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About Yale Alumni Magazine | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1899)
264 VALE ALUMNI WEEKLY NOTICES. [Continued from 261st page.] John W. Hardenbergh, Hudson Co. Nat’l. Bank, Jersey City, N. J. Walter Hitchcock, M.D., Norwalk, Conn. Theodore L. Hooper, 1130 N. Calvert st., Baltimore, Md. Colin M. Ingersoll, Jr., Plains, Mass. Martin E. Jensen, Norwich, Conn, E. Theo. Liefeld, New Haven, Conn. Willey S. McCrea, Board of Trade Building, Chicago, I]. John Moorehead, Jr., P. O. Box 893, Pittsburg, Pa. Carl E. Munger, M.D., Waterbury, Conn. : : Edward B. Needham, Richmond, nd. George B. Phelps, Jr., 2822 Prairie ave., Chicago, II. Prof. Dwight Porter, Mass. Inst. of Technology, Boston, Mass. Edward F. Porter, Melville, North Dakota. Edward V. Raynolds, New Haven, Conn. Edwin McN. Rogers, Aspen, Col. William B. Schofield, 111 Broadway, New York City. Henry Starkweather, care Pratt & Whitney Co., Hartford, Conn. Adian R. Wadsworth, Farmington, Conn. : William C. Warren, Buffalo Commer- cial Office, Buffalo, N. Y. Adolph F. Wehner, 245 Broadway, New York City. George G. Williams, 28 Prospect st., Hartford, Conn. Jamaica Address all corrections to Edward R. | Sargent, 4o Wall st., New Haven, Conn. ; Eighty-Nine. Anyone who has information con- cerning the location of Messrs. Barnes, Douglas, Copland, Hanlon, Jetcher and White of the Class of Eighty-Nine, will confer a favor upon the Class Secretary and aid the work of preparing the Class Record by sending said in- formation to Charles H. Sherrill, 30 Broad street, New York City. Information is also wanted by the Secretary concerning the following ex- members of the Class: Harry Webb McClellan, Endicott Greenwood Put- nam, Albert LeRoy Skinner, William Carver Williams and Joseph ‘Lafon Winchell. euene Vemeee Ninety-Three Dinner. You are invited to attend a dinner of Yale Ninety-Three men at the Yale Club, 17 East 26th street (Madison Square), New York City, on Saturday evening, April 29, 18990, at 7 P. M. Cost, $2.00, including everything. Sex- ennial and Bi-centennial plans will be discussed. Tell all the men you meet about this and come if possible. The dinner is open to all Ninety-Three men, whether members of Yale Club or not. Reply at once. Noau H. SwAyYNE, 2D., Class Secretary. The Ninety Reunion. The following members of the Class of Ninety were present at the re- union held Friday, April 14, at the Yale Club, of men living in the vicinity of New York. Bayard; Baldwin; Crall; Durant; Durand; Haslam; Holt; Han- son; Percy; Parker; Robinson; Mc- Chntock: . Parsens: . (ons: ie; Kneeland; Tracy; Opdyke; Danforth; White; Meara; Porter, and Farnham. William Parker, Jr., presided as toast- master. Speeches and songs combined to make the evening pass very rapidly. Everyone had a good time. The Com- mittee was: Bayard, Haslam and Par- sons. =~ oo Oregon Yale Association. The Yale Alumni Association of Oregon gave its third annual banquet at the Hotel Portland, in the city of Port- land, Saturday evening, April 8. The following graduates from the different departments of the University were present: B. B. Beekman, *88L.5., President; R. L. Glisan, ’90, Secretary; 7. W. 4h, 98:48. UC. fefierds, 82; G, F, Adams, ’81S.; J. C. Flanders, ’85: S. W. Scott, “86; “N. E. Ayer, ’863.; H? G, Platt, 88; R: Ti: Platt,.’80; H-= F, Conner, 793 S.; T. W. Noon, ’96, and HB AMSer, 10. A number of graduates from Har- vard, etc., were present as guests. Let- ters from absent members were read, toasts responded to, stories of varied hue and college reminiscences were in- dulged in and hearty enthusiasm mani- fested. The Association has about 25 members, most of them residing in Portland and each year a prize is offered to the winner of the best com- petitive entrance examination to Yale from Oregon. Yale is the only Eastern University or College which has an active alumni organization in Oregon, and it was at the Yale banquet last year that steps were taken to form a University Club in Portland. Cincinnati Alumni and the Presidency. The Cincinnati Yale Alumni Associa- tion held a meeting at the Queen City Club, Tuesday afternoon, April rith. A luncheon was served and a large number of alumni were present. The meeting was presided over by Vice- President George W. Johnson, in the absence of President William L. Dick- son, 78. The purpose of this meeting was to consider the subject of Yale’s next President. Judge William. H. Taft, ’78, was called upon and he briefly set forth what seemed to him the,re- quirements of a President, closing his remarks by introducing the name of Professor A. T. Hadley, as being that of a man who was thoroughly fitted for such a position. Judge R. B. Smith, 76, followed, giving emphasis to the remarks of Judge Taft and in addition spoke of Professor Hadley in his rela- tion to him as a classmate. On motion of W. A. DeCamp, ’go, it was moved that resolutions be drawn up setting forth the name of Profes- sor Hadley as the choice of the Cincin- nati alumni. This motion was seconded by Judge Howard C. Hollister, 78. This motion was unanimously passed and the resolutions are as follows: “Resolved, that in the opinion of the Yale alumni of Cincinnati, Prof. Arthur T. Hadley possesses in the highest de- gree all the great qualities which the presidency of Yale demands; that in his charge the high scholarship and great prestige of the University would be maintained and its field of usefulness would be extended to meet the progres- sive needs of the future; that this expres- sion of the views of the Cincinnati alumni be respectfully submitted to the members of the Yale Corporation for their consideration.”’ In addition, several speeches were made endorsing A. L. Ripley, member of the Corporation. 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