Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO)

 - Class of 1921

Page 1 of 212

 

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1921 Edition, Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collectionPage 7, 1921 Edition, Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection
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Page 10, 1921 Edition, Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collectionPage 11, 1921 Edition, Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection
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Page 8, 1921 Edition, Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collectionPage 9, 1921 Edition, Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 212 of the 1921 volume:

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E, Em- Q- - . . .g -. tx., 2 -'li' Q-Q - X:-:J -453 iihrv ' , Q.-,iig ' 't Q .Q--'Yung ' m i illunuq J 1EF0REHUNNER 0F CI ILIZATION x-- ' E ,,,..-It-nit -.,oP ?1uqr 'hn-. 0 ' gn-qgg1lvi19?'-' .. , ' K ' o 9 0 I If fi? 7 Hyrx, mmm4uwae., 4-0 N? lr' 1:- 34? Q ,v.f+Tr' ,P 49' rl ar, f .fae'M4-R0 , .1 -,L.,,1., 5,5 -.rq V 4. 1, ,.- ,ln is 'Q user , 1 I A ,Au If 1 426: if af, 4 4-. 1 I ,- e I Q i is ju,.l3i,iE,,. A' big.--T,,-TwT,i.-i,qT..r.T.,T,,, Q 1 R '1 5 v 'hike' -M' 'aff 9- .V .. '2.' 'f Ip: 9' ?- -, 1, gi . qirbi 735- 'bf ':,:. Egg'Tbig::,,.5:1g,igggggiiwgs,-ig . : :1'l Ufiiiiaiiiiiiiiifz -::1.::f1 ,f :: :fisfi X Publzshcfd bythe THE STUDENTS OF ' The IVIISSCURI SCI-IGOL of MINES V Rolla, Missouri A I 22 .13 2 ROLLAMO BOARD juremnrh N presenting this book, the fifteenth Rollamo, to you, we wish i i to say that we have tried to convey a true picture of the if life of the student in and about Rolla, Missouri, at the School of Mines. VVe have striven to make this picture as comprehensive and as representative as possible. In order to gain this end we have put aside our individual feeling and have endeavored to replace it with a cosmopolitan one. Any sentiment that we considered current among any group of students has been given a place here. We have no apologies to make. We have made an honest effort to please and if we have failed the failure is irremediable. J. EWART JONES . H. E. D1ERs . R. L. JOHNSON ,. Rov ER1cKsoN EDW. KAHLBAUM JOE M. W1LsoN K. H. DE CoUssER W. E. CASE . J. F. HOSTERMAN W. H. DUNLOP . RoLLAMo E.oARD. E Editor in Chief Business Manager A ss't B nsiness M gr Secretary Treasurer Art Editor Athletic Editor Stal? Photographer A ssistant Editor Assistant Editor I 9 iff X NX 'f Xxxlffiz ff'-1' X .g l- 4 , - F i xv T JS X X ' 54 ' ,. S ' fx Q S 4 I ,fg x f x s K S ,f ,aff X Q. f? , wif, X i 7T ' is-155155 -2em ?:f'- is wzzlillngsi f -- . 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'm..: 1 , 1 J ' ' r , f .K ,, f r , - fh-LL.: : 4 f a N, 1 1 Y , . 1 1 ,fll .f - 1. 1 . : 1 5,1 'QA f ,Ax . --4 A A I :nz W 22 -,:,iW'fei.2 M hr w,,M.,, gf, fff ,fm.,5 ,W -M .4 fm,-W' A 2 , f x -M-W 'Ki . , A , , 1-r i ., wr K i Q -' 1 ' - .JJ -- - if f nn f f ' . A . . - 2 , -L . ' X .gfwgng .A,4 .LLil,i, Q f W J 3 1 K5 ,1.M-: .W ,L , , K , , ,.,,,,m,AAA Q A , .,,, - , f V..-,,,v A ,---..N A..L.X..L,x ix .LX-g...l.5,,,L. .....i.1f-til., x.,-1'-5 ' H- -ix Ll WY w,AL,,i -f ' W -:. 1i.:AA-jiifillvkvui-1,,,i'. .'. LJ- 'iff - f 'k ' U4 W ',,,....v-...., , Q K .Mfg----1--..q.,,n Q 'Vrv-,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,V,-,,, an ' , W ' X-. ff-Q-fw - ,.., N M 1 'S--.. IVA if - . K A i ?:rf?L?.yA f I my VW' awww Wm !,,,,. F -. T174 6 I! . ...,,,.MWw,,A,.-,....w- . I' ME. 4.3. I, A I --. , M M V E-..,,wiwmvl X, -uk' K .. Mm Mm 4 ' E f I L 1,f4z5,,5f'k ' iff. , if . ,fy 1, ,gf f' ,f pl ff f f 1 ,V V' , , ' -f 151 A j ' ,.-1,4 ' f fxfif' M M-'M hh' ',.7,,,,,p1 wk' ,,.V..,-..,-SQL --WL.:-,Ml Vgyyk, V ,JNL lg-L xl I Y QJMJNJM-JMA,,--,,,..J.,.ufim f 7.,. if ggmiwzgmrl , ,, 4 2 A , 'nf A-Q, f,Q+',WQ,,:'x Nyv, it K.- xv V K V , ,V t It .gh I ,, I1 1 1 ,,,f A M., 1, W -- ..,.,. , ...M M, ,... -.,...,,, ,M ,W , . 3 M , A . , 1 L f 3 -..,,z!'h'4f M K A W ' ' ' N k- ' W R N' 'Af i 415'-V 4 f ,fm E K W ,1 K fx fl if v ..- ' 1-1 X. . 3 . .fy ....,, X A, ,T-in ! ,5,,W .,M , , My s,,. . ...4 1 ,Q 4,... .x:,..:,,W,,, ffx AQ U x M 1 U' A I + 1 + f. H r 3 . k F C .9 x X X E UXOM 'ff M Nw I 1lT'7lf!fffffflflf 4 1 5 Iraqi: 25 , .N ' S cf' O4 L lg U k ff' 1 'nm 'Q fgog 3' .. 1 'H ' -i QA wjful xoqqvp , s 5 .1 H A x Q f, flu w , gvsif V igvo fx x ? . f cd -A ., w, , - +Q' Ifff-'145,, 4 ,, Wi . ,,-,,,' Q. f f- f'f f'S '-L'A A A N x liz 31 J 91 ' 2 J WO Q: A 3 1 3 . ENN- L1 46 rf' F VI TTT I.. W4 ,, , .,,W Q! fi , I K q f' , I . Ji Q , j f Y ,J 2 N : f A I Vx, fx 1 x s f -S5311 iR'Xxxv-X 25 ,.,,u?f J h ' ,A-ki Q I,- f ' f ff' 4 ,ff .1 1 5. N X 1 I 1 I 'J 0 'KX 4, 3 I F N Q Y. nw 'x , , il- A if 'KX gy, Vg!! Y, 'Q If , ' ' fin 11... ,,A. A . ' -, llll 4 M' f . ' , , ' . S f , I 'NX I I 'lv f - , 'II' I ' 'l flfgbfifwl .Shiv , fg, ,g, 1 ' 1 fX ' -D l i I 3 2 Page 27 ALBERT ROSS HILL President of the Umzfersvlty .V -f-Me Nj?-FQ . mr. ft. 19. :fulrfm Dr. Fulton was named Director of the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy as successor to Dr. McRae in June, 4 fl 1920. . He is a man Well known in the circles of Mining and Metallurgical industries. He received his E. M. at Colum- bia University in 1897. Since then he has held the chair of Professor of Metallurgy at the South Dakota State School of Mines and at the Case School of Applied Science. During most of his time at the South Dakota State School of Mines he was also President of that institution. At the present time Dr. -Fulton is Consulting Metallurgist for the Ameri- can Institute of Mining Engineersg amember of that insti- tution: anda member of the Mining and Metallurgical Society of America. ' With the experience of President at the South Dakota School of Mines and' hisipractical knowledge of the held in which this school is most vitally interested, we feel sure that we have a man at the head of this school who is well fitted for the task and who will advance the institution. Dr. Fulton has already proven to us that he deserves our coioperation in any plans which he has for benefiting the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy. we if 5 Q9 A .E I D- - as M I l .1 Wm' ' 9 'fi J gi 3 ' sfff .af J A 1 'O '3:, 0 QCP- ti! l S . . i l N ' 5 Pagw Z!! 4 I - X A 1 YW Kennet! St. Louis Springfield Illorztgomery C113 Joplin St. Joseph Rolla Parrfs Kansas C113 School Charrmarr . l3,xYs1Nn1-in Treasurer L II xs. IQN.-NPI' ION j Secretary LDWIN li.-x111.1x.xlx1 Drrector of School of Mrnes C Il. Fwy A- E IX' 3 Q FA' 'W ml I 6 'LIL'uL'L4E L'm T X ia N lit 1 1 i ' . 1 i c 5' MG y l X I: x 5 ' x E x Q. . ul I Q. - Q X N u 4 an x. I h b ..- .lf U K - 1-we ss ,mrs ff Mo re 59, Page A I lg EBL QI. 31. illldme 3 1 Dr. McRae was director of the Missouri School of Mines from 1915 until June, 1920. Prior to that time he had been an Instructor in this school for nineteen years. During his term of service he has been extremely conscientious and ever zealous for the advancement of the school. He was at all times willing ,to render any assistance possible to the students. He was an ardent advocate of athletics and is yet greatly interested in all our contests. We Wish to extend the thanks of the student body to Dr. McRae for the achievements he had accomplished for the school. 31 900 L, Q v 04 I ,f ' mnifffu xoga I 5- 5 R bw -29 1 ,- 'CF 151 E 5 .65 f Al ll EE F 1 . u n -l 'I It ll ,I QL I Sf! 1? 'R .T F O L r , . 3 ., m 'xb if L L. Ti ' . 53, ,f X 1' . X. if 'E 2' E? N I 2 2.4 if ii -Q ELMO GOLIGHTLY HARRIS, C. E. Q , , , , GEORGE REINALD DEAN, B. S., C. E. L Professor of C1v1l Engmeermg. I ' - American Society of Civil Engineering. ' Tau Beta P1 u Q L ' - Professor of Mathematics. . x L- L A ' Registrar Missouri School of Mines. .Q a . X es 1 , f FN s A . I -X I S .. ll .. I ll l X -gli -. C fX S. v N5 F7 I CARROLL RALPH F0RBE5,,B- 5-, E- M. JOSEPH VVAYNE BARLEY, A. B., .-X. M., Ph. IB, ,uk Tgu Feta P1QS1ifn1a,Rho, S. , E. Sigma Nu ul i j T0 CSSOF 0 1116 E1'1g1I'l6Cl'lHg. Professor of Ifnglisli and Modern lnixeimqcs. 5 fAs-' L ' cn., , - :px 3 L 3 5 . l'4liJ4 S , ' L ' K L . . E 0 5 . Q ' f... ...ummm 5 3, E00 3 2 sf- M , , xblbxsmnfsa . S. s LI i 'ini i, ff, li ,, gi F if Pi? ,Y i . x N N i I I I if , . 'W Dix I 1 1 4 rv, imWi 'k ' xx .faq . rent Wi M Q B gag 6iAPiNX f'11TLT.Z115:liL 'nag' 'A A U li A R Qi X if J , L ,g lg 1 f X f - i A Ll.-XROLD LESLIE XNHEELER, A. B., B. L. S. WILLIAM DEGARMO TURNER, B, S., Ph. D, A j Phi Kappa Psi. i Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi. Y Librarian- Professor of Chemistry. i Memberfof the American Library Associa- American Chemical Society. ' tion, Missouri State Library Association, 1 Special Libraries Association. Q I I lj ' 11 174' J r , E1 5 4 i V pi LEO-N ELMER VVOODMAN, A. B., A. M., Ph. D. CHARLES Yr CLAYTON' B' S Met' E' i 4 . ' . p . 3 Phi Beta Ka13Da,Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi. I Sigfj51EaiLQ2HEgg3gnPeta PM Quo Vadlsf 5 Y' Professor of ,Physics Professor of Metallurgy. ,V 1 3 N' Fellow of themi1g3fr,nfASfC?ei2g the Advance- HMember of Institute if Metals,dLpxII1dong A ' V V ' American Institute of ining an eta- 3 A American Pl'1ySiCal SOCi6ty- lurgical Engineersg Consulting' Metallurgist, 1 A P3 U. S. Bureau of Mines. ' i , k p E A Q, 6 ... P , 3.2 I , A Lf W v ol- -:I i Ca 5 ' Q' ' . E 3 . H - A I ,I i X 1 . 1 9 ' mmm i fr f f ,,..fff4a'nm i don Q0 5 41 L- L,-5 A H1155 'O qv 55 l,,....--.,....- .-,,,,,.., , CI.1'IITf f '-Q-v, V pq X . , Q: . P P J! A. ' s 1 . 1 11 In I -.Q4 P 3 4 if in ni W f , j ' Q T ff 1043 .N fk gig - i lo rl i 2 ' ' B .y 7 l I LEON ELLIS GARRETT, - . :V CHARLES I.AURENC113h.D15X.kE, A- B-f N Tau Beta Pi P Acacia, 'Phi Beta K-?lDD3i Sigma Xi' Professor of MechaDiCS- N ' Gamma Alpha. 1 i Q A Professor of Geology and Mineralogy- ? x W l N Ai N if Blk w : l P N 2? I '-E4 Q ll ' 1 - CHARLES EDWARD COOKE LT. I-Iowixizn Loris l'i-:r'im.xx1 - 5 Gamma Alpha, Sigma Gamma Epsilon. Professor of Military Science ami 'llmviivs N l - Pf0fGSSOI' of TODOg1'21DhiC Engineering, First Lieutenant, Corps of l'fi1giiuwi,, I . S. Wlashington Society of Engineers. A'-'mi' K T0D0g1'21DhiC EHQHSCF, U. S. G. S. Society of Aim-ricaln Military liugim-i-rs, . I Lt X 5 0-X00L Q p 5 ' fp OA 5 ,Q -I un. ' f ' ' E + OOP . ' .J f... .0 2 M fi f f- 4,39 p X... N., .pk if ,HN-e 456 X A xl 7 'iv X 'S 1I!fC'!l,TT'SW iw' Ng I as wa 1 IAQ eel fe I -.A x Wl x A FRANK EDXVARD DEINNIE B. S. ' Associate Professor of Athletics. Physical Director. K I N ,X X HOWARD LEROY DUNLAP, B. S. A. M. Phi Delta Chi I Associate Professor of Chemistry. American Chemical Society. Page Q HENRY HORTON ARMSBY B. .V C. A Sigma Nu Phi Kappa i Associate Professor of Civil Envineering. Member of Society for Promotion of En- gineering Education. l Y an 1, A 4, ' D 1 , 3 l I Z ' a ,I N 'N I ia... X Dj! O J QE P I I , s, E. I' , ' Ph fy D 3 l I A1 4 I rs Ji? 2 A ay, , FREDERICK WILLIAM SHAW M. D. Associate Professor of Hygiene. U. S. Army 1910-1919 A Graduate Student John Hopkins, Research Student XVIII. Voll er Research Laboratory 1919 I 900 L, O fo 04 Q I :lg 3C N H 0 0 tv 5 I 1 Cf' Qf 1. Q. 7. H I fix x , , , f' 23' My ,QV -- , 1, ff ,r 1 gi ' , f ko away ' f Ap A I . D xy , , tix, J l I W f f W 1: . . Ziff, 5, 4 p I 1 ffglwlfgg 4 tfqa M L I f f I, A. 12, 1 1 aw . ft .V M73 i , if P,,,g,g.M.. f , 1 4 , H3525 4 ff Y ' s RWM 5 ,Mfg ,Z W , ZA 15, . v A r ' ' 1 ,gg , A w e 4354, 1 1 W' 48 v I ,A 1 -A I M . A ' I ' I 1 1 . . N 1 1 C I Q I -. Y c , . 1 I I - u if ' I I 9 . 'I r . l '- A' .f I ' Q' ' . A1 I f - N O 1 . iv ' .sf if u -V fx . Q , 1 ' P ro 2 I WW rf' Us , , L L ,. X AQZQ O J .E ro., c I A . X. ' . A E 4 LQ -3 lf? I . If -' A FLOYD HILL FRAME A. B, I JOSEPH HENRY BOWEN U ' ' . . ' Ph' . Assistant,'Professor of, Mechanical Engl- Phllqappa I . . - L Heefiflg' Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering. YN Q x i 5 K . r xx x X H 9 Q l wt EUGENE LEE JOHNSON, Pli. B., LL. B. G ARRETT A. lVlUILENl3l'RG, A. B., M. S. Assistant Professor of En lish. Q' Q g sigma Gamma Epsilon Secretary to the Faculty. Assistant Professor of Geology nml Nlincr- K l alogy. L . 4 N i S ' I 1' N X s Q S F : . s I 3 -- I'um 1 lf S' A 600 L 5 c. 6 04 ff x . I .. . 1 Mllllll '5 Q03 3 ' if . ,,q -..Jill ' T x lqqw , 5 PSX is 0 A . f,g,c,, so WX f E wif' E ,U 'X S for .fc QL LVAMQ3 X- tj, E -Lx , ,W , - ,ci A x X Q -or ' l 0 LW , xl .J l aa- X :IE U nv H JOSEPH RAMON GUITERAS, E. M. ROBERT LEE RHOADS, B. S., M. E. , Tau Beta Pi. Delta Upsilon. Assistant Professor of Geology. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engi- N X neermg. E ei N ll sf f W If 1 ,,..1 i , A 1 N s.titq Kg CLAIR VICTOR MANN, B. S. JOSIAH BRIDGE, A- B-, M- 5- Tau Beta Pi. Sigma Xi, Sigma Gamma Epsilon. 5 Assistant Professor of Drawing, American Assistant Professor Of Geology. Ass'n of Engineers, Society for Promotion of ' Eng. Education. E Page 37 A J Lf . ' E .1-: -x u 0+ 2 Q .r ,. - fi '-x .f .I B 3 U ,ff ' H ' A 9 0 Q f H 4 l - E E fr, - 1 1 ffl O 0 S N - X f- f. J fg dl , x A JS , e Fi A 2 ss 'bw 59 E I - l f Y 1 X - Q la 3 5 t,-f-- W-eQZy A :Q g A R r I . e ,.:,1.-s o ' ,- g . fl 'fl ff N S - i la' 4' f Q RY1..-xND FLETCHER RATLIFF, A. B., A. M. MARTIN HAREOIE Qf50RNg3E?1fY, Met. E-, n l . . . en. .,c. .gl Assistant Professor of Physlcs. W S. G F .1 - ' . 1gma amma .DSI on. l T Instructor in Metallurgy, Research Metal- I K lurgist Experiment Station. s a l N 5: 1 'f 1 5: . 9 l l s 1 Q 2- 5 , l g . l 5 l I Q , A 6 ,zeg , I '3 ,Q v i. X -,- E 94 ' 5 : , .X 5 i , -f ' ' l1f5'?3S'3L. L : : 3 .,.4 , ,,..' .: -',,.,,,-1 - 4 ' 15 t... ' :: l N ESE 1' 'f' l N X kts. : N wi N X X ' . X Lv x XX X vt I- , , F7 ' CLARENCE EDXVARD' BARDSLEY, B. S, - . XWA 41' - T - 1 - X' '03 ASS1Sf3Ht Professor' of 'T0POgral3hical Engi- RRDN SCOTT BOXCL, -Y B., :X. Xl., l'l1. ll. ' neefmg- , Assistant Professor of Economics. , ' Q if ' 'ff' v . l L ,if I'1lUz' .Tb K 4 , 6 ' N 1: ' 4 A: +R 0 Q Q ' . l ' -I ' 0 , - ,Y Q., ntdffldumm , O 'J 550 3 o V l r K 0 N 'wut H ' 4,5 en ,r of llllllltro l 1 xxx. J, o . I Lv , 56 O i I. Y V A ' 'M rl--ij s Iivrwi 41 It p. Xil, f I I . 'iq ,X fl, Q X 1, F Ng. , f 6 K, - ff 5 A f s S Cv-f Lasik N f 5 Y i L, r U 235 g -1 VAN BUREN HINSCH, B. S., E. M. JOSEPH HENRY UNDERWOOD Phl Delta Theta Instructor in Forge Shop. Instructor in Mathematics. . ' s ,gi lie 15 1 IST jf iv ARTHUR SCOTT im THOMAS IVIELLOR BAINS, E. M. V Master Sergeant, U- 5- A- Beta Theta Pi, Tau Beta Pi, sigma Xi. Instructor in Military Science and Tactics. Military Order of Dragons. Instructor in Metallurgy. f E5 I Page 39 001. A ff 01199 N x ' 'Q lv 5 . ffl I. -l g 3 9 mm HW ' e Q A M x Q rg 'U ' 6 z .? I ,J Q i -..-W gr- i ef-1 E E fp I L. QL M kfgjxfi m 4 v B one E ' it E if X fl 'KS .x 5 N I S x x N X - 'B I . Q. 3 X if S I x Q, Q., 3- 1: sv' 1 e u 5 7 I I ef 1 4 v 5 : 1-2 La' RALPH 'VINCENT PRITCHARD, B. S. JOE BEATY BUTLER, B. S. Instructor in Mathematics. Instructor in Civil Engineering. ' American Assfn of Engineers. C h arter Member of Soc. of Am. Military Engineers. K ei 55 'I ll I S M-Nfelge I L Q 5' 'F -X 33 Q... 37 ' 1 I 52? i I X Y Pct 0 X s X 94194 X WW hi OSCAR I I ADAM HENNING, A- B-, A. M. PIERRE CELESTIN CAMBIARRE, A. B., Ph. B. Instructor in German. I V Instructor in Spanish and French. , . in E? I . ' P0-gc' -Q-0 C900 g 4- 1. -5. 1 f Q.. 1199 I E. ,q nmmiix , I myngbg. :AEM 5 - Q I I . ' I 05 , Q s ng . I --'Jflyu I x A 3 5 O V N ' . 4- F 6: . H- g ' fl f yy . at I .Xxx -a 553 W ' VE N 4 1,8 N iw ' f It fa N 1 ' if gl 5 T x 44 1 5 - I 'O 1 x W .iii ,lx V 'I A A Q. , .. A ' t X 5. J I -4 x A S. . I jg t -if ' -Q -' gx. - ' , , ' ' t i fx -f 1 x ff --.': 'M fk--w 1 2- t P If.-XRL IQENNETH IQERSHNER, B. S., M. S. t ' 4 r . . VICTOR KOPPLE FISCHLOWITZ B. S. .1 P111 Kappa Phr a ' , I 1 . . .J Instructor In Chemlstry. Instructor 1n Chennstry. ii ' I X . A ' 51 .4 t N Y 3 '4 11 . A 1 5 N E5 Q1 , . f W T14 4 4 4 1 A A 4 5 4 3 A -4 K 4 YV 1 1 Q: 3 E: ' t :E N :U Y L.-4 X f t t J g a. 5,92 EDMUND HAROLD WOOLRYCH S 24 Kappa Slgma Instructor in Drawing. E 1 03 1 -,, f t 5 if 21 I 4 hh I Q Page 41 J :FOOL ' E ' O-4 1? ti k A N -'Q Q0 5 ' -fm , W ' so 0 s Q I' f' N. 6' 1 ,y 'Q I - . .B . ' + eotlaAlMxOIIIs. 1I A -N, 5 f' L-----.M I I , 5 1 A E A I 1 ' 1 . , Ref' QBfIj21' janultp Zlssmstrants ,I MARION S. BADOLLET, B. S. ..... Assistant in Chemistry 0 BARNEY NUDELMAN, B. S. , Assistant in Chemistry : VVILLI.-XM W. VVEIGEL, B. S. ,,... Assistant in .Mining A. EDNVIN KAHLBAUM . ROBERT R. DICIQERSON' ZELLA ELIAS . . MRS. H. O. NORVILLE N INA EDITH ENGLISH NANCY HARRISON . ELIZABETH MONTGOMERY' . . RUTH F. STEVENS . EVA MAY UNDERXVOOD OTHER OFFICERS 1 W I Q , , , Business Manager A '51 . Sitybt. of Groitnds and Bldgs. 2'E Secretary to Director if n Assistant Librarian I 'f Catalogiter, Library , ' Assistant in Library . . Stenographer Q , . Stenographer Si . . S tenographer ' ' MILDRED S. FISCHLOWITZ ,,..... Stenographer 8 , I BUREAU OF MINES EXPERIMENT STATION I. J. RUTLEDGE, Supt. . . A .... St. Loitis, Jllissoitri I JOHN GROSS, Metallurgist . . . . Rolla, ,Missouri Q WILL H. COGHILL, Metallurgist . . , Platteville, Wisconsin I C. O. ANDERSON, Metallurgist . . . Platteville, IfVisconsin wx' VVALTER SCOTT, ASS't Metallurgist . . Rolla, Jwissoztri . NOLL HUBBARD, Chief Clerk . . . Rolla, .Missouri . A ALBERT L. JOHNS, Clerk 4 ...I . St. Louis, llfissouri I STUDENT ASSISTANTS h E. S. WHEELER, Chemistry HUSTON TAYLOR, Chemistry E. W. REMBERT, .Chemistry 1. P. COLBERT, Civil Engin H M. L. FREY, English . S. L. LLOYD, English I W. L. STEWART, Matlzleiiiatzks ' - H. C. LOESCHE, Drawing H. E. ZOLLER, Civil Engin. C. J. MILLAR, Gymnasi-um V E. G. MACHIN, Civil Engin. E. J. TORRENCE, Qjice L- E-DAV1DSON,Ge0l0ey A. L. ACKERS, Via. Tr. F' NETZEBANDII Gevlvgy J. L. BULGER, Gymnasium HI' W' HURST, ASSUNWZ A I. P. GORDON, Gymizosin-nz I WAYMAN CROW, Memllwgy W. VV. BOLT, Gj'777'llI0.YI.'I1AI7I A gi lfsillidsgl? jjllie'iaZuLf53' f WV. YY. ICEELER, Vocfotiozzal Y'I'cI1.III'I1Q 5 . BMLEY EWWZZU Wg? J. EWART -IONES, If0Fl7l'I.l7II4I1'Tl'lII.lII.lIg D. E' HUFFMZW Phyilics I GEO- B- BLOOM, If'oc'c1l1o11ol 1xI'L11.Il1-IIQ Q A 1 A . JOHN H. IJOLIGIIICRTX, Reg. Qftm' I I OO ' I-' IL L 5 ' boa L O 1 -- V - om I A ' g .I 12 f cp ,NW - A ...af ulllm .0,,?3, ,Qgajqu A . Jylv 5,9 . B. I O 3 ---s..x, at -. X S 5 '53 Pr Q' X X x K N 3 9 .f '1 -! ,, I-gi ii ff -1 -4 1 . f 1 4 Q 4 4 ,, , 4 . A s 1 -L A Q In Vi AJ! UW M 61 N , x x s X ,,. .-- N ,N ,,,,...,,,,s- N , lf' , ' w ' 'NH -'Y--M.- 'P Q h5 W M xx Tlx Q :X gy fZ-wmmAMQ fwN gy f l 4 A T I T7 Iii 'D K . ' Si: 4' I 1 Ir- , I ggi, W ff ' 5 1 Z5 N iv Az MWQ 1 Q S gg i, fi 'A , A 'N 01' ' XX , Q6-6 ,I 473, . ' 5 X l rf',?,7' 15 'W v - 1 , U lf ffw. if M Q 1 fy'WMEW Lf 1f ?QQ !4M Yf:if X f, wb Li. ff 5 'A fly If ,g E: WE 'Y4r' ' WL Mp ,w i 'g 3 4 if Q A - , --' , A 3 W Q O W f - P? K doe Mumv, Q P ' oo' 5 L A E vi 'X parm ' tg 3 Hx ' ' ' J ',,, cinlffl xO,1QGS , r-N I! f ' A-av s ' x . 'Iv 5 fi' A w .a - .., ,g .f Y 44 . - up i rjf' Y J W V Y ,U ar an . X., -h Ax -as as ri ff , Mk fs.- - J' , -Q 2.512391-IIJM 259, ,' l, Senior Qilass lkshiztn -9 J ' J I lan fp p majority of our class entered school 'M i 1 , pg' in the fall of '17, but since the war many f Q, T7 up men of former classes have returned to W 3 . alhliate themselves with the class of '21. V Q T As Freshmen, we took our share of hazing, 5 l as all good Freshmen should, and looked forward , 3 gj to the next year when, as Sophs, it would be our V turn. The next fall, however, found the S. A. T. L' -3 ' 5 C. established in the school and we were able to F , p Q administer instruction to the Frosh only on rare 3 occasions. I I :T : We have always been represented in all ., A branches of athletics. During this year the rec- qi: A ords made by Mort Wilson, Cairns CCaptainD, lf' I X and White at football, Rohloff at basketballg 4, gp and Needham and White in track are records A A s 5' K that any class could be proud of. :E -' As students, throughout our college' career, I we find that we have had representatives in the by two extremes of the classes. The average of the ' I I class, as a whole, has ranked high. lf Members of our class have always been leaders in all forms of school activ- if ities. We were among the leaders in the nationalizing of the Guards of St. Patrick and were the first Junior class to present the Guard of St. Patrick Pin or Emblem to the graduating class. ,, Strange is the feeling of each Senior as the time draws near for him to start , . if out in the world and prove the value of a college education. As Freshmen, we A 1 envied the Seniors who were about to leave school, but now, as Seniors, we envy 1 X those undergraduates who will return again to M. S. M. I if , A if N OFFICERS S2 L. E. DAVIDSON . . . . . President A R, K, STROUP Vice-President 74 x V. I. KEETER . - S60V015U1'3' . A . 1 STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES Ext. 1 C I T A. F. DELALOYE L. E. DAVIDSON fi E ' R. K. STROUP 2 I ' Page 45 600 L :Il Q ...., J E 3 I mm H ' 'A K A1339 I .S A ' I UUHV fo 'MV 59 N l N - .AMW-ml-A--Mwawfx -frilltiiitre-2 ref x 9 ' 'S C ' 1 C' 'ST C , 1 iii' 1 by-C, f,, A f . f 'Q - -1 1 ix 'A ff--1. ' f oN . - ffll f'l1eXf ' ' I 'x A- in fi iq I X f, ' f' 5, ,Q-,I i I 1 F ' Nxt 'wifi' , T r 4 l all 5 05. . i I ' I 9 2 I ' T . H ii 0 - HAROLD LELAND BAILEY Xfirgima, 111- ' l W Mine Engiiieeriiig C1055 1920 :L 3 Pi Kappa Alpha, Theta Tau, Quo VaCliS, SSVCYY, American Ass'n of Engineers,, Student Coun- 5' I cil 1919, Pres. Athletic Board. Bill is another one of our mid-year grad- ' uates. A practical man thru and thru and one on Whom We can count to bring home the bacon. g Would never disclose his middle name except , on very special occasion. VVas Prol. Forbes , 1 Q right-hand man and spent most of his time in N N Mining Lab. F . X x 2 ' l r,,l:q,,, t,:,,i. , ,,,p GEORGE BARNETT BLOOM Maysville, Mo. -,fp i..:.A:.- General Science Class 1920 . X ' i-,.r ,, Kappa Alpha, Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Quo Q, E 1 Vadis, Square and Compass, A. I. M. 8: M. E., V Editor Rollamo 1920, Pres. Student Council 1 ff Ee.tl , '20, Tennis Team 1920, Student Instructor ' wi, .Qi Mineralogy in 1920. : ' Q Blossom graduated in December and fell for the army life. He just couldn't stay out rx, M of the. clouds. He is now flying at Carlstrom . X. l.i' 1 Field in Florida. Bloom was here last summer ' . ' A and admitted that he enjoyed every minute ' ' fL M.-vs4s..a2:,.-1 f, Q of the tirne. 2-X K 3 PM ,,.... , riill 'IAVV i - t.,,,, aal F- EDWIN JOSEPH BOHN St. Louis, Mo. v Civil Engiiieeriiig Class 1021 , ' -l'-. I v l ' . l . ', ,,',5 1 Kappa Alpha, Quo Vadis, A. A. E., Mercier 5 x Club, M Football '17, '18, Honorary Xl I' , ,,., , ,B 1920, M Basketball '19, '20, M Track '19, 5: x g A '20, Captain Basketball 1919-'20, Elected Cap- :il N ji ' Q tain Track 1920-'21, 1' Q W Q' V Eddie left us in November '20, but his in- - . fluence.w1ll long be felt in the school. The , X X I Xp p Memorial that we are erecting to him but slight- , . MX Q 5 ' Q sz ly expresses the high regard which we have for vi ' S T 'Im' 5 L . i ,,,.. ,..,.. , 1 p, , , v f lr s . ...... m ' EQ, I? I 2500 1 ' O o ' ' 1'4I1'1 iff or tu., wu- Q 1 no-... 4-'19 PS fs ' M JHNNV6 A V, A.,', H ,. , V J E . U I 0 S xg my Aims-l lk Hx ,E V 5 4 i I . 4' I-Je! l ,l ,l til it A 1.5 H .gi Q X il x , X H .I I S I x ll 'N lx 'I l . I K WW' .- - f Ss, ,.,, we ., , . V FFP' -sd eq - ss mv .fe lf 1 ' , s-N.. ' 'N -.NX 1-QQ, .R I ' ,Au 1 . mf' 'P X fr, I G was fat f K ., 'I ix s ij, i -S f ' L GJ l IQARI. XY1l.l.I.-XM Booiuci: Kansas City, Mo. .lline lf!IgIiII:'t'I'I-llg Clays 1931 Pi Kappa .-Xlpha, Press Club, Square and Com- pass, Student Council '20, American Ass'n of Engineers, Mo. Mining .-Xss'n, A. I. M. 8 M. E. Miner Board '20, '2l. Book hails from Kansas City, but has tried to live that down by his work on the Miner Board. Is a hard and consistent worker. A real student and a strong supporter of all school activities. Has been known to visit Cuba with alarming regularity. I-las no inclination to argue. ' CARROLL PRESTON BURFORD Beaumont, Texas .Mine Engineering Class IQZI Pi Kappa Alpha, American Ass'n of Engi- neers, A. I. M. 8 M. E., Rollamo Board '20. No one seems to know just how he acquired the good old Spanish name of Bobo, but Dame Rumor has it that he was a gun in Descrip. Is one of our most consistent and nonpartial fussers. ARTHUR L. CAIRNS Cape Girardeau, Mo. ilffetallurgy Class IQZO Sigma Nu, Pipe and Bowl Club, Captain Football Team '20, M in Football in '17-'18- '19-'ZO. ' Buddy voluntarily incarcerated himself for life early in the Football season. Won his fourth letter in football in '2O. Has some ex- pectations of being a Met. Engr. Page 0 7 ,500 L 19 1 lf? hwy 5 fu fx .r , , c , f H , Q Vbigwgffgmdiwwj em eat ' E. ' 2 . iii x'f'14z7'9w in ,IV 5 Z .