University of Massachusetts Amherst - Index Yearbook (Amherst, MA) - Class of 1920 Page 1 of 160
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1920 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1920 volume: “
LIBRARY MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE SOURCE.Cxi.-C. - l,i. A, C, COLLlCTION C£P- UMASS AMHERST 312066 0339 0602 4 The Tmtle Company Publishers Rutland. Vermont M Tfie iJunior Annual of tfie Claas of MIHETEEN TWErfTY nfl33flcfiii3ettj Ayiculturol College igSi SX- I m (Lcr - fti, , v.. COUrCTIOK Mll«EliIT01l!i EDITOR-IN-CHIEF James C. Maples LITERARY DEPARTMENT Henry Lyons, Editor Charles Doucette Guy F. MacLeod John A. Crawford ■■' ' STATISTICAL DEPARTMENT Philip A. Readio, Editor Alfred A. Clough Gordon B. Crafts ART DEPARTMENT Charles M. Boardman, Editor Marion E. Earley George A. Smith ' I zjkSi - - AViNDOM A. Allen, Faculty Dexter E. Bailey, ' 10 John W. Bradley, ' 14 Louis C. Bbown, ' 10 John E. Callanan, ' 19 Thomas E. Carter, ' 18 Raymond Chamberlain, ' 16 Robert H. Capon, ex- ' 14 Charles H. Clough, ' 17 Edwin P. Cooley, ' 19 Walter I. Cross, ' 17 Ernest L. Davies, Grad, Asst. Elston a. Day, ex- ' l9 Thomas W. Desmond, ex- ' 19 David O. N. Edes, ' 18, Warren F. Fisherdick, ' 12 William P. Fitzgerald, Unci. H. K. Foster, ' 18 Carroll E. Fuller, Unci. Lawrence W. Gay, ' 20 John F. Giles, Unci. Warren T. Harris, ex- ' 17 Willard H. Hasey, ' 13 Warren S. Hathaway, ' 20 Edward A. Hooper, Unci. Herbert B. Hutchinson, ' 13 Robert P. Irvine, ' 18 Forrest D. Jones, ' 18 Trueman Kile, ' 22 Kenneth B. Laird, ' 16 Edward B. Larrabeb, ' 11 John E. Martin, Grad. Student Ralph R. McCormack, ' 21 Raymond Moore, ' 19 Ralph T. Neal, ' 13 Victor A. Petit, ' 18 Ivan A. Roberts, ' 20 Ernest F. Sexton, ' 19 Charles M. Streeter, ' 13 William W. Thayer, ' 17 Robert C. Westman, ' 17 Francis W. Whitney, ' 13 Charles R. Wilber, ' 17 Alton P. Wood, ex- ' ll W. L. Woodside, ' 19 Brooks Woodworth, ' 18 fl Wrm- Snbex is ficliicatctr to t t men ot tl f S$aSSac u ttt SLgcicuItural CoIIfSf tol)0 in lISc (15«at flfilar sabf life itself, iiut paSSfd tfif torc of t dt iUumini-t) Spirits on to us. We shall hold high The torch you throw, And you may sleep. We are the living. Now we know Not all of life Is youth and love; Now comes the giving. Oh! we shall keep True faith: altho The great winds blow And grisly Err our lie Where we would go. We shall hold high The torch you throw, That you may sleep. nCI LTT ninETEEn twenty index aDministratiUe flDfficcrs Kenyon L. Butterfield, A.m., LL.D. Born 1868; President of the College and Head of the Division of Rural Social Science; $ K $. (on leave) Charles H. Fernald, Ph.D. Born 1838; Honorary Director of the Graduate School. Edward M. Lewis, A.M. Born 187 ?; Dean of the College and Professor of Languages and Literature; $K$. (Acting President) Fred C. Kenney, Born 1860; Treasurer of the College. William D. HuRD, M.Agr. Born 1875; Director of the Extension Service; A Z. $rA .$ K ! . Charles E. Marshall, Ph.D. Born 1866; Director of the Graduate School and Profes- sor of Microbiology; A Z. $ K $. John Phelan, A.M. Born 1879; Director of Short Courses and Professor of Rural Sociology. Philip B. Hasbrouck, B.Sc. Born 1870; Registrar of the College and Professor of Physics; X . $K . Ralph J. Watts, B.Sc. Born 1885; Secretary of the College; $ 2 K. $ K $. Charles R. Green, B.Agr. Born 1876; Librarian. Margaret Hamilton, A.B. Supervisor of Agricultural Courses for Women. Division of a:griculture James A. FooRD, M.Sc.Agr., B.Sc. Born 1872; Head of the Division of Agriculture and Professor of Farm Management; S H. $ K $. K Z. William P. B. LoCKWOOD, M.Sc, B.Sc. Born 1875; Professor of Dairying; K 2. A Z. (on leave) John C. Graham, B.Sc.Agr. Born 1868; Professor of Poultry Husbandry. Christian I. Gdnness, B.Sc. Born 1882; Professor of Rural Engineering; $ K f . John C. McNutt, B.Sc. Born 1881; Professor of Animal Husbandry. Loyal F. Payne, B.Sc. Born 1889; Assistant Professor of Poultry Husbandry. Orville a. Jamison, M.Sc. Born 1889; Assistant Professor of Dairying. Arthur B. Beaumont ' B.Sc. Born 1887; Professor of x4gronomy; 2 X. Byron E. Pontius, B.Sc.Agr. Born 1888; Assistant Professor of Animal Husbandry. Frederick G. Merkle, M.Sc. Born 1892; Instructor in Agronomy. Stanley E. Van Horn. Born 1878; Instructor in Dairying. Harvey D. Drain, B.Sc.Agr. Born 1887; Instructor in Dairying. 11 ninETEin twenty index Lloyd L. Stewart, B.Sc.Agr. Born 1893; Instructor in Poultry Husbandry, (on leave) Luther Banta, B.Sc. Born 1893; Instructor in Poultry Husbandry; SII. Herbert P. Cooper, M.Sc. Born 1887; Assistant Professor of Agronomy. Division of l otticulture Frank A. Waugh, M.Sc. Born 1869; Head of the Division of Horticulture and Profes- sor of Landscape Gardening; K 2. $ K$. (on leave) Fred C. Sears, M.Sc. Born 1866; Professor of Pomology; K . William D. Clark, A.B., M.F. Born 1879; Professor of Forestry; A Z. Harold F. Tompson, B.Sc. Professor of Market Gardening. Walter W. Chenoweth, A.B., M.Sc. Born 1872; Professor of Horticultural Manufac- tures; AZ. 2 E. Arthur L. Dacy, B.Sc. Born 1875; Associate Professor of Market Gardening; A 2 $. Arthur K. Harrison. Born 1872; Assistant Professor of Landscape Gardening. Charles H. Thompson, M.Sc, B.Sc. Born 1870; Assistant Professor of Horticulture; 2 S August G. Hecht, B.Sc. Born 1892; Assistant Professor of Floriculture. Brooks D. Drain. Born 1894; Assistant Professor of Pomology. Frank W. Rane, B.Sc.Agr., M.F. Born 1868; Lecturer in Forestry; $Ae. Division of tlje ij)umanities Robert J. Sprague, Ph.D., M.A. Born 1868; Head of the Division of Humanities and Professor of Economics and Sociology; B 9 11. $ B K. $K$. (on leave) Edward M. Lewis, A.M. Born 1872; Dean of the College and Professor of Languages and Literature. Robert W. Neal, A.M., A.B. Born 1873; Associate Professor of English; $BK. $K$. Edgar L. Ashley, A.M., A.B. Born 1880; Associate Professor of German; $ K . Alexander A. Mackimmie, A.M., A.B. Born 1878; Associate Professor of French; Adelphia. $ B K. $ K $. Walter E. Prince, Ph. B., A.M. Born 1881; Assistant Professor of English and Public Speaking. Charles H. Patterson, A.M., A.B. Born 1868; Assistant Professor of English; 9 AX. Helena T. Goessman, Ph.M. Instructor in English. Arthur N. Julian, A.B. Born 1886; Instructor in German; $ B K. Frank P. Rand, A.B. Born 1889; Instructor in English. 12 ninETEEn twenty index Division of Bucal Social Science Kenyon L. Butterfield, A.m., LL.D. Born 1868; President of the College and Head of the Division of Rural Social Science, (on leave) John Phelan, A.M. Born 1879; Director of Short Courses and Professor of Rural Sociol- ogy. William R. Hart, A.B., L.B., A.M. Born 1853; Professor of Agricultural Education. Alexander E. Cance, A.B., A.M., Ph.D Born 1873; Professor of Agricultural Econ- omics, (on leave) Edna L. Skinner, A.B. Professor of Home Economics. LoRiAN P. Jefferson, A.M. Assistant Professor in the Division of Rural Social Science. Donald B. Sawtell, M.Sc. Born 1888; Instructor in Agricultural Economics; A Z. $ K $. Joseph Novitski. Born 1884; Assistant in Rural Sociology. Division of Science Henry T. Fernald, A.M., M.Sc, Ph.D. Born 1866; Chairman of the Division of Science and Professor of Entomology; B 9 IT. $ K $. Joseph B. Lindsey, M,A., Ph.D. Born 1862; Goessman Professor of Chemistry; A S $. $ K$. Charles Wellington, B.Sc, Ph.D. Born 1853; Professor of Chemistry; K S. $ K$. Joseph C. Chamberlin. B.Sc, M.S., Ph.D. Born 1890; Profes.sor of Organic and Agri- cultural Chemistry; I BK. cpK . Charles A. Peters, B.Sc, Ph.D. Born 1875; Professor of Inorganic and Soil Chemistry; A 2. S H. $ K$. Paul Serex, Jr., M.Sc. Born 1890; Instructor in Chemistry; $ K $. Botanp A. Vincent Osmun, B.Agr., M.Sc. Born 1880; Professor of Botany and Head of the Department of Botany; Q. T. V. $ K $. Paul J Anderson, A.B,, Ph.D. Born 1884; Associate Professor of Botany; SX. $ B K. Orton L. Clark, B.Sc. Born 1887; Assistant Professor of Botany. Frederick A. McLaughlin, B.Sc. Born 1888; Instructor in Botany; K 2. 13 ninmin twemty index (EntontDlosp Henry T. Fernald, A.M., M.S., Ph.D. Born 1866; Professor of Entomology and Chcair- man of the Division of Science; B H. $ K$. William S. Regan, Ph.D. Born 1885; Assistant Professor of Entomology; K 2. G. Chester Crampton, Ph.D., A.M., A.B. Born 1882; Professor of Insect Morphology; $ BK. $K$. C.C. John E. Ostrander, A.M., A.B., C.E. Born 1865; Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering; $K$. William L. Machmer, A.M., M.E. Born 1883; Assistant Professor of Mathematics; A Z$. $ B K. $ K$. Frank C. Moore, A.B. Born 1879; Assistant Professor of Mathematics; X $. $ B K. Burt A. Hazeltine, B.Sc. Born 1890; Assistant in Mathematics, (on leave) Charles E. Marshall, Ph.D. Born 1866; Director of the Graduate Sphool and Professor of Microbiology; AZ. ATA. $K I . Arao Itano, B.Sc, Ph.D. Born 1888; Assistant Professor in Microbiology. Edgarton G. Hood, B.Sc.Agr. Born 1891; Instructor in Microbiology, (on leave) Philip B. Hasbrouck, B.Sc. Born 1870; Professorof Physics and Registrar of the College; X . $ K $. Harold E. Robbins, B.Sc, M.Sc Born 1885; Assistant Professor in Physics; 2 S. l ctftinarp cimct James B. Paige, B.Sc, D.V.S. Born 1862; Professor of Veterinary Science; Q.T.V. $K$. George E. Gage, A.M., Ph.D. Born 1884; Associate Professor of Animal Pathology; K ! . (on leave) Xoolosp anti CBtolosv Clarcnce E. Gordon, B.Sc, A.M.. Ph.D. Born 1876; Professor of Zoology and Geology; $ B K. $ K $. 14 niMETEEM TWENTY INDEX (General Departments PSgiSical (Education CuHHY S. Hicks, B.Pd. Bom 1885; Professor of Physical Education and Hygiene. Hakold M. Gore, B.Sc. Born 1891; Assistant Professor of Physical Education; Q.T.V. Adelphia. asilitatp Scifnce ann ' SCacticiS Richard H. Wilson, Colonel U. S. Infantry. Born 1853; Professor of Military Science prd Tactics. John J. Lee, Ordnance Sergeant, U. S. Army, Retired, Adjutant; Born 1860. 15 iiiBiSSiiMiiiiiaiBgMiaikJ. m • I ninETEEn twenty index Senior CIa0S Officers Paxil Faxon Charles G. Mattoon E. Asa White Vincent D. Callanan Henry B. Peirson William J. Sweeney President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Historian Marshal Senior Class i istorp T the present time, few of us are thinking of the past — that is now history. Most of us are looking ahead for an opening through which we can get into the great game of hfe and do our part towards making it a success. For four short years, we have been equipping ourselves with the necessary knowledge to tackle successfully the job ahead of us. When we started out on our college career, few of us knew what to prepare for. The vision has, however, through careful training, gradually presented itself to us. The many phases of college hfe appeal to a senior in an entirely different manner than they do to an underclassman. We look back upon our freshman-sophomore class scraps not only as contests of strength and wits, but more particularly as means by which we learn- ed how to work together as a class for common purposes. When we came back from the summer vacation as sophomores, our first inspiration was to give vent to spirits upon the freshmen. Prexy, however, soon put a stop to informal speeches and greased pole climb- ing. The end of our sophomore year saw the entrance of the United States into the war and when the declaration was made the entire class soon left college — many of them two months before the normal closing date, either to enter the army or navy or to aid in agricultural pursuits. The junior year saw fewer of the men back. The substitution of rice for potatoes, syrup for sugar, wood for coal, etc., began to bring the war home to us. Many of the class contests were given up and the entire college settled down to the one job of winning the war. This year we started off with a class enrollment of about thirty, whereas our freshman year, we had been two hundred ten strong. Eight of our class-mates had made the supreme sacrifice, having laid down their lives for the country. The armistice having been signed during the first term, many men were able to re-enter college after the Christmas vacation, the college giving them credit for the courses missed. The class history would hardly be complete without a word as to the part taken by the class in college affairs. In athletics few classes have produced such good material. The sophomore year saw our men on all of the varsity teams — football, baseball, basketball, hockey and track. In interclass contests we were victorious in football, tennis and hockey. In non-athletics, the class also took a prominent part. Our days at Aggie will never be forgotten, and that spirit of loyalty and good fellowship that all Aggie men acquire should forever remain with us as one of the strongest weapons that we have equipped ourselves with, in our preparation for the Great Adventure. 20 ninETEEH twenty index Cla00 of 1919 Bagg, Qdincy Austin ......... South Hadley A 2 House; South Hadley High School; 1898; Animal Husbandry; AS ; Class Football (2, 3); Class Basketball (2, 3, 4); Varsity Basketball (3); Animal Husbandry Club. Blanchard, Carlton Douglas . . . . . . . Uxb ridge K 2 House; Uxbridge High School; 1898; Agriculture; K 2; Class Football (1, 3); Class Basketball (1, 2); Varsity Football (2); Varsity Basketball (3, 4); Glee Club (4). Bond, Herbert Richard ......... Needham 2 K House; Dover High School; 1898; Animal Husbandry; 2 K; Class Football (1, 2, 3); Manager Class Baseball (3); Assistant Manager Basketball (3); Manager Basketball (4); Cross Country (4); Animal Husbandry Club. Brigham, Sylvia Boynton ........ Newtonville Draper Hall; Newton High School; 1897; Pomology; A I r. Buffum, Eliot Mansfield ......... Waban Q. T. V. House; Newton High School; 1897; Animal Husbandry; Q. T. V.; Collegian Board (1, 2, 3, 4,); 1919 Index Board; Assistant Manager Baseball (2); Manager Baseball (4); Class Hockey (1, 2); Class Tennis (1, 2, 3); Animal Husbandry Club. Burt, Henry John .......... Arlington North College; Somerville High School; 1895; Rural Sociology; Commons Club; Class Debating (1); Vars- ity Debating (1, 2, 3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (1, 4); Public Speaking Council (1, 2, 3, 4); Burnham Winner (1); Flint Oratorical (1); 1919 ?]dfx Board; Class Secretary (1). Callanan, Vincent DePaul ......... Maiden 11 South College; Maiden High School; 1896; Agricultural Economics; 2 E; Class Track (2, 3); Class Baseball (1, 3); Class Football (3); Informal Committee (4); Varsity Track (4); Economics Club. Carpenter, Hall Bryant ......... Somerville K 2 House; Somerville High School; 1896; Entomology; K S; Class Track (1, 2, 3,); Varsity Track (1, 2, 3, 4); Secretary-Treasurer Y. M. C. A. (3); Interclass Athletic Board (2); Entomology Club. Carroll, Olive Evangeline . . . . . . . . . Dorchester 33 East Pleasant Street; Dorchester High School; 1896; Botany; A l r; Class Vice-President (2); Collegiaii Board (4). Cassidy, Morton Harding ........ East Boston A X A House; East Boston High School; 1897; Entomology; A X A; Rifle Team (2); 1919 Index Board; Assistant Manager Hockey (3); Interfraternity Conference; Informal Committee (4); Orchestra (1); Landscape Club. Chambers, Roger James ......... Dorchester A 2 House; Dorchester High School; 1895; Chemistry; A 2 ; Class Football (1); Class Baseball (1, 2); Captain Class Baseball (1); Varsity Baseball (1, 2); Assistant Manager Football (3). Chandler, Arthur Lincoln ........ Leominster 12 South College; Leominster High School; 1897; Agriculture; S E; Collegian Board (2, 3, 4); 1919 Index Board; Manager Class Hockey (2); Manager Class Track (2); President Interclass Athletic Board (4); Stockbridge Club; Animal Husbandry Club. 21 ninETEEH twenty index Chisholm, Robert Dudley Melrose Highlands S K House; Melrose High School; 1897; Chemistry; 2 K; Varsity Hockey (2, 3, 4) ; Captain Hockej Team (3, -1) ; Class Hockey (1, 2); Manager Class Basketball (1); Senate (3, 4); Class Vice-President (3); Informal Committee(3, 4); Class Secretary (1) ; Inter- class Athletic Board (1); Interfraternity Conference (3, 4); Assistant Manager Foot- ball (3); Junior Prom Committee; Chemistry Club; Adelphia; Soph-Senior Hop Com- mittee (2). Collins, Robert Burleigh Rockland e X House; Rockland High School; 1898; Agricultural Economics; B X; Class Debat- ing (1); 1919 Index Board; Class Vice- President (3); Manager Varsity Hockey (3, 4); Adelphia; Interfraternity Conference (3, 4); Interclass Athletic Board(4). Cosby, Alfred Francis . . . ... 15 Amity Street; Westfield High School; 1897; Chemistry; 2 E; Glee Club (4). Westfield Davis, Albert Noah .....•••■• Amherst 73 Pleasant Street; Springfield Technical High School; 1893; Pomology; M T; Glee Club (3, 4); Economics Club. Dickenson, Victor Abel .....••■. Amherst Mt. Pleasant; Springfield Technical High School; 1896; Chemistry; Chemistry Club; Mandolin Club (3, 4). Erhard, Bena Gertrude East Milton Draper Hall; Milton High School; 1897; Agriculture; A r; Collegian Board (4). Erickson, George Edwin .....•••• Brockton North College; Brockton High School; 1895; Agricultural Education; Commons Club; Glee Club (3, 4); Educational Club. Erickson, Gunner Emmanuel ....•••• West Lynn North College; Lynn Cla.ssical High School; 1897; Agricultural Economics; Commons Club; Class Track (2, 3); 1919 Index Board; Glee Club (3, 4); Economics Club. Evans, Myrton Files . . . ' West Somerville K 2 House; Somerville High School; 1898; Agricultural Economics; K 2; Class Rifle Team (1); Manager Class Track (1). Class Athletic Board (1); Collegian Board (1, 2, 3, 4); Manager Musical Clubs (3, 4); Editor 1919 Index; Class Secretary (3); Secretary-Treasurer Agricultural Economics Club (3); Non- Athletic Board (3); Junior Prom Committee; Vice-President Adelphia (4). Faber, Edward Stuart Plainfield, N. J. e X House; Leal School; 1896; Agricultural Economics; 6 X; Class Hockey (2); Collegian Board (4). Faneuf, Ambrose Clement West Warren 7 South College; Warren High School; 1897; Chemistry; Commons Club; Class Basketball (4); Chemistry Club. 22 ninETEEn twenty index Faxon, Paul . Wellesley Hills 2K House; Xenton High School; 1808: Pomology; S K; Class Football (1, . ' !); Manager Class Football (2); Class Relay (1, a); Class Baseball (1.2); Captain Class Base- ball (3); Senate (3, 4); President Senate (4); Varsity Hockey (3,4); Adelphia; Class Vice- President (2); ' Class President (3, 4); Vice- President Pomology Club (3); President Pomology Club (4); 1919 Index Board; Class Athletic Board (1, 2). Ferris, Samuel Boynton New Milford, Conn. ATP House; New Milford High School; 1896; Agriculture; ATP; Business Manager Collegian (3, 4); Six-Man Rope Pull (2); Business Manager Squib (3) ; Interfraternity Conference (3, 4); 1919 Index Board; Manager Senior Show; Animal Husbandry Club. Somerville Field, Wilbert Daniel .......•• Colonial Inn; Berkely Preparatory School; 1891; Poultry; 1919 Index Board; Class Secretary (3, 4); Manager Class Track (4); Collegian Board (4); Smoker Committee (3); Social Committee (4); Banquet Committee (4). . Fogg, Verne Allen Danvers 6 South College; Topsfield High School; 1897; Agricultural Economics; K r ; Orchestra (1, 2, 3); Class Track (1, 2, 3); Agricultural Economics Club (3). French, Willard Kyte Worcester Q. T. V. House; Worcester Classical High School; 1897; Pomology; Q. T. V.; 1919 Index Board; Collegian Board (3, 4); Class Basketball (3, 4); Class Track (2); Informal Committee (4); Pomology Club. Garde, Earle Augustus ......•■• Lynn 30 North Prospect Street; Lynn English High School; 1896; Poultry; Commons Club. Garvey, Mary Ellen Monicia Amherst 27 South Prospect Street; Amherst High School; 1896; Chemistry; A T; Chemistry Club. Gasser, Thomas Jefferson .......•■Uxbridge A 2 House; Uxbridge High School; 1895; Agriculture; AS ; Class Basketball (1, 2); Varsity Basket- ball (3, 4); Class Baseball (1); Varsity Baseball (2, 3); Class Sergeant-at-Arms (2); Vice-President Stock- bridge Club (3). GuBA, Emil Frederick ......... New Bedford Clark Hall; New Bedford High School; 1897; Botany; Commons Club; 1919 Index Board. Harris, Ethel Lovett .......... Wenham Draper Hall; Beverly High School; 1897; Pomology; A T; Pomology Club. Hartwell, Richard Raymond 101 Pleasant Street; Springfield Technical High School; If Springfield 3; Pomology Club; Class Track (3). Hastings, Louis Pease ......... Spr ingfield K S House; Springfield Technical High School; 1896; Microbiology; K S; Roister Doisters (1, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Leader Glee Club (4); Class President (4); Informal Committee (4); Interfraternity Conference (4); K ; Microbiology Club; Quartet. 