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Page 1: 1920 trinity ivy
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19------------

Acceuion No. --

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·-

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1/0'\ 1'-.: /

vo" f\.: /

THE IVY 1920 ,

Th.e Ye~ Book

cj' Trin:ity ~olle-(3e Publirhed in 1919

by the jill\ior Cl~J'/

VolUJtte, XLVIII (

vo" 1'-.: '/

Vo\ ' /

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ftreface :lr) eall tf)ese pages witf) kinblp epes, we beseecb tbee, ~ ~entle ~eallerl m!e bope tbep will probe of interest

to pou, for we babe bone wbat we coulll. J!ilut our llifficulties babe been manp, lack of time cbief among tbem. mle babe broken some of tbe trabitions wbicb babe been banbeb bown in past bolumes, but no more tban we coulb belp. Be babe trieb to make tbe book more informal, but at tf)e same time to gibe an accurate account of tbis topsp-turbp pear, l9l8= l9l9.

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~o. tbe

~tbtttnb jflabd ~tttuten JLutbtr, lBbJD.,JLJL.iJl. ~re~ibent of ~rinitp ~ollege from 1904 to 1919

anb to

l9earl ~1!' JLutber bi~ wife

mte l:Jel:Jicate tbis bolume of tbe Jfbp iS>urelp, we ~ball mi~~ pou. iS>tiU, we ~ball eber remember

pou anb keep alibe pour loftp ibeal~ anb pour forceful per~onalitie~. wbicb babe kinbleb witbin u~ a lobe

towarb pou tbat will be eberlasting.

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f all tbr manp m:rinitp mrn wbo frulp offrrrb tbrir librs to sabe cibili?ation anb librrtp wbrn in peril of war, tbese, wbose namrs we srt bown in lobing mrmorp.

were speciallp cbosrn to br a pure sacrifice upon tbe ~ltat of .:lfrrrbom. m:bep babr paib tbr final price in tbat lobe tban wbicb no man batb grratrr. m:brougb frll bisrasr. from grirbous bJounbs, or, bappiest. bp subben stroke in battle, tbese, our btrtbren, followeb tbe patb of butp anb of glorp to tbe beigbts beponb our. eartblp bision. Ulell bone. Ql::omrabes. farewell ; map pou rest in peace anb map J!.igbt Qitemal sbine upon pou.

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~rinitp '!i ~olb ~tar :ifflen Private Paul H. Baer, (1921)

Died at Fort Slocum, N.Y., March 19, 1918.

2nd Lieut. Thomas B. Boardman, (1918) Died Oct. 23rd, 1918, at Camp Zachary T aylor, Louisville, K y .

Major Lloyd W. Clarke, (1907) Died, Oct. 24, 1918 at Fort Pike, Little Rock, Arkansas.

Chaplain (Captain) Rev. Walton S. Danker, 1897 Died from wounds, in France, June 18, 1918.

Sergeant Robert Glenny, (1904) Died from wounds, Sept. 23, 1918 at Ypres, Belgium.

Private George Halle, 1919 Died at Camp Upton, . Y., Sept. 29, 1918.

William J. Hamersley, 1909, Red Cro s Died at H artford , Conn ., October 12, 1918.

Captain Harry W. Hayward, 1897 Killed in battle before St. Quentin, France, Sept. 29, 1918.

Chaplain Rev. Robert S. Hooper, 1915 Died at Fort Ogle thorpe, Ga. , Oct. 16, 1918.

Second Lieut. Geo. S. Huggard, (1920) Died in France, September 27, 19l!l.

Rev. Arthur Paul Kelly, Sergeant, 1901 Died of he morrh age of the brain, near the front in France, July 5, 1918.

Second Lieut. Harold C. Mills, 1915 Died from effect of wounds June 17, 1918.

Second Lieut. James Palache, (1917) Killed in action May 16, 1918.

Ensign Basil L. Steel, Asst. Paymaster, U. S. N., 1910 Died at Cardiff, Wales, October 8, 1918.

First Lieut. Rev. P arker VanAmee, (1907) Died in France, Oct. 2, 1918. Pneumonia a nrl severe wounds.

Ensign Arthur H. Wright, (1918) Died of Pneumonia at Cala is, France, October 31, 1918.

Seaman Lester H. Church, (1920) Died of pneum onia a t New London, Ct., Sept. 27, 1918.

James J. Page, (1908) Killed in action, September 29, 1918.

Aubrey G. King, 1918, S. A. T . C. Died at H artford H ospital D ecember 2nd, 1918, of influenza and broncho-pneumonia.

Kenneth K. Walker, (1920) Died October 7, 1918.

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jSecause

wme abmireb cteolond \!Cbeobore ~oosebdt

j!Jis great abilitp, bis unfaltering courage, bis exalteb patriotism, bis spirit of self-sacrifice

jSecause

Be trust tbat bis precepts anb example babe inspireb us to be better %lmericans

jSecause

Be are proub tbat, on last ~ommencement ::lBap, be became a

~rtnttp ~an

'QJ::berefore

Be, stubents of 'QJ::rinitp ~ollrge , tbus recorb our appreciation of bis greatness anb our gratitube for bis manifolb serbicrs

~o ®ur <!Countrp

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I VY -

m;be 1920 m;rtnttp lfbp J§oarb Joseph Wurts Stansfield Alfred Pelton Bond

~ssociate <!fbitors Nelson Frederick Adkins Rob,ert Sabert Casey Francis Raymond Fox J;rederick Reed Hoisington, Jr. Harold Vincent Lynch Jack Wible Lyon Leonel Edgar William Mitchell James Alfred Nichols Gustavus Richard Perkins Hall Pierce

12

. Editor-in-Chief Business Manager

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• IVY-

fjook of cteontents PREFACE

DEDICATION

BooK ONE, FACULTY

BooK Two, STUDE T BonY

BooK THREE, FRATERNITIES .

BooK FouR, ATHLETics

BooK FrvE, SociETY

BooK SIX, CoLLEGE ORGANIZATIONs

BooK SEvE , LITERARY

BooK ETGHT, Sous LEs ARMES

BooK N I E, MISCELLANEous

BooK TEN, ADVERTISEMENTS

13

4 5

15 29 57 97

113 121 133 139 163 185

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BooK ONE

II FA~~~ II

tt. ~

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IVY-

~enatus ~cabemicus

<teotpotation

The President of the College ex o.fficio President* The Hon. William E. Curtis , LL.D. John H. S. Quick, M.A. Sydney G. Fisher, L.H.D., LL.D. William S. Cogswell, M.A. Robert Thorne, LL.B. The Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster, D.D. The Hon. Joseph Buffington, LL.D. Ambrose Spencer Murray, Jr., M.A. The Hon. Frank L. Wilcox, B.A. * Edgar F. Waterman, LL.B., Secretary and Treasurer* George Dawson Howell , B.A. William Gwinn Mather, M.A. John Prince Elton, B.S. * The Rev. Ernest M. Stires, D.D. Shiras Morris, B.S.* William Stimpson Hubbard, M.D. t E. Kent Hubbard, B.S. t Charles G. Woodward, M.A.* William H. Eaton, B.S. t Frank C. Sumner, M.A. Samuel Ferguson, M .A. Sidney T. Miller, M.A. *These members o£ the Corporation form the Executive Committee. tE iecled by the Alumni.

§bbisotp j!joatb

The Hon. William Hamersley, LL.D. William C. Skinner, M.A. The Rev. Francis Goodwin, D.D.

16

Hartford New Yorlc

Chicago Philadelphia

Jamaica, N. Y. New York

Hartford Pittsburgh New Yorlc

B erlin Har(ford

Pittsburgh Cleveland

Waterbury New York

Hartford New York

Middletown Hartford

Pittsfield, Mass . Hartford Hartford

Detroit

Hartford Hartford Hartford

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92 v 1/ioarb of jf ellob.ls

~bairman

lrenus K . H amilton, B.S.

~enior .1f ellows Frederick Everes t Haight, Ph.D. Walter Stanley Schutz, M.A., LL~B .

William Hammer Eaton, B.S. James Albert Wales, B .A. W. E. A. Bulkelcy, B.S. Samuel Ferguson, M.A.

3Junior .:tfellows Harold N. Chandler, B.A. Lawson Purdy, LL.D. John Morgan Brainerd , M.A. Murray H. Coggeshall, B.S. I renus Kittredge Hamilton, B .S.

~ssociation of tbe ~lumni W. E . A. Bulkeley, '90 . John W. Edgerton, '94 . C. A. John on, '92 John F. Forward, '96 .

~tan'bing ~ommittee

R obert H. Schutz, '89 Jacob H . Greene, '91 Paul l\1. Butterworth, '09

17

. President Vice- President

Secretary . Treasurer

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TRINITY COLLEGE ' i\'as 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 Pre iding Bishop from 1852 to 1865. From 1824 to 1831 he was The first President of the College.

~resih ents Right Rev. Thomas Church Brownell, D.D., LL.D. Rev. Nathaniel Sheldon Wheaton, S.T.D. Rev. Silas Totten, S.T.D., LL.D. . Right Rev. John Williams, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. Daniel Raynes Goodwin, S.T.D., LL.D. Samuel Eliot, LL.D. . . . . . Right Rev .. John Barrett Kerfoot, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. Abner Jackson , S.T.D., LL.D. . Rev. Thomas Ruggles Pynchon, S.T.D., LL.D. Rev. George Williamson Smith, D.D., LL.D. Rev. Flavel Sweeten Luther, Ph.D., LL.D.

18

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

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jfacultp

The Rev. Flavel Sweeten Luther, Ph.D. , LL.D. President and Seabury Professor of ~Mathematics and Astronomy

115 Veriwn Street (Office, Williams Hall)

B.A., Trinity, 1870; Ph .D ., 1896; LL.D ., 1904 ; Professor of Mathematics a nd Astronomy at Racine College, 1871-81 ; Professor of Mathematics a nd Astronomy at K e nyon College, 1881-83; Professor at Trinity since 1883; President of Trinity College, 1901-1919; Member of American Society of M echanical Engineers; Senator from Fiz·st District of Connectic ut, 1907, 1909 ; of> BK,

.6 T.

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IVY-The Rev. George Williamson Smith, D.D., LL.D.

Professor of M etaphysics, Emeritus

R.A. , H obart, 1857; D .D ., 1880; D .D ., Columbia ; LL.D ., Trinity, 1887. Chaplain, U nited States ' a,·y, 1864 ; Act­ing Professor of Mathematics, United States Naval Acad­emy, Newport, 1864-65; Chaplain at Annapolis, 1865-68; R e<'tor in various places till 1883 ; President of Trinity College 1883-1904. 8 6 X.

Charle Frederick Johnson, L.H.D., LL.D.

Professor of English L iterature, Emeritus

69 Vernon Street

B.A .. Yale, 1855; M.A ., 1863; L .H .D. , 1895; LL.D., Trinity; Assistant Professor o! Mathematics. U nited Statt>s Naval Academy, 1865-70 ; Professor at Trinity 1883-96; Professor Emeritus, 1896- ; Author of "English \Vords ;' ' " Three Englishmen and Three Americans;" "Ele­ments of Literary Criticism;"' " What Can I <io for Brady?" a n<i other poems;' " Outline Hi story of English and Ameri­can I .iterature;" "Forms of Verse;" "Shakespeare and His Critics," etc. iJi T.

The Rev. John James McCook, M.A., D.D., LL.D.

Professor of Modern Languages

396 Main Street

B.A .. Trinity, 1863; D .D ., 1901 ; LL.D., 1910 ; tuJied at J efferson College, New York College of Phys icia ns and Sur­geons, and Ber·keley Di vinity School; Second Lieutenant First Virginia Volunteer Infa ntry during the Civil War ; Professor at Trinity since 1883: R ector of St. J ohn's Church, East H a rtford, since 1869. Author of reports on poo•·-law administration and prison reform ; also of numerous magazine articles on vagabondage, political venal ity, pa uperism, drink, etc. <I> BK, 8 6 X.

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Robert Baird Riggs, Ph.D.

co'Ville Professor of Chemistry

35 Forest Street

B.A., Beloit College. Wi sconsin, 1876 : Ph .D .. Gtitti nge n; Chemist for United States Geological Sur vey, 1884-87: Professor of Chemistry, National College of Pharmacy, 1885-87. Professor of Chemistry at Trinity 1887-. Con­tributor to The A mericnn Chem·ical Journal, Th e A ·rnerican Journal of Srirnce, a nd other journals . B 911.

Frank Cole Babbitt, Ph.D. Professor of the Greelc Language and L iterature

65 Vernon Street

H.A ., H arvard , 1890; M .A. , 189'l: Ph.D., 1895; F ellow of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1895-96. Instructor in Greek at Harvard, 1896-98; Professor at Trinity. 1899-; Member of the American Archaeological Institute: Member of t he American Philological Associa­tion, Author of "G reek Grammar ;" a lso of paper in A1nerican J ournal nf Arcltneo!ogy. and in Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. <PBK, 9~X.

· Wilbur Marshall Urban, Ph.D.

Brownell Professor of Philosophy

71 Vernon Street

A.B .. Princeton, 1895 ; Ph .D., Leipzig, 1897; studied also at J ena, and was Readet· in Philosophy in Princeton and Profes or of Philosophy at Ursinus College. Member of American Psychological Association and American Philo­sophical Association. Author of "Valuation, Its Nature and Laws," 1909, and contributor to various philosophical journals and reviews. Contri butor to Atlantic Monthly and other literary journals. <I> BK.

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IVY -

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IVY Henry Augustus Perkins, M .A., E.E.

Professor of Physics

83 Gillett Street

-

B .A., Yale, 1896 ; M.A., Columbia, 1899 ; E.E., Columbia, 1899. M ember of American Physical Society; Societe FmnQaise de Physiq ue: Associate M ember of American In titute of Electrical Engineers. Author of " An Intro­duction to General Thermody namics:'' has published articles in American J ournal of Science, Sci~ntijic American, ElectricallVorld, Com pies R rndus, Le Radium, Yale Review, a nd the Physical Reriew. <l> B K, 1: :=:, ALl. <l>.

Gustavus Adolphus Kleene, Ph.D. Professor of Economics

179 Sigourney Street

A.R. , U niversity of Michigan. 1891; studied at Berlin a nd TUbinge n, at Columbia U niversity, and the U ni versity of Pennsylvania, receiving his Ph.D . from the latter institu­tion. F or two winters wi th the Charity Organization So­ciety of New York City; Assistant in Economics at the University of Wi·consi n ; Instructor in Economics and Socia l Science at Swarthmore College, and Lecturer at the U nivers ity of Pennsyh·ania. Author of " Profit and Wages.'' Contributor to the Annale of th e A mcrican A cademy of Political and Soria! Scieuce, American Sta­ti.vlical Associ a lion Pttblicalion .v, Y ale R eriew, etc. <l> BK.

Joseph Devine Flynn, M.A. *

Professor of Mathematics

93 North Beacon Street

B.A., Trinity, 1897: M.A., Tufts. 1908. Instruct or in M athematics at Professor Stearns' School and at the H art­ford Pu blic High School; Assistant Professor of Mathe­matics at T rinity to 1907; Professor of M athematics, 1907- . <l>BK, <I>rLl. . *Leave of absence during 191 8-19.

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Charles Edwin Rogers, C.E., M.C.E.

Professor of Civil Engineering

11 Lincoln Street

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1S96 ; M.C.E., Harvarcl , 191.5. Engineer and Contractor, 1896-1901; Instructor, Lehigh University, 1901-04 ; Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering, Clarkson M emo1·ial School of T ech­nology and General Engineering Practice, 1904-05 ; Pro­fessor of Civil Engineering. Trinity , 1905- ; Member of the Rensselaer Society of Engineers; Connecticut Society of Civil Engineers, Association of H arva rd Engineers.~ S.

Horace Cheney Swan, M.D.

Professor of Physiology and of Physical Training,

Medical Director

196 Whitney Street

M.D., Tufts College Medical School, 1903; B.P.E. , Inter­national Y. M . C. A. College. Instructor Histology, Harva1·d Summer School of Physical Education, 1903-05 ; Director of Gymnasium, Wesleyan Uni,·ersity, 1903-05 ; Medical Director and Director of Gymnasium, Trinity College, 1905-; Member of H artford Meclical Association, Connecticut Medical Association, Fellow American Medi­,cal Association, Society of Directo1·s of Physical Education in Colleges, American Physical Education Society, Ameri­can Public Health Association, Connecticut Public Health Associations, Member American Association for the Advancement of Science. 4> eX.

The Rev. Arthur Adams, Ph.D. Professor of English and Librarian

73 Vernon Street

B.A., Rutgers, 190!t; M.A., 1903 ; Ph.D., Yale, 1905 ; B.D., Berkeley Divinity School, 1910 ; S.T.M., Philadelphia Divinity School, 1916. Instructor in English at the Uni­versity of Colorado, 1905-06; Assistant Professor a t Trinity, 1906-08; Associate Professor, 1908-11; Professor of English, 1911-15 ; Professor of English and Librarian, 1915- ; Acting Professor of English at the University of Maine, Summer Term, 1912. Member of the Moclern Language Association of America and of the American Philological Association. Author of Syntax of thB Te·mporal Clause in Old English Prose, collaborator on the Gray and Wordsworth Concordances, author of notes a nd reviews in Modern Language Notes, and contributor to various other periodicals . 4> BK, D. 4>.

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VY -

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IVY-LeRoy Carr Barret, Ph.D.

Professor of the Latin Language and Literature

28 Brownell Avenue

B.A. , Washington and Lee U ru versity, 1897; M.A ., 1898 ; Ph .D ., J ohn Hopkins niYersi ty, 1903. Instructor in Latin, Johns Hopkins, 1903-07; Preceptor in Classics, Princeton, 1907-09 ; Instructor, Dartmouth 1909-10: Pro­fessor, Trinity, 1910-; Editor of K as hmiria n Atharna­Veda B ooks I-V. <I>BK. l:.AE.

Archer Eben Knowlton, M.S.

Assistant Professor of Physics

39 Brownell A venue

B.S., Trinity, 1910 ; Studied at Columbia U nive rsity, 1911 ; M .S., Trinity, 191 2. P ower an d Illuminat ion Expert for Connecticut Public Uti lities Commission ; Member of American Ph ys ical Society, Member of American Insti­tute of Electrical Engineers: Member of American Asso­ciation for the Advance ment of Science. <1> rD..

Stanley I .. eman Galpin, Ph.D. Professor of R omance Languages

902 Asylum Avenue

B .A .. Western R esen·e l:niversity, ' 01 ; M.A., Yale ni­versity, 190't; Ph.D ., Yale niversity, 1904. Was U ni­versity Fellow of Yale ni vers ity, 1902-1904. Member of the Modern La nguage Association of America and of the New England M odern Language Association. Appointed Instructor in the R omance Languages and Latin at Am­herst Coll ege, 1904 ; Instructor in the R oma nce Languages, 1906; Associate .Professot· of Romance La nguages. 1908-1913. Professor of R omance La nguages, Trinity Coll ege, 1913-. <l> BK, D. T.

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Frederic Walton Carpenter, Ph.D. * J. Pierpont Morgan Professor of Biology

1033 Farmington Avenue, West Hartford

B.S., rew York nive rsity, 1899 ; A.M ., Harvard, 190~ ; Ph.D., Harvard, 1904 ; Studierl al•o at the Universities of Be rlin and Munich. T nstructor, assoriate and assistant professor of Zoology, ( niversity of Illinois, 1904-1913. Direc tor Bermurla Biological Station for R esearch, summer of 1909. J<'eUow American Association for the Advance­ment of Science; M embe r· American Society of Zoologist s. American Association of Anatomists; M e mber, Editoria l Board of "Folia Neuro-Riologica," Amst rdam . Author of variou. papers on zoological subjects. of>BK, ~2:. ZiJi. *Leave of absence while in service of the R ed Cross.

Edward Collins Stone, Ph.D. Ass1'stant Professor of Chemistry

40 Allen Place

B.A., Yale, 1904: M.A. , Trinity, 1905 ; Ph.D., Columbia. Instructor in Chemistry, Trinity, 1905-11 and 1913-14 ; Assistant Professor, 1915-; M embe r of the AmNican ChemiC'al Society. ~ :::, of> AT.

Edward Frank Humphrey, Ph.D. Northam Professor of History and Political

Science

333 Washington Street

B.A., niversity of Minnesota, 1903; M.A. Columbia "Cniversity, 1908: Graduate Student l'Ecole pratique de.• Jlautes-Etude.•, University of Paris, 1910-11: Ph.D., Col­umbia University, 1912. Instructor, Columbia Univer­sity, 1911-15; Northam Professor of I-li!.tory and Political Science, Trinity College, 1915-; Author " Politics and Religion in the days of Augustine." of>BK, ~AE.

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IVY -

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IVY-Odell Shepard, Ph.D.

James J. Goodwin Professor of English Literature

14-15 Seabury Hall

B.A. , l:niversity of Chicago, 1907, Ph.M., 1908; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1916. Teacher of Rnglish , Smith Academy, St. J.ouis, 1908-09; Assistant Professor of English. l:niversity of Southern Califomia, 1909-10; Professor of English , lJn!versity of Southern California, 1910-1914 : In.•tructor in English, Harvard University, 1916-17; Professor, Trinity College, 1917. Author of ''.4 Lonely Flute"" and of "Shake.<peare Quest1:ons. A S tudy of the Cln"ef Play.•." Contributor to various lite rary and lea rned journals . Ll T Ll , 9-¥.

Robert Earle Bacon, M.A. Instructor in English 12 Seabury Hall

Ph .B., Lafayette, 1917: M.A ., Harvard , 1918. Instructor in English, Trinity College, 1919-. <I> BK, Ll T

Edgar Francis Waterman, M.A., LL.B. Treasurer

Williams Memorial

B .A., Trinity, 1898; M.A ., Trinity, 1901 ; LL.B., Colum­bia, 1901. '¥ T.

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Charles Amos .Johnson

Secretary, The Alumni Council of Trinity College

B.S., Trinity College, 189~. Secretary o£ the Alumni Council of Trinity College, 1917-. t.KE, cf>BK.

27

IVY-

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DR. L THER, COMMENCEME T, 1870

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BooK Two

II SfUD~~= BODY ll

~ ~

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Arthur Morris Goldstein"

Harry William N ordstrum

Harmon Tyler Barber

Leslie La Verne Curtis .

John Francis Maher, Jr.

E vald Laurids Skau

C!Class <!&fficers

~enior ~lass

<!I:bristmas ~erm

~rinitp ~erm

30

. President

Vice-P resident

Secretary-Treasurer

. P resident

Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer

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IVY Edward Gabriel Armstrong New Haven, Conn.

.Football Squad (1); l?ootball T ea m (!!); Captain Class }'ootball (1); Class Baseball ( I ); Class Basketball (1, 2) ; Freshman Junior Banquet Committee; }?resh­man Rules Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Class Secretary-Treasurer (2, 2nd term); Class President (3, 1st term); Senate; Sophomore Dining Club; M e­dusa; w T .

Hurlburt Allingham Armstrong New Haven, Conn. Class Baseball (1, !!) ; Class Track (1); Assistant M ana­ger of Baseball (res igner!); Jesters (1); Stage Manager of J esters (!!); President of J es ters (3); Senate; Soph o­more Dining Club ; 'ITT.

Harmon Tyler Barber Hartford, Conn. Class Historia n (1, 4); Glee Club (!!, 3); Secretary of Musical Clubs (3); Assistant Manager of Track (2), Manager (3); M ember of Executive Co mmittee of New England Inter- Collegiate Athletic As ocia tion (3); Assistant Business Manager of J esters' Production (3); Junior Promenade Committee; 1919 Ivy Board ; Senate (3) ; Class Secretary-Treasurer (3, 2nd term; 4, 1st term); Political Science Club ; Associate Editor of Tripod (3), Editor-in-Chief (3); Secretary of Advisory Commission on Student Activi ties (4); 2:N.

31

-

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IVY-Leslie La Verne Curtis Bradford, Pa.

Entered Tr·inity College in Sophomore year from Syra­c use Univers ity; Football (2, 3); Class Jh ·eball (2), Baseball T eam (2); Junior Promenade Co mmittee; Chairman Junior Smoker Com mittee; P oliti cal Science Club ; <I> r A.

Theodore Francis Evans Annapolis, Md. Tripod Board (3); Associate Editor 1919 Ivy Board ; Cia s Baseball (2); P olitical Science Club ; A A <I>.

Edward Max Finesilver H artford, Conn. Class Football (1, 2); Second Football T eam (1, !i'); Soph omore Smoker Committee; Class Baseball (1); President Neutral Body (4); College Senate.

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19 IVY Arthur Morris Goldstein Hartford, Conn.

Chairman Freshman Rules Committee ; Sophomore Dining Club; Track Tea m (1, 2, 3); Captain rrack Team (3) ; Class Tra(•k Tea m (1, 2, 3); R elay T eam (1, 2) ; Class Football Team (2); Cross Country T eam (3) ; Senator (3); Class Vice-President (3, 2nd term); Class Pres id ent (4); M edusa; A X P.

Edward Marshall Hyland, Jr. Utica, N.Y. l<'ootball Squad (1); Football T eam (2, 3); Captain­elect (4); Assis tant Track M anager (2); Freshm an­Junior Ba nquet Co mmittee; C hai rman Sophomore Hop; Chairm an Junior Prom; Class Basketba ll (2); Junior Smoker Committee; Secretary-Treasurer Athle­tic Associa tion (3, 1st term), President (3, 2nd term, 4); Union Committee (3); Sophomore Dining Club ; Senate (3, 4) ; Class President (2, 2nd term); Class Vice-Presi­dent (1, 2nd term, 4); College T ennis Champion (3); KB<l>; LliJt .

Samuel Gardiner Jarvis Claremont, N. H. :Football Squ ad (1); F ootball T eam ('l, 3); Class F oot­ball (1); Class Baseball (1); Track T eam (1, 2); C hair­man Freshm an-Juni or Banquet Committee ; Sophomore Hop Co mmittee: Class Vice-President (2, 2nd term); Sophomore Dining Club ; M edusa; K B <l> ; iJt T.

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-

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VY -Jasper Edward Jessen East Hartford, Conn.

Junior Promenade Committee; Football Squad (1, 2, 3, 4); Acting Captain Football T eam (4); Class Football (1, 2) ; Political Science Club; AXP.

Austin A very King Norwich, Conn. Class Basketball (1); Class Baseball (2); Political Science Club ; Junior Smoker Co mmittee; Senate (4); <I> rD. .

John Francis Maher, Jr. East Hartford, Conn. Class Football (1); J esters (1, 2, 3); Cast, "Gentleman of Leisure; " Sophomore H op Committee; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Secretary-Treasurer and President of J ester (3); Junior Cheer Leader; P olitical Science Club; Business Manager of J esters (4); <I> rD. .

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19 * . .

. IVY-Harry William Nordstrom Brooklyn, N. Y.

