Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT)
- Class of 1918
Page 1 of 284
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 284 of the 1918 volume:
“
.1 .-, - 1 1,- ,,--. 1.. 145 L f 51-17, z .vf ,fs ,,.. , ' - .:,,'g,'f,cuf f 5 ,g-A-Z.. ., IF? df 1 f!:: ',x-'Qf3'5211,., ,,,, .,,,,,,, .,.A. ., -1 1:1 17, w t. m T, uf., .7-, .r. A Q 1: FEWZK. 4'-'l'!9v3- -' '-1: vw: .. : -51:3 ' m g:f'Gf:i- ' :f, 1:f, p-.ffl 3-31, Ing -xv : .-', .13 Lffh rv MLQEQ, ., -. 4. +V1.: ' I -.W T -I L X752-55... ' uri- 'f ' 1 FT: f ' ' .wh ,. .,,- ' .v ,,. 1 u wr-'ve-sr, .- .. -:4-,z . .i.,-.V mf 1 ',.,aqf4, 'P'-'M .'f.:g'Lv ,I ,U .WJLIZ , .X -Y-1. , .,, F? . I-C99 W faff'-iff ,M sfi,,tff ag,-1't ff. ,vf if if My wc, 355 If XQQIJLI: 4 iz! lx- OIFW. 'til Ag-S5722 'wma i kiE g,4ST','i M116 A -fig gf HIV '17 ff ,.LE31 b' I-X1 W S195-'IT4 ff?- I,-1 ?:'55I 'I' 'EQ--111, 243- J I ING -,mn ., 'D mill fa! , gil!! Fw--0 S -. 4. ,711 4 'Dr 4.4 . . . , Q, , I f fn .W pf' - L. wggfgfqgw- fda? I If p5.2?zg,Ifz?xI , , rw iwf F 3' T' 1 31 4539? I .- f 5 :ia 'i ff '4 ' Q IiXI'IIIf'F? ' 51 ' I Ia QQ HEI! 1 , Timm I 3- ,I n E f Rip: -,?TlmN:L1fEg-,Fr lff- :I i ' ' ff X '. f f -EI: ' ' ' ' I f f I W-' I I JI I Lf ' . ...gl 4 1 LII-5, -1:-'f ' I I I J I I - ' THE l9l 8 OLLA PODRIDA A BOOK PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE COLLEGE BODY OF WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY VOLUME LIX-PUBLISHED IN NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVENTEEN MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUT BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Chief WILLIAM DAVID FENTON, JR. Associate Editors EVERETT BUELL BLAKE H HERBERT BENSON FINNEGAN GERALD MEADE GANTZ GEORGE BRIGDEN HULSE ' Business Blanager CHARLES MIRACK WINCHESTER, JR Assistant Business Dlanager KENNETH PORTER STEVENS ' -.35..., ,-,-- rf.. - H w , - - mf- -,,,n,,,: fp. - 4., .-, -. 1 ' Q Q 1 1 f 5 . if WILLIAM ARNQLD Q0 SHANKLIN, PRESIDENT of WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY this BOOK is DEDICATED 51 FR 4 132-'f f fi ff W y X l I Q- 1 9 fffhff X NSJ I-rn 'rj Tixfglv X? X X ffiifk 'df 5 -f If? fn X-,-K -. ,X 3 431,-H. . 1.2, ,E X 4722? 15.1 5? :,, ,.- N, . ........ .. .... . .... ....... .. -y f 'fl - - QL mu, X ' W - f v ' 4. f' ' , A If J .nqtnl l, .X Q44 'il fs,, I fi-f .f ,ff I ' EAI ha X I ', I T v f X I lg! ,I sqm ENT5 A 'QXI . -fx .-N'- A' .F -fifffff f V I , , V 'P ATL! ffff X ' If 'I I IIIIKII III' 'W Ii? .-Alf 'W C I1 5 , I -Z ' ' 'I Z 59- 71 , :Z Z -. I f '1 ' KZ E . 7 mu. 'T , , f 1 ., I If 2 f I UNIVERSITY 2, ff, 6 .QI - H Z lx., 1 I my 5 -dl, X Z fd 25 CTW- ' ? zzigaiffsx-2 Q '14g5vIe': I tc-'T-x f ' N ' I f f' f -mtg A70 , H , 6 fy ,,,, M f .mzw I' Q ' f f, ATHLETICS IE 141 I I 5 I I ' I T52 Q4 2 I 'I X ff? ' :W Q O O Z 13295 fX' I Z IZ ACTIVITIES vi if I- I ff Z K . 0 o o -'Ea I -I I Z FEATURE WD ig , A, X I I Z ff of ' f ' if E AX Z I fx..J , U fnnc -.---.-- -'lx --- ...-. H 9 2.3 I' 5 f vffff-1 I f ll 12 I 1 Z CAD I, A f IA f 'X . I 7 5 ,fwgfyw ,rf ' -ji' , 'I Af X , I k - g- A Y rl, Ml-- I- In ul I-.- l f -'I--I-II' All I II-num If I I TAL. 6u65':u,IgiLFLguA,I -+A Q Q Hp' S fIIIl'I,lH I. I I , X E E x Y x X X S 2 2 .1 1 .J Q , ful 5 fs. 51 , X I lg , iggysgw f- Q fi 15 --Q X . 5 , . - X SME 5' f ' -,-if x 2l32:LiSl x 529,50 Sw jf 1, L 'XE JE af Pl, A1 Q: c - L' X ---A-i M Q- ' 'Q N g' Sig , I v'gQ i?g QE? 15 56 1 1 15 IL, S fb' X1 'K 'x S .1 1 FA 12 i 5 Jn. 11 , H .- . , -,E f 1, E:q:A.ASNh9 4 xg, WHA N f . -f ' m, S - v? '-l L12-'f .-7 ?Z75 .E Q44 Eg.,-5 lc , , 5 . 2.4 - 5' 2' Q52 .' -, -14 AS-59-'bif..4:,aa if . University UPU ,aj -. f 'I ,hr ' ? -If '?'2 eitgjfw 9 4.6, 4 5:uf..l ,gfffykf if .4 '. ciffgiw B fiivff I U 's 51 1 muuw CZAMDELIL. Wesleyan lj 1rst TLSLLYAN First VVhether you 'ue an alumnus or an undei gifiduate what does this signify to you Does it merely mean that we shall endeavor to keep the spirit of the University a unit, or does it imply a broader conception? Does it simply imply that we shall be loyal to VVesleyan first, and to our fraternities second, or is there a greater meaning hidden within these two words? To a great many of us Wesleyan First means something larger and broader than any efforts to do away with the selfishness on the parts of any fraternity groups. Wesleyan First means a Greater VVesleyan, a VVesleyan that will be a leader among colleges, a standard of excellence that is to be looked up to by others. There is a college with many handsome graystone buildings that lacks only college spirit to make it the greatest of small colleges. There are in- stitutions with ordinary athletic teams, others with less renowned facul- ties, others with mediocre equipment, but which are all striving for pre- eminence among themselves. I-n Wesleyan there is embodied a remarkable University. It is re- markable in its splendid faculty composed of men of national reputationg it is remarkable in its undergraduate spiritg it is remarkable in its new buildings that are rapidly transforming the once old fashioned institution into a University that is a University in all that the word implies. Wesleyan spirit has been remarkable during the past year. There are few colleges in the land that are free from political troubles, fraternity feeling, and cliques, but Wesleyan has every reason to be proud that there has been less of this narrowness during the past year than perhaps ever before. The undergraduates should feel gratified that the spirit of judging a man has at last been placed on a system of merit, and that group feeling has been thrown to the winds. Wesleyan has just reason to be proud of the many buildings erected in recent years. The Van Vleck Observatory has opened a department that is filling a long felt want, and the building is fitted with all possible equipment that could be utilized in the department of Astronomy. The new Dormitory for underclassmen recently completed is a worthy corner- stone to the second quadrangle, and the equipment of the building is all that could be desired. The handsome new Chapel with its perfect Gothic . 1' 1 '. L. . I .- ' C 9 ' . . .. 1 . . . S 1918 1 .JRR f-- K architecture will be I 4 a constant delight through the ensuing years. The buildings to come as outlined by President Shanklin conceive a University that will be remark- ably handsome. Pro- visions for the erec- tion of the Labora- tory for the depart- ment 'of Chemistry .have been made, and the building will be ready for use inside of two years. The realization of a new Library, a College Union, and a third . modern Dormitory is only a matter of time, and what is now termed the Greater Wesleyan is' rapidly becoming a reality. Great praise is due to President Shanklin for his untiring efforts in this di- rection, and truly, every Wesleyan man feels that the University owes the present state of progress almost entirely to his efficient and remarkable leadership. . Is it no wonder that Wesleyan First is being thought of in a new sense? Can we make Wesleyan Hrst among the smaller colleges of the East? Yes, on one condition. It is the old story of the struggle between the old and the new. At present Wesleyan is in a period of transition. There are still a few men of the college of old that are satisfied and do not Wish to see any new developments. There are still a few undergraduates that are narrow-in the extreme, and who retard the growth of the University. But on the other hand, the majority of the men now entering Wesleyan are of . THE NEW CHAPEL ,.,-- 1918L ,J GER, , A I 15 .fl THE NEW DORMITORY the newer school. They are men that are building the college of the future. Wesleyan does not cater to the man of narrow principles, Wesleyan does not wish to turn out men who waste four years in anything but college Work, and further, Wesleyan does not desire to turn out grinds. ' ' What Wesleyan is doing at present is' trying to train picked men. The University does not want a man who only burns midnight oil, grinding out his work for the love of the marks aloneg men of merely athletic prowess are not desiredg men who think Wesleyan is a preparation for the ministry are not desired. What VVesleyan wants is the broadminded man who trains himself for further efforts in the business world 3 who during his four years in college does not restrict himself entirely to studies, or to athletics alone, or merely to social activities, but who is capable of ,engaging in all phases of undergraduate activities. . Is Wesleyan to become the first small college of the East? Is the remarkable undergraduate spirit to continue? Are the eiiorts of the past few years to be carried onward? They must be, and every Wesleyan man must do his share. The little old Methodist college is deadg-long live the newer Wesleyan. ' 1918 THE WESLEYAN OF FIFTY YEARS AGO Q Q E 45 53 i ll' F Officers of the Administration l Williain Arnold shankiin, L.H.D., LL.D. . .... 'PTCS'iCZC7Lt Frank Walter Nicolson, M.A ..... Secretary of the Faculty William John James, M.A. . . . Librao'ia,n and flasfistant Treasurer r It Warren French Sheldon, B.A., B.D. , . Secretary of the Alumni Council y Eugenia Nlay Henry, B.A. . . . . . Assistant Librarian Hermann Arthur Lum, B.S. . . . Secretary of the Y. lil. C. A. l Charles Willard Shaw . . . Superi1z.z'e1z,clent of Groimcls ancl7Buildings Francis Henry Joseph Newton . . . . .1 . F M echanicfiavi Ka A 1918 L F Trustees Cfficers John Cheesinan Clark, Ll..D .... John Gribbel, NLA. . . David George Downey, D.D. Clinton DeVVitt Burdick, lW.A. . The President of the University ..... Members of the Board James Nlonroe Buckley, D.D., LL.D. Wlilliam Henry Hall, B.S. . . . James Noel Brown . . . Amos Jay Givens, M,D., LLD. . Wesley Ulysses Pearne, B.A. . John Edward Eustis, LL.D. . David George Downey, D.D. . . Warren Lanning Hoagland, D.D. . Charles Edward Davis, D.D. . Charles Lee Rockwell . William Edwin Sessions . . William Henry Burrows . . . Reuben Nelson Bennett, B.A., LL.B. . VVilliam Burt, D.D., LL.D. . . . . Augustus Burr Carrington, M.A., LL.B. . Martin Augustine Knapp, LL.D. . Charles Arthur Hadley, B.A. , . Phineas Chapman Lounsbury, LL.D. George Silas Coleman, LL.D. . George Willets Davison, LL.D. . John Cheesrnan Clark, LL.D. . Albert VVheeler Johnston . . . Webster Rogers Walkley, D.C.L. . Frederic Wilcox Clarke, B.S. . . . . Presirlcrzf . V1'cfc-Prcxzfflerzt . . Secrelfary . . . ,Treasurer . Illenzber 632-Q1jr'ZiC'7i0 . hlorristown, N. J. . South VVillington . New York, N. Y. . Stamford . . Middletown . New York, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . Phillipsburg, N. J. South Boston, Mass. . . . Meriden . . Bristol . . Nliddletown . VVilkes-Barre, Pa. . Buffalo, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . Washington, D. C. . Black River, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . New York, N. Y. . Baltimore, Md. Boston, Mass. ' x 6 ,.., 1... Frank lVIason North D D David Howard Tribou D D Edwin Sloan Tasker D D William Valentine Kelley D D LL D Watson Carvosso Squire LL D New York N Y Bucksport Me Woodfords Me Tilton N H New York N Y Seattle Wash Howard Abbott Clifford, Mixf 1 Q I i i i Albert Randolph Crittenden John Gribbel, M.A. . .. . . . Wilbur Fisk Hamilton, B.S ...... William Thayer Rich . . Cyrus John Strong, M.D. . Stephen Henry Olin, LL.D. . Charles Scott, Jr., M.A. , . . Andrew Jackson Coultas, Jr., D.D. . Charles Otis Judkins, D.D. . . Cephas Brainerd Rogers . John Emory Andrus, LL.D. Charles Gibson . . . Clinton DeWitt Burdick, M.A. . . . ,William Ingraham Haven, D.D. . . Henry Ingraham Harriman, Ph.B., LL.B. Frank Bentley Weeks, LL.D .... George Davis Beattys, M.A .... James Aylward Develin, Ph.B., LL.B. . Abraham John Palmer, D.D. . . Edmund Mead Mills, Ph.D., D.D. . Middletown . Ph1ladelph1a, Pa. . . Cynwyd, Pa. J . . Boston,fMass. . New York, N. Y. . . New York, N. Y., . Overbrook, Pa. New Bedford, Mass. ' . Glens Falls, N. Y. ' N . . Meriden Yonkers, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. . Brooklyn,'N. Y. . New York, - . Boston, Mass. li . . A Middletown l . New York, N. Y. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Milton,,N. AY. . I Syracuse, N. Y. as A' guna S5 -'fix CUL 5 .4- , v ' fa X -. 'Xa The Faculty Vvllllalll Arnold Shftnklin, L H D LL D President of the Umverszty B A Hamilton College 1883 STB Garret Biblical Institute 1891 M A Hamil LHD Upper Iona Unlvelsity 1909 D D Allegheny College 1910 LLD Trinity College, 1910, LL.D., Unixeisity of Vermont, 1911, M.A., WVesleyan Unixersity, 1912, LL.D., Hamilton College, 1913, EQ, fIPBK. I c U . . ., .- ., 'i l I ton College, 1895, D.D., University of Washington, 1895, LL.D., Baker University, 1906, 3 William, North Rice, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Geology 1 b B.A., Wesleyan University, 1865, Ph.D., Yale University, 1867, LL.D., Syracuse University, 1886, LL.D., Wlesleyan University, 1915, Sheffield ScientiHc School, Yale, 1866-1867: University of Berlin, 1867-1868, Professor of Geology and Natural History, Wfesleyan University, 1807-18841, Zoological work with United States Fish Coin- mission, 1878-1874-: Geological and Zoological investigation in the Bermudas, 1876-18771 Professoryof Geology, Wesleyan University, 1884-1 President of Board' of Education of Middletown City School District 1885-1891, President of Connecticut Council of Educa- tion, 1903-1905, Assistant Geologist, United States Geological Survey, employed in the study of Connecticut Triasic, 1891-1892, Superintendent of State Geological and Natural History Survey of Connecticut, 1903-1916, Acting President 1fVesleyan Uniyersity, 1907- 19091 Member of American Society of Naturalists,, President, 1891, Chairman of Board of Examiners, New York East Conference, 1897-, Member of Council of Connecticut Federation of Churches, 1908-, President, 1910-1911, Secretary, 1913-, Nlember of Con- necticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, Fellow of American Association for the Advance- ment of Science, Vice-President, 1905, Member of Geological Society of America, Vice- President, 1910: Lecturer on Science and Religion, Colgate University, 1897-1900, Mem- ber, Board of Governors, West China Union University, 1913-, fbN9, QIJBK. Caleb Thomas VVinchester, L.H.D., Professor ofE1zylf1f.9l1, Lzfteraiture B.A., Wesleyan University, 1869, M.A., 1872, L.H.D., Dickinson College, 1801, University of Leipzig, 1880: Librarian Wesleyan University, 1869-1873, Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature, 1873-1890: Professor of English Literature, 1890-1 Don- ovan Lecturer on English Literature in Johns Hopkins University. 1890-1891-1891-1892, 1894-1895, 1899-1900, Lecturer on English Literature in 1Vells College, 1885-1911, ,Asso- ciate General Editor of the Athenaeum Press Series of English Classics, 1893-g Member of the committee for the revision of the Hymnal of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1900- 1901:'X1fT, C11 BK. lVIorris Barker Crawford, lVI.A., Professor of Physics. ' B.A., Wesleyan University, 1874, M.A., 1877, Tutor in liflathematics, 1874--1877, Universities of Leipzig and Berlin, 1877-1880, Instructor in Physics, 'Wesleyan University, 1880-1881, Associate Professor of Physics, 1881-1884, Professor of Physics, 1884-, studied in the University of Berlin, 1895-1896, Fellow of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, Member of the American Physical Society, TNG, CDBK. 7 19182 li?- Q 1 Herbert Avllllillll Conn , Ph D I wfessoz ofBLoloqy BA Boston UHIXCISILD 1881 PhD Johns Hopkins Unnelsity 1884 111-X VVcs in Biology 1Veslcy an Unix eisity 1884- 1886 Xssociitc PlO1'CSN0l of Biology 1886 1888 Professor ot Biology 1888 DIILCLOI of Cold Spring Htrbor Summer Biologic il Labora tory 1889-1897' Lecturer on Biology lrinity College 1888-1889' Lecturer on Agricul- tural Bacteriology Storrs Agricultural Colle 'e 1901-1905' Secretary of Society of Ameri- can Bacteriologists, 1899-19025 President, 1902: Bactcriologist of Storrs Experiment-'ll Station, 1890-1905g Corresponding Editor Revue Generale, du Lait, 1901g Bacteriologist of State Board of Health, 1905-3 Member of the American Association for the Advance- , 23 u?-LQ Y. ' x - 1 ' ' J . .. ,. ,' . Q, . 'rf f, 1 . ., . ' 1 , g My ., -'- lcyan University, 1885, Director Johns Hopkins Summer Laboratory, 18843 Instructor ' ' , 1 A r ' 1 V-N' v, - 'Q A. 1- 'Z s - , -: - A' yy , g ' A ,. i i 'y 'Z 1 'A ' L I C I 2 1 ' I 'E 1 4 - ,S 5 7 W Y - - C 0 , f lg , , . . 1 K A I C ment of Science, of American Society of Naturalists, of Association of Agricultural Chem- ists. of National Association of Medical Milk Commissioners, of Official Dairy Instruc- tors' Association, Director of Connecticut State Laboratories, 1905-1 Director and Mem- ber of Executive Committee of Summer Public Health Association, 19163: BGH: TBK, Andrew Campbell Armstrong, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy B.A., Princeton, 1881g M.A,, 18841, M.A., WVesleyan University, 189-L: Ph.D., Prince- ton, 1896, Fellow in Mental Science, Princeton, 1881-1882, Princeton Theological Semi- nary, 1882-18851 University of Berlin, 1885-18861 Associate Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Princeton Theological Seminary, 1886-18873 Associate Editor of New Princeton Review, and Instructor in History, Princeton University, 1887-1888g Professor of Phil- osophy, Wesleyan University, 1888-5 Cooperating Editor Psychological Review 190-1- 1909g Member of American Psychological Association, National Institute of Social Sciencesg American Philosophical Association: President, 1915g JJBK. 1Villiam Edward 1VIead, Ph.D., Profeaso-r of the English Language Wesleyan University, 1881: M.A., 1884g Ph.D., Leipzig, 1889: Principal of High School, Troy, New York,'1885-18873 studied at Universities of Leipzig and Berlin, 1887-1889g Ecole des Chartes, Paris, and British Museum, 1889-1890: Associate Professor of the English Language, Wesleyan University, 1890-1893g Professor of the English Lan- guage, 1893-5 Professor of Middle English, University of Chicago, Summer Semester, 1903: Secretary of Pedagogical Section, Modern Language Association of America, 1897- 19033 Lecturer on Middle English, Columbia University, Summer Session, 1911: Secretary- Treasurer American Dialect Society, 19063 Secretary, 1907-1911g President, 1912-1915, Editor Dialect Notes, 1906-1911, KIITQ KIJBK. Karl Pomeroy Harrington, M.A., Professor of the Latin Language and Litera- ture B.A., 1Nesleyan University, 1882, NLA., 1885, University of Berlin, 1887-89, Yale University, 1890-91, Teacher of Classics, Westfield High School, 1882-853 Professor of Latin, Wesleyan Academy, 1885-873 Tutor in Latin, VVesleyan University, 1889-91g Professor of Latin, University of North Carolina, 1891-995 Professor of Latin, University of Maine, 1899-1905, Professor of Latin, Wesleyan University, 19054: Musical Editor,-Methodist Hymnal, 1901-053 Alumni Editor, 1Vesleyan Song Bookg Editor Psi Upsilon Song Book, Editor of Songs of all the Collegesg Nlernber of American Philological Associationg Mem- ber of Archaeological Institute of America, XIITQ 111 BK. 1918? I lV1ll1am John Jimes, BI A Librarian B A Wesleyan Unix eisity 1883 M A 1886 Unix ersities of Leipzig and Berlin matics 1890 95 Liblarian 1891 President Connecticut Llbiary Association 1899 1901 Assistant Treasurer Wesleyan Unisersity 1908 NPT CPBK 21 , I .g , K , , , I . . c . ., 1883-8l'f,', Tutor in Mathematics, Wesleyan University, 1887-90, Instructor in Mathe- Frank Walter Nicolson, INIA., Secretary of the Faculty and Professor of Latin B,A., Mount Allison College CCanadaD, 1883, B.A., Harvard University, 1887, M.A. Vllesleyan University, 1894, Instructor in Sanskrit, Harvard University, 1888-89, In structor in Latin, Harva1'd University, 1889-91, Tutor in Latin, Wesleyan University 1891-94, Instructor, 1894-95, Associate Professo1', 1895-1913, Professor, 1913-, Secre tary of the Faculty, 1895-, Secretary Phi Beta Kappa, Connecticut Gamma Chapter 1894--, Editor Wesleyan University Alumni Record, 1910, Member American Philolog ical Association, President New England College Entrance Certificate Board, 1910-13 Secretary-Treasurer, 1913-g Member College Entrance Examination Board, 1909- Prcsident Association of New England Colleges for Conference on Athletics, 1907-10, Sec retary-Treasurer National Collegiate Athletic Association, 1908-, Secretary-Treasurer National Conference Committee on Standards of Colleges and Secondary Schools, 1915- CIP B K. Charles Augustus Tuttle, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Economics and Social Science B.A., Amherst College, 1883, M.A., 1886, Ph.D., University of Heidelburg, 1886 LL.D., Vllabasli College, 1913, Instructor in Political Economy, Amherst College, 1886 1892, Associate Professor of Political Economy and International Law, 1892-93, Professor of History and Sociology,'lfVabash College, 1893-98, Professor of Political Economy and Political Science, 1898-1913, Professor of Economics and Social Science, Indiana Univer sity, Summer Sessions, 1911, 1912, 1913, and 1916, Member American Economic Associa tion, Professor of Economics and Social Science, lVesleyan University, 1913-, KIPBK. Oscar Kuhns, L.H.D., Professor of Romance Languages V B.A., Wesleyan University, 1885, M.A., 1888, Universities of Berlin, Paris and Gene va, 1885-87, Librarian, VVesleyan University, 1887-89, Instructor in Romance Languages 1889-90, Associate Professor, 1890-93, Professor, 1893-, Universities of Reine and Flor ence, 1900-01, L.H.D., Dickinson College, 1904, Nlember of Modern Language Associa tion, Corresponding Member Societe Archeologique de la France, N11 T, LDBK. ' William Arthur Heidel, Ph.D., Professor of the Greek Language and Literature B.A., Central Wesleyan College, 1888, M.A., 1891, Ph.D., University of Chicago 1895, University of Berlin, 1888-90, University of Chicago, 1894-96, Acting Professor of Latin, Illinois VVesleyan University, 1890-91, Professor of Greek, 1891-94, Senior Fel low in Greek, University of Chicago, 1894-95, Instructor in Ancient Philosophy, 1895-96 Professor of Latin, Iowa College, 1896-1905, Professor of Greek, Wesleyan University 1905-, Associate Editor, Classical Philology, Member of American Philological Associa tion, Fellow American Academy of Arts and Sciences, QBK. -P I 11918 2 l '5 Raymond Dodge, Ph D Professor of Psychology B X Williams Collegc 1803 PhD UDIXLISILQ of Htlle 1896 Graduate and As sistant Librariin Willitms Collcge 1803 9-L Umxusitv of H Llle 189-L 96 Assistant to Philosophy and Psychologv Ursmus College 1897 08 Instructor in Philosophy Wes leyan Lnncrsity 1898 90 -Xssociite Professor 1809 1902 Professor of Psychology Wes leyan Uniyersity 1902 IJTIIXEISILQ of C'1l1f0lHl'l, Summer Sesslon 1006 Columbia I,lH1V6I'Slty, Summer Session, 1909 and IQIIQ Cooperating Editor of Psychological Bulletin, 1904-103 Advisory Editor of Psychological Review, 1910-IG, Advisory Editor of Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1916-3 Consulting Experimental Psychologist at Nutrition 0- ' 1 . ,- w r ' ' I 1 . ' ,, ..' , , . . . .. ., . ,, . , . ., . , , , - 2- , ' 1 - f , - - 'L 2 , - L Professor Erdmann, Psychological Institute, University of Halle, 1896-973 Professor of A 7 x ' ' 1 - - 1 A l A K N 9 J ' W J 7 - Y Y fs tv, , K Q A A. i L. .7 l I Q ' K . . 8 , I ' . .' v . ' ' V - .' v ' ' . ' , ' . ' ' i J W! 'K C 9 5 ' 7 Laboratory of Carnegie Institution, 1912-1-13' Non-resident Lecturer in Psychology, Colum- bia University, 1916, Ernest Kempton Adams Research Fellow, Columbia University, 1916-173 Member of American Philosophical Associationg Member of American Psycholog- ical Associationg Member of American Psychological Association, CPresident, 1916j3 Fel- low of American Association for the Advancement of Scienceg -LBK. Wlalter Guyton Cady, Ph.D., Professor of Physics Ph.B., Brown University, 18953 A.M,, Brown University, 18963 Ph.D., University of Berlin, 19003 Instructor in Mathematics, Brown University, 1895-973 Magnetic Observer, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1900-023 Instructor in Physics, Wesleyan Uni- versity, 1902-033 Associate Professor of Physics, Wesleyan University, 1903-073 Professor, 1907-3 Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Scienceg Member of American Physical Societyg Associate of Institute of Radio Engineers, A A CD3 db BK: EE. Robert Herndon Fife, Jr., Ph.D., Professor of the German Language and Lit- erature B.A. and M.A., University of Virginia, 18953 Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1901, Instructor in English and German, St. Albans School, Radford, Virginia, 1895-983 Goettin- gen and Leipzig, 1898-19013 Instructor in German, WVestern Reserve University, 1901-032 Professor of German, Virginia Summer School of ltlethods, University of Virginia, 1903-053 Associate Professor of German, VVesleyan University, 1903-053 Columbia University, Summer Session, 19073 Professor of German, Wesleyan University, 1905-3 CIDBK. Frederick Slocum, Ph.D., Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Van Vleck Observatory B.A., Brown University, 1895, M.A., 18963 Ph.D., 1898, Volunteer Research Assistant at Yerkes Observatory, 1907, at the Royal Astrophysical Observatory of Potsdam, 1908- 1909, Instructor in Mathematics, Brown University, 1895-19003 Assistant Professor of As- tronomy, 1900-19093 Acting Director of the Ladd Observatory, Brown, 190-L-053 Lecturer in Mathematics, New York University, Summer of 19083 Instructor in Astrophysics, Yerkes Observatory of the University of Chicago, 1909-19113 Assistant Professor of Astronomy, 1911-19143 Professor of Astronomy, Wesleyan University, and Director of the Van Vleck Observatory, 1914-3 Fellow of the American Associat'on for the Advancement of Science3 Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, Member of the Astronomisehe Gesellschaft, of the American Astronomical Society, of the International Union for Cooperation in Solar Research3 EEL KIPBK. I 1918 George NI1ttheu Dutcher, Ph D Professor of Hzstory B A Cornell University 1891 PhD Cornell Unisersity 1903 Assistant in English xeisitv 1900 1901 Associate Professoi of History VVesleyan Unixeisity 1901 05 10 soi of History 1905 Professol of History Cornell Unix eisity Summer Session 1912 Professor Columbia University Summer Session 1913' fIvBK. - I . 