23 ninETEEFI TWENTY INDEX Hodgson, Benjamin Eahle . . Methuen Entomology Building; Phillips Andover Academy; 1888; Entomology; Commons Club. Howe, Ralph Thomas . Melrose Highlands Colonial Inn; Melrose High School; 1897; Pomology; Class Track (3); ]919 7!rfe.r Board; Glee Club (4); Pomology Club. HuNTOON, Douglas Henderson . Norwood S K House; Norwood High School; 1894; Poultry; ZK; Class Baseball (1, 2); Class Track (1, 2); Class Football (1). Jewell, Charles Henry . . . Merrimac North College; Merrimac High School; 1897; Chemistry; Commons Club; Manager Class Basketball (4). Johnson, Lawrence Wilhelm . . Avon a 2 House; Williston Seminary; 1892; Pomology; A S ; Class Football (1); Interfraternity Conference (3). Johnson, Sidney Clarence . Gloucester ATP House; Gloucester High School; 1894; Dairying; ATP; Band (1, 2, 3,4); Orchestra (1,2,3, 4); Class Foot- ball (3). Knowlton, Priscilla . . Roxbury Draper Hall; Girls ' Latin School; 1898; Agriculture; A P. Dorchester Liebman, Anna .......... Draper Hall; Dorchester High School; 1898; Chemistry; A T; Chemistry Club. Mather, William ........... Amherst West Experiment Station; Stand Grammar School; 1898; Chemistry; Commons Club; i K I ; Chemistry Club. Mattoon, Charles Gordon . . . . . Pittsfield 12 South College; Pittsfield High School; 1896; Animal Husbandry; S E; Class Rifle (1, 2); Manager Class Track (2, 3); Manager Varsity Track (3); 1919 Index Board; Animal Husbandry Club. McCarthy, Arthur Martin ......... Monson Q. T. V. House; Monson Academy; 1897; Animal Husbandry; Q. T. V.; Captain Class Baseball (1); Class Basketball (1, 2); Varsity Baseball (2); Varsity Basketball (2, 3, 4); Orchestra (1); Band (I, 2); Class Treasurer (2, 3); Senate (4); Secretary Catholic Club (2); Animal Husbandry Club. McKee, William Henry ......... Chelsea e X House; Chelsea High School; 1895; Agricultural Economics; B X; Class Football (1, 2); Varsity Football (2). Parke, Robert Warren ......... Winchendon 6 Nutting Avenue; Murdock School; 1897; .Agricultural Economics; Commons Club. Parkhurst, Raymond Thurston ....... Fitchburg K 2 House; Fitchburg High School; 1898; Poultry; K S; Class Basketball (1, 2); Varsity Basketball (3, 4); Class Football (3); Class Track (3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (2, 3); Senate (3, 4); Adelphia; Interfratern- ity Conference (3, 4); Junior Prom Committee; Informal Committee; Stockbridge Club. 24 ninETKn twemty index Peck, George Newberry Granville North College; Hartford High School; 1896; Agricultural Economics; Commons Club; Glee Club (1, 2. 3); Class Rifle Team (2). Peieson, Henry Byron New Bedford K 2 House; Haverhill High School; 1894; Entomology; K S; Class Secretary (1) ; Manager Class Tennis (1, 2, 3); Editor Y. M. C. A, Handbook (3); Squib Board (1, 2, 3); 1919 Index Board; President Student Cabinet (4); Editor-in-Chief Collegian (4); Y. M. C. A. (1, 2, 3,4); Class Historian (4). Phipps, Clarence Ritchie Dorchester e X House; Dorchester High School; 1895; Entomology; eX; Manager Class Tennis (2); Varsity Rifle Team (2, 3, 4); Class Sergeant-at-Arms (3). Pulley, Marion Gertrude . . - ' • ■■• • • ' Melrose 2 Allen Street; Melrose High School; 1898; Poultry; A r. Rea, Julian Stuart East Weymouth North College; Weymouth High School; 1897; Agricultural Economics; Commons Club; Economics Club Roberts, Oliver Cousens ...•■■•■• Arlington e X House; Phillips Andover Academy; 1895; Pomology; X; Class Football (1, 2); Varsity Football (2, 3); Pomology Club. Sibley, Helen Aramintha Longmeadow Draper Hall; Springfield Technical High School; 1897; Floriculture; A T; 1919 Index Board; Class Secretary (2). Smith, Wendell Frederick ...■■■•• Troy, N. Y. North College; Troy High School; 1898; Pomology; Commons Club; Class Tennis (2, 3); Mandolin Club (3, 4); Pomology Club; 1919 htdex Board. Spaulding, Harold Edwin . ■Milford K 2 House; 1896; Entomology; K S; Class Tennis (1, 2, 3); President Entomology Club (3); 1919 Index Board. Stafford, Irving Boynton ...■•••• Fall River 6 Nutting Avenue; B. M. C. Durfee High School; 1898; Pomology; Class Track (2, 3, 4); Class Rifle (2); Varsity Rifle (3, 4); S K ; 1919 Index Board; Pomology Club. Stevens, Chester Dillingham ...■•■•• Reading 7 South College; Reading High School; 1897; Agriculture; Commons Club; Pomology Club. Stockwell, Ervin Sidney . . • ■■• ■■Sharon North College; Sharon High School; 1898; Agricultural Economics; Commons Club; Varsity Debating (2, 3); Mandolin Club (2, 3); Roister Doisters (1); Burnham Contest (1). Strack, Edward Framingham Clark Hall; Framingham High School; 1895; Agronomy; Commons Club; Chemistry Club. 25 niriETEEN TWENTY INDEX Sutherland, Ralph ......... Cambridge AS House; Rindge Technical School; 1897; Poultry; A 2 ; Roister Doisters (1); Class Basketball (3, 4); Glee Club (1, 2). Sweeney, William Joseph ......... Dorchester South College; Boston English High; 1898; Chemistry; 2 E; Varsity Track (1, 2, 3); Class Cross Country (1, 2); Class Hockey (2, 3, 4); Class Track (2, 3); Class Tennis (2); Class Baseball (1); 1919 Index Board; Glee Club (4). Thomas, Frank DesAutels ......... Milford 1 South College; Milford High School; 1897; Poultry; Orchestra (1); Class Football (4) ; Class Basketball (4). Thompson, Wells Nash .......... Adams A 2 House; Adams High School; 1895; Landscape Gardening; AS ; Mandolin Club (2, 3, 4); Leader Mandolin Club (4). ViCKERS, John ........... Amherst 1 South College; Deerfield Academy; 1895; Agricultural Economics; Class Basketball (1, 2, 3); Varsity Basketball (4). Wells, Marion Nichols ......... Springfield Draper Hall; Springfield Central High School; 1896; Pomology; A T; 1919 hidex Board; Pomology Club. White, Edward Asa ......... Providence, R. I. 12 South College; Moses Brown School; 1896; Agriculture; Class Baseball (1, 2, 3); Class Football (1, 2, 3); Class Basketball (2, 3, 4); Class Treasurer (2); Class Captain (3); Class President (3); Class Secretary (4); Animal Husbandry Club; Senate; Adelphia. Williams, Kenneth Sanderson . . . . . . . Sunderland Q. T. V. House; Deerfield Academy; 1897; Agriculture; Q. T. V.; Class Football (1, 2, 3, 4); Class Basket- ball (1, 2, 3, 4); Class President (2). WiLLOUGHBY, RAYMOND RoYCE ...... New Britain, Conn. 12 North College; New Britain High School; 1896; Rural Sociology; 1918 Index Board; Class Historian (3); K . Wood, Oliver Wiswell • . . . . Arlington North College; Arlington High School; 1892; Pomology; Commons Club; Class Football (1, 3); Varsity Football (2). Woodward, Chester Smith ......... Leverett 32 North Prospect Street; Amherst High School; 1896; Agriculture; Commons Club; Class Rifle (1, 2)! Varsity Rifle (3, 4). Yesair, John Newburyport Draper Hall; Dummer Academy; 1894; Microbiology; K S; Class Track (1, 2, 3); Varsity Track (2, 3, 4); Captain Varsity Track (3, 4); Class Baseball (1, 2); Varsity Baseball (2); Secretary Interclass Athletic Board (3); Class Captain (3); Class Sergeant-at-Arms (3); College Cheer Leader (4); Senate (4); Adelphia. 26 niriETEEn twenty index 27 niMETEEII TWENTY INDEX 3Iunior Class Officers Harold L. Harrington Gordon B. Crafts Earle D. Lothrop Henry E. Lyons K ' knneth Blanchard ]{ )r R. Brown Mtss Susan Smith Se. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Captain geant-at-arms Historian fi 3funior Class iDistorp ' OR the third time during our college course, we are called upon to give an ac- count of ourselves, and we do so gladly, feeling that our record for the past two years and a half is one to which we can ever point with pride and satis- faction. Ours has been an unusual career. We have seen college life in all its aspects, in times both before and after the war, and during the war. It was only as freshmen that we had an opportunity to engage to any extent in those sports and activities which lend so much to the hfe and interest of college days. An unusual class! Yes, for we have never been pulled through the famous Aggie pond. We also won the six-man rope pull, and it was with that same fighting spirit that our football team made a record worthy of any freshman class team. With 1920 the old sophomore smokers were revived. Though perhaps we did miss out on some of the functions our first two years, we are looking forward to the Prom as one of our big successes. It was no small part that ' 20 played in this world-wide issue. It was in April of our freshman year that war was declared, and the call to Aggie men was so great. 1 ' 920 responded readily to President Butterfield ' s hope that all would enter some form of patriotic service for the summer and everyone, we believe, lived up to his hopes. After our summer ' s work, those of us who returned to M. A. C. found our numbers greatly diminished. It was then that we learned that those tales of the sophomore curriculum of which we had stood so much in awe were somewhat of a reality. Nevertheless, we were ready to judge for ourselves. But the call from our country for men was becoming more urgent and the close of the year found a decided depletion in the ranks of ' 20. The climax was reached, however, when as juniors there were only six to enroll in September, 1918. What did this mean! Was our class to drift apart so soon. ' It meant that out of almost one hundred fifty, every ' 20 man was in service for his country, and three of them have paid the great price. Our history has only begun, but we are sure that the future has great things in store for us, and that ' 20 will always rise to meet the occasion. 31 ninETEEH TWENTY INDEX atolb Hcnnttfi alien Above the smoke and s i of this dim spot which men call earth ' Belchertown In war service Relchertown High School 1896. Belchertown has supplied this world with many famous men and when in the fall of 1916 Harold left home to enter Aggie another illustrious son left the maternal fold. Freshman year, he and Davie had a plan worked out to delay the early morning B. M. train from Belchertown and thus free themselves from the clutches of the Aggie Army. Sophomore year Harold forsook the B. M. and acquired a Buick roadster as a means of con- veyance. We understand he was clever with the books and seldom had trouble with the registrar ' s office. Like many other members of the class he is not with us this year, but we sincerely hope he will be next year. cetotst muid apse?, 3it. The rule is: cram tomorrow and cram yesterday but never cram today. Winchester Winchester High School il House Chemistry; A 2; . A man whose virtues are due to his profound belief that the best time to stop talking is just before you have told all you know. His dynamic nature finds egress in the perfume of the Chem Lab or in counting the elusive bean at Aggie Inn, and so great is his love for the science of chemistry that he is anxious to try the doubtful experiment of raising a professional beard. All in all, George is a pleasing combination of a rosy cheeked human cash register and an embryo scientist of note. He may justly feel assured of an explosive future. fil ilo moticricft Bacon Bake Who kath given, who halh sold it thee, knoivledge of me? Leominster Draper Hall Leominster High School 1899; Agriculture; S E; Class Football (1); Class Baseball (1, 2). Milo hails from Leominster. All Aggie stood aside with awe when this colossal strode amongst us. From hearsay, we had great hopes in Milo as a Southpaw, but studies and the co-eds soon headed him along the paths of wisdom and happiness. Mr. Delroy described Bake ' s character for us when he said he was an easy going fellow; was very kind hearted; never knew what worry was; and would live to a ripe old age. Milo says he never saw Venus so he doesn ' t know whether he was named after her or not. 32 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Williamstown Bill Arise and shake the dust from off thy feet. ' Drury High School In war service 1896; Commons Club. Bill hails from the purple hills of Williamstown. After graduating from high school, he lost no time in deciding that Williams College was not the place for him. He served his first year on the campus with ' 19 but couldn ' t come to terms with an odd class and so affiliated himself with 1920. Bill left college after the demobilization of the S. A, T. C. because he felt that the shock of a return to student life would be too great. After he has recuper- ated from the strain of army life, he will return to finish his awaiting hen coop in the Rural Engineering Department. Bridgewater l atrg abtafiam 25 all Bally ' ' My mind to me a kingdom is. ' Bridgewater High School (3). 1898; Chemistry; Commons Club; Mandolin Club (3); Chemistry Club He is a true disciple of Socrates whose mind seldom leaves the etherial realm of the sciences and our rural problem. When Harry came on to the M. A. C. campus, he was a ver.y timid little chap, but he has now outgrown the gastrula stage. Harry hails from Bridgewater, the town of fair women and he sure enough must have been a heart-breaker. He can do most any- thing from throwing a line on the evolution of the genus Homo to hoeing corn in his fathers cabbage patch. Within two years, he expects to get his Ph. D. degree in tactics. . -  ' Amherst %otin Catl Sail Red Not much talk, a great siveet silence Amherst High School Q. T. V. House 1898; Agricultural Education; Q. T. V.; Class Football (1, 2); Class Basketball (1, 2); Class Hockev (1); Class Baseball (1, 2); Varsity Basketball (3)- Red has achieved undying fame in the annals of 1920 by playing on four class teams in one year, and by being allowed to take Aggie Ec. a second time. The basketball floor and the hockey rink furnish an environment which Red prefers to that of the class room, tho it is said on good authority that he is considering public speaking as a major course. L. E. is a firm believer in co-education at Aggie, having been known to walk to class occasionally with some of the campus fair sex. He usually cracks the books just before finals, and succeeds in fooling most of the profs. 33 niMETEEM TWENTY INDEX aoinficlli Scott IBfauregattJ Beau Come sleep! O Sleep, the certain knot of peace. Framingham South College Framingham High School 1897; Chemistry; S E; Mandolin Club (2, 3). Ho Beau! How ' s Quad? Omar Khayyam had the right idea when he wrote Into this world and why, not knowing, etc. The greatest work in his life is to keep his mandolin off his roommates head. The breezy uniform of the navy appealed to him and he tried gobbing it. Now he is back at school gobbing it in the chem. lab. He manages to keep the department busy buying beakers and says he is fitting himself to test glassware at his favorite hotel where he dines occasionally. He firmly believes a faint heart never won a cook-stove. North Easton iSDanwI WLUl)0tct TBtXt tt ' Young fellows loill be young fellows. ' Oliver Ames High School 120 Pleasant Street 1897. The barefoot boy with cheek of tan , wonderful brown eyes, and in spite of it all he plays locally, refusing all offers from major leagues across the river. He came to us from Rhode Island State and the day he left they lost a million dollar smile. But he is a modest junior and considers a hearty laugh the sign of a vacant mind. He has a good voice and legs like a canary but he is too bashful to sing in public. This with the coming problem of home economics keeps him from the musical clubs. Withal a worthy chap. I attg B«man Shokty Good things come in small parcels Holyoke High School 1895; Chemistry; Band (1,2); Chemistry Club (3). Holyoke West Exp. Station When Shorty first hit town, he was followed to college by a crowd of highly delighted youngsters. Notwithstanding this auspicious beginning, Harry soon demonstrated that the town of Holyoke could produce something more than good paper. Zoology and Physics were playthings for Shorty, and Trigonometry an amusement, so he took a high dive into Calculus and has not reached the surface. Perhaps he thought he felt the need of Calculus in figuring his breakage losses in chemistry. Business is Shorty ' s middle name and in spite of his leaning toward agriculture, this innate tendency finds expression in his social dances. 34 ninETEEFI TWENTY IFIDEX ILouia Sctman Co%vs may come and coivs may go, but the ' Bull ' goes on forever Dorchester In war service Dorchester High School 1898; Chiss Basketball (]); Class Football (2). He came from Dorchester to visit us and decided to remain in order to find out who relieved him of his nightie at the night shirt parade. There was method in his madness for he put in his daily appearance at the Dean ' s office to protest the crimes of Physics and Zoo. He could spread his line on these topics just as easily as collecting nickels on the Old Bay State Line. Louis with the wonderful experience which he gained at the Hash House will some day make his fortune and reputation in the commissary world. He grasps me wilh a shinny hand. Millville High School In war service Millville, N. J. 1898; ATP. Millville is on the map- Where? Somewhere in New Jersey. Oh, that ' s where Henry Bigelow comes from. Henry was born in Salem, Massachusetts, but wanted to try life on the South Jersey plains. Good judgment sent him back to Massachusetts to college. He does not advertise his home town, in fact he forgets it, so busy is he with writing journalistic articles and getting Freshmen to shovel off the pond for hockey practice. Never did a cat watch a mouse as Henry watched those Freshmen, -they were not safe anywhere. Henry went to Camp Lee with the first S. A. T. C. contingent from here. The gold bars stand out pretty well on his shoulders. : c ; ItcnnctS BlancfiacD Tex The Future hides in it Gladness and sorrow, We press still thorough, Naught that abides in it Daunting us,-onward. e X House Highland Falls High School 1897; Landscape Gardening; O X; Interfraternity Conference (3); Class Captain (2, 3); Captain Six-Man Rope Pull (1, 2). Tex ' s strength and genial character should be great attributes in his walk through life. He has seen some of the world, but it has left no discrediting scars upon him. He has had experience with men and so knows how to deal with problems related to life. Knowing the worth of study he is bound to rise to fame. A sense of humor wrought by contact with men, and a clear, far seeing brain are his to aid him up the road to success. Highland Falls, N. Y. 35 ninETEEM TWENTY IHDEX mherst Cflaclcfi a calir Boattiman Chick Lei us be calm, men. ' ' Amherst High School Q. T. V. House 1897; Landscape Gardening; Q. T. V.; Musical Clubs (1, 2, 3); Inter- Traternity Conference (3); Senate (3); Index Board (3); Business Manager Roister Doisters (3); Prom, Committee (3); Adelphia. It has been rumored that Chick once lived in New Jersey, but at an earli, age he took exception to the Jersey climate and came to Amherst to live. A.tter a lengthy period of growth, he graduated from Amherst High School and with his usual good taste selected Aggie as his future Alma Mater. Chick decided Freshman year that it would be wasteful to spend time walking back and forth across the campus, so chose Landscape as a major and as a result spends most of his time on the East side of the campus. Aside from his affinity for the fair sex Chick manages to find time for a number of campus activities. Hudson IRop IRobcttiSon IBcohjn Beownif, Thy smile becomes Ihee well Quincy High School e X House Ci) 1898; Agricultural Economics; G X; Sergeant-at-arms (3); Index Board What a noble mixture in this prodigal from Hudson; a good scholar, a keen wit and a fair face. His accomplishments are many. Among the fore- most are guardian of the safe and the toothpicks at the dining hall, playing a clarionet, running, and basketball. He is out for a good time no matter where he is, and many a burst of laughter is due to Browny ' s remarks. Down in Hudson, they do not appreciate him because he just moved (here, but back in Quincy the thoughts of John Hancock and John Quincy Adams fade jwaj to insignificance when Browny is around. West Somerville Cacroll MlooGttt TBuniitt Bunk ■' For mirth prolongetk life and causelh health ' ' : Somerville High School In War Service 1899; Q. T. v.; Class Football (1, 2); Squib Board. Bunk , whose middle name would like to be Genera Ability , terms himself a woman-hater. Cross-examination shows that his hatred of women applies only to chaperones. Bunk is not yet a habitue of The Dean ' s Board in fact, Bunk doesn ' t like to get in the good company there. Bunk is an artist. His transparent camouflage has been the hit of Aggie. Let us hope that his art may be the making of him. 36 niriETEEn twemty index SLlan Q flljiUe TButnS Scottie Peace on earth to gentle men Taunton High School e X House 1896; Pomology; G X; Assistant Manager Hockej (3). Scottie has an enviable worry proof constitution. His care free attention to studies has not lost him a point. Though he appears to care little for the girls, he has been known to visit Smith once in a while. His sense of humor, is that of a Scotchman. Upon men he has a quiet influence. Scottie is due to reach a high rung in life ' s ladder. Baltimore, Md. CBtotse SBticcap CampbfU Skinny Business before Pleasure Oilman Country School J 2 K House 1898; Agricultural Economics; - K; Collegian Board (1, 2, 3); Class Athletic Board (1); Assistant Manager Basketball (3); Business Manager 1920 Index; Junior Prom Committee; Informal Committee (3); Adelphia. George had his freshman year with ' 19. Then he thought he would re- sign to become a millionaire. Not much of a success at this, he returned