- lee 'I' 5 V- 'r 55:12 2, I 5 A N, ' 4 ft 2 miie' f' ,QT -1' ' vw : '.-' I f 1 X 9 s nf X ,. I Ml ' Q X ,b X , - I ,QA X X I3 5? ff , s I 'f all f f ' K N K X riff if 9 1 ,K QV? W ,, 2 if 45 s W X 2 ,af 4 gy 'PX X R gpm 2 ' J Wx 8 X . , f , fe lj 3 36 I, 4, 3 4 9 1,9 'f is , i, ,HA v gf yay, Q f l Q ' iv 7,0 l f gif' N' 4 '21 QQ , Q ii 9 as rv 4 M . 4 Q . ui A A f M ' 5 .- - . ' ,S :- 'Wi i Y X 'diff' Y, 1 , s , ss- 2 , N f .5 ,Qi iyjvgfw W e ww 'A ' 0,499 , A f fe: rsq O4 .. g , - P ag imc? g ulilr I HW P J' 'lv -5 , -v l , - , ' 1 l i J Ei! : 2' sz ig? Is 1: I I f 4 g If l 5 C6 l . 1 H T -. I ' lu . ,. gr 111 I A L., l l l l l l l i v '27 up l l in . ' 'Q l 'O 4 l I l 5 I l l 1 l I l i I l I I li l 1 i fl z I lf fl ll I is li I E lr if . H I I I I 2 I S R. E, I l I ii li if 3 I. ls ii I s 4. 4 I I I g , I A A-W , :sw I ' N q 'T 2 Z' E ' N D , I 'S 2 fi 5 xcx.-Q-I! 5s.fk'9 ' . , I I I ' ' 'I ' I X- I ' 05' X I Q I Mg 1 9 Q32 . N as M R-N fy A , . f A I , n ii . I.- I ' 1 , . ' E e 1. gg XX X X ' IQUANG YU CHANG Kunghsien, Honan, China I I llline Engineering Class 1921 L' I: Vibbqqh A I Independent, American Ass'n of Engineers, ' . A. I. M. it M. E. . ' Chang hails from China, and therefore we are short of dope on his mental afliictions such as fussing. Nevertheless, he is a good student and a willing worker. VVe are inclined to be- lieve from his actions that Someone is wait- ing for him. , S JULES PHILIP COLBERT - Maryville, Mo. -' Civil Engineering Class 1921 . 31 Pi Kappa Alpha, Tau Beta Pi, C. E. Society, I American Ass'n of Engineers, Delegate to St. I Pat's Convention '20. jules Philip has all the qualifications of a . Prof. and takes especial delight in show-ing the Vocates that they don't know much about Trigonometry and Algebra. Armsby's right- ! 7 hand man. . LAWRENCE COLLINS Quincy, Ill. Mine Engineering Class 1914 Q I' Grubstakers, Theta Tau, Quo Vadis, Ameri- Q, ' , X can Ass'n of Engineers, A. I. M. 81 M. E., N l QI 'f' Mo. Mining Ass'n, Rollamo 1913-'14, Business If I , 5 1, Mgr. Ath. Ass'n 1913-'14. ii, X I f Mike was a member of the '14 class whore- ' '-Q turned to school last fall for his degree. He N N 3 found the Ways of the student much different from those of olden days. Noted for his regu- X lar attendance at the shows and his stories of ' K Xl 5, -ig C I Mexico and Russia and his famous expression: A. . It's all a -- mistake. If '91 ' 0900 L I 7 Page 48 V - Q 04 E Q I' ., Q A 'Q ,ff MIM!! ci ao? 3 ' mmm H , 7 I f 's 4 t J ,fi can-I KO!! ds , 5 N 1. S Ji Y- -..,,......A - -s....sxXv!ifMA,F,,....- I ilzitfk -.swxl 1 Ng. .-'T ' xx if V? if 1. - ygsxm A 'K ,fNsfi 11 11 r I , me K is Alf-.. i I A 'lvl i S' le-J O lg!-fX.I.XNllX S. t'o1:N11'1-11.1. Si. l.ouis, Mo. .llirzf l'frzgir:1'1'r1'rz,Q 6711.15 lQ2I l'i Kappa .-Xlphgi, Sigma 111111111111 Epsilon, .'xlllL'I'lL'Llll .'XSS'Il of lC11gi111-1-1's, Nlo. Mining Ass'n., .-X. l. NLS Nl. li. Bc1111ic was i11 the nzivy, but he had ll friend who was L1 pilot i11 thc kil1X'illI'f'. As ll H1-LISSCFH we c1111't llllllkl him IIlllCll, but that is thc girls' hard luck and not his. XY.11'x1.1N Cizow St. Louis, Mo. .lfemllurgy Class 1919 Kappa Alpha, American .-Xss'n of Engineers, .-X. l. Nl. X Nl. E., Chem. and Met. Society, Miner Board 1917. Crow spent some few years in the army and returned to school in 1919. He has been work- ing under Boots since he came back and is now quite a metallurgist and well known as an Electrical Engineer. LEXYIS Eu' DAVIDSON Savannah, Mo. .Urine Engineering Class IQI8 Prospectors, Phi Kappa Phi, Tau Beta Pi,Theta Tau, American Ass'n of Engineers, President Senior Class, Rollamo Board '19-'20, A. I. M. 8: N . E. 'Will probably be a geologist. Spent last sum- mer chasing Ruby Doux over the Gzarks. Says he found several excellent speclrnens, but can show no conclusive evidence. Metamorphi- cally speaking, occurs locally in Contact with Hurst and Bailey. K . it 'ie 2531.1 1,.t IJ X ' E l , ll, l i 5 1 . ' 1,1 'Q ,,,. 1. 7 Q ' ' 'W ff- .4 ,if 1 l I If il: ' 1 I 'nv ,Q 1 ik il 1 21 EE f 1 i , ,, IN E l 1 L 1 1 6 ge 'I ll 1' l 1 lv L l- ! .,. I. 'L f 1, aa' Page 49 1 OL, ' gl 0. 5 Yr 1 005 3 I H ' P -I 1 f , .5 ,u mmm .Oda M Ks .H UM i mnv' f. -in f Lv 5 if Ns! f l N 0 , -2 1 :Q 1 X Us- ' 3 : i like .. T7 l gvx 53 E i, I H Ai'uifs'r lfRANc1s Dial..-x1.ox'1e Rolla, Mo. ,YT 5 i ' .llinr Engineerilzg Class 1921 9 Nm Q E-E gl Independent, J. Q., American Ass'n of Engi- glg S neers, Mo. Mining Ass'n., A. I. M. X M. E., 1 I Pres. junior Class '20, Bus. Mgr. Athletic Ass'n . '19-'2O. T Gus is an Ozark product and is generally seen in Lights with his pipe in one hand and a cue in the other. Sometimes he has been ' known to tote a book around. He is Bob - I Dickerson's chief Hunky, and was never known Qi E 'to bother the skirts. Also an authority on ' X Q Q home brew. ' Q .f S XVILLIAM R. DENISON Rolla, Mo. 2, ' Civil Engineering I Class 1921 N . . 5' - K, Bonanza Club, American Ass'n of Engineers, l , g . f Mo. Highway Engineers' Ass'n. f M Pride of the Ozarks. Has a tendency . ' .I - toward the gentle art of fussing, especially within pf .Q The family! Aspires to the position of . ' - county surveyor in 1945. 3? 1 - Li A liar-4 . . 1 U JOHN R. FIEDLER Shelbyville, Ind. ,I N' Q Mine Engineering Class 1921 Jfj l, , - s T 'g P1 Kappa Alpha, Theta Tau, American Ass'n l' E2 N , of Engineers, A. I. M. 8: M. E., Mo. Mining . Q :E , I Q I L Ass'n. -Ti . 3 Fiedler returned to school after service in X T fr' the army and several years of practical expe- g M .V rience, but 'never allowed that to affect him as l - ' he got back into the swim very easily. Is 1, X N ,, . one of the few in school this year who miss the T V . 4 1 I 'ga 5 l good old days. l , XA, fulfil' Q , -. -, ...- ...zz . -- i V ,Qt l cl im i A l iz I, I - ... 2 Page 50 Q A 1 WOOL ... 3 U . O-o A -.Q -v - 1 1 0 Q ' J 'N J M O n , 2 if 'A ---- Mn, -0,f33,, , 3 mm! i s rf, . . qv 519 , g I i i I mv x O -Nr C C C 'ii' 'gli C . 'Wl ' ,f - v '17 ' . - I ' ' X ,-' Q 'I T A ' - xx .sy ff A jing! fs. 'Ya as X 'sr J K , I a' Q -. as Af i 'N-..,, i W Q N tl as v v H XICTOR lx. FISCHLOWITZ St. Louis, Mo. j Chemical Engineering Class IQ20 Bn' 'Independent, Metallurgy and Chemical So- p ' ciety. ' , f'Fish hasn't left Rolla for two years but i once. He was sure lucky that time, though, fl l for he brought back his better half. He 1' Q l now spends his time in trying to penetrate the i f l domes of some of the Sophomore Chemists. 1 i l F i PERCY G. FORMAN Sasakwa, Okla. Mine Engineering Class 1920 E 1 s p 1 Pi Kappa Alpha. l Percy is another one of those whom fate I j has led astray. Is also one of those quiet, un- U ' N ' obtrusive fellows who is always ready to shoulder . If his share of the work and is sure to do it to the ' best of his ability. Can be seen most any time ofthe day carrying home groceries or getting 1 1 in wood. ' if 1 EARL NICKINLEY GUY Davenport, Iowa i C9 4 Mine Engineering Class IQZI - EQ Bonanza, Square and Compass, Star and Gar- i ter, Satyr, American Ass'n of Engineers, Mis- ,i souri Mining and Metallurgical Ass'n., Pres. ' of Trowel Club '19-'20. 1 l f One of the shortcomings of Davenport. i l Caruso of the Country Club. Usually seen i l looking for something that he has lost. Page .Q l , ,, f AQX mx . rs - fail . 2 ss a 4 - 2 I l l Wjf' ' YXOOL f 2 Q 1? Ze- i I Qf E 0 g - -.....x J f 3 U Fi H ' Q I 4,, xoaasp I ii ' is l i 4 pr. lv so I 1 I I I I ,I I 5 I I I I I I I I . I I I 1 I I I I I I I 1 I I , I I I ,E w I I 5 I i I I E I I I I I i I I I I 3. i I. Y. l I, 3, 1 lv I I I I 3. I I I I I I I I I I I 1'-'i ltn4-If SNK X pb in :sq I f I 1 Q ' S I I I ' m' . -as f H1921 A L I I J g . :az ' ABNER DECKER HAHN Muscatine, Iowa X 1 x . W .Mine Engflneerflng Class 1921 Independent. X ' Q Hahn became a member of the Benedicts of M. S. M. before he was half thru school. s a frequent visitor to the library and picture show with his better half as company. Was quite a gun in the S. A. T. C. I f BERINARD ELY HAMMER Stanton Mo. Mine Engineering ' Class 1921 1 .II1 ' Q , P1 Kappa Alpha' American Ass n of Engineers K A. I. M 85 M. E. Square and Compass. 9 , I A burner of the midnight oil for more than one reason. 'Ben likes to travel but doesnt f believe in railfoad fares. May be found at H. 81 S. when the high six is not in session. ' - WILLIAM F. HOKE Lee s Summit Mo -- M fine Engineering Class 1921 Kappa Sigma. This handsome gentleman came from Drurx to this place in order to become an engineer. I : 1 I ' 1 I , . I h I x X I I 1. I I . I ei ! 4, ' 1 . E? I gm . . I I X 4. i Y I ' ' 1 ' -X si X ' 1 . I I XJR x xl I H X X I I S ., I3 . ': 'S 2: I -. S ' I! I I . Ig J ,-13 x 'fi I . 7' , . Can always be.found at the dances and is a Q 1 very popular man among both sexes. He xr, Ax , I . -+ . who loves not the women, wine and song had L X .2 , V . . 3 x x X' I ,V mal 3 N I 43' if ' l be .. F0 I 'gg f I 1 ' I Q if ' , . , i I foo -. fx ua 4 i SQ . Q 0 Q X 1 I N ' it -I 0 g . ' I 'D ' 3 sf' ' i H ' J ' ...Jail XO 0 30 5 45 1' II- qjllg. Lf. 4 'P 5 ' Q I f I might as Well be dead all his life long. ' - . ' , Page 5. , 900 L, Q I 'V S x x X Q I we 't A 'L f Sr-' -Inq I ,v fi' , . ,. , Sf' 1' V. 4 I 6 I .X , .,, ,C , X, Q, X 'sexy ' f I l .NX wx 1 ' ' F 4 i 1 0 I 5 L N .'L', : WZ 1 9321... 1 45' N ,,.,. ' VV . H wp W I A 2, Li 1 . 4 . HOMER A. HOLLINGSHEAD Hannibal, Mo. , mg fig! I Nfine Engineering Class IQZI ii J ,f -.,-' , I: f - - - . f 1n'A 1 .1 I Sigma Nu, American Ass'n of Engmeers, Mo. . ,Q Mining Ass'n., A. I. M. 8: M. E. Formerly of Hannibal, but grew ashamed to ,Z l admit it so he claims St. Joseph now. Is re- I ' ported to have made regular trips to St. Louis Q Z fli- and then stopped suddenly. Is trying to re- - X establish his fame as a pugilist. Zpbl X V' l bv X M N .. v' X I N . E ,ww w ..'0 , 3 A I ' g DANIEL E. HUFFMAN, JR. St. LOUIS, Mo. R I A zu 5 Illetallurgy Class IQZI I as i Independent, Square and Compass, Press 1 . 9' Club, Miner Board, Methodist Engineers. c 1 ' ' . . I . l , I . :S-Tx2g ,..2 -Z 2- ' Little Eva 1S a Mining Engineer and has . ,ji is ' 0 - Y' M . 5 been of great assistance to the Physics De- l is . X , artment in his 1nvest1 ations of the electrical 1 , ' fx' p - g - - fi ,fv 3 'I .1 - fields in the bottom of the Fgisco Pond. His 1 - chief pride is the little growth which he has so i 1 t faithfully nurtured on his upper lip. Is going , ' , to China when he learns all there 1S to be learned f S xg ,ll p Q here. W E . S . is ' 5 xg' osv wwtwki . - 'gg . l ,bfi lv Q -I -1' . HARRY H. HUGHES, JR. Santa Monica, Calif. g :,, ..,, . X f I Q 1 lllzne En zneerzn Class I 2I . 1': 'r-' I Ei g g , 3 -.f ' .'v. '.rv ist. X -- N . . fy ..t... f .'..ee. 1 ' , P1 Kappa Alpha, Satyr, Pipe and Bowl, V 51, .V,.. .,,. xii American Ass'n of Engineers, A. I. M. 85 M. E. ,S t,,' 's u 2 , Bus hasn't anythmg agalnst studying but 1 ,.,, l 'ust hasn't the time for 1t. Takes articular 2 ' x -l . . . I . dellght 1n smokers and has been known to make V ,Q . ug., . I f ,Y g several trips to the Fair Grounds. Has some 2. gf I D hopes of becoming a Mine Engmeer. I pgglug Q, Q, ff . 1 , ,iq I Al my-. i il ,.-as A te: ' 1 ' ff ,H ,.,.. .....'.. ., ,.,,,,............, ,,4..-..,I- 'S E l C. L Page 5 3 I 0900 L O ' C -0 .? if .A E QS ll l F I' A I H Q , 1 ,fflulllm .0 12, 50 5 mlm WWII: IIUHV' f, J 1-G .--' 'Q JN f Q 'X ' ui x . 1 I Jylv 50 Nr P fi J-T-qv ' f - a feozllgakllvlogf 'C 5.2, x X . x 05 . ,N - 'X S. X Mx. . if 5 r . Q J G lie'-4 + l J-S its JI C a -A ,.A., V ' HARoi.D W. l'lURD Iaris Mo. Alina f11lg1f1zee1l1zg Class 1919 Lambda Chi Alpha. XVe alvvqsl thought Hurd vs'1s from Paris larance until one day we asked him about his birthplace. All the girls were wild about him and non that he has left us they visit the P. O. every day CThey did this before he left too.l Probably spends his time and money buying postage stamps. H1:NRx W. HURST ' Kansas City Mo. .7VI'l11e Fnvlizeeflnv Class 1921 Prospectors Theta Tau American 'Ass n of Engineers I. M. 85 M. E. Square and Com- pass Student Council 20 Rollamo Board 20. Hanl hails from K. C. but claims good old U. S. A. as his home. One of the few re- maining members of the Old School. For character reference see Bailey or Davidson. ROBERT E. ILLIDGE Corbett Oregon Mine Engineering Class 1920 Speaks Chinese Readily gained his greatest reputation as a fusser. Made the fatal leap and is now a life-termer. The man who originated the laugh and brought- it to its highest degree of development. - - P001 'ff oot l ai-' 11.1 oe ... i Q. or Q5 ' ' 49p f-s f l..-':'. Ull 'O I 'v 5 X K ' . ' J 1 ai: T em , 1 . 7 S' 'Ni ' X, QL l -'Q N 6 C 1 I X 1 VC 7 fc , t f l S ' , Q A I cr I , x Xx N C kd T X SX :A I X A1 X 4 Y 1 , x J 6 f 6 , X ' ic , U Y , IK y ,yr , , , X 1 4 C A: 3' , E. A ,: g Eg Prospector, J. Q., Mercier Club. . s 1 A i T KK ,Y lg .M W l L Lv. . if Q: 5: LQ. in. ' .4 Yf N ,l K l 5 2 ' i 17 i fp oc E T ' - A ., . 1 if' ' ,pair 9 nm A ' :D Q 3 ' Q iffy! wjfmll X 0 5 49 f. 1. 'P fs 4... --1-557 ,ss 1 ' ' 1 S x v ,--1 ., 1 . X fu ii fy ' X . Y x' sl 14 45 x ' N7 . . ya, J Xe l P A , ..,. 1: ' fiction and makes up a lot. Rolla's girls offer A no attraction to Keeler. We wonder why? , 'li 1 . 921 X f-. N --:: H 1 I K , n wi M IXICHARD L. jouxsox Henryetta, Olcla. l ,r::, ,,r.:- Q 'r H .gl .Metallzzrgy Class 1921 Q .4 V kappa Sigma, American Ass'n of Engineers, 3 1 . A. 1. M. a M. E. Q ' - . 'r e 2 'T Johnson 15 known to everybody as Dick and ' ' , ' also knows everyone in Rolla. Always keeps an t - 1 eagle eye on.h1s suitcase when returning to .Q t'tll. J qi Rolla. He must have killed a dear out of sea- V qzfx if 3 son as he is always getting letters from the Game stt 1: - . .:,, J.. ' fi Department. Forgets that the K. Z. house is - 4 X his home when a certain girlis in town. We Q1 it would say Little Joe as well as Little Dick. l it . gyy Af, ls tm, f Ji Qfl. -,,:- X w w. KEELER Tulsa, Okla. f . 1 I I ' .I V,,V f llline Engineering Class IQZI g a . sset Kappa Sigma, Sigma Gamma Epsilon, A. I. i'is I ii M. 81 M. E. il - - P Sv' :L yi 1 Known to his friends as Pb. O. Never known Qjfg?jtf1f 3 5 ' - to move faster than a walk. Reads the latest - P 1 5 se W , X Q... . 2 ..., X XLQ, 'A A X ' 5. i Q1 VERNON I. KEETER Maysville, Mo. 3 Electrical Engineering Class 1921 , Kappa Sigma, Satyr, Square and-Compass. W X Baldy is the pride of Maysville. Spends A -V - his time reading meters and the popular maga- .Q zines. Is working on a formula for growing . Q j l -k hair on a billiard ball. Didn't come very far' Q 4 ll from being a mosquito. 1 f 'l f i 'f Q -4 N ,.,,. ' 3 4 N ....,.... . - ., y-fp 1 J 1 1 LSU' Ab 1 I . S 6 Page 55 . 001. e 1 P Q s . gl , . it . V . 5 ci r 5 4 A 5 . , . +2 .. fs . 5 .. , is-1 x Y. . K. .Q If :S Q 'K u A 3 3 X -wa ' fx: Ng, 'fl vi' 5 Inifim Q Ya 5 yi .. . 1 ,Aww .a:w:.. fgg: - ll , :Y X ' ii F Q if i .. 2 K - N Q J xg . ,lffum 3 x t f. P3 3 z' H C' i g O4 In H. x 0 S qv 519 . if ' if 1 I 23,1 1 1 :ls 9 sl ll 11 1 E: E I7 U9 1 2 Q Q l l 2 5 'l 1 l l l 3 l l 1 .f Vg 'C P- 3'3 .1 eee eaew li ll 1 1- .fl .Q I : fl? V E f, E. Q, , , f 1 , xV HOMER CHALMERS KERR Rolla, Mo. 5 . . .Mine Engineering Class IQZI 'IIS' X - 5? 19 I ' ' 5 iw , ! Independent, Satyr, American Ass'n of Engi- ' ' leen if Miner Board '18-'19-'20, 4 l I gg E neers, . A - ,' 1 -1'- Q - Kerr is also a home-grown product and can i ' , E . be located at Scott's Drug Store or on Salem ' 5 3 Avenue. When he fails in his Mine Engineer- - g ing we suspect that he will lecture on The Art . Q, S v 5 of Love-making. He is proficient in this line, 5 x V and :many recommendations can be had upon . ,.,. Q , 1 E application. 4 ' E I Q I i N Q el 1 N. , ,, , ALBERT CHARLES LAUN St. james, Mo. g Chemical Engineering ' Class IQZI l i I V Lambda Chi Alpha, Satyr, Square and Com- Q pass, Met. and Chem. Society. i Fat is from St. james but says that he ,can't 'help it. l , 2 , , r : I 5 - l ,. , 'R f HIRAM PETTIBONE LAWRENCE Norfolk, Conn. H N ' ' Metallurgy Class 1921 5: I 22 x W lk Independent, Mercier Club. - N qi fs Hi 'is an Easterner who fell for one of our 1 Q Rolla girls. Now a Vocate, and spends his . R I . gpm? assaying and trolling the bones at the ' . i 4 ,ii Q, 1, i N X - -N EX 1 B '1:.f,YQs2'fS' . 'f E 3 - ls ' ' 1-1 - - .... .,,.,..,., V s ,K ' 1 :e ' . . if- P1053 I sf 69 01. 7 sf '-f ' -T Y 05 I . ,, N M . O N if ' , fill ' J D 3 O 'fi ' ' h J 'Q -.-- N N xp. 1 Iv 5 1 4 X If a A Q., ...Exif .vu if 1.1 K. .J Q QQ, m NX ' 1 8 ,,c,.,. L Sl ' ga il, 47 I .- ll' J LEXYIS E. W. LEPPER Marlboro, Mass. .Mine Engineering Class IQI4 5 N 1 IIB' I Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Square 1 3 and Compass, M Football '13. r, Lepper attended Colgate in 1912 and in 1913 p made his letter here in Football. And now f ' Poicey is back with us again as a Vocational Man, with the Miner pep. ' I 47 . . K - . f Q LLOXD EARL LUMPKIN jefferson City, Mo. 5 Q N , up W 5. i r Electrical Engineering . Class IQZI . i gg 1 g Bonanza Club, American Association of Engineers. , l Lloyd Earl Lumpkin-the boy with the long- flowing locks. Spends most of his time debat- ing with BeDell as to whether Jeff City or St. Louis is the more corrupt. Lumpy generally A Wins on Jeff City. , i HENG YUNG MA Amyang, Honan, China , '- Mine Engineering Class IQZI ' g -. 1 ez: Independent, American Institute of Mining 'E and Metallurgical Engineers. Ma also comes to us from the Eastern Con- , N H , 4 tinent. He is a great believer in Frame's course , f in E. E. and H. Eb' S. Pool Hall. He is also chief critic on the Junior Class Lyceum Course Com- m E' mittee. n L :I A l 'fl : I ' Q Page 57 i 9 04 5 ,, 1... . ..eg w as m me f. llv 5 3 .5 4 A Yff ,Mg qui!! N In Q' If 6 .U . , I -AW f- N' ' - nl fi , .l.q Q E K , , iv' N iam n ggwf- S A s.. X Y f Q P X sq 'C X I o X 4 sr y a Ox 1 ... .. . . Q . JSNW ..,, . Ji Ill. C.: 1 CHARLES JAMES NIILLAR Webb City, Mo. C lzemical Engineering Class 1920 Sigma Nu, Pipe and Bowl Club, Student As- sistant in Department of Special Research. Liz graduated at Christmas, but likes to study so well that he is still here. At present he is faithfully guarding the Student's Health with the able assistance of Dr. Shaw. EDWIN LAWRENCE MILLER, JR. Kansas City, Mo. M ine Engineering , Class 1921 Pi Kappa Alpha, Press Club, American Ass'n of Engineers, A. I. M. Es' M. E., Square and Compass, Miner Staff 1919-1920, Editor Miner 1921, Missouri Mining Association. Schnutze left us in December after an in- terrupted college career dating back to 1914. VVas a gun in Descript. joined the ranks of the benedicts shortly before leaving school, thus gaining extra credit in fussing laboratory. CHARLES R. MIZE Independence, Mo. llline Engineering Class 1921 Kappa Sigma, Tau Beta Pi, Sigma Gamma Epsilon, Af I. M. Ea' M. E., Satyr. Started his quest for knowledge in 1912, left school in 1913 and did not return until he had distinguished himself in the 'World War. He returned in 1919 and completed his course at Christmas. Upon graduation he joined the Field Artillery and is working for Uncle Sam again. . Page 58 ,400 L I I ., 31 sl? 7 I d . l ,- f f FS, 'A I il 'l ' li ' It 'I ll 2 I 2 V !u-v A so 1 , I 1? 'gi' I i Q53 W , S I fa 04' E Q -' N , '- ' OJ? U ' l- H ld, A t 3- P QI? f' lll.-:: lll!!ll5 o 5 J 1 ga is V T w -M Q f- 7 G! Y Qsi, X ' ff-sv i-X 4-5 , f 3 ,fx f'f' 115 X N - Q01 LANG f I . I X . 1, 2 U C .KJ J 1 x. 09 I K V lf HERBERT W. NIUNDT St. Louis, Mo. Ti llfzfne Engineerin.g Class 'IQ20 I , Prospector, J. Q., Square and Compass, : Mo. Met. and Mining Ass'n. 1 l N The man with the Bill Hart physiognomy. Quick on the draw and doesn'tt miss. One X of the few men who haven't made a mistake- ' as yet. By the way, loan -me a cigarette. s X x 1 K HERLIAN MUTZ Elizabethtown, N. Mex. X llline Engineering A Class IQZI Prospector, Theta Tau, Mercier Club, J. Q., Mo. Met. and Mining Ass'n. Mutz was some worker and surprised the Profs by getting out of school sooner than they had expected. Also surprised us by getting married as soon as he was out of school. N ALBERT B. NEEDHAM Collinsville, Ill. Mine Engineering Class IQZI 5 Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Gamma Epsilon, x Quo Vadis, A. I. M. Ea? M. E., Rollamo Board y '20, St. Pat 1920, Vice-President Class '20, - X M in Track '20. 1 Squeek has done a little of everything since 4 coming to Rolla, and now we hear that he is - going to Oklahoma as Instructor in Calculus, N Ore Dressin and Surve in Has made the 8' Y ng- , H . discovery that The Moon is Beaming. .l , if Page 59 600 L u MR 9 l Q -2 W . . .... . . . H ..,, 2 . . 1 'tl' l'l is ...vv fe lj? I Q , .glff xii. I s .. .b.- 4- N-i. . V as 'A -. :WL N- K. X Us fu ' in f J , ,fix R-. .ps 13 5 ' .QQ Q53 l A If: El? I si Ai DO up ld 21 f Z Pu l, l Z6 5: V N 1 Q f 'ii .7 2 ,,41lll'lll 0 s A f 'es ' 0 'J Q an l A tp , 'lv 5 . '96 O4 P is 17 ' - 05 . ' ,111 .oi g g ' 'll4 L'f -R fa x 5 N AQ - A Yi ff'- H C .N t NK V r 5:- n . . I ,X 2 fx X f L 5 ' xx. H-j -,Ay A . 9 i I 'Qs-1 7 -L' I . I 5 A fa . I 05 I Ee' 'izy' l w x 3 f yi 255. L H E Q L I ' WM. FERDINAND NETZEBAND St. Louis, Mo. 21: Q Mine Engineering Class 1921 ' Gfubatakafa, Tau Beta Pi,,Phi Kappa Phi f f American Ass'n of Engineers, A. I. M. E-f M. E., gf Mining Ass'n, Miner Board '19, '20, '21. Bill hails from St. Louis and won his letter in Mineralogy. Quiet and studious to the ex- L treme. Never fussed much in Rolla, but was . seen with one of the fair ones in the city. Always X has been a Willing worker in student activities. Q X just mention Kris?' to Bill and watch him - blush. P Y HOWARD OLIVER NORVILLE Beardstown, Ill. A X Mine Engineering ' Class 1921 EE 'O Pi Kappa Alpha, Theta Tau, Square and Com- f pass, Editor in Chief Miner 1921, A. I. M. w Ea' M. E., Mo. Met. and Mining Ass'n, Student Council 1919-'20. , H, O. is one of the erring and another of our mid-year graduates. Liked Rolla so well he continued to stay after his graduation to edit the Miner and to assist H. Ea' S. to rake in the students' extra shekels. Has some hopes - E of becoming a Mine Engineer. . BARNEY NUDELMAN St. Louis, Mo. ' g f Chemical Engineering Class 1921 Ei Q ' Prospectors, Phi Kappa Phi, Met. and Chem. h X1 Society, 'Diphenyl Dozen. Q N Barney is' now doing P. G. work, looking '- I towards a position as assistant beaker boy. L f Would be a musician, but the necessity of im- h fi' pressing chemistry on the Frosh occupies too V P l f Q much of his time. ' , 3 .i .E., 5 3 . s X' . , Jlx .. ,, :ls - -, 1 - YF ...,.. ., 1 Fl -l aa . 13 . I ' Q A . e P. V60 S from C W .. C Ag sQ 11 fa QW '70 'S s.. I fa 04 - - 0 ' L. , , , My i f..... ..ffw'm .0 is M enmummipnnq a -a, N, A AV a ' I P w - - f Nr T 1 rf ' -55,1 . IQ fy 157:51 O 5 A 'N - -A s fn O . be f . . 1 ' ft I 1 , f - g ,L .AJ K - J 1 f X 1 PBX grin- I Q9 , J Q O ei - fl . - ' V, ' E ' : ll t. ' ' 1 f V , ., I 1 Q7 ..s.t 1 fs 5 p . ,:, . ! HAROLD FORD PATTERSOY W b . - ' 3 E 5 i 1 M arrens mg' MO' 'A Q ,AA A O 7 2 Afine Engfineerfing Class IQZI ' 9 Sigma Nu, American Association Of Engineers. Handsome Har ld is one of Rolla s h'g - powered fussers. Taking several correspon- dence courses now. Only man in school that ever outran Fred lfVhite. Prefers Buicks. JOSEPH H. ROHLOFF St. joseph o. Metallurgy Class IQZI Lambda Chi Alpha Sigma Kappa Zeta Sigma Gamma Epsilon, M in Basketball 1920 1921. Dizzy is one of our star Basketball men and we are sorry that he is going to coach a rival' team next year. He is another Missourian that has been corrupted by cash and is going to Oklahoma. JULIUS C. SALMON, JR.. Rayville La. Mine Engineering Class 1921 Bonanza Club Quo Vadis, MO. Mining Ass n, A. I. M. 81 M E. Fish says he knows geology but is.t going to put it out until he gets paid for it. Has burned the candle at both ends and has had good QD results. Page 61 ,AOC L, -J' ..- 4? dy , 'Mo sh x -' -ry . ei..-i rl.. f, N .. ,g 0 NB- 'Q x g. . 5359- 0 L il' NN .k S, . , mes N ...-. . . . fffi X06 I SPX lv se' I If I L 1 l sf f l I 1 'N . , . -1 i X XXX I Q f V X x V! 5 . X NK 1' 1 an - , xl , H D Z ,sis S n H , y 5 . A O , 1h Y l u n , , xxx X X at A A ff K xg . 