Football (1, 2); Captain (3}; Glee Club (1, 2}; Leader (3}; Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3}: Track T eam (1, 2, 3); Class Track Team (1, 2) : Fresb man-Junior Banquet Committee; Freshman Rules Committee; Class Vice­Pres ident (3, 2nd term}; P olitical Science Club ; College Choir; Sophomor Dining Club ; M etlu sa; K B <P;

At. <P .

Irving Emerson Partridge, Jr. Hartford, Conn. Assistant Manager Baseball (2) ; Manager (3); Busi­ness Manager ancl Treasurer 1919 Ivy ; Class Football (1, 2) ; Assistant in Biology (3}; Football Squad (1, 2}; Mandolin Club (2, 3}; Glee Club (3); Gymnasium In­structor (3, 4}; College Marshal (3) ; College Senate ; M edusa; A X P.

Hyman Poritz Hartford, Conn. Political Science Club (2).

35

Page 40: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY -Vincent Hamilton Potter Burnside, Conn.

Tripod Board (3, 4); Alumni Editor (3); Associate Editor (4); Secretary of Tri pod Board (4); 1919 IVY Board ; Press Com mittee (3); Political Science Club; J es te rs (3, 4) ; <I> r t. .

Herbert Ernest Palmer Pressey Portland, Maine C!ass Baseball (1, 2); Class Track (2) ; Cross Country T eam (3); Gymnasium Instructor (3); Chairman Class Cheer Committee ; Glee Club (~. 3) ; College Choir (~.

3); Leader (3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); Tripod B oard , Alumni Editor (3); 1919 IVY Board ; 'if T.

Edward Charles Schartmann Providence, R. I. Cross Country Squad (1); Clas Cheer Committee (2); Political Science Club (2, 3); . athan M. Water­man Scholar; 2: N.

36

Page 41: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-Sumner W. Shepherd, Jr. Wellesley Hills, Mass.

Class Pre ident (1st term) (1); Football Squad (1); Sophomore Dining Club; Glee Club (2, 3) : M anager (3); Class Track (1, 2); Gymn as ium Instructor (2, 3): Senate (3) : Junior Cheer Leader (3) : .Junior Prom Com­mittee; Athletic Advisory Counci l (3); President of Col­lege Senate (4); Student Advisory Co mmission ; Col­lege Marshal (3) : P oli t ical Science Club ; \]'!'I'.

Jacob Barnard Sigal H artford , C01in. Entererl Trinity College in Sophomore year from Yale University.

Benjamin Silverberg H artford, Conn . Debating T eam (2); Vice-President of Debatin g Asso­ciation (3); Third Alumni English Prize (3); President of Debating Association .

37

Page 42: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-Evald Laurid Skau Hartford, Conn.

Holland Scholar (2, 3, 4); Sophomore Smoker Com­mittee; Junior Promenade Committee; 1919 Ivy Board (3); Junior Smoker Committee; Editor-in- Chief of Tripod (4) ; Secretary of College Senate (4); College Senate (4) ; <I>BK.

Lan ing Wemple Tostevin New York, N.Y. Assistant Manager T ennis (1); Manager (2, 3); Vice­Pre ident T ennis Association (l ); Secretary-Treasurer (3); Glee Club (2) : Mandolin Club (l ) ; 1919 Ivy Board ; Political Science Club (2, 4); J esters (4); A X P.

Henry Woodhouse Valentine Hartford, Conn. Class Baseball Team (1, 2); Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; Freshman Rules Co mmittee; Sophomore Smoker Committee : Assistant M anager of Baseball (2); C. I?. Daniels Scholar (2, 3); <I>BK; l:N.

38

Page 43: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-Frederick George Vogel Hartford, Conn.

Goodwin-Hoadley Scholar ; <I> BK ; 2:

Everett Nelson Sturman Hartford, Conn. Class Vice-President (1, 1st t erm); Class President (1, 2.nd term); Sophomore H op Committee; Sopho­more Dining Club ; Chairman Sophomore Dining Club; Glee Club (1); K B <I>; AX P.

Richard Wainwright Wyse New York, N.Y. Freshman-Junior Banquet Committee; Freshman Rules Committee; Tr-ipod Board (2); Assistant Manger Track (2); Manager (4); Musical Clubs (1, 2); P olitical Science Clu b (2, 4); AX P.

39

Page 44: 1920 trinity ivy

ctelass ~fficers

Harold Vincent Lynch . James Alfred Nichols . Frederick Reed Hoisington, Jr . Seymour Scott Jackson Leonel Edgar William Mitchell

31 unior ~lass

~tinitp ~etm

40

. President Vice- President

Secretary-Treasurer Senator

. Historian

Page 45: 1920 trinity ivy

92 Junior <ttla~~ l\oll

Nelson Frederick Adkins Hartford, Conn.

" He was the mildest mannered man that ever scut­tled ship or cut a throat."

1920 Ivy Board.

Werner Henry Carl Berg Ne~v Britain, Conn.

" He is of a very melancholy disposition."

Transferred in Sophomore year from niver ity of Maine; t.KE.

Alfred Pelton Bond Windsor, Conn.

"Happy am I ; f rom care I'm free! Why arn't they all contented like me?"

Chairman Freshman-Junior Banquet; Class Secretary-Treasurer (1, 1st term) ; Cross Coun­try Team (I ) ; Sophomore Dining Club; Col­lege Senate (2, 3) ; Business Manager 1920 Ivy ; Advertising Manager Tripod (2) ; Assistant

fanager Football (2), Manager (4) ; K B <I>

t.KE.

41

IVY -

Page 46: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-

Robert Greenleaf Bruce Berlin, Conn.

"A merry heart doeth good, like a medicine."

Class Football (1) ; Football Squad (1, 2); Football Team (3); Cia s Track (1); Track Squad (2) ; Class Vice-President (2, 2nd term); Politif'al Science Club (2): ~ 1 .

Robert Sabert Casey Fort Madison, Iowa

"The sleep of a laboring man is sweet."

Clas Track Team (1) ; Class Basketball Team (l); Class Football Team. (1) ; Gymnasium In tructor (2) ; College Choir (2, 3): Pardee Scholar (2); 1920 Ivy Board; ~<I>.

Francis Raymond Fox Hartford, Conn.

"I am sure cares are an enemy to life."

Captain Class Track (1, 2); Track Team (1, 2); Captain (3) ; Class Vice-Pre ident (1, 1st term);

ophomore Hop Committee; Chairman Sopho­more Smoker Committee; Chairman Junior Promenade Committee; 1920 Ivy Board: Soph-omore Dining Club; K B <I>; <I> r ~-

Page 47: 1920 trinity ivy

192

Caleb Albert Harding Hartford, Conn.

"A wise man is strong. Yea, a man of lcnowledge increaseth strength."

Holland Scholar (2) ; Mary Howard Williams Scholar ; Freshman Oratorical Prize; Sopho­more Hop Committee; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Junior Promenade Committee; <I> r Ll .

Joseph Hartzmark Hartford, Conn.

"As a man speaks, so is he."

Tennis Team (i, 2, 3); Captain (2) : Manager (3); Runner-up in College Tennis Tournament (1, 2); Sophomore Hop Committee.

Louis Lester Rohenthal South Manchester, Ct.

"A very gentle beast, and ·of a good conscience."

ATK.

43

I v-

Page 48: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY -Frederick Reed Hoisington, Jr. Rye, N.Y.

"Drinlc, pretty creature, drinlc."

Football Squad (2); Class Football (1); Track Squad (1, 2); Class Track (1, 2); Class Secre­tary-Treasurer (2, 3) ; Sophomore Hop Com­mittee; Secretary-Treasurer Athletic Associa­tion (3, 1st term) ; Tripod Board (2) ; Secretary­Treasurer of Political Science Club; Mandolin Club (1, 2) ; Assistant Manager (2) ; 1920 Ivy Board; 11 \[!.

Seymour Scott Jackson Norwich, Conn.

" He was a man, take him for all in all, I shall not look upon his like agnin."

Sophomore Smoker Committee; Football Team (1, 2) ; Cia President (1, 2nd term) ; Sopho­more Dining lub; 11K E.

Arthur Lovelee King Brooklyn, N. Y. "Oh what men dare do; what men may do! What

1nen daily do, not knowing what they do!"

Class Football (1) ; Football Team (2) ; Junior Smoker Committee; Junior 'Promenade Com­mittee; Sophomore Hop Committee ; A 11 <I>.

44

Page 49: 1920 trinity ivy

Benjamin Levin Hartford, Conn.

"The best of me is diligence."

Hoadley-Goodwin Scholar (1, 2, 3) ; Tennis Team (2) ; Junior Smoker Committee.

Harold Vincent Lynch Ocean City, N.J.

"Notl~1·ng can cover his high fame but heaven."

Class Track (1) ; Football Team (2) ; Jesters (2, 3) ; Chairman Sophomore Hop Committee; Sophomore Smoker Committee; 1920 Ivy Board; Junior Promenade Committee; Junior Smoker Committee; Sophomore Dining Club; \II T.

Jack Wibble Lyon Sewickley, P a .

"I am not in the roll of comrnon men."

Class Pre ident (2, 1st term) ; Sophomore Hop Committee; Sophomore Smoker Committe~;

Junior Promenade Committee; 1920 Ivy Board; Assistant Manager Football (2) ; Sophomore Dining Club; K B <I>; A~ <I>.

45

Page 50: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-

Lester Miller Hartford, Conn.

"The miller sees not all the uater that goes by his m1:a."

Leone! Edgar William Mitchell Bethel, Conn. "Ah, why

Should life all labor be?"

Glee Club Reader (1); Junior Smoker Com­mittee; Junior Promenade Committee; 1920 Ivy Board; Class Historian (3); Political Science Club (3); Jesters (3); A X P.

James Alfred Nichols Windsor, Conn.

"Slowly and surely he ambles into measureless contentment. ''

Mandolin Club (1); Sophomore Hop Commit­tee; Tennis Team (2); Junior Promenade Committee; Junior Smoker Committee; Class Vice-President (3); 1920 Ivy Board; ~N.

46

Page 51: 1920 trinity ivy

Gustavus Richard Perkins Hartford, Conn.

"A parlous boy."

Second Chemical Prize (1) ; College Senate (2, 3) ; Junior Promenade Committee; 1920 Ivy Board; Instructor in Chemistry (3) ; AT IC.

Hall Pierce Auburn, N. Y .

"Piercing the night's dttll ear w1"th thy celesti al 1nelndy."

Glee Club (1, 2) ; Mandolin Club (1, 2) ; Col­lege Choir (2) ; Track Squad (2) ; President of theY. M. C. A. (2) ; 1920 Ivy Board; ~KE.

Frank Ripley P css, Jr. New York, N.Y.

"My heart is true as steel. "

Transferred in Junior Year frc.m Columbia University; .Junior Smoker Committee ; K B <P; ~ 'lr.

47

IVY-

Page 52: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY ...

Donald Emerson Puffer Waterbury, Conn.

"He hath borne his faculties so mee/( in his great o.ffice."

Class President (2, 2nd term); Football Team (2); Sophomore pining Club; Manager Base­ball (3); Chairman Junior Smoker Committee; Chairman Freshman Rule Committee; K B <I>; 6.KE.

Gibson Godfrey Ramsay Saranac Lake, N. Y.

"As idle as a painted ship, Upon a painted ocean."

Clas Baseball (1); Track Squad (1, 2); Fresh­man-Junior Banquet Committee; Freshman Rules Committee; Sophomore Hop Committee; Sophomore Smoker Committee; Juni0r Prome­nade Committee; Jesters (2); D. <I>.

Henry David Shelling Hartford, Conn.

"Let lcnowledge grow .from 11wre to 1!1-0re."

48

Page 53: 1920 trinity ivy

19 Joseph Wurts Stansfield Denver, Col.

"Look, then, into th1"ne heart, and write!"

Transferred in Sophomore Year from University of Denver ; Vice-President Y. M. C. A. (2); Second Prize Alumni Engli sh Contest; First Frank W. Whitlock Prize (2); Editor-in-Chief 1920 I vy; ~N.

Phillips Brooks Warner Bridgewater, Conn.

"A bashed the dem"l stood, And f elt how awful goodness is"

Secretary Y. M. C. A. (2); Political Science Club (2, 3); ~ .

49

I V -

Page 54: 1920 trinity ivy

~~~~~~~~~-

1 ~opbomores I m - ~ m~m~~~~~~m~~m~~~~~~~

C!Cla~~ ®fficer~

John H olmes Callen K arl Pierce H erzer Lionel Alexander Mohnkern

Nelson Addi on Shepard Frederick Lamond Bradley Wilbur K incaid Noel R ollin Main R an om

ii>opbomore ~lass

<!l:bristmas 'QJ:erm

'QI:rinitp 'QJ:erm

50

President Vice- President

Secretary-Treasurer

. President Vice-President

Secretary-Treasurer Class Senator

Page 55: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-

~opbomore C!lass ~on Frederick Harry Ameluxen, AT K . Frederick Lamond Bradley, A X P . William James Cahill, ~ N John Holmes Callen, A X P James William Campaine Robert McMeekin Collins Rocco D 'Esopo Israel Friedman . MiJton Leonard H ersey, ~ N Karl Pierce Herzer, \]! T Herman Charles Hoffman Claude Zoe] Jette George Rehn Kingeter, Jr., \]! T Arthur Gustave Larson, A X P

Walfrid Gu taf Lundborg Arthur Newton Matthews, ~N James Harold McGee, A X P Lionel Alexander Mohnkern, t. K E Howard Arnold T albot Morse, ~ Moses Jacob Neiditz Beaufort Rossmore Newsom, t. \]! Wilbur Kincaid Noel, At. <I>

Robert Irvin Parke, t. <I>

Rollin Main Ransom, ~N Nelson Addison Shepard, \]! T Harold Thompson Slattery, <I> r t. Eugene David Smith, AT K . Norman Clemens Strong, At. <I>

William Wilbur Tulin . James David Walsh, t.K E

51

. Hartford Ozone Park, N.Y.

. H artford Arlington, N. J .

Warehouse P oint Shelton

. Hartford

. Hartford . R andlett, Utah

. Hartford . East Hartford

Wauregan Philadelphia, Pa.

West Hartford . Hartford . Windsor

New York City, N. Y. Waterbury

Warehouse Point . Hartford

Clinton Danville, Ky.

Williamsport, Pa. '~'incisor Portland Norwich Hartford Hartford Hartford

Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

Page 56: 1920 trinity ivy

Frederic Talbert Tansill Robert Gardiner Reynolds Harry Drake Hen on . Thomas Joseph Ahern .

C!l:lass <!&ff icers

jfresbman €-lass

~rinitp ~etm

52

. President . Vice-President

. Secretary

. Treasurer

Page 57: 1920 trinity ivy

_)

IVY-

jf re~bman ctela~~ l\oll Lewis George Abele Thomas Joseph Ahern, <I> r ~ Samuel Jacob Allinson Buell Alvord Edward Clarence Anderson John Harold Ferdinand Anderson Alan Griffin Baker Frederick C. Beach, A X P Joel Morse Beard Benjamin Bodek . Matthew Jochim Brady Wilson Gillette Brainerd, A ~ <I> Clark Bill Bristol, A~ <I> George Andrew Brown . George DeWitt Burnham Phillip Ennis Burns, ~K E Robert Dennison Byrnes, AT K Warren Francis Caldwell, ~K E James K. Callaghan, A X P Bruce Engle Campbell, A X P John Josiah Carey, A TK Jarvis Dixon Case, ~ <I> Stewart Leo Caulfield . Winfield Ernest Chapin, Jr., A X P Verner Warren Clapp, ~ N Richard Eugene Clark . William Cyril Clark Ellis Charles Cohen Henry Nathaniel Cohn Francis James Conley . John Joseph Coughlin, AT K Albert Edward Coxeter, AT K Clare Edward Cram John Bayard Cunningham, AX P Edward Gilmore Darling, AT K Matthew Edward Despard Louis Franklin Dettenborn, \P r ~ John Emmet Doran, ~K E Wilber Jay Dowd Hyman Dubin David Thurber Eaton Karl Frank Echer Arthur Barney Edison

53

. Hartford

. Hartford New Haven . Hartford . Hartford Torrington

New York City, N.Y. Stratford

Say brooke New Haven

Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford Windsor

New York City, N.Y. . Norwich

. Thompson ville Brooklyn, N. Y.

Arlington, N.J. Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford

Poughkeepsie, N .Y. Bristol

Carbondale, Pa. Willimantic . Hartford

New Britain Hartford

. Hartford

. Hartford Hamilton, 0.

Hartford . Hartford

. . . Hartford New York City, N .Y.

. Madison

. Hartford Na hua, N.H.

. Hartford New Haven

Page 58: 1920 trinity ivy

Karl Herman Ely Edwin Justin Emmons, Jr. John Mitchell England, t. <I> . Oscar Harold Engstrom, ~N . Ronald Hall Ferguson . Benjamin Jacob Finman Francis Strong Oli er Freed Samuel Abraham Friedenberg Howard William Fritz . Bert Clayton Gable, Jr., A X P Charles Raymond Genung Jacob Harry Glad tein . John Morris Goffin James Michael Goggin . Timothy Graham Goggin Abraham Maxwell Goldberg Jacob Joseph Goldenberg Arthur Clifford Gorman, AT K John Leonard Gothers . . Morton David Graham, t. <I> • Lloyd Shepard Grant, t. K E . Clifford Rutherford Greenough John Holcomb Griffeth Charles Grime, ~N Norman Grimshaw Alfred I a pol eon Guertin, ~ N James Daniel Gunning, AT K Robert Irving Gurwitz . Louis Michael Guzzo Jeffrey Joseph Hammel ·walter Ernest Hansen . Virgil Baldwin Hatch John Gerald Havens, AT K Harry Drake Hen on, t. K E Samuel Maurice Hoffman Theodore Littleton Holden, At. <I> Edward Buell Hungerford, A X P William Robert Hutcheson, A X P Herman Martin Immeln, A TK Algernon Schaeffer Johnson, t. K E Edward Landor Johnson, ~ N Wilson Terrill Johnson Howard Jones, A X P Isadore Kelm,anson Frank Watson Keith Neil Granger Kendall, t.K E James Charle Kiniry Cyril Stratton Kirkby, t. <I>

54

IVY-Plantsville

New Milford Washington, D. C.

New Haven Manchester . Hartford . Hartford

New Haven Torrington . Hartford

Litchfield . Hartford

New Haven East Canaan East Canaan

. Hartford

. Hartford South Manchester

. Hartford

. Meriden East Windsor Hill

. Hartford Wallingford

Cheshire Windsor Hartford Hartford Hartford Hartford Windsor

Vernon New Milford

. Hartford New York City

Bridgeport . Hartford

New Britain Brooklyn, N.Y .

. Hartford Waterbury . Hartford . Hartford

Arlington, N. J. . Hartford Forrest ville

Granby Southington

Essex Falls, N. J.

Page 59: 1920 trinity ivy

Jerome Hartman Kohn . Newton Redforde La Boiteaux Howard Raymond Lacey Maurice Leider Benjamin David Levine Edward Levoy . Whitney Van Dora Lippincott Robert Ward Loo is, Jr. David Joseph Loughlin Paul Armand de MaCarty . Edward Thurston Macauley, !:>. 'IJr Dave Matthews Matchton Robert Leal Mallory William Arthur Mattice, !:>. ci> Stanley William Maynard George Daniel MeN a mara Edward Joseph McNulty Benjamin Michel . Agumaldo Charles Migliora Arthur Alexander Miller Milford Paul Miller Everett vV arren Miner . Lloyd Wesley Minor, !:>. ci> John George Mitchell . McAllister Reynold Mohnkern, !:>. K E Roland Samuel Moller . John Thomas Moran, ~ N Joseph William Moran, ~N Frank Morris . Barton William Murray, A!:>. ci> Merle Stephen Myers, !:>. ci> Nathan N amerovsky Tennison Lewis Newson, !:>. 'IJr Paul Gaylord Newton . Reinhold Enoch Nordlund Evan William Nyquist . Herbert James O'Hara . John Gerald O'Keefe Thomas Francis O'Keefe Albert Joseph O'Neill . Howard Somerville Ortgies, A X P Andrew Ottenheimer . Sherman Clifford Parker, ci> r !:>. Robert Benjamin Pastor Ralph Andrew Pierpont, !:>.K E Robert Johnston Plumb, A!:>. ci> Richard Conrad Puels, !:>. K E Elroy David Racine, AT K .

55

IV Y -New York City, N. Y.

. Hartford Southington

. Hartford New Haven New Haven

Madison Hartford Hartford Hartford

Peekskill, N. Y. . Hartford . Bristol

Welle ley, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y.

. Hartford Middletown . Hartford

Warehouse Point · Westport

Hartford Hartford

Berlin Hartford

Waterbury Bridgeport Plantsville Plantsville . Hartford

Rochester, N. Y. Fort Madison, Iowa

. Hartford

. Clinton Gaylordsville

. Hartford South Manchester

Rockville Middletown Middletown New Haven

Forrest Hills, N. J. Willimantic Wallingford . Hartford Waterbury

New Milford Brooklyn, N. Y.

Bristol

Page 60: 1920 trinity ivy

VY-H arold Edwin R ead Paul Morri R eardon R obert Gardiner R eynolds, !::.. <I> J oseph Milledge Rice, Jr. Milton H erbert R ichman Robert M cK ee Robertson James Patri ck R ooney, A T K Alfred Ll oyd R oulet, \f! T J ohn Sylvester R outh, Jr., t::..K E J acob Ru binsky . Harold George Schu mann, A TK J ames Aloy ius Shea, A T K Willi am J oseph Shea R alph Tilney Sheldon \f! T Joseph Silver H arold Small J ames George Smit h K enneth Noble Soule, <I> r!::.. R aymond Frank Sprague K enneth Wilbur St ockberger William H e m y Tai t, !::.. <I> Frederick T albert T a nsill , !::.. K E H orace Albert Thomson, !::.. <I> Fred J oseph Uricchio J ohn P atrick Walsh, George Weinman, \f! T R alph George Woolfson

~rabuate ~tubents

Samu£"1 H armon Edsall B .A. Trini ty 1915

Thomas K elley J ames, Russell Fellow B .S. Trinity 1918

H erbert R. Li Yingston . B .D . Pacific School of Religion

Charle · Julian M uller , Terry Fellow B.S. Trini ty 1918

~on=~atriculateb ~tubents

Francis Jo eph D onohue Albert K arsten J ohannessen Benja min Styring Joseph T oth

56

. H artford South Windsor

Glastonbury New H aven

Hartford H artford Hartford H a rtford

New York City, N. Y. New Haven Southington

. H artford South M anchest er

New York City , N . Y. . H artford

Wallingford . Hartford

New Britain R ocky Hill . M erid£"n

Poughkeepsie, N.Y. New York City, N .Y.

H artford . H artford . H artford

Philadelphia, P a . . H artford

M inneapolis, Minn.

. l orwich

Ontario, Oregon

Iew York, N .Y.

. H artford

. H artford Southington

nionville

Page 61: 1920 trinity ivy

BooK THREE

II FRA ~;;TIES J

~ · ~

Page 62: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-

~be jfraternttp of 1!\elta .. ~!it Founded in 1847 at Columbia College and the nive~sity of New York

Alpha Delta . Epsilon Lambda Upsilon Sigma Tau

l\oll of ({bapters

. Columbia University University of Pennsylvania

Trinity College WiJliam College

University of Virginia . Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University

. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

58

Page 63: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 64: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 65: 1920 trinity ivy

~l)e €J}5ilan- C!bapttr

of

j!lelta ~~i

§ctibe ~embers

1918

IVY-

Rufus Colfax Phillips, Jr.

1919 Edward Marshall Hyland, Jr.

1920 Frank Ripley Poss, Jr. Frederick Reed Hoisington, Jr.

1921 Beaufort Rossmore Newson

1922 Edward Thurston Macauley Tennison Lewis New om

61

Page 66: 1920 trinity ivy

I VY -1lebt jfrattrnitp of ~lpba 1!ltlta tlbi

Founded in 1832 at Hamilton College

l\oll of ~bapters Hamilton Hamilton College . 1832 Columbia Columbia College . 1836 Yale Yale University 1836 Amherst Amherst College 1836 Brunonian Brown University 1836 Hudson Western Reserve University 1841 Bowdoin Bowdoin College 1841 Dartmouth Dartmouth College 1845 Peninsular niversity of Michigan . 1846 Rochester University of Rochester 1850 Williams Williams College 1851 Middletown Wesleyan University 1856 Kenyon Kenyon College 1858 Union Union College 1859 Cornell Cornell University 1869 Phi Kappa Trinity College 1877 Johns Hopkins Johns Hopkins University 1889 Minnesota University of Minnesota 1891 Toronto Toronto University 1893 Chicago University of Chicago 1896 McGill McGill University 1897 Wisconsin University of Wisconsin 1902 California University of California 1908 Illinois University of Illinois 1911 Stanford Leland Stanford University 1916

62

Page 67: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 68: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 69: 1920 trinity ivy

92 I VY-

mbt ~bi Jkappa

C!bapter

of

~lpba :1!\dta ~bi

Theodore Francis Evans

Arthur Lovelee King

Wilbur Kincaid Noel

Wilson Gillette Brainerd Clark Bill Bristol

~ctibe ;flflembers

1918 Paul Curtis Harding

1919

1920

1921

1922

Robert Johnston Plumb

65

Harry William Nordstrom

Jack Wible Lyon

Norman Clemens trong

Theodore Littleton Holden Barton William Murray

Page 70: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY 1ltbe jfratrrnttp of j!\elta Jkappa Cfp~ilon

Phi Theta Xi Sigma Gamma P si Upsilon Beta Eta K appa Lambda Pi Iota Alpha Alph a Omicron Epsil on Rho T a u Mu Nu Beta Phi Phi Chi P si Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi D elta Chi Phi Ga mma Ga mma Beta The ta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epsil on Sigma T a u. D elta D elta Alph a Phi T a u Lambda D elta K a ppa T a u Alpha . Sigma Rh o D elta Pi Rh o D elta . K appa Epsil on

}?ounded in 1844 at Yale ni versity

~on of QCbapters Yale University Bowdoin Coll ege Colby U ni versity Amhers t College Va nderbilt University

ni versity of Al abama Brown nivers ity Uni versity of North Carolina U ni versity of Virginia Mi a mi Uni versity K enyon College D artmouth Coll ege Centra l U ni ve rsity Middlebury Coll ege U ni versity of Michi gan . William Coll ege Lafayette Coll ege . H a milton College . Colgate ni ve rsity College of t he City of New York

ni ve rsity of R oches ter Rutgers Coll ege D e P auw ni ve rsity Wesleyan U niversity R ensselaer Polytechnic Institute Adelbert College Cornell U ni ve rsity Syracuse Uni versity Colum bia U ni versity

ni,·ersity of Californi a Trinity Coll ege U ni versity of Minnesota M assachusetts Institute of T echnol ogy Uni,·ersity of Chicago Uni versity of T oronto Tul ane U ni versity U ni versity of P ennsylvani a M cGill ni ve rsity Leland Stanford , Jr. , Unive rsity U niversity of Illinoi U ni versity of Wisconsin U ni versity of Wa hington

66

-

1844 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 1850 1851 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1854 1855 1855 1855

1856 1856 1856 18.56 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1893 1898 1898 1899 1900 1902 1904 1906 1912

Page 71: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 72: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 73: 1920 trinity ivy

tn:be ~lpba ~bi

ctCbapter

of

jJgdta

J!appa Cfp!Silon

VY-

)gctibe .members

1918 Myron Robinson Jackson

Wern~r Henry Carl Berg Alfred Pelton Bond

Lionel Alexander Mohnkern

Phillip Ennis Burns Warren Francis Caldwell John Emmet Doran Lloyd Shepard Grant Harry Drake Henson

1920 Seymour Scott Jack on Hall Pierce

Donald Emer on Puffer

1921

1922

69

James David Walsh

Algernon Schaeffer Johnson McAllister Reynold Mohnkern Ralph Andrew Pierpont Richard Conrad Puels Frederick Talbert Tansill

Page 74: 1920 trinity ivy

Theta Delta. Beta . Sigma Gamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi Xi Upsilon Iota Phi Pi Chi Beta Beta Eta Tau Mu Rho Omega Epsilon Omicron Delta Delta Theta Theta

IVY -

mbe jf , aternitp of ~sf WpsHon Founded at Union College in 1833

~on of ~bapters

70

. Union College New York University

Yale University Brown University

Amherst College Dartmouth College

Columbia University Bowdoin College

Hamilton College Wesleyan University

University of Rochester Kenyon College

University of Michigan Syracuse University

Cornell University Trinity College

Lehigh niversity University of Pennsylvania

University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin

University of Chicago University of California

University of Illinois Williams College

niversity of Washington

Page 75: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 76: 1920 trinity ivy

,..

Page 77: 1920 trinity ivy

m:be

JSeta jSeta

<tCbapter of

~st Wpstlon

IVY-

~cti\.le ilflembers

1919 Edward Gabriel Armstrong Samuel Gardiner Jarvi Hurlburt Allingham Armstrong Herbert Ernest Palmer Pressey

Harold Vincent Lynch

Karl Pierce Herzer

Alfred Lloyd Roulet

Sumner Whitney Shepherd, Jr.

19.20 Richard Palmer Pressey

1921 George Rehn Kingeter, Jr.

· Nelson Addison Shepard

19.2.2 Ralph Tilney Sheldon

George Weinman

73

Page 78: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY -~bi ~amma 11\elta jfraternitp Pound ed in 1848 at Was hi ngton and J e fferson College

Alpha Lambda Xi Omicron Pi T a u . Omega P si Alpha D euteron Thet a D euteron Gamm a D euteron Zeta D euteron Zeta . Omicron Deuteron I u Deuteron Beta Cha pter Pi Deuteron Delta La mbda D eute•·on Rbo Deuteron Sigma Deuteron Zeta Phi Delta C hi Theta P si Beta Chi K appa Nu K a ppa Tau Mu Sigma .

l\oll of QCI)apters

74

'''ashington and J efferson College DePauw U ni versi ty Getty burg College

University of Virginia Allegheny College

H anover College Columbia Univers ity

Wabash College Illinois Wesleyan University

Ohio Wesleyan U niversity Knox College

Washington and Lee ni versity Indiana State ni versity

Ohi o State University Yale University

niversity of Pennsylvania Kansas University

Bucknell U ni versity Dennison University

Wooster U ni versity Lafayette College

William Jewell College U niversity of California

Colga te niversity Lehigh U niversity Cornell niversity

U niversity of T ennessee University of Minnesota

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Rho Chi Ga mma Phi Pi I ota Chi Alpha Chi Nu Epsilon T au Alpha. Beta Mu M u Chi I ot a Sigma Delta Nu Pi Rh o Omega Mu I ota Mu Xi Deuteron Sigma N u . La mbda I ota Theta Chi U psil on Alpha Phi . Alpha I ota . Chi Mu Chi Sig ma . La mbda ' u 'T'au D euteron La mbda Sigma Sigma T a u . Ep ilon Omicron Beta K a ppa I ot a . Pi Sigma N u Omega .

9 vv-l}bi ~amma 1Delta jfraternitp

75

Richmond College Pennsylvania Sta te College

Worcester Poly technic Institu te U nion College

Amherst College New York Uni versity

Trinity College J ohns H opkins University

ni vers ity of Wisconsin Uni versity of Illinois

Wittenberg College Dartmouth College

Brown Uni versity M aine niversity

M assachusetts Insti t ute of T echnology Adelbert College

Syracuse Uni versity Purdue University

U ni versity of Alaba ma ni versity of Chicago

niversity of Michigan I owa Sta te University Uni versity of Missouri

Colorado College University of Nebraska

U niversity of T exas Leland Stanford , Jr ., Uni versity

Washington tate University Uni versity of Oregon Colorado Uni versity

Willia ms College Uni versity of Pittsburgh

niver ity of Oklahoma

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IVY-

mbt mau ~lpba

C!bapttr of

~bi ~amma 1!\tlta

~ctit.J e :members

Frederick Paul Easland

Leslie J,a Verne Curtis Austin Avery King

1918

George Eulas Mercer

1919

1920 Francis Raymond Fox

1921

William Elijah L'Heureux

John Francis Maher, Jr. Vincent Hamilton Potter

Harold Thompson Slattery

Thomas Joseph Ahern Louis Franklin Dettenborn

1922

76

Sherman Clifford Parker Kenneth Nobe Soule

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IVY-

~be jfraternitp of ~lpba ((bi ~bo

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

Founded in 1895 at Trinity College

1\oll of <ltba:pteu

79

Trinity College Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn

University of Pennsylvania . Columbia University

Lafayette College Dickinson College

Yale University Syracuse University

University of Virginia Washington and Lee University

Cornell University Wesleyan niversity

Allegheny College University of Illinois

Pennsylvania State College Lehigh University

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19 m:be llbi l}%i

C!Cbapter of

~lpba C!Cbi l\bo

Arthur Morris Goldstein Jasper Edward Jessen Irving Emerson Partridge, Jr.

~ctibe ~embers

1918 Melville Shulthiess

1919

1920 Leonel Edgar William Mitchell

Frederick Lamond Bradley John Holmes Callen

Frederick C. Beach James Callaghan Bruce Engle Campbell Winfred Ernest Chapin, Jr. John Bayard Cunningham

1921

1922

80

IVY-

Everett Nelson Sturman Lansing Wemple Tostevin Richard Wainwright Wyse

Randall Edwards Porter

Arthur Gustave Larson James Harold McGee

Bert Clayton Gable, Jr. Edward Buell Hungerford William Robert Hutcheson Howard J ones Howard Somerville Ortgies

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' IVY-

t!l:be jfraternttp of 1!ldta ~bt

Alpha Beta . Gamma Delta Epsilon Eta Lambda Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho I. K. A. (Sigma)

1\oll of <ll:bapters

83

Union University Brown niversity

New York University . Columbia University

Rutgers College University of Pennsylvania

. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Lehigh University

Johns Hopkin University Yale University

Cornell University University of Virginia

Trinity College

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~be JJ. 1!. ~.

(8igma) C!Cbapter

of

11\elta labi

Robert Sabert Casey

J arvis Dixon Case John Mitchell England Morton David Graham Cyril Stratton Kirkby William Arthur Mattice

~ctibe memberS'

1920

1921 Rober t Irvin Parke

1922

84

IVY-

Gibson Godfrey Ramsay

Lloyd Wesley Minor M erie Stephen Myers Robert Gardiner Reynolds William Henry Tait Horace Albert Thomson

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11

Page 90: 1920 trinity ivy
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IVY ~be jfraternttp of ~tgma j)}u

Alpha Beta M:u Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Epsilon Eta Nu Xi Pi Rho Sigma Upsilon Phi P si Beta Phi Beta Beta Beta Theta Beta Zeta Beta Nu Beta Chi D elta Theta Beta Eta Beta Iota Beta P si Beta Mu Beta Xi Beta Rho Gamma Rho Beta T au Beta psilon Gamma Gamma . Gamma Alpha Gamma Chi Gamma Be ta Beta Sigma Gamma D elta Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta

Founded at Virginia Military Institute in 1869

l\oll of ~bapters Virginia M ilitary Institute U niversity of Virginia University of Georgia U ni ver ity of Alabama H oward College North Georgia Agricultural College Washington and Lee U ni versity Bethany College Mercer ni versity U niversity of Kansas Emory College Lehigh Uni versity U ni versity of Missouri Vanderbi lt niversity University of T exas Louisiana State University University of 1orth Carolina Tulane Unh·ersity D eP auw University Alabama Polytechnic College Purdue niversity Ohio State niversity Stanford University Lombard Coll ege Indiana Uni versity Mt. nion College Univers ity of Californin University of I owa William-Jewell College U ni versity of Pennsylvania University of Chicago N . C. Coli. of Agr. a nd Mech . Arts Rose Polytechnic Institute Albion College Georgia School of T echnology University of Washington N orthwester.u U ni versity U nivers ity of Vermont Steve ns Institute of T echnology Lafayette College .

ni versi ty of Oregon

87

-

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

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Ga mma Eta Gamma Theta Ga mma I ota Ga mma K appa Ga mma La mbda Ga mm a Mu Ga mm a Nu Gamma Xi Ga mma Omicron Gamm a Pi. Ga mma Sigma Ga mma T a u Ga mma psil on Ga mm a Xi Ga mm a P si Delta Alpha Delta Beta Delta Gamm a Delta Delta Delta E ps il on Alpha Zeta Delta Eta D elta I ota . Delta K a ppa Delta La mbda Delta N u Delta Mu Beta K a ppa Delta Xi Delta Omicron D elta Pi Delta Rh o . Delta Sigma Delta Tau Delta U psil on Delta Phi Delta Chi Delta P si Epsilon Alpha

9-2 IVY Colorad o School or Mines Cornell niversity State College or K entucky

niversity or Colorado . U niversity or Wisconsin University or Illinois University or Michigan . Missouri Sc hool or Mines Washington Uni versity (M o.) West Virginia ni ve rsity Iowa State College Uni versi ty or Minnesota U ni versity or Arka nsas U ni versity or M onta na . Syracuse Uni versity Case School or Applied Science D a rtm outh College Columbia Uni versity Pennsylvania State College Uni ve r·sity or Okl a homa vVes tern R eserve Uni ve rs il~'

Uni versity or Nebraska Was hington Sta te College Dela wa re State College . Brown Uni versity Uni versity or Maine Stetson Uni versity K a nsas State Agricul t ural College Uni versity or Nevada Uni versity or Ida ho George Was hington Uni versity Colorado Agr. College Carnegie Inst . or T ec)1. . Oregon Agricultural College Colga te Uni versity Ma ryland Sta te College Trinity College Bowdoin College University or Arizona

88

-1901 1901 1902 1902 1902 1902 1902 1903 1903 1904 1904 1904 1904 1905 1906 1907 1907 1908 1908 1909 1909 1909 1910 1910 191 2 1913 1913 1913 1914 191 5 191 5 1915 1916 1917 1917 1917 1918 1918 191 8

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t!Cbt J.lelta C!bi

C!bapter of

~igma J!u jfraternitp

IVY-

~ctibe members

1919 Harmon Tyler Barber Edward Charles Schortmann

Henry Woodhouse Valentine Frederick George Vogel

Phillips Brooks Warner Robert Greenleaf Bruce

William James Cahill Rollin Main Ransom

Verner Warren Clapp Oscar Harold Engstrom Alfred Napoleon Guertin

1920

1921

Joseph Wurts Stansfield James Alfred Nichols

Arthur Newton Matthews Howard Arnold Morse

Milton Leonard Hersey

1922 Edward Lawler Johnson Charles Grime John Thomas Moran

Joseph William Moran

91

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JLocal jfraternitp

of

~lpba m:au Jkappa

Carl Edwin Carlson

Louis Lester Hohenthal

Frederick Harry Ameluxen

William Earl Buckley Robert Dennison Byrnes John J o iah Cary John Joseph Coughlin Albert Edward Coxeter Edward Gilmore Darling Arthur Clifford Gorman

jfounbeb in 1908

1918

1920

1921

1922

IVY-

Charles Hartnes Simonson

Gustavus Richard Perkins

Eugene David Smith

James Daniel Gunning John Gerald Havens Herman Martin Immeln Elroy David Racine James Patrick Rooney Harold George Schumann James Aloysius Shea

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f

~bi Jlieta Jkappa

fli eta of (!Connecticut Chartered 1845

J ohn Taylor Huntington, D.D. * John James McCook, D.D., LL.D. Arthur Adams, Ph.D. . George Lewis Cook, M.A. *Died January 4, 1919

®fficers

IVY-

. President Vice- President

Secretary . Treasurer

i!flembers ~bmitteb in 1918 Henry Samuel Beers Meyer Isaac Gurian Thomas Kelley James

Abraham Meyer Silverman Evald Laurids Skau Henry Woodhouse Valentine

Frederick George Vogel

95

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BooK FouR

II AT~~ICS II

~ ~

/

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1

c

'

l

jfootball 1918 Jasper E. Jessen, '19 K. D. McGuffey, '19 A. P. Bond, 'QO

Captain Manager

Assistant Manager

Athletics at Trinity were in eclipse last fall during the S. A. T. C. regime. Football of course was the main sport and this was the one whose loss was felt most. At first it wa thought that the college would have a team and Manager Bond arranged as good a schedule as possible. Games were carded with N.Y. U., Amherst and Wesleyan. The N. Y. U. game was cancelled by the New York college as they could not play on election day. The team, with only a week of practice, went up to Amber t and played a creditable game against a heavier team, losing Ql to 0. Then the following week half of the first team was sent to Camp Lee and the military authorities refused to give the team any time for practice so the Wesleyan game was called off.

Football was started as a purely inter-company sport. The two companies of the battalion, A and B, organized teams and were both coached by "Art" Howe, a former Yale quarterback. These two teams were to serve as elimination trials for the future varsity. After about a week of practice the two teams clashed on the football field.

The weather was far from ideal, a muddy field and a rainstorm slowing up the play to a great extent. Each team scored once in the first quarter and then held the other safe for the rest of the game. "Buddy" Burns the half back for Co. B, was the individual star of the game. He cored for his team with a bril­liant forty-yard off-tackle run in the first few minutes of play. He was seconded on his team by Curtis, Nordlund, Kingeter and Jette.

Mter Co. B scored they had a lap e in form and Co. A took ad vantage of this to rip their line wide open and score a touchdown, thus accounting for the twelve points scored. Kendall and Bruce were the mainstays at the line plung­ing game for Co. A. Doran, the quarterback, ran his team in a heady fashion and gained many yards by a brainy variation of the line plunging with forward passes.

Trinity sent a green team up to Amherst on Nov. 9 and lost 21 to 0. Amherst started with a rush. Trinity kicked off and on the first play-a forward pass, Amherst scored. Amherst saw visions of a record score. but Trinity ca,me back

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IVY-and carried the ball the length of the field in straight line-plunging. On one off­tackle plunge Kingeter got away for a long run that made the Amherst stands hold their breath. Amherst held after a desperate effort and prevented a score.

In the econd quarter the play was mostly in the middle of the field with neither side having any great advantage. At the beginning of the econd half Amherst put fresh backfield men into the game and their steam and speed made itself felt in the Trinity line. Amber t got the ball within ten yards of the Trinity goal in this quarter and Trinity held until the last down, when an offside penalty gave Amherst :first down. At that it took them three downs to travel four yards. The final score came near the end of the game on a long forward pass which paved the way for a forty-yard run by an Amherst end.

The athletic championship of the S. A. T. C. battalion went to Co. B on the strength of their basketball team as the football game proved indeci ive. They secured a clean cut victory over the Co. A team in the gym by the score of 20 to 9. Kingeter, Armstrong, and Jessen were the only upperclassmen in the game, the rest of the teams being composed of freshmen.

The Football Lineup

Armstrong, -R. E. Nordlund, R. T. Gunning, R. G. Bruce, C. Kingeter, R. H. B.

Burns, F. B.

Havens, L. E. Jessen (Capt), L. T. lVIohnkern, L. G. Doran, Q. B. Coughlin, L . H. B.

Substitutes: Campbell, Baker, Pierpoint, Brainerd, Tansill, Grimshaw.

100

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t

Jljaseball 1918 Richard C. Buckley lrviug E. Partridge . Donald E. Puffer H. I. Kenney

N. G. B ut ler, '21, Catcher A. M. Goldstein, '19, Pitcher A. L. King, '20, Pitcher C. J. Muller, '18, First Base H . T . Reddish, '20, Second Base

H. W. Valentine, '19

Captain Manager

Assistant jJ anager . Coach

m:be m:eam F. P. Murtha, '20, Shortstop L . L. Curtis, '19, Third Base R. C. Buckley, ' 19, Capt., Center Field J . A. Nichols, '20, L eft Field R. G. Bruce, '20, Right Field

~ubstitutes

H. E. P. Pressey, ' 19

101

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VY -

~ l\ebiebl of tbe JjasebaU ~eason The ba eball season of 1918 was reduced to but one game on account of the

war and the large number of men leaving for training camps. That one game was with Wesleyan on May 4th, and resulted in a victory for them with a score of 17 to 5. This game marked the resumption of athletic relations with our most intimate rivals.

The squad journeyed to Middletown, accompanied by what was left of the student body. Goldstein, who did the twirling for Trinity, was wild in the first two innings, walking five men and allowing three hits, one of which Boote of Wesleyan banged out for a homer when three of his compatriots were on bases. In the second inning Wesleyan scored five more runs, and Trinity's first run came in this frame. After these two disastrous innings Goldstein steadied down and for the rest of the game pitched good ball. Murtha scored two of Trinity 's five runs and Captain Buckley and Bruce obtained two hits apiece. The fielding on both sides was ragged and showed lack of team work and practice.

But it wa impossible to feel badly that we were not putting out a better ball team for we all knew the reason why. It was because the call of the nation was greater and more urgent than that of the athletic field, and those who were not leaving for , orne branch of the service, or had not already left, were preparing by dri lling and studying for the time when their call would come.

102

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Arthur lVI. Goldstein Harmon T. Barber George A. Sanford George A. Boyce

~rack 1918 Captain

Manager Assistant Manager Assistant Manager

The 1918 track season was an exceptionally short one for Trinity athletes. A dual meet with Wesleyan and the intercollegiate meets at Springfield and Boston comprised the entire schedule.

The meet with ·wesleyan took place at Trinity Field on lVIay 25th and resulted in a victory for our rivals. The score was 99 1-2 to 25 1-2 and although our team was rather outclassed, there wa keen competition in some of the events .

Six men were sent to Springfield for the Connecticut Valley Intercollegiate Meet and four to 13oston for the New England Intercollegiate Meet, but they failed to score. At Springfield Nordstrom would have won first place in the hammer throw, had he not been wild and thrown out of the sector.

103

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~pringfitlb==='ltrinitp ctrogg=ctountrp l\un ~el'b at ~pringfiel'b , ~ass. , J}obember 11, 1917

~ntrp ~pringfielb 'Ql:rinitp

B uckley. 1 Peabody (Capt. ) 2 Gray 3 McCormac 4 Strong 5 George 6 Matthews 7

· Wood 8 Ransom . 9 Pressey 10

24 31

104

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92 v -1

~ummarp of \!Crtnttp =~t%lepan 1!lual Jfleet ~ell:J at 1!I:tinttp jfiell:J , ~attforl:J , i!Map 25, 1918

Qibents \!!:rinitp ml!leslepan 100-Yard Dash 3 6 220-Yard Dash 3 6 120-Yard High Hurdles 0 8 220-Yard Low Hurdles . 3 6 440-Yard Dash 0 9 880-Yard Run 0 9 One-Mile Run 3 6 Two- '[ile Run 3 1- 2 5 1- 2 High Jump . 0 9 Broad Jump 0 9 Pole Vault 1 8 Hammer Throw 5 4 Discus Throw 0 9 Shot Put 4 5

25 1- 2 99 1- 2

105

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~ennis

Tennis at Trinity last year was not altogether unsuccessful. To have put out a team at all was an accomplishment, for everyth ing was against tennis, or at least nothing was for it. That was, of course, to be expected, for interest was centered so strongly in the war, that tennis was given hardly a thought at first. H owever, due to the persistent efforts of a few who realized its value even in war time, tennis was given a chance. A short but well-balanced schedule was ar­ranged, and although no victories were won, some interesting matche were played.

The season started with Massachusetts Institute of Technology at H artford. Tech sent down a fine team and won 6-0 although Hartzmark put up a good fight against Wei, their star player. ·

The second match was at Springfield with the Springfield Y. M. C. A. Col­lege. The score was a tie and would probably have resulted in a victory, had we not lost Hyland. the college champion, who had left to join the T ank Corps.

On May 10 the team enjoyed an excellent trip to Union College where the third match was played. This trip included two nights away, and the members of the team had the pleasure of seeing the "moving-up" day program of class scraps and sports which took place the morning of the 11th. Although Trinity was defeated, the match was not decided until the la t ·doubles contest was played.

The final match was played with Holy Cross on May 25. Tht> visiting team was a little too strong for us, although some of the matches were close and in­teresting.

· However. the final result of the tennis season must not be reckoned by games won and lost, but by the fine spi rit which surmounted the many obstacles and completed a schedule.

~ummarp of ;§Matcbes April 28 At Hartford Trinity 0 1[. I. T. 6 · May 4 At Springfield Trinity 3 Y.M.C.A. 3 May 11 At Union Trinity 2 Union 4 May 25 At Hartford Trinity 0 Holy Cross 6

t!l':be t!l':eam J. Hartzmark, Captain B. Levin E. M . Hyland, Jr. J. A. Nichols R. E. Porter N.C. Strong

106

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9 -jfresbman J§askttbaU

:For the first time in several years Trinity had an interclass basketball team, and for the first time in the athletic history of the college this team went outside the college, played superior teams and made an excellent showing. The team broke even on games won and lost having four in both the "Won" and "Lost" columns. Their opponents outscored them by eighteen points, 235 to 217, but when it is borne in mind that the freshmen five was matched against teams, who had daily practice under skilled coaches, one wonders how they made the show­ing they did. In every case when they were matched against a semi-professional team, which had to labor under the s!Lme conditions regarding practice and coach­ing as they did, they easily proved their superiority. In the case of the Travellers' Insurance Company team, consisting of older and more experienced players, Trinity fully justified the support which it received. The Insurance team's only defeats on its home floor were received from the Trinity team, the second of these defeats coming after an unbroken string of ten victories by the Insurance team.

After the breakup of the S. A. T. C. the freshman team was hastily organized, · mainly through the efforts of Ralph Pierpont. who wa elected captain. Pier­pont, unfortunately, was unable to continue with the team throughout the season on account of cholastic difficulties. While with the team he .was its mainstay, both on the defense and offense. He was a deadly man on the foul shots and also had that eel-like motion, so essential to a good forward.

O'Hara who played the other forward position in the first game did not return to college for the second term and the team lo t a valuable man. The tall carrot-topped youth was second only to Pierpont in the points scored and was at all time a dangerous man.

After Pierpont left, the team elected R. E. Nordlund captain in his place. Ray played a con istent game all season. He was the ideal captain, never flus­tered and always with his eyes on the ball and his opponents' goal. Although he was not in the limelight with spectacular shots a often as some of the rest of .the team (he got his share of these however) his steady defensive work was the main factor in the victories which the team has to its credit and at the same time was an important factor in keeping down some of the other scores.

After Nordlund, John on, the lanky center, wa the star performer for the team. Johnson showed continuous improvement throughout the sea on and by the last game was one of the mainsta,ys of the team. He was one of the leading point-getters for the team during the last half of the season.

Reynolds made the team after Pierpont left and was a revelation. He plays the same kind of a game as Nordlund, steady, but dangerous to opponents. Reynolds, by virtue of playing forward however, had more chance to get in o the spot light than Nordlund and in more than one ca e his long and difficult shots brought even the rival's rooters from their seats.

Tansill and Mohnkern were not as steady as the other member of the team although both did excellent work at times. When their work was not on this high plane they still managed to look after their opponents in a very capable manner.

When one considers that this team, with no coach and with only the freshman

107

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IVY-class to draw on for material, made such an excellent showing, it i very easy to see the weight of the arguments of the growing number in the student body who are asking for basketball at Trinity next winter . These men want not an inter­class league with perhaps the teams going outside and playing local teams but a varsity team that will be a Trinity team as much as the football ot· baseball team. They want a team with a good coach- they have the players- and they want to see Trinity on the basketball schedules of the ew England colleges, at last giving Trinity a winter intercollegiate sport.

In considering the summary of the work of the freshman team it is inter­esting to consider each game briefl y . In this way the rapid growth of the team can be traced and at the same time some seeming routs of the team can be ex­plained .

The first game of the season was with the fast Hartford High School team in their gym. The freshmen were over-confident. H artford wa on its own floor and had the majority of the crowd with it. Trinity received a woeful walloping in the first half but came back strong in the second half and although they could not overcome the big lead of the high school team they held them even during this period.

Two weeks after the opening of the new term saw Trinity lined up on the High School gym floor again, this time with the team from the Travellers as their opponents. The freshmen redeemed themselves by taking the measure of th is bunch of semi-pro players, 31 to 24.

Their first out-of town game was at Loomis Institute in Windsor and after a hard struggle the institute team won by a single point, 28 to 27. To take the sting out of the defeat the team was treated to tea after the game!

Crosby, which had furni shed J ohnson and iohnkern to the team was the next opponent but unhappily not a victim. The game was fast however a nd the high school team knew that they had been in a game before the wh istle rang down the curtain on a 31 to 24 score.

The next game was at South Windsor and this semi-pro team fell 37 to 30. The game wa interesting but the freshmen led from the start, and never lost their advantage.

Taft School's scalp was added to the growing string in spite of the kindly efforts of the referee. He did his best for Taft or better perhap against Trinity, for the Taft team played a clean game, but he was unable to save Taft from a defeat by a margin of three points, 27 to 24.

The Travellers came back on March 12 looking for revenge but only had insult added to injury. They had won ten consecutive games and then Trinity spoiled their nice record, making them look like elephants at a Russian ballet. The final core was 30 to 17.

Overconfidence was a white elephant, for the next day St. Thomas' handed Trinity a terrible trouncing. D etails are gruesome. J,et it suffi ce to say the seminary team counted 39 points to Trinity's 19.

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IVY-

Jja~ketbaU

~ummarp of tbe ~eason jDate ®pponents

Dec. 20 At Hartford T rinity 22 Hartford High 42 Jan. 15 At Hartford Trinity 31 Travellers 24 Jan. 25 At Windsor Trinity 27 Loomis Institute 28 Jan. 29 At Waterbury Trinity 24 Crosby High 31 Feb. 7 At So. Windsor Trinity 37 So. Windsor A. C. 30 Feb. 12 At Watertown Trinity 27 Taft School 24 Mar. 12 At Hartford Trinity 30 Travellers 17 Mar. 13 At Hartford Trinity 19 St. Thomas 39

217 235

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M. R. Jackson , ' 18 E. M. Hyland, Jr., '19 H. W. Nordstrom , ' 19 S. G. Jarvis, '19

F. P. Easland. ' 18 M. Shulthies , '18 H. T. Barber, '19

IVY-

itmearer~ of tbe H~, jfootball

;Jlllaseball I. P. Partridge, '19

~tach

F. R. Fox, '20

~ennis

. . H. Edsall, '15

111

S. S. J ackson, '20 A. L. King, '20 H. V. Lynch, '20

I . A. Shepard, '21

A. M. Goldstein, '19 S. G. J arvis, '19 H. W. Nordstrom. ' 19

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BooK FivE

II so~~fy II

~ ~

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IV Y -(

~be Junior ~romenabe ~elb in ~Iumni ~all, ~ptil 28tb, 1919

J NIOR PROM COMMITTEE Francis Raymond Fox .

Caleb Albert H arding J ames Alfred Nichols

. Chairman

Harold Vincent Lynch Gustavus Richard Perkins Jack Wible Lyon Frank Ripley Poss, Jr. Leone] Edga1· Willia m Mitchell D onald Emerson Puffer

Gibson Godfrey R a msay

1920 ~opbomore ~moker ~ap 25tb. 1918

SOPHOMORE SMOKER COMMITTEE Harold Vincent Lynch . . Chairman

Alfred Pelton Bond Francis R aymond Fox Samuel Martin Griffin Caleb Albert H arding

Frederick R eed H oisington , Jr. Jack Wible Lyon J ames Alfred N ichols Richard Palmer Pres ey

Gibson Godfrey Ra msay

115

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3f unior ~moker (!Committee Donald Emerson Puffer

Francis Raymond Fox Frederick Reed Hoisington, Jr. Arthur Lovelee King Benjamin Levin

117

. Chairman

Harold Vincent Lynch Leone! Edgar William Mitchell James Alfred Nichols Gibson Godfrey Ramsay

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H 0 p.

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92 I v -

'lr:be ~opbomore j!)op Held in Alumni Hall, Friday evening, F ebrua ry 7, 1919

~opbomore ~op ~ommittee

James David Walsh

.James Harold l\IcGee Karl Pierce Herzer Xorman Clemens Stronl! Lionel Alexander 1ohnkern Frederick Lamond Bradley

119

. Chairman

Claude Zoe] J ette Beaufort R ossmore Newsom R ollin Main R a nso m Frederick H enry Ameluxen R obert Irvin Parke

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IVY-

jf resbman= 3f unior ~anquet Held at the Hotel Worthy, Springfield, Mass., March 8, 1919

'Qr:be <!tommittee Wilson Gillette Brainerd, Chairman

Edward Thurston Macauley Thomas Joseph Ahern Robert Gardiner Reynolds Theodore Littleton Holden Alfred Napoleon Guertin John Bayard Cunningham Harry Drake Henson Robert Dennison Byrnes Ralph Tilney Sheldon George Andrew Brown

A Few Words by An Old Timer A Word from An A. E. F. Words and Music

Frederick Talbert Tansill, ex-officio

~rogram Myron Robinson Jackson

Samuel Harmon Edsall Edward Marshall Hyland, Jr.

Everett Nelson Sturman . Harry William Nordstrom

Music by " Jazz Band of '22"

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BooK Six

1, coLLEGE o~~~NIZA TioNs Jj

~---· _________ [~

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\!I:bt ~bbisorp (!Commission on ~tubent ~cttbities

®fficer.s anb ;§Members Professor H enry A. Perkins Dr. Edward F. Humphrey Mr. Charles A. J oh nson H armon T. Barher Sumner W. Shepherd, Jr.

122

. Chairman Curator

Treasurer Secretary

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~tnatt Sumner Whitney Shepherd , Jr., ' 19 Evald Laurids Skau, '19

Francis R aymond Fox, '20 Austin Avery King, ' 19

Pres·ident Secretary

Arthur Morri Goldstein , ' 19 H arry William Nordstrom, '19 Edward Marshall H yland, Jr. , ' 19 Robert Irvin P a rke, '21 Seymour Scott Jackson, '20 Gustavus Richard P erkins, '20

Rollin Main Ransom, '21

123

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Page 129: 1920 trinity ivy

/ -r.· I T(t /

-r- _[J_ l ; '

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" J

! ..=.. /"

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f,

~enior ~onorarp ~otietp Es tablished 1893

~be 1!flebusa 1919 Edward Gabriel Armstrong Arthur M orris Goldstein Edwa rd M arshall H yland, Jr.

M elvill e Shulthiess

12.5

Samuel Gardiner J arvis H arry Willia m Nordstrom Irving Emerson P artridge

Page 130: 1920 trinity ivy

92 v ~rabuate Jflembers

Ahern, Philip Aloys ius, '1 2 Allen, Edwin Stanton, '93 All en, Walter Bes t , '04 Austin, William M orri s, ' 98 Bacon, Frede rick Stanley, ' 99 Badgley, Oliver Warren, '07 Bar·bour, H enry Grosvenor, ' 96 Barton, C harles Cla rence, ' 93 Barton, Philip Lockwoorl, ' 02 Bates, R obert P eck, '93 ') Beecroft, Edgar C ha rles, '97 Bell a my, R obert Bayard , ' 01 Bjorn , W alte r, ' 18 Bleecke r, William Hill , Jr ., '12 Bowne, Garrett D enise. '06 Bird, William Augustus, JV., ' 12 Brigha m, H enry D ay, '03 Brines, Moses J ames, '00 Broughton, C harle Dubois, ' 9.5 Brown, William P a rnell, ' 01 Brinley, Godfrey, ' 01 Bryant, P e rcy Cal'l eto n, ' 07 Buck, George Stunn er, '09 Bulkeley, J ohn Cha l'l es, ' 93 Capen, Geo rge Cleveland, '10 Car·penter, J ames tratton, Jr. , 'O!J CarToll , J oseph Oliver·. ' 11 Carter, Julian Stua rt, '98 Carter, Lawson Averill , ' 93 Carter, Shirley, ' 94 Castator, Frederick Barwick, '16 Churchma n, Clarke, ' 93 Cle ment, Charles Francis, '05 Coggeshall , Murray H art, ' 96 Cole, J a mes Land on, ' 16 Collett, Cha rles H enry, ' 13 Collins. Willia m French, ' 93 CJ"Oss , William Rich, '08 C ull en, James, Jr. , '93 Cunningham, Gerald Arthur, '07 D a nker, w ·atton Stoutenburgh, ' 97 D avis, J ohn H enry Kelso, '99 Davis, Cameron J os iah, ' 93 D eppen, Rich ard Lawton, '13 Dingwell , H arrie R enz, ' 94 D ougherty, Philip, '07 Donnell y, Edwin J oseph , '08 D ravo, M a rion Stua rt, '07 Durfee, Edward Llewelly n, ' 05 Edgerton, Francis Cruger, ' 94 Edgerton, J ohn W a rren, '94 Edsall , J a mes Kirkla nd, ' OS Edsa ll. Sa muel H ar mon, ' 15 Ellis, George Willia m, ' 94 Ewing, R obert Mosby. '05 FarTow, M alcolm Collins, ' 05 Fiske, R eginald, ' 01

126

Fiske, Willia m Sydney Walker, '06 Fort, H orace, ' 14 Furnivall, Maurice Les t er, '1.5 Gateson. D aniel Wilmot, '06 George. Eugene Evan, ' 07 Gildersleeve, Nelson H all , ' 10 Glazebrook, Haslett M cKim, '00 Good •·id ge, Edward , Jr., '02 Gostenhorer, Charl es Edward, ' 05 Graves, Dudley Chase, ' 98 Greeley, H oward Trescott, ' 9~ Groves, Joseph, ' 10 H a hn, J a mes P endleton, '18 H a ight, Austin Dunham, '06 H a ight, Sherma n Post, ' 11 H a mlin, Edward P ercy, ' 95 Hartl ey, George D erwent, ' 93 H enderson, J ames, ' 02 Rill , Frederick Ch arl es , Jr. , '06 Hill , H owa•·d Rice, ' 15 Hornor, H arry Archer, ' 00 H owell, Alfred , ' 11 H owell, Charles I-I urd, ' 12 Howell, George D awson, Jr ., ' 15 Hudson, J a mes Musgrove, '01 Hudson, Theodore Canfie ld, Jr ., ' 11 Ives, J oh n Norton, ' 16 .Tones, Allen Northey, ' 17 L ambet·t, Fra nk, ' 16 Langford , Arc hibald Morrison, ' 97 Langford , Willi am Spaight, Jr., ' 96 Lewis, Elton Gardiner, ' 9"9 L ' H eure ux, Alfred J o eph, ' 13 L ord, J a mes \Va tson, ' 98 Lockwood, Luke Vincent, '93 M acaul ey, Richard H enry, ' 95 Macrum, Willia m Wade. ' 17 Mann, Edwa rd James, ' 04 M axon, P aul, ' 11 M a xson, H a rry I rl. '09 M cCook, George Sheldon, '97

'lcGinley, Stephen Essex, ' 09 McTi vai nt>, John Gilbert, ·oo M cK ay, Edward Gabriel, ' 17 Meyer, H enry Louis, '03 . f oo re, J a mes Ashton, '14 M oore, J oh n Bigelow, ' 13 M organ, Sam uel St. J ohn, ' 03 Morgan, Owen, ' 06 M or;is, Robert Seymour, '1 6 Morse, Bryan Killikelly, ' 99 M oses, J ohn Shapleigh, ' U Murray. Edwa rd Francis, ' 18 Murray, J a mes P a trick, ' 15 Nichols, J ohn Williams, ' 99 N iles, William Porte r, '93 Ol cott, Will iam T yler, ' !)6

-

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Olmslerl , H orace Riglcow, ·os Paine, Ogk T aylor, '9(j Paige, J oh n H enry, Jr. , '97 Pa r>ons, Edgerton, '96 PParce, Reginald '93 P!>ck. Ca rlo• Curtis. ·o~ Peck, Richard E ugene. '01 Pelton, H enry IT uhbard, '93 Penrose, J ohn J esse, .) r .. ' 95 Pinney, Sidney Dillingha m, ' 18 Plant, Woodforde H a milton, ' 09 Pond, H arvey Clark, '08 Powell , J ohn Frankl in, ' OG Prince, Fred erick Welles, ' 00 Ra m.<dcll, Earl lllancha rd . ' 11 Rankin, George Douglas, ' 03 Remsen, Cornelius Wags ta fl', ' 0,5 Remse n, H enry Rutgers, ' 98 Rey nolds. Lloyd Gilson, ' 9R Rich, Emest Alb ert , ' 99 R ock, Alhe1·t ~ewman , ' 17 Srhulz, Walter Stanley, ' 94 Schw art7., D avid Louis, J r., ' 00 Shelley. Isarre Ba ttin, ' 15 Sherma n, Cla rence Edga1·. ' 11 Short, Will iam. J1·., ' l 'l Shulthit'ss. Melville, ' 18 Smi th , AlhNt Marston, ' 00

1 ~7

IVY Smi th, Ber t ram Leon Burgoy ne, ' 15 Spa rks, William Albert, '97 Spofl'ord , Cha rles By ron, Jr ., ' 1G St1·a wbridge, J ohn, '95 Sy ph ax, T . Min ton, ' 03 T aylor, C ha rles F.dwa rd, '94 Tay lor, M ar tin, ' OS Thomas, Edmund Cra wf01·d , ' 03 T ownsend. H erma n Edwarrl . ' 04 T r um bull , Charles La mb, ' 08 Vi bbert , W illia m Welch, '94 Vibbe-1\t, Aubrey D arrell , '99 Wai nwright, J onatha n M ay hew, '95 W'ebster, J erome Pierce, ' 10 Weed, Charles F reder ick, ' !)4 Weibel, Ri cha rd N ickes, '02 Welles, Philip Turner, '05 Wessels, T heodore Francis, ' 14 Wh eeler, Charles H a wt hom e, 'O'l Wheeler, Willia m H ard in, '02 Willi ams, Alexande1· J ohn, '0() Wilson. George H ewson, ' 93 Wilson, Willia m Crosswell D oan!', ' 9~ WoA'enden, Hichard H enr.v, '93 Woodle, All en S heldon, '99 Wooley, Fredcriek P orter. ' 17 Wrigh t, 'Richardson Li ttle. ' 10

-

Page 132: 1920 trinity ivy

IVY-~opbomore J.\ining QClub

Alfred Pelton Bond Francis R aymond Fox Seymour Scott J ackson

1920 ~embers

~rabuate ~embers

Harold Vincent Lynch J ack Wible Lyon Donald Emerson Puffer

Founded by the Clas o£ '99 on February 15, 1897

W. B. Allen, '04 E. G. Armstrong, ' 19 H . A. Armstrong, ' 19 E. A. Astlett, ' 18 F. E. Ba ridon, ' 14 E. S . Barney, ' 13 P . L . Barton, '02 G. T . Bates, ' 12 0. R. Berkeley, ' 17 W. A. Bird, ' 12 W. Bjorn, ' 18 W. H. Bleecker, Jr., ' 12 H . C. Boyd. '05 G. D. Bowne, ' 06 H. S. Bradfield, '02 J . W. Bradin, '00 P. H . Bradin, ' 03 H. T . Bradley, ' 17 H . L. Brainerd, ' 15 N. F. Breed, ' 12 J . E. Breslin, '19 H . D. Brigham, '03 Gilbert Brown, ' 10 W. P. Brown, '01 D . H . Browne, ' 03 T. P . Browne, Jr ., '03 C. E. Bruce, Jr ., '03 P . C. Brya nt, '07 B. Budd, '08 J . Buffington, Jr ., '18 M . H. Buffington, '04 G. C. Burgwin, Jr .. ' 14 H . Burgwin, Jr ., '06 H. H. Burgwin, ' 11 W. C. Burwell , '06 P . M . Butterworth, '08 G. C. Capen, ' 10 C. Carpenter, ' 12 J. S. Carpenter, Jr. , '09 L . G. Carpenter, '09 J . 0 . Carroll , ' 11 K. B. Case, ' 13 F . B. Castator, ' 16

H . N. Cha ndler, 'Or( S. N. Clapp. '04 C. F. Clement, '05 M . W . Clement. '01 A. C. Coburn, '07 R. G. Coghlan, ' 10 F . H . Coggeshall , '07 .J. L. Cole, ' 16 C. H. Collett, ' 13 H. W . Cook, ' 10 J. R. Cook, Jr., '10 D . S. Corson, '99 J . S. Craik, ' 12 T. H . Craig. ' 16 A. W. Creedon, '09 W . R . Cross, '08 M . F . Cromwell , '13 G. A. Cunningha m, '07 ' R . Cunningham, ' 07 H. L . Curtin, '07 T. C. Curtis, ' 07 J . H . K. D avis, ' 99 II. de W. de Mauriac, '07 T . N . Denslow, '04 R. L. D eppen, ' 13 W. C. Dewey, ' ll E. J . Dibble, '04 H. B. Dill ard, ' 13 E . J . D onnelly, '08 M. S. Dravo, '07 A. E . Dunsford, ' 15 F. P . Easland, ' 18 W. H . Eaton, '99 W . S. Eaton, ' 10 J. K. Edsall . '08 S. H . Edsall , '15 G. H . Elder, ' 14 J . D. E vans, ' 01 R. M. Ewing, '05 G. i\11. F erris, ' 16 R. Fiske, '01 '~' . S. W. Fiske, ' 06 F . S. Fitzpatrick, ' 14 R. H. Fox, '00

128

S. R . Fuller. Jr ., ·oo C. V. Ferguson, '07 H. Fort, '14 M. L. Furni,·all , ' 15 D . W . Gateson, '06 E. E . George, '07 N . H. Gildersleeve, ' 10 0 . Gildersleeve, Jr., ' 12 D. A. Gillool y, ' 16 . H. C. Goodrich, '09 C. E. Gostenhofer, ' 05 H. McK. Glazeb rook, '00 A. M. -Goldstein, ' 19 E. B. Goodrich, '02 E . Goodridge, Jr. ' 02 R. N. Graham, '05 W. T . Grange, ' 06 H. D . Green, '99 H . W. Greer, '08 J oseph Grove , ' 10 M. G. Haight, '00 S. P. H aight, ' 11 E . H. Hall , ' 15 Sturges Harmon, ' 10 H. G. Hart, '07 J. C. H art, '09 L. G. H a rriman, ' 09 C. B. H edrick, '99 D . M. H enry, '03 A. B . H enshaw, '10 C. H . Hill , '02 H. R. Hill , ' 15 w. c. Hill , ·oo G. S. Hine, ' 06 H. 0 . Hinkle, ' 09 A. E. Hodge, '15 H. A. Hornor, ·oo A. Howell , ' 11 G. D. H owell , Jr., ' 15 G. W. Hubbard, '08 J. M. Hudson, ' 01 T . C. Hudson, Jr. , ' 14 J . H. Humphrey, ' 12

Page 133: 1920 trinity ivy

H. Huet, '06 R. H . Hutch inson, '03 N. P . H olden. ' 18 E . M. H yla nd, Jr ., '19 J . N. Jves, '16 C. F. Ives, '18 S. G. J a rvis, '19 H . W.Jep. on, ' 17 B. D . J e wett, ·oo J . MeA . J ohnson, '03 A. N. Jones, ' 17 C. B. Jud ge, ' 10 G. T . K endall. ' 99 K. M. Kendall , ' 12 H . I. K enney, ' 19 I . R. Kenyon, '07 G. T. K eyes, '11 R. E. Kinney, '15 C. M. K onvalinka, '11 F. Lambert, ' 16 W. Larchar, Jr ., '03 P . T . Lightbourn , '04 E. G. Littell , '99 D. W. Little, ' 17 T . W. Little, ' 14 W . G. Livingston. '09 L . T . Lyon, ' 16 H . F. M acGuyer. '08 L. H. M cClure, ' 12 G. B. McCune, '07 W. W . Macru m, '17 W. F . M C'Elroy. ' 10 S. E. McGinle.v, '09 C. C. Mcivor, '17 H . R . Mcilvaine, '04 .J. G. Mcilvain e, '00 P. L. M cK eon, '04 W. J . McNei l, '01 W. F. Madden, '08 E. H . M add ox, ' 0-1-,J. H . Maginnis, 'Ofl H. S. Marl or, ' 10 S. F . Marr, ' 13 R. S. Martin, '1 6 H. I. Maxson, '09 P . Maxon, '11 R. L. M axon. '16 F . C. Meredith. '05 E. G. M cK ay, ' 17 H . L. G. M eyer, '03 J. B. Moore, ' 13

S. St. J. Morgan, ' 03 0 . M01·ga n, '06 J . 0. Morris, '08 R. S. Morris, ' 16 J. A. M OOI'e, ' l4 B. K. 'lorse, ' 99 .J. S. Moses, ' 14 A. S. Murr·ay, Ill., ' 10 E. F. Murray, ' 18 J. P . Murray, ' 15 H. C. Neff, ' 10 J. W. Nichol s, ' 99 R. C. Noble, ' 13 H . ''V. Nord trom, '19 H. B. Olmsted. ·os A. H . Onderdonk, '99 H . C. Owen, '99 J . W. O'Connor, '05 C. C. Peck, '02 R . E. P eck, '01 C. H. P er·kins, '16 F . F. Pettigrew, ' 12 J\1. S. Phillips, '06 G. P . Pie rce, '06 S. D . Pinney, ' 18 N. F. Pitts, '11 H . C. P ond, '03 J . Porte us, ' 11 A. L. P oto, ' 18 A. L. Potter, '1 0 W. B . Pressey, ' 15 F. W. Prince, ·oo E. B. R amsdell, ' 11 C. G. Randle, ' 05 G. D . R a nd all , '03 A. E. R ank in, '11 G. D. Rankin, '03 C. W. R emse n, ·o,; C. Reed, '06 C. M. Rhodes, '05 E . A. Uich, ' 99 F. C. Rich, '09 P . R oberts, '09 A. N. R ock, '17 H. H . Rudd. '01 P . V. R. chuyler, ' 17 D . L. Schwa rtz, '00 H . L. Schwartz, '06 J . B. Shearer, '09 I. B. Shelley, ' 15 S. W. Shepherd, .Jr., ' 19

1~9

v-C. E. Sherman, ·u A. C . Short. '03 W . Short, Jr ., ' 12 M. Shult hiess, ' 18 W. C. Skinner, ' 11 B. L. B . S mi t h, ' 15 P . H.. Smith, '07 H . Spencer, ' 16 W. H. Spo fford , ' 14 'vV. P . Stedm a n, '05 E. K. Sterlin g, ' 99 F. Stevens, '08 G. W. Stewart. ' 11 F. B. Stites, ' 15 E. N. Stu r·man, ' 19 W. B. Sutton, '99 S. S. Sw irt, ' 13 J . P. W . Taylor, '02 M. T aylor, '08 R . W. Thomas, '13 H. E. Townsend, 'O.J, J . H . Townsend, Jr ., ' 16 C. L. Trumbull , '08 W. S. Trumbull , '03 A. R . Van de Wa ter, '01 R. B. Van Tin e, '04 A. D. Vibbert, ' 99 J . '"'~' · Vizner, ' 15 A. W. Wa lker, ' 14 J . M. Walker, '01 C. D . 'Vardlaw, '07 H. L. Watson, '05 J .P. Webster, ' 10 B. G. Weekes. '06 H.. ~ . Weibel , '02 P . T. Welles, '05 H . Wessels, ' 12 T. F . Wessels, ' 14 C. H . Wheeler, '01 C. R . Whipple, ' 12 H. R . White, ' 02 J . J . Whitehead, Jr ., '13 H . D . Wilson, Jr ., '01 F. E. Willi ams, '13 K. Will oughby, '09 C. C. Withington, ' 15 R. P . Withington, ' 13 H . G. Wooclbury, ' 13 F. P . Wooley, Jr ., ' 16 C. B. Wy nkoop, '05

Page 134: 1920 trinity ivy

2

TRINITY G

KB<I> 1920

Rufus Colfax Phillips, Jr.

Edward Mar hall H yland, Jr. Samuel Gardiner J arvis

Alfred Pelton Bond Francis R aymond F ox

VY -

1Sappa TSeta ~bi

~lpba

of ~onnecticut

1918

1919

1920

William E lijah L'H eureux

H arry William Nordstrom E verett Nelson Sturman

J ack Wible Lyon Donald Emerson Puffer

Frank Ripley P oss, Jr.

1921 Nelson Addison Shepard J ames D avid Walsh

130

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IVY-m:be lQolitical ~cience C!Club

Member of the Federation of International Polity Clubs Dr. Edward F. Humphrey Director Myron R. Jackson, '18 . . President Frederick R. Hoisington, Jr., '20 Secretary-Treasurer

Membership :-Students interested in History and Political Science Department One of the first activities to be revived at the opening of the second semester

was the Political Science Club. Under its direction a most interesting program has been carried out, including a series of Smokers in the College Union and one at the home of Professor Humphrey.

The first of these smokers was held in the Union on January 30th. Professor E. Griffith-Jones, Principal of the Yorkshire United Independent College, Brad­ford, England, was the speaker. The subject of his address was: "British De­mocracy in the Melting Pot of the Great War." The second was held on Feb­ruary 14th. Dr. Luther presided at the meeting and the speaker was Dr. John N. Mills, whose subject was: "Foreigners in America. " Another meeting was held in the Union on March 6th when four overseas men related their experiences. The speakers were: Longham K. Porritt, George E. Mercer '18, Everett N. Sturman '19, and Frederi k C. Beach '22. All had most interesting stories to tell and Porritt passed around a number of photographs and Italian and Austrian weapons and medals which he had collected as souvenirs. On April 3rd a smoker was held at the home of Professor Humphrey, 333 Washington Street, for returned soldiers with Lt. John Spalding Kramer ' 17, an ex-president of the Political Science Club, as the guest of honor. Again on April lOth an excellent smoker was held in the Union. Major J. H. Kelso Davis '99, spoke of the work of the Ordnance Department in Washington. Major Morgan G. Bulkeley, who was in command of the lOlst Machine Gun Battalion in France, told in a very interesting manner of the work of that organization over there.

The Club was represented at two meetings of the "Congress for League of Nations." Russel Z. Johnston '16, and Dudley Stark '17 attended the one held at Boston. Rufus C. Phillips, Jr. , '18, and Frederick R. Hoisington, Jr., '20, attended the one at New York.

The Club has received a series of topographical maps prepared for the Peace Conference. It has also received the following books from the American Association for International Conciliation:

"The Organization of a Federal League of Nations," by Raleigh C. Minor. "Selected Articles on A League of Nations," by Edith M. Phelps. "The Disclosures from Germany," by Munroe Smith and J ames Brown. "Nationalism," by Rabindranath Tagore. "Nationality and Government," by Alfred Zimmern. "The Diplomatic Background of the War," by Charles Seymour. "Greater Italy," by William Kay Wallace. "Towards an Enduring Peace," by Randolph S. Bourne and Franklin H.

Giddings. "The American League to Enforce Peace," by C. R. Ashbee. "War Addresses of Woodrow Wilson," by A. R. Leonard. "Nationalism and Internationalism," by Ramsay Muir.

131

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IVY-

The R ev. President Flavel . Luther, LL.D., Ph.D., Cha7Jlain A sisted by the clerical members of the faculty

~hligatorp

Morning Prayer, 8:30 A. M. Sunday, 10:30 A.M.

Qeboir

'V oluntarp (~unbap)

Holy Communion, 8:45A.M.

Robert I. Parke, '21. 01·ganist

.:!first m:enors

H. W. Nordstrom, '19 J . M. Engla nd, '22

· L. W. Minor, '22 M. S. Myers, '22

~econb m:enors

R. M. R ansom, '21 W. H. T ait, '22

jl¥(onitou

M. R. J ackson, '19 J . W. Stansfield , '20 J. 1-I. Callen, '21

132

.:!first jlilasses

1\I. D. Graham, '22 W. . Mattice, '22

~econb jlilasses

J . A. Nichols, '20 R. S. Casey, '20 R. C. Puels, '22

Page 137: 1920 trinity ivy

c(}le TI\INlTY ~

___ )

BooK SEVEN

11 LIT~§y II

~. ~

Page 138: 1920 trinity ivy

Joseph Wurts Stansfield Alfred Pelton Bond

mbe m:rinitp lfbp Established 1873

jliloadJ of Qfbitots

~ssotiate Qfbitors Jack Wible Lyon

. Editor-in-Chief Business Manager

Nelson Frederick Adkins Robert Sabert Casey Francis Raymond Fox Frederick Reed Hoisington, Jr. Harold Vincent Lynch

Leone! Edgar William Mitchell James Alfred Nichols Gustavus Richard Perkins Hall Pierce

134

Page 139: 1920 trinity ivy

Established 1904. I ncorporated 1913 Published weekly throughout the College year

jliloatb of 1.Directors Frank L Wilcox '80 Patti M. Butterworth, '09 Shiras Morris, '96, President Edgar F. Waterman, '98

C. A. J ohn on, '92, Treasurer Evald L. Skau, ' 19

Evald Laurids Skau, '19 Yincent Hamilton Potter, '1!)

l\felville Shulthiess, '18

jliloarb of <!Ebitors

jlilusiness 1.Department Xorman Clemens Strong, '21

135

. Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor

Business ~Manager

Page 140: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 141: 1920 trinity ivy

92 IV Y-

Present two one-act plays at Alumni Hall

Saturday evening, April 26th, 19Hl

Coached and produced under the direction of Hallie Florence Gelbart

The Beggar The Man The Woman The Poet The Satisfied One

Mr. Burbage as Macbeth

"~unger"

By Eugene Pillot

~ •m:f]e l\ef)earsal" By Maurice Baring

Mr. Hughes as Lady Macbeth Shakespeare MacDuff Ban quo The Doctor First Witch Second Witch The Producer The Stage Manager

J. H. Callen, '21 J. F. Maher, '19

Followed by Dancing

Music by Costello's Orchestra

H. A. Armstrong, '19 W. K. Noel, '21

137

C. B. Bristol L . E. W. Mitchell E. B. Hungerford

L. W. Tostevin J. K. Callaghan

L. E. W. Mitchell J. K. Callaghan

. B. R. Newsom T. B. Macauley

R. B. Pastor T. B. Macauley

F. L. Bradley . L W. Tostevin

E. B. Hungerford . E. N. Sturman

President Treasurer

Business Manager Property Manager

Page 142: 1920 trinity ivy
Page 143: 1920 trinity ivy

• BooK EIGHT

JC sou~s ,ARMES JJ

~ ~

Page 144: 1920 trinity ivy

COLONEL CALVI~ D. COWLES

Page 145: 1920 trinity ivy

tErinitp cteollege Wnit of tbe ~tubents' ~rmp 'lrraining cteorps

OFFICERS

C. D. Cowles, Colonel, . . Army, R etired, Commanding

James F. Lucey, 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry, U. S. A. Adjutant and Personnel Adjutant

Frederick Bauer, 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry, U. S. A. Commanding Company "B"

Lewis E. Crook, 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry, . S. A. C01mnanding Company "A"

John E. Buck, 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry, . S. A. Acting Quartermaster and Supply Officer, and Agent Officer

141

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IVY-((olonel ((owle~ on tbt ~tubent~' ~rmp

~raining ((orp~

A Students' Army Training Corps Unit was established at Trinity College in October, 1918, in compliance with instructions from the Committee on Educa­tion and Special Training, War Department, Washington, D. C. Inductions began October 1, 1918. The quota for the College was limited to 175 men. The total number of inductions was 159, and one Naval Reservist was attached for duty. Owing to the Armistice and the prospect of an early peace, orders were received from the War Department, November 26, 1918, for the demobilization of the S. A. T. C. Unit to begin on December 4, 1918, and to be completed not later than December 21, 1918. All men physically fit were discharged on or be­fore the latter date.

The members of the S. A. T. C. were voluntarily inducted into the Service through their respective draft boards to serve during the emergency. They re­ceived the pay and allowances of private soldiers and were subject to military law and regulations. They were uniformed, equipped, housed, subsisted, and paid by the U. S. Government and were under strict military discipline at all times. They were required to devote eleven hours per week to intensive military training and forty-two hours to academic study and work. They were arranged in three classes according to age at entrance. Those twenty years or older were to remain for three months, those nineteen years old, for six months, and those eighteen years, for nine months, though these dates were dependent upon the exigencies of the Service and subject to change. The academic work included a twelve weeks' course in "War Issues," Military Law and Practice, Hygiene and Sanitation, and Surveying and Map Making.

The opportunities open to the members of the S. A. T. C. were as follows, according to their performance and the recommendation of the military and college authorities at the end of each period:

(a) To be transferred to a Central Officers' Training School. (b) To be transferred to a Non-commissioned Officers' School. (c) . To be retained at the institution for further intensive work. (d) To be assigned to a Vocational Section. (e) To be transferred to a cantonment for duty with troops as a private. Orders were received to tran fer eighteen men to the Qentral Officers'

Training School at Camp Lee, Virginia, November 11, 1918. Owing to the signing of the Armistice, these men were given the option of returning to the S. A. T. C.; of receiving their discharges from the Service; or of remaining at the C. 0. T. S. Nine of these men returned to the S. A. T. C.

142

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IVY-The enrolled section of the S. A. T. C. consisted of twelve men who, being

under 18 years of age, were not subject to the draft and could not be inducted into the service. Their enrollment was entirely voluntary, and they served without pay or allowances of any kind. They received the same training and were subject to the same discipline as the members of the S. A. T. C. unit. Their conduct and performance of duty are worthy of the highest commendation.

The following named officers, commissioned at the S. A. T. C. Training Camps, Plattsburg Barracks, New York, and Can1p Perry, Ohio, in September, 1918, were assigned for duty with the nit, and the successful mobilization, disciplining, and training of the men, and subsequent demobilization of the

nit are largely due to their intelligent, zealous, and loyal assistance: 2nd Lieut. James F. Lucey, Infantry, Adjutant, Personnel Adjutant. 2nd Lieut. Frederick Bauer, Infantry, Commanding Company B. 2nd Lieut. Lewis E. Crook, Infantry, Commanding Company A. 2nd Lieut. John E. Buck, Infantry, Acting Quartermaster and Supply Officer. Doctor H. C. Swan and William F. Fay were appointed Contract Surgeons

on half time in the latter part of September and served in that capacity until the latter part of October, 1918. Doctor Dwight Wallace Tracy was appointed Contract Surgeon November 27, 1918.

Lieutena11t Lucey reports that subscriptions to the Fourth Liberty Loan amounting to $7,650.00 were made by members of the Corps, and that in urance to the amount of $1,528,000 was taken by them.

Much credit is due to Mr. Edgar F. Waterman, Treasurer, for the very efficient manner in which he conducted the S. A. T. C. mess, which contributed largely to the harmonious working of the military administration. Under his supervision the old mess hall and kitchen were fitted up with modern equipment; a competent caterer, a chef, and assistants were employed. The meals were served by details from the S. A. T. C. and were of good quality.

The progress made by the men in their training was gratifying, and their con­duct and military bearing were deserving of the highest praise. It is believed that the lessons learned in discipline, self-restraint, punctuality, and courtesy, and the good effects of the physical exercises to which they were subjected will prove to be a valuable asset in whatever pursuit they may follow in after life.

I wish to testify to the excellent discipline, zeal, loyalty, and fidelity displayed at all times by the officers and men of the S. A. T. C., and to the cordial support and willing assi tance given by Dr. Flavel S. Luther, President, and the other college authorities in carrying out the plan of the War Department.

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ABBEY, RAYMO D C., ' 10, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army ACHATZ, FRANK J ., ' 18, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army ADDIS, EMMETT, '99, Major, U.S. Army ADKINS, LEONARD D. , ' 13, U. S. Navy ALDRI CH, PHILIP E ., ' 18, Ensign, . S. Navy ALESHIRE, JOSEPH P ., '09, Captain, . S. Army ALLI TG, PA L H ., ' 19, 1st. Lieut., . S. Army AMELUXEN, FREDERICK H ., n.m., Pri va te, Aviation Corps, U. S. Army ANDERSON, ARTHUR P. , '20, Pri vate, . S. Army Ambulance Service ASTLETT, ERIC A., ' 18, Priva te, U. S. Army Ambulance Service AUSTIN, WILLIAM M., '98, Superintending Constructor, U. S. Navy BA CKUS, CLINTON J. JR., ' 09, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army Air Service BAILEY, BERTRAM B. ' 15, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Arm y BALCH , IRA A., ' 15, Sergeant, . S. Army Air Service BALDWIN, GUY M . ' 17, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army Air Service BARBER, GEORGE H ., ' 18, 1st Lieut ., U. S. Army BARBER, HARMON T ., ' 19, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Army BARBER, WILLIAM P ., JR., ' 13, 2nd Lieut. , U.S . Army BARBOUR , REV. PAUL H ., ' 09, Sergeant, . S. Army BARIDON , FELIX E ., '14, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army BARNETT, BION HALL, .JR., ' 12, Priva te, U.S. Army BARNETT, REV. JOSEPH N., ' 13, Sergeant, U.S. Army BARNETT, WILLIAM E ., ' 15, Capta in, U. S. Army BARNEY, EDWARD S., ' 13, Sergeant, U.s: Army BARNS, JOHN A., ' 15, Pri vate, . . Army Medical Corps BARNWELL, FRANKL., '17, Private, U.S. Air Service BARNWELL, JOH B., ' 17, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army BASSFORD, ETHA1 F., ' 14, Priva te, . S. Army Medical Corps BASSFORD, HORA CE R. , ' 10, 2nd Lieut ., . S. Army BATTERSON, WALTER E ., ' 11, Pri,·a te, . S. Army BEA CH, CHARLES B., ' 18, Gunner's Mate, 2nd Class, U. S. Navy BEARDSLEY, LEWI G., ' 15, 1st Lieut ., U.S. Army Medical Corps BEDELL, ARCHER W., ' 13, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army BEERS, HEN RY S. , '18, Chief Quartermaster, . S. Na,·al A,·iation BEIJ, KARL H ., ' 1'4, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army Air Service BERGMAN, EDWARD H ., ' 15, Private, U. S. Marine Corps BERKMAN, MOSES, '20, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army BERMAN, MOSE S A., '14, Sergeant, U. S. Army Air Service BERNKLOW, JOHN H., ' 19, Private, . S. Army BISHOP, FREDERICK S., ' 11, Lieut. , U. S. Army BISSELL, RA TDWICK A., ' 15, Captain, . S. Army

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BJORN, WALTER, ' 18, Cadet, U. S. Army Air ervice BLEASE, DOUGLAS A., ' 18, Priva te, U.S. Army

VY-BLEECKER, WILLIAM H :, JR., '12, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army Air Service BLOODGOOD, FRANCIS J ., ' 18, Serg't-Major, . S. Army BOEHM, CHARLES H., ' 15, Corporal, . S. Army Ambul ance Service BOND, RAYMO D A. , ' 16, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army BO NER, HAMPTON, ' 16, Private, U. S. Marine Corps BOYCE, GEORGE A., ' !W , 2nd Class Seaman, U. S. Navy BOWIE, WILLIAM, '93, Major, U. S. Army BOYNTON, KENNETH W., ' 14, Pri vate, U. S. Army BRADIN, PERCIVAL H., ' 12, 1st Lieut., U. . Army BRAINERD, HENRY L., ' 15, 2nd Lieut ., . S. Army BRA:\ID, SMART, '15, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army Air er vice BRANDT, ERNE T H ., JR., '18, Private, U.S. Army BREED, FRAl\KLI?\ N., ' 12, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army BRENNAN, JAMES A., JR., ' 12, Private, . S. Army BRESLIN, JAMES E., ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army BREWSTER, JAMES, ' 08, U.S. Navy BRICKLEY, GEORGE V., ' 19, P1·i vate, . S. Navy Medical Corps BRICKLEY, HAROLD J ., ' 19, Pri vate, U. S. Arm y BRILL, CLINTON B. F ., ' 19, 1st Lieut. , . S. Army BRINKMAN, WILLIAM W., '15, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army BROWN, ERNEST F., ' 15, Pri vate, U. S. Army Air Service BROWN, GILBERT, ' 10, 1st Class Q . M., . S. Navy BROWN, THOMAS G., ' 13, Corporal, . S. Army BROWNE, REV. D CAN H ., ' 03, Chapla in, . . Army BRUYA, RAYMOND A., ' 19, Private, U.S. Army BRYANT, ARTH R H ., '00, Lieut. Colonel, U.S. Army BUCK, WILLIAM W., ' 11, Sergeant, . S. Army BUCKLEY, RICHARD C., ' 19, Ensign, . S. Navy BUDD, BERN, '08, Captain, U. S. Army BUDD, OGDEN D ., JR., ' 15, 1st Lieut. , U.S . Army Air Service BUDD, THOMA G., '21, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army Air Service Bt.:FFINGTON, JOSEPH JR., ' 18, Private, . S. Army Amb ul ance Service BURL, LAWRENCE D ., ' 12, 2nd Lieut., U. . Army Air Service BURDICK, VERE G., ' 11, 1st Lieut ., . S. Army BURGWIN, AUG ST S P ., '82, Major, . . Army B RGWIN, GEORGE C., JR., ' 14, Captain, . S. Army B RGWIN, HOWARD J. , ' 13, Private, U.S. Army Ambulance Ser vice BURNAP, ARTHUR E. , ' 19, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army BUSHNELL, HOWARD E ., '05, Captai n, U.S. Army BUSSOM, THOMAS W., F aculty, l•'nsign, U. S. Kavy CAHILL, JOSEPH H ., ' 16, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army CAMERON, RALPH E ., ' 09, Major, U.S. Arn~y CAPE '. GEORGE C., ' 10, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army CARLSON , CARL E ., ' 18, Corporal, U. S. Army CARLSON, FRA NZ J ., '21, U. S. Navy CARPENTER, CH APIN, M . D ., ' a , 1st Lieut ., U . S. Army Medical Corps

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CARPENTER, LEWIS G., '09, Capta in, . S. Army CARROLL, EDWARD C., '18, Ensign, U.S. Navy CASE, CARROLL B., '20, Corporal, . S. Army

"IVY-

CASE, KE NETH B., ' 13, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Air Service CASSADY, MARK C., ' 18, Private, . S. Army CASTA TOR, FREDERICK B. , '16, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army Air Service CHANDLER, HAROLD N., '09, Corporal, U.S. Army CHAPIN, WALCOTT, ' 15, Priva te, . S. Army CH RCHILL, ALVORD B., ' 16, 2nd Lieut., U .S. Army CLAPP, STUART H ., '05, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army CLARK, HOBART H ., ' 17, Corporal, . S. Army CLARK, OLI H. , JR ., '21, Corporal, . S. Army CLEMENT, CHARLES F ., '05, Major, U.S. Army CLEMENT, JOHN K., ' 00, Major, U. S. Army CLEMENT, THERON B., ' 17, Captain, . S. Army CLEVELAND, REV. EDMUND J ., '02, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army COFFEE, MA RICE D., ' 17, Sergeant, . S. Army COHEN, GEORGE H ., ' 11, 1st Lieut. , . S. Anny COHEN, LOUIS S., '18, Private, U. S. Army COLE, JAMES LANDO r, '16, 1st L ieut., . S. Army COLEMAN, WILLIAM C., '09, Sergeant, . S. Army CONNOR, MICHAEL A. , '09, Captain, U. . Army CONNORS, FRA CIS J ., ' 18, Private, . S. Army COYLE, FRANCIS B., '16, Sergeant, . S. Army Air Sen ·ice CRABB, WILLIAM W., '07, Captain, U. S. Army CRAIK, JAMES S., ' 12, . S. Navy CRAIK, OSCAR W., '16, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army Air Service CREHORE, MORTONS., ' 17, Private, . . Army Medical Corps CROMWELL, MERRITT F ., ' 13, Sergeant, U. S. Marine Corps CROSS, ROBERT E., ' 14, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army CUNNINGHAM, REV. RAYMOND, '07, Chaplain, U. S. Army CURTIS, WILLIAM R. , ' 13, Coxswain, . S. Navy DART, FREDERICK B., ' 15 , Private, U.S. Army Ambulance Service DAVIS, ALEXANDER K., ' 11, 2nd Lieut ., U.S. Army DAVIS, JOHN H . K. , '99, Major, . S. Army DAWLEY, DANIEL B., '13, Private, U.S. Army DEMING, WILLIAM C., '84, Captain, ' . S. Medi cal Corps DENNING, HARRY H., ' 17, 2nd Lieut ., U.S. Army DIBBLE, LEONARD J ., ' 09, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army DILLARD, HENRY B., ' 13, 2nd Lieut. , . . Army DINEZZO, VICTOR F. F ., '16, U. S. Navy DOBBIN, EDWARD S., ' 99, Captain, . S. Army DOOMAN, DAVID S., M. D ., ' 16, 1st Lieut ., U. S. Army Medical Corps DORWART, FREDERIC G., ' 15 , Captain, . S. Army D FFY, WARD E., ' 15, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army DUNN, STEPHE r F., '14, Sergeant, U. S. Army DU SFORD, ALBERT E., ' 15, U. S. Navy DWORSKI, HARRY, '17, U.S. Navy

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DYETT, WALTER F., ' 95, Captain, U.S. Army EASTERBY, CHARLES T. , '16, Corporal, . S. Army

IVY-EATON, ARTHUR ., ' 11, Private, U.S. Army Ambulance Service EATON, WILLIAM H ., '99, Lieut. Colonel, U.S. Army EATON, WILLIAM S., ' 10, Captain, U.S. Army ECKELS, JOHN J. , ' 17, Sergeant, U.S. Army EDSALL, JAMES K., '08, Captain, U. S. Army EDSALL, SAMUEL H., ' 15, U.S. Navy EDWARDS, REV. H . BOYD, '07, Capta in, U. S. Army EHLERS, JOSEPH H ., ' 14, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army ELDER, FRANCIS W., ' 16, U.S. Army Ambulance Service ELLIS, ALFRED L., M.D ., '98, Captain, . S. Army Med ical Corps E GLISH, JAMES F ., '16, Sergeant, U. S. Army Medical Corps ERWIN, JAMES B., '76, Brigadier General , U.S. Army EVANS, REV. SYD TEY K., '95, Chaplain, U. S. Navy EVISON, SAMUEL H., ' 13, 2nd Lieut ., U.S. Army FELDMA r, ARTHUR E., '20, Radio Man, 2nd Cl. , U. S. Navy FENOGLIO, ARTH R A. r., ' 14, Private, U. S. Army Medical Corps FENTON, PA UL E. , ' 17, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army Air Service FERGUSON, HARRY F., ' 10, 1st I,ieut. , U. S. Army FERRIS, GEORGE M., ' 16, Captain, U.S. Air Service FILLINGHAM, ALFRED B., '21, Landsman, R ad io, U. S. Navy FLEMMING, REV. DAVID L. , '80, Captain, U. S. Army FOOTE, ELLIOT S., '09, Pri \•ate, U.S. Army FOSTER, LEON R. , '11, Pri vate, U.S. Army FOX, FRANCIS R ., ' 20, . S. ravy FRA CTS, GEORGES., ' 10, Private, . S. Army FRANCIS, WALTER L., ' 17, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army Air Service FREELAND, REV. CHARLES W., '81, Major, U. S. Army FULLER, SAMUEL R., JR., ' 00, Lieut. Co mmander, U.S. Navy FURNIVALL, MAURICE L. , ' 15, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army GABERMAN, LOUIS Y., ' 14, Chief Yeoman, U. S. Navy GAGE, PHILIPS., '08, Major, U.S. Army GARVIN, JAME P ., '03, Machinists ' Mate, 1st Class, U. S. Navy GATES, ROGER W., ' 13, Ensign, U.S. Navy GIGNILLIAT, LEIGH U., ' 15, Lieut. Col., . S. Army GOLDSTEIN, ARTH R M. , ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army GOSTE t HOFER, CHARLES E., '05, Gunner, Canadi an Field Artillery GOTT, DOUGLAS, ' 11, Sergeant, U. S. Army GRAY, WILLIAM T., JR. , ' 15, Private, U.S. Army GRIESINGER, CHARLES H., '20, Private, U. S. Army Ambulance Service GRIFFITH, GEORGE C., ' 19, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Army G IDONE, ERELL., '18, Private, U. S. Army Medical Corps HAHN, JAMES P ., ' 18, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army HAIGHT, SHERMAN 0., ' 11, Captain, U.S. Army HAIGHT, SHERMAN P ., '11, Captain, U. S. Army HALE, WARREN L., ' 16, 1st Lieut., U. S. Air Service HALL, EVERITT H ., ' 15, Corporal, U.S. Army

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IVY-HAMPSON, EDMUND R ., '18, Wagoner, U.S. Army HARDING, ALFRED, JR. , ' 16, 1st Lieut., . S. Army HARDING, PA L C .. ' 19, 2nd Li ,.ut., U.S. Air Service HARMON, STURGES, ' 10, 2nrl Lieut ., U.S. Army HARRIMAN, REV. CHARLES J ., '05, 1st Lieut. , . S. Army HARRIS, ROBERT V. K. , ' 17, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army HARRIS, THADDEUS W., JR., ' 17, Pri vate, U.S. Army HARTZMARK, JOSEPH, ' 20, 2ncl Lieut., . S. Army HASBURG, WILLIAM, '17, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army HATCH, JAMES W., ' 17, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army HA WKSWORTH, TOM T ., '20, Ensign, . S. Navy HAYDEN, ROBERT C., '93, Lieut. Jr. Grade, . S. Navy HAYS, JAMES McF., ' HI, Lieut. Jr. Grade, U. S. Navy REI TIG , FRANK G., '20, Private, . S. Army Medical Corps HENRY, DANIEL M. , ' 03, Major, . S. Army Air Service HERZER, KARL P ., '21, Seaman, U. S. Navy HICKEY, LEVI P. M., ' 11, Seaman, 2nd Cl. , . S. Navy HICKS, URY A.,' 14, ~nd Lieut., . . S. Army HILL, HOWARD R ., ' 15, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army HINE, HAROLD M., ' 18, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army Air Serv ice HODDER, CLIFFORD E., '20, Sergeant, . S. Army HODDER, LESLIE W. , ' 19, Private, U. S. Army HOHENTHAL, LESTER, '20, . S. Navy HOISINGTON, FREDERICK R ., JR., '20, Q. M., 3rd Class, . S. Navy HOLBECK, ELMER, '19, Corporal, . S. Army HOLCOMB, CARLOS S., ' 12, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army HOLDEN, NEWTON P ., ' 18, Chief Q. M., . S. Naval Aviation HOLM, CARL G. F., '20, Seaman, <tnd Class, U.S. Navy HOWELL, CHARLES H ., '12, Captain , English R oyal Flying Corps HOWELL, GEORGE D ., JR., ' 15. Lieut. Jr. Grade, . S. 1 avy H UBER, HERMAN C., '20, Sergeant, . . Medical Corps H UDSON, THEODORE C., '14, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army H MPHREY, JOHN H ., II, ' 16, Pri vate, . S. Med ical Corps H UMPHRIES, l~LOYD T .,'20, Private, U. S. A. Amublance Service H UMPHRIES, ROMILL Y F ., JR., '20, Corporal , U. S. Army H RD , ALFRED D ., '77, U. S. Army H UT CHISON, FRANKS., '21, U.S. Na,·y HYLAND, EDWARD J . B., ' 18, Ensign, U.S. Navy HYLAND, EDWARD M., JR., ' 19, Chief Q. M., U.S. Navy I r GERSOLL, COLIN M., ' 14, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army IVES, CHARLES F ., ' 18. Sergeant, U. S. Army Medical Corps IVES, JOHN MORTON, '16, Pri vate, . S. Army JA CKSON, MYRO r R., ' 18, Sergeant, U.S. Army Medical Corps JACKSON, SEYMOUR S., '20, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army JAMES, THOMAS K. , ' 18, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army JARVIS, SAMUEL G., ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army Air Service JEPSON, HERBERT W. , ' 17, Sergeant, U. S. Army JEWETT, EDWARD W., ' 13, Se rgeant, . S. Army

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IVY-JOHNSON, CHARLES P. , ' 16, Private, . S. Army Air Service JOHNSON, GARDINER P ., ·~ o . French Foreign Legion JOHNSTON, R USSELL Z., ' 16, Private, U.S. Army JONES, ALLEN N. , ' 17, Private, U.S. Army JOYCE, CLARENCE A., ' 18, Corporal, U. S. Army J UDGE, CYRIL B., ' 10, Ensign, U.S. Navy KALLINICH, ERNEST A., ' 19, Priva te, U.S. Army KATES, CI,ARENCE S., III, ' 18, Private, U.S . Army KEATING, THOMAS J ., JR. , · ~o. J'rivate, U.S. Army KENDALL, KILBOURN M., ' 1 ~, Sergeant, U.S . Army KE INEY, HAROLD I. , ' 19, Seaman, Second Class, U.S. Navy KER ER, HOWARD S., ' 99, F.nsign, U.S. Navy KING, ARTHllR L ., ·~o. 2nd Lieut. , T1. S. Army KIRKBY, KENTS., ' 17, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army Air Service K t OWLTON, WADE H ., ' 11, Private, U.S. Army Air Service KRAMER, JOHNS., '17, 1st Lieut., U.S. Army KYLE, THEODORE C., ' 15, ~nd Lieut. , U. S. Army LAMBERT, FRANK, '16, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army Air Service LAMOND , BERTRAM B., '16, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army LANGFORD, ARCHIBALD M ., ' 97, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army LANGFORD, EDWARD T., ' 10, Corporal , U.S. Army LARNED, WILLIAM E ., '10, Colonel, U. S. Army LAWLOR, PETER P., ' 14, Private, U.S. Medical Corps LEAVENWORTH, JOHN P., ' 13, Major, U. S. Army LECOUR, JOSEPH M. JR ., ' 98, Lieut., U.S. Army LEEKE, STANLEY H., ' 19, Corporal , U.S. Army LENNON, HARRY E., '20 LESCHKE, AUGUST H ., ' 10, Private, U.S . Army J,EVIN, ABRAHAM, ' 14, Sergeant, U.S. Army L 'HE UREUX , ALFRED J ., ' 13, Major, U.S . Army L'HEUREUX, WILLIAM E., '18, Pharmacist's Mate, U.S. Navy LINTON, DONALDS. , ' 16, ~nd Lieut., U.S. Army LITTLE, DRUMMOND W., '17, Sergeant, U.S. Army LITTLE, THOMAS W., ' 14, Captain, U.S. Army LONSDAJ,E, REV. HERMAN L., '86, U. S. Army LOVE, ETHELBERT W., ·~o. Private, U.S. Army Ambulance Service L YCETT, FRED W. , '06, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army LYN CH, HAROLD V., '20, Chief Quartermaster, U.S. Naval Aviation LYON, LOWELL T., ' 16, Ensign, U.S . Navy MACRUM, WILLIAM W., ' 17, 1st Lieut., . S. Army MACY, EUGENE E., ' 10, Corporal, U. S. Marine Corps MANION, JOHN H ., '20, ~nd Lieut., U. S. Army MAPLESDEN, RAY <J:OND J. , '08, Sergeant, U. S. Army MARKHAM, JUDSON W., ' lfl, Sergeant, U.S. Army MARLOR, THOMAS S., ' 06, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army MARSllALJ,, FRANCIS C., ' 16, Brigadier (~<'neral , U.S. Army MARTIN, ROBERTS., '16, ~nd Lieut., U.S. Army MAXON, PAUL, ' 1~ . 1st Lieut., U.S. Arm y

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MAXON, RICHARD L ., ' 16, Private, Canadian Engineer McCABE, JAMES S., JR., ' 15, U. S. Navy McCOID, CHESTER B., ' 17, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Anny McCOOK, AN SO r T ., '02, Captain, . S. Army McCOOK, PHILIP J. , ' 95, Major, U.S. Army McCORMAC, H UBERT J. J ., '21, U. S. Army Air Servi ce McCUE, THOMAS F ., '15, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Air Service McGEE, MARCUS T., ' 14, Priva te, U.S. Army MciLVAI TE , JOHN G., '00, 1st Lieut., U.S. Army MciVOR, ·CARLISLE C., ' 17, Lieut. Jr . Grade, U.S. avy McKAY, EDWARD G., ' 17, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army MECHTOLD, ROLAND H., '98, Lieut., . S. Army MERCER, GEORGE E ., ' 18, Prim te, . S. Army MILLER, LLOYD R ., ' 16, Private, U. S. Army MITCHELL, JA COB G. N ., ' 16, Chief Petty Officer, U. S. Navy MITCHELL, JAMES A., ' 15, Priva te, . . Army MITCHELL, JOHN McK., ' 18, 1st Lieut ., . S. Army MOORE, JAIRUS A., ' 97, Colonel, U. S. Army MORAN, LOUIS J ., ' 16, Coxswain, U.S. Navy MORGAN, EDGAR T .. ' 16, Sergeant, U.S . Army MORGAN, HERMAN T ., '08, Captain, . S. Arm y MORRIS, ROBERT-S .. '16, Ensign, . S. Navy M ULLEN, ARTHUR J. , ' 18, . S. Army Medical Corp M ULLER, CHARLES J ., ' 18, Ensign. . S. Navy

VY -

MURRAY, AMBROSE S., III, ' 10, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army M URRAY, J AMES P., '14, Flight Lieut., English R oyal Flying Corps M URHA Y, EDWARD F., ' 18, 2nd Li eut.. . S. Army MURTHA, FRA NCIS P .. ' 20, Seaman, . S. Navy MYERS, DOUGLAS D ., '17, 2nd Lieut ., U.S . Army NEFF, HENRY C., ' 11 , Private, U. S. Army NELSON, MILTON G., ' 13, Corporal , U.S . Army NELSON, WILLIAM L ., ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army NEWHALL, G Y H ., ' 12. Private, U. S. Signal Corps . riCHOLS, WILLIAM, '01 , Major, U.S. Army NILES, EDWARD A., ' 16, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army Air Service

II.SSON , GORDO~ G., ' 16, Pt·iva te, . S. Army Ambulance Service NOBLE, R USSELL C., ' 13, Ensign, . S. Naval Aviation NORDSTROM, HARRY W .. ' 19, Petty Offi cer, U.S. 1 a' 'Y NORRI , ERNEST E ., ' 19, Wagoner, . S. Army O' CONNELL, MARK E .. ' 15, Asst. Pay master, U. S. Navy O'CONNOR, JAMES J., ' 15, Pri vate, . S. Army O'CONN OR, ROBERT B., ' 16, Captain, U. S. Army OLAI?SON, HAROLD S., ' 15, Pri vate, U. S. Arm y Ambul ance Service OLMSTED, FREDERICK N., ' 19, Bri t ish Royal Flyin g Corps OLMSTED, WILLI AM B., ' 15, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Arm y OLSSON, EWALD E., ' 16, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Ar-my ORTGIE , JOHN A., '20, Pri vate, U. S. Army OWE , H A S C., '99, Captain , . S. Army

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IVY-OWENS, MICHAEL F ., ' 07, Captain, U.S. Army Air Service PAGE , COURTEN AY K. , ' 17, Corporal, U. S. Army P AGE, JOHN H ., JR., ' 97, Lieut. Col. , U. S. Army P AGE, PHILIP S., ' 14, Chief Q. M., U.S. Naval Aviat ion P ARKE R, JOHN M., ' 17, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army P AR SONS, PAUL S. , '18, Sergeant, U.S. Army PARTRIDGE, IRVING E ., JR., ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army PAULSE N, DAVID F ., ' 16, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Army PEASLEE, ARTHUR F ., ' 13, Lieut. Jr . Gr. , U.S. Navy PECK , THEODORE A., ' 15, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army Air Service P ECK, ''~' lLLIAM L. , ' 16, Corporal, U.S. Marine Corps PEDERSEN, VI CTOR C., 'l. D ., '91 , Major, U . S. Army Medical Corps PE LTON, BENJAMI 1 W., ' 17, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army PELTON, CHARLES H ., M. D ., '05, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army Medical Corps PE NN, CLARENCE I., ' 12, Sergeant, U. S. Army Medical Corps PERKINS, CLIFFORD H ., ' 16, Pri va te, U. S. Army PETTIGREW, ELLIOTT F ., ' 12, Ensign, U. S. Navy PHILLIPS, R UF US C., JR. , ' 18, 2nd Lieut. , Royal F lying Corps PHILLIPS, THOMAS M., '08, Pri va te, U.S. Marine Corps PHTSTER, LISPENARD B., '20, 2nd Lieut ., U.S. Air Ser vice PIERCE , H ALL, '20, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Arm y PIERPON T , N ATHAN M. , ' 16, Corporal, U. S. Ar my PIN TEY, SYD NE Y D ., ' 18, Corporal, U. S. Army PLATT, PERCI VAL C., '15, Sergeant, U.S. Army Medical Corps PL MMER, CH ARLES B., ' 16 .. Pri va te, U. S. Marine Corps POLLOCK, EDWARD L., ' 15, 1st Lieut., U. S. Marine Corps POLLOCK, WOOLSEY MeA. , ' 18, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Ar my PORITZ, HYMA N, ' 19, Seaman, 2nd Cl. , . S. Navy PORTER, HOWARD S., '08, Major, U.S. Army POTO, ANTHON Y L., ' 18, Pri vate, U. S. Army PRATT, JOHN H ., JR ., ' 17, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army PRESCOTT, MYRO N M. , ' 19, Private, U. S. Army PRESSEY, HERBERT E. P ., ' 19, Sergeant, U.S. Ar my PRESSEY, RI CHARD P ., ' 20, Sergeant, U.S. Army PRESSEY, WILLIAM B., ' 15, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Marine Corps P UFFER, DONALD E., '20, U. S. Navy PULF ORD, DELOS S., JR., M . D ., ' 12, 1st Lieut., . S. Am1y Medical Corps P URDY, STEWART W., '20, 1st Lieut ., U. S. Marine Corps P URVES, STUART St.C., '20, Midshipman, U.S. Navy RABIN OVITZ, ARTH UR, '17, Sergeant, U.S. Army R ACIOPPI, JOSEPH A., ' 17, Private, U. S. Army Medical Corps RAFTERY, HAROI.D B., ' 17, Ensign Cadet, U. S. Navy RAMSAY, GIBSON G., '20, Private, U.S. Army RAMSAY, PHILLIPS S., '21, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army R AMSDELL, EARL B., ' 11, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army RAN DALL, GILES D ., '08, Ensign, U. S. Navy RA DALL, LESTER, '16, Sergeant, U.S. Army R AN KIN, ALFRED E ., ' 11, 1st Lieut ., U.S . Army Air Service

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RANKIN, WILLIAM G., ' 18, U. S. Navy RASK, PETER K. , ' 16, Private, . S. Army RAU, HARRY E., ' 10, Yeoman, 2nd Cl. , U.S. avy REDDICK, JOHN F ., ' l'l, Major, U. S. Army

IVY-

REDFIELD, HENRY ., ' 19, Pri vate, U.S. Army Medical Corps REINER, WILLIAM, ' 18, Pri va te, U . S. Army REITEMEYER, JOHN R ., '21, Sergeant, 1 . S. T ank Service REYNOLDS, NOYES H ., '15, Private, U. S. Ar·my Ambul ance Service RIPLEY, EDWARD ~~V. , ' 10, Priva te, U.S. Arm y Medical Corps RIPLEY, LEWIS B. , ' 15, Corporal, U. S. T ank . erYice RIPLEY, ~YILLIAM R., ' 10, Ensign, U. S. Navy ROBERTS, HOBART J ., ' 14, Pri vate, U.S. Army ROBERTS, REV. WILLIA f B., ' 05, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army ROBERTSON, MARTIN B., ' 18, 2nd Lieut ., . S. rm y ROBir SON, EDWARD W., '96, Lieut. , . S. Anny ROBIN SON, THOMA H ., ' 16, Sergeant, ' . . Army ROCK , ALBERT N ., '17, Lieutenant, U.S. Navy ROGERS, BENJAMI N T., JR., ' 15, Captain, U. S. Army deRON GE, I ,OUIS 0., ' 14, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army RORISON, JOHN C., '20, 1st Lieut ., R oyal Air F orces ROSEN BERG , M A RICE W., 'flO, Private, U. S. Army

.1 RUCIN SKI, JOHN H ., ' 17, 2nd Lieut. , Polish Army R UCKER, RI CHMO JD, '19, Pri vate, U.S. Army RYERSON, HERBERT E ., ' 15, Captain, . S. Army SAGE, N EWELL R ., ' 15, Chief Petty Offi cer, U. S. Navy SANFORD, GEORG E A., ' 20, . S. Naval Aviation SATHER, EINER, ' 17, Pri vate, U.S. Army SAYRES, AR CHER P ., ' 13, Pri vate, Canad ian Army Medical Corps SAYRES, REV. CORTLANDT W. , ' 13, Pri va te, U. S. Army SCHAEFER, JA C.OB, l\f. D ., '17, Pri vate, . S. Army Med ical Corps SCHLIER, CHARLE L., ' 17, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army SCHMITT, ERHARDT G., '16, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Anny Air Ser vice SCI-IORTMANN, EDWARD C., ' 19, Chief Q. M., U.S . :-laval Avia ti on SCH UYLER, PHILIP VanR. , ' 17, Sergeant, C . . . Ar·my SCHWOLSKY, HARRY, '17, Priva te, U. S. Army SEG R , GERALD H ., ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army SE A Y, CHARLES T ., ' 14, Captain, U. S. Arm y

EYMO R, CHESTER R ., ' 15, Sergeant, . S. Army SHAPIRO, JOSEPH J ., ' 14, Corporal, U.S. Army Air Service SHELLEY, ISA AC B., '15, Private, U. S. Ar my Med ical Corp · SHEPARD, NEL ON A., '21, Corporal, U.S . Marine Corps SHORT, ARTHUR C., '03, Sergeant, U. S. Ar my Ambul ance Service SH ULTHIESS, MELVILLE , ' 18, Sergeant, U.S. Army SIBLEY, MARK M ., '96, Lieut. Jr . Gr. , U.S. Navy SILVERBERG , BENJAMIN, ' 19, Seaman, 2nd Class, U.S. Navy SIMONSON, CHARLE H ., '19, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army SIMONSON, L AURITZ D ., ' 15, Captain, U. S. Army SKI JNER, ROBERT K., ' 10, Sergean t, U.S. Army

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SKINNER, WILLIAM C., JR., '11, 2nd Lieut., . S. Army SLEE, JAMES N., ' 15, 'i!nd Lieut., U.S. Army SMART, CH).RLES T ., ' 00, 2nd Lieut.. U. S. Army SMEATHERS, EUGENE G., "13, Private, U. S. Army SMITH, BERTRAM L. B. , ' 15, Sergeant, U . . Marin e Corps SMITH, ETHELBERT T ., ' 13, Captain , U.S. Army Ambulance Service SMITH. HUGH M., "17, ergeant, U. S. Military Police SMITH, RICHARD M., ' 13. U. S. Merchant Marine Cor·ps SMITH, ROBERT R. , ' 15, Privat e, U. S. Army SMITH, WALTER J. T .. '20, Private, . S. Army SMITH, WILBERT A .. ' 1'i!, Lieut ., U. S. Navy SMYTH, WALTER G., "1 8, 2nrl Lieut., U. S. Army SOFIA, REV. A RLEI S, '21 , Private, U. S. Army SOMERVILLE, ERNEST T., ' 15, Chief Petty Officer, U . .. Navy SPENCER. HERBERT, '16, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army Air Ser· vice SPOFFORD, CHARLES B., JR., ' 17, 1st Lieut.. . S. Army SPORER, MAXIMILIAN, '12, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army STANSFIELD, LEON A., ' 11, 1st Lieut. , . S. Army STARK, DUDLEY ., ' 17. Ensign, U. S. Navy STARR, ROBERTS., M . D ., ' 97, Captain, . S. Army STERLING, EDM ND K. , ' 99, Colonel, U. S. Army STEVEN. CYRUS T ., '14, 2nd Lieut .. U. S. Army STEVEN, WILLIAM E ., l'i!, Private, U. S. Army STEVENS, FREDERI CK. '08, 2nd Lieut. , . S. Army STEWART, GORDO. W., ' 11 , 1st Lieut. , U. S. Arm y STEWART, MURRAY MeG., JR., ' 18, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army STITES, FRANCIS R., ' 15, Captain, U. S. Army Air Service STOECKEL, HERBERT J. , '20, Private, . S. Army Medi cal Corps STORRS, RALPH W., ' 17, Private, U . . S. Arm y Medical Corps STORY, THEODORE L.. M. D ., ' 14, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army Medical Corps STRATTON, REUEL C., ' 15, Private, l i . S. Army STRAWBRIDGE, JOHN, '95 , Captain, U. S. Army STURMAN, EVERETT N., "19, Corporal, U. S. Army SUTTON, MeW. B. E ., M. D ., ' 99, Lieut. Sr. Gr. , U. S. Navy SWEET, JOHN H . T., JR., ' 10, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army SWIFT, PAUL M ., ' 15, Asst. Pay master, . S. ravy SWIFT, SAMUELS., ' 13, 2nd Lieut. , U.S. Army TAFF, ALFRED E ., ' 20, Sergeant, U. S. Army Ambulance Corps TALBOTT, BARNETT T ., '18, Midshipman, . S. Navy THOMAS, REV. EDM ND C., '03, 1st Lieut.. U. S. Army THOMAS, ROBERT W., JR. , '13, 2nd Lieut., l . S. Army THOMPSON, HARVEY L., ' 07, Inspector, TJ . S. Army THORNE, HAROLD R. , JR., ' 16, 1st Lieut., U. S. Army TIGER, ELMER S., ' 16, Corporal, U. S. Arm,v TILTON, ARTHUR VanH., '20, Private, U. S. Army TITUS, ALLEN S., ' 01 , 'tnd Lieut., U.S. Army TOLL, ERIC 0 ., ' 19, Private, U. S. Army TOSTEVIN, LANSIKG W. , '19, Private, . •. Army

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IVY TOWNSEND, JAMES F., ' 10, Q. M ., 1st Cl. , U. S. Navy TRACY, DWIGHT W., ' 16, Maj or, U. S. Army Medical Corps TROTTER, ALTON V., '20, Pri vate, U.S. Army TRUMBULL, WALTER S., '03, Capta in, U.S. Army T OLIN, WILLIAM W., '21, U. S. Tavy T SKA. CLAREN CE D .. ' 19, 1 t Lieut., U. S. Army Air Sen · ice VALENTINE, HENRY W., ' 19, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army VANZILE, EDWARD B., '12, Corporal, . S. Army VJZNER, JOHN W., ' 16, Pri vate, . S. Ar my Medical Corps VOGEL, FREDERICK G. , ' 19, Private, U. S. Army WADLUN D, ARTHUR P . R., ' 17, Corporal, U. S. Army WAINWRIGHT, ARTH R W. , ' 16, 1st Lieut. , . S. Army WAINWRIGHT, JONATHAN M., M.D ., ' 95, Lieut. Col. , U. S. Army Medical Corps W ALKER, ARCHIBALD W., ' 14, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army WALKER, RI CHARD F., ' 14, 1st Lieut ., U.S. Army WARD, CHESTER D ., ' 13, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army WARD, ELLIOTT L., ' 13, Lieut. Jr. Gr., . S. Navy WALSH , JA 1ES D., '21, Chief Q. M., U. S. Navy WARNER, PHILIP W. , ' 17, Sergeant, U.S. Army M edical CorPs WARNER, PHILLIPS B., '20, Pri vate, U. S. Army Medical Corps WATERMA N, FRANCIS E ., '01 , Asst. Sup t . Engineer, U.S. T ransport Servi!'e WATSON, HE1 RY L ., ' 05, Lieut. Colonel, U. S. Army Air Service WEAVER, CORNELIUS W., ' 19, Pri vate. U. S. Marine Corps WEBSTER, JEROME P ., M . D., '10, 1st Lieut., . S. Arm y Medical Corps WELLING, WILLIAM C., Faculty, M aster Gunner, U. S. Army WESSELS, HARRY, ' 12, Priva te, U. S. Army WESSELS, THEODORE F. , ' U , 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army WESTPHAL, ARTH R L. , ' 19, aptain, U. S. Army WHIPPLE, CHARLES R ., ' 12, 1st I ,ieut., U. S. Army WHIPPLE, SYD NEY H ., '20, Flight Lieut., Bri tish Royal Air Forces WHITE, REV. HOWARD R ., ' 02, Private, U. S. Army WHITEHEAD, JOHN J. , JR., ' 14, 1 t Lieut. , U. S. Courier Sen ·icc WILLIAMS, FRANCIS E. , ' 13, 1st Lieut. , U.S. Army WILSON, WILLIAM N., '17, 2nd Lieut., U.S. Army WITHINGTON, CHARLES C., '15, 2nd Lieut. , U. S. Army WITHINGTON, JAMES H ., ' 18, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Army WITHINGTON, ROBERT P. , ' 13, Ensign, U. S. Navy WOODLE, BERNON T ., ' 11, Captain, U. S. Arm y WOOLLEY, FREDERICK P., ' 17, 1st Lieut. , U. S. Army WRIGHT, CLIFTON, ' 15, U. S. Army YATES, BLINN F ., ' 11, Captain, U.S. Army YERGASON, ROBERT M. , M . D ., ' 08, Captain, 11. S. Army Medical Corps YOUNG, HAROLD W., ' 11, Captai n, . S. Army YOUNG, PHILIP J ., ' 15, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Army YOUNG, VERTREES, ' 14, 2nd Lieut ., .. Army

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IVY-jfliscdlancou.s

BARBOUR, HENRY G., M. D., '06, U. S. Gas Inves tigation BASSFORD, CHARLES H., ' 10, Home Defense League BEACH, GEORGE, ' 15, American R ed Cross BIERCK. JOHN E ., ' 17, Enlisted but rejected for Physical disability BIRDSALL, PAUL H. REV., '86, Y. M. C. A. Work BLA CKMAN, ELMER B., ' 11, Corporal, Conn. Home Guard BLAKE, CHARLES E ., ' 12, Y. M. C. A. Work • BONNELL, BARTLETT B., '12, French Foreign Legion and American Red Cross BRENTON, CRANSTON, ' 99, Y. M . C. A. Work BRI TTON, PAUL H. M.P., '04, Captain, Chemical Service Section, N . A. BROWN, THOMAS C., ' 15, Enlist ed but rejected for physical disability BROWNE, REV. GEORGE I., '88, 1st Lieut., M arine Reserve Corps BRUCE, ROBERT G. , '20, Private, Tra ining Camp for Senior Di visions of R . 0. T. C. BUCK, GROSVENOR, '08, Lieut. , Minnesota Home Guard BUFFINGTON, HON. JOSEPH, '75, Speaker for the Mili tary Y. M. C. A. BURNHAM, JOHN B., ' 91 , Head of American Sportman's Magazine Fund for sending Sport-

man's Magazine to American Sold iers and Sailors BURRAGE, FRANK S., ' 95, Y. 1\L C. A. Work BURWELL, WILLIAM C., ' 06, Private, Conn . Hom e Guard BUTLER, NICHOLAS G., '21, Private, Training Camp for Senior Divisions of R . 0 . T. C. CAMPBELL, CARROLL A., '05, Private, Conn. Home Guard CARPENTER, PROF. FREDERICK W., Faculty, Associate Field Director, American Red Cross CARTER, JOHN R. , '83, Major, American Red Cross CHAMBERLAIN, CHARLES G., '07, 2nd Lieut. , Conn. Home Guard CHASE, HERBERT G., '08, Corporal, Conn. Home Guard CHASE, HORACE R., '72, Camp Secretary, Y. M. C. A. Work COHEN, HARRY, '20, Enlisted but rejected for physical disability CONOVER, REV. THOMAS A., '90, Temporary Chaplain, Y. M. C. A. Work COOK, REV. PHILIP, ' 98, Y. M . C. A. Work COWPER, PROF. FREDERICK A. G., ' 06, Director of French, Army Y. M. C. A. CRAIK, REV. CHARLES E., JR., ' 15, Y. 1\f. C. A. Work CRAMPTON, CHARLES S., ' 19, Enlisted but rejected for physical disability CUNNINGHAM, REV. GERALD A., '07, Y. M. C. A. Work DENSLOW, THEODORE N., '04, Y. M. C. A. Work ELWELL, GEORGE E., JR. , ' 09, Government Work FITZPATRICK, FRANCIS S., ' 14, Government Work FORT, HORACE, ' 14, Secretary, Y. M. C. A. Work GEORGE, REV. JAMES H., ' 05, Y. M. C. A. Work GEORGE, WILLIS B., ' 16, Enlisted but reject ed for physical disability GOODWIN, WILI.IAM B., '88, National Council of Defense GRAVES, HARMON S., ' 92, American Red Cross GREENE, JACOB H. , ' 91 , Captain, Conn. H ome Guard GRIFFITH, JOH?\T E. , JR., ' 17, Enlisted but reject ed for physical disability HALL, LEO G., ' 09, Enlisted but rejected for physical disability. Government work HART, HAROLD G., ' 07, Y. M. C. A. Work HEATER, GUY C., '13, 1st Lieut., N.Y. Home Guard

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IVY-HICKS, WILLIAM ., .JR. , '21, Training Camp for Senior Divisions of R. 0. T . C. HILLS, REV. GEORGE H. , '84. Y . M . C. A. Work HOHSFALL, MOHLAND A., '19, Enlisted hut rejected for physical disability HUGHES, REV. ISAAC W., ' 91, R ed Cross andY. M. C. A. Speaker, al o " Four-Minute Man" H NGERFORD, SIDNEY R. , ' 17, Enlisted but rejected for phys ical disability JEFFERSO~, LOUIS F., ' 15, Private, Conn. Hom e Guard JOBE, REV. SAMUEL H., '93, Private, Mass. Home Guard JOHNSON, FRANK E ., '84, Y. M . C. A. Work KIMBALL, HEV. NORMAN C., ' 07, War R elief Work KNOWLTON, ARCHER E ., ' 10, Government Work LANGDON, REV. GEORGE F ., ' 96, Pri vat e, N. Y. Home Guard LEVIN, BENJAMIN, '20 , Private, Training Camp for Senior Divisions of R . 0 . T. C. LITTELL, ELTON G. , M. D., ' 99, Captain, Am erican R ed Cros LUDWIG, EDWARD W. , ' 1.5. Enlisted but rejected for physical disability LYON, JOHN W., ' 20, Enlisted but rejected for physical disability MALLORY, ROLAND H., ' 92, Y . M. C. A. Work McCOOK, JOHX B., M . D. , ' 90, American R ed Cross McGANN, REV. JOHN M. , ' 95, Y. M. C. A. Work MEREDITH, REV. FREDERICK C., ' 05 . Y . M . C. A. Work MERRITT, LUCIUS A. , JR. , ' 10, Pri vate, Mass. Home Guard MIEL, REV. ERNEST DeF., D. D ., '88, American R ed Cross MILLER, SID 1EY T., ' R5 . Director of the Am er·ican R ed Cross for the State of Michigan MOORE, REV . JAMES A. G. , ' 14, Y. M. C. A. Work MORGAN, BAYARD Q., '04, War Work MORRISON, PALMER R. , ' 9-t, Captain , American R eel Cross NEWTON, REV. EDWARD P ., '81, Pri vate, 1 ew York Horne Guard NILES, EDWARD C., '87, Government Work OLCOTT, WILLIAM T ., ' 96. Corporal, Conn. Horn e Gua rd PADDOCK, RT. REV. ROBERT L., ' 94, Y. M . C. A. Work PECK, CARLOS C., '01, Private, Conn. Horne Guard PECK, REV. THEODORE M., '80, Conn. Horne Guard PELTON. HEKRY H ., M.D. , '93, 1st Lieut., New York Home Guarrl REES, HARRY K. , ' 11 , Okla. Home Guard REICHARD, JOHN D ., M . D. , ' 10, Government Work REILAND, REV. KARL, '97, Y. M. C. A. Work . RICH, REV . ERNEST A., ' 99, Civi lian Chaplai n, War Commission of the Episcopal Church ROEBLING, PA T., ' 17, Sergeant, Enlisted but discharged on accou nt of ill health SA 1FOR'D, REV . EDGAR L. , '84, Y . M . C. A. Work SAUNDERS, GEORGE L ., · ~w. Training Camp for Senior Divisions of 1l. 0 . T. C. SCHUTZ, WALTERS., ' 94, Y. M. C. A. Work SHANKLIN, REV. WILLIAM A., D. D ., ' 10, Y. M. C. A. Work

LATTERY, HAROLD T. , '21, Training Camp for Senior Divisions of R. 0 . T . C. SMART, JOHN H., ' 95, S. A. T . C. at Harvard Univers ity SMEATHERS, RALPH E ., '19, Private, Conn . Home Guard

MITH, THOMAS B .• M. D., ' 91, Captain, Ma . Sta te Guard SPITZ, J,EO (RABBI), ' 15, J ewish Welfare Boarrl SPRENGER, WILLIAM E. , '20, Y. l\1. C. A. Wor·k STIRES, REV . ERKEST M., '01, Y . M. C. A. Work

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IVY -SWAN, HORA CE C., M.D., Faculty, Commanda nt, American Red Cross Sanita ry Trai ning

D etachment of H artford THURSTON, RT. REV. THEODORE P ., D . D ., '91, Civili an Chaplain TOWNSEND, JOHN H ., JR. , ' 16, American R ed Cross T ULL, HERMAN E., '97, Pa. H ome Guard VEITCH, JAMES R ., ·os, Government Work VIBBERT, AUBREY D ., '99, Corporal , New York Guard WALKER, REV. JOHN W., ' 02, Clergy R eserve Corps WARTMAN, GEORGE H ., '08, Captain , American R ed Cross WEDGE, ALFRED H ., '95, New York Guard WILLARD, DAVID, ' 95, Captain, American R ed Cross WILSON, REV. H UGH D., ' 01 , Y . M. C. A. Work WOJ,FE, RALPH R. , '08, Y. M. C. A. Work WOODWARD , RAYMOND W., ' 14, Government Work WRISLEY, GERALD M ., '08, Y. M . C. A. Work WYNKOOP, AUGl STUS T ., ' 01, American R ed Cross ZIPP, CLARENCE S., ' 11 , R . 0 . T. C.

QCitations WILLIAM E. BARNETT-(1915)- Captain and Acting Major of the 1st Battalion, 104th

Infantry, 26th Di vision, American E. F. , France. Captain Barnett \vas awarded the French War Cross for gallantry at Apt·emont Wood about April 28, 1918, and also for gall ant and meritorious conduct under fire in the battle of Seicheprey. H e is one of the very few offi cers or men either, wbo have survived tbe war, of the origi nal men of t he 104tb Infa ntry , and up to the signing of the Armistice, h e had escaped wounds of any kind, though he was in the thick of the fighting at Seicheprey, Chemin des D a mes, Chateau Thierry, St. Mihiel a nd finally at Argonne F orest, a t a ll times at the head of hi s pl atoon or company, and now wears the Croix de Guerre, with star, and has had two citations recently.

JAMES E. BRESLIN- (1 919)-Second Lieutenant, Co. A, l6Rth Infantry, 48th Di vis ion . Awarded Distin guis hed Service Cross some time in January, 1919.

WALTON S. DANKER- (1897)- Deceased. Chapl ain and Captain of the 104th Infantry. Chaplain Danker was awarded the Croix de Guerre and decorated by the General Command­ing the French Army Corps, with which his regiment was serving. On June 16, 1918, Chap­lain D anker was wounded by hostile shell fire at the station and died at Evacuation H os. No. 1, on June 18, 1918. Th e Chaplain was highl y regarded by both offi cers a nd men of his Regiment and his loss keenly felt . H e was awarded t he Croix de Guerre on April 28, 1918, and cited for bravery and spirit of sacrifice and devotion in cari ng for the sick a nd wounded.

FRAN CIS W. ELDER-(1916)-Mr. Elder has received a citation for a Croix de Guerre for extraordinary bravery in rescuing in his ambulance under heavy fire four wounded French­men. In carryi ng out this act of bravery he was himself wounded in the ri ght leg by a piece of high explosive shell. He returned to the United States recently and is now a patient in U.S. General H ospital No. 2, Fort McHenry, Maryland.

ROBERT V. K. HARlUS-(1918)-Second Lieutenant, 306th Brigade Tank Corps, U . S. Infan­try has been cited for bravery by the French Government. This is the t hird time that he bas received a citation for bravery. He received the Croix de Guerre for distinguished service at "Shrapnel Valley." Last May Lieut. Harris was wounded and gassed at the same time a nd confined to a hospital for several weeks. In October he was cited for bravery at Montfaucon.

ETHELBERT W. LOVE- (1920)- S. S. U. 658, Convois Automobiles , B. C. M., American E. F ., awarded French War Cross April 3, 1918.

ETHELBERT T. SMITH-(1913)-Captain , Commanding Section 537, U. S. Army Ambulance Corps with Italian Army. Captain Smith has been recommended for decoration and received Wat· Cross on January 4th for special bra,·er,v under fire in the action of October 24-28th, 1918. During the two days' terrific fighting on that front during the latter p art of October, with only twelve ambulances at his command , he rescued 2,000 wounded under circumstances of extreme peril. It is reported thnt, although he took ab olutely no precautions for his own safety, he escaped uninjured.

JOHN S. KRAMER- (1917)- I?irst Lieutenant, Battalion Intelligence Officer, 103rd U. S. Infantry . Wounded July 20, 1918, at Chateau Thierry. Twice mentioned in orders for bravery.

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IVY -11\istinguisbeb ~erbiet (!Crosses

JOH:"'" H . PRATT, JR.-(1917)-First Lieutenant, Supply Co., 47th Infantry, 4th Di vision. Lieut. Pratt wa awarded th e Distinguished Service Cross for bravery under fire a nd extra­ordinary heroism in action near Bazocbe, France, August 7-8, 1918. Lieut. Pratt was un­tiring a nd fearl ess at all times in performance of his du t ies as liason officer. Under heavy fire he made three exceptionally hazardous trips with messages of vital importance, when other means of communication had fail ed, volunteering for this service.

EDM ND R. HAMPSON-(1918)-Co. B, JOist Machine G. Battalion, 26th Division. Mr. Hampson was awarded the Distinguished e rvice Cross about Oct. 12th. He was severe ly wounded in action near Trugny, France, Jul y 22, a nd despite his wounds made three trips to a dressing station with wounded soldi l'rs. A shel l exploded four feet in front of the car he was driving, wounding him in 10 pl ace . H e continuerl at his work until the loss of blood and pain caused him to collapse. For some time be was a motorcycle dispatb rider and rode more than 8,000 miles on this duty. H e arrived in America on J a nua ry Srd and is now at the Cam p M erritt 1-lo pita! a nd has alm ost recovered from his wounds.

CHARLES T . SENAY-(1914)-Capta in, Co. C, 28th U.S. Infantry. Awarded the Dist inguish­ed serviC'e cross for ext raordinary heroism in ac tion near Floisy, south of Soissons, France, July 19, 1918. H e displayed inspirin g courage a nd leadership und er fire, during the capture of Fl oisy a nd while reorganizing units and repelling counter-attacks.

ARTHUR L ' 'VESTPHAL-(1919)-Captain, 7th Infa ntry. Captain Westphal bas been re-co mmended for a distinguished service medal for heroic conduct in battle.

JEROME P . WEBSTER- (19'10) - First Lieutenant, 1st Battalion. 80th En gineers. Cited for Croix de Guerre for " devotion and courage'' in re cuing and reviving Frenchmen.

JAIRUS A. MOORE-(1897)-Colonel, Coa t Artillery. Received divisional citation J an. 6, 1919.

•ounbeb JAMES E . BRESLI N, ' 18, 2nd Lieut. WILLIAM vY. BUR CH , ' 11. Wounded July 25 , 1918. LEWTS G. CARPENTER, '09. Captain 340th F. A. , 89th Di vision. About Oct. 1918. EDMUN D R . HXMPSON, ' 18. Wounded July 22nd, 1918. R. V. K. HARRIS, ' 18. 2nd Lieut. , T ank Corps, 306th Brigadt>. JOHNS. KRAMER, ' 17. 1st Lieut. , 103rd In!. Wounded July 20, 1918-Chateau Tl:tierry. STANLEY H. LEEKE, ' 19. Corporal, lOl st Machine Gun Battalion. Wounded about Nov. 1,

1918. RICHARD L . MAXO , ' 16. Wounded in arm and thigh, Oct. 191 8. ANSON T . M cCOOK, ' 02 . Captain. Wounded in the arm. PHILIP J. M cCOOK, Major. Wounded Nov. 6, 1918. GEORGE E. MERCER. ' 18. Pri vate 101 t Machine Gun Battalion. Gassed Nov. 1, 1918.

Wounded in a rm by shell fragment. NATHAN M. PIERPONT, ' 16. Private, 65th Inf. Severely wounded Dec. 1917. SIDNEY D. PINNEY, ' 18. Corporal , JOi st M achine Gun Batta lion. HOBART J. ROBERTS, '14. Priva te, Canadia n Army. Severely wounded. CHARLES T. SENAY, '14. Capt. Co. C, 28th Inf. Wounded Oct. 1918. EVERETT N. STURMAN, ' 19. Co. C, lOlst M achine Gun Battalion. Gassed Nov. 1, 1918. HAROLD B . THORNE, ' 16. 1st Lt. , 815th M. G . B . Severely wounded at Argonne. ELMER S. TIGER, ' 16. Sergeant, 101st M . G. B. Gassed in Meuse River Sector. EDWARD B. VAN ZILE, ' 12. Severely wounded in Argonne fighting. ARTHUR WADL D, ' 17. Corporal , Co. B, 101st M. G. B . Gassed in second Battle of the

Marne. ARTHUR L. WESTPHAL, ' 19. Capta in. SIDNEY WHIPPLE, '20. Lt. Royal Flying Corps. Severely wounded on Aug. 24.

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IVY -mo mtinitp's 1!ltab in tbt ~teat ~at

1914-1918

* * * Ye were men of Trinity. We knew you when the campus green Ye trod, nnd toyed with sophistry: Like boys, with raptu rous hearts attu.ned To ev'ry note by nature crooned. How envious Age didst grieve to see Your Song of Youth, ex ultant, free, On academic a irs marooned!

Ye lived as now we live: cared not The myster ies of life to plumb, No strange phil osophies to find, Nor thought to flower in the mind. Ye visioned ne'er the years to co me But down the present"s da~·-dream paths Rollicked, to the harvest blind.

To Alma Mater yet ye clung With such impetuous constancy As needed but a ri ghteous cause In swift defense of God-gi'en laws To quicken into fealty To home and fl ag. to liberty , And win a waiting world's applause.

* * * Ye were men of Trinity. We knew you in the happier days Before its fangs this Monster drew Full deep in Freedom' s breast to thrust. We knew you a nd ye kept the trust : As youth to manhood 's beauty grew Ye kept the faith with all ye knew And trampled e ,·il in the dust.

We knew you in those bright days past ­And then the ominous rumble came or distant storm-the a nvil blast Of Mars-and peaceful skies o'ercast With clouds begot of blackest shame. Before a crime too low for name A wakened world ·hrank back aghast.

From heights afar. with troubled eyes That strove to read such mysteries, Ye watched th ' ensanguined struggle go And, watching. came at last to know That all our hopes, our destinies, The faith of martyred centuries, Stood threatened by a brutish foe.

So rang the clarion call to arms Across the seas incarnadine From Flanders ' fields of pain, We saw your strong hearts pulse again, Your eyes with fiery fervor s hin e, Your spirits eager leap to meet The chall enge a nd avenge the slain.

161

With heads held high in lof ty pride And arms up raised impulsively, We watched you swi ng a long tbe tmil That led to freedom' s Holy Grail­Where glory waits, a nd ignomy F or a ll who put the faith to shame * * * Wh ere D eath forever doth prevail.

* * Ye were men of Trinitv. We knew yo u when ye first beheld The crimsoned shores of wounded France \-"'11ith eyes that over-reached the hill ;. Some fl a h of wars grim face to catch As blew on winds of ci rcumstances; Some foretaste of that venture great From obdurate destiny to snatch.

We saw you catch the wav' ring Rag From those whom battle's st1·ess had bowed. Ye took yot11· stand like Chri stian men. * * * Souls unfettered saw we then That to1·e aside the myst ic shroud or days undawned, a nd soared with proud White eagle wings beyond our ken.

H ere where the carnal fires blazed bright And all the faces of the dead Tra nsfigured with a holy light, The courage born of Truth a nd Ri ght Your bodies cast, full sanctified , To ste m the devasting tide or evil and tyrannic might.

* * * So ye died. Like unto Him Y e made the sac1·ifi ce supre me. * * *No more ye know these ivied ways­Yet birds their anthems sweeter raise And a ll things round us sweeter see m : Of blest Tomorrows ou rs to drea m B ecause ye gave of your Todays.

* * * Ye were men of Trinity. Brief hours ago Beneath the Elms The ca mpus green ye happy trod And now * * ye lie Beneath the sod. But tho' fore'er your hearts be still ed , Your foots teps hushed , your dear lips sealed, Your souls-Triumphant, glorified-Onward march to God.

CORP. THOMAS G. BROWN, '13 Cobern, Rhenish Pruss ia,

Christmas Day, 1918.

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BooK NINE

· jl MISCELLANrouc:Jl

~ ~ ·

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SUNDAY MORNING In Front of Northam Towers

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IVY /

<teommencement ~eek, 3f une, 1918 Owing to the a bsence of many men engaged in National Service the customary events of

Com~encement \'\leek were conducted in a somewh at different manner than in former years. In spite of this change, the occasion was characterized by much brilliance and interest . For th e cust omary Class D ay progra m was substituted one which related a lmost entirely to war. Dr. J. J . M cCook gave an address upon the Civil W ar. This address coming as it did from a man who h ad actually participated in th a t struggle was very interesting and instructive. The causes and general events of the war were graphically outlined by him . The Spanish ' 'Var was trea ted in an address by the R ev . Edward S. Travers of the class of 1898. H e la id specia l emphasis on the pa rt pl ayed by Trinity in that war, giving a list of the Trinity men engaged in it. In an address entitled " Th e Present \Var," ' the Hon . La wson Purdy, ' 84 spoke of the Great \Var, and the part taken by the alumni a nd undergraduates of the college. Th e class poem, "America's Com mencemen t ," written by Prof. Odell Shepard was unusuall y interesting and appropri ate.

On the moming of S und ay , June 16, 1918, a memorable event took pl ace on the cam pus of Trinity College. In front of Northam Towers five th ousand peopl e assembled and joined reverentl y in a n open-air religious servi ce conducted by Bishop Acheson, Suffragan of Connecticut. The service was a shortened for m of Morning Prayer, interspersed with pa triotic hymns. At the conclusion o£ th e ser vice the pres iden t of the college presented Colonel Theodore R oosevelt, who addressed the congregation.

Th ose who were present that Sunday morning will never forget the impress iveness of the situa tion. Roosevelt in his cha rac teri sti c manner, with his characteristic gest ures, and character­istic phraseology held his a udien ce for more than an hour·. The frequent appl ause gave evidence of the appreciat ion and respect which the peopl e felt for this great man. His opening words were altogether characteristic of him . " Pres ident Luther, Bi shop Acheson, men and women of Conn ecticut, my fri ends a nd my fellow Amer·icans, - and no man li ving in the United States whom I cannot call a fellow American is a fri end of mine. No one could fa il to be moved and touched by such a greeting as you afford me, and by the opportunity und er these surroundings to address such an audience; and above all , I am glad to come here as a special guest of President Luther a nd to be introduced by him in wor·ds which, howeYer ill deserved, I would like my chil­dren and grandchildren to think were deser ved. President Luther see ms to me, a nd has long seemed t o me, to just about realize in his life what an American citizen should be, along a great many lines. F or example, he shows by his life that we can in this country approach the world democratic ideal of a n absolute democracy of the soul , coupled with the finest cultivation of the mind and sp irit." '

R oosevelt' s text for the morning was the well known verse from I Kings: " Let not him that girdeth on his harness boas t himsell as he that putte th it off ." In the development of his text he said: " There is a good deal about the system of censorship t hat we have es tablished which has an unpl easant suggestion,-but there is one line a long which I wish the c~nsorship could be extended. I wish it were poss ible to censor a ll boasting, and devote ourselves to achievement, not to improper exaggeration of what we have done, and above all not to grandil oquent s tatements of wh a t we are going to do.- Let us quit boas ting until we have done something to boast of. "

In the afternoon there was a brief college sing in the Union. The Baccalaureate Sermon was deli vered in Chr·ist Church in the evening by Dr. K arl R eiland, rec tor of St. George's Church, New York . His t ex t was " \<\' ha t shall a man gi,·e in exchange for his soul?'"

On the next day took place the Nin ety-second Commencement of Tr·inity Coll ege. The seats of those men of the class of 1918 who would have graduated, ha d th ey not been engaged in the service, were draped with flags. Th e customa ry orations by the grad uating men were omitted, save for the salutatory and valedictory addresses. The principal address of the morning

165

/

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IV Y-was given by George Wharton P epper. Dr. P epper's bri ll iancy and force as a speaker were much in evidence. H e spoke of the exceptional ad van tage and opportunit ies open to modern college graduates, and the great need of " polite, effi cient, a nd la w-abiding citizens in this country." T o ten members of the class of 1918 was conferred t he degree of Bachelor of Arts; to eight mem­bers, the degree of Bachelor of cience. M as ter of Arts was conferred upon th ree, and Master of Science upon one. Twelve nota ble men of this country received h onorary degrees. Trinity is proud to have been able to confer upon Theodore Roo evelt the degree of Doctor of Science. It was indeed a p ri vi lege to have ba d the opportunity to pay our las t respects to this grea t a nd noble man.

The degrees conferred were as follows :

jSacbelor of ~rts . in <IJ:ourse T o ten members of the Class of 191 8.

jSacbelor of ~cience , in <IJ:ourse T o eight members of the Class of 191 8.

jSacbelor of ~rts , ab eunbem Fra nk J oseph Achatz, Lieutenant U. S. A.

jlflaster of ~rt~ . in <IJ:ourse Elbert Cha rles Cole, Connecticut, B.A. 191 5, Middlebury College. J a mes M adison Love Cooley, Ohio, of the Class of 1917. E a rle Winthrop Darro \\·, Connecticut, B .D. 1908. Newton Theological Se min ary.

jlflaster of ~cience , in <IJ:ourse Charles By ron Spofford , Jr ., N ew H a mps hire, of t he Class of 1917.

jSacbelor of ~usic . ~onoris <IJ:ausa Will ia m Butl er D avis, of Middletown, Connecticut.

jlflaster of ~rts . ~onoris <IJ:ausa N atha niel Hor ton Batchelder, of Windsor, Conn ecticut . M eigs H aywood Whaples, of H a rtford , Connecticut.

J:\octor of ~cience, ~onoris <IJ:ausa Russell J ordan Coles, of Dmwille, \'irgini a . George hiras, III, of Washington, D . C . Theodore R ooseYel t , of Oys ter Bay, N . Y.

l!)octor of <IJ:anon 1Law. j!Jonoris <IJ:ausa George Wh arton P epper, of Philadelphi a, P ennsy lvania.

J:\octor of 1Lab:l5, ~onoris <IJ:ausa J ohn Pierpont M organ, of New York City. Charl es Lathrop P ack, of Lakewood, Iew J ersey.

J:\octor of J:\ibinit!'. ~onoris <IJ:ausa The R ev. Edward Scofi eld Tra vers, of Pittsburgh, P ennsylvania. The Rev. Karl R eil and, of N ew York City. The Rt. R ev. Granville Hudson Sherwood, of Springfi eld, Illinois. The Rt. R ev. P aul M atthews, of Trenton, New J ersey.

166

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v ~inetp=$econb (!Commencement of

mrinitp (!College ~rogram of tbe Meeh

jfril:Jap, 3June 14

..

6:30P.M. Annual Meeting of the Board of Fellows, at the H artford Club, Pmspect Street.

8:00 P. M. Annual Meeting of the Corporation. 8:30P.M. Fraternity Reunions.

9:1.5 A.M. 9:30A.M.

10 :00 A.M. 12:00 M.

1:00 P .M.

3:00P.M. 5:00P.M. 7:00P.M.

~aturl:Jap, jJune 15 ALUMNI AND CLASS DAY

Prayers in the Chapel. Annual Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa in the History Room. Meeting of the Corporation in Williams Memorial. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association in Alumni H all. Luncheon for the Trustees, Alumni, and friends of the College in

Gymnasium. Class Day Exercises on the Campus. Meeting of the Tripod in Tripod Room, Seabury H all. Cla R eunions and R eunion of the Class of " 1823."

~unl:Jap, 3June 16 9 :30 A. M. Holy Communion in the Chapel.

11 :00 A. M. Open Air Service on the Campu with address by the Honorable Theodore Roosevelt.

3:00P.M. to 5:00P.M. Fraternity Houses open to Alumni and Visitors. 5:00 P. M. College Sing led by the Glee Club. 7:45P.M. Evening Prayer in Christ Church with Baccalaureate Sermon.

m onl:Jap, 3June 17 COMMENCEMENT DAY

D :15 A. M . Morning Prayer in the Chapel. 10 :00 A.M. Academic Procession form in front of Northam Towers for the

Commencement Exercises. 10 :30 A. M. Ninety-Second Commencement in Alumni Hall. 3:00P.M. to 4:00P.M. Informal Reception by Pre ident and Mrs. Luther

in the President's Hou e. 9:30P.M. Senior As embly in Alumni Hall.

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IVY-mrtnttp ~olltgt ~attfotb , ~onnecticut

Ninety- econd Annual Commencement, Alumni Hall, J une 17, 1918

®tber of ~xercises

Salutatory . Announcement of Prizes Conferring of Degrees, in Course Valedictory Address

Address

Conferring of Honorary Degrees Doxology Benediction

Music

Henry Samuel Beers, Connecticut

Abraham Meyer Si lverman, Connecticut Music

George Wharton Pepper, D. C. L., LL.D. Music

~lass 1!\ap <!Exercises of tbe ~lass of 1918

Saturday, June Fifteenth

President's Address

Class History Address, "Civil War"

Presentation of Uhletic Awards

Address, "Spanish American War"

tltogram Walter G. Smyth, New York

Music William Grime, Cheshire, Conn.

D r. J. J. McCook, M.A., D.D., LL.D., '63 Music

President Luther Music

Rev. Edward S. T ravers, '98, Rector of Trinity Church, Pitt burg, Penn. Class Poem, "America's Commencement" Written by Prof. Odell Shephard

Read by Henry Samuel Beers Music

Address, " The Present War" Hon. Lawson Purdy, LL.D., '84, President of the Charity Organization Society, N.Y. City

"'1 eatb the Elms"

16R

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9 IV Y ~onors anb ~rt~es

..1for tbe ~ear 1918

Valedictorian :- Abraham Meyer Silverman Salutatorian:- Henry Samuel Bem·s

Tuttle Prize Essay First Prize: Walter G. Smyth Subject: "International Ideals"

-

Committee of Award: Charles B. Cook and Clarence E. Whitney, both of Hartford

Goodwin Greek Prizes: (Not awarded)

Prizes in History and Political Science First Prize: Albert Erif'sson Haase Subject: "Abraham Lincoln, Commander-in-Chief of the Union Army" Second Prize: (Not awarded) Committee of Award: Albert C. Bates, Secretary of the ConnectiC'ut His­

torical Society

The Alumni Prizes in English Composition First Prize: Albert Ericsson Haase Second Prize: Joseph Wurts Stansfield Third Prize: Benjamin Silverberg Honorable ~Mention: Martin Brown Robertson Committee of Award: Professor Richard Burton, of the University of

Minnesota

The Frank W. Whitlock Prizes First Prize : Joseph Wurts Stansfield Second Prize : Martin Brown Robertson Committee of Award: John F. Forward, Esquire, Doctor John T. Sweet,

Jr., and Karl Philip Morba, E quire

The Douglas Prize: (Not awarded)

The Holland Scholarships for the Year 1918-19 In the Senior Class: Evald Laurids Skau In the Junior Class: George Kelodny In the Sophomore Class: William James Cahill

169

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HONORARII (indicated by affixing their degrees) TRUSTEES A JD G ESTS OF TRINITY COLLEGE

Photographed at the Entrance to Williams Memorial

Top, Left to right- Fl avel S. Luther ; Colonel Th eodore R oosevelt, Sc . D .; Russell Jordan Coles, Sc.D.; Bishop Paul Matthews, D. D .; George Wh arton P epper, D.C.L. ; J ohn Pierpont Morgan, LL.D.

Second row-George Shiras, III., Sc.D.; Charl es La tht·op P ack, LL.D .; K a rl Reil and, D .D.; Bishop Granville Hudson Sherwood, D.D. ; Edwa rd Schofield TraYers, D.D .

Others, in Two Rows, in Order-Charles A. Johnson ; W. S. Hubbard ; N. H . Batchelder, f.A .. ; Charles G. Wood ward; William B. Davis, Mus. B.; P rank L . Wilcox; Edgnr P . Water­

man ; George D. H owell ; Willia m G . .i\lather; M eigs H. Wha ples, :\f.A.; Admiral Willia m S. Cowles; Willia m S. Cogswell ; Willi a m E . C urtis; :\. S. Murray, Jr .; Shiras Morris; J ohn P . Elton, J osepb Buffington.

170

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IVY-eptimi

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 Ro ·ebaugh, '11 Allen Northey Jones, '17 Abraham Meyer Silverman, '18

171

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~res enter

W. H. Benjamin, '57

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

C. E. Woodman, '73

R. M . Edwards, '74

IVY-

mbe 1Ltmon ~qutt?tr

'57

'59 Inveniam viam aut jacimn

'61 Per aspera ad astra

'63 N e tentes aut prefice

'65 Facta non verba

'68 Semper crescens

'69 Numquam non paratus

'71 Nulla vestigia retrorswn

'73

'74

172

l\eceibet

G. R . Hallam, '59

W. S. Cogswell, '61

N. B. Dayton, '63

C. W. Munro, '65

Robert Shaw, '68

E . V. B. Kissam, '69

D. P . Cotton, '71

F. 0. Grannis, '73

C. E. Craik, '74

H. V. Rutherford, '76

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9 C. E. Moore, '76

J. D. Hills, '7S

W. R. Leaken, 'SO

A. P. Burgwin, 'S2

A. D. Neeley, 'S5

A. H. Anderson, 'S7

E. C. Johnson, II, 'SS

T. A. Conover, '90

G. Hall, '92

J. W. Edgerton, '94

E. P. Hamlin, '95

VY -'76

I nservit honori '7S

'SO

'S2 Respice finem

'S5 Duris non frangi

'S7 M ulta in dies addiscentes

'SS Per ang11sta ad augusta

'90 Sernper ayens aliquid

'92

'94 A gere pro virib118

'95 En avant!

'96 (Keepers of the Lemon Squeezer)

' 97

'99 Fortier, fidel iter, f eliciter

'01 N ovus ordo saeclorum

'04

'06

'OS

'10

'11

'14

'15

'16

'1S

'20

173

W. C. Blackmer, '7S

D. L. Fleming, 'SO

A. P. Burgwin, 'S2

S. H. Giesy, 'S5

G. S. Waters, 'S7

E. C. Johnson, II, 'SS

E. McP. McCook, '90

I. D. Russell, '92

F. F. Johnson, '94

J. trawbridge, '95

C. E. Cogs:well, '97

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IVY -jfllemorablt 11\att~ in j!}i~torp

Feb. 29. Bob Parke played a hymn in chapel which most of the choir knew.

April 1. It was rumored that a news item was discovered in the last issue of the Tripod, hidden between several ads.

April 2. Rumor denied. April 5. Registrar posts new office hours.

8:07 to 8:09 (A.M. or P.M. at my conven ience). Mondays, Wednesdays and August, if I am here. May be seen at any time on Feb. 29th or April 31st.

April 6. Registrar seen in his office during office hours, but door was locked.

January 18. Only eleven men fell asleep in Economics.

March 17. Dr. McCook kept up in the race while saying the creed in chapel this morning.

A Freshman, when rebuked for displaying haber­dashery whose acoustic properties were too intense for his lowly position in the scale of evolutionary development, was heard to remark with a wisdom beyond his years, " Blessed he the tie that binds!"

Prof. "The child of my brain will find a place among the world's greatest master­pieces!"

'22. "I'll say it belongs in an orphan asylum."

PLATONIC WIT Soapy. "Why is J.P. Morgan like Pharo's

daughter?" '20. " They both took advantage of the

rushes on the bank."

"Do you know Annette Kellerman?" "Sure, I saw a lot of her last summer." "So did I, I saw "A Daughter of the Gods."

174

. ' ~ fatnous St\'\'"

"vamous

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IVY ~ ons ~sinorum

Once there lived in a far coun tr,v a race of men known as estudia ntes. A ha rd working, industt·ious lot were they, content to mind their o11·n afl'ait·s, troubling no one and asking only that they, too, be not dist lll'bed.

Now there dwelt in the same land a hideous taskmaster, whose delight it was to assign great and well-nigh imposs ible tasks for his subj ects to perform and woe, indeed, to th e luckless wight who failed in th e performance of a ny of these!

But a ll their ex iste nce wa not hopeless. Nay, one ci rcumstance there was which tended to a ll e,·iate their great suffct·ing. Vor in that self same land was also a remarkable contriva nce, built up in ages long past by some obscure and little thanked bell(•factor of he race.

This wonderful structure was as puzzling as it wa usefuL Indeed, the inhabitants of the land were at a loss even for a suitable name for the instrument; the taskmaster irately speaki ng of it as the "pons asi norum" wherea the somewh at enigmatical appelation gi,·en it by the populace was "tr ot.'' However, call it what you will , the fact of the matter is that with it a ll assignments of the taskmaste r were made easy; without it thl'y were impossible of execution.

Xow the task master was well a11·at·e of the value set upon this mighty aid by the estudiantes, and it irked him not a little. So much , in fact, t hat it was his 11·ont to lie awake in the night churn­ing his mind. and gnas hing his t eeth and sc hemin g how be might outwit the fri end of his se rfs. Ma ny were his e fforts, e\'en to dri ,·in g it from the kingdom, to rid himself of the hindrance to his plans. but all to no avaiL

Bu t came the day when in a s uper b moment of wickedne ·s, he concci ,·cd a task and set it be­fore the estuid a ntes whi ch , de pite the fact that he could not t·id himself of the tt·ot, made its efforts useless, as it was unable to cope with the new ass ignment. For the a uthor, through a terrible overaight, had omitted to translate that portion.

Then. indeed, was anguis h in that fait· land. l\Tany fled the country; so me feigned illness; and the ot he t·s were in despair.

Th e mom i.ng came. The unwillin g subjects came before the master who, in ghoulish glee s mil ed upon th em, enjoying in ad vance their discom fiture. And on that day, ind eed many suc­cumbed to him. And the following day was it the same. And on the next even as the day before, until it appeared that there were to be none left of that race called estudia ntes.

All, however, was not lost. For among the lower people dwelt one ri ch in lea rning, and with und erstanding in many occult sc iences yea, even that of fathoming the mystet·y of the letter on the back of the books in the library. ~ow this philanthropic youth begat him st raight to the library (it being neady his turn to be called upon) and there did search mightily among dusty tomes, until , lo, what was hi delight, plea ure, surprise, indeed, wh at not, upon finding a large book wherein was a translation of the very portion the master had o confiden t ly deemed untranslatable! And the noble youth straigh t way did inform a ll that wNe left of his remm·kable discovery whereat a ll rejoiced exceed ingly. The taskmaster drew his <' loak over his face murmuring, " H ah! foiled again! "

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~· 19 IVY-

A student there was and he combed his hair, (Even as you and I! )

With a comb and a brush he patted it there, He looked in the mirror and saw it was fair And whispered "I wonder if she can care!"

(Even as you and I. )

Oh the hours we waste and the sweets we taste, And the work of our heart and hand

Are the result of the things we do not know (And now we know didn' t want to know)

And do not understand.

A student there was and a dollar he spent, (Even as you and I ) .

They went to the theatre with good intent (Be sure that dollar was not misspent!) But a student must follow his natural bent.

(Even as you and I. )

Oh the time he lost and the money he lost And the studying he had planned

Belong to the girl he took to the show (But to be sure, the professors don't know)

And nobody understands.

Examinations ~arne for this student bright (Just as to you and I! )

He studied all day, he studied all night, He nearly died from hideous fright,_ He almost lost his blessed eyesight,

(Even as you and I! )

Oh it wasn't the work and it wasn't the hell Of the terrible hours he spent.

'Twas the finding out, and he did find out, (when all the exams were o'er)

That he'd flunked every one and his "dear little girl" That evening showed hirn the door!

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~I 19 IVY-

Pskov Kharkof Wloclawek Zglerz Czenstochowa Mlawa Yaraslav k . Breshkovshaya Pritzstalvk . Crcwtndkszgqzklqhxvitch

~aprtlapapecba

A Tragedy in Four Murders

(From the Russian)

11Bramatis ~ersonae

ACT !- June 1917

An Agitator A Raticide

A Bolshevist A Minneshevist

An Anarchist A Super-ideali st

A Liberal An I. W. W.

A Socialist A Nihilist

Scene: An attic room. Rude couch, broken chairs, warped washstand with cracked pitcher and washbowl; room lighted by candle tuck in neck of vodka bottle. Kharkof discovered shaving and cursing to himself. One side of his face is shaved, the other is covered with long bristly whiskers.

Kharkof: Saprist.i, what a dull razor! But I must endure! Ah, yes, I must endure this and more if my own dear Ru sia is to become a dwelling place safe and suitable for my great following. (Shaves awhile in ilence; cuts himself). Hah! blood! But I must endure more than this, aye far more if my bloody ends are to be realized! (Slight noise without) Hah! It is Czenstochowa! A plague on her. the misguided anarchist! She shall not live! (Enter, Czenstochowa carrying bill.)

Czenst: Kharkof, your bill for these lodgings.- (Hands Karkof the bill). Khark: A plague on you and your bills! You shall not live! (Slashes her

throat with razor. Czenst. screams, die ) . Curtain.

ACT II- A few moments later Scene: Street before the Kremlin. Windows broken, masonry shattered

and flecked with bullet marks, machine guns on adjacent roofs, drunken oldiers lying about. Mlawa is cleaning the street with a coarse broom. Enter Bresh­kovskaya, carrying a fine painting.

Breshk: (to l\1lawa) Well, my fine lady, you have come to this, have you? Mlawa: Well, why not? if I hadn't I wouldn't, can't you? Breshk: Ah, but Oh, my! (laughs). Mlawa: (furious) Oh, Ah, Soho! My :fine fellow, (chokes with wrath) Enter Khark: (sti ll with razor, sees Breshk. Turns to flee).

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Breshk: (catching sight of him) Oh, what is this now! (smashes picture down over Khark's head; canvass rips through, and he has caught Khark in the picture frame). R evenge! (Drags Khark. to sewer and thrusts him down it. Khark ' voice is heard in a yell of terror, then all is still ). Exit Breshk.

ACT III- A Year Later Scene: A Russian Village. A crowd of peasants standing about, listening

with gaping mouth first to one then to another speaker. Wloclawek (the Bolshevist) stands on a rude bench fini hing his harangue.

Wloc: And bread will cost you not one cent! You will have all and more that you can eat! Every one will be rich! (the crowd goes wi ld with enthusia m).

Zglerz: (The Minneshevi t ) Every one of you, I say, will li ve like a Czar! Misery has been vanq uished! Crime, trouble, prisons, debts, taxes, sickness all, all I say, are a thing of the past if each and every one of you will take home a bottle of this wonderful household remedy-(realizes his mistake, coughs and tries to pass it over) this wonderfu l opportunity of becoming citizens of our great, new republic! (Crowd goes wi ld with enthusiasm).

Wloc: And any one opposing our happiness must be shot! (Crowd cheers but Zglerz pays no attention).

Wloc: (in louder voice) And any one, I say, who opposes us must be shot! (This time Zglerz hears, murmurs an apology, draws automatic and shoots

himself; crowd weeps). Enter, Mlawa (sees dead form of Zglerz). Mlawa: Oh, oh, my old friend, oh, my poor old friend! Who has done th i ?

(The peasants, sensing a dramatic situation point with one accord to Wloc. ) What, you ? Ah, I might have known! (grasps Zglerz's weapon and shoots Wloc. Wloc draws a paper from his pocket).

Wloc: Send thi to my mother. It is a ll I have for her to remember me by. (Dies) .

Mlawa: (examining paper) What is this? A New York Junk Dealer's License! (Turning to one of the peasants) D oes any one know where that man lives?

Peasant: (staring at her in stupid wonder): To, Madam. (Strikes her over the head with rustic flail. She scream , dies).

ACT IV- Some Months Later Scene: Riga, the docks. · A gangway is seen leading up to the deck of a

tramp steamer, bound for America. Enter, with various packages, suitcases, etc. Pskov,_ Yaraslavsk, Pritxstlvk

and other Socialists, I. W. W.'s, Liberals, Agitators, etc. They march up gang­way, discoursing with each other, forming plans for their American triumph occasionally playfully pushing one another into the icy water, shooting or stab­bing each other. Boat whistles. Pulls away from dock.

Enter, Crew. (Looks about) Hah! Th~y are gone! (Pulls out from under coat a pint of milk and a cheese sandwich; munche contentedly.

C RTAIN

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~~~~m~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I ~og l\iber ~ntbologp I ~ (With apologies to lVIr. Masters) ~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~be Vallep Where are Putty, Soapy, Prexy and Charlie? The stern of countenance, the rough of voice, The gentle man, the old man, the young man? All, all are sleeping in the valley.

One choked to death, One died in his bed, One fell off his bicycle And was cru bed beneath its wheel One ran up a telephone pole In his brand new Ford. One died from overwork. All, all are sleeping, sleeping in the valley.

Where is the Old Roman, Robert and Odell? The good, the kind, the gentle and severe? The one of merry countenance, the our one? All, all are sleeping in the valley.

One fell down the chapel stairs And broke hi neck. Another got a sore on his middle finger From marking "E's" And he died from blood-poisoning. All, all are sleeping, sleeping in the valley.

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VY jflabd JLutbet

I loved the elms that grew on the campus, · When they were in full leaf and when their branches were bare.

I loved those ivied walls and musty halls. I loved all who ever entered them, As well as all who ever went out. And I believe most of them loved me. They were all my children. They all interested me inten ely. Some were so everlastingly merry, Some, a curious few, were sad. I watched them in their youthful frivolity, I aw them grow into old men . Some fai led, some succeeded. Not one of them forgets these halls. Not one of them forgets me .

.:lftank jliabbitt f realize now that I was a learned man. I studied much and long and hard. I devoured Plato, Xenophanes, Tertaeus, Aristophanes and all the others. I imbibed their spirit of ancientness. And I wanted all others to do the same. But one of my kinsmen invented a new species of soap And gave it mine own name. And all my students called me "Soapy." Soapy! Soapy! Soapy! The hated words burned their very selves Into my heart and soul and brain Until I became a bar of soap myself. And then the students used me to wash their hands And in a short period of time I dissolved into nothingness. And Plato, Xenophanes and Tertaius, How do they live without me now? I do not know, indeed, I do not know!

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~us 1ldttnt

In my youth I ran away from home. I joined a circus, and there I learned

IVY

That all the world is governed by economics. From feeding the monkeys I learned .the law of Supply and

Demand. From observing the cats I learned that all animals love to

sleep. And then I was offered two jobs, One as a clown in the largest circus of the world, The other as a professor at Trinity College. The choice I made was the fatal mistake of my life. And now down here a shade is continually following me. It whispers and beckons to me. It is the ghost of the clown that I might have been.

~ttl)ut ~bams

It is awfully hot down here. Nothing like the cool fresh breezes of the Hill Refresh my wearied spirit now. That was a wonderfully joyous, pleasant life Compared with this. Each morning I arose near noon And wended my way to the Chapel. I became an expert in my line, Learning to drone out God's sacred service In less than fourteen minutes. • But Sundays' Ah, sweet remembrances! That was the most joyful time of all. How I delighted in my red and purple gowns! And I could sleep while another preached. But even then The very hairs of my bead were all numbered. Oh, woeful, spiteful, cursed day, When someone put a banana peel On the top chapel step! And I slipped, going bump, bumpity, bump, Down to the very bottom, And broke my blessed back.

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IVY-®bell ~beparb

Did t thou not think that black bow tie was beautiful? And that flaring red one! I was a poet, different from other men. That is why I wore them. I even wore knickerbockers and golf stockings To my so intellectual classes. Can you imagine Dr. McCook doing that? You may have snickered and miled, oh Students, But you must admit, I was brave. I enjoyed walking on the green campus, When the sun was disappearing o'er the western hill I enjoyed my huge-bowled pipe. But most of all, I liked to awe my classes, To astound them with my learning, The massiveness of my intellect, The keenness of my appreciation. I forgot that once upon a time, In the dim and distant past, I could neither write nor read, Nor understand a line of poetry.

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IVY-;u,enrp ~erhins

How unfortunate That I flunked Tom and passed Harry. But Harry had a smoother face than Tom. His hand were not so rough and grimy. I hate dirty hands. That is why I did no work Save dictate notes to my stenographer And sign my Henry Augustu . They were often mean notes, I'll admit. "'~'e regret that, owing to your present standing, We can not grant you a scholar hip." How unfortunate It must have been for the poor lad . But I had all I needed, then. A poverty stricken student was no concern of mine. And I could always smile And explaill to him why it must be o. "How unfortunate!" I would say. How unfortunate That I picked up a live wire While trying to make my door-bell ring! I did not know so little juice could kill. How unfortunate!

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9 IVY ~barlie :Rogers

They called me "Good old Charlie Rogers." I was a harmless thing. Meek and mild I walked the campus. But somehow they eemed to like me. Perhaps it was because I could remember That I too was once a boy, not very long ago. I sympathized with their seeming idleness, For I never over loved my books. I was interested in their sports, For I once enjoyed such things myself. I am very proud of that name, "Good old Charlie Rogers." Who else could boa t of such a title? In this afterlife, at least, It is worth more than all the D.D.'s, LL.D.'s, or Ph.D.'s, that Trinity ever saw.

I was born. I lived. I died. 'Nuff said.

mmilbur tltrban

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192 Qfb ~umpbtep

When another Trinity prof told me

IVY

That Napoleon was the greatest man in history, I slammed him in the jaw. Nor did he ever rise again! But they put me in their little wagon with its bell And rushed me to jail, Accused me of premeditated manslaughter, And though I talked and cussed and swore They ru bed me through a trial. The last I remember was That I was seated in a copper bottomed chair With straps about my wrists. I have always told my classes that Capital punishment is essential in America. It was the only way the old fogies could get rid of me. Do you suppose they cared whether Napoleon was great or

not? Why this was merely a typical faculty meeting.

J:)uckie ~wan

If they bad taken my advice They would have had a new gym long ago. Then the old one would not Have tumbled down upon my head. If they had taken my advice The faculty would have played on the baseball team. And then Trinity would never have been beaten. Who could beat old Johnny McCook on a bat? But no one ever took my advice, Not until they were about to die. And those poor youngsters! How I loved to get my bands on a green freshman And nearly kill him in the gym. I liked to make men work. If they had taken my advice They would all be dead by now!

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IVY-~ublime=lUbiculous

(The Author of Hog River Anthology)

They read these epitaphs with guilt-laden souls. They found their true selves in them. All men hate the truth. For the truth not only sets one free, it hurts. So they took me and tried to frighten me. They did not ucceed. They stepped on me with their dainty feet. It did not hurt. They put on spiked shoes. But they merely scratched me. They threatened to throw me out. I lau ghed and laughed and laughed! They browbeat me, they flogged me, They ground me beneath their heels, They cursed me and prayed for me. I did not mind at a ll! It was not until the whole village came to-gether And did for me as I had done for them. They wrote it, and put it in all the papers, And I dierl from morti6Pation.

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BooK TEN

JC AovERTIS~ENTS :]

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THIS BOOK is published through

the courtesy of the advertisers. In

order lo let them know their invest­

ments have been appreciated, kindly

mention the "Ivy" when

patronizing

·188

/

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TRINITY COLLEGE HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT

rr======i~ RINITY COLLEGE, under the name of Was hin gton College, received its Charter in 18~3 . The present name was adopted in 1845. Its chief founder was the Doctor Th omas Church Brownell , Bishop of Connecticut. Established mainly by Episcopalians as a contributi on to higher education, it is not a Ch urch in­stituti on in the sense of being directed by the Church. Its advantages are placed at the service of those of every creed.

The principal building is in t he English Secular Gothic style and includes J a rvis and Seab ury H a lls and Northa m T owers. At the north end of this struc­

ture has recently been erected a Library and ad ministr·ation building, the gift of the late J . P . Morgan, LL.D ., in memory of J ohn Williams, fourt h Bishop of Connecticut. With this additi on, which is in architectural ha rmony with the main edifice, the building extends more than seven hundred feet north a nd south, while the library reaches one hundred and twenty-five feet to the east , constitutin g a part of the north ide of the proposed quadrangle. It was ready for use at the opening of the academic year 1914-1 5. Outside of t he lines of this quadrangle at the south a re the Observatory, the Boardman Hall of Natu ral History, and the J ar vis Labora­tories for che mistry and for Physics. To the north of it a re the Gymnasium, houses of the Pres­ident and of Professors, and Chapter H ouses of the Fraternities. Below the College Campus to the east a nd within three minutes' walk is the spacious Athletic Field.

The courses of study which may be pursued cover a wide range of electives within t he field of Libera l Arts and in Sciences; and adequate provision is made for t hei r proper presentation.

The library conta ins 85,000 volumes and 50,000 pamphlets. Generous contributions of the Alumni are making rapid additions to its resources. A R eference R eading Room is open every day and evenin g of the week.

The J a rvis Chem ical a nd Phys ical Laboratories have an excell f'nt equipment for Elementary and Advanced work.

The Hall of Natural History conta ins the Museum, Biological Laboratories, the Psychological Laboratory, and accommodation for t he cia ses in Mathematics and in Civil Engineering.

In the year 1903-1904 a cou rse in Civi l Engineering was inaugurated and ha proved most successful in fitting students for pract ical work after graduation.

There are 'numerous schola rships providin g pecunia ry assistance for deservi ng students. The three Holland scholarships, yielding each $600 per a nnum, are awarded to the three best s tudents in the three lower classes, respecti vely. The Russell Graduate l<'ellowship of $.500 is awarded biennially in the inte res t of higher graduate study. The Mary A. T erry G raduate :Fellowship of $550 is awarded annually. Prizes to the amount of $500 are also awa rded to undergraduates for success in the work of the various departments.

For Catalogues, or information, apply to the Pres ident or to the Secretary of the Faculty.

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J. FRED BITZER, Jr. DIAMONDS AND WATCHES

JEWELRY, CLOCKS AND SILVERWARE FINE REPAIRING

Agent for the celebrated H a milton and Gruen Watches

49 PEARL STREET,

C!Calboun ~bow ~rint BIG TYPE AND

POSTER CARD PRINTERS

HARTFORD, CONN.

C!Calboun ~rt55 COMMERCIAL PRINTERS

DAN CE PROGRAMMES, Etc. Reasonable Price

DIGNAM & WALSH 356 A ylum St., H artford , Conn.

Telephone Charter 5121

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J. P. MORGAN & CO. Wall Street , Corner o£ Broad

NEW YORK

DREXEL & CO. , PHILADELPHIA Corner o[ 5th and Chestnut Streets

MORGAN. GRENFELL & CO., LONDON o. 22 Old Broad Stree t

MORGAN, HARJES & CO., PARI S 14 Place Vendome

Securities bought and old on Co mmission

F oreign Exchange, Commercial Credits Cable Transfers

Circul a r Lette rs for Tra velers, available in all pa rts or the world

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Insurance Company of North America

Philadelphia, Pa.

* * America's Oldest Company

FOUNDED 1792

Cash Capital, $4,000,000.00 Cash Assets 28,523,025.89

Surplus for Policy Holders 12,373,597.68 Losses Paid since Organization 192,518,273.33

BENJAMIN RUSH. Presid ent

JOHN 0. PLATT, First Vice-President

SHELDON CATLIN , Seconrl Vice-President

T . HOWARD WRIGHT, Secretary and Treasurer

GALLOWAY C. MORRIS, Ass istant Secreta ry

JOHN KREMER, Assistant Secretary

NEW ENGLAND DEPARTMENT, HARTFORD, CONN.

Charles E. Parker

50 STATE STREET,

MANAGER

First National Bank Building

HARTFORD, CONN.

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The Peterson Studio

847 Main Street Hartford, Connecticut

Official Photographer for 1915,1916,1917,1918,

1919 and 1920 Ivys

194

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Gaffey's Express 205 ALLYN STREET

(First D oor from Union Place) H ARTF ORD, CO TN.

~ Parcels Checked Light Trucking

Storage of Trunks

Open 7 A. M . to 9.30 P . M.

T elephone Charter 1577

Buick T,axicab Co. t<2J

DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE

LIMOUSINES AND TOURING CARS

Charter 930

195

Heublein Hotel Barber Shop

* J. H . LeDOUX, Proprietor

William H~ Post Carpet Co.

Decorators

CARPETS-R UGS-WALL PAPERS AND UPHOLSTERY

219 Asylum Street, H ARTFORD, CONN.

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The Arrow Electric Company H artjord, Connecticut

The Fidelity Trust Company

49 PEARL STREET

* FRAKK L. WIL COX, Pres.

ROBERT B. NEWELL, V.Pres. and Treas.

THOMAS A. SHANKON, Secy.

* We solicit Individual and Society

Accounts

W e Aim to Serve

State Bank and Trust Co.

795 Main Street, Hartford, Conn. Organized in 1849

Capital, $400,000.00

Surplus and Profits, $600,000.00

Banking and Trusts

Safe Deposit Vaults

LO CATED I FIRE-PROOF BUILDING

G. F. WARFIELD & CO.

Booksellers and Stationers

77 AND 79 ASYLUM STREET HARTFORD, CONN.

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ESTABLISHED 1818

,

~~~~ ~tlttnen:s urni.s~ing ~ob-;t MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY·FOURTH STREET

NEW YORK

Telephone Murray Hill 88oo

Clothing for Every Requirement of Men and Boys R eady-made and to Measure

Suits and Overcoats for Business, Dress or Sport English and Domestic Hats and Shoes

Shirts, Cravats, Collars, Pajamas. Underwear, Hosiery & Gloves Dressing Gowns, Travellers' R equisites, Leather Goods

Waistcoats, Caps. Sweaters and Mufflers of Shetland or Angora Wool Imported Pipes, Tobacco Pouche , Cigarette Cases, etc.

Liveries for all Menservants

Send for Illustrated Catalogue

BOSTON SALES· OFFICES TREMONT coR. BoYLSTON STREET

Lowry & Joyce

OPTICIANS

Oculists' Prescriptions accurately filled

11 Asylum Street

HARTFORD, CONN.

197

NEWPORT SALES-OFFICES 220 B ELLEVUE AVENUE

The Gentlefolk Air of Horsfall Clothing

dwells in it unconsciousne of po e or pretense and its scorn of

sham or subterfuge.

Hand tailored and All Wool $25 to $40

Knox Hats Manhattan and Eagle Shirts

French, Shriner and Urner Shoes Stein Bloch Smart Clothes

Horsfall Made Clothes

Horsfall's It Pays To Buy Our Kind

93-99 Asylum Street

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PLI M PTO N MA UFACTURI JG COMPA Y

Printers Stationers Engravers

fJ!c High-Grade Engra ving from copper

a nd steel

Wedding, R eception and T ea Cards Embossed Correspondence P aper

"Ve can furni sh you with any thing for the Office

Agents for the Y & E Filing Equip­ment a nd K alamazoo Loose Leaf

Syste!lls

252 P earl Street HARTFORD, CON r

The Alderman Drug Co.

COR. M AIN & PEARL STREETS Hartford's Busiest Corner

* Kodaks and E as tman Photo Supplies D eveloping, Printing

Copy ing and Enlarging Quick Service Best Work

Sa rno et , Green Seal , Apollo and M ary Garden Chocolates

Prescriptions carefully compounded

P erfect Soda and Service

If you get it at Alderman 's

" It' s R ight"

~~~~~~~~~~~~m~~~~

The Bond Press, Inc. J. HELMER JOHNSON, P.-esidcnt-T.-easurc.- J . ALBERT JOHNSON, Sec.-eta ry

Increasing business proves our efforts to do GOOD

Pri nt in g at the Best Prices for that class of \York are meeting

with appreciation. M ay we count you among the many Satisfied Patrons?

284 Asylum Street

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Howard-Wesson Company

College Engravers of New England

WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS

Unexcelled Engravings for Class Books and other

College Publications

199

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' .

lA ~

Eagle Printing and Binding Con1pany

School and College Printing a Specialty

Flatiron Building, Eagle Square

Pittsfield, Massachusetts

The Printing and Binding of this book was

done by us

200

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'

Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co.

Corner Pearl and Main Streets

C APITAL AND S U RPL US, $ 1 , 750,000.00

Banking Business Safe Deposit Vaults Trust Department

MEIGS H. WHAPLES, President

BANKING DEPARTMENT NATHAN D . PRINCE, Vice-President HOSMER P . REDFIELD, Treas urer ALLEN H . NEWTON, Ass' t. Treas urer

201

TR ST DEPARTMENT ARTHUR P. DAY,

Vice-President and Trust Officer J . LI NCOLN FE , Secretary ALBERT T . DEWEY, Ass't Secreta ry THOMAS J . ROGERS, Ass't Secretary CLEMENT SCOTT, Attorney

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ROSEMARY KENNELS West Hartford, Conn.

T el. Elizabeth 1428

T eam of Blenheim Spaniels, English T oy Spaniels, P ekingese and Brussels Griffons P uppies and Grown Stoclc For S ale at All Ti1nes

The Subscribe for

Trinity Tripod Published each Tuesday through­out t he college year by the students

of Trinity College.

$~ .00 PER YE A R

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Compliments of

180 A sy lum Street

J. J. BURNS, Athletic Outfitter Baseball, Football , Basketball , Tennis, Track

and Hockey Outfits Sweaters, Jackets, J erseys, Athletic Clothing and Gymnasium Supplies

MERIDEN, CONN.

Compliments of

The Heublein Hotel 98 WELLS ST., HARTFORD, CONN.

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THE

CASE, LOCKWOOD & BRAINARD CO. HARTFORD, CONN.

Hartford's Leadin_g PRINTERS for Eighty-Two Years

Tie Tag to Racket and Mail

Rackets Restrung Mark tag No. 1 for Extra Spec. Tournament Gut $3.75

No. 2 for $2.50 Gut No. 3 for $1.75 Gut

Raclcets Leave Here Same Day as R eceived

. Y. Tennis Racket Co., 410 West 125th St., . Y. City (Established since 1896)

The Joseph L. Besse Co. Caterers

FRENCH AND AMERICAN ICE CREAMS, FRENCH PASTRY CONFECTIONERY, ETC.

701 Main Street, HARTFORD, CONN. Telephone Charter 2134

Telephone Charter 2510

L. G. Wiley Company Quality Printers

105 TRUMBULL STREET, HARTFORD, CONN.

. 204

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W. F. Miller & Co. Commercial Photographers

450 Asylum Street, H artford, Connecticut

1J1 rank ~rntqrrn .J'tft4 1\urnur ihloot ~l1op

.At 4814 &trut Nrw lock

Olds & Whipple High Grade R anges, Stoves,

and Furnaces Hartford Agents of "The Richmond"

Range for past 40 years. For this department ca ll Charter 6610

16·~-6-8 STATE ST .

HARTFORD, CONN.

The Berkeley Divinity School Middletown, Connecticut

Founded in 1854 in continuation of a Theological Department at Trinity College.

Courses fitting for Canonical examinations and leading to the degree of Bachelor of Divinity.

Applications for rooms and scholarships should be made to the R ev. Wm. P. La?d, Profes or in Charge.

205

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NOT TO BE T"KEN FROM liBRARY

tl"lm t y Ivy

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