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~reface jae not too barb l:nitb u~. pou l:nbo ~can tbe.l)e page~ . for altbougb our .l)bortcoming~ are manp, anb all too ebibent, our intent i~ goob. ~e babe trieb berein to gibe a true account of tbe bappening~ of tbe pear 1924=1925, anb .I)O maintain a~ manp of tbe age olb trabition~ a~ l:ne were able. jae kinb. 'Ql::o pou l:ne bumblp pre.l)ent our book.
1f n ;§Memoriam jfreberick •
alton
~a rpenter
1876=1925 passing of Frederick Walton Carpenter, Professor of Biology, who died I NontheMarch 1, 1925, Trinity College uffers an irreparable loss. He has gone from us suddenly in the prime of his age and powers, leaving his admirable work for the College unfinished and the fruit of long years of study ungathered. ro imaginable cessation could have le apparent meaning or could sadden us more deeply by a sense of hopeless and overwhelming waste. What we most admired in our teacher and friend was the inexhaustible patience always shown in his thought by a scrupulous exactness, in his conduct by unwavering justice, and in his dealings with other by quietness and courtesy. Though reticent, he was never cold, and he had the gentleness of strength. ntouched by malice and untainted by self-seeking, he set love side-by-side with law and lived true to the noble teachings of the Society of Friend in which he was reared. Yet his patience and kindness never betrayed him into laxity. In the presence of what he disapproved his very ilence was often more eloquent with rebuke than the words of other men. Although an ardent lover of literature and of the wild, Professor Carpenter was es entially a scholar and teacher, allowing nothing to come between him and his exacting work . His strength and erenity were due, perhaps, to this unswerving devotion. The only pride he had in his own accomplishment seemed to be in what he had been able to do for his pupil . Arduous self-di cipline, travel and study in many lands, and prolonged concentration upon the great ubject of his special interest had brought him a scholarship both wide and deep, but all of this, together with the sense of awe which filled him before the spectacle of life's manifold beauty, he seems to have valued chiefly in the hope that he might communicate it to others. Devoted to fact but striving always forward toward the Truth, he lived soberly, and yet with deep happiness, in the light of the ideal. Thus he built his strength and knowledge and wisdom solidly into the fabric of the College which he served with perfect loyalty for eleven years. Day by day, year in and year out, he gave all that he had, and what he had was much. But words cannot· depict this man to whom words never came so readily as works. He spoke in deeds that were thoughtful, wise, and kind. He will never cease to speak through the deeds of tho e who are more tolerant of others and more exacting of themselves because he has lived. His monument is in the lives of the many men who have admired andre pected him and who have been unable to live beside him without resolving to attain omf!thing of hi quiet nobility. His memorial stands forever in the hearts of that smaller number who felt for him an abiding affection of which, in some cases, he never· knew. He lives among us still as a memory which will be fruitful and beneficent while our College stands . . . the memory of a strong and quiet man, high-minded, gentle, just, and faithful to the uttermo t.
T any HE Editor-in-Chief wishes to take this opportunity to thank all those who in way helped to make the success of this volume of the IvY possible. In particular he wishes to extend his thanks to Mrs. John F. Plumb, through whose courtesy the picture of her son wa procured; to Professor Odell Shepard for '"'rriting the eulogy to Professor Carpenter; Nathaniel R oss Parke and George Malcolm-Smith who contributed the arti. tic work of the book; Arthur"\ an Riper Tilton and Alexander Forbes McBurney, who permitted the use of photographs belonging to them; and Winthrop Hubbard Segur and Samuel Churchill" ilcox who very capably wrote-up the athletic games and teams. The Editor is indebted to the Ogden Studio and the Curtiss-Schervee Studio for their co-operation in taking both the individual and group pictures used in th is book. Lastly to those whose names are not herein mentioned, but without whose work the production of this book would have been impossible, the Editor wishes to express hi s thanks and appreciation.
THE.
TRlNlTY lvY \.>o l
J:u
Publishe-d by _ THE. C.l.A 55 of 192.6
3Jn JLobing .memorp of
.Jobn JLanbon ~lumb mle ;i!;umblp 119ebicate m:bi~ 'Volume of m:be 3Jbp m:bougb ~ob in ;U;i~ 1.9ibine mli~om ba~ ~een fit to tak e . bim from u~. bi~ ~pitit ~tiU abibe~ among u~. anb tbe memorp of bi~ s'taumb faitb anb true frienb~bip will alhtap~ remain in tbe brart~ of bi~ cla~~mate~
Stimpson Hubba rd Ri chard B. T alcott
Ed路itor-in-Chiej Business Manager ~ssociate
Q!bitors
George P. Jackso n, Jr. James W. Keena David S. Loeffler Nicholas W. Manocchio John Williams, Jr. H arry W. Green Joseph J. Connor Charles B. Cook
10
t
mabie of (!Contents Preface
3
D edication
8
Faculty
15- 28
Student Body
29- 66
Fraternities
67- 93 95- 117
Athletics Society
119- 143
Organizations
125- 142
Mi cellaneous
143- 167
1l
~enatu~ acabemicu~ QI:orpor ation The President of the Collebe e:r o.fj'icio Pre.~idertf * Sydney G. Fisher, L.H.D., LL.D. 'William S. Cogswell, M.A. Robert Thorne LL.B. The Rt . Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, D.D. The Hon. Joseph Buffington, LL.D. The Hon. Frank L. Wilcox. B.A.* Edgar F. " ' aterman, LL.B., S ecretary and Trea.mrer* George Dawson Howell, B.A. William Gwinn Mather, M .A. John Prince Elton, B .S. The Rev. Ernest M. Stires, D .D. Shiras Morris, B.S .* William Stimpson Hubbard, M.A., M.D. t Charles G. Woodward. M.A. * Samuel Ferguson, M .A. * Sidney T. Miller, M .A. Newton C. Brainerd , B.A. * lrenus Kittredge Hamilton, Jr., B.S. t John James McCook, M.A., D.D. , LL.D. .John Henry Kelso Davis, M.A. t
Hartford Plziladelplda .Jamaica, N.Y . .Yew Yorlc Hartford Pittsburgh B erlin Hartford P ittsburgh Cleveland Waterbury N ew Y ork Hartford N ew Y ork Hartford Hartford D etroit Harifard Hartfard Hartford Hartford
*Th ese m~ m be r s o f the Corporatio n fo rm lhe Rxeeuti ve Co m.millee . tEi ecled hy I he Alumni .
~'bbisorp
Ambrose Spencer 1\i11rray, .Jr., :M.A .
jaoar'b N ew Yorl.-
1~
t
Jljoarb of jfellohl~ JList of
~enio r
jfellol:us
James Albert Wales, B .A. Jarvis McAlpine John so n, B .A. Lewis Gilder leeY e Haniman, B.A . Owen Morgan, B .A. Hill Burgw in, Jr. , B.A.
jfunior jfellol:us Murray H. Cogge hall, B. S. Harold N. Chandler, B.A. Martin Taylor, LL.B . Theodore C. Hudson, B.S. Lawson Purdy, LL.D . John Morgan Brainerd, M ..\..
~~~octation
of tbe
~lumnt
Joseph Buffington, LL.D . John F. Forward . Charles Amos John on . Paul M. Butterworth, B.L.
. President Vice- President Secretary . Treasurer ~tanb in g
QI:ommittee
The Officers: Philip J McCook Edmund Thomas Robert 路. Morris
13
TRINITY COLLEGE was founded by the Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, D.D., LL.D., who was bom at Westport, Mass. , Oct. 19, 1779, and di ed at Hartford, Jan. 13, 1865. From 1819 to 1865 he was the third Bishop of Connecticut and the Presidin<>' Bishop from 185fl to 1865. From 18fl4 to 1831 he was the first President of the College. ~resi'bents
Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, D.D., LL.D. Rev. Nathaniel Sheldon Wheaton, .T.D. Rev. Silas Totten, S.T.D., LL.D. Right Rev. John Williams, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. Daniel Raynes Goodwin, S.T.D., LL.D. Samuel Eliot, LL.D. Right Rev. John Barrett Kerfoot, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. Abner Jackson, S.T .D., LL.D. Rev. Thomas Ruggles Pynchon, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. George Williamson Smith, D.D ., LL.D. Rev . Flavel Sweeten Luther, Ph.D., LL.D . Rev. Remsen Brinkerhoff Ogilby, B.D. , LL.D.
1824- 1831 1831- 1837 1837- 1848 1848- 1853 1853- 1860 1860- 1864 1864- 1866 1866- 1874 1874- 1883 1883- 1904 1904- 1919 19flo-
THE RE''路 REMSEN BRINKERHOFF OGILBY, B.D., LL.D. President 115 Yernon Street (Office Williams Hall )
The Rev. George Williamson Smith, D.D., LL.D. Professor of Metaphysics, Emeritus B.A., Hobart, 1857; D.D ., 1880 ; D.D., Columbi a; LL.D ., Trinity, 1887. Chapla in, nited States Navy, 1864; Acting Professor of Mathematics, L"nited States Naval Academy, Newport, 1864-65 ; Chaplain at Annapolis, 1865-6 ; Hector in various p laces till 1883 ; President of Trinity Coll ege, 1883-1904. e~x.
The R ev. Flavel s,veeten Luther, Ph.D., LL.D. President and eabury Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, E1neritus B.A. , Trinity, 1870; Ph.D., 1896 ; LL.D. , 1904; Professor ofMathematics and Astronomy at Racine Col lege, 1871-81; Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at K enyon College, 1881-83 ; Professor at Trinity since 1883; President of Trinity College, 1901-1919; Member of Ameri can Society of Mechani cal Engineers; Senator from First District of Connecticut, 1907, 1909 ; iJ> BK, ~ T.
Charle Frederick Johnson, L.H.D., LL.D. Professor of English Literature, Emeritus 69 Vernon Street B.A., Yale, 1855; M.A., 1863: L.I-J.D ., 1895 ; LL.D ., Trinity; A sistant Professor of Mathematics, United States Naval Academy, 186.'i-70; Professor at Trinity 1883-96; Professor Emeritus, 1896- ; Author of "English Words ;" "Three Englishmen and Three Americans; 路路 "Elements of Literary Criti cism ;" "What Can I do for Brady?"' and other poems; "Outline History of English and American Literature :" " Forms of Ver e;'" "Shakespeare and His Critics," etc. '1' T.
16
The R ev. J ohn J a mes Mc Cook, M.A., D .D ., LL.D . P rofessor of .Modern Languages, E meritus
396 M ain Street B.A ., Trinity, 1863; D .D ., 1901; LL.D. , 1910 ; s tudi ed a t . J e fferso n College, N e w Y ork Co ll ege of Ph ysicia ns a nd S urgeons, and Berke ley Di v inity Schoo l; Seco nd Li e ute na n t First Virgini a. Volun tee r Infa ntry durin g t he C ivil Wa r ; Professo r at Trini ty si nce 1883 ; R ector of St. J ohn 's C hurch, E ast H a r tford, sin ce 1869 . Aut hor of repor ts o n poo r-l aw admi nist ratio n a nd priso n refo rm ; a lso of num erou magaz ine a r t icles on vagabo ndage , po li t ica l ve na li ty, pa uperi s m, d rink, e tc. <I? B K, 8 6 X.
Robert Baird Ri ggs, Ph .D. Sc oville Professor of Chemistry , Euw-rilvs
35 F orest Street B .A., Beloit Coll ege, Wisco nsin , 18 76 ; Ph.D ., Goltin ge n ; C he mi st for U ni ted States Geo logical S ur vey, 1884-87 ; Professor of C hem istry , N a t io nal Coll ege of Ph a rm acy, 1885-87; Professor of C he mistry at Trini ty, 1887- . Co ntrib utor to The American Che1nical J ournal, Th e American J ournal of Sci ence, a nd oth er journa ls. B 8 11.
Frank C'ole Babbitt, Ph.D . Professor of the Greek Language and Literalttre 65 \' ernon Street B .A., Harvard, 1890 ; M .A. , 1892; Ph.D. , 1895 ; !?ell ow of tb e Am eri can School of Classical Studies ai. Ath ens, 189596 . Instru ctor in Gree k at Harvard, 1896-98 ; Profes or at Trinity , 1899- ; M ember of the American Archaeologi cal In stitute; M e mber of the Ameri can Philological Associat ion , Author of " Greek Grammar ;" also of papers in American J ournal of Archaeology, and in llan>ard Studies in Cla ssical Philology . <I?BK, 8t.X.
17
Henry Augustus Perkins, M.A., E.E. Professor of Physics 83 Gillett Street B.A ., Yale, 1896; M .A., Columbia, 1899 ; E.E., Columbia, 1899. Member of American Physica l Society; Societe Francaise de Physique ; Associate M ember of American Institute of E lectrical Engineer . Author of "An Introduction to General Thermodynamics: " has published articles in American J ournal of Science, Scientific American,
Electrical World, Com pies Rendus, Le Radiu1n, Yale R eview; and the Physical Review. <)> BK, ~ Z, A 6 <P.
Gustavus Adolphus Kleene, Ph.D. Professor of Economics 179 Sigourney Street A.B ., University of Michigan, 1891; studied at Berlin and TUbingen, at Co lumbi a l'niversity, and the University of Pennsylvania. receiving his Ph.D. from the latter institution . For two winte rs with the Charity Organization Society of l\ew York City; Assistant in Economics at the University of vYisconsin ; Instructor in Economics and Social Science at Swarthmore College, and Lecturer at the University of P ennsylvania. Author of "Profit and Wages." ' Contributor to the Annals of the American
Academy of Political a'11d Social Science, American Statistical Association Publications, Yale R eview, etc. <)> B K.
Charles Edwin Ro gers, C.E., M.C.E. Professor of Ci~'il Engineering 11 Lincoln Street R e nsse laer Polytechnic Institute, 1896 ; M.C.E. , Harvard, 1915. Engineer and Contractor, 1896-1901; In tructor, Lehigh niversity, 1901-04; Professor of Mathemati cs and Civil Engineering, Clarkson Memorial School of Technology and General Engin eering Practice, 1904-05; Professor of Civi l Engineering, Trinity, 1905- ; Member of the R ensselaer ociety of Engineers: Connecticut Society of Civ" l Engineers, Association of Harvard Engineers. ~ :::.
18
Horace Cheney Swan, M.D. Professor of Physiology and of Physcil Training, Medical Director 196 Whitney Street M.D., Tufts College Medical School, 1903 ; B .P.E ., International Y. M. C. A. Coll ege. Instru ctor Histology, Harvard Summer School of Physical Edu cation, 1903-05 ; Director of Gymnasium, Wes leyan University, 1903-05; Medi cal Director and Director of Gymnasium, Trinity College, 1905- ; Member of Hartford Medica l Association, Connecticut Medical Association, Fellow American Medical Association, Society of Directo rs of Physi ca l Education in Coll eges, American Ph ys ical Education Society, American Pu bli c H eal th Association, Connecticut Public H ealth Associations, Member American Association for the Advan cement of Science. 1> 8 X.
The R ev. Arthur Adams, Ph.D . Professor of English and Librarian 73 Vernon Street B.A., Rutgers, 1902 ; M.A. , 1903 ; Ph.D. , Yale, 1905; B.D., Berkeley Di vinity School, 1910 ; S.T.M., Philadelphi a Di vinity School, 1916. Instru ctor in English at the niversity of Colorado, 1905-06 ; Assistant Professor at Trinity, 1906-08; Associate Professo r, 1908-ll ; Professor of English, 19ll-15; Professor of English a nd Librarian, 1915- ; Acting Professor of English at th e University of Maine, Summer Term, 1912. Member of the Modern Language Association of America and of the American Philologi cal Association . Author of Syntax of th e T emporal C/cwsc in Old English P rose, coll abo rator on the Gray and 'Yordsworth Concordances, author of notes and reviews in Jl odern Langu age Notes, and contributo r to various other periodica Is. 1> B K, t. 1>.
LeRoy Carr Barret, Ph.D. Professor of the Latin Language and L iterature 28 Brownell AY enue B.A., Washington and Lee l'niversily, 1897; M.A., 1898; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins l'niversity. 1903 . Instructor in Latin, Johns Hopkins, 1903-07: Preceptor in Classics, Princeton, 1907-09; Instructor, Dartmouth, 1909-10 ; Professor, Trin ity, 1910- ; Editor of Kashmirian .\tharna\'edaBooksl- , -. cf>BK, 2:AE .
19
Frederic Walton Carpenter, Ph.D. * J . P1"erpont Morgan Professor of Biology 1033 Farmington Avenue, West H a rtford B .S., New York nivers ity, 1899; A.M., Har vard, 1902 ; Ph .D ., H arvard , 1904 ; Studied also at th e niversities of Berlin a nd Munich. Instru ctor, associate 路and ass istant profes or of Zoology, U ni versity of Illinois, 1904-191 3; Director Bermuda Biological Station for R esea rch, sum mer of 1909 . F ell ow Am eri ca n Association for the Advanceme nt of Science; M e mber American ociety of Zoologi ts; American Association of An atomists; M e mber, Editorial Board of " Folia Neuro-Biologica,' " Amsterdam. Author of var iou papers on zoological sub jects . <I> B K, ~ :=:, Z \11 . *Died March I , 1925.
Stanley Leman Galpin, Ph.D. P rofessor of R omance Languages 902 Asylum Avenue B .A., Wes tern Reserve U niversity, 'OJ ; M.A ., Yale Un iversity, 1902; Ph .D., Yal e niversity, 1904. Was Un iversity F ellow of Yal e University, 1902-1904 . M ember of the Modern Langu age Association of Am eri ca and of the New England Mod ern La nguage Associntion. Appointed Instructor in th e Romance Lan guages a nd Latin at Amherst Co ll ege, 1904 ; Instru cto r in the Roman ce La nguages, 1906 ; Associate Professor of R omnnce Languages, 1908191 3. Professor of R omance Languages, Trini ty Co ll ege, 1913- . <I>BK, llT.
Edward Frank Humphrey, Ph.D. 1\'orthmn Professor of H istory and Political Science 333 Washin gton Street B.A. , niversity of Minnesota, 1903; M.A., Columbi a niversity, 1908 ; Graduate Student l'Ecole pratique des Hautes-Etudes, U niversity of Paris, 1910-11 ; Ph .D ., Co lumbi a Unive rsity, 191 2. Instructor, Co lumbi a niversity, 1911-1 5; Northam Professor of History a nd P oliti cal Scie nce, Trinity Coll ege, 1915-: Author " Politics anc! Religion in the days of Augustine." <I>BK, ~AE .
