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The following twenty-two Seniors and eight Juniors have been elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society. Scholarly achievement and scholarly promise have been the basis of election, and a conscientious attempt has been made to do justice to every eligible name. In determining the elections, scholarship grades alone have not been the ultimate grounds for decision; the difficulty of the courses taken and the student's progress throughout his college career have also received due consideration. The names are arranged alphabetically and not according to rank or order of election.
1913.
Sidney Fay Blake, of Stoughton.
Carey Judson Chamberlin, of Beverly.
Thomas Coggeshall, of Allston.
Frederick Coolidge Crawford, of Watertown.
Samuel Atkins Eliot, Jr., of Cambridge.
Byron Winthrop Grimes, of Woburn.
Millard Burr Gulick, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
Alan Dugald McKillop, of Lynn.
Amos Philip McMahon, of Mexico City, Mexico.
Lincoln MacVeagh, of New York, N. Y.
Nestor Antonius Pope, of Constantinople, Turkey.
Frederick Ernest Richter, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
Gracie Hall Roosevelt, of Tivoli-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Howard Frank Root, of Ottumwa, Iowa.
Harold Joseph Rosatto, of Lowell.
Hira Lal Roy, of Bengal, India.
Daniel Sargent, of Wellesley.
John Elliot Slater, of Somerville.
Oscar Joseph Smith, of Toledo, Ohio.
George Safford Torrey, of Providence, R. I.
Walter Freeman Whitman, of Cleveland, Ohio.
John Kirkland Wright, of Cambridge.
1914
Charles Pelham Curtis, Jr., of Boston.
Joseph Vincent Fuller, of St. Paul, Minn.
Isadore Levin, of Detroit, Mich.
Earle Carver Pitman, of Salem.
Henry Coe Place, of Gilbertsville, N. Y.
Pitman Benjamin Potter, of Long Branch, New Jersey.
Walter Cecil Schumb, of Roxbury.
Webster Godman Simon, of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Officers.
First Marshal--Ralph Beatley '13, of Roxbury.
Second Marshal--Donald Earl Dunbar '13, of Springfield.
Orator--Henry Coe Place '14, of Gilbertsville, N. Y.
Poet--Charles Pelham Curtis, Jr., '14 of Boston.
Schools and Places Represented.
Of the above men 10 come from private schools and 20 from public schools. Groton School is represented by 4 men and Browne and Nichols by 2. These two schools are the only ones which enjoy the distinction of haying more than one graduate elected to the Phi Beta Kappa this year.
While almost half of these men come from Massachusetts, six other states are represented. It is also interesting to note that the list includes three foreign countries, India. Mexico, and Turkey.
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