Imatges de pàgina
PDF
EPUB

than last year's. Some one has called attention to the fact that on the nine Saturdays of the schedule-including last Saturday the Harvard eleven will meet opponents from nine States in the Union; Boston University and Holy Cross from Massachusetts; Middlebury from Vermont; Indiana from Indiana; Georgia from Georgia; Penn. State from Pennsylvania; Centre from Kentucky; Princeton from New Jersey; Brown from Rhode Island; Yale from Connecticut.

FOOTBALL TICKETS

Tickets for the Penn. State, Centre, Princeton, Brown, and Yale football games will be handled on the application system. For the Yale game the limit will be two to each applicant, and no application will be accepted unless one of the seats is for the personal occupancy of the applicant. The usual order of preference in allotment will be followed as hereinafter described.

For the other application games the number of tickets of each applicant will not be limited either as to number or "personal use," but, in general, applications for "personal use" will be preferred in the allotment.

Individual application blanks for these games have been mailed to all graduates eligible to apply whose signature cards are already on file. Applications from others will not be honored until their signature cards have been filed. Blank cards may be obtained by sending a stamp to the Harvard Athletic Association.

Students now in the University, as heretofore, must make out their applications in person at the office of the Athletic Association, and must call for the tickets allotted to them at this office during the five days preceding the day of the game.

Applications close for the Penn. State game, Tuesday, Oct. 11; for the Centre game, Tuesday, Oct. 18; for the Princeton game, Thursday, Oct. 20; for the Brown game, Thursday, Oct. 27; for the Yale. game, Friday, Oct. 28.

The order of preference in the allotment

of tickets for the Yale game, (only applications for tickets for personal use will be accepted) will be as follows:

1. ONE SEAT APPLICATIONS. 1st., College undergraduates (i. e., all students pursuing undergraduate studies); 2nd., College graduates (i. e., former undergraduates who remained in College two years or more), and University Officers (i. e., members of the Administrative Boards and Faculties); 3rd., School students (i. e., professional or graduate school students not classified above; 4th., School graduates (i. e., men who were formerly school students and remained in school at least two academic years.)

2. TWO SEAT APPLICATIONS. 1st., Seniors, juniors, and other College undergraduates who have attended College two academic years or more; 2nd., College graduates and University Officers; 3rd., freshmen, sophomores, and other undergraduates who have attended College less than two academic years; 4th., School students; 5th., School graduates.

GENERAL INFORMATION.

The rules against speculation will be rigidly enforced. Failure to observe the agreement on the Yale blank as to personal use or the return of tickets will be grounds for blacklisting.

Every applicant is held responsible for the tickets allotted to him. Any Harvard man whose tickets are sold or offered for sale at a premium may be blacklisted.

Applications from men. now on the blacklist will be rejected.

A separate remittance must be made for each game.

Persons wishing to sit together may enclose their applications together, but such applications will be filed with those of the lowest classification enclosed.

Yale and Princeton men attending any of the Harvard Schools should apply to their own managements for the games with their universities.

Space for automobiles is provided within the field. The entrance will be directly from North Harvard St. Tickets will be on sale at the gate at 50 cents each.

RECENT BOOKS BY HARVARD MEN '71-Ephraim Emerton, Winn Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Emeritus, "Learning and Living," Harvard University Press: A collection of essays on academic topics, such as "The Academic Life," "The Discipline of a University College," "Gentleman and Scholar," "The Choice of Studies in College," "The Academic Study of History," "The Rational Education of the Modern Minister," "The Place of History in Theological Study."

'76-George B. Ives, "Text, Type, and Style," Atlantic Monthly Press: A discussion of principles and rules of "style" followed by the Atlantic Monthly Press and the Atlantic Monthly, written by one who has been in charge of the proof-reading in that office for many years. Pp. 305. Price: $2.

'00-Alfred M. Tozzer, Associate Professor of Anthropology, "A Maya Grammar," The Peabody Museum of American Anthropology and Ethnology, Cambridge: A study of the Maya language and literature by the first recipient of the Travelling Fellowship in American Archaeology of the Archaeological Institute of America, who spent two winters in Yucatan, Chiapas, and Tabasco, Mexico, and northern Guatemala. Pp. 301.

'05-Lothrop Stoddard, "The New World of Islam," Charles Scribner's Sons: The story of the development and transformation of Mohammedanism-religious, cultural, political, economic, social-by the author of "The Rising Tide of Color," "The Stakes of the War," "Present Day Europe: Its National States of Mind," and "The French Revolution in San Domingo." Pp. 362. Price: $3.