2 Myne' 9 .-Q5' Q X f'A 'l xx Q l M 'F N N 1 f M X 4 QQQSS sl! xxx X Q sig XR A 1, ls X N X0 wi: X 44 ' N N .1 x H H 7 If X1 ls 1 fi' f w , 6 K ll ll 1 s , ss W . 5. . it if TX K st 1 s o I XXX XY Q SN Q' XXX X 5 N N if E I Q ex L 1 , 4 U s fi .. , I s l r X X X 'O a , . , N 55 A X gk N , y lsr X 1 N :: - ,X X -. 1 X ,X X its ' ll xr ' is X XQXSX ii ' is , n .X I is xg QQX N ,IJ s Xl: X ixxs X 'N . X : sf X so x vp R 'Q X ' + . me N ! Q35 xx lf E v x X xx X f we X 3 1' ' S 3 X Q X , X 4 - X sms .- vi l gq - 4 2. f 1 I .9 I X 5 i L - i 5-K 0 'R V-' - 05 ' 3 Lf: O 4 H ' lllll 9 B6 5 9 . Hx f- IIIIIV I NK me 1 1 4- '---Q-.,,'-1 A X 2 - - ,fs Q, as PTJEEOLLQAMQ fr Q69 N X qt' 6- V I F33 1 1921 ,J lb X3 H ,il . x,'n . 1 fs - Q K 47, -n x vi fl . ,A Xe I x x Q N S - 'N x '- ,, -. Q-- 1 ,gf l ,l I C l LEON B. SCHUMACHER St. Louis, Mo. ilfetallurgy Class 1921 Kappa Sigma, A. l. M. 8: M. E., American Ass'n of Engineers, Star and Garter. Schumi is a typical St. Louis product. Does not seem to realize that he is in Rolla. YVonders why the Rolla girls want to kiss him when he takes them home from a dance. VVell, you know he's good-looking and girls will be girls. SAMUEL N. SHANFELD St. Louis, Mo. Chemical Engineering Class 1921 Prospectors, Tau Beta Pi, Met. and Chem. Society. Very quiet and unassuming. Exceedingly modest in presence 'of ladies. Successfully concealed his baser instincts until his record was established as a student and then overnight blossomed into an uinexcelled ladies' man. H. P. SHIH Chi Yuan, Honan, China Metallurgy Class 1921 Independent, Tau Beta Pi, A. I. M. 8: M. E., American Ass'n of Engineers. Mike has the distinction of being one of the few foreign members of Tau Beta Pi. He received his degree asa Christmas presentin 1921 and has gone forth to make his fortune. Also received his B. S. degree in pool lab. shortly after he came, but gave it up finally for the more ardent love for picture shows. P11 gc' 6.3 YxOOL A ., f , I C55 J E 3 A A g to D 65 Q mm ann a A- llv 5 , l J 25: el: 'nv f el ss s zz Q f y ff To A . :A -: li .,: U 'I 2 I 1' V' VO 4 u ,f S l f ws.. T 1. F O , -Q -' ,f M2114 gwiuiiigy gy, XYILLI.-XM LINCOLN STEXVART Pittsburgh, Pa. Alina Ezzgfzfneeriizg Class IQZI Pi Kappa Alpha, Tau Beta Pi, Phi Kappa Phi, Pipe and Bowl Club, Star and Garter. Altho Bill is one of the guns of the class, he doesn't allow his studies to interfere with his college education. Has plenty of school spirit and pep and is a loyal supporter of all school activities. Wlhen not fussing he spends his time at school. ROBERT KNOX STROUP Quincy, Ill. Jlffine Engineering Class 1920 Grubstakers, Theta Tau, Tau Beta Pi, Mo. Mining Ass'n, American Ass'n of Engineers, A. I. M. 8: M. E., Miner Board, '17-'18. I Old Politician Bob is so called because he can argue religion and politics by the hour. His exact religion is unknown,but it is thought that he is inclined towards Mormonism. He made his social splash this year, but since then he has not bothered the 4:O0 any. He also gained some renown as a baggage srnasher. A jolly good fellow after all is said. RICHARD JOHN STROUP Quincy, Ill. Mine Engineering Class IQT8 Grubstakers, Theta Tau, Tau Beta Pi, Mo. Mining Ass'n, American Ass'n of Engineers, A. I. M. 8: M. E. Dick Stroup is known more generally as the Gob, due to his peculiar walk acquired while in the Navy. Occasionally seen at the School of Mines caring for the Mine Surveyors. Never known to fuss in Rolla. ' Page 63 ,500 L - 1 1 i 1 ii . Q. XI: f . f by f' f W s. X l was Pr .5 tr ' v f WJ Q. 1, J V Rf., g ',,., . . , 2 . . XR A. 3, A lv E ' fl 1 3. I A I L f i A 1 ig A i l .li 1 2 B E 1 E3 I A 'f' .3 1 3 N ix.. imp E 3 f + l : Xxx If J- - - X, , 5 E '- b X. X . ik : -.s' X , - -1 . s .- -N ,:,.,v.'y5.x X . . s N 6 1 gs. X- Q 1 1 . :ni . , Q ,,- U , . M. N as 1' lx I . f 3 . , 'g ' Q . , MW. . .- ,XR 4. A ' E LM, , . f HWT - O ,x r s f1 'im 'lv 5 so 04 f - UQ . -A I . ff--mi S 0 A ig il' f el 25 gl .11 If y 'Cf ie 1 V V3 E f 1? E? I 2 2 l 'O +A NV' A -re -S-ss-f ' 'S ' 0 9 , A . Q3 A A g l HUSTOIN TAYLOR Rolla Mo. Chemical E1zginee1'i1zg Class 1921 A '1 -1 N. Q ,F X, 3 4 , -N s FQQLLWXMQ f E' EQ, I N ,L I Kappa Sigma Satyr Met. and Chem. So- ciety Diphenyl Dozen Miner Board 17- 18- 19 St. Pat in 1918 Pres. Met. and Chem. 21. Better known as Porky. A real politiclan and sooner or later gets things his way. Can borrow seventeen hundred dollars on a dime. Imports his friends from Lebanon and shows unusually good taste. Is not so very large but then you know what comes 1n small packages. H. F. VALENIILE Marshall Mo Jlline Engineering ' Class 1921 Bonanza Sigma Gamma Epsilon. Valentine spent several years working for Uncle Sam and as a reward for his services he has been given Vocational Training. He worked a miracle in producing 60 beads which he had obtained when here at a former date, He parted and weighed these checking all but three. VIILTOL W. WALLACE E. Orange N. J. Electrical Fnglneering Class 1921 Milt is a true son of the East' came west to inhale VVestern Brand of Knowledge. He can always be found playing pinochle when not studying E. E. Was once known to fuss one of th' fair sex in Rolla. Pagz . 0400 L CS A iffall 0 D Qc? mmm I 1 1 i , T y :- r El? 4 D f z 1' l - 7 A , , , 7 D , 7 H 1 XJ' ll If ' 1 7 ' ur w l N l X 3 l ' , l N , ' B , ' I l 1 A1 N I T , . K 1 :E 1 l G ' ' 'rin .QQ l I fig , If xx I 'I X J , N . a E ' 1 l f ' - .s iii i i T 7 ,Q ' J E2 N I . , :E r Q Grubstakers, American Ass'n of Engineers. 17 N gli I ll H 'Q I - gg I C 1 i -F1 'f X 2, S Q7- 1 1- 7 , X x 'Y-M 2 1 ' W 9 1 . 'gf N I 'Uk - , E? 1 l .1 1 me c ' gg A 9 - O 1 s 04 Q '-1 sv Y 5- L 0 Q 'AN - J E ' ' , 1 I g l ' 3 5,41-, H .- J ff lane N A 0 , x 'hs J 'v s ., ,. J. -v T we s 1 1 E +A 1 -av A -E faq X -1: I,-I, T.. W 'R 'QI - ' - . , i ' A i ,,a.,.-g.ex A . U ' f 'A'V' t ., FRED POPE WHITE Ft. Worth, Texas I C ia , ' 2, Mfine Engzfneering Class 1921 ,,- F j-A A'-. - 5 ' v i H f - V ,V i L. nv Kappa Sigma, Square and Compass. Football 1 Q f '16-'19-'20, Basketball '17g Track '17-'19-'20, , , A- ' ' A Capt.-elect of Track 1921. lik ' ' i Nubian would not be happy unless he could i ' Q start a rough house every day. Is very un- 'rrl' happy if he does not-receive his yellow letter K lrisr irom Lindenwood daily. VVe wonder if she , Q., 4 knows him as well as we do. A fast man on ,ffl the track. fsgsqw' g PTNVIL CLARK WILLIAMS, Sullivan, Mo. , . . . . nn Cwzl Engzneemng i Class 1921 - 1 ' Pi Kappa Alpha, Tau Beta Pi, Theta Tau, l Phi Kappa Phi, American Ass'n of Engineers. -3 Clark is a demon for work and is one of the ' real guns of the school. Seldom fails to knock rx, the Professors off in their quizzes.. Takes par- 1 ' ticular interest in Masonry Design. Though l unknown to most of us, he has an extra credit I in Hfussing labf' , . , , E l . VI ,TO JAMES NIORTIMER W1LsoN . Hannibal, l o. it Mine Engineering Class 1921 :Q .I Sigma Nu, M in Football '18-'19-'20. -S Kiss Me has his reputation asa Tea Hound i to uphold. Well known in Hannibal dress suit circles. Member of the Every Nlght lfeffel' J Club. Favorite song, All the World Will Be 5 'iv jealous of Me. - 9 5 ' V ii?-ffl 1 , V -I PEL:-- ' .I T 9 1 ' Pag6e 6a 600 L -'M sa 3 mlm lv 9 ,, f a X 1 -I' .i i 2? I ' 1,0 04 E -ef g - i005 , , H . , Sf 'T' .O 5 5 454 'ls ' 'O -9 0 Nr i i 'te ii wx-L' i' ' X - -1 4 P-X , 4 'iq .ga A A if X: x X x I lil , V 'X : s f N . Q ak a P-7 ' x . K? B I - .:,' -' . a . I W X 5 JOSEPH NIARTLAND VVILSON RockRapids, Iowa A 3 Jlifine Engineerifzg Class 1921 i' -, i Sigma Nu, Theta Tau, Tau Beta Pi, Phi L' 4, 3 I Kappa Phi, A. I. M. aa M. E., Mihaf Board f 5 fp . '19-'20-'21, Rollamo Board '20-'21, Pres. of 'T I Freshman Class '18. , joe is known for his ability as an artist. A 5 Has invented a leather vest to wearaat the 5 dances. Can be found at any time in the Li- . x brary. Believes in Volstead's Hypothesis. X ei ' S5 11 f U 9. I ,. N E: I -U 1 i ' X Page 66 Q K 6 ., '-5 aff-' A i - ' , 1 'T J S fafaa 3' -fe i H ii' Q2-an ga. ', .Hx L nmua ru, I . 5 u 5 N NE vi -FQ F -X, ,N MKCQXZ ,Q wc- fgo S.,,l'9 IJ Ti fr yi Q ' 11 f - N., 3 Q, -K 1 +0 j I 27 - 45 T 3 ,us 5 I ig .1 , f ,I 1 fx 1 jf: ' 'E' 9? ff II. 900 L, ' mm 19 M Q mmu S E QR E l a 4 S-ff' - 05 , - Rs C! f gl H Q -gy f,.,,,,,,.f1Ill xO,,g, , 5A 41 f ' ..... ' ' 'MV 55 x9 1 s 7? l V Nm I 2 1 E X! ,Li 6 Zlumur Glass Iiansturp Our class returned last fall to school about lv ninetv-eight per cent strong Some of our class . - did not come back but there are a few other T men that came from other schools and Joined relief on their faces after having weathered the Damns and Goshes of Professor Dean s Calculus class . ' Tie gang entered M S M back in the days of the S A T C They came trftmpmg in like a bunch of frightened mountain goats but soon got over It after they were herded several times between the runways in Mechanical Hall Then came the much looked for class smoker It was a howling success. The de- feat of the Sophomores in the annual football game was our first real scalp The year was closed by the successful inauguration of a Fresh- man dance. We again blossomed forth 1n September, '19, with our khakis on and with paddles 1n hand to teach the F rosh .how Darwin arrived at his Theory on Evolution of Man. This was taught by submerging them in Frisco Pond to the tune of '-'Whirling Barrel Staves. After . several tea parties, we decided to stand by and let our newly deposited species develop into mining engineers. The Sophomore smoker was next on the program. At this time we 'gave the Frosh a realtreat. Then we added another scalp to our belt by defeating the F rosh in the annual football scrap between the two lower classes. Everything ran along smoothly for the entire year except when one of the hypnotized rabbits would run into the integrating machine backwards. Then the roof of Norwood Hall would rise about six inches. ' The general goat of the class was our president, Stanley M. Hayes, who is a world war veteran. - The class is strong in athletics, having several men in football who received li 1 ld I v , 1 f ,p 4 .1 I L I2 it IQ ' 2: p 2 I 2 I X -f , C 4 if - TT 4 I 'pq I J f 1 us p. RQK MQ f C . ,QQ WU V f F p ff , 4 X1 -1 , - y - . . . 'K K us.. The boys all came back with a look of X Ki 77 KK YY 7 . . U glg I' 5 K , 1 . . . C . I N11 . . ' ' '. ' . I li . . I . . . -- 1 rx letters and also some M men in basketball. At present the class has the foot- ball championship of the school. We have defeated every class. VVe are now ready and anxious to takeour places as Seniors and help direct student activities as Seniors must. We have been, and always will be, readv to serve M. S. M. ' ' C OFFICERS S. M. PI.-XYES . . . . . President VV E CASE . . Vice-President W H METZGER . . Secretary J E JEWELL - . Treasmeir Page 6x 0900 L QQ 'Wm I' gg m V' N Q I I ' l . . ' I if 6 at T E TX' ' g ,Q J E 0 A x Q -T ,, f . a . , , ' J Ida! '..,l 6fu ' X0 2 m0 '?5 ' fia ' bl, H 'MV 19 1 O.. +R e 0 0 +A fre 013 L 65' Qllass SKUII I 05 . 1 A. L. ACKERS 5 H. E. AHRENS D1 I. W. ALCORN . . R. aj W. H. BAXTER . T O. L. BRANDENBURGER Q 1 J. L. PJULGER . . EMTLIO DE CARDENAS . I W. E. CASE . - . ' H. L. CHILDRESS G. J. CHRISTNER ,. A G. V. COFFEY . - F. W. COFFMAN . A KURT DE COUSSER . A. F. DENISON . A. DEVEREAUX . X G. P. DIERS 1. ' H. E. DIERS . J. H. DOUGHERTY . OTTO EHLER . R. E. ERICKSON ' . W. R. GETTLER . MEYER GOLLUB . LINDELL HAGOOD . F. R. HALASEXL B. E. HAMMER . 95 S. M. HAYES . ml F. I. HENDERSON ' J. F. HOSTERMAN . A . K s N - R. W. HUNT . . F. K. M. HUNTER . A A X - A J. E. JEWELL . ' J. E. JONES . N P. H. KARGES . ff E. A. KEELER . - R. G. KENYON . R. J. KENYON . K R. H. KNIGHT . 1 3 H. L. LEONARD . - E. G. MACHIN . W. H. METZGER . 1 -T NATHAN PACKMAN . . -- Page 69 O ' z Staunton, Ill. L Corning, 1110. I Ranger, Texas. Oklahoma City, Okla. Belleville, Ill. Gouoerneur, N. Y. 31: La Paz, Bolivia. il? Rene, MQ. I Galena, Kan. Horton, Kan. La Fontaine, I nd. Liberty, 1110. Rolla, Mo. Cushman, Ark. Puehuea, Hilolago, .11e.x'. East Orange, N. J., East Orange, N. J. f Peoria, Ill . Washington, 1110. 111adricl, Iowa. Hannibal, 1110. St. Louis, 1110. 111arshall, Mo. .11ary'0ille, 1110. Stanton, 1110. Wellsoille, 1110. Eg St. Louis, 1110. N Kansas City, 1110. ,gf Indepenalenee, 1110. Rolla, 1110. Kansas City, 1110. 1l1ays0ille, 1110. Kansas City, 1110. .- Tulsa, Okla. Rolla, 1110. - ': Q-gh 'U' K0 Rolla, 1110. St. Louis, 1110. E , Rolla, 1110. 'Q Blzzjton, 1110. East St. Louis, III. St. Louis, 1110. ' '2 Tn 1 L ' ,fi ' lf! I , XPS A .gf Q i 04 W4-7' 05 . 7.x J Bi f I H ' M J I I U r ' . 9 gf G uam N llllll- fo 0 . 99 ,. ' .1-A 1 1 t k X5 LL 1 ri ' .3 ' Li r 1- J ' , 3 1 .. 'Q ! f I I ff-4. j 117 :Af '5 715 .-Je . FP 1 W i ,V 2 x I ,,.,.l E 1 ff? . : K N ,Q-W 'll 'f:'l1'fl g 55'-1' :TJ wi Lg? .L-,-fy.: 3-N f .1-ii , W., ' 5 . fi 4 ...fi 5 ..-J Qi W5 5: , W. 'H- I jgugf ,C Q if E AA YQ H ,ml 1, 5-V--a gp! . -fi 1 Q 7: 1 54 4,5 1 'f,-1315-K iff? x',i,f g' nf! 9 f 3 I 'E Q fm xp. ,,-Z 'A ,ffm fi'-if . Q ..j I -'fx 4 ...J 5 If ,I A, I ,A ,y ,I V ff L: V 'ir 1, I 5 if 14-4 1 H . .F-2 5 1 -,-- Y A , F 'f .-fdiii s UQ ,z fa-wi 311-if 1. Em-.,g-in V wwrf my V ,..HfJ x -'-- J f., ri wt:-9, 1 W1 ' I ,, -fr 'l if! .1 -:V-I Z 7 I -:pw e . L, F J 1 5 1 gk. A -I-4 2 I ' ' 5 5 T 5 I 3 5 X T5 ' ,-'xii WL Xi' X 4 555-if SENIOR SNAPS X Q xi i- A l V. Page 7.2 fx' , x X .3 X ' V m fhffi . VM KM ..,.. 4 x.,-,...z.J N ' '5...,,, ., 4 w., 9, 1 A ---., , -- ,M ,- ,. , . g Q r 1 X , 3 X Y .L .. X , , ,wi 2 Q ,A , N. If Q Q . Q Q cm N1 N . A .-M. fn W ' f-Wfiz' ' L s I Q x.,,JY.w:,K UNlOR CLASS .xii v'.1y'-gps: 'fs ,.j,, . 1. ffwrgvxlw 5' 10 fs' fife- .Kfv ,,.xAr A 41 -1. 3,512-4' L x ,.. xt Fo' x .1 S- , f,.,,,. ,, ,.. . - . , . ifhr My G!! .fri lm, -.jx :qw ,-'I 'N'?N:,r':fA -V: A'f'M 1 3' Q3 M Y Q LW, H: ' 5 fs- '1'2.1 -Qa,:..5 V: Y V X, F 4-' ' 'Y ,- ,,,' N -f Q' ' TTQFE' ffl. M? X rf. A ,J-.f'Q' - v-rr -Y.U,4h. Q? '34 s kSQXx ,':' , 'xv gf' .-af K ,x, Q'- -Y,.3-N x ' ,, . M. ,,-As V, ., , b y. Q is g,'xi'ix WX X L 'Kal xx .A A XX w. 'ff vin' , Q is if fQ?55?lW'lQ f 1 Q ilaisturp uf the Glass nf '23 T4 05 Though most of us entered Charlie Fulton's f Finishing School for Boys on the banks of the Frisco Pond, yet this is not the outstanding -Q feature of our first-year life. The most im- GQ portant accomplishment of the class has been -gl the ferocious pursuit of knowledge and its N brilliant elimination of the academic curricula. I Provided with a twenty 'mule team recipro- l - cating spreader, the class historians felt the lack -. N g of sufficient material to fully fertilize this no- fl toriousifield of '23's felonies land, quite nat- urally, turned to the faculty for a little caustic T comment and kindly criticism. Prof. Dean X was wildly enthusiastic. ,He sprang four feet rl and seven inches into the air in a frenzy of ad- miration. . In eighty years of teaching, cried the genial registrar, kicking out' a panel of his ' fireproof safe, never have encountered such s a heterogeneous conglomeration of --! And he lapsed into eloquent incoherence. With - a genuine glow of pleasure at this simple ex- pression of the Prof's. approval of '23's scholastic endeavors, we left him beaming a pale purple smile and foaming benignly at the mouth. ,' . Twenty-three has found time for other purposes than strictly academic s .X X. X 3 1 ones. Entertainment for homesick Freshmen was inaugurated at --the fall re- 5 - Q1 ception. Committees on millineryi and haberdashery coached the 1924 incre- ment with such telling effect that we take inordinate pride in our latest, rollick- r mg Rolla college boys. Doubtless, in a few years, these dashing, carefree Frosh : will qualify as second class sophomores' helpers. I l ' E Twenty-three once, twenty-three twice, T Holy jumping Chinese dice! r Are we Miners? We should smile! VVe'll be Miners for a hell of a while! Q , oFF1cERs I P3 S. H STUART . . . . . President A B WILKERSON . Vice-President VAINCE WEBSTER . Secretary M N BEDELL Treasurevr l Paclf OAOOL 0 D 0 lllllii I -1 1 Ei! Sz ,, 15 11 Q f 4 1 IX, ,- O . ll il ll ll ' li II 'I it I L.-' V YU - 4 l . . , T . . 1 0,7 --sf' , OA i I A lim f,5'fQ9- N-- W! 5 'Qf X, ,N X X r N N-14 I ' -- , W 0 gf I J I 43 . Q N 1 ' 17 : S- I . ' I mx p X I el 75 ' QV . E Q1 . , A 1 5 A . -- m- . EZ .4-, ,- I Q A I 'lll 9. wats' 9- ' 3 . ,1-. 3 ' - 1 J ww f H f S u a 1 '.L . Q, f is 2 I 0 I gg V Ff 'ev 1 'W N Q 3 N f 7flE FHOSH . - ki Paj 900 1, -s 'Iv 2? V X 1 - f 5 i ff O4 5 ff' - am - K , QQ, 3- mm, HW' J ' -... W K xg x X -3 J' I L A ,IR A A --L-, 'Q ' t We I PLNA 4 'K f 33 , Nz: ' Kgs ' 'X Sf' f-S L If L I . s J 4.12 f GJ I J i ,AY r hx V A,-4' BILLII5 RAYMOND MENNIE Hannibal, Ado. 0 DONALD SPEED MOSBY Jefferson City, Ado. I CHARLES CLIFFORD MOSENA Falls City, Neb. f JAMES IQENNETH MURPHY . Vinita, Okla. RAYMOND EDWARD MURPHY . Galena, Ill. HOLLIS EUGENE NICBRIDE Cape Girardeau, Ado. NIAURICE HUNTER MCCLELLAN Eminence, Mo. j GEORGE FRANCIS N AXVN Rolla, Mo. -. RAYMOND FITZGERALD ORR . Webb City, Mo. :XRLIS BECRHAM PARKHURST Tulsa, Okla. L' HARRY SIM.-XNTON PENCE . Falls City, Neb. f EDXVARD PESOUT . St. Louis, Mo. EDWIN IQEMP PORTER . Holden, Mo. JOHN MILTON REEVES . Anderson, Ind. CHARLES ADELBERT RUNGE . Kirkwood, Mo. FERDINAND EUGENE SAPPER Galveston, Tex. IQARL AUGUSTUS SCHMIDT . Springfield, Mo. HERBERT G. SCHXVARZ . Syracuse, N. Y. THEODORE C. SCOTT . Jejerson City, Mo. I ALFRED LEON SOTIER . . St. Louis, Mo. fi STUART ESSELMAN STORRS . Hannibal, Mo. A 55 SAMUEL HENRY STUART . Rolla, Mo. I J IQEDZIE TELLER . Riverside, Ill. f W ILLIAM EARL TETER Bunker Hill, -I ll. 3 CHARLES CYRUS TEVIS . Holden, Mo. rx, LAVVRENCE THOMY . St. Louis, Mo. ' ROXVLAND TRAGITT . . Rolla, Mo. RONALD DAVID WAILES . Eaton, Colo. VVILLI.-XM HENRY WALLING . Dayton, Wyo. J JOE M. WANEMACHER . Steubenville, Ohio. I, MARION WHITFIELD WATKINS M ernpliis, Tenn. , VANCE XXVEBSTER . . . Anderson, Ind. X 0 MELXVIN POXVELL WEIGEL ' Fredericktozvn, Mo. EQ WALTER HENRY WEIMER . Girard, Kan. ' HARRY WELLS . I . Si. Louis, MO. -5 EVERETT JOHN WENDELL . Peoria, Ill. ' WALTER A. WERNER . . St. Louis,.Mo. JAMES A. WESTGARD . . Rolla, Mo. I .AUGUSTUS BENTON WILKERSON Aurora, Mo. V CHARLES VVILMESHERR . Cuba, Mo. EDGAR MARK WILSON ' ,. Caney, Kan. ., GEORGE AUGUST ZELLER . St. Louis, Mo. m ROBERT CAVERO ZEVALLOS . Callao, Peru. , WILLIAM CLARK ZIEGLER . Providence, R. I. HENRY EUGENE ZOLLER Tulsa, Okla. SAMUEL IRVIN ZOOK . Buffalo, Kim, , , 2? ' I Page 76 CROOL J 6 O4 E V 55 OS - ' A I X f J 'D 3 ' sf' U H ' A . ' ' '31, 1 ' v mmm iff. :lv 519 I ' .vt --A riff' M GV To QF AX., A K .I ' Vg ,SN LEA-PM Qilass Bull JOHN LEXVIS ANDREWS . MILO NANSON BEDELL . IQINGSTON BOWMAN . . . PAUL MACFARLANE BROWVN . JEAN PAUL BRYAN . . IVAN BURCH -. . . STEPHEN MICHAEL BURKE . HENRY CLARENCE BUSER . FRANCISCO ALEJANDRO CANALES EVERETT HUNTER CATHCART ALFRED STARKLOFF CHAPPUIS . HENRI CHOMEAU .... GEORGE THOMAS DIERKING . GLEN ANGUS DOOLEY . . ELBA LAFAYETTE FIPPS . PAUL EDGAR FISCHER . HOWARD FLECK . . . WAYNE SHANNON FRAME . WALTER PAUL GARRETSON . WILLIAM PRESCOTT GATTS . DOD GRAHAM GIBSON, JR . JOHN PEMBERTON GORDON . ROBERT F. GRADY . . FRED EDWIN GRAY . . LAWRENCE JAMES GREGG . JOHN JOSEPH HABERTHIER . MICHAEL VICTOR HEALY . . PAUL JENT HEGWER . . JOHN FREDERICK HELMERICHS . DAVID JOHN HENDRY . . RALPH ANDREW HOFFMAN . FRANCIS HERRON HOLLONV . B. F. HOOVER . . . ARMIANE BRENE JEWELI. VERN GEORGE JOSLIN . CHARLES BAYARD KALEY . WILLIAM MILLER KEELING . IRVIN WILSON KEYES . . ROWLAND JOSEPH LAPEE . WILLIARD CLAXTON LAY . BEN MCCULLOCH LAYTON . ROY ALEXANDER LINDGREN . LEO LINZER .... GUY VERDIER MARTIN . . PHILLIP FRANCIS MARTYN FRED PALMFR MATLACK FELIX Z. MEEKS . . . SAMUEL EGMONT MEINICKE . CARL E. MILLIKAN . . Page 75 0 L Rolla, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Keokuk, Iowa. Jejerson City, Mo. Rolla, Mo. Georgetown, Ill. St. Louis, Mo. Webster Groves, M o Ayacucho, Peru. Kansas City, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Clayton, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Joplin, Mo. Salern, Mo. Webster Groves, M o El Paso, Tex. Salesville, Ohio. Carthage, Mo. Hannibal, Mo. Webster Groves, M o fejerson City, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Moran, Kan. Independence, Mo. Wichita, Kan. Macon, Mo. Sarcoxie, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Rolla, Mo. Cuba, Mo. Trenton, Mo. Tulsa, Okla. Rolla, Mo. Gouoerneur, N. Y. Falls City, Neb. Richmond, .M o. Sullivan, lilo. St. Clair, Mo. Ferguson, lvfo Chicago, Ill New York N I . Rolla 1110 Cuba Ado Overland Park . Affarshall Rffo Bay 1VIo Buffalo N Y ,Q lfljum XO'-'gp , ., s 11 f V. lv 49 I I 'IQ I di 41 :ls- I FI 1 ei SS 51 J Pa ll :: 3: '.:'! : V K0 J , 0 ,Ado E ef' 04, -me-.. A- 0 SENIOR SNAPS Pagv TS .4 5 00114 Ns X ' ' Q- 'V w:,,.4.s , :,. Nr:-sy, fx A 5 9 GX .Xi . i , ' A14 Q w,,,,.AN x ,, . wx W 2 sig! 1 b y , 4 Q 55 3: X i x nw w M, ..,.., -N . - . - Nw www-1'-fwifiww sm'HcmoRli c'I,,xss Ilaisturp uf Qlilass uf '24 Each of the upper classmen must remember the day when we arrived in Rolla as verdant r Freshmeng the time that we had getting ac- I quaintedg the first week of our life that was so i buried in the adventure of the night life of Rolla. The first week was a very trying one for us with its usual nocturnal activities when it was dangerous for either Soph or Frosh to ven- ture upon the streets of Rolla alone. There was the never-to-be-forgotten exodus to the Fair Grounds, where, on a pleasant Sunday evening, we counted the gang and got acquainted with one another. After that extremely restful QPD - night, and a hearty breakfast of one cup of coffee for each of us, we marched back into town some fifty-odd strong. The Sophs were victorious in the class ight, but the odds were - against us, inasmuch as their class was the largest class that was ever grouped together under any class organization. The Sophomore Smoker in the evening made us feel at home at , M. S. M. ' l ' On November the 20th, we got sweet re- venge on our self-appointed guardians, the I class of '23, by beating them in the annual football game by the score of 19 to 6. After this game everyone thought that class football was over for the year. The Juniors, however, challenged us and we accepted. About that game we have little to say, 'except that We did our best and were beaten by the best class team in school. VVhat did we do for the school in other ways? On the varsity football team we had Buck and Kenning. In addition to these men, we had several others who did duty with the scrubs. In basketball we are well represented by Haywood, Kemper, and McClelland on the varsity, and two other men with the scrubs. Then, too, our class has the honor of organizing the first class or- chestra at M. S. M. In various other activities at M. S. M. the class of '24 has tried to do its part, and we pledge our support to all worth-while school activities. ' V . l OFFICERS P. L. BLAKE . . . , President C. F. ELLIS . . Vice-President R. H. .KENNING . . Secretary A- E. BUCK . . . . . Treasurer A. W. NAYLOR . Sergeant-at-A rrns A ' Oo L Page S0 VW Cv fs O4 iff Q , IW 56 1 'ff 1 f ei EE I , 4 . 1 YS, C6 E: lu - :: Ji -1' fv l. I- ,F3 I 1 1 Z' I :vi 14' li' ITN , -l g goi , - AJ I sO,, ,Qf1,rrmmnllIx NS'g 1 - if K Q ,,f'y,., N2 4 'Sq . 'X ' Qw im X Q N .1 .f Q if-'I' ll- Ii-f llV Q, f vs. A 0 as Q, fl 2 i , - 2.1: .r r f lX R g 'df' ' ' Qv I S rmfa 'xi , ! , L ' S IN . . k Q LK ,f + U h 's L if - s as 1 E N ., Q S 5 A I 'G X li vu pf '7 4 - ' - da5M4s'0fv?l l P U 79 I OL O4 3 ff- Jvoqi ' . H - ' fA 'X Ula ? '- qv ef? Nr 'm Dk , 'S-. o S- . -A Nwf. 'TQ 'Q f- OLAWMQ S SQ, W . MIICELL . . F. F. M. NIONOHAN D. L. NIOODIE . M. MCCLELLAND A. W. N'AYLOR . W. A. POXVELL . W. E. REMMERS . D. F. ROESE . A. E. RUNGE B. SAMPLES . C. F. SCHAEFER . LEO SCHAPIRO . H. O. SCHRAMM . C. W. B. SITZLER C. SMITH . . I. SUBLET . . W. E. TEN EYCK P. F. THOMPSON M. F. TIRRE . F. J. UNDERXVOOD A. W. VVALKER . J. R. WALKER . J. F. WALLACE .A J. M. WASMUND R. O. WILSON . W. S. WRIGHT . D. ZIMMERMANN . Augusta, Ga. Sapulpa, Okla. St. Louis, Ado. Centralia, Ill. Rolla, Mo. Lees Summit, Ill o. St. Louis, Ado. Syracuse, N. Y. Kirkwood, lilo. Boonville, Ind. Pittsburg, Pa. Chicago, Ill. Elmhurst, L. I., N. Y. St. Louis, Mo. Richmond, Ind. Texarkana, Tex. St. James, Mo. Goodland, Kan. St. Louis, Mo. Rolla, Mo. Eas1fOran0e N 5 Z, , . J. Roadhouse, Ill. Clearmont, Mo. Vinita, Okla. Boonville, Ind. Sedalia, Mo. St. Louis, lilo. 1 a J :ii al? f ei 2' 1 ,- .v If 6 It li li ' ll ll 'I it I L' I 'af C 1 Q l I! Q . .J A--n L Nr-x r ,gi mp , S 25' o A E if , 4 . Q RS A A o A . as 1 1 , 'lg Qr0 ?3 mm H My as A lv 55 . ? I LV, W ,..,X f LJ J S 1 fp ' ,,,.,-Taft-sr. P Q' ' I All TlT'x'I, I A lt , X cwxx IA is Wwgx Q I 42111355 33011 S. C. ALGERMISSEN . R. A. B.