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The Stanford Quad Vol. VIII I i I k I t I (Wire, lanforb In memory of ten bright years IVhen you have smiled upon us through the tears Of a great sorrow; In gratitude that griefs you bore Seemed only to make possible the more Tour thought for our tomorrow; IVe dedicate to you this book, Hopingt if chance shall bring it some day to your look, Ton may awhile Forget to grieve in thinking of the treasure You have received in our ten years of pleasure. And will you smile ? Copyright, 1901, ry M. E. McDougalp M. F. McCormick I %a raAJKifrto Dedication.................. Ideals of Stanford First Decade of the University The Growth of the Quadrangle In Memoriam Verses to Barbara The Faculty Classes Fraternities Organizations Musical Clubs Publications Athletics Debating Miscellaneous Literary 11 13 15 17 18 19 29 79 143 155 1G7 173 197 211 223 Joshes 245 . AFTER TEN Ten years ago, when Stanford was a glowing possibility, but nothing more. Mr. Walter M. Page, then editor of the Forum, asked me to set forth some of its ideals and purposes. The question to be answered was this: ' What advantage can a new university have over an old one in America?” In what way can freedom and newness make up for the lack of history and traditions ? It may be interesting for a moment to glance at the theoretical answer to these questions, in the light of our own actual experience. It seemed to me, in the first place, that it was not necessary that a school should be ancient in order to gain the wisdom of age. Each generation is heir to all previous experiences. In the new university the period of infancy and growth may be materially shortened. Among the |x sitive advantages of the new school was, first, the simplicity of its mechanism. A hard and fast organization, or any code of regulations beyond those necessary to secure order, is a burden on teacher and student. In all things,” says James Watt. but proverbially in mechanism, the supreme excellence is simplicity.” Tlie essential function of the university is the “ emancipation of thought.” This was the original impulse which in the Dark Ages gave rise to the first universities. To this end the simplest |x ssible organization is the one which serves the purpose best. The essential of method in the university must be instruction by investigation. It is only by direct contact with the problems of life and nature that thought can be made free. The new university, it seemed to me, should cut itself loose from the timeworn English College curriculum and its much-patched American equivalent, with its system of favored studies and false incentives. It can give to each line of work the time and freedom it needs, thus leaving all questions of the relative value of studies to be settled by each student for himself. It can free itself from traditional methods of teaching, because no teacher of a mechanical sort, left over from former conditions, can have any claim on a new school for pension or sup| ort. A new school need fill its ranks with none but growing men. And just as important as growth is soundness. The mushroom may grow rapidly, but it does not make good wood. Jftonforb §uab 1902 11 JKanforb (Juab 1902 Tile new school can treat its students as men and not as Children. In dealing with undergraduates in college work the methods of the university will always be more effective than the methods of the nursery. The nursery should cease where the university begins, and the university student should not do his work in the child's fear of the rod behind the mirror.” The new university can. in some measure, free itself from the shackles of the examination system. There is room, also, for reform in the matter of entrance requirements. What the university really wants is to have students trained to see and to think ; practical ” life requires the same, and when this demand is really met, the university work and the work of life will each rest on a sound foundation. The new university can at once recognize itself as a servant of the people, not as an organism existing for its own sake, or for the sake of any class or faction. The rest of the discussion is summed up in these words: The new university in America can discard the worn-out part of the educational methods and machinery of past ages, and of other lands, and can address itself directly to the life and work of the people of a great republic, and of the coming twentieth century.” The Stanford of today is no longer a new institution. It has made a record of its own. it has scored successes and failures. By its record it must be judged. This judgment it is not for me to give, but Stanford University may decide whether it has departed from its ideals, and whether those it has discarded are exchanged for those of higher value. Simplicity of mechanism is certainly a trait of the Stanford of today. No professor or student wise enough to act or speak for himself has found any check to his speech or action. No professor or student has l een asked to refrain from any line of investigation or to proclaim any kind of doctrine as the truth. That freedom of s| eech which is the badge of immaturity the University has not encouraged. It is part of its duty to distinguish journalism from scholarship. In no institution do students and teachers come nearer together than at Stanford. That is what the Quadrangle is for. In the field of investigation Stanford has taken its full part. This their lengthening line of publications shows. And these researches are a natural growth. There is no prize to the instructor who can show the greatest output of printed pages. The curriculum of Stanford has been and will continue to be one for each man or woman who comes here. Those who have the minds of men are not treated as children. There is no candy after the medicine and no “rod behind the mirror.” The University freely exercises its self-preserving faculty of letting go those who belong somewhere else. The examination system and the entrance requirements still hamper us more or less as necessary evils That the University belongs to all it can help and that every interest in the community may be helped by it, we think that the experience of Stanford has clearly proved. California is a l etter State to live in than it was ten years ago. Today, the pressure of Higher Kducation is greater to the square mile in California than in anywhere else in the world. Nowhere else is the path from the farmhouse to the college so well trodden. It requires no prophet to forecast the intellectual preeminence of California, and in this the new University, the two new Universities, for the growth of the one means the development of the other, has taken its full part. David Starr Jordan. 12 JHanforb Quab 1902 The First Decade of the University HE hard-pressed History Major of the year 2501. set to write a thesis on “ The First Decade of the University, will doubtless complain of the paucity of material, of the difficulty of making anything out of that inchoate period. (Tins, on the assumption that the big scrapbooks in the Secretary s office, the private memoirs of Bristow Adams, and this particular volume of the Quad shall all alike have succumbed to the gnawing tooth of time.) Still, if the aforesaid H. M. does credit to his department, he will doubtless be able to dig up 1 1 'm • many an odd bit. which, fused by the historical imagination, will naturally take shape under the following heads: I. The Pre-Natal Period. II. The Golden Age. III. In the Breakers. IV. The Renaissance. I. The Pre-Natal Period.— Not much out of this period can hope to survive to the twenty-sixth century. Already the point of inception has faded into that misty past when the present Freshman class were babes in arms. Six years it was from Charter to Opening Day. A brief enough span, as looked at from the year 2501, but from the stand| oint of a nineteenth century enterprise a very’ long preparation. Thus candidates in plenty for four times all the possible positions in the Faculty were lined up before a single building was sha| ed. Would-be students were hardly less impatient. Will II. M. catch any impression of the seemingly slow movement of the founders, of the long conferences, the hesitations, the tentative planning and replanning? What grist it all was for the newspapers! Will the magnificence of their heralding, the splendid, roseate vistas of the real estate agent enliven a bit an otherwise prosy introduction ? Will the advice so diligently sought, so lavishly, overwhelmingly inured out, add its spice and piquancy to the tale? Finally the hurrying of the private car across country to n JManforb $uab 1902 Baltimore, Gilman's westward pointing, and then a day in March, 1891, when Andrew I). White and Mrs. Comstock talked to the founders and settled the fate of the University. Some university there would have been, anyway. But this University, with its golden glamour, its winds of freedom, its happy-go-luckyism. its buoyancy, its energy, its modernness — this University exists ! ecause David Starr Jordan was chosen President. However little or much of all this reaches down to the twenty-sixth century, there will emerge out of the pre-natal period a noble plan of buildings well realized, a masterful President, an energetic Faculty, and a modern, progressive program. II. The Golden Age.— n 1890-91 the University of California had, in the colleges at Berkeley, 450 students. At Stanford it was determined to prepare for a possible 200. On the natal day, October 1, 1891, over 400 appeared. The first Register showed 559, distancing Berkeley by thirty. It was a truly cosmopolitan crowd. Not even Charley Field would maintain that all were equally fitted for the higher education. But in 2601 nobody will guess that. And if all were not “ beer and skittles,” if there were also difficulties, unexpected, appalling, crudenesses unimaginable, President Jordan did not let on, Fesler is silenced, and the History Major will never suspect. In the receding vista of six centuries the taming of Encina, the reign of Zion, the lusty exploits of the Pioneer Class will all alike ap| ear as threads of light in the golden garment. The earnestness, the enthusiasm, the intoxicating delight of fresh beginnings; the rollicking tread of the President speeding from one appointment to another; the stirring air of expansion ; the vigor, independence, achievement — these are the local colors with which H. M. will touch up his musty tale. “That tired feeling” which sometimes comes over University faculties will have no place in the Golden Age. HI. In the Breakers.— There was a sudden pull-up. Two years had been completed. The experiment had been made to go, and the results commanded the respect of the educational world. Plans for enlargement were all but perfected. The salary roll had been doubled. At first there was only the feeling of sorrow and loss in the death of Mr. Stanford. Only Mrs. Stanford and President Jordan divined the coming storm. Would even they have had the courage to face it if they could have foreseen the four long years of strain, the prolonged panic, the government suit, the threatened collapse of pro| erties, the importunities of heirs, the numbing sense of utter lack of needed moneys ? At any rate, the undaunted, unconquerable courage of the one, and the fertile, irrepressible buoyancy of the other — that sublime pretense that all was right — prevented the catastrophe which all of Mrs. Stanford's advisers regarded as inevitable. It would be a pity if the History Major of 2501 were to miss the essential spirit of this day of trial. It gave a meaning to sacrifice. It consecrated the University. There will never be any more wholesome academic life than breathed through those days of doubt and trial. IV. The Renaissance.— As suddenly as the trial had come, so suddenly it (Kissed away. Almost before we were aware, when we had almost trained ourselves not to expect it, the good ship sailed into calm waters. H. M. will see it in the new buildings, in the tremulous feeling betokening an imminent expansion in every corner of the University. He will see it also in the internal readjustment and reorganization, in the loss of mere abandon and happy-go-luckvism, in more concentration, higher standards, more sense of responsibility, the dignity, the poise, the solidity that comes of stability and fairly .adequate resources. 'Hie I)ecade closes on the threshold of great things. Great things will come because they have l een prepared for, because the heart of the University is sound, liecause the Stanford spirit is wholesome, manly and womanly. The History Major will summarize the First Decade by finding m it the kernel and promise of all that was to come after, the enduring foundation of a noble superstructure. O. L. E. 4 JManforb $uab 1902 Ph,t b A. 0. Aunt Section or the Feiece in Cour e or Construction I he Growth ot the Quadrangle MAY 14. 1887, the corner-stone was placed in the Inner Quadrangle, the beginning of a great work, by loving parents, to the memory oi an only son, I .eland Stanford, Junior. Those who witnessed that impressive ceremony can hardly realize the arduous task which was left the surviving founder of carrying out the great scheme that is making this University one of the leading educational institutions in the world. Shepley. Rutan Coolidge of Boston, successors to the famous Richardson, were the architects selected for this important work. The design, originating from the old Santa Barbara Mission, is now being carefully adhered to. Ten years ago. in August. 1891. the University first opened its doors, anti its progress during the ensuing years, despite its trials and tribulations, has been slow out sure. With the opening of the University only the Inner Quadrangle. Encina and Rohle Halls were completed, houses being rapidly erected for the Faculty. After the death of Mr. Stanford and a lapse of five years, one began to realize that the original plan was not merely a drawing, but a substantial fact that would live forever. The gift of Thomas Welton Stanford, for the erection of the Library, started the Outer Quadrangle, the corner-stone for which was laid in 1S99. Simultaneously with the Library, the walls of the Assembly Hall l egan to rise, followed by the Memorial Arch in the same year. The sculptured frieze of the arch is from the model and description by St. Gaudcns, and is being executed by Ru| ert Schmid- The design represents the •S JHcmforb $uab 1902 “ Progress of Civilization in America. The central figure on the front of the arch is Civilization, the beginning and end of the processional scene. Providence ” is on the left. Columbus, taking his mission from Providence, tears the veil from America, standing between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn. Pizarro and Cortez appear mounted, tearing down the idolatry of ancient America preparing the way for Christianity. On the corner of the arch is the chief Aztec Divinity, and on the west end Las Casas, preaching of the cross to the Indians. The next step in the evolution of events is the peculiarly American idea of Liberty protecting Religion, thus bringing Christianity to the New World. The Pilgrims are seen landing at Plymouth, and this cycle ends with the figure of Wisdom. The discovery completed, the work concerns itself with the United States. On the rear of the arch we see the march of the thirteen States, led by Washington, acconi| anied by two generals on horseback. The result of the War of Independence is shown by the figure of Columbia, or the United States, occupying the center of the frieze; from her proceeds Abundance,pointing to the virgin lands westward. First comes a group representing Grazing, with the god Pan ; then Ceres, with mowers and reapers ; Mining, on the comer of the arch—a Cyclops; Electricity, with the Leyden jar; Steam, with boiler and fire; the Sciences, Philosophy, Medicine and Mathematics, and the corner crowned with Minerva, a bear at her side, representing California. Again at the front of the arch we see Titans, holding up the mountains. The Railway is pictured—Mr. and Mrs. Stanford riding on horseback, and the Genius of Engineering superintending the work,— the end and beginning of which is Civilization. In 1900 the corner-stone of the Memorial Church was laid, with simple and impressive ceremony. 'Hie Science. Physics and History buildings and the Chemical I-aboratory were begun soon after. 'Hie new buildings are creeping slowly around the old, the Outer Quadrangle gradually enclosing the Inner. But the beloved Inner Quadrangle has lost none of its l eauty. It will always have for those who have been associated with the University a peculiar charm and attraction. Many millions will be spent in the construction of these buildings. The hearts of students the world over should feel grateful to the surviving founder, and say, earnestly, God bless the name of Stanford. Chas. Ed. Hodges. i 6 JManforfe }uab 1902 Some one whispers, you sre gone, too, Little olsssmste Barbara! Gone ss we who left you plsying In the hsppy campus sunshine Where the playmate squirrels are. Earliest we came, together, Barbara, when all was new. And our hearts, too, shared the wonder In your brown eyes softly shining. We were children there like you. When we slipped away, one morning, Barbara, we left you there! In your hands our plaything treasures, Asking you to keep them for us While we labored otherwhere. You are gone, too, say the whispers; (Are you hiding, little friend. In the green we loved together, By the slumber-walls of granite. Where the drowsy peppers bend?) While they look for you, these others, Barbara I ” calling, high and low Through the silent Arboretum, We who played there first together. We who left you there, we know! From her leafy place of hiding Barbara, through all the years. Never growing any older, Still the Baby-one we played with. Watches for the Pioneers. iS Carolus Ager, } k jtfanford Founders Quab 1902 ♦LELAND STANFORD JANE LATHROP STANFORD Board ot t rustees MR. TIMOTHY HOPKINS........................................San Francisco THE HON. HENRY L. DODGE....................................San Francisco I)R. HARVEY W. HARKNESS....................................San Francisco THE HON. HORACE DAVIS......................................San Francisco THE HON. THOMAS B. McFARLAND .... San Francisco THE HON. GEORGE E. GRAY.........................................San Francisco THE HON. NATHAN W. SPAULDING..........................................Oakland THE HON. WILLIAM M. STEWART .... Carson City, Ncv. THE REV. HORATIO STEBBINS, D. D. - - - • Cambridge, Mass. MR. JOSEPH D. GRANT........................................San Francisco MR. SAMUEL F. LEIB.............................................San Jose MR. LEON SLOSS.............................................San Francisco THE HON. THOMAS WELTON STANFORD - - Melbourne, Australia MR. FRANK MILLER...................................................Sacramento MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP.....................................San Francisco MR. RUSSELL J. WILSON......................................San Francisco Officers of T he Board of T rustees MR. SAMUEL F. LEIB .................................................President MR. RUSSELL J. WILSON..........................................Vice-President MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP..............................................Treasurer MR. HERBERT C. NASH......................................... - Secretary Jkcmford (Quab 1902 DAVID STARR JORDAN, President of the University. M. S., Cornell University, 1872; M. I)., Indiana Medical College, 1875 ; Ph. 1)., Butler University, 1878; LL. I)., Cornell University, 1886. A T. JOHN CASPER BRANNER, Vice-President of the University, and Professor of Geology. B. S., Cornell University. 1882; Ph. D., Indiana University, 1885. A T. OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS, Professor of Physiology and Histology. A. B., Moore’s Hill College, 1869; A. M-, 1872; M. S.. Indiana University, 1886 ; Ph. I)., 1889. MELVILLE BEST ANDERSON, Professor of English Literature. A. M., Butler University, 1877. JOHN MAXSON STILLMAN, Professor of Chemistry. Ph. B., University of California, 1874; Ph. D., 1885. 7. +. FERNANDO SANFORD, Professor of Physics. B. S., Carthage College, 1879 ; M. S., 1882. CHARLES DAVID MARX, Professor of Civil Engineering. B. C. E., Cornell University, 1878; C. E., Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 1881. O A X. ERNEST MONDELL PEASE, Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. A. B., University of Colorado, 1882; A. M., 1885. CHARLES HENRY GILBERT. Professor of Zoology. B. S., Butler University, 1879 ; M. S., Indiana University, 1882; Ph. I)., 1883. DOUGLAS HOUGHTON CAMPBELL, Professor of Botany. Ph. M., University of Michigan, 1882; Ph. I)., 1886. 2 £Kanforb THOMAS DENISON WOOD, Professor of Hygiene and Organic uab Training. A. B., Oberlin College. 1888; A. M., 1891; M- I).. College of Physicians and 1902 Surgeons, New York City, 1891. ♦ALBERT WILLIAM SMITH, Professor of Mechanical Engineering. B. M. E., Cornell University, 1878; M. M. E., 1886. O A X. EWALD FLUGEL, Professor of English Philology. • IMi. I)., University of Leipzig, 1886. CHARLES BENJAMIN WING, Professor of Structural Engineering. C. E., Cornell University, 1886. FRANK ANGELL, Professor of Psychology. B. S.. University of Vermont, 1878; Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1891; L. H. D. , University of Vermont, 1892. LEANDER MILLER HOSKINS, Professor of Applied Mathematics. B. C. E. and B. S., University of Wisconsin, 1883; M. S., 1885; C. E., 1887. ♦ROBERT EDGAR ALLARDICE, Professor of Mathematics. A. M., University of Edinburg, 1882. WILLIAM RUSSELL DUDLEY, Professor of Botany. B. S., Cornell University, 1874; M. S., 1876. A T. AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY, Professor of Greek. A. B , Haverford College, 1885; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890. JULIUS GOEBEL, Professor of Germanic Literature and Philology. Ph. D., University of Tubingen, 1882. J NATHAN ABBOTT, Professor of Law. A. B., Yale University, 1877; LL. B., Boston University, 1893. t V. JOHN ERNST MATZKE, Professor of the Romanic Languages. A. B.. Hope College, 1882; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1888. ! It K. GEORGE MANN RICHARDSON, Professor of Organic Chemistry. A. C., I-ehigh University, 1886 ; Ph. I)., Johns Hopkins University, 1890. + V. JAMES OWEN GRIFFIN, Professor of German. Graduate of the Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1873. A Y. WALTER MILLER, Professor of Classical Philology, and Secretary of the Faculty. A. M., University of Michigan, 1884. RUFUS LOT GREEN, Professor of Mathematics. B. S., Indiana University, 1885; A M., 1890. ♦ARLEY BARTHLOW SHOW, Professor of European History. A. B., Doane College, 1882; Graduate Andover Theological Seminarv, 1885; A. M., Doane College, 1892. ORRIN LESLIE ELLIOTT, Registrar. ' Ph. B., Cornell University, 1885; Ph. D., 1890. ♦ It K. VERNON LYMAN KELLOGG, Professor of Entomology. B. S., University of Kansas, 1889; M. S., 1892. ♦40, HK. 32 I Beginning September, 1901. BOLTON COIT BROWN, Professor of Drawing and Painting. B. P., Syracuse University. 1885; M. P., 1889. JAMES PERRIN SMITH, Professor of Mineralogy and Paleontology. A. M., Vanderbilt University, 1888; Ph. D., University of Gottingen, 1892. BO II. LIONEL REMOND LENOX, Professor of Analytical Chemistry. Ph. B., Columbia College. 1888. HENRY RUSHTON FAIRCLOUCH, Professor of Classical Literature. A. B., University of Toronto, 1883; A. M„ 1886; Ph. I)., Johns Hopkins University, 1896. A A 4 . HENRY BURROWES LATHROP, Professor of Rhetoric and Forensics. A. B., Harvard College, 1889. B K. ALPHONSO GERALD NEWCOMER, Associate Professor of English. A. B., University of Michigan, 1887; A. M., Cornell University, 1888. 4 P A. ARTHUR BRIDGMAN CLARK, Associate Prolessor of Drawing. B. Ar., Syracuse University, 1888; M. Ar., 1891. A T. HERBERT CHARLES NASH, Librarian. FRANK MACE McFARLAND, Associate Professor of Histology. Ph. B., DePauw University. 1889; A. M.. Leland Stanford Junior University, 1893; Ph. D., University of Wurzburg, 1896. A K K. GEORGE CLINTON PRICE, Associate Professor of Zoology. B. S., DePauw University, 1890; Ph. D.. Leland Stanford Junior University, 1897. A K F.. JOHN CHARLES LOUNSBURY FISH, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. C. E., Cornell University, 1892. A T u. ALEXIS VASILYEVICH BABINE, Associate Librarian. Graduate Elatma (Russia) Gymnasium, 1885; A. B., Cornell University, 1892; A. M., 1894. ELWOOI) P. CUBBERLEY, Associate Professor of Education. A. B., Indiana University, 1891. 4 A O. MARY ROBERTS SMITH, Associate Professor of Sociology. Ph. B., Cornell University, 1880; M. S., 1882; Ph. D., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1896. 4 B K, K A O. GUIDO HUGO MARX, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering. M. E., Cornell University, 1893. A T. CLYDE AUGUSTUS DUNJWAY, Associate Professor of History. A. B., Cornell University, 18512; A. M., Harvard University. 1894. Ph. D., 1897. 4 B K. GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, Secretary to the University. B. L., University of Minnesota, 1891. A Y. CLARKE BUTLER WHITTIER, Associate Professor of Law. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1893; LL. B., Harvard University, 1896. 4- K T. JAMES PARKER HALL, Associate Professor of Law. A. B., Cornell University, 1894 ; LL. B.. Harvard University, 1897. Lecturer 4 B K. JHanforb $uab 1902 3 JHanforb Quafc 1902 CLEMENT AUSTIN COPELAND, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering. M E., Cornell University, 1896. ARTHUR ONCKEN LOVEJOY, Associate Professor of Philosophy. A. B., University of California, 1895; A. M., Harvard University, 1897. GEORGE JAMES PIERCE, Associate Professor of Botany and Plant Physiology. B. S., Harvard University, 1890 ; Ph. I)., University of Leipzig, 1894. HERMAN DE CLERCQ STEARNS, Associate Professor of Physics. A. B., I-eland Stanford Junior University, 1892; A. M., 1893. OLIVER MARTIN JOHNSTON, Associate Professor of Romanic Languages. A. B., Mississippi College. 1890; A. M., 1892; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University. 1896. STEWART WOODFORD YOUNG, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. B. S., Cornell University, 1890. A T ii. KARL G. RENDTORFF, Assistant Professor of German. A. M., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1894; Ph. D., 1896. ♦EDWARD DANA DURAND, Assistant Professor of Finance and Administration. A. B., Oberlin College, 1893; Ph. D., Cornell University, 1896. EDWIN DILLER STARBUCK, Assistant Professor of Education. A. B., Indiana University, 1890; A. M.f Harvard University. 1895; Ph. I)., Clark University, 1897. HAROLD HEATH, Assistant Professor of Zoology. A B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1893; Ph. I)., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. • A 8. JOHN FLESHER NEWSOM, Assistant Professor of Mining and Metal-lurgy. A. B , Indiana University, 1891; A. M., Leland Stanford Junior University. 1893. B 6 II. HERBERT ZABRISKIE KIP, Assistant Professor of German. A. B., Princeton University, 1894; A. M., 1897; Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1899. A K K. BURT ESTES HOWARD, Assistant Professor of Political Science. A. B., Western Reserve University, 1883; A. M.. 1886; Graduate Lane Theological Seminary, 1886. A A 4 . SAMUEL JACKSON BARNETT, Assistant Professor of Physics. A. B., University of Denver, 1894; Ph. I)., Cornell University, 1898. JACKSON ELI REVNOLDS, Assistant Professor of Law. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1896; LL. B., Columbia University, 1899. £ P II. CHARLES ROSS LEWERS, Assistant Professor of Law. A. B., University of Nevada. 1893; A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University 1896. A T. 24 'Beginning September, 1901. RAY LYMAN WILBUR. Assistant Professor of Physiology. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1896; A. M., 1897; M. I)., Coo| er Medical College, 1891). PIERRE JOSEPH FREIN, Assistant Professor of Romanic languages. A. B., Williams College, 1892 ; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1899. FREDERICK JOHN ROGERS. Assistant Professor ol Physics. M. S., Cornell University, 1891. ♦LILLIE JANE MARTIN, Assistant Professor of Psychology. A. B., Vassar College, 1880. HANS FREDERICK BLICHFELDT, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. A. B., Lcland Stanford Junior University, 1896; Ph. I)., University of Leip-zig, 1898. JAMES HARRIS CURRAN, Acting Assistant Professor of Economics. A. B.. Dickinson College. 1892; I.L. B., Dickinson School of Ltw, 1896; Ph. D., University of Halle. 1900. ♦ K t, ♦ B K. GAILLARD THOMAS LAPSLEY, Acting Assistant Professor of History. A. B., Harvard University, 1893; A. M„ 1894; Ph. D., 1897. ELMER ELSWORTH FARMER, Instructor in Electrical Engineering. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1895; E. F... 1897. ♦MARATHON MONTROSE RAMSEY, Assistant Professor of Spanish. ALFRED FRANCIS WILLIAM SCHMIDT, Assistant Librarian. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University. 1895. K i'. CLARA S. STOLTENBERG, Instructor in Physiology. A. B.. Leland Stanford Junior University, 1896 ; A. M.. 1897. ZOE WORTHINGTON FISKE, Instructor in Drawing and Painting. B. P., Syracuse University, 1891. EDWARD LAMBE PARSONS, Instructor in Philosophy. A. B„ Yale University, 1889. + T. ELEANOR BROOKS PEARSON, Instructor in Rhetoric. A. B., University of Michigan, 1891. JOHN O. SNYDER, Instructor in Zoology. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1897; A. M., 1899. THOMAS ANDREW STOREY, Instructor in Hygiene and Organic Training. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1896; A. M., 1900. t K t. MAUD MARCH, Instructor in Hygiene and Organic Training. JEFFERSON ELMORE, Instructor in Latin. A. B.i Leland Stanford Junior University, 1895; A. M., 1895; Ph. D., 1901. ♦ROBERT ECKLES SWAIN, Instructor in Chemistry. A. B., Inland Stanford Junior University, 1899. LUCILE EAVES, Instructor in History. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1894. S JHonforb ($uab 1902 Beginning September, 1901. JManforb ($uab 1902 BLANCHE JOSEPHINE ANDERSON, Instructor in History. A. B., Oberlin College, 1890; A. M.. Inland Stanford Junior University, 1898. WILLIAM FREEMAN SNOW, Instructor in Hygiene and Organic Training. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1896; A. M., 1897; M. D., Cooper Medical College, 1900. ERANE GEORGE BAUM, Instructor in Electrical Engineering. A. B., I .eland Stanford Junior University, 1898; E. E., 1899. EDWIN CHAPIN STARKS, Curator in Zoology. GEORGE FREDERICK MADDOCK, Instructor in Electrical Engineering. A. B., I .eland Stanford Junior University. 1900. HAROLD STRUAN MUCKLESTON, Instructor in Greek. A. B., Trinity University, Toronto, 1899; A. M., Inland Stanford Junior University. 1900. FREDERIC HUNTINGTON BARTLETT. Instructor in English. A. B., Harvard University, 1895; A. M., Columbia University, 1898. SAMUEL SWAYZE SEWARD, Jr , Instructor in English. A. B., Columbia College, 1896; A. M., Columbia University, 1897. ♦ It K. ERNEST WILLIAM RETTGER, Instructor in Mathematics. A. B., Indiana University, 1893 ; Ph. D., Clark University, 1898. ♦LEE EMERSON BASSETT, Instructor in Elocution. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1901. JOSEPH PARKER WARREN, Instructor in History. A. B., Harvard University, 1896; A. M., 1897. A T, «t It K. WILLIAM JONATHAN NEIDIG, Instructor in English. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1896. DAVID SAMUEL SNEDDEN, Instructor in Education. A. B., St. Vincent’s College, I.os Angeles, 1890; A. B., Inland Stanford Junior University, 1897. ♦EDWARD PLAYFAIR ANDERSON, Instructor in English Philology. A. M , University of Michigan, 1879; Ph. D., 1886. ROBERT EVANS SNODGRASS, Instructor in Entomology. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1901. Assistants JULIUS EMBRET PETERSON, Foreman of the Forge. EUGENE SOULE, Foreman of the Woodworking Shop. JOHN EZRA McDOWELL, Assistant Registrar. A. B., Inland Stanford Junior University, 1900. ♦ 0. SUSAN BROWN BRISTOL, President’s Stenographer. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1897. ERNEST HARVEY SHIBLEY, Assistant in Mathematics. z6 • Absent on leave. WILLIAM ALBERT MANNING, Assistant in Mathematics. A. B„ Willamette University, 1900. CHARLES FREDERICK SCHMUTZLER, Assistant in German. A. B., Inland Stanford Junior University, 1898; A. M., 1899. PETER VON LE FORT, Assistant in French. Graduate Gymnasium of Anklam, 1879. CHARLES REIGHLEY DETRICK, Assistant in Economics. A. B., Harvard University, 1891. HOMER PRICE EARLE, Assistant in Spanish. SHINKAI INOKICHI KUWANA, Assistant in Entomology. A. B., Lcland Stanford Junior University, 1899. MILNOR ROBERTS, Assistant in Blowpipe Analysis. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1899. RALPH ARNOLD, Assistant in Geology. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1899; A. M., 1900. JOHN T. McMANIS, Assistant in Education. A B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1897. LE ROY ABRAMS, Assistant in Systematic Botany. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1899 LLOYD ELLIOTT HARTER, Assistant in Ethics. RUBY GREEN BELL, Assistant in Bionomics. ALVIN JOSEPH COX, Assistant in Chemistry. FRANCIS JAMES REIDY, Assistant in Chemistry. FRANK L. HESS, Assistant in Assaying. RICHMOND WHEELER, Lecture Assistant in Chemistry. JESSIE ARCHIBALD MOORE, Assistant in Chemistry. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1901. ELIOT GRAY POTTER, Assistant in Chemistry. ANTON JULIUS CARLSON, Assistant in Physiology. A. B., Augustana College, 1898. A. M., 1899. ALVIN WALTER BAIRD, Assistant in Physiology. WILLIAM HENRY SLOAN, Assistant in Physiology. JOSEPH GRANT BROWN, Assistant in Physics. FRANK ERNEST THOMPSON, Assistant in Education. MICHITARO SHINDO, Assistant Curator, Hopkins Laboratory. LYDIA M. HART, Assistant Artist of Hopkins Laboratory. HALBERT WILLIAM CHAPPELL, Assistant in the Gymnasium. VERA TOWNSEND, Assistant in the Gymnasium. CHARLES ABRAHAM CANTWELL, Assistant in the Gymnasium. 7 |Manfor (Juafc 1902 JKanforfc (Quat 1902 WALTER MORTEN BOSTON, Assistant in the Gymnasium. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1900. FLORENCE BOLTON. Assistant in the Gymnasium. KATHRYN ROMER KIP, Assistant in the Gymnasium. CHLOE LESLEY STARKS, Artist of the Hopkins Laboratory. FLORENCE HUGHES, Cataloguer. LOUISE MAXWELL, Classifier. ALPHA BUSHNELL, Library Assistant. WESLEY HERMAN BEACH, Library Assistant. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1900. HARROLD TRADER, Library Assistant. MARTHA ELIZABETH HE WEN, Library Assistant. JESSIE MARION BEACH, Library Assistant. MARY ANN HADDEN, Library Assistant. ISAAC RUSSELL, Library Assistant. HARRY C. PETERSON, Curator of the Leland Stanford Junior Museum. HARRIET HENRIETTA BROWN, Assistant to the Registrar. KARL ASA RICHARDSON, Assistant to the Secretary. ROGER JOHN STERRETT, Assistant to the Secretary. LILLIAN EMELINE RAY. Mistress of Roblc Hall. A. B., Iceland Stanford Junior University, 1897. r. FRANCES ELIZABETH SHORT, Mistress of Madroflo Hall. Lecturers CHARLES REYNOLDS BROWN, Lecturer on the Ethics of Christ. A. B., University of Iowa, 1883; A. M.. 1880; S. T. B.. Boston University School of Theology, 1889. JOSEPH HUTCHINSON, Lecturer in Law. A. B , University of California, 1878; LL. B., Hastings Law School, 1882. Other Officers CHARLES EDWARD HODGES, Resident Architect. CARLE A. PHILBROOK, Clerk to the Architect. M. J. LOVETT, Chief Engineer. JOHN J. LEWIN, Electrician. GEORGE ADDERSON, Overseer of Buildings. CHARLES F. MOORE, University Plumber. CHARLES C. WALLEY, University Carpenter. 28 JKanford ($uab 1902 Senior Class Officers First Semester President............................. Vice-President ..... Secretary ------ Treasurer................................ Sergeant-at-Anns .... Athletic Manager......................... Second Semester President................................... Vice-President - Secretary................................... Treasurer ...... Sergeant-at-Arms -Athletic Manager - Historian................................... A. B. Lemmon N. G. Symonds E. A. Strout F. D. Hamilton E. L. Brune C. M. Wardai.l W. M. Parkin W. K. Gray W. C. Morrow A. B. Lem mon-Eugene Warren j. Frank English M. C. Dkcarli Yell: IVhoopety ! Whoopcly ! Ha ! Ha ! Ha ! Naughty-one ! Naughty-one ! Rah! Rah! Rah! 3° Senior Class of 1901 Adams, Bristow, Washington, D. C., English Assistant Editor Sequoia (2); Associate Editor (1), (4); Editor-in-Chief (3); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (1) ; Associate Editor (2), (3); Managing Editor 14); Art Editor “ Quad,” Vol. VI (3); Editor-in-Chief Chaparral (4), (5); member Press Club (2), (3), (4), (5); Sec-retar)’-Treasurer (4). (5); Board of Directors Encina Club (3); Varsity Track Team (3); Class Track Team (4); Secretary Student Body (4); English Club (5); Secretary-Treasurer (5). Adams, Frank, San Francisco, Economics Alderman, Rupert Lewis, Santa Clara, Law Bacher, Bertha Rachel, San Jose, German Bailey, Forrest Cutter, San Jose, English Baird, Alvin W., Portland, Ore., Physiology Assistant in Physiology (4). Balcomb, J. B., Woodland Park, Colo., Civil Eng. Ballard, Jessie May, Seattle, Wash., History Treasurer Y. W. C. A. (2); Reception Committee Senior Ball (4). Barber, William Burton, Alameda, Geology Associated Engineers (3), (4). Barnard, Maryline E., Ventura, Physiology KAO; Freshman Glee Committee fl); Secretary Students’ Guild (3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Member Senior Prom Committee (4). Barneberg, Grace Elizabeth, San Luis Obispo, History ♦Barnhisel, Claire Grace, San Jose, History KAO. Barnwell, Susie Dale, Los Angeles, Romanic languages KAO. ♦Bassett, Lee Emerson, Salem, Wis., English Bennett, Frank Waite, Phoenix, Ariz., Law £ X; 2 2; ♦ A 4 ; Bench and Bar ; Varsity Track Team (1), (2); Chess Team (2); President Chess Club (4); Chairman Reception Committee Senior Ball (4). Bentley, James Andrew, Modesto, Physiology Member Athletic Committee (2); Class Football Team (2), (8), (4); Second Team (2), (3), (4); Class Baseball Team (1), (2), (3), (4); Captain Class Baseball Team (4); Treasurer Students’ Guild (4). JManforb (Juab 1902 3' Decree contorted January 1901. JKattforb $uab 1902 ♦Birdsall, Kathrine, Oakland, German Bourland, William Franklin, Petersburg, I. T., Law Bowman, Larrey MacFarlane, Delphi, hid., English Assistant Editor Sequoia (1); Associate Editor (2). (3); Associate Editor Chaparral (3), (4); Associate Editor Stanford “ Quad,” Vol. VII (3): Chairman Junior Farce Committee (3); Author of Prize Story, “ Quad,” Vol VI (2); Prize Football Sour (4); “ Plug Ugly ” (3); Prize Junior Farce (4): Chairman Senior Program Committee (4); Member of Senior Farce Committee (4); Member of Senior Week Committee (4); Press Club (2), (3), (4); Sword and Sandals (3), (4); President English Club (4). Bradley, Christopher Mason, Tacoma, IVash., English Editor-in-Chief Josh 12); Editor-in-Chief Chaparral (3); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (I); Associate Editor (2); Managing Editor (3); Assistant Editor Sequoia (2); Editor-in-Chief Stanford “Quad,” Vol. V (3); Joint Author with W. M. Erb, Junior Farce (3); Winner Cosmopolitan Essay Contest ; Press Club (2), (3), (4); Sword and Sandals (2), (3), (4); Assistant Football Manager (3); Farce Committee (4). Breen, Eugene, Hollister, Cal., Civil Engineering Associated Engineers (3), (4) ; Member Senior Plate Committee (4). Brick ell, Howard, San Francisco, Law «t K +. Brookie, Frank McCord, Vincennes, hid., Civil Engineering Brown, Joseph Grant, Stillman Valley, III., Physics Varsity Glee Club (2). (3), (4); University Band (1), (2), (3). (4); Member Senior Plate Committee (4). Brown, Leonard Harvey, Palo Alto, Law Brown, Ora I-ee, Seattle, Wash., History Reception Committee Senior Ball (4). Brune, Ernest Louis, San Francisco, I-aw 2 N, ♦ A +, 2 £ ; Bench and Bar Moot Court. Butterfield, Alice Olivia, Wit I cox, Ariz., History ♦Caldwell, Mary I-ucile, San Francisco, English ♦Campbell, William Pleasant, Covington, Tenn., I-at in Cantwell, Charles Abraham, Tulare, Cal., Law 4 a«l ; Bench and Bar Moot Court; Executive Committee Associated Students (2); Track Manager (3); Secretary (4); Varsity Track Team (2); Class President (3) ; Intercollegiate Athletic Committee (3), (4); Chairman Senior Week Committee (4); Member Finance Committee 4); Chairman Prom Committee (4) ; Assistant Encina Gymnasium (4). 3 • I Krcc conferred January, 1901. Card, Ernest Mason, Tacoma, Has ., Economics Hoard of Directors Encina Club (4); Nestorian Literary Society (1), (2). (3), (4). Carver, Laura Marion, Meadow Creek, Mont., German Castagnetto, George Allen, San Francisco, Physiology Cochran, George Thomas, Palo Alto, Law Assistant I-aw Library (3), (4). Coe, Harrison Streeter, Palo A lo, Geology Cole, Augusta Marie, Gilroy, I I istory ♦Coleman, Cynthia Edna, Dixon, I-a tin Coleman, Rolla Wood, Kansas City, Mo., Law Cone, Elizabeth Hiett, Salinas, English Saturday Night Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Secretary-Treasurer (3). ♦Conneau, Myrtie, Palo Alto, 11 istory Cooke, Some Lillian Santa Ana, Education Coulter, Annie Mabel, Salinas, English Cowdery, Alice May, San Francisco, English Cox, Alvin Joseph, San Jose, Chemistry Assistant in Assaying (3). Cranston, William McGregor, San Francisco, taw Philolcxian Literary Society (1). (2); Member Senior Prom Commit- tee (4). Crippen, John Herbert, Point Ij)tna, Law Member Euphronia Debating Society il), (2); Class Treasurer (1); Member University Hand (1), (2), (3), (4). Cross, Rol ert Patterson, Chicago, III., Law A T 0 U ; A ; Executive Committee Stanford Republican Club (4). Crow, Benjamin Stewart, San Jose, Law Philolcxian Literary Society (1), (2); Treasurer (2) Cummings, Frank J., Petrot ia, History Finals Intercollegiate Debate (2); Intersocietv Executive Committee (4); Nestoria Debating Society (1), (2), (3), (4); President (4). ♦ Daly, Kathryn Helen, San Francisco, History ♦Davis, Relxicca Louise, Sycamore, 11 istory Day, Homer Leland, San Francisco, Physiology JHcutforb $uab 1902 SJ •Degree conferred January, 1901. I JHaitforb Day, William Clarence, Santa Barbara, Economics (Juab ♦ s o. 1902 Decarli, Milo Charles, Wadding ton, Law Member Nestoria Debating Society (1), (2), (3). (4): Secretary-Treasurer (2); Member Intersociety Debating Committee (2), (3), (4); Secretary (4); Class Historian (4). Dellinger, Edna Leland, New Whatcom, I Fash., History Diviny, Thomas Matthew, Sacramento, I-aw f A l . Dorset, Helen, La Crosse, IFis., Latin r i b. Drake, Frederick Henry, Portland, Ore., Law Xt; Manager Varsity Glee Club (2). (3): Member Varsity Glee Club (1). (2), (3). (4): Mandolin Club (2 . (3): Banjo Club (2); Sword and Sandals (2), (3), (4); President (4); Class Secretary (2); Plug Ugly” (3). Dryer, Katherine, Santa Ana, German Girls’ Mandolin Club (3), (4). Edwards, Harry James, San Diego, History 2 P H; Class Baseball Team(l), (2). (3), (4); Captain (2); Manager (3); Varsity Baseball Team (2), (3). (4); Captain (4); Member Athletic Committee (4); Senior Ball Committee (4). English, John Francis, Jr., San Francisco, I aw Member Philolexian Literary Society (1), (2). (3), (4): Member Class Debating Team (2); Member Carnot Debating Team (3), (4); Alternate Intercollegiate Debating Team (3); Member Executive Debating Committee (3), (4); President (4); Executive Committee Associated Students. (3); Director Encina Club (2); Senior Ball Committee (4). Erb, William Maurice, Chemainus, B. C., Economics Varsity Football Team (3), (4); Captain Second Eleven (1), (2); Class Football Team (I); Track Team (1); President Encina Club (3); Sword and Sandals (2). (3). (4); Press Club (2). (3). (4); President (4); Joint Author with C. M. Bradley. 11H)1 Junior Farce (3); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (21, (3), (4); Associate Editor Sequoia (2); Senior Week Committee (4 ); Chairman Farce Committee (4). Evans, Genevieve V., San Jose, Latin Girls’ Mandolin Club (3), (4). Everett, Laura B., Sutler, English Member Saturday Night Club (1), (2). (3). (4); Member Intersociety Debating League (3), (4); Member Editorial Board of Woman’s Edition Daily Palo Alto {1); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (1), (2), (3); Associate Editor Sequoia (2), (3); Editor-in-Chief (4); Senior Plate Committee (4); Ivy Committee (4). 1 I J I 4 1 ) I Degree conferred January 1901. 34 ♦Ferguson, Louis Bangs, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Physiology Ferrari, Louis, San Francisco, I-aw Nestorian Literary Society (1), (2). (3), (4); Secretary-Treasurer (3); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (4). Fisher, Walter Kenrick, Washington, D. C., Zoology Member Zoology Club (1), (2), (3), (4); President Zoology Club (3); Special Field Naturalist U. S. Biological Survey (1), (2), (3), (4). ♦ Flint, E. Royal, Palo Alto, Latin Foster, Hugh Gwyn, Coronado Reach, Law £ X ; 4 A 4 ; £ £; Bench and Bar Moot Court; Euphronia Debating Society (2), (3), (4); Publications Committee (3), (4); Associate Editor Stanford “Quad,” Vol. VII (3); Member Senior Prom Com- mittee (4). France, Lucy Mabel, Oakland, Latin A 4 ; Member Senior Prom Committee (4), Free, Arthur Monroe, Mountain View, Law Finals Intercollegiate Debate (4). Friedman, Henry Albert, San Francisco, Economics Assistant Editor Daily Palo AUo (2); Member Leland Debating Society (2); Business Manager Stanford ••Quad, Vol. VII (3). Fry, H. Ray, San Jose, Law Society of Stanford Volunteers (3), (4). Gillespie, Claude Bailey, San Jose, Law K £; 4 A t ; Philolcxian Literary Society (2), (3), (4); President (4); Vice-President Junior Day Committee (2). Gilman, Charles Edward, Oakland, Geology A T; £ £; Snake and Key ; Geological Society : Class Football Team (2), (3); Substitute Varsity Football Team (2); Varsity Football Team (3); Manager of Varsity Track Team (4); Athletic Committee (4); Varsity Glee Club (2), (3), (4); Geology Club (1), (2); Chairman of Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2); Senior Prom Committee (4); Associated Engineers (3). (4). Gilman, Philip Kingsnorth, Palo Alto, Physiology A T; £ £; Snake and Key; Sword and Sandals (2), (3), (4); Freshman Glee Committee (1) ; Chairman Junior Prom Committee (3); Chairman Senior Ball Committee (4); Executive Committee Student Body (2) ; Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Leader (4); Treasurer Student Guild (3) ; President (4); laboratory Assistant (4). Goodwin, Lucia, Aurora, III., Education Gray, Eunice Thompson, Luverne, Minn., English r ♦ it. JKanford $uab 1902 35 Degree conferred January, 1901. JHanforb (§uab 1902 Gray, Ida, Suisutt, Education Gray, Walter Kempster, X t; Executive Committee Class (4). Milwaukee, ll'is., Republican Club (4); H istory Vice-President Grigsby, Lillian Hardman, Tulare, English Haelil, Harry Lewis, A V; Geology Club (3). (4) ; San 'randsco. Geology and Mining Associated Engineers (1). (-). (’ )• (■ )• Hall, Laura, San Hi ego. 11 istory Hamilton, Addie Louise, Hollister, I-atin I larris, May, San Francisco, History Harris, Rosalie, San Francisco, English Harter, Lloyd Elliott, President V. M. C. A. (3). i Literary Society (2), (3), (4). San Jose, Economics 4); Plate Committee (4); Philolexian Haskell, Jessie Judson, Bradford, Ten a., A «►; Freshman Glee Committee (1); Junior Farce (3): Hellenic (4). History President Pan- Heller, Edmund, Riverside, Zoology Club (1), (2), (3). (4).. Zoology Herzinger, Leo Agnes, Ouray, Colo., English Hicks, Alden Rhodes, Scottirilie. III., I-aw Hobson, Edna Mary, K K r. Fast land. English ♦Hogue, Clara Elizabeth, K A 0. Santa Tania, Physiology Hogue, Helen May, Albany, Ore., German Holbrook, Charles Ed., AT A. Ottawa, Iowa, Law Holley, Harry Hall, Ta o Alto, Geology Holmes, Helen Lathrop, Tacoma, Mask., English A O; Associate Editor Stanford “Quad, Vol. VI (3); Freshman C lee Committee (I); Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2); Junior Farce Committee (3) ; Senior Farce Committee (4). Holmes, John Elmer, Tacoma, H as ., Geology £ I ll ; Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2); “ Plug Ugly” (3). Decree conferred January, 1901. Hopper, Florence, I.os Angeles, Latin Hoover, Theodore Jesse, Palo Alto, Geology Geology Society (3), (4); Associated Engineers (3), (4); President Training House Corporation (3), (4); Executive Committee Associated Students (3); Chairman Finance Committee (4); Member Senior Week Committee (4). Hudson, William George, 11 atsonvilie. I Hyde, James Macdonald, Palo Alto, Geology Associated Engineers (3), (4); Society (4). Assistant in Assaying (3); Geology Hyde, Mary Elizabeth, Palo Alto, History lbs, Matilda, San Diego, English Jackson, Byron Nicholson, U'ilkesbarre, Pa., Geology Associated Engineers (3), (4). Kalloch, Belle, San Francisco, English Member Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2); Member Senior Prom Committee (4). Keller, Clara Drusilla, San Bernardino, German Kidder, Marie Margaret, Pasadena, History King, Mabel Lyda, San Luis Obispo, Rom. languages Koontz, James Alva, Palo Alto, English Kuechlcr, Henry Norbury, Jacksonville, III., Civil Engineering . +; Member Reception Committee Senior Ball (4); Associated Engineers (3), (4). Langnecker, Harry Leslie, New Brighton, Pa., Physiology A T; £ 1; Editor-in-Chief Stanford ••Quad,” Yol. VII (3); Vice-President Y. M. C. A. (2); President Y. M. C. A. (3); Member Press Club (3), (4); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (1), (2). Lemmon, Allen Bosley, Santa Posa, Mining Engineering Assistant Editor Daily Plato Alto (1), (2); Managing Editor (4); Editor-in-Chief (4); Vice-President Class (I); Secretary (3); President (4); Treasurer (4); Associate Editor Stanford “ Quad,” Vol. VII (3); Finance Committee (4) ; Geology Society (3), (4); Associated Engineers (3), (4). Lockey, Mary Ishbel, Helena, Mont., English A ■ ; Member junior Prom Committee (3). Lockey, Richard, Jr., Helena, Mont., Law B 6 II ; 2 2; !■ A ♦; Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2); Associate Editor (3); Second Vice-President Stanford Republican Club (4). Jlfoitforb §uab 1902 57 Degree conferred J a unary, 1901. jttanforh £u ah 1902 Lynn, Ella Utley, McCrea, Samuel Pressly, McFadden, Elizabeth, Cambria, English Mayfield, History Ana, Physiology Manager Women’s Athletics (4); Saturday Night Club (1) (-). (3), (4). Mabrey, Eli Nelson, Palo Alto, Law Maples, Edward Thompson, Bakersfield, Economics 4‘AO; Class Football Team (1), (2); “Plug Ugly (3); Member Euphronia Literary Society (1), (2), (3), (4). Marrack, Cecil Mortimer, San Francisco, English Member Euphronia Debating Society (2), (3), (4); Vice-President (8); President Student Body (4); Intercollegiate Debating Team (3), (4); ganza (2); Junior Farce (3); “ Plug Ugly” (3). Marx, Joseph, Cleveland, Ohio, Chemistry Associated Engineers (3), (4). ’•'Mathews, Julia, Ijjs Angeles, English Matthews, Helen L., Salem, Ore., History Member Saturday Night Club (2), (3), (4); Vice-President (3); President (4). Meredith, Mary California, Senior Ivy Committee (4). San Luis Obispo, Latin Merritt, Albert Newton, Alternate Carnot Team (4). Del Key, III., Latin ♦Merritt, Mary Elizabeth, k k r. Woodland, Romanic languages Merritt, Rowena, K K r; Senior Prom Committee Woodland, (4). German ♦Meyer, Catherine Bertha, San la Posa, German Mills, Helen Hall, Menlo Park, Zoology Mills, Louis David, Menlo Park, Geology Mitchel, Edgar Lillian, Fcrndale, Education Nestorian Literary Society (2), (3). (4). Mitchell, Paul Lamar, Harrison Sla., Miss., English Moeller, Albert Lucien, San Francisco, Chemistry Monteith, Andrew Ector, San Francisco, History 3 'Decree conferred January, 1901. Montgomery, De Witt, Placentia, English JKcmforfc Nestorian Literary Society (2), (8), (4). (Quab ♦Moore, Jessie Archibald, Los Angeles, Chemistry 1902 Member Girls’ Glee Club (2), (3), (4); President (8), (4); Member Senior Farce Committee (4). Mordecai, George Washington, Jr., Madera, Law Morris, William Alfred, Salem, Ore., History Vice-President V. M. C. A. (2); Member Sophomore Debating Team (2); Member Euphronia (3), (4); Secretary (3); President (4 ; Vice-President Student body (4); Secretary Students' Guild (4); Member Carnot Debating Team (4); Winner of Carnot Medal (4); Member Class Ivy Committee (4). Morrison, Sam Graham, Sharon, Pa., History Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (1), (2); Assistant Editor Sequoia (2); Stanford Girls' Glee, (2), (3); Treasurer and Business Manager of Girls’ Glee (3); Associate Editor Quad,” Vol. VII (3); Member Junior Farce Committee (3); Member Senior Prom Committee (4). Morrow, William Carr, Portland, Ore., History X+; 21; Senior Society; President Alpha Debating Society (2); Sword and Sandals (3), (4); Society of Stanford Volunteers (3), (4); Class Secretary (4); Intercollegiate Debating Team (4). Murgotten, Francis Clark, San Jose, Classical Philology Nicolas, Virginia Noelie, Fullerton, Romanic languages Nutter, Edward Hoit, Mayfield, Geology Member Geology Club (1), (2), (3). (4); Member Associated Engineers (1) , (2), (3), (4); Class Football Team (3). (4); Junior Farce Committee (3); Second Team (4); Chairman Plate Committee (4); Senior Week Committee (4). O'Farrel, Edith, San Diego, English Cap and Gown Committee (4); Senior Prom Committee (4). Olshausen, Bruno Adolph, Los Angeles, Chemistry Mandolin Club (3), (4); Soloist (3), (4); University Orchestra (2). (3), (4); Member Senior Prom Committee (4); Geology Club (4); Associated Engineers (3), (4); Board of Directors Encina Club (4). Osborne, Lucy Ellery, Watsonville, English Page, Clarence Winslow, Berkeley, Physiology K 2. Parkin, William Metcalf, Pittsburg, Penn., Geology 2 A K; Geology Society; Manager Class Track Team (1); Manager Class Football Team (4); Class Baseball Team (2), (3), (4); Class Football Team (2). (3), (4); Mandolin Club (2). (3). (4); Glee Club (2) , (3), (4); Manager Mandolin Club (2), (3), (4); Manager Musical Clubs (4): Member Athletic Committee (4); Associate Editor Stanford Quad,” Vol. VII (3); Class President (4); Junior Prom Committee (3) ; Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2). 39 Degree conferred January, 1901. I JKcmforb (Juab 1902 ♦Passmore, Irvin, (itampion. Pa., Classical Philology ♦Patterson, Frances Doremus, Past Orange, N. History K A o. ♦Patterson, Letitia, East Orange, N. J., English K A O. ♦Phelps, Mary Mabel, San Jose, English Pitcher, Yrene, San Francisco, Mathematics Basket-ball Team(l), (2), (3), (4). Pollock, Adelaide Lowry, Stockton, Physiology Saturday Night Club (I), (2). (3). (4); Secretary-Treasurer (3). ♦Ramsay, Georgiana Crawford, Palo Alto, History Rea, Ernest Lloyd, San Jose, Classical Philology Reidy, Francis James, San Jose, Chemistry Richards, Charles Lenmore, Austin, Nev., Law Philolexian Literary Society (1), (2), (3), (4). Riddell, Charles Francis, Coronado Peach, Economics Euphronia Literary Society (1). (2), (3), (4); Assistant Editor Daily Palo A!to (1), (2); Associate Editor i3); Finals Intercollegiate IX - bate (3). ♦Rider, Ella Moore, Naga, Latin Ripley, Lila Irene, San Jose, English Cap and Gown Committee (4). Roth, Emma Katherine, Pasadena, German Rounds, Ida May, Alameda, History Rowell, Gertrude, Easton, Education Rush, Frederick Winn, Suisun, Geology Society of Stanford Volunteers (3), (4); Associated Engineers (3), (4). ♦Russ, Edythc Josephine, Ferndalc, English ♦Schofield, Blanche Adele, Mitchell, S. D., German Shaw, Bertha Mary, San Francisco, Romanic languages Reception Committee Senior Ball (4); Senior Plate Committee (4). Snell, Joel N., Palo Alto, Latin Sobey, Gifford Lyne, San Francisco, Physiology Class Council (I). (2), (3); Intercollegiate Chess Team (2); Junior Prom Committee (3); President Encina Club (4): Executive Committee (4); Gym Club (4); Secretary-Treasurer Chess Club (4); Junior Prom Committee (3); “Plug Ugly” (3); Senior Ball Committee (4). I 40 Degree Confer(c«l January. 