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RINITV COLLEGE LIBRARY RE .-EIVED ,J (.;

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THE.

TRINITY l\JY VOL. LIII

Publishe-d by THE. ClA55 of 1928

Colle8eHar1..-tord .C.onn

Tnni-t:y

19ZZ


TRINITY COLLEGE LIBRARY RECElVED 路I

~ber

12 1927

beating in minb tbe fact tbat Jfbp is 'artinitp's 拢ole mebium fot tbe reflection of bet belobeb ttabi路 tions, \ne babe bone out Iebel best to mittot tbese as accutatelp anb as fit= tinglp as possible. .l\eali?ing tbat in tbe ebiting of tbis 3Jbp out faults babe been manp anb out bittues fe\n, \ne present it to pou \nitb mingleb feel= ings of ptibe anb ttepibation. jlje not too batsb in pout treatment of us ~be


I I I J

Foreword

4

Dedication .

6

In Memoriam

8

Acknowledgements

11.

J

Ivy Board

12

J

Senatus Academicus

16

Faculty .

19

College Body

31

Fraternaties

61

Athletics

91

,1

Social Events and Organizations

113

Commencement

128

St. Patrick's Day Scrap

135

Miscellaneous

138

Advertisements

149


DEDICATION

~o

tbe belobeb

.memorp of

31obn 31ames JMcQCook .m.~.,

1JB.1JB., JLJL.m.

tbig 3Jbp is respectfullp bebicateb



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3Jn Jlltmortam 3f obn 3f ames :.ffflc~ook I T was my happy fortune to call John J. McCook my friend for about sixty years. When, in 1868, he came from a church in Detroit and entered upon his long rectorship at St. Johns, East Hartford, several Trinity students were attracted by his engaging personality and attended his services more or less regularly. Yested choirs, frequent communions, extempore preaching, ornate ceremonial were less common than they are now and East Hartford became a local mecca for those who li ked such services, as very many did. How beautiful those servi ces were and how fine the eloquence of the young, enthusiastic preacher! But it was in the later years, from 1883 to 1927, that the full power of this unusual man was graduall y revealed. When the academic year 1883-84 began at Trinity College there wa a new President and five new Profes ors, three of the six sti ll li ving. Dr. McCook was made Professor of Modern Languages, a position which he filled with conspicuous success for forty years, though for the latter part of this period his actual teaching was almost exclusively in German. Dr. McCook was more insistent than most teachers of Modern Languages that his pupils shou ld be able to speak with some fluency those foreign tongues. We learned with pride that one of our Russell Fellows was known from the time of his arrival at a German University as "the young American who speaks German." Not least among the services rendered his Alma Mater by this loyal son was the outgrowth of his love for athletic sports. He had been a strong young fellow, prominent in such rudimentary athletics as flourished before the growth of the gate-money motif. Until the touch of real old age he played a good game of lawn tennis. The present Trinity gymnasium, inadequate, and soon, let us hope, to be supplanted by something larger and more modern, was, in 1886, when it was erected, a notable structure, large enough and perfect in equipment. We looked down superciliously upon many colleges that had nothing so fine as the "Trinity Gym". Dr. McCook obtained the funds for this old building, largely from Mr. Junius S. Morgan, grandfather of Mr. J. P. Morgan of New York City. No worthy enterprise upon which our college entered but has felt the stimulus of the McCook enthusiasm. He had much to do with a ll that was undertaken, from the campus flag-staff, to the half-million fund raised in 1908, mostly through hi per onal endeavors. But his influence was potent over a much larger range than the activities of Trinity College. Something has already been said of his work as Rector in East 7


Hartford. This was maintained by him alone until the infirmities that come to all as the years increase made it advisable that he hould have help. And to the day of his death he cared beyond most other interests for the Church and congregation so long in pis charge. Those citizens of Hartford who have lived long in that city know something, perhaps much, of what he did for his community. He was leader of a movement by which the problem of the relief of the poor, especially "out-door relief", was investigated, the various factors co-ordinated, the whole matter simplified. Out of this study emerged Hartford's Charity Organization Society. He studied "Tramp-life" and showed many doubters what the liquor traffic means. He led in an attempt to provide a state reformatory for the salvage of savable offenders against the law. This movement failed, to his great distress, but before many years the reformatory was a fact and it is now in successful operation. He served many years on the High School Committee. Happy is the man whose best eulogy is the simple story of his life. I have mentioned but a few outstanding peaks in the outline of a splendid career. Naturally the intimacies of a life-long friendship are almost too sacred for the printing press. But I loved him; and I believe that even when he could not approve me, he yet loved me. Soldier, teacher, preacher of religion, patriot, champion of righteousness, would that you were with us still! But no; for in the Paradise of God are great rewards and greater opportunities for service. Flavel S. Luther '70

8


DR. McCOOK'S LAST CLASS, MAY, 1923

9


DR. McCOOK LEAVING IDS LAST CLA S


ACKNOWLL DGM

F

ULLY realizing his deep indebtedness to those whose kind assistance made the publication of this IvY possible, the Editor-in-Chief extends his grateful appreciation to Mr. Anson Theodore McCook for his kindness in providing the several photographs of his father; to the Reverend Dr. Flavel Sweeten Luther for his appropriate composition of the eulogy to Dr. John James McCook; to Professor Odell Shepard for the writing of his poem to Dr. McCook; and to Winthrop H. Segur, through whose courtesy permission was given for the use of several zinc etchings, originally intended for the Class of 1927. In addition, the Editor sincerely thanks the Bachrach, Ogden, and CurtissShervee studios for their unstinted aid in the taking of the group and individual pictures herein contained. And in conclusion, the appreciation of the Editor is extended to Stanley Bell for his permission to use his snapshots of various college scenes and scrap pictures, and to J. Mills Hartley for his unique woodcuts. The Editor is also aware of the fact that without the help of everal men whose names are not recorded here the 1928 IVY could never have been a concrete realization. To tho e men he expresses his sincerest gratitude.


John E ll is Large James Edward Bent

. Editor-i n-Chief B11siness Manager

JLiterarp

~taff

William F. Judge William B. St ewart, III I. Scott Alford H. A. L. Janes Dudley H. Burr Thom as Francis Daly

JSusiness

~taff

Berry 0 . Bald win Lewi s H . Small, Jr. William McE. Ellis Robert F. Gibson, Jr. Oswin H . D oolittle


TRINITY COLLEGE was founded by the Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, D.D., LL.D., . who was born at Westport, Mass., Oct. 19, 1779, and died at Hartford, Jan. 13, 1865. From 1819 to 1865 he was the third Bishop of Connecticut and the Presiding Bishop from 1852 to 1865. From 1824 to 1831 he was the :first President of the College. ~resibents

Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, D.D., LL.D. Rev. Nathaniel heldon Wheaton, S.T.D. Rev. Silas Totten, S.T.D., LLD. Right Rev. John Williams, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. Daniel Raynes Goodwin, .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. 13

1824- 1831 1831- 1837 1837- 1848 1848- 1853 1853- 1860 186Q-1864 1864- 1866 1866- 1874 1874- 1883 1883- 1904 1904-1919 192Q-



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TilE Rev. Flavel Sweeten Luther was President of Trinity College from 1904 to 1920, a period of almost unsurpassed prosperity in the history of the eollege. He received his B.A. from Trinity in 1870, his Ph.D. in 1896, and his LL.D. in 1904. At Racine College he was Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy during the years from 1871 to 1881. For the next two years he was Professor of the same subjects at Kenyon College. In 1883 he was offered and accepted a Professorship at Trinity. Twenty-one years later, in 1904, he was made President of the college, which position he held for the next sixteen years to the ultimate betterment of Trinity. Dr. Luther is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and had the honor of being chosen as United States Senator from the First Di trict of Connecticut from 1907 to 1909. He is a member of <I>BK and ~T. Re idence: 129 :\'orth Ilill Avenue, Pasadena, Calif.

15


~enatu~ ~cabemicu~ ~orporation

The President of the Coll ege ea; ojj'icio President* Sydney G. Fisher, L.H.D. , LL.D. Robert Thorne, LL.B. The Rt. R ev. Chauncey B. Brewster, D.D. The Hon . J oseph Buffington, LL.D. The Hon. Frank L. Wilcox, B.A.* Edgar F. Waterman, M.A., LL.B., Secretary and Treasurer * William Gwinn Mather, M.A., LL.D. John Prince Elton, B.S. The Rt. R ev. Ernest M. Stires, D.D. Shiras Morris, B.S. *:j: Charles G. Woodward, M.A.* Samuel Fergu on, M.A.* Sidney T. Miller, M.A., LL.D. Newton C. Brainard, B.A.* The R ev. John James McCook, M.A., D.D ., LL.D.:j: John Henry Kelso Davis, M.A. *t Grenvill e Kane, M.A., L.H.D . James Guthrie Harbord, LL.D. Edward Mi ll igan, M .A. Henry Campbell Black, LL.D. t

Hartford Philadelphia New York Hartford Pittsburgh B erlin Har~ford

Cleveland Waterbury New York Hartford Har~ford

Hartford Detroit Hartford Hartford Hartford New York New York Hartford Washington

ยงbbisorp rBoarb J amaica, N. Y.

William S. Cogswell , M.A., LL.D. *These me mbers of the Corporalion form the Execulive Committee tElected by lbe Alumni tDeceased

16


raoarb of jfeUob.ls JLi ~t

of gs,enior

jfellotu~

Lewis Gildersleeve H arriman, B. A. Owen M organ, B .A. Hill Burgwin, Jr. , B .A. William F estus Morgan, B. A. H enry L ouis Godlove M eyer , B.A. An son Theodore McCook, B.A.

jfunior

..1fellotu ~

Martin T aylor, LL.B . Theodore Canfield Hudson, B .S. M urray H ar t Coggeshall, B.S. H arold Nathaniel Chandler, B.A. Frederick J oseph Corbett, B. A. William P ond Bar ber, B. S.

(tCoUege <!&fftcers R obert Y. Condit Frederi ck J. Eberl e Charl es G. J ackson Stanley L . Bell

P 1路esident of College B ody P resident of Athletic Association Secretary of Athle11:c Association College Marshal

17


THE REV. REMSEN BRINKERHOFF OGILBY, B.D., LL.D .


Hemsen Brinkerhoff Ogilby President 115 Vernon Street A.B., Harvard, 190~: A.M., 1907; B.D. , Episcopal Theological School, 1907 ; LL.D., Wesleyan University, 19~1; Taught at Groton School, 1902-04; General Th eologi cal Seminary, 19040G; Episcopal Theological School, 1906-07 ; Assistant Saint Stephen's Chu rch, Boston, 1907-09; Headmaster of Baguio School, 1909-18; Chaplain U nited States Army, 1918-1919 ; taught at St. Paul's School, 1919-20; President, 1920- ; Directo r of the H artfo rd C ha mber of Commerce; Trustee of the Watkinson Memorial Library; Member of the Association of New England Coll eges; Xew England Classical Association, American Histori cal Association, and New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.

19


The Rev. George Williamson Smith, D.D., LL.D . Professor of M etaphysics, Emeritus B .A., H obart, 1857 ; D.D ., 1880 ; D .D., Columbia; LL.D ., Trinity, 1887. C haplain, Un ited States Navy, 1864 ; Acting Professor of Mathematics, nited States Naval Acade my, Newport, 1864-65; Chaplain at Annapolis, 1865-68; R ector in various places till 1883; Pres ident of Trinity Coll ege, 1883-1904. 8LlX.

Charles Frederick Johnson, L .H .D., LL.D. Professor of English L i terature, Emeritus 69 Vernon Street B.A ., Yal e, 1855; M .A., 1863; L.H .D., 1895 ; LL.D ., Trinity; Assistant Professor of Math e mati cs, nited States Naval Academy, 1865-70 ; Professor at Trinity 1883-96 ; Professor Emeritus, 1896-; Auth or of "English 路w ords;" " Three Englishmen and Three Americans; " "Elements of Literary Criticism;" "What Can I do for Brady?" and other poems; "Out lin e History of Engli hand American Literature; " " }?or ms of Verse;" "Shakespeare and His Critics, " etc. 'JIT.

The R ev. John James McCook, M.A., D .D., LL.D. Professor of ~Modern Languages, Emeritus 396 Main Street B .A. , Trinity, 1863; D .D ., 1901 ; LL.D ., 1910 ; stud ied at J efferson College, New York College of Ph ysicians and Surgeons, and Berkeley Divinity School; Second Li eutenant First Virginia Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War ; Professor at Trinity sin ce 1883; R ector of St. J ohn's Church, East H artford, sin ce 1869. Author of reports on poor-law admi ni stration and prison r eform ; also of numerous magazine articles on vagabond age, political vena lity, pauperism, drink, etc. <I>BK, 8LlX.

~0


Robert Baird Riggs, Ph.D. Scoville Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus 35 Forest Street B.A., Beloit College, Wi sco nsin, 1876; Ph.D ., Gottingen ; Chemist for U nited States Geologi cal Survey, 1884-87; Professor of Chemistry, National College of Pharmacy, 1885-87 ; Professor of Che mistry at Trinity, 1887- . Co ntributor to Th e American Chemical J ou.rnal, Th e American Journal of Science, and other journals. Ben.

Frank Cole Babbitt, Ph.D. Professor of the Greelc Language and L iterature 65 Vern on Street B .A., Harvard, 1890 ; M.A., 1892; Ph .D ., 1895; Fellow of the American School of Classica l Studi es at Athens, 189596. Instructor in Greek at H a r vard, 1896-98 ; Professor at Trinity, 1899- ; M e mber of the American Archaeological Institute; M ember of the American Phil ological Association. Author of "Greek Grammar;" also of papers in American Journal of Archaeology, and in H arvard Studies in Clas.~ical Philology . <PBK, 8D.X.