'06 Robert Withington, A.M. '09, Ph.D. '13, "In Occupied Belgium," Cornhill Publishing Co., Boston: Sketches of the life of a member of Mr. Hoover's Commission for Relief in Belgium during the German occupation of Belgium. Professor Withington served at Antwerp and Hasselt with the Commission in 1916.

'15-Haven McClure, "The Contents of the New Testament," Macmillan: A volume designed to present the results of the labors of the world's greatest Bible students in a manner intelligible to the younger mind and the general reader, by the secretary of the English council of the Indiana State Teachers' Association. Pp. 211. Price: $1.50.

INFORMATION BUREAU IN THE UNION

An information bureau for students who have this year transferred to Harvard from other colleges was set up in the Living Room of the Union for the first two days of College. Seniors were constantly in attendance to assist transferred students who applied for information.

TWO BELGIAN STUDENTS AT HARVARD

Amand Cerulus and Jean Lekeu, both of Belgium, have become students at Harvard University this year as holders of fellowships awarded by the Commission for Relief in Belgium. M. Cerulus, a graduate of the University of Ghent, who holds the degree of architect-engineer magna cum laude, will continue his study of architecture, particularly of municipal architecture. During the war M. Cerulus served with distinction in the Belgian Army. He wears, in addition to the Commemorative Medal and the Victory Medal, the coveted Belgian War Cross.

M. Lekeu will continue at the Bussey Institute his study of genetics, begun at the University of Louvain. During the war he was wounded and spent a year recovering in a hospital, but he was in active service from February, 1916, until the cessation of hostilities.

SECRETARY OF THE CLASS OF 1862

Arthur Howard Nichols, '62, M.D. '66, of 55 Mt. Vernon St, Boston, has been chosen secretary of the class of 1862 to succeed the late Charles Pickard Ware. Since his graduation from the Medical School Dr. Nichols has practised his profession in Boston almost without interruption. He has always been interested also in scientific change-ringing on tower bells. He has written several papers on campanology, and is a member of three London ringing guilds.

SECRETARY OF THE CLASS OF 1874

William C. Mason, 74, M.D. '78, of Bangor, Me, has been chosen secretary of the class of 1874 to succeed the late Charles S. Penhallow. Dr. Mason has practised medicine in Bangor since 1878, and has held public appointments as city physician of Bangor for two years, and as manager of the Home for Aged Women for 19 years. He is a surgeon on the staff of several local hospitals. For many years he was president of the Harvard Club of Bangor, and has been honorary vice-president of the New England Federation of Harvard Clubs. His address is 3144 Hammond St, Bangor, Me.

STUDENT LIBERAL CLUB

The Student Liberal Club has engaged a clubhouse at 66 Winthrop St., where meetings will be held for the discussion of political, economic, and social questions, and meals served. The club hopes to entertain as guests prominent men who may be in Cambridge from time to time, as it has done at the Harvard Union during the past two years. The club hopes also to stimulate interest at Harvard in general informal debating.

The Alumni Association on request will give the addresses of Harvard men.

55 Edwin H. Abbot has removed his office from 14 Beacon St, Boston, to 1 Follen St., Cambridge, 38, Mass.

89 Caleb M. Saville has been appointed by Mayor Hagerty of Hartford, Conn., a member of the Hartford Meadows Development Commission to serve for four years. The commission was created to reclaim a large area of valuable land in Hartford which is now flooded at certain periods of the year. Saville is chief engineer and superintendent of the Hartford City Water Department. He was engaged on work at the Panama Canal from 1907 to 1912, and worked out the details of the construction of the Gatun Dam. 93-Fred W. Moore, LL.B. '96, Graduate Treasurer of the Harvard Athletic Association, was married in New York City, July 27, 1921, to Mrs. Louise Becker. Mr. and Mrs. Moore will live in Brookline.

97-Benjamin T. Burley, M.D. '01, was married in Chicago, Aug. 22, to Miss Angelyn Jefferds. Dr. and Mrs. Burley will live at 19 High St., Worcester, Mass, where he has practised his profession since 1904.

97-Lendall Pitts was married in Paris, France, June 21, to Miss Elizabeth Stevens McCord. Pitts is a landscape artist. Mrs. Pitts is the daughter of the late George McCord, of New York, a distinguished landscape painter, and is herself a landscape painter. Mr. and Mrs. Pitts will live in Paris.

97-Edward E. Whiting of Newton has been appointed assistant secretary to Mayor Peters, of Boston. Whiting has taken over practically all of the correspondence work of the office. He is also conducting a column, entitled "Talk of the Town," in the Boston Herald. Whiting resigned from the Boston Record in January of this year.