1901. Stanford, Mildred, Olympia, Wash., English Prize Story l!H)l Annual (3); Assistant Editor Sequoia (3); Associate Editor Sequoia (4 ; Associate Editor Stanford “Quad,” Vol. VII (3); Member Stanford Girls’ Glee (3), (4); Secretary (4); Member Cap and Gown Committee (4); Member Ivy Committee (4). Stevens, Maud, Oroville, History Stewart, Arthur Bonbright, Heaver Falls, Pa., Law A K ; Class Track Team (1), (2), (3). (4); Varsity Track Team (1), (2) , (3), (4); Captain (4); Member Athletic Committee (3), (4); Senior Ball Committee (4); Vice-President Class (2). Strout, Ernest Allen, Sebaslopol, Geology Member of Varsity Track Team (1), (2). (3), (4); Membei of Class Football Team (3), (4); Secretary of Class (4); Geology Society (3), (4); Reception Committee Senior Ball (4). Susman, Leo Henry, San Francisco, Law Swindells, Charles Jay, Tacoma, Wash., I-aw 4' A 1 ; Varsity Baseball Team (1), (2). Symonds, Nathaniel Gardner, Los Gatos, Electrical Engineering K £ ; Class Football Team (3), (4); Class Baseball Team (2), (3), (4); Class Track Team (1), (2), (3), (4) ; Varsity Track Team (2), (3); Varsity Baseball Team (3), (4); Philolexian Literary Society (1), (2), (3) , (4); Secretary (2); Class President (3); Vice-President (4); Athletic Committee (4); Program Committee (4). Taber, Clara Mabel, Elko, Alev., Saturday Night Club (1), (2); Secretary Y. W. C. A. (3). Mathematics Taylor, Florence M., Steubenville, Ohio, I atin Thompson, Frank Ernest, Nestoria Debating Society (1), Palo Alto, , (2). (3), (4). Education Thompson, Ray Walter, Glee Club (3), (4). Tacoma, Wash., Economics ♦Thoms, Clifford Carlton, Associated Engineers (3), (4). Rialto, Geology Tipton, Will S., Phoenix, Ariz., History ♦Townsend, Vera, Palo Alto, Assistant in Roble Gymnasium (3), (4). Latin Turner, Bessie Kathleen, Paso Robles, Latin Uri, Sol, San Francisco, Chemistry ♦Vinyard, Helen Plato, Los Angeles, Physiology KAO. 4i JKoitforb £uab 1902 Degree conferred January, 1901. JKaitforb $uab 1902 Wagner, Juliet Antoinette, San Francisco, Latin Walker, Abraham Lincoln, Eureka, Education ♦Walter, Herbert David, San Francisco, English Warren, Eugene, Silver City, N. M., Law XX; I I; ♦ i ; Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2 ); “ Plug Ugly ” (3); Varsity Baseball Manager (4); Class Treasurer (3): Member Senior Farce Committee (4). Weh, Edna, Plymouth, Ohio, English Weir, Maliel McQueen. - Boone, Iowa, Classical Philology Girls’ Mandolin Club (3), (4); Secretary Y. W. C. A. (3). ♦Welges, Eleanor Kathrine, Wells, George Summers, Wheeler, Richmond, Whittier, Wilmot Edgar, Y. Woodland. Classical Philology San Jose, Chemistry Albany, Ore., Chemistry Riverside, Mathematics ♦Wigle, Ruby Beatrice, Palo Alto, German Wilson, Joseph Elmer, San Francisco, English Assistant Editor Sequoia (1), (2); Associate Editor (3), (4); Associate Editor Alumnus (3), (4); Associate Editor Stanford ••Quad.” Vol. VII (3); Plug Ugly” (3); Member of Euphronia Literary Society (I), (2), (3), (4); Member Ivy Committee (4); English Club (4). ♦Wilson, Lida, Vallejo, History Wilson, Samuel Mountford, San Francisco, Law X +; Class Football Team (2), (3), (4). Wood, Elsie Maude, Palo Alto, History Wood, Walton Jones, Merced, Law Secretary Stanford Republican Club (4). Wooten, Joseph Bivens, Linden, Education ♦Yoch, Josephine Rose, Santa Ana, Classical Philology Zucker, Emmabelle Hudson, Oakland, English Member Senior Farce Committee (4). 4 JKcmforb §uab 1902 Junior Class Officers First Semester C. I). Scott - W. R. Hamilton C. E. Waitf. - E. N. Chadbourxe F. H. Bancroft - (j, G. Gage R. H. Black (H. H. Adams Second Semester President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Executive Committee A. E. Cooley - K. F. Cooper G. G. Gage - A. J. Copp C. C. Seeley (R. S. Fisher ' 1C. W. Sell President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Athletic Manager Executive Committee Yell: Hickcty! Hickety ! Walt! Hoof Wahl Naughty-two ! Naughty-two ! Rah Rah Rah! « 44 JKanforb §uab 1902 Naughty-two entered college in the Fall of the terrible slump. The profane may point to this coincidence as a working of the law of cause and effect. Hut we modest ones claim no such connection with that momentous epoch in Stanford history. Coining in, as we did, synchronously with the slump, we could certainly not be considered its effect, and far be it from us to attribute to a Freshman class, even a F'reshman class which brought with it Newberg and Teddy Berwick, the power to cause such a cataclysm as the slump of ’99, or, indeed, anything at all except a few very poor Sophomoric jokes. Naughty-two squeezed very unobtrusively into Stanford, with a feeling of insignificance, which rendered quite superfluous, not to say redundant, the perennial editorial suggestions to Freshmen on keeping their proper place. That is not to say that the moulders of public opinion withheld their advice just because it was not needed ; for columns have to be filled, and the editorial barrel would never last through if its contents had all to pass the test of appropriateness. VVe entered, then, reverently and with awe, humbly desiring to merge ourselves into the life of the undergraduate world, to make as little 45 Jfrfanforb $uab 1902 trouble as possible, and, by persistent emulation of great '01, not to raise presuming eyes higher ; to grow into worthy wearers of the Cardinal — perhaps even with an S negligently spread across our backs. So we struck the campus as things were beginning to slump. What was there for ’°2 to do? U 't had been bold ’01 that entered that Fall, or dauntless Naughty-three, marshalled by Wisehart and the terrrible Ackerman, no doubt the Freshmen would have stepped into the breach and done things to — well, would have done things, anyhow. Not so ‘02. No such presumptuous imaginings swelled the heads of those right-minded Freshmen. Loyalty, to them, meant not to parade themselves with blare of trumpets and flaunt their petty victories through the dark days of college mourning. The Alma Mater was suffering, let the Freshmen get in and suffer with her. deeply, unobtrusively. Let them weep with her weeping and slump with her slumping. Let them forego the delights of conquest and of booty. Let them curb their strength and subdue their warlike spirits. Let them bow submissive to the yoke of the victor, and taste the bitterness of defeat. And, so, through all that dreary year the Freshmen sat in the ashes of humiliation, and bore the ceaseless prodding of student-body contempt. They denied themselves the honors of class office and the revelry of class 46 JKonforb §uab 1902 meetings. They offered themselves ;is ripe fruit for the picking to prep schools and scrub teams. They continently refrained from going out to football practice. With heroism most sublime they submitted themselves to be chased by the Berkeley Freshmen up and down the Sixteenth Street field till the score stood 21 to 0. In class contests they forebore to use their strength and prowess. In debate they let themselves be beaten even by the Sophomores. So went our Freshman year. And to the vulgar eye our self-immolation seemed but lack of class spirit. It were unnecessary dwelling on a sorrowful theme, to recount the distressing times of our Sophomore year : how the Cardinal struggled to rise from the terrible slump, but fell again and again, dragging Stanford hearts through the black depths of misery. Once more was Naughty-two called on to mourn and triumph not. Once more was the unseemly pride of class put off and the garb of humility donned. We gave our men to fight for the Cardinal, but for the honor of the class we lifted not hand or voice. And so we came to be known as the winners of the biggest string of booby prizes ever drawn down at Stanford. 47 kfftiiforb §uob 1902 In the Fall of 1900 we came back to college in all the dignity of upper-classmen. The Cardinal was in the ascendant. Stanford rooters had found their voices ; Stanford backers were looking toward prosperity ; Stanford hearts were beating high with hope. The days of mourning were at an end. Now might the loyal sons of Naughty-two go forth to battle in her name and raise their voices in her war songs. Hut think not, reader, to find here the shameless bragging of triumphs and of conquests which has filled the pages of so many class chronicles. Is an autobiography, forsooth, the place for boasting ? Is it becoming in one to portray himself laurel-crowned and laden with the palms ol victory ? Let modest Naughty-two forbear to follow the example of those who have unblushingly spread to the public gaze their lengthy pages of “we won’s” and “ we done’s,” claiming no glory for whatever it may have wrought in these latter days of emancipation, and leaving the recognition of its supremacy to such time as future poets and historians shall take up the theme, or Naughty-twos shall wander back as “Old Grads, to dazzle the degenerate moderns with the splendors of reminiscence. May Hurlburt. 48 fhUtl I) t’.inUln Herbert H. Admit Ann B. Aihenfelter Robert H. Bacon Elizabeth H. Bailey Frederic W. Bancroft Annie Barrett Walter C. Beagle Florence F. Billing Roy H. Black John K. Bunnell Frank H. Boren Marie Borough Alex. S. Boulware Cora May Bradford F. Fottcr Bradley . H. Bragg, Jr. Phttn i; t'ranllln Frederick A. Brown Richard Bryan Victor A. Caglieri Henry A. Campbell E. M. Chadbourne Harnett A. Cleary Harmon S. Coe J. B. Cohn Alice M. Cole Jamea S. Cone Lucy (). Connell Josie L. Cook Arthur E. Cooley Kenneth F. Cooper A. J Copp, Jr. Lucy A. Corker I JHanforb §uab 1902 Wagner, Juliet Antoinette, Walker, Abraham Lincoln, ♦Walter, Herbert David, Warren. Eugene, San Francisco, Eureka, San Francisco, Latin Education English Law Silver City, N. M., « N ; - i'; ♦ A ♦; Sophomore Cotillion Committee ( 2 ); “ Plug Ugly ” (3); Varsity Baseball Manager (4); Class Treasurer (3); Member Senior Farce Committee (4). Weh, Edna, Plymouth, Ohio, English Weir, Mabel McQueen, Boone, Iowa, Classical Philology Girls’ Mandolin Club (3), (4); Secretary Y. W. C. A. (3). ♦Wclgcs, Eleanor Kathrine, Wells, George Summers, Wheeler, Richmond, Whittier, Wilmot Edgar, T. ♦Wigle, Ruby Beatrice, Wilson, Joseph Elmer, Woodland. San Jose, Albany, Ore., Riverside, Palo Alto, Classical Philology Chemistry Chemistry Mathematics German San Francisco, English Assistant Editor Sequoia (1). (2); Associate Editor (3), (4); Associate Editor Alumnus (3). (4); Associate Editor Stanford ‘•Quad.” Vol. VII (3); “Plug Ugly” (3); Member of Euphronia Literary Society (I), (2), (3), (4): Member Ivy Committee (4); English Club (4). ♦Wilson, Lida, Vallejo, Wilson, Samuel Mountford, San Francisco, X +; Class Football Team (2), (3), (4). Wood, Elsie Maude, Palo Alto, Wood, Walton Jones, Merced, Secretary Stanford Republican Club (4). Wooten, Joseph Bivens, IJnden, ♦Yoch, Josephine Rose, Santa Ana, Zucker, Emmabelle Hudson, Oakland, Member Senior Farce Committee (4). History Law History Law Education Classical Philology English 4 I Ph t i I) FrjaUla David V. Cowden Thoreau Cronyn Delos D. Dsvii Ethel A. Dodge George W. Dryer Chav de Young Elku R. D. Emerson Ralph W. Everett Maud M. Kay Amy P. Ferguson Reginald G. Fernald Helen E. Fickes Frances Fickes Ralph S. Usher David M. Folsom Ralph D. Frisselle Pktln ky franklin George G. Gage Kathryne E. Garibaldi Cora E. Gamer L. Maude Garner Arthur D. Geiuler J. Burt Gildcnlceve Maryland E. Gill Elmon Hall Ralph A. Hamilton W. R. Hamilton Alice L. Hammenon Helen N. Henry Florence Hey wood Mary A. Hodge William A. Holt Dcllc Howard I • . I 1 rhttti ky Edward H. Hurlbut Frank Carr Annie R. King May Hurlburt Charles M. Kellogg Jesaic Knepper |ohn E. Johnson Charles E. Kenney Earl H. Knepper Herbert C. Jonc Sherman Kimball Kisatsuchi Koda Grace O. Kummcr Blanche Kummcr George R. Lawrence Frank A. Leib Fhtlti i; h'rjnHin Andrd E. Lee l.eon L. Loofbourow Charlotte M. Lord Vivian B. Lo e Vincent 1). Louvley Harry C. Lucas Laura N. Mabury M. F. McCormick Louise McDougald Mary E. McDougald Percy McDowell Roy P. McLaughlin Ethel C. McLellan fames L. McWcthy Mary V. Martin Ellen Matthews Ptuhl hf hrjnihn Cyrus L. Merriam Guy C. Miller Joseph Minni, Jr. J. Perce Mitchell Ada B. Morse Mervyn J. Ncwbcrg William J. Patterson Louise A. Mourot Grace Nims Alice I. Patton Kleanor C. Mugler B. P. Oak ford Elizabeth A. Peckham Frederick E. Naftzger E. A. Palmer Raymond L. Pleak . I Phtlti if PrjnUm Elbert K. PotteT Nel n C. Powers Aida E. Rademaker VI. Ellen Kawdon Kelley Ree Roy V. Reppy Ethel Rhode Edward W. Rice Imia G. Richards Charlotte A. Rixon Earl C. Robinson Loui H. Rose berry Edna E. Rowell Charles G. Sakuma Joe A. Schaefer Imogcne A. Schanck ’ ! • I 4 t'rjntll)I Sophie E. Schocnhcit Roy E. Schulz Carroll l)e W. Scott Carrol C. Seeley Charle W. Sell Alfred B. Sill Paul L. Smith William A. Smith Henry W. Stager Charles T. Stephens Roger J. Sterrett Leo I. Sussman Cora E. Taber Marion D. Taylor Asahel C. Toll M. Louise Toll PhtIH FrJitHlit Harold Trader Maude L. Tynan T. L. Vandeventer Fletcher B. Wagner Charles E. Waite K. (trace Ward Hazel H. Wcbater Eva M. Wheeler Charles A. Whitmore Keith E. Wigle E. H. Williams Jessica A. Wilson Claude Winan (uliane A. Woltcra |ohn y. Young Herbert L. YoungeT ' JHanforb (Quab 1902 Program Thursday Evening Junior Farce Friday Morning.........................................Interclass Field Day Won by Freshmen Afternoon .... Baseball, Varsity vs. Santa Clara Won by Varsity 69 Evening - Junior From JHcmforb Quab 1902 Junior Prom Committee Miss Wheelf.r Miss Fay R. V. Reppy R. S. Fisher C. F. Waite W. R. Hamilton- Frank A. Leib, Chairman Junior Farce—Class of ’02 Thursday, March 28, 1901 At S p. m. Driven Back to Egypt or, The Riddle of the Sphinx Written and Maged by LARREY BOWMAN AND BRISTOW ADAMS Farce Committee Mm Hkywood, Mm Barrktt, |. K. Bonnrll, A. J. Core M. F. McCormick, Chairman Cast of Characters ProfcMor Krckicl Palmer, Professor of Egyptology - - - • • - C. M. Bradley Professor H. A. Gormley - - - - - - - - - - E. Warcen Harry Allen, a Jolly Junior, sometime Ramcse - - - - - J. K. Bonnell Fred Blecker, Alien’ Chum - - - - - - - - - • A. C. Ryon Philip Searsville Ames, Prc idcnt of the Santa Kovi Female Seminary ... F. A. Ford Percy Stanley-Alien, an Englishman, Uncle of Harry Allen - - - • R. W. Thompson Ramese White, a Black .......... Bristow Adams Tim Geoghegan, Dime Museum Manager - • - - - - • - F. K. Nangle Franklin, Photographer - - - - - - . - - - L. H. Roscbcrry Matsumoto, a Japanese Servant - ....... Gifford Sobey Mr . Ames, wife of Mr. Ames - Miss M. M. Kidder Clara Palmer, Daughter of the Professor ....... Miss Claire Soule Vivian Armstrong, a Prep-school Miss ....... Miss Bertha Shaw Elaine Young, Ditto, and Sub-Freshman ...... Miss Emnubcllc Zuckcr Museum Assistants, Japs, Kidnapers Synopsis of Scenes ACT I — Room in the Museum. ACT II, Scr.Nr. 1 — Reception in Professor Palmer’s Home, ten days later. Scr.Nr 2 — The same, on the same evening. A err III —The (Quadrangle, five day after. 70 JKauforb §uab 1907 Junior Plug Ugly Cast PALE FACE (“ A moon-eyed, pink-eyed, lump of candle grease ’ ) - - L. H. Roscberry LEADER OF WAR PARTY ( Chief Many-Irons-in-thc-Fire ) - - M. F. McCormick (Chief Big-Poli-Titian ------ Funk Karr Chief Bad-Medicine-Man - - - - - G. R. Lawrence Old Indian Around . Chief Devilish-Daffodil.................................Percy McDowell Camp-fire Chief GIum-a -a-CIam ----- C. DeW. Scott | Chief Steam-Beer-Gauge - - - - - G. G. Gage Chief Amoeba-Cell - -- -- -- C. W. Sell Indian-Who-Want -To-Ride - ... W. A. Smith Bold-Brawny-Biceps-Breakcr-Of-Brains ----- - • F. H. Boren ( Bewildering-Bi-binocular - - - - - F. F. Bradley Scouts and Runner I Foxy-Four-Eye - - - - - - C. A. Whitmore Brave-Who-Want -To-Talk.........................................................R. D. Friaellc Passionate Pocahontas, Pride of Pitner - - - - - - - R.A. Hamilton Braves of the Tribe of N'aw Teetoo - Junior Classmen Heinous Hoodoos Bounding Bulb of Brown. Peculiar, Pedantic, Pedagogical, Piperiverous, Peripatetic, Pedal-Propeller. Puzzling, Pancreatic, Pig-skin Pellet, a Popular Pastime for Pugnacious People. Permanent, Perpendicular, Pestivcrous, Poly-angular, Petrified, Unpopular, Poplar Post From the Palo Alto Path. Accidents and Accessories Author and Manager - - - - - - - - - -F. B. Wagner War Paint and Feathers............................................Red Paste and Turkey Tails Camp Fire and Red Lights.....................................Ex-board Walk and Powder Distinctive Mark of Juniordont .... The Plug and Brui es After the Ugly Yell — class and otherwise..............................From the Bazoo of Naughty-two Roasts Pale Face and Chaparral Knockers ...... Senior and Some Obstreperous Under-classnven Applause ........ The Awe-struck and Admiring Audience 7 “' “«•‘A ‘i •‘•Hd Cotillion Committee Miss S. F. Bird Miss M. K. Gilman L. C. Hawley M. H. Evans W. F. Whitaker W. B. Barnhisel Paul P. Parker, Chairman Glee Committee Miss Sara R. Park Miss I.otta Waldo Freeman Ford Claude Blodget G. W. Bernhard Seymour T. Montgomery, Chairman 74 JKanford §uab 1902 Sophomore Class Officers President -Vice-President Secretary -Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms First Semester R. L. Brooke F. R. Hart Miss H. II. Ely Norman Dole W. W. Copp President Vice-President -Secretary Treasurer -Sergeant-at-Arms -Athletic Manager Second Semester C. Naramore Paul Parker C. H. Joiner B. E. Nourse R. L. Brooke Claude Pollard Yell: Rickedy! Rackedy ! Zip Boom Bah ! Naughty-three! Naughty-three ! Rah! Rah! Rah! 76 Officers President Vice-President Secretary -Treasurer Sergeant -at - A rms President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer -Sergeant-at-Arms Athletic Manager First Semester Frank Roemu - Miss J. L. Bean V. A. Crossman - F. S. Hoi.man R. J. McFadden Second Semester - William C. Wood Miss Bertha Bootes - H. M. Lewis Claude Blodget - Whipple S. Hall A. S. Henley Yell: Naught Four ! We Roar ! We Roar ! Naught Four ! Stanford ! For Its always fair weather When good fellows get together With the stein on the table And the good song ringing clear. JManforb Zeta Psi 1902 Mu Chapter, Established October 5, 1891 Frater in Facilitate John Maxson Stii.i.man, Pii. D. Fratres in Universitate 1900 Chester Griffin Murpiiy . 1901 Hbnrv Nor iiury Kuechler Samuel Percy Llewellyn Hardy '9°3 1902 Frf.d Earle Naftzgkr George Guilford Gage Franklin Ai.lkn I.eiii Carrol Carrenter Seeley Walter Benedict Barniiisel Roy Chilton Leih Horace Clarence Hubbard Hubert Harry Hall Harry Hunt Atkinson Ralph Edward Ken mid 1904 Robert Nvm Park Whipple Spear Hall Edgar Augustine Luce Sevmoure Thomas Montgomery Paul Rockey Cleveland Hai.i. Baker George Vance Lawrv Clarence Tryon Manwaring 80 Phttt if FrsnUhi Zeta Psi Founded at University of New York, 1846 Chapter Roll Pm -Zkta Delta Sigma -Chi -Epsilon Kappa Tav - U PSI I.ON -Xi Lambda Beta Psi -Iota Theta Xi -Alpha -Alpha Psi Nt: Eta - Mu Alpha Beta University of New York Williams College Rutgers College University of Pennsylvania Colby University Brown University Tufts College I-afayette College University of North Carolina University of Michigan Bowdoin College University of Virginia Cornell University University of California University of Toronto Columbia College McGill University Case School of Applied Sciences Yale University Iceland Stanford Junior University University of Minnesota Alumni Associations Northwestern Association op Zeta Psi -Capital City Association of Zeta Psi - Zeta Psi Association...................... Zeta Psi Club........................... Metropolitan Chapter of Zeta Psi New England Association of Zeta Psi -Pacific Association of Zeta Psi - Color : White Chicago, III. Washington, D. C. Cleveland, Ohio New York City Philadelphia, Pa. Boston. Mass. San Francisco, Cal ) ’ell: Rah ! Rah ! Rah Rah! Rah! Psi! Rah, Rah ! Rah, Rah ! Zeta Psi! 3 JHcutforb Quab i902 JHanforfe Quab 1902 Phi Delta Theta California Beta Chapter, Established October 21, 1891 Fratres in Facilitate Lean dr r Miller Hoskins. M. S., C. E. Vernon Lyman Kellogg, M. S. Eliavood P. Ci bber ley, A. B. Harold Heatii, A. B. r ratres in Lniversitate 1901 Edward Thompson Maples 1902 Percy McDowell Ralph Dennison Frissei.le Charles Edgar Waite •903 Edward Irving Frissei.le Edgar Augustus Beiii.ow Theodore Willard ] William Clarence Day John Everett Johnson Charles Mitchell Kellogg Roy Edwin Schulz Samuel Parker Frissei.le Porter Emerson Lamii otherton. Jr. 1904 Freeman Arms Ford Alfred Bingham Swinerton George Herbert Clark Daniel Garfield ('.rant Stuart Le Roy Taylor Emil Valentine Kehrlein, Jr. John Peck Irish, Jr. Roscoe William Maples 11 ¥J Phi Delta Theta Founded at Miami University, 1848 Chapter Roll Alpha Province University |Kcil fOTb Quab 902 Maine Alpha. Coiby New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth University Vermont Alpha. University ol Vermont ichusctts Alpha. Williams College Mm _ Massachusetts Beta. Amherst College Rhode Island Alpha, Brown University New York Alpha, Cornell University New York Beta, Union University New York Delta, Columbia University New York Kpsilon, Syracuse University Pennsylvania Alpha, l.alavettc College Pennsylvania Beta. Pennsylvania College Pennsylvania Gamma, Washington and Ohio Zela, Ohio State University Ohio Km. Case School of Applied Sciences Ohio Theta. University oi Cunpnuati Jctterson Cortege Pennsylvania Delta. Allegheny Cortege Pennsylvania Epsilon, Dickinson College Pennsylvania ' .eta, University ol Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Eta, l.cltigh University Beta Province Virginia Beta. University of Virginia Kentucky Alpha, Centre College Virginia Gamma. Randolph-Macon College Kentucky Delta. Central University Virginia Zeta. Washington and l.cc University Tennessee Alpha. Vanderbilt Untvcrsity North Carolina Beta, University of NorthCaroltna Tcutiessce Beta, University of the South (ranima Province Georgia Alpha. University of Georgia Georgia Gamma. Mercer University Georgia Beta, Emory College Alabama Alpha, University ol Alabama Alabama Bela. Alabama Polytechnic institute Delta Province Ohio Alpha. Miami University Ohio Beta. Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Gamma, Ohio University Michigan Alpha. University of Michigan Epsilon Province Indiana Alpha, Indiaua University Indiana Delta, Franklin College Indiana Beta. Walmsh College Indiana Kpsilon. Hanover College Indiana Gamma. Butler College Indiana ' .eta. Dcl’auw University Indiana Theta, Purdue University Zeta Province Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Chicago Illinois Delta. Knox College Illinois Zeta. Lombard University Illinois Kta. University of Illinois Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Minnesota Alpha, University of Minnesota Eta Mississippi Alpha, University of Mississippi Louisiana Alpha. Tulanc University of I mtsiana Texas Gamma. Southwestern University Theta Province California Alpha, University ol California Washington Alpha. University ot Washington California Beta, l.ehnd Stanford Junior University Iowa Alpha. Iowa Wesleyan University Iowa Beta. University of Iowa Missouri Alpha. University ot Missouri Missouri Beta. Wesiminster College Missouri Gamma, Washington University Kansas Alpha. University ot Kansas Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska Province Texas Beta, University ot Texas Boston, Mass. Harvard University Providence, K. I. New York N. Y. Syracuse. N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Pittsburg. Pa. Philadelphia Pa. Washington, D. C. Richmond. Va. Louisville. Ky. Nashville. Tenn. Columbus. Ga. Atlanta. Ga. Alumni Clubs Macon, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Selma, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Mobile. Ala. New Orleans, l.a. Cincinnati, Ohio Akron, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Columbus. Ohio Athens, Ohio Detroit, Mich. Franklin, 1ml lmlianupolts, I ml. Chicago, 111. Galesburg, 111. l.a Crosse, Wls. Milwaukee. W is. Minneapolis and St. Pawl, Minn. Kansas City, Mo. Denver, Colo. Austin, Teg. Sail Lake City, Utah San Praucisco.Cal. jos Angeles. Cal. Spokane, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Colors : Azure and Ardent Yell: Fiowkr •. While Carnation Rah! Rah! Rah! Phi! Kci! A! Phi! Della! Theta Rah! Rah! Rah! 87 JMcmforfe 1902 Phi Kappa Psi California Beta Chapter, Established November io, 1891 Kratres in Universitate Fred E. Fisher 1901 Howard Bkickki.i. 1903 K. F. Crowell J. I). Carr Harry L. Rohhrts Curtis T. Forrest Hugh H. Owens Louis A. Dougherty Wilder Taylor 1904 Herbert Ykrington William G. Deal Frank Sanborn Waldemar Yoi’NC Karl F. Kennedy ni“ j • •‘•hj Phi Kappa Psi JMonford (Quab 1902 Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 Active Chapters Pennsylvania Alpha, Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Beta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania Gamma, Bucknell University Pennsylvania Epsilon, Pennsylvania College Pennsylvania Zeta, Dickinson College Pennsylvania Kta, Franklin and Marshall College Pennsylvania Theta, Lafayette College Pennsylvania Kappa, Swarthmore College Pennsylvania Iota, University of Pennsylvania New York Alpha. Cornell University New York Beta, Syracuse University New York Gamma, Columbia University New York Epsilon, Colgate University New York Zeta, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute Massachusetts Alpha, Amherst College New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth College Virginia Alpha, University of Virginia Virginia Beta, Washington and Lee University Virginia Gamma, Hampden-Sydney College West Virginia Alpha, University of West Virginia Maryland Alpha, Johns Hopkins University Mississippi Alpha, University of Mississippi Ohio Alpha, Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Beta, Wittenberg College Ohio Delta, Ohio State University Indiana Alpha. DePauw University Indiana Beta, Indiana State University Indiana Gamma, Wabash College Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Chicago Michigan Alpha, University of Michigan Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Wisconsin Gamma, Beloit College Iowa Alpha. University of Iowa Minnesota Beta, University of Minnesota Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Ncbrnska Alpha, University of Nebraska California Beta. Lcland Stanford Jr. University California Gamma, University of California Alumni Associations New York Washington Philadelphia Cleveland Buffalo Sun Francisco Columbus Kansas City Denver Springfield, Ohio I.ouisville, Ky. Maryland Pittsburg Meadville Newark Bucyrus Chicago Twin City Portland Indiana Los Angeles Anderson, Iml Salt I.ake City Colors : Pink and Lavender Flower : Sweet Pea Yell: High! High! High! Phi Kappa Psi! Live ever, die never! Phi Kappa Psi 91 JHanforb $uab 1902 Sigma Nu Beta Chi Chapter, Established 1891 Kratres in Universitate 1901 Roiirkt Tavijor Hale Hugh Gwvn Foster Ernest Louis Brunb Eugene Warren Paui. Lamar Mitchell 1902 Robert Estee Field Edward Merriam Chadbouknk '9° 3 George W. Sou ns Albert Potts Hill Hudson Edward Fogg Frederick Asamel Geer Edward Augustus Smith William Gentry Morrison Harry Lee Morrison Howard Shields Lee «9°4 Alexander Beaton Carey McGilvray Louis Philip Bansbach Hector Cowan McNaught Louis Everett Fuller Joseph Welmer Sefton. Jr. Special Robert Maximilian Loesbr 9s Sigma Nu Fraternity JKanforb §uctb 1902 Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1864 Chapter Roll Bet . University of Virginia Delta, University of South Carolina Zeta. Central University Kta. Mercer University Theta, University of Alahainn Kappa. North Georgia A. ami M. College l.ambda. Washington ami I.ce University Mu. University of Georgia Nu. University of Kansas Xi, Kmory College Omlcron, Bethel College Pi, I.ehigh University Rho, Missouri State University Sigma, Vanderbilt University Upsilon, University of Texas Phi, Louisiana State University Psi, University of North Carolina Beta Phi, Tulane University Beta Beta, DcPauw University Beta Kta. Indiana University Beta Zeta. Purdue University Beta Theta, Alabama A. and M. College Beta Mu. University of Iowa Beta Nu. Ohio State University Beta Rho, University of Pennsylvania Beta Xi, William Jewell College Beta Iota, Mt. Union College Beta Sigma, University of Vermont Beta Chi, Stanford University Beta Psi, University of California Beta Tau, North Carolina College of A. and M. Beta Upsilon, Rose Polytechnic Inst. Arts Delta Theta. Lombard University Gamma Gamma. Albion College Gamma Alpha. Georgia School of Technology Gamma Delta, Stevens Institute Gamma Beta, Northwestern University Gamma Kpsilon. Lafayette College Gamma Chi, University of Washington Gamma Psi, University of Oregon Alumni Associations Dallas, Tex. New Orleans, I.o. Belle Plains. Ia. Brookfield. Wis. New York City, N. Y. Columbus. Ohio Chicago. III. Shelbyville, Ky. St. Louis, Mo. Seattle. Wash. Athens. Ga Atlanta, Gn. Charlotte, N. C. Bessemer, Ala. Louisville, Ky. Birmingham, Ala. San Francisco, Cal. Kansas City, Mo. Grecncastlc. Ind. Tacoma, Wash. Colors: Black, White and Gold Fratkrnitv Flower : The White Rose Yell: Rah! Rah! Ruh L. S.J. U. ! Beta Chi Chapter ! Sigma Nu ! 