Henry Augu tus Perkins, M .A., E.E. Professor of Physics 83 Gillett Street B.A., Yale, 1896; M.A., Columbi a, 1899 ; E .E ., Columbi a, 1899. Member of American Ph ys ical Society; Societe Franc;:aise de Ph ys ique; Associate Member of American Institute of Electri cal En gineers. Author of "An Introduction to General Thermod y namics;" has publis hed articles in A1nerican Journal of S~;ience, Sdentific American, Electrical W oriel, Comptes R end us, Le Radi um, Y ale Review, and the Phy.ical Review. <PBK, :Z~, All<!? .

21


Gustavu Adolphus Kleene, Ph .D. Professor of Economics 179 Sigourney Street A.B., U niversity of Mi chigan, 1891; studied at Berlin and Tiibingen, at Columbi a Univ ersity, and the University of P enn sy lvani a, receiving hi s Ph .D. from the latter inst itution. For two winters with the C ha rity Organization Society of New York City; Assistant in E co nomics at th e University of Wi sconsin; Instructor in Economics and Social Scie nce at Swarthmore Coll ege, an d L ecturer at the University of P ennsy lvan ia. Author of " Profit a nd W ages." Co ntributor to the Annals of the American Academy of P olitical and Social Science, American Statistical Association Publications, Yale R e~tiew, etc. <I>BK.

Charles Edwin Rogers, C.E., M.C.E. Professor of Civil Engineering 11 Lincoln Street R ensselaer Polytechnic Institu te, 1896 ; M. C. E ., H a rvard , 1915. Engineer a nd Co ntractor, 1896-1901 : Instru ctor, L eh igh U ni versity, 1901-04 ; Professor of Mathematics a nd Civ il Engineerin g, Cla rkson Memorial chool of T echnology and General Engineering Practice, 1904-05 ; Professor of Civ il Engineering, Trinity, 1905- ; Member of the R ensselaer Society of Engineers; Connecticut Society of Civi l Engineers, Association of H ar vard Engin.eers, ~z.

Horace Cheney Swan, M.D. Professor of Physiology and Physical Training, Medical Director 196 Whitney Street M.D., Tufts Coll ege M ed ical School, 1903 ; B .P .E., International Y. M . C. A. College. Instru ctor Histology, H a rva rd Summ er School of Ph ysical Education, 1903-05; Directo r of Gymnasium, Wesleyan University, 1903-05 ; Medical Director and Director of Gymnasium, Trinity Co ll ege, 1905-; Member of H a rtford M ed ical Association, Connecticut Medical Association, Fellow American Medical Association, Societ y of Directors of Phys ical Education in Colleges, American Phys ica l Education Society, American Public H ealth Association, Con nectic ut Public H ealth Associations, Member American Association for the Advancement of Science. <1>8X.

22


The Rev. Arthur Adams, Ph.D. Professor of English and L i brarian 73 Vernon Street B.A., Rutgers, 190 ~; M.A. , 1903; Ph .D. , Yal e, 1905 ; B .D ., Ber keley Divinity School, 1910 ; S. T. M. , Phil adelphi a Divinity SC'hool, 1916. Instru ctor in Englis h at the U niversity of Colorado, 1905-06; Assistant Professor at Trinit y, 1906-08; Associate Proft>sso r, 1908-11; Professo r of English, 1911-15 ; Professor of English an d Libra ri a n. 1915- ; Acting Profe sor of English at the U ni versity of M a ine, Su mmer T erm, 191 ~. M e mber of the M odern Lan guage Association of America a nd of the American Philological Association . Author of Synta x of the T em1>oral Clause in Old Engli•h P1ose, collab orator on the Gray and Wordsworth Concorda nces, author of notes and reviews in :Modern Language Not es, a nd C'ontributor to various other perioclicals. <l>BK, 6<1>.

LeRoy Carr Barret, Ph.D. P rofess01· of the Latin Language andLi teratu1·e 28 Brownell Avenue B.A .. Washington a nd Lee Univusity, 1897 ; M .A., 1898 ; Ph.D ., J ohn s Hopkins U ni ver ity, 1903. Instr uctor in Latin, J oh ns Hopkin , 1903-07 ; Preceptor in Classics, Princeton, 1907-09 ; Instru ctor, Dartmouth, 1909-10 ; Prores or, Trinity, 1910- ; Editor of K ashmiri an AtharnaVeda Books I - V. <l>BK, ~AE .

Stanley Leman Galpin, Ph.D. Professor of Rornance Languages 902 A ylum Avenue B.A .. Western R eser ve University, "01; M .A., Yale nivers ity, 190~; Ph.D. , Yale niversity, 1904. Was oiversity F ell ow of Yale University, 190 ~- 1904. Member of the M odern Lltn guage Association of Am eri ca and of the ~ ew England Mod ern Language Association. Appointed Instructor in the Rom a nce La ngu ages and Latin at Amherst College, 1904; Instru ctor in the Roman ce Lan guages, 1906; Associa te Professor of R o man ce L a nguages, 1908191 3. Professor of R oma nce L ang uages, Trini ty Coll ege, 191 3-. ct>BK, 6 'f.

23


~---..

-~ ---

-~ J;

U-1

Edward Frank Humphrey, Ph.D. Northam Professor of Historical and Political Science 333 Washington Street B .A. , University of Minnesota, 1903 ; M.A. , Columbia University, 1908; Graduate Student l'Ecole pratique des H aules-Etudes, University of Paris, 1910-11; Ph.D., Columbia Univer ity, 1912. In tru ctor, Columbi a University, 1911-15 ; Northam Professor of History and Political -science, Trinity College, 1915- ; Author "Politics and Religion in the days of A11g11stine." cJ>BK, };AE.

Odell Shepard, Ph.D. James J. Goodwin Professor of English Literature 14 Seabury Hall B.A ., niversity of Chicago, 1907, Ph.M., 1908; Ph .D., Harvard Univers ity, 1916. 1eacher of English, Smith Acade my, St. Louis, 1908-09 ; Assistant Professor of English, University of Southern California, 1909-10; Professor of English, University of Southern California, 1910-1914; Instructor in English, Harvard University, 1916-17 ; Professo r, Trinity College, 1917-. Author of "A Lonely Flute" and of "Shakespeare Questions. A Study of the Chief Plays." Contributor to various literary aD<I learned journals. Winn er of Guggenheim scholarship for social work in Europe on "Romantic Solitud e." ATA, 8'li'.

Haroutune Mugurdich Dadourian, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics 125 Vernon Street Ph .B., 19 ~ 3. M.A. , 1905, Ph.D., 1906, Yale University; Loomis F ellow in Physics, 1903-C5. Assistant in Physics, 1905-C6; Instru ctor in Sheffield Scientific School, and Lecturer at Graduate School of Yale, 1906-17; Aeronauti cal Engineer U. S. Government, 1917-18; Associate Professor of Physics, Trinity, 1919-. Fellow American Physical Society; M e mber Aml'rican Mathematical ociety, American Association for the Advan cement of Science. Author of Analytical M echanics and Graphic Statics. Contributor of papers on radioactivity, x-rays, ra dio-electricity electrons , sound ranging, elasticity, and dynamics. };2:.

24


Edward Leffingwell Troxell, Ph.D. Dean and Professor of Geology 123 Vernon Street B.A., Iorthwestern University, 1908 , M.A. , 1911; Ph.D ., Yale, 1914. Instructor niversity of Michigan, 1914. Commission ed Captain Infantry. 1917; one year in France; student for four months at the Sorbonne University, Paris; Research Associate in Vertebrate Paliontology, Yal e, 1919; Assistant Professor of G eology and Physiography, Trinity College, 1920. Has carried on explorati on in th e West several seasons, and has published several papers in the American Journal of Science, Scientific .Monthly, and Bulletin of the Geological ociety. Member Paleonthological Society, Books and Bond. l:Z.

Vernon K. Krieble, Ph.D. Scoville Professor of Chemistry 71 Vernon Street Ph.B., Brown, 1907; M.S. , McGill University, 1909; Ph.D. , 1913 ; D e monstrator and Lecturer in Chemistry, McGill, 1907-14; Assistant Professor in Chemistry, 191420; Scoville Professor of Chemistry at Trinity, 1920Member of the Am erican Chemical Society, American Association for the Advance ment of Science. Contributor to the Journal of Chemical 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. <l>BK, l:Z.

Morse Shepard Allen, Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Literature 74 FairÂŁeld Avenue B .A. , Wesleyan, 1912; M.A. , 1913 ; M .A., Columbia, 1913 ; Oxford University, 1913-14 ; Ph.D. , Princeto n, 1920. Taught at Ohio Wesl eyan niversity, 1914-17; 1918-20 ; Adelphia College, summer of 1916; Assistant Professor, Trinity, 1920-. Author of Th e Satire of John .Marsden, 1920.

25


Harry Todd Costello, Ph.D. Brownell Professor of Philosophy 12 Seabury Hall B.A., Earlham Coll ege, 1908; M.A., H arvard , 1910 ; Ph .D ., H arvar d, 1911 ; Sheldon R esearch Fellow (Harvard ) at th e U niversity of P ari s, 1911 - 1~ ; Instru ctor at H arvard , 1912-14; Instru ctor at Ya le. 1914-15 ; Instru ctor a nd Lecturer directing research at Columbia, 1915-~0 ; Special Instru ctor at Coll ege of th e City of N e w York, 19 19 -~0; Professor at Trini ty, 19 ~ 0- . M ember of American Philosophi cal Association ; Ameri ca n Association for th e Advance ment of Scie nce. Co ntribu tor to t he J ournal o.f Philosophy a nd ot her philosophi cal journals.

J ohn Austin Spaulding, Ph.D. Professor of Germanic Languages 73 Catherine Street B .A., M .A., Ph .D ., H a r vard . Attended niversit ies of Muni ch a nd Freiburg, in Germany. Author of "Lower Middle Class in 1'iecl.路s Writings,"' published in J ourn a l for English and G erm anic Phil ology. T aught in Worces ter T ech. U ni versity of N e w Bruns wi ck, and Yale Un iversity. M e mb er of Association of American Un iversity Professors; Bo ton H a t路vard Club . <I>BK, <1>2:K.

Louis H astings Naylor, Ph .D. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages 416 Farmington Avenue A. B ., J ohns H op kin s, 1917 ; M .A., J ohns Hopkins, 19~2; Ph .D ., J ohn Hopkins, 1923. Taught Latin and French in th e S t. J ames ' School, Wash in gton Co., Mel. ; Awarded fe ll owship for stud y under the Belgium R elief Commission Edu cationa l Founda tion ; Studi ed a t Univers ity of Li ege. <I>BK.

26


Arthur Pehr Robert Wadlund, M.S. Assistant Professor of Physics 1087 Boulevard, West Hartford, Conn. B.S., Trinity, 1917; M .S., Trinity, 19~~ . 1917-1919 served in 101st Machine Gun Battalion, ~6th Di vision U. S. A. M emb er of Ameri ca n Physical Society; American Society for Steel Treating; Hartford Engin eers' Club. <l>BK, ATK.

John Edward Foglesong, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry 23 Brownell Avenue A.B., Wabash Coll ege, 1910; M.A., Ohio State U niversity, 191~; Ph.D., University of Corn ell, 1919 ; Co mmercia l Chemist, 191~-16 ; Instructor of Chemistry at Cornell, 1916-19; Assistant Professor of Chemistry at University of the South, 19~1-~3 ; Assistant Professor, Trinity, 19~3-. American Chemistry Society, and Association of College Professors. 1:il', AXE, 8A.

Stanley Howard Leeke, B.S. Director in Physical Training 3 Jarvis Hall B .S., Trinity, 19~0; Studied at th e University of Paris; Playground R ecreation Assistant for two years; Graduate Manager of Athletics, Dunkirk, N. Y ., a nd 'orth East Harbor, M e. D.<l>.

27


Ray Oosting, B.P.E. Coach of Traclc and Basketball and Instructor of Physical Training 30 North Whitney Street B .P .E., Springfield College.

George Ross Wells, Ph.D. Instructor in Philosophy 45 Church Street, Wethersfield B.A ., McMaster U ni on ; A.M., Harva rd ; Ph .D. , Johns H opkins; Instructor and Associate Professor at Oberlin Coll ege, 1912- 17 ; Professor at Ohio Wes leyan .. 1917-20 ; Professor at H artford Seminary Foundation, 1920-; In tr uctor at Trini ty and Wesleyan Univ<>rsity. F ell ow of Ameri can Association for the Advancement of Science; M e mber of Ameri can P sychol ogy Associa tion . Author of Youth and the Open Door; Articles. 1:X.

John S. Merriman, Jr., B .P.E. Coach of Football and Baseball and Instructor of Physical Training Jarvis Hall B .P.E ., Springfield College.

28


Howard C . .Wiley Instructor of M echanical Drawing 65 Robbins Drive, Wethersfield, Conn.

H. T. Engstrom , M.S. Instructor in Mathematics 17 Seabury Hall B .S., Northeastern niversity, 1922; M.S., niversity of Maine, 1925. Engineering D epartment \'11estern nion T elegraph Company, 1922-23; Instructor in Mathematics at niversity of Main e, 1923-25. M ember of American Mathematical Society. <l>rt:..

•

Robert E. Hillyer, M .A. Assistant Professor of English 145 Woodland Street, Hartford, Conn. B .A., Harvard, 1917; Fellow of American-Sca ndinavian Foundation, 1917-1918 ; Ambulance Driver with French Army, 1917 ; First Lieutenant, A. E. F. , 1918- 1919 ; Instructor of English, Harvard, 1919-1926; Assistant Professor of English , Trinity, 1926-; Author, "Sonnets and Other Lyrics", "The Five Books of Youth" , "Alchemy: A Symphonic Poem", "The Hills Give Promise" , " The Coming Forth by Day'', "The Halt in the Garden", "The Happy Episode", also in coll aboration. "Eight Harvard Poets", and "A Book of Danish Verse" ; Contributor to The Atlantic Monthly, Harp er's, The Bookman, The N ew Republic, The Outlook, etc.; President 1\ew England Poetry Club, 1923-1926 ; Member of The Poets C lub of 'ew York, The Boston Authors ' Club, and The America Folk-Lore Society.

