YALE ALUMNI WHEESLY:
Cornell Yale Club Banquet.
The recently formed Yale Club at
Cornell University held a banquet on
Friday evening, April 15. A number
of interesting addresses were made by
graduates of the different colleges re-
Presented on the Cornell Faculty, and
the affair proved very successful.
Souvenir programs provided for the
occasion bore an engraving of the Yale
Campus, surrounded by a gilded wreath,
and were tied with red, white and blue
ribbons. Professor Charles Mellen
Tyler, ’55, acted as toastmaster, and
the following toasts were responded to:
“Yale Club of Cornell,” Frederick P.
James, ’95; “College Diplomacy,” Pro-
fessor Ernest W. Huffcut, Cornell, ’84;
“Football,” Professor Louis M. Dennis,
U. of M., ’85; “Harvard,” Professor
Horatio S. White, Harvard, ’73; “Yale
Athletics,’ Ebenezer Hill, Jr., ’97;
‘Cornell,’ Professor Benjamin Ide
Wheeler, Brown, ’75; “The Ladies,”
Maujer McLaughlin, Cornell, ’98;
“Yale,” Judge Francis M. Finch, ’40.
The Yale Club was organized a short
time ago with a membership of twenty-
two, consisting of Yale men who were
connected with the University as mem-
bers of the Faculty or undergraduates,
together with a few alumni residing in
Ithaca. In addition to promoting good
fellowship among former students of
Yale, the club seeks to foster good feel-
ing between the undergraduates of both
Universities. The present membership
includes the following:
Judge Francis M. Finch, ’49; Pro-
fessor Charles Mellin Tyler, ’55; Pro-
fessor Moses Coit Tyler, ’57; Professor
George W. Jones, ’50; W. H. Sage,
65; Calvin D. Stowell, ’68; Roger
B. Williams, 68; R. H. Williams;
Charles A. Morrall; Professor Fred-
erick Bedell, o0;- A. -S. . Diven, 64!
H. W. Sage, ‘95; Frederick P. James,
95; George A. Smith, ’96: Andrew G.
C. Sage, ;96; M. N. Whitaker, ’o6;
Harold Lee, ’96S.; DeWitt L. Sage,
97; J. U. Miller; Floyd W. Mundy,
ex-'98, and Professor W. F. Willcox.
<p 2»
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Yale in New York Hospitals,
The following Yale men have received
appointment at the various New York
hospitals, as internes, having passed
successful competitive examinations in
the order indicated:
Presbyterian Hospital— Burton J.
Lee, ’94 S., first place; Henry P. Mose-
ley, ’94, third place.
St. Luke’s Hospital—Guy B. Miller,
94, first place; Nathan W. Green, ’94,
third place.
New York Hospital—Hughes Day-
ton, ’948., second place; John B.
Solley, ’94, fifth place. 3
Roosevelt Hospital—Charles M. Wil-
liams, ’92S., third place.
City Hospital—Harold E. Hewlett,
904 S., first place, Ralph Tousey, ’o4,
third place.
Of the nineteen positions in four of
the hospitals above, open to all competi-
tors, it is a noticeable fact that eighteen
were taken by graduates of the College
of Physicians and Surgeons (Columbia
University). :
ie EEO ad
Psi Upsilon Convention.
The Annual Convention of the Psi
Upsilon Fraternity will take place at
Minneapolis, Minn. on May, 3, 4, 5 and
6. The headquarters of the Convention
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will be at the West Hotel. On Tues-
day, May 3, an informal reception will
be held at the West Hotel. On Wed-
nesday the public literary exercises will
take place at Lyceum Theatre. The
address of the evening will be delivered
by Dr. Charles.K. Adams, President of
the University of Wisconsin. on
Thursday the Convention Ball will be
given, and on Friday the Banquet.
—— -
Obituary.
GEORGE RUDOLPH FREEMAN, ’85T. S.
George Rudolph Freeman, ’85 T. S.,
died at his home in Meadville, Pa., on
Easter Sunday night, April 10. He
entered the Theological School in 1882,
and graduated with honors three years
later.. He was awarded the Hooker
Fellowship and spent the next two
years in Germany. Soon after his re-
turn to America, he was elected Pro-
fessor of Old Testament Language and
Literature in the Meadville Theologi-
cal Seminary, Meadville, Pa. In the
congenial atmosphere of the School, he
labored with increasing power and ac-
ceptance to the day of his death. One
of his colleagues writes thus of him,
“He could not hide—for he seemed not
to know it—a great delicacy and beauty
of sympathy, and a spirit lofty with
honor.”
FREDERICK K. BREMNER, EX-’93.
Frederick Keith Bremner, ex-’93,
died on Friday, April 15, at his home in
New York City. He was born in Box-
ford, Mass., in 1869, and received his
early education at Andover, graduating
from there in 1889. In the Fall of the
same year he came to Yale and remained
only during the Freshman year, com-
pleting a three year’s course at the
Boston University Law School. For
a year after graduation he was an in-
valid, and upon the recovery of his |
health accepted a place in the Right-of-
Way department of the Bell Telephone
Company. He was connected with the
New York office.
JASON EVANS, ’93 S.
Jason Evans died in Pasadena, Cali-
fornia, on April 16, of a hemorrhage,
at the age of twenty-seven. Though
Mr. Evans had been unwell for some
time, there was no reason to think he
was threatened with an attack of this
sort and his death was a great surprise
to his friends. Jason Evans was born
July 13, 1871, in Cincinnati, Ohio. He
entered the Sheffield Scientific School
in the Fall of 1890, and after graduation
went to live in Morristown, N. J.
While travelling in California some
years later he met Miss Anna Mohr
of Philadelphia, whom he subsequently
married. Mr. Evans had been a resi-
dent of Pasadena for about two years,
and was a Director of the Edison.
Electric Company of Los Angeles and
one of the organizers of the Pasadena
Country Club. His wife survives him.
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