to S;ttle in with ' 20 and finish his college work. However, he did learn many valuable pointers in the outside world about financial matters and consequently he was elected Business Manager of this volume by an almost unanimous vote. Has he proved worthy of this honor? Well just look at the size of the advertising section. George is a product of Baltimore; however no relation to oysters and clams. KalpS iuntct Catli Jehhy Dreamer of dreams, why should I strive In set the crooked straight Somerville East Pleasant Street Somerville High School 1898; Commons Club; Pomolog.y. When the Sergeant first saw Delia ' s graceful figure come undulating toward him, he grasped wildly at his hair and was heard to mutter, Help Ye Muses A chorus girl in disguise. Not satisfied with going through the seven stages once, Ralph came back for another dose in the form of a course in the Anatomy of the Higher Mammalians. Ralph missed his calling. Intended for a Nature Dancer, he decided to become a Pomologist. He has some very radical ideas, such for instance as the beneficial effects of music during blossoming time, and is contemplating writing a book on the effects of moonlight on pine- apple growing. niriETEEn twehty index East Sandwich 3lD5n ifOfECtoft Carlfton Jacky Actio7is speak louder than words Sandwich High School Draper Hall 1898; Agriculture; Z E; Class Football (1, 2); Class Baseball (1, 2); Captain Class Baseball (1); Class Track (1, 2); Manager Class Basketball (2, 3); Adelphia. Jacky — athlete and wooer of fair women — takes great delight in rendering the Sandwich cheers and in handing the freshmen the small end of the score. Jacky is unquestionably one of the best athletes in the class and it is hard lo say in what branch of sport he excels. On tlie track as else- where, he is a hard man to down for he fights every inch of the way and never says die. He is the pluckiest little fighter in college. We all admire Jacky for his cheerful disposition and abundance of pep. Springfield SLtttiut (EHiuin €mtet Art Please go away and lei me sleep ' ' Springfield Technical High School 8 South College 1898; Agricultural Economics; K V ; Class Tennis f2); Class Baseball (2); Class Hockey (3). Art hails from Springfield, with the accent on the hail. He is a bear at driving a car, as some of his Informal partners can testify. Woe unto him who enters the room in a boisterous manner when li ' l ' Artha is studying. His days shall be numbered. Just one more secret — Art is some corporal, but the freshmen wouldn ' t admit it. jfcftiracft aaUIItam ClatnUgc Friday All men are born free and equal, but ?nost of them marry Milford e X House Milford High School 1896; Landscape Gardening; 6 X; Dramatics (1); Musical Club (2, 3); Class Basketball (2, 3); Rifle team (3). Milford must be rewarded for producing our hero. When interviewed by our reporter he claimed that one of his reasons for coming here was to study. That is why he chose a room in Morton Hall. Later he moved to quieter and more aristocratic bachelor apartments. W ' hen it comes to chasing macrogametes Freddie laps the bunch. His military appearance is probably the reason. He stands five feet ten in his drill shirt and when on parade in full military uniform he presents an appearance that would make both General Pershing and Apollo hustle for the pines. It is rumored that he will major in landscape. 38 niriETEEn twenty index X House aifwD jatnolb CIousS Al Jesters ever counselled kings Wollaston Quincy High School 1898; Landscape Gardening; O X; Class Rifle (2); Varisty Rifle (2); Index Board; Glee Club (3); Roister Doisters (3). Alfred Arnold Clough, our brilliant physicist, singer, landscape artist, not to mention fusser, first kicked the slats out of the family cradle in Wollas- ton, Mass. Since that time he has changed considerably. It is even rumored that he is a ringer of Belles in North Amherst. Correcting physics papers is his avocation. (Ask any ' 21 man.) Al chose Landscape as the least of the sixteen evils although he and Johnnie O. get together onre in a while and discuss figures. On the side Al plays second base in the Glee Chil) and goes over to the shooting gallery once in a while. He is considering pledging K next year. Well, go to it, Al, we wish you a life full of sun- shine and Heirs. r ' - 4 P iftcbEncfe (Eugcnt Coir, 9!r. South Portland, Me. e X House Freddy tvrap myself in my virtue South Portland High School 1897; Pomology; X; Mandolin Club (2). We ' ve got to hand it to Fred; he certainly made two wise moves in the course of his young life. He realized Massachusetts was better than Maine when it came to Agricultural Colleges, and that it was more desirable to be- long to an even class than to an odd one. He can usually be found during his spare time at the College Store trying to cater to the whims of students and stenographers. Doubtless Fred ' s good looks and pleasant ways increase the sales considerably in the case of the ladies. His good nature and his attitude towards his class mates have won him many friends. CSotton Butngam CtnftS Crip.s Worthy must a Freshman he to ' scape this man ' s authority Manchester Q. T. V. House Manchester High School 1896; Animal Husbandry; Q. T. V.; Class Hockey (1, 2, 3); Captain Class Hockey (1); Class Baseball (1); Varsity Hockey (2, 3); Class Captain (2); Class Vice-President (3) ; Senate (3) ; Class Athletic Board (3) ; Index Board; Adelphia. Gordon, the pride of Manchester, started his college career by playing on the almost famous Freshman Baseball Team whose sea.son was abruptly cut short in the rush for war work. As a sophomore, 1921 has become well acquainted with him as Class Captain. After holding a pond party for them he turned his attention to Varsity Hockey, and has always given a good account of himself. Crip ' s big heart and good natured smile are great as.sets, both in college and among the ladies. He says he is not a fusser but we wonder. We are sure, however, that he ' ll make good at anything he undertakes. 39 niHETEEn TWENTY INDEX 3oSn aUjanftcr Ctatofotli Jack Young in limbs; in judgment old Public Latin Scliool ATP House 1899; Rural Sociology; ATP; Class Football (1); Class Debating Team (3); Mandolin Club (1,2); Burnham Declamation Prize ( ' 2); lyidex Board (3); Y. M C. A. Cabine-; (3). His brow is wrinkled from working out the many ideas that crowd them- selves into his capacious head. Although a large part of his time is spent in the pursuit of his studies, among which Rural Soc. and Aggie Ee. are favored, yet his grin is occasionally to be seen in the front row of tlis Mandolin Club. His gift of gab has won for him the office of class orator. Severa ' duties a.ssigned to him by the class have been faithfully and whole-heartedly per- formed One who offers his friendship to all who are desirous and worthy of it — a true 1920 man is Jack. Clinton ioncgi SDagffftt Albany, N. Y. An honest man is the yiohlest work of God ' ' Irving School 1899; Agriculture; K 2); Class Football (2); Class Treasurer (2); Manager Varsity Track (3). When C. J. started out for college from Albany, his sweetheart turned him around and kissed him goodby. Clint didn ' t notice the difference in direction so traveled due East to M. A. C. instead of due West to Cornell. The angels sure showered us on this occasion for we saw at once an A 1 class treasurer, and varsity track manager. His roommate, an expert at telling character by one ' s handwriting, claims Clint does not like dancing, but we know better. You can tell Clint a mile away by his smile, and this is due to the fact that he often gets up bright and early in the morning to study for a quiz. 3lDl)n HctsJcg SDclafiitnt Del He was the mildest manne.r ' d man ' hat ever scu ' lled ship or cut a throat Berton South College Boston Latin School 1897; Entomology; K P . Fighting Jack Delahunt came on the campus fresh from the wilds of Dorchester, with a knowing look which started the upper-classmen guessing at the start. He hung a freshman cap on his right ear, spat upon his hands, aiid tackled the books with a vim which got him thru his college career to date willKnit a flunk. Del ' s favorite pastime is the manly art of self-defence, altho he has delved into the my.steries of basketball. His pessimistic nature is one of the chief things which make him loom up as far different from the average man in our class. Del ' s one bad habit is continuous mastication of the chicle. And, sh! He goes over the mountain occasionally. 40 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Clinton Cl5UnliDn B.obnt SDtticii. Glen ' Where can (here be a more ralorous man? Clinton High School 13 Fearing Street 18!)8; Landscape Gardening; Commons Club; Class Debating (1). A quiet, modest, unobtrusive chap, not afflicted with the mouth disease , — nor ' lock-jaw either. Even if he can ' t reach as high as some of the boys, he makes himself felt when he does reach. Ask one of the Freshmen what happened late Monday night on that memorable eighteenth of March One Freshman, at least, went home, somewhat the worse for immediate contact wsith Glen Derick and the Phi Sig lawn. He can see even if he docs have to have an extra pair of eyes. That dreaded Board which appears about the middle of the term in South College bears no fears for him. Kingston K S House Tub Not mere words, but thoughts he speaks Plymouth High School 1898; Chemistry; K 2; Class Football (1); Class Track (1, 2); Class Baseball (1); Varsity Track (2, 3); Senate; Chemistry Club; Adelphia; K . The rural community is indeed the seed bed of the nation. Kingston sent Tub here to finish his education and he is putting an excellent finish on it. He observes that he may judge, and judges only on occasion. Nature blessed him with a fine physique, — another Aggie man whose trail is seen but who never trails, who runs the path to victory on track, gridiron, and diamond. His legs, though fast, strive vainly with his head. K will be but one of his trophies. ' 20 showed its common sense in electing him to presidency and to the Senate. Other honors, innumerable, add testimony of his worth They .say even that some one calls him up from South Hadley. Can the State question Aggie ' s worthy products? Melrose CfiarlfSr jfdij SDourtttc Ch. rlie would dwell among the bees and books Melrose High School North College 1898; Entomology; Commons Club; Class Hockey (1, 2, 3); Class De- bating (2); Index Board. Charlie is a real student as he has shown by his fine scholastic record during the last two years. But like all tru sons of Melrose, he is an athlete too, playing goal for our freshman and sophomore hockey teams. Charlie is majoring in Ent, and if good hard work counts for anything, he will surely get to the top. 41 ninETEEn twemty index station dEtiitg (CarU Sunshine A type of the wise, who soar but never roam West Newton Draper Hall Newton High School 1895; Landscape; A T; Index Board (3). Earley by name but not by nature, she is the one member of the Trio whose duties are so numerous that she is always running a little off schedule like the trains on the Central Vermont. Marion is extremely candid and voices her opinions regardless of the future. She has chosen sunny California as her future destination where she hopes to find ample range for training in landscape, her major. i ttfa ct attin (Emct? Doc Yon Cassius halh a lean and hungry look Newburyport North College Newburyport High School 1897; Agriculture Education. Herb grew up at Newburyport, but he couldn ' t make cabbages grow on the beaches, so he decided to travel. In his wanderings in the interior of Massachusetts, he chanced upon Amherst. Discovering the natural advantages of M. A. C. he decided to stay. He has a violent love for Physics but prefers to discuss Smith, Mt. Holyoke, and Co-eds. One day in Physics Billy happen- ed to glance at Herb. ' Twas one of Billy ' s fishing trips and Herb soon experienced the feeling of being landed hook, bawb, and sinkah. He succeeded in extricating himself however and is still in the swim with 1920. HotfnjD ifullft Bou A killing tongue but a quiet su ' ord Haverhill High School A X A; Class Football (1, 2); Manager Class Basketball (1 In war service Lowel ' IBS Broad, bluff and buoyant of spirit are the terms that characterize this husky son of 1920. He spends his time throwing a basketball around in the Drill Hall and trying to devise some method by which to extricate himself from the fatal finals. Bob is right there with the class spirit too, having enough for three or four ordinary men. Certainly we never could accuse him of diseased lungs for he had no rival other than the combined yell of the regiment when dismis.sed. His loud voice branded him as a roughneck until they discovered that it was only the overflow of surplus pep. 42 ninETEEFI TWENTY IMDEX Eelanti pcague (Statt Lee Maidens like moths are ever caught by his glare Newton Center Q. T. V. House Reading High School 1896; Animal Husbandry; Q. T. V.; Band (1, 2); Musical Club (1, 2, 3); Assistant Manager Hockey (3). A product of the thriving metropolis of Reading, Lee stayed around his native community long enough to obtain his credentials from its high school, when he forsook the haunts of his boyhood and came up to M. A. C as a member of 1920. The place was so much to his liking that he decided to stay and has been fooling the profs, ever since. Lee is strong for the social game, and when irformals, etc., are mentioned he begins to sit up and take notice. He is also pretty clever at extracting music from the cornet. That he intends to lead the simple life in after years is shown by his choosing An. Hus. as a major. Stamford, Conn. A 2 l House Catlislt ifcttin (Btabe Carl man has done it, I can Stamford High School 1897; Animal Husbandry; A 2 ; Class Basketball (2). It is a long walk to Stamford, Conn., but Carl made it and found a home at M. A. C. He isn ' t very big but he is all quality and has a lot of scrap in spite of his demure, self-effacing manner. The old saying Silence is golden governs his life. Yet he has an appealing way with the ladies and knows his way to Hamp, but of course just goes for the ride. He once spoke fluently about molasses and feathers, but he is more of a stump puller than a stump .speaker. His sympathies are with the An. Hus. Department in the cam- paign for cheaper beef. Woods Hole In war service Ben True as ike needle to the pole Lawrence High School 1897; ATP; Class Football (1, 2); Class Track (1). Ben got his early training chasing crayfish and ascaris worms for the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole. He tried Freshman foot- ball up here and no wonder they trimmed Monson. The track showed more of his speed; the 300 was easy for Ben. He considered his head as valuable an asset as his feet, so he and Billy did not agree as to the laws of motion, and studying by osmosis. Ben decided to try out his theories in an aero- plane down South and he succeeded. The Hamp car line did pretty well without his support but it was a hard pull. 43 ninETEEn twenty index iRatlian CBtout Nate Put not your trust in princes Slierborn In war service Dean Academy 1896; K r ; Class Track (2); Landscape Club (2). Sweet, thick, tempting silence and plenty of it is Nates most prom- inent characteristic. Perhaps the fact that he has roomed next to a church during his stay in Amherst is the cause of his reluctance in voicing his opinions. Still waters run deep means something in his case, and his depths are at times almost unfathomable. He has never explained his anxiety to go home often but — well, use your imagination. He always has been a mystery to us and always will be until that unfathomable reason which is far back in his own home town is discovered One long look at his soulful eyes is enough to tell the world that somewhere in the numerous folds of his grey matter there lurks a fair face, who holds the scepter which will destroj ' the mysterious silence which now envelops him. Byfield ATP House jftanft CalDtofll l alc Finkie The high cost of lo ' ing is keeping me brolie Dummer Academy 1897; Pomology; A T P; Class Baseball (2); Assistant Manager Basket- ball (3); Interfraternity Conference (3); Pomology Club (2, 3). Hale, Hale, the gang ' s all here — from Byfield. Yes, a stork dropped Fink in an out-of-the-way place but he managed to survive the rigorous training on the frontier of civilization. Fink dropped in for a four years call at Aggie one October morning in 1916. He immediately blossomed as a social lion. The co-eds were right on his heels. He would hike to the woods for a relief but they waited his return. Finally he escaped one night to Hamp and again to South Hadley and has been occupied there ever since. Good nature is his art. North Amherst Igajftt waolCDtt laamlin Ham A man ' s mind is moulded by his thoughts North Amherst Salem High School 1898; Agricultural Economics; A X A; Class Rifle Team (1, 2); Varsity Rifle Team (2). Ham is one of Amherst ' s contributions to the class of ' 20. He has however a common masculine weakness which manifests itself in a ferocious appetite which is best appeased by home made pie and cake. He relieves his dyspepsia by skidding a bicycle about campus in mid-winter. Ham ' s specialty is tactics, it is here that he enjo.ys those hours of restful bliss. In his recreation hours Ham is a consistent inhabitant of the rifle gallery. Sarg says he uses an awful lot of ammunition, but he does get a bulls ' eye sometimes. 44 nincTKn twenty index Lunenburg ATP House atolti £.£011 ifatcington Hahry Actions speak louder than words Lunenburg High School 1898; Pomology; K r ; Class Basketball (1); Varsity Basketball (2); Class Baseball (]); Pomology Club. Harry took his first peek at the world in Lunenburg. Of course his ambitions, social and otherwise, led him away to seek his education. M. A. C. drew a prize when his seeking led him here. Activity is his middle name and he can be seen chasing around the basketball court and the baseball field as well as over the mountain . We will admit he has the gift when it comes to eluding final exams. Final week is his vacation. His optimism is invaluable and the srnile that won ' t come ofl ' will surely bring him friends wherever he goes. He is fond of fruit growing — especially peaches. ' estwood In war service (Bmtt on JFrancifii l asiam Has Oh sleep, it is a gentle thing Hyde Park High School 1898; Chemistry; .9 X; Musical Clubs (1). This member of Aggie was sent to us from Hyde Park where he was hiding when some one heard his voice and mistook him for a bear, kindly forwarding him as another specimen for the Zoo museum. He succeeded in escaping Doc. Gordon ' s clutches and joined 1920. His bark is worse than his bite for he smiles oftener than he frowns. He was a member of the class track team and developed his wind by blowing a clarionet in the band. Chemistry is his major and he bids fare to break his share of apparatus. CSatlfiS ifrancis ajincs With half a heart, I wander here, as from an age gone by Bolton In war service Houghton High School 1899; Commons Club. Charley ' s sober countenance chimes poorly with the beauty of his features. Absorbed in a world of his own, Charley lets the trivial things of life such as the war, electives, classes, and informals pass him by without a stir. Coming here under handicaps, he soon demonstrated his worth and earned a solid place for himself in his class. How he fits in with the fair pnes is a death- sealed mystery, for a clam would seem loquacious in comparison with the silent Charley. He firmly believes that his ears, were not put on his head for orna- mental purposes onl.y. Will he be a statesman or a private detective? 