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YALE ALUMNI WHEEKLY
A Providence UWniversity Club
College graduates in Providence, R.
I., have recently been agitating the for-
mation of a University Club in that
city, and about thirty were present at
the first meeting of those interested in
the project. At this meeting S. Minot
Pitman of Harvard, was elected Chair-
man, and Professor E. B. DeLabarre,
Secretary. A Committee whose duty it
is to make a regular canvass for mem-
bers was also appointed, consisting of
the following: Professor E. B. De-
Labarre of Amherst; S. Minot Pitman
of Harvard; Rev. A. M. Lord of Har-
vard; W. R. Callender, Yale ’94; . Dr.
J. E. Sullivan, College of New York;
G. H. Webb of Brown; Judge Loring
M. Cook of Brown; Ex-Mayor E. D.
McGuinness of Brown; A. A. Baker of
Brown; F. M. Day of Brown.
Although this Committee has been
organized but a short time, it has met
with remarkable success, having a
pledged membership of one hundred
and three, among whom are United
States Senator George Peabody Wet-
more, Yale 67, and twenty-five other
Yale graduates. The Committee has the
refusal of a house on College street,
which will be engaged when two hun-
dred and fifty names are secured.
The object of the Club is similar to
that of all University clubs throughout
the country—sociability and a spirit of
fraternity among college men. It is of
course the ultimate intention of the
members of the Club to erect a club
house. 7
a
Ninety-Three Dinner.
A dinner of the Ninety-Three men
in and about New York was held at the
Yale Club, Saturday evening, April 20.
Twenty-three men were in attendance,
as follows: Parsons; Swayne; Chat-
field; L. E. Brown; W. E. Dwight; H.
R. Dwight; H. C. Allen; A. J. Martin;
R. Burchard; J. W. Allen; C. J. Fay;
J. MynCooke: Co. Re Mickox. [re 22-1).
Bliss; W: J.. Lamson; H. D.. Bradley;
T.:-A. Gardiner; John H. Morgan; T.
Cy “Lrasxer: bie tea: aoottomes?: BiB.
Barnes, Jr.; F. W. Hastings, Jr., and
L. A’ Welles.
W. E. Dwight reported, for the Sex-
ennial Committee, that a hall and band
had been engaged for Sexennial cele-
bration, and that thus far somewhat
over twenty men had paid the amount
of the Sexennial assessment to. the
Treasurer of the Committee. He re-
ported further that the Sexennial Com-
mittee had procured a hall for a supper,
to be held Wednesday, October 21, 1901,
the principal day of the Bi-centennial
celebration. This will not be expected
to interfere with either the Sexennial or
- the Decennial, as it comes two years
after the one and two years before the
other. .
Songs, which they made familiar to
the Class in College, were sung with
apparently undiminished zeal by Gardi-
ner; H. C. Allen; Bottome and Swayne.
As Breeze was unavoidably detained in
San Francisco, the Scotch song which
he introduced and frequently sung for
the Class, was sung by all present with
great gusto. E
The meeting lasted until Sunday
morning.
ARS SS
Kentucky Association.
Hon. J. Stoddard Johnston, ’53, Presi-
dent of the Yale Alumni Association of
Kentucky, has appointed as members of
the Executive Committee for the ensu-
ing year, Messrs. Charles T. Ballard,
70 S., Chairman; F. E. Gatchel, ’93,
and G. S. Cowan, ’98
a
Yale Golfers Win.
During the past week the University
Golf team played only one match. This
was played with the Orford Golf Club
at the New Haven Golf Club links,
Wednesday, May 3, and resulted in a
victory for the Yale team by the score
of 29 to 7. The individual scores were
as: follows: «J. Reid) Jr.jo8y5<-Jee-B.
Cheney 4; W. B. Smith 4; W. B.
Cheney 0; T. M.- Robertson 1; T. L,
Cheney 0; L. P. Myers 3; R. S. Cut-
ler 0; F. C. Havemeyer 1; P. Cheney
of be Hinkle o;:7Ey Ri Cooley 73
E. S. Ives 8; H. S. Redfield 0; L. Cogs-
well 4; N. C. Cheney o.
On Saturday, May 6, A. T. Dwight,
1900 S., defeated Champion Findlay S.
Douglas in the Crescent A. C. match.
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