Anne Crosby Emery Allinson also published "Roads from Rome" in 1913, "Children of the Way" in 1923, and "Friends with Life" in 1924.Allinson, Anne Crosby Emery
Anne Crosby Emery Allinson was called back to serve as dean in 1921 and remained through the first semester of 1923-24.Allinson, Anne Crosby Emery
Funds for the building had been raised through the efforts of the Alumnae Association which initiated its campaign at its annual meeting in June 1923, when it was announced that Stephen O. Metcalf would duplicate all gifts of students and alumnae.Alumnae Hall
By 1923-24 sports were making money as the receipts of $98,449.99 minus expenses left a profit of $19,949.63.Athletics
In December 1923 the advisory committee to the coaching staff recommended to the accessory committee that football coach Edward N. Robinson and his assistant coach, Reginald W. P. Brown, should not be rehired.Athletics
Wally Snell coached from 1921 to 1923 and Harold Evans from 1923 to 1926.Basketball
In 1921-22 Professor James Q. Dealey spent a semester teaching at Shanghai College, and in 1923-24 Professor Harold S. Bucklin spent a year there, while Kulp spent the year at Brown, teaching and studying.Brown-in-China
He graduated from Brown in 1915, served as an assistant in the English Department for a year, then taught at Phillips Academy in Andover, at Oregon State College, and served in the army during World War I, before coming back to Brown in 1923 as assistant professor.Brown, Sharon
In 1923-24 in connection with the Brown-in-China program as professor of sociology at Shanghai College, Harold S. Bucklin directed a social settlement center and helped college students conduct a survey of a Chinese village.Bucklin, Harold S.
"Casements," a literary magazine which first appeared in January 1923, was, as its foreword announced, born of "the conviction that undergraduates have things to say," and carried the motto, "To Youth’s glimpses – the time of the most vivid feeling of Truth and Beauty."Casements
When Sayles Hall was in turn outgrown by the student body in 1923, only two of the classes could be accommodated at one time, and President Faunce noted, "No longer can any officer or speaker on any occasion address the entire student body at once."Chapel
Meanwhile Charles V. Chapin was instructor in physiology at Brown from 1882 to 1886 and professor from 1886 to 1895, city registrar of Providence from 1889 to 1932, lecturer at Harvard Medical School in 1909, at Harvard-M.I.T. School for health officers from 1913 to 1922, and at Harvard School of Hygiene from 1923 to 1931.Chapin, Charles V.
Professor Lincoln died in 1891, and Professor Albert Granger Harkness1879 (son the professor of Greek) took over the instruction in Latin, which he continued until 1923.Classics
In 1923, after the death of Albert Granger Harkness, the separate departments of Greek literature and history and Latin literature and history were joined together as Greek and Latin classics under Professor Allinson with Latin instruction by Associate Professor John F. Greene.Classics
Two students earned their M.B.A. degree in 1923, one in 1924, and two in 1925, after which the degree was discontinued.Degrees
The second half of the building was renovated in 1923.East Building
Colvin was director of the School of Education from 1918 to 1923, Jacobs from 1923 to 1927, and C. Emanuel Ekstrom, who had joined the department in 1919, from 1927 until 1931.Education
Margaret S. Morriss, succeeding Dean King, was named associate professor of American history in 1923 and promoted to professor in 1932.Faculty
The Class of 1923 bought its section in 1956, paying $2750, the estimated cost of adding a new section at that time.Fence
The new star who flashed across the field that year was Fritz Pollard ’19, the first black to make Camp’s All-American backfield, but the decisive play was Captain Buzz Andrews’ ’16 first and only field goal of his career, which clinched a 3-0 victory over Yale and the invitation to the Tournament of Roses Association Game (which became known as the Rose Bowl Game in 1923).Football
In February 1923 with the blessing of the Cammarian Club a group of non-fraternity men formed a new club, which began as the Bruno Club, changed its name to the Bear Cubs, and finally to the Bear Club in the first month of its existence.Fraternities
In 1923 Phi Kappa Psi acquired a house at 108 Waterman Street.Fraternities
After living at 110 and 104 Waterman Street, in 1923 Sigma Nu purchased a house at 23 Charles Field Street.Fraternities
He joined his father’s law firm, and after 1906 headed the law firm of Green, Hinckley and Allen until 1923, and after that the firm of Green, Curran and Hart.Green, Theodore Francis
William Hastings graduated in 1903, and immediately began what was to be his life-long teaching career at Brown, being appointed assistant in English in 1903, instructor in 1907, assistant professor in 1912, associate professor in 1923, professor in 1935, and chairman of the Department of English from 1937 to 1949.Hastings, William T.