29


Archie Roy Bangs, M.A. Instructor in German 55 \rdm ore Road, West H artford, Conn. B.A., Bates Co ll ege, 1908; M.A. , Colgate, 1910: M .A., Har vard , 1911 ; In st ru ctor in German, Colgate, 1908-1910 ; In stru ctor in German, Williams Coll ege, 1912-1914 ; T a ught Mod ern L a nguages, Franklin School, C incinn a ti , Ohio, 1918-1919, Gardner Hi gh School. Gardner, Mass., 1924-1926; Instr uctor in German, Trini ty, 1926-.

Alfred Louis Peiker, B.S. Assistant in Chemistry 1 Northam Towers B.S., Trinity, 1926.

~

Edgar Francis Waterman, M.A., LL.B. Treasurer Williams Memorial B .A. , Trinity, 1898; M.A., 1901 ; LL.B., Columbia, 1910. itT.

30


C!Class 庐fficers (IC:bristmas

~erm

. P1路esidenl V ice-President ecretary-Treasurer

Frederick J. Eberle Kenneth Daughn Robert W. Hildebrand ~rinitp ~erm

. President V ice-President ecretm路y- T1路easurer

Frederick J. Eberle Robert W . Hildebrand Richard A. McCurdy

31


Joseph Tamir Bashour

Hartford, Conn.

Track Squad ~ 1 ); Track T eam (2, 3, 4); Basketball (2, 3, 4).

Stanley Leslie Bell Football (2, 3, 4): Basketball (2, 3, 4) : Jr. \'arsity (3,4); Po liti cal S<'ience Club (3, 4); Track (3, 4); KB<l>, At. <I>.

James Michael Cahill

Hartford, Conn.

Varsity Track (1, 2, 3, 4); Capta in (4) ; Varsity Football Squad (4) ; Junior Varsity Basketball (3, 4); Assistant Manager J esters (1); Holl and Scholar (2, 3, 4); M edusa; Coll ege Senate (4); Jr. M em ber Discipline Co mmittee (3); Class President (2); Sophomore Hop Committee; Vice-Presid ent German Club (3); C. C. TrowbridgtMemorial Ph ys ics Prize (1); <l>BK, AXP.

32


Robert Yellowlee Condit

Ithaca, N.Y.

. Freshman-Junior Banquet; Track (2, 3, 4); Football T eam (2. 3. 4); Freshman Football; Political Science Club ( I ); French C lub (1 ); Glee Club (I ) ; Juni or Prom Co mmittee; S ub-Freshman Week-end Committee; Presid ent C lass (3); Co llege Bod y Pres ident (4); M e mber Athletic Advisory Coun cil (4); PrPs id ent Senate (4); St. P atri ck's Day Scrap Co mmi ttee ( I , 2); M edusa; A6<1>.

Frank E. Conran

Hartford, Conn.

Freshman Football ; P oliti cal Science Club (I , 2, 3, 4); French Clu b (1, 2); German Cluh (3); Junior Prom Committee; Tr ack T eam (2, 3); AXP.

Kenneth E. Daughn

Hartford, Conn.

Sophomore Hop Committee; Varsity Football (3); Vi ce-Presi dent Se ni or Class; Freshman-Junior B anquet Committee; Senate (4); President Neutral B ody (4).

33


----... - 1"'!1 - -

-~ J;

U-1

Frederick J. Eberle

Hartford, Conn.

Football (2, 3, 4); Basketball (2); Baseball (2, 3, 4); Secretary Athl etic Association (3); Pres id ent Athletic Association (4); Politica] Science Club (4); President Senior Class ; Sophomore Dining Club; Senate (4) ; Medusa; 2:N.

Andrew Hamilton Forrester

Trenton, N . J.

Freshman Ru.les Co mmittee; Freshman FootbaH ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Junior Prom Committee; C.lass Vi ce-President (3); Track (2, 3, 4) ; Foot baH Squad (2, 3, 4); Political Science Club (3, 4); German Club (3, 4); Union Manager (4); Tripod (2); Senate (4); Sophomore Dining Club ; M edusa. AXP.

George Courtenay Glass, Jr. Hartford, Conn. Varsity Football (1); French Club (1); German Club (1); Biological Seminar (1); 2:N.

34


George Childs Hamlin

Brooklyn, N.Y.

Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; Sophomore Hop Committee; Vice-Presid ent Freshman Class; Track Squad (2); Inter-Fraternity Basketball (1, 2, 3); French Club; 'ItT.

Hartford, Conn.

Roger W. Hartt

Freshman Football; Junior Varsity Basketball (2); Class Secretary (2); ::!:N.

Robert W. Hildebrand Union Committee (2); Class (1, 4); AM>.

Wilkes-Barre, Pa.

Glee Club (1, 2,); Secretary

35


Edwin J. W. Johnson

Hartford, Conn.

M a nager Baseball {3); Track T ea m {1, 2, 3, 4); Glee Club {1, 2, 3): Germ a n Club (~, 3); French Club {2, 3); P olitical Science Club (1, 2, 3, 4); ATK.

Alexander Kronfeld

Hartford, Conn.

Baseball Squad {2, 3, 4) ; Football Squa d {2, 3, 4); College Orches tra {3, 4).

Wendell Holme Langdon

Hartford, Conn.

T ennis T ea m {1); M a th ema ti cs Prize (1); St. P a tri ck's D ay Scra p Co mmi t tee ( 1); Baseba ll Squ a d {2) ; T ennis Cap t ain {4): German Club (3); C1\li

36


Howard Francis Manierre East Hartford, Conn. Gl ee Club (3); German -C lub (3, 4); Political Science Club (2, 3, 4) ; Coll ege Orchestra (3, 4); ATK.

Richard Augustus MacCurdy Hartford, Conn. Freshman Rules Committee (2); Senate Finan ce Co mmittee (1); Union Committee (2); Senate (3); Juni or Prom Committee; German C lub (2, 3) ; Fre nch C lub (2); Glee C lub (2, 3); ATK.

G. B. Reynolds Meade

Brooklyn, N. Y.

Freshman-Junior BaJLquet Com mittee ; Political Scie nce Club (1, 4) ; J esters (2); Track Squad (2); Fres hm an Rules Committee; Junior Prom Committee; French Club (3); Germ a n Club (3, 4) ; ll'l' .

37


Winthrop H. Segur

Hartford, Conn.

Freshman-Junior Ba nquet Committee; Sub-Freshman Week-end Com mittee; Union ComJUittee (2); Track Squad (1, 2) ; J es ters (2, 3, 4); President (4); Class Vice-President (l ); Junior Prom Committee; Assistant Manager Football (3); Political Science Club (2, 3, 4); Sophomore Dining Club; l:N .

Gordon Herbert Sunbury

Casimir L. S. Sutula

Hartford, Conn.

New Britain, Conn.

Latin Club (2. 3, 4); French Cl ub (2, 3, 4); J esters (4); Trip od (3, 4); Track Squad (4).

38


William Astor Towill

Ashville, N. C.

Baseball T eam ('t , 3, 4); Basketba ll (3, 4); T ennis ('t , 3, 4) ; D. <I>.

Dana Roberts Varney

Detroit, Mich.

Transferred Sophomore Year from College of City of Detroit; Sophomore Baseball; Tripod Board ('t); Junior Prom Committee; KB<I>, 'l!T.

39


(!Class

~fficers

<!l:brit>tmaÂŁ> -m:erm . President Tfice-President Secretary- Treasurer

Charles G. Jackson Dudley H. Burr . Walter E. Whitaker 'Ql;tinitp -m:erm

. President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer

Edwin M. Griswold John M. Young . Robert F. Gibson

40


Irving Scott Alford

Stottville, N. Y.

Our Morni ng Alcmn Clock J esters (1, 2, 3); Business Manager J esters (3); Tri pod Board (1); Fre nch Club (1) ; Latin C lub (1, 2) ; Gl ee Cl ub (2) ; Political Science Club (2, 3); Chapel Bellringer (3) ; IvY Board (3) ; AXP .

Berry Oakley Baldwin

H averford, Pa.

H e's (t B erry Nic e Man Baseball Squad (1); Sophomore Dining Club; T enni Squad (2) ; Assistant Manager Football (3); Junior Prom Committee (3) ; AD.<l>.

Sherman John son Beers

Lanesboro, Mass.

'Jo e' Biology Track Team (1, 2, 3); Freshman Football; Va rsity Football (2, 3) ; Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Junior Prom Committee (3) ; D.<l> .

41


James Edward Bent

West Hartford, Conn.

A Gentleman, a Scholar, and a Good Judg e of-Well, a Good Judge Tra nsferred from Conn . Aggies in Sophomore year; J esters (2); Track Squad (2); Business M a nager Jyy (8); 'liT .

Royden Constantine Berger Thompsonville, Conn. Y ou can't tell jro1n where you're sitti ng how your-oh, what's the use? Freshman Football Squad; Va rsity Football (2); Assistant Manager Baseba ll (8); Glee Club (1, 2); l:N.

Andrew C. Brown

Hartford, Conn.

"Who said Aggies?" Transferred from Conn . Aggies in Sophomore year; Football (3); Basketba ll <s); l:N.

42


Dudley Holcomb Burr

Baltic, Conn.

"You're all wrong, Professor ; Macbeth was a Moral Bum'' Vice-President Freshman Class; Vice-president Junior Class; Freshman Football ; Varsity Football ('l , 3); Junior Varsity Basketball (1) ; Varsity Basketball ('l, 3) ; Freshman-Junior Banquet ommittee ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Athletic Editor Tripod ('l) ; Athletic Editor IVY; French Club (1, 'l , 3) ; President (I ) ; Latin Club (1,2, 3); EN.

Raymond F. Burton

Hartford, Conn.

What can we do with all these here Aggie Transfers? Transferred from Conn. Aggies in Sophomore Year Junior Varsity Basketball ('l); Varsity Basketball (3) Track ('l) ; Political Science Club ('l , 3); Gl ee Club ('l ) German Club ('l , ; AXP.

Thomas Francis Daly

Hartford, Conn.

"I love a man who smokes a pi pe" Secretary Freshman Class; Freshman-Junior Ba nquet Committee ; Sophomore Hop Committee ; Freshman Rules Committee ('l); Junior Prom Committee; IVY Board: Latin Club (1, 2,3); Political Science Club (1, 'l, 3) ; German Club ('l , 3); French Club (3); Fres hma n Football ; ATK .

43


William Harold Deacon

Quincy, Mass.

" I' m sorry, but I simply can't be cured of that Bo.Yton accent."

French Club (2, 3); Political Science Club (1, 2, 3); \liT .

Oswin Heman Doolittle

Wethersfield, Conn.

Tf e outlived Gerald Chapman's stay in his home to~vn. Fres hman Hul es Co mmittee (2) : Glee Club (2); IvY Board.

John J oseph Downey

Hartford, Conn.

Bound to be a fanwus Clubman, some day. l-atin Club (1, 2, 3): German Cl ub (3) : P oli tif'al Science Clu b (1, 3); ATK.

44


Walter Edward Ebersold

Hartford, Conn.

It' s too bad, Walt, thai those Nash speedometers don 't register above 75 M . P. Il . Baseball (1, 2) ; Basketball (3); French Club (2); Gl ee Club (2) ; Political Science Club (1); German Club (1) . AXP.

William McEwan Elli 路

Metuchen,

I.

J.

Another man from a for eign country. Where's your passport, Bill? Freshman Football ; Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; President Sophomore Class; German Club (1, 2); Senate Finance Committee (i, 2) ; President (3) ; Business Manager Tripod (3) ; Assistant Manager Basketball; Junior Promenad e Committee; IVY Board ; t. '}! .

William F. Even

Hartford, Conn.

"]u se Pepsodent every day ," Signed, Yours tmly. Transferred from Conn . Aggi es in Freshman Year ; President Sophomore Class ; Sophomore Hop Committee ; Fre nch Club (2); Politi cal Science Club (3) ; Sophomore Dining Club; Track T eam (2); l~oo tball (2, 3); Captain-elec t of Football ; At.<l>.

45


John Joseph Gaffney

Seymour, Conn.

" Do I hate 1001nen? and how!" Class Baseball (1); Manager oÂŁ Baseball (3); German Club; AXP.

R obert Fisher Gibson

Montclair, N. J.

Th e World's Most Famous Feminine I mpersonator Freshman Football ; Football ( ~, 3); Freshman Rules Committee (2) ; Jesters ( ~, 3); Political Science Club (1, ~. 3) ; Secretary Sophomore Class; Junior Prom Committee; Assistant Editor Tripod (3); Sophomore Dining Club ; IVY Board; KB<I>, t.'l!.

John Hamilton Gordon

Hartford, Conn .

His fath er i s not the gent/ eman who makes the prohibited beverage Track Squad (1); French Club ; German Club ; AXP.

46


Edwin Monroe Griswold

H artford, Conn.

" Kolynos Toothpaste Co. pays me for my smile." Freshman-Junior Ba nquet Committee; C hai r man Sophomore H op Commi t tee; Juni or Prom Comm ittee; Track (1, 2); M a nager Juni or Varsity Football (3) : Sophomore Dining Club ; AXP.

James Mills Hartley

Wortendyke, N. J.

"Fr01n now on I demand to be called j}f ills!"

Wres Uin g Sq ua d (1) ; Track Sq uad (2); Cir cul atio n Ma nager Tripod (1); College C hoir (1) ; ']I T.

Charles Gilbert J ackson

Yonkers, N . Y.

" I n all Athletics, I' m there a f ew. Without my prowess, what would they do?" President Freshma n Class ; F res h man Rules Committee (2) ; Soph omore H op Com mittee; P oli t ical Science Club; Assistan t M a nager of Coll ege U nion ; Secretary Athl et ic Association (3); President Ju nior Class ; Sophomore Dinjng Clu b; Juni or Varsity Basket ball (1, 2, 3); Fresh man Football ; Football (2, 3) ; Track (1, 2) ; AXP.

47


William Franklin Judge

Mattapan, Mass.