-XLLINGER H. L. BARNARD W. I. B.-XRNETT . S v- B. R. BAUIIIIARDNER P. L. BLAKE . J. BLICKENSDEREER C. G. BOXVERS . A. E. BUCK . . J. P. CAMPBELL . H. H. CARLTON R. A. CARTER Q JOSEPH CASTELLI . J. H. CHRISTOPHER R. M. COURTNEY . R. V. A. DAVIDSON C. B. DAVIS . . H. R. DROUOT . O. H. EBLE . C. F. ELLIS . L. A. FORAN . . G. C. GABLER . A. S. GREENSWEIGHT R. R. HAMILTON . E. G. HAYWOOD . . A. HEDBERG . . H. H. HEIDTMANN . A. L. HUNT , . J. O. HUNT A . 1. E. JETT . E. H. JOHNS . C. KEMPER . R. H. KENNING H. H. KESSLER . W. E. H. KNIGHT . . A. A. LEVINSON . D. B. LOEVY . T. C. LUSTER C. W. MAGALIS C. H. MAREK C. S. METCALF Montgomery City, M0 Gallatin, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Bristow, Okla. Rolla, Mo. Lynn, Mass. Lebanon, Mo. Carrollton, Ilo. Central Falls, R. I. Doniphan, Ilo. St. Louis, Mo. Bronaugh, Ilo. Knoboiew, Ilo. Warrensburg, Mo. Hannibal, Ilo. , Cherryoale, Kan. Rolla, Mo. Tulsa, Okla. St. Louis, Mo. Dallas, Tex. Sorento, Ill. Cojeyoille, Kan. Rolla, Mo. Rolla, Mo. South Centralia, Ill. Chicago, Ill. Wright City, Mo. Independence, Mo. Hannibal, Mo., Rolla, Mo. Carthage, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Hannibal, Mo. St. Louis,..M0. Joplin, Mo. Chicago, Ill. St. Louis, Illo. Chickasha, Okla. Dallas, Tex. Sioux City, Iowa. Greenjield, Ill. mn M 45.2 'I v Page 81 YXOCL I fo 4 f f Ei ',., ...digg ,042 , I 0 1 'S E' . 3 f'- Sw ff' I 'fl f 23: - f :ls f el 15 11 1 , f If 6 E2 .3 ' 33 -U if i V F7 I 17 if , 1 T : l l v O xl 1 v . 1, 6 X,. K, 1 5 5 2 ,N 'S 4 5 f 1 1, I 1 1 I I 4 3 4 5 I Q I I J I 1 I 1 x 5 1 i 1 1 4 1 x f E 3 Z I 1 s H x . SENIOR SNAPS P0470 S10 K .N qw Xa ' ' 'WN1,,.,,m1-fy--, ,:::f -S 'W no 4 icq A41 no me nv-v M V ef, Q37 1127i f f ,f,,,,, n 4 Wil' ,yy WM, ij, WN, , ,,,,,9W,,: Tx , , Q5 X S 7 1 . 'mf i FIT' A fc . WC? X - - . . 3' Emzatinnal Training jllilen Vocational Training for disabled soldiers, sailors, and marines was established at the Missouri School of Mines in May, 1919. The number of students in this course has steadily increased until at present there are nearly a hundred enrolled in this department. The large majority of these are studying Topography under the able instruction of Major C. Cooke of the United States Geodetic Survey and C. E. Bardsley, formerly of the same organization. The men have received the hearty co- operation of the Director and the Faculty of the school. They have shown commendable progress in their chosen fields of study. I F ! it This department has been set off from the regular college departments and has a special board of supervisors. In this Way- the department is able tg take care of all the affairs that pertain toithe Welfare of 'the men. The success of this branch of the school seems to be assured if present con- ditions are indicative of future results. OFFICERS C. W. CAMPBELL . . .... , , President H- P- J ONES . Vice-President S. B. 0,HAR.A . . Secretary J. L. SANDERS . Tyeagwey C900 L, Page 96 +4 I J :Ii : 5 ua! f ei 55 11 q E: li 'I Q I :Q v N 1 Q i Illlll ' Og j am! R g , E Q fp ., Q i : ff E i Q -. 'yi ., .. 4 V, , - Z IF A .,..1ffWu .0 Sowma axg Civ -iflmmllHilmllg !E-', 5 1 Q -. . 5 s I N l N 5 1. l1.?l L. x 95 X s - s X Q x ef A MQ f . 1 NX-' W- ' .- ,--. .f .- X X I s ' s. s za f L J ,., R f 'MA J ff I : Zgilfjif ,ff f X ' Q I7 Q L E 1 ff!! e. x f ' t : N. J ' M , I 1 Z IL?-W 7 N ' 1, ' H kf X ' ? J 55 J Pj of ,mm N F-1-W 1 W ' 900 L J ,,f ' '33-, QU Q 1 f, 1 Pay 8 -if ' E i O4 5 Q '-f ., ? f 'N 4 E' 3 ' ll K ' H ' ' . 1' cnul M 0 K0 Sf., 1' is ow se C .. Y A. -A .ffm LA , Ms. fi P. R. NICGUIRE . J. M. IVICDONNELL MARTIN MCDONNELI, H. I. N.-XPPER . CHAS. B. NEIL . A. G. NEUWIRTII . NOAH NEWTON . T. J. 0'BRIEN . S. B. O'HARA . J. P. GSTER . J. R. PATTON . R. R. PETRI . . W. D. PHILLIPS O. P. PIRTLE . JOHN RIDDLE . A. C. RUCKER . R. ROZIER . . J. L. SANDERS . F. C. SCHNEEBERGER Ii. J. SCHREMP . J. T. SCHULTZ . . W. SHUPE . . XVILLIAM SIEGLE ' . CHRIS. SOUTHERN C. E. STOVER . J. E. TAYLOR . D. S. TEDFORD . A. V. TERNES . P. A. TOXVER . C. A. TURNER . H. L. TURNER . . H. VENABLE . . WILLIAM WALLING . G. WILLIAMS . R. L. YE.AGER . CHAS. YOUNG . R. E. ZINK . M. F. ZOGG . S. I . ZOOK f. S00 L Castleton, Kan. St. Louis, Ildo. St. Louis, Mo. Webb City, Ildo. Republic, lilo. St. Louis, Ildo. Wichita, Kan. St. Louis, .Ma Rosendale, Ildo. Jefferson City, Mo. Columbus, Kan. St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Des Moines, Iowa. M arion, Kan. Keytesville, Ildo. Rolla, Mo. Doniphan, Ildo. Webster Gioves, Mo. A St., Louis, Mo. Rolla, Mo. Des Ildoines, Iowa. St. Louis, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. - Mason City, Iowa. Diamond, Mo. Garden Plains, Kan. Rolla,, Mo. Washington, Iowa. Moberly, M 0. St. Louis, Mo. Dayton, Wyo. Wichita, Kan. Joplin, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Independence, M o. Granby, Mo. Buffalo, Kan. Page SQ 'Vw I' Xa-,g mt , R W Q 0 , . J A fffdumm -043 ,5 H 'L' . ,Av 5 . , ., ' is vu' 1' L 'V ' f ' N: LLLL L LL+B B L C I AQ ' 'N I 't f---. fff' 1 9'x 4 ,N . f .I L Q , A A rg? 1 Yi . r i i I I ,l Qlllass Bull ' Us WM. J. ALTON . Columbia M0 . ' N GEO. J. BALCH . jam - in .' : A S M. R. BENT . B, ?ZCaMa1nS,MaSS. f I F. G. BISCH , Bagfninjqewassjll 6 R- F- BRANT Cuauwau 0' E. H. BURKE . - L 0' 5 St. Louis, .Ma K C. VV. CAMPBELL . Sedum M0 115753 2355512 I ftrgrfrir M00 ei: ,r J. L. COAKLEY . Kglnsixzbgitlokan 32' 9 O. C. COPE . . St Louis 1320 ' D. L. CRIPPEN Wichita kan. FRED CUMMINS . Rolla M0 ' G. B. DYER . st. Louis .Ido O. H. EVANS Maia, Mg. ' - - A . alena, Kan. I I E. L. FIPPS . Salem, Mo. X P. F. HANVORTH . Elwood, Neo. 5 A I. F. Hazelwood . St. Louis, Mg, ga E. HEALEY . C7'651f07fL, Igwa, W. W. HOGAN . Moberly, Mo. 1 P- A- HOLLAR . Kansas City, Kan. 5 T. HOLLIDAY . . Pollock, Mo. , MAX R. HOWARD I Springfield, Mo. 'X- H. W. HOPPER . Franklin, Kan. A. HOUSTON . . St. Louis, Mo. is IEIUCKINS . Kirkwood, Mo. . . OHNSON . Springjield, Mo. H. P. JONES . Perry, Iowa. ,, B. L. KIBLER . Enirnetsburg, Iowa. '25 3 D. KIMBLE . St. Louis, Elo. ig C G. L. KNIGHT . Joplin, Mo. X E. C. KRUSE . . St. Louis, Mo. -Q . . C. M. LANCASTER Ornaha, Neb. A i A. E. LANG . . . East St. Louis, Ill ' ' H. P. LAWRENCE . Rolla, M0- B Mfarlboro, Mass. v a . E W. LEPPER . N R LINDENBERGER K J A LOGAN . . I F E LOWD B F LYONS . I. S. MARTIN . H S MILSTED I E MITCHELL . I J F MAHAN . A B MORRIS . E. M MULI EN A W MEYER . .500 L L! 00 I . lv 5 Rantoul, Kan. Rolla, Mfo Boston, lVIass St. Louis llifo. Hutchinson Kan. Rolla M o Rolla llffo. Boston Blass Willard 1110. Hutchinson Kan St Louis N10 Q L . . . . F YF , . . F3 ' ' , . 1 , I, .g .u ', ' X ' 1 ' j , , , . ' Page 87 .Lf ...., Q H e Q O.. : -' 9 we 3 dllml H ' ,M 4--' K0 5 F5 f X W 1 7. 4' 0 SENIOR SNAPS P000 90 f-X! 4 .1 . 4 x 1, . 1 ix 1 ,L K 1 ' We- x S, U.,gvAT ' x 'X J: ,L+ i V' M I - x, . ,K 'XA v I gg 901161 'tf Tg-f,.!mx I GMI? 4 LU, - Lp? ' .- .,.,.'.,L,.-A K 5. ...,.,,W TFL' A-A-. Q-, , 3:-4 L A Q., ,,., ,AM A., .. Q..,,.--.9 ,- EAXYXXQQNXNNNWX ?Ek3xxxXxf'x99X X. X - QQ m SX X wx kXQNQw3XNNxNNN-N X X v 5 .X - ' f f ,Mx XQNX5'S Q O fs Xi X .yxsw M X X XM. X .v Y. x ,WMNX kv if! KXYy5g X Q EQQXXXXNNXXNXXXXXF if lf f X Q, '5 XXQQQ 5 X - K ww Swxgiixi A X gxfgwx-S X K Si liixgx X - xi N0 Ni dx- Q- X .X xx ,, Q. . six ' i - wi Y , Q ,sc 'wx ff K -5 X ,Avi- I VOC,-YIXIONAI, M ICN-1 VW! 4 3 f, h M Wfmffgy SENIOR SNAPS Pflgll' 9.9 f-ITL 'N I 'Q . I A NE I E' 'O' P-' I ' 'YI ,R 074 Ig QAMQ f PPE IQ, A A-A I I A L .Q Eegrees N X 1,51 BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN MINE ENGINEERING HARLAND H. HOPPOCK CLIFFORD P. HOWARD , JOHN L. HOVVENDOBLER Q? JUAN R. C ASANOV.-XS THOMAS W. LEACH LAXYRENCE O. C ASSELMAN FRANK M. MCMILLEN '19 LORAIN H. C UNNINGHAM ROBERT L. MARSTON 5 K GERARD E. EBMEYER FREDERICK V. MOORE ARTILEUS V. EULICH EARLE N. MURPHY 5 OSHER GOLDSMITH WILLIAM L...NIECE WI XNESLEY G. HIPP.-XRD WILLIAM J. NOLTE 1 . . 5 IQENNETH AID : DANIEL C. BEYER P MATTHEW P. BRAZILL s ARTHUR H. PETSCH GERALD F. RACKETT RUDOLPH C. SCHAPPLER I A. B., A. M. OSCAR E. STONER FREDERICK W. UTHOFF WILLIAM W. WEIGEL KENNETH M. WRIGHT MAURICE C. LUCKY ' BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN METALLURGY x TI : EDVVIN A. SLOVER CARL B. HUMMEL ALLEN D. POTTS . GEORGE A. KROENLEIN RONALD O. SWAYZE X Q MARK L. TERRY RAFAEL E. VELASCO XX BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN CIVIL ENGINEERING EVAN E. ASHLOCK ICARL W. HEIMBERGER . CLARENCE E. BARDSLEY LOUISM. MCCARTHY CHARLES R. BARNARD JOSEPH NOVAK, JR. GEORGE BURNET U s . EDYVARD K. SCHUMAN, LL. B. RONALD B. WILLS HAROLD W. ZIESENISS BACHELOR 'OF SCIENCE IN GENERAL SCIENCE PETER 'HAROLD PIETSCH - J . Q WILLIAM MISKEY TAGGART T BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN CHEMICAL - DP' A. B. SH CARL A. GETTLER ' BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING KARL K. KERSHNER . AVID A H SON GOLDMAN FREDERICK A. KRAUSE Ig 'EUGENE DREIDEL LEON ARRI I WILLIAM J. FINLAY ARTHUR M. HOWALD EDGAR A. WILLIAMS ' MASTER OF SCIENCE IN IVIETALLURCYY I THOMAS P. WALSH, B: S. '17 I-IANLEY WEISER, B- 5- '13 ' x I S X V KARL K. KERSHNER ENGINEER OF MINES S Q x GINEERING MASTER OF SCIENCE IN CHEMICAL EN ARTHUR M. IIOXVALD JOSEPH BARTON B. S. '17 LEONIDAS JABOUCHER, If ' ' B S 5 PHILLIP B. DOLMAN, B. S. 17 .- - METALLURGICAL ENGINEEER B S ,F O N 0, AMBLER, B. S. '06 FRANK S. LERE12, . . y 1 IRAS! G. KNICKERBOCKER, B.S. '13 EARLBJ.iVIC1IEIELX, B. S. 16 Q MARTIN H. THORNBERRY, I ' CIVIL ENGINEER ENOCH R. NEEDLES, B' 5- 14 Page 91 ' 900 L I 1 :li - 5 C, I! 1 4 el EE I , , If ko ' 'U' N 1 , ' Q '2 Q -'T fc O4 ' . 1' as f CP ' .0 S .5 iU HI 7 fo A Axgyfv 95 '57 17 s. at , .fe X, 'iq x O T T 'N . 1 -X 5' 'T I Z 1 -Z 1. 'L - ' .Wal KQ? 'sffy L I Q9 P . X g Aa, I E ' i s 'T - S 4 l , 5 :fastball EKBUIBXU ' - if -24, ...yi HE final results of this year's season of football show the Miners X -se fzzfil . .. . . 1 tied with Kirksville and William Jewell for first honors. This 5 - 'Q showing is conceded by all to be the best made by a Miner team 'ff Q K in recent years. VVe deserved and would have had undisputed posses- ai-5 sion of first honors had it not been for a disheartening accident. is I The season opened with plenty of old material and such a large amount of new that it was possible to have four teams until the season was well advanced. School spirit was high and every one of the players went out on the field with the determination that there should be but X one outcome of the game-that was for the Miners to win. The first two games that were played were easily won. The X third, with Vlfarrensburg, was won at a great sacrifice. It cost the life Ea of one of our best men, Eddie Bohn. With this deplorable accident 1 the Miner spirit fell, not to rise again during the season. iWe lost two 2 comparatively easy 'games which would have been easily annexed by K our men had there been nothing such as this depressing catastrophe to ' take the pep from the men. X T Although we lost our game with Drury, they did not beat the real l 1 Miner eleven. Had they faced the team of the week before that wal- , . V ,: loped the Warrensburg team, it is doubtful whether they would have F. if scored. As it was, they were lucky to get away with the game. r -jf s The season was a successful one, so far as the sport was concerned, Q because we were at the top of the percentage column-although tied, Q and because two of our men made the All ,State Eleven. A V ' ' we will lose only two men thru graduation this spring. With gf Coach McCune back next fall to whip the rest of the veterans into 6 5 shape as well as to sift out the new material, we can 'rest assured that . the undisputedconference title will be ours 'next season. i . I E I If - 17 ' L Page 94 if oaom' .. H , A 5 'ff' Q 05 i Q 'N I J O T Q K' 'Q' I ffllllnnl 'D Q0 3 . , H ' , J ...J xolqqgs Su n tl Q. 1 lv 59 , M X , . , . A 5 x Sl i 'i L 48 I 3 . 1 I t Tia?-1.3-'5 -gl ii f Q 2 W A f-5.51215 E5 2 EJQTEL 2--,. : AL 'f-'ELT' --4' ..-:f -- ' ---1 :, f 1 --. -- -H -v- ' .4 59 ' I 1 x if--SQ R 3 o , 3 ff if X 'mf' Q I F , 1 , , N A 1 A KM I I I 37 .. X . X ' ITT -. xy gi 9 VSMVN -' 5? 6 MH W f , J 92' nn u ua u 4 TIT!! 4' 3 21 a .1 -' Aljk f fl' .. ,, ,va , - . 4 IL, 4 Q, 8 405 9,5 Nu an Iql ,fi gl afqy k . 0 If .-x ifodf -Z .-Zi:?r ' Z5 C C 5 i':f'.xQ4iir 32 'L JJ SW' ocpff Z 6 6' A5 ic - fag iw swf -.7 fb Q ' ,, 2 L- K - , I o, h-:mgi',, , ..i, -- 'i'1' ' ' ,-5 P2 . ' 4' ' -' ' L . -'T i Qiii ' V ' xxx, rf? ' fi - .l xx I Ill:- X ' ' A ' T . Q - gm LF if 7? , N 1 y. E 5 5 H1 s . 11 X Sf ' - 11 J - L E3 0 Z Q Z' V I f N f -- 4 f ' 'l ,,:::::', v N 3 -- , m r X J . --un. 'Till un ii- - - - ' ' 11 -v 5 , gk Paye9' WOOL I 'E I if 0 4, ' 9 Ei 17 -- 09 H ' W Q00 3' -'mm X N fo 'J I..-Q ttnlffdumm fu V- fv 9 . 7 .NV 2 g ,W .. n il U3 s S Oct. 2. K Oct. 9. Oct. 16. Oct. 23. 2 Oct. 30. Nov. 6. Nov. 13. X Nov. 25. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. D Nov. X Nov Nov 'wi l Miners. . . Miners .... Miners .... Miners.. . . Miners .... Miners .... Miners .... Miners .... 1. Miners vs. 7. Miners vs. 14. Open date 21. Miners vs. 28. Open date 4. Miners vs. 11. Miners vs. 18. Miners vs. 24. 2 Wx U5 00 Open date. Results, 1920 . . O Wfashington University.. . . . . . 21 . . 28 Cape Girardeau .......... . 0 . . 33 S. W. Teachers College. ....... 15 . . 0 St. Louis University .... . . . 27 . . 0 Arkansas University .... . 14 . . 17 ' Warrensburg. ...... . 0 . . 7 Drury College. ...,..... . 13 . . 0 Henry Kendall College ..... . 45 Scbehule, 1921 Washington University at St. Louis. Cape Girardeau at Cape Girardeau. Missouri Wesleyan at Rolla. Springfield Normal at Rolla. Drury at Springfield. Central at Rolla. Page 96 OAOO L Q O I V er 1 EE :ls 5. 2: 'I 1: gl f , K .f- I f E -I 1 V 1 in E? 1 e 04 il 3 'ff' - 0 1 f' ' G Q25 3 -ff H ' il ' 0 -5 'ee - fr l fo . 5 'G - A S N7 f rs '72 f o a0fftwlMQ f R ,L G2-fp , Basketball W L V wrath 1' 2' M. I. SITONER 1 l .ff E. J. BOHN f J. L. BLLGER , , F P WHITE J' H' ROHLOFF t BRAZILL CLAUDE KEBIPER , 1 W. M. TAGGART MYRON MCCLELLAND 'Hi A X HENRI CHORLEAU 21: E. G. HAYXYOOD H. D. SCRUBY ilg J , A. RUNOE l 3 i :Wunthall A. L. CAIRNS QCapt.j E. J. WENDELL CCapt.-BLD E. J. BOHN A J. M. WILSON A. BUCK I. K. OWENS R. KENNING S. I. ZOOK ' H. E. ZOLLER 1 W. W. BOLT A. B. PARKHURST . R. C. MCCLURKEN I H. E. MCBRIDE G. J. CHRISTNER O. L. BRANDENBUROER ' A ' If 1920 Football - ' Captain I ' Captain-Elect , A. L. CAIRNS E- I - WENDELL Basketball Z-Qt M. I. SIGNER J- L- BULGER 5: Tmck F P W TE E. J. BOHN - - H1 Athletic Director F. E. DENNIE Football Coach ROGER J. MCCUNE Athletic Board M. LQSIGNER . . - - ' Pfmdem l J. E. JEWELL . Business Manager Page 95 OO L , - 04 5 to L 0 Q HW ' U f Q ' . ' ' 0.12 mmml..-Q N '9 'H S ,fb , ? I 'lv so 5 Nf is I 1 XJCEQZZ S4 'fl vi Captain CAIRNS '2O. Quarterback x .. This was Buddy's ifourth letter year. His excellent playing won him a place on one of the All-Conference teams. He never missed tg a N Q a game and could always be counted on for a gain. Q : L K, .1-5' tiff? I Ji' Q -. Q 'E K lQ P ' M Captain-Elect VVENDELL '23 Tackle .1 Ax y This is Dip's first letter -year altho it is his second season on ' the team. Last year injuries kept him from making his letter. A game player. I A' IW. . '. . K: .J-' O i I i . EDWIIN J. BOHN '21 Halfbagk A good sportsman, a gentlernang loved, respected and missed by 3, . Page 98 - 0400 L i '-il l s it 23: ' 1 :Ie f li EE Q O . :I I In ll lb yu If -Q A L' V F7 l l 1 , is l g ' 2 Q rss! - as ft Nl! mm OJ? fmod 3' V' H ' g Ol Ulllllll l gb 55 mul f, Q L E I I 2 I W T LL BUCK DENISON, Coach MCCUNE, T012 Row-WHITE, CHRISTNER, SANDERS, ELDE , , MCCLURKEN, COFFEE, SHEPHERD, PARKHURST, FISCHER, MACHIN. Bottom Row-GRAY, ZOLLER, GETTLER, WILSON, WATKINS, CAIRNS p MCBRIDE, OWENS, KENNING, ZOOK Page 97 CCa tainj, BRANDENBURGER, ' 4 'QT 5 3:- w-N ,K 4 6 N, - H is 2 2 :Q - s W MMQYNS Q92 x X ' N. 1 5 'fl 4 f 'T' T WILSON '21 End x This is Mort's third letter. He is a scrappy player and can C9 break interference as well as any man in spite of his light weight. 5 K , -Y s 21'- : il? K ff '.- - W ' ,R G- Q ll . t ' fl f i Q K S CHRISTNER '22 Guard s 14 i Gobby made his firstgletter this year. Hard luck prevented ' him from doing it last year. Chosen for one hoof they All-Conference teams for his ability to play the line, breaking interference and tack- .A ling: Wle hope to see him back next year with the same old fight. P E 1: N E2 pl 1 .JI N ii, s u s 5 s OWENS '23 Hahfback S N Hank has made many a gain and has scored several touchdowns. He has the old fight in him that puts the ball close to the goal every time that it gets into his hands. Z . ,f I 4 Q.. at sz Page 100 O . 040 L, if i .- i fo O4 li .ff-' J E 00 . H E .,y1 -J,,41llllIll x 12 Q0 3 qg limmqflllg ' ' L ' ii '1?q FS I :lv 5 'Y-f ,,,f was e I If i .. if I4 1 X i X- u A-ag QQ! 'N 'ii QBQDZ f we-. J Ty ' 54 'fi ' : I lik.-XXDENBURC-El' '29 X End N s - . Brandy is a fast end and full of pep. This is his second year Q5 ot playing on the team. Smashing interference is his passion and h l getting passes his hobby. e ' 3: ,- 'QS' 1 2 .- :I- f 1 1 1 - 5 5 .- ' X 1 'n fl lr .. I - . X ,, , X X ,Xp se. gs Q -'3,fi,..vN - 1Xf1.,s- Q 5' Q 9 s - Q X I , 55 ZooK 23 Guard gg s I Zook can play either guard or tackle and play them well. This , is his first year on the team. We are fortunate in having him for ' ' two more Seasons. fxi . Q Q Q s - 13 . tl s ,av ' it E: x ' ':-I Q H I b le NICBRIDE '23 af ac V E Buddy picks a hole in the line and goes thru like a veteran. I xt ear because of his - i He will probably succeed Cairns at Quarter ne V M if cool-headedness and his ability to lead. H I N , Page 99 , - 000 L 2 'A' 'Sm li l el .gf : . , 90 O4 .- Q u 51' faoq 4 1 X HW ' H A 'Taj 4 .-,.l,,yum X0 O 5 ,N 1! fa, 99 f JD M t '0 X e .Q he sg at :sz . -ga Lryexlhloy it 26.2, f Ui Bo1.'r '22 TGCH6 s X 1. gl- This is Bolt's second season and second letter. He is in line for two more seasons. A hard worker and can be counted on for a gain. s N s I N s Q x N X ZoL1,12R '23 Center Hank can twirl the pigskin with the precision that comes from hard work and experience. Besides this he has the ability to keep the opponent from coming thru the line. ' ': x i S l . PARKHURST '23 Guard ' Babe put all that he had in the game and played a good game s of clean football. While on the trips he took great delight in the girls i xf at the cigar counters. - s . l 0 si' 1 -1 1 46 11 Q 'A I bl -- UQ .- ll 'I - I I 14' I TK b V x Page102 .w:! ' I gg JE 3. e H 5. If ' i i0,.a -f. . lv 9, ' 'l 1 i I 2 1 o- - lx, 3 41, -- , if ,L N Iii AQ' - ' 4 8 mm ik ' lL.1::- - A H ... '-lul r X , 'xx Y' -nsjf ns f N . 5? .,,.. 'X ' MQQI f B 5 , Q' Y- ,Kg M , l' e - e GV , :U -if 5 l l hx s. .,-, 6 fl 09 N 47 . T . X X I 5 u S I 3 fr ' I X E R1 'f,' . ,.., vfy, V if ,I 1 X s 7,9 'A-,, I 1 A :- . ww ' ,.,,.6:6,, . A.- . -Cfgq., 5, fl 1 ff g id ff ! X345 W lf! -f , 1, X Page 101 .NZ I IQENNING '24 h Fullback I Kenning will be with us three more years, during which we expect that he w1ll score many a touchdown and smash up the interference Q. of our opponents. ! ,L f ' 9. BUCK '24 E114 22 1 ll 51 Buck is virtually the find of the season. He gets under the ball 2 at the kick-off in a surprisingly short time. He is also a man wrth ' three more seasons to go. rg To J? 2 , ' k MCCLURKEN 22 1f 'UC Mack is good at breaking up interference and is a hard .hitting player, He has scored on many an occfxsxon when scores xxcxc most needed - 55' 1 f l 001. ' 3 O6 Q 5 'D 4 5 Q -f EE' 3 ,nlllllm rg I ff l Q ' ,N O13 g ' f H my ...ffl l t - f-Qt Sp ' 'Nw -2? N 1 me ,MWW c w, , fy! 5 ,gsff lngf ia rv Zfyff qgifsv 52 f . ,, 47 92541 5 fgyf A ,f , Q - ftvkffff 2 12 7 J'Sf 9. ffy I If l , 2 .1 C 2 '- N 5 i lllllll 9 s Q - I Y f -4 ,ir .B ? 4 A 1 ! 1 X r 1 f V 4 1 1 f O 4 5 A I L 4 ,5 5 I if .3 if. i N ., ,w az -4 3 xk x 1 1 r TX s . ,x 'NE I! if i 1 gif If if g ,W 7 2 ,Af l,: .., i 'zi ,L X ,a-- , -mwwww 3 OUR GAMES Page? 104 .YI I X 1 -.f - 1,5 I -', .-.-'IA , :Lis 52 ' ,, ,, .X ,V Agn' 'I .LT-'ff 5 guy :fl I 5 7 s FA.. j if ...Q 9 E an : A ' 3 X 2 ,Ml ' K 5 5 ,' -L ', X L 1 3 .-:-- , 3. J .,r'k ' wi,--fi ,ps .., -x' f Hg:-, . yy '-ffyiif VIZ' 2 Ms? S.,..! xl Y 5 . 5 , I 3... 5 T25 I J s 2 v . Z 5 T' 1 6 S z A--fx l 'Q ' T T ..-' fi QQ ,E 4 jr ,,,'l,tI, R ,AA .A .f.,f, 5, ,uljpn Ap 'H W2 F' 'sffffkf H xx ,Q ,N 3 TI- A gf ,lv ff if 5 3 2 J! fs .fl 7 .1 II' fl! 5 if 5? 'H 'fvwg ,g 'eff . : cf 'G 2 'STE' 1 7,,5,! i..,mS151 X 9 1-any rw ' gf D w J .5 ,J ! 2 'ii 2 'i7 5 N1 H Pi s X! .ag ,KH xii ,r 114-E111 .KA 17 X ,,..N ..f1 1 .F-4 1 '4 ' ' 4 N. X Q11 , 1. 1 X , . 5' ww .i .- . -' N-.-... ?M'...v-1' 5 -,, WJ, ' , I x 1 1 ff ' X K x XL, .1gHg,'- ., ,en 'E'Vm-4 ' 1 Page 103 , - V X f .is + 1 N 1 Off? MQ f IQ? 40 ' 1 CVJ , Basketball Bantam l NO Team Vtfon. Lost. Percentage. Xkarrensburg. . . 10 0 1000 llestminster... . . 5 1 -833 - Miners ......... 10 3 .770 JB' Cape Girardeau. ...... 5 2 .714 Springfield Teachers. .... 8 4 .006 E: Maryville ........ Q. . 4 4 -500 Central College .... 3 4 -429 XX-lilliam Jewell. .... 5 7 .417 Drury .......... ' 4 8 -333 Tarkio. ....... 4 8 -333 Mo. 1N7esleyan. . . 3 7 .300 L 15 Culver Stockton .... 1 5 . 1.66 1 Central Vlfesleyan .... 1 10 .091 , i A ' 1 ri F rom the above figures one can see that the Miners hadna real team. Two of the games that we lost should have been ours. But luck was breaking against us and we lost them. Yet we are satisfied with the results as they are. We feel that our men put everything into the game that they were capable of and that they had the true Miner spirit of C5 fight. An unfortunate circumstance dealt us a blow when Jimmy Harris, fe one of the better forwards in the Conference, was forced out. ' -ll Besides the letter men of the team we had several other men who were quite capable basketball players. There was Jimmy Harris, our star forward, who left school in the middle of the seasong Buddy Mc- v Bride, who distinguished himself in the last two Westminster games, Kaley, forward, who played a good game in several games at the last of the season, Kasel, who broke into quite a few games. Moodie Q and Campbell are two men that will be heard from next year. With the . ' five letter men back next year and the substitutes of this year we should ' have the best team in the Conference. - ' Page 106 cfloo L - ' k to O4 E a N .. -I f 0 'a ' . ,Mfmm 'D Q0 5 H ' ' ' I ' GQSP I Q g um S 3 Jr. 'lv 9,9 . 5. -xx fy 4 f-'fix if QL lJ QQ: , E I i , Z A . E ai: gg 2 gl: 9 9- QC N A I -f Uh' Q 4 ,I . v -gr-Y Q- Ll - .v zwz N -s , 06. , l X A - 37 N Vx 9 X X ' i X?-PEfff?n-Z, X V l ,p Q F . fl 3 , 'JENQQW5 F f 21 ' Q-?i:g-4 1 -2 , fr - 4 1 se Ma J- -' ,T X -4 2 ff' - rx 1 N X 9 s. I ' OPPSJ 1 ,-nw 2 K gg - E ' - Q 'f r, .- U E- N ij A L . F-'Y -Q -il 7 'I -A W 6jfIH Q 'Q' A' I Page 105 O , - O L, E -'E Zog g w- X HF! Q., nnffllumm x0,'f?., I 5 F5 I! f' E 'Ev 59 . I I I Av I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I D l I, . I I I 4 IK I. I I ,J I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 . M IV H-N: f ?q qvkfillzx ,A f,f2Q2Q5QiZiQ2j3hb5NNi3, If NSI. gggaz Y Q - tn 1 I I 2' 1 I ' I . I I 5 1 I I I it ' UII I I QI I I , .. I QA k :Ls 1 . I I Elf-' In A 5.2 I A I sf . A, N 1 Q I I ' , ' 2 Y Q wg ' gk 'haf ' 1 I I X x , 5 X I el . 15 I :O I 5 I H f 7 f 5 rxi , , 4 I Ii' ' 9- -, I I Is N ' lu .I ' Q i X Q N , V Top Row-MURPHY, NIOODIE, IQASEL, CAMPBELL, MCBRIDE, CASE, IQALEY A I qi Boffom Row-KEMPER, MCCLELLAND, ROHLOFF, SIGNER, BULGER, HAYXKVOOD, ZOOK, HARRIS so s -, 1 s ,' 1 '55 I I 'lk I J Q n Page 10s Sf AOOL A It ' O4 .3 'ff' - as I I , J K . A A ' qv 5 X. , . Q , .Jw . :4 N -. ' Xxx l X , 05 Q . his N ip s LX . .. ' K5 5' X xx .X SX . .. , X . x 5 X XE. Ll 3 N E X s , X 09 X XX Y it R N N -.xxx - X n . CAPTAIN SIGNER 3 , ,P Q' JASXF 1 1 'S is N ,V rf' ' Rai ,Nagy '. , .f f 39. x s N BULGER 21 x 252' f 5 . ' 14. , . 4, . X , f VV., 1 AQ f 7 X ' f 4 , f fl . . 4 , . A 1 f if . . , ' N 22 . f WW , ' Tiff f . wt ! fvffr f c' ,v,, t HIAYWOOD i Page 107 4. as' mefiane f E Q W E w- it ee W X: ,N Q l .X xxx Iliff - 2 D Q K 'N .f' ' I v T X Q .tif g It r , ' 3 ,.