20
Od ell Shepard, Ph .D . J ames J . Goodwin Professor of English L iterature 14-15 Seabury Hall B .A., niversity -of Ch icago, 1907, Ph.M., 1908 ; Ph .D ., H arvard ni vers ity, 1916. T eacher of English, Smith Academy, St. Louis, 1908-09 ; Assistant Professor of English, Univers ity of Southern Ca li fornia, 1909-10 ; Professor of Engl ish , U niversity of So uth ern Californi a, 1910-1914: Instr uctor in English, H arva rd U niversity, 1916-1 7; Professor, Trini ty Co ll ege, 1917. Author of " A Lonely Flute·• and of "Shal.-espeare Qu esti ons. A Study of the Chief Pletys." Contributor to various litera1·y a nd learned journa ls. !:. '1' !:. , ew.
Haroutune Mugurdich D adou ri an , Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics Seabury Hall Ph.B., 1903, M .A., 1905, Ph .D ., 1906, Yale University: Loomis Fellow in Ph ysics, 1903-05. Ass istant in Physics, 1905-06; Ins tru ctor in Sheffield Scie ntifi c School, and Lecturer at Graduate School of Ya le, 1906-17; Aeronautical Engineer U.S. Government, 1917-18; Associate Professor of Physics, Trini ty, 1919-. F ellow Ameri can Physical Society; Member Ameri can Mathematical Society, Ameri ca n Association for the Advan ce ment of Science. Author of Analyticetl M echanics and Graphic Statics. Co ntribu tor of pa pers on radioactivity, x-rays, radi o-elect'r icity, electrons, so und rangin g, elasti city, and dy na 1nics. ~ 2.
Edward Liffingwell Troxell, Ph.D . Assistant Professor of Geology New Haven, Conn. B.A., Xorlhwestern University, 1908, M.A. , 1911 ; Ph.D. , Yale, 1914. Instru ctor l'niversity of Michigan, 1914 . Commissioned Captain Infantry, 1917; one year in France: student for four months at the Sorbonne Univers ity, Paris; Research Associate in Vertebrate Paliontology, Yale, 1919: Assistant Professor of Geology and Ph ysiography, Trinity College, 1920. Has carried on exploration in the West several seasons, and has published several papers in the American Journetl of Science, 8cient~fic Monthly , and Bulletin of the Geological Society. Member Paleo nlhol ogical Society, Hooks and Bond . l: :=:.
21
Vernon K. Krieble, Ph.D. Scoville Professor of Chemistry 71 Vemon Street Ph.B., Brown, 1907; M.Sc., McGill University, 1909 ; Ph.D., 1913; Demonstrator and Lecturer in Chemistry, McGill, 1907-14; Assistant Professor in Chemistry, 191420; Scoville Professor of Chemistry at Trinity, 1920-. Member of the American Chemical Society, Am eri ca n Association for the Advancement of Science. Contributor to the Journal of Che1m:cal Society, (London ), Journal of American Chemical Society, Journal of Biological Chemistry. Winner of Can. Gov. General's Medal for Scientific Research at McGill for 1912. il> BK, ~ ::;;.
Morse Shepard Allen Assistant Professor of English Literature Jarvis Hall B.A., Wesleyan, 1912; M.A ., 1913; M.A. , Columbi a, 1913; Oxford University, 1913-14; Ph.D., Prin ceto n, 1920. Taught at Ohio Wesleyan University,路 1914-17; 1918-20; Adelphia College, summer of 1916; Assistant Professor, Trinity, 1920-. Author of Th e Satire of John Marsden, 1920.
Harry Todd Costello, Ph.D. Brownell Professor of Philosophy 36 J a rvi s H all B.A., Earlham Co ll ege, 1908; l\I.A. , Harvard, 1910; Ph.D., Harvard, 1911; Sheld on Research Fellow (Harvard) at the Unive r ity of Paris, 1911-12; Instructor at Harvard, 191 2-14; Instructor at Yale, 1914-15; Instructor and Lecturer directing res.earch at Columbia, 1915-20; Special Instructor at Co ll ege of the City of New York, 1919-20; Professor at Trinity, 1920-. Member of American Philosophical Association ; American Association for the Advancem ent of Science. Contributor to the Journal of Philosophy and other phi losophical journals.
22
Paul Stephen Parsons, M.A. Instructor in French and English 12 Seabury Hall A.B., Trinity, 1920. M.A ., Trinity 1923. Taught French, Wes t Hartford High choo l, 1920-21. Instru cto r, Trinity, 1921-. iF T .
John Austin Spauldin g, Ph.D. Professor of Germanic Languages 73 Catherine Street B.A. , M.A., Ph.D., Harva rd . Attended U nivers iti es of Muni ch a nd Freiburg, in Germany. Author of "Lower Jfiddle Class in Tiecks Writings," publish ed in J ourn a l for English and Germ a ni c Philology. Tau ght in Worces ter T ech ., University of New Brunswick, and Yal e niversity. Member of Association of Ameri can University Professors; Boston H ar vard Club. <I>BK, <I>~K.
Fredrick James H yland Burkett, M.A. Assistant Professor of Mathematics 28 Brownell Avenue B.A., Xew York Cniversity, 1917 ; M.A., University of Pittsburg, 1921; Graduate \York University of Chicago, 1923; fember oÂŁ the Mathematical Association of Ameri ca, and American Mathemati cs Association.
23
Loui: IIa:tin gs Nay lor, Ph.D. I nslructor in R omance Language.~ 79. Farmington A venue A.B. , Johns H opkins, 1917 ; M .A., J ohn s Hopkins. 1922; Ph.D ., J ohn Hopkins, 1923. T aught Latin and French in th e St. J a mes Sc hoo l, Washin gto n Co., Md. ; A ward ed fell ows hip for st ud y und er the Belgium R elief Co mmi ssion Edu ca tional Foundatio n; Studied at Un ivers ity of Li ege. <Iâ&#x20AC;˘BK.
Sterling Bishop Smith, M.S. I nstructor in Chemistry 16 Seabury Hall Ph.B. , Yal e, 1920 ; M. S., Ya le, 1923 : L abomtory Assistant Ya le, 1920-23 . Author of "Equilibrium in the System, Sodium Phtha late, Sodium Sulphate, a nd Water '' ; T eacher of C he mistry at Hill yer Institute, Hartford ; Am eri ca n C hemistry Society.
Arthur P ehr Robert Wadlund , M.S. Assistant Professor of Physics 1087 Boulevard, '\Vest Hartford, Conn . B .S., Trini ty, 191 7; M.S. , Trinity, 1922. 1917-1919 served in l01st Machin e Gun Battalion, 26th Division U. S. A. Member of Amer ica n Physical Society; America n Society for . tee! Treatin g; H a rtford Engineers' Club. c:t>BK, A TK .
24
.,
I
J ohn Edward F ogleson g, Ph .D. Assistant P rof essor of Chemistry 23 Brownell Avenue A.B ., Wabash Coll ege, 1910 ; M . A., Ohio Sta te Uni ve rsity, 1912; Ph.D. , U ni vers ity of Cornell, 1919 ; Co m mercial C he mi st, 1912-16; Instru ctor of C he mi stry a t Cornell , 1916-19 ; Ass ista nt Professor of Che mi stry at Uni ve rsity of t he So uth , 1921-23: Ass is ta nt Professo r, Trini ty, 1923-. Ameri ca n C he mi s try Society, a nd Associa ti on of Coll ege P rofessors. ~ \11, A X E, 8 A.
Arthur Va n Riper Tilton Instructor in Drawing and A ssistant Administration O.O'icer Ledyard R oa d, West H artford B .. , Trinity, 1921; Exec u tive Secreta ry of Centenni a l Fund . D. <1> .
Trin ity
Philip H olmes I nstmctor in German Seabury Hall A.B., Harvard, 1924. T a ught Spanish a nd F rench, Everett High School. Associated with Professor G. P . Baker's "'47 Workshop" al Harvard . Studied in Fra nce and England.
25
Ralph Warren Storrs, 1.D. Instructor in Physiology and Hygiene 24 1 Laurel Street B.S., Trinity, 1917; M.D., Harvard, 1920; Instructor in Biology at Triuity, 1923-1924; Graduate of Su rgi cal ervice of Boston City Hospital; Graduate of Boston Lying-in Hospital; Contrib ut01路 to Boston Surgical and Medical Journal. Member of Hartford Medical Association: Connecticut 1edical Associaliou; Fellow American Medical Association ; Member Boylston Medi ca l Society of Harvard.
Paul A. Becker Coach of Football and Baseball and Instructor w Physical Training 63 Allendale Road B.S., Xebraska State Teachers College, niversity of III. High School Coach, Maryville, Missouri; l\orfolk, ' ebraska; Paris, Ill.; Rockwell City, Iowa; and Denfield High School, Duluth, 1inn .
Stanley Howard Leeke Director in Physical Training 3 Jarvi s Hall B.S., Trinity, 1920: Studied at the ' niversity of Paris; Playgro und Recreation Assi tant for two years; Graduate Manager of Athletics, Dunkirk, N. Y ., and ~orth East Harbor, Me. /1 <1>.
26
Ray Oosting Coach of Track and Basketball and Instructor of Physical Training J arvis H a ll B.P.E., Springfield College.
George McLean H arper, Jr . Instructor in Latin J arv is H all A.B., Prin ceton, 1920; A.M. , Prin ceto n, 1920. Stt~died at Harvard, and Cambridge, En g. Member of Gateway Club at Prin ceton .
George R oss Wells 45 Church Street, Wether fi eld B.A. , M e Ja ster l"nion; A.l\1., Harvard; Ph.D. , John s Hopkins; In stru ctor and Associate Profe sor at Oberlin College, 191'l-17 ; Professor at Ohio \\'esleyan , 1917-20; Professor al Hartford Semina ry Foundation, 1920- ; lnstru<.tor at Trinity and Wesleyan Cniversity. Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science; I e mber of A rnerican Psychology Associ a ti on. Author of Yo11llt and th e Open Door ; Articl es. ~X.
27
0
Edgar Francis Wa term a n, M.A., LL.B. Treasurer 路w illi a ms Memorial B.A. , Trinity, 1898; M .A., 190 1; LL.B. , Colum bia, 1901. \]IT .
28
~en tors
. President Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer
Nils August Anderson Samuel Wil cox Harry McNiff
't!l:rinitp 't!l:erm . Pres ideut Vice- P resident Sec retary-Treasurer
Alfred Pieker David Hadlow Robert Heal ey
29
John Willi am Ainley
Westwood, N.J.
Chairman So ph omore H op Committee ; Senate Finance Committee (2, 3) ; Sub-Freshman Week-end Committee (2, 3); Interfraternity Council (3); Delegate to Interfraternity Council 1923; As istant Manager Baseball (3) ; Sopho more Di ning Club ; AX P.
N ils August Charles Ander on
H artford , Conn .
Football (2) ; Coach l''reshman (3); Track (2) ; Glee Club ; Political Science Club ; C hoi r (3); J un ior Prom Committee; President of Cia s (4); AX P.
Y\'illiam King Applebaugh Junior Prom Committee;
30
D anville, Pa. 11 <1>.
Ed ward Wilson A Yerill
Fond du Lac, Wis.
Cod man Scholar; A 1.\ <I>.
Lewis Hall Bartlett
Freeport, L. I.
Transferred from Union (2); Tripod Board (3); Junior Prom Committee; Sub-Freshman Week-end Committee (3); Varsity Cheerleader (3); Chairman of Senior Prom ; AI.\ <I>.
Alfred Knightly Birch
Meriden, Conn.
Class Tmck (2); \'a rsi ty Track (2); Captain (3) ; Eastern lntercollegiale Track and l<ield M eet, 1923; l:N.
31
Thomas A. Ca ey
Waterbury, Con n.
Glee Club (1, 2, 3) ; P oliti ca l Science Club; French Club ; Coll ege Orchestra; 2: .
Martin M a mice Coll etta
Hartford Conn.
Glee Club (2, 3).
Francis Joseph Cronin
Xew Haven, Conn.
Football (2, 3); Drop Ki cking Pri ze (1) ; Basketball Squad (2, 3); Baseba ll (2, 3); Juni or Prom Committee; KB<I>.
32
Henry Joseph Feeley
E. Hartford. Conn.
Track Sq uad; ATK .
New York Cit~r
Samuel Spender Fishzohn
IvY Board (3); Tripod Board (3); Poli li ca l Science
John Berry Gallaudet
Iub.
Phila delphia P a.
Transferred Junior Year路 from Willi ams;
Z'it.
33
Isidore Stolper Geeter
Hartford, Conn.
D ebating Club ; Glee Club; Holder of Frank Whitlock Prize in Public Speaking; Chairman Biological Seminar (4).
David Moore Hadlow
Geneva, N. Y.
Assistant Manager Baseball (2); Manager (3) ; Chairman Junior Prom Committee ; Political Science Club; Se nate; Union Committee (2) ; Vi ce-President Class (4); Junior Smoker Committee ; K B <1>, A D.<!>.
Robert Marshall Healey
H artfo rd, Conn
Secretary-Treasurer Class (1) ; Track (1. 2) ; Freshman Rules Committee; President French Clu b; Junior Prom Co.mmittee; Senate (3, 4) ; Chairm an t:nion Committee (3) ; Class ecretary (4); Senior Prom Committee (..J.) ; Class Day 路ominating Committee (4) ; ATK.
34
George Arnold Hives Transferred from
Detroit, fieh.
niversity of Mi chi ga n; K B <1>, 'Ji T.
Walter Patrick Jenning
Bristol, Conn.
KB<J>.
Marius Pitkin Johnson
H a rtford , Conn .
l?res hman-Juni or l3 anquel Committee; Freshman Rules Committee; Secreta ry-Treas urer C lass (2) ; Track (1, 2); Captain (3); Glee C lub (3) ; Football (2, 3) ; Secretary Athl eti c Association; IvY Board; Senate (3); Sophomore Dining Club; ~ .
3:)
Theodore Winslow Jones
P erth Amboy, N. J.
Footba ll (1, 2, 3) ; Assistant Manager Basketball (2), M a nager (3); op homore H op Comm ittee; Juni or Prom Com mittee ; Uni on Committee ; Class Vi cePresident (3); Interfraterni ty Council ; P oliti cal Scie nce Club (3); IVY Boa rd (3) ; Soph omore Dining Club ; Junior Smoker Co mmitlee ; Se ni or Pro m Comm ittee; Sen ale (4); Athletic Advisory Co un cil (3); K B iJ>, 'l! T.
Duncan Day K ennedy
Hartford, Conn.
Tra nsferred fr om Storrs Coll ege in Sophom ore Year; Baseba ll Sq uad; Class Baseball ; College Orchestra; AXP .
Edward Bernard Le Winn Glee Club .
36
H artford , Conn.
Moses David Lischner Glee Club; Freshman Baseball; Class Basketball.
George Malcolm-Smith
H artford , Conn. Baskethall (2, 3) ;
Haverhill, Mass.
Freshman-Jun ior Banquet Committee; Sub-Freshman Show (1, 2); Managing Editor Tripod (2), Editor-inChief (3); President Class (2) ; Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Discipline Committee (3) : Senate (3) : Sophomore Smoker Committee (2); KBcf>,
cf>T~.
Leon Alverden Mansur
E . Hartford, Conn.
Glee Club (2, 3); Jesters (3, 4).
37
Israel Meran ki
Hartford , Conn.
Glee Club.
William Holman Merchant, Jr.
Carlsbad, N. M.
Sophomore Ilop Committee; Assistant Manager Basketball and Track (2) ; Basketball Squad; Football Squad; Track Squad ; President Class (3) ; Union Committee (3) ; AX P.
D av id Miller Football (2, 3) .
38
Hartford, Conn.
Richard B. Ioble
Hartford, Conn.
Freshman Football; Varsity (2, 4); Captai n-elect (5); Track (1); Pres id ent Class (2); Senate (4); Pre id ent Student Bod y (4); Athletic Advisory Co un cil; Sophomore Dinin g Club ; P oliti ca l Science Club ; Basketball Squad (2) ; <I>rA, KB<f>.
Portland
Richard James O'Brien
B asketball Squad (2, 3); Track Squad (2); Football (3); Class Vice-President (2); Presid ent (3); K B<l'.
Alfred Louis Peiker
West Orange, N .J.
Auxiliary B oard Tripod (2); C hoir (1, 2); Football (3) ; Man ager Elect (4); Basketball (2, 3); Char le F. Daniel" s Scholar (2); Track Squad (1, 2); Class Secretary-T1路easurer (3); Sophomore Dining Club ; President Class (4); M edusa; ~ .
39
1\feriden, Conn .
Antoni o Leo Ri cc i P oliti ca l Science Clu h; Fr¡e nch Cluh .
Thomas Shannon Freshm a n Rul es Co mmit tee; Science Clu b; !:> \]1.
H enry Taylor Stone
Hartford, Conn. Glee Clu b;
P oli t ical
Hartford , Conn.
Pres ident Class (1); Freshm a n-Juni or Ba nque t Co mmittee; Fres hm a n Rul es Co mmittee; P oliti ca l Science Club ; Ass ista nt M a nager T rack (2, 3), M a nager (~); T enni s; Business M a nager T ripod; L ni on Co m mittee; Presid en t Glee Club ; Se nate (3); Choir ; Business M a nage r h 'Y; â&#x20AC;˘ eni or Prom Com mittee; \'a rsity . ong L ea d e r ( ~ );
A ..l. <1>.
40
George Edward Tat e
Willi a m Spender T errell
Fr:mklin , Conn.
Wallin gfot路d, Conn.
Freshma n-Juni or Ba nqu et Co mmittee ; So ph o m ore S moker Co mmittee; S ub-Fres hman 路wee k-e nd Co mmittee; C lass Pres id e nt (1, 3) ; C ha irm a n Juni or Pro m; Seni or M e mber Discip lin e Co mmittee; F ootba ll (3) ; Cap ta in (4) : Pres ide nt , t ud en t Body: M edusa: K B<l>, <t>
r "路
Nels M artin Valerius
H artford , Conn.
Football (3) : Class Track (1) ; Footba ll (4) : . enate (4) : H oll a nd Scholar (4) .
41
Ho,vard Reynolds Washburn
Hartford, Conn.
Transfer-red from Bates College rn Senior year.
Julius Weiner
Samuel Churchill Wilcox
H artford, Conn.
Berlin, Conn.
