Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX)

 - Class of 1935

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Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 212 of the 1935 volume:

' -■- tri ' j w ZT-r fi3t- -sfc Fl  P THE 1935 CAMPANILE IRWIN MORRIS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF RAYMOND COOK BUSINESS MANAGER ' Would but some winged Angel ere too late Arrest the yet unfolded Roll of Fate, And make the stern Recorder otherwise Enregister, or quite obliterate! ' T3 .;;.. y sSSii: . u nEf i; -„:- :r ■ ' -,-. . BfiAONikS if SJr •- ' •• ' - i-. -■_ AMPHITHEATRE CAMPANILE k y f ' -?f.w riswn i f f! . LECTURE HALL  $  £ ■ ' • - .... ■ ■ COHEN HOUSE SALLYPORT msmm %m $i fcrfir. . £,- . ■£- v -; ... ' : Bte COMMONS til w , - — — ■- ;■_— _ ..... - ■ fl A I a v J coo I d thou a «i d I j ; Jh Fcrte c  spi re Rc ' ritcula if. hearer to j| r k hearth Dcjtro! 3T V m ( s . F ' i . _ Mr — ■-■ % % -.- . ' « jVU n The Ball no question makes of Ayes and Noes, But Here or There as strikes the Player goes; And He that toss ' d you down into the Field, He knows about it all — He knows — HE knows! ADMINISTRATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES James Addison Baker Chairman William Marsh Rice, Jr. Vice Chairman John Thaddeus Scott Vice Chairman Benjamin B. Rice Secretary-Treasurer Edgar Odell Lovett Alexander Cleveland Robert Lee Blaffer OFFICERS OF THE ADMINISTRATION Edgar Odell Lovett President Harry Boyer Weiser Lovett Dean Samuel Glenn McCann Registrar John Thomas McCants Bursar McCann McCants Weiser DEPARTMENTAL HEADS STOCKTON AXSON, LL. D. English Literature ROBERT GRANVILLE CALDWELL, Litt. D. American History MAX FREUND, Ph. D. CLAUDE WILLIAM HEAPS, Ph.D. EDGAR ODELL LOVETT, Sc.D. SAMUEL GLENN McCANN, Ph.B. German Pure Mathematics Mathematics Jurisprudence JOHN T. McCANTS, M.A. ALAN DUGALD McKILLOP, Ph.D. Business Administration English DEPARTMENTAL HEADS JOSEPH HORACE POUND, M.E. Mechanical Engineering LEWIS BABCOCK RYAN, C.E. Civil Engineering HARRY ALEXANDER SCOTT, Ph.D. Physical Education JOHN WILLIS SLAUGHTER, Ph.D. Sociology ANDREA RADOSLAV TSANOFF, Ph.D. WILLIAM WARD WATKIN, M.A.I.A. Philosophy Architecture HARRY BOYER WEISER, Ph.D. HAROLD ALBERT WILSON, Sc.D. Chemistry Physics FACULTY ROSTER Virgil Charles Aldrich, Ph.D.; Instructor in Philosophy Edgar Altenburg, Ph.D.; Assistant Professor of Biology Joseph Lloyd Battista, M.A.; Instructor in Spanish and Italian Edwin Ford Beckenbach, Ph.D.; Instructor in Mathematics Andre Georges Bourgeois, Bachelier en Droit; Instructor in French Hubert Evelyn Bray, Ph.D.; Assistant Professor of Mathematics Andrew Bonnell Bryan, Ph.D.; Instructor in Physics Arthur Houghton Burr, M.S.; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering Robert Granville Caldwell, Ph.D.; Professor of American History, absent on leave Carroll Camden, Jr., Ph.D.; Instructor in English Lynn Marshall Case, Ph.D.; Instructor in History James Chillman, Jr., M.A.I. A.; Assistant Professor of Architecture Robert Rae Crookston, B.S. in M.E.; Instructor in Mechanical Engi- neering Charles Hewitt Dix, Ph.D.; Instructor in Mathematics Lester R. Ford, Ph.D.; Assistant Professor of Mathematics Joseph Stephen Gallegly, Jr., M.A.; Instructor in English Allen Darnaby Garrison, Ph.D.; Assistant Professor of Physical Chemistry Arthur J. Hartsook, M.S.; Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering Joseph William Hendren, Ph.D.; Instructor in English Gilbert Leslie Hermance, M.A.; Instructor in Physical Education Claude Edgar Hooton, M.A.; Instructor in Architecture Harvey Leroy Johnson, M.A.; Instructor in Spanish Joseph Estil Jones, M.A.; Instructor in Spanish Floyd Seyward Lear, Ph.D.; Assistant Professor of History Jarmon Alvis Lynch, Ph.D.; Instructor in Education Heinrich Meyer, Ph.D.; Instructor in German Walter Peter Miksch, M.A.; Instructor in French John Marshall Miller, B.S. in E.E.; Instructor in Engineering Drawing Lewis Morton Mott-Smith, Ph.D.; Instructor in Physics Henry Oscar Nicholas, Ph.D.; Instructor in Chemistry Addison Stayton Nunn, B.S. in Arch.; Instructor in Architectural Construction Eugene Jean Oberle, M.A.; Instructor in French Frank Acklen Pattie, Jr., Ph.D.; Assistant Professor of Psychology George Holmes Richter, Ph.D.; Instructor in Organic Chemistry Arthur Ferdinand Scott, Ph.D.; Instructor in Analytical Chemistry Fred Vernon Shelton, M.A.; Instructor in French Edwin Joe Shimek, M.S.; Instructor in Electrical Engineering Verne Franklin Simons, M.A., C.P.A.; Instructor in Economics Morris Albion Stewart, Ph.D.; Instructor in Biology Joseph David Thomas, M.A.; Instructor in English Leo Vernon Uhrig, B.S. in C.E.; Instructor in Civil Engineering James Stephen Walters, B.S.; Instructor in Electrical Engineering Hugh Clayton Welsh, M.D.; Instructor in Biology Russell Eugene Westmeyer, Ph.D.; Instructor in Economics William Erickson White, C.E.; Instructor in Civil Engineering George Wesley Whiting, Ph.D.; Instructor in English George Guion Williams, M.A.; Instructor in English ASSISTANTS AND FELLOWS Grover Leon Bridger, B.S. in Ch.E.; Fellow in Chemistry Paul Livingston Burlingame, M.A.; Fellow in Biology Weldon Burk Cabaniss, B.A.; Assistant in Jurisprudence Joseph Ilott Davies, M.A.; Assistant in Biology Alice Crowell Dean, M.A.; Fellow in Mathematics Henry Coley Edwards, B.A.; Fellow in Architecture Wesley Clarence Ekholm, B.S. in Ch.E.; Fellow in Chemistry George Alvin Garrett, M.A.; Fellow in Mathematics F. Cleon Goble, M.S.; Fellow in Biology Joseph Williams Hahn, M.A.; Fellow in Mathematics Lee Hodges, M.A.; Assistant in French and Spanish Wilson Mathis Hudson, M.A.; Assistant in English Frank House Hurley, Jr., B.A.; Fellow in Chemistry John Tom Hurt, M.A.; Fellow in Mathematics Carl Sellner Kuhn, Jr., B.S. in Ch.E.; Fellow in Chemistry Barnes Fletcher Lathrop, M.A.; Samuel Fain Carter Fellow Winfred O. Milligan, Ph.D.; Research Assistant in Chemistry William Grosvenor Pollard, M.A.; Fellow in Physics James Herbert Sawyer, Jr., M.A.; Fellow in Physics Frederic Allen Scott, M.S.; Fellow in Physics Walter Tandy Scott, B.A.; Fellow in Mathematics Millard Seals Taggart, M.A.; Fellow in Chemistry MOORE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS THOMAS W. MOORE ' 23 PRESIDENT MARY SANFORD CAMPBELL ' 29 VICE PRESIDENT E. F. K ALB ' 16 SECRETARY TREASURER WELDON B. CABANISS ' 28 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY EXECUTIVE BOARD ■ • 1 CABANISS MRS. ESTELLE STREETMAN LINDSEY ' 23 1932-35 HARVIN C. MOORE ' 27 LEWIS D. FISHER ' 25 1932-35 1932-35 MRS. OLIVE ERKEL BELL ' 19 HUBERT E. BRAY ' 18 1933-36 1934-37 CARLM. KNAPP ' 16 1934-37 JAMES I. CAMPBELL ' 24 R ASSOCIATION W. M. STANDISH ' 16 RETIRED PRESIDENT J. MASON BARRON ' 31 PORT ARTHUR CLUB THE WOMAN ' S COUNCIL COLLIER COOKE HUDSPETH Hudspeth PRESIDENT Quin DOROTHY OUIN VICE PRESIDENT RUTH HARDY Hardy SECRETARY-TREASURER Malone MILDRED MALONE MEMBER-AT-LARGE Dawson NADINE DAWSON MARY B. HENSLEY Hensley MARGARET DAVIS Davis DOROTHY BLANTON Blanton jfl S J W - f Van Gundy Watkin THE HONOR COl Cox JACK VAN GUNDY PRESIDENT RAY WATKIN Lagow VICE PRESIDENT Lawson EVRI MENDEL Mendel EDNA LEAH JACOBS AGNES COX BILL LAWSON Fitzhugh JOE LAGOW ROBERT FITZHUGH Moore STANLEY MOORE Williamson EUGENIA WILLIAMSON HOWARD NICHOLLS SCOTT F. BAILEY THE STUDENT COUNCIL Journeay OFFICERS Woods HARRY JOURNEAY PRESIDENT ROBERTA WOODS VICE PRESDENT Barnes EARL BARNES McClanahan SECRETARY Arthur ED McCLANAHAN TREASURER i PERCY ARTHUR COUNCILMAN- AT-LARGE Ferguson Francis .ASS REPRESENTATIVES Lawson Senior BILL FERGUSON BILL FRANCIS Boyd WILLIAM LAWSON Neuhaus Junior Sherrill WILLIAM SHERRILL OSCAR NEUHAUS MARJORIE BOYD Sophomore Farren MARY MARGARET HURLEY Hurley PAUL FARREN Crain Freshman CATHERINE CRAIN Myself when young did eagerly frequent Doctor and Saint, and heard great Argument About it and about; but evermore Came out by the same Door as in I went. CLASSES TO RICE NINETEEN THIRTY-FIVE Ambition and intelligence of mind brought you to this institution. Industry and upright- ness of character have kept you here. All four of them you will continue to need for satis- faction in work and distinction of achievement. Of the next best qualities for your future, I should place in the front line fortitude, faith, and friendliness, that is to say, courage in the presence of physical danger or political problem or spiritual discipline; confidence in your judgment, your fellows, your country, and your religion; and kindliness to men in all walks of life, and to horses and dogs, and their kind. And I am of course well aware that you have already had and met many an occasion for the exercise of the foregoing familiar virtues. With respect to fortitude, you will recall that the Founder of the Rice Institute was a man of resolute fortitude. He believed with Pericles that the secret of happiness is freedom and the secret of freedom is a brave heart, and with Pindar that the fortunes of the world follow heroic souls. You will agree with all three. For my own part, I know of no mathematical formulae that have worn quite as well as these equations of Pindar and Pericles, and I earnestly pray that neither courage, nor freedom, nor happiness may ever fail the for- tunes of the present foundation. In the next place, faith is fundamental to all enterprises of the human spirit. It is the first word in the experience of human nature and in our day it is the last word in the science of external nature. When writing his preamble to legislation for ways of temperance and justice, Plato put following God first, while to Plotinus, love, beauty, joy, and worship were forever building, unbuilding, and rebuilding in each man ' s soul and in the soul of the whole world. Here again we come upon ancient formularies that are independent of place or period. Their tenets are therefore timeless, and thus always timely. Their perennial re- vival restores passion for living and awakens anew its energies of love and hope and of faith in the future of man. And what shall I say of friendliness? Only this. Some time ago I said to undergraduates that in the long run the forces of the universe are friendly to us, and the saying is as true as anything the Bellman said thrice. The beneficent agencies throughout the ages have been winning out over the malevolent ones, otherwise we should hardly be here. And next to the love of God and of the family circle, I have encountered nothing on the personal side more constant than the love of a man for his friend. I shall remember while the light lives yet, and in the darkness I shall not forget, said one of them. That, I should very much like to think, is the measure of our loyalty to the graduates of this institution and of their loyalty to Rice, and I trust that from time to time you of nineteen thirty-five may give the Trustees and Faculty not only opportunity to validate their share therein but also occasion to rejoice in your own. So long as these enduring loyalties shall last, so long shall love of learning illumine this house and our sons and daughters pursue it. —EDGAR ODELL LOVETT. IN ME MORI AM s STOCKTON AXSON EDWARD ANDREW PEDEN SENIORS ADERMAN, CARLE BEVERLY; B.A. Houston ALLEN, GEORGE HERDER; B.S. in C.E. Eagle Lake Rally Club; Engineering Society; Yell Leader. ANDERSON, LOCHATRICE S.; B.A. Houston ARMSTRONG, MATTIE WILLIAMS; B.A. Dramatic Club. ARONSON, ARNOLD BLOCK; B.A. French Club; Band; Debate Club. Houston Orange ARTHUR, PERCY; B.S. in P.E. Houston Physical Education Club, Vice Pres. ' 34; Foot- ball, Captain ' 34; Student Association. BALLANFANT, AUTREY LEWIS; B.A. BALLARD, MARY LOUISE; B.A. BANNER, KNOX, B.A. Rally Club; Campanile Staff. Houston Houston Ft. Woilh BARNES, EARL BOWER; B.A. Houston Rally Club; B.S.U.; Honor Council; Pre-Medi- cal Society; Student Council; Mary Parker Gieseke Scholar. BARRICK, NOLAN ELLMORE; B.A. Houston Band, Vice Pres. ' 34, Bus. Mgr. ' 35; Archi- tectural Society, Pres. ' 35; Owl Staff; Cam- panile Staff. BARTON, WILLIAM ANDREW; B.A. Mercedes Student Council; Golf, Captain ' 33; Rally Club; Pre-Law; Junior Prom Committee. BEAVENS, HELEN; B.A. Houston BELL, HELEN; B.A. Houston Dramatic Club; Spanish Club; Thresher Staff. BEMAN. ESTHER IRENE; B.A. Pi Delta Phi. Houston BENDER, MARGARET; B.A. Houston May Fete. BINGHAM, BETTY JOE; B.A. Chenango BLAKE, GEORGE MILTON; B.A. Hearne Debate Club. BLOHM, MARY LOUISE; B.A. Houston O.W.L.S. BOCK, ISABELLE; B.A. Houston Architectural Society; Dramatic Club. BORGSTROM, FLOREINE ANTHEA; B.A. Houston SKEY, JAMES WILBUR; B.S. in Ch.E. Velasco WN, GEORGE W„ JR.; B.A. Beaumont Rally Club. ■WN, NYNA DOT; B.A. Houston M.S.U. BUCHANAN, ALICE PAULINE; B.A. BUFORD, SUSIE STOWERS; B.A. E.B.L.S.; Cranmer Club; Dramatic Club. BURDEAUX, CHARLES MAURICE; B.S. Dickinson Dallas Galena Park BURKE, WILLIAM FRANCIS; B.A. Architectural Society; Owl Statf. CALDWELL, PEARSON CASH; B.A. Rally Club; Pre-Medical Society. CANADA, JANE VERONA; B.A. Dramatic Club. Dallas Mt. Pleasant La Porte CASTLE, MARGARET FLORENCE; B.A. Ft. Sam Houston Architectural Society; Owl Staff; May Fete. CLEMENS, ROBERT WEIDIMIER; B.A. Houston Rally Club; Band; Architectural Society; Cam- panile Staff; Dramatic Club, Vice Pres. ' 34, Pres. ' 35. COOK, RAYMOND A.; B.A. Houston Campanile, Bus. Mgr. ' 35; Rally Club, Secy. ' 35; Dramatic Club; Debate Club. COOKE, COLLIER; B.A. Houston E.B.L.S.; Owl Staff; Woman ' s Council, Pres, ' 35; Vice Pres. Class ' 32, ' 34; May Fete. COWLEY, STANISLAUS PETER; B.A. New Orleans, La Dramatic Club. COX, AGNES; B.A. E.B.L.S.; Honor Council. CROCKETT, ARCHIBALD GORDON; B.A. Houston Houston CROOKER, JOHN H„ JR.; B.A. Houston Pre-Law Society, Pres. ' 35; Debating Club, Pres. ' 33; Honor Council; Rally Club; Phi Beta Kappa. DAUNOY, ELDEN LEO; B.A. Football. Houston SEN, SHIRLEY LOUISE; B.A. Houston [ON, THELMA FAY; B.A. Houston Y.W.C.A. DD, LAVON COUCH; B.S. in E.E. Houston Engineering Society; A. I. E.E. DOOLEY, ARTHUR RHEW; B.S. in Ch.E. Beaumont DUNLAP, MARIAN MARGARET; B.A. Houston Architectural Society. EBERSPACHER, CORALIE EVELYN; B.A. Houston Y.W.C.A. EISER, RICHARD EUGENE; B.S. in M.E. Rally Club. San Antonio ELKINS, MARGARET MODENA; B.A. Houston Edith Ripley Scholar; Pi Delta Phi; Y.W.C.A.; French Club; Phi Beta Kappa. ELLIS, MILDRED; B.A. Houston ELLIS ,T. B.; B.S. in E.E. A.I.E.E. Houston EVERETT, ELIZABETH LOU; B.A. Houston B.S.U. Council; Dramatic Club; Writing Club. FERGUSON, WILLIAM MURRAY; B.S. in Ch.E. Dallas Engineering Society; Rally Club; Student Coun- cil; Treas. Class ' 34; Hall Committee. FOUKE, HARRY HAYDON; B.S. in P.E. Texarkana, Ark. Football. FOULKS, CAROLINE SPENCER; B.A. Dickson Scholar; Glee Club. Houston FRANCIS, WILLIAM HOWARD; B.A. Dallas Rally Club; Student Council; Pre-Law Society. GAINEY, JOHN VINCENT; B.A. Architectural Society; Dramatic Club. GARFIELD, MARY AGNES; B.A. Y.W.C.A. GARNER, J. P.; B.A. Band; Pre-Law Society. Houston Pasadena Houston GEHRING, ELLA MAE; B.A. Y.W.C.A. GIBSON, SAMUEL HILARY; B.A. Houston Abilene GIBSON, WILLIAM HUNTER; B.A. Monahans Band; Engineering Society; Honor Council. ft to GOLDOFSKY, DEBORAH GERTRUDE; B.A. San Antonio Pi Delta Phi. GOULD, MARTIN JAMES; B.A. Engineering Society; Thresher. GREEN, HAZEL ROSE; B.A. P.A.L.S. Houston Houston GREEN, JOHN WILLIE, JR.; B.A. Houston Band; Mary Parker Gieseke Scholar; Graham Baker Scholar; Phi Beta Kappa. GREEN, JULIA; B.A. Houston O.W.L.S. GREENWOOD, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN; B.A. Houston Architectural Society. GREER, WALTON JEFFRIES; B.S. in E.E. Houston A.I.E.E.; Engineering Society, Secretary ' 35; Campanile Staff. HANDER, EDWIN JOHN; B.S. in E.E. Football; A.I.E.E. HARRIS, ALYDA; B.A. HARRIS, HUNTER PINCKNEY, JR.; B.A. Pre-Medical Society. HARRIS, JACK WINFIELD; B.S. in Ch.E. Engineering Society. HARTWELL, JOHN HASKINS; B.S. in M.E. Engineering Society; A.S.M.E. Waco Houston Fulshear Houston Houston HENDERSON, RUTH ELVERTA; B.A. Choral Club; Writing Club. Houston HENSCHEN, GUSTAVE ELIOT; B.S. in Ch.E. Sherman Engineering Society; M.S.U.; Debate Club. HERDON, THOMAS BUSEY; B.S. in M.E. A.S.M.E.; Engineering Society. Houston HESS, WILBUR EUGENE; B.A. Pre-Law Society; Tennis Team. HICKEY, MARY ELIZABETH; B.A. Thresher Staff. HILL, ROBERT MOORE; B.A. Pre-Medical Society. Ft. WORTH Houston Houston HOMER. CHARLES HENRY; B.S. in Ch.E. Engineering Society. HOWARD, ALFRED RYLAND; B.A. JACKSON, ROY GRAHAM; B.S. in Arch. Architectural Society; B.S.U. Houston Housion Houston JACOBS, EDNA LEAH; B.A. Houston Thresher Staff; Pi Delta Phi; Honor Council. JOHNSON, HERBERT HOWARD; B.A. Architectural Society. El Campo JOHNSON, LAWRENCE THOMAS; B.S. in Ch.E. Band. Texarkana Aik. JOHNSON, PAULINE FA YE; B.A. Palestine JOHNSTON, HELEN ELIZABETH; B.A. Houston Phi Beta Kappa; Ellen Axson Wilson Scholar; Spanish Club. JOURNEAY, WILLIAM HENRY; B.S. in P.E. Houston Student Association, Pres. ' 35; Basketball, Capt. ' 34, ' 35. KENDRICK, FLORENCE; B.A. M.S.U.; Y.W.C.A.; Tennis Club. KING, DOROTHY JACQUELINE; B.A. Y.W.C.A.; Choral Club. KING, GLENN WELLS; B.S. in M.E. Engineering Society; A.S.M.E. Houston Houston Ferguson, Mo. v5 £5 f: s 1 KING, HELEN LOUISE; B.A. Houston KIVELL, BERT HAWORTH; B.S in P.E. Houston KLAPPENBACH, ERNST KARL; BA. New Braunfels Band; Los Buhos; M.S.U. KROPF, LOUISE IRMA; B.A. M.S.U.; Choral Club. League City LADNER, ANDREW WALTER; B.A. Houston LAGOW. JOE LANGLEY; B.S. in P.E. Hall Committee; P.E Club. Dallas LANCASTER, ELIZABETH ROSS; B.A. Houston LATHROP, EULA LA VERNE; B.A. B.S.U.; Y.W.A.; Y.W.C.A. Houston LAWSON, WILLIAM GLENN; B.A. Houston Pre-Medical Society; Student Association; Rally Club. LENNIE, JOHN McARTHUR; B.S. in Ch.E. Engineering Society. Houston LEWIS, KEMP SLOAN, JR.; B.S. in Ch.E. Rally Club, Pres. ' 35. Dallas LILLIOTT, RICHARD W. JR., B.A. Houston Architectural Society; Dramatic Club; Hall Com- mittee. LILLY, JESSICA AZELINE; B.A. Houston LODGE, MARGARET ROSE; B.A. Houston Writing Club; Y.W.C.A. LUCK, JUANITA MARIELLA; B.A. Houston Dramatic Club; Y.W.C.A LUSK, LEON, JR.; B.S. in Ch.E. Engineering Society. Houston McCARTHY, CHARLES EDWARD; B.A. Houston Rally Club; Golf; Chairman Junior Prom Com- mittee. McCLAN AHAN, EDWIN THOMAS; B.A. Houston Student Council, Treas. ' 35; Pre-Law Society; Rally Club; Thresher, Bus. Mgr. ' 34. mcdavid, mildred rosetta; b.a. McDonald, mary gordon ; b.a. Y.W.C.A. McELRATH, EBY NELL; B.A. Seymour Tyler Gainesville McGILL, DORIS ALINE; B.A. McGILL, DOSCA MILDRED; B.A. McKEAN, CHARLES VINCENT; B.S. in M.E. A.S.M.E. Killeen Killeen Houston McKEE, JOHN III; B.A. Kansas City, Mo. Cranmer Club. McMURREY, ELLA FRANCES; B.A. Houston McREYNOLDS, JOHN OLIVER; B.S. in M.E. Sherman A.S.M.E. McWHIRTER, JOHN CHARLES; B.A. Houston Rally Club; Yell Leader; Thresher Staff. MAGEE, WILLIE EUNICE; B.A. Humble B.S.U.; Phi Delta Phi. MASTERSON, WILLIAM HENRY; B.A. Houston Debating Club; Campanile Staff. 