95 JKanford Quab 1902 Sigma Chi Alpha Omega Chapter, Established December 19, 1891 Fratres in Universitate 1901 John Alfred Givens Frank Waite Bennett 1902 John Francis Cowan Alexander Griffith Pack 1903 George H. Lutgkrding Joseph Adams Miller Oliver G. Jones William Lawrence Barr Herhert Lane Younger Elbert K. Potter Arno Grotk Thies Robert Rovgiian Henry A. Daggett 1904 Alfred L. Bernardin 96 II1 J 1 • ,H4 Sigma Chi JManforb §uab 1902 Founded at Miami University, 1835 Chapter Roll Alpha, Miami University Beta, Wooster University Gamma, Ohio Wesleyan University Epsilon, Columbia University eta, Washington and Lee University Kta, University of Mississippi Theta, Pennsylvania College Kappa, BuclcncU University lambda, Indiana University Mu. Denison University Xi, DcPauw University Omicron, Dickinson College Rho, Butler College Tau, Roanoke College Phi, Lafayette College Chi, Hanover College Psi. University of Virginia Omega. Northwestern University Alpha Alpha, Hobart College Alpha Beta, University of California Alpha Gamma, Ohio State University Alpha Epsilon. Nebraska Alpha eta, Beloit College Alpha Theta, Mass. Institute of Technology Alpha Iota, Illinois Wesleyan University- Alpha Lambda, University of Wisconsin Alpha Nu, University of Texas Alpha Xi, Uuiversityof Kansas Alpha Omicron. Tulane University- Alpha Pi, Albion College Alpha Rho, Lehigh University- Alpha Sigma, University of Minnesota Alpha Tau, University of North Carolina Alpha Upsilon, University of S. California Alpha Phi, Cornell University Alpha Chi, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Psi. Vanderbilt University- Alpha Omega, Lcland Stanford Jr. University Gamma Gamma. Randolph-Macon College Delta Delta, Purdue University eta eta, Centre College eta Psi, University of Cincinnati Theta Theta. University of Michigan Kta Eta, Dartmouth College Kappa Kappa, University-of Illinois Lambda Lambda, Kentucky Slate College Mu Mu, West Virginia University Nu Nu, Columbia University Xi Xi, Missouri State University Otnicron Omicron, University of Chicago Sigma Sigma, Hainpdcn-Sydney College Phi Phi. University of Pennsylvania Alumni Chapters Chicago Cincinnati Indianapolis New York Philadelphia Louisville Colors: Blue and Gold Flower: White Rose 99 JKcwforb $uab 1902 Sigma Alpha Epsilon California Alpha Chapter, Established March 5, 1892 Kratres in Universitate 1901 William METCALF Parkin Artiur Bon bright Stewart 1902 Frederick Wolcott Bancroft Charles Thomas Stephens Joseph Acgcstcs Shakfer Charles Walter Sell Harry Avery Campbell Cykcs Lincoln Mkkkiam Arthur Dorman Geissler •903 Harry Dravo Parkin Royal Kingsley Baldwin Charles Partridge Allen, Jr. Royden James Keith Edward Irving Thayer 9°4 Theodore Goodwin Hosmer Walter Misner John D. Spreckels, Jr. Orrin Ai.i.en Wilson Harry Saltonstai.l Babcock. Jr. Howard Whitman Prentice 100 UllfUVJj ,y I JKcmforb (Jjuab 1902 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 Chapter Roll Boston University, Massachusetts Beta Upsilon Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Iota Tau Cornell University. New York Alpha Columbia University, New York Mu St. Stephen’s College, New York Sigma Phi Allegheny College, Pennsylvania Omega University of Virginia, Virginia Omicron Washington and Lee University,Virginia Sigma University of North Carolina, North Carolina Xi Davidson College, North Carolina Theta University of Michigan, Michigan lota Bela Adrian College, Michigan Alpha Mount Union College, Ohio Sigma r- Ohio Wesleyan College. Ohio Delta University of Cincinnati, Ohio Kpsilon Central University, Kentucky Kappa Bethel College, Kentucky Iota Southwestern Presbyterian University, Tennessee Zeta Cumberland University, Tennessee lambda Vanderbilt University, Tennessee Nu Alabama A. and M. College, Alabama Mu University of Missouri. Missouri Alpha University of Nebraska, Nebraska Lambda Pi University of Arkansas. Arkansas Alpha Upsilon University of Colorado, Colorado Chi University of California, California Beta Louisiana State University, Louisiana Kpsilon Tulanc University, Louisiana Tau Upsilon Hatvard University, Massachusetts Gamma Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Massachusetts Delta Dickinson College, Pennsylvania Sigma Phi Pennsylvania State College. Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta Buckncll University. Pennsylvania Zeta Wofford College, South Carolina Gamma University of Georgia, Georgia Beta Mercer University, Georgia Psi Emory College, Georgia Kpsilon Georgia School of Technology, Georgia Phi Ohio State University. Ohio Theta Franklin College, Indiana Alpha Purdue University, Indiana Beta Northwestern University, Illinois Psi Omega University of Illinois, Illinois Beta University of Tennessee, Tennessee Kappa University of the South. Tennessee Omega Southwestern Baptist University, Tennessee Kta University of Alabama, Alabama Mu Southern University. Alabama Iota Washington University, Missouri Beta Denver University, Colorado Zeta Leland Stanford Jr. University, California Alpha University of Mississippi. Mississippi Gamma University of Texas, Texas Rho University of Maine University of Pennsylvania New S’ork City Chicago, III. Boston, Mass. Atlanta. Ga. Cincinnati, Ohio Colors: Royal Purple Alumni Associations Savannah, Ga. Pittsburg, Pa. Augusta, Ga. Alliance. Ohio Chattanooga. Tenn. and Old Gobi Kansas City. Mo. Jackson, Miss. Cleveland, Ohio Detroit. Mich New Orleans. La. F1.0WER : Violet Yell; Phi Alpha, Alicazce ! Phi Alpha, Alicazon ! Sigma Alpha ! Sigma Alpha ! Sigma Alpha Epsilon ! 103 JHanforb (Quab 1902 Delta 1'au Delta Beta Rho Chapter, Established 1893 a Kratres in Universitate 1901 Eliot Grav Potter Joseph Ephraim White Charles Edmund Hoi brook 1902 John Kester Bonneli. John Edward Healey Reginald Goodwin Fkrnald •9°3 Frank Slaker' Charles Maynard Richards Harold Hall 1904 William Getchki.l Scales Arthur Levshon Henry Crowki.i. Scales Hans Barkan 104 rhtu hy FranUi Delta Tau Delta JHemforb Quafc 1902 Founded at Bethany College, 1860 Chapter Roll Southern Lanitala. Vanderbilt University Pi. University of Mississippi Phi. Washington and Lee University Beta Kpsiton. Kraory College Western Omicron, University of Iowa Beta Gamma, University of Wisconsin Beta Kta. University of Minnesota Beta Kappa, University of Colorado Beta Pi. Northwestern University Northern Beta, Ohio University Delta, University of Michigan Kpsiton, Albion College Kappa, Hillsdale College Zeta, Adclt'crt College Mu, Ohio Wesleyan University Chi. Kcnyou College Eastern Alpha, Allegheny College Rho. Stevens Institute of Technology Upsilon, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Omega. University of Pennsylvania Beta Lambda. Lehigh University Division Beta Theta. University of the South Beta Iota. University of Virginia Beta Xi, Tulane University Division Beta Rho. Stanford University Beta Tau. University of Nebraska Beta Upsilon, University of Illinois Beta Omega, Universityof California Gamma Alpha, University of Chicago Division Beta Alpha, Indianu University Beta Beta, DePauw University Beta Zeta. Butler College Beta Psi. Wabash College Beta Phi, Ohio Slate University Gamma Delta, Universityof West Virginia Division Beta Mu. Tufts College Beta Nu, Mass. Institute of Technology Beta Omicron, Cornell University- Beta Chi, Brown University Gamma, Washington and Jefferson College Alumni Chapters New York, Brooklyn, N. V. Chicago, Chicago. 111. Cincinnati, Cincinnati. Ohio San Prandsco, San Francisco, Cal. Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa. Milwaukee. Milwaukee, Wis. Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Ind. Colors : Purple, Gold and White Flower : Pansy 107 JKanforb Quab 1902 Beta Theta Pi lambda Sigma Chapter, Established 1895 Fratres in Facilitate James Perkin Smith, Pit. D. John Fi.hsiiek Newsom, A. M. Fratres in Univcrsitate 1899 Thomas Tingby Craven Gregory . 1901 Richard Lockky. Jr. Willis Baknum Hays Francis Addison Cokiu'siek Roy Valentine Reity Eaki. Hamaker Kneppek Ralph 1902 Lawrence Lawson Lvman Fox Clinton Damon Emerson '9° 3 Norman Elliot Dole Harold Phillips Kuhn Domingo Lyle Giiikakdeli.i Arch Perrin Thomas Eaki. Palmer Edward James Doering 1904 Paul Jerome Pitner Arthur Berry Watson De Lancy Lewis Maximilian Langdon Van Nordbn 108 Ij(ur J 1 'I'W Beta Theta Pi JHaitforh }uab 1902 Founded at Miami University, 1839 Chapter Roll Kta. Harvard University Kappa, Brown University Gamma, Boston University Beta Kta, Maine State College Beta Iota, Amherst College Alpha Omega, Dartmouth College Mu Kpsilou, Wesleyan University Phi Chi, Yale University Beta Sigma, Bowdoin College Beta Gamma, Kutgers University Beta Delta, Cornell University Sigma, Stephens Institute of Technology Beta Zeta, St. Lawrence University Beta Theta, Colgate University Nu, Union College Alpha Alpha, Columbia College Beta Kpsilou, Syracuse University Gamma, Washington and Jefferson College Alpha Sigma, Dickinson College Alpha Chi, Johns Hopkins University Phi. University of Pennsylvania Alphn Gamma, Pennsylvania State College Beta Chi, Lehigh University Zeta, Hampden-Sydney College Kta Beta. University of North Carolina Omieron, University of Virginia Phi Alpha, Davidsou University Kpsilon. Centre College Beta Beta. University of Mississippi Beta Lambda, Vanderbilt University Beta Omieron, University of Texas Alpha. Miami University Colors: Pink and Blue Beta Nu, University of Cincinnati Beta, Western Reserve University Beta Kuppa, Ohio University Theta, Ohio Wesleyan University Psi, Bethany University Alpha Gamma. Wittenberg College Alpha Kta, Denison University Alpha LamlMta, Wooster University Beta Alphn, Kenyon College Theta Delta, Ohio State University Beta Psi, West Virginia University Delta. DePauw University Kta, Indiana University Gamma, Wabash College Iota, Hanover College Lambda, University of Michigan Alpha Xi, Knox College Chi. Beloit College Alpha Beta, Iowa University Lambda Pi, Chicago University Alpha Kpsilon, Iowa Wesleyan University- Alpha Pi, Wisconsin University Pi, Northwestern University Beta Pi, Minnesota University Alpha Delta. Westminster College Alpha Nu, Kansas University Alpha Zeta, Denver University Alpha Tau, Nebraska University Zeta Phi, Missouri University Beta Tau, Colorado University Omega, University of California Alpha Sigma, Leland Stanford Jr. University Flower : The Rose Yell: Phi, Kai, Phi! Pet a, Theta, Pi! Alpha, Omega, Lambda, Theta ! 11 eta. Theta, Pi! 11 Jftairforb }uab 1902 Chi Psi Alpha Gamma Delta, Established April 24, 1895 Fra t res in L'niversitate 1901 Frederick Henry Drake William Carr Morrow SaMCEL MoCNTEORD WlLSON WALTER KeMPSTKR GRAY I902 Charles Adrot Whitmore 19°3 Howard Brookes Sharpe Edgar Axton Jones Nathan Decker 9°4 Carl Sheliiv McNacght Walter Coriialev Stone Gordon William Edwards 112 Chi Psi JKonforb Quab 1902 Founded at Union College, 1841 Chapter Pi................... Thrta................. Mu................... Alpha................. Phi ...... Epsilon............... Cm................... Psi................... Tau.................. Nu.................... Iota................. Rho................... Xi................... Alpha Delta • Beta Delta Gamma Delta Delta Delta -Epsilon Delta Roll Union College - Williams College Middlebury College - Wesleyan University Hamilton College - University of Michigan Amherst College - Cornell University Wofford College • University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin - Rutgers College Stevens Institute of Technology - University of Georgia lA;high University - Stanford University University of California - University of Chicago 113 JKanforb (Quail 1902 Delta Upsilon Stanford Chapter, Established March 13, 1896 Fratrcs in Facilitate David Starr Jordan, LL. D. John Henry Comstock, B. S. Arthur Bridgman Clark, M. A. Guido Hugo Marx, M. E. Charles Ross Lewbrs, A. B. John Casper Bkanner, Ph. D. William Russell Dudley, M. S. James Owen Griffin George Archibald Clark. B. L. Joseph Parker Warren, A. M. Fratres in Universitate 1901 Wilmot Edgar Whittier Harrv Leslie Langnecker Charles Edward Gilman Philip Kingsnorth Gilman Harry Lewis Haehl 1902 Frank Foster Bradley Arthur Edward Cooley David Van Clief Cow den Edward Augustus Palmer Sherman Kimball David Morrill Folsom John Pearce Mitchell . Fletcher Bernard Wagner 1903 Charles Henry Joiner James Archer Fay Rufus Hatch Kimball Clarence Harrison Crawford William Franklin Whitaker 1904 Frederick Hall Fowler Charles Ludwig Firebaugh Benjamin Cary Ledyard Harold Bowen Jordan Fulton Lane “4 ' M 1 ■- I Delta Upsilon Jttcuiforb §uab 1902 Founded at Williams College, 1834 Chapter Roll Williams, Williams College Union, Union College Hamilton, Hamilton College Amherst, Amherst College Adelbert, Adelbert College Colby, Colby University Rochester, University of Rochester Middlebury, Middlcbury College Bowdoin, Bowdoin College Rutgers, Rutgers College Brown, Brown University Colgate, Colgate University New York, University of the City of New York Cornell, Cornell University Marietta, Marietta College Syracuse, University of Syracuse Michigan, University of Michigan Northwestern, Northwestern University Harvard, Harvard University Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin Uafayette, Lafayette College Columbia, Columbia University lx high, Lehigh University Tufts, Tufts College DePauw, DePauw University Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania Minnesota, University of Minnesota Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Swarthmore, Swarthmore College Stanford, Iceland Stanford Junior University California. University of California McGill. McGill University, Montreal Nebraska, University of Nebraska Toronto, University of Toronto Chicago. University of Chicago • 17 JKanforb $uob 1902 Kappa Sigma Beta Zeta Chapter, Established May 19, 1899 Frater in Facilitate Ai.fred Ekancis William Schmidt, A. 15. Fratres in Universitate 1900 E. S. Page 1901 Claude Bailey Gillespie Clarence Winslow Page Nathaniel Gardner Symonds Rudolf Herman Schwarzkopf Frank Hinman 1902 Roy Harry Black . Raymond Lucas Pleak Harry Clifford Lucas James Leroy McWethv Earle Clayton Robinson 9 3 William Benson Walling 1904 . Lawrence Nash Clarke Frank Roeiir Grant Hathaway Moore Chester Boyce Allen Clarence Arthur Robinson 118 1 •I'HJ i i Kappa Sigma JMcmforb $uab 1902 Founded at University ot' Virginia, 1867 Chapter Roll Pai, University of Maine Alpha Kho, Bowdoin College Alpha lambda. University of Vermont Alpha Kappa. Cornell University Beta Alpha, Brown University Pi, Swarthmore College Alpha Alpha, University of Maryland Alpha Kpsilon, University of Pennsylvania Alpha Hta. Columbian University Alpha Delta, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Phi, Bucknell University Beta Delta, Washington and Jefferson College Beta Iota, Lehigh University Zeta, University of Virginia Kta, Randolph-Macon College Nu. William and Mary College Upsilon. Hampden.Sidney College Delta, Davidson College Hta Prime, Trinity College Alpha Mu. University of North Carolina Beta Beta, Richmond College Alpha Nu. Wofford College Alpha Beta. Mercer University Alpha Tau, Ccorgia School of Technology Beta, University of Alabama Beta Kta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Theta. Cumberland University Kappa, Vanderbilt University Lambda, University of Tennessee Phi, Southwestern Presbyterian University Omega, University of the South Alpha Theta, Southwestern Baptist University Alpha Xi, Bethel College Alpha Omicron, Kentucky University- Alpha Upsilon. Millsaps College Gamma, Louisiana State University Kpsilon, Centenary College Sigma, Tulane University- Iota, Southwestern University Tau. University of Texas Xi, University of Arkansas Alpha Omega, William Jewell College Bela Gamma, Missouri State University- Alpha Psi. University of Nebraska Alpha Sigma. Ohio State University Chi, Purdue University Alpha Pi. Wabash College Beta Theta, University of Indiana Alpha Gamma, University of Illinois Alpha Chi, Lake Poresl University Beta Kpsilon, University of Wisconsin Beta Zeta, Lcland Stanford Junior University- Beta Kappa, New Hampshire State College Alumni Associations Yazoo City. Miss. Philadelphia, Pa. New York. N. Y. New Orleans, I.a. Boston, Mass. Memphis, Tenn. Chicago, III. Indianapolis, Ind. St. Louis, Missouri Pine Bluff, Ark. Ruston. Ln. Chihuahua, Mex. Pittsburg. Pa. Colors: Old Cold, Maroon and Peacock Blue Flowbr : Lily-of-the-valley Yell: Rah! Rah! Rah! Crescent and Star ! Vive La! Vive La! Kappa Sigma ! 121 Jftairforfc $uab 1902 Phi Delta Phi Miller Chapter Fratres in Facilitate Nathan Ahbott, LL. B., + Y Clarke B. Whittier. LI,. B.. 1 K t Cl'KTIS II. Lindlry Jackson E. Reynolds, !.L. B., - I’ H Chaki.ks R. I.ewers. LL. B., a Y James P. Hall, LL. B. Fratres in Universitatc Graduates Halbert William Ciiappel Charles Quavi.k Chester Griffin Murphy, 7. + John Thomas Noi rse Ernest Stoddard Page, k 1 1901 Frank Waite Bennett, - X Ernest Locis Brune, X X Charles Abraham Cantwell Robert Patterson Cross, a T u William Clarence Day, 4’ A o Frederick Henry Drake, X + Eugene W. Joseph Gutiirie Dk Forest Thomas Matthew Diyiny Hugh Gwyn Foster, X X Claude Bailey Gillespie, k X Richard Lockey, Jr., ho II Charles Jay Swi.ndei.i_s :en, X X 1902 Herbert Coffin Jones Frank Allen Leib, ■ + Elbert King Potter, X X 122 Walter Benedict Barniiisel, 7. + Dave Van Clief Cowden. a Y Arthur Edward Cooley, a Y Phut ii Franklin Phi Delta Phi JManforb (JJuab 1902 Chapter Roll Kent — I-aw Department, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Benjamin— Law Department, Illinois Wesleyan University Booth —Northwestern University I-aw School, Chicago, III. Storv —School of Law, Columbia University, New York City Cooley — St. Louis Law School, Washington University, St. I-ouis, Mo. Pomeroy — Hastings College of the Law, San Francisco, Cal. Marshall —Law School of Columbian University, Washington, 1). C. Jay— Albany I-aw School, Union University, Albany, N. Y. Webster — School of Law, Boston University, Boston, Mass. Hamilton — I-aw Department of the University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio Gibson — Department of Law, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Choate — Harvard Law School, Cambridge. Mass. Waite —Yale Law School, New Haven, Conn. Field — Department of Law, New York University, Washington Square Conkling — School of Law, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. Tjbdeman — I-aw Department, University of State of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Minor — Law Department, University of Virginia, Charlottesville. Va. Dillon — Department of Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Daniei.s — Buffalo Law School, Buffalo, N. Y. Chase—School of Law, University of Oregon, Portland, Ore. Harlan — School of Law, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. Swan —Law Department, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio McClain — Law Department, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa Lincoln—College of I-aw, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Osgoode — I-aw School of Upper Canada, Toronto, Ontario Fuller — Chicago College of I-aw, Lake Forest University, Chicago, III. Miller —Law Department, Leland Stanford Jr. University, Palo Alto. Cal. Green—School of Law, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. Comstock — College of I-aw, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Dwight— New York I-aw School. 35 Nassau St., New York City, N. Y. Foster —Law Department, Indiana University, Bloomington, Inti. ' 5 JHaitforb §uab 1902 Sigma Rho Eta (Local) Established at Stanford University, October I, 1896 Frater in Facilitate Jackson Eli Revnolds Fratres in Univcrsitate 1901 IIakkv J. Edwards John E. IIolmks Earle Talbot 1902 Thomas Hamilton 1903 John C. Muir Harrv A. Wkiiik William P. Rotii 1904 Sherwood H. Adams 126 Hamilton R. Leigh Paul M. Davis Senior Society •899 Thomas Tingey Craven Gkegoky Milnor Roberts 1900 Chester Griffin Murfiiv 1901 Charles Howard Gilman William Carr Morrow Philip Kingsnorth Gilman JKanforfe §uab 1902 129 JKanforb llyua Kai llyua §uat 1902 )ofui« T Vycw Kpd f tv Tptyopv B 0 II Xio$tp l'pi’ t t ,v Wvp t v Z 4 MtAvop Vofitprs IV i' ”E ixipS EaAt A I' A Pi a Aokcv. Pp, B (-) 11 Kpi’OTT Aovit lipvi’t N •Ppavic {hurt B V«rr - X Xap t ; K oapS Vi pav A Y •KAcr KivycrvopO Yikpjiv AY rw ’aatf pi r wK, ex Ih'AAui i K apTT Wop pot X IVyivaAS rupfiov Ptpya A T A Y Pwf 1Hump, AN Appv AcirAu AdvyvtKtp AY Ahtfae ♦ay KA «£ KorScr A Y vpv 'Nopfivpv KvcXAcp A 'I' Aa ircA 1J(p rv AcokAAw ’ApSv Z ♦ AdutpivtTi Adonriv B 0 II ♦pawis AS utov KopSwrup B0I1 PptSipiK EapAt Sd f Ttryip Z 'I' PpdvK 'AAAty Am .3 Z ! o - P(pvov PeVirv B 0 11 ’Euy«Vc ’lidpptv A N 1V ' K. Bom'AA A T A 130 U I I I I '1 - JHanforb Qual 1902 Kappa Alpha Theta Phi Chapter, Established at University of Pacific, April 4, 1888 (Transferred to Stanford Sorores Julia Gilbert, Beta Harriet Grotkci.oss Marx, Iota Anna Paddock Wing, Iota Addik Perry Newsom, Beta Blanche Macleod Fkein, Iota Carrie Bean Burnell, Phi Martha Haven, Phi Mary Roberts Smith, Iota Sorores in Kith Wilson Letitia 1 Claire Grace Barnhisbl University, January, 1892) in Urbe Gertrude Van Duzen Marx, Iota Helen Cubrerlky, Beta Edith Basye Price, Alpha Winifred Caldwell Whittier, Ilii Elsie Shelley Heath, Phi Pearle Green, Phi Eleanor Williams Sissons, Rho Ettilla Bethel. Plii Universitate ’atterson Sue Kingsbury Frances Dolores Patterson 1901 Maryi.ine Barnard Helen Lathrop Sue Dale Barnwell Ada Julia Hkinemann Georgia Alberta Caswell 1902 Cara Stillman Ruby Green Bell Minna Stillman Hazel Hope Webster Florence Hevwood 9°3 Maymk HendrIck Clara Stevenson Genevieve Chambers Grace Lavayea Joshena Stone Mekeel 1904 Mabel Helen Baum Alice Mary Edwards Claire Soule I.ouisk Van Uxem Sara-Rbid Park Ethel Traphagbn Lyla Jeannette Vincent 134 Kappa Alpha Theta JKanforb §uafc 1902 Founded at DePauw University, 1870 Chapter Roll Alpha District Iota..............................Cornell University Lambda............................University of Vermont Mu................................Allegheny College Chi...............................Syracuse University Alpha Beta........................Swarthmore College Alpha Delta.......................Woman’s College of Baltimore Alpha Epsilon .... Brown University Alpha Zkta............Barnard College Beta District Alpha ................. Beta..................... Delta.................. Epsilon - - • - Eta.................... Kappa.................... Pi..................... Rho...................... Tau.................... Ups 1 lon................ Psi.................... Alpha Gamma .... Gamma Phi.................... Omega.................... • DePauw University - Indiana State University University of Illinois - Wooster University University of Michigan University of Kansas Albion College - University of Nebraska Northwestern University - University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin Ohio State University District Stanford University University of California Alumna Associations Gamma Alumna-: -Eta Alumna: -Theta Alumna-: -Alpha Alumna: Beta Alumna: Delta Alumna: Epsilon Alumna: Zkta Alumna: - Kappa Alpha Tiikta Club - New York Vermont Pennsylvania Indiana Minnesota Illinois Ohio Indiana Southern California Colors : Black and Gold Flower : Black and Yellow Pansy 55 JHanforb $uab 1902 Kappa Kappa Gamma Beta Eta Chapter, Established June io, 1892 Soror in Urbe Tkilla Toles Copeland Sorores in Universitate Louise Sue Dyek, '99 Winifred Payne, '98 1901 Edna Mary Hobson Mary Elizabeth Merritt Theodora Waters Stubbs Ronvena Merritt Winifred June Morgan 1902 Jess Knbppbr Helen Downing May Kimble Ethel McLellan Eva Marian Wheeler Kate Louise Gridley Anita Butler Perrin Mary Ruth Barnes 1904 1903 Eulavelle Sweetland Jane Elizabeth Evans Jessie Elizabeth Barnard Kappa Kappa Gamma JManforb §uab 1902 Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 Chapter Roll Pm - - Beta Epsilon • ■ Psi - . BetaTau • - Beta Alpha . Beta Iota • - Gamma Rho - . Lambda Beta Gamma • Beta Nr Beta Delta Xi - Kappa Delta - Iota - - Mu Eta - Beta Lambda U PSI LON - Epsilon Chi - Beta Zbta • Theta Sigma - Omega Pi - Beta Eta - Boston University Barnard College Cornell University Syracuse University University of Pennsylvania Swarthmore College Allegheny College Buchtel College Wooster University Ohio State University University of Michigan Adrian College Hillsdale College Indiana State University DePauw University Butler College University of Wisconsin University of Illinois Northwestern University Illinois Wesleyan University University of Minnesota Iowa State University Missouri State University Nebraska State University Kansas State University University of California Lelaud Stanford Junior University Alumna Associations New York Boston Indianapolis «37 Colors: Dark and Light Blue Flower: Fleur-de-lis JKanforb ( uab 1902 Delta Gamma Upsilon Chapter, Established March 6, 1897 Sorores in Urbc Mary Johnson Pease, Phi Parnik Hamilton Storky, Upsilon Lillian Emklinb Ray, Upsilon Alexandra Fay, Upsilon Sorores in Universitate 1901 Chkistahkl Rose Sobky JULIANK WoLTKKS 1902 Eleanor Hardy Aida Eleanor Rademaker Alice May Cole Marion Dickie Taylor «9°3 Alice Eugenia Arnold Sarah Jane Blake Amy Louise Dunn Alice Joiner Edith Ahigaii. Hill Helen Edmona Martin Maude Ewing Ross Helen Edna Smith Lena Iaduise Loser Delta Gamma JKanforb Quai 1902 Founded at University of Mississippi, 1872 Chapter Roll Alpha Mt. Union College Zkta • - - - Albion College Eta • Buchtel College Kappa - University of Nebraska Lambda - University of Minnesota Xi University of Michigan Sigma Northwestern University Tau University of Iowa Upsii.on Inland Stanford Junior University Phi...............................University of Colorado Cm...................................Cornell University Psi...............................Woman’s College of Baltimore Omkga University of Wisconsin Thkta - University of Indiana Colors: Bronze, Pink and Blue. Flower : Marechal Niel Rose '39 JMonforb (Juab 1902 Alpha Phi Kappa Chapter, Established May 20, 1899 Sorores in Universitate 1901 Lucy Mabel France Helen Lathrop Holmes Jessie Judson Haskell Mary Ishbel Lockey 1902 Anna Bennett Ashenfelter Amy Parker Ferguson May Hurlburt 19°3 Francisca Luisa Arques Esther van Tuyl Avery Margaret Paris Clinton Stone Ruth Stephenson Ruth Taylor Mary Katherine Gilman 1904 Christine Burnap Mary Foster Alpha Phi JKcutforfe §uab 1902 Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 Chapti Alpha................... Beta................. Gamma .................. Delta - Epsilon .... Zkta................. Eta.................... Theta .... Iota.................... Kappa .... Alumna; Chicago Central New York New York Cil Roll Syracuse University - Northwestern University DePauw University - Cornell University University of Minnesota - Woman’s College of Baltimore Boston University - University of Michigan University of Wisconsin - Leland Stanford Junior University Associations Boston Minnesota 4' o 4 T« M i Hard Lines on Co-education My cruel love insists, alas, A Bachelor I he! But me my stern professors class A youth of no degree. R. St. jfcfanforb Quab 1902 Associated Students Officers President Cecil M. Marrack, ’01 Vice-President - William A. Morris, ’01 Secretary Charles A. Cantwell, ’01 (♦Henry H. Taylor, ’00 Treasurer 1 tJOHN T. Nourse, ’00 Executive Committee C. E. Gii.man, ’01 Gifford L. Sobf.y, ’01 Arthur B. Sill, 02 ♦Frank R. Whf.eler, ’02 IFrank H. Boren, ’02 William I. Traeger, ’03 Charles B. Raitt, ’03 • Resigned. Appointed to till vacancy. 