Football (2): Vice-President Class (2) ; Sophomore Hop Comm ittee; Track (1) ; Political Science Club; Debating Club; lvy Board ; Sophomore Dining Club ; President Co ll ege Body (4); President Senate (4); Discipline Committee (4); Class Vi ce-President (4); Football (4); Tripod Board (4); Union Co mmittee (4); Member Athle ti c Advisory Committee; M edusa ; 6\](.
42
Philip Otis Zwi ssler
N e \Y York , N . Y .
Editor-in- C hief '25 I VY; Varsity Cheerleader (3) ; Glee Club (3); Se na te (2, 3); Interfra ternity Co un <' il (2, 3) ; U ni o n Co mmittee (2); Politica l Scie nce Club (2, 3); Ch a irm a n Fres hm a n Rul es Committee; Fres hm a nJuni or B anqu e t Co mmittee; Sub-Freshma n Wee k-end Committee ; Juni or S moker Committee; J es ters (3); Busin ess Manage r of J es ters (4); Pres id ent of P oliti cal Science Club (4); Se ni or路 Pro m Co mmittee; 6. KE.
43
3Junior.s (tl:Iass
~fficers
~bristmas
m:erm
or man Cli fford Pitcher Geor ge Thoms Adrian Rola nd Avita ble
. President Vice-P resident . Secretary 'Ql:rin itp
R eginald Ne"路sholm c J a mes K eena David Loeffl er
m:erm . President V ice- President . Secretary
44
Adri an Rol a nd Avita bl e
Brooklyn , N.Y.
F resh ma n F ootball ; Va rsity F ootba ll {2, 3) : \'a rsity T enn is (1, 2) ; Ba eba ll {2) ; Vi ce-Pres ide nt of Class {1); Secretary (2) ; A X P.
R alph Arthur Behrend
H artford , Conn
Tra nsferred fr om Tufts Co ll ege in Juni or yea r .
J ames B . Burr
Balt ic, Conn.
Fres hma n Foolball : Varsity Foo t ball (2) ; Baske tba ll (1, 2, 3) ; Baseball (2) ; Track (1, 2) ; Sop homore H op Co mmittee : So ph omore Din ing Cluh ; P olitical Science Club ; ~N.
45
Charles Bannister Cook
West Hartford, Conn.
A sis tant Manager Baseball (2); P oliti cal Science Club (2, 3) ; 1926 I VY B oard ; At.<!>.
Philip Curtiss Fenn
Hartford, Conn.
t. <!>.
Richard Strong Foxwell ~<!>.
46
Camden, lVIc.
Joseph Glotzer
Hartford, Conn.
Glee Club (2, 3).
Hany W. Green
Detroit, Mich .
Transferred rrom Detroit City College; .Jvy Board; \liT, KB<t>.
George Morgan Han"lilton Football
Hartford , Conn.
quad (2, 3); Basketball Squad (2).
47
Fred G. Hi cks
D etroit, licit
Tran ferred from University of Michigan Junior year; Choir (3); French Club (3); '1! T.
Ri c-hard A. Hicks
D etroit, Mich .
Transferred from D etroit Co ll ege in Sophomore year; Glee Club (2); .Jesters (3) ; "The Dover R oad"; Managing Editor of Tri7Jod (3) ; Edilor of Tri]JOd for three weeks ; K B <P, '1! T .
Perry T. Hough 路 l 1 nion
Hartford, Conn.
Committee (2): Junior Pr路om Committee; M anager of Basketba ll (3); Freshman Hul es Commillee ~
.
48
Stimpso n Hubba rd
Brookl,vn , N.Y.
Freshman-Juni or Banquet; G lee Club ( l. 2) : French Club (2); tage Manager of J esters (2, 3); Assistant Manager of Track (3): Junior Member of Disciplin e Committee (3); Political Science Club : So ph omo re H op Committee: Juni or Prom Committee; Editor-inChief of 1926 I vY; 6.KE.
George P . Jack on
Yonkers, N.Y.
Freshman Rul es Committee: Junior Prom Committee; C lass Secretary (2, 3): lvY Board (3) ; Junior Varsity Bas ketball (2); Tripod Board (1, 2); A X P .
.James \V . K eena
Hartford , Conn.
J?reshman Football: G lee Clu b (1, 2): French Club (2) : Political Science Club (2, 3) ; Sophomore Hop Committee; \'arsity Basketball (3); \'i ce-Pres ident of Class (3); A X P.
49
David Stewart Loeffler路
Lakewood, Ohio
Basketball quad (3); Ba eball (1, 3) ; Gl ee Club (2, 3); Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; ophomore Hop Committee; Senate (3); 1926 IVY Board; Political Science Club; KB<I>, At:. <I>.
Nicholas W. Manocchio
Hartford , Conn.
Produ ction Manager of J esters (1, 2, 3) ; FreshmanJunior Banquet Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Ivy Board ; Track Squad (1, 2, 3) ; Political Scien ce Club ; Gl ee Club (1, 2); t:.KE.
Alexander F. McBurney
La Grange, Ill.
Assistant Manager I<ootbaU (3) ; Varsity Track Team (1, 2, 3) ; Junior Varsity Basketball (2, 3) ; Freshman Football; Treasurer of French Club (3); A X P.
50
Jarvis Meirs
Philadelphia, Pa.
Transferred from J>rincelon m Junior year; (3); ~ iJ!.
Harold ". Messer
Senate
East Haddam, Conn.
Freshman Cross-Country Team; Glee Club (1, 3); Librarian of Glee Club (3) ; Political Science Clu b (2, 3); Chapel Monitor (2, 3); S. P . ocicty; AX P.
Reginald H. Iewsholme
New York,
J.
Baseball (1, 2, 3); Captain (3) ; Basketball (2, 3); Sophomore Dining Club ; en ale (2, 3); Sophomore Hop Committee; Political Science Club ; ~ <1> .
51
Y.
Willi am Nicol, Jr.
Hartford. Con n.
T enn is (1, 2, 3) ; Captain (2, 3) ; Senate (3) ; Basketball Squad (2); AXP.
H erbert J. Noble
Hartford, Conn.
Class Football (1) ; Track Squad (1) ; Vice-President Class (2) ; 路 Sophomo re Dining Club ; A 6 il>.
Rob ert J. O'Shea Ba sketba ll Sq ua d (1, 2) .
52
Hartford, Conn.
Milton Francis Pt>llet Tra ck (2);
~
Hartford , Conn .
.
Norman B . Pitcher
Moorestown, N ..J.
Fresh man Football : Varsity Football (2); Glee Club (1, 2); Politi cal Science Club ; Class Presiden t (2); U nion Committee (2): Sophomore Dining Club ; S. P . Society: AXP.
Francis J. Pryor, III
Philadelphia , P a.
Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee (1); Freshman F ootba ll ; Varsity Football (2, 3); P oli t ical Science Club ; President of Sop homore Dinin g Club; Jun ior Prom Cha irman ; Sub-Fresh man Wee k-end Committee; Sophomore H op Co mmitt ee; Se nate Finance Committee (2, 3) : -'..iV .
53
Walter J . Riley
P alisade P ark, N. J .
Freshm a n F ootba ll ; Va rsity (2, 3) ; Jun io r Va rsity Bas ke tball Capta in (2); Basketball Sq uad (I , 3) ; F res hma n Juni or Ba nq uet; Class P re iden t (2); Soph o more H op Co mmi ttee ; Soph omore Di ning Club ; P oli t ica l Science Club ; French Club ; ~ .
Morri s M. Rois ma n
H artford , Conn.
H oll a nd Scholar (2) .
Geoi路ge P. Sampers
Yonkers, N.Y.
Baseba ll (2, 3) ; Bas ke tba ll (2, 3) ; F oo tba ll (3) ; Secreta ry of Athl e ti c Associa ti on (3) : French Clu b ; P oliti ca l Science Club ; K B <1', 6 K E.
54
1
Robert W. Sheehan
Wallingford, Conn.
Freshmen Rules Committee; Ba seball ( I ); \'arsity Basketball (2 ); K B <I>.
Merrill B. Sherman
Hartford, Conn.
Jesters (2); Pres ide nt Jesters (3); Choir (2, 3); Glee Club (2); Senate (3); Politi cal Science Club (2, 3); Latin Club; D. <I>.
Thomas Dale Stewart
New Kennsington, Pa.
KB<l>, 'ItT.
â&#x20AC;˘
55
Kenneth W. Steur
M ethuen, 1\Jass.
Politica l Science Cluh ; Fre nch Club: Juni or· Pr·o m Committee: }'reshman Football: Bas ketball Squad (1. 2) ; Cla ss Vi ce- Pr·esid e nt (3) : So ph o more H op Committee.
Ri chard Babcock Talcott
Hartford, Conn.
Tr·ansfe rred from Norwi ch Un ivers ity in So ph o more yeal': lee Club (2) ; P oliti ca l cience Club (2, 3) : Tripod Board (2) ; Busin ess Manager· (3) ; Juni or Prom Co mmittee: Jyy Board (2); Business Manager of 192G I VY ; K B <1>, At. <1>.
Adolf Mich ael Taute
Hartford , Conn .
•
56
J
George Thoms
Brooklyn, N . Y .
Class Yi ce-Presi de nt (2) : Junior Varsitv Basketball (3) ; Baseball Squad (3) ; Assistant M a n; ger Base hall (3) ; K B<l>, \jl T.
Harold E. Traver
Middletown, C'onn
Glee Club (2).
Howard W. Tule
H a rtford, Conn .
Transferred from Worcester Tech in Sophomore year: P olitical Science Clu b; 6 <1> .
;37
John Williams, Jr.
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Cia s President (1, 3); Clas Secretary (1); FreshmanJunior Banquet Committee; Choir (I , 2, 3); Glee Club (1); Sophomore Hop Co mmittee; Track (2); Secretary of Politi cal Science Club (3); J esters (2, 3); Union Committee (3); IVY Board (3) ; Junior Prom Committee (3); Tripod Board (2, 3); \[1 T.
'Qi:be 3Jbp jSoarlJ regrets tbat it was unable to obtain pictures of tbe following men: 1925 Albert Cooke Bill , Jr. Ralph Merril Clark Morris Greenbaum Samuel Koplowitz Marshall Max Lieber Douglas Seymour Peny I adore I. Pollock Nicholas Samponaro James Victor Sorocco William James Tate Willard Barber
Wethersfield, Hartford, H a rtford, Hartford, Hartford, New Haven, Hartford, Hartford, Hartford, Franklin, Hartford,
Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn.
1926 Joseph J. Connor, A TK Joseph N. D'Esopo Rocco D'Esopo . Richard I . Ford, f1 <I> Lloyd Gamble . Charles J ainchill . Herman Katz John Leo Linnon, A TK . Frederick W. Leesemann, 'll T Robert S. Lindsay Everett B. Merriam . Morton Herman Chapnick Wilbert W. Nyline Morris Max Roisman . Francis R. Shields, f1 K E Harry Elishe Wallad
Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. . D etroit, Mich. East Hartford, Conn. Waterbury, Conn. South Manchester, Conn. Danbury, Conn. Hartford, Conn. I ew Medford, Mass. Hartford, Conn. 58
I
~opbomorcs
I路
ctelass <!&fficers Ql:bristmas m:erm J ames Mi chael Cahill . Willi am J oseph Schuyler Fredrick John Eberl e
. P resident Vice-P resident . Secretary
m:rinitp m:erm Wales Di xo n J oseph Elmendorf R oger H ar tt
. President Vice- President . Secretary
59
I
Scott H. Adams, ...l <P Joseph T. Bas hoUI· Stanley L. Bell, A 6 <P
~opbomore1) Ocean City, N. J . Hartford, Conn. R ochester, r. Y. New York, N. Y. . Newark, N . .J. Wa shington, C'onn. Hartford , Conn . New Haven, Co nn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. West Hartford, Conn . Mar hall, Mich. Hartford, Conn. Hack ensack, N. J . New York, N. Y. . Trenton, . J . H a1·tfor·d , Conn. H a r·tford, on n. Brookly n, N. Y. H ar tford, Conn. Soqth Port, Conn. Wilkes-bane, P a. Ha rtford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Brookly n, 1 . Y. ~ ew London , Conn. H artford, Co nn. H a r·tford , Conn. H a rtford , Con n. Brooklyn, r. Y. Sil ve1· Lane, Conn. Brunsid e, Conn. New Brita in, Co nn .
Frank P . Bloodgood, Jr., 6J< E D av id E._Br·own, 6 <!> Putnam H . Browne, 61\ E Jam es M. Cahill , A X P Alfred Celentano, A 'I' K Fra ncis E. Conran William Dampsky Lee M. De Lude Lawrence Dickey, 6 cJ> Fredrick J. Eberl e, 6 '1f Joseph B. Elm endorf, 6 <P Win ston S. Fliess, 6 K E Andrew H . Forreste r, A X P H arold W. Gale . George C. Glass, Jr., ~ N George C. H am lin , '1fT Roger W . Hartt, l:N P a ul H . H etzel, A X P . Robert W. Hildebrand, A 6 <J> Charles Jaincl1i ll . Herman J. Katz . Willard G. Keller, Jr. , Ll <!> Philip M. Kenidge, Jr., A 6 <P Wendall H. Langdon , Ll '1f J osepl1 .J. I.ut in Richa rd A. M cC'urdy, 1\ 'I' K George B. M eade, 6 '1f Herbert S. Mine1· Carl H . Muller James l V. Nell
60
I
Samuel R avich Winthrop H. Segur, .2:N Howard W . malley. tJ. K E Charles M. Stewart. tJ. I< E William A. Towill , tJ. c:J> Dana R. Varney, \[1 T
Hartford, H artford, Brooklyn, Sprin gfield , Brookl yn, . D etroit,
61
Conn. Conn. N.Y. Mass.
N.Y. Miclt
Walter E berle Wh itaker D udley H olcomb B urr T homas F rancis D aly
(!tbri.s'tma~ ~erm
President Vice-President Secretary 0
0
0
Charles J ackson William Orrick Roy Gade
~rinitp ~erm
President V 1oce-President Secretary 0
0
0
62
jfrtsbmtn Thomas P. Aitkin, ~ Irving S. Alford . Harry S. Apter Berry 0. Baldwin, At:,. <l> John T. Barrett, A TK Sherman J. Beers, t:,. <l> Roy den Berger, 1: N Ed ward S. Bu.nn . Dudley H. Burr, ~N Ronald Condon, t:,. <l> William G. Crain, t:,. '1! Frederi ck E . Creamer, t:,. '1! Thomas F. Daly, A TK Kenneth E. Dau.ghn Russell E. Davis . Oswin H. Doolittle John J. Downey, A TK Walter E. Ebersold, A X P William M. Ellis, t:,. '1! William Even, At:,. <l> J ack T . Farris, t:,. <l> John C . .FitzGerald Roy A. Gade, '1! n John J . Gaffney . Robert F. Gibson, Jr., t:,.\]! Howard M. Goodhue, ~ John H. Gordon, A X P Daniel Gotkiss Robert W. Gray, Jr. , t:,.K E l\Iorris Green Alexander Gregorieff George Gregorieff Edwin M. Griswold, A X P J~ mes M. Hartley, '1! T Charles G. Jackson, A X P Edwin J. Johnson
:M anchester, Conn. Stottville, N. Y. Newington, C'onn. 'Vynnewood, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Lanesboro, 1\1a s. Thompso nv11l e, Conn. Bum ~ ide , onn. Baltic, Conn . Brooklyn, N.Y. Washington, D. C. Willi a msport, P a. H artford, Conn. H artford , Conn. Hartford, Conn. 路w ethersfi eld, Conn. Hartford, Conn. H artford, Conn. ietuchen, N. J. New York, N.Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Iew Haven, Conn . Perth Amboy, N. J . Sey mour, Conn. Montclair r. J . New H aven, Conn. H a rtford , Conn. H a rtford, Conn. H artford. Conn. H artford, Conn. New York, N.Y. New York, r. Y. Hartford, Conn. Wortendyke, N.J. Yonkers, N.Y. Hartford, Conn.
63
William F. Judge, /:::,. iP . . \.braham Katz Raymond Kennedy, AT K Norbit B. Lacy, A TK John E. Large, \]iT Ed gar F. Law, t:..l< E James E. Leavitt, At:.. <I> Elmar F . Ligety . Louis Lipkowitz . George Y. Loeser . John ". Lonsdale. /: :,. \(i James C. 路Malone, ~N . Millard F. Manning Nicholas A. J\1astronade Harry Meier John A. Mills Henry A. Moses, Jr., A/:::,. iP William W. Niles, '!' T . William D. Orr William P. Orrick, /:::,. \]t Arthur D. Platt, /:::,. iP Philip F. Reisler . P aul A.. Romanov Harold .J. Rome . William Rosenfeld Louis J. Rulnick . George R. Salisky, A X P Edward J. Salmonsen Louis H. Small, Jr., 2: Charles Solms, t:.. <J> Jonathan K. Sterling, f:,.\]i John J. Stevens, Jr. William B. Stewart, 3rd \]i T Frank R. Tarkany, Jr .. Theodore L. Thomas, t:.. <J> Milton P. Thomson, 1:N Harry Tulin Eric B. Valerius .
Mattapan , Mass. Hartford, Conn . Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Merrick, N.Y. )ilew York, . Y. New York, N.Y. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Ne'v York , N.Y. Hartford, Conn. Y&ntic, Conn. Hartford, Conn. . Wilson, Conn. Philadelphia, Pa. Merchantville, N.J .. Nashua, N.H. Newton Center, Mas. Washington, D. C. Manila, P. I. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford , Conn. Farmington, Conn. Hartford. Conn. . Queens, N. Y. Washington, D . C. Hartford , Conn. )/"ew York, N.Y. Hartford, Conn. Lenoir, N. C. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. West Hartford, Conn. 64 /
Bridgeport, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Shelton, Conn. New York, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Glen Ellyn, Ill.
Henry B. VanGie on, J r., 'liT Robert I. Walter . George T. Ward, ~ Donald C. Webster, t. K E Walter E. W hitaker, ~N ,John M. Young, .Jr., 'l]i T
jl}on=Jlatriculateb
~tubents Pou.ghkeep ie, N. Y. H artford, Conn. H artford, Conn. . Quincy, Mass. H artford, Conn. Brooklyn, N .Y. Hartford, Conn. H artford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. H a rtford, Conn. Hartford, Conn . Hartford, Conn.
Henry Mandev ille Bartlett l\Iorris Nathan Cohen . Willard Bunce Cowles . William Harold Deacon Alfred Clinton Gammons William Hamilton Gregory Everett James Hi<'key John Patrick Hickey Edwin Joseph Nugent Morris P erkel Gordon H erbert Sunbury Thomas Stephen T yszka
65
~rabuatt ~tubtnts Manchester Green, Conn.