45 niriETEEn twenty index Scituate South College Pa Sober, steadfast and demure Scituate High School 1894; Agriculture; K T . This representative of Tom Lawson ' s home town knew a good thing when he saw it, so he joined the ranks of Twenty. He is quiet but we hear him occasionally, and at such times well weighed words alone pass his lips. He is a man of judgment and so sticks to his original intention of becoming a farmer. He makes friends with his books, and it is his conscientious work with them that has put him among our best students. We expect that in a short time Pa will be handling great quantities of sparkling metal, for he is certain to succeed with his new learned scientific farming methods. Shrewsbury jFtanK l atolli l ollanti Dutch What holds the future, the i, in store For him who speaks one wcrrd, no more? Shrewsbury High School In war service 1897; Floriculture; A X A; Si.x-man Rope Pull (], 2); Class Track (1, 2). Here is the man small in stature but great in mind who is to bring fame to Shrewsbury in the future through his efforts in floriculture. Dutch got his name from our friend Dutch Cleanser at the Hash House. He found himself on the Dean ' s Board occasionally due to his over indulgence in ath- letics, but his characteristic spurt always brought him through at the finish. His relations with the ladies are somewhat obscure but it is rumored that he has been seen with a charming auburn haired young lady at Mt. Holyoke. Taunton 3|of)n flfllilliam l ollotoa? Jack Put me amongst the girls Taunton High School e X House 1898; Agricultural Economics; G X; Orchestra (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (3); Class Rifle Team (1, 2); Secretary Roister Doisters (3). Yonny ' s skill with the violin is hardly to be mentioned when we think of his smile. That smile has won him favor with many a girl. In fact it is a question in the minds of some as to just how many girls he has favored with his smile. Theatre parties are a hobby with him. His quiet walk through life is a source of much envy among his friends. That fertile brain of his is now probably in the act of devising some means of capturing a wealthy heiress. If he fails in this, he ' ll succeed in making some girl happy with that three inch smile. .46 niHETEEn TWENTY INDEX Derry, N. H. WiObett feantrctson J otne Bob My life is one damned horrid grind Amherst High School T. V. House 1897; Animal Husbandry; Q. T. V.; Class Tennis (1, 2); Assisfant Manager Musical Clubs (3) ; Index Board. Bob is a product of Sunderland, but early in life he weighed anchor and set sail for Hawaii where he remained for ten years. At the end of that time either the strength of Sunderland onions or Sunderland wimmen drew him back. Although we are not sure which it is, we notice that if any one says, Does she? the one answer we always get from him is I ' ll say she does . Among other things, we notice Bob would rather dance than study — doubtless due to the early Hula-hula environment. He has been a sturdy booster of his class and college, and we wish him luck. aibcrt (Etitoatti l otof Al Music to thine ears Needham _ M South College Needham High School 1894; Agricultural Economics; Orchestra (1, 2, 3); Mandolin Club (I, 2, 3). About two years ago, Al decided he ' d had enough of books and, Ho for the life of a sailor lad! His cruise on the seas hasn ' t changed him much, he is the same quiet, good natured, efficient lad we old timers knew him, but ye gods what a leaning he has taken on for business! From boats, W has transferred his love to automobiles for he has acquired the knack of direct- ing the vast traffic across the river and back. Some day, we shall hear of him as a railroad president at least. However, we hope he can always find time to play to us on his cello. 2Dabi£ aidtn l|utli Al His tawny beard was equal in grace Both to his wisdom and his face Wellesley Hills In war service Wellesley High School 1897; ATP; Class Football (1, 2). This gentleman talks very little and least of all about himself, so clever detective work was necessary to reveal the secrets of his life. Al is one of the Hurds. The other one is not his brother or even third cousin to his sister ' s second husband ' s brother, but they stick together closely enough to pass for newlyweds almost anywhere. Al believes in studies, athletics, and social life, but seems to favor them in the reverse order. He really bats high in the Smith league, whither he journeys on his greasy iron steed, midst much smoke and noise. 47 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX ceottion MiU m utti The sicain responsive as the ynilk-maid sung Millbury In war service Gushing Academy 1897; Commons Club; Glee Club (1); Mandolin Club (1); Orchestra (1); Class Tennis (2). This unit of ' 20 succeeded in fooling the Profs, along with the rest of us during his two years ' stay in Amherst. .4t the completion of his second year, he went with the blister rust delegates to Hanover, where he spent his days in pursuit of wild gooseberries, and his nights glued to an appendage of the twin ' s motorcycle, which was hurd forever and ever. Gordon carried a remarkable voice somewhere in his shoes, and proved its quality during his Sophomore year with the Musical Clubs. He is a man who does not be- lieve that College Bred means a four years ' loaf. Winchester SrooKS iftanfelin iaftfman Jake Happy is the man who feareth nothing Winchester High School A X A House 1898; Agriculture; A X A; Class Baseball (2); Class Football (2); Ser- geant-at-arms (1); Class Basketljall (3); Senate (3). Here we have one of these Winchester stars, an expert at handling the elusive sphere out on the third sack. ' 20 wanted a cultured roughneck for Sargeant-at-arms so they called on Brooks the Fighting Swede to hold the office. He performed this duty so well that the season found him on the class football team and from thence to basketball. The training his mind received in various branches of athletics fitted him to wear the red and black of the Senate. Jake has recently taken a turn at tripping the light fantastic. However in this line he requires something pretty special and home talent preferred. latcSarb T5o ' ta t Eambcct Dick Peaceful and serene Stow In war service Stow High School 1899; Pomology; A X A; This husky ' 20 man hails from the apply orchards of Stow. After grad- uation Dick is planning to show the natives how to grow real apples. His double windows proclaim him a student and such he is. The aforesaid windows did not prevent him from holding down a place on the freshman baseball team. If his classmates had been at his christening he would have been named Earnest N. Deavor. Dick spent part of his Sophomore year supervis- ing the building of a hen coup in the Rural Engineering Department at the same time managing to escape the free ends of fl.ying rafters. 48 niriETEEn twenty index SDonalti asporti Jlmt Doi Man delights me not, no, nor woman cither Maynard In war service Maynard High School 1896; ATP; Class Football (1); Class Basketball (1); Varsity Baseball (1); Class Track (1); Six-man Rope Pull (2); Varsity Basketball (2). Some may say that athletes are made and not born, but we have a hunch that the opposite is true in Don ' s case. About the only sport he has not tried is that of fussing , though, as has been hinted, there may be a reason. The same spirit of determination and the ability to come through in the pinch, which characterize Don on the gridiron and the diamond, should enable him to bat ' ' or better than 300 in the game of life. He will carry the best wishes of 1920 with him in whatever line he chooses. Lynn 3Dfin (Elitoin Eittlefidli Cy Learning by study must he won, ' twas ne ' er entailed from son to son Lynn Classical High School B; Agriculture ; 9 X; Class Basketball (1, 2, 3). 11 North College Not much is known of Cy before his advent at Aggie in 1916; except that he had learned how to combine studies and athletics. He played class basketball during both his Freshman and Sophomore years. We never sa« him when he was asleep. The ever present Bull Durham and papers with which he finds recreation reminds us very much of the man with whom he gets along so well in the little grey building on the hill. Agriculture is his major but he has a leaning toward bugs as his search for the elusive blistei would seem to indicate. West Bridgewater (EatlE SDanicl ilotfirop Then he arose and said — Howard High School ATP House 1898; Entomology; ATP; Class Football (1,2); Class Basketball (1); Class Baseball (1); Varsity Basketball (2); Class Secretary (2, 3)- Index Board (3); Prom Committee (3), He blew in from the little hamlet of West Bridgewater with a desire to- learn about the busy bee. After starting life in the shoe industry, he decided that it was best to let the bugs provide shoes for the family, and so he is an entomologist. He finds time to lend valuable aid to nearly all the class athletic teams and is sure to take a place with the best. His many friends keep him busy filling the mail boxes and his ability to record great acts in writing has kept hira in the class secretary ' s chair for two years. And women — Oh boy! 49 niMETEEH TWENTY INDEX West Boylston {ICIilliam Sllan Ku0t Bill am the music maker West Boylston High School A X A House 1897; Pomology; A X A; Orchestra (1, 2, 3); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3); Varsity Baseball (1); Class Baseball (2); Class Hockey (1, 3); Interfraternity Conference (3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3). Studies come first with Alan and that is why his name was conspicuous for its absence on the Dean ' s Board, during our Freshman year, while most of us were being fairly well advertised thereon. His abilities seem unlimited but manifest themselves most openly when he has his fiddle tucked under his chin leading the college orchestra in the battle of music. Bill usually wins. However a fiddle is not the only thing he can play for he has proved his worth on the varsity diamond. Bill is something more than a name- sake of Billy Sunday ' s, for like the evangelist he too dabbles in Y .M. C. A. affairs. l tntp (Cginont fL ond Doc Over hill and dale, with never a rest he sped Norwell East Exp. Station Norwell High School 1899; Agricultural Economics; A X A; Class Track (1, 2); Class Treasurer (3); Index Board (3); President Y. M. C. A. (3). Henry ' s chief aim since he arrived at Aggie has been to keep up the reputation of his brother as a runner. As we all know, he has fulfilled this purpose and has hopes of establishing a still better record. Henry has always been of a serious turn of mind as indicated by his actions and the duties thrust upon him. Without a doubt, he is one of the busiest men on the campus. When he is not on the track, engaged in Y. M. C. A. work or writing up Jour- nal! m, Henry may be found engaged in a more serious business pertaining to matrimony. He is a strong supporter of the class of 1920. Lowell CBug iftanftlin i9?acEcoli Mac One vast substantial smile A 2 ! House Lowell High School 1897; Entomology; A 2 ; Class Football (1, 2); Index Board (3). For wit and cleverness, Mac is among the best 1920 possesses. As a jokesmith, he charms both his classmates and the fair sex, for the mere mentioning of his name in many houses on the Smith campus will cause that far-away reminiscent look to appear in the fair one ' s e.yes. But Mac is a worker, too, and Lowell should be proud of the spirit shown by one of her favored sons in boosting old Aggie and 1920. Ent. is his affinity and we sincerely hope that he has as much success in playing little jokes on the bugs as he has in his efforts amongst the members of 1920. 50 niriETEEn twenty index Port Chester, N. Y. iameiS Comlp Naples Jim ' Slretigih of mind is exercise, not rest Brunswick School K 2 House 1897; Agricultural Economics; K 2; Collegian Roard (1, 2, 3); Class Secretary (2); Class Track (2); Editor ndex; Adelphia; K . This quiet Quaker lad started to major in college activities but his scholarly ambitions kept him out of a few college affairs. Jim is no slouch when it comes to athletics but 1920 stepped in and chose him their Index chief. Back home on Long Island Sound, he led a quiet life among stuffed birds and pansies until Uncle Sam induced him to join the Navy to see what he could see on the sea. Vacation most frequently finds Jim at the wheel of his Packard. Jim says, Someone must write me up, so here it is. Jlatownce Paul Sl attin Larry Whal ' s the use of working lohile father ' s well and strong? Maiden In war service Maiden High School 1898; Pomology; AS ; Squih Board. Larry came to join the order of the green tassel in 1916. His abnormal appetite led him to decide on Pomology as a major at the close of his Sopho- more year. It was at this point that the cruel war claimed hira, so he joined the Tank Corps and lore overseas. January 1919 finds him still there re- cuperating from the harvest, and his six feet of brimming good nature, that ear-to-ear grin, and his blonde thatch are sadly missed on campus. When last heard from he expected to return, complete his course, and revolutionize fruit growing by the use of tanks in the orchard. Framingham Tom He ' s gentle and not fearful Framingham High School 5 South College 1898; Agriculture; K T J ; Class Baseball (1, 2); Class Track 1, 2); Class Hockey (1, 3); Six-man Rope Pull (2); Class Rifle Team (2). Yea, the world was truly benefited when Tom blew around in the cold of 1898. His six feet of might and muscle is softened only by the strains of music, from his varied instruments, which issue from six North only when the rest of the dorm, has long been asleep. His wit and humor are always present to spite the darkest cloud. Calmly, yet masterfully, he tackles any- thing from the steers of wild Montana to the fair sex over the river. If he .goes at his stock raising in later life as he has everything in his college life, we have little to fear for his success. 51 niriETEEn twenty index (ireat Barrington H tlm Stanlfg Sl iUatti Heinie is a chemist of wonderful renown, And Heinie ' s skill in cooking is knoivn Throughout the town, But we hope she won ' t make this mislake,- it has been done hefore- And take for harmless H O, her H SO Draper Hal! Searles High School 1897; Chemistry; A T. AVhenever there is anything good to eat being made upstairs in Draper Mall, Heinie is there. Heinie makes the salads-Heinie furnishes the dishes, and then washes them. How we ' d ever live without her Sunday nights no one knows. Also Heinie is equal to most any emergency. Once, however, .■ihe did not live up to her reputation, -but then she very much objects to rats ill her room, so we don ' t blame her. She insists that at one time she was working on the railroad, and shows us, to prove it, the big blanket which adorns her couch bearing the initials N. Y. N. H. H. Heinie is not an artless child, but she is a most dignified and sensible person. West Newton |)ilip feiangct Jl2fh)cU Phil Men of few words are the best men Newton High School In war service 1896; $ 2 K; Class Track (1); Varsity Baseball (1); Class Tennis (1); Class President (2); Senate (2). He is a master of many arts and a prince among his fellowmen. His quiet and sober attitude won a place for him on the college Senate. His mental development was assisted by his equally great physical development by means of which he secured and held a place on the varsitj ' baseball team as well as on the class track, and class tennis teams. Phil wasn ' t strong for many women, but he sure was strong enough for one. We came to believe that Luna refused to travel the milky way when Phil and that one were absent from their habitual seat(s) on the veranda. Cos Cob, Conn. liftman SDcdCHitt fiDppe Come and trip it as you go, On the light fantastic toe Newton High School 10 South College 1899; Chemistry; K r ; Band (1, 2); Mandolin Club (1, 3); Orchestra (1,3); Class Basketball (2, 3); Chemi.stry Club. If you want real humor this artist can supply it with a lift of his eyebrow. Above all else his name is engraved on the keys of every piano within several miles of Amherst, that is, those which are not in private houses, for Herman is not a callous fusser. He is integral part of the musical clubs and the or- chestra for the informals. He is a thinker and a worker from whom the class has received many helpful suggestions. He seems to find some attraction in the chem. lab. but it surely is not musical unless it be the wind whistling thru the shingles. 52 ninETKn twemty index Springfield Math. Building Chet Trust not too much to appearances Athol High School 1891; Agronomy; A X A. Chet was originally in the class of 1917, but his natural intelligence led him to withhold until he could join the ranks of 1920 to finish his education. He is a fond lover of deer hunting, but we cannot understand why this sport takes him to Springfield over the weekend. Chet says he is one of the favored few who can see thru agronomy as clear as mud, but that covers the ground. Thus it is we find him majoring in agronomy but strange as it may seem no such courses appear on his schedule. oinatti pteston uatilanti Quad Laugh and the world laughs with you North Adams 15 South College Drury Academy 1898; Floriculture; 2 E; Manager Class Hockey (1); Class Track (1, 2); Class Football (2). Once you hear Quad ' s laugh you always recognize him as, like Marys little lamb, wherever he goes the laugh is there too. One fatal night he went over to Smith and he has never recovered from the effects of the little blonde yet, and we have but little hope for him. He can be serious if it is necessary and he attached the prefix of lieutenant to his name in spite of the fact that he was pronounced as hopeless in the bloke ' s army. He majors in floriculture as he says that is the only thing that will satisfy his artistic temperament. QSIilliam l acolb pecftgam Peck wonder at nothing more than how a man can he a scholar Newport, R. I. A 2 $ House Andover Academy 1898; Animal Husbandry; A 2 4 ; Manager Class Track (1); Assistant Manager Track (2); Manager Class Football (2); Rifle Team (1). Drill was always the bane of Willie ' s existence especially in the old days when it came in the early morning, but what will he do when he has to get up at two o ' clock in the morning to take care of the Moolies? In him 1920 has a most consistent worker. Although his success along musical lines is a negligible quantity, he has tried and proven his ability in other ways. The soldier should be his cognomen, for was there ever a man who studied his tactics and attended drill more faithfully? He more than makes up for his lack of musical talent by his all around good fellowship and willingness to help out a cla.ssmate in distress. 53 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Holliston Sillan JLeon ponb Ras Strenglh, valor and l eadership K 2 House Holliston High School 1896; Agricultural Economics; K 2; Varsity Football (2); Class Football (1); Class Basketball (1); Varsity Basketball (2); Class Baseball (1); Varsity Baseball (2); Class President (1919) (2); Adelphia. When Holliston ' s leading citizen deigned to favor us with his presence, we counted the event one of Aggie ' s luckiest. After showing us how to be a successful class president, how the gentle games of football and basketball are made easy by Pond ' s Patented Process, Ras decided to apply said Pro- cess to the Huns. It is needless to say the Huns haven ' t recovered yet. While over there , Ras ran into some gas that threatened to put an end to his athletic prowess, but he proved himself something of a gas-meter, and after taking it all in, came back as lively as ever. Pfiilip atina EeatiiD Pete Hoir could a mortal man he so kind and generous? Florence ATP House Northampton High School 1897; Entomology; ATP; Class Football (1, 2); Manager Class Track (2); Mandolin Club (1, 2, S); Orchestra (1, 2, 3); Index Board (3). Behold our prodigy from Florence; slight of form it is true, but broad of heart and mind. Let future opposing football guards behold the results of Pete ' s Freshman activities in Monson and Deerfield, not to mention what happened on the home field. The profs ' attempts to veil the thoughts of books in cloudy questionnaires have brought forth no draft of hot air from him. Chemical radio activity has nothing on this Readio activity. Well may ' 20 look to him as successful track manager a second time. Pete has a snappy way with the girls and has brought more than one blushing girl to our monthly dances. Melrose 9 Fearing Street CSeotge Hennftg IRedbinB Red have all I have ever enjoyed Melrose H ' gh School 1897; Chemistry; C. C; Class Hockey (1); Varsity Hockey (2, 3); Class Baseball (2); Class Track (2). Red discovered M. A. C. in the summer of 1910. Since he came from Melrose, it was natural to suppose that he would foUjw one of two courses, studies or hockey. He has neglected neither of them and has succeeded in both. How he maintains his position in studies is a question. He has never been discovered very much absorbed in the books but he manages in some way or other (perhaps genius) to convince the profs, that he knows his lessons. His athletic prowess is not confined to hockey, as he has helped 1920 to up- hold her honor in both track and baseball. If Melrose has any more kke him, we want them. 54 niriETEEn twenty index 1900; Chemistry. Silence is gold, speech is silver Worcester Classical High School In war service Hail to the man who ' s so fat and so tann ' d. On to the campus came marching one day, all by his lonesome, our plump Mr. Reed. Sure enough, Worcester Classical H ' gh School made a good choice in sending Morris Reed as her Ambassador to M. A. C. Fishing for crabs in the Zoo. lab. was no more for him than devouring his Zup at the Hash House . Morris was usually in full retreat after his battle with the razor early in the A. M. but he has hopes of using this instrument more efficiently after he has completed his training in D Company. We sure wish him success. afllilliam Jfenton EobectiSon Robbie And a Utile child shall lead Ihem Framingham 6 South College Framingham High School 1897; Pomology; K r ; Pomology Club. This prospector for a sheepskin with 1920 may best be described by the expression, a miniature dynamo of spontaneous exclamations. His early days at M. A. C. were spent trying to get out of finals and into informals at both of which he was successful. He also took his turn around the track occasionally. His desire to taste the green cheese in the moon became strongly evident when the war broke out and for the first time in his young life he went entirely up in the air . He has, however, come to earth and is now back with the rest of us. 8 South College lR,aIp8 emcntoap Siantm on Sandy Books are his only worries Waltham Waltham High School 1898; Agriculture; K r ; Clasi Hockey (1); Class Rifle Team (2). Sandy breezed into Amherst,an unassuming,and strange tosay,studious vouth. He hails from Wal ham, th ■watch town, and this may account for his punctuality. He arises each morning at exactly seven-seventeen and retires each night at punctually ten-fifty-nine. He has one ambition which always takes precedence over his career, and that is hunting and fishing. He imagines that he is an explorer and can be seen any Saturday afternoon armed with his trusty twelve guage Winchester, and dressed similar to a cave man, plodding his weary way into the Pelham Hills. Here he enters into a deadly struggle with a wild, man-eating, snow-shoe rabbit. 