98-Lawrence J. Henderson, M.D. '02, has been appointed a foreign correspondent of the Paris Academy of Medicine.

99-The engagement of Arthur Adams to Mrs. Francis W. Sargent, Jr., (Marjery Lee), of Dover, has been announced.

-The engagement of Edward C. Wheeler, Jr., to Miss Anne Swann Hubbard, of Weston, has been announced.

01-Frederick R. Brysan's permanent address is 620 East Capital Ave., Little Rock, Ark. He expects to spend the winter in Paris.

01-Charles D. Daly is once more in charge of the coaching of the football team at West Point. 01-Richard Dexter's address has been changed to 2417 Prospect Ave, Cleveland, O. He was

[ocr errors]

toastmaster at the 20th reunion dinner of the class of 1901, held at Plymouth, in June.

01-Harold H. Flower, of Deerfield, Mass, has been appointed Chief Deputy by the United States Collector of Internal Revenue for Massachusetts. Flower is a lawyer. He has been connected with the Income Tax Department at Springfield, Mass., and served through the war as captain and major in the United States Infantry.

'01-Paul S. Harvey of New York City has been appointed a trustee of the Christian Science Publishing Society. For a number of years he has devoted his time exclusively to the interests of the Christian Science movement.

'01-A son, Howland Hayes, was born, July 1, to Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Hayes of New York. 01-At the request of the Harvard Graduate Rowing Committee, R. Heber Howe, Jr., has been granted another year's leave of absence by the trustees of Middlesex School. He will again be connected with the coaching system at Harvard and will also continue his research work in entomology at the Bussey Institution.

'01-Elmer Schlesinger, LL.B. '03, of Chicago, has been appointed counsel for the United States Shipping Board at Washington.

01-A daughter, Caroline Hinckley Swaim, was born, July 11, to Mr. and Mrs. Roger D. Swaim.

'02-The engagement of George K. Pratt to Miss Helen Krogmann Horton, (Simmons College) '12, of Quincy, Mass., has been announced.

M.D. '02-William W. Bellamy was married recently in Roslindale to Miss Elsie M. Stark of that city. Dr. and Mrs. Bellamy will live in Jamaica Plain.

'03 The engagement of George A. Barrow, Ph.D. '05, to Miss R. Choate, of Chelsea, Mass., has been announced. Barrow is rector of St. Luke's Church, Chelsea.

'03-George G. Davis, Law 03-06, was married in Waterford, Wis, June 28, to Miss Mildred Ann Albee.

03-Peter Butler Olney, 3d, six years of age, and his sister, Cornelia Olney, eight, children of Peter B. Olney, Jr., were drowned in the Bouquet River, Elizabethtown, N. Y., on Sept. 5. Their cousin, Wilson Olney, Jr., son of Wilson Olney, '07, was drowned at the same time.

A.M. '03 Henry A. Christian, M.D. (Johns Hopkins) '00, was married in Brookline, June 30, to Miss Elizabeth Sears Seabury. Dr. Christian is physician-in-chief at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston.

'04-A daughter, Ruth Nichols Porter, was born, Aug. 14, at Cleveland, to Eugene L. Porter and Helen (Nichols) Porter.

'06-George H. Chase was married at Newark, N. J., Sept. 7, to Miss Florence Corinne Brelsford. Mr. and Mrs. Chase will live at 669 High St., Newark, N. J.

'06-The engagement of Robert F. Gowen to Miss Grace Marie Chadeayne, of Ossining, N. Y., has been announced. Gowen is chief engineer and plant manager of the deForest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Co. He has made the world's record in radio telephone transmission on low power; in 1920 Gowen transmitted speech and music from his home in Ossining to Valley City, N. D., a distance of nearly 1,500 miles.

LL.B. '07-Alonzo H. Garcelon, A.B. (Bowdoin) '01, was married in Boston, June 16, to Miss Marion Stetson of Boston. Garcelon is practising his profession in Boston.

'07-Wilson Onley, Jr.. eight years of age, son of Wilson Olney, '07, was drowned in the Bouquet River, Elizabethtown, N. Y., on Sept. 5. His two cousins, Peter Butler Olney, 3d., six years of age, and Cornelia Olney, eight, children of Peter B. Olney, Jr., '03, were drowned at the same time.

'08-Timothy F. Downey was married recently in Cambridge to Miss Lucy T. White of that city. Downey is the head of the chemistry department of the Cambridge High and Latin School and supervisor of playgrounds for the city of Cambridge.