- - . -x A'-f Sig plays guard and forward equally as wt-ll and is frequently called upon to change from one position to another. He is an able leader and his presence peps up the team. His playing won him a place on All-Conference Team. johnny was a good running mate to Rohloff. The two make a splendid team of guards. Johnny's great am- bition is to put Gou- verneur, N. Y., on the map, and is succeed- ing in it very well. Bridge played a steady game at all times and put every ounce of pep that he had into every game. He too has three more years ahead of him and We do not hesitate to predict great things .300 L, This is Do-Do's second year on the team. An excellent man on the defense. His scrappiness kept him playing throughout the season despite painful injury to his back. Kemp Was the big boy who out-jumped them all, including the great DeBernardi. This was Kemper's first year on the team but he displayed all the old Miner fight and pep. With three more years of basketball ahead of him, he should develop into one of the best centers that has ever played for M. S. M. Mac is one of our Freshman trio of play- ers. Got away with a bad start, but devel- oped into one of our best men under coach- ing of Dennie. He will be with us three more seasons and we expect much of him. 569' Pl L lb .. e if we Et' ! ROHLOFF sfa up 5 1 5 . . - i . - x ii, 7 lf it U 2 KEMPER ff.: l . , . s ff .,z4L MCC L1:LLAxD .J fAwJ,,y1l .gag 8 ,..c ,- ' S llv 'll I YS' I 2-1 : -1 rl! l el EE l I . so I il il it '7 JD -L4 V Cf' 1 1 'gf N sg nf 6' i 3 i yi '-' if f I r 2 Q 5 ' K ' ' for him. E N f f? ,QW l of l f I 4 LY xl L' ' : N' 1 i A fgc' O4 Q S.. vi' E og 'nn' 4 SU 5 gg llmmlll W ' ,- X , V -if--W, ,ffl 1 1 1 .X A T' 'K I Z H -X ' Wa R024 mwioi 9 re WD ' -V49 Q9 I I V fn, r Stl ' . : Q f Y Ii as Trask 1920 T K ' J Of the two track meets scheduled this year the Miners QQ' ' i ' won the first and lost the second. T The Triangular Meet held between Drury, Normal and Q - the Miners was won by the Miners with a score of 69. Drury Q- X collected 39 points and Normal 36. It was a comparatively 1 easy victory for the Miners. - ' , Taggart, Brazill, White, Scruby and Rungewon their Q, 1 letters in this meet. ' The meet with Washington University was Xheld in St. of Louis. We lost the meet by one event. The- hnal score was 9 69 to 58 with Washington on the long end. Cur men were first in most of the events, but we had too few men entered in the meet to take any seconds and thirds. Washington, 79 if on the other hand, had an unlimited number to do this work. V r -if : Chomeau, Brazill, Scruby and Taggart won their letters S in this meer. i A 1 T c ' V l z N5 vii l, 2 ' I 'Page 110 Z A OL. . ,- l O4 E I cf' T' - as T ' 9 '-'N 'J cf f O 0 . ' 1 to 'J S0 3 5 H , . 'A ton i H ii .i ma -vf. Q 1 lv 5 Q fy? NXxf is I . Q S X 1 +23 vi 'L 3 I 43 Q' R . F f . x . EB f SPEED SHOP E 'X 5 ll Q 2-' WO A N 'fr X J za 'QU 5 fy 1 0 n , WCM? T fl 1 Cf ,x g mm l ,- w 1 Vx 92 X X ' j U 1 I 7 1 ' 'W I is w n vw ' 1 S V0 N 1 N z ' 17- X , I w g i . x ,S Page 109 4 O O90 L ,M-,,, -m ,. M m x4--m- f- 'S' ' 'i ' A , 4 Q .- Y J E g Q I H ' N ' ' 41 ,.l x 9 Q N Pi '- R .. 65 lv 5 I 0 A il as t 5. 1 I . t x u H N I I 5 l S Q 2 S Q x -1 . -sv Lf i .Qf A Nr if it , Q. - ,Q I I A -TQ if S' ,st wc . .Ss-Q! . ,A ,M Eddie ran just like he did everything else, and that is saying that he was a good track man. He was elected Captain of the team this year. Hennie spent his time last year to good advantage. He. c a n start at eight a. m. and run until six fp. m. without getting out of wind. V w iff. . 55 Bonus BOHN z 5 .x N, l e S I ixlllnig ' V tl l . t , .ff , .t,, ,. ' A rl af- f ...ft Mick is a man we could count on for a first in the low hurd- dles. An old track man and one who uses his head as well as his feet and lungs. Runge filled a place on the team which had long been weak. He picked up the discus and heaved it 119 ft. 10 inches in the Tri- angular meet at Drury. 'ti' vw J Vt s s 'Qf Q K. N, t. . gg 55 Micro? BRAZILL NR,--vm, ff Q ' . K ' ' lx B ' ..., ,w M-ff 4 l 'Zu l if ' :.. lf, W X 2 , 4 gl f l l l 4 l l 'll f Big 1 'Cy ' ae gf HENNIE CHOMEAU C. A. RUNGE ' E. Bill claims to be s 1 ...y Fred is the man who , a sprinter because he moves twelve feet ev- V parts his hair in the ery time he sets one of ti center, which forms a his feet in front of the Y U stream-line body. NVe other. He has shown 6 figured Bill was good some speed in the three 1' for another year, but he if 21 years of his track. i '. fooled us and the Profs. M Q A i as Q ,.-,.' ' ' 1 HBILLH TAGGART FRED WHITE Page 112 CFAOOL, . 2 rff 04 :Q - . 1 tg 05 A ' Q .7177 'A f lu . . J 5 mods 5 . 0 'f UMlYlxlm'll k'f ul '1 da, I Q 'N' f' i 445 Q . I lv 517 l . . N . s Q N 1 ,- in 0 V t , ..-. Xa 4 W 00 u I ws w E ,. - if yi W r. V I , . 't-xx-' 'Q - , ' -2 fs- ' ? ' , 5 fx., 'N ' N my QJZI0, ZA MXQ ,- - IQ? , l 'iv E f Y Cv-J I 5. Ulirmangular il-Fleet 1 ffl FIRST PLACES. ' , 5' TAGG.-xRI' . . . 100 yd. l 05' WHITE . 440 yd- : R WHITE . , 330 yd. J I BOHN l . . l ' J BR.-XZILL I . Q f I l M Mile Relay. - WHITE I . . T AGGART l . . l 1' - ' VVHITE . 120 yd. High Hurdles. X BRAZILL . . 220 yd. LOW Hurdles. RUNGE . Shot Put. A ' RUNGE . . Discus QRecord 119' 10 D. ! SCRUBY . 'Pole Vault. Il 1 rf Q . I Q washington Meat 3 ' FIRST PLACES. H ' x WHITE . . . . 440 yd. l WHITE . ' 330 Yd- CHOMEAU . . Mige. V ' WHITE , 120 yd. High Hurdles. x If BRAZILL SCRUBY . SCRUBY ' 220 yd. Low Hurdles. . Po-e Vault. 4 . H1gh Jump .900 L ,Q fl 0 -A S jf ' Q 'nn I i , lg il 5 'E i 60 04 5 rf- - - as 0 I. d - I 1, I . ou? N00 MUNI, ' fo au- K 59 lv 5 N Z ,-eg ,- X Q . g I , XX TT ff .EZ X Afq 1 Q ,FQ vw . is 4 'g G2-J I - -- .d f-A i k T. The opening of school in September, 1920, found a new Director, , I Dr. Fulton, in charge of affairs at M. S. M. As it had been decided ,- before school opened that we were to have a new football coach, it l remained for Dr. Fulton to select a man for the position. Naturally, he thought of a man from his old school, and that man was Roger J. - McCune. Coach McCune came to Rolla with an enviable record, both in football and baseball. On the Case team he. played quar- jd! terback for several years, as well as serving as captain during part Q15 of his career. As a baseball player he was one of the if best catchers that was ever turned out at Case. -f One could not help lik- ling McCune from the first time he spoke at a mass meeting, when he told us what he expected of his men and what he expected to do J for them and the school. ' The liking grew every day Q-Q he was with us. E A Football practice start- ed about a week after school I opened. Everyone seemed to have Caught the fight 2, spirit and under the Coach's careful guidance the team made a good record. All H thru the season he had the l men doing their best, and the fact that we won three 3 out of fourconference games and might have won anoth- rx, er but for unavoidable ill- luck, speaks well for his first p i season's work. Under try- ing conditions incident to the death of Bohn, he worked to keep up the morale of the team. A'- Before Coach McCune. left Rolla he was appointed Assistant Athletic Director. This was welcome news to every loyal Miner, iw for we had learned to love and respect him as a real man. Since leav- , gg ing Rolla he has undergone a severe attack of pneumonia. Owing to - this he was unable to return to take up his duties this semester. He has, however, returned for the last month's work and will be on hand T to pilot our next year's football team. Here's to you, Coach! i F7 0500 L, kk 1 Page 111, 4 3 3 Q L ff xO,1C?p . N ll' r. 6 as O ' -A J u g' bf H T- -'Lv 55? ,- Y-.,-,,,.... 0 ----...x . Q ,ff I Y ku IQ! TS 'k-ir., F , Y . i. ' I My I I AQ S, I I-1:4 I vs, . I5 -S 1 . : I x 1 14QH pg' 3 CV L , - --Qlw . -1g I , jf' I s . ..... DONAI BLOOM I ' K f el Ulienms, 1920 . I In the tennis tournament played- on the Drury courts 5 - last year the singles event was Won by Griggs of Drury and the ri - 5 9 5 In the singles Bullock of the Teachers' College drew - a bye, Griggs of Drury played Donai of the Miners. I-Ie Won lil the first three sets. Griggs then played Bullock for three Q6 doubles event by Donai and Bloom of the School of Mines. sets and won them handily. This gave the event to Drury, - r 1? N Whom Griggs represented. I Q 4 In the doubles We drew the bye.. Muratta and Pipkin I I I I x ill of Drury Won the preliminariesfrom Bacon and Phillips of V Q Teachers' College 6-1 and 6-2. Drury won the first Set xf in the finals from us, but We took-the next three. The scores tj, j were 6-2, 6-3, 6-1. - I Q I Page 11 900 L E 1-JW' mffmn' . AQ Q0 3 I WW' JW . 'lv 5 . E I if 3 . .2 I o .. Q'-, , . . I - as I .. . ' JN T I1 0.2 I 1131 .- , r - f ' 'VE 'ii . .. ef' Q A OZLEA-MQ f is I lg ' X A . . 19am Ziaelleniailssuniatiun of of the . Missouri Scbunl uf mines Q i I l ll s OG . T k . J I -A 3 .f,7T., HE PAN - HELLENIC ASSOCIATION of the Missouri School of 31- S 'i3'1 3 'f -' 5 - Mines of Rolla, Missouri, was organized for the purpose of establishing 'ill' X I t a better spirit of co-operation between the fraternity and non-fraternity pd' meng to strengthen the bonds of unity and intinqacy among the Greek letter men, both active and alumnig and to consider, discuss and regulate those phases of 4 fraternal college life which are essential to all fraternities. K A Q i X OFFICERS N ei A. L. CAIRNS . ' . President W. H. BAXTER . . Vice-Presidentp A Y J. M. TAYLOR . . . Secretary S N. M. ROUNTREE . Treasurer DELEGATES ' Sigma Nu Kappa Alpha Q if A. L. CAIRNS N. M. ROUNTREE E5 ' 1 W. R. GETTLER J. E. JONES gif 1 f Kappa Sigma Pi Kappa Alpha T J. M. TAYLOR W. H. BAXTER yv A - . F. P. WHITE J. P. COLBERT rf + ' F0 Lambda Cha Alpha I A B NEED1-IAM - ff N D F UPDHE f - 4 . if If x - Page 116 0400 L, E 5 . ' 3 sf' W A ' My 01-139 Q0 R lim ll 'm uflll' gg I gk . . 7 ' 5 i fs 04 A - as E 1 I S -X u A M 0 . H ' S J gn' X S Fx 'U l ' ' wiv 5,5 I H X 5 X ,g:5 :j Tf 4 4 A'A iW+fx,:,QfW M- Mm-M -1-Q-u..,v fq mxxf .. ,jj ly' 51 ' 4 A 'NX .Q awww ff hx fee, 1 V ,,..4j wwf Tux Citi., 1 1 ' - .,k - .y , XZ. Cb O C D x. C.: Q Q Y ,Y -V U5 'O P 6 C- c 91 . kk C, C C , S J T Afxz .J g, gf, L 4 I .J , ' .. cp f PJ O 1 f - E '- .J 0 '12 :JJ sf C J Z .- 53 , , - - 'VLH QM LZD 3 . qk 54 I V - xl :: 'S , A .. 1 7 1' : Z -K. X . ,... -L 4 .. - X ! X nmnhklv x U' ' x R ' 1 2? . If A GJ 1 wqf , vi , E T K Q I E Page 115 OO ' 2 V' M M I . --X lf! fgoy 3' .. gt H ' - If-'Q , S I! K ' X11 S r. J- llv Q., J - If'T' I tag. 6 1 kappa Qlpba 5 Beta Alpha Chapter -- Clnstalled April 27, 19035 Q fs I Q X I f X K FRATER IN URBE L.. i N 'Ii ' '- X . - N , Lf f ?q I-I -A 2 A JROELJQAMO fC If' SQ, 1 S+ f I 'D' A ff ' 1 4 , . .- CHARLES L. WOODS L ki If , J I FRATER IN FACULTATE . J Q CHARLES YANCEY CLAYTON . I Q W SENIORS I N GEORGE B. BLOOM - EDWIN. J. BOHN A Q X VVAYMAN CROWV JUNIORS if J. EVVART JONES THOMAS G. WEIR ' JOHN H. DOUGHERTX' STUART E.'STORRS OSCAR L. BRANDENBURGER NEWTON M. ROUNTREE . U I p 5 SOPHOMORES . Q1 z HAMILTON MOORE FRED P. MATLACK ' HERBERT G. SCHYVARZ GEORGE T. DIERKING ' p :ff r T JOHN F. HELNIERICHS N DOD G. GIBSON, JR. 1- X EVERETT J. WENDELL f I 'D + A - ERESHMEN J Yi CURTIS E. STOVER DAVID F. ROESE M DWVIGHT L. MOODIE WALTER E. REMMERS '- N HERBERT E. BARNARD , x Page 118 054001, ' f-99 1 S .1 N!-Emllllll fo 15 I .K X P 1' I , I Q 'U fs O4 Q E l .L I . J E 3 . L , ' V J v-.,f.n7af I f . I 10 'J Q0 S H A N L.. as 'v 55 . W Page 117 ' 'GQ - D f ' ' A A RR QW 59 Ylamhha Cibi Qlpba A. C. LAUN A. B. NEEDHfkM J. L. BULGER P. D. WINDSOR K. DE COUSSER R. H. KNIGHT R. A. LINDGREN ST. C. HOMER J. G. HUCKINS J. K. MURPHY J O HUNT J. M WASMUTND Alpha Delta Chapter Clnstalled April 30, 1917? SENIORS JUNIORS F. K. M.. HUNTER SOPHDMORES T H. W. HODGES FRESHMEN 600 L bt QQ H. W. HURD J. H. ROHLOFF S. K. REID K. R. TEIS F. E. GRAY D. F. UPDIKE W. P. GATTS J. V. HARRIS V. JOSLIN C. M. 'RUOFE A. E BUCK HLDBERG JN .qv 5 N' . .. T A. .4 4 9 04 V ! - T 4 , umm R. ' ' ..-R ,. I I , N f 1 X I 1 r dill' Page 119 .,.. + !S'3M0L5:E?XINJkQ ,g 3 553 1Bi kappa Zllpba X 'nl x 05. - Alpha Kappa Chapter g flhstalled December 2, 19055 - . 057 FRATER IN FACULTATE T I WILLIAM VVIALBRIDGE WEIGEL I I . ' CHARLES L. SMITH x CARROL P. BUREORD BERNARDI E. HAMMER S Q EDWIN L. MILLER, JR. T K HARRY H. HUGHES, JR. x A BENJAMIN S. CORNWELL SENIORS KARL W. BOOKER RUSSEL W. HUNT PERCY G. FORMAN HAROLD L. BAILEY JOHN RAY FIEDLER HOWARD O. NORVILLE X JULES PHILIP COLBERT VIRGIL L. WHITWORTHI WILLIAM L. STEWART, JR. A A ANVIL CLARK WILLIAMS ' JUNIORS ' PAUL H. KARGES BRUNO RIXLEBEN JOHN F. HOSTERMAN ' MERTON IRA SIGNER HOMER LA KIRBY LEONARD WILLIAM H. BAXTER - GLEN SHERMAN WYMAN - ' Q. J I N HONVARD FLECK - WILLIAM KEELING MELVIN P. WEIGEL I , WILLIAM C. ZIEGLER ' . Q X - SOPHOM-ORES IRVIN W. KEYES HARRY S. PENCE BEN M. LAYTON E. H. CATHCART . WILLIAM SAYLE ROBERTSON Yi . I ERESHMEN ARLO LOWELL HUNT HOWARD O. SCHRAMM K CLYDE SPERRY METCALF JOHN RAWLINGS WALKER - VVILFORD STILLMAN WRIGHT -. l Q. 4. 4 -- E oeeee Q J CHRISTIAN F. SCHAEFER . O Z . . ff' I A ,, . E z, , I ' .se 42,91 '1Q5,,,, 4 1 S vx..x X mm - i , 3 I 1 I I E ! 1 A Page 121 J f. 6 -QQ A I I V - H' H A 'I f Ag x 9 A ,A ' Nj . X' ' P----.L H 'N ' ,S 1 C OL AMO f x 1 J J - 1 . L 1 , SQ J TN I ,-- l ' 1 , . A--I . Us f : 5 Sngma 33211 , Gamma Xi Chapter T R QI-Established January 23, 19020 I .A ii? FRATER IN URBE I : JOHN M. SOUTHGATE Q FRATRES IN FACULTATE J Q JOSEPH W. BARLEY HENRY H. ARMSBY QA T K . SEN IORS I 1 5 ARTHUR L. CAIRNS JOSEPH M. WILSON , Q: K A HAROLD F. PATTERSON K U JAMES M. WILSON gg HOMER A. HOLLINGSHEAD CHARLES J. MILLAR J A JUNIORS C JQ WARREN R. GETTLER . HONVARD S. CRAWFORD A SOPHOMORES KARL A. SCHMIDT J A MARION W. WATKINS ALFRED S. CHAPPUIS 'RAYMOND F. ORR T9 95 BILLIE RAYMOND MENNIE . JOHN P. GORDON Q! CHARLES G. KISKADDON HENRY E. ZOLLER f CHARLES J. COLLET ' FRANK COFFMAN -:jf :I JEAN PAUL BRYAN Q A . FRESHMEN v X ROBERT M. COURTNEY JAMES CHRISTOPHER I RUSSEL H. KENNING FRANK M. TIRRE - A WV WARING MIKELL M 'UI f F f if A . . Q f ' fjllvfli' 126 I . . 600 L 2 ef' . 4 ja 4 sq-yy' J E 0 Q Q J . 1,-'C 'Nw K J Z5 5 0 s-4,1 N t lx X - H A A' mx K5 'N' 'C ' Ss mm A 0 I 'v S6 . J I Page 123 1 F l 9 ?'!l'llllllI I ' N ' llllil c of 1 1 1 5 E i I L A . .i I 7 V v 5 s l ig ' .fl N. - V :Q I 1 E Ill , - 1 ,A 4 1, Q do ROL 2 Mo f if-W fG' j 5 ' f E gji 1, J f r9.1 5 ' 'A cc D 'Y ' i . q q 3 E P I i QQ I Yi I received a manuscript by mail one day and upon reading Q fx il T t it was surprised at its good qualities. It was rather a unique j Q 5 I 5' 1 piece of literature. At first I did not see how I could possibly iig- l P I print it, but after some thought the thing began to be funny L7 ' I 47 t to me and consequently I desired to let everyone in on the I ' 'S joke. As I am not a D. D. M. I could not write the thing out ? - 1 i l l. l i P n ii I x F l. I I i i ii i E N.. f at various places on the sidewalks, therefore I am taking the only method I have of letting all have a laugh over this. Consequently I present this paper to you, in continued form X l . 1 5 3 l fl, f , .VI . 1: I 1 fl i Q s lp 3 fp X throughout the book. 4 if I Q -The Editor. 5 I I 2,2 . . x is . L' , If 66 D 7' I 1 3 - E p f I l Z g CA story in five episodesj I F5 During the first week of .school last fall a certain Freshman 1 f 7 was rushed by all of the fraternities which have chapters I at the School of Mines. Each crowd wasiso sure that it had f the best bunch of men in school it made this Frosh suspicious ' I, h and the rushing season ended without his honoring any of C6 5 ' 'S the chapters with his pledge. It happened that one day not is 3 q long ago we were speaking with this man about various l E I q X 'things and during the course of the conversation he mentioned qi '. r the fact that he knew several Hbrotherhoods' very well but had I lf never affiliated with any of them because-but then the fol- j lowing is a record of the statements made by the various V I X chapters to this man the first day he was in school and from i Nt these statements you can see WHY, , I I I : CContinued on page 138.5 . I ' nk E f , . W X E7 i l 'I I Page 128 A . 9001, . gf-' o E ' , Wh' ' 4 p .2 . . q , N Us Y' r - hx . .I If 0 4 . , ' I 9 3 'ff H . . 'A ' '01-1939 1 5 , fp N llllll fg 5 !'D'NW'f96 lfgi Page 125 x 1 J X z ' ml ...,-..- Nr PM- 6 i i 1 T .'. 5 O A 'O !5f?.44AA 53 , 5 fi L 5 ignnanga Qliluh f ' GRADUATE 4 L K JOHN H. BOWLES Eg: A f A : 1 Q SENIORS I I 5 E. M. GUY J. G. MILLER 1. C. SALMON W. R. DENISON A ' L. E. LUMPKIN M. A. BADOLLET 1 H. F. VALENTINE x X ' V JUNIORS A I N 'Q L.I1AOOOD CL P.LHERS Q2 n H. E. DIERS S. M. HAYES Q2 g R. D. SMITH E. F. CHAPIN- ', E I. W. ALCORN A. F. DENISON 9 I1.C.LOE9HH3 E.VV.REMBERT gs. K R. E. RICHARDS R. C. MCCLURKEN ' . G. J. CHRISTNER A ' ' 'Q SOPHOMORES D. S. MOSBY A A F. Z. MEEKS P. M. BROXVN M. N. BEDELI, gg S.IT.STUARI ' T1f:.SCHOTT E T. M. THOMPSON -FRESHMEN P. L. BLAKE P. L. THOMPSON iv C. L. KEMPER 1 E. B. SANDERS 1 - Q- 1 :vo I Page130 9000. A . EQ 4' 0... . 'S 'ff S as ' A' f SB Ong S00 3 H ' . '1'w'?p SN ' W...-r. U!5' 'O 'XSL 50 I 1 I N N Q l Q I P 27 r 1 pw, 3,11 253 'Q 4 1' 1? -I fs 1 , - 3 lvl uh' ,w ZA. r, :.f .LI fl 2? i. if E .fl fi. H fu? 5K 2 .i ii Ea 'a is K sf wi EE . 2? .Y 5 1 P .Ar L Ti Q: ,. P5 ,. 4 F. fi .gi x E2 'I . r 1 P e 1 x 1 1. I A ,,.1. 5 I X - .- K. 'Q UN 5 Lx Q: NE f 6 1 . Glfuhstakew:-f Cliluh SEN IORS R. J. STROUP W. F. NETZEBAND F. A. KAULLEN JUNIORS J. E. JEWELL E. S. WHEELER I. F. HODGES R. O. ERICKSON SOPHOMORES M. V. HEALEY S. I. ZOOK W. K. TELLER E. PESOUT' H. C. BUSER A. W. WALKER I. SUBLET FRESHMEN M. W. WALLACE R. K. STROUP L. COLLINS J. T. HODGES A. L. ACKERS T. S. WOLVERTON H. M. WHITNEY A. B. WILKERSON W. E. TETER 4 W. H. WEIMER , R. J. LAPEE . R. A. HOFFMAN H: H. HEIDTMAN C. W. B. SITZLER C x X F Q 3 0 . I . s y, I lv. 5 - H. H. CARLTON +- 7 Q R - sr s - A Yi V7 -1 . 'V s I A 0 x S Page 13 C500 g, A Q 'v fuk . , YC 'C . 3 Jr 1 if A O.. 2 xqfv E 0 Q . - ' ir 'W , U V , J . V, v f... f f 0,35 M 3.w1,. . N J! f JD My 'V 5 Page 131 A 1 S' EQAAAMR 'RI Ernspentnrs SENIORS L. E. DAVIDSON FRED A. DECKMIEYER H. W. HURST BARNEY NUDEI.RIAN XM R. QUILLIAM JUNIORS MUIR L. FREY HAIiOI.D L. CHILDRESS R. G. KASEL W. H. METZGER VICTOR E. KIMMEL W. H. DUNLOP SGPHGMQRES JOHN M. REEVES STEPHEN M. BURKE DAVID F. WALSH VANCE H. WEBSTER J. J. HAEERTHIER .GEORGE A. ZELLER R. E. MURPHY JAMES A. VVESTGARD FRESHSMEN C. G. BOXVERS U A CYRUS W. MAGALIS CARLETON SMITH S. C. ALGERMISSEN SPECIALS EDNVIN H. SANGUINET A. 1. ANDERSON GUY R. SCOTT I 0900 L S 'Q 'Wm NPS- ' 'X..1-'s ' 'v 5 Z S m e sr! ,X JS O 4 . i Q f .0 S M 3 -f .-.I H L, ., 5 . mf!-rr 1' E Qs' A XX 1 X x 3 ' x XX X . 'S N W X X x x SRX S 2 Xbx Q X S X Ngkxwbwigq bb xwx Rwv N JK-,lu MW! bxx X x ww Q Xbxxlx Page 133 if ' 1 apr, w 3 C 1205 52, lui A 'F Cx ' I I A--5 ' A v T if Zlnhepznhents 6. Tk CLASS OF '21 J xl H. C. KERR H. Y. MA N A. D. HAHN H. P. S1-HH f f . MEYER GOLLUB K. Y. CHANO ' S . . A. F. DELALOYE A A CLASS OF '22 - X S W. E. CASE E. G. MACHIN A X R. J. KENYON A. C. RUCICER ' NATHAN PACKMAN F. R. HALASEY ' x 22 . CLASS OF '23 A x 5 H. WELLS I L. LINZER A P C. L. GRIP R. TRAGITT , . , F. H. HOLLONV R. ZEVALLOS f T P. J. HEGWER A A. B. IEWELL Q J. L. ANDRENVS TEDW. TORRENCE Qi J. M. WANNAMACHER I ' J. F. WALLACE ! , . S 5 S A ' CLASS OF '24 . A P- - FA 1 J. CASTELLI W. E. CASEY- E5 .L a P B. K. BAUMGARDNER W. S. GRAHAM b 3 SPECIALS , ' Q C. HUNTER H. JONES . H. W. HOPPER f W. R. STEBBINS1 4 A ' K E-1 S j 1? 12 . I .T ,. Q Page 136 if 900 L, i 5 - ..--f lxgp I Nfx - f. 70 S OA E V' M. JE ZR 3' W H ll 'ffl Nw . D s on-mnmwnmm NJ .W so 3 P A ! Page? 135 1 W :sw . Q, j X 'ff I I 'FF 1 My fs F Q2 why -Clluntinueh Fnzsr EPISODE K HEN I got off Number Eleven I was greeted by an eager looking young Qi ,im X man who' asked me if he could show me around the town. Cwhich was ., 2 the first time I knew that Rolla was not a cityj. After toting my grip 'e' L around for some time he asked me if I wouldn't go over to the house with him. Now, I am from St. Louis, and when he mentioned the word house I jumped at the chance and away we went. During our walk I noticed that he wore a something on his vest which looked to me like the emblem of the United Brotherhood of Moving Picture Machine Uperatorsg but when I asked him what it was he told me in sacred .tone that it was his Fraternity pin. It seemed as if all the men that we met belonged to the same organization, and when we saw a student wearing any other sort of a pin my conductor would sort of shy off and somehow I never got to know any men who wore other sorts of pins. By this time we were approaching a large building that stood just south of the Campus QI didn't know that it was a Campus at that time, it just looked like a yard to mel. Groups of young men whom I took to be students were standing around on the porch giving all of their attention to certain other speci- mens whom I afterward found to be first year men. This puzzled me, too, for I had always heard that the upper classmen were mighty rough on Freshmen, such, however, was not the case, and I found that never before had'I received such an excess amount of attention as I got at that place. Dinner was served, and after dinner cigars were handed out and some of the more worldly wise were taken upstairs and offered liquor of various kinds. which was seldom refused though most of us had never taken a drop before. Then one by one the new men began to disappear only to reappear some minutes afterwards with faces wreathed in smiles and wearing a little round button on the lapel of their coat the meaning of which I did not know. However, I was not allowed to sit here long unmolested and I too was called up stairs and taken into a room,lined with a crowd of the fratres in universitate, and their story began: . , 'We've the best bunch of men in the University and we are the strongest financially of any of the fraternities in the College. VVe've got the most spirit of any bunch in the schoolgwe can prove it because we give our yell after every meeting. VVe have some of the most influential men in the school, not to men- tion Doc Armsby, who works for us as much as he can and is slick enough to get by with it. We once had another member of thefaculty, but somehow he has gone back on us-we don't know why. Football? Goodness, yes! VVe've got the captain of the team and most of the members of the team and if we can work it just right we will have a 'Sigma Nu team, and the emblem that the players will get will be a snake instead of an M, Some idea, isn't it? Now we don't claim to be perfect, but you will have to admit that we are pretty darn good. QThey admit it themselvesj Now, Qld Fellow Qthrowing an arm around my shouldersj, we have come to like you mighty well and we want you to become one of us. just cancel all the rest of your dates and wear this little buttonf Now frankly, I looked like a fool to turn down such a great crowd of fellows, but that's what I did. CContinued on page 146D P000 138 0.500 L 2: 04 t 03 , oi? WQ0 3' -- .il i H fa' X' 'fqsp PK.. 1- ii xx xl , . 'v s fu X0 1 4 I1 3..- :1 .1 'r I Q: 'I 11 I 1 f ,f f tx To E: 1 ' - 'U' V0 E 1? : 2 l L., , Page 137 XV' 'fs' N Qin ' WQQLLZAMQ xi . CQ? N X N. 4-l . 0? 5 AV 'V V 'U' If 'lf v V- N' 'V V Vfv' 05 - - ' 5 QE ' ? A Y 4Y.A A, JK, A A rl A If L-A IN A rl JL Q -. fx - - 'EL Un I !' f?' f ' 0' .5 Q ,A .V f- sf 'nj'-' xv t I. 'lu' vi ' ' A3 Q fa f 'J ,N D ,S , 1- Qi JM i +0 1 QS' 4 ,.f an :IE I sv f Q: .I if 1 ,. f ri A I II p cm I :S V F7 1- , K , 1 2 2' P J 39 O 1 W ,X I Or , 3031 l I--Q fffdum f-- I! l X55 I ' 2 Q 1 if YxO0L i 4 k ff- - 005 Hw- :J f N K X X '9 ' .... -0 e -Div 55 I 'G 17 C I 5 N ' ' X , Y -E A -2:1--A-AE , , S J. I 5 J f J 'sity . 4 - 1 CJ fl UE Ulbeta Ulau I I 5 Iota Chapter x Clnstalled December 30, 19155 3 HONORARY MEMBER W H. A. BUEHLER S ' 1921 , A x HAROLD LELAND BAILEY HOWARD OLIVER NORVILLE LEXVIS ELY DAVIDSON RICHARD JOHN STROUP JOSEPH MARTLAND WILSON LAWRENCE COLLINS I HENRY VVILLIAM HURST ROBERT K. STROUP ANVIL CLARK WILLIAMS JOHN RAY FIEDLER SAMUEL HORACE LLOYD ' 1922 1 I L Q . WARREN ROY GETTLER , WILLIAM H. DUNLOP Ji JOHN FRANCIS HOSTERMAN JAMES EDWIN JEXVELL STANLEY MERTON HAYE S 2 I' x. ff A F I LI I OOL Paoc14 O4 ' 'ff' - as ' -N 01 ' ' 1 OJ:23 5 VAzF 1x 1 H 'A x wl3,, qqfk- f' '..