"Do I know my Greek? Just ask me!" Freshman Football (1): Varsity Football (!'l); Varsity Track (2) : Assistant Manager Track (2) ; Manager Track (3); Junior Varsity Basketball (I. 2, 3) ; Choir (1,2) ; Jesters (1) ; I VY Board (3) ; Glee Club (2) ; Library Staff (1, 2) ; L1<l>.

Norbert B. Lacy

Hartford, Conn.

" H e seems rather quiet, but-" ATK.

John Ellis Large_

Merrick, L. I.

Deleted by the Editor Jes tera (1, 2, 3); Sophomore Hop Committee; Freshman Base ball ; Track Squad (2); Chapel Choir (1); Editor-in-Chief of 1928 IVY ; iJ!'l'.

48


Millard F. Manning

Yantic, Conn.

"It's terrible to be so smart" Track Squad (2); Holland Scholar (2).

Arnold Henry Mose , Jr.

Merchantville, N.J.

" Here lie I beneath this daisy, The blo01ning Tripod drove me crazy." Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee (1); Latin Club (1); President Latin Club (2, 3); Senate (2); Chairman Sophomore Rules Committee (2); Vi ce-President Senate Finance Committee (2, 3); Sophomore Hop Committee (2); Assistant Circulati on M a nager Tripod (1); Circulation Manager Tripod (2); Editor-in-Chief Tripod (3); Chairman Junior Prom Committee (3); At. <I>.

Clarence John Nordstrom New Britain, Conn. "Middlebury and Trinity? ThPre' s no Comparison/"' Transferred from Middlebury in Sophomore year. German Club (2, 3); J>olitical cience Club (2, 3) Glee Club (2). L't.T

49


Paul A. Romanov

Hartford, Conn.

" Holland Scholar! What 1n0re could one expect of him?" Holland Scholar (1).

George R. Salisky

Hartford, Conn.

"Whad d"ya 1nean 1ny Olds11wbile ain't no good? It's bettern'n your Nash Roadster! " Freshman Baseball (l ); Glee Club (1, 2) ; Manager Basketball (3); German Club (2) ; AXP .

Lewi H. Small, Jr.

Hartford, Conn.

"OJ all my car.~. I love my old Hudson the best, don't you?" French Club ; Germ a n Club; Political Science Club; 2:N.

50


Charles Solms

路 Queen's Village, N . Y. "Get right, will ya?"

Varsity Baseball (1, 2, 3) ; Varsity Track (1, 2); Freshman Football (1) ; Freshman Baseball; Junior Varsity Basketball (1, 2); Varsity Basketball (3); College Choir (1, 2); College Quartette (3) ; Glee Club (2) ; Sophomore Dining C lub ; G erman Club ; President German Club (3) ; Varsity Club (3); lliJ>.

William Owings Stone Emmitsburg, Maryland "Th' Suth'n Col'nel, Suh!" Transferred from W estern Maryland College in Junior Year; Political Science Club ; French Club ; iJt'l'.

George Thomas Ward

Shelton, Conn.

"If not a scholar, at least a gentleman." Freshman Football; Varsity Football (3); Treasurer Instrumental Club (2) ; Gl ee Club (1, 2); C hoir (1, 2); French Club ; Assistant Manager Basketball (2); Manager Basketball (3) ; 2: .

51


Walter E. Whitaker

Hartford, Conn.

" Ho w do you like the pose?" Class President (1); French Club; Freshman Football; Fresh ma n Baseball ; Varsity Football (~. 8); Varsity Basketba ll (~. 3); Captain Basketba ll (3); Varsity Baseball (1, 2, 3); Sophomore Dining Club; Junior Prom Committee; Class Secretary (3); l:N.

John Mansfield Young, Jr.

Glen Ellyn, Ill.

"Now, out in Glen Ellyn where I rmne from -" Freshman Football; St. Patrick's Day Scrap Committee (1); Sophomore Rules Committee; Varsity Football (2, 8); Latin Club (1, 2); Senate Finance Com mittee (3); Junior Prom Committee; Class VicePreside nt (~); 'liT.

52


<!Class <!&fftcers Ernest A. H allstrom Rudolf J. T aute . George H ardman .

~bristma:s

'(!!;erm . President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer

'(ll;rinitp '(!!;erm

George Hardman . Stephen B . O'Leary Robert R. Bartlett

. President Vice- President Secretary-Treasurer

53


~opbomore~ Charles Einar Anderson Robert Ruggles Bartlett, At.<l> Francis Root Belden, AXP Alfred Renere Bengston Arthur Samuel Blank Joseph Bronstein . William Francis Burleigh, AXP Stewart Eugene Burr, ~N George David Chesnalevich Jacob Cohen Cyril Cohn . Edgar Richard Coles, Jr., ATK Amos Leonard Craft, 'ltT Albert Victor DeBonis . Llewellyn Oswald Diplock William Ambrose Dower, ATK Kenneth Stanley Duffes Abraham Root Friedman Frartk Andrew Fuhlbruck, 'ltT Harry Gillespie Philip Goldenthal Kenneth Gordon, Jr. , AXP Ernest Alexander Hallstrom, AXP George Hardman, AXP Max Haverback . Max Heimovitch . George Anderson H ey, t.<f> Albert Hunt Paul Rey Ihrig, ~N Harry Halliday Jackson, t.<l> . Roland Templeton Jennings Anthony John Kearshes . James Francis Kelly Arthur Morris Klurfeld John Thomas Kneeland, Jr. Karl Fred Koenig, ATK Barney Kostin Morris Kusnitz, Jr. William Francis Leahy, ATK

Hartford, Conn. Freeport, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. New Britain, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Ansonia, Conn. Hartford, Conn. East Windsor, Conn Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Wethersfield, Conn. Bridgeport, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Camden, Me. Hartford, Conn. Bridgeport, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Newington, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Point Pleasant, N. J. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Lawrence, 1\-Iass., Lowell, Mass. Brooklyn, N.Y. Methuen, Mass. Winsted, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford; Conn. Bridgeport, Conn. West Hartford, Conn.

54


Burton Howard Francis Lee Harwood Loomis, t.<I> Robert George Menasian Rocco Anthony Montano George Wilson Morgan, Jr., t.<I> John Ralph Nolan, ~N Gustav Peter Nordstrom Edwin Joseph Nugent., t.<I> Stephen Blake O'Leary, ~ Carlton Anthony Palo, 'll!T Abraham Perlstein Simon Irving Pitcoff William Jones Pitt, Jr., ~ John Reindle, Jr . . Stanley Fay Rice Louis Julian Rulnick Joseph Zeoli Salvatore Louis Sherman Louis Spekter Louis Samuel Sternchuss, t.<I> Rudolph Joseph Taute, ATK John Richard Thomas, t.KE . Leon Toomajian . George Reginald Turney, t.<I> Frank Graves Whitney, Jr., ~N John Walter Woods, At.<I> Edward Steele Wotkyns, At.<I>

Spring Valley r. Y. New York, N .Y. H artford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. New York, N.Y. Hartford, Conn. H artford, Conn. H artford, Conn. Hartford, Conn . Stamford, Conn. H artford, Conn . Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. H artford, Conn. So. Manchester, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Bristol, Conn. H artford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. New H aven, Conn . Hartford, Conn. Osgood, Indi ana Hartford, Conn. Princeton, N. J. H artfo rd , Conn. Lakewood, Ohio Waterbury, Conn.

55


C!Class <!&fftcers l!l:bristmas 'QI::erm . President Vice- President Secretary- Treasurer

Hans Christain Owen, Jr. Martin J. Mo tyn Francis J. Ryan . 'QI::rinitp 'QI::erm

. President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer

Ralph G. L. Roger Walter R. Anderson Gleng E. McNitt

56


. jfresbmtn . W. Hartford, Conn. So. Manchester, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. New York, N.Y. Bel Air, Md. Wethersfield, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. . Fort Lee, N.J. Poquonock, Conn. Simsbury, Conn. Bar Harbor, Me. Hartford, Conn. New Britain, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. New Haven, Conn. Ansonia, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Catskill, N. Y. Shelton, Conn. Rochester, N.Y. Bloomfield, N. J. Hartford, Conn. So. Manchester, Conn. Hartford, Conn . So. Manchester, Conn . Hartford, Conn. Huntin gdon , Pa. New York, N.Y. St. Helena, Calif. Philadelphia, Pa. Grand Rapids, Mich. 1\ianchester, lass.

William Torrence Barto, Jr., AXP John Sherwood Bissell . Aaron Bobrow Lyman Bushnell Brainerd, Jr.,Ail<P Norman Martin Bush, ~N Philip Henry Close, Jr., t.'li . Dorance Heath Cole , AT K . Philip Morba Cornwell, AXP Louis Frank Coro o Morris Joseph Cutler Nicholas Domenick D'Esopo Bernard Stephen Dignam Marcel Lucien Doublier, 'liT . Albert Charles Endee . Jonathan Elizur Eno, Jr., il 'li Augustus Theodore Falkenstrom, Ail<P Roger Joseph Forastiere, ~N Lars Moreau Fromen William Bradford Gardner Delphis Joseph Gauthier, ATK James Archibald Gillies, Jr., .:lei> John Irving Gillis, 'liT . William Aaron Glaubman Abraham Hackman George Lamb Hay, ilKE Donald Edwin Hilton, ilKE Stuart Redmond Ikeler, Ll 'li Harold Saunders Johnson John Kazarian Robert Raymond Keeney, Jr. Adam Felix Knurek George Bantly Krause . Louis LaBella Henry Bangs Lewis, il 'li Kenneth Allen Linn, ~N Joseph Lovering, Ail<P . John Nealon Macinnes, Ail<P Glenn Elmer McNitt. ~N William Franklin Mills, Ll 'li . 57


1artin Joseph Mostyn Charles Sydney Nicolai Hans Christian Owen, Jr., 'liT Emanuel Petrikat, t,.<]) . Robert Herron Pickles, 1: N Frank Patrick Prete Joseph Raffa IT erbert Ramirez . .Joseph Ronald Regnier Ralph George Louis Rogers, 'liT George Jonas Rosenbaum Louis Frank Rowe Francis James Ryan, ATK Frank Richard Salisky, AXP John Joseph Sayers Cresson Eli Smith, Jr., 'liT James Cyrus Smith, t.'짜 Robert Seymour Spier, 'liT Alfred Barr Stain ton, t. 'II William Avery Sturm Edward Tho~as Taggard, At.<]) Louis Clarence Tonken William Kenneth Walker, At.<]) Fernald Gordon Wentworth, At.<]) James Vernon White, AXP Harry Wise Seymour Ziff

Hartford, Conn. York, N.Y. Bridgeport, Conn. . Pelham, N. Y. Windsor Locks, Conn. So. Manchester, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Caracos, Venezuela, S. A. Hartford, Conn . New Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Plainville, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn. New York, N.Y. Ridgewood, N. J. New Haven, Conn. Ridgewood, N.J. Wethersfield, Conn . Woodhaven, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Port Chester, N. Y. West Haven, Conn. New Haven, Conn. Hartford, Conn. Hartfor'cl, Conn. ~Iew

58


----.. - t-=J _ - -

-~!-

j}on=Jlatrtculateb

U-!J_-

~tubent~ Brooklyn, N _ Y. Hartford, Conn. Worcester, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Holyoke, Ma sNew Haven, Conn. New York, N.Y. Iewington, Conn.

Walter Ragnar Anderson Lewis Hall Babbitt Frederick William Cooper John Patrick Hickey Franklin Woodall Owen Carmine Antonio Polo _ Herbert Edwin Snow Theodore Clifford Wallen

~r abuate ~tubent~ Ray Dearborn Arnold

West Hartford, Conn.

B.A. , 1911 , Clark Un iversity

William Gregg Brill B.S.,

Hartford, Conn.

19~3

William Edward Buckley B.A., 1913, Yale

Manchester Green, Conn

niversity

Edward Harold Coburn B.A.,

19~4,

Hartford, Conn.

Bowdoin College

Thomas Joseph Quinn B.S.,

Hartford, Conn.

19~4

West Orange, N _ J.

Alfred Louis Peiker B.S.,

19~5

Morris Max Roisman, Terry Fellow B.A. ,

Hartford, Conn.

19~6

Charles Francis Whiston , Russell Fellow

Melrose Highlands, Ma _

B.A., 1926

~ummarp

Graduate Students Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen Non-Matriculated Students

8 35

51 71 70 8 Q43

59



- - .....===

-.

.

=-路

- - - - -=

-


l\oll of jf raternities <!Cpl5ilon Ql:bapter of ji)elta .t'l5i

~J5tablisbeb

~bi

~stablisbeb

.tlbi .tlJ5i Ql:bapter of

<!Cstablisbeb 1879 <!CJ5tablisbeb 1880 jfounbeb 1895

Jkappa Ql:bapter of ~lpba :1\elta ~bi ~lpba Ql:bi Ql:bapter of :tBelta Jkappa <!Cpl5ilon jยงeta jยงeta Ql:bapter of ~si Wpsilon ~lpba

Ql:bi 1\bo

1850 1877

~igma

~stablisbeb

JLocal jfraternitp of

<!Cstablisbeb 1918 jfounbeb 1919

Ql:bapter of 1llelta .tlbi 11'elta Ql:bi Ql:bapter of gs,igma jf}u ~lpba

'Q!::au Jkappa

62

1917


mbe jfraternttp of J}elta

~~t

Founded in 1847 at Columbia College and the Univer ity of New York ~oil

Alpha D elta . Epsilon Lambda Upsilon Sigma Tau Phi Xi

of

~bapters

Columbia University University of Pennsylvania Trinity College Williams College University of Virginia Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mississippi College University of North Carolina

63



(fp!)ilon

~bapter

of 11\tlta

~si

~ra'tluates

Robert H. Coleman

路william G. Brill Robert S. Hillyer

1926 Jarvis Me irs

1927 Wendell Holmes Langdon

1928 William McEwan Ellis

1929 Stuart Redmond Ikeler

1930 Philip Henry Close, Jr. Johnathan Elizur Eno, Jr. Alfred Barr Stain ton

65

G. B. Reynolds Meade Robert Fisher Gibson, Jr. William Franklin Mills Henry Bangs Lewis James Cyrus Smith


..