William Edward Buckley B . A. , Yale, 1913
Hartford , Conn.
Wheeler Hawley, Russell Fell ow B.A ., 1924
Middletown, Conn.
George H. Hines . B.A ., Wesleyan, 1918
Northampton, fa ss.
Everett W . Lovering B .S., 1922, Mass. Agricultural College
Hartford, Conn.
Francis L. Lundborg B .. , 1924
Hartford, Conn.
James G. McNa ll y B.S., 1924
Hartford, Conn.
I saac L . Newell B .S., 1924
Lebanon, Ohio
Howard W. Orr B .A., 1923, Wilmjngton College
Hartford, Conn.
Benjam in F. Poriss B .S., 1924
West Hartford , Conn.
Joshua L. Robbin B .S., 1906, \Vt>sleyan
Hartford, Conn.
Robert V. Sinnott B.S., 1923
Hartford , Conn.
Arthur V. Ti lton . B .S., 1921
Bel Air, Md.
Stevenson W. Webster, Terry Fellow B.A., 1924
~ummarp
Graduate Students Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen Non-Matriculated Students Total
13 37 55
.57 91 12 265
6G
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of t)si 'mpsilon
of %llpba ~bi l\bo ~igma ~bapter of :Jlelta ~bi :Jlelta ~bi ~bapter of ~igma _flu JLocal jfraternit!.' of %llpba 'Qr:au Jltappa tlbi
~si ~bapter
68
cestablisbeb 1850 cestablisbeb 1877 cestablisbell 1879 QEstablisbeb 1880 jfounlleb 1895 cestablisbell 1917 QEstablisbeb 1918 jfounbeb 1919
â&#x20AC;˘
t!l:bt jfraternitp of 1!ltlta
J~i
Founded in 1847 at Columbia College and the University of New York
l\oU of Alpha . Delta . Epsilon Lambda Upsilon Sigma Tau
~bapters
Columbi a Univers ity University of Pennsylvania Trinity College Williams College University of Virginia Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University Massachusetts Institute of Technology
69
mbt ~psilon QCbapttr of meua
~si
Established 1850
Qlctibe ;.ffiembers 1925 Samuel C. Wilcox
Thomas A . Shannon
1926 Francis J. Pryor, 3rd
J arvis Meirs
1927 路william J . Schuyler
George B. R. Meade Wendell H. Langdon
William M. E llis William P. Orrick
1928 Bennett Crain R obert F. Gibson Fred. E. Creamer
71
m:be jf raternitp of alpba 1!\elta llbi Founded in 1832 at H a milton Coll ege
1\oU of Qebapters H a milton Columbia Yale Amherst Brunoniari Hudson Bowdoin Dartmouth Peninsular Rochester Williams Middletown Kenyon nwn Cornell Phi Kappa J ohns Hopkin s Minnesota Toronto Chicago McGill Wisconsi n California Illinois tanford Washington
Hamilton College Columbia College Yale University Amherst College Brown University Western R eserve University Bowdoin College Dartmouth Coll ege University of Michigan University of R ochester Willi ams College Wesleyan niversity K enyon College nion College . Cornell niversity Trinity Coll ege Johns Hopkins Un ive rsity University of Minnesota Toronto University University of Chi cago McGill University Univer ity of Wisconsin University of California University of Illinoi s L eland Stanford niversity niversity of Washin gton
72
1832 1836 1836 1836 1836 1841 1841 1845 1846 1850 1851 1856 1858 1859 1869 1877 1889 1891 1893 1896 1897 1902 1908 1911 1916 1922
~be ~bi
1Sappa C!Cbapter ~lpba 1!\elta ~bi Established 1877
~ctib e
Edward W. Averill David M. Hadlow Charles B. Cook, Jr. Herbert J. I oble Stanley L. Bell Robert Y. Condit
;ffiembers 1925 Lewi H. Bartlett Henry T. Stone
1926 David S. Loeffler Richard B. Talcott
1927 Philip M. Kerridge
James 0. Baldwin Henry A. Moses
Wales S. Dixon Robert W. Hildebrand
1928 James Leavitt William Even
74
~bt
jfrattrnitp of illtlta 1Sappa
~p~ilon
Founded in lBH al Yal e University
l\oll of Qtbapters Phi Theta Xi Sigma Gamma Psi psi ion Beta Eta Kappa Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Chi Phi Gamma Gamma Bela Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epsilon ::iigma Tau. Delta Della .\lpha Phi Tau Lambda Della Kappa Tau Alpha . Sigma Rho Della Pi Rho Della . Kappa Epsilon Omega ('hi
Yale University Bowdoin Coll ege Colby niversily Amherst Coll ege Vanderbilt Unive•·sity University of Alabama Brown niversity University of North Carolina niversity of Virginia Miami University Kenyon College Dartmouth College Central niver ity Middlebury Coll ege Univers it y of Michigan . Williams Coll ege J,afayette Coll ege . Hamilton Co llege . Colgate University Co ll ege of the City of New York ni versi ty of Rochester Rutgers College DePauw niversity Wesleyan University Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Adelbert Coll ege Cornell University Syracuse niversity Co lumbi a niversity 'Cniversity of California Trinity College University of Minnesota Massachu etts ] nstitule of Technology niversity of C hi cago University of Toronto Tulan e Cniversily l'niversity of Pennsylvania Mdiill University Leland 'Lanford, Jr., Unive1·sity University of Jllinois 'Cniversity of Wisconsin University of Washingt,on l'niversity of Texas
75
1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 1850 . 1851 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 1902 1904 1906 1912 1920
~be
aipba C!Cbi C!Cbapter of
j!lelta Jkappa Cfpil%on Established 1879
~ctibe ~embers
1925 P . Oti 路 Zwissler
1926 Stimpson Hubbard George P. Sampers
1927 Frank P. Bloodgood Putnam II. Browne
Francis R. Shi elds Nicholas W . Manocchio H oward W. Smalley Charles M. Stewart
Winsto n W. Fliess
1928 Robert W. Gray Edgar F. Law ~leb gees
Lee :\I. De Lucie Malcolm Stephenson Robert Sheehan
77
D onald C. 'Vebster
tli:be jfraternitp of ~~i Wp~ilon Founded at Union College in 1833
l\oll of @:bapter.f5 Theta Delta Beta Sigma Gamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi
. Union College Xew York niversity Yale niversity Brown niversity Amherst College Dartmouth Co ll ege Columbi a University Bowdoin Coll ege Hamilton Coll ege Wesleyan University . niversity of Rochester Kenyon Coll ege University of Michigan . Syracuse niversity Cornell niversity Trinity College Lehigh Univer ity University of Pennsylvania niversity of Minnesota University of Wisconsin niversity of Chicago niversity of California Un iversity of Illinois Williams College Uni,路ersity of Washington
Xi psilon Iota Phi Pi Chi Beta Beta Eta Tau Mu Rho Omega . Epsilon Omicron Delta Delta 路 Theta Theta .
78
Jjeta J搂eta C!bapter tl~i Wp~ilon E stablished 1880
~ctib e
.members 1925
Theodore W. J ones George A. Hi ves George Thoms John Williams, Jr. T. Dale Stewart
1926
Fred " . Leesemann Dana R . Varney 路
Frank M. Th orburn
Richard A. Hick Fred G. Hicks Harry W. Green
1927 George C. Hamlin
1928 " illiam W. riles R oy A. Gade J ohn M. Young, Jr.
J ames M. H artley John E. Large Willi am B. Stewart, Srd
80
t!Cbt j='rattrnitp of
~lpba
C!tbi Rbo
Founded in 1895 at Trinity College
1\oll of ([bapters Trinity College Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn University of Penn ylvania Columbia University Lafayette College Dickinson College Yale niversity . Syracuse University University of Virginia Washington and Lee Universit~路 Cornell University Wesleyan University Allegheny College University of Illinois Pennsylvania State College Lehigh University . Dartmouth College
Phi Psi Phi Chi Phi Phi Phi Omega Phi Alpha Phi Beta Phi Delta Phi Epsilon Phi Zeta Phi Eta Phi Theta Phi Gamma Phi Iota Phi Kappa Phi Lambda Phi Mu Phi Nu
81
m:be ~bi ~~i ctbapter of ~lpba ctbi ~bo Founded 1895
~cti\:le ~embers
1925 \\ illiam H. Merchant James G. McNalley
John W. Ainley Ni ls A. C. Anderson
Duncan D. Kennedy
1926 orman C. Fitcr.er John A. Avitable George P . J ackson, Jr.
Alexander F. McBurney James W . Keena William Nicol, Jr.
H a rold W. Messer
1927 James M. Cahi ll Andrew H. Forrester
1928 Charles G . .Jackson Edward M. Griswold
George R. Salisky
83
Paul H. H etzel \\~li ard B. Cowles Walter E. Ebersold J ohn H. Gordon
~be
jfraternitp of 1!lelta tlbi l\oll of
~bapter~
Alpha Beta . Gamma Delta . Epsi lon Eta Lambda
mon niversity Brown niversity New York University . Columbia University Rutgers College University of Pennsylvania Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Lehigh niversity Johns Hopkins University Yale University Cornell University University of Virginia Trinity College
Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho I. K. A. (Sigma)
84
_,
~igma
(lf. 1S.
~.)
({bapttr 11\tlta ~bi Established 1917
~ctib e
.members 1925
William K. Applebaugh
Lloyd W. Minor
1926 Merrill B. Sherman Philip C. Fenn
H. Reginald Iewsholme Richard N. Ford Howard W. Tul e
1927 J oseph B. E lemendorf William G. Keller, Jr. Evans Brown
Williams A. Towill Scott H. Adams Lawrence D. Dickey Charles F. Whi ton
1928 Charles Solm John T. Farris William F. Judge
Arthur D. Platt Theodore L. Thomas Sherman J. Beer Ronald Condon
86
~be
jfraternitp of
~igma
jlu
Founded at Virginia Military Inst itute in 1869
!\oil of
,
Alpha Beta . Mu Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Epsi lon Eta Nu Xi Pi Rho Sigma Upsilon Phi Psi Beta Phi Beta Beta Beta Theta Beta Zeta Beta Nu Beta Chi D elta Theta Beta Eta Beta I ota Beta P si Beta Mu Beta Xi Beta Rho Gamma Rho Beta Tau Beta Upsilon Gamma Gamma Gamma Alpha Gamma Chi Gamma Beta Beta Sigma Gamma Delta Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Eta Gamma Theta
~bapters
Virginia 1.ilitary Institute Uni versity of Virginia. University of Georgia U niversity of Alaba ma Howard Co ll ege North Georgia Agricultural Coll ege Washington and Lee U niversity Bethany College Mercer University Un iversity of K ansas Emory College Lehigh University University of Missouri Vanderbilt University University of Texas Louisiana State University Unive rsity of North Carolina Tulane University DePauw University Alabama Polytechnic College Purdue University Ohio State University Stanford niversity Lombard College Indian a U niversity Mt. Union College University of Ca liforni a U niversity of I owa William-Jewell Co ll ege Un ivers ity of P ennsylva nia Un iversity of Ch icago N.C. Co li. of Agr. an d Mech. Arts R ose Pol ytechnic Institute Albion College Georgia School of T ech nology University of Washington North western U ni versi ty University of Vermont Stevens Institute of Technology Lafayette College . University of Oregon Colorado School of Mines Corne ll University
87
1869 1870 1873 1874 1879 1881 1882 1883 1884 1884 1884 1885 1886 1886 1886 1887 1888 1888 1890 1890 1891 1891 189 1 1891 1892 1892 1892 1893 1894 1894 1895 1895 1895 1895 1896 1896 1898 1898 1900 1900 1900 1901 1901
Gamma I ota Gamma Kappa Gamma L a mbd a Gamma Mu Gamma N u Gamma Xi Gamma Omi cron Gamma Pi . Gamma Sigma Gamma T a u Gamma Upsilon Gamma Xi Gamma Psi D elta Alph a Delta Beta D elta Gamma Delta Delta Delta Epsilon Alpha Zeta Delta Eta D elta I ota . D elta Kappa D elta Lambda D elta Nu D elta Mu Beta K appa Delta Xi Delta Omicron Delta Pi Delta Rh o . D elta Sigma Delta T a u D elta U psil on D elta Phi D elta C hi D elta Psi Epsilon Alpha Epsilon Beta Epsilon Gamma Epsil on Epsilon Epsilon D elta Epsilon Zeta Epsilon Eta Epsilon Th eta Epsilon Iota
SLate College of K entu cky U niversity of Colorado . U niversity of Wi sco nsin University of Illinois University of Michigan . Missouri School of Mines Washington niversity (Mo.) West Virginia nivers ity Iowa State College University of Minneso ta University of Arkansas University of Montana Syracuse University Case School of Appli ed Science Dartmouth College Columbia University P ennsylvan ia State College U niversity of Okla homa vVestern R eser ve niversity U niversity of Neb raska Washington State Coll ege D elaware State Co ll ege . Brown Uni vers ity University of Maine Stetson Uni versity Kansas State Agri cu ltura l Coll ege niversity of Nevada University of Idaho George Washington Un ivers ity Colorado Agr. College Carnegie Inst. of Tech . . Oregon Agricultural College Colgate University M aryl a nd Stale Coll ege Trinity College Bowdoin College Un iversity of Arizona Drury College Wesleyan U ni versity Oklahoma Agricultural College U niversity of Wyoming U niversity of Florida U ni versity of Tennessee Mass. Institute of Technology Williams and Mary College
88
190!l 1902 190!l 1902 1902 1903 1903 1904 1904 190-J. 1904 1905 1906 1907 1907 1908 1908 1909 1909 1909 1910 1910 1912 1913 1913 191 3 1914 1915 1915 1915 1916 1917 191 7 1917 191 8 1918 1918 1919 1920 1920 1920 19!l0 19!l1 19!l2 1922
~be
11\elta <!Cbi <!Cbapter of ~igma J}u Establi. hed 1918
~ctibe ~embers
William J. Tate Alfred L. Peiket路 Alfred K. Birch Perry T. Hough James B. Burr Winthrop H. Segur George C. Glass, Jr. Dudley H. Burr George P. Ward Milton P. Thomson Roy C. Berger
1925 1\iarius P. Johnson Harry J. McNiff Thomas A. S. Ca ey
1926 Milton F. Pellett Walter J. Riley
1927 Fred J. Eberle Roger W. Hartt
1928 Howard M. Goodhue J. Clifford Malone Walter E. Whitaker Louis H. Small , Jr. Thomas P. Aitkin
90
~bt
1Local jf raternitp of
~lpba ~au
1Sappa
Founded in 19HI ~ctibe
:芦(embers 1925
R obert M. Hea ly Joseph J. Connor John L. Litmon R ichard A. McCurdy
1926 Howard F. l\1anierre Henry J. Feeley
1927 Alfred Celentano
Thomas F. Daly John .J. Downey
John E. ' "'路 Johnson
1928 John T . Barrett Norbet路t B. Lacy Raymond Kennedy
~bi
Jljeta 1Sappa Jljeta of cteonnecticut Chartered 1845
庐fficers of tbe qconnecticut jljeta . President Vice- President . 8ecretary . Treasurer 1ssistant Treasurer
J ohn J a me 路 M cCook, D .D. , LL.D. Frederick Willi a m H a rrim an, D.D. Arthur Ad ams, Ph .D. . George l ewi s Cooke, M. A. Anson Th eodore i cCook , B .A., LL.B. Jllembers Qiledeb in 1923
Albert D ale M itchell Juli us J acob N irenst ein jlflembers Qiledeb in 1924
Bern ard E d wi n Du bin Wheeler H aw le,v Nels Mar t in Valerius
93
fOOTBALL Captain Coach Manager Assistant Manager
William S. Terrell, '25 P aul E. Becker Alfred L. Pieker, '25 A. F. McBurney, '26
\ ~be ~eam
(1Letter
~en )
L eft End, Merchant, '25 L eft Tackle, T~rell , '25, Captain L eft Guard, Anderson, '25, Valerius, '25 Center, Pryor, '26 Right Guard, McNally, '25, Pollock, '25 R ight Tackle, Noble, '25, Captain-elect Right End, Eberl e, '27, Avi!!'tble, '26 Qt~arterbaclr, Riley, '26 Left Halfback, Sampers '26, Stewart, '27 Right Halfback, McKniff, '25 Ftdlbacl.路, Pieker, '25, Wi1 cox, '25
gs,ubstitutes Bell, '27 Dixon, '27 Farrell, '26
Forre ter, '27 Hamilton , '26
96
Keller, '27 Lieber, '26 McBurney, '26
jfootball 1924 T
RINITY'S 1924 fo :) tball season could hardly be called a success even by the most optimistic of critics. It seemed to be the consensus of opinion that \Ye had a tea m which somehow did not consistently how the latent ability which rose to the surface for many brilliant moments throughout the season. 'Ve had more than our share of injuries which, coupled with a small squad, made matters difficult, to say the lea t. By far the most important event of the fall was the installation of a new gridiron coach, Paul Becker of Illinois. Coach Be~ker has won our respect and esteem. He has shown h-iglself as a man who knows football. The obstacles in his path were tremendou , and many a man would have given up the task. A great part of any credit that i due the team should go to him. About two week before college opened, Coach Becker issued his fir t call for candidates. Some fifteen men reported on the hill for pr.a ctice twice a day. On paper, at the beginn,ing of the season we had the be t team in years. Soon things began to break. Fischer did not return to college, and O'Brien and Pitcher were declared ineligible. We started off using the western shift and the unbalanced line which looked great, but they were changed later in the season. About a week before the fir t game, Pieker, varsity man la t year, was severely burt. Because of this, he wa forced to see most of the game from the sideline . The first game of the season was with Worcester Tech at Trinity field. Worcester gave us a good game, but our line was too much of a stone wall for their backs. The game ended 14-0 in our favor. Captain Terrell and Captainelect Noble played stellar games in the line, while Sampers and McKniff starred in the backfield, tearing off several long and startling runs. The next week the student body sent the team off to the Maine woods to play Colby. Enthusiasm ran high, but we were doomed to disappointment for the heavier Colby team sent our men back with a 19-3 score again t them. A series of blocked punts and intercepted passes tell s the story. Dick Noble made our only score by a field goal from placement from the forty-three yard line. On the next Saturday, the team tackled nion at Schenectady. nion turned out to have a team that outweighed ours by orne ten pounds to a man, but we went down, fighting, 13-0. Again the eleven took the field in foreign territory. This time against the much heavier eleven of N. Y. U. The team played a fine defense game against the much stronger Violet eleven. Our goal line was crossed but once. A safety and a field goal complete the story of the 12-0 defeat. Hobart, Conn. Aggies, and Middlebury came to Hartford in the next three weeks. Perhaps the less said the better. In the Aggie game, Bill Merchant wa forced to leave the game with a broken leg. Two plays later, Harry McKniff was carried from the field with ankle injuries. (Such is the story). 97
Stewart developed water on the knee, Sampers a strained shoulder. As usual, the Aggies brought a large crowd with them. The Ia t game, that with Middlebury, one of the strongest teams in the East, started off in great shape. After the first quarter, it looked as if the score wa going to resemble a telephone number. Pryor pulled the unexpected and recovered a Middlebury fumble to race for a touchdown. Eberle played a great game at end, spilling play after play. Anderson, who had been shifted from guard to fullback, was the only consistent gainer through the Middlebury line. Noble, although out part of the game due to a leg injury, played his usual, hard game. Captain Terrell played his last game as he played his first-scrapping. And o we came through our schedule, winning one out of seven games. Not an impre sive record to say the least. It seemed that the team had the "stuff", but could not show it. Lack of coordination was the great fault. We bad far more than our share of injuries. Captain Terrell led his team well, and played his best. Captain-elect Noble was by far the most impressive man on the squad. His hard playing, and driving power won for him the captaincy for next year, and a place on the Courant All-Conn. Valley EleYen. Dick, we wish you the best for next year. Sampers proved to be a good man with the ball. McKniff played his usual good game all season, but was severely handicapped by his weak ankles. Even at that, he proved to be the best man in the backfield. Pieker, Stewart, Anderson, Eberle, and Merchant deserve more than a passing coJL.ment. Although the losses at graduation will be heavy, we expect much by the addition of this year's, scrappy freshman team, which makes the next season' prospects look brighter than they haYe for soine time.
