Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)

 - Class of 1928

Page 1 of 538

 

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1928 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 7, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 11, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 15, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 9, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 13, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collectionPage 17, 1928 Edition, Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 538 of the 1928 volume:

) « ( v4 5 ( v« r c sy ( ' v « fi ex LiB-nis YALE-BANNER •8c POT P0VR.R1- YALE BANNER er POT POURRI FOUNDED I84I VOLUME XX NE V HAVEN PUBLISHED FOR THE EDITORS BY YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS mBmmmMmmmmMMmmmmM YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CONTENTS A Partial Chronicle of Yale for 1927 — President James Rowland Angell ....... Administration ...... Class Organizations ..... The New Art JNIuseum — Professor Theodore Sizer Forensics ....... Societies ....... Pencil Sketches ...... Publications ....... The Peabody INIuseum — Professor Richard Swann Lull Athletics ....... Militaiy Units INIusical Clubs ...... Dramatics ....... Clubs Index ........ YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1 28 Yale Banner and Pot Pourri Chairman Thomas Marshall Business Manager Pomeroy Day Editor John Rawlings Toop Assistant Editors Crilly Butler John Lord King Assistant Business Manager Howard Hunter Williams Associate Editors Chauncey Bradley Ives Robert Chesley Osborn Art Editor Anson Bailey Cutts, Jr. i YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = TO THE MEMORY OF YALE COLLEGE It was an earthly place, but strangely made Because it slept unruffled by the cold Immutable ironic serenade, The legal song of time and food and gold. It lay beneath oiu- common sky and yet It was another world, a place called Yale, A fancy land wherein there daily met The permanence of dust with us, the frail. We lived there once, and then across our days Strode death, a masquerader capped and gowned; And we, the boys whom nothing could amaze. Stepped downward into life and so were drowned. Quite gone — and there is only left behind A dream of misty elms to plague the mind. II Where was despair a swift and careless joke, And where was melancholy sweet and green? Where was remorse a thin and lovely smoke, And where was sin still arrogant and keen ? Where was unseemly chance a playful child, And indolence the aim of death and birth. And where was drunkenness still bright and wild, And where was everything the food of mirth? There in the college all these things were so — The throat of thirsty youth drank our despair, A gorgeous wine which made our senses glow So that derisive laughter echoed there. And even now with thin and clarion strains That laughter sweeps across our pompous brains. H. Phelps Putnam. Reprinted with permission from Trine, pulilislied liy Doulileday, Doran Co. CAMPUS VIEWS I. Hillhouse Avenue II. W. H. Harkness Recitation Hall III. Xortlieast Corner of Branford Court, Memorial Quadrangle IV. Library Street V. Entrance to the Medical School VI. Branford Court, JNIemorial Quadrangle VII. OldLibrary VIII. Memorial Tower Gatewa IX. Hewitt Quadrangle X. Cotton Mather Gateway XI. World War Memorial Colonnade XII. Wrexham Tower from Branford Court XIII. The Gold Coast XIV. Calliope Court XV. Southwest Comer, Branford Court, ]Memorial Quadrangle PLATE I PLATE II PLATE III f H J - , ■ 1 91RB PLATE IV PLATE V i PLATE VI PLATE Xn PLATE VIII PLATE IX PLATE X PLATE XI PLATE XII PLATE XIII PLATE XIV PLATE XV YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI HIGH STREET FAC ADE OF THE NEW LIBRARY A Partial Chronicle of Yale for 1927 By James Rowland Angeli, THE current year has been marked by a number of events of great interest, some of them affecting the physical projierties of the University, others concerned with developments in educational procedure. Among the former may well be mentioned the completion and occupancy of the beautiful and extremely convenient William L. Hark- ncss Hall for college recitation and lecture purposes; the completion of the Charles L. Bingham Hall, whose gracious contours delight the eye and adorn the site of the first Yale building in New Haven, more recently tenanted by Osborn Hall of blessed memory. The impressive dedication of the War Memorial at Commencement was char- acterized by a depth and dignity of feeling well reflected in the superb colonnade itself. The imposing new gallery of the fine arts is approaching completion and will, for the first time, afford genuinely fireproof protection for our jiriceless collections, and allow us also for the first time to dis])lay them effectively for study by students and for the enjoyment of the public. The Medical School is completing its connnodious clinical laboratory buildings, so urgently needed and now supplied through the generous gift of the General Education Board. At the playing fields may be seen the new baseball stands, erected by reason of the condemnation by the city of the old wooden structures, and the great Charles E. Coxe Memorial Field Gymnasium, in which throughout the winter months our athletic teams maj ' find opportunity for practice. Completed also is the stately Walter Camp Memorial Gateway, erected from funds contributed by graduates of Yale and by alumni of 593 other universities, colleges, and schools. Nor should there be overlooked the completion at Lyme of the attractive and practical buildings of the Engineering Camp, which we owe very largely to the enterprise and energy of the officers and members of the Yale Elnginecring Association. The plant as a whole is ideal equipment for the field training of our engineers. The excavation of the ground for the great Sterling Memorial Library is already well advanced and the foundation walls have begun to emerge. This building promises to 50 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI be of extraordinary ' beaut} ' and it will certainly give Yale the most perfect university library anywhere to be found. Nothing has been omitted which meticulous care and unlimited study can provide in the way of rendering the structure serviceable for its great purposes of protecting our invaluable collection of books and making them as accessible as possible to students. Xo university library has ever provided comparable facilities for students pursuing individual research, nor will there elsewhere be found so many conveniences for students desiring to use the library in the ordinary course of their college work. Two thousand can be accommodated at one time in the various parts of the building. The Graduate School has this year published the record of its Doctors of Philosophy, showing that from the year 1861, when it gave the first of these degrees ever conferred in the United States down to, and including, the year 1927, 1374 persons have won this honor under Yale auspices. The record of their subsequent careers reflects the greatest credit upon the University. The Medical School is now in the second year of a liberalized and somewhat revolutionary change of curriculum, which has been widely commented upon and has already experienced the flattery of imitation by others. Incidentally it has raised its tuition charges $100 above those of any other School in the University. The Law School has similarly struck out on new lines with provision, for the first time in any American law school, of stimulating facilities for honors work, and with the introduction of new courses in the field of the social, psycho- logical, and economic foundations of the law, a program which is everywhere attracting attention. In the person of Robert M. Hutchins, formerly Secretary of the University and for a year Acting Dean, it is believed that it has secured the youngest Dean in captivity. The appointment of this brilliant young scholar has attracted wide and flattering comment. Like the School of Medicine, the School of Law, with its sharp raising of standards for admission and its limitation of numbers, is drawing a very superior group of students. The Divinity School has selected Luther A. Weigle, Sterling Professor of Religious Education, to succeed Dean Charles R. Brown, who retires at the end of the current academic year. This is not the place to comment upon the remarkable development of the School under Dean Brown ' s administration, nor upon the extraordinary services he has rendered to Yale during the last sixteen years, though it would be difficult to exaggerate the value of these. In Professor Weigle, who stands by common consent at the head of his special field in this country, the School secures an executive in whose leadership we all have implicit confidence. The School of the Fine Arts goes on from victor ' to victory. This year its graduates captured all three of the first prizes in the competition for fellowships in the School at Rome in the fields of architecture, sculpture, and painting — an unprecedented record and one not likelv soon to be repeated. There is no one of our schools about which it would not be possible to add similar connnents of interest. But I must perforce content myself with this brief sketch. The University is to be congratulated upon the appointment as provost of her distinguished Sterling Professor of History, Charles Seymour. His lifelong connection with Yale, which his revered father served so devotedly, his rich experience as a teacher for sixteen years in Yale College, his broad cosmopolitan outlook on life, the unqualified confidence of Yale men in his insight and wisdom, all lead us to look forward with the greatest satisfaction to his work in his new post. It was a source of the most sincere regret that Dean Graves, who had rendered us brilliant service for four years as provost, felt himself compelled to give his entire time to the School of Forestry and so to retire from the provostship. He not only brouo-ht the delicate duties of the provost ' s office to a high pitch of administrative efficiency, but he also gave invaluable assistance in every phase of the preparations for the recent endowment campaign. Without his keen insight and indomitable energy, we could never so quickly and so accurately have analyzed and presented our real requirements. He 51 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI leaves tlic provostship carrying with liini the admiration and respect of all his col- leagues, as well as the deep gratitude of the Corporation and the President. As I look back over Yale history, I fail to find a time when someone was not acutely anxious about undergraduates. If it has not been their morals — and often it has — it has been their alleged intellectual torpor and ineptitude, or their distressing lack of taste or manners, or some similar imputed shortcoming, which elicited disparag- ing alumni comment and faculty despair. There is a certain bleak satisfaction in the recognition that our present troubles arc direct descendants of many generations of anxiety and unrest. We are at least in 7io instant danger of the dry rot of complete self-complacency. To some of these con- temporary perplexities attention is in- vited. As we take stock of current under- graduate conditions, we find certain con- clusions emerging which are difficult of convincing demonstration, but which cer- tainly represent the conviction of many men strategically placed to form a cor- rect opinion. And let it be understood forthwith that in many respects the cir- cumstances are entirely reassuring. On the profit side of the ledger may be listed the facts — and I am sure that they are facts — that the average man ac- cepted today for the Freshman Class is mucli better prepared than at any pre- vious period, that he does better work after he gets into Yale, that a far smaller proportion of these men is eliminated for academic failure than was formerly the case, and that the average of schol- arly attainment, so far as this can be decided by marks, honors assigned, or any similar criteria, was never higher than it has been in the last few years and is today. Whether the sheer quality of the minds we are getting is in any notable manner different from that received in an earlier generation, it is probably impossible to tell. That the social and cultural back- ground of the families from which our students come has changed materially in the last two generations, is widely believed and is probably true, so far as concerns a certain fraction of our student group. I have, however, yet to hear any competent observer, whose experience goes back to an appreciably earlier day, fail to agree that, with due allowance for obvious exceptions, the students of our time seem, on the average, dis- tinctly superior to those of his own in breadth of outlook, sincerity, range and vividness of intellectual intere st, and in essential stability of character. Our physical measure- ments, kept over long periods of years, disclose an average increase in stature and weight of Freshmen and a like improvement in endurance and general physique. Needless to say, our athletic records in such sports as permit exact measurement continue slowly to advance. No man — to say nothing of any Yale man — has ever vaulted so high as Sabin Carr of the present Senior Class. No Yale oarsmen ever had a finer record than the Olympic Crew of 1924. The members of our swimming team are constantly making new records — and so it goes. 52 THE (UtEAT HALL OF THE NEW LIBRARY YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI I sincerely believe that for those who have the ability and the desire to improve them, Yale never held out greater or more alluring opportunities for sheer intellectual development and the spiritual exhilaration which comes from drinking deep at the wellsprings of literature, history and art, science and philosophy, while before one unfolds the whole great drama of thought and imagination and human achievement. Certainly there are many teachers on the Yale Campus today who arc profoundly stirring the thought and moulding the taste of their students. Moreover, with all the disadvantages which belong to our relatively large numbers, there must not be forgotten the extraordinary richness of human intercourse inherent in the mere presence of widely varying types. The individual may indeed miss the forest for the trees, but he will never know what possibilities human personality holds out, if he be cribbed and cabined within the confines of a small and self-complacent group. Moreover, many of the more robust human traits find in a large group the most favorable conditions for their development. One who is disturbed by current trends must therefore recall these unequivocal merits of our present conditions — a circumstance which Dean INIendell presented most forcefully to you a year ago. On the debit side is to be entered the alleged loss in our Yale life of some of the personal and social advantages which apparently belonged to an earlier day. In the judgment of one, responsibility is to be assigned to the Common Freshman Year, with its supposedly sinister invasion of the proper spheres of the College and the Scientific School — a view which will hardly stand the strong light of day. To another, it is the strangling of the Select Course in the Scientific School and the transfer of the moribund remains to the College. To still another, it is the sheer size of the student group. To some perhaps more keenly observant, it is the general change in the social outlook and ideals of the present younger generation, both in and out of college, superposed upon any, or all, of the preceding influences. In any event, whatever the causes which have brought it to pass, the evidence indicates that under present conditions far too many men of real quality are submerged in the press and never secure opportunity to make their powers count, never i-eceive the social recognition which their abilities deserve, and so find themselves excluded from many of the most desired rewards of student life. To men of proud and sensitive nature, this experience too often results in permanent embitterment. Many attribute the difficulties to the breakdown of the class system and tiiis in turn again to the presence in recent years of very large numbers. This assertion is, however, fraught with difficulty when one calls for a bill of particulars. In the first place, the classes in the Scientific School are not so large as they were from 1901 to 1921, exclusive of 1917. I personally believe that it is fair to say that, when the ' ander- bilt Quadrangle is completed, so that the great mass of Scientific School students can be properly housed, this undergraduate group will find within its reach all, and more than all, of the social advantages which that group ever enjoyed in the past. In the second place, big classes are no new thing in the College. There were prior to 1920 classes tliat entered over 450 strong and others that have graduated nearly 300, and when you reach groups of that size, a hundred or two more or less makes relatively little difference. As a matter of fact, when tlie elective system came in during the last quarter of the previous century, the knell of the class system in its older forms was certainly sounded. For a man to sit for four years side by side with some classmate was ipso facto to create a sense of class solidarity which none could escape. When to this was added attendance together as a group upon daily chapel, and the occupancy of adjacent quarters in college dormitories — the total effect was reasonably certain. The early groups being small, acquaintance with one ' s classmates was inevitable and out of such acquaintance often sprung deep and abiding friendships — occasionally also, be it said, hearty and abiding dislikes. Those days are gone. The elective system in its extreme 53 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI form has passed, but it lias left behind another system which, with the curricula ex- panded to do some justice to the extraordinary extension which has occurred in the field of human knowledge, is quite as fatal to the day-by-day contact with one another of identical student groups. The students by their own initiative substantially com- pelled the faculty to abandon the requirement of chapel attendance, thus throttling the one remaining vital expression of group solidarity. The automobile, together with the interurban street car, and the familiar facilities of the New Haven Railroad, have made exodus from New Haven over the week-end not only easy and practicable, but almost irresistibly alluring. Sunday was, in the earlier days, a highly important occa- sion for forming and fixing intimate friendships. Class loyalties blossomed readily in such a soil. The average boy when he came to New Haven in the autumn expected to be continuously in residence, except for the occasional vacations. The youth of today contemplates sjDending no more of his week-ends in New Haven than the impositions of a callous faculty and the limitations of his purse oblige; and this, despite the fact that we are attempting in every practicable manner to make the opportunities for the agreeable and profitable investment of leisure over the week-end as attractive as possible. Numbers have grown, and, despite the limit imposed in 1921-1922, they are entirely too large for any one man in a college class to know all his classmates. The obvious remedv would seem to be a further reduction of our Freshman group, but nobody familiar with the actual conditions can regard this as other than a futile counsel of perfection. We are under tremendous pressure now greatly to enlarge the entering class and all the indications are that this pressure will rapidly increase. It is extremely diffi- cult to select justly even at present from among all the applicants who desire a Yale education, and to curtail in any notable degree the number now accepted would ci ' eate an almost impossible situation. In this connection people all too readily forget the enormous increase in the population of the country in recent years and the far greater increase in wealth, both of them circumstances which inevitably contribute to the demand made upon our colleges and universities. Unquestionably some values have been lost which belonged to the earlier days of the College and even though we admit, as candor will certainly compel, that many ad- vantages have been gained, we are still eager to discover, if possible, sound methods of restoring that which has at least partially disappeared. Probably all effort merely to re-establish the old forms must be futile. As one of my colleagues says, we may as soon expect to restore the hoop skirt and the one-horse chaise. But it is not futile to seek through other forms the essence of the old moral and social values. A great variety of remedies has been proposed for the difl[icultics just recited. Throughout the current academic year, there has been a committee of the Under- graduate Faculties giving continuous attention to these issues in the search for devices which might promise some alleviation of the conditions. Some fourteen years ago the late Professor George Burton Adams suggested the wisdom of creating a third college which should stand parallel with Yale College and the Sheffield Scientific School. In recent years substantially the same proposal has been renewed in several variant forms. Dean ] Iendell in his brilliant address delivered a year ago in this place expressed his enthusiastic belief in such a college, and the com- mittee to which I have just referred has canvassed with a good deal of detail three or four of the possibilities related to a solution of this character, calling to its assistance for conference a considerable number of members of the faculty and of the under- graduate student body. It has not j ' et framed its report. It is apparent that there are two great groups of interest reflected in the concern about the present situation, the one educational in the narrower and more pedagogical sense, the other broader and more definitely social in its essentials. There is thus an 54 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI appreciable number of men, many of them leaders in their fields, who believe that our entire educational organization is too rigid, too traditional, and too little stimulating to the student to exert liimself to his full intellectual powers. The} ' are impatient of the rather superficial and diluted form of education which the present college curriculum, in their judgment, offers, and in its place they desire to see more opportunity for the intensive cultivation of particular fields of intellectual interest, with far greater inde- pendence from the essentially schoolmasterly regulations now prevailing. In short, they desire a more plastic, more individualistic program, keyed to a very much higher level of actual intellectual achievement for students capable of improving such oppor- tunities. Certain of them believe that results of this character could be secured in a XEW collegiate organization much more readily than in the College or the Scientific School of today. It should be said in passing that the College has in recent years made some provision for honors work and that it is now in process of adopting a still more ambitious and flexible program in this respect. The Scientific School has also within the year provided opportunities for its abler students to specialize in a much more marked degree than has hitherto been the case. Over against these interests in a change of educational method is to be recorded the strong feeling of many members of our faculty that the great need in the present generation is such a reorganization of the social conditions of student life, especially in the College and the Freshman Year, as will permit a more generous flowering of the personal and social qualities of the rank and file of students now lost in the general herd. Some of these faculty men perhaps share the view of many alumni, that the most significant values of the college life are to be found outside, rather than inside, the class- rooms, in the give and take of student with student, in discipline given by student or- ganizations, and in the entire social environment created by the students themselves. This way lies danger, for it is only a step from such conceptions to the ideal, all too widely entertained, that college should be simply a kind of glorified country club. And yet no thoughtful observer of American college life can fail to recognize that there is a large measure of truth in the picture. Moreover, there are other thoughtful observers who would stress the preservation of a certain group consciousness, a kind of Yale ethos, as President Hadley is said once to have termed it, as of more importance than the mere supplying of opportunities for the development of personality in the individual student. As a matter of fact, the two things hang closely together and are perhaps as much menaced by too great diversity in the aims and desires of the types thrown together, as by the sheer size of the group. And yet it must be remembered that the English college contains within its numbers men who are in training for a wide variety of ends, including the professions of teaching, law, medicine, and divinity, and that English educators highly value the eft ' ect of this circumstance upon their students. To men who entertain these general views which I have been citing, the only possible cure for the most menacing ills seems to lie in the direction of some subdivision of the student body, presumably on collegiate lines. ]Men who take this position are of the opinion that, if, for example, the present Yale College group, where the numbers are at the moment most embarrassing, could be subdivided into two or three collegiate organizations, each with its own residential halls and, if possible, with provision for common dining rooms and agreeable lounges, it wo ild be possible to restore something of the intimacy of contact which belonged to an earlier day and thus, in the face of the compulsion to accept relatively large numbers in the University as a whole, once again to make possible certain of the social values inherent in the earlier life of the College. There are, however, not a few of our colleagues, and among them men of good judgment and long familiarity with Yale, who see in any or all of these proposals only grandiose and fallacious dreams which, even if brought to realization, would not ma- terially relieve the difficulties of whicli we have spoken. ]Men of this type of thought are 55 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI apt to connect the whole problem with the changes in the attitude towards life of our present collegiate generation, to feel that an_y man who has real stuff in him can secure all the outlet for his powers which it is wholesome for him to enjoy, and that the men who fail to meet the test are for the most part indivitkials who would not greatly benefit by any devices of collegiate organization which could be set up. Together with certain groups who are otherwise favorable to a solution of our difficulties on the line of sub- dividing our student body, they are extremely fearful of the added costs which n)ight be involved in the carrying out of these new programs. Clearly, however, if one is to subdivide at all on the ground of social expediency, one must be sure that the size of the new group is not itself too large to confer any sub- stantial benefit. There is a good deal of agreement that, so far as concerns class rela- tions, personal intimacies are at a great disadvantage when one passes 200, and that 300 is the upper limit for a class which shall have much opportunity to develop a real corporate sense. Obviously, if the College were divided into two substantially equal groups, with the present average attendance of something between fifteen and sixteen hundred students, each class in each collegiate group might number about 2.50. Un- doubtedly, if such a group could be again divided, it would be better from the social point of view, but a good many new problems of administration and housing would be created. Indeed, for any plan which contemplates a subdivision of the present college group, no matter on what lines, the problem of housing is perplexing, provided it be desired to give the groups separate quarters ; and, unless this were done, the plan would become almost purely a paper program, with little or no chance of really affecting the social contacts of students. Furthermore, if these groups were organized as bona fide ■ :3irte ' fr ' -iti ' is VIEW FROM LIBRARIAN ' S OFFICES IN THE NEW LIBRARY 56 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI colleges, it would be necessary for each to have at least the nucleus of a separate faculty, with freedom to develop such forms of curricula as might seem judicious, sub- ject to the general jurisdiction of the University over entrance requirements and degrees. The securing of such Faculty groups would certainly present j)roblems of no little difficulty. Again, there is the ever-present question of the student fraternities and societies. It is unnecessary to attempt at this time to anticipate what adjustments might be made in this matter, but the moment any kind of plan for collegiate subdivision is seriously considered, this aspect of the case takes on an acute significance. Finally, there is, as a difficulty of no negligible kind, the question of the names to be given to any such new collegiate organizations. One needs only to mention the prob- lem to have you sense at once some of the perplexities which would be encountered. On one point practically all are agreed, and that is that we are at present housing many of our Freshmen very wretchedly, and that in so doing we are nullifying a large part of the result which the Conunon Freshman Year was created to attain. We ought to have dormitory facilities for at least five hundred men, preferably six hundred, beyond those now available. The general impression is that these dormitories should be divided into residential groups accommodating one hundred and fifty to two hundred men each. With building units of that size provided with attractive dining halls and comfortable lounges, no Freshman possessing any possibilities of companionship need feel himself left out, stranded, abandoned, forgotten, as man ' of our newcomers unques- tionablv do. If some range of acquaintance and intimacy of friendship can really be established in the Freshman Year, the social problem of the large numbers of the later j-ears would surely be in the way of substantial solution. You will not need to have suggested to you the possibilities which such a subdivision of the Freshman group offers for competitive intramural sports and for the development of various forms of whole- some group consciousness. To deal successfully with these jiroblems which I have sketched will require patience and wisdom and the willingness to sacrifice some convictions, some prejudices and preferences for the sake of a larger and more inclusive good. Be assured that there is no plan which will not seem to some unwise, unnecessary, unavailing. Whatever is done must not entail too abrupt and radical a departure from Yale traditions and practices. It must be, if possible, a genuine growth in response to obvious opportunity and compelling need. It is superfluous to say that the great event in the life of Yale this year is the oversubscription by more than a million dollars of the twenty-million Endowment Fund, of which in the interim we have heard so much. Indeed, it may, I think, be safely alleged that this is, in many ways, the most significant single occurrence in the history of the University since its establishment in New Haven. I say this, not because I believe money to be the consideration of predominant importance for Yale — a hundred inci- dents in her history would belie this view — nor because the University is within the next five years to find surcease from its financial perplexities — however much I might wish this were true — but simply because, so far as I can learn, support comparable, in extent, generosity, and intelligent understanding has never before been given to the educational program of any single institution, and it is impossible to believe that Yale should not benefit for years to come in all sorts of ways through the vivid interest expressed by more than 22,000 of her graduates, students, and other friends through gifts made in response to the presentation of her needs and her ideals. There now devolves upon the authorities of the University, and not least upon its faculties in any recommendations they may make, the obligation to see to it that these new resources, for which we are so deeply grateful, are j)ut to the wisest possible use in improving Yale ' s educational work as set forth in the original program, and to this end we shall devote our best energies. 57 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ADMINISTRATION IT is the rather too frequent opin- ion of your average undergradu- ate that liis physical attendance at some fifteen classes a week is, after all, the primal force which keeps the Univer- sity staggering along year after year as well as it does. The regulations of his college exist- ence, the mechanism of the routine, offer only unnecessary irritants which are constantly dis- turbing what he has decided should be the life of a gentleman and a scholar. However, it is the work of the Administra- tion which not only keejjs Yale alive but guides Yale in the direction which makes her an insti- tution of inspiration as well as an institution of learning. The Administration directs, content to let the applause go to the actors who fret their hour upon the stage. 68 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI PRESIDENT James Rowland Angell, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. FELLOWS His Excellency the Goveenor or Connecticut, ex officio His Honor the Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut, ex officio Rev. Newell Meeker Calhoun, M.A., Orange, Conn. Otto Tremont Bannard, LL.D., New York City (June, 1928 f) Alfred Lawrence Ripley, J LA., Boston, Mass. (June, 1933) John Villiers Farwell, M.A., Chicago, 111. (June, 1929) Edwin Musser Herr, Sc.D., New York City (June, 1932) Clarence Blakeslee, M.A., New Haven, Conn. (June, 1931) Rev. William Adams Brown, Ph.D., D.D., New York City George Grant Mason, M.A., New York City Samuel Herbert Fisher, LL.B., M.A., New York City Howell Cheney, M.A., South Manchester, Conn. Vance Criswell McCormick, M.A., Harrisburg, Pa. (June, 1930) Francis Parsons, LL.B., M.A., Hartford, Conn. Rev. Henry Sloane Coffin, D.D., New York City Fred Towsley Murphy, M.D., M.A., Detroit, Mich. Edward Belden Greene, M.A., Cleveland, Ohio Rev. Arthur Howe Bradford, D.D., Providence, R. I. PROVOST Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D. SECRETARY Carl Albert Lohmann, M.A. TREASURER George Parmly Day, M.A. ASSOCIATE TREASURER AND COMPTROLLER Thomas Wells Farnam, M.A. t The date when the term of each Alumni Fellow expires is printed after his name. 61 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS James Rowland Angell, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D., President Charles Seymour, Ph.D., Litt.D., LL.D., Provost Carl Albert Lohmann, jNLA., Secretary George Parmly Day, M.A., Treasurer Thomas Wells Farnain, ALA., Associateil Treasurer and Comptroller Andrew Keogh, M.A., Librarian Robert Nelson Corwin, Ph.D., Chairman of the Board of Admissions Frederic Blair Johnson, ALA., Bursar of the University Harry Judd Ostrander, Cashier of the Treasurer ' s Office Albert Beeclier Crawford, M.A., Director of the Bureau of Appointments THE FRESHMAN YEAR Percy Talbot Walden, Ph.D., Dean Joseph Roy Ellis, M.A., Registrar YALE COLLEGE Clarence Wliittlesey Mendell, Ph.D., Dean Alfred Kindred Alerritt, B.A., Registrar SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Charles Hyde Warren, Ph.D., Dean Looniis Havemeyer, Ph.D., Registrar GRADUATE SCHOOL Wilbur Lucius Cross, Ph.D., Litt.D., L.H.D., Dean SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Milton Charles Winternitz, M.D., Dean Arthur Bliss Dayton, ALD., Assistant Dean THE DIVINITY SCHOOL Rev. Charles Reynolds Brown, L.H.D., S.T.D., LL.D., Dean SCHOOL OF LAW Robert Maynard Hutchins, I L.B., ALA., Dean SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS Everett Victor Meeks, ALA., A.D.G.F., F.A.LA., Dean SCHOOL OF MUSIC SCHOOL OF FORESTRY David Stanley Smith, AIus.D., Dean Henry Solon Graves, IX. D., Dean SCHOOL OF NURSING Annie Warb urton Goodrich, K.X., Sc.D., Dean PEABODY MUSEUM Richard Swann Lull, Ph.D.. Sc.D., Director OBSERVATORY DEPARTMENT OF UNIVERSITY HEALTH Frank Schlesinger, Pii.D., Sc.D., Director James Cowan Grecnway, ALD., Director Orville Forrest Rogers, ALD., Assistant Director GYMNASIUM William Gilbert Anderson, ALD., ALP.E., Dr.P.H., Director Resiiined. 62 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CHARLES SEYMOUR Provost CARL ALBERT LOHMANN Secretary GEORGE PARMLY DAY Treasurer Courtesy of Kaca)t]tan THOMAS WELLS FARNAM Associate Treasurer and Comptroller YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ALUMNI ADVISORY BOARD The Alumni Advisory Board was established by vote of the Yale Cor- poration in 1906 to meet the desire of Yale graduates in different sections of the country for representation in the councils of the University. Every asso- ciation with an active membership of one hundred is entitled to one represent- ative on the Board, while associations having two hundred or more members are entitled to two representatives. The executive committee is composed of the officers of the Board, ex officio, and the chairman of the Alumni Univer- sity Fund Association, c v officio, and nine other members of the Board. Since the University administration and various alumni organizations are repre- sented on the Board, it becomes the central ahmini organization. Chairman, Alfred L. Aiken, ' 91, 346 Broadway, New York City. First Vice-Chairman, Richard Hooker, ' 99, Springfield, ISIass. Second Vice-Chairman, Reeve Schley, ' 03, 57 Broadway, New York City. Acting Secretary, Carl A. Lohmann, ' 10, 1850 Yale Station, New Haven, Conn. Executive Covimittee, jNIr. Aiken, Chairman; jNIr. Hooker, First Vice-Chair- man; Mr. Schley, Second Vice-Chairman; Messrs. Allen (New York City), Bundy (Boston), Deming (New Haven), Hey worth (Chicago), Hitchcock (St. Louis), Pratt (Schenectady), Smith (Cleveland), Wear ( Philadelphia ) , Woodward ( Denver ) . 64 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CLARENCE WHITTLESEY MENDELL Dean of Yale Collese Photograph by Bachrach CHARLES HYDE WARREN Dean of Sheffield Scientific School YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI B 1 i IkI r M L_ _ i YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Photograph by Bachrach. ROBERT MAVNARD HLTCHINS Dean of School of Law Photograph by Bachrach. EXERETT VICTOR MEKKS Dean of School of the Fine Arts DAVID STANLEY SMITH Dean of School of Music Photograph by Bachrach. ANNIE WARBURTON GOODRICH Dean of School of Nursing g. ' .v.v.vAv.vAV. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI vAv.v.vaBaaB! i t SCEOLARSEIP HONORS 1 i YALE COLLEGE i ;• RANKING SCHOLARS, CLASS OF 1928t 1 SCHOLARS OF THE FIRST RANK Leonard I,ee Bacon Conrad Halm Winlock William Miller, Jr. 1 Donald Henry Ballou John Frederick Huber, Jr. Joseph Innings Ostergren i George Bart Berber, Jr. Robert Watkinson Huntington, Jr . .lames Frederick Rettger ( Joseph Milton Bernstein Charles Bertus Lauren Roger Robb ( Preston James Dunn Mitchell Levensohn Casper Shanok t Thomas Irwin Emerson Harry Ralph Le -y George Thomas Washington i Philip Hayward Gray, Jr. SCHOLARS OF THE SECOND RANK ] Max Cecil Abrams John Shepard Eells, Jr. Benjamin Nassau Howard Martin Antevil Roswell Leavitt Gilpatric Richard Martin Paskus Byron Kenneth Anthony Richard Walter Hall Howard Everett Quimby i Frank Marion Atterholt, Jr. William Frederick Hamilton, Jr . James Irving Raymond 1 Dana Treat Bartholomew Charles Daggett Harvey Charles Marion Rice ! George Buckingham Beecher Fred William Herron Edwin Date Richards , ' Albert Max Karl Blume James Lambert High Raymond Flynt Roberts .; Henry Brill Willard Tisdel Hodgsdon William Joseph Sanders 1 Daniel Noyes Brown Eli Russell Katz Minier Sargent Frederick Burgess Raymond Kennedy George Melville Shepherd, Jr. ;. Bruce Caldwell Stanton Francis Kennedy Jacob Joseph Smick 4 Thomas Huntington Chappell Isadore Levine Louis Stein ! Sanford Cobb Charlton Miner Lewis Edwin Turner Thompson { Malachi Tracy Conway Charles Chalmers MacLean, Jr. Charles Beecher Holmes Vaill t Thomas Wellsted Copeland Angelo Fred Mignone Bernard Irving Verney Maxton Routh Davies, Jr. Stuart Marvin Miller Charles Hopkins Welles, 3d ;. Charles Walker Dibbell Edward Lloyd Mills Hassler Whitney :- John Wyllvs Dixon William Ring Morley Gerardus Hilles Wynkoop i George Alfred Eddy i JUNIOR APPOINTMENTS, CLASS OF 1929 1 PHILOSOPHICAL ORATIONS i Thomas Holmes Bracken Arthur Baird Hersey Robert Treat Piatt, 2d ! Benjamin Brewster Robert Emmett Houston, Jr. Hamilton Southworth ! Winthrop Gilman Brown Hans Alexander Klagsbrunn Frank Ransom Strong John Paulding Farnham HIGH ORATIONS William Welling Werntz, Jr. i William Appleton Aiken, 2d Herbert Isaac Finch, Jr. Nathaniel Louis Nathanson i William Spencer Begg Kenrick Samson Gillespie James Hunt Nichols 1 Fitch Kirtland Bishop George Minor Hampton John Field Oldt Mark Rush Briney, Jr. Stephen Harding Hart Edward Pym Remington 1 Samuel Howard Bunting, Jr. Howard Edward Hausman Harold Robinson ( Dwight Beavis Buss Robert Haigis Herzog Jonathan Goodhue Sherman i Alfred Hoblitzelle Clifford Walter Howe George Sklar Donald Edward Cobey Edwin Virgil Huggins Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes, 2d ; Judson Irving Cohen Harold Levine Edward Howland Tatum, Jr. ) John Ward Cutler John Lester I ewine Gordon Tucker Frank Joseph John Davies Malcolm Ames Maclntyre Thomas Hume Vance 1 Anthony DeFlorio Robert Francis McNerney, Jr. Henry Weiner 1 Kendall Emerson, Jr. Roger Sherman Makepeace Frederick . lbert Wies 1 George Joseph Epstein Daniel Luzon Morris of 90 or above; second rank, 85-89. Chester Edward Wilcox + First rank, general average 1 1 t i • 68 8 r.T. .w. j. jj.T. . . . . , . . . . . . .T: y - W J ' Jl YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL CLASS OF 1928 GENERAL TWO-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Charles John Augustine, Electrical Engineering Richard Block, Physiological Chemistry and Bac- teriology Philip Davis Brass, Chemistry Isadore Edward Budnitz, Pre-iledicnl Henry Brevoort Cannon, Jr., Industrial Engineer- ing David Jerome Cohen, Pre-Medical William Roliert Cooper, Civil Engineering Harold Edward Harrison, Pre-Medical John Herman, Jr., Chemical Engineering Joseph Imperati, Mechanical Engineering Philip Hull Kirby, Chemistry Rollin Carroll Wynkoop Lewis, Electrical Engi- neering Arnold Caverly Mason, Industrial Engineering Walter Raymond Meyer, Chemistry Charles Ellsworth Nettleton, Chemical Engineer- ing Carl Arthur William Peterson, Metallurgy Charles Skryne Powell, Chemical Engineering Frank Rajiaini, Civil Eiigincerimi Hugh I anders Ross, M crhiniirnl Emiincerinri Gilfry Ward, Industrial Eiiginfcring Tliayer Willis, Pre-Medical John Franklin Wyckoff, General Science CLASS OF 1929 GENERAL ONE- YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Francis Joseph Awdziewicz, Pre-Medical Edwin Ruggles Baker, Chemistry Donald Chadwick, Industrial Engineering John Lincoln Daley, Engineering Science Leon Frederick Doss, Einiiin i rimi Science Meyer George Etkind, I ' rr-M , dir.il Jolin Henry Ferdinandus, Enginet ring Science Harry Huntington Fletcher, Cliemistry Howard Gamlirill, Jr., I ndiistrial Engineering Charles Rufus Harte, Jr., Cheinical Engineering Hugh Kaul, General Science Charles Pray Knaebel, Mining Engineering Peter Joseph Mc. ndrews, General Science Philip Charles Michel, Engineering Science Melvin Newman, Chemistry William Leon Pious, Pre-Medical .Joseph Pratt Ringland, Industrial Engineering Alljert I ouis Ruiz, Engineering Science . shton Tourison Scott, Chemical Engineering George Ingraham Staber, Engineering Science Benjamin Nathan Tager, Pre-Medical Robert Butterfield Trench, Engineering Science Donald Thomas Ward, Industrial Engineering Israel Zaur, Pre-Medical GENERAL TWO-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES Everett Sydney Collett, Civil Engineering James Oliver Flower, Industrial Engineering Richard Edward Shea, Combined Pre-Medical and Medical Harold George Thompson, Pre-Forestry Burton Tiffany, Chemistry GENERAL ONE-YEAR HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN ALL STUDIES George Beaumont, Civil Engineering William Henry Billings, Jr., Industrial Engineer- ing Alfred Cossidente, Pre-Medical Fred Nathaniel Cuneo, Electrical Engineering Leonard Weakley Doolan, Jr., Chemical Engineer- ing Morris Freedman, Pre-Mediccd Philip Henry Goldsmith, Industrial Engineering Henry Bethune Hall, Industrial Engineering Herbert Donald Harris, t eneral Scietice William Orville Hickok, -1th, General Science Daniel Cornwall Hickson, Industrial Engineering Hyman Hodes, Pre-Medical Paul Komroff, Electrical Engineering Paul Harold Lavietes, Combined Medical and Pre- Medical Edwin Hoyt Lockwood. Jr., Electrical Engineer- ing Earl Harold Marsden, Civil Engiiici ring Hoffman JIarvin, Industrial Englncirinii William Frederick Preston, Industrial Engineer- ing Rene Odelon Quenneville, Civil Engineering Harry Hasselle Revelle, Civil Engineering William Joseph Sette, Physics-Mathematics Harold John Simnien, Industricd Engineering Joseph Kusterer Stetson, General Science George Willard Tidd, Industricd Engineering Roger Thwaites Williams, Industrial Engineering 69 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVEIiSrrY PHIZES James Cnhni Bi inirfl Prhe—So award. Philo ShrniKiii HiiiiNlt Prize—So award. Frinieis I!, r,i ii M iimrwl Pri; ' — Frederick Wilcox Diipee, Class of 1927. liradforil Ilriiitiiii liramntic Prize — Xo award. Coliihn Club Silver Medal— ' So award. filbert Stitnbiirr }ii( h Cook Prize in Poetrij — Xo award. Jacob Cooper Prize in Greek Philosophi — J. Franklin Ray, Jr. George Washiniiton Egle.ilon Historical Prize — Xo award. Eno Foundation Prize — No award. John Ed-ccard Hailon Prize— So award. John Masrpild Pi„tr;i Prize— So award. Lloiid Mifflin Pri- — Thomas Wellsted Copeland, Class of 1928; honorable mention, Thomas Hume ' Vance, Class of 1929. Ledyard Milrhill j:iii ' Prize — No award. Montaii nr Prize — .lames Frederick Rettger, Class of 1928. John Addison Porter Prize — No award. Francis Joseph Vernon Memorial Prize— So award. Kutherine K. Walker Prize — No award. Uy: DEE GRADUATE PRIZES AND PREMIUMS 1926-1927 YALE COLLEGE Prizes Not Restricted to a Single Class Ilenrii A. Beers Prize in American Literature — Divided betw ' een Fletcher Collins, Jr., and Dwight MacDonald, Class of 1928; honorable mention, Allen Hindle Olmstead, Class of 1927. Charles Washburn Clark Prize— So award. John Hubbard Curtis Prize— John Clark Carlisle Holding, Jr., and Charles Marion Rice, Class of 1928. William W. IJeForest Prize in Spanish — Donehian Dramatic Prize — X ' 0 award. Figli d ' Jtalia Prizes — Second and Third Year Students: First Prize, Anthony DeFlorio, Class of 1929; Second Prize, William Frederick Hamilton, Jr., Class of 1928; honorable mention, Thomas Hunt- ington Chappell, Class of 1928. First Year Students: X ' o award. Noi es-Cutter Prize — Farrington Burfeind Kinne, Class of 1928; honorable mention, Richard Walter Hall, Class of 1928. John Addison Porter Prize in American Historii — No award. Lucius F. Robinson Latin Prizes — Junior-Senior Competition: First Prize, Thomas Irwin Emerson, Class of 1928; Second Prize, Mason Young, 3d, Class of 1927; Third Prize, Francis Thomas O ' Melia, Class of 1927. Sophomore Competition: Third Prize, Albert Ray Connelly, George Sklar, Class of 1929. Thaeher Prizes — First Prizes, Edwin Glanffrwd Jenkins, Class of 1927, Winlock William Miller, Jr., Class of 1928; Second Prizes, Alfred Mitchell Bingham, Class of 1927, Charles Halliwell Duel], Class of 1927, Dwight Stone Mallon, Class of 1928, Winslow Percy Leighton, Class of 1929. Andrew D. White Prizes — Sophoniore-Junior-Senior Competition: James . ugustus Close, Jr., Class of 1929. Junior-Senior Competition: John Frederick Huber, Jr., Class of 1928. Henri P. Wriaht Memorial Prize — Howard Joseph Keller, Class of 1927; honorable mention, Victor L. Schiff. Cla ' ss of 1928. George Beckiclth Medal (First Award) — Frederick Pinneo Chapman, Class of 1927; honorable mention, Donald Henry Ballon, Class of 1928. SENIOR PRIZES, CLASS OF 1927 David C. DcForest Pii; — Alfred Mitchell Bingham. DeForest Mathematical Prizes — Alplieus Ihnrii Sntnc I ' rize for Scholarship and Character — John Herman Groeslicck Pierson. Townsend Premiums — George Henry Danforth, Frank Theodore Sherlock, Henry Davis Xadig, Edwin Glanffrwd Jenkins, Harry Gillespie Hayes. Warren Memorial High Scholarship Prize — John Herman Groesbeck Pierson. JUNIOR PRIZES, CLASS OF 1928 Scott Prize in French — Marvin Hoosep Hatcherian; honorable mention, John Edgar Sinclair. Scott Prize in German — Casper Shanok. Anthony D. Stanlr, Malhriuatical Prizes- Henry James TeuEyck Prizes — First Prize, Arthur Clendcnin Robertson; Second Prize, John Rocke- feller Prentice; Third Prize, Thomas Wellsted Copeland. Winfhrop Prizes — First Prize, Mitchell Levensohn. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SOPHOMORE PRIZES, CLASS OF 1929 Donald Annis Prize — No award. Benjamin P. Barge Mathematical Prhe.i — First Prize, Gordon Reis, Jr.; Second Prizes, Alfred Hol)Iit- zelle Clifford, Alfred Baird Hersey. C. Wi ll;)s Belts Pri:e — Hugh Douglas McCandless; honorable mention, Carl James Balliett, Jr. Parker Dickson Buck Prize — Robert Enimett Houston, Jr. ; honorable mention, Stanley Warren Graham. SHEFFIELD SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL Prizes Not Restricted to a Single Class Blake Stone Breaker Prize — No award. Stone Trust Corporation {Book and Snake Siiciilii) Srluihirship Pri-cs— For Excellence in Englisli: For Excellence in Mathematics: divided between Pliilip Charles Michel and Albert Louis Ruiz, Class of 1929 S. For Excellence in Spanish: Peter Joseph .McAndrews, Class of 1929 S.; honoralile mention, John Spencer O ' Gorman, Jr., Class of 1929 S. SENIOR PRIZES, CLASS OF 1927 William R. Belknap Prizes — For Excellence in Biological Studies: No award. For Excellence in Geo- logical Studies: Harrv Hammond Hess. Russell Henrij Chittenden Prize— For Excellence in Civil Engineering; — For Excellence in Electrical Engineerintj — Harold Tliorntcm Lyman, Jr. For Excellence in Mechanical Engineering — Martin .Vugustus Mayers; honorable mention, Hollis Norton Hugins and Augustus Rudolph Rogowski. For Excellence in Metallurgy — For Excellence in Mining Engineering — For Excellence in Sanitarg Engineering — Edward Oliver Lanphier Memoriid Prize. For Excellence in Electrical Engineering — Chester Harding Plimpton Prize — James Olver Flower, Class of 1927. Thompson-Starrett Prize — Louis Emerson Lee. Westinghouse Steam Turbine Prize — SOPHOMORE PRIZE.S, CLASS OF 1929 Samuel Lewis Penfield Prize — Charles Pray Knaebel; honorable mention, David Gallagher. For Excellence in Botang and Biologii—dhided between .Meyer George Ekind and William Leon Pious; honorable mention, Rudolph . ngelevitz and Benjamin Nathan Tager and Israel Zaur. For Excellence in Chemistrg — For Excellence in Drawing — Robert Butterfield Trench; honorable mention, Donald Chadwick. For Excellence in Enqineerinq Mechanics — John Longuin Bannoff; honorable mention, Robert Butter- field Trench. For Excellence in French — For Excellence in German — William Leon Pious. For Excellence in Mathematics — General Science Group: Hugh Kaul. Industrial Engineering Group: divided between Harry Edgar Snavely and Donald Thomas Ward. Engineering Science Group: Albert Louis Ruiz. For Excellence in Mineralogy — Philip Davis Brass. For Excellence in Phfisics — Engineering Group: Albert Louis Ruiz; honorable mention, Philip Charles Michel and Donald Lindsay Vivian. Natural Science Groups: Israel Zaur; honorable mention, Charles Rufus Harte, Jr. For Excellence in all Studies of the Sophomore Year — Engineering Courses: Robert Butterfield Trench. Science Courses: William Leon Pious. THE FRESHMAN YEAR FRESHM. N PRIZES, CL. SS OF 19.30 Benjamin F. Barge Mathematical Prizes — First Prize, Saunders Macl.ane; Second Prize, Peter Van- Duzer Gott; Third Prize, Arthur Eugene Bestor, Jr.; honorable mention, Warren Pierson Spining. Berkeleg Premiums — First Prize, Harold Edward Hoffman; Second Prize, James Francis Hogan. Hugh Chaniherlain Greek Prize — Giles Edwin Brown; honorable mention, Joseph Gilluly Hodges. Samuel Henrg (lalpin Latin Prizes — Hurlbut-Runk Scholarship — Leigh Miltz Marlow. McLaughlin Memorial Prizes — First Prize, George Edward Lewis; Second Prize, William George Fennell. Winston Trowbridge Townsend Prizes — . rthur Eugene Bestor, Jr., Tom Prideaux. Andrew D. White Prize — Freshman Competition: Caryl Parker Haskins; honorable mention, Charles Ruggles Langmuir. Woolseg Scholarship — Chester Rhoades de la Vergne. New York Yale Club Prizes — English: Frank Raymond Stocker. History: Saunders MacLane. Mathe- matics 11: Arthur Charles Vidal Diehl. Chemistry 13: Saunders MacLane. Chemistry 11: Roger Hooker. Physics 10: Robert .Man Lee. Physics 11: Charles Leslie Stevenson. Latin 13: John Irvin Beggs McCulloch. Greek (all Freshman courses): John Simonds Lobb and Atwood Hale Miller. French 10: Ervin Solomon Seltzer. French 20: William Leffinwell Wilkinson. French 30: Fletcher Ellis Nyce, Jr.; honorable mention, Thatcher Magoun Brown, Jr. German 10: Saunders MacLane. German 20: Eric Ernest Stietzel. German 30: Charles .James Donahue. Spanish 10: Harold . Vllan Lachner. Spanish 20: Milton Morton Sitnitsky; honorable mention, Louis Joseph Petrillo. Spanish 30: George Edward Lewis. Biology: George Amos Poole, Jr. Drawing: Warren Pierson Spining and Carol Reginald Webster. Naval Science: James Beverly Harvie, Jr. 71 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = CLASS OFFICERS NTIL Senior Year the Class is a heterogeneous collection of indi- viduals, interested principally in private enterprises. But with the arrival of the last lap, there comes a realization of unity and, with this realization, the necessity for all manner of Class committees. A class secretary is elected in Junior year to edit the Class Book and to attend to the dirty work of Class affairs after graduation. The Triennial Committee manages the reunions. The spiritual aspect of the class — if there is one, and it is always assumed that there is — falls into the hands of the Poet, the Orator, and the Historian of the Class, who at Com- mencement warn the world at large what it may exj)ect now that they and their colleagues are at its threshold. 