1 hAM Sfcrifc lS lK,m ' MAU, WILLIAM R. H., Jr.; B.S. in E.E. Houston A.I.E.E. MAUZY, HARRY LINCOLN; B.S. in Ch.E. Houston Phi Lambda Upsilon; Hohenthal Scholar. MEEKER, RICHARD HENRY; B.S. in C.E. New York, N.Y. MENDEL, EVRI BEAR; B.A. Galveston Honor Council; Thresher Staff; Debating Club. METCALF, RICHARD JACKSON; B.S.in Ch.E. Jacksonville, Ark. METZLER, ALBERT FREDERICK; B.S. Football; Basketball; Track. MYER, REGINA ESTHER; B.A. P.E. Houston Houston MIDDLETON, ROBERT LELDON; B.S. in Ch.E. Corsicana Rally Club. MILLER, GEORGE JOHN; B.A. B.S.U.; Glee Club. Houston MILLINGTON, JOHN WILLIAMS; B.S.in E.E. A.I.E.E. MIRON. THELMA; B.A. MOODY, AUDREY LACY; B.A. E.B.L.S. Dallas Houston Houston MORRIS, SETH IRWIN; B.A. Houston Rally Club; Architectural Society, Vice Pres. ' 35; Campanile, Editor ' 35; Vice Pres. Class ' 33. MOURSUND, ANNA BELLE; B.A. Houston MOYER, ROLLO NELLIS; B.S. San Antonio Thresher, Bus. Mgr. ' 35; Pre-Law Society. MUCH, CHARLES FREDERICK; B.A. Alvin Dramatic Club; Assistant Editor Owl; Campanile Staff; Basketball. MULLER, JULIEN PEARSON; B.A. Rally Club; Hall Committee. MURPHY, EDGAR JOSEPH; B.A. B.S.U.; Glee Club. Port Arthur Dallas NEATHERY, MARY ELIZABETH; B.A. E.B.L.S., Pres. ' 35. NELKIN, MADELINE SONA; B.A. NICHOLSON, WILLIAM FREDERICK; B.A. NOBLE, WILEY BOZEMAN; B.S. in M.E. A.S.M.E. Houston Houston Houston Houston NOLLEY, ROBERT HAROLD; B.S. in M.E. New Orleans, La. A.S.M.E.; Engineering Society. OPPENHEIMER, EDWARD, JR.; B.A. Mission Secretary Class ' 35; Rally Club; Pre-Law So- ciety; Cranmer Club. PATTON, KATE ROSS; B.A. Houston E.B.L.S., Vice Pres. ' 34; Dramatic Club; May Fete. PAYNE, JOHN HOWARD, JR.; B.A. Chess Club. Houston PETERS, LOIS BRYAN; B.A. Houston Thresher Staff; Campanile Staff; Dramatic Club; Writing Club. PETERSON, RUSSELL ATER; B.A. Glee Club. Houston PIKE, GEORGE EDGAR; B.A. Houston Owl, Bus. Mgr. ' 33; Rally Club; Dramatic Club; Debating Club; Treas. Class ' 33; Phi Beta Kappa; Campanile Staff. PITNER, CRATON GUTHRIE; B.S. in Ch.E. Pally Club; Phi Lambda Upsilon, Ft. Worth PONDER, ELEANOR LYDIA; B.A. Houston POUTRA, MARGARET BELLE; B.A. Houston POWELL, CLIFFORD PATRICK; B.A. Tyler Rally Club. POWELL, RICHARD HEPWORTH; B.A. Houston POWELL, WILLIAM MEACHUM; B.S. in M.E. Houston Engineering Society; A.S.M.E. PRATT, EDNA IRENE; B.A. Houston QUIN, DOROTHY CLINTON; B.A. Houston P.A.L.S., Vice Pres. ' 35; Woman ' s Council, Vice Pres. ' 35; Campanile Staff; Cranmer Club; Vice Pres. Class ' 35. RAMEY, BENJAMIN RYBURN; B.S. in M.E. Sulphur Springs Engineering Society; A.S.M.E. RAUCH, SHIRLEY WINIFRED; B.A. Houston RICK, ROBERT GORDON; B.A. Houston Architectural Society. ROBINSON, MARIAN ELDA; B.A. Houston ROBSON, MAX RADCLIFF, JR.; B.A. Houston Rally Club; Golf. ROGERS, BETTY NORTH; B.A. P.A.L.S., Pres. ' 35. RUDD, BEVERLY; B.A. German Club. Houston Houston SANDERS, ODELL KENTON; B.A. McDade Pre-Medical Society; Hohenthal Scholar. SCHEPS, CLARENCE; B.A. Houston SCOBEE. RICHARD GORDON; B.A. Houston Pre-Medical Society; Student Council; Track. SCHWARTZ, SAMUEL KENT; B.A. Houston Cranmer Club; Dramatic Club; Owl, Editor ' 35. SELKIRK, MILDRED LOUISE; B.A. Phi Beta Kappa. Goose Creek SHIPLEY, GEORGE HALE, JR.; B.S. in E. Houston Band; Engineering Society. SMITH. MARGARET ELIZABETH; B.A. Houston Dramatic Club; Y.W.C.A.; Thresher Staff. 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WHITE DOROTHY OUIN EDWARD OPPENHEIMER SENIORS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR ADAMS, JOE M. ALTMAN, WILLIAM A. APPLEBY, WALTER G. BALLAFANT, RICHARD E. BELLEGGIE, PHILLIP A., JR. BLACK, CLARENCE HARPER BOYD, ALICE LYNN BRANDES, WILLIAM E. BRYAN, RALPH D. BURNS, BENNETT W. CAMP, PERRY B. CASH, BENJAMIN D. CLEAVER, HARRY M. CONKLIN, THOMAS H. CUTAIA, SAMUEL JOSEPH DE YOUNG, RICHARD, JR. DOEHRING, SWEENEY J. DOUGLAS, EARLE C, JR. DYER, EDWIN H. ELDER, HARTWELL ERNEST ELLIOTT, CARD G., JR. FURMAN, DAVID C. GOOD, SAMUEL FLOYD GOODRICH, BAXTER DEE GREER, JOHN ROBERT HALLUM, JOHN STEWART HANS, EDWARD WALTER HARP, BILL MEYERS HEINRICH, RAYMOND LAWRENCE HENSON, ROBERT LEE HIGHTOWER, LEONARD E. HODGES, ZELLA KATHERINE HOLCOMB, NORMAN FRANKLIN HORTON, CLAUD WENDELL Dallas Sherman Houston Mercedes Houston Shreveport, La. Houston Coral Gables, Fla. Houston Houston Houston Houston Dallas Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Lake Charles, La. 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Houston Houston Houston Dallas Houston Humble Houston Houston Houston El Campo Houston Navasota Houston Houston Houston Houston San Antonio Houston Dallas Houston Houston Columbus Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Vernon Brownsville Houston Washington, D. C. Tulsa, Okla. JUNIORS ADAMS, FRANCIS VALLEE ALLEN. HARRIETT WHITESIDE ARMSTRONG, JOHN WILLIAM AVERILL, JOHN REED AXELRAD, BEULAH BALDWIN, JOHN ROBERT BALE, ALLEN MELBERT BARBER, ALBERTA BARNES, HARRIET VIRGINIA BLACK, EDWARD CLANTON BLAIR, WILLIAM PAUL BOONE, LAWRENCE DOUGLAS BOYD, MARJORIE ELLEN BRIGGS, FRANK FORD, JR. EROSIUS, MARGARET LYNN Galveston Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Dallas Houston Houston Houston Vernon Dalla Houston Galveston Houston BROTHERS, LOUIS CALHOUN, LILLIAN GRAFTON CHAPMAN, JAMES WINSTON San Angelo Houston Houston CLARK, JAMES MOTT COLE, ERNEST ALLEN, JR. COMBS, PAT GREENWOOD Houston Temple Sulphur Springs CONRAD, HAZEL ANITA COOK, JOHN R. 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MUCH, JOE CLIFFORD NEUHAUS, WILLIAM OSCAR Houston Cleveland, Ohio Houston Houston Houston Palestine Houston Celeste Houston Houston Houston Wharton Houston Alvin Houston NEWSOME, JOE ARTHUR O ' CONNOR, LAWRENCE JOSE PH. JR. O ' FIEL, CHARLYNE LOUISE OFNER, CHARLES FRANCIS PARKER, (CATHERINE RED PEARSON, KATHRYN POLK, MARGARET POMERANTZ. MIRIAM ADEL POOLE, LUCILE ANNIS PUNTCH, MARY ZITA REDDICLIFFE, HAROLD ARTHUR RED, DAVID DOUGLASS REDMAN, TRAVIS ROOS, LEWIS VAN SKITE VON ROSENBERG, CHARLES Houston Houston Houston San Antonio Houston Houston Houston Houston Texline Houston League City Houston Houston Princeton, N. J. Houston 1 f% o SANDERS. CHARLES MALVIN, JR. SCARBOROUGH, DOROTHY WINIFRED SCHELLING. JOE AUSTIN SCHLESER, ERICH SCHNURR, ALICE CORENA SCOTT. JAMES HUNTER SHERRILL, WILLIAM MORGAN STOVALL, FLORENCE HELEN STUART, MARY LOUISE STUERMER, ADOLPH D. SUMMERS, RUTH LOUISE SWILLEY, LEE TUER TALBERT, MILTON L. TAYLOR, COURTNEY LONGCOPE TIDWELL, GEORGE M., JR. Houston Houston Houston Freeport Houston Houston Houston Houston Houston Nordheim Houston Houston China Springs Houston Mexia TSANOFF, NEVENNA TURNER, HARRY WALLACE, JOHN EDWIN WALLACE, WILLIAM BROOKS WATKIN, ANNIE RAY WHITESIDE, CAMILE RUNNELS WILLIAMS, BYRON WALLACE WILSON, DOROTHY ALICE WILSON, ROBERT HOWARD WRIGHT, RUTH WYATT, DOROTHEA EILEEN YEAGER, IOHN GLENN Houston Houston Kansas City, Mo. Eagle Lake Houston Houston Dallas Houston Houston Paris Conroe Houston JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer BYRON WILLIAMS NANINE FERRIS CARLOSS MORRIS JUNIORS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR Albert, Mayo William Andrus, Bailey Crawford Arai, Eiko Arnold, Kingsland Atkins, Jesse West Aves, Frederick Huston Battestin, Wilson I. Bauer, Paul Louis Bennett, Mildred L. 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Galveston ADKINS, WARD NOBLE Houston ALBER, ELSIE Houston ALBRECHT, FLORENCE MAI Houston ALLEN, SARAH NELL Houston ASHBURN, MARGARET Greenville AUSTIN, MARGARET CATHERINE Houston BALDWIN, JEAN JOHN Houston BARBER, JIMMIE ROUTT Enid, Okla. BARKER, JOHN H. Houston BARKLEY, CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH Houston BARNES, ADDISON LAFAYETTE Houston BARNSTON, ALFRED JULES Houston BARRETT, MARY CATHERINE Houston BARTLETT, SARAH KENDRICK Marlin BAWCOM, RUTH FOYE Houston BECKER, GEORGIA MADELINE Anderson BLACK, LAURA LUCILLE Houston BROOKS, RANDALL EARL Ennis BROWN, MYRTA CLAIRE Houston BROWN, WILLOW BELLE San Angelo BRYAN, MONROE Tyler BURR, DOROTHY MABEL Humble BURT, MARY ELIZABETH Houston CANNAFAX, JANE Houston CAVENAGH, FRANK, JR. Houston CHAMBERS, OCTAVIA San Antonio COLLIER, EVERETT DALTON Houston COLLINS, HOWARD WILLIAM Port Arthur CROWDER, ROBERT GRAHAM Ft. Worth CRUMP, WILLIAM LUCAS Houston DAIGLE, HENRIETTE I. Houston DATO, EDNA Houston DAVIS, MARGARET ELINOR Houston DAVIS, VIRGINIA Houston DOHONEY, ANN Houston DWIGANS, RUTH ADAIR Ganado DWYER, THEODORE HUDER Houston FARGERSON, VIVIAN ELIZABETH Houston FARREN, PAUL LESTER Houston FLICK, MARY ELLEN Houston FLOETER, ELIZABETH CORDIFF Houston FOWLER, JOSEPHINE JETER Houston GILLESPIE, MINNIE MOORE Houston GILLETTE, REAGAN WORD Houston GLASCOCK, HENRIETTA Houston GORDON, WENDELL CHAFFEE Houston GREER, CARL FENNELL Houston • mnm ± M GUTHRIE, MARY VIRNA Houston HALE, MARY JANE Houston HARDY, RUTH ELIZABETH Houston HARRIS, GERALDINE VIOLET Lubbock HASELTINE, NATHANIEL GREENE, Carpinteria, Cal. HEYCK, FRANCES MARIE Houston HINZIE, MARJORIE AUDREY Palestine HOLT, RUTH ELIZABETH Houston HOPKINS, ALLENE MARIE HORNE, OLIVE CHESLEY HORTON, JACK CARTER HOUSE, EDWIN BONNER Houston Houston Houston Houston HOWARD, DAVID STEWART, JR., NewHartford, N.Y. HUMPHREVILLE, LANELLE Houston HURLEY, MARY MARGARET Houston JACKSON, MARY LUCILLE Houston JACKSON, NORVELL FORD JAMES, PATRICK HENRY JEWETT, DOROTHY GLADYS Rockport Houston Houston JOHNSON, BYRON KENNETH, New York Mill, Minn. KAY, META Houston KELLER, DOROTHY BERNADINE Houston KELLY, WARNER Denison KOBB, SOL RUDY Houston KRUEGER, ALBA VIRGINIA Houston KUTSCHBACH, ANNA BETH ' Houston LEE, MILDRED OLIENE Houston LEHMANN, RUTH ELIZABETH Houston LESTER EARL LAWRENCE, JR. Houston LILJESTRAND, WALTER EMANUEL Elsa LLOYD, ELIZABETH Houston LONG, JACK Wichita Falls LOVE, FRANCES MARSHALL Houston McCANTS, MALCOLM THOMAS Houston McCOWN, THOMAS ASHBY Alvin McNAIR, HELEN FRANCES Houston MacLAUGHLIN, GUY, JR. Houston MAGUIRE, WILLIAM LUCIUS Houston MASKE, BETTY BRENT Houston MOODY, EVERETT HOWARD San Antonio MORAUD, MARCEL Houston MORAUD, MARY ELIZABETH Houston de la MORINIERE, JULIETTE Houston MORRIS, HAROLD BRETT Houston MUMMERT, MORDINE ANNE NELMS, ELIZABETH WILLIAMS NITZE, MARJORIE ELIZABETH PEARSON, PATTY Houston Houston Houston Houston  4 PEARSON, POLLY Houston PEDEN, ALEXANDER, PHILLIPS Houston PLATT, JOHN ARTHUR, JR. Houston POOLE, DORIS ELETTA Houston PUTNAM, HELEN INGRAM Houston RICHTER, RUTH Houston ROCHELLE, MARINELLE Houston ROSE, JAY HAROLD Houston ROYALL, ROY ROYSTER Houston RYAN, CORNELIUS O ' BRIEN Houston SAUTER, LOIS Houston SCARDINO PETER LESTER. JR. Houston SCHILLER, JAMES CURTISS Houston SCHNURR, IDA MARY Houston SHAPLEY, ANNA BETH Houston SMITH, ARNOLD Houston SMITH, A. FRANK, JR. Houston SMYTH, RODGER GRIGSBY Uvalde STARK, ELWOOD E. Houston STEIN, ROSE LEE Rosenberg STEINBERG, HANNAH VIVIAN Houston STEVENS, ELEANOR ADRIANCE Angleton SULLIVAN, FRANK B. KING Houston TALLEY, WILLIAM HENRY, JR. Houston TAUSEND, HAROLD JACK Houston TAUSEND, RUTH EDNA , Houston ten BRINK, KARL CORNELIUS Wichita Falls THORNTON, VIRGINIA MARION Houston TITTLE, SARAH MARTHA Houston TOWNLEY, LUCILLE FRANCES Houston TRIPLETT, MARY ELLEN Houston VINSON, MARTHA BRICE Houston WALFLE, CALVIN Houston WALL, MARY VIRGINIA Port Arthur WALLACE, MARIE MARRAST Houston WALLIS, WILLIAM McVICKER Houston WEBRE, LLOYD POSEY Houston WEISER, DOROTHY BOYER Houston WERNER, EVELYN ALBERTA Houston WHALEN, FRANCES Houston WHITE, WILLIAM PARKER, JR. Houston WILLIAMSON, MARY EUGENIA Houston WILSON, JOAN FERRAR Houston WISSINGER, JOHN EARL Houston YOUNG, G. REGINALD Houston SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer FRANK SMITH VIRGINIA DAVIS RODGER SMYTH SOPHOl 0RES WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR Abba e, Joe Agnor, W. D. Allan, John William Andrews, John Edwin Arai, Kazko Ard, Billy Glynn Arnim, Ben. F., Jr. Bailey, Florence Audrey Baker, William Edwin Barnes, Marvin Melvin Battaile, Henry William Bauer, Howard Page Beaulieu, William Clarence Belt, Maurice Bennett, Dean Averill Bentley, Russell Bonner Biering, Bob Charles Biggio, Chester Congdon Blanton, William Neal, Jr. Boyle, Edward Cooksley Brandenberger, John William Brice, William Eugene Brookner, Ralph Jay Brown, Frances Willard Brown, William Oscar Bruce, Richard H., Jr. Bryan, Monroe Bryant, Frank Albert Buck, Willard Ewing Burch, Allen Eugene Bussa, Harry Irvin Byrnes, Margaret Louise Chambliss, Grover C, Jr. Chandler, Dorothy Belle Clarke, Jack Dudley Clevenger, Helen Close, Mablegrace Cody, Claude Carr Cole, Paul Raymond Collier, Everett Dalton Collier, Margaret Rae Collins, Theron Tilford, Jr. Cook, John Roscoe Cook, Winfield Hollis Cooksey, Edward, Jr. Degnan, James Haines Delambre, Lorry Constant Dinsmoor, Mary Louise Dodd, James Grady Eckhardt, William Rudolf, III Evans, Howard Lee Feagan, Richard Wynne Fenity, Carl Lester, Jr. Fink, Mildred Dorothy r isher, Bernard Meredith Flint, Mary Madeline Forbes, John Robert Foulks, James G. Fourmy, Frank Campbell Frankie, Johnnie Frederick, Ben Frederick, Jr. Friedman, Joseph Walter Frost, Jack William Gates, Mary Caroline Gibson, David Irvin Gillis, Robert Raymond Goodrich, Jerome Duncan Gordon, Wendell Chaffee Goyen, Billie Graff, Clifford Otis Gray, Louis Patrick Gready, Howard Francis Greenwood, Marvin Henderson Griffiths, James Thompson Guyler, Louise Elizabeth Hall, Elizabeth Anne Hallman, Gerald Beights Harbordt, Charles Harrison, Ruth Perla Hatcher, Elsa Ruth Haymes, Albert Burke Hays, Betty Henderson, James Louis Holloway, Sellers Hosah Holmes, Harry Newton Hudson, Richard Lee Hudspeth, Emmett Leroy Hurley, Henry Charles, Jr. Tackson, William Kenyon Keating, Ernest Wilbur King, George Randolph Kobaysahi, Hope Fuku Krause, Ferdinand Harry Kutschenreuter, Paul Herbert Lawton, Frederick George, II Leggett, James Riley Levingston, Clarence W. Lewis, Thomae Leslie, Jr. Lodge, Harris Louwien Long, James Harry Lynn, Jack McGregor McDaniel, Roy Shelton McGaffey, Mary Jane McGee, James Butler, Jr. McGilvray, LaRue Cooke McKinney, Charlotte Kaapke McLachlan, Argyle Malone, William Chapman, Jr. Masterson, Harris, III Matteson, Burton James, Jr. Mays, George Carroll Miller, Mary Emily Moilliet, Marguerite Moore, Dolph Beadle Moore, Henry Paisley Morgan, Berney Lambeth Morgan, Dorothy La Verne Morris, Harold Brett Morris, Wilford Victor Morrison, John Robert Motheral, George Ed. Murphy, Barney Owen Murphy, Daniel Francis Nagai, Mamie Hayako Nallin, James Joseph, Jr. Neece, John Prendergast, Jr. Newsome, Joe Arthur, Jr. Nicholls, W. Howard Nichols, Ralph Gregory Orr, Willis Poindexter Owen, Wade, Jr. Parker, Leonard A. Bowles Pulley, Thomas Edward Rainey, John Bradshaw Red, David Douglass Redman, Travis Holland Rieger, Jane Roberts, Thomas Hiram Robinson, David Dean Rogers, John Sinclair Ross, Joe Elmore Ruff, Dorothy Loraine Sadlier, Muriel Elaine Schleeter, William Vesper Schnitzer, George Cecil, Jr. Schutte, Henry John, Jr. Schwinn, Fred Seaman Sears, Nelson Bernard Segal, Jerome Joe Sellers, Clemille Franklin Sentell, Margaret Josephine Sexton, Lerah Hortense Shelton, Dowlen Shelton, Harris W. Sherman, Karl Harberg Shoss, Morris Sisk, Eugene Bounds, Jr. Smith, Eliphlet Arnold Spence, Joseph Walton Stanford, William Aaron Staples, John Charles Steele, Jack Candle Steen, Frank William Stoner, John Randolph Surles, Ruth Eloise Szafir, Edgar Emil Talley, William Henry, Jr. Tarrer, James Keith Tenery, John Henry, Jr. Tenery, William Boyce Tidwell, George Minor Tinterow, Maurice Meyer Townes, Chris Garrett Treadwell, John Holland Trible, John Bowles Turner, Frank Shannon Tynes, Lee Nelson Waddell, David Lewis Wallace, Elmer Martin Walsh, David Paul Weber, Chester Herman Weichert, David Richard Wertheimer, Haskell M. Westheimer, David Wildman, Carol Williams, Edward Carson Wilson, Charles Henry, Jr. Wilson, James Monroe Wilson, Vernon O. Wisenberg, Dorothy Janice Wolfle, Calvin Edward Wolfram, Lionel Foster Wright, Rosaline Young, Henry Ben, Jr. FRESHMEN ABBOT, BETTY Houston ALEXANDER, WOODROW WILSON Houston BALCKE, LOLA MAE Houston BARTELS, MARTHA RUTH Houston EECKER, KENNARD WILLIAM Bedford, Ind. BEMAN, JOHN SHOOMER Houston BENNETT, DeWITT CLINTON, JR. Orange BLAIR, MARY MARGARET Houston BLANTON, DOROTHY ELIZABETH Houston BLANTON, EDGAR BACON, JR. Houston BRESKY, RUBY LEE Houston BROADWAY, KATHRYN FRANCES Houston BROWN, BETSY Houston BYERS, BILLIE LOUISE Houston CAMPSEY, MARY FRANCES Houston CARR, MARY KATHLEEN Houston CLEMENTS, GLENN NAILOR Houston CORNELISON, BOYD Houston COX, JANE WINGATE Houston CRAIN, CATHERINE Houston CRUSE, SAMUEL WILLIAM Houston CURTIS, MARY LOUISE Houston DAIGLE, DOROTHY VIRGINIA Houston DANIEL, BLANCHE ADELAIDE Houston DAVIS, ELEANOR GRACE ELLIS, MARY FRANCES FARMER, MARTHA ADELIA FENNELLE, CHARLES EDWIN Houston Houston Houston Waco FERRIN, MARION Houston FOOTE, MARY LOUISE Houston FOSSELMAN, MARY ELEANOR Houston FRETZ, MARGARET ELIZABETH Houston GERLAND, HAZEL AILEEN Houston GIBSON, KATHLYN BELL Houston GIDDINGS, WALLACE MATTHEWS ' Caldwell GRANBURY, RUTH Houston GREENWOOD, MARY LOIS Houston GREER, KATHRYN E. Houston GRIFFITH, GRACE SEGIL Houston GRIPON, MARGERY ELISE Houston HANDLEY, RITA CORNELIA Houston HARRISON, NAOMI HELEN Palacios HEWITT, RUTH Houston HOMER, JOSEPH FREDERICK Houston HUDSON, JANE MAE Houston HYDE, JOHN BRUCE Marshall JACOBS, LOUIS Houston JARVIS, WALTER HEARNE, JR. Grand Saline «F A JOHNSON, TIFFIN ELMORE, JR. Houston LaFLEUR, CHARLES CEPHUS Kinder, La. LEVY, DAVID JACOB Gatun, Canal Zone LILLIOTT, MIRIAM JEAN Houston LOCKWOOD, PATTYE GENE Houston Mcdowell, silia beth Houston McELGUNN, PATRICIA ANNE Houston McINTYRE, LILLIAN HAZEL Houston MANSELL, MORRIS ENOCH, JR. Houston MANSFELD, LOUISE MARGARET Houston MARSH, ARTHUR PAUL Port Arthur MARSH, NAT HUYLER Houston MATHEWS, S. J., JR. Piano MATLAGE, WILLIAM THEODORE, JR. Sugar Land MATTHEWS, MARY MARSHALL Houston MERONEY, GERALDINE MARIE Houston MILLSAP, MARGARET LOUISE Houston MINTO, MARY BARBARA Houston MIXON, MABEL Lufkin MOORE, ANNE CATHERINE Houston MOYER, ROBERT IRVING Ft. Plain, N. Y. MUCH, ROY DONALD Alvin MULLIS, ALFRED REGGIE Camden, Ark. MUSKE, IDA AILEEN Brookshire NAGEL, NANCY GLENN Houston NAGLE, DOROTHY LOIS . Houston NORSWORTHY, WILLIAM HERBERT Bastrop, La. O ' RIORDAN, MILDRED Houston ORMAN, FORREST CLARENCE Houston PARK, FRANCES MARIE Houston PARKER, ROBERT E.L., JR. Tobe, Colo. PERRY, WILLIAM COX Houston PETERSON, MARY BETH Houston PILKENTON, RUTH Houston POORMAN, ELIZABETH ANN Katy PYLE, LOREEN IMOGENE Houston QUICK, CLARA ELIZABETH Houston RACK, HAROLD ARMIN Waco RESCH, MARIE Houston REUTER, PAULINE JULIA Houston RODDY, THOMAS CARL, JR. Port Arthur ROGDE, WILLIAM JAMES El Paso RUTHSTEIN, REBECCA Houston SAKOWITZ, LOUISE Houston SCARBOROUGH, HELEN Gilliam, La. SCHAFFER, RANDOLPH LEE Rosenberg SCHILD, DORIS LEE Houston SCHRAMM, WELDON ALFRED Shiner SCHROEDER, MORITZ JULIUS Monterrey, N. L., Mexico SEALE, CAROLINE LOUISE Houston SELEWICZ, WILLIAM FRANCIS Danbury. Conn. SHACKELFORD, MARSHALL D. SHACKELFORD, LEWIS LEMUEL SHEFFIELD, MARGARET PENSE SHERMAN, WANDA HILL SHINDLER, CALLIE OWEN SLATAPER, FELICIA Waxahachie Waxahachie Alvin Pasadena Houston Houston SMITH, ANNE MARIE Houston SMITH, BENJAMIN S., JR. Mexia SMITH, ELIZABETH DOROTHY Houston SPRAGUE, VIRGINIA Houston STEINMANN, CORA MARIE Houston STERLING, ALBERT ALEXANDER Houston STOCKTON, JANE Houston STROZIER, MARY MARGARET Houston SULLIVAN, ELEANOR KATHERINE Houston TALK, JAMES Houston TEBBS, JUDITH COWNE Houston THOMPSON, WILLIAM LEWIS McKinney TRONE, NELL EARLINE Houston TSANOFF, {CATHERINE Houston TURBEVILLE, KATHRYN Houston VINEYARD, ROBERT HAWES Wharton WALTHALL, LOUISE CHARLOTTE Houston WARREN, MARGARET Houston WATKIN, ROSEMARY Houston WEBSTER, JOHN BOOKHOUT Dallas WEYRICH, MARY JANE Houston WHITELEY, FRANK RICHARD Hillsboro WILLIAMS, EDWARD WILLIAM Houston WILLIAMSON, JANE WINIFRED Houston WITTE, FRANK DAVIS WRIGHT, BYRON TERRY Houston Cross Plains FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary-Treasurer S. J. MATTHEWS BILLIE BYERS JAMES NANCE FRESHMEN WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR Alexander, Warren Ames Anderson, Thomas John Andrews, Lillian Marguerite Anthony, Charles Joseph Appleby, Preston Brooks Asbell, James Marion Axelrad, Milton Seymour Bailey, Scott Field Baird, Kenneth Hunter Baird, Raleigh William, Jr. Bakke, Oliver Mathias Banta, Norman Hollis Beard, Bradfield Augustus Beaulieu, Evelyn Hope Behrman, Robert Goodall Bell, Bernard Israel Bender, William Cassell Bentley, Valerie Ledwidge Bigler, Ruth Boice, Edward Henry Boone, Berrill Harrison Borgstrom, Gus Magnus, Jr. Brandon, William Dale Bratten, Virginia Lindsley Britton, Thomas Lemuel Brokaw, Earle Wilford Brous, Lloyd Knaur Buckley, Raynor Lee Bumpers, Carl Ray Burchfield, Robert Howland Burkhart, Hugh Reginald Burns, Marie Olga Burnside, Neil Delmont Burnside, Nina Virginia Burrell, Rebecca Frances Burton, Royce Lyle Bush, Claude Farrington Cabaniss, Bert A. Caldwell, Charles Buford Callihan, Lily Catherine Campbell, Max Berkley Campise, Nash Oscar Cannizzo, Adele Emma Caplin, Arthur Irian Carr, Bert, Jr. Clarke, Katherine Virginia Cody, Melville Lockett Cogdell, Frank Craig Colvin, Helen Inez Cook, Arthur Aaron Cook, Clem Howard Cooper, Mary Alice Couzens, Ellen Rea Crawford, John Franklin, Jr. Craymer, Loring G., Jr. Dougherty, F. M., Jr. Davis, Clyde William Delevanti, Cyril Harold Delgado, Luis Dill, Herbert Clyde Dowlearn, A. C. Dugat, Alvin Earnest Dunlap, Henry Francis Durrenberger, Edward Beall Dyer, Robert Dreer Eggleston, William Joseph Elliott, Wallace Lee Roy Evans, George Keiser Evans, Sarah Catherine Felton, Jack Bert Fitz, Orville Warren Frame, Wilma Clifton Francis, Edward Lysaght Frazier, Robert Bevis Fryou, Joseph Arthur Gladish, Virginia Dell Glover, Robert Milner, Jr. Goode, William Josiah Goodson, Alfred Clement Gregory, Robert Henry Greve, Thomas Edmonds Hall, Lewis Tyus Hamblen, Tolar Numa, Jr. Hatfield, George Leland Hill, Maurice Hindman, James William Hoencke, Gustave Cook, Jr. Helden, Everitt Russ Hollomon, Mary Bernice Holm, Herbert Ernest Holmes, Woodrow Floyd Hotmann, Charles Allan Hughes, Arthur Thomas Hussey, Emmett Matthew John, John Spaulding Johnson, Celeste Louise Jones, Fisher Bibson Jones, Fred Murphy Jones, Samuel Riddle, Jr. Jones, William Henry Karkalits, Olin Carroll, Jr. Keeper, Zelda Leah Kellersberger, Edna Ruth Kelly, Warner Marion Kercheval, Leonard Ian, Jr. Kilpatrick, Julia Lillian Kirkpatrick, Charles Verne Klindworth, Clifford Walter Knapp, Kennerth Kirch Kunover, Mary Ursula Lancaster, William Moore Lancaster, York Lane, Jonathan Lanqford, Augustus Laura, Matthew Philmore LeClere, Roberta Gomperts Lederer, George William Leesemann, Charles Jules Leiper, William Harper Lemex, Dell Leeds Lewis, Lendon Earl Lindsay, Bert Wetzel Loker, George Andrew, Jr. Lotz, John Shields, Jr. Lyne, William Henry McBride, Bonnie Delle McCune, Wesson Kilpatric McElya, Fred Herbert McGary, John Keith McGee, James Henry McGee, William Sears McLelland, Margaret Rose McReynolds, Andrew Wetherbee McShan, Clarence Hunter McWhinney, Roy LeClaire Macaulay, Gertrude Frances Mackey, George Whitelaw Mahaffey, Morris Dale Mason, Thomas Robert Massey, Haro ' d Gordon Matthews, Francis Ha ry Mau, Fredric Eugene May, Herbert C. Melton, Milton Ernest Miller, Ralph Edward Minto, William Munro Montgomery, Foster Wilkerson Moore, Charles Edward Morgan, Dorothy Eloise Morgan, George Gay Mounce, Buford Redmond Mudgett, William Alan Muir, Andrew Forest Naman, Isreal Adrian Nance, James Kinchen Nolan, William Conlin Northrop, Joseph Walter, III Northrop, Page Harris Pace, Jimmie Pace, Jonnie Parsons, Olive Mae Parsons, Richard Lewis Parsons, Robert Lowrey Patterson, Jack Pennell, Robert Perry, Haile Deucalion Petty, J. C., Jr. Pfeiffer, Paul Edwin Phillips, Wendell Earl Pike, Beuhring William, Jr. Planchak, John Pledge, Elizabeth Genevieve Ploeger, Vernon Gideon Pollak, Edward, Jr. Pope, Robert Parks Price, Sterling David, III Proctor, Malcolm Ramin, Fred Walter Rau, Charles Brooks Reed, William Forsythe Rembert, Hannah Juanita Riesenberg, Robert, Jr. Riordan, Robert Polk Robbins, John Dana Roberts, Lee Ferman, Jr. Robinson, Garland John Robinson, Robery Byron Rogers, Doris Eileen Rose, Joseph Sims, Jr. Sandow, Ken Sawtelle, Fred Glynn Schmidt, Margarete L. L. Seale, William Wesley Shannon, Milton Clifton Shepherd, Henry Harrison Sherrill, Lillian Louise Short, Wendell Culp Sinclair, James Alfred Smith, Harold John Sparks, John Wesley Spinks, John Le Grande Spring, Barbara Ann Stanton, William Lawrence Stell, Jack Powell Stern, Henry Adolph Still, Julianna Stockdick, W. C, Jr. Strong, Isla Mae Talley, Carroll Homer Taylor, Edward Everett Thomas, James Bates Topfer, Robert Tungate, Mace, Jr. Turner, Dean Walton Turner, Harry Adams Turner, Jo Thomas Vale, Whlie Walker Vawter, Jean Ray Vickers, Thomas Francis Vohs, Harry Rudolph Volkmann, Edmund Russe! Waddell, Eloise Dozier Wagner, Urban Harry, II Wait, Partheria Nell Waller, Denzil Monroe Watson, Robert Allan Westcott, Hoyt Sloan, Jr. White, Edgar Warren, Jr. Wiebusch, Walter C. Wilkerson, William Fayne Williams, Bob Moroney Williams, Dorothy Virginia Willke, William John, Jr. Wood, Willard, K. Worley, James Ellis Wyatt, Gene Marshall Zylicz, Dorothy Georgia Look to the Rose that blows about us — ' Lo, Laughing, ' she says, ' into the World I blow: At once the silken Tassel of my Purse Tear, and its Treasure on the Garden throw. ' VANITY FAIR HARRIET MfiLLOY REGINA MEYER . ROSEMARY WfiTKIN JULIA GREEN ELIZABETH NEATHERY MfiRY JANE WEYRICH MARGARET DAVIS €ii i NflNINE FERRIS Indeed, the Idols I have loved so long Have done my Credit in Men ' s Eye much wrong: Have drown ' d my Honour in a shallow Cup, And sold my Reputation for a Song. ORGANIZATIONS SflfiQ Allen Barkley Barnes Bartlett Buford Burt Hudspeth Cox Malone McKinney Moody 1 • £2L Tsanoif, N. Vinson Watkin, R. Williamson Wilson Wright Abbot Bartels Byers Carr Crain, C. Grandbury Greenwood Tsanoff, C. Warren Watkin, R. M THE ELIZABETH BALDWIN LITERARY SOCIETY This, the oldest of the Literary Socie- ties, has been fighting a fierce though consistent battle with its younger rivals for the girls who matter. It still main- tains a certain prestige in the face of in- creasing numbers of interesting fresh- men. The society maintained its annual scholarship at the Institute. It expressed itself socially in successful annual dance with the Pre-Medical Society, picnics, and dances at private homes and at the bay; and also a party at Sui Jen and one at the Junior League. Other activities included a spirited if unsuccessful basketball game with the P. A. L. S., and a well-run and success- ful electioneering machine. Oh, and the books reviewed this year were modern novels. OFFICERS ELIZABETH NEATHERY KATE ROSS PATTON SUSIE BUFORD MILDRED MALONE SARAH BARTLETT SALLY ALLEN M 1RET POLK k TSANOFF HNSON ■ BARKLEY PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER SERGEANT-AT-ARMS PROGRAM CHIEF TRIBUNAL REPORTER CRITIC KEEPER OF SCRAPS THE PALLAS ATHENA LITERARY SOCIETY The literary program for the year was the study of contemporary humorists, but any- way the society got twelve of the campus ' most eligible girls. The annual dance with the Pre-Laws pro- vided the novel amusement of finding a strange place, twelve miles from town in a blinding rainstorm. But enough people got there for the young woman of scholarship, personality, and physical vigor to get her scholarship as before. An outstanding P. A. ' L. success of the year was athletic, as both E. B. L. S. and O. W. L. S. went down in defeat in basketball. However, the greatest success came with the Mayfete election with freshman and senior duchesses, a princess and ten maids. Ah, triumph! OFFICERS BETTY ROGERS DOROTHY OUIN ELIZABETH SULLIVAN JANE CANNAFAX ANN DOHONEY OLIVE HORNE ELIZABETH NELMS SE PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER PROGRAM 4S R Allen Baldwin . Cannafax Dohoney Floeter Green Hale Heyck Home Nelms Quin Rogers Stremmel Sullivan Tomlinson Weiser Wilson Brown Davis Ferrin I.u :ki ] Nagle Park Sakowitz Tebbs Thornton Weyrich Meroney Pilkenton Townley Triplett THE OWEN WISTER LITERARY SOCIETY The O. W. L. S. had a very good year, etc. The literary justification this year was an in- tensive study of the modern drama even to the extent of several entertaining faculty speakers. Also, the usual library fund. The practical justification was the highly useful Student Directory. The social justifications in- cluded the fall formal with the Band, formal Spring affair for the seniors, the Queen and Junior Duchess of the Mayfete, Cotton Ball Representative, and other minor triumphs. The athletic justification included the National Intercollegiate Tennis Champion and an ex- cellent basketball team which played one game and lost one game. The society pledged some of the most outstanding girls on the campus. OFFICERS ROBERTA WOODS KATHRYN PEARSON MARJORIE BOYD MARGARET BROSIUS HARRIET MALLOY JOSEPHINE FOWLER MARJORIE NITZE BILLIE KNIGHT ELIZABETH LLOYD VIRGINIA WALL PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER PUBLICITY SERGEANTS-AT-ARMS PROGRAMS HISTORIAN PARLIAMENTARIAN By mistake Eleanor Sullivans ' picture was omitted. THE DRAMATIC CLUB Nineteen thirty-five finds the Dramatic Club more simply and appropriately settled in Autry House, owning the ' necessary acces- sories comfortably provided with capital by faithful patrons, supplied with hard-working underclassmen, abundant directors, and a Mayking President. Professedly it has been built on the sound theory of the experimental theatre, working modestly toward an original dramatic expres- sion before a permanent audience, avoiding both Little-Theatre plays and collegiate drawing cards, actually, however, with Ca- mille treated in a light manner and Dover Road produced for the sake of larger audi- ences, its best productions are the workshop plays and the annual One-Act Play Contest. ROBERT CLEMENS BILLIE KNIGHT RANDALL BROOKS OFFICERS PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURER MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR HELEN BELL FRANCES LOVE JANE CANADA AUDREY MOODY EVERETT COLLIER TOM POLK MILLER ANN DOHONEY MARY JANE McGAFFNEY ELIZABETH LOU EVERETT L. A. PARKER JACK FROST W. J. GODSEY RUTH HENDERSON FRANCES HEYCK DOROTHY JEWETT J. C. PETTY, JR. DAVID RED KING SULLIVAN JOAN WILSON JANE STOCTON Albrecht Armstrong Barnes Brooks Cannafax Clemens Estill Ferran Floeter Glascock Hale Horton Knight Long de la Morinier Much Nitze Park Pilkington Poole Parker Ryan Smith Thomas w w V1G OB ■ Broadway Eberspacher Fargeson Garfield Gehring Kendricks Kropff Lodge Luck Millsap YOUNG WOMAN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION The Y. W. C. A. unofficially seeks a program compris- ing the local elements of the (Literary) societies, the his- trionics of the Dramatic Club, the athletics of the Tennis Club, plus religious aims. The results are remarkable. The club this year based its programs on the intel- lectual interests of its members. The result was a series of thought provoking discussions, as the philosophy of re- ligion, and personality of religion, and inter-social problems. The annual fall Y. W. C A. and Y. M. C A. conference was held this year at the Institute, the spring conference including Rice delegates at A. M. In February, Rice Y. W. C. A. group was hostess to the World ' s Student Christian Federation Conference, at which twenty-two colleges were represented, and the subject was Peace and War. OFFICERS DORIS WHITE PRESIDENT Mixon ELEANOR SMITH VICE PRESIDENT O ' Fiel MARY GARFIELD SECRETARY DOROTHY SCARBOROUGH TREASURER MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR Scarborough MARY MARGARET BLAIR MARGARET MILLSAP Shindler FRANCES BROWN OLIVE PARSONS MARY LINDA GORTON ZITA PUNTCH MARY MARGARET HURLEY MILDRED SELKIRK BERNADINE KELLER CALLIE SHINDLER Smith LUCILE KENNEDY ELEANOR SMITH JACQUELINE KING JANE STEVENS White MARGARET ROSE LODGE FLORENCE STOVALL MARY GORDON McDONALD MARGARET SWITZER MARGARET TUFTS THE PRE-LAW SOCIETY The Pre-Lctw Society is primarily for future legal lights, but accepts as members students with ambition, if the aspirants have enough character, i.e., personality. It meets twice a week to hear local lawyers and business men speak on important legal and social problems, thus forming for its members contacts which are a help for the present and a hope for the future. Finances of the club are obtained by the services of members as ushers at the Open Forum, unless everyone happens to have a date that night. The social activities of the club consist principally of the dance given with the Pallas Athene Literary Society (the Pals), and such dances are generally good (in the social sense). Also the senior members are given a Final Banguet at the end of the school year. This is the club responsible for the occasional appearance of woeful- looking boys wearing sacks and carrying lamps about the campus — the pledges. The high standard of membership maintained throughout the twe lve years of its existence on the Rice campus has marked the Pre-Law Society as one of the Barton Boone Clark Crooker Francis Garner Hanks Hess ftfl leading men ' s club: 3 at Rice. OFFICERS Hill Horton JOHN CROOKER PRESIDENT SWEENEY DOEHRING VICE-PRESIDENT EARLE DOUGLAS SECRETARY-TREASURER J. P. GARNER MEMBERS SERGEANT-AT-ARMS McCants McClanahan BILL BARTON BILL FRANCIS JOHN CROOKER J. P. GARNER SWEENEY DOEHRING WILBUR HESS Morris EARLE DOUGLAS PLEDGES ED McCLANAHAN Moyer WARD ADKINS JACK HORTON LAWRENCE BOONE MALCOLM McCANTS JAMES CLARK CARLOS MORRIS Oppenheimer CLYDE HANKS ROLLO MOYER Smith JOHN HILL ED OPPENHEIMER FRANK SMITH ■■■m ■ tr- THE ENGINEERING SOCIETY Adams, C. Adams, V. Allen Averill Bryan Cook Dodd Doggett Dowe Dwyer Elder Ellis Fairbrother Ferguson Greer Hartwell Haseltine Henshen Herndon Hildebrandt Hogue Homer, C. Homer, J. Howard King Lennie Long Lusk Millington Moody Moore Nolley Powell Schleser Shipley Stockton Swilley Talbert Van Gundy Weaver Williams Wilson, G. Wilson, R. Yeager Young The stated purpose of the Engineering Society is that of organizing students who have a common interest in the engineering world and of introducing engineering students to their graduate and disillusioned brothers. The incidental purpose of the society is to organize the reviled engineers for counsel and defense against the Sally Port Set, of- ficially the Academic students! The society boasts of the first formal dance of the year, which is, therefore, very formal, and a Beach Party in the spring, of which the same cannot be said. A banquet is put on at the end of the year with the attendant horrors of an initiation. The very real and worthwhile achievements of this so- ciety are the Biennial Engineering Shows, of which the next will be the ninth. This activity, the most consequential of any campus society ' s, more than justifies the existence of the organization and brings credit to and appreciation of the Institute. OFFICERS FOR THE FIRST TERM WILLIAM POWELL PRESIDENT EARL WEAVER VICE PRESIDENT WALTON GREER SECRETARY JACK VAN GUNDY TREASURER OFFIC ERS FOR THE SECOND TERM EARL WEAVER PRESIDENT GLENN YEAGER VICE PRESIDENT WALTER PESTELL SECRETARY JACK VAN GUNDY TREASURER ACTIVE MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR C. J. Brooke Bob Dawson Robert Fitzhugh James Fowler William Harp Fred Lawton Leon Lusk Burton Matteson Eugene Oliver Walter Pestell John Rainey Ben Ramey Fred Schwinn Clarence Wells INACTIVE MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR Lyndon Boyd Bud Brandes E. B. Blanton William Brown Richard Bruce Hugh Burkhart Monroe Byrn William Crump Ben Frederick W. J. Godsey Carl Greer Charles Harbordt Willard Wood Charles Levingston Walter Liljestrand William Lyne George Mothera! Alan Mudgett Morris Norvick Robert Pennell Frank Proctor Fred Ramin James Schiller Robert Watson Hoyt Westcott RALLY CLUB The Rally Club is the most sought a fter club on the campus — by the students for membership, by the faculty for annihilation. The popularity of the club springs from the same source as its unpopularity; namely, its social activities. Originally founded for service to the school, its function is now more truly social. Hence membership carries a social prestige (and ad- ministration outlawry). The members usher with remarkable efficiency football and basketball games. The iraining thus gained, however, is not nearly so valuable as the political sagacity ac- quired in the vote-getting, etc., of the interclub machines. The outstanding feature of the Rally Club is its clocklike efficiency in putting on parties — more accurately known as brawls. These affairs ex- press in our poor way the conception of college life perpetuated by the Eastern college maga- zines. Too much administration disapproval is allayed by an occasional formal ' ' banquet, at which administration officers are admitted and for which members, with Spartan self-denial, re- main sober. The best points of the club are the widely varied abilities of its membership and its frank and cheerful pursuance of its pleasures of what- ever nature and with whatever faculty reper- cussions. OFFICERS kemp lewis george pike raymond cook bill barton Charles McCarthy PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER SERGEANT-AT-ARMS MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR William Altman B. H. Boone Ben Cash Walter Crawford John Crooker Ralph Fite Marshall Gates Wilbur Hess Joe Kocurek Jack Morrison Aubrey Smith Manson Stell Tom Sumners John Wallace Earl Weaver Talbott Wilson Adkins Allen Banner Barber Barnes Barton Black Boone Brooks Brown Caldwell Clark Clemens Cook, J. Cook, R. Eiser Ferguson Francis Hanks Hogue Illes Knowles Lawson Lee Lewis McCants McCarthy McClanahan McWhirter Maguire Middleton Morris, C. Morris, I. Muller Ofner Oppenheimer Pike Pitner Powell Redman Robson Schelling Smith ten Brink White rt |p c Bud Williams Barker Barrick Clemens Eliassof Fairbrother Gibson Green Johnson Klappenbach Matlage Morris Mullis Schleser Schramm Shipley Smith Steele Talbert Talley Tidwell Van Gundy Wilson Wood Young THE BAND J. W. ALLAN R. L. HUDSON GEORGE H. SHIPLEY JOHN H. BARKER JOHN HYDE BEN SMITH NOLAN BARRICK BALLARD JARED ALLAN STEELE ROBERT BEHRMAN LAWRENCE JOHNSON JACK STELL R. G. BRANDES ERNST KLAPPENBACH MILTON TALBERT ROBERT CLEMENS JAMES H. LONG W. H. TALLEY, JR. ALVIN DUGAT guy Mclaughlin GEORGE TIDWELL BILL ELIASSOF W. T. MATLAGE M. M. TINTEROW HORACE FAIRBROTHER RAY McDANIEL JACK VAN GUNDY ROBERT FITZHUGH HAROLD B. MORRIS LAWRENCE VIDRINE CHARLES FREUNDLICH GEORGE MOTHERAL R. EDMUND VOLKMANN DAVID GIBSON ALAN MUDGETT W. H. WAGNER WILLIAM GIBSON ROGGIE MULLIS CLARENCE WELLS WALLACE GIDDINGS KTTRELL REID R. H. WILSON JOHN GREEN ERICH SCHLESER ARTHUR WOOD WAYNE HOUCK WELDON SCHRAMM REGINALD YOUNG OFFICERS JACK VAN GUNDY ROBERT FITZHUGH NOLAN BARRICK R. L. HUDSON PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT BUSINESS MANAGER LIBRARIAN THE BAND The band news item of the year was the acquisition of new uniforms. Although followed by the usual remarks about monkey suits, etz. — the improvement was substantial. The drum major ' s costume is a joy to behold. Trips were made to, and most of the band played at, Arkansas A. M., and Baylor. The band took part in a number of extra campus affairs this year. It won the Houston Jubilee award, and played for several city functions. As usual, it teamed with the O. W. L. S. in their dance (the OWLS made their scholar- ship and the Band was left in debt) and presented a Spring Concert at Miller Memorial. For the first time an award — the C. F. Montgomery award — was made to the best all around band member. The band claims a successful year and except for a few marches at the basketball games, the school agrees. Odu.u wm Barrick Hensley Bock Jackson Chambers Johnson Clemens Morris Dunaway Rick Gainey Stevens Greenwood Thomas THE ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY NOLAN BARRICK ISABELLE BOCK JOHN CASHMAN ROBERT CLEMENS FRANK DILL JAMES KARL DUNAWAY CARD ELLIOT GEORGE FASULLO VINCENT GAINEY MARY GATES BENJAMIN GREENWOOD MARY B. HENSLEY GRAHAM JACKSON HERBERT JOHNSON JACK KNOSTMAN JAMES McGEE TOM POLK MILLER IRWIN MORRIS MARY ISABEL MOUNT ROBERT RICK ADOLF STUERMER JAMES THOMAS LAWRENCE VIDRINE JAMES WEBSTER TALBOTT WILSON FRANCES YOUNG PLEDGES OCTAVIA CHAMBERS ELEANOR STEVENS OFFICERS NOLAN BARRICK IRWIN MORRIS MARY B. HENSLEY JAMES THOMAS PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER THE BALL CELTICA The Ball this year had the distinction of introducing the Campanile beauties, and this was effec- tively done by means of a pageant in which each of the beauties was a Princess of an ancient king- dom. An array of beauty displayed to such advantage is seldom seen. Perhaps that is why there was no one on the door for an hour and a half, and during that time the dance was quite unintentionally and completely open to the public. The decorations represented very adequately a scene which might well have been of the Celtic period. Giant trees and rocks placed about made a stockade of the dance floor, while skulls and bones (of starved Celtic architects?) added the gruesome touch. A caricature bust of a god bearing some resemblance to the Dean was placed with appropriateness near the altar of sacrifice. The costumes, both of the members of the pageant and of the dancers, were very effective, dis- playing all the gay colors, gold tunics, armor and sandals ranging from that of Roman soldier to the Celtic peasant. COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN NOLAN BARRICK CARD ELLIOT, JR. MARY ISABEL MOUNT IRWIN MORRIS ROBERT RICK TALBOTT WILSON JAMES McGEE JAMES THOMAS PAGEANT PATRONS BIDS AND PROGRAMS ARRANGEMENTS PAGEANT AND COSTUMES PUBLICITY DECORATIONS Adams Dodd Greer Hander Hilderbrandt Mau Weaver Wood AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS This is an association of and for Men of Mind. The purpose of the organization as a whole is to maintain the standards of the electrical engineering profession, and to ad- vance the interest of the individual engineer to the point of getting him a job. The Rice Branch held an annual meeting with the A. M. Branch and the Houston Branch for the competitive presentation of technical papers. A prize was offered by the Houston section and was won this year by a Rice student. There was also a district con- vention in Oklahoma City in April to which Rice representatives went and presented papers in competition with other colleges throughout the country. The organization let down for a beach party in the late spring. FIRST TERM OFFICERS ARTHUR WOOD LAVON DODD WALTON GREER DONALD NORGAARD CHAIRMAN VICE-CHAIRMAN SECRETARY TREASURER SECOND TERM OFFICERS WALTON GREER EARL WEAVER VALLEE ADAMS DONALD NORGAARD CHAIRMAN VICE-CHAIRMAN SECRETARY TREASURER MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR T. B. ELLIS V. C. M cCONNELL JOHN MILLINGTON DONALD NORGAARD AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS The A. S. M. E. (American Society of Mechani- cal Engineers) is another group, whose purpose is to give its members a glimpse of their chosen profession outside academic halls. This purpose is sought by association with practicing engi- neers, the preparation of technical papers, joint meetings with other groups, and inspection trips through plants. A Rice member upheld the Institute ' s name by winning a first prize with his paper over A. S M. and Texas at a joint meet here. Thus well received, the paper was entered at the South- west Student Conference at Dallas and won a similar recognition this time over eleven repre- sentatives of six other schools. The club as a whole heard important speak- ers of the profession; saw moving pictures of mechanical engineering work; and made trips to U.S.S. Houston, Burlington ' s Zephyr and local refineries. Strictly business in atmosphere, the club is another argument that a societyless club can be successful. FALL TERM OFFICERS R. H. NOLLEY CHAIRMAN BEN RAMEY SECRETARY-TREASURER A. H. BURR SPONSOR SECOND TERM OFFICERS T. B. HERNDON C. J. BROOKE ROBERT FITZHUGH A. H. BURR F. V. ADAMS C. J. BROOKE ROBERT FITZHUGH JAMES FOWLER J. H. HARTWELL CHAIRMAN SECRETARY-TREASURER ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER SPONSOR MEMBERS T. B. HERNDON GLENN KING WILEY NOBLE FRANK PROCTOR JOHN RAINEY Burr Doggeti Elder McK ' ■! in McReynolds Moore Nolley Powell Schleser Swilley BEN RAMEY 4 Caldwell Armstrong Barnes Harris Hill Lawson Lee McCown Newsome Saunders Scardino Scobee Sherrill PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY Although both might reasonably re- sent the implications, the Pre-Meds fill in their field a position analogous to the Pre-Laws. The chief difference is that the Pre-Med membership is more strictly composed of future doctors since one who intends in callow col- lege years to be a lawyer may reform himself into almost anything, but a second or third year pre-Med has taken the awful step. The purposes are obviously to bind together kindred souls and then inform them, by means of bi-weekly addresses by Houston doctors, just what the future holds for them, professionally. The club has the advantage of know- ing what chemicals won ' t rub off; so its pledges are fairly well distinguishable after the dreaded initiation night. After the effects have worn off, the pledges are invited to forgive if not forget all at a banguet. The Society claims a successful year under the sponsorship of Dr. F. A. Psycho Pattie. The annual banguet was held on December 18, at the Rice, and the much heralded dance with the EBLS on April 27, at River Oaks. OFFICERS PEARSON CALDWELL PRESIDENT WILLIAM LAWSON VICE-PRESIDENT JACK LYNN SECRETARY EARL BARNES TREASURER RICHARD SCOBEE COUNCILMAN-AT-LARGE MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR Smythe Tausend White ALVIN DUGAT CHARLES FREUNDLICH RICHARD HUDSON JOE CASHION RALPH NICOSIA W. C. MIXON FRED AVES JACK FROST BEN ARNIM BAILEY ANDRUS DAVID GIBSON JOHN TRIBLE JACK LYNN HOWARD EVANS EARLE BROKAW CRANMER CLUB The Cranmer Club was a spas- modic institution this year, not so large that it had to keep surging on when it didn ' t want to. Infor- mal discussions were cond ucted during Lent in Mr. Charles Sum- ners ' apartment, several picnics were held at Camp Allen, and a corporate Communion and break- fast in Autry House was held on the first Sunday in each month. The club was host to the annual College Student Council for a week-end in February. No retreats. OFFICERS RALPH NEMIR PRESIDENT MARGARET POLK ACTIVE CHAIRMAN CHARLES SUMNERS SPONSOR Polk Aklen Buford Dohoney Ferguson Green Guthrie Hale Liljestrand McKee MEMBERS Oppenheimer SARAH NELL ALLEN ANDREW FOREST MUIR Ouin SCOTT FIELD BAILEY RALPH NEMIR B. H. BOONE ED OPPENHEIMER Schwartz SUSIE BUFORD MARGARET POLK ANN DOHONEY DOROTHY QUIN BILL FERGUSON JOSEPH ROSE MARY FLINT CHAS. VON ROSENBERG HAZEL ROSE GREEN KENT SCHWARTZ Tomlinson MARY VIRNA GUTHRIE MARY JANE HALE MARY LOUISE STUART METTA TOMLINSON von Rosenberg ALLENE HOPKINS JOHN TRIBLE Wilson, J. WALTER LILJESTRAND JOAN WILSON JACK McKEE KATHLEEN WILSON MARGUERITE MOILLET RUTH WRIGHT 2 ±L ft Arthur Bale ' ?■ 1 ? Brothers jl. -n . i _ __ ■4 V 7 naion ft ft Fouke Kivell PHYSICAL EDUCATION SOCIETY Under the somewhat ominous purpose of the pro- fessional advancement of all phases of physical health, this association bands together the P. E. stu- dents to destroy persecution complexes and raise P. E. self-esteem. A newly organized group, the association suffers from the Rice tradition of campus indifference, though it may well have a useful future if the desired alumni-student cooperation is brought about. The association is open to P. E. juniors and above. It meets once during the first fifteen days of December, June, and April, and during the last fifteen of May, and expresses its virile and non-social purposefulness by refusing to sponsor or become involved in social af- fairs. OFFICERS HARRY FOUKE PRESIDENT HAROLD MICKELSON VICE PRESIDENT JOE LAGOW SECRETARY-TREASURER Lagow Mays PERCY ARTHUR ALBERT METZLER EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR J. ADKINS N. LETTS R. BALLANFANT J. McCAULEY Metzler M. BARNES H. MICKELSON Scott H. BOLLMAN C. BRANDON D. FURMAN B. HALEY W. SADLER J. SAWTELLE T. SEARS F. TERRANELLA Treshwig G. JOHNSON J. YOUNG Wallace HONORARY MEMBERS G. HERMANCE L. HERTENBERGER J. KITTS E. DYER E. BRUNSON H. A. SCOTT DEBATING CLUB The best thing about the Debating Club is that various members occasionally bring credit to the Institute by winning from well known universities. The next best thing about the Debating Club is that the mem- bers in general refuse to take their interest too seriously. Important wins of the year have been over L. S. U., U. of S. C, Florida, Centenary, and Leland Stanford. They lost to A. M. and Baylor. The club participated with fair success in the Baylor Debate Tour- nament, and put on a radio debate in Hous- ton with S. M. U. Naturally small and un- naturally informal, this club gathers much from the association of the faculty advisor, J. D. Thomas. In spite of some administra- tion impatience over doubtful publicity to Rice, the club maintained a successful year. Ryan Baldwin Barnston Blake Gordon Masterson Reddicliffe OFFICERS CORNELIUS RYAN PRESIDENT MILTON BLAKE VICE PRESIDENT WENDELL GORDON SECRETARY-TREASURER J. D. THOMAS FACULTY ADVISOR Smith Thomas MEMBERS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR WILLIAM BLANTON JOE ANTHONY WILLIAM JESSUP LOUIS DELGADO ifrj TENNIS CLUB The Tennis Club attempts to fill Rice ' s need for a girls ' athletic organ- ization. Membership is open to all girls and weekly instruction programs are followed by practice on the courts. Led by their nationally rating captain, the club defeated their only, and scarcely formidable, opponents from San Jacinto. The winners of the club ' s annual spring tournament receive silver tro- phies from the school. OFFICERS KATHRYN PEARSON COURTNEY TAYLOR RUTH SUMMERS DOROTHY SCARBOROUGH PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER MEMBERS LOLA MAE BLACKE MARY MARSHALL MATTHEWS MARY LOUISE FOOTE DOROTHY WILLIAMS MARY ALICE COOPER COURTNEY TAYLOR KATHRYN PEARSON RUTH HEWITT RUTH SUMMERS NANCY NAGLE DOROTHY SCARBOROUGH HELEN SCARBOROUGH GERALDINE MERONEY DORIS SCHILD CALLIE SHINDLER DOROTHY WILLIAMS SARAH CATHERINE EVANS LOUISE MANSFIELD DOROTHY WISENBORG CHARLENE O ' FIEL Morris Cook Barnes Boone Abbot Banner Cashman Clemens Hale King McClanahan Masterson Much Nitze Pike Redman THE 1935 CAMPANILE EDITORIAL STAFF IRWIN MORRIS VIRGINIA BARNES WILLIAM MASTERSON GEORGE PIKE MARJORIE NITZE MARY JANE HALE ROBERT CLEMENS HOWARD NICHOLLS FRED MUCH ED McCLANAHAN TRAVIS REDMAN JOHN CASHMAN TALBOTT WILSON EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR DRAMATICS SPORT EDITOR FOOTBALL BASKETBALL TRACK PHOTOGRAPHER ARTIST ARTIST BUSINESS STAFF RAYMOND COOK LAWRENCE BOONE GLENN KING BETTY ABBOT KNOX BANNER BUSINESS MANAGER ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER SALES MANAGER SALES MANAGER SALES MANAGER Schwartz Collier Lorimer Ferris Cook Hale Much Knight Albrecht Malloy Burke Newsome Cashman Scobee Castle Thomas THE RICE OWL KENT SCHWARTZ JOHN R. COOK FRED MUCH WILLIAM LORIMER NELSON SEARS EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER ART STAFF NOLAN BARRICK BILLY BURKE JOHN CASHMAN PEGGY CASTLE CARD ELLIOTT JIMMIE McGEE JAMES THOMAS TALBOT WILSON EDITORIAL STAFF FLORENCE MAI ALBRECHT EVERETT COLLIER ALMON DOBBS NANINE FERRIS MARY JANE HALE BILLIE KNIGHT LaRUE McGILVRAY FRED MUCH JOE ARTHUR NEWSOME JAY HAROLD ROSE RICHARD SCOBEE KING SULLIVAN IMn SlUl kit Scott Moyer Costley Hanks Barnes Dato Davis Horton Jacobs Long Love Malloy Mendel Rose Tsanoff Yeager THE RICE THRESHER JAMES H. SCOTT JOHN COSTLEY ROLLO MOYER CLYDE HANKS EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER STAFF EDNA LEAH JACOBS PAULINE LECHENGER HARRIET MALLOY ASSOCIATE EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR LEWIS HALL MANSON STELL J. HAROLD ROSE BETTY ABBOT JEAN DORMAN VIRGINIA BARNES FRANCES LOVE MARGARET POLK VIRGINIA BRATTEN JOHNNIE PACE JACK HORTON EVRI MENDEL RAY WATKIN JOHN YEAGER NELSON SEARS ARTHUR EPLEY NEVENNA TSANOFF JANE STOCKTON ULLMAN KILGORE RANDALL BROOKS ACTIVITIES MAY FETE 1934 Turquoise-gowned Senior Duchess, Lois Schwartz, and her maids, Tallichet, Heyck, Ragan, Freeman, Hedrick, Slim- pin, McNeir, and Cavitt. The Queen, Lenoir Bowen, gowned in white and carrying orchids and Killar- ney roses, is crowned by King Lauter- bach on the steps of the Spanish Throne. Their Majesties: King Richard of the House of Lauterbach, and Queen Lenoir of the House of Bowen. Junior Duchess Roberta Woods and her court, gowned in yellow, pose in- formally: Neathery, Bender, Patton, Worrall. Woods, Sullivan, Cooke, Quin, and Cammack. Sophomore Court grouped around the Duchess Nanine Ferris, in green. The maids are: Allen, Crain, Calhoun, Barnes, Boyd, Wright, Malloy, and Mc- Kinney. Princesses Tuttle and Hutcheson ap- proach the Throne, amused by the clever antics of jesters. Hall and Mum- mert. Freshman Duchess Mary Jane Hale was attended by maids Hardy, Nitze, Home, Weiser, Brogdon, Baldwin, Davis, and Triplett. Announcer, John Cook; music, Torres ' string ensemble; dancing, Pritchard ' s gauzy dancers. DRAMATICS 1934 CAMILLE, presented at Autry House on November 26 and 27, under the di- rection of Moyne Morrison Given. Cast: Jane Cannafax, Paul Farren, Burke Haymes, Marjorie Nitze, Marion Ferrin, Ann Dohoney, Edwin House, Audrey Moody, Randall Brooks, Card Elliott, and Robert Rick. Sets were executed by James Thomas and Mattie Armstrong. The annual One Act Play Contest was held at Autry House on March 4, with an original play, WOODEN LIONS, by Ullman Kilgore winning the first award. The cast included Zelda Keeper, King Sullivan and Ted Dwyer. The Fletcher Award for the best individual actress went to Ann Dohoney who ap- peared in Sigrid. Paul Ferren was named the best actor. Judges of the contest were: Chillman, Delevanti, Wil- liams, and Mrs. Bourgoyne. The Dramatic Club presented A DOVER ROAD at the Autry House on May 10, 11, 12. Directed by Renee Bourgoyne, the cast included: Robert Clemens, Frances Park, Ruth Pilking- ton, Randall Brooks, Jack Horton, Ann Dohoney, Edwin House, Dorothy Nagel, and Edwin McClanahan. The sets were designed by James Thomas, and prop- erties were handled by Mattie Arm- strong and Marjorie Nitze. THE COMMENCEMENT 1934 BACCALAUREATE. In the tradi- tional cool morning fragrance of commencement jasmines, Chicago University ' s chapel dean, Dr. Charles Whiting Gilkey, delivered a fresh and meaningful baccalaureate ser- mon. His sympathetic and experi- enced guidance of the graduating class through the student door to religion remained the high point of the formal commencement cere- monies. Sunday, June 3. COMMENCEMENT. Sudden show- ers forced a helpless commencement body to assemble at St. Paul ' s Metho- dist, late, ill-arranged, irritable, and apprehensive of the tedious cere- mony. Following Dr. Gilkey ' s con- vening prayer, Dr. John Campbell Merriam, paleontologist, and presi- dent of Carnegie Institute, lamented over national politics, and then read at length sincere but general com- ments on The Inquiring Mind of the Changing World. Thereupon, di- plomas were awarded, in confused order, due to unfortunate lack of facilities caused by inclement weather, to two hundred and fifty- four Bachelors, nine Masters, and five Doctors. After final announce- ments of scholarship awards, the as- sembly dispersed. Monday, June 4. SENIOR AMERICAN. The piano runs of Herbie Kay ' s orchestra set the Senior Class off to a morning cruise on the Rice-Roof-turned-steam- er-deck. The breezy dancing and scanty lunch was followed by an afternoon swim at River Oaks. Chair- man Donoghue; committee, Talley, Alter, Hannon, Graf, and Perlitz ar- ranged this, the first affair of the friv- olous series. baturday, June A. SENIOR BANQUET. To prepare for the strenuous week-end, the Sen- ior Class and its Administration guests, exclusively, and almost quietly, fell to a grand feast at the Rice Hotel. Official business included permanent election of officers, Geis- elman, Christian, and Ryman, and speeches by Axson, Weiser, and Mc- Cann. Chairman Higginbotham; committee, Lacy, Wilkins, Vinson, and Quinn, were responsible. Saturday, June 2. GARDEN PARTY. President Lovett, Mrs. W. Browne Baker subbing for Mrs. Lovett, and the class officers presided in the Academic Court over the President ' s annual garden party for seniors and their families. Monday, June 4. SENIOR FINAL. With diplomas in pocket, inhibitions gone, the Class of ' 34 put a flashy and forceful end to its activities. Shannon played until 12, then after much food and a new start, Herbie Kay, down from the roof, finished it. Chairman, Cook; committee, Zenor, Bowen, Webster, Dionne, Cook, Aleo, Calvin, Shan- non, Lewis, and Wall-LeBarge were in charge. . , . T . Monday, June 4. THE SOPHOMORE SHIPWRECK PARTY Rather clumsily rough, but interesting, the Sophomore affair succeeded in being one whose motif was thoroughly carried out in the costumes and atmosphere. Following immediately the February Exams, the occasion was one for reaction and recreation after intensive cramming and some study. This dance also followed in time, place, and procedure a Rally Club evening, and so little else need be said about its nature except that clothes were again conspicuous by their absence, and a good — no — enjoyable time was had by all. The River Oaks ballroom represented, for the occasion, a desert island. A backdrop of an old shipwrecked vessel and various palms supplied adequate decoration, but the abandoned atmosphere was furnished best by the conduct of those present. Just to put everyone in the right frame of mind, a heavy rain and thunderstorm broke just before the hour of the dance. Whether this gratuitous back- ground was part of the arranged program or not, it added to the spirit of the occasion, though the amount of spirits was quite sufficient without Providential aid. Jimmie Scott and his campus band furnished the music, and this was about the only thing that was quite normal about the entire evening. COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN JACK MORRISON GENERAL WILLIAM MAGUIRE BIDS KARL TEN BRINK ARRANGEMENTS EDWIN HOUSE DECORATIONS MARY ELLEN TRIPLETT REFRESHMENTS PHIL PEDEN ORCHESTRA MAURICE TINTEROW PUBLICITY THE JUNIOR PROM Apprehensive to the extent of sending for Jimmy Scott and his band, and then no doubt unbalanced by the twenty-past-eleven arrival of Jacques Renard and his unfed, ill-dressed orchestra, the Junior Prom finally unbent its classic boredom and abandoned itself to a pleas- ant evening at the Houston Club, March 1. The musicians, however, once fed and filled, gave their novelties a clever jiggle, their dance tunes a late-hour smoothness; the dancers supplied geniality and more expression than the above photograph would suggest; private grill parties offered their spirits; the Houston Club offered its proper and graceful ballroom-lounge, and filled in with the usual olives and tuna-chicken salad lunch. %f COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN CLIFTON HOGGE CARLOS MORRIS LAWRENCE BOONE NANINE FERRIS MARJORIE BOYD MARSHALL GATES JAMES H. SCOTT GENERAL ORCHESTRA BIDS PATRONS DECORATIONS REFRESHMENTS PUBLICITY SATURDAY NIGHT DANCES The answer to the Saturday night date entertainment question was this year successful as never before. Although the attendance was at times made up more of Texas, A. M., and even S. M. U. visitors, than Rice students, this attendance was throughout the year socially enjoyable and financially gratifying. A number of elements induced this success. First, with the help of an attractive girl singer, a silver-voiced tenor, and the Vidrine-tuba, Illis-violin combination, Jimmie Scott and com- pany produced some of the best music that has come out of local horns recently. Secondly, the University Club was redecorated at New Year, and after the Rice-Texas crush, the band sported new suits. Thirdly, a four for three or eight for five financial policy, and finally and far from least, the active and intelligent work of the committee. The result was highly successful for Rice society in general and Rice seniors in particular. The morgue-like atmosphere of former years has been broken away and a tradition of success has been started. THE COMMITTEE a A ft HARRY IOURNEAY PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION RALEIGH WHITE PRESIDENT OF THE SENIOR CLASS WILLIAM LAWSON MEMBER-AT-LARGE, STUDENT COUNCIL KEMP LEWIS BILL FRANCIS THE CALENDAR (Compiled from Thresher News) Sept. 13. President Lovett predicts Rice is going from well to belter, yearly self-sur- past. 400 enroll, 150 go on relief. Friends of Rice, Kitts, the Owls at once take stage. Sept. 21. President Lovett tells Frosh why they are matriculating. Loyola. Clubs again plan banner year. Pat Quin with Jimmie Scott open dancing. Sept. 28. McWhirter-Allen lead — tame (see Freshman Thresher, March 15, 1935). Shirt-tail-parade-pep rally. L. S. U. game, no Huey. Societies spot pledges at inter- literary society tea. Dramatic Club returns to Autry House; Mrs. Blake, It was born and raised here and I ' m glad it ' s coming back. Kitts. Oct. 5. Purdue Miracle, Rice in national news, Rice friends congratulate selves. Prexy ' s prediction ironically fulfilled. Sammy begins to use names. Bet ty Abbot considers dropping out of school. Much Kitts. Oct. 12. Literary Societies pledge. E. B.