Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 09, 1900, Page 14, Image 14

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    320
Pe aes © ATO NEN FT
VWs
This Year.
It’s Flannels
Even more than last year. There
are a great many novelties and
some very pretty ones. If you
can’t come in we can send you
samples.
F. A. CORBIN,
1000 CHAPEL ST.,
New Haven, Conn.
(> My DAY IN NEW York is Thursday
Place, Astor House. Time, 12 to 4.
[Continued from page 319.]
and 4 Juniors have elected “Outlines of
Forestry.” Throughout “Mathematics”
the tendency of both classes is to take
more than similar classes have taken
for five or six years.
ELECTIVE FIGURES FOR FOURTEEN YEARS.
The following table shows in _per-
centages the fluctuation in the choices
of electives since the beginning of the
elective system in 1886, and indicates
very fairly the relative amount of work
done in each of the eight leading de-
partments of study by a number of typi-
cal Yale/tlassés 3') 13
1886 1888 1890 1892 1894 1897 1898 1901
Classics, 84.8 80.6 28.9 27.4 28.6 24.1 23.2 21.9
Mathematics, 18.8 16.9 15.7 14.8 14.6 9.7 9.4 11.0
English, C2. 12338 2: 85-25 82709 13:5
European Lang’s, 100 71 12.8 14.0 13.5 144 14.3 14.0
History, 72 81 7.2 99 9510.1 144 10.9
35 60 88 7.6 9.8 12.7 11.1 13.8
91 9.4 96 82 8410.1 9.3 6.4
(4 O82 85.8.7 68°99 8.2 4.
Political Science,
Philosophy,
Natural Science,
These figures show that during the
past fourteen years the study of Mathe-
matics and the Classics has steadily de-
clined, though the former, judging from
the increase of 1.6 per cent. for I90I1,
would seem to have reached rock bot-
tom and started on the recovery. It is
worthy of attention that, in Classics, as
the requirements were eased up, less and
less men took the various courses.
The fluctuations in English, which
have been wide, are, without much
doubt, due to changes in entrance fre-
quirements and in the curriculum, and
particularly to changes in the personnel
of the instructors. The filling up of
the vacant English chair is probably re-
sponsible for the increase for 1900-1901.
In direct contrast to English, the Eu-
ropean languages, since 1890, have been
very steady, which would seem to indi-
cate that there is a strong demand for
a certain marketable amount of instruc-
tion in these languages. In History the
tendency has been upward, though, on
the whole it has been rather steady dur-
in the entire fourteen years, The
great fluctuations in Political Science
are due to radical changes in the per-
sonnel of the instructors, but in gen-
eral, there has been a steady upward
progress The introduction of the new
Law course, which has immediately
proved that there was need for such a
course, has made some confusion in the
other Law courses. :
One of the most noticeable things
shown by the table is the drop from 9.3
to 6.4 per cent. in Philosophy, which
held comparatively steady as long as
the study was required. Of the 6.4 per
cent. shown for the year 1900-1901, only
I.4 per cent. is voluntary choice, the re-
maining 5 per cent. being required work
in Junior year.
Natural Science has, with but few
exceptions, held steady for the fourteen
GENTLEMEN’S
FURNISHINGS
We have created, and occupy
alone, a special field in this
Csi Se oe oe Bd
On our shelves you will find
the best and latest from both
sides of the water. om
W. H. GOWDY & CO.
Xpp. Osborn Hall,
years, the fluctuations being caused,
chiefly by accidental variations in
choices of professions.
YALE OBITUARIES.
HENRY EDWARD FISK, '83.
Henry Edward Fisk, ’83, died at the
home of his father, Rev. Dr. Franklin
W. Fisk, President of the Chicago
Theological Seminary, Friday, April 27.
Mr. Fisk was thirty-seven years of age
and was at the head of the commission
firm of H. E. Fisk & Co. He leaves a
wife and one son. The burial was held
at Lake Geneva, Wis., Monday, April 30.
JONATHAN BOYNTON DILL, ’93.
Jonathan Boynton Dill, ’93, died at
his home in Hastings, Cambria County,
Pa., Sunday, April 22, of acute spinal
meningitis after a sickness of less than
twenty-four hours.
He was taken ill on Saturday even-
ing about six o’clock with a severe pain
in the head, which continued to grow
worse until he became unconscious a
few hours later. He did not regain con-
sciousness, and died at four, Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. Dill was born at Clearfield, Pa.,
January 30, 1871. After graduating from
Yale, he went into the coal business at
Hastings, which became his home.
About four years ago he was made
Manager of the Alport Coal Company,
acquired an interest in the Byrnes Run
Supply Company of Spangler, and last
February was elected to the office of
Chief Burgess of Hastings. In Col-
lege he was a member of Psi Upsilon
and Wolf’s Head Societies. Mr. Dill
was unmarried.
yw
ee: ee
Mr. Weller Wins the Athenian
Scholarship.
C. H. Weller, ’95, has just received
word that he has been awarded an
Athenian Scholarship by the Archaeo-
logical Institute of America. The exam-
ination was held on March 15, and lasted
for three days. It was open to Bache-
lors of Arts from any American college.