Theodore Collier was associate professor of European history from 1911 to 1917, professor from 1917 to 1923, and professor of history and international relations after 1923.History
Women professors first joined the department in the 1970s, although Margaret S. Morriss, who was Dean of the Women’s College was given the title of Associate Professor of History in 1923.History
A report of the renewal of hockey at Brown in the "Boston American" in January 1923, which announced a new Brown team with Quentin Reynolds ’24 as coach, was only a rumor.Hockey
An Infirmary was first opened in 1923 in Room 104, Metcalf Laboratory.Infirmary
On January 1, 1923, at a banquet at the Town House in New York City, a group of Jewish alumni of Brown living in Boston, Providence, and New York formed a fraternal organization, also Alpha Sigma Omicron, the purpose of which was to maintain the interest of its members in the activities of the University and to help further its interests.Jews
Chester H. Kirby received his A.B. degree in 1921 and his A.M. in 1923, both from the State University of Iowa, and went on the receive a second A.M. degree in 1924 and a Ph.D. in 1929 from Harvard.Kirby, Chester H.
In 1923-24 Charles A. Kraus was a lecturer at Brown and the following year became professor of chemistry and director of the chemical laboratories.Kraus, Charles A.
Their translation was published by Gyldendal in 1923 with the title, "The Atom and the Bohr Theory of its Structure," and was published in the United States by Knopf in 1924.Lindsay, Robert Bruce
The Lindsays used the approximately $125 they had received for the translation in traveling around Europe in the summer of 1923.Lindsay, Robert Bruce
In 1921Andrew H. MacPhail became a research assistant in educational psychology at Brown and earned his Ph.D. degree in 1923, at which time he was appointed instructor.MacPhail, Andrew H.
His writings included "The Liberal College" in 1920, "Freedom and the College" in 1923, "The Experimental College" in 1930, "Free Speech and its Relation to Self-Government" in 1948, and "Political Freedom; the Constitutional Powers of the People" in 1960, Alexander Meiklejohn was a long-time member of the National Committee of the American Civil Liberties Union.Meiklejohn, Alexander
Professor James William McBain came from Bristol University in England to deliver the principal address at the dedication of the building on October 10, 1923.Metcalf Chemical Laboratory
Miss Morris arrived in 1923 and set about making the Women’s College known.Morriss, Margaret Shove
Gene Wilder Ware ’06, who had been director of chapel music since 1906, became lecturer in music in 1920, and assistant professor of music in 1923.Music
Adam Smith ’27 of the 1924 Olympic swimming team, entered Brown in 1923, but left during his first year to prepare for the Olympic trials.Olympic Games
This brief early history of the founding of the Women’s College was included in the annual report of June 1898 of President Andrews, who was responsible for its founding: Margaret Shove Morriss became Dean of the Women’s College in 1923, taking over 350 students, a majority of them from the Providence area, with a staff consisting of a registrar, a physical education teacher, and a secretary.Pembroke College
William W. Russell graduated from Brown in 1918 and received a master of science degree from the University in 1920, after which he earned a second master’s in 1923 and a Ph.D. in 1926 from Princeton.Russell, William W.
After receiving a Ph.D. degree from the University of Hamburg in 1923 Detlev W. Schumann taught in secondary schools in Germany until 1926, when he came to the United States.Schumann, Detlev W.
Kendall K. Smith was promoted to associate professor in 1923 and David Benedict Professor of Greek literature and history in 1927, when he became the head of the Department of Greek and Latin Classics.Smith, Kendall K.
In 1923-24 he participated in the Brown-in-China program as professor of sociology at Shanghai College.Sociology
Randall Stewart was assistant professor of English at the University of Idaho from 1923 to 1925, instructor at Yale from 1926 to 1931 and assistant professor from 1931 to 1934, and professor of English at Vanderbilt from 1934 until he came to Brown in 1937 with an appointment as full professor of English.Stewart, Randall
The coaches after Archie Hahn were Alfred W. Haddleton, who had coached at Providence Technical High School and Moses Brown School and filled in at Brown in 1920-21, James E. Smith 1892 from 1921 to 1923, John Frederick Powers, former Notre Dame track star and coach at Worcester Academy, from 1924 to 1938, and Malcolm Williams from 1938 to 1941.Track
The remaining treasurers have been Arnold Buffum Chace1866 from 1882 to 1900; Cornelius S. Sweetland 1866 from 1900 to 1923; Frank W. Matteson 1892 from 1923 to 1933, Edwin Aylsworth Burlingame ’14, acting treasurer from 1933 to 1934; Harold C. Field 1894 from 1934 to 1949; George Burton Hibbert from 1949 to 1950; Gordon L. Parker ’18 from 1950 to 1965; Patrick J. James ’32 from 1965 to 1970; Joseph W. Ress ’26 from 1970 to 1979; Andrew M. Hunt ’51 from 1979 to 1988; and Marie J. Langlois ’64 since 1988.Treasurer
Lawrence C. Wroth was assistant librarian of the Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore from 1912 to 1923, with a two-year absence with the 110th and 111th Field Artillery in France from 1917 to 1919.Wroth, Lawrence C.