- P. A. L. fracas (not in Thresher). No news but Kitts (S. M. U.). Oct. 19. Team leaves for Creighton; so societies give book reviews. Oct. 26. Texas week end — 2 bonfires — Kitts — Tony — rival parades — $50 seat s — Royall — Wallace — Smith — 20-9 — mob brawl — fadeout. Nov. 2. Phi Beta Kappa detects. T. A. I. swamped. Bourgeois leads Les Tactiques, plays L ' Oncle de Goose Creek. Nov. 9. The Engineer after many weeks. First Last deadline for Campanile photographs. Nov. 16. Chandler speaks on Rate of Ac- quisition and Loss by Hookworms. Scott writes an editorial. Nov. 23. Homecomers see T. C. U. jinx rise from dead. New band uniforms (finally). Debate Club wins from Huey ' s squad. Sec- ond Last deadline for Campanile photos. Nov. 30. Wednesday nite— O.W.L.S. Band dance. Thursday — b 1 e s s e d Thanksgiving rest. Dec. 7. Bender wills $200,000. At once R Assn. banquets Conference Champs, and Rally Club throws Break-Training Dance. Camille wheezes. Dec. 14. Collier ' s All- American Bill Wal- lace. EBLS dig up old trophy. Dramatic Club Hula dances. Football team has Campanile photographs taken. Dec. 21. Football season ends; literary societies again have book reviews. Scott says merry Christmas in 500 words. CHRISTMAS CHEER (No Thresher). Jan. 11. Dance Committee paternally cuts rates. Four co-eds get wrecked; wrecker gets publicity. Sammy uses more than just names — Betty Abbot does drop out. Exten- tion lectures. Debate Club beats California. Jan. 18. Williams publishes Creative Writing, loses Lectures. Owl cagers seize the torch. Archi-Arts name it Bal-Primeval. Office objects. Jan. 25. Rice entertains Chinese Wei. Pattie jigsaw picture hoaxs Art Museum. Bal Celtica. Feb. 15. Texas Colleges Won ' t Join League of Nations. Whoops! Bal Primeval. Feb. 22. Mrs. Autry mourned. Bal Cel- tica, with primeval beauty pageant, flows. Mar. 1. Dr. Stockton Axson, Ave Atque Vale! Junior Prom goes ahead. Mar. 8. Kilgore ' s Wooden Lions bowls over One Act Play Contest. Mar. 15. Worship Queen Woods, Prin- cesses Neathery and Quin. Phi Beta Kappa canonizes 6 more. Literary-basketball fight stops third scheduled book review. Mar. 22. May Fite. (Elections continue.) Mar. 29. PALS-Pre-Law Dance in rain, at Beechmont. Architect Clemens goes May- King. Scobee spouts. April 7. Harvard-humorist-historian hits ham ' athletics. Dover Road Will last 3 days! Scobee spurts. April 22. Oberle heads La Malade Imaginaire. Thresher scoops Helen Hayes story. April 19. A Thresher came out as usual. (Advertising contracts.) Scobee. May 3. Engineers, Greer leading, crash thru t o Scott and Dees at EB-Pre-Med. Scobee does not attend. Roberta says, Wake me early mother. Haw. May 8. Roberta says, Wake me, etc. Haw! Haw! Fellows propose a May-fete- commencement. May 9. Roberta says, I ' ll give ' em one more chance. May 10. Election results. Boone. No Chiefs. No rest-room-gang. R Quill comes to life again. May 17. Campanile goes to press. But helpless Pieces of the Game He plays Upon this Chequer-board of Nights and Days; Hither and thither moves, and checks, and slays. And one by one back in the Closet lays. SPORT FOOTBALL «« , THE 1934 SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE CHAMPIONS The year 1934 will go into the annals of football history as the most satisfying in the development of the athletic prestige of Rice Institute. No longer is Tony forced to sneak down the wrong side of the street with hat slouched dismally over his defeat ridden features; no longer do we undergrads have to shoulder the burden of the time-worn Next Year — Rice has arrived. Starting the season with a new mentor and their ability a distinct question mark, the battling Owls began the hardest schedule on the school ' s record, barely noticed by the other conference schools, and, needless to say, completely overlooked by the rest of the country. Undaunted by the lack of notoriety and the small chances attributed them for success, the Kittsmen began their schedule with a grim determination that sent victory rolling on victory until the once weak Owl chirp became a screaming, screeching challenge sweeping over the entire country, sending galling, rasping fear into the hearts of the football powers that be. Ripping, snarling, battering, they annihi- lated in quick order Loyola, Texas, S. M. U., Arkansas, and A. M. They forced a her- alded L. S. U. team to play over their heads to gain an undecisive tie. Traveling north to the home of the Boilermakers, they made those most worthy gentlemen rise to super- human heights to prevent the Owls from run- ning up more than the fourteen points that were the margin of victory. Then came disaster in the lorm at an in- spired Texas Christian team. We need not apologize for this defeat. T. C. U. for the day was simply the better team. We all know the story of the following week-end — of how the Owls with their na- tional reputation and the Southwest Confer- ence crown at stake, pounced upon a power- ful Baylor aggregation to hand them the most decisive defeat suffered by that school in fifteen years. The 1934 Conference Champions can not be praised too highly for the superhuman way they came through the rigors of a hard schedule. Injuries were kept at a minimum, and the morale of the team was always at a high level. Some idea of the great bounds which Rice football made in 1934 may be gathered from the fact that in 1933 Rice stood 143 in na- tional ranking while in 1934 they stood RICE 12; LOYOLA Opening the season with a night game at New Orleans, the Owls in a torrential rain- fall showed the class that was to prevail the whole season. At least four touchdowns better than the Wolves, they were robbed of two by holding penalties in the fourth quarter. Both of Rice ' s touchdowns were scored in the first half, Wallace scoring the first with a beautiful sixty-yard dash through the rain. McCaulay followed with a forty- five-yard punt return down the sideline for the other score. RICE 9; L. S. U. 9 Meeting the second Louisiana team in two weeks, Rice ended with a 9-9 tie with L. S. U. Entirely on the defense in the first half, and repulsing successfully four Tiger threats, the Owls changed to the touchdown blue jerseys in the second half and with beautiful force scored a field goal in the third quarter and a touchdown in the fourth. Wallace, Fried- man, and Sylvester figured vitally in the action. The Tigers came back brilliantly with a necessary safety, and a beautiful drive down the field for a touchdown and a tie. Mickal ' s kicking played an important part in the score of the game. RICE 14; PURDUE Before a crowd of 12,000 people at Lafay- ette, Indiana, Rice decisively whipped a for- midable Purdue team. Only slightly marred by the unfortunate absence of Purdue ' s All- American halfback, Duane Purvis, this well- earned upset over one of the Big Ten ' s strongest teams gave Rice national recog- nition. Outstanding was the running of Wal- lace and McCaulay of Rice and Carter and Drake of Purdue. Wallace began his trek to All-American fame with 89 yards gained, with 69 for McCaulay and 65 for Carter. A pass, Wallace to McCaulay, scored the first touchdown and a blocked pass by Steen, the second. Despite the manner of both these touchdowns, Rice ' s victory was by no means a fluke, in fact except for the first part of the second half the Owls constantly outplayed the Boilermakers. RICE 9; S. M. U. Making their conference debut at Rice field before 12,000 fans, the Owls turned in a decisive victory over S. M. U. Rice ' s only touchdown came in the first quarter. Wallace took a daring pickup of a bounding punt, sidestepped an end, darted off to the left, reversing his field, and twisting out of sev- eral tacklers and running behind good block- ing, went 36 yards for the touchdown. S. M. U. completed a number of short passes but without gaining much yardage; their running attack was not strong enough to draw in the Rice secondary, since the aggressive play of the Rice line was chiefly responsible for hold- ing the tricky Bob Wilson in check. Rice looked best in the third quarter when it took the ball from its own 28-yard line to the S. M. U. eight-yard line, McCaulay carrying the ball. From this point Sylvester kicked a field goal from placement, making the final score 9-0. RICE 47; CREIGHTON 13 Rice went to Nebraska as the favorites to defeat the Bluejays, but the decisiveness of the victory was a surprise to all. The first two touchdowns in the first few minutes re- sulted from the identical circumstances; both times Rice lost the ball in the center of the field and immediately afterward McCaulay for the first time and Witt for the second time picked the ball out of the air on a fumble and ran for a touchdown. The third touch- down came on a pass from McCaulay to Wallace. • In eleven minutes the team had piled up 20 points. From then on, after a 64-yard run by Wallace, virtually a new team played for the rest of the game. In the last half both teams managed to put over 13 points, making the final score 47-13. In the line Mays and Sylvester were outstanding; Steen, Biering, Royall, and Smith also looked very good. RICE 27; T. A. I. A breather for the team. Most of the regulars went in the game for only the first 12 minutes. The reserves, however, led the visitors by the score of 7 to for their part of the game. The first three touchdowns came after long marches of 36, 54, and 36 yards, with Metzler, Wallace, and Witt mak- ing the scores. Wallace ran 44 yards to pro- vide one of the main thrills of the game. Friedman scored the final touchdown early in the second half after Bollman blocked a punt on the one-yard line. RICE 20; TEXAS 9 Eighteen thousand fans, including James V. Allred, jammed into the groaning Rice field bleachers to see the most exciting game of the year. Rice ' s first touchdown came in the first half on a pass from Wallace to Witt; the blocking on this play was perfectly exe- cuted. Texas also scored in the first half when Verde intercepted a pass and ran 90 yards for a touchdown; the pass was thrown from the famous spread play. Texas failed to convert and the score remained Rice 7, Texas 6, until the last six minutes. At this point Texas was on its own 12-yard line; a pass was then thrown to Hadlock who gal- loped down the field and who would have had a certain touchdown had he not been beautifully tackled by Roy Royall. But Hil- liard was then sent in and a field goal from placement put Texas in the lead, 9 to 7. After a punt exchange, Rice pulled a good piece of strategy. Wallace had just been put back into the game and Texas was expecting a running play; but instead, Wallace threw a beautiful pass to Smith, who caught it at full speed and went over for a touchdown. Atkins kicked goal, making the score, Rice 14, Texas 9. Then to add a finishing touch, with one minute to play, Fouke intercepted a pass and ran 35 yards for the last touch- down. RICE 25; A. M. 6 The Owls breezed through their fourth conference victory by defeating the Aggies, 25 to 6, thereby inflicting upon them the worst defeat with one exception that the Aggies had ever suffered on Kyle Field. Yet this was done without difficulty and with the freest use of reserves. Rice ' s first touchdown came early in the game. Wallace kicked a 54-yard punt out of bounds on the Aggie eight -yard line; Couser then kicked back 20 yards, placing the ball on the A. M. 28- yard line. Wallace then in a couple of plays ran the opposition ragged and went over for the score. With crafty generalship and beautiful timing of the line the scoring con- tinued even with the full team of reserves. Couser of A. M. almost alone accounted for the Aggie score when he ran through the center of the line to the four-yard strip and then took the ball over. RICE 7; ARKANSAS Playing in Fayetteville on Arkansas home- coming day, Rice roundly outplayed their opponents as indicated by twelve first downs to five. Rice ' s only score came in the second quarter when Wallace returned a punt from his 30-yard line to the Arkansas 36-yard line, followed by a beautiful pass, McCaulay to Witt which placed the ball on the seventeen- yard line. After a penalty and a line plunge had put the ball on the nine-yard strip, Mc- Caulay called the spread play with one yard for first down; the Hogs thought that Wal- lace was going to carry the ball over the line and failed to cover McCaulay, who received a pass over the goal line. Sylvester con- verted the point after touchdown. Doc Metz- ler gained most yardage for Rice, while Primo Miller played such a smashing game that Coach Thompson of Arkansas gave him individual praise. RICE 2; T. C. U. 7 On Saturday, November 24, Rice suffered her one defeat of the year. This was largely due to T. C. U. ' s line with Lester at center and Roach and Walls at ends. Rice made fifteen first downs to T. C. U. ' s eight, the latter not making any in the last half. Furthermore, Rice was constantly threatening in the last quarter, but the original T. C. U. score in the first quarter was decisive. That score was inaugurated with five successive first downs, with Lawrence carrying the ball most of the time. With the ball on the six-yard line, Lawrence faded back to pass from his thir- teen-yard line, being vigorously rushed by three Owl men, but the subsequent pass to Coleman was ruled good, and the touchdown resulted. Rice ' s score came in the fourth quarter when Sadler killed McCaulay ' s punt on the T. C. U. one and one-half yard line; T. C. U. then donated the safety. The fourth quarter was very wild, with Rice threatening every minute; but each time Lester and Roach would throw them back. On the next to last play of the game, Rice had the ball on the Frogs ' four-yard line, but with an in- complete pass over the goal line they lost their last chance to score. RICE 32; BAYLOR In the final game of the 1934 season Rice overwhelmed the Baylor Bears, 32 to 0, mak- ing a brilliant finish to a brilliant season and thereby winning for Rice their first Southwest Conference football championship. With Baylor using a peculiar 5-3-2-1 defense and with the Rice line blocking viciously, Wal- lace, McCaulay, Metzler, Smith, and Fried- man went through at will. The passing attack was equally successful. Not until the last few minutes did Baylor even make a threat, and their drive was successfully stopped on the three-yard line. McCaulay and Wallace supplied most of the punch for Rice. Wallace had been named on the Associated Press All-American team the morning before and did in fact fulfill the part with his brilliant playing. It was McCaulay, however, who was the real star of the game, running, block- ing, and tackling in magnificent fashion. His fifty-yard touchdown run was probably the most thrilling play of the game. In the line Captain Arthur and Buddy Daunoy were the outstanding players. The latter, playing his last game, was the best guard on the field. Others who played inspired football in their last game were Arthur, Metzler, Letts, Barnes, and Lagow. RAYBORN MAYS— Telephone— Captain- elect — Quiet, takes his football seriously and is very much a man. Hampered somewhat by a head injury, but was still able to be an outstanding tackle. A terrific hitter. Watch him next year. LECHE SYLVESTER- -Pin-head— E n d — All- Conference — Best place kicker in the South- west. Coached the squad in biology on trips. A steady reliable wingman, who used his head to advantage. Back next year. CARMEN BRANDON— Apus— Guard— Start- ing guard who played splendid, courageous football all year. Improved with every game. Shifted from backfield to line. Sixty minute player. Another year. JOHN McCAULAY— Ole J a wn— Ail-Ameri- can Quarterback — Elected most valuable player by teammates. Possessed amazing speed and shiftiness for such a large man. He could do everything a little better than good. Very calm and smart on the field. All-American next year too. RAY SMITH— Morro Castle— Big, rangy sophomore who showed up well. Fine passer and punter. Ability will increase with ex- perience. He also catches passes. BOB BIERING— Stony— T a c k 1 e— Schreiner Institute transfer who showed up fine in first year. Large and tough, he handled every- thing that came at his position. Will go great next year. JESSE ATKINS— Flash— Back — large and powerful with the getaway of a sprinter. Excellent place kicker. Blocked nicely against T. C. U. Will be back next year. BILL WALLACE— Willie— B a c k— All-Ameri- ican Halfback — Outstanding back of the con- ference. Great all around player who could run, pass, and kick better than the best. A southpaw and a track star too. Watch him next year. r- U- Am JOE DUCK LAGOW— Guard— small but a tough and deadly tackier — watch charm guard who always did his best — beautiful game against Baylor — his last year. JOHN MUSSOLINI FRANKIE — Tackle — starting tackle in sophomore year — quiet, ef- ficient and not ruffled — takes football serious- ly — handles himself nicely — even better next year. NORMAN LAUNDRY LETTS— Back— small but fearless — the tougher the going the better he liked it — noted for terrific tackling — swell punter and a plunging runner — last year. ALBERT DOC METZLER — Back — speedy — hard to catch — started all games — good blocker yet was best ground gainer against Arkansas and T. C. U. — a three letter athlete — a credit to school — last year. JOE MORRIS — Guard — sophomore linesman who played well when in a game — steady and powerful defense man — looks forward to lettering next year. MELVIN GENERAL MOTORS BARNES— shifted from end to tackle — capable reserve — showed up well in stiff competition — not aggressive but played a smart game — senior. ELDEN INSULL JR. DAUNOY — Guard - fought through four years for his letter — con- stant and steady — played well against Bay- lor — good blocker and a swell person. NORVELL JACKSON — Tackle — sophomore linesman who was a steady, useful tackle although he saw little action — can be de- pended on and will be needed next year. WILLIAM SAD DOG SADLER— End— ca- pable and reliant wingman — plays conserva- tively or spectacularly — general all around ability — should be outstanding in a crop of ends next year. RALPH PRIMO MILLER — Tackle — out- standing in the Southwest — All Conference — carried 225 pounds with speed and ease to wreck the opponents ' line and back field — greatest fear was of hurting some of the op- position — only a sophomore — probably All American before he ' s through. W. D. CHIN AGNOR— Guard— low, heavy, immovable — a tough man who really dishes it out and takes it when he has to — running mate to Ard — sophomore. WILLIAM BUTTERBALL ARD— shifted from end to guard — played splendidly for a sopho- more — has ability to sift through line — better next year. MELVIN RED BALE — Guard — all confer- ence — asked for trouble and took care of all he could get — excellent in running interfer- ence — one big reason for Rice ' s line being what it was — junior. PERCY STOOGE ARTHUR— Center— great leader and swell center — not one bad pass all year — much of the success of the team can be traced to his smart sixty minute foot- ball — hate to see him go. ROBERT NIGGER FORBES— End— showed up fine although he suffered a bad ankle in- jury in mid-season to slow him up — best on defense — two more years. BYRON FASHIONPLATE WILLIAMS— End — an engineer who managed to find time from labs to make first string — steady and dependable blocker and sure tackle — another year. LOU HERTENBERGER — Line Coach — not only a good coach but a swell fellow — well liked by all the squad — teaches by demon- stration as well as instruction. WADE SPOT OWEN— End— fast and elu- sive — excellent in offense and good in de- fense — sophomore — outstanding prospect for next year. FRANK ABIE STEEN— End— excellent pass receiver and defense man — pleasure to the grandstand and a pain to the opposition — his goal line stand against Texas will be long remembered — talked a swell game — All Con- ference if he comes back. HOWARD PONY NICHOLLS— Center- junior college transfer slated for first string center next year if he doesn ' t become a back field man — played like a halfback at A. M. — good linesman and an architect besides. BUCK PUDDIN ' HEAD FRIEDMAN— Back — big, hard driving sophomore — powerful line plunger and shifty broken field runner — handicapped by knee injury, but should go great next year. G ROVER CHAMBLISS— Back— substitute sophomore who showed to advantage against A. 5 M. — promising runner with speed. HENRY CROONER BOLLM AN — Center - reserve with fine spirit — light but aggressive — fights and tries hard — back next year. HARRY SCRAPBOOK WITT— Back- heavy, hard plunging fullback — started all eleven games — fine pass receiver but excels in backing up line on defense — see him next year. BASKETBALL BASKETBALL 1935 The Rice Owls acquitted themselves nobly in both the conference -struggle and non- conference games this year. Winning from all competition in non-conference bouts, the Owls were able to eke out a three way tie for the conference championship by finish- ing with a meteoric winning spurt. The feathered quintet opened the confer- ence season against the Aggies January 5 and were paced to a hard won victory, 46 to 32, by the smart, curly-haired Lodge. The Owls were off their game at the free-throw line but their passing attack went better than was expected. Orr in the second half dem- onstrated that Kitts ' judgment in picking him as a future luminary was justified. At Fayetteville on January 11, Rice cham- pionship aspirations met a cropper when Ike Foole, rangy Razorback center, dropped in a last minute counter to take away a heartbreaker, 31 to 30. The Porkers had their own way the biggest part of the game, with Captain Moody scoring 17 points against the scrapping Rice five. Institute backers felt the depression more keenly than ever after the second tussle with the Arkansas basketeers on January 12. The smooth working opponents took the lead early in the game and the Owls never threat- ened. Journeay and Kelly started a rally in the second period but it couldn ' t be kept up long enough to get a lead. Stanford and Kelly were high for the visiting team. The Birdmen retained a toehold January 14 at Fort Worth by defeating the Homed Frogs, 36-24. Every Rice player joined in the victory with at least two points, and Kitts used eleven men. The going was tough for the first half, but then Steele turned on the steam and led the team in a spirited assault to build up a heavy margin. Steele was high for the winners with six tallies. The travel weary team dropped to a new low in pennant odds when S. M. U. won its first conference game by taking Rice, 32 to 19, in the red and blue gym, January 16. With a tight defense and fast shooting of- fense the Ponies completely outplayed the Owls who had been on the road for the previous six days. The Institute team pulled back into the .500 class at the City Auditorium, January 26, when it overcame a game Baylor quintet, 43-31. Twenty fouls were called against Baylor, but their accuracy with free throws kept them in the game. The crafty Lodge directed the last period rally with a lame knee. R. T. Eaton ' s passing in the first half was notable. Paced by Captain Journeay and Floyd Kelly, the Kittsmen took a rough and tumble contest from the Longhorns on February 9, 43-35. Jack Gray of Texas was a serious threat as his one hand push shot piled up 21 points for the Steers. Twenty-three per- sonal fouls were called on the visitors, and the game will be memorable for its thrills. Hot as a firecracker, Kelly sank five field goals to give the Owls a victory over the S. M. U. team on February 16. Journeay held the speedy Baccus to one field goal the last half, and the change in defense by the Institute five and the rest period is given credit for the victory. The Ponies battled gamely and their last period spurt was al- most fatal for Rice hopes. The ending score gave the home team a scant lead at 32 to 30. On February 19, Rice fought out a 33 to 23 game for a victory over A. S M. on their own low-ceiling court. The Aggies are always hard to beat on home ground, and they were much improved. Stanford, Steele, Johnson and Witt bore the brunt of the attack while Metzler and Eaton co-operated at guard. One step further toward the championship flag, and Rice supporters were hoping against hope. Atoning in part for the defeat suffered in football from T. C. U., the Owls outlasted the Frogs on February 21, 29 to 25. The game was as rough as football and as vivid for the lead changed hands three times in the first half. R. T. Eaton and Spot Owen turned in fine defensive games while Jour- neay led the scoring with nine points. Smothering Jack Gray Co. of Texas, 34-28, the Kittsmen chalked up their sixth straight victory, March 1. Journeay brilliantly guarded Gray, Eaton ' s passing was superb, and Witt hustled for the ball the whole game. Defeating Baylor, 36 to 24, to cinch a tie for the conference with S. M. U. and Arkan- sas, the Blue and Gray quintet ended the season March 2. Orr took the heart out of the Bears with his wily crip shots, but it was Lodge who steadied the Owls with his pass- ing. Rice finished the season with nine vic- tories and three defeats. CAPTAIN HARRY JOURNEAY— Forward— His ability as captain so appreciated by his team-mates that he was elected a second time . . . Played more minutes in competition than any other man on the team . . . Second high point man . . . Classy forward, with ability to shift to guard and cling like a leech . . . Modest and competent. WADE SPOT OWEN— Guard— Stellar, little all-state performer from Athens . . . Broke into games late in the season but made it up shortly . . . Pugnacious . . . Scoring threat from the foul line . . . Another sopho- more . . . Dribbling and passing call for little improve- ment. HENRY BOLLMAN— Guard -Active, light, agile . . . Lacking only in experience which comes with continual playing, he stands to show with the best of next year ' s team ... A good eye for the basket and good diagnosis of plays kept him on the squad. JACK STEELE — Forward — Sophomore who continued his freshman honors and became a valuable fast man . . . Started the season like a house afire and is likely to become Rice ' s biggest scorer in a couple of years . . . Quick on his feet, tough to guard or pass through. HARRIS TIGHTWAD LODGE— Sparkplug of the team. Crafty Houston sophomore guard turned in a brilliant performance . . . Acted as field general . . . One of the surest shots on team, but earned his laurels as guard against Gray, Baccus, and Alford . . . Cinch all- conference the next two years. ALBERT DOC METZLER— Guard— From Houston . . . Finished his last year as remarkable an athlete as he has proved heretofore . . . Speedy, elusive, he dribbled in and then handed the scoring glory over to someone else with a lightning pass . . . Goes down in history as an athlete for Rice to be proud of. WILLIS ORR- -Furnished the surprise of this year . . . The angling forward from Houston stepped into a first string position through ability to make crip shots . . . His wily, fast break and dribble did much to discourage and disconcert the enemy . . . Sophomore, shows much promise. AARON STANFORD— Forward— Sophomore from San Angelo . . . Like dynamite . . . ' til it is time to do some- thing . . . Dependable for a score when the game is close . . . Seldom misses the basket but needs the ex- perience v hich will come with practice. R. T. EATON, JR.— Guard- -Maintained the type of playing which won him all conference honors . . . Confi- dent, capable passing steadied his team mates . . . Pulled the game out of the bag several times with almost impossible shots . . . Deceptive . . . His perception of the opponent ' s attack never failed. FLOYD KELLY— Center- -Gainesville . . . Tallest man in the conference . . . Highest scoring honors . . . Vastly improved, his work at center and in the hole was the mainstay of the Rice attack . . . Great expectations are held for him again next year. HAROLD BULL JOHNSON— Center from Smithville— An affable pachyderm upon whose shoulders the brunt of the attack fell when the going got rough . . . An ac- curate overhand shot . . . Wise in basketball tactics as this is his last year . . . Never complaining, his steady stream of humor kept the squad in good spirits all year. HARRY WITT— Forward— Another Houston product . . . Big and powerful . . . Keen eye for basket and showed great dependability . . . His second year on the team has shown marked improvement in technique . . . Will fight hard for a first string position next year . . . Played in almost every game. Members of the team who failed to play in the re- quired number of games but played a valuable part in the team ' s success are Ray Smith, Lee Tynes, and David Furman. TRACK - j IS 1 Ww M 1 ■ L A w TRACK 1935 Opening the competition with other con- ference schools early, Rice entered the Bor- der Olympics at Laredo on February 22 with a full team. Petty set a new record for the meet with a discus throw of 157 feet, 5 inches. Brothers and Weichert took firsts also and Rice was second to Texas with 32 points. It was a good preview to what the year in track promised. On March 23, the Owls entered the Ft. Worth Fat Stock Show track and field events and took four firsts — Reid tied with Weichert in the vault at 12:8; Wilson, Petty, and Brothers took first, and Johnson second in the discus. March 30, Brunson took the team to Austin for the Texas Relays. The mile relay team took first in 3.19:8 but was disqualified. Petty set a new discus record with a toss of 163 feet, 3Vi inches. Weichert tied for first with 13 feet. The 880 relay team of Cashman, Wallace, Brothers, and Haley took second. Taking either first or second in all but two events at L. S. U. on April 6, the Birdmen were so short of spare points that they lost by three points, 57 to 60. Eugene Oliver took second in the high hurdles and E. Wal- lace second in the high jump, Brothers first in the 440 and 220, Haley in the 100, John- son in the shot and Weichert in the vault with 13 feet, 3 inches. Entertaining A. M. on April 22, Rice took the little end, 59 to 63. Letts won the javelin, hurling it 197 feet, 3 inches. Mile relay got first, Bill Wallace took first in both hurdles, Johnson, Petty, Brothers, and Reid took firsts. In the triangular meet with Texas U. and Abiline Christian at Austin, April 16, Rice was second with 59 Vz points. Wallace ran the high hurdles in 14:8 and also took first in the 220 low hurdles. Wilson won the mile in 4:31. As usual, Brothers, Weichert, John- son, Letts, and Petty took their respective firsts. On April 20, Coach Brunson took seven men to the Kansas Relays at Lawrence, Kansas. Petty set a new record for the re- lays with a discus throw of 154 feet. Weichert tied for third in the pole vault at 12 feet, 6 inches. The 880 relay team of Brothers, Haley, Metzler, and Wallace took fourth. Sending only three men to the Drake Re- lays at Des Moines, on April 27, Rice ob- tained distinction. Petty took first in the discus and Weichert tied for second in the pole vault at 13 feet, 8 inches. Wallace un- fortunately fell in running the high hurdles to lose a place. Entering another triangular meet with Texas U. and A. S M. on May 4 at Austin, Rice took second place with 58 Vi points. Wallace ran the 220 low hurdles in 23:9 for a first, Forbes took a third in the broad jump, Johnson threw the shot 47 feet, 8 inches for a first, and Brothers ran the 880 in 2:00.5 for a first. Petty, Weichert, and Wilson placed first in their respective events. Mays was second with the javelin. The Owls entered the Southwest Confer- ence Championships on May 10-11 to finish in second place with 48 Vi points. Weichert set a new conference record in the pole vault at 13 feet, 5 s s inches. Wallace won the low hurdles in 23:3, and Petty set a new conference record in the discus with a toss of 157 feet, 7% inches. Wilson took the mile run with ease in 4:29.5. Brothers won the 440 and_ Johnson the shotput with a heave of 46 feet, 7Vi inches. VERNON WILSON— Sturdy little distance man who distinguished himself by winning the Conference mile in 4:29.5. Outclassed his competition all year in this event and steadily improved. Also ran the two mile — took first in all meets he entered for the year in the mile. DAVID WEICHERT— Slender sophomore pole-vaulter - Took easy firsts in all competition — Was sent to Drake and Kansas Relays — Bettered records in Conference Meet by two inches with new mark of 13 feet, 5 5 s inches — He is expected to clear 14 before he leaves — Deserves everything he gets. JOHN CASHMAN-AU around track athlete— Weight man, broad jump, sprinter, and 440 relay team — Injuries kept him from doing his best — One jump in Conference Meet netted a place — Consistent scores — Finishes this year — Points in all meets. KITTRELL REID — Bespectacled vaulter who is ham- pered by difficulty in finding time to train — Distin- guished himself by taking points in all meets — Tied for third in Conference — Another year in which to catch up with Weichert — Plenty of grit and stamina. J. C. PETTY of Kaufman — This husky youngster took first in the discus in every competition in which he was entered — Bettered his own conference record by three feet in the Conference Meet with a throw of 157 — Won Drake and Kansas Relays and set new records there — Has another year in which to take new honors. R. T. EATON — Junior from Houston who made the team his first year out — Is developing into an excellent quarter-miler and 880 man — Placed in Triangular and L. S. U. meets — Lacks experience but has the constitu- tion of a runner and is a potential scorer for next year. BUCK FRIEDMAN of Austin— Sophomore me mber of squad who does everything from putting the shot to discus, javelin, and running — Lacks confidence and has not yet found his niche — Took points in Laredo and Triangular meets — All kinds of ability with two years for improvement. AARON STANFORD— San Angelo— Long distance man who unexpectedly showed to advantage in the 880 and quarter-mile events — Has plenty of endurance and pluck to keep running when the going gets tough — Placed in the Laredo, L. S. U. and Triangular meets — Only a sophomore with two years for further develop- ment. RED HALEY — Crimson flash from San Angelo — Takes part in all sprint races and a member of the 440 relay foursome — Placed in all meets he entered in Texas — A dependable point-getter with another year ahead of him — Good nature also makes him a valuable member of the team. SMOKEY Brothers— Also of San Angelo— Took first in the 440 in every meet he entered — One of Rice ' s most outstanding performers and threatens to obtain national honors in the quarter-mile —Won Conference with ease in 49.1 — Has run this event in 48. SAM MAYS— Stalwart hurler of the javelin— One of most dependable men on track squad — Took second in Conference Meet and first or place in all others — Aver- age throw of 190 or more — Has another year in which to perfect himself — His accuracy will be vouched for by Bull, the negro mascot. ELMER WALLACE— High high jumper— First year out and he cleared six feet at the Conference Meet — A con- scientious performer with ambition — Pride of Eagle Lake No. 2— Was handicapped by inexperience but with able coaching will develop into a real track athlete. ALBERT DOC METZLER— Adds to his athletic pro- lificity by serving as a sprinter, member of relay team, and broad-jumper — Took places wherever he competed - -Ended his last year as a point-getter for Rice in a competent manner — Unassuming and capable, his loss will be felt keenly. WILLIAM WALLACE— Crack hurdler— Ran five races in the Conference Meet — Work horse of the squad — A junior performer who is expected to set a new confer- ence record in both hurdle races next year — Placed in every meet he entered for the year. NORMAN LETTS— Blond, curley -haired, and good- natured — Specializes in the javelin throw — Threw 198 for first in the Texas Triangular Meet — Took places in all meets but the Conference — Ended his last year of competition — His sunny smile will be missed as much as his skill. EUGENE OLIVER— Lithe hurdler who comb ines this ability with running the 880 — Took third in the Con- ference high hurdles and added up points for Rice in all competition that he entered — Turned in good per- formance during the year -Is expected to improve his last year. HAROLD BULL JOHNSON— Burly weight man from Smithville — Took first in the shot put with 46.9 and second in the discus in the Conference Meet — One of the most valuable and consistent point-getters in Con- ference — Took first in shot put in Laredo and Triangular meets — His going leaves a gap which will be difficult to fill. RAY SMITH— San Antonio giant speedster— 100 and 200 man who was prevented from much competition by leg injuries — A sophomore of whom much will be heard in the next two years — Placed in all meets until hampered by his injury. MINOR SPORTS TENNIS 1934 The Rice tennis team, composed of Co-Captains Fred Alter and Wilbur Hess, with Bob Allen and Otto Nachlas, got off to an auspicious start with decisive victories over L. S. U. and S. M. U., win- ning 5-1 in both cases. Against Texas, however, the result was the opposite. Hess was the only Rice winner. He showed sensational form and remarkable steadiness to win from the conference champion, Martin Buxby, in straight sets. In the conference meet Hess went easily into the semi- finals, but in his match with Weltens of Texas he took a cramp and lost after a 2-1 lead in sets. The doubles team of Hess and Alter, also in the semi-finals, had to default because of Hess ' in- ability to participate. WILBUR HESS— Co-Captain— Beyond doubt the outstanding netter in t he conference. Captain- elect — is a cinch for singles championship. His steady stroking and accurate placements more than offset his lack of weight. Little Jake ' s big brother. FRED ALTER— Co-Captain— Freddie the War- rior — A remarkable personality. Won at times only because he had the will to win. Strong competitive spirit. We ' ll remember that match with Gordon Pease cf Texas a long time. OTTO NACHLAS— A senior who played beautiful if erratic tennis. Was invincible when right. He overcame his physical smallness by his aggressiveness. Had a bewildering serve and a powerful overhead. ROBERT ALLEN— Bob worked steadily and im- proved rapidly toward the end of the season. His doubles play with Nachlas usually added necessary points to Rice ' s score. OUINN CONNELLY— Coach Quinn had the con- fidence and the respect of the team and his value cannot be overrated. GOLF 1935 In a year not marked by outstanding successes, the Rice golf team managed to place third in the Conference Meet at Dallas, in May. Captain Raleigh White, quali- fied with a score of 80, Robson with an 82, and Mc- Carthy with an 83. In the first round White defeated Ramsey of Texas, one up. Ramsey led the field in the qualifying round with a 72. Gore of S. M. U. defeated McCarthy, and Jones of S. M. U. eliminated Robson. In the second round, White bowed to Gore, who became runner-up to Ed White, the conference champion. In dual competition, Rice lost to S. M. U. by one point and by the same margin to A. M. In the dual meet with Texas, the Longhorns ' victory was more decisive. Although remarkably effective against the good local competition, a lack of confidence contributed to the erratic play in con ference matches. RALEIGH WHITE— Captain—Ranked number one. A consistently good golfer, his jovial personality made him friends even with his competitors. Raleigh ' s night work was his greatest handicap. BUDDY ROBSON— The chip shot artist of the team- made his approaches count. Robson was erratic but brilliant in the rest of his game. RALPH NEMIR— Dependable— Ralph has a knowledge cf the fundamentals of the game. Dodged the cameras. CHIC MCCARTHY— Probably the most consistent put- ter on the squad . . . never blew up . . . Noted for his long putts . . . For this reason turned in some excep- tionally low scores. BILL BARTON— Buzz showed a dependability and a consistency which was badly needed by the team. His good swing and perfect timing kept him in the running. RICE ' S ALL JOHN McCAULEY Mac ' s the guy who called the pass from the spread play against Arkansas that afternoon that won the game. He seems to have found favor in national football circles, being chosen for All-American by Red Grange and for second teams by the United Press and Liberty. The Liberty ' s team was chosen by a players ' poll, and if four more Creighton men had voted, Mac would have been first. But those of you who saw the Baylor game or heard about the Purdue game don ' t need Creighton players to tell you what kind of football he plays. He received the George Martin Award when his teammates voted him the most valuable man on the squad. Mac says that football is out of his line, that he had rather play baseball. I. C. PETTY Jesse has the unpardonable habit of bringing home all discus throw honors in meets that he enters. Having established a new state and national High School Intercollegiate record in this event, he continued in this practice at Rice and at present has not been defeated in any competition. He established new records for the Kansas and the Texas Relays, and in the Conference Meet he broke his own record by more than three feet. His best heave was at the Texas Relays where he tossed the discus 163 feet, six inches, less than six feet short of the World ' s Record, and about thirty more than his nearest competitor. WILBUR HESS Wilbur had a tough afternoon one day last year during the South- west Conference Tennis Meet, and while leading two sets to one, in the semi-finals, took a cramp and was forced to let up. But just to make things right, this year he took the man he bowed to in defeat last year in straight sets to win the Southwest Conference Singles Champion- ship for 1935. Some of his other conquests include singles and doubles championships of Texas, North Carolina, Mid-Atlantic States, and Eastern States Clay Courts. He was ranked fourth in the National Intercollegiate last summer, and lived up to it by going to the semi- finals. Watch him this summer in the Nationals. AMERICANS. WILLIAM WALLACE Bill is that fellow who hitch-hiked to the high school district track meet and won it single-handed. At Rice he continued his solitary ways and applied them to football. He managed to gain more yardage in punt returns in the Arkansas game than the whole Razorback back- field could pick up all afternoon. For this and like efforts, Grantland Rice and the Associated Press made him All-American. Bill still fares well in track too. He just finished winning the Conference 220 low hurdles in 23:3 and expects to enter the National Meet at Berkeley, CaL, in June. He has already come within four-tenths second of the world record. LOUIS BROTHERS Smokey has contributed his bit for Rice ' s honor the past two years in track. He opened up six years ago when he took the state half- mile run and continued in this practice for two more years, then he topped it off by placing in the National Interscholastic Meet. He has done big things for Rice by winning the 440 yard run in the meet of ' 34 at Los Angeles, and in many Southern meets. In addition, he placed in the National Intercollegiate Meet and in the National A. A. U. His most recent victory was in the 440 at the Conference Meet this year. His best time to date is 48:0 for the 440, which is not so bad. KATHRYN PEARSON With a trophy case filled with about forty tennis and eight golf trophies and still possessing becoming modesty, Kathryn is probably the outstanding girl athlete in intercollegiate competition. Kay started going somewhere about three years ago when she received national ranking in the Girls ' National Tennis Tournament. At present she holds the National Intercollegiate Woman ' s Singles and Doubles Champion- ships and has had the privilege of playing at Forest Hills with both Helen Wills and Helen Jacobs. She has been number one girl tennis champion at Rice for the past three years, and has won three times the Southern branch of the A. A. U. Nice going, Kay. But leave the Wise to wrangle, and with me The Quarrel of the Universe let be: And, in some corner of the Hubbub coucht, Make Game of that which makes as much of Thee. SALLYPORT Problem-child ' s ' sister. Spotlight. The tree marks the growth of the Alumni Building. Pop! Whoops, boys! And these same boys. Kitts and his Wildcats. Madame X. Diogenes? Weiser and the water wagon. I can see now. Interpretive dancing. This was Creighton. s ULPi Earl the Grate Barnes. Carnivorous. Hi. Butch! ■UK 5 - H ft twum W  %± Male and female. And I said — And I said. Student Council Per- sonal Appearance. Hi, Si! Optimism. Jason and the Argo- nauts. Conference ' 35. More hot air! Living down an in- feriority complex. Ape love. Blank. OWLS Pledges and Cousin Jane. Million Dollar — Schelling and Scott. Beau Bill. Tarzana — a-a-a — a ! Beer? or just Engi- neer? Freshmen followed (as usual) by P. E. ' s. Double-blank. Sammy has a baleful gleam in his eye. Wilson, the artist, strikes a pose. Pre-historic architects. Potential May Queen. Lewis keeping kiss- able. Versatile Sam Mays strikes out. Dramatic Club actors and David Red. A beery good party. One of the less formal dances (they didn ' t wear clothes). Just a jester. (See above picture.) Rice night. Held over. Tony. Embryonic Sawbones. Ring out, wild belles. Pep? rally. Wood-tag. King-fish. m w % Heep! heep! . . hie. Malloy ' s round. Benevolent Buzz. Mix well and serve. Whew! .,:„■.■.  to m ! Business Administra- tion 500. Merrily we go to school. I CAN ' T seem to re- member. Percy ' s best Sunday expression. But just look at the rest of the bums. (This public appearance wasn ' t in the contract.) Grafton — Bull of the woods. How about this one, Gaylord? Just a jester. Taylor looks better on the other end of a camera. Pull away, Peruna; that ' s Bill Wallace. Peculiar diet — milk and whiskey (poor whis- key). Look at them laigs. Character study. Even the jug got its fill. That independent look. Townley, you ' ve got something there. Why don ' t you wear Lookie, lookie, lookie. Weiser and weiser. Constancy, thou art a jewel. —Hale. Our gang. iTTTnTTTTniillllMlllllllratni ' - ' lllllll Public Enemy No. 3. Derby Day. Hey, hay, Rice formal. What a spot. All for art. Haw! Cleaning up the night before. Which one is the P. E. friend? P.A.L.S. Oh, yeah! Eddie K Snow scene. ' Owlingly funny. (See them laugh.) Joe College becomes academic. Fretts and Fretz. Stormy weather. But, Johnnie, you ' re not as tall either. Bull session disbands for class. Big Shots. V Mamma ' s boy. it A little Boyd told me. Dean ' s Data. Vanishing American. Monthly date chart appears. , ' ( ' Blond Candor. r - sj i Queen and Retinue? H Dogfish lab? The Duchess gets left. in nt« We still think so. 4 Yoo-Hoo! As we dance, as we sing — Tra la . . . Polka Face. - Breaking away for a touchdown. In vacant, or in pen- sive mood. He ' s writing a new- book; somebody figured the other one out. Jp I can ' t see a thing. Hurt by a Rose. Using one of the colo- nel characteristic poses. The Cherub of the Slide Rule. McCants soft-soaping some simple sap. Mister Burlingame to you. Dr. H. E. Bray (note the English accent). • ' ..■:■ ; Our Athletic A c a - dems or Profs. (Back- drops courtesy Lorimer Co.) Sparks flying. She ' s an old South- ern Custom. I i Battle of the Noses. You cawn ' t mean that- Some joke, eh, Pop? £ And then there were three — Oui . . . And you expect me to believe that — H ' lo, boys. Eleanor and Journeay (this was January). Justified Optimism. Ole Pappy. Bull Johnson. Ole Pappy. Tolstoi ' s got him again. Now this won ' t hurt— When knighthood was in flower. Yassah! ROULANDE STUDIOS Photographer SOUTHWESTERN ENGRAVING COMPANY Engraver THE REIN COMPANY Printer STUDENTS The money that you have paid for this 1935 Campanile represents less than 50% of the actual cost of pro- ducing this yearbook for you. The re- maining cost of this, your book, has been largely assumed by the adver- tisers whose messages appear on the following pages. Remember them and give them the patronage that is rightfully theirs. The Motor Car Is a Good Customer o£ Everybody T Xe: I EX AS is primarily an agricul- tural State, interested in markets for the products of its farms. Years ago, the larger portion of these markets was the individual consumer, the family which bought for its tables the products of the farmer ' s flocks and fields. Today industry consumes vast quantities of these products. For example, the Ford Motor Company has an- nounced an intention to build 1,000,000 automo- biles during 1935. That number of cars will re- quire 3,200,000 pounds of wool, and that quantity of wool will require more than 800,000 sheep to produce it. The wool goes into upholstery, floor coverings, lubricants and anti-rust preparations. And then comes the part played by cattle, beef and dairy. The production of glues from hides, glues made from milk, stearic acid, greases, glycerine, soap chips, and 1,500,000 square feet of leather for upholstery, will utilize 30,000 cattle. The hog also enters the picture. For lard oil in lubricants, oleric acid and bristles for brushes, 20,000 hogs will be used. Even the goat yields his quota, for in making the pile fabric used in upholstery, 350,000 pounds of goat ' s hair — mohair — will be needed, which means shearing 87,500 goats. Turning to cultivated fields we come first to cotton. Every four-door Ford sedan uses 70 pounds of cotton. A million cars will require over 09,000,000 pounds of cotton— 25,000,000 pounds in tires; 34,000 pounds in batting, cloth, brake lin- ings, battery box, timing gears and safety glass. It will take 433,000 acres of cotton to produce this material. King Motor is a strong ally of King Cotton. The corn field also is laid under tribute. Some 500,000 bushels of corn will be needed for butyl alcohol and starch used in manufacture. This will bring the product of 11,280 acres of corn to the Ford factory. Flax growers will furnish 2,400,000 pounds of linseed oil, and to produce this they will cultivate 17,500 acres of flax. Even the fields of sugar cane help build the Ford car, for they furnish the 2,500,000 gallons of molasses from which come solvents, anti-freeze and shock absorber fluids, and it will take 12,500 acres of sugar cane for that. Growers of the castor bean will supply 240,000 pounds of castor oil for lacquers and artificial leather. The trees make their contribution. The Ford company will need 112,000,000 feet of lumber, mostly for packing purposes, and 5,000,000 feet of paper board, and that provides a market for 20,500 acres of timber. This is only to mention the ordinary materials. But this will indicate how great a farm market the Ford Motor company is. The motor car is not a kingdom in itself; it must buy something of nearly everything that is grown on the farm and that is made in other industries — for, of course, most of the products named here reach the fac- tory after much labor has been spent on them in other industries. The motor car is a good cus- tomer of everybody. The farmer helps to build motor cars, just as the motor manufacturer helps to make farming more efficient and convenient. They help each other and that helps the country. AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS OF THE SOUTHWEST The art of being human CROM a woman motorist comes one - - of our most cherished bouquets. Last Saturday, she ' writes, I was driving through open country and a tire blew out. It was miles to the nearest garage. There was no place I could go for help. Cars came by — several of them. But not one stopped — until one of your big tank trucks came along. Before I so much as raised a finger, the driver saw my predicament, jumped down, and of- fered to help. In just a few minutes, he had changed the tire — and had driven off followed by my gratitude. I call that a pretty courteous and neighborly ges- ture for an employee of a big and busy company! We value this letter because, like many of its kind, it is proof that an old- established policy of this company has borne fruit. That policy is this . . . cour- tesy to patrons is as vital as quality of product. The five thousand men who drive Gulf tank trucks are schooled to ob- serve certain rules of the road which are nothing more or less than common courtesy. If you drive toward a Gulf tank truck, the driver will give you all the road the truck allows. If you ap- proach one from behind, you ' ll be given ample room to pass — quickly, before you wear out your horn or your tem- per. And if you break down on the road, there is a chance that your first offer of help will come from the driver of a Gulf tank truck. Gulf is proud to have grown big. But it is even prouder of staying human. GULF REFINING COMPANY COPYRIGHT 1934. GULF REFINING COMPANY.. PITTSBURGH. PA. COMPLIMENTS OF WARREN W. BATES BUFORD GOODWIN CO. COMPLIMENTS O F UNION BOTTLING WORKS THE HOUSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE 3708 Main Street Lehigh 0589 HOUSTON, TEXAS RED ARROW FREIGHT LINES, Inc. L. B. BROWN, President WALK UPSTAIRS AND SAVE $10.00 MOSK ' S CLOTHES SHOP, INC. 419 Vi Main Street • HOUSTON LAW SCHOOL JESSE E. MOSELEY, L.L.B., L.L.M President EWING WERLEIN. B.S., L.L.B. Dean OFFICES 1212 Second National Bank Building 2818 Caroline Fairfax 0373-0374 NU-WAY LAUNDRY CLEANING COMPANY (AT YOUR SERVICE ALWAYS) At Rice as elsewhere we maintain our reputation of fine laundering Every Laundry Service Careful Handling of Fine Fabrics We Congratulate Rice Institute and the 1935 Class FINE FURS HOUSTON ftalph duplex Exclusive Furrier COMPLIMENTS OF CAMERON IRON WORKS, INC In appreciation for the patronage of Rice Stud ents during the past year TEXAS PHOTO SUPPLY CO. 1019 Main Street Phone Fairfax 8124 Night Phone Lehigh 5391 W. H. CURTIN COMPANY. Inc. RETAIL— WHOLESALE—EXPORT Laboratory Apparatus and Reagents HOUSTON, TEXAS For your china ware, glass ware, din- ner ware, novelties and gifts, in fact, a complete line of household utilities, see that old Reliable Firm — they will ap- preciate your trade. TEXAS LAMP OIL CO. Established 1879 809-11 PRAIRIE AVENUE STOP FOR SERVICE j imu WHERE YOU SEE THE HUMBLE SIGN THE GUARDIAN TRUST COMPANY ESPERSON BUILDING HOUSTON, TEXAS COMPLETE BANKING AND TRUST FACILITIES YORK ICE MACHINERY CORPORATION YORK. PENNSYLVANIA SOUTHWESTERN HEADQUARTERS 2201 TEXAS AVENUE HOUSTON, TEXAS FACTORY BRANCHES: DALLAS. FT. WORTH, NEW ORLEANS, SHREVEPORT, SAN ANTONIO, HOUSTON YORK AIR CONDITIONING AND REFRIGERATION HUGHES TOOL COMPANY HOUSTON Manufacturers of Patented Oil Field Tools such as . . . ROCK BITS ' TOOL JOINTS CORE BITS VALVES There is not an oil field in the world that does not know Hughes Tools. For many a year Rice Institute and the Warwick have been neighbors and friends, both ever ready to lend a helping hand to the other. We of the Warwick keenly regret the passing of each Senior Class, yet with almost egual keenness do we an- ticipate the coming of a new flock of friends. It is our sincerest neighborly