速 m:be jfraternttp of

~lpba

1!\elta

~bt

Founded in 1832 at Hamilton College

l\oll of Hamilton Columbia Yale Amherst Brunonian Hudson Bowdoin . Dartmouth Peninsular R ochester Williams . Middletown Kenyon Union Cornell Phi Kappa J ohns Hopkins Minnesota ToroJ?to Chicago McGill Wisconsin California lllinois Stanford Washington British Columbia

~bapters

Hamilton Coll ege Columbia College Yale niversity Aml1erst College Brown University Western Reserve University Bowdoin College Dartmouth College University of Michigan University of Roche ter Williams College Wesleyan University Kenyon College Union College . Cornell niversity Trinity College Johns Hopkins University University of Minnesota Toronto niversity . University of Chicago McGill University University of Wisconsin University of California Univer ity of Illinois Leland Stanford Univer ity University of Washington British Columbia College .

66

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 1926



~bi

Jkappa (:bapter of

~lpba

1!\elta

~bi

1926 Herbert James Noble

1927

Stanley Leslie Bell

Robert Yellowlee Condit Robert William Hildebrand

1928 Wi!Eam Fredrick Even

Berry Oakley Baldwin Arnold Henry Moses, Jr.

1929 Robert Ruggles Bartlett Lyman Bushnell Brainerd, Jr.

1930 Walter Ragnar Anderson Augustus Theodore Falken trom Joseph Lovering

68

John Walter Woods Edward Steele Wotkyns

John Nealon Macinnes Fernald Gordon Wentworth Edward Thomas Taggard


~be

jfraternitp of 1!\elta Jkappa F ound ed in 1844 a t Yale

~oil Phi Th eta Xi Sigma Ga mm a P si U psilon Beta . Eta Kappa Lambd a Pi Iota Alpha Alph a Omicron Epsilon Rh o Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi C hi P si Phi Gamm a Phi P si Omega Beta Chi D elta Chi Phi Ga mma Ga mm a Beta Thet a Zeta Alpha Ch i Phi Epsil on Sigma T a u . Delta D elta Alph a Phi T a u La mbda D elta K appa T a u Alpha. Sigma Rh o D elta P i Rho D elta . K appa Epsil on Omega Chi

~psilon

ni versity

of ÂŤ:bapters

Yale U ni ver sity B owdoin College Colb y U niver sity Amh erst Coll ege Va nderbilt U ni vers ity University of Al a bama Brown Uni versity ni versi t y of North Caroli na ' ni versity of Virgini a Mi a mi Univers ity K enyon College D a rtm out h College Ce ntra l U ni versity Middl ebury College Uni ve rsity of Mi chi ga n . Willi a ms College La fayette College H a milton Coll ege . Col gate U ni versity College of th e City of New York ni versity of R ochester Rutgers College D e P a uw Uni versity Wesleyan University R ensselaer Pol y t echni c Institute Adelbert College Cornell Uni versity Syracuse Un iversity Colu mbia U ni versity University of Californ ia Tri nity College Univer sity of Mi nn esota Massachusetts Instit u te of T echnology Un iversity of Chi cago Uni vers ity of T oron to T ul a ne Uni versity U ni versity of P ennsylvan ia McGill Univer sity Lela nd Stanford, Jr., U ni versity Uni versity of Illinois U ni versity of Wi sconsin ni versity of Washin gto n l n iversity of T exas

69

1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 1850 185 1 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1871 1874 1876 1.879 1889 1890 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 1902 1904 1906 1912 1920



~lpba

ctebt ctCbapter of 11Belta 1Sappa

Henry Lloyd Fertig

~pstlon

1928 Henry John Uhlig Harold A. L. Janes

Donald Edwin Hi lton

1930 John Richard Thomas George Lamb Hay

71


tlebe jfraternttp of Founded at

~st

Wpstlon

nion College in 1833

l\oll of QI:bapters nion College New York University Yale niversity Brown niversity . Amber t College Dartmouth College Colum bia University . Bowdoin College Hamilton College Wesleyan University University of Rochester Kenyon College University of Michigan Syracuse niversity Cornell niversity Trinity College Lehigh University University of Pennsylvania University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin University of Chicago University of California niversity of Illinois . Williams College University of Washington . University of Toronto

Theta Delta Beta Sigma Gamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi .

Xi . Upsil on I ota Phi. Pi Chi. Beta Beta Eta Tau Mu. Rho Omega Epsilon Omicron Delta Delta Theta Theta Nu .

72



1ieta TSeta ~bapter of ,tlst Wpstlon Frank Malcolm Thorburn George Childs Hamlin John Mansfield Young James Mills Hartley William Woodruff Tiles William Brown Stewart, III Carlton Anthony Palo

1925 Richard James O'Brien

1927 Dana Roberts Varney

1928 John Ellis Large William Harold Deacon William O~ings Stone James Edward Bent

1929 Amos T. Craft

Marcel Lucien Doublier Cresson Eli Smith

Frank A. Fuhlbruck

1930 John Irving Gillis

74

Hans Christian Owen, Jr. Ralph E. Rogers


m;be jfraternttp of

~lpba

<tCbt l\bo

Founded in 1895 at Trinity College ~on

of Ql:bapters Trinity College Polytechnic Institute of Broolclyn niversity of Pennsylvania Columbia University Lafayette College Dickinson College Yale University Syracuse University University of Virginia Washington and Lee University Cornell niversity 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 PhiMu Phi Nu

75



~bt ~~~ ~bapter

of

~lpba ~bt ~bo

1927 James Michael Cahill Francis Edward Conran

Andrew Hamilton Forrester Paul Hunt Hetzel

1928 Irving Scott AJford Raymond Foresey Burton Walter Edward Ebersold John Joseph Gaffney William Francis Burleigh

1929 Francis Root Belden Kenneth Gordon, Jr. Ernest AJexender Hallstrom

John Hamilton Gordon Edwin Monroe Griswold Charles Gilbert Jackson George Robert Salisky

James Vern on White Frederick William Cooper George Hardman

1930 William Torrance Barto, Jr.

Philip Morba Cornwell Frank Richard Salisky

77


~be

jfraternitp of jl)elta ~on

~bi

of Ql:bapters

Alpha . Beta Gamma Delta . Epsilon Eta Lambda Nu

nion University Brown University New York University Columbia ni versity Rutgers College University of Pennsylvania Rens elaer Polytechnic Institute Lehigh niversity Johns Hopkins University Yale niversity Cornell University University of Virginia Trinity College Williams College

Xi Omicron Pi Rho I. K. A. (Sigma) Upsilon

78



JL 1!.

~. (~tgma) ~bapter

of 1!lelta

~bt

1927 Lloyd Wesley Minor

William Astor Towill

1928 Sherman Johnson Beers William Franklin Judge

Arthur Dwight Platt Charles Sohns

1929 George Anderson Hey Harry Halliday Jackson Harwood Loomis

George Wilson Morgan, Jr. Edwin Joseph Nugent Louis Samuel Sternchuss George Reginald Turney

1930 James Archibald Gillies, Jr.

Emanuel Petrikat

80


mbe jfraternttp of

~tgma

j}u

Founded at Virginia Military Institute in 1869

l\oll of Alpha Beta . Mu Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Epsilon Eta Nu Xi Pi Rl10 Sigma Upsilon Phi Psi Beta Phi Beta Beta Beta Theta Beta Zeta Beta Nu Beta Chi Delta Theta Beta Eta Beta Iota Beta Psi 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 Military Institute University of Virginia University of Georgia University of Alabama Howard College North Georgia Agricultural College Washington and Lee University Bethany CoLlege . Mercer University University of Kansas Emory College Lehigl1 University University of Missouri Vanderbilt University University of Texas Louisiana State University niversity of North Carolina Tulane University DePauw University Alabama Polytechnic College Purdue University Ohio State niversity Stanford University Lombard College . Indiana University Mt. Union College niversity of California niversity of Iowa William-JeweLl College . University of Pennsylvania University of Chicago N. C. Coli. of Agr. and Mech. Arts Rose Polytechnic Institute Albion College Georgia School of Technology University of Washington Northwestern University University of Vermont . Stevens Institute of Technology Lafayette College . University of Oregon Colorado School of Mines Cornell University

81

1869 1870 1873 1874 1879 1881 1882 1883 1884 1884 1884 1885 1886 1886 1886 1887 1888 1888 1890 1890 1891 1891 1891 1891 1892 1892 1892 1893 1894 1894 1895 1895 1895 1895 1896 1896 1898 1898 1900 1900 1900 1901 1901


Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Xi Gamma Omicron Gamma Pi. Gamma Sigma Gamma Tau Gamma Upsilon Gamma Xi Gamma Psi D elta Alpha D elta Dcta D elta Gamma D elta D elta Delta Epsilon Alpha 7eta D elta Eta Delta Iota . D elta Kappa Delta Lambda Delta u D elta Mu Beta Kappa D elta Xi D elta Omicron D elta Pi D elta Rho . D elta Sigma D elta Tau D elta Upsilon D elta Phi D elta Chi D elta Psi Epsilon Alpha Epsilon Beta Epsilon Gamma Epsilon Epsilon Epsilon D elta Epsilon 7 eta Epsilon Eta Epsilon Theta Epsilon Iota Epsilon Epsilon Kappa Epsilon Lambda .

State College of Kentucky University of Colorado . University of Wisconsin University of Illinois University of Mi chigan . Missouri School of Min es Washington University (Mo.) Wes t Virginia University Iowa State College University of Minn esota University of Arkansas University of Montana . Syracuse University Case School of Applied Science Dartmouth College Columbia niver ity P ennsylvania State College University of Oklahoma Wes tern Reserve University University of N ebraska Washington State College D elaware State College . Brown niversity niversity of Maine Stetson University Kansas State Agricultural College University of Nevada University oÂŁ Idaho George Washington U niversity Colorado Agr. College Carnegie Inst. of T ech .. Oregon Agri cultural College Colgate niversity Maryland State College Trinity College Bowdoin College niversity of Arizona Drury Coll ege Wes leyan niversily Oklahoma Agricultural College University of Wyoming University of Florida University of T ennessee Mass. Institute of T echnology William and Mary College Butler Coll ege University of Torth Dakota University of Utah

82

190~ 190~ 190~

190~ 190~

1903 1903 1904 1904 1904 1904 1905 1906 1907 1907 1908 1908 1909 1909 1909 1910 1910 1912 1913 1913 1913 . 1914 1915 1915 1915 1916 1917 1917 1917 1918 1918 1918 1919 1920 19~0 19~0 19~0 19~1 19~~ 19~2

19~6

19~6 19 ~6



11\tlta ctrbt ctrbapter of 1927 Frederick John Eberle George Courtenay Glass, Jr.

~tgma

J}u

Roger Wilbur Hartt Winthrop Hubbard Segur

1928 Nicholas Angelo Mastronade Lewis Hiram Small, Jr. George Thomas Ward Walter Eberle Whitaker

Royden Constantine Berger Andrew Charles Brown, Jr. Dudley Holcome Burr James Clifford Malone

1929 Stephen Blake O'Leary William Jones Pitt, Jr. Frank Graves Whitney

Stewart Eugene Burr Paul Rey Ihrig John Ralph Nolan

1930 Norman Martin Bush Kenneth Allen Linn

84

Glenn Elmer McNitt William Avery Sturm



mbt JLocal jfrattrnttp of

~lpba

1927 Edwin J. W. Johnson

John J. Downey

Norbert B. Lacy

1929 Edgar R. Coles, Jr. William A. Dower John T. Kneeland, Jr.

1930 Dorance H. Coles

Howard F. Manierre

Richard A. McCurdy

1928 Thomas F. Daly

mau Jkappa

Francis J. R yan

Karl F. Koenig William F. Leahy Rudolph J. Taute J. Delphis Gauthier


~bi

Tยงeta Jkappa Tยงeta of ~onnecticut Chartered 1845

C!&fficers of tbe ~onnecticut jSeta John James McCook, D.D., LL.D. * Frederick William Harriman, D.D. Arthur Adams, Ph.D. . George Lewis Cooke, M .A. Anson Theodore McCook, B.A. , LL.B.

. President Vice- President . Secretary . Treasurer Assistant Treasurer

~emb ers ~Iecteb

itt 1926

Charles Francis Whi ston Morris Max Roisman ~ embeu ~Iecteb

*Deceased

itt 1927

James Michael Cahill James W. Nell

87


FROM A WOOD CUT BY J . MILLS HARTLEY •2s


1J n .memoriam 31 obn 31 ames

~c((ook

No other man could take so much away, No lover of ours could strike a deeper blow; Nor could the Shadow, crouched beyond the glow, Have chosen in all our ranks a richer prey. For he had borne the toil and heat of the day ; He knew our early paths, and none could know Better than he the road that we must go Now silence covers all that he would say. Silence, and dark, and utter loss? Not so Ends that heroic heart and stored mind; The Shadow cannot work such overthrow. Who is not gentler becau e he was kind? Who is not stronger for his strength? Ah, no! What other man could leave more wealth behind? - Odell Shepard

89





1V arsttp (flub Established 1927 . President

Robert Y. Condit

Edwin Griswold '28 Edward Johnson '27 ' Charles Jackson '28 Charles Solms '28 Andrew Brown '28 Andrew Forrester '27 Richard O'Brien '26 Rudolph Taute '29 John Young '28 Ernest Halstrom '29

Walter Eberle '27 Walter Whitaker '28 Winthrop Segur '27 Dudley Burr '28 William Even '28 ' James Cahill '27 Stephen O'Leary '29 Sherman Beers '28 Nicholas Mastronade '28 George Hardman '29 Walter Ebersol '28

T HE Varsity Club was founded at Trinity in January, 1927 for the primary purpose of knitting more closely together the various branches of sport at college, of increasing the prestige gained from the possession of a 'T', and for the closer adherence to training rules. With a building up of interest in such an organization, it will naturally follow that interest in the sports themselves will spring up. Having already drawn up an official constitution, the club hopes to perpetuate itself for all future time a a live extra-curriculum activity.