55 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Hudson 1896; E. leialpl) CEtntSt fec anHclmaECC Schan Call me anything but early Marlboro High School In war service Schan breezed in from Marlboro and startled the student body with a deep love for anything that savored of mathematics, even Billy ' s course being tame to this student, as final week he disports one of the carefree grins that are scarce at this time, and crawls into bed early while the rest of us mor- tals burn the midnight oil. Women seem all the same to him but in spite of this we sometimes think that there is a woman in the case somewhere. After Retting his coveted degree he expects to return to the soil and make two tur- nips grow where one grew before. CUfton {LQIilltam cott Scotty Whose high endeavors are an inward light, That makes the path he ore him always bright Buckland 90 Pleasant Street Sanderson Academy 1898; Agriculture; ATP; Class Baseball (1, 2). Scottie is a perfectly healthy result of an experiment at Sanderson . cademy at Ashfield. That he is studious, we do not doubt, but he was discovered several times during his Sophomore year playing poker with his roommate until all hours of the early morning to see who would buy matches for the ' morrow. Perhaps it was his losses in these mid-night games that led liim to study the laws of supply and demand for which purpose he is taking a course in Aggie Ec. Scottie never tires of drilling and is in favor of having a parade in Hamp every week-end. He says Agronomy should be spelled Agony. otoatd 3lof)n fe)!)ausl neiSs(p ' Tis better to tnove than be msved Springfield In war service Williston Academy 1899; Entomology; A 2 . Monsieur Shaughnessy is an example of that rare combination, youth, beauty, grace and skill. He is a man of many hobbies, the chief ones being bugs and relay racing. He pursues these two most ardentl.y because some day he intends to use his rela.y training to advantage in capturing the sprightly bugs. His experiences with bugs in Rockland were very disappointing how- ever for he got callouses on his knees from crawling over the cobblestones. One little bug got him right in the heart and he crawled in the tank corps after the one big bug Kaiser Bill. 56 ninETEEM TWEMTY INDEX Dighton e X House Hester Mlinsioto g)immDns Simmy You can ' I tread lightly ivith heavy shoes Durfee High School 1899; Pomology; 9 X. Les hails from the town of Dighton, but this town being too small for him, he stepped out to Fall River to complete his education before coming to Aggie. He chose Aggie so he could study Pomology that he might be able to take care of his Dad ' s apple orchard. Les is of a very quiet nature and vows that he is a woman-hater, but he is quite frequently seen heading in the direction of High Street. He also receives occasional letters from the one girl in Dighton. These things, however, do not prevent him from fol- lowing his favorite pursuit of getting out of final exams. Pittsfield SDonalb itam mitg Doin ' He alone has energy who cannot be deprived of it Pittsfield High School In war service 1897; 2 E; Class Hockey (1); Manager Six-man Rope Pull (1); Class President (1); Glee Club (2); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (2); Class Debating (1); Varsity Hockey (2). Donald, the dear boy, with the peaches and cream complexion of a co-ed, is a deadly heart-breaker with the women. Women, however, played a minor roll in his Freshman year when his efforts put 1920 in the honor roll while they were yet green. Energetic, versatile, working for the glory of 1920 and of M. A. C, Don has shown himself capable of getting into al- most any branch of activity he cares to. He was rightfully elected a member of the Senate and we may expect great deeds and results from Don ' s presence there. He tried farming in Concord but the early hours were too much for him. CBtotet Stlfttd SmitJ Gawoe Hurry is the resource of the faithless Whitinsville Q. T. V. House Northbridge High School 1897; Agricultural Economics; Q. T. V.; Collegian Board (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (2, 3); Orchestra (1); Class Rifle Team (1); Index Board. Here is another member of our class whose more or less secluded habits render him a mystery. Perhaps it is because he spends so much time in the library reading Aggie. Ec. for he is a man who devotes much time to his major. However, he does find time to get the Collegian out and to journey around with the Glee Club. As a ladies man we hardly know what to say of him. George talks long and fluently about them but is never sure as to just what he means. Neither over the river or over the mountain are on his program, yet he seems to be well informed on the subject. 57 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Plainville e X House Ray They sin, who tell us love can die Plainville High School 1896; Pomology; e X; Six-man Rope Pull. If any one were to pick up a copy of the Plainville Gazette, dated Sept. 18. 1896, he would have noticed in a column marked Per.sonal, Mr. and Mrs. Silvester Smith of No. 48 Street are receiving congratulations, etc. Yes it was Ray . He prefers informals to athletics or German, but finds time between them to help us beat up the class of ' 21. In our Sophomore year, he was a member of our six-man rope pull team, which came through in grand stvle. Just one question, Ray , What is the attraction at Draper Hall? udan Imita gimiti) Susie Susie is a gentle maid, Demure and sweet and mild, And all who know her will agree She is a model child Great Barrington Draper Hall Searles High School 1899; Chemistry; A T; Class Historian (3). Don ' t call me Susie! is the name by which this young person is frequent- ly known, because of her insistence upon Susan. But her protests proved unavailing and Susie she has always been since her arrival at M. A. C. However, lately, since she has been helping to run the college this summer, we frequently hear Miss Smith. Altho she is ver.y quiet, on inquiry we liscover that Susie knows many things, and can tell us how to transplant and even how to can cabbages. Susie planned to go to Smith College, but was persuaded to try M. A. C. We extend our sympathies to Smith and congratulate ourselves. Her Freshman year at the farmhouse proved that she was indeed a model child for she was never reproved, — except once for being too noisy. HalpI) i)ato gitebman Sted The biggest 7 ' ascal that walks on two legs Springfield S K House Central High School 1898; Agricultural Economics; 2 K; Class Basketball (l); Class Track (1, 2); Varsity Basketball (2, 3); Class Treasurer (1); Class Vice-Pres- ident (2). Sted is our personification of Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He can entice lacteal fluid from the bovines in the daytime — and cause the hearts of society buds to miss several beats during the evening. He has a wealth of stories of past experiences which he takes great pleasure in relating when in repose. A typical one is Put the cows to bed, then went with Doug, and Johnny to the Copley-Plaza. As class treasurer, he started the firm financial basis on which the class rests; and his ability as a basketball player has kept him on the varsity squad two years. (A very smooth lad in everything!) 58 ninETEEN TWENTY INDEX =t Maltcr SS itciien giulliban Mitch Whither shall we go from heref Lawrence AS House Lawrence High School 1899; Chemistry; AS ; Class Football (2); Class Basketball (2). Mitch was one of those unfortunates, who spent the larger part of their Freshman year in Morton Hall. The breaking up of any hopes that 1921 may have of attaining ascendancy over 1920 is one of his joys in life. But by far his greatest sport is in s eeing the fair ones fall for him. That cute twinkle in his eye gets them. Sully ' s mission in life should be that of analyzing the human heart rather than mere food because his charming personality will break down the strongest defenses. Needless to say he comes from Lawrence where they grow them good and tall. Whitman Be patient while I tell you this story Williston Academy In war servict 1894; AS ; Class Football (2). Our first impression of this sober, sedate appearing gentleman receive i a decided jolt when, during his sophomore year, he was surprised in the act of plowing up the athletic field with an unruly Freshman in the battle of nightwear . The Senate succeeded in detaching him from the said frosh ' but his experience had proved so pleasing that he repeated the performance with the Sophomore football team when they played the Freshmen. He is naturally a genteel scholar and spends the greater part of his time during the day in some dark recess of the chem. lab. making bombs for his room-mate. Shelburne Q. T. V. House Rdsty For courage mounteth with occasion Greenfield High School 1898; Animal Husbandry; Q. T. V.; Class Rifle Team (1); Class Basket- ball (1, 2, 3). On the seventh of August 1898, the heavens opened and Rust} ' fell through with the idea of improving the Shorthorns grazing on Father ' s farm. With this purpose, he established headquarters at M. A. C, and settled down to study An. Hus. with great care and forethought. However, realizing that there were other things that were interesting, he acquired several black eyes on the basketball floor. As his education progresses, we fear his interest in the fair sex is increasing to the breaking point. When that break comes some lucky girl will win a blue ribbon even though it is fringed with red. i ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Ufiotnton (16t«ni D0li Zlaplot Zack Beware Ihefury of the patient man Winchester A X A House Newton High School 1897; Forestry; A X A. Probably most of the class would not recognize this name for the owner of it is known by all as Zack. Slow moving but steady Zack gets results and that is what counts. One glance at Zack ' s cheerful, one sided smile drives away the blues. T. G. is majoring in forestry and though he hates to leave M. A. 0. he is planning to enter the Yale School of Forestry at the end of this year. We certainly will miss this forester of ours for his optimistic viewpoint has cheered some of us mightily, especially at the Zero hour, directly before a physics quiz. 11 North College ailan Cacrutli {ISIilltamd Cupid The wisest man the warl ' e ' er saw Rockland Rockland High School 1897; Animal Husbandry; Commons Club. Should the world suddenly come to an end, Cupe would not be in the least concerned. After living through the harrowing experiences of Physics, Zoo. and English, he still retains his hopeful outlook on life. He considers the faculty a conglomeration of imperfect individuals gathered together for the express purpose of making his life unhappy. When not studying An. Hus. he may be found over in East Entry waiting for mail. Meals, mails (females), and money are Cupe ' s three great interests in life. He hopes to own a Ford some day, and then his happiness will be complete. Kalpl) CLZllootitDatti, 3ir. Woody Kent School In war service Grafton 1899; K r P. This man, in truth, is a son of the wild, and first impressions proclaimed him a bad man. He brought guns galore, yea verily, enough to drive all lions from Shutesbury. Withal, he proved a worthy man always on hand to champion the class, in word or deed. True, he had an almost fatal attack of Physicus Kimballae, but he came back with his subway grin, proclaiming that such a disease would never ring the curtain on his college career. At night he is a changed man, for then he rides forth in patent leather boots for the big game across the river. There they tame us all. 60 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX (Beotss Blossom acioolitoatli Woody Here, indeed, is a nrise man Nassau, N. Y. K 2 House Albany Academy 1897; Pomology; K 2; Class Track (3); Pomology Club. Crash! Bang! go things up in our room most every morning shortly after Woody gets up. This must be shocking to those who know him but slightly for on the outside he seems just a good-looking, studious chap. But you can never tell about these men from Yale. Woody is pretty good at long distance running and he always comes in strong at the finish. Lately Woody parted his hair in the middle and since that time he has been busy talking with the co-eds. Besides athletics, George has been turning his attention towards the Collegian and we wish him full success. Stew Merit is worthier than fame Raynham K 2 House Taunton High School 1897; Pomology; K 2; Varsity Track (2, 3); Class Track (1, 2). Stew decided he could run better in fresh air than in the smoke of Boston so left Tech to join the Aggie track squad. The change evidently did him good as the re sults of the recent meets prove. Stew is well liked by all because of his quiet manner and his dry sarcastic wit, which causes many a laugh at the most unexpected moments. It is very hard, in fact it is well nigh impossible to learn anything about Stew ' s personal affairs for he is quite reserved. We wonder if this can be accounted for by the fact that Cu- pid is keeping a secret. Dorchester He jftanft fmow SDabfnpott Dav Remember mc when I am gone away Dorchester High School 1898; A 2 ; Class Football (2); Mandolin Club (2). Boston ' s own Baked Bean Boy was smuggled to South College in a trunk, but finding the place to his liking he decided to remain and pursue the complex system of agricultural economics. He found that there was a tide in the affairs of men when everybody seemed to soak him, and so left us to find Bilious Bill Hohenzollern. He was bitterly disappointed in this, his last heard of love, since the Powers kept him among the coming rather than the going officers. He tells us that this was because he got along too well with the girls on this side. After he has recuperated from the effects of his campaign, he intends to give us a treat by bringing his kinky crowned head to bear on the door of the Registrar ' s Office in a smashing endeavor to return. 61 ninETEEn twenty index SDtin CSfStcr SDabis Davie me.l a traveller from an aiUique land Belchertown In war service Belchertown High School 1897; A r P; Class Basketball (I): Class Baseball (1). Having heard about Aggie during his high school days in the nearby metropolis of Belchertown, Davie came up to give the place the onceover, and entered with 1920. We are all glad that he cast his lot with us, for he is a congenial, enthusiastic individual and has helped us out immensely in class basketball and baseball. Buck admitted to Kid that he taught him more about athletics than he learned in his native city, down on the B. M. His only diversions from his books are his occasional trips over the river with Pete and Ben , though it is rumored that he has interests farther north. itSiir Paul 2Dunn Art Majestic Silence Maiden ATP House Maiden High School Agricultural Economics; ATP; Varsity Football (1, 2, 3). Art came up from Maiden with ' 17 to show us how to play football. He had the right idea. His grit on the gridiron caused more than one broken head. It carried him four times over the front line trenches w here earth ' s hottest hell raged. Art left a piece of his elbow to argue territorial claims with a machine gun bullet at Cantigny, but don ' t forget that his right still has the old ' 17 punch. Football seems pretty tame to him after passing wizzbangs and grenades for twelve months. Some say that he is making up for his twelve months of wizzbangs and grenades in France by paying a goodly share of the Northampton Street Railway ' s taxes. 31amc£i (ElitnattJ iaDtopfc Jim Eal, drink and be meiry Sunderland AS House Deerfield Academy 1897; AS ; Class Football (2); Class Baseball (1); Glee Club. Even the silt of Sunderland, his native habitat, failed to stem the aesthet- ic sense of beauty which .so infested this lad of the land, so he donned purple tie and green socks, left Deerfield Academy, and came to board at M. A. C. His main object in joining us was to gain sufficient knowledge of the beasts of burden so that he might fool his fellow. men of the valley and be a success. Since the greatest pen can not do justice to such a man in so small a space, suffice it to say that he has wasted no time in trying to fool the women — rather he has let them fool themselves. 62 niriETEEn twenty index lS,(c9«tD {ffllasgatt iFacnStoortfi Dick Hence we learned the meaning of all luinds Lancaster In war service Lancaster High School 1898; Agricultnre. Granite or Fuller ' s earth for sale! I will demonstrate, — Dick discovered these valuable minerals beneath the paternal acres and has been proclaiming them ever since. He has instructed the college on the merits of these geological formations and on anything else in question. You have his advice without the asking. He and Kirk bought a community pipe when they were in the army which rivals the chem. lab, on a busy day. What further combinations he will make, we do not know, but his General Ag. major calls for hitching up the new gray pair to the plow next spring. 91oiScp5 l apmonb fetanborn Doc Above Ihe -pitch, out of tune, and off the hinges North Amherst North Amherst Durfee High School 1897; Microbiology; Commons Club. This lad is a near neighbor of M. A. C. coming from North . mherst. During his early years he had ample opportunity to see the various Freshman classes stripped of promising buds and diminished by one-way tickets. Despite this, he gathered sufficient courage to face the ordeal of mid-year exams, and entered the class of 1920. The problem of getting to classes on time was solved by making his feet give his body a ride on a bicycle. We could consider no Smoker a success unless Sandy was there with his pipe. He is our little ray of sunshine from the valley. 3|oSn flfllacDrop iHtquiDatt Uhk His own opinion is his law East Walpole 8 South College Walpole High School 1898; Agriculture; K r . J. Wardrop Urquhart is a light-haired youth from the jungles of Wal- pole, where the neighboring town of Boston did much to educate him. IVk considered this education insufficient and came to Aggie. He entertained all good intentions of becoming an entomologist. However, he later decided that he was entirely unsnited for a scientific life, and so he is majoring in General Ag. .John has a remarkably bright future in a line of endeavor rather remote from agriculture. That is, as manager, trainer, and sparring partner of one of the future world ' s champion heavy weights. 63 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Washington, D. C. Harv Ha there! How are Ihey going? Worcester High School 1894; Animal Husbandry; G X. e X House E. Erskin Harvey, the boy with the teeth, started life in Worcester but decided that on account of the handle he ought to move South. He spends his summers building houses for Senators in Washington and occasion- ally trips to Camp Devens. Harvey spends most of the day in the Hash house handing out steak and bovine, but evenings he makes for the western extremity of Amity Street. Although he may be majoring with Billy , he always has the glad hand and he can even look a physics book in the face with his famous product, that patent Roosevelt smile. He is a ' 20 man through the misfortunes of war. Rutherford, N. J. 1898; 2 K; pjilip BtDtonElI SlttttiStronfl; Phil Rutherford High School S K House .„„„, , w .., Class Basketball (1); Class Track (2). Metamorphically speaking, he evolved from the Hackensack Swamps of New Jersey. Perhaps that is why he decided to major in Ent. When a mere stripling he captured a three pound mosquito and presented it to the Smithsonian Institute — it ' s a fact. Phil just steps over the hurdles and has propensities for basketball also. His ability to caliper fruit trees for Doc Shaw puts him in the class of a great scientist. Mac The empty vessel makes the greatest sound Amherst High School ; Commons Club. In war service Amherst 1898 Ah, Professor, here we have the genuine, 99 -14-100 % pure, dyed-in-the- wool, student. Mac likes his studies so well that he is willing, nay eager, to talk about them to anyone, at any time, in any place. As a proof that he is appreciated in his home town, we would offer the information that Mac is a member of the faculty of the Amherst High School. If it were not for his severe and dignified manners, we would feel concerned for his safety with the young ladies at the aforesaid high school. He has recently acquired a motor- cycle and speeds around the campus like a second Barney Oldfield. 