The award of the Williams medal; . S MYNDERSE RICE 1911RICHARD GILDERSLEEVE 1912 CHARLES FRANCIS HAWKINSBRANTON HOLSTEIN KELLOGG 1913*MERRITT HAVILAND SMITH. Jr 1914 NORMAN DELAFIELD DUBOIS VICKTOR HEATH JONES ?Edmund Albro Kellogg, 13, died on January 10, 1920, fromdisease contracted in service in France. [?1] ROLL OF HONOR—Continued HENRY MANCHESTER LADD, Jr. FRANCIS ROBBINS McCOOK ROLAND CROSBY NICKERSON ROBERT PARKER STAATS. 2nd WILLIAM BRADFORD TURNER 1915 RAYMOND CURTIS BLOOM BARRON BRAINERD HAROLD FREDERICK COWPERTHWAITE IRA WILLARD DEMPSEY DANIEL SCHNECK KELLER lOHN COWPERTHWAITE TYLER


The award of the Williams medal; . S MYNDERSE RICE 1911RICHARD GILDERSLEEVE 1912 CHARLES FRANCIS HAWKINSBRANTON HOLSTEIN KELLOGG 1913*MERRITT HAVILAND SMITH. Jr 1914 NORMAN DELAFIELD DUBOIS VICKTOR HEATH JONES ?Edmund Albro Kellogg, 13, died on January 10, 1920, fromdisease contracted in service in France. [?1] ROLL OF HONOR—Continued HENRY MANCHESTER LADD, Jr. FRANCIS ROBBINS McCOOK ROLAND CROSBY NICKERSON ROBERT PARKER STAATS. 2nd WILLIAM BRADFORD TURNER 1915 RAYMOND CURTIS BLOOM BARRON BRAINERD HAROLD FREDERICK COWPERTHWAITE IRA WILLARD DEMPSEY DANIEL SCHNECK KELLER lOHN COWPERTHWAITE TYLER ROWLAND WESTCOTT WATERBURY 1916 DONALD FREDERICK GEDDESRICHARD BURTON ROCKWOOD 1917 ALEXANDER THOMSON BURR THOMAS RIPLEY DORR WILLIAM BOGARDUS MERSELIS, Jr. WINTHROP FLOYD SMITH 1018 AMHERST WIGHT MEEKER RICHARD lAMES OBRIEN FREDERICK DOBSON POLLARD LAMBERT ALEXANDER WOOD 1919 RICHARD ASHLEY BLODGETT MALCOLM GIFFORD, Jr. ALBERT CLINTON WUNDERLICH 1920 DONALD GUILD BISHOPWILLIAM HEERMANCE PRIME 1921HARRY ABRAM SCHECTMAN [12]. BLISS PHRRV, , Si ADDRESS OF BLISS PERRY, , Si Mr. President, Guests of the College, Sons ofWilliams: THIS is a day of pride,—pride in the living,pride in tlie sacred dead. We lift our hearts,for this hour at least, above the ache of privatesorrow, above war-weariness, above disillusion,above the clamor of voices counselling selfishnessand fear. We lift them to the high, clear places,—higher e\en than these circling hills, cleanereven than this mountain air,—where Honordwells, and Duty, and where Service and Sacrificeseem no longer dark mysteries, but stand sunlitand glorious. We meet as Williams men, to give honor toother men of Williams, luckier than we were,—who served in the Army and Navy and MarineCorps of the United States or of her Allies in theGreat War. It is college loyalty, primarily, whichhas prompted this celebration: and college loy-alty, like all vital things, escapes logical analysisand definition. No one has ever define


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectworldwar19141918