98
~ummarp
October October October October November November November
4 11
18 25 1 8 15
Worcester Tech at Hartford Colby at Brunswick Union at Schenectady N.Y. U. at New York Hobart at Hartford Conn. Aggies at Hartford Middlebury at Hartford Total
\j
Trinity Opponent 14 0
3
7
19 13 12 28 26 74
24
172
0 0
0 0
jf rt~bman jfoothaU the varsity football team was not exactly a success last fall, one A LTHOUGH may say, with pride that our Freshman team was. Perhaps the two main factors in this success were capable coaches and quanity of material. Coach Oosting with the help of John R. Rietemeyer turned out a ~crappy football team from an almost impossible bunch of freshmen. Some thirty odd men reported for practice on the fir t day. Of these thirty men perhaps ten of them had had a football uniform on before, and not more than six could boast of more than a hundred and fifty pounds. After a few weeks' earne t practice, they journeyed up to Storrs to play the much heralded Aggie Frosh who boa ted of team averaging about 165 pounds. Our little team came out on the field outweighed about twenty pounds to the man. After the first four minutes of play, the score was 14-0 in favor of the Aggies. Soon it was 21-0. The first quarter ended thus, with the boys ju t beginning to get over their stage fright. Fully half the team were playing their first real football game. The last three quarters tell a different story. The game ended 21-0. The feature of the game ;vas the 140 pound line holding the Aggie boilermakers on our one yard line for downs, and then coming within an ace of scoring themselw . After another week of practice, in which Loomis was played an informat' practice game, the Fre hmen winning about 46-0, the team again took foreign territory in imsbury. Westminster presented a team which outweighed but did not outplay us. They expected a \valkover but were almost beaten themselves. The ball see-sawed up and down the field for four , long quarters which resulted in a scoreless tie (in favor of Trinity 1928). During the next two weeks of practice, the freshmen played West Hartford High informally. The boys didn't do so well in this game. Although they held West Hartford scoreless, they failed to make a hundred points themselves. The Mass. Aggie Two Year Men brought down a team for the last game of the season. Again the freshmen were outweighed but came out on the top of a 26-6 score. And so ended the Freshman schedule, gloriou ly, with only one defeat. Captain Thomson was the most outstanding man on the team. He played tackle and punted. When the backs couldn't put the ball over, "Ring" came out of the line and did it himself. He was the main gun on the defense, breaking up play after play. He certainly will look sweet in a varsity uniform next fall. Burr, the quarterback, proYed himself a good open field runner, field general, and defensive back. Orrick and Crain made sweet ends, while Condon showed his stuff by playing through half of the Westminister game with a broken nose. Sterling and Jackson pro,路ed good backs. Fertig developed wonderfully, and at the end of the season was one of the most consistent ground gainers on the outfit. 101
' Young, M.astronarde, Whittaker, Gray, and La\v deserve more than a passing comment. Every man on the team deserYes credit for his work. Our one hope and prayer is that the faculty see fit to have you out for the varsity next year.
jf re~bman jf ootball Milton P. Thomson Ray Oost ing John R. Rietemeyer A. F. McBurney, '~6
Captain Coach Line Coach . Manager
m:be m:eam William P. Orrick. Left End Morris Green, Right Tackle Milton P . Thomson, Left Tackle Bennett Crain, Right End John M. Young, Left Guard Dudley Burr, Quarterback Robert Gray, Center John Sterling, Halfback Ronald Condon, Right Guard Harry Fertig, Halfback Nicholas Mastronade, Fullbaclâ&#x20AC;˘ ~ubstitut es
Backs Walter Whitaker Donald Webster
Charles Solms Charle Jacksoh
Linesmen Harry Tulin George Ward Harry Apter
Arthur Platt Thomas Daly Sherman Beers Roy Berger
Ends Edgar Law George Gregory
William Judge Henry Van Giesen ~umma rp
0
Trin. ¡~s 0 0
6
~6
27
26
Opp October ~5 November 1 November 15
Conn. Agricultural College '~8 at Storrs Westminister Prep. at Simsbury Mass. School of Agri. at Hartford Total 102
~1
•
jiasketball Alfred L. Pieker, '25 Perry T. Hough, '26 Ray Oosting
Captain },fanager Coach
1!tbe m:eam James B . Burr, '26 Milton P. Thomson, '28 William Orrick, '28 Alfred L. Pieker , '25 James Keena, '26
Left Forwm·d Right Forward Center Left Gtwrd Right Gtwrd
Forwards: Walter J. Ril ey, '26, Regin ald Newsholme, '26, Scott H. Adams, '27 Guards: Fredrick J. Eberle, '27, Stan ley Bell, '27
Centers: Gem·ge Sampers, '26, Wales S. Dixon, '27
103
;sasketbaU before Thanksgiving, Coach Oosting issued his call for basketball SHORTLY men. Some 路 forty-five men responded. Conspicuous among these were Captain Peiker, George ampers, and Jim Burr, Peiker and Burr being the only letter men from last year's team. Keena and Riley were products from last year's Junior Varsity. Manager Hough bad arranged a fifteen game schedule extending from December 12th to March 4th , \vhen we met Wesleyan for the first time since 1920 on the basketball court. The season divides itself into two distinct periods: before and after mid-year . Befor mid-years, we beat St. Michael's and Norwich niversity, a11.d fell victim to Franklin & Marshall, Worcester Tech., Mass. Aggies, and Conn. Aggies. Trus part of the season wa dominated by the floor work and scoring of "Shuffiin' " George Sampers, Scott Adams, and the guarding of Captain Peiker and Jim Keena. Al and Jim forced a "mean combination" in the backcourt. Jimmy Burr contracted throat trouble early in the season, and spent much of the time on the sidelines, as a result. After mid-years the team received a serious blow. "Shuffiin' " George, Scott Adams, and Wales Dixon were declared ineligible by the faculty. We soon found that the outlook wasn't so terrible, when "Ring" Thomson and "Silent" Bill Orrick, both freshmen, entered Oosting's flock. These two men proved to be Trinity's scoring power. Lowell Texile and St. Stephen's fell in short order to this revamped team. The Lowell game created what is believed to be an intercollegiate record, Lowell not scoring once from the floor. Hamilton took a clo e game from us. On the New York trip, Captain Peiker only brought back half of the bacon, beating Pratt, but loosing to Brooklyn Poly. In the Pratt game, Al went wild scoring five times from the floor . February 18th saw Northeastern fall in defeat. Conn. Aggies came down on the 23rd with a big crowd and a good team . Long shots and perfect passing (plus a lot of Joseph Luck) told the story, and the farmers went away contented. Pratt came back for a return game with blood in her eye. The result was a rough game, and a three-point defeat. Then we came to the climax. Wesleyan had beaten Conn. Aggies on the Aggie floor, and the Aggies had beaten us almost two to one. The dopesters were all for a Trinity massacre. The Hopkins Street gym was filJed to capacity. That Trinity-Wesleyan game will go down in the annals of rustory, as last June' 'Vesleyan baseball game. Wesleyan started the scoring, Thomson and Orrick followed up with one apiece, and from that moment Trinity was never headed. A final burst from Wesleyan failed to cany enough point , and the game was ours! Thomson scored seven times from the floor, while "Silent" Bill scored four. Captain Peiker played his last game, as a last game hould be played. Jimmy 10.')
Burr cavorted around in a pretty exhibition of basketball. Reggie Newsholme, Pete Eberle, and Walt Riley showed their stuff. And so the ea on ended with seven wins and eight losses. Thi , however, is not the way we look at it- rather, six wins besides Wesleyan. Certainly if any man has worked his way into the heart of a college, Coach Oosting has. He has turned out, since last fall, a successful freshman football team, and a successful ''Wesleyan-beatin g" ba ketball team. Ray, we're ri ght with you, and all for you! All through the season, Captain Peiker and Jim Keena proved a perfect pair in the back co urt. Ring Thomson and Silent Bill Orrick proved that a team may have an offense as well as a defense. By the end of the season, capt.-elect Jimmy Burr had finally recovered from his throat trouble and hit his old-time, flashy stride. Reggie New holme proved himself a valuable asset, as did Riley, Eberle, and Bell. Everything points to a bright season, next year. Although we will missAl Picker's playing, we will have seven letter men to count on, and urely Capt.-elect Burr will be able to give a good account for the 1925-26 team. And so a successful season is ended, thanks to the constant work of the squad and Coach Oosting! ~ummatp
December December December January January J anuary January February February February February February February February March
12 St. Michaels 17 Franklin and Marshall 20 ' Vorcester Tech. 9 Mass. Aggies 16 Norwich 31 Lowell Textile 20 Conn. Aggies 5 Hamilton 11 St. Stephen's 13 Pratt Institute 14 Brooklyn Poly. 18 Northeastern 23 Conn. Aggies 27 Pratt Institute 4 Wesleyan
At Hartford At Hartford At Worcester At Hartford At Hartford At Hartford At Storrs At Hartford At Hartford At Brooklyn At Brooklyn At Hartford At Hartford At Hartford At Hartford Total
106
Trinity Opps. 12 11 8 15 21 26 10 36 29 10 31 3 23 50 25 31 32 15 20 25 19 22 28 25 22 42 24 28 31 28 340
412
~
0 H
zp
....,
Paul J. Norman, '24 Fredrick W. Stone Charle E. Cunningham, '23 路 Da\'icll\1. Hacllow, '25 .
P. F. R. F.
Captain Coach ~Manager
. l ssislant Manager
J. Norman, First Base F. S. Jones, Catcher J . Pryor, Second Base F. J . Cronin, Shortstop H. Newsholme, Third Base H. S. Ortgies, Center Field R. Sh ield s, Left Field David S. Loeffler, Right Field Carl B. Newman, Pitcher ~ubstttutes
J. F. Keating
W. J. Riley
H. J. 1\1cKniff
IO!l
J. A. Tuck
'Qr:be April April April April May May May May May May May iay May June
~cores
Trinity 3 3 0
18 Clark UniYersity Q1 " 'oi'Cester Tech. 25 Amherst 28 . C.N. Y . 4 St. Stephen' 5 Union 8 Kew York UniYersity 12 SteYens Tech. 16 Bro,\'11 19 Mass. Aggies 23 Conn. Aggies 26 Springfield 30 Eeton H all 9 Amherst
Opponents 4
3 8 Rain
16
5
7
9 8
2 R ain
1 1 6 3 9 1
110
8 10 8 4
12 2
At Home At Home Away At Home Away Away Away At Home Away Away At Home Away At Home At Home
J搂asehall
~eason
HE 1923 Baseball season could not be called a success, as the team only \YOn one game, tied one and lost ten. Of the ten defeats however, only :fiye were decisive, that is to say, were lost by more than a two run margin, which shows that most of the games were closely contested. In ba eball , as in other sports, it can be said that we did not have a bad team, but for one reason or another it did not become a winning team. In reality it was rather a green organization, a only three of the men played on the varsity the previous year. Consequently, all things considered, they did about as well as cou ld be expected, though they often went to pieces badly having an especially poor inning in each game, and not getting most out of the hits that were made. The season opened on a cold day in the middle of April with Clark niversity as our opponent. The visitors were so late in arr iving that the game had to be cut to seven innings, on account of darkne s. It was anybody's game to the last minute hut Clark came out on top with a final core of 4-3. For an early season game it was remarkably well played, each side making only one error. Trinity led in both hits, and earned runs but failed to turn them into actual runs. Two weeks later, before the Sub-Freshman Week-end crowd, the team met the Worce ter nine and played a fine game to a 3-3 tie. The game had to be ca ll ed at the end of the tenth inning because of darkness. Again we tallied more hits, being credited with nine to our opponents' five, but again we failed to make the
T
most of them. The next game was with Amherst , and once more from our point of view the Amherst hospitalit~路 was not all that it might have been. They took eight runs without gi,路ing us any, and were the only team to keep u.s from scor in g. The game with C. C. N. Y. which was seheduled for the same week had to be called off on account of rain. Next the team invaded New York State for three games, one of which was a distinct success, but the other two were fa ilures. Against the St. Stephen's organization the Trinity team came out on the long end of a 16-5 score, in what appeared to be a combination track meet and ball game. This time we made sixteen runs out of fourteen hits which showed a va t improvement. The following day, playing Union, in spite of the fact that we out hit them, and made but one error, as opposed to their :five, we failed to make them all count, and dropped a 9-7 game. A few days later the team came up against New York Univer 路ity. Again the hits and error were about even, but by concentrating theirs into the first and fourth inning , they decidedly out-scored us, winning 8-2. The Stevens Tech game had to be cancelled because it was rainy and excessively cold. Consequently the nine next faced Brown at Providence, and 111
Newman who had borne the burden of most of Trinity's pitchin g, was hit hard for the first time. They had the better team, a nd in two good innings cinched the game 8-1. This was followed by another defeat by the Mass. Aggies. They made six runs in one inning and won the game 10-1. The game took place at Amherst which may have had so mething to do with the outcome. The next game was a rather loosely played affair again t the Connecticut Aggies. We took a two run lead in the first inning but two errors in the second gave them three. Then in the seventh we staged a spectacular rally . There were two o ut. The bases were full. The next man up made a clean hit and it looked as if the sco re would be tied , but Jones who was on third had a bad knee, a nd it gave way before he reached home. He was touched out and the score remained the same. We lost the game 8-6. That Saturday we lost another close contest to Sp ringfield, 4-3. and the following week we encountered the Seton Hall nine. In this game we played poorly and were out hit, and out-played in the field , where we made six enors to their one. They romped off with the game to the tune of 12-7. The final ga me of the year proved to be the be t of them a ll. It was Alumni Day of the Centennial Celebration and we played a return game with Amherst. A they were the only team who had white-washed us it wa expected that they would win. H owever, this time it wa played in H artford , a nd developed into quite a battle. Both pitchers were effective and allowed only three hits apiece, but we made three errors to their two which resulted in our defeat 2-1. The team was somewhat handicapped by the fact that spring came on late a nd the men were not allowed as much pre-season practice as usual. Coach Sto ne deserves a lot of credit for turning such untri ed material into a team in so short a time. Captain Norman playing first base, had a teadying influence on the team and proved himself a capable and hard-working leader. U nfortunately Newman had to sho uld er most of the pitching, though both McKniff and Tuck helped out on occasion. Newman was the outstanding player and was uphe!d by the rest of his battery, first by Pryor and then later by Jones. Keating, ~e wman , N ewsholme, and Ortgies proved to be the best with the ''willow"
11 2
William H . .\!l en H a rold D . Dre w Alfred M. Niese Roger R. Eastman
Captain Coach ]fanager Assistant Manager
~ummarp
Trinity April May May
28 5
12
". orcester T ech a t Worcest er
47
Opp. 79
Un ion at Schenectady . Ea tern Intercoll egiate
30
96
3
~rack 1923 RACK ha been a losin g sport at Trinity and the seaso n of 1923 was no exT cepti on. We h ad several really good men, but their number was so limited that there were not enough men of better than average caliber to take care of the eYents and there were even fewer sure seconds and thirds. This lack of a sufficient number of good entries lost us nearly h a lf the events a nd with the e losses went both of the meet . The final meet wa with 'Vorcester Tech on a rainy day in the latter p a rt of April. Trinity proved able to beat the best in the weight and field events, where the two teams were about evenly matched, but we failed to obtain suffi cient first places in the track eYen t s to bring our score very close to the opponents. The followin g week the team journeyed to Schenectady for a dual meet with nion College. In this contest the track events were slightly stron ger, but this time the weight and field events proved to be weak, and we again, rather literally took their dust. The Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic Association Meet wa held at Springfi eld on 1\fay 12 and Trinity entered two men. O'Connor in the discus throw and Birch in the mil e run. O'Connor failed to qualify but Birch ca me in second after giving Cavanaugh of Boston College a close run for first place. AI . Birch turned out to be the bi g point winner of the season. It was his fir t year of track work, and running the mile and half-mile he made three first and two second places out of five starts. O'Connor whose events were the di cu s throw and t he shot put took second honors. Several times in practice he broke the college record for the di scus but his good days unfortunately never seemed to coincide with the days of meets. These two were closely followed by J epson, J ohnson and Captain Allen, all three of whom were excellent track men. These three men were greatly handicapped by injured legs which prevented them from performing to the best of their ability. H ealey and K eating also did good work throughout the season. Birch, Johnson, and H ealey are still with us so we may look forward to a successful record this year.