'A ..4-4 History.',Cornell University, 1898-1900, President White Fellow in History, Cornell Uni- - ly.,-. g. ' J - gp-- Joseph William Hewitt, Ph.D., Professor of Classics 1 B.A., Bowdoin College, 1897, M.A., 1899, lVI.A., Harvard University, 1900, Ph.D., 1902, Instructor in Latin and Greek, Bowdoin College, 1897-98, Principal Hanover High School, Hanover, N. H., 1898-99, Instructor in Latin, Worcester Academy, 1902-03, Master in Latin, 1903-05, Associate Professor in Latin and Greek, Wesleyan University, 1905-13, Professor of Classics, 1913-, Member American Philological Association, 1905-, K 21 fIPBK. Edgar Fauver, lVI.D., Professor of Physical Education and College Physician A.B., Oberlin College, 1899, M.D., Columbia University, 1909, Student at Harvard Summer School of Physical Education, 1903, Student at Columbia University, Summer School of Physical Education, 1904, Coach of Athletic Teams and Director of Gymnasium, Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, 1899-1900, Tutor of Greek, Oberlin Academy, Coach of .Athletic Teams and Instructor in Gymnasium, Oberlin College, 1900-03, Instructor in Physical Education and Coach of Athletic Teams, Horace Nlann School, 1903-07: Lecturer in History of Physical Education, Teachers, College, Columbia University, 1907-091 Pro- fessor of Physical Education, Columbia Unive1'sity, 1910-11, Professor of Physical Educa- tion, Wesleyan University, 1911-12, Professor of Physical Education and College Physician, Wesleyan University, 1913-. Leroy Albert Howland, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics B.A., Wesleyan University, 1900, M.A., Harvard, 1904, Ph.D., Munich, 1908, In- structor in Mathematics, Drexel Institute, Philadelphia, Pa., 1900-03, and Wesleyan Uni- versity, 1905-06, Graduate Student Harvard, 1903-05, Parker Fellow from Harvard, Uni- versity of Munich-, 1906-08, Editor Annals of Mathematics, 1910-113 Member ofxAmerican Mathematical Society, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Wlesleyan University, 1903- 13, Professor of Mathematics, Wesleyan University, 1913-, XII T, KIQBK. Burton Howard Camp, Ph.D., Professor of lVIathemat'ics I B.A., Wesleyan University, 1901, Harvard University, 1903, M.A., 1907, Ph.D., Yale University, 1911, Teacher Oak Grove Seminary, Vassalboro, Me., 1904--09, Instructor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1903-04, Wesleyan University, 1905-05, Instructor, Wesleyan University, 1907-09, Associate Professor, 1909-1-1-, Professor, 1914-, Fellow, Yale University, 1910-11, Member of American Mathematical Society, CIDNG, 1111?-K. 19186 a Cfuev Herbeit Conley IVI A lssoczate I rofessor of Rheforzc B X Umxcisity of MlCl1lgLI1 1907 M X Umxcisity of Lhicago 1912 Professoi in I1I1gllSl1 Lt Purdue LlI1lX01S1tV 1901 09 IHSLIULJEOI in Rhetorlc at the Unlverslty ot N1-1Ll1lgd,11 1909 19 Assomiate Professor of Rhctoiic 1VLsles'm Unix ersity 1913 Memhei Modern Linbriicc Xssociition ot -Xmeiici ' Q7 . . . 1 , L , .. ' J - ,, - - ,- V . .gi 'Lg J. . ,.l A i of English and Public Speaking at Grand Island College. Nebraska, 1905-07, Instructor . L U.: 2 y .,-Z '. .Ac V4. . , ' . 1 0' uf- .L -'z ' ' 1 z. Louis Bliss Gillet, BA., Associate Professor ofE1zgl'islz Literature B.A., Columbia University, 190-L: Instructor in English, Wesleyan Academy, 1904- 053 Temple College, Philadelphia, Pa., 1906-073 Graduate Student, Harvard University, 1905-06, and Columbia University, 1907-08g Assistant in English, Columbia University, 1907-083 Instructor in English, 1Vcsleyar1 University, 1908-131 Associate Professor of English Literature, Wlesleyan University, 1913-1 fDBKg CIHEK. Paul Holroyd Curts, Ph.D., flssocrfate Professor ofGerma'n, B.A., Yale University, 19053 M.A., 19073 Ph.D., 1909, Instructor in Physics and Chemistry, Cheshire Academy, 1905-073 Instructor in German, Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University, 1907-08g Instructor in German. VVesleyan University, 1909-123 Associate Professor, 1913ig NPT, 233 fb BK. Albert lVIann, Jr., 1VI.A., Associate Professor of Romance Lcmguages B,A., 1Vesleyan University, 19062 M.A., Harvard University, 1909, Instructor in French, Hotchkiss School, 1906-073 and Boston Country School, 1907-08, Graduate Stu- dent, Harvard University, 1908-113 Member New England Modern Language Associationg Instructor in Romance Languages, 1Veslcyan University, 1911-133 Associate Professor, 19153-1 N11 T. Edgar Sheflield Brightman, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofEthtcs cmd Religion A. B., Brown, 1906g A.M., Brown, 1908g S.T.B., Boston University School of Theol- ogy, 19101 Jacob Sleeper Fellow, University of Berlin, 1910-113 University of Marburg, 1911-12g Ph.D., Boston University, 19121 Assistant in Greek and Philosophy, Brown, 1906-085 Professor of Philosophy and Psychology, Nebraska Wesleyan University, 1912-153 Associate Professor of Ethics and Religion, Wesleyan Unive1'sity, 1915-1 Member American Philosophical Association, Religious Education Association: fIDBKg fI1Kfbg KE. Charle Ruglas Hoover, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry Ph.B., Penn College, Iowa, 1906, B.S., Haverford, 19073 M.A., 19082 Ph.D., Har- vard University, 1915g Instructor in Chemistry, Haverford College, 1908-09g Professor of Chemistry, Penn College, 1909-10g Research Fellow, Carnegie Foundation at Ha1'vard, 1910-13g Associate Professor of Chemistry, Syracuse University, 1913-153 Associate Pro- fessor of Chemistry, Wesleyan University, 1915-5 Member American Chemical Soc-ietyg Nlember Association for the Advancement of Scienccg AX23 EE. 7 g1918 3 C 28 NIoses Leverock Crossley, Ph.D., Associate 'Professor of Chemistry Ph.B., Brown University, 1909g Instructor in Chemistry, Brown University, 1909-113 NI.Sc., Brown University, 19101 Ph.D., 19115 Associate Professor of Chemistry, William Jewell College, 1911-12, Professor of Organic Chemistry and Biology, 1912-139 Lecturer in Chemistry, Wesleyan University, 1913-14g Associate Professor of Chemistry, 1914-3 Lecturer International Committee Y. M. C. A. 1911-13g Fellow of American Association for Advancement of Science, the American Chemical Society, and Eighth International Congress of Applied Chemistryg President, Conn. Valley Section, American Chemical S0- ciety, 1915g EN3 EE. John VVesley VVetzel, Ph..B, I nstrnctor in Public Speaking S Ph.B., South Western College, 189-lg Diploma Cummock School of Oratory, North- western University, 18963 Director, Department of Oratory, University of Denver, 1896- 19003 Instructor in Oratory, IliFf School of Theology, 1896-19003 Instructor in Public Speaking, Yale University, 1901-06: Assistant Professor, 1906-3 Instructor in Public Speaking, Hartford Theological Seminary, I906r07, Instructor in Public Speaking, Wes- leyan University, 1906-3 NIember National Association for the Advancement of Speech Arts. ' Harold Douglass Allen,gB.A., Instructor in German B.A., Wfesleyan University, 1907, Instructor, Gunnery School, Washington, Conn., 1907-10g Student,vUniversity of Gottingen, 1910-119 Bulkeley High School, New London, Conn., 1911, Instructor in German, Case School of Applied Science, 1911-143 Assistant Professor of German, 1914-16g Instructor in German, Wlesleyan University, 1916-g QN9. Hubert Baker Goodrich, Ph.D., Instructor in Zoology v B.S., Amherst College, 1909g M.A., Columbia University, 1914, Ph.D., 19165 Assistant in Zoology, Amherst, 1909-115 University Scholar, Columbia, 1911-12g Assistant in Zo- ology, Columbia, 1912-Mg Fellow in Zoology, Princeton, 1914-15g Instructor in Biology, Union College, 1915-16g Member of the American Society of Zoologistsg Member of the Corporation of the Marine Biological Laboratory of Woods Hole, Massachusettsg In- structor in Zoology, Wesleyan University, 1916-3 fI1BKg BSU, EE. George lVIcCutchen McBride, B.A., Instructor in Physical Geography B.A., Park College, 18983 Auburn Theological Seminary, 19013 Missionary to South America, 1901-15, Instructor in Physical Geography, Wesleyan University, 1916-. Wesley Everett Rich, M.A., Instructor in Economics and Social Science B.A., Wesleyan University, 19119 M.A., 19125 Graduate Study at Harvard, 1911-14, Assistant in Economics, 1912-133 Instructor in Economics and Social Science, Wesleyan University, 1914-g Member of the American Economic Associationg AKE. ' 6. 1918 29 Henry lVIerritt VVriston, NLA., Instructor in History B.A., Wesleyan University, 1911, M.A., 19192, Harvard Graduate School, 1911-14, Austin Teaching Fellow, Harvard, 1912-1-L, Instructor in History, VVesleyan University, 1914-3 Member of the American Historical Association, AT A, KIHBK. Gordon Thorn Fish, M.A., Instructor in Biology B.A., Amherst College, 1911: Student at the University of Paris, 191Q-13, Graduate Student and Assistant in Biology at Yale University, 1913-15: M.A., Yale University, 1915, Instructor in Biology, New York University, 1915-16, Instructor in Biology, Wes- leyan University, 1916-. Lawrence Lesure Steele, Ph.D., Instructor 'tn Chemistry B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1912: Assistant Instructor in Organic Chemic- try, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1912-1-L, M.S., 1914, Thayer Scholar, Harvard Uni- versity, 1914-15, M.A., 1915, George Emerson Scholar, Harvard University, 1915-16, Ph.D., 1916, Instructor in Chemistry, Wesleyan University, 11916-, lVIember of the American Chemical Society, EE. Paul Burt, M.A., Instructor 'tn History i ' B.A., 'Wesleyan University, 1913, M.A., 1914, Drew Theological Seminary, 1913-16, B.D., Drew Theological Seminary, 1916, Member of American Historical Association, Instructor in History, Wesleyan University, 1916-3 113 BK, AKE. Eugene Shepherd Clark, M.A., I nstractor in Romance Languages A.B., Wesleyan, 1913, A.M., 1914, Instructor in French, Allen School, 1913-14, Instructor in French, Philips Exeter Academy, 1914-15, Instructor in Romance Languages, Northwestern University, 1915-16, Instructor in Romance Languages, Wesleyan Uni- versity, 1916-, n QDBK, AKE. Clarence Newton Reynolds, Jr., MHA., Instructor in M athematics Ph.B., Brown University, 1913, Assistant in Mathematics, Brown University, 1913- 14, M.A., 1914, Townsend Scholar, Harvard University, 1914-15, Shattuck Scholar Harvard University, 1915-16, Instructor in Mathematics, Wesleyan, 1916-g Member of American Mathematical Society, Member of Mathematical Association of America, Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science, QBK, EE. 1918? 4 Y 4254? M 'x 'W XX - . XXV N V xx , X X KRW x N Q-Sy. s QQ, AWN N Q - ' , -2 N x- ., ., A ,.....,., .. L .,,,, ,. R. V- -- - I - if K Ezg:r::fi3gi --ffifiliiiif 1'55ii2:--l'5-1f '. f'.fi:: '3::5F'?- Q? ' '- 21:11 211:-225 -I ,ab ' 'Pffi ' 23.1355155516-1 eg:-'15 , V - I . -:f?f1f:f: 5I 513g:,lEE:I:11E1.7li'g, , - N ?5f1ifi2i1g. iii' . Q4-2242: , ' V- .- -. .V :1.:fi,..i1g.3.. .a2E::z'-5' ' . A .,,.,, X x,,:: , I . ,N J ., - Zim It 918 . ' 1'w,Q,, -532127-90yM'fyfzL . ,' v ,H , I ,X I -L 373 '41 f A .W4 .f Wgfefffv' - ' V 1 '-WW. ' ' . -- 2-'ZZYZGUJ 'Q ' - . H TJ, , - - ,,,4:::i:.w5::, .1 52114 . . 1 2-.1,,:f , ff -- wwf 'M fd 'Z' fi, 2 -5 -f44.. f 'V724--9.1, ,AS '1'C?,4'+ Mfg! ' '- .4-if 5773 ' 'pam fifia. Y'4 h '59?'2':Zf1 ' F f . ' 2-f74 ,s'f.9 L W ,f-sW'7y541::zv4,+:, ,-,:v'?f2 ,fiffhz '1'sfr':fbf:s-. ' . fm? 75 235, :G . ' 41:9 55-A' 'f M 5111 1 ' ,959 I 1ffii'f if J, , ,'?i'f-: , f-1134f'- TE'-Wifi V '-:I F2153 ,fu 5 . V1 . V ' ':,,: wfjgfle-lfqjva-f-,11f,::,-.mm 319182 CLASS. OF 1869 Graduate Students y A SQUIRE FELLOW Wynne Chard Stevens, B.A., Williamstown, Mass. 23 Brainerd Avenue Latin, Greek - RICH FELLOW Bradford Downey, B.A., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. AKE House Economics Harold Douglass Allen, B.A., Middletown P 177' So. Main Street German Walter Frederick Borchert, BQA., Newburgh, N. Y. Berkeley German Wilfred McKinley Bywater, B.S., Middletown 18 Park Street Mathematics, Chemistry Harry Speake Cobey, B.S., Vienna, Va. Berkeley Philosophy Warren McAllister Deacon, B.A., .Mariettai, Pa. A X P House Biology Loyal Young Graham, 3rd, B.S., Philadelphia, Pa. Berkeley Romance Languages . Ira Vaughan Hiscock, M.A., Farmington, Me. 32 Brainerd Avenue Chemistry I George Shelton Hubbell, B.A., Calgary, Alberta, Canada 32 N. C. English Literature, German, Philosophy, David Richard Johns, B.A., Ansonia Berkeley English Literature L Robert Henry Johnson, B.S., South Manchester Berkeley , Philosophy V ' 1918 L so 34 il i James George McAlpine, B.A., VVinsted B611 House Biology Henry McDonald, Jr., B.A., Middletown 1 A T A House Chemistry, Physics Eldon Hubert lllartin, B.A., Williamstown, Vt. Philosophy, Psychology, English Literature George Falley Ninde, B.A., Providence, R. I. English Literature John VVesley Prince, BA., Fresno, Cal. Psychology, Ethics Benjamin Louis Ramsay, BA., Plattsburgh, N. English Literature Herbert Chester Sargent, B.A., Barre, Vt. Ethics, Philosophy, Psychology Harrison Monell Sayre, B.A., Newark, N. J. Philosophy, Ethics George Elwood Stookey, B.S., Cambra, Pa. Chemistry Karl Skillman VanDyke, B.S., Middletown Physics, Mathematics Henry Peter Ward, B.A., Worcester, Mass. ' Chemistry, Mathematics, German Ray Cawley Young, B.S., VVaterville, Me. Physics Y. 49 Brainerd Avenue Q62 College Street B 9 11 House Berkeley Q40 College Street 109 Lawn Avenue B 9 11 House 9 East Hall 308 Williani Street 10 East Hall c S182 ,sf .185 +1 aff? W it l?,x 53, 1 4' .X fx. 'ah . E -6 L , , Q Q r. u K , if i 3 av 2 2 4' 2 5 -H-+5 1 Si F ff- , lfk f ' 1, Agffix vi , --. :. .- , -'gl sl -X - P . , - ,- ,Mf- :R x, I .Te - .,. ,S - 9 -'QQ ,I , mfg, ig? 4. -LA -A -6 :Qi -' X -5- mi, aah A' nf ' 'REQ I Y 'Q' -' ' SSW Riga 5 e, 2553 fQr l,Q fs2fEE Y E Z ,gm 2 g.Z'!,,g.'g:. - kv ' W 1 -34,11 - ,Rf 51: ,.3 . 2 E 3 W i ,ja N ? 5 52 3 , ,ay',, .i'. 215, 1 v, -. A, -1 , ,I , H Q 55 'SA 2 + 42 j i. ',4, X 7QgL,,g 4 1-i, . 3 c .N J- ' ' 5 '- '- 5 - iff fx . f 6 ? W- M 'f jgivag' . -4 :' - .ju ff? E? E 5 ' M f: :ff 2 5 ' if E E ' --9,9-. - il ..- :,,- rf: 4' ., , H' 1 ,.1, Uml x' A1 li :1ff '-vw QL. , 'kk N- '455952 'f A ' Q v' ' ' , . 1 . V F.-:n:0.,:,.vn.1.-1:-'ii ' Q v: :.- h . , V I ,, 5: . .- Z EJ. ' il . A .1 N . .- f . gsr ig '1:,,. 'W'-:rr-,f --.H - 24. ' ' A , 132 , . v if . .1 ,-- .- '2 fi C- -1- nv-. 4-f'. 'i' ' . .,,.. 5' 1 ' ' fs 1 ., - ,' - 1 gg, Ag 7, . - . -E 1 ' - ,. 4, 1 1 --, j , .R .JN . 'I 3, 9, , 4-. Lx wi . M- , . r - .' ' :.,., 31. .a ,tg J - ,Liza ' ' s 1- 1.,f 1 . ,- . 13, ' ' ' : '5 lag 1 . - ', u' 'Fa' ., 'f 1 ' gr.,- ' --fi.-,-1565... THE SENATE 'Wi Wesleyan University Senate l9I6-1917 . J i kj .. Officers Frank Edward Stevens . . . Preszdent of the College Body Farrant Lewis Turner . . Secretary Treasurer of the College Body Edwin Henry Witman . . . Secretary of the Senate I9I7 Horace Strow Baldwin Emanuel Louis Chiesa Frank Marshall Clark Carl Leslie Eaton Robert Moilat Henry Kristen Kristensen Augustus Moore Maxwell George Warner Skilton Frank Edward Stevens Walter Richard Talbot Farrant Lewis Turner Frank Trelease Underhill James Vincent Walsh Edwin Henry Witman I 9I 8 William VVood McCarthy I9I 9 Richard Johns Keeler l 920 Logan Morris Dayton 1918 9' 38 r. Special Students James Landeck Bauer, Middletown . Henry Daniels, Greenfield, Mass. I . Harold Johnson Edwards, Bridgeport . Howard Edward Green, Philadelphia, Pa. James Stanley Howie, Ulster, Pa ..., VVilliam Herman lVIeyer, Jr., Brooklyn, N. Y. . Carl Alton Reed, Middletown .... Samuel Herman Rees, Newtown, Pa. . Sidney Wishart Wallace, WVasl1ington, D. C. . Francis DeSales Walsh, Middletown . . Masaaki Yoshimoto, Osaka, Japan . Harvey Cedric Yeamans, Meriden . . 107 High Street . . Berkeley . . 'Berkeley . 85 Home Avenue Commons Club House . . . 56 N. D. . 135 Liberty Street . . . Berkeley . . Berkeley . 155 Spring Street . . 3 O. H. . Meriden S 1918? vWf'.... ,Jap 'sb - a- 1, . . gf . I N x .L din-Jgf. 5552-M W5 ' ' . J.. 'ix'2f:W'4l. A , ,I 1 , ' -www? X5 -WW A M' 'ft F A4 ' J ' 'mf' -2452 ' ' -' cr -f . V ' T fy' : - 1-. X if ff' L- WA x'. 'I Q5 -'1 11, f iv-. ig? Ma -J2E?e'42' .5 ' .1 ,e '- .1.' ., -. . 51-zz, -. T, , Q5 A ,. ' ' ff 1 - -a V . I 7 - , 1. My .,. 1 L . J. . ,5M . ,f S ' , V 1 - 5' kf '.5'u,, . f . ,- 4 ' i 1 5 4E . . - ' lv ,ff - -.1-,Q x 1 1- -x . , I -ff Q? :fa IZ: 1. J ,F km. - Q' , I . Q . , ' , '. -,Q V' f wfseff . 'fa ' ' ff N ' .ff nga, .4 tl. .1 , ,.' yKgI'.t,,g '.'Y4' -'L ff . U Y ,, 94, fav' 1- -- TWU yu, iv -5, .4 H ,, f . ' . R f ' 32 ,J , l 11 ' 4,5555 f , , i , 5 5 .. 'f ' 'W . 'Q ' Fmt fi 4: 35331 - 'I 7? ' f .1 ,I A ig fg 41' ,415 gf ' '1 'QW :avian - f- 4 :. g . . I ' fs? - - . -4. .wa Q: 55 J '-9141 ',. 'IX' tl, .- E gf hi W e- -51? gif-N32 .-1 -N 81 '. I F 1 gl- ' ' ',, -Q -and . . .A .. hl. ' up U art? Q 4,511 sq? ,L . 1 2 F .s.,f - 'W z., ,, 'f.'3!'. 51' f-: 2-Q' ' H54 jf? -.Safes .. ,ie 1 - ,1:ef:,h- . JH? ' il- ' K-3 F .' 'ng' , 5? 1-' , ,af-pg 2 ,ES ' .. .- gg' , ' c ,L 1-3911? 1 Q ..,,' . Fgffy: . ., - gi ir: .5-T ' 5. 4 1- , .,A I . - V .5125 '.,: ' , PM an. V ' 5 Z- . x K u. N ', .--: ' ,ifffm ', .. . - , VJ .- A 5 - f -w. 4 ---,. . I ,, -QL... ,Jr . Q ' v-,gp -I ' 5 3.15 I . :L-I , x. 1 . 'x 'H' .. f r f rx. if .:- -- 21-. '-n 'T - -If Q . , , .1 'V J. 1 1. T1.'.f:a:Q -1 .' .He f. 'fi-f if - 1 L 3,1 ' ' . 'V vu, F'-:, 3' 1. . LT. 1, Ai' I 1.1 Q1 .Q ,' 3' 1,5 'v ,HST - . ,gi--I -,-3 ' -j 550- ,f 4 2.1 sl --' .Y :-1 f ' Y- 9. ', ,fl ' 6. r- :, ,, - 'L-if 'bw' , ,. 3' - cal, , ,-51. jg u .,.-. ' gi 'Fri-? 1 , uv ' -' Jfw ir 42 -ii-: saf- -Wzi 'N' . - r- - -- I . L Q N. v, ff: Ig ' '- .. f Qizsgbfz? .I J, . -, -V 'Reef x- X rg.: digg .-'xr' - 3 - Q ' . ' v. -'I - f 1 f -1'f'p1g', I -laaikrj' 45 -1 ' '5 ., 13. - -Q .- .. -C. - X53 .. ' .A 1 'I ' 'i5r',fp.:1.a '-' Tv L. - 7 l- V ' ' 2 . 'Z 5555 YQ, ' :EF Ta W' , 3,1 -x 1 ,, ff: 9 UQ! 'ai A w .. N if QQ' Q WK f XY , QL., l 9 ll 7 Class History F you were asked, O gentle reader, to write the history of the great and illustrious Class of 1917, we ask you, wouldnlt you have that grand and glorious feeling?', But lest the Olla Podrida be a flat mixture lacking the inspiration and vigor that the history of the class of 1917 must needs give it, ye humble scribe consented, and hence the Pod was saved. ' ' We don't recall whether it was the VV. C. T. U.-CWesleya11 Chapter of Twelve Unearthlies, alias the Dirty Dozenj, or whether it was Pop7, Sheridan who said, After us, the deluge. Yet we cannot help sympathiz- ing with Prexy and Nick when we shall have left the old burg, eighty strong clean manly fellows, every one of them, God bless themf, You can imagine what a help we have been to the Old lVIother, and how much it has been appreciated when you consider that since we arrived way back -in 1913, ag new Observatory has been built to provide for the transcendental activi- ,ties of the 1917 Ego, a swimming pool has been added to the Gym in order that our proselyte from Oahu Ukalileiwi, might have exercise, and another dormitory has been added forthe Wesleyan that is to bel, when nineteen seventeen,s descendants shall arrive. The Class of 1917 has been foremost in raising scholarship standards. After we had been at Wfesleyan a year, realizing that for men of our calibre the scholarship rules were so low a.s to be almost insulting, the rule of threes .--- 5' N' '1918C 7 J -'A vias originated In spite of this several of the sex enteeners have merrily left because even the rule 1911 is the only class of threes could not keep them here to have ever had a mortality in the cannon scrap 42 y romped through in three years, but quite a few on the other hand, have . OX ei in the Fertilizei Plant on the shady side of the Connecticut, the ob servant passerby may read these touching lines: Here Lies Old Dobbin The Real Reason VVhy I The Cannon Scrap Ain't No More The grave over which you are now shedding tears, gentle reader, holds the remains of one of the worst near sighted and rheumatic nags that ever drag- ged a cab up College Street. 9 About this time ye humble writer suddenly realized that this was sup- posed to be a history of the Class of 1917, and simultaneously an inexpress- ible realization of his own incapability surged within his palpitating breast. So incapable did ye humble writer feel, that he resigned his task, leaving it to the discretion of various 1917 students in search of Ph.D,s. In fact, we are not sure but what the history of the class of 1917 will supplant Hy- giene in the curriculum. 1Vho knows? 1 119186 QQ li? 43 Senlor Class Oflicers Walter Richard Talbot ......... President George Reuben Potter . Augustus Moore Maxwell Horace Strow Baldwin . Frederick John Andrews Commons Club House ' Buckfastleigh, Devon, England . . . . . . , . Vice-President . . S ecretary . T1'ea.s'urer Members Cecil Albro Allen Commons Club House Brooklyn, N. Y 2 X Q S 1918 Horace Strow Baldwin Delta Tau Delta House Orange, N. J. 1135-X Wesley Owen Ash Eelectic House Caithage, N Sigma Taug Class Basketball C1, 2, 35g Captain C35g Varsity Basketball Squad C255 Class Base- ball C1, 253 Captain C25g Argus Board CQ, 3, 45g Managing Editor C45g OLLA PopRIDA Board C355 Cotillion Club CQ, 3, 45. Senate C45g Class Treasurer C45g Class Historiang Honor System Committee C455 Undergraduate Finance Committee C45g College Agency Com- mittee C45: Deutscher Verein C3, 453 Vice-Presi- dent C3, 45, La Societe Francaise C2, 35g Short Story Club CQ, 3, 453 President C351 Undergradu- ate Speaker C45g Class Basketball CQ, 353 Cheer Leader C455 Argus Board C2, 3, 453 Editor-in- Chief C453 Publications Board C451 Junior Wfeek Committeeg Washingtorfs Birthday Banquet Committee C45. Hubert Edwin Beckwith V Omega Phi House YVaterport,aN. Y Westgate Club C453 Class Track C1, 353 Varsity Relay C1, 353 Captain C45g Glee Club C15g Junior VVeek Committee. 1918i V C . WJ Alfred Paul Behrman Omega Phl House Waltham lVI iss 5 La Societe Francaise CQ, 3, 413 Varsity Basketball Manageiship Qualification C31, Dramatic Asso- ciation Managership Qualification C313 Sopho- more Hop Committee. Omega Phi House Committee. Olin Winthrop Blackett Omega Phi House Cambridge, lVIass. Deutscher Verein C9215 Class Football CQ, 3, 41. Howard French Bigelow Kalamazoo, lVIich Glee Club CQ, 3, 41g Choir C3, 415 Senior Ball fNZ'x-W- K as J P 4' C 1918 4 l Zl 46 Psi Walter David Briggs Short Story Club CQ, 3, 41: Class Debate Charles Graham Chapin Upsilon House Wilbrallam, Mass. Corpse and Coiiing Mystical Seveng Class Vice-President C213 Cup Ceremonyg College Agency Committee CLUQ Class Football Cl, 2, 3, Q5 Captain C493 Class Basketball CD3 Varsity Basketball CQ, 3, Mg Varsity Baseball C1, 2. 3, 4Dg Captain C433 Class Track Cl, 2, Sjg Cheer Leader C403 Chairman Upperclassmen Flag Scrap Com- mittee Emanuel Louis Chiesa Alpha Chi Rho House Brooklyu,'N Phi Beta Kappag Senate Celjg Classical Club CQ, 3, Mg La Societe Francaise CQ, 3, Mg Junior Ex- hibitiong Washington's Birthday Banquet'Co1n- mittee C419 Cannon Scrap Committee C115 Ayres Prize Commons Club House East Greenwich, R. I. Y gl 1918 2 A,a..-L 1.1, W Everett Avery Churchill Commons Club House Plymouth, iMass. N Donald Buttz Clark Psi Upsilon House Rome, Italy Deutscher Verein C3, 455 President C3, 403 La. Societe.Francaise KSDQ Short Story Club C313 Lib- eral Arts Club Cfljg Mandolin Club C3, Lkjg Gerald ' Prize - ' Frank lVIarshall Clark Omega Phi House Peekskill, N. Y. Phi Beta Kappag Senate C413 Class Day Com- mitteeg La Societe Francaise C3, Mg Vice-Presi- dent M03 Short Story Club CQDQ Atwater Club 13, 4-jg President My Junior Prom Committee. J S 1918 5 ri Lewis Bates Coddmg Jr Beta Theta. P1 House Cochesett Mass lnderbraduate Speaker C41- Class Track C1 ' -trsity Track Squad C1 21' Varsity Track Feam 4 X I V L , Q ' , ,21, VC , , ' Harold Redmond Coleman ' Commons Club House Lake Ronkonkoma, N. Y. ' , , 5 Wlestgate Club C41. l CZ, 41g Varsity Relay Squad C1, 2, 3, 413 Cheer Leader C4-11 Glee Club'C1, Q, 3, 411g Leader C4r1g Choir C1, 2, 3, 41g Leader C419 College Choragus C411 Senior Ball Committee. Karl Warren Curtis V Commons Club House YVilliston, Vt. La Societe Francaise C3, 451g Short Story Club Q C3, 41: Class Basketball C41g Business Manager Literary IVIonthly C415 Business Manager OLLA PODRIDA C413 Publications Board C41g Sopho- more Hop Committeeg Junior Prom Committee: Senior Ball Committee. 519182 C A Ai L- Frank Roberts Custard 53 North College Scranton, Pa. Classical Club Mfjg Class Baseball CSD. ,. 4, 4, ,J 1 lgjjflf. . 'I i ' ' ,A l H ..,. 1.4 iaf'f.'.-7 . f'5v,,:fi iif1'2 ,7 , mf' :l3EggIa1 -Fife.. C Norman L ,f Philip Ayres Dales Eclectic House Washiington, D. C. Classical Club CQ, 3 ' ambert Davidson Commons C1 b u House , -D, Johnston Prize C3 ,A :':,,,,,, v' ff ,. , , M,. ,, - w f HV' Easton, Pa. Classical Club C3 , 4fDg Assistant Manager W'esf leyan Handbook f3Dg M anager Q40 . 74-- 918 S ,lg l l C l K ie? 50 2--X - A - 9 . 4' . at A V ' Robert John Davis ' chi Psi Lodge Loweliviiie, ohio lr A . l Waldemar Luis Deetjen I Alpha Delta Phi House Montclair, N. J. Marshalg Class Football CD3 Captain Cljg Varsi- ty Football CQ, 3, 403 Captain CML Class Basket- ball C1, Mg Varsity Basketball Squad CQ, Lkjg Class Baseball C1, Qjg Class Track CU: Varsity Track Team C1, Qjg Class Relay CUQ Captain CD5 Varsity Relay Team CD3 German Club CQ, 3, 45. Corpse and Cofling Mystical Seveng Class Day r 7 Carl 'Leslie Eaton Eclectic House VValthaIn, Mass. Sigma Taug Skull and Serpentg Senate CAQQ Class Treasurer C313 Deutscher Verein Cl, 2, 315 Var- sity Football Squad C315 Varsity Football CQ, Q3 Assistant Manager Track C393 Manager C4fjg Undergraduate Athletic Executive Committee C3. 40. Athletic Council CLD. 9 vt 1918L W1ll1a1n Ramsay Edmonds Psi Upsilon House Ehzfrbetli N Deutscher Verein CQ, 3, Mg Atwater Club Cijg I i I 4' Class Basketball KQ, 3D, Vaislty Basketball Squad C3Dg Class Baseball Cl, Q53 Varsity Base- ball Squad CQD3 Mandolin Club C3, 4:15 Cannon Scrap Committee CQJ. Q Maurice Millett Edwards Commons Club House lVIethuen, lVIass, Deutscher Verein CZ, Sl. ' - Albert Arnold Elsey Chi Psi Lodge New York, N. Y. Deutscher Verein C353 Westgate Club CHQ Paint and Powder Club CSD. Q ' - 6 1 59 A . : 1-'W' F' VV V A' . ' V ,..-5 Julian Grimm Ely Beta Theta Pi House ' Hamburg, Conn. l Class Baseball Cl, 2, 3, 41g Varsity Track Mana- gership Qualification C213 Varsity Swimming Squad C4jg Class Banquet Committee CED. Alexander VVilson Greer Commons Club House West Hartford, Conn. Cannon Scrap Committee CQJ. , James Vernon Gridley Beta Theta Pi House Paterson, N. J. h Class Day Committeeg Class Baseball fl, 225 Captain CQDQ Junior VVeek Committeeg Declama- tion Contest CQD. it 1 it S1918 fa Z.-L Oscar Fra Omega Phi House ' Class Baseball CQ, . Class Basketball C3 41 ,4 b. O 4 0 ff M X ncis Haffner Gloversville N. Y. V ,4i1a?444,f, .31 . ,,:. , f , H ' v,,5.1g-3, - .,-1. Lf, , , .- , '47 ., , .y ,'2l- ' 1 wi - ,' f':v1ls'. 5 ' I yfff qT,Q3s'2i1:p.3 '- ,. wi , . 'f'f':'ff' , , 31 X f If . 