Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA)

 - Class of 1925

Page 1 of 286

 

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 286 of the 1925 volume:

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' a i r vyi - t , ■ ■Vv«l -- ' v . v . - ' v .v«tC . -‘.v v V « « C b% v4 « . 4 iv« ' , •• lo a l JUMBO BOOK Published by the, 5EN10R CLASS o TUFTS COLLEGE MEDFORD HILLSIDE MASSACHUSETTS 3 774 419 ' Jq Charles Ernest Fay‘68, as ©ur tribute to bis unswerving loyally t© Alma Mater, steadfast tbrouob ever a half century ©f effort in her behalf; in deference t©. bis renown as a scb©lar, naturalist. Alpinist, and a distinguished Tufts roan, whose ac¬ complishments we w©uld d© well t© enou ate. and as the acknowledged patron and honorary member ©f fee class ©f 1925, we d© m©st respectfully dedicate this Jumb© book. HE editors of this 1925 Jumbo Book have aimed to crystallize within these pages the life, the atmos¬ phere, and the ideals of Tufts Col¬ lege, that their successors may strive further in behalf of the in¬ stitution which embodies these activities and traditions. The aim of the 1925 Jumbo is to set forth the phases of Tufts life which have played their part in the building of men, and the creation of loyal sons, who will serve her, even after they leave her walls. CONTENT! v_ « - s THE COLLEGE THE CLASSES ATHLETICS ORGANIZATIONS JACKSON FRATERNITIES STAFF Editor RAYMOND L. WILSON Art Editor J. DONALD RUSSELL Business Manager DONALD H. MILLER o college poop dotDioi i )2%, CAMPUS AND FACULTY EATON LIBRARY BALLOU AND BARNUM ROBINSON HALL mw w fjwl Ti OVER CHARLIE’S HILL 17 Photo by Bachracli JOHN ALBERT COUSENS A.B., LL.D., A T A, $ B K P RESIDENT COUSENS graduated from Tufts in 1898. A misfortune ended his college career prematurely and prevented his going to Medical School. He entered into business and later became Vice-President of the Metropol¬ itan Coal Company of Boston. He is director of the Brookline Trust Company, chairman of the Board of Investment of the Brookline Savings Bank, a member of the Century Club, Boston Chamber of Commerce, the Appalachian Mountain Club, Boston City Club, Exchange Club, Longwood Tennis Club, University Club, and the Commonwealth Country Club. He has given unstinted service to our college as Visitor, Trustee, member of the Finance and Executive Committees. It was in September, 1919, that he became acting president of Tufts. In June, 1920, Mr. Cousens was elected President of the College. Since President Cousens’s inauguration the college endowment has been increased by the Jumbo Bond Campaign of 1922. The long-promised chemistry laboratory has been completed, and is one of the largest college laboratories in New England. This year construction of a fence around the quardangle was begun, and other steps taken toward realizing the President’s dream of a “Tufts Beautiful.” 1!) THE DEANS THE DEANS Frank George Wren, A.B., A.M. Dean of School of Liberal Arts A.B., Tufts, 1894; A.M., 1897; Studied at Harvard University 1900-01. ATQ. Assistant in Mathematics, Tufts, 1894-95; Instructor, Mathematics, 1895-99; Assistant Professor, Mathematics, 1899-1902; Professor Mathematics, 1902-1904; Walker Professor of Mathematics, 1904; Dean of the School of Liberal Arts, 1907; Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, 1907. Member of the American Mathematics Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Herbert Vincent Neal, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Zoology. Dean of the Graduate School A.B., Bates, 1890; A.B., Harvard, 1893; A.M., 1894; Ph.D., 1896; University of Munich, 1896-97. B K, S X. Master of History and Latin, St. Paul’s School, 1890-92; Professor of Biology, Knox College, 1897- 1913; Present position, 1913-; Dean of The Graduate School 1924-. Fellow, A.A.A.S. (American Academy Arts and Sciences); Member: American Society Zoologists; American Society Naturalists; Association American Anatomists; Boston Society Natural History; Boyce Club. 20 Gardner Chace Anthony, A.M., Sc.D. Dean of the Engineering School A. M., Tufts, 1889 (Hon.); Sc.D., 1905 (Hon.); Student at Brown University and Tufts College, 1875-78. A I 2. Practice of Mechanical Engineering, 1878-85; Teacher, Rhode Island School of Design, and Director and Founder, Rhode Island Technical Drawing School, 1885-93; Dean, Bromfield-Pearson School, and Professor of Technical Drawing at Tufts College, 1893; Dean, Engineering School, Tufts College, 1898 to date. Treasurer, Tufts College Athletic Association, 1912; Member, American Society of Mechanical Engineers; President of Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, 1913-14, and Vice-President in 1911-12, now Chairman of New England Section; Member of American Association for the Advance¬ ment of Science; American Association of University Professors; National Geographical Society. Author of “The Elements of Mechanical Drawing,” “Machine Drawing,” “Descriptive Geometry,” “Essentials of Gearing, and “An Introduction to the Graphic Language.” Lee Sullivan McCollester, A.B., B.D., D.D. Dean of the Crane Theological School A.B., Tufts, 1881; B.D., 1884; D.D., 1899. d A 0, d B K. Ordained to the Universalist Ministry, 1884. Pastorates: Claremont, N. H., 1884-88; Detroit, Mich., 1889-1912; Dean, Crane Theological School, 1912; Chaplain, Tufts College, 1919. President of Universalist General Convention, 1915-19; Chairman of Board of Trustees, 1914-1923; Member of Board of Trustees, 1906-; Member of Michigan and Massachusetts Societies S. A. R.; Michigan Sons of Colonial Wars; Chaplain, General National Society S. A. R., 1918-21; Religious Educational Association; Vice-President, International Congress of Free Christians and Other Religious Liberals; Trustee of Dean Academy; Mason, Knight Templar and 32nd; Boston Ministers’ Club; Vice-President Boston Browning Society; Member City Club; University Club; Universalist Club; 20th Century Club; Universalist Historical Society. In Detroit, where he was pastor for twenty-four years, he was on many charity boards; the Commission of Fifty for adjusting Street Car Controversy; at different times President and Secretary of Michigan Universalist Convention; Trustee of Buchtel College; President of New England Society; Vice-President of Unitarian Conference; Chairman of Universalist Extension Committee. Caroline Stodder Davies, A.B., A.M. Dean of Jackson College ( retiring) A.B., Wellesley, 1887; A.M., 1914; Studied at Newnham College, Cambridge, Engl and, 1890-91. Teacher of Greek and English, Harcourt Place School, Gambier, Ohio, 1887-90, 1892-95; Teacher of English, Chicago Latin School, 1907-1909; Dean of Jackson College, 1911-24. Member: New England Association Colleges and Secondary Schools; Shakespeare Society of Wellesley College; Wellesley Alumnae Association; Association of Collegiate Alumnae, Boston; College Club. Boston; Consumer’s League; Wellesley College Club of Boston; Women’s Industrial and Educa¬ tional Union; M assachusetts Society for the University Education of Women. THE HILL IN PERSPECTIVE 21 LIBERAL ARTS FACULTY FACULTY Arthur Irving Andrews, A.B., Pli.I). Professor of History and Public Law A.II., Brown, 1901; Ph.D., Harvard, 1905. A Y. Instructor in History, Simmons College, 1906-09; Assistant in History, Harvard University, 1906- OS; Assistant Professor, Simmons College, 1909-12; Joint Head of Department, 1910-12; Associate Professor of History, Tufts, 1911-12; Professor, 1912; Professor of American Foreign Policy, Charles University, Prague, 1921. J. A. C. Fagginger Auer, B.D., Ph.D. Professor of Church History and Philosophy of Religion II.D., Meadville Theological School, 1906; Ph.D., Cornell, 1924. Studied in Holland, 1902, and attained a degree in theology at Amsterdam, Holland, in 1910. Instructor, University of Pittsburgh, 191,‘3-14; Instructed at Carnegie Institute of Technology, 1914- la; Minister, Wheeling Unitarian Church, 1915-17; Minister, Ithaca Unitarian Church, 1917-24; In¬ structor, Cornell University, 1918-24. George Preston Bacon, A.B., A.M. Professor of Physics A. II., Dartmouth, 1887; A.M., Dartmouth, 1890; Graduate study. University of Michigan, 1902 and 1909; University of Berlin, 1899 and 1910. 0 A X, $ B K. Instructor, Ripon College, 1888-1889; Peekskill Military Academy, 1890-1892; Professor of Physics, Wooster College, 1902-1908; Simmons College, 1910-1919; Professor of Physics, Tufts, 1919-. Crosby Fred Baker, B.S., M.S. Professor of Analytical Chemistry B. S., Tufts, 1910; M.S., Tufts, 1911. A H. Assistant in Chemistry, Tufts, 1909-11; Instructor in Chemistry, Tufts, 1911-18; Assistant Professor, Tufts, 1918-24; Professor 1924-. Harry Poole Burden, B.S. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., University of Maine, 1912. (-) X. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Tufts, 1913-18; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, 1919-21; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, 1922-. Associate Member American Society of Civil Engineers; Member Society for Promotion of Engineer¬ ing Education; Member Massachusetts Highway Association. Richard John Ridgway Caines, M.D. Physician and Professor of Hygiene and Head of the Physical Education Department of Tufts College M.D., Tufts, 1913. AKK. City of London College; London, England College; Instructor of Physical Therapeutics, Tufts Medical School, 1915-16; Lieutenant Colonel, Medical Reserve Corps, U. S. Army; Instructor, Medical Officers School, Langres, France; Medical Director, Badminton Health Club, Boston. Charles Harris Chase, B.S. Professor of Steam Engineering B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1892. A FII. In employ of General Electric Company, 1892-94; Boston Electric Company, 1894-96; Instructor in Shopwork, Tufts, 1896-1902; Assistant Professor, Steam Engineering, 1902-08; Professor, Steam Engineering, 1908-. 23 ENGINEERING FACULTY Samuel Lucas Conner, B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., Delaware, 1897; M.S., 1912. A I 2. General Engineering Practice, 1897-1909; Instructor in Railroa d Engineering, Tufts College, 1909- 12; Assistant Professor, 1912-17; Technical Expert, Advisory Staff on Education and Special Training, ar Department, 1918. Leave of absence 1919-1920, as Development Expert on Vocational Courses for Army Training, under E. and R. Branch War Plans Division of War Department; Professor, 1917-20; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, 1920-. William Kendall Denison, A.B., A.M. Professor of Latin Language and Literature A.B., Tufts, 1891; A.M., Harvard, 1892; Studied, Harvard Graduate School, 1891-95; American School of Classical Studies in Rome, 1895-96; Z l F, B K. Professor of Latin, Tufts, 1897-. Frank Williams Durkee, A.B., A.M., D.Sc. Professor of Chemistry A.B., Tufts, 1888; A.M., 1889; D.Sc., 1921. A T, I B K. Instructor in Chemistry, 1889-96; Assistant Professor, 1896-97; Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, 1897-1913; Professor of Chemistry, 1913-. Member; American Chemistry Society; Society Chemical Industry; American Institute Mining Engineers; A.A.A.S.; American Electrochemical Society; S.A.R. Charles Ernest Fay, A.B., A.M., Litt.D. Wade Professor of Modern Languages A.B., Tufts, 1868; A.M., 1872; Litt.D., 1900 (Hon.); Studied in Europe, 1869-70; Instructor in Mathematics, Tufts, 1868-69. 0 A X, h B K. Instructor in Modern Languages, Tufts 1869-71; Wade Professor, Modern Languages, 1871-; Dean of the Graduate School, 1912-24. Member: American Philological Association; Charter Member, Modern Language Association of America, and Modern Language Association of New England (President, 1905); Charter Member, New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools (President, 1888-89); President, Appalachian Mountain Club, 1878, 1881, 1893, 1905; First President, American Alpine Club, 1902-08; re-elected, 1916, 1918; Fellow, Harvard Travellers Club (Vice-President, 1909); Honorary Member: Alpine Club (London), French Alpine Club, Italian Alpine Club, Alpine Club of Canada; Cambridge Shakespeare Society; Boston Browning Society; Corresponding Member, Philadelphia Geographical Society; Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences; Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences; The Round Table (Boston) (Vice-President, 1900); Twentieth Century Club; Friday Evening Club; Knighted as Officer of the Order of St. Charles (Monaco), 1921; Editor of Appalachia , 1871-1920; Editor, Alpina Americana, since 1907; Associate Member American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1924. Albert Hatton Gilmer, S.B., A.M. Professor of Dramatic Literature , Rhetoric and Debate S.B.. Knox College, 1900; A.M., 1912; Studied at University of Chicago, 1906, and University of Munich, 1908-09; Graduate student of Drama at Harvard, 1911-13. B 0 n, I B K. Instructor in English, Bates. 1909-10; Instructor in English, Tufts, 1910-15; Assistant Professor in English, Tufts, 1915-24; Professor of Dramatic Literature, Tufts, 1924-; Professor of Rhetoric and Debate, 1925-. Robert Ciienault Givler, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy A.M., Harvard 1913; Ph.D., Harvard, 1914. Instructor in Psychology, University of Washington, 1914-17; Assistant and Instructor in Psy¬ chology, Harvard, 1917-19; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Tufts, 1919-22; Professor of Philosophy, Tufts, 1922-. 25 Charles Henry Gray, B.L., M.L., Ph.D. Professor of English B.L., University of Michigan, 1895; M.L., University of Michigan, 1896; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1904; Research Fellow in English, University of Pennslyvania, 1914-15. © A X. Teaching positions in the English Departments of the University of Michigan, Oberlin College, University of Chicago, and University of Kansas. Frank Oliver Hall, B.D., D.D., S.T.D. Professor of Homiletics B.D., Tufts, 1884; D.D., St. Lawrence University, 1901; S.T.D., Tufts, 1905. Pastor. Church of the Divine Paternity, New York, 1902-1919; Present position, 1920-. Halford Lancaster Hoskins, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Dickson Professor of English and American History A.B., Earlham College, 1913; A.M., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1920, 1924; Graduate student, University of Chicago, Harvard University. High School Instruction, 191.8-15, 1917-18; Instructor in History, Friends University, 1915-17; Assistant Professor of History, Trinity College, N. C., 1918-19; Assistant Professor of History and Public Law, Tufts College, 1920-24; Member of Summer Session Faculties, Kansas University, 1919; University of Pennsylvania, 1920, 1923; Western Reserve University, 1921, 1922; Dickson Professor of English and American History, Tufts College, 1924-. Fred Dayton Lambert, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Botany Ph.B., Tufts, 1894; A.M., Ph.D., Tufts, 1897; Studied at University of Frieburg, Germany, and Naples Zoological Station, 1910-11; A T A, d B K. Assistant in Biology, Tufts, 1896-97; Sub-Master, Edward Little High School, Auburn, Maine, 1897-98; Instructor in Biology, Tufts, 1898-1900; Instructor in Natural History, Tufts, 1900-04; Assist¬ ant Professor of Botany, Tufts, 1904-13; Professor of Botany, Tufts, 1913-. Alfred Church Lane, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Sc.D. Pearson Professor of Geology and Mineralogy A.B., Harvard, 1883; A.M., Ph.D., 1888; Sc.D., Tufts, 1913; Studied at University of Heidelberg, 1885-87. Instructor in Mathematics, Harvard, 1883-85; Instructor, Michigan College of Mines, 1889-92; Assistant State Geologist of Michigan, 1892-99; State Geologist, 1899-1909; Present position, 1909-. Fellow: A.A.A.S. (American Academy Arts and Science); Member: Geology Society of America, American Mineralogical Society; American Institution Mining and Metallurgical Engineers (President Boston Section 1918-19); Harvard Engineering Society; Association American Engineering; Boston Society Natural History; Society American Forestry Association; Navy League; Lake Superior Mining Institution. Leo Rich Lewis, A.B., A.M., Litt.D. Professor of History and Theory of Music, Associate Professor of Modern Languages A.B., Tufts, 1887; A.B., Harvard, 1888; A.M., Harvard, 1889; Litt.D. Graduate, Munich Conserva¬ tory of Music, 1892. Z T 4 B K, K F F. Instructor in French, Tufts College, 1892-95; Professor of History and Theory of Music, Tufts College, 1895; Associate Professor of Modern Languages, Tufts College, 1919-; Visiting Instructor, Harvard Summer School, 1915-22; Fletcher Professor of Music, Tufts, 1925-. Chairman of Medford Music Committee at 275th Anniversary, 1905; Chairman, Board of Exam¬ iners in Music in College Entrance Examination Board, 1909-14; Vice-President, Music Teachers’ National Association, 1910-12; Member, Eastern Educational Conference in Music; International Music Society; National Society for the Study of Education and for the Advancement of Science; Modern Language Associations of New England and of America. Edgar MacNaughton, M.E. Professor of Mechanical Engineering M.E., Cornell, 1911. FITS, TBII. Student Engineer, General Electric Company, 1911-15; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering, Tufts, 1915-18; Associate in Mechanical Engineering, University of Illinois, 1918-19; Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering, Tufts, 1919-21; Professor of Mechanical Engineering 1921-. Member: American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Author of Elementary Steam Power Plant Engineering. William Richard Ransom, A.B., A.M. Professor of Mathematics A.B., A.M., Tufts, 1898; A.M., Harvard, 1903. B K. Teacher at Caseadilla School, Brooklyn Polytechnic, and Harvard University; Professor ot Mathe¬ matics, Tufts, 1900-. Frank Elias Seavey, A.B., A.M. Professor of English A.B., Bowdoin, 1905; A.M., Harvard, 1916. Z l F. . _ .. . Instructor in Modern Languages, Somes School, Aurora, N. Y., 1905-06; Instructor in English, Highland Military Academy, Worcester, 1906-08; Instructor in English, Tufts, 1908-13; Assistant Professor, 1913-17; Professor, 1917-; Instructor in English Composition, University Extension, 1924-. Member American Association of University Professors; Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Member of National Committee on Teaching of English, 1921-; Member National Council, S.P.E.E., 1923-26. Co-author (with S. C. Earle and H. J. Savage), ‘Sentences and Their Elements.” Clarence Russell Skinner, A.B., A.M. Professor of Applied Christianity A.B., St. Lawrence University, 1904; A.M., 1910; Studied at Harvard University; School for Social Workers, Boston; Columbia University. B 0 R d B K. . Universalist Minister in New York City, Mt. Vernon, N. and Lowell, Mass.; Social Service Work; Social Service Secretary, Universalist Church; President, State Universalist Convention; Leader, Boston Community Church and Old South Forum. David Elbridge Worrall, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Organic Chemistry B.S., Rhode Island State College, 1910; M.A., Harvard, 1911; Ph.D., Harvard, 1919. Chemist, Guantanamo Sugar Co., Cuba, 1912; Instructor in Chemistry, Smith College, Assistant Chemist and First Lieutenant, C. W. S. of U. S. Army, 1918. AX 2, 1914-17; Edwin Hanscom Wright, B.S. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., Tufts College, 1894. ATil. . Architectural and Engineering practice, 1894-1918; Instructor in Structural Engineering. I ufts College, 1918-19; Assistant Professor of Civil and Structural Engineering, 1919-22; Associate 1 rofessor in Civil Engineering, 1922-. . . , Member: American Society of Civil Engineers; Society for Promotion of Engineering Education. William Frank Wyatt, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Greek A.B.. Centre College (Kentucky), 1904; A.M., Harvard University, 1912; Ph.I)., Harvard University, 1915. 0 B K, K A (Southern). T T . i Assistant Principal, Mt. Sterling High School (Kentucky), 1904-05; Instructor in Latin and (.reek, Transylvania College (Kentucky), 1905-10; Traveling Fellow in Palaeography, Harvard l mversity, 1912-18; Private Tutor, 1913-14; Instructor in Greek, Tufts College, 1914-16; Assistant 1 rofessor ot Greek, 1916-23; Professor of Greek, 1923. 27 ASSISTANT PROFESSORS Robinson Abbott, B.S. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1918. A f 2. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Tufts, 1918-22; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 1922-; Resident Engineer, Massachusetts Department of Public Works, 1921-23; Assistant Football Coach, Tufts, 1919-22. Member: Boston Society of Civil Engineers, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education. Courtney Bruerton, x4.B., A.M., Pli.D. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages A.B., Tufts, 1912; A.M., Harvard, 1913; Ph.D., Harvard, 1915; Graduate Student, Harvard, 1912- 15; John Harvard Fellow, 1914-15. J BK. Instructor in Romance Languages, Dartmouth, 1915-20; Assistant Professor of Romance Lan¬ guages, Dartmouth, 1920-21; Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, Tufts, 1921. Edith Linwood Bush, B.S. Assistant Professor of Mathematics A. B., Tufts, 1903. XQ, $BK. Instructor, Brewster and Stafford High Schools, 1903-06; Instructor Chelsea High School, 1906-18; Principal, Provincetown High School, 1918-20; Instructor in Mathematics, Tufts, 1920-22; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Tufts, 1922-. Walter Elwood Farnham, B.S. Assistant Professor of Graphics B. S., University of Maine, 1907. K 2. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing, Lhiiversity of Maine, 1909-17; Head of Engineering Depart¬ ment, New Bedford Textile School, 1917-18; Instructor in General Engineering Drawing, University of Illinois, 1918-19; Assistant Professor of Graphics, Tufts College, 1919-. Myron Jennison Files, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of English A. B., Dartmouth, 1914; A.M., Harvard, 1916. T AE. Instructor, Engineering School, Tufts, 1914-16; Instructor, Dartmouth, 1916-17; Private, Sergeant, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army, July 1917 to December 1918; Instructor, Engineering School, Tufts, 1919-21; Assistant Professor, Tufts, 1921-. Raymond Underwood Fittz, B.S. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering B. S., Tufts, 1915. Ad 2. Laboratory, Edison Electric Illuminating Co., Boston; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering, 1915-16; University of Pennsylvania, 1916-18; Instructor in Radio, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, 1918; Instructor in Engineering Subjects, Massachusetts Department of Education, 1920-25. Eleanor Adelaide Gardner, Ph.D. Head of Education Department A.B., University of Southern California, 1916; Pd.M., New York University, 1917; M.A., Columbia University, 1919; Ph.D., New York University, 1923. Teaching in Public and Private Schools; Registrar and Precept of Girls, Wilson Academy, 1912-14; Instructor and Head of Department, University of Southern California, 1914-16; Head of Education Department, Greenville Women’s College, 1919-22; Assistant Professor and Head of Education Depart¬ ment, Tufts, 1923.- Donald Winfred Goodnow, A.B. Assistant Professor of Physics A.B., Clark University, 1920. A M. Instructor in Physics, Tufts, 1920-23; Assistant Professor of Physics, Tufts 1923-. 28 ok. Clarence Preston Huston, B.S., LL.B. Assistant Professor of Commercial Law B.S., Tufts, 1914. 0 A X. Instructor in Mathematics and Athletic Supervisor, Adirondack Florida School, Onchiota, N. Y., 1914-17; First Lieutenant and Captain of Infantry, U. S. Army, 1917-19; Alumni Secretary of Tufts College Alumni Association, 1919-24; Director of Physical Education, Tufts, 1919-24; Lawyer, 1924-; Assistant Professor of Commercial Law, Tufts, 1924-. John Louis Charles Keegen, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of English A.B., Tufts, 1913; A.M., Tufts, 1914; Candidate for Ph.D., at Columbia University. A T A. Assistant in History, Tufts, 1913-14; Instructor in English, Tufts, 1914-20; Assistant Professor in English, 1920-. Member Modern Language Association; Secretary-Treasurer Tufts College Teachers ' Association; Secretary Tufts Club of Boston; Lieutenant of Infantry, Officers Reserve Corps. Nathaniel Hobbs Knight, B.S. Assistant Professor of Physics B.S., Dartmouth, 1907. 2 N. Sub-Master, North Yarmouth Academy, 1909-10; Instructor, Tufts, 1911-20; Assistant Professor of Physics, 1920-. Roland Winthrop Lefavour Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering d A. Associated with E. W. Bowditch of Boston 1910-17. With Hazen, Whipple and Fuller of New York City 1917-18; Committee on Educational and Special Training of War Department; Officers’ Teacher at Fort Strong 1918; Instructor Civil Engineering at Tufts College 1918-22 and Assistant Pro¬ fessor 1922-. Associate Member A.S.M.E.; Member S.P.E.E. Arthur Whiting Leighton, B.S., Ed.M. Assistant Professor of Graphics B.S.. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1921; Ed.M., Harvard University, 1924. A X A, I K I , 4 AK. Instructor in Engineering Drawing, University of Maine, 1914-17; Instructor in Technical Drawing, Tufts, 1917-19; Instructor in Mathematics, Huntington School, Boston, 1921-22; Assistant Professor of Graphics, Tufts, 1922-. Joseph Mayer, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Head of Department of Economics and Social Sciences A.B. 1911, Southwestern L T niversity (highest honors); A.M., Harvard, 1914; Ph.D., Columbia, 1922. Assistant in Mathematics and Physics, University of Texas, 1908-10; Instructor in Mathematics and Physics, Northwestern University 1910-11; Instructor in Business English and History, Baylor University and Hardin Military School, 1918-19; Lecturer in Business Organization, Business Training Corporation, New York City, 1919-20; Consulting Engineer-Economist, New York City 1919-23; Head of Economics and Sociology Department, Tufts College. 1924-; Director War Camp Community Service, 1918-19. Lecturer for the World Peace Foundation, Council of National Defense, League to Enforce Peace, and during the war a Four-Minute Man; Member, American SocietyM.E., A.A.A.S., Am. Ec. Ass n. Am. Soc. Society, Amer. Mgmt. Ass ' n, History of Science Soc., Am. Ac. of Polit. and Sec. Science, Ac. of Polit. Sc., Am. Ass’n for Labor Legis., Pres. Soc. Ind. Engrs., New York Chapter (1921-23); Author of numerous Economic and Sociology books and treatises. r criT a b iq a 3 ▼ 29 Newell Carroll Maynard, A.B. Professor of Oratory A. B., Dartmouth, 1910. Minister: South Congregational Church, Peabody, Mass., 1911-13; Central Congregational Church, Middleboro, Mass., 1914-17; Centre Congregational Church, Haverhill, Mass., 1917-23; Instructor in Public Speaking, Harvard University Summer School, 1922-25; Assistant Professor of Public Speaking, Tufts, 1923 1925; Fletcher Professor of Oratory, Tufts, 1925-. Titus Eugene Mergendahl, B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Mathematics B. S., Tufys, 1907; M.S., Tufts, 1913; Graduate Work, University of Chicago. A T A. Instructor in Mathematics, Ripon College, 1907-09; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Ripon College, 1909-11; Professor and Head of Department of Mathematics, College of Emporia, 1911-18; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Tufts College, 1919-. George Stewart Miller, A.B., A.M. Assistant to the President, Assistant Professor of History and Government and Secretary of the Faculty A. B., Tufts, 1906; A.M., Tufts, 1907. A T Q, d B K. Teacher in Concord High School, 1907-09; Assistant Principal of Monson Academy, 1909-12; Head of History Department, Medford High School, 1912-16; Secretary to the President of Tufts, 1916-20; Assistant to the President of Tufts, 1920-; Instructor in History, Tufts, 1919-21; Assistant Professor of History and Government, Tufts, 1921-; Secretary of the Faculty, 1920-; Faculty Member of Student Council. Member: American Political Science Association, American Academy of Political and Social Science; National Municipal League; Medford School Committee, Rotary. Melville Smith Munro, B.S. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering B. S.,Tufts, 1904. AT. Assistant in Electrical Engineering, Tufts, 1905-07; Instructor, 1907-13; Assistant Professor, 1913-. Member: American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Society for Promotion of Engineering Educa- tion; Association of University Professors; Professional Photographer of College Activities. William Howell Reed, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages A. B., Harvard, 1898; A.M., Harvard, 1899. Instructor and Teaching Fellow in Germany, Harvard, 1900-04; Instructor in German, Massa¬ chusetts Institute of Technology, 1902-03; Instructor and Assistant Professor in Modern Languages, Tufts, 1904-. Member: Modern Language Association of America; New England Modern Language Association. James A. Reynolds, B.S. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering B. S., Tufts, 1910. A f 2. Foreman, Testing Department, General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y., 1910-16; Sales Engineer, 1916- 17; Electrical Superintendent of Maintenance, Southern Power Company, Great Falls, N. Y., 1917- 18. Edwin Butler Rollins, B.S. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1901. A E 2. Assistant, Electrical Engineering, Tufts, 1901-02; Instructor, 1902-15; Assistant Professor, 1915-. Frederick Nixon Weaver, B.S. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering B.S., Tufts, 1913. 2 T A. Checker, New England Structural Company, 1913-15; Industrial Education, Passaic, N. J., 1915-17; 101st Engineers, 26th Division, 1917-19; Tufts Engineering School, 1919-. 30 INSTRUCTORS Charles Francis Hitchcock Allen, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. K $ A Che m istry (0rga n ic ) George Edward Wilson Armstrong Rudolf Bennitt, S.B., A.M., Ph.D. B K, K $ A Joseph Franklin Carlz, M.E. A T Ellen Hodges Cary Harris Marshall Chadwell, B.S., A.M., P11.D. A X A, F A, A X X Physical Chemistry David MacGregor Cheney, A.B. X Q l F English Reginald Coggeshall, A.B. English Charles Henry Downs, B.S. AT A Director of Physical Education and Athletics Machine Laboratory Biology Mech an ical Engineering Office Technique Norman Wallace Fradd, B.P.E. A K Esther Beatrice Freeman Carl Herbert Holmberg, B.S. Ernest Frank Lawrence James Millidge LeCain, B.S. A T A William Henry Meanix, B.S. A K E Norman Edward Nelson, A.M. Ralph Aubrey Smith Royal Stewart Steiner, A.M. Ruth Tousey, A.B. X Q Percy Desmond Wilkins, A.B. Z l F Physical Education Physical Training Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Physical Education Ph ys ical Educat ion English Meehan ical Engineering Economics English Mathematics ASSISTANTS Raeburn Stanley Hunt, A.M. Psychology Dirrell Daniel Sample, B.S. ( I A Physical Education, Basketball Coach Oliver Dunbar Wescott, D.M.D. 0 A X Physical Education, Coach of Freshman Football 31 Dowson Spofford Winslow Miller F. Russell Pearson Truesdale Nelson Ballard Fogg Wilson French D. Russell THE STUDENT COUNCIL Raymond L. Wilson ( President ) Dana P. Fogg, Jr. {Vice-President) J. Donald Russell ( Secretary) Joseph T. Ballard Hubert W. Dowson Evander French George S. Miller Victor Nelson John L. Pearson . Francis H. Russell Nathan N. Singerman Foster R. Spofford Clarence N. Truesdale Maurice N. Winslow The Weekly Baseball Pen , Paint, and Pretzels Track Ivy To wer Cross Faculty Football Musical Clubs 1 vy . Tufts Union . Sword and Shield Basketball Tower Cross 32 ISonoraru Societies ■4 Nelson Clark Fogg Wilson French Winslow Miller TOWER CROSS The Senior Honorary Society Founded in 1897 Object: — To promote the best interests of Alma Mater. Membership is considered one of the highest honors that can be accorded an undergraduate. Evander French Donald H. Miller Lawrence R. Clark Dana P. Fogg, Jr. Victor Nelson President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Marshal Raymond L. Wilson Maurice N. Winslow Greenway Haff Gamage Hosmer Brosseau Russell Sargent PEN, PAINT AND PRETZELS Senior Honorary Dramatic Society Established 1910 Object: lo encourage and foster interest in dramatics at Tufts J. Donald Russell Ernest P. Brosseau . Frank H. Sargent, Jr. Carl P. Brocco Elwin H. Gamage Cornelius I. Greenway President Secretary-Treasurer Bu siness Manager Alexander 0. Haff Donald S. Hosmer Ralph C. Weaver 35 Leacli Lewis Haff Ettleson Yeuell Halpersohn PHI BETA KAPPA Honorary Scholastic Fraternitv Roland L. Leach ’25 Lawrence L. Ettleson ’25 Dorothy S. Lewis ’25 Marian G. Haff May B. Halpersohn ’25 Thelma Yeuell ’25 James J. Cammisa ’24 Alice M. Towsley ’24 Angela Q. Marchese ’24 30 Goss Russell Perry Watson Dowson Kidd IVY SOCIETY The Junior Honorary Society, Ivy, was founded in 1901, for the purpose of uniting the different factions in the common interests of the college. MEMBERSHIP II ubert W. Dowson Eugene Smith Lawrence S. Kidd Edward V. Watson . Eugene F. Goss George V. Perry President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Francis II. Russell A A :i7 Fulton Schuman MacLeod Nickerson Lyons Austin Spofford True Fogg Strathdee SWORD AND SHIELD The Sophomore Honorary Society, Sword and Shield, was founded in 1902, to promote the fellowship and best interests of the sophomore class. Dean W. True MEMBERSHIP President Foster R. Spofford Vice-President Donald F. Fogg Secretary-Treasurer Wilbur C. Fulton Sanfrey M. Lilyestrom Leo G. Lyons Allan D. MacLeod James E. Nickerson Frank Schuman John J. Austin Wallace B. Strathdee 38 f 39 I Clark Schuster Ballard Weaver Winslow Fogg TUFTS 1925 OFFICERS Maurice N. Winslow .... Dana P. Fogg, Jr. Arthur W. Schuster ..... Lawrence R. Clark ..... Joseph T. Ballard ..... Ralph C. Weaver ..... Colors — Red and White Cheer — 1-9-2-5 1-9-2-5 1-9-2-5 Rah! Rah! Rah! Twenty-Five! . President Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer Marshal . H istorian 40 V A 41 LIBERAL ARTS SENIORS ENGINEERING SENIORS Whitten Harrington R. Ward Havner Holmes M. Ward 1925 Carolyn Havner President Alice Harrington . Vice-President Margaret Holmes Secretary Ruth Ward . . Treasurer Mildred Ward . Marshal Ruth Whitten Colors — Red and lute . Historian 43 JACKSON SENIORS % r £ h ’ £-4 n ■= ■ p ► i HENRY LYMAN ADAMS, Jr., STA B.S. in Economics “Hank” Geokgetown, Mass. “He wears the rose of youth upon him ” Perley Free School. Assistant Manager Track (3); Cosmos Club (3); 1925 Debating Society (2); Jumbo Subscription Committee (4). BENJAMIN ALPORT B.S. in Biology “Benny” Springfield, Mass. “What cant be cured must be endured ” Central High School. JAMES FREDERICK ARCHIBALD, 2 T A B.S. in Electrical Engineering “Arch” Medford, Mass. “ — and he retires ” Medford High School. President of Radio Society (2), (3), (4); chosen to represent Engineer¬ ing School at Commencement. JOSEPH THORPE BALLARD, A T A B.S. in Chemistry “Joe” Malden, Mass. “ Ye Gods, annihilate both space and time and make two lovers happy ” Browne and Nichols. Class Hockey (1); Class Tennis (1); ( ' lass Baseball (1); Assistant Manager Football (3); Manager of Track (4); Student Council (4); Evening Party Association (4); Class Marshal (1), (3), (4); Athletic Association Nomin¬ ating Committee (4). Ch cx ? c I ' To Fi e r c c m 2 . to h 7a 45 LAWRENCE BARUFFALDI, B K B.S. in Civil Engineering “Barry” Somerville, Mass. “ Report me and my cause aright ” Somerville High School. Wrestling Team (1), (4); Evening Party Association (3); President Evening Party Association (4); Glee Club (2), (3), (4); President Musical Clubs (4). HAROLD KOETTER BECK, A T B.S. in Civil Engineering “Hal” Everett, Mass. “Every man has business and desire ' ’ Everett High School. Musical Clubs (1), (2), (3) ; Junior Prom Committee (3); Secretary-Treas¬ urer Evening Party Association (4); Jumbo Book Staff (4); American Society of Civil Engineers (3), (4) ; New England Interscholastic Basketball Tournament Committee (3); Class Day Committee (4). ADRIAN EDWIN BESSEY, A ff N B.S. in Engineering “Bess” Columbus, Ohio “My appetite comes to me while eating ” Zanesville High School. American Society of Mechanical Engineers (I), (2), (3), (4), Secretary- Treasurer (4); Evening Party Association (4). FRANCIS EDWIN BLANEY, I A B.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Dutch” Salem, Mass. “Fortune always leaves some door open to come at a remedy ” Peabody High School. American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1), (3), (4); Evening Party Association (4); Class Baseball (1); Class Football ( 2 ). yxj ; ► ' t ' ll 1 j j g !q |k- ri! Ml I ! 1 . ) j ; 1 j I i q ► 4 ri 1 i ri [l 4 1 I • m 3 f ! ► q! i 3 ► 46 v EZNICK BOGOSIAN, A T B.S. in History “Red” West Hoboken, N. J. “Bright flaming , heat full fire, the source of motion” Emerson High School. Freshman Basketball Squad; Sword and Shield; Varsity Basketball Squad (2), (3); Ivy; Varsity Football Squad (3); Moses True Brown Prize (4); Varsity Basketball (4). JOSEPH EUGENE BOURETT, © A X B.S. in English “Joe” Auburn, R. I. “Living ivill teach you how to live better than preacher or book Cranston High School. Tufts Pre-Medical. Base¬ ball (2), (3), (4). CARL PETER BROCCO, A T A B.S., S.T.B. “Pete” Reading, Penn. “And had a face like a blessing ” Liberal Club (4); Pipers (4); Pen, Paint and Pretzels (4); Dramatics (2), (3). ERNEST PAUL BROSSEAU, Z V F B.S. in Biology “Doc” North Adams, Mass. “But the fruit that can fall without shaking. Indeed is too mellow for me. Drury High School. Class Football (l); Banquet Committee (1); Chairman Numerals Committee (2) ; Chairman Cane Committee (3); Assistant Manager Tennis (1), (2), (3); Dramatics (1), (2), (3) , (4); Sword and Shield; Secretary and Treasurer, Pen, Paint and Pretzels; Evening Party Association (4) ; Cheer Leader (3); Golf Association, Greens Committee (3), (4); Photograph Editor Jumbo Book. 47 GEORGE EDWIN BUDD, Z T B.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Judge” Fall River, Mass. “ Plough deep while sluggards sleep ” Durfee High School. Nominating Committee (2), (3); Football (3), (4); Musical Clubs (1), (4); Class Banquet Committee (4). JOHN JOSEPH BURKE, Jr. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Joe” Waltham, Mass. ‘ ‘ S weet grave aspect Waltham High School. RALPH EDWARD CARLISLE, Jr., A T Q B.S. in English “Zeke” Winchester, Mass. “ All things are in common among friends Wakefield High School, Norwich LTniversity. Track (3). WILLIAM HENRY CARTER, 2 T A B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Bill” Andover, Mass. “A man used to vicissitude is not easily dejected ” Punchard High School. Class Track (l); Class Baseball (1); 2nd Varsity Football (2); Chairman Banquet Committee (3); Varsity Football (3), (4); Vice-President East Hall Association (4); Class Banquet Committee (4). WILLIAM LAWRENCE CASHEN, A I N B.S. in Engineering “Rill” Meriden, Conn. “ am only one, but still I am one Meriden High School. LAWRENCE RAYMOND CLARK, A Y B.S. in Economics “Larry,” “Pop” Springfield, Mass. “ know everything except myself ” Springfield Technical High School. Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Treasurer of Class (1), (2), (3), (4); Sword and Shield, Secretary-Treas¬ urer; Glee Club (2), (4); Varsity Football (3); Secretary Ivy; Chairman Junior Prom Committee; Secretary-Treasurer Tower Cross; Underclass Rules Committee (4); Advertising Manager, Jumbo Book. DAVID DUKE COCHRANE, ATQ B.S. in Civil Engineering “Duke” East Dorset, Vt. “ This cord ial julep here, that flames and dances in his crystal bounds ” Loomis Institute, Burr and Burton. MATTHEW PAUL CONDE B.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Matty” Peabody, Mass. “ The first gears of man must make provision for the last ” Peabody High School. 49 JUnBO BOOK (cib i TjlOCZ 7i ji YiT SHERMAN CONVERSE, ATQ B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Sherm” Woburn, Mass. “And those sad eyes were spiritual and clear ' ' Woburn High School. Freshman Football; Chemical Society (1); Track (2), (3); Class Banquet Committee (3); Evening Party Association (4); Advertising Staff, Jumbo. ARTHUR CRESSWELL B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Art” Lynn, Mass. “ Young felloids will he young fellows Lynn Classical High School. Chemical Society. LAURENCE MORSE CURTIS, A T Q B.S. in Economics “Larry,” “Kurt” Groton, Mass. “ The ruling passion be it what it mil The ruling passion conquers still. Milton High School, Winchester High School, Dartmouth College. Freshman Assistant Manager of Basketball; New England Interscholastic Basket¬ ball Tournament (2); Debating Council (3), (4); Inter-fraternity Council (3), (4); Class Nominating Committee (4); Cosmos Club (4); President Tufts Republican Club (4); Executive Committee Intra¬ mural Athletics (4); Jumbo Staff (4); Chapel Orator (4). EARLE CHESTER DAVIS B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Dave” Swampscott, Mass. “ You can never plan the future by the past Swampscott High School. 3 HT y (4 r q juhbo JESSE SEYMOUR DOOLITTLE li.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Jess,” “Dooley” Southington, Conn. “Rough and solid like the rock ” Lewis High School, ( ' lass Debating (2); President East Ilall Association (4). MALCOLM GRAEME DOUGLAS, A T A R.S. in Civil Engineering ‘Doug” Hull, Mass. “IUc give to necessity the praise of virtue Ilingham High School. LAWRENCE NEWTON ETTELSON R.S. in Biology “La wry” Boston, Mass. “ Wisdom is the principal thing, therefore get wisdom, and with all thy getting get understanding ' ' English High School. Second Varsity Football (3); Track Squad (3); Chess Team (4); Howland Scholarship (4); Phi Beta Kappa (4). CLARENCE EDWIN EVANS, A T A R.S. in Chemistry “Chick” Waltham, Mass. “ In that day, seven women shall take hold of one man ' ' Waltham High School. Freshman Smoker (1); Freshman Track; Dramatics (2), (3); Musical Clubs (3), (4); Chemical Society (3), (4). BOOK ' iKJaU MAX FABER B.S. in Biology O y « Chelsea, Mas- “ Toil is the sire of fame” Chelsea High School. LOUIS FEIN, T E !• B.S. in Biology “Lou” Springfield, Mass “ Second thoughts are ever wiser ” Central High School. Dramatics (3). DANA PALMER FOGG, Jr., A T LI B.S. in Mechanical Engineering “D.P” Auburn, Maine If you have not lost a thing, you have it” Edward Little High School. Freshman Track; Musical Clubs (l), (2); Assistant Manager Baseball (3); Manager Baseball (4); Ivy; Union Governing Board (3), (4); Junior Day Committee; Marshal, Tower Cross; Vice-President Class (4); Vice-Presi¬ dent Athletic Association (4); Vice-President Student Council (4); Chairman Athletic Association Nomi¬ nating Committee (4); Assistant Editor Ivy Book (3); Associate Editor Jumbo Book (4); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (4). EVANDER FRENCH, Z B.S. “Van” Winchester, Mass. “7 have more understanding than all my teachers, for their testimonies are my meditations” Winchester High School, University of Maine. Freshman Football; Captain Freshman Basketball; Basketball (2), (3), (4); Vice-President Ivy; Presi¬ dent Tower Cross; Student Council (4); President Athletic Association (4); Underclass Rules Com¬ mittee (3); Executive Committee A. A. (4). 3 i --S fr- id! g rl Ml 3 g ■f OX ELWYN HARVEY GAMAGE, B K B.S. in Engineering “Gam” Auburn, Maine “ The world is a wheel and it will all come around all right” Edward Little High School. Captain Freshman Track; Class Track (2), (3), (4); Varsity Track (2), (3), (4); Varsity Football (4); Underclass Rides Committee (4); Band (1); Glee Club (1); Chairman Nominating Committee (3); Ivy; Pen Paint and Pretzels (3); Class Day Committee (4). ARMAND JEAN GARIEPY, Z T B.S. in Economics “Gary” Barre, Mass. “Wrestle thou with adversity” Barre High School. Class Baseball (1), (2); Wrestling (1), (2), (4); Advertising Staff Jumbo Book (4). ACHILLE GEORGE GELALLES B.S. in Engineering “Joe” Yerdikousa, Greece “He thought as a sage though he felt as a man” Huntington School. ISAAC GOLDSTEIN B.S. in Chemical Engineering “I” Boston, Mass. “Each man reaps on his own farm” English High School. 53 KEITH A. GOVE, STA B.S. in Economics “Old Man” Woodland, Maine “Remove not the ancient landmark’ ' Dean Academy. Assistant Manager Baseball (l), (2); Freshman Football. CORNELIUS GREENWAY, B K B.S. in English “Connie” Franklin, Mass. “ Let thy. words be few” Dean Academy. Pen, Paint and Pretzels (3), (4). Delegate, Inter-collegiate Conference (3). RICHARD MASON GROWER, A d 2 B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Dick” Arlington, Mass. “For ive that live to please must please to live” Arlington High School. Manager Freshman Baseball (1); Assistant Manager Baseball (3); Chemical Society (4); Inter-fraternity Council (3), (4); Cap and Gown Committee (4). ALEXANDER OTIS HAFF, A T B.S. in Biology “Alec” Newton Highlands, Mass. “Since knowledge is but sorrow’s spy It is not safe to know” Kearny High School, Newton High School. Band (2); Biology Club (2); Class Debating (2); Football Squad (2), (3); Dramatics (2), (3); Glee Club (3), (4); Chemical Society (4); Pen, Paint and Pretzels (4). g i - t ►- q 3 I fV, ' ► y 1 Ji 1 1 1 teT - i y i % g d 54 WILLIAM CHESTER HALEY, ATQ li.S. in Economics “Chet” Arlington, Mass. “Wit, whither wilt” Cambridge Latin School, Nolan School, Arlington High School. Class Track (1); Captain Hockey (1) Numerals Committee (1); Track (2); Boxing (2) Secretary Republican Club; Jumbo Book Staff (4) Toastmaster Class Banquet (4). FRANK EVANS HANSON li.S. in Chemical Engineering “Hank” Wakefield, Mass. “I am a part of all I have met” Chelsea High School. Class Basketball (1), (2), (4); Chemical Society (4); Varsity Basketball Squad (4). JAMISON RICHARD HARRISON li.S. in Physics Dick” Boston, Mass. “ Like glimpses of forgotten dreams” Mechanic Arts High School. RONALD KENNETH HATCH, A 1 N li.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Ron” W INCHESTER, Mass. “Oh, why should life all labor be” Winchester High School. Class Baseball (1); Nominating Committee (3), (4); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (3), (4). 5 1 55 ROBERT IRVING HAYES, $ A B.S. in Engineering “Bob” Somerville, Mass. “An oyster may be crossed in love” Somerville High. CLARENCE FULTON HEAD B.S. in Electrical Engineering “Clarry” Somerville, Mass “A workman that need not be ashamed” Somerville High School; Assistant Track Mana¬ ger (3). stuart Macdonald hosmer, a t B.S. in Chemistry “Curley” “Whoopee” Ashland, Wise. “ The kiss snatched hasty from the sidelong maid ” Ashland High School, Macalester College. Man¬ dolin Club (2); Band (2); Dramatics (2), (3); Pen, Paint and Pretzels; Varsity Football (3), (4); Banquet Class Committee (4); Chemical Society. CHARLES WILLIAM HOUGHTON, A d S B.S. in Biology “Charley” Walpole, N. H. “ We must eat to live and live to eat” Walpole High School. Weekly staff (1), (2); Class Track (1); Track Squad (2), (3), (4). 5(5 HENRY JOSEPH JEFFRESS, A T I B.S. in Biology “Jeff” West Medford, Mass. “A good name is more to be desired than precious ointment ” Medford High School. Cosmos Club (3); Class Debating (2); Assistant Secretary Student Union; Weekly Staff (3), (4); Track (2), (3), (4). WILLARD HAVEN JOHNSON, I A B.S. in Structural Engineering “Yolly” Newark, N. J “ The ornaments of a home are the f riends that frequent it Barringer‘High School. MOSES LEROY JORDAN, A I 2 B.S. in Engineering “Roy,” “Doc” Portland, Maine “And the Lord called unto Moses, ‘Come forth ' Winchester High School. A.S.M.E. (l), (2), (3), (4), Vice-Chairman (4); Freshman Hockey; Radio Society. RAYMOND L. KILTY, 2 T A B.S. in Civil Engineering “Ray,” “Tim” Warehouse Point, Conn. “Strong meat belongcth to them that are of full age Windsor Locks High School. Hockey (1); Nom¬ inating Committee (4); Press Club (4). 57 SAMUEL KLEIN B.S. in Electrical Engineering “Sam” Lynn, Mass. “Hotvjce apples swim ” Lynn Classical High. Track (1), (2); A.S.M.E. (4). NATHANIEL KOSAK, B K B.S. in Chemistry “Nat” Everett, Mass. “Speak after the manner of men” Everett High School. LEONARD LANDSBERG B.S. in History and Public Law “Lenny” Roxbury, Mass. “Comes unexpressive silence, muse is praise ” Boston English High. Glee Club (2); Cosmos Club (3). ANDREW SHEPEARD LAURIE, A T B.S. in Chemistry “Andy,” “Gump” Somerville, Mass. “Despatch is the soul of business ” Somerville High. Freshman Track; Calendar Committee (2); Nominating Committee (l), (3), (4); Weekly Staff (3), (4); Jumbo Staff; Chemical Society. 58 “Roly” ROLAND LEO LEACH A.B. in Latin Methuen, Mass. “ With them the seed of wisdom did I sow. And with mine own hand wrought to make it grow. And this was all the Harvest that I reaped .” Methuen High School. Phi Beta Kappa; Liberal Arts Commencement Speaker; Weekly Staff (4). ERNEST EASTMAN LEAVITT, STA B.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Ernie” Dorchester, Mass. “ Wise men lay up knowledge ” Dorchester High. Chairman A.S.M.E. (4) Band (1), (2); A.S.M.E. delegate to New York (4) Cap and Gown Committee; Glee Club (4). DUDLEY DAVID LEVY B.S. in Engineering “Dava” New York, N. Y. “ have lived and toiled with men ” (Left college January 192.5) MILTON FREDERICK LITTLE, A T B.S. in Biology ( Pre-Med) ‘‘Milt” Waterbury, Conn. “Knowledge is power.—Nam et ipsa scientia potestas est.” Willoughby High School. Ohio Wesleyan. Biology Club; Cosmos Club; Dramatics. I 4 FREDERIC BILLINGS LITTLEFIELD, © A X R.S. in Engineering “Small Meadows” Somerville, Mass. “I took to my heels as fast as I could ” Somerville High. Class Football (l), (2); Second Team Football (3); Junior Day Committee; Chairman Underclass Rules Committee (4); A.S.C.E. (2), (3); Freshman Track; Varsity Track, Captain (4); Track (2), (3), (4); Varsity Relay (3), (4); Jumbo Book Staff. RAFAEL FILIBERTO LOBATO B.S. in Economics “Mex,” “Ralph” Colonta del Valle, Mexico “Let every man he fully persuaded in his own mind ” Mexico City High School. Track (1); Boxing (2). WALTER MILLER MARON, Z F B.S. in Engineering “Walt” Meriden, Conn. “ The sleep of a laboring man is sweet” Meriden High School. Mandolin Club (l), (2), (3), (4), Leader (3), (4); Cross Country (2). ► ' i rt ■ W 1 C • ' EDWARD ROBERT McCARTHY B.S. in Civil Engineering “Mac,” “Ned” Natick, Mass “ Silence is golden ” Natick High School. Class Track (1); Sword and Shield; Nominating Committee (2). . rq I - JM9 CO 25 jun o HAROLD MacDONNELL A.B. in Latin “Hal,” “Mac” Roxbury, Mass. “A glass is good, and a lass is good, And a pipe to smoke in good weather St. John’s Prep., Georgetown University. Var¬ sity Football (3), (4); Varsity Basketball (3), (4); Varsity Baseball (2), (3), Captain (4). DONALD HAYES MILLER, A T A ‘Don” ll.S. in Engineering Somerville, Mass. “Nothing succeeds like success ” Somerville High School. Class Track (1); Assistant Advertising Manager Weekly (1); Winner Subscription Prize in Jumbo Drive; Manager Freshman Tennis (2); Chairman Class Calendar Committee (2); Business Manager Weekly (2), (3), (4); Vice-President of Class (3); Ivy Society; Assistant Manager Tennis (3); Vice-President Tower Cross; Business Manager, Ivy Book-, Business Manager Jumbo Book, Manager Tennis (4); Executive Committee, A.A. (4). SIMON NAZARIAN B.S. in Mechanical-Electrical Engineering Cambridge, Mass. A clear fire, a clean hearth, and the rigor of the game ” Rindge Technical High School. u VICTOR NELSON, 2 T A B.S. in Economics “Vic” Magnolia, Mass. “ A good man possesses a kingdom Gloucester High School. Sword and Shield; Calendar Committee; Ivy; Junior Day Committee; Assistant Manager Football (3); Tower Cross; Student Council (I); Manager Football (4); Vice- President Inter-fraternity Council (4) £ ' -M t ■ 4 (51 M b i T- !lc k 4 . fell h mis junfto book ' ' MBB ■ttWai Al’ ALBERT IRA PARKER, l A B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Melrose, Mass. “ Be not wise in your oum conceits ” ERANCIS BOSWORTH PARSONS, BK B.S. in Chemical Engineering ‘Molly Reading, Mass. “If you have knowledge, let others light their candles by it ” Reading High School. JOHN LINCOLN PEARSON, Z T B.S. in Engineering Jack, “Jawn’ Somerville, Mass. “Man ' s best possession is a sympathetic wife ” Track (1); (’lass Smoker Committee (1); Nomin¬ ating Committee (1), (2); Chairman (4); Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Assistant Manager Musical Clubs (2); Manager Musical Clubs (.‘5), (4): Student Council (4); Class Day Committee (4). JAMES FREDERIC PERKINS S.T.B. “Perk” South Portland, Me. “ Rejoice , 0 young man , in thy youth ” Westbrook Seminary. Glee Club (l); The Pipers (3), (4); Biology Club (4). 62 1 925 JUHBO JOSEPH PETERSON B.S. in Civil Engineering “Pete” Somerville, Mass, “Render therefore to all, their dues ' ' Huntington School. ARTHUR LEONARD POIRIER B.S. in Engineering “Pop” Des Couse, Nova Scotia “ This business will never hold water Ste. Anne, Central English High School. WALTER HOWARD POLLARD, Ju., N T A B.S. in Engineering “Walt,” “Polly” Leominster, Mass. “ A carpenter is known by his chips Leominster High School. Hock ey (1); Nominat¬ ing Committee (2); Banquet Committee (3). JAMES HARRY PRICE, A T Q B.S. in English Winchester, Mass. “We ure ne ' er like angels until our passion dies Randolph-Macon School, Parkdale Collegiate Institute, Winchester High School. Freshman Football; Freshman Track; Debating Council (4); Liberal Club (4). BOOK d m nn 1 j Wf P r a. WI fjkpL _1 4 tjL y T U SJj . A; a, ml • HLu y •■ 63 FRANCIS B. QUINN, B K B.S. in Civil. Engineering “Jack” “Bob” Medford, Mass. “Do good with what thou hast or it will do thee no good ” Medford High School. NORMAN LAMSON REED, B K B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Moon” Reading, Mass. “ The libef ' al soul shall be made fat” Reading High School. Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Class Football (2); Varsity Football Squad (2); Varsity Football (3), (4). ALEXANDER RICHTER B.S. in English “Alex” Roxbury, Mass. “Why should the devil have all the good times?” Boston English High School. Glee Club (2); Mandolin Club (1), (2), (4); The Pipers (3), (4); Band (2); Secretary Menorah Society (2). ALVAH O. RING B.S. in French “Obie” Arlington, Mass. “My fair one — let us sivear an eternal friendship” Arlington High School. 64 ► JOHN EARLE ROCHE B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Rock” East Lynn, Mass. “And hold one another ' s noses to the grindstone hard ” Lynn Classical High School. Baseball Squad (2), (3), (4); Treasurer Chemical Society (4); Instructor in Freshman Chemical Laboratory. JOSEPH ROSSELLI B.S. in Languages “Joe” Watekbury, Conn. “ know the disposition of women; when you will, they wont; when you won ' t, they set their hearts upon you, of their own inclination ' Crosby High School. Varsity Basketball (2), (8), (4); Underclass Rules Committee (4); Junior Day Committee; Commencement Usher (3); Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Evening Party Association (4); New England Interscholastic Basketball Tournament (2), (3). WHITMAN GRANVILLE ROUILLARD B.S. in Chemistry “Whit” Westwood, Mass. “ There is no fire without some smoke ” Dedham High School. Freshman Football; Freshman Track; Football Squad (2); Calendar Committee (2); Chemical Society (4). JOHN DONALD RUSSELL, © A X B.S. in History and Public Law “Red” White Plains, N. Y. “ The enduring elegance of female friendship. IVhat ho. King Oberon? ' White Plains High School. Freshman Football; Freshman Track; Weekly Staff (2), (3), (4); Chair¬ man Banquet Committee (2); President Sword and Shield; President Ivy; Inter-fraternity Council (3), President (4) ; Publishing Association (3), President (4); Dramatics (1), (2), (3), (4); Art Editor Jumbo Book (4); President Pen, Paint and Pretzels (4); Athletic Association Nominating Committee (4); Chairman Historical Society (4); Secretary Student Council (4); Class Day Committee (4). FRANK HILLIARD SARGENT, Jr., Z V B.S. in Electrical Engineering “Bud” Brighton, Mass. “7 am a man, arid nothing that concerns a man do I deem a matter of indifference to me” Mechanic Arts High School. Dramatics (1), (2), (3); Pen, Paint and Pretzels (4); Greens Com¬ mittee Golf Association (4). HARRY SUROVSKY B.S. in Chemical Engineering “Harry” ' Roxbury, Mass. “Better learn late than never ” Dorchester High School. LORRIMER MILLER SCHMIDT A.B. in Biology “Lorrie” North Billerica, Mass. “ This is the short and the long of it” Howe High School. Biology Club (4); Jumbo Book Circulation Staff (4). HENRY CORTLAND SCHROEDER, A S B.S. in Economics “Chris” Adams, Mass. “Power to start, and power to finish” Adams High School. Varsity Football (3), (4). WILLIAM ARTHUR SCHUSTER, A T B.S. in Engineering “Art,” “Dutch” Waterbury, Conn. “Farts the goats on one hand and the sheep upon the other” Crosby High. Freshman Football; Football (2), (3), (4); Freshman Track; Freshman Baseball; Manager Wrestling Team (3), (4) ; Secretary Inter¬ fraternity Council (4); Chairman Junior Day Com¬ mittee; A.S.M.E. (2), (3); Secretary A. A. (4); Class Secretary (4); Class Debating (2). NATHAN LOUIS SHARE, 2 LI W B.S. in Civil Engineering “Nate” Boston, Mass. “Whoso neglects learning in his youth , loses the past and is dead to the future” Boston English High School. Freshman Foot¬ ball; Football (2), (3), (4); Basketball (4); Fresh¬ man Track; Civil Engineering Society; Dramatics (4). JOSEPH EDWARD SHARKEY B.S. in Economics “Ed” Somerville, Mass. “We will take thy good will for the deed” Somerville High School, Tufts Pre-Medical School. ALFRED BERNARD ROWLAND SHELLEY B.S. in English “Keats” Somerville, Mass. “ With morning cool reflection came ” Somerville High School. Vice-President Pipers (4); Historical Society (4). 67 I NATHAN MORRIS SINGERMAN, 2 Q T B.S. in Public Law “Nate” Cleveland, Ohio “No one knows what he can do until he tries Western Reserve Academy. Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Inter-fraternity Council (4); Student Council (4); Chairman Tufts Union Governors (4); General Secretary Union (4); Cosmos Club (3); President Chess Team (4). THEODORE WYMAN SLACK, A T Q B.S. in English “Ted” Boston, Mass. “0 happy years, once more, who would not be a boy Boston English High School, Williston Academy, University of New Hampshire. Freshman Track; Freshman Tennis; Varsity Track (3), (4); Varsity Tennis (3); Glee Club (4); A.A. Nominating Com¬ mittee (4); Chairman Cap and Gown Committee (4); Varsity Relay (4). HOWARD DAVIS SPOERL B.S. in Philosophy “Howie” Woodhaven, N. Y. “Wisdom shall die with you Richmond Hill High School. Weekly (1), (2), (3); Publishing Association (2); Secretary (3), (4); Managing Editor Tuf-Tonic (2); Vice-President Liberal Club (4). CLARENCE NEWMAN TRUESDALE, A T A B.S. in Civil Engineering “Pat” - Somerville, Mass. “7 have often regretted my speech, never my silence” Somerville High School. Sword and Shield; Assistant Manager Basketball (3); Manager Basketball (4); Student Council (4); Executive Committee Intra-Mural Athletics (4). li¬ es AN JsJJrfffjffjirrj r) I 92J JU nt 0 fe p ' PAUL DUDLEY VanAUKEN li.S. in Electrical Engineering Somerville, Mass. “A wise son maketh a glad father Medford High School. IRVING LONGFELLOW VAUGHAN, A Y li.S. in Economies Vogan” Groveland, Mass. “ .1 rhapsody of words ” Groveland High School, Wesleyan University. Sport Editor Weekly (3), (4); Jumbo Book Staff (4); Tennis Squad (3), (4); Assistant Manager Tennis (4); Secretary-Treasurer Press Club (4); Interscho¬ lastic Basketball Tournament (3); Class Basket¬ ball (4); Varsity Basketball Squad (4). RALPH CROWELL WEAVER, 2 T A li.S. in Mechanical Engineering “Rick” Dorchester, Mass. It is a condition which confronts us, not a theory Dorchester High School. Class Historian (3), (4); Pen, Paint and Pretzels (4); Freshman Tennis; Band; Junior Prom Committee; A.S.M.E.; Evening Party Association (4); Band Leader (2); Dramatics (1), (2); Class Day Committee (4). LOUIS WEINER, 2 Q W li.S. in Chemistry East Boston, Mass. “ Asleep in laps of legends old East Boston High School. iw BOOK 15 v ’ m 1 92 5 A 5a ' Ai 7i ,.4 _a TWITTY WHALEY, S $ E B.S. in Chemical Engineering Checotah, Oklahoma “Let the battle be fought over” Checotah High School. Second Varsity Football (4). WILLIAM FRANCIS WHITE B.S. in Civil Engineering “Whitey” West Newton, Mass. “ Fire is the test of gold. Adversity of strong men ” Boston College High, Boston College. Football (2) , (3), (4); Nominating Committee (3); Civil Engineering Society (3). JOHN JACOB WILSON B.S. in Economics “Jack” Allston, Mass. “ And I learned about women from her” Boston Latin. Freshman Football; Class Foot¬ ball (2); Varsity Football (2), (3), (4); Freshman Basketball; Class Basketball (2), (3), (4); Varsity Basketball (2), (3), (4); Class Baseball (1), (2); Class Track (I), (2), (3), (4); Varsity Track (3), (4); Banquet Committee (2). RAYMOND LINDSLEY WILSON, Z T B.S. in English and Economics “Ray,” “Scoop,” “R” Schenectady, N. Y. “ And we meet with champagne and a chicken at last” Schenectady High. President Student Council (4); Tower Cross; Ivy; Sword and Shield; Class Secretary (l), (2), (3); Inter-fraternity Council (3) , (4); News Editor Weekly (2); Managing Editor Weekly (3); Editor Weekly (4); Editor Ivy Book (3); Editor Jumbo Book (4); Toastmaster Class Banquet (3) ; Delegate National Inter-fraternity Conference (4) ; Board of Governors, Tufts Union (3), (4); Dramatics (2); Ivy Orator (3); Tree Orator (4); Press Club (4). t92S JunBO MAURICE NORMAN WINSLOW, STA B.S. in Civil Engineering “Maurie” Falmouth, Maine “ The flea which I have in mine ear ” Westbrook Seminary. Class Track (1), (2); ( ' lass Vice-President (1); Class President (2), (3), (4); Student Council (4); Tower Cross (4); Presi¬ dent Civil Engineering Society (4); Tufts Union Governing Board (4); Circulation Manager, Jumbo. CLARK ELBRIDGE WOODROW, A T A B.S. in Economics “Woody” Greenfield, Mass. “ believe he would make three bites of a cherry ” Greenfield High School, Norwich University; Class Football (2); Class Basketball (2); President Press Club (2), (3), (4); Glee Club (4). Ig CARL EDWARD WYMAN B.S. in Chemistry Cleveland, Ohio “ Come out of thy tent , 0 sheik ” East Technical High. Class Debating (1), (2); Dramatics (3); Glee Club (3), (4); Olmstead Scholar (4). r u VERNON WYNOTT B.S. in Engineering “Vern” Brighton, Mass. “Send them home as merry as crickets ” 1 ■ flkfc v ■ v l 71 BENJAMIN YANOVITZ, 2 Q F B.S. in Chemistry ‘Bennie” Boston, Mass. “Let the curtain dotvn, the farce is done Boston English High. Class Basketball (1). ELIZABETH ENFIELD ATKINSON, A OH , A.B. South Sudbury, Mass. ‘Give me understanding and I shall keep thy laws” (Left college March 1925) ANNA GREENLEAF BENT, 2 K A.B. in Latin “Nan” Plymouth, Mass. “Here thou, great Anna! Whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes counsel take — and sometimes tea.” Plymouth High School. Glee Club (l), (2); Property Manager, Junior Day Play (3). WINIFRED ESTHER BURRELL, X LI A.B. in French “Win” Dorchester, Mass. “It is not necessary to light a candle to the sun ” Girl ' s Latin School. Class Play (2); Class Basket¬ ball (1), (2); Class Hockey (1), (2); Weekly Staff (2). i 1 72 OPr I w -4 y y , 1 I ip I . ' 41 Ip: ' ■ ◄ jb iQ 6 ; i ta I p. r 4i fc 1 1 Pi -41 t i“-4 ' IV ' V J , 1 -4 t) ! b r ,P I ' •4 P DORIS HERRICK COCHRANE, A Z A A.B. in History and Public Law “Dot” Manchester, N. H. “ Horn to success she seemed with grace to vein, with heart to hold Xorthfield Seminary. Class Hockey (l), (2), (3); Secretary-Treasurer Historical Society (3); Secretary Cosmos Club (3); Pan-Hellenic Delegate (3). ELEANOR CROSBY, X K A.B. in French f “L-N or” West Medford, Mass. “Absence makes the heart grow fonder Medford High School. Cosmos Club (2), (3), (4); Glee Club (2); Maqua (3); Class Hockey (3).; Junior Elector I.C.S.A.; Treasurer All Around Club (3); Delegate to Student Volunteer Convention, Indianapolis (3); Chairman Jackson Day Commit¬ tee (3); Pan-Hellenic Council (3), (4); Student Council (4); President All Around Club (4); Presi¬ dent Y. W. C. A. (4). LILLIAN RACHEL CUTLER, X K A.B. in Latin “Rae” Barre, Vt. “Of manner gentle , of affections mild Goddard Seminary. Treasurer Knight House (3), (4). N FRANCES ELLEN DONOWAY, XQ A.B. in Mathematics “Fran” Belmont, Mass. “’ Tis said that absence conquers lore; But Oh, believe it not. Burlington High School, Girl ' s Latin School. Class Hockey (1), (3); Junior Day Play (3); Chair¬ man Red Cross Drive (4); Alpha Xi Delta Prize Scholarship (4). I V2S JUn O BOOK . srrr or ? « fl J 7 ELIZABETH FARWELL A. B. in English “Beth” Salem, Mass. “I love tranquil solitude and such society as is quiet, wise and good” Salem High School. Hockey (1), (2), (4). GENEVA CAMPBELL FISHER, S K B.S. in English ’’Gene” Plymouth, Mass. “ Sighed and looked and sighed again ” Plymouth High School. Class Basketball (l), (3), (4); Class Social Committee (4). ALICE ADALINE FORBES, XQ B.S. in French “Al” Manchester, N. H. “Let us have peace” Manchester High School. Class Play (2). MARJORIE ISABEL GLENNIE, ASA A.B. in English “Marge” North Andover, Mass. “ To beguile many and be beguiled by none” Johnson High School. Glee Club (1), (2), (4); Vice-President Y.W.C.A. (2), (3); Class Basketball (3) , (4); Pan-Hellenic Delegate (3); Class Hockey (4) ; President Pan-Hellenic Council (4); Chairman Cap and Gown Committee (4). ' V KaT ■ A , V-J a. AT J f f 7 T T TOf a Jq Mb SD MIRIAM LILLIAN GOLDMAN A. 77. in French “Mim” Dorchester, Mass. “Few thing. are impossible to diligence Dorchester High School. IDYLA FLORENCE GOULD B.S. in Economics “If” Barre, Vt. “ The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach Spaulding High School, Goddard Seminary. Class Play (2); Masque (2), (4); Treasurer (4); Cosmos Club (4); Vice-President (4); Class Hockey (1), (2), (3) , (4); Varsity Hockey (2); I.C.S.A. (1), (2), (3), (4) ; President Knight House (4); Class Basketball (2), (3); The Pipers (4); Historical Society (4); Chi Omega Scholarship Prize (4). RUTH EVERETTE GROGAN, ASA A.B. in Latin “Billie” Cambridge, Mass. “And mistress of herself though China fall” Cambridge Latin School, Haskell School. Class Day Committee. MARJORIE BRADFORD GULICK, XQ A.B. in English “Marge” New York, N. Y. “7 laughed and danced and talked and sang ” Dean Academy. Varsity Basketball (1), (2). Class Basketball (l), (2), (3), (4); Masque (3), (4)’ Secretary (3), Vice-President (4); Class Play (l), (2)’ Class Social Committee (1), (2), (3), (4); Organist (2), (3), (4); Vice-President Cosmos Club (4); “Successful Calamity” (3). juri o BOOK tsbsdi 75 KATHLEEN MASON HAFF B.S. in English “K” Newton Highlands, Mass. “If to her lot some female errors fall Look on her face and you’ll forget them all.” Kearny High School, Newton High School. Class Basketball (1), (3), (4); Class Hockey (4); Class Day Committee. MARION GODDARD HAFF, J BK A.B. in English “Nan” Newton Highlands, Mass. “ The fatal facility of octosyllabic verse ” Kearny High School, New York School of Ex¬ pression. Goddard Prize Readings (2); “ Romeo and Juliet” (3); Masque (3), (4); President Coolidge Club (3), (4); The Pipers (4); Cosmos Club (4); Historical Society (4); Jackson Editor of the Weekly (4); Chapel Orator. MAY BEATRICE HALPERSOHN, I B K B.S. in Chemistry “May” Everett, Mass. “What potent blood hath modest May Everett High School. Class Dramatics (l), (3); Masque (3), (4); Chemical Society (4); Phi Beta Kappa (4). MARION SANDERS HARDING B.S. in Chemistry Ossipee, N. H. “ Tell (for you can) xchat is it to be wisef” Arlington High School. Chemical Societ y (4); I. C. S. A. (1), (2), (3), (4); Y. W. C. A. (l), (2), (3), (4); Circulation Committee Jumbo Book. V ' f-s i —4 i 4 16 I -4 ' - 4 .4 p -4 £ -4 -4 | P I -4 6 4 !P . -4 t ”’-41 I V | £ t ’ K | r r V- 1B0 BOOK A V yvr0 ALICE HARRINGTON, A O II B.S. in Biology “Al” Cleveland, Ohio “Holds the eel of science by the tail” Shaw High School. Varsity Tennis (1); Varsity Hockey (2); Va rsity Basketball (2), (3); Class Basketball (1), (2); Class Hockey (l), (2), (3), (4); Tennis Champion (2), (3); Vice-President Class (1), (2), (3), (4); Vice-President A. A. (3); Pan- Hellenic Delegate; Masque (3), (4); Class Play (2); Running High Jump Record 4 ' 4 (1). EVELYN GERTRUDE HAVEN, A E A A.B. in History “Ev” Athol, Mass. “ There is a time for all things’’ Athol High School. Class Hockey (l), (2), (3), (4); Hockey (2); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), (4); Class Basketball (2); I.C.S.A. Cabinet (2), (3); President (4); Student Government (4); Glee Club (1), (2), (4); Class Play (2); Historical Society (4); Maqua (2); Mt. Ivy (3). CAROLYN CLAY HAVNER, X Q A. B. in English “Carrie” Portland, Maine “Let the pathway be open to talent’’ Deering High School, Westbrook Seminary. Class President (l), (2), (3), (4); Jackson Editor Weekly (2); Class Play (1), (2); Cast “R.U.R.” (3); “Aria da Capo” (3); “Romeo and Juliet” (3); Masque (3); President Masque (4); “Mithradates” (4); Secretary I.C.S.A. (3); The Pipers (3), President (4); Student Council (4); Jumbo Book Staff (4); Tree Orator. HELEN REGINA HEDERMAN, A E A B. S. in French “Reggie” Webster, Mass. “So we grew together like to a double cherry ' ’ Bartlett High School. Class Tennis (2); Tennis Tournament (3); Student Council (4). 77 MARGARET SAYLES HOLMES, A E A A.B. in English “Peg” Adams, Mass. “ Push on — keep moving ” Adams High School. Class Secretary (2), (3), (4); Class Hockey (l); Basketball Manager (3), (4); Class Play (l), (2); I.C.S.A. Cabinet (1), (2); Jumbo Book Staff (4); Glee Club (l), (2), (3), (4); Chairman Red Cross Campaign (1), (2); Leader Glee Club (4); Student Council (3), (4). EVELYN REBECCA JOHNSTON, A E A A.B. in Mathematics “Chuck” South Manchester, Conn. “As yet a child — 1 lisped in numbers for the numbers came ” South Manchester High School. Secretary Y.W.C.A. (4); Student Council (4); Tuftconic (3), (4), Treasurer Y.W.C.A. (2); Class Play (2); Maqua Delegate (2). M. WILMA KOELSCH, A O n B.S. in History “Willie” Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. “She is pretty to walk with, and witty to talk with” Barnard School for Girls. Class Hockey (l), (2), (3), (4); Captain Class Basketball (l), (2); Class Social Committee (l), (2), (3); Chairman (4); Varsity Basketball (l), (2), (3), (4); Captain (2); Class Play (1); “ Children of the Moon ” (4); Jackson Editor Jumbo Book (4); Class Day Committee. GWENDOLYN JACKSON LAMBERT, A E A B.S. in French “Gwen” Saugus, Mass. “So we gretv together like to a double cherry” Kennebunk and Saugus High Schools. 78 1 025 JUHBO BOOK DOROTHY STANDISH LEWIS, i B K A.B. in History and Public Law “Dot” East Lynn, Mass. “Let knowledge grow from more to more Lynn Classical High School. Phi Beta Kappa (4); Comm encement Speaker; Historical Society (4). EVELINA GARRISON MARTIN A.B. in Biology “Ev” West Peabody, Mass. “ Good sense which only is the gift of heaven ” Peabody High School. Class Hockey (1), (2), Captain (3), (4); Class Basketball (l), (2), (3), (4); Varsity Hockey (2); Varsity Basketball (1), (2), (3), (4); Class Play (I); Student Council (2). EDITH LOUISE McKEE, AOn A.B. in Economics “Dick Bethlehem, Penn. “ Patience is a necessary ingredient of genius ” ( ' lass Hockey (l), (2); Class Basketball (l), (2); Jackson Staff Weekly (2); Student Assistant Librarian (3); Student Assistant Economics De¬ partment (4). CECILIA MARIAN MOKRAY A.B. in English “Cele” Passaic, N. J. “Should auld acquaintance be forgot?” Passaic High School, Oxford College, Ohio. Hockey (3). £ 79 HELEN MARY NEWHALL, XQ A. IS. iti English Swampscott, Mass. “And like another Helen find another Troy Swampscott High School. Varsity Basketball (2), (3), (4); Captain (3); Class Basketball (l); Class Social Committee (l), (2), (3), (4); Chairman All Around Club Social Committee (4); Student Council (4); Art Staff Jumbo Book (4); Treasurer Coolidge Club (3), (4). ELSA ORENT, A M’ B.S. in Chemistry “Sticky” Springfield, Mass. “—you know physics, something of geology, mathe¬ matics are your pastime Central High School. Liberal Club; Chemical Society; Class Play (2); Glee Club (2). MILDRED EVANGELINE PARKER A.B. in Latin “Millie” Lenox, Mass. “A girl there urns of quiet ways ” Lenox High School. ELIZABETH VIRGINIA PATTERSON,, X Q A.B. in French “Pat” Amherst, Mass. “ Variety is the very spice of life ” Lyndon Institute, Amherst High School. Class Hockey (l), (2), (3); Class Basketball (1), (2); Class Play Cl). (2); Masque (3), (4); Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); “Romeo and Juliet” (3). SO MARGUERITE GERTRUDE PEARMAN A J T A.B. in English “Peg • Boston, Mass. “Every man meets his Waterloo at last ” Girl ' s Latin School. Goddard Readings (2); Class Play (2); “Children of the Moon” (4); Liberal Club. DOROTHY BILLINGS PENNIMAN A.B. in Latin Monson, Mass. “ Hath thy toil o ' er boohs consum’d, the midnight oil? Monson Academy. Track (1); Varsity Hockey (2); Class Dramatics (l), (2). HELEN ELAINE ROSE, X Q A.B. in English “Rosie North Attleboro, Mass. “On their own merits modest ones are dumb ” North Attleboro High School. Class Basketball (l), (2); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (3); Class Hockey (1), (2); Student Government (2), (3); President (4); Pan-Hellenic Council (3), (4). RUTH EVELYN SALAWAY A.B. in French “Sally Roxbury, Mass. “ Woman at best ' s a contradiction still Girl’s Latin School. Class Hoekev (1); Class Basketball (1). ml 81 IBO BOOK Ac ELEANOR ROWELL SANBORN, 2 K A.B. in Economics “Sammy” Amesbury, Mass. “ The world’s calm sunshine ” Dean Academy. Mathematics Club (1), (2), (3); Glee Club (1), (2); Class Hockey (l). AGNES ELEANOR SCHILT, ASA A.B. in English “Van” Greenwich, Conn. “ Better late than never ” Greenwich High School. Varsity Basketball (l), (2), (3), (4); Varsity Hockey Squad (2); Class Basketball (1), (2); Class Hockey (2), (3), (4); Glee Club (1), (2); Class Play (2); “R.U.R.” (3); Junior Day Play (3); Cosmos Club (3), (4): Masque (3), (4). ETHEL FLORENCE SMITH, A Oil A.B. in English “Bobby” Brookline, Mass. “Let the world slide ” Brookline High and Nolan School. MARGARET LOUISE SMITH, 2 K A.B. in English “Peggy” Lebanon, N. H. “ With thee conversing I forget all time ” Lebanon High School. Class Hockey (l); Glee Club (1), (2). (3); Class Play (2); President Knight House (3); Cosmos Club (3), (4); The Pipers (4); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (4); Historical Society (4). r T 82 nao GLADYS MARY SPENCER, 2 lv A.B. in Mathematics East Lynn, Mass. “ Talk to her of Jacob ' s ladder and she would ask you the number of steps” Lynn Classical High School. Class Hockey (1); Class Basketball (2), (3), (4); Glee Club (1); Mathematics Club (3); Masque (3), (4); President Tuftconic (4); Treasurer Jackson A. A. (3), (4); Property Manager ( ' lass Play (2); Business Man¬ ager Masque (4). BERTHA ELIZABETH VEEDER, A Z A A.B. in English “Bert” Wood’s Hole, Mass. “ have the courage of my opinions ” Falmouth High School. Class Play (2); Glee Club (1), (2); Maqua Delegate (3); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (4); Chairman Jackson Ring Committee (4); Historical Society (4). LEOLA HERRICK WAGNER, A Oil A.B. in English “Dutchy” Northeast Harbor, Maine “As good to be out of the world as out of fashion ” Gilman High School. Class Hockey (1); Class Social Committee (1), (2), (3), (4); Secretary All Around Club (4); Assistant Manager Basketball (2). MILDRED WAGNER, XL B.S. in English Babe” Berlin, N. II. ' There is something in the autumn that is native to my blood ” Berlin High School, Westbrook Seminary. Class Hockey (I), (2), (3). 30 0 K y 83 ELIZABETH MARION WALKER A.B. in Mathematics Sudbury, Mass. “ There studious let me sit” Sudbury High School. Mathematics Club (3); Tuftconic (4); Student Assistant Modern Language Department (3), (4). MILDRED WARD, AOn B.S. in English “Milly” East Braintree, Mass “ The reason firm, the temperate will. Endurance, foresight, strength and skill” Braintree High School. Class Basketball (1), (2); Varsity Basketball (1), (2), (3); Captain (4); Class Hockey (l), (2), (3), (4); Secretary Coolidge Club (3), (4); Class Marshal (1), (2), (3), (4); Class Play (1); Vice-President All Around Club (3). RUTH WARD, X Q B.S. in Chemistry Dover, N. J. “Oh, call it by some better name for friendship sounds too cold” Westbrook Seminary. President Jackson A.A. (4); Secretary (2); Class Treasurer (1), (2), (3), (4); Student Council (l), (2), (3), (4); Athletic Council (1) , (2), (3), (4); Vice-President Student Govern¬ ment (4); Vice-President Chemical Society (4); Varsity Basketball (1), (2), (3), (4); Varsity Hockey (2) ; Class Basketball (l), (2); Class Hockey (l), (2), (3) , (4); “Monsieur Beaucaire” (1); President Student Council (4). RUTH ELIZABETH WHITTEN, A O n B.S. in English “Az” New York, N. Y. “Still xcaters run deep ” Barnard School for Girls. Class Historian (1), (2), (3), (4); Cosmos Club; Assistant Jackson Editor Weekly (l), (2); Class Play (1), (2). ■ 84 i 1925 JVJHBO BOOK r?,orr ' n IL av MIRIAM WILLIS, XQ L.S. in English “Mim Durham, N. H. “ To me high mountains are a feeling (iorham High School. THELMA YEUELL, t B K A. B. in English and Psychology “T Greenwood, Mass. “I find the Englishman to he him — of all men who standest firmest in his shoes Wakefield High School. “Monsieur Beaucaire” (1); Glee Club (1); I.C.S.A. (1); “Prunella” (2); Historical Society (4); Phi Beta Kappa (4). ALBERT SAMUEL BROWN B.S. in Engineering “Brownie” Somerville, Mass. “Fair and softly goes far Somerville High School. GEORGE ROBERT COPELAND B. S. in Mechanical Engineering “Cope” Somerville, Mass. “ The will for the deed Somerville High School, Northeastern University. HERBERT LORAINE DODGE B.S. in Civil Engineering Needham, Mass. “It matters not how a man dies but how he lives University of New Hampshire. RAYMOND GINSBERG B.S. in Biology “Skip, “Ray Roxbury, Mass. “And panting time toiled after him in vain English High School. FRANCIS LAWRENCE MORAN B.S. in Mechanical-Electrical Engineering Brookline, Mass. “B hen 1 became a man I put away childish things Chelsea High School. JOHN K. Y. NIEH B.S. in Chemistry Tientsin, China “I am a citizen of the world Nankai College, Tientsin, China. JAMES HOLDEN SULLIVAN, Z M‘ B.S. “Jim” Allston, Mass. “A lover without indiscretion is no lover at all” Brookline High School, Stone School. JULIUS WALDMAN, SQ? B.S. in Civil Engineering Chelsea, Mass. “ Variety is the very spice of life” Chelsea High School. Civil Engineering Society (3), (4). MARGUERITE MARIE THYNG B.S. in Biology W ATERBORO, MAINE “ While bright-eyed science watches round” Shapleigh and Kents Hill. I.C.S.A. (2). CLASS OF 1924 DENMAN GRAY BAKER, R IC B.S. in Engineering Marshfield, Mass. Dean Academy EDSON EUGENE DEWEY B.S. in Engineering Brookline, Mass. Brookline High School FRANCIS ERACKELTON DOWNEY, BK B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Charlestown, Mass. Boston Latin School ROBERT OLIVER FULLER B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Belmont, Mass. Belmont High School FREDERICK FRANCIS HAGNER, B.S. in Chemical Engineering Meriden, Conn. Meriden High School MORGAN HAYNES, S T A B.S. in Chemical Engineering Boston, Mass. Brighton High School BERNARD JOAL HOROWITZ, S Q F B .S. Worcester, Mass. Worcester Polytechnic Institute ORRIN CLYDE MacCORKLE, A T A B.S. in Economics Everett, Mass. Everett High School JAMES JOSEPH MURRAY, Jr., A N “Jimmy” B.S. Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School LEAVITT OLIVER COBURN, A Y Pre-Dental Lewiston, Maine Lewiston High School, Bowdoin College ALFRED STORER COLE Theology Buckfield, Maine OWEN WHITMAN EAMES, A T A Theology Everett, Mass. ROBERT STEWART STEVEN B.S. Worcester, Mass. Worcester High School. Clark College WILLIAM DAWES VEAZIE Theology Malden, Mass. a? LIBERAL ARTS JUNIORS Vi 1 . 1 bL Wjm 1 ML f m il Watson Brothers Dirlam Goss Hicks 1926 CLASS OFFICERS Eugene F. Goss . Carlton S. Hicks Arland A. Dirlam Edmund V. Watson Allan E. Brothers Joseph Harrison . . President Vice-President . Secretary T r easier er Marshal Historian Colors — Line and hite Cheer — 19-2(5 1-9-2-6 1-9-2-6 1-9-2-6 Rah! Rah! Rah! Twenty-Six! I 89 ENGINEERING JUNIORS 1’ . 1 A A a 4 joh o ' book 3 CLASS ROLL m HAROLD EVERETT ATKINS “Tommy” II. S. in Economics Wilmington, Mass. Wilmington High School, Wentworth Insti¬ tute Rad io Society (1), (2) (3); Civil Engineering Society (1). ELWOOD CHOATE AVERY Ivory” li.S. in Civil Engineering Harrisburg, Penn. Harrisburg Technical High School Chess Team (3); Band (1), (2); Civil Engin¬ eering Society. ERIC ALTON AYER S.T.B., M.A. Lennoxville, Quebec Lennoxville High School, Bishop ' s University Dramatics; Packard Club. FRANCIS HENRY BAKER, A I 2 li.S. in Engineering Plymouth, Mass. Plymouth High School EUGENE RUSSELL BANKS “Russ” li.S. in Mathematics Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Freshman Baseball; Freshman Tennis; Boxing (1); Class Baseball (2); Varsity Tennis (2) ; 2nd Varsity Football (3). HAROLD LESTER BARTLETT “Bart” li.S. in Civil Engineering West Lynn, Mass. Lynn Classical High School. Civil Engineering Society (1), (2), (3); C. E. Committee (3). JOSHUA JOSEPH BERINSTEIN “Jay Jay” li.S. in Philosophy Springfield, Mass. Central High School ALBERT REA BERRY, BK li.S. in Mechanical Engineering Middleton, Mass. Johnson High School RICHARD HENRY BIRD, Jr., I A “Dick” li.S. in Electrical Engineering Waltham, Mass. Waltham High School Glee Club (3) “Living will teach you how to live better than preacher or book.” JOSEPH EUGENE BOURRET, ©AX Joe” li.S. in English Auburn, It. I. Cranston High School, Tufts Pre-Medical Baseball (2), (3,) (4) CHARLES PRATT BRADFORD, A T Brad” li.S. in English Turner, Maine Leavitt Institute Glee Club (1); Freshman Track; Varsity Track (2). WALTER NELSON BRECKENRIDGE “Breck” li.S. in Economics Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School EARL MELIS BRENNAN, A I 2 “Canary” li.S. in Chemical Engineering Dorchester, Mass. Dorchester High School ALLAN EDMUND BROTHERS, A T A “Shorty” li.S. in Mechanical Engineering Hudson, Mass. Hudson High School Class Basketball (1), (2); Class Baseball (1) , (2); Sword and Shield; Class Track (1). (2) ; Freshman Basketball; Class Football (2); Freshman Baseball; Football Squad (2); Basketball Squad (2). AMBROSE BURTON, A I 2 “Am” li.S. in Civil Engineering Roslindale, Mass. Hyde Park High School Civil Engineering Society; Cross Country (1); Freshman Track; Track Squad (2); Assistant Manager Tennis (2); Assistant Manager Wrestling (3); Junior Day Com¬ mittee. 91 (A 0 3 KLUX? WYLIE. OUR GANG HOLD YOUR OWN BLUE LINE TWINS 92 JAMES SYLVESTER BUTLER, I A “Slikum” B.S. in Engineering Salem, Mass. Salem High School. ALBERT WARREN CARLETON “Al” B.S. in Civil Engineering Melrose, Mass. Huntington. EARL MELVIN CARPENTER, A t N “Carp” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Glens Falls High School Dramatics (1), (2), (3); A.S.M.E. (1), (2), (3). ALBERT EMMET CASEY B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Stoneham, Mass. Stoneham High School KENNETH WILLIAM CHASE “Ken” B.S. in Civil Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Civil Engineering Society. ALPHONSE ALBERT CHERNESKY, B K “Dike” B.S. in Engineering West Lynn, Mass. Lynn Classical High School Vice-President Civil Engineering Society (3); 2nd Varsity Football (3) NATHAN LAWRENCE CIBLEY B.S. Dorchester, Mass. Boston English High School, Boston Uni¬ versity LEWIS WESTON COLLINS, l A “Dinty” B.S. in Civil Engineering Eastham. Mass. Orleans High School Class Baseball (2) HARTWELL ROBLEY CONGDON, A T A A. B. Burlington, Mass. Keene High School, Somerville High School DONALD FOULDS COVIL “Don” B. S. in Chemistry Wilkinsburg, Penn. ilkinsburg High School, Hartford Conn., High School Glee Club (2); Chemical Society (3). WILLIAM FOULDS COVIL, A I 2 “Bill” B.S. in Civil Engineering Wilkinsburg, Penn. Wilkinsburg High School Football (1); Wrestling (1), (2); Civil En¬ gineering Society; Nominating Committee (3); Banquet Committee (3). PATRICK FRANCIS COX “Pat” B.S. in Engineering Woburn, Mass. Woburn High School Football (1) ROBERT WILLIAM CROSBY, B K “Bob” B.S. in Theology Reading, Mass. Reading High School Varsity Basketball (4) JOHN EDWARD CUNNINGHAM, Jr. “Jack” B.S. in English Somerville, Mass. Medford High School, Georgetown Univer¬ sity Football (1), (2), (3); Track (2), (3); Second Team Basketball ROBERT D. M. CUNNINGHAM “Bob,” “Lord” B.S. Pre-Medical Stamford, Conn. Stamford High School WILLIAM CLARKE CUSTER, A d A “Bill” B.S. in Civil Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Musical Clubs (1), (2), (3); Track (2) EARLE RAYMOND CUTTING, f K A, A T Q “Bozo” B.S. in History and Public Law Waltham, Mass. Waltham High School, Norwich RAYMOND TERHUNE DAWES, BAX “Ray” B.S. in English New York, N. Y. Montclair High School, New Jersey Glee Club (2); Assistant Manager (3) RUSSELL KILBOURNE DEWAR “Russ” B.S. in Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Glee Club (2); Assistant Manager (3); A.S.M.E. 93 DEAN WREN + ROMEO HUGHIE PATRICK MORE ROUGHNECKS BARNEY GOOGLE FLUNKS rwm ► ' lbs JPi rxjxjx: JUMBO BOOK JIXJJlXJA ADDISON POPE DINGWALL A “Ding” B.S. in Economics North Weymouth, Mass. Assistant Manager Baseball (1), (2), (.