wish that we may have added a bit of gaiety or convenience to your college life. THE WARWICK HOTEL AND APARTMENTS WHERE MAIN STREET MEETS HERMANN PARK Wallace C O ' Leary, Manager Houston ' s leading home-furnishing store extends best wishes for success to RICE Students. STAWERS mm FumtiTUftc mm COMPLIMENTS OF R. T. GIBBS HOUSTON ICE AND COLD STORAGE CO. 408 Washington Avenue Nathan ' s clothes are authentically styled for college men SUITS, HATS, SHOES AND MEN ' S FURNISHINGS f .l 1 1 Booksellers to Houston for over 40 Years mtau 1014 Texas Avenue (near Main) BOOKS . . . STATIONERY . . . GIFTS LENDING LIBRARY SCHOOL SUPPLIES ImlKeux s MAIN AT CAPITOL Phone Fairfax 5331 PERFECTO CLEANING DYE WORKS SUPERIOR WORKMANSHIP Office and Plant- -2817-19 Fannin St. H. McDOUGAL Proprietor HOUSTON. TEXAS NORVELL - WILDER SUPPLY COMPANY Wholesale . HEAVY HARDWARE OIL WELL AND MILL SUPPLIES HOUSTON, TEXAS KING WOOD MORROW ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS Shell Building George S. King Andy C. Wood H. Earl Cox Wright Morrow Sam Holliday Newton Gresham George P. Murrin John W. Martin Jno. C. Williams HENKE PILLOT. Inc. GROCERIES Most of the Best for the Price MERCHANTS COOPERATIVE GROCERY PRODUCE CO. THE HADEN COMPANY BUILDING MATERIAL 1720 Delgno St. READY-MIXED SAND, GRAVEL CONCRETE MORTAR SHELL GULF ENVELOPE COMPANY 617 Brooks St. P. O. Box 164 HOUSTON, TEXAS J. WEINGARTEN ' S. Inc. BETTER FOODS FOR LESS COMPLIMENTS OF DR. J. E. CLARKE YELLOW CAB 2.5$ mIles 3 i Dial C-1212 RICE GRADUATES We congratulate you! Suable Fu Cfo Sianit ouJM. Furs and Ready-to-Wear 606 Main Compliments of W. L. MACATEE SONS, Inc. BUILDING MATERIALS 103 Austin Houston, Texas COMPLIMENTS OF HEIGHTS LUMBER YARD 425 WEST 18th STREET PHONE TAYLOR 6118 Compliments MIMEOGRAPH SALES AND SUPPLY COMPANY 714 McKINNEY AVENUE FAIRFAX 7700 iji ' iii ' tiiipiiii ' jj 1 ' !! ' ' ' ' WK Genuine A. B. Dick Mimeographs Supplies and Service WHAT AFTER RICE? Let Massey introduce you to an office position in keeping with your educational background. We do not promise to make of you a business executive; but we will train you for and place you in, a starting position where your talents and education will open to you opportunities without limit. We are receiving constantly more calls from employers for Rice graduates with business training than we have available to fill the very desirable office positions open to them. We invite your investigation of our record in starting Rice graduates on the road to success. MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE CAPITOL AVENUE AT CAROLINE STREET FAIRFAX 3533 SENIORS, We appreciated your patronage as students — join the graduate group who have enjoyed our curb service through the years. The ©ata, Inc. DELICIOUS DRINKS— SANDWICHES 3100 MAIN AT ROSALIE Decker ' s Iowana and Vacuum Cooked Hams The Taste is so good J. E. Decker Sons Sales Co. Compliments of SHEPHERD LAUNDRIES CO. Houston, Beaumont, San Antonio Compliments of AUTRY HOUSE CANTEEN Serving Klein ' s Ice Cream YE OLD COLLEGE INN Is more than an eating place It ' s part of your college days SOUTH TEXAS SCHOOL OF LAW State Supreme Court Approved Law School SO. TEXAS SCHOOL OF COMMERCE Prepares for C.P.A. Examination or Executive Positions Non-Profit Evening Schools with Day School methods of Instruction, High Scholastic Standards, and Sound Professional Ideals. Open to Men and Women. Law School Grants LL.B. Degree Commerce School Grants B.B.A. Degree Full information A. L. TURNER, A.B., B. Pd., Educational Director Y. M. C A. 918 Fannin Street Fairfax 2266 R. B. BOWEN CO. Esperson Building INSURANCE BONDS Millers and Merchandisers of the seventh of the rice crop of the U. S. J.V1.).U.I.H4JJ, I ' I.«II,UUJ.IJE7T HOUSTON ' S MOST EXCLUSIVE ARTISTIC CLEANER-DYER The STYLE and DISTINCTION of your wardrobe renewed . . . The ORIGINAL LUSTRE and WELL TAILORED effect retained by JENNINGS EXCLUSIVE serv- ice. Jennings CLEANING— DYEING SHOPPF HADLEY 8 IE CAROLINE AT ANITA RICKS EXTRACT CO Houston, Texas H. H. RICHTER M. RICHTER Extracts, Flavors, Colors COMPLIMENTS OF ANNA BRAUN GREEN BEAUTY SHOPPE GINN JENKINS SEA FOOD MARKET Two Modern Stores Serving Houston No. 1 Hampshaw Bldq. No. 2 2910 Lyons Ave. PATRONIZE CAMPANILE ADVERTISERS ITS HOW YOU DO It! It is not what you read or what you hear that counts most in advertising, but how YOU use it! Behind every product of merit there should be a basic idea — that actually sells. And this basic idea should be presented in a way that moves hu- man emotions — moves people to buy. When you do this, sales increase, advertising brings genuine returns. This Agency has helped some of its clients grow from birth of a product to national leadership by the use of this principle. ROGERS-GANO ADVERTISING AGENCY, Inc. 10th FLOOR BANKERS MORTGAGE BLDG. HOUSTON, TEXAS A NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED ORGANIZATION COMPLIMENTS OF WILLIAMS, LEE, SEARS KENNERLY ATTORNEYS AT LAW PETROLEUM BUILDING, HOUSTON, TEXAS Fred L. Williams W. H. Blades T. E. Kennedy Jesse I. Lee Fred W. Moore Robert N. Williams Geo. D. Sears Alan B. Cameron Sam R. Fisher Irl F. Kennedy Roland B. Voight RICE STUDENTS . . . Thank you for the business placed with Star Engraving Company. As a Houston manufacturer, it pleases us to serve Houston Educational Institutions. We especially ap- preciate the opportunity of designing and manufacturing Commencement Invitations for the Class of 1935. LINDSEY BLAYNEY, JR., representing STAR ENGRAVING COMPANY a Houston Manufacturer ANDREWS, KELLY, KURTH CAMPBELL MADING ' S DRUG STORES A. M. SUHR DESEL-BOETTCHER CO., INC. COMPLIMENTS OF MABRY PRODUCE COMPANY COMPLIMENTS OF LAMAR DRUG COMPANY We design, engrave, print, and bind books of every description as well as magazines, booklets, circulars, broadsides, window displays, and posters. THE LAKESIDE PRESS R. R. DONNELLEY SONS COMPANY Printers, Binders, Engravers, Designers, Lithographers 350 East 22nd Street, Chicago, Illinois Eastern Sales Office: 305 East 45th Street, New York City ONE OF THE NATION ' S TRULY FINE STORES a store whose reputation extends beyond city and State lines . . . whose rec- ognition is nation wide. People who travel much . . . and are really in posi- tion to know . . . rate Sakowitz Bros, among the upper ten of the men ' s and women ' s specialty stores of America. Everything to wear for every member of the family. High quality but not high priced! HOUSTON, TEXAS 8§||M5 Leo, The M. G. M. Lion, roars a greeting to Rice Institute Class of ' 35 in behalf of the following Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Stars! GRETA GARBO CLARK GABLE JOAN CRAWFORD WALLACE BEERY NORMA SHEARER ROBERT MONTGOMERY ANN HARDING WILLIAM POWELL MYRNA LOY CHARLES LAUGHTON • JEAN HARLOW NELSON EDDY JEANETTE MacDONALD And Leo Adds: It ' s Smart to Be Lionized. Meet the RICE OWLS and your favorite stars at LOEWS HOUSTON ' S FINEST THEATRE HOUSTON ' S WELCOME TO THE WORLD Playing Nationally Famous Orchestras In the Summer RICE ROOF In the Winter RICE TERRACE 4 Great Eating Establishments Rice Cafeteria Rice Coffee Shop Francis I Dining Room (In Summer It ' s Rice Roof) Banguet Rooms, Second Floor GOOD WISHES TO RICE STUDENT BODY AND FACULTY GULF BREWING COMPANY HOUSTON FRANTZ BROGNIEZ, President FRANK BROGNIEZ, Vice President WE HOLD RICE INSTITUTE In High Regard particularly because of its contribution to engineering as applied to the design and perfection of oil field tools and equipment. J. H. McEVOY COMPANY Texas at Milby Houston, Texas STERLING BAKER BROKERS AND INVESTMENT COUNSELORS Houston Serving Texas Investors Since 1923 COMPLIMENTS OF HOUSTON LAND TRUST COMPANY MAIN AT FRANKLIN FOUNDED 1876 W. W. SHORT THE LARGEST Frigidaire STORE IN THE LARGEST For Every Purse and Pu rpose CITY IN THE LARGEST 3108 Main St. STATE Investigation Will Reveal It Costs No More To Have The Best SSZriSby gyfo @£ a COMPLIMENTS OF ||[ MID-CONTINENT MUD COMPANY CfQjl ft. L i Lm 1 Hn HlHiL - COMPLIMENTS OF SOUTH MAIN r If BAPTIST CHURCH LYKES LINES OPERATING REGULAR LINER SERVICES— AMERICAN FLAG STEAMERS LYKES-COASTWISE LINE, INC. WEEKLY SAILINGS Between HOUSTON and GALVESTON and BOSTON, NEW BEDFORD. BALTIMORE AND NORFOLK SOUTHERN STATES LINE U. S. Mail Service— Route No. 57 From Houston, New Orleans, Galveston, Corpus Christi, Tampa and Sabine Ports To Bremen, Hamburg, Rotterdam, Havre, Antwerp, Ghent and other Continental, Baltic and Scandinavian Ports AMERICAN GULF ORIENT LINE U. S. Mail Service— Route No. 57 From Houston, New Orleans, Galveston, Mobile, Tampa and other U. S. Gulf Ports To Ports in China, Japan and Philippines DIXIE U. K. LINE U. S. Mail Service— Route No. 57 From Houston, New Orleans, Galveston, Corpus Christi, Tampa and Sabine Ports To London, Hull, Newcastle, Liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow, Belfast, Dublin and other United Kingdom and Irish Ports DIXIE MEDITERRANEAN LINE U. S. Mail Service— Route No. 57 From Houston, New Orleans, Galveston, Mobile, Tampa and other U. S. Gulf Ports To Genoa, Leghorn, Naples, Venice, Trieste and other Mediterranean, Adriatic and Black Sea Ports LYKES BROS. -RIPLEY STEAMSHIP CO., Inc. OWNERS GULF WEST MEDITERRANEAN LINE U. S. Mail Service— Route No. 45 From Houston, New Orleans, Galveston, Mobile, Tampa and other U. S. Gulf Ports To Barcelona, Valencia, Lisbon, Oporto, Bilbao and other Spanish and Portuguese Ports Tampa Interocean Steamship Co., Inc. Owners LYKES-WEST INDIES LINE U. S. Mail Service— Route No. 23 From Texas Ports and Lake Charles, La. To Puerto Rico, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Havana and Cuban ports, Panama, Colombia and other West Indies and Central American Ports Lykes Bros Steamship Co., Inc. Owners NEW ORLEANS GENERAL OFFICES HOUSTON GALVESTON BRANCH OFFICES: Beaumont, Corpus Christi, Port Arthur, Dallas, Lake Charles, Tampa, Memphis, Kansas City, Chicago, New York, Baltimore, San Juan, Port-au-Prince, Santo Domingo and Havana. 1 Ml ' k rw ww • • rrr IN APPRECIATION Because of the largemindedness of its board of directors, the place siven in its curricula to pure science, and its high interpre- tation of its obligation to business .... we hold the Rice Institute in high regard. Especially, because we hold to similar ideals, do we appreciate the contribution of pure science and engineering principles which Rice Institute makes to the practical business of producing rotary drilling tools. REED ROLLER BIT CO. HOUSTON • TEXAS ATWATER KENT RADIO STRAUS-FRANK CO Houston, Texas Amateur Headquarters JNO. E. BOYD CO. INSURANCE CUTRER MURFEE Attorneys at Law JAMES BUTE COMPANY Paints and Wallpaper McKinney and Caroline Phone Fairfax 9371 PIG ' N WHISTLE SANDWICHES Are To Made J - Your Fresh V A Order No. 1 4701 Main No. 2 3018 Main pig ' n ttptlc No. 2 Open All Night • BE SURE OF ALL-WOOL you really get it in Hart Schaffner Marx Clothes S5 J553S HART SCHAFFNER MARX _«- CLOTHES LANDERS KING SMITH 1016 TEXAS AVE— STERLING BUILDING COMPLIMENTS OF FIRST NATIONAL BANK IN HOUSTON EXAMINATION QUESTIONS 1. What should be a College man ' s first investment? 2. How can a College man create an immediate estate of $10,000 by paying only 1 V2 % annual interest? 3. Name an investment that can be bought on the instalment plan and mature for its full value whether the buyer lives or dies? 4. What type of investment best meets the following tests: (a) Safety? (b) Liquidity? (c) Guaranteed market value? (d) Regularity of deposits? (e) Fair return? 5. What investment requires health and character ahead of money? 6. What investment has been worth 100 cents on the dollar all through the depression? The UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY of Cincinnati, Ohio, has given a good answer to these questions for nearly three quarters of a century. Tested by wars, epidemics, and panics, it has fulfilled every obligation promptly, paying out over six hundred million dollars to its policyholders and their beneficiaries. You are invited to visit us and discuss life insurance as an investment, or life insurance as a career. The UNION CENTRAL is glad to pay its respects to W. H. Winn, leading representative of the Houston Office and a graduate of The Rice Institute, class of 1923. WILLIAM HARRISON, General Agent 812 Esperson Building Capitol 5388 COMPLIMENTS OF the RED WHITE STORES Retailers of Fine GROCERIES, MEATS AND PRODUCE and GORDON SEW ALL CO. WHOLESALE GROCERS HARRIS COUNTY IMPLEMENT COMPANY John Deere Farm Machinery Fairfax 8293 2107 Walker HOUSTON, TEXAS COMPLIMENTS OF PRINCE ' S FAMOUS HAMBURGER STAND 4509 South Main COMPLIMENTS OF R.H.HARGROVE JUST A FRIENDLY GREETING FROM THE KIRBY THEATRE ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW LAWSON ' S FLOWERS CORSAGES AND WEDDING BOUQUETS FOR ALL OCCASIONS McGowen at Fannin Fairfax 3531 ' SAUSAGE COMPLIMENTS OF DIXON PACKING CO 108 MILAM HOMES AND INVESTMENTS John T. and W. Stewart Boyle 1007-8 State National Bank Bldg. 917-19-21 Main Houston, Texas Compliments of KIRBY PETROLEUM CO Compliments and best wishes for success to the GRADUATES OF 1935 JESSE H. JONES INTERESTS HOUSTON TEXAS COMPLIMENTS OF ALICE RICHTER SECRETARIAL ACCOUNTING AND COMPLETE BUSINESS TRAINING DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES Competent instructors — Modern equipment Reasonable tuition fees American Business Institute 623 M M Buildinq Telephone C-1528 COMPLIMENTS OF HOUSTON ELECTRIC COMPANY BERT GRAY, President THE TEXAS DENTAL COLLEGE (ACCREDITED) A Modern College with Approved Methods of Instruction For information address the Dean BLODGETT AT FANNIN HOUSTON, TEXAS In 1 AND 3-LB. GLASS JARS — vacuum packed, indefinitely retaining all the rich, matchless flavor. Also packed in 1 AND 3-LB. TINS, and 1-LB. CELLOPHANE BAGS at lowest retail price. Cleveland Coffee Co. Houston COMPLIMENTS OF €, yCW 1 7l5M ivSt. WHERE HOUSTON SHOPS WITH CONFIDENCE JOS. F. MEYER CO. JOBBERS OF HEAVY HARDWARE—AUTOMOTIVE EQUIPMENT 802-812 FRANKLIN AVE. PHONE PRESTON 0146 THE UNION NATIONAL BANK OF HOUSTON, TEXAS I W£NT fob SALLV $P| A ND I WENT TOR SUE ( J •£ MOW I ' M GOIN ' FOR ORDtN ' S, I ' M T LLIN You YOU JAID IT , GRANDPA -THAT5 WORTH GOING TOC ! CK TO THE Grocers tSoKfoflti GRADE A MILK AND OTHER FINE DAIRY PRODUCTS HAS THE WHOLE TOWN GOING TO THE GROCERS The YEAR ROUND Store for BERING-CORTES COLLEGE STUDENT NEEDS HARDWARE CO. PRAIRIE AND PRESTON SOCIAL STATIONERY • FOUNTAIN MILAM 1261 PENS • LOOSE LEAF RING BOOKS GREETING CARDS • DESK SETS • LEATHER PORTFOLIOS THE HOME OF GOOD HARDWARE BASEBALL, TENNIS, FISHING, Ufii cn u SKnoNERyr n HUNTING EQUIPMENT iiILjUWandprintin vU PRAIRIE AT FANNIN Friendly Service Always COMPLIMENTS OF ROULANDE STUDIO 3305 Main Street HOGAN-ALLNOCH DRY GOODS COMPANY WHOLESALE HOUSTON, TEXAS SOUTH TEXAS COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK AMERICAN TITLE GUARANTY CO. HARRIS COUNTY ABSTRACT CO. Third Floor Esperson Building Houston, Texas INSURES LAND TITLES IN ALL PARTS OF TEXAS ABSTRACTS OF TITLES Frank J. Breaker, Manager Fairfax 5191 TEXAS CHEMICAL COMPANY Manufacturers ol Heavy Chemicals Executive and Sales Office Houston, Texas Factories Houston — Fort Worth—Baton Rouge, La.— Bastrop, La. HOUSTON ' S FAVORITE MAN ' S STORE BATTELSTEIN ' S 512 MAIN COMPLIMENTS OF ANDERSON CLAYTON FOKE SIGHT As you, in consultation with your parents and friends, planned your college career, so would we, as bankers and friends, be happy to have you plan with us your business and financial career SECOND NATIONAL BANK MAIN AT RUSK HOUSTON Our best wishes . . . for Success Graduation Day is the begin- ning of a new era in your life. It is our wish that your business or professional career will be a successful one, and that your efforts to make it so will be richly rewarded. R. B. Creager, Receiver HOUSTON GAS AND FUEL COMPANY 916 MAIN ST. CAPITOL 51 FARRAR LUMBER COMPANY BUILDING MATERIAL 2401 TEXAS AVENUE PHONE CAPITOL 1347 J. J. SWEENEY JEWELRY COMPANY 700 MAIN STREET, CORNER CAPITOL IT CAME FROM SWEENEY ' S COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND SERVING HOUSTON AND SOUTH TEXAS with a dependable, adequate and economical Electric Service § HOUSTON LIGHTING POWER COMPANY COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND STARS FELL ON HOUSTON A MESSAGE FROM HOUSTON ' S DOMINANT THEATRES! METROPOLITAN MAJESTIC Stars Have Deserted Alabama 1 They ' ve Found a Better Falling Ground 1 Right Here In Houston, at the MET and MAJESTIC This Past Season Has Witnessed a Descending Constellation of Stars Never Before Duplicated In These Parts. HELEN HAYES, THE MILLS BROTHERS, FANNIE BRICE, TED LEWIS, ETHEL WATERS, and Numerous Others Have Graced These Stages! And Further Along in the Current Season . . . Probably Before You Scan This Disserta- tion . . . Comes RUBINOFF, MARY PICKFORD . . . IN PERSON, OF COURSE i And We ' re Working on GEORGE OLSON, DAVE APOLLON, BUCK and BUBBLES ... For the Middle of the Summer 1 HOUSTON Leads The Nation In The Presentation Of Big Stars 1 WHEN STARS FALL ON HOUSTON THEIR GLITTER SHINES AT THESE INTERSTATE THEATRES TO THE 1935 GRADUATES WE EXTEND BEST WISHES FOR SUCCESS Whatever business or profession you may follow, remember that the services of a Good bank are of inestimable value. THE NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE Capital $3,500,000.00 Surplus $2,000,000.00 HOUSTON, TEXAS BREAD for pep, vitality i S and charm 9 BREAD N HOUSTON ' S BEST SHOP FOR MEN orton ' s BARRJNGER-NORTON CO. - 506 Main St. MODERN? Then the FORD V-8 is the car for you. Sleek and slim as a grey- hound, small enough to turn on a thin dime, yet big enough for the whole crowd. Fast as the Derby favorite — and best of all economical enough for even the collegiate allowance. RAYMOND PEARSON POLK AT CAROLINE The password to jood fellowship Lets have a cup of ADMIRATION DUNCAN COFFEE COMPANY if a ® g a, a r® a®n iL The Alamo! It was here that a gal- lant few, the bravest of the brave, redeemed their pledge to Texas with the forfeit of their lives — they fell the chosen sacrifice to Texan freedom. Spirits of the mighty had fallen; but their memory brightens the page of Texas history and they are hailed as founders of new institutions, and the patterns of illustrious action. In Texas today, in every field of in- dustry, commerce and art, Texans are carrying on in the spirit and fi- delity to ideals of their brave pre- decessors. A school annual designed and engraved by Southwestern En- graving Company craftsmen is pro- duced in the same manner true to ideals of high quality in the art of designing and engraving. It is our pledge to give Texas schools our truest and finest efforts in the creation of their annuals. We are proud to say that this annual is a pro- duction of Southwestern craftsmen. SOUTHWESTERN ENGRAVING COMPANY CREATORS OF DISTINCTIVE ANNUALS HOUSTON, TEXAS EVERT ROGERS School Annual Representative GEORGE C. YAX President Printers oj The 193 5 Campanile 1? i 11 IW mm W BUFFALO DRIVE • HOUSTON, TEXAS tMMV MJM ii|t M  J !t flfiJ 3 ft ' N  l f . 1 «ei it :-i;.V i« ; « ; ilt j « j  j ■ ; ftfcrf??T l  pJi n l nn l— iM« il


Suggestions in the Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) collection:

Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Rice University - Campanile Yearbook (Houston, TX) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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