115
--
------~---
,, f--.. Howard S. Ortgies C. E. C unningham
Captain Manager
H. S. Ortgie . '23 C. E. Cunningham, '23
W. Nicol, '26 A. R. 1ohnkem, '23 A. J. Avitable, '26
-atcbes May May May May May
2 10 11
15 25
At At At At At
Schenectady Amherst Hartford New H aven Worcester
Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity Trinity
116
3 0 1 1 2
mon Amherst Springfield Yale Seconds Worcester
3 6 5 5
4
~tnni~
TEN IIS in the spring of 1923 was rather trying for all concerned.
The college courts were in such a bad condition that the team was unable to even practice on them , until very late in the year路. They were never fit for路 a real match. Hence the one home match had to be played at Colt's Park. The one gleam of li ght in the otherwi e dark season \vas Captain Ortgies, who between baseball games managed to win all of his matches with one exception. He was the only man, beside the manager, to win his letter. Trinity did not have any success whatever in the doubles matches, and in the singles, each man, other than the captain, managed to win but once. The team began fairly well hy tying Union , but then lost consistently for the rest of the season.
117
mue Jf unior
~romenab e
Held in \.lumni Hall , Monda y , F ebru a ry 2, Hl25 JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE
. Chairman
Fra ncis J . Pryor, 3rd
J ohn Willi a ms, Jr. Stim pson Hubbard Richa rd B . T alcott Nicholas W . Manocchi o
K enneth W. Stuer Geo r路ge P . Jackso n, Jr. f errill B. Sherm an P erry T. Hou gh
120
mbe
~opbomore
J!}op
Held in Alumni H all , Monday, December 3, 1924
. Chairman
Francis R. Shield s ~opbomore ~op
Ql:ommittee Francis J. Pryor, 3rd ~orman C. Pitchet路 .James B. Burr
Walter J . Ril ey Reginald H. Newsholme Stimpson Hubbard John Willi a ms, Jr.
121
Junior
~moktr
QI:ommitttt . Chairman
Nils A. C. Anderson
P. Otis Zwis ler Robert M. Healey William H. Merchant William K Applebaugh
David M. Had low Theodore W. Jones Marius P. Johnson Samuel C. Wilcox .James G. McNally
122
jfre%bman Junior jlianquet H eld at Stoeck 's H otel, M iddlet ow n, Conn. C'ludrman
Walter J . Riley
(!Committee Francis J. Pryor, 3rd N icholas W. M a nocchi o J a mes W . K eena Stimpson Hubbard
John Willi a ms, Jr. Richard B. Talcott Kenneth W. Steur R eginald H . Newsholme
123
. President Bu siness ~Manager . Stage ~Manager Production Manager
Merrill B. Sherman P. Oti s Zwi ssler Stimpson Hubbard Nicholas W. Manocchio
D DRING the past two years the J esters have showed in a most pleasin g manner their ability to p resent good plays, and to pre ent them well. For some years before the present organization was formed the J ester h ad been extinct, having died a natu ral death, as the member most interested left college. But Trinity could not long exist without a dramatic club and a small nucleus of enthusiastic supporters were able to revive the und~rgraduate interest. ince their re-organization the J e ters h ave put on three plays, all of which met with great success. The men have had very competent leadership and coaching, and are slowly but surely regaining the high standard which the former club attained. Pl ans for the spring are now well under way, and t he student body as well as many supporters in Hartford, are looking forward to good work, such as they have already witne ed.
"m:be m:urtle 1Dobe" or "m:be 1\omance of tbe mllillohl l!llate" By Mrs. Margaret Scott Oliver Presented at the Hartford Club, February First, Nineteen Twenty-four CAST OF CHARACTERS G. Waldron O'Connor George F. Humphrey Sereno B. Gammell Jerrill B . Sherman l\Iiss Frances Simpson Howard W. Small ey P. Otis Zwissler Roger R. Eastman
First Chorus Second Chorus Chang-Sut-Yen (the hero) The Mandarin Kwen-Lin (h is daughter) The God of Fate . The Property Man The Gong Bearer
127
" ~olio's ~ilb
庐at"
(A Comedy in Three Acts) By Clare Kummer Presented May T enth,
1
inet een Twenty -four
CAST IN ORDER OF APPEARA:\TCE Hews ton P. Otis Zwi sle r Lydia. John Williams, Jr. Rollo Webster Sereno B. Gammell Mr. Stein Winston S. Fliess Goldie 1acDuff Winthrop H. Segur George Lucas Howard W. Smalley Mrs. Park-Gales G. Waldron O'Connor Whortley Campderdown John B . Allen Thomas Skitterling Bernard E. Dubin Aunt Lan e . William J. Schuyler Horatio Webster 1errill B. Sherman Bella . Leon A. Mansur ~pnopsis
of
~cenc.s
ACT I. Scene 1. Scene S!.
Roll o's Studio, New York. Twelve o'clock on a mormng sprin g. The ame, the following evening.
111
early
ACT II . Scene 1. Scene 2.
Rollo's Dres 路ing Room, The Oddity Theatre. On the stage that very moment. ACT III.
Scene 1. Scene fl.
Sitting Room , Grandfather Web ter's House, Shelbrooke, a few hours later. The same, the following evening. Play coached by Mrs . Hallie Gelbart Reynolds.
128
I
"m:be J)ober l\oab" (A Co medy in Three Act s) B y A . A . Milne Prese nted F ebr uary Sixth , Nineteen Tw enty-fiv e PEOPLE I N THE PLAY T he H ouse D ominic The St aff :
M a ids Servants
l\1r. L atimer
{ {
Ri cha rd Hi cks Russell D av is Scott Alford Sherma n Beers J ohn Willia ms, Jr. M errill B . Sherma n
Th e Guest s L eo nard Anne . Eustacia N icholas
Win ston S. Fliess Winthrop H. Segur . L eon M ansur . J ohn E . L arge
The Scene is the recept ion r oom of M r. L atimer's ho use, a little way off t he D over R oad . ACT
I.
Evenin g
ACT
II.
Scene 1. Scene 2.
ACT Ill.
Next mornin g. E arly evening.
Three days lat er
l'la y coached by 1\Iess rs. W <tiler S. Brown and H <troiJ S. :-; pencc r.
mrtnitp <tCollege <!auartette Henry W. Herrick, '24 . Nathaniel R. Parke, '26 Nils A. C. Ander on, '25 G. Waldron O'Connor, '24
First Tenor Second T enor Baritone Bass
President Secretary
Samuel C. Wilcox, '25 Francis R. Shields, '26
" 'inst on S. l<']iess, '27 iarius P. J ohn son '2.5 Nor man C. Pitcher, '26 J a n 路is Meir 路, '26
Richard B. Talcott, '26 Richard A. Hicks, '26 John W. Ainley, '25 R eginald H. Newsholme, '26
132
~enior
J)onorarp
~ocietp
Established 1893
\!Cbe .fflebusa 1924 Samuel C. Wilcox William H. Merchant, Jr. Marius P. Johnson
Willi am S. T errell Alfred L. Peiker
133
, 't;¥ \.~
~
~
•
',, ' ~
•
\, ~
~--
~
.~
~
·t
,
-~ ~ I
t., ~""
I ~
\•
itappa Jaeta 1924 William S. Terrell Thomas Birmingham
"
~
.
-
~bi Stanley L. Kenn edy Paul J . Korman
1925 Raymond Montgomery George A. Hives Frank J . Cronin Ri chard J . O'B ien
David l\I. H adlow George Malcolm-Smith Theodore W. Jones Richard B. Nob le
1926 George Thoms Walter P. J en nin gs H arry W. Green, J1·. Robert W. Sheehan D avid S. Loeffler
Ri chard B. Talcott Richard A. Hi cks Frederi ck W. Leesemann Dale T. Stewart George P. Sampers
1927 Stanley L. B ell 134
..1
1!Cbe
~en ate
jf ina nee cteommittee . Chairman . Junior Member Sophomore Member
John W. Ainley . Francis J. Pryor, 3rd Joseph B. Elmendorf
1:35
m:be C!beer 1Leabers H. Taylor Stone, '25 George Thoms, '26
P . Otis Zwissler, ' 25
L Hall Bartlett, '2:5
137
~be
l)olitical S9cience ctelub
Edward F. Humphrey, Ph.D. Otis Zwissler, '25 . .John Williams, Jr., '25 .
Director President Secretary- Treasurer
FOR
many years the Political Science Club stood as the only extra curriculum organization at Trinity College with an intellectual purpose. Almost entire credit for the success of the club is due to its director, Professor Edward F. Humphrey. It is always through his efforts that the speakers are obtained, and it is the quality of these men that makes the club a succes . The first meeting of the club during the coliege year of 1923-24 was heid at Professor Humphrey's house. Mrs. Lewis Rose, Preisdent of the Hartford Branch of the League of Women Voters, outlined the aims and accomplishments of'that organization; and Mr. John Yoemans, Chairman of the State Central Committee of the Democratic Party of Connecticut, gave a talk on "The Party Bosf;" . The next meeting for the year was held at the Delta Kappa Epsilon House and at that time four of the younger alumni of the Political Science Club spoke about the work they were doing. James Breslin '19 told of the many calls that came to him as clerk of the Police Court. Beaufort Newsom described that most popular of all calling for men just out of college, bond salesmanship. Ruz7.el Z. Johnston recounted some of the peculiar cases that confront a young lawyer. William A. Rheiner gave us a very clear idea of the work of a director of a Federal Land Bank. The last meeting of the year was held at the Psi Upsillon House and at that time Governor Charles A. Templeton spoke of the duties of the Governor of Connecticut, and set forth his ideals of what the young man of to-day should tand for. The first meeting of the year 1924-25 was held in the Public Speaking Room. Horace D. Taft, head of the Taft School, championed "Law Enforcement" with re pect to the Eighteenth Amendment. Professor Alexander J. Carlyle of University College, Oxford, gave the next lecture. He described the present day Social and Political Partie of Great Britain . At the next meeting Bishop Brent explained some of the obstacles which prevented a settlement being reached at the Geneva Opium Conference.
138
t!t:be
~dipse
O
N Saturday, January 24, 1925, at nine o'clock in the morning 8000 people viewed, from the Trin ity College Campus, the sight of a lifetime, a total eclipse of the sun. People came from all parts of the city and the suburbs round about to see the spectacle. Coach Becker was heard to remark as he gazed at the va t throngs that he wished "they'd" have an eclipse every time there was a football game. If they did we are inclined to think the new stadium would be an accomplished fact and not a wildman's dream. As the time approached people began to choose the most advantageous places from which to gain the best view. Hundreds lined the rocks of Professor Troxell's Rocky Ridge Park, score stood shivering with cold on the college walks, and still others not satisfied with terra firma as a vantage point, climbed to the roof of Boardman Hall. Each of these expectant visitors wa equipped with some dark, translucent object through which to gaze at the awe orne phenomenon. Everything from moked glas to kodak negatives was pressed into ervice. The moon was now beginning to cover the edge of the sun, alfd a sudden stillne s came over the crowd as if some impending danger was about to strike. Not a soul spoke. All eyes were turned on the slowly disappearing ball of fire. Some even forgot to take the pictures they bad planned to, and allowed their cameras to hang idly by their sides . In a moment the un was entirely covered 139
J926
JJry
and only a few flaming rays from around the circumference were visible. Then the tension broke. As if controlled by some giant mechanism the crowd turned about in unison to catch a fleeting glimpse of the speeding shadow across the Yalley. Soon it was over. The scene became light once more 'a nd a hundred cars sped away bearing the vi itors. The world had not come to an end, and the business of the day must be attended to. The photographers packed up their equipment and were gone. But that is not quite all. The poor astronomer in the observatory must not be forgotten. They had stood in that stuffy little room all through the excitement, gar.ing with intent eyes through the telescope, and all they had been able to see was the top floor of Boardman Hall. N ext time the thing occurs we're either going to tear down the building or arrange with the snn to he eclip. ed on the other side of the heavens.
140
\!!:be \!Crinitp 3Jbp Established 1873 . Editor-in-Chief B 1tsiness 111 anager
Stimpson Hubbard R ichard B. Talcott ~ssociate
Qfbitors
George P. J ackson J ames 'V. K eena D avid S. L oeffler Nicholas W . 1anocchio John William s. Jr. Harry W. Green, Jr . Joseph J. Connor Charles B. Cook, Jr. 141
mbe mripob Established 1904.
Incorporated 1913
Published weekly throughout the Coll ege year Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Circulation Manager Business Manager Assistant Business jt[ anager
Francis R. Sl1ields, '26 L Hall Bartlett, '25 Jol1n Williams, Jr., '26 H. Taylor Stone, '25 Richard B. Talcott, '26
Qlssociatt Qfllitors Richard A. ;Hicks, '26 Samuei C. Wilcox, '25
Fredrick Leesemann, '26 Andrew H. Forrester, '27 142
OMNENCEJ\iEN tn:rinitp ((ollege ~artforb ,
Q!:onnecticut
Ninety-Eighth Annual Commencement, Alumni Hall, June Sixteenth, 1924
速rber of
~xercises
Music Daniel Green Morton, Penn ylvania
Salutatory . Announcement of Prize Conferring of Degrees, in Course Valedictory .
Albert Dale Mitchell, Illinois Music
Address Conferring of Honorary Degrees Doxology Benediction
Winchell Smith
. Chauncey B. Brewster, LL.D., Ph.D.
14 ~3
<!Class 1!lap
~rogram
<IJ:lass of 1924 Saturday, June F ourteenth ~ rogram
Pres ident's Address Stanl ey Li v in gsto ne K ennedy, New York Class Histo ry . J ohn Hutchins Yeo ma ns, Connec ti cut I'rophecy Thomas J oseph Birmingha m, Connecticut Pre entati on of ~\. th l c ti c A \\" a rds : " T " and "aT a" Certifi cates The Geo rge Sheldon M cCook Tro ph~路 Cl ass Poem . H arri son D av id Schofi eld, Co nnedicut Presentation of C lass Ba nner .H erman Asc h, Chairman Ackn owl edged by Prof L R oy Carr Barret fo r the Coll ege Class D ay Sp eaker Profe sor Vernon Kri eble K r ieble Presentations W arren Al vah H o ug h, Con nectic ut Un vei ling of Class Gift T homas J oseph Birmin gha m, P resident Speaker R ev. Dr. J ohn J a mes McCook
144
~onors
anb t)ri?t5 for tbe ~onon~
~ear 1923=1924
in tl)e QC[a55 .of 1924
Valedictorian- '" heeler Hawley Salutatorian- Bernard Edwin Dubin Honors in General cholarship--Bernard Edwin Dubin, Wheeler Hawley Honors in H istory and E conomics- Albert Dale Mitchell Honors in M odern Languages- Wheeler Hawley
Tuttle Prize E ssay: (Not awarded) Goodwin Greek Pri ze; (Not awarded) Prizes in History and Political Scien ce First Prize: (Not awarded) Second P1路ize: ( Jot awarded) The Alumni Prize in English Composition First Prize : (N ot awarded) Second Prize: (N ot awarded) The Frank W. Whitlock Prizes First Prize: (N ot awarded) S econd Prize : I idore Stolper Geeter The Dou glas Prize: (N ot a wa rded) The F. A. Brown Prize: Tha ne Bell ows Wri ght The Phi Ga mma D elta Prize in M athematics: Wendell H ohues La ngd on The Christ oph er Trowbridge M emori al Prize: J a mes Michael Cahill
~ol'tlers
of jfellowsbips an'tl
~cbolarsbips
H. E. Russell F ellow : Wheeler H awley M ary A. T erry F ellow: Stevenson Willia ms W ebster Lemuel J. Curtis Schola r : Alfred Louis P eiker Daniel Goodwin a nd H oadl ey Scholar : R aymond K en nedy Charles F. D aniel Sch ola r : George P ercival J ac kson,.Jr. Holland Schol ar : N els M artin Valerius, ' ~5 ; Charles Fra ncis Whi ston, '26路 James Michael Cahill , '27 William Allen Mather Scholar: Kenneth Willard Stuer, '~6 Caroline Sidney M ears Scholar : Francis Richard Shields, '26
145
1!\egree~ ~onferreb J/iacbelor of ~rts, in ~ourse To Fifteen Students in the Class of 1924 J/iacbelor of ~cience, in ~ourse To Twenty-nine Student of the Class of 1924 ,iflaster of
~rts,
in
~ourse
Harold Willard Gleason Paul Stephen Parsons of the Class of 1920
Jflaster of
~cience , in ~ourse Everett Waldron Lovering
Jflaster of
~rts ~onoris ~ausa
Charles Lester Ames Ri chardson Little Wri ght H elen Hartley Jenkin ~ onoris ~ausa
ti:loctor of JLetters
Winchell Smith
l9octor of JLaws
~ onori s ~ausa
William Came ron Forbes James Guthrie Harbord H oward Elliott
ti:loctor of
~cience ~onoris ~ausa
William Le Roy Emmet
ti:loctor of
~anon
JLaw
~onoris ~a usa
Burton Mansfield
:1Doctor of 1Dibinitp
~onoris ~ausa
George Aaron Barton
146
11\eceiber
~re~tnter
'57
G. R. Hallam, '59
W. H. Benjamin, '57 '59 G. R. Hallam, '59
vV. H. Webster, '61 R. F. Goodman, '63 H. G. (!ardner, '65 F. L. Norton, '68 Jacob LeRoy, '69 William Drayton, '71
I nveniam vimn aut facimn '61 Per aspera ad astra '63 N e tentes aut prefice '65 Facta non verbct '68 Semper crescen:; '69 Numqvam non paratus '71 Nulla vestigia retrorsmn '73
W. S. Cogswell, '61 N. B. Dayton, '63 C. W. Munro, '65 Robert Shaw, '68 E. V. B. Kissam, '69 D. P. Cotton, '71 F. 0. Grannis, '73 C. E. Craik, '74
C. E. Woodman, '73 '74
H. V. Rutherford, '76
R. M. Edwards, '7-! '76
C. E. Moore, '76
In servit honori '78
W. C. lllackmer, '78 D. I,. Fleming, '80
J . D. Hills, '78 '80
A. P. Burgwin, '82
W. R. Leaken, '80 A. P. Burgwin, '82 A. D. Neeley, '85 A. H. Anderson, '87 E. C. Johnson, II, '88 T. A. Conover, '90
'82 Respire finem '85 Duris non frangi '87 M ulta in dies addisrentes '88 P er angusta ad augusta '90 Se1nper agens aliquid
147
S. H. Giesy, '85 G. S. Waters, '87
E. C. John on, II, '88 E. McP. McCook, '90
I. D . Russell, '92
.Jlre~enter
~eceiber
'92 G. Hall, '92 J. W. Edgerton, '94 E . P. Hamlin, '95
F. F . Johnson, ' 94 ' 94 Agere pro viribus . ' 95 En avant! '96 (Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer) '97
J. Strawbridge, '95 C. E. Cogswell, '97
'99 Fortier, fideliter, f eliciter '01
rv ovus ordo
saeclorwn '04
'06 '08 ' 10
' 11
'14 '15 '16 '18
'20 '22 Stanley Miller, '22
John Williams, Jr., '26
148
William D. Orr, Organist
jfiut 'Q!:enor.s Scott H. Adams, Alfred L. Peiker, ~econb
·~s
jfir.st 161a.s.se.s
'~7
Irving S. Alford, ·~s William A. Towill, '~7
'~5
'Q!:enor.s
~econb
Fred G. Hicks, '~6 John E. Large, ·~s John M. Young, Jr., ·~s .John Williams, Jr., '~6
161a.s.se.s
William H. Deacon, Charles Solms, ·~s
~bbitional
·~s
.-embers
Philip M. Kerridge, Jr. Lloyd W. Minor Merrill B. Sherma11 Charles F. Whiston
JSeH l\inger Theodore L. Th omas,
jiflonitor.s ·~s
R obert W. Hildebrand, '27 Stimpson Hubbard, '26 Harold W. Mes er, '~6 14!)