45, F ' Frauk Austin Hamilton Alpha Chi Rho House New t Club C411 Assistant Circulation Mana- ' Westga e ' M ager C41. gel' A 1-gus C31, an James Hale Alpha Delta Phi House A Springfield, lVIass 1 C113 Class Football Sigma Taug Class Secretaq 121' Class Basketball C215 German Club CQ, 315 A Leave of Absence C41. Bedford, Mass. K1 54. Henry Martyn Harman Psi Upsilon House New Rochelle, N. Y. Class Football C1,41g cuss Basketball 42, 3, Log Captain C41g Glass Baseball Cl, 2, 31g Varsity Baseball Squad C313 Cannon Scrap Committee C11- Robert lVIofTat Henry Q Commons Club House Jermyn, Pa. gi? 5 Delta Sigma Rhog Senate C41g Classical Club 3 CQ, 3, 413 Secretary-Treasurel' C313 President Q '1-- C413 Short Story Club C2, 3, 41g Advertising ' ' Manager OLLA PODRIDA C313 Varsity Debate C313 President Debate Council C413 Sherman Prize C119 Spinney Prize C213 Briggs Prize C31. ,ass ' e C -fin i ? -AYQ P ---- Nahor Yard Hill 4 Q 4, A Eclectic House Nlorristown, Tenn. C Vllestgate Club C4-13 Secretary-Treasurer C41g Lib- eral Arts Club C41g Secretary-Treasurer C41g Class Track C1, 2, 31g Sophomore Hop Commit- teeg Cotillion Club 55 Samuel Prentice Hopley Commons Club House Hartford, Conn. Classical Club CQ, 3, 403 La Societe Francaise CS, 41: Phi Beta Kappa Prize CLD. Frank 'Willard Johnson Delta Tau Delta House Long Island City, N. Y. Deutscher Verein C3, 40g VVestgate Club C413 Class Football C4Qg Varsity Football lVIanager- ship Qualification C213 Junior Prom Coinmitteeg Cotillion Club CD3 Class Banquet Committee 623. George Frederick Johnson Beta Theta Pi House Riverside, N. J. Short Story Club Cl, 2, 3, QQ Secretary CLLDQ Var- sity Football lVIanagership Qualification CQDQ Class Track C1, 2, 3, fkjg Captain CD3 Varsity Track C1, Qjg Litefra-ry Nlontlzly Board C1, 2, 3, QU. iii? QQ 'S W I Warren Irving Keith Alpha Chi Rho House South Manchester Conn Class Day Committee' Radio Club 3 41' Sec- retary-Treasurer C31' Class Football C41' Class Basketball C2 3' Varsity Basketball C3 41' Class Baseball C1 2 3 41' Varsity Baseball Squad C2, 313 Argus Board C2, 3, 413 Junior Prom Committeeg Varsity Debate Managership Qualification C213 Cannon Scrap Committee C21. Kristen Kristensen Beta Theta Pi House Gundtoft, Denmark Senate C413 Class Treasurer C213 Honor System Committee C413 College Agency Committee C413 Class Football C1, 2, 3, 41g Varsity Football Squad C21. Frederick Thompson Laing Omega Phi House Chelsea, Ma,ss. ' Class Football Cl, 2, 3, 413 Class 'Baseball C213 Class Track Cl, 2, 3, 413 Varsity' Track Squad C1, 2, 313 Varsity Relay Squad Cl, 213 Cannon Scrap Committee C1, 21.. K ' 57 ,4-4 lklarshall Grant Lee Alpha Delta Phi House Pasadena Cal. Sigma Tau' Skull and Serpent' Assistant Mana- l c . , 4 . I a N, a y r ger Andrus Swimming Association CSDQ Manager Varsity Swimming C4-D3 Athletic Council C4-jg Junior VVeek Committeeg Cannon Scrap Com- mittee C1, QD. Ralph Morgan Lewis Commons Club House Pottsville, Class Day Committeeg La Societe Francaise CAD' Class Track fl, 2, 3Dg Varsity Track Squad CQJQ 'Varsity Relay Squad C353 VVashington's Birthday Banquet Committee Cfljg Cannon Scrap Committee T Albert Ferdinand Lindstrom Psi Upsilon House Nutley, N. J. Corpse and Coffing Class Basketball Cl, 2, 31 Captain QQDQ Varsity Basketball 'Squad QSJ, Class Baseball CQ, 353 Atwater Club C455 Sopho- i , more Hop Committee: German Club CQ, 3, 41 Pa. E T 1918 J K -4 i S 58 QQ Wyllys Street Sayre Paul lVIaddoek Commons Club House Sayre, Pa. P ' n h1 Beta. Kappag Deutscher Verein QQ, 3, 45. Commons Club House 1 Beta Kappa. Norman Douglas Lothrop Winthrop, Me Raymond Lewis Martin l Barre, Vt. Ph' 519182 -ji? A469 A ,QX u 60 3- Lawrence Bradford Neeld Chi Psi Lodge Sigma Tang Westgate Club C4113 President C413 Junior Prom Committeeg Cotillion Club CQ, 3, 413 Secretary-Treasurer C41. Delta Kappa Epsilon House Brooklyn, N. Y Gorham Bert Mrinson Fine Arts Club C4!1Q Manager Dramatic Associa- tion C4313 Paint and Powder Club C413 Literary Monthly Board C413 OLLA PODRIDA Board C31Q Junior Week Committeeg Senior Ball Committee. Hartford, Conn. Francis Osborn Noble Alpha Delta Phi House Schenectady, N Corpse and COEIIQ Senate CQDQ Class President C213 Class Prophet3 Classical Club C3, 413 Deutscher Verein C4:1Q La Societe Francaise C3, 413 Liberal Arts Club C411 Undergraduate Speak- er C413 Varsity Baseball Managership Qualifica- tion CQDQ Class Track Cl, 213 Paint and Powder Club C413 Glee Club C1, Q, 3, 413 Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 31, Choir CS. 413 OLLA PODRIDA Board C31Q German Club CQ, 3, 41Q Senior Ball Com- mitteeg Class Debate C213 Varsity Debate C413 President Triangular Debating League C413 Jun- ior Exhibitiong Chairman Class Banquet Com- mittee C11. N.: P A Charles Leroy NO1thI1dg6 Beta 'lheta P1 House Vlloreester Mass 1 A 1. - 61 s. a u. Ju 1 ' A, , , ., . 1 . 1 . . . C 4 ' I 7 7 9 3 1 4 C Class Iootbzll C1 Q J 4- . Squad CQ, 3, 415 Class Baseball CQ, 31g Class Track CQJ. J Vllblty Pootbfmll ' lVIatias Perez y Ponce - Omega Phi House Dupax, P. I. Class Debate CU. Ernest Ralph Perkins Commons Club House Tilton, N. H. Wvelstgate Club C423 Argus Board QQ, 3, 45. 11 si as 1918 E :C Augustus lVIoore Miaxwell Delta Kappm Epsilon House Chicago Ill Corpse and Cooin Mystlctl Seien Senate C-L1 Class Secretary C4-1 Chairman Class Day Committee' Ixy Ceremony' Class Football C1 2 3 ' Assistant Manatger Varsity Baseball C31Q lVIanaber C413 Class Track C1, 213 Athletic Council C3, 413 Vice-President C413 Undergradu- ate Athletic Executive Committee C3, 4113 German Club CQ, 3, 413 Secretary-Treasurer C313 Presi- dent C413 lVasliington's Birthday Banquet Com- mittee C413 Cannon Scrap Committee CQ1. c C A t 4 Q i 7 Q , . 3 . , . '. ' 1 4 s 1 1 1 1 J , ' , 1 , , 1, 1 C0 . s 0' Albert Charles lVIerriam Beta Theta Pi House 3 VVoodmont, Conn Class Football C313 Varsity Football Squad C31Q Class Baseball CQ, 313 Class Track CQ, 313 Varsity Track Squad CQDQ Varsity Relay Team C213 Class Tennis C213 Varsity Tennis Squad CQ, 313 Varsity Tennis C313 Glee Club CQ, 315 Assistant Manager Musical Clubs C313 Junior Prom Committeeg Graduate Student, Yale C413 Graduated with 1916. Frank lfVillard Mor1'ell Chi Psi Lodge New York, N Westgate Club C41Q Literary Motlillly B02l1'd C3, 413 Junior VVeek Committee3 Senior Ball Committee. 1918 L FTJHCIS VV1lbur Pettengill 89 North College Ellsworth ' ' ,Me. if li X A 1 Atwater Club C3, 415 Vice-,President C41. John Theodore Plate Delta Tau Delta House Elizabeth, N. J. Deutscher Verei-n CQ, 3, 415 Vice-'President C315- Class Football C3, 415 Class Baslcetball'CQ, 3, 415 Varsitv Basketball Squad C415 Class Baseball 2 3teL1' Captain C31' Secretary Dramatic C , , 9 1 , Association C4-15 Paint and Powder Club Francis VVilcoX Potter - ' ' Alpha Chi Rho House Portland, Conn t C115 Class Football C315 Class, Basketball C1, 3, 415 Class Track C t in C11 Varsity Track C1 2, 3, Team C115 ap a 5 . , 4-15 Captain C315 Varsity Relay -C215 Under- graduate Athletic Executive Committee C315 Mandolin Club Cl, 2. 3, 415 Senior Bull Com- .- . Rf 1' - rnittee5 Declamatlon Contest Cl, 21, l as llllg ton's Birthday Banquet Committee C315 Hibbard Prize C115 Parker Prize CQ1. 918 S . Senate C115 Class Presiden 63 Geolge Reuben Potter Delta Tau Delta House Fitchburg Mass Phi Beta Kappi Class X7lCC,P1CSlClCDt 4 Club C3 41 V1ceP1es1dcnt 41 Deutscher Verein C21- La bocicte Trane-iise 4 ' Short btory Club C2 3 41' President C41' Class Track I il - .x - . I . 3 Q' ' - - 23 . ' 1- -4 ' c ig 1 Class Day Committeeg Class Poet: Classical . 1, , Z ' ,- V ' 5 C Q J x - , , C ' , 0 4 C C J, ' Cl, 21g Captain C21g Varsity 'lrack Squad C113 Varsity Track CQ, 31g Literary lllonzfhly Board C3, 41g Editor-in-Chief C411 Editor-In-Chief OLLA PODRIDA C315 Publications Board C41g Junior Exhibitiong Camp Prize C213 Wlalkley Prize C'21g One Half Coles Prize Psi Earle Edmunds Richardson 6 South College Atwater Club C3, 413 Class Track Cl, 21. C21- ' Robert Fulton Raymond, Jr. Upsilon House Newton Centre, M La Societe Francaise C413 Class Track C113 Class Relay Cl, Q13 Varsity Relay C1, 2, 31g Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 3, 41g Leader C413 Senior Ball Com- mittee: German Club C2, 3, 413 Class Banquet Committee C11. Rumford, Me ELSS 1918L ,D W 64 4 l 49 Hubbard Street V ' Harrison Monell Sayre 4 ' Alpha Chi Rho House Nladison, N ' Phi Beta Kappag Class Secretary CQJQ College Customs Committee Cfilg Argus Board QQ, 3, Mg OLLA PODRIDA Board CSDQ Junior Week Com- '-' P i mitteeg Interclass Debate CHQ Varsity Debate CQDQ Junior Exhibitiong Declaniiation Contest CQD3 Cannon Scrap Committee CD3 Graduate Student, VVc-:sleyan C413 Graduated with 1916. l 4 82 North College Y M ' 1918 YQ. lVIaX Ruderrnan- J. Middletown, Conn. f we 'WZ1 f A . George Warner Skilton Thornaston, Conn. Senate C405 Class Day Comrnitteeg Junior Prom Cornznitteeg One Half Rice Prize CRD. ' -1.93125- 65 Alpha Delti, Phi House Stamford Conn Charles Stevx art Smith Sigma Taug Skull and Serpentg Class Day Com mitteeg Class Baseball CQ, 3, 413 Upperelassmen Flag Scrap Committee C41. I l 4 C l 4 P Psi l Carl Leo Stearns Commons Club House Westbroolr, Me Phi Beta Kappag La Societe Francaise C3, 415 'R' One Half Coles Prize CQ1g One Half Rich Prize Frank Edward Stevens Upsilon House Lexington, Okla, Skull and Serpentg Senate C3, 413 President C413 College Body President C413 Class Presenta- tionsg La Societe Francaise C1, Q, 3, 413 Under- graduate Speaker C41g Class Football Cl, 2, 3, 413 Class Baseball C1, Q, 3, 41g Publications Board C41g Vice-President C415 Junior Wfeek Commit- teeg Washington's Birthday Banquet Committee C43- K+ Pa P' 1918157 Henry Charles Stone 17 East Hall Hartford, Conn Class Football Q1, 3, 453 Junior Week Committeeg Senior Ball Committee. George Edward Stookey Beta Theta Pi House Cambra, Pa. Phi Beta Kappag Senate C353 Class President C35g Honor System Committee C355 Class Foot- ball Q15, Varsity Football Squad CQ, 353 Class ,, Baseball U53 Varsity Baseball Squad Q155 Var- sity Baseball C2, 355 Class Track Q1, 253 Varsity Relay C15g Graduate Student, Wesleyan 015, Graduated with 1916. John Russell Studwell Delta Tau Delta House Greenwich, Conn. Sigma Tau, Skull and Serpentg WVestgate Club C453 Vice-President C455 Class Football Q1, 2, 453 Captain Q25g Varsity Football Squad C353 Var- sity Baseball Managership Qualification Q25g Sophomore Hop Committeeg. Chairman Senior Ball Committee, Cotillion Club CQ, 3, 45, Vice- President Q355 President Q45. C S 19182 NJ 7 Walter R1chard Talbot Eclectic House Newark N J Corpse and Coffin Skull and Selpent Senate C3, 405 Class Vice-President Cfijg President C413 Class Day Address, Chairman Honor System Committee Clljg Undergraduate Speaker ff-DQ Class Football Cljg Varsity Football CQ, 3, 495 Class Baseball CQ, 353 Class Track CQDQ Cannon Scrap Committee CU. M6h1'aH Kafafian Thomson 553 lVIain Street, Portland, Conn. ' Paterson, N. J. Delta Sigma Rhog Class Track 11, Qjg Class Debate Cl, Qjg Varsity Debate C2, 37g Junior Exhibitiong Declamation Contest QQ, 313 Briggs Prize C3D. Harry Morgan Tiebout Alpha Chi Rho House Brooklyn, N- Y. up Deutscher Verein CQ, 3, 403 Treasurer C403 Class Track Cl, Qjg Sophomore Hop Committee. S S Q-1918 Charles Powell Townsend Eclectic House Milton, N. Classical Club C413 Liberal Arts Club C413 Man- dolin Club CQ1. 1 Farrant Lewis Turner bi.. Psi Upsilon House Honolulu, Hawaii V ' Corpse and Cofting Mystical Seven, Senate C413 .,, Secretary-T1'easurer College Body C413 Class Day Committeeg Pipe Ceremonyg Chairman College Customs Committee C313 Assistant if 1 ' Manager Basketball C31g Manager C41g Class 'X' Track Cl, 313 Swimming Team CQ, 3, 413 Captain CQ, 3, 413 Athletic Council CQ, 3, 419-L Under- graduate Athletic Executive Committee C319 Publications Board C415 Secretary C41g Chair- Committeeg German Club man Junior Prom CQ, 3, 41. , N iff' -1,11-.. ,,,,. , H. af X 0 , R3-24 A gg, ,N 4 x , X Q I , X vi' , . X 2 iw f f , ,fit V 6 in i M 3 -Q 'M 4? ' gy wg , f gy' .w .... ff., 1. 1' '' Q-.f,.,Q,1::.51:2Ea:2?Ei22:1:e2 fi 2' '-'-Hf 4115z12:1::1:a1r1' ,,11:fA' IPP , ' - x ,Q .. , 5 . 111,221-.1 ,1.fH7'iE1'l:4 V 5 ,- - ll., :A , 'Ii , 1 '- Frank Trelease Underhill Eclectic House Jersey City, N Corpse and Cofing lVIystical Seveng Senate C413 Class Day Cominitteeg Undergraduate Finance Committee C413 La Societe Francaise C41g Var- sity Football Managership Qualification C215 Varsity Football Manager C413 Athletic Council C413 Assistant Business Manager Argus C2-1, Nlanager C413 Publications Board C41g Chairman VVashington's Birthday Banquet Committee C41. ,.1918i'i kr Charles Laurence Uniacke Mandolin Club MD Commons Club House Wallingford, Conn. i James Vincent Walsh Senate MJ, Classical Club C3, 415 Class Basket- ball C425 '.Mandolin Club C1, Q, 3, 4-D3 Cannon Scrap Committee CQD. 'Malvern Paul Westcott chi Psi Lodge chews Landing, N. J. Corpse and Cofiing Skull and Serpentg Senate C425 Class Day Corninitteeg Class Football C3jg Class Basketball Captain CSDQ Varsity Bas- ketball Squad Cljg Varsity Basketball CQJQ Class Baseball CSJ3 Varsity Baseball Squad Cljg Var- sity Baseball CQ, 3, -Q. 4 fs 1918 82 Hubbard Street Middletown, Conn, V- '7 ff i A Harold Wilkinson Eclectic House Middletown, Conn Coipse and Coffin Mystical Seven Class Foot ball Q1 4D Captain CU Varsity Basketball CQ 3D Class Track C1 QD Chairman Junior VVeek Committee Senior Ball Committee Flag Sciap Committee C11 Cannon Scrap Committee YVe1r VV1lliams Alpha Delta Phi House Evanston Ill Corpse and Coffing Class Basketball CD3 Class Tennis Qljg Captain CD3 Varsity Tennis Squad f3jg Dramatic Association fl, Qjg Paint and Powder Club C3, Mg President Dramatic Associa- tion Mbg Chairman Sophomore Hop Comrnitteeg ' haf- - QQ' 1 1 ' . N '70 ' V 4 I ball Cl, Q3 Varsitgi Football CQ, 3jg Class Basket- ' ' QQQ. I German Club CQ, 3, flj. Edwin Henry Witinan Delta Kappa Epsilon House Berwick, Pa. Senate My Secretary C4153 Class Football Qrljg Class Track CQDQ Glee Club CQ, 3, 403 Choir M13 Musical Clubs Manage1'ship Qualification QQJQ Manager QLLDQ Varsity Debate llflanagership Qualifdcation CQJ. Truman Hollis YVoodWzLrd Commons Club House Rockville Conn Lzierary Dflonthly Boaid C3 4D Declamation , 5 ' Contest CSD. Leslie George W1'ight 66 Hamlin Street Bristol, Conn E 19182 , ., a . X ' , . . X , . X K 34.82 fi .f - - ..j.+ ?' . va- .' -ff -A , ?' -- . . A 4 4 4 W . 'i A 7, f r- . 1 avg ' N. l v. 'ff' k I K 0 pi!-. L. 'mliil'--X , 1- 5-fffw iii? ff , 'bmi . H . ,EQ ,Sf A- .:'-:ra.g, 3' -'fa - A - 1253. ' if - r -Fmnqi iw' gl. , gg, . fm. J-1' at-1 in . 1-... wx Ari: f 1. e -f.. --a pq ,1.,X--.- rf df.. I. -Lx - 5,13-fir 2-- g..1.,Q Q, :uw f, 11, HN, wg . 1 ff 'ffs' 1 LL .J Lf fl ' Q-Qf'lL5. -A PM 5: . .1-f3.w.Ef'4, , 5, -1- Q -Z, We -' - , Aww.-ef. -if-my 99 . 1, -' . gf 1 -T 5 ,,F:..-9 A Q ,L .. - . I, 1 3... fcm,,.,...,,gv gf' -A A ' QP .. ,. ,.-I , .,, fs.fY.-' 41 FE - . '.Lig,J'7 - , 'f,f . . N- '23, 1 gp . -.vf-'iqrglq-sv : ',,.uwx 'f 'ei .f. 'l1 'w?.w+ f gi ' Q EE ss' QE- Y 4 T.,,iQ5,L5, P, ff? '-' 'E w',1,.,'.'-:yf9rj5' 1.f:'5 ,.:u1- 5.9. -, 3 - vsfggs- .QS .Bit fr' Y- ff- . 's-N .'-5 i?:-f 1' , . Marv V'-,-2+ 'f:1-.-w4:'-1-- :F 4' 1 Sifiis-'fiif .c1f F - +4 '-..5j-,:5x,7'f- ,' , ff... 1' 2 , - 4, R f55.f2iK3vf'gQ, 2, 1 .- ,., ,-344: V ug :ga - -. 3151 ff? fl 99is..5fi':VvQ 2 Q f. , 1 ,. s . 1. ' . igfiig.-1: tfgixif l i'- Q. :Li . 3 . . ,gz - , , , . , 'V Effie : , . fi A X . - di Q J , 5 U . YC.-iz P 21: -Q? 'f'-'dxf 5 , A+,5LIi-ff ,fg- gf.qf5afgw+-21 ., 5 ??'11'U'4'.. A girl?-c',' ,f -. -. J - fag- sv ' .gm 4. iff? 'L .-4-'. an ,,. ,- W , . .- . , ff , .Eff ff-gif' . 'I - :j3 -,,.- ,l , , aa- ,. - ,M .- 4 - 'H ',::. .' lv A -. x, P IJ , ai' 5 A Led .D gb ' 'ii' mf , , , surf' x ' -Ei 35 vm Q by rf 2 f - - '31-LQ ,. , --M. - , -I , ,ai awfg 553 I f fu '9 'Q' P 5 g . v 'R- .r v Y Na ef, 1,-nf ? .- ' ,Y 3 , P -. A F. 3 f lr ,,, - '-ww-we ' : V: Ng. ' x 'L ran 54 4' A ,aw ' . -yr 'f .:f':- ,Qi 1 1... .K 7 - Y , , ..r H ' -.f ' - J. ,..41.- . A .v 2-. - 4 1.-w . ' ,-1 , . A ...H-v. . .4 A V H Y 'g5.- -f . ' .again H. 1- A '- . N 1 - ff 3 4 ' ' y.-I , ,. ,W ,, , .,fz: 'K ', -. afq , f- ' i. -3, fffwi-5 'S ?-- ' ET. ,-f 2 I . 1 X ,Bic u r -. f ' ' I 1 . '- -. -' nw, - -' -a .RL-. ' V - TS. il: H- 9+ if '1'- ' me. . ' gf 'egg as' Y J: -.. v, : 5f NR -dv. -.Q -.fi 5-' if 62 :.g' ' 4 ' -- lv? A 2 , -. Tiff, - ,fi - t, , I' 4 15. ,WS 4 .,,.:' .J 4512 - . A s vw. HJ, ' XP?-, 'il' -J f . 212 . 59 'lil 7' ' ' if - , Q ' -. - f - . '- . ,pd lj' 141.1 1 41 ', :E 'N xr i '55 1: ' ffl , av Q 2. 'gf 'P ,, . Q '-'.'3.. -122 . 11 . rm 4-,V , . , 4 1.1, 3 . .v, 1 . -. 4' Tia? 5' -'. J Q. . V 4-F ? V . '13 1 A -. H' , , -,. . . 'YR' 4 Q J 1 1 Y r w ' KS! k fl XA VG N X JUNIOR CLASS M-9 Sm? , W fp, 1918 Class History ' 9 LANCING backward over two and a half years which involves the gradual development of the nucleus from the mass, we find it dilli- cult to place our pen point on a single spot in which the grand and glorious nom de plume of our compact group of cohorts is not vitally con- cerned. In fact we admit that there isn't any such. And to substantiate the foregoing statement against the attacks of petty aspirants to this zenith of class achievements, we humbly call attention to the following. Reverting to Hank's History of the Early Twentieth Century , we find the class of 1918 was unsubdued, defeating 1917 twice, and 1919 once, without waste of time or energy. Admitting our invincible right of con- quest, the college body took steps to prevent further massacre, because of the enormous hospital bills following our missions. Nothing daunting us, we directed our warlike spirit to new channels and after we took posses- sion of the interclass cup, 1916 acknowledged our supremacy by awarding us the Gym Key. VVe can not say this was awarded unanimously, because our wily sleuths got a tip from the bottom of the ballot box that Joe Gold- blatt voted for 1917. In a transition from the aesthetic to the physical We now observe that 1918 composes over half the football team, two-fifths of the basketball team, over half of the swimming team, half the letter men of the track teamg and over a third of the baseball team. Among these sturdy Spartans 3 + '76 deserving honorable mention are Kangaroo Williams, who has hopped the hurdles for a few at the Intercollegiatesg Tennyson Jones, the vigilant guardian of N ickis back yard, and St. Aloysius, own son Hap. Every one has his faults, and in maintaining our first place in scholar- ship we have to admit that the following have caused us dire distress Fw Van Hennigar Bower, Bingham Barrows, J: Elmer Cavelti, Billy Mead Gantz and G. Raymond Larkin. However, by continual prodding and conscientious sem work at the Stueck Tutoring School, we hope to round them into shape. Q ' In accordance with recent evolutionary theories propounded by Herbie, we have ascended with power through the three stages of creation, birth, and development, and are now ready for the fourth stage, maturity. We now don the cap and gown for our Enal sojourn. May the remarkable spirit of 1918 continue throughout the senior year with the same warmth of friendship that has characterized the class in its Freshman, Sophomore and Junior years at Wesleyan. V - '+-.if ' J '77 -LM unior Class - Officers VVillian1 VVood lVIcCarthy . . . . President Franklin Milton Johnson . . Vice-Piesident Sherman Christie Ellis .... . Secretary-Treasurev' Members Alan Chichester Abeel . . . . A. New York, N. Y. Edwin Carl Anderson . . Suncook, N. H. Raymond Charles Baker . . . Jermyn, Pa. Fred Bingham Barrows . . . . . Ayer, Mass. Paul Adams Bassett . . . . Springfield Gardens, N. Y. Alfred Melville Cleave Bennett . . . Cheshire, Conn. Benjamin Hezekiah Bissell . . . . Meriden, Conn. Andrew John Blackmore . . Barre, Vt. Everett Buell Blake . . . Evanston, Ill. Charles lVIartin Boswell, Jr. . Philadelphia, Pa. Lahman Van Hennigar Bower . . Milwaukee, VVis. Robert Driscoll Boyle . . , Flushing, N. Y. Lester Ray Bradbury . . . Bridgeport, Conn. Robert Wfeldon Brooks I . VVallingford, Conn. Foster Lewis Burgess . . lVIoosup, Conn. John Burisch . . . Elizabeth, N. J. John Elmer Cavelti . Stratford, Conn. Chuan Chao . . . '. Tsun Hua, China Ping-Yen Chu . . . Changsha, China W7illiam Michael Citron . . lVIiddletown, Conn. Paul Douglas Compton . . Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Paul Frederick Craig . . . Springfield, Mass. LeGrand VVa1dorf Curtis . , Red Hook, N . Y. VVilliam Whitman Deacon . . Marietta, Pa. Joseph V ineent Dempsey . Middletown, Conn. James Edward Dooley . Middletown, Conn. VVendell Jay Dunstan . , . Spokane, Wfash. Arthur Nisbett Eagles, Jr. . . Newark, N. J. Paul Frederick Eckstorm . . Brewer, Me. Richard Travis Elliott . . Comanche, Ia. Sherman Christie Ellis . . . Springield, lVIass. Lynwood King Elmore . . . , Burnside, Conn. VVilliam David Fenton, Jr. . . Portland, Ore. M.. Y xi 1918 -, ' L ii g1918'? zfl'-5 ' 1 fi W Herbert Benson Finnegan Berti am Charles Proidex aux Enoch Doble Puller Emanuel I awrence Gebauer John Gray Glenn Q., South Manchester Conn Collinsville Conn Quincy Mass Henderson Ky Tyrone Pa i Gel-aid Meade Gantz f 1 I i I . f iNewYork1 N. Yi Hairy Mills Grinton Pheodore James Grippen . Robert Darius Guinn . . VVarren Haines . . . Wfatson Munroe Hannan . Luther Keefer Hannum, Jr. Ragnar Hanson . . . Harold George Harman . Frank Douglas Harris . . . Coleridge Wells Hart . . . Aubrey Cresson Davis Hartman Robert Gray Hartsock . . . George Harold Hines . . . Edwin 'Roy Holden .P VVilliam Duran Holman . Albert Asa Houck . . . Garry de Neuville Hough, Jr. . George Brigden Hulse . . VVilliam Joseph Hurley Mitchell Jenkins . . . Franklin Milton Johnson . Ralph Edward Jones . Reese Pughe Jones . Harold Dean Krafft . Gerald Penfield Kynett . Wlilson Davis Langley . George Raymond Larkin . Clifford Bronson Lehmann . Cheung Tsuen Lei . . . Donald Cooper Lewis . Morgan Noulton Lewis Harry Edwin Lindsey . Elliott Colby Logan . Harry Ludwig Leurich . . VVilliam Wood McCarthy . Charles lVIcDonald Neil Macdonald, Jr. . Harold Edgar McGrath . John Aloysius McGuinn . John Anson Markham . lVI1ddletown N Y Saratoga Springs, N. Y. .. . . Hawley, Pa. . . Portland, Conn. . Madison, N. J. . New York, N. Y. Middletown, Conn. . Hartford, Conn. Middletown, Conn. . Peekskill, N. Y. . . Erie, Pa. . . Scranton, Pa. . lXIiddletown, Conn. . Hackettstown, N. J. South lVIanchester, Conn. . . Elmira, N. Y. . New Bedford, Mass. . Newark, N. J. . . Portland, Conn. . . . Kingston, Pa. . VVashington, D. C. West Somerville, Mass. . . . Utica, N. Y. . Minneapolis, Minn. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Schenectady N. Y. . Pittsfield, lVIass. . Brooklyn, N. Y. . Canton, China . New York, N. Y. . Bridgeport, Conn. . Rochelle, Ill. . Bridgeport Conn. . Newark, N. J. . Evanston, Ill. . Nliddletown, Conn. . Upper Montclair, N. J. . East Northfield, lVIass. . . VVorcester, lVIass. . Hartford, Conn. .-n44' Q3-V ,C Wandell McMaster Mooney William Arthur Moore Harold Metcalf Paine John Leonard Palmer Ralph Edward Peck Ivan Maurice Perkins Arthur William Phillips Lester Irving Pitt . . Charles Pullman Porter H. Dart Porter . . Abram Butler Pratt . Russell Talcott Purnell Gordon Bridge Randall Herbert LeVan Richards Charles William Riley . Percy Couch Rogers . Aubrey Gerard Russell . Harold Sigfrid Sanstrom A William Arnold Shanklin, Jr. Robert Boies Sharpe . Elmer Howard Shattuck Raymond Dudley Sherwin Elton Robert Skilton . Joseph Roland Smith . Lynn Howard Smith . Erland Myles Standish Kenneth Porter Stevens Everett Fisk Strong . Walter Frederick Sutter Sidney Attilio Thompson Earle Orchard Titus . Frank Hopewell Underhill John Huber Underhill . Robert Boyd Ward . Steacy Ernest Webster . Frank Henry Wenner . Howard Vincent Widdoes Clifford Keith Wilbur . Lawrence Edwin Williams Charles Mirack Winchester, Jr. . ' Harold Townsend Woolley ,,,i-1-- sf, Paterson N J Brattleboro Vt Berlin Conn Worcester lVIass Milton on Hudson N Y New York N Y Penobscot Me Harvey Zenos Nourse ', 1 i Albion N Y Middletown Conn . New Rochelle, N. Y . . . Albion, N. Y . . . Troy, N. Y South Manchester, Conn . . Melrose, Mass . . Orange, N. J . Burnside, Conn . Gloucester, Mass . Vilestfield, N. J . Portland, Conn Middletown, Conn . Greenwich, N. Y . Lisbon, N. H New Haven, Conn . Morris, Conn . Brooklyn, N. Y Binghamton, N. Y Wethersfield, Conn . Danbury, Conn Natick, Mass . Elizabeth, N . J . Greenwich, Conn . East Orange, N. J . Newton Centre, Mass . . Jersey City, N . J . New Rochelle, N. Y . Philadelphia, Pa . . . Utica, N.- Y . . , Dexter, Me . East Wareham, lVIass . . Geneva, N. Y . Albany, N. Y . Great Neck, N.Y 1918 E .. 5 . ,43..'74-, - ' V9-lzfi. ii 'I E. -, .M Qzeijj A ' . 41 w gf 'U' I . X58 'L A I ,,, , in JE 5' M If A 22 ii v ' .1 S-'A X ' , ' ..,, 'gf' ' ri' - 5 ..-Q-.-H' , ,,?,,- .2 5 1255 5.-9' ' 1----g., 4' y-at-.1 ' v , Q N f af M ' we . f f- , - ' ' -'u.- ' 1-.531 -F .f Q--'a .ah-V Y .. T Egg . 1,1 ,Q H.. ' ,.,g'? -. alfa- ', h '- -S' 1-f1 Wf- ,, -Q ,-...-3- , f . 1, W, 5 .Q :J -V .- - ,uv ' ' 4 Jr .zu Q - rm ' fe. ' qw'-f:4 'f ' , '. A fvxff' : g .. CH R A . 1 . - . ff ,, as 453' if . r ' A 4 L' i gi f I : E' ' ' .J .1 Q - 'L L1 . rf , I Zi - W if : ' 'QQ it ' . A . 4-eg fi 5 . T 4, , 79 3 F' 91 9? W' 4 . . .v,-, lr !- 51 . 'ze' ' -A -- F-'J' E 1 ' . iffzfg ' . ,mi W ' .p , , . - ...1,.y.-yn.: f ,L 'i - -355 . i 9 ff-E. ,W '4 -f- r' - eg,.,.' I f .r - ,, 9 A. ffl?-xf A:,f'333' 5 . I T ' - 1. 'L' V. . . ,,r -- , . ' W:-'.-Z' l K gg: IZ. sa, '32, V -4 A: - ,. , ,. ' 234.2 zz, 1,1 - -'H L- '-: I g- - ' 9: .. ' 'y...3 2- , :EA I ' ,- 1, Y l 'T ,Q-,ff 'C I ': 511 ' J ' ' Ar-':: ' 'I-.: -' L.. 8, 1 f QI!2'::.'f- 1 , l,.,3,,:: - .1 i - l L J. ' . ' . Q3 11 ' -':3f 51I Ji' ,, x ., , , f-- --Pax . .', 'H 4 Ped ' 1' '45 ' ' . 1: , I f , -. gr J 1 W LQ I if v --., - gf. - - 1 I u. 5 fr' 'ff ,. , 1' Q br f ,, .s Z' . 1 4 A , t .- J , A Z 5' -K I Y . .. I ,Lh.g.:eL,4 . I L 1 , . K nl : ,-.. , - ' .. .- . . . ,-L fr' .4 3 I -iw .fig-.W x 1 .JN 1 1 , !.- 'l - g ff KW X w jj ix V ' - S n N Y l N WW 5 Qb oo 1 V I b . A '24 H '-'-V.,., V B SOPHOMQRE CLASS! y Mi K , : - I 1 AfIk.5s-. l 91 9 Class History ELL, here are the twins again-nineteen-nineteen! The only twins in college, and individuality is our motto. VVe do not measure our attainments by victories in class contests, but by intellectual and social achievements. Mere weight of numbers may overcome us, but when it comes to headwork, translating from the Broadway, we mur- 1nur, Oh, Boy . Flag Scraps-oh, let's forget them, and remember that it is the brain, not brawn, that holds the outcome ever in doubt. But as for Banquets, why, we even added to the success of the 1918 banquet by having some of our most distinguished social lights there to enliven the evening. Ah, Cabaret Knapp, willst ever forget said evening? For recreation from our mental grind, we often seek diversion in the Held of sport. And with what results? No team in college but has been graced with some of our illustrious members. Cob VVebb and Silent Law- son, of Baseball fame, not to forget Toothless Brown, one of the bulwarks of the Fighting Line, Ocky Knipe, the winged Mercury, Max Hahn, the idol of the Tank Balcony, Cutey Keeler, our diminutive wonder-and oh,-so many others, that Bill refuses to conduct a Hall of Fame for the beneit of Sophomores alone. Give the others a chancef, quoth he. Our individuality is manifested by our social, as well as by our athletic activities. Gaze at the .names of our drawing room scorpions. Behold, fe -F E 1918? f K 'a ' proteges Imperial Scott the princely wooer and Don Juan Woodruff the interior decorator All all are gone the old familiar faces but with the spring fresh crops arise on Blain Street to feed the ever mounting flame. - Scholastically we know no peer' has not brother Dutcher torn his hair at the xersatility of our question-doping chapel students? No Hunks in I History! VVhat other class has bourgeonned into such portentous fame? And as for Hygiene-Herby piled the work upon our shoulders, but setting our teeth, we bore the load with credit, ,and without a whimper. And our reward for such undeviating effort and devotion? Not one got lower than a three! Our fame has spread afar. Haddam, South Farms, Meriden, Hart- ford, and Durham, too, have reason to know the prowess, not only of the class of nineteen-nineteen, but of many individuals therein, who have gone forth from our brown old row of college Callsn, made their conquest, and returned covered with-glory? Well, something very like it. We have artistic merit, too. Old Pop Crandell draws posters for the college dances that infiame the imaginations of the most prosaic souls, Rube Norris writes for the Literary Monthly, and we must not forget Rad- cliffe the boy orator. And when Spike Wagner published his Femina', -no longer could the fair sex claim to be unfathomable:-Waldo knows all their secrets. Only two years-and see how we have grown. Day by day our dreams come nearer to realization. Before so very many moons have passed, decked out in caps and gowns, we shall stalk in our digniiied and seniorly way up the right hand aisle of Chapel, to sit, not in some dim, obscure recess be- neath the gallery, but out in the open light of day, where, under Prexy's watchful eye, we shall have to listen to the sermon. ,Oh, haste the day. 1 84 - K Popper Ritchie, the flaming meteor, Garter-snake Norris, with his freshmen . D, h '. . a - . 