64 ninETEEFI TWENTY IHDEX INTERIOR OF THE COW BARN 65 niMETEEn TWENTY INDEX €x ' 20 jWen Harold Kenneth Allen George Anderson Gust William Anderson George Henry Andrews John Shepard Armstrong Philip Brownell Armstrong Leslie Edmund Babcock William Bailey Louis Berman Henry Charles Bigelow Robert Austin Blake Abram Temple Bowen Ral ph Burton Bowmar James Pitts Bridge Caroll Wooster Bunker Paul Lapham Burnett Robert Parsons Cande Francis Chapin Chase Alexander George Crawford RoYCE Brainerd Crimmin Frank Semore Davenport Donald Gordon Davidson Orrin Chester Davis Harry Louis Dixon Donald Churchill Douglass James Edward Dwyer Reuel AVest Eldbedge Richard Wasgatt Farnsworth Lorenzo Fuller Harland Everett Gaskill Laurence Washburn Gay James Sidney Golosov Richard Hamblet Gorwaiz Irving Emery Gray Nathan Grout William Nathaniel Gustafson Harold Arthur Haskins Emerson Francis Haslam Richard Hobson Hathaway Warren Sidney Hathaway Charles Francis Haynes Carl Marshall Hemenway Allen Humphrey Hersom John Alden Higgs Theodore Hill, Jr. Charles Kroh Hillabold Frank Harold Holland John Foster Holmes George Herbert Howland Davis Alden Hurd Gordon Killam Hurd Kenneth Squier Hyde Carlo Antonio Iorio Alberta Johnson Conrad John Johnson Edson Temple Jones Robert Lambert Jones Walter William Keene Starr Margetts King William Cutting King Richard Bowles Lambert Donald Ashford Lent Maurice Eleazer Levine Ping Liang Harry Gotfred Lindquist Herbert Aloysius MacArdle Charles Hugh Mallon Andrew Bruyette Magnum Lawrence Paul Martin Milton Crandall McDonald William Brimble McGeorge Raymond Henry McNulty Raymond Franklin Munroe Harry Athol Murray, Jr. Allan Victor Mutty Philip Sanger Newell Henry Stuart Ortloff Joseph Cutler Paige William Hildreth Parkin Stephen Austin Phillips George Taylor Plowman, Jr. Henry George Porteck Frederic Henry Putnam Percy Edmund Quincy Morris Reed George Henry Richards Mark Morton Richardson Ivan Andrew Roberts 66 ninETEEH TWENTY INDEX Lafayette James Robertson, Jr. Ralph Ernest Meyers Carl Winter Shattuck Howard John Shaughnessy Joseph Silverman Donald Hiram Smith Fred George Smith Herbert Thacher Smith Raymond Archer Smith John Dow Snow William Spencer Curtis Steacie William Burling Stiles Edmund Herman Strecker Ralph Martin Sumner Frank Joseph Sweeney Harry John Talmage Converse Hall Torrey Alfred William Turner John Dellea Vegezzi Mary Theresa Vegezzi Mason Ware Frederick Vail Waugh Milton Fuller Webster Maud Ethel Willis Ralph Woodward, Jr. Kenneth Yerxa Wright 67 sornonoPB ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX opf)omorc CIa0S Officers James W. Alger George J. Thyberg Miss Sarah Goodstone Herbert L. Geer John D. Brigham Charles G. Mackintosh. Reginald D. Tillson President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Captain Sergeant-at-arms Historian . j E, the class of lO ' Sl and the fiftieth class to come into this college, entered M. A. C. r M profoundly influenced by the war, and the war has been the predominating ■I ■factor in our history since that time. We were the smallest class in numbers V B r which has entered for several years. Many of the Aggie customs into which freshman classes are inaugurated, this class has never experienced. There was no freshman banquet. There have been no varsity football or baseball games since we have been here and the usual commencement exercises were not held last year. All these things were due to war conditions, and all of them have affected us as a class in one way or another. At the beginning of what would normally be our sophomore year, the S. A. T. C. claimed every man of the class fit for military service who was not already with the colors, leaving only half a dozen co-eds and a handful of army rejects to compose the class. But the signing of the armistice, and the virtual end of the war, brought back eighty per cent, of our number at the beginning of the second term. Although we have missed many of the experiences which freshmen ordinarily go through, the class of 1920 did its best to give us a warm reception. The posterior portions of our metaboHcal mechanisms were viciously smitten by the stout paddles in the hands of 1920, as we ran the gauntlet in the preamble to the nightshirt parade, an experience conducive to toughening the epidermis. In the contest which followed the parade, 1920 strove to remove our nocturnal raiment in the face of our powerful opposition. They attained a fair degree of success as it was preordained that they should. In the wrestling bouts 1920 took three out of five hard fought contests on close decisions. Sixty of our number were also treated to an excursion through the pure and transparent waters of the college pond in the annual rope pull. In the six man rope pull 1920 succeeded in acquiring six inches of the rope. However, although we did not have as much pull as some classes have, we have demonstrated that we have plenty of push. We put through a freshman show which by common consent is considered one of the best that any class has produced. In spite of the conditions adverse to its acquisition, we pride ourselves upon having attained a strong class spirit and a stronger Aggie spirit. 71 ninETEEn twenty index Alger, James Warren .......... Reading K Z House; Reading High School; 1899; K 2; Class Basketball (1, 2); Class Baseball (1); Class Track (1); Class Rifle Team (1); Varsity Rifle Team (1); Class Vice-President (1); Class President (2). Allen, Henry Vaughn .......... Arlington 2 K House; Arlington High School; 1898; 2 K; Class Rifle Team (1); Class Hockey (2); Varsitv Hockey (2); Class Track (1). Anderson, Charles Henry ......... Medford e X House; Medford High School; 1897; B X; Class Football (1); Manager Class Basketball (1); Class Baseball (1); Class Hockey (2). Baker, Louis Eliot ......... 16 South College; Salem High School; 1898; Class Basketball (2). Baker, Russell Dexter ........ 17 Fearing Street; Marshfield High School; 1900. Blackwell, Henrietta ......... 12 Draper Hall; Girls ' High School; 1900; A F; Chemistry Club. Brigham, John Dexter ......... 82 Pleasant Street; Sutton High School; 1898; A X A; Class Football (1). Brown, Paul Wilfred ......... 82 Pleasant Street; Hitchcock Free Academy; 1898; A X A; Class Baseball (1). Calhoun, Saltean Frederick ....... 10 South College; Worcester North High School; 1897; XT ; Mandolin Club (1). Cameron, Viola Mary . . . . . . East Pleasant Street; Amherst High School; A r. Salem Oxford, Maine Boston Sutton Fiskdale Brookline Amherst Coombs, Roger Conklin ......... Peabody 11 South College; Peabody High School; 1898; 2 E; Manager Class Rifle Team (1); Class Baseball (1); Class Hockey (2). Cooper, Lawrence Melville. ........ Charlemont 90 Pleasant Street; Charlemont High School; 1899; ATP; Class Baseball (1). Dean, Herman Nelson .......... Oakham Q. T. V. House; Barre High School; 1898; Q. T. V.; Class Track (1). Dixon, Harry Louis ......... West Somerville A X a House; Rindge Technical School; 1895; A X A; Collegian Board (2). Edman, George William ......... Orange Q. T. V. House; Orange High School; 1900; Q. T. V.; Class Baseball (1); Chemistry Club. EvERS, Joseph Daniel .......... Maiden 11 South College; Maiden High School; 1898; 2 E. 72 niriETEEn twenty index Feng, Chao Chuan China 21 Fearing Street; Tsing Hua College; 1897. Fletcher, Francis Summers . Lynn 90 Pleasant Street; Lynn Classical High School, 1898; AFP. Gaskill, Harland Everett Hopedale A 2 House; Hopedale High School; 189S AS ; Class Basketball (1, 2). Geer, Herbert Leroy . Three River Q. T. V. House; Mt. Hermon; 1898; Q, T. , Collegian Board (1). GooDSTONE, Sarah Winthrop Springfiehl 81 Pleasant Street; Central High School; A r Gould, Robert Meredith ...... Q, T, V. House; Arms Academy; 1899; Q. T. V.; Class Football (1). Haskins, Harold Arthur ...... North Amherst; Amherst High School; 1898; 2 K; Class Baseball (1) Howard, Frederic ....... 82 Pleasant Street; Needham High School; 1898; A X A. Howard, Winthrop Wilmarth ..... Shelburne North Amherst Needham South Easton 120 Pleasant Street; Oliver Ames High School; 1899; K r ; Class Basketball (1, 2); Class Baseball (1). loRio, Carlo Antonio ......... Springfield East Experiment Station; International Y. M. C. A. College; 1891; Commons Club. Johnson, Conrad John .......... Campello 82 Pleasant Street; Brockton High School; 1898; A X A; Manager Class Football (1). Kendall, Charles Donald ........ Worcester Q. T. V. House; North Worcester High School; 1899; Q. T. V.; Assistant Manager Track (2); Manager Class Track (2); Sophomore-Senior Hop Committee (2). King, Starr Margetts ......... Pittsfield K 2 House; Adams High School; 1895; K 2; Class Football (1); Class Baseball (1). KiRKLAND, Lyle Lord .......... Chester 9 South College; Chester High School; 1899; K T . Leavitt, Ralph Goodwin ......... Melrose e X House; Melrose High School; 1896; O X; Class Football (1); Class President (1); Varsity Hockey (1, 2). Labrovitz, Edward Browdy ......... Amherst 11 Amity Street; Amherst High School; 1898; Musical Clubs (1, 2); Class Football (1). Levine, Maurice Eleazer ......... Sherborn 1 South College; Sawin Academy; 1900; Class Basketball (1, 2). 73 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX LocKwooD, George Russell . . Hyde Park 86 Pleasant Street; Hyde Park High School; 1899; O X; Manager Class Football (1); Manager Class Hockey (2). Long, Albert Douglas .... Chicopee 14 South College; Chicopee High School; 1899; 2 E; Class Football (1); Class Basketball (1, 2) LovERiNG, Holland Frederick . Northampton Northampton; Northampton High School; 1899 Mackintosh, Charles Gideon . . Peabody S K House; Peabody High School; 1898; 2 K; Class Basketball (1). Marsh, Walter Ashton .... Jefferson 90 Pleasant Street; Holden High School; 1898; AFP. Martin, Edward William .... Amherst 5 Phillips Street; Amherst High School; 1899; AS ; Class Football (1). McCarty, Justin Jeremiah ........ Arlington S K House; Arlington High School; 1899; S K; Class Track (1); Class Treasurer (1); Class Baseball (1); Varsity Hockey (1, 2); Interfraternity Relay (1, 2); Freshman Show. Mellen, Richard Adams ........ Cambridge 75 Pleasant Street; Cambridge High School; 1900; 2 E; Class Rifle Team (1); Class Debating Team (1). Miller, William Henry ........ Springfield North College; Springfield Technical High School; 1898; Commons Club; Mandolin Club (1, 2). Millington, Walter Roy . . ... French Hall; New Bedford High School; 1899; K r . Palmer, Walter Isaiah ........ 4 Chestnut Street; Greenfield High School; 1898; B X. Peck, Richard Charles ........ Stockbridge Hall; Arms Academy; 1898; ATP. Maynard Amherst Shelburne North Weymouth Dorchester Roxbury Rice, Henry Lawrence . . . . . . . . Somerville K 2 House; Somerville High School; 1899; K 2; Class Football (1); Class Debating Team (1); Manager Class Baseball (1). Richards, George Henry ........ Springfield 2 K House; Central High School; 1897; 2 K; Class Basketball (1); Class Baseball (1); Class Foot- ball (2); Manager Class Rifle Team (1); Class Tennis (1). Pratt, Lawrence Francis ..... Q. T. V. House; Weymouth High School; 1899; Q. T. V. Preston, Everett Carroll ..... Nutrition Experiment Station; 1898; K T ; Chemistry Club. Quint, Isador Gabriel ...... 16 South College; Boston Latin School, 1900; Class Basketball (2). 74 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Robertson, Lafayette Janes, Jr. Hartford 7 North College; Hartford Public HikIi School; 1896. Robinson, Philip Luther New Bedford AFP House; New Bedford High School, 1899; AFP; Varsitv Rifle Team(l); ( l,i-,s Rifle Team (1). RosoFF, Samuel . Springfield 16 South College; Boys ' High School; 1899, Class Basketball (1, 2); Chemistry Club Russell, Charles Francis Winchendon 17 Fearing Street; Murdock High School, 1897. RussERT, Marion Ruth Boston Draper Hall; Girls ' Latin School; A T. Sampson, Howard Jenney 86 Pleasant Street; Durfee High School; 1899; X. Sanford, Richard Herbert ....... 14 South College; Westfield High School; 1898; 2 E; Class Rifle Team (1). Slate, George Lewis ........ 90 Pleasant Street; Bernardston High School; 1899; ATP. Sloan, Kenneth Wilson 29 Prospect Street; Amherst High School; 1898; A 2 . Smith, Julian Denton Fall River Westfield Bernardston Amherst Far Rockaway A X a House; Far Rockaway High School; 1898; A X A; Orchestra (1); Class Track Team (1) Snow, John Dow .......... Arlington 2 K House; Arhngton High School; 1898; 2 K; Class Hockey (1, 2); Class Tennis (1, 2). Spencer, Orville Holland West Haven, Conn. 2 K House; West Haven High School; 1900; 2 K; Glee Club (2); Mandolin Club (2). Stiles, Harry Stephen .......... Lynn 9 South College; Lynn Classical High School; 1901; K F . Stevens, Ralph Shattuck Arlington e X House; Arlington High School; 1899; 9 X; Manager Class Hockey (1); Class Vice-President (1), Thyberg, George Jonathan Springfield 2 K House; Springfield Technical High School; 1898; 2 K; Class Vice-President (2). Tietz, Harrison M. . . . . Cottage Street; Richmond Hill High School; 1895. New York, N. Y. 75 ninETEEn twenty ifidex TiLLsoN, Reginald Drury 21 Fearing Street; Whitman High School; IS Whitman VanLennep, Emily Bird . Great Barrington Draper Hall; Searles High School; 1898; A r. Webster, Milton Fuller Maiden 73 Pleasant Street; Maiden High School; 1895; K r ; Class Rifle Team (1). West, Guy Clifford . . . Amesburj 9 South College; Amesbury High School; 1899; K r ; Class Track (1); Class Basketball (2). Wood, Clarence Milton . West Somerville A X A House; Somerville High School; 1898; A X A; Mandolin Club (2); Orchestra (2), Zercher, Q. T. V Frederick Kaupp .... . House; Dickinson High School; 1897; Q. T. V. Huntington, W. Va. 76 mmm ninETEEN TWENTY INDEX jTresijman Class Officers Clarence E. Clark Howard F. Coles . Miss Beryl M. S. Shaw George A. Cotton Maxfield M. Smith Peter A. Crichton President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Captain Historian jTresljman Class IDistorp ON December 30, 1918, we the class of 192 ' ' 2 invaded the campus of M. A. C. one hundred twenty strong. Most of us were returning after having been dis- charged from the S. A. T. C. in which we spent three strenuous months at Aggie under the auspices of Uncle Sam. During those months of association, we had made many friends not only in our own class but among the upper classmen as well, and we had gained a good deal of knowledge about college activities and customs. Consecjuently, when the regular college curriculum was resumed in January, we had gone a good way toward learning the ropes and hence were not of such a brilliant green as other freshman classes have been. We spent our first day visiting the Registrar (who in the course of our meeting en- deavored to find out how much we didn ' t know); learning to jump the nines (we spent a month carrying out our acquired knowledge in this respect); buying our frosh hats (the greenest we could get); and learning the ten commandments. After carefully scru- tinizing us, or in college language giving us the once over, the upper classmen gravely shook their heads and said, Hopeless. We arose early during the second week of college. No, not because we wanted to get a running start on the studies but because the Senate invited us to spend one half hour each morning during this week in learning the songs and cheers of our Alma Mater. To make sure that we all made use of the invitation the Sophomore cla.ss captain called the roll at South College every morning. After learning the songs and cheers, we felt that we had made some progress. We made still more when the call came for basketball candidates and two of our number immediately made the varsity. The sophs gave us something of a setback in the nightshirt parade and hockey game, but we came back strongly and defeated them 20-10 in basketball. We hope to come through the banquet season and sixty-man rope pull with flying colors. Nine of our number were foolish enough to disobey the rules laid down by the Senate and consequently had to submit to a few disciplinary exercises in the Arena under the guidance of the sophomores. We hope this experience will serve to lessen the number of splashes in the pond during the coming Spring. Our history is in the making. May it be as fair as that of any class which has gone before us! May it make old Aggie proud of us! And may we boost old Aggie to the skies! 79 niriETEEH twenty index Classs of 1922 AcHESON, Roger Melvin, ATP 53 Lincoln Avenue Bainton, Hurbert Judson 75 Pleasant Street Baker, George Louis, Kr$ . West Street Barnard, Kenneth Allen, Q.T.V. Aggie Inn Barnes, Franklin Allen, ATP 66 Pleasant Street Barrows, Edward Fletcher . 75 Pleasant Street Beckwith, Robert Henry 3 Nutting Avenue Bent, Leslie Dana, AX A 83 Pleasant Street Blakely, Roger Wolcott 66 Pleasant Street Blanchard, Raymond Stanwood Stockbridge Hall Brason, Albert Grovbr, ATP Stockbridge Hall Bromley, Stanley Willard, ATP 75 Pleasant Street Buck, Charles Alfred, ATP 35 East Pleasant Street Burnham, Edwin Graham, AX A The Davenport Carey, Edmund Thomas, Kr 83 Pleasant Street Chapin, Ellis Warren 35 East Pleasant Street Chase, Eleanor Francis Draper Hall New Bedford Hyde Park Amherst Shelburne West Lynn Brattleboro, Vt. Worcester Medfield Medford Wollaston Worcester Southbridge Mansfield Springfield Springfield Chicopee Falls Amesbury ninETEEn twenty index Claek, Clarence Frederick, Q.T.V. Sunderland Q. T. V. House Coles, Howard Finley, 9X Tarrytown, N. Y. 1 1 North College Collins, Donald Keith, 9X Rockland 101 Pleasant Street Collins, Herbert Laurence, 2$E 101 Pleasant Street Arlington Cook, FeeeeeickBelcher,C.C. ICl Butterfield Terrace Cotton, George Asa, 2; i E 84 Pleasant Street Middleburj ' , Conn. Woburn Ckichton, Peter Andrew, K 2S Greenwich, Conn. Kappa Sigma House Cross, Charles Sale, 2$E 53 Lincoln Avenue CuMMiNGs, Robert, C. C. 6 Nutting Avenue Davis, Harold Sanborn 17 Fearing Street Degener, Otto 81 Pleasant Street DuBois, Howard Grace, K 2 23 East Pleasant Street Eldridge, Dean Stratton 8 Gaylord Street Erysian, Harry Adrian, C. C. North College Farwell, Charles Austin, A S $ 116 Pleasant Street Fenton, James Francis, KT $ 108 Pleasant Street Field, Richard Edmund, Q.T.V. East Experiment Station Hingham Center Newton Belchertown New York, N. Y. Springfield Amherst Chelsea Turners Falls Amherst Shelburne Falls 81 ninETEEn twenty index Graves, James Additon, AFP 31 East Pleasant Street Haskins, Philip Hall, $2 K . North Amherst HiGGiN, Albert Snyder, A S $ 83 Pleasant Street HoLMAN, Reginald Newton, Q.T.V. 101 Pleasant Street Hooper, Francis Edwards, S$E . 23 East Pleasant Street Hooper, Oliver Furbish, KT 6 Prospect Street HuEDER, Ruth Wasson . 81 Pleasant Street HussEY, Francis William 7 Nutting Avenue Jackson, Belding Francis, ATP . Fearing Street Jarvis, Albert Arthur, S$E 3 North College Jarvis, Harold Nelson, S $ E 83 Pleasant Street Lawrence, Robert Parker, AX A Math. Building Frilen, Karl Arvid, ATP West Springfield 53 Lincoln Avenue (iASKiLL, Millard Thayer Care of E. F. Gaskill Hopedale Gilbert, Frank Albert, Jr., AX A Watertown Plant House Giles, Clifton Forrest Newtonville 6 Nutting Avenue GowDY, Carlyle Hale, 2$E Westfield 15 Amity Street Shelburne Falls North Amherst Passaic, N. J. Somerville Revere East Lynn Mattapan Whitinsville Belchertown Lynn Lynn East Greenwich, R.I. 82 niriETEEn twenty index Lawton, Harold Hayden, K 2 Bradford Kappa Sigma Leland, James Freeman, Jr., A S $ Sherborn 13 Phillips Street Leonard, Earle Stanley, AX A Hyde Park 16 Nutting Avenue Lewandowski, John Neptumeen, A 2 $ Easthampton 77 Pleasant Street LiNGHAM, Robert Marston, Q.T.V. Newton Highlands Q. T. V. House LocKHART, John Harold, 9X Plant House LovERiNG, Everett Waldron Northampton Lowery, John Gordon, K 2 . 80 Pleasant Street Lyons, Edgar Albion 101 Pleasant Street Lyons, John Joseph, Jr., S$E 101 Pleasant Street MacArdle, Herbert Aloysius 5 South College Main, Stuart DrGroff 101 Butterfield Terrace McGuiNN, Albert Francis 83 Pleasant Street Moody, Kenneth Watts, AX A 16 Nutting Avenue Morgan, Stuart Carleton, 2 $ E 53 Lincoln Avenue MosELEY, Henry Samson, A 2 I 66 Pleasant Street Tarrytown, N.Y. Northampton Maiden Methuen Arlington Worcester Maplewood, N. J. Worcester Brookline Worcester Glastonbury, Conn. 83 ninETEEN TWENTY INDEX MuRDOCK, Matthew John, Q.T.V. . . . . . . . . Medford Aggie Inn Murray, Myron George, AXA . . . . . . . . Bradford 75 Pleasant Street Packer, George Blanchard, S$E . . . . Wat erbury, Conn. 77 Pleasant Street Peck, William Henry, AXA. . . . . . . . . Stow 75 Pleasant Street Pickup, Ezra Alden .......... Holyoke 4 North College Pollard, Jane Isabel ........ North Adams Draper Hall RosER, Conrad Herman, $ 2K . . . . Gla.stonbury, Conn. 66 Pleasant Street Russell, Ralph, C.C. . . . . . . . Worcester. 51 Amity Street Shaw, Beryl Simpson ........ Amherst Farview Way Sherman, Kenneth David ......... Orange 35 East Pleasant Street Smith, Rowland Piper, Q.T.V. ....... North Amherst 46 Pleasant Street Smith, Stuart VanAlstyne, K S . . . . . . Springfield 23 East Pleasant Street Spadea, James Vincent, C.C. . . . . . . . . Brockton 4 North College Spring, Hobart Wadsworth, Q.T.V. ... . . . . Braintree 77 Pleasant Street Stephan, Henry Wesley, C.C. . . . . Jamaica Plain 1 North College Stevens, Albert Webster, 6 X . . . . . Arlington Heights 5 Nutting Avenue Stevens, Seth Edward, K 2 . . . . . . Reading 7 South College 84 niriETEEN TWENTY INDEX Stubing, Ernest Stone . 66 Pleasant Street Sullivan, Joseph Timothy, ATP 53 Lincoln Avenue Swift, Arthur Lawrence, Kr$ Summer Street Tanner, Willis, C.C. 3 McClure Street Task, Mortimer, C.C. . 3 Nutting Avenue Thompson, George Henry, Jr., 2$E 84 Pleasant Street Tucker, Francis Sample 4 Nutting Avenue VanAnden, Luther Charles, $SK 53 Lincoln Avenue Walker, John Duane 116 Pleasant Street Walsh, John Leonard, Kr$ 4 Chestnut Street Warren, Edwin Herbert 82 Pleasant Street Wason, Raymond .... 11 North College Whitaker, Carl Fales, KS . Hadley New York, N. Y. Lawrence North Amherst Yokohama, Japan West Stoughton Lenox Arlington Carmel, N. Y. Hardwick Amhers t Chelmsford Brookline Hadley 85 niMETEEII TWENTY INDEX Mnclaggifieb tubentsi Ames, Nathaniel Jackson Peabody Kappa Sigma House Anderson, Gust William Brockton 9 Fearing Street Andrews, John Hollis Vineyard Haven 3 McClure Street Beverly, Ralph Gardner Springfield 16 Nutting Avenue Carlson, Walter Mauritz Northboro 5 Fearing Street Connor, John Leo Northampton Northampton Crosby, Robert Francis Lawrence 90 Pleasant Street Geoghegan, James Dewey Brighton Poultry Plant Gerrish, Arthur Herman Lowell 66 Pleasant Street GusTiN, Francis Borden North Amherst North Amherst Harrington, Frederic, Jr. Winchester 83 Pleasant Street Hart, Owen Stephen Meriden, Conn. 6 Nutting Avenue Hugo, Alvin Ernest Worcester 3 Fearing Street Jones, Ashley Sumner Lynn 7 Nutting Avenue Jones, Edward Charles Wrentham 34 North Prospect Street Kemp, George Austin North Andover 75 Pleasant Street Kimball, Hazen Bixby Rehoboth M. A. C. Bungalow Kimball, William Howard Rehoboth M. A. C. Bungalow Knapp, Fanny Carter Draper Hall Law, Hervey Fuller Experiment Station Lewis, Edward William 19 Lincoln Avenue Lowell Longmeadow Amherst McKenzie, David Hamilton Thorndike Physics Building Noble, Theodore Kingsbury The Davenport New London, Conn NoviTSKi, Joseph Francis Amherst 6 Phillips Street Prouty, Alfred Howe Spencer Q. T. V. House Reynolds, Frank Curtis Hadlej Kappa Sigma House Stockbridge, Derry Lamar Atlanta, Ga. Kappa Sigma House Taylor, Clarence Leo Jamaica Plain 31 East Pleasant Street Tracy, Ralph Prior Winchendon 3 Fearing Street Trulson, George Frederick Worcester Fearing Street Webber, Karl Durrell West Wrentham 103 Butterfield Terrace AVendler, Henry George Clinton Stockbridge Hall Whitney, Clara Frances Boston Draper Hall Williamson, Mary Washington, D. C. Draper Hall Wright, Whitcomb Wadleigh Lowell 90 Pleasant Street 86 ninETEEN TWENTY INDEX ilnclaseificti jFwSfjimn Arms, Philip Baxter, Kr$ 6 Nutting Avenue Hopinton Arms, Richard Woodworth, Kr$ 13 Phillips Street CONANT, LUMAN BiNNEY 18 Nutting Avenue Eastwood, John Edgar 7 Nutting Avenue FiSKE, David Allen, S$E Brooks Farm Globus, Joseph, C.C. 8 North College Howard, Elmer Smith 120 Pleasant Street Hopinton AValtham Plymouth Amherst Attleboro South Easton Kenney, Chester Davis, 9X Amherst Mt. Pleasant Krasher, Abraham 53 Lincoln Avenue Boston NiGRO, Henry, C.C. Revere 120 Pleasant Street Paige, Howard Lindsey Amherst 12 Kellog Avenue Purington, George Richmond, C. C. 2 North College, $SK Providence, R. I. Randall, Kenneth Charles Springfield Experiment Station Rollins, Walter Jessie, 2 I E 31 East Pleasant Street Leominster Smith, Albert William, A 2 $. 77 Pleasant Street Easthampton Smith, Maxfield Merriam $2K Pittsfield 23 East Pleasant Street Wentsch, Harold Earle, Kr$ 94 Pleasant Street Southbury, Conn. White, George Edwin, Kr$. 4 Chestnut Street Worcester 87 MILITAKY niriETEEN TWENTY INDEX iM. A. C. anb m Mar ©■' HE war did not have a great influence on the enroll- ment at Aggie until January, 1918. At that time, some thirtj ' -five under-graduates left college to be- come members of the Third Oflicers Training Camp which was also attended by about the same number of alumni. Most of these men were sent directly ov erseas upon the completion of their three months, course and received their commissions after having seen actual fighting. During the spring term, men were continually leaving col- lege to join some branch of the service. Then two weeks after college closed, on the eighteenth of May, the Fourth Officers Training Camp began at Camp Devens. We were represented there by more than twenty men, mostly from the classes of 1918 and 1919. The pre.sciil ( (illc e year started on September 25, and was closely followed by the formal establishment of the Students Army Training Corps. There were only 97 regular students, while 351 enrolled in the S. A. T. C. under the following provisions: That men formally enrolled in the college, and those between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one who were able to meet the entrance requirements, would be allowed to enter college as usual: and that these men would be inducted into the army as regular soldiers, and as such would receive the pay of privates, namely, thirty dollars a month, and would be clothed, housed, fed and trained at government expense. The students were required to take military drill and certain academic subjects prescribed by the war department. In addition to Colonel Wilson and Sergeant Lee, Captain Rifenbark, and Lieutenants Costello, Cunningham, Chalmers, Daves, Dehls, and Dickerson were detailed as instructors at M. A. C. and under their direction an exceptionally well-drilled and efficient battalion was developed. During the three months that the S. A. T. C. prevailed on the Aggie campus, two batches of men were sent to the C. O. T. S. at Camp Lee and two smaller batches to Camp Hancock, the former to qualify as lieutenants of infantry and the latter as lieutenants of machine gunnery. A group were about to be sent to Camp Zachary Taylor, but the signing of the armistice robbed this group of a pleasant trip. Shortly after the signing of the armistice on November 11, bills were passed by the government which provided for the doing away of all S. A. T. C. units and accordingly the men were mustered out before December 21, 1918. The total number of M. A. C. undergraduates and alumni who have served the country is 1067, and of this number 291 were commissioned officers and 362 were in France. Aggie ' s athletic teams have the reputation of being hard fighters, and our men have certainly upheld that reputation on the battle front during the past year and a half. Our men have conducted themselves most gallantly and many times we have read in the newspapers of the citation of an M. A. C. man for bravery in battle, some having received two war crosses. Because these men went into the war with such zeal and fought so despera tely, it was preordained that a large number would have to pay the supreme sacrifice. It is with the feeling of extreme sadness that we think of those faces which we shall never see again, but we are proud of what they have done and we shall try to live under the guidance of the torch they have lit. 92 IMTO SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS FRESHMAN HOCKEY TEAM 96 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM 1920 BASEBALL TEAM 97 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM VARSITY RELAY TEAM 99 niriETEEn twenty ifidex JFootfiall The first varsity football season that 1920 saw imbued the class with the strong feeling of college loyalty so necessary for a class to have. The fact that the schedule of 1916-1917 was the heaviest the college had ever tackled helped to increase the enthusiasm. It was with hopes of a much stronger varsity team that the college looked forward to the fall of 1917. Spring practice had started in April and the quality of the candidates was excellent. Coach Gore drummed on the technique of the line and the backfield, leaving the formations and plays until fall. The declaration of war halted the whole college. The fever for enlistment, the thrill of the novel condition, the uncertainty of the college ' s position, the risk of the great contest itself, and above all, a feeling that every man ' s place was in the trench lines stopped foot- ball practice and finally the whole college. Hurried conferences finally decided to cancel the football schedule for 1917-1918. Many colleges built up strong informal teams but M. A. C. contented itself with inter- class contests. The spirit of college loyalty was divided into that of class loyalty. Practice and scrimmage developed teams such that good games could be played. In the fall of 1918, football was wholly out of the question, for the S. A. T. C. had taken all but a handful of the old men. All collegiate football was similarly affected. The football that fall amounted to semi-organized rushes on the old athletic field. With the cessation of war came renewed hopes for a football season. Coach Gore has decided to have spring practice as in 1917. A stiff schedule is being arranged which will give the team many severe tests. The material in college is practically all new, for the only regular, back from the service, is Pond ex ' 19, now with ' 20, although a few more vet erans are expected. However, the prospects for the 1919 season in football are good. The class of 1923 will not miss the college spirit, so hard to get without the varsity sports. The present undergraduates expect to sense a new feeling of loyalty when football shall again start the year. As a result of Interclass basketball, which developed so much enthusiasm and college spirit, it was decided to try varsity basketball again after a lapse of eight years. The quality of the team was exceptionally good and considering that the men had never played together before, the season proved a thorough success. A stiff schedule brought out the best in the team so that it won half of its games. The 1918-1919 team was handicapped by the loss of some of the old men. Two fresh- men, Smith and Gowdy, filled the empty places and Parkhurst ' 19, Gasser ' 19 and Captain McCarty completed the reg ular team. Coach Dole ' 15 during the absence of Kid Gore in France, started coaching the team as soon as the college was re-established on a normal peace basis again. A hurried schedule was arranged by Manager Bond which gave eight games. Coach Dole built a fine foundation for the team so that his new material worked well with the old. Kid Gore, soon after he was discharged from the service, took over the team and by careful drilling turned out a very fast quintet. The M. A. C. team was unable to win its first game, although Amherst was the opponent. In five of the eight contests, the opponents were stronger than Aggie, but several games were lost by only one point. However, the season was deemed satisfactory when Aggie defeated the champions of New England, the Worcester Polytechnic Institute team, in a hard, fast game in the Drill Hall. 100 niriETKn twenty index In dreams again I see Visions of what used to be. Since the spring of 1916, baseball has been on the M. A. C. casualty roll under the title Missing. It has been the fault of neither students, faculty, nor the college. Point the finger of blame at William Hohenzollern, now a member of the also ran club. Last November, Kaiser Bill decided that his team was beaten so he ducked for the showers and escaped by a side door before the crowd got wind of it. This unexpected develojjment made several changes on the campus. Baseball is still on the casualty list but is now on the list of Returned to Active Duty. Prof. Gore, generally called Kid, is again on the campus and on the regular payroll at Shylock ' s office. Kid saw he would have nothing to do if he stayed around coUege last year so he went into the thick of things, but he got back quick when he found the fighting was over. Now we have Kid to coach a baseball team. This year an ordinary coach would consider himself in the hole with only one letter-man back, but Kid doesn ' t care much about letter- men, he wants baseball players if he has to develop them himself. Leave it to Kid expresses the faith of the college in his ability. The material is showing up well in practice and the student body is looking forward to a very successful season but no matter what the outcome is, what Kid wants to hear at the end of the season is this: ' Victors or the vanquished, her spirit is the same. Maroon and White has won the fight, her boys have played the game. Crack The track season at Aggie has been very satisfactory thus far and prospects look good for a successful completion of the year ' s schedule. There was no varsity cross country season this year, but a team represented the S. A. T. C. This combination easily defeated Springfield and finished in the New England Intercollegiate Cross Country run at Franklin Field, Boston. The relay team, the first varsity track team of the year, did not give promise of being an exceptional one at the beginning of the season. Captain Yesair being the only letter-man in college, but Dewing returned and the new material proved to be up o the Agg e ; tan ard. M. A. C. defeated the New Hampshire quartet at the Army and Navy meet at Boston by a margin of eighteen yards. The second race was with Dartmouth. The first meeting of the two teams was at the B. A. A. games, March first. This race was marred by a foul on the part of Dartmouth ' s first man. The same teams competed again at the New England In- door Intercollegiates and Dartmouth won this time by about four yards. Coach Dickinson is looking forward to a banner season in spring track. We have our own cinder track now and at least one dual meet will be held on the M. A. C. athletic field. J ocbep C ' est la guerre, of course, when the 1918 season is mentioned. Except Bob Chisholra, veterans of the 1917 team were missing when the first game was played, but Bob drew from the student body a team of seven men that held its own in every game. Springfield lost twice, Tufts was another victim, Williams found us a bit better than they, while West Point fought hard and beat us 2-1. Dartmouth with Murphy came to M. A. C. one Satur- day and took back a 3-0 victory. The next Saturday the Aggie team with minds intent on victory visited Dartmouth and showed a grand comeback, winning 5-3. When college opened December 31, 1918, all of last year ' s team was back save one. Competition was strenuous and there was little difficulty in filling the vacant position, but games were hard to schedule and ice conditions were bad, so as a result only two games were played. Williams was defeated 2-0 on the college pond while Assumption College at Wor- cester held Aggie to a 0-0 score. The prospects are exceptionally good for a fast hockey team next year. 101 NON-ATHLETIC ACTIVITIES BOARD COMBINED MUSICAL CLUBS 104 1920 INDEX BOARD COLLEGIAN BOARD 105 Y. M. C. A. CABINET INFORMAL COMMITTEE 106 nsMffO niHETEEn TWEHTY INDEX ©. tE. V. jFounHrti at 9 a at u ttt agricultutal CoIIcst, Sl ap 12, 1869 Colors: White and Brown Floioer: White Carnation 108 ninETEEn twenty index (a. c. V. Haeold M. Gobe Henry R. Francis J. E. Bement Charles F. Deuel James E. Deuel Henri D. Haskins Eliot Mansfield Buffum WiLLARD Kyte French Lorin Earle Ball Charles Meade Boardman Gordon Burnham Crafts Qiemticts jfrattfS in JFaruItate ifrattcS) in Wltbt 1919 A. Vincent Osmun James B. Paige Gerald D. Jones Albert C. McCloud Albert Parsons Frederick Tuckerman Arthur Martin McCarthy Kenneth Sanderson Williams 1920 Leland Sprague Graff Robert Sanderson Horne George Alfred Smith Elliot Hubbard Taylor Herman Nelson Dean George William Edman Herbert LeRoy Geer 1921 Robert Meredith Gould Charles Donald Kendall Lawrence Francis Pratt Frederick Kaupp Zercher 1922 Kenneth Allen Barnard Clarence Frederick Clark Richard Edmund Field Reginald Newton Holman Robert Marston Lingham Matthew John Murdock Rowland Piper Smith HOBART WadSWORTH SpRING 109 ninETEEIi TWENTY INDEX jFounlieti at a aSSacfiwiSctts aptcultutal CoUfBc 9l?ntcf) 13, 1873 3lpl)a Chapter f2ational fl rgamjatiDn Thirty Chapters Twelve Alumni Clubs Colors: Silver and Magenta Puhlication: The Sianet 110 ninETEEii TwmiY ihdex $f)i igma appa m ' j William P. Brooks Orton C. Clark Lawrence S. Dickenson AValter E. Dickenson Arthur M. Hall, Jr. Raymond A. Jackson Herbert Richard Bond Robert Dudley Chisholm George Murray Campbell 0@em6ets jftfltaS in jfacultate iFtatwiS in WLtbe Ralph J. Watts 1919 1920 Frank P. Rand George E. Stone F. CiviLLE Pray Luther A. Root Philip H. Smith Frank E. Thurston Paul Faxon Douglas Henderson Huntoon Ralph Shaw Stedman 1921 Henry Vaughn Allen Donald Churchill Douglass Harold Arthur Haskins Charles Gideon Mackintosh Justin Jeremiah McCarthy George Henry Richards John Dow Snow Orville Holland Spencer Robert Lyman Starkey George Jonathan Thyberg Phillip Hall Haskins Maxfield Merriam Smith Conrad Herman Roser Luther Charles Van Anden 111 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX Eappa igma jfounUfD at caiubctiSftp of IPitginia, 2DrKmbcr 10, 1860 (Samma Delta Chapter at tabliQfltb Sl ftp 18, 1904 Jl ational jaDrganuation Eighty-five Undergraduate Chapters Thirty-eight Alumni Chapters Publication: The Caduceus Colors: Scarlet, Green and White Flower: Lily of the Valley 112 niriETEEH twehty index Eappa igma JrrattfS in ifacultatf Charles Wellington w. p. b. lockwood Harold F. Thompson Edward B. Holland James K. Mills Carlton Dol glas Blanchard Hall Bryant Carpenter Harold Edward Spaulding John Yesair Frederick A. Frank A. AVaugh James A. Foord William Regan McLaughlin jfcatt££i in WLtbe 1919 George E. Cutler QUINCEY S. LoWRY Raymond Thurston Parkhurst Myrton Files Evans Louis Pease Hastings Henry Byron Peirson Clinton Jones Daggett George Blossom Woodward James Warren Alger Peter Andrew Crichton Stuart VanAlstyne Smith Howard Grace Dubois 1920 James Comly Maples 1921 Stuart Eld hedge Wright Warren Montague Dewing Henry Lawrence Rice Starr Margetts King 1922 John Gordon Lowery Carol Fales Whitaker Harold Hayden Lawton Seth Stevens 113 ninETEEn twenty index llappa amma U jfDunbfb at 9?a0iSac5uSfttiS SLgticultutal €oUtse, SDrtobet 28, 1900 Colors: Orange and Black Flower: Tiger Lily 114 niriETEEn twenty index «i appa amma $f)i A. Anderson Mackimmie QiemtJers jFrattrS in jfacultate Sttattt in Witbt Chester P. Spofford 1919 Verne Allen Fogg 1920 Harold F. Tompson Arthur Edwin Center Malcolm Willis Chase John Kersey Delahunt Harold Leon Harrington John Farren Hill Mark Anthony Roberts Albert Wadsworth Meserve Herman DeWitt Oppe William Fenton Robertson Ralph Hemenway Sanderson John Wardrop Urquhart 1921 Salteau Frederick Calhoun WiNTHROP WiLMARTH HoWARD Lyle Lord Kirkland Herbert Aloysius MacAedle Guy Clifford West 1922 Walter Roy Millington Everett Caroll Preston Harry Stephen Stiles Milton Fuller Webster Philip Baxter Arms Richard Woodworth Arms George Louis Baker James Francis Fenton Oliver Furbish Hooper Ray Palmer Arthur Laurence Swift John Leonard Walsh Harold Earle Wentsch George Edwin White Edmund Thomas Carey 115 ninETEEn twenty index. j otinOrti at Unibcrsitp of O|)io. 1903 93n Ct)apter establisfirti un? national Orsanijation Thirteen Chapters P ihlication: ' ' Sickle and Sheaf Colors: Sorrel Green and Gold Flotier: Fink Rose 116 WlriiriETEEn twenty index lp()a ( amma Efto Qgcmftcrs iftattr in ifacHltatf ARTHUR S. Thurston ifrattrs! in WLtbe Carlos L. Beals Arthur Newton Bowen Albert L. Dean Harold B. Pierce 1919 Samuel Boynton Ferriss Sidney Clarence Johnson John Alexander Crawford Arthur Paul Dunn Frank Thompson Caldwell Hale Lawrence Melville Cooper Francis Summers Fletcher Walter Ashton Marsh Roger Melvin Acheson Franklin Allen Barnes Albert Grover Brason Stanley Willard Bromley 1920 1921 1922 Earle Daniel Lothrop Philip Adna Readio Clifton William Scott Richard Charles Peck Philip Luther Robinson George Lewis Slate Charles Alfred Buck Karl Arvid Frit en James Addison Graves Belding Frai cis Jackson Joseph Timothy Sullivan 117 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX i I If M 1 } ' m l„l i.A 1« 5 iS trjjeta Cf)i Colors: Red and White ifountifli at jRortoicfi WLnibtt itv, SL til 10, 1856 CI)eta Chapter (£Stabli tti SDecembn 16, 1911 iRational flDtganijation Twenty-four Chapters Eight Alumni Chapters Publication: The Rattle Floiver: Red Carnation 118 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX ©tieta Cfji Robert Burleigh Collins Edward Stuart Faber Kenneth Blanchard Roy Robertson Brown Allan Melville Burns Fred William Clarridge Alfred Arnold Clough Charles Henry