chas. H. Elliott Co., Phila- delphia: Electric City Engraving Co., Buffalo: American Bank Note Co., New York. EXPRESS AND MOVING! Prescott's Express, Boston. FIRE BRICK: Evens 85 Howard Fire Brick Co., St. Louis. FLAGS: Bent 55 Bush, Boston. FLORISTS: S. Hoffman, Boston. FOUNDRIES: Textile Finishing Machine Co., Providence, R. I. FOUNDRY EQUIPMENT: Millet Core Oven Co., Brightwood, Mass. FOUNDRY FACING: SpringHeld Facing Co., Springiield, Mass. FOUNTAIN PENS: Conklin Pen Co., Toledo, Ohio: Adams, Cushing 55 Foster, Boston. FORGINGS: National Tube Co., McKeesport, Pa. FUEL ECONOMIZERS: Green Fuel Economizer Co., lVIatteawan, N. Y. FURNISHING GOODS! C. F. Hovey 85 Co., Boston. GAS APPARATUS: United Gas Improvement Co., Philadelphia. GAS ENGINES: Otto Gas Engine Co., Boston. ldl rant weeks, rinter Cmalier of Qgoolis, Qjiagcqines, Catafogues anb Cgbbertising Literature of Every Qeseription unity bffice anb woriisljop 3 52 Qtvasgington gat. Qgoston, Qftassaegusetts Cefepbone 273 mtain or Qiwenty 'Pears we Dave Been tlje printers of Zecgnique, mail ing t5e first one in 1885, t5e :present bofume 1905, anb eigtjtgffibe per cent of aff t5e otgers Insert B GLASSHOUSE SUPPLIES! Findlay Clay Pot Co., Washington, Pa. Qfgqgniqug GLUE: American Glue Co., Bostong Baeder, Adamson 85 Co., Boston. HARDWARE: A. J. Wilkinson 85 Co., Boston. HEATING AND VENTILATING APPARATUS: Huey Bros., Boston: Magee Furnace Co., Boston. HOISTS AND HOISTING ENGINES: Rawson 85 Morrison, Cambridge, Lidger- Wood Mfg. Co., New York. HOTELS: Hotel Touraine, Boston: Parker House, Boston, Young's Hotel, Boston, Hotel Berkeley, Boston. INDICATORS: Ashcroft Mfg. Co., New York, L. S. Starrett Co., Athol. INIECTORS: Jenkins Bros., Boston, Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Ghio. INSPIRATORS. fSee Machine Shop Equipmentj INSULATORS: W. T. C. Macallan Co., Boston. INSURANCE: Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection 55 Insurance Co., Hartford. IRON: Petroleum Iron Works. IEWELERS: A. S. Adams, Boston, Bent 85 Bush, Boston, Shreve, Crump 85 Low, Boston, Frederick T. Widmer, Boston. LATHES. fSee Machine Shop Equipmentj LATHE AND PLANER TOOLS: Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago. LAUNDRIES: Boston Custom Laundry, Boston. LOCOMOTIVES: Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia. LUBRICATORS: The Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Qhio. LUBRICATING OILS: Leonard 85 Ellis, Boston, Vacuum Oil Co., Rochester: LUMBER: George W. Gale Lumber Co., Cambridge. MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT: Simonds Mfg. Co., Fitchburg, lX1ass.g Iones 85 Lamson Machine Co., Springfield, Vt., Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago, S. A. Woods Machine Co., South Boston, A. I. Wilkinson 85 Co., Boston, Hill, Clark 85 Co., Bostong Hancock Inspirator Co., New York. MACHINISTS, SUPPLIES: VValworth llflfg. Co., Boston, A. I. Wilkinson 85 Co., Boston. ICJ 1905 Ceclinique 1905 MEASURING TAPES: L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass., Lufkin Rule Co., Saginaw, Mich. MODEL MAKERS: Hurd Sc Co., New York. OILS: Vacuum Oil Co., Rochester, N. Y., Leonard Sc Ellis, Boston. PACKING: Jenkins Bros., Boston, W. B. Merrill Sc Co., Boston. PENCILS: Joseph Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City, N. J. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Chas. W. Hearn, Boston: J. E. Purdy 85 Co., Boston. PIPE: National Tube Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston. PLATINUM: Eimer 85 Amend, New York. PRINTING: Frank Wood, Boston, Buxton 85 Skinner, St. Louis, W. B. Libby, Boston. PUBLICATIONS: The Technology Review, Boston, Engineering Record, New York. RAILROADS: Boston 55 Maine R. R., Boston 85 Albany R. R., Texas 8: Pacific Ry., Missouri Pacific Ry., Wabash Ry., St. Louis, Iron Mountain 85 Southern Ry. RECORDING PRESSURE GAUGES: United Gas Improvent Co., Philadelphia. REFRIGERATING MACHINERY, Vilter Mfg. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. ROAD MACHINERY: American Road Machine Co., Boston. ROPE: Samson Cordage Works, Boston, A. Leschen 85 Sons Rope Co., St. Louis, Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. SAWS: Simonds Mfg. Co., Fitchburg, Mass. SEWER PIPE: Evens 56 Howard Fire Brick Co., St. Louis. SHOES: Regal Shoe Co., Boston. STATIONERS: A. D. Maclachlan, Boston. STEAM GAUGES AND VALVES: American Balanced Valve Co., Jersey Shore, Pa., Jenkins Bros., New York, Mason Regulator Co., Boston, Ash- ton Valve Co., Boston, Ashcroft Mfg. Co., New York, Lunkenhei- mer Co., Cincinnati, Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston. STEAM PUMPS! Mason Regulator Co., Boston. STEAMSHIP LINES: Merchant 86 Miners Transportation Co., Hamburg American Line. STEAM SPECIALTIES: Julien d'Este Co., Boston, Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, O. lfl RDY HE studios are equipped throughout with every essential inducive of the best results in portraiture. Careful and courteous treatment with every con- sideration for the preferences of the individual, originality in posing and design, and the prompt execution of all orders have Won us friends who, in their appreciation, are our best advertising medium. Your negative goes on file with those of the leading statesmen, clergy, artists and literati of this country and abroad. ' 1 I 146 TREMCNT STREET, BOSTON BETWEEN TEMPLE PLACE AND WEST STREET Insert C STEEL: Homer F. Livermore, Boston, William Jessops 86 Sons, New York. 1905 STRUCTURAL STEEL: American Bridge Co., New York. SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS: C. L. Berger 86 Sons, Boston: Buff 86 Buff Mfg. Co., Jamaica Plain. TAILORS: George H. Lane, Boston. TECH EMBLEMS: Bent 86 Bush, Boston, A. S. Adams, Boston, Frederick T. Widmer, Boston. TESTS: Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, Pittsburgh, Pa. TEXTILE MACHINERY: Textile Finishing Machine Co., Providence, R. I. TOOLS! L. S. Starrett 86 Co., Athol,l Mass., A. J. Wilkinson 86 Co., Boston, Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago, Hurd 86 Co., New York, C. H. Besly, Chicago, American Tool 86 Machine Co., Boston. TRUST COMPANIES: Old Colony Trust Co., Boston. TUBING: National Tube Co., McKeesport, Pa. WIRE ROPE: A. Leschen 86 Sons, St. Louis, Trenton Iron Works, Trenton. WOODWORKING MACHINERY! S. A. Woods Machine, Co., South Boston. Capital 31,500,000 Surplus 555,000,000 GBIII Qlnlnng Grunt Glnmpang MAIN OFFICE, AMES BUILDING BRANCH OFFICE, 52 TEMPLE PLACE BOSTON I E J Snbeyc fo Qbberfizemenfs ADAMS, A. S. .... Page ADAMS, CUSHING 8: FOSTER . . AMERICAN AMERICAN AMERICAN AMERICAN AMERICAN AMERICAN BALANCED VALVE CO. BANK NOTE CO. . . BRIDGE CO .... GLUE CO. ROAD MACHINE CO. . SCHOOL of CORRES- PONDENCE . . AMERICAN TOOL 8: MACHINE Co. ARMSTRONG BROS. TOOL CO. . ASHCROFT MANUFACTURING CO. ASHTON VALVE Co. ATLANTIC WORKS . AVERY CHEMICAL CO. BAEDER ADAMSON 8: CO. . . . BAKER 8: ADAIVISON CHEMICAL CO. BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE WORKS . BARRUS, G. H. . . BAY STATE BELTING CO. . . . BENT8:BUSH . . BERGER 8: SONS, C. L. . . BERKELEY HOTEL , BESLEY 8: CO., C. H. BOSTON 8: ALBANY R. R. . . . BOSTON CUSTOM LAUNDRY . . BOSTON 8: LOCKPORT BLOCK CO. E111 BOSTON 8: MAINE R. R. . Page 18 BUEF 8: BUEE MFG. .... 50 BUSINESS CARDS CGraduatesj 22-23 BUXTON 8: SKINNER .... 1 CARMICHAEL, HENRY . . . 51 CASSELLA COLOR CO. . . . 48 CHAUNCY HALL SCHOOL . . 50 f COCHRANE CHEMICAL CO. . . 29 , CONKLING PEN CO. . . . 30 CURRAN 8: BURTON . . 50 A DEAN 8: MAIN .... . 24 DENSMORE 8: LE CLEAR . . 51 D'ESTE 8: CO., JULIEN . . . 12 DIXON CRUCIBLE CO., JOSEPH . 29 DODGE MFG. CO ...... 51 EIMER 8: AMEND ..... 2 I ELECTRIC CITY ENGRAVING CO. j ELLIOTT CO., CHAS. H .... 28 1 ENGINEERING RECORD .... 46 11 I I EVENS 8: HOWARD FIREBRICK CO. 16 FINDLAY CLAY POT CO. . ., . 27 FRENCH 8: BRYANT . . . 51 GALE LUMBER CO., G. W. . . 41 GILBRETH, FRANK B. .... 25 GRADUATES BUSINESS CARDS 22-23 GRAY, ARTHUR F. ..... 51 . . I' GREEN FUEL ECONOMIZER CO. . 6 .- I lx IH ,I I I HARTFORD STEAM BOILER Page INSP. 8: INS. CO. . . . HAMBURG AMERICAN LINE . . HANCOCK INSPIRATOR CO. ' . . HEARN, CHAS. W. . . . . HILL, CLARKE 8: CO. . . HOFFMAN, S. ..... . HOLTZER-CABOT ELECTRIC CO. . HOVEY 8: Co., C. F .... . HURD 8: CO. . . HUEY BROS. . . . JEFFREY MFG. CO. . . JENKINS BROS ....... JESSOPS 8: SONS, WM., LTD. . . JONES 8: LAMSON MACHINE CO. . KENDALL 8: SONS, EDWARD . . KUTTEROFF, PICKHARDT 8: CO. . LANE, GEORGE H. .... . LECLANCHE BATTERY CO. . . LESCHENS 8: SONS ROPE CO., A. . LIDGERWOOD MFG. CO .... LIVERMORE, HOMER F. . . LIBBY, W. B .... . LUFKIN RULE CO .... . LUNKENHEIMER CO., THE . . . MACALLAN, W. T. C. . JVIACLACHLAN, A. D. . . MAGEE FURNACE CO. . . MASON REGULATOR CO .... MASS. INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY MCCAFFERTY 8: CO., J. H. . . MEAD MFG. CO., JOHN A. . . MERCHANTS 8: MINERS TRANS- PORTATION CO ...... 24 46 14 32 33 I 34 21 4 53 28 26 16 7 16 26 34 52 2 13 17 52 6 10 43 38 53 10 39 53 34 19 TVIERRIAM CO.,G. 8: C. . MERRILL 8: Co., W. B. . MERRINIAC CHEMICAL CO. METZ 8: CO., H. A. . . MILLET CORE OVEN CO. . MISSOURI PACIFIC RY. CO. Page MORSE TWIST DRILL 8: MA- CHINE CO. . . . . MORSE, WILLIAMS 8: CO. . NATIONAL CONDUIT 8: CABLE CO. NATIONAL SHAWMUT BANK NATIONAL TUBE CO. . . NELSON BROS ..... NEW YORK 8: BOSTON DYE- WOOD CO. .... . NORTON EMERY WHEEL Co. . . OAK GROVE CREAMERY CO OLD COLONY TRUST CO. OLD CORNER BOOK STORE OTTO GAS ENGINE CO. . PARKER HOUSE .... PETROLEUM IRON WORKS PITTSBURGH TESTING LABORA- TORY ...... PRESCOTT,S EXPRESS . . PURDYOCCO., . Insert C and RAWSON 8: MORRISON MFG. CO., REGAL SHOE CO .... RIDGEWAY DYNAMO 8: ENGINE CO. ..., ROBERTS IRON WORKS . ROESSLER 8: HASSLACHER CHEMI- CAL CO ...... ROGERS, C. E. . lil 41 52 50 5 44 20 4 29 8 11 9 J 40 13 49 8 41 43 10 36 15 48 8 17 47 45 38 35 53 Qieciinique 1905 Ceclinique 1905 SAMSON CORDAGE WORKS Page 21 TOURAINE HOTEL. . . Page 10 S C H O E L L KO P F, HARTFORD 85 TRENTON IRON WORKS CO., THE, 6 HANNA CO ....... 36 UNITED GAS IMPROVEMENT CO., 31 SHREVE, CRUMP 8c LOW . . 49 VACUUM OIL CO ...... 24 SHULTZ BELTING CO. . . 53 VALVOLINE OIL CO. . . 35 SIMONDS MFG. CO. . . 35 VILTER MFG. Co. . . 16 SIMPLEX ELECTRIC CO. . . 43 WABASH RY. CO. . . . . 19 SOLVAY PROCESS CO. . . . 27 WALWORTH MFG. CO. . Insert A SPRINGFIELD FACING CO. . . 38 WESTON ELECTRICAL INSTRU- STARRET CO., L. S ..... 15 MENT CO- ------- 13 ST. LOUIS, IRON MOUNTAIN Sc WHIPPLE 56 CO-, J- R- - 10 30, RY. CO .,.,,, , 20 WIDMER, FRED T. . . . 31 STONE gc WEBSTER , , I 11 WILKINSON 8: CO., A. J. . . . 42 TECHNOLOGY REVIEW .... 44 WILLCUTT 31 SON, G. D- - - 50 TEXAS Sc PACIFIC RY. CO., THE, 20 WOOD, FRANK ---- IHSCH B TEXTILE FINISHING MACHINERY WOODS MACHINE C0-I 3- A- - - 40 CO. ......... 37 YOUNG,S HOTEL ..... 10 E51 HOFFMAN Me Florist EVERYTHING UP TO DATE AT REASONABLE PRICES .... MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE 925 BOYLSTON STREET 61 NELSON BROS. Ornamental Iron Work FENCES, GATES, GRILLES, RAILINGS LIGHTING FIXTURES, ETC. 62 1-2 THAYER STREET, BOSTON TELEP1-IONE CONNECTION TECH HOUSE . Page TECH REUNION . TECH SHOW CArtiCleD . TECH SHOW, 1903 TECH SHOW, 1904 . . . TECHNIQUE BOARD . . . TECHNIQUE ELECTORAL COMMITTEE . TECHNOLOGY AT THE WORLD'S FAIR . TECHNOLOGY CLUB . . . TECHNOLOGY QUARTERLY . . TECHNOLOGY REVIEW . TRACK TEAM . . . TUG-OF-WAR, 1906 AND 1907 TENNIS ASSOCIATION . . VIEWS . WALKER CLUB . WEARERS OF THE T WISCONSIN CLUB . Y. M. C. A. . CH fp., 'E A Q 44? J jg! jx V 15,9 QQ QB if If x QQ XXXL i 231 229 119 250 252 210 226 47 227 212 213 134 158 165 264 190 131 192 230 l3611 Ceclinique 1905 D I w , 1 e J W Cfassifieb Bifrf of Qibberfiserer ALKALIES: Solvay Process Co., Solvay, N. Y. ANILINE COLORS: H. A. Metz 86 Co., New York: Kuttroff, Pickhardt 86 Co., New York: New York :Sz Boston Dyewood Co., Boston. BANKERS: National Shawmut Bank, Boston, Old Colony Trust Co., Boston. BATTERIES: Leclanche Battery Co., New York. BELTING: Bay State Belting Co., Boston: Schultz Belting Co., St. Louis. BLOCKS: Boston 55 Lockport Block Co., Boston. BOILERS: Atlantic Works, East Boston: Roberts Iron Works, Cambridge: Edward Kendall 86 Sons, Cambridgeport. BOOKS: Qld Corner Book Store, Boston: A. D. Maclachlan, Boston: C. 85 G. Merriam, Springneld, Mass. BORING TOOL! Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago: Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co., New Bedford, Mass. BRASS AND BRONZE SUPPLIES: J. H. MaCafferty 85 Co., Boston, C. E. Rogers, Boston. BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION: American Bridge Co., New York. BUILDING: Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston, L. D. Willcutt, Boston. CABLES: National Conduit and Cable Co., New York: A. Leschen 81 Sons Rope Co., St. Louis: Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. CAFES: Oak Grove Creamery Co., Boston. CASTINGS: Homer F. Livermore, Boston: American Tool and Machine Co., Boston. U11 ESTABLISHED 1842 5 ,i Z -6- XX f f N T W S BENT PIPES REDUCE FRICTION, SAVE JOINTS, AND PROVIDE FOR EXPANSION AND CONTRACTION IIHHIIIIIIIIIIII H ,LL IIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIH HIGH PRESSURE VALVES PIPE AND FITTINGS WALWORTH FLANC-ED OVER JOINT CWILL NOT WEEP UNDER 200 LBS PRESSURE? A -: . , Eg E I I -A-, 2.-: . ' F -4 f,lli'?3 ,i 5 g 2 53:5 GENERAL OFFICES EET 3255? I I-F EE E: E 1 4 IMI E E 2 I 132 FEDERAL ST., BOSTON. E f- ,- .T L, X New YORK oFFlcE, I PARK ROW BUILDING. g : 'Asn -fi I-: 5 .I I ' - - rf I -ws , 1 J ...w.L.., ..... iw QW .gggfffgf 'Q - Q, . 14 4, IJ: fr- 7Wgg,L2af WV - , T XS Y ,f ' 4 ' -,ww ' - I Y ,'7, 'Za 1317- w ff' 2 Wfff , If W !ffZ4yf,f,'L f,,. 'f1 V wi' if 'Wx Iwi mmf IM J ,PII M MQ fbi 1395 III ' W V51 W. nw if ,II 'H 41x-111. '1 W 5 J. x . II Ig 1-wg gm -A II' 'all I ffl I3 HIE ESI 'Wd - vm Nady xy III I uw In I1 u I 155, , IM I WW I HHIIIIIIIIIIIII III J IIIIIIII1IW11'1M2II rl Wil' Insert A CHEMICALS: -Baker 85 Adamson Chemical Co., Easton, Pa., Cochrane Chemical Co., Boston, Kuttroff, Pickhardt 85 Co., New York, Roess- ler 85 Hasslacher Chemical Co., New York, Eimer 85 Amend, New York, Merrimac Chemical Co., Boston, Avery Chemical Co., Boston, H. A. Metz 85 Co., New York, Solvay Process Co., Solvay, N. Y., Schoellkopf, Hartford 85 Hanna, Buffalo, N. Y. CHEMICAL APPARATUS: Eimer 85 Amend, New York. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS! Henry Carmichael, Ph.D., Boston. CHEMICAL TESTING LABORATORIES: Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, Pitts- burgh, Pa. CLOTHINGi George H. Lane, Boston. COAL: Curran 85 Burton, Boston. COAL HANDLING MACHINERY. CSee Conveying Machine-:ry.j CONDUITS: National Conduit 85 Cable Co., New York. CONTRACTORS: Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston. CONVEYING MACHINERY: John A. Mead Mfg. Co., New York, Jeffrey Mfg. Co., Columbus, O., Rawson 85 Morrison Mfg. Co., Cambridge, A. Leschen 85 Sons Rope Co., St. Louis, Trenton Iron Works, Tren- ton, N. J. CORDAGE: Samson Cordage Works, Boston. CORE OVENS: Millett Core Oven Co., Brightwood, Mass. COTTON MACHINERY: Textile Finishing Machine CO., Providence, R. I. DRAUGHTING INSTRUMENTS: A. D. Maclachlan, Boston, L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass. DRY GOODS: C. F. Hovey 85 Co., Boston. DRILLS AND DRILLING MIACHINERY: Morse Twist Drill Co., New Bed- ford, Mass., Hill, Clark 85 CO., Boston. DYES: Kuttroff, Pickhardt 85 Co., New York, New York 85 Boston Dye- wood Co., Boston, H. A. Metz 85 Co., New York, Schoellkopf, Hart- ford 85 Hanna, Buffalo. EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, American School of Correspondence, Chicago, Chauncy Hall School, Boston. ICJ Qieclhtique 1905 Qieclinique 1905 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS: Stone Sz Webster, Boston. ELECTRICAL GENERATORS AND MOTORS: Ridgeway Dynamo and Engine Co., Ridgeway, Pa.: Holtzer-Cabot Electric Co., Boston QBrooklineD, Mass. ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES: Simplex Electrical Co., Boston: Weston Electrical Instrument Co., Newark, N. J. ELEVATORS: Morse, Williams 86 Co., Boston. EMERY WHEELS: Norton Emery Wheel Co., Worcester, Mass. ENGINES: Vilter Mfg. Co., Milwaukee: Wis.: Otto Gas Engine Co., Boston. ENGINEERS: Frank B. Gilbreth, Boston: American Bridge Co., New York: Dean 86 Main, Boston: Densmore 8cLeClear, Boston: French 85 Bryant, Boston: G. H. Barrus, Boston: Arthur F. Gray, Boston: Huey Brothers, Boston: Henry Carmichael, Ph.D., Boston. ENGINEERING JOURNALS: Engineering Record, New York. ENGRAVING: Buxton 85 Skinner, St. Louis: Chas. H. Elliott Co., Phila- delphia: Electric City Engraving Co., Buffalo: American Bank Note Co., New York. EXPRESS AND MOVING: Prescott's Express, Boston. FIRE BRICK: Evens 85 Howard Fire Brick Co., St. Louis. FLAGS: Bent 86 Bush, Boston. FLORISTS: S. Hoffman, Boston. FOUNDRIES: Textile Finishing Machine Co., Providence, R. I. FOUNDRY EQUIPMENT: Millet Core Oven Co., Brightwood, Mass. FOUNDRY FACING: Springfield Facing Co., Springfield, Mass. FOUNTAIN PENS: Conklin Pen Co., Toledo, Ohio: Adams, Cushing 85 Foster, Boston. FORGINGS: National Tube Co., McKeesport, Pa. FUEL ECONOMIZERS: Green Fuel Economizer Co., Matteawari, N. Y. FURNISHING GOODS: C. F. Hovey 85 Co., Boston. GAS APPARATUS: United Gas Improvement Co., Philadelphia. GAS ENGINES: Otto Gas Engine Co., Boston. ldl rant? Qf0oob, rinter fmaker of Qgooiks, Qylagagcines, Gatafogues anb Qkbbertising Biterature of every Qescription witg Dffice anb worliztjop 3 52 Wbasfjington gt. Qljoston, Qlassacfjusetts Zefepljone 273 mlain or Qfwenty ears me ljabe Been t5e printers of Zecgnique, maii ing ttje first one in 1885, we present bofume 1905, ants eigtjtgffibe per cent of aff' t5e ot5ers Insert B GLASSHOUSE SUPPLIES: Findlay Clay Pot Co., Washington, Pa. GLUE: American Glue Co., Boston: Baeder, Adamson 85 Co., Boston. HARDWARE: A. J. Wilkinson 85 Co., Boston. HEATING AND VENTILATING APPARATUS: Huey Bros., Boston: Magee Furnace Co., Boston. HOISTS AND HOISTING ENGINES: Rawson85 Morrison, Cambridge: Lidger- wood Mfg. Co., New York. HOTELS: Hotel Touraine, Boston: Parker-House, Boston: Young's Hotel, Boston: Hotel Berkeley, Boston. INDICATORS: Ashcroft Mfg. Co., New York: L. S. Starrett Co., Athol. INJECTORS: Jenkins Bros., Boston: Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. INSPIRATORS. fSee Machine Shop Equipmentj INSULATORS: W. T. C. Macallan Co., Boston. INSURANCE: Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection 85 Insurance Co., Hartford. IRON: Petroleum Iron Works. IEWELERS: A. S. Adams, Boston: Bent 85 Bush, Boston: Shreve, Crump 85 Low, Boston: Frederick T. Widmer, Boston. LATHES. QSee Machine Shop Equipmentj LATHE AND PLANER TooLs: Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago. LAUNDRIES: Boston Custom Laundry, Boston. LocoMoTIvEs: Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia. LUBRICATORS: The Lunkenheirner Co., Cincinnati, Qhio. LUBRICATING OILS: Leonard 85 Ellis, Boston: Vacuum Oil Co., Rochester. LUMBER: George W. Gale Lumber Co., Cambridge. MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT: Simonds Mfg. Co., Fitchburg, Mass.: Jones 85 Lamson Machine Co., Springfield, Vt.: Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago: S. A. Woods Machine Co., South Boston: A. I. Wilkinson 85 Co., Boston: Hill, Clark 85 Co., Boston: Hancock Inspirator Co., New York. MACHINISTS, SUPPLIES: Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston: A. J. W'i1kinson 85 Co., Boston. IGI 1905 QZecBnique 1905 MEASURING TAPES: L. S. Starrett Co., Athol, Mass., Lufkin Rule Co., Saginaw, Mich. - i MODEL MAKERS: Hurd 85 Co., New York. OILS: Vacuum Oil Co., Rochester, N. Y., Leonard 85 Ellis, Boston. PACKING: Jenkins Bros., Boston, W. B. Merrill 85 Co., Boston. PENCILS: Joseph Dixon Crucible Co., Jersey City, N. J. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Chas. W. Hearn, Boston: J. E. Purdy 85 Co., Boston. PIPE: National Tube Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston. PLATINUM: Eimer 85 Amend, New York. PRINTING: Frank Wood, Boston, Buxton 85 Skinner, St. Louis, W. B. Libby, Boston. PUBLICATIONS: The Technology Review, Boston, Engineering Record, New York. RAILROADS: Boston 85 Maine R. R., Boston 85 Albany R. R., Texas 85 Pacific Ry., Missouri Pacific Ry., Wabash Ry., St. Louis, Iron Mountain 85 Southern Ry. RECORDING PRESSURE GAUGES: United Gas Improvent Co., Philadelphia. REFRIGERATING MACHINERY, Vilter Mfg. Co., Milwaukee, Wis. ROAD MACHINERY: American Road Machine Co., Boston. ROPE: Samson Cordage Works, Boston, A. Leschen 85 Sons Rope Co., St. Louis, Trenton Iron Works, Trenton, N. J. SAWS: Simonds Mfg. Co., Fitchburg, Mass. SEWER PIPE: Evens 85 Howard Fire Brick Co., St. Louis. SHOES: Regal Shoe Co., Boston. STATIONERS: A. D. Maclaehlan, Boston. STEAM GAUGES AND VALVES: American Balanced Valve Co., Jersey Shore, Pa., Jenkins Bros., New York, Mason Regulator Co., Boston, Ash- ton Valve Co., Boston, Ashcroft Mfg. Co., New York, Lunkenhei- mer Co., Cincinnati, Walworth Mfg. Co., Boston. STEAM PUMPS! Mason Regulator Co., Boston. STEAMSHIP LINES: Merchant 85 Miners Transportation Co., Hamburg American Line. STEAM SPECIALTIES: Julien d'Este Co., Boston, Lunkenheimer Co., Cincinnati, O. lfl HE studios are equipped throughout with every essential inducive of the best results in portraiture. Careful and courteous treatment with, every con- sideration for the preferences of the individual, originality in posing and design, and the prompt execution of all orders have Won us friends who, in their appreciation, are our best advertising medium. Your negative goes on file with those of the leading statesrnen, clergy, artists and literati of this country and abroad. ' 1 I 146 TREMONT STREET, BOSTON BETWEEN TEMPLE PLACE AND WEST STREET Insert C STEEL: Homer F. Livermore, Boston, William Jessops 86 Sons, New Y k. or 1 STRUCTURAL STEEL: American Bridge Co., New York. SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS: C. L. Berger 86 Sons, Boston, Buff 86 Buff Mfg. Co., Jamaica Plain. TAILORS: George H. Lane, Boston. TECH EMBLEMS: Bent 8: Bush, Boston, A. S. Adams, Bostong Frederick T. Widmer, Boston. TESTS: Pittsburgh Testing Laboratory, Pittsburgh, Pa. TEXTILE NIACHINERY: Textile Finishing Machine Co., Providence, R. I. TOOLS: L. S. Starrett 86 Co., Athol,YMass.g A. I. Wilkinson 55 Co., Boston, Armstrong Bros. Tool Co., Chicago, Hurd 85 Co., New York, C. H. Besly, Chicago, American Tool 85 Machine Co., Boston. TRUST COMPANIES: Old Colony Trust Co., Boston. TUBING: National Tube Co., McKeesport, Pa. A WIRE ROPE: A. Leschen Sc Sons, St. Louisg Trenton Iron Works, Trenton. WOODWORKING MACHINERY: S. A. Woods Machine, Co., South Boston. Capital 31,500,000 Surplus 355,000,000 09121 Glnlung 'mai Glnmpang MAIN OFFICE, AMES BUILDING BRANCH OFFICE, 52 TEMPLE PLACE L ...W .,,., , ,.,..,, ,,,. , L, . BOSTON Q ,,.ij-zfjfg:wp:.I.:z 5.9. .