93


rOOTE>ALL T HE

Trinity 1926 Football Season was obviously not a success mathematically. Two victories and four defeats leave much to be desired. "Injury" had the most prominent place among the various legitimate reasons for the team's lack of success. The pre-season training camp was located at Plainfield, Conn ., where the squad of about twenty-five enjoyed themselves immensely at the town's expense. However, they suited the townspeople becau e they have already asked them to return. Under coaches Merriman and Donnelly much football was learned there, including fundamentals and rules. AI o a short co urse in "How to Woo the Country Lass" was given by the sophomore delegation of the squad, led by O'Leary and Taute. Immediately upon arrival in Hartford injuries began to pile up. Brown developed a muscle turn in his right leg, Burr broke three bones in the back of the right hand, Mastronard sprained an ankle, Whitaker twisted a knee, and Even had a renewal of an old "charley horse". Trinity's future began to look very dark when the first game with Cooper Union came along with the first string backfield unable to play. The Cooper Union game was slow and uninteresting. Trinity's line pushed the lighte1路 Cooper Union team all over the lot but the inexperienced backfield could score but once. About three quarters of the game were played within the Cooper Union twenty-yard line, but there the plucky little fellows held like giants and prevented Trinity from rolling up the score. As this was the only game in which the Trinity line showed itself to advantage, it is well to give them all the 94


credit possible. Hallstrom and Even showed up very well, both playing a hardhitting, slashing game. Condit at center was brilliant on offense, Uhlig and Fertig did the ball carrying for the greater part. The game ended with the score 6-0 in favor of Trinity. The second game at Worcester against W. P. I. was ami erable failure. The Trinity line crumbled like paper in front of the furious onslaught of the Worcester backs. Guide and Converse, Worcester backs, gave a brilliant exhibition of line smashing and end-running. The Trinity offense seemed to be as dead as the defense and no appreciable gains were made. Never did Trinity come within Worcester's thirty-yard line. Condit received a crack in the head during the first half which rendered him a trifle out of his mind for the rest of the afternoon. The game ended 16-0 in favor of W. P. I. The third game, with the Iew York Aggies, again raised the hopes of the Trinity undergraduates. The backfield showed an excess of speed and power, winning by a score of 26-0. Mastronard and Taute did excellent work on the offense, running the ends and slashing tackles. Brown did well on the defense, tackling the backs for loss after loss. The game was played brilliantly with Trinity outclassing her heavier opponents in every department of play. The next game saw the reappearance of the Connecticut Aggie jinx. The Connecticut backfield was too heavy and powerful for the light Trinity line, which did the best it could. Hardman, his first game at end, was a strong defensive power. He tackled Williams time after time for losses. The Trinity offense would get started and suddenly stop before any great progress could be made. This was not a brilliant game, but imply a spectacle of a heavy steam rolling team crushing its weaker and lighter opponent. The score was 35-0 in favor of Connecticut Aggies. The big game of the year was a heartbreaking exhibition. Trinity held the Wesleyan line attack, only to have the vVesleyan forward passes result in touchdowns. The Trinity backfield did notable work in offense and carried the greater part of the burden of the defen e. The Trinity line was woefully weak many times, forcing the backfield to bring up the secondary defense. Wesleyan uncorked some brilliant forward passes with a combination of Tettley to Steele. The final score was Wesleyan 20- Trinity 0. This game found Trinity in complete reversal of the form it howed in beating the Wesleyan outfit the year before, 6-0. The last game of the season, played at Clinton, N. Y. against Hamilton College, proved another sad event. The Hamilton backfield gained at will against the Trinity team. Trinity's most brilliant exhibition of an offense came in the third quarter when the Blue and Gold started on their ten-yard line and by a series of forward passe marched up the field. It looked like a score, but an interception stopped the offense. The score was Hamilton 33-Trinity 0.

95


That the season was a failure will be doubted by no one, but the prospects for next year are bright and no one ever received a stiff neck or a black eye for looking into the future. The spring training ought to bring out some dormant material around College. In closing, it is well to congratulate Captain O'Brien on the conscientious, never-say-die attitude which he displayed in every game throughout the season. ~cores

Trinity 6 Trinity 0 Trinity 26 Trinity 0 Trinity 0 Trinity 0

Cooper Union Worcester Tech. N.Y. Aggies Connecticut Aggies Wesleyan Hamilton

CAPTAIN " DICK" O' BRIEN

96

0

16 0 35 20 33






O'C

BASKLTBALL T ilE basketball season opened with a defeat at the hands of the Coast Guard Academy from New Londo!!路 At the Christmas Holidays, the count tood two won and two lost. Immediately following the holidays, a lopsided game was lost to Wesleyan. Probably the two most outstanding games on the rest of the schedule were those played with Worcester and Hamilton, which Trinity won easily by large scores. The we~k-end trip to New York proved to be a heart breaker, both games being lost by the mall margin of one basket each, the first one to Pratt, and the second to Brooklyn Poly. The biggest surprise of the season was Trinity's defeat of St. Stephen, which defeated Yale the following night. The second game with Wesleyan, played at Middletown, was a thriller. The lead see-sawed back and forth until near the end of the second half. Three Trinity men were banished via the foul route. Wesleyan here found the opening, and rushed in to top the Blue and Gold by a small margin. Capt. Burr played a fast and heady game throughout the year, well up at the top of the scoring column. "Ring" Thomson, our blond center was a great scoring power, leading the squad at all times. The fact that the Blue and Gold scored a total number of points exceeding that of their opponents was pleasing to the college, and did much to offset the sting of the games which were lost.

101


-~l>~u~ ~cbebule

Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec . Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar.

5 11

12 .17 12 16 19 30 6 9 12 17 22 26 27 3

Trinity 23 33 21 30 10 22 44 26 34 27 37 23 44 22 29 24

Coat Guard Clark Northeastern Norwich VVesleyan Williams Worcester Tech. Pratt Institute St. Stephens Conn . Aggies St. Michaels Wesleyan Hamilton Pratt Institute Brooklyn Poly Conn. Aggies

449

Opponents 32 22 24 14 43 28 26 28 17 32 10 34 27 24 31 51

443

\Von six I.ost ten J. B. Burr . R. Oosting . P. T. Hough

Captain Coach Manager

J. Burr, Right Forward D. Burr, Left Forward M. Thomson, Center A. Taute, Right Guard

W. Whitaker, Right Forward R. Newsholme, Left Forward W. Riley, Center W. Orrick, Left Guard

102


ball/ R. H. Tewsholme J. S. Merriman E. J. W. Johnson .

Captain Coach Manager

Whitaker, Pitcher Thomson, Catcher Eberle, First Base Newsholme, Third Base Towill, Left Field

Mastronarde, Pitcher Pryor, Catcher Solms, Second Base Riley, Shortstop Burr J., Center Field Ebersold, Right Field

103


-~-:::~ _

-~ t-

--路

-----..

-

-

U-!J_-

wHEN Coach Merriman sent out his annual call for candidates, a good-sized squad answered, among which were many veterans of last year's squad. The battery po itions were filled by Whitaker, Mastronarde, Solms, on the throwing end, and by Thomson, Pryor, Burr and Cutler on the receiving end. The infield at econd base and shortstop presented a problem. Riley was moved in from center field to cover the short top position, but the keystone sack presented a stubborn problem throughout the rest of the year. The team was captained by Reggie New holme, our veteran third sacker who held down the dizzy corner in fine fashion. The season started auspiciou ly with a win from Lowell Tech. When the six-game stage was passed the tally stood three won and three lost. But here the team went into a slump from which they did not recover until the Pratt game, the next to the last on the schedule. The last game with the Alumni was called at a tie, 5 to 5, on account of the rain which came down in torrents after having threatened all morning. Whitaker pitched good ball throughout the eason, winning four out of eight starts. The season as a whole was not what could be called a howling success. But it is reasonably possible to forecast that the coming season will be a successful one, in view of the fact that the majority of our veterans will be back on the team agam. Captain-elect Eberle at the initial sack prophesies a good year, and Coach Merriman looks over his material with a pleased eye. The outfield which was one of the main weak points last year will be built up again into a hard-hitting, fly-grabbing bunch of baseball cha ers. The Lowell game was an exciting one for the rooters in the stands. It was not a pitchers' duel, nor a batting orgy, but rather a crafty game of baseball from the point of view of headwork, with each team forging ahead at its turn at bat. The score, 9 to 8, indicates that Trinity batted last. It was not until the last half of the ninth inning that the game was sewed up. A loo ely played game replete with errors wa lo t to Williams. But the Blue and Gold turned the tables in the next game by defeating the Worcester team, 3 to 2. This game began as a pitcher's duel and continued :;,s such until the last ball was thrown. Whitaker was on top all of the time. On a bitter cold day in April, a slow game was dropped to Conn. Aggies at Storrs. Trinity redeemed herself three days later with a definite win in a fast game against Stevens Tech. 7 to 2. The next week N. Y. U. engaged with us in a combined ba eball game and track meet to the tune of 17 to 1. Here it was that Trinity dropped into a slump, retaining this reversal of form until the Pratt game on June fifth, when Trinity bats connected with the ball for all kinds of runs. The final tie with the alumni fini hed the eason with a tally of: four wins, eight losses, and one tie.

104



~ummat:p

Trinity April April April April May May May May May May May May June June

17 21 24 28 1 7 8 11

15 22 26 31 5

12

9

Lowell Textile Williams Worcester Tech. Conn. Aggies Stevens Tech. N.Y. U. C. C. N.Y. Wesleyan Conn. Aggies Clark R.I. State Wesleyan Pratt Alumni

1 3 3 7 1 6 2 1 3 3

Opponents 8 0

2 9

2 17 9

8 5

4 5

Rain

.

106

12

4

5

5

;i6

88


TRACK McBurney R. Oosting Hubbard

Captain Coach Manager

A. McBurney (hurdles)

D. Hevenor (pole vault) A. Forrester (jumps) C. Jackson (sprints) J. Williams (distance) J. Burr (sprints) J. Bent (sprints) W. Orrick (javelin) R. Noble (weights) F. Conran (distance) J. Farris (distance) R . Burton (sprints) C. Solms (jumps)

R. O'Brien (weights) W. Even (weights) E. Griswold (hurdles) R. Condit (weights) J. Young (weights) .J. Cahill (distance) E. Brown (sprints) N. Anderson (pole vault) R. Gibson (jumps) S. Beers (distance) E. Johnson (distance)

107



THE 1926 track sea on opened up with an abundant supply of candidates. Coach Oosting had them out as soon as possible to show him their wares. The first meet was with Worcester Tech. , in which meet, the Blue and Gold runners were greatly outclassed. 'Vorcester pre ented a strong aggregation of sprinters and distance runners, securely sewing up that department of the meet. Trinity did well in the weights, however, and thereby gained a number of points. The final score was Worcester 91 j -Trinity 34t. The next meet at Rhode I sland State was a repetition of the Worcester meet, with the Blue and Gold failing in the weight-throwing end of the affair. The final score : R. I . State 99! -Trinity 26t. The following week Cahill , Blue and Gold quarter miler, placed in the Eastern Intercollegiates. Norwich University provided a thrilling meet which ended in a tie 63-63. The races were all touch and go-now Trinity ahead and now Norwich. In weight throwing and jumping contests quarters and halves of inches meant a win or a loss. Every event was contested to the last breath and inch. The meet finally ended in a tie, providing probably the most thrilling meet that has ever been seen on the Trinity campus. The final event of the year again t Conn. Aggies was another defeat by a tally of Conn. Aggies 81! -Trintiy 41 t . The Trinity men lacked the power to get across that final spurt which is so necessary in track. ~cbel:Jule

April May May May May

28 8 15 22 29

Trinity 34126t ! (Cahill) 63

Worcester R. I. State Eastern Inter-Collegiates Norwich niversity Conn. Aggies

4It

109

Opponent 91199 } 63 8Jt


j

TEtiHIJ T HE tennis team, captained by "Abe" Katz, showed itself to fairly good advantage in the four matches which they engaged in this year. Meeting stronger teams than the Blue and Gold, the racket wielders played good, consistent tennis, losing only one match. Capt. "Abe" and his brother Herman each swung a mighty gut-string, both in singles and doubles. The Clark match at Worcester opened the season with an excellent brand of tennis by the Trinity men. The match would have been won except for a fluke which gave Clark an unwarranted singles, tying the score. The following week Springfield, one of the strongest teams in New England, came to Hartford only to be sent back, down-hearted, with a tie match. They came here over-confident, and unexpectedly met a team of scrappy tennis players. The next match against Worcester was another tie. Up to this point the team seemed fortified against defeat, but, try as they might, they cou ld not rid them elves of that apparent jinx which persistently kept them from victory. Jupiter Pluvius, (otherwise known as rain), called off the match with Holy Cross. It is rumored that the Holy Cro s team were well satisfied with rain. The final match with Wesleyan proved to be a heart-breaker. Much was expected from the Blue and Gold net-men, but disappointment seemed ever-present. The team took a slump in its most important game, which resulted in Trinity's only loss throughout the entire season.