‘5); Nominating Committee (3); Glee Club (3); Junior Prom Committee ARLAND AUGUSTUS DIRLAM, A T Q “ Bob” B.S. in Civil Engineering Malden, Mass. Somerville High School, Berkeley Prepara- , tory Freshman Football; Class Banquet Com¬ mittee (1); Art Staff Weekly (1), (2); Calen¬ dar Committee (2); Class Secretary (1), (2), (3); Treasurer Civil Engineering Society (3); Assistant Manager of Football (3); Tvf-Tonic ; Freshman Assistant Manager Basketball WILLIAM JOHN DOWNER “Bill” B.S. in Civil Engineering Malden, Mass. Malden High .School Freshman Football HUBERT WHITNEY DOWSON, BK “IIughie” A.B., S.T.B. East Braintree, Mass. Brooklyn High School, Mansfield Normal School Freshman Football; Captain Freshman Basketball; Freshman Tennis; Vice-Presi¬ dent Sword and Shield; Chairman Banquet Committee (2); Captain Varsity Tennis (2) ; Varsity Basketball (2); President Ivy (3) ; Captain Varsity Basketball (3); Cap¬ tain Varsity Tennis (3); Student Council (3); Athletic Board (3); Inter-fraternity Council (3) BENJAMIN G. B. DURKEE, A Y “Ben” B.S. in Chemistry Somerville, Mass. Medford High School Calendar Committee (2); Chemistry Society ( 3 ) CHARLES ERROL EXLEY, Z ' F Bill” B.S. in Economics Trinidad, B. W. I. Grangers Academy Cross Country (1); Football Squad (2), (3); Sword and Shield; Business Manager, Weekly (3); Track (3) HARRY FINKELSTEIN, I E 11 “Fink” B.S. in Mathematics Revere, Mass. Revere High School Freshman Football; Varsity Football (2), (3); Tnf-Tonic (2). EDWARD THOMAS FLEMING, S T A “Red” B.S. in History Greenfield, Mass. Greenfield High School, Goddard Seminary , Dean Academy, Norwich Glee Club (2); Press Club (2); Toastmaster Class Banquet (3) JAMES FORREST FOLSOM, A T Q “Jimmie” B.S. in Civil Engineering Braintree, Mass. Thayer Academy Freshman Football; Assistant Manager Baseball (1), (2); Nominating Committee (3); Civil Engineering Society; Junior Day Committee (3) THEODORE FRANKS “Ted” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lawrence, Mass. Lawrence High School ISAAC FREEDMAN “Ike” B.S. Salem, Mass. Salem High School Varsitv Track Team WILLIAM GARBING “Bill” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Winchester, Mass. W inchester High School 1-4 K WALTER CROCKER ELLIS, I A “Walt” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School DAVID BERNARD GLICKMAN B.S. New York, N. Y. Eastern District High School Columbia University 95 WHATVMUTT home BREW ? VOLT COPELAND AT LAST. 96 92 jf junao book 1 I ► j g g | 3 u 3 JOSEPH EDWIN GONSALVES “Joe” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Woburn, Mass. Woburn High School Freshman Football; Freshman Track El GENE FRANCIS GOSS, ATQ Gene B.S. in Economies Auburn, Maine Edward Little High School Mandolin Club (1), (2), (3); Assistant Leader (2), (3); Sword and Shield; Vice- President Class (2); President Class (3); Ivy; Inter-fraternity Council (3) WILLIAM ARCHIBALD HANEY “Bill” S.T.B., M.A. Newark, N. J. Barringer High School, Montclair Academy Freshman Tennis; Packard Club; Liberal Club RUPERT MANNING HANNY, A T “Doc” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Brookline, Mass. Bridgton High School, Medford High School A.S.M.E.; Band (1); Chairman Class Ban¬ quet Committee (l), (3); Track (l), (2), (3); Football (1), (2), (3) OTIS HENRY HANSLICK B.S. Somerv ille, Mass. Somerville High School JOSEPH HARRISON “Joe” B.S. in History and Public Law Newark, N. J. South Side High School Class Historian; Assistant Manager Tennis (3); Weekly Staff (3); “The Servant in the House” (1); “R.U.R.” (2); “Romeo and Juliet” (2); Treasurer Cosmos Club (3); Liberal Club (3); Vice-Chairman Historical Society (3); Publishing Association (3); Assistant Circulating Manager Jumbo Book (3); Class Debating (2). MAX HERMAN, Y Q W “Mac” B.S. in Civil Engineering Roxbury, Mass. East Boston High School Tr T TAT. CARLTON SEAVEY HICKS, B K “Carl” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Freshman Track; Mandolin Club (2) (3); Vice-President Class (1) LEONARD MYLES HODGKINS “Len” B.S. in Civil Engineering Waltham, Mass. Waltham High School Freshman Track; Varsity 2nd Football Squad (2); Glee Club (3) JACOB ARTHUR ISRAELSON, Y Q ' F B.S. Portland, Maine Portland High School LAWRENCE STEVENS KIDD, A T “Larry” B.S. in Economics Lawrence, Mass. Dean Academy Secretary Sword and Shield; Weekly Staff (2), (3); Manager 2nd Team Basketball (3); Secretary Ivy (3); Inter-fraternity Council (3) PERRY OLIVER KILLAM “Ollie” B.S. in Economics Allston, Mass. Boston English High School Mandolin Club (1); Glee Club (1), (3) SERGE IVANOVITCH KOSTENETSKY A.B. Kiev, Russia Classical Gymnasium, Bielaja-Tzezkov Chess Club (3) JOSEPH ALFRED LEONARD, B K “Joe” A.B. in Latin Gray, Maine Edward Little High School Class Basketball; Class Baseball; Circula¬ tion Manager Weekly (2), (3); “Romeo and Juliet” (2) MICHAEL SALVINO LESPASIO “Mike” B.S. in Civil Engineering East Boston, Mass. Boston English High School T r T J7 Jj SJk C 97 3 I 1 I g 3 i i 3 J - It- ' BILL’ COVIL BR0TI1ER5-HICK5 LOOMIS. STRAUGLERVBUB ' WORM X aNDG.V, CAGEY TWO in OME sta:£6 VANDYKE 0 s 98 MORE ENGINEERS THOMMY WHAT BENJAMIN SAMUEL LEVINE, S Q T “Dixie” B.S. in Biology Malden, Mass. Malden High School Freshman Wrestling; Freshman Track; Bi¬ ology Club (3) ELMER LEWIS LITTLEFIELD “Steve” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Radio Club (1), (2); A.S.M.E. (1), (2) PERCY III TESTIS LOOMER, A T A “Perce” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Belmont, Mass. Belmont High School Class Track (2) PATRICK JOSEPH LYMAN B.S. in Chemical Engineering Medford, Mass. English High School Chemical Society ARTHUR FREDERIC MacWILLIAMS, A 1 S “Dutch” B.S. in Economics Cambridge, Mass. Freshman Basketball; Botany Club (3); Track (2) MICHAEL EDWARD McCABE, A T A “Mac” B.S. in Biology Worcester, Mass. Worcester South High School Pipers Club (2), (3); Assistant Manager Track (3); Musical Clubs (3) ROBERT EDWARD McCARTHY “Bob” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Natick, Mass. Natick High School Sword and Shield JAMES ARTHUR McCORMICK B.S. Everett, Mass. Westbrook Seminary GEORGE PATRICK McGRATH, Z T “Mac,” “Pat” B.S. in History Hartford, Conn. Hartford High School Varsity Football (3); Track (3); Historical Society (3) LLOYD J. McISAAC, A X A “Mac” B.S. in Economics West Roxbury, Mass. Huntington School, Brown University WILFRED GEORGE McKINNEY, A T “Mickey” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering South Manchester, Conn. South Manchester High School Manager Class Basketball (1); Assistant Manager Baseball (3); Class Basketball (1), (2) , (3); 2nd Varsity Basketball (2), (3); Class Banquet Committee (2); A.S.M.E. (3) ; Junior Day Committee CARLTON NORWOOD MORROW, A T Q “Fish” B.S. in Biology Gloucester, Mass. Gloucester High School Wrestling (1); Varsity Wrestling (2), (3); Calendar Committee (2); Weekly Staff (1), (2), (3) L. KENNETH MOSES, A I S “Moe” B.S. in Economics Meriden, Conn. Connecticut Agricultural College CLARE GIFFIN NEWTON, S T A “Newt” B.S. in Biology Buzzards Bay, Mass. Burlington High School, University of Vermont ROBERT LESLIE NICHOLS, B K “Bob” B.S. in Chemistry East Milton, Mass. Quincy High School Class Debating (1), (2); Class Cross Country (1) ; Freshman Tennis; Mathematics Club (2) , (3); Chemical Society (3); Varsity Tennis (2); College Tennis Champion (2); Debating Council (3); Varsity Debating Team (3) CHARLES FULLER NICKERSON, S I E “Nick” B.S. in Economics Needham, Mass. Newton and Needham High Schools, Nor¬ wich University JAMES EDWARD NOLAN “Jim” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Woburn, Mass. Woburn High School SSSSSHFS HALL OF FAHEL 0LL APRIL Jk ; ■ jaLw X aMM 1 « H r Vf m ■ ■■% I tl) iff j. .;: W y f’yjegfrq-s s .ii -« • S8p ® |£f4 | ' ■ ' . -•• ' J 1 CHARLES J. ODENWELLER III, A T A “Oijdy” B.S. in Economics Arlington, Mass. Arlington High School Toastmaster, Class Banquet (1); Banquet Committee (I); Football (1); Assistant Manager Basketball (1); Varsity Football Squad (2), (3); Vice-President Publishing Association (3). PAI L RICHARD O ' DONNELL “ Cleo ” B.S. in Civil Engineering Salem. Mass. Redondo l T nion High School ROBERT ANTHONY O’DONNELL “ Bob” B.S. in Chemical Engineering Arlington, Mass. Arlington High School Assistant Secretary Student Union (2), (3); Weekly Staff (2), (3); Chemical Society (3). MERRILL CHENEY ORSWELL “Ozzy” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Medford, Mass. Quincy High School Boxing Tournament (I); Vice-President Mathematics Club (3); A.S.M.E. (3) ROGER EVERETT PACKARD, Z W A. B. West Bridgewater, Mass. Howard High School LOUIS THOMAS PEREIRA “Lou” B. S. Fall River, Mass. Durfee High School Freshman Baseball MORRIS PETT, SQT “Moe” B.S. Gloucester, Mass. Gloucester High School Varsity Football (2) EDGAR HORACE PHILLIPS “Joe” B.S. in Engineering Medford, Mass. Revere High School, Huntington School Freshman Baseball; Varsity Baseball Squad (2); Track (2) RUSSELL AUSTIN PICKINS “Pick” B.S. in Engineering Watertown, Mass. Dorchester High School; Watertown High School, Huntington School Class Tennis (1) BRAMAN BOYD PLATTS, B K “Bra” B.S. in Chemistry Reading, Mass. Reading High School Freshman Basketball; Class Tennis (2); Chemical Society ROGER GARDNER POOLE, A T Q “Rog” B.S. in Economics Cambridge, Mass. Allen Military School Sophomore Manager Basketball; Assistant Manager Football (3) MALVIN PROCTOR B.S. Boston, Mass. Central High School, Philadelphia, Tufts Pre-Medical School MILTON QUINT, 2 Q l F “Mil” B.S. in Economics Roxbury, Mass. English High School HARRY EDWARD RICE, Jr. “Squash” B.S. in Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Nominating Committee (l), (2), (3); Class Track (1), (2); Chairman Junior Prom Committee WILLIAM McCLURE RINGLAND, 0 A X “Barney” B.S. in English Norwich, Conn. Goddard Seminary, Norwich Free Academy. ROBERT BARTON RICE, Z V F B.S. in Engineering Long Meadow, Mass. Springfield Technology High School DOUGLAS HILL ROBBINS “Dove” S.T.B., M.A. Lawrence, Mass. Lawrence High School Dramatics (2); Packard Club CLARENCE ALBERT ROBERTS “ Robbie” B.S. in Public Law Everett, Mass. Everett High School Freshman Debating; Dramatics (1), (2); Varsity Debating Team (2), (3); Musical Clubs’ Reader (2); Cosmos Club (1), (2), (3); Greenwood Prize Scholarship (3). 101 AUSTIN CHAPIN ROBINSON, Z V “Ace” B.S. in English Fitchburg, Mass. Fitchburg High School Freshman Basketball; 2nd Varsity Basket¬ ball (2), (3); Dramatics (2), (3) AUSTIN TUTTLE ROPES, Z l F “Hemp” B.S. in Economics Salem, Mass. Salem High School Wrestling (l), (2), (3); Track (1), (2); Tennis ( 2 ). BARNETT ROSENFIELD “Bob” B.S. in Biology Chelsea, Mass. Chelsea High School Advertising Staff Weekly (1); Wrestling (1) ABRAHAM ROSENTHAL “Rosey” B.S. in Biology Boston, Mass. Boston English High School Advertising Staff Weekly (1); Tuftconic (3) FRANCIS HENRY RUSSELL, A T “Jimmy” A. B. in History Newton, Mass. Newton High School Manager Freshman Football (l); Dramatics (1), (2); Glee Club (2); Goddard Readings (1) ; Sword and Shield; Varsity Debating (2) , (3); President Cosmos Club (3); Ivy; Underclass Rules Committee (3); Jumbo Book Staff (3); Managing Editor Weekly (3); Student Council (3); Treasurer Liberal Club (3) ALBERT RICHARD SCHMALFUSS, ATQ “Snick” B. S. in Electrical Engineering Fitchburg, Mass. Fitchburg High School Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Freshman Basketball; Varsity Basketball Squad (3); A.S.M.E. (2), (3) WILLIAM SCHWARTZ “Bill” B.S. in Chemical Engineering Mattapan, Mass. Boston English High School Class Track (1), (2); Varsity Track (2), (3); Chemical Society (I), (3) NATHAN COLEMAN SHARFMAN A.B. Boston, Mass. Boston Latin School ALEXANDER SIDMAN “Al” B.S. in History and Public Law Everett, Mass. Everett High School Art Staff Weekly (1), (2), (3); Cosmos Club (2) , (3); Debating Council (3) ALFRED SIGEL “Al” A. B. in Economics Mattapan, Mass. Boston Latin School ALBERT LLEWELLYN SIMONDS “Al” B. S. in Mechanical Engineering Soutlibridge, Mass. Southbridge High School, Huntington School ARTHUR HOWARD SISSON “Ding” B.S. in Engineering Lynn, Mass. Lynn Classical High School PARKER ADAMS SMALL, A t 2 B.S. in Engineering North Truro, Mass. Provincetown High School Cross Country (l); Wrestling (1), (2), Captain (1); Captain Varsity Wrestling (3) EZRA SHELDON SMITH, Ju. “Ezree” B.S. in Philosophy Attleboro, Mass. Attleboro High School Musical Clubs (1), (2), (3); Assistant. Leader Mandolin Club (3); Art Staff Jumbo Book (3) . ALBERT SOZIO “Also” B.S. in Electrical Engineering East Boston, Mass. East Boston High School Freshman Track; Varsity Track (2); Vice- President Mazzini Club; Baseball (3) HOWARD JUDSON SPROTT B.S. Cambridge, Mass. Cambridge Latin School, Massachusetts Institute of Technology JOHN FRANCIS STUDLEY “Jack” B.S. in Engineering Greenwood, Mass. Wakefield High School Cross Country (l) NORMAN FREDERICK STULTZ B.S. Brockton, Mass. Brockton High School 102 LEWIS ARTHUR WELLMAN SWETT, I 2 K “Lewie” B.S. in Civil Engineering Winthrop, Mass. Winthrop High School HERBERT SETH SWIFT, © A X “Herb” B.S. in Economics Scituate, Mass. Huntington School Varsity 2nd Baseball (1); Sophomore Ban¬ quet Committee; Inter-fraternity Council (3); Sword and Shield. FRANK CHARLES SYNKOVICH B.S. Stoughton, Mass. Stoughton High School Tufts Pre-Medical School MICHAEL FRANCIS SZTUKOWSKI B.S. Hartford, Conn. M eriden High School Tufts Pre-Medical School ABBA SWAINE TAYLOR, A J X “Kanaba” B.S. in Engineering Swampscott, Mass. Lynn Classical High School Assistant Manager Basketball (3); Dramat¬ ics (1), (8), (3); A.S.M.E. (1), (2), (3); Sword and Shield; Governing Board, Tufts Union (3; In ter-fraternity Council (3); Junior Day Committee C. FRANK THOMAS, X P “Tommy” B.S. in Chemistry Port Kennedy, Penn. Tredgffrin-Easttown High School Assistant Manager Track (l), (2), (3); Junior Prom Committee; Assistant Manager Wrestling (3); Nominating Committee (3); Calendar Committee (2); Student Manager New England Interscholastic Basketball Tournament (3). DONALD ALEXANDER THOMPSON A. B. Whitman, Mass. Northfield High School HENRY WOOD THOMPSON, ATQ “Thommy” B. S., S.T.B. Everett, Mass. Everett High School Dramatics (1); Packard Club (2); Vice- President Packard Club (3); Liberal Club (3) GEORGE HENRY THORBURN, Jr., d A S.T.B. Marblehead, Mass. Lynn English High School Packard Club (2), (3) JAMES RICHARD TIDYMAN, Z F “Jim” B.S. i?i Civil Engineering Akron, Ohio Akron Central High School Glee Club (2), (3); Mandolin Club (2), (8); Civil Engineering Society (2), (3); Freshman Smoker Committee FRED SYMONDS TRASHER B.S. in Engineering Marblehead, Mass. Marblehead High School ALDUS STONE TROWBRIDGE, X T A “Al” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School JOHN GEORGE TSAGARIS “Cigarettes” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lynn, Mass. Lynn English High School General Electric Trade School Wrestling (1), (2), (3) CHARLES TURNER “Chick” B.S. in Chemistry Boston, Mass. Boston Latin School, Salem High School Boxing (l); Secretary Chemical Society (3) FRANK DOMENICO URSONE “Sonny” B.S. Hartford, Conn. Hartford High School WALTER HENRY VanDYKE, I A “Van” B.S. in Engineering Peabody, Mass. Peabody High School DON ANDREW WAITE, Jr., A I X B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Medford High School GEORGE ELMER WALDRON, Jr., Z T B.S. in Engineering Gloucester, Mass. Gloucester High School Class Football (1), (2); Vice-President Class (1); Wrestling (1), (2); (3) Dramatics (1) , (2), (3); Track (2); Calendar Committee ( 2 ) 103 SI GORDON LYNN WALLS “The Count” B.S. in Engineering Watertown, Mass. Boston English High School Musical Clubs (2), (3) JAMES HENRY WALSH, 2 T A “Jim” B.S. in Civil Engineering Cambridge, Mass. Rindge Technical School Class Track (l), (2); Chairman Banquet Committee (3); Varsity Track (3) RICHARD TRENHOLM WILSON “Dick” B.S. in Biology Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School RICHARD BLAISDELL WINGATE B.S. Amesbury, Mass. Amesbury High School, Tufts Pre-Medical School EDMUND VINCENT WATSON “Jerry” B.S. in Engineering Jamaica Plain, Mass. Boston Latin School Freshman Football; Varsity Football Squad (2), (3); Freshman Track; Varsity Track (2), (3); Class Treasurer (2), (3); Treasurer Ivy (3); A.S.M.E. (2), (3) GEORGE MORELAND WEIR, A “Ike” B.S. in Civil Engineering Somerville, Mass. High School of Commerce, English High School SAMUEL MYER WEISBERG “Sam” B.S. in Chemistry Boston, Mass. English High School Weekly Staff (1), (2); President Chemical Society (3) EDWARD STEVENS WHITNEY, A T Q “Ed,” “Deacon” B.S. Medford, Mass. Medford High School, Williams College KENNETH JOHN WOLF, A T A “Ken” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School EDGAR JAMES WOOD, Z T “Eddie” B.S. in Economics Cleveland, Ohio Heights High School Musical Clubs (l), (2), (3); Toastmaster Class Banquet (2) PAUL INGRAM WREN, A T A “Birdie” A.B. in Economics Tufts College, Mass. Browne and Nichols Track Squad (2); Class Track (2); Inter- fraternity Council (3) RUSSELL ALLEN WYLIE, I A “Russ” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Schenectady, N. Y. Schenectady High School Freshman Basketball; 2nd Varsity Basket¬ ball (2) NORMAN LEWIS WILLARD, I A “Jess” B.S. in Civil Engineering Lowell, Mass. Lowell High School, Huntington School Freshman Football ROBERT BRUCE WILLIAMS, l U T “Bob” A.B. in English Glencoe, Illinois New Trier High School, H. F. Bar Ranch School, Snyder School, Dartmouth Varsity 2nd Football (3); Freshman Basket¬ ball (3); Dramatics (3) TOSHIHIKO YAMAGUCHI “Tosh” A.B. Tokio, Japan Dean Academy, Exeter Summer School Liberal Club; Art Staff Jumbo Book BENJAMIN WHITESMITH “Ben” Special Theological North Dana, Mass. New Salem Academy, Dennis High, Calais Academy 104 105 106 LIBERAL ARTS SOPHOMORES Blanchard MacLeod Liukkonen Fulton True 1927 OFFICERS Dean W. True . . President Wilbur C. Fulton . Vice-President Oscar Liukkonen . Secretary Dana L. Blanchard . Treasurer Allan D. MacLeod Colors — Red and Black Marshal ( ' heer 1-9-2-7 Rah-rah-rah-rah 1-9-2-7 Rah-rah-rah-rah 1-9-2-7 Rah-rah-rah-rah ’27-’27-’27 107 ENGINEERING SOPHOMORES CLASS ROLL GREGORIO ABUEG B.S. in Chemical Engineering Rosario, Cavite, Philippine Islands Manila Trade School BAKER ADAMS B K “Bake” B.S. in Economics Georgetown, Mass. Perley Free School HENRY HALL ADAMS “Jack” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School ELSWORTH LYMAN AMIDON A T Q “Don,” “Am” B.S. in Biology Barnet, Vermont Goddard Seminary CLARENCE D. ASH B.S. in Chemistry Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School Northeastern University ABRAHAM ASHKENAZY A.B. Lawrence, Mass. Lawrence High School ABRAHAM J. ASHKENAZY I E IT A. B. Methuen, Mass. Lawrence High School JOHN JOSEPH AUSTIN, 2 T A “Jack” B. S. in Civil Engineering Bondsville, Mass. Westbrook Seminary, Palmer High School NELSON BLAISDELL BAKER, STA “Nellie” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Manchester, Mass. Manchester High School HERBERT SPENCER BARNHART, 0 A X “Barney” B.S. in Civil Engineering New York, N. Y. Evander Childs High School GEORGE WASHINGTON BARSKY, $ E II B.S. in Physics and Philosophy Worcester, Mass. High School of Commerce LEO BERNSTEIN SQ? B.S. in Biology Arlington, Mass. Arlington High School ALFRED AMOS BETTS B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Medford High School ERNEST DORR BICKNELL A. B. Windsor, Vermont Windsor High School, Middlebury College DANA LINCOLN BLANCHARD, Z W “Blanch” B. S. in Biology Newton, Mass. West Roxbury High School LEONARD JOHN BOLGER B.S. Allston, Mass. Dean Academy HAROLD WILLIAM BORNS B.S. Medford, Mass. Medford High School MELVIN DEAN BRETT, A 4 X B.S. in Electrical Engineering Groveton, N. H. Groveton, High School MORRIS BROWN 2 Q l F B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Dorchester, Mass. Dorchester High School CHARLES HOWARD BUCKLIN, A Y “Buck” B.S. in Economics Northeast Harbor, Maine Gilman High School WELTON MACKENZIE BURGESS “Birdie” B.S. Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School 109 w Jf PAUL CALLAHAN B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Scituate, Mass. Scituate High School, Huntington School FRANK CHARLES CALIRI B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Allston, Mass. WILLIAM HARRISON CAMPBELL, A T A B.S. Napoleon, Ohio Napoleon High School FREDERIC SCOTT CARR, 0 A X “Peskus” B.S. in Biology Kingston, N. Y. Kingston High School AMERICO CARUSO “En” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Boston, Mass. Mechanic Arts High School JACK CASHMAN, 3 E n “Curly” A. B. in History and Public Law Newton, Mass. Newton High School, Huntington School MARIO CIULLO, ATQ “Marty” B. S. in History Arlington, Mass. Arlington High School WILFRED ALEXANDER CLABAULT, A T “Duke” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Elmhurst, Long Island, N. Y. Stuyvesant High School LLOYD MEEGEE COFER, A I A B.S. in Biology New York, N. Y. DeWitt Clinton High School DAVID ABRAHAM COHEN B.S. Boston, Mass. Boston English High School JEROME JOSEPH COHEN, I E 11 “Jerry” A. B. in Biology Quincy, Mass. Quincy High School LEANDER JOSEPH COSTA “El” B. S. in Chemical Engineering East Boston, Mass. Mechanic Arts High School HOWARD KENT CRABTREE, B K “Crabbie” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Melrose, Mass. Melrose High School CLIFFORD ALFRED CRAWFORD B.S. Boston, Mass. Boston English High School KENNETH MALCOLM CRAWFORD “Crawf” B.S. in Chemistry Belmont, Mass. Belmont High School WILLIAM ARTHUR DANE B.S. Salem, Mass. Salem Classical High School, L T niversity of New Hampshire LAWRENCE MILLER DAWSON, Z T “Larry” B.S. Meriden, Conn. Meriden High School ROBERT HENRY DECKER, A T Q “Bob” B.S. in Civil Engineering West Chester, Penn. West Chester High School FRANK DiNATALE B.S. in Mechanical Engineering East Boston, Mass. East Boston High School , JOSEPH KNOWLES DOANE B.S. in Civil Engineering Malden, Mass. Malden High School ELSON PERRY DOLLIVER “Dolly” B.S. in Engineering Waltham, Mass. Waltham High School FRED NAPOLEON JOSEPH DUBE “Nap” B.S. in Biology Nashua, New Hampshire Sanborn Seminary, Middlebury College PERLEY EATON B.S. in Chemical Engineering Danvers, Mass. Danvers High School GEORGE EVERETT ELDRIDGE, ETA “Teddy” B.S. in Civil Engineering Mattapoisett, Mass. Fairhaven High School 110 WALTER TROWBRIDGE EPPLER, X T A “Walt” B.S. in Electrical Engineering East Lynn, Mass. Lynn Classical High School BERNARD ESNER B.S. in Civil Engineering Medford, Mass. Wakefield High School ERWIN ERNEST ESPIG, B K “Sprig” B.S. in Engineering North Andover, Mass. Johnson High School LOLLS FINKELSTEIN, A li ' L “Fink” B.S. in Civil Engineering Dorchester, Mass. East Boston High School JOHN JOSEPH FINNIN A. B. Somerville, Mass. Boston College High School HENRY JOHN FITZPATRICK, A I 2 “Fitzy” B. S. in Civil Engineering Stoughton, Mass. Stoughton High School, Chauncy Hall DONALD FRANKLIN FOGG, A T G “Don” B.S. in Economics Auburn, Maine Edward Little High School JOHN JOSEPH FOLEY B.S. Cambridge, Mass. Rindge Technical High School GEORGE FREDRICKSON B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Burlington, Mass. Rindge Technical High School, Lexington High School SETH FRIEND B.S. in Engineering Beverly, Mass. Beverly High School WILBUR CROWE FULTON, A Y “Fred” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Boston, Mass. Hyde Park High School, Huntington School ARTHUR JOHN GAVIGAN I A A.B. Peabody, Mass. Peabody High School, Holy Cross College THEODORE HASS GEIGER, 0 A X “Turk” B.S., in Chemical Engineering New York, N. Y. Evander Childs High School GEORGE SYMOND GOSS, A T “Buster” B.S. in Economics Swampscott, Mass. Allen Military School, Hackley School Stone School BENJAMIN DAVID GOULD, I E II “Bennie” A. B. in Biology Barre, Vermont Spaulding High School HOWARD CLAYTON HANDY “Big Boy” B. S. in Mechanical Engineering Athol, Mass. Athol High School, Birlingame Private School EDWARD JOSEPH HAROLD, A X B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Boston, Mass. Huntington School JOHN JAMES HAYES, 0 A X “Jack,” “Spud” B.S. in Biology New York, N. Y. Evander Childs High School ABRAHAM MATTHEW HELMAN A. B. Roxbury, Mass. Boston Latin High School, Tufts Pre-Medi¬ cal School FRANCIS CALVIN HENDERSON B. S. in Electrical Engineering Saugus, Mass. Roxbury Latin School DAVID HARRY HERSHFIELD B.S. in Biology Lawrence, Mass. Lawrence High School DAVID LEON HERTZ, A T Q B.S. in English New York, N. Y. Stuyvesant High School TARO HI RAO B.S. in English Hyogoken, Japan Seikei Preparatory School CHARLES AUGUSTINE HOGAN B.S. in Enginering South Boston, Mass. Mechanic Arts, English High School 111 ALBAN JOHN HOLTER, B K “ Al” B.S. in Engineering Portland, Conn. Portland High School ELWYN TURNBULL HOOK, Z F “Hooky” B.S. in Engineering West Medford, Mass. Medford High School CLEON EDSON HOPKINS “Hop B.S. in Economics Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School ROBERT ISENMAN B.S. Malden, Mass. Malden High School. RAYMOND LOUIS JOHNSON B.S. W est Bridgewater, Mass. Howard High School FRED JACK JOSEPHSON A.B. New London, Conn. Bulkeley High School JOHN SAMUEL KELLEY A. B. Boston, Mass. Boston Latin High School ROBERT JOSEPH KENNEDY “Bob” B. S. in Civil Engineering Whitinsville, Mass. Northbridge High School HOWARD GLAZIER LASKEY A. B. in Biology Boston, Mass. Appian Way Tutoring School HERBERT EDWIN LAWSON, Z W “Pop” B. S. in Chemistry New York, N. Y. Stuyvesant High School RALPH EDWARD LEHAN “Dutch” B.S. Stoughton, Mass. St. John’s Preparatory School CHARLES RODNEY LEHIGH, i’TA Roddy” B.S. in Biology Bloomfield, N. J. Bloomfield High School HOWARD WTLLIAM LEONHARDT, 0 A X B.S. in Chemical Engineering Hartsdale, N. Y. Stuyvesant High School ALLEN HENRY LESTER, ATQ “Speed” A. B. in Biology Norwell, Mass. Norwell High School SAMUEL HIRAM LEVIGNE 2 Q ' F B. S. Salem, Mass. Salem Classical High School SAMUEL ELI LEVIN B.S. in Biology Roxbury, Mass. Boston English High School SANFREY MATHEW LILYESTROM, BAX “Limpie” B.S. in Biology Spencer, Mass. High Scho ' ol of Commerce, Worcester LORING BILLS LINCOLN, A T A “Link” B.S. Waltham, Mass. Waltham High School JOSEPH ROWE LITTLE A. B. Cambridge, Mass. OSCAR LIUKKONEN, S T A “Luke”. B. S. in Electrical Engineering Braintree, Mass. Braintree High School JOSEPH LOURIE B.S. Boston, Mass. Dorchester and Chelsea High Schools LEO GORMAN LYONS, Z V F “Governor” B.S. in History Portland, Maine Portland High School, Westbrook Seminary GERARD FLORES MACALALAG B.S. Pagsanjan, Laguna, Philippine Islands Northeastern University, Chicago; Lewis Institute ALLAN DONALD MacKILLOP B.S. Reading, Mass. Reading High School, Wesleyan University ll‘ ALLAN DELWIN MacLEOD ATO “Mac” B.S. in Mechanical Engineering Allston, Mass. Mechanic Arts High School Birlingame Private School JOHN JOSEPH MAHONEY, A‘I X “Jack” H.S. in Civil Engineering Charlestown, Mass. Boston Latin School JOHN HENRY MALONEY H.S. in Chemical Engineering Danvers, Mass. Holten High School EDWIN ALBERT MARTINSON “Ed,” “Marty” H.S. in Chemistry Concord, Mass. Concord High School JOHN McCLOSKEY “Mac” H.S. in Civil Engineering Marblehead, Mass. Marblehead High School richard l. McWilliams H.S. in Mechanical Engineering Graniteville, Vermont Goddard Seminary MONTGOMERY RICHARD MEIGS “Monty” B.S. Re jvere, Mass. Revere High School FRANK HAROLD MENDES “Frankie” H.S. in Engineering Port of Spain, Trinidad, B. W. I. Granger’s Institute VERNON HENRY MEYER, A I S “ V ernie” H.S. in Engineering Dorchester, Mass. Mechanic Arts High School RAYMOND BALCOM MORRISON, A I 2 Ray” H.S. in Mechanical Engineering Lynn, Mass. Lynn Classical High School JOHN HOWELL NEAL A.H. Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School WALTER NEWTON NELSON, BK “Newt H.S. in Electrical Engineering Lexington, Mass. Lexington High School WALLACE NICHOLS, Jn„ A T “Nic” H.S. in Biology Medford. Mass. Medford High School JAMES ELDREDGE NICKERSON, B K Nick H.S. in History West Harwich, Mass. Harwich High School FENTON HANNAFORD NORRIS, A T A “Fen” H.S. in Chemistry Cambridge, Mass. Rindge Technical High School JOHN VAN SCHAICK NORTON, © A X “Jack” H.S. in Civil Engineering Cobleskill, N. Y. Cobleskill High School STANLEY ERNEST OBER B.S. Somerville, Mass. Medford High School JAMES ARTHUR O’NEIL H.S. in Mechanical Engineering Everett, Mass. Everett High School HAROLD ALONZO PALMER, A T “Hal” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Westfield, Mass. Westfield High School PHILIP PAUL PASQUALINO, B K “Pass” B.S. in Structural Engineering Wakefield, Mass. Wakefield High School, Northeastern Uni¬ versity LEONARD FOSTER PATRIDGE “Len” B.S. in Engineering Stoneham, Mass. Stoneham High School ALBERT ANTONIO PAYETTE B.S. in Engineering Everett, Mass. Everett High School WILLIAM MacLEAN PIERCE I A “Billy” B.S. in Chemistry Melrose, Mass. Melrose High School, Northeastern University EDWARD VERNE POWELL, ATQ “Ed” B.S. Arlington, Mass. Arlington High School 113 GEORGES ETIENNE PllEVOST B.S. St. Johnsbury, Vermont University of Vermont ALFRED ALEXANDER RADULSKI B.S. in Civil Engineering Haverhill, Mass. FRED SMALLIDGE RALPH, Z W “Freddy” B.S. in Economics Northeast Harbor, Maine Gilman High School JAMES WALLACE REDDIE “Tub,” “Jack” B.S. in Chemistry Hull, Mass. Hingham High School JOSEPH JEAN RESNICK “Joe” B.S. in English Quincy, Mass. Waltham High School ELI RICHMAN A. B. Chelsea, Mass. Chelsea High School STANLEY OSBORNE ROBINSON, 0 A X “Roby,” “Stan” B. S. in Engineering Winthrop, Mass. Winthrop High School EARL CUTLER ROGERS B.S. in Mathematics South Weymouth, Mass. Natick High School HARRY BERNARD ROSENER “Rosy” B.S. in Chemistry Webster, Mass. Bartlett High School ROBERT WILLIS ROUNDS, A T Q “Bob” B.S. in History Roselle, N. J. Riverside High School, Milwaukee ISRAEL RUBIN SQT B.S. Dorchester, Mass. Boston English High School, Tufts Pre- Medical School SOTIROS ANTONIOS SAMPATAKOS A.B. Lowell, Mass. Lowell High School 114 VINCENT HENRY SCHIAVONI B.S. Haverhill, Mass. Haverhill High School University of New Hampshire PHILIP EDWARD SCHWARTZ, X Q l F “Phil” B.S. in Biology Lawrence, Mass. Lawrence High School HAROLD MORRIS SESEN, d E n A. B. Lynn, Mass. FRANKLIN CHOLERTON SHUMAN, A d X “Monk” B. S. in Engineering Somerville, Mass. Boston College High School, Northeastern University MARLIN MAYNARD SILVERSTEIN, P E 11 B.S. Providence, R. I. Hope Street High School, Tufts Pre-Medical School MELVILLE ABRAM SMALL, A d X “Ma,” “Mel” B.S. in Chemical Engineering Everett, Mass. Everett High School NORMAN SWAZEY SMITH, Z W “Norm” A. B. Brookline, Mass. RAYMOND FISKE SOUTHWICK B. S. in Chemical Engineering Lynn, Mass. Lynn Classical High School FOSTER RAWSON SPOFFORD, A T A “Jumbo” B.S. in Civil Engineering Berlin, Mass. Hudson High School OSCAR STARK, X T A “Gus” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Waltham, Mass. Waltham High School RUSSELL FROST STONE, I A “Stoney” B.S. in Economics Southington, Conn. Lewis High School WALLACE BRUCE STRATHDEE, X T A “Wally” B.S. in Electrical Engineering South Braintree, Mass. Braintree High School JOHN SANBORN STRONG, © A X “Sam” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Winthrop, Mass. Winthrop High School CLAUDE RANDOLPH TAYLOR, A I A “Randy” li.S. in Biology New York, N. Y. Stuyvesant High School RANDOLPH SCOTT THOMAS, 4 A li.S. in Civil Engineering Sagamore, Mass. Huntington School WARREN SMILEY THOMAS, A T A “Tommy” li.S. in Civil Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School WILLIAM ARTHUR THOMPSON, Jr., X 4 E B.S. in Engineering Newark, N. J. South Side and Barringer High Schools MILLARD HARRIS TIBBETTS B.S. North Truro, Mass. Provincetown High School IIEINN FREDERIC TOMFOHRDE, Jr., ©AX B.S. in Chemical Engineering Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School H. EDMUND TRIPP “Trippy” li.S. in History Marion, Mass. Tabor Academy DEANE WINTHROP TRUE, Z F “Double-Shirt” B.S. in Civil Engineering Yarmouth, Maine Deering Higli School, Westbrook Seminary ORAZIO ERCOLE VACCARO “Vac” li.S. in Economics Roslindale, Mass. Boston Latin School EDWARD MERRILL WHEELER “Ed” B.S. Weston, Mass. Weston High School LESLIE STORY WILKINS, B K “Wilkie” B.S. in Electrical Engineering Gloucester, Mass. Gloucester High School SAMUEL WINER, 4 E n “Sam” B.S. in Chemical Engineering Roxbury, Mass. Hebron Academy, University of Maine CLARENCE YANOFSKY X Q l F “Cal” A. B. in Economics Mattapan, Mass. Boston Latin School PETER WILLIAM VAPHIADES B. S. Andover, Mass. Lawrence High School JOSEPH ZARKIN, SQ? “Joe” B.S. in Biology Roxbury, Mass. English High School 115 UNDERCLASS CONTESTS I N addition to the banquet battles, and the tug-of-war, there are organized contests between the freshman and sophomore classes. The two underclasses meet each other in football, baseball, basketball, and track. Each of these and the tug-of-war count for the possession of class flags, with right to fly them right side up. The senior class lost this privilege in its first year, and did not succeed in keeping the class of ' 26 from winning theirs. The class of 1927, apparently was not hoodooed by the odd numbers, and won its flags last year. The contest now is still unde¬ cided. The freshmen won the tug-of-war, lost the football game, but carried away the basketball game. Baseball and track contests will be fought out this spring, too late for our records. In former years, a bag rush was held which counted for flags, but this year the Underclass Rules Committee, of which F. B. Littlefield is the chairman, abolished the bag rush and made the tug-of-war over Alewife Brook count a point for flags. The frosh won. Every fall, the Underclass Rules Committee announces an “open season,” during which underclassmen try to keep their rival classes from holding the annual banquet of their class. The campus abounds in brutal assaults and high crimes. This year both banquets were successful, the frosh initiating the rare expedient of having their banquet at six-thirty in the morning. Only one banquet has failed in this generation, that of the class of 1927 last year. THE “BODUN” TRIP T HIS famous Tufts institution has been immortalized in song, and in lurid memories of sloppy voyages in the “Governor Dingbat,” and over the roads and rails to Portland. The present senior class saw its first Armistice Day in Portland, and waded through mighty slush to see the team buried under a steep score. As sophomores, the class of ’25 saw a closer game with our ancient rival, but came back heartbroken with a 13-12 defeat. In 1923 Bowdoin came to the Oval and won, so it remained for this year to be the banner year in our history. Practically all of the student body made the trip this year and was rewarded by seeing the team “come through” with a 7-6 victory. Another year must elapse before the Brown and Blue will invade Longfellow Square again. TUFTS NIGHT On the first Monday following fall registration, the Tufts clan gathers in Goddard Gym to break once more into the spirit and swing of Tufts activity and enthusiasm. Speakers are to be had, but the session is informal, and marks the nitiation of the freshmen into the life of the Hill and the Tufts brotherhood. 