ATM ALUMNI “WEEKLY ALUMNI NOTES. [Continued from 3d page.] te oe factory at Little Falls, ’94—Harry P. Whitney has been ap- pointed a Commissioner of Municipal Statistics for the Greater New York by the Mayor. ’94—Charles G. King was married to Miss Gineora Fuller, daughter of Mr. William A. Fuller, at Christ Chtrch, Chicago, on the evening of January Oth. ’94—George H. Fox, who is recover- ing from a serious illness, is in Tytus- ville, Pa. He had been studying at the College for Physicians and Surgeons at New York. ’94 and ’96 L.S.—Raymond H. Arnot has’ begun the practice of law in Rochester, N. Y. Last year Mr. Arnot was engaged in teaching school in New Hampshire. ’94—The Australian Student Chris- tian. Union, of which William H. Sall- mon is traveling secretary, has issued a circular letter containing brief notes of Mr. Sallmon’s arrival on July 24th _and of a tour which he has completed since that time. ’94—Fred A. Lockwood, who has spent the past two years in the bank of F. W. Hubbard & Co., in Bad Axe, Mich., has severed his connection with that institution and returned to his home in Norwalk, Conn. He _ will assist his father, Col. Frederick St John Lockwood, in the management of his extensive business affairs. °95—E. W. Hobart has a law office at No. 56 Carew Building, Cincinnati, O. ’95 S.—Carl R. Lindenburg is with the firm of M. C. Lilley & Company, Columbus, Ohio. i ’95—Frederick H. Rawson has ob- tained the position of teller in the Chi- cago National Bank. Ex-'95 S.—George Reed has opened an office in Pittsburg, Pa., for the trans- action of a real estate business. Ex-’95 S.—William S. Ferguson is with the Pittsburg Reduction Company at their Niagara Falls branch. ’95—John B. Speer is located with the American Water Works and Guar- antee Company, Pittsburg, Pa. 705 S.— Theodore W. Griggs is a member of the firm of Griggs, Cooper & Company, of St. Paul, Minn. ’95 S.i— Henry H. Robinson is in business with the Keystone Roller and Chisler Company, cor. Wood and Water streets, Pittsburg, Pa. ’°95—W. F. Carter has been elected captain of a baseball team which has been organized at Columbia Univer- sity for the first time in several years. ’96 S.—Thomas H. West, Jr., is with the Hamilton-Brown Shoe Company, Sti Lours; -Mo: ’°96—W. S. Woodhull has changed his address from Orange, N. J., to 173 West 81st st., New York City. ’°96—Carroll H. Fitzhugh is reading law in the office of William Blair, St. Nicholas Building,’ Allegheny, Pa. Ex-’96 S.—Earle R. Marvin is inter- ested in the firm of S. S. Marvin & Company, bakers, at Pittsburg, Pa. ’796—The engagement of John E. Breckenridge to Miss Amy G. Edgar of Woodbridge, N. J., is announced. 796 S.—Robert H. Perdue was elect- ed President of the University School Alumni Association at its recent meet- ing held in Cleveland. ’96—John E. Breckenridge has changed his address from Palmer, Mass., to Carteret, .N. J., where he is with the Liebig Manufacturing Co. *96—Douglas Stewart, who has been traveling since graduation, is for the present at his home in Allegheny, Pa., but expects to leave soon for Japan. °96 S.—The engagement has been an- nounced of R. H. Perdue and Miss Eleanor Hower Morgan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Nash Morgan. | of Cleveland, Ohio. | ! ’96 —Arthur G. Walter has changed his address from Betts Academy, Stam- ford, Conn., to Teachers College, 120th st. W., New York City, where he is taking special studies under Professor Woodhull, Yale ’80o. +h) ’96—Clarence S. Day, Jr., has been admitted as a partner by his father, Clarence S. Day, banker, 40 Wall st., New York, and the business will now be conducted under the firm name of Clarence .S, Day-@ Co: ’°96—Marcellin C. Adams was married to Miss Ida Bright of New Haven, on Wednesday evening, January 5, at hour. United Church in New Haven, by the Rev. Dr. Theodore T. Munger, ’51. After two months travel they will re- turn to Pittsburg, Pa., where Mr. Adams is associated in business with his father. ’97—W. L. Goodwin is with J. P. Morgan & Co., bankers, New York. ’97 S.—Charles H. Morrison has a position at his home in La Porte, Ind. ’97—S. D. Babcock, Jr., has entered the office of J. P. Morgan & Co., bank- ers, New York. ’97—-For the present the address of . D. Hamilton is Norwood, East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. ’97—Elisha E. Garrison is in the law office of Davies, Stone & Auerbach, 32 Nassau st., New York City. ’97 S.—Louis E. Voorheis is with the firm of Voorheis, Miller & Company, wholesale clothiers, at Cincinnati, Ohio. ’97—E. W. Van Deusen has changed his address from 38 W. 44th st., Bay- onne, N. J., to Englewood, N. J., where he is teaching in the Preparatory School for Boys. wv. Professor Hoppin’s Lectures. Professor Hoppin’s lectures at the Art School for this year are on the following subjects: . Italian Painting of the 14th and 15th centuries in Northern Central Italy. I. Giotto and the Umbrian revival. II. Signorelli. III. Sienese School, ideal and relig- | ious. IV. Benozzo Gozzoli and frescoes of San Gimignano and other Tus- can cities. V. Perugino. VI. Followers of Perugino. VII. Some early Florentine painters. English School of Painting. I. Older portrait and painters. _ II. Beginning and influence of Pre- raphaelite movement. 3 Ill. Modern School of Watts, Her- komer and Burne-Jones. The lectures will commence Tuesday, January 18th, at 4 P.M., and continue on successive Tuesdays at the same They are open to all members of the University. landscape > a ae A Progressive University. [Editorial in Waterbury American. ] The University of Chicago, as ’ be- comes a university in the sort of a city that Chicago is, reports through President Harper a continuance of its booming prosperity, It has needed an income of $729,000 a year, and so Mr. Rockefeller has given it another $200,000 to help toward that amount. It has secured in Rush College, a lead- ing medical institution of Chicago, a medical department of equal standing with its other departments. It is to establish a college of commerce and politics where the students will study railroads, finance, insurance, manufac- turing, trade, diplomatic service and journalism. It proposes soon to estab- lish a college for teachers in the public schools of the city, to enable them to pursue higher studies while continuing at work. What other university of them all can show an equal push and capacity to do all—more than all that is expected of it? << >. in es eo? A Bust of Dr. Barnard. A marble bust of Dr. Henry Bar- nard, ’30, the distinguished educator of® Connecticut, has been ordered by the alumni of the State Normal School of Rhode Island, and will be placed in the new building of that school in Provi- dence. Albert Jaegers of New York has completed the plaster cast and the finishing of the marble will be com- pleted in a short time. ~