-,U B Egl Jnbeyc fo ADANIS, A. S. .... Page ADAMS, CUSHING 8: FOSTER . . AMERICAN BALANCED VALVE CO. AMERICAN BANK NOTE CO. . . AMERICAN BRIDGE CO. . AMERICAN GLUE CO. . . . . AMERICAN ROAD MACHINE CO. . AMERICAN SCHOOL of CORRES- PONDENCE ...... AMERICAN TOOL 8: MACHINE Co. ARMSTRONG BROS. TOOL CO. . ASHCROFT MANUFACTURING CO. ASHTON VALVE CO. . . . . ATLANTIC WORKS . . . AVERY CHEMICAL CO. . . . BAEDER ADAMSON 8: CO. . . . BAKER 8: ADAMSON CHEMICAL CO. BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE WORKS . BARRUS, G. H. ..... . BAY STATE BELTING CO. . . BENT 8: BUSH .... . BERGER 8: SONS, C. L. . . BERKELEY HOTEL . . . BESLEY 8: CO., C. H. . . BOSTON 8: ALBANY R. R. . . . BOSTON CUSTOM LAUNDRY . . BOSTON 8: LOCKPORT BLOCK Co. E111 bberfisemenfs 30621 31 BOSTON 8: MAINE R. R. . Page 18 52 BUEE 8: BUEE MFG. .... So 32 ' BUSINESS CARDS CGraduatesj 22-23 51 BUXTON 8: SKINNER .... 1 3 CARMICHAEL, HENRY . . 51 5 CASSELLA COLOR CO. . . 48 47 CHAUNCY HALL SCHOOL . . . 50 COCHRANE CHEMICAL CO. . 29 37 CONKLING PEN CO. . . 30 27 CURRAN 8: BURTON . . 50 4 DEAN 8: MAIN .... . 24 14 DENSMORE 8: LE CLEAR . . . 51 21 D,ESTE 8: CO., JULIEN . . 12 36 DIXON CRUCIBLE CO., JOSEPH . 29 49 DODGE MFG. CO ...... 51 24 EIMER 8: AMEND ...... 2 15 ELECTRIC CITY ENGRAVING CO. j 17 ELLIOTT CO., CHAS. H .... 28 51 ENGINEERING RECORD .... 46 24 EVENS 8: HOWARD FIREBRICK CO. 16 31 FINDLAY CLAY POT CO .... 27 29 FRENCH 8: BRYANT .... 51 47 GALE LUMBER CO., G. W. . . 41 5 GILBRETH, FRANK B. .... 25 18 GRADUATES BUSINESS CARDS 22-23 53 GRAY, ARTHUR F. ..... 51 28 GREEN FUEL ECONOMIZER CO. . 6 HARTFORD STEAM BOILER Page INSP. 8: INS. CO. . . . HAMBURG AMERICAN LINE . . HANCOCK INSPIRATOR CO. . . HEARN, CHAS. W. . . . HILL, CLARKE 8: CO. . . HOFFMAN, S. ..... . HOLTZER-CABOT ELECTRIC CO. . HOVEY 8: Co., C. F .... . HURD 8: CO. . . HUEY BROS. . . . . JEFFREY MFG. CO. . . JENKINS BROS ....... JESSOPS 8: SONS, WM., LTD. . . JONES 8: LAMSON MACHINE CO. . KENDALL 8: SONS, EDWARD . . KUTTEROFF, PICKHARDT 8: CO. . LANE, GEORGE H. ..., . LECLANCHE BATTERY CO. . . LESCHENS 8: SONS ROPE CO., A. . LIDGERWOOD MFG. CO .... LIVERMORE, HOMER F. . . LIBBY, W. B .... . LUFKIN RULE CO. . . . . LUNKENHEIMER CO., THE . . . MACALLAN, W. T. C. . . MACLACHLAN, A. D. . . MAGEE FURNACE CO. . . . . MASON REGULATOR CO .... MASS. INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY MCCAFFERTY 8: CO., J. H. . . MEAD MFG. CO., JOHN A. . . MERCHANTS 8: MINERS TRANS- PORTATION CO. .... . 24 46 14 32 33 J 34 21 4 53 28 26 16 7 16 26 34 52 2 13 17 52 6 10 43 38 S3 10 39 53 34 19 IVIERRIAM CO.,G. 8: C. . . Page MERRILL 8: Co., W. B. . . . IVIERRIMAC CHEMICAL CO. . . METZ 8: CO., H. A. . . . MILLET CORE OVEN CO. . . MISSOURI PACIFIC RY. CO. . . MORSE TWIST DRILL 8: MA- CHINE CO. ..... . MORSE, WILLIAMS 8: CO. . . . NATIONAL CONDUIT 8: CABLE CO. NATIONAL SHAWMUT BANK . . NATIONAL TUBE CO. . . . . NELSON BROS ....... NEW YORK 8: BOSTON DYE- WOOD CO. ...... . NORTON EMERY WHEEL Co. . . OAK GROVE CREAMERY CO. . OLD COLONY TRUST CO. OLD CORNER BOOK STORE . . OTTO GAS ENGINE CO. . . PARKER HOUSE .,.. . PETROLEUM IRON WORKS . . PITTSBURGH TESTING LABORA- TORY ........ PRESCOTT,S EXPRESS .... PURDYSCCO., . Insert C and RAWSON 8: MORRISON NIFG. CO., REGAL SHOE CO ...... RIDGEWAY DYNAIVIO 8: ENGINE CO. ........ . ROBERTS IRON WORKS . . . ROESSLER 8: HASSLACHER CHEMI- CAL CO ........ ROGERS, C. E. . . lil 41 52 50 5 44 20 4 29 8 11 9 J 40 13 49 S 41 43 10 36 15 48 8 17 47 45 38 35 53 Qfeclinique 1905 zecgnique SAMSON CORDAGE WORKS Page 1905 SCHOELLKOPF, HARTFORD 8a HANNA CO ....... SHREVE, CRUMP 8c LOW . . SHULTZ BELTING CO. . . . SIMONDS MFG. CO. . . SIMPLEX ELECTRIC CO. . . SOLVAY PROCESS CO. . . . SPRINGFIELD FACING CO. . . STARRET CO., L. S .... . ST. LOUIS, IRON MOUNTAIN 8c SO. RY. CO ...... . STONE 8: WEBSTER . . TECHNOLOGY REVIEW .... TEXAS 8: PACIFIC RY. CO., THE, TEXTILE FINISHING MACHINERY CO. ........ . 21 36 49 53 35 43 27 38 15 20 11 44 20 37 TOURAINE HOTEL . . . Page 10 TRENTON IRON WORKS CO., THE, 6 UNITED GAS IMPROVEMENT CO., 31 VACUUM OIL CO ...... 24 VALVOLINE OIL CO. . . 35 VILTER MFG. CO. . . 16 WABASH RY. CO ...... 19 WALWORTH MFG. CO. . Insert A WESTON ELECTRICAL INSTRU- MENT CO. ....... 13 WHIPPLE 8a CO., J. R. . 10 VVIDVMER, FRED T. . . . . 31 WILKINSON 8c Co., A. J. . . . 42 WILLCUTT 8l.SON, G. D. . . 50 WOOD, FRANK .... Insert B WOODS MACHINE CO., S. A. . . 40 YOUNG'S HOTEL .... H. 10 Ill HOFFMAN ibe Florist EVERYTHING UP TO DATE AT REASONABLE PRICES .... 61 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE 925 BOYLSTON STREET NELSON BROS. Ornamental Iron Work FENCES, GATES, GRILLES, RAILINGS LIGHTING FIXTURES, ETC. 62 1-2 THAYER STREET, BOSTON TELEPHONE CONNECTION ' V N H n I i H l. X2 I, Q w! H i N W I l 1 5 1 w L--MG--WA wh- x F N K A g -W - ,- -QffQff 11 Qitie 45ecl5nique Qitbvertiser WANTED H Sfzenfyiv 1 S 519001 A D D R E S S wfwm' OPPOSITE L. P 1 n k O S The T rzilor ESTABLISHED 1851 1 EIMER 81 AMEND Corner Third Ave. and Eighteenth Street, NEW YORK -. ' iii -- iiit ?,gM!11H1r ' ' IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF 1 L W 1 ' Cbcmlcals and if 'D , - T Vi 'Wil 5 - 5 i i l f Cbemlcal Hpparatus -M g tg 1 , g t Hssay Goods i fi Complete line of all Testing Instruments for Light, Heat, Gas, Etc. L m 11 11 1 Sole Agents for ,TR ' -i 4 H C. A. F. KAI'ILBAUM'S C. P. i ts CHEMICALS and RLAGENTS -J .JL-1- Li- -f ii ii J'-fs111..., CJIPUREST HAMMERED PLATINUM AT LOWEST MAR. KET RATES QIBALANCES AND WEIGHTS IJICOMPLETE F?-22 h LABORATORY OUTFITS 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 111 September 30. Fletcher arrives. Fireworks on the Common in the evening Z5e Zeckhxique glbverfiser l. ,E lf 1 American Bridge Company Of NEW YORK STRUCTURAL S ENGINEERS and STEEL F011 5 LVLRY PURPOSE CONTRACTORS 100 BROADWAY NEW YORK b TRUST BUILDING PITTSBURG PA 1315 MONADNOCK BLOCK CHICAGO ILL Deadwood 8: Delaware Milling Company, Deadwood, S. D. 0 0 I I I Eastem Division, , Pitts urg Division, , , . Lmlsmocs, N. Y., 21-soo Westem Dwlslon- 1 - QI October 3 Ah CI ID 'IJ THE TECH f r an exciting contest 65a Riectinique Qkbvertiseg ARMSTRONG fs Q zom CENTURY so TOOL HOLDERS For Lathe and Planer Work, P f - L - using inserted cutters of self- hardening steel. Save all forging and tempering. 5' W JMSJ HNEQ 70 per cent. grinding. Boring T001, C7 511053- gn tool steel. W 9 47 N x, L1 r I12.. W 'Y' .ff Offs , Q12 Ks, 'ty 44, t ,, Y- -L Tizii -. 400 444' M: R ' unc. Y Yrjit 9.9 gy- , 2- Cutting-Off Tools. 7 sizes each, DESIGNERS Straight and R. 81 L. Offset. MANUFACTURERS Lathe Tools. II sizes each, K I-IURD 85 CO. 304 322 HUDSON STREET NEW YORK l I ? R Straight and R. 81 L. Offset. The ARMSTRONG UNIVERSAL RATCHET DRILL 2 inches of motion at end of handle in W W any direction will drive the drill. VVhen the other ratchets you have are useless for luck of oom to ove the handle get 'in Xrm. stro ig Unive s'il 'in 't vill do the job. Z Q5 .115 x. W lH i 5 l ,y W N .1--' ww : ' ' ARMSTRONG '- Plfme Too . L UNIVERSAL RATCHET 'ZCS. l VVr'te for New C'it'i1og e No. . V' 'i i i . 2 M 6 1, m ly rr K H! I 0 l x 1 , 1' C 4 d I X Q f X Q 1 X E Tifffffl1lfy,,,,,m M K 9? li XX . r l W 7 Sl t Keep posted. I i .. 1 . . u io V . ARMSTRONG BROS. TOOL co. ' Q TheTool Holder People, 599 Austin Ave., Chicago, III., U.S.A. Morse Twist fill and Machine Co. New Bedford Mass. , 'R X .ii , Z3L.Qe4is1on1L.L QgCN1fy9 X in:?:':-21:1 -f1.J. .4i , U S A e.f3::2P..i.-.FQ f 5 1.4-il'V . . . ,WG X PAW VA: izvklln 5. in 1 N ia: M f f WW .-l l -il llll lllllwll ll l anu acturerso -' ' 1 s W, l4l fs v in 'll W' 1. E llgaf W v' ,ww 'fM:'l,I Mull fix l ll Drills, Chucks, Reamers, Cui-ters, Taps, 'elated' llfxlwllivl l ' ,ill 2 1 '. ff ' W 1' li lilillfff :lil ll Dies, Machinery, and Machinists' Tools Q K K 1.3 WM: ll!,5W.,l i , vi f rf l ll 5 qIThe Drills in this Patented Indexed Case Ww w .A in i.,Il,ll'mi1 I I M are contained in holes arranged in concentric lil X .Q N Y illlillli 'lil'-jQlf,ll.i 1 Fl li 'll - ' ' - ' - ilil Ml ll W Wil l llll'lllf Ulla lf Ili' :lvl 5 circles ln the block. Over them 15 a swinging N A l R Qin Witwlftm Wggilllxg vgi ll! Ii! Will, W W3 gl cover with holes to match each circle. The Wligili Ell ll l' l swinging cover can be moved by a small knob ,E ,,Y. ,ll iw 'N l li 1, , xl shown so that its holes will register with the I l.l'l'1rll, lly lfi1Q'-iii? U' itil! lfyl' I ifllvfl I? L r, till Ml,..ll . - . l .I l . holes in the outer cover or cap. Around the l l ,. H ll I ,L - ' l' l 'I M H ' edge ofthe cap are stamped the sizes of the 2 all .N Wi Y, ill various drills. The cap is turned to bring any ' l 'ill R lj' size in line with an index mark, and by in- li iii 'iii .xiii W ml W Ili ll A. verting the case the selected drill will drop ' i': '.l'l l .'il fl , .wi 'li out. P55 1. ,.,. 1 .... .. , . - ' QI October 7. Craesser, '05, swears off fussing 65a Q7ec5niq ue Qkbverfiser H. A. METZ 81 I 22 Hudson Street NEW YORK, N. Y CHEMICALS BRANCHES M L B BOSTON, MASS. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Anlline COIOIS PROVIDENCE, R. I. , , CHARLOTTE, N, C, Alizarine Colors ATLANTA, GA. Laboratories: Newark, N. CO. BRANCHES CHICAGO, ILL. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. MONTREAL, CANADA TORONTO, CANADA FRANKFURT AXM GERMANY J. Amerivan Glue Co. 1 MANUFACTURERS OF ALL GRADES OF Flint, Garner and Emery Paper and Cfoffz STORES: Boston, Mass., Chicago, Ill., New York, N. Y., Philadelphia, Pa., St. Louis, lVIo. A FACTORIES: Peabody, lVIass.g hflalden, Mass., East Walpole, Blass., Rockport, Mass., Hallowell, lie., Springdale, Pa., Chicago, Ill. III October 8. Graesser seen boarding a Wellesley train vi Zkie Cectinique Qbbverfiser , 4. U IH C21Sl11'1Hg HPCS ARE THE STANDARD TAPES OF THE WORLD X, W .A-T 'I m l' unequaled for Hccuracy and Rehabthty ' ft ' r'? 'i'l lpjlj.. fi LUFKIN RULE CO., Saginaw, Mich., U. S. A. 1 New York City Branch, zSo Broadway our Gggijtfgiisiliiiicjsby All London Office and VVarehouse, 43 Lime St., E. C. 4 ,'-b t I . -I U K- . ,-V I1 e' lie N ' ,e::V .-jr-gl T ATl DD T I , TT T TT,T 4.v, AA.'A,,A ' ge I V ' V lT V ' FOR ALL PURPOSES mire ope Cramways ' 1. .9 . , I 5 1f:'g5.,.2g,. 1-5 xi., by gi , . LQ '?4 -V i b Adapted to the conveyance of all lcinds of materials. 'Gi S fix- 'W' MANUFACTURED BY b I V, ,,,, TRLNTON, N. 1. Lii .1 f Engineers and Contractors and sole licensees in North America for the Bleichert System. Also, Wire Rope Equipments for Cable Hoist-Conveyors, Surface and Underground Haulage, Etc. Illustrated book upon application NEW YORK OFFICE - Cooper, Hewitt 8a Co., 17 Burling Slip CHICAGO OFFICE- 1 1 14 Monadnock Building DENVER OFFICE- 1711 Tremont Street SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE- 34 Fremont Street Green,S Economizer Is Me Standard gf Economy Decreases the COAL BILL, Increases the BOILER EFFICIENCY No steam user can afiorcl to be without one. Before designing new steam plants or remodeling old ones, CONSULT US. Over 30,000,000 b 'l ox er horse power now in use ..... WRITE US FOR ANY FURTHER INFORMATI ON You MAY REQUIRE. THE GREEN FUEL ECO NOMIZER CO., Matteawan, N. Y. 1-ll October 15. Merryweather, '04, cupels in a scorifier V em ?Zec5nique Qjlbverfiser 11 PRI GEIELD, VERMONT artness Fm Turret ath Send for copy of 'Rapid Lathe XVork if you wish to know hm t d c tl t of lat e work under I4 inches in diameter and 36 inches in length JONES 81 LAMSON MACHINE CO. Springfield, Vermont Q7 Queen Victoria Street U. S. A. LONDON, E. C. Germany, Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria-Hungary: M. Koyemann, Charlottenstrasse 112, Dusseldorf, Germany. France and Spaing Ph. Bonvillain, 6 Rue Blanche, Paris, France. Italy, Adler 85 Eisenschitz, Milan. ll October ZI . Clean spot discovered on a towel at the Laboratoires Mecaniques viii Wie Cectinique Gjkbvertiser COMPLIMENTSOF Ihr aiinnnl ' nnhnii amh Qlahlr Qlnmpnng Exrruiihe Qbffirra, 41 Iinrk i'Knh1, Nrin Burk EEL -Q Q N SCJ axe S ,SC H4 i i' 5'2- ,554 Xa Q si Ci. QQ, flank gr 4 was J PUIPD PERFECTION 232 PORTRAITURE QA photograph is the chronicle in personal appearance of a certain period. Qur pict- ures are both pleasing and accurate, and can be referred to at a future date with considerable satisfaction to the subject : : : 4i5'i -52 , E 14,16 TREMONT STREET CBETVVEEN TEMPLE PLACE AND WEST SED Discount to TECH,,' S EQ, wi 3 QQ fx C x2 W 2- '53 FC A A fif.-Q. lf? C ,,-I 1 Nix fc v QR K , QI October 25. Steinberg, '05, buys a TECH - My Q?ec6nique Qbbverfiser ational ube Co. Manzyfacfurers fyfWrought Merchant Pipe BOILER TUBES, CASING, TUBING amz' DRIVE PIPE, GAS and OIL LINE PIPEQI All kinds: Sizes if-inch to 30-inch NATIONAL DEPARTMENT, MCKEESPORT, PA. Water and Gas Mains Fitted with Converse or Matheson Joints i Q - gvamlwaa Umbra ann ilmuirrllanrnua ilinrgmg LOCAL SALES OFFICES NEW YORK! Havemeyer Building. CHICAGO: Rookery Building. PHILADELPHIA Pennsylvania Building. SAN FRANCISCO: 420 California Street. PITTSBLRG Erick Building :: :: :: :: :: :: 1: :: :: :: :: 411 October 3l. Gene Burton lends prestige to a select Halloween party in Chelsea Zlie Zecflnique Qkbverfiser Moron Regixzhg Valve! SUI: l fell-195' .nlhiuc-4-at -I u JL l sw ll Sl ? l ARE THE WORLD'S STANDARD VALVES TT For automatically reducing and absolutely maintaining an even steam or air pressure. 'lTThey 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. YOUNG'S HOTEL European Plan Head of Sfafe Sf., Bosfon 225156 CPA R K E R H O U S E European Plan School and Tremonf Sfs., Bosfon 22365 HOTEL TO URAINE ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF European Plan Tremonf and Boylslon Sfs,, Bosfon 15358 I. R. WHIPPLE, E1 CO., Proprietors Ill November 2. Professor Cross mislays his notebook and omits two of his annual jolcelets Zije Qieciinique Qkbverfiser wmmwwwww TH E N ATI O N AL DEPOSITORY SHAWMUT BANK OFT-HE OF BOSTON CUUTEDSTATES 22563 COMMONWEALTH OF Capital ..... 33,500,000 MASSACHUSETTS Surplus and Profits, over 53,000,000 AND my E2 5 CHTYIHTBOSTON I 0FF1cERs mmmmmmmm C C STONEEYVVEBSTER iilvrtriral 'iixpvrin zmil Enginvrrn 84 STATE STREET, BOSTON, MASS QI November 7. 1906 holds a Field Day. Several members of l907 present xii Wie Q7ec5nique Qlbvertiser Curtis Engineering Specialties Il 5-- in-TW ljlilllllllllllllilll tilllllmllhllllllilllllilllltltltllillllltlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllIlllllililllllllllllllllIIIIKIIHIIII I se ff 1IllllIllllllIlIlllIll1I., .I Illlllllllllllli 1lllllllllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllll 'INET 4illIIlllIlllllll IHHlillllIlIlIlHl!'llIII , 'llllllllllll lllllllllllilllllllllllll illlllllll -E I3llHlllll'lIlilllhlllilHl'lItlItII X ' l'llHHHllillIHIlI l 'l'l'l -IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImII.I.II.I.I II I .IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII - ,W .-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I w. .PY:1EiEEll?lll IWIIIIIIIIIIIIlumlIlIlIliiiI 2 ' M --- 1 i 'i' l Iv, I .V l 'K I' l . l W5'lllEI3Ii'EEliE'ilk5ll!I55EllE'illllllllllI:IsIr 'Qlllllllllililili 'img lgllllllll llylllllllllllllllllIllllllllllilllllllllllllllilllilillkllllllllllllllllllllliIlilllllllllllllllllllHlllllilllllllllilllllllIllllllll I I HuIIn:IIw.i.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIuuululuIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImmun IIIIIII,I,.IIIIIIII.. ,j?lf'e II I f ' I SW il I2 II1',J IW- DAMPER REGULATOR I -,EIU I, I I 5' R l Ill 'II ,f-gsfzlflzllullfllfjl l t 'lla ! I ll I l1:Qfi+ LIST OF SPECIALTIES qi-fill ' I' IMI 'll'ilI-7 I E ,I I we MANUFACTURL IQ -5 75? 'ii' ' 7. 5' E I 1' asf all l mi' XII .IIIII ,E Improved Pressure Regulator IE S l'IH fW1m1nnm1LW iI. Improved Pump Regulator ' 'j S I llllIlIlfu I I Water Pressure Regulator ' l ,II III IV! Ii I .Ifbi Relief Valve for Steam and Water qw!! 'QI I Q V il il i il: i ' l IIlHI' : i all Mmm mnumlnll ll ,II , I I ,III Combined Separator and Trap II II I II I II Ig E I Tank Governor and rump IlIIlHlllHl1 lllllilllml Iir ll' I I Qir Spring Tljressure Regulator E' uw ' If I II xpansion rap IMPROVED PRESSURE REGULATOR Ii l Return Steam Trap Balanced Steam Trap ,I'llI l I?tIl Damper Regulator I 'ld 'f::::::I lr I I IIIIEF II R iiiilelilfiiefiegum + T ll U. s. Ball cock Gauge Cock S, - lfifl A If. II QV I ! 11 1 . I ' .. -I x' ' , Rl iii- Vjf f QI fit Iw i ? RN 'l 5 ffff . II, I I IWQ 1904 Cafalogae 'I 'L I II IIIIIIIII In QE .Illllllllllllllllllllll21IIIIIlIIIIIHHIIIII A ia . I mIIInIIn IIIl- If -Ig-I '. an .E n I I- IIIRR ' Illllll !IIH,Il!HIIlH1H'I- - . E6 Hi ll!! 1 , al I-'ff ' -' fi L X3 I I, BALANCED STEAM TRAP S I Ip 0 , Iullan d Este Company RETURN STEAM TRAP 24 CANAL STREET, BOSTON, MASS. ill November IZ. Fire Sale at Vorenberg's. Report that Webber, '06, buys a vest is denied by friends Clk Qiectinique Qftbverfiser xiii g A LITTLE THING YOU OUGHT TO KNOWABOUT : : : : : : The Very Bef! Grzhelzizg Wheel- The iNUHTUNf O Tell us your requirements and allow our experience and judgment to be your wheel guide fllTlie largest ancl most complete plant in the world cle- voted to the scientific manufacture, grading and testing of Emery, Corundum and Alundum Wheels ill Silicate, Elastic or Vitriflecl, from 3-I6 inch to 7 feet in Diameter. qlOur facilities for the Manufacture of the largest wheels are unsurpassed. lllAgencies with complete stoclc of goods-EVERYWHERE : :, 2 : : : : NORTON EMERY WHEEL COMPANY Chieezgo Sfore, 25 South Cana! Sf. Ojiee and Workf, Werceffer, Ma:J., U. S. 11. L ID G E R W0 0 D imitating iinginvz be WESTON wi- - P offmefers and Afmmefery . M EM qi Are built to gauge on the YF duplicate part system. T llllll' 111 Quick delivery assured .cj '- ,Q f i mi W gif: V . P ORTABLE 'ii-ull O 21000 - J A c c U R AT E - E A Ver i ln USC' gg R E L IA B L E img, f- , ,ee ir : T E I -ef! T 1. 5, ' N Y -,E -, Q: i Sax an Ste and EI tr T TT TRTM- A We it R' - -. i H f our instruments are RECOGNIZED as STANDARD, lj send for Late f throughout the civilized world Catalogue WESTON ELECTRICAL A A Ea' INSTRUMENT CGMPANY WAVERLY PARK, NEWARK, N.J. N. Y. OFFTCE, 74 CORTDLANT STREET STANDARD Llueskwoao volsrams ENGIAE LIDGERVVOOD MFG.CO. 96 LIBERTY STREET, NEW YORK 111 November l9. Dr. Fay omits to say enormous tendency Xiv Ckie 27ec5nique Qkbvertiser The Name Ashcroft is a Guarantee of the quality of any device on which it appears. qISteam, Pressure, and Water Gauges, Recording Gaugesg Revolution Countersg Marine and Engine Room Clocksg Steam Trapsg Pipe Stocks and Diesg Brown's Adjustable Pipe Tongsg Packer Ratchets, Gauge Glasses, and the TABOR INDICATOR QI This indicator has for a long while been in use by the prin- cipal navies of the World, and has recently been greatly changed in design by the placing of the spring outside. This removes it from the direct action of the steam, keeps it from moisture and sudden changes of temperature, and adds to the conven- ience of handling. This is described in a special new circular. 11 . ,jr TZ V ' -' - if P72 ,-1 Z Lui 4: ,- .. ies, . 12 7 -f - ' ll mnu r l ' mm T - i il llll W W . ,lll lil lk ff' 11 llll ll : l ,ll 'll ll ll Q, ll l 4 .alll C l .lt l M il ' l l ,I ,Qlll ik, lem V x. a f -l 1 'fl lu ll Q: lil 1 5 u m, f l mumll lu Hull, I - Ry' .llwu l 'A-Q f 3 J 1 ll l E Ill! ll ll ll i ll 1, ,nl 4 5- - ' i i , The Asbcrjf fwfg. Company, 8 ljfw89Yij'f'g.Sff2fff CHICAGO OFFICE, 22-24-26 South Canal Sf. Hundredy of Thousands Hanaock STEAM eq-ff' E, ' 'lit-me fm QQ, I mul my Z ifllllfl Jil 3 11' Tl ' 111-.1 lg ' Wigs, . E ll nu- :- I ' 'rlimwvri I .1 I -.1-,,.:. N r tif- . A ',-3 ll.. 'lu Q-'TTE31 Vflllli- li'-' 'lla nauvsan - 'llllll zv 5, V, S v- F Impimfors and E jecfors Are in Use IL These injectors are working in all sorts of places and have TE will records of over 25 years. They start on a pressure of I5 mm l pounds, will Work to 250 pounds or higher, and will lift wivrza 25 feet. Made in marine, stationary and portable types, and 5 the genuine have the words Hancock lnspiratorn cast on mmf the body. OBIERELQW. THE HANCOCK INSPIRATOR CO. Chicago Office, 22-24-26 South Cana! Si. 85-87-89 Lfberfy Sf., New York U S. A. QI November 21. Annual Glee Club Concert at State Deaf and Dumb Asylum much appreciated 65a Ceckhxique Qlbvertiser XV Steel Tapes In Steel or Lmtfaer Cases , Ywea .V ' f,:'rHE L.S. T 3 ST I I 15, I ' ' I-ss.. q PRN Zyfze-Lfuaafissl ,A I ' V ':1: I -N-- i I In our tapes the figures denoting feet are smaller than those denoting inches. Two reasons for this : This dissimilarity of figures materially les- sens fin fact ought to entirely prohibitj 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, instead 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. Sendfor Catalog No.1 7ofFine flleclzanical Tools TbeiL. S. Starrett Co. ATHOL, NIASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A. me Baker 81 Adamson Chemical Co. MANUFACTURERS OF Cwemicaffg tpure Qiluriafic Qlifric anb 5ul3pBuric Qllcibs cmb Qlmmonia CI-IEIVIICALLY PURE SALTS ASI-ILESS FILTER PAPERS Ed-XZL072, Pemtsyftfczfzzkt Pittsburgh Testing I,6lb07 df07 .Q! . .Lzhziteff INSPECTING AND METALLURGICAL ENGINEERS AND CHEMISTS Specialties, Inspection of RAILS, STEEL and WOODEN CARS and all material for BRIDGES, BUILDINGS, and other structures, Boiler and Engine Tests Cfyemical Azzrzgfszs if Physical Tests Of All Kinds 3 .35 VV ater St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Chicago, 1750 Monadnock Block Philadelphia, 906-7 Crozier Building New York, 60 New Street Richmond, Va., 11075 E. Main Street QI November 24. Noyes, '07, wins running broad smile Xvi 61542 Zecbnique Qkbverfiser Cross Compound Corliss Engine with H y Duty Frame, Direct C .. THE .. VILTER MFG. C0. IOIB Clinton Street, MILWAUKEE, WIS. High Grade Corliss Engines , I High Pressure, Compound and Com- pound Condensing. Girder or Heavy D ty Bed, Ice Making and Re: f igerating Mach-inery. cted to Duplex Compressors SEWER PIPE 36, 30 and 27-inch our specialty. Also smaller sizes, 3-foot lengths. Deep sockets. Corrugated ends. I WRITE FOR PRICES EVENS Sc HOWARD FIRE BRICK COMPANY SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI, U.S.A. 9 Awarded Gold Medal World's Columbian Exposition Awarded Grand Prix at Paris Nineteen Hundred Best Circular and Band Saw Plates. Best Annealed Tool and Die Steel. Double Shear and Sheet Steel, Truss Spring and Blister Steel. Annealecl Die Blocks WM. JESSOP Sc SONS Limited Cbiqf Amerzkazz Ojfre, QI 70672 Street, New 1' ark W. F. WAGNER, General Manager BG' Mazzufartary, SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND BG' O P ERATING FESSOP STEEL COMPANY WASHINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA Manufacturers of CRUCIBLE SHEET STEEL For Saws and Other Tools CHARLES RIVER IRON WORKS ESTABLISHED 1860 EDWARD KENDALL Sc SONS Qrtanufacfurers of Qteam Mowers, Canis anb gfrfafe Jron 'ilforft of Gverp Qescription END WEST BOSTON BRIDGE :: :: CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS. 111 November 27. Linus having left, no Descript exam follows Thanksgiving 652 Cectinique qzjtbverfiser I Xvii BALDWIN LOCGIVIOTIVE WORKS r,.,,,,, ..,,,, ,,, , , ,.., ,...,, ,. ....-.