44 Christian Associations ot Stanford University Young Men’s Christian Association Officers First Semester President...............................Lloyd E. Harter, ’01 Vice-President..........................Frank L. Hess, '03 Recording Secretary • - - • A. G. Crane, '04 Treasurer...............................James Lb K. McWetiiv, ’03 Second Semester President.............................Lloyd E. Harter, ’01 Vice-President Hbrhert F. Evans, ’02 Recording Secretary .... William C. Halsey, ’03 Treasurer.............................R. B. Hl'MMBLL, ’04 Student Employment Bureau, Li.oyd E. Harter, ’01 Young Women’s Christian Association Officers President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer - Corresponding Secretary Harriett H. Brown, ’01 - Florence Hopper, 01 1 Irmagarde Richards, '03 ( tFuoRBNCE Hammond, '04 - Elizabeth Cone, ’01 M. Elizabeth Brown, '03 ( tCni-oE Anderson, '04 Student Employment Bureau, Kathryn Romer Kip, '03 •Resigned. November 15th t Appointed to till vacancy 45 JHanforfe $uat 1902 JManforb Quab 1902 i Sword and Sandals ()fficers Preside nt -Vice-President Sccretary-T reasurer Frederick H. Drake, ’01 J. G. Dk Forest, ’01 William M. Erb, ’01 Kxecutivc Committee J. G. De Forest, ’01 Frederick H. Drake, ’01 Members C. M. Bradley, ’01 J. G. I)k Forest, ’01 F. H. Drake, ’01 W. M. Erb, ’01 L. MacF. Bowman, ’01 W. C. Morrow, ’01 146 Eugene Warren, ’01 P. K. Gilman, ’01 F. A. Corbusier, ’02 J K. Bonn ell, ’02 A. C. Rvon, 02 R. E. Rknaud, ’02 Stanford English Club £Hanforb $uab 1902 Organized February 14 1901 C )fficers President Vice-President -Secretary-Treasurer Executive Committee Charter Bristow Adams, ’01 John K. Bonneli., 02 Ear rev MacF. Bowman, ’01 Dane Coolidgb, ’ s H. F. Cooi.idgk, 03 Tiiorkau Cronyn, ’02 Laura B. Everett, '01 Hki.bn N. Henry, ’01 Florence Hey wood, '02 H. M. Lewis, 04 Larrev MacF. Bowman, ’01 - Hazel Hope Webster, ’o2 • Bristow Adams, ’01 i.Miss Webster Miss Pearson Miss Hey wood Larrev MacF. Bowman Bristow Adams Ralph K. Renacd John K. Bonneli. Members Leon L. Loofbocrow, '02 Cecil M. Marrack, ’01 Mary E. McDougald, ’02 Ralph E. Renacd, '03 Isaac Russell, ’04 Roger J. Sterrett, ’02 Mildred Stanford, ’01 Hazel Hope Webster, ’02 Charles A. Whitmore, ’02 Joseph Elmer Wilson, ‘01 Faculty S. S. Seward W. J. Neidig, ‘s G F. H. Bartlett Miss Eleanor B. Pearson Jlfanforb $uab 1902 Founded February 28, 1898 Officers First Semester President...................................G. L. Sorev, ’01 Vice-President........................... • F. E. A. Gaddis, ’01 Secretary...................................F. H. Boren, ’02 Treasurer.....................................J. M. Burkett, ’02 Directors John T. Nouksk, '00 G. I.. Sorev, '01 F. H. Boren, '02 F. F. A. Gaddis, ’01 J. M. Burkett, '02 P. P. Parker, ’03 C. B. Raitt, 03 Officers Second Semester President Vice-President -Secretary Treasurer - John T. Nourse, ’00 P. P. Parker, ’03 Claude Pollard, ’03 R. J. McFaddkn, ’04 B. A. Olshausen, '01 E. M. Card, 01 Directors John T. Nourse, '04 R. S. Fisher, ’02 P. P. Parker. 03 F. H. Boren, ’02 Claude Pollard, ’03 R. J. McFadden, ’04 «4 ym ur A 1 •i'hj r i- JKcmfdrb (Juab 1902 Gymnasium Club Officers President...........................................H. YV. Chappbl, ’00 Secretar ’..........................................C. B. Raitt, ’03 Executive Committee W. M. Bbacii, ’on V. I. Trakckr, ’03 C. B. Raitt, ’03 N. E. Dole, ’03 Instructor T. A. Storey Members V. M. Reach, '00 W. M. Boston, 00 C. A. Cantwell, 01 H. W. Chappel, ’01 G. L. SOBBY, ’01 L. E. Harter, ’01 Frank Hinman, ’02 W. R. Hamilton, ’02 A. D. Gbissler, ’02 G. R. Lawrence, '02 H. H. Atkinson, A. J. Copp, ’02 A. B. Sill, ’02 W. I. Traeger, 03 C. B. Raitt, ’03 N. E. Dole, ’03 J. M. Beach, 08 W. W. Copp, ’03 S. L. Davis, '03 H. D. Du.mars, ’03 H. F. Cameron, ’03 ’03 5° JHcmforfe (Quab 1902 Golf Club Officers President.......................Mil.nor Robkrts Secretary.......................Mii.nora de B. Roberts Treasurer.......................H. Rushton Fairci.oi gii Executive Committee H. Rushton Fairci.ough Hugh Foster Milnor Roberts Geo. B. Cooksik, Chairman Faculty Field Club Officers President...........................................J. M. Stillman Treasurer...........................................C. B. Wing Secretary...........................................V. L. Kellogg «S« JHanforfc Quab 1902 Bench and Bar Members James Taylor Burch am, ’97 John Francis English, ’01 Eugene Warren, 01 Ernest Louis Brune, 01 Hugh Gwvn Foster, '01 Charles Abraham Cantwell, ’01 Frank Waite Bennett, '01 Benjamin Palmer Oak ford, '02 Students’ Guild Officers President - Secretary Treasurer - Philip K. Gilman, ’01 W. A. Morris, ’01 James A. Bentley, '01 Directors Dr. W. F. Snow Dr. C. H. Gilbert Maud Fay, '02 Maryline Barnard, '01 JManforfc (§uafc 1902 President Officers W. M. Erb, ’01 Vice-President - . - L. MacF. Bowman, 01 Secretary-Treasurer . Bristow Adams, ’01 Toast-master - • • - C. M. Bradley, ’01 Members Dane Cooi.iix;k, ’08 T. T. C. Gregory, ’9 J. T. Nourse, ’00 H. H. Taylor, 00 Bristow Adams, 01 L. MacF. Bowman. 01 F. D. Hamilton, 01 H. L. Langnecker, 01 Frank Adams, ’01 C. M. Bradley, ’01 J. R. Hamilton, ’01 R. Lockey, Jk., ’01 W. M. Err. ’01 J. B. Gildkrslekve, ’02 C. A. Whitmore, ’02 Keith VVigle, ’02 G. W. Dryer, 02 Frank Hinman, 02 J. K. Bonn ell, ’02 Claude Pollard, 03 W. C. Francis, ’03 R. E. Rknaud, 03 Paul Parker, ’03 H. F. Coolidge, ’03 jtfanforb $uab 1902 Stanford Alumni Associations General Association President - First Vice-President -Second Vice-President Secretary - • L. M. Burwkll, ’03 H. R. Blichfeldt, ’9 i - Chas. E. Schwartz, ’99 Miss Lillian E. Ray, ’97 Executive Committee Miss Hbnriktta StadtmUllrr, ’95 Ray Wilbur, ’96 Jackson E. Reynolds, ’96, Chairman Stanford Alumni Clubs San Francisco I-os Angeles San Jose Portland Johns Hopkins Kansas City Indianapolis Harvard University Columbia College University 55 JKanforb §uab 1902 leader and (’resident Manager Executive Committee - I’llii.ti’ Kingsnortii Gilman, '01 William Parkin, ’01 ( P. K. Gilman, ’01 ' J. G. Brown, ’01 ( W. F. Whitaker, ’03 First Tenor J. G. Brown, ’01 F. A. I.Kin, '02 H. S. Gay, '03 L C. Hawley, '03 C. Baker, 03 Second Tenor A. Perrin, '02 H. F. Scoville, '03 G. W. Dryer. 02 G. Clark, '04 First Bass C. E. Gilman,'01 W. E. Whittier,'01 F. H. Drake, '01 W. F. Whitaker, ’03 E. I. Frisselle, 03 Second Bass W. M. Parkin, ’01 F. S. Fox, '00 R. W. Thompson, 01 1 . K. Gilman, 01 C. L. Firkbalgh, ’04 Accompanist Arch Perrin, '02 156 JKanforfe §uab 1902 Mandolin Club leader -Manager f R. E. Field, gr-I Rov Keith, 03 f W. M. Parkin, ’01 1 Harry I,. Morrison, 'OS Roy Kkitii, ’03 W. M. Parkin, '01 T E. Palmer, 03 Executive Committee F. A. Corbusier, 01 Guitars YV. G. Morrison, ’03 H. S. Gay. ’03 V. T. Misnkr, ’04 First Mandolins W. G. Morrison, ’03 E. I. Thayer, ’03 H. B. Sharpe, ’03 F. A. Corbusier. ’01 A. J. Copp. Jr.. 02 N. C. Powers, ’02 J. E. Knapp, ’03 H. L. Morrison, ’03 Roy Keith, ’03 Second Mandolins Geo. Sohns, ’03 C. T. Stephens, ’02 Ei . Fogg, ’03 Norman Dole, ’03 D. H. Collier, ’04 Harry Wbihb, ’03 Flute B. A. Ol_SHAUSKN, ’01 158 m f uvjj f •nyj JManforb (Quab 1902 Stanford University Hand Leader...................................F. R. Schanck, '02 Manager - W. R. Frasek, ’03 Members Cornets E. H. Hurlbut, 02 A. B. Lee, ’02 R. J. Hughes, ’03 L. CL Moore, 03 G. H. Beebe, '04 CL V. Bernhard, ’04 Baritone H. M. McCabe, '04 A. L. Walker, '01 T rombonc D. M. Horn, ’03 B. C. Bunn, 04 Tenors S. J. Engle, '03 Bass Drum I. Anderson, '03 Cymbals D. P. Campbell, '03 Alto W. R. Fraser, 03 H. C. Lucas, ’02 C. W. Hatton, ’03 W. J. Stack, 03 M. D. Harper, 03 Clarinets J. G. Brown, 02 C. Duncan, 04 Piccolo B. A. Olshauskn. 01 A. R. Rowley, 04 Bassos F. R. Schanck, ’02 W. R. Hildreth, ’04 Snare-drum A. S. Halley, 03 160 NIVERSITY Phtlt ly f'rjni ii JManforb (Quab 1902 Girls’ Mandolin Club Officers President...........................................Gbnevibvb Evans, 01 Secretary and Treasurer..............................Kathrvnk Garibaldi, ’02 Leader.............................................Louise Me Doug a ld, '02 Members First Mandolins Louise McDougald, ’02 Ann Ashknfelter, ’02 Claire Swbetman, ’03 Lotta Waldo, ’04 Second Mandolins Mabel M. Weir, ’01 Christabel Sobky, ’01 Ella Ins, '02 Kathryns Garibaldi, ’02 Genevieve Evans, ’01 Katiierin Dryer, ’01 Guitars Ethel Fifif.ld, '04 Milnora Roberts (S|K-cial) 162 Phtlt hy F'Jniiin JKanford §uab 1902 % r Girls’ Glee Club Officers President -Secretary Treasurer -Business Manager -Leader Jessib A. Moore, ’01 Mildred Stanford, ’01 Agnes S. Ritchie, ’03 Mattie M. Scott, ’03 May Hurlburt, ’02 Members First Soprano Cecelia F. Atherton, ’02 Susan F. Bird, ’03 Bessie L. Ross, ’03 Mildred Stanford, ’01 Florence H. Wanzer, ’03 First Alto M. M. Bartruff, ’04 Louse Farmer, ’03 A. M. Laird, ’02 Agnes S. Ritchie, ’03 Mattie M. Scott, ’03 Second Soprano Pearl M. Bartlett, '04 Sorrie L. Cooke, ’01 Margaret S. Faris, '03 Mary K. Gilman, 03 B. F. Hill, ’04 Elsie Kimball, '02 Fay F. Moody, '04 Imogens A. Sciianck, '02 Ida S. Small, ’03 Second Alto Grace L. Chandler, ’03 A. C. Kraft, '04 Jessie A. Moore,’01 164 I I I JHanforl ($uab 1902 Orchestra Conductor Prof. S. W. Young Piano Miss May Hurlbukt Violins Miss Cora Stillman Miss Pkarl Bartlett Miss Grace Bruckman F. G. Baum A. J. Copp H. F. Scoville R. H. Bacon V. C. Halsey E. H. Williams W. R. Hamilton C. C. James L. J. Wertheimer E. U. KEIIRLEIN W. H. SlIADBURNK Violas C. M. Stow F. H. Foster Clarinets R. Y. Fitting L. Muller Cornet R. J. Hughes F. Roller Flute B. A. Olshausen Cellos Dane Coolidge A. G. Times Base D. P. Campbell Horn C. W. Hatton Trombone F. R. Schanck 166 •Died February 11.1901 r JKanforfc §uab 1902 rhe Quad i Board of Kditors Editor Mary E. McDouc.ald Manager M. F. McCormick Editorial Staff John K. Bonnei.i. George W. Dryer Ralph S. Fisher J. Burt Gildersleeve Samuei. P. L. Hardy May Hurluurt Leon L. Ixjoebourow Hazel Hope Webster Charles A. Whitmore Art Editor Roger J. Sterrbtt Resigned 168 Daily :£lalo 3Mto. Voi. XVIII. 8TAKFOKD CNIVKRSITY. OAI... MONDAY. MAR. IH. JOOI. No. 47 Jttanforb }uab 1902 Board of Editors First Semester Editor-in-Chief......................F. I). Hamilton, ’01 Managing Editor - - - - A. B. Lemmon, ’01 News Editor............................Miss M. E. McDougald, ’02 Associate Editors W. M. Erh. ’00 Thoreau Cronvn, ’02 G. W. Dryer, '02 Frank Hinman, ’02 C. A. Whitmore, '02 Claude Pollard, ’03 Paul Parker, ’03 G. L. Soijey, ’01 Harold Hall, ’03 R. C. McComish. ’03 Miss I. A. Zilisch, ’03 Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor News Editor - Assistant Editors R. I . McLaughlin. ’02 O. G. Jones. ’03 R. H. Kimhalu ’03 C. J. Crary. ’03 Second Semester R. Anderson, ’04 R. W. Maples. ’04 H. M. Lewis. ’04 Miss F. Drydalb, ’03 Allen B. Lemmon. ’01 Frank Hinman, ’02 Thoreau Cronvn, ’02 Associate Editors L. Ferrari. ’01 R. O. Hadley, ’03 Paul Parker, ’03 R. H. Kimhali.,’03 Claude Pollard, ’03 H. M. Lewis, ’04 Miss I. A. Zilisch, ’03 Assistant Editors C. J. Crary, ’03 T. E. Stephenson, ’03 W. B. Chandler, ’04 O. A. Wilson, ’04 Business Manager.................A. J. Copp, Jr., ’02 Assistant Business Manager - - L. J. Wertheimer, ’04 169 JHonforb $uab 1902 C0e l fanforb equota rot, X Wednesday, February 27, igoi No. 14 Editor-in-Chief Business Manager J. E. Wilson H. F. Coolidge R. E. Renaud W. M. Boston C. A. Cantwell Editor-in-Chief Business Manager J. E. Wilson H. F. Coolidge C. M. Makrack F. C. Bailey C. M. Stowe Board of Editors First Semester Associate Editors H. D. Walter C. A. Whitmore Assistant Editors L. L. Loofbourow Hazel Hope Webster Second Semester Associate Editors J. K. Bonn ell C. A. Whitmore R. E. Renaud Assistant Editors L. L. Loofbourow Hazel Hope Webster H. M. Lewis L. B. Everett K. E. Wigle Mildred Stanford J. K. Bonnell W.W. Burnett F. C. Bailey Meredyth Woodward B. Everett K. E. Wigle Mildred Stanford R. J. Sterrbtt C. A. Cantwell I. Russell Edna A. Needles 170 CHaparral £tamforb (Juab 1902 Board of Kditors Bristow Adams Larrby MacF. Bowman Rai.ph E. Renaud W. C. Francis John K. Bonnei.i. JKanforb (Quab 1902 The Stanford Alumnus At the seventh annual meeting of the Stanford University Alumni Association, held at the University May 23, 1899. it was decided to authorize the publication of the Stanford Alumnus monthly during the college year as the official organ of the association. Full control of the paper for its first year was placed in the hands of Charles E. Schwartz. ’99. A little later Miss Helen Swett, ’00, was appointed undergraduate editor, and Warren Hull. ’99. business manager. At the eighth annual meeting of the association, May 29. 1900, the executive committee of the Alumni Association was given control of the paper, and immediately afterward this committee voted to continue the paper for a second year under its original management and with the same editors as during the first year. The Stanford Alumnus is entirely an alumni paper, published to keep the absent alumnus in touch with the more important events at the University and to keep the alumni interested in what other alumni are doing in the larger world after leaving the University. Board of Editors Alumni Editor Associate Editor Undergraduate Editor -Athletics -Editor for San Francisco Business Manager Chaki.ks Eknkst Schwartz, ’99 Miss Helen Swett, ’00 Miss Florence Heywood, ’02 John F. Sheehan, Jr.. ’95 Archie B. Rick. ’95 Warren Hull, ’99 7 JManforfe Qua?) 1902 Review of the Year’s Athletics ME task of writing a resume of intercollegiate athletic contests of the twelvemonth just passed is a pleasant one to a Stanford man. As usual, we have had much the better of the argument with our rivals across the bay, and thus far during the present college year have a clean record of victories. Perhaps the most satisfactory feature of the season’s sports is the return of the football championship to our campus for the eighth time since the first game nine years ago. when intercollegiate sports had their beginning on this Coast. On April 21st Berkeley and Stanford divided honors, the former winning the Field Day, and the latter carrying off the tennis victory. The day was cold, and a high wind prevailed, so that the performances on the track and field were mediocre. The first event and the prettiest contest was the one-hundred-yard dash, in which our Freshman McCaughern furnished the surprise of the day by winning from the California veteran. Drum. Another event which thrilled the Stanford section was the mile run, when Hamilton, after trailing his opponents for three laps, won easily in a sprinting finish. Captain Boyd won the pole vault with his usual consistence. The best performances of our opponents were the two weight records established by Plaw — 148 feet 9 inches for the hammer and 41 feet 6 inches for the shot. The tennis gave us a clean-cut victory, as our team clearly outclassed their opponents. In the doubles match VVeihe and Hardy won as they pleased by the one-sided score of 6-1, 6-2. Sumner Hardy, U. C., won in singles against Sam Hardy, S., 6-4, 5-7, 6-0, but most of the spectators conceded that the last was a brotherly “love” set. Roth of Stanford furnished the sensation of the day by his defeat of Braley, who had been counted a sure winner by the wise ones. The score was 7-5, 6-4, and throughout the contest our Freshman showed himself clearly the superior of his opponent as a steady tournament player. California won the baseball series, taking the first game, 10-8, and the third game. 10-5. Our team pulled out the second contest by the score of 10-7. Baseball was the most unsatisfactory event of the year, because our defeat can be attributed to the lack of fighting team spirit. We had many good players on our team, but in spite of all Dr. Murphy’s excellent coaching, there was little team work. When the battery played winning ball, as in the first game, the other members of the team gave their poorest exhibition. When the latter were doing steady, consistent work, they were without the support of the battery. In all the games Stanford outbatted California, but with the exception of the first inning of the second game, the hits were never bunched. The initial intercollegiate contest of the autumn was one to gladden Stanford hearts. Berkeley seemed certain of victory in the Freshman football game, and all the wiseacres prophesied a Blue and Gold score of thirty to our nothing. On form this seemed a probable result, for the California Babies were men with brilliant preparatory records, and many of them captains of their school teams. The day of the game the odds seemed all against us until the teams faced each other on the field, and then I think every Stanford man felt in his bones that we should win. No team ever met a forlorn ho| e with better spirit, or turned a rout into a victory 74 with more decision than did our Freshman eleven that day. Our team won on straight, old-fashioned football, making their one touchdown on clean, hard line plunges straight down the field, and blocking every attempt .at a score on the part of their opi onents by a dogged, impenetrable defense. The team work of our men was the finest I ever saw in any Freshman game, and superior to that of the Varsity of this year. It is scarcely extravagant to say that the most ecstatic moment of the year to the lover of athletics was that which marked the close of the intercollegiate football game last Thanksgiving Day, and left the score in our favor five to nothing. The season throughout was a hard one, filled with discouragements from first to last, and only the tenacity and consummate skill of such men as Yost and Dr. Murphy could have brought us out victorious at the end. The team developed early, then slumped, and then improved again, so that it was a hazard as to what they would do on Thanksgiving Day. During the season the eleven at times developed form that was nothing short of brilliant, scoring 34-0 and 44-0 against such worthy op| o-nents as the Oregon University and Reliance teams. Such a showing would then be followed by a game so ragged and weak as to throw a coach into chronic melancholia. In contrast with our erratic performances, Berkeley seemed to lx steadily improving and working toward a climax for the last Thursday of November. In spite of all this, however, I think every Stanford man went to the game with a firm faith in our team and its ability to win. California played her lx st game of the season, while our team showed only its poorer form and pulled a five-to-nothing victory out of the coals during the last few minutes of play. The eleven showed an excellent fighting spirit, but lacked the cohesion of our Freshman team. With the exception of Seeley and Ralph McFadden, the line was slow in both offense and defense, while it was plainly every man for himself” among the backs, with the striking exception of Slaker. Our ends, Cooperand Tom McFadden, clearly outclassed those of Berkeley in every department of the game, and Hill outpunted Moore of California. The game was clearly won on Traeger’s place kick for goal—a play which he had reduced to a practical certainty by faithful practice throughout the season. Our team demonstrated beyond question its superiority over the Berkeley team, and made its name blessed by bringing the intercollegiate championship to Stanford for the eighth time since the first game in 185 2. The retrospect, then, can not bo otherwise than pleasant, and, in all humility, the prospect would seem to be no less so. But let us smother any tendency toward over-confidence and work the harder to bring about a realization of our hopes. Let every participant train with patience and self-denial, and let every non-combatant give all his spirit to the cause, that in future days the Alumni may |K int with offensive pride to the good old days of 15)00-1901, and thus irritate the undergraduates of those days even as the Pioneers are now wont to irritate us. JJfanforb Quab 1902 Jack Reynolds. Mh . March 30, 1901. JKanforb ($uab 1902 University Athletic Committees Student Committee C. M. Markack, ’01, Chairman W. A. Morris, ’01, Vice-Chairman C. A. Cantwell, ’01, Secretary Elizabeth McFadden, ’01 Frank Leib, ’02 Eugene Warren, ’01 C. E. Gilman, ’01 R. S. Fisher, '02 A. B. Stewart, ’01 W. M. Parkin, ’01 N. G. Svmonds, ’01 W. R. Hamilton, ’02 C. Naramore, ’03 Faculty Committee George Mann Richardson John Casper Branner Vernon Lyman Kellogg Guido Hugo Marx Frank Angell I 76 JKoitforS $uab 1902 K. A. I.eib Harry Edwards W. W. Burnell Tennit Manager Baseball Captain Football Captain A. B. Stewart Track Captain Ed. Gilman Track Manager Eugene Warren Baseball Manager Athletic Captains and 1900-1901 Managers 177 JKcmforb (Juab 1902 Football Schedule, 1900 Date Score Opponent Score Place Sept. 29 Stanford 6 Reliance 0 Campus Oct. 11 • 85 San Jose Normal 0 San Jose Oct. 13 • 6 Reliance 0 San I rancisco Oct. 20 • 24 San Jose Normal 0 Campus Oct. 26 • t 0 Stanford Alumni 14 Nov. 3 • t 44 Reliance 0 Nov. 10 • • 34 Oregon 0 Nov. 17 11 0 Nevada 6 Nov. 29 “ 5 California 0 San I- rancisco Summary : (fimct won, 7; game. lost, I. Stanford Football Team, Season of 1900 Coach -Captain -Manager Left End -Left Tackle -I-eft Guard Center Right Guard -Right Tackle Right End Quarter Back Right Half-back l-eft Half-back -Full-back - Fielding Harris Yost W. Y. Burnett J. Burt Gildersleeve T. L. McFadden W. I. Tkaec.br J. G I)k Forest H. S. I-ee R. J. McFadden C. C. Seeley W. W. Burnett K. F. Cooper f C. B. Raitt L. P. Ransbach f W. M. Erb I E. A. Smith H. W Hill F. L. Sl.AKER J. A. Bentley G. I. Emerson Substitutes E. II. Nutter C. P. Allen O. H. Luck A. D. Geissler R. A. Thompson J. N. Stanford Intercollegiate Football Record Mar., i8.;i—Stanford, 14; Unircnity of California, 10 I8« — Stanford. 0: Unl Dec., iS yi— - ' 9J-•89J- 44 10; “ “ 10 .897- “ tt, u H “ 6 1S98— • 0; M 11 “ 0 .899- “ o; 6; “ 6 1900— • S; r ity of California, c O IS to o 178 Fh.l hi FranHii1 Rail! Seeley Yoal, Coach De Foreil Slaker Gildcnleeve, Manager Smith T. McFaddcn Cooper R. McFadden Lee Burnell, Captain Traeger Hill Bantbach Erb Jftoitforfe 1902 j Head Coach and A iitant Coache , 1900 Ph.t, I, F.. R. MaJit, V. C., 'o.j Thanksgiving Day, 1900 Phttn if Ktrlt C. tmlk , V. C.,'oj The Cardinal is Again Victorious JKanforb §uafc 1902 o JKanford 1902 Baseball Schedule, 1900 Date Score Opponent Score Jan. 27 Stanford 2 Fireman's Fund 8 Feb. 10 • 4 6 Fireman’s Fund 8 Feb. 15 44 8 Santa Clara College 6 Feb. 22 44 2 Fireman’s Fund 5 Feb. 24 44 3 Fireman’s Fund 7 Mar. 1 “ 1 Santa Clara College 3 Mar. 10 44 3 Fireman’s Fund 2 Mar. 24 44 5 Fireman’s Fund 8 Mar. 30 44 8 Santa Clara College 10 Apr. 7 4 4 8 Univ. of California 10 Apr. 14 44 10 Univ. of California 7 Apr. 28 5 Univ. of California 10 Summary : Games won, ) j games lost, 9. Stanford Baseball Team, Season of 1900 Coach Captain -Manager • Catcher -Pitcher First Base Second Base Third Base -Short Stop I-eft Field - Center Right Field - W. H. Murphy C. B. Strohn A. B. Haslaciier H. E. Loughbed I. F. L AN AG AN H. Havens (C. B. Strohn I). V. Cowden F. A. Brown C. B. Strohn I F. A. Brown H. J. Edwards {F. A. Brown G. II. Hampson D. V. Cowden C. G. Murphy N. G. Svmonds 182 Phslt if h'rjnklin Cowden Murphy Bennett Horn Traeger Parker Ball Dr. Murphy, Coach Edward , Captain Warren, Manager Mttner Lowenthal Symonda Brown Candidates for the Varsity, 1901 JKanforfe (Quab 1902 Coach Captain Manager - Track 'ream of 1900 I)r. W. H. Murphy-Hug h Boyd, ‘00 C. A. Cantwki.i., ’01 Norman E. Dole, ’03 I. . C. Hayvley, '03 Paul Parker, ’03 R. L. Brooke, '03 C. Naramork, ’03 Earle Tai.hot, ’01 A. B. Stewart, ’01 A. J. Zsciiokke, '01 H. McCullough, ‘03 B. M. Hopper, 09 E. A. Smith, 03 E. M. Chadkourne. ’02 C. M. Wardall, ’01 J. T. Nourse. '00 N. G. Symonds, ’01 Claude Pollard, '03 Hugh Boyd, ’00 E. A. Strout, ’01 Lloyd Harter, '01 V. R. Hamilton, '02 L. S Lyons, ’03 J. C. McCauchern, '03 W. I. Traeger, ’03 H. C. Jones, 02 R. VV. Borough, '01 .84 Phttt i; hrjnilin Hawley Parker Brooke Naramorc Talbot Stewart ' .tchokkc Dole McCullough Hopper Smith Chadbourne Wardall Nourie S monds Pollard Dr. Murphy, Trainer Boyd, Captain Cantwell, Manager Stroul Harter Hamilton Beach Lyon McCaughcrn PhttH Ly R. E. H jr itlJ, Vy T. oj First Field I ay on Stanford Campus, April a , 1900 JHaitforb Quab 1902 Eighth Annual Intercollegiate Field Day Stanford Oval, April 21, 1900 Points Bvbkt Kkcok l FlHST Srcond Third C. S. loo-yard dash o:io a-5 McCanghern.S. Drum, C Harter, S. 6 120-yard hurdle 0:164.5 Hamlin, C. Strout. S. Powell, C. 6 3 88o-yard run 2:0735 Woolaey. C. Hamilton. S. Kuster. C. 6 3 440-yard dash o:S5 «-S Drum. C. Smith. S. Scott. C. 6 .; 220-yard hurdle 0:26 2-5 Woolaey, C. Powell. C. N'aramorc. S. 8 1 Mile walk 7:29 2-5 Walsh. C. Allen. C. Zsehokke, S. X 1 Shot put 41 ft.otf in. Plaw. C. Woolscy, C. Parker. S. b 1 High jump S ft- 3Vi in. ( Woolaey, C. 1 Power . C. t Dole. S. j McCullough. S. 8 1 Hammer throw 14S ft. VJ in. Plaw. C. Alltertson. C. Brooke. S. 8 1 220-yard dash 0:23 2-5 Drum. C. Cadogan, c. McCaughern. S. 8 1 Mile run 5 J 2.5 Hamilton, S. Moser, C. Bailey. C. Foster. S. 5 4 Pole vault toft. 7In. Boyd. S. Hoffman, C. J Beach. S. ( Dole. S. 3 6 Broad jump 21 ft.454 in. Tnpharn. C. Broughton, C. Hopper, S. 8 1 Total, 84 33 Comparative Athletic Records KVBNT Amkrican Coi.lkgiatk Kkcokh Kuldkk loo-yard dash o:f) 4-5 220-yard dash 0:21 «-5 440.yard run 0:40 2-5 Seo-yard run i:j6 4 S i-mile run 4! '5 •120-yard hurdle 0:15 2-5 Jio-yard hurdle 0:23 3’5 . Broad jump 24 ft- 4 4 ’n High jump 6 ft. 3 iH- Shot put Hammer throw Pole vault 44 ft 8V4 in-165 ft 6 iu. 11 ft. 5 °- Wefcrs, Georgetown Wcfcrs, Georgetown Long, Columbia Hollister, Harvard Orton. Penn. Kracnzlcin, Penn. Kraeiizlcin. Penn. Kraenzlcin. Perm. Windsor. Penn. McCracken. Penn. Plaw, California Clapp, Yale Coast Stanford Kkcokds ATK Kkcok n Rkcokd Holder 0:10 t-5 0 9 4-5 Brunloo,ex-‘99 0:23 t-5 0:23 1-5 t Knowles, ’96 j Bernhard. ‘96 o:st 0:5' 3-5 Brunton.ex-’99 2:00 2-5 «:y 2-5 Copeland. '95 4 38 2-5 Ij6 Brown. '97 0:16 o' 1s 3-5 Morgan, ex- 00 0:26 1-5 Reynolds. 96 22 It. 10 in. 21 ft. 7 n- Johnson, '97 5 ft. 9 4 in. 5 It. 954 in. I Dole ’99 4 Morgan, ex-'oo 41 ft. 6K in. 41 It. 6 in. Wilbur, ex-'99 148 ft.in 132 ft- Fickert. ’9s 10 ft. 10 in. 11 ft. 54 in. Boyd. «o 18X JHattforb §uafc 1902 Freshman Game, San Francisco, October 27, 1900 189 Jftanforb Quad 1902 Freshman Football Schedule of 1900 Date Score Opponent Score Sept. 22 Freshmen 29 Hoitt’s 0 Sept. 25 “ 0 Palo Alto High 0 Oct. 6 • 4 16 Tama!pais Mil. Acad. 0 Oct. 12 44 46 Peralta Hall 0 Oct. 23 44 6 Palo Alto High 6 Oct. 27 44 5 California Freshmen 0 Summary : Garnet woo, 4; garnet lott, o ■, lie, 1. Freshman Team Captain -Manager - Left End .... I-eft Tackle -I-eft Guard Center -Right Guard -Right Tackle Right End Quarter-back Left Half Right Half - Full-back L. P. Bansbach - J. Burt Gildersleeve f J. C. Lunt 1G. H. Moors W. Hall W. Young R. J. McFaddkn A. F. Feeder ickson - K. F. Kennedy VV. D. Patterson L. P. Bansbach F. G. Lemmon - J. N. Stanford j G. H. Clark f S. Taylor Substitutes Beebe Burton Grant Maples Merrill Freshman Football Record 1 K 4—Stanford, O; Unirertity of California, 4; 1897—Stanford, 16; University of California, 8 1895— “ Oj “ “ 44 i 1898— “ O; “ XI 189 1— 4i “ “ 4 1899— “ 6i “ “ o 1900—Stanford, y ; University of California, o 190 Frederick ion Hall Clarke Lunt Gildertleerc, Manager Young Kennedy McFadden Taylor Banibaeb Pailcrton Stanford Lemmon Moore JKanforb 1902 T en nis Season of 1900 Manager Singles - Doubles Samuel P. Hakdv, ’02 William P. Roth,'08 Samuel P. Hakdv. '02 Harry A. Wkihe, ’03 Samuel P. Hardy, 02 Intercollegiate Tournament Saturday, April 21st, San Francisco Roth, Stanford, beat Brai.kv, University of California, 7-5, 0-4. Sumner Hardy, University of California. f eat Samuel Hardy, Stanford, 0-4. 