72 Academic Oeni or C-laas Officers SkelFielJ Senior Class Oltic I College student Council Slieffield Student Council ji;}: unior i rom Committee YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI il 1 li - 1  ■ • i 1 lft 5 I ' 1 __ YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ACADEMIC SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Class Secretary Dana T. Bartholomew Class Treasurer Geoi ' ge W. Haight CLASS BOOK COMMITTEE Dana T. Bartliolomew, Chairman George W. Haight, Business Manager Francis J. Jones, II, Managing Editor Stoughton Walker, Biographical Editor Edward C. Childs, Pictorial Editor Robert C. Osborn, Art Editor DANA T. BARTHOLOMEW CLASS SECRETARY CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Arthur C. Robertson, Chairman Dana T. Bartliolomew Dwiglit B. Fishwick Charles T. Bingham Burr C. Miller Lancelot P. Ross Class Poet Wilder Hobson Class Orator Arthur C. Robertson Class Historian John K. Jessup SENIOR PROMENADE COMMITTEE W illiam Brewster Sabin W. Carr Edward C. Childs lartvn D. Keeler Joseph T. McCance Burr C. Miller Irving H. Peck, Jr. Samuel A. Scoville TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE Charles T. Bingham, Chairman Dana T. Bartholomew Arthur C. Robertson George W. Haight Lancelot P. Ross Harold W. Snow 75 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI gpfS — Bigf ' m « ' 0f f i YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SHEFFIELD SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Class Secretary Olix Alvin Saixders Class Treasurer Thomas Jexkixsox North CLASS BOOK COMMITTEE Oi.ix Alvix Sauxder.s, Chairman Thomas Jexkixsox North, Treasurer William T. Kelly, Jr. Charles E. Nettleton ' anCourt Lucas Elmer A. Stevens Gilfry Ward CLIN ALVIN SAUNDERS CLASS SECRETARY CLASS DAY COMMITTEE Edward Cornish, Jr., Chairman L. W. King H. Spitzer S. S. Quarrier W. A. Webster Class Historian T. P. Field Class Orator F. B. Hayne, Jr. Irij Orator O. A. Saunders Class Prophet S. Robbing, III SENIOR PROM COMMITTEE R. W. Batchelder P. C. Donovan W L. Graham, Jr. F. B. Havne, Jr. W. T. Kelly, Jr. VanC. Lucas E. B. Page S. Robbins, III TRIENNIAL COMMITTEE Olin Alvin Saunders, Chairman T. L. Arnold YanC. Lucas 77 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 0 W l • • ■ % ' fl ' ■fPS 1(1 - «IS .Tf r fP ' |i YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI COLLEGE STUDENT COUNCIL Arthur Clexdexix Robertson, Chairman Charles Tiffaxy Bixgham, Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS D. T. Bartholomew G. B. Berger, Jr. G. W. Haight 1928 B. C. : Iiller L. P. Ross H. W. Snow G. H. Crile M. H. Eddy iVI. J. Grove 1929 L. H. Smith H. E. Manville, Jr. H. R. ]MerriU F. A. Simmons, Jr. H. S. Aldrich H. M. Ellis 1930 A. E. Palmer, Jr. W. W. Greene L. W. Ladd, Jr. 79 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI £ 4l P 4fl •WT: t. 1 £ it 4 1 ft .M 1 F- ' IflH n 4 ■ ' 1 1 1 ' m . r ! tf 1 m f ?.. ? J ? s a YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SHEFFIELD STUDENT COUNCIL 1927-1928 H. Spitzer, Chairman L. W. King, Secretary 1928 T. L. Arnold E. Cornish, Jr. S. S. Quarrier O. A. Saunders E. B. Sturges 1929 J. A. Brandenburg S. J. Dow, Jr. C. E. Hayward, Jr. J. J. Hoben C. D. jMahoney 1930 C. Ellis, Jr. R. W. Everett, Jr. 81 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 4 I it r w 01 ' 41 a 0 P fl YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE John Kexnedv Beesox, Chairman Henry Riudle Mereilt., Treasurer Charles Ecci.eston Hayward, Jr., Floor Manager 1929 Francis Gordon Brown Edmund Lockwood Decker, Jr. JMaxon Hunter Eddy Kenrick Samson Gillespie Henry Riddle Merrill John Alexander Poj)e Fred Albert Simmons, Jr. Damon deBlois Wack 1929 S. John Kennedy Becson Putnam Davis Scott Jonathan Dow, Jr. Charles Eccleston Hayward, Jr. John Joseph Hoben Andrew Kaul, 3d Charles A. Ivline Charles Hungerford Erlund Milbank J. K. BEESON, chairman FORMER CHAIRMEN AND FLOOR MANAGERS Chairmen Fi.ooR Managers Chairmen Floor Managers 1873 S. L. Boyce 1901 P. L. Mitchell H. S. Curtiss 1874 T. P. Wickes 1902 B. C. Rumsey, 3d W. E. Day 1875 D. A. Jones F. H. Jones 1903 A. R. Lamb C. J. Hamlin 1876 J. Porter C. Johnson 1904 J. F. Byers C. E. Adams 1877 N. U. Walker F. J. Stinison 1905 E. P. Rogers F. H. Day 1878 H. C. Hollister C. H. Morgan 1906 B. D. Smith J. A. Stevenson 1879 J. D. Torreyson J. 0. Perrin 1907 C. Sumner W. McC. Blair 1880 N. G. Osborn W. R. Innis 1908 R. B. Shepard J. M. Townsend, Jr 1881 J. B. Dimmick Henry Ives 1909 J. B. Perrin R. B. Burch 1882 A. P. French W. P. Eno 1910 Elton Hovt, 2d S. M. Clement, Jr. 1883 F. W. Rogers E. B. Frost 1911 F. W. Hyde F. F. Randolph 1884 T. G. Lawrence D. H. Wilcox 1912 R. A. Gardner H. T. Clement 1885 S. R. Bertron H. S. Brooks 1913 V. Webb H. E. Sawyer 1886 T. Darling E. C. Lambert 1914 H. A. Pumpelly J. Walker, 3d 1887 J. Rogers, Jr. E. Allen 1915 E. M. Bostwick H. J. Crocker, Jr. 1888 S. J. Walker J. R. Sheffield 1916 H. W. LeGore S. A. Pumpelly 1889 H. S. Robinson W. L. Armstrong 1917 L. Armour R. A. Lovett 1890 A. G. McClintock S. Phelps 1918 A. V. Heely F. D. Carter 1891 G. B. Hoppin G. S. Brewster 1919 DeF. Van Slyck C. S. Heminway 1892 T. L. McClung H. A. Bayne 1920 C. J. LaRoche J. E. NeviUe 1893 Francis Parsons A. S. Chisholm 1921 W. Cheney J. S. Bush 1894 Thos. Cocliran, Jr. H. P. Whitney 1922 J. C. Dann J. S. Cooper, Jr. 189.5 William Sloane F. B. Harrison 1923 E. F. Blair C. M. O ' Hearn 1896 A. E. Foote A. P. Stokes, Jr. 1924 E. C. Bench J. S. Ewing 1897 C. M. Fincke E. E. Garrison 1925 E. P. Cottle, Jr. A. V. Stout, Jr. 1898 Grenville Parker F. H. Simmons 1926 L. M. Noble R. B. McGunigle 1899 W. E. S. Griswold F. H. Brooke 1927 C. T. Bingham A. C. Robertson 1900 P. A. Rockefeller S. B. Camp r YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The New Art Museum THE first section of the new Gallery of Fine Arts, located at the corner of Chapel and High Streets, was made possible through the generosity of two Yale graduates, an anonymous donor and Mait- land F. Griggs, ' 96. The new unit, Romanesque in style, is about two-fifths of the pro])osed whole. It connects with the old brown stone ' enetian Gothic Art School, built in 186-5, by means of a two-story bridge crowned with medijpval merlons. Whe n com- pleted the Gallery will extend, on the Chapel Street side, from High to York Streets, abutting the York- Library Dormitory. At right angles to thi.s is to be a narrow double section, containing a reference li- brary and lantern slide and photograph rooms, con- necting with both ends of Weir Hall. The present court in the middle will be undis- turbed. Thus all art instruction, architecture, painting, and sculpture (with the excep- tion of the drama, housed for the past two years in the new University Theatre), will be taught in a series of attached buildings, with the great examples of art of the past and present in the museum in the center. One should not pass judgment on the present structure without keeping in mind the completed whole, a sketch of which is reproduced elsewhere in this book. The present unit, designed by Egerton Swartwout, ' 91, is built of A ' irginia sandstone, from a quarry which Washington used. The stone trim around the doors and windows is from Ohio. A tower, which does not show in the photograph of the fa9ade taken last winter, extends some thirty feet above the northeast corner of the building and provides two extra floors of badly needed studio space. Not only is the tower an extra gift of the anonymous donor, but funds for the large amount of carving, both exterior and interior, on the building came from the same source. The carved orna- ment is both foliate and in the form of real and fanciful beasts, quite in the spirit of the Middle Ages. Three large handsome iron gates were designed and executed by Samuel Yellin of Philadelphia for the interior of the building, making it possible to have two separate and distinct circuits in the museum, so that the galleries can be closed off in the late afternoon and evening for greater protection, leaving, however, free access to the lecture rooms, studios, and offices. Although the work- and storerooms in the base- ment and the classrooms and offices on the first floor and mezzanine will be finished soon, the main galleries on the second floor will not be completed for several months. The University ' s scattered art collections, now largely in storage, will be installed during the summer months, so that the entire building may be ready for use in the fall or early winter. The University ' s active interest in art dates back to the time of Col. John Trum- bull, the aide-de-camp of General Washington and distinguished painter of the Revolu- tion, who sold his collection to the College in 1831. The following year the Trumbull Gallery, which stood near the northwest corner of the campus until 1901, was con- structed under the artist ' s direction, for the reception of his hundred paintings an d miniatures, dealing, for the most part, with the war of Independence. In the new museum a special gallery, suggested by the old interior (removed in 1875) of the Congrega- tional Church at Lebanon, Connecticut, which was one of Trumbull ' s few architectural efforts, has been designed especially for this collection. Col. Trumbull ' s body and that of his wife, Sarah Hope, now resting under the old Art School building, will be removed and placed in a crypt in the new building, in order to comply with the artist ' s will. 87 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI In 1868, three years after the establishment of the School of the Fine Arts, the well-known collection of paintings of the Italian Primitives, brought together by James Jackson Jarves in the fifties and sixties of the last century, was first exhibited at Yale. Two years later these pictures, numbering 119 in all, and unappreciated by the public of the time, were purchased by the University. Although the collection contains nothing from the hands of the giants of the Italian Renaissance, it remains, nevertheless, prob- abh ' the best teaching collection of its kind in the country. It is especially rich in thirteenth century painting and is often referred to as the most notable collection of the early Tuscan masters outside Italy. Besides these two highly important groups of paintings, the University possesses a num- ber of Colonial and Early American portraits from the hands of such men as S. F. B. Morse, Ralph Earle, and John Smibert, which will be exhibited with contemporary furniture, silver, and glassware in the new building. Assyrian and Baby- lonian art will be represented by four bas-reliefs from the Palace of Ximrud, and by a dozen or two small bronze and clay objects, interesting pri- marily from an esthetic stand- point, coming from the Baby- lonian Collection, at present housed in room 202, Osborne Memorial I aboratories. The Rebecca Darlington Stoddard Collection of Greek vases, which has for many years been ex- hibited on the second floor of Memorial Hall, will be removed to the classical gallery in the new museum. Other of the Uni- versity ' s art collections include the five pieces of French Romanesque sculpture, the gift of Maitland F. Griggs, ' 96; the Louis XV furniture from Archer M. Huntington, Hon. M.A. ' 9T ; Diirer and Rem- brandt prints presented by Frederic G. Achelis, ' 07, in memory of his father, Fritz Achelis ; and Italian and German Renaissance engravings and woodcuts from Edward B. Greene, ' 00. All of the objects will be exhibited, in so far as it is possible, in chrono- logical order, keeping different cultures and art epochs together, instead of having prints, porcelains, paintings, and so on, exhibited separately, a practice followed in many of the older institutions in Europe and America. The plans, reproduced in a later section, give an approximate idea of the proposed method of installing the University ' s now scattered art collections. Last December, the Corporation, following the precedent of Oxford and Cam- bridge, appointed a committee, with a three-year term of office, to act in a general way in an advisory capacity with regard to the collections and in particular to pass upon 89 PORTRAIT OF ALEXANDER H UIL.T OS— Trumbull The artist painted several pictures of Hamilton, in Philadelphia, in 179i. ' Ilie Vale portrait was made thirty years later, as a copy by Trum- bull of one of his earlier portraits. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Gentile was the last ureat mediaeval painter of Italy, and the first great Umbrian. The signed panel in the Yale Collection is particularly interesting as being, perhaps, theearliest formal repre- ntation of the Madonna and Child without a gold background. ADORATION OF THE MAGI —Signorelli (1441-lo£3) A potent influence upon Michelangelo, Luca Siffnorelli is one of the mightiest figures in Italian paintin?. The Vale Adoration is a late work which shows admirably the rugged strength and earnestness of this stern, uncompromising master. all proposed gifts. The committee is composed of Walter S. Brewster, ' 95, Edward B. Greene, ' 00, Maitland F. Griggs, ' 96, de Lance} ' Kountze, ' 99, Duncan Philips, ' 08, and the Dean of the School of the Fine Arts, and the Curator of Painting and Sculpture ex officiis. It is impossible, of course, to foresee in what directions the collections will grow. The general purpose of the museum is to illustrate, with a few fine examples, the great creative periods of art in the history of mankind — at present, for instance, there is almost nothing to represent the cultures of Persia, India, China or Japan. Although five centuries of Italian painting is well represented by the Jarves pictures, there are no examples of Italian Renaissance sculpture, pottery, textiles or metal work. The most crying needs arc, perhaps, in the fields of Egyptian and Roman art, as examples of these great and widely separate civilizations are entirely lacking. No attempt will be made, however, to build up a great collection on the model of some of the larger mu- nicipal institutions. For the present, at least, it is unnecessary to illustrate the origins, development, fruition, and decadence of every art epoch with multitudes of examples, but rather to characterize the dozen or more important cultures by a small number of well-chosen objects of outstanding quality. Such a teaching collection a t Yale can be supplemented bv the vast and easilv accessible public and private collections in New York. 91 YALE BANNER AND POT POURKI THE LIME BURNER — TF7iis ej- iiynious gift in memory of Frederic G. Aoheli; YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The I niversitv has been greatly aided in the past few years, not only in attempting to build up sucii a teaching collection, but in the publication of art matters, by the Associates in Fine Arts at Yale University. The members of this informal organization of graduates, undergraduates, and friends of Yale, pay no dues, but contribute from time to time to a fund, which, up to the present, has been used for publication. Richard Offner ' s Italian Primi- tives at Yale University and John Hill Mor- gan ' s Paintings by John Trumbull at Yale University were published by the Associates. A Bulletin is also issued two or three times a vear, devoted to describing and illustrating additions to the collection and to outstanding matters connected with the activities of the dif- ferent departments of the School — architec- ture, painting, sculpture, and drama. The Asso- ciates wish to include among their members all those who are interested in the many-sided problem of the Yale Art Schools. Further pictures concerning the Art School are to he found in the last section of this book. ST. JEIi()NU ' ; ' - . ' M;r. n,i. d, Lnn,,.,, Ic. UkO-lSll) As tlie reputed master of I ' eru ino and Pinturic- chio, Fiorenzo di Lorenzo oceupies a position of commandinfr importinee in Umbrian art. The Yale Fiorenzo is one of the best-preserved paintings in the sallerv. and has always been a favorite with the iritii-al puhli,-. ST. EfSTACE -£ ' nsr)c Gift of Frederic G. Achelis. ' O chelis. Durer is the greatest of lii ■ing by Albrecht Durer in memory of his father, Fritz YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI FORENSICS HETHER it be that the modern age speaks with actions rather than words, or else that it does not tliink, and has, therefore, nothing to say, would be a hard question to determine. It is, however, an obvious fact that interest in oratory has fallen off to a surprising degree since the honored days of the Linonia, Broth- ers in lenity, and Calliope debating societies. An annual forensic contest is still held for each class and the established and traditional prizes are given to the winners. The University De- bating Society still holds contests with other universities. But there is no general support or interest in this fast-fading art. The shell of the old tradition is still there, but most of the meat is gone. It is a turn of events that must be regretted to a certain degree, but a consideration of the new fields of endeavor is necessary before the final judgment is made. 94! AB-C rlfn: Foreiv iCiS YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI DEBA TING DEBATING at Yale this season has been unusually successful. Aji en- couraging amount of interest and new material have added consider- ably to the prestige of this activity. This is accounted for in part by the active and enthusiastic Freshman club which, since its founding two years ago, has supplied practice and initiative to those who now make up the University teams. So far this year, the debating teams have won five and lost two debates. The Intercollegiate league season started in December with a double win over Amherst and Pennsylvania on the subject of Extra-territorial rights in China. The next league contest, on INIarch 3, produced one loss and one victory. On the question of Alfred E. Smith for President, tlie negative lost to Wes- leyan while the affirmative was defeating Dart- mouth in New Haven. The last of the league debates were with Harvard and Princeton on the subject of ]Mussolini ' s Policies. Here, the affirmative team won the decision over Princeton while the negative team lost to the Harvard sjieakers. Perhaps the most important debate of the season, that Avith the far-famed Bates team, brought the first victory for Yale over that college for several years. Debating in New Haven on The Chinese Question, the Yale team received a Avell- earned and exciting victory. The usual Oxford or Cambridge debate did not take place this year due to unavoidable circumstances. This was regretfully missed, but it is expected that the custom will be revived again next year. Later in the spring, two other important debates are scheduled. One is with the University of Porto Rico on the question of American Intervention 96 WILLIAM ROBEKT CIIAMBEKS, ' M WINNER OF Deforest prize YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI in Latin American Countries, while another will he held witli the University of Vermont on American Civilization. The important points of the season might be summed up as follows: First, an increased interest among those trying for the teams; second, a record-breaking crowd at the Al Smith debate where there was a shortage of about three hundred programs ; third, the conquest of Bates ; and lastly, the fact that Yale placed third in the Eastern Intercollegiate Debating League. Of the three prizes for oratory offered to the College, one is available for a member of each of the upper classes. The most recently founded prize- speaking contest was instituted by Mrs. Henry B. Buck in memory of her son, Parker Dickenson Buck, killed in the World War. Originally, the Parker Dickenson Buck Prize was awarded for an essay, but now it goes to the best orator on a subject connected with patriotism or patriotic achieve- ment. It was won this year by William George Fennell, with an oration en- titled The Most Patriotic Thing in America. John I. B. INIcCulloch and John N. Hazard received honorable mention for their orations. The old Junior Exhibition has now been incorporated with the Ten Eyck Contest, so that the winner of one automatically wins the other. The winner this year was Erwin Hall Steif. Honorable mention was given to Robert Emmett Houston. The DeForest INIedal for Seniors, founded in 1823 by David C. De- Forest, was this year won by W illiam Robert Chambers. WILLIAM GEORGE FENNELL. SO WINNER OF BUCK PRIZE ERWIN HALL STEIF. ' 29 WINNER OF JUNIOR EXHIBITION 97 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ARTHUR CLENDENIX ROBERTSON, JS CLASS ORATOR JOHN KNOX JESSUP. ' i8 CLASS HISTORIAN Class Historian HUMOR eternally is allied with solemnity to make a satisfying whole. So ancient Athens revered her heroes and yet laughed at them heartily in caricature at the play — so the Historian of the Graduating Class takes his honored stand. It is his duty to give the chronicle of the meritorious actions of his fellows and the memorable events in the history of his class. But, shunning a report, ponderous with listed virtues, and realizing that humanly we must fail to appreciate even the Father of Our Country without the detail of the red hair under the powdered wig and the ink-bottle episode, he takes the opportunity in a final, glorious session to rake the supposedly high and mighty and dignified over the coals. Such is the tradition of the Class Historian and well worthy to remain in years to come, giving to the portentous ritual of Commencement an echo of the fun that has been, with work, an integral part of enjoyment of life at Yale, nor allowing the momen- tous occasion of solemnity to pass without some word for levity. Class Orator rr HE position of Class Orator has licld, from the earliest days, its prominence and - ' - soleninit} ' in the spring exercises of the graduating class. Traditionally this address was given in Latin, in appreciation of its dignified purpose. Although, since 1840, it has been given in English and has been of a more popular nature, its character continues to be that of a serious treatise on educational methods and a formal valedictory of the graduating class. As the entire Senior Class elects the man to represent them as Orator on Com- mencement Day, the position has always been considered one of high honor. 98 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Fence Orations ANOTHER of the orations in the lighter k. vein attends the more or less formal con- cession to the Freshmen of the Sophomores ' envied privileges, namely, the possession of the Sophomore Fence and the right to smoke a pipe on the campus. At this time is accom- plished their entire emancipation and elevation to the social status of Sophomores. This ceremony was founded in 1878 when an entire day, late in the spring, known as Presentation Day, was given over to the celebrations of the symbols of their new au- thority. The yearlings sj orted beaver hats and walking sticks and enjoyed a riotous sojourn to Savin Rock or some other secluded spot. But the ritual of the transition of privileges has changed. The Fence and pipes are the sole surviving bequests and the elaborate procedure has centered down to a half-hour of concentrated mud-slinging between the spokesmen of the two classes : the Fence Orator of the Sophomore Class, who dedicates the Fence and at the same time points out rather glaring defects in the year- history of his successors, and the elect of the P reshman Class who accepts the honors with a return of as many caustic comments. The object is to make the most ridiculous remark and bring up the most disgracing scandal. The triumph rests on the loudest guffaw on the part of the two classes gathered under the elms for the occasion. In 1927, Henry C. Downing, ' 29, represented his class at the ceremony and of the class of ' 30, John N. Hazard made the speech of acceptance. H. C. DOWNING, ' it FENCE ORATOR 99 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE UNIVERSITY DEBATING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS WiNLOCK W. Miller, Jr., ' 28, President Samuel Thorne, Jr., ' 28, Vice-President WiNSLOw P. Leighton, ' 29, Manager Charles A. Frank, Jr., ' 28, Secretary Herbert G. Dyke, ' 30, Assistant Manager D. S. Mallox, 28, Member at Large to the Executive Committee Prof. R. H. Gabriel HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. John Chester Adams, Coach Prof. Edgar S. Furniss L. jM. Baldwin P. Day T. I. Emerson ACTIVE MEMBERS 1928 C. A. Frank, Jr. C. J I. Lewis D. S. Mallon W. W. Miller, Jr. S. Thorne, Jr. F. A. Truslow W. S. Gaud, Jr. R. E. Houston, Jr. H. G. Dyke W. G. Fennell 1929 1930 J. N. Hazard J. I. B. McCulloch 1930 S. W. E. Arnstein W. P. Leighton T. H. Vance J. T. Patterson, Jr. F. E. C. Roelker Yale- Amherst Debate (at Amherst), December 10 Won by Yale Yale-Pennsylvania Debate (at Yale), December 10 Won by Yale Yale-Bates Debate (at Yale), January 21 Won by Yale Yale-Dartmouth Debate (at Yale), March 3 Won by Yale Yale-Wesleyan Debate (at Wesleyan), March 3 Lost to Wesleyan Yale-Harvard Debate (at Harvard), March 24 Lost to Harvard Yale-Princeton Debate (at Yale), March 2i Won bv Yale 101 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE FRESHMAN DEBATING CLUB THE Freshman Debating Society was organized in the middle of October under the guidance of the officers of the 1930 Club. Following the custom of previous years, the group of about sixty members elected the officers for the year, who divided the society into tiie Wall and the Court. Throughout the first term meetings took place biweekly at whicii time debates wei-e held between the two factions. These proved helpful and interesting; each group winning four contests. The second term was devoted to debates with outside institutions, including Taft, Choate, Hill, Princeton, and Harvard. OFFICERS BuRTOx Cheney Smith, President Richard Daniel Weigi-e, Vice-President Joseph Irwin Miller, Secretary THE WALL J. S. JlcCarthev, Floor Leader C. Albom E. C. Curent, Jr. C. S. Evans H. S. Fields A. H. Fine F. B. Fisch C. H. Ford G. A. Griffin H. L Hartman H. M. Hutton J. N. Hyde E. C. Leedy B. MacChesney J. T. McClintock C. H. Oliver J. L. Reed W. E. Russell J. W. Sanford, Jr. C. S. Schnell W. T. Schoyer B. C. Smith M. E. Stein B. R. Sturges P. E. Traccliio L. Tucker R. D. Weigle THE COURT W. Swoope, Floor Leader W. D. Behnke B. Herman W. L. Carv R. W. Clark J. B. Coleman A. L. Coles C. L Head A. Kaplowitz K. B. Lawrence F. L. Lawyer J. A. Long M. W. MacDuffie H. H. M. Mack H. Mansbach E. McElwain J. L Miller H. L. Osterweis R. H. Radsch J. A. Reed L Rosenbaum L. I. Ross N. E. Sangiovanni B. C. Shapiro W. D. Taylor 102 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI HONOR SOCIETIES ilHROUGH admi ssion to an honor society a man gets that definite recognition of intellectual achieve- ment which is a much needed en- couragement in itself and in the popular re- sjject it brings with it. So often is the emphasis wrongly placed, so often is the true goal ob- scured by the immediate impedimenta; it is well that a mark of distinction should be ac- corded to tbe man who has constantly pursued the end he originally set for himself. It is through these societies that the scholar receives the recognition that he is at least approaching that end. The popular esteem for the honor society man is a tribute to the men whom he has surpassed as well as to himself. 104 Hoivoax Societies YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI m PHI BETA KAPPA OFFICERS Hamilton Southworth, President Robert E. Houston, Jr., Vice-President Arthur B. Hersey, Secretary Benjamin Brewster, Treasurer Hans A. Klagsbrunn, Librarian Howard M. Antevil Byron K. Anthony Frank M. Atterholt, Jr. Leonard L. Bacon Donald H. Ballou George B. Berger, Jr. Joseph M. Bernstein Albert M. K. Blume Donald G. Borg Henry Brill Daniel Noyes Brown John H. Callender Thomas H. Chappell Sanford Cobb Thomas W. Copeland George A. Eddy Thomas I. Emerson Roswell L. Gilpatric SENIORS Philip H. Gray, Jr. Conrad Hahn Richard V. Hall Charles D. Harvey James L. High Robert W. Huntington, Jr. Raymond Kennedy Stanton F. Kennedy Charles B. Lauren Jlitchell Levensohn Isadore Levine Harry R. Levy Charleton M. Lewis Stuart M. Miller Winlock W. Miller, Jr. Benjamin Nassau Joseph I. Ostergren Richard M. Paskus Lawrence S. Pratt John R. Prentice James L Raymond James F. Rettger Charles M. Rice Edwin D. Richards Roger Robl) John F. Ruber, Jr. William T. Sanders Minier Sargent Casper Shanok Edwin T. Thompson Dana T. Warren George T. Washington Charles H. Welles, 3d Hassler Whitney Thomas H. Bracken Benjamin Brewster Mark R. Briney, Jr. Winthrop G. Brown Alfred H. Clifford John P. Farnham JUNIORS Arthur B. Hersey Robert E. Houston, Jr. Hans A. Klagsbrunn Roger S. Makepeace James H. Nichols Robert T. Piatt, H Hamilton Southworth Isaac N. P. Stokes, 2d Frank R. Strong William W. Werntz, Jr. 107 p: t ? LITERARY SOCIZTi ' T T rr r K TMrTS «ii li£arr-  -%=-3i T YALE BA EK FORENSIC SOCIETi ' DELTA SIGMA KHO OFFICERS- 1S 7-MSB HONORARY MEMBER T« 1 % WilnaiB Ste Gwsd. Jr. lufart r — II I n— . j— Willi ihn IVagy W OEhb Gew FowS bviB YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SCIENTIFIC HONORARY SOCIETY YALE CHAPTER OF THE SOCIETY OF THE SIGMA XI OFFICERS Profkssor Leigh Page, President Professor Adolph Knopf, Vice-President Professor Albert F. Hill, Secretary Mr. Lauren E. Seeley, Treasurer UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Joseph Imperati Philip Hull Kirby Rollin Carroll Wynkoop Lewis Arnold Caverly Mason Walter Raymond IMeyer Charles Ellsworth Nettleton Charles Worthington Phelps Frank Ragaini Hughes Landers Ross John Franklin Wyckoff YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI HONORARY ENGINEERING SOCIETY TAU BETA PI OFFICERS, 1927-1928 Elmer Atwood Stevens, President John Lester Kimberley, Vice-President Henry Brevoort Cannon, Jr., Treasurer Charles Ellsworth Xettleton, Corresponding Secretary George Wilson Penny, Jr., Recording Secretary MEMBERS Thomas Lyman Arnold Thornton Wynne Barrett Henry Brevoort Cannon, Jr. Edmund Lovell Dana Harold Fayette Doolittle Wood Dailey Gerstell William Taylor Howe John Lester Kimberley Arnold Caverly Mason Ralph Willis Miner Charles Ellsworth Nettleton George Wilson Penny, Jr. Sidney Sayre Quarrier Frank Ragaini Joseph Pratt Ringland Hugh Landers Ross Ashton Tourison Scott Elmer Atwood Stevens Gilfry Ward George Edward Woods 111 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ATHLETIC SOCIETY SIGMA DELTA PSI OFFICERS, 1927-1928 S. W. Carr, President L. L. Stott, Secretary S. P. Scott, Treasurer COMMITTEE ON CERTIFICATION W. G. Anderson, M. D. H. A. Farr Clarence W. Mendell H. S. Anderson Boyd Coiiistock Robert N. Corwin HONORARY MEMBERS Georfje P. Dav R. J. H. Kipliuth John Mack N. A. Merriam :. P. Aldrich, ' 22 . Allen, Jr., ' 19 . H. Ardrey, ' 21 . L. Baldwin, ' 22 . C. Becket, ' 13 i. Bingham, Jr., ' 25 H. Brinckerhoff, ' 23 S. . P. Brown, ' 21 S. . W. Bunnell, ' 27 . Campbell, ' 23 , W. Carr, ' 28 . Carter, ' 15 [. C. Cheney, ' 24 S. . W. Colt, ' 17 . H. Crane, ' 22 . C. Crittenden, ' 23 . K. Cureton, Jr., ' 24 S. . H. Cushing, ' 17 S. . C. Cutler, ' 26 . P. Deacon. ' 27 S. . F. Dean, ' 29 . W. Dean, ' 18 . Dodd, ' 29 S. 1. N. Estill, ' 23 . G. Estill, ' 17 S. MEMBERS W. E. Estill, ' 18 S. GiU, ' 26 S. J. S. Gorby, ' 28 S. J. H. Grubb, ' 16 A. R. Gurney, ' 18 N. S. Hall, ' 30 N. T. Hayes, ' 25 J. C. Herman, ' 15 tA. Hulman, ' 24 S. O. Z. Ide, ' 15 L. G. Jarvis, ' 18 S. W. L. Jelliffe, ' 23 H. S. Landon, ' 16 S. R. W. Landon, ' 21 G. H. Lazarus, ' 20 J. J. Lincoln, ' 24 S. J. Locke, ' 24 A. M. Loveman, ' 15 J. H. McDill, ' 27 T. Means, ' 10 T. J. O ' Brien, ' 21 F. T. Oldt, Jr., ' 80 tW. M. Oler. Jr., ' 16 •fJ. W. Overton, ' 17 D. F. Parker, ' 18 H. L. Perry, ' 16 H. Potter. ' 17 K. V. Potter, ' 19 S. Potter, ' 19 S. Bobbins, 3d, ' 28 S. H. F. Rogers, ' 21 H. C. Rolf. ' 17 S. C. H. Ruddy, ' 22 tW. B. Schleiter, ' 21 S. P. Scott, ' 28 W. P. Sessions, ' 23 D. C. A. Smith, ' 21 J. W. B. Smith, ' 25 R. J. Stackpole, Jr., ' 15 C. J. Stewart, ' 18 T. N. St. Hill, ' 17 S. L. L. Stott, ' 28 B. Thorne, ' 28 S. H. S. Thorne, ' 20 A. T. N. Tracy, ' 25 S. M. Treadwell, ' 24 H. R. Tyler, ' 28 tS. B. Waring, ' 25 E. R. Williams, ' 21 S. W. W. Wise, ' 23 ' Deceased. t Former presidents. 112 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI S. S. S. SOCIETY AURELIAN HONOR SOCIETY Thomas Lyman Arnold Gerald Van Cleve Baker Edward Cornish, Jr. Maurice Hazehvood Fisher William Lawrence Graham, Jr. Lewis Waldo Kins ' Sidney Sayre Quarrier Sabin Robbins, III Horton Spitzer Edward Baker Sturges James Shelley Tatman Gilfrv Ward William Adam Webster 113 a YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI w S. S. S. SOCIETY TORCH HONOR SOCIETY Roger Walker Batchclder Henry Brevoort Cannon, Jr. Paul Collins Donovan Thomas Phillips Field Frank Brevard Hayne, Jr. William Tolson Kelly, Jr. VanCourt Lucas Frank Dwight Sage Stuart Sanger Olin Alvin Saunders Harry Bartlett Stewart, Jr. James Edgerly Thayer 114 ,.,.,.,... .... ....i u! !.j i, VALE BAiNiNLK AND POT POURRI jmammvavavas. HONORARY ARCHITECTURAL FRATERNITY 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 i s J i ; i Sg THE IKTINOS SOCIETY 1 j i i ! ! i OFFICERS, 1928 William Narcisse Gillette, President i Robert Williams Shackletox, Vice-President 1 William Brooks Cobb, Secretary ( Lewis Austin Storrs, Jr., Treasurer j MEISIBERS 1 Ben Afle Standish Mcacham Thomas Cranston Albro Bobbin Huntington Miller 1 Charles Akers Bradbury Robert Xorfleet ! Ernest Thorwell Brown Lawrence Peacock Donald Byrne George Frederick Poehler ! William Brooks Cobb Carlos Albert Sanchez i Ford Hillard Cooper Boydston Satterfield i Frederick Wallace Dunn William Curt Scherer ; i James Mathew Edwards, Jr. Peter Schladermundt i Andrew Francis Euston Robert Hutchins Schutz i I Juan Manuel Salvado Fontanillas Robert Paul Schweiker Harold Carl Geyer Robert Williams Shackleton William Narcisse Gillette Dudley Tyler Smith i Francisco Guillermo Gonzalez Allan Taft Squire i Henry Sage Goodwin Allan Burton Stanhope Everett Merrick Jones William Addison Stone, Jr. 1 Walk Claridge Jones, Jr. Lewis Austin Storrs, Jr. 1 William Benjamin Grafton Kirk Robert Doulton Stott j Gordon Howard Kunz Ford Steele Whittaker j ) Theodore Warren Lamb Julian Hill Whittlesy 1 i 115 i 1 ( 1 J WB   .. - . - . - - - . ' . - - ,  - ..   V   y.. j T. j.  j. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI i  ,■ YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI FOUNDATION OF SOCIETIES Linonia (Debating), 1735-18G8, 1878-1880, 1904- 1906. ♦Brothers in Unity (Debating), 1768-1878 (?). Plii Beta Kappa (Scholarship), 1780—. CaUiopean (Debating), 1819-1853. Chi Delta Theta (Senior Literary), 1821—. SlvuU and Bones (Senior), 18.32—. Alpha Delta Phi (Junior), 1836-1871; (Aca- demic), 1888-1896; (Junior), 1896—. Psi Upsilon (Junior), 1838—. Kappa Sigma Theta (Sophomore), 1838-1857. ♦Kappa Sigma Epsilon (Freshman), 1840-1880. Scroll and Key (Senior), 1842 — . Delta Kappa Epsilon (Junior), 1844 — . ♦Delta Kappa (Freshman), 1845-1880. Alpha Sigma Phi (Sophomore), 1845-1864; (as Delta Beta Xi, Sophomore), 1864-1875; (University. Celven Club ), 1907-1924; (Jun- ior), 1924 . ♦Star and Dart (Senior), 1848-1851. Berzelius, Colony (Sheffield), 1848—. ♦Sigma Delta (Freshman), 1849-1860. L. L. O. E. (Medical). 18.52-1872. ♦Vieta (Engineering), 1852-1860. ♦Gamma Nu (Freshman), 18.55-1889. ♦Theta Upsilon (Law), 1859-1860. ♦S. B. (Medical), 1860-1864. ♦L. S. (Scientific), 1862-1864. Book and Snake, Cloister (Sheffield), 1863—. ♦Spade and Grave (Senior), 1864-1867. ♦Phi Theta Psi (Sophomore), 1864-1876. Theta Xi, Franklin Hall (Sheffield), 1865-1896, 1906—. Delta Psi, St. Anthony (Sheffield), 1869—. ♦Alpha Chi (Sheffield Freshman), 1872 (?)-1881; (Sheffield), 1881-1884. ♦Teth Keth Men (Law), 1874-1880. ♦Lambda Sigma (Law), 1874-1876. Phi Gamma Delta (Sheffield Junior), 1875; (Sheffield), 1880-1882; (University), 1888- 1898; Vernon Hall (Sheffield), 1908—. Nu Sigma Delta (Sophomore), 1875-1876. ♦He Boule (Sophomore), 187.5-1902. ♦Alpha Kappa (Sophomore), 1878-1884. Qii Phi, York Hall (Sheffield), 1878—. ♦Eta Phi (Sophomore), 1879-1902. Wolf ' s Head (Senior), 1883—. ♦Beta Chi ( ). 188-3— (?). Phi Delta Phi, Corbev Court (Law), 1886—. ♦Theta Delta Chi (Sheffield), 1887-1900. Zeta Psi (Junior), 1888—. Delta Phi, St. Elmo (Sheffield), 1888—. Alpha Kappa Kappa (Medical), 1888 — . •Sigma Xu (University), 1888-1892. Nu Sigma Nu (Jledical), 1890. Book and Gavel (Law), 1890—; Phi Alpha Delta, 1893 — . Reorganized 1921. Skull and Sceptre (Medicine), 1891—; Phi Rho Sigma, 1907—. Beta Theta Pi (Academic), 1892-1906; (Junior), 1906—. ♦Kappa Psi (Sophomore), 1875-1902. S igma Xi (Scientific Honorary), 1896 — . Book and Bond (University), 1899—. Phi Sigma Kappa, Sachem Hall (Sheffield), 189.3—. Elihu Club (Senior), 1903. Alpha Chi Rho (University), 1905-1924; (Col- lege), 1924—. Xi Tau Kappa (Honorary Law), 1908 — . Acacia (LIniversity), 1909 — . Aurelian (Sheffield Honorary), 1910 — . Elizabethan Club, 1911—. Delta Sigma Rho (Honorary Debating), 1912 — . Alpha Chi Sigma (Chemical), 1914—. Sigma Delta Psi (. thletic), 191.5—. Torch (Sheffield Honorary), 1916—. Phi Chi (Medical), 1922—. Delta Theta Phi (I aw), 1923—. Chi Psi (Junior), 1924 . No longer in existence. 127 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ' 1 1 111 5 eiviox oocieties YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SENIOR SOCIETY Dana Treat Bartholomew George Bart Berger, Jr. Charles Tiffany Bingham Dwight Brown Fishwick Herbert Stanton Griggs, Jr. George Winthrop Haight Chauncey Bradley Ives Raymond White Lapham Barton Lee JNIallory, Jr. John Rockefeller Prentice Arthur Clendenin Robertson Lancelot Patrick Ross Stewart Patterson Scott Peter Hellwege Stewart Stoughton Walker 131 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SENIOR SOCIETY C. S. P. C. C. J. Richard Church Durant Alfred Sherman Foote Earl Goodwine, Jr. Charles Daggett Harvey Wilder Hobson Willard Tisdel Hodgsdon John Thomas Manson, 2d Charles Barnej- Gould Murphy Robert Chesley O shorn Irving Hohart Peck, Jr. John Sterling Rockefeller Harold Wetmore Snow George L. Storm, Jr. Joseph Albert Thomas Richard Farries Vaiighan 133 7!S YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI r ' , YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SENIOR SOCIETY John Townsend Abbott Fred Chambers Baldwin George Clymer Brooke Gardner Brown Sabin William Carr Thomas Huntington Chappell John Kimberly Curtis Francis Johnston Jones, 2d Milton Knight Dudley Bates Lawrence, Jr. Joseph Taylor JNIcCance Raymond Otis Mitchell Lewis Rathbone Parker Joseph Roby, Jr. IMalcolm Wilder Stevenson 135 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ! . , . ' . ' . ' .-. ' . ' .-. ' YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SENIOR SOCIETY Lee Stewart Bradlej ' William Brewster Edward Coffin Childs Kdward Howard Dodd, Jr. John Preston Flaherty William Spode Hammersley William Chauncey Keator, Jr. Stanton Francis Kennedy Richard Custer Knight George Harriman I arsen John McClellan Robert Valentine INIassey, Jr. Henry Lawrence Ross Samuel Armstrong Scoville Henry Kelsey Wallace 137 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SOCIETIES IHE national fraternity organiza- tions have frequently shown disap- pointment in the attitude of the Yale chapters. Fraternities at Yale are not taken with that solemnity which marks them elsewhere. But this is a matter for self -congratulation rather than regret. The numljer of fraternities is small and member- ship in them is too selective to have much sig- nificance. The modern tendency is to make them less secret and to open the houses to non- fraternity men, as well as to members of other fraternities. This change is one that should bring the class closer together and help destroy the tendency towards cliques which, with a large class, is so difficult to avoid. 11 138 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The Junior Fraternities FOLLOWING the lead of Delta Kappa Epsilon, Zeta Psi, Beta Theta Pi, and Psi LTpsilon in rapid succession have settled in the York Street fraternity area. Only Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha Delta Phi, and Chi Psi now lodge in the old tradition-bound tombs, and all three have campaigns under way to join their brethren. Within two years, possibly three, returning alumni will find a new region to scan with envious or scornful eyes, as a situation different from the good old days. Less exclusiveness, more comradeship between different houses and espe- cially between the fraternity man and the non-fraternity man, seem to be the goal. The results, whatever they may be, are not to be reached without the co-operation of every college undergraduate. When the fraternitj ' man, indifferent as he is, can raise himself from his shell of inaccessibility and reach that higher plane where he accepts for his friends, intimate and casual, the major group of his classmates, the fraternity problem will be solved. Yet, still the question of pacting looms. The result of the Interfraternity Council ' s pondering, the rule against l acting is universally accepted by all the college grouj) except when it is most important. Why evade the question any longer? Admittedly all groups contain a certain number who know no law. It remains for the more con- scientious of the fraternity group to lead their wayward brothers and perhaps, in time of temptation, force them to follow the proper course. It remains for the bewildered Sophomore to shut his eyes to the doubtful honor of being one of the pacted, to forego illegal certainty of election for legal honorable 140 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI recognition. It remains for every Yale man, graduate or student, to consider and suggest every possible means of modifying the present system of election to blend with the growing attempt of the fraternities to make those bodies non-exclusive, non-political, and non-deterring to the weal of the college. The present period of transition is the vital time. Next fall the council is introducing a change in an attempt to increase the intimacy of the initiated and uninitiated before the actual elections are made. To lessen the importance of making a house, to cease from consuming curricular time for extra-curricular affairs, the period of calling will be placed earlier in the fall term, preceded by three periods of one day a week to pro- mote acquaintanceship and understanding. The Interfraternity Council be- lieves this to be the first step towards remedying the problem while at the same time retaining the colorful old ceremonies of Calling, Hold-offs, and Running. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 14, s YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JUNIOR FRATERNITY ALPHA DELTA PHI Robert Burton Alexander Fred Chambers Baldwin Clinton Miller Bidwell Reginald Bragonier, Jr. William Brewster Clinton Harris Brown Alexander Fish Campbell Albert Christopher Candler Edward Perkins Carter, Jr. Clifford DeWitt Castle, Jr. Nicholas Williamson Danforth George Henry Darrell Matthew Davison, Jr. Noves Cornell Dockendorff 1928 Edward Howard Dodd, Jr. Paul John Fitzpatrick Frederick Steinmann Franklin, Jr. George Winthrop Haight John Hopkins Hayward John Andrew Howard, Jr. Phelps Stokes Hunter Juan Ceballos Hutchison Chauncey Bradley Ives Roger Kent Vance McCaulIey Thomas Marshall Raymond Otis Mitchell Howard Lawrence O ' Fallon, Jr. Lewis Rathbone Parker Richard Peabody John Delbridge Petrikin William Christopher Robinson, Jr. Henry Lawrence Ross Arthur I.effingweU Shipman, Jr George Smith Stevenson Malcolm Wilder Stevenson Robert Todd Terry Charles Hunt Todd Francis Adams Truslow Arniitage Watkins Asa Fred Baldwin Clarence Wanton Balis, Jr. Philip Cushman Barney John Hamilton Briggs Briant Stephenson Cookman Roger Conant Damon Arthur Fuller Dean George Winter Dean Washington Dodge, 2d Henry Craig Downing John I.andells Drummond John Stoughton Ellsworth, Jr. 1929 George Andrews Espy Stockton Green George Minor Hampton, 2d James Williani.son Henning Henry Van Zile Hyde Albert Edward Johnson Adolph Korper Burton James Lee, Jr. James Gordon Mcintosh Huntington Miller Thruston Ballard Morton Hilmert Albert Ranges Harold Perrine Rich David Oliver Ross Arthur Behn Shepley Fred Albert Simmons, Jr. Henry I.add Smith Erwin Hall Steif Isaac Xewton Phelps Stokes, 2d Oliver Reinick Waite Henry Kline Weir Robert Wheeler Henry Woodward Wylie Lyman S. Ayres, 2d John Henry Buckingham Charles Parsons Clifford James Espy Robert William Foster Walter Wood Garnsey Frederich Evelyn Gignoux, Jr. Timothy Watson Goodrich, 2d John Stephen Graetzer, Jr. John Newbold Hazard 1930 Joseph Gillulv Hodges Robert Clyatt Kiml)erly Louis Williams Ladd, Jr. Frank Dunlevy McCaulley, Jr. John McEwen, 3d Thomas Edgar Moore John Miller Musser Frank Green Osborne Arthur Edward Palmer, Jr. Allen Killman Randolph Roswell Hopkins Rudd Dean Sage, .Jr. Robinson Simonds Winston Sizer Sherwood Winslow Smith John McMahon Sprigg Bernard Leo Thompson Cornelius Delano Wood, Jr. 143 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI -S jf r ■- - ' ' y tii YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = JUNIOR FRATERNITY ALPHA SIGMA PHI (formerly Delta Beta Xi) Marshall Ellis Baker John Bernard Beach Lawrence Edward Brown Edmund Haupt Chapman Anson Bailey Cutts, Jr. Charles Walker Dibbell George Henry Ely, 2d 1928 James Lambert High Sanford Bogert Kauffman John James Lake, Jr. Edwin Warren Lewis Archie McKaig Albert Ralston Matheny John Austin Perkins Edward Date Richards Thomas Wright Richey Minier Sargent Laurence Albert Schroeder, Arthur MacBurney Scott Wells Sinclair Harold Frederick Thiessen Frederick Ashley Alraquist Edward Everett Ashley, 3d Irving Thornton Babb William Spencer Bernard Thomas Edwin Swinburne Bracken David Mayer Burrell Crilly Butler Charles Hawley Corbett, Jr. Louis Larkin Cox 1929 Jason Crain Marshall Winton Daniels John Edward Elton Robert Emmett Houston, Jr. Rutherford Hubbard Harold Leroy Jackson WInslow Percy Leighton Richard Allen Lester Donald Cameron MacDonald Clark Braucher Metzger Lewis William Morgan Harry Gilmore Pollard, Jr. Xathan Beattie Ricker Hall Seely Gordon Tucker Thomas Hume Vance Maury Kent W ' ells Lynn Alfred Williams, Jr. Elbridge Gerry Anderson William Chandler Bagley, Jr. James Morrill Banner John Kirkman Berry John Cornelius Bogardus Merwin Gavlord Camp Charles Gardner Child, 3d Chester Rhoades de la Vergne, Jr. Porter Dietrich 1930 Valentine Luther Fine Langdon Austin Hooper Lawrence Frederick Hope Brooke W avell .Tones Ralph George Kuehn Harold Allan Lachner Wayne Wills Long Herbert Minor Nichols Edmund William Overstreet Wilbur Louis Ross Richard Moore Sawhill N ' eill Weiss Schoonmaker Wallace Moore Sheridan .Morgan Day Smith Frank Oakman Spinney Theodore Thomas Francis William Tully, Jr. Walter .Tames Watson 145 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = JUNIOR FRATERNITY BETA THETA PI I.yttleton Mathers Baldwin Harvey Alonzo Basham, Jr. Frederick Beck Georjre Buckingham Beecher Lawrence Michael Butler Thomas Huntington Chappell Fletcher Collins, Jr. John Forrest Dillon, 3d Edward Gilroy Edson, Jr. Alexander Uorward Gordon James Layng Green William Henry Greene William Press Hodgkins Henry Palmer Bakewell Robert Samuel Bradshaw, Jr. William Henry Button, Jr. Frank Henry Clark, Jr. Hugh Gawtry CoUins Carle Cotter Conway, Jr. George James Coy, Jr. Rol ert Edgar Cushman Thomas James Farber Harold Eimer Faust Franklin Faulkner Ferguson Ralph Charles Glock Roger Blackstone Alley John Coleman Avery John William Barber James Muncaster Brown, Jr. Frederick Guion Bull Henry Joseph Caren Walter Edwards Culbertson, Jr. Charles Reginald Evans John George Haas 1928 Donald Hoggson Charles Morgan Howell, Jr. John Frederick Huber, Jr. John Baird Johnson Morris Frame Kennedy Stanton Francis Kennedy Robert Chapman I.andon Eben Learned, Jr. Lucius Baxter Leonard M ' illiam Tennent Moffly, Jr. Denis Washington Coburn Moore Walter Holt Xeff 1929 John vanBenschoten Griggs Jordan Weller Hays Lincoln Pratt Holmes Richard Minor Holter Samuel Hyde, 2d Kirkwood Edmund Jewett John Clarence Kline, Jr. Herbert Stanley JLicDonald .lohn Edward 5lcMillin William Jose])h Mulligan, Jr. George Ohl, Jr. Bernard Pagenstecher 1930 George Norris Henson James Anthony Kuhn Paul Fennell SicDevitt Leigh Miltz Marlow William Porter Mar.sh, Jr. Forrest .Jerome Newman .Mbert Watson Morton, Jr. Franklin Theodore Oldt, 2d Robert Becker Phillips, 2d Hiram Norcross, Jr. Harris Parsons Robert I ' p john Redpath, Jr. William Oliver RoUinson William Journey Roome Louis Xickel Rugee Frederick Behrens Ryan, Jr. Henry Bush Shepherd Solomon Byron Smith Paul Edmond Sterrett Hayden Rogers Tyler Frank Henry Woods, Jr. Eugene Lovick Pearce, Jr. Allen Thorndyke Perry Spencer West Pitts Kent Ravenscroft William Curtis Ryan, Jr. Lewis Mercer Smith Carl Graham Tebbe Francis Lansing Veeder .Vlbert Leisenring Watson Franklin Brown Wildman, J r Calvin Howard Wilkins Richard Davis Wood, 2d Rufus Delancey Seeley Putney, Jr. Stuart Blackinton Riley Howard Colby Robin.son William Pruden Smith Grant Martin Stadelman Stovall Whitney Trawick George Carlton Turner Howard Talbot Walden, Jr. George V ' anVelsor Wolf 14-7 i,9 9j wjwjrjwjw w w wjr.w wj !f - B YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI -A L - N b ' =,.-.■ ■..■...,... mg YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JUNIOR FRATERNITY CHI PSI Dana Treat Bartholomew Charles Tiffany Bingham Augustus Hager Bryant, Jr. Bruce Caldwell Sabin William Carr John Kimberly Curtis Samuel Renny Damon Dwight Brown Fishwick John Preston Flaherty Alfred Sherman Foote Roswell Leavitt Gilpatric James Cox Brady, Jr. Francis Gordon Brown Francis Terence Carmody James Whitney Cook George Harris Crile Edmund I ockwood Decker, Jr. Charles Noyes deForest Maxon Hunter Eddy Peter Folger Seely Perry Forbes Charles Heffelfinger Bell John deForest Buckingham Ernest Layton Busby Nelson Reed Cherry Chester Wesley Dudley, Jr. Robert Munro Ferguson James Kipp Gearhart, Jr. Jay P. Graves, 2d Robert Andrew Hall Charles Joseph Heller 1928 Earl Goodwine, Jr. Charles Daggett Harvey Henrv Hitchcock Willard Tisdel Hodgsdon Milton Knight Richard Custer Knight George Harrinian Larsen Robert Valentine Massey, J r. Burr Churchill Miller Charles Barney Gould Murphy 1929 William Henry Haze Charles Robert Hogen George Brewster Loud, Jr. Joseph Edwin Lowes, Jr. Paul Mellon Henry Riddle Merrill Louis Burchard MiUen Horace Reynolds Moorhead, Jr. Frederick Wistar Morris, 3d 1930 Cortlandt Taylor Hill F ' rancis Valentine Keesling, Jr. Henry Adolph Kugeler John Crenshaw Lanphier, 3d Edgar Atwater Manning, Jr. Robert Thomas McDevitt Thomas Durell McLaughlin, Jr. Henrv Oliver. Jr. Orvilie Hickok Schell, Jr. Nathaniel Norton Noble Howard Everett Quimby Joseph Roby, Jr. Dudley Tenney Smith George L. Storm, Jr. Albert Cox Thomas, Jr. Joseph Albert Thomas Richard Farries Vaughan Stoughton Walker Theodore Allen Wendell Leonard Seeley Mudge Frederick Sugden Murphy John Alexander Pope John Ernest Schurman Olcott Damon Smith George WelLs, 2d Theodore Harry Wickwire, 3d Henry Augustus Wilmerding, Jr. Hamilton Washburne Wright Thomas Curtis Schwartzburg Raoul Norman Sender Henry Stoddard Sherman, Jr. Hulbert Taft, Jr. Wendell Bassett Thompson James Wear Walker Charles Frederick Wallace, Jr. Herbert St. John Webb, Jr. James Kent Willing, Jr. 149 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JUNIOR FRATERNITY DELTA KAPPA EPSILON John Townscnd Abbott Georjre Bart Berger, Jr. Lee Stewart Bradley David Pierre Guyot Cameron William Palmer Conklin, Jr. James McMahon Cox, Jr. Samuel Ingham Diehl Richard Church Durant Huntington Eldridge Lawrence Oilworth Forsyth Herbert Stanton Griggs, Jr. Frank Harwood Hamlin 1928 William Spode Hannnersley Travis Northrop Ingham William Chauncey Keator, Jr Raymond White Lapham Barton Lee Mallory, Jr. ,Iohn Thomas Manson. 2d Winlock William .Miller, Jr. John Nantes Paschall I.aurance , rmistead Peters George .Mexander Phelps Willis McCook Reed Arthur Clendenin Robertson John Sterling Rockefeller James Otis Rodgers, Jr. William Farnam Sanford Everett Langdon Schmidt Stewart Patterson Scott Peter Hellwege Stewart Knowlton Davies Stone Benjamin Franklin Tracy, 2d . Idace Walker, 3d Henry Kelsey Wallace Selleck Byron Warren Howard Crouse Adams Albert Blackhurst .-Vshforth George Thayer Ashforth Kenyon Boocock Benjamin Brewster Alliert Ray Connelly Francis Augustus Drake Thomas Church Farnsworth John Joseph Garvey Kenrick Samson Gillespie George Hills Oilman, Jr. Manasses Jacob Grove Philip Sylvester Agar Hulbert Stratton Aldrich Thatcher JIagoun Brown, Jr. George Shepard Chappell, Jr. George Phelps Clayson, Jr. Joseph Clegg DeWitt Dominick Donald Carl Dunham Harlan Montgomery Ellis 1929 .Alfred Reed Hamilton, Jr. Malcolm Byrne Hamilton Nelson Arthur Howard William Pomeroy Jenkins Eben Knowlton Jacob Howard Lampe David Lindsay, 3d Hiram Edward Manville, Jr. John Ripley Ordway Ralph Delahaye Pai ne, Jr. Robert Patterson, Jr. 1930 Raymond Walleser EUis Owen Osborn Freeman Leonard Francis Genz Waldo Wittemeyer Greene Samuel Lawrence Gwin, Jr. Norman Stewart Hall ,Iohn Howland, Jr. Sidney Barnes Kieselhorst Adrian Lambert John Henrv Pierce Richard Tyner Shields Robert Edward Spiel Paul Forman Switz Charles Harold Taylor Elmer Gildersleeve Thompson James Willard Thorns Laurence Tweedy, Jr. Damon deBlois Wack Frank Cookman Wright, Jr. Hays Richmond Yandell George Brown Longstreth Herbert Chauncey Miller, Jr. Fletcher Ellis Nvce, Jr. William Ledwith Paul George Amos Poole, Jr. Nathaniel Smith Graham Richards Treadway John Strong Turner John Whitridge, Jr. 151 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JUNIOR FRATERNITY PSI UPSILON George Clymer Brooke Gardiner Brown Edward Coffin Childs Stuart Wilson Cragin Farrington Lawrence Dow John Brockway Goss Chauncey Jerome Hamlin, Jr. M ' illiam Warner Hoppin, Jr. Richard Melancthon Hurd, Jr. Francis Johnston Jones, 2d 1928 Samuel Gail Landon, Jr. Dudley Bates Lawrence, Jr. Joseph Taylor McCance John McClellan Henry Richard McLane Dwight Macdonald Edward Pierce Maffit William Whipple Miller Irving Hobart Peck, Jr. John Henry Howard Phipps John Phillips Satterfield William Beecher Scoville Harold Wetmore Snow Moreau Lawson Stoddard Louis Lathrop Stott Edwin Turner Thompson Oliver Malcolm Wallop Charles Beecher Warren, Jr. Gordon Read Weaver Clarence Alfred Barnes, Jr. Courtlandt Dixon Barnes, Jr. Donald Fowler Bradley Stanley . ldridge Brady Eugene Morse Brimicombe John Dudley Charlesworth Granger Kent Costikyan Richard Carleton Crisler Paul Curtis John Waldo Douglas 1929 William Durfor English Martin Fenton Richard Wayne Goss John Hart Graves Alfred Whitney Griswold Robert Howell Gwaltney Carl Herdic Hardt Chauncey Keep Hubbard Arthur Monroe Moody, Jr. John Southworth Xiles Edmund Pendleton Piatt Charles Henry Sawyer Gilliat Ghequiere Schroeder, Jr. Lloyd Hilton Smith Frederick . lbert Spencer Gordon Bradford Tweedy Robert Stafford Ward Alden Young Warner George Warren Wyckoff Wodrow . rclibald Adams Batcheller, Jr. Benjamin Cheney Thomas Southworth Childs Henry Tefft Clarke, .3d Maurice Francis Hanson William Barclay Harding Daniel Hastings Hickok Clement Gazzam Hurd 1930 Ford Hinchman Jones Denison Kitchel Maxwell Moore William Boardnian Mosle Robert Carter Nicholas, Jr. Joseph Wood Oliver Winthrop Hale Palmer Henry Emanuel Russell David Sylvester Sampsell Hardie Scott Paul Morton Smith Scott Stewart, Jr. Woodruff Rankin Tappen William Wade Robert Ward John Cristy West Holland Van Etten Williams Robert Forster Wilson 153 w YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI s YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI JUNIOR FRATERNITY ZETA PSI Arthur Edward Barker Franklin Alden Batcheller, Jr. John Cloves Bridgman George Lawrence Bulkley John Kirkland Clark, Jr. Duncan Bulkley Cox Ponieroy Day Philip Hayward Gray, Jr. Rowan Allen Greer, Jr. Raymond Elwood Groff Spencer Gross Wilder Hobson Lincoln Bradford Hockaday Charles Beecher Hogan Edgar Reginald Boone Brigham Britton Winthrop Gilman Brown Roland Bryant Charles Edwin Christenson Arthur Bryan Clark, Jr. Cornelius Philip Donnel, Jr. William Stanley Dwinnell, Jr. William Burnet Easton, Jr. John Paulding Farnham George Henry Bowman, Jr. Homer Morrison Byington, Jr Donald Newton Clark Edwin Noyes Dodge Arthur Gihb Cliarles Farrington Gill Henry Parniele Hamlin Stewart Ogden Jones William David Judson, Jr. 1928 Reginald Woodbury Holt Robert Watkinson Huntington, Jr. .Tohn Knox Jessup Martyn Decker Keeler Benjamin Howard Larrabee Charlton Miner Lewis Thomas Eugene Lovejoy, Jr. Dwight Stone Mallon William Stephen Meany, Jr. Nathan Townley Milliken William Cooper Moore William Ring Morley George Lovett Kingsland Morris 1929 Harold Alexander Fletcher Paul Kingston Fodder Roswell Eldridge Hubbell John Francis Jenkins Alphonse Kenison, Jr. Edward Bradley Loomis Stuart Adams Lyman Donald Cameron MacDonald Raymond George Masters Morse Ruggles Newconib 1930 Dyer Burnham Lawrence ,Iohn Siinonds Lobb Hedges Macdonald John Koliert MacNeille, Jr. John Suti)hin Manuel, Jr. William Sherman Manuel Stowell Whitney Mears Ogden Dayton Miller Sidnev Oviatt . lfred Horatio Belo Peabody Thomas Franklin Price Lancelot Patrick Ross George Augustus Sanderson, Jr. Willis Hibbs Satterthwaite Alexis John Schulten, Jr. Samuel .Vrm.strong Scoville Henry Jackson Sillcocks Victor Henderson Sutro Roger Sherman Whitney William Harwood Woodward Francis Browne Woodworth Jerome Brainard Zerbe, Jr. Joseph Edward Nolan Alfred Bernhard Roby Wallace Alger Russell Rich ard Adams Sawyer Henry Harper Silliman Frederic Harry Sturdy Howard Boyd Ward, Jr. John Bertram Whitelaw Edward Porter Williams James Tyler Patterson, Jr. Horace White Peters Allen Quimby, Jr. Edgar Talcott Sloan Joseph I awrence Townsend, Jr. Schuyler Carl Wells, Jr. Herbert Budington Wilcox, Jr. Howard Hunter Williams Arthur Stephens Wright 155 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI COLLEGE FRATERNITY ALPHA CHI RHO Raymond Eliot Bassett Edmund Butler Beaumont Dudley Buck Blossom David Wilson Byron Sanford Cobb Franklin Dexter Crosby Dernel] Every Donald LeSure Fessenden Charles Augustus Frank, Jr. Arthur Frederick Blaser, Jr. Dwight Beavis Buss Alfred Hoblitzelle CUfford Ervinfr Wade Close John James Engelking Herliert Isaac Finch, Jr. William Steen Gaud, Jr. . ' rthur Baird Hersey Richard .Vlexander Holliday Sciitt Adams, Jr. Charles Stevens Burr Walter Rockwell Clark, Jr. Herbert Stanley Connell, Jr. Oliver Russell Grace James Hale, .Tr. Tliomas Townsend HoUister Pearson Hunt 1928 James Bronson Gardiner, 2d Felix Campliell Good Sydney Luther Hall Robert Chandler Hamilton James Clark Carlisle Holding, Jr. Richard Kimball House Albert Anthony Martell, Jr. Carroll Louis Meeks 1929 Edwin Virgil Huggins Covert Russell Hunter Edgar Wagstaflf Jones Donald Ward Kramer William Pollard Lamb Lewis Merkt Lind. 2d Malcolm Ames Maclntvre Clifford .McClure Marshall Robert Treat Piatt, 2d 1930 Edward Struble Johnson John Irvin Beggs McCuUocli Robert Standish McKenzie Edward Bancroft Mansfield .Vlexander Donaldson Moffat John DeF ' orest Pettus Charles Myers Pond Henry Finch Pearson Charles Marion Rice William Northrop Robson, 2d John Edgar Sinclair Duncan Sterling. ,Ir. Nickerson Hough Taylor William Bertice Thomas, Jr. Robert Allen Ward John . lbion Saxton, Jr. Morris Woodruff Seymore Charles Francis Roe Slade . rthur Bumiller Sullivan Edward Howland Tatum, Jr. Gilbert Lawrence Ward Herbert Douglas Wilson John Stuart Wisely James Kenneth Robertson Frederick Edmonds Coudert Roelker Frederick Rushworth Steckel Lewis Bookwalter Ward Thomas Long Wheeler Jonathan Holman Wood 157 .■J  - J. -   .  J. . JJJ   J.  JJ  '    U JJ T  YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ,,,,■■■■■■■...... VATF RANNFR AND POT POURRI ssasssBsasasss, s. s. s SOCIETY i 4 1 1 1 i ( 1 ) BERZELIUS 1 1 1 1 1 ( 1 1 fi i ( 1 4 1 1 ( [ Edward Ralph Anderson Cedric Cornwall Hornby 1 1 ! 