-,-, ..,,,. W- .,.., ,, ,,., . , . S. ,V I I f f ' , BROAD SINGLE AND NARROW Q EXPANSION GAUGE B AND COMPOUND Mine, Furnace and Industrial Locomotives. Electric Locomotives with Westinghouse Motors and Electric Trucks BURNI-IAM, WILLIAMS QSC CQ., Philadelphia, Pa., UQ S. A. code Word- Baldwin Philadelphia THAT ALL ARE MOULDED TRUE T0 PATTERN SM ARE OF TOUGH AND UNIFORM SWETAL ARE EASILY MACHINED KNO Hard Spofsj S ARE FREE FROM BLOW OR SAND HOLES CAS S WILL TAKE A FINE POLISH WILL HARDEN LIKE TOOL STEEL Send Samples for Prices, Stating Quantity Required I-I F S5 and 87 PEARL STREET OIIICI' . IVCYIIIOYC . . BOSTON, MASS. Rawson gl Morrison Manufacturing Company Auiomazic Coal Handlzlng Machinery STANDARD AND EASTERN HOISTING ENGINES ELECTRIC HOISTS, CABLE WA YS AND SPECIAL MACHINERY New York, II Broadway. Baltimore, 3-5 German. Chicago, 48-50 Lake Street. Philadelphia, I406 Washington Avenue New Orleans, 200 South Peters Street. San Franciso, Rialto Building E2'3LeD'?2?iZ2sf'.K'fQIlf2fON works, 31-45 Main St., cambfidgepoff, BOSTON, MASS. QI December 2. Charlie Dean addresses a I' Mothers' Meeting at Tech Mission Xviii Che Cectiniq ue Qtbvertiser BOSTON Er MAI lf, RAILROAD g2,2f2h,fff,12 west, NORTHWEST AND SOUTHWEST Trains leave Boston via the Fitchburg Division 9 a m For Troy, Albany, Binghamton, Elmira, Chicago and Cincinnati. Pullman Parlor car Boston to Albany week. ' ' ' days. Sleeping car Boston to Chicago. Tourist car Boston to Chicago on Vfednesdays, and Boston to Cincinnati on Mondays, via D. 81 H. and Erie Rds. On Sundays leave Boston at Q.Ol a. m. m Dailyfor Troy, Albany, Rotterdam, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester, Detroit, Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago, St. ' p' ' Louis and Kansas City. Pullman Parlor car Boston to Troy on week.days. Sleeping car to Chicago, also St. Louis. Tourist car Boston to Chicago on Tuesdays, Thursda s and Saturdays via VVest Shore and YVabash Roads ' on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays via YVest Shore and bfickel Plate Roads. , 4 m Daily for Troy, Albany, Binghamton, Elmira, Cincinnati, Rotterdam, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo. Cleve: ' P' ' land and Chicago. Pullman Sleeping car Boston to Chicago via Nickel Plate daily, and to Chicago on Sundavs only via West Shore and W'abash Roads, also Boston to I-Iornellsville daily. ' ' 6 m Daily, except Sundays, for Rotterdam, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis and ' p' ' Kansas City. Pullman Sleeping car Boston to Chicago, Via the Southern Division a nl Daily, except Sundays, for Newport, Montreal, Detroit, Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis. Sleeping car ' ' ' Boston to Montreal, St, Paul and Minneapolis. ll a m Daily, except Sundays, for Montreal, Toronto, Detroit, and Chicago. Pullman Sleeping car Boston to Chicago. ' ' ' Tourist car Boston to Chicago on Mondays and TVednesdays via. Central Vermont and Grand Trunk Railways. 7.30 19.111, Daily for Montreal, Toronto, Detroit and Chicago. Pullman Sleeping car Boston to Montreal. m Daily for Newport, Montreal, Detroit and Chicago. Sleeping car Boston to Montreal. Tourist car Boston to ' p' ' Vancouver on VVednesda s via Canadian Pacific Railwa . Y Y D. I. FLANDTLRS, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, BOSTON, MASS. K 5 166 X a ' Th h me r.3?.?5. Da Leave BOSTON over the Boston 8: Albany R. R. For points XVest 111.11 New York Central Lines, with through car service to Albany, Buffalo, De: troit, Cleveland, Chicago. St. HA Railroad Beautiful is the title ofa ox 12 brochure issued by the Passenger Department BOSTON Si ALBANY R. R. Contllifliflg Illustrations and Description of its work in Landscape Gardening at Railroad Stations Copy of this pamphlet will be mailed on request. QSee illustrationj , 01 ,na l cf Louis, Cincinnati and Pittsburg. THE BOSTON 6: ALBANY R. R. with its double-track system, gives the finest train service out of New England, and the route lies through the Picturesque Berkshire Hills, the Mohawk Valley, thence via Niagara Falls NEYVTON HIGHLANDS STATION AND GROUNDS 5100 a. Albany Local. Connections forpoints in New York State. 81150 n.. Albany Express. For Saratoga and New York State. -Parlor car to Albany and Syracuse.- 10 'l5 a. Berkshire Express. Albany, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo. Parlor car torfrlbany and Buffalo. ' 10 45 n.m. Chicago Special via Lake Shore, Cleveland, Chicago, Pittsburg,Cincinnati, St. Louis. Sleepers and Diningcar. 2t00 p.m. North Shore Limited via Michigan Central, Detroit, Grand RH17ldS,'Ch1C2lg0. Pullman Sleepers and Dining car. 3130 p. lVestern Express. Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago. Pullman Sleepers. 6i 00 p.1n. Southwestern Express. Cincinnati, Detroit and Chicago. Pullman Buffet Sleepers. SBOO p.m. Pacific Express. Buffalo and Chicago. Pullman Sleepers. 11145 p . Albany Local. Points in New York State. Pullman Sleepers to Albany. Turzoucu SLEEPING CAR AND DINING CAR SERVICE COMPLETE. if Daily. T Except Sunday. it Except Saturday. For advertising matter, address, A. S. HANSON, General Passenger Agent, South Station, Boston, Mass. 'll December S. A new chicken added to Lunch Room menu 664: Zectinique Qtbverfiser Xix BETWEEN 'W'l '1' Queen of Sea Routes BOSTON, PROVIDENCE BALTIMORE, NORFOLK NEWPORT NEWS, RICH- MOND Ef WASHINGTON Hlvrrhanta anh Hilinrra Finest Coastwise Trips in the World Steamships New, fast and Elegant. Accommodations and Cuisine Unsurpassed :: I ranapnrtaiinn Glnmpzmg Send for illustrated booklet, particulars, etc. p A. M. GRAHAM, Agent W. P. CORIA, Agent ply, Boston, Mass. Proyiclence, R. l. W. P. TURNER, General Passenger Agent Baltimore, Md. EASE of TRAVEL on the WABASH HE. ease with which trains on the WABASH LINE run has often been the subject of remark by travelers. It is not unusual to see patrons enjoying their morning shave as comfortably as at home while traveling at the rate of sixty miles an hour. THROUGH CARS are run between St. Louis and Chicago, Kansas City, Omaha, New York, Boston, Los Angeles, Minneapolis and St. Paul, between Chicago and Buffalo, New York, Boston and Montreal, between Kansas City and Buffalo. The Wabash Line has its own rails direct to the World's Fair Grounds in St. Louis. All Wabash through trains pass through the beautiful Forest Park and stop at Worlds Fair Station, landing passengers directly at main entrance. For infomation as to rates, routes, etc., address C. S. CRANE, Gen'l Pass. and Tkt. Agent, ST. LOUIS, MO. 4. 7. iff i v iii. 'fi :wi 15,3 -L' . -- -,Q - ii '55 wfr. ,,' as-495' Q qi December l7. Wellesley closes. Warren and Burke cut two days and start for Chicago Qikie Q7ec5nique Qfkbvertiser Texas and Louisiana E. P. TURNER General Passenger Agent, Dallas, Texas Through Tourist and Stand- WM ard Sleepers between St. u Louis and California with- QQ , THE 09645 out change... Cl-V Nt WWW P0 f itlw . WWWWA A NEW DINING CARS fmealsa lacarrej 2-ai TEXAS PACIFIC in between Texas and St. Louis... S IVIWIIIIW Wlllwf 6 W W xfa Write for New Book on Texas. Free lp sassy 0 RAILWAY ga Illiiii A tum l No Trouble to Answer Questions A ,.. , ,,, P 1 1 T L. w. EwAn.o, N. E. P. AGT., 192 WASHINGTON sv., Bosron, MASS. i 111 Christmas. Geclcler expects a hair-cut but is disappointed Clie Cecijnique Qfjbverfiser C. F. HOVEY 85 CO. IMP ORTERS AND RETAIL Brg Mumba. g Q1 .we-gen ERS OF illlmfa Illurniuhing Mumba 5' G 171 4 4 5. 5 fykgalglg M553 A of H Q x--1 - f if? .- . . qgiiig 9 1-49 0 QTlTTi.'f7 Wav 33 SUMMER STREET 42 AVON STREET BOSTON, MASS. Samson Spot Cor d Ashton Pop Valves g effect Satisfaction. Made of Best Material. Insuring greatest Elffxciency and ggi? V A YV Durability. Send for Catalogue T . ., is , , es. -ea, TZ' 5 as V w, V2 1 gf specify ..f- 'S' Ashton Well known by our trade-mark-THB Pop ' COLORED SPOT. It is all inspected, and Valves we can thus guarantee it free from flaws and -Ml 4 .4-IQ V, aw K'- if, p ie , If I f-MM ,Q-1,1-Q: I ' f-'jr M? gifs' ls r' .gig f,c,3w - A Y Lila? g i, Sash Cord, Curtain Cord, Clothes Lines, Chalk Lines, lVIason's L' ' mes, Shade Lines, Etc. Linen and Hemp Corcl Samson Cordage Works BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 111 December 28. T h Gages The Best is None too Good ASHTON STEAM CAGE, H ave Non-Corrosive Movements and Seamless Drawn Tubes: Are Accurate, Durable and Strictly High Grade TON VALVE, C O. 27x Franklin Street, BOSTON Branches: NEW YORK CHICAGO LONDON ec opens. Profs. lecture to small houses Xxi A Wie Ceclwique Qtbvertiser XXII USI Lss C RD C. W. GOODALE WITH BOSTON IQ: INIONTANA CONS. COPPER AND SILVER MINING CO. A. H. ROGERS, 990 MANAGER VELARDENA MINING Kr SMELTING CO. VELARDENA, DGO., MEXICO CHARLES T. INIAIN DEAN dk MAIN, MILL ENGINEERS EXCHANGE BLDG., BOSTON GEORGE A. PACKARD METALLURGIST At MINING ENGINEER BEDFORD DICNEIL CODE USED IJERMANENT ADDRESS, 18 LAFAYETTE ST. XVAKEFIELD, BIASS. CIIARLES S. GOODING, '79 MECH. ENGINEER AND SOLICITOR OF PATENTS 28 SCHOOL ST., BOSTON, MASS. H. L. BRAND PRESIDENT BRAND BROS. CO. CHICAGO FREDERICK B. KNAPP, '79 PRINCIPAL OF POWVDER POINT SCHOOL DUXBURY, MASS. II. A. FISKE, '91 MANAGER SPECIAL RISK DEPARTAIENT PHOENIX INSURANCE CO. IIARTFORD, CONN. GEO. W. MANSFIELD SEC,Y AND TREAS. EASTERN ELECTRIC CONTRACT CO. 406 BOARD OF TRADE BUILDING, BOSTON, MASS. LEONARD C. WASON C. E., M. AM. SOC. C. E. CONSULTING ENGINEER FOR CONCRETE STEEL CONSTRUCTION OF EVERY KIND 8 BEACON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. A. D. LITTLE, 985 LITTLE fic XVALKEB, CHEMISTS 93 BROAD STREET, BOSTON S . WV. IVILDER MERRIMAC CHEMICAL CO. BOSTON, NIASS. GARDNER T. VOORI-IEES BEFRIGERATING ENGINEER, CHIEF BUREAU OF REFRIGERATION UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION' ST. LOUIS, MO. WVALTER M. NEVVKIRK, ,92 MANAGER, DEPARTMENT OF ENGINEERING BUIIL MALLEABLE CO. DETROIT, LIICH. ll january I. Castleman is seen buying a cake of soap ZW Zeckinique Qkbverfiser Xxiii J. SCOTT PARRISH, '92 RICHBIOND, VIRGINIA ARTHUR A. BLA,NCHARD, '98 INSTRUCTOR IN CHEINIISTRY AND CONSULTING CHEMIST IVIASS. INST. TECH. E. ZAPF, '95 SECRETARY ADIERICAN SCHOOL OF CORRESPONDENCE A. CHICAGO, ILL. GEORGE D. HUNTINGTON ASSISTANT ENGINEER NEWV YORK AIR BRAKE CO. R. S. IIARDX, PAUL P. JOIINSON, '98 FACTORY SUPERINTENDENT PROINIOTER PROVO, - UTIXII JOHNSON SERVICE CO. IVIILWAUIIEE, XVIS. LAIWIBERT N. WVHITNEY SUPERINTENDENT CENTRAL UNION TELEPIIONE CO. INDIANAPO LIS, INDIANA CARROLL XV. BROXVN WYITI-I BROWN HOISTING MACHINERY CO. CLEVELAND, 01110. MALCOLM F. EXVEN ENGINEER OF LIGNUM INVERSION CO. 145 LA SALLE ST., CIIICIKGO, ILL. ALBERT WV. TUCKER WVITH SEABOARD COPPER COMPANY WTIRGILINA, VIRGINIA A. L. JENNINGS, '97 WVITII B. F. STURTEVANT CO. 135 N. 3D STREET, PHILA., PA. ISI. B. FOSTER, 901 M. B. FOSTER ELECTRIC CO. NEW 1'0RR' BOSTON YVINI. C. POTTER, '97 TVITI-I DICKDIAN, BIACKENZIE LE POTTER RIINING ENGINEERS CHICAGO, ILL. GEORGE T. WVILSON, 'Ol WVITH FRANK B. GILBRETH, BUILDING CONTRACTOR BOSTON BALTIBIORE NEW 1'0RK LONDON ERNEST XVOODYATT ARCIIITIJCT 123 LA SALLE ST., CHICAGO HARLE OREN CUMDIINS, 'O2 BIAXAGER INIIDDLE CREEK GOLD BIINING CO. SHASTA, CAL. 