7 , O' Sophomore Class Richard Johns Keeler Lorenzo Dow Webber Allen Daggett Bean Lawrence Coffin Ames . James lVIason Austin . Paul Livingston Avery . XDeWitt Clair Baldwin . Allen Daggett Bean . Russell Dudley Bell . ,Q I Henry Arnold Bennett . 'N Richard Cissel Berry . George Floyd Bickford . Sydney Watson Blackett Gerald Baldwin Bliss . Joseph Truman Bray . Emerson David Breese S. Chester Gordon Bridge Irving Charles Brown, Jr. James Ediniston Brown Harry Clarke Bruner . Paul Evans Burbank . Howard Burdick . . Harry Puckey Burgwin Walter Scott Buswell . Allan Carman . . Hubert Biays Chappell Frederick Langley Clark Vincent Brown Coffin . Frank Cyril Cooper . Arthur Searles Cramer . John Bradshaw Crandell Harold Clifford Cutbill Ofhcers Members . ,, .-fx . U- ! 85 . . President . Vice-President Secreta-ry-Treasrwer West Newton, Mass. . Glens Falls, N. Y. . Granby, Conn. . . Derby, Me. . Rockville, Conn. . Plattsburg, N. Y. . - Stamford, Conn. . Elizabeth, N. J. . Hardwick, V t. . Cambridge, Mass. . . Albion, N. Y. . East Bangor, Pa. Sidney Centre, N. Y. . Hazardville, Conn. . Franklin, N. H. West Roxbury, lVIass. . Columbia, Pa. -. Pittsfield, Mass. . Brooklyn, N. Y. Port Chester, N. Y. . Evanston, Ill. . Summit, N. J. . VVashington, D. C. . Freeport, N. Y. . Albany, N. Y. . Brockton, lVIass. . Portland, Conn. . Glens Falls, N. Y. South Norwalk, Conn. 19182 .zafirlu- X A. .ax rw ii Benjamin Woodhull Davis ....... Coram, N. Y Edgar Holmes Delamater Alfred Dodd . . . Clifford Francis Dodge . Frank Eaton Dorian . Charles Nathan Downs Kenneth Brevoort DuBois Ralph Vernet Farrel . James Newbury FitzGerald Lyle Wayman Forman . Leonard Beeman Fuller Cuthbert Charles Gabel Gordon Jasper Gale . Donald Covil Gordon . William Drum Gould . Ulyssis Simpson Grant . Frederic Halstead Hahn Courtney Robert Hall . Herbert Rhey Hannan . William Hendry . . Arthur Henry Illing . Eugene Howard Jeffrey Richard Johns Keeler . Stewart Benjamin Knapp Oscar Linden Knipe . Gordon Irwin Kyle . James Cordis Langdon . Earl Elmer Lasher . Harry Emanuel Lawson Howard Willis Lindsey Reginald Lester Lord . Elford Floyd Lounsbury Byron Dwight MacDonald Nils Carl Malmquist . Daniel Valentine Manahan Dudley Haley Manchester Arthur Frederick Markthaler Charles Wesley Martin John Hall Martin . . John Lawrence Martin . Everette Dunbar Marvin Charles Thayer Mason . Raymond Benedict Mead ...ii .lQ.E5 Hockanum Conn . Middletown, Conn. . Malden, lVIass. . . Mt. Vernon, N. Y . Riverside, N. J . Albany, N. Y . Plainville, Conn . Newark, N. J . Trenton, N. J . ,Sandy Hook, Conn . Belvidere, Ill . Newtown, Conn. . Hazardville, Conn. . Ardmore, Pa. . Newton, N. J. . New York, N. Y. . Rochester, N. Y. . lVIadison, N. J . . Barre, Vt . Simsbury, Conn . Elberon, N. J . Wlayzata, Minn . Stamford, Conn . Bridgeton, N. J Belleville, N. J Smyrna, Turkey North Germantown, N. Y . . YVoburn, Mass . . Rochelle, Ill . . . Lyme, Conn . . Kensington, Conn . . Nanticoke, Pa . Vilallingford, Conn Monmouth Beach, N. J . . Winsted, Conn . . Elizabeth, N. J . . VVestfield, N. J . . Elizabeth, N. J East Longmeadow, lVIass. . . Derby, Conn. . Washington, Conn. South Bethleham, N. Y. ..x.Q Walter Agnew lVIorr1s Malcolm Wilbur lVIoss Hubert Leslie Mott J ulian Reuben Nor11s Haiold Lewis N olton Stephen Adams Norton Albert Ernst Nuelsen .ixl if 5.0 Henderson Ky Henderson Ky VVatertown N Y Elizabeth N J Newport R I Mount Hermon Mass sidpey ivien-iaNewi1a11' f f f Q 1 1 .spfipgneidf MASQ Carl Edwin Nyman Earle Waldon Parsons , . John Stackhouse Piper . John Halifax Plumb . Maurice Allen Potter . James Vincent Prifi' . Austin Leonard Prynn . Lynn James Radcliffe . George Renwick Raynor . Andrew Redheflier . . Earle Franklin Richards . J ames, Franklin Ritchie . Nelson Virgil Rorer . Milton Harold Ryan . Eric Verner Sandin . Gordon Embler Scott . Francis Eliot Seeley . Russell Thomas Seeley , . Otto Page Sharp . . . Graeme Thomas Smallwood Earle Templer Somerville . Carleton Southwick Spear . Waldo Whipple Spear . Sidney Lewis Straley . . Edwin Stanley Taylor . . John Wadsworth Thomas . Clark Coggshall Thompson , Harold Orlo Thompson . Guy Rogers Turner . . Samuel Foster Upham . . William DeWitt Van Pelt, Jr. Waldo Urban YVagner . . Ernest Belden Warriner . Paul Redner Webb . Lorenzo Dow Webber . Leslie Whidden . . Lee Jay Whittles . . Walter Roberts Williams . Kenneth Crane Woodruff . Kilchberb Switzerland Portland, Conn . . Elizabeth, N. J. . . Delhi, N. Y. . North Adams, lVIass. North Longbranch, N. J. . . Kenilworth, N. J. . . Scranton, Pa. . . Weehawken, N. J. Lake Ronkonkoma, N. Y. . VVest Haven, Conn. . West Haven, Conn. . New York, N. Y. . . Philadelphia, Pa. . . N utley, N .J . . East Hampton, Conn. . . Albany, N. Y. . Wlashington, Conn. . . Belleville, N. J. . Newton Lower Falls, Blass. . Washington, D. C. . , Gloversville, N. Y. . VVarren, R. I. . . Warren, R. L . Brooklyn, N. Y. . . Norwalk, Conn. . Ticonderoga, N. Y. . Brooklyn, N. Y. . Brooklyn, N. Y. . Hartford, Conn. . Brooklyn, N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y. . Scranton, Pal . Springield, Mass. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Ivoryton, Conn. Melrose, Mass. . Gildersleeve, Conn. . Sunderland, Mass. . Elizabeth, N. J. 1918 2 1.-, f N n Qi? 4 fu v 'Jr 'K' wig: 4 an H b f- ' ., -J-. W 1. E1 QM, . - -lil' wa' sa ' ,Z ,sf 'Q A x-'Hg - E . 5' , .ni eff .- e:f'2'-+V . --iw: J- .i- fa I A-4 51 .faq ' 4' 'T .1- .fif ' eff' .fm ' - .r . my fi g f. . ' 4- . -'43 ' '14 i, '-,-!.H ,,'., '-:gg . '-f , - -- k m + 1 3'- J, 31- ,-FJ: -. ,A r I 31-- - V, .!-2 1: '-ni,4f'- -- VI'- gx V'- -Mraiff fy- l 5 . - ,..! f ? , A ' H -fae1rx??9w.u .31 -r' l.,.'f -V .1 if-'Z 1 .fi --- vs? f?3 ' ' 'Jr -'A s if-fy . vs t f V ' ,f'2 . V B - '. f- 1 -1 ' 465' . ' 'S-- 4 '- -f 1 -VMMSZWQ Y' f? rf, , I rn if ', , :A-' z-i n If m:Tg,.:4.....l- .. 1-QM -ff 3 ' k P -. '. .. . ' :LQ 15.--. .-I 1-2 -ff -A f fgiffi x ' F MF- 1 1- ' 1, We , . -' 'F -,-im - ' 5- ' l . . -r., Er, V' Rt A . x ' V A I H H. N A 5 7 1 ' -J A,'ff71'l -f 1' I ' , a I U H' H .A 4.g..ATv.:Q 4' 9, X Q 2. , I Yr nz, ' ' 11' .TW 9 : fn? 1 ' Q 1 ' X' Qi H 123. -f. 3,-f gp vai , ,, -.:5'f -A ' a -,f: ' 2- . Eg ,,4'YWAf ' 112: ff' ' ' E 'i . .f , 1, A ,. is 5 w, :I ,fu J., , vs , Lp? , 5 '-57' V 1 .- ' nf ' 14 1 his ' ' I 'e' 2 A -T P V Q .V I f-.LM ' 4 -r ? 41 H , K -'5 . X, ' 5, L w 1 1 Q , -1,--,V A , ' .,j 1 ig.. I 'E ' ' ' 'fiffnh u f 3' .A ,RT , f .v ' rr- - . , - L KQQ rf C-' ' ':fLf5:35Z', u-.- W. A V 4 .jf if -, . -I s v. A - -Q.. gf- 'L S ' -, - . , .,, , , . H ES oo KW 11 in FRESHMAN CLASS - 91 ,PL '45 l 920 Class History l H ha, chuckled Nick, as he gazed cunningly over his dusty specks, Well if here isnit another green class to hand out conditions to.', I It was the triumphant entry- of a husky bunch of prep school heroes, dragging their Indestructo luggage along with them, and with imaginary Phi Beta Kappas already hanging on' their watch chains. Such was the debut of 1920, proclaimed by Doc Fauver to be the freshest class that ever entered Wesleyan, excluding, of course, the class of Herman Gross Scott, Jr. i - . . The Chapel being newly adorned, we were spared the thrilling sensation of leaving mother earth the first day, and had to be contented with a warm- ing-up run. After donning our cute little red hats, and becoming accustomed to the angles of the campus, we set about, and helped pay for the be-u-ti-ful posters, which our friends, the noted twins presented us with. Then of course, some of us had a little excursion down town onenight, and amused the arc-lights and Sophomores, but disturbed the neighbors and the police force with our harmonious singing- and witty speeches. Statistics showed, that we were the biggest and healthiest class to enter VVesleyan in many moons. That is theory, here is the proof. That Flag Scrap was the first real evidence of our hygienic perfection. But, oh no, thatfs not all, being grateful to the Sophs for the preliminary practice, we taught them how to run, and gave them a free exhibition of baseball and it t 1918g football as it should be played We even went so far as to win the football championship from the Seniors and that s something to chuckle over be lieve us But to revert to our friends again what was the matter with the daring Sophs coming home from the Williams game? The cars had racks and the trip was long yet where were the Sophomores? But then the twins area bit delicate. By that time 1920 could be distinguished from the surrounding shrub- bery, and we turnedour thoughts to convertingrthe Dormitories into Gym- nasiums. Prexie, however, requested an interview with several of our teams, and with a few kindly words, told us that one swimming pool was enough. Tradition was rigorously followed when we sumptuously buried old Amherst, and, with variations, 'when the old Cannon Scrap was enacted for the n1ovies',. It is useless to even start to enumerate our accomplish- ments, for, we even admit ourselves, that they are many and Varied. We have made the start, and we are going to continue to strive to serve both Wesleyan and 1920. 92 : Raymond VValton Allen . Logan MOIIIS Dayton Freshman Class Officers resulent - ....,..... P -' 3 Russell Hobson Anderson Robert Meredith Moore Henry Spangler Rich, Jr. Names Lyndon Travis Abbot . George Asa Ackerly . Frederick Franklin Adams . Russell Hobson Anderson ' Howard Gallup Andrews Milton Spry Andrews . Oliver Harold Andrews . Herbert Eli Arnold . . Alan Frank Bain . George lVillia.m Bain . Leslie Palmer Beebe . Stephen VVilliam Beekman . John Randolph Belcher . Herman David Berlew . Arthur Sands Bibbins . Nelson Sylvester Bigelow . Earl Matthias Bilger . Coe Austin Boardman . Stanley Ramsey Bodine . . Edward Spellmeyer Boote . Leon Alson Bradley . Nlarshal Brown . . Merrill James Campbell . Charles Henry Carey . Morris Winfred Carey . William True Cass . . Carton Joseph Chapin . Robert Mills Chapin . Harold Crawford Chapma.n . Howard Arthur Clark . . Everett Ross Clinchy . Ralph Oliver Collins . Members V109 Preszclenf . Secretary . Treasurer Residences East Orange, N. J . Brooklyn, N. Y Manchester, N. H Hackettstown, N. J Bridgeboro, N. J . Chicago, Ill . Cambridge, Md Stamford, Conn . Brooklyn, N. Y Greenwich, N. Y Greenwich, N. Y Colchester, Conn i'. -Brooklyn N. Y Washington, D. C VVest Pittston, Pa . Darien, Conn Middletown, Conn . Meriden, Conn Springfield, Mass Flemington, N. J East Orange, N. J Wfest Haven, . Suffield, Conn Conn . Indianola, Ia Mauch Chunk, Pa Mauch Chunk, Pa . Tilton, N. H Dorranceton, Pa . Norwich, Conn . Bethel, Me . Hartford, Conn East Orange, N. J. Gloversville, N. Y. E 1918 6 ' 1 94: -J N Frank Edwin Conlin ............ Troy, N. Y. V nan rail-Ciiild comma .......... Morristown, N. J. John Alpaugh Conover ........... Gladstone, N. J. Frederick Morgan Davenport, Jr. ........ Clinton, N. Y. Stuart Johnson Davies ........... Utica, N. Y Benjamin Thomas Davis ........., Pottsville, Pa. tl lVIark Loyne Davis . . Logan Morris Dayton . Clark4Smith Defandorf . Charles YVilliam Deininger Harley B1'onson Dennison Jasper Cropsey Dibble . Chauncey William Diecks Edward Everett Dixon, Jr. Kenneth Victor Dixon . Raymond Anthony Do'usseau Van Cott Duncan . . Wayland Pierce Duncan George Howard Fotliergill George Barnes Galloway Ronald Scott Gibbons . Lewis Loder Gilbert, Jr. . Robert Bartow Gillespie .- William Ginn' , . . Raymond Hamilton Goodale Maurice Blaisdell Gould . Earl Carlile Gravatt . Boyd Raymond Greenwalt Henry Parker Hallock, Jr. Edward Chambers Hartsock Charles Stuart Hedden . Edgar Allen Henderson . Earl Wesley Hildreth . Edward Roland Hill . William Norbert Hill . Benjamin Franklin Holme Roger Franklin Holmes . Woolsey Rogers Hopkins Hugh Deal Hughes . . Douglas Lawrence Hutton Henry West Jacobs . . David Spergin Jenkins . Hugh Cohan Jenkins . Edward Matthews Jones Theron Loudon Kelley . George Carter Kcllorn . Sidney Joseph Keser . Ellsworth Frank Lamson Eugene Barr Lequin . , Lincoln Hammel Lippincott Harold Lawrence Lonsdale 1918 ,S 5 . Wzrrren, N. H Wlissahickon, Pa . Troy, N. Y . Hartford, Conn Wate1'bury, Conn Valley Stream, N. Y VVest Orange, N. J . Moore, Pa . . Onarga, Ill . Astoria, N. Y . New York, N. Y . Brooklyn, N. Y . Hartford, Conn . Passaic, N. J Salisbury, lVIass New Haven, Conn . Stamford, Conn . Philadelphia, Pa New Britain, Conn New Haven, Conn . Camden, N. J . Hoboken, N. J . New York, N. Y . Scranton, Pa . Newark, N. J . Garwood, N. J . Cromwell, Conn . Noank, Conn . Noank, Conn . Camden, N. J New Britain, Conn . Boston, Mass Amsterdam, N. Y Southington, Conn. . Oswego, N. Y Nesquehoning, Pa . Kingston, Pa . Elkton, Md . Meadville, Pa Wlinchester, N. H . Portland, Conn . Bristol, Conn. 'East Orange, N. J . Beverley, N. J South Orange, N. J K , . 90 Nevin Gebhart McCloskey .......... Beech Creek, Pa. ' ..... N ' 1 - Edward Shelton MacKendr1ck John Henry Mahler, Jr. . . George William Malcomson . Lindsley Brooks lVIarvin Leo Julius Meyer . . Robert Meredith Moore . George Curtis Morgan . Jiro hlotokawa . . . Harold Howe Llunroe . Pierre Allaire Northrip, Jr. . Lucius James Parks . Ray Edward Parmenter . William King Parslow . Albert Berton Patterson . George Francis Peck . Randall Robinson Porter Arthur Rees Pughe . . John Carl Rash . . Ralph Tichenor Reeve . Henry Spangler Rich, Jr. Harold George Richardson . VVilliam Tenncy Rumsey . Victor Alexander Salloway . VVallace Edwin Sample . Bertram William Saunders . Malcolm Palmer Schumacher Lewis Gregory Seeley . . Paul Wesley Sherman . George Arthur Small . Linus Ingalls Snyder . John Milton Stackhouse . Dwight Elliott Stagg . Harry Newman Stark . Frederick Gilman Stewart . James David Stewart . Roger Clark Stimson . Charles Freeborn Strohson . Kenneth Stewart Thompson . Stanley Linham Thornton . Edward Horace Tomlinson . Harold Gilbert Travis . Harry Charles Underwood . Edward Austin Warren, Jr. . Nathan Wilbur Wentworth . Paul Nelson Westerbeke Martin Edward VVhalen . Francis Raymond Wight Talbot Cole Wildman . Bernard Sidney Wlrubel . Paul Helmer Young . . . . i eu Hai en, Conn. Amityville, N. Y. . Detroit, Mich. Saint Albans, Vt. Bridgeport, Conn. . Elizabeth, N. J. . . Berlin, Conn. . Honolulu, Hawaii . Long Island City, N. Y. . Newburgh, N. Y. . Tilton, N H. . Skowhegan, Me. . New York, N. Y. . N oank, Conn. . Scranton, Pa. . Columbia, Conn. . Utica, N. Y. . Geneva, N. Y. . Wfestfield, N. J. . Nlarietta, Pa. . Mayfield, N. Y. . . . . . Keota, Col. . . . Watertown, Mass. . Lake George Assembly, N. Y. . Passaic, N. J. . El Paso, Tex. Vllashington, Conn. . La Grange, Ill. . Malden, Mass. . Ickesburg, Pa. . Bloomsburg, Pa. Bridgeport, Conn. . Brooklyn, N. Y. . Brooklyn, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. . Gorham, Die. . Lynbrook, N. Y. . Boston. Mass. . Philadelphia, Pa. . Elizabeth, N. J. . Dunkirk, N. Y. . Buffalo. N. Y. . W'est Acton, Mass. . Somcrsworth, N. H. . . Sayville, N. Y. . Hartford, Conn. . Hartford, Conn. . Glenbrook, Conn. . Middletown, Conn. . . . Topeka, Kan. 19l8L S' 0 X X N if Xl s N X X ., S '37 Y A f Vg R Z 1531554 '71 1 SZ 2 Q 'iv :RQ 5 'B r -E 'f ff '-: Zig KX' Wi ggi ew X UQQE QQX bv' 3 5 A 112 j fij bggbl 5 1155 5 1- f Q lff sslxx E35 - 'E f ii SWQ bb X77 Q 5 211 1. ? 3 W-Ei ffoffi' J' : 5 2' 3- my .lsffwfff 'G ? 35 B---W 3 23534. T , tl N A L...L 2 f :X ..,3.:.:1,'--:fm 5533 ---,151-Z, I, my ,gag my -' af 5 f f'TiZfQ K7-fl J kv fy M A .Tnifaw ,. 15,55 Aulllu y 1 v :-' 1' :I1,IKQ-dz:.'-:-Ifii4'7f,e-sliflliv 'EEZWLP ' I- Quinn: 5i fl I g . A,,,,w Cwmav. Qrganizations W 4 QW M' V X X Z S , ,- ' Q ,. S ,Q ,tr gr .. J lf' w'x , x 'Q . ' rw: '-Mull. N' . f af fun I ' K Q , ,I 1 - , 3, .fx f f' .., 2? 7g, I flkqpwg'-I ,I X ., X, ,. ,A ,gr 1 Y, X vaMfGwwS - 1 W: 4' N-' ,ff , Y 'L g m,i'mwf'f'f QW k lf- ,,,. .-M' V S Qiwwvxw SX on - MX ,HN Q X -1 1 XX-A f, ff' x - xx NNW if C 'Zi X .wif A2 '. WNV XS 5 X313 k wxv gi iii, 6 Xfvf U , - Y- K ff s , ', WITH 1 w AU . gi ' N , 7 f ,V ii' f f, , ,' E5 , W from A: E ., 5 f bww, W vf X N fn, ' ld'f fza ' 5 , Wy f? '3 1 fa .3 JE G E ff I 2: , f Q Q' is-5 :E ' xl no-.1 1 I an tl I n 1 'r 05 :J 'A ,aid fa? ,gn ,I 4 ,'9:,'l P9 'li- 4 4 1 'qi' 04 o'fr e f 40 4-4' ' 1 , I ,ul pf : H? ' 1 1- if I r r- ' z u 0 1 n. 1, if Jlfpamw 5 SUN Nha ,Q , ' , ' X Q -. 1 x . 755- Q, 17.1525 5 ., R in S ' L A ,. .,. . - K -. -. , -- By 1- . g:':'ig1 i7 , -.... fisagii- f4e4EiT 4' - X Ji ' l.- 9: - ' ,1- 1' 4 ' 1 il ' Ne- 'n .., x 0 1 r v N Q 3 , , . K , X ,411 , .iz , 'V 44' .C Q -ifu ,. 55 ul 6!-3Alv'Uf'L L ,, U ifg A if ' wh fe f JF ml? Auggqapl. EKAEI'-106 , E gm ail - ..,- PHI VNU THETA ji? Phi Nu Theta W Established 183 7 Fratres in Facultate William North Rice, Ph.D., LLD. ltlorris Barker Crawford. M.A. Wesley Owen Ash Philip Ayres Dales Carl Leslie Eaton Nahor Yard Hill Gerald Meade Gantz Mitchell Jenkins John Anson lVIarkham Charles lfvllllillll Riley Hubert Biays Chappell Vincent Brown Collin Courtney Robert Hall Gordon Irwin Kyle Frederick lVIorgan Davenport, Jasper Cropsey Dibble Raymond Anthony Dousseau VVilliam Ginn J 1917 1918 1919 1920 Burton Howard Camp, Ph.D Harold Douglass Allen, HA. VValter Richard Talbot Charles Powell Townsend Frank Trelease Underhill Harold VVilkinson Everett Fisk Strong Frank Hopewell Underhill John Huber Underhill Frank Henry 1Venner Ja1nes Cordis Langdon Sidney lVIerritt Newhall Maurice Allen Potter Samuel Foster Uphain Hugh Coloan Jenkins Leo Julius Meyer Harold Howe Munroe Lewis Gregory Seeley 918 FJ gba ' x . , - I A .Q fl A F 'ff . 2151-:.f b ig ,f f f: 1 A www - 'lf 1 . 4 jf' . ,f ' 1 T ' Sf ' ' f ,V X49 'KM X12 XQQV X' .1-AS WFNEZEER W X PSI UPSILON X1 Chapter of Psi Upsilon Establlshed IS43 Fratres in ljacultate Caleb Thomas VV1I1Cl1GqJECl L H D WV1ll1am Edu ard lVIead Ph D Oscar Kuhns I H D ICIOV Albert Hou land Ph D Paul Holroyd Curts Ph D ' P . ' ' r. . I ', . . . -l 'c ' . , 1: . . i i lc ' , . . J ' L I - '7 , . . Karl Pomeroy Harrington, lNfI.A. 1 ' 1 A ' , , , Wlilliam John James, lNI.A. Albert lVIann, Jr., lVI.A. I l7 1 ' I 4 c 2 I 'l i 1 J- f , T L 1 C I , . L C C T 4 4 YZ LN N J 2 Lf C C iz z ' l l c c I , J g r 4 Qc I C -1 'li C 2 C I f JC 1 1. ' c 'I 7 N Clliarles Cr-th-un Ch tpin Donald Butt7 Clark lVilli11n Rf1.ms'1.y Ldmonds Henry lVI trtx n Hftrman Charles IVI L1'tlI1 Bosu ell Jr: Herbert Benson Pinnejan Wirtsoii MllI11'06 Htnnfin YVilli-tm Duran Holman Franklin lXIilton Johnson 9 98 Albert Perdm-1nd I indstrom Robert Fulton Raymond Ir. Prank Edu Lrd qtevens Ptrr Int Lewis Purner Reese I u 'he Iones Gerald Penfield Kynett C eorzge Raymond I arkin IVandell lVICIVI'1St6I' Mooneg Robert Boyd IVard Steacy Er-nest VVebster Russell Dudley Bell Richard Cissel Berry George Floyd Bicktord Howard Burdick John Bradshaw Crandell James Newbury FitzGe1'ald Frederick I-Ialsted Hahn lVIilton Spry Andrews John Randolph Belcher Robert lVIills Chapin Logan lVIorris Dayton Edward lVIatthews Jones l9l9 I 920 Arthur Frederick lVIarkthaler Harold Lewis Norton Stephen Adams Norton Earle Wfaldon Parsons Earle Franklin Richards Paul Redner IN7ebb Kenneth Crane Ivoodruff Robert lVIeredith lVIoore Arthur Rees Pughe Bertram 'William Saunders Stanley Linham Thornton Edward Horace Tomlinson Harold Gilbert Travis K L 1918 P v 1 . CHI PSI Alpha Alpha of Chi P51 Robert John Davis Albert Arnold Elsey Sherman Christie Ellis George Brigden Hulse Harold Dean Krafftt Lawrence Coflin Ames Paul Evans Burbank Howard Artlnn' Clark Earl Fairchild Connett Established 1844 1917 Frank WVilla1'd llflorrell Lawrence Bradford Neeld Nlalvern Paul VVestCott l9l8 Arthur VVillian1 Phillips H. Dart Porter f Aubrey Gerard Russell Lawrence Edwin YVillia1ns 1919 Richard Johns Keeler Charles Wlesley lliartin VVillia1n DeVVi'tt Van Pelt, Jr. 1920 Henry Parker Hallock, J r. Edgar Allen Henderson Douglas Lawrence Hutton Ellsworth Frank Lamson Ralph Tiehenor.Reeve Paul Helmer Young - V 111 L, Ya 1918 W- N xl: S- S N Qlx O f 0 Ok Liao? s 'VI .J f' ff fb. 1 is gqig J '53 Qgffd ?JN 3 K '. '25 .. 1' L , . .ff Q Xu xv- X ' e f . 8:3 s al V, 'Q' . 25 m f d f ' ff' up f V as kgqi 2. wi' f f -afx ALPHA DELTA PHI 5? 1 5 Middletown Chapter of Alpha Delta Phi Established l856 1 Prater in Facultate Walter Guyton Cady, Ph.D. P l9l7 Waldemar Luis Deetjen Francis Osborn Noble Marshall Grant Lee Charles Stewart Smith Weir Williams I9I 8 Lahman Van Hennigar Bower Clifford Bronson Lehmann Lester Ray Bradbury William Wood McCarthy William David Fenton, Jr. Lester Irving Pitt Coleridge Wells Hart ' B Herbert LeVan Richards William Arnold Shanklin, Jr. l9I9 Allen Daggett Bean Gordon Embler Scott Harry Clarke Bruner - John Wadsworth Thomas Harry Puckey Burgwin Clark Coggshall Thompson Walter Scott Buswell Waldo Urban Wagner Lyle Wayman Forman Lorenzo Dow Webber ' Everette Dunbar Marvin Walter Roberts Williams 1920 Everett Ross Clinchy Robert Bartow Gillespie Kenneth Victor Diicon I William King Parslow Louis Loder Gilbert, Jr. George Francis Peek Talbot Cole Wildman ' ' E X I f IW N SQL? v , ,Wfq f , ' 141 ' -:zdijgqg wgw m, f'z,'g'.,-fd X f - - , -f ' -'-, M 4 ll' 'Illia Q f EES ' ., , 3: fw.U M I m'WD5 EiQf5!Q:ilMH.l - N5 Af - ' , vv,v in :V 'qi ., Aff filgos I ey: cb UN DELTA KAPPA EPSILON kA Gamma Phi of Delta Kappa Epsilon 4- J - Y xi . 1 , Established IS67 Fratres in Facultate Wesley Everett Rich, M.A. Paul Burt, M.A. Eugene Shepard Clark, M.A. 1917 Augustus Moore Maxwell Gorham Bert Munson Edwin Henry Tvitman . A 1918 Fred Bingham Barrows Robert Driscoll Boyle John Leonard Palmer W Ralph Edward Peck James Edlniston Brown Alfred Dodd Frank Easton Dorian Kenneth Brevoort DuBois Howard Gallup Andrews Merrill James Campbell Ralph Oliver Collins Stuart Johnston Davies Earle Orchard Titus Howard Vincent VViddoes Charles Mirack Winchester, Howard Townsend Woolley I9l9 John Lawrence Martin James Franklin Ritchie - Graeme Thomas Smallwood ' Sidney Lewis Straley Harold Orlo Thompson , I920 Benjamin Thomas Davis Harley Bronson Dennison Eugene Barr Lequin George VVilliam Malcomson lVIalcolm Palmer Schumacher 519182 , '- ' ' 1-e ' gf: If I x. ,:yzx , !z?riz 5L Jn. A N935 ff . A -1 - f .15 LJVIW In IM, I4 , !.!,, ,.5iiF.-.i,'ffn,-,dJIfrjf'ffW1ls nl i .q,A A w i' wal 5 2 4 q if vnu: i ' .,mz',1ir, i gfi J , i sw2iaiH?l2i' I? .A, , , x,: -'ff -'Lv' W! BETA THETA PI 115 Mu Epsilon of Beta Theta P1 Established l 890 Fratres in Facultate Herbert William Conn, Ph.D. Hubert Baker Goodrich, Ph.D I9I 7 Lewis Bates Codding, Jr. George Frederick Johnson Julian Griflin Ely Kristen Kristensen James Vernon Gridley Charles Leroy Northridge I9l8 Raymond Charles Baker Garry de Neuville Hough, Jr. Paul Frederick Craig Gordon Bridge Randall Harry XMills Grinton Robert Boies Sharpe Luther Keefer Hannum, Jr. Lynn Howard Smith Aubrey Cresson Davis Hartman F Erland Myles Standish I9l9 X Joseph Truman Bray Donald Covil Gordon Chester Gordon Bridge Oscar Linden' Knipe Allan Carman Byron Dwight MacDonald Frederick Langley Clark Nelson Virgil Rorer Arthur Searles Cramer Otto Page Sharp Edgar Holmes Delamater Guy Rogers Turner Leslie VVhidden I92O' Lyndon Travis Abbot Herman David Berlew Edward Spellmeyer Boote Leon Alson Bradley Carlton Joseph Chapin Van Cott Duncan George Barnes Galloway Alfred Berton Patterson K 1 918 g +14 .h Ay . , 3 Q 4' ,. jj ? - ,IW , W ', ' - ' f ,QL WV CL. . . W 571 '5: '- ,459 'gif .- ' F3 , ,' E -' ' fll ifiufwf +221 ,if ,,, 1.3, ,,,,., fH ,,,y1 ' f W :fp vvwfa. 'N ' XL V JL. '..gg,pngf:f.f-,Y - ., 1 ffm ' 'iiiw' J ml 54, -f QT H H W ', J fi, 1 I5 ' ,,,1g1,7 .L'-'iNf1'.1 -'aw 4 'v 'fr 45,-5' ry- W, an 4 ,ff-7 we gp fi n I 'Q' A 34 5: J, Q U gf, 4, W ,, , Zi, f f :U .,lN , ML M bww , TZ? -. P V ' ' 5' 'E ' ' 1 ' il5u,o1fgQ,i 412' Qffjqjyiif' ' W fQl 1v-VW f fi L w ,,:mgw 1,,,f.fgw X , ' ,gW:',.f1.,:gg,'- M .A ,W A5 N .WN wfwqfg -' 3 1 ,wJ,,L1r5f-f.,uf, Y -,laf-...f,w' '!v33l5' ,HM - -- J: Q , f wir, 1f A .:, Wj :1.L54,g.u, a- . if g'fgpv.,1' l .. .v m ,. .V , 1' X' 57,1 b l. a 'Z' ' ' . 21 -. mar J, ' f A 391 A.: 'Env . ' '- :E1fwf'fHv1f4'4'-f 4 U, ,,.,,,,j .. ..a.-M. r, r J M ,..' W, I ,T 14, ,nv 0 ' - --'-'ri . . '-- Q 'f' , Mn, . A I COMMONSQ CLUB ,Amin Wesleyan Chapter of Commons Club Established I 899 Fratres in Facultate Frank VValter Nicolson, M.A. g William Arthur Heidel, Ph.D. Ra.ymond Dodge, Ph.D. Cecil Albro Allen Frederick John Andrews Walter David Briggs Everett Avery Churchill Harold Remond Coleman Karl Warren Curtis Norman Lambert Davidson Maurice Millett Edwards Alexander Wilson Greer 1917 Robert Herndon Fife, Jr., Ph D Edgar Fauver, lVI.D. Carey Herbert Conley, M.A. Robert lVIoffat Henry Samuel Prentice Hopley Ralph Morgan Lewis Sayre Paul Maddock Raymond Lewis lVIartin Ernest Ralph Perkins Carl Leo Stearns Nlehran Kafafian Thomson Carl Laurence Uniaeke Truman Hollis 'Woodward Alan Chichester Abeel Edwin Carl Anderson Paul Adams Bassett Benjamin Hezekiah Bissell Robert Weldon Brooks Foster Lewis Burgess John Elmer Cavelti LeGrand Waldorf Curtis Lynwood King Elmore Bertram Charles Froidevaux l9l8 Emanuel Lawrence Gebauer Theodore James Grippen Robert Darius Guinn Edwin Roy Holden Wilson Davis Langley Donald Cooper Lewis lVIorgan Noulton Lewis Harold Edgar McGrath VVilliam Arthur lVIoore Harold Sigfrid Sanstrom ' Kenneth Porter Stevens 19182 , , ms 6 U 1919 Paul Livingston Avery Earl Elmer Lasher Henry Arnold Bennett Nils Carl Nlalmquist Clifford Francis Dodge VValter Agnew lVIor1'is Leonard Beeman Fuller Q hlalcolm VVilbur hloss VVilliam Hendry James Stanley Howie Arthur Henry Illing Eugene Howard J effrey Harold Crawford Chapman Howard Edward Green Boyd Raymond Greenwalt Earl Wesley Hildreth Edward Roland Hill William Norbert Hill Benjamin Franklin Holme John Stackhouse Piper Austin Leonard Prynn Eric Verner Sandin Earle Templer Somerville Ernest Belden Wlarriner l 920 Henry Wlest Jacobs ' David Spergin .Jenkins Lincoln Hammell Lippine J iro Motokawa Lucious James Parks VVilliam Tenney Rumsey Linus Ingalls Snyder O 519182 4, Y ? ix j -Q? lil i Raul!!-'Q XX X N 15 QA QA? Sw X Q QS w of L3 kiw- 31, .SAV Au Q-rj DELTA TAU DELTA J4 S- ,B Y Gamma Zeta of Delta Tau Delta Established I 902 Frater in Facultate Henry Merritt Wriston, M.A. Horace Strow Baldwin Frank Willard Johnson Paul Douglas Compton Enoch Doble Fuller Ragnar Hanson Harold George Harman Ralph Edward Jones Ralph Vernet Farrel Cuthbert Charles Gabel Herbert Rhey Hannan Stephen William Beekman VVilliam True Cass Frank Edward Conlin I , I9l 7 John Theodore Plate George Reuben Potter John Russell Studwell l9l8 Charles lVIcDonald ' Neil Macdonald, Jr. Harvey Zenos Nourse Abram Butler Pratt Sidney Attilio Thompson 1919 . ' Stewart Benjamin Knapp Harry Emanuel Lawson Julian Reuben Norris l92O H Roger Franklin Holmes Harold Lawrence Lonsdal A Paul Wesley Sherman Dwight Elliott Stagg E 6 1918 .v '3 1 K ' -A V Q iff. 1 gf Qin! , yQ51Q!F' AY Q1 .f:21gw'91l W . ly 11 Midi gilt v 11Mg !imu , f ,eff J ' H'i ' 3 Fx ' 'A Ka 1 W ' 1 ' Z'21I'K! f j ,vf1 hiillg L mrinfif' 'life' W me 1391? '!'Jf3i HfffiE1 x fggxbl 203 ALPHA CHI RHO 0 lt! Phi Gamma of Alpha Chi Rho Emanuel Louis Chiesa Frank Austin Hamilton ' Alfred Melville Cleave Bennett Everett Buell Blake William Whitman Deacon Wendell Jay Dunstan Established I 91 I L 191 7 VVarren Irving Keith Francis Wilcox Potter Harry Morgan Tiebout l9I8 ' F Arthur Nisbett Eagles, Jr. Harry Ludwig Leurich Elliott Colby Logan Percy Couch Rogers V l9I9 DeWitt Clair Baldwin '17 William Drum Gould Frank Cyril Cooper Albert Ernst Nuelsen Gordon Jasper Gale John Halifax Plumb George Renwick Raynor ' l920 Charles Stuart Hedden Woolsey Rogers Hopkins Theron Loudon Kelley George Carter Kellom John Henry Mahler, J r. Henry Spangler Rich, Jr. James David Stewart Kenneth Stewart Thompson 1918 2 l X If-, 'f' QW- 'Wa 35455 H 51, 4 k 1 lr 3 f , fu M4 foo 5. My iffy, , , J, I, li! M 4:31-' . Q fp ww Zi 3'5 1 .JE 'Q OMEGA PHI , LXQYQ C .f v X, N Hubert Edwin Beckwith Alfred Paul Behrman Howard French Bigelow Olin Winthrop Blackett Paul Frederick Eckstorm Frank Douglas Harris Albert Asa Houck Harry Edwin Lindsey Sydney VVatson Blackett Gerald Baldwin Bliss Benjamin VVoodhull Davis Ulysses Simpson Grant Russell Hobson Anderson Herbert Eli Arnold Nelson Sylvester Bigelow Ronald Scott Gibbons Qmega Phi Established l 91 3 l9I7 I9l8 1919 I920 Frank Marshall Clark Oscar Francis Haffner Frederick Thompson Lain Matias Perez y Ponce Ivan Maurice Perkins Elton Robert Skilton Joseph Roland Smith Clifford Keith Wilbur Howard Willis Lindsey Carleton Southwick Spear Waldo Whipple Spear Edwin Stanley Taylor Raymond Hamilton Goodale Lindsey Brooks Marvin George Arthur Small Roger Clarke Stimson ' Edward .Austin Warren, J r. 3 iii? 2 X ,gawk Phi Beta Kappa Gamma of Connecticut Q . Cfhcers Caleb Thomas Winchester, L.H.D. . . Morris Barker Crawford, M.A. . . Frank Walter Nicolson, M.A. . John E. Loveland, M.D. . . 1917 Emanuel Louis Chiesa Frank Marshall Clark Sayre Paul Maddoek Raymond Lewis Martin George Reuben Potter Carl Leo Stearns . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer 519182 x 4.,..,. X as A X 44, .1 mm. 5 ' wen E an T4 ,f 4, ,, W 0' 455' QA? AW , V 35,51a:5a ,. ,V w:zf3 x: ,...:, is ' - X , ,rig 3- A. . , LJ 1:12 L, '. ' ' 4 2151322 1-44fjw: W ,N - -' '53 3'-ii? : Zi1AsQfi'1' V ' 2 J 'ff' , U , ' 14441 Delta .Sigma Rho Wesleyan Chapter Officers Mehran Kafafian Thompson, 1917 . . Byron Dwight MacDongald, 1919 . . 1917 Robert Moffat Henry Mehran Kafaian Thompson 1919 Clifford Francis Dodge Byron Dwight MacDonald Lynn James Radcliie Presideni Secretary 1918 CLASS SOCIETIES SKULL AND SERPENT K 1 'Wi Skull and Serpent Established 1865 I9I7 Carl Leslie Eaton Marshall Grant Lee ' Charles Stewart' Smith F rank. Edward Stevens John Russell Studwell Malvern Paul Westcott Robert Boyd Ward R Walter Richard Talbot C ' 1918 ' MYSTICAL SEVEN Ya 1918 Mystical Seven Established I88Z I9I7 Charles Graham Chapin Waldemar Luis Deetjen ' Augustus Moore Maxwell John Allen Stephens, Jr. Farrant Lewis Turner Frank Trelease Underhill Harold Wilkinson ' .....-- ,C 'Q CORPSE AND COFFIN Ks 19182 Corpse and Coffin Established l872 I9I8 Charles Martin Boswell, Jr. Robert Driscoll Boyle Harold George Harman Frank Milton Johnson V William Wood McCarthy A Ralph Edward Peek Lester Irving Pitt John Huber Underhill U Howard Vincent Widdoes . Clifford Keith Wilbur Lawrence Edwin Williams Harold Townsend Woolley ,. SIGMA TAU 3 Sigma Tau Established 1896 1918 Lahman Van Hennigar Bower James Aylward Develin, Jr. Willialn David Fenton, Jr. Ragnar Hanson Ralph Edward Jones Harold Dean Krafft Gerald Penfleld Kynett John Anson lVIarkham Benedictus Emil Niese Harvey Zenos Nourse 1 Herbert LeVan Richards Aubrey Gerard Russell William Arnold Shanklin, Jr. if 519182 LIIT lil-II4E'55 156 I Robert Moffat Henry, 1917 . George Reuben Potter, 1917 , Joseph Vincent Dempsey, 1918 Prof. Karl P. Harrington Prof. Frank W. Nicolson Prof. WVilliam A. Heidel Emanuel L. Chiesa Frank R. Custard Philip A. Dales Norman L. Davidson Benjamin H. Bissell Joseph V. Dempsey John G. Glenn Classical Club ' Officers Members Faculty Students 191 7 William R. Edmonds 'Robert M. Henry I9l8 Mitchell Jenkins Russell T. Purnell 1919 Albert E. Nuelsen C . . . President . . V ice- President S ecretary-Treasurer Prof. Joseph W. Hewitt ' Dr. Edgar Fauver Prof. Edgar S. Brightman Samuel P. Hopley Francis O. Noble John T. Plate George R. Potter Robert B. Sharpe Kenneth P. Stevens Everett F. Strong Y 191 5,55 KQEX If I 1 1 Wesltgate Club l Officers Lawrence Bradford Neeld, 1917 . . . . . . President John Russell Studwell, 1917 . V . . . . Vice-President Naho1'Yard Hill, 1917 ..... . Secretary-Treasurer Members Faculty Prof. William J. James Mr. Wesley E. Rich Prof. Charles A. Tuttle Mr. Henry M. Wriston Prof. George M. Dutcher Mr. Paul Burt . Students 191 7 Hubert F.. Beckwith . Harold R. Coleman Albert A. Elsey Frank A. Hamilton John R. Studwell Nahor Y. Hill P Frank W. Johnson Frank W. Morrell Lawrence B. Neeld 1918s V Short Story Club , Officers George Reuben Potter, 1917 .... . Preszflent George Frederick Johnson, 1917 . . . Secretary Karl Warren Curtis, 1917 .... . l'rcas11rer Members Faculty Prof. Carey I-I. Conley Students 1917 Horace S. Baldwin Robert M. Henry Walter D. Briggs George F. Johnson Karl XV. Curtis . Frederic-k T. Laing George R. Potter l9l 8 Fred B. Barrows ' Frank D. Harris Paul F. Craig Robert B. Sharpe 1919 Frank E. Dorian VValdo U. Wagner ,iz Radio Club Officers Karl Skillman Van Dyke, 1916 . . Foster Lewis Burgess, 1918 Dduin Carl Anderson, 1918 Edwin C. Anderson Paul A. Bassett Foster L. Burgess Theodore J. Grippen Paul L. Avery Richard C. Berry Nils C. Malmquist Members Faculty Prof. Morris B. Crawford Prof. VValter Cady Students 1918 Clifford' K. Wilbur 1919 . . PTE61llC nt . Vice- Presulenf Secretary- Treasurer William D. Holman Morgan N. Lewis Wandell M. Mooney Gordon B. Randall Julian R. Norris Harold L. Norton Eric V. Sandin K ' S2132 lug 1 Q59 g, l 5 ,L I gl I ,' i Nahor Yard Hill, 1917 l Donald B. Clark Nahor Y. Hill Paul F. Craig William D. Fenton. Frank E. Dorian Liberl Arts Club 4 Officers Earle Orchard Titus, 1918 Frank Douglas Harris, 1918 . . . Members Faculty at Prof. George M. Dutcher Prof. Albert Mann, Jr. ' Students 191 7 C. Powell Townsend 1918 - Jr. Earle O.. Titus 1919 '- 2 . . President . Vice- President S ecrctary- Treasurer Gorham B. Munson Francis O. Noble Herbert B. Finnegan Frank D. Harris CuthbertlC.fGabe1 K- SML? K-- 1918L ,gwg .f L - Atwater Club Ofhcers ' Frank Marshall Clark, 1917 . . . . . President Francis Wilbur Pettengill, 1917 . . . . Vice-President Raymond Charles Baker, 1918 . . . . . Secretary John Elmer Cavelt.i,f1918 .... . Treasufrer Members Faculty Prof. Charles R. Hoover Prof. Moses L. Crossley ' Mr. Lawrence L. Steele ' Students 1917 Frank M. Clark Albert F. Lindstrom William R. Edmunds Francis W. Pettengill ' Earle E. Richardson I9l 8 Raymond C. Baker J. 'Elmer Cavelti Robert WV. Brooks Paul F. Eckstorm John Burisch Ivan M. Perkins , Howard V. Widdoes 'W l W esleyan Christian Association Hermann Arthur Lum . . l .... General Secretary I Officers x Frank Edward Stevens, 1917 . . . . , President Edwin Henry Witiiian, 1917 . . . Vice-President Kristen Kristensen, 91917 . . Secretary-Treasurer Committee Chairmen Walter R. Talbot, 1917 ...... . Boys, Worlc 'R Ralph E. Peck, 1918 . . .... . Deputations l John H. Underhill, 1918 . . . . Meetings Hubert E. Beckwith, 1917 . . Community Service Harry E. Lawson, 1919 . . . . Social Lahman V. Bower, 1918 . . New Student Horace S. Baldwin, 1917 . . Bible Study George R. Larkin, 1918 . Mission Study X x Y E X S E X S E N S li - 5 :hx A-f gi 9 f?,,fT'k- i ' XB msg' lg f f., -. x lf-li - X ,us 2 ggi EEL ' .t 5 xx M' 5 . T -, ' EY SXX? l i ,gig if E 1 jg 9 Lf Egg 'fs f J - ' MRS sfx bg 54 '2 iff Q E bb' , 'Z' A, L11 fi 5 ff 4: L .. -.fffffvfg ? 3? ff 4-2 2 j Lafzfiga, - - . sg -Ei-12 - lf f A0:Ill'FSE4 ' 515541111 :Ari-:fs ' 2 ef f..:mm:M: 1 NW MW ,TF ..,,....... A ggi, ,, ,Q s . 52 .j r Q4 Im , A.4,::a- 6 m g ily: Athletics A 167 Wesleyan University Athletic Council Qflicers R. W. Rice, 1908 ...... . . President Augustus M. Maxwell, 1917 . . Vice-President Dr. Edgar Fauver .... . . Secretary Prof. Leroy A. Howland, 1900 .... . Treasurer Alumni Members H. B. Shonk, 1903 A. K. Dearborn, 1906 R. VV. Rice, 1908 Faculty Members Prof. Frank W. Nicolson Dr. Edgar Fauver Prof. Leroy A. Howland, 1900 Undergraduate Members Carl L. Eaton, 1917 Augustus lVI. Maxwell. 1917 Frank T. Underhill, 1917 VARSITY CAPTAINS K Wearers of the W Football 169 Carl L Eaton 1917 VValterR Talbot 1917 Harold Wllklnson 1911 1ValterP Sutter 1918 Cl1Hord K Wilbur 1918 HaroldT VVoolley 1918 if I as l ' ' VValde1nar L.'Deetjen, 1917 Y Ralph E. Peck, 1918 ' - 4 a I 4 - 9 , , A I . , Charles lVI. Boswell, Jr., 1918 Bertram C. Froidevaux, 1918 Harold G. Harman 1918 Franklin M. Johnson, 1918 James E Brown, 1919 Paul R. Webb, 1919 L. Dow VVebber, 1919 F. T. Underhill, 1917 William W. McCarthy, 1918 Charles G. Chapin, 1917 YVarren I. Keith, 1917 lVI. Paul VVestcott, 1917 Harold Wilkinson, 1917 Harold G. Harman, 1918 Charles G. Chapin, 1917 BI. Paul VVestcott, 1917 Franklin M. Johnson, 1918 , Howard V. VViddoes, 1918 Basketball U Baseball - Lahman V. Bowe Hubert E. Beckwith, 1917 Lewis B. Codding, Jr., 1917 VValdemar L. Deetjen, 1917 Francis VV. Potter, 1917 George R. Potter, 1917 Harry M. Grinton, 1918 Farrant L. Turner, 1917 4 Fred B. Barrows, 1918 Lahman V. Bower, 1918 Gerald P. Kynett, 1918 Track Lester 1. Pitt, 1918 H. LeVan Richards, 1918 Richard J. Keeler, 1919 Farrant L. Turner, 1917 Robert D. Boyle, 1918 Clifford K. eWilbur, 1918, Harry E. Lawson, 1919 ' Paul R. Webb, 1919 Augustus M. lVIaxwell, 1917 r,19l8 Harold D. Kralft, 1918 Lawrence E. VVilliams, 1918 Richard J. Keeler, 1919 Oscar L. Knipe, 1919 Carl L. Eaton, 1917 Coleridge W. Hart, 1918 Swimming William VV. McCarthy, 1918 Sidney A. Thompson, 1918 Walter S. Buswell, 1919 Marshall' G. Lee, 1917 1 Ragnar Hanson, 1918 , Tennis Ralph E. Jones, 1918 ' ..- C he 1918 V W LL... 4. ..am. gm? FGOTBA LL. nj EL ,CL il TY QQ FQ H5 UN 1Jig7Kf'3 EWQW M55 CTQ4XV?i1 ,REQ7 gnj ff' , Sw ,X SPX f'QNy f GfIwfQZXiKK7u0Tvfzifg61f 11z QQ W E5 HE 'Z' 'iff '33 1792 Wesleyan University Football Association Officers VVilliam'W. McCarthy, 1918 . . . . . . Manager James N. FitzGerald, 1919 . . , Assistant Manager Charles lVI. Boswell, Jr., 1918 . . . . Captain Dan C. Kenan, 1915 . i. . . Head Coach Prof. Robert H. Fife, Jr ........ Faculty Advisor 4 Varsity Team of 1916 Waldemar L. Deetjen, 1917, Right Halfback, Captain Charles M. Boswell, Jr., 1918, Right End Ralph E. Peck, 1918, Left End James E. Brown, 1919, Right Tackle Paul R. Webb, 1919, Quarterback Walter R. Talbot, 1917 Harold G. Harman, 1918, Right Guard Left Halfback Franklin M. Johnson, 1918, Center Clifford K. Wilbur, 1918, Fullback Bertram C. Froidevaux, 1918, Left Guard Carl L. Eaton, 1917, Center Harold T. Woolley, 1918, Left Tackle Walter F. Sutter, 1918, Guard Lorenzo D. Webber, 1919, End 1 i1918g W ,EXW A Review of the l9l6 Football Season - AX. I 173 CAPTAIN DEETJEN ITH one of the fastest back- Helds in the East, coupled, however, with a rather weak line, Wesleyan's football team finished one of the best seasons of recent years. Four games were won, one lost, and two tied, making a total of ninety-three points against the opponents, thirty-six. The one blot on the season's record was the defeat at the hands of Williams, who Hnally overcame the Red and Black '7 to 0 after a closely fought contest. This game was marked by splendid de- fensive work on both sides. The win- ning score was registered by half-back lVIcLean, who miraculously eluded the whole Wesleyan team on a seventy X X11' Kenan, assistant coach last season under Eustis, took charge this year and great credit is due to him for his resourcefulness, strategy, and inspiring leadership. At the opening of the season he was faced by the loss of four veteran linemen, two ends, and ive backfleld men. Added to these han- dicaps, there was doubt as to the return to college of Captain Deetjen. Upon the news of Deetjen's decision to return, however, hopes began to rise and a wonderful backfield was soon formed consisting of Deetjen, Harman, and Webb with Wilbur or 'Richards at fullback. Boswell, Peck, and Webber proved to be very efficient ends. Eaton and John- son played center, and the new line consisting of yard run back of a punt. COACH KENAN F XD il. -C gpg'-SN-45,2 l 1741 Talbot. Froidevaux, Sutter, Woolley, and Brown improved greatly during the season. The first game was played on September thirtieth against the Con- necticut Agricultural College which resulted in a Wesleyan victory 7 to 0. The team play was rather ragged but showed its strength at times. The next opponent was the heavy Rhode Island State team who had held the strong Brown eleven 18 to 0, This hard-fought game resulted in a 3 to 3 tie, Harman scoring a Held goal. In this game Wesleyan's weak offence was in evidence when twice the Blue and Whiteis goal was threatened and yet, the team was un- able to score. October seventh saw Bowdoin's veteran eleven as our opponent, the team meeting VVesleyan directly following a victory over Amherst. This game played before a large crowd was one full of thrills. With Bowdoin ahead 19 to 6 and with eight minutes to play, MANAGERELECT McCARTHY e B xiewg f the team came back and tied the game 19 to 19 The backiield scored many gains and the line held gamely against one which greatly outweigh ed them Accompanied by a crowd of loyal support- ers, the team defeated New York University scoring two touchdowns in the last half. During this game the Red and Black defence held their opponent twice within their ten yard lines. Deet- jen and Peck starred for Wesleyan on this occasion. The next week the offensive strength of the backiield conquered the famous Amherst jinx 10 to 7 and thus compensated for last year's unfor- tunate defeat. The offensive and defensive work of Harman and Deetjen was worthy of the highest praise. The following week two hundred WVesleyan rooters on a special train journeyed to Williamstown where the team met defeat only after a hard- fought contest. In the final game at New York with Columbia, Wesleyan defeated -the strongest team put on the field during the season by the Blue and White, 40 to 0, and thus wiped out last yearls 18 to 0 defeat. Deetjen's brilliant playing in this game has caused his name to be mentioned among the All-American choices. The greatest accomplishment of the football, season, however, was the renewal of the real Wesleyan spirit which pre- dominated in every game, and the college body support of the team was wonderful. Next Fall Captain-elect Boswell will greatly miss Deetjen in the backfield and Talbot and Eaton on the line, but with a strong nucleus left, together with material from an undefeated Freshman team, the a ' 11917 football prospects at present are CAPTAIN-ELECT BOSTVELL Very bright. , ' T X' .u , 4' I ' .. V . - 17 l r 7 - . H 19183, 176 Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Football Games of l9l6 c 7 3 19 14 10 0 40 Connecticut Agricultural College 0 Rhode Island State 3 Bowdoin 19 New York University 0 Amherst 7 Williams 7 Columbia 0 The I9I 7 Football Schedule September Q9 October 6 October 13 October Q0 October 927 November 3 November 10 November 17 Connecticut Agricultural College Rhode Island State Stevens, Institute New York University Amherst Williams Bowdoin Columbia At Middletown At Middletown At Middletown At New York At Amherst C , At Middletown At Brunswick At New York -y-M L , Y I .ill 9 Bi f 36 9 f mi ., Q 9 as NWN W W X W R K eh I I ,L UWM' X? fr hhrl 1 ,,,, A 0 5 Q' JI N Xi 7 I N x Mjmf, 7 S 4 ,. I 5-I YJ N y N Nx X f I X MW x l nil! 'Q L , 11 W2 1 A A PQ ' - ,QC 'l X ' 'W J N , Q75 , N l W ll Wesleyan University Basketball Association Officers Farrant L. Turner, 1917 ......... Manager l Robert D. Boyle, 1918 . . . Assistant M anager Harold G. Harman, 1918 . . . . Captain , Dan C. Kenan, 1915 . . . . . . Head Coach , Prof. William J. James ,....... Faculty Advisor Varsity Team of l9l 7 Harold G. Harman, 1918, Left Forward, Captain K Richard J. Keeler, 1919, Charles G. Chapin, 1919, Right Forward . Left Guard Warren I. Keith, 1917, Center Lester I. Pitt, 1918, Right Guard Substitutes Waldemar L. Deetjen, 1917 Robert M. Chapin, 1920 John T. Plate, 1917 Van C. Duncan, 1920 M. Paul Westcott, 1917 Albert B. Patterson, 1920 Aubrey C. D. Hartman, 1918 Malcolm P. Schumacher, 1920 Arthur F. Markthaler, 1919 Edward H. Tomlinson, 1920 1- 9 S 7 X . 2 1918 5 179 Review of the l9I 7 Basketball Season The basketball team again under the leadership of Captain Harman, and with Dan Kenan, 1915 as coach, demonstrated some of the best Hghting spirit and snappy playing that has been produced for several years, and provided some of the most thrilling games ever played on the Fayerweather floor. With Dartmouth, Union, Williams, and Amherst even breaks resulted and by defeating the strong Union team Q0 to 19 at Schenectady the season was brought to a spectacular close. The first game on December 16, with the Connecticut Agricultural Col- Y lege was an easy victory and Wesleyan, showing good form, won by a short pass- ing game 38 to Q1. After the Christmas recess the Red and Black met Dartmouth in the first important game of the season and by winning Q41 to 18 in a hard-fought' game revenged the Dartmouth' victory of the previous year. On January 8, Wesleyan won the third game of the season with New Hampshire State QQ to 11 in a game characterized by close guarding. The first defeat of the season was at the hands of Amherst who won by QQ to Q1 in an overtime game, Knauth of Amherst being the particular star. Wesleyan put up a fast, aggressive game, but lost by being weak in foul shooting, On February 5, Wesleyan played the first game out of town and lost 37 to 18 against Dartmouth. Colgate then took a rough game from Wesleyan, winning 30 to 13 by superior team work. Wesleyan's playing in this game was very poor and a tendency to long shots weakened the scoring ability. CAPTAIN HARMAN Ci' K - 1918 'Q J score of 23 to 19 In this game Wesleyan guarded well but their opponents were heavier faster and more accurate at shooting basl ets WVesleyan evened up the series with Xmherst by winning the second game 23 to 17. Tomlinson s accurate floor shooting, with Keith s fouls, were responsible for this victory. On February 17, Union Won a slow game 26 to 17, the team being decidedly off form. The best home game was with VVilliams o11 February 21, in which VVesleyan Won 25 to 23. Throughout the game VVesleyan staged a sensa- tional uphill fight against their strong Purple opponents. Williams led 14 to 12 at the end of the Hrst half but this was overcome, and in the last two minutes of play Captain Harman's basket from a brilliant dribble down the floor broke the tie and clinched the victory for Wfesleyan. In this game Captain Harman and Keith shared the honors. Springfield College, with a long string of victories, found Wesleyan easy and won 114 to 24. This team was the best to face VVesleyan on the home floor during the season and the Red and Black were unable to solve their swift passing. Williams broke the long string of Wesleyan victories by winning their first game since 1910, at VVilliamstown, by the score of 27 to 11. The playing of the team in this contest was listless. iso V. I , New York University with a veteran team tool: a very exciting game by the D , . , c I ' Q . . I. t A . . h i p . , . U . . , 2 1918 L5 K Playing one of the hardest games of the season against a heavier and more experienced team, VVesleyan went down to defeat at New Haven, Yale winning the contest 48 to 29. Olsen excelled for Yale While Harman and Pitt played best for Wfesleyan. In this game Pitt held Kinney, one of the fastest collegiate for- wards in the country to one basket and broke up many of the opponent's passes' In the closing game of the season on Marcli 10, Wesleyan took the game at Schenectady against Union by the close score of 20 to 19. Chapin and Keith will be lost by gradua- tion, but with Pitt, Keeler, and Tomlinson left under the leadership of Captain-elect Harman, the prospects for next year seem bright. - Basketball Games of 181 'f5T '7f'f7f' ' ' .- 'f - 1 A A :1a,.,:'.1-1' l ' '-', ' , :rg-l gg- .,,jf'Q...1- . I -:Z1 1, '. :Q-. 5 ' .- '1'1'- -. 5 VV .- - gi .V .zv i ' ja: A , ' ' gi g .7 ' 1. 5 :H 7 , ,iii i ' g m? , --.ggi-T gg 1 , MANAGER TURNER 1917 Wesleyan 38 Connecticut Aggies Q1 Wesleyan 241 Dartmouth 1 8 Wesleyan QQ New Hampshire State 11 Wesleyan Q1 R Amherst Q2 Wesleyan 18 Dartmouth ' 37 VVesleyan 13 Colgate 30 Wesleyan 19 N. Y. U. Q3 Wesleyan Q3 Amherst 17 VVesleyan 17 Union Q6 Wesleyan 25 Wfilliams 23 Wfesleyan 24- . Springfield 441 Wesleyan 1 1 Wlilliams Q7 Wesleyan Q9 Yale 48 Wfesleyan Q0 Union 19 ,Q J X 2 L 5 gm? A SHE LL Q 1 f as ax nn ' Q X X ' m X QM - Q W XX I Jn PHNWNML 1' lultl ih, '. K Q H , ,, ' X n 7 .. 114- ' 4 7' XX ,W Q .. , 4 A ww SE: fgfwff. . J, -i , ,..-..+if '-1 uw AP f . h I G ' J -.lww Wesleyan University Baseball Association Officers Augustus lVI. Nlaxwell, 1917 . . . . . Manage?- lahman V. Bower, 1918 . . As.9i.sl'a'mf Managei' Charles G. Chapin, 1917 . . . . Captain Dan C. Kenan, 1915 . .... . Head Coach Dr. Edgar Fauver . .4 ...... Faculty Advisor Varsity Team of l9l6 Edward L. Nlarkthaler, 1916-, First Base, Captain. Charles XV. Seeholzer, 1916. Pitcher George YV. Beeman, 1916, Third Base lVI. Paul VVestcott, 1917, Pitcher Harry E. Lawson, 1919, Short Stop Charles G. Chapin, 1917, Catcher Clifford K. 'Wilbur, 1918, Left Field Howard V. VViddoes, 1918, Catcher Franklin lVI. Johnson, 1918, Right Field Adolph F. Becker, Jr., 1918, George E. Stookey. 1916, Second Base Center Field Paul R. Webb, 1919, Center Field 3918.2 Review of the l9l 6 Baseball Season S only two members of the 1915 team ation the prospects for a successful season last year seemed extremely bright, es- pecially in View of the experienced battery ma- terial available. A heavy blow was given, how- ever, when Captain-elect Lanning was declared ineligible. Markthaler, at first base, was elected Captain, and practice was begun in the cage un- der Coaches Fauver and Kenan. An auspicious start was made when the strong Bowdoin team was defeated 3 to 1, and the next four games were easy victories. Dur- ing the latter part of the season, however, the team played very erratic ball and lost many contests through loose playing in a single inning. This was especially true of the Columbia game in New York, and the Amherst series. In the first Columbia game, a su- perb pitchers' battle between Westcott and Beck resulted, Westcott striking out nine men and allowing only three hits. Errors in one inning cost the game, however, by a Q to 1 score. In the home contest with Amherst, the remarkable feat of scoring six runs without a hit was performed by the visitors in the first inning, so wild was the playing of the Wesleyan infield. In the second Amherst game, the in- field blew,' again in much the same fashion. Wesleyan was leading 5 to 1 in the ninth inning, U Kenan and Stanley, WV6l'6 lost by gradu- E CAPTAIN MARKTHALER when Amherst scored enough runs to win the game 6 to 5. The annual contest with Williams was also lost 6 to 1. That the team could play good ball was demonstrated on their Boston trip, when they beat the fast Boston College team 12 to 6. But although victories were registered over Bowdoin, Stevens, Institute, and other teams of MANAGER MAXWELL is 'T 1918 E 186 N lx' 5 fi like calibre, it was deplorable that Wesleyan was forced to defeat by Am- . herst, Williains, Dartmouth, and Columbia. The record in games for the season stands seven won and nine lost. There were few men on the team that played consistently during the season, and among these few, Westcott, handicapped by an injured knee, pitched good ball, and deserves individual praise. Beeman completed his fourth season at third base in creditable style, and good work was also done by Chapin, Lawson, and Captain Markthaler. The team hit fairly well, as shown by their batting record, second only to Tufts among college averages. Markthaler, Beeman, Chapin, Stookey, and Lawson all hit over three hundred. The Helding, however, was very mediocre and it was this fault that made the playing of the team so un- certain. The record of the season is rather difficult to account for with the material which was avail- able. This year, under the leadership of Captain Chapin better things are hoped for, and every effort will be made for a winning season. l l CAPTAIN-ELECT CHAPIN I T 19186 l Baseball Games of l9l 6 l l Wesleyan Bowdoin Wesleyan Connecticut Agricultural College Wesleyan Worcester Polytechnic Institute Wesleyan Connecticut Agricultural College Wesleyan Stevens Institute H Wesleyan Amherst ' ' Wesleyan Connecticut Agricultural College l fl Wesleyan Columbia ' B Wesleyan Dartmouth Wesleyan Boston College Q Wesleyan Dartmouth Wesleyan Amherst ' Wesleyan Union Wesleyan Williams Wesleyan Boston College Wesleyan Columbia ,E K A 1918 J 1 5 188 April April April April April April May May lVIay May lVIay May May May May May June The l9I 7 Baseball Season Connecticut Agricultural College Bowdoin New York University Hamilton Middlebury Amherst 'Williams Columbia Dartmouth Colgate Massachuse Dartmouth Amherst Lafayette Colby Springfield tts Agricultural College Leland Stanford University At Nliddletown At Middletown At lVIiddletown At Middletown At Middletown At Middletown At Middletown At New York At Middletown At Middletown At Middletown At Hanover At Amherst At Middletown At Nliddletown At lVIiddletown At Middletown 19186 RACK 'N x I 1 xx, I, I X ' A X 1!bmsr!Av1GAnofLL 1 V , V , .. . . , K 5 ' U lf? 13, Q ld ? I -Z J l I W esleyan University Track Association Ofncers Carl ,L. Eaton, 1917 ..... . . . lllanugdr Coleridge YV. Hart, 1918 . . 416'-Si8fCL7l1f'IMHTLUQGI' Lawrence E. Williams, 1918 . . . Captain, W'illia,m B. Hunter . . . Head Coach Prof. Frank VV. Nicolson Faculty Aflzrisor K 1918L -.. fx g 1 ll Varsity Team of l 91 6 Francis W. Potter, 1917, Captain George M. Craig, 1916 Harold D. Krafftt, 1918 Lewis B. Codding, Jr,, 1917 Alvin H. Treadwell, 1918 George R. Potter, 1917 Lawrence E. Williams, 1918 Harry M. Grinton, 1918 Richard J. Keeler, 1919 Oscar L. Knipe, 1919 Track Meets of I 9I 6 Wesleyan 63 Colgate 63 Wesleyan 57 Q-3 WVilliarns 68 1-3 CIW Review of the l9l6 Track Season HE 1916 track season was marked by the presence on the team of individual stars but insufficient number of men capable of securing second and third places. Craig was the only consistent scorer in the field events Where the usual Weakness prevented added tallies for Wes- , leyan. At the University of Penn- sylvania Relays in April, Wil- liams, 1918, finished second in the 4140 hurdles event, beating Tren- holm of Dartmouth and losing by only 2-5 of a second to Burke of Wisconsin. Colgate offered the most ex- citing and, in some respects, the most satisfactory meet of the sea- son. The meet took place on Andrus Field on May sixth before the Junior Week guests and re- sulted in a tie score of 63-63. Although no records were broken, Grinton saved the day for WVes- , I, l .,,,,'A- V. Z CAPTAIN WILLIAMS leyan by tying in the high jump, only three- fourths of an inch short of the Wesleyan record. Captain Potter won the mile in fast time and Wil- liams, 1918, starred in the hurdles. V Wesleyanas superiority in the track events gave a good lead, but fr this was lost in the field events, and a tie was the I result. ' The greatest disappointment of the year was the defeat at Williamstown on May thirteenth, in the last dual meet of the season by the score of 68 and 1-3 to 57 and 2-3. Craig Was the indi- MANAGER EATON ,l f ' c '1918L , 192 vidual star of the meet, winning the three weight events. In the hurdles WVilliams, 1918, once more added ten points for the Red and Black score. Captain Potter won Hrst place in a very close mile but in the 880 was forced to yield to his team mate, Codding. G. R. Potter did good work in the pole vault and high jump. As a matter of fact, Wesleyan scored eight first places in this meet but the inability to take enough seconds and thirds cost us the victory. - The last event of the season was the New England Intercollegiates, held at Springfield on May twentieth which was won by Dartmouth for the fifth consecutive time. Four records of the Association were broken which made the meet noteworthy. Williams, 1918, was .the only point winner for Wesleyan. He 'finished third, close on the heels of Savage and French, and his achievements in the meet were very creditable. With the return again of Coach Hunter the prospects for the Spring meets with New York Uni- versity and Williams seem bright, although it will be a problem to find a man to fill Craig's place in the weights. The Wesleyan relay team has defeated the relay team of New York University at the Naval Militia Meet in Hartford on February twenty-first of this year which argues well for a successful season. The I9l7 Track Schedule April Q7-28 Penn Relays At Philadelphia May 5 New York University At New York May 1Q Williams At lVIiddletown Nlay 18-19 N. E. Inter-Collegiates At Boston QS , 1918 I S IMMING N ' ' X7 ' N, Ui V N ,,,f 1 0,00 ' A ii I 019 If , -'XM A-5 X I A , A 0 ' DELL acunlnrfe Wesleyan University Swimming Association' Officers Marshall G. Lee, 1917 . . . . . . . Wlanager Rzignzu' Hanson, 1918 . . Amistavct M imager Farrant L. Turner, 1917 . . . . Captain Dr. Edgar Fauver . . Faculty Advisor 1117? Nlmk A .Q G71 - 194 ! i E 1 Pl Varsity Team of I9I7 . Farrant L. Turner, 1917, Captain Julian G. Ely, 1917 Fred B. Barrows, 1918 Lahman V. Bower, 1918 Arthur N. Eagles, Jr., 1918 Gerald P. Kynett, 1918 ,1-1 Willia1n W. McCarthy, 1918 Sidney A. Thompson, 1918 Walter S. Buswell, 1919 Frederic H. Hahn, 1919 Gordon I. Kyle, 1919 918 .e .dl1, 'b- Review of the I9I 7 Swimming Season Winning decisixe victories oxer noslng out Amherst by a one point mar ,,1n the Wesleyan Swimming Team may be creditied with a very successful sea- son and well deserved the support of the Athletic Council, which gave to swim- ming this year for the first time, the - recognition of a college sport. The -. Red and Black presented a well E balanced team' throughout the season . . Y U. . 