'08-The engagement of Albert Parker to Miss Edith Boyle, of New York City, has been announced.

'08-The engagement of R. Thornton Wilson to Miss Harriette Appleton Post has been announced.

'09 Charles P. Howard, LL.B. '14, was married at Winston-Salem, N. C., Sept. 15, to Miss Katherine Montague Graham, (Smith) 20. Mr. and Mrs. Howard will live at 109 Summer Ave., Reading, Mass.

'09-Arthur W. Sampson was married, Sept. 17, to Miss Laura Elizabeth Robinson, (Radcliffe) '16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter F.. Robinson, of Arlington Heights, Mass.

M.D. '11-Carl A. Hedblom, Ph.D. (Minnecota) '20, who graduated from Colorado College in 1907 and received there the degree of A.M. in 1908, received the honorary degree of D.S. from Colorado last June. The President of that college, bestowing the degree, said of Dr. Hedblom, "A man of marked force as student and athlete, whose scientific achievements and great technical skill enable him to render distinguished service as a surgeon."

'12-Franklin P. Lowry, M.D. '16, was married in Newton, Sept. 15, to Miss Edith A. Rae. Dr. and Mrs. Lowry will live in Newton.

'12-Sanford F. Petts, Jr., was married in Waban, June 29, to Miss Agnes Breck.

'14 Thorndike Saville, S.M. '17, was married at Chapel Hill, N. C., Sept. 10, 1921, to Miss Edith Stedman Wilson. Saville is the son of C. M. Saville, '89, and is Associate Professor of Hy. draulic and Sanitary Engineering at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

LL.B. '14-A daughter, Fendall Winston Franchot, was born, Aug. 4, at Buffalo, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Franchot.

LL.B. '14 Parker McCollester, A.B. (Tufts) '11, was married, Sept. 7, to Miss de Forest Baldwin, of New York City.

M.D. '14 The engagement of Benjamin H. Alton, A.B, (University of South Dakota) '08, to Miss Elizabeth Moen, of Worcester, Mass., has been announced. Dr. Allen has practised surgery in Worcester since his return from France, where he served with the rank of major in the Harvard Surgical Unit of the British Army.

'15-Richard B. Peirce was married at Central City, Neb., June 29, to Miss Ethel Faye Dressler, of Boise, Ida. Peirce is in the real estate business with C. W. Whittier & Brother, of Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Peirce will live in Brookline.

'15-Bruce Snow, M.D. '19, was married in Boxford, Mass, July 2, to Miss Alice E. Wormwood. Dr. Snow is assistant surgeon of the Notre Dame de Lourdes Hospital, Manchester, N. H.

'15-Dana N. Trimble was married in Ipswich, Mass., Sept. 17, to Miss Barbara Campbell of that town.

Ph.D. '15 Julius Klein, of the United States Department of Commerce, spoke at the Boston City Club on Sept. 23. His subject was "Can American Manufacturers Meet New Trading Conditions Abroad?"

'16-The engagement of Elliott M. Grant to Miss Evelyn Nay, of Brookline, has been announced.

'16 Robert F. Herrick, Jr., was married at Emmanuel Church, Boston, Sept. 6, to Miss Thelma A. Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Herrick will soon take a trip to the Orient.

'16-The engagement of Guy H. Lee to Miss Jeanne Pailley, of Grenoble, France, has been announced.

'16 The engagement of Harrison S. Wiggin to Miss Dorothy Isabel Simson has been announced.

'16 The engagement of Frederick Woodruff to Miss Eva Jeannette Cashman, of Cambridge, has been announced.

'17 The engagement of Duncan Fraser, of Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y., to Miss Charlotte Bonyond, of Ussat, Ariege, France, has been announced. Fraser went overseas with the Sixteenth Infantry, First Division. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross by the United

States and the Croix de Guerre by France. He served in France eight months after the armistice.

17-The engagement of Rogers B. Johnson to Miss Dorothy Squires Aiken, of Brooklyn, N. Y., has been announced. Johnson is connected with the Department of Grounds and Buildings of Harvard University.

'17 The engagement of John Winthrop Pennock, son of the late John D. Pennock, '83, to Miss Clarice Hewitt Leavell, of Louisville, Ky., has been announced.

A.M. '17-Richard O. Atkinson was married in Boston, Aug. 19, to Miss Dorothy E. Wor

cester.

A.M. '17-Henry J. Doermann, A.B. (University of Minnesota) '13, was recently married on Mount Rainier, Wash., to Miss Alice Robbins Humphrey, (Bryn Mawr) '15.