'II january 4. Graesser returns from Buffalo, and says he is going to import a n queen for the Prom xxiv My Gectinique Qtbverfiser VACUU OILS ARE used in every corner of the world where wheels turn-because they Iuhricate most. CII If interested in lubri- cation wouIcI he pleased to have you writeus::::: :::: VACUUM OIL COMPANY Roci-IESTER, 1: NEWYORK Heder, IACTHITISOH 8K CO. ESTABLISHED 1828 Boston Store, 68 Sc 70 HIGH STREET BAY STATE BELTING CO. BRANCHES X New York I ANUFACTURERS OF GLUE PhiladelPhia Q .:' 111 CURLED HAIR QU FLINT Atlanta xx., PAPER ill GARNET PAPERQI Memphis :Ei EMERY PAPER and EMERY CLOTH 3:2 QIGROUND FLINT and EIVIERYIJI I' HAIRFELT for covering Boilers and I N PIPES and for Lining Refrigerators : : : If TANNERIES WIZWWWTI' H' Graduates of the Institute of Technolngy Salem, Mass. age invitedf to acquaipt ttlhernsglves vgith t C manu SC UYCS 0 C 3 Ove rm South Boston A., STORES 71 '-U. Philadelphia New York Boston Chicago - FACTORIES l Sole 'Lanners and Manufacturers of the Philadelphia Newark, N. J. Woburn, Mass. Genuine Indian Tanned Belting 8: Lacing Leather 'fidzii 66 Hartford Steam Boller v L cial I Inspection and Insurance Co Hartford Ct F. W. DEAN CIIAS. T. MAIN, ,76 DEAN 85 MAIN MECHANICAL AND MILL ENGINEERS EXCHANGE BUILDING, 53 STATE STREET BOSTON, Mass. QI january I3. Dippy attends a German recitation Cm ?Jecl5nique Qfkbverfiser XXV FRANK B. CILBRETH GENERAL CONTRACTOR FOR RAPID BUILDING CONSTRUCTION WE MAINTAIN A PERMANENT FORCE OF CIVIL, MECHANICAL AND CONCRETE EN- CINEERS, AND THE LARGEST EQUIPMENT OF CONCRETE MACHINERY ---ORCANIZATION J. W. BUZZELL, C. E., GENERAL MANAGER W. E. HAMLIN, A.M. AM. soc. c.E., CHIEF CIVIL ENGINEER W. H. LARKIN, JR., M.E., CHIEF MECHANICAL ENGINEER G. T. WILSON, MECHANICAL ENCI EER BALTIMORE BOSTON NEW YORK 1,11 January ZI. Bill Green asks Prof. what Q and T stand for in Entropy 2 SI? xxvi Clie Qieciiniq ue Qkbverfiser KUTTROFF, PICKHARDT 85 CO. BADISCHE ANILIN- C99 SODA-FABRIK Ludwigshafen o f Rhine, Germany Importers of Aniline and .dlizezrine Dyes Colors, Chemicals and Indigo Technical Chemicals Liquid Chlorine Anhydrous Suljrhuric Acid, also Fleming All Strength: 128 DUANE STREET .... . NEW YORK Branch Ofces Boston . .... 153 Milk Street Providence . .... 80 So. Water Street Philadelphia . 207 Chestnut Street Chicago . . 107 Michigan Street N San Franciso . 215 Sacramento Street I I y y 151 January 27. Ralph Whitcomb lcillsn a condition exam. in Military Science CW Zeciinique Qflbverfiser Xxvii C. H. LAMBIE, President CHAS. CRISPIN, Secretary and Treasurer 1 illinhlag Qllag ISM Qlnmpang Glass Melting Pots... ...Tank and furnace Blocks. GLASSHOUSF, SUPPLIES Eastern Plant Western Plant WASHINGTON, PA. FINDLAY, OHIO THE, 3 Solvay Process Co. 1 Q04 LKALI MANUFACTURERS , 3579 Works at SOLVAY, near Syracuse, N. Y., DELRAY, ll near Detroit, Michigan SODA, CAUSTIC, CRYSTALS, Etc. M. H. BARKER, General Manager XV. O. LINCOLN, Treasur r AMERICAN TOOL AND BIACHINE COMPANY ENGINEERS, FOUNDERS, INLACHINISTS MANUFACTURERS OF SHAFTING, PULLEYS, HANGERS, FRICTION CLUTCHES, GENERAL NIA- CHINERY AND MILL YVORK. IRON, BRASS A.ND LEAD CASTINGS SPECIALTIES: WESTON CENTRIFUGALS, 1-IYDRO-ExTR.Ic'1'oRs, BRASS FIXISHERS' LATHES, BELT KNIFE SPLITTING BIACHINES, IBIPROVED WVORRALL FRICTION CLUTCH COUPLIXGS AND PULLEYS, IIKIPROVED BELT TIGHTEXERS 109 BEACH STREET TELEPHONES, 64 AND 63 oxronn BOSTON, BIASS- Ill January 29. Exams. over. Bob Clark reverses his cuffs and starts for Northampton Xxviii Clie ifiectinique Qtbvertiser Boston 81 Lockport Block Co. 160 COMMERCIAL ST., BOSTON 33 SOUTH ST., NEW YORK HIGHEST GRADE Blocks - Pumps - I fucks Send for 1904 Catalogue 5 I . I Eff' I 41'w'K', Iiiilitiv- ', X W I' I ' It I TW ' X -I . K Diaphragm Pump Wire Rope BIocIcs my The CI-IAS I-I EI ,I .JIO I I CO ,ewiwiwgf THE LARGEST COLLEGE ENGRAVING HOUSE IN THE WORLD It New York Office, 156 FIFTH AVENUE Works: 17th Street and Lehigh Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. Qtnmmvnrrmrnt Zlnhitatinna ann 0112155 Eng lgrngranw Dance Programs and Invitations CIass and Fraternity Stationery ...IVIenus... CIass Pins ancI IVIecIaIs Cwfife for Catalogue, Class and Fraternity Inserts for Annuals Makers of Superior I-IaII-Tones . . . . I ,, Q11 February 2. Lambie begins daily theme fto father, entitled. Exams are not the true lest Electrolyte or Storage Battery Solution ny and other Chemicals Cty: Geciinique Qjtbverfiser ' Xxix COCHRANE CHEMICAL COMPANY 55 KILBY STREET, BOSTQN, MASS. Manufacturers of Oil Vitriol Glaubefs Salt Muriatic Acid Extract Indigo Nitric Acid Aqua Ammonia Aqua Fortis Sulphate Ammonia Acetic Acid Sal Ammoniac Tin Crystals Sulphate Soda Muriates of Tin Bisulphate Soda BUSINESS FO UNDED 1849 Bisulphite Soda Hyposulphite Soda Sulphide Soda Stannate Soda Alum Porus Alum Sulphate Alumina Oxy. Mur. Antimo Chloride Alumina Wool Carbonizers Nitrate Iron N'tr t C r cixifiafilf lron Liquors WORKS ATEVERETT, MASS. Dixonas American Graphite Pencils qlllust four words but they mean a great deal. These pencils are used in all the leading Scientific and Technical Schools in the country, and have great strength and durability of lead combined with absolute smoothness and accuracy in grading. Ill Pupils in America's leading school should use Americafs leading pencil. Try them and you will not regret that we gave you the hint Joseph Dixon Crucible Co. Jersey City, N. Freight Elevators FOR MILLS, FACTORIES, WAREHOUSES, ETC. Q11 0ur Belt Power, l-land Power, Electric, l-lydraulic, and Steam Freight Elevators are given the benefit of the most accurate construction. They are reliable, durable and economical of power Write for Descriptive Booklet MORSE,WILLIAMS Sc CO. IQ PEARL STREET, BOSTON D. B. MACLAR T, Safer Agent 0---0 -hhh ....:E-::--- -:-. .. .... --.gi -,.,-.:... 1 L . - ..-J -: iezm ssc- ------- -: E.--a-... -:J --,ss-:.: --c::-...,-.- E E i A-..-.-.. .--.... A.-- ..7Yv:.-1-1-ue. , -- ?-11:1-:1::-,:-1-1: r-5 . . -ig .,,,. ...:.yiE55J.:-e: ?.:5-figzyza-.n:1,: :gage 515: ..-.,.,-..,.... ..::-:f ,.... .s--. :.?::'::-: Eyes? , V -LW c. L.pBliRlivExR at SONS T T T Ji., m,:i., i.w,1a..,....n :ni lr, iijl mtlgas .i,.g'1igza. N xiisim tx will qi ny' -5 -:' ,.f - ly ,,ii 'iw-a,f,, ti 1 l wi ilfill SW' :ri in Blix! illli iiil in .1 '-.1i'n,' 'un -1 ,IFA-f -ef Q ' wt . 1 5231: :. ' an , ' ' 1 'tlllfwii lli' ' 'lliif 3311: -ki ll 1 'lil ix ' a ll llf lill li fmsgilfasa l '. Lili ' l ' ' Surveying, Engineering Afrtrofzamifal Ifzftrzzmezztf gf Prerifim N, it , 5 H l up L 5, F9 it gt. ,it 37 WILLIAMS STREET, BOSTON .ami -'i e-T5 lag--2 - sag - T -5 ' 113145-il l lu !5?:, , 1-121'-E. i' . p vas: , n i,..3li:. 1 , , , l, .H -rtigll 3 -MAQ gy? ,T -,E? - hr 4, Tlieysecure ingtheir- instrumentss Accuracy of ag.: 7 ' ff ' ',t'f5'l' 4Tlll',.'2fl' , :.12 -Mt : Division, Simplicity in hianipulatmn, Liglitness : combined with Strength, a Chromatic Telescope with High Power, Steadiness of Adjustments under Varying Temperatures Stilfness to avoid any Tremor, even in a strong wind, and Thorough XVorkmansliip in Every Part. 1TTheir instruments are in, general use by the United States Government Engineers. Geologists and Survevors, and the range of instruments, as made bv them for River Harbor, City, Bridge, Tunnel, Railroad and Mining Engineering, as well as those made for Triangulation or Topographical XVork and Lund Surveying, etc., is larger than that of any firm in the country. Illuffrated M'a1zual and Catalogue Sen! on Appliralion ill February 9. Rumor afloat that H. Mawn, '06, got an L in Physics xxx Cm Gecbnique Qkbvertiser only Now let us send your th,eFREE BOOK telling all about it. U I I We will also send you iiftyroriginal suggestionspfor improving your handwriting. Pl F 1N MT2lnePcenf'TUi'lmea,iE Fills Its lf 99 Dip pen in any ink Well or any ink, press lever and operation is over. As a matter of cleanliness, comfort and convenience, don't you owe it to yourself to learn more about this perfect pen? Ifyou will let us send you our beautiful new illustrated catalogue, it will make you a CONKLIN enthusiast. The Conklin Pen Co. 699 Mad's2'5L'IJ53f'f,',,,0, Represented in Great Britain by American Agencies, Ltd., 38 Shoe Lane, Farringdon St., London, E. C.g in Australia by Rae, Munn 8: Gilbert, 47 Market Street, Melbourne. ill February IO. Rumor not connmied Ziie Zeciinique Qfkbverfiser 1 Xxxi be msnot 2 ji 2 'v' 47 'PVWAKQ A. S. A D A M S IOO TREMCNT STREET Tie M. I. 71 Ojgeiczl jeweler I4 Karat Gold Triangle Enamel Raised Monogram 52.50 IO U Flush 2.00 St l' S1 R rl 1.00 F1 h ' 4 lx t G ld R d Pl 2 55 St l S 1 4K tome 1 3 BENT Sc BUSH I5 SCHOOL STREET BQSTON, MASS. Cach Gmbleme St l g S l 1 XX l l l1 lf size tr gl l p a d fp t ft gl circle above. 4 lx tG ld T l E nel Plain Monogram 51.50 ' 4 Scarfpin 1.50 Sterling S l T gl Plain Monogr 50 ' S rfpin 5 . Z- Z- . 71 Alsoringsfb l tp ffb tt p ltp t S d fy Mail ord 511 cl p ptly FREDERICK T. WIDMER Successor to HENRY GUILD 81 SON Manzgfaefurzhg jfewefers OFFICIAL JEWELER TO Tl-IE Tl-IETA XI Ialso make the OFFICIAL M. l. T. PIN, Hammer Sc Tongs, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Pins. PRESENTATION GAVELS AND PRIZE CUPS 28 VVEST STREET Ta. Oxford 147:-2 BOSTON 111 February l6. Co-op prices unaffected by the recent drop in wheat XXXii 4:56 zecgniq 112 Qlbbetffiwt' Fourteen Years as Main Valve Specialists MULTI -PORTED High Pressure Slide Valves Balanced Meyer Cut-off Valves Partially Balanced HDI' Slide Valves Semi-Plug High- Pressure Piston Valves for Pressure up to 250 lbs. OUR EXPERIENCE IS AT YOUR COMMAND IF YOU DONT Add what we have learned to what you know about Balanced Main Valves you are the loser. Also ask about the Nixon Safe- ty Stay Bolt Sleeve and the American Metallic Valve Stem and Piston Rod Packing. The T. Wilson High-Pressure Valve with Double Admission and Double Exhaust Openings and for Internal or External Aclmision, Meets the Requirements of High Pressure and High Speed 17447555 AMERICAN BALANCE VALVE CQ. Main Oflice, San Francisco, Cala., U. S. A. Eastern Office and Works, Jersey Shore, Penn. harlva M. lgvarn 394 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. -sea Photographer to M. I. T. for 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904 111 We make a SPECIALTY of I-IIGI-I GRADE work in Carbon, Black and Sepia Platinum, and in Carbonettes. ill Special Rates to Tech Students Medals Awarded whenever in Competition with other Photographic Artists Ill February IS. Five members of the Chicago Club attend annual dinner and elect themselves officers Zkie Ceciinique Qtbvertiser Xxxiii New o. 2 Milwaukee Milli M h' ng ac 1ne WITH IMPROVED VERTICA This Machine is furnished either with horizontal spindle or with both horizontal and vertical spindles. Five minutes only is required to change from one to the other . ... . . ,W . , ,,.,. ,,.,,.0. .,,. . H A ,Aae,.., Q ., .. ,, :ag 1- ii! 512 Q l..l, is ' W 1' ,.,o!fe-,iir,i - M Z -V , M-,.,1-W, ,:,w,.:::,.s-if --inf V ' V.-Mag, , .Q , ..v ,M-ts.-,1,..-1 -fn, 2 ,.. 'f 1 s' - r r .. A I - - .,.,,.,. ' I . 1 f.,??,,.0,,.6jj-.,:,Z,sdiigwfs.,fvfjrtnzfjfza: gf, V , . The cut shows the vertical spindle milling off the bottom of a vise base. Diameter of cutter, 9 . Width of cut, 8 I-Z . Depth of cut, 3-32 . Table feed per minute, 5 . I-III..I.., CLARKE Sc CQ., General Selling Agents Main Ofiice, I56 Oliver Street, Boston Chicago Office, I4 South Canal Street New York Office, I53 Greenwich Street near Liberty QI February 22. Holiday in honor of Geo. FF. Washington, IVI. I .T., '76 Xxxiv My Qiecmique Qjtbvertiser TOR ELECTRICAL LABORATORIES 1 131 '1g ggf,.,j.,- Q I V, -fini .g. 1, - ' 1 gr- 4- ,A ap ,E ng lap Q3 - , 6 , a I . -:QE 1 f .. ff' .:f ' ,f,. l3:. I f hifi' ,I 21 4 ,f f 1 1 - ' - , I R 'WI V- ef' l . Iiesu- Q.. I 1:24. Izfsfflf-fswzfivza '4f.z4 swmf1-.A vw.. , 3 I -. - .-4 '73.,-iiffififliiaiii-!i'ff i f g 1 - -2- In-Q - - 4 ' lv ' --.I cp Wg.-Zg. . ' , J'-F '6-4'-'V xg 'f-'72 0525-, Q J ,-3 3' , D '.- If - M211-ffE3,4m,f .-E. I .-V 'H f - f 'ft 441922-fw-E ' ,:.. I' 1 7-Mis-x'I.iEL67l53I5i' .-RA-SG, 'hm' :' .-,-vim L'-15If?a?Ii15F yr ' 3 12? '.