-'E'- Hunt 1 lv 5 A Page 141 'sv f X' ff -Q5 il 5 x X l W i I r 1 4 1 I Q e . I E 5-Q 'M 0? I yi 'i x:-vi C? , gk Geology Metallurgy Mining s , 1.3 T Sigma Gamma Qipsulun .X Eta Chapter f Q Qlnstalled December 22, l920j f PROEESSIONAL gt x C. R. MIZE . . .i . . . .Mining 1 3 G. B. BLOOM . Mining 1 H. E. DIERS . . tMining ' D. F. UPDIKE . Memzzwgy at f I. F. HODGES . Mining t W. W. KEELER. ...Mining A. B. NEEDHAM . .Mining ' Q A. F. DENISON lllining J. EWART JONES . Mining -5-9 r I :jf f 2 1, -. I X L + L v af If-3 4l s yt . P3 2 , '- F -K s ' ft I Page 144 Y QOOL .: -'J' . 4 Q- . 'ff' - as ' f ., if-N A M f Q 3 0 V, H ' l f if-1 xoagp A fm 5 I ' .HX MKNSQQ Q 4511, 515 I Page 14 - NV ' Y Y-A .V ff 4: Q1 ' in-.1 X , ,.... it J, -st 2 featwklo f rf SQ, fl why -flliuntinueh SECOND EPISODE Now I had been seeing a lot of these students in school wearing a sort of a diamond shaped pin and I wondered if there could be any chance of going to their house. Soon enough the chance came and when I entered their home I found that it was just a big eating club and they had about hfty members and I I! f going strong. I liked this crowd for it seemed to me that it would be less ex- at pensive for a large crowd to live together than a small one Canyway, that's what gl? they told mel, and when I was called 'upstairs' this is what I learned about f this chapter: 'VVe've got things just the way we want them this year. During the war we had so many men stay in the Student Army, that we were able to get things well in hand, we are patriotic, too, for didn't almost all our men volunteer to join al: the S. A. T. C.? I ' ' 'Vlfe have some good men, too. Take our Bills, for instance. They can do any- thing and get away with it-even to alcohol. One of them was at Yale, too, , went there a whole year one month. He was pledged Deke also, but when he Q, found that they had no chapter at this school he pledged us. The other was in business during the war-we don't know what-but he's a good' man all right. l Take Bill Bailey, he's one of us even if he'won't admit itg got him his freshman Q year Cjust like they thought they'd get mel. ,gf 'There's just one thing we tried to do and didn't get results, and that didnit amount to much. We could not get our St, 'Pat's Queen-thot we'd combine pleasure with business and get the girl, whom one of our number had in mind, ' but somehow. it didn't work out as,we expected. ' . l 'VVe've got enough men on the Miner Board to control that paper for several . 1,6 years to come. I - E. 'W'e've got enough men on'the Tau Beta Pi roster to-keep that a pledge society of ours for some time to come. B 'Of course, Theta Tau is our own. Everybody will admit that. We have more strong right arms than any other frat in town-in fact, at the gentle art of hand-shaking we have no equals. . , Nq- 'We have so many, many things to be proud of that it is useless to tcll you all of them. To sum, it all up, the school could not run-absolutely could g NOT operate-without our club. in 'VVe have just twenty-five more pledge .buttons left, won't you wear one Q of them? , -QContinued on page 150.5 I E Page 146 ' OYAOOL ' . 2 or . 5 'A 5011 Qs 1 ' 5 1' mm'Il 'llI1W fo MUN- se' I Page 145 tl' BUMS EN ROUTE I S' I A SAAA A 'AB---.A --A 'S QMWA0 f E -fi X X l I-Z. I 1 ml . gl 415110 P3116 A NO. 1 Jungle. . Motto Colors Flower Please, mum Black and Blue Dog Fennel gi.- :gg 1 A thousand miles Without a red, 1 ' A side door Pullman for a bed- i At Some kind dame'S freely fed, A jolly good fellow When all is Said. EDDIE BOHN BOE IN EACULTY BOOTS CLAYTON I l gf I. J 'I DOES IN JOINT SQUEEK NEEDHAM ' HBUDDIEH MCBRIDE' HFISHH SALMON I DIP WENDELL 5 ' BRANDY BRANDENBURGER HJIMMIEH HARRIS ' SENATOR REID j'ONESIE JONES .v SIG SIGNER I Q. s MIKE COLLINS BLOSSOM BLOOM r 1 I2 -Q In 'Q 'I il: 4 X I . - I BILL BAILEY 4 , 5. ,l ,, I. ix N li . I L COMIN' EUMS S . 'I ' MAc'.' MCCLURKIN NEWT ROUNTREE lr 5 KM HUNTER IKHERBY, SCHWARZ fi x s f tlgt? 1-18 , 0900 1, - AJ f-- 043 ' ,. HI,-, mul , I Tk 5 '55 3 5 I I If fo or S Q ' 4 55 04:9 . - Q pm .lu K D0 ' mm H N .nr I 1 -S E S I ffRoLIfAMQ',-E 5 , I I -SYS , Q'-I f'-X X 2 4 K As? I ' - - 'X ' A -R L, It ,L . TQ? - f I fa UI, ' -I - Y 3-7 . xe . 4 T A ' --'FFSSQX qf - I f jX. Z K . az if S ' A 'X , : 5 IV : 'A . ND 1 S . N 3 1911i ZKHIJIJH ilBbi QI V 'x jt X Honor Society X I 'MiSSOufi. School of Mines Chapter Q, ' -Qlnstalled january 29. 19205 . I I ACTIVE MEMBERS Q GEORGE DEAN ELMO G. HARRIS IST HENRY H. ARM-SBY LEON E. WN-OODMAN I . CARROLL R. FORBES AUSTIN L. MCRAE ' JOSEPH W. BARLEY WILLIAM D. TURNER CLARENCE E. BARDSLEY WILLIAM W. XVEIGEL Ji A Elected in 1920 fa FACULTY if I CHARLES H. ,FULTON FLOYD H. FRAME ii k KARL K. KERSI-INER . ' A I v X -I . 'UNDERGRADUATES X X ERNEST W. REMBERT . JOSEPH M. XNILSON - I - so S5 WILLIAM F. NETZEBAND - ANVIL C- WILLIAM - LEWIS RLY D AVIDSQN WILLIAM H. DUXLOP WILLIAM L STEM ART .I . ' J il Page147 YXOOL 1 0 . A -A 3 0 J HW IA wJ,,yfllI1 xgno I 5 ,N 41 f ' ...- A J' I I , . O4 E 'D WUHHVI, g 'vw ef, ' S fx 5 V K PS., 0 why Cinntinueh ' THIRD EPISODE illfhile walking down the street that evening I was accosted by a fellow wearing one of those pins shaped like a half-moon, with some other marks on it. It certainly was a good-looking pin, and I thought how my girl would like to wear one of them set with rubies and emeralds, with maybe a diamond or two - si I f c JQOL IQWIQYNS . , , , C . , R ,fl mixed in it to make it look more expensive. This man greeted me like a long lost friend and asked me if my name wasn't Newman. I told him it was, won- dering how he found that out. It happened that one of his lady friends was visiting in my 'Home Town' last summer and she found out from a friend of mine that I was going to school at Rolla in the fall and told him to be sure to look me up, which he did. I wondered how a bunch of college students could own and keep up such a nice, large house. CThis is always a source of wonder to new students until they hnd that the houses are rented and that the landlords only rent to College Fraternities as a last resort.j Kappa Sigma has everything-even a dog, Cwhich Ilater found to belong to the Kappa Alpha boys and was ostracised because of a certain ungentlemanly conduct in their housel. They had colored help, which always looked big to a new man, and they certainly treated me white. The dinner was perfect and the show we attended was one of the best I had seen, so I was feeling pretty good toward the crowd 'til I was invited 'upstairsf This bunch was more clever than the rest, and they began with the follow- ing conversation between two of the brothers: A 'Dick, this is may last year at the old school, and how I am going to miss the bunch. The old fraternity has meant everything to me since I have been here, and how I would have hated to have been left out.' , 'Yes,' said Dick, 'it means a lot to a fellow to be called a fraternity man. A fellow little realizes when he is pledged justwhat an honor thefraternity is conferring upon him.' A A With this little conversation they began on me: 'When you have been at the college for awhile you will findthat we are not as well liked as some of the other bunchesf This is a point in our favor, as it marks us as being individual, and really we are the most aristocratic crowd in town. We are not snobs, we are just better than anyone else and we admit it, and so will you after you know us. 'Our fraternity is the largest college frat in the world, of course Lamda Chi Alpha will be larger in time, but it will be ia long time, and anyway we pick our men QEditor's Note-we don't know how they pick themb. Our organiza- tion is the oldest in the world, it even dates back to the Catacombs and to An- cient Rome. The Masons and our fraternity are brother organizations-in fact we have borrowed much from them. . 'This chapter is one of the oldest chapters in the institution and we be- lieve without bouquets that we are just about as good as we could be and not be too good. Of course, we have our faults and they are good faults, and you are bound to do the right thing if you wear the little badge we have here, this is our pledge button, we want you to wear it and become a member of this grand old fraternityf Again it seemed like I was making the mistake of my life but I did not go away wearing the black and gold button they tried to wish on me. Y I CContinued on page 174.D Page 150 900 L Q 4 1 1 1 ei EE I . ll ll ll li li ll 1' P 'll -L' V F- m f I 1 5? U l 2 ' T 'up I fs- f Q UUUV Vo Gag. 4' O.. 2 Tj' I E 00 Q p 4 I J . ' ' uf' 4 ' I ' K .0 25 Q0 3 fl IIPRQ H .s- N Page 149 1 A u C x 0 L -S 'Sr L -wx' ' ATNQ ' '59 ' L 2 E K Q N I 'fl f v 'T sl- :I-'F 1-5 ! . S Q A ,AQOLLWRMQQ f 5.9, 5, fi 03 g L Qatprs I - Honorary Sophomore Organization CEStabliShed October, 1913D N ACTIVE MEMBERS S X Q X D. S. MOSBY 1 H. E. ZOLLER N J. V. HARRIS X S. M. BURKE P. E. FISCHER F. H. HOLLOW IN THE SCHOOL H. TAYLOR H. H. HUGHES T V. I. KEETER . W. R. GETTLER L. HAGOOD 'S R. W. HUNT ' W. E. CASE I K I 4 L. L -- -: 0400 I, 19 J J. P. GORDON H. S. PENCE A. B. WILKERSON S. H. STUART D. G. GIBSON V. H. WEBSTER E. M. GUY J. M..WILSON H. C. KERR J. E. JEWELL H. L. LEONARD G. J. CHRISTNER ei 15 'I 11 f ll ll 1 I L4 aa Page 152 rf O 9 . 'E .Qfv N 4 -T Q1 1 Mx 'lg QQJ K' wr H . -.J A.. ...Jw . ,, 00 , -.5 d mmmnr mmx A-',. lv 55 C Page 151 1 Nr r-- '5 W 'TD e R+ 1 S- . A V S :Q 'R 'O !350ZZLWAMQhf E X S N Square anh Qiumpasi C D I Q-. Masonic v 0? A z Q, HONORARY MEMBERS I R WALTER ASHER W. J. KILGORIE .6 H. A. BUEHLER E. J. KOCH D Q B. F. CULBERTSON J. W. SCOTT Q F. H. FARRIS J. M. SOUTHGATE 515 5 M. F. FAULKENER ' F. W. VVEBB if I R. E. HELI.ER B. W. HUMPIJREX' f i C. L. WOODS . - OFFICERS I VIRGIL L. VVHITNVORTH ...... President GLEN V. COFFEY . . f . . Vice-President THOMAS M. THOMPSON . . Secretafy-T1'6as1fLre1' f KURT DE COUSSER ..... Sergeant-at-A rms A EE ACTIVE MEMBERS . 1 M. S. BADOLLET C. E. BARDSLEY W. H. BAXTER 5 K. W. BOOKER J. H. BOWEN E. F. CHAPIN bf C. J. COLLET . L. DARE ' E. E. DECKERS R. R. DICKERSON . L. DUNLAP O. R. EVANS C. R. FORBES GARRET E. M. GUY E. G. HARRIS J. HENDRY V. B. HINSCH C D. E. HUEEMAN I. KEETER S. W. KILGORE ,,, F. H. LANE - M. .LAYTON E. S. MCCANDLISS F. A. L. MCRAE C. MOSENA G. A. MUTLENBURC H. O. NORVILLE M. H. THORNBERRY A F. P. WHITE L. E. WOODMAN ' RECENT' INTTIATES . Q- C. P. BURFORD R. CAMERON B. S. CORNWELL ' J. R. FIEDLER E. HAMMER J. T. HODGES J - MAX HOWARD W. HUNT V. J. JOSLIN Jn J. E. JONES H. KNIGHT ' H. L. LEONARD I L. E. W. LEPPER N UDELMAN W. J. SCOTT E. H. SANGUINET C E. STOVER VV. R. STUBBINS : , F. N. STRONG P K. R. TEIS A. B. NEEDHAM is LIEUT. H. L. PECKHAM VV. E. TEN EYCK f Page 15.4 Q OL -E O4 E - as ' A ' ' 3 7 , H N -.I J 4,-Q u,,,mA'l 1 A 'rn I r. My 51-9 . I Page 153 J r i R. . , C Q Y V ' F -ff D' 'Ss A R014 2 Wmff 'CN' ' SVA-9 ' ' 1 . ' P -A 5' f 1 n .3 Miner 5 JRR Cllluh 5 E. J. WENDELL . . . . President Q R. C. MCCLURKEN . . Vice-President 'Q A. L. CAIRNS .... Secretary-Treasurer X: MEMBERS J. H. BOXVEN ..... Football 'oo - JOE BOYVLES . . . Football '09-'10-'11 5 O. L. BRANDENBURGER . . Football '20 A. E. BUCK . . . Football '20 J. L. BULGER . . : H. C. BUSER X A. L. CAIRNS . H. CHOMEAU . . G. J. CHRISTNER . J. V. HARRIS . lx X . W. H. KAMP R. H. KENNING . L. E. W. LEPPER '. H. L. LEONARD . H. E. MCBRIDE . R. C. MCCLURKEN' . A. B. NEEDHAM . I. K. OWENS 4. . A. B. PARKHURST . J. H. ROHLOFF . P5 C. A. RUNGE . J. W. SCOTT, JR. Q JOHN SCHUMAN . R M. I. SIGNER . . E J. M. SOUTHGATE . T M. H. THORNBERRY . A E. J. WENDELL . 2 F. P. WHITE ' ' sf L - J. MORT. WILSON . S. I. ZOOK . . H. E. ZOLLER . x s I Q ' I sb Q. 1. 1- if OOL Basketball '20 Football '19 Football '17-'18-'19-'20 Track '20 Football '20 Basketball '20 Track '13-'14 Baseball '13-'14-'15-'16 Basketball '13-'14 ' Football '20 ' Football '12 Track '19 Football '20 I Football '20 Track '19 Football '20 Football '20 Basketball '20 Track '20 Basketball '17-'18-'19 Football '12 Basketball '19-'20 Football '99-'00-'01-'02 Football '06' Football '20 Track '17-'19-'20 Football '16-'19 Basketball '17 Football '18-'19-'20 Football '20 Football '20 Page 156 cu W , xpss A fu ' 4 f' I S I 'D I 04 Q '-' I E-R E 0 . J ' 1ffJ OJ V iv my H ' J' . lv 55 I J' 4-' Q .zh- N. -' xx, , , . I x . fs , .. Vyg. ,G v X 5. - . 1. .AA H r 14 f -Q. x Q I 'T 'hh' ' - is w . ' P fu 7 ' 6 ,Aff The Star anh Garter x .4 Ph P Music and Drama COFg31liZCCi March, 192OD T K Membership Competitive 5 OFFICERS if : CHARLES J. COLLET . . . 1, F MARION W. WATKINS . . w RUSSELL W. HUNT . THOMAS G. WEIR . . . . Q X L SENIORS Q . V. L. WHITWORTH 5 L. B. SCHUMACHER 4 JUNIORS T. G. WEIR A - H J. E. JEXVELL , ' ' f A R. VV. HUNT H. E. DIERS . I D. F. UPDIKE I - ' F. K. M. HUNTER 95 ' SOPHOMORES L. LINZER . x D. S. MOSEY E C . J. COLLET - M. W. WATKINS V FRESHMEN A. L. HUNT i I I 5 C. S. METCALE I. M. W-ASMUND I ' K A P. L. BLAKE Yi P? I ,400 L Q . President Vice-Pvfesideut . Secretary Treasureff E. M. GUY W. L. STEWART F. PA. KAULLEN I R. H. KNIGHT I KURT DE COUSSER J. E. JONES W. W. BOLT J. P. GORDON F. P. AMATLACK W. P. GATTS G.-AS. DOOLEY R. N. COURTNEY D. F. ROESE A. W. NAXfI.OR 410 jf ff f,,N..e vi O.. . S 0 I .. -R R mx - 'f-1 i K. Ja 3 , e ' J' 5 K F!! I u 1- ' .. TV 'XX f'-H Ulbe ilflllmssnurl mer ez W EGINNINC with the first week of September the Miner started off - fbi . ' f A of last year s staff returned to take up their duties in their branches of the various departments. ,Miller Norville Wheeler Leonard and Wilson on the editorial staff Booker Net7eband Kerr Huffman and Burke, on the business staff Snutz 'Vhller 'Ls Editor 1n Chief was always on hand to keep things moving but due to pressing school work was compelled to resign shortly after Thanksgiving H. O Norville who had served on the board as class reporter and Assistant Fditor was then elected as' Chief He performed his dutiesr like a seasoned veteran and lt was thru his efforts that the Miner passed through '1 xery successful season H L Ieonard has always been on hand to dash off the society and local news and has won considerable fame as a VVho s Wno writer. E. S Wheeler is deserving of much credit for his diligence in reporting athletic activities and in his efforts to mould the athletic spirit -of the school. Joe Wilson, our Cartoonist, has worked diligently and has made the weekly cartoons a special feature of this year's Miner. . ' I K. W. Booker, W. F. Netzeband and W. K. Teller have handled the business affairs of the Miner in a very commendable manner. They have been true ef- ficiency engineers if their work and through their efforts theiinancial condition of the Miner has been materially improved. H With an increase of twenty per cent in subscriptions among the alumni, local and national business men have come to regard our columns as an effective advertising medium. S. M. Burke and G. E. Zeller have successfully coped with the problems of circulation in a creditable manner. 1 - When all is considered, the Miner may be said to have enjoyed a very successful year. Our Christmas edition consisted of twenty-four pages, and, without doubt, was the' best issue of the Miner ever published. Our St. Pat's I 4 i n i 9 l L l 5 . ,. Q 1. l vl E an l 1 .4 i 1 i 1 4 1 . . 4 Q l , ' 0 . ll in u ll ' ll II If gg I L' V' x Q: I iv M-K T if if TT'-T K N J ' -.. -! , , 4 RQ? fl? Mo f E' 16 r I V 1' fl Q Y ' . . ' on the most successful year in the history of the paper. Ten members ' . ? 7 ,ty g b , . . . - . ' , ' 7 Y 9 Q- . i 1 ' 1 7 . E . . . . . . . . . A I l l rx issue was above the standard. The old paper of eight pages was increased, in many issues, to ten and twelve pages. - F7 The staff has attempted to give the student body, the faculty and the 2 S alumni an unprejudiced reflectionlof school life and school opinion. It has been the aim of the staff to reflect in every respect the feelings of the college regarding those events which have come to our notice. -I 5 1 Page 160 WOOL '- O :- if 9 W Wk S 5 ----'-H--'-N --- J Di Q . 'sawn Q v 3 1 as hmfQig9'D Qm9t 3 1 ofa xumgf H q - . ' ' O x . l X ' l Q' 1' 1 1 ' ' .. Q A if S mm 5- 0 xf' ,AYV 4- Mfgel? 'fl k w 1 N 1 I 1 ls' Xi xx 'Y11 Nz . P kk 5 -QR 3, x Page 159 -B 33' ,pr i l l 1 le lil 1 rl, I , l 4 I . V HF iv 2 l gl '1 ,li i . is 2. .xl ad' I 4 , .I l .s 1 l l V r X. . .,. Q 1 3 F ii ll lv' I is ll lr. l ll l s ff E. l I A 1 l 3. i L I 5. I . P U' I 5 rl is I X e I.. ll El.. ar 21. l ll li P gl w 5' fl l fl , iT.Xw,f rf fa ,--fr ,..i.z...,l - so 5, 1 x x 1 X - . 5. Brass Qliluh The Press Club was organized last year to promote inter- IJ? Q ll . est in technical writing among the students of M..S. M. The f 2 T membership included all men who have been or are at present on the Miner Board. . A great many plans were considered for exciting more T T . ix interest in writing, but the one finally accepted was that of i offering a prize of 325.00 for the best technical article or edi- . X torial Written by a student. A X The contest started in Januaryiand ended March lst. The Winning article was rinted in the St. Pat's issue of the E1 2 . P V A f . 1 Miner. Other articles of special merit are to be printed in the Miner from time to time, and no doubt Will be of much interest. The Press Club deserves much credit for its Work and it is hoped that thestudents will respond to this offer made to them, not entirely for the 'monetary Value of the prize, but for the ex- perience that will be gained in working upon such articles. M Engineers are- inclined to belittle their work in English. . 5 If they realized its great importance in actual practice they -- N . . . . . . 12 , Would undoubtedly take-more interest in their Writing. E5 -ll Q l . l . li 1 x 4 N. s l N Gf ' . T Page 16.2 0 do L Q . E Q GQ qi' O4 ' A 't 9':p sm f '-w mv' f. !R?xQs'-7,15 5 fl. I I 5 -.. M, - ' .x,,-n..,,. ,M ,,,,............?.....,.,v-1, Y ,fm , V . I ' 'Y 4-1 , xi B, 4 .. , J. U .' ' Y , i !- ' f ' . ,. , x ' ,. w I Wu ff' If I 41N Q I I , . !.' , f Y , l fy ff ' . I' V A ,J , K . .fl - K y ,I I ' I , I ,' f L--J ju- N- ' If ., AJ t .rj , ' X ,f .. 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YOU Cl! , 5 E 1, f - if ' - mi mm mu an u A veg-IH-' sms, , 3 f ' Xe ,r 6, MEANS voun EI , 9 . . 5 1 I: ' fm ' wi.-aux.-:vu mu me nr-rl-wilt I nm ,,n,,g,.g In me s-mon, 5 I I 99 rv' A Q or Acnvml IN I ,F F- - S IL ' 1, I ' ,lm ww. he Il l f 'd annum, .mn umm- a - fy' 4' 601,34 race 'ro fact who -ol 9 I N. F 5, ...rn in chmfor mm mm H- ,,,.,.,. nr 1..I..m .mv.0.a,'.f-u sv S A N urs. xr vcu nm Q J, N 3 I ' ' In . 3 A ' 5. wr,-mum. imma-1 qv ' nw mum .Ir so ww' 3'yg,. 50- XE, sruonzs :mn 1055? ,.A uma: , 4 ,- I - G-MIQ auf... 1.. 1nm.1nvm ' nn.: fvnmxon. Qmfihmuc r' ,H+ ,gee Lncxnzznuififfn gn news: vnu mum or V, , ' I I 53 -.1 4 1 - M Q H - -- U M13 IT 'n 'I'5I'f1mfhZ 1Z'il'ff-171 'W'x. xI ' IfQ LJ..'f35. 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II Holla men. .. . . I- I ' TH NIISSOU IMINE I - z -,.5,... z5g,,n-.,:,n-uf 'Q-1 . . gg E 5 555.2--aa1-,: :4:,.,....y. . I I, HE MISSOURI MINER. I I IE NI I P - 161 3 We vom 5 2 ' ' H as Q, 3 .X HW' 4' f I x JD 0 V -og'-V P -s I felt 1 Ghz Qtuhent Qtuuncil OFFICERS ' GEORGE B. BLOOM ..... President WILLIAM BAILEY . . . Vice-President THOMAS G. VVEIR . Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS G. B, BLOOM T. G. WEIR W. BAILEY H. HURST R. GETTLER A. DELALOYE . R. K. STROUP L. E. DAVIDSON The Student Council of the Missouri School of 'Mines consists of live men. Three of these are from the Senior Class and ,two from the Junior Class, and are elected by the student body. , , 1 This year, Bloom, Bailey and Hurst from .the Senior Class, and Weir and Gettler from the Junior Class were elected to serve until April, 1921, but due to the graduation of the three Senior members, it was necessary to elect new men. The men elected to fill. these vacancies were Davidson, Delaloye and Stroup. The Student Council has been' more active and more representative of a Student Council this year than in those previous, particularly so regarding the class ,fight and green caps. It also handled many minor cases very credit- ably, and it is hoped that the organization will continue in the future to be as active as it has been in the past year. Page 16-4 ,400 L, J f-Qu. IX 4 I -I! 1 A 5'5 1.2 f Ai EE Q I in ll li Ii 'I I 'I Q-Q I L' V I h- lm Z , 1 Q 25 c,,. . A 1-. ' CD fl! QQ Q 0- Qf' N. . ,y f. .....f so 11 3.5: I I+ I L nmnr f. .rj MMF!! 'v S, . Page 16 14 B 2,5 1 4 - - A - -me A I , A X X gl UQ. C '- A 1 N. Q . 55 fl 5. s l : + R s R X - N iN A x N 9: l ml I I H N - X W s - NI 3 015132 warner Qllluh Chaplain REV. FR. JOHN P. LYNCH OFFICERS D. F. WALSH . . . . President S. M. BURKE Vice-President - D. S. MOSBX' . Secretary OTTO EHLER H Treasurer F. A. KAULLEN . . . Historian MEMBERS A. C. ALOERMISSEN ED. KRUSE P. BISCH E. J. BOHNX J. L. BULGER E. DE CARDENAS A. S. CHAPPIUS . E. A. CANALES F. A. DECKMEYER A. F. DELALOYE A. DEVEREUXX C. J. GRIP M. V. HEALEY J. J. HABERTHIER F. R. HALASEY ' F. H. HOLLOXV R. E. ILLIDGE R. J. LAPEE HIRAM LAWRENCE F. E. LOWD JAMES MCCARTHEY R. J. MCCUNE ' ' J. M. MCDONELL GEORGE NAWN JOHN P. OSTER R. L. PARKER G. L. RICHERT E. B. SANDERS CHRIS. SOUTHERN G. F. WILLIAMS R. ZEVALLOS H. E. ZOLLER ASSOCIATE MEMBERS REV. J. J. HUGHES E. J. CAMPBELL J. E. BULLARD D. F. DONOHOE W. H. FETTERS L, W, HIGLEY I I - QR XDie d NOV. 7, 1920. . C. E. PARKER 0900 L, Q Page 166 AJ if-' AR C Q - N unn J 3 i fo 04 1' ' .m rumm XOJU fsoev g' f . H I DH, Eff'-N P . Paj I Q ,s 'Q .. 7 gc .- wa-.N fge ' I -'x --4 A f-N Q L , I 1 -I Nw f lj y Q2 1 1 7 K ' rrrrfih-P,-L !i 74'-V A Q-I 'fl of S37 O9 1 Q I issnurl inmg anh nztallurgunal gi.,- N , , 1.2 Qssuuatlun 1 LTHOUGH the Mining and Metallurgical Association got an early f start this year, there was but one lecture given during the first term. f Ziyi? This was a talk by J. R. Guiteras on Mining at the Chile Copper Co., N I Chuquicamata, Chilef, x More activity was displayed during the second term by the society. In january John Bowles gave a talk on Woodriver, Idaho. In the following month s - J. Gross of the Bureau of Mines told us of his experiences in lAlaska. The last ' meeting of the year was' turned over to H. A. Buehler. As usual, 'he gave usga Q very interesting lecture. . l I The Association is affiliated 'With the .American Institute of Mining and 52 Metallurgical Engineers. Many of our members are Junior Associates of 3 this national organization. I A , p ' N1 I oFF1cERs , 'S A. F. DELALOYE ' . . . . . President if A. L. ACKERS Secretary' ' V f 'I ' Q Page 168 L 00 - sf 60 L O -5 ' 4 2 ' A I I 'D 3 . 'Ii' QT . H ' fx 4 .1 'A ' '-'19s SPN f w mv fo 1 Page 1 67 s x , 5 y wi Y A v A -lg, Y rs , , -A A R Qi 3 f 'wan Qc Co ff lf of 4 I V 'fm' L f jg Q?-i.,,Y f i i ff L 1 xD 031 f . r I 4 The jlllletallurgmcal anh Qibemlcal bounty , .Q,,,7:,,2j HE METALLURGICAL AND CHEMICAL SOCIETY, which fs 7 composed of men who intend to make some phase of chemistry or Q- Q It metallurgy their life work, has had a number of successful meetings 35- : this year. These have been held with the object of presenting the various ag ,V Q phases of practical work that the different members have come in contact with S in their work. During the year the following addresses were made at the meetings: 51 T X The Relation betweenthe Research Laboratory F and the Industrial Plant . . HUSTON TAYLOR N Harding sau Mills . . . I , G. F. METZ ,, X The Use of Powdered Coal in Lead , if l Blast Furnaces . . . f D. E. HUFFMAN ' . . If The Littlest Things in Chemistry ' . B. NUDELMAN Ancient History . . I. . , . 4 E. BUSKETT The business meetings Were generally followed by a social hour at which 6 if time refreshments were served. ' P N ' ' , , ' E5 ' X The Diphenyl Dozen, an organization of chemists, has been a very great : aid in assisting the society, and on December 9th they were hosts to the society I ' yi when the new physical laboratory was given a formal christening. A Q A gy Q OFFICERS ' HUFSTON TAYLOR .' ' .4 . . ' . . President F T PAUL H., KARGES . . . Vice-President 4 ' QTTO EHLER . . Secretary-Treasuffef' Tk E ,T Q 5 I E' Q Page 170 'I if cfxom' Tye ff O., 2 s I Y s- 0 Q - Q gs . 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' ff f, f ' 5 f ffgm ff 402 W I Zim 7 ,, , M, ff, ,, 5 U75 WW QM WWW Z Z, ,, ' f -1 .: ,Q 1.-. I W A 'I s. I! I if 1 ls -Y E I I C I I ' I f r If 3 . ll Il ll ll . ,: I I L -4 1. V . 70 .. P f I r '3 5 ,. 'O I E 21' fa RQJDKLZMINWQ f I . l , .w 'F' Y , G Y Y V ' V N 1 gl 3 .lf , U .XX , 3 . L- I . 5 X 1 , I ff I I, 1' H R E- F 3 49 A ' J f ' s-r fu,-iw V M , W f Y -+,Q,.,.of ' XL ,Y . . . gk, ACKERS, A. L. IXLTON, W. J. ANDERSON, A. S. ANDREXVS, J. L. ARMSBY, H. H. BARDSLEY, C. E. BEDELL, M. N. BISCH, F. G. BLAKE, P. L. BLICKENSDERFER, TBOHN, E. J. BOORER, K. W. BONVERS, C. G. BOWLES, J. BOVVMAN, K. M. BROWN, P. M. BRYAN, J. P. BUCK, E. BURFORD, C. P. BURKE, S. M. BUSER, H. C. CALVERT, C. P. CARDENAS, E. DE CASE, W. E. CASEY, 'W. CASTELLI, J. CATHCART, E. H. CHANG, K. Y. CHAPIN, E. F. CHRISTNER, G. J. CHRISTOPHER, J. H. COAKLEY, I. L. COFFEY, G. V. COLBERT, J. P. COPE, O. C. CORNWELL, B. S. CROUSE, G. T. CROW, W. DAMOTTE, F.. V. DAVIDSON, L. E. DAVIS, C. B. DELALOYE, A. F. DENISON, A. F. DENISON, W. R. DEVEREUX, P. A. emhersbip list nf Q. Q. DIERKING, G. T. DIERS, G. P. DIERS, H. F.. . DOOLEY, G. A. DUNLOP, W. H. ' EBLE, O. EVANS, O. R. FISHBURN, C. D. FORAN, L. A. FORMAN, P. G. FRAME, F. H. FRAME, W. S. FREY, M. L. GOLLUB, M. GORDON, J. P., JR. GRAHAM, W. S. GRAY, F. F. GUY, F.. M. HABERTHIER, J. 1. HAGOOD. L. HALASEY, F. R. HARRIS, E. G. HAYES, S. M. HEIDTMAN, H. H. HENDRY, D. J. HINSCH, V. B. HODGES, I. F. HOFFMAN, R. A. HOLLAR, P. A. HOLLINGSHEAD, H. A. HOLLOW, E. J. ' HOWARD, M. R.. HUCKINS, I. G. HUFFMAN, D. E., HUNT, J. O. V JEWELL, A. B. KALEY, C. B. KARGES, P. H. KASEL, R. G. KAULLEN, F. A. KEMPER, C. KENNING, R. H. KENYON, R. J. KERR H. C. JR. LAY W C LENOX J LEONARD, H. L. . LINZER, L. LOESCHE, . C. LUMPKIN, L. E. LUSTER, T. C. MCCARTHY LAPEE, J. R. H , J- MCCLELLAN, M. H. MCCLURKEN, R. C. MAREK, H. C. MEEKS, F. Z. METZGAR, W. A. MIRELL, W. MILLAR, C. 1. MILLER,,J. G., JR. NIILLIKAN, C. E. MONAHAN, J. MOODIE, D. L. MOSBY, D. S. MOSENA, C. C. NAPPER, H. I. NAWN, G. F. ' NAYLOR, A. W. NETZEBAND, W. F. NEUWIRTH, A. G. NORVILLE, H. O. NUDELMAN, B. NUNNALLY, H. N. PACKMAN, N. PARKHURST, A. B. PATTERSON, H. F. PENCE, H. S. PESOUT, E. PORTER, E. K. POWELL, W. A. REEVES, J. M. REMBERT, E. W. REMMERS, W. E. RHOADS, R. L. RICHARDS, R. E. RICHERT, G. L. RUNGE, A. E. CEE. SALMON, J. C., JR, SANDERS, A. E. SCHOTT, T. C. SHIH, H. P. SIEGLE, Wm. SITZLER, C. W. B. SMITH, C. SMITH, R. D. SOTIER, A. L. SOUTHERN, C. SOUTHGATE, J. M. STORRS, S. E. STOVER, C. E. STROUP, R. J. STROUP, R. K. STUART, S. H. SCHUMACHER, L. B. SCOTT, G. R. TEDFORD, F.. S. TEVIS, C. C. THOMPSON, P. F. THOMPSON, T. TIRRE, F. M. T ORRENCE, E. TURNER, H. L. WALLACE F. , J- WALLACE, M. W. WALLINO, W. H. WATKINS, M. W. WATTS, A. B. WVEBSTER, V. H. WELLS, H. WERNE,R, W. A. WESTOARD, J. A. WHITNEY, H. M. WHITWORTH, V. L WILKERSON, A. B. WILLIAMS, A. C. ZELLER, G. A. ZIMMERMAN, D. ZOLLER, H. E. ZOOK, S. I. I DeceaSed. 1 KERCHNER, K. K. Page173 Qoolw 'Oo O4 I v- A I -I E 003 3 ' Nm x , f' ,, A 9 Q N f- . Q 1-1 NOAO I -? 'F .rf 'Mv 53' X LJ ?I ff 5? I +0 I YT iii U v f 1 it 15 Q , f If I Q: ' EE .JI 2 V F7 'Z , ir:- up ' 1'-. 'ui 1 l I rg THE BATTALION Imgv 1 74: I I n 1 J 7 i 1 r -f if K V Q 1, 1 I fn N2 as A -TQ 1. M i 5 . : fl 3+ Q! OI . Eyl o 9 0 o E 1: . - x x u . N I Z 4 1 1 1 N ' N ld i . ', 1, , nl 5 , 1 ' ' lx, Z 1 , Y C, 'o U UI .Q 5 ll ' -U ' .J H9 I 1 9: I xo-xy I A S J Q0.UxX I' ' Z K in 1 ' - U U : A E , -I-' I, , t i X Q I N VI? V t .-4' A 4 meKE IT ,SNAPPYI 'f' Q. if H A , K .JM :Q 17 ' ' A , 4 . N ' . 1 Q Page 1 . 0 - 2 fbcjaogli O4 g LE. f - i , I Q!--' E tabs , - HW ' y' , I -'--s J 'J X xg v X X ' 7, f I ' xO,1Qp Q 'S ' f W 1 c , . 4 , 7 . .. ,.. i I ,- heire- , S-. S. JR T N wg kt Q .QBQ .ae 'S 'P' f P 1 t -e...A., , S t I- ix A -Q' - X X I J Q w US, : , Ct A ' 3 6' H A Sf 5 f 1 x 5 EE 5 I , , f L - Q- , i 4 Q I 1 x t T 1 X f , ' rf s 5 E - COMPANY HA. - Sergeamfs PARKHURST, A. B. Corporals - PORTER E K N ORR, R- pt , - - GIBSON, D. G.,jR. , Captain LINDGREN, R. A. REMMERS' W' . FRAME, W- 5- AV - ROUFF, MIKELL W. A .f Sf BOLT, W. W. RUNGE, A. EJ ' 5 WALLACE, J' F- . Privates Feeee Seegeeee Ceffmfs A XVVEEQINIZJ gt- F. ANDREWS, J. L. a - BURKE 5. M. HEGWAR, P. J. BALLINGER, R. A. -:J N ' GREGG, J. L. CASEY, W. E. T Bugleys WATTS, A. -B. GREENSWEIGHT, A. S. I 4 SECOND PLATOON LAY, W. C. t ' PESOUT, E. A . MARTYN, P. F. Irv 2 VVELLS' H' Privates Leader H X EAMPBELL, J. P. Second Lieutenant METCALF, Cf S. A HRISTOPHER J. H. ZEIGLER W. C. MOODIE D. L. - YF FIRST PLATOON DAVIDSON, R.,V. A ' Mnmn? R. E. so D . B. . f . . . - Leeeee eiliife. C. LPZMM Sfffgmf 5ffE.'if?3?,?e.VX.' JR . 1 Fitst Lieutenant GRAHAM, W. S. FREY, M. L. SITZLER, C. W. B. KNIGHT, R, H, LJOLLLEWEF. H. ETRONG, N. , . ETT, . . - UBLETT, . A 5 f T K Platoon Sergeant SEMPER, C. L. Sergeams THOMPSON, P. -F. OORE, H. H. MEEKS, F. Z. VVANENMACHER, J. M. v 1 , - LOESCHE, H. C. NAWN, G. F. BLICKENSDERFER, J. ZIMMERMANN, D. 1 A Q Page 1 TS .if C900 L, , Q 04 , E Y A' .,, Q b I I - v ' 7. -7 N f A ' '95 33 3' A llllhl H ' J -A -0,-. 1335 , S 5 .QQ -N unn Sh dxf, 56 BATTALIGN STAFF Captain and Adjutant' h Major cwllffflll-II ami Snfnply Qjiinv THOMY, L. NIILLER, E. L., JR. me C'Nl'?4SIi,R, Ii. IRI. COLOR GUARD ' Color Sergeant c0gif7g1I'xA' Ii. COFFEY, G. V. , ELLIS: C' I,-v Page 1 77 1? il 5 Styx r---f .I Mt 0 1 ljlljl fi , H Urlid? ' '35 ' . Ili 15' ill ' Vi' ii 'f ' 'fill' I wif . gr, ,,,. - - - ., t fq 9' will x TT ' R ff: , , p , Q 'N 4 p W my , E. f J, A feozz f o fa - r n s 'i I 7 , i i 1 l 5 i 2 3 1 3 s 1 I 3 ,.4 i e , 1 i e.li p ff K I i y,, V 4, A i if 'T l if if il I 1 A . I . x N i K if . it X rl , 's .li ly Y la 'l l r bs . I i lt l' K 1 K, I. . . a I ' I ii tl , I N i s ? : ? x I. S l lf. J I f 4 I , . ,lb Why -Qllontinueh FIFTH EPISODE Now it happened that when I matriculated in college I started rooming at the home of the lady who cooked for the other fraternity in school-that good old Southern fraternity-Kappa Alpha. The first day I was there her son asked me if I wanted to join a frat, and I told him I was not particular, but he told me that the Kappa Alphas would be glad to have me for they needed fresh- men to keep up the fires for them. Of course, I did not like to be recommended by the son of the landlady, but I soon found out that fraternities would take information from almost anyone and likely were glad to get the recommendation. Time went on, but the invitation from this crowd did not come 'til finally one of their members came to me and told me how good they were. He said: 'We are the only fraternity that occupiesthe house in which we live. 'We do not ente'r politics Qthey all say thatj. 'We have some of the best men in school Qthey meant they did have in 19162. p , ' ' 'W'e've got the best house on the -campus Cthey mean Prof. Harris hasj. 'We've got a member on the Rollamo .Board Ceverybody hasb. 'We have a faculty representative Che won't admit it thoughj. 'VVe have the most of Rolla's 400 sisters Cquery-what is a fraternity sister? Did anybody ever hear of one,?j p 'We have a lot of good friends in town, too, among the most influential men of the vicinity, we had ColonelWoods until the sewer pipe broke. - 'Taking it allin all, we think we are ,pretty good, in fact, we know we are pretty good and sometimes we can make the statement without anyone dis- puting the fact, but that is becausethe most of them are jealous of us Cof what?D 'We limit ourselves to the good old South Cold is rightj, and the ideals of the grand old brotherhood do not allow us to change that policy, which is really a benefit Qwe don't know howjf ' I They really did not have such a bad bunch of fellows, but then you' might say the same thing for all the rest, so I 'laid off,' and this with all the rest is- WHYX' g ' THE END. ' ZX, I .fl I A -U 4 - g S .':' S4 Al 55 15 1 ll ll In il u. ll ll 1 I 14' 1 1 17- 157 ' f 1 Page 180 6001. . - cm 7 4 Di 0 - ' ' D 3 0 'xi' f I i I if H I gn' OA E ' 'O '3:.x I ,S fe- fa' ' 'm mm 'Q 'v 5 I .IK . Q. L., -im. ff I A 5 . Xl. . 5 xc . X, Kg. CI s il x -11 I 1 Z I 3 I I 5 5 '. ,km 5..--.9 Ii 11 ' I I1 'S .I . si, 4, Ifz E-W , . 1 .J ? I -. . ,,, I , . TNG 5 '-T791 I ...J , . . . I 3 NE if --f , X: 5 .5 I -z a I .IX .X .xy I, 1 Rm I 1 5 1 Is. xg IX NJ X if I 'fgxl 1- H ..,- 50 fgaifg ITE g .I I Nj ,Q f nktxq. I , . I , I Q.....,1l I 'I I I I X1 'I I, ---I I AI! ,au-.1AiI4X .-I' I. I MQ? 3, j-I-1 Iv-II I if N.,,I ' gg II ,f ,'5 ,Q T I , -. 51 2 v I I - . .W I 5 , .-K I . ' I I I , . , .I I I 5 I . rj I I I .X .SW Q 3 . .Ii I I Ii? ,A at . I-III Q Tw- x. I uf. .. .r 4 . , 1, VA nf, a.,,. ..n', 2 X .iff c . Elf .. wt 1 f'w....4--' ' .Mx LR .f -. 4 ,. gg, IW... I v I . 3 I I I. 1. 4. ' .V '-,i,,,f5 -f., ,y- 'I 'N' 1-ff COMPANY HB. Caprdin STUART, S. H. First Sergeant MCBRIDE, H. E. Bnglers SCHWARZ, H. G. KEYES, I. W. FIRST PLATOON I Leader First Lieutenant ZOLLER, H. E. Platoon Sergeant LEONARD, H. L. Sergeants TORRENCE, E. J. KIMMEL, V. E. Page 179 .-.-' . ,.,-f,-f Corporals BURCH, I. C. FISHBURN, C. D. TETER, W. E. Privates BAUMGARTNER, B. K. CARTER, R. A. COURTNEY, R. M. FLECK, H. HAYWOOD, E. G. HUNT, J. O. KALEY, C. B. KESSLER, H. H. MONAHAN, F. M. XKVILKERSON, A. B., JR. XVILSON, E. M. ZELLER, G. A. SECOND PI..-XTOON Leader Second Lieutenant REEVES, J. M. Platoon Sergoanl NIIENNIE, B. R. N Sl?I'f7t'l1llfS . K. 6 , IIQASEZZHQDJF. IJOOVER, B. In SCHOTQ C. NUNNALY, IAI. N. SCHRAMM, H. O. , STORRS 5.13. C0 Pf 'f'fS TEVIS, C. f3R.-XDY, R. If., .IR UNDERNXIOOD, F. J. j12w12I.I., A. B. VVEIGEL, M. P. DROUOT, I-I. R. Pfl'i'lIfF.Y BACKIQR, XY. II. BARNHTT, XY. j. BOWERS, C Cl. CAs'rIiI.I.I, j. IAIVNT, A. I.. HOOPER, Ii. Cl. IQNIGIIT, QI. R. LINZIQR, I.. NI. I.0Izvx', D. B. I.L's'rER, T. C KIAIQALIS, C W. NI.-XRTIN, G. Y. NICC'I.I31.I-AxII, RI SCH.-XEFISR, C. If., SIITIIQR, .-X. I-. XYAI.KI5R, .-X. XY. IY.AxI.IcIzR, -I. R. I.YIzIxsTIzR, Y. II. XYISSTGARII, I. A. XYRIGHT, W. S. N 4 . Tiff In TS' -N' .fs ,N Y fl c Q? l . g 6,45 A ,X CJ-,V ' ' K. l I t S S N f 'N Ti 1 I , ' .5 St. at 5' Bay ' , v ULD IRELAND is not the only locality that has called in ' I if the Honored and Venerable Saint Patrick to rid itself of the 'P reptiles that bothered the inhabitants. In the early days 5 l of the Missouri School of Mines several Miners reported the fact that f xl they had seen these serpents and that they thought that it was advisable i 5 to get rid of them before they becaine too numerous. This idea met E: I 3 with spontaneous enthusiasm. Then the idea of awarding the task ' F to one of the engineering fraternity was thought of, and the recipient ' L of such a job could be but one man and that was St. Pat himself. Q Thus it came about that John Bowles had the honor of interviewing F X this worthy saint, thrust upon him. John brought back a promise 5 H from St. Pat that he would visit the Missouri School of Mines on Ni his next birthday if possible. I A X At the beginning of March he sent word that it would be im- possible for him to come here in person. And with this announce- Q . ment he delegated his powers to George Menefee. This was in the , 4 year 1908. Early in the morning of the 17th the student body turned 1 -out in full force to welcome St. Pat as he came into Rolla. He came 'X' in on his handcar. The crowd of students escorted him to the campus, 2 , where he was given the opportunity of viewing the portion of Rolla where he was to exercise the ,powers that St. Pat had given him. He ran a careful traverse, checking to the ten-thousandths, of the area T . with a transit that was both original and unique. This instrument ,ro '5 consisted of an empty beer bottle set in fork of a branch of tree. This EQ act ended the day's affair, and St. Pat's representative marched back ' N to the music of the ban-d which was -present on the campus. Such Q Q was the modest beginning of the modern celebration of St. Pat's. ' ,K l Since then the movement has come to be recognizedJas an author- Q- , ized holiday and has taken the place of all other holidays in magnitude q . and importance. Various stunts have been added from time to time. E 'QF These include the parade, the minstrel show, the Masqued Ball and m the knighting ceremonies. A further feature is the queen that is - to accompany St. Pat at the ball. Miss Helen James Baysinger was the s ink first queen in the year 1915. E V I r 'T l D Page 1 S2 1 CAOCJ L - ,- , i is .. OA ll XQX-'-' M S 0 Q Q A . 7,5 J kj . 9, - n :MQ .'.' ffMm , , .1 ,.,, fu 5 .m fs .gg I f N. ' Q- V ,. -Sy,-'I Nl '7 I X Y .QQ X. V Qf x 559, 5 f i s ' RQ!4LNW 'E N Q x Q . C ' S 1 Us K 3 i 'fl I .1 r f 1 wr S Q W B K Q . 4 . ' :3 ix Q f . , X . xx ' , gi I X -1 .7 . 55 , , 5 1 g 2177 Q L5 , n U Ml. f H 1. 3, fllfhl l A f 1 1 fs xv ' J M' S - - v wr , ' ,Q ' hi ' f . ' l 3 I K ' ' .Jag-MLsoN l ' f I . 1 Paq 181 goof - f I ' O4 ,, 3 x Cff -. Q . N--x ' , NN J 'ZQGU 30 -nw ' .f f f 1 f 5 ,r i f N Y ' 17 1 K . ' ' ,W J-'Nia-. C339 X, ,SP , A Q Y X fo - ' ff ' Y K I . ' V 'lliTX,,.f'46 x.. U I - f X lg F , is L,-.L .. '. FYI - ts Q .4 jg QIQ LW MMO? ,, 1 E O- X L I x f I Q, S I FF ICER 666, a comedy in three acts, presented under the auspices f 'l Of the Star and Garter for the benefit of the Rollamo Board, proved to 56 be a success rivaled only by Billie and Stop Thief Of last year. A '-' A The play, diff1cult to present under normal conditions, was handicapped ,3- ' K by the fact that the time was limited. Only thru the efforts Of a well picked A 1 cast and a capable director was the play successfully staged. 2-E The play deals with a young millionaire who has traveled abroad in search li! 1 Of adventure. Failing in his search, he returns to find adventure in his own 3 home in the form of an attempted robbery, a girl and Officer 666. The play, ' full of action and humor, was a direct hit and is another addition to the long list Of plays successfully presented at Parker Hall. The Rollamo Board is indebted to the cast, W. L. Stewart, H. H. Armsby, the Freshman Orchestra, and all who contributed in any way to the success Of X Officer 666. A I X X 1 CAST ' X Bateato ...... VIRGIL WHITWORTH A A Michael Phelan, Officer 666 . PEMBERTON GORDON gg Whitney Barnes . . , . . WILLIAM HOKE s Travers Gladwin . . . ,WILLIAM BAXTER Helen Burton . . . . CHARLOTTE FARRIs Sadie Small, her cousin . BILLIE FARRIS Mrs. Burton . . . . MARGUERITE NORVILLE Alfred Wilson .g . WILLIAM STEWART Watkins - . . . . . . CHARLES KI'SKADDON Police Captain Stone . .' MARION WATKINS Kearney, a plainclothes man . . CHARLES' COLLET Ryan, a policeman . ' . . SAM STUART :J . I SCENES g 5 ' x Act. 1. Drawings Room of the Gladwin Home-afternoon. Act. 2. The same room-evening. 5 s Q Act. 3. Same as Act 1. - j STAFF f . Director . V . . . WILLIAM STEVVART gf State Manager . H. H. ARMSBY Properties . . . J. F. HOSTERMAN, VV. E. CASE ' Business Manager . . HUSTON TAYLOR K Music furnished by the Freshman Orchestra. 3 I - 2 . gf ' 3 Page' 18.9 4 if GBOUL ' ' 9 Q.. 1-2.- - N 0 Q Q .. 'Nx . J fkf 0 . . I ' 'J 3 fi - V v ' . ' ' -J 'A ...Wad , .0,, cg, was 5 I ff, gvsiuvnbgvvffgg ,,,- s 7' The ullamu lap ,DM 5 I Q AL L 3, X 1, 'gi S I I , 3 I .x f 5 ,,-,'g fi! 21292 ,M .sg M R K 1-xf X xr 5 . gilt rw' H, 4. S 55 if 4? I f 3 'Q 3 5 MV I ,' 7 Y ! 4 .r 4 -,p I f Q . Q 3.-x EK :Q xx lxet. J 4 my 3 K 1 1 14, 2 2 . 5.4 5 , 1 1 ' 5 -' i :TW-1 1 .Til 5 i .. 2 F ' 1 3 bf Q wg , G N5 We Z' E 11.572 - iQi ,f ' ff mg W, I--lf Q R2 X 43 1 fx: H a -f , Q L a E 3 ! 5 , , s. fa i 7 1 , ' il. 1 :fi , Q? 5 '--b OTHER VISITS OF DT. PAT f5 H., liz 7? af '?.fLF'- ' ig 5 jg 'ff Page 183 'A ' fa ,if b A fi? - ,f .QS ff f MW Q M' ' f ' 5 . 3 i f- -- A j ' 1 , Qt! ' -'H' I I kj. f ' A A fr , c c T . - c , 1 l U Green Cllap Bay THE train came to a standstill at Rolla's station the first Freshman 1 of the Class of '24 alighted with spirits high and with a multitude of Q. 2 visions of the Missouri School of Mines. He had heard of its world- j ' ' wide fame and reputation and now he had at last arrived here, after 533 a blissful summer at home. Instead of the peace and prominence which he had SQ? anticipated he found that he had been set down in a locality infested with g barbarous, blood-thirsty Sophomores who were on the warpath for Freshmen scalps. The very atmosphere seemed to predict evil to Freshmen, and as more I and more of his classmen arrived the patrols were increased. He was afraid of the waters of the Frisco Pond. , The Sophomores' ultimatum, which had been posted in conspicuous places about town, was sufficient warning for him and he spent the evenings of the , first week at home. From various members of the school he found out that the ' fair grounds afforded the only place of safety on the eve of the battle, so he borrowed a blanket and with a few sandwiches he set outon the designated Q, evening for the consultation of war. A large bonfire had been built, around EE which most of his class had already collected. Our hero was soon lost in the mob. l After a pleasant evening spent counting the stars the Freshmen arose 5 and prepared to march back into town. This march was duly accomplished to , the tune of the Mining Engineer. The opposing forces lined up on the two F' ends of the field. The sight of -a hundred Sophomores before him frightened l our hero. At the stipulated time the gun went off and the fray began. The 1, Held was a surging, seething mass of entangled humanity. At intervals, a Fresh- J' ' man, bound hand and foot, would be extricated from the mass and carried to the side to await the will of the victor. In twenty-three minutes the Freshmen were vanquished and the Sophomores were duly proclaimed victors. T9 After a brief rest to repair the sick and the wounded the defeated Fresh- men were liberally decorated with green paint and choice signs such as Siberian ,jf Goof' Hound, Pride of the 400 and Swamp Angel. They were then marched to Jackling Field for the circus, which consisted of lampblack fights, egg shampoos, molasses lights, songs, dances and proposals tosome of the society T belles of Rolla. In most cases the Sophomores deemed an application of the V pine paddle a part of the necessary enthusiasm and pep of the meeting. ' After the curtain had fallen on the last act of the circus the Freshmen were L .. , provided with the customary green caps which betokened the ignorance of the N wearer. They were now tamed and broken. A - 15 f 1 1 2 - l l . ' 2 , Page iss X, QAOOL' t A U 'C' ,, Q0 S if 'V 5 05 . ' . , N Hay' 4 -J 30 V, cccv 1, H 2 J l :fulfil V V X r '-,I ',,,. is, S -va Plym .f55? A P s 1 ' T- ' sf - A -sf L ' 45, I-X D 3 Pg t A K ,gh .1 fi Q L ' Q f' to ' Q 56 , f K 1 'X A A ' U' I fp, 1 is fl Q 5 :fastball Eanquet f WEDNESDAY, D6Cember the Sth, 1920, a banquet was tendered A S QL 5 the thirty men that composed the 1920 'football squad. The success ,1- ba p of the team prompted the student body to give-this banquet in honor I of the men. This IS the first of such banquets, for after the close of each season f 7 a similar affair will be given., . H ' The thirty men were the honor guests. Besides these, there were nearly three hundred others that attended thisuaffair. Among those present to do x X H honor to the ,squad were Rolla business men, faculty members and students. pl Cheers given by the upper classmen and Freshmen opened the eventful ix evening. A veryiappetizing supper was served by the ladies of the Presbyterian 5, A Church. After the supper Was over the speeches were begun. 1 . ' . y l '.'Thorny acted as toastmaster and introduced the various speakers. Q Among these was Dr. Fulton, who awarded the letters to the men of the team. f Eddie Bohn, who was killed in the Warrensburg game, was awarded the hon- rx' orary letter. Among others who spoke that evening were: Coach Roger Mcfune, Coach Spike Dennie, who predicted that the football team of the M iners would be champions of 1921, Buddy Cairns, captain of the team, Dr. A. L. McRae, ' ei former director of the School of Mines, Dr. Baysinger, Dip Wfendell, captain sl of the 1921 team, W. J. Ellis, Major C. E. Cooke, Dr, Barley and George Bloom. ' ' 'E A Une of the interesting features of the evening was the presentation of a E bouquet of 'flowers to each member of the squad by the little son of Dr. Turner. lv n N. ' 'iBefore the evening was over it was voted that the first banquet was a Q s great success and that the meeting be adjourned to meet one year from Decem- - , I , H N 'ff ber 8th for- the second Annual Football Banquet. 1' x ' I ' . - .ar : . g?-' , . K 'F 1 ' l Pate 185 . J L 06 ., 3 N I gm f - -C 'U A .Qfv ,N W . YV, Q f H 1 H H f. A a F JiblXf f5!? ,fe xggffmlvlgif iff! J ff beninr Grip Our yearly trips constitute a part of the pleasure of attending a Mine Engineering School. Last year in the spring the Juniors and Seniors took an extended inspectipn trip thru the South Missouri Mining District. The trip started April 9th from St. Louis and ended at the same place on April 17th. Dr. Cox and Professor Charles C. Clayton supervised the students While on this jaunt. ' The geology of the Iron Mountain District, together with that of Frederickstown, was studied for three days. Here actual ,mining and field conditions were studied under the direction of Dr. Cox and with the assistance of - Boots .In fact, Prof. Clayton rwas deeply in- terested in this inspection. 1 . , A - Then Professors Forbes and Clayton got a chance at the boys, This was at the Missouri Cobalt Company. Here the milling and smelting plants were both visited and studied. Many things were learned here that could not be obtained from books. The study of all milling and smelting methods Were further gone into at the .plants of the Federal Lead Co. at Flat River, Missouri, and again at Bonne Terre. All these plants were of interest to the men, due to the fact that they are in Missouriand are among the largest lead milling and smelting plants in the country. Underground methods were studied as well as the milling and smelting plants above ground. Then the Lead Smelter at Herculaneum Was visited and Boots told us again the advantages of the Dwight-Lloyd and Pots furnace in Lead Roasting. Zinc is also an important product of the district, so We visited the Collinsville Zinc Corporation and studied their me-thods. And after imbibing all this knowledge the party returned to St. Louis, dining sumptuously at the Planter's Hotel. After this there was nothing to do, so naturally we returned to Rolla to graduate, if pos- sible. Liz Millar arrived via the blinds and declared hewas feel- ing O. K., so We all decided to call the trip a real success and wish to thank the Professors for making it such. I Page in T7 .1-f n JE f00q 9 ' 1 t P 5 f-'-:ww ,N , J . ,uf , - L HM, - 50 ,J UE -4 I I J i -.1 f? fa li sf 4 '15 ,fi ,. , ,Q F IG! if-,A .J ,xg . i4 xgxt, N5 gf.. X? :H -1. Q3 ii A 'XM . ...Lx S iff X3 z Af 3 xii. N? Cz' W iz -J 3 Qi am .1 ,' T4 Q . 2: is? , A S512 Af , x T Q,aila.4,- lj 5,1 ll V.: 1 E135 . 5 fi 5 Mi Eg - ,f H AT'-+R .J 4 I . W'-j V 5? 5 nf? 1 ! 'mi 1 L, 3 he 1 GRE ? I f kf f A? lil ji Q. .1 A A it if ff? Y'-0 xiftk 5x...fq,, f 1 5 6 45: LH ' 1 ,.. A ,,0.. ix We x ...JG-'Hf:,:ii- V Page 187 OUR HPRETTYH FROSI-I I X. I l lub Eff' - .X f sl.. is ...gg i 9 9 i -FQ i 1 ...T fb Clllalenhar AUGUST 29. Rolla's Chautauqua entertains the Miners. 30. George- Easley, an old Miner, addresses the Students. 31. The Phelps County Fair starts and the Freshmen get a first glimpse of the bewhiskered Ozarkians. I Y ff Y - at S - .- 1' - Wk 1 X - 1 55. J, J A Xlfllil - : , uri: 1 , : 9 -7: -' . ef- ' -. ' .Ti-Q' '4' -L w r ' 1 ll I I V L-ii' f.j I 5 1 E . 0 W il! ! J I 43:31 xi 7-'xi H1 ' 1 I ' f Q s ,v A f 'T'--,1 - V A . T 4 SEPTEMBER 1. Miners' start going to classes now and then. Aquatic Classes held at Frisco for benefit of Freshmen. V .1-4 Fl - ' -- 2 My 1 all X ., 'l ll f .. f ll V. .. E x ' ' Stk y fur-s Y ml V ,-an A-in S w I 5 ,. 'Wann ini X' ZW ' 1 14 .P lx - If N K L gy U5 my Y N 2. Eighteen Freshmen tied to iron fence around campus and later dis- ciplined by Sophs. A ' 3. Dr. Fulton makes his Inaugural Address. Most tremendous success. 4. Student Council takes unpre- cedented step and bring about hostile and favorable criticism. 5. F rosh make stragetic retreat to Fair Grounds. 6. Sophs Win in class fight. 22 minutes time. 7. Football candidates report to Coach McCune. Both parties well pleased. ' K- - g s W A I - . I, ryfz. M157 Tr 1 - ' q J V. 5EPT.'T if 8. Election to fill vacancies on Rollamo Board. 9. Prof. Forbes blows student up with a squib thought to be dead. E-I A I I ado C2 'SQ' 3 i 4: fry! 2-,ixxpg , ,X K I 145' D - '2'::gg'5y R u I f- hcl.. 5 0, TN :ab A, , ' . A I XQAXJJ Xu af, en A ' . 