110



路 ~cbe'bule Trinity April 24 May 1 May 8 May 15 May 21

Clark Springfield VVorcester Holy Cross We leyan

Opponent

3 3 3

3 3 3

Rain 0

6

9

15

'QI:eam A. Katz C. Cook S. I.eeke

Captain Manager Coach

A. Katz H. Katz W. Nichol

W. Langdon H. Fairchild B. Baldwin

112


路路--------~-------------,

Jumor Prom


'lrbe Junior

~romenabe

Held in Alumni H all , Friday, J anuary 28, 1927

jfunior 11}rom @:ommittee . Chairrnan

Arnold Henry Moses V\Tilliam Dunl op Orr Robert Fisher Gibson, Jr. Berry Oakley Baldwin Henry Fertig John M ans:field Young

Edwin Monroe Griswold Walter Eberle Whitaker Sherman J ohnson Beers Thomas Francis Daly Charles Gilbert J ackson, ex-officio

114


~be ~opbomore

J!}op

Held in Alumni Hall, Monday, November 30, 1925 Edwin Monroe Griswold

. Chairman ~opbomore ~op

A. Henry Moses, Jr. Charles G. Jackson Sherman J. Beers John E. Large Dudley H. Burr

(!Committee William P. Orrick Russell E. Davis Henry L. Fertig Thomas F. Daly William F. Even, ex-officio

115


J

. President

Winthrop H. Segur John E. Large, I. Scott Alford

CJTE:...R.J

Robert F . Gibson, Jr. Paul R. Ihrig William Pitt



31 esters

1925=6

T

HERE might have been a time a few short years ago when the inveterate pessimist could have said of the then recently rejuvenated Jesters, 'Well, Ll1ey've started off well enough, but they're trying to do too much. They have hi tten off more than they can chew. They're bound to fall down again into the old rut.' Admittedly, the Jesters did bite off an exceptionally large piece when they attempted to whip together a dramatic organization at Trinity which cou ld lay claim to social and financial success. The fact is, however, that they did not only bite off this piece, but they also chewed it- and swallowed it. Nor at any time since have they found it necessary to resort to indigestion tablets. Since the date of their re-organization in nineteen twenty-four they have successfully presented the following plays: 'The Turtle Dove' by Margaret Scott Oliver; 'Rollo's Wild Oat' by Clare Kummer; 'The Dover Road' by A. A. 118


l\Jilne; 'Arms And The Man' by Bernard Shaw; 'The Whole Town's Talking' by Anita Loos; and 'Wedding Bells' by Salisbury Fields. Since the time of its founding, the Jester organization has had for it aim and ideal the amassing together of sufficient money to provide Trinity with a little 1heatre of its own. Far fetched as that may sound, its realization is not at all impossible with the type of work which the Jesters are doing at the present time. The present college generation will not see it, nor is it likely that the freshmen entering Trinity four years hence will see it. But if the Jesters hold themselves up to that high standard of work of which they are capable, it is not unreasonable to expect that their goal hall be attained in a not-too-far-off future.

119


. President

Robert Y. Condit

Frederi ck J . Eberle K enneth E. D aughn

Andrew H. Forrester J ames M. Cahill Richard J . O'Brien

120


~enior

1!}onorarp

~ocietp

Established 1893

mbe Jlebusa 1927 Andrew H . Forrester James M. Cahill

Frederick J . Eberle R obert Y. Condit

121


~opbomore

1!\ining ctelub

Founded by the Class of '99 on February 15, 1897

1928 1J9elegation Robert F. Gibson, Jr. , Chair1nan Cbarle Jackson Walter Whitaker Dudley Burr M il ton P. Thomson

William Even Berry Baldwin Edwin Griswold William P. Orrick Charl es Sol m

•

122


m:be

~enate

jfinance

William McE. Ellis A. Henry Mose John M. Young

123

~ommittee


1!\tbating

~lub Coach

Gustav Adolph Kleene, Ph.D. Albert DeBonis V\ illiam Pitt William Leahy P. Kazarian

President Vice- President A. Rosenfeldt W. Barbro R. Wise

M. Ziff

12-l-



mbe mrinitp Jfbp Established 1873 John Ellis Large . James Edward Bent

. Editor-in-Chief B11siness Manager ~55ociate

Qfbitors

R obert Fisher Gib on, Jr. William McEwan Elli Berry Oakley Baldwin Harold A. L. Janes I. Scott Alford William Brown Stewart, III Dudley Holcomb Burr William Franklin Judge Thomas Francis Daly Oswin Heman Doolittle Lewis Hiram Small, Jr.

126


Established 1904

Incorporated 1913 Editor Business Manager Assistant Business Manager . Circulation ~1 anager Assistant Circulation ~1 anager

A. Henry Moses '28 William McEwan Ellis '28 Lyman Bushnell Brainerd, Jr., '30 . William Dunlop Orr '28 Edward Thomas Taggard '30 ~ssodate

Qfbitors

John Clark FitzGerald '28 William Brown Stewart, III '28 Robert Fisher Gibson, Jr. '28 Edward Ru ggles Bartlett '29 William Franklin Mills '29 127


OMMENCENEN ~rinitp ~attfor'l:l,

([ollege (!Connecticut

One Hundredth Annual Commencement, Alumni Hall, June Fourteenth, 1926

速r'l:let of Qfxercises Mu ic Salutatory . Announcement of Prizes Conferring of Degrees, in Course Valedictory . Address Conferring of Honorary Degrees Doxology Benediction

Morris Max Roisman, Hartford

Charles Francis Whiston, Massachusetts Music Robert Ernest Vinson, D.D., LL.D.

128


1!\egree!i QConferreb ~acbelor

of

~rts,

in Q!:ourse

To Ten Students in the Class of 1926

of

~acbelor

~cience,

in Q!:ourse

To Thirty Students in the Class of 1926

of

~aster

~rts,

in Q!:ourse

Robert Thomas Daly, B.A., 1921, D artmouth College Harry Cumins, B.S. , 1925, Valparaiso University Charles Elmer Hadley, B .A ., 1914, Bates College Arthur VanRiper Tilton, Trinity '21 ~aster

of

~cience,

in Q!:ourse

George Edward Tates, Trinity '25 ~aster

of

~rts ~onoris

Q!:ausa

Charles Frederick Smith Henry Wood Erving Edward Jones Pearson

1Doctor of

~usic ~onoris

Q!:ausa

Thomas Tertius Noble

1Doctor of JLal:lls

~onoris

Q!:ausa

James Lukens McConaughy Preston Brown Robert Ernest Vinson

1Doctor of

~cience ~ onoris

Q!:ausa

Ansel Granville Cook

1Doctor of 1Dibinitp

~onoris

Q!:ausa

Elmer Truesdell Merrill John Gardner Murray

129


J!)onor~

anb

~ri?t~ ~onors

for tbe

~ear 1925 =1926

in tf:Je QI:lass of 1926

V aledictorian-Char!es Francis Whiston Salutatorian-Morris Max Roisman Honors in General Scholarship-Charles Francis Whiston Honors in Biology- Joseph Nicholas D'Esopo Honors in -Modern Languages- Martin Maurice Coletta, Morris Max Roisman Honors in Philosophy-Char!e Franci Whiston

,itti}e5 Tuttle Prize Essay: Alfred Knightly Birch Goodwin Greek Prize: Charles Francis Whiston Prizes in History and Political Science First Prize: (Not awarded) Second Prize: (Not awarded) The Alumni Prize in English Composition First Prize: (Not awarded) Second Prize: (Not awarded) The Frank W. Whitlock Prizes First Prize: Casimir L. S. Sutula Second Prize: William Pitt, Jr. The Douglas Prize: Irving Scott Alford The F. A. Brown Prize: John Williams, Jr. The Phi Gamma Delta Prize in Mathematics: Arthur S. Blank The Christopher Trowbridge Memorial Prize: ArthurS. Blank ~olbers

of jfellotusbips anb $cbolarsbips

H. E. Russell Fellow: Charles Francis Whiston Mary A. Terry Fellow: Morris Max Roisman Lemuel J. Curtis Scholar: James Wilfred Nell Charles F. Daniels Scholar: Harold William Gale Holland Scholars: Jame Michael Cahill '27; Millard Fuller Manning '28; ArthurS. Blank '29 William Allen Mather Scholar: Frederick John Eberle Caroline Sidney Mears Scholar: Joseph Lovering Toucey Scholars: John Mansfield Young, William Dunlop Orr, Edward Thomas Taggard

130


<l&ptimi Samuel Hart, '66 George Otis Holbrooke, '69 Lucius Waterman, '71 Leonard Woods Richardson, '73 Hiram Benjamin Loomis, '85 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, '05 Gustave Alexander Feingold, ' 11 John Howard Rosebau gh, '11 Allen Northey Jones, '17 Abraham Meyer Silverman, ' 18 Evald Laurids Skau, '19

C!Cla~~

1!\ap

速fficer~ Class Day Chairman Historian P oet Orator Prophet Statistician Presentor Chairman of Senior Ball

Andrew H. Forrester Stanley L. Bell Casimir L. S. Sutula James M. Cahill . George C. Glass . Wendell H. Langdon Robert Y. Condit Robert W. Hildebrand .

131


l\eceiber

~resenter

'57 G. R. Hallam, '59

W. H. Benjamin, '57 '59

G. R. Hallam, '59 W. H. Webster, '61 R. F. Goodman, '63 H. G. Gardner, '65 F. L. Norton, '68 Jacob LeRoy, '69 William Drayton, '71

Inveniam viam aut faciam '61 Per aspera ad astra '63 "N e tentes aut prefice '65 Facta non verba '68 SemJJer crescens '69 N urn quam non pm路atus '71 Nulla restigic拢 retrors1t1n '73

W. S. Cogswell , '61

N. B. Dayton, '63 C. "'. 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, '74 '76

C. E. Moore, '76

I nservit honori

W. C. Blackmer, '78

'78

D. L. Fleming, '80

J. D. Hills, '78 '80

A . P. Burgwin, '82

W. R. Leaken, '80 '82

A. P. Burgwin, '82

Respice fin em

S. H. Giesy, ' 85

'85

A. D. Neeley, '85

Duris non frangi

G. S. Waters, '87

'87

A. H. Anderson, '87

Multa in dies addiscentes

E. C. Johnson, II, '88

'88

E. C. Johnson, II, '88

Per angusta ad augusta

E. McP. McCook, '90

'90 T. A. Conover, '90

Semper agens aliquid '92

I. D. Rus ell, '92 F. F. Johnson, '94

G. Hall, '92 132


tlre.uenter J. W. Edgerton, '94 E. P. Hamlin, '95

l\eceiber '94 Agere pro viribus '95 En A vant! '96

J. Strawbridge, '95 C. E. Cogswell , '97

(Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer) '97 '99 Fortier, fideliter, feliciter '01

N ovus or do saeclorum '04 '06

'08 '10 '11

'14 '15 '16 '18

'20 '22 Stanley Miller, '22

John Williams, Jr., '26 '23

. William Ellis, '28 ' 26

133



~bt ~t. ~atrick's •itb

1l\ap ~crap, ala 'j}i?t TSabp' ~pologi e~

to

O

~lilt <19ro~~

OHOO, nize baby, itt opp all de hepplesuss, so momma'll gonna tell de sturry from de Screp wit St. Patrick. By Trinity Collitch it was de screp betwinn dose huffel Suphamores- de minn tings- and de Frashmens-dose poor critchures. So annehoe, came it along de saventinth from March, nineteen hundred twanty seex, and dose doidy Suphamores hald a conwention and made by demsalves an incision dey should geeve wance a beeg poddy de Freshmens prewious from taking huff de rules. Befurr precidding momma'll geeve you avera) bextracts wit hexemples from dese rules: Foist- De Fra hmens shall wulk donstess wan stap from a time, plizz, not gredually tree wit furr taps altogather. Sacond-Dey shall hev repul ive chepel itch day, Sonday concluded. ToidDey shall not under panalty from dett wear perhep school pins or niddles. Fort-Dey shall not from enny minus go by de Bond Huttel, axcept whan unaccompanied from an hupper-clessman. Fifth- Dey shall ulways geeve it a teep de hat to gantlemens as well ladies .... Dose poor Frashmens hav by dem planty more rules yat, bot de momma has geeven de baby a deficient nomber from dem to see how huffel wit tarrible was de seetuation dare at Trinity. Iven de alluminum wot graduated yirrs befurr was complittly halpless. (Nize baby take annodder spoon hepplesuss) . So anyhoe, gave it de Suphamores a demand from what de Frashmens nidds must be all huff from de canvas by seex o'clock !stern Stendard Time, in addition from which dey shall not be sinn in de wacinity till seex de naxt munning. De Frashmens- dose poor tings-hed notting to do bot dey must hobey de doidy Suphamores exclaration. So graduelly dey all ren dontown and hed supper wit itch odder by de Plymott Lonch. De fodder from wan of de Frashmens \Yas soch an underteker wot buries dad pipple by de seminary. So dere was it dey should slipp till de bettie began . De Frashmens- dose halple critchures- slapt everywhere in the fummeral parlors- bon de ceskets, under de cuffins, in de l10ises, averywhere dey hed to slipp where dey should be eble from finding a plaze to lay de had. Santinels dey plazed all from around de ture, so de henimy shouldn't heavesdrop and catch de Frashmens wit de pents don. (Nize baby take annodder spoon hepplesuss. ) 'i'\Tit meking a shut sturry longer, de beeg bettie stodded at wan Hay. M. by Menu Stritt in front from de Capite! Teater. Fife hondred Frashmens wa it and furr hondred Suphamores. Mutter cars, huttobusses, trolleys, texi-cabs- all treffic was hulted while in de minntime want hon de bettie. Soch a bettie naver was it sinn since pre-hy terical times. De treffic cop leffed and sad, 'Look wance, it geeves it yat a bettie betwinn de Frashmens and de Suphamores. Ef I don't stop from ]effing I'll bust it yat soch a blood wassel.' Opp wit de Concuss and don witt de Booleywott and arond by