5-7. 6-0. Weiiie and Hardy, Stanford, beat Hunt and Sumner Hardy, University of California, 6-1, 0-2. Won by Stanford. Class Baseball Championship of 190! won by Sophomores I'eams 1901 1902 90.3 1904 Catcher Swindells Cowden Traeger Bowers Pitcher Bennett j McFadden ( Palmer f Parker {Studley Tritch First Base Bentley Geissler Horn Taylor Second Base f I hompson Diviny Kellogg Ball Mistier Short Stop Edwards Brown Crawford Yerrington Third Base Symonds f Conner Young Moore Ballagh Left Field Parkin Hamilton Lowenthal Luce Center Field Warren Sill Copp Lamb Right Field Erb McDowell 1 Knight t Pollard Wilson Score Sophomores 11. Freshmen 6 Juniors 9, Seniors 5 Sophomores 8, Juniors 7 Class Football Championship of 1900 won by Sophomores I'eams 1901 1902 9°3 1904 I-eft End. Symonds Campbell Caglieri Clark Ia. ft Tackle Bentley f Cone Smith Hauverman I amt I eft Guard Moulton Younger Thoni| son Young Center Talbot Gage Brooke McFadden Right Guard Harter Rice McCormick Jacobs Frederickson Right Tackle Nutter f Smith J X Cone [ Lowenthal I Crawford Harper Right End St rout McFadden Knight Patterson Quarter Ferrari Hamilton ! Luck [ Pollard Bansbach Ia;ft Half Wardall Cowden Parker De Witt Right Half Wood Frisselle | I Naramore | Luck Stanford Full-back Parkin Boren Roberts Grant Score Sophomores 0, Freshmen 0 juniors 5, Seniors 0 Sophomores 6, Juniors 0 j fanforb ($ua 1902 93 JWanforb (Quab 1902 Oilman, Manager Sprague Chad bourne Taylor .schokke Hamilton Olympic Cross-Country Run February 2 2d, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. Distance, four miles. Entries: Stanford, Oakland High, Olympic Club Won by Stanford. Time: 1 hour 59 minutes 37 2-5 seconds. Team A. J. Zsciiokke, ’01 E. M. Chaduournb, 02 W. R. Hamilton, ’02 J. C. Taylor, '04 H. A. Sprague. ’04 194 Women's Athletic Association Officers President - - - Maud March Vice-President - - - Mrs. Parnib Storey Secretary - • - Miss Francks E. Short Board of Directors Theodora W. Stubbs, ’01 Martha Scott, ’03 Etiiki. Rhodes, ’02 Mrs. C. A. Copeland, Faculty Standing Committees Pedestrian May Voorhbs Elsie Schwartz Elizabeth Pbckham, Chairman Bicycling Edna Rowell Mary Meredith Ina Zii.isch, Chairman Tennis Mary Hodge Marylinb Barnard Mrs. J. P. Hall, Chairman 95 JKonforb ($uab 1902 JKanford (Quad 1902 Prank II. Borfn. '02 -L. P. Bansbach. W Kknnktii F. Coorkr. 02 -Howard M. Chadbocrnk. 02 W. M. Kbii, 01 - II. J. Howards. 01 R. L. Brookb. 'OS R. 8. Pishkr, '02 - C. Howard Oilman. 01 -Samckl P. Hardy, '02 • w. R. Hamilton. 02 • V. D. Localky. 02 • L. K. IlARTKR. ’01 Chkstkr Mcrpiiy. '00 • Thomas McPadokn, ‘00 -R. J. McPadokn, 'CM C. Naramork, 03 . . . Paul Parkrr. '03 - J. C. McCacoiibrn, ‘03 Ciias. B. Raitt,'03 • Wm. Roth, '03 A. B. Stkwakt, 01 • K. A. Strout. 01 K. A. Smith, '03 Char. J. Swindells. 01 -Prank Slakrr. '03 C. C. Skklky, 02 • W. I. Traeokr, 08 -Harry Wkiiik, 03 A. J. Zkhukkk, “01 Football Team, '09 - Football Team. '00 - Football Team, '00 • Track Team. CIO Football Team. 99-,00 . Baseball Team, '99-'00 Track Team, 00 . Football Team. 99 Football Team. 99 - Tennis. 99 '00 Track Team. 00 - Track Team, '98 - Track Team, '00 ( Football Team, '96- 97-'9S'99 ; Captain. 99 ; • 1 Baseball Team, '98 '99 00; Track Team. 97 Football Team. '99 00 - Football Team. 00 • Track Team. '00 • Track Team. 00 Track Team. 00 - Football Team. '99 '00 • Tennis, 00 - Track Team. 99.'00 ; Captain, 01 • Track Team. ’99-'C© - Football Team. 99- 00 ; Track. '00 Baseball Team. '98-'99 • Football Team, '00 Football Team. 00 - Football Team. '99.‘00 • Tennis, '00 • Track Team. 99-'00 196 I Jftcmforb ($uab 1902 Review of the Year’s Debating |HR average university student does not pay much attention to debating except upon the evening for intercollegiate debate. Then, if victory be ours, the air is rent with shouts, and some one is a hero for a few hours, until something else comes along for our student body to play with. But beneath all this showy superstructure of debating, there has been gradually erected a solid foundation at Stanford, built by a few earnest workers who have had the future in view. It is because some of these long-hid plans have been brought to completion during the present academic year that this article deserves any attention whatever; it may serve as a reminder to those who have not noticed the radical moves that have been made. Its opinions are merely those of the writer, to be taken for what they are worth. Last year there was inaugurated a series of contests between the several high schools of the State, comprising the Debating League of Northern California, for the Stanford Debating Cup, offered by this University. The school first winning this cup three times is to possess it permanently. This contest has aroused great interest in high school debating circles, and already the league contemplates extending its scope so as to be all-Californian in character. May not we say that Stanford' had her share in thus developing debating in the secondary schools of the State? Commencing with May of this year, the final debate is to l e held at the University, and these high school students brought in still closer touch with Stanford. Stanford debaters have always been perplexed over the problem of getting Freshmen to do active debating work. Many of our leading men have regretted at the end of their college days, that they had not had the benefit of a Freshman year’s debating experience. To remedy this evil, there was started, in 1899, the Sophomore-Freshman Debate. This has filled a long-felt want. Class rivalry has stimulated Freshmen to efforts when intercollegiate preliminaries would not. In furtherance of this same idea, the Freshman Debating Society was started this year, all other societies agreeing not to pledge Freshmen until after the Sophomore-Freshman debate. This society has not made much noise, but it has had a series of hotly contested and enthusiastic debates, culminating in a set of 198 finals for the choice of a Freshman team. This team is easily far above any Freshman team of the past, and if these men persevere, 1904 will graduate with the highest debating record. In May, Stanford will, for the first time, send a debating team out of the State. We are to meet the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, Nebraska. Next year Nebraska comes here. It is to be hoped that this contest will become an established thing. It is worth while to widen our horizon, to reach out for new fields to explore and finally conquer. It is most gratifying to us to be the recipient of challenges from both Nebraska and Washington. We are evidently being spoken of as a university with a good debating record. This amounts to more real good to the University than any amount of athletic preeminence. The debater may lx? overvalued as a peculiar representative of the intellectual life of the University. He undoubtedly is. Hut the valuation is thus made, nevertheless, and, remembering this, we must lx? most careful to guard our reputation in this branch of contest. As the Nebraska-Stanford debate is, in the future, to take place during the Fall semester, it will be |x ssible to have our very best material represent us against both California and Nebraska. It should always be borne in mind that Stanford’s first duty is to defeat California. No contest can ever take the place of the intercollegiate debate. No plan that would interfere with our chance of victory against California should for a moment be considered. It should, and always shall be, the debater's ambition to make the Intercollegiate team. He should not, and shall not, be so considered in the front rank of Stanford debaters until he does. In conclusion, I ask the privilege of leaving one word of advice to future representatives of the Cardinal against the Blue and Gold. Remember that the traditional debating jx licy of Stanford is, to treat your subject fairly and honestly. Leave to California all the technical, fine spun, ingenious, diagram style of argument. But do not underestimate the effectiveness of that kind of logic. It is dangerous unless crushed by the same kind of tactics. More than one debate has lx?en lost to California because our men did not think it worth while to point out what they knew to be mere ingenuity. Stanford should continue to lx? fair and honest in her constructing arguments, but should be prepared to cross swords and fence on technicalities, if challenged. •99 JMoitforb (§uafc 1902 J. F. English, ’01. .Stanford $uab 1902 W.fC. Morrow W. A. Morrit C. M. Mimck A. N. Merritt E.'H.'Williuu J. P. English Stanford Debaters Eighth Intercollegiate Debate Stanford University vs. University of California, Metropolitan Temple, May 5, 1900 Question “Resolved, That the guarantees of the Constitution should extend to all persons and territory under the permanent control of the United States, except to persons living in tribal relations.” Affirmative : Negative : John M. Springer ) Fred E. Borton ) Miss Anna Eraser [of Stanford Owen E. Hotlb [of U. C. Cecil M. Marrack i Willsie M. Martin j Decision for the Affirmative Presiding Officer: Frank A. Fetter Judges Hon. Erskine M. Ross Hon. J. A. Cooper Hon. Thomas P. Hawley Intercollegiate Debating Records 1893 —Won by Stanford 1894 —Won by Stanford 181 5—Won by California 1896—Won by California 1897— Won by Stanford 1898— Won by California 1899— Won by California 1900— Won by Stanford 200 Seventh Carnot Debate Assembly Hall, Stanford University, February 8, 190! Question “Resolved, That the French administrative law is incompatible with the spirit of a democratic republic.” Affirmative: Jesse Hbnrv Steinhart of California William Backhout Greblbv of California William Alfred Morris of Stanford . Negative: John Francis English, Jr., of Stanford Cecil Mortimer Marrack of Stanford Leon Elmer Martin of California Decision for Mr. Morris Chairman David Starr Jordan Judges Hon. G. H. Cabaniss of San Francisco C I . Pomeroy, Esq., of San Francisco Wm. Thomas, Esq., of San Francisco Carnot Record 1895 — Won by Mr. Sandwick of Stanford 1896 — Won by Mr. Flaherty of California 1897 — Won by Mr. Overstreet of California 1898 —Won by Mr. Fryer of California 1899 —Won by Mr. Warner of California 1900 —Won by Mr. Martin of California 1901 — Won by Mr. Morris of Stanford Wearers of the Varsity “S” John F. English, Jr., '01, Carnot Debating Team, '00, ’01 James Ferguson. ’99. Intercollegiate Team. ’98. '99 Cecil M. Marrack. ’01, Carnot Team. '00, ’01; Intercollegiate Team, ’00, '01 William A. Morris, ’01. Carnot Team, ’01; Intercollegiate Team, ’01 William C. Morrow, ’01, Intercollegiate Team, '01 JKanforb Qu ab 1902 201 JKanforb Quab 1902 Euphronia Literary Society Organized January 14, 1893 Officers First Semester VV. A. Morris, ’01 C. F. Riddell, ’01 Tiioreau Ckonvn, ’02 J. S. Bircham, ’01 C. DbW. Scott, ’02 (C. M. MARRACK, ’01 |J. E. Wii-SON, 01 President......................... Vice-President....................... Secretary-Treasurer - Assistant Secretary-Treasurer -Sergeant-at-Amis .... Critics.............................. Second Semester President......................................J. E. Wilson, ’01 Vice-President...................................Thor eau Cron vs, ’02 Secretary-Treasurer............................J. S. Bircham, ’01 Assistant Secretary-Treasurer....................J. W. Cameron, ’03 Sergeant-at-Arms...............................W. A. Morris, ’01 tW. A. Morris. ’01 Critics..........................................SC. M. Mar rack, ’01 Members W. H. Beach, ’00 W. A. Morris, ’01 II. G. Foster, '01 J. E. Wilson, ’01 A. R. Hicks, ’01 C. M. Mar rack, ’01 C. F. Riddell, ’01 J. S. Burciiam, ’01 Frank Adams, ’01 Tiioreau Cronvn, '02 M. F. McCormick, ’02 Richard Brvan, ’02 W. H. Owrnbv. ’02 C. Dk. W. Scott, ’02 B. P. Oakfokd, ’02 Ci. W. Drvkr, 02 A. E. Cooley, ’02 R. J. Stkrrett, ’02 F. B. Wagner, '02 I). P. Campbell, ’03 J. W. Cameron, ’03 W. C. Malov, ’03 F. E. Nakglk, ’03 (i. I). Boalt, ’03 C. D. McComisii, ’03 F. J. Pl'RSKLL, ’03 J. M. Beach, ’03 P. I.. Rourke, ’03 R. II. Kimball, '03 R. L. Brooke, ’03 20a if I H JHanforb §uob 1902 Ncstoria Literary Society Organized September, 1894 Officers First Semester President Vice-President Secretary-T reasurer Sergeantat-Arms F. E. Thompson, ’01 C. M. Wardall. ’01 J. H. Page, ’03 T. L. McFaddkn, gr. Second Semester President...................................F. J. Cummings, ’01 Vice-President................................De Witt Montgomery, ’01 Secretary-T reasurer........................R. W. Everett, ’02 Sergeant-at-Arms..............................F. E. Thompson? ’01 Members F. J. Cummings, '01 E. M. Card, ’01 M. C. Decarli, 01 W. E. Dickson, gr. R. W. Everett, '02 Louis Ferrari, ’01 R C. McComish, ’03 T. L. McFaddkn, gr. De Witt Montgomery, ’01 C. D. Montgomery, '02 Edward Mitch el, '01 E L. Morris,’03 J. H. Page, ’03 E. W. Rice, ’02 J. J. Ryan, ’03 Martin Singer, gr J. A. Snell, ’01 A. B. Sill, ’02 G. S. Snyder, '03 F. E. Thompson, ’01 104 £fanforb Philolexian Literary Society Quab 1902 Organized November 17, 1894 Officers President......................C. A. Dittmar. ’02 Vice-President...................L. E. Harter, ’01 Secretary......................Claude Pollard, 03 Treasurer........................L. H. Roseberry, ’02 Members Graduates C. Quavlb, ’00 H. V. Edwards, ’00 E. S. Page, '00 J. F. English, ’01 L. E. Harter, ’01 C. B. Gn.LEsriE, '01 F. H. Foster, ’01 A. J. Coi i’, Jr.. ’02 C. A. Dittmar, ’02 V. I). Louslev, ’02 L. H. Roseherrv, ’02 W. W. Copp, 03 F. F. Gi ndki m, ’03 J. Mori, ’03 C. Pollard, ’03 C. B. Wooster, ’03 L. K. Wisehart, ’03 P. A. Martin. 03 R. V. Knight, ’03 C. K. Studlev, ’03 Ciias. Crary, ’03 Clarence Crary, ’04 106 Phut kj Franklin JKcmforb $uab 1902 Officers I I First Semester President, Elizabeth McFadpen, ’oi Vice-President, Dellk Howard, 02 Secretary -Treasurer, Rebecca Davis, ’oi Ass’t Sec.-Treasurer,Flora B. Beecher, 03 Second Semester President, Helen Matthews, ’oi Vice-President, Dellk Howarp, 'oa See.-Treasurer, Flora B. Beecher, ’03 Harriet Brown, ’oi Elizabeth Cone, ’oi Rebecca L. Davis, ’oi Lacra B. Everett,'ot Helen Matthews, ’oi Elizabeth McFadden, ’oi Ipa Gray, ’oi Lucy E. Osborne, ’oi Gertrude F. Rowell, 01 Adelaide L. Pollock, 'oi Elizabeth A. Everett, ’02 Delle Howard, '02 Flora B. Beecher, ’03 Rebecca S. Suhr, ’03 Mae I.. Johnson, ’03 1 Saturday Mil Night Club I Organized October 19, 1895 208 r resnman Debating Society Officers First Semester President, W. B. Chandler Vice-Proidcnt, O. C. Stencer Secretary, D. V. Noland Scrgeant-at-Arim, W. C. Wood Second Semester President, W. C. Wood Vice-President, Miss M. Barnhouse Secretary, R. V. V. Anderson Treasurer, A. T. Parsons Sergeant-at-Arms, M. A. Thomas Members R. V. V. Anderson M. Arnold C. I). Atterburv Miss M. Barnhouse Miss I.. Beebe C. R. Blodgkt W. H. Brown C. E. Burton W. B. Chandler A. L. Dahlgren W. O. Dins J. A. Erickson K. S. Harter A. S. Henley A. E. Joy W. A. Kingery A. J. Klamt H. M. Lewis L. I). Lockwood P. W. McDonald E. K. Miller D. V. Noland A. J. Parsons O. H. Ritter F. Roehr A. H. Rose A. Silvey O. C. Stencer J. W. Staneord M. A. Thomas M. E. Van Dine P. C. Well C. B. WlNTLER W. C. Wood JHanforb }uab 1902 209 I Fmhman ' Dream of Vacation. jjtanforb The Training - house Corporation at the $u b b ' r 1902 End of its First Year TO THE present time there has been no change in the personnel of the Training-house Corporation. The directors are O. C. Leiter, '99, Portland, Ore.; Milnor Roberts, '99, Stanford University; J. E. McDowell, ’00, Stanford University; Henry H. Taylor, ’00 (secretary), San Francisco; T.J. Hoover, ’01 (chairman), Palo Alto ; C. A. Cantwell, ’01, Stanford University, and J. Burt Gildersleeve, ’02, Palo Alto. Dr. Frank Angell is the treasurer of the Corporation. The first fruits of the Corporation’s lalxjrs, during its initial year, should be very gratifying to the Student Body. There is now in the treasury the sum of fifteen hundred dollars. There will also be due the Training-house Fund at the end of the academic year one-half of the surplus of the Student Body at that time. The immediate work of the Corporation has not been as active as at first because the temporary Training-house has met the more urgent athletic needs. However, the policy of the Corporation has l ecome clearly outlined. It intends that its work shall be thorough and fundamental. Recognizing Stanford’s future growth and the present cramped athletic facilities, it hopes to obviate further embarrassments and prepare well for coming expansion. In the scoj e of its work this Corporation feels that the precedent, so patriotically set by the class of ’99, will be emulated by the succeeding classes, and that each will add its tithe to the Training-house Fund. Further, it is the hope of this Corporation that every member of the Student Body will realize that their earnest cooperation is needed and that this Training-house Movement is not a thing of a day or of a month, but of years, perhaps,—or until we have a training-house that is a credit to us, and athletic fields that will meet every contingency of present and future athletics. Temporary Training-home. How the Stanford Amendment Was Won JKanfdrfe (Quab 1902 E HAVE fought and won. California has seen her sacred Constitution invaded by Stanford men who hammered and tinkered at it until she was compelled to heed their clamor and add a new clause —one which will ever be a source of pride to her. for by it she has righted a wrong and has placed lierself in the honorable company of those States which believe in fostering free education. The fight is over. As we look at the majority of nearly eighty thousand which the Amendment received we can not help thinking that | erhaps we did not do it after all — that it may just have happened in spite of us. At any rate we tried to do something, and whether that something helped clear the course for the landslide or hindered, it is worth telling. If the former, that it may serve in the future as an encouragement for strenuous effort; if the latter, that it may be a warning to him who dreams, as many of us did at times, that the weight of the universe is on his shoulders. In spite of the magnitude of our victory I think we should not have succeeded at all if it had not been for the systematic and persistent efforts of the friends of Stanford. Our cause was just mid needed but its simple statement to win. To the men who made this statement, to the hundreds of thousands of voters in the State is due the victory. There was some opposition to overcome, both honest and interested, but our chief opponent was ignorance of what we asked and why we asked. And now something as to the causes which made this victory necessary and possible. For several years the burden of taxes weighed heavily upon Stanford. The friends of the University believed that it should be exempt from taxation, and through their efforts a constitutional amendment was passed through the Legislature two years ago which needed only the assent of the majority of the voters of the State to become a law. Amendment did not refer to taxation alone. At one time this was thought the most pressing issue. A large part of the University funds were invested in bonds which yielded no more than enough income to pay the taxes on the bonds themselves. Harvard, Vale ami other universities, no more public in their nature than Stanford, were exempt. Why not we, also? Relief could not be gained at once, so the form of investments was changed as far as possible into non-taxablc securities. For this reason alone the taxation problem had become of comparatively small im|K rtance when the Amendment was finally submitted to the people last year. For other reasons it ceased to have its original importance. The conviction had gradually forced itself upon those in charge of the fight before the Legislature that the very existence of the University itself was endangered by the uncertainty of its right to hold its vast endowments or to receive new additions. By its original charter it could receive nothing by will nor could it take anything by grant which lay outside the State. To remedy these defects and numerous others equally vital, but too technical to l e discussed here, the Amendment was framed with the greatest of care. But the effect of the early emphasis which had been laid on the taxation feature could not be eliminated at once or at all, and we were compelled to go both before the Legislature and, later, before the people ready to combat the idea that we sought tax exemption alone. The active work of the campaign began last September. A meeting of all those interested was called in the University chajjel. and chairmen were appointed from the students for each county represented in college These chairmen organized their county delegations who acted in conjunction with the Alumni clubs in various parts of the State. These clubs had been organized through the efforts of 2,3 JHanforfe $uab 1902 various Stanford graduates, especially of Frank V. Keesling, '08, who traveled from one end of the State to the other during Septemlier and October, stirring up slumbering enthusiasm among the Alumni, and bringing the Amendment personally before the newspapers. From the meeting in the chapel dates the separation of the campaign into two distinct divisions. The first, which comprised all that was to be done through the students and their friends from the University itself, was put in charge of the executive committee of the Amendment Club with the vice-president of the club as manager. The second division, which had charge of the campaign generally throughout the State was under the active management of George E. Crothers, S 5. the president of the club, with headquarters in San Francisco. The most important and effective work of the campaign was done by this latter division, but it is only of the former that I shall speak since it more immediately concerns the students themselves. As soon as lists of names were received from the county chairmen or from local clubs, the sending out of campaign material began. This consisted of printed letters setting forth the objects of the Amendment with answers to the known objections. The most popular campaign document was a reprint of a newspaper article written by Professor Cubberley. Besides this, a great number of personal letters and specially written manuscript articles for use in the country’ papers were sent out. In all. nearly 220,000 pieces of printed matter were mailed from the Stanford office in addition to what was sent out from the city headquarters. Every one on the Campus was urged to make a supreme effort to win voters. Twenty thousand mimeographed postal cards requesting support were distributed among the students to l e sent to voters of their acquaintance. These were all used in less than two days. An examination of the cards before mailing showed that they were sent out almost equally by the men and women of the University, a particularly gratifying fact to those of us who had felt that the women were not assuming their share of the campaign. It is true, to be sure, that some of the women refused to sign these personal appeals, because the voters addressed were not on their correspondence lists. As far as possible speakers were sent out to attend political meetings and s| eak upon the Amendment. Members of the executive committee and such other students as could be gotten were impressed for this duty in neighboring towns and in San Francisco. The final act of the campaign was the most characteristic of true Stanford loyalty. Volunteers were called for and came forward eagerly to attend the jxills in San Francisco, and distribute cards or explain the Amendment to voters. They did their work so well that the Stanford Amendment was better known that day than any other. “Them Stanford l oys are everywhere,” said a jxdiceman out in the Potrero. and they are genin' all the voters, too.” There were not enough to cover every voting precinct, so they were industriously shifted around to give the impression of great numbers. To them is due a large part of San Francisco's twenty thousand majority. But San Francisco was not alone in the attention bestowed upon its voters. In I.os Angeles, Sacramento. Fresno, Oakland anti other places the same thing was done by students or Alumni. In some places, notably San Bernardino, the high school students distributed Stanford election cards. Success has come to our efforts, and in the resulting gratification we arc likely to lose sight of many lessons which the fight taught us. One of these is particularly worthy of notice. Those who shouted loudest and prated most of organized “ rooting” and ” true Stanford spirit did the least. The campaign revealed many a hitherto unknown student who did all he could for his college for the sake of doing and not for public applause. In most cases these were men who have had to work their own way, partially, at least. They and the others who worked so loyally typifv the “ true Stanford spirit” rather than the “dig” or the perennial • rooter.” The latter individual was, perhaps, in the mind of a country’ editor who opposed us when he said that the Amendment was “ for the lienefit of a horde of imported professors who are paid fancy salaries for overseeing a gang of baseball and football players.” Ch.vs. K. Lkwers, '96. JHonforb Quafc 1902 Commencement, 1900 Thursday, May 24th 8:00 p. M.— Musical Clubs Concert Friday, May 25th 8:00 p. m.—Senior Class Reception Saturday, May 26th 10:00 a. M.— Faculty • Senior Baseball Game • 8:00 1 . m.— Senior Farce - Assembly Hall Encina Hall Campus Assembly Hall Sunday, May 27th 11:00 a. u.— Baccalaureate Sermon by Rabbi Voorsanger - Assembly Hall Monday, 10:30 a. m —Class Day Exercises -Introductory Remarks Class History -Address -Cane Presentation Acceptance -Last Will and Testament 11:30 a. m.— Dedication of Class Plate laying of Class Roll and Plate Dedication • Acceptance Song........................... 9:00 i . m.— Senior Ball Tuesday, 11:00 a. m.— Annual Alumni Meeting -12:30 p. m.— Alumni Lunch 8:00 I , m.— Promenade Concert Wednesday; 10:00 a. m.— Commencement Address by Professor ' May 28th - - - Chapel Class President, Lloyd B. Wickersham Miss Anna G. Fraser Professor Walter Miller - C. D Scott, 02 - W. W. Copp. ’03 F. B. Riley - - • Quadrangle Lloyd B. Wickersham Charles Quayle - - David Starr Jordan - - Girls’ Glee - - - Encina Hall May 29th Chapel Roble Hall Quadrangle May 30th - - - Assembly Hall Villiam Henry Hudson 216 “To Have and to Lose” JHcmforb (Juab 1902 By Johm Seymour Briscoe With Songs by C. B. Strohn, ’oo, Bristow Adams, '01, L. MacF. Bowman, 'oi H. I. Wiel, ’oo, Musical Director W. M. E , ’oi, Stage Manager Cast Tuttle, Stanford ‘94, ’95, ’96, 97, '98, ’99, ’oo, back to college Harris, a former friend of Tuttle - - Prof. Binks, a married nun with a mission .... Prof. Jinks, Binks' friend and sympathizer - Prof. Hinks, from Cornell, and dumb ..... Jay Do-’cm-up, a wizard Actor Nevcreat, advance agent y ..... Mary, a domestic Billy Brownell, a constable J James Actoreno, willing to work S King of the Hottentots ....... Mrs. Binks, the second one ...... Ethel Binks, who likes Tuttle ...... Hazel Binks, Harris' steady ...... Frank Branch Riley, '00 Ray W. Thompson, ’01 W. M. Erb, ’oi Eugene Warren, ’01 - - G. Sobcy, ’01 Frank Corbusier, ’01 C. B. Strohn, ’00 P. K. Gilman, ’01 Miss C. Sobey, ’oi Miss Alice Joiner, ’03 Miss Helen Smith, ’03 Synopsis of Scenes Place, Stanford Time, Now ACT 1— Drawing-room Professor Binks' house. ACT II—Scene 1, uad. Song, “The Actor's Confession,’’ by C. B. Strohn, ’00. Scene i, Patagonia. The ‘inks installed. Happenings. ACT III — Patagonia. Song, “One, Two, Three, by L. MacF. Bowman, ’oi. Song, “Berkeley Talcs,’’ by Bristow Adams, ’01. Mrs. Binks to the rescue. 