9 X - ' 12 1' llll Illlii s ' i jf V. W7ff,.Q'f 5: HL? 454 .532-'2 1i. k A Z-'Q ' lb' ' i ' ' 5EPT.9 H' y 10. Politics very much in evidence. 12. Students go to church. Some accomplish purpose and get a I free dinner.. 12 6 16. Prof. Dean feels fine and tells gg some new jokes. ' 1.53 asa 1 'E -Q . ' 4 . fm., gc if ,292 H7 W- 'All' ialid - .'--Nw N.--if fp B ibi? gif - 'tggf V N 49 . A aaa lv ix:-A -- --C -1- -' .5 ' vw A V' A 0' .21 , an y SEPTJ6 ., 4 ' 1 y 19. Everybody in dark on account Rolla being broke. ' 1 20. Students labor under the handi- caps' of no lights and think it advan- tageous in prospecting. Pagc 190 0400 L -..S . S ,G V 1,p xr'--C ' ' ii Q ..-K 4 m Nr. -if 'Q or 3 0 - .4 Gf Q , V, A - l I ' K0 '33 Q 0 x 3 . V Q t X H ,iv ' -P 5? ' N' iw 5 r5 'q Q 5 , -M ' if . -ffl gf EQ! QSSQ, LD I 05 kr fifi f 1 i ' x 1 4 . , , sl? - 1 A 5' J : ' 1 . x ua I S .. 4 X : f - ' N E 1 1 , I I 5 EE I 52 'O 2 25 1 3 1 f 1 f 1 K 4 - I Q is I I , 1 . I , T2 5 Q I x ! . , fi Q k Z2 7 X is 1 1 I 1 Z gif :1 fa- fj' V S 'w . 4 x ' 1 .. V3 V3 ' s E5 I Page 189 Q00 I, CO4 V- O 1 K ' - 1 l -s I -'95 S30 3' mm w ,HWX .P 6 I x 0 erx f' S :RTM Sf? qi' s- 1, .. sfo s ss A E to 'sr to , QW T .Ns ,C F 4 M f Ness, IQ! i L!-7 LQ L 5 0 . 'QJJ 1 f is e ff' i 5 1 r NOVEMBER 19. N0 lights. students peruse 1. October grades turned in. The tem by Cflndlellght- , i rumor is in the air that Buddy Cairns 1 4 is married. I 2. Scholars celebrate the outcome , Q J of the elections. Recruiting for the f Q EsquimauX Navy begins. f 444 1- U an Uni W9 ll. . , ' Nov I9 sl:-I T r f- f 61 . ,I . l . 7 f g,,, .gf . y , f Q fA'i K if 20. Quo Vadis convention and at- if ' gf K N 'ri tendant evils. Frosh draw blood from A T 0 L N '- Sophs by the score of 19-6. Second 4 J I A NOV2, Miner dance. ' .. d Q h f . 23. Rollamo play, Qff1cer 6667 at ' 3' Frei Nl? ae.erQ?t1geS 'Ei Hmsuc- Football team leaves for 'Tulsa to play' A Cessful snipe unt in ..1n' um o ow. Henry Kendall. A I T: 4. October Flunks invited to a pink Q , L S tea given in their honor by the faculty. - T l gg 6. Eddie Bohn seriously injured an ---- E B l i in football game. Doc Pshaw assists T I ' 5 in customary manner. ' ' , I i rx, 8. EDWIN JOSEPH. BOHN r A' X, i T' U .11. Armistice Day. Memor-ial ' I A services at Parker Hall. ' T .T A NQW23, 131 flxigirs lose gamepto Drury by A 25. Turkey Dayp Miners celebrate 4 Score O ' by losing game. to Henry Kendall by 14' Sunday' You knfiw the rest' thesmall score of. 45 to O. Alumni A , A X I , ' - up Banquet at Tulsa. Lots of pep. J Y E . I ' .Dom -28. Undefeated Junior team chal- A .T U?l1',lhy C . 4 D S? ' lenges the Froshf to a football game. v 9 f 'll lb 'T 4 7' 5 29. Basketball practice begins in f x! 'I Z fr 1 . 5 ' f I ,f B V- . ' ', '- earnest. Good squad out for honors. l ' .IQ ' 30. Something new under the Rolla to i 1 Z ,iz Y' 'I I .,' Sun. New arrival in town. Q 5'-'ff.f f.i??Q' gN2l'l1 DECEMBER l . 17. News of Buddy Cairns, life sen- 1- A- A- E- Smf-Ukef in QYU1- 5 , ' tence confirmed. ' 2. Coach McCune appointed to be V lg.. Theta Tau B anq uet- The Assistant Athletic Director. x chosen few are put thru the fire and 3. Freshman Smoker. Herewith tested for many things. 4 picture takenlof student body. Paov192 i .AOCL ' . 2 Q 60 - 1' E W ' 675 . ,.,-f -A-rs. I H-N J 9-3 O 4 VA, , , ' I t'Pi,y...c.-. 56 ' i N.. g , -I l ,L fl l SI el , EE l ls iff TO li -il r 'il' 'li 2 5 , at l l X- . . , ff to -es sv QQ My ...s . c W. 1 . to 'r'r S . + he . 1 21. Prof. Forbes lulls class to sleep N with lecture in his Mining Class. x 15. Lectureonl Concrete by Col. ' Boyden. Some Miners feel insulted. ? 23. H. P. Lawrence-Thelma Bal- 17. Sunday. Usual excitement. l ljl lard. 19. johnny Bulger gets another ,W 1 01, 24. Miners do not take kindlyto Wrinkling- 2 special train idea for Washington 1 if of game. 25. Rolla's 13, better known as the I 3 '- Four Hundred, Work overtime on 7 Q' . Q 2 thislJ1'lgl1tI11OOHligl'1fnl.gl1t. ll .1-.Wig 1:7 . P . I 4 fy., -X I 'un K . - 'P -. , 'g 2f. ' 5 ,J ,'-:T -., vfl1.,',' , I Q , fm ' All Ocl lg QL 1 RP 23. Wfe lose football game IO St. 5 3 ', Louis U., 27-0. Qx ' 24. Miners organize a Bible Class 'Q Y H' - ,fs . -. Q rfci i, 1. 1 at the Methoc ist it rc 1 v ' K OCTQBER X 1 X Y1.. Real Pep shown at mass meet- M M4 xg 1 ing. ffff 0'0 'WI' ' 1 4. Freshmen organize an orchestra. WW,w,mQ W! NX' ,C J at 9 - - . 4 1 iifli-we Q ffff fff 2? ' , N .. . , ' mi, suuouscnooi. 0 ' Q i if.i-f'-.- . l f I v , , - If IW 'pf S G 1 emma on r , ,F L, Q15 . W r.s...., onus.. 061.247 :V if g U C, llc-uf 27. Lyceum Course begins and is is . P Well attended. 1 , l . H 29. Big Halloween dance. X P ' Oc'll. l ' 30, Many find that school starts 1 , I, I an hour too soon-rather a clay too 5' Flosh lialse hell ln general' in soon. Miners meet the Razorbacks K7 12' Basketball and Fall track men in the annual contest. begin their grind. c F2 1 - i g g T g E g J . l-qc it A lc f' cii-iflfilllfIffif.1'.Yf1.1,fv f -mi N an i ' ln ' . , , If-.-tiff-fi ll M si- N x j .X '1 214- zgfgz-'K iF.z-,, I ,Xb ...QI . ' X- -:Eff 'ffs l ili I f 1 'S .L '.1.j,1 - f' f.z.T -i . f -1 la 39' . fl , ,'i, 555 ,- 4,t,' ?.,.'f,'1-..f1I! S.,-' ' 2 . - , , ' I N 'lg lt.1fifqa.'.. T, C3-ilyjfli-Q- 'l'l, l ,':'l'-qv-lip' ' .sdlllll '-fp in-if 6 ' l .. 1 ' - 1 - '. ,b H ' ,, r 2' b f IE! D W, ,,,, 1 oaiz. 1 .- . 6 - :A J 0.1.30 -Qu OU 2 Z2 Page 191 L OA .5 ., lg , I fr 0 Cb KX Hw ' Q! . J lg il K I i I X L Q x l 7' fo - J f' .JW 1 0491 1 . e fr - ' -1,RXf-c----.., , Ciba :Frat in LMOST any lovely lady is satisfied with a string of pearls, a platinum brooch and . I a diamond glinting somewhere between her jeweled comb and her cut-steel buckles. cal f' ig She cares no more for ornaments than Omar did for hooch. Which is where the - X lovely women differ from the stalwart of the species. A man is satisfied with one pink frat pin. ' No guy has made the most of his college education unless he comes from college drooping gig with a frat pin on his chest. A bird that spends four years on the front line benches without bagging a campus Croix-de-Guerre is skipping pretty close to the nix column. He must face f the world without a fancy hat band, without a mystic grip to slip all comers and without the Greek alphabet peeking from his vest. And that's some handicap. Since sport shoes came down to 36 a pair, it is getting harder and harder to distinguish the college guy. , There are 11,926,012 combinations of the Greek alphabet and just that many frats. Every- thing secret nowadays is labeled alpha or omega, including salad dressing and linament formulae. Any guy that lopes thru college without being tagged for some Greek outfit is a dud with a capital D and a missing fuse. ' 1 1 The frat guys are the outstanding gazinks of the dear old alma mater-the boys that drink the midnight fusel oil. The collegiate Ku-Klux is the real thing in the mystic department. And A the Greek 'letters are the code language for something hidden and unseen, as for example, Beta Vodka Delta for B. V. D's. The boys that peddle the hush dope make the moonshiner look 1 like a public character. ' i if All the real folks have been tagged for honors. . George Washington belonged to the Kanan Tella Li fraternity, Babe Ruth has joined the Hitta Lotta Runs and Ponzi belongs to the I. O. U.'s. j A No frat brother is complete without a triangle of platinum pinned where he spatters his breakfast eggs. The real thing in frat fixings is a couple of spare parts of the Greek alphabet enclosed by a barrage of baby pearls and -Attleboro diamonds. The aleck that carries one of these hokey-opokeys over his fifth rib is a loudbang in frat circles. And every year they murder 120,000,000 oysters just to get pearls for the edges of those pins. ' The big minutes in a frat guy's life is when he gives a gal that pin. The skies quiver and ' the gods halt till the safety clasp pier-ces the dame's georgette. According to all the by-laws and :g umpty-umpty of the sacred frat, the lady is now engaged to the yap that just gave up the- pin. It is a thrilling moment, especially to akjane that can't read Greek. W -:E Another star-spangled ceremony connected with the Balkan alphabet is slipping the frat grip. The grand and solemn handclasp has all the finger movements of a Cornet solo without lj P the cornet. When Greek-letter guy meets Greek-letter guy then comesgthe tug of paws. There is no thrill like feeling the authorized squeeze of the brother fratheaid. And there are more vi victims of the Greek grip than there are of the Spanish influenza. The intricate moves of the regular handclasp makes the Bertillon system look like a rough W - description. But even so, the grip's a good thing for the college boys-it's the one kind of ro manual labor that they fall for. And that's our argument. You don't have to be a frat guy to . get by in life, but it helps. When you are broke and starving miles from home you can always ' hock the frat pin.-CEXJ 2? ' 1 Page 191, . ,AOCL . ,- -if o E ' 4. 4 Q : TN f .' ' 'Ei fab? 2' H 'A - A-fa. s it i mma eh 'Wassi- 13 C? ry N . gs,f ,ii-A Q -A I ax .M ..... X QQ!! f ffm , fgex s,, :Y I x J 4 li i - f ' - 21. Everything calm. ,Something .s i A 5 j X-f xy J must be going to happen. i ig o L 22. It did-John Miner Shaved. Q J ,QQ N U 23. Basketball team leaves for tour 4' J kj CJ ' .2 of state. A I fl 1 o J ,fl , 0 24. Miners lose to Central by score qi Y ' .1 'I' r'L 's' i s I 1 of 24-12. X Es - A I K At Y 'qc G N' Dila. 25. Missouri Mining and Metal- , j J 1 V . lurgical Society meets. iN ew Physical 1 D 4, Tau Beta Pi initiation and ban- Director arrives. Name, Bill- K-amp. L' l 5 ' quet for the consecrated ones.. Qld letter mali- 15, Everyone looking' forward to 26. Miners lose to Wfestminster. the Xmas holidays. I 271' Tau Beta Pi pledges some men. 19. A Miner thought to have been 28. Miners stage 6th anniversary r X Seen at ehui-oh. . , A dance. The shuffie-GGSH! Q 20. Lambda Chi's Win- 'basketball ' championship. A I 15 A f ss 1 1 . JANUARY 1 i 3. g 4. Ed Hollow blows in with the ' A same old line. V Q 5.. Dr. it Boycealso arrives to take l ' chair of Economics. ' A Q - 18. Dean kicks out four students l. i - - 28 N . . - - IAN. - . : for Working Calculus that 1S' beyond os A 3 his mental grasp. Q . , Qui A 1 29. .Satyrs throw a dam-p party. ,O 2 I Revenue ofhcers busy. ' 5' 45 , X -75 ' 'QM I, , X. 1 1 f 1 N 73,56 ' we-,Bev f pf! i is 1 -X of .W x - - X ef N '1 Y :v . 041, . 1 . - 5 2:5 1 ,f W k. X . T- 'i'?fi2 j 3 X . v5W-1z,i':??i'- f '?Vf.'E.f?-,ff v N X 1 62 A X f , ' 1 X f'??fi, f' JAN ia f .ff rw fn . . -. ' I ' 77 ggi? H : . v . ,V sv f - Sa. 19. A. A. E. meeting. o JANE I f - f ' f Q9 i 20. Frosh seen Sporflng latest In 30.1 Satyrs require help to get home. I undress uniform. X, Page 19.2 oo L 2 5 4906 QA 5 . o- H s . j ,M .E vf ii I , 5 . ff.. 1 .Oda M .: ' -K5 '- In V Wpfivy,-,,f,Q,'5 , I I f A W f A . me 'T 'T EICCQW f' CD fc ' A Q 1-51' ' ' C1-J'-J I , A f- ' -I He: Let's kiss and make up! U She: If you're careful, I won t have to. ' ECONOMICS I Prof. Boyce was waxing warm on the topic of Supply and De- mand. N oticing a lack of attention, he asked: Mr, Reid, give me an example of an elastic demand. Mr. Reid answered: A pair of gartersf' rr 2 x x x A . E55 a WE'LL BITE il: l They say its not the dress that, makes the chorus girls. Then I what is it? - - . bk Pk Pk Pk . DO TELL! Elizabeth: Doctor, I want you to vaccinate me, but I want it done in some place where it won't show. p ' I ' ' , Dr. Bay Cmeditatinglz Well, I don't see how I can do it without I doing it internally. 96 Pk is X ' I - V, nl DO YGUI BELIEVE IT?. . 1 You are concealing something from me! hissed I the villain. Certainly I am, replied -the fair damsel: I ain't no Salome. FK Ik Pk Pk . ' IS THAT SO Crow: - What date is tomorrow? T Dip: jim's. , Dk Dk Plf Pk up HERE AND THERE , Schwarz CWorld-famed Explorerl - I've been everywhere all over the world. and seen everything. McBride CLocal Eziplorerlz D'je ever take some of this unlabeled T' whiskey? - V Schwarz: Never did.':'. McBride: You've never seen anything then. J wk Pk Pk Pk ITHEY ARE SO INNOCENT , Lovesick Frosh: You are the breath of my life, dearest. The 400: Do you mean it? Then see how long you can hold your breath. 1 Pk Y? Pk PIC I, TAKING NO CHANCES . ' ' Any Prof.: This examination will be held under the honor sys- tem. Take seats three apart and in alternate rows. U Page 196 ,. 900g - u on . .Ig ff - as - .F A :: ev'-X A or-A .J W O 4 , , ' , T I , D u . . H f5 Ql..' xvfx cab S I' i i ' L f. qv L 55. 'Q .il L t I 'Q' N ,Q t l , X Z .l ,. TS, Z5 E: si? 7' 4 1 9 I if O4 Vi P fo .1 .- t s- if- MMS e Nf' '- T ' es X-, ssl ...WCUDXF 2 tl it PM - Niko ff if- .ey M ,X W r TDR Jfresbman Smuk BI' l ' The Freshman smoker on De- no , l cember 3, 1920, was well attended f by men from all of the classes. Perhaps the large attendance was due to the fact that there had been -sf a hint of something special in the . be way of entertainment. The pro- T4 i gramme started with a selection -f by the famous Freshman Orches- l i tra. Following this, Spoof XYalker i and Snipe Schaefer staged a thrill- ! ing pillow fight in which Spoof J was declared winner on points. oi Marek and Smith then engaged v in a mock sparring bout, each of the contestants being blindfolded. , This mock bout was followed by 1 a real one between H. O. Schramm - l and Kessler, in which Kessler had , the advantage although both con- lr? testants displayed good form at -k times. This ended the fistic entertainment for the evening and the next type was is brought on. This was Fred Underwood, who rendered a vocal solo. Not' to be outdone, the orchestra played the other selection that is in the repertoire. All 16 l the preceding forms of amusements were tame when they are compared to that J which followed. A The next thing on the list of amusements was the main drawing card of the evening. And as the imported cabaret dancers from the city of St. Louis came tripping in there was a great outburst of spontaneous applause, mingled rf with several hundred ferventfsighs. However wild the Miners were. to he the lucky N ones who should draw the attention of these dancers the luck was with the United States Army-Lieut. Peckhamg Wlall Street-Fred Smith: Rolla- ,Q Prof. Butler, and at last one or two of the students, principally Stroup, because he had less hair on his head than most of us. 'Z The Miners were truly appreciative of the performance and enjoyed it im- E 5 mensely. The Smoker was a complete success as there were plenty of smokes 'Q and lots of pep. l Parye 195 ,AOCLV - W S 0 Q ' .ff or -fs reefs' ts digg? 5 lllllllit i 'HT' I fi - -'D N .fr .?,.x r' s A wh ef? , . iivld g i K., li ':1:'. 'v. U 4- 0 V ' ll , 5: . ig f ul' .li J l ii 4 i .'1'5?!S , M U, im ,Q im, Y I, ig Ti as 3 '-4:l'1 5 asl- l' lf, 1 1-'E Ali i 1 ,V me ww, ,,.,,, !-V. -5 ' 3. ,r 'i i A , w i ,ii ., 4 , ,Ii 1 1 r , 3,1 JL .flux lim, X Y 4-, li . ,4 N Q it t eete as -TQ -fs ffffecaiziifgailwl , l 1 Us on can Q or 1 fs' ll Rolla State Bank Og i lk Capital and Surplus, S100,000 . X 3'S Q Q' X l I : 4 f 1 Safety and Service T x It is our purpose to handle any and all business X entrusted to us in such a fair and liberal manner A X as to make all patrons' relations With ourbank i v . satisfactory and profitable. ' V Students' Accounts Welcome Q. 5 5 i 1 N 1-Q 'A N 5 X . s wi . Depository of Missouri School of Mines E K - x :iii 0 ' 5 ' Q I ' 3 0000 L Page 198 'I 'D ai 2 .Q7--' 1 or - as 5 er -s ,Aki 0 . - 0 f 1 ,ffmnlm D sa , is LI J X dfgsb X ga J 1,1 fl -Hx L fo l1j '---f E7'5 I 'N s Q. w x is W- f' Nf iv , -x - ,...x ' 762 5, A AQ .-.Q C095 rg xxx I Q ' Q4 -- , W if 5 we VCT ISC ITICD Q39' WEB X X .Q A J ' D N , QU? 4 ix ff ff. N gf f W 1 fs. W V, A 5 A . xx fx 43 ff c f'-O ' VW ? SY ' C zo ' X A , : 6 fs If ,ivy i 3 Gtr 'Yi A 1 1 ' 'TJ , ? QW - M, - f 4 W J x . Pay 197 j OO . 1, .Q 6 L Ofvx ' RQ -f I .. f U f nfvfvwkxnfcfi fgfg EQ? .fm .,. ' N91 fi! 7' x --P N '9 1 A X ' f X V '54 I , ' - f'.f ,z' ' ' ' ' 4 'iff ' ,.f'Q X' IV 'v' fl J X 4 ' a 5. fk-- K' 'v 5 u ' V U I T0 be strong To .verve U5 To befiberezl eieposzforswell T0 be prompt and irubf I IS THE POLICY GF 1 1 1 he .I ational ank of olla Q. Capita! Surplus Reserve Over GOVERNMENT DEPQSITORY . Y i f . t J . . I 0 F F I C E R S SERVICE based on the facili- J ties and experience gained dur- H. W. LENOX - - -h P 'd nz ing nearly a quarter of a century DAVID E. COWAN - re -P ident is CXtC.HdCd by this bank- We P. H. MCGREGOR - - Cafhier feel that, because of this experience, We FLOYD W. WEBB, - A z C her are in a position to extend every aid and F. A. CAMERON, - A :C h' assistance to our friends and customers, . 1 W. J. McCAw - - A. IC ph consistent with sound business methods. w MEMBER OF FEDERAL RESERVE Bi'NK P GAQUL u 9 2 Ga Q fas 3. --.fm E . J 'ff-1' .if If i ' xo ,141 L' Q 4.-Q N m r. 6:'ltj..xmWV,..ff WN 5 a C y r Q ,iff , if f as E no -Se-E 'sm e e XJQQDZ4, rgykllslo f 'E Q Y X - F-ph ' ' CVJ ' E R IC E ' .IS THE SECRET OF THE SUCCESS OF The STUDENTS' sToRE al, The place of service Here you find just what you want Every time you vvantit ' Soda Fountain of the very best Tobacco and cigars of any known brand 9, Universally advertised candies Divers lines of pipes and accessories Everything in text books 're' Nifty line of engraved stationery The finest kind of billiard parlor l E Sporting goods of all kinds - ' . F, Special attention given to all The store is open seven days each week Our Grafanola department at your service v Remember the advertisers in the Rollamo Every time you need anything M HARVEY Sc SMITH PROPRIETORS OF THE STUDENTS' STORE H. SL S BILLI XRD H XLL ROLLA S THEATER Page 199 -,AOC L 'O E 1-+ffssaif303 1 'W !,f1 i E l'!JN xi -T fu I ' I 'I L,x , I N- ,Q .mfgj A, Q 1 T X ,wx 'xnq R' f XXQQNQ Ll mv Q' J -144 ..! fx AE, R ,SU M A 1 fs ZLMEFSZZQ 5, 05. X, Q. ,X -X N I 'x n x x X W N S . N X S 5 . x -. x x Sk -. I i i 1- , J yor REI IABI E COODQ - -AT.. REASONABLE PRICES GO TO I Hel1c:r'S Clothing .I EEEEEEEEEEE.,,.EEEE.EE.EEK,E1EEEE.1E..EK,E,1E.EEEEEEEK , E,.EEEEE,EE.K ,EE. EEEEEE.E . . .,I,-IQUSG.. . The Clotlzing House for tudents 535 RQLLA, MISSOURI Q lllllllllllllll 8 0900 L Paar' S 'idx g ,Lf 45 fo 04 Iqyw-f N. 0 EJ .0455 'WOW YQ-.y,,lm1nI I m If ' 'Ea fqyxe Q ' S' 'S X x ,Mx D fw XE I 4 .fwq I 'fl f 'Ci' .'M6f6hd'Hf5V 6? Farmers Bank A RoLLA, MISSOURI 8 A Capital and Surplus, 3123000 , X Studemm' 'D E: You cannot make the most of your Q5 educatlon W1thout busmess trammg. E A bank aecount with us will give you , that trainmg---the value of Wh1Ch can- not be overestimated. if WE ARE GLAD TO HANDLE A ' STUDENT ACCOUNTS A 03 A Modern Bcmlzfof Progressive People Page 201 6-L 64 j 4 . fig. - N Q03 -fo . JD fb f ' '- lv 5 5 1 'FI 'T 1 , f 0 A - f sw f ,sri-I Ig I .ff 5 T The Brunswick Phonographs 1 ' The Brunswick Records , I F,ffi5A3?fI.ZlEIlf,JIllatal5i'EZIhef CO11k1iH F0UHfai11 PCP-S I OE SIGNET Gold and Silver Pencils ' i I? sUN RAY ELAsHLIOI-Irs ' Q TH-E BEST FOOD and COLLEGE and SCHOOL f THE EEsT SERVICE SUPPLIES We sell a.1g1Elf?:ELOWEST Givebeuscoziwegiltd and b l HOT and COLD 5 l I MC3lS-40C LUNCI-IES F EIBSIISE . , . I Dunham 'I .fzrber 70 6' , 6 I Real Shme W I T See BUS A sHOP T A az Murray'5 5, TLY - 22 A gl DIsTINc ,, INDIVIDUAL A TRIAL Barber' Shop l I , 0 I IX T mlm' Made otlzes I ' I T I, I WEAR LONGER l LOOK NEATER 1 FIT BETTER 6 S 1 I ROLLA TAILORING COMPANY I H. WITT 1 We alfa do Clegning and Preffmg I I7 - FOR - J V Athletzc Gloody T N F iyh in Tackle f T Sh g and Watchmaker and 1 T 02' GVZHZJ' RIFLES Jeweler k I Almmzmztzon I ' T SEE B Hgrdwgrg ALL WORK GUARANTEED L. 11313351553 ROLLA, MISSOURI 4 oy-VIOOL M P U Off B I9 ,., 4. O4 1' E i 'ff ' I Ie as I D 'ie J 9: f O R V, , A , I I I 'TTT I A I ,cg USULS-ulli 'sfglflf ls.. T! 'Wx , , N A I Y N I KX: .J T Aj T? A f 1 A , ,L I jg ROGERS FQUNDRY AND 5 MEG. CO. fi ENGINEERS, FOUNDERS and MACHINISTS I Qlanufacturerf of I Q E V , I ODERN I i INING I I ACHINERYI A JOPLIN MISSOURI I The Northern Optical Company ll EYES CAREFULLY and SCIENTIFICALLY EYAMINED II, ix W in 2 J N If is GLASSES FITTED INF A I CONSULT US ABOUT YOUR EYES s fn A B NORT HF RN Opromemlfr M ' EIGHTH STREET RQLLA MISSOURI ,AOCL Q ' 1- rg? Z K Q c J 9 l ry af ' L P I - g C C 04 .. Aff-f ' - J E ZOOQ I , ' N . - ' 3 . iff? H ',., .luffff ' xx 'A A , 'Sf 'D W A Liv 5 QJ 1 I! r ,- 'QS' -I Q 24 N e. ee I 'rf I .fe J? af V I 9 f S 2 1 I ! O 11. X T. ,If 'U ,Y W! , r 1 fv '- : V. ., A 1: K 'V !x'1 X .. A A it A I A rf: . I ...N A ,I 2 Q ff 'Scif fgo I 5-fly' Q 1 j A ' A A , . . YT 'T gg: - 43 , I b 1 fe Y T ' if A , ' Bmtmgordner Stztelzo ' I 1 no A L EVERYTHING ' I . 'J PHOTOGRAPHIC Nfl I 03 , I fr I Rolla Missonrz 5 . 1 2,5 .I A D il A If x SERVICE AND COMFORT-A Real Home to ez Weary Traveler A - B LTI MORE Y, I I I I I EVERY CONVENIENCE EVERYTHING CLEAN ' A A WE CATER TO BANQUETS AND DINNER PARTIES A I . . - V H 4 , J RATES 53.00 PER DAY ROIYLA, MISSOURI . NEAR STATION I I XENV BEFORE LEAVING M. S. M. SUBSCRIBE FOR fxf T V ' , V i Compliment: of - I The M, M. Vellerius 1 . fn ei I Company 'ii 1' - A ' Herolo' I . Petroleum - It wan be G ' 1- like gettingla e0g0 Hts V letter from home ' I Something W ' . of interest ' ,Uk always in it 1 , DON'T FORGET THAT WE TURN OUT T: ONLY THE BEST IN JOB WORK Tnlxa, Ulelahonm I I CHARLES L. WOODS - Proprietor and Editor WOO L ' Pa-go .206 A ff, ff' O.. A is T, T 0 Q . . H J Ci f Y if B F - Q.. A f ,gl M EQ ke, J91tjxA, e6c T N- E7 'D I ,ff 11 ,IT .I ,., 1 3 1 I ? i i I 1 E i s I I I 1 J 1 Q T? Y ee 47 A-,V , 'S 'S JSQ III ESE 'N X SAA US A V I J Aa fl I. x 1K x N x u R I' ' Z SJ I sf , YF .I K . 'N , - ROLLA Mo ,ff gl I I' I 1 For T ext Books, Drawing Instruments emo' School Supplies -SEE- JOHN W. SCOTT . QM. s. M. 886-87-asp MGH H X - A T , .4 TD Dfugglff ' . PINE STS. E21IHIIIIIIIllillllllIIIIHllilllIIlI!IllllHIIIilIllllililWI1IIlIIII!HIllINHIIIllIIIllIIlilIlII1HIIIIIIIIIllllllmlllillilhlllllllIllllllllllllllNIIHIllIllIIIllIllillIllllllllilllllllllllhlllIllllllllillllllllIIIIllllIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIlIlIIIlHiIHI!I!I!IIIlIIIlIIIEII'1iIIIiIIIIH Z0 IGN TAPES ACCURATE On Sale Everywhere S v rfliglff-w1vA7uL56 o. '-'-'-o5,,sgNrssssf 51103-Y 5 ' . I w a nyct . T '. . E52 FSTABLISHED 8 A H Fettlng Manufacturing Jewelry Co MANUFACTURERS GREEK LETTER FRATERNITY JEWELRY 213 N. LIBERTY STRELT BALTIMORE MD. ARY Sc SMITH Hlghest Grades ofME ' emd GTOCCFICS QUALITY AND SERVICE P Q 05 goof, ..! 'ra 9 . K9 C9 I I at ill' A f q t el Send for Cnmlog I I llIIIHllllllllillllllllIIillHHHHIllIlIIIllllllIIIIIIlIlIIIIlllIllllllIllIlIllllIllllIlIHIIIHIllHlllHIllllllYHHIllIIIHVIIHIllllIllII1llIllIIIllIHIllIllllYllYllIllllIllIllIHIllIllIllYIVIIIllIIIIIIIIIlIIINllIIIHIHIIIIIllIHllIllHIIIIIllIIllllIllIIllIIIIINIHHIHIHIIIIHHWIHWIHFIIWIHIHEITHUIU rr 'I ' I 73 . . ,co I v J I! 7 , v F5 I I csc' OA .3 fllllll 0 DI My 3Q53I , I 1,1 Q39 5 fx I' . l llv 1 1 i 1 1 I v l 4 r I 5 1 ! a 5 E 1 3 i 2 . i i 1 Q a y Q i E I V 1 S g 9 1 v r 1 1 f? ' i, '75, .K , I S s , , C I I , ffff f S. . gggiak X '1'HE. BHP Q. s h S I ' x J' N 's .K L! .T ...- GAOU L Q IXM M16 5 i O4 ,gf--f Q- 0 N , If J 3 O V, lf-1 .L.: A n s J' PG-Q0 .2 08 x 4' I V 'X AXQOZZ f 1 'Q , - s A A A A X-' ' st ,L 7 fl .5 IW 'X 4 'Sq J .L at A I as A f i git PM Q 53, . . 5 - i X L- 4 W , Packard Sho h ' N A CS Jo n B. Stetson Hats : J A I if Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothes .- K A , RL f : Rolla S Bzggerz and Bert Store f X A 7 A' , V' h A E N. l X 1 A SCHUMAN BRCTHERS 5 I RoLLA, M1ssoUR1 , 1 Sa 1 ff The Largest and Nlost Complete - I S k f JoHN A. GARCIA me O MINING ENGINEER I L X FURNITURE, CARPETS '- J A AND WALL PAPER ' I LLEN Sc GARCIA -7: X COMPANY CHICAGO I A In Southwest Missouri l , V tr B. H. RUCKER D .INSURANCE-ABSTRACTS HARRY R' MCCAW tg, 4 REAL ESTATE' ft PINE ST I -,Q ALfti351f,fZ5,i35xzts5f5035,i1iiif2f's5Zfffd' , wg K Real Ertate bought and fold. Q L Office S. E. corner 7th 8: Pine St. Rolla, Mo. Undertaking and Embalm.ing I S D. F. DONAHOE MARIE M. KEPLER I ,L , MANAGER STENOGRAPHER 1 A Page 207 A .gf CYOOL O' ' R A E 'ff' A R E 00 A - f-XJ f 3 I I X H VV It J A. f ma s f t A I '- A 'lv if


Suggestions in the Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) collection:

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Missouri University of Science and Technology - Rollamo Yearbook (Rolla, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924


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