1 1 ; Thornton Wynne Barrett William Tolson Kelly, Jr. Roger Walker Batchelder Thomas Conger Kennedy James Luther Black, Jr. Donald Alexis Kohr David Hall Blair Robert Boyle Kohr Louis Curtis Booth Alexander Marvin Laidlaw 4 J John Marshall Budd John Guffey Miller 1 Christian Henr ' Buhl Frank Paul Newton 1 Donald Chadwick Clinton Paul O ' Connell 1 1 Henr} ' Bushncll Chalker John Sherman O ' Gorman, Jr. ( 1 Charles Agnew Cooper John Albert Pardridge 1 Charles Donald Davidson Samuel Giles Payne, 4th Alvah Chisholm Drake George Wilson Penny, Jr. Richard Musser Duff Charles Shepard Reed, Jr. 1 1 Benjamin Farren English Frank Dwight Sage ( Perry Earle Farnum Olin Alvin Saunders 1 1 Frederick Marcus Farwell, Jr. Robert Green Shiell I 1 Thomas Phillips Field John Strohm Speer, 3d 1 Aiken Woodhull Fisher Frank Raymond Stocker Robert Raphael Fowler, Jr. John Frantz Stratton Arthur LeRoy Francisco James Shelley Tatman, Jr. 1 Robert Stephen Hart John Poulson Trommald 1 1 Duncan Leverich Hooper I Noyes Salvador Wilmot 159 j 1 i i i 1 ! YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI S. S. S. SOCIETY BOOK AND SNAKE John Kennedy Beeson Oliver Chandler Billings, Jr. Alexander Montgomery Brooks Edward Goodwin Cahill John Piatt Cheney, Jr. Edward Cornish, Jr. John Duncan Cox James Sterling Davis Edwin Tobias Earl Frank Talbott Fisher James Scott Glenn William Lawrence Graham, Jr. John Joseph Hoben Allan Curtiss Hoffman, Jr. James Joseph Holahan James Arthur House, Jr. Charles Henry Howson Charles A. Kline VanCourt Lucas Henry Malcolm McAleenan Charles Daniel Mahoney William Taggart jNIeloy Charles Hungerford Milbank John Gwennap Murray Frederick Augustus Nash Ralph Burt Phillips, Jr. Edward Archibald Rice Sabin Bobbins, 3d Stuart Sanger Garfield Frederick Schafer Thomas Floyd Smith, Jr. Harry Bartlett Stewart, Jr. James Edgerly Thayer Frederic Baughman Trimble William Weber, Jr. William Adam Webster George Edward Woodward, Jr. Charles Arden Yinkev, Jr. 161 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI avav.w. . S. S. S. SOCIETY THETA XI Orien Joseph Allaire Albert Burton Anderson Ledyard Avery Robert Stuckey Baker Gordon Walbridge Battey William Wyndham Bayfield Guy Erastus Beardslev, Jr. Karl Fred Billhardt David Ferguson Black William Williams Blunt, Jr. Francis Hayes Brennan jMelville Lawson Brown Robert John Caine Spencer Greenwood Carlton James Allen Carney Robert Ennnons Carr Edward Vincent Carvey Frank Barker Chase Marcus Eddy Cunningham Harold Fayette Doolittle Xickolaus Louis Engelhardt, Jr. John Lyons Flanagan Edward Ernest Furst James Simon Geddes William Allyn Geer George Chittenden Guibert William Taylor Howe 162 Owen Craven Jones Everett Edward Kavanaugh James Simon Kern Theodore Maynard Ley Ellwood Caldwell Lindsay, Jr. Quentin McAdam Losee Donald Francis MacEachern Stewart Baker McLeod, Jr. John Garthwaite Martin George Thomas Moore, Jr. Albert Beecher Mosebach Louis Putnam Myers Thomas Jenkinson North Knowlton Wendell Oberlander James Pickands Eastman Potter Robert Lee Randolph, Jr. John Jakob Raskob, Jr. William Frederick Raskob, 2d Hen ry Brown Reinhardt, Jr. Arthur Edwin Rodger Richard ]Maxwell Sargent Walter B -ron Swartz John Chester ' aden Charles Wilbur Vreeland William Wakefield Douglas Rippon Geils Williams y. . . ' . ' . ' A ' .v YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI S. S. S. SOCIETY DELTA PSI Lee Chrisnian Ashley John Peale Bent Louis Joseph Benton George Pearson Biggs Augustus Silliman Blagden, Jr. Charles Seaton Bowman, Jr. John Asher Brandenburg Curtis Henry Brockelman Rufus Choate Brown, III Henry Brevoort Cannon, Jr. Ralph Willard Carson John Reeder Cary Putnam Davis Gideon Knapp deForest Scott Jonathan Dow, Jr. Mont Sandles Echols Charles Ellis, Jr. Charles Harry Engle Randall Wade Everett, Jr. Maurice Hazlewood Fisher Richard Howell Game James Parmalee Gasser Joseph Alexander Gilchrist, Jr. George Coe Graves, H Charles Woodford Griswold Philip Woodworth Hatch Frank Brevard Hayne, Jr. Irving Beechum Hiett, Jr. I John William Hunter Frederick Charles Jarecki Nahum Edward Jennison John Edwin King, Jr. Lewis Waldo King Thomas ]Morton Kugeman William Kelsey Lanman, Jr. Louis Powell LeBourgeois Richard Tasker Lowndes Samuel Plumcr IcCalmont Charles Daniel McPhee, III Wheeler Xazro William Reeves George Wolfe Reily, III Reuben Buck Robertson, Jr. Harold Carl Sandberg Charles Hamilton Sanford, Jr. Raymond Ellwood Sargeant George Abram Smith Rayburn Clark Smith, Jr. Horton Spitzer Thomas Anderson Standish, Jr. Joseph Bodine Terbell, Jr. Bruce Thorne Laurence Edward Tierney, Jr. Gilfry Ward James Otis Watson, HI 163 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI S. S. S. SOCIETY PHI GAMMA DELTA Louis Winfield Adams, Jr. Frederick Victor Austin, Jr. Edmund Ferdinand Ball Nicholas Thompson Bard Clyde Harrison Bingham Henry Arnold Bodw ell Chester Bcacli Bulkley Gerald Norman Burk Leland Howard Burt Randoljjh Hill Cook Andrew Crawford Uana David Pyle Davoll Stewart Logan deVausncy Ferdinand Heim Diebold Paul Collins Donovan James Henry Eddy William Lewis Funk Henry Kidder Gilbert, Jr. Robert Luey Griffin Hugh Haddow, HI Henry Lloyd Hanson Elmer Jay Huss Herbert Leigh Kinsolving Geoi ' ge Lester Kreidcr Albert Harold Laub Frank Louis Marting Peter Joseph McAndrews 164 Callaghan James McCarthy, Jr. Robert Stone McConnell Charles Stewart Harding : Iott Henry James O ' Donnell George Peterson, Jr. Clifton Walter Phalen Ziba Bennett Phelps, Jr. George Verity Phillips Wayne Rawley, Jr. Joseph Pratt Ringland Frank Smith Robbins, Jr. John Edwin Ruby Warren Curtis Sawyer Asbton Tourison Scott Joseph Ijilburne Seger John Edward Snyder, Jr. George Walker Sonntag, Jr. George Ligrabam Staber Robert Wallace Stokes John Joseph Sullivan J. Preston Thomas Franklin Graves Treat August Monroe T urner Edward Moffat Weyer, Jr. Albert jMoeser Williams Lewis Woolsey John Elbridge Wulbcrn YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = S. S. S. SOCIETY CHI PHI - ilA B, III te - Daniel Putnam Adams John Herbei-t Bagg, Jr. Frederick George Bannerot, Jr. Clarence Worcester Bouck Theodore Brand Leslie Carroll Burton Robert Bowne Coburn John Albert Cosmus, Jr. Edmund Lovell Dana Lee Wallace Dean, Jr. Harry Elliott DePass, Jr. John Newhall Douglas Archibald Robertson Dunning Edward Easton, Jr. Lee Wells Eighniy, Jr. Charles Francis Fairbanks, 2d Edward Richard Florea Gerrit Davis Foster Oscar Rorick Foster Peter ' anDuzer Gott Henry Charles Griggs David Boughton Hamilton William Caldwell Hamilton George Patterson Harrington Charles Eccleston Hayward, Jr. Richard Keast Watson Frederick Kinney Boyden Kinsey, Jr. William Hyer Knowles, Jr. Joseph Hearn Little Sydney Esterbrook Longmaid Thomas Lord Charles Noyes Loveland, Jr. John Brownlow Metcalfe Richard Asbury Myers Lucien Scott Necly Earl Tajdor Pierce Harry Samuel Renkert, Jr. Horace Vernon Rumsey Victor Hugo Schuize William Clement Scott, Jr. Elmer Atwood Stevens Hugh Vincent Strong WiUiam Wier Sudduth Graham Sumner, Jr. Frederick Theodore vanBeuren, 3d Theron Woodward Wright Robert Fairchild Zimmerman 165 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI S. S. S. SOCIETY ST. ELMO Thomas Lyman Arnold Gerald A ' anCleve Baker Simeon INIorgan Barber, Jr. Thomas Gray Bennett, 2d John Henry Beyer Oliver Blair Richard Henry Blythe, Jr. Charles William Buckley Richard Ga} ' Cad} ' Robert IMoorhead Carrier Lucius Davis Cochran Walker Percy deBardeleben W ' illiam Eno deBuys Burwell Dodd Wood Dailey Gerstell Francis Lewis Hall Marshall Goldthwait Hall George Sampson Hill Logan Gillett Hill Hamilton Hitt William Edward Hoblitzelle, Jr. Richard Rider Jackson William Walker Jemison Andrew Kaul, 3d Hugh Kaul 166 John I ord King Charles Foster Miles Franklin Beardsley Miles Nelson Woodworth Millard Ralph Willis Miner Cyril ' alentine Moore Ralph Scott INIueller, Jr. Walter Howard O ' Brien, Jr. Sewall Kemble Oliver Edward Bradford Page Worthen Paxton Frank Palmer Pendleton Sidney Sayre Quarrier William Callaway Shepp Norman Elbert Sherwood Donald William Smith Henry vanHoff Stoever, Jr. William Alexander Stromeyer Edward Baker Sturges Burton Wakeman Taylor Seymour Yardley Warner, Jr. Richard Warren Walter Wheeler John Sawver Clocklcv Wilson, HI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI S. S. S. SOCIETY PHI SIGMA KAPPA James Hislop Allyn IMatthew Baird Barkley, Ji . Robert Plimley Breckenridge Horace Dedreux Bregenzer Walter Cooper Charles Henry Costello Louis Austin Crowell John Stewart Dunning Charles Wetherbee Earnshaw Frank Hanson Eastman, Jr. Lee Edward Farr Edward Samuel Frisch Aaron Solomon Hershey Stedman Tomlinson Hitchcock Pierre William Hoge William Randolph Jennings William Horace Jervis Richard Frederick Jones, Jr. Elmer Andrew Kell, Jr. John Lester Kimberley Gilman Deering Kirk Robert Chester Kirk Jameson Larimore, Jr. Landon Carter Lodge Forrest Edward Mars Arnold Caverly Mason Albert Goodale Massey George Bragg lassev Richard Hollister Mather Theodore Robert Miller Harvey Rowe Morrison Ashley Pond, 3d Russell Robert Raab Philip Mason Reynolds Rudolf Hoyt Robinson Douglas Kimber Smith Norman W elles Spencer Warren Pierson Spinning Chadbourne Arnold Spring Lester Nichols Towner Valentine Held von der Lin James Peter Warbasse, Jr. Carl Reginald Webster Robert Brainerd Whittredge Thayer Willis George Edward Woods 167 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MEDICAL SCHOOL FRATERNITY PHI CHI M ' 28 Robert Joseph Carey Edwin Blair Egli Raymond Augustinus Johnson Edward Patrick Joseph Kearney Claude Bernard Mackes Daniel Aloysius Mulverhill Charles Christopher Wilson M ' 29 Jarvis Dixon Case Vernon William Lippard Christopher Joseph McCormack Martin Leo O ' Neill Felix Francis Tonuiiiio M ' 30 William Farris Anderson Ralph Arthur Behrend Ignacio Bird-Acosta James Shields Conant Joseph Joyce Connor Vincent Anthony Doroszka Erwin George Gross William Andrew Krauss Milton Theodore ] IacDonald Robert Nelson Taylor Cliarles Louis Wood M ' 31 George Harold Alexander Francis Xavier Baumert William Gerald Campbell Hollis Emerton Clow Clarence Hummer Cole 168 Albert Philip LaFrance Conrad Ramsey Lam Edward Lord ] lult ' ord Paul Selbcrt Ross John Joseph Smithwick YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = CHEMICAL FRATERNITY ALPHA CHI SIGMA Matthew Baird Barkley, Jr. Arthur William Bloomquist Louis Austin Crowell, Jr. Philip Hull Kirby 1928 S. Donald Alexis Kohr Robert Boyle Kohr Charles Ellsworth Xettleton Cai-1 Arthur William Peterson 1929 S. Louis Winfield Adams, Jr. Donald Cuthbert Addoms Robert Stuckey Baker Lee Edward Farr Henry Charles Griggs Charles Rufus Harte, Jr. Richard Hollister Mather Ashley Pond, HI GRADUATE SCHOOL James Bliss Austin Ralph William Baker Alpheus Messerly Ball Shailer Linwood Bass George R. Burns Robert Barnett Flint Newell Clarence Gibson Clinton Sheely Grove George Horace Hafer Waldersee Brazier Hendrey John Randolph Huffman Bingham Johnson Humphrey Henry Louis Kellner George Hartland Law Elliott John Roberts Joseph Harrel Shipp Albert Alonzo Smith, Jr. Wilfred Winter Smith Harold Morton Spurlin Burton Ephraim Tiffany 169 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY BOOK AND BOND Thomas Cranston Albro, 3d William Ralph Borden Ernest Thornell Brown Irving Horton Bull George Alexander Cai ' ver Alfred Chadburn, Jr. Thomas Francis Corcoran William George Fennell James Stancliffe Ferguson Clifton Curtis Flather Louis Hasselman Davis Fraser Theodore Dodge Gatchel Frank Patrick Gillon, Jr. Albert Hooker Goodwin Jesse Johnston Haight Charles Keller Hammer Basil George Frederick Laslett Edgar Kendrick Leavenworth Kenneth Ray Lee George Summers Light Walter Frederick North Burton Bull Patterson Joseph Frederic Purcell Burton Brush Rogers Ralph Edward Scott Francis Henry Shepard, Jr. Edwin William Small Gareth Wright Speer Robert Burdett Taggart Samuel Bartram Richards Taylor Franklin VanCulen Thompson Philip Russell Thompson Robert Fuller Truesdell Maxwell Turner John Wallis Herbert Palmer White 170 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY ACACIA I Jr. Robert Talmadge Beck Robert Stansfield Cook George Winter Dean Dwight Charles Eckerman Cai ' l Peters Fatzinger Archie Hine Hook Leroj Laase Hughbert Hall Landram James Franklin McKinley Arland Lee McKinney George Alfred Garratt, David Hunter Markle Charles Wortliington Phelps Philip Franklin Schmehl Orion Edwin Schupp, Jr. Leslie Raymond Smith Richard James Smith Roy Bertrand Thomson Porter Hamilton Turner Eugene Hurlbut Woodruff Advisor 171 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY ZETA BETA TAU ' IS98 ALPHA LAMBDA CHAPTER Philip Dee Block. Jr. Victor Fasslor Harry Hammond Hess George Martin Kohn, Jr. Alan Barth Lauchheimer Justus Baldwin Lyman Lawrence Lawrence Benjamin Lehman James Sichel Linburn Julius Strauss Loewenthal Morris Simon Michael Leon Edgar Newman Melvin Newman Dan Oppenheimer Rollin Gustave Osterweis Edwin Stanton Rosenbaum, Jr. Fuller Maxwell Rothschild Milton Albert Shlenker, Jr. Elmore Stelzer Herman Wilier James Wittenberg, Jr. 172 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVERSITY FRATERNITY TAU EPSILON PHI iua.Jr, r.Jr. I. Edward Budnitz Mervin Ranger Danzig Merrill Stern Dreyfus Robert Roosevelt Goldberger Hyman Hugh Halpern Zacharj ' T. Hirsch Mark Gladstone Kanzer Philip SidneA ' Manne Bernard Stuart Marvin Miller Perc} ' Robert Peck Anson Ronald Rauschber Nicholas Tausig Rogers Harold Jacob Rome Herman David Segcl Philip Robert Shiff Leonard Jeffreys Temko Igor Verney 173 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SHEFF CLUBS HOUGH most of the Sheff Clubs are chapters of national fraterni- ties, the life of these clubs is dis- tinctly more social than that of the college fraternities. In the first place, their houses are far better pi ' ovided, so that in Jun- ior and Senior jears members live in them. Then there is a greater interchange of associa- tion between the members of different clubs and on festive occasions such as football week- ends or Prom times, visitors are invited from the college for the dances, and other entertain- ments which form so large a part of the social celebrations of the University. They make un- doubtedly the greatest contribution to the so- cial life of Sheff and their significance to the college is appreciated and respected. 174 =1 [oZ ' r ' 1 5kefr Clubs YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SHEFF CLUBS AX outstanding feature of the Slieffield Scientific School life is the club , system. There are eight of these clul)s, five of which are chapters of National fraternities, the remaining three being local organizations. They have a strong influence on the unilergraduate life and work consistently for the betterment of the school and its members, encouraging high scholastic attainment and competition in extra-curriculum activities. The members of each Society live in their respective houses during their Junior and Senior years, thus enabling the men to form lasting acquaintances with their classmates of Freshman and Sophomore years. Inter-house teas, tournaments, and numerous other social events throughout the year aid in keeping the men from becoming entirely centered in their own house groups. There are teas and dances at the more important football games, at the Prom, and at the Spring regatta. Touch-football, hockey, squash, baseball, pool, and billiard tournaments are in progress throughout the year. A prize awarded to the Club which has attained the highest scholastic record for the year inspires a friendly rivalry in scholastic attainment. Throughout the winter there are weekly meetings at the different houses open to all the members of the LTniversity. The ability of the speakers and the interesting discussions following the speeches make them extremely popular. In fact the several houses attempt in every way to cultivate a hospitable and friendly attitude towards all members of the LTniversity. The social system of the Clubs is kept uniform by the Inter-house Agree- ment which is subscribed to by all the Societies. The Presidents ' Committee, made up of the presidents of each of the houses, attends to the administration of this agreement and is continually sti ' iving for the i mprovement of the existin - conditions. 176 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The first club to be founded was The Colony, first known as the Ber- zelius Society, dating from 1848, the year after the founding of the Scientific School. It is a local organization located at 17 Hillhouse Avenue. The Cloister was next founded in 1863 as a local organization known as Book and Snake. Its clubhouse is at 1 Hillhouse Avenue. Franklin Hall at 119 College Street was founded in 1865 ; it is a chapter of Theta Xi. St. Anthony Hall, founded in 1868, moved to its present location at 133 College Street in 1913; it is a chapter of Delta Psi. York Hall, a chaj ter of Chi Phi, was founded at Yale in 1877. Its clubhouse is at 96 Wall Street. The St. Elmo Society was founded in 1889 as a chapter of Delta Phi, but in 1925 it withdrew from the national fraternity and became a local society; it is situated at 111 Grove Street. Vernon Hall was founded as a University chapter of Phi Gamma Delta in 1880, but in 1903 restricted its membership to the Sheffield Scientific School. In 1905 it moved to its house at 370 Temple Street. Sachem Hall from 1890 to 1903 was a University fraternity, Phi Sigma Kappa. In 1903 its membership was limited to members of the Scientific School. Its house is at 124 Prospect Street. LIVING ROOM OF ST. ELMO 177 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI These clubs have played an important part in the life of Sheffield Scien- tific School since its early days and are continuing to wield an important influence through the strength of their ideals and their leadership, always striving for a better Yale. Edward B. Sturges, ' 28 S. LIVING ROOM OF ST. ANTHONY 179 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI i Edward Ralpli Anderson Thornton W3 ' nne Barrett Roger Walker Batchelder James Luther Black, Jr. David Hall Blair Louis Curtis Bootli John Marshall Budd Christian Henry Buhl Donald Chadwick Richard Bushnell Chalker Charles Agnew Cooper Charles Donald Davidson Alvah Chisholm Drake Richard Alusser Duff Benjamin Farren English Perry Earle Farnum Frederick Marcus Farwell, Jr. Thomas Phillips Field Aiken Woodhull Fisher Robert Raphael Fowler, Jr. Arthur LeRoy Francisco Robert Stephen Hart Duncan Leverich Hooper Cedric Cornwall Hornby William Tolson Kelly, Jr. Thomas Conger Kennedy Donald Alexis Kohr Robert Boyle Kohr Alexander Marvin Laidlaw John Guffey Miller Frank Paul Newton Clinton Paul O ' Connell John Sherman O ' Gorman, Jr. John Albert I ' ardridge Samuel Giles Payne, 4th George Wilson Penny, Jr. Cliarles Shepard Reed, Jr. Frank Dwight Sage Olin Alvin Saunders Robert Green Shiell John Strohm Speer, 3d Frank Raymond Stocker John Frantz Stratton James Shelley Tatman John Poulsen Trommald Noyes Salvador Wilmot 181 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI John Kennedy Beeson Oliver Chandler Billings, Jr. Alexander Montgomery Brooks Edward Goodwin Cahill John Piatt Cheney, Jr. Edward Cornish, Jr. John Duncan Cox James Sterling Davis Edwin Tobias Earl Frank Talbott Fisher James Scott Glenn William Lawrence Graham, Jr. John Joseph Hoben Allan Curtiss Hoffman, Jr. James Joseph Holahan James Arthur House, Jr. Charles Henry Howson, Jr. Charles A. Kline VanCourt Lucas Henry Malcolm McAleenan Charles Daniel Mahonej ' William Taggart Meloy Charles Hungerford Erlund Milbank John Gwennap Murray Frederick Augustus Nash Ralph Burt Phillips, Jr. Edward Archibald Rice Sabin Bobbins, 3d Stuart Sanger Garfield Frederick Schafer Thomas Floyd Smith, Jr. Harry Bartlett Stewart, Jr. James Edgerly Thayer Frederick Baughman Trimble William Weber, Jr. William Adam Webster George Edward Woodward, Jr. Charles Arden Yinkey, Jr. 183 , r i- - ■ ■ p    ■ jMi; jijMpJ V A T TT RANNITR ANH zz: |l8j '  « « « «  «  « 1 AJjIIi JjAiMMjn AINU 4 s i 1 1 1 1 [ i 1 j j FRANKLIN HALL I ( i 1 Orien Joseph Allaire Owen Craven Jones J Albert Burton Anderson Everett Edward Kavanaugh i 1 Ledyard Avery James Simon Kern 1 ) Robert Stuckey Baker Theodore Maynard Ley 1 i Gordon Walbridge Battey Ellwood Caldwell Lindsay, Jr. 1 1 j William Wyndham Bayfield Quentin ] IcAdam Losee 1 1 Guy Erastus Beard.sley, Jr. Donald Francis MacEachern Karl Fred Billhardt Stewart Baker McLeod, Jr. 1 David Ferguson Black John Garthwaite IMartin William Williams Blunt, Jr. George Thomas Moore, Jr. Francis Hayes Brennan Albert Beechcr Mosebach I Melville Lawson Brown Louis Putnam Myers ! Robert John Caine Thomas Jenkinson North i Spencer Greenwood Carlton Knowlton Wendell Oberlander i James Allen Carney James Pickands Robert Emmons Carr Eastman Potter Edward Vincent Carvey Robert Lee Randoljjh, Jr. Frank Barker Chase John .Jakob Raskob, Jr. Marcus Eddy Cunningham William Frederick Raskob, 2d Harold Fayette Doolittle Henry Brown Reinhardt, Jr. Nickolaus Louis Englehardt, Jr. Arthur Edwin Rodger Edward Ernest Furst Richard Maxwell Sargent James Simon Geddes Walter Byron Swartz William Allyn Geer John Chester A ' aden George Chittenden Guibert Charles Wilbur Vreeland 1 John Lyons Flanagan William Wakefield 1 ( William Taylor Howe 1 Douglas Rippon Geils Williams 185 1 i J ' VU V ' «V «%Vi. JJ JJ  JVVUV%.%V ' M ' r«r. g«.T : TA- i ' A mrsrA A m ' A ' ' arararm ' mrsrA A A ' ' srA A mrsrM ' ' srarai m! ' M srm jS I S-ammssssssssssa YALE BAJNNEK AM) HOT FOUKKl ' vav.v.v ST. ANTHONY HALL 1 i Lee Chrisman Aslilcy Edward Carter Ives j John Peale Bent Frederick Charles Jarecki t Louis Joseph Benton Nahum Edward Jennison 1 George Pearson Biggs John Edwin King, Jr. i Augustus Silliman Blagden, Jr. Lewis Waldo King 1 Charles Seaton Bowman, Jr. Thomas Morton Kugeman 1 John Asher Brandenburg William Kelsey Lanman, Jr. 1 I Curtis Henry Brockelman Louis Powell LeBourgeois S Rufus Choate Brown, III Richard Tasker Lowndes i Henry Brevoort Cannon, Jr. Samuel Plumer McCalmont 1 Ralph Willard Carson Charles Daniel McPhee, III 1 1 John Reeder Gary Wheeler Xazro 1 1 Putnam Davis William Reeves i Gideon Knapp deForest George Wolf Reily, HI 1 Scott Jonathan Dow, Jr. Reuben Buck Robertson, Jr. Mont Sandles Echols Harold Carl Sandburg i William Joseph Echols Charles Hamilton Sanford, Jr. i H Charles Ellis, Jr. Raj-mond Ellwood Sargeant 1 1 H Charles Harry Engle Lucius Miles Seiberling 1 V Randall Wade Everett, Jr. George Abrani Smith i 1 Maurice Hazlewood Fisher Rayburn Clark Smith, Jr. 1 1 H Richard Howell Game Horton Spitzer 1 1 James Parmalee Gasser Thomas Anderson Standish, Jr. i I Joseph Alexander Gilchrist, Jr. Joseph Bodine Terbell, Jr. 1 George Coe Graves, II Bruce Thorne 1 Charles Woodford Griswold Laurence Edward Tierney, Jr. Philip Woodworth Hatch Norman Atwood Walker j Frank Brevard Hayne, Jr. Gilfry Ward j 4 Irving Beechum Hiett, Jr. James Otis Watson, III i 1 Chapin Pierson Hunt George Tyler Weymouth J ( i John William Hunter 187 1 1 i J J ( 1 i 1 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Daniel Putnam Adams John Herbert Bagg, Jr. Frederick George Bannerot, Jr. Clarence Worcester Bouck Theodore Brand Leslie Carroll Burton Robert Bowne Coburn John Albert Cosmus, Jr. Edmund Lovell Dana Lee Wallace Dean, Jr. Harry Elliott DePass John Xewhall Douglas Archibald Robertson Dunning Edward Easton, Jr. Lee Wells Eighmy, Jr. Cliarles Francis J airbanks, 2d Edward Richard Florea Gerrit Davis Foster Oscar Rorick Foster Peter A ' anDuzer Gott Henry Cliarles Griggs David Boughton Hamilton William Caldwell Hamilton George Patterson Harrington Charles Eccleston Hayward, Jr. Richard Keast Watson Frederick Kinney Boyden Kinsey, Jr. William H_ver Knowles, Jr. Joseph Hearn Little Sydney Esterbrook Longmaid Thomas Lord Charles Noyes Loveland, Jr. John Brownlow Metcalfe Richard Asbury Myers liUcien Scott Xeely Earl Taylor Pierce Harry Samuel Renkert, Jr. Horace Vernon Rumsey A ' ictor Hugo Schulze AVilliam Clement Scott, Jr. Elmer Atwood Stevens Hugh A ' incent Strong William Wier Sudduth Graham Sumner, Jr. Frederick Theodore vanBeuren, III Theron Woodward Wright Robert Fairchild Zimmerman 189 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Thomas Lyman Arnold Gerald VanCleve Baker Simeon Morgan Barber, Jr. Thomas Graj ' Bennett, 2d John Henry Beyer Oliver Blair Richard Henry Blythe, Jr. Charles William Buckley Richard Gay Cady Robert Moorhead Carrier Lucius Davis Cochran Walker Percy deBardeleben William Eno deBuys Burwell Dodd Wood Dailey Gerstell Francis Lewis Hall Marshall Goldthwait Hall George Sampson Hill Logan Gillett Hill Hamilton Hitt William Edward Hoblitzelle, Jr. Richard Rider Jackson William Walker Jemison Andrew Kaul, 3d John Sawver Clockev Hugh Kaul John Lord King Charles Foster Miles Franklin Beardsley Miles Nelson Woodworth ] Iillard Ralph Willis Miner Cyril Valentine Moore Ralph Scott Mueller, Jr. Walter Howard O ' Brien, Jr. Sewall Kemble Oliver Edward Bradford Page Worthen Paxton Frank Palmer Pendleton Sidney Sayre Quarrier William Callaway Shepp Xorman Elbert Sherwood Donald Williams Smith Henry vanHoff Stoever, Jr. William Alexander Stromeyer Edward Baker Sturges Burton Wakeman Taylor Seymour Yardley Warner, Jr. Richard Warren Walter Wheeler Wilson, III 191 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE SACHEM CLUB James Hislop Allyn jMatthew Baii-d Barkley, Jr. Robert Plimley Breckenridge Horace Dedreux Bregenzer Walter Cooper Charles Henry Costello Louis Austin Crowell, Jr. John Stewart Dunning Charles Wetherbee Earnshaw Frank Hanson Eastman, Jr. Lee Edward Farr Edward Samuel Frisch Aaron Solomon Hershey Stedman Tomlinson Hitchcock Pierre William Hoge William Randolph Jennings William Horace Jervis Richard Frederick Jones, Jr. Elmer Andrew Kell, Jr. John Lester Kimberley Gilman Deering Kirk Robert Chester Kirk Jameson Larimore, Jr. Landon Carter Lodge Forrest Edward Mars Arnold Caverly Mason Albert Goodale Massey George Bragg Masse Richard Hollister Mather Theodore Robert Miller Harvey Rowe Morrison Ashley Pond, 3d Russell Robert Raab Philip lason Reynolds Rudolf Hoyt Robinson Douglas Kimber Smith Norman Welles Spencer Warren Pierson Spinning Chadbourne Arnold Spring Lester Nichols Towner Valentine Held von der Lin James Peter Warbasse, Jr. Carl Reginald Webster Robert Brainerd Whittredge Thayer Willis George Edward Woods, Jr. 193 YALE BANNER AND POTPOURRI Louis Winfield Adams, Jr. Frederick Victor Austin, Jr. Edmund Ferdinand Ball Nicholas Thomson Bard Clyde Harrison Bingham Henry Arnold Bodwell Chester Beach Bulkley Gerald Norman Burk Iceland Howard Burt Randolph Hill Cook Andrew Crawford Dana David Pyle Davoll Stewart Logan deVausney Ferdinand Heim Diebold Paul Collins Donovan James Henry Eddy William Lewis Funk Henry Kidder Gilbert, Jr. Robert Luev Griffin Hugh Haddow, 3d Henry Lloyd Hanson Elmer Jay Huss Herbert Leigh Kinsolving George Lester Kreider Albert Harold Laub Frank Louis Marting Peter Joseph McAndrews Callaghan James IVIcCarthy, Jr. Robert Stone McConnell Charles Stewart Harding Mott Henry James O ' Donnell George Peterson, Jr. Clifton Walter Phalen Ziba Bennett Phelps, Jr. George Verity Phillips Wayne Rawley, Jr. Joseph Pratt Ringland Frank Smith Robbins, Jr. John Edwin Ruby Warren Curtis Sawyer Ashton Tourison Scott John Edward Snyder, Jr. George Walker Sonntag, Jr. George Ingraham Staber Robert Wallace Stokes John Joseph Sullivan J. Preston Thomas Franklin Graves Treat August Monroe Turner Edward Moffat Weyer, Jr. Albert Moser Williams Lewis Woolsey John Elbridge Wulbern 195 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI BOOK AND BOND Thomas Cranston Albro, 3d William Ralph Borden Ernest Thornell Brown Irving Horton Bull George Alexander Carver Alfred Chadburn, Jr. Thomas Francis Corcoran William George Fennell James Stancliife Ferguson Clifton Curtis Flather Louis Hasselman Davis Fraser Theodore Dodge Gatchel Frank Patrick Gillon, Jr. Albert Hooker Goodwin Jesse Johnston Haight Charles Keller Hammer Basil George Frederick Laslett Edgar Kendrick Leavenworth Kenneth Ray Lee George Sunmiers Light Walter Frederick North Burton Bull Patterson Joseph Frederic Purcell Burton Brush Rogers Ralph Edward Scott Francis Henry Shepard, Jr. Edwin William Small Gareth Wright Speer Robert Burdett Taggart Samuel Bartram Richards Taylor Franklin VanCulen Thompson Philip Russell Thompson Robert Fuller Truesdell ALixwell Turner John Wallis Herbert Palmer White 197 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI RELIGIOUS ACTIVITIES HE University Christian Associa- tion, an organization directed en- tirely by undergraduates, main- tains the work of Dwight Hall in the College and Byers Hall in SheflP. Through these many in teresting religious speakers are brought to the University every year, and per- sonal religious interest is fostered amongst the undergraduates. It also does much to keep up the interest in Daily Chapel which inevitably lost tremendously in its attendance with the abolition of compulsion. But perhaps its most important contribution is with the Yale Hope Mission which does the most valuable settle- ment work in the city. Here the old slogan of helping men to help themselves is put into effect with results that have always been en- couraging and inspiring. 198 A ' C thir Religious Aclivilies YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CHRISTIA ASSOCIATI RELIGION has always plaj ' ed a large, more or less conscious part in the life of Yale University. From the first the administration has fostered it and for the last half- century undergraduates have made it a special part of their college life through the agency of the University Christian Association. The second year of voluntary chapel may well be said to have been a success. Under the pastorship of the Rev. Elmore M. IMcKee, 1919, the University Church has assumed a place of somewhat new interest and greater significance. At the start of the year the undergraduate Deacons in co-operation with the undergraduate committee on dailv chapel made a large number of calls among the members of the Freshman Class cul- minating in a meeting of about two hundred members of the Class of 1931, at which time membership in the Church was explained and urged. Subsequently a large number of men has affiliated itself with the Church for the period of the college course. It was chiefly this Freshman constituency which engaged itself to support the innovation of weekly vesper services during certain seasons of the year. Three of these services held on the three Sundays before Christmas took the form of card-services and were addressed by Yale Alumni. A second series took place on the Sundays of Lent. In each case they were followed by a tea served by the ladies of the Church in the reading room of Dwight Hall. The number of people who took part in these two new functions shows that thev supply a need in the religious life of the campus. Daily chapel has been conducted this year on Saturdays as well as the other week- days and was carried through the period of mid-year examinations. Although a certain novelty may be said to have worn off, the attendance has maintained a consistent mark. The types of services and the messages of the leaders have been sufficiently varied in their appeal to meet the demands of every student. The Sunday eleven o ' clock services with their splendid roster of preachers have proved a stimulus to the intellectual as well as the religious life of the L niversity. It is quite fitting at this point to make particular mention of the Rev. Elmore M. McKee. In taking the position of LTniversity pastor under this new regime, Mr. McKee was doing a piece of work of a pioneer quality. It is largely his personality and con- stant efforts which have stimulated so much undergraduate support and created such things as the volunteer choir for the vesper services. We may assume that the Univer- sity Church will become more and more a constructive influence in Yale. The University Christian Association, with its branches in Dwight and Byers Halls 201 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Prof. Smith Prof. Nettleton Miller Hill Dean Mendell Brewster DEACONS r Bartholomew Bingham Phelps Arnold Keeler and the Divinity School, is tlie peculiar student medium for education and expression along religious lines and in social service. The emphasis is placed on these two parallel lines. Through opportunities to hear eminent speakers, to studj ' the Bible, to study current problems bearing on religion, to see through experience in the outside world the needs religion is meeting, men are brought to a realization of the part it can play and their own convictions are formed or strengthened. Then, in various types of social service work and in discussion groups, they find the means of expressing these convic- tions. The purpose of the Christian Association is to bring men to a better knowledge of the personality and teachings of Jesus Christ and to help them find a way in which to work out the spirit of those teachings in modern life. The high point in the campaign to help men think out religion for themselves came with the four-day visit of Dr. Henry Sloane Coffin, ' 97, in March. Dr. Coffin preached in Battell Chapel twice on Sunday, led the daily service, lectured each evening in Sprague Hall, and led forums in the fraternity houses. During that time he discussed such topics as The Value of Religious Experience, How one may know God, Is God Per- sonal . ' ' What is the Use of Religion? and Is there an Adventure in Religion. His keen intellectual analyses and his vast experience made a deep impression on the several hundred men who came into contact with him during that period. Leading up to and following this climax were a number of Bible study groups and forums led by members of the facultv including Prof essors Tweedy, Latourette, and R. S. Smith. Kacli of the 202 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI if tlirec lower classes had their ])articuhii- o-roup meeting once a week to discuss problems of particular interest to them. The Yale Court has been studying out social, political, and economic problems of the present day from a Christian point of view. The Sheffield Scientific School clubs have held a series of Wednesday night meetings addressed by prominent men in various walks of life. Conferences held at Detroit, Northfield, and ] Iiddletown have proved an inspiration to Yale men in the consciousness of the great scope of the work and interests which appeal to them. This year, under the direction of a special part-time secretary, a new impetus was given to the work in the boys ' clubs of New Haven. A good number of men, particularly in the Freshman Class, have spent a great deal of time coaching teams, directing pub- lications and dramatics, tutoring and generally helping the less fortunate boys of the city. This work is always a source of satisfaction as well as a means of serving others. A few men have taught English and found other ways of helping the situation among the laboring class of New Haven. An unusually large number of men have found a chance to express themselves and crystallize their own ideas on deputations to prepara- tory schools and churches in New England and the metropolitan area. The Yale Hope Mission, with its program for Rebuilding Broken Lives, is perhaps Yale ' s greatest single contribution to social welfare. The members of the Undergraduate Committee are called upon to speak at the gospel meetings, at the jails, and in hosj ital wards and to show a spirit of friendship towards the down-and-outer. Frequently men are met at the Mission who have begun to live a new life with the aid of religion and who have something very powerful to contribute to the student. This spring sees the start of the construction of a new plant for this splendid work. The Berkeley Association for Episcopal Students, The Catholic Club, and the Christian Science Society all make their contributions to the religious life of the Uni- versity. In a place of this size there is bound to be diversification, but it is to be hoped that the single central purpose will not be lost sight of: to prepare men for more intelligent service in Church and civil state. M. D. KEELER, ' 48 T. L. ARNOLD. ■«« S. 203 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Ti0 - •p 0 ' : 0 0 x||!i ..r-.,.-. i 0 ■ ■ - V ' ' ' 0 - ■w r YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI COLLEGE CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OFFICERS M. D. Keeler, ' 28, President B. K. AxTHoxY, ' 28, Vice-President B. C. Miller, ' 28, Secretary A. B. Clark, ' 29, Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Boys ' Work W. C. :Moorc, ' 28 Deputations T. E. Moore, ' 30 Foreign Students E. McC. Fleming, ' 30 Industrial Work F. A. Drake, ' 29 J. B. Whitelaw, ' 29 Missions B. K. Anthony, ' 28 R. E. Spiel, ' 29 Publicity G. B. Tweedy, ' 29 Sunday Evening Meetings T. Painter, ' 29 C. A. Janeway, ' 30 Yale Court T. Painter, ' 29 Yale Hope Mission A. B. Clark, ' 29 G. W. Brooks, ' 30 GRADUATE SPXRETARIES, 1927-1928 E. Fay Campbell, University Secretary John Currie, Foreign Student Secretary Anson P. Stokes, Jr., College Secretary Stanhope Pier, Boys ' Work Secretary 205 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 0? :- YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SHEFFIELD CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Thomas Lyman Arxold, President Henry Brevort Cannon, Jr., Vice-President John Herbert Bagg, Jr., Secretary Sidney Sayre Quarrier, Treasurer E. Fay Campbell, Graduate Secretary CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Gilfry Ward House Meetings James Lindsay Hcdden Boys ' Work Ziba Bennett Phelps, Jr. Yale Hope Mission Sidney Sayre Quarrier Deputations John Herbert Bagg, Jr. Industrial Work Thomas Lyman Arnold New England Council Delegate CABINET 1928 James Lindsay Hedden Sydney Esterbrook Longmaid A ' anCourt Lucas Ziba Bennett Phelps, Jr. Gilfry Ward 1929 William Eno deBuys Ralph Willard Carson Charles Eccleston Hayward, Jr. George Bragg IMassev, Jr. 207 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE HOPE MISSION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Elmer D. Keith, Chairman Johx W. ] IacDonald, Superintendent Thomas M. Steele, Treasurer New Building Fund DoxALD G. North, Mission Treasurer T. L. Arnold F. H. Blakeslee Dean C. R. Brown C. S. Campbell Rev. E. F. Campbell F. H. Dawless J. Duncan Dr. T. Evans Dr. R. J. Ferguson L. L. Gilbert S. E. Grumman M. D. Keeler E. D. Keith H. C. Keith Prof. K. S. Latourette Dr. O. E. Mauer Rev. E. McKee N. X. Nolile Prof. W. L. Phelps G. Purdue A. P. Stokes, Jr. S. Thorne, Jr. UNDERGRADUATE COMMITTEE N. N. Noble, Chairman E. C. Childs, Vice-President 1928 E. G. M C. Childs ■ V. Haight D. Keeler J. T. McCance W. C. Moore X. X. Xoble J. F. Rettger S. A. Scoville W. B. Scoville S. Thorne, Jr. J. B. Zerbe, Jr R. A. AV D. Bastow B. Clark, Jr. B. Easton, Jr. 1929 K. Emerson, Jr. K. S. Gillespie T. Painter H. P. Rich J. G. Sherman H. Southworth R. E. Spiel W. E. Terry J. Thomas G. E. W. Brooks, Jr. JI. Fleming 1930 B. H. Gere J. X. Hazard T. E. Moore J. DeF. Pettus I.. B. Ward R. S. Xewhall, 2d 1931 L. Thorne W . C . Thorne R. P. H. Blythe, Jr., ' 30 V. Gott, ' .SO Sheffield Scientific School C. E. Hayward, Jr., ' 29 G. B. Massey, Jr., 29 T. Z. L. B. Arnold, ' 28 Phelps, Jr., ' 28 Divinity School . . G. Baldwin 208 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CATHOLIC CLUB Rev. T. Lawrason Riggs, Chaplain William Adam Webster, ' 28 S., President Neil Anthony Connor, ' 28, Secretary and Treasurer SCHOOL OF MEDICINE F. X. Baumert SCHOOL OF LAW C. H. Blackall C. A. Boyd E. T. Carmodv C. A. Hadden R. D. O ' Connell H. A. Onofrio H. G. Reuschlein SCHOOL OF THE FINE ARTS J. Christensen J. D. CIvne F. H. Connolly J. P. Flaherty J. C. Brady E. M. Brimicombe AV. H. Buckley, Jr. F. T. Carmody P. Folger L. F. Genz J. L. Glynn M. F. Hanson H. J. McDonaJd R. A. McLoughlin 1928 1929 A. F. Brook H. Brook J. B. Coleman, Jr. R. W. Condon R. W. Curnen, Jr. J. H. Dillon, 2d T. G. Early J. S. Evans, Jr. E. F. Falsev L. Fox, Jr. 1929 S. F. F. Clark, Jr. 1930 1930 S. F. A. Nash 1931 D. J. Heekin B. M. Holden, Jr. J. R. Joyce J. H. Kopmeier J. L. Leonard F. J. Linehan J. A. Lynch, Jr. J. L. McCorniick B. F. Nelson, 2d J. L. Curtin R. M. Leieh D. M. McKeon J. J. Garvey T. V. Hynes C. A. Passagno W. W. Walsh J. A. Watters F. A. Mulgrew J. J. Murphy R. J. Petrueelli F. J. Wilcox E. B. O ' Brien E. T. O ' DonneU J. C. Rathborne E. J. Rockefeller E. B. Sweeney R. H. Trenkamp J. B. Whalen T. D. Williams, Jr. J. C. Winslow 209 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI rah I icifv tioivs YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI X - YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Yale Literary Magazine Established 1836 Chairman Wilder Hobson Managing Editor DWIGHT MaCDONALD Business Managers Gerald VanCle -e Baker Charles Augustus Frank Phelps Stokes Hunter Editors Robert Jay Cone Thomas Wellsted Copeland Washington Dodge, II Chauncey Bradley Ives Announcement May, igiy FOR many years it has been traditional that th Chairman of The Yale Literary Magazine shall receive an election to Skull and Bones. It is the belief of the present editorial Board that this custom is highly undesirable, for reasons which are stated below. Undergraduates who write for the Lit. should, if possible, be actuated only by the desire for literarj- ex- pression. The Lit. should not be regarded as a stepping- stone to a Senior honor society. It is manifestly desir- able for the magazine to have a chairman. But for this position to be synonymous with election to the Senior society in question establishes a spurious way of obtain- ing an honor which should be conferred impartiallv upon individuals and not upon extra-curricular officers as such. We do not wish our contributors ' creative purpose to be distracted by Senior society considera- tions. As a protest against this situation the 19 ' S editorial Board announces that it will not elect a chairman until after Tap Day. CHAIRMAN HOBSON We propose to change the system of elections which has been employed up to the present. Under this system five editors were chosen each year from the Junior class. These men were generally the five who had liad the most material published. The objections to this arrangement are obvious. It would be only by coincidence that just five men in college were worthy of editorship. Limiting the Board arbitrarily to five excludes deserving men in pro- ductive years and includes undeserving men in lean years. There is also no reason for re- stricting editorship to the Junior class. There have been prolific, enthusiastic contributors who have been forced to wait until late in Junior year to gain their positions on the Board while in recent years men have been elected editors of the Lit. who had not even been awarded the Chi Delta Theta triangle. We feel that this system is unfair to the under- graduate who is seriously interested in creative work. Elections should be accorded not when a man has reached a certain period in his college course, but when he has demonstrated to the Board ' s satisfaction his interest and capability. The accepted proof of these is the publication of five contributions. We shall therefore institute the following new system of elections to the Board, to take effect with the Class of 192S. 215 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Elections will be given automatically upon the award of the Chi Delta Theta triangle (the publication of five contributions), irrespective of class, and at any time during the college course. Immediately after the make-up for the last issue of each college year, a Junior shall be elected for the ensuing year. All the members of the Board except Seniors shall vote, the election to be determined by a majority. In the event of no Junior being on the Board a Sophomore shall be elected Chairman. In the event of no Junior or Sophomore being on the Board a Freshman shall be elected Chairman. Jewels I FOUND a pebble on the beach. Caparisoned in white and blue. Its artless beauty gave me joy ; I kept it as a gift for you. In gleaming silk you sat ; there fell Bright, clustered jewels on your breast. You took my simple offering. And smiled, and made a foolish jest. The tints that gathered on my stone Convened in delicate array ; There was no glint or dazzle there. Should I have given it away ? WILDER HOBSON. There is a suggestion of sadness in the chimes of the Harkness clock. Cunning construction has made the clock itself practically invisible. But does that mean that it cannot see ? Its faces are open to the four sides of the tower. If it had that gift of speech which has made man so superior to all things else in the world, what would it say to the humanity that scrambles below? — You who hurry from Greek 10 to Physics 41a, what is on your mind? Are you considering your 83 in Greek and your 73 in Physics? That means that the Greek department places your value in the world at 83 and the Physics department considers you worth only 73, does it not? Or are you disturbed that the football manager evaluates you at 93,000 points and the A czi ' s at 93,000,000? There are others above you. Surely, that is a cause for worry. But there are yet others below you, and there is food for satisfaction. Your system is defended on the grounds that there is need for incentive and the marking method is the simplest way to give it. Then why is it not carried further? There is a Personnel Bureau. It should be easy for the University to determine the net value of your existence. It is merely a matter of figures — so much for what you have done, so much for your friendships, so much for your ])er- sonality. Your Grand Average could be put on your diploma, and in future years you would point to it with pride or try to forget about it. Indeed, much has been done to this end already. It is not down to a mathematical basis, but the system is there. Ah, you are taught to say, this is the way of the world. ' Non scliolae sed v ' ltac discimus. ' ' ' Then this to you will be z ' itaf You will always be out for points ? But the chimes of the Harkness clock are only marking the hour of noon. 216 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI IVaves THE breaking waves are old men With wind-whipped white hair. They crawl, roaring, on to the land And toss their hair high over the rocks. DWIGHT MACDONALDj JR. THE one unquestionable requirement for a writer is that he write. I often think I would write a novel if I could settle down. Just like that. In the meantime he goes about in the role of an author ; this imminent possibility of his writing gives him the right to criticize, not from the justifiable point of view of a reader, but as one who could do better himself. It is a comfortable position; it gives prestige without work. It is a safe position ; for it is difficult to comment on unwritten writing. And there is an air about the po- tential author which suggests that if he did decide to write — well, just look out, that ' s all. It is perhaps partly explained by the feeling one has when reading a story, that one could easily do as well one- self; the story flows smoothly; one senses that one would have written it just that way. The cure for such a feeling is to sit down before a blank sheet of paper and notice how extremely bare it is. The bushes are full of great writers who have no time to write. The number of roses blushing unseen in this country is, at a low estimate, three million five hundred thousand. ROBERT .T. Y CONE. MR. GALSWORTHY, we are told, is one of the few writers of our generation who seems at all likely to live. Mr. Galsworthy lias written a very long book, the Forsyte Saga, which is the basis for this remark, and has got quite a number of people to read it : which we will all admit is Something. But what class has he got to read it? In general a very bourgeois public, whose best reading is the Saga and whose general reading is the fiction magazines. And how has he got them to read it? Partly by discussing such fascinating problems as the Deleterious Efi ects of Property (have his readers, then, so much property?) and the Divorce Situation among the Swells. Partly by a crafty conserva- tism which selects and re-uses all the more workable features of Victorianism, pleasantly varnished with the vocabulary of Us ] Ioderns. Partly by a general (and commendable) policy of popu- larizing modernism ; in a vrr gentle way, of course, but still people do know there arc modern problems in morality, etc., after reading Galsworthy who might never hear of them in the Post. And, of course, partly because there is some slight residuum of literary merit in his work. This has been exaggerated : the name Gals- worthy sounds so genteel and all (supposing his name were Jenks, or Plunkett ) ; but we will admit there must be something in some sections of his writing which keeps critics from recognizing the fundamental inanity of the rest. THOM. S WELLSTED COPELAND. 217 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI OFFICERS Thomas Marshali., Chairman PoMEROv Day, Business Manager John Rawlings Toop, Editor John Lord King, Assistant Editor Howard Hunter Williams, Assistant Business Manager Crilly Butlkr, Assistant Manager THOMAS MARSHALL, CHAIRMAN AS tlie successive editors of this volume have ■ never failed to point out, the Yale Banner AND Pot Pourri is the grandfather of Yale publica- tions. The Pot Pourri, in fact, was founded as far back in the comparative youth of this great institu- tion and nation as 18-H, while its rival for the favor of the University, the Banner, was given to the world in 1865. There is, of course, that elderly spinster the Lit., who first dawned on the benighted wilderness that America had been, in 1836. It is, however, scarcely polite to call attention to the greater an- tiquity of a lady, and it is impossible to impute to a lady of such known chastity the grandmothcrhood of the noisy and ill-behaved progeny that are now growing up in our midst. However, in 1908, the rivalry of the two pub- lications had become so intense that it was deemed wise to combine them into the Yale Banner and Pot Pourri. Since that time, the book has advanced through successive generations and vicissitudes to the high state of its existence in its present form, which it attained as a result of the energy of the 1926 board. The addition of special sections of views and sketches, illustration of all articles, an increase in the size of the volume, greatly increased space for reading matter and the relegation to secondary importance of the numerous lists, together with an attempt to increase the accuracy of the data incorporated in the book have all contributed to give the University annual its present form. In this volume, still greater attention has been given tlian before to the appear- ance of the volume as a whole. The art work has been done with an eye to uniformity; the special articles are longer and more numerous, and great attention has been paid to the securing of articles which are timely and adapted to the function of the book. A Partial Review of Yale for 1927, by the President, contains a discussion of the chief problems which are now facing the University, and particularly the undergradu- ate schools ; a review and consideration of the present situation and the plans for the future so well drawn up that it should be read by every undergraduate. In an excellent article on The New Art ]Museum, Ir. Sizer has presented the best available account of the new building on Chapel Street and the many pressing needs it is expected to 219 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI POMEROY DAY, BUSINESS MANAGER fulfill. Tliis article is illustnitod with reproductions from ])aintings in tlie Yale collec- tions. Furthermore, JMr. Lull lias contributed an interesting account of tlie Peabody Museum, its function, and his plans for its future. We can confidently assert that the dinosaurs, ichthyosaurs, and other beasts which adorn the pages of this section are the finest which have ever been presented in any college publication. In fact, it is most timely that attention should be thus called to the enormously difficult and yet most promising work which Professor Lull and his staff have undertaken. This department of the University lias established a tradition of which we may well be )iroud. Special mention should be made of t he first appearance in the Baxxer axd Pot Pourri of the Yale Naval Unit. In a section of six pages, the mis- sion of this branch of the aval Reserve is set forth by Captain Berrien. All of the changes and enlargements which the book has undergone in recent years are entirelj the result of corresponding increases and expansions in the interest of the University. Never before has it been the privilege of the editors to print an insertion dealing with aeronautics at Yale. And so it goes. The field for material has undoubtedly increased faster and with more complexity than the editors have been able to cope with. Nevertheless, a new phase of the book ' s development has struck it. The task of the editors is vastly greater than it has ever been before but, at the same time, it is far more gratifying to perform, and brings to the editors an increasingly enlarging con- ception of the possibilities of which future editors may avail themselves. The important contribution of that mysterious organization, the business board, to the success of the book cannot be overestimated. The task of financing a college year- book is well known for its difficulty. Especially is the competition strong in New Haven. The success of the business managers is due in large part to their policy of seeking ad- vei-tisements of the kind to which year-books are particularly suitable mediums. Beyond this, little is known of its doings. An occasional distraught sigh from a harassed heeler gives evidence that it is in feverish operation and, at the end of the year, the work is done. Like the Simplon Tunnel, which was dug and blasted from both ends until the two parties met exactly in the middle, the Baxxer axd Pot Pourri is built up from opposite sides, until the whole thing is finished. It is a childlike, pure, and beautiful faith with which the editors rely upon their confreres, and so far they have never been deceived. Such trustworthiness and efficiency are beautiful to contemplate. It is our hope that, as the presenters of this edition have endeavored to make it as nearly as they could a record of a fleeting year, its accomplishments and problems, both solved and bequeathed to the future, so our successors and the successors of these will bring the Yale Baxxer axd Pot Pourri to the point where it will approximate a complete account of that many-sided day-dream, a Yale year. 220 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI FORMER EDITORS Volume I. A. B. Gardner s. J. Keator, Jr. J. E. Meeker F. A. Morrell, Jr. F. C. H. Olmstead H. P. Thurston Volume VI. W S. Harpham Volume II. H W. Hobson A E. Baker J. G. Kilbreth J. W. Ford S. H. Paradise T. Hewes C. C. Jewett, Jr. Volume VII Volume III. w H. Jessup C. Abbott J. C. Peet T. Beer B. A. Tompkins R Evans, Jr. W A. McAfee Volume VIII Volume IV. R. H. Lucas ,T. LeC. Bell C. R. Walker, Jr. J. Chandler N. M. Way F,. P. Dawson W V. GrifBn Volume IX. Volume V. L. B. P. Gould A H. Beard R. P. Pflieger A B. Cra%vford C. M. Steward, 3d Volume XVII E P. Cottle R E. Hirsh C. G. Poore A . V. Spencer S. C. Badger Philip Barry D. M. Campbell E. C. Gould C. S. Reed M. F. Sosa S. V. Benet D. M. Campbell W. J. Carr C. G. Stradella E. B. Fisher H. R. Luce W. Millis E. Woollen, Jr. Volume XIII. H. J. Mali T. J. Robertson H. Stark J. Wiley Volume XIX. H. Hamlin T. C. Patterson J. D. Stelle J. Stil.son Volume XIV. John P. Bankson, Jr. Cyril Hume John A. Thomas Charles A. Wight Volume XV. M. E. Foster E. S. Husted L. F. Watermulder J. W. Williamson Volume XVI. S. B. Haynes W. E. Houghton D. A. January Volume XVII. S. K. Barhydt R. P. Crenshaw C. F. Elliott B. McL. Spock ' THE UNIVERSITY OX WHEELS 221 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 222 Sidney C. Partridge, ' 80 Doremus Scudder, ' 80 J. E. Whitney, ' 82 F. E. Worcester, ' 82 J. E. Whitney, ' 82 F. B. Stevens, ' 83 G. R. Blodgett, ' 84 F. S. Jones, ' 84 P. I. Wells, ' 85 W. T. G. Weymouth, ' 85 Yale Literary Magazine Thomas Penney, ' 87 G. T. Pettee, ' 87 Andrew F. Gates, ' 87 Louis L. Barnum, ' 89 S. Louis L. Barnum, ' 89 S. Vertner Kenerson, ' 91 Wm. C. Wurtenburg, ' 89 S Theodore S. Hart, ' 91 John Q. Tilson, ' 91 John Q. Tilson, ' 91 C. W. Halbert, ' 95 H. T. Halbert, ' 95 J. W. Roe, ' 95 S. John Q. Tilson, ' 91 B. J. Hendrick, ' 95 E. E. Garrison, ' 97 C. R. Hemenway, ' 97 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 John MacGregor, Jr F. M. Gilbert, ' 98 H. W. Hincks, ' 98 N. M. Burrell, ' 99 J. L. Evans, ' 99 J. M. Hopkins, ' 00 Owen Johnson, ' 00 Ray Morris, ' 01 L. D. Waddell, ' 01 S. John B. Hart, ' 02 Lyman S. Spitzer, ' 02 Howard A. Plummer, ' 03 Reeve Schley, ' 03 Thomas R. Gaines, ' 04 Henry H. Stebbins, ' 04 Lansing P. Reed, ' 04 Berrien Hughes, ' 05 John H. Lathrop, ' 05 Robert F. Tilney, 2d, ' 05 L. W. Gorham, ' 06 C. B. Van Tassel, ' 06 R. L. Rogers, ' 06 W. W. Collin, ' 07 D. M. Ryerson, ' 07 Richard b. Bulkeley Malcolm G. Douglas Chauncey B. Garver YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ecrvd Pot Pouxx Established 1865 Published Anmually Combined with The Banner in 1908 FORMER EDITORS I 1866 D. J. Burrell 1867 D. J. Burrell 1868 B. A. Fowler 1869 W. G. Sperry 1870 F. S. Dana 1871 C. E. Beebe 1872 H. W. B. Howard 1873 S. I,. Boyce W. F. McCook 1874 F. Jenkins William Kelly 1875 E. H. Landon 1876 John Porter D. Trumbull 1877 E. M. Dudley W. P. Macomber J. A. Porter 1878 E. L. Morse 1879 L. L. Stanton W. J. Ten Eyck 1880 D. W. Richards C. A. Smith 1881 A. E. Bostwick W. AV. K. Nixon 1882 C. A. Wight A. C. Hand 1883 William Trumbull 1884 E. C. Gale G. H. Makuen 1885 R. J. Pitkin J. R. Joy 1886 G. E. Elliott, Jr. H. T. Nason 1887 R. I. Jenks H. F. Perkins 1888 F. L. Woodward T. E. Ripley 1889 H. F. Noyes J. G. Rogers 1890 Stowe Phelps G. F. Peter 1891 H. W. Gushing G. B. Hoppin 1892 Daniel Lord, 3d H. B. McCormick W. N. Runyon 1893 T. A. Gardiner W. W. Smith R. B. W ade 1894 c. Dunkerson L. Smith 1895 W . A. Delano W H. ScoviUe 1896 H J. Fisher A. E. Foote I.. P. Sheldon 1897 T. C. Clarke G. P. Day J. P. Sawyer 1898 R. P. M. Crosby W. Hamill M Mullally 1899 W B. Connor M H C. Harvey Mason 1900 F. T. Crawford Matthew Mills J. H. Niedecken 1901 R. I . Atkinson H. Auchincloss Maurice Mason 1902 L. B. Beckwith I.. M. Johnson N. H. Mason 1903 C. C. Auchincloss J. R. Robinson O. J. Willis 1904 E. W. Clucas W. L. Mitchell A. H. Olmstead 1905 H. Baxter S. R. Burnap B. H. Prentice 190() E. S. Mills J. H. Twitchell 1907 G. W. Abbott J. G. Crane 1908 S. D. Frissell M. L. Mitchell J. B. W ' aterworth 223 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI •ii . 5K ? ' -0 ' • ' ««l r l pl i F P- YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The Oldest College Dail Founded January 28, 187 Entered as second class matter, January 2. 1910, at the Post Office at New Haven, Conn., under the Act of March 3, 1878. Dana Treat Bartholomew. Chairman George Winthrop Haight, Business Manager Joseph Albert Thomas, Managing Editor Raymond Otis Mitchell, Assignment Editor Matthew Davison, Jr., Vice-Chairman Lincoln Bradford Hockaday, Asst. Business Mgr, Editors P. Day, 1928 W. V. Miller, 1928 F. H. Hamlin, II. 1928 A. C. Robertson, 1928 D. S. Mallon, 1928 C. H. Welles, III, 1928 Associate Editobs G. K. Costikyan, 1929 L. H. Smith, 1929 R. C. Crisler, 1929 E. H. Steif, 1929 W. Dodge, II, 1929 I. X. P. Stokes, II, 1929 H. V. Z. Hyde, 1929 C. B. Tweedy, 1929 J. E. Lowes, Jr., 1929 R. M. Calfee, Tr., 1930 P. Mellon. 1929 H. Macdonald, ' 1930 R. Patterson, 1929 J. T. Patterson, 1930 F. A. Simmons, Jr., 1929 H. S. Sherman, 1930 G. T. Hellman, 1928, Cohimnist R. C. Osborn, 1928, Cartoonist C. A. Eddy, 1928, Flickers D. Macdonald, 1928, Inquisitor M. M. Kastendieck, 1927, Lobby Gossip Member of Intercollegiate Newspaper Association The News does not necessarily endorse senti- ments expressed in communications. No communications will be printed in the News unless the writers ' names are left with the Chair- man of the News. Anonymity will be preserved News Editors for this Issue : Davison, Costikjan, Macdonald FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE Conceived by Seniors as a pastime, an un- pretentious slieet of the seventies has sur- vived fire and sword to celebrate this year its fiftieth anniversary as the oldest daily college paper in the world. Why a seed so carelessly sown should ever have taken per- manent root is no whim of fortune. Any organ providing an outlet for the restless energy of youth and a medium for the ex- pression of independent thought was bound to flourish in a soil so rich in vitality and democracy as that of Yale. Each succeeding class nourished the foundling it discovered deserted on its door- step and infused it with new blood. The News soon became an integral part of Yale and as it grew quite naturally assumed the function of leadership in a disorganized aca- demic community. By its initiative were founded the Yale Co-op and the Alumni Weekly. With diabolical cleverness, it ini- tiated the heeling system, and numerous other institutions now fundamental in Yale life. In spite of its lack of continuity the News has been consistently accepted as the con- science of the student body. Its progress has been spasmodic, but from the theories advanced by each board, however fantastic, a residue of ideas has lived on to affect permanentl} ' the general development of Yale. Some boards have been more con- servative than others. Most have been ac- cused of walking in the middle of the road. But considered in the long run, the News has been rationally progressive and has taken its stand between those radicals who would upset the apple cart entirely and that bulk of the student body which would pre- fer to leave it undistu rbed. The newspaper has ever been a hard mas- ter and the News is no exception. It is a challenge to ambitious youth that calls forth the best he has in him. Unfortunately this best has too often been a question of physi- cal endurance and not quality of work. At present too much of a premium may be placed on the go-getter and not enough on the artist. If the editors did some of the writing, it would not only brisk up the tone of the sheet but would make the heeling ex- perience less of a drain on his vitality and education. Certainly, no compethion in the business of life demands more concentrated and complete self-sacrifice than is expected of a Freshman in his nine weeks of News heeling. And yet experience on the News is not without compensation. Beyond the immediate gratification of do- ing a big job, is a training of solid worth in learning to bear responsibility. The disci- pline of a system which will not take no for an answer but demands that that paper must come out in acceptable form every morning, teaches a man to stand on his ovvn feet. There is also lasting satisfaction in creating something which someone else will read. In the news reports, the editorials, the colyum and the book reviews is a stimulus to independence of thought and ex- pression. But of more real value than all these are the connections which the News brings with the stream of Yale life. It ties a man up vv-ith tradition, brings him in con- tact with men from top to bottom of the Vale family, and gives him a comprehension of the whole, as a vigorous force in the de- velopment of the coimtry. This personal association with Yale and Vale men, inspir- ing as it does implicit love of her and devo- tion to her ideals, is a real joy of life. The experience is a substantial training for service and citizenship. 225 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI DE LYTE DELIVERS ROUSING ADDRESS In a recent address, Mr. Boise De Lyte spoke to the Junior Mutts of the Mongrel Patrol on How to Rescue a One-legged Man from the Twentieth Story of a Burn- ing Building, and Fly-Casting. First of all, began Mr. De Lyte in that stirring way of his, you must get a one- legged man. If this proves impracticable, get an ordinary man and have one leg cut oflf, or ' amputated ' — to use the jargon of the geneticist. Now erect a building at least twenty stories high and put the man on the twentieth floor. Then set tire to the build- ing. Now resc ue the man — not so hard, is it? queried Mr. De Lyte of the listening Mutts, whcse eyes were almost popping out of their heads what with excitement and eye-trouble. Heaven forfendl cried the dear little things. As for Fly-Casting, continued Mr. De Lyte. whom nothing short of Mrs. De Lyte could ever stop, I may say — and indeed I think I will— that I have established a rec- ord in that sport. Standing near the Grand Canyon — for I had gone abroad that sum- mer — I cast a fly over the edge, a distance of some five thousand feet. — I had of course killed the fly beforehand, he concluded, wishing to inculcate in his hearers feelings of kindness towards even the lowliest of God ' s creatures, for, as he was wont to say in his humane way, even at the risk of ex- aggeration, Every fly has a mother. NATURE POEMS . The Louse Lice Aren ' t nice. . The Clothes-Moth Do not get wroth At the clothes-moth. Or think that the little thing hates yer: In hatching her young Where your coonskin is hung She follows the dictates of nature. . The BoU-Weevil Think naught but evil Of the boll-weevil. Social Note Mr. and Mrs. Victor Buggash of this city and Bird Lyme-on-Rye announce the birth of a scorpion. THOUGHTS FOR MOTHERS ' DAY A. The Pig To men you represent a pig ; To me }on represent a swig. Dear Mudder, Please pass the udder. 226 B. The Donkey Dear mother, you ' re an ass ; Biology makes that clear. But even if I ' d missed that class I think I ' d know, old dear ! Hee-haw ! C. The Ichthyosaurus An ichthyosaurus ' s best friend is his mother. LADY WINDERMERE ' S FANNY OR, AREN ' T WE WILD! (. play without an audience) Lady Windermere: Do you see that woman. Lord Darlington? That is a bad woman. Lord Darlington: It is absurd to divide people into good and bad. Merely divide them in two. Dumby: Then count the rings and you can tell their age, what ? Lord D.: Where is your son nowadays, Dumby ? I haven ' t seen him for some time. Dumby: Oswald ' s at Yale. He won a Ford Scholarship — study abroad, you know. Duchess of Berwick: What is Yale? It sounds so interesting, I think. Dumby: Yale is the refuge of mediocrities and the ruin of intellectuals. Oswald likes it. It is the home of Freshman Commons, Compulsory Chapel, and the Honour Sys- tem. Duchess of Berzvick: What is Commons? Mrs. Eriynne: What is Chapel? Cecil Graham-Cracker : Commons pro- vides food for thought if for nothing else. Chapel doesn ' t even provide food for thought. Lady Windermere: And what is the Hon- our System, Mr. Graham-Cracker? Cecil Graham-Cracker: What, indeed! Indeed, what ! Lady W.: Really? Not really! And what else is there at Yale? Cecil Graham-Cracker: There is the Fac- ulty. Duchess of Berzi ' ick: That sounds so in- teresting, I think. Dumby: Oswald says it isn ' t. He says it has no faculties. But Oswald ' s judgment may be unfair. Mrs. Erlxnne: Oh, I am so sorry to hear that. Duchess of Berzvick: That is the tragedy of your life, Mrs. Eriynne. Lord Darlington: In this world there are only two tragedies. One is Othello and the other is King Lear. Lady IVindermere: My petticoat is show- ing. Eanny I Where ' s my Fanny ? (Enter Fanny) Cecil Graham-Cracker: Just behind you. Lady ' indermere. Lady Windei mere: What a bad maid you are, Fanny ! Lord Darlington: Bad maids are no good. Good maids are bad. That is the only dif- ference between them. (Curtain) —BARON M UNCHA US EN. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI l np. • m ' itfeii Haiti. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI PICTORIAL SUPPLEMENT 1928 BOARD Robert Chapman Landon Chairman Walker Harden V ' tce-Cliairman Griffith Ellis Fulton Business Manager William C. Dickerman, Jr. Assistant Business Manager Eben Learned, Jr. Managing Editor William McC. Martin, Jr. Photographic Editor PICTORHl SI 1 1 I (MhM ASSOCIATE EDITORS 1929 R. C. Damon G. A. Espy S. Hyde, 2d B. Pagenstecher K. Ravenscroft A. B. Shepley W. E. Terry 1930 P. Van D. Beckwith G. P. Clayson, Jr. J. Espy J. S. Graetzer, Jr. V. M. Jackson G. W. Pearson N. Rogers 1931 J. S. Buckley C. H. Dickerman R. S. Newhall SIX years have brought the Pictorial Supplement of the Yale Daily Xews to the most healthy point of its career. As we who have known it in the cradle turn and reach for cap and gown, we think of the efforts of those before us. G. M. Pynchon under- took the establishment of the Pictorial in the fall of 1922, and conducted the first competition in 1923. Associated with him the following year were L. J. Kane and J. W. B. Smith of the class of ' 25. Three men were on the board the following year, then four and, to-day, six editors are required to direct the activities of the paper. All the younger editors know exactly what the Pictorial needs in way of improvement, and the retir- ing board feels that with so many pairs of sleeves rolled back to the elbow, the Pic will suffer no dearth of creation. Peering at the world through one eye, it is our pleasure to see much and say little. We need not deliver Yale from the dangers of an impotent faculty. Freshman tene- ments, exposure to religion, or the many problems which creep to the breast of our dear mother, O. C. D., for life. 229 CHAIRMAN LANUON YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI i YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Dwipht Macdonald, 28, Chnininui I.. S. Piatt, ' 28, Mannyhig Editor S. Gail Landon, Jr., 28, Business Manager A. H. B. Peabody, ■28. Cirridation Mannr fr R. C. Osborn, ' 28, Art Editor X. C. Dookendorff, ' 28, Advertising Manager S. Walker, ' 28, Assistnnt Business Manager 1928 T. V. Copeland S. Gross G. T. Hellman AV. Hobson EDITORS J. C. C. Holdin, Jr. J. K. .Jessop P. J. I.inson S. A. Peck J. B. Zerbe 1929 C. J. Balliett A. W. Griswold E. I.. Homniel J. Otterson J. AV. Pepper J. J. Scliiiferes D. T. Ward 1930 T. M. Folds 1931 E. W. Beattie, Jr. 1928 A. F. CampbeU F. B. Ryan H. Spitzer BUSINESS STAFF p. Switz G. W. WyckofF 1929 W. C. Crawford R. Hubbell F. M. Sherwln H. Southworth O. Sterling 1930 C. P. Clifford J. B. Longstreth J. M. Weil S. C. WeUs, Jr. 1931 0. C. Hardy The Sour Note EV ' ER since old Eliliu Yale opened the bidding back in 1702 (was it?) with these books for tlie found- ing of a college, the Yale market has been decidedly bullish. Throughout our tribal tents Hosannah has been the resounding cry rather tlian Eili! Eili ! Translating these fevered metaphors for the benefit of those who are neither stockbrokers nor students of Hebrew, there has always been a tendency in our right little tight little col- lege towards an uncritical acceptance of present condi- tions together with a belief as naive as it is provincial that Yale is the best of all possible universities in this best of all possible lands. Now all who have studied the rise and fall of nations (and with Freshman History compulsory, who has not?) know that there is no state of mind more dangerous to the institution possessing it than that j ust indicated. Xo state or college tliat is unwilling to tolerate well-founded criticism and to adapt itself accordingly can be considered to be in good health. Yale is wealthy, to the extent of twentv million at least, but is she also DWIGHT MACDONALD. CHAIRMAN 233 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI liealtliy and wise? The Owl thinks not, and so during the ))ast year he lias tried to inject a little health and a little wisdom into her, using for that hypodermic the needle of criticism filled with tlie germ-fiuid of wit and humor, to speak with a more than Oriental hjperbole. When every- one was huzzaing and throwing up his cap at the success of the World-Wide Never-to-be-Forgotten Endowment Drive and gushing about the Great Yale Family tliat Reaches around the Globe, the Owl merely coughed ironically behind his wing. When people spoke of the splendid Yale faculty, the Owl winked a wise old eye. When that eighth wonder of the world, the Yale curricu- lum, came in for its meed of ])raise from some faculty die-hard, the Owl merely remarked, No, I thank you. I ' m not taking any. ' All in all, he was the most dis- agreeable, ornery, cross-grained old bird you could imagine. In addition to his critical exploits, he also went so far as to flirt an impertinent wing in the face of col- lege morality in the notorious Film Fun number which shocked the local sin-sniffers but which, strangely enough, sold out on the local news stands. Thus in his brief career the 1928 Owl has succeeded, to what extent he modestly leaves to you. in making himself a fly in the professional ointment, a thorn in the side of authoritj , a worm in the round ros) ' apple of Yale. Believing that in these groves of Academe and shadj ' walks of Minerva there is need of a little more Worcestershire and a little less apple sauce, he has persistentlj- acted on that conviction — with sometimes disastrous but always interesting results. In the sweet sj ' mphony of rejoicing that ascended daily last year from the spires and gables of Yale, there was one consistently sour note, the product, we are proud to say, of that prince YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI I I II , MOMENTARY FORGETFULNESS Geez, me beads! Sonnet to a Dancing Partner OF country maidens have our poets sung And all the joys that rural lovers knew In vanished days when mossy for- ests rung With madrigals — ah, ages lost from view ! The rustic bower, the swing, the maypole too That stood on village green with streamers hung. Round which revolved the simple country crew — All these have had their due from poet ' s tongue. The hurden of m song is Ballroom Love, The sort that disarranges evening ties. That wages war with powder-iniff and glove, A formal game of speaking lips, and eyes. I sing the joys, discarding subter- fuge. Of pressing cheeks incarnadined with rouge. Two Other Jokesters Get Together TJELLO, Ned. Have you heard the new ' gland ' -Tl. song? No. What? ■ Pituitary Body Here Seen Kelly? ' Oh, hello there, Fred. Have you heard the new ' golf song? No. What? ' Any Birdy Here Seen Kelly ? ' Well, gotta be going, Ned. Have you heard the new ' chambermaid ' song . ' ' No. What? ' Any Biddy Here Seen Kelly? ' See you later, Fred. Have you heard the new ' pal ' song? No. What? ' Any Buddy Here Seen Kelly ? ' O.K., Ned. Have you heard the new dirty song? S ' long, Fred. No. What? ' Anv Bawdv Here Seen Kellv ? ' G ' bv, Ned. The Little Fellow: Merry Christmas! The Big One: Yeah? 235 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE SCIENTIFIC MACxAZINE EDITORS Van Court Lucas, Chairman Chari.es Daniel Mahoney, Vice-Chairman Maurice Hazeiavood Fisher, Managing Editor Frank Dwight Sage, Circulation Manager GiLFRY Ward, Assistant Managing Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS T. P. Field, 28 S. G. K. deForest, ' 29 S. J. H. Bagg, ' 28 S. T. F. Smith, Jr., ' 29 S. J. K. Beeson, ' 29 S. W. E. deBuys, ' 29 S. E. T. Earl, ' 29 S. A. M. Laidlaw, ' 29 S. W. E. Hoblitzelle, Jr., ' 29 S. 236 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE Published Quarterly in the Interest of Science and Engineering in the Sheffield Scientific School A FEW years ago, a group of seniors in the Sheffield Scientific School felt the need of a scientific magazine to further the interests of science and engineering in that department of the University. Last year, after many months of shattered Iiojjes and disappointments, the plans were well enough established to go ahead with the make-up of the first issue, which made its ap- jjearance in iNIay, 1927. To say that the editors produced a magazine sur- prisingly well finished as to contents and make-up, and that they made a financial success of this issue whereas it was underwritten for a loss, is insuffi- cient praise for those who worked so untiringly to make the project an actual and successful fact. The faculty has been very generous in making valuable suggestions and in submitting most of the material for the issues uj) to this time. It is, however, the added desire of the editors to obtain more articles from men engaged in engineering and scientific enterprises throughout the country, and in that way develop the magazine so that it will become the organ through which the undergraduates, the graduates, and the outside world hear of the accomplish- ments of Yale ' s great scientific body. We feel that there are great jjossibilities for the future of such a publica- tion as this, and that added departments and improvements have started to and will make it a permanent factor in the University. 237 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = Ward North Nettleton Stev Saunders SHEFFIELD SENIOR CLASS BOOK, 1928 Olin ' a. Saunders, Chairman Thomas J. North, Treasurer COMMITTEE William T. Kelly, Jr. VanCourt Lucas Charles E. Nettleton Elmer A. Stevens Gilfry Ward YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The Brick Row Book Shop, Inc. In December, 191.3, there was established at Yale The Brick Rmv Book Shop, an institution the primary object of which was to inculcate a love for books amongst the undergraduates, through the ownership of good books. Its incorporators included Anson Phelps Stokes, George Henry Nettle- ton, Roswell P. Angier, Samuel H. Fisher, George Family Day, and the late John C. Schwab, who saw the need and value of having a book shop which would bring books within the reach of and give encouragement to their col- lection by the undergraduate. Success has attended the activities of the Brick lioti: from its beginning. Each year has seen an increasing number of imdergraduates using the Shop, many of whom have become collectors to no slight degree. In April, 1920, at the invitation of a number of aknnni, a Xew York Shop was opened at 19 East 47th Street. Its immediate support, in large measure by the graduates of Yale, showed that there was at least as great a need for a University book shop in New York, where graduates of Yale might find a congenial place wherein to fill their book needs, and where they could utilize the many resources of the Brick Rorc for everything relating to books. In the same year the directors received an invitation from the Princeton University authorities to open a shop at Princeton. After a year ' s operation there. President Hibben declared that the Brick Rorc was an important institution of cultural influence on the life of the University. The growth of the Brick Rozv has proved the vision of its founders, in that it has become an important educative and cultural adjunct to the work of the classroom, and has proved of incalculable good to the undergraduate whom it serves. Officers Edmond Byrxe Hackett, President Robert K. Root, Vice-President Kathryx F. Moore, Secretary and Acting Treasurer Directors Roswell P. Angier Henry A. Colgate Edmond B. Hackett Philip R. Mallory George D. Olds, Jr. Russell G. Pruden Robert K. Root Lewis S. Welch Eugene Ferrin Clark. Manager of the Xew Haven Shop Ml YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS The Yale University Press is owned and controlled by Yale University. It was founded in 1908 by George Parnily Day, with the idea of striving to advance the cause of scholarship and letters tliroughout the world by the publication of works and letters possessing permanent interest and value whether or not the authors were connected with Yale. From one point of view the Yale University Press is really the Extension Depart- ment of the University, and, as such, its influence has become international. Through the supervision exercised by the Council ' s Committee on Publications, the high quality of its publications is assured, and each volume carries the authority of the University with it. At the time of his retirement from the direction of the University, President Hadley said: The thing on which I look back with the most satisfaction in my whole administration is the development of the publishing work of the University and the recognition it lias obtained throughout tlie world. I regard The Yale Review and the Yale University Press as our best products of the last twenty years. More recently President Angell has made the following statement: The Yale Hevieu- and the Yale University Press both render service of the very highest order. The Review is by common consent one of the outstanding journals covering the whole range of con- temporary thought. The Press, by the uniformly high standard of the works it pub- lishes, as well as by the extraordinary beauty and excellence of their printing and binding, is everywhere accorded a place in the front rank of tiie great publishing concerns. Yale is justly proud of both. During the past year the Yale University Press has added many important vol- umes to its list now comprising more than one thousand titles. Among these new pub- lications may be mentioned: A limited edition of Tu-o Washington Irving Note Books, edited by Stanley T. Williams; The Immediate Origins of the War by Pierre Renouvin, translated by Theodore C. Hume; Marching 7cith Sherman. The Campaign Diaries of Henry Hitchcock, edited by ]M. A. DeWolfe Howe; four new volumes in the im])ortant scries known as The Corridors of Time by Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure; a translation of Rostand ' s L ' Aiglon by Basil Davenport; a volume descriptive of the Italian Primitives at Yale University, by Richard Oft ' ner. There have also been sig- nificant additions to the list of the Williamstown Institute of Politics and The Division of Economics and History of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, both of which institutions publish through tlic Yale University Press. 242 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Following the Ten Etchings of Yale Universit} ' , by I ouis Orr, which were issued by the Yale University Press in 1926, there will be a striking scries of the Ports of America, ready for distribution in the autumn of 1928. Through its Educational Department the Press has continued to distribute those of its publications which are designed primarily for use in educational work. Among the volumes most in demand for teaching purposes ai e The Yale Shakespeare now complete in forty volumes ; MacCracken ' s The College Chaucer; the textbook edition of The Chronicles of America; certain volumes in T ie Pageant of America; and The Science of Society by Sumner and Keller. The Film Service of the Press, closeU ' co-operating with members of the Depart- ment of Education at Yale University, has continued to promote the definite and sys- tematic use of the Chronicles of America Photoplays in schools and colleges through- out the country. Among the authors of the Yale University Press may be found the following names: Lord Bryce, Allen Johnson, Graham Wallas, Arthur Twining Hadley, Pierre Renouvin, Charles Evans Hughes, Wilbur C. xVbbott, Viscount Haldane, William Gra- ham Sumner, William Howard Taft, Benedict Crowell, Sir William Osier, Edward Salisbury Dana, George Bird Grinnell, Ellsworth Huntington, Josiah Roycc, William Ernest Hocking, Wilbur Lucius Cross, Henry Augustin Beers, Henry Bordeaux, Henry W. Nevinson, Samuel Butler, William H. Davies, Benjamin X. Cardozo, John Drink- water, Lee W ilson Dodd, Padraic Colum, Charles Reynolds Brown, Roscoe Pound, Frederick S. Dellenbaugh, George B. Cutten, Robert Shafer, Thomas X. Morgan, J. Arthur Thomson, Grant Showerman, Albert G. Keller, Henry Louis Russell, Charles Seymour, Arthur S. Eddington, Clarence W. Mentlell, ]Max Farrand, August Krogh, Charles M. Andrews, Paul Claudel. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1 lllffil Bm? - ' ' ' I|p3 ' 1 f i ' IH ' 1 Byington Hersey Miller Milliken Haight Ravenscroft THE ELI BOOK (Founded 1909) With which is combined the Yale Freshman Handbook (Founded 1881) EDITORS George W. Haight, ' 28 Nathan T. Jlillikcn, 28 ASSISTANT EDITORS Artliur B. Hersey, ' 29 Homer ]M. Byington, Jr., ' 30 Kent Ravenscroft, ' 29 Herbert C. Miller, Jr., ' 30 24.4. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI The Peabody Museum BY RICHARD SWANN LULL OF the many departments of Yale, few have greater popular appeal than her museums, hut two of which, that of the Fine Arts and that of Natu- ral History, are adequately housed. The other collections of a museum nature are scattered through various rooms, laboratories, and libraries and are there- fore not so accessible nor so fully appreciated as they might be. The Fine Arts building, which is something more than one- third its ultimate size, is admii-ably designed and will be fully available during the coming collegiate year, while the Peabodj ' INIuseum collections were installed in their new home two or more years ago and have been thus accessible for that period. With a museum, as with a human being, there are two aspects, one the outward and visible body, the building, and the other the spirit animating it. Peabody luseum in the latter sense has had an existence of some sixty- two j ears, having been founded by George Peabody, the philanthropist, in the year 1866 and endowed as a distinct institution within the University, with its own self-perpetuating board of Trustees. To it were given collections in natural history which had been accumulating at Yale, in some instances since the beginning of tlie nineteenth centiu ' y, and subsequent material has l)een added to the original collections by gift and purchase until they have reached very large proportions indeed and now constitute one of the greatest imiversity collections in America, if not in the world. George Peabody also made provision for the housing of the collections, which, until 1873, were in diverse college buildings with some of them even stored in the basement of the Old State House on the Green. The first mu- seum building was merely the north wing of what was designed to be a large structure, extending along the entire block on High Street between Library and Elm Streets, where the INIemorial Quadrangle now stands. This design was never carried out, and the unlovely, but highly serviceable unit was finally 246 RICHARD SWANN LULL DIRECTOR OF THE MUSEUM YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI destroj-etl after forty years of use to make way for Yale ' s most beautiful architectural feature. A period of more or less inaccessible storage followed, and at the end of the seven leanest years in its history the institution was reincar- nated and made once more a tan il)le thing in tlie present edifice on Whitney Avenue. Here its service to Y ale and her sister colleges of Connecticut, to the local schools, and to the public generally is increasing with the years. Such an institution is not, however, content with the mere display of its ex- hibition series, however complete and admirable that may be. Its spirit also is manifest through its publications of a technical, or more or less popular, char- acter, which spread its influence in the sphere of education to the uttermost corners of the globe. The result is a ' ' ' ' ■ large and continually growing body of Ijublished research, the production of which is one of the most important functions of the institution and of Y ale. The collections are thus divided into the exhibition and teaching series on the one hand and the storage material on the other. The latter is not, however, merely jJut away for safe-keeping, as one would store unused things too good to throw away, but it is as carefidly arranged in large storage halls as the exhibition series itself. The exhibition material has already given up to the scientific world much that it can teach, but the storage material is a largely unworked mine of information, the basis of future research, and no one can tell the secrets as yet locked within it. The early curators, Verrill, Marsh, and the Danas, gave not only of their time and energy, but, especially in Pro- fessor JNIarsh ' s case, of their fortimes also, and they collected largely, wisely, and well. To them are due both the material growth of the collections and their scientific exploitation. Since the cessation of their active service their 247 Restoration of the lifeof a Silurian sea-floor. Leftabove. ajellyflsh, witli coiled nautiloids below. The flowerlike animals growing on stiUks are crinoids and cystoids, brachiopods cling to the rocks, in the right foreground is YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI successors have carried on, although of late years, except for certain very notahle gifts, the accessions have not been so numerous as they were during the formative period, the last third of the past century. Much work of inter- pretation has been done, however, in the mounting and up-to-date display of the exhibition series and the scientific description of the whole. The visitor is impressed not only by the perfection of the individual speci- mens but by the orderlj ' arrangement of the exhibition halls, both as units and as parts of a general scheme which serves not only to bring before the eye each interesting object but to show the great processes of nature and the majesty of the created whole. Of the four floors of the building, the basement is given over largely to storage. The groinid floor includes five exhibition halls, in which are displayed both fossil and recent animals in such a way as to show the continuity of life throughout the ages and thus attest to the reasonable- ness of a belief in creative evolution. Here also are shown a series of fossils arranged in their stratigraphic sequence for the demonstration of historical geology, and a number of habitat groups showing animals in their natural surroundings, either actual, or, in the case of prehistoric forms, imagined. The second floor is devoted to offices, the library, seminar rooms, and laboratories, while the third is again an exhibition floor, whose successive halls contain u S ♦ , , Jurassic dinosaurs in their native haunts. In the bayou are the huy e sauropods Brontosaurus and Barosaurus. To the right is a carnivorous type, Allosaurus, feeding on a sauropod carcass, while on the left another Altosaurus is chasing a stegosaur. 2418 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI minerals, meteorites, and transjiarencies of the heav- enly bodies, economic and local zoology, and eth- nology. The tower is used for research and contains also a room dedicated to the use of children. Two items of more than passing interest are the Foucault pendu- lum in the entrance rotunda, which demonstrates the rotation of the earth upon its axis, and, beneath it, in the crypt, a seismograph, which records earth tremors uj) to several thousand miles away. Local clubs and other organizations make occa- sional or habitual use of the jSIuseum ' s hospitality, but no public lectm-es of large attendance are possible, al- though they would be of great interest and value, be- cause there is as yet no auditorium other than the com- I aratively small seminar and children ' s rooms. This greatly needed addition to the building, as well as sj)ace for further storage and research, and possibly for the adequate housing of the additional collections, concerned with those THE VALE SEISMOGRAPH E THE PEABODY MUSEUM 249 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI phases of human endeavor which he hetween man ' s natural history and the fine arts, will, it is hoped, hecome realities when funds shall liave heen obtained for their construction. A portion of the Great ll.iil 1 li, ' If.ri-m.i t niemhrr ..f thr ,l;Mo MHr tin.l.-m i v„ which stands Head Preparator Hiieh (iibb; in the rear is the small-headed S(eoo« i along its curving spine, and its tail bristling with spikes. 251 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI i 0- YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI GENERAL AT LETI THE Athletic Association reports that favorable progress has been made during the past year in all phases of undergraduate athletic activities. The purpose under- lying the development of facilities for physical recreation and organized competition in athletics, in conjunction with the educational program of the University, is perhaps more generally understood by students and alumni than ever before, with the result that a most healthful situation exists. The coaching staff is being maintained at its traditionally high standard and the relations between coaches and stu- dents are particularly pleasant and satisfactory. Empiiasis is placed on the fact that athletics are conducted in the interests of the individual student. Our coaches recognize the fact that they owe a special duty to the members of the various squads and the results obtained from their coaching, meas- ured in terms of student proficiency and mental atti- tude, are increasingly satisfactory. Notable additions to facilities for sport have been made during the year. Perhaps the most out- standing accomplishment is the completion of the Coxe Memorial Cage. This structure was made pos- sible through the generosity of the family of Charles E. Coxe, ' 93 S., and it satisfies a need of long stand- ing. It is impossible to express in words our very real gratitude to those who have made this fine piece of equipment available for our use. The new basebal l stands have been completed and the general appearance of the field has been improved. The increase in traffic on Derby Avenue created a dangerous situation for those using fields on the south side of that tlioroughfare. To eliminate tiie possibility of injury, a tunnel has been constructed under Derby Avenue, leading from the dressing rooms in the Lapham Field House to the old field. A new soccer and lacrosse field lias been completed and additional tennis courts are under construction, all of which will provide much-needed space for sports which are rapidly increasing in popularity. The Phipps Polo Field lias been completed on the west side of the Armory which provides playing space for this sport second to none in college circles. The Undergraduate Athletic Association is functioning splendidly and the utmost harmony prevails between the student organization and the Board of Control. The undergraduates continue to show sound judgment and appreciation of merit in the 254 HAROLD F. WOODCOCK GENERAL MANAGER YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI selection of captains and managers. Our relations with other colleges in all branches of intercollegiate competition continue on a friendly plane. The past year marks the retirement of T. A. D. Jones as head coach of football after eight consecutive years of meritorious service. His passing from active charge of this sport is universally re- gretted. The selection of Marvin A. Stevens as his successor assures the University of a continuation of the same general policy in football which has prevailed in the past. The position of Athletic Director, vacant for one year after the retirement of John T. Blossom, has been filled by the appointment of John M. Gates under whom the develop- ment of facilities for more widespread participation in athletics will go forward with every prospect of increased service to the student body. e 1 .■ M mI M p! ' | 1 |B|S HH H fe ' -Li- « _ ;■ ., , SjHbl HH H IglUli -f smi if liil ' iiili iJteiliv H 1 Hp - ' ww 1 ■ CADETS PARADING IN THE BOWL 255 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI BOARD OF CONTROL George H. Nettleton, Chairman George Parmly Day, Treasurer James C. Greenway, Secretary Harold F. Woodcock, General Manager GRADUATE MEMBERS FACULTY MEMBERS President James R. Angell Yale College Clarence W. Mendell, ' 04. R. Selden Rose, ' 09 Sheffield Scientific School Charles H. Warren, ' 96 S. Charles J. Tilden, ' 19 Hon. Freshman Year Percy T. Walden, ' 92 S. Mortimer N. Buckner, ' 95 James C. Greenway, ' 00 Malcolm P. Aldrich, ' 22 GRADUATE COMMITTEES ' CHAIR- MEN General Athletics, George T. Adee, ' 95 Football, T. A. D. Jones, ' 08 S. Baseball, Burnside Winslow, ' 04 Crew, Frederick Sheffield, ' 2-1 Track, Alfred C. Gilbert, ' 09 Hockey, Ezekiel S. Bronson, ' 00 UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS William A. Webster, ' 28 S. Sabin W. Carr, ' 28 Horton Spitzcr, ' 28 S. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF CONTROL George H. Nettleton, Chairman James C. Greenway R. Selden Rose Horton Spitzer Sabin W. Carr YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Eldridge Scott Peck Jr. Wa Stewart Va ughan Webster Robbins. 3d UNDERGRADUATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 1927-1928 W. A. Webster, ' 28 S., Chairman H. Spitzer, ' 28 S., Secretary S. W. Carr, ' 28 J. K. Curtis, ' 28 H. Eldridge, ' 28 I. H. Peck, Jr., ' 28 S. Robbins, 3d, ' 28 S. S. P. Scott, ' 28 P. H. Stewart, 28 R. r. Vaughan, ' 28 G. Ward, ' 28 S. 258 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI FOOTBALL COMMITTEE 1927-1928 L. E. Stoddard, ' 99 A. L. Gates, ' 18 A. L. Corey, ' 11 W. L. Richeson, Jr., ' 24 S. C. D. Raffertv, ' 04- S. P. L. Veeder, ' 07 S. CREW CO]M] riTTEE 1927-1928 Frederick Sheffield, ' 24, Chairman J. M. Goetchius, ' 94 S. R. B. Russell, ' 23 Seth Low, ' 16 B. M. Spock, ' 25 C. J. Coe, ' 15 J. S. Rockefeller, ' 24 S. Y. Hord, ' 21 F. F. Robinson, ' 27 TRACK COINIMITTEE 1927-1928 A. C. Gilbert, ' 09 M., Chairjnan J. R. Kilpatrick, ' 11 H. G. Laphani, ' 97 C. S. Gage, ' 25 W. M. Oler, Jr., 16 J. T. Bryan, ' 14 S. F. P. Heffelfinger, ' 20 H. S. Brooks, ' 85 F. P. Garvan, ' 97 E. B. Coxe, 3d, ' 18 BASEBALL COMMITTEE 1927-1928 Burnside Winslow, ' 04, Chairman A. M. Hirsh, ' 01 :M. P. Aldrich, ' 22 J. F. Riddell, Jr., ' 13 S. E. S. Bronson, ' 00 R. S. Rose, ' 09 HOCKEY COMMITTEE 1927-1928 E. S. Bronson, ' 00, Chairman George T. Adee, ' 95 J. O. Bulkley, ' 23 J. E. Bierwirth, ' 17 Sanford Stoddard, ' 99 BASKETBALL COMMITTEE 1927-1928 W. McK. Barber, ' 05 S. C. Stradella, ' 19 William P. Arnold, ' 15 S. C. P. Taft, ' 18 DeForest Van Slyck, ' 20 259 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MAJOR Y MEN W. Brady, ' 28 J. A. Brandenburg, ' 29 S. B. Caldwell, ' 28 D. B. Cox, ' 28 D. B. Fishwick, ' 28 D. T. Bartholomew, ' 28 FOOTBALL J. p. Flaherty, ' 28 A. S. Foote, ' 28 E. A. Goodwine, ' 28 C. D. Harvey, ' 28 J.J. Hoben, ' 29 S. S. S. Quarrier, ' 28 S. CREW H. B. Cannon, ' 28 S. S. S. Quarrier, ' 28 S. S. Robhins, 3d, ' 28 S F. B. Ryan, ' 28 S. P. Stott, ' 28 K. D. Stone, ' 28 P. F. Switz, ' 29 P. H. Stewart, ' :; C. H. Brockelman, ' 29 S. B. Caldwell, ' 28 A. S. Foote, ' 28 M. J. Grove, ' 29 BASEBALL W. S. Hamniersley, ' ii J. J. Hoben, ' 29 S. J. McCleUan, ' 28 I. H. Peck, Jr., ' 28 R. A. Sawyer, ' 29 E. L. Sehmidt, ' 28 W. R. Shoop, ' 28 D. T. Smith, ' 28 R. F. Vaughan, ' 28 G. B. Berger, ' 28 W. Bradley, ' 28 J. A. Brandenburg, ' 29 S. F. B. Brown, ' 28 S. S. W. Carr, ' 28 G. H. Crile, ' 29 A. F. Dean, ' 29 W. S. Edwards, Jr., ' 28 H. M. Ellis, ' 30 TRACK C. H. Engle, ' 30 J. W. Evans, ' 28 R. Game, ' 28 S. C. B. Hogan, ' 28 T. N. Ingham, ' 28 F. C. Jarecki, ' 29 S. S. B. Kieselhorst, ' 30 G. H. Larsen, ' 28 J. S. O ' Gorman, ' 29 S. A. Pond, 3d, ' 29 S. S. W. Robbins, ' 28 S. L. P. Ross, ' 28 J. E. Schurman, ' 29 F. K. Sheldon, ' 29 S. K. D. Stone, ' 28 F. H. Sturdy, ' 29 G. V. Wolf, ' 30 R. J. Wood, ' 28 F. H. Wood, ' 28 E. G. Cahill, ' 30 J. A. House, Jr., ' 28 S. SWIMMING W. S. Meany, ' 28 W. Sandford, ' 28 S. P. Scott, ' 28 J. C. Brady, Jr., ' 29 R. G. Cadv, ' 29 S. J. K. Curtis, ' 28 P. Curtis, ' 29 T. C. Farnsworth, ' 29 H. A. Fletcher, ' 29 HOCKEY D. H. Hickok, ' 30 R. M. Kurd, Jr., ' 28 R. C. Knight, ' 28 W. R. I.apham, ' 28 W. H. Palmer, ' 30 J. Rol)V. Jr., ' 28 F. B. Ryan, Jr., ' 28 W. Sizer, ' 30 J. C. West, ' 30 R. F. Wilson, ' 30 R. F. Vaughan, ' 28 A. Y. Warner, ' 29 WRESTLING B. C. Miller, ' 28 260 BANNER AND POT PO MINOR Y MEN 1 1 1 i 1 1 i 1 j BASKETBALL i i 1 j K. F. Billhardt, ' 29 S. C. H. Brockelman, ' 29 S. A. H. Bryant, ' 28 J. W. Cook, ' 29 P. K. Fodder, ' 29 CREW Y with crossed oars A. P. McNulty, ' 28 G. Ward, ' 28 S. I i i 1 i W. G. Brown, ' 29 S. W. Cragin, ' 28 F. A. Drake, ' 29 R. C. Durant, ' 28 H. S. Griggs, ' 28 FENCING R. M. Holter, ' 29 W. P. Jenkins, ' 29 F. A. Truslow, ' 28 1 J 1 t 1 i C. P. Babcock, ' 29 D. B. Blossom, ' 28 D. Every, ' 28 A. Hyde, ' 29 B. G. Lee, Jr.. ' 28 R. Naussbaum, Jr., ' 28 S. LACROSSE F. S. Righeimer, Jr., ' 29 H. W. Snow, ' 28 G. I,. Ward, ' 29 1 1 j j 1 1 1 i O. J. Allaire, ' 28 S. C. W. Bouck, ' 28 S. T. P. Field, ' 28 5. H. W. Green, ' 28 C. Hahn, -28 E. V. Hupgins, ' 28 JI. A. Mclntyre, ' 28 M. H. Oettinger. ' 28 J. Roby, Jr., ' 28 POLO E. A. Stevens, ' 28 S. R. Taggart, ' 29 S. G. S. Tatman, ' 28 J. C. Vaden, ' 29 S. 1 ; 1 i i j H. C. Adams, ' 29 F. C. Baldwin, ' 28 p. Folger, ' 29 SWIMMING J. H. H. Phipps, ' 28 0. M. M ' allop, ' 28 i i 1 i i R. A. Greer, ' 28 C. R. Hogen, ' 29 J. A. House, Jr., ' 28 S. ■ V. S. Meanv. Jr., ' 28 J. A. Pope, ' 29 F. M. Rickman, ' 28 W. F. Sanford, ' 28 WATER POLO S. P. Scott, ' 28 J. C. Vaden, ' 29 S. W. W. Walsh, ' 29 j 1 1 j j i i 1 1 G. E. Blun, ' 28 W. B. Cressy, ' 28 E. L. Decker, Jr., ' 29 S. J. Dow, Jr., ' 29 S. J. C. Hutchison, ' 28 WRESTLING C. M. Poore, ' 29 S. P. Scott, ' 28 1 i 1 R. P. Bisson, ' 28 S. W. W. Blunt, Jr., ' 28 S. B. Dodd, ' 29 A. C. Hoffman, Jr., ' 29 S. G. L. Kreider, ' 29 S. B. C. Miller. ' 28 H. W. A ylie, ' 29 1 j 1 i 1 1 1 261 1 1 i i U YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MAJOR SPORTS OMETHING is frequently said about mens sana in corpore sano, and the cry that there is too much emphasis on athletics at Yale shows an aptitude to overlook the fact that this undergraduate interest indicates a healthy state of mind as well as a healthy state of body. Success or failure on the athletic field is, more- over, a bond which is able not only to draw together the enthusiasms of the imdergradu- ates but also those of all who claim any associa- tions with Yale. If Yale means more than an open book, certainly a part of the more that she does mean is the result of the co-operation and team play that is required of her teams, as well as of those who support her teams. 362 Ilklcoltii l uiicaH YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Football Season THIS book for the past few years has contained reviews of the football season that have attempted to solace the reader witli the statement that regardless of victories the spirit of victory has been present. This year both the spirit and the victories were with us, and few will contest that Tad Jones ' s last year was one of the greatest in Yale football. Work started on September 15 with much the same spirit as it ended on November 19 at Cambridge. A squad of about 125 reported for practice, many more than in previous years. A new dressing room had been completed at the Armory so that the whole squad dressed together, making it more of a unit than before. Exer- cises and kicking practice were held in the mornings, and in the afternoons the usual dummy practice and conditioning work took up most of the time. The lineup at the time of the first game was by no means settled and the team was a long distance from its later unity. BOWDOIN, OCTOBER 1 The Bowdoin game resembled a baseball more than a football game. Tiie intense heat required each side to use five or six teams and the outcome was decided more by the condi- tion of the men than perfection of plays. The score of 41 to will show that Yale far outclassed Bowdoin but it was due more to her numbers of reserve material than actual playing ability. Yet strength both in offense and defense showed that Yale had great possibilities. The line stopped nearly all of the plunges of the Bowdoin backs and the offense with Cald- well, Hammersley, Garvey, and Cox showed great power. Yale worked several successful forward passes and showed promise of future skill. The punting of Caldwell and Ham- mersley was fine and the general condition of the team showed that the pre-season work had had its effect. GEORGIA UNIVERSITY, OCTOBER 8 The Georgia game blasted all hope of an undefeated season. Seven times Yale was within Georgia ' s ten-yard line and seven fumbles added to four intercepted passes took Yale to a 14 to 10 defeat. Georgia scored first on a finely executed pass in the first period. Yale ' s passing game was also fairly successful but unfortunately the touchdowns were lacking. She excelled Georgia in every department of the game except clean handling of the ball, and the fumbles came at times when a touchdown seemed certain. Late in the fourth period a pass, Loud to Scott, looked like a victory in sight but the touchdown was ruled out as the receiver stepped over tlie end zone in catching it. When the game ended it was hard to realize that a Yale team, showing the strength it did, had been beaten by a team which, at that point, was only mediocre. Its effect upon the team was very noticeable. Hopes of an undefeated season were gone, but there remained the Big Three Championship, and the consolation of conquering several other teams whose unde- feated records made them formidable opponents. T. A. D. JONES, 08 s. COACH OF FOOTBALL BROWN, OCTOBER 15 The next week Brown ' s Iron Men visited New Haven to attempt to renew their victory of the v ' ear before. The papers had pictured a fumbling bulldog which seemed easy prey for 265 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI the Iron Men. Yet they met a Yale line, lu-aded by Captain Webster, which withstood all the attempts of Cornsweet and Randall to break through. For three periods Brown tried play after play against a line which seemed weak with onlj- six men, but which thev failed to penetrate. It was the ability of this line to wear down its opponents which made much of Yale ' s scoring possible in all future games. The interference also showed up very well in this game and with Cox and Decker heading the play, Caldwell and Haniniersley gained con- sistently. Yale ' s passes also showed a great improvement over the week before and four out of seven tried were completed. Scott showed a remarkable ability to handle seemingly impossible passes and with Caldwell and Hoben at the throwing end. things worked smoothly. The game ended after Hammer.sley had added a touchdown to the two of Caldwell ' s, for a score of 19 to 0. ARMY, OCTOBER 22 One of the best games of this season was the Army game. Just as Brown brouglit to New Haven eight veterans, so the Army had seven players of the previous year including a backfield of Cagle, Wilson, and Murrell, one of the best sets of backs in the country. Yet in this game Yale showed more strength than the week before, both on ofl ' ense and defense. Early in the first period Caldwell threw a thirty- yard pass to Quarrier who ran for eleven yards, finally falling over tlie goal line with two Army tacklers on his back. This i lay, combined with the pass which made the Army ' s touchdown possible and Yale ' s stand on her two-yard line, were the outstanding features of the game. In the second ])eriod Army took the ball to Yale ' s seven-yard line and from there had five downs to put it over. It seemed that a touch- down was certain, especially when a penalty for Yale put the ball on the two-yard line with two downs to put it over. But here neither Wilson nor Murrell could penetrate a Yale line in wliich Webster, Charlesworth, and Greene stopped both tries. Immediately after Yale had punted out of this danger, another Army march again brought the ball close to the goal line and again the line stopped them. In the third period, after Yale had been held for three downs, Caldwell kicked a perfect drop-kick from the IS-yard line, into the wind. The score was now 10 to but in the fourth period Cagle threw a thirty-yard pass straight down the center of the field to Harbold who took it to the three-yard line from which Wilson scored for Army ' s six points, leaving the score at 10 to 6. DARTMOUTH, OCTOBER 29 The Dartmouth game was another victory for Yale, with a 19 to score. Dartmouth ' s famous passing combination, Marsters to Lane, resulted in several gains and four intercep- tions by Decker. For Yale, Garvey scored two touchdowns and Caldwell one, each coming after a steady march down the field. Again the Yale line stopped a strong attack which more than once carried the ball within the ten-j ' ard line. In the first quarter Marsters of Dartmouth made one of the prettiest runs of the year. Intercepting a pass on his forty-yard line, he went down the field, never more than five j ' ards from the sidelines until he was stopped by Hoben on Yale ' s 8-yard line. Here Yale held and Dartmouth ' s attempted place kick failed. Throughout the game Yale outclassed the Green in every way and played as fine fo otball as they ever did. MARYLAND. NOVEMBER .5 On November 5 Yale ' s passing game accounted for the score of 30 to 6 against Mary- land. All of the touchdowns were made in the first half, two being the result of forward passes. 266 M. H. EDDY CAPTAIN ELECT YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI HARVARD GAME In this half Yale completed six out of eight passes tried, for a total of 138 yards. Maryland ' s score also came in this half, when Snyder received a kick-off and ran 90 yards through the entire Yale team for a touciidown. In defeating Maryland, Y ' ale conquered the third of the four teams that defeated her last season. PRIXCETON, NOVEMBER 12 Yale met Princeton with the odds about even. In the first period Princeton started a drive from her twenty-five-yard line which ended in a touchdown bj Wittmer. In the second period Yale twice carried the ball within Princeton ' s ten-yard line but was unable to put it over. It looked as if the game would end with Princeton 6, Yale 0. Yet, with onh ' ten minutes to play, and just after a penalty which put tiie goal even further away, Hoben threw a pass to Fish- wick who ran 25 yards for a gain of 15 yards on the play and a touchdown. Cox then put over a place kick making the score Yale 7, Princeton 6. But the game was not over and Princeton rallied to attempt a score. A fimible, however, gave Yale the ball on Princeton ' s 20-yard line and in three plays Hammersley had gone off Princeton ' s tackle for Yale ' s second score, ending the game with a 14 to 6 score. HARVARD, NOVEMBER 19 Injuries to Webster, Hoben, and Garvey seemed serious enough to keep tliem out of the Harvard game, but on November 19 the first team lined up intact at Cambridge. Previous games made Yale the favorite, but there was no overwhelming defeat of Harvard. The latter ' s 267 YALE BANNER AND POT POURKI BROWN GAME HAMMEKSLEY SCORES IN THE PRINCETON GAME YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI lateral pass, their most effective play, was not used enough to cause any damage. Yale ' s two touchdowns were made on brilliant runs by Garvey and Hammersley from mid-field. During the last period Harvard tlirew many passes and laterals and although throughout the game Yale was the better team, nevertheless Harvard threatened at all times. Webster played a fine game all the time, completing the d,. third year in which he had plaj ' ed a full game against Harvard. Looking back over the season, there are several high lights. Web- ster was selected on almost all the All-American choices. Scott, Quar- rier, Hoben, and Caldwell were on several selections, and many others including Fishwick, Decker, Gar- vey, Greene, Eddy, and Charles- worth received honorable mention and sometimes first or second team selections. With Captain Eddy for 1928, will be Greene, Hoben, Decker, Charlesworth, Miner, Spiel, Wilson, Crile, West, Switz. N. S. Hall, R. A. Hall, Billhardt, Hubbard, Oldt, Garvey, KcU, Lampe, and Marting, from which group, as well as from manj ' additions from the Freshman team, we hope another cliampionship team will appear to duplicate or surpass the record of the 1927 team. With Mai Stevens as Head Coach we shall have a continuation of the system that Tad Jones started in 1916. Steve has a fine record both as a player and as an assistant coach and we wish him the best of luck. DARTMOUTH GAME CAPTAINS OF YALE UNIVERSITY ELEVENS 1872 1873 1874. 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 D. S. SchafiF, ' 73 G. L. Halstead, ' 74 H. J. McBirney, ' 75 William Arnold, ' 76 E. V. Barker, ' 77 E. V. Barker, ' 77 W. C. Camp, ' 80 W. C. Camp, ' 80 R. W. Watson, ' 81 S. F. M. Eaton, ' 82 Ray Tompkins, ' 84 Ray Tompkins, ' 84 E. L. Richards, ' 85 F. G. Peters, ' 86 R. N. Corwin, ' 87 H. W. Beecher, ' 88 W. H. Corbin, ' 89 C. O. Gill, P. G. W. C. Rhodes, ' 91 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 T. L. McClunfr, ' 92 V. C. McCormick, ' 93 S. F. A. Hinkey, ' 95 F. A. Hinkev, ' 95 S. B. Thorne ' , ' 96 F. T. Murpliy, ' 97 J. O. Rodgers, ' 98 B. C. ChamberUn, P. G. M. L. McBride, ' 00 F. G. Brown, Jr., ' 01 Charles Gould, ' 02 G. B. Chadwick, ' 03 C. D. Rafferty, ' 04 S. J. J. Hogan, ' 05 T. L. Shevlin, ' 06 S. F. B. Morse, ' 07 F. H. Biglow, 2d, ' 08 R. B. Burch, ' 09 E. H. Coy, ' 10 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 F. .1. Daly, ' 11 Arthur Howe, ' 12 J. Spalding, ' 13 H. H. Ketcham, ' 14 N. S. Talbott, ' 15 S. A. D. Wilson, ' 16 C. R. Black, ' 17 S. Artemus Gates, ' 18 (Informal) Stewart J. T. Callahan, ' 18 S. J. T. Callahan, ' 18 S. M. P. Aldrich, ' 22 R. E. Jordan, ' 23 W. N. Mallory, ' 24 W. M. Lovejoy, ' 25 J. H. Joss, ' 26 P. W. Bunnell, ' 27 W. A. Webster, ' 28 S. 269 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI £■ 2 i = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1928 Maxon H. Eddy, ' 29, Captain Richard W. Goss, ' 29, Manager William L. Paul, ' 30, Assistant Manager OFFICERS, 1927 William A. Webstek, ' 28 S., Captain Sabix Robbins, 3d, ' 28 S., Manager Richard W. Goss, ' 29, Assistant Manager SABIN robbins, 3d, ' iS manager of football TEAM S. p. Scott, ' 28, 1. e. S. S. Quarrier, ' 28 S., I. t. W. W. Greene, ' 30, 1. g. J. D. Charlesworth, ' 29, c. W. A. Webster, ' 28 S., r. g. M. H. Eddy, ' 29, r. t. D. B. Fishwick, ' 28, r. e. J. J. Hoben, ' 29 S., q. b. D. B. Cox, ' 28, f. b. J. J. Garvey, ' 29, 1. h. b. E. L. Decker, Jr., ' 29, r. h. b. COACHES T. A. D. Jones, ' 08 S., Head Coach Major V. E. Prichard, Assistant M. A. Stevens, ' 25, Assistant B. C. Chamberlain, Assistant C. A. Comerford, ' 18 S., Assistant P. W. Bunnell, ' 27, Assistant W. M. Lovejoy, ' 25, Assistant M. E. Fuller, ' 11 S., Assistant G. S. Connors, Trainer SUBSTITUTES K. F. Billhardt, ' 29 S!, back B. Caldwell, ' 28, back G. H. Crile, ' 29, end J. P. Flaherty, ' 28, guard A. S. Foote, ' 28, back E. Goodwine, ' 28, back N. S. Hall, ' 30, guard R. A. Hall, ' 30, back W. S. Hammersley, ' 28, back C. D. Harvey, ' 28, center C. K. Hubbard, ' 29, back E. A. Kell, Jr., ' 29, guard J. E. Lampe, ' 29, back B. L. Mallory, Jr., ' 28, end F. L. Marting, ' 30 S., tackle R. W. Miner, ' 29 S., tackle F. T. Oldt, ' 30, end F. B. Ryan, Jr., ' 28, guard S. Sanger, ' 28 S., end R. E. Spiel, ' 29, guard K. D. Stone, ' 28, back P. F. Switz, ' 29, back J. C. West, ' 30, end R. F. Wilson, ' 30, back 271 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE FOOTBALL RECORDS SINCE 1885 1885 1890 West Point 12-0 Bates 28-0 Yale vs. Points Yale vs. Points Brown 12-0 Dartmouth 12-0 Stevens 55-0 Wesleyan 8-0 Tufts 67-0 Wisconsin 6-0 Wesleyan 18-0 Crescent A. C. 18-6 Lehigh 50-0 Columbia 0-5 Wesleyan 71-0 Wesleyan 34-0 Chicago A. C. 48-0 West Point 24-0 Inst, of Tech. 51-0 I.ehigh 26-0 Harvard 12-4 Penn. State 42-0 Crescents 52-0 Orange 16-0 Princeton 24-0 Harvard 0-0 Univ. of Penn. 53-5 Williams 32-0 1895 Yale vs. Trinity Princeton 10-11 Princeton Wesleyan 5-6 61-0 Amherst Wesleyan 12-0 76-0 Points 8-0 1900 Crescent A. C. 52-0 Yale vs. Points 1886 Rutgers 70-0 Brown 4-0 Trinity 22-0 Yale vs. Points Univ. of Penn. 60-0 Union 26-0 Amherst 27-0 Wesleyan 75-0 Harvard 6-12 Amherst 36-0 Tufts 30-0 Wesleyan 52-0 Princeton 32-0 Crescent A. C. 8-2 Bates 50-0 Technology 96-0 Dartmouth 26-0 Dartmouth 17-0 Stevens 54-0 1891 Orange A. C. 24-12 Bowdoin 30-0 Williams 76-0 Yale vs. Points Williams 54-0 Wesleyan 38-0 Wesleyan 136-0 Wesleyan 28-0 Boston A. C. 0-0 Columbia 12-5 Crescents 82-0 Crescent A. C. 26-0 Dartmouth 32-0 West Point 18-0 Univ. of Penn. 75-0 Trinity 36-0 West Point 28-8 Carlisle 35-0 Harvard 29-t Williams 46-10 Carlisle 18-0 Princeton 29-5 Princeton 4-0 Stagg ' s Eleven 30-0 Brown 6-6 Harvard 28-0 Orange A. C. 37-0 Orange A. C. 26-0 1887 Lehigh 36-0 Princeton 20-10 1901 Yale vs. Wesleyan Wesleyan Williams Univ. of Penn. Rutgers Crescents Points 38-0 106-0 74-0 50-0 74-0 68-0 Crescent A. C. M esleyan Amherst Univ. of Penn. Harvard Princeton 1892 70-0 76-0 27-0 48-0 10-0 19-0 1896 Yale vs. Brown Orange A. C. Williams Dartmouth Carlisle Points 18-0 12-0 22-0 42-0 12-6 Yale vs. Trinity Amherst Tufts Wesleyan Annapolis Bowdoin Points 23-0 6-0 29-6 24-0 24-0 45-0 Wesleyan Princeton Harvard 74-4 12-0 17-8 Yale vs. Points Elizabeth A. C. 12-6 Penn. State 22-0 Wesleyan Crescents 6-0 26-0 West Point Boston A. A. 16-2 10-0 Bates Columbia 21-0 10-5 1888 Williams 32-0 Brown 18-6 West Point 5-5 Yale vs. Points Manhattan A. C. 22-0 New Jersey A. C 16-0 Orange A. C. 35-0 Wesleyan Rutgers Univ. of Penn. Wesleyan Amherst Williams Boston Tech. 76-0 65-0 46-0 46-0 39-0 30-0 68-0 Amherst 29-0 Orange A. C. 58-0 Sp ' f ' d Y. M. C. A. 50-0 Tufts 44-0 Wesleyan 72-0 New York A. C. 48-0 Univ. of Penn. 28-0 Harvard 6-0 Princeton 1897 Yale vs. Trinity Wesleyan Amherst Williams 6-24 Points 10-0 30-0 18-0 32-0 Princeton Harvard 1902 Yale vs. Trinity Tufts Amherst 12-0 0-22 Points 40-0 34-6 23-0 Stevens Univ. of Penn. 69-0 50-0 Princeton 12-0 Newton A. C. Brown 10-0 18-14 Wesleyan Brown 35-0 10-0 Crescents 28-0 1893 Carlisle 24-9 Univ. of Vermont 32-0 Amherst 70-0 Yale vs. Points West Point 6-6 Penn. State 11-0 Wesleyan 15-0 Brown 18-0 Chicago A. C. Harvard 16-6 Syracuse 24-0 Princeton 10-0 Crescent A. C. 6-0 0-0 West Point 6-6 1889 Yale vs. Wesleyan Dartmouth 28-0 Princeton 6-0 BuckneU 36-5 Points 38-0 Amherst Orange A. C. Williams 52-0 50-0 82-0 1898 Yale vs. Points Princeton Harvard 12-5 23-0 Wesleyan Williams 63-5 U. S. Mil. Acad. 28-0 Wesleyan 5-0 1903 36-0 New York A. C. 32-0 Amherst 34-0 Cornell 60-0 Univ. of Penn. 14-6 Williams 23-0 Yale vs. Points Amherst 42-0 Harvard 6-0 Newton A. C. 6-0 Trinity 35-0 Trinity Columbia 64-0 62-0 Princeton 0-6 Brown Carlisle 22-6 18-5 Tufts 19-0 Univ. of Vermont 46-0 Univ. of Penn. 22-10 1894 West Point 10-0 Wesleyan 33-0 Stevens 30-8 Yale vs. Points Chicago A. C. Princeton 10-0 Springfield T. S. 22-0 Crescent A. C. 18-0 Trinity 42-0 0-6 Holy Cross 36-10 Cornell 70-0 Brown 28-5 Harvard 0-17 Penn. State 27-0 Amherst 32-0 Crescent A. C. 10-0 West Point 17-5 Williams 70-0 Lehigh 34-0 1899 Columbia 25-0 Wesleyan 52-0 Dartmouth 34-0 Yale vs. Points Syracuse 30-0 Harvard 6-0 Orange A. C. 24-0 Amherst 23-0 Princeton 6-11 Princeton 0-10 Boston A. A. 23-0 Trinity 46-0 Harvard 16-0 272 Syracuse Holy Cross Springfield T. S. West Point Colgate Amherst Brown Princeton Harvard 1910 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 15-0 12-0 36-0 17-0 36-0 34-0 23-0 17-0 8-0 Points 22-0 12-6 17-0 12-0 3-9 0-0 19-9 0-21 5-3 0-0 Points 25-0 11-0 17-0 52-0 0-0 44-0 11-0 22-0 12-10 12-0 1908 Yale vs. Points Wesleyan 16-0 Syracuse 5-0 Holy Cross West Point Wash, and Jeff. Mass. Agr. College 49-0 Brown 10-10 Princeton 11-6 Harvard 0 18-0 6-0 38-0 Colgate Brown Princeton Harvard 1915 Yale vs. Univ. of Maine Univ. of Virginia I.ehigh Springfield T. S. Wash, and Jeff. Colgate Brown Princeton Harvard 49-7 14-6 19-14 0-36 Points 37-0 0-10 7-6 9-0 7-16 0-15 0-3 13-7 0-41 1911 Yale vs. Wesleyan Holy Cross Syracuse Virginia P. I. West Point Colgate Kew York Univ. Brown Princeton Harvard 1912 Yale vs. Wesleyan Holy Cross Syracuse Lafayette West Point Wash, and Jeff. Brown Princeton Harvard 1913 Yale vs. Wesleyan Holy Cross Univ. of Maine Lafayette Lehigh M ' ash. and Jeff. Colgate Brown Princeton Harvard Points 21-0 26-0 12-0 33-0 0-6 23-0 28-3 15-0 3-6 0-0 Points 10-3 7-0 16-0 16-0 6-9 13-3 10-0 6-6 0-20 Points 21-0 10-0 0-0 28-0 37-0 O-O 6-16 17-0 3-3 5-15 1916 Yale vs. Points Carnegie Inst. 25-0 Univ. of Virginia 61-3 Lehigh 12-0 Virginia Poly. 19-0 Wash, and Jeff. 36-14 Colgate 7-3 Brown 6-21 Princeton 10-0 Harvard 6-3 Yale vs. Wesleyan Points 11-0 1914 Yale vs. Points Univ. of Maine 20-0 Univ. of Virginia 21-0 Lehigh 20-3 Notre Dame 28-0 Wash, and Jeff. 7-13 1917 Yale vs. Trinity Naval Base I oomis 1919 Yale vs. Springfield Coll. North Carolina Boston College Tufts Maryland State Brown Princeton Harvard 1920 Yale vs. Carnegie Tech. North Carolina Boston College West Virginia Colgate Brown Princeton Harvard 1921 Yale vs. Bates Vermont North Carolina Williams Army Brown Maryland State Princeton Harvard Points 7-0 33-0 7-0 1922 Yale vs. Bates Carnegie Tech. North Carolina Iowa Williams Army Brown Maryland Princeton Harvard 1923 Yale vs. North Carolina Georgia Bucknell Brown Army Maryland Princeton Harvard 1924 Yale vs. North Carolina Georgia Dartmouth Brown Army Maryland Princeton Harvard 1925 Points Yale vs. 20-0 Middlebury 34-7 Georgia 3-5 Pennsylvania 37-0 Brown 31-0 Army 14-0 Maryland 6-13 Princeton 3-10 Harvard 1926 Points Yale vs. 44-0 Boston Univ. 21-0 13-21 Georgia Dartmouth 24-0 21-7 14-10 0-20 A rniy Maryland 0-9 Harvard Points 1927 28-0 Yale vs. 14-0 Bowdoin 34-0 Georgia 23-0 Brown 14-7 Armv 45-7 Dartmouth 28-0 Maryland 13-7 Princeton 3-10 Harvard Points 48-0 13-0 18-0 0-6 38-0 7-7 20-0 45-3 0-3 3-10 Points 53-0 40-0 29-14 21-0 31-10 16-14 27-0 13-0 Points 27-0 7-6 14-14 13-3 7-7 47-0 10-0 19-6 Points 53-0 35-7 13-16 20-7 28-7 43-14 12-25 0-0 Points 55-0 19-0 14-7 0-7 0-33 0-15 7-10 12-7 Points 41-0 10-14 19-0 10-6 19-0 30-6 14-6 14-0 273 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1931 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS F. T. ' ixcENT, ' 31, Captain R. W. Goss, ' 29, Manager C. S. OsBOURN, ' 15, Coach CAPTAIN VINCENT THE FOLLOWING MEMBERS OF THE TEAM RECEIVED NUMERALS J. T. Adams W. McEauchlan E. Austen D. R. McLennan A. Z. Belous S. C. Mallory H. J. Brown E. C. Marsh J. C. Cairns F. L. Meserve J. Cookman J. Rathborne D. Coursen C. Snead H. Cruikshank J. H. Stewart B. Cunningham E. G. Stoddard K. Dunn T. Taylor D. B. Fisk F. T. Vincent T. T. Hare J. Walker F. J. Linehan E. S. Ward F. W. Loeser F. E. Weicker F. L. Luce J. W. Whiting J. H. Macdonald SCORES A. L. Wiener Yale 6 Exeter Yale 9 Andover Yale St. Joh n ' s Prep 7 Yale 22 Roxbui y Yale 13 Princeton Freshmen 9 Yale Harvar d Freshmen 6 275 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Baseball Season, 1927 WITH a veteran infield, two good outfielders from the previous season, and Holabird and Smith as a nucleus of a strong pitching staff, pros- pects were bright at the opening of the season. The lack of an indoor cage — eliminated this year by the opening of the new Coxe Cage — prevented satis- factory practice until the weather allowed the squad to go outdoors, but the j itchers found opportimity to loosen up their arms and round into fair con- dition before the Southern trip. Joe Wood was again head coach, with Clyde Engle in charge of the Freshmen. Cap- tain Jones at third base, Vaughan at short, Kline at first, and Caldwell and Brown in the other infield positions, left Wood little worry. Noble, one of the leading batters on the 192G team, and jSIcClellan, a fine fielder, were slated to hold down right and center fields. Several men from the 1929 team, including Sawyer on the mound. Grove in the infield, Garvey in the outfield, and Hoben behind the bat, looked as if they would satisfactorily fill in the vacancies left by graduation. On April 6 the squad set out for Rich- mond, where it opened the season auspiciously the next day by an easy victory over the Uni- versity of Richmond by 11 to 2. Holabird pitched a strong game and Noble batted well. Jones, Caldwell, Vaughan, and Kline started in the infield, with McClellan, Noble, and Garvey in the outfield. Barclay, Hoben, and Walker divided the catching. Three successive defeats by one-rim margins followed, however, with weakness at the bat the cause of all of them. William and Mary won a pitchers ' battle by 3 to 2, Georgetown took an eleven-inning struggle by 8 to 7, and Maryland repeated the William and Mary score. Sawyer, Smith, Scott, and Holabird shared the pitching. Returning to New York, however, Yale broke the losing streak by taking Columbia into camp 4 to 2, by dint of Sawyer ' s effective work. This ended the trip, the Navy encounter having been canceled on account of rain. 277 JOE WOOD BASEBALL COACH YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Yale ojiened the home series with three defeats at the hands of Xew Haven, sandwiched around a creditable victory over Fordhani. Yictories over N. Y. U. and Brown seemed to indicate that practice was beginning to bring out the full power concealed in the lineup. Both games were slugging matches. Tufts ' strong team then took a 2 to 1 pitchers ' battle. Dartmouth. Penn., Bowdoin, and Virginia were defeated in succession, before the Elis met defeat in a second encounter with Penn. Then Columbia, William and JNIary, Cornell, Catholic U., Holy Cross, and Cornell fell before effective pitching and timely hitting. Sawyer and Smith were particularlj ' good, while Vaughan ' s batting in the pinches was responsible for many valuable runs. Although Caldwell was absent from the lineup, Brown filled his place in excellent fashion, and Hammerslej% brought up from the Junior Varsity to replace Garvey, led the team at bat and fielded well. Hoben did all the catching. The preliminary season closed with a victory over Vanderbilt, and defeats at the hands of Georgetown, Syracuse, and Providence, all in close ffames. PRACTICE IN THE NEW COXE MEMORIAL CAGE 278 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI INDOOR BATTING PRACTICE YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI .vavav.v PRINCETON SCORES THE Y-H-P SERIES The lineup for the major games against Princeton and Harvard re- mained unchanged, except that Caldwell returned to play part of the games. Sawyer, Holabird, and Smith did the jjitching. PRINCETON SERIES The first game against the Tigers was played in a di-izzling rain at Xew Haven on June 4. Sawyer came within an ace of the Hall of Fame by holding Princeton to one scratch hit and shutting them out 4 to 0. Yale got to Palmer for eight hits and four scattered runs, but the game was never in doubt. Yale 4 — Princeton 3 The same teams met the following week at Princeton before the Com- mencement guests, and Yale was again victorious behind Sawyer, although by the closest of margins. Yaughan ' s home run in the third clinched the contest. 280 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE VS. NEW HAVEN PROS. HARVARD SERIES Y u,E 5 — PIarvaki) 10 The Crimson came from behind to win a shigfest, driving Sawyer to cover. Infield errors proved Yale ' s undoing, and an early lead off Barbee was nullified hj- Cuffs ' brilliant relief work. Yale 5 — Harvard 6 The next day the teams met in Cambridge, and Harvard clinched the series in straight games by a ninth inning rally in which Zarakov ' s home run was the big gim. Holabird and Smith were unable to stem the tide. R. F. Yaughan, who plays anywhere in the infield except first, was elected captain for 1928, I. H. Peck was made manager, and F. G. Brown assistant manager. 281 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE UNIVERSITY BASEBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS R. F. Vaughax, ' 28, Captain I. H. Peck, Jr., ' 28, Manager F. G. Browx, ' 29, Asxistant Manager IRVING HOBART PECK. ' 48 MANAGER OF BASEBALL R. L. Jones, Capt., ' 27 S. K. F. Billhardt, ' 29 S. C. H. Brockelman, ' 29 S. G. Brown, ' 28 J. J. Garvev, ' 29 : I. J. Grove, ' 29 W. S. Hammersley, ' 28 TEAM, 1927 J. J. Hoben, ' 29 S. W. Holabird, 3d, ' 27 S. W. S. Kline, ' 27 S. G. B. Loud, Jr., ' 29 J. McClellan, ' 28 B. L. Mallory, Jr., ' 28 L. M. Noble, ' 27 R. A. Sawver, ' 29 E. L. Schmidt, ' 28 D. T. Smith, ' 28 R. F. Vaughan, ' 2S G. H. Walker, ' 27 April May BASEBALL SCORES , 1927 Yale 0pp. Yale Opp 7 Richmond 11 2 : Iay 10 Columbia 6 8 William and Mar 2 3 12 William and Marv 3 2 9 Annapolis Can celled 14 Cornell 2 1 11 Georgetown 7 8 17 Catholic Univ. 14 12 Marj ' land 2 3 18 Holy Cross 2 1 13 Columbia 4. 