7 . . 7 ,Q Brown, Harvard, and Williams, and ox. , 1 l . . N ..,, . .Wy i , 57 and in every meet except with M. I. T. took first place in half or more of the t it -e'eQ-A events, and even in the Yale meet, the J . Blue team were obliged to win on a majority of second and third places. A Captain Turner has been the high- est individual seorer of the team, and . ,',. his remarkable work in the short dashes and in the relay has been largely re- sponsible for thesplendid showing of the CAPTAIN TURNER team tl1iS year. He defeated Lemclie ' and Nelligan of Amherst who outdis- tanced him last season, and in the Yale meet, surpassed Captain Schlaet, one of the fastest and most experienced swimmers in the East, in the 50 yard dash, and tied the eastern intercollegiate record in this event by swim- ming the distance in Q5 1-5 seconds, while in the Amherst meet, Turner lowered the record for the 40 yard dash in the local pool by 3-5 of a second. Kynett proved a dependable winner in the dives, taking 'drst place in every meet except at Brown and Springfield, being outpointed by Hahn of Wes- leyan in the former meet, while at Springield the Wesleyan divers were handicapped by a stiff diving board. Barrows did good consistent work in the plunges, and established a new record for himself of 59 feet in the Amherst meet. McCarthy, Buswell, Bower, Ely, and Turner formed the relay ,team which was victorious in over half of the meets of the season, while Buswell and Thompson also placed in the 290 yard swim in a ma- jority of their events. In the first contest of the season at Brown, the Red and Black swim- mers captured first place in all events except the plunge, winning the meet 39 to 11. Presenting a well balanced team of stellar swimmers, M. I. T. won the second meet of the season in a handy fashion, by a score of 39 to 18. Wes- leyan took first honors in only one event, the dives, Kynett easily beating -I 1918.5 f? out his Tech opponents while Hahn of VVes In a close meet at bpimgfield Weslcyan retuined the Xictors 31 to Q1 Capt un lurner taking first honors in the 40 and 100 yard dashes and annexmg Hrst place in the 160 ya1d relay. Taking first places in all events, Wesleyan overwhelmed the Harvard natators by a 42 to 11 score. Captain Turner, though not pressed hard, made a new Wesleyan record of 59 3-5 seconds' in the hund1'ed. ' Smashing two VVesleyan records, VVesleyan defeated Amherst in the closest contest of the season Q7 to 26, Captain Turner cutting his record in the -L0 yard dash by 3-5 of a second, and Barrows bettering his record distance in the plunge by Q feet. Amherst won the relay With- out effort, owing to the fast work of the Purple stars Nelligan and Lemcke. The deciding event of the meet was the 100 yard dash, which Captain Turner won by a final burst of speed, leaving Nelligan in second place, and giving VVesleyan a one point lead in the meet. Although defeated 36 to 17 by the fast Yale team, the Red and Black swimmers put up a hard fight and the meet was more closely contested than the score would indicate. Captain Turner furnished the sensation of the meet, when, in defeating Schlaet of Yale, in the 50 yard dash, he tied the eastern intercollegiate record by swimming the distance in Q5 1-5 seconds. Kynett readily Won first place in the dives. , Overwhelming Williams in the final meet of the season, 3-l to 19, XV es- leyan took first honors in all events except the plunge. Captain Turner and Kynett took initial honors in their respective events, and though start- ing two yards behind his opponent in the relay, Turner, by a final effort, reached the inish line the winner by inches. Though the swimming team will sustain a great loss by the graduation of Captain Turner, prospects are good for a successful season next year under the capable leadership of Captain-elect Kynett. LN' - ' if 73 V I ' l ' is T m ' ' -- ' Q ' ' leyan was awarded third place. T ' N 0' 1 , f - , 5 :W - 7. , 2 I 7 1 - BIANAGER LEE Swimming Meets of 1917 Wesleyan 39 Brown VVesleyan 18 M. I. T. Wesleyan 31 Springhel VVesleyan 482 Harvard Wlesleyan 927, Amherst Wesleyan 17' Yale Wfesleyan 3-1 VVilliams T - C .E -X 1918 TENNIS el i D- I sl if A 'lll E-'Wil JAIA, sl 41 Q Wesleyan University Tennis Association ' Ofhcers Ralph E. Jones, 1918 ..... . ,flcfzfng 111 anagcr F. Hopewell Underhill, 1918 . Assismnt 111 cmager Ralph E. Jones, 1918 . . . . . Captain Prof. Wlalter G. Cady . . Faculty Advisor 'W glwk . 198 J -.6 E 1 Varsity Team of 1 91 6 Joseph A. Hofmann, Jr., 1916, Captam Mansield Freeman, 1916 ' Ralph E. Jones 1918 Albert C. Merriam, 1916 Robert T. Lockrld e 1919 Tennis Matches of 1916 VVesleyan 3 Brown Wesleyan 0 Yale Wesleyan 3 Columbia Wesleyan 1 Dartmouth Wesleyan 1 Williams VVesleyan 5 Swarthmore Wesleyan 4 Haverford Wfesleyan 1 Amherst iii? Review of the I9I 6 Tennis Season team had one of th e poorest sea sons in ltS his- tory, winning only two matches, tieing two, and losing four. To her greatest rivals, Williams, Amherst and Dartmouth, Wesleyan lost each match by a 5 to 1 score. Bad Weather and the miserable condition of the courts, which handicapped practice during the early part of the season, to- gether with the fact that only two varsity men were back, gave the team an exceedingly poor startQ Captain Hof- mann played far below his usual style and only broke even in his match- es. i - HE 1916 tennis E The first match of the season was played with Brown at Provi- CAPTAIN JONES dence and resulted in a tie. The feature of the contest was the match between lVIerriam of YVesleyan and Ewing of Brown, Merriam winning o.ut after three hard fought sets. V Yale, playing a fast and accurate game, completely outclassed YVes- leyan in the first- match on the home courts, and won an easy victory, 6 to 0. The home team lacked aggressiveness and played in poor form. In the contest with Columbia before the guests of Junior week, Wfesleyan for the first time showed good form and played a consistent game. The teams were evenly matched and the sets were closely contested, each team winning two matches in the singles and breaking even in the doubles. Dartmouth completely outclassed VVesleyan on the home courts taking five of the six matches, the local team winning one match of the doubles. Hofmann and Jones defeating Larmon and Koeniger of Dartmouth. I., c r Williams the rival of old easily disposed of VVesley'1n twinning live of the sur matches lVIer11am was the individual star for YVesleyan on this occasion defeating Wright of Williains in straight sets 6 to 1 6 to 3 Lock ridge 19 played his first varsity game and was only defeated after two deuce sets IVesleyan s tennis invasion of Pennsylvania resulted 1n the only vic to11es of the season as both Swarthmore and Haverford went down to de feat before the Red and Black Both of the opponents teams were fast and evenly balanced, but Wesleyan displayed exceptional form and won a double victory. A . In the last contest of the season, with only Jones showing any tennis ability, VVesleyan easily fell victim to Amherst on the local courts. Jones was the only local man to win a match, defeating Blair of Amherst 6 to 1, '7 to 5. Poor team work lost the doubles for the Red and Black. The showing at the New England Intercollegiates at Longwood was the brightest spot in an otherwise dull season. Captain Hofmann succumbed in the second roundto Maynard of Williams, whom he had beaten the pre- vious year, but Jones played remarkable tennis and after -defeating Stewart of lVI. I. T. in the semi-finals, lost to Maynard of VVilliams after an excep- tionally hard fight. This match furnished the sensation of the tournament, Maynard winning out only by his superior ability at placing. , Altogether the season was disappointing and showed no consistent playing except on the part of Jones and Merriam, the former displaying a style that marks him as a possible future intercollegiate champion. For 1917 a larger and more varied schedule has been prepared by lVIan- ager Jones, and twelve matches will be played, instead of seven or eight as formerly. In the University fall tournament unusual first-class material developed and so the 1917 season will show a marked improvement over the endeavors of the past year. 200 ' . l . , . I , . . l l C , T. . 0 . , . m . ' . . . . H , , i Y- . ' , . . or 9 3 C ' I , . . . . . . - . 5 - The l9l 7 Tennis Schedule April 21 Brown At lVIiddletown April 28 Columbia At New York May 4 NI. I. T. At lVIiddletown May 5 Springfield At lVIiddletown May 10 Swarthmore At Middletown lVIay 12 Amherst At Amherst lVIay 14-19 Intercollegiates At Longwood May 19 Tufts At Boston .Iune 1 Dartmouth At Hanover June 2 ,'Williams At Middletown . Lg - 1918 1 TWT 1920 1917 1919 1918 1916 1918 1917 p 1919 lnterclass Contests First place Second place First place Second place First place Second place First place Second place 1918 Y Football 1916 1919 1918 Basketball 191 7 f 1917 1920 Baseball 1916 , 1919 1917 Track 1916 1916 1918 Third place Fourth place Third place Fourth place Third place Fourth place Third place Fourth place ! L 4 lnterfraternlty Contests Basketball 9 'Won Lost Percentage Psi Upsilon 10 1 909 Beta Theta Pi 9 Q 818 Alpha Delta Phi '7 1 3 . 700 Omega Phi 6 4 600 Alpha Chi Rho 5 K 4 555 Delta Kappa Epsilon 5 5 500 Delta Tau Delta 5 5 500 Phi Nu Theta 5 5 500 4 Independents 2 7 223 l' Chi Psi 1 ' 9 100 Commons Club 0 10 000 f , Baseball l9l6 League A VVon Lost Percentage Delta Tau Delta 5 0 1000 Alpha Delta Phi 3 2 600 T Commons Club 3 92 600 4 Alpha Chi Rho Q 3 400 1 Chi Psi 2 3 ' 400 Independents 0 5 000 ' League B Beta Theta Pi 4 0 1000 Psi Upsilon 3' 1 750 Delta Kappa Epsilon 1 Q 250 Omega Phi 1 Q 250 Phi Nu Theta 0 4 000 Final: VVon by Delta Tau Delta, 4-3 The lnterfraternity Athletic Cup Won by Delta Tau Delta vi 0 19l8L S S S X S . Vg a X 21953 'Q ' X ri? ,QQ-jf':k' Q ' ,gf 252' is, W 'f ,L N Q55 me jg Q Li 'fgigi '42 3 ' L ' f S XXT X - E ,-:U f , 1154 :SNS ,Maj 1 Q N fi- 'Mm 3.2, af .Y Q 5 ji gif f f ' 65522 My . -ff ll.sNXf:-X - ' HAH l'ff1If?'-:1-.J- vr'm5.,-. :FEIS- Activities L E VNV' F Q?3?i W X HCS Wesleyan University Dramatic Association Officers Wfeir Williams, 1917 ..... . President John Theodore Plate, 1917 .... . . Secretary Gorham Bert Munson, 1917 . , Q . Manager Harry Ludwig Leurich, 1918 . . . Assistant Manager William David Fenton, Jr., 1918 . . . . Stage Manager Paint and Powder Club Members V 1917 Gorham B. lVIunson John T. Plate Francis O. Noble VVeir Williams 1918 Lester R. Bradbury Emanuel L. Gebauer William D. Fenton, Jr. Harry L. Leurich VVilliam A. Shanklin, Jr. 1919 A Richard C. Berry Charles C. Gabel 1920 Clark S. Defandorf Raymond A. Dousseau 'W The Arrival of Kitty By Norman L. Swartout Presented Under the Direction of Mrs. l... A. Howland ,V Presentation l The Middlesex Theatre, Middletown Cast of Characters William Winkler , .... . Bobbie Baxter . . ' . . l Benjamin More . Ting . . . Aunt J ane . ll Jane . . A Suzette . T - Sam . Kitty , . . Synopsis ACT I-The Office of the Halcyon House, i ACT II-The Same. ACT III-The Same. X -- December 9, 1916 . Lester R. Bradbury . YVeir VVillia.1ns . Emanuel L. Gebauer Raymond A. Dousseau . Cuthbert C. Gabel Clark S. Defandorf . Richard C. Berry . Francis O. Noble VVillia1n A. Shanklin, Jr. 11 the Catskills. gig? wx A 7 1 Review of the l9l6-l9l 7 Dramatics Zi ll + HE past collegiate year has seen the revival of interest in the held of dramatics. Since the production of Who's Got VVinnifred in 1914, dramatic activities have been at a standstill, and it was due to the efforts of Manager Munson that the Dramatic Association was re- organized and a new interest created. This year the Paint and Powder Club put forth its first production at the Middlesex theatre early in December. Norman Swartout's The Ar- rival of Kittyn was presented before the Sophomore Week guests, and the performance was more than satisfying. The handling of the parts of Winkler by Bradbury, 1918, and that of Bobbie Baxter, by Williams, 1917, deserves special commendation. The cast as a whole was splendidly suited to the parts, and the performance was smoothly handled throughout. The second production of the season takes place during Junior VVeek at the Nliddlesex. VVhat Happened to Jonesu is to be presented on Friday evening, May 11th, and every indication points to a cleverly enacted per- formance. For both productions the Association is indebted to Mrs. L. A. Howland for the coaching, and to W. D. Fenton, Jr., for the stage manager- ship. The Dramatic Association has further endeavored to present under its auspices professional dramatic talent from time to time during the year. The Portmanteau Players offered two programmes of their one-act play early in November, and the Ben Greet Players are to appear during Commence- ment Week. It is the hope of the Association to present further representa- tive organizations during the coming year. Under the capable management of Leurich, 1918, the Paint and Powder Club will undoubtedly pay visits to nearby New -England cities during the 1917-1918 season, and possibly will include a performance in New York City. . Xgg - 19186 J Wlusccm. CLUBS MUSICAL CLUBS The l9l6-l9l 7 Musical Clubs' Season HE past season of the combined Musical Clubs has been most suc- cessful. Never has Wesleyan had a more gifted organization, both in singing qualities and musical talent. Codding, 1917, is to be con- gratulated upon the capable way in which he handled the Glee Club, and Raymond, 1917, upon the life and real melody that he put into the Mando- lin Club. The coaching of the Clubs was entrusted to the same capable leaders of the past few years, Billy Davis, and W. C. Knipfer, and the success of the past season is largely due to their ability as directors. Instead of making numerous trips during the fall as in former years, the Clubs gave but two minor concerts and then during the- Christmas recess made a tour of Eve days, stopping at New Rochelle, N. Y., Madison and Patterson, N. J., and Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, Penn. Several con- certs were given between the Christmas and the Easter trips, one of the best being the Washington's Birthday Concert in the Memorial Chapel at Mid- dletown. The Easter trip, taken during the recess from April eighth to twelfth, was highly successful, the Clubs receiving enthusiastic praise in every city. For 1917-1918, there has been outlined a series of concerts on a scale never yet attempted. The Christmas trip will include cities as far west as Cleveland, and the trip will be made by private car throughout. With the system of an advisory manager, placed in the hands of W. F. Sheldon, 1899, the coming season looms up as one of exceptional brilliancy and promise. L. B. Codding, Jr., 1917, Leader First Tenors VV. A. Shanklin, Jr., 1918 L. H. Smith, 1918 W. M. Hannan, 1918 A. B. Pratt, 1918 L. B. Codding, Jr., 1917 R. D. Bell, 1919 C. C. Gabel, 1919 J. L. Martin, 1919 F. O. Noble, 1917 H. L. Leurich, 1918 H. C. Bruner, 1919 H. F. Bigelow, 1917 A. C. D. Hartman, 1918 J. H. Underhill, 1918 H. R. Hannan, 1919 G. I. Kyle, 1919 H. G. Travis, 1920 Second Tenors L. J. WVhittles, 1919 O. H. Andrews, 1920 P. A. Northrip, Jr., 1920 S. First Basses L. Thornton, 1920 o. L. Knipe, 1919 L. T. Second Basses F. A. C. G. A. Small, 1920 M. Dayton, 1920 C. Wildman, 1920 H. Wenner, 1918 D. Bean, 1919 W. Martin, 1919 X OANDouN Quan R. F. Raymond, Jr., 1917, Leader First Mandolins J. V. VValsh, 1917 J. T. Bray, 1919 R. C. Baker, 1918 A. Dodd, 1919 W. R. Hopkins, 1920 Second Mandolins A. S. Cramer, 1919 I R. T. Reeve, 1920 E. W. Hildreth, 1920 T. C. VVildman, 1920 Guitars M. N. Lewis, 1918 N. Macdonald, Jr., 1918 Tenor Mandela Cello-Banjo F. W. Potter, 1917 H. E. Arnold, 1920 Cello First Violin Second Violin D. B. Clark, 1917 R. F. Raymond, Jr., 1917 W. D. Holman, 1918 V Flute Piano Traps VV. R. Edmonds, 1917 H. B. Finnegan, 1918 C. L. Uniaeke, 1917 W .LJLJC 1 - if Q14 W A. Chapel Choir L. B. Codding, Jr., 1917 . E. O. Titus, 1918 . B. Pratt, 1918 W. A. Shanklin, Jr., 1918 L. A. F. E. B. Codding, Jr., 1917 G. Russell, 1918 0. Noble, 1917 H. Witman, 1917 H. F. Bigelow, 1917 W. W. Deacon, 1918 First Tenors Second Tenors First Basses Second Basses . Leader . Organist L. H. Smith, 1918 H. R. Hannan, 1919 C. C. Gabel, 1919 J. L. Martin, 1919 H. M. Grinton, 1918 H. C. Bruner, 1919 A. C. D. Hartman, 1918 A. D. Bean, 1919 C - 5182 , I ' -:Ek gg. 1 ,Ts N, . Ja. -37' ,, x -, F ' A M 5: ,ieiffifw mlw-.' '1'E 7 ,:-if V' Q ff 4 ,,. . .1..-Q-01- ':lJ: kts . x e ,Ng-'-,f' - .- ,141 ,-...vw,f p- ,if ' 7 -la, x -1? -+- - . X N ,. ' - D - - F ' 3-7-fig-1, 1 . ii Q. fx-3,,5,A-wg, 4..,G.-...B ,,g.,,.,7 1 , . H ve 1,41 25. .sjlnwffl ,.l -Afxjz.-, -:V-3-A .Jr V' 5 ' '- .Fda V- ?5f1f1i Pil MQ, -ai 'X 'Y 'X ' ' 1 H1512 'Wd-fr., ., fs 5-.F QB,-5-1 '-K. -- fin , H, Y 'Cf'lj.,i'ij-3 if 4:,. 'g,j.A.: fl'1fl, .4-3',4.70 Zi. f f iff F A, - '- Arg, 1 f . fwfnwei img? ,vfwzm-'fy ., Sf, . ,r Qu Jw 1. E4 ff ' ,f 1 ,,:.:mf -mf 'Zfwm4g,S',, ,-.5 ,53fI, 4:2 11,3-vN,, .+ - , iff' jivifni Mar- - T-59-H-A4 -fx -1 .Qs 112725 fi x qggjika 53 , we Qxisi 9.- ., s .gfggfcm . n ' 'Q-:-2,--'Q' Q wx- 1' , ' 4,-fnfifv ' ' L I . 319' Hu? - 53:5 ' 'QKW4-iff . fi' -'zi E L 9352 J, -w a, ,. w -'1 ??5'i9::L . - ' fi 4 Y 'GQ Wg rife? Wye, -fy , ,fg,'f,q:4-- V- f' , 1:1 , jw, ff-,.,47z. r-211: ' ' ' fiwiif? mi' ' 1 ? ' fmfigf C4591 WLC fr! '. ' .7 ' '27,-1gQ:f1:'f'fs5 l 'I5 -gb HETEQ- I Ah .ff ,, ' H ' -. ,- pg A 32' f k -- q 7 i 5, . ,- f, wp.-34'-, 4 aw.-1f.e,,f. ff , V ,,. ,meg , 41, ,,,l,.-. J, ,,..v- iK15,,f -v . q? 5, nn.--In ,-gf. ,f ' I L, -:n f j535i,,f3L.3K2EQ5gqy.,4Q+ .' - 41-Lg X. A .f my V V 1 ,. X f - A X ff A : .. -.,-1 zu. : L Y -S 1 :.2:f4:.i1--fg:,.- ' T- Jiri ,.,,,-f' -N: - Nm- fir .Af 24, A cg ' S ' -,5S5?5,z' , ' S,-Q Jw' ,. ' , , ' 'fa'-R 'lu 2 S .-' .r ff ff' 'SMH-H nba m g , Z 1, - 13 ' a1f'1WyzH3'.ff-ggfg ' fig-54-5 . - 5 ff J' P' 1 2413? Tfcfgfg, fl.lf3,,s ?g 1'4,fiQgHiR1f4Q a. -'Q 'flgniffv' - . s 4' 191,-L -m-'.5:- . '-,za ' 'f'1 ' ' ,A-L61,.-1 any-f'-bigfyv. -f ' 5. NIT. V ' f Na- -'Vi 5313+ - .E .:.x11 f'l:f:1-5'!- 5- -5 : X Q - V ,RP J f' .I J' 251' if A K 4 V. ,- 2 , . -' fix ' . 9 js f .A R 15155:-Eagzfii ' - ANAWQ.-,giv Tw' v '-'.-:--Q, . , .f ':. . ! , fy , 1 S , A ...UA .:35 ?F ,gtl kg y ,ff , 1,2 9' , , - , 1' , -175 AQ. , :iffy -' 1-bfi., ' 4-rs 1 -2'-...N .'g5:m:'.5w, 'ai Li- V- U bza lw'Si6z3'ii, L1: gint Q V - v, ft-ll S4 5, .. xgjf Q51 9 but 11,0 5 The Wesleyan LLL rgus 'fiiiifan All... x.lu,h.. 1 nl.. Mlxu, ' ' L.,f.u..,- -v.-mn-f uf lm A Punts 1-'numzsvs .-- I-. H- wr-g:,i'1 'm',1l1fnExeT, Bmw? Afl'U'O' My jQm- vnu rm, mm! ,- ,,1AMHERST RALLIES T0 N0 AVAIL AND M ' FALLS BEFORE WESLEYAN 10-7 Lntcoiw known wnunsszs onzn WESLEYAN CDMA: BACK . VICTORY was My orrnsslvz STRENGTR or BACIQIWLU. AMKHILST LINE noon. .m L J u.. ' The Wesleyan Argus Volume L Board of Editors Horace S. Baldwin, 1917 ..... . . Editor-in-Chiqf' 1fVesley O. Ash, 1917 ..... . Managing Editor Associate Editors A Warren I. Keith, 1917 Lahman V. Bower, 1918 Ernest R. Perkins, 1917 Gerald M. Gantz, 1918 Harrison M. Sayre, 1917 Emanuel L. Gebauer, 1918 Everett B. Blake, 1918 Coleridge YV. Hart, 1918 Charles P. Porter, 1918 Frank T. Underhill, 1917 ....... Business Manager Elton R. Skilton, 1918 . . . Assistant Business Manager Frank A. Hamilton, 1917 . . . Circulation Manager Raymond C. Baker, 1918 .... Assistant Circulation Manager 1918 ,Q2 Qkf., 1' il QW The Wesleyan Literary Monthly Volume XXV A Board of' Editors I George R. Potter, 1917 ..... Editor-in-Chief Associate Editors George F. Johnson, 1917 Frank W. Morrell, 1917 Gorham B. Munson, 1917 P Karl W. Curtis, 1917 . . F. Hopewell Underhill, 1918 .11- Truman H. Woodward, 1917 Frank D. Harris, 1918 Robert B. Sharpe, 1918 . . . Business Manager . Assistant Business M anage-r 1918 it--11 OM PODRlDA x voL Llx O WESLEYAN if ff? x- l l P. 5. s 1 F N -. .., 1m M1iw:llllQK,4' . ,.-1 - Q I The Olla Podrida Volume LIX Board of Editors . William D. Fenton, J r., 1918 .... Editor-in-Clzief Associate Editors Everett B. Blake, 1918 Gerald lVI. Gantz, 1918 Herbert B. Finnegan, 1918 . George B. Hulse, 1918 Charles lVI. VVinchester, Jr., 1918 . . . . Business Ma1Lager Kenneth P. Stexiens, 1918 . . . Assistant Business Manager Q Wesleyan Handbook 1 1 , n 1 Qljublished under the auspices of the Wesleyan Christian Assoeiationj Frank E. Stevens, 1917 . . . . Editor-in-Chief Norman L. Davidson, 1917 . . . . Business M anager Alfred M. C. Bennett, 1918 . Assistant Business M anager x 4' V , Xt: E 1 1918 X Q24 ka '..'-I .- in-.-.. - , -.,, -. Committee S Frederic Halsted Hahn, Chairman James Mason Austin' VValter Scott Buswell Benjamin VVoodhull Davis Ralph Vernet Farrel Walter Agnew Morris Nlrs. W. A. Shanklin Mrs. G. M. Dutcher Mrs. RQH. Fife, Jr. T ,res-1 George Renwick Raynor Sidney Lewis Straley Guy Rogers Turner Samuel Foster Upham VVillia1n Dc-:Witt Van Pe Patronesses Mrs. F. K. Hallock Mrs. E. K. Hubbard Mrs. W. J. James Music he Broadway Sextette, New York V, MY 6 , SOphOn'1Ol'e HOP Class of 1919 Fayerweather Gymnasium December 8, 1916 lt, Jr 1918 S John Howard French Bigelow Lewis Bates Codding, Jr. Karl WVarren Curtis Frank Willard Mor1'ell Gorham Bert lVIunson Nlrs. YV. A. Shanklin Mrs.fG. NI. Dutcher Mrs. Alfred Gildersleeve Senior Ball Class of l9l7 Fayerweather Gymnasium, February 16, 1917 Committee Russell Studwell, ChCL'li7'77ML7L Francis Osborn Noble Francis VVilcoX Potter Robert Fulton Raymond, Henry Charles Stone Harold VVilkinson Patronesses lVIrs. Albert lllann, Jr. lVIrs. R. VV. Rice lVIrs. H. DI. Wriston Music Danz's Orchestra, New Haven J ,C 'Q -1918 F .e-'fs Q W X A 4 Class of l9l8 lVI'1y llth to 13th 1917 Programme Friday May Ilth 30 p Baseball Col atc Xersus YVLS- leyan on Andrus Field. .30 p Dramatlcs 'What Happened 1 o Jones presented by the Pfunt and Powder Club at the Middlesex lheatre. 10 00p Phe Junior Promenade ' Saturday May I2th 2 00 p Flack VV1lll8.111S versus Wes- leyan on Andrus Field. LL 00 p Fraternity Tea Dmces. 00 p Collebe Srnb North College Campus :50 p. . Fraternity Dtnces. Sunday May l3th E 11 100 . 1 he Colle,5e Church N.li6,11101'l'tl Chapel. Committee Lester Ray Bradbury Clzairmcm Lverett Buell Blake John Burisch Paul Frederick Crain Herbert Benson l'iune,5an Theodore James Grippen Hari ey Zenos Nourse Charles William Riley Earle Orchard Titus Clifford Keith VVilbur l 6' N6 QQ Junlor Week l . l ' ' Qin ,111. - - , g L 1 f A 5 ' 4 '7:' . 111. 1 ' , ' I ' 1 - 1 H ' 1 : .111. ' 1 , ln .f ' x Fayerweather Gymnasium. , , : . 111. ' ' , ' ' f S Q b a ll , A : . m. ' 2 ,g , 1 1 H 7 L m 4 . z + fT A W 1, W . , X 1 . I Y A r . c ' O' 4 0 w U I Q I Lawrence Edwin Williams K gels? ,4f '-' , Q l il Junior Prom Class of 1918 r Fayerweather Gyinnasiuin, May 11, 1917 Committee VVillia1n Arnold Shanklin, Jr., ClLCl1iI'7lI,CL7L Charles lVIartin Boswell, Jr. Nlorgan Noulton Lewis Paul Frederick Eckstorm Elliott Colby Logan John Gray Glenn Aubrey Gerard Russell Harry Mills Grinton Sidney Attilio Thompson Howard Vincent Vlliddoes Music The Biltmore Hawaiian Orchestra New York Danzls Orchestra New Haven H 'J 519183 ! unior Week 1917 O the Junior VVeek guests the class of 1918 bids each a hearty welcome. It is a privilege to entertain you, and even if Nliddletown is a funny old New England community, We'll forget the town, and just stick to the college. The committees for nineteen-eighteen,s Junior Wleek have endeavored to plan a programme that will keep you busy every minute you are here. From the time that you arrive, there is a continual procession of things to choose from. You may dance at the Prom whenever and as long as you wish, and if you don,t like one orchestra, havanola. If you don't like the supper, any of the cominitteemen will be only too glad to take you to all of the lobster palaces that the village affords. If you Wish, you may dine at Stuecks, The Taft, Pop's, or any of the string of glittering food emporiunis in the vicinity. Me1'ely have a coinmitteeman paged. If you wish to dance Saturday morning,-call up nine-nine-two. If you tire of track meets, baseball games, or tennis matches,-try a ride in the country in any one of the Stutz cars at your disposal around the campus. If the driver isn,t nearby, just help yourself, but kindly return cars to their respective fraternity houses. 1918 is happy to have you with them 5-and hopes that you may come again. so i Swag' 'W GCIMHH Ofhcers A. M. 'MaXwell, 1917 . . . . . . President J. H. Underhill, 1918 . . . . Sec'rc2ta7'y-Trec1.9m'er Members 1917 YV. L. Deetjen F. 0. Noble F. L. Turner A. F. Lindstrom R. F. Raymond, Jr F. T. Underhill A. M. lVIaXwell 9 8 VVeir 'Williams I I C. M. Boswell, Jr. C. VV. Hart VV. A. Shanklin, Jr. R. D. Boyle F. Mf. Johnson J. H. Underhill W. D. Fenton, Jr. G. P. Kynett H. V. YViddoes H. B. Finnegan L. I. Pitt C. M. Winchester, Jr. H. L. Richards ' l9l9 A. D. Bean F. H. Hahn J. YV. Thomas Alfred Dodd G. E. Kyle K. C. WVOodruf'f J. N. FitzGera1d J. F. Ritchie S. F. Upham G. T. Sinallwood 51.6.2 Q30 A 4 . X J. R. Studwell, 1917 J. A. Markhalll, 1918 L. B. Neeld, 1917 . VV. O. Ash N. Y. Hill L. R. Bradbury Cotillion Club Cfhcers Members 1917 F. VV. Johnson L. B. Neeld 1918 G. de N. Hough, Jr. . . . Presiclenf . . Vzce- Preszdent S6C7'6fIl17'fLj-T7'E?ll.S'7,lT67' J. R. Studwell Harold Wilkinson J. A. l.VI21,1'lil121.II1 Ragnor Hanson H. D. Krafftf H. D. Porter A. C. D. Hartman W. YV. lVICCa1'thy C. VV. Riley W. D. Holman Neil Macdollald, Jr. A. G. Russell 1919 W. S. Buswell A. F. Markthaler N. V. Rorer F. L. Clark S. lVI. Newhall G. E. Scott R. J. Keeler ' L. D. Webber 3315.3 ff' , 555 .ax- J ing x X ' 'V .Ak I ....,,,.n.L-'.' 