116 15 2S JUHBO BOOK TAT T, fAA . A U 117 LIBERAL ARTS FRESHMEN 0 0 K o v Erickson Hanson Keefe Ball Wright TUFTS 1928 OFFICERS Earl T. Ball J. Royce Keefe Chandler M. Wright W illiam H. Erickson, Ralph E. Hanson Jr. . President Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer M arshal Colors — Blue and Gold Cheer — Ya — bo! Jum — bo! Twenty-Eight Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Team! fi § id y a 4 a H i P |_J| 119 ENGINEERING FRESHMEN CLASS ROLL VICTOR JOSEPH AIMANE, “Vic”. FREDERICK ANDERSON, “Andy” .... HAROLD ALBERT ANDERSON, “Red” ELMORE LANE ANDREWS, “Sheik” ATQ HALSEY ERWIN ANDREWS, “Doc” ST A. CHARLES GEORGE ASH. Jk., “Slim” .... HARVEY EDMUND ASHWORTH, “Ash” ST A BENJAMIN ASNES, “Ben”. THEODORE PETER BAC ' CIOLA, “Ted” CHARLES JONES BAKER, “Doc” AT A . JOHN ANDREW BALKUS, “Jack” BK EARL THOMAS BALL, “Sam” AT. HORACE EDWARD BARDSLEY. DONIVAN AUSTIN BARNES, “Don” AT A JOHN BALCOM BELKNAP, “PeTE” .... LAWRENCE ALBERT BICKNELL .... ROBERT HEMENWAY BOODY, “Boots” Z T . MELVIN RICHARD BOWKER, “Mel” A t S . HARRY MORTON BOYARSKY. M. PHI LB KICK BRIDGESS. ELLIOT COUDEN BROWN, “Brownie” HEMENWAY REYNOLD BULLOCK, “Bull” NORRIS HITCH INS BUSSELL ST A . MERRIL JOSEPH CARTER ...... STURGIS ELLIOT CHADWICK, “Chad” ZT . PERRY KEAN CHANDLER. ANTHONY CHIBORO. “Chibby”. EDWIN BERNHARDT CHRISTENSEN, “Christy” LAWRENCE JAHN CLARKE, “Larry” A I S . ISRAEL CLAYMAN, “Izzy”. SYDNEY PHINEAS COHEN. FRANCIS GILMAN COLLIER. “Frank WILLIAM DOWNEY COLLINS, “Bill” I A PHILIP GEORGE COOK, “C ookie” .... THEODORE NORRIS DENNETT I A X ROLAND JOSEPH de VERTEUIL. CORNELIUS FRANCIS DONA VAN, Jr., “Connie” A I S JOSEPH TIMOTHY DONOVAN . WILLIAM JOSEPH DOWNING, “Bill” ST A SELWYN PARKER DROWN, WAX LOUIS ENDLER $ZII . WILLIAM HERBERT ERICKSON. Jr., “Spud” A T MORRIS WILBUR ESTES . OAKLAND SWAN EVANS, “Pete .... MALCOLM JOSEPH FARRELL, “Mal” GEORGE FREDERICK FELLOWS, Jr., “Ted” AT A RALPH SANBORN FELLOWS, “Jerry” AT A FRED JAMES FLYNN, “Porky . CONSTANTINE IZRAEL GINZBURG .... GEORGE GOLDMAN. “Goldie” FEn RALPH MYER GOLDSTEIN, “Shadow” I EI! . CLARENCE THOMAS GORDON, “Dink” A !• S JOSEPH HENRY GRAMER, “Joe” .... Belmont, Mass. Weston, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Everett, Mass. Boston, Mass. Swampseott, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Quincy, Mass. East Boston, Mass. Pittsfield, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Westbrook, Me. Lawrence, Mass. Cleveland, Ohio Framingham, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Ilyannis, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Wallingford, Conn. Swampseott, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Pittsfield, Me. Roxbury, Mass. Nutley, N. J. Medford, Mass. Boston, Mass. Forest Hills, Mass. Stoneham, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Littleton, Mass. Wa verley, Mass. Trinidad, B. W. I. Dedham, Mass. Medford, M ass. Littleton, Mass. Swampseott, Mass. Malden, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Medford, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Hyde Park, Mass. Hyde Park, Mass. South Boston, Mass. Pavlograd, Russia Revere, Mass. Mattapan, Mass. . Lynn, Mass. . Boston, Mass. 141 WILLIAM HALL GRIFFITHS, “Bill” $ T X FREDERICK COKER HADLEY, “Fred” © A X ROY STANLEY HANSLICK, “Ray” RALPH EVERETT HANSON, A T A . KENNETH BRAMLER HAPGOOD, “Happy”. WALTER WESLEY HARDING .... WILLIAM GIDDEN HARRIS, “Bill” $ S n SUMNER HARWOOD. PAUL ROCKWELL HOLMAN, Z F JOHN ALBERT HOLMES, ATQ . BRAINERD FRANCIS HUGHES AT. CHARLES HOWE HYSON, “Charlie” . IRVINO JAMES JENKINS. A fS PAUL EMANUEL JOHNSON, B K PRESCOTT MERRIL JONES, I A X WALTER RUSSEL KEAN, “Russ” ©AX JOSEPH WILLIAM KENNY. JOHN ROYCE KEEFE, “Mickey” ATQ FRED LOYD KENNEDY, “Potts” A L Y . JAMES PALMER KNOWLES, Jr., “Jimmie” . JOHN PETER KRZEMINSKI. “Christ” YT A WALTER EDWARD LAWRENCE, “Walt” . RICHARD HOWARD LeCOUR, “Dick” MORRIS HAROLD LEVINE, f E n DONALD GUY LOTHROP, “Don” ATQ . RICHMOND DELANO LUCE, “Richie” DAVID STUART MacINTYRE. “Mac” A BERTRAM ALEXANDER MANSFIELD. ROBERT ALEXANDER MARSHALL, “Red” A I Y PHILLIP McCLURE MAXWELL, “Max” JOSEPH WALTER MAYNE, Y T A GEORGE HUGH McGINNIS, “Mac” . CARL BERNARD MILLER. ROBERT BASIL MILLS,. DONALD DeWITT MOATS, “Don” AT. JOHN JOSEPH MOHAN, “Johnnie” JOSEPH SALVATORE NADILE, “Joe” YTA WILLARD DIKRAN NALCHAJIAN, “Nal” . FREDERICK ENGELS NESSON ... ARTHUR RAYMOND NICHOLSON. “Jimmie” MICHAEL FRANK NIGRO, “Mike” HENRY ROGER NUSSBAUM .... GEORGE PERCIVAL NYE, “Joe” ZT. WILLIAM OAKES . WALTER MATTHEW O’BRIEN, “Wally” . ALBERT WILLIAMS OWENS .... EVERETT EDWIN PERKINS .... HAROLD SANBORN PERKINS .... ERNEST GUNNAR PETERSON, “Pete” A T . CUTHBERT EWART CLAUD PHILLIBERT HARRY LOUIS POLLIS. JOHN BACHELDER POORE . VINCENT BERNARD PORRAZZO, “Jim” WILLIAM NEWTON HAMMILL POTTERTON, “Bill” JOHN JOSEPH PURCELL, “Jack” HENRY ADAM RADZIKOWSKI, “Rad” JOHN FENNELL REILLY, “Boiler” AT. NATHAN RICIIMAN, “Preacher” GEORGE ARCHIBALD RILEY, B K HERBERT ELIAS ROBERTSON .... NATHAN DAVID ROBINSON .... A T Yonkers, N. Y. . . Somerville, Mass. Somerville, Mass. . . . Sanford, Me. . . Waltham, Mass. . . . Allston, Mass. . . Lynn, Mass. Newtonville, Mass. Leominster, Mass. Somerville, Mass. . . Arlington, Mass. . . Melrose, Mass. . . Amesbury, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Woburn, Mass. Medford, Mass. Westbrook, Me. Lynn, Mass. New York, N. Y. Meriden, Conn. Medford, Mass. Winthrop, Mass. Pittsfield, Mass. ,«• . Lexington, Mass. Washington, D. C. Provincetown, Mass. Allston, Mass. Malden, Mass. Monmouth, Me. Niagara Falls, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Medford, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Meriden, Conn. Chelsea, Mass. Boston, Mass. Methuen, Mass. Medford, Mass. New York, N. Y. Malden, Mass. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Waterbury, Conn. Wiscasset, Me. Falmouth, Mass. St. John’s, Grenada, B. W. I. Haverhill, Mass. Wakefield, Mass. Nantasket, Mass. . . Manchester, Conn. Meriden, Conn. . . Boston, Mass. . West Medford, Mass. Brockton, Mass. . . Manchester, N. H. . Somerville, Mass. Providence, R. I. HOWARD JEROME ROBISON, “Lefty” Z ' I ' FRANK BRANKIN ROGERS .... ISRAEL ZELMON ROISEN. ALLEN L. ROOKS, Jr. WALTER WILLIAM ROSE. SYDNEY LEO ROSENTHAL, t E n FRANCIS GERALD SADOWSKI .... RICHARD EDWARD SAMPSON, B K . FRED JOSEPH SANDERS. “Ted Z ' I JAMES SANDERS, “Tink” Z? . WILLARD IRESON SAVAGE, “Bun AT . MALCOLM THOREAU SHAW . LEONARD VICTOR SHORT, “Len” ATQ MARK SIEGEL. MILTON MELVIN SISSON, “Sis” .... ROBERT SLEPIAN. CLIFFORD ELLIOTT SMITH, “Smithy” A T A . EDWARD WILLIAM SMITH. PHILLIP HAGAR SMITH, “Phil” WILLARD ELMER SMITH. ABRAHAM NATHAN SOLOMON, “Soly” I E II . LOUIS SOREFF, “Kid”. KARL KAISER SOULE, “Karl” AT. IRVING GRAVELY SPERING, “Speyis” ATQ . CLARENCE PROCTOR STANLEY, “Pie-cye” Z ‘I CHARLES RICHMOND STEVENS, B T LESLIE MASON STEWART, “Les” EDWARD JOSEPH SULLIVAN, “Sully” ST A . ARTHUR WILSON SWANSON, “Art” BAX EUGENE JOSEPH SWEENEY, “Gene” ABDALLAH G. SWEDE ..... LEOPOLD CHARLES TAPPEY .... MAX TARLOW, “Mac” I E II WILLIAM J. TAYLOR, “Bill” ATQ MILTON THOMAS. LYLE SHELDON THORPE. LOUIS TOBIN, “Lou” 2 T A RICHARD TOUSEY ©AX. DONALD BYRON TRIBE, “Don” .... HYMAN SAMUEL TRILLING, “Hye” LI-CHUAN TSAO, “Len”. FREDERICK CECIL WARD, A T A WALTER ARTHUR WEISLEDER, “Mufus” Z M WALTER FREDERIC K WELCH, Jk. SAMUEL ISRAEL WIDERSHIEN SYLVIO WILLIAMS. RUDOLPH FREDERICK WILSON THOMAS MATTHEW WILSON, Jr., “Tom” A T A JOSEPH WINTROB. (HANDLER MORSE WRIGHT, “Ciian” ATQ . FRANCIS WOODWARD YOUNG A T A LESTER HENRY YOUNG. DEXTER ZAKON, “Zake”. RAFAEL ENRIQUE ZAMORA .... Meriden, Conn. Somerville, Mass. Harbine, China Somerville, Mass. Somerville, Mass. . . Boston, Mass. Brighton, Mass. St. Johnsbury, Vt. Southington, Conn. Southington, Conn. . Brookline, Mass. Newburyport, Mass. Lexington, Mass. „ Dorchester, Mass. Winthrop, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Newtonville, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Lexington, Mass. . Waltham, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Portland, Me. Somerville, Mass. Northeast Harbor, Me. Cambridge, Mass. Winchester, Mass. . Medford, Mass. Belmont, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Dedham, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Revere, Mass. Everett, Mass. Troy, N. Y. Medford, Mass. . Belmont, Mass. Somerville, Mass. West Somerville, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Nanking, China Dover, N. J. Meriden, Conn. Jamaica, N. Y. Roxbury, Mass. . Haverhill, Mass. . Peabody, Mass. . Dorchester, Mass. Revere, Mass. Tufts College, Mass. Newton (’enter, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. San Casimiro, Venezuela 123 THE COLLEGE MASCOT N EARLY as famous as Princeton’s Tiger and Yale’s Bulldog is the Tufts college mascot, P. T. Barnum ' s:wonder-elephant, “Jumbo.” This book has been named after the “famous beast,” songs have been written about him, peanuts named after him, and crowned and bald heads have flocked about his massive sides to admire his bulk and stolidity. He was captured in Africa when but three years of age, and first publicly exhibited in Paris. In 1865, he was taken to London, to the Royal Zoological Gardens, and kept there for seventeen years. He became noted for his great size and his amiable disposition, being for years the pet of the children who visited the Garden. In 1882 P. T. Barnum bought Jumbo for $10,000, and sent agents to England to bring him over here. A great furore was aroused throughout England, Parliament even forbidding the transportation of large animals on passenger vessels, which was calculated to prevent Barnum from shipping Jumbo. The veteran show¬ man got around this by carrying Jumbo on a boat of his own, and the elephant soon afterward went on tour in this country. 0 The great elephant added to his fame later, while in Buffalo, by saving the life of a little child who had been attacked by a lion. He met his death in 1885, in St. Thomas, Canada, when he charged head-on into a moving locomotive, aim¬ ing, it is believed, to protect a baby elephant accompanying him. He stopped the engine, but suffered fatal injury. The hide of the great beast was nailed to a huge oak form, laboriously carved into a likeness, and the skeleton sent to the Natural H istory Museum in New York. The mounted hide was put on a special platform and taken on tour throughout the country. In 1899 it was given to Tufts, for which Barnum had built a museum. But public demand was in¬ sistent, and the elephant was taken out for a triumphant tour of Europe. The next year he returned to Tufts, and has reposed undisturbed in the Barnum Mu¬ seum to this day, attracting thousands yearly to gaze upon his bulk. Jumbo” 0 THE SQUAD VARSITY TEAM OF 1924 Evander French, halfback George V. Perry, quarterback Samuel Winer, fullback Harold D. MacDonnell, halfback Claude R. Taylor, halfback Cortland H. Schroeder, halfback Wilfred A. Clabault, halfback William F. White, end Arthur W. Schuster, end McDonald S. Hosmer, end Norman L. Reed, guard Nathan L. Share, tackle George P. McGrath, tackle John J. Wilson, tackle William J. Carter, tackle Deane W. True, center Foster R. Spofford, guard Harry Finkelstein, guard Coach Casey 120 Capt. French Manager Nelson OFFICERS 1925 Season Victor Nelson .... Evander French .... 1925 Season Manager Not Selected George Perry . Manager Captain Captain Capt. Perry COACHES 1925 SEASON Edward I . Casey . Head Coach James W. LeCain Walter Cleary . . Line Coach Robinson Abbott Trainer Line Coach RECORD OF GAMES Date Opponent Place Tufts Opp. October 4 Connecticut A. C. Tufts 6 0 October 11 Bates Lewiston, Me. 12 6 October 18 Middlebury Tufts 7 26 October 25 University of N. H. Manchester, N. H. 0 20 November 1 Wesleyan Middletown, Ct. 13 6 November 8 Bowdoin Brunswick, Me. 7 6 November 15 University of Maine Tufts 13 14 November 22 M. A. C. Tufts 7 7 November 27 Western Reserve Cleveland, Ohio 0 33 Totals 59 118 Share Intercepts an Aggie Pass and Gains 27 yards 127 I Cleary Casey LeCain 1924 FOOTBALL MENTORS SECOND TEAM—FOOTBALL T HE Tufts second team won only one of its three games but at the same time the players were given much valuable experience and from time to time men were advanced to the varsity squad. Roger G. Poole James M. LeCain Stewart Lourie Hanny Baker Lehan SQUAD 19 2 It Sampatakos Hogan Mahoney Cunningham Kelley Pett Fitzpatrick Watson Chenesky Odenwaller Manager Coach Rosener Williams Banks Quinn Whaley Tufts Tufts Tufts SEASON 1924 0 Dean Academy 19 0 General Electric Company (5 14 Lowell Textile Seconds 0 128 HBEnHSuHli Sample Hanson Bogosian Wilson Nichols Crosby Share Truesdale Dowson French MacDonnell 1924 TEAM OFFICERS Clarence R. Truesdale Hubert W. Dowson Dirral D. Sample • • • Manager Captain Coach Lawrence S. Kidd Assistant Managers Arba S. Taylor TEAM 1925 Eznick Bogosian (T) Evander French (T) Harold D. MacDonnell (T) Hubert W. Dowson (T) John J. Wilson (T) Robert W. Crosby Joseph Rosselli (T) Nathan L. Share Frank E. Hanson Robert L. Nichols Fred S. Ralph 130 W ITH the season almost at an end at the time this went to press, the record of the basketball team stood eight wins and seven losses. When it is taken into consideration that three of the best basketball players Tufts ever had were lost by graduation, the season seems successful. Tufts had consider¬ able of a reputation to maintain, with the record of the 1924 season, when only three games were lost out of a schedule of seventeen. The New York trip, which came January 30 and 31, resulted in two victories, against the University Club and Pratt Institute. This trip has been run for several years and the Tufts team has a record of wins in that section of the country. The season opened with an easy win over Northeastern, 31 to 19. Van French, center, Bogosian and Rosselli, forwards, and Captain Dowson and Wilson, guards, were the starting five. One of the hardest games of the season came directly on this, Wesleyan, and they won 25 to 14. Lowell Textile fell before the Jumbo five, but only after a hard battle and the next week Rhode Island State came to avenge the two clef eats of last year. They won in one of the closest games of the year, 24 to 22. Rhode Island and the University of New Hampshire are the two teams that defeated Tufts twice this year. Captain Dowson has been the most consistent guard that Tufts has had for several years. As the bulwark in the Tufts defense he takes the place of Captain Rogers of last year. On offense and defense both Bogosian and French have worked together as forwards with great results. O SECOND TEAM PLAYERS RESULTS 1925 January 7 Tufts 31 N ort heastern 19 January 10 Tufts 14 Wesleyan 25 January 15 Tufts 48 Lowell Textile 21 January 17 Tufts 22 Rhode Island State 24 January 30 Tufts 25 Pratt Institute 23 January 31 Tufts 29 University Club 20 February 6 Tufts 23 New Hampshire University 42 February 11 Tufts 35 Massachusetts Institute Technology 32 February 14 Tufts 30 Holy Cross 18 February 18 Tufts 31 Worcester Technology 29 February 21 Tufts 33 Springfield 36 February 25 Tufts 14 Rhode Island State 49 February 28 Tufts 16 Massachusetts Aggies 27 March 4 Tufts 29 N orwieh 25 March 6 Tufts 14 University of New Hampshire 21 March 21 Tufts 37 Boston University 33 SECOND TEAM —BASKETBALL Manager Captain Coach Lawrence S. Kidd George V. Perry Dirral D. Sample George V. Perry Austin C. Robinson Second Team Joseph Lourie Jacob A. Isrealson Irving L. Vaughan Sotiros A. Sampatakos SEASON Tufts Opponents January 10 Dean Academy St. John’s Prep. Dean 21 49 January 17 Danvers 25 43 February 4 Allen-Chalmers West Newton 11 7 February 14 Tabor Academy Tufts 27 25 February 20 Lawrence Boys’ Club Lawrence 29 37 February 27 Brown Seconds Providence 17 30 130 191 Games played, 6; won, 2; lost, 4 Coach D. D. Sample Mgr. C. P. Truesdale W HEN the first call for track was issued early in January, almost one hundred men responded to work out on the board track under the new coach, William Meanix, former Olympic hurdler and holder of a world’s record. No regular indoor schedule was arranged although entries were made in the different indoor meets and one dual meet was held with Boston University early in February. The main object of the call was to develop material for the outdoor season, for which five meets had been scheduled. Coach Meanix had five letter men from last year’s team as a nucleus and also several good men from the freshman team. The captain, Frederic B. Littlefield, Elwin Gamage, Morgan Haynes, Edmund V. Watson, and Charles P. Bradford, were the five veterans. The indoor meet held with Boston University showed the capabilities of the Tufts team to be great. The meet was forced, by bad weather, to last two days and on the first day Tufts won every running event. The weight events and the hurdles and high jump were left for the next day, and it was in those events that the Tufts competitors proved weak. Of the nine events against Boston University, Tufts took five first places. Taylor won the 40-yard dash, Walsh and Slack tied for first in the mile, Bolger won the 300, Slack the 1000, and Captain Littlefield, the 600. Mgr. J. T. Ballard 133 Capt. F. B. Littlefield Coach W. B. Meanix VARSITY TRACK SQUAD OFFICERS Joseph T. Ballard ..... Manager Frederic B. Littlefield .... Captain William B. Meanix ..... Coach Assistant Managers C. Frank Thomas Michael E. McCabe IHBO BOOK “tfeoit ' ' Haynes Slack Littlefield Gamage , RELAY TEAM Charles P. Bradford Frederic B. Littlefield TRACK TEAM 1925 Letter Men Theodore W. Slack Morgan Haynes Elwin H. Gamage Edmund V. Watson Rufus H. Lovering Other Point Winners — Indoor Season Claude R. Taylor James H. Walsh Leonard J. Bolger Harold D. MacDonnell Walter T. Eppler Austin T. Ropes Morgan Haynes Elwin H. Gamage Edmund V. Watson Relay Team Theodore W. Slack Frederic B. Littlefield Leander J. Costa Season Indoor Track April 14 April 25 April 28 Mat- a May 8-9 May 20 May — Tufts 29% — Boston University 47% Schedule Spring Track Northeastern University at Tufts Wesleyan l niversity at Middletown Massachusetts Aggies at Tufts Colby College at Waterville Eastern Intercollegiates at Springfield Boston University at Tufts New England Intercollegiates at Technology, Cambridge 135 3 W HEN the time came last spring for the baseball candidates to report in the cage, it was found that Coach Kenneth L. Nash was seriously ill and would have to be away from the team until the season was almost through. Fred Lake was selected as temporary coach, and in the face of a squad of poor material, turned out a fairly creditable team. It was a team much unlike those of a few years ago, but it did turn in six wins of the sixteen games played. Two wins were made over the University of Maine, and Bates, Connecticut Aggies, Colby, and Springfield, were the other losers. Rain broke up both of the games scheduled with Bowdoin and also the annual alumni day game with Harvard. It was decided not to run any spring trip and the early season games were held at the Oval during the spring vacation. Northeastern, Providence College, and Boston University, came to the Oval and departed winners and then the team went to Amherst to be defeated in a fast game 4 to 0. A win here and there made up the rest of the season. Perhaps the most interesting game at the Oval was with Bates, which was finally won by Tufts after eleven innings of tie ball. OFFICERS 19H 1925 Lawrence R. Beardmore Manager Dana P. Fogg, Jr. Manager Michael J. Crowley, Jr. Captain Harold D. MacDonnell Captain Fred Lake, Kenneth L. Nash Coach Kenneth L. Nash Coach Assistant Managers Wilfred G. McKinney Addison P. Dingwall i 36 Back Row — Beardmore, Briggs, Bagley, Kinneally, Crowley, MacDonnell, Morris, Nash. Front Ron -Atherton, Kattarri, Phillips, Mahoney, Evans, Etelman, Hunter. SEASON SCORES 1924 Tufts 3 Northeastern 5 Tufts 0 Providence College 5 Tufts 1 Boston University 8 Tufts 0 Amherst 4 Tufts 8 University of Maine 0 Tufts 5 Bates 4 Tufts 0 Holy Cross 11 Tufts 8 Connecticut Aggies 4 Tufts 4 Boston College 21 Tufts 4 Boston College 12 Tufts 3 Bates 7 Tufts 3 University of Maine 2 Tufts 1 University of N. H. 15 Tufts 6 Colby 3 Tufts 10 Springfield 8 Tufts 8 St. John’s 13 Tufts 04 Opponents Won 0; lost 10 122 1:37 f i A jL Jk Itfy 1 92. JUflBO 300 K s4V III 4 Y. rr l. w OFFICERS 1924 1925 Owen W. Eames Manager Donald H. Miller Manager Assistant Managers —1924 Donald H. Miller Ernest P. Brosseau Assistant Managers — 1925 - Irving L. Vaughan Joseph Harrison Arthur Favreau Coach Arthur Favreau Coach Hubert W. Dowson Captain Hubert W. Dowson Captain Robert L. Nichols College Champion Letter Men Hubert W. Dowson Theodore W. Slack Paul H. Doleman Eugene R. Banks Lawrence B. Maddison Herman S. Livingstone Tufts 0 Brown 6 Tufts 5 Worcester Polytechnic 1 Tufts 2 Boston University 4 Tufts 6 Clark University 0 Tufts 2 Bowdoin 4 Tufts 6 Boston College 0 Tufts 4 Holy Cross 2 Tufts 3 University of Vermont 3 Tufts 9 c Springfield 4 ; 30 24 Won four; lost four; tied one A f $ $ mm. 1 M V Coach Arthur Favreau pi _ _ V N rU ,y rV ,— v J-: v • a A 1 QTQT-OJ jQJjTat UM pyl O,. CCNT-VA T4 ATO T ' Cf a i QUCAT riT 138 Banks Maddison Nichols Favreau Dowson Doleman Slack Livingstone 1924 TENNIS SQUAD W ITH an entirely new team the Tufts tennis players went through a schedule of nine games, winning four, and tying one. Captain Hubert Dowson was the highest individual winner and his consistent playing was the feature of every match. In doubles, Dowson paired with Slack for the first team and Maddi¬ son and Livingstone made up the second. The college tennis tournament which was run off in 1924, was won by Robert L. Nichols, after a hard battle with the team captain, Hubert W. Dowson. For 1925, the finals are yet to be played. Manager D. H. Miller 139 VARSITY WRESTLING Samuel Ruggieri ' 18 1925 • 1926 Coach Arthur W. Schuster ’25 Manager Ambrose Burton ’26 Manager Parker Small ’26 Captain RESULTS Austin T. Ropes ’26 1925 Captain January 31 Tufts 0 M. I. T. 33 February 5 Tufts 15 Northeastern 18 February 12 Tufts 30 Boston University 5 February 19 Tufts 21 Beverly Y. M. C . A. 6 March ' 7 Tufts 18 84 Northeastern 11 73 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Name Weight No. Matches Score Fall Decision Default Gariepy 115 lbs. 5 10 0 0 2 Covil 125 lbs. 4 5 1 0 0 Ropes 135 lbs. 7 28 5 1 0 Small 145 lbs. 4 10 2 0 0 Baruffaldi 158 lbs. 5 3 0 1 0 Palmer 175 lbs. 4 13 2 1 0 Doolittle 175 lbs. 4 10 2 0 0 Spofford Unlimited 2 5 1 0 0 Capt. Parker Small Coach Samuel Ruggieri 140 MjM CATBE .o book IV. m Ruggieri Pett Doolittle Baruffaldi Covil Small Waldron Palmer Schuster Ropes Gariepy W RESTLING at Tufts is on the incline and the schedule arranged this year was the first formal one for a period of several years. This year it was voted to recognize wrestling as an intercollegiate sport and minor letters are to be awarded from now 7 on. Its popularity under the regular coach, Ruggieri, who is a former Tufts wrestling captain, is great, and it promises to be one of Tufts’ best sports. Manager A. W. Schuster IkWi W A 1924-25 CAPTAINS Wrestling Parker A. Small ’26 North Truro, Mass. Basketball and Tennis Hubert W. Dowson ’26 East Braintree, Mass. Baseball Harold MacDonnell ’25 Roxbury, Mass. Football Evander French ’25 Winchester, Mass. Track Frederic B. Littlefield Somerville, Mass. Leo G. Lyons ’27 142 Leo Lyons, Cheerleader Cheerleader Portland, Maine T HE freshmen eame out on the losing end of every game, including the battle with the Sophomores, but in spite of their losses, the results of the season were a success, for much material for future varsity squads was discovered and developed. On November 12, the freshmen lined up against the sophomores at the Oval, and took their first class defeat , losing the first competition for their flags. Although they were shut out by the sophomores, they put up a game fight. The varsity men on the sophomore team ran wild on their few chances and came through with two touchdowns, winning 13 to 0. Roger Poole OFFICERS Manager Robert A. Marshall ...... Captain Dr. Oliver D. Wescott Coach William A. Thompson Alfred E. IImlah Ralph E. Hanson Clarence T. Gordon Frederick C. Ward John R. Keefe WILLIARD D. NALCHAJIAN Team Earl T. Ball Karl K. Soule John F. Reilly Donald D. Moats W illiam H. Erickson, Jr. George Goldman Harry M. Boyarsky Philip P. Pasqualino Melvin R. Bowker Donald G. Lothrop Fred L. Kennedy Robert A. Marshall Joseph T. Donovan William A. Dane SEASON SCORES Tufts 0 Pomfret 0 Tufts 0 St. James 14 Tufts 2 St. John’s 42 Tufts 0 St. Anselm’s 26 Tufts 0 Dean 20 2 102 INTRA-MURAL SPORTS W INNING all five games of their league, and the final game between the leagues, Delta Upsilon takes possession of the interfraternity basketball trophy for the coming year. In the Brown league, the competition was close between Delta Upsilon and Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon winning at the end of the season by defeating Delta Tau Delta 1(5 to 8. In the Blue league. Delta Phi Sigma won every game until defeated by Zeta Psi. In a play-off, of a tie be¬ tween Delta Phi Sigma and Phi Epsilon Pi, the Sigs won and were the competitors of Delta Upsilon in the finals. The General Score 1923 — Won by Zeta Psi 1924 — Won by Sigma Omega Psi 1925 — Won by Delta Upsilon D ELTA UPSILON is the first winner of the new baseball shield that is to be put in competition each year. The championship must be won three years to keep permanent possession of the large shield, which has been given by the Athletic Association. Two leagues, the Brown and the Blue, are formed as in the other interfraternity sports. Delta Upsilon went through the Brown league an undefeated team, as did Sigma Tau Alpha of the Blue league. 