DEPARTMENT REPORTS. 



155 



CLASS REPOET TABULATED. 



Time. 



18S0. 



Autumn. 



1881. 



Spring.. 



t( 



^i 



Summer. 



Autumn. 



1882." 



Spring.. 



k( 



ti 



n 

 ^l 

 u 



Summer. 



Study, 



Geometry A 



" *B 



Mechanics , 



Algebra A 



Algebra B 



Trigonometry A. 

 B. 



Surveying A 



B 



Civil Engineering 



Astronomy 



Mechanics 



Civil Engineering 

 Mechanics 



Trigometry A 



B.... 



Surveying A 



B 



Drawing A 



B 



Astronomy 



Mechanics 



Class. 



Sophomores. 

 Sophomores. 



Juniors 



Freshmen... 

 Freshmen .. 



Sophomores. 

 Sophomores. 

 Sophomores. 

 Sopliomores. 



Seniors 



Seniors 



Sophomores. 



Seniors 



Juniors 



Sophomores., 



Sophomores.. 



Sophomores. 



Sophomores. 



Freshmen... 



Freshmen... 



Seniors 



Sophomores. 



Weeks 



of 

 Study. 



11 



11 

 1] 



26 

 6 

 6 

 6 



12 

 6 



12 



11 



6 

 6 

 6 

 6 

 6 

 6 

 6 

 12 



Taught by Professor Uook and Mr. W. W. Remington. 



MECHANICAL OPERATIONS. 



JVeiu Works and Repairs. 



From the difficulty of getting good or honest work from contractors or ordi- 

 nary workmen, I was led to commence the system of doing our own repair- 

 ing of our steam works. Finding that this plan not only gave better results, 

 but effected a very great saving to the College, we have extended the 

 system to new works, as yet, however, on a small scale. The objections 

 to this method are that it requires so much of my time that class work is 

 likely to be neglected, and that work done with assistance of students who 

 labor only about three hours each day is likely to be extended over a long 

 time. The advantages are better work and low cost. 



During 1881, assisted by students, H. Bamber and C. Phelps, I made quite 

 extensive changes in the steam-heating apparatus in Wells Hall, adding much 

 to its efficiency, and constructed a sewer from Williams Hall to the river, a 

 distance of about 600 feet. Also, 



Built a pump-well near the river, eight feet in diameter and eight feet deep, 

 having a depth about four feet below the bottom of the river; connected the 

 well bottom with the river bottom by an eight-inch sewer pipe; laid from 

 the pump well to the boiler-house, a distance of 500 feet, a four-inch suction 

 pipe of wrought iron covered with asphaltum to prevent rusting; laid 800 

 feet of 2|-inch discharge pipe from boiler-house to Williams Hall and the new 

 library and museum. 



During the school year lSSl-2, I had, as assistants, F. E. Delano, J. M. 