'Ng 1 'X ffg A, 4::.,.,..fx55f.?:'5 ,g,iZ' ', X 67' 6 'T . F Q 1353? X X ' 'f .vf 'givfkf .f f X 'f . - xv Q av f - v if '?'Z,fj?Lf:'MI' . G O 'qTx'L1fiQ:,2 . ' +67-'I' ' - - '.'frZ.,1 ', 1' 4. --115'-Zg,.: .-.' ?' , ' ' H' M Qflq-513' 4 ' ES, , I N c 3 X X , leg I If ' if g gg K :sv N I nw f. 1 I I . f 'CIJJ-., '. C ' F N nh f' I I' ' ' - Vi uh ,f , qu' 2, X Q I :ya j I-5 E , I ,, AW, 1 I xl ENT X I I-1,354 14,1 ,H , A , 1 1 , -'ay'-I.: -q In - 5,1 INT ' nl. is 'I Laiziq S - 14, I M-f,..., f - ' 'f -V ,lr --1-I ll ll , A, x , ' ll 'I ll ' 4'- A! U -- I--I, - ,,,, 4 I . ,g,.t,-ml.. 1 gi ,pq 5 77--5 li ll , ffm -QR ,. . .1 , u. up il u ,, X ' E 1 'f fQ HI I -:lun V yxlf I I , d' -. I 5 ll ll HQ X M xi' -x i if I ' -: :Q 51 54 l nn 1-NW 'B H ll I. ll nii ,r w1W . ll i Ill Ili! lla,-rid i-i L ' ' ll I I r 1 5 1 - h l ...B 'll I ll I ll ' I ' -X - . ll I I N'-fl-1 1k 5' , 'f'f . 4 A I Q I l J- . -H ..,. , 4 1 ?,,f--h D ia1gsiag5 ffll51'j3P':1' 1 -' V f 1 Twrill - .15 --- -- ' ' -1. .' f W' .Ni ', !flil.,:IenI,r! VZ? K' - ul l v -. ,. I .- V1 wk Xxlkwxvavl-,...-l QQ!! :-L ' - I 'gif-, .ig -.4' . A iqjvl If 79 3.44 , , I , -Z ,,- ,H if ll 4 1'fcM3L.',:l -My - ,, ,fly 3 1 Jijg 'I' vs' 5- ' . - -A Q Q. , ,,. ,- P11r4f1,l,'- 5,133 if' 3, , , 3 if-12-Q1 - 5, -iff ff - 12 'f' -2 52 aff! ,.,-. 1 ff' 31133. aria- 5592! Gig- i fli' . sg'-i, ffsi.i2f-'pg 1 NS: C'1f':' ZF' Eff ' :Elf -2:E:.Z 1-BQ: '-x' 1 ', 15-'-,-1 ' f- -1 '42-QQ: A ' lf. '9'T..'x vb H Iv- E T I ,., 4, ' -- , t ' '. ' 3. ,..5g, , - ezfiia gillgg If-1 -1 'W MM 'sw 1 5 fi9ffQf,E'2 ,i!Fii52Eza '. :Q - vb: ia 2221 5 , 1,5 .1 if 1. ' ' . - 'J '-'Q-,fipgzfzzas . ' - ' -- JLJ'-? 221i'Nf1 J 5' - .. 4 A ' M f Em ' 1 ' E-+1 ,..' -: ' R ' '! 5' ' - WYE: 5-'1'3 V fw.QiT '.'-:Eli ...' .Q :H m f'-r 55. 12:2 -' A ff- ,--.- L ' J .4 V H 1 ,UH QI, E ATE- g Huw Wesleyan Debafing Council Officers Robert Moffat Henry, 1917 . . . . . Presiclevzt Richard Cramm, 1917 . . . . . . . lllcmagev Mitchell Jenkins, 1918 ........ ,f1.s'sisiant M anageo' Amherst-Wesleyan-Williams League A ' Francis Osborn Noble, 1917 ........ P7'6.97.!I671f S 191881 Bowdoin Hamilton Wesleyan League 1VIf1lch Q9 1916 cr ' , 1 , - , QUESTION: Resolved, That ex-Secretary Garrison's plan for military 3 reorganization should be adopted. 1-lamilton -Wesleyan Memorial Chapel, Nliddletown President Shanklin, Presiding Ojficm' Affirmative-Hamilton D. F. Aldrich, 1916 G. V. Pope, 1916 C. C. Young, 1916 E. H. 1Voods, 1918 CAlternatej Negative-Wesleyan Eldon Hubert 1VIartin, 1916, Robert 1VIoFFat Henry, 1917 Mehran Kafafian Thomson,191'7 Lynn James RadcliHe, 1919 QAlternatej judges N112 D. 117. Abercrombie Mr. S. H. Fisher Professor A. L, Gillett Decision in favor of the affirmative Bowdoin -Wesleyan At Brunswick Afhrmative-Wesleyan Ma.nsfield Freeman, 1916 Richard Cramm, 1917 Charles Francis Dodge, 1919 Byron Dwight MacDonald, 1919 CAlternatej judges ' Mr. VVilford G. Chapman Professor J. Murray Carroll Mr. William B. Jack Decision in favor of the negative 9 19l8g 234: Amherst-Wesleyan -Williams League December 15, 191 6 QUESTION! Resolved, That the principle of compulsory arbitration of disputes between employers and employees be applied to all public service corporations in the United States. Amherst -Wesleyan . Nlemorial Chapel, Middletown President Shanklin, Presiclfing Qficer Afhrmative -Wesleyan Lahman Van Hennigar Bower, 1918 John Elmer Cavelti, 1918 Matlrice Allen Potter, 1919 CAlternatej ' Negative-Amherst lVIortimer Eisner, 1917 'Winfred YV. Riefier, 1919 Charles Channin, 1918 QAlternateD judges Mr. Herbert O. Brigham Mr. Louis R. Cheney Mr. Lewis A. Storrs Decision in favor of the aflirmative Wesleyan -Williams Grace Hall, Williamstown Afhrmative-Williams VVillis L. Buck, 1919 Howard Goodman, 1919 Goodrich C. Schauifler, 1918 CAlternatej Negativwwesleyan Richard Cramm, 1917 Lynn James Radcliffe, 1919 Q Francis Osborn Noble, 1917 CAlternatej judges Dean M. F. Dee 1VI1'. Clarence E. 1VIeleney Professor James A. 1fVinans Decision in favor of the affirmative S 1918 2 as '-S2592 'W Wesleyanj 1919 versus Brown, 1919 Sayles Hall, Providence, April 18, 1916 Professor Karl Epliraim VVeston, Pre.s1ffl'in,g Qfffzfcev' QUESTION: Resolved, That the United States should adopt the Swiss Military Systemf' Affirmative-Brown Thomas F, Black William H. Edwards Roger T. Clap? , Douglas A. Holyoke CAltC1'HH1t8D N i . 1 Negative -Wesleyan Leonard Beeman Fuller Lynn James Radcliffe Byron Dwight MacDonald Williain Drum Gould Cfklternatej l Judges M1'. Lester VV. Boardman Rev. Myron E. Genter lVIr. Frederick P. Latimer . Decision in favor of the negative C ' Annual Underclass Debate i 1919-1920 Nlemorial Chapel, December 11, 1916 President Shanklin, Presiclvlng Ojicefr QUESTION: Resolved, That the principle of compulsory arbitration between employers and employees be applied to all public service corpora- tions in the United States. I Affirmative-l 920 Frederick M01'gHH Davenport. Jr. l1Villiam Tenney Rumsey Ray Edward Parmenter Boyd Raymond Greenwalt QAlt.D Negative-l9l9 Clifford Francis Dodge William Hendry VVilliam Drum Gould Milton Harold Ryan CAlt.D judges Professor Burton H. Camp Professor Morris B. Crawford Professor Leroy A. Howland ' Decision in favor of the negative Sena? V f junior Exhibition Memorial Chapel, March 16, 1916 l X President Shanklin, Presiding Qjficer A Speakers iSA111CTiC2LiS Opportunity in Europen . . Emanuel Louis Chiesa The National Defenseu . . . .V . Richard Cramm Education and Democracyu . ' . Francis Osborn Noble The Outlook for American Music', . George Reuben Potter Pan-American Unity , . . . . . Carl Leo Stearns The Future of the Armenian People . . Meliraii Kafafian Thomson Prize Awarded to lllehran K. Thomson fi' 1 1918 2 Q Annual Declamation Contest i . Fayerweather Gymnasium, June 15, 1916 President Shanklin, Presifding Qjficcr Freshman Speakers Z1 Theodore Roosevelt's Inaugural Address . . . George Floyd Bickford The Tell-tale Heart ..... . VValdo Urban Wagner 4 ll Horatio at the Bridgel' ...... - . . Kok Ann VVee V Sophomore Speakers The Just 1V1an LA1'l11Cd,, .... Emanuel Lawrence Gebauer American Preparednessl' . Harry Ludwig Leurich c'American Dernocracyn .... John Huber Underhill i Junior Speakers ' Martin Glynnls Reply to Senator Root . . John Allen Stephens, Jr. Culture', ........ 4M6l1F3H Kafaiian Thomson The Nation and the F lagn . . . Truman Hollis WVo0dWard judges Rev. Williairl D. Beach lVIr. George A. Craig Dr. C. Floyd Haviland A Prizes X Parker Prize . . . John A. Stephens, Jr. Hibbard Prize . . Waldo U. Waglier 'ienag I ,,, ANQLJETS Washingtonls Birthday Banquet Fayerweather Gyninasiunl, February 24, 1917 Professor Frank W. Nicolson, Toastmaster Henry G. Wells, 190Q Kenneth M. Goode, 1904 George L. Moore, 1914 Frank E. Stevens, 1917 VValter R. Talbot, 1917 Committee Frank T. Underhill, 1917, Chairman Horace S. Baldwin, 1917 Emanuel L. Chiesa, 1917 Ralph M. Lewis, 1917 Augustus M. Maxwell, 1917 Robert C. Baker, 1918 Clifford K. VVilbur, 1918 Lawrence E. VVillia1ns, 1918 VVilliam A. Shanklin, Jr., 1918 James 1VI. Austin, 1919 Logan M. Dayton, 19120 240 Sophomore Banquet 1918 Harry Bond,s, Hartford, May 19, 1916 Toasts Robert Driscoll Boyle, Toastmaster H1918 in 1950 ...... Charles Martin Boswell, Jr. As Upperclassmenn . Lahman Van Hennigar Bower Mexican Bullw . . . Fred Bingham Barrows S'We Stand Together .... George Raymond Larkin Committee Lester Ray Bradbury, Chairman Charles lVIartin Boswell, Jr. John Huber Underhill Z1 it Freshman Banquet I 9 I 9 Harry Bondis, Hartford, lVlay 20, 1916 Toasts Andrew Augustus Aschenbach, Toastmaster '1919 in the Futureu ...... Byron Dwight BfI2LCDOI1ELld '1919 in Athletics ..,... Earle Franklin Richards Committee Kenneth Brevoort DuBois, CllieL'l:7'7IlfL7l Robert Watkins Clarke Richard Johns Keeler Vincent Brown Coffin John Wadsworth Thomas Ralph Vernet Farrel Clark Coggshall Thompson -it Y 1 91857 A K- FLAG S CRAP L-I , I . L 5 frzggaa X FS, kv., Ili . 111 2 ------ -- I - .., 3 L - 1 The Flag scrap September 30, 1916 Upperclassmen Flag Scrap Committee Charles G. Chapin, Chairman Horace M. Abrams Charles S. Smith Howard V. Widdoes Sophomore Flag Scrap Committee 'Arthur F. Markthaler, Chairman Alfred Dodd Lyle W. Forman Ralph V. Farrel Richard J. Keeler Freshman Flag Scrap Committee . Logan M. Dayton, Chairman Russell H. Anderson Malcolm P. Schumacher George H. Fothergill Stanley L. Thornton Bertram W. Saunders Harold C. Tyson A Paul H. Young X X- x., , .. . C0 mm cmmxs W Commencement Week I9l 6 A Programme A Thursday, June 15 Prize Declamation Contest in Fayerweather Gymnasium at eight o'clock p. m. ' Friday, June 16 The Dedication of the VanVleck Observatory at two o'clock p. rn. Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing presented by the Ben Greet Players on the Front Campus at eight o'clock p. m. Saturday, June 17 Meeting of the Alumni Athletic Association at ten o'clock a. m. Meetings of the Alumni at ten-thirty o'clock a. m. Class Day Exercises, beginning on the Front Campus, at eleven o'clock a. m. Meeting of the Alumni Council at twelve o,clock noon. Alumni Luncheon in Fayerweather Gymnasium at one olclock p. m. lVIeeting of the Trustees of the University at two o'clock p. m. Costume Parade of the Alumni by Classes at half past two o'clock p. m. Baseball game with Columbia on Andrus Field at three o'clock p. m. Preliminary Meeting of Phi Beta Kappa at five o'clock p. m. Class Reunion Banquets at half past six olclock p. m. The H1831 Dinner at half past six o'clock p. m. The Wesleyan Glee Club presents the opera Brother Omega at the Middlesex Theatre at nine oielock p. m. Sunday, June 18 Baccalaureate Sermon to the Graduating Class by President William Arnold Shanklin, L.H.D., LL.D., in the Memorial Chapel at half past ten o,clock a. rn. . The Senior Sing on the steps of the Chapel at half past seven p. m. University Sermon by Bishop William Burt, D.D., LL.D., of the class of eighteen seventy-nine, in the Memorial Chapel at eight o,elock p. m. Monday, June 19 Commencement Exercises at half past nine o'clock a. m. Alumni Luncheon in Fayerweather Gymnasium at half past twelve o,clock p. m. The Annual Meeting of Phi Beta Kappa at half past three o'clock p. rn. Presidentls Reception at the President's House from four .to six o'clock p. m. A Fraternity Receptions in the various Fraternity Houses from half past five to half past seven o'clock p. m. College Sing on the Front Campus at nine o,cloek p. m. Fraternity Reunions. Yr 11 W Class Day Exercises Saturday, June I7 ll.00 a. rn. l Programme President's Address . .... George Whitfield Beeman l Response .... . President William Arnold Shanklin Class History .... . . . Earl Place Stevenson Music, The Princess Pat . .... H erbert Class Poem .... . George Shelton Hubbell Presentations .... . . . David VVilliam Gordon Class Prophecy . . . . Joseph Anthony Hofmann, Jr. Music, Samson and Delilahl' . . H. . . Deliebes J l Cup Ceremony . . . . Frank Alfred Slocum, Jr. Pipe Ceremony . Algernon Poole Reeves Ivy Ceremony ....... Elmer Tice Eustis ll Class Day Committee l George Mansfield Craig, Chairman Albert Akley Belyea Edward Leopold Markthaler Edgar Blake, Jr. Winfield Scott Moore, Jr. Wilbur Nelson Edwards Algernon Poole Reeves Ralph Edward Foster Lyman Stephen Young James George lVIcAlpine lVIinor Crawford Young Marshal Minor Crawford Young 98Li 4f1 5- ,H Y A Commencement Exerclses Organ Processional Monday, June 19 Prayer M Music- Scotch Poem .,.. M acDoweZl Oration- The Pan-American Policyl' . Mansield Freeman Oration- Sophistry in Modern Thought Ioseph Milner Goldblat Oration- America and the Immigrantu . Morus Blumer Music- Shades of Nightv .... F meclland Oration- The American Democratic Ideal Harrison Monell Sayre Oration-HA Plea for the Classicsv . . Herbert Chester Saroent Music- Bal de Nocesl' . . Burgmezn Conferring of Degrees Benediction The Rich Prize was awarded to Joseph M Goldblatt Honorable Mention was awarded to Harrison M Sayre .,...1. l82 ,l?A-ii tg... Degrees Conferred June 1916 Degrees in Course Bachelor of Arts To Forty-six lVIembers'of the Class of 1916 Bachelor of Science a To Thirty-three Meinbers of the Class of 1916 'N Master of Arts Homer Franklin Carey Robert Elwood lVIoore Rudolph Wilson Chamberlain Harold Andrew Richmond James Holmes Defandorf Howard Boniwell Wfarren Joseph Williain Fosa John Cheney White Ira Vaughan Hiscock Harold Rideout Willoughby Master of Science l Eli Allison Francis Chapin Breckenridge Henry Hopkins VVright Honorary Degrees Master of Arts George Seymour Godard Albert Barret Meredith - Doctor of Divinity Edward Campion Acheson William Henry Kidd Fred Winslow Adams Lewis Marshall Lounsbury VVilbur Vincent lVIallalieu ., Doctor of Laws Nicholas M11r1'ay Butler Harry Burns Hutchins 1918 it X REEL, Q48 A , 4 , Honors Awardedat Commencement l9I 6 High Honors Wilbur Nelson Edwards 1,1 Harold Raymond Aldrich Raymond Theodore Broeg Alfred Evans Bruner Wilfred McKinley Bywater Lewis James Carey George Bartlett Curtis i Bradford Downey Joseph Milner Goldblatt 2 . 8 Joseph Anthony Hofmann, George Shelton Hubbell Franklin Patton Kellom l H0-Min Lin Jr. Honors James George MeAlpine Robert Chester Macdonald Eldon Hubert Martin William Maxmillian Rau Harrison Monell Sayre Earl Place Stevenson George Hawley Stewart George Elwood Stookey Karl Skillman Van Dyke Joseph Hall Van Shoick George Clinton Weeks Charles Lewis Wood, Jr. Honors in Special Departments George Shelton Hubbell Eldon Hubert Martin 549152 Prizes Awarded I9I 5 I9I6 The Peirce Prize Frank Douglas Harris, 1918 y The Phi Beta Kappa Prize 1 Benjamin Hezekiah Bissell, 1918 The john Bell' Scott Prize Russell Talcott Purnell, 1918 The Griffin Prize Eldon Hubert Martin, 1916 The Camp Prize ' Fred Bingham Barrows, 1918 The Johnston Prize Philip Ayres Dales, 1917 ' The Spinney Prize John Gray Glenn, 1918 The Rice Prize Carl Leo Stearns, 1917 John Elmer Cavelti, 1918 The Walkley Prize Fred Bingham Barrows, 1918 Cuthbert Charles Gabel, 1919 The Gerald Prize Donald Buttz Clark, 1917 The Prentice Prize Morris Blumer, 1916 a 5191865 1 The Sherman Prize Arthur Prudden Coleman, 1919 The Ayres Prize Frederick Morgan Davenport, Jr., 1920 ' The Rich Prize Joseph Milner Goldlolatt, 1917 The Olin Prize , George Shelton Hubbell, 1916 The Cole Prize George Raymond Larkin, 1918 Robert Boies Sharpe, 1918 The Briggs Prize Mehran Kafaiian Thomson, 1917 The Junior Exhibition Prize Mehran Kafafian Thomson, 1917 The Parker Prize John Allen Stephens, Jr., 1917 The Hibhard Prize Waldo Urban Wagner, 1919 natal? f y im? f,-5 Y N ' lg fa? 23 752, 2142- ,-2 1 .Pal f 1 has 2 'ff jk-L My VE- zfgg Ti 5 K7 . ' ' 1 2 1 ll X . S . ie: - , f 5 f -,f If X X 5 , fx 1 F .- P- - E -7-11 c - ' v 1. x :iii eff- ii Q2 QQN . bu 5, - 5, Y -,,- . :pq - v F ti : ' 'Ex f X 3 E Q x S X x Q x .xg x S S x S E S S Q 2 N X! SS I Y R13 N-I . 1213 X w , -x , , JF C f 'ET x.-X H , WR - :E H fg nmm, 7 f 5 Y I X X NM X 11 X E R ,L FE Sys . by fl! N E Ui rf . .1 'I -1. ., ,cf ,Y A 'V I xi -j all-LC QI . if i' 1 is fi. 1 2. A ww W7 1 A L - 'WIN 0 E522 5. , e v , 4: .I f wwggfr X X4 - - -Q . 1 ff: V! E , 1 my Ms: Eshfgjleflgze , - .illll.12E1-1- -f il JE I fl' 9 1. 41,12 -E i:-: ' Isfsgf-35 M Fil' ,E ...... :,...1.:.- -VS , 1 gy . . rg gh N w NNW . vs' Ili ES - ri 1 ,1 :-- I5 - . ,. . f .ff,112'. 5 H - '-Hifi., 1 -f ,fT'?', 43, WWW 1-Ulq X-. , 51, XG N, .. IIIIK will' ...Hu ng .X !, a:aEg'x 'x N' I 'i 1 :W--- ' if-z., :is fl: N5 129 1 .,-x, -Tuff' if-1 'ag' Feature '11 1,352 4917! - , 1 . .-ff, 1 ff 5 f zz' I aoxluv CIAHDEI- ug., A ... 4 if T. I N ' AD I' - 1 'I ' v . L '- if ii QI . T? . ...nb wif .. . f ish .. Y -wp ,g '11--M -. +A. f l 4: .. , - . 1 4 5-'Af -N ZH' : 4, 2.1,-gf: f 11 :Ll 1-,-.-5 ,--1-f . Tm, P -J ' v ,Ja - -:Af Q: .' . .- f - ,,-7 W ,. ...,g. ..g,,l T . L. --iw 'M ..,,.-f 1-1 xr- L34E.n:,:- - . K N yy J in , J ,X.x,l.,,,. .. .. .,.,p.,,,H .- , . f -kg ..g-.1 ,, , ' A -.11--1',w1V:- . L .1 . Ti , w - 'j uf -1. ni :.3?T'.! - 1 '.,'. ..'.u , K- - V, - 4- ,312 3 'L , ,'A v . .5 A -5 L' fy. iifnivifb.. . -. 1. 4- if H.-,Q1 ' -A ,.: ,. 'fv' 3 Y qv. 5 ' .-1 .2 - 'L ,X , ' . ' , - .1 , ' ' Egg. 101' .., H, 5 lf' - ' 4. , si . WJW5 ' .wi , fc, .- .. - x -H . Y-, .u gugff. ' ' r gy . ,, -Q .-r . .- , '15, ' . r-'. 'J -A. .. . . ,,, 4 v, - H 1 ,- ,M ' .-Q, ..q.,,., . . V ,. 5 ' '.if'- ,: Y .- ..,f1. -45 ' .1.V' :jr ,.1. . n L , . K. . - u, -v -.1 ,L ,,- . ' ,-pg ' , ' V X .H . I x A , fin, w 1. W n. ,I , ,- 1-:T'z,1g'5,L 5.-5 - wp 1 ' ' ...au . V .' .', -1 , : ,xrvs U.. ,.,.Y -w-, 1 -L if M. ff f ..V,VLI , ep 's 1 . . r --41.-, ,g... Tl.,-Z M f-f.1 - : - 5..-my A' - 1. . 4' , ,. ff: '-if f 1-ff N- . .. ,, , .f '5fg,,.z P E I , ., , ' I . . .1 A-51 .-, fjjl ' 1.14, Q L ' 4.. 72 sf? '. - 4 ' N9 Y ' !g,3' ,Q , az - X 151- - - 11 ' mil , W' '. Ji.-, :ggi . . , .. . .- ' 1' TQ .-.- 't I ' ' V LL .- , -L' .-1, r - -A... . ,U ' V+ , L ,. I,-T43 ' uf. f , - Y- 1 ' ,, , ... . y . --I 3. 5 - , - A lsi F I -. J r 55 E J' 4. A I 4 I . V' - M .N W he , 'w w, 'A I '. ri - - . . . .J , , , -1 : if -- , 41+ 1- - 2 S, r A ,fl H A ' ' Q . -an Hp- .W , , .4 -J ' . V , i-.--'5 J A V. 5 A - 3, M I ix I -:lr .- -Q '- '1 ,F--' ,- . An . ifggjrvi, Y- til., , I 4. . , 1 .-. , - - V 1 '-A .J -1.4. - - N --.w , fn.: - wrt' . : .,,-j .,, I I r X . ,zf gf' v'.j 'I w . , 4. , V ,.',- , . I .fri I ', fi fijv' 'E 14 F 3 1 'A-Q L .. , 4 , - T' L f ., . , w ' ff. 1.1 .P . . ' . K ...M ' - , -f. -. 41: A EF3.. I I LN W w A . , .if , -EE: !Q . .w ' I- , : A X .-, , ,r - .1 - . .4 , , --pf 11 2: nfim--' -j , . 2' .ggi--.. .5 ' Q' - 1 N, ' .4 , 3, U I f ' - jf . ,Q w.,..L 4 T Jff. - - - ' - 1 . .- v vE,,-f' ' 3 ' ' ' .I Tlwi' ia fi ' ' f A ' 1 ' ' iicfl-gif.: 'T lr V if-LQ is I ,:H,v'v. A: Tri. . N-.4-x.,'-.1f..:'fgQ-I-?I9i,:1 V143 1.1 .fgigzx-ig Lfejsif fi, UT 5.13. ' ig-a'f.A-if E: ...figs 1-,-Q: -F --.'.-, f- 3 .rg .7 lu +4- . mn' av, ,li ' --'if4- ig Y- 'gc' H., Q' ' - .,5 V -.Aw,-A,- I-, u., .Euan J ,. -Y . :L :9-'4 f -' , ,, . '.- :'r'- II .,, ,. 1 , GYEX Gentle Reader RE you one of those who make the Feature Section an Economic want? Are you a nut? Do you appear to be absent? -Or do you merely sit and blink at the wisdom of Pliny the Younger? But whether or not we say Koom',, when visitors rap at our door, there has been no object of War in this section. To those Who think they owe it to themselves to get mad, we have very little to say. However, it would give us no end of suffering if We thought anything had been held back, because it might make someone sore. i 19l8g i ,ZW -lwx 256 H 4 ' X DEDICQTION TO THE ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE FOR WHICH EVERY STUDENT HAS A SOFT PLACE IN HIS HEAD AND A BRICK IN HIS HAND: TO THE N. Y., N. H., 6: H. R. R., I TO THE PENNY PRESS, TO PROFESSOR GILLET'S LIPS I RESPECTFULLY, WE DEDICATE THIS SECTION. 1918 - f A - . .QTL Q.'q'Q, N , ' fje' f'f'SkXY - X X III44 lv SES' rlifldlgh S .Ry I QW! 'with' s ali gm' 6 ,, -X J, ,,.. iw. xx-X55 - wwf-f' ', E . T me Y 4 , 4' . l 'f ' ' -1 ':-4 if H75 : 1 .1mI A- . ' '17 .a - . '1 '. 117' X fjj3,,.,. 7 - ., .f fi J ft A ,fa , vs. N31 Q I 3 I l -.W KN ll if f. ff W 1. .-,Lf-, .-AX, - fr. vw-- '-ilff 'K 5 X Hifi xi XR all t.. Ye Gods! Shell Rims Sweatshirts lVIura,ds Frank Brotherls Senior mustaiches Weinsteins The Grand Doc Doc Behrmzin The Lit K B CII Books Wise men Chapel , Knickerbockers Endowments Flannels Fossils A new club Exams For Your Convenience Happy Frosh Chaffeed Sophornores Lovesick Juniors And Lest We forget,- N. Y. Hill Ye Gods! A K I 1 1 .2 0 ' .. ' if' I ix A -11 Fu. J i -5 lil 'WMM ZW l'1 10.55 a 11.09 a 12.01 p. 12.20 p 12.50 p 1.00 p 2.30 p A J it J l-low Dotli t e Busy Wesleyan Senior III. Rosy dawn. The busy Senior dives for a shower. The only Thursday class Sweet sleep again. That soothing bromo for your convenience. The careful grooming. Out to the Highland Q58 fm' ' 0 0 m aaa ig m rn m II1 II1 Club with Ruth. The Stutz must have its ex- ercise. Luncheon pour deux, or something like that. Golf. The busy Senior has just killed another golf. 3.42 p m The city calls. 6.06 p III The Grand Central. ya 6.07 p rn. The busy Senior meets brother Clam of the Cape Cod Chapter. 6.08 p m. The Biltmore. 6.09 p m The 'M 7 6.10 p. m The theatre ticket reser- ' vations. Q ' A 6.15 p m The alluring blonde tele- S 5 phone miss. 6.30 p m Dinner. 6.31 p m M95 ' 6.32 p m Mx' q Q 0.35 p m W' laid fq 6.45 p m. etc. p -W 'lf 8.20 p m The ride in the taxi. ' C X fi' V 8.30 p m. The Century Theatre. ' 8.40 p. m. The stage of alluring 1 V 1 ' f -lm K colors. Q, 'f-J l 4 g 8.41 p m. The idea. 1 i wwwmu 8.42 p m. ' 2 E t 918 - .--- 259 According to the Beliefs of Many 9.56 p. 111. 1 1111 11.03 p. m The taxi again. ?Qj X I 11.18 p. m The Midnight Frolic. 1 11.28 P. m The blase waiter. 'N L'Vi'Q1f f -- V I! 11.29 p. 111 We if ix 4 -1 12.00 l'I'1. The gong. 12.16 a. m The balloon that you can't get. 12.17 a.1n ysakpkxbkxx 12.20 a. In 1.35 a. m Brother Clam suggests .SZ leaving. Q-f' 1.410 a. m The rebuke to brother -ff, Clam. AJVNfxfxJVN 1.411 a. m The rebuke.'WWbk 3.00 a. m The taxi again. 3.15 a. m Jack's. 3.50 a. m 111141 X. 4-19 at m fkvk wk 4.28 a. m 4.31 a. m 4.39 a. m 4.110 a. m 4.411 a. m 7.50 a. m 8.45 a. III. 11.55 a. m. Brother Clam rudely calls attention to the time of morning. The taxi once more. The Grand Central. The hurried han, shalis. The rush for the Milk Train. The Lord is in His Holy Temple in Middletown, but the Busy Senior is only reaching New Ha- ven. Downy sleep again. Rosy dawn. Etc. etc. lu 1 E11 1 W in . . , armi-f7'. 1' ......-'.. .-,y ,170 H-Q1 X 1.-U66 if-' 1 I I .11 1 Yx N-X rr 'frm wi 2 f . IllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll Q mmnnm ,..-g --:: :::::::P ' ' 47 ig 1115 - -- ,-ii-T- ' JBHADJWW' FM 1' g19l8i? J lm Ma YE ?Q'5 Aa. -'Lf , 3 I .QE Pe J F ok , if ,. WHEN I CAME 'ro commas A Sitting on the porch one dayf?my parentgcame down to me. It was a beautiful spring morning and thembirds sang with verna1.gi f- freshness in the trees. AS I sat in thought a sparrow flitted E I 4, by with joyful chirping, and I could hardly restrain myself for joy that I was alive. But returning to our subject, my father '...-f-'N..,f-'x-.'v g,-.r-,,fA,,,Q:,,ae--,-v,,,4 N-Awugm asked me if I wanted to go to college. At the very thought my head swam and my eyes grew misty with happiness at the thought. The very most I had expected was a business school. iggif M., wwawirixtmfxsewwghf-1:1 we-13.55, an sv'h: :4'1', n 'e'-e-f-f:-kms:,2.,:W But enough of vacationgl Having decided to go to college it Y hsn'w-s-,-.,,,.,-1ve-4v:-lv.w:v::a':-:.Le-:2,:'A 3! ' was neceagary to decide why I should go. One can get a lot out of college. Thaggin itself is a sufficient reason Why one should :mr --he -4 -:slim 'Leif -45535119722-sa-cz. go.Q4Qut let us proceedij The main thing in college is an educa- tional influence the advantages from which are many. The educa- ted young man will make his way in the world where others miser- ably fail. . fag? It iskbiliho will enter t12ea,r?a9,39n2,.eeCH2Y25?S.r.ei,i ws' Step 1-,se-..-R. .--ml.. X- V X , ,f,.?,:,.:Q. by step against incomprehensible forces to the top. Hereghqlstands -e::,ui:.vei ' 'T' 1? firmly on both feet and cries uSucoess.H Seegfimgas he waves the banner of victory triumphantly over the headsjwhich he used for , .4.' stepping stones of the more unfortunate phi naturally are the ig- Q. norant. gf E And not only in the factory bui in the office does the educa- ted young man materially advance. igiiggiiimgimggfEfiggggiiiiiiigg in a bank, say, to size a bogus check on the instant. Or by com- ing in early and having an eye to the waste-baskets and cuspidors will help him in the long run immeasurably. f fa XR f' x yy k ' -,,-Qj. J 1 h I The World:- Now that y u've had a good four years' education t 11 t k you about t d t b t k f years more to ge 0 ac sf, . 63 5.1 X Wesleyan University QI . Brainstormj nqjune, 19175 AI. Give all the latest developments in the Launcelot-Guinevere and Tristan-Isolde scandals, Be explicit-the moregscandalous the better. II. Discuss political, ecclesiastical, and social conditions in England during the period from 49 B. C. to 1917 A. D. with especial reference to domestic and foreign affairs. III. Hydropodoza. - IV. How does the margin of supply and demand affect Communistic socialism. State carefully WHY or VVHY NOT. ' V. Translate the following sentences into idiomatic German:- Caj Some line, bo, some line, but you can't kid me. Come across with the kale or I'll croak you with the gat. Speedlw Cbj With a naive smile she whispered, sotto Voce, A propos, of our recent t6te-a- tete, to be comme il faut, one must never be de trop. ' VI. Cal Of the inmates of insane asylums, 49.52, are there because of tobacco, 86.2fZ, because of alcohol, and 61.34723 because of the drug habit. Accounts for the reason for the presence of the remaining 40.723 Wg. 1191895 so L1., 1-5. rule, 'ffl ,gtx EE? A -2- It is the little things that count as a well known author is known to have uttered. Even in such vivid examples asasel- ling tickets at a base-bd.1 game the educated young man has the ff- ' KJ-NGACMN .Q advantage over the ignorant one. Qghereasg the latter, if so disposed, may be successful in short-changing a customer once udp.,-Jay.-.tis-A Q-.ar-f '...1-fz.yg: ,3 .2 ,A . .fl .Nh' . 9 or twiceg yet once or twicewhr innumerable more times he might Y '-,H-E 1 -sau... we 49: la,- -'H-Yzw-'rv-:.-v-!,,n-..r..34y 5 short-change himself and by dishonesty the tables would be turned against the latter. But the former never would make that mis- take, moreover,let us not suppose that the former would take ad- vantage of his education to put himself in the position of the latter by dishonesty. There are many other examples too numerous to mention. All these are but a few examples of the advantages of a col-Egfif ?'?? lege education. But to suppose that education is the only advan-jfgpgi S tage would be mere folly. One forms many friends. How great is 2 V i their value especially in after life! For instance I know a guy f A , ..-.5 .,,f-c,,,v,.r J.--i,,,:..x from 5ustraliaQ?gThink of the great pleasure I can look forward to if I should visit Australia and how secure I would feel at hav- ing friends all over the world. Compare this with the dreary out- lookighgaggpjggagh of the following: Columous, Drake, Mandeville, f v ans. agd even in our own timekgogkg These men had little or no college Nsf:xfr1fPgy.f57agQCfa3' ,J AL - 1:1w.f.,..f,,,1,T,:?m-..-4- -gg.:.1:n7e-ffLff'A- 'i1- -52' . 4. . . education such as I will get and consequently no friends to greet, them on their travels. - ' X But even if I dohnot get an education or make any friends it A k stillkl feel with certainty that Ifsiall make myfwgg in the gsridQ Think df the goldggfoppoitunitgeg ahead of a guy than couldpland a job inxthe luhih room ogkgyirdian ofaiheftender Hbgadijgrassor- umn fmay IEEuhte?d on the hrilliant work? KI hope thEJEQEEQMYflt?gg .amaaaa,a,,a . ,i-J1f1fw .