~ub=jfresbman •eek=~nb jfribap, jlflap 9
In Alumni Hall · Glee Club Recital
Centennial Motion Picture ~aturbap,
jlflap 10 Classes in the morning Baseball Game with Boston University J esters' Play in the even in g Fraternity R eun ions ~unbap,
.map 11
Chapel Service
150
. Chairman
G. W aldron O'Connor, '24 Winst on S. Fliess, '27 R oss P a rke, '26 John W . Ainley, '2!>
Willi am Allen, '24 Winthrop H . Segur, '27 L. H a ll Ba rtlett, '25 Fra ncis J . Pryor, 3rd
1.51
~opbomore
j!lining
~lub
Founded by the Class of '99 on Februa1-y 15, 1897
1926 119elegation Walter J . Ril ey Fran cis J. Pryor , 3rd Norman C. Pitcher
Reginald H. Newsholme Francis R. Shields .Tames B. BuJT
152
<!&pttmt Samuel Hart, '66 George Otis Holbrooke, '69 Lucius 路w aterman, '71 Leonard Woods Richardson, '73 Hiram Banjamin Loomis, '8.5 Herman Lilienthal, '86 Willard Scudder, '89 Harold Loomis Cleasby, '99 Francis Raymond Sturtevant, '01 William Perry Bentley, '02 Edward Henry Lorenz, '02 Anson Theodore McCook, '02 Karl Philip Morba, '02 Marshall Bowyer Stewart, '02 Bayard Quincy Morgan, '04 Edward Samuel Carr, '0.5 Gustave Alexander Feingold. '11 John Howard Rosebaugh, '11 Allen Northey Jones, '17 Abraham Meyer Silverman, '18 Evald Laurids Skau, '19
mbt ;Jiattlt of tbt
~aints
ilflatcb 17tb. 1925 it came to pass on the sixteenth day of the month called March, the A NDFreshmen did all turn their backs on the campus, even at the setting of the sun . And they gathered themselves together, and their leader spake unto them, sayin g, "Do ye abide within the camp the night lon g?" (Now the camp was a barn, over against Front Street, a strong fort). So they abode in the camp accordingto his word, and it was straightway shut up, few went out, and none came in. And it came to pass, about the twelfth hour, even the selfsame night it came to pa s, that the children of 1928 went out from the barn. And forth into the streets did their leader send his chosen bands, al l lusty men, and with them parchments inscribed 2T8, in glaring green. So they returned, and behold their bands were empty, for on the walls they had left them, yea, even upon the campus trees, and not one remained unto them. And then they spake unto their leader concerning it, saying, "We did encounter one band, mounted in an armored truck, and several of our number did they take e'er we fled." Then was hi anger kindled against them, for that he had lo t such mighty men of valour, and forth he sent them, saying, "Let not one return until he is avenged". So a great journey did they make, and then they returned. And they brought back the captives, released from the bonds and walls wherein they were hog-tied. And their leader went forth to meet them without the camp, and he looked upon them and was well pleased. And forwith they rested. And it came to pass on the next day, which was called Saint Patrick's Day, that they arose early, about the dawning of the day. And their leader arose up amongst them and spake, saying, "Now therefore, hearken, Oh Freshmen, unto the judgments which I teach you, that ye may go forth to the place called 'Campus', and possess the Tree. Arm yourselves unto the battle, and go forth amongst the enemy to battle fiercely. Take ye, therefore, heed unto yourselves, that ye may not add unto the word which I command ye, nor diminish ought from it." And they listened and answered him, sayi!lg, "All that thou commandest us, we will do, and whithersoever thou sendest us, we will go''. So they gathered themselves together against the enemy, and descended from the hill called Zion, they and all the people with them. And they were without numbers as the sand by the seaside, for multitude. And the children of 19'l7 were gathered unto themselves around the Tree, and they lifted up their eyes, and behold, the Freshman host marched before them, and they were sore afraid. But their leader spake unto them, saying, "Be strong and of good courage." 155
And the leader of the enemy advanced with the chosen men in front, and heavy withal, and in their midst were the two heroe., so that they were a wall unto them, on their right hand and on their left. And there was a very sore battle that day. And one hero in little time possessed the Tree. And anon the other hero ascended with him. And they found the banner from out of their armor- so it was in little time exposed to the \vine!, and it fluttered. Then the Freshman leader saw it and was pleased. So the fighting continued, and the childrf'n of 1927 were sore distressed, so that the Freshman host overcame them, and they were put to flight. Wherefore they that peak in the journal- even that which lieth in the place called New York, saying, "And those that were injured in the battle were full twenty, those incarcerated were two, and great was the riot thereof."
15G
(fbolutton A freshman once to college came, To add new laurels to his name, To make his mark, insure his fame, He stud ied hard. At mid-years he was going strong, H e turned in answers right or wrong, He wrote exams 'most six books long, He all but passed. His intellect he could not doubt, He'd raise a stink, he'd fight a bout, Then someone said, "Tee hee you're out," And now he's gone.
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mbt 庐lb Jjunkum SCENE- Professor's o,ffice at Trinity CHARACTERS- The professor and a student (A knock is heard at the door) PROF. "Come in." STUDENT- (wallcing to deslc where professor is seated)- Good afternoon, sir. I guess I mi ssed you yesterday. I came in at four, but the door was locked. PROF. Oh yes, well I waited for a while but you didn 't come. I supposed you had forgotten. However I have the paper here now. STUD. Can you spare the time to go over it with me? PROF. Yes, I guess so. It won't take long to point out your mistakes. I looked it over again to see whether or not I co uld raise yo ur mark, and I found so me error which had escaped me before. I reall y ought to lower your grade, but I gues 路 we'll leave it a t 55. STUD. I didn' t think I did so poorl y on the thin g, sir, just where did I go wrong? PROF. (putting on his glasses and scrutinizing the paper) Well, here in the first question you mi ssed the point entirely . Instead of answering the question you have put down a lot of things which have nothing to do with it. I didn 't take off full credit because I think you tried to get at the root of it. STUD. Oh yes, I remember now about that fir t one. I didn 't understand it. I raised my hand to ask you but yo u were busy so I thought I'd do what I co uld. PROF. I gave yo u full credit for the second. It had to be either right or wrong. Luckily yo u got it right. STUD. Yes sir. PROF. On the third you made a seriou s error. You didn 't seem to know that principle we spoke of at the last meeting of the class, before the quiz. Now that should have been fresh in your mind. Didn't yo u understand it when it was explained? STUD. No, I didn't sir. That was a thing I wanted to talk to you abo ut. I came up after the hour, but there were so many around the desk, I didn 't have time to wait. You see, I have a class right after yours, sir. PROF. Yes, well that principle isn't in the text. I can hardly hold yo u for it if you didn't get it in class. I guess I can raise the mark on that one. STUD. Thank you, sir. PROF. The fourth and fifth were both done rather poorly. Just what did you mean by this remark ? It doesn't seem to mean much of anything. ( H ands the paper to the student) .
158
ST D. (reads the answer) Oh perhaps that accounts for it. I remember I didn't think it wa very clear when I wrote it, but I was pretty rushed for time. I can .explain what I meant by it, ir. I understand it all right. I meant that - - - - - . PROF. (looks at watch) You're sure you know what it should have been? ST D. Oh yes, sir. PROF. All right then I'll give you credit for it. I've got to go now, but I guess that gives you a passing grade anyway. ST D. Oh thank you, sir, very much. I'm sure I'll do much better next time.
15!)
JLost Once A freshman Was standing On The College Walk Thinking about An idea Which He had To be Careful of Because It wa In a Strange place When all at once He saw Two girls Passing The Sundial Suddenly ome heads Popped out Of Some windows And yelled "Fire" He looked around For The smoke And The flames But saw none Meanwhile He forgot The idea So Nobody knows What the 'vorld Lost.
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.A Comedy of Standardization
CHARACTERS A WO !fAr A NEWSBOY
A MAN ANOTHER MAN
A PROLOGUE TIME- A century hence, provided the trend of modern busines attains its ultimate end. SCENE- Any street corner in any future city. The streets are like narrow aisles between carefull y laid rows of many well-worn ivory dice, and the long lines of yellow apartment houses have myriads of little windows poked in them with the geometric regularity of dice spots. The tedious uniformity of the scene might be relieved by the pre ence here and there of a nited Cigar Store, an Atlantic and Pacific Grocery Store, a Standard Oil Station, a Y. M. C. A., a Ford Agency, a second-story business college or a Rotary Club signboard. A traveller waking up in the morning and looking out his hotel window couldn't for the life of him tell whether this was the same city in which he went to bed or not; for this is a "model city" in the Era of Standardization. It is five o'clock, and past our street corner trudge weary business men-all dressed alike in standardized suits and wearing similar false-faces, colorless and expressionless. A newsboy stands on the curb, his face masked like the others, droning his wares in a monotone reminiscent of the present-day station-master's announcements of trains.
NEWSBOY. Wha' daya read? Wha' daya read? Munsey's Amalgamated Paper! Paper! Munsey's Syndicated Paper! Paper! (Two 1nen, dressed alike and masked alike, enter frmn opposite wings and approach Newsboy.) BOTH MEN (in unison and in tired, uninflected voices). as well have a paper.
I suppose I might
NEWSBOY. Yessir, yessi r. (Both men feel their poclcets for change, and as each does so, a pinlc card flutters from his poclcet to the .floor, Mechanically, each picks up the other's card and hands it to him.) 161
BOTH MEN (in unison).
Thank you. Nice day. Good-bye. (Each pays the newsboy . Exeunt by opposite wings. on.) (C RTAI )
The newsboy drones
THE PLAY SCENE-The apartment of one of the two men--either one will do. The walls are plain, probably cardboard, and might be decorated with a Maxfield Parrish print or a portrait of Henry Ford the Great Standardizer holding a motor car on his palm in the fashion of an heroic statue. The furn iture, the most central feature of which is a dining-table set for supper, is obviously machinemade, uniform in design and quite devoid of beauty. There are doors on either side of the room and a window in the center. The whole effect is not unlike that of a furniture store window, impersonal, stiff and undomesti c. One of the men of the Prologu either one will do nters by the left door, newspaper in hand. Mechanically he remove his hat, and with it the mask thereon attached. There is an extraordinary resemblance between the expressionless false-face and hi s own countenance. VOICE OF HIS WH'E (from interior of room at right ). I s that you? (The man malces no answer. H e stands in the center of the room expectantly. His wife en{ers by right door, hsses hirn perfunctorily, takes his hat and mask, puts thern in room at n'ght and returns, The man sits at the table reading his paper as ln's wife goes about setting supper, passing in and out of the room in the process. ) WIFE (in matter-of-course mice). Tired? MAN (reading). Uhmm. WIFE (still in mechanical tone). How is the man at the next desk? lVIA J. He left today. Broke down and they had to call the district doctor. He said he wouldn't last long. I am taking his column in Ledger 6398 till some one is transferred from Department 49. WIFE (with a trace of human sentiment). Oh well, I suppose they'll soon be carving another number over a grave in the corporation cemetery. 'Vhat was his number? MAN. Don't know. Never had need to know . 1 ever asked. WIFE. That' the way it goes. Grinding on and on at the same old desk till you finally fall to pieces. MAN. Well, it's the same for all of us in the serv ice of the Company.
162
WIFE . Service of the Compa ny-Pooh! Before I married yo u a nd had to work for a living, I neve r took any of that Servi ce stuff from those glib propagandists. (Worked up to a tmly alarming human emotionalism by her heretical mitburst. ) Service to whom, I'd like to know? To a handful of fat corporationist running a big grinding machine made of fellows like you, who don 't even know the number of the ma n at the next desk! MAN (alarmed by this e:rhibition o.f heresy). Hu sh, hush! Such talk! That's the trouble with women. Always upsettin g thin gs . You can 't understand the fundamental s of servi ce a nd system. Y ou would all ruin the whole system of standardized busine s ifWIFE (relentlessly ). I wish you would get papers to transfer _vou from that plant to some other. The Lord knows it' bad eno ugh everywhere else, but you' ve been in that place so long yo u talk like an advertisement for it. MA (helplessly ). Th ere yo u go again! How can I transfer? You know as well as I do that I' ve been calculating Ledger 6398 ever since I left the College of Business Administration. It's my trade. That's all I can do. I wa t ra ined and trained for that one thing. And I wouldn't and couldn 't do anything else. ( Nervously) But do be more quiet in you1· outbreaks. Some one might hear. If your talk ever reached the authorities! Why , I never heard yo u carry on so . (When his wife leaves the room in the business of preparing supper the man starts to read his paper. B 1Lt his wife's outbmst has disturbed him. I-I is expressionless .face has begun to assume a troubled nnd bewildered look. ) WIFE (returning with loaf of bread). Look at that bread! The same bread we've been having all our li ves. Every loaf a like, every wrapper al ike, the shape alike, the taste a like! And the cereal- eve ry package alike, every corn flake in every package alike! And the same with eve ry house, every street, every man and woman! MAN. Wh y, what- what's all thi ?WIFE. Hou se all a like! Ever_vbody in them a ll a like! Faces all a like! Everything just like t he next thing! MAN (flabbergasted, his .face quite re.ft of its c01npos1ae) . Wh at does a ll this talk mean? What have you been doing? \\"!FE (reco1•ering slowly, then ashamed, almost whispering ). I've been reading:VIAN (horrified) . R eading! Wife (guiltily). Yes, a man came and left a book here. H e went right away afterward. It was a book a bout long ago. l\IAK (uncomfortably). If the authorities ever kn ew that! Er- where 1s this book? WIFE (lilre a confederate in a conspiracy) . I will show it to you later! I hid it. 163
MAN. Come, come. We will get into trouble. You mustn't talk to men who come to the door without showing their personal license number cards. They might be radicals, anti-standardizationists or something. If the authorities ever got wind of such doings! (Exit the woman again by right door. The man vainly endeavors to concentrate on his newspaper. The woman re-enters). MAN (casually). Tomorrow, you know, is the first of the month. We 路must renew our personal license number cards and spend the two hours with the children at the public nursery. Have the identification plates ready when I get home. (He produces a pink card from his pocket and looks at it. His face becomes suddenly perplexed. He leaps from his chair in agitation. Then, explosively:) Great Kiwanis! Look at that licen e card! WIFE (puzzled).
What!
MAN (very much upset). own number. This isn't路 it!
What is it? Why look!
What is the matter? This isn't my number!
I know my
WIFE. Why of course it is. It must be. MAN (dropping into a chair). But it isn't! It isn't! WIFE. Let me see. Why, you're losing your mind. How could you have the wrong personal license number card? MAN. It isn't mine, I tell you. I know that's not my number. WIFE (confusedly ). Why it must be . . . If it i n 't . . . then, hmv do I know . . . how can I tell \vhether-? MAN. Why it must be. I must have forgotten my own number. Ha, ha. ( H e tries to laugh and convince himself. Then, as he sees the expression of his wife's face, a terrible thought occurs to him.) Perhaps, though . . . . . 路why, that's right, you may not be my wife! WIFE. And you may not be my husband! MAN (angrily). How can I tell? WIFE. How can I tell? (The thought nonplusses both of them). MAN (trying to fathom out the puzzle). Well, I mu t have some one else's number card. How did I get it, that's the question? . . . Why of course. I must be me. You must be my wife and I must be your husband. WIFE. But how do I know? Suppose you are not, and that card is yours. MAN. But worse still, suppose I am your husband and this card is not mine. I'd be given twenty years for losing my number! What if the authorities found out? ( H e is not quite humanized in his confusion). Well this is a hell of a mess! 164
WIFE (also humanized). Yes, isn't it? (They are startled by a violent ringing of the doorbell. They try to regain composure. But before the woman can answer the bell, another man-the other man of the prologue-swings in on the handle of the left door. He closes it and leans against it, panting inside his false-face). OTHER MAN (very much agitated). There ha been orne mistake! 'VIFE . Yes, there has been some mistake. MAN (ceremoniously) . May we have the pleasure, ir, of seeing your personal license number card? OTHER MAN. That's just the point. I don't know whether it is mine. MAN (somewhat relieved and to himself). I have the same difficulty. OTHER MAN (to the wife). Will you please pull that shade? (As she cuts o.ff the view of the rows of box-shaped yellow apartment houses, lze loolcs furtively about him, then removes his hat and the mask attached. His countenance differs liUle from his false-face and from the other mnn's real face). Now may I explain myself? I've been through every apartment in this building trying to find where I beiong. I must belong here. I must belong somewhere. You see, I've discovered that through some mistake I have some one else's personal license number card, and if the authorities were to find outMAN AND WIFE. Sh-sh! OTHER MAN. But I must tell you! I must aet where I belong! I went to Commissioner 43 of this district, and he saidMAN. I'm ruined! OTHER MA r. And he shooed me out. He wouldn't listen to me. He said he never heard of such a thing before-a man losing his number and getting somebody el e' . Oh, it's terrible! MAN. Go on, go on. What else did he say? OTHER MAN. He told me for God's sake to get out of his district and settle it for myself. You see, he's.afraid of the higher authorities. He said it was twenty years for losing your number, but he said he had never heard of anyone getting some one else's number. He aid if everybody began getting out of place, they'd get all mixed-up, and they'd never get straightened out and then what would they do? I got away as quickly as I could. Oh, it' terrible! MAN. Now let's see if 'v.e can straighten this thing out together. You say you think you have some one else's personal license number card? OTHER MAN. That's it. I'm glad you can understand that. fAN. Well, I think I have too. But I'm not sure. I may have forgotten my own personal license number, though the very idea is impossible. I never got out of place before. WIFE (impatiently). Well, let's find out what is the matter. Which of you i my husband, that's what I want to know? 165
BOTH 1E l (in unison). That's just it. How can we tell? WIFE. There mu t he so me way of finding out. Suppo. e I cross-examine each one of you? I ought to know my own husband. (To the Other Man ) First, what is your personal number? OTHER MAN. I thought it was D494-District 43, but this card says E598-District 44. MAN. And I know mine is E598-District 44, but this card says D494District 43. WIFE. That's nonsen e! We can't get any satisfaction out of that. (To Other Man ) What is your social category? BOTH ME1 (in unison). Bourgeoisie, of course. "' IFE. No sati faction. Your mental category? BOTH MEN. Orthodox, of course. WIFE. Still no satisfaction. Your religiou s category? BOTH MEN. Chri tian, of co urse. WIFE. Well, your fraternal category? BOTH MEN. Elks. (Both put spread fingers to the temples antler-fashion). WIFE (desperate ). Your favorite drink? BOTH MEN. Postum, there's a reason. WIFE (at her wits' end). Your favorite smoke? BOTH MEN. Chesterfields, they satisfy. WIFE (after a moment's hesitation, then deciding to resort to the direst means). One more question. How old is your wife? OTHER MAN (without hesitation ). Madam, you are thirty-eight. MAN (after a moment's thought). My wife is thirty-four years old. WIFE (pointing to the latter spea ker) . This man is my husband. OTHER MAN (downcast). Another failure! I thought at first I might belong here. Well , I'll try again. ( H e dons his hat and false-face, stands for one dej 8cted moment at the left door, thm lem•es ). (The man and woman look at each other dully. Finally: ) MAN. Well, we're in our place anyway. WIFE. Yes, I suppose we are. (i,!echanically, she leaves by the right door to return presently with a tea-pot and to pour out l1ro cups of tea). This will relieve "that tired feeling." (They sit at the table. The man renews the perusal of his neu·spaper). MAN (brea lcing a few minute's silence and lool.:ing up quizzically). You know, I thought you were older. (Eyeing her with suspicion) . . . But I gue s you ought to know. Well it doesn't matter, anyway. ( H e returns to his paper). WIFE (very tired). No, it doesn't matter. (CURTA! 1) -G. M.- S.
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(!College (!onnecticut
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RINITY COLLEGE, under the name of Washington College, received its charter in 1823. It was established by Episcopalians as their contribution to higher education. But the original charter expressly forbids the application of any religious test to professor or student. The name Washington College was changed to Trinity College in 1845 largely because there were several other colleges bearing the name of our first President.
The principal building is in the English Secular Gothic style and includes Jarvis and Seabury Halls and Northam Towers. At the north end of this structure has recently been erected a Library and administration building, the gift of the late J. P. Morgan, LL.D., in memory of John Williams, fourth Bishop of Connecticut. With this addition, which is in architectural harmony with the main edifice, the building extends more than even hundred feet north and south, while the library reaches one hundred and twenty-five feet to the east, constituting a part of the north side of the proposed quadrangle. The Library was ready for use at the opening of the academic year 1914-1915. Outside of the lines of this quadrangle at the south are the Observatory, the Boardman Hall of Natural History, and the Jarvis Laboratories for Chemistry and Physics. To the north of it are the Gymnasium, houses of the President and Professors, and Chapter houses of the Fraternities. Below, and to the east of the College Campus, is the Athletic Field. The contribution made by Trinity College to ~ducation is in its training for leadership. It is not a University, and has practically no graduate tudents. Beginning with the year 1921-1922, there was established a group system of studies, which means that at the end of his freshman year, every tudent i required to choose one of the ten different groups. He finds certain courses required and certain others, freely optional, in order to stimulate interest in the one specialty, but also to insure a well-rounded, broadly developed course. This means that the graduates of Trinity College are especially fitted to enter professional schools. For catalogues and information, apply to the President, the Secretary of the Faculty, or the Registrar.
ESTABLISHED 1818
~~ O$S£0~~ frutlrmrn~ fllmi~lfin:g
fo obs,
MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY·FOURTH STREET NEW YORK
Clothes for School and College B 0 5 T 0 N
PALM BEACH
N EW P 0 RT
LITTLI: BUILDING Tt~c•o•T ~··· aGnsto•
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AUDAAIN BUilDING 220 B nLI\'"'1 An-• wr
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•UILDII'IG t • A • oo o
J . McGEE
W. A. HEALEY
The New Barber Shop
Books
We Sterilize Everything
EDWIN VALENTINE MITCHELL 27 Lewis Street, Hartrord
Old Hartford Fire Building Cor. Pearl and Trumbull Sts. Telephone 3-1266
3
Insurance Company of North America PHILADELPHIA, PA.
*' America's Oldest Fire and Marine Insurance Company FOUNDED 1792
Cash Capital Liabilities Assets Surplus to Policyholders
$ 5,000,000.00 29,625 ,878.29 53,667,924.28 24 ,042,045.99
BENJAMIN RUSH, President JOHN 0. PLATT, Vice-President SHELDON CATLIN, 2nd Vice- President GALLOWAY C. MORRIS, 3rd Vice - President JOHN KREMER, Secretary JOHN J. CONNOR, Treasurer & Asst. Secy. T . LEAMING SMITH, Marine Secretary EDMUND H. PORTER, Asst. Secretary CURTIS L. CLAY, Asst. Treasurer
NEW ENGLAND DEPARTMENT HARTFORD, CONN.
Charles E. Parker Manager 1~5
Trumbull Street, Old Hartford Fire Building
HARTFORD, CONN.
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THE
SPORT
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SHOP
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Offers A. G. Spalding & Bros.
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Athletic Equipment
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For Sportsmen Who Demand the Best at the Lowest Price
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E verything for
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Golf, Tennis, Baseball Track, Archery
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Special Prices will be Q uoted to T eams and Schools
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The Sport Goods Shop
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fRANK BR(OTJHERS Fifii1Avenue Boo1 Shop: Between 47!!! and 48!!! Slrecls, New York
Good Clothes
Thei1路 smart style and sound quality make these shoes the favorite of all college men
College models for college men Department of E vening Clothes
THIRTY FOUR ASYLUM STREET
FREEMAN
CHURCH
Exhibit S hops:
COMPANY
"Good Clolbes for
~fe n
CHICAGO Peoples Trust and Sa vin~s B a nk Bmlding
and Boys,
WASHINGTON Woodward Building opposite
Shore ham Hotel NEW HAVEN Hotel T aft
ST. LOUIS Arcade Building
PITTSBURGH J enkin s Arcade
Gustave Fisher Company School and Commercial Stationery Office Furniture and Supplies Photographic Supplies 236-237 ASYLUM STREET
HARTFORD, CONN.
The Model Barber Shop, Inc. Vincent Corso, Manager
Where Service and Courtesy are Coupled with Expert Barbering 7 CHAIRS
MANICURIST
19 Asylum Street
19 Steps from Main Street 6
Our Store Is Your Store The Place to Trade
Every Need Has Been Planned For; Every Want Given Much Thought EFFICIENCY Efficiency is the important word in business and personal life today. P ersonal , busin ess and national welfare will be det ermin ed by the degt路ee of effi ciency with which路 every indi vidual and organizati on applies itself t o dut ies and responsibili t ies. This store is constantly strivin~ for ~reater efficiency in every depart ment of our busin ess so t hat you, as a cust omer, can receive t he hi ghest type of ser vice, t he most desirable merchandise and t he great est economy .
7
Compliments of
The Noble & Westbrook Manufacturing Co. Rubber Stamps, Steel Stamps, Notary and Corporate Seals Metal Checks, Badges, Stencils
19 Asyl urn Street
Hartford, Conn.
"A City is Known by Its I-I otels"
HOTEL BOND H artford's Social Center
Restaurants of Excellence Our Own Motor Pl aza
Dancing Every Evening Harry. S B ond
For many years our
William H. Post Carpet Co.
COAL H as given life and comfort to the halls of old Trinity and its splendid Fraternity Houses
Decorators Oriental Rugs, Carpets Domestic Rugs, W'allpapers, Upholstery and Furniture
We handle the finest grades of coal produced
George W.
Newton & Son
219 Asylum Street
Office: 218 Pearl St.
H artford , Conn.
8
We Seek Your Friendly Patronage It is our earnest wish that this store may help you in the import ant problem of purchasing, by displaying high quality standard merchandi e that you will be proud of possessing
~lbcrt
* ~tctgcr, JJnc.
A Store of Specialty Shops
9
rrhe Oldest and Largest T'rust Company in Connecticut Meigs H. Whaples, Chairman of Board Arthur P. Day Vice-Chairman Nathan D. Prince President
ID The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company 10
The Case, Lockwood &Brainard Co. 141 Pearl Street, Hartford, Connecticut
Printers H m路tf ord' s L eading P rinters for E i ghty-three Y em路s
Compliments of a member of
'fhe "Great and Glorious Class" of Eighty- eight
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F. B. Skiff lN CORPORATED
Ben Abramson & Co.
M anujactu1路ers of
The Shop S exl to the Bond
Awnings, Tents and Flags
High grade
Clothes, Haberdashery and Sportwear For the University Element and the Well-Dressed Man Exclusive agents for L angrock and Goodman and Suss Clothes
220 SO. WHITNEY ST.
350 Asylum Street Hartford, Conn .
S. Slossberg The Well-known College Tailor
Fine Custom 'failoring
T elephone 5-3076
65 Lincoln Street, Cor. Broad
Hartford, Connecticut
Comfortable and Inexpensive
Furniture for Your Roolll f"Cl OTS, Beds, Mattresses and all bedding acce sories at ~ most reasonable prices. Chest of Drawers, Dressers, etc., in a variety of styles, many of which can be bought for very little. Rugs of every size and grade. Odd Chairs in abundance, at all sorts of prices. In fact, everything to make your quarters homelike and inviting .
â&#x20AC;˘ â&#x20AC;˘ C. C. FULLE R CO. THE FURNITURE STORE
40-56 FORD STREET
WALKER Phone 2-2943
131 Adams Street
H artford's L eading Caterer Caterer for Governor's Ball for last eight years Caterer for Trinity Proms Caterer for recent Trinity Centennial Well known in Colleges throughout New England
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A Department Store With wide resources and in perpetual contact with the World's Greatest Producers of Exceptional Merchandise
路~
With every facility to assure t h e u t m o s t i n Satisfactory Service and unusual advantages in wide Variety, Quality and Price :
~.jfox& C!Companp,1Jnc. J}artforbt {!Connecticut Established Over One Hundred Years
~cotti~b
llnion anb Jlational 3Jnsurance C!Companp
UN ITED STATES MAIN OFFICE: HARTFORD, CONN. J. H. Vreeland, Manager Assets, $9,064,377.11 - Net Surplus, $4,134, 437.61 Policies of Insurance to Cover:
Fire Lightning Windstorm Tornado
Explosion Riot and Civi l Commotion Sprinkler Leakage Automobile
Agents in All the Principal Cities and Towns
Rents Profits Commissions Use and Occupancy
Ask Our Agent for a Scottish Union Policy
14
Radio in Every Room with the
''H & H'' Radio Outlet HIS brings radio to ev~ry room- or to every pomt of convenience-from a central receiving set.
Wires carry from a main receiving set to the H&H Wiredin Receptacle, and the user "plugs in" with loud-speaker or head- et like plugging into a Baseboard R eceptacle with an electric appliance!
T
To every bedside in a hospital ward; to every suite in an apartment house; to hotel bedrooms and children's nurseries you can plan Radio Extensions. In clubs, restaurants , retail em pori urns, too, it speaks for foresight in wiring plans.
Again, the Radio Outlet extends battery service to guests or tenants , from a central storage battery operated by the management.
Write for a new circular on t his great new convenience in up-to-date wiring
THE HART &HECE.MRN.MFa.Co. HARTFORD. CoNN.
15
Calhoun Show Print
Calhoun Press
Big T ype and Poster Card Printers
Commercial Printers D ance Programs, etc.
Di gnam & Walsh
356 Asylum Street, Hartford, Connecticut Telephone 2-252 1
GLENEAGLES It gives us great pleasure to announce that the famous Gleneagles brand of Scotch Brogues and Shoes are now available to patrons in America.
Compliments of A Friend
No. 5093 Brog u e with D o uble L eather Sole
The
Heublein Hotel Barber Shop
We use only the choicest of heavy T an Scotc h Grain Leather for uppers and all models are full leather lin ed. No. 5001 Pla ntat io n Cre p e Rubb er Sole --Golf o r S p o rt
Manicurist
At the College l ' nion the Second Monday of Every Month
F. H. Peabody, Representative 58 MULBERRY STREET Hartford, Conn.
CANTON, CONN. Prices quoted on request
16
â&#x20AC;˘
Jacobs & Saltzman, Inc. Tailors and Importers NEW HAVEN
-
CONNECTIC T
"Better Clothes for Less"
~~ H a rold J acobs showing at the Coll ege Union every Thursday
The
When You Are Downtown
Joseph L. Besse Company
Looking for the fellows, you are ure to :find some of them in
Caterers
March's
French and Ameri can Ice C reams, French Pastry, Confectionery, etc.
Barber Shop Connecticut Mutual Bldg.
701 Main Street
Vibration Shampoo
Hartford, Connecticut
Manicure by Lady Attendant
Tel ephone, Charter.2134
17
F . F. SMA LL
C. H . BRIGH AM:
F. F. Small & Company FIRE AND LIABILITY
INSURANCE 95 Pearl Street, Hartford, Connecticut
Local Manage1路s, Th1路ee liaTtfoTd Companies National Fire Insurance Company Connecticut Fire Insurance Company H a rtford Co unty Mutual Fire Insurance Company
Compliments of a Friend
18
Education Never Ends
The ed~cation of th e agent stands ~ut pre-emmently as one of th e leadmg factors in th e busine. s of life insurance. Conn ec ti cut Mutual agents always have avail able educational facilit ies of a hi gh character . We teach a nd train men for the business .
The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company THOMPSON & TAI NTOR, GE 1 ERAL AGE ' T S 1846- 1925
H artford, Co nn ecticut
Over 78 Year Old
A Bank ts a Bank to Most People This in t itution st ands for ornething more. We aim to make our cu t omer and t he public feel they are welcome at all t imes, not only to deposit or draw money, but to talk over with us any business or financial problems
United States Security Trust Company CORN ER MAIN A1 D PEARL STREETS
19
<!&gben
~tubio
Distinctive Portraits 69 Pratt Street
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT .
<!&gben
~itt ~bop
Exclusive Gifts and Greeting Cards 69 Pratt Street
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
"See Doug Perry in the UNION'' Invest your fmids in the UNION and receive regular and extra dividends in added improvements for your comfort. ~ The one table and successful organization in college offers yo u its services for any and everything at all times.
"UNITE WITH THE U ION"
~rinitp
((ollege minion
DouglasS. Perry, Mgr.
R eginald H. Newsholme, Asst. Mgr.
20
m:tinit!] Q!ollcgc, mattfotll.
Mjcroscopes and L aboratory Accessories for Student Requirements
The Gladding Drug Co. Physicians' and Hospital Supplies Elastic Supports for Athletic Needs Hartford, Conn.
56 Church Street
First-Class Shoe Repairing For a number of years have been doing work for G. Fox & Co., Sage-Allen & Co. and Stet on Shoe Store REASON BLE PRICES
MICHELE PANE 410 New Britain Ave., Hartford, Conn. 21
Have our Koal Kids serve you with dependable Fuel. Free burning and free from slate
3 Albany A venue
'
The Tracy, Robinson &Williams Co. 78-80 Asylum Street, Hartford, Conn. Hardware , Mill Supplies, Tools, Cutlery Fishing Tackle and Guns
Henry Antz---Barber Shop H erm a nn Ficht ner a nd G. Codra ro, Props.
10 CHAIRS ~
C).7 P earl St. and
C).
Grove St., cor . M ain St.
HARTFORD, CONN. I
F acin g St a t e Capitol
Opposite Bushn ell P ark
The Heublein Hotel HARTFORD, CONN. "One of New Engla nd"s most satisfying hotels." Quiet and refi ned. Famous as an eati ng place. T he H eublei n Garage has accommodations for fifty cars. CLI FFORD D. PERKINS, Proprietor " If you. really want to di ne well" 22
,
'
Yoward~Wesson Co. Worcester; Mass.
THI COLL:GGI INGRA..VbRS !fNIW £NGLAND Conveniently Located, With Yea1·s of Experience in Producin._~ College Annuals.
Jleady to Give You Complete Service. Business Managers and Editors App reciate our Constructive Help.
YVrtte
f01·
du7' .b!beral Contta.ct .
® .
.
i!te Finest Engravin!f. ShoR in New ETIQ:lanii 71k rloor,Printers'<Bldg:
Designing R.._etouchin[, Half Tones. Color Plates
Engravers for lhe 1926 Ivy
•
23
THE COLLEGE TAILOR N D E R
NEW
M A N A G E M E N T
"Harry" Born stein, formerly with the Luke H orsfall Co., where he has had over four year's experience, has taken over Sam Schneider's place. He is a first-class Ladies' and Gentlemen's T a ilor, ready to give the students specia l attent ion Let's get acquainted
All work guaranteed
1279 Broad Street, between Vernon and Allen Streets Telephone 3-0446
The.College Store M. W. SCHER,
PROP.
The Place of Accommodation 44 Vernon Street, Hartford, Conn.
Correct
Footwear for Men The W. G. Simmons Corporation 48-58 Pratt Street, Hartford, Conn.
Compliments of a Friend
..... .... ,.,~
路~t路
EAGLE PRINTING AND BINDING Co. OUR SPECIALTY IS PRINTING FOR SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES
Fla tiron Building
E agle Squ a re
Pittsfield, Massachusetts We Printed and Bound This Book
26
~bis
J}iook is publisbeb tbrougb tbe courtesp of tbe abbertisers. 3ln orber to let tbem know tbeir inbest= ments babe been appreciateb kinblp mention tbe "3lbp" wben patroni?ing
Date Due
/!J
LJ :
lAKE ~~r~y
I i
.. --
ru.. JNO rQu~rwrNT •u~t:OAl
Cat. No. 1090A
Trinity Ivy
NOT TO BE TAK FRO UBRAR