Anderson Roland Wight Day Ralph Goodwin Leavitt ftattt in Witbt Enos James Montague 1919 William Henry McKee Clarence Ritchie Phipps Oliver Cousens Roberts 1920 Frederick Eugene Cole, Jr. Ebenezer Erskine Harvey John William Holloway John Edwin Littlefield Lester Winslow Simmons Raymond Newton Smith 1921 George Russell Lockwood Walter Isaiah Palmer Howard Jenney Sampson Ralph Shattuck Stevens 1922 Howard Finlay Coles Donald Keith Collins John Harold Lockhart Albert Webster Stevens 119 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX . f t « f « s jfounarb at IfiliclimDnD Collfse, j obrmlict l, 1901 9iassact)usctts aipija C aptet (jtetablisfttti 1912 Colors: Purple and Red iUational Organijation Fortj ' -five Chapters Pvblication: The Journal Flowers: American Beauties and Violets 120 niriETEEn twenty index igma l)i €psJilon Vincent DePaul Callanan Arthur Lincoln Chandler egemtJets Alfred Francis Cosby Charles Gordon Mattoon AVilliam Joseph Sweeney MiLo Roderick Bacon Winfield Scoit Beauregard 1920 John Foxcroft Carleton Howard Preston Quadland Roger Conklin Coombs Joseph Daniel Evers 1921 Albert Douglas Long Richard Adams Mellen Richard Herbert Sanford 1922 Herbert Lawrence Collins George Asa Cotton Charles Sale Cross Carlyle Hale Gowdy Francis Edward Hooper Albert Arthur Jarvis Harold Nelson Jarvis John Joseph Lyons, Jr. Stewart Carleton Morgan George Blanchard Packer Walter Jessie Rollins George Henry Thompson, Jr. 121 ninETEEH twenty index jfDunlifti at Boston mnibn it , jRobcmbrr 2, 1909 ( amma 3eta Chapter (B tabU fieh 9l?a?; 18, 1912 iRational ©tganuation Forty-eight Chapters Publication: The Purple, Green and Gold Colors: Purple, Green and Gold Flower: Violet 122 niriETEEN TWENTY INDEX Hamtiba € )i Ipfja 90embers Sftattt in fracultatf Richard Lynde Holden 1919 Morton Harding Cassidy Hazen Walcott Hamlin Brooks Franklin Jakeman William Alan Luce . John Dexter Bhigham Paul Wilfred Brown Harry Louis Dixon Leslie Dana Bent Edwin Graham Burnham Frank Albert Gilbert, Jr. George Austin Kemp Robert Parker Lawrence 1920 1921 Henry Egmont Lyons Chester Arthur Pike Thornton Greenwood Taylor Frederic Howard Conrad John Johnson Julian Denton Smith Clarence Milton Wood 1922 Earle Stanley Leonard Kenneth Watts Moody Myron George Murray William Henry Peck Edwin Herbert Warren 12:3 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX tU 1 1 1 f t tfv 1 lift f t r: 1 t 1 f ■t w n HiK jfDunbtli at gait Unibctsiitp, 1845 (Damma Chapter (£dtablism 1913 jRational flDtganisation Twenty Chapters Eleven Alumni Councils Publication: The Tomahawk ' Colors: Cardinal and Stone Flower: Cardinal Rose 124 ninETEEM TWENTY INDEX aipf)a igma Mi Joseph P. Lindsey 0@em6ers jFtataiS in ifacultatc William P. Machmer Charles A. Peters George Chapman E. Baxter Eastman Edwin F. Gaskill Nathaniel L. Harlow jfratwS in Wltbe Sumner R. Parker Stephan a. Puffer Charles S. Walker Lewell S. Walker QuiNCY Austin Bagg Roger James Chambers Lawrence Wilhelm Johnson 1919 Thomas Jefferson Gasser Ralph Sutherland Wells Nash Thompson George Wills Apsey, Jr. Carlisle Ferrin Graves 1920 Guy Franklin MacLeod William Harold Peckham Walter Mitchell Sullivan Harland Everett Gaskill Edward William Martin 1921 Francis Edwin Park, Jr. Kenneth Wilson Sloane Charles Austin Faewell Millard Thayer Gaskill Albert Snyder Higgin James Freeman Leland 1922 Henry Samson Mosely Albert William Smith George Francis Sample Tucker Philip Duane Walker 125 ninETEEn twenty index Commons Club ifountrfb at mtSlevan mnibstsitv, 1S99 as0acf)usctts Chapter iRational flDrganijatioii Four Chapters 126 niriETEEn twenty index Commons Club 9 exnbtt0 in iFacuItg Paul J. Anderson Walter C. Bruce (i. Chester Crampton Harry D. Drain Arthur K. Harrison Paul Serex, Jr. Orville a. Jamison Arthur N. Julian Fred C. Kenney John Phelan Byron E. Pontius KcjStlient 9 tmbet Walter G. Buchanan Edmund D. Kelsey Henry John Burt Gunnar Emmanuel Erickson Ambrose Clement Faneuf Earle Augustus Garde Emil Frederick Guba Benjamin Earl Hodgson Charles Henry Jewell William Mather A. Sidney Mallory 1919 Harry Abraham Ball Ralph Hunter Card Glendon Robert Derick Charles Felix Doucette Herman B. Nash Raymond W. Swift Robert Warren Parke George Newberry Peck Julian Stuart Rea Wendell Frederick Smith Chester Dillingham Stevens Edward Strack Oliver Wiswell AVood Chester Smith Woodward George Edwin Erickson 1920 George Kenneth Redding Joseph Raymond Sanborn Walter Harriman Sargent Allen Caruth Williams Carl Antonio Iorio 1921 William Henry Miller 1922 John Hollis Andrews Hubert Judson Sainton Ellis Warren Chapin Frederick Belcher Cook Robert Cummings Harry Adrian Erysian Joseph Globus Henry Nigro George Richmond Purrington Ralph Russell James Vincent Spadea Kenneth David Sherman Henry Wesley Stephan Willis Tanner Mortimer Task 127 niriETEEM TWENTY INDEX Belta 1)1 (§amma Colors: White and Green Flowers: White Roses and Pine 128 niriETEEn twenty index Helena T. Goessman LoRiAN P. Jefferson JBelta $f)i amma Qiem tiers jfacult? 9l9cmI)ftS Adeline E. Hicks Edna L. Skinner Mae Holden Wheeler 1919 Sylvia Boaven Brigham Olive Evangeline Carroll Bena Gertrude Erhard Mary Ellen Monicia Garvey Ethel Lovett Harris Priscilla Knowlton Anna Liebman Marion Gertrude Pulley Helen Aramintha Sibley Marion Nichols Wells Marion Edith Earley 1920 Helen Stanley Millard Susan Elmira Smith Henrietta Blackwell Viola Mary Cameron 1921 Marion Ruth Russert Emily Bird VanLennep Elinor Frances Chase Ruth Wasson Hurder 1922 Jane Isabel Pollard Beryl May Shaw 129 ninETEEn twemty index f)i i appa 3Pf)i IBlESiDcitt 9 embn in ifarultp Edgar L. Ashley William P. Brooks Kenyon L. Butteefield Alexander E. Cance Joseph S. Chamberlain G. Chester Crampton William A. Doran Charles H. Fernald Henry T. Fernald James A. Foord Henry J. Franklin George E. Gage Clarence E. Gordon c. i. gunness Philip B. Hasbrouck Edward B. Holland William D. Hurd Edward M. Lewis Joseph B. Lindsey William L. Machmer A. Anderson Mackimmie Charles E. Marshall Feed W. Morse Robert W. Neal A. Vincent Osmun John E. Osteandee James B. Paige Chaeles a. Petees Harold E. Robbins Feed C. Seaes Paul Seeex, Jr. Robert J. Speague H. F. ToMPSON Miss Olive Tuener Ralph J. Watts Feank a. Waugh Charles Wellington Mes. S. S. Wheelee C. F. Deuel H. M. Thomson Wit itimt Sl fmbetiS C. S. Walker Raymond R. Willoughby Louis P. Hastings 1018 £ltction Irving B. Stafford 130 William Mathee niriETEEn twenty index Snterfraternitp Conference Robert B. Collins, President Charles M. Boardman, Secretary em ers 1918=1919 BUFFUM ' 19 Chisholm ' 19 Hastings ' 19 Johnson ' 19 Collins ' 19 Cassidy ' 19 Ferriss ' 19 Fogg ' 19 Chandler ' 19 Icappa igma Slli a tgrna pigi ' 2L|)fta €U fLambha € i Sllp a Sllptta CSamma Wi o Kappa (!5amma i isma U (£p iion 131 Boardman, ' 20 Campbell ' 20 Dewing ' 20 MacLEOD ' 20 Blanchard ' 20 Luce ' 20 Hale ' 20 Oppe ' 20 Carleton ' 20 A. J. Hastings XIII American Dairy Supply Co X Amherst Book Store XV A. W. Higgins XIX Belcher Taylor Agricultural Too] Co VIII Brooks Brothers VI Campion XIII Carpenter Morehouse XII Casper Ranger Construction Co V Chas, M. Cox Co XI Cobb, Bates Yerxa Co VIII College Candy Kitchen XIV Colonial Inn XII C. R. Elder XV Deuel ' s Drug Store VII D. Whiting Sons X E. D. Marsh Estate V E. E. Millett Estate XV Electric City Engraving Co Ill E. M. Bolles XV F. M. Thompson Son XIII Hammond ' s Paint Slug Shot Works IX Henry Adams Co VI Holyoke Valve and Hydrant Co XVI Horrigan Doe Co X Jackson Cutler XV Jerome B. Rice Seed Co XIII J. E. Merrick Co XIII Joseph Breck Sons, Corp XIV Lord Burnham Co VIII Morandi-Proctor Co V Mono-Service Co XII New College Store XIII New England Baled Shavings Co XIV Page ' s Shoe Store XV Rumery Fay XV Russell, Burdsall Ward Bolt and Nut Co. .VII Shepard XV The Aeolian Co II The Davenport VI The J. B. Ford Co XI The Hinde Dauch Paper Co XVI The Mutual Plumbing Heating Co V The New England Nurseries Co IX The Tuttle Company XVI White Studio IV Wright Wire Co X Wright-Ziegler Co ' IX The Advertisers have been a great factor in making thi.s book possible. All of them have met with the stamp of approval from either the students, the alumni or the college authorities; so we urge with whole heartedness that you too PATRONIZE THESE ADVERTISERS  r iiW I I m ■tlllfe Aeolian-Vocauon UKLIKE ANT OTHER PHONOGRAPH— A KEW MUSICAL INSTRUMENT I HE AEOLIAN ' VOCALION will interest every phonograph owner since it represents such a remarkable advance in phonograph development. It will interest those also who never have con- sidered the phonograph seriously— the Vocalion tone is so clear, pure, so artistically perfect that it wins the admira- tion and respect of those qualified to judge music critically. The wonderful expression device — the Graduola — quite doubles the appeal of the phonograph. For it grants literally the privilege of singing with voices of the greatest vocalists, playing with the tone of the most famous instrumentalists. THE AEOLIAN COMPANY AEOLIAN HALL In BROOKLYN 11 Flatbush Avenue In MANHATTAN 29 West 42nd Street In THE BRONX, 367 East 149th Street In NEWARK, 895 Broad Street cJ ' ' yo y ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK BY Buffalo EQUIPPED with many years experi- ence for making photographs of all sorts, desirable for illustrating college annuals. Best obtainable artists, workmanship and the capacity for prompt and unequalled service. PHOTOGRAPHERS Address requests for information to our Executive Offices, 1546 Broadway, New York, N.Y. Studios also conveniently located at-— 557 5th Avenue, N. Y. South Hadley, Mass. Northampton, Mass. Hanover, N. H. Princeton, N. J. Lafayette, Ind, Ann Arbor, Michigan Poughkeepsie, N.Y. West Point, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. IV Amherst Furniture and Carpet Rooms Makes a Specialty of Students ' Furniture Carpets, Kugs, Draperies, Bedding, Bookcases, Black- ing Cases, Desks, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Cord, etc., at lowest prices. — ■■■Casper Ranger Construction Co. The Complete Building Contractors MAIN OFFICE, HOLYOKE, MASS. Save Freight and Cartage by Purchasing Here E. D. Marsh Est. E. F. STRICKLAND, Manager 18-20-22 Main Street Amherst, Mass. BRANCHES SPRINGFIELD, MASS. NEW YORK, N. Y. Morandi-ProctorCompany DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF Cooking Apparatus FOR Hotels, Restaurants, Clubs, Institutions and Steamships No. 86 Washington Street Adams Square BOSTON HARDWARE WE SELL EVERYTHING IN THE HARDWARE LINE If you do not see what you want, ask for it; we have it. Also Plumbing and Heating THE MUTUAL PLUMBING AND HEATING COMPANY CSTABLISHED 1S18 MADISON aUEWUS COR. FORTV-FOUSTH STREET NEW VORK BOSTON SALES-OFFICES LITTLE BUILDING Tremont Corner Boylston Street Telephone Beach 4743 Clothes Ready-made or Made to Order for Dress or Sporting Wear English Hats and Haberdashery Fine Boots and Shoes Fur and Shetland Wool Garments Trunks, Bags and Travelling Kits Send for Illustrated Catalogue COMPLETE CLOTHING OUTFITS FOR OFFICERS CONTINUING IN THE SERVICE AS WELL AS FOR THOSE PREPARING TO RESUME CIVILIAN LIFE davenport THE PLACE TO HOLD YOUR REUNION BANQUET SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO DINNER PARTIES, ETC. n Henry Adams Co. The Rexall Store ON THE CORNER n SODA CANDY CIGARS STATIONERY DRUGS n Meet Me at Adams Fountain Pens Waterman ' s Moore ' s Boston Safety Ink Tennis Balls Golf Balls Deuel ' s Drug Store Victrola Records Edson Disk Phonograph Records Kodaks Eastman Films Russell, Burdsall Ward Bolt and Nut Company MANUFACTURERS OF Celebrated Empire Bolts, Nuts and Rivets PORT CHESTER, N. Y. —i m a i - ii . i Have You Sent for the NeM Handy Hand Book ? Not new last year, mind you. but new this. New from stem to ateni. New facts, new text and new cuts. It ' s twice the size of the old one. Pages big enough to show big roomy illustra- tions. Never mind if you don ' t want to buy one single thing now, send for this book just the same. Have it handy; for some day you will want something ctuick. That something you will find in the book. It is more than a Handy Hand Book, it is a greenhouse counselor, friend and guide. 1 m Builders of Greenhouses and Conservatories Coronation Coffee The more exacting your Coffee-taste the more thoroughly you will appreciate the delight- ful fragrance and rich mellow flavor of Coro- nation Brand. Cobb, Bates Yerxa Co. BOSTON. MASS. .5!%g, ee i s New England Made Farm Implements Plows Harrows Cultivators Fertilizer Sowers Corn Planters Land Rollers Potato Diggers Hay Rakes Tedders, Etc Belcher Taylor Agl. Tool Co. CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS. VIII ' %.a 9P7nonc y ;££u ef tt HAMMOND ' S SLUG SHOT  Used from Ocean to Ocean A light, composite, fine powder, easilj ' distributed either by duster, bellows, or in water by spraying. Thoroughly reliable in killing Currant Worms, Potato Bugs, Cabbage Worms, Lice, Slugs, Sow Bugs, etc., and it is also strongly impregnated with fungicides. ;; Put up in Popular Packages at Popular Prices. Sold by Seed Dealers and Merchants. Hardy New England Grown Trees, Shrubs and Plants for All Purposes Also Rhododendrons, Azaleas, Boxwood, and other Foreign Stock. Let Us Quote On Your Want List The New England Nurseries Co. BEDFORD, MASS. TEL. LEXINGTON 374 V AND ' CREAMERY EQUIPMENT Wright-Ziegler Co. 12 SOUTH MARKET ST. BOSTON,- MASS. STOCK BARN FITTINGS j MILKING MACHINES CORK BRICK IX Whiting ' s Dairy Products Our Delivery Service Covers Boston and Suburbs Regular Milk This milk is from regularly inspected dniries and is finally safe-guarded by scientific pasteurization at 145 degrees F. for 30 minutes. Grade A IVIilk An exeeptional, rich, clean milk produced under a liberal bonus system, controlled by laboratory su- pervision. Sealed with the tamper-proof seal. Certified Milk Prod ' uced under supervision of Medical Milk Com- mission of Boston, in the ideal dairies of Massa- chusetts Agricultural College and Hampshire Hills Dairy. Modified Milk for Babies Prepared for the individual baby on Doctor ' s pre- scription. Buttermilk A refreshing beverage and an easily digested and healthful food. Cream-Light-Medium-Heavy Past ' iiri zed — scaled with tamper-proof seals. Sugar-Free Milk for Diabetics 8 Oz. This milk is practically FREE FROM SUGAR and may be freely used in those cases where sugar is prohibited. It is especially valuable in diabetes, also advantageous in the treatment of obesity, gout, etc. Butter Made under sanitary methods in solid or print forms. D. WHITING SONS . . . Boston The New Certified Depressed Handle Cap L Packed in Tubes for Use in Capping Machines The cap with a lifter that is always isible and does not pull off in ex- tracting it from bottle. The thumb and finger only instruments re- quired to remove it. 10C% EFFICIENCY Ask Your Jobber or Write for Prices and Samples. AMERICAN DAIRY SUPPLY COMPANY 318-32 MAINE AVENUE, S. W. WASHINGTON, D. C JOHN H. HORRIGAN P(esidenl JOSEPH A. FEENNY Vice-President WILLIAM A. DOE Treasurer Horrigan Doe Co. OFFICE, 34 MERCHANTS ROW BOSTON, MASS. Hotel and Club Supplies Institution and Steamship Supplies Beef, Lamb, Veal, Hams, Bacon Sausage, Poultry, Fish, Butter Cheese, Eggs, Oils, Olives FANEUIL HALL MARKET, Boston Five Trunk Lines Connecting All Departments TELEPHONE, RICHMOND 2143 OCIiSIOR RUST I I«,OOF RUST PROOF Wire and Iron FENCES Flower Guards, Trellis, Arches, Tree Guards We furnish handsome wire and iron fences and erect them complete. We installed the fence around the athletic field. Wright Wire Company Worcester, Mass. COMMON KNOWLEDGE The modern business man realizes that the betterment of his industry as a whole increases the standard of his business. Consequently valuable business facts are becoming common knowledge. This exjDlains why the wide spread knowledge and use of ' ' A. Dajrvjnan ' s B among the large majority of dairymen, creamery men, milk dealers and cheese factorymen is rapidly increasing. The sanitary protection maintained with the use of this cleaner for washing milk cans, bottles, separators, churns, and all milk containers has raised the standard of dairy products so that they return a profit. Indian in Circle n Every Package If you doubt these facts, order this cleaner from your supply house, and try it for yourself. IT CLEANS CLEAN The J. B. Ford Co., t±.. Wyandotte, Mich. Raise Every Chick You Hatch on IRTBMORe Buttermilk Baby Chick Food You will raise more and better chicks by using this feed. The chicks will grow faster, feather out more even and mature into heavier layers. The lactic acid in Buttermilk destroys disease germs and aids in the prevention of white diarrhoea. Many of the largest poultry raisers in New England insist on having Wirthmore Chick Feeds because they are always uniform and One Quality Only— -The Best Wirthmore Buttermilk Baby Chick Food is packed in 3-lb., 6 -lb. cartons, 25-lb. and 100-lb. bags. More than a thousand dealers in New England sell Wirthmore Feeds. CHAS. M. COX CO. DISTRIBUTORS BOSTON, MASS. ST. ALBANS GRAIN CO. MINUFACTUREBS ST. ALBANS, VT. XI THE IDEAL PACKAGE FOR COTTAGE CHEESE AND OTHER DAIRY PRODUCTS Mono -Service Co, NEWARK, N. J. Largest niakers of Wood-Fibre (Paper) Containers for Foods in the world. Carpenter Morehouse BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS The Amherst Record AMHERST, MASS. Colonial Inn Everything Home Cooked in Southern Style We Serve in the Old Fashioned Way XII Hart, Schaffner Marx Ready Clothes The Best in College Men ' s WITH CLASS NUMERALS l|ampBJ|tr? lott THE STATIONERY OF GENTLEMEN AT A. J. HASTINGS NEWSDEALER AND STATIONER AMHERST, MASS. HABERDASHERY F. M. Thompson Son AMHERST, MASS. J. E. Merrick Co. DEALERS IN FLOUR AND GRAIN CAMPION Fine.... Tailoring COLLEGE OUTFIi lER HABERDASHERY COMPLIMENTS OF Jerome B. Rice Seed Co. Wholesale Seed Growers Cambridge, N. Y, Detroit, Mich. Fairfield, Wash. St. Anthony, Idaho Bozeman, Mont. F. E. COLE ' 20, Manager R. R. BROWN ' 20 NEW COLLEGE STORE Student Supplies GOOD GOODS FOR FAIR PRICES R. N. SMITH ' 20 W. I. PALMER ' 21 XIII HOME MADE HIGH GRADE CHOCOLATES CREAMS, NUTS AND FRUIT CENTERS Cream Caramels with Nuts and Marshmallow Vanilla and Chocolate Nut Fudges Cream Mint Wafers HARD CANDIES Peanut Brittle Molasses Peppermint Drops Lemon Dro])s Choji Suey SALTED NUTS Almonds and Pecans Jumbo and Spanish Peanuts FANCY PACKAGES Cream, Nuts, Fruit and Novelty Centers LIGHT LUNCH SERVED College Candy Kitchen THE HOME OF SWEETS 22 Main St., Amherst A. W. HIGGINS South Deerfield, Mass. Dealer in Fertilizers and Fertilizer Materials Higgins ' 07 Russell ' 16 OF EVERY KIND Implements, Machines, Woodenware Nursery and Seed Trial Grounds Conducted by The Breck-Robinson Nursery Co. Munroe Station, Lexington, Mass. Especial attention paid to Landscape Designing, Planting, Fores try, H orticulture, etc. BrecR ' s R.eal Estate A.£iency Farms, Suburbaa Properties, etc. ISrecK ' s Bureau. Famishes Approved Employees, Mercantile, Agricultural, Horticultural JOSEPH BRECK «S SONS, Corp. 51-52 North Market St.. Boston, Mass. Telephone UjcIhikiihI -. ' aa) USE BALED SHAVINGS FOR BEDDING COWS THE MODERN BEDDING MATERIAL Cheaper, cleaner, and more absorbent than straw. In use at the stables of all agricultural colleges in the east and by progressive dairymen and breeders. For delivered price, in carload lots, write New England Baled Shavings Co. ALBANY, N. Y. XIV Jackson Cutler Deale Dry and Fancy Goods and Choice Family GROCERIES Amherst Book Store C. F. DYER ALL COLLEGE SUPPLIES Stationery, Fountain Pens Latest Fiction and Music 3 SO. PLEASANT Telephone 45-W s H E SIIEPARD A R f) MEN ' S STORE RUMERY FAY ELECTRIC PORTABLES ELECTRIC WIRING ELECTRIC APPLIANCES RUMERY FAY Page ' s Shoe Store AMHERST Between the Banks The Millett Jewelry Store IS THE PLACE FINE WATCH WORK BROKEN LENSES REPLACED College Jewelry All Kinds of Strings NEXT TO POST OFFICE COLLEGE SHOES We carry the Largest Stock in the State outside of Boston MODERN REPAIR DEPT. E. M. BOLLES THE SHOE MAN WE ' VE BEEN SELLING COAL FOR YEARS C. R. ELDER AMHERST VLfjt l uttU Companp Established 1832 l vinttx anb pinberg RUTLAND, VERMONT OUR EIGHTY- SEVEN YEARS ' EXPERIENCE IN THE PUBLISHING BUSINESS AT YOUR SERVICE MAKERS OF HISTORIES, GENEALOGIES, CLASS BOOKS In Library and De Luxe Editions LEGAL DOCUMENTS DEALERS IN OFFICE STATIONERY AND FURNITURE, TYPEWRITERS, ATHLETIC GOODS ART WORKS ANY BOOK IN PRINT H. D. Egg Boxes FOR EXPRESS OR PARCEL POST Made of H. D. Corrugated Fibre Board, light, strong, durable. Prevent breakage — save postage and expressage. W7-ite for booklet. THE HINDE DAUCH PAPER COMPANY 901 WATER STREET, SANDUSKY, 0. Hoiyoke Valve and Hydrant Co. JOBBERS OF WROUGHT IRON AND BRASS PIPE VALVES AND i ITTiNGS FOR STEAM, WATER AND GAS Asbestos and Magnesia Boiler and Pipe Coverings Pipe Cut to Sketch Mill Supplies ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS FOR Steam and Hot Water Heating Auto matic Sprinkler System Boiler and Engine Connections HOLYOKE, MASS. XVI lli;iiliiiB mm If :: ' iftlilil iiiii
”
1917
1918
1919
1921
1922
1923
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.