There were ten competitors and the sub-
jects in which the examinations were
held were Archaeology, Architecture,
Sculpture, Vases, Epigraphy, Pausanias
and Topography of Athens, Modern
Greek. Mr. Weller is apparently the
CHARLES H. WELLER, Yale ’95.
first Yale man to take this fellowship.
He will start the middle of the Sum- -
mer, stopping in Italy to spend some
time in study, before going to Greece.
Mr. Weller is now teaching in the
Hillhouse High School.
—_————__+e
Working for the Public Good.
The Neighborhood Club, formed of
the residents of the Seventh Ward of
New Haven, where Yale Hall is sit-
uated, and conducted under its auspices,
held a mass meeting Friday night, May
_ 4, in the cause of establishing free baths
in New Haven, especially for that dis-
trict. The meeting was held at Yale
Hall. The President of the Neighbor-
hood Club, Cornelius P. Kitchel, Yale
’97, at the opening of the meeting wel-
comed those preseift and turned the
meeting over to J. E. Miller, Alderman-
elect from the Seventh Ward, who pre-
sided. There was a good attendance
of men who represented the hard-
working, self-respecting portion of the
community. The speakers were Direc-
tor Alexander Troup of the Department
of Public Works of New Haven; Mr.
Harry Leigh, who is much in the poli-
tics of New Haven; Livingston W.
Cleaveland, ’81 L.S., Judge of Probate
of New Haven; A. Maxcy Hiller; H.
G. Newton, 72 L.S.; Rev: -A; ¥. Ervine.
The speeches were good and the senti- .
ment of the meeting was strongly in
favor of the appropriation by the city
of a sufficient sum of money to supply
that part of the city and all others who
desired to use them, with good public
bath houses. A petition was started
and was largely signed on the spot. It
will be presented to the Council when
it meets early in June. The members
of the different Faculties of the Univer-
sity will be.among the petitioners.
This whole movement for this public
improvement has begun under the
auspices of this Yale institution and has
been managed with great enthusiasm
and good judgment. A. C. Ludington,
10% is Secretary of the Neighborhood
ub.
Strength Record Broken.
Charles A. Carver, 1900, broke the
strength record of the University April
23, with a total of 1,754 points.
record was held by Clare S. Verrill,
’99 S., at 1,676 points. The points were
made as follows: Strength of legs, 681.7
kilograms; strength of back, 252 kilo-
grams; strength of chest, 612 kilograms
(dip 47 times, pull-up 30 times) ;
strength of right grip, 95.5 kilograms;
strength of left grip, 86.8 kilograms;
strength of lungs, 25.5 kilograms; total
1,754. Carver comes from Chicago.
He is 6 feet 1% inches tall and weighs
175 pounds.
Spring Oxfords
Double Sole Wax Calf, Russia Calf
and Patent Leather New Lasts.
The New Haven Shoe Company
842 and 846 Chapel Street.
F. B. WALKER & CO.
TAILORS
SUCCEEDING F. R. BLISS & CO.
CHURCH AND CHAPEL STREETS
FRANK B. WALKER
CHAS. P. WALKER
“CLASS REUNIONS.”
If you wish your Supper to bea success, address
the old Reliable Yale Caterer,
J. W. STEWART,
Warner Hall Restaurant,
New Haven, Conn.
E. L. GLOUSKIN,
Elm cor. York.
‘The oldest Established Jeweler in Vicinity
of Yale University.
Best accommodations and Lowest Prices.
J. Kaiser,
Tailor,
1042
Chapel Street,
(Opp. Vanderbilt Hall.)
PACH BROS: ,
COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHERS,
1024 Chapel St., New Haven.
Branch of No. 935 Broadway, - New York
Te
UNCHANGED
COMFORT.
Of course a good many things
change at a good hotel. There
are new ways to make guests
‘happy. But though adding
modern improvements constantly
the home flavor and conditions
of solid comfort are not dis-
turbed at
MOSELEY’S
NEW HAVEN HOUSE.
S. H. MOORE
FLORIST
1054 CHAPEL ST.
OPP. YALE ART SCHOOL
[Vfory’s - -
=
wie acaeis. Liuder-
Please mention the paper tn doing
business with advertisers.
The C. W. Whittlesey Co.
281 State St.
Our line of Photographic Materials and
Supplies is larger and more complete than
ever before.
Our facilities for doing amateur work
are unexcelled.
GRUENER BROTHERS
Tailors,
New Haven House, New Haven, Ci.
Graduate correspondence solictted.
Hurle & Co.,
Tailors,
38 Center Street.
ae aie QVP3GeGH
SOYA
a
CHARLES T. PENNELL,
Successor to Wm. Franklin & Co.,
IMPORTING | AILOR,
40 Center St., New Haven, Conn.
COLLEGE MEN
will find exceedingly comfortable and wel
kept quarters at a most reasonable price at
MILLER’S HOTEL
39 West 26th St., - New York City.
This house is patronized largely by Yalé
Princeton, Cornell, Vassar, Wellesley, Smitl
and other Colleges, to the students of whic
special rates are made.
SEND FOR CIRCULAR.
CHARLES H. HAYNES,
Propristor.