14.5 OFFICERS Arba S. Taylor . . . Manager Howard J. Robison Captain Dirral D. Sample • _ ■ Coach Freshman Team Howard J. Robison C. Proctor Stanley Henry R. Nussbaum Edward T. Abrahams Harry M. Boyarsky Walter A. Weisleder Phillip H. Smith Robert B. Williams Ralph Hanson 1925 SEASON Date School Place Tufts Opponent January 7 Northeastern ' 28 Tufts 50 15 January 10 Boston University ’28 Boston 32 17 January 15 Wentworth Institute Tufts 35 20 January 17 New Bedford Technology Tufts 70 27 January 20 Arlington High School Tufts 50 26 February 7 Phillips Academy Andover 21 36 February 11 M. I. T. ’28 Cambridge 51 42 February 13 Milton Academy Milton 18 16 February 18 St. John’s Prep. Tufts 42 24 February 21 Dean Academy Franklin 47 32 February 27 Worcester xAcademy Worcester 30 41 February 28 Tilton School Tilton, N. H. 42 14 March 7 Cushing Academy Ashburnham 41 30 March 11 Brown ’28 Providence, R.I. 25 30 563 370 Total number of games played 14 Games won 11 140 Games lost 3 Taylor Hanson Weisleder Smith Williams Sample Royarsky Stanley Robison Nussbaum Abrahams 1928 BASKETBALL SQUAD W INNING eleven out of the schedule of fourteen games, the freshman team completed what may be termed a very successful season. A total of 5G3 points were scored in the fourteen games to the opponents’ 379. Coach Sample developed probably the fastest playing and passing freshman quintet ever seen at Tufts. Although the first team worked with the perfection of a machine, there were two players whose work was of exceptional quality. The captain, Robison, who played forward, and Nussbaum a guard, contributed most of the scoring, while Abrahams, another forward, was a close third. Brown freshmen, Andover, and Worcester Academy were the three teams to defeat the freshmen, and each of these contests were won by a margin of one or two points. The freshman offense by far excelled anything seen at Tufts for several years, and the prospects for an excellent varsity next year seem good. 147 WRESTLING OFFICERS Ambrose Burton J M anager Phillip P. Pasqualino ...... m Captain Samuel Ruggieri ’18 . RESULTS 1925 • Coach Date Opponent Tufts Opponent February 28 Andover Academy at Andover 8 20 March 5 Milton Academy at Milton 13 13 March 7 Northeastern University ’28 23 8 44 41 INDIVIDUAL RECORDS Name Weight No. Matches Fall Decision Default T otal Porrazzo, V. B. 115 lb. 3 0 1 0 3 Lawrence, W. E. 125 lb. 1 1 0 0 5 Thorpe, L. S. 125 lb. 2 0 1 0 3 Pierce, W. M. 135 lb. 2 1 0 0 5 Fellows, G. F. 135 lb. 1 0 0 0 0 Pollis, H. L. 145 lb. 3 1 0 0 5 Pasqualino, P. P. 158 lb. 3 1 1 0 8 Hanson, R. E. 175 lb. 3 2 0 0 10 Soule, K. K. Unlimited 1 1 0 0 5 19 7 3 0 44 T HE call for freshmen wrestlers and an open tournament brought out much material and in a few days Coach Ruggieri turned out a team to meet Andover. Experience was lacking in many of the weights but they made a good fight and at least one man scored. From that meet on the interest increased and the freshmen closed their season with a win over the Northeastern yearlings. 148 : S¥k 1 92S JUHBO BOOK s ' IJS ,Ui v I ' V 1 hri ■® T HE Tufts Musical Clubs comprise the singers and instrumentalists who represent the college at public concerts throughout the East. This year there were forty men chosen for the combined clubs. This thirty-ninth season of the clubs was curtailed somewhat by academic difficulties of several members. During the Easter vacation the clubs made a circuit of southern New England. In a normal year thirty to fifty concerts are given, and in 1923, the clubs visited New York and Washington. The reputation of the Musical Clubs has always been that of one of the best in the Northeast, and has helped establish Tufts as the “singing college.” The pro¬ gram is changed entirely every second year, and minor changes are constantly being made. The clubs have a large repertoire, and at concerts generally mix classical with comic and college songs, including as well several readings. The reputation of the clubs has been considerably enhanced in past years by such soloists as “Harry” O’Brien and “Eddie” Burns. This year the solo parts were carried by Leo G. Lyons ’27, George P. Nye ’28, C. G. Newton and P. O. Killam. The activities of the clubs “on the road” are by no means confined to musical and forensic achievements, as will be seen in the increased volumes of sweet-scented mail that burden the college postman after a successful tour. Every year the clubs unearth several veteran home-wreckers, and usually a couple of habitual train- missers are included in the personnel. The Boston Symphony Orchestra has musical scores for several Tufts songs, and on the occasion of the annual “Pops” Night at Symphony Hall, which this year takes place on the night before Class Day, will play the music for the Glee Club’s rendering of several pieces. The direction of the Clubs is yearly in charge of Professor Leo R. Lewis. EXECUTIVE COM MI 7 TEE Leo G. Lyons W. M. Mahon John L. Pearson Pianist —E. J. Wood L. Baruffaldi J ' A. asT , 149 i Cf v I | J g 1 I 4 4 p 3 TUFTS MUSICAL CLUBS OFFICERS Manager John L. Pearson Lawrence Baruffaldi D. A. Waite Prof. J. Louis Keegen John L. Pearson Raymond T. Dawes 1 Gordon L. W ALLS j Prof. Leo Rich Lewis Leo G. Lyons . W ALTER M. MARON . E. F. Goss PERSONNEL GLEE CLUB President Secretary Treasurer Manager Asst. Managers . Musical Director Leader Glee Club Leader Mandolin Club Assistant Leader R. C. Merrill First Tenors C. G. Newton G. P. Nye D. A. Waite G. L. Walls L. Baruffaldi L. R. Clark Second Tenors D. F. Covil A. P. Dingwall E. E. Leavitt A. 0. Ring T. W. Slack M. Haynes C. E. Wyman First Basses P. 0. Killam V. H. Meyer S. 0. Robinson F. J. Sanders J. Sanders J. L. Pearson M. A. Small H. F. Tomfohrde Second Basses F. II. Baker J. H. Neal R. T. Dawes J. J. Finnin L. G. Lyons E. E. Perkins PERSONNEL MANDOLIN CLUB First Violins W. M. Maron A. Richter First Mandolins C.S. Hicks C.E. Smith J.R.Tidyman E.F. Cross Mandola I). F. Fogg Guitars Second Violins F. II. Baker J. J. Resnick C. C. Newton M. Tarlow Viola Cello Clarinet W. C. C uster C. B. Miller L. B. I jINCOLN Third Violin E. T. Hook W. M. Maron Leader Mandolin Club T HE Association has as its purpose the promotion of social life on the Hill. Every year it gives a series of formal dances, which are open to all students of the Hill Schools. President Secretary-Treasurer Francis E. Blanky Ralph C. Weaver Adrl n E. Bessey Joseph Rosselli Bessey Ballard Blaney Rosselli Weaver Converse Beck Baruffakli Brosseau Bourett 1.52 OFFICERS Lawrence Baruffaldi Harold K. Beck 5 MEMBERS Joseph T. Ballard Ernest P. Brosseau Sherman T. Converse Joseph E. Bourett a t ' V ' A ' ' ' . - Kinao book ' k Tr- ? VSKjaa 7i? % ‘A _ A T HE purpose of this Council is to promote good fellowship among the fraternal organizations of the College and regulate all matters of inter-fraternity concern. The membership of this organization is composed of one member from each of the two upper classes in each of the recognized fraternities. The activities of the Council this year have been confined to the preparation and discussion of rushing rules, though no definite action has been taken toward changing the open rushing system. The Council supervises intra-mural sports J. Donald Russell MEMBERSHIP 1924-25 President Victor Nelson . Vice-President Arthur W. Schuster . . . . . Secretary-Treasurer THE COLLEGE GOLF COURSE I X 1923 the college announced its intention of establishing a six-hole golf course for the use of students and faculty members. Construction was begun by college labor and student teams of workers and by the late spring of ’23, the greens and tees were nearly completed. The course was opened in October 1924, Professor Givler driving the first ball. A committee of faculty members and students supervises the greens and lays down the rules of the course. THE COMMITTEE . Chairman Secretary Frank II. Sargent Professor Robert C. Givler Ernest P. Rrokseau . ... Harvey C. Averill .1. Donald Russell T T 7 1 j.‘5 14 BIOLOGY CLUB T HIS organization is not, strictly speaking, a club, but is conducted along the lines of a seminar, having meetings whenever it is deemed advisable — usually every two weeks — at which time topics of general biological interest are presented by members of that department to any and all of those who may be interested. Another year will undoubtedly see a duly organized Biology Club. COSMOS CLUB T HE Cosmos Club is composed of a group of sixteen students of both Tufts and Jackson, who meet frequently during the year for the purpose of discussing and debating matters of national, international, social and political interest. Members of the Club are elected at the end of each year on the basis of scho¬ lastic standing in social science courses and interest shown in the programs of the Club. The officers are: President, Francis Henry Russell ’26; Vice-President, Idylla Florence Gould ’25; Secretary, Doris Herrick Cochrane ’26; Treasurer, Joseph Harrison ’26. The members are: Marion G. Haff ’25, Marjorie B. Gulick ’25, Hertha M. Cordts ’27, Agnes E. Schilt ’25, Margaret L. Smith ’25, Ruth F. Whitten ' 25, George W. Barsky ’27, Lawrence M. Curtis ’25, James E. Nickerson ’27, Clarence A. Roberts ’26, Alexander Sidman ’26, Nathan M. Singerman ’25, Donald M. Thompson ’26. HISTORICAL SOCIETY F ORMED under departmental auspices in November 1924, this organization is in reality interdepartmental in membership. Its aims are three-fold: to supplement history work by presentations of the more basic aspects of . 1 ' ' d 2 1 M f 4 fl j 4 ■j ■■ g c| Vi 154 history; to afford opportunity for presentation of historical topics both by experts and by students; and to popularize, in general, the subject matter of history. The officers for this year are: President, J. Donald Russell; Vice-President, Joseph Harrison; Secretary-Treasurer, Doris Cochrane. LIBERAL CLUB T HE Liberal Club was formed last November for the purpose of organizing the liberal th ought of the students into effectual endeavors. The member¬ ship roll of twenty members includes those students who are interested and active in functions and thought of a liberal kind. The Liberal Club this year conducted a college-wide questionnaire on matters of college interest with a view to determining the opinions of the student body and the faculty on a program for liberalizing college curricula and activities. The officers for the past year were: President, Howard Davis Spoerl ’25; Vice-President, Benjamin Whitesmith ’26; Secretary, Owen Whitman Eames ’25; Treasurer, Francis Henry Russell ’26. THE PIPERS T HIS organization came into existence in the spring of 1922, at the time the course in poetry became a part of the college curriculum, under Professor Albert H. Gilmer, and it has been the aim of The Pipers to stimulate, in the students, an interest in poetry and its creation. The present officers are: President, Carolyn Havner; Vice-President, Bernard Shelley; Secretary-Treasurer, Mary Hall. TUFTCONIC A FTER an intermittent existence covering a period of several years the Mathematics Club was reorganized in 1924, under the name Tuftconic. Members of the club have extended their knowledge of mathematics in its higher form through the presentation of papers at the meetings. The officers for the current year are: President, Gladys M. Spencer ’25; Vice-President, Merrill C. Orswell ' 20; Secretary, Alice H. Stolworthy ’27. CHEMICAL SOCIETY T HE Chemical Society was founded in 1900, and has since worked to further the interests of Chemistry, through the kindness of speakers who have presented papers on topics of interest. The officers are: President, Samuel Weisberg; Vice-President, Ruth Ward; Secretary, Charles Turner; Treasurer, John Roche. E NGINEER ING Societies- ACE THE CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY T UFTS was among the very first colleges in the country to establish an under¬ graduate engineering society. “The Engineering Society of Tufts Col¬ lege” was founded in 1898 and has been in continuous existence since that time. It has as its object the promotion of the interests of Civil Engineering The officers are: President, Maurice N. Winslow; Vice-President, Albert A. Cher- nesky; Secretary, Donald H. Miller; Treasurer, Arland A. Dirlam. A. S. M. E. T HE American Society of Mechanical Engineers is the leading and most influential organization in the world for the promotion of engineering interests, and is represented here by a Student Branch founded in 1917, which ranks highly among the seventy-eight branches in the country. Dean Gardner C. Anthony was the first Honorary Chairman. The officers for the current year are: Honorary Chairman, Prof. C. H. Chase; Chairman, Ernest E. Leavitt ; Vice-Chairman,LeroyM. Jordan; Secretary-Treasurer, Adrian Bessey. THE RADIO SOCIETY T HE Radio Society was first founded in 1911, and re-organized in 1922, with the purpose of maintaining an adequate experimental station in the endeavor to promote the interests of radio telegraph and telephone engin¬ eering. The officers are: President, James F. Archibald; Vice-President, Allan D. MacLeod; Secretary-Treasurer, Leroy M. Jordan. Nichols Roberts Nickerson Russell VARSITY DEBATERS T HE first debate of the year was held at Brunswick, on December 12, 1924. Tufts, supporting the affirmative, lost the decision to Bowdoin on the fol¬ lowing question: Resolved, That the adoption of the provisions in the Immigration Act of 1924, for the exclusion of the Japanese, was the best policy. On March 12, 1925, Tufts, on the negative, won a unanimous decision over Middlebury College. The question, debated at Tufts, was: Resolved, That Con¬ gress should have the power to pass a measure over the veto of the Supreme Court by a two-thirds vote. The members of the team for the current year are: Francis II. Russell ' 26, James E. Nickerson ’27, and Clarence A. Roberts ' 26, with Robert L. Nichols ' 26, and Alexander Sidman ’26, as alternates. I N the spring of 1924, a group of Ivy members and students particularly inter¬ ested, conducted a drive for funds, which was successful enough to permit the foundation of a Tufts Union, with a room in Curtis Hall as the student center. The present Union is far too small for the college needs, and another drive was undertaken this spring, with the aim of building it further. The eventual aim of the Union is a building of its own, usable as a college social and recreational center, which would be used by both men and women, and would have a common audi¬ torium for dramatic productions. THE BOARD David M. Cheney . Nathan M. Singerman Dana P. Fogg, Jr. Raymond L. Wilson OF GOVERNORS Faculty Advisor Chairman and Student Secretary Arba S. Tay lor Maurice N. Winslow Mr. David M. Cheney THE JUMBO BOOK STAFF THE JUMBO BOOK STAFF Editor-in-chief Raymond L. Wilson Associate Editor Dana P. Fogg, Jr. Photographic Editors Ernest P. Brosseau Margaret S. Holmes Art Editor J. Donald Russell Art work contributed by E. S. Smith Jr., Helen M. Newhall, N. L. Cobb, Marion Hesse, Maxine Melson, Ruth Dowd, T. Yamaguchi, M. McCabe, R. LeFaveur, Mark Robinson, and A. A. Dirlam Quotations Committee Lawrence M. Curtis Carolyn Havner W. Chester Haley Business Manager Donald H. Miller Advertising Manager Lawrence R. Clarke Assistants to the Advertising Manager: Harold E. Beck, Armand J. Gariepy, Sherman T. Converse Circulation Manager Maurice N. Winslow Assistants to the Circulation Manager Joseph Harrison Harold R. Congdon Lorimer M. Schmidt Activities Photos by Prof. M. S. Munro This book is being entered in the National Art Crafts Guild contest, the winner of which will be announced in the fall. 161 T HE Tufts Weekly is the official student news publication, published every Wednesday during the college year by students. Freshmen compete for positions on the News staff, and later rise by promotion to editorships. The paper is, besides a news bulletin for hill activities, a medium for the expression of student opinion. Some of the notable movements of the past two years in which the Weekly has had a part are the formation of a student union, the creation of a democratic student government, and the abolition of rigid freshman rules. The present board of editors of the Weekly comprises: Editor — Raymond L. Wilson ’25 Managing Editor — Francis H. Russell ’26 Sporting Editor — Robert W. Rounds ’27 Sport Staff H. J. Jeffress ’25 I. L. Vaughan ’25 G. S. Goss ’27 News Editors L. M. Dawson ’27 D. L. Hertz ’27 Jackson Editor — Marion Haff ’25 News Staff A. S. Laurie ’25 L. S. Kidd ’26 S. M. Kasdan ’26 Mary S. Hall ’26 J. Harrison ’26 C. M. Wright ’28 J. A. Holmes ’28 Art Staff J. D. Russell ’25 A. Sidman ’26 Business Manager — Charles E. Exley ’26 Assistant Advertising Managers W. S. Thomas ’27 W. J. Nichols ’26 Circulation Manager — Joseph A. Leonard ’26 162 TUFTS WEEKLY STAFF The Weekly is officially managed by the Tufts Publishing Association, the officers of which are: President, J. Donald Russell ' 25; Vice-President, C. J. Oden- weller III ' 26; Secretary, Howard D. Spoerl ’25; Charles H. Gray ’25, Frank H. Sargent ' 25, J. Louis Keegan, Joseph T. Ballard ’25, Joseph J. Harrison ' 26. Students who serve on the editorial staff of the Weekly for three years are voted a watch charm in recognition of their work. THE IVY BOOK P RACTICALLY every college publishes annually a hand-bookof information about the activities, rules and customs of the college, which it calls by various names, usually designating it unofficially as the “freshman bible.” Tufts prints such a book in the Ivy Hook. The Ivy society takes this work as one of its tasks, and delegates a board of three editors to handle it. This year the editing was done by Raymond L. Wilson, as editor, assisted by Dana P. Fogg, Jr. The business management of the book was handled by Donald H. Miller. s JunBO ' Book ' 163 T HE year 1921, and the month September, of that year, will be recalled with sad musings as the time when nearly two-hundred naive individuals, dwelling in nearly as many parts of the Northeast and New England, severed (temporarily in some cases) the old home ties, took a farewell look at the old oaken bucket, kissed the only girl good-by, murmuring meanwhile certain tritisms about “coming back unchanged,” and looked carefully to the safety-pins fastening the pants pocket. A week later, heads still slightly over-size and ringing with the golden prophe¬ cies of School Superintendents from Attleboro to Zoar, the same two hundred were subjected to a process of reduction from 7% size to 6) or less, by contact with the subtle alchemy of sophomore rules and methods. But the supersize sky-pieces were carefully embalmed in moth balls, for use in the senior year, and the business of being a collegian began in earnest. The second year began unauspiciously, but the arrival of Armistice day found Portlun’s carnival crowds augmented by several hundred Tufts cohorts. Again they returned with a heart-breaking defeat, but one and all “saw the sights,” and rocked the boat. The year ended in a blaze of glory and a wild hullabaloo in staid old Boston, for the consecutive victories over Holy Cross and Harvard at the end of the baseball season required celebrating in fit and lively fashion. Exalted to the ranking of juniors, though slightly decimated in numbers, the class of ’25 crept on, and lived up to the true junior tradition by celebrating its festive week-end under umbrellas. That year the unprecedented number of eight persons attended the Ivy Oration. The orator was too startled to speak, but his remarks were published later serially, in the Boston newspapers, and nobody missed them. The class established itself as a candidate for the Tufts Hall of Fame, by voting to publish a Jumbo Book, and abolishing the Junior Day cap. The latter good deed was cancelled later when the class decreed canes for Junior Day, and the evil results of the former appear now for your perusal. 1G4 105 0 0 l “R. U. R.” Prof. A. H. Gilmer Karel Kapek’s futuristic melodrama, “R. U. R.,” was given in December 1923, by Three P’s, its first production in Boston. The presentation was marked by the artistic finish of the speaking parts and the vividness of the stage effects, which were a large part of the production. “ROMEO AND JULIET” One of the outstanding amateur productions of last year in Boston, according to press comments, was the Masque’s production of “Romeo and Juliet.” The production was the creation of many, since no phase of it was neglected or over- stressed. The picturesque imaginativeness of the scenes, splendid costuming, and the remarkably effective lighting, were as much a part of the success of the tragedy as was the brilliant performance of the cast, especially Miss Havner and Mr. Brocco in the leading roles. Miss Havner’s portrayal of “Juliet” was a work of amateur art comparable to the professional achievements of more experienced talent, and Mr. Brocco’s “Romeo” was a thoroughly satisfactory companion for “Juliet.” U 1G8 “CHILDREN OF THE MOON” The first production of the current year was Martin Flavin ' s “Children of the Moon,” which, while not the remarkable production that “R. U. R.” and “Romeo and Juliet” were, maintained the standard of Tufts dramatics. This play was given under the direction of the Masque Society of Jackson. Miss Frances Austin ’26, took the leading part, that of the granddaughter under the spell of moon-madness, in a manner that bodes well for her success in forthcoming productions. Owen W. Eames played the companion part in his usual able manner. The play brought to light some new talent in Mr. Orazio E. Vacarro ’27, as the old man, and Mr. Orrin McCorkle as the pompous family physician. “Children of the Moon” was not epochal, but held up the standard. Others participating in this production were Marguerite G. Pearman ’26, M. Wilma Koelsch ’25, J. W. Reddie ’27, and B. R, Mills, ’28. Mrs. A. H. Gilmer 1G9 FOUR ONE-ACT PLAYS On February 19th, the Three P’s Society initiated a new policy in Hill dramatics by presenting a quartet of one-act plays, using in the casts only players with no pre¬ vious record in Tufts dramatics. The playlets chosen were Eugene O’Neil’s “In the Zone,’’ Alice Gerstenberg’s “The Pot-Boiler,” “Illuminati in Drama Libre,” and Lord Dunsany’s “Glittering Gate.” Prof. Courtney Bruerton This program called for some staging ingenuity and enlarged interest in the work of the dramatic department, by drawing upon hitherto unused talent. Several of the actors in these produc¬ tions revealed potentialities which should carry them into larger work of the societies later. The policy may be continued, and each- year see the experiment repeated. In the spring, three plays were given at the Jackson Gymnasium, which were entirely the products of Tufts undergraduate endeavor. Two one-act plays by L. M. Dawson, and a third by R. B. Williams, coached and staged by the authors and student assistants, were successfully presented. FROM “IN THE ZONE” “THE HAIRY APE” On May 1st, Pen, Paint, and Pretzels gave its main production of the year, O ' Neil ' s “The Hairy Ape, with Nathan Share taking the major part of Robert “Yank” Smith. The part of “Long” was taken by R. B. Williams, “Paddy” by O. C. Vaccaro, and the I. W. W. secretary by H. J. Cohen. The second engineer was played by Robert Nichols. “The Hairy Ape” offered another challenge to those Prof. Leo It. Lewis concerned with problems of staging, and the response was good. With the limitations of the Jackson gym always before them, the stage managers of this production carried through their work to complete success. The Masque’s main production of the year was “Mithridates,” or rather a translation of the famous French play. It was remarkable in that it was the first play to be given in very recent years at Tufts which was so thoroughly a Tufts play that it practically came from the pen of a Tufts student. “Mithridates” was translated for staging here by H. I). Spoerl. Up to the time that this volume went to press, the east had not been entirely selected. This production was under the direction of Professor Leo R. Lewis. Others on the coaching staff besides Professors Gilmer and Lewis, are Mrs. A. H. Gilmer, Professor Courtney Bruerton, and Professor Frank C. Weaver. FROM “It. U. It.” 171 • T HE annual Commencement week attracts thousands of visitors to the Hill yearly, as it is made the occasion for the reunion of Tufts graduate classes, as well as the final social week and formal graduation of seniors. Class Day, following last examinations and the “Pop” concert, is featured by last chapel exercises, spreads, Tree Exercises, and dancing in the evening. All classes partici¬ pate. Alumni Day features alumni meetings and dinners, and the last baseball game of the season at the Oval. The Baccalaureate sermon is given Sunday in the chapel, followed Monday by formal graduation exercises in the tent. The last adieu to the Hill is said by seniors at the Promenade on Monday night, June 15th. 172 I ♦ f 173 JACKSON JUNIOR CLASS JflBO BOOK Kasdan Hettinger Cutler Austin Hesse Riordan 1926 OFFICERS Frances Austin ..... President Catherine Riordan .... Vice-President Dorothy Hettinger .... Secretary Ruth Cutler ..... Treasurer Sylvia Kasdan ..... Marshal Marian Hesse ..... . Historian Colors — Yellow and White i 175 SIX BABIES soft music please i!t « fw ) 6 4 ■ .......... “ ' I ' “ Wv- A« «.v. A yp y «•« ' . ««• • V“ ■ -H W y y . Y ic y- W y • c c wyvS U • 1 ' v •• } ROOTERS WHY? FROSTY A PASTORAL 1DYLA 1 I J ■HBHnmnp 1 j |£Mf| kJ j 1 l ' si ' ' K ” vJ‘ ' J LKppP Jn|lEj iflT ' 170 KATHARINE GRIGGS ATWOOD “Kay. Springfield, Mass. B.S. in Chemistry Central High School. Glee Club (1); Chemical Society (3). FRANCES JOSEPHINE AUSTIN, X O “Fran.” Portland, Maine B.S. in English Westbrook Seminary. Class President (3); Student Council (3); Secretary, Masque (3); “Children of theMoon”(3); Sophomore Class Play (2); Goddard Prize Reading (2); Class Historian (1); Goddard Prize Reading (1). HELEN MARION BARNES, A O n A. It. in English Saugus, Mass. Saugus High School, Bradford Academy. Class Hockey (2), (3). ROSELYN ORA BRAY, X K “Rosie.” Gloucester, Mass. A.B. in English Gloucester High School. Baseball (l); Hockey (2), (3); Captain Basketball (2); Treasurer All Around Club (3); Jackson Day Committee (2). ALICIA RUTH BREEN “Tish.” Boston, Mass. A. B. Girl ' s Latin School. Class Hockey (2), (3); Class Basketball (1), (2). CAROLYN LOUISE BREEN, AOn “Car.” Winchester, Mass. B. S. in Chemistry Winchester High School, Wellesley College. Glee Club (3); Chemical Society (3). OLIVE ABBOTT BYRNE, AOn “Bobby.” New York, N. Y. B.S. in English Mount St. Joseph Academy. Weekly Staff (1); Class Basketball (1); Chairman Social Committee (l), (2), (3); Assistant Manager Basketball (2); Glee Club (1), (2); ( ' lass Play (2); Liberal Club; Junior Prom; Asst. Mgr. Basketball (3). LORETTA LIVERMORE COOK, A Z A “Retta.” Springfield, Mass. B.S. in English Central High School, Springfield Junior College. Class Hockey (1), (2); Glee Club (l); Class Play (2); Mathematics Club (2). ALSACE MIONE CROSBIE “Allie.” Peoria, Ill. A. B. in Biology, S.T.B. Peoria High School. Packard Club (1), (2), (3), Treasurer (2); Class Executive Commit¬ tee (1), (2), (3); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (1); Jumbo Book Circulation Committee. RUTH ALCHORN CUTLER, AZA B. S. in English Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School. Class Treasurer (1), (2), (3); Class Play (2). HAZEL WITIIERELL DAMON, X Q “Dee.” Rockland, Mass. A. B. in Economics Rockland, Mass. Rockland High School. Student Council (1) , (2); Class Hockey (3). IDA RAE ESNER Medford Hillside, Mass. B. S. in English Goddard Seminary. Class Hockey (l); Class Basketball (l); Class Play (l), (2); Freshman Poster (1); Toastmistress Class Banquet (2); Goddard Prize Readings (2); Masque (3); The Pipers (3). RUTH MARIAN FIELD, A OH “Bric.” Holbrook, Mass. B.S. in History Thayer Academy. Glee Club (l), (2), (3); Varsity Basketball (1); Class Dramatic Committee (1), (2), (3); Class Basketball (2) ; Class Hockey (2), (3). MARION TUTTLE FROST, X K B.S. in English Chelsea, Mass. Chelsea High School. Glee Club (1); Stringed Octette (1); Freshman Poster (1); The Pipers (2), (3); Historical Society (3); Class Play (2); Chairman Freshman Music Committee (3). MARY SELLERS HALL, A Oil B.S. in English Longmeadow, Mass. Springfield Technical High School. Weekly Staff (l), (2), (3); Masque (3); The Pipers (2); Secretary-Treasurer (3); Assistant Manager Basketball (2). MARIAN JULIET HESSE, XQ A. B. in English Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School. Class Hockey (l); Treasurer I.C.S.A. (2); Vice-President, Y.W.C.A. (3); Class Historian (2), (3); Masque Class Play (2); Art Staff, Jumbo Book (3); Publicity Committee (2); Class Dramatic Committee (2); Class Social Committee (2), (3). DOROTHY WEBSTER HETTINGER, A O n “Dot IIet.” Belmont, Mass. B. S. in English Middlebury and Northampton High Schools. Class Secretary (l), (2), (3); Secretary A. A. (2); Vice-President All Around Club (3); Junior Pan-Hellenic Delegate (3). ELIZABETH NOYES INGALLS “Betty.” Gloucester, Mass. B.S. in Chemistry. Gloucester High School. Properties, Jackson Day Play (2); Tuftconic (2), (3); Glee Club (3); Chemical Society (3). 177 GERTRUDE MAE JOHNSON, ASA “Trudie.” Brockton, Mass. A. B. in French Brockton High School. Tuftconic (3); Glee Club (1), (3). PAULINE ALOHA JOHNSON, A O n “Polly.” Auburndale, Mass. B. S. in English Newton High School. Hockey (l), (2); Basketball (2); Class Play (2). THELMA ANNA JONES B.S. in English Falmouth Foreside, Maine Somerville High School. Class Play (2). SYLVIA MAUDE KASDAN, ASA “Syl.” Belmar, N. J. A.B. in French Asbury Park High School. Class Marshal (2) , (3); Varsity Basketball (1), (2), (3); Class Basketball (1); Captain Class Hockey (l ), (2); A.A. Board (1), (3); Vice-President A. A. (3); Varsity Hockey Squad (l); Class Play (2); Masque (3). MILDRED LOUISE H. LENTH, 2 IC “Millie.” East Boston, Mass. B. S. in Biology Girl’s Latin School. EVELYN BANCROFT MARSTON, 2 K “Webbie.” West Medford, Mass. A.B. in English Medford High School. Tuftconic; Social Committee; All Around Club (3); Circula¬ tion Committee Jumbo Book; Assistant Manager Hockey (2); Pan-Hellenic Council. LORA MERCHANT, XQ “Dinky.” Gloucester, Mass. A. B. in Economics Gloucester High School. Class Basketball (l), (2); Pan-Hellenic Council (3). EDITH CHOATE NELSON “Teddy.” Gloucester, Mass. A.B. in English Gloucester High School. Glee Club (1). ADELAIDE LOUISE OSTHUES “Buster,” “Ad.” Medford, Mass. A. B. in French and Latin Medford High School. Glee Club (2). MARY ELIZABETH O’SULLIVAN B. S. in Pre-Medical West Medford, Mass. Colby Academy, Massachusetts College of P harmacy. Liberal Club (3); Hockey (2), (3) . MARY ETTA POLK, ASA “Ettie.” Wollaston, Mass. A.B. in History Woodward Institute. Treasurer of class ( 1 ), ( 2 ). ELEANOR PRESCOTT, A O n “Scotty.” Braintree, Mass. A.B. in English Thayer Academy. Glee Club (1), (2), (3); Chairman of Dramatics (1), (2), (3); I.C.S.A. Representative (2); “The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife” (2); Chairman, Y.W.C.A. Program Committee (2); Secre¬ tary I.C.S.A. (3); Y.W.C.A. Cabinet (3). CATHERINE ELIZABETH RIORDAN, ASA “Kay.” Worcester, Mass. A. B. Ascension High School. Vice-President Class (3); Hockey (1), (3); Glee Club (1), (2), (3). DORIS HELEN RIPLEY, ASA “Dot.” Andover, Maine B. S. Andover High School, Westbrook Seminary. ELIZABETH AGNES RYAN “Bessie.” Braintree, Mass. A. B. in Latin Braintree High School. Class Basketball (1) ; Varsity Basketball (l), (2), (3); Class Play (2); Hockey (2), (3). MADELINE ADA SNOW, A O n “Mad.” Dorchester, Mass. B. S. in Biology Girl’s Latin School. Class Dramatic Com¬ mittee. GEORGIANA JOSEPHINE vonTORNOW “George.” New York, N. Y. A.B. in English Virginia Junior College, Defiance College. Masque (3); Assistant Manager Glee Club (2) , (3); Liberal Club (3); Publicity Com¬ mittee Y.W.C.A. (3); Goddard Prize Read¬ ings (2), (3); Class Hockey (3). LILLIAN ALMA WATSON “Lil.” Woolwich, Maine A. B. Morse High School. Class Hockey (2), (3); Class Basketball (l), (2); Varsity Basket¬ ball (2). MARY CLARA WARMBIER “Mayr.” Meriden, Conn. B. S. in Biology Meriden High School. Hockey (1); Class Basketball (1), (2), (3); Class Hockey (1), (2), (3); Glee Club (1), (2); Jackson Day Play (2); Student Council (3); Captain Class Hockey (3); Junior Elector I.C.S.A. (3). VIVIAN ADELIA WIGHT, A O II “Viv.” Bethel, Maine Gould’s Academy. Hockey (3); Social Committee (3). EDITH LILLIAN WOLPER “E” Brookline, Mass. B.S. Brookline High School. 