2 21 Cornell .5 4 li New Haven 1 12 23 Waseda Can celled 15 New Haven i 6 24 Colgate Cancelled 16 Fordham 6 1 26 Georgetown 3 18 New Haven 2 3 28 Holy Cross 7 20 New York Univ. 19 7 31 Syracuse 1 2 23 Brown 8 2 June 4 Princeton 4 26 Tufts 1 2 11 Yanderbilt 2 28 Dartmouth 11 10 14 Providence 3 4 30 Pennsylvania 3 2 18 Princeton 4 3 3 Bowdoin 5 21 Harvard 6 10 5 Virginia 4 1 22 Harvard 5 6 7 Pennsylvania 5 7 283 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE-HARVARD UNIVERSITY BASEBALL GAMES SINCE 1895 June 29, June 23, June 28, July 1, June 22, New Haven June 20, New Haven June 25, No series with Harva Cambridge June 23, New Haven Cambridge New Haven New York Camliridge New Haven June 27, New York July 1, Cambridge June 21, New Haven June 26, New York June 30, Cambridge June 20, New Haven June 25, Cambridge June 20, New Haven June 24, New York June 28, Cambridge June 18, New Haven June 23, Cambridge June 26, New Haven June 29, New York July 2, Cambridge June 22, New Haven June 27, Cambridge June 21, 1895 7-4 1895 5-0 rd 1896 1897 5-7 1897 8-10 1898 4-9 1898 7-0 1898 3-1 1899 2-0 1899 3-4 1899 10-13 1900 15-5 1900 0-3 1900 2-5 1901 3-7 1901 0-3 1902 7-0 1902 4-12 1902 5-6 1903 2-5 1903 6-10 1904 2-5 1904 6-1 1904 0-5 1905 1-1 1905 7-2 1906 3-1 New Haven Cambridge New Haven New York Cambridge New Haven New York Cambridge New Haven New York New Haven Cambridge New York New Haven Cambridge New Haven Cambridge New Haven Cambridge Brooklyn New Haven Cambridge Boston New Haven Cambridge Brooklyn June 26 June 20 June 25 June 29. June 18. June 23. June 27. June 24. June 29 July 3 June 21, June 23. June 28 June 20. June 23 June 18, June 19 June 17 June 18 June 21 June 16, June 17, June 20 June 22 June 23. June 26. ,1906 3-2 New Haven June 20 1916 2-5 .1907 1-2 Cambridge June 21 1916 1-4 ,1907 14-6 No series with Harvard 1917 ,1907 3-7 Cambridge May 11 1918 5-0 ,1908 3-5 New Haven June 1 1918 5-3 ,1908 3-0 New Haven June 17 1919 2-1 ,1908 5-9 Cambridge June 18 1919 10-8 ,1909 2-3 New Haven June 22 1920 1-4 ), 1909 4-0 Cambridge June 23 1920 4-2 !, 1909 5-2 Boston June 26 1920 3-6 ,1910 12-5 New Haven June 21 1921 2-4 ,1910 2-3 Cambridge June 22 1921 4-16 !, 1910 10-9 New Haven June 22 1922 7-3 ,1911 2-8 Cambridge June 24 1922 7-8 !, 1911 1-4 New York June 26 1922 6-0 i, 1912 9-6 New Haven June 19 1923 3-2 ), 1912 5-2 Cambridge June 20 1923 7-9 ,1913 2-0 New York June 23 1923 10-3 ,1913 3-4 New Haven June 17 1924 3-2 ,1913 5-6 Cambridge June 18 1924 8-7 ,1914 6-1 New Haven June 16 1925 25-15 ,1914 3-7 Cambridge June 17 1925 18-4 ), 1914 13-8 New Haven June 22 1926 7-8 , 1915 2-4 Cambridge June 23 1926 5-13 ,1915 2-3 New Haven June 21 1927 6-10 ,1915 13-0 Cambridge June 22 1927 5-6 Total since 1895, Yale 66 games; Harvard 51 games; 1 tie YALE-PRINCETON BASEBALL GAMES SINCE 1894 New York 1894 9-5 Princeton 1902 5-8 Princeton 1910 1-6 New Haven 1919 5-0 New Haven 1895 1-0 New York 1902 5-4 New York 1910 5-7 Princeton 1919 6-0 Princeton 1895 9-8 New Haven 1903 2-1 New Haven 1911 2-5 New Haven 1920 6-6 Princeton 1896 0-13 Princeton 1903 6-10 Princeton 1911 6-3 Princeton 1920 4-2 New Haven 1896 7-5 New York 1903 6-7 Brooklyn 1911 0-1 New York 1920 1-0 Princeton 1896 0-5 New Haven 1904 3-1 New Haven 1912 6-1 New Haven 1921 4-0 New York 1896 8-4 Princeton 1904 1-10 Princeton 1912 2-4 Princeton 1921 2-4 New Haven 1896 3-4 New York 1904 4-10 New York 1912 6-19 New York 1921 13-1 New Haven 1897 10-9 New Haven 1905 2-18 New Haven 1913 4-3 New Haven 1922 14-5 Princeton 1897 8-16 Princeton 1905 3-2 Princeton 1913 5-4 Princeton 1922 4-2 New i ' ork 1897 8-22 New York 1905 8-5 New Haven 1914 1-3 New Haven 1923 5-14 New Haven 1898 7-12 New Haven 1906 2-3 Princeton 1914 3-0 Princeton 1923 6-2 Princeton 1898 6-4 Princeton 1906 2-3 New York 1914 0-1 New York 1923 5-1 New York 1898 8-3 New Haven 1907 7-9 New Haven 1915 1-2 Princeton 1924 0-1 New Haven 1899 8-0 Princeton 1907 3-4 Princeton 1915 2-1 New Haven 1924 0-7 Princeton 1899 2-6 Princeton 1908 2-3 New York 1915 4-3 New Haven 1925 7-6 New York 1899 4-11 New Haven 1908 8-2 New Haven 1916 5-2 Princeton 1925 2-5 New Haven 1900 3-9 New York 1908 2-4 Princeton 1916 5-7 New York 1925 10-9 Princeton 1900 4-5 New Haven 1909 6-0 New York 1916 0-1 New Haven 1926 8-6 New Haven 1901 9-8 Princeton 1909 2-3 No games 1917 Princeton 1926 8-7 Princeton 1901 5-15 New York 1909 5-2 Princeton 1918 5-3 New Haven 1927 4-0 New York 1901 2-5 New Haven 1910 4-2 New Haven 1918 2-0 Princeton 1927 4-3 New Haven 1902 10-6 Total since 1894, Yale 70 games; Princeton 52 games; 1 tie 284 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE WALTER CAMP MEMORIAL GATEWAY CAPTAINS OF UNIVERSITY NINES 1865-66 C. A. Edwards, ' 66 1867 Jacob Coffin, ' 68 1868 Thomas Hooker, ' 69 1869 S. S. McCutcheon, ' 70 1870 S. S. McCutcheon, ' 70 1871 Clarence Deming, ' 72 1872 Clarence Deming, ' 72 1873 A. B. Nevin, ' 74 1874 C. H. Avery, ' 75 1875 C. H. Avery, ' 75 1876 W. I. Bigelow, ' 77 1877 W. I. Bigelow, ' 77 1878 C. H. Morgan, ' 78 1879 W. F. Hutchinson, ' 80 1880 W. F. Hutchinson, ' 80 1881 H. T. Walden, ' 81 1882 W. I. Badger, ' 82 1883 Allan Hubbard, ' 83 S. 1884 H. C. Hopkins, ' 84 1885 Wyllys Terry, ' 85 1886 P. B. Stewart, ' 86 1887 J. C. Dann, ' 88 S. 1888 A A. Stagg, ' 88 1909 F. J. Murphy, ' 10 1889 H F. Noyes, ' 89 1910 S. H. Philbin, ' 10 1890 G. Calhoun, ' 91 1910 w . S. Logan, ' 10 1891 G. Calhoun, ' 91 1911 A. L. Corey, ' 11 1892 W H. Murphy, ' 93 1912 H N. Merritt, ' 12 1893 L. T. Bliss, ' 93 S. 1913 J. T. Blossom, ' 14 1894 G. B. Case, ' 94 1914 J. T. Blossom, ' 14 1895 F. Rustin, ' 95 S. 1915 L. S. Middlebrook, ' 16 1896 S. L. Quimby, ' 96 S. 1916 R. V. Vaughn 1897 H M. Keator, ' 97 1917 Harry LeGore 1898 G. C. Greenway, Jr., ' 98 S. 1918 R. F. Snell, ' 18 1899 C. A. H. deSauUes, ' 99 S. 1918 N. E. Lyman, ' 18 S. 1900 S. B. Camp, ' 00 1919 R. H. Boyd, ' 19 S. 1901 F. L. Quimby, ' 02 S. 1920 H T. Sawyer, ' 20 1901 F. M. C. Robertson, ' 01 1921 J. W. Peters, ' 21 S. 1902 R. G. Guernsey, ' 02 1922 M P. A Id rich, ' 22 1903 B. Winslow, ' 04 1923 C. F. Eddy, ' 23 1904 B. Winslow, ' 04 1924 C. M. O ' Hearn, ' 24 8. 1905 M H. Bowman, ' 05 S. 1925 R. W. Pond, ' 25 1906 F. O ' Brien, ' 06 1926 D. A. Lindley, ' 26 1907 G. Kinney, ' 07 S. 1927 R. L. Jones, ' 27 S. 1908 T. A. D. Jones, ' 08 S. 1928 R. F. Vaughan, ' 28 285 = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE FRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 1927 H. S. Aldrich, Captain I. H. Peck, Jr., Manager C. Engle, Coach CAPTAIN ALDRICH TEAM H. S. Aldrich J. H. Beyer B. Cheney A. C. Dana J. P. Graves, 2d J. J. Holahan A. W. Morton, Jr. A. E. Nanry A. Quimby, Jr. R. H. Rudd T. C. Schwartzburg W. B. Thompson SCORES, 1927 April Mav Yale Opp 6 Massee 5 20 Geo. Wash. H. S. 4 6 23 St. Jolm ' s Prep. 12 10 27 Kent 21 3 30 Roxburv 5 4 •i Choate 11 4 7 Andover 16 1 11 Worcester 8 7 14 Exeter 3 10 18 Milford 2 4 21 Princeton 6 4 26 Suffield Rain 28 Harvard 3 4 287 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ; as vAVA ' Av. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Track Season, 1927 I3EMARKABLE individual performances by the various members of the track team - - ' in the Boston Athletic Association, the New York Athletic Club, and the A. A. U. meets made the indoor season successful in spite of the serious handicaps encountered in having only a seventy-yard straightaway track at the Winchester Armory and the gym track, for practice. In addition the team was further hurt by the loss of three sure point winners when Yale met Cornell in the annual dual meet there. In the Intercolle- giates Yale made a fine showing notwithstanding all these hardshijJs in practice. Har- vard barely beat us for first place, as it turned out. After a ratlier mediocre showing in the Penn Relay Carnival, the team won handily from Princeton and Harvard, and placed third in the outdoor Intercollcgiates. To finish the year the combined power of Yale and Harvard traveled to England and, in the meet that they entered there, lost to the track men from Oxford and Cambridge by the score of 7 to 5. The Boston Athletic Association Games opened the indoor season on February 5. A new world ' s record mark at 13 ft. 7 1-8 in. was set in the pole vault by S. W. Carr, ' 28. G. H. Larsen, ' 28, tied with Hollis of Harvard for second place in the high jump. In the New York Athletic Club Games on February 14, S. W. Carr, ' 28, again shattered the world ' s indoor mark in the pole vault, making 13 ft. 9 l-4 in. This bettered the unaccepted record of Charles Hoff of Norway made in the United States one year earlier at 13 ft. 8 in. D. M. Campbell, ' 27 S., took second place in the high-hurdle race, and Captain H. C. Paulsen, ' 27 S., took third in the 60-yd. dash. Yale next entered the National A. A. U. Champion- ship meet in New York on February 28. S. W. Carr, ' 28, took first in the pole vault at 13 ft. and F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, took second. L. P. Ross, ' 28, won the National Indoor 300-yd. championship title in the fast time of 31 4-5 sec. He beat such fast men as McDonald of Penn, and Jackson Scolz. W. S. Edwards, Jr., ' 28, took third place in the 70-yd. high-hurdles. On March 5, in New York, Yale took second in the Intercollcgiates. S. W. Carr, ' 28, tied for first in the pole vault with Bradley of Princeton at 13 ft. In the two-mile race, A. M. Briggs, ' 27, took second to Benson of Cornell. Wells of Dartmouth beat out D. M. Campbell, ' 27 S., by a foot in the high-hurdle race, and in tiiis same event W. S. Edwards, Jr., ' 28, took fourth. In the Cornell meet on March 12, at Ithaca, the team lost 62 3-4 to 50 1-4. Cornell took eight firsts to Yale ' s five. S. W. Carr, ' 28, won the pole vault at 13 ft. 6 in. The other men to win first for Yale were D. ] I. Campbell, ' 27 S., in the 75-yd. high- 289 GEORGE S. CONNORS TRACK COACH YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI hurdles, M. L. Smith, ' 27, in the mile, G. P. Deacon, ' 27 S., in the high jump, and R. W. Goss, ' 29, in the broad jump. This concluded the indoor season. At the Penn Relays in Philadelphia, the outdoor season was inaugurated. The Yale 480-yd. shuttle relay team took second to Cambridge after Yale lost twenty yards on the start. Though W. S. Edwards actually gained on Lord Burghley of Cambridge in the final set, yet he could not regain the ground lost at the start to win. Yale took fourth in the one-mile relay among some of the best relay teams that ever had assembled together. G. H. Larsen, ' 28, took second in the high jump with a leap of 5 ft. 11 1-4 in. To G. P. Deacon, ' 27 S., went third place in the high jump. On May 14, Yale went to Princeton to open the annual Harvard-Princeton-Yale series. Yale won 70 to 65 taking seven first places and a tie for another, while Princeton also won seven first places. Captain H. C. Paulsen won two firsts, one in the 100-yd. dash and one in the 220-yd. dash. One week later, on May 21, Yale defeated Harvard by a score of 71 1-2 to 63 1-2. C. B. Hogan, ' 28, beat Haggerty of Harvard in a beautiful half-mile race in the fast time of 1 : 56 1-5. The other two outstanding performances of the meet were Captain Paulsen ' s victory in the 220-yd. dash and tying the meet record of 21 2-5 sec, and S. W. Carr ' s new meet record in the pole vault at 13 ft. 6 1-8 in. Yale took all of the places in the high-hurdles, pole vault, and high jump, while Harvard took all of the places in the javelin. Yale won nine first places to Harvard ' s six. Stanford won the outdoor intercollegiates, Penn State was second, and Yale was a close third with 23 1-2 points. The honor of establishing a new world ' s record fell again to Yale when S. W. Carr, ' 28, cleared fourteen feet in the pole vault. This feat was supposed to have been impossible, but Carr electrified the world with his astounding 290 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI INDOOR PRACTICE record. Captain H. C. Paulsen, ' 27 S., took second in the lOO-yd. dash, and third in the 220-yd. dash. L. P. Ross won second place in the 440-yd. run, and M. L. Smith won second in the two-mile run. THE YALE-HARVARD TRIP TO ENGLAND TO MEET OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE A combined team, consisting of seven Harvard and fourteen Yale men, sailed for England from Montreal on June 25, on the white Star liner Doric. Manager Scott, Assistant Manager Eldridge, Coach Connors, Coach McGall, Mr. Woodcock, and the fourteen Yale men made up the party from Yale. The boat arrived thirty-six hours late in Liverpool on the morning of Monday, July 3. Immediately the team went to Oxford where they had their first workout. On Tuesday two more workouts took place there. On Wednesday the party went to Stamford Bridge and held another practice. The British Sportsmen ' s Club, with Lord Desborough presiding in the chair, enter- tained the team with a delightful lunch at the Savoy in London. A short tour of London was made that afternoon before the train to Cambridge. On Thursday morning a strenu- ous practice was held, followed by a liglit lunch. That afternoon the team made a trip to Burghley House, the magnificent seat of Lord Burghley, and one of the show places of England. After dinner, the party was invited to the house of Dr. and Mrs. A. Salis- bury Woods, the Graduate Treasurer of Cambridge, for cigars and coffee. Friday, the day befoi-e the meet, no workout was held, and that afternoon the team went to London and took up quarters at the Onslow Court Hotel. Saturday, July 9, was a very poor day in the morning and the early afternoon and, threatening with occasional showers, hurt the attendance which would in all prob- ability have been a record one, considering the number that came in spite of the weather. The meet was very close throughout, and its result in doubt until the end. Outstanding performances were the double win of John Rinkals of Cambridge in the 220 and 440, 291 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI and the remarkable performance of Dick White of Oxford in the mile. For Yale, M. L. Smith, ' 27, gave a marvelous exhibition of power in winning the three-mile race by two- thirds of a lap. S. W. Carr, ' 28, won the pole vault with ease at 13 ft., which sot a new British record, in spite of the difficulties of the grass runway ; F. H. Sturdy, ' 29, took second in the pole vault. H. M. Ellis, ' 30, took third in the 100-yd. dash. S. B. Kiesel- horst, ' 30, took second to Lord Burghley in the 220-yd. low-hurdles. F. K. Sheldon, ' 29 S., took fourth in the low-hurdles and third in the high-hurdles. L. P. Ross, ' 28, took third in the iJ ' O, and C. H. Engle, ' 30 S., took fourth in the same event. G. P. Deacon, ' 27 S., won the broad jump with a leap of 23 ft. 9 1-2 in. C. B. Hogan, ' 28, placed third in the 880. Capt. H. C. Paulsen, ' 27 S., placed fourth in the 220-yd. dash. Bayes Norton, ' 26 S., former Yale Captain of Track, placed second in the 100- and 220-yd. dashes, running for Oxford. G. V. Wolf, ' 30, took third in the high jump, and G. H. Larsen, ' 28, took fourth. D. M. Campbell, ' 27 S., placed fourth in the 120-yd. high-hurdles. Lord Burghley set a new record in the 220-yd. low-hurdles making the distance in 24 7-10 seconds. Pratt of Harvard made a new record in the shot put, making 44 1-2 feet; Carr made a new pole vault record for Great Britain; and G. Wightman-Smith of Cambridge set a new meet record in the 120-yd. high-hurdles, making it in 15 1-10. Oxford and Cambridge won over Yale and Harvard 7 to 5, first places each counting one point. Following the meet, Oxford and Cambridge entertained the team at a magnificent banquet. On the ] londay following, the team was entertained by ]Mr. Morgan at a luncheon held at the American Club. The presentation, by the combined American teams, of a gold stop-watch to Lord Burghley, as a sign of their appreciation of his kindness and sportsmanship, at a dinner at the Bucks ' Club, was the official termination of the trip. THE START YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI • ' •--• ' • 4 1 ,iA i j2i s « y IK Ty ' . ,:-: ■|H|flHH|ReK • W YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI a YALE UNIVERSITY TRACK TEAM OFFICERS, 1927-1928 S. VV. Carr, • ' 28, Captain H. Eldridge, ' 28, Manager A. Kaul, 3d, ' 29 S., Assistant Manager G. S. Connors, Head Coach A. McGall, Coach H. ELDRIDGE, ' is MANAGER OF TRACK G. B. Berger, Jr. W. Bradley J. A. Brandenburg A. M. Briggs F. B. Bro ™ D. M. Campbell S. W. Carr G. H. Crile H. M. Davison TRACK TEAM, 1927 «Y Men G. P. Deacon A. F. Dean W. S. Edwards, Jr. J. W. Evans G. H. Larsen J. S. O ' Gorman, Jr. H. C. Paulsen A. Pond, 3d L. P. Ross J. E. Schurman F. K. Sheldon M. L. Smith K. D. Stone F. H. Sturdy A. J. Vorster R. J. Wood F. H. Woods, Jr MEETS May 14, at Princeton, Yale 70, Princeton 65 May 21, at New Haven, Yale 71 1 2, Harvard 631 2 July 9, at Stamford Bridge, Oxford-Cambridge 7, Yale-Harvard 5 INTERCOLLEGIATE MEET Held at Philadelphia, May 26-28 Stanford 36% Penn State 27 Yale 23V. PLACES WON BY YALE QUALIFIERS Pole vault, Carr, 1st 2 mile, Briggs, .5th 880, Hogan, .5th High Jump, I.arsen tied for 4th 100, Paulsen, 2d 220, Paulsen, 3d 440, Ross, 2d 2 mile. Smith, 2d 295 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = s a. « jsn s s s sss5szs5ssa YALE BANiNEK AND POT POUKKI ' avavavava ' s 1 YALE FRESHMAN TRACK ASSOCIATION B OFFICERS, 1927 n H 1 H S. B. KiESELHORST, Captain H i 5n l l a H. Eldridge, Manager ««ili. H 1 H G. S. Connors, Coach ■1 _ j H H E. J. Thomson, Coach ■W_ ' ■ ' - l ) 1 H A. McGall, Coach mim 4 1 j i 1 1 1 H i H CAPTAIN KIESELHORST i TEAM i Numeral Men ! L. C. Ashley C. H. Englo T. E. Moore i G. P. Biggs D. L. Ferris F. T. Oldt i J. A. Carnev F. M. Foote J. A. Pardridge j C. G. Child, 3d C. F. Gill H. C. Reiner • T. S. Childs, Jr. W. W. Greene M. D. Smith ! G. P. Clayson, Jr. N. S. Hall S. W. Smith | J. Clegg F. V. Keesling, Jr. R. C. Stevens, Jr. W. A. Cone S. B. Kieselhorst B. L. Thompson , , R. H. Cook E. A. Manning, Jr. F. B. Tuttle i 1 f H. M. Ellis J. McEwen, Jr. G. . Wolf ! 1 J. G. Miller i 1 MEETS i 4 At Pottstown, Pa., April 12— Yale lOOYi, Hill 25% At New Haven, May 7 — Yale 96 3, Andover 29% | At Princeton, May 14 — Yale 92, Princeton 43 At New Haven, May 21 — Yale 99, Harvard 36 i 1 . 1 j 297 i 1 S ' Mrm-trm-m ' t ' m ' m ' ti ' m- ' M- ' ar - tn tnirartr ' A ' a. ' trti ' srtl ' ai ' tl ' ti ' ti ' M M arA aL ' M ' ' « ' ' ' ' « 1 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE UNIVERSITY CROSS COUNTRY TEAM OFFICERS, 1927-1928 T. X. IxGHAj[, ' 28, Captain W. N. Queal, Coach M. Davisox, Jr., ' 28, Manager TEAM T. N. Ingham, 28, Captain F. M. Foote, ' 30 S. D. R. Jacob, ' 29 A. C. jNIason, ' 28 S. J. A. Pardridge, 30 S. M. D. Smith, ' 30 W. F. Smith, ' 30 YALE-COLUMBIA MEET At New Haven, October 21, 1927 Columbia 25 Yale 30 Yale 29 Yale 39 -H YALE-SPRINGFIELD MEET At New Haven, October 28, 1927 Springfield 26 YALE-HARVARD MEET At Cambridge, November i, 1927 Harvard 16 Individual winner, Reid, Harvard, 27 niin. ll ' s sec. (new record) ORDER OF FINISH 5. Jacob — Y 6. Lee— H 7. M. D. Smith— Y 8. King— H YALE-PRIXCETON MEET At New Haven, November 11, 1927 Princeton 29 Individual winner, Welles, Princeton, 28 niin. .50 sec. ORDER OF FINISH .5. Ingham — Y 6. Crabb— P 7. Pardridgi Reid Wildes— H Flakeman — H Luttman — H Yale 26 9. Mitchell— H 10. Hyde— H 1. Welles— P 2. Jacob — Y ' ' 3. Gore— P 4. M. D. Smith— Y 9. Kennedy — P 10. Austen— P 8. W. Smith- I. C. A. A. A. A. CHAMPIONSHIP MEET At Van Cortlandt Park, New York City, November 21, 1927 Individual winner, W. J. Cox. Penn. State, 30 min. 46% sec. ORDER OF FINISH 1. Penn. State 50 6. Syracuse 178 11. Yale 273 2. Harvard 60 7. Cornell 189 12. Dartmouth 288 3. Elaine 69 8. Pennsylvania 222 13. I ' rinceton 335 4. Union 92 9. N. Y. Univ. 234 14. Manhattan 443 5. M.I.T. 153 10. Columbia 241 15. Fordham 445 Low score wins. 299 = YALE BANNER AND POT POURKI 1 JSt.  1931 m a ; iB I h ■ ' ' Sil a l||Jg S 1 .r153|B ■p YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE FRESHMAN CROSS COUNTRY TEAM OFFICERS, 1927-1028 F. R. O ' Brien, Captain A. McGali,, Coach H. C. DowxiNG, ' 29, Manager S. P. Brewer F. M. Bryan E. D. Cov TEAM F. R. O ' Brien, Captain B. De.Meritt J. S. Evans, Jr. E. Fox, Jr. R. T. Hall J. Keogli, Jr. J. S. White MEETS At New Haven, October 21, 192T— Columbia 25, Yale 30 At Xew Haven, October 28, 1927— Yale 19, Springfield 36 At Cambridge, November 4, 1927 — Harvard 18, Yale 37 At New Haven, November 11, 1927 — Yale 20, Princeton 3.3 FRESHMAN INTERCOLLEGIATES At Van Cortlandt Park, New York City, November 21, 1927. ORDER OF FINISH 8. Cornell 188 9. Columbia 278 10. N. Y. U. 283 11. Union 284 12. Manhattan College 294 13. C. C. N. Y. 388 1. Penn State 31 2. Dartmouth 42 3. Syracuse 106 4. Yale 126 o. Princeton 128 6. M. I. T. 147 7. Rutgers 183 Low score wins. 301 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Crew Season, 1927 IN reviewing the 1927 season, we may say it was a successful one, though Coach Leader ' s unbroken series of victories was ended. Captain Robinson an d his crew won their first race with Pennsylvania and the much-heralded Columbia boat, and prospects for another undefeated year were bright. They lost to the powerful Harvard and Princeton crews, however, in two of the most brilliant races ever Avitnessed. In each case the outcome was undecided until the finish line was crossed, and this crew will always be classed as one of Leader ' s best. The fall rowing season opened with a rally on the fifth of October, and plans for the year were outlined by the captain and coaches. Good weather followed, and a great deal was accom- plished in the outdoor rowing that continued as long as the weather permitted. After the Christmas holidays, rowing was resumed in the tank and on the machines. Several football men were added to the squad, and the routine prac- tice for the indoor season was established. Cap- tain Robinson was unable to join the squad for several weeks because he was a member of the University Hockey Team. The coaches drilled on blade work and satisfactory progress was made. Taking advantage of good weather conditions. Coach I eader put his crews on the water on the seventeenth of Februaiy, the earliest spring practice recorded at Yale. Intensive training was then begun for the first race. Because of misconduct in previous years on the part of some of the stu- dent body, the Derby Day Regatta was almost abolished. A referendum was taken which resulted in the authorization of the combined Student Councils to supervise the affair, and this colorful spectacle was allowed to continue. As the seventh of May approached. Coach Leader rearranged and shifted the varsity boat until he got a satisfactory combination. Towards the end of April, Bartholomew, Wardwell, and Taylor replaced Griggs, Cannon, and Hudson in the first boat, and then no more changes were made before the race. The Regatta opened with a victory for Yale when the Jimior Varsity led Columbia across the finish line bj a length. Pennsylvania came in third, trail- ing a length behind Columbia. The Freshman boat then created a sensation in the power hidden beneath its smooth stroke. Keeping a slow beat, it was able 303 E. O. LEADER COACH OF CREW YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI LATE PRACTICE AT DERBY to win easily, crossing the line four lengths ahead of Coluinhia. It was a true INIurphy crew, well deserving of praise. After a delay of an hour for calmer weather, the varsity race started. Columbia got away first. At the mile stake Yale took the lead, pulling to- gether with that smooth glide between strokes that is so beautifid to watch. When Coxswain Stewart waved his red flag the spurt carried the shell over the finish line almost two lengths ahead of the rival boat. Beautifid applica- tion and good blade work were the distinguishing features. The following week Coach Grant ' s 150-pound varsity crew inaugurated its season at Derby, winning the triangular regatta with Cohmibia and M. I. T. In a verv dramatic finish. Yale carried the stroke up to forty-two without a falter, and nosed out Columbia at the line by a few feet. Weather conditions for the race on Lake Carnegie were ideal. There was l ractically no wind, the water was calm and noticeably dead, being scarcely six feet deei all along the coin-se. The varsity crew was seated the same as for the race at Derliv two weeks earlier, except that Nlosle at bow was replaced by Durant. Cornell took the lead at the start, but dropped behind as the jjace 305 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Christenson. Cox , Stroke Cannon Griggs Clarke Brewster JUNIOR VARSITY CREW, 1927 was set at thirty- four. Yale and Princeton were even at the half-mile mark. Then Princeton took a slight lead and held it to the finish line, winning by a quarter length, and giving Yale the first defeat a varsity crew has exjjerienced since Coach Leader came to take over Yale rowing. The Freshmen also lost on the one and three-fourths mile course, Princeton leading almost all of the way. In the Junior varsity race Yale took the lead at the last mile and won by two lengths, Cornell coming in second. The 150-j3ound crew won their event in a very spectacular race. One of the most exciting exhibitions of the year was the race on the Schuylkill at Philadelphia in which the University third crew lowered the Henley course record in the third A arsity Class. The Yale boat, stroked by Ward, won from Princeton by three-quarters of a lenglh, witli Pennsylvania and Harvard finishing third and fourtli, respectively. The former mark was set by Yale two years before. Thirty-six oarsmen, including the Varsity and Fresliman squads, arrived at Gales Ferry on the fifth of June. Light practices were held at first, and the time before examinations was spent in getting the A arsity adjusted to the four-mile course. Then serious preparation Avas begim for the Harvard race. 306 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Hinkley Cragin Holter Trommald Jenkins Fenton Ward. 3d Brown Drake ISO-LB. CREW, 192T Coach Leader had difficulty in keeping the Varsity crew intact. Two of the most valuable oarsmen, Quarrier and Warren, were on the sick list for several days and substitutions were necessary. They recovered shortly, however, and returned to their positions. At the last moment Cannon was moved up to the first boat while Paschal was dropped back to the Junior Varsity. Both Yale and Harvard showed up well in time trials, and everything pointed towards a close race. The Thames was ablaze with color on the day of the race. A thousand yachts, dressed with blue and red flags, stretched up the river to the end of the four-mile course, brilliant and colorful in the sunshine, A slight southerly wind was against the oarsmen. The varsity race was started at eight o ' clock daylight saving. Harvard had a lead of half a length at the first mile stake, and increased it steadily until oj en water showed between the shells. Ijaughlin then raised the stroke, but every move was met by the Harvard crew and Yale was still three-quarters of a len gth behind when the finish line was crossed. The Junior Varsity and Freshman crews had both won their races in the morning, over the two-mile coiu ' se. The former took the lead from Harvard at the one and three-quarter mile mark, and held it to the end. The Freshman 307 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI crew also came from behind to win, taking the lead at the mile stake. They rowed a slow powerful stroke and set a new record, breaking the former one by twenty seconds. With the Olympics in view, interest in crew will run unusually high this coming season. Four men were lost from the first boat by graduation, but Coach Leader will have some good material from the Junior Varsity and Freshman crcAvs. His great problem lies in a stroke. Coach Murphy ' s Fresh- man boat was one of the best he has ever had, and much can be expected of them this year. All indications point towards a successful season for Coach Leader and his staflf. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Sumviary of University Boat Races and Officers Year Date Winner Course Time Crews Engaged Captains Presidents 1853 1854 1855 R. Waite, ' 63 A. H. Stevens, ' 54 Samiiei Scoviile, ' 57 W. D. Morgan, ' 58 N. W. Bumstead. ' 53 1856 ]]] ,,..],. ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . A. W. Harriott, ' 56 1857 S. Scoviile, ' 57 185S W. P. Bacon, ' 68 1869 July 26 Harvard Worcester ig ' m. ' iss. ' 3 H. L. Johnson, ' 60 S. D. Page, ' 59 1860 July 24 Harvard Worcester 18 m. S3 s. 3 H. L. Johnson, 60 H. L. Johnson, ' 60 1861 C. T. Stanton. ' 61 1862 E. S. Lyman. ' 62 1863 G. L. Curran, ' 63 1864 July 29! Yale Worcester 19 mi. is. 2 W. R. Baconr ' 65 S. C. Pierson, ' 64 1865 Ijuly 28 Yale Worcester 18 m. 42j s. 2 W. R. Bacon, ' 65 W. R. Bacon, ' 65 1866 July 27 Harvard Worcester 18 m. 43 s. 2 E. B. Bennett, ' 66 E. B. Bennett, ' 66 1867 July 19 Harvard Worcester 18 m. 12i s. 2 Samuel Parry, 68 A. B. Bissell, ' 67 1868 July 24 Harvard Worcester 17 m. 4S5 s. 2 Samuel Parry, 68 S. Parry, ' 68 1869 ' July 23 Harvard Worcester 18 m. 2 s. 2 W. A. Copp, ' 69 W. A. Copp, ' 69 1870 jJuly 22 Harvard Worcester 18 m. 45 s. 2 D. M. Bone, ' 70 D. M. Bone, ' 70 1871 July 21 Amherst Connecticut River 17 m. 47 s. 3 F. G. Adee, ' 73 1 W. F. McCook, ' 731 I. H. Ford, ' 71 1872 July 24 Amherst Connecticut River 16 m. 33! s. 6 W. F. McCook, ' 78 L. G. Parsons, ' 72 1873 IJuly 17 Yale Connecticut River 16 m. 59 s. 11 R. J. Cook, ' 76 H. A. Oakes, ' 73 1874 IJuly 18 Columbia Saratoga 18 m. 42J s. 9 R. J. Cook, ' 76 C. H. Ferry, ' 75 1875 July 14 Cornell Saratoga 16 m. 5.1i s. IS R. J. Cook, ' 76 C. H. Ferry, ' 75 1876 June 30 Yale Connecticut River 22 m. 2 s. 2 R. J. Cook, ' 76 E. P. Howe, 76 1876 July WiCornell Saratoga 17 m. 15 s. 6 1877 June SolHarvard Connecticut River 24 m. 36 s. 2t W. W. Collin, ' 77 F. W. Davis. ' 77 1878 June 28 1 Harvard New London 20 m. 44i s. 2 0. D. Thompson, ' 79 W. H. Hite, ' 78 1879 June 27! Harvard New London 22 m. 15 s. 2 0. D. Thompson, 79 C. F. Aldrich, ' 79 1880 July 11 Yale New London 24 m. 27 s. 2 G. B. Rogers, ' 79 S. W. C. McHenry. ' 80 1881 July IJYale New London 22 m. 13 s. 2 J. B. Collins, ' 81 R. A. Bigelow, ' 81 1882 iJune 29 Harvard New London 20 m. 47J s. 2 L. K. Hull, -83 R. A. Bigelow, ' 81 1883 June 2S Harvard New London 25 m. 46j s. 2 L. K. Hull, ' 83 F. C. Leonard. ' 83 1884 June 26 Yale New London 20 m. 31 s. 2 H. R. Flanders, 85 E. A. Merritt, ' 84 1885 June 26 Harvard New London 25 m. 155 s. 2 H. R. Flanders, ' 85 W. G. Green, ' 85 1886 July 2 Yale New London 20 m. 42 s. 2 Alfred Cowles, ' 86 Paul K. Ames, ' 86 1887 July 2 Yale New London 22 m. 56 s. 2 John Rogers, ' 87 S. Knight, ' 87 1888 June 29 Yale New London 20 m. 10 s. 2 F. A. Stevenson, ' 88 E. A. Stevenson, ' 88 1889 June 28 Yale New London 21 m. 30 s. 2 G. A. Woodruff, ' 89 L. T. Snipe, ' 89 1890 IJune 27 Yale New London 21 m. 29 s. 2 Philip Allen, ' 90 S. C. A. Sheldon, ' 90 1891 June 26 Harvard New London 21 m. 23 s. 2 G. S. Brewster, ' 91 J. B. Townsend, ' 91 1892 Ijuly liYale New London 20 m. 47 s. 2 J. A. Hartwell, M. S. E. H. Floyd-Jones, ' 92 1893 June 30 Yale New London 24 m. 59 s. 2 S. B. Ives, ' 93 Derby Rogers, ' 93 1894 June 28 Yale New London 23 m. 455 s. 2 F. A. Johnson, ' 94 S. P. H. McMillin, ' 94 1895 June 28 Yale New London 21 m. 29} s. 2 R. Armstrong, ' 95 S. G. T. Adee, ' 96 1896 July 7 Leander Henley-on-Thames 7 m. 41 s. 2 R. B. Treadway, ' 96 J. G. H. de Sibour, ' 96 1897 25, Cornell Poughkeepsie 20 m. 34 s. 2 P. H. Bailey, ' 97 J. S. Wheelwright, ' 97 1898 June — Cornell New London 23 m. 48 s. 3 Payne Whitney, ' 98 Greenville Parker, ' 98 1899 June 29 Harvard New London 20 m. 54 s. 3 F. W. Allen, ' 00 P. Preston, ' 99 1900 28 Yale New London 21 m. 12I s. 2 F. W. Allen, ' 00 R. J. Schweppe, ' 00 1901 June 27 Yale New London 23 m. 37 s. 2 A. S. Blagden, ' 01 S. A. H. Richardson. ' 01 1902 June 26 Yale New London 20 ni. 20 s. 2 P. H. Kunzig, L. S. Roderick Potter, 02 1903 25 New London 20 m. 19S s. 2 C. B. Waterman, L. S. J. M. Dreisbach, ' 03 1904 June 29 Yale New London 21 m. 405 s. 2 W. S. Cross, ' 04 F. T. Dodge, ' 04 1905 29 New London 23 m. 30 s. 2 R. C. Whittier, ' 05 S. H. A. Raymond. 05 1906 June 28 Harvard New London 23 m. 2 s. 2 R. C. Morse, Jr., 06 S. W. S. Moorhead, 06 1907 June 27 Yale New London 21 m. 10 s. 2 C. E. Ide, 08 T. P. Dixon, ' 07 1908 June 25 Harvard New London 24 m. 10 s. 2 C. E. Ide, ' 08 C. Seymour, ' 08 1909 July 1 Harvard New London 21 m. 50 s. 2 H. A. Howe. ' 09 J. B. Perrin, ' 09 1910 July 1 Harvard New London 21 m. 50 s. 2 R. A. Wodell, 10 H. T. Curtiss, ' 10 1911 June 30 Harvard New London 22 m. 44 s. 2 E. P. Frost, ' 11 F. F. Randolph, 11 1912 June 19 Harvard New London 21 m. 435 s. 2 R. Romeyn, 12 S. H. A. Street, ' 12 1913 June 20 Harvard New London 21 m. 42 s. 2 C. N. Snowdon, ' 13 S. J. R. Walker, ' 13 1914 June 19 Yale New London 21 m. 16 s. 2 T. B. Denegre, 15 H. W. Hobson. 14 1915 June 20 Yale New London 21 m. 16 s. 2 A. D. Sturtevant, ' 16 S. R. K. Lackey. 16 S. 1916 June 25 Harvard New London 20 m. 52 s. 2 Seth Low, 2d, ' 16 Dan C. Elkin, ' 16 1917 lApri 7 Yale Philadelphia 6 m. 52 s. C. Meyer, ' 17 S. C. B. 0. Armstrong, ' 17 S. 1918 IJune 1 Harvard Housatonic 10 m. 58 s. 2 A. R. Hyatt, ' 18 Trubee Davison, ' 18 1919 Ijune 20 Yale New London 21 m. 42j s. 2 W. Mead, ' 19 M. H. Ross, ' 19 1920 ' June 25 Harvard New London 23 m. 11 s. 2 C. C. Peters, ' 19 S. H. Knox, ' 20 1921 June 24, Yale New London 20 m. 41 s. 2 S. Y. Hord, ' 21 E. Buflington, ' 21 1922 June 23 Yale New London 21 m. 53 s. 2 L. Gibson, ' 22 H. B. Strong, ' 22 1923 June 22 Yale New London 22 m. 10 s. 2 B. B. Pelly, ' 23 J. T. Houk, ' 23 S. 1924 June 20 Yale New London 21 m. 58? s. 2 J. S. Rockefeller, ' 24 W. M. Robbins. ' 24 S. 1925 IJnne 19 Vale New London 20 m. 26 s. 2 A. M. Wilson. ' 25 C. H. Walker, ' 25 S. 1926 June 25 Yale New London 20 m. 141 s. 2 H.T.Kingsbury,Jr., ' 26 R. N. Je.ssop, ' 26 S. 1927 IJune 241 Harvard New London 22 m. 35i s. 2 F. F Robinson. ' 27 H. Spitzer, ' 28 S. , 18 m. 45 s. Given to Harvard on foul. tYale and Harvard i ght-oared crews. 4 miles. 309 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE UNIVERSITY BOAT CLUB OFFICERS, 1927-1928 Peter Hei.lwege Stewart, ' 28, Captain Edwin O. Leader, Coach HoKTON Spitzer, ' 28 S., Manager Roger Conant Damon, ' 29, Assistant Manager HORTON spitzer. 48 s. MANAGER OF CREW OFFICERS, 1926-1927 Frederick Flower Robinson, ' 27, Captain Edwin O. Leader, Coach Horton Spitzer, ' 28 S., Acting Manager UNIVERSITY CREW, 1927 Position Name Class Age Height ft. in. Weight Stroke T. I. Laughlin ' 27 21 6 2 168 7 E. R. Wardwell ' 27 22 6 1 175 6 D. T. Bartholomew ' 28 20 6 2 175 5 H. B. Cannon, Jr. ' 28 S. 21 6 2 190 4 S. S. Quarrier ' 28 S. 20 6 2 180 3 J. 0. Warren ' 27 22 6 2 180 2 B. W. Taylor ' 28 S. 20 6 1 170 Bow F. F. Robinson Average ■27 22 21 6 3 175 6 I ' s 176.6 Cox P. H. Stewart •28 20 5 9 110 311 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 150 POUND CREW SEASON J. HixKLEY, ' 27 S., Captain H. Spitzer, ' 28 S., Manager YALE-COLUMBIA-MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY RACE Yak in. 31 Derby, Conn., May 14, 192 ' 7 Won by Yale Columbia 7 min. 31% sec. ] I. I. T. 7 niin. 42 sec. Position Xa iic Bow J. Hinkley, ' 27 S. 2 S. Cragin, ' 28 6 3 R. Holter, 29 7 4 J. Tromniald, ' 29 S. Stroke Cox J. Ward, ' 27 Position Name 5 W. Jenkins, ' 29 6 M. Fenton, ' 29 7 W. Brown, ' 29 F. Drake, ' 29 YALE-PRIXCETOX RACE Lake Carnegie, May 21, 192 Won bv Yale Yale 7 niin. 43 sec. Princeton 7 min. 45 sec. Position Xame Bow J. Hinkley, ' 27 S. 2 S. Cragin, ' 28 6 3 R. Holter, 29 7 4 J. Trommald, ' 29 S. Stroke Cox J. Ward, ' 27 Position Xame 5 W. Jenkins, ' 29 6 :M. Fenton, ' 29 7 W. Brown, ' 29 F. Drake, ' 29 STEWART CUP REGATTA Philadelphia, Pa., May 28, 1927 Won bv Pennsylvania Pennsylvania 6 min. 39 5 sec. Yale 4th Position Xame Position Xame Bow J. Hinklev, ' 27 S. 5 W. Jenkins, ' 29 2 S. Cragin, ' 28 6 :M. Fenton, ' 29 3 R. Holter, ' 29 7 W. Brown. ' 29 4 J. Trommald, 29 S. Stroke F. Drake, ' 29 Cox J. Ward, ' 27 313 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SEASON, 1926-1927 1930 FRESHMAN CREW H. Spitzer, ' 28 S., Manager YALE-PENNSYLVANIA-COLUMBIA FRESHMAN RACE Derby, Conn., May 7, 1927 Course two miles Won by Yale Yale 10 min. 29 sec. Columbia 10 min. 41 sec. Pennsylvania 10 min. 46 sec. Position Name Bow W. B. Harding 2 W. W. Garnsev 3 W. B. Mosle 4 S. P. McCalmont Cox D. Kitchel Position Name 5 L. W. Ladd 6 A E. Palmer 7 A S. Blagden Stroke J. S. Graetzer YALE-CORNELL-PRINCETON FRESHMAN RACE Lake Carnegie, Princeton, May 21, 1927 Course one and three-quarters miles Won by Princeton Princeton 9 min. 51 ' s sec. Yale 10 min. 1% sec. Cornell 10 min. 14 see. Position Name Bow W. B. Harding 2 W. W. Garnsev 3 W. B. Mosle 4 S. P. McCalmont Position Name 5 L. W. Ladd 6 A E. Palmer 7 A S. Blagden Stroke J. S. Graetzer Cox D. Kitchel YALE-HARVARD FRESHMAN RACE New London, Conn., June 24, 1927 Course two miles Won by Yale Yale 9 min. 18 sec. Harvard 9 min. 22% sec. ( ew Freshman Down Stream Record) Position Name Bow W. B. Harding 2 S. P. IMcCalmont 3 W. B. Mosle 4 J. S. Graetzer Position Stroke Cox D. Kitchel Name L. W. Ladd W. W. Garnsey A. S. Blagden A. E. Palmer 315 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI SEASON, 1926-1927 1930 FRESHMAN 150 LB. CREW H. E. Russell, ' 30, Captain D. F. Grant, Coach KENT-YALE FRESHMAN 150-LB. RACE Derby, Conn., May 14, 1927 Course one mile Won by Kent Kent 5 min. 3i sec. Yale 5 min. 41 sec. YALE Position Name Position Name Bow W. F. Thompson 5 E. 0. Holier, Jr. 2 S. Adams, Jr. 6 T. A. Standish, Jr 3 R. il. Putnam T G. H. Hodges, Jr. 4 E. Brooks, Jr. Stroke H. E. Russell Cox R. Simonds YALE-HARVARD FRESHMAN 150-LB. RACE Cambridge, Mass., May 21, 1927 Course one mile Won by Yale Yale 5 min. 28 sec. Harvard 5 min. 34 sec. YALE Position Name Position Name Bow W. F. Thompson 5 E. 0. Holler 2 R. C. Nicholas, Jr. 6 T. A. Standish, Jr 3 R. M. Putnam 7 G. H. Hodges 4 E. Brooks Sti •oke H. E. Russell Cox R. Simonds 317 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Hockey Season, 1927-1928 ONE of Yale ' s most successful hocke_v seasons was officially opened on November M in Lampson Lyceum when a large number of veteran players put in their attendance. Speeches by Coach C. L. Wanamaker, J. M. Cates ' 06, Athletic Director, Captain R. F, Vaughan, ' 28, and J. K. Curtis, ' 28, ;Manager, featured the meeting. The season was opened in the Arena, on December 7, when George Owen ' s University Club sextet of Boston defeated tlie Blue skaters by a score of 8 to 5. W. H. Palmer, ' 30, the outstanding man in intercollegiate hockey this year, started a wonderful season by scoring three of Yale ' s five goals. Just before tlie Christmas vacation a cut was made, and the nineteen men who were retained returned to New Haven on December 28. After three days of practice, Yale played its first intercollegiate game with Boston College on December 31. Again led by the bril- liant playing of Palmer, who scored four of the five goals, the Eli team emerged victorious bj- a score of .5 to 2. On January 3, the opening day of college, Y ' ale lost its second game to Toronto University — t to 3. Yale led 3 to 2 with but a few minutes of tlie closing period, when Carrick, big Toronto defense man, scored the winning goal after the score had been tied. The !M. I. T. team arrived here January 7, and went down to a one-sided defeat by a score of 12 to 1. Palmer scored five times. Captain Vaughan and Curtis three times and Cady once. On January 10, the Yale sextet made a trip to Providence, where, led by Captain Vaughan, who scored three goals, they easily defeated the Brown sextet, 8 to 1. The first game of the Princeton series was played in New Haven on January 14. The Yale team, playing brilliant hockev, were easily able to overcome the Tiger sextet by a score of 6 to 2. The visiting sextet held the Yale team to a standstill in the first period, but finally in tlie closing minutes of the second period the Yale skaters hit their stride. On January 17. the Yale team met another Boston team in the local Arena. The Boston University Hockey team was decidedly outclassed by Yale and went down to defeat by the score of 9 to 1. Curtis this time led the Yale scoring, making four goals, while Palmer tallied three times and Ryan twice. The next night, Yale took the Bowdoin University sextet into camp to tlie tune of 8 to 0. The visitors from Brunswick were no match for the Yale skaters who scored five times in the opening period and three in the closing frame. Captain Vaughan and Palmer each scored three goals, while Curtis and Wilson scored one apiece. The Dartmouth team arrived in New Haven on Januarj- 21 for the first game of a series in which Yale, showing its best teamwork of the season, won b.y a score of 3 to 1. The o-ame was fast and rough, and the penalty box was constantly being filled by offenders on both teams. Palmer accounted for two of the goals, while CajDtain Vaughan made the third. Bott the Green ' s goalie, did marvelous work in the nets to keep the score from mounting any higher. Hurd, the Yale goal tender, played well for the Elis. On the following Wednesday, January 2t, the Yale team crushed New Hampshire, 11 to 2. Yale scored at will, five times in the first period, three in the second, and three in the last. The first game of the annual series with the St. Nicholas ' Club of New York was plaved here February 4. Although composed of several former college stars, the St. Nicks ' showed their lack of practice and were no match for the powerful Yale team, which won, 7 to 2. Yale went into the lead in the second period after a scoreless initial frame and scored two goals, and five times in the final period. Palmer was responsible for five of the seven scores. The Yale-Bates game, which was one of the features of Prom Week activities, took place on Wednesday, February 8. The first string line, composed of Captain Vaughan, Curtis, and 319 COACH WANAMAKER OF HOCKEY YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Palmer, skated rings around the Maine team and scored almost at will, hanging up a 12 to 3 victory. Palmer scored five times, and Cajjtain ughan and Curtis three apiece. Coming to New Haven again on February 15, the St. Nicks ' sextet showed little improve- ment over their first appearance here and lost 6 to 2. Palmer was not in his usual form, but managed, nevertheless, to score two of the goals. Curtis starred with three tallies, while Captain Vaughan contributed the other. A long-anticipated return game with the University Club team of Boston was played in New Haven on February 18. A better-conditioned Yale team outskated its opponents, and took the game, 5 to 1. Palmer was invincible and scored four of the five goals for Yale. The second game of the Princeton series was played at Yale and was a repetition of the first victory for the Blue. Palmer led the scoring attack with five goals. The Tigers managed, not without difficulty, to hold the Yale attack to two goals in each of the first two periods, but in the final frame Yale flashed through for five tallies. The game was sjiectacular, despite its one-sidedness. The Yale attack worked smoothly throughout the game, and Ryan and Cady broke up most of the Tiger rushes. Up to this time Yale had lost only two games out of the sixteen and had won the last thirteen contests in a row. They had been beaten by no college team and the intercollegiate championship of the East rested on the outcome of the oncoming series with the strong Harvard team. Neither team was particularly favored in the pre- series betting, for Yale had an enviable record, and, in Hale Palmer, the Blue had a scoring ace who was con- sidered the greatest man in intercollegiate hockey since the days of George Owen of Harvard and Red Hall of Dartmouth, while Harvard was known to have an equally powerful team and an almost impassable goal guard in Joe Morrill. The first clash of the two teams was held in New Haven on February 25, and Harvard conquered the Blue, 2 to 1, before the greatest crowd that ever packed the Arena. It required an overtime period to break a 1 to 1 deadlock which la sted for an hour. Ryan and Cady excelled on the defense, but Harvard had two equally strong forward lines which gradually wore the Yale team ' s spirit down as the game progressed. Palmer was so effectively throttled by the Harvard forwards that his chances for shots at Morrill were few and far between. The Harvard defense played far up the ice, forcing the Yale forwards to shoot at long range, with the result that Morrill handled all the Yale shots with great ease. The game went into over- time periods, as Yale succeeded in holding Harvard to a 1 to 1 deadlock, but in the first extra session, Captain Chase of Harvard received a pass from Tudor who liad followed up a rebound and scored on Sizer, the Yale goalie who was substituted when Hurd received a deep cut on his cheek. On the following Saturday, March 3, Yale met Harvard for the second time in the Boston Arena before a capacity crowd, only to go down to defeat for the second time bv a score of 2 to 0. Cajitain Chase and Giddens tallied for Harvard in the opening period, and although the Yale sextet fought valiantly they were unable to pierce an almost impregnable defense. The Harvard forwards again watched Palmer like a hawk. An idea of the relative effective- ness of both teams ' defense may be gathered from the fact that Morrill, Harvard goalie, was called upon to make only twenty-two stops, while Hurd made fifty-five. A banquet at the Hotel Taft on Tuesday, March 13, at which R. G. Cady was elected captain, marked the official close of the season. The apjiointment of T. C. Farnsworth, ' 29, as manager and G. B. Longstreth as assistant manager was also announced. CAPTAIN-ELECT CADY YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI r YALE UNIVERSITY HOCKEY TEAM OFFICERS, 1927-1928 pk H R. F. Vaughan, ' 28, Captain J. K. Curtis, ' 28, Manager if i T. C. Farnsworth, ' 29, Assistajit Manager M C. L. Wanamaker, Coach J. K. CURTIS MANAGER TEAM, 1927-1928 J. C. Brady, Jr. R. M. Hurd, Jr. J. A. Thomas R. G. Cady R. C. Knight R. F. Vaughan P. Curtis W. H. Palmer A. Y. Warner H. A. Fletcher F. B. Rvan, Jr. J. C. West D. H. Hickok W. Sizer R. F. Wilson SCORES Yale Opponents Dec. 10 University Club of Boston 5 8 Dec. 31 Boston College 5 2 Jan. 3 Toronto 3 4 Jan. 7 M. I. T. 12 1 Jan. 10 Brown at Providence 8 1 Jan. 14 Princeton 6 2 Jan. 17 Boston University 9 1 Jan. 18 Bowdoin 8 Jan. 21 Dartmouth 3 1 Jan. 24 New Hampshire 11 2 Feb. 4 St. Nicks 7 2 Feb. 8 Bates 12 3 Feb. 11 Dartmouth at Hanover 4 3 Feb. 15 St. Nicks 6 2 Feb. 18 University Club of Boston 5 1 Feb. 22 Princeton at Princeton 9 2 Feb. 25 Harvard 1 2 Mar. 3 Harvard at Cambridge 2 323 . YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE FRESHMAN HOCKEY TEAM OFFICERS, 1927-1928 F. A. Nelson, Je., ' 31, Captain T. C. Farnsworth, ' 29, Manager L. M. XoBLE, Coach CAPTAIN NELSON TEAM E. Austen J. Breckenridge J. E. Cookman H. L. Cruikshank F. Farrel, 3d F. L. Luce A. D. :McIntosh D. R. McLennan F. A. Nelson, Jr. R. Schley, Jr. C. S. Snead E. G. Stoddard SCORES Springfield Freshmen jNIelrose High School Yale 13 3 Opponents 1 Choate 10 1 Newton High School 6 4 Hebron High School 4 3 Dartmouth Freshmen 3 1 St. Paul ' s at Concord 1 2 Princeton Freshmen at Princeton 6 3 Harvard Freshmen 2 1 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MINOR SPORTS N the field of minor sports, Ath- letics for all, the democratic bat- tle-cry of the Athletic Association, is put into effect with a vengeance. Almost every form of phj sical exercise is here recognized and organized. Good coaching is obtained and the best equipment provided. Scheduled competitions with other colleges are arranged, and, indeed, every encouragement is given to the man who would indulge his pro- pensity for unusual forms of competition and who does not require a cheering section. 326 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Basketball Season DECEMBER seventh marked the opening of tlie basketball season. On this day the team defeated Upsala by a good margin. Thi-ee days later Rhode Island was de- feated by the decisive score of 43-22. Fodder, who played center, was the mainstay in both games. On December 17, the team was defeated for the first time by St. Lawrence by a score of 28 to 29 in a very hard-fought game. During the Christmas holidays, Yale defeated both Vermont and New York Uni- versity thus winning the annual winter tournament. Yale ' s first league game was with Pennsylvania on December 31 at Philadelphia and won by a score of 24-21. The team came from behind in the second half and won due to the remarkable playing of Nassau and iMerrill. A strong undefeated Fordham team defeated Yale in the last game before college opened. The first game after the holidays was with Dartmouth in which Yale won from last year ' s Intercollegiate Cham- pions by a close score of 26-22. Yale was at this time leader of the League and had defeated the two strongest rivals. Nassau, Merrill, and Fodder had played remarkable basketball and were ably assisted by Captain Ward, McNulty, and Townsend. Three days after the Dartmouth game the team de- feated M. I. T. in a close competition. On January 14, Yale was defeated in a close game with Cornell in which Merrill and Fodder starred. Fodder at this time led the League in points scored. A few days later Columbia won from Yale in the most exciting game played so far. The score was tied until the last few minutes to play when Columbia shot a foul which gave them a one point victory. The team defeated Brown in a well played game at Providence on January 21. This was the last game until after mid-years. In the first game after examinations Yale won from Williams by a decisive score. On February 15, Yale suffered a second defeat at the hands of Cornell. The team was not in good form and Cornell led all the way. Three days later the team was defeated by Princeton by the score of 16-24. It was a hard-fought game, but Yale was unable to come from behind at any time. The return game was played on February 22 at New Haven. The game was featured by unbeliev- able accuracy of the Princeton team. They made baskets from any distance or angle. The victors won 24 to 47. Yale, a few days later, won an easy victory from Weslcyan. The return game with Dartmouth on February 29 was a victory by the score of 47-39. In the last of the second half the score was tied but Nassau, right forward, suddenly found the basket and with several remarkable shots placed Yale in the lead. On March 3, Yale defeated Harvard in the most exciting game of the season, during the last ten minutes of play. First one team and then the other would gain a one point lead. With four seconds to go Cook shot a foul which tied the score. In the over- time period the team made four points thus winning the game. The team was defeated by Penn by a small margin. Yale made a valiant attempt to come back in the second half but could not overcome the strong Penn lead. 328 CAPTAIN WARD YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ■ • Parke Nassau Miner R Ward Bryant YALE UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 G. Ward, ' 28 S., Captain L. R. Parker, ' 28, Manager George H. Taylor, Coach SQUAD K. F. BiUhardt, ' 29 S. A. P. McX ulty, ' 28 J. D. Rusher, Jr., ' 29 A. H Bryant, Jr., 28 H R -Merr ill, ' 29 R. E. Scott, ' 28 J. W. Cook, ' 29 R. ' Miner, ' 29 S. L. E. F. Thelen, ' 29 P. K. Fodder, ' 29 A. E. Xanry, ' 30 S. J. L. Townsend, Jr., ' 30 A. M Freeman, Jr., ' 30 L. K. Nassau, ' 30 G. Ward, ' 28 S. M. H arris, ' 29 S. A. I. Nelson, ' 30 J. J. Walters, ' 29 W Leide, ' 30 W Reeves, ' 29 S. SCORES Yale 19 Upsala 13 Yale 26 Da rtmouth Yale 43 Rhode Island 22 Yale 28 M. I. T. Yale 28 St. I.awrence TOUBNAMENT 29 Yale 24 Yale 23 Yale 3fi Cornell Columbia Brown Yale 34. Vermont 30 Yale 40 W Uiams Yale 32 N. Y. U. 30 Yale 18 Cornell Yale 24 Pennsylvania 21 Yale 16 Princeton Yale 32 Fordham 47 Yale 24 Princeton 329 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Swimming ' Season CAPTAIN HOUSE THE first meet of what lias jjroved to be an unusually successful season was held December 10 with tlie Alumni. The stars of former years were not easily defeated, 37 to 25. Intercollegiate competition opened at the Columbia Pool in New York City on January 13, wlien the Light Blue swimmers, handicapped by the absence of Wright, made only 16 points against 46 for Yale. The team left New Haven again on January 18, going to Middletown to face Wesleyan. Yale easily won the meet in which Captain J. A. House, ' 28 S., broke the Intercollegiate Short Course Record for the 1.50-yard back stroke, covering the distance in one minute 13 1-5 seconds. The same evening, Yale swimmers broke the Intercollegiate Records for the 800-yard and 1000-yard breast stroke relays. C. C. N. Y., swimming against Yale in Carnegie Pool on January 21, failed to place better than third in any event except the relays which it won. The final score was 48 to 14. In an interclass meet of unusual interest on January 24, eight world ' s records were broken while three intercollegiate records were bettered and five established. The events were the 600-yard, 750-yard, 900-yard, and one-mile back stroke relays, and the 800-yard, 1000-yard, 1200-yard, and one-mile breast stroke relays. In the last contest before the mid-year vacation, the Brown Bears were no equal for the University Water-dogs, and man- aged to get only 21 jjoints against 41. Captain House swam the 50-yard dash in the fast time of 24 1-5 seconds. On February 1 1, the Varsity swimmers traveled to Syracuse where they over- whelmed the Orange team, 43 to 19. J. Howland, ' 30, starred in the 100-yard dash and the relay. A feature of the evening was the 440-yard dash in which Cannon, Syracuse, nosed out W. F. Sanford, ' 28. One of the closest meets of the season was with the Boys ' Club of New York on Washington ' s Birthday. In spite of the remarkable swimming of George Kojac, Boy ' s Club star, who broke the world ' s record for the 150-yard back stroke, making the distance in one minute 39 4-5 seconds, Yale was able to defeat the visitors, 48 to 14. Howland placed first in the 50-yard and 100-yard dashes. The Orange and Black swimmers from Princeton opposed Yale in Carnegie Pool on February 25. The most interesting event of the contest, which Yale won, 45 to 17, was the breast stroke, in which Wallace of Princeton defeated F. M. Rickman, ' 28, by inches. Rutgers was the next team downed by Yale, the New Brunswick swimmers losing 53 to 9 on February 29, in a meet in which Captain House was victor in three events. The meet with Dartmouth on March 3, while the Eli men had no trouble winning, 34 to 28, ])roved to be very close. The 50-yard and 100-yard dashes were noteworthy. In the former, J. Howland, ' 30, and Bryant of Dartmouth swam a dead heat in 24 3-5 seconds; in the latter, Howland, Captain House, and Br ' ant finished less than a yard apart in the order named. What might be called the Annual Swimming Circus occurred on March 6. Three National Junior A. A. U. championships were held: the 300-yard medley relay was won by the New York Athletic Club team, as was the 200-yard relay. N. Y. A. C. also won the third champion- ship when Ramsdorf took the high dive. A special 440-yard race between Ruddy, National Interscholastic Champion, and W. F. Sanford, ' 28, took place, the former winning in the very fast time of 5 minutes 8 3-5 seconds. The second meeting between Yale and Princeton, this time at Princeton on March 10, resulted in another victory for the Blue, 41 to 21. In a nip-and-tuck race, Wallace of Princeton again defeated Rickman by a touch. On March 17, Yale clinched its sixteenth Intercollegiate Swimming Association champion- ship by defeating the Navy, 50 to 12. The best race of the evening was the 50-yard dash which Captain House swam in 24 seconds flat. On April 2. Yale met the swimmers from the University of Michigan in Carnegie Pool. The meet decided the unofficial intercollegiate swimming championship of the United States. The score was: Yale, 39; Michigan, 23. 330 YALE UNIVERSITY SWIMMING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 J. A. House, Jr., ' 28 S., Captain L. P. Holmes, ' 29, Assistant Manager F. Collins, Jr., ' 28, Manager R. J. H. KiPHUTH. Coach W. Brewster, ' 28 M. A. Glascock, ' 30 R. A. Greer, Jr., ' 28 C. R. Hogen, ' 29 J. . . House, Jr., ' 28 S. TEAM ,J. Howland, Jr., ' 30 J. C. Hutchison, Jr., ' 28 W. S. Manuel, ' 30 W. S. Meanv, Jr., ' 28 C. D. ilercer, 30 J. A. Pope, ' 29 I,. J. Rapoport, ' 30 S. F. M. Rickman, ' 28 S. P. Scott, ' 28 F. A. Spencer, 29 MEETS December 10 Yale 37 January 13 Yale 46 January 18 Yale 44 January 21 Yale 4-8 January 25 Yale 41 February 11 Yale 43 February 15 Yale 35 February 17 Yale 54 Alumni Columliia Wesleyan C. C. N. Y. Brown Syracuse Pennsyhania M. I. T. February 18 Interscholastics February 22 Yale 48 February 22 Yale 23 February 25 Yale 45 February 29 March March March March April Boys ' Club of X. Y. N.Y. A. C. Princeton Rutgers Dartmouth Princeton N ' ayy 23, 24 IntercoUegiates (at Philadelphi 12 Yale 39 Michigan 331 Yale .53 Yale 34 Yale 41 Yale .50 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Water Polo Season FOR the fourth successive year, Yale won the championship of The Eastern Inter- collegiate Water Polo League during the 1927-1928 season. Tiie season opened with tiie annual game with the Alumni on December 10. Yale ' s potential strength was clearly seen in this early encounter, which the Varsity won 28 to 6. Columbia, the league champion the year before Yale ' s supremacy began, was easily defeated 81 to 7 in New York on January 18. Captain J. C. Hutchison, ' 28, was the outstanding player, scoring six touch goals and one thrown goal. C. C. N. Y. was no match for the Blue team in the home pool on January 21, Captain Hutchison making nine toucli goals towards the total score of 80 to 15. The power of the Yale team become more obvious each game. Yale had an easy time when it faced Syracuse at Syracuse on February I. ' }, winning 57 to 9. L. J. Rapoport, ' 30 S., led the attack for Yale, while the Blue defense kept the Orange from coring a goal. The Yale team concluded its early run of victories by overcoming the University of Pennsylvania water-poloists on February 15 at Philadelphia by a score of 51 to 11. On February 22, the famed Xew York Athletic Club team gave Yale her only defeat of the season. In the closely con- tested game, in which former Captain Matelene of Prince- ton starred, the New Yorkers were held to a 33 to 23 score. The old rivalry between Princeton and Yale was re- newed on February 25. In a rather rough game, the Orange and Black was defeated 60 to 16. S. P. Scott, ' 28, played an exceptional game on the defense. The Dartmouth team invaded New Haven on March 3, but was able to offer but slight opposition to the strong Yale squad. The Green team made only 9 points, while the Blue, composed of mostly Junior Varsity men, collected -iS. In the second contest with Princeton at Princeton, the score was closer than any intercollegiate game of the year. A foul goal by Scott, ' 28, decided the contest, making the score 29 to 28. At this time both teams were under R. J. H. Kiphuth, Yale coach for ten years. The final game of the year, against Navy, in Carnegie Pool, on March 17, was an ideal ending to a successful season. Since neither team had been defeated, the champion- ship depended on the outcome of the contest. After a very exciting and hard-fought game, throughout which the spectators were in a continual uproar, the Yale men emerged victorious 47 to 1 ' 2. The outstanding star of the evening was L. J. Rapoport, ' 30 S., who time and again reached the Navy goal to score 40 of Yale ' s points. At the end of the season. Captain Hutchison led the scorers of the league with a total of 155 points, while Rapoport was a close second with 135 points. From this year ' s squad, Blun, Cressy, Scott, and Hutchison will be lost by graduation. CAPTAIN HUTCHISON YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Collins. Mgr. : Ielville Douglas Peyton Dow Gwin Rapoport Hutchison. Scott Hynes P - Riley Goodrich Marks Kiphuth Blun Poore Cressy YALE UNIVERSITY WATER POLO ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 J. C. Hutchison, ' 28, Captain Fi-ETCHER Collins, Jr., ' 28, Manager R. J. H. Kiphuth, Coach TEAM G. E. Blun, ' 28 H. A. Bodwell, ' 30 S. W. B. Cressy, ' 28 E. L. Decker, Jr., ' 28 J. N. Douglas S. J. Dow, Jr., ' 29 S. W. B. Easton. Jr. T. W. Goodrich, 2d S. I.. Gwin, Jr., ' 30 R. C. Hume, ' 30 S. J. C. Hutchison, 28 T. V. Hynes, Jr., ' 29 K. P. Marks, ' 30 W. L. Paul, ' 30 J. L. Peyton, ' 30 MEETS December 10 Yale 33 Alumni January 13 Yale 81 Columbia January 21 Yale 80 C. C. N. Y. February 11 Yale 57 Syracuse February 15 Yale 51 Pennsylvania February 22 Yale 23 N. Y. Ath. Club February 25 Yale 60 Princeton March 3 Yale 43 Dartmouth March 10 Yale 29 Princeton March 17 Yale 47 Xavv C. M. Poore, ' 29 I,. J. Rapoport, ' 30 S. C. Rilev, ' 30 S. P. Scott, ' 28 7 (At Columbia) 15 9 (At Syracuse) 11 (At Pennsylvania) (At Princeton) 333 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Boxing Season rr HE 1928 Boxing Season was formally opened in January by the traditional Fresh- -■■ man and Varsitj ' elimination contests. The Freshman matches, as amusing as usual from the spectators ' point of view, brought to light a wealth of promising ma- terial, in five of the six classes. The light-heavyweight group, containing a single en- trant, provided the only safe decision of the tournament. In the Varsity bouts an upset was contributed by E. A. Rice, ' 29 S., who defeated D. L. Ferris, star 175-pounder of the 1930 Freshman team. F. Gatyas, another mainstay of the 1930 team, took the 1-15- pound class from E. W. Ritchie, ' 29, and in the 135-pound class F. B. Haync, ' 28 S., and S. R. Prince, Jr., ' 29, fought to a four-round draw. The remaining weights, the 115, 125, and 158, were won easily ' by L. E. Newman, ' 29, Captain W. L. Graham, Jr., ' 28 S., and C. W. Dibbell, ' 28, all members of last year ' s championship team. In the opening match of the season on February 22, Yale defeated the University of Western Maryland by winning four of the six bouts, all of which were terminated by what the officials chose to call technical knock-outs. Boxing three days later, the University team scored another four-weight victory ; this time over the University of New Hampshire. The same afternoon marked the initial appearance of the 1931 team, which disposed of the M. I. T. Freshmen without losing a bout. The work of J. B. Boyle, who was subsequently elected captain, was outstanding. On March 3, Yale met the Army at West Point, suffering their first and only de- feat. Captain Graham, knocking out Smith of Army in the second round, scored Yale ' s single point. In the 145-pound class, however, F. A. Gatyas, ' 30, carried the most difficult bout of the afternoon through four rounds to an exceptionally close decision. The final meet against the A ' arsity and Freshman teams of the University of Pcnnsvlvania, on ] Iarch 10, closed the season with a double victory. The University team won in four divisions, while the Freshmen were again undefeated. The season of 1929 will find Yale denied the further services of Captain Graham in the 125-pound class, of Smick in the 115, and of Dibbell in the 158. Their loss, par- ticularly that of Captain Graham, will be keenly felt. With the championship 1931 organization to draw from, however, and with Prince, Gatyas, and Ferris again in the ring, the prospects for next season appear favorable. CAPTAIN GRAHAM 334 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI f Back row— Howell, mgr.. Brand. Ritchie, Balis, High. King, coach Front row— Gatyas, Dibbell, Graham, capt., Prince, Thomas UNIVERSITY BOXING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 W. L. Graham, Jr., ' 28, Captain C. M. Howell, Jr., ' 28, Manager C. W. Balls, ' 29, Assistant Manager Moses Kixg, Coach TEAM T. Thomas, 115-pound class J. J. Smick, 115-pound class W. L. Graham, Jr., 125-pound class S. W. Pitts, 125-pound class S. R. Prince, Jr., 135-pound class D. Ferris, 175-pound class SCHEDULE F. Hayne, 135-pound class F. Gatj-as, 145-pound class T. Brand, 158-pound class J. High, 158-pound class C. Dibbell, 158-pound class Yale 4 Western Maryland Yale 4 New Hamp.shire Yale 1 Army 5 Yale 4 Pennsylvania 335 2 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Wrestling Season THIS season, in spite of the fact that Yale was beaten by Harvard for the first time in eighteen years, has, on the whole, been successful. The veterans to return this year were Captain Miller, Intercollegiate Champion for the past two years in the 158-lb. class, and Dodd and Blunt runners-up in the 145-lb. and unlimited classes, respectively ' . With the Intercollegiates, the only remaining meet of the season, Sargent, a sterling performer on last year ' s Freshman team, is the only undefeated man on the team. Cap- tain ]Miller, Dodd, and Bhuit have all performed consist- entl} ' , while Wade, although inexperienced, shows great promise as a wrestler. Randolph and Drake have also done notable work. In the first meet of the season, the team defeated Brown 14-9, at Providence. This meet was featured by Captain ] Iiller ' s victory over Spellman, the New England Intercollegiate Chamyjion. On the twenty-first of January, the team went to West Point where they defeated the Army by tlie score of 18-15. Captain Miller won again, while Blunt suffered his only defeat of the season. After the mid-year examinations, the team met Alfred University. Alfred won the first two classes, but Sargent and Miller came through with falls which gave us the meet 16-11. The following Saturday Yale met the strong Navy team. Although Sai ' gent and Miller both got falls, Yale lost 1-1-13. On February 25 Yale suffered defeat at the hands of Lehigh by the score of 18-11. The features of the meet were Dodd ' s victory over Captain Hellman and Miller ' s victory over Landis. Sargent also won his bout. On March 3, the University team won a brilliant victory over Princeton by the score of 14-9. The greatest upset was Miller ' s defeat by Captain Graham of Princeton on time advantage. Last year Miller defeated Graham who had not been defeated for six years, while Miller ' s defeat this year was his first in eight years of wrestling. At the end of the 175-lb. bout the score was 9-9, the outcome resting on Blunt. Although Blunt ' s man, Barfield, was a veteran. Blunt threw him in one minute and twelve seconds which won the meet for Yale. The last meet of the season was marked by a great surprise when Miller was de- feated by Solaro of Harvard by time advantage. Blunt and Sargent both won their bouts, but their victories failed to stave off the first defeat Yale has received from Harvard in eighteen years by a score of 14-13. The Intercollegiates were held on the sixteenth and seventeenth of jNIarch. Yale won fourth place with Dodd capturing the 145-lb. championship. Captain Miller suc- cumbed to Graham of Princeton in an exciting bout. Sargent, hitherto undefeated, received second place in the 135-lb. class. Blunt was within a minute and forty-three seconds of victory when he suffered a broken rib and was forced to default. Dodd, whose stellar work has been the mainstay of the team during the past season, was elected captain for next year. CATTAIN MILLER 336 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Thayer Whitridge ODo Holt ill Drake Randolph YALE UNIVERSITY WRESTLING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 B. C. Miller, Jr., ' 28, Captain Paul Donovan, ' 28 S., Manager R. C. Glock, ' 29, Assistant Manager Eddie O ' Donnell, Coach TEAM A. K. Randolph, ' 30, llo-lb. class J. A. Drake, ' 29, 125-lb. class J. Whitridge, Jr., ' 30, 125-lb. class R. IM. Sargent, ' 30 S., 13.5-lb. class B. Dodd, ' 29 S., 145-lb. class B. C. Miller, ' 28, 158-lb. class R. W. Holt, ' 28, 175-lb. class W. H. Wade, ' 30, 175-lb. class W. W. Blunt, Jr., ' 28 S., unlimited D. W. Smith, ' 30 S., unlimited SCORES January 14 Yale 14 Brown 9 January 21 Yale 18 Army 1 5 February 11 Yale 16 Alfred Univ. 1 1 February 18 Yale 13 Navy 14 February 25 Yale 11 Lehigh 18 March 3 Yale 14 Princeton 9 March 10 Yale 13 Harvard 14 March 16, IT Wrestlin g In tercolle jiates (at Princeton), ' 337 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Tennis Season, 1927 THE SOUTHERN TRIP THE season commenced when tlie team left on its annual Southern Trip during the Easter vacation. They left on Wednesday, April 6, and proceeded directly to Nor- folk where they practiced three days prior to the first match with the Norfolk Club on Saturday. They defeated this team five matches to two and won similarly from George- town University the following jNIonday. On Tuesday, the Yale aggregation met Balti- more, defeating this strong team six to three. Unfortunately the last match with Annapolis had to be called off on account of rain. On the trip were Captain Watson, Coach Hinchcliff, Manager Chappell, J. McGlinn, K. Jack- son, A. E. Parker, M. Reed, antl A. J. jMahan. THE HOME SEASON In the first match played after vacation, Dartmouth « as defeated. The next match with Williams was a very close one, Yale losing by one match. Pittsburgh and Lehigh were both defeated, Yale taking every match. The latter was notable for Captain Watson ' s victory over Neil Sulli- van, a hard-fought and exciting match. The Yale team bowed as usual to the Hartford Golf Club and a meeting scheduled with Holy Cross was cancelled. THE YALE-HARVARD-PRINCETON SERIES The first of the series, played at Princeton, Yale lost de- cisively, six matches to three. The most exciting match was that between Captain Watson and Van Ryn of Princeton. The latter took the first set but Watson carried the second to 9-7 before his opponent could win the match. On the whole, the Yale team did much better than the score would indicate, as practically all the individual scores went to three sets. Against Harvard at New Haven, the next week- end, Yale was more fortunate and defeated the Crimson team five matches to four. The Harvard captain, J. Whitbeck, defeated Captain Watson in the feature match but the rest of the team did better. Those who participated in these series were Watson, McGlinn, Jackson, Barker, Reed, Mahan, and Guest. The Junior Varsity also defeated Harvard in a similar fashion. Brown, Metcalf, Failing, Goodye.ar, Redfield, Tweedy, and Day playing for Yale. CAPTAIN REED THE INTERCOLLEGIATES AND THE TRIP ABROAD In the Intercollegiates, played as usual at the Merion Cricket Club near Phila- delphia, after college closed, Yale did very poorl_v, practically all the Yale entries being eliminated in the first few rounds. Yale was represented by Watson, ] IcGlinn. Reed, and Guest. Directly following this, the combined Yale-Harvard Tennis Team sailed on the Homeric, July 2, for their European trip. The Yale men included Watson, McGlinn, and Reed. Although the American team won fourteen out of sixteen matches played in England, France, and Italy during the course of the summer, it was defeated in the most important match against the Oxford-Cambridge group. 338 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = Guest McGlii Hinchliff Maha YALE UNIVERSITY TENNIS ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1928 Willis McCook Reed, ' 28, Captain RoswELL Leavitt Gilpatric, ' 28, Manager Charles E. Hayward, Jr., ' 29 S., Assistant Manager William E. Hinchliff, Coach 1927 TEAM A. E. Barker W. F. C. Guest K. V. Jackson T. Mahan T. B. McGlinn W. M. Reed C. Watson, 3d, Captain SCORES Yale 7 Dartmouth 1 Yale 4 Williams •5 Yale i Hartford Golf Clul. 11 Yale 9 Pittsburgh University Yale 6 I.ehigh Yale 3 Princeton Yale 5 Harvard Yale Holy Cross 6 4 (postponed) 339 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Lacrosse Season THE Universit} ' Lacrosse Team, captained by R. W. Hogue, Jr., completed the 1927 season with deserved success, winning every intercollegiate match with the exception of that witji Johns Hopkins. The season opened at Lapham Field on April 2, against the Crescent Athletic Club of New York. The greater experience of the visitors proved too much for the Yale twelve which was still in pre-season form, and lacked the co-operation and team play necessary for a winning Lacrosse team. The score was 2-5. In the first game of the Southern trip, Yale defeated the University of Pennsyl- vania at Franklin Field, in Philadelphia. Scoring almost at will, the Yale attack, by quick and accurate shooting, piled up a score of 7-0 by the end of the first period. Penn staged a comeback in the second period and scored five goals, but were unable to over- come the lead, the game ending 10-.5 in favor of Yale. The team then went to Baltimore to J)lay Johns Hopkins on the following Satur- day, but due to heavy rain and snow it was deemed ad- visable to continue to Charlottesville, Virginia, postponing the game with the Blue Jays until April 13. Under perfect weather conditions, the team consist- ently outplayed the Southerners, the game ending with the one-sided score of Yale 17, University of A ' irginia 2. On the 13th of April the team lost its only inter- collegiate game of the season to Johns Hopkins, cham- pions of North America for the past three j ' ears. Despite the previous postponement, the match was played on a soggy, slippery field in a pouring rain, and at the end of the first half Hopkins led by a 5-3 score. In the second period the Yale defense weakened, allowing seven more tallies to be made before the final whistle, the game ending 12-3 in favor of Hopkins. Stevens, at first attack, and Field, at center, played brilliantly for Yale, the former accounting for Yale ' s three points. The team returned to New Haven with the dubious record of the Southern trip but with a wealth of experi- ence, and beat its next three opponents. Saint Stephens, Dartnioutli, and Brown, with ease, rolling up one-sided scores in each case. On May 7, preceding the Derby Regatta, Yale met Rutgers on Lapham Field and defeated them 7-4. The game was marked by the brilliant playing of Stevens on the attack and Field in the mid-field, while Mansfield in the goal and Roby on the defense, displayed excellent stickwork and were to a large degree responsible for the opponents ' low score. Despite the seemingly one-sided score, the game was closely contested and marked the first defeat of the strong Rutgers team. The following week, the Montclair Athletic Club was met and defeated at IMontclair by the score of 8-1. On i Iay 21, Harvard was defeated by 8-1 in tlie Bowl. At the end of the lialf, Yale led 4-1 and, in the succeeding period, rolled up four more goals. In the final game of the season the team went to Princeton and won the first victory over the Tigers in this sport in ten years, 6-2, due to the stellar work of IVIansficld, the Blue goalie, and the aggressive and accurate shooting of Hogue and Withington. The season ended with captain-elect Stevens high scorer and Lynch a close second. Having proved themselves champions in many respects, the members of the 1927 team were awarded their minor Y insignia and were ranked third in the intercollegiate rat- ing, Johns Hopkins and Navy taking precedence in these honors. 340 CAPTAIN STEVENS YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Coach Touchton L. Smith Hahn Huggins Mclntyre Smith Mgr. Hickson Fisher Wendell A. C. Smith Bouck Purcell Roby Oettinger Taggart Field Keller Speer Stevens. Capt. Hogue, Withington, Mansfield Lynch Allaire McKee Ryan Greene Saydah Hannah Vaden YALE UNIVERSITY LACROSSE ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 E. A. Stevens, ' 28 S., Captain W. T. Kelly, Jr., ' 28 S., Manager D. Chadwick, ' 29 S., Assistant Manager F. M. ToucHTOx, Coach TEAM, 1927 0. J. AUaire E. V. Hufrgins K. E. Ryan C. W. Bouck H. J. Keller J. Smith T. P. Field W. J. Lynch , J. S. Speer, 2d W. H. Greene E. B. Mansfield E. A. Stevens C. Hahn M. A. Mclntyre R. B. Taggart R. W. Hannah W. F. McKee J. C. Vaden R. W. Hofrue, Jr. M. H. Oettinger N. E. Withington T. H. Hopkins J. Roby, Jr. SCORES fale 2 Crescent A. C. 5 Vale 26 Brown fale 10 University of Penn. 5 Yale 7 Rutger s 4 i ' ale 3 Johns Hopkins 12 Yale 8 Montcl air A. C. 1 i ' ale 10 St. Stephens Yale 8 Harva d 1 i ' ale 12 Dartmouth 3 Yale 6 Prince on 2 341 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI .v.vAv.v. ' agsasa The Soccer Season THE 1927-1928 Soccer Season started out unusually favorably with a large turnout both of University and of Freshman players. The open- ing game, with the P!Lnglewood Field Club, resulted in a 5-1 victory for Yale. This was followed by decisive victories over Brown, Springfield, and Dart- mouth, but, on the trip to West Point, the team was defeated by a score of 4-0. The following week brought another defeat when the Princeton team rolled up a 6-2 score against us. The season closed with the Harvard and Navy games in which tlie Blue eleven rallied from tlie shnnp of tlie preceding games antl played a hard and steady game, showing a team work superior to that of their opponents, and scored two more decisive victories to their credit. The last niatch was that with Navy at Annapolis on Thanks- giving Day, which marks a departiu ' e from prece- dent in that, in previous years, the season has always continued initil the end of the first week in December. Captain Holt was unable to play during most of the season owing to a lame knee, but he proved a strong defense man when he did i lay. He Avas ably assisted by J. B. Yhitelaw who occupied the position of riglit fullback and played a steady and brilliant game throughout the season. Whitelaw is the cap- tain-elect for next year. J. C. Sleath was the only Yale man on the All-College Soccer Team selected by Neis, the Princeton coach, but Fletcher and Harte were both awarded places on a second team. The prosjject for tlie coming year is even more promising than it was last year as Capta in Holt is the only regular member of tlie team who will be lost by graduation. The Freshman Soccer Eleven had a successful season. They suffered no defeats and won all their games except two which resulted in ties; one of the latter was the Princeton game, which it was impossible to play off to a de- cision, due to the fact that the UniAcrsity game had to be played on the same field and there was not enough time for further overtime periods. This year ' s Freshman team should provide some excellent material to compete with veteran University players for places on the team next season. CAI ' TAIN HOLT 342 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Rudy Hersey Br Ri imsey Leemann, Coach Treat Holt Wylie Harte, Jr Ra Motfly. Jr Fletcher Hersey Whitelaw Holt Wyhe Harte, Jr. Everitt Smith ,, „ Sleath Hitchcock Knowlton Marsh Brown YALE UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 192T-1928 Reginald W. Holt, ' 28, Captain Daniel N. Brown, ' 28, Manager Eugene L. Pearce, Jr., ' 29, Assistant Manager Walter Leemann, Coach TEAM R R. Anderson, ' 30 S. S. T. Hitclicock, 29 S. H Rumsev, ' 30 S. T, C. Ashley, ' 30 S. R. W. Holt, ' 28, Captain J. C. Sleath, ' 29 A C. Brown, ' 28 E. Knowlton, 29 b. W. Smith, ' 30 R M. Duff, ' 30 S. J. L. Mansh, ' 30 S. I- ' G. Treat, ' 28 S. J, T. Everitt, ' 30 W. T. Mofflv, Jr., ' 28 J. B. Whitelaw, ' 29 H A. Fletcher, ' 29 A. H. Rasnnis.son, 30 H . W. Wylie, ' 29 r R. Harte, Jr., ' 29 S. R. B. Roljertson, Jr., ' 30 S. A B. Hersey, ' 29 J. A. Rudy, ' 30 SCORES Oct ft Yale 5 Englewood 1 Nov. 5 Yale Army at West Point 4 not u Yale 3 Brown Nov. 12 Yale 2 Princeton b (Vt ?1 Yale 4 Springfield 3 Nov. 19 Yale 3 Harvard at Cambridge 1 Oct. 28 Yale 5 Dartmouth 1 Nov. 24 Yale 5 Navy at Annapolis 2 34-3 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Fencing Season CAPTAINED by D. P evy, intercollegicate foils champion in 1927, the University Fencing Team concluded a very successful season with the Intercollegiates in New York on April .5 and 6. The increasing popularity of this sjjort is illustrated by the fact that an additional fencing coach, Arthur Noel, was engaged this year and another fencing room was built. It can safely be said that this sport is more strongly established at Yale than in any other college in the countiy. Under the tutelage of Coaches Grasson and Noel a strong team was developed which defeated many fencing clubs as well as the college teams on its schedule. The first meet of the season was with the New Haven Fencer ' s Club which the Yale team won, 14-13. Following this the J. Sanford Saltus Club of New York was defeated, 11-6, but the next week the Eli swordsmen were defeated by the strong New York Fencer ' s Club, a group of the best fencers in the country. On February 2o tlie team gained the first leg on its championship season by conquering Harvard, 11-6 and the following week the Navy fencers were defeated, 10-7. The Yale team scored a decisive victory at the Intercollegiates on April 5 and 6, taking first place in the Foils Team Championship, second in the Sabre, and third in the Epee. In addition to this Captain Every again won the Foils Championship, winning his title by a splendid exhibition of swords- manship. CAPTAIN EVERY 34i4 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Longmaid, Mgr. Blossom Hill Every. Capt. . Coach Righe YALE UNIVERSITY FENCING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, 1927-1928 D. Every, ' 28, Captain J. H. Dippel, ' 29, Assistant Manager S. E. LoxGMAiD, ' 28 S., Manager R. H. E. Grasson, Coach A. Noel, Assistant Coach Foils D. Every, ' 28 F. S. Righeiiiier, Jr., ' 29 E. W. Overstreet, ' 30 E. JI. Fleming, ' 30 TEAM Sabres 1. R. Nussbaum, Jr., ' 28 S. 2. D. B. Blossom, ' 28 3. G. L. Ward. ' 29 4. E. A. Kell, Jr.. ' 29 MEETS Epee E. I.. Hill, ' 30 C. E. Wright, ' 29 P. J. Linson, ' 28 W. A. Walker, ' 30 Jan. 3 National Junior Foil Team Championsliip Jan. 17 National Junior Sabre Team Championship Jan. 21 Yale 14 New Haven Fencer ' s Club Jan. 26 National Junior Epee Team Championship Feb. 11 Yale 11 Sanford Saltus Club Feb. 16 National Three Weapon Team Championship — 2d place Feb. 18 Yale 7 New York Fencer ' s Club Feb. 25 Yale 11 Harvard (at Cambridge) Mar. 3 Yale 10 Navy (at Annapolis) 345 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Polo Season IN possession of the crowns of tlie National Indoor Open as well as the Indoor and Outdoor Intercollegiate Championships of 1926. the Yale Polo Team set out to attain equal success this year, but was defeated in tlie finals of the National Class A and National Open Tourna- ments by the Brooklyn Riding and Driving Club trio. In intercollegiate polo the Yale team showed its supremacy, although no Indoor Intercollegiate Tournament was held this 3 ' ear. Having lost only W. K. Muir by graduation, Major Arnold, known as one of the country ' s foremost coaches, developed a nineteen goal handicap indoor team. This team was captained by W. F. C. Guest, who had a handicap of nine indoors and six outdoors, and played at number two. C. R. Barrett played number three outdoors and had a six goal rating indoors, and three outdoors. Playing back in both indoor and outdoor games, R. W. Simmons proved a very fine defense plaj-er. The contenders for number one position on tlie outdoor team were F. C. Baldwin, O. M. Wallop, and J. H. H. Phipps. Other promising players were H. C. Adams and P. Folger. The opening game of the 1927 season was with Squadron A of New York, Yale winning by a score of 17-5l . On December 11, Yale suffered the only defeat of the season at the hands of tile Triangle Club of New York, the score being 1(3-10. The .Funior Varsity lost to the 101st Cavalry of Brooklyn on this same date. In a return game with Squadron A on January 9, the ' arsity won by a score of TWo-i. The following week Yale de- feated Harvard 12-5. At this time the Junior Varsity over- whelmed the 7th Regiment of New York 22-1 2- but two weeks liter were defeated by the Essex troop of Newark 16-15 in a very thrilling and hard fought game. This losing streak con- tinued, the Junior Varsity succumbing to the 112th Field Artil- lery of East Orange 13-91 2- The Varsity ' s game with West Point on P ' ebruary 19 was another victory for Yale, 17-9, the first Army defeat of the season. Simultaneously, the Junior Varsity won from the 101st Field Artillery of Boston 15-2. February 22 saw the second defeat of Harvard — this time by the score of 1 8-7, the Crimson players being without the services of Captain Pinkerton whose arm had been broken in the first Yale game. The annual western trip was very successful this year. The Yale team won from the Cin- cinnati Riding Club 141 -8, and from Troop A, Cleveland, 1 ll o-lO. Guest ' s hitting and Simmons ' s defensive i)lay were the features of these games. The indoor season was completed March 5 with a game with Princeton in which Guest played against A. Borden, named by critics as the second outstanding collegiate poloist. Princeton was defeated by a score of 16-8. Yale entered four teams in the National Indoor Tournament, three of which reached the finals. In the Class A (handicap) tournament Yale won from the New York Athletic Club 1314-II, both teams having an eighteen goal handicap. In the finals, however, the Elis were defeated Sl o-? by the Brooklyn Riding and Driving Club, who were given two goals. The same team defeated Yale 13-10l ' o in tiie National Ojjen Tournament when the game was carried to an extra period. Yale had previously defeated West Point 131 0-3 and won the finals of this tournev. The other Yale teams were defeated in the first round of the Class B tourna- ment, and in the finals and semi-finals of Class C and Class D respectively. The outdoor spring schedule of the Yale quartet consisted of four games, all of which Yale won easily. On May 7 the Eli team defeated Princeton on the latter ' s new field by the score of 10-7. A. Borden was the individual star of the game. May 1-t and 16 saw the Yale horsemen score a double victory over Pennsylvania Military Academy at Chester, Pa. The scores of these encounters were 11-3 and 9-1. The team journeyed to West Point on May 21. Here they defeated the Cadets 7-4, although Captain Guest was playing on the Varsity Tennis Team at the time. An intercollegiate round-robin tournament was played on .Tune 16 and 25 at the West- chester Biltmore Polo Field. In this tournament Yale won all of its games, winning the inter- collegiate championship outdoors and indoors, and thus completed a very successful season. 346 CAPT. BALDWIN YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Hoge Wallop Scott Adams Dodge Baldwin. Capt. Folger Capt. Gates, Coach Ferguson Phipps YALE UNIVERSITY POLO TEAM OFFICERS F. C. Baldwin, ' 28, Captain P. W. Hoge, ' 28 S., Manager J. P. Farnham, ' 29, Assistant Manager Captain O. I. Gates, Coach POLO SQUAD H. C. Adams F. C. Baldwin C. P. Dodge. Jr. K. M. Ferguson V. Folger J. H. Phipps H. .Scott O. M. Wallop Yale 17 Yale 10 Yale 71 2 Yale 12 Yale 23 Yale 17 Yale 18 Yale UVa Yale 141 2 Yale 16 Yale 10 Yale 11 Yale 16% Indoors— Winter 1926-1927 Squadron . Triangle Club Squadron A Harvard R. O. T. C. Officers West Point Harvard Cincinnati Cleveland Troop A Princeton Outdoors — Spring of 1927 Princeton P. M. C. Hartford SCORES 51 2 16 4 7 3 131 2 Yale 9 Yale 7 Yale 13 Yale 714 Yale 5 Yale 181 Yale 1.5 Yale 4 Yale 91 2 Yale 9 Yale 191 2 Yale 31 2 P. M. C. 1 West Point 4 Indoors— Winter 1927-1928 Hartford Troop C 10 Brooklyn Riding and Driving Cluli 8% Squadron A 11% Princeton 7 Squadron A 6 Army 14 Harvard 12% Cleveland Troop A 11 Cincinnati Riding and Driving Club 16 Harvard I8I 2 347 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Golf Season THE Kay Tompkins Meniorical Golf Course has given the members of Yale Uni- versity as fine a course to play over as there is in America. Today the greens and tees on the course are in almost perfect condition, and within a year or two the fair- ways, which have not had enough time as yet to get a firm hold should be in an unrivaled position. The spring of 1927 was the first year that the Yale team had its prelim inary rounds and matches over the Yale course, and from the results shown Yale will have a decided advantage over its opponents in the future. The team was composed of three members from the previous 3 ' ear, Paul Haviland, Captain, William K. Lanman, Jr., captain for 1928, and Lewis R. Parker. To this number after the competitive rounds three more names were added : W. K. Child, A. M. Knapp, and J. A. Sherman. The scores of the matches showed clearly that it was a very well-balanced team. The first match was on May 8 with Dartmouth. The Yale team was at somewhat of an advantage for the new course proved too much of a test for the Green team. Holy Cross, Wesleyan, Pennsylvania, Williams, and Brown also were defeated during the season. In the Brown match Cap- tain Paul Haviland of the University team defeated Ro- land Mackenzie, the Brown captain and a member of the 1926 Walker Cup team. On May 21 Princeton was de- feated over the Apawanis Club course of Rye, New York, by a score of 8 to 1. This decisive score does not show the closeness of the matches. Captain Haviland after being 4i down and 6 to play won his match from Hersey of Prince- ton, 1 up. In the foursomes Lanman and Knapp won their match on the 19th hole, while Child and Sherman won their match on the last green. The match at Providence with Harvard over the Rhode Island Country Club course was the closest of the whole season, the score being 5 to 4 in favor of Yale. This completed a successful season of match ])lay and left Yale an undefeated team. During the time that the team matches were being played the first Yale University championship was progressing. The cup was presented by an anon ' mous donor and is to be called the Charles B. MacDonald Cup, with the name of the University champion to be in- scribed upon it. This cup was first won by W. K. I anman, Jr., when he defeated W. K. Childs in the final round of the tournament. In the Intercollegiate Golf Championship the Yale team was runner uj) to Prince- ton. The Tournament was held over the Garden City Golf Club at Garden City, Long Island. This course is short but very difficult and treacherous due to the high wind that blows over the Long Island meadows. All six members of the team qualified in the cham- pionship and two reached the semi-finals. Paul Haviland was eliminated in the semi-final round by Roland Mackenzie, while at the same time Watts Gunn the champion was putting out Ij. R. Parker. The prospects for the year 1928 seem very bright with three former members of the team back and some excellent prospective material. The Intercollegiates this year are to be held over the Apawanis Club course the last week in June. CAPTAIN LANMAN 348 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ' mfp mjpf} Thompson. Coach Kn Haviland. Capt. ] THE 1927 TEAM YALE UNIVERSITY GOLF TEAM OFFICERS, 1928 William K. Laxmax, Jr., Captain W. T. Meloy, Manager TEAM VV. K. Child Paul Haviland A. M. Knapp SCORES May 6 Dartmouth at New Haven May 7 Holy Cross at New Haven May 11 Wesleyan at New Haven May 13 Pennsylvania at Rye May 14 Brown at New Haven May 21 Princeton at Rye May 28 Williams at New Haven May 30 Harvard at Providence W. K. Lanman, Jr. L. R. Parker J. A. Sherman Yale 8- Opp. 1 Yale 9— 0pp. Yale 9— 0pp. Yale 9— 0pp. Yale 9— 0pp. Yale 8 — 0pp. 1 Yale 8— 0pp. 1 Yale 5— 0pp. 4 349 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Robertson Smith Larrabee Phillips YALE UNIVERSITY GUN CLUB OFFICERS, 1927-1928 James L. Green, ' 28, Captain Benjamin H. Larrabee, Manager J. L. Green S. H. Hart 1928 H. Chapin M. H. Fisher C. A. Frank J. L. Green E. W. Lewis J. I. Ravinond TEAM E. W. Lewis J. K. Robertson R. B. Phillips, Jr. P. M. Smith MEMBERS D. Sterling, Jr. 1929 S. H. Hart R. B. Phillips, Jr. O. E. Stacy C. K. Woolsev 1930 C F. Adams C. H. Bell J. Collins, Jr. C. A. Graham H. Oliver SCORES Fall, 1927 Yale 277 Harvard 293 0. E. Stacy W. F. Paul G. Peterson, Jr. A. K. Randolph J. K. Robertson R. N. Semler 350 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE UNIVERSITY SQUASH RACQUETS TEAM OFFICERS A. E. Barker, Captain W. HiNCHLiFF, Coach r. L. Dow, Manager TEAM No. 1 A. E. Barker, ' 28 No. 4 K. Mabon No. 2 C. W. Gillespie, ' 30 No. 5 R. A. Goodwin No. 3 R. Peabody, ' 28 MATCHES Yale 3 Hope Club at Providence Yale 2 Buffalo at Philadelphia (National Championships) Yale Harvard at Cambridge Yale 4 Racquet and Tennis Club at New York Yale 6 Pennsylvania at New Haven Yale 2 University Club at New York 3 5 1 3 351 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRl Gallagher Hollowa Farley Epste Taylor Wade JIcGo YALE FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 192T-1928 F. J. LiNEHAN, ' 31, Captain S. Hartshorn, ' 29, Manager H. W. Carkington, Coach TEAM K Cheney H. J. Gallagher E. Horowitz T. T avlor N Epstein W B . Hill F. .1. Linehan P. D Th omas J. W. Farley G. J. A. D. Hollowav A. P. McGowan L. R Hopkins B. L. Poole SCORES Wade Yale 28 Naugatuck High School 24 Yale 28 George Washington High School 31 Yale 48 Connecticut Aggies Freshmen 47 Yale 48 Carmel Hall 29 Yale 28 Roxburv at Cheshire 37 Yale 29 Roxbiirv 30 Yale 19 Milford Prep 30 Yale 28 IVekskill 29 Yale 28 Princeton Freshmen at Princeton 22 Yale 43 Andover at Andover 19 Yale 38 Harvard Freshmen 24 352 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Holmes Patterson Bender Partington Wilson R. Smith Leedy Anthony Newton Guild MacDuffie Jarcho Scott Owen Oldfield Cooper Crawford Olmsted Houston Weber Loeser Clement Lincoln Messimer OIney Lounsbury Zug Sturges Forbes Paine B. Smith Kusterer Campbell Hunter DuBarry B. Smi Buck Clark Olive YALE FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAM OFFICERS H. LiNcoi,x, ' 31, Captain L. P. Holmes, ' 29, Manager R. J. H. KiPHUTH, Coach SQUAD R. L. Anthony J. T. Bender R. D. Buck J. G. Campbell R. V. Clark D. H. Clement G. C. Forbes I. H. Houston J. C. Houston A. S. Jarcho H. Lincoln F. W. Loeser J. B. Lounsbury M. W. MacDuffie R. L. Messimer S. G. Xeal W. T. Oldfield R. G. Olmsted R. M. Owen E. B. Paine P. F. Partington S. Patterson L. P. Scott B. C. Smith B. R. Sturges W. M. Swoope M. C. Weber F. K. Wilson C. G. Zug Yale 38 Yale 48 Yale 51 Yale 32 Yale 33 Springfield Freshmen Andover at Andover New Haven High Flushing Y.M.C.A. Dartmouth Freshmen MEETS 24 Yale 20 Rutgers Freshmen 42 14 Yale 34 New Haven Swimming Club 28 11 Yale 40 Hotchkiss 22 30 Yale 34 Princeton Freshmen 28 27 Yale 34 Worcester Academy 28 353 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Holn Kusterer Lavietes Wilson Patterson nberg MacDuffie Loeser Hutler Kiphuth Belous Mustard Poo re YALE FRESHMAN WATER POLO TEAM OFFICERS F. W. Loeser, ' 31, Captain L. P. Holmes, ' 29, Manager VV. I. Newton, Coach TEAM A. Z. Belous M. W. MacDuffie E. B. Butler H. R. Mustard J. I. Hess C. H. Oliver L. P. Isenberg S. Patterson J. Keogh G. C. Poore H. Kusterer R. C. Smith H. Lavietes F. K. Wilson F. W. Loeser W. G. Wood MEETS January 21 Y ale 50 All-Ha Hows 28 February 10 Y ale 45 New H aven High School 6 February 13 Y ale 8 Bedfoi d Y. M. C. A. 26 March 2 Y ale 23 Monte air A. C. 8 March 10 Y ale 20 Prince! on 18 354 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Mgr. Balis Curnen Di Supove Patte Cornellier Lowthe Boyle Heuble Hartman Robinson King. Coach rown Prince YALE FRESHMAN BOXING TEAM OFFICERS, 1928-1929 J. B. BoYi.E, ' 31, Captain C. W. Balis, ' 29, Manager Moses King, Coach TEAM H. L. Hartman, 115-pound class J. B. Boyle, 145-pound class R. W. Brown, 125-pound class E. C. Curnen, 158-pound class G. Prince, 125-pound class L. H. Nichols, 158-pound class L. H. Cornellier, 135-pound class K. Dunn, 157-pound class W. Patterson, 135-pound class SCHEDULE February 25 Yale ' 31 6 M. I. T. March 10 Yale ' 31 6 Pennsylvania 355 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI J. H. Pitman E. T Sloan T. N Todd SCORES Choate 6 Ponn. Fresh nen 6 Roxburv 2 Andover 2 Dartmouth 3 Princeton 1 Harvard 4 I YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI OFFICERS, 1927-1928 C. D. Wood, Jr., ' 30, Captain W. T. Kelly, Jr., ' 28 S., Manager R. D. Root, ' 26, Coach TEAM vv Archbald R. G. Kuehn H. C. Sandburg w C. Bagley, Jr G. D. Kirk W. Sizer R. H. Blythe, Jr. R. C. Kirk N. Smith W C. Deuell A. B. Lutz R. C. Smith E. N. Dodge B. A. : lacDonald W. F. Smith, Jr. 0. 0. Freeman L. S. Putnam S. Y. Warner, Jr W R. Hcdden H B. Reinhardt, Jr. C. D. Wood, Jr. H. C. Hoffman H V. Rumsey SCORES Yale Freshmen 5 New Haven Bears 3 Yale Freshmen 2 Erasnms High Scl lool 3 Yale Fr eshnien 7 Peekskill Milit irv Acad. 2 Yale Freshmen 5 Princeton 4 Yale Freshmen 13 H.arvard 358 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Lee Touchtone, Coach Pearce. Mgr. Nelson Potts rtevant Smith Capt. Hardy Carr Lowndes MacDuffie Wilson Hoffman Coonley YALE FRESHMAN ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL TEAM OFFICERS, 1928 Charles C. Hardy, ' 31, Captain EuGEXE L. Pearce, Jr., ' 29, Manager F. Morris Touchtone, Coach P. S. Carr F. Coonlev, Jr. C. C. Hardv, Capt. G. G. Hoffman E. Lee, Jr. Oct. 15 Nov. 2 Nov. 5 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 26 Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale Yale TEAM R. A. Lowndes M. W. MacDuffie, Jr. F. A. Nelson, Jr. C. E. Potts B. C. Smith C. L. Sturtevant, Jr. A. R. Sumner S. T. Terhune F. K. Wilson SCORES Erasmus Hall 1 Riverdalc Country Day School Polytechnic Preparatory School 1 ' (at Brooklyn, N. Y.) Princeton (Freshman) 1 Harvard (Freshman) (at Cambridge, Mass.) Taft 359 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Clock, Mki. i... ; .c.ikin Terry O ' Donne:. Whiting Sidenberg Gleason Wood Mason YALE FRESHMAN WRESTLING TEAM OFFICERS, 1927-1928 F. B. Gleason, Jr., ' 31, Captain R. C. Glock, ' 29, Manager Eddie O ' Donnell, Coach TEAM 115-lb. Class M. C. Mason, Jr. 125-lb. Class E. L. Bacon, Jr. R. L. Wood 135-lb. Class J. W. M. Whiting G. H. Sidenberg January 14 January 21 February 11 February 18 360 145-lb. Class F. B. Gleason, Jr. 158-]b. Class F. W. Perry S. Jenkins 175-lb. Class W. Terry, Jr. E. K. Chapin SCHEDULE AND SCORES Yale Yale Yale Yale 18 10 13 18 Brown 13 Andover 16 Choate 11 N. H. H. S. 8 February 25 March ' 3 March 10 Yale Yale Yak 25 11 M. I. T. 8 Princeton 18 Harvard 19 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI uH I V FE ca •1 Hna- ' V ' 9 TQ1 ' ■i ' - ' % FRESHMAN POLO CLUB OFFICERS J. C. Rathhokne, Captain J. P. Farnham, ' 29, Manager Captain Gates, Coach SQUAD J. L. Bradley C. R. AlcCormick R. W. Mcllvain, Jr. F. B. Porter, Jr. J. C. Rathborne W. B. Wood SCORES Yale 131 0 Blue Herons of Hartford 5 Yale 111 2 Squadron A of New York (C Team) 10 Yale 21 7th Regiment of New York 7 Yale 2 Harvard (at Boston) 13 Yale 13 Harvard (at New Haven) 5 Yale 19 Hartford Troop C IQl o 362 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE FRESHMAN GOLF TEAM OFFICERS, 1927 J. C. Lamphier, 3d, Captain H. B. Stkwart, Jk., Manager M. W. Forrcist W. H. Gurnev R. M. Hitch, Jr. TEAM G. A. Poole, Jr. J. G. Hodges J. C. Lamphier, 3d H. H. Lihme SCORES Yale 4 Yale 7 Yale 3 Choate Dartmouth 1930 Princeton 1930 363 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MILITARY UNITS j]HE Reserve Officers ' Training Corps is an organization estab- lished to train civilians for the duties of an officer. The sudden advent of war has alwaj ' s found this country in need of men, who by their training and edu- cation are suited to lead the additional j erson- nel required by a serious conflict. The lack of such men has in the past meant terrible and useless waste of life. The R.O.T.C. quite natu- rally selects its men from the colleges. At Yale membershiji is entirelj ' voluntary. Although the success of the establishment of the unit was at first doubtful, each year brings a greater number of men desiring a military training and each year graduates a greater number of second lieutenants in the Reserve. Two years ago, a Reserve Xaval Unit was established with much the same ideals. Al- though it has liad little time to jjrove its lasting- qualities, it made a fine start, and a steady urowth seems assured. 364 IVlil i t x:y ' Z YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI m. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MAJOR rRITCIlARI) CONGRESS, under the constitution of the United States, in carrying out the duties pre- scribed for it in providing for tiie common defense, iias inaugurated a system by wliieh reserve officers may be obtained from those college men who voluntarily desire to enlist their services during their undergraduate days in a mild form of military training. This provision has been made at Yale by the organization and maintenance of the R.O.T.C. Yale, believing that it should undertake its share in adhering to national policies, approves and encourages the corps. Yale does not want war. Siie hopes to avert war, either offensively or defensively, but she realizes that it is her duty to contribute to the policy that our country shall not be found wholly unprepared nor at too great a disadvantage if war should come. This country will do its utmost to settle our domestic and international defenses without resorting to force, yet we cannot be blind to the fact that some day we may be the defenders of our country against aggression from within or without. Peace will be made permanent when a consciousness is developed which shows that enough people demand peace. We must not move too far in advance in our desire for peace, so that we precede concrete possibilities for maintaining it. The unit though small in numbers is voluntary and lias liad a slow but healthy growtli for several years. About ten per cent of the students at Yale are members of the R.O.T.C, yet there are many otliers in the Uni- versity who are favorably disposed towards it and hope to see it efficiently maintained. The gradual increase in the enrollment may be taken as an indication of favorable student opinion. It is doubted that there is more departmental spirit or enthusiasm found in any other department of the Uni- versity. The R.O.T.C. students desire to support the unit and iielp materially in bettering it in every way they can. Yale, with other universities, is contributing her share towards the national security. Leadership, courage, character, and discipline are learned on the athletic fields as they are in the Military Science Department. Athletics train men in those qualities which make them desirable leaders in civil pursuits as well as in times of emergency. Athletics have been recog- nized by faculties, students, and others connected with education as having their proper place in undergraduate activities. They realize that through athletics proper training in the ideals of leadership is attained. Because of tliis, the University and tlie War Department each recognize the value of that which the otlicr has to offer. Tiie university gives full credit towards gradua- tion, for courses completed in Military Science, and the War Department, in addition, gives military credit to those men enrolled in the R.O.T.C. who participate in intercollegiate athletics. A challenge has been handed down to the undergraduate of Yale by the nine thousand Yale men who served their country during the World War. There is no Yale man who is not proud of that loyalty, sacrifice, and devotion to duty, as exemplified by those loyal sons of Eli. The R.O.T.C. offers all Yale students the opportunity to prepare themselves for military service, wiiieh service may be effectively performed in case men are needed to respond to the call of their country or Alma ! Mater. The story of the R.O.T.C. at Yale has been written not onlj ' in the university publica- tions, but upon the pages of history. There is little need here to recall the organization of the old Yale Battery, of which one hundred per cent participated in the Spanish- American War; that in 1912 when there was agitation along the southern border the Battery grew in strength and, becoming more active, it developed until 191 1, when tlie Yale Battery was expanded into four Batteries and went to camp to prepare itself for any emergenc ' ; that upon the entrance of this country into the World War all of those men of the old Battery were given commissions. These facts are now history, and we of to-day are merely carrying on, under another name, the work and heritage handed down to us by the sons of an earlier day. If we follow loyally and truthfully in thei r footsteps, it can be said of us, Well done. 367 = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI BATTEKY OX THE ROAU FIELD ARTILLERY The historj ' and tradition which surround the old Yale Battery are such that as long as a military unit is maintained at Yale, the Field Artillery must be given precedence in Yale College. In his preparatory work which leads to his qualification as a Second Lieutenant of Field Artillery, the student has a jirogressive and varied group of courses. In preparation for his practical instruction at the summer encampment which comes at tlie end of his Junior j ' eir, he is given instruction in the calculation of firing data so that he can point his gun at the target and then, after the proper direction is given, he is taught how to set it off on the guns to start the projectile on its way. Other courses, teacliing him how to conduct and adjust this firing so that he can get effect on his target, are given. In addition to the strictly Field Artillery subjects there are allied courses such as Tactics, Map Making, and Military History, which are incorporated in his instruction. The combination of the strictly Field Artillery and allied training is found in the practical use of the Battery in Vermont during a period of six weeks, during which tlie Batterv marches to the Artillery range where service practice with the French 7.5 is conducted and all students given an opportunity to fire the guns. The Harvard and Yale units had 118 Juniors at the last encampment. 368 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI LOADING FRENCH 75 MM. PIECE YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI FIELD ARTILLERY PLATOON IN ACTION ENGINEERS ' UNIT The courses in the Engineer R.O.T.C. Unit are designed to give the students of the Sheffield Scientific School a basic knowledge of the principles involved in applying their technical knowledge to the solution of military engineering problems. The specific subjects include law, topography, tactics, bridges, roads, and other works of an engineering nature which engineers may be called upon to perform in the interest of National Defense. Various problems in the form of practical situations are presented for solution in order to illustrate the adaptation of basic engineering principles to military necessity. Actual experience is obtained in the six weeks ' encampment period which immediately follows the close of the school year and which may be attended after either Sophomore or Junior year at college. Last summer the camp was held at Fort Humphre3-s, Virginia, about twenty-two miles from Washington, D. C. The camp schedule allotted periods for instruction, drill, and tactics, equitation, bridge building using timber and the various types of floating pontoon equipment, wire entanglements, use of explosives, rifle and pistol firing. During the last weeks of camp a two-day march and combat problem with a temporary shelter tent camp on the intervening night was the climax of the training period. The last two days of camp were devoted to military and athletic competitions between the several subdivisions of the R.O.T.C. camp. The Yale-M.I.T. platoon made a very creditable showing in the drills against the more experienced military school units and excelled in the athletic contests. The schedule not only provided for these drill and instruction periods, but also allowed time for recreation. There were facilities for golf, tennis, baseball, and swimming every after- noon. The evenings were free for seeking amusement in Washington, or attending the Post movies, or the R.O.T.C. dances at the Post Service Club. Opportunity was ofTered on Saturdays and Sundays for visits to places of historic and national interest in the vicinity of Washington. The practical nature of the problems considered during the school year and tiie actual experience at the summer camp fulfill the primary mission of the R.O.T.C. of giving students an opportunity to prepare for the duties of citizenship and a means of securing a Reserve Commission. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Department of Naval Science and Tactics i «■ T 71 riTH the opening of the present schoListic year, the Department of '  Naval Science and Tactics entered upon its second year inider happy auspices. The Xaval Unit had its inception in an Act of Congress passed in 1926, authorizing the estabhshment of six Xaval R. O. T. C. Units. During the summer of 19 26 Units were accordingly established at Harvard, Yale, Georgia School of Technology, Northwestern University, the University of California, and the University of Washington, the geographical location of these Units being such as to best meet the demands of the Xavy. The object of the course in Xaval Science and Tactics is to supplement the regular courses taken by students so that graduates of both will possess a thorough knowledge of Xaval subjects, a disciplined mind and body, and the quality of self-i eliant leadership, and thus qualify themselves for commis- sions in the United States Xaval Reserve. In time of war, graduates who have accepted commissions will be transferred to the regular Xavy as com- missioned officers. The officers detailed for duty in connection with the De- partment of Xaval Science and Tactics are officers on the active list of the Xavy who have had considerable experience on various types of ships and who are graduates of the U. S. Xaval Academy and Xaval War College. When the United States entered the World War, imprecedented de- mands were made upon the Xavy Department for officer personnel. Because of the lack of a sufficient number of Xaval Reserve Officers, the Xavy was confronted with the task of training officers in time of war. This was ac- complished by enrolling college graduates and sending them to tlie Xaval Academy for a three months ' intensive course of study. This procedure, while more or less satisfactory diu ' ing the late war, under conditions whicli did not require the immediate active participation of our Xavy, will not prove satis- factory in a war requiring aggressive action on our part coincident with the 373 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI rtT - - V ' V fSx lit f. ' J 4 i i| i YALE UNIT SUMMER PRACTICE CRUISE 1927 U. S. S. FLORIDA outbreak of hostilities, a condition which might, quite conceivablj ' , preclude the training of officers after the outbreak of war. It therefore becomes a matter of great importance to provide a highly trained reserve officer per- sonnel in time of peace. This is the mission of the Naval Units. The course in Naval Science and Tactics covers fom years and is limited to sixty students in each class, credit being given, hour for hour, towards a college degree, as in other courses. The first two j ears comprise the Basic Course; the last two the Advanced Course. Work in Naval Science and Tactics is assigned under the general headings: Mathematics, Seamanship, Navigation, and Ordnance, with various subgroups of Naval subject matter included under the major headings, such as Tactics and Strategy, Leader- ship, Naval Communications, International and Military Law. The course of study as outlined is progressive and is designed to advance the student in logical sequence from the basic and elementary work to a point where actual problems in Navigation, Ordnance, Tactics, and Strategy are considered. Theoretical instruction in the classroom is supplemented by jjractical in- struction, as opportunity offers. Cruises will be arranged each summer on battleshijJS, destroyers, and other types of vessels, as well as week-end cruises during the college year. During these cruises ample opportunity is offered the 374 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MACHINE GUN INSTRUCTION students to put into practice the knowledge acquired in classroom. Few material accom- plishments afford a greater thrill and more genuine satisfaction than that of fixing a ship ' s position by means of astronomical observations. Instruction in actual chart work, embracing the plotting of courses, fixing the position of the ship by plotting bearings or astronomical observations, is part of the classroom work and affords the students the means of becoming proficient navigators. During the summer of 1927 students of the Harvard, Yale, and Georgia School of Technology Units embarked on board the U. S. S. Florida for a three weeks ' cruise. The itinerary of the cruise included Havana, Sa- vannah, Xew Haven, Xewj oi ' t, and Boston, each of which offered something of interest and pleasiu ' e to the students. While at Annapolis, the students visited the Naval Academy and inspected its beautiful buildings and fine equipment. During the week-end 5-Q Xovember, 1927, fifty-two students were taken on a week-end cruise in Long Island Soimd on board the destroyer Fo.r. The cruise for the summer of 1928 will most probably take the students to a foreign port on this coast. The equipment of the Yale Xaval Unit, used in the instruction of stu- dents, includes a collection of seventeen models of different types of ships, a twenty-one-inch torpedo, compasses, sextants, chronometers, and other navi- gational instruments, signal flags, Springfield rifles, and machine guns. Uniforms and textbooks are fur- nished by the Xavy Department with- out cost and, during the last two years of the course, students will be paid al- lowances amounting to one hundred and ten dollars per year. NAVIGATION INSTRUCTION 375 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Captain Frank D. Berrien, U. S. Navy Professor of Naval Sc ence. Lieutenant Commander EWART G Haas, U. S. Navy Lieutenant Commander S . muel G. Moore, U. S. Navy Lieutenant Commander C LINTON E. Braine, U. S. Navy Lieutenant Paul Sterling U. S. Navy : Assistant Professors of Naval Science. ROSTER OF STUDENTS ENROLLED IN NAVAL UNIT ' CLASS OF 1930 1 Clark Tait Abbott Wodrow Archbald Warren William Breckenridge Gerald Norman Burk Robert Woodworth Burton James Howard Moulton Campbell Thomas Southworth Childs, Jr. Barron Collier, Jr. Alvah Chisholm Drake Helmuth Prince John Duberg Herbert Gordon Dyke George Miller England Edward Richard Florea Marshall William Forrest Peter VanDuzer Gott William Howard . nthony Halpin Charles Keller Hammer Harry Mayo Harris, Jr. James Beverly Harvie, Jr. Logan Spaulding Gillett Hill Hamilton Hitt Thomas Townsend Hollister Pearson Hunt Stewart Ogden Jones Albert McXutt Littleton Danforth Henry Lombard Frank Byron Look Henry Lyne. Jr. ,Tohn Sutphin ilanuel, Jr. William Sherman Manuel r Charles Foster Miles John Guffey Miller Oj den Dayton Miller Jlaxwell Moore Francis James O ' Hara, Jr. John Olof Olson Frederick Rushworth Steckel Robert Cooke Stevens, Jr. Frank Raymond Stocker John Joseph Sullivan Paul Talniey George Carlton Turner John Strong Turner Howard Talbot Walden, Jr. John Cristy West Robert Brainerd Whittredge George VanVelsor Wolf Charles Arden Yinkey, Jr. CLASS OF 1931 1 Donald Herbert Battles Charles Bradford Bidwell Sam Pope Brewer Charles Harvey Brooks Laurence Fiske Brown Robinson Dudley Buck Stanley Ward Burnham Gorham Cluett Frederick Coonley, Jr. Frederick Davenport Cowles George Herbert Day, Jr. .John vanAntwerp Easton 1 ; Thomas Mellon Evans Paul Falk 1 i Franklin Farrel, 3d Bennett Fisher Isaac Hathaway Francis, 3d Mever Friedman John Charles Fulton William Hayden Fulton Harry Joseph Gallagher William Blakeslee Hall John dePeyster Townsend Hills Joseph Emmert Hitt, Jr. Harvey Cecil Hope Isaac Hayne Houston William Norman Hunter, Jr. Joseph Reinhard Joyce Elwood Marlin Keener Edgar Norman Kemp Donald Edward Lane Alfred Brunson MacChesney, 3d John Hardison Moser James Munro Robert Stuart Newhall, 2d Francis Robert O ' Brien 1 John Stanley Pease Cornelius Perry 1 Frederick Wurster Perry Thomas Junius Prentice, Jr. 1 Abner Alfred Rednor Thomas McMahon Rianhard, Jr. Leon Irving Ross James Horton Shankland Lester Mitchell Sofeico Earl Radcliffe Stevens ! Harmon Somar Strauss Norman Nathaniel Supove Arthur John Taylor Arthur Abbot Thomas Lewis Thorne Laut Rowlatt Wade Donald Goodman Walker William Barkly Wallace Frederick Bingham Walsh Edward McLain Watters, Jr. William Henry Wetherill, 3d Robert Lindsay Wickes Ogden Compton Woodruff Charles Stephen Yancey Charles Austin Yelvington 1 1 — — — 377 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI MUSICAL CLUBS i|T is well that the musical ci-avings of the undergraduate have, to some degree at least, been localized and concentrated in clubs. Were there no opportunity to seek the lighter joys of government and control, there is no telling to what depths the campus chorister might de- grade himself through the medium of the im- promptu quartet. As it is, the musical situation is now pretty well in hand, and has, further- more, won an enviable reputation. The Glee Club travels far on its annual Christmas trip, and with no small gain of tribute — spiritual and otherwise. And Mory ' s may some day be persuaded to give a private offering of thanks to the Whiffenpoofs who have so effectively shown the way to the most exclusive eating house in the city. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI B mjsicaU CLUBS THE sixty-first Glee Club season opened auspiciously soon after the opening of college, with some two hundred upperclassmen responding to the first call of Manager McCance, Leader Lancelot Ross, and Director Marshall Bartholomew. At the same time one hinidred and twelve Freshmen rejjorted to Maurice Watkins, assistant director, for the organization of the second yearling club under his direction. The aspirations of the L niversity Club were raised to a higher plane than ever before, with the usual term-time trips and concert being culminated by extensive plans for the proposed Euro- pean tour starting June twenty-fourth and ending in London with a concert on the twentj ' -third of July. The leaders of the club for years past were invited to take the trip, witli several graduates of distinction in singing to bolster up the undergraduate club and form a nucleus to work on some of the harder selections that such an extended tour would render necessary. While great plans for the future were thus being formulated by the great moguls in charge, the club was getting valuable training in the concerts that roll about each year. The Princeton concert here in Woolsey was acclaimed a distinct success, and Dick Dm-ant for the first time in public appear- ance hit the honey note in the famous yodeling song. We are wondering if cream cheese will be served to the club when that song is sung in Switzer- land. And then tlie dual concert at Caml)ridge, when the clubs of Harvard and Yale sang together, ojjened up tlie way to a later concert in the spring whicli Harvard lays particular stress on, and in wliich the Yale Club is an honored participant. M. M. BARTHOLOMEW DIRECTOR 380 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Ashforth. Jr. Ross UNIVERSITY DOUBLE QUARTET Along about the first of December a trip was made over the week-end to Greenwich and Bronxville, where rare hospitality was offered to the members, who were put up in private homes and entertained most delightfully. The Greenwich concert was particularly important, as music critics were present to adjudge this renovated Glee Club of Yale, and to report on it to the press. On December 10, the club sang to an enthusiastic audience in the Xew York Town Hall. Of this the New York Tribune said in part, Under Mr. Bar- tholomew ' s regime, the Yale Glee Club has become entitled to a high standing among the male choruses. The Times in general praised tlie quality of tone of the singers, but decried the loss of pitch of the tenors. It was, in fact, a bad night for the tenors, for the club this year has humbly prided itself on its ability to keep on pitch. A radical change was introduced in tliese concerts. For the first time the Banjo Club was not represented. It was felt that the lightness and necessary levity introduced by any selections that could be rendered well on the banjo were somewhat detrimental to the new policy of the club, that of offering songs more difficult and classic tlian hitherto. In some ways this abolition of 381 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI L. I . ROSS, ' 28 LEADER OF THE GLEE CLUB the Banjo Club was not seen as tlioroughly justifiable; but inasmuch as it was the policy of the authorities to produce a bigger and better Glee Club, the result seemed inevitable. A banjo quartet, however, did take the Christ- mas trip, and afforded a good share of the more humorous side of the program, besides being a sort of change of pace. The annual Christmas trip this year headed westward, leaving Wilmington and Baltimore on the nineteenth of December, the former with a very hazy idea of what real melody the club was capable of producing, and a very good idea of the disadvantages of being the first city on a long list. At Baltimore Ross found his pace, and thence- forth led the club through a series of eight more concerts — Cincinnati, Chi- cago, Minneapolis, St. Paul, St. Louis, Avhere Christmas was spent, Detroit, Toledo, and finally Cleveland, where JNIr. Bartholomew met the club and led it through its last Christmas concert while lionny enchanted his audience with an unusually large repertoire of tenor solos. All through the year leader Ross ' s unusually clear and charming voice has been the feature of the 1927- 1928 club. His leadership and Joe McCance ' s efficient and clear-head ed man- agement made of the Christmas trijj this year a great thing. This year ' s jjrogram was both well-bal- anced and unusual. The University Double Quartet, and the String Quartet under as- sistant leader Paul Sterrett, added diversion and variance. The first part of the club ' s pro- gram consisted of Christmas and sacred music, of which perhaps the Ave INIaria was best ren- dered. Then came selections of more or less serious nature, tending always to become less serious as the final burst of volume left the audience standing and listening to the echoes of Bright College Years. J. T. McCANCE. ' 28 MANAGER 382 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI rk. Rogers, Loie. Duncan. Merithew. Maci onald. Darreil. Henning. Ashtorth, Stott, Dunham, Oviatt VanHorn, Dixon, Gordon. Hall. Boone, Scoville, H. Ross, Brady. Morley. Brooks. Turner Blume Gillespie Wack Danforth Gil patric Hoggson L. P. Ross. Leader Durant Sterrett Babb Pierson Lewis Lindeke Seely Cheney YALE UNIVERSITY GLEE CLUB OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION, 1927-1928 j I. M. Bartholomew, ' OT S., Director L. P. Ross, ' 28, President J. T. McCance, ' 28, Manager P. E. Steruett, ' 28, Vice-President D. 0. Ross, ' 29, Assistant Manager CHRISTMAS TRIP Wilmington Cincinnati Minneapolis St. Louis Toledo Baltimore Chicago St. P iul Detroit Cleveland First Tenors Second Tenors FiBST Basses Second Basses F. V. Austin, Jr., ' 28 S I. T. Babb, ' 29 A. B. Ashforth. Jr., ' 29 J. C. Brooks, Jr., ' 30 H. A. Basham, Jr., ' 28 C. R. Burke, ' 28 E. R. Boone, ' 29 S. L. Hall, ' 28 A. M. K. Blume, ' 28 M. G. Duncan, 3 art S. A. Brady, ' 29 J. W. Henning, ' 29 D. N. Clark, ' 30 R. C. Durant, ' 28 J. R. Cary, ' 28 S. D Hoggson, 28 J. W. Dixon, ' 28 K. S. Gillespie, ' 29 A. A. Cheney, ' 29 F. C. Jarecki, ' 29 S. C. L. Dunham, ' 29 E. McJI. Lewis, ' 30 C. V. Cole, ' 28 K S. Makepeace, ' 29 J. vanB. Griggs, ' 29 W. A. Lindeke. ' 31 X. W. Danfortli, ' 28 S. Oviatt, ' 30 R. S. MueUer, Jr., ' 29 S . D. M. McKeon, ' 28 R. L. Gilpatric, ' 28 P. G. Robertson, 3 arch J. 0. Rodgers, Jr., ' 28 W. R. Morley, ' 28 A. D. Gordon, ' 28 G. G. Schroeder, Jr., ' 29 H. Seelv, ' 29 F. T. Pierson, Jr., ' 29 J. C. C. Holding, Jr., ' 28 1 ' . L. Shipman, ' 28 R. D. Stott, 4 arch. L. P. Ross, ' 28 R. G. Masters, ' 29 P. VanHorn, ' 29 S. S. A. Scoville, ' 28 R. S. Merithew, ' 28 S. D deB. Wack, ' 29 F. T. vanBeuren, 3d, ' 29 S. M. Turner, 29 383 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI i f i f I McNally,,id Pond Brereton Ferris Cowles Thompson Clement Harvey Smith Rodman Thome Gemehl Tyler Rathborne Sherrill Knight Sterling DeMeritt Robertson Sikes Lay, Jr. Marsh, Jr. Vaill Northam Miller Driggs. Leader Phillips Lounsbury Kimberly Talcott, Jr. Forbes McClintock Payne Stoddard Washington YALE FRESHMAN GLEE CLUB OFFICERS, 1927-1928 M. F. Driggs, 31, Leader First Tenors H. Brereton H. Cluett J. T. Kimberly E. L. Marsh, Jr. J. K. Northam L. E. Robertson J. L. Vaill A. K. White Second Tenors H. E. Baton, Jr. M. F. Driggs J. vanA. Easton J. E. Lounsbury J. E. Phillips C. S. Rodman 384 W. C . Thorne H. Y. Tyler J. D. Washington K. Weida G. P. Williams First Basses D. A. Albright F. D. Cowles B. DeMeritt R. M. Ferris G. B. Forbes R. J. Harvey O. jNIcClintock C. E. Payne J. C. Rathborne G. W. Sherrill G. Stoddard J. L. Wilkins Second Bassbis D. H. Clement J. C. Gemehl A. L. Harris E. . Knight B. Lay, Jr. W. S. McCa.skey A. McNally C. C. Miller N. J. Pond J. G. Rogers, Jr. W. A. Smith K. L. Terrell A. C. Thompson A. B. Wallace, Jr. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Thwing Vidal Fletcher Cur Bruce Dryfoos Berry THE YALE CLUB ORCHESTRAS COMBINED WITH THE YALE COLLEGIANS J. A. Curtis, ' 30, Manager H. A. Fi-ETCHEE, ' 30, Leader Piano, Harrv Rose, ' 28 Violin, R. Y. Berry, ' 28 Banjo, J. A. Curtis, ' 30 Tuba, A. B. Lutz, 30 Drums. J. R. Titus, ' 30 Trumpet. C. Vidal, ' 31 Trumpet, S. F. Flctclier, ' 31 Trombone, F. C. Thwing, ' 29 Alto Saxophone, J. E. Thayer, ' 28 S. Alto Saxophone, H. Dryfoos, ' 30 Tenor Saxophone, R. Bruce, ' 31 385 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE UNIVERSITY BAND THE Yale Band has continued to be an important part of the Football Rallies and the backbone of the Cheering Section at games. A victorious year for the team gave the Band many opportunities to lead the snake dance celebrations. A concert was given again this year at the Cen- tral High School of Bridgeport under the auspices of the Yale Alumni Association of Fairfield County. A program was presented at Danbury. The Sixth An- nual Concert in the New York Yale Club was held on the Wednesday preceding the Harvard game. On Friday night, of that week, a concert was given at the New Bedford Hotel in New Bedford, Mass., followed by a dance given by the Yale Alumni of the town. The custom of playing Christmas Carols on the eve of the December Recess was retained. The Band visited the campus, Branford Court, and the homes of President Angell and several of the professors. They played in the glow of red and green torches, giving the serenades a picturesque setting recalling the days of trouba- dours and wandering minstrels. SAMUEL I. DIEHL, OFFICERS, 1927-1928 Samuel I. Diehl, Leader Edward T. Buckingham, Jr., Manager Henry P. Bakewell, Assistant Manager George G. Halfinger, Librarian OFFICERS, 1928-1929 Jerome F. Downing, Leader Henry P. Bakewell, Manager Neil S. Waterman, Assistant Manager George G. Halfinger, Librarian Basses C. Kimball A. B. Lutz C. R. Webster C. W. Woolse y Horns J. W. Belts E. M. Lewis J. K. Northam A. L. Wiener Charles F. Smith, Professional Director Joseph R. Ellis (Registrar of Freshmen), Treasurer A. B. Mosebach R. Smith Trombones R. J. Nichols J. W. Parrish R. R. Raab C. Thorne N. S. Waterman W. W. Wells Soprano Saxophones A. C. Anders, Jr. R. H. Robinson C Melody Saxophones R. B. Scobie L. L. Stirling Alto Saxophones L. J. Rapoport A. C. Thompson R. Williams, Jr. T. Willis Tenor Saxophones H. Dryfoos, 3d G. G. Halfinger Piccolos R. T. Beck J. F. Downing G. K. Hirst B. Lay, Jr. Clarinets R. H. At water F. A. Cipriano E. R. Engstrand D. H. Hassler C. McKee C. W. Phelps J. A. Reed D. E. Remer O. E. Stacy M. F. Strashun Cymbals L. D. Laden Trumpets T. W. Aldrich H. P. Bakewell A. Bella S. DeMaio H. A. Fletcher W. H. Jervis C. R. Lam A. Miller J. H. Parker S. F. Pletcher S. C. Vidal T. S. Woods Snake Drums E. T. Buckingham, Jr. F. Cavett H. T. Crawford W. D. English F. M. Wick Bass Drum E. J. Pulaski 387 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI i w . ' . ' A ' .v.wAv. YALE BAN NEK AND POT POURRI jasawavavas. THE COLLEGE CHOIR •9 1 1 1 ! i FIRST TENORS ' M H R. B. Alvarez, G.S. W. L. Funk, ' 30 S. lll l F. y. Austin, Jr., ' 28 S. A. W. Hawley, ' 28 S. i l A. M. K. Blumc, ' 28 M. Kullman, G.S. Hr ' i l T. P. Chalker, G.S. P. A. Solandt, G.S. ivjH C. G. Cipriano, G.S. J. A. Timm, Inst. D. X. Clark, ' 30 W. J. Watson, ' 30 WL M C. L. Dunham, ' 29 C. H. Zimmerman, G.S. 1 SECOND TENORS 1 1 !! l M. G. Duncan, ' 28, Art H. A. Pflug, G.S. ■ |n R. L. Gilpatric, ' 28 L. P. Ross, ' 28 ■ H L. B. Halper, G.S. S. A. Scoville, ' 28 prof, harry b. J EPSON M. M. Kastendieck, G.S. E. W. Slifer, G.S. director and organist W. R. Morley, ' 28 A. T. Squire, G.S. 1 C. W. Naylor, G.S. H. N. Violette, G.S. 1 FIRST BASSES i ' ' G. A. Carver, ' 28 R. G. Masters, ' 29 r 1 P. H. Gray, Jr., ' 28 T. E. Moore, ' 30 i ' G. M. Harper, Jr., Inst. A. L. Wallace, G.S. 1 J. C. C. Holding, Jr., ' 28 S. B. Weston, G.S. 1 1 1 1 R. M. Kennan, G.S. G. B. Workman, G.S [ j G. B. Massey, Jr., ' 29 S. i I i SECOND BASSES 1 G. B. Bachman, G.S. R. S. Makepeace, ' 29 y A. Bellinger, Inst. F. M. Meek, G.S. r ) H. F. Bozyan, Inst. S. Oviatt, ' 30 i ' i D. B. Buss, ' 29 R. W. Seitz, Inst. n S. L. Gwin, Jr., ' 30 J. G. Sherman, ' 29 1 1 S. L. Hall. ' 28 W. W. Smith, G.S. 1. 1 1 i M. Hay, ' 30 V. H. Sutro, ' 28 1 1 J. N. Hazard, ' 30 C. P. West, ' 28 1 B. Lay, Jr., ' 31 389 = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI DRAMATICS HERE is hardly any time in the college year when some part of Yale is not putting forth an ear- nest histrionic effort. This is not an effort of gymnastics. Y ale does not boast a troupe of soft shoe artists or a chorus of colle- giate high steppers. The effort expresses an active desire to create and to interpret along the traditional lines of conservative drama. Playcraftsmen and Fraternities can pro- duce to only limited audiences, but the Dra- matic Association is able to show more compre- hensively the work that the undergraduates are trying to do in this field. Comedy and tragedy are usuallj included in the program of each year, and whereas the comedy may represent the lightest of all humors, yet is it legitimate stage, while the tragic presentations assault such heights as Shakespeare and the Greek classics. The receptions that have recently met this dramatic work have been so encoiu-aging that each j ear a greater portion of the University has been taking a real interest in it. 390 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ' fH t-i-S s flir ' YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI a DRAMATICS Prof. J. R. Crawford, Chairman Dean E. V. Meeks Prof. G. H. Nettleton BOARD OF DIRECTORS Prof. W. L. Phelps Prof. J. M. Bcrdan Mr. G. T. Adee Rev. T. L. Riggs Mr. W. W. Williams Mr. E. M. Woolley C. T. Bingham, ' 28, President R. C. OsBORN, ' 28, Vice-President J. T. Manson, 2d, ' 28, Manager G. C. Brooke, ' 28, Secretary E. H. DoDD, Jr., ' 28, Press Manager OFFICERS W. p. Jenkins, ' 29, Assistant Manager H. R. MooREHEAD, Jr., ' 29, Assistant Press Mgr J. C. Brady, Jr., ' 29, Assistant Secretary A. L. Shipman, Jr., ' 28, Production Manager A. S. Hershet, ' 29 S., Stage Manager Miss Maude Adams Prof. Edward B. Reed Mr. John B. Reed Mr. Stuart Walker 1928 L. M. Baldwin J. M. Bernstein C. T. Bingham G. C. Brooke A. C. Brown C. H. Brown C. R. M. Burke D. ly. Clendenin E. H. Dodd, Jr. W. Hobson W. W. Hoppin, Jr. C. B. Ives J. K. Jessup HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. William L. Phelps Prof. John M. Berdan Mr. F. L. Short Dean David S. Smith Mr. C. C. S. Gushing Mr. WiUiam B. Kip MEMBERS J. T. Manson, 2d E. L. MUls G. H. Xelson R. C. Osborn W. N. Robson, 2d G. A. Sanderson, Jr. A. L. Shipman J. A. Thomas S. Thome, Jr. H. A. Wake 1928 S. F. B. Miles 1929 A. B. Ashforth, Jr. G. T. Ashforth K. Boocock J. C. Brady, Jr. L. S. Douglass S. Green R. E. Houston, Jr. W. P. Jenkins W. P. Leighton H. Miller H. R. Moorehead, Jr. I. X. P. Stokes, 2d C. H. Taylor A. B. Walker L. A. Williams, Jr. 1929 S. H. Gambrill, Jr. A. S. Hershey 1929 Art R. W. Shaekleton 1930 R. S. Allison, Jr. S. O. Jones A. Lambert G. B. Longstreth W. Sizer J. C. West 1931 W. W. Watson, 3d SUCH a phenomenon as a stabilized contented Dramatic Association never has existed at Yale and probably never will — at least as long as the University and the Department of Drama preserve their present attitude. The outgoing executive board finds itself forced to hand down just as uncertain an outlook for the future as it in- herited a year ago. 393 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE UNIVERSITY DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION presents Shakespeare ' s CORIOLANUS CAST Caius Martins Coriolanus II. Hamlin, ' 27 Tullus Aufidius H. M. Slianeberger, ' 27 Menenlus Agrippa J. M. Bernstein, ' 28 Sicinius Velutus W. W. Hobson, Jr., ' 28 Junius Brutus H. Miller, ' 29 Cominius C. R. M. Burke, ' 28 Titus Lartius L. M. Baldwin, ' 28 Volumnia R. S. Allison, Jr., ' 30 Vergilia F. E. C. Roell er, ' 30 First Roman Citizen C. T. Bingham, ' 28 Second Roman Citizen C. B. Ives, ' 28 Tliird Roman Citizen I. N. P. Stolies, 2d, ' 29 Fourth Roman Citizen T. C. Kennedy, ' 30 S. Fifth Roman Citizen R. E. Houston, jr., ' 29 Sixth Roman Citizen L. I.. Stirling, ' 27 Seventh Roman Citizen H. E. Reaslie, ' 27 Eighth Roman Citizen S. O. Jones, ' 30 An Aedile A. B. Ashforth, Jr., ' 29 First Roman Senator V. P. Leighton, ' 29 Second Roman Senator G. B. Berger, Jr., ' 28 A Messenger G. T. Ashforth, ' 29 Lieutenant to Aufidius F. A. Mulgrew, 3d, ' 30 First Volscian Guard I,. A. Williams, Jr., ' 30 Second Volscian Guard A. B. Walker, ' 29 First Volscian Senator V. H. Sutro, ' 28 Second Volscian Senator S. Thorne, Jr., 28 Third Volscian Senator G. A. Eddy, ' 28 First Servant to Aufidius W. A. Aiken, 2d, ' 29 Second Servant to Aufidius I,. S. Robbins, Jr., ' 30 Third Servant to Aufidius C. H. Taylor, ' 29 A Roman Herald T. Morrison, ' 30 S. First Roman Soldier D. E. Cobey, ' 29 Second Roman Soldier H. M. Byington, Jr., ' 30 Third Roman Soldier A. Lambert, ' 30 Son of Coriolanus Master William Warren Roman Senators, Soldiers, and Citizens Volscian Senators and Soldiers 1927: J. B. Armstrong, O. Bahr, R. S. Berrey, P. Y. Epier, J. W. Evans, R. B. Flint, H. B. Hofifman, R. W. Hogue, D. C. LoGeorge, R. C. Lucas, G. O. Riggs, P. S. Seward, F. T. Sherlock, A. C. Smith, L. Svirsky, P. A. Toomer, P. G. Willard. 1927 S.: G. H. Langner. 1928: A. C. Brown. C. H. Brown, J. C. Gasman, D. L. Clendenin, F. Collins, E. H. Dodd, Jr., W. Green- house, G. T. Hellman, G. V. Hemsley, L. B. Hockaday, J. T. McCanee, T. Marsliall, C. H. Morgan, G. M. Shepherd, A. L. Chipman. 1928 S.: E. Blumenthal, S. A. Payne. 1929: W. G. Anderson, M. Baker, C. J. Balliett, Jr., K. M. Balnier, R. B. Bryant, S. P. Dorais, L. S. Douglass, C. L. Dunham, S. M. Gompertz, S. Green, S. F. Hemsley, 6. R. B. Hollberg, J. F. Jenkins, W. P. Jenkins, D. M. Kerr, N. A. Resnik, A. H. Roberts, J. A. Roberts, G. Sklar, F. C, Thwing. 1929 S.: H. Gambrill, A. S. Hershey, F. K. Sheldon, J. C. Sleath. 1930: H. J. Frey, Jr., J. L. L. Goldstone, E. P. Israel, E. R. Jones, G. B. Longstreth, S. W. Mears, C. R. Pope, W.Sizer, T. Thomas, J. C. West, D. D. Wright. 394 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI In the spring of 1927, in spite of an impending struggle with the University au- thorities on the question of giving Mr. Woolley a reappointment on the English faculty or some such official recognition, the Association went ahead and with unsparing effort produced Coriolanus. As Mr. Woolley was not reappointed to the faculty and conse- quently felt justified in resigning his position as coach of the Dramat, Coriolanus was his last production. It was well worthy of his best efforts. As a pageant, as a master- piece of directing and interpretation, this production of a Shakespearean tragedj ' gave undeniable evidence of Mr. Woolley ' s genius ; as a rarely-given pla} ' of quite some lit- erary merit, it was fully on a par with previous Commencement plays. There was much talk of abolishing the Association after the spring show as it was felt that the Association alone could never obtain and hold a first-class director without going in debt. However, it was decided to make the best of an unfortunate situation, to engage a new coach and if all did not go well, at least prove to those in authority that support from the University, either financially or thi ' ough the creating in some depart- ment of an official appointment for the Director of Undergraduate Dramatics, was quite essential and vital to the future success of the Association. During the summer, the organization was fortunate enough to obtain the services of Douglas Walter Ross, a professional English actor of some distinction. Mr. Ross came to Yale particularlj ' well qualified to take Mr. Woollej- ' s place as he had had experience in every field of the stage — acting, managing, producing, designing, and teaching. Within four weeks after his arrival, in spite of tremendous difficulties in 395 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE UNIVERSITY DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION PRESENTS THIS WOMAN BUSINESS By Ben Levy CAST Hodges W. Hobson, ' 28 Honey C. B. Ives, ' 28 Nettlebank A. Lambert, ' 30 Bingham G. A. Sanderson, Jr., ' 28 Crofts J. K. Jessup, ' 28 Brown S. O. Jones, ' 30 Trent A. B. Ashforth, Jr., ' 29 Crawford R. S. Allison, ' 30 Addleshaw L. M. Baldwin, ' 28 Scene: The smoking room of Hodges ' home in Cornwall, England Act I An evening in May Act 1 1 Three weeks later. Evening Act III Three weeks later. Afternoon 396 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI finding reliearsing space, Mr. Ross had a pla_y ready to go on the road for the Christ- mas tour. As an instance of the undiminished popularity of the work of the Dramatic Club, it may be mentioned that 125 men reported for tryouts for the selected play, This Woman Business, by Benjamin W. Levy. Performances of This Woman Busi- ness were given during the vacation at Albany, Rochester, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, and Washington and everywhere the work of Mr. Ross and his highly trained company was well received. At the time of the Junior Promenade, when three more performances were given, and again later at Waterburv, the praise was unanimous and extremely flatter- ing. Mr. Ross has showed his ability to make polished actors out of inexperienced undergraduates, to produce a difficult, light comedy with almost professional perfec- tion, and to adapt himself, to an extraordinary degree, to the peculiar temperament of a Yale student, who likes to act, but hates to rehearse. His skill in directing a large cast and producing a great drama is as yet untried at Yale, but his work so far augurs well for the future. To the casual observer, therefore, it looks as though the Dramat has found the man it needs to fill the vacancy left by Mr. Woolley and all is well. If one goes deeper, however, it is at once seen that all is not so serene. The Association has used every reasonable means to raise money, its policy has remained unchanged and its earnings are quite up to the average. Nevertheless, indebtedness stares it in the face ; never has it had the whole burden of a full-time director ' s salary to bear. In former j ' ears, the experiment of engaging a director on a part-time basis was tried and proven a failure. What must be done then to stabilize tlie financial position of the Dramat and ensure the services of a first-rate director, both of which factors are indispensable to the con- tinuance of the finest traditions of the Dramatic Association. ' There seems to be just one answer to this question. The Dramat must have more than the mere nominal support of the University and its various departments. DOUGLAS ROSS DIRECTOR C. T. BINGHAM PRESIDENT 397 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI m 1 H i Robson Peters Judd Gambrill Leighton Osborn Zerbe Mulgrew Collins Allison Brown Sanderson Smith Harvie Broden Dunn Curtis Clendenin Wake Connelly Hoppin Saunders Kelly PLAYCRAFTSMEN rry he University Playcraftsmen have had an active year. A group of three one-act - ■ plays was presented at the time of the Princeton game, this fall, with large attend- ance at both performances. These were given in the Little Theatre. In December For A Man, by C. R. Burke and C. R. Pope, was given by the Playcraftsmen on the occasion of the annual banquet of the New Haven Alumni Asso- ciation at the Lawn Club. Again on February 17 this same play was enthusiastically received at the banquet of the Essex County Alumni Association at Orange, X. J. The presentation of a play to the Hartford Alumni Association early in May and two performances of three one-act plaj ' s complete the work for the year. The number of play manuscripts submitted by students has been large and shows a real interest in playwriting among undergraduates. ]Moreover, the large number of men who try out for parts denotes the need for a dramatic organization, that serves as a laboratory for undergraduates. 398 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE PLAYCRAFTSMEN OFFICERS W. W. HoppiN, Jr., Chairman W. M. Saunders, Associate Director J. M. Bernstein, Associate Director R. C. Osborn, Associate Director W. T. Kelley, Jr., Business Manager J. B. Zerbe, Jr., Press Manager Prof. J. R. Crawford, Faculty Adviser Production Staff H. A. Wake, Production Manager H. Gambrill, Jr., Stage Manager R. V. Berry J. A. Curtis Playcraftsmen Orchestra H. A. Fletcher M. M. Koskoff J. R. Titus A. B. Lutz L. Peacock MEMBERS J. M. Bernstein C. R. Burke D. L. Clendenin P. J. Dunn W. W. Hoppin, Jr. 1928 C. B. Ives W. T. Kelley, Jr. (S.) A. R. Matheny C. L. V. Meeks E. L. Mills R. C. Osborn W. N. Robson, 2d G. A. Sanderson, Jr. W. M. A. Saunders H. A. Wake J. B. Zerbe, Jr. W. R. Borden A. R. Connelly R. S. Allison, Jr. T. M. Brown, Jr. J. Collins, Jr. 1929 1930 J. A. Curtis J. B. Harvie, Jr. S. O. H. Jones 1981 J. L. D. Peters H. Gambrill, Jr. (S.) S. R. Prince, Jr. F. A. Mulgrew, 3d C. R. Pope W. J. Watson 399 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CLUBS S the following catalogue of clubs is scanned, few legitimate excuses for the existence of any of them will become aj parent. And therein lies their charm. They have no great purposes. They can produce no carefully planned proj- ects for the future. They have been born and they continue to live because their members have found that the exchange of congeniality is an end in itself worthy of recognition and encouragement. They are an unpretentious but powerful protest against the materialism of the scheduled routine. 400 1 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI CLUB THERE are at Yale, a goodl}- number of these informal associations, coalitions, as- similations, and organizations, classified under the general heading of clubs. Among the number, some few have become permanent groups, while each year sees the birth and death of a large assortment of innocuous fol-de-rols. It is our purpose to dis- cuss only those organizations which have, through their powers of perseverance, estab- lished a definite and lasting record for themselves. We do not underestimate the spirit and importance of the somewhat ephemeral organizations which appear from year to year, but their number is legion and an enumeration of their various characteristics would prove an endless undertaking. It is only fitting that the Whiffenpoofs receive the first consideration. Twenty-one years ago a group of congenial and rather hilarious songsters, after an evening of Bacchanalian revelry, pledged tliemselves to eternal friendship and brotherhood. Since that memorable evening, the Whiffenpoofs have had an unbroken existence. Every jMonday night, they dine at ] Iory ' s and regale tiie company with song. ( To the Tables down at Mory ' s, Shall I Wasting, Mavourneen, etc.) It is also their custom to sing on fine spring evenings in the Quadrangle, while they occasionally serenade the Freshmen in Berkeley Oval. The A ' olstead Act has, in late years, somewhat cramped the style of these gentlemen songsters, but their musical harmony has endured. Today they stand for perhaps the finest informal group singing to be found in any American University. The Pundits, thoroughly dissimilar in character to the preceding organization, are fundamentally the super-poetical, highly resthetical, out-of-the-way young men of the College. According to their own definition, they are the ten most Punditical (?) and least congenial ( . ' ' ) members of the Senior Class, presided over by the well-known Billy Phelps. In their number are to be found men of individuality and artistic sense, men interested in literature, music, art, and the humanities in general. At their meetings, held from time to time throughout the year, any conceivable subject may be discussed, with only tiiree exceptions : athletics, business, and politics. The Pundits were founded in 188-1, and on no less than three occasions lias the organization sunk into oblivion. Yet, each time, like the Phoenix, it has risen from the ashes of its former ruin. In 1903, the organization was last reincarnated and has, since then, had an unbroken existence, standing, primarily, for culture and the iiumanities. The Old Crows, although a comparatively recent addition to Yale ' s informal clubs, have, through their precocity, shown strong signs of insuring their existence in per- petuo. They were organized informally, for purposes of conviviality and good-fellow- ship. From time to time, the members dine together and indulge in a little informal singing, concluding all their meetings with that sweet and plaintive little dirge, 402 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI They ' re coming through the Windows ... etc. In the spring they go on occasional outings and picnics. What takes place at these meetings is known only to them- selves. Among the oldest of all are the jMohicans, who claim to have been founded by thet thar James Fenimore Cooper, f.r-1811. Regardless of the doubtful veracity of this legendary story concerning their ancestry, the Mohicans are still comparatively primitive in character. They are a group of about twelve congenial individuals who swear by that good old homespun philosophy that fire-water is not only a panacea for all physical ailments but is also a sovereign remedy for melancholy. Once each fall, at the command of the Big Chief, the tribe assembles, and clad in full regalia, goes forth upon the warpath. The Sword and Gun Club is an outgrowth of the Mohicans, probably resulting from a schism concerning the inclusion of members. They have adopted as their official symbols a large sword and gun in place of the savage externals of their progenitors, yet in character they are much the same, motivated by the same Epicurean philosophy. The Sword and Gun Club is especially noteworthy in that it is one of the few which includes men from both the College and Sheff. It should be noted, in conclusion, that these clubs, unlike the Junior fraternities and Senior societies, are not composed of any specified body of men. Their membership varies in number from year to year, while it often occurs that the same man is a member of two or three at once. A lack of formality is the essential characteristic of each. They are, fundamentally, much the same, differing only in name, membership, and external custom. They afford an opportunity for men of congenial disposition to enjoy their youth in company with similarly inclined friends. The part of these clubs in college life is entirely harmless and conducive to a spirit of good-fellowship and congeniality — a spirit which is so desirable a part of undergraduate life. 403 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Sterrett Hoggson McCance Berger Durant Bartholomew Ross WHIFFENPOOFS Fuzzy Tail Bartholomew Jungle Buzzard Basham Stew Bum Berger Ding Bat Durant Wangy Hoggson Gun ] foll McCance Rummy Bag Ross Bundle Stiff Scoville IMush Rigger Sterrett 404 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = Hubbard Brady, Jr. Mudge Wyckoff Moorehead, Jr WHAT IS YALE FOUR? J. C. Brady, Jr. C. K. Hubbard H. R. Moorhead, Jr. L. S. Mudge G. W. Wvckoff 405 YALE BANNER AND POT POURKI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI OLD CROWS G. C. Brooke H. Hitchcock D. B. Lawrence R. O. Mitchell C. B. G. Murphy R. C. Osborn W. M. Reed A. C. Robertson J. Roby J. S. Rockefeller W. C. Robinson G. L. Storm, Jr. 409 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE OLD GUARD Daniel Noyes Brown Stuart Wilson Cragin Pomeroy Day John Shepard Eells, Jr. Spencer Gross Frank Harwood Hamlin Geoffrey Theodore Hellman Benjamin Howard Larrabee Charlton Miner Lewis Winlock William Miller, Jr. Nathan Townley Milliken Dexter Belknap Peck George Alexander Phelps Keith Smith, Jr. Robert Waring Stoddard 410 = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE MASONIC CLUB OFFICERS J. F. McKixLEY, President L. Laase, Secretary and Treasurer R. T. Beck L. R. Burroughs V. P. Caguioa D. C. Eckennan G. H. Edmunds T. D. Gatchcl A. V. Goldiere I. G. Hintz O. G. Hupfel M. A. Jacobs T. James S. Klamon MEMBERS A. F. Kovarik L. Laase H. H. Landran J. S. Lobb J. F. McKinley H. T. Mead C. W. Phelps R. H. Robinson P. F. Sclimehl O. E. Schupp R. D. Stevens R. B. Thomson W. B. Wheelis 412 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI Professor William Lyon Phelps R. C. OsBORX, Secretary George Bart Berger, Jr. Stanton Francis Kennedy Joseph ] Iilton Bernstein Robert Valentine Massey, Jr. Thomas Huntington Chappell Robert Chesley Osborn Wilder Hobson George Augustus Sanderson, Jr. John Knox Jessup Joseph Albert Thomas 413 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE UNIVERSITY CLUB OFFICERS J. P. Satterfield, ' 28, President H. Spitzer, ' 28 S., Vice-President G. W. Wyckoff, ' 29, Secretary-Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERNORS 1928 G. B. Berger F. J. Jones, 2d B. L. Mallory, Jr. R. O. MitcheU H. W. Snow 1928 S. L. V. King 1929 B. S. Cookman H. E. Manville, Jr. L. H. Smith 1929 S. M. S. Echols 1930 R. W. Ellis W. R. Tappan J. ?. SATTERFIELD, PRESIDENT BACK in the grim eighties, in the days when undergraduates habitually wore moustaches and side whiskers but, nevertheless, possessed the human characteristics of hunger and grcgariousness, a small group of epicures who had formed the snobbish habit of dining together conceived the brilliant idea of forming a club to facilitate this purpose. And so, by some forgotten means, they secured a building on Chapel Street, next to the old Quinnipiac Club, and hung out the sign of the University Club. Its popularity at once assured its successful continuance, and, with the entire under- graduate body of the University from w ' hich to choose its membership, it soon became a select circle where the best of food and beer was consumed in an atmosphere of cigar smoke and sociability. Its membership steadily increased, and in 1916 the Club moved to the more commodious quarters in the building which it now occupies. Here, in addi- tion to its excellent dining room, it has the facilities of writing room, library, and billiard tables. Undergraduates of both the College and Sheff gather here three times a day to glare at each other over the festal boards and to mingle in the s])irit of conviviality. The Club forms one of the best common meeting grounds for the three upper classes of both undergraduate schools and is one of the strongest bonds of union between them. The management of the Club is directed entirely b} ' undergraduates. An elected Board of Governors meets monthly to dine in Bacchanalian splendor, and incidentally to elect new members and devise means of collecting debts owed the Club. The members of the Governing Board reward themselves for their efforts by holding an annual outing towards the close of the college year, which activity alone serves to perpetuate ade- quately the pre-Volsteadian traditions of the Club. Since the construction of the open houses by the Junior fraternities of the College, the University Club has faced a problem which seriously threatens its existence or at least its traditional character. Because of the fact that most of the men in the frater- nities dine in their new houses, the membership of the Club has been enlarged steadily, with a consequent loss of some of the intimacy which prevailed in the former days. The Board of Governors hopes to receive the co-operation of the fraternities in devising a plan whereby a certain part of the membership of each house will continue to eat at the Club. The University Club is an integral part of the social system of the University, and its successful continuance in the future is an end to be sought by all of under- graduate Yale. 415 VSrXK ' S S ' XKKrX ' J ' S ' S . YALE BANNER ANn PHT PATTRRT JA... ........ ..Ti:iT? MEMBERS I J. T. Abbott R. C. Durant S. B. Kie.selborst W. Reeves H. C. Adams M. S. Echols J. E. King, Jr. S. R. Riley W. A. Aiken, 11 H. Eldridge I.. W. King S. Robbins, III R. B. Alexander R. G. Elliott D. Kitchel W. C. Robinson, Jr. W. Archliald H. M. Ellis A. M. Knap|) D. S. Sampsell H. D. Babcock R. W. Ellis T. N. Kugeman C. H. Sanford, Jr. J. H. Baggs, Jr. W. D. English A. Lambert C. H. Sanger (i. N. Baker G. A. Espy R. C. I.andon S. Sanger ( V. C. Baldwin T. C. Farnsworth S. G. I.andon, Jr. J. P. Satterfield 1 E. F. Ball M. Fenton W. K. I.anman, Jr. O. H. Schell, Jr. C. A. Barnes, Jr. R. M. Ferguson R. V. I,a])bam G. G. Schroeder, Jr. C. D. Barnes, Jr. M. H. Fisher D. B. Lawrence H. . . Schroeder 1 A. Batchekier P. J. Fitzpatrick L. P. LeBourgeois J. E. Schurman C. H. Bell J. P. Flahertv J. N. Lindeke H. Scott E. C. Bendere P. Folger W. A. Lindeke S. P. Scott L. G. Benton L. D. Forsyth D. Lindsay, III W. B. Scoville G. B. Berger, Jr. O. O. Freeman G. B. Longstreth R. N. Semler I.. S. Bigelow, Jr. R. Game B. Long, Jr. A. B. Shepley C. T. Bingbam W. W. Garnsey S. A. Lyman R. T. Shields A. S. Blagden, Jr. J. P. Gasser, jr E. P. Maffitt W. Sizer K. Boocock J. K. Gearhart, Jr. B. L. Mallory, Jr. L. H. Smith C. S. Bowman, Jr. F. E. Gignoux E. A. Manning P. M. Smith D. F. Bradley J. A. Gilchrist J. T. Manson, II H. W. Snow L. S. Bradley C. W. Gillespie H. E. Manville, Jr. R. E. Spiel 1 J. C. Brady, Jr. J. S. Glenn W. S. Meaney, Jr. H. Spitzer ► S. A. Brady E. Goodwine, Jr. P. Mellon J. M. Sprigg ] ! U. Bragonier J. B. Goss W. T. Meloy T. A. Standish, Jr. ► B. Brewster J. S. Graetzer, Jr. H. R. Merrill G. S. Stevenson i C. H. Brockleman W. L. Graham R. D. Mitchell M. W. Stevenson t G. C. Brooke G. C. Graves, 11 A. M. Moody, Jr. S. Stewart, Jr. F. G. Brown J. H. Graves C. V. Moore M. L. Stoddard  Gardner Brown J. P. Graves, II H. R. Moorhead, Jr. H. Taft ; N. Brown H. S. Griggs, Jr. F. W. Morris, III W. R. Tappan ( R. Brown A. W. Griswold W. B. Mosle J. B. Terbell, Jr. R. C. Brown, III C. N. Griswold L. S. Mudge B. L. Thompson ! R. M. Brown, Jr. R. H. Gwaltney, Jr. F. A. Mulgrew, HI E. F. Thompson t J. DeF. Buckingham S. L. Gwin, Jr. F. S. Murphy W. B. Thompson H. C. Campbell R. A. Hall J. M. Musser B. Thorne H. B. Cannon, Jr. A. R. Hamilton, Jr. H. M. McAleenan R. C. Thrall 1 F. T. Carmody M. B. Hamilton J. T. McCance L. W. Tierney, Jr. ! J. R. Carv C. J. Hamlin, Jr. F. D. McCaulley, Jr. W. W. Trimble f G. S. Chappell, Jr. W. S. Hammersley V. McCaulley G. B. Tweedy j N. R. Cherry M. T. Hanson R. T. McDevitt L. Tweedy, Jr. 1 E. C. Childs W. B. Harding J. McEwen F. L. Veedcr 1 T. S. Childs, Jr. C. H. Hardt E. C. McHenry D. deB. Wack D. M. Clark P. W. Hatch J. S. xMclntosh W. Wade J. Clegg J. H. Hayward H. R. McLane A. Walker, III A. R. Connelly C. J. Heller C. D. McPhee, HI J. W. Walker B. S. Cookman S. M. Henrv F. A. Nash S. Walker S. K. Costikyan D. H. Hickok R. C. Nicholas, Jr. C. F. Wallace S. W. Cragin I. B. Hiett J. S. Niles, Jr. O. M. Wallop R. C. Crisler C. T. Hill N. N. Noble G. Ward P. Curtis J. G. Hodges H. L. O ' Fallon, Jr. R. Ward G. H. Darrell W. W. Hoppin, Jr. H. Oliver, Jr. A. Y. Warner J. S. Davis .1. Howland M. W. Oliver J. O. Watson ; P. Davis C. K. Hubbard R. C. Osborn G. R. Weaver i ' M. Davison R. E. Hubbell L. R. Parker H. S. Webb, Jr. ! C. N. DeForest J. W. Hunter W. L. Paul H. K. Weir ! G. K. DeForest C. S. Hurd R. Peabody J. C. West N. C. Dockendorff C. B. Ives I. H. Peck, Jr. F. H. Wickwire, III i C. N. Dodge E. C. Ives J. D. Petriken F. B. Wildman, Jr. i C. P. Dodge F. C. Jarecki J. H. Phipps J. K. Willing, Jr. W. Dodge W. P. Jenkins E. P. Piatt H. A. Wilnierding J. W. Douglas F. H. Jones C. R. Pope C. D. Wood, Jr. F. L. Dow F. J. Jones, II E. Potter F. C. Wright, Jr. S. J. Dow, Jr. H. Kaul H. B. Potts W. Wright Jl C. W. Dudley, Jr. Wm. C. Keator, Jr. W. Ravn.ond, Jr. G. W. Wvckoff ■ 416 I nnvsvsvATA vuvj W.W.W.W.W ' . ' Av.vAv. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI FORMER PRESIDENTS 1880-Sl 1881-82 1882-83 1883-84 1884-85 1885-86 1886-87 1887-88 1889-90 1890-91 1891-92 1892-93 1893-94 1894-95 1895-96 1896-97 J. E. Bowen 1897-98 J. M. Woolsey 1913-14 W. E. Bailey 1898-99 C. A. Bravton 1914-15 C. F. Collins 1899-00 J. M. McCormick 1915-16 F, D. Bowen 1900-01 J. Day 1916-17 W. Catherwood 1901-02 J. R. Swan 1917-lS C. I.. Bailey, Jr. 1902-03 R. R. McCormick 1918-19 J. Archibald, Jr. 1903-04 J. B. Huff 1919-20 W. B. Brinsmade 1904-05 E. P. Rogers 1920-21 G. F. Peter 1905-06 E. Corning 1921-22 E. V. Hale 1906-07 C. Truesdale 1922-23 E. H. Floyd-Jones 1907-08 C. P. Dixon 1923-24 M. Taylor 1908-09 F. W. Murray, Jr. 1924-25 F. L. Polk 1909-10 E. Hoyt, 2d 1925-26 C. Vanderbilt 1910-11 M. J. O ' Brien, Jr. 1926-27 A. G. C. Sage 1911-12 H. L. R. Emmet 1927-28 R. S. Brewster 1912-13 C. H. MarshaU YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE ELIZABETHAN CLUB OFFICERS, 1927-1928 Wilbur L. Cross, President Samuel B. Hemingway, Vice-President Andrew Keogh, Librarian John S. Eells, Jr., ' 28, Secretary UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS 1928 George Bart Berger, Jr. Joseph JNIilton Bernstein Tliomas Huntington Chappell Robert Jay Cone Thomas Wellsted Copeland John Shepard Eells, Jr. Roswell Leavitt Gilpatric Philip Hayward Gray, Jr. GeoiFrey Theodore Hellman Wilder Hobson Charles Beecher Hogan John Andrew Howard, Jr. Robert Watkinson Huntington, Jr. Chauncey Bradley Ives Jolm Knox Jessup Stanton Francis Kennedy Dwight JMacdonald George Lovett Morris Robert Chesley Osborn George Augustus Sanderson, Jr. William Appleton Aiken, 2d Winthrop Gilman Brown Charles XoA ' es dcForest Washington Dodge, 2d 1929 Kenrick Samson Gillespie Ralph DcLahaye Paine, Jr. Hamilton Soutlnvorth Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes, 2d Frank Cookman Wright, Jr. 1930 William David Judson, Jr. Tom Prideaux 419 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI John L. Gilson, ' 99, President Raynham Townshend, ' 00 S., Vice-President George E. Thompson, ' 95 S., Secretary BuRNSiDE WiNSLOw, ' 04, Treasurer BOARD OF GOVERXORS J. Frederick Baker, ' 09 Charles M. Bakewell, ' 05 H. Ezekiel S. Bronson, ' 00 Frederick D. Grave, ' 11 S. Edgar C. Lackland, ' 96 Omar W. Piatt, ' 99 William A. Rice, ' 86 S. R. Selden Rose, ' 09 Graham F. Thompson, ' 07 S. Philip Troup, ' 00 S. Stephen Whitney, ' 08 S. Burnside Winslow, ' 04 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ai W. P. Baldv F. C. Baldwin in C. T. Bingham Ch Carter. Jr. A. F. Baldwin YALE HAWAIIAN CLUB OFFICERS G. R. Carter, Jr., ' 28, President A. F. Baldwin, ' 29, Secretary MEMBERS A. F. Baldwin, ' 29 F. C. Baldwin, ' 28 W. P. Baldwin, ' 31 A. M. Bingham, Law C. T. Bingham, ' 28 B. Bingham, 31 G. R. Carter, Jr., ' 28 E. J. Q. Chun, ' 31 E. K. Kai, Law W. A. Lydgate, ' 31 421 = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI OFFICERS N. L. Engei.hakdt, Jr., ' 29 S., President G. E. Beardsley, Jr., ' 28 S., Secretary W. H. Bolter, ' 29 S., Treasnrer S. B. R. Taylor, ' 29 S., Flight Manager THE Aeronauticjil Society was created to provide an outlet for the enthusiasm of the undergraduate body for flying. It ofi ers to its members instruction in the art of flying and in the various other phases of aeronautics. In the year and a half of its existence it has built up a program which has attracted hundreds of men from all the schools of the University. Its members have flown over eight thousand miles under direct supervision of the Society without mishap of any kind and they have had the privilege of entertaining some of the foremost men connected with aeronautics. Two landplanes, a Travel- Air, and an Eaglerock, ai-e leased by the Society for instruction purposes. Under the leadership of Lieutenant Harry D. Copland, C.N.G., the Society oft ' ers one of the best and safest courses in flying obtainable by civilians. Tlie Society stands firm in its belief that the future of aviation depends upon the type of persons which is allowed to pilot airplanes. Hence, those whom it takes the responsi- bility to instruct are chosen and trained with gi ' eat care. Flying is done both at Brainard Field in Hartford, one of the best airports in the country, and at Bethany Airport eleven miles from the University. Among other activities of the Society is included a course in Aircraft Motors and also one in Commercial Air Transportation. Trips are taken to the various plants and aviation fields in this part of the country, which give the members an opportunity to become well acquainted with the industry and its possibilities. Research is conducted by individual members in various fields, and under the auspices of the Society much information is gathered from sources not open to individuals. o outline of the program of the Society could be complete without a mention of the New Haven Airport Survey conducted in the fall of 1927. This survey was the most complete which had been turned out in this country until that time and, as a result, the Society won a place for itself among the aeronautical organizations of the United States. With the constant thought of interesting new men in aviation as well as meeting the requirements of those already interested, the Society welcomes any student, regard- less of whether or not he knows anything of aviation. It undertakes to acquaint Yale men with avijition and endeavors to send them out with enthusiasm for the future of aviation. 422 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI YALE CORINTHIAN YACHT CLUB John Lord King, ' 30 S., Commodore Briggs Swift Cunningham, ' 31, Vice-Commodore Oliver May, ' 30, Secretary and Treasurer L. S. G. Hill REGATTA COMJNIITTEE B. S. Cunningham, Chairman Oliver May Class of ' 28 G. C. Brooke A. C. Brown E. H. Dodd, Jr. A. L. Francisco, S. T. G. Bennett, 2d, S. A. F. Dean W. P. Jenkins Class of ' 29 T. Marshall B. C. Miller J. Roby, Jr. D. Sterling, Jr. F. P. Newton, S. M. K. Wells L. Y. A. Williams, Jr. L. S. G. Hill, S. H. Hitt, S. J. L. King, S. Class of ' 30 0. May J. McEwen J. West B. S. Cunningham B. Fisher Class of ' 31 L. Tucker T. M. Rianhard, Jr. J. W. Streeter 423 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1928 P. J. Linson J. Lockett J. McClellan W. W. Miller W. W. Miller, Jr. C. B. G. Murphy C. H. Onthank R. M. Paskus D. B. Peck R. U. Redpath, Jr. W. J. Roome E. Rosenbauin, Jr. L. N. Rugee A. J. Schulten, Jr. 1928 S. J. R. Gary J. S. Kern R. B. Chalker A. G. Massev J. D. Cox C. P. O ' Connell W. T. Kelly, Jr. G. W. Penny, Jr. T. L. Shipman D. T. Smith K. Smith, Jr. H. N. Sperry, Jr. G. S. Stevenson M. W. Stevenson K. D. Stone A. C. Thomas, Jr. E. T. Thompson W. A. Tolman R. F. ' aughan S. Walker G. R. Weaver W. H. Woothva S. S. Quarrier C. H. Sanford, Jr. O. A. Saunders F. A. Almquist C. A. Barnes, Jr. S. A. Brady R. B. Bryant C. E. Christenson P. Curtis E. L. Decker, Jr. H. C. Downing J. A. Drake J. L. Drummond J. P. Famham W. D. Geer R. C. Glock D. Lindsay, 3d G. M. Hampton, 2d R. S. Makepeace S. Hyde, 2d G. Ohl, Jr. A. B. Ix ' iucheimer R. D. Paine, Jr. B. J. Lee, Jr. A. H. B. Peabody R. M. Levy J. H. Pierce BOTnn==s=s= YALE BANNER AND POT POUKKl ! v a v.v. v. v ■ F. T. Pierson, Jr. F. M. Rothschild G. B. Tweedy T. H. Wickwire, 3d Vi C. M. Poore C. H. Sawyer L. Tweedy, Jr. C. K. Woolsey H. C. Powley, Jr. H. S. Sawyer J. F. Varian H. W. Wylie I H. P. Rich R. E. Spiel R. S. Ward 1929 S. J. K. Beeson B. F. English G. L. Kreider E. A. Rice K. F. Billhardt A. W. Fisher C. N. Loveland, Jr. J. P. Ringland G. G. Bradley E. E. Furst E. Potter T. F. Smith, Jr. i R. J. Caine W. F. Kinney VV. Reeves 1930 J. D. Waite 1 H. S. Aldrich J. L. L. Goldstone F. V. Keesling, Jr. A. Quimby, Jr. W. D. Anderson C. E. Goodman, Jr. S. B. Kieselhorst H. C. Reiner ! W. Archbald R. A. Goodwin P. C. Kohn S. B. Riley f F. G. Bull J. E. Grace C. R. Langmuir S. W. Smith 4 H. M. Byington, Jr. 0. R. Grace J. S. Lobb G. W. Speer C. R. de la Vergne, J. S. Graetzer, Jr. J. B. Lyman, Jr. F. 0. Spinney Jr. C. A. Graham H. Lyne, Jr. J. M. Sprigg S C. W. Dudley, Jr. D. B. Hardenbergh E. A. Manning, Jr. B. L. Thompson 1 D. C. Dunham M. Hav W. Marshall, Jr. W. B. Thompson ; L. H. Ehrlich, Jr. E. L. Hill E. Martin R. M. C. Thrall ! J. J. Eiseman T. T. Hollister A. H. Miller G. R. Treadway ! A. D. Erskine, Jr. M. I. Holstein F. E. Nvce, Jr. F. W. Tully, Jr. 1 V. L. Fine L. A. Hooper F. J. O ' Hara, Jr. H. T. Walden, Jr. ; C. M. Fishel L. F. Hope F. G. Osborne J. M. Weil i 0. 0. Freeman A. C. Jack R. L. Popper G. V. V. Wolf ■ C. F. Gill P. H. Jennings, Jr. 1930 S. 1 E. R. Anderson C. A. Cooper T. C. Kennedy W. C. Shepp j D. F. Black C. D. Davidson G. W. Reily, 3d N. W. Spencer 1 C. W. Buckley A. C. Drake H. C. Sandberg N. S. Wilmot 1 S. G. Carlton 0. C. Jones 1931 1 1 1 W. I. Abell, Jr. B. Fisher M. W. McDuffie, Jr G. C. Poore 1 L. L. Aitken, Jr. L. R. Fouke D. B. McLean R. F. Prentiss i 1 G. N. Armstrong, Jr. C. C. Hardy R. A. Maes C. T. Rhodes ! E. L. Bacon, Jr. W. W. Heffelfinger, T. R. Malsin T. Rich 1 W. P. Baldwin Jr. H. H. Mansbach T. N. Richardson, Jr. 1 R. T. Beach A. M. Hirsh, Jr. E. C. Marsh B. C. Smith i H. B. Bowser G. G. Hoffman M. C. Mason, Jr. G. G. Smith 1 , D. C. Bridgman F. G. Hoogland J. Merwin R. C. Smith I ■ 1 J. S. Bulkley J. C. Houston, Jr. W. L. Mitchell, Jr. W. L. Smith ; C. A. Cahn A. S. Howard J. H. Moser W. C. Stanley ; G. G. Cameron R. S. Judge J. Munro J. R. Stewart F. Coonley, Jr. E. M. Keener R. J. Nordhaus H. S. Strauss j F. B. Cooper, Jr. J. Keogh, Jr. E. A. Nunn J. W. Streeter 1 1 F. D. Cowles R. S. Kimball, Jr. E. B. Paine S. W. Strong j R. L. Crowell E. R. Laughlin R. B. Parsons C. L. Sturtevant, Jr. 1 P. Dater F. B. Look W. Parsons W. M. Swoope C. H. Dickerman F. L. Luce, Jr. C. E. Payne D. L. Vaill, Jr. H. C. Eastman J.T.McClintock, Jr. R. H. Pelletreau F. E. Weicker i L. E. Fichthorn, Jr. J. L. :McCormick T. M. Persons J. W. M. Whiting 427 i - -. ' --. '  .- .-!JJ  JJJAJ .  YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI J Vii -¥ ife ., %M f fo ' li WPiP rS m ASHEVILLE SCHOOL CLUB 1928 Edmund Ferdinand Ball James Otis Rodgers, Jr. Peter Heelwege Stewart 1928 S. William Taggart Meloy, Jr. 1929 Clarence Phelps Dodge, Jr. William Steen Gaud, Jr. Charles Little Dunham Roger Sherman Makepeace Thomas Church Farnsworth Robert Patterson, Jr. Eugene Lovick Pearce John Coleman Avery George Norris Henson James Anthony Kuhn 1930 George Amos Poole, Jr. William Pruden Smith Hubert Holwav Weiser 1930 S. Henry Philip Ammidown Ledyard Avery Lee Chirsman Ashley Randall Wade Everett, Jr. Reuben Buck Robertson, Jr. 1931 James Everett Beckwith Henry Taylor Gaud James Grove Seely John Day Seelv 429 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE BERKSHIRE CLUB OFFICERS G. L. Storm, Jr., ' 28, President H. W. Snow, ' 28, Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS O. C. Billings, Jr., ' 29 S. L. S. Bradley, ' 28 H. J. Brown ' , ' 31 D. M. Collins, ' 30 A. R. Connelly, ' 29 G. P. Davis, ' 30 R. C. Durant, ' 28 J. L. King, ' 30 S. H. Lyman, ' 28 J. R. Lyman, ' 31 430 S. A. Lyman, ' 29 J. R. Ordwav, ' 29 J. L. D. Peters, ' 31 J. P. Satterfield, ' 28 W. T. Siegfried, ' 30 H. W. Snow, ' 28 G. L. Storm, Jr., ' 28 A. Watkins, ' 28 M. C. Weber, ' 31 W. Weber, Jr., ' 28 S. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE CANTERBURY CLUB OFFICERS Paul John Fitzpatrick, ' 28, President James Cox Brady, ' 29, Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS 1928 Paul John Fitzpatrick Daniel Manning jNIcKeon 1929 James Cox Brady, Jr. Francis Terence Carniody Thomas Duffy Gill Alexander Marvin Laidlaw Theron Butler Miller, Jr. John Mullen O ' Connor Edward Ryan Robert Elisha Walker 1930 Willis Hanson Burns Henry Joseph Caren Joseph Nicholas Early, Jr. 431 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ifliii CHICAGO LATIN SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS H. E LDRIDGE, ' 28, President MEMBERS 1928 Ednuiiui t ' lia])in; Huntington Eldi James High Wells Sinclair n •idg e 1929 S. H. K. Gilbert 1930 B. H. Slade 1928 S. T. P. Field 1930 S. J. L. King 1929 A. . C ' rarv F. A. Drake C. H. Symington 1931 R. H. High 432 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI III[IIJI ' j3 M W ' M fli I V ' Vii t. ( iH H iii p ijlM HJ wm m miii ' m KKKHi byr THE CHOATE CLUB OFFICERS Daxa T. Baetholomew, ' 28, President Burr C. Iii-ler, ' 28, Vice-President Thomas P. Field, ' 28 S., Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS D. T. Bartholomew C. G. Bondv G. H. Elv, 2d T. P. Field P. H. Gray, Jr. L. W. Adams, Jr. C. W. Bouck B. C. Bower H. S. Connell, Jr. J. Grain J. W. Barber R. S. Callings R. L. Eaton J. Espv F. C. Hamblin D. G. Austin J. L. Caskey W. Crean, Jr. J. H. Dillon, 2d H. J. Duval O. H. George R. B. Gottfried T. W. Hefferan, Jr. H. J. Heinz, 2d J. N. Hyde P. W. Knapp 1928 C. B. Hogan W. T. Lee J. S. Linburn B. C. Miller M. L. Stoddard 1929 W. Dodge, 2d W. B. Easton, Jr. G. A. Espy, 2d A. E. Hall A. S. Hershey 1930 J. C. Lanphier, 3d T. D. McLaughlin, Jr. E. A. Manning, Jr. H. W. Peters L. S. Bobbins, Jr. 1931 C. H. Lanphier J. A. Lynch, Jr. Chas. IcKee F. B. McKown L. J. -Mead, Jr. V. E. Palmer, Jr. W. J. Parrish, Jr. B. L. Poole T. J. Prentice, Jr. L. K. Robertson N. D. Rogers V. H. Sutro J. S. Tatman F. M. Wick W. D. Woodford W. J. Hitchcock, Jr. P. Mellon D. L. Morris C. A. VanPatten J. H. Stursberg W. R. Tappen J. W. VanSiclen T. J. Welch E. G. Stoddard, 2d L. E. Walker H. F. Wanning, 2d A. L. Weiner G. P. WiUiams T. D. WilUams, Jr. J. C. Winslo%v R. L. Wood C. A. Yelvington YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE YALE GROTON CLUB i Ir,?! 1928 C. T. Bingham C. H. Brown E. P. Carter, Jr. E. C. Childs W. W. Hoppin, J r. C. B. Ives P. W. Lovejoy G. L. K. Morris G. A. Sanderson, .Ir. S. Tliorne, Jr. 1929 AV. A. Aiken, 2d C. P. Babcock H. P. Bakewell C. D. Barnes, Jr. OFFICERS E. C. Childs, ' 28, President K. BoococK, ' 29, Vice-President MEMBERS K. Boocock F. G. Brown C. N. deForest L. T. Lusk J. G. Parsons, Jr. J. A. Roberts G. G. Schroeder, Jr. A. B. Shepley H. Southworth O. J. Sterling 1929 8. H. A. Schroeder J. P. Trommald 1930 W. B. Harding W. B. Mosle W. Raymond, Jr. W. S. Roberts J. S. Rogers, Jr. P. M. Smith J. C. West 1931 J. T. Adams B. Bingham B. Crane J. W. Cro: :s, Jr. M. M. Hare J. M. Polk G. W. Sherrill L. Thorne 435 I YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE HAVERFORD CLUB OFFICERS Thomas Marshall, ' 28, President Charles Hexrv.Howsox, Jr., ' 30 S., Secretary Wood Dailey Gerstell, ' 28 S., Treasurer MEMBERS Wood Dailey Gerstell, ' 28 S. Thomas Marshall, ' 28 John Louis Rakestraw, ' 28 John Clarence Kline, Jr., ' 29 Ellwood Caldwell Lindsay, Jr., ' 29 S. Aston Tourison Scott, ' 29 S. Samuel Bartram Taylor, ' 29 S. J. Preston Thomas, ' 29 S. Richard Henry Blythe, Jr., ' 30 Charles Henry Howson, Jr., ' 30 S. Henry Brown Reinhardt, Jr., ' 30 Lewis Yelland Smith, Jr., ' 30 William Alexander Stromeyer, ' 30 S. James Kent Willing, Jr., ' 30 Lloyd Bankson, 2d, ' 31 Harrj ' Samuel Henry, ' 31 John Franciscus Lindsay, ' 31 Edward Rogers Loder, ' 31 Noah Haynes Swayne, 3d, ' 31 Edward Bannon Sweeney, ' 31 437 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI B l ' - — M m k. ■ = — . B i E ' ' ' ' L-teii i- I ' .-; Hj Hpiki HHBK - s m 4  :: ' - !?vr ' -f - IPF IK. •- ' .. ' W i F .. ■-■m ■ ' ' - ' Wi - - ' l i ' • — -.. ..■r Hip PJ k v: ... • • THE HILL SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS E. Goodwine, Jk., ' 28, President S. B. Smith, ' 28, Vice-President F. H. Woods, Jr., ' 28, Secretary 1). S. Sampsell, ' 30, Treasurer J. M. Walker, ' 31, Assistant Treasurer MEMBERS 1928 1929 J. F. J ellinghaus E. C. Curnen D. G. Borg W. C. Crawford T. E. Moore C. G. Davis C. S. Bowman, Jr. R. C. Crisler D. S. Sampsell V. S. DeLaCour S. W. Carr W. D. English G. M. Stadelman S. C. Fisk E. Goodwine, Jr. S. P. Forbes H. L. Stocking I. H. Francis S. E. I,onfrniaid W. H. Haze J. W. Walker J. E. Haslani D. B, Peck J. C. Lewis „ C. A. LYtle, Jr. _ . ■ H.S. McDonald ? ' r n, ' T C. Mc.M. Marshall ' ' • V rf « .r. E. Schurn.an f M. Duff F.B.WiUhnan V. t l 1929 S. R. E. Sargeant T. G. Bennett, 2d . F. Heller C. M. Rice G. B. Hicster T. W. Richey W. M. Hiester W. Sinclair J. E. Hitt S. B. Smith S. D. I.udlum H. B. Stewart, Jr. R. W. Mcllvain A. H. AVard F. H. Woods A. McNallv A. B. MacChcsney W.W.Jemison . H Kaul J- B- Boyle - ' ' ' ' P. S. Carr T. W. Morseman 1928 S. J. B. Nichols C. H. Buhl J. W. Sandford F. M. Farwell, Jr. S. T. Terhune W. I Graham, Jr. 1930 S. B. Childs P. D. Thomas F. B. Havne W. S. Chittenden R. W. Clark J. M. Trainer B. W. TaVlor E. M. Fleming D. H. Clement J. M. Walker B. Thome M. F. Han.son F. N. Conner S. Washburn J. N. Hazard B. J. Cunningham F. Wilkins 438 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI = THE HOTCHKISS CLUB A. C. Robertson, ' 28, Secretary MEMBERS J. T. Abbott T. H. Chappell F. C. Baldwin W. P. Conklin. Jr. J. B. Bell, Jr. E. H. Dodd, Jr. G. B. Berger, Jr. R. L. Gilpatric T. L. Arnold G. V. Baker G. E. Beardslev, Jr. R. B. Coburn 1928 M. Knight R. W. Lapham R. V. Massey, Jr. N. T. Milliken 1928 S. G. C. Guibert H. Spitzer G. A. Phelps A. C. Robertson A. M. Scott S. A. Scoville J. B. Terbell, Jr. N. A. Walker H. J. SUlcocks H. J. Stott C. H. Welles, 3d W. A. Webster H. C. Adams G. K. Costikyan A. B. Ashforth, Jr. L. L. Cox G. T. Ashforth R. D. Bastow D. F. Bradley O. D. Cammann A. B. Clark, Jr. G. K. deForest B. Dodd G. H. Crile R. C. Damon J. S. Ellsworth, Jr. K. Emerson, Jr. M. S. Echols I. B. Hiett, Jr. 1929 J. B. Evarts R. W. Goss A. W. Griswold C. A. Hardt S. H. Hartshorn C. K. Hubbard 1929 S. J. J. Hoben A. C. Hoffman, Jr. R. E. Hubbell F. W. Hubby, 3d F. B. I.oomis D. MacDonald E. P. Piatt D. O. Ross F. C. Jarecki F. M. Sherwin M. W. Seymour E. H. Steif M. K. WeUs E. P. Williams H. D. Wilson G. W. Wyckofif F. T. vanBeuren, 3d R. B. Alley C. H. Bell G. H. Bowman J. C. Brooks, Jr. G. E. Brown G. S. Chappell, Jr. T. S. Childs, Jr. E. A. Choate, Jr. H. T. Clarke, 3d J. T. Everitt D. L. Ferris R. W. Foster A. Gibb H. P. Hamlin L. V. Hammond J. G. Hodges 1930 J. F. Hogan S. O. H. Jones W. D. Judson, Jr. J. S. Kendall, 3d . . Lambert E. McM. Lewis A. McN. Littleton G. B. Longstreth S. W. Mears E. T. Sloan J. M. Musser B. S. Tilney K. W. Oberlander W. H. Wade, Jr. H. L. O ' Neil S. C. Wells, Jr. P. R. Partington H. H. Williams J. T. Patterson, Jr. F. M. Woods W. L. Paul M. Yeomans R. H. Rudd A. S. Blagden, Jr. 1930 S. C. Ellis, Jr. S. P. McCalmont D. E. Albright J. W. Blagden L. S. Bohlmann J. J. Brooks, 2d D. C. Cook L. H. Cornellier E. D. Cov C. S. DeLong G. Donnelley J. A. Draper, 2d R. M. Ferris T. R. Fisher, Jr. F. B. Fitch G. C. Forbes W. F. Gillespie, Jr. R. W. Gillispie, Jr. F. C. Hixson 1931 P. D. Holden E. McElwain J. A. Howell D. R. McLennan, Jr. G. A. Hubby R. M. Owen, Jr. R. M. Huertematte C. B. Palmer R. M. Ingham, Jr. C. Perry L. A. Lapham F. W. Perry J. B. Lounsburv W. R. Scott E. L. Marsh, Jr. G. C. Smith F. T. Vincent J. D. Welles D. H. White E. P. White E. L. Whittemore, 2d J. L. Wilkin, Jr. W. S. WoodhuU, Jr. A. K. Wylie 439 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI W. Brewster, ' 28, President N. M. Fearing, ' 29, Vice-President Kempton Dunn, ' 31, Secretary MEMBERS W. Brewster G. L. Bulkley S. L. deV ' ausney R. G. Cady J. P. Cheney, Jr. J. M. K. Davis N. M. Feai-ing P. VanD. Beckwith J. P. Bent C. E. Brainerd W. ]M. Brewster A. M. Brooks B. Cheney R. N. Fowler H. W. R. Barry J. Breckenridge Kempton Dunn R. V. Fabian L. S. Goodbody 1930 1931 R. S. Hart N. N. Noble W. B. Thompson J. vanB. Griggs J. G. Sherman O. D. Smith W. S. Gavlord, Jr. P. vanD. Gott T. B. Grandin M. jMoore W. H. Palmer H. E. Russell G. Wainwriffht R. D. Irving P. Richmond M. H. Robbins R. Williams, Jr. 44 0 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE LAWRENCEVILLE CLUB OFFICERS J. K. Gearhart, Jr., ' 30, President E. B. Page, ' 28 S., Vice-President J. S. Espy, ' 31, Secretary and Treasurer 1928 D. N. Brown F. W. Dau, Jr. J. P. Flaherty S. G. Landon, Jr. C. N. Lowrie, Jr. J. F. Mitchell W. R. Morley W. O. Rollinson H. M. Rose H. L. Ross G. M. Shepherd, Jr. 1928 S. G. S. Hill R. R. Jackson F. B. Miles W. H. O ' Brien, Jr. E. B. Page MEMBERS H. vanH. Stoevcr, Jr. 1929 R. Birks T. C. Farnswoi ' th R. H. Gwaltney, Jr. E. D. Lewis H. E. Marker, Jr. L. B. Millen 1929 S. R. W. Carson W. P. DeBardeleben P. W. Hatch J. W. Hunter W. C. Sawyer 1930 T. M. Brown, Jr. M. C. Colt J. A. Curtis J. K. Gearhart, Jr. W. W. Greene R. M. Hitch, Jr. P. Hunt W. W. Long A. H. Miller F. S. Murphy F. J. Newman O. H. Schell, Jr. F. R. Series, Jr. S. W. Trawick R. J. Wiener 1930 S. J. A. Carney C. D. McPhee, 3d C. F. ]Miles F. B. Mills A. E. Rodger 1931 J. Bacon H. E. Baton, Jr. J. X. Buckwalter R. H. Butler J. C. Cairns E. A. Corbett, Jr. F. D. DuBarry, Jr. J. S. Espy S. J. Foster J. R. Hewitt, Jr. W. B. Hill, Jr. H. C. Kugeler C. C. Pond C. R. Posev, Jr. M. Zink 44.1 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI D. B. Cox J. T. McCance J. C. Bridgman H. C. Griggs M. G. Hall W. P. Housel J. A. Cosmus, Jr. W. A. Davis R. M. Board man, Jr. D. C. Bridgman R. D. Buck D. J. Burns, Jr. J. M. Burrall, Jr. E. B. Butler W. L. Camp, 3d M2 THE LOOMIS CLUB OFFICERS J. T. AIcCance, 28, President T. M. KuGEMAN, ' 29 S., Vice-President MEMBERS 1928 E. T. Pierce W. B. Scoville 1929 J. V. Howland T. N. Kugeman W. P. Lamb R. H. Mather T. Wills G. Miller J. D. Rusher, Jr. H. P. White 1930 G. T. Moore, Jr. R. A. Myers 1931 J. G. Campbell F. W. Coates W. E. Cornett J. L. Cox, 2d W. A. Goodrich, Jr. W. B. Hall J. J. Lorenzen J. M. Pearce A. S. Wright H. C. Lynch M. Merriman C. G. Miller, Jr. J. W. Peck C. S. Rodman YALE BANNER AND POT POU RRI MERCERSBURG CLUB OFFICERS S. p. Scott, ' 28, President J. W. Hays, ' 29, Vice-Presideut J. F. Oldt, ' 29, Secretary J. J. Garvey, ' 29, Treasurer I.. M. Baldwin J. B. Beach G. E. Fulton A. R. Matheny J. J. Garvey J. W. Hays N. B. Hekma C. A. Kline E. G. Cahill V. Culbertson Rav C. Ellis C. R. Evans F. A. Gatvas P. H. Sturge MEMBERS 1928 1929 J. C. Kline, Jr. H. J. O ' Donnell J. F. Oldt R. H. Robinson 1930 Wayne Rawley 1931 W. S. Meany, Jr. J. H. Miller G. W. Moorhead S. P. Scott I-. N. Towner H. Weiner X. S. Hall W. C. LeGore W. P. Marsh, Jr. S. K. Oliver, Jr. F. T. Oldt Hardy Oliver 44.3 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE NORTH SHORE COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL CLUB Malcolm Wilder Stevenson, ' 28, President John McEwen, 3d, ' 30, Vice-President Ei.nuiDGE Gerry Anderson, ' 30, Secretary-Treasurer YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI  .vav.v.v. PAWLING SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS William H. Jervis, ' 29 S., President MEMBERS 1929 S. 1930 W. H. Jervis R. Calfee B. P. Patterson J. Clcgg F. H. Shepard H. Palmer D. K. Smith 1930 S. 1931 W. H. Gurney G. Cluett H. E. Obermanns J. Easton W. C. Scott, Jr. 445 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ADMINISTRATION ' BUILDING PEDDIE SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS Damon deBlois Wack, ' 29, President Harry E. Muecke, ' 28, Vice-President William R. Borden, ' 29, Secretary MEMBERS Robert Biggert, ' 31 William R. Borden, ' 29 Theodore Brand, ' 30 S. Wallace M. Chamberlain, ' 31 Harold A. Fletcher, ' 29 Edward R. Florea, ' 30 Robert N. Horton, ' 31 Callaghan J. McCarthy, Jr., ' 30 S. Damon deBlois Harry J. McKee, ' 31 William E. Millard, ' 29 Harry E. Muecke, ' 28 Francis M. Myers, ' 29 S. Stuart Sanger, ' 28 S. Richard W. Sidenberg, ' 29 Lee J. Spiegelberg, ' 31 Richard A. Terhune, ' 30 Wack, ' 29 Member of Associated Peddie Clubs of the colleges. 446 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI POLYTECHNIC PREPARATORY SCHOOL CLUB MEMBERS F. Campbell Good Lewis H. D. Fraser 1928 Wilder Hobson Edward K. Savdah Robert M. Whitaker 1929 Henry Brown Reinhardt, Jr. John Chester Vaden 1930 James P. Warbasse, Jr. Cornelius D. Wood, Jr. Allan Whitney Betts 1931 ] Iarshall Fletcher Dri John H. ] Iacdonald Graduate School Miles M. Kastendieck 447 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI POMFRET SCHOOL CLUB MEMBERS 1928 Barton Lee Mallory, Jr. Walter Everett Palmer Richard Peabody Aldace Walker 1928 S. VanCourt Lucas 1929 Wendell Phillips Colton, Jr. James Williamson Henning Huntington Miller Francis Lansing Veeder 1930 Winston Sizer 1931 Allan Whitney Beets Oliver May Daniel Gillette Olney Charles Scott Snead 448 , = YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ST. GEORGES SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS G. W. Haight, ' 28, President R. T. Shields, ' 29, Vice-President F. E. GiGNOux, Jr., ' 30, Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS G. W. Haight 1928 C. B. Ripley F. J. Jones, 2d H. G. Collins 1929 R. T. Shields W. Howe C. F. R. Slade G. H. Cox, Jr. 1930 F. H. Jones F. E. Gignoux, Jr. W. M. Jackson P. G. Melville G. Peterson, Jr. W. ]M. Churchman, Ji 1931 W. A. Lindeke H. B. Clark, Jr. E. C. Sterling G. W. Heublein A. R. Sumner J. N. Lindeke G. W. Wlieeler W. W. Watson, 3d 449 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ST. LOUIS COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL CLUB 1928 William McChesney Martin, Jr. Howard Lawrence O ' Fallon 1929 Herbert Isaac Finch, Jr. Richard Alexander Holliday Kent Ravenscroft John Albion Saxton, Jr. Robert Todd Terry 1929 S. William Edward Hoblitzelle, Jr. 1930 John Irvin Beggs McCulloch Rufus DeLancey Putney, Jr. Daniel Upthegrove, Jr. 1930S. Landon Carter Lodge 1931 Ethan Allen Hitchcock John Wickham Seddon Frank Rice Sheldon 460 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI ST. MARK ' S SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS W. T. HoDGSDON, ' 28, Preside?