'18 Richard F. Boyce was married in Minneapolis on Aug. 24 to Miss Katherine Randall. Mr. and Mrs. Boyce will live at Elgin Cottage, Kingston, Jamaica, British West Indies.

'18 Edward B. Condon was married at Bernardsville, N. J., June 30, to Miss Caroline Bayard Stevens, of Castle Point, Hoboken, N. Y.

'18 The engagement of John F. A. Davis to Miss Marjorie Abbott Thomas, of Hamilton, Mass., has been announced.

'18 The engagement of Frederick W. Ecker to Miss Barbara Hoyt, of New York City, has been announced.

'18 The engagement of A. Edward McDougall to Miss Ina Brown, of Winchester, Mass., has been announced.

18-Kenneth L. Maclachlan, Med. '22, was married in Cambridge, Sept. 17, to Miss Olga Clark, (Radcliffe) 21. During the past summer Maclachan was head of the food laboratory on the Boston Floating Hospital.

'18 William C. Plunkett, LL.B. '21, recently passed his Massachusetts bar examinations, and is secretary to Joseph D. Taylor, '14, LL.B. '17, counsel of the Boston Legal Aid Society. Although Plunkett has been blind for many years, he has graduated from the Roxbury Latin School, and from Harvard College, as well as the Law School. His home is in Lexington. His business address is in care of the Boston Legal Aid Society, 39 Court St., Boston.

19-Edward L. Casey was married at Winthrop, Mass., Sept. 14, to Miss Anna Louise Cusick.

19 The engagement of Dan H. Fenn toMiss Anna Yens, (Radcliffe) '20, has been announced.

19-Lawrence P. Hall was married in Watertown, Mass., Sept. 20, to Miss Blanche Warriner Milliken. Mr. and Mrs. Hall will live at 72 Kirkland St., Cambridge, Mass.

19-Foster M. Trainer was married in Brook

line, Sept. 17, to Miss Priscilla R. Bigelow, of Chestnut Hill.

'19 Ralph H. Wales has bought a farm in Pepperell, Mass., where he intends to specialize in fruit growing. His address is Parke St., Pepperell, Mass.

'19-Henry K. White, Jr., is now with the marine department of the United Fruit Co., 131 State St., Boston.

'20-Tom M. Brown's address is 319 W. 7th St., Winona, Minn.

'20-The engagement of Robert P. Burr to Miss Laurence Hewlett, of Long Island, N. Y., has been announced.

'20-J. Bertram Fischer's address is 164 Davis St., Bradford, Pa.

'20-The engagement of John Hitchcock to Miss Margaret Jenkins, of Newton, has been announced.

'20-Frederick P. Muhlhauser, was married, Sept. 7, to Miss Lucille Einstein (Radcliffe) '24, of Brookline, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. Muhlhauser will live in Cleveland, O.

'20 Snelling S. Robinson was married at Belfast, Me., Aug. 20, to Miss Evelyn Hope Flanders, of Brookline.

'20-Norcross Teel was married, July 12, at Winchester, Mass., to Miss Charlotte Fisk Ramsay. Teel is president and treasurer of the Norcross Teel Co.

'20 The engagement of Gardner Tilton to Miss Elizabeth Jane Conner has been announced. A.M. '20-The engagement of Reginald G. Buehler, A.B. (Yale) '19, to Miss Margaret Farrar, (Vassar) '22, of Brookline, has been announced.

A.M. '20-The engagement of Arthur N. Sharp, A.B. (Boston University) '19. to Miss Miriam Virginia Hewins has been announced.

LL.B. '20-Louis S. Herrink, A.B. (Randolph Macon College) '11, was married at Brookline, Sept. 21, to Miss Virginia C. Wardwell of that town. Mr. and Mrs. Herrink will live at 1120 Grace St., Richmond, Va.

'21-The engagement of Thomas F. Dolan, Jr., to Miss Eleanor Sullivan has been announced. '21-The engagement of Francis B. Lothrop to Miss Eleanor Abbott, of Boston, has been announced. Lothrop studied at Oxford University, England, during the past academic year.

M.B.A. '21-Joe K. Billingsley, A.B. (DePauw University) '17, was married at Winchester, Mass., Sept. 9, to Miss Georgiana Brown.

'22-The engagement of James W. Freeman to Miss Virginia Cross, of New York City, has been announced.

'22-Jerome C. Greene, who took his degree this year, has been admitted to Trinity College, University of Cambridge, where he will spend a year in special studies before returning to the Harvard Engineering School.

« AnteriorContinua »