178 179 18 Q JACKSON SOPHOMORES un o BOOK 90iM7av_ 4 i ' jiuil Arnold Tracy Pettigrew Ramsdell Cordts Pope 1927 OFFICERS Virginia Ramsdell Margaret Pettigrew Margaret Arnold Mary Etta Pope Hertha Cordts Marguerite Tracy President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Marshal . Historian Colors — (Ireen and liite 181 CLASS ROLL GRACE MARION ANDERSON, ASA “Gracie” A. ?. in French Medford, Mass. Medford High School MARGARET CAIN ARNOLD, A O II “Peggy” A.B. in English Braintree, Mass. Braintree High School MARGUERITE GENEVIEVE BOWSER “Gene” A. B. Arlington, Mass. Somerville High School HELEN LOUISE BRACKETT, A E A .4.2?. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Jamaica Plain High School A LYME R LOUISE COGSWELL B. S. Worcester, Mass. High School of Commerce HELEN BRIGHAM COOK “Cookie” A. B. in French Townsend, Mass. Townsend High School HERTHA MARGARETTE CORDTS, 2Iv B. S. in French Toms River, N. J. Balboa High School, Canal Zone; Medway High School HELEN MARY DANIELEWICZ, 2 K “Danny” .4.2?. in Mathematics Bridgeport, Conn. Bridgeport High School LILLIAN MAY DOLE, X Q “Bill” A. B. in Latin West Medford, Mass. Somerville High School PERSIS MAE DOLLOFF “Sis” B. S. in Biology Arlington, Mass. Arlington High School RUTH BERNARDINE DOWD “Bubbles” .4.2?. in Latin Boston, Mass. Girl’s Latin School EDITH MAY DOWLING “Ede” B.S. in Biology Holyoke, Mass. Holyoke High School VERA ROSE FLUKE B.S. Meriden, Conn. Meriden High School SYLVIA LILLIAN GERRISH “Sil” A.B. in French Stoneham, Mass. Stoneham High School REGINA SOPHIE GRENIER, 2 K “Reggie” A. B. in History Cambridge, Mass. Marycliff Academy, Cambridge Latin School HELEN MABELLE HARDING, 2 K B. S. in History Medway, Mass. Medway High School, Dean Academy MARGARET HAUCK, XQ “Peggy” A. B. in English New York, N. Y. Evander Childs High School DOROTHY KEITH HUDSON, XQ “Dot” B. S. in English Swampscott, Mass. Swampscott High School MARION JANET HURLEY, X Q A. B. in French Rockland, Mass. Rockland High School DORIS RUTH HUTCHINSON, 2 K “Dot” B. S. in Chemistry Lexington, Mass. Lexington High School 182 BERNICE DREW INGALLS, SK “Bunny” A. B. in English Berlin, N. II. Berlin High School VIVIAN ELVA KNIGHT “Viv” A.B. in English Dover, N. H. Dover High School ELLEN LA I HO A.B. in French Fitchburg, Mass. Fitchburg High School MIRIAM LOWE “Mim” A. B. in English Methuen, Mass. Methuen High School EDITH MARIE McCarthy “Edith Marie” B. S. in Chemistry Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School HENRIETTA LOETTA McKENNEY “Dollie” B.S. in Chemistry Medford Hillside, Mass. Everett High School LOUISA LEMPRIERE MURRAY, S K A. B. in History North Andover, Mass. Johnson High School ELEANOR HOVEY PATTERSON, 2 K “Pat” B. S. in English Arlington, Mass. Detroit Northern High School MARGARET ALICE PETTIGREW, A Oil “Peggy” A. B. in Biology Newton Center, Mass. Newton High School, Colby Academy CATHERINE VIRGINIA PRICE, XQ “ Kay ” B. S. in History Winchester. Mass. Winchester High School ANNA QUINT B.S. in History New York, N. Y. Wadleigh High School, Robert Louis Stevenson School VIRGINIA LEE RAMSDELL, 2 K “Jince” A. B. in Mathematics Andover, Mass. Punchard High School DORIS LORETTA RIGGS, AOn “Dot” B. S. in English Essex, Mass. Essex High School, Salem Normal School ESTHER MARIE ROESCH “Es” B.S. in Chemistry North Andover, Mass. Johnson High School MARY BULLARD SAUNDERS, ASA “Mary” A.B. in History Brookline, Mass. Brookline High School, Lasell Seminary PAULINE SCHONA SHAYEVITZ “Paul” A.B. in German Waterbury, Conn. Crosby High School ALICE HAZEL STOLWORTHY, 2 K “Al” A. B. in Mathematics Plainville, Mass. Plainville High School MARGUERITE HARRIET TRACY “Marge” B. S. in English Taunton, Mass. Taunton High School RUTH ADELAIDE WILKINSON A.B. in English and Latin North Andover, Mass. Johnson High School MAE TYSON WRIGHT “Mittie” A.B. in History Baltimore, Md. Cushing Academy OLGA YOLANDA YELINEK A.B. Somerville, Mass. Somerville High School 18. ' $ 184 FAMILIAR Dem R c md ” ' Uad( ' ' Ho, mo wait. WmSm rf Of te TMjk for askm 185 186 JACKSON FRESHMEN McCoy Sheafe Ransom Page Danielewicz B ooth 1928 OFFICERS Barbara Page ....... Mary Ransom ...... Ethel Booth ....... Isabel Sheafe ....... Stasia Danielewicz ...... IjENa McCoy ....... Colors — Purple and White . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer M arshal . Hi storian 187 CLASS ROLL MARY ALTHEA ANDREW, “Al” A Oil ESTHER ARONSON . LOUISE ESTELLE AUSTIN, “Lou” XQ SERENA BALDUS, XQ. HELYN BERTIL BARRETT .... CONSTANCE BOODY, “Connie” XQ . ETHEL MAY BOOTH X Q . FLORENCE LEWIS BYRD, “Bobby” . VIRGINIA CALL, “Gin” 2 K ALICE COOPER, “Sammy” XQ . EDITH MAY COVIL, A 3 A . STASIA ELIZABETH DANIELEWICZ, “Sta” PAULINE WEBSTER FRANKLIN, “Polly” . LYDIA FLORENCE GLIDDEN A O II . LILA GINSBERG, “Lil”. MARION AUSTIN GREEN 2 K . EDYTHE GROSSMAN, “E” . GRACE MAY HAVEY, “Gay” 2K CATHERINE HAZEL HAWKES, “Tattie” . PAULA DOROTHY HEALD, “Sonny” . DOROTHY HOLDEN .... MARTHA HOOD, A O II MARION OLIVE HOWE, “Peggy” ASA MABEL GARCIDE HOYLE .... JOSEPHINE LOUISE HULL, “Lou” ASA LEMPI ELINA HUKARI, “Lee” . HARRIET GROVER INGALLS AINA S. JOHANSON, “Hiney” LILLIAN HELENE KAREILITZ, “Patsy” MARGARET MATHILDE KLUMPP, “Marge” RUTH CHANDLER LADD, “Laddy” ASA RUTH ELEANOR LINDERHOLM X Q GERTRUDE EVELYN LINK, “Trudy” 2 K HELEN SUTPHIN LUCAS, X Q ELIZABETH MADDISON, “Betty” XQ FAITH EDITH MARDEN .... ALICE LAURA MASON, “Al” MAXINE FREDRICA MELSON, “Max” AOl LENA HARRIETTE McCOY .... HELEN GERTRUDE MURRAY . BARBARA WHITE PAGE, “Bob” XQ THEDA OLIVE PAGE, “Teddy” XQ ANTOINETTE FULVIA PERILLO BEATRICE LILLIAN POOL, “Rea” ASA . LUCILE EMILY POWERS .... DOROTHY MAE RANGER, “Dot” MARY RANSOM, X Q. ELINOR PRESSON RICHARDSON 2 K ELEANOR WELD RICKARD, “Rickie” AOI HELEN BEATRICE SCHIFFENHAUS . HELEN BARBARA SCHNECK, “Schneckums” ISABEL AMELIA SHEAFE, “Ibbie” XQ . Ayer, Mass. Salem, Mass. Portland, Me. Dover, N. J. Fall River, Mass. Hyannis, Mass. Wethersfield, Conn. Norfolk, Va. Lewiston, Me. Schenectady, N. Y. Wilkinsburg, Penn. 2 Iv . . . Bridgeport, Conn. Greenfield, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. .... Hanover, N. H. Asbury Park, N. J. Everett, Mass. East Windsor, Conn. Somerville, Mass. Fall River, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Orange, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. . Berlin, N. H. Fitchburg, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. ASA New York, N. Y. Barre, Vt. Belmont, Mass. Old Lyme, Conn. Brookline, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Georgetown, Mass. North Andover, Mass. fl.New York, N. Y. . . . . North Attleboro, Mass. North Attleboro, Mass. , Woodsville, N. H. Woodsville, N. H. Waterbury, Conn. Roslindale, Mass. Woodstock, Vt. Somerville, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. I .... Franklin, Mass. Newark, N. J. Greenfield, Mass. Hackensack, N. J. 188 MURIEL SIMONSON, “Mac” SK LEAH SISSON, “Lee”. EDNA GERTRUDS SMITH .... ELIZABETH LOl ' ISE SNEIDER, “Betty” ELIZABETH CRAWFORD SONIER, “Betty” GERTRUDE STEINMANN, “Gert” DOROTHY LOUISE STONE, “Dot” ETHEL GRACE VanSTONE .... MARY AURORA SYLVIA, “Rory”. AENEAS CAROLINE TRANFAGLIA, “Venus” Medford, Mass Boston, Mass- Harrisburg, Penn- Asbury Park, N. J- . Medford, Mass- Concord Junction, Mass. Billerica, Mass. Bridgeport, Conn. Providence, R. I. Revere, Mass. r m THE JUMBO ART DESIGNS ART motifs in the opening section of this book, and the border design on every page, are taken from architectural features of several campus buildings. The view eastward from the Rez inspired the fly-leaf design, the Chem lab contributed the title page and frontispiece, and the dedication panels are similarly derived. The design of the staff page will be found in the doorway to Eaton library, while the two lions of our title page may be noted staring across the quadrangle from the steps of Barnum. The rest of the title page motif is from Miner Hall, while the border is taken from the Library cornice and the Senior panel obviously represents the chapel tower. The aim throughout has been to make this book a Tufts book. 189 THE FOOTBALL DANCE T HE close of the football season every fall is celebrated by the college at a dance in the gym. Decorations for the occasion are particularly timely, the football motif predominating. Tower Cross Society sponsors this affair. The notable feature of the Tower Cross dance is the election of captain and manager of the next year’s team. THE BASKETBALL DANCE S IMILAR to the Tower Cross football dance, have been the Ivy basketball dances. During the season, several games are followed by informal dancing, and the wind-up of the basketball year is celebrated at a dance, managed by the Ivy society. At this time officers of the next team are selected. JUNIOR DAY THE COMMITTEE Edmund V. Watson, Chairman Ambrose Burton James F. Folsom Wilfred G. McKinney Area S. Taylor T HE day of all days for Juniors, occurs in early May, when the Junior Prom precedes a day of color and activity on the campus. The Prom, for which the gym is extensively decorated, with unusual lighting effects, is followed on Saturday by a program of events of interest to all classes. The underclass song contests, Ivy Oration, a tennis match, fraternity spreads, Horribles’ parade, baseball game and a play in the evening comprise the day’s features. JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE Harry E. Rice, Jr., Chairman Frances J. Austin Olive A. Byrne Addison P. Dingwall Doris H. Ripley C. Frank Thomas 191 T EN straight wins in two years tells the story of Jackson Varsity Basketball. This year, seasoned players have been developed by expert coaching into a fast team excelling any previously produced. The 45-5 score resulting from a practice game with the Boston City Club augured well for the 1925 season. The opening game at Wheaton gave only a hint of the smooth team-work and brilliant playing which showed itself when Brown was severely trimmed at the Goddard Gymnasium, and which reached its apex when the Radcliffe sextette, victors over Posse and B. S. P. E., came out on the tail end of a 31-22 score. VARSITY BASKETBALL SQUAD Mildred Ward ’25 Margaret Holmes ’25. Louise Sewall . Kathleen Haff ’25 Alice Harrington ’25 Wilma Koelscii ’25 Evelina Martin ’25 Helen Newhall ’25 Agnes Schilt ’25 Ruth Ward ’25 Sylvia Kasdan ’26 Elizabeth Ryan ’26 Margaret Arnold ’27 Captain Manager Coach Regina Grenier ’27 Vera Tovey ’27 Stasia Danielewicz ’28 Josephine Hull ’28 Frances Rooks ’28 Jackson Jackson Jackson 32 43 31 Wheaton 26 Brown 5 Radcliffe 32 Captain “Milly” Ward 192 Kasdan M. Ward R. Ward Newhall Koelsch Schilt Martin VARSITY TEAM OF 1925 CLASS BASKETBALL C LASS basketball teams are supported, and they stage the battles for the class championship. At these contests the varsity players learn how it feels to be a spectator, and provide the heavy voeal support. The Cham¬ pionship wrested by 1925 from 1922, was held by 1925 in 1922 and 1923. In 1924 the title was won by 1927. HOCKEY TT V OCKEY, for the past two seasons, has not been a varsity sport, but it has I I been kept vigorously alive through the inter-class hockey games. This year, with a Hookey field and with the splendid coaches secured through the A. A., class teams of an unusual calibre have been developed. It is prophesied that next year, the combination of expert coaching, promising material and an improved field, will result in a Jackson Varsity Hockey Team. In the interclass games the seniors beat the juniors 1-0. The freshmen fought the Sophomores to a scoreless tie, which necessitated a second game in which the freshmen won a 2-1 victory. The survivors, the seniors and the freshmen, failed to determine the winner when, by a last minute goal, the freshmen made the score 1-1. Owing to weather conditions the decisive game has been postponed. 19:3 STUDENT GOVERNMENT I N the spring of 1924 the Student Government of Jackson College was reorganized. At this time the rules and regulations were overhauled and modified, the idea being to give more freedom and added individual responsibility, on a basis of scholastic standing. Heretofore privileges were given entirely according to classes, now the scale varies also with the individual’s scholastic rating. The change is popular with the student body and seems to be working its way to success. The object of this organization is to encourage self-control, responsibility, and loyalty, in the student body. OFFICERS Helen Rose ’25 . Ruth Ward ’25 . Virginia Ramsdell ’27. President Vice-President Secretary Eleanor Crosby Evelyn Haven Carolyn Havner Regina Hederman TEE COUNCIL 1925 Margaret Holmes Evelyn Johnston Helen Newhall Helen Rose Ruth Ward 1926 Frances Austin Mary Wambier Laura Smith Hertha Cordts 1927 Virginia Ramsdell Austin Holmes Smith Crosby Hederman Wambier Haven Havner R. Ward Rose Newhall Johnston STUDENT GOVERNMENT JACKSON GLEE CLUB E. L. Austin S. G. Baldus C. Boody E. M. Booth C. S. Brun H. B. Cook H. B. B ARRETT E. V. Patterson H. L. Brackett C. E. Riordan Leader — Margaret Holmes Sopranos D. M. Cragin L. M. Dale P. M. Doli .OFF H. Lucas L. F. Glidden M. A. Grun E. G. M. G. Hoyle H. G. Ingalls M. Lowe E. Maddison H. G. Murray ' M. A. Pettigrew .’an Stone Second Sopranos M. D. Howe M. M. Klumpp B. L. Poole M. Ransom E. C. Sonier Altos E. M. C ovill M. S. Holmes I). H. Ripley S. D. Stone W. Prescott D. M. Ranger E. W. Rickard H. B. Schneck M. A. Sylvia A. C. Tranfaglia F. E. Marden E. P. Richardson V. L. Ramsdell C. J. von Toiinow 19 5 V O- T HE Jackson dramatic society. The Masque, had its origin in December 1915, under the sponsorship of Professor Albert Hatton Gilmer. Its purpose is to foster dramatics and increase efficiency in amateur dramatics. The officers are: President, ' Carolyn Havner; Vice-President, Marjorie Gulick; Secretary, Frances Austin; Treasurer, Idyla Gould. Harrington Schilt Haft Esner Freeman Spencer Hesse Patterson Gulick Gould Havner Hall Kasdan Austin l ' JU JACKSON ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION I N September 1913, the Jackson Athletic Association was organized, taking the place of the Advisory Committee on Women’s Athletics, a committee of the All Around Club, which had supervised Jackson athletics. All interclass contests are conducted under the auspices of the Athletic Associa¬ tion, which arranges schedules, secures coaches, referees, equipment, etc. Each class has a basketball, baseball, hockey, and track team; and a varsity basketball team is always supported. Supplementing this is a varsity hockey or tennis team— the choice being optional and varied. In some years all three sports have been included among varsity athletics. WEARERS OF THE 1925 ‘J” Gould, hockey Harrington, basketball , tennis, hockey Haven, hockey Holmes, manager basketball Koelsch, basketball Martin, basketball, hockey Newhall, basketball Schilt, basketball M. Ward, basketball R. Ward, basketball 1920 Kasdan, basketball Ryan, basketball In 1921 Ellen Eddy Shaw ' 99, now Curator of Elementary Instruction in the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, gave to the Jackson Athletic Association the Eddy Cup to be presented annually to that class winning the interclass champ¬ ionship in two out of three of the following sports — basketball, hockey and base¬ ball. It was first contested for in 1921-22. 1921- 22 won by 1922 1922- 23 won by 1923 1923- 24 won by 1925 The officers of the Athletic Association are: Ruth Ward, President; Sylvia Kasdan, Vice-President; Regina Grenier, Secretary; Gladys Spencer, Treasurer. 107 SENIOR SCAMPERS A PPROPRIATELY on April first, Jackson 1925 revived the Senior Scampers a vaudeville satire on the faculty and the student body. The Social Com¬ mittee, aided and abetted by the entire class, staged the side-splitting per¬ formance. Authors are almost as numerous as those of a Broadway musical show and some of the fun just wrote itself. The Boxing Match may be accredited to Marian Haff and Wilma Koelsch, Airs. McLoud to Carolyn Havner, Metcalf Scene to Wilma Koelsch and Carolyn Havner, and Photos by White to Wilma Koelsch. Thanks to Edgar Wood ' 20 and Bud Carpenter ' 24, the Cute Co-ed was introduced to the college. CLASS PLAYS C LASS plays are given each year by each of the two underclasses, and, since their members are barred from Masque and the Three P ' s productions, these plays serve as a sort of testing and training for later dramatic en¬ deavors. It has become the custom for the sophomore class to give the Jackson Day play. Anatole France’s “The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife,” produced by 1926, and coached by Professor Weaver, was most favorably received last Jackson Day. The freshmen of last year, 1927, presented “Neighbors”; and our present youngsters, 1928, gave two interesting one-act plays. DOE DANCE O NCE each year the Jackson Gymnasium is the scene of a brilliant social function attended exclusively by the students of Jackson, and observed, the whispers have it, by Tufts — at Munro’s. This affair is the Doe Dance, sponsored by the All Around Club. The Does attend in pairs and it is the occasion for fancy dress — the requisites being the ridiculous and the startling. BABY PARTY T HE Damoclian Sword hanging over the head of the Jackson freshman is that potent remark, “Wait till the Baby Party.” This party is the concluding event of Baby Day, on which day, by removing hairpins, paint, powder, and curls, and adding a jaunty green bow, the freshmen must for once appear as sweetly youthful and as meekly humble as their elders and betters, the sophomores, would have them. Costumes in keeping with the youthful simplicity of their coiffures are worn by the yearlings, while the sophs pose as nurses for these frac¬ tious charges. The seniors, suddenly grown gray and infirm, are the grandparents, and the juniors, garbed as uninvited guests and poor relations, provide any comedy relief that may be needed in addition to the show staged by the sophs in which the furious frosli are the principal actors. 198 Cochrane Hettinger Crosby Marston Merchant Glennie Rose Harrington PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL T HE Pan -Hellenic Council of Jackson was instituted several years ago and has been active in fraternity life ever since. The object of this association is, 1. To improve the conditions of fraternity life and inter-fraternity relationship, and to cooperate with the college authorities in all efforts to improve social and scholastic standards. 2. To fix the date of pledge day. 3. To formulate the rules for the rushing season. The Council is composed of eight members — two from each fraternity. Marjorie Glennie ....... President Ai jICE Harrington ..... Secretary and Treasurer Helen Rose Eleanor Croshy ✓ Doris Cochrane Dorothy Hettinger Lora Merchant Evelyn Marston 199 Wagner Hettinger Newhall Crosby Bray THE ALL AROUND CLUB T HE All Around Club, founded in 1897, is a social organization open to all the women of Jackson. Every spring the Club gives an informal dance, the only function of its kind open to all the students of Jackson. The Jackson reception to Tufts freshmen is an annual event early in the fall, and is given under the auspices of the All Around Club. The club also runs Jackson Day for sub¬ freshmen early in the spring. Eleanor Crosby Dorothy Hettinger Leola Wagner Roselyn Bray President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer JACKSON I. C. S. A. A CHAPTER of the Intercollegiate Community Service Association was estab¬ lished at Jackson in 1918. The aim of the organization is to promote social justice and responsibility. The I.C.S.A. presents to the students an opportunity to learn about Social Welfare Activities, Protective and Relief Societies, Public Health movements, Child Care associations, Americanization, etc. It contributes to the support and management of college settlements in New ork, Boston, and Philadelphia. The I.C.S.A. Cabinet for 1924-1925: Evelyn Haven Eleanor Prescott Ruth Wilkinson . Catherine Price . Mary Warmbier Virginia Ramsdell Marian Hesse President Secretary Treasurer Con necting Secreta ry Junior Elector Sophomore Elector Publicity M a n ager 01 Y. W. C. A. T HIS organization was founded and Held its first Cabinet meeting on March 21, 1919. It has since carried out an extensive and varied program, and has been instrumental in bringing interesting speakers on current topics, before the student body. Sunday vespers and morning services by this organization. have been conducted Eleanor Crosby ...... President Marian Hesse ....... 1 7 ice-President Evelyn Johnston ....... Secretary Margaret Pettigrew ...... Treasurer 202 FRIENDSHIP A ruddy drop of manly blood The surging sea outweighs. The world uncertain comes and goes; The lover rooted stays. I fancied he was fled, — And, after many a year, Glowed unexhausted kindliness, Like daily sunrise there. My careful heart was free again, O friend, my bosom said, Through thee alone the sky is arched, Through thee the rose is red; All things through thee take nobler form, And look beyond the earth. The mill-round of our fate appears A sun-path in thy worth. Me too thy nobleness has taught To master my despair; The fountains of my hidden life Are through thy friendship fair. — Emerson ■wri 3 —i Z Pi K ■ En — m A , C H W N I ZETA PSI FRATERNITY Kappa Chapter Established 18.55 Founded at New York University IS if 7 Twenty-eir ht Chapters FRATRES IN FACULTATE Leo Rich Lewis ’87 William Kendall Dennison ’1)1 Harvey Eastman Averill ’08 Frank Elias Seavey, Lambda ’04 Percy Desmond Wilkins, Lambda ’21 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 Ernest Paul Brosseau George Edwin Budd Evander French Armand Jean Gariepy Walter Miller Maron John Lincoln Pearson Frank Hilliard Sargent James Holden Sullivan Raymond Lindsley Wilson 19 Charles Errol Exley George Patrick McGrath Roger Everett Packard George Vincent Perry Robert Barton Rice Edgar .L Austin Chapin Robinson Austin Tuttle Ropes Norman Swasey Smith James Richard Tidyman George Elmer Waldron, Jr. ss W OOD 1) ana Lincoln Blanchard Robert Boody Lawrence Miller Dawson Elmer Turnbull Hook 1927 Herbert Edwin Lawson Leo Gorman Lyons Fred Smallidge Ralph Dean Wintiirop True Sturgis Elliot Chadwick Paul Rockwell Holman George Percival Nye Howard Jerome Robison 1928 Fred Joseph Sanders James Sanders Clarence Proctor Stanley Walter Arthur Weisleder THETA DELTA CHI FRATERNITY THETA DELTA CHI FRATERNITY Kappa Charge Established 1850 Founded at Union College in 184$ Twen ty-nine C 7 1 apters FRATRES IN FACULTATE Charles Henry Gray Charles Ernest Fay George Preston Bacon Clarence Preston Huston Oliver Dunbar Westcott FRATRES IN UN IYERSITATE 1925 Joseph Eugene Bourret Frederic Billings Littlefield 192(5 Raymond Teriiune Dawes 1927 Herbert Spencer Barnhart Frederic Scott Carr Theodore Hass Geiger John James Hayes Stanley Osborne Robinson 1928 Theodore Norris Dennett Selwyn Parker Drown William Hall Griffiths Frederick Coker Hadley Richard T William McClure Ring land John Donald Russell Herbert Seth Swift Howard William Leonhardt Cartlon Ellis Littlefield Sanfrey Mathew Lilyestrom John Van Schaick Norton Heinn Frederic Tomfohrde Prescott Merrill Jones Walter Russell Kean John Sanborn Strong Arthur Wilson Swanson JSEY 207 DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY DELTA UPSILON FRATERNITY Established at Tufts 188(5 Founded at Williams College 1831 Fo rty-n i n e Ch a piers FRATRES IN FACULTATE Frank Williams Durkee, Tufts ' 88 Arthur Irving Andrews, Brown Melville Smith Munro, Tufts ’04 Joseph Franklin Carlz, Lehigh ' 17 FRATRES IN UN IVERSITAT E Harold Koetter Beck Eznick Bogosian Allan Emerson Bruce Lawrence Raymond Clark Alexander Otis Haff 1925 Macdonald Stuart Hosmer Andrew Shepeard Laurie Milton Frederick Little Arthur William Schuster Irving Longfellow Vaughan 1926 Rupert Manning Hanny Lawrence Stevens Kidd W ilfred George McKinney Charles Pratt Bradford Albert Warren Carleton Benjamin Graves Brown Durkee Francis Henry Russell 1927 Charles Howard Bucklin Wilbur Crowe Fulton Wilfred Alexander Clabault George Symond Goss Neal Louis Cobb Wallace Joseph Nichols Harold Alonzo Palmer Earl Thomas Ball William Herbert Erickson, Jr. Donald DeWitt Moats Brainerd Francis Hughes 1928 Ernest Gunnar Peterson William Newton Hammill Potterton John Fennell Reilly Willard Ireson Savage Karl Kaiser Soule 209 210 DELTA TAU DELTA FRATERNITY t ' DELTA TAU DELTA FRATERNITY Beta Mu Chapter Established 1889 Founded at Bethany College, 1859 Sixty-eight Chapters FRATRES IN FACULTATE President John Albert Cousens Fred Dayton Lambert Titus Eugene Mergendahl John Louis Charles Keegan Charles Henry Downes James Milledge LeCain FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 Joseph Thorpe Ballard Clarence Edwin Evans Carl Peter Brocco Donald Hayes Miller M alcolm Graeme Douglas Clarence Newman Truesdale Clark Elbridge Woodrow 1926 Allan Edmund Brothers Michael Edward McCabe Hartwell Robley Congdon Charles Joseph Odenweller Percy Huestis Loomer Kenneth John Wolf Paul Ingraham Wren 1927 Loring Bills Lincoln Fenton Hannaford Norris Edwin Albert Martinson Foster Rawson Spofford Warren Smiley Thomas 1928 Charles Jones Baker Donivan Austin Barnes George Frederick Fellows, Jr. Frederick Cecil Ward Francis Woodw Ralph Sanborn Fellows Ralph Everett Hanson Clifford Elliott Smith Thomas Matthew Wilson, Jr. ard Young 211 ALPHA TAU OMEGA FRATERNITY ALPHA TAU OMEGA FRATERNITY Massachusetts Gamma Beta Chapter National Fraternity Founded 1865 Local Chapter 1898 Eighty-five Ch apters FRATRES IN FACULTATE Dean Frank George Wren George Stewart Miller Edwin Hanscom Wright FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 Ralph Edward Carlisle, Jr. David Duke Cochrane Sherman Converse Laurence Morse Curtis 1926 Arland Augustus Dirlam Earle Raymond Cutting James Forrest Folsom Eugene Francis Goss Carleton Norwood Morrow Dana Palmer Fogg, Jr. William Chester Haley James Harry ' Price Theodore Wyman Slack Roger Gardner Poole Edward Verne Powell Albert Richard Schmalfuss Henry Wood Thompson Edward Stevens Whitney ' Ellsworth Lyman Amidon Mario Ciullo Robert Henry Decker Donald Franklin Fogg 1927 David Leon Hertz Allen Henry ' Lester Allan Delwin MacLeod Robert Willis Rounds 1928 Elmore Lane Andrews John Albert Holmes John Royce Keefe Donald Guy Lothrop Leonard Victor Short Irving Gravely ' Spering William Jeremiah Taylor Chandler Morse Wright Pledges. 