} t R. Ward, ' 30, Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS G. H. Darrell M. Fenton 1928 W. T. Hodgsdon 1929 C. U. Harvev W. P. Jenkins H. D. Babcock A. Batcheller, Jr. E. Brooks, Jr. 1930 P. M. Burnett R. Ward J. K. Willing, Jr. L. A. Carter R. F. Chatfield-Taylor J. T. Cottrell C. W. Goodyear, Jr. T. T. Hare, Jr. 1931 G. W. Hill, Jr. W. McLauchlan, 2d F. B. Porter, Jr. E. S. Potter J. B. Potts 451 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1 ] ,J - . , E ' 3 n  u r„. A Hi _,«M ' ' S|lfflf«H||B ( 1 ||||gl||MMI;Tifffl WioMfrrTm WmWmmW KtKjk a rmam.iiiit ' iii .mi ' s m M nn| R jSSHM H m ST. PAUL ' S SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS J. RoBY, Jr., ' 28, President F. A. Drake, ' 29, Secretary MEMBERS G. C. Brooke A. C. Brown H. B. Cannon, Jr. W. N. GiUette B. Brewster W. G. Brown G. A. Cochran, Jr. G. Coghill, Jr. J. W. Douglas F. A. Drake 1928 G. A. Huhn J. D. Petrikin D. B. Lawrence, Jr. Z. B. Phelps, Jr. H. R. McLane H. E. Quimby 1929 F. C. Ellsworth C. F. Fairbanks, 2d A. F. Hockstader A. Kenison, Jr. E. Knowlton H. E. Manville, Jr. I,. H. Mills, 2d H. R. Moorhead, Jr. F. W. Morris, 3d L. S. Mudge J. W. Pepper I. N. P. Stokes, 2d W. C. Robinson, Jr. J. Roby, Jr. F. B. Ryan, Jr. A. B. Sullivan C. H. Symington W. Tuttle H. A. Wiliiierding, Jr 1930 S. M. Barber, Jr. H. Brock R. W. Cheney B. G. Collier, Jr. P. W. Cooley R. G. Elliott C. W. Gillespie T. W. Goodrich, 2d D. H. Hickok G. H. Hodges, Jr. E. O. Holter, Jr. C. G. Hurd P. H. Jennings, Jr. N. E. Jennison D. Kitchel J. W. MacMiller, Jr. R. C. Nicholas. Jr. J. W. Oliver J. A. Pardridge J. A. Riplev, Jr. D. Sage, Jr. R. Simonds W. F. Smith, Jr. S. Stewart, Jr. W. F. Thompson J. W. Walker W. Whiting H. B. Wilcox, Jr. R. F. Wilson 1931 M. Bond, Jr. J. I,. Bradley P. Chubb, III R. H. Collin G. R. Farquhar F. Farrel, III I.. Fox, Jr. H. M. Hanna, Jr. 452 S. W. Hawley J. Holbrook J. R. Hunt, Jr. E. G. Ingram B. Lay, Jr. E. Lee, Jr. C. Leonard S. C. Mallory J. McEvoy F. A. Nelson, Jr. H. Parsons, Jr. G. S. Patter.son, Jr. L. B. Rand J. C. Rathl)orne, Jr. J. G. Rogers, Jr. S. Saltus ART W. C. Lockwood R. Schley, Jr. R. Stebbins, Jr. D. S. Stone B. R. Sturgis W. Terrv, Jr. A. . Tiiomas L. Tucker S. P. Weston, Jr. YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI sssssaaaa SALISBURY CLUB OFFICERS Oliver Blair, ' 28 S., President R. E. CusHMAN, ' 29, Secretary MEMBERS Frederick C. Bassick, Jr., ' 31 Oliver Blair, ' 28 S. R. E. Cushman, ' 29 James H. Eddy, ' 30 S. J. S. Glenn, ' 30 S. Jerome B. Zerbe, Guy B. Holt, ' 28 Lucius B. Leonard, ' 28 Dan T. Moore, ' 31 Robert G. Sellew, Jr., ' 31 John E. Snyder, Jr., ' 28 S. 453 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI 1928 I. H. BuU A. F. Campbell C. DeW. Castle, Jr. S. R. Damon M. Davison, Jr. P. Day N. C. Dockendorff R. D. Donchian, Jr. T. K. Field J. B. Goss J. L. Green S. Gross G. T. Hellman D. Hoggson J. K. Jessup C. M. Lewis V ' . McCaullev E. P. Maffitt D. S. Mallon J. T. Manson, 2d R. O. Mitchell L. R. Parker J. I. Raymond J. S. Rockefeller L. P. Ross, Jr. A. L. Shipman, Jr. B. F. Tracy, 2d H. K. Wallace O. M. Wallop C. B. Warren, Jr. R. S. Whitney 1928 S. L. S. Beach C. C. Finucane D. B. Hamilton E. B. Sturges F. G. Treat 1929 W. S. Begg J. H. Briggs R. B. Bryant H. C. Campbell .A. A. Cheney K. S. Gillespie G. H. Gilmaii, Jr. S. W. Graham S. Green N. A. Howard, Jr. J. F. Jenkins A. Korper B. Pagenstecher T. Painter H. K. Smith J. W. Thorns G. B. Tweedy 1929 S. A. R. Dunning S. T. Hitchcock TAFT SCHOOL CLUB OFFICERS L. P. Ross, Jr., President J. K. Jessup, Vice-President J. F. Jenkins, Secretary MEMBERS Martin 1930 R. H. Atwater W. B. Boyd J. DeF. Buckingham C. E. Burton, Jr. M. G. Camp J. H. M. Campbell H. H. Chapman N. R. Cherry D. X. Clark P. W. Dockerv G. M. England E. P. Frambach J. P. Graves, 2d J. M. Guiterman R. Husted E. S. Johnson, Jr. F. D. McCaullev, Jr. H. C. Miller, Jr. . . B. Norcross R. G. Osterweis H. Scott H. Taft, Jr. C. F. Wallace, Jr. F. H. Wallace 1930 S. C. S. Reed, Jr. D. W. Smith T. A. Standish, Jr. 1931 F. O. . yres, Jr. S. D. Bacon G. R. Black H. Brereton H. W. Chambers, Jr. E. K. Chapin G. B. Dunn G. R. M. Ewing, Jr. J. D. Garrison J. B. Gates F. B. Glea,son, Jr. G. S. Guild X. H. Hargrave, Jr. T. H. Hefferan G. F. Hill . M. Holden, Jr. E. J. Kemp D. R. Mcllwaine . . D. .Mcintosh, Jr. .M. H. Mack F. L. Meserve J. I. Miller E. F. Motch H. L. Osterweis J. A. Reed C. Sherwood, Jr. G. H. Sidenburg L. Stern, 2d J. L. Vail . . B. WaUace, Jr. .T. G. Williams 455 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THACHER CLUB OFFICERS J. K. CuETis; ' 28, President P. C. Barney, ' 29, Secretary MEMBERS 1928 C. M. Bidwell G. R. Carter, Jr. J. K. Curtis J. S. Eells, Jr. P. S. Hunter R. W. Huntington, Jr. R. Kent B. H. Larrabee A. Phelps W. F. Sanford L. L. Stott C. H. Todd A. F. Baldwin 1929 P. C. Barney A. H. Clifford C. F. Adams, Jr. L. S. Ayres, 2d J. H. Buckingham 1930 T. N. Todd J. Collins, Jr. C. Cowles W. S. Newhall 1931 W. P. Baldwin N. W. Blanchard, 3d W. S. McCaskey 456 E. P. Goss C. L. Griggs YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OFFICERS James A. House, Jr., ' 28 S., President Pierre W. Hoge, ' 28 S., Vice-President RoLLiN S. Hall, Jr., ' 28, Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS 1928 Rollin S. Hall, Jr. Pierre W. Hoge (S.) James A. House, Jr. (S.) Henry B. Shepherd Walter D. Woodford 1929 Brigham Britton John H. Dippel Lewis M. Lind, 2d James Pickands (S.) Arthur H. Skall 1930 1931 John S. Manuel, Jr. Walter C. Adams William S. Manuel Henry Chisholm, Jr. Frederick W. Porter Stuart Jenkins Lawrence S. Bobbins, Jr. Elton F. Motch Henry S. Sherman, Jr. Robert H. Trenkamp John M. Weil 457 YALE BANNER AND POT POURRI THE WESTMINSTER CLUB OFFICERS M. L. Stoddaed, ' 28, President L. D. Forsyth, ' 28, Vice-President J. M. HoDGMAN, ' 28, Secretary L. D. Forsyth G. T. Hellman T. F. Clark, Jr. W. H. Knowlcs, Jr. W. Archbald W. R. Clark, Jr. F. S. Robbins, Jr. J. C. Adier J. H. Barnes, Jr. P. W. Cooley 458 MEMBERS 1928 J. M. Hodgnian E. C. McHenry J. H. Phipps 1929 R. M. Brill 1929 S. 1930 S. Oviatt W. Smith 1930 S. 1931 F. E. Darr G. D. Knopf J. W. Peck G. S. Stevenson M. L. Stoddard J. S. O ' Gorman, Jr. R. W. Stokes R. C. Stevens, Jr. C. D. Wood, Jr. G. Sumner, Jr. D. D. Sullivan B. G. WJiite, Jr. W. J. Wood INDEX Acacia .... Academic Triennial Committee Academic Senior Class Officers Academic Student Council Administration Administrative Officers . Aeronautical Society Albany Academy Alpha Chi Rho . Alpha Chi Sigma . Alpha Delta Phi . Alpha Sigma Phi . Alumni Advisory Board Andover Club Angell, Partial Chronicle for 1927 Art iMuscum Asheville School Club Athletics .... Board of Control . Graduate Advisory Committee Athletic Association, Undergraduate Aurelian Honor Society 171 74 75 78 .58 62 422 428 1.56 169 143 145 64 426 50 85 429 1.53 257 257 258 113 Band, University Banjo Club Banner and Pot Pourri . Baseball Season, Article on Association . Team . Freshman Association Freshman Team Basketball Team, University Freshman Berkshire Club Berzelius Beta Theta Pi Board of Control, Athletic Boat Club . Book and Bond, Fraternity Club . 460 387 380 218 277 283 282 287 286 329 352 430 159 147 257 311 170 197 I MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY FOURTH STREET NEW YORK BOSTON LITTLE BUILDING: TREMONT COR. BOYLSTON STREET Messrs. Brooks Brothers beg leave to announce that they will remove their Boston Store to their New Building, Newbury cor. Berkeley Street about August , ig28 461 Book and Snake . 161 Boxing Team, University 335 Freshman 355 Brick Row Bookshop . 241 Byers Hall 206 Campus Views ........... 17 Canterbury School Club 431 Catholic Club 209 Chicago Latin School Club 432 Chi Delta Theta . 108 Chi Phi ... . 165 Chi Psi . . . . 148 Choate Club 433 Choir, College 389 Christian Associations . 201 College 205 Sheffield 207 Class Book, Academic . 238 Sheffield 239 Class Officers 72 Academic 75 Sheffield 77 Class Historian 98 Class Orator 98 Class Organizations 73 Class Secretaries and Treasurers 75,77 Cloister .... 183 Clubs .... 401 College Student Council 79 Colony .... 181 Contents .... 8 Corinthian Yacht Club . 423 Corporation 61 Crew Season, Article on 303 University Boat Club 311 150-lb. Crew 313 Freshman Crew 315 Freshman 150-lb. Crew . 317 Cross Country Team, University 299 Freshman 301 Cup Men .... 408 Dance Orchestra, University Club 462 385 463 Deacons Deans Debating, Article on Association . Freshman Club Dedication DeForest Orations Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Psi . Delta Sigma Rho Dramatic Association Dramatics Dwiffht Hall Cabinet 202 65 96 101 102 11 97 150 163 109 393 390 201. Editors Eli Book . Elihu Club . Elizabethan Club 13 IS- MS Faculty Fence Orator Fencing Team, University Freshman Football Season, Article on Association . Team . Freshman Association Team . Forensics Foreword Foundation of Societies Franklin Hall Fraternities 62 99 345 361 265 271 270 275 274 94 9 127 184 139 General Athletics Gilman School Club Glee Club, University Freshman Golf Team, University Freshman Grenfell Association Groton Club Gun Club . 253 434 380 384 349 363 411 435 350 464 i N ew Home for i angrock r ine (clothes Unique among the buildings which sur- round the college group at New Haven, and perhaps the only structure of its kind in existence, the new Langroi k store, direct- ly opposite tiie Harkness Memorial Quad- rangle and the site of the new Sterling Memorial Library, has been designed un- der the supervision of James Gamble Rogers, who was in charge of the drawing of the Harkness plans, so as to conform in all details with the Gothic architecture of Harkness. The interior of the store will lie in keep- ing with the exterior. The woodwork will be dark oak and the walls light buff. The basement will house the clothing depart- ment and there will be space for a restaur- ant. The ground Hoor will be occupied by OTHER S Harvard, Princeton, Williams. Brown, And the furnishing department, which will in- clude haberdashery, hats, and shoes. The formal dress and custom tailoring department, and space for a barber shop, are planned for the mezzanine; and addi- tional tailoring facilities together with offices and a preparator.v school clothes department will be placed on the third floor. The new store will also be distribution center of the Langrock stores for imported furnishing goods designed by A. E. Rub- ington, manager of the New Haven store. There will be elevator service and the building, which will be completed about January 1, will cost in the neighborhood of S ' 2t30,000. rORES AT over, Exeter, and 184. Broadway, New York 465 Haeklcy Club Haverford Club . Hawaiian Club Hill School Club . Hockey Season, Article on University Association Team . Freshman Association Team Honor Societies . Honors, Scholastic Hotchkiss Club Iktinos Index Interfraternity Council Junior Appointments Junior Fraternities Junior Promenade Committee 436 437 421 438 319 323 322 325 324 105 68 439 115 460 84 68 140 83 Kent School Club 440 Lacrosse Team, University Freshman Lawrenceville Club Literary Magazine, The Yale Loomis Club Lull, Peabody Museum . Major Sports Masonic Club Mercersburg Club iMilitary Departments . Minor Sports Mohicans Mory ' s Association IMuseum, Yale Art Museum, Peabody Musical Clubs Naval Science News, The Yale Daily . North Shore Country Day Club 466 341 358 441 215 442 245 263 412 443 364 327 406 420 85 245 380 372 225 443 « The New rkTrust Company Capital, Surplus 8C Undivided Profits - - - 33,000,000 OFFERS a complete commercial banking service, both domestic and foreign, together with un- excelled facilities for the administration of all per- sonal and corporate trusts. 100 Broadway 40th St. 8C Madison Ave. 57th St. 8C Fifth Ave. OTTO T. BANNARD Chair. an of ihe Advisory Commillet MORTIMER N. BUCKNER Chairman of the Board HARVEY D GIBSON FREDERIC W. ALLEN OTTO T. BANNARD MORTIMER N. BUCKNER JAMES C. COLGATE ALFRED A. COOK ARTHUR J CUMNOCK X1LL1AM F. CUTLER HARR1 ' P. DA TSON ROBERT W. DE FOREST GEORGE DOUBLEDAY Trustees RUSSELL H. DUNHAM SAMUEL H FISHER JOHN A. GARV ER HARVEY D. GIBSON CHARLES HAYDEN F. N HOFFSTOT WALTER JENNINGS DARft IN P. KINGSLEY EDWARD E- LOOMIS Rl ' BERT a. LOVETT HOWARD W. MAX ELL EDWARD S. MOORE GRAYSON M-P. MURPHY ' HARRY T PETERS GEORGE F. RAND DEAN SAGE VANOERBILT WEBB FREDERICK S.WHEELER 467 Officers, Class Old Crows .... Old Guard .... Orator, Class Orchestra — Yale University Club Pawling School Club Peabody Museum Peddie School Club Phi Beta Kappa . Phi Clii Phi Gamma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Pictorial Supplement, The Yale Daily News Playcraftsmen Polo Team, University Freshman Polytechnic Prep Club Pomfret School Club Pot Pourri . Prizes and Premiums Promenade, Junior Psi Upsilon Publications Public Speaking . Pundits Ranking Scholars, College Sheffield Record, The Yale Religious Activities R. O. T. C, Article on Sachem Hall St. Anthony Hall St. Elmo, Fraternity Club St. George ' s School Club St. I ouis Country Day Club St. Mark ' s School Club St. Paul ' s School Club Salisbury Club Santa Barbara Club Scholarship Honors School Clubs 72 409 410 98 385 445 245 446 107 168 164 167 229 398 347 362 447 448 219 70 83 153 213 96 413 68 69 231 201 366 193 187 166 191 449 450 451 452 453 454 68 425 468 This Race Called , BUSINESS i CaMBUgTiaN ENGINEERINC ' Lopuico Storage System {Pulverized Fuel) Lopuico Unit System ( Pulverized Fuel) Raymond Pulverizing Mill C-E Fin Furnace C-E Air Preheater Frederick Multiple Retort Stoker Type E Stoker Type K Stoker Type H Stoker Coxe Stoker Green Natural Draft Stoker Green Forced Draft Stoker C-E Ash Conveyor Combustion Steam Generators Ladd Boilers ' 0U are soon to take your place in the race called business. Long months of training have earned for you a position in the lineup — a chance to start. It may be a long grind . . . and up-hill part of the way — but the reward is well worth the effort. So, on your mark . . . get set . . . go — into this race called business — to shops and factories and furnaces — to offices and drafting boards and desks — into the open with transit and level — to mines, refineries and smelters — to power stations, boiler houses and turbine rooms — and cany with you this assurance — the road identified ivithfuel burning and steam generation — )ieed not be np- ii . The knowl- edge, experience and friendly counsel of this organization are always available to you. COMBUSTION ENGINEERING CORPORATION International Combustion Building 200 ladison Avenue New York 469 Scientific jNIagazine Scroll and Key Secretaries, Academic . Sheffield Christian Association, Ac Sheffield Senior Appointments Senior Class Book, Academic Sheffield Senior Societies . Sheffield Class Day Committee Sheffield Clubs . Sheffield Senior Class Officers Sheffield Student Council Sigma Delta Psi . Sigma Xi . Sizer, Yale Art ] Iuseum Skull and Bones . Sketches Soccer Team, University Freshman Societies Honor Societies Senior Societies Foundation of Fraternities Squash-Racquets Team, Univ Freshman Student Council, Academic Sheffield Swimming Team, University Freshman Sword and Gun ademic •sity 237 133 75 77 205 207 68 238 239 129 76 175 77 81 112 110 85 130 117 34.3 359 105 129 127 139 351 357 79 81 331 353 407 Taft School Club Tau Beta Pi Tau Epsilon Phi . Tennis Team, University Freshman Thacher School Club . Theta Xi . Torch Honor Society Track Season, Article on Association . 455 111 173 339 356 456 162 111. 289 295 470 I Qhrysi kr MOTOR CARS Are as far ahead of present competition as the first Chrysler was ahead of competition four years ago. A demonstration will best prove this to you. Prices range from S670 to $3495 f. o. b., Detroit « .e 5 BIEVER MOTOR CAR CO. 138 Whalley Avenue New Haven, Conn. HE RINCETON ®5| NN ALEXANDER ST., PRINCETON, N. J. 700 Rooms with baths FIREPROOF IM B JBBBBwBBfe. — ' TJmBB ' B b .j.m i M ■■■i The dining room facilities of The Inn are especially recommended to those visiting Princeton during the Yale-Princeton athletic contests. Accoi7imodatiom for per7nanent and tramient guests. J. HOWARD SLOCUM 471 Team . Freshman Association Team . 294 297 296 Undergraduate Athletic Association University Club . . . . University Press . . . . University School Club 258 414 242 457 Vernon Hall View Section 195 17 W ater Polo, University Freshman Westminster Club What Is Yale Four? Whiffenpoofs Wolf ' s Head Wrestling Team, University Freshman Yacht Club Yale Hope Mission Y Men, Major Sports Minor Sports York Hall . Zeta Beta Tau . Zeta Psi 333 354 458 405 404 135 337 361 423 208 260 261 189 172 155 I 472 3t t Sc Co. Fifth Ave. at 35th St.-N. Y. 1 68 Regent Street. London Exclusive WhitehalhBritish Fabrics Smart Styles Fine Tailoring T)roit)nin§;Kmg Established 106 Years Men ' s Clothing, Haberdashery, Hats Agents for French, Shriner, and Urner Shoes CHAPEL AND HIGH STREETS NEW HAVEN, CONN. Wlien you visit New York you are cordially invited to inspect our new store at Fifth Avenue and Fortv-fifth Street 4T3 r Jl O those who have a keen appreciation of the finer things, the Providence Biltmore offers the utmost in modern convenience and delightful appointments. A visit to Rhode Island ahcays means stopping at the Provi- dence Biltmore. L. Duane Wallick, Resident Manager PRO ' Vil ENCE Biltrnore How to Keep the Wolf from the Dorm Turn your summer vacation to profit, selling a product welcomed in every household — FULLER BRUSHES. A weekly average of $50 to i{;75— $1.35 an hour — is earned by college men like yourself. Rich territories still open to a limited number of students. Better get in touch today with Gordon Maffry, District Manager, The Fuller Brush Company hartford, conn. CITIES CAN BE MADE CLEAN Vast amounts of valuable material from coal now going up the chimney No Dust— No Smoke WITH THE N-T-U PROCESS Perfectly Practical for Coal N-T-U Company WooLwoRTH Building New York City 474, Quality Workmanship Service These are what we offer to you. Yale men who are instinctively pre- cise and exacting in their dress have always chosen HENRY GOLD CLOTHES because they are the highest in distinction and quality. Henry Gold and Co. TAILORS 278 York Street New Haven f Also our branch establishment at Harvard, 1384 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass.jQ 475 •• ANNUNCIATION — SKli(KXH) The School of the Fine Arts By EVERETT V. MEEKS THE School of the Fine Arts provides a dual program of instruction for students in Yale University. In the first place, there are four professional courses. Architecture, Drama, Painting, and Sculpture, in which lectures are combined with technical practice. The atmosphere of an Art School in which these branches are studied side by side should properly have a more advan- tageous effect upon the student of any one of these professions than a school limited to the consideration of one branch alone. Each student is cognizant of the work done in the other courses and can follow and be insjiired by the work of the whole school, as shown in the regu- lar reviews or exhibitions ; and the important realization of the interdependence of these dif- ferent expressions of the artistic spirit is brought clearly to his mind. In the second place, there is an extensive curriculum and wide choice of courses for stu- dents in the College and Graduate School not specializing professionally in art. For the year 1928-1929 there will be available nineteen elective courses. These courses range from general introductorj ' survey courses, through courses on special periods or special subjects, including certain of the elementary professional courses. An undergraduate student is therefore able, by careful election, to anticipate a full year of professional work, leading to the professional degree as well as to the B.A., Ph.B. or B.S. degrees. By thus combining courses, the student may receive the two degrees in seven years. The School of the Fine Arts has now four buildings to house the various branches of its work : Weir Hall, for tlie Department of Architecture ; the University Theatre, for the Depart- ment of Drama; the Art School, for the Department of Painting and Sculpture; and the new Yale Gallery building, for the general lecture courses in history, appreciation, and criticism. In the new Gallery will of course be housed the various art collections of the University. It is hoped that this building will be ready for occupancy by the various classes at the beginning of the fall term in Se])tember and that, later on in the fall or early winter, the Galleries will be opened. It is the aim of the Department of Fine Arts at Yale, through its curricula and methods, to offer all reasonable approaches to a knowledge of art so that each student, according to his interest, perseverance, talent, or genius, may achieve a knowledge of beauty and the ability not only to understand, assimilate, and criticize, but, when inclination calls and opportunity is present, to create. 476 i SNEAD BOOKSTACKS for Libraries We are furnishing- the bookstacl: equip- ment fnr the new Sterling Memorial Library, James Gamble Rogers, Archi- tect, Marc Eidlitz : Son, General Con- tractors . . . From a simple installation of bookstacks or shelving (such as a library for a law firm or club) to the largest multiple-tier stack — no book storage problem is too small or too large for our careful attention. SNEAD fCowpa; y 92 Pine St., Jersey City, N. J. Canajian Branch 250 Richmond Street, W. Toronto FINE ETCHINGS AND ENGRAVINGS Old English Colour Prints Morland : Aiken : Sporting Mezzotints Fine Americana Views : Sports : Audubons Ship Paintings and Prints Correspondence Invited KENNEDY COMPANY 693 Fifth Avenue New York City M. KNOEDLER and CO. Etching.s Paintings Engravings 14 East 57th Stkeet new york city 477 •The- Fiddler ■ (Becquet)— Whistler. 1S34-100.J FROM THE YALE MUSEUM 478 An audience four times the size of a gathering at the Commencement Alumni Luncheons reads the Yale Alumni Weekly Established 1891 Edited by Edwix Oviatt, 96 Owned in Trust bj- a group of 50 repre- sentative alumni It is Your Yale Paper An ever-ready source of pleasure and information all through your graduate life. Subscription, ■$4-00 a year. Life Subscription, $100.00 479 IJcKtoi h mstiis — it liiiui hy Remhyandt Jleiment luiiili n Diitih Itjilh-litii Aihih-. CdUntum FROM THE YALE MUSEUM 480 The Home of the Perfect Diamond That ' s why — Before you BUY Consult a Diamond Expert S. H. KIRBY k SONS, Inc. 972 Chapel Street New Haven, Conn. INDIAN MOTORCYCLES A Large Assortment of Used Motous of All Makes SWENSON-LUTZ CO. 77 Broadway Affents for Intlian Motorcycles eriiifli) TAILORS — IMPORTERS ACCESSORIES 1084 Chapel St., Ara- Hnren, Conn. 7 Ea.it 47th St., New York City 481 l tm f . OIl|ambfUan Artljitprtural Srul;itor Studio: 317 East 39th Street New York Citv SELECTED FOR THE ERECTION OF ARCHITECTURAL SCULPTURE FOR THE STERLING MEMORIAL LIBRARY 482 E. A. PIERCE CO. New York Stock Exchange Building, 11 Wall Street, Xew York NEW HAVEN OFFICE: 86 COLLEGE STREET Stocks : Cotton : Bonds : Grain OFFICES AT: Buffalo, N. Y. Chicaso, III. Columbia, ,S. C. Dallas. Texas Greensboro, N.C Hamilton, Ont. Houston, Texas Los Angeles, Cal. New Haven. Conn. New Orleans, La Ottawa, Ont. Pasadena, Cal. Paterson, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittslield, Mass Plainfleld, N. J. Portland, Ore. San Francisco, Cal. Seattle, Wash. Sprinstield, Mass Tacoma, Wash. Toronto, Ont. Vancouver, B. C. Washington, D. C New York Stock Exchange N. Y. Coffee Sugar Exchange Rubber Exchange of N. Y.. Inc. Dallas Cotton Exchange Los Angeles Stock Exchange New Orleans Stock Exchange MEMBERS OF New York Cotton Exchange New York Curb Market New York Produce Exchange New York Cocoa Exchange, Inc. Chicago Board of Trade Chicago Stock Exchange Houston Cotton Exchange Liverpool Cotton Assn. (Assoc. Members) Memphis Cotton Exchange New Orleans Cotton Exchange San Francisco Stock Exchange Seattle Bond and Stock Exchange Seattle Grain Exchange Toronto Stock Exchange Vancouver Stock Exchange Winnipeg Grain Exchang Leased private : ■ to the principal securities and c rkets in United States and Canada McCLAVE COMPANY NEW YORK STOCK E.VCHANGE NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE NEW YORK CURB MARKET (ASSOCIATE) 67 EXCHANGE PLACE NEW YORK 483 The Colonial Trust Company 20 South Fifteenth Street Philadeli ' hia f Resources $40,000,000.00 Henry W. Farnum Paul E. Gardner James M. Sheldon Wallace C. W ter Clarence H.Girton Jesse Spalding Herbert L. Jones John Coleman Farnum, Winter Co. Members New York Stock Exchange New York Curb Market Chicago Board qf Trade New York Cotton Exchange New York Office Ul Broadway Telephone Rector 8960 Chicago 120 West Adams St. HIGH GRADE PUBLIC UTILITY BONDS PREFERRED STOCKS CONNECTICUT BANK AND INSURANCE COMPANY SECURITIES NEW YORK AND BOSTON BANK AND TRUST COMPANY STOCKS Direct Jf ires Quotations Tickc?- Service F. E. Kingston Co. Investment Securities Church Street at Ehn Telephone Colony 8020 NEW HAVEN, CONN. Bridgeport New London Meriden Danbdry MiDDI.ETOWN WaTERBURT WlLLIMANTIC 484 GEORGE M. FORMAN COMPANY Investment Bonds Since 1885 112 West Adams St., Chicago 120 Broadway, New York [Offices in Principal Cities] Philadelphia Office Rochester Office Svbacise Office Bcffalo Officf 1447 Walnut Street 31 Exchange St. Bldg. Denison BIdg. Grand Court Ellicott Sq. Utica Office Brooklyn Office 1st National Bank Bldg. 44 Court Street DRAYTON, PENINGTON Ik COLKET 115 Broadway New York W. Heyward Drayton Sd Members New Y ' ork and Albin G. Penington Phi la Stock Exchanges Tristram C Coikft Chicago Board of Trade Franklin I. Mallory Cptowv Office WoRTHiNGTON Davis 470 Parii ATenue A Xew Yor i itock E.rchange firm equipped to serve the Connecticut Investor Charles W. Scranton Co. New Haven 157 Church Street — Tel. Liberty 4936 485 Mercantile Safe Deposit Company 72 Church Street, New Haven FENNER BEANE New York . . New Orleans 3Iei ibers New York Stock Exchange New York and New Orleans Cotton Exchanges Chicago Board of Trade New York Coffee Sugar Exchange and other principal Exchanges Private Wire i New York, New Orleans, Cliicago, and throughout the South 486 ly Logan Bryan 42 Broadway BROKERS New York Benjamin B. Bryan, Jr. J. J. Bagley E. Vail Stebbins B. L. Taylor, Jr. Harry L. Reno Parker M. Paine William F. Kane R. C.Jenkins DeWitt C. Harlow STOCKS, BONDS. COTTON. GRAIN, COFFEE, RUBBER. SUGAR. COTTON SEED OIL, PROVISIONS Private Wires Atlantic to Pacific, con- necting with Important Intermediate Points in the United States and Canada Members of the New York Stock Exchange and other leading Exchanges in the United States and Canada YALE MEN and The Grand Central District New York Judging from the past a large percent- age of present Ya ' e men will locate in the Grand Central District, New York. We cordially invite such future neigh- bors to use our services and suggest now as the time to establish bank account and acquaintanceship. Send for booklet The Story of the Fifth Avenue Bank Service. The Fifth Avenue Bank of New York 530 Fifth Ave., N. W. Cor. 44th St. Taylor, Thorne Co. 3Iei)ibers of the Neiv York Stock Excliangc Member fi of the Nciv York Curb Mcn-ket o r= o 49 Wall Street NEW YORK 487 -p Iaii CO. lOI-l- CHAPEI, STREET J6 EAST 52-™ STREET KEW KAVE.V NEW-VORK. Tomorrow and What? To some a career in the professional world beckons, while others will cast their lot with the tide of business and industry. Wherever your field of endeavor may He, The Arthur M. Rosenberg Co. hopes to continue to serve you. Representatives visit the large cities of the country and a dependable mail order department is maintained. Write for a copy of itinerary. TO ALL YALE MEN Are you familiar with the fact that Chichester Clothes and Chichester Service are not confined to your college days, and that our representa- tives visit most principal cities between New York and Chicago once each month ' as follows : Rochester, New York Buffalo, New York Detroit, Michigan Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Chicago, Illinois Cleveland, Ohio Toledo, Ohio Dayton, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio Furthermore, we maintain a permanent New York City Office at (313 Liggett Bldg. ) 41 East 42d Street. We also maintain a reliable Mail Order Service. Ask to receive trip announcements in your city. Samples sent on request. OII|trI|P0ter $c Qlnmpang, Jnr. TAILORS NEW HAVEN, CONN. 489 Z o Motor Cars upon which we proudly place our name In them you will find the reflec- tion of our ideas ot distinguished appearance, of thoroughgoing comfort, of dependable construc- tion, of fully satisfactory per- formance, and substantial worth. I 2 models on 5 chassis in sixes and eights — prices beginning at $860, f. o. b. Detroit. (Xyrvi_y Cc nxy £,AAAAM-PAIfi£ 491 L. F. Rothschild Co. Members Ifew York Stock Exchange 120 Broadway New York City NEWARK ROCHESTER MONTBEA A complete Brokerage and Investment Service LEONARD A. HOCKSTADER ' 00 WILLARDE. LOEB IH S ALAN M. LIMBURG ' 19 S HENRY C. SCHREIER ' 20 Lansburgh Brothers Established 1869 Members New York Stock Exchange 30 Broad Street New York Froment Co. 150 Bank Street New York, N. Y INVESTMENT SECURITIES LACKxNER, BUTZ and COMPANY 111 W. Wasliington Street Chicago, Illinois Telephone-- Main 2811 492 COHEN k POWELL ■■■■■■ WE MOVE, STORE, PACK, CRATE, AND SHIP Special Bates Quoted to all Students We have been handling Yale Students ' moving, storing, crating, and shipping for several years, as a specialty. 189 George Street Colony, 1380 P 1 A N O A N D F U R N I T U R E M O V E R S ROYAL BLUE LINE TOURS Dependable, Distinctive Sight-seeing PORTLAND, ME. BOSTON NEW YORK PHILADELPHI.X WASHINGTON NORFOLK CHICAGO SALT LAKE CITY r - - ill im lijjT„ ..«r: ' ■ S y ' V r-v COLORADO SPRINGS PORTLAND, ORE. LOS ANGELES BfFFALO NIAGARA FALLS DETROIT MONTREAL QUEBEC Royal Blue Lint- lourinf; Service Mppe;ils to those who desire the highest type of comfort, courtesy and convenience that it is possible to have. Luxurious, parlor sedan cars. Intel- ligent, attentive drivers. Large illustrated maps and folders free at our offices, leading hotels where we operate and tourist offices, or by mail. By appointment We serve the athletic and social organizations of New England ' s leading Colleges and Universities HOTEL BRUNSWICK ROYAL BLUE LINE, Inc. Phones Kenmore 4.680-1681-4e82 BOSTON, MASS. 493 GO TO RING ' S for BREAKFAST MILK DRINKS WHITE ROCK GINGER ALE CIGARS CIGARETTES DRl ' GS 217 Elm St. 0pp. Hai ' kness UNIVERSITY SMOKE SHOP OPPOSITE BINGHAM HALL LUNCH DRINKS PIPES SMOKERS ARTICLES Slip iSpn r2unua of nh Mm Waldorf a clean PLACE TO EAT — where j ' ou can get just what you want when you want it — and be sure of the best in quahty, variety, and service. 848 Chapel Street 21 Church Street 92 Church Street 107 Meadow Street 355 State Street and 1074. Chapel Street Conveniently located at the corner of Chapel and High Streets WE ARE IN BUSINESS FOR HEALTH — FOR YOUR HEALTH. Sagal-Lou Products Co. 494 LuDiNGTON Philadelphia Flying Service, Inc. PHILADELPHIA AIRPORT Agents for WACO and FAIRCHILD Airplanes Complete Instruction Course Taxi Service Full Repair Facilities C. T. LiDiXGTON, ' 19, President R. S. Saltus, Jr., ' 18, Vice-President OSBOHN memorial LABORATORIES 495 -k9 Vour Child Educated A S40,000 Gift to Your Son or Daughter statistics prove that the time spent at school and college is worth at least §40.000 to each of your boys or girls. Such an education can be guaranteed by an education policy with The Union Central Life Insurance Co. Cincinnali, Ohio John L. Shuff, C. J. Stern. Mgr. Home Office General Agent Gen. Agency I. M. ABLER, Inc. Sieam.sliip and Tourists Agency Trips and Toubs to am, Parts of the World D 0 162 Temple St. New Haven, Conn. Phone: Colony 4J00 Investigate the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas Semi-Tropical Climate An Ideal Winter Residence For the Sportsman — Abundant Game and Gulf Fishing Raises Finest Grapefruit and Winter Vegetables 600 miles farther south than Los Angeles Address inquiries to AMERICAN RIO GRANDE LAND AND IRRIGATION COMPANY Mercedes, Texas Steamship and Raihvay Tickets anyxchere in the xvorld Everything in Insurance Frank J. Rice Co. 11 ' :? Elm Street Pioneer 20 496 No hurry — no worry — no care — person- ally conducted — every detail arranged for you — every wish anticipated Rock Island Your Best Vacation For Least Expense Just think of it ! A two weeks ' tour of the Colorado Rockies — complete rest and relaxation — glorious mountain air — inspiring scenery. Superior accommodations on Rock Island limited trains enroute — sleeping and dining car ser- vice unexcelled. Rooms at the famous Broadmoor Hotel at Colorado Springs and Brown Palace in Denver. All travel in Colorado by modern automobiles — a comprehensive leisurely tour including the best of Rocky Mountain scenery • — Pike ' s Peak region, Estes-Rocky Mountain National Park, Fall River road across Continental Divide, Grand Lake, Idaho Springs, Georgetown Loop and Silver Plume — with ample rest periods. Recreation at its best and all for $175 from Chicago including every item of expense — much less than cost if individually arranged. Highest class tour ever offered for this price. For details or personal travel service, mail this coupon. Rock Island Vacation Travel Service Bureau, Room 409-10 Old South Bldg., Boston, Mass. Please send me copies of your free booklets descriptive of Colorado and the various Colorado All-Expense Tours available. Address. THE ROAD OF UNUSUAL SERVICE 497 SUMMER See the Wonderful Black Hills of South Dakota The Rockies of Colorado, picturesque California, Yellowstone National Park, Zion National Park, Jasper National Park and Northern Wisconsin, Minnesota Land O ' Lakes. Get away from the crowd- ed cities into the open camp — fish, swim, hike, explore, golf. Enjoy your favorite pastime in lands of enchantment. Write Vacation Headquarters about the low tares and liberal stop-over privileges to any one of these vacation paradises. Also illustrated booklets about the places you are most interested in seeing. Address — C. A. CAIRNS Passenger Traf fic Manager 226 W. Jackson St. Chicago CHICAGO (C lORTH The Best of Everything in the Best of the West R. . I LWiVY NORTHWESTERN 498 ' X luy. p Whenyou use the Remington Portable WRITER ' S cramp may sound like a joke to some, but to the student who has spent several long hours wi-iting a thesis or report by hand, it looms as a very real malady. Eliminate the drudgery and slowmess of wait- ing by hand — get a Remington Portable. Your work will be neater and you ' ll get it done fai more quickly. Remington Portable is the smallest, lightest, most compact and most dependable portable with standard keyboard. Carrying case only 4 inches high. Weighs 8 2 pounds, net. Cash or Convenient Terms Remington Rand Business Service Inc. 11-13 Whitney Ave.. New Haven. Conn. Corona JVic Pcr.soiud Typeivritcr Special Keyboards FOR Scientific Men ■ jr EDUCATIONAL BOOMS BOOK STORC iVC ' 2ZI tLH ST. RUf-HAVEN.CI HARRY ' S SMOKE SHOP L UNCH WHITE ROCK ORANGE JUICE GINGER ALE 236 York Street Next to Yale Theatre 199 CHASE AND COMPANY — IN ' CORPUKATED— — Clothing — Hosiers, Glovers and Shirt Makers— English Hats New Haven, Connectjcut We specialize in Outfitting of Men with Garments and Accessories for every requirement of Day and Evening Wear, Dress, Business, Travel or Sport. The same High Standard of Quality we have al- ways maintained characterizes the Merchandize we are now showing. ORDERS BY POST FULFILLED WITH UTMOST ACCURACY Our representative makes regular trips to the For West — dates on request All Clothes Pretend Equality with Merchant Tailoring 1881 1928 JACOBS, INC. New York II E. 44th St. New Haven Crown-at-College WiLLIAMSTOWN =$ « TAILORS It is the gratuitous tribute of the follower to the leader. But— the point of a pen is not the point of a needle. Only garments custom - made - to - measure have the art, taste and ex- pression which distinguish the dress of the gentleman from the clothes of the multitude. 500 Joe College is proud of two things . . His pledge pin and his HARTMANN 5 WARDROBE TRUNK Wwi His pledsre pin means a lot to Joe College— and so does his Hartmann Wardrobe Trunk. He ' s proud of both. The Hartmann not only looks like a knock- out, but it enables Joe to look that way. too— keeps his clothes fresh, immaculate and safe. When he goes out he closes his Hart mann and knows what he leaves will be there when he returns— as he left it. HARTMANN TRUNK COMPANY RACINE, WIS. J. B. Brooks Co., Ltd., Great Charles St., Birmingham. En . Licensed Distributors for Great Britain For over 50 years Hartmann ' shave been building wardrobe trunks, putting into them the quality that makes them worthy of the signature. Other Student Specials at $42.50, $49.50, and $75.00. Freight necessitates slightly higher selling prices west of Denver. ItlARlMANN TRMNKS BE S U RE THE RED IS ON THE TRUNK YOU Bl 501 The Brick Row Book Shop I N C O R P O R A T E D Is primarily a book shop for persons who have a feehng for books. It carries a diversified stock of Standard Sets, well-selected volumes in English Literature, First Editions, Association Books, Etchings, Prints and Autographs, as well as a large miscellaneous stock of second- hand books, and is, in fact, competent to under- take any of the obligations of a thoroughly equipped book shop. The Brick Row Book Shop was established and is maintained in New Haven and Princeton for under-graduates, while its main shops in New York are filling the needs of the larger collectors who have found that its stock is not excelled by any other dealer, either in this country or abroad. New Haven 235 Elm St. New York 19 East 4Tth St. 30 Broad St. Princeton 68 Nassau St. 502 Happy New Year ANNOUNCEMENT TO ACADEMIC STUDENTS OWING TO CERTAIN FAULTS IN THE PRES- ENT SYSTEM OF MARKS AND CUTS, THE FOLLOWING COMPROMISES HAVE BEEN EFFECTED AND WILL GO INTO OPERATION BEGINNING JANUARY 6th, 1910. 1. RULE8(.) l ' ,oU,on AU UixknU .cicepi mem- ber! of the Senior Council i ih.ll be pUced on probation Any aludenl qucilionine the equity of this rule ■hall be further diKiplined. bi A itudent whose acholsrvhip lOl, altendance l23i, or conduct t57i ii unutiifactory may be put to death. Cut! taken immediately beforr aftei I Mil At I ill be cancelled on llii- following baiis: For Freihmen. 0. Kor Sophomore., 1 ; for Jun.or., 2; FOR SENIORS, 3. Ik) The penally for cutting Sunday Chapel ihall be im priaonment for life. •4. 20 (a| T.,: be penalized 6 culi provi c ceed27 1.2.ccondi f ho shall be pcnal.ied 2 cu 5. 24(c) Eji.o. An narily count 10 cull. Ho. ding in which the recitatio Allude. lardy t • held il ihall 6. 29 (I) Bmf A .tudent may be f.red for any cauM. whatever. The Irivialily of the offenie .hair o( courae re- ceive absolutely no con.ideration However, no .tudent luay be fired more than once (m) Each .tudent .hall be auigned a i jmber When a Itudent i. fired the town fire bell will toll hi. correaponding lumber, for the convenience of friend, and acquaintance.. 7. 46 Id I Su oXiCh p,! To further popularize Sunday Chapel, a riling bell will be rung at each K.-vice immc duitely after the cloM of ihe Mtmon. In addition .tudent. .hall be required to hand in weekly to the Senior Council • .hort 20 page euay on Kime .uch .ubject a. ' Free Religion for the Mawe.. ' Thi. euay mult be .ubmitled between 4 and S Monday morning. 8. 51 ipl ... When a .tudent . .tudent ' . arrival at the home city. All .lampage will be placed on the tuition bill. 9. 64 la) U,I For the benclil of the friend. . lation. of .ludenl. the Yale Porl Office will open branch in Milford Addre.. care of Yale Kindei 10 79 lb) V ,ul,„, To accommodate tho.e . living we.t of the Miuiuippi the Chri.lma. Receu future be eitended to I week 11 82iji ' ' .. ' . Special priie. will be awar any .tudent or .tudent. (if more than onel graduatini Ihe new .y.tem. 12. 99(.| ;.V™.r™.v, ,, Ku o It I. to be ol eipected that a. the.e new rule, are extremely lai i I .hall be I will be nt i. fired le of Ihe YALE ' S WELCOME TO DEAN JONES. JANUARY. 1910 503 Durham ' s Smoke Shop The Three Handy Stores 1 Broadway 29 Church Street 129 Church Street WHERE YOU (4ET Service, Qi alifi a id Price EMIL H. KOSSACK Barbers to Vale Men Since 1893 Ac. Shop, 100 High Street Tel. Col. 939 Sheff. Shop, Byers Hall Tel. L. 674.5 Learn to Play melody and accompaniment chords of popular music on the BANJO. Also the elaborating of melody and harmony parts. Through my system you can do it in a short time — from the piano mu- sic. I also give a thorough course of in- struction on Banjo, Mandolin, Guitar and kindred instruments. J. J. DERWIN (coach of YALE BANJO CLUb) 10-l-t Chapel St., New Haven The Lawlor System Drive It Yourself Auto Renting Co. Studebakers, Chiyslers and Buicks FOR RENT Day, Week or MoniJi All cars insured Liberty 501)0 2o+ Crown Street New Havkn, Connecticut 504 THE SPERRY TREAT General Contractors 39 Church Street New Haven, Connecticut COMPANY G. A. TREAT, President S. T. WILLIS. Treasurer NATIONAL REGULATOR COMPANY CHICAGO Maxifahthehs of All Typoi of T ifrmo.sttific Heat Controlling- Devices Wthtx tutiio Photographers To Leading Yale Men Since 1910 r Quality Is Our Motto 505 The Roxbury School Cheshire, Conn. The success of Roxbury is the result of sound educational methods : An experienced and permanent faculty insures continuity of training. A system of small group instruction and individual attention creates opportunity for every boy. A flexible pro gram, adapted to the boy, not the form, pro- motes steady progress. A properly orga7iir:ed regime provides regular and healthful school life. A. N. Sheriff, Headmaster. Special summer session in August and September. A B«SEE ELEVATOR GDMPANY INCORPOR!ATED 1923 ESTABLISHED 1883 506 ■ The Yale Co-operative Corporation Organized 1885 — Incorpohated 189-2 This society was founded by the students, conducted by the students and supported by the students. Its conti ' ol is in the hands of the present Board of Directors. It has no capital stock. Its basic principle as set forth in its Constitution ' ' is to buy and deal in goods, wares and merchandise of every description and to sell the same to its members at prices as near the cost as practicable. ' The ratio of expense, or overhead, to gross sales has not exceeded 16%. Prof. Vm. L. Phelps, President Prof. Avard L. Bishop, Secretary F. O. Robbins, Treasurer and Superintendent E. F. Blair, Law School C. C. Bishop, Medical School E. F. Campbell, Divinity School Donald Cooksey, Graduate School The Present Board of Directors A. C. Robertson, 19 8 Wm. A. Webster, 1928 S. Lawrence Tweedy, Jr., 1929 J. A. Brandenburg, 1929 S. Fletcher E. Nyce, 1930 C. F. Miles, 1930 S. R. L. Crowell, 1931 The Yale Shield in Your Home Town There must be a bookstore — maybe two or three — and a library in your home town. You probably visit them occasion- ally — at any rate you should. You are aware, too, that Yale University Press publishes many of the most important books issued in America. Every one of these has the Yale shield stamped in gold on the back. Each makes in its own field a significant contribtttion to scholar- ship, literature, or art. Yale books on the tables in your book- store and on the shelves in j ' our library make for the prestige of Yale University. If you do not see the Yale shield pretty well represented in jour bookstore and librarj ' , call the attention of the book- seller or the librarian to that fact. You will be doing a good turn for Yale and for the bookstore and for the library. Thelmmediate Origins of the War (jstli June— nil Aug. 1914) By PIERRE RENOUVIN Translated by Theodore C. Hume; with a Preface by CHARLES SEYMOLR Pro vast of Yrile Un i ve rsHii Clnthbound. i ' 4.00 Heirs of Old Venice Bv ClRRTRl DE SLAUOHTER, Author of ■ ' Two Children in Old Paris and Shakespeare and the Heart of a Child. Heliotype Frontispiece, Si.oo The Corridors of Time A sociologrical series. 8vols. HAROLD PEAKE, F.S.A. and HERBERT JOHN FLECRE, D.Sc. Now Ready Vol. I. .4pes and Men; Vol. n. Hunters and Artists; Vol. HL Peasants and Potters; VoL IV. Priests and Kings Illustrated. JJ.OO a volume. 507 United Actors, Inc. Present THE LADDER A PLAY FOR THE THINKING MAN CORT THEATRE NEW YORK CITY 508 Hegeman-Harris Co., Inc. 360 Madison Avenue New York, N. Y. SENN-HERRICK CORPORATION Reinforced Concrete 300 Madison Avenfe New York City Telephone Murray Hill 4823-4 Oberg, Blumberg k Bleyer Contracting Electrical Enmneers 67-73 West -Wth Street New York Telephone 3M6 Murray Hill In the Varnish Field- Berry ' s Liquid Graxite o The Million Step Test Floor Varnish 509 ! r -M P a O w mnf I Hl l Here, under a single roof, is manufactured everything required for the complete printed job . . . Selling Ideas . . . Copy . . . Art . . . Photog- raphy . . . Engravings . . . Electrotypes . . . Typogra- phy . . . Inks . . . Printing . . . and Binding ... all con- sistently fine. And in the largest printing plant of its kind in existence. Any Size i k Job is welcomed MANZ CORPORATION 4001-4053 Ravenswood Avenue Chicago Green Hill Farms City Line and Lancaster Avenue Overbrook. Phii.adeli ' HU. Penna. Philadelphia ' s Most Beautiful Hotel R. ELLSWORTH METCALF Manager In Every Respect Everybody ' s Newspaper, but Because of its thorough treat- ment of amateur sports and excellence of its school and college news, the BOSTON EVENING TRANSCRIPT is pre-eminentl} ' the newspaper for the student. CLEAN complete DEPENDABLE 510 1 Gentlemen— Your Health! Orange-Crush is bottled in patented Krinkly bottles — every bottle carefully sterilized— under exclusive license and direction of the Orange-Crush Com- pany, Chicago. Next time you want to otFer your friends a real treat, step up to the soft -drink counter that carries the sign of Orange-Crush — call for Orange-Crush by name — and drink hearty! Juice of luscious oranges, delicate flavor of their peel, zestful tang of the fruit acid found in oranges, lemons and limes, a pure food color, healthful carbonated water, pure cane sugar — these are the things that make Orange-Crush surpassingly delicious. At your neighborhood dealer ' s, buy it al- ways in the patented Orange-Crush bottle — or ask him to send a case to your home. A wonderfully refreshing drink ! Ofange-Crush 511 Telephone CENtral 3820 Matteson-Fogarty -Jordan Company Advertising Agency 307 North Michigan Avenue Chicago Newspaper Advertising Outdoor Advertising Magazine Advertising Radio Broadcasting Member American Association of Advertising Agencies Audit Bureiiii of Circulations National Outdoor Advertising Bureau Chicago Association of Commerce 512 513 COLUMBIA-KOLSTER VIVA-TONAL ' ' like life itself Model 900 COLUMBIA-KOLSTER VIVA-TONAL The Electric Reproducing Phonograph List Price, .f+To.OO Music ' s reproducing triumph ! Thrill to its notes! In this instrument, are combined the Columbia 11 hievements in the reproduction of recorded music « ith the finest and latest development in power implification, the Kolster Power Cone Speaker. The Columbia-Kolster Viva-tonal plays any stand- ard record. The instrument gets its power from the house current. Batteries are eliminated. In- cluded In the equipment are five Cunningham tubes. Every detail is designed to delight the eye and offer the utmost in service. ois te COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH COMPANY 1819 Broadway New York Schubert Centennial— Orsranized by Columbia Phonograph Company COLUMBIA NEW PROCESS RECORDS WAGNER — Masterworks Series BEETHOVEN — Works in Album Form MOZART— Symphony 35 in D HAYDN— Symphony 4 in D Major BRAHMS— Sonata in D Minor Music T epartiuenf r EDUCATIONAL BOOMS. BOVCm STORE. MC 219-221 CilJil ST. RtlV MEN.Ct CHARLES H. DARMSTADT, Inc. Plumbing, Heating and Sprinkler Engineers and Contractors 352 West -ISfiD Street New York 514 The Champion Fibre Company Tablet Index Post Card Pulp Board Bond Envelope Kraft M. F. Book Bleached Soda Pulp Bleached Sulphate Pulp Bleached Sulphite Pulp Lumber Lime Turpentine Caustic Soda Tannic Acid Coal Bindex Mills and Executive and Sales Offices at Canton, North Carolina 515 516 Ask for Eiffel Hosiery by name Look for the gold wreath on the toe of every stock- ing. Then you are sure of getting style and depend- able quality for every member of the family Leigh, Inc CHEMIST Perfumers 501 Fifth Avenue New York Paris, 15 Rue Royale San Francisco, 281 Eddy Street ce ' e ' e ' k reSi€4 ' Featured by ROSENBERG BROS. DRESS CORP. 1375 Broadway, New York City J Dresses of Distinction Sold in Exclusive Shops Koslyn Silks Used In Our Garments 517 Evans for Excellent Clothes 1109 Chapel Street [Next to New Yale Art School] New Haven, Connecticut Established 18T6 BETTER r UHNITURE VAltlE S ALWAYS REMEMB ER 12 CHURCH STREET FlRNITURE, Rigs, and Linoleums The complete furnishing ' of your room with furniture and rugs will be safe in our hands. Attractive, substantial merchandise in varied styles at reasonable prices. PACH BROS. Photographers to Yale Since 1878 1024 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. Official Photographer for the Banner and Pot Pourri Catalog No. 11 Tapes and Rules 518 UFKJN TAPES and r TOOLS r Best for every measurinor requirement Send for Catalog TH E UFK N PULEnO. Windsor. Out. SAGINAW. MICH. New York Catalog No. 5 Fine Tools I Your Favorite Cheese No matter what the variety may be, you can find it bearing the Kraft label. And it will be pure and whole- some and good, true in flavor, a delight to the palate and of a quality that has never been surpassed. Cheese should be apart of every diet. Ask any physi- cian or dietitian and he will tell you that cheese is a great builder of bone and tissue — especially rich in proteins. You never fully appreciate the delicious va- riations that can be made in the diet by the use of cheese, until you have become acquainted with sev- eral of the different kinds of cheese. Each variety of Kraft Cheese comes to you in its neat, distinguishable package, easily identified, and you can always avoid any disappointment when buying if you will just say Kraft before you say cheese. Sold by the slice, and in half and quarter pound cartons, packages and jars. KRAFT CHEESE COMPANY, General Offices, CHICAGO 519 1 Joseph Halberstadt INSURANCE 110 EAST 4.2nd street NEW YORK Robert Stevenson 1900 Chicago, 111. Lawrence, Blake Jewell INCORPORATED Real Estate Mortgages 285 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY J. L. -The- Mott Iron Works Mott Building. 369 Lexington Avenue, New York, N. Y. Plumbing Sujjplies for Residences, Schools, Factories, and Apartment Houses. Hospital and Marine Plumbing. Ornamental Iron Work, Fountains, Stable Fittings, Hot Water and Steam Boilers, Caldrons and Steam Kettles. Jordan L. Mott, 3rd, ' 25 Vice President and General Manager 520 In Planning Your Vacation you may need a top coat, white flannel trousers, light weight sweater, a few pairs of golf hose, shirts, underwear, pajamas, hat, etc. We only ask for a chance to show you. We know you will be pleased with our assort- ment, quality, and price. John F. Fn zGerald HOTEL TAFT BUILDING NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT Full Measure Service w %m is distinctly a JERREMS Clothes Characteristic TN ordering a suit you want all there is 1 in quality, all there is in tailoring, and all there is in well-trained ability to make it tit you. This has been JERREMS ' reputation over a long period of years. Ours is a full measure service. The most interesting weaves for your selection at $65, 875, .$85 and upwards Formal — Businexs and Sport Clothes 3-2+ So. Michigan Ave. Chicago and Four Other Stores CORNWALL PATTERSON MFG. CO. Leaders Since 1881 in the Manufacture of Piano and Organ Hardware Bridgeport, Conn. 521 YALE MEMORABILIA Our collection of books relating to Yale University is considered the most complete of any on sale. We can from stock fill wants for Banners and Pot Pourris back to the very early issues. JVe can replace a lost Class Book Pamphlets, Lectures and Addresses Class Poems and Orations Unique Books about Yale Pictures of Yale in the past Etchings of Present Day Yale Undergraduate Publications ESTABLISHED I900. EDUCATIONAL BOOKS. CE.awHmocK- pres. BOOK STORE, c: z zz ELM ST. NEW- HAVEN. CI 522 The Wilson Name Pro- tects Your Game ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT Kvery piece of athletic equipment bearing the Wilson trade mark is worthy of your confiilence. It is the result of the most exacting tests, rigid control of quality. and supervision by experts of International repute. Our store is headquarters for this super line, come in and let us show it to you. New Haven Sporting Goods Company 120 Cronn St. New Haven, Conn. FOR MORE THAN HALF A CENTURY FAMOUS FOR THEIR MILD AND DELICATE FLAVOR SPERRY k BARNES HAMS AND BACON THE SPERRY BARNES CO. NEW HAVEN .Ashland Oiao-1-2 Yard and Dock Foot of East 42nd St. Cxramercy r uel Corp. Anthracite COAL Bituminous (Wholesale — Ketail Ul East 29th St., New York Geo. W. Martin President S. MORGANSTERN Vice-President MONUMENTS PACIFIC GIORDANO 77 Derby Avenue New Haven 523 TAILORS OUR CLOTHES have earned an enviable reputation and are acknowledged the stan- dard of perfection in MAKE, QUALITY and SMARTNESS. Samples sent on request. J16 Fifth Ave. New Yohk 1056 Chapel St. New Haven DE FRANCO BARBER SHOP Barbers to Yale Students We carry a complete stock of Oleaqua and ' italls ' 2 Wall Street, opposite ' an Sheft ' . Expressing- our appre- ciation for the hearty cooperation of the 1931 class for the Year Book THE CROSBY STUDIO of PHOTOGRAPHY 831 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn. ' ' Ye Sheff Shoppe ' ' Restaurant Fountain Refreshments Cigarettes Cigars Tobacco Toilet Articles and Stationery 381 Temple Street 524 THE MONASIX The lowest priced European six cylinder car of quality. The most enjoyable and economical way to see Europe is to drive yourself in a Monasix. Orders given to us now for delivery in France will be filled promptly by our factory at their prevailing Paris prices. 719 5th Avenue RENAULT SELLING BRANCH, INC. ' l he Yale Daily News 1 The Oldest College Daily Founded . anuary 28, 1878 THE YALE DAILY NEWS Yale Station New Haven Connecticut YOU CAN RELY ON WHITRY Ijtt Irotlf rsi CLEANERS, PRESSERS AND TAILORS Altering and Repair Work A Specialty 1119 Chapel Street New Haven Established 1852 I. KLEINER k SON Tail ors 1098 Chapel Street UP ONE FLIGHT CLOSED ON SATURDAY UNTIL EVENING New England Wholesale Tailors 87 Orange ; Street Telephone Lib. 1605 New Haven, Conn. Men ' s clothes made to order at wholesale prices direct to wearer. BELMONT HOSPITALITY-Charley, the Barber It is enough to know that Charley is the head of this marvellous barber shop and you can know that all service will be first class in every respect. It is acknowledged that Charley has the best tonsorial help, the most painstaking assistants. Park Avenue and 42d Street HOTEL BELMONT At Grand Central Terminal A BOWMAN BILTMOUK HOTEL NEW YORK CITY 5W The New Haven Printing Co. PRINTING LITHOGRAPHING 101-105 Meadow Street NEW HAVEN : CONNECTICUT Cooperative Craftsmansh ip is the essence of work well done and the foundation of success in business. E.L.HILDRETH CO. PRINTERS BRATTLEBORO, VT. When you want a good reliable laundry call the oldest laundry to Yale, established 1885 This is our new liome, lO ' iO Modern, Sanitary, Fireproof Tdephone Liberty 66 .} or see Cornelins THE NONPAREIL LAUNDRY COMPANY ■2-i BLATCHLEY AVENUE 527 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS A. B. See Elevator Co 506 I. M. Adler 496 American Rio Grande Land Co. . . 496 Asheville School 528 Belmont Barber Shop 526 Berry ' s Liquid Ciranite 509 Best Co 473 Biever Motor Co 471 Boston Evening Transcript . . . 510 Brick Row Book Shop 502 Brooks Bros 461 Browning King 473 R. P. Chambellan 482 Champion Coated Paper Co. . . . 516 Champion Fibre Co 515 Chase Co 500 Chicago North Western R. R. . . 498 Cliichester Co 489 Cohen Powell 493 Colonial Trust Co 484 Columbia Plionograph Co 514 Combustion Engineering Co. . . . 469 Cornwall Patterson Mfg. Co. . . 521 Corona Typewriter 499 Crosby Studio 524 Charles H. Darmstadt, Inc. . . . 514 De Franco Barber Shop .... 524 J. J. Derwin 504 Drayton, Penington, Colket . . . 485 Durham Smoke Shop 501 Eift ' el Hosiery 517 Evans, Tailor 518 Farnum, Winter Co 484 Feinstein, Tailors 524 Fenner Beane 486 Fifth Ave. Bank of New York ... 487 J. F. Fitzgerald 521 George ] L Forman Co 485 THE ASHEVILLE SCHOOL ASHEVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA Ar I ideally located school for boys, excellent climate with mild but stimulating winters. Elxcellent equipment. For catalogue and information add ■ess Mr. Howard Bement, Headmaster Asheville School, N. C. GEORGE k HARRY ' S RESTAURANT and SODA FOUNTAIN 90 Wall Street, Opposite nn ShefF. OPEN ALL NIGHT SAVE MONEY AND BUY A COUPON BOOK— $10 FOR S9 528 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS [continued] Froment Co 492 Fuller Brush Co 474 Georgf Harry ' s 528 Henry Gold Co 475 Graham-Paige Automobiles . . 490-491 Gramercy Fuel Corp 523 Green Hill Farms 510 Joseph Halberstadt Harry ' s Smoke Shop Hartmann Trunks Hegel ' s Furniture Store Hegeman-Harris Co. Hildreth . . . . 520 499 501 518 509 527 Jacobs, Inc. Jerrems . Kennedy Co. . F. E. Kingston . S. H. Kirby Sons Inc. I. Kleiner Son M. Knoedler Emil H. Kossack Kraft Cheese I.ackner, Butz Co. Langrock, Inc Lansburgh Brothers The Lawlor System .... Lawrence. Blake Jewell . Leigh, Perfumers .... Logan Bryan Ludington Philadelphia Flyinf Inc Lufkin Rule Co. .... Co. 500 521 477 484 481 526 477 504 519 492 465 492 504 520 517 487 495 518 Oberg, Blumberg Blej ' er Pach Bros. Pacific Giordano E. H. Pierce Co. . Princeton Inn Providence Biltmore Remington Rand Business Service, Inc. Renault Selling Branch, Inc. . Frank J. Rice Co P. Ring ' s Rock Island R. R Arthur M. Rosenburg Co Roslvn Silk Mills L. F . Rothschild Co Roxbury School Royal Blue Line Tours Rubin Berman Sagal-Lou Products Co Charles W. Scranton Co Senn-Herrick Corp Snead Co Sperry Barnes Sperry Treat Standard Oil Co. of New York Robert Stevenson Stoddard Engraving Co Swenson Lutz Co Taylor, Thorne Co. F. R. Tripler L ' nited Actors Lniversity Smoke Shop 518 523 483 471 474 499 525 496 494 497 489 517 492 506 493 481 494 485 509 477 523 505 530 520 530 481 487 463 508 494 Manz Corp. . 510 Matteson, Fogartv Jordan . . 512 McClave Co. . 483 Mercantile Safe Deposit Co. . . . 486 J. L. Mott Iron Works 520 National Regulator Co 505 New England Wholesale Tailors . . 526 New Haven Printing Co 527 New Haven Sporting Goods Co. . . 523 New York Trust Co 467 Nonpareil Laundry Co. .... 527 N. T. L ' . Company 474 Waldorf 494 Ward ' s Orange Crush 511 Weber Studio 505 White Bros 526 Whitlock ' s Book Store 522 Whitlock ' s Music Store 514 Wilson Athletic Equipment . . . 523 Yale Alumni Weekly Yale Co-op . Yale Daily News Yale University Press Ye ShefF Shoppe . 479 507 525 507 524 529 - - . - ■ H ni K P BWlliWl ' Ml -i5|f J M L L -=5? H I m ' E JmB s PwEwxmIP «a Slfci ttl b wU. flflliiBlAitf Vjfl Bf ' -j JSMMB m. .- A ' . Jr- . ift|ii5M Pw jl|t|aaraBjgy 91 Sw m!m i: s m bmhic s ' ' ' lS SM HH B HBM I HI krj i HHHL R 1 D JB. V ' mZj T xj C-J HKIS MM 9BMf ' 1 | MB|I HBJHL HBfU|jniM|U u jB s i sisapi Sl ' TL ' SfScorp. NEW HAVEN TODAY The Stoddard Engraving Company. New Haven. Conn. Engravers to Btmner SDCDNY ?EG U S PAT, OFF Gasoline - Motor Oil Made by a company that is fifty-four years old STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK 26 BROADWAY 5;30


Suggestions in the Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) collection:

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931


Searching for more yearbooks in Connecticut?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Connecticut yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.