--5,7 :2. .Ef- ' f ,' , -:...fr.3f', II, w- H ' . ,- ' ' ' fW'fa:4::.1g-:5'-'fr- ff -I -'tb I . I ' Q ' J VM,.':. tg. .,,., vi' THE BEST OBTAINABLE IS NONE TOO GOOD We have had an extenclecl experience along this line, ancl have a most complete line of DYNAMOS, MOTORS, DYNA- MOTORS, MOTORLLENERA- TORS, TELEPI-IONES, etc., etc. SEND FOR BULLETINS THE FIOLTZER - CABOT ELECTRIC CO. Chicago: 395-397 Dearborn Street CBROOKLINEJ, BOSTON, MASS.f New York: 143 Liberty Street olm A. Mead Mfg. Co. 11 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY CDAL HANDLING MACHINERY TELEPHONE, 1192-5 OXFORD GEO. H. LANE IMPORTING '-I Cl Sh ll Sh ls, McCaslin Ogglapping Egvity Bucket TAILGR Conveyor, Qable Railways, M I '2fff.2,12'jf,1fRa11Ways'Hamm FROCK COATS, DRESS SUITS AND TUXEDOS A SPECIALTY :I PRICES ELECTRIC 2113121-ZRATE AND ALL WORK FIRST- I . CARS 1 S Ill T if COAL AND SAND HAND- 18 BOYLSTON STREET LINC- PLANTS BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS i l DESIGNED and EQUIPPED Q le' 5' S LN D F O R C AT A L O G, U E, Discount to Students :: A. G. MORSE, Salesman Q February 26. Bushnell, '05, tries for the Tech Show Chorus and is appointed Press Agent Cf'e Qiecfhxique Qkbverfiser 'XXXV Sinlonds C00 Bleaching with Peroxide of Sodium ESTABLISHED 1832 EXPLANATORY PAMPHLET Sezfwf emei fllezelyme O, ,,,,,,,,,,,, On R,,,,,,, ' Advantages : 'f'95uAFl'l',p-1' Obffliffllffff 7227165 0 el A Simplieity 153. Egg: IVlzzz'e Three baths XVithouf: tintiug . Wg? ' ,Q ' 'f1Piff'1 E if ggffZ2j11ou1's ll jig b'C1l0wing wi, az CH EMISTS w1L11 nge ,, I, A, C I ' Z 5 MdfEFiHl Zlwnys Y I' Stfong as the same VT w .' S SA 011 CUR HOUSE IS OLD- PK7'7l1ll7Z67ZL'y 1, 1- Otlfgxgiiizidluhoi OUR REPUTATION THE BEST Colortotully 94D P59 Of frenght :md removed E PA storage NWN THE RoEssLER sc HASSLACHER FITCHBURG, MASS., NEW YORK, CHICAGO, NEW OR- C H E M I C A L C O M P A N Y Cl '.1w 1 P -.-'1 W A.- LEANS, SAN FRANCISCO, PORTLAND, ORE., SEATTLE Pe,.li'IXfQbOyf'Qf? OFEce,NewYork N,a?,fQ1i-flllsfgfyi VALVOLINE OIL COMPANY LEONARD 85 ELLIS DEPARTMENT SOLE MANUFACTURERS OF , ADEMAR VA E Cyfzkeefer emez' Leebrzeezfzkzg 0175, Kerosene Gasofefee QYZQI Nezlbbfbez W. H. DRESSER, Local llflanager 27 STATE STREET :: :: BOSTON, lVlASSACI-IUSETTS 111 February 29. Blackstein the Punster is actually stumped by Hirminio Ytizarry, '06 Xxxvi Zbe Ceciinique gzjbverfwer The United Gas Improvement Company Pnzindenbbzn, Pennsylvania STANDARD DOUBLE SUPERHEATER LOWE WATER GAS APPARATUS Gas Analysis Apparatus Bar Photorneters S ' lR pecia ecording Pressure Gauges ANUFA CTURERS Sehoellliopig Hartford Sc Hanna Co. Aniline Colors s Dyestuiis Ch emieals Bnfafo New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Mil waukee, Cincinnati, Providence, Kansas City ATLANTIC WORKS INCORPORATED IS53 Bu2'!c2'ff.f W' Stationary 599 Marine BOILERS BORDER, MAVERICK PLATE and SHEET IRON WORK of Every Description, STEAM- SHIP STOWBOATS, YACHTS and HEAVY MACHINERY AND NEW STREETS EAST BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS Q1 March 5. Rainy Saturday-Blum sings a solo at Technology Kommers 66a Zecbniq ue Qjlbverfiser Xxxvii Technical Instruction BY CORRESPONDILN Cf, HE American School of C orrespondence, formerly of Boston, offers instruction by corres- pondence in Mechanical, Stationary, Marin L ' ' ' L gineering Architecture, Perspective Drawing, Telephony, Heating, Plumbing, Mechanical Drawing, Telegraphy, Navigation, Ventilation, Textiles, etc., also College Preparatory Course The College Preparatory Course practically covers the work of the scientific Academy of Armour Institute of Technology, and is accepted as fulhlling the requirements for en- trance to the College of Engineering of that institution. The instruction is in no way intended to replace resident school instruction, but offers ambition young men who have not the means or time to attend a resident school an opportunity for seIf-improve- ment under the guidance of thoroughly competent teachers. The instruction papers have been prepared especially for home study by men of acknowledged pro fessional standing. Among these are Prof F. B. Crocker - - - Columbia University Prof. A. lllrzrstan - - . - Iowa State College Prof F. E. Tzzrneaure - University of Wisconsin Prof W. L. Webb - - Formerly University of Penn. Prof Iflfm. .Est-y - - - Lehigh University Prof. C. L. Grzjfn - - Formerly Penn. State College Prof W2 IL Lawrence Mass. Institure of Technology D. A. Gregg -------- Boston Prof. A. E. Phillips Armour Institute of Technology For further information and catalogue address American School of Corres o d p n ence, at Armour Institute of Technology A. E. ZAPF, M. 1. T. '95, Sec'y CHICAGO, ILL. e, ocomotive, and Civil Q I f-71 I All , S THE TEXTILE-FINISHING MACHINERY COMPANY MANUFACTURERS OF BLEACHINC, DYEING DRYINC AND FINISHING MACHINERY ALSO FINISHING MACHINERY FOR BOOK PAPERS LEDCER PAPERS AND COATED PAPE RS Estimates furnished on complete plants, and experienced Engineers furnished to superintend the erecting of the same N 0.17 EXCHANGE PLACE . . . PROVIDENCE, R. I. NEW YORK OFFICE, 39 CORTLANDT STREET 111 March IO. Decided to hold Technique Rush out doors, and have first live boolcs signed by Spinoza Xxfiviii Cfje Ceciiniq ue Qlbvertiser Roberts Iron Works Company y J. M. BEMIS, President G. B. ROBERTS, Treasurer Manufacturers of STEAM BOILERS if PRESSURE TANKS Plate and Sheet Steel Work of Every Description J 59. TELEPHONE: 121 CAMBRIDGE 180 to 198 Mai'n Street : : CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS. T665 A. D. Maclachlan Gmdmfes WZROTNAND 1 Dmfwzhg Mdf67ZdlJ f Are expected to know everything by many Who employ them, and should . MANUFACTURER or put up a strong case every t1me. If k d b Ch 1 ' l , 21S C ia out a1'CO.a IH car ots SC600! and College for any pO1I1t ID the United States or . for highest grade of Foundry Facing, Slfflbflef speak up like a little man, saying- Springfield Facing Co. . L. S. BROWN' . t Q BOSTON 214 Clarendon Street S pring yield, Massachusetts ll March IZ. Tech fencers defeat Yale, U. of P. and Harvard.: inch,acc0l1nt in Bosion PBPCFS Che Cectfniq ue Qtbvertiser XXXIX The Massachusetts Institute of Technology . . . Boston ---l HENRY s. PRITCHLTT, LL.D., PreSidenf-l---- I-IE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY offers courses, each of four years' duration, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science, in Civil, Mechanical, lVlining, Electrical, Chemical and Sani- tary Engineering, in Architecture, Chemistry, Physics, BiolOgY, Geology To be admitted to the first-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 Entrance examinations are held at the Institute in June and Sep- tember of each year. ln June applicants may be examined also by the College Entrance Examination Board in New York, Philadelphia, Chi- cago, and many other cities in America and Europe. A circular stating 'i ' ZYA l and Naval Architecture. A ft!-1 Eff l ,f TTISSX ' A .il 34? is permitted. aivqx.. l.... times and places is issued in advance, and will be mailed on application. Graduates of colleges and scientific schools are admitted, without examination, to such advanced standing as is warranted by their previous training. A Graduate School of Engineering Research was established in October, l903. The Annual Catalogue, the Report of the President and the Treasurer fissued in Decemberj, and any of the following descriptive circulars, will be mailed free on application: Massachusetts Institute of Technology: an illustrated pamphlet describing the laboratories of the lnslitute. Circulars of the Departments of Cifvil Engi- neering: Mechanical Engineering: Mining Engineering: Physics and Electrical Engi- neering: Architecture: Chemistry : Chemical Engineering: Biology : Nafval 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. QI March I9. Worcester defeats Tech' at Basltet Bally column and a half in Boston papers 664: Qieckinique Qlbvertufer Special ood orliing Machinery FOR SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL INSTITUTIONS ,In I.. g If l f g E l Il Qi E ,qu - ,. U, 1 X 1 I I'l, F ' ' l'l it f li A xlI..,: ' l1i XQ AT fi . minus: 'admllll M-flli ' w i ll 'I ll I Wil Il I If wh Mlm h ylil ,ll ' my 1 'I llll.llI MI I l 'I I 1-ll? I I! HOLLOW-CHISEL MORTISERS PLANERS AND MATCHERS TIMBER SIZERS SURFACE PLANERS MOULIDERS SAWING MACHINES 'l - KNIFE GRINDERS Ih llrn III- I- ,.. - l, .. ef : '1' 1' l Jl plilltlftbvs .El , I' '- if- E ' llllll N 'el l' 'TL In I-II .N fl ' I ' .lx 9 I lu l. nnlllll , X II Tw , 'WX' ,I I I . I ll I' 'f l X llmli Iii l 421 12: l fwlllllllf rg ,ai will Ill' ,WUI flllllnllll ll f gefsf- ,QW4 IIWH1mllllllll l ..' . . f lllli i 9 iq, NO. 300. AUTOMATIC HOLLOVV-CHISEL IVIORTISER , P OUR new Automatic Hollow-Chisel Mortisers 1 are designed for railway, engineering and ,A other work where accuracy is essential. YV 'f Q Z I THEY are fsster in operaio? than other tygfi Y G -1 l an are uit to wor rom 15 to g 1 x. . square, making a finished mortise of any ? I - size within that range with one stroke of 2 the chisel plunger. . U -- DETAILS IN BULLETIN T. ' . ' 1 INIOTOR APPLICATION T0 NO. 300 WITH LONG S. A. WOODS MACHINE CO. BoSToN, MASS. CARRIAGE 111 March 23. The Tech appears Cnnifhotif anreditorial on Tech Spirit I I Ziie 4Zec6mque Qgbverfwer X GOO. . GCZZOIJLIITZOOI' C 640 MAIN STREET Manufacturers Wholesalers . Retailers . Y --5 T2 ly O 1 d C r r l 6 O U 6 E 5 WEBSTERS E 5 AM INTERNATIONAL E 5 ME.- WEBSERS 'ImmllmQll'! D151-IUNARY 'mm-wyvv' vufms G 0 S 0 nz, Aumamc VVEBSTER5 'WN1u ummm WLBQBQ 'COLLEQMTE gif fwinjimg lpidvwnr D'CT'0 'm S Incorporated - W , , gif if A FU LL LINE ff TEXT -17. 5 E :E E E Mix E gg S Eg g. ond REFERENCE BOOKS E ' E E E fi at SPECIAL PRICES to ALL STUDENTS should own the New Edition of Webster-'s all International Dictionary with its 25,000 New Words, 2364 pages and 5000 illustrations, or the largest of its abridgments, Wehstex-'s goillpgisge dDic9cinlary Glossaryllfg too is or s an r e . . illustrations. Size7x10a:i2E5inchegi1geS 27 and 29 BI-Ornfleld Street LET US SEND YOU FREE A Test in Pronunciation which affords a B0.S'!f072' pleasant and instructive evening's entertain- ment. Illustrated pamphlet also free. Qjust below Tremont SU-eetj ' G. 85 O. MERRIAM CO., Pubs., Springfield, Mass. New York and Boston Dyewood Company Work:.' Brooklyn and Boston Manufacturer: Qfr DYEWOODS and EXTRACTS for Tanning and Dyeing Imporfers gf INDIGO and ANILINE COLORS NEW YORK, 156 William St. BOSTON, 115 and 117 High St. PHILADELPHIA, 121 Arch St QU March 23. Earthquake at l.04 A. M. Sid Cole and D. L. Davis reach a nine o'clock on time. xiii Z5e Ceckinique Qkbvertiseri HE, TAR 1 L wi. HIT, - ,JL - - L , fl ' ' .,. '-ini : - 1 VA-mu.-:44s+v-1-'-4. 2: g,. -, :- -' 4' 1--if!-.iw i--1,-:g:,5,,i.-M. .,-,i5,. - , - , .6 2,,..ic4f..-- .1- 592 l,'.'- ' 1 ' ' ' H k4.'-,,1!1N.3. I 3-1415.-hi 'hmmm V- L 1 -L, -- 5 4. ' ' 'w1,,.. ,...,..,1,-., -..:,-1-- - V . . . me .. ...,. af, ., . . -1111.-'zu ' V Q ,1-e' , i. . , ..-rm -514,i4xli---w,,aym:5' . ' ' War V ,, , -- k . .,,, 1' - -,, .iz-gi'.,g,:,.g4-1. --pf.-f, 1 -sim. r pig-1.4.:,g.,,,'35x:5:--51313,T ,. -f- , -,mf - - ' H- V--+. --'- - . - . . -, - 4, ,.a,gf:g.y?q,'. .7 3.1.C,W3 . 3: 1, - I.. . - fu V- ' I' ' ' c 1 -1 - in 2: ' . - 'I 3- - 2125521 ' warm I ?5-DI! ., fl?-er? 1 .,,,.,.. I v ,, -. ,' iff . .,y-figy I -4 - ,A Q . 1. , ,, '.-.,.,e-:gr-.','.. me -- - K 1 ' H .sw Vg, . -. , 511 - -.4 . ,, 1 S 2-5-.235,52,1fgzz52p5'2si325-gs.: ' 4-D -,i 1 j25f:Qfi'g zgi5.2..gf- ' V- 4-4, Wi 3391 a?l':'15 f ? 'F' f ,f - xg . 1, ' ' '- . 4316+ 4 ,':f,f:,4-H . Q-fff v:-1. 'g'.r,- ,'q,j-f'fS'f f: L ' :- - I-:.q2:y5 1- ,, fi:-5 13 U a . .'-Jia-J .- . -. 52.44, ....f - ' ' fi 11,51 f.-7 - .. - -,pg ' ,M .. . I Q, - ix- c-.1-5 .. 3,2 , , -.ffm ' . '-Tv: -. br-' .. ' ug. U,-3.5, -J I w-,..- ,pg , - --Q:- 1. -, 1- Jammu -aff , -. 'fu Q:-gf:-rw ' ' A - ,ki l ' A. ,I .- .fV.1. :',.,.:.'