21S SIGMA TAU ALPHA FRATERNITY SIGMA TAU ALPHA FRATERNITY Local Chapter Established 1905 FRATER IN FACULTATE Frederick Nixon Weaver ’13 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1924 Morgan Haynes 1925 Ernest Eastman Leavitt Victor Nelson Walter Howard Pollard, Jr. Ralph Crowell Weaver Maurice Norman Winslow 1926 Addison Pope Dingwall Edward Thomas Fleming James Henry 1927 Walter Trowbridge Eppler Oscar Liukkonen Oscar Stark Wallace Bruce Strathdee 1928 Harvey Edmund Ashworth Joseph Walter Mayne William Joseph Downing Joseph Salvatore Nadile John Peter Krzeminski Edward Joseph Sullivan Louis Tobin Halsey Irwin Andrews John Joseph Austin Nelson Blaisdell Baker George Everett Eldridge Clarence Giffin Newton Aldus Stone Troavbridge Walsh Henry Lyman Adams, Jr. James Frederick Archibald William Henry Carter, Jr. Keith Alwin Gove Raymond Earl Kilty 15 DELTA PHI SIGMA FRATERNITY DELTA PHI SIGMA FRATERNITY Local Fraternity Established 1908 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Dean Gardner Chase Anthony Robinson Abbott Crosby Fred Baker Charles Harris Cha se Samuel Lucas Connor Raymond Underwood Fitts James Alfred Reynolds Edwin Butler Rollins FRATRES IN UNIYERSITATE William Lawrence Cashen 1924 James Joseph Murray, Jr Francis Henry Baker Adrian Edwin Bessey Richard Mason Grower Ronald Kenneth Hatch Ambrose Burton Earl Mjelis Brennan William Foulds Covil William Clark Custer Earl Melvin Carpenter Melvin Dean Brett Henry John Fitzpatrick Edward Joseph Harold John Joseph Mahoney 1925 Charles William Houghton Leroy Moses Jordan Arthur Frederick Mac Williams Cortland Henry Schroeder 1920 George Robert Copeland L. Kenneth Moses Parker Adams Small Arba Swaine Taylor Don Andrew Waite 1927 Vernon Henry Meyer Raymond Balcom Morrison Melville Abram Small Franklin Cholerton Shuman Melvin Richard Bowker Lawrence Gahn Clarke Cornelius Francis Donovan, Jr. 1928 Clarence Thomas Gordon Irving James Jensen Robert Alexander Marshall PHI EPSILON PI CLUB PHI EPSILON PI CLUB Established 1915 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Harry Finkelstein 1926 Samuel Winer Abraham Ashkenazy George Barsky Jerome Cohen Jack Cashman Benjamin I. Goldberg Benjamin D. Gould 1927 Eli Richmond Harold M. Sesen Dave E. Rosengard Jack Smith Harry Strauss Martin M. Silverstein 1928 Louis Endler Ralph M. Goldstein George Goldman Max William Harris Maurice H. Levine Abraham M. Solomon Tarlow V -V5 1 219 PHI DELTA FRATERNITY PHI DELTA FRATERNITY Founded at Tufts 1912 FllATRES IN FACULTATE George Robrrt Cronin Carl H ERBERT HoLMBERG Edward Albert Joy Roland Winthrop Lefavour FRATRES IN UN IVERSIT ATE Graduate School Donald Brooks Willard, A.B., Tufts 1922 Robert Marshall Rice, A.B., St. Lawrence 1924 1924 Frederick Francis Hagner Robert Irving Hayes W iLLARD Haven Johnson 1925 Francis Edwin Blaney Albert Ira Parker Richard Henry Bird, Jr. Walter Crocker Ellis Walter Henry Van Dyke Norman Lewis Willard Lewis pm h .. tF ' ' 1927 Arthur John Gavignon William MacLean Pierce P f( Russell Frost Stone Randolph Scott Thomas George Henry Thor burn, Jr. k 1928 William Downey Collins David Stuart MacIntyre 192(5 James Sylvester Butler, Jr. Paul Alfred Carroll George Moreland Weir Russell Allan Wylie Weston Collins zn BETA KAPPA FRATERNITY BETA KAPPA FRATERNITY Theta Chapter Established 1925 Founded at Hamline University in 1901 Eleven Chapters Honorary Member General Clarence R. Edwards (26th Uiv.) FRATRES IN UNIVEllSITATE Denman Gray Baker 1924 Francis Bosworth Parsons 1925 Lawrence Baruffaldi Norman Lamson Reed Elwin Harvey Gamage Nathaniel Cosack Cornelius Greenway Francis Frackelton Downey Francis Bartholomew Quinn 1926 Albert Rea Berry Robert William Crosby Hu bert Whitney Dowson Carleton Hicks Robert Leslie Nichols Braman Boyd Platts Alphonse Albert Chernesky Edmund Vincent Watson Joseph Alfred Leonard Erwin Ernest Espig Leslie Story Wilkins Baker Adams James Eldridge Nickerson 1927 Philip Paul Pasqualino Howard Kent Crabtree Walter Milton Nelson Alban John Holter 1928 223 George Archibald Riley John Andrew Balkus Paul Emanuel Johnson Richard Edward Sampson ‘224 fVjl 1 I m SIGMA OMEGA PSI FRATERNITY Mu Chapter Established 1922 PRATER IN FACULTATE David M. Cheney FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 I jA whence Ettleson Nathan Share Nathan Singerman Julius Waldman Louis Weiner Benjamin Yanovitz Jacob A. Israelson Benjamin S. Levine Morris Rett 1926 Alfred Sigel Mii .ton Quint Louis Rosenthal Alexander Sidman 1927 Leo Bernstein Maurice Brown Louis Finklestein Joseph Zarkin Irving Rubin Phillip Schwartz Clarence Yanovsky ALPHA XI DELTA FRATERNITY c ALPHA XI DELTA FRATERNITY ipgi FRATERNITY Lambda Chapter Established 1007 Founded at Lombard in 1893 Thirty-eight (Chapters SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE Marjorie Glennie Ruth Grogan Evelyn Haven Regina IIederman 1925 Margaret Holmes Evelyn Johnston Gwendolyn Lambert Agnes Sciiilt Bertha Veeder Doris Cochrane Loretta Cook Ruth Cutler 1926 Gertrude Johnson Sylvia Kasdan Catherine Riordan Doris Ripley Grace Anderson Helen Brackett Gladys Failing 1927 Henrietta McKenney Maryetta Polk Mary Saunders Vera Tovey Dorothy Craig in Ethel Gesner Marion IIowe 1928 Louise Hull Margaret Klumpp Ruth Ladd Beatrice Poole ALPHA OMICRON PI FRATERNITY 1 92S jun o BOO I 1 ALPHA OMICRON PI FRATERNITY Delta Chapter Established 1008 Founded at Barnard in 1897 Twenty-nine Chapters SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 Elizabeth Enfield Atkinson Alice Harrington Edith Louise McKee M. Wilma Koelsch 1926 Dorothy Webster Hettinger Pauline Aloha Johnson Eleanor Prescott Madeline Ada Snow Vivian Adelia Wight 1927 Margaret Cain Arnold Margaret Alice Pettigrew Doris Loretta Riggs 1928 Mary Althea Andrew Maxine Fredrica Melson Lydia Florence Glidden Ida Armstrong Quigley Martha Hood Eleanor Weld Rickard Frances Mary Rooks i 4 Helen Marion Barnes Caroline Louise Breen Olive Abbott Byrne Ruth Marian Field Mary Sellers Hall Ethel Florence Smith Leola Herrick Wagner Mildred Ward Ruth Elizabeth Whitten m rSji iii) CHI OMEGA FRATERNITY o K CHI OMEGA FRATERNITY Chi Alpha Chapter Established 1910 Founded at University of A rkansas in 1895 Seventy Chapters SORORES IN FACULTATE Edith Lin wood Bush Ruth Tousey SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 Elizabeth Virginia Patterson Helen Elaine Rose Mildred Wagner Adelaide Ruth Ward Miriam Willis 1926 Marian Juliet Hesse Lora Merchant 1927 Lilian May Dole Dorothy Keith Hudson Margaret Hauck Marion Janet Hurley Catherine Virginia Price Frances Josephine Austin Hazel Witherell Damon Frances Ellen Donoway Alice Ad aline Forbes Marjorie Bradford Gulick Carolyn Clay Havner Helen Mary Newhall Estelle Louise Austin Serena Grennitii Baldus Constance Boody Ethel May Booth Alice Cooper Ruth Eleanor Linderholm 1928 Helen Sutphin Lucas Elizabeth Maddison Barbara White Page Theda Olive Page Mary Ransom Isabel Amelia Siieafe 231 SIGMA KAPPA SORORITY Omicron Chapter Established 1913 Founded at Colby in 1874 Thirteen Chapters SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE 1925 Anna Greenlief Bent Geneva Campbell Fisher Eleanor Crosby Eleanor Rowell Sanborn Lillian Rachel Cutler Margaret Louise Smith Gladys Mary Spencer Roselyn Ora Bray Marion Tuttle Frost 1926 Mildred Louise Lentii Evelyn Bancroft Marston Laura Ruth Smith 1927 Hertha Margerette Cordts Helen Mary Danielewicz Regina Sophie Grenier Helen Maybelle Harding Alice Hazel Doris Rutii Hutchinson Bernice Drew Ingalls Louisa Lempriere Murray Virginia Lee Ramsdell Stolworthy Virginia Call Stasia Elizabeth Danielewicz Marion Austin Greene Grace May Havey 1928 Gertrude Link Louise Gardner M ARSII Elinor Presson Richardson Muriel Simonson 233 1924 — 25 September 16th — On this day calamity overtook many households throughout New England and the East, and full many firesides were forsaken. The lawn-mower and the hoe were abandoned for the slide-rule and the forceps. Many tears at parting from the old homestead. September 17th — “The Little Shepard of Kingdom Coin” had his innings. Stranger giving the name of Virgil Greengrass found in a dazed condition walking around in Park Street turnstile. Was directed to Tufts college. Student Council discarded the paddle for the palm. After this freshmen are almost as good as upperclassmen. September 25th —- Freshman discovered who remembered names of more than six of the fraternity men he had met this week. Pledged at once to Phi Beta Kappa. His name was Addison Sims, of Seattle. October 6th —Consternation on the Hill, accompanied by indigestion and sleeplessness. 1928 beats the sophs and the milkmen’s union by a few hours and breakfasts at the Westminster. October 8th — More indigestion. 1927 holds its first successful banquet at the Buckminster. One speaker becomes famous by forgetting to use that gag about “this is the best class, etc.” October 10th — Serious epidemic of endo-carditis. Jackson All Around Club received Tufts freshmen at first dance. Dean Wren overcome with surprise at record-breaking size of freshman class. October 11th — Dean Wren’s condition improved. Tufts Weekly breaks all records by coming out one day late. All hands advised to “sail on.” Tomorrow is the birthday of that “geographical gentleman, Colombo.” October 15 — Hotels Westminster and Buckminster open again, having been able to secure new dining-room furniture and cutlery. Henson reports replacement of all turf torn up in the jams. October 25th — Day of the Great Hejira. Tufts met New Hampshire at Durham but failed to throw the “bull.” November 1st — Gloom descends over 34-1. Automatic machine installed for waking up drowsy chemists in the rows between one and thirty. Prof. Gilmer issues denial that production of “Children of the Moon” is impracticable because of lack of moonshine hereabouts. Rehearsals will go on. November 8th — Cheers from Portland, Me., to Portland. Ore.! Jumbo does the impossible by beating Bodun. Undergraduates mob trains, hurrying back to Tufts for Russell lecture next day. November 18th — Football squad refuses to practice. All found present at faculty tea, badly soaked and looking crumby. Consternation in the ranks when Greenway refused a fourth dish of ice-cream. Faculty will act later. November 19th — Academic honors awarded. Four football players, two Musical Clubs leaders and an editor elected to Phi Beta Kappa. (Bughouse Fables No. 275643). But read on! November 20th — Jackson seniors and frosh battle at Hockey on the old campus at noon. Both teams attired in plus four bloomers. Cafeteria files petition in bankruptcy for lack of business. December 3d — Dean Wren publishes his college ranking list. Well-known campus lion threatened with extermination for remarking, “The higher they are, the ranker they are.” Cosmos will hold a forum on this question. December 10th — Great excitement. Two Tufts rooters return from Cleveland; their car is still missing. Musical Clubs discontinue schedule, due to scholastic handicaps of members. Citizens of towns on the touring schedule breathe sighs of relief. Local belles along the line fear they will get no chance for a ring this year. 235 December 15th — Half-holiday declared. Jackson student found an oyster in cafeteria scallops. Bowdoin defeats Tufts debaters at Brunswick. Tufts captain says “we could have won all right, but we weren’t accustomed to the floor.’’ i December 20th — Pop Clark returns elat¬ ed from town. Says he saw both Santa Claus and his brother. One was at Filene’s and the other at Raymond’s. Faculty expresses skep¬ ticism. Cosmos will hold a forum soon on the question. Vacation begins. January 6th — No one late for classes. Everyone shaken out of bed by earthquake. January 21st — Mid-years commence. Every bookworm has his day, and the rest of us have six nights of it. January 24 th —-This day was epochal. Total eclipse viewed in Boston. Residents of Somerville who did not have smoked glasses came to Ballou to watch the eclipse through the windows. January 28th — Some sad partings. Chuckles of glee from both Deans’ offices. Wakes were held at all fraternity houses. History is vague here. Recur¬ rence of the total eclipse of January 24th. February 28th — Second earthquake shakes the Hill. Jackson Juniors and Freshmen give dance at the gym. The minor quake was not noticed. March 3d — Great enthusiasm. Weekly attacks compulsory chapel, abetted and opposed both by faculty and students. So much knocking puts the bell out of business. Classes disorganized. March 20th — Invasion by the basketball players. Observer finds that officials outnumber spectators in the gym. April 1st — Nothing happened. Fooled you that time! April 15th — Spring recess begins. Students present petition to Park Commissioner for more benches in Middlesex Fells. May 1st — No further record. Jumbo reported loose and preparing to come out and meet his book. Editors return from rest cure. 286 1 t r t AA M 1 - A - AV tAAj SA 237 238 ’25 Baptized in Fire When Horribles Were Horrible ea t hall AJTOCiATIOF HI w fi9 SflR ism. i -a ? ©oh! Scandal! ' a-JKSi V •■ ■+ ' V - Jl Ui ' ., Jome place,What? KBQSSXA fse® A. Bit of Imagery Prof. Monroe - A friend In Tfeed NOV. 1921 Remember this ? Packard Mali A Hard View To Get The Office Force UAL x IE 1 Is A P lx i k v 231 ) FINIS And now the sky god, Phoebus, Flings his banners to the west wind; First falls the cloudy veil before his face, Then silently close his castle gates. Black shadows on the earth — Then night, dew-dripping, creeps, Last night of our high hopes. Tomorrow — Brings life’s test. So while ye may, Dream! Marjory B. Gulick 240 b- l J ' S Shield ' X S(o INDEX TO ADVERTISERS PAGE PAGE The Andover Press. Arms Manufacturing Co.. L. G. Balfour Co. Beacon Trust Co. Boston Transcript. Bookstore. James W. Brine Co. C. D. Bullerwell Co.. . Arthur W. Burke Co.. . Robert Burlen Son.... Childs, Sleeper Co. Crowell ’23, Mahoney ’24 Francis S. Cummings Co. Daddy Jack’s. Davis Sq. Fish Market . Dewick Flanders. Dodes Limited. William A. Doe. Dorrety of Boston. Emil’s Barber Shop. Frank Brothers. Goddard Seminary. Andrew J. Hezlitt. Journal Engraving. Jumbo Spa. Lowney’s. Lefax Inc. 12 18 18 8 7 4 5 11 17 5 6 3 22 21 18 20 5 20 19 14 10 24 17 7 14 22 11 B. L. Makpeace Inc.15 John Paulding Meade. 9 Metropolitan Coal Co. 2 David J. Molloy Co.10 James J. Murray.19 Murray Taxi.24 Notman Studios. 1 Oak Manor. 7 Thomas O ' Brien Sons. 1 Jack Pearlson.15 S. S. Pierce Co. 4 Pictorial Review Co.13 Jahn Ollier Engraving Co.23 Karl T. Small.11 C. B. Smith Bro.19 Reid, Murdock Co.25 H. J. Seiler Co.16 Strong, Marson Co.21 Frank A. Teele.21 Teele Sq. Theatre.20 Tufts College Graduate.10 Tufts College Weekly. 6 Westminster Hotel. 4 M. Winer Co.22 E. A. Wright Co.14 H. W. Whittemore Co. 6 Wright Ditson.15 The advertisers listed in this section have made the publication of the Tufts 1925 Jumbo Book possible. To them we extend our heartiest best wishes and most sincerely hope that the students of Tufts College will show every possible courtesy to these advertisers. (g komas Q’ riei goi s SINCE 1886 Readv-to-wear Clothing ? Furnishings of Character Moderately Priced Harry C. 0’ Brien ’22 ed MEDFORD SQUARE ♦ ♦ NOTMAN.. THE OLD STAND-BY PHOTOGRAPHER FOR TUFTS COLLEGE Individual Portraits - Fraternity Groups SERVICE UNEXCELLED l Special Rates to All Tufts and Jackson Students 1286 Massachusetts Ave. (Harvard Square) CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 4 PARK STREET BOSTON i METROPOLITAN COAL Keeps TUFTS STUDENTS WARM In their Class rooms, Dormitories Fraternity Houses and College Buildings Our best wishes to the graduating class of Tufts College METROPOLITAN COAL COMPANY General Offices: 20 Exchange Place BOSTON II TUFTS WINS AGAIN PRESIDENT COOLIDGE calls a “TUFTS MAN” to his Cabinet. THE PRESIDENT IS A MAN OF GOOD JUDGMENT! He knows men. He knows the fundamentals of their success. Here is what he says about Life Insurance: “Insurance is the means by which Success is almost guaranteed. Every policy is a declaration of indepen¬ dence, a charter of economic freedom. He who holds one has overcome adversity. It is a certificate of character, an evidence of good citizenship, an unim¬ peachable title to self-government.” LET US HELP YOU START YOUR LIFE INSURANCE TODAY STEVE CROWELL ’23 JOE MAHONEY ’24 97 Milk Street, Boston, Mass. Telephone Congress 0700 NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY III S. S. PIERCE CO. Purveyors to FRATERNITY HOUSES ‘ The Sure Sign of Superiority ' Superior Groceries Confectionery, Cigars and Toilet Articles S. S. Pierce Co. Cor. Tremont and Beacon Sts., Boston Tufts Book Store DESIGNED TO SAVE YOU MONEY Books, Paper, Jewelry Clothing Supplies Sporting Goods D. D. SAMPLE ’16 - Manager Hotel Westminster Copley Square, Boston, Mass. 250 Rooms - $2.50 Upwards Its convenient location on beautiful Copley Square, its large and small Dining Rooms, Grill Room, Winter Garden, spacious Foyer, comfortable Lounging Rooms, offer the most com¬ plete service for Banquets Private Dinner Supper Dances Weddings Receptions Debutante Parties IV FOR YEARS OFFICIAL ATHLETIC OUTFITTERS TO TUFTS COLLEGE GOLF TENNIS BASEBALL BATHING CROQUET BICYCLES TRACK tWede Goods ESb Devonshire St Boston Mass. James W. Brine Co. 286 Devonshire Street Boston, Mass. FOOTBALL BASKETBALL SOCCER SNOWSHOES SKIS HOCKEY BOXING BINDERS Of the TUFTS - 1925 - JUMBO BOOK Book Binding of Every Description R. BURLEN SON 156 Pearl Street BOSTON Clothes - for the Discriminating College Man One of our popular models for Spring is the two-button Jacket sketched above FORTY TO SIXTY-FIVE DOLLARS ILM HO© B ©yllstoini SHn°e©ll IBostoini Ma§§ v THE TUFTS WEEKLY Will keep you in touch with college activities. Subscription $2.00 per year Send your order in the first of September each year. Checks to TUFTS COLLEGE PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION Tufts Qollege Tress Sprinters and Publishers H. W. Whittemore Co. Qhilds , Sleeper 8P Qompany Healers in Beef, Tout try, TMtutton famb and Ideal Hotel Supplies Wholesale— %etail yy fyS N . Market Street Poston VI 1 ) . T HE DANCE place unique ‘Distinctive WEDNtSDAVS SATURDAYS i ' .jV ANORX ano Different R efined THE MANOR- IS IDEAL FOR ALL OCCASIONS INQUIRIES INVITED Catering to a College ‘Patronage Open every WEDNESDAY, SATURDAY and HOLIDAY PERLEY BREED and his OAK MANOR ORCHESTRA The team with the irresistible rhythm Oak Manor is available for W. JARVIS LOWE Foster St. E. Melrose, Mass, private rental ’ - Telephone Accommodations for 300 Owner-JVLgr. Melrose 1713 T HERE are engravers and engravers and engravers but tke engraving of the Journal Engraving Company is the engraving that counts IVe have done the work for the Tufts College Press the Tufts Weekly for years Journal Engraving (To. 134 Summer Street BOSTON Say “TRANSCRIPT” To your newsboy tonight, then you will know that you will get the BEST School and College News Sports—Radio—Financial and Business News Your regular newspaper should be the Uloalnn lEtmting (Brausrriyt A Tufts Man is the Editor VII BEACON TRUST COMPANY TWO OFFICES 31 Milk Street 89 State Street BOSTON, MASS. Member of Federal Reserve System Capital Surplus and Profits Deposits $ 1 , 000 , 000.00 2,000,000.00 24,000,000.00 Officers CHARLES B. JOPP, President C. L. Billman, Vice-President Alfred S. Nelson, Treasurer Frank B. Lawler, Vice-President Leverett A. Haskell, Asst. Treas. Robert G. Shaw, Jr., Secretary Wallace H. Pratt, Asst. Treas. James H. Turnbull, Asst. Sec’y Henry H. Pierce, Asst. Treas. Edward J. Ramhofer, Asst. Treas. Interest Paid on Commercial Deposits over $500. SAVINGS DEPARTMENT SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS Faneuil Hall Branch Open to Receive Deposits Saturday, 7 to 10 P. M. VIII JOHN PAULDING MEADE COMPANY INSURANCE JOHN PAULDING MEADE PRESIDENT EDMUND BILLINGS VICE PRES. AND TREAS. CALVIN E. WARREN VICE PRESIDENT FREDERIC R. GALACAR VICE PRESIDENT LOWELL D. MACNUTT CORPORATION CLERK PAUL BURDETT DIRECTOR 50 Kilby Street. Boston ix The TUFTS COLLEGE GRADUATE The only official publication of Tufts College Alumni Association. Published four times a year in February, May, August and November. E ACH issue is full of interesting information about your classmates and fraternity brothers. It tells you what Tufts men of the world are doing. It keeps you informed of new developments in all departments of the College. You can’t keep in touch without it. Start the habit of subscribing NOW. RATES 1 year. 3 years. 5 years. $ 2.00 5.50 9.00 f JOSEPH W. MORTON, Treas. Make checks payable to - Alumni Office [ Tufts College, Mass. T he cover for this annual was created by The DAVID J. MOLLOY CO. 2857 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois Svery Molloy Made Cover bears this trade mark on the back lid■ FRANK BROTHERS Fifth Avenue Bool Shop Between 47th and 48th Streets. New x, brk Their smart style and sound quality make these shoes the favorite footwear of college men Formal, Informal and Dress Exhibit Shops: CHICAGO WASHINGTON Peoples Trust and Savings Woodward Building Bank Building opp. Shoreham Hotel PITTSBURGH NEW HAVEN Jenkins Arcade Hotel Taft X The Right Note—In The Right Place SAVES THE MIDNIGHT OIL AT EXAMINATION TIME! That is why college students all over the country are using LEFAX — the pocket-size, loose-leaf note and data system to get the most out of their education. It keeps notes alive! The LEFAX system includes: pocket note-books — blank and ruled forms for every purpose— 6,000 pages of loose-leaf busi¬ ness and engineering data— cabinets and files. Ask to see LEFAX at THE TUFTS COLLEGE BOOK STORE C. D. Bullerwell F. M. Scoborxa Karl T. Small C. D. Bullerwell Company IVholes ale Fruit and ' Produce Apothecary Telephone Richmond ,jI 173 2 7 tN(ew Faneuil Hall Market (North Side) TEELE SQUARE Poston, ' Jlfass. WEST SOMERVILLE XI The Sign of Careful Workmanship T?OR nearly one hundred years the Andover Press has been serving the printing buyers of New England with the product of its careful workmanship. Books, catalogs, folders and small printed pieces numbering into the millions have come from its presses. Today, it places at your service a modern equipment and a corps of highly trained workmen who have made their product known by their ability to produce some¬ thing “a little bit better.” The ANDOVER PRESS ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS XII Those Who Have Served We dedicate this space The Pictorial Review During the summer months for the past seven emblem of success years more than one hundred Tufts Men have represented Pictorial Review. A Few Tufts Men Who Head the Honor Roll of Pictorial Review Henry J. Curry Albert Vanderhoof Donald H. Miller Joseph IV. Mahoney Harold R. Brown Lawrence R. Clark Stewart P. Crowell Sherman Converse Allan Bruce Herman Stearnstein A. J. Gariepy tV. G. McKinney Clarence Evans E. P. Lufkin Earl Schwartz Arthur Collier E. Woodworth J. A. tVinthrop Wilbur G. Stanley Harold K. Beck John J. Hayes Their success has been phenomenal. Pictorial Review is proud of its Tufts men, and the financial assistance that it has been able to give them. We are anxious that coming generations at Medford will continue to keep the campus word-—-“Good morning, Madam.” And enjoy the advantages of a Pictorial Review scholarship. L. M. HOLTZ, Manager Educational Division ALEXANDER GRAHAM Subscription Manager HAROLD F. DELANEY N. E. Subscription Mgr. The Pictorial Review Company 7th Ave. 39th Street New York City, N. Y. XIII EMIL’S Barber Shop E. A. WRIGHT COMPANY Engravers — Printers Stationers FOR COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS Specialists in Fraternity and School Stationery Commencement Invitations Class Day Programs Dance Programs and Dance Favors School Catalogs Diplomas Class Rings and Pi;is Wedding Invitations Business Stationery Opp. Fire Station Bonds and Stock Certificates Teele Square Somerville Broad and Huntingdon Streets PHILADELPHIA XIV DRAWING INSTRUMENTS SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS SLIDE-RULES TAPES BOARDS—TABLES TRIANGLES T. SQUARES A COMPLETE LINE OF DRAWING MATERIAL AND ENGINEERING EQUIPMENT B. I_. MAKEPEACE INC. i M porters 387 WASHINGTON STREET manufacturers 394 BOYLSTpN STREET BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS T ufts Men Are Neat By Patronizing Jack Pearlson The Tufts Tailor Suits Called For and Delivered 81 Holland St., Somerville Som. 1896-R WRIGHT DITSON Athletic Outfitters Reliable equipment for BASEBALL, TENNIS, GOLF, TRACK, and all outdoor and indoor sports. Everything for the Tennis Player Wright Ditson Championship Ten- nisBalls, Tennis Rackets, Nets, Tapes, Markers, etc. Also, the proper cloth¬ ing and shoes. Old Tennis Rackets Restrung at short notice. (Send for Spring and Summer Catalog) 344 Washington St., Boston, Mass. XV Andrew S. Seiler Irving I Seiler H. J. SEILER GO. Qaterers Since 1873 FIFTY YEARS OF CORRECT SERVICE Telephones Beach 8542-8543-8544 513 Fremont St. Boston, Mass. XVI Telephone Congress 7486 Arthur W. Burke Thomas S. Prouty Arthur W. Burke dr Co. Insurance Boston Insurance Exchange No. 40 Broad Street Boston, Mass. ANDREW J. HEZLITT Twenty Years oj Service iAs Tufts Decorator Tel. Univ. 2893- 1 C Qa mb ridge, ' ChCass. XVII The ' -Anns Fhtanufacturing Qompany Established 1809 Manufacturing Specialists of Leather Novelties of the Better Kind Trance Favors 6 F Souvenirs Our representative, Mr. J. Arthur Favreau, Tufts Ex-2i, will call upon request. Notify our Malden Factory Office, 144 Main Street. Telephone Malden 020c;. THE ARMS MANUFACTURING CO. Factories at SOUTH DEERFIELD, MASS., AND MALDEN, MASS. DAVIS SQUARE FISH MARKET E. S. MITCHELL, Prop. a C Q. Balfour Qompany ATTLEBORO MASSACHUSETTS Jfratermties i upplieb Manufacturers of Greek letter Frater¬ nity and Special Society Jewelry, Class and School emblems, pins and rings. Special designs and estimates furnished on Fraternity and Special Club insignia, on Class Pins, Medals, Loving Cups and Trophies, and on Honorary Keys. IVrite for the 24 Holland Street Davis Square Somerville BALFOUR BLUE BOOK The Standard Reference for Fraternity Jewelry XVIII TEL., CHARLESTOWN 2171 J. J. MURRAY JR. CLASS OF ‘24 (Hlf? QloUrgr $ rutting ( to. INDIVIDUALITY AND CHARACTER 34-35 City Sq. Bldg. Charlestown, Mass. C. B. SMITH BROTHER BOSTON Distributors of Groceries to Hotels, Fraternities and Clubs Supplying Delta Upsilon and Sigma Tau Alpha iorrrtg of looton We design manufacture for these organizations Beta Tau Phi Delta Tower Cross Cosmos Club P. P. P. Sword Shield Fraternity Jewelry Charms Emblems Ivy- Musical Clubs Chemical Society East Hall Prom Favors Loving Cups Trophies TELEPHONE LIBERTY 4500 387 Washington Street Telephone 6185 Main BOSTON XIX DEWICK FLANDERS INSURANCE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION IN ANY AMOUNT Prompt and Positive Service 40 BROAD ST., BOSTON, MASS. Telephone Main 7530 WILLIAM A. DOE CO. Teele Square WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Theatre BEEF, PORK, LAMB VEAL POULTRY BUTTER, CHEESE, EGGS OILS, OLIVES, SELEX JAMS, PICKLES, FISH “Four minutes from Tufts Campus’’ FANEUIL HALL MARKET BOSTON MAIN OFFICE 34 MERCHANTS ROW Telephone CONGRESS 7020 ALL DEPARTMENTS TEELE SQUARE SOMERVILLE XX Home of the better made Boston Joker. Dribble Class, Novelty Favor Hats, Unique Hose Shaker Horn, Rose Cricket, and Doiley Blow-outs. Masks. Puzzles, Place Cards, Noise Makers, Joke Parlor Game Books, Trick and Fortune Telling Cards, Bridal Birthday Cake FortuneTelling Sets Serpen tine. Confetti, Coo Coo Stunts, Peppy Thrill Toasts, Donkey other PartyGames,K.ross-K.omic Puzzle Games, Novelty, Pictured-Infla. Balloons. Other Clever Joker Novelties, Dance, Dinner and Party Favors. V o R S .-... pcc jaltics or all Holidays «... 22 Bromfield St., Boston, Mass. FRANK A. TEELE , , Richmond 673 Telephones Richmond 1110 DAVIS SQUARE W. SOMERVILLE Strong, Marson Co. Commission Wholesale Dealers In ANTHRACITE — BITUMINOUS Beef, Lamb, Veal COAL Provisions Poultry Hotel, Institution, Club and Restaurant Supplies Telephones Somerset 0054 Somerset 0055 30 A North Street ESTABLISHED 1872 Boston, Mass. XXI Whatever The Occasion ) Oyf ff L ' f ' S Chocolates Are A Little Better WALTER M. LOWNEY COMPANY BOSTON MASS. Stores Everywhere Established 1896 “FOLLOW THE FLAG” M. Winer Co. Creameries SOWINGS PWk CreamX [Jf74-5des=;. 30 min. BUTTER, CHEESE and EGGS For Quality Milk Cream Fresh Daily Wholesale and Retail Grade “A” Guernsey and Certified Ayrshire Milk A GRADE FOR EVERY TASTE Central Office 154 Commercial Street FRANCIS S. CUMMINGS CO. 534 Boston Ave. Somerville Boston, Mass. “Ok the Edge of the Campus ” XXII Jalm and Ollier Again ' HE largest personal service school annual engraving house More than twenty years of successful experi- |_ in America ence in Year Book designing and engraving. Three hundred craftsmen, specially skilled in Annual production. Over 40,000 square feet of operating space in our own fireproof building. A specially organized system of production that insures indi¬ vidual attention to each Annual, efficient manufacture, and on-time delivery. The personal co-operation of a creative and research service department with a reputation. This annuai. engpaveo By _ JAHN 8 OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. _ |1 Photographers, Artists, and Makers of III | Fine Printing Platesfor Black or Go or$ I M H 817 Washington Boulevard-Chicago j f m ° (COR. GREEN ST.) ' f i fi XXIII A BARRE VERMONT An Endowed Co-educational School beautifully situated in one of the best communities of Vermont. Modern and adequate equipment. A traditionally strong school spirit. Carefully selected corps of capable teachers. A fine home school for boys and girls. Rate $450. STRONG COURSES IN: College Piano Preparatory Voice Subjects Business Elocution .. Domestic Science Languages Supervised Athletics Buildings in Attractive Condition Visitors Welcome For catalogue address: JARVIS T. BEAL, A.B., Principal GODDARD SEMINARY MURRAY TAXI HEATED METER-CABS LIMOUSINES DAVIS SQUARE HESE ADVERTISERS MADE THE 1925 JUMBO BOOK POSSIBLE; THEY DESERVE YOUR CONSIDERATION. XXIV f ONAW ' 0 OUUSAUI If you were to pay tl a pound youmuldritbuy afinercoffee than MONARCH ONE POUND NET WEIGHT yfSsmHCh COFFEE REIDMUBDOCH CO. WARNINQ Our Monarch Coffee is NEVER sold in bulk XXV THE ANDOVER PRESS ANDOVER, MASS. ' ‘s , 4 A . - . . . . m ■ p • 4; • ' V,A ’ 4 • ' V v - ' ; v .%f - ’’ ' , V: .. ■■ ' , • ’j? ■ ;•«• • Xv’.-, ; vi . • ' ' J; ’ ' ?•’ at? a v ■ ; ' vi 4 • . ft ' r QU.- ■.«s ' • V ‘s 0 V ' ■ ' •) ' , . j v ' ' . JV ft • . i-;, f •• ' d • • • ■ -iso • ■ ' t % .. C, 1 • V • . ' $ tJ . . ft f “.V ,-A- if , KffiSljOft ;v ‘ :.•. ' • .V ' . , • ■ tL - • • ' ' ‘ { ft 4 . , . ' V W) ! 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Suggestions in the Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) collection:

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929


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