-t' kindly note this al1egory.l -Mqgggn EE This, and solely these, is why I came to college.fEf 1 .vqyq 13-I-iff-J V 4:35- UQ We Nominate F or if ' ' ---1 Because he brings us the overcut cards: because he is one of the boysg because he can out-talk any Wesleyan l1l1fl6'l'gl'ilClll2ll,G2 and because he is an estab- lished institution. Because he is so bashfulg because he reads Robert W,Se1'vice3 because he occasionally smokes a cigarette: because of his desire to become a missionary to Pekingg and because he combines those rare qualities of being human as well as tenor. Because hc says just what he thinks on any sub- jectg because he doesn't care whether you agree with him or notg because he graduated from Princeton and is proud of itg and because he gives Wesleyan men the quiet understanding and ready help of an eminent scholar, a great teacher, and an abiding friend. 1918L ll? W ---Fl-ll'lC of l:E1II'1C Because he keeps the Deke's in good humorg be- cause he attends football games: because he can smileg and because he can concoct anything from caviar to bisque tortoni. Because he is a Senior: because he suggested that the German Club get rnonogrammed dancing shoes: because he can grow a mustache over nightg because he thought this picture would please Lew Codding: and because we think This scores one for Lew. . ,. - .457-i f' i 4'Q4frfviQ fgawmmQ?'ww 2. ' 5-vI5, 'f25,'3321j:-,Q,.Q.5-,'Q.,1.'.-'53i ,-5' , afwiflf 77? gg, aaaf awaaa Because he blobs most beautilullyg because he ' l . IU'f can romp around the track to beat the cardsg because 55f11,L3:gz1- ,l f . . '1Wsf?5v he IS not Swedlshg and because he allowed us to use , this photograph. Q' ' A -eeu ,. - :ew f'4Z1v 'w r .1 .,., 4 ,,. ...L . ., .Jael-,-lgffcL1'7A5f 4 1.:f'f4wfl?5Qfi1jn .fw ewaa'+f5QmwW ' .1 fi- 1918 Y Q66 x l -- I L o, i T A f-- w. il' f . X A t ,431 L 3' X N Y SINJ Y X A i lt ll A ln A 'll ' i f ' lt, 'W I Q ' Nlfi M if x it ll Gentlemen, the Musical Clubs X April 3rd-M. E. Church, Durham, Conn. April 4th-M. E. Church, MacJunk, Conn. April 5th-Grammar School, New Rochelle, N. Y. April 6th-M. E. Sunday-school Room, Port Chester, N. Y. April 7th-High School, Germantown, Penn. April 8th-M. E. Church, Maunch Chunk, Penn. April 9th-Ladies, Aid Society, Beaver, Penn. Dear Bud:- We hope' That You won,t Sever . Diplomatic relations When- you Read this. . But- We donit Like The Bill Bryan Circuit. Yours, The Sufferers. I glen? S Ei! 'X 'Q' LF! X all . L up fl yn af 3' if X W j 1 'WE ,N . V X X l il , O 'H H ix ffl lit ix., I t' My f .ll ,, i i all I x f N The Snappy Story y He was only a Freshman, and only seventeen, ,Twas after dinner of a warm evening in May, a Saturday night with the very seence of springtime in the air. The Freshman strolled down the hill to the broad stretch of the city known as Main Street. 'Before a shabby wooden building he paused, the warm glow of youth thrilling him through and through. As he entered he climbed up the rickety stairs and stopped before a dingy door. He felt in his pocket to make sure of the dollar bill safely stored away, then with new determination he walked in. l--Ccensoredj ------ He lay back oblivious to everything except the white-clad form that hovered above him. He expected something, yet he did not know just what. Softly a snowy arm drooped around his neck, and he felt the gentlest caresses on lip and cheeks. His tense body quivered throughout g he pressed his eyes closed in ecstacy. He was only a Freshman, only seventeen, and this was his fi1'st--- shave. it 1918? we to of 1918 2 L., l l f-1 .., A 5 X -ll IN X Yell' X J , 1 P ll IL ir X. f f U X mm l is Qlm 5 ' il l l Studes , Freshnienj studes Who insist on saying 'hello' to everyoneg studes i with sweatshirtsg studes who look like Wise nieng and hear not neither do A they speakg eye-brow lipped studesg studes with shell-rimsg studes with VVeinsteinsg studes with flannelsg studes out for assistant inanagerships, greeting all with smilesg studes with cigsg studes with Camelsg Senior studes looking insulted all the time g loud nlouthed Sophomore studesg- :L eonceited Freshman herog-YOU, and I. 4fL 4iig :- S 4 -'hgfixqiw we zine J 9 ' I , ' - gg, Ak? 2 QB PI'OfS 'Good profsg bad profsg thin profsg profs with excess baggageg profs who say 'koom' in shrill voieesg profs with whiskersg tortoise-shelled profsg profs with shiny facesg profs Who have tendencies for Fordsg profs who prefer Overlandsg profs with blinky eyesg profs who enjoy kidding you in classg profs who go on chatauqua toursg and,-Wesleyaii profs. 209 l tl Q70 What the Well-Dressed Man Will Weinstein For Morning Wear while Hitting from class to class, a natty garment of cream-colored wool de swette is shown. The rakish V-neck affords the wearer an excellent opportunity to air his taste in pajama hues. With this they are wearing white flannel trousers, although, to be exactly comme il faut, one should not appear in public unless the trousers are carefully aged and weathered. A long-felt want among college men is filled by the new Chapel Coat, the principal charm of which lies in its commodious inside pockets, large enough to conceal the current cosmo even in its present enlarged form. Bird hunters of III Biology will hail with delight a clever two-piece field suit for exploring purposesg the coat of Goodrich Green tweed, with feather collarg the trousers, mid-calf length, of fog gray, splashed with mud brown-indeed a charming ensemble. For the eukalale artist, up-to-the-minute outitters are furnishing a yellow satin sash, and an alluring garland of white velvet moonflowers. These accessories are quite essential to the correct atmosphere. Among the specialties for the coming Summer season, the ladies' man will view the following with favor. A vest, of light, elastic material, has individual pockets for sen-sen, cloves, and chiclets. You will be unable to obey that hasty and oft-times ill-advised impulse if your fraternity pin is guarded by one of the new time-lock attachments. A non-collapsible peterskyla case of frosted aluminum obviates the usual necessity for caution in embraces. It is tested for a pressure of three hundred and forty pounds to the square inch. If you care to exceed that you ought not to carry cigars. The smoker need not be embarrassed by the absence of ash-trays, if he is provided with the new asbestos linings for trouser-cuffs. Cigarette stubs may be deposited there without fear of disaster. -as The Morning Cold Plunge The seven o'clock bell. The Warm, cosy bed. The turn over. The mental struggle. The sudden resolution. The Wild leap. The cold room. The gooseflesh. The dive for the shower. The turn of the faucet. The cold Water. The missing towel. The trip to the linen closet. . The return. p The gaze at the cold Water. The deep breath. The shudder. The retreat. The return. The awful dive. Br-r-r-r-r The brisk rubbing. The discordant song. The return of the ego. The other shower-seekers assemble. The superior glances. The remark that it is second nature now. K- 1918L c K S. Q72 -Dear 1917 VVe thought that you might have forffotten 'Lb t tl ' D . ou us, so 111 case that you have, we herewith be ' to ll ' g ca. attentlon to- J -x THE GYlVI KEY lovingly, The Class of 1918 1918 'T At the P rom Yes, isn't it a nice evening? The decorations are simply Wonderful, a1'en,t they?U Are you a Senior? Oh, haven't I met you before?,' Good crowd of buds, eh? 6'What a terrible dressf' Look at that couple over there, did you ever see such dancingiw Oh so you are a Delta Alpha Beta? Let's see do you know Ding Kenilworthiv' I always feel so sorry for the patronessesf, VVho said this was punch?' Oh, I'm awfully glad to know you, Ilve heard Jack speak so often of youf' Oh youv'e ruined my dressf, Gotta a cigarette? g'Rotten party isn't it? Let,s go for a spin in the ear?,' Damn this tie. OW, some people-H 6'Oh did you ever hear such heavenly music? I beg youah pahdonf' - So you live in Chicago. Do you know Fred. Smith of Omaha?', La, la, la, la-la, la. You,re a wonderful dancerf' Goodnight, I'm so glad to have met youf, E 'o 1918i Omission QThe Editors humbly wish to offer their apologies for the unealled for omission of lVIr. lVIaeDuffie's honors from the Senior Class roll. Wie' hope that by placing Mr. MaeDufHe,s OLLA PODRIDA points on this page, that We shall have reeolnpensed him for this indiscreet omission.j John Wesley lVlacDuflie Kappa Beta Phig Bones and Bonesg Stein Club Cl, 2, 3, Mg Varsity Chaffee Team Cl, 2, 3, fljg Class Nut Cl, Qlg Chairman Chapel HQS Com- mittee Qljg La Societe Jewish Cl, Q, 3, 41g Preliminary Honors in Fatiinas CQDg Leave of Absence Q5j. Mutterings All the University's a stage, And all the Studes merely players, They have their entrances and then LXITS And each one in his time plays many parts First, the Freshman, Babbling and tripping, Hesitating and timorously shy, Fearing and dreading, yet learn Then the Sophomore, Loud mouthed and -blase, Thinking that he is a comer, And that college revolves aroun Third, the Junior, ' Still care-free, 'for the World lies Yet a two years hence. - And then, the Senior,- Sopping in his self-assurance, At first, then towards J une, Becoming a cynic, Discussing the Ways of life, And what he has accomplished, Or rather, not accomplished, And then, The saddest sight of all, ing d his happy self To graduate or not to graduate, That is the question. And lastly, The young alumnus, Realizing that after all, The World doesn't give A good blankety-blank, VVhat he did in college. H so iillifg Iii- W l N Epilogue Last night As I strolled Across the campus At suppertime And the birds Wlere twittering In the trees And the moon I l' Was full I think 'l . Ano I-was hungry Thinking of home And father And next m0nth's bills ' , A black cat crossed In front of 1ne Then too got A letter I This morning 4 When I got home From class It was from f2liI.I1G1' He said he wanted An accounting 'I'hat's Why She's not going To the game With me. Q77 ..... r ,xp We l-lave a Lot To Be Thankful To The thing that is most discouraging of all is to have to wind up all this mess without thanking each and every individual for this that or the other. And besides, to think of the lies that have been told about other people! And the pictures We have swiped! - And the ones we have promised to re- turn. These things eanit be lived down! Let us go off and have a good cry together. E 1918 ii , 1 Advertisements ' --- 09,5-. 'T KSEYSQ, 1' Z! 42' E9 mil I, 0 ,,,,,f- so 4 F E Nloney Ca1n't buy any bet- ter Woolens. Yet, prices of our suits and overeoats for men and boys are moderate. Mail Orders Fillczl RQGERS PEET COMPANY Urozulwuy Brouclwaly at 13th St. -The at 341th St. Four , B1'ozulway Coruerstf Flfth Ave. at 1Va1'1'en at 4151: St. NEW YORK CITY ESTABLISHED 1896 MAX PRESS Tailor and Cloihier cg 45 I I 9 171 MAIN STREET ESTABLISHED IBIS CEE E ess? E E53 tlemmm urnislqinig mhz, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY'FOURTH STREET NEW YORK l 4 . i i T, .Ek fps is i l fjfillf T BROOKS ONLYA BRoTHERs' l STEP FROM '- 1' QM , ,',' lf? fi . . New Building l Grand C entral, Telephone i Subway, and Murray Hill .. T many leading E l.f, . .ilgm1.feis- f ssoo . :. g.r -r 'l if Hotels 25 life,-.5151 -'-' 'gi gs fx:-r. 'lf'im:'l .ni-wp! . T 5 3 E 14 , y 'A-. 4:3535 l k 3 5' SE' -,':2l,1f'-,ef ll,' ,.,, i f - E i' G lam if f'l 'if' Clothing for Every Requirement Ready-niade and to Measure Suits and Overeoats for Business, Dress or Sport English and Domestic Hats and Shoes Shirts, Cravats, Collars, Pajamas, Underwear, Hosiery and Gloves Dressing Gowns, Travellers' Requisites, Leather Goods A Vllool VVa.istcoa.ts, Gaps, Sweaters and Mufflers of Shetland or ngora Imported Pipes, Tobacco Pouches, Cigarette Cases, etc. Liveries for all Menservants Our New I lluslmlefl Catalogue Conlalziiwg more than One Hunclrecl Phologmplzflc Plates will be sent on request NEWPORT BRANCH BOSTON BRANCH 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE LITTLE BUILDING ll fsmmo Plwotograplwers to College Annuals. Special Equipment ancl Experience in tlwis worla. Main OFECQ, Broadway 557 Fifth Avenue Northampton, Mass. Hanover, N. H. ltlmaca, N. Y Princeton, N. West Point, N. Y. Ann Arbor, lVlicl'1. a If xfivR'Q3 1 r ,fi . .- L Y ki. JD , .f-, Plumbing cmd Ile. lg, 1 r n l j H mlm : 1-f5ig'., Qg,: ,ilk I n - ec 1 ?.3T.:.7: i l il lgllle sTUEcK's M0msRN TAVERN 35 Private Dining and Tea Rooms Dance Hall and Ball Room Catering for College Banquets a Specialty J. W. STUECK 8: SON MIDDLETOWN, coNN. , BACON BRQS. 287 Main St. CAMP, The Store ofthe better Quality, 'where you always find the best Stein-Bloch Clothes, Fashion Park Clothes, Knox l-lats, Fowne's Gloves, Korrect Shapen Shoes, Star Shirts ' Yours for satisfaction THE R. W. CAMP CO. 346-3 50 Main St., Middletown, Conn. Connecticut D Brown Stone The Brainerd, Shaler and Hall Quarry Company ' PORTLAND, CONNECTICUT WHEN you buy of us, ne are both benefited. Wlhen you buy out of town, both are losers-you by paying more for your goods, we by losing E1 small profit. Wfhere do your interests lie? Hart, Schajner 6' Marx Cloihing, Fowne's 5' Meycris Gloves, Yorke, Hathaway and Leighlon Shiris, B. V. D. Shirts and Drawers, B. V. D. Union Suits, Holeproof Hosiery Neckwear, Hats, Caps, Umbrellas, Trunks and Bags. : . CUSTOM TAILORING ' The Barton Clothing Co. 324-326 Main St., Middletown, Conn. Installed in the new Wesleyan Dormitory S and in most of the prominent colleges and educational institutions throughout the - United States, including the new buildings for the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- l--- nology and the Harvard Freshmen Dormi- tory Buildlngs. The S eneer Turbine Cleaner Co. pl-IARTFORD, CONN. 01132 5311.-zriben Qbrahure Qin. PHOTO-GELATINE PRINTERS - I MERIDEN, CONN. Inserts, Technical and Scientific Reproduc- tions, Posters, Catalog Illustrations, etc. Estimates cheerfully furnished on receipt of specifications. Middletown Coal Co. SOLE AGENT FOR Old Company s Lehigh Office. 265 Main Street MIDDLETOVVN, CONN. V MYL CHREEST BR OS. Budders of We5leyan's N ew Dormzlory Bminevfd Ave., Middletown C, Slgne 81 S0115 Griffing Scofield INC. Electric Co. Comfraciors and EE QE Builders Electrical Engineers and Contractors me l I36 Church Street 137 Maln St., New Dom Hotel Building 5 M I DDLETOWN HARTFORD Hartford Builders' Finish Co. vff ,aggy:f:,:,, . i .1-.3 . -'s.':,'2.1+',gT,3?m?'21-EYLSI'-ji:S'7Y?:g I 'A B3gggf1251ffff2'f - , i- its ':- .:.ff.afsf:r:':1'5::'sf 'I' :S-, . - P - 35212-'f A , ii., 1 mia' , , - 41 ' Q ' sys - ' K :-2 -in 1 eg ,z W .,.,,1Q,,- 1 -V:-fs:::'.f-we . ' .,-,1- W- - -- - . -W , .- 1 Q f- viii? - it - sf 1,., - Q L-: v w. - gs? ' . H ' 'Q-'mg-2. W2vk,mi,yrRx KW ' L' .. - Lf .3f, 4 5iiE? :,, .:z::w ' s:?g'F e V i : -, ,rw -N.. V , ,, 1, asp-.4,f,Zaz 5 if f' .. I- gs -Sm ' sf L-. V -In rj I. Q15 ,:.N..g12g5Eg'iI'Qqwiim- mm-- . vi. , . . ,E..iEKn,-Fonv V ,E 535' E, tw'--4 In ' jg-'fm , .g F .X X ' . K. ,, I HW gr QQ 3, 1 ' xi . ,,- IEQ:-Hjj31f 17g JWC- iffE ': -fl' . ' : Ee, auf 'I' PZ..-1.,9 f' ,. . , K ,,5.-v -' .,,. - ZZ? SE: - .. is ' ,- Ha- -iw.- .r N' U1 4 W!- .1 ' -N , ,.r- - . , . .r...,:..,1:-'..s:a',--'IZ?s:a'ff::'2s,,:,:':eg H. . V-,fm.v:'w X 7 ' 'V 'gm 4 A ..-1+ .- ,.--e ' -f ,wi .,.fgsax-5g,.5.,g5:.:::x. 1 -4 . -:. ..5 ws, sis-fr., -rm . f'5f7VI'3fF1:1.-'XS 5 fi .4 ' ..,fig-Ef'i'fiifQ:33ifL:-viI'.:f?lv? T'fl 1131-ir .'-53535351 50' 1 ' ' '- I ' - '- '5f',.5 '- '-.Iv :c5'.f4 'V' .11-'?:-'tZ5'S?:Ji '.':.i.'i hrs.-11 'CJ'v'1-:.: ' ' f...3,'.N ':-rdiflkfif.-.'.-Efcf I Builders' Finish Hartford, Conn. The Berkeley i f 1v1n1ty iii 2 S h 1 HE reputation of Spalding's C 00 Athletic Goods for quality which has been made in over forty MIDDLETOWN years of successful business, has .1 been acquired only by manufactur- ing with the utmost care and giving to the public athletic goods of the very best grade that can be produced. ' Catalogue on request September 18, 1917. Q 3 For Students of Theology with courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Divinity The sixty-fourth year will open For further information, apply to the REV. W. P. LADD, Acting Dean 124-128 Nassau St. 523 Fifth Avenue NEW YORK CITY vii If you ure particular about the style, quality, und fit ofyour clothes, buy your next suit of Richmond E5 I Weinstein AT ALPHA DELTA PHI HOUSE HOTEL ARRIGONI Newest Hotel in Middletown., Conn. EUROPEAN PLAN ROOMS-SINGLE. Sl .00 and up WITH PRIVATE BATH, 351.50 and up f T...-AYL0R'S Goodliflqlitii iuiiiiii Tildniiflght TENNIS BASEBALL TRACK I Q I ' LACROSSE I GOLF Q SWIMMING OUTING if -I I CAMP SUPPLIES L ' ALEX. TAYLOR 8: CO. INC. I Athletic Outfitters Taylor Building, 42nd St., New York Opp. Hotel Manhattan viii Tie LLA S UDRIDA to be sure of having good engravings, ejfcieni anci accornmociaiing service, prompi deliveries ana' fair charges, seieciealu Yiie HOWARD-WESSON CO. COLLEGE ENGRAVERS WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS A request t t lk over your Book ll not oblige you t make this select' ew Furnishings Needed? F so, then this is the place to Conie for furniture, rugs or draperies. After the fire had swept old North Col- lege out of existence, we helped complete the new build- ing that took its place, with fLll'I1lSl1l1lgS. Then we supplied most of the'F1'aternity Houses with outfits, winding up by Completely furnishing the New DOl'lllll201'5f. Doesnit this show that VVesleyarn knows where to go for good furnishings? The Jamey H Bama Company Savard 81 Lyon iLBIen'5 QButfitters Hand-Tailored Clothing For Men and Young Men Manhattan Shirts Interwoven Hosiery Regal and Banister Shoes Sport Coats White Flannel Trousers N ine Stores M I DDLETO WN PRINTING OF ALL KINDS ' E aim to make our Work a little better, and deliveries a little more prompt. Prices are 'always right. Telephone 338-3 Middlesex County Printery Co. PORTLAND, CONN. HARRY PRESS The Popular Tailor of Wesleyan University 192 MAIN STREET CNext to Elks' Buildingj MIDDLETCWN SPECIAL TO ALUMNI Branch Office at the Park Avenue Hotel, Park Mtllj Avenue, 32nd and 33d Streets, New York City. I :un there every Tuesday. When in New York call and see ine. Hotel Cumberland NEVV YORK Broadway at 5ll'th Street NEW YORK ,A KEPT BY A COLLEGE MAN - :Qs 'F Y 5 ' . 1 ll Headquarters for College Men Broadway ears from Grand Central Dcpol pass Lhc door, also T-eve-nlli Avenue Cars from Pennsylvania Station H E Modern and Fire roof r nwgg gll P lgl lg E , STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS RATES REASONABLL -1-A h U 362.00 VVITH BATH AND UP vf f-. 33-'fin , Ill !!! H : Specral Rates for College Teams and Students f? i l:E Ten lIllIllllC5' walk EO forly llrealres x' S k'x 7 km. The Cumberland s. S X 1 4 does more college lmsiness than any other hotel Q' Q in New York. Send for booklet. - HARRY P. STIMSON I-IEADQIUARTERS FOR COLLEGE MEN J. D. YOUNG THE Fine College PRINTING 91 Cross Street MlDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUT Stewart Printing Co ' Printers and if Boolchinclersi 5 .. , X ,, Sec our Sample Limit of Calendars for Next A l Year ' TELEPHONE CONNECTTON No. 106 Court St., Middletown, Conn. All .3 , f -. UXGLE V1 1? :X ' , X 2 lm ' 0 5 1 I fp Air--i DQ 99 o loom Q? 'IND BWXO Eagle Printing ancl incling Company Www FI-l1e Printing 42155. Senol for our ancl Bmclmg of book Evi- fl1is laooli was g'l'25?' dencen ---- It clone us tells flue story 'age School and College Printing A a SpecialtQ Flatiron Building Eagle Square Pittsfield, Massachusetts Q0 OY Q6 we? of Many Wesleyan M e n are giving us fine support in our ef- fort to supply this community with dairy products of the highest qual- ity. These men are seeing to it that their places of eating serve them Millbkiiiiok MILK CREAM ICE CREAM Your influence added to that of these men will help. VVhy not tall: it oyer with your steward today? THE MILLBROOK DAIRY COMPANY QM SK your steward to buy milk of us. Milk which it will pay you to buy. C The Calf Groue Dairy O12 the H271 Every Week CY,' EVANS Tailor C530 S IO98 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. ESTABLISHED INSTITUTIONS Wesleyan University and HAZENIS BOOK STORE SN! ESLEYAN'S reputation has been established for years, likewise the reputation of this store, which has been known to college men for generations. As you seek knowledge. remeinher, there is no place in lVIid- clletown where you can find a. more Complete line of Books, Stationery, Fountain Pens, Blank Books, Pads, etc., than at Tl-IE OLD RELIABLE STAND 198 Main Street, Middletown, Conn. GEORGE O. SIMONS, Inc. 4 Successor to SINIONS 81 FOX I Decorator for Sophomore Hops and Junior Proms. Manufacturers of Awnings, Tents, Flags and Penants New EngIand's Leading Decorator Also Dealer in All Kinds of Felt Goods 238-240 ASYLUM STREET, HARTFORD, CONN. 'CV HARLAN P. FRENCH, Pres. WILLARD W'. ANDREWS, Sec'y ALBA TEAcHERs'AG1+: CY A 1NcoP.PoRA'rED Supplier Schools and Colleges wzllz Competent Teacher! Afszkts Teachers 231 Obtezzizzhg Poszizbm VVe receive calls for wide-awake and progressive teachers from every State in the Union, and we want more such teachers upon our lists. We believe no agency has done more for its clients or secured positions for a larger proportion of them. For many years We have had more positions than candidates, and we can certainly be of service to college graduates who wish to teach and who are qualified to do good work. NOW IS THE TIME TO REGISTER Send for Bulletin 81 CHAPEL STREET, ALBANY, N. Y. C t D u Own 1 our ' Owe Xpense Eliminate laundry bills and cut down towel waste. Onliwon Paper 4iI1 iraL'5-7512 . . . Towel Cabinets will do this. A new, clean towel for everybodyeno 1. . .eegreagif . . . danger of communicating disease, 1, Mg, I ,fffioaf jyzs 4 - . . Are easily attached to wood, brick, tile, or marble. Hold ZOO soft -f. 4552333151 firweem ee ' .2 ' Em absorbent paper towels that wxll not injure most delicate skin. The x,3Qfvi4'x 59'M42f'U 'w Ways? A S y - - - supply one towel at a time. No waste-no tearing-no wash bills' 11t'l'S,-'fini eQs 'pix Zffft Sp. Q2-171 Jw , . They save money and provide better service. - 2, . f A. P. W. PAPER C0., Sole Manufacturer, Albany, N. Y., U. S. A. GANE BROTHERS Sc CO. 106-108-110 Lafayette Street A S New York Bookbzhders' Supplzes and Maehzhery Sole Selling Agents-ORIENTAL TISSUE LEAF-the New Imitation Gold Leaf 610-618 .Federal Street Q00-Q04 North Third Street. Clllcaigo, Ill. St. Louis, Mo. xvi alkali WE WANT YOUR ORDER T I-I E C O L L E G E Pl-IOTCDGRAPI-IER Be sure to have a complete collection of group photos of your various College activ- ities before leaving college 350 MAIN STREET The Middletown Fish Market JOHN MOORE, Proprie tor Fresh, Salt and Smoked Fish E Oysters, Clams Scallops, Lobsters and Shrimp in Season 114 Center Street Middletown, - - Conn. Telephone 1084 The College ' Press Room BASEMENT Middle Section New Dormitory , ii i T P il 'X 'xr' II6 SERIES-5-6-7-8-9 and I0 inch Write for the name of Dealer in your locality who handles the most pop- ular line of Prize Cups ever manufactured. The Values will astonisli you. THE MIDDLETOWN SILVER COMPANY MIDDLETOWN, CONN. A ET ACQUAINTED IhDn with our line of Bath G R E E N F 1 E L D, Room fittings. We carry M A 3 5. a full line of Towel Bars, Soap Dishes, Shaving Mirrors, etc. We also carry a full line of Welslvaclz Gas Lamp anal Gas Appliances. Mohawk Trail h The Lyman D. Mills Co. A Plumbing, Healing and . Sheet Metal W orlg N. A. CAMPBELL, Mgr. 108 Court Street, lVlicldlet0wn,IConn. on direct route to the YOUR NOSE KNOWS QUT FLQWERS that Alta-Co disinfects and ' d l ly. It is FOR ALL OCCASIONS deodorizes o or ess a colorless, odorless, non- staining, liquid spray. The druggy odors, so long , 7 ' associated with sanitation are no longer necessary. l Write for special introduc- tory Offer, list of users, labo- rqfivry reports and t KODAKS AND SUPPLIES ma s. tes imo- ln ine Hours Developing and Printing N MAIN OFFICES AND LABORATORIES y WESTPORT, CONN- THE F. B. FOUNTAIN CO. FIFFY-TWO SANITARY PRODUCTS Let us inspect your building-this serv 399 MAIN STREET' is free QUALITYH-BEAUTY-COM FORT build into every are what We Palmer Hammock ana' Couch Hammock E PALMER CO. THE J. . MIDDLETOWN, CONN. New York Office, 334 Fourth Ave. Athletic Supplies Equipment for Teams Sport Clothing for Lovers of Out Doom xpkgtlllb sl SONNSJ1, C' . HADE QEBD MARK 5. eO5TON MP5 364 Washington Street Opposite Bromfelct St. TELEPHONE FORT HILL lZ34 r i - Lew 1:17 ,M ' ' 'f'7 1t, J V ' 'iiiltifz-. ' ' lf? 'Xe ' . -.wt ..1 4, f-.z f . . ., .. A AV ,,.,,1 f-E'i f ' -fi... iltrank Ifirntherz Eltifth Avenue itinnt Shun AI 48th Street New tgnrk Draper Hotel Northampton, Mass. Attractive accommodations for college students, athletic teams, musical o1'ganiza.tions, etc. EE WM. M. KIMBALL. Prop. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company SIXTEEN Members of the Wesleyan Faculty are insured with us, in addition to a considerable number of students. Ellfllll W. H. BOUTEILLER, District Manager 38 Lawn Avenue, Middletown, Conn. ' 4 lX.- :QQ s e , 1 ,Ii 7 '-wsfksefux - i X is L be N F 4 A X X f 5. R X x SX A S s S 7 SX S xgx E - 5 - ss ea .5 .- X X , X QBII1 Iaampsbire Quai: You may use only a box a year, but when you really need it, no other paper will suffice. We have a sample packet we would like to mail you. Ask us for it. HAMPSHIRE PAPER COMPANY South Hadley Falls, Massachusetts What if the Theatres are closed? You can have all the grand opera and comedy and music and fun you Want with a Victor Victrola all brought right into your home or club by the same great artists who have been entertaining the multi- tudes throughout the season. VICTOR VICTROLAS S15 to S250 EDISON DIAMOND DISC MACHINES S60 to S250 J. F. CONNER Y 96 Main Street Whalen 81 Fitzgerald -Dealers in- Choice Beef, Mutton, Lamb, Canned Goods, Fruit, Vegetables, Etc. OIC Poultry and Game in Season ' 2-me Telephone Connection I 16.2 COURT STREET Sorting Out the Laundry . IS EASY CAS!-PS NAMES gives you an ideal system for marking linen and for knitted garments, woollens and other articles of wear that cannot be marked -with ink. Each lnlenilfler of the family should ave is name on every article of 45125 wear. . f gilt! CASH'S NAMES ARE WOVEN ' on fine cambric tape in fast turkey - - red. Prices for any .f - nr' name, not exceed- !! X I I, ing 221etters: 'Q' X 12 Daz. 52.00 H N 'N 14 Z 6 Daz. 1.25 ' 3 D . .ss 1 in oz i ' A WRITE US FOR S15 X ' STYLE SHEET ' , - .AS and SAMPLES of N' V , wovEN NAMES. I s som by .11 Lead- ' I X33 5- -si -7,.gfIff'f:-If ing Dry Goods and lgienk Furnishing .7-, ggi- - ores. obtained from Samples and prices can be J. KL J. CASH, Limited 120 West 32nd Sl., New York City XYI BOSTON UNIVERSITY School of Law 11 AISHBURTON PLACE, BOSTON The purpose of the school is to give the student such training in the principles of the law and such equipment in the tech- nique of the profession as will best prepare him for active practice wherever the Eng- lish system of law prevails. The course of study for LL.B. degree occupies three full school years. For those who have received this degree f1'om this or any other repu- table school of law the degree of LL. M. may be received on the completion of a one year's resident attendance under the direction of Melville M. Bigelow. Special scholarships C350 per yearj are awarded to college graduates. For catalog address HOMER ALBERS, Dean. Sc-:aco Stamlarcl' Hot Water Bottles A VACATION INSURANCE A COLD WEATHER COMFORT A SICK ROOM NECESSITY Try lhe Peerless for 82.50 poslpaid-il carries a 2-year guaranlee FOR SALE BY Geo. L. Claflin Company HEAD QUARTERS FOR RELIABLE DRUG STORE SUPPLIES ilautel urtbp SPRINGFIELD MASS. THE HOME OF COLLEGE MEN WHILE IN SPRINGFIELD Wm. W. Benson MANAGER rown rothers Plumbers to Particular People If you want to succeed Take care of your eyes. Come in and see about GAS LIGHT SUPPLIES xxii
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.