- H . N .,., S , , For Sale -by . J. WILKINSO 8: CO. Dealers in JWACHINISTS' TOOLS 0 Cf zz SUPPLIES, WOODWORKERS' TOOLS ELECTRICAL GOODS, AUT OMOBILE SUPPLIES 1 8 0 - 1 8 8 WASHINGTON QI April VI . Trufh is stranger than flcti STREET, BOSTON, MASS. .. pn 66a Cecfbnique Qftbverfiser Xliii EVERETT MORSS, President C. A. MORSS, Treasurer HENRY A. MORSS, Vice President J. H. MASON, Gen'1 Manager IHIISIIIPIIXIHICIKIIIIII? IIO State Street, Boston, Mass. ' Telephone, 5300 Main. Cable Address, Innosam, Boston. Ma nufa cf zz r e rs o f INSULATED WIRES AND CABLES INTERIOR, AERIAL, SUBIVIARINE AND UNDER GROUND SIIVIPLEX ELECTRIC HEATING COMPANY AII Sorts of ELECTRIC HEATING APPARATUS ENAMEL RHEOSTATS fUnit Systemb CAR HEATERS W T C n MANUFACTURERS OF ' ' ' 6 HIGH GRADE INSULATION C O IVI I3 A N Y FOR ELECTRIC RAILWAYS INSULATING JOINTS FOR COMBINATION and ELECTRIC FIXTURES 338 CONGRESS STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Special High Voltage Insulators THE OTTO GAS ENGINE WORKS MANUFACTURERS OF ENCINES OF THE HICHEST TYPE FOR USE ON CITY CAS, CASOLENE AND PRODUCEIR CAS ROOM 536 HOLD SOUTH BUILDINCQIBOSTON 411 April 8. Lombard retums to the Tech Board Xliv Clie Q3ec5nique Qftbvertiser One Thousand MILLETT PATENT CORE OVENS are now in use in the Best Foundries of the World HAVE YOU GOT ONE? SALES AGENTS! J. W1 PAXSON CO., S. OBERAIA TER CO., Ph1'!adeQ5hz'a CI.?1Cl'7l7l6ZfL' and Clzimga J. S. AI:CORMfCK CO., J. W JA CKMAN CO., IJl.lfSlJZl7g7' London EEG' Send for Catalog to MILLETT CORE OVEN CO Brightvvood Station, SPRINGFIELD, MASS The 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, MASS- ' I 'I-IE 'Refvfefw aims to develop closer relations among Institute men, and to stimulate their Interest in the work of the college. 411 It is in no sense an engineering maga- zme, but deals broadly with the problems of Technological Education and the responsibilties of the professional man. SUBSCRIPTION, ONE DOLLAR .A YEAR SINGLE COPIES, THIRTY-FIVE CENTS 111 Volumes I, Ill, IV and V, fiinely bound in half morocco are ready for delivery at 32.00 each, or will be exchanged for unbound sets, provided they are in good condition, at 31.00 each. Clf sent by mail, 30 cents extra.J 1,11 April 9. Special Edition of Kansas City Journal issued Ztie QZec5nique qfibvertiser Xlv AMES L. KIMBALL, '85 53 STATE STREET, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 4 Direct Connected Compound Engine at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Direct Connected Dynarnos and Engines, Interior Department, XV:1shington, D. C. ' c Rzdgzwy Dyfmmos amz' Engznes qrlwmpsomnyan Patentsj queen-en Patentsj Q April I I. Butts, '05, engagecl to coach the Wellesley May Pole Dancers :dvi C62 Zecbnique Qzjtbvertiser HAMBURG - AMERICAN LINE Plymouth Naples 1LondonD X ,, N: -K . :,.- A Q WF M TK ki K Chefbwfg Genoa ,parm .tw1,,g,g.:,,,,, ..,.. T. ...:Q,3,i. ?:,m.:,, L l v Hamburg A Alex and r1a SUMMER CRUISES DURING JUNE, JULY AND AUGUST TO NORWAY, TI-IE NORTH CAPE, SPITZBERGEN and the BALTIC SEA APPLY FOR ITINERARIES, RATES AND ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLETS TO DONNER Bt CO., General Agents, 70 State St., Boston Telephone 2744 Main I t t , Bun.mf-no Reconn A -4e. MQIESAIIITARY ENGINEER PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT II4 LIBERTY ST., NEW YORK InvaIuaI3Ie to Stuclents ONLY 353.00 PER ANNUM SAMPLE COPY FOR POSTAL CII April I3. Sammie Ayers wins Hrst prize, West End Baby Showg Spraque, second 65a ifiecfbnique Qjkbverfiser Xlv ii UNIVERSITY STYLES in Regal Shoes Regal Oxforcls for the Summer of 1904 embody every detail of style, mate- rials, and workmanship found elsewhere only in the Q57 to S12 custom-macle shoes. There are few college and university men in this country who clon't know this 532 This illustration shows a plain, comfortable, correet Patent leather Oxford. Same model in finest Russia Calf Seventy-two Regal Stores in the large cities. Boston stores, II3 Summer X St., 24S Whsliington St., 169 Tremont St. Mail Order Dept. 105 Summer St., Boston The Berkeley Hotel BERKELEY AND BOYLSTONH STREETS EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLANS Modern in Every Defail Restaurant a la carte Dining Room table d'hote Genllemenfs CAFE and Billiard Room Enhance on Berkeley Sfreef JOHN A. SHERLOCK ROCK CRUSHERS ROAD MACHINES AND REPAIRS .w 5, is Zz, Y X- ---, 1, A? . sg e It gh wg ti Isa., ll T y' ki al i. ,. ' t, ' 2' , -,E ' , 'P Ii ' 'B - 'f:f'i--.Liu is-- fel -4-. -eww. --W ' 3 it ta FURNISHED BY THE AMERICAN ROAD MACHINE COMPANY F. L. WRIGHT, MANAGER 36 SOUTH MARKET STREET BOSTON, MASS. COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND April IS. 111 -Iuclge Emmons raids the Tech Lunch. Nothing of a suspicious nature found xlviii Ctie '4Zec5nique Qbbberfiser CPR OBLEMS I 'DYEI G QI We are prepared to dye any shade upon any fabric submitted, or we will match any required shade and submit exact dyeing directions. 111 Information of a technical nature cheerfully given. QI No charge is made for such service, and in accepting it there is no obligation to purchase from us anything that you can buy, or that you think you can buy, to better advantage elsewhere. Address CASSELLA COLOR COMPANY l82-184 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK BRANCI-IES Boston, 68 Essex Street Providence, 64 Exchange Place Philadelphia, I26-128 South Front Street Atlanta, 47 North Pryor Street , Montreal, S6-SS Youville Square rvzrntfn Earth Eng Iiaeprma I BAGGAGE A N D EXPRESS WORK O F ALL KINDS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. FURNITURE PACKED A N D SHIPPED T O A L L POINTS ESTABLISHED 1880 TELEPHONE x96 BACK BAY STANDS CORNER CLARENDON AND BOYLSTON STREETS C. W PHILLIPS, Proprielor 'II April ZI. C. E. Darling, '06, addresses Mining Eng. Soc, on Paint and Powder analysis. The refreshments were good Cfpe Ceckinique Qfkbvertiser xIiX Avery'S Lactic Acid THE STANDARD LARGEST MANUFACTURERS IN THE WORLD -311.1 Q, A 2.4 ,iwkii-, .x Z, 7 E .. ,E . .--' I I . Q- fs-15'- --4 - '-Wg! in-5. 4, f -7 I, lb' 'wives'-4, I y Q : ...- Avery Chemical Co. BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, U. S. A. SHREVE, CRUMP dz LOWV CO. J EWVELERS DESIGNS AND ESTIMATES FURNISHED FOR CLASS .AND SOCIETY PINS AND M.EDALS CLASS DAY AND COBIISIENCEINIENT INVITATIONS ENGRAVED AND PRINTED THE PLACE T0 FIND APPROPRIATE GIFTS 147 TREIMONT STREET BOSTON SPECIAL NOTICE TO THE TECHNOLOGY STUDENTS We wish to announce that we have enlarged our lunch-room, and equipped it with all modern im- provements for quick service, and are prepared to serve everything the market affords, well cooked and perfectly served,.at reasonable prices. Below is a fac simile check worth 35.5 0, which we sell for 55.00. 5 5 5 5 5 5 I0 I0 I0 I5 I5 I5 Saw OAK GROVE. CREAIVIERY CO. G Q 445 Boylston Street N OAK GROVE. 'O - O OAK GROVE. Euurlirnn CREAIVIERY CO. C: N CREAMERY CO. CO 3 2 No. Over 2 30 30 25 25 25 25 25 25 20 20 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, 445 Boylston Street, cor. Berkeley N. L. MARTIN, Proprietor 111 April 26. Tech Show performs to a full house, to say nothing of Dippy l Qikie Qieclinique Qflbverfiser B U F F Tmmzziv mi Letzzefs FOR R 'l-Ofzd ' 1 B 'dg s . L i F, I . R' dsofC ' E I' .- . L41 ge t 1 style . C .ne,'lus'-oy I1 ll P .R.R.T - 1sN12fSzb yIL S.E ' ' R.R f . y A if 1 3 ff fi ff.. 'Q' ER? 155 BUFF Sc BUFF MFG. CO. MAIN OFFICE AND WORKS AT :: :: :: JAMAICA PLAIN STATION 4- I IIII -ffo-.s IIAA f l lln lu T ali . S, lllmm Hlg iways, 7 , U 11 e , ' In X ai 9 and all 1 1 t in nil ngineer il 3 , mg ii s vlrtetyin 'f ' L4 l X s an sizes ,fm ,N A TALE, k MLK! li 1 have xc z el f I l X ck iv ly ze emi zuz 1 .ids V, ,ggi- ne , 1 -wa , W x' N- fzgzzzeers, Imjnerzal .1 ,G m 5 Chlflll, and all I erzgzzzeerswho base hezr chozce on 1 ea! and if led L.,,,41 511 accuz ac zz ze el 1' x H v um, -M WAX Send for bound copy V to-ij: . 1+ X of Adjustment'1-reatise. 31 .,,r :L,a- gulf, E1jLggf -'F:,t, -A 4 me 35 1,1 ' A, ,, U1 . ' A, U W V' l ' w ll lull lx il '51 Tr ' . Elf' . 't I ' ' , l --f l z t fl i nf Ag L4 u 1' A 534 :fwfr ly, ,N ave 3- 1 V f ' V T in ' ml V EJ ' f f ,1 i Q, K 1 ji!-'VTQY . . x Boston, Mass. -if 9-, oLx. 'lil -, Qlh Makes mxnrg-IQEIII Svrhuul 458 BOYLSTON STREET COpposite Technologyb a specialty of preparing pupils for the Institute 1, xx , N X s TAYLOR, HAGAR 85 KURT CURRAN 81 BURTON New England Agents for Pocahontas ituminous Wharf: South Boston l26BggTC5l3eet L. D. Willcutt 85 Son BUILDERS Merrz'mac Cbemical Company 166 DEVONSHIRE STREET :r ROOM S4 Manufacturing Chmim B in Ma . BOSTON M ' U QI April 28. The corporation Hncls a quarter in the Treasury and pays last installment on Eng. C Cbe Qleckinique Qkbverfiser li TELEPHONE 2357 MAIN .ALEXIS H. FRENCH HENRY F. BRYANT F 86 B T I DENSMORE 85 LE CIIEAR RENCEEIGINEEBEX AWT ENGINEERS 15 EXCHANGE ST. EDYVARD D. DENSMORE, M. I. T., 593 GIFFORD LE CLEAR BOSTON 334 IVASHINGTON ST., BROOKLINE, 4 STATE ST., BOSTON Municipal and Landscape Engineering, Topographical and General Surveys, Bridges, Roads, Water Supply and Sewerage S86 BOSTON TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS 240 BBOOKLINE INCORP ORATED 18 58 AMERICAN BANK NOTE CO. No. 87 MILK STREET, BOSTON, MASS. ENGRAVERS AND PRINTERS OF BONDS STOCK CERTIFICATES, BANK NOTES BILLS OF EXCHANGE, DIPLOMAS AND ALL KINDS OF SECURITIES GEORGE H. BARRUS EXPERT AND CONSULTING STEADI ENGINEER 12 PEMBERTON SQUARE BOSTON IIENRY CARMICHAEL, PHQD. ANALYTICAL CHEMIST, CHEMICAL ENGINEER ARTHUR F. GRAIY MILL ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER METALLURGIST WVELD BUILDING, 176 FEDERAL STREET 53 STATE STREET, BOSTON: MASS' ROOL1 520 TELEPHONE 4568-4 MAIN EXCHANGE BUILDING TELEPHONE, MAIN 3836-2 C OMPLIMEN TS OF DODGE MANUFACTURING CO. 111 April 30. Spinoza makes only 78 per cent on a trade. Recovery seems assured l 1 , 'Cm Qiectinique Qftbvertiser The Clean-to-Handle Fountain Pen Moore's NomLeakable Fountain Pen. l . Is guaranteed NOT T0 - LEAK when carried S 37 in any position in I. . A the pocket ' arranted to write IMMEDI- ot h e r T, ,n. ll T ill ' 1 If I li A ATELY without - ff . . urging or Hood- ' ing whenever ., applied to paper Positively the highest grade Fountain A Pon onthe market Unlike all others CALL -HND .TEE THESE ZDONDERF UL PEN! - 168 Devonshire and 21-23 federal Streets KE i t s 1 is , s ll X 'llo' Iftimo' imotuwtif' ,IV lil llllll in 'Tl r, W ill lrtlllliil ill-17 . tooo lo H ill - - hotle to ll olohh hil t. soot to I oo 'l 1 tt' l t I E., rlt i 't x 'FAEL nl' yi X llllllllllllllllllllllll to tw L 1 -43 1 lo to I l I L' the ,JZ I it ii'-L' f I L im .t9i!1il'.ol1ilt ,oy o ,.kg2..f-K-!TL.Nr .'.g' V 'lf 'ff ',, . . E I O f not I 4 N Il 1' I Gb 4 , -W I i f n it Vt ll 'T 1 273129 ,' limi n tttiillioreii 1' .l to o to 'oo orttll In nhl .t.,..,...te1trytlqoyt 'lov.'..,r',l flu? nl V .I V-ig '.'1,:l',!1,.:.ii ggiisi A, iw ,L Ag 13 p X Adams, Cushing Sf foster A frog STANDARD Open - Circuit Batteries OF THE WORLD GOLD MEDAL and HIGHEST AWARDS Paris, 1878, IBSQQ Chicago, 1893 Q1IThe batteries bearing the well-known trade-mark Gouda are beyond question the best made in 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 Gouda. The LECLANCHE BATTERY CO. 111 to 117 EAST 131sT STREET NEW YORK TRIPP METALLIC P A C K I N G Far Piston Rods and Valve Stems Wm. B. Merrill 82: Co. Sole Manufacturers Ofiice 8: Factory: 74 India St. BOSTON The arden Press WILLIAM B. LIBBY 16 Arlington Street BOSTON II II MASSACHUSETTS l- -l.l--i.. 11 BOOK, JOB and MERCAN TILE PRINTING OF ALL KINDS 1: NO ORDER too LARGE, NONE loo SMALL TELEPHONE 528-3 Back Bay qi May 5. F. H. Briggs sells the Track Team to Jackn Taylor


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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Technique Yearbook (Cambridge, MA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

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