135


Sanitarium Stritt gave it horn de honks, stritt car hal de reeng, and drifer's and huffer's woices de coising. At lest was de treffic cop, wot was prewiously ]effing, hengry and noivous from henxiety wot it should tot up here soch a treffic jem wot it should come from it collegians and racks. So gredually he gave it a queek jomp by soch a -nited Stetts Ceegar Sture and culled it opp on de telephun de Poleece Cut wot dey should sand dere gredually de resoive corpse. De resoives was late like usual, bot annehoe dey came. De Chiff from Poleece ascended from de car and smecked it a Suphamore on de had wit hees night steek. 'Gerradahere', he sad. ' ot in de had, Mowri s,' sad a sacond lootenant to de Chiff wot was hees podner in avery breedge game wot was played by de Station Houz. Hof cus , soch woids from honly a sacond lootenant stodded it opp queek planty trouble. ' herropp your doity mout, plizz!' contorted de Chiff. 'Sherropp yoursalf,' came de henswer. 'Furdermurr, it geeves by me de hup wot all your cheedren should hev by dem smallpox witt gullstune , wit deepteria, wit scollet-fivver and mizzles.' De Chiff's faze got rad like tomato zoup. 'So you're making it by me soch a public explay halrady, ha? I'll gonna hev you know wot I recivved my aducation by Cissy r. Y., not dat goot-for-notting Hen. Y. U.' De sacond lootenant leffed, 'Haxcuse, plizz, de leffter, Chiff, bot you are haxciting your alf from a tarrible haxtant. Kipp your shoid on, and don' breed so dipply-it stratches your Bivvy Dizz!' De chiff exploded, 'Makes it by you de intanshun to stend dere and comply me?' Wance more de sacond lootenant leffed and sad, wit soch a shrog from de hulders, 'Don't esk. Radder den I should stend here henswering your dopey quastions, I should hend in my designation-! shall kipp you from de trouble from keeking me hout from de Poleece Fuss. Goot-pye. Kipp your had high and your system oppen.' And wit dese woids geeves bees laigs gredually a run away from de sinn of de discursion. Of cuss, dollink, de Frashmens and de Suphamores, being collitch men like dey was, knew dere wegtables. So wan de concussion betwinn de Chiff and dat doidy sacond lootenant was depleted, de poys was nowhere in de wacinity. So de Poleece resoives peecked opp de creepled Frashmen wot was dere in de stritt, and de treffic preceeded heppily hever hafter. At saven Hay. M. wa de beeg bettie hon de collitch canvas. De Suphamore was extermined wot dey should gat de Frashmens fleg don from de helm tree in de mittie from de canvas, and dose doidy Suphamores vanished de Frashmen in bettie, and so de cless from ninetinn twanty-haight succidded in consoiving de day. (Hm-Sotch a dollink baby ate opp all de hepplesuss!) J. E. Large

136



jfacultp

JMeettng

B EING one of those bitte1路, boresome brainstorms with which the editor is constantly pestered by his staff of maniacs. The tone is tragical, after the manner of its humor. SCENE I The Time: 4 P . M. , any Tuesday afternoon of the year. The Place: Having a faculty involved, it is most likely a college. If not a colJege, it is a tate institute manitained for the feeble intellect s . The distinction is difficult. The Manner: Suggested by "The Charge of the Light Brigade". (The dignified faculty are to be seen entering the lower end of the stage-whichever end that may be. The Dean enters from the front . The faculty are seated. The Dean seats himself, as he is perfectly competent to do.) THE PRE !DENT: I ask a blessing upon this group. (No blessing is apparently coming forth after a stage wait of five seconds .) I thank you. The Professor of Greek will read the minutes of the last meeting. THE GREEK DEPARTMENT (after rattling sundry impressive papers): A meeting of the faculty of our beloved a nd most sacred college was held on Tuesday, January eleventh of this same year in this same room in which we are now assembled according to the custom of thi body to assemble in this room to discuss the problem over which it has control uch as the ne cessity of purchasing new shovels with which to clear the local pavements from the accumulations of crystallized water popularly known as snow upon which motion there was a favorable action taken due largely to the intercession of a counter-motion introduced by the Physical Training D epartment to the effect that all students should be required to dive through a barrel into a giant swing on the low bar before they received the degree of Bachelor of Arts which is seldom given in this college as was ably pointed out by the English department in a speech on the evil and depravity of readin g the Bible in French by the French D epa rtment and its cohorts of French students prote ting against the req uirement of German for the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws after the manner of the continental syst em which has been extensively studied by the History Department remembered in our group as the hero who introduced a motion to a djourn and saved sundry married members of our group from the protests of irate wives against their staying out so late in the evening. I th a nk you. THE LlBRARIAN (rapidly regaining consciousness) : I suggest a com ma after the word " protesting". (The debate on this question wages hot for ten minutes, then is referred to the committee on student behaviour). 138


THE PRESIDENT: I would like to call to your attention the business on our calloused hands today, We are assembled to settle the hash of the Freshman Class. First of all, we must consider the case of Mr. R. C. Jones. . CHORUS: Throw him out! THE FRENCH DEPARTMENT: Oh, please don't! THE PRESIDENT: Thus we have decided in the proper and formal manner that Mr. Jones must leave these secluded halls. NEXT! THE ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT: A shave, please. And leave the sideburns long. THE GERMAN DEPARTMENT: What about this man Brown? THE LATIN DEPARTMENT : Yes, what's the matter with Brown? CHORUS: He's all right! THE PRESIDENT: Who's all right? THE JANITOR: Brown's all right! CHORUS: Hurrah! THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT (climbing onto the table) : How many shall we throw out today? THE DEAN: Hundreds. THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT: Hundreds?- Thousands! THE GERMAN DEPARTMENT: It grieves me much to say this, gentlemen, but- . THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: Last meeting we discussed the advisibility of discarding the lascivious custom of using seven different colors in the chapel slips and proposed the number be cut down to a maximum of two color . I would like to hear some discussion. THE CHORUS: Drown him! THE GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT: According to Robert's Rules of Order and Dana's Laws of Cycles, I move the meeting adjourn. (The department is trampled in the dust by the milling herds. Some of the dust is only silicon dioxide, but there is considerable kaolin or clay which is a potassium alll1ninu?n silicate, supposedly hydrous). THE CHORUS (From the wings) : For he's a jolly good fellow! (A sound of breaking glass is heard) .

139


jfamousllltorbs of jfamous

~en

(Being the faithful record of the pet phrases employed by the venerable intelligentsia of an American college.) "I'm not sure of that point. You had better refer to the text." And from the lips of the same man: "We have the rules, gentlemen, and we must abide by them." "Hey, there, feller!" "So and so much, and so and so many." "One thousand?-Ten thousand ! ! !" "You will find that point explained on page 236, section 915, paragraph 19, the third sentence, in my Greek grammar". "I'm very sorry, gentlemen, but-". "Now, when I was up at Hahvahd-." "A faculty meeting always leaves me with the feeling that, as Shakespeare expresses it, 'My way of life is fallen into the sear, the yellow leaf." "Be obedjent, gentlemen. Do it immejately." "I'd love to raise your mark from a 58- to a 60-, but, really, it would hurt my conscience." "You've had plenty of time to get into your gym uniform. This class begins at 3.15, and it is now exactly 3.16. Half cut."

140


H1!lemocracp ," ~t.

"1J9ear

~ob , ~in' t

'lrbere jl}o J u~tice? "

0 H N Nickel: 's fact, Joe. I can hardly draw my ):n路eath. Same way every morning, ain't it? It's a hell of a city administration that 'ud allow this kind of a jam every day in the subway. All we need is some olive oil and we'd be sardines. Ha-ha .... Lucky I have a good sense of humor, huh, Joe? Joe Bookkeeper: I'll say so. J ohn: Just bum politics, that's all. Of course, us peeple ought to keep them grafters out of office. But it's Wall Street. 'N what can you do about it, huh, Joe ? Joe: Yeh . What can you do about it? J ohn: That's what I ay . What can you do about it? It's just the ignorance of the majority of the peeple what's makin' all this here bum administration for intelligent ones like you and me, Joe. 'A seat for every one in the subway' would be my motto if I was mayor of this here city. Ain't that right, Joe? J oe: You bet it's right J ohn: I'llsayit' right. J oe: I'll say. J ohn: But our say in the matter don't count, Joe. There 1s too many ignorant people in this here city, ain't there? Joe: You bet. John: And then you take this here question about the oil scandal. There's ignorance again. If all these high officials in politics only knew how to handle finance and speculation, there wouldn't be no scandal. Now, you take my case for example. A feller, slick looking, with a big, genuine diamond in his polka dot tie and everything, came to my house last night. He said he was visiting the select few of the city who he thought had judgement to grab a good opportunity when they saw it. He was selling oil stock for some company down in Texas, I think it was. The stock certificates were gilt-edged and they had a big red seal in one corner. Oh, it's good stock, all right. Joe: Where is the mine in Texas? John: I - I-er- I don't know . What's that got to do with it anyhow? Joe: Well, is the stock really good, do you think? John: Of course, its good. Didn't I just tell you it was gilt-edged and everything? What better proof could you have? Sure, I'm going to grab up all I can of it. The man said it probably wouldn't last long, so I'm going to draw my money out of the bank today and buy some before it's all sold out. Now that's

]

141


---

-~a

- (-d _ - -

-~ t-

u_-p__

the same way with this here administration. The mayor would probably never think of buying any of this here gilt-edge stock. He'd never realize what he was missing. But not me! No, sir. I guess I'm not so dumb, huh Joe? Joe : I'll say you're not. John: You bet. Joe: That's right. John: You're right it' right. Joe: I'll say. John: Sure, Joe,thi all goes to prove how flat and ignorant the mayor and his administration is. Yes, sir, if I was mayor my motto would be, 'No more straphangers in the subway.' That's me all over, Joe. All the city needs is a few more intelligent peeple and everything would run smooth like silk. Right, _ Joe, huh? Joe: Guess you're right, John. John: You bet I'm right. Joe: I'll say. John: Yeh, and listen-If I was mayorDoor Guard: Forty Second Street! Change for loooo- cal traaaa-in!

142


Ql ~ollegiate ~bening } T was my roommate that first proposed it. The occasion was satisfactorily auspicious, being one of those inspiring fall evenings- the kind that make people long to "go places and do things." Such were our intentions. Our first consideration was, necessarily, to take stock of the mutual financial system. Things proved to be highly satisfactory. One of us produced three dollars. The other had nothing. One of us could still draw a check (it was rather late in the month) . The other could only draw a protest. As bas been said this was highly satisfactory. I was the other. Thus, between us, we were quite comfortably set for the evening. An inve tigation into necessary expenses showed us that we were faced with luxury. Six dollars were available (which meant that the account would be over-drawn only a dollar on this occasion) . And six dollars is luxury, under good management. Luxury is a product of good management (I had been told that fact when my allowance had been trimmed the last time) . Six dollar is luxury; therefore, six dollars is good management. Q. E. D. And there we were. Half our troubles were already settled. There now remained only the problem of searching about the town for the proper kind of feminine a ~companiment. " ot too rough, nor any more too gentle," was our aim. Ten minutes were set aside for mutual reflection on the subject, than there came the following conversation: "How about Anne, and that blonde friend of hers?" "~ ot so hot." "Then there's Betty." " Bah!" " Dolly?" Reply censored by necessity. Type metal is a low fusing alloy. A few more minutes elapse, supposedly devoted to deep thought on the threatening situation. "Try Kit?" "Yeah, go ahead! Any pot in a torm" Lapse of ten minutes in the story to indicate a heart-rending 'phone call. We have been asked not to publish the res ults. "Well , who else?" " You got me." "There's Ruth." "Didn't you know she was engaged? No? Say that's a story you missed. Yeah, I'll tell you about it. You see, she was- ". Five more minutes devoted to this delicious piece of scandal. Then silence, probably indicating thought. 143


~--..

-~ - 路 --

-~ t路

U-!J_-

"What shows are in town this week?" "Yeah, I guess we might as well go down. It's too late to get any women at home now, anyway." We enjoyed the show very much, thank you. Mother , watch your sons, and keep them from the strife and evil of collegiate evening .

144



~utograpbs


-:-- ::.,.

-

~utograpbs

147


t!r:bis book is publisbeb tbrougb tbe courtesp of tbe abbertisers. Jfn orber to let tbem know tbeir inbestments babe been appreciateb kinblp mention tbe "Jfbp" \uben patroni?ing



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RINITY COLLEGE, under the name of Washington College, received its charter in 1823. It was e tablished 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 th~re were several other colleges bearing the name of our first Pre ident. The place of the mall college in American education is an important one. The resources of our great universities offer unparalleled opportunity for re earch and are a definite stimulus to certain students. On the other hand, the small college is able to meet the need of every individ~al, and the opportunities for close contact and even personal friendship with the professor are distinct advantages. With an excellent library and a well trained faculty it is no wonder that Trinity men stand high in the estimation of their fellows. The contribution made by Trinity College to education is in its training for leadership . It i not a University, and has practically no graduate students. 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 student is required to choose one of the ten different groups. He finds certain courses required and certain others optional, in order to stimulate interest in the one specialty, but al ·o to insure a well-rounded, broadly developed course. This means that the graduates of Trinity College are e pecially fitted to enter professional schools. For catalogues and information, apply to the Dean.


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- --------

INE annuals, like brilliant victories, are brought about by the c<X>rdination of skillful generalship and trained effort. The J ahn & Oilier F Engraving Co. is America路 s foremost school annual designing and engraving specialist, because in its organization are mobilized America's leading creative minds and mechanical craftsmen.

THE JAHN &. OLLIER ENGRAVI G CO. Photographers, Artists and Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black and Colors 817 w. WASHINGTO BLVD., CHICAGO


EAGLE PRINTING AND BINDING Co. OUR SPECIALTY IS PRINTING FOR SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES

Flatiron Building

Eagle Square

Pittsfield, Massachusetts

I

We Printed and Bound This Book

13


Compliments of

C01npliments of

Saint Anthony Hall

Sigma {I. K.A .) Chapter of Delta Phi

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Compliments of

C01npliments of

Delta Chi Chapter of Sigma Nu

Phi Psi Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho

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.

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14


10 Chairs Compliments of

HENRY AN'fZ

Barber Shop

Beta Beta Chapter of Psi Upsilon

H ermann Fichtner and G. Codraro, Props.

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PEARL STREET H ARTFORD

LIFE INSURANCE A good t hing

l

To

OWN

and a good t hing

To

SELL

Come in to see us

Thompson & Taintor General Agents 505 Judd Building

Hartford

THE

.

CONNECTICUT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE Co .

EST. 1846

15




Date Due J~or.

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Cat. No. l090A


NOT iiD if TAKEN fOOM IBRARY



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