117 JHcutforb $uab 1902 Senior Ball Committee, i goo Miss B. M. Phelps Miss C. E. Earl Miss Oka Brown J. T. Noursk J. F. I .AN AG AN G. P. Roberts E. M. Davis C. G. Murphy Garth Parker, Chairman Faculty-Senior Game Faculty SkNIUMh Fish pitcher - ( Braden ( Stkohn Richardson • • catcher I. A NAG AN Jordan first base Dutton Kei.i.oog • • second base .... Coffin Wing - third base Roberts Newsom short stop .... Hawley Ueatii - left field Strohn Marx center field .... Murphy Hoskins • - right field Davis Score by Innings 21 Faculty Seniors 2 8 1 0 0 0 0—11 1 4 2 0 1 2 0—10 Scene at the Faculty-Senior Game. £ ftnforb Labiche, La Pcrle de la Canebicre (Juab 1902 Assembly Hall, Mcrcrcdi, 16 Mai, 1900 Person nages Beautendon, ancien parfeumer..................................MM. Schulte Godefroid, son fils..................................................... Love joy Antoine, doniestique...........................................du Cellide-Muller Thirison Marcasse. riche Marseillaise............................Mmes. Cook Madame de Sainte-Poule.....................................................Turcot Blanche, fille de Madame de Sainte-Poule.....................................Shaw Miette, bonne de Th£r 5son.................................................Mourot I.a seine se passe Paris, dans le salon de M. Beautendon. Rideau A 8 heu res. Musique par le Ladies' Glee Club. 220 Memorial Day Exercises JMcmforb $uab 1902 Chapel, Monday, May 14, 1900 Music Program Glee Cluij Quartet Reading from Stanford Stories” .... Irwin and Field F. B. Rii.ey Trio. Nocturne, Op. 183, No.l- - - - - - Behr Winifred Morgan. Violin B. A. Olshauskn, Flute R. E. Schulz, Piano Address - E. M. Davis Vocal Solo, ” Life's Lullaby Lane Alycb Moore Reading, “The Fern Leaf” - • ... Inon. “ Spinning ” II. . L. E. Bassett Music, America” . Founders’ Day J Assembly Hall, Friday, March 8, 190 Gloria (Twelfth Mass) Mozart Choral Society Address, Education” .... Mr. Charles F. Lummis Praise Ye the Father Gounod Choral Society 221 With Apologies to 1901 Quad. Literary jttanforb $uab 1902 ( Double Ballade) Beyond the portals of that mighty gate Through which the winds of sorrow take their flight, Moaning and murmuring, disconsolate, There lies a desolate country never bright With song, or smile of sunshine. Hovering night Rests fitfully upon a beetling row Of mountain tops, and herded in below There stands a multitude all gaunt and thin With hope deferred and pain of present woe, Waiting the day when Love shall enter in. Wistful their eyes and ever passionate Of some forgotten unfulfilled delight, Shivering, with weary bodies adumbrate, A sorry company! — hopeless, despite Their yearning! All the wayward winds that blow Make mock of them except what breezes go Wandering, the languid land of love to win,— For they bear prayer of those who suffer so, Waiting the day when Love shall enter in. Slim, vague-eyed girls are there who, sighing, wait JKanforb They know not what nor why, with heart-lit light 1902 Fled from their features, deeming it too late To stop the Angel that has slipped their sight. Old women, men with faces sharp and white, Husband and wife are in that ghastly show; But bitterer still is one who, fading slow, Clings whispering to his phantom might-have-been, Holding the shadow real nor will not know, Waiting the day when Love shall enter in. Envoy. 0 thou, around whom even yet the flow And rhythm of Love seems still to swell and grow, On those for whom this pulse will not begin, 1 pray thee somewhat of thy pity to bestow, Waiting the day when Love shall enter in! “S I JHoitforb (Quafc 1902 MEDIUMS PRESS A?; ' I PRIZE STORY 7 t jrfl Charles Abbott Whitmore VE MADE up my mind. Doc: the first of next week I begin hustling for the price of a glance at a menu card.” “It will be a passing glance, too, if you have to earn the money to get it. But don’t utter any such enervating sentiments outside the house, —some one might take you seriously.” ‘‘Now, shut your eves fora moment and imagine me in earnest. I’m going to quit.” The decided tone of the speaker drew from his companion a closer scrutiny, and the expression he observed in the good-natured countenance opposite surprised his own into sober earnestness. Irwin Glover, who had been deciding, was up against the real thing, as he would have expressed it. In some way his philanthropic father had discovered that with the one-hundred-dollar educational tax, which he credited monthly to profit and loss, his obvious heir was having no end of a good time, and studying exactly enough, and no more, to keep from being guillotined by the faculty executioner. The head of the Glover household was strictly business. He saw that at the aforesaid rate the family line running to Stanford was gilt-edged insecurity, and decided that he ought not, in justice to his principles, continue to operate the longest leased wire in the State. The relation between Glover’s allowance and this resolution proved to be as $100 to $30. If the fall in his fortunes had come gradually, he might have made arrangements to tide over the time of greatest depression, but to have it all come in a lump was enough to sour even so genial a disjKisition as he possessed. Ordinarily, Irwin Glover was as refreshing a fellow as one could wish to meet. He was tall and well set up, and, since his financial difficulties, described himself as ‘‘athletic but impecunious.” Like many another man at college, his natural abilities seemed proportioned to his indolence, which was great. Among the non-academic honors that were his, Glover enjoyed most his jxwition as stuntist for the musical clubs, and if he had a real ambition at this particular | eriod of his life, it was to l e their leader. But where Glover could have had almost any Student Body election, the Glee Club leadership was a different matter. The Beta Chi fraternity, to which he belonged, was weak in Glee Club men, while Sigma Psi, which 226 ran to musicians, had easily a third of the songsters wearing their jeweled crescent—and worst of all, they had a candidate. Phil Pearson, for it was not other than lie, was no unworthy opponent so lar as musical ability went. The other fraternity men were fond of saying that his energy ami blarney were all that kept Sigma Psi near the head of things fraternal, but such whisperings always had something of a persimmony sound, lor Pearson had several regrets to send out at the end of his first month as a Freshman. But although a good fellow to those he liked, Pearson was not generally popular. Curtis, whom you will know better later, used to say that Pearson would be right at home among the crocodiles of the Saurian age. It may lie telling, perhaps, though several fellows not in his own crowd were on to the fact, but Pearson received a warning the previous semester that unless he took a reef in his Junior corduroys and doffed his plug more often liefore the professorial shrines, the spring catalogue would be obliged to issue from the University press office without his name among the list of survivors. Yet in spite of Pearson’s balance of power in the Glee Club, Glover seemed to have the lead on him by a few votes. Glover and Doc Curtis were drawn up before a comfortable fire in the big, open grate of the library. It was a miserable, cold night, and several other fellows had brought their books down from the rooms up stairs to study where it was warm. But warmth and fellowship, when combined, are not conducive to study, and their efforts were as spasmodic as the showers that beat against the window. Occasional quiet would l e restored by the stern interference of some upper-classman. Finally Jamison, who was quarreling with a case in Equity, swore he would throw a ! ook at the next man who thought out loud. The Irrepressible Freshman, in a stage whisper, said he’d like to know how he could tell when he was thinking if he couldn't hear himself think, and was just quick enough to dodge a calf-bound volume of hewers’ “ On Crimes.” As the conversation between Glover and Curtis became more vehement, the room finally awoke to the fact that a heated discussion had been going on before the fireplace. “ Well,” said Doc Curtis, as though to sum things up, “ 1 think I have a picture of you quitting just as you have a buckle on the leadership. You won’t ; not if this frat knows itself.” “But I don’t fancy sailing around the Quad so close hauled. My bark is like the house-dog’s ; it isn't sea-worthy. See here,” pulling down one of his long legs from the mantel, ” my shoe ships water already. No, sir, I’m not living here to show posterity how cheap it can be done,” and Glover vented his ire with a vicious kick at the log in the fireplace. “You have enough to live on if you are economical,” asserted Jamison. “ We can not afford, as a crowd, to give in to Pearson and his litter of Sigma Psis now that you've started.” “ But I haven’t enough to live on,” Glover came back. “ And it will Ik? a fine thing for the crowd, won’t it, to have people dodging around behind me on the Quad straightening their hats and ties by the reflection in the back of my coat! ” “Have you used all the jollies in your repertoire?” asked Karsling, filling his pipe. JJfcmforb (Quab 1902 217 , fanforb (J}uab 1902 “I'm just like Samson with a hair-cut.” Glover got up slowly and shook the wrinkles out of his tall figure. ‘‘And so far as I can see. I can't do any business with the pillars around here. In any event, I’m going to bed.” ‘‘I hardly realized things were so bad with the boy,” said Jamison, when the door had closed. “ I know he has been grumbling around for the past month or so, but it is so common for the fellows to be broke that I had not paid much attention to him.” ‘‘Seems to me we ought to l e able to fix it up with his father some way,” said Curtis. “If Glove were only the Sigma Psi who got that pufif in the Palo Alto tonight! ” Here Curtis pointed to a short, single-head item : “ ‘Original Research. Cornelius Hildin has just completed embodying the results of his study of punctuation in the English language in a treatise for the English Department. Dr. Melville says — here, listen to this—‘The work of the young man is remarkable for its thoroughness, and the results will l e of great practical and theoretical value to this department.’ ” ‘‘You might cut Hildin’s name out, paste in Glover’s, and send it to his dad.” The Freshman offered what he supposed was one of his immoderate instances. “There’s some sense in his madness! If we could print it in — ” Jamison paused, and Curtis looked at him quickly. “Why not ? ” he asked abruptly. “It is too risky,” replied the other, shaking his head slowly. “ Not so very. Look here; what’s the matter with getting in the back door and setting it up? Put Glover's name in place of Hildin’s, you know. They don’t distribute the last forms, and it would be dead easy to put them back on the press and run a copy off by hand. By George, that’s just what we’ll do ! Such an article ought to fix Glover’s parent so he could be hypnotized again.” The men had learned from long experience that a proposition receiving Curtis’ sanction was worth considering, and it did not therefore take him long to work their enthusiasm up to the doing. Four fellows were selected for the expedition. Curtis got an old bike lamp to use as a dark lantern, and they started towards the University Press. The rain had ceased, but moisture hung heavy in the misty air, and the two weak incandescents on the Row glowed dull and subdued. After leaving the cement sidewalk and wading the street, they slipped over the mud and grass through the Camp, and were close to the corner of the Press building, when a sudden ejaculation from Curtis, who was in the lead, brought the others to a halt. It was too dark to see ten feet away, but they heard a sound like the closing of a door swollen with rain, and in a moment more the form of a man loomed up almost under their noses. He gave a surprised gasp, hesitated a second, and then, turning quickly, nearly falling as he did so, sped away in the darkness. “Well, I’ll be darned !” exclaimed Curtis, in an intense undertone. “Who was it, could you tell? ” “It was too dark to see his face,” whispered Cinnan, “but he acted mighty guilty.” 2 8 “Think we had better go on ? He might come back,” said Jamison, anxiously. “I’m not for getting into any mix-up that will keep me from graduating.” “ He was evidently through with his job, whatever it was, and I’ll bet too scared to return.” Curtis laughed silently. “Come on.” Half an hour later Curtis folded up a fresh-inked copy of the amended Palo Alto, and stuck it in his pocket. “We’ll go out through the manager’s office — the front door has a spring lock,” he said. JMcmforb (Quab 1902 About three days later Glover came up from the Lab to find a letter from his father awaiting him. Curtis, who, to hear him tell it, was always as “busy as a red ant,” and the Freshman, who never seemed to have anything to do, were playing solitaire by the fire, and watched Glover narrowly as he broke the seal. His almost disdainful indifference changed to happiness as he drew out a slip of blue paj er that had the facial expressions of a draft. “ Hooray !” he shouted, waving the paper frantically over their heads. “A check for fifty. Who said the days of miracles were past? Think of it, you unblessed mortals — a letter from home with fifty plunks just as I was al out to go to work ! That must have been the threat that killed papa. He could not bear to see me labor, and has preserved me from ignominy.” “Preserved you from being a first-class cucumber pickle,” corrected Curtis. “But wouldn’t it incinerate you !” Glover’s slang was awful when he was excited, and he was still grinning like a hyena. “ I never was so tickled in my life. Let’s see what this miracle means, anyway.” He turned to his letter, but it only served to deepen his surprised amusement. When he finished he was laughing in a mystified sort of way. “This is certainly the strangest epistle I ever perused. Imagine, dad accuses me, a physiology major, of impaling the English Department with a treatise on punctuation. I haven’t passed my IB yet. Me on punctuation ! I couldn’t punctuate the sentence of a police judge. I wouldn’t know a dash from a runaway, or a colon from a cord of wood. Me punctuate! I couldn’t do the first syllable. But I don’t understand. Dad can’t be crazy, 229 JMonforb Quafc 1902 though it looks that way. Talks about an article in the Palo Alto that I sent him. Say,”—he turned a suspicious eye on the merriment before him — ‘‘have any of you guineas been putting up a job on my poor old dad ? ’ ’ Curtis tapped his head, shook it doubtfully, looking wise and sympathetic. ‘‘Too bad ; sad case.” ‘‘Must run in the family,” observed the Freshman. ‘‘Well, there is something rotten in Denmark somewhere, but I'm too satisfied to scent it all out. I am willing to take things as they come ; it is only when they don’t come that I quarrel. What a relief not to be obliged to dodge a collector ! I’ll pay twenty-five cents on the dollar and wait for the next miracle. Wonder what my dad will have me writing on next? I think I’ll write on poetry. I have an inspiration to the tune of Yankee Doodle ’ : “Oh, Glove, he owed some thousand bills, Though nary a bill had he, sir; The bills were birds— ” A chorus of yells interrupted him as several fellows entered, ushered in by a gust of cold air. Glover dodged out the rear door, and they heard his jeering song fade away as he mounted the back stairs : “The bills were birds, and at his words They gave him all their notes, sir. ‘‘The Glove seems to be mended,” remarked Jamison, as he backed up to the fire. Glover’s luck lasted two days. Then he came down to supper with a disgusted expression on his face and a newspaper in his hand. ” I’m it for sure. Just cast your eyes over that page. Wouldn’t it make you blush to see your frat brother so conspicuous ?—picture and all in the Casco Casket. That’s my home paper, I want to tell you. My papa owns half, so he does. He is proud of me, so he is; and there is that article that worked the miracle, all about my being able to punctuate. I’d like to punctuate the illustrious editor of the Casco Casket with a bat. Discusses me as if I were a prize pig, or a dime museum freak. Gives an itemized account of my fine parts : hair half an inch to the left of middle ; ‘precocious’—listen to that—says I’m precocious, as if I were a two-year-old. ‘ Showing wonderful capacity ’—wonder how he heard of my hollow leg ! But foolishness aside, fellows,” he went on with sudden gravity, ” I knew the other day, when that letter came, that some one had put up a job for my sake. That was very considerate. So long as everything worked well, I did not intend to say anything. But, as you see, my father has hunted up an old glee club cut that I left at home, and has given it. with that article you sent, to the home paper. Andrews, the Sigma Psi. is a townsman of mine, and, of course, got a paper. Naturally, they were startled to see me sailing off with Hildin’s honors, and asked Kditor Duncan how about it — he is a proteg£ ol theirs anyway. He called this afternoon, all swelled up like a toy balloon, and wanted 230 an explanation : said I was guilty of usurping another’s honors, housebreaking, and was no fit man for glee club leader. I saw through his coarse work, and asked him what that had to do with Mrs. Nation’s antisaloon crusade, with the plan for communicating with Mars — in fact, what it had to do with the editor of the Palo Alto. Of course, I couldn’t explain anything. We both got kind of hot, and I told him that if he couldn't talk to a gentleman like a gentleman, he’d better leave. He went out sputtering like a deceased candle, saying that if an explanation was not presented at his office before next publication, he would expose the whole infamous proceedings. You fellows concocted this scheme, now it is up to you to uncock it.” Metaphorically the table was upset by this disaster. The most intense rivalry existed between the Sigma Psi and Beta Chi, and it looked dangerously as though the latter had made a bad break, (ilover’s face wore an expression of resigned martyrdom that would have l een comical under happier circumstances. Even the Irrepressible Freshman had no instances to offer. Curtis alone remained un| erturbcd. and a close observer might have thought that he almost enjoyed the situation. The fellows were all busy with their own opinions and schemes, but, as was ever the case when their own wits failed, they turned to Curtis. Curtis had the making of a statesman in his well-shaped head. He was a shrewd, careful thinker, and seldom initiated a scheme that he could not see his way out of. That this article should go farther than (ilover’s immediate family, even he could not have foreseen. During the afternoon Curtis had heard from some Beta Chi friends in the (ilee Club that the Sigma Psis had a story out on Glover. Sore and angry, he put his wits to work to find an antidote for the poison, and made the old discovery anew that back of a seemingly trivial occurrence there is often a strange agency. He put two and two together, with the result that this evening he had about four up his sleeve. But Curtis was a true sport. The fellows, some of them, criticized him for getting Glover from the frying-pan to the fire, and he preferred to take their apologies rather than their applause. Therefore he remained silent. After dinner Curtis went over to the Sigma Psi house. Pearson seemed a little surprised to see him, but recovered his affable manner, and upon Curtis’ request for a private interview took him up to his den. ‘‘It is about this little matter involving Glover.” Curtis began. Pearson flushed a trifle, but nodded his head, and the other continued : ‘‘I’m sorry a thing of this kind should come up to disturb a friendly contest, but it is only justice to Glover that I make an explanation.” Curtis rapidly sketched the affair. “You see, there was no intentional attempt to steal Hildin’s honors. Such a thing would l e absurd. We never expected that the thing would go past Glover’s father, but you know how the old folks are apt to be proud of their boys, and so he rushed off to print with it. It’s made it deuced inconvenient. Some way the story has gotten out among the fellows.” ‘‘That certainly does make it bad,” agreed Pearson, ‘‘but an explanation in the Palo Alto ought to make it right.” ‘‘Yes, but you know, Pearson, we can’t afford to have a tale like 3« JHanfori §uafc 1902 JHaitforb §uab 1902 that published on us. We’d be the laughing stock of college,” Curtis returned. ‘‘But I don’t see what I can do. Hildin is not the man that feels put out. But the fellows are all joshing Duncan, and he naturally wants to square himself. I can promise you that Hildin will accept your explanation, and our fellows will say nothing about it,” said Pearson, with a tine show of good-fellowship. Curtis who knew that they had been talking—ragtime, he would have called it—ever since they had first wind of the matter, felt his blood climb through his veins, but he restrained any retort and remained the model of the under dog. “ You have a lot of influence with Duncan. If you would explain the thing to him and say it’s all right he might let it slide,” Curtis almost begged. Pearson who saw he had things going his way took down his guards and became aggressive. ‘‘That is asking a good deal, don’t you think ? It is nothing that really concerns us except for the friendly feeling that we have for you as a neighbor fraternity. It is doubtful if Duncan would suppress the story even for me.” ‘‘You must see, though, Pearson, that Clover might as well withdraw from the fight if the story Incomes current. He might even have to leave college.” ‘‘Seems to me that I’m the hist man in college to talk to about that,” and Pearson flushed angrily. “Political courtesy, certainly, does not require that I try to elect my opponent.” “Suppose Glover should withdraw!” “Well,” Pearson hesitated, — he did not want to appear hasty,—“that might simplify matters. I could then, of course, make it a personal consideration with Duncan, and perhaps prevail upon him to shoulder the odium.” There was a slight emphasis on the last word. “ I ain’t go back to the fellows without some pledge, old man. Glover will be pulled down if you promise to square us with Duncan.” Pearson could hardly keep from showing his elation, but he controlled himself admirably, and, after dallying with his prey for awhile, admitted that he had power enough to keep the story out of print. No sooner had he made this admission than Curtis’ air changed from humility to sarcastic suavity: “I noticed a little 'ad' of yours in last night's Palo Alto, he remarked. The subject was so foreign to the topic in hand that Pearson looked at the speaker in surprise. “ Yes ; I lost a piece of my cuff button. It belongs to a set that I prize, besides l eing valuable.” Is this it?” Curtis produced a diamond, monogrammed button which one of the men had found the night of their expedition. ” Why, yes, where did you find it? I’m a thousand times obliged.” “ Don’t mention it, we’re so deeply indebted to you. I found it near Stevens’ desk in the University Press office.” Pearson's face hardened as he hastened to explain : That is so. I remember now. I was in to sec Stevens the other evening, but I had no idea I lost it there.” Or you might not have advertised for it,” added Curtis. Rather late call you were making,” he continued. No — not very. But I don’t see what business it is of yours,” said the Sigma Psi, firing up. I’m much obliged for the button, and if you will excuse me, I’ve got some work to do.” You were not a bit clublike that night,” continued Curtis, calmly, without paying any attention to his unceremonious dismissal. What did you leave us so precipitously for? You almost fell down.” It was you I — ” stammered Pearson. Yes; it was us you almost ran into.” Curtis took up the words tauntingly, and then continued with apparent irrelevancy: Miss Pere was telling one of our fellows how wonderfully clever you were at prognosticating Evolution exes. It’s rather careless of Stevens, don’t you think, to leave the examination papers in his desk over night?” Pearson, pale to the lips, tried to speak. You — I — it don’t prove anything.” Now, look here, Pearson, if you are not as great a fool as you’ve shown yourself an underhanded cur, you may save your reputation. I’ve got you dead to rights. I gave you a chance to do the gentlemanly thing, but instead you trier! to put it on us. Now it is my innings and I don’t intend to fan out. I won’t ask you to drop out of the fight, as you tried to force us to do ; we will win fairly or not at all; but your men have been doing dirty work against Glover. Undo that work, and keep your promise about Duncan, and nothing more need be said on either side. Is it a go ? ” Pearson was leaning forward in his chair with his eyes on the floor. Without raising them to the questioner, he answered, and Curtis left him still sitting there and found his way out of doors alone. Queer how that Glee Club election turned out, wasn’t it?” the lone singing brother of the Tau Rhos said at dinner one night. After that story got out about Glover, last week, it looked as though Pearson had a cinch. But this afternoon, when he was nominated, he got up and said that through misapprehension of facts, some of their men had rej ortcd JHanforb }uab 1902 33 Jftanforb (Quab 1902 things concerning Glover that were not true. He wished in behalf of Sigma Psi to apologize, and under the circumstances preferred not to have his name considered as a candidate. Decidedly gentlemanly. I didn’t think Pearson had it in him.” s34 JHcmforb $uab 1902 The Passing ot the Snaps. ERE were clays when their name was as legion. When the light of their faces was shed. When the classrooms were temples of gladness — Alas, for the days that are aead! By the sword of his grief for their passing The heart of the grafter is cleft — For of all the old snaps of the past time Only Woodwork is left. Now the class in Hygiene is a gold-brick To the student who hunteth a pipe; Front the whole blessed English Department Not one hour of ease can we swipe; But we work on and on without ceasing. Of the joy that was ours we’re bereft — For of all the old snaps of the past time Only Woodwork is left. Like the grasshopper gav of the legend On the Quad, in old days, did we frisk, But with scarcely a pipe in the schedule; Will any one dare take the risk Of getting a notice some morning From the hands of the Flunker so deft? For of all the old snaps of the past time Only Woodwork is left. ’Mid the ghosts of dead snaps are we mourning. Of Ethics, and French, and Hygiene — And we gloomily wonder if Woodwork Will shortly be labeled Has Been.” O Mac. thou art mighty — have pity On us that are surelv bereft! And still of the snaps of the past time Let Woodwork be left. 35 Kathryn Daly. Jftanforb ( uab 1902 Graduation ONG did the night ride sovereign in the sky, And draw great shadows on these sleeping hills. Such was the time to figure human ills And shape brave fortunes at the candle’s eye. What task was this,— simply to stamp the lie, The truth discover? We have done them both — Planned the long way to go, and, something loth, We wipe the pen and blot the pages dry. Come to the window, where presageful, cold, The morning wind sets all the leaves astir, And voice on voice there rise up manifold From earth’s green breast the cries that trouble her. With the first blush of morning comes a doubt. -----Dawn ! Let us put the paltry candle out. L. MacF. B. 236 Serenade JKanforb ($uab 1902 Sweet Madrofla maid ! Sweet Madrofla maid ! The lights are out the Quad about, the winds are laid — There’s a banjo’s fairy tinkle from down the Zete House way, And a lonely student’s candle from your attic bends its ray ; Save for these all sleep. Dost thou ? Bend thee from thy window now — Hark my serenade, Sweet Madrofla maid ! I watch her snow - white curtain, if by any chance it stirs. There’s a tremble! Is it but the wind's light hand — or hers? The roses wreathe around her sill, all pallid ’neath the moon. The sparrows in the ivy stir their sleepy wings and croon — Still she dreams. I can not keep 1 Ieart to break her slumber deep. Hushed my serenade — Sleep, Madrofla maid ! Mildkf.d Stanford. 237 “ Hello. Hastings, glad to see you ! ” “Why. hello, old man, what brought you here ? ” “Combination of bicycle and surplus energy.” “Oh, l e serious for a minute, can’t you? I never saw anything like your everlasting joshing. I thought you hated receptions. Do.” “ What did you come for, then?” “Same thing you did. If I thought you meant that, I’d thrash you.” All right, perfectly willing to l e waked up; been in a comatose state since Wednesday night. I’ve one suggestion to offer, though. Isn’t the cause of this sudden desire of yours to exercise your manly strength rather vague?” “ Vague?” Yes. It seems to me that there is just a faint |x ssil ility that you and I haven’t the same person in mind. You said you came to see Elizabeth.” “Oh. — Elizabeth ! This is getting interesting. “ It will l e more than interesting if you — ” “I didn’t mention the name of Elizabeth, if that is what is worrying you. Man alive! you terrify me! I'd get under that tea-table if I wasn’t positively certain that it is shaky on its legs.” I’m not discussing tea-tables; and I'd like to know what you did say? “ I said that I came for the same reason you did. Well, if that isn’t — ” “Jack, you have a habit of jumping at conclusions, that you should have left behind in your Freshman year. You’ll — ” “ Bother my habits! ” “Certainly — what is it this time? Mayfield?” “ I’m serious. Did you come to see Elizabeth ? ” “ I have a lurking suspicion that I did. I'm not certain about her first name, but Elizabeth suits her pretty well; small and — ’’ “Dark?” “No.” Why didn’t you say so in the first place, instead of hinting at things for ten minutes?” Didn’t suppose you’d get excited over a small matter like that. Live and learn. Congratulations in order? ” “If you ever say one word about this, I'll make things warm for you. Do you understand?” “ I'll think about it.” 3 You'd better. I-ook at this picture. Who is it ?” • Don’t know. She hasn't the pleasure of my acquaintance.” I low much she is missing! ” • Yes, I realize it perfectly. It makes me almost pensive, sometimes, when I think of the vast number of unfortunates in the same pitiful condition.” I never saw such a conceited specimen in my life.” Didn't you? I-ook in the glass. What on earth does a girl want so much truck on her bureau for? Look at this conglomeration! Not one thing that is any earthly use, except this hair-brush and the button-hook, and I'll wager that she only uses a comb, and that her shoes lace.” “ Wonder whose room this is, anyway?” ” I don’t know. Easy enough to find out. Look at that string of dance programs.” Where?” ” Right in front of you. See — Elizabeth Curtis.” Elizabeth Curtis! ” Yes.” ” What program have you there?” Junior.” “ Whom did she go with?” She has thoughtfully left that to the imagination. Nothing but a check after the first, the fourth, the sixth, the tenth, the thirteenth, the — well, there's nothing stingy about him ! ” Wonder who the other occupant of the room is? ” Some Gibson friend. Pity they couldn't find room for a few more of his sketches.” There's the inevitable fish-net. That couch looks comfortable. I’d like to stretch my weary bones on it instead of going down-stairs and discussing the weather and the new buildings. They have a lot of pillows.” Yes; look at that brown leather one — awfully mean thing to carry, though. Hello. Redman, glad to see you ! What's the matter ? You look distressed. You and Hastings come out into the hall.” ' What’s the matter? Come out here, I say.” What on — ” Why didn’t you fellows come down-stairs?” It’s early. What’s the rush ? What’s the rush? Well, I’ve been down stairs alone with about fifty girls for nearly — Oh, come. Redman, you’re seeing double. Be still, will you, and come out here! Have you two been in that room ever since you went up-stairs?” Yes.” “ Examining things, I sup| ose, and commenting on everything you saw?” To a slight degree, yes.” 219 JMaitforb 1902 Jftcmforb §ucib 1902 “Well, you’ve done it. I knew you would. I tried to put you on when we met in the hall, but Helen came just then, and I couldn’t. “ What are you getting at ? I t’s have it.” “Something you’ll enjoy ruminating on in your leisure moments. You seem to take a fiendish delight in keeping a fellow in suspense.” “Well, when I was going down-stairs, I heard snatches of ‘ poor Elizabeth —primping, as usual — Mr. Redman — hope she won’t smother.’ “ I don’t understand.” “Neither did I, so I took it upon myself to find out. Waited until I had an audience of four girls, then asked where Miss Curtis was. They exchanged glances, looked mysterious, tried to keep a straight face, then one of them murmured something about ‘ upstairs,’ and asked me if I wouldn’t have some ice. I was a lot more interested in Miss Curtis than I was in ice, but I went into the dining-room and made myself agreeable, and — ” “What has all this got to do with us?” “ I’m getting to that. Miss Curtis was up-stairs, and some one hoped she wouldn’t smother. I was sure I had gone into the right room, for only one door was open. When I went in. a rocking-chair was swaying back and forth rather vigorously, and about five inches of a certain pink silk dress, very like one Miss Curtis wore to the house last night, stuck defiantly from the closet door. I got out as soon as possible, and you proceeded to get in— rather deep, judging from the expression on your faces. Well, I’m going home; have to cram for an ‘ex.’ Hope Miss Curtis will be rescued in a fair state of preservation. It’s about time you fellows were going down-stairs. Hope you enjoy yourselves. Good-night! ” Anita B. Pf.krin. 4° J fcmforb (Quab 1902 Day’s Work BV 3. R. B. Oft when the jealous evening, drawing down her soft and shadowy curtain, covereth Che long day's crude result, and, as in death, Che weary eyes relax their anxious frown, how doth the yearning heart upbraid the clown Chat cheats it still of all it coveteth? 440 weakling eyes! 0 faltering hand! It saith, 44 how long shall ye ray each emotion drown 44Ulith stubborn dulness and with awkward sloth? 44 Shall Death one time, as even now night doth, 44find my work soulless, rude and incomplete? “And shall I bitterly resist that dread arrest, 44 After long toll for such an end unmeet, “Or, having done mine utmost, count It best? JKottforb Quab 1902 I They say the bloods of Naughty-three have found The carved board the pioneers sat around, And callow Jones has grown as wild an ass As old John Smith, who first his sorrows drowned. II And this reviving malt whose genial fire Moves the harsh voice strange melodies to choir,— What gleams and promises shall rise from it, To sink back slowly in the Mayfield mire ! Ill For some we loved, by fable not the best, A stave sang here and put their wits to test ; Drank a deep potion to the kindly past, The future cheered when it seemed gloomiest. IV And ye, that now make merry in the room Where Irwin sang and Field outwitted gloom, Ye, too, shall cut a legend on the board. Call for the score, and give your place — to whom? 24 V Myself, a Freshman, sure of his ideal, At wood and tinsel idols came to kneel. And now that Reason lights the way for me, I only know the old gods are unreal. VI Of all I learned, how much was rabid cant,— A negative enlargement on, “Thou Sha’n’t ! ” I know no law of life is absolute, And only Heaven is walled in adamant. VII Perchance some vision told the heart to sing, Unauthorized, unlike to anything; Such truth or trash as in mine eyes seemed good, And in a trice I saw the ax a-swing. VIII Of all the saints and sages that have trod The lights and shadows of the sculptured Quad, Translated and immortal are what names The office touched with the divining rod ! IX Out of the Quad, where fourteen voices cry, “ ’Tis there the day-star blazes in the sky,” And each keen prophet shows a different way,-I went to find where happiness may lie. X Vic could not answer, nor the man, of course, Who bought his “S” with six months of remorse. I asked the dig, who raised his startled eyes,— “ Dear me !” said he, “I never took that course !” XI Then to the lip of one poor earthen stein I leaned to catch the glint of that bright sign, And lip to lip it murmured, “Seeker, know I hold no title to the Days Divine.” ______ •Victor Anzinl, of the Grape and the Hose. 43 JKanforb $uab 1902 XII |Hanforfe ($uab 1902 Across the Bay there came a voice not new, Why doesn’t Stanford organize a crew? And so I sought the water that we lacked, Upon the road to fair Alviso Slough. XIII The sun rose higher and the air was dry, I could not pass the Mayfield Tavern by. “ ’ Tis yonder lies the water,” there said one, But stay the while for gilded moments fly.” XIV And so I stayed the day till evening fell O’er that wise brew of earthly asphodel; Till he and I went homeward by the moon — I had no water seen, no news could tell. XV Yon rising moon its vigil comes to keep, — How oft of old ye held its counsels cheap ! The day is over of our stopping here ; The fair moon beckons, and ye yield to sleep. XVI Sleep fair, O Senior, for the fair stars shine On things that are no longer yours and mine! Time was —, but sleep, we’ve laid our toys away— The smoked-out briar and the empty stein. Larrey MacF. Bowman. 244 Lau h at your friends.an arc sore. 5o much the bcUcj ' k npaC- w ILl I A. l Tfyour friends ( u may laugh the more? pope JKanforh Quab 1P02 Faculty Alphabet A is for Anderson, fierce of mustache,— Whose voice has been located down in his sash. His hobbies are poetry, music and art, And a pretty girl very much moveth his heart. For B, there’s Babine. Now his beauty surpasses The love that is felt for himself by the masses. The Library uses in snaring his game. His heels made of rubber and neck of the same. C stands for Cubberley. driver of slaves. With victims fast wendmg their way to their graves. If his own meek opinion could measure his knowledge He’d fill every single department in college. The man with a D! That’s Duniway,— Clyde. You hear less of him than you do of the Bride He is soon to annex. Clydie thinks he’s all right Since the Major Professorship came into sight. El is for Eaves; she's a dear little lady Who likes all the students no matter how shady. She’s pretty keen. too. though she's young for a teacher; And her looks aren’t by any two ways her worst feature. Fish is the prof —O Freshman, beware! Who’ll scare you to death with his cold, icy stare. You'll have to be keen, in geometry bright, Or Fish, aforesaid, will flunk you, all right. C is for Goebel. He’s one of those men That the world hears of now and again. A poet, an artist, a scholar of note, A teacher of German on whom we all dote. Howard! that's “Skin,” the prof that’s dead easy And edifies classrooms with manners quite breezy. He knows about Politics, Bertie does, too. And you’ll find what he knows, in most cases, is true. I stands for eye brows — they’re Greene’s, it is said ; Two grim minus marks in the front of his head. Some profs wear a plus mark, but his never vary; If you enter his office, I warn you. I e wary. Jenkins a J(ay)? No; anything but! Absent-minded, perha| s, and perhaps in a rut As to current events, but a man we all love For his | erfect commingling of serpent and dove. It is for Kellogg, that sweet little fellow Whose eyes are so blue, and whose hair is so yellow. His other name’s Vernon — he likes butterflies. He’s a Bachelor, though, which is very unwise. 246 Lathrop's first name is English, his second is Fight, A man of more mental than physical weight; If yon ever have known him you never need pray Kipling’s prayer, for you can not ' forget” him a day. M is for Matzke, a nice little man With a bad little Primer— digest it, who can ! This had little Primer will teach you to swear In twenty-live tongues, and to pull out your hair. N.— we all know him — that dear little ' Newky ” Who walks into hearts in a manner so spookey. As soon as you’ve seen him you’re his on the sjiot — And sun, moon or stars couldn’t stir you a jot. P is for Pease; they are excellent, green; The one we have here is the l est I have seen. Next to Elmore it is likely he knows more of Latin Than any one else in the world. Just take that in. Q — that’s our Queener. His other name’s Kip. A Lady, as ever gave Nature the slip By becoming a man. His fortune's his face, And for Queening he’d run even Pitner a race. Rendtorff, grand master, both present and past, Of wit. keen and cool as a northerly blast. If you fancy you’re wise, take a course under him; You’ll graduate wiser, and lamer of limb. S is for Smith — Mary Roberts — you bet! You’ve missed half your life if you don't know her yet. She teaches ” Race Problems” and puts it all over The men, as | erha| s you already discover. Taber — that’s T, though it’s wrong side before. The other end’s Murray, a man I adore. He makes you feel —oh, so bewitchingly small! Why? —well, you see Murray is terribly tall! U is for Us! Though we’re not noted talkers, Sweet Bristow, himself, couldn't beat us as knockers. We’re running a game to supersede bells. And will hang on the houses of Frisco’s best swells. W,— that’s the way Whittier starts. Oh. he’s a corker at breaking young hearts! His method ? A smile and a little pink card. And to flunk you, it’s said, lie’ll work mighty hard. Y is for Young, as his name signifies. His really fine feature, we think, are his eyes. As a popular prof, I've got a straight hunch, This chemistry man will lead the whole bunch. JManforb $uab 1902 247 Starduck Under his feet the mud lay deep, Over his head the skies rained down; And far and near no bus was seen, And he must, somehow, Ret to town. The shoes upon his feet were new — To spoil their luster he disliked — So, with them clasped close to his breast, I’rof Star buck, barefoot, homeward hiked. McFarland McFarland is charming and gracious of mien. At least when he’s holding the hands of a queen; Hut do not look shocked till I tell you the rest,— I le simply is making a physiology test. The ladies all like him. and well may they might, For the I oc is good looking, in languages bright; While the boys are all working, he pleases the queens By translating to English their hard German themes. Camphei.i. A modern Don Quixote we here to you show, Campbell’s his name, and he lives on the How; A professor of botany, a bit of a swell. He dresses his beard and his body both well. And the thing that’s quixotic about this tine gent Is the figure he cuts when he’s on a quest bent. All dressed in a riding suit, leather and grey, With top-boots and gauntlets—full knightly array— He sticks his big spurs in the flanks of his bike, And whipping its forks he sails out of sight. JKattforb (Juab 1902 The Football men assembled, from the Hast and the West they came ; They wanted him mighty badly, and they weren’t much to blame, For he was a man of muscle, and he had a head on him, too, And there wasn’t a Full-back like him the blooming country through. And Stanford begged and l esought him to come and fight for her, And help knock the Berkeley 'Leven to a blue and bilious blur; But the grip of Chicago held him — we might have been out of the race, Except that — Praise be to Allah ! — there was a Girl in the case. So the Full-back came to Stanford, and he played a beautiful game ; And we yelled ourselves black in our faces when any one named his name; And things seemed O. K. with the Lady whom the Full-back hoped to win, When —alas, for the schemes of humans ! — a Half back bold cut in. And now we are watching with interest to see how the cat will jump, For to beat his Rival the Full-back must take to himself a hump ; But whichever one is the Winner, here's luck to the Gentleman gay, And just how the story’ll be ended — it’s up to the Girl to say. 249 jKdnford Gleanings from University Census 1902 1. Who’s the most popular professor? 1. Newky, and this is no josh. 2. Curran, ’cause he isn’t coming back next year. The ladies voted for McFarland. The engineers went solid for Gecko Marx — a pipe-dream. 2. Who is the keenest co-ed ? Miss Hey wood worked hard for herself. The frat voted for Miss Kalloch. Miss Wanzer drew one vote, supposed to be Kappa Sigma’s. 3. Who works the hardest ? 1. Gov Gage. 2. Snell. 3. Gene Warren. 4. Holy Holbrook. This was not a faculty vote. 4. Who's the youngest man in college? Dryer says he is. Little Willie Barr looks it. Paul Davis acts it. Geiss-ler's l ones are still soft. 5. Who takes the most snaps ? 1. Corbusier. 2. Holy Holbrook. Sam Wilson would have made third place, but was side-tracked on Greek sculpture. 6. Who is the best dressed student ? 1. Lee (nde Levy). 2. For Eastern styles, Ryon and Cross tied. Miss Waldo wears the most clothes at a time. For color combinations, Miss I-osse beats every one. 7. Who is the biggest liar? Chet Murphy, as the smoothest liar, had them all distanced. Warren and Dick Adams were promising candidates. Fisher used to be, but he says he's reformed. 8. Who is the biggest | olitician ? Karr leads. Brotherton and Gilman, with their backers, tie for second place. V. M. C. A. put up a strong fight,.but couldn't win out against Encina and the frats. 9. Who is the champion queener? The event could not lie judged. Finished near the lead. Decker, Dixon. Card, Chadboume. Joiner, Bartlett and Seward in team work, Sefton. Kehrlein. Alpha Phi voted for the Parkin Brothers. Delta Gamma for Percy McDowell. The Theta vote was cast impartially for Betas — any one will do. Kapjia vote scattering, D. U. slightly in the lead. Madrono went for Sigma Nu, though Miss Wanzer held out for Kappa Sigma. Miss Hahn had the Roble vote in her pocket, but couldn’t decide which way to cast it. 10. Who is the prettiest undergrad ? For fear of exciting jealousy, the vote was restricted to the men. Even then it was hard to prevent ill feeling. Brooke Sharp and Harry Weihe lead the bunch, with the chances slightly in favor of Weihe. Bansbach pulled up third. Frank Leib and Emerson each received one vote — their own. 11. Who is the most lieautifully built man ? Bancroft, according to his tailor. Fisher, according to the Examiner. Whipple Hall secures place by means of his influence. 2S0 JKcmforb $uab 1902 They built them a home did these wily maid On the Row — you can see it there — And a eery keen thelf run round one room. Till lately that shell was bare. Some fellow laid : “ Say, that' a dandy shelf. Why don't you till it with stein The idea wa pleating, those girl began To cleverly cast their line To work some stein from the eaty boys; So they formed a Club select. And they said that the man whose stein came hr ! They would President elect. Nath Egan showed up and be won the place. You almost could hear him smile ; Joe Rosborough wa next, but an also ran — Hurrah for the Emerald Islet Bvle smith enl two, the extravagant man, With music on them writ; And one came, with a icntimental note, E’rom Riley, to long bard hit. Then the Parkins gay tent tome tein along; And Joe Schaefer' came to time; And E'ernald't, though they feared it a paving-tlone In a certain torrid clime. And one ha been promised, for old sake' sake. By the bold Prank Corbusier; But they wait, do those girl , with anxious eye , A stein that doe not appear. £fanfor Ancient and Aristocratic Order of Has-Beens Quab 1902 Organized for the Purpose of Perpetuating Our Public Reputation. Chapters in Every College in the United States. I irgc and Influential Body of Alumni. Fratres in Facilitate J. E. Reynolds C. E. Hodges B. C. Brown -A. V. Barikk Nl. B. Anderson C. R. Lkwkrs Ralph Arnold Skin Howard Since he became a Law Prof Naturally and especially since he painted the Row Whom the Theosophists say was an artist once Who is a sprout from the roots of our racial tree If he continues to give Exes the day after vacation Unless he takes more P. G. work Because he’s married Just because Active Members Cranston, who was like Narcissus Knigiit, who may wear an S Lee. whose name was I evy Pitner, who proposed Riddell, who also ran 11BWLKTT, on account of his wife Moss, who nominated Hamilton Uri, who was King of the Jews Bacon, who was different from most pigs I.owknthal, who was called Dildock Rvan, who acts the part Decarli, who won a diamond medal Snei.l, who received goodies from home Thompson, who gave his pictures away Sobey, who was President of Encina Roshberry, since the Y. M. C. A. reception Montgomery, since he became a Baptist Lamb, who wanted a special trainer Brown, of Calaveras, who spoke on Woman's Suffrage Lemmon, since he became an editor Who Barely Escaped the Honor Young Parkin, on account of his brother Young McDowell, for the same reason R. P. Cross, since the Presidential campaign Gaddis, who was active in Kncina 252 Suggcsti°ns for Freshmen JHanforb Quab By Paul Pitnf.r. 1902 Come to Stanford if you like the ladies. They are easy —at least, I found some of them so. But, of course, every fellow is not as attractive as I am. At the earliest opportunity cop out some Sorority girl — any gag will do; Sorority sister ; fine crowd at Oshkoshbegosh, etc. This is a sure leader to either my crowd or Phi Diddle. Hold out from a frat as long as possible. It makes things interesting and the girls solicitous. As your confidence increases take on a becoming swagger, and talk ragtime. The time will now be about right to become sentimental. The moonlight nights and the soft atmosphere make youth’s fancies lightly turn to thoughts of softness, and therefore you should make love while the moon shines. Suggest walks in the Arboretum, strolls between dances—if you can make her cut a dance she will feel wicked for your sake. If she is wise, talk lovingly. Get her to take a puff of your cigarette, examine her rings and see if her boa is carefully around her shoulders. I-ook at the stars and wish that you two might go on through life together thus. And then----------. But don’t propose definitely if you can help it. Most girls will not require it. Let me warn you against rushing too many girls in the same house. That was the one mistake I made. They got together and compared notes. If you ever tackle the wrong girl altogether, work the reform dodge. It will save you in most cases. It did me once. She was a K. K. G. and he a B. T. P., though for the sake of further hiding his identity we will call him Smith. He was calling on her, but it wasn't anywhere near the first call that he had made in that quarter. The conversation started out of the necessity to say something, and had progressed from the weather to individuals. She said in a casual way, that she thought on a pinch she could do almost anything except cook and wash dishes, and, then, chancing to observe the doleful expression on Smith’s face, she hastened to amend : “ But I can learn.” Fair locks are left uncovered, And hats are cast away, Because 'tis so done elsewhere, I-et’s do it here, some say. No plants are found more tender Than local customs are; They're better when a natural growth Than transplanted from Bryn Mawr. 53 JManforb Quab 1902 The Mythical Cartoon J The End was dead on to the picture, The Frat Man recited the verse, And the Girl got all Roble about her And to them did her troubles rehearse. For some fellow here had a pipe-dream, Which he wickedly whispered abroad, Of a full-page cartoon of these people That w;ts slated to be in the Quad. The Football Man did on his armor, And also he sharpened his wits ; He strode forth, breathing bloodshed and slaughter, ( And Duke nearly chewed him in bits ! ) But the argument he pinned his faith to, To keep this from going abroad, Was: “Her Mamma would take her from College If this should be put in the Quad!” Grim wrath filled the soul of the Frat Man ; Twas enough to make any man swear — But his trouble was only for others — Why, he pulled at his bright auburn hair ; And he cried, as his hat he flung from him, And his heel ground it into the sod ; “The Frat will be ruined forever If those verses get into the Quad ! “ The lady, however, was cooler, She said the whole thing she could squash. She’d such influence with the Quad people That they never would dare run the josh. And this is the really true reason — Watch the Lady triumphantly nod — Why the mythical verses and picture No fellow can find in the Quad. 54 Stanford Association of War Correspondents Keith Wiclb, Examiner Chris Bradley, Cbronide Jack Nolrsf., AstoeiateJ Pren Billy Erb, Bulletin Ed Maples, Call JKanforb Quab 1902 Organized During the Late Unpleasantness For tmr Purpose op Prolonging Any Trouble Sensations Always On Tap Rumors Sent Without Grounds Nothing Investigated—It Might Spoil Fake Interviews — Scare Heads Extra Cheap Notoriety — Scandals Pictures Printed, Fiptv Cents News Manufactured To Order Commonplaces Massaged Into Shape AUTHENTICATED ACCOUNTS o r Battles of ROSS’S RETREAT, HUDSON’S BLUFF, and the Abandonment of FORT HOWARD. Maneuvers criticised. Minor engagements of ALDRICH’S FIASCO, SPENCER’S RUN and EAVES’S RETIREMENT. Rally at STUDENT’S HALL, massacre of DUNIWAY’S STRADDLE, opinion of GENERAL MARRACK, floundering of the Monitor MONTGOMERY. Any one desirous of notoriety call at the office of the Daily Palo Alto or Western Union Agency. Hush money not rtctivtJ at the Association office . 55 2 tV. M. Parkin 1902 Political Jobber and Tinker 359 Emmerson Street, Palo Alto, Cal. 7(Upborn Hl.uk igoi Does a General Political Business. Controls S. A. E., the strongest organization at college. T. M. C. A. not in the same alphabet. Strings and Blockers in every department of college life. kVe Buy and Sell Preferences Come and see us. Bring your confidences. IVe can be diplomatic. Never known to lose a case. Schemes concocted on short notice. IVe have a convenient conscience and no scruples. Ttrmti Rtatonable i kart of tpoi i and a prominory note on your fund of futurt auittanrt Write for my Pamphlets How I Became Glee Club Manager How I Wonted Phil Gilman How to Run Senior Week 156 LITTLE CHARLIE SELL SWEET UTILE MOORE OUR BERTIE WIRTHEIMER. lotoerd ino y GOWIE GAGE i ' . m. 'Jk ’ Some ot Our Mellin’s Food Babies Students’ Fire Insurance Company 1902 F J Stanford University, Cal. Post-office Box No. 48 Capital Stock - - - EXPERIENCE Liabilities: Assets: Political and Athletic Aaplratloai Stock la Trade • • • Oall Fatally Coaalttec on Stadcat Affairs Reserve Faad .... Di(s Uadivided Earalan • • Alaaal Balance, What’s Left RESIDENT OFFICERS Chri Mason Bradley ..... President Francis Addison Corbusier ..... f iee-President Samuel Mwnteord Wilson .... Secretary William Maurice Erb ...... Treasurer DIRECTORS AND TRAVELING AGENTS Joseph Guthrie De Forest William Wesley Burnett Frank Dana Hamilton Joseph Burt Gildersleeve Henry Huntly Taylor, B. A. Clarence Marian Wardall Joseph Reuben Hamilton This company is prepared to insure against casualties of college life. In cases of fire by accident, policy will be paid in full ; in cases of flunk, suspension or enforced leave of absence, policy will be paid up to extent of damage. The company’s constant effort is to give its clients not only insurance indemnity, but prompt and often effective inspection and adjusting of claims. The company, in such cases, will use every graft, drag, bluff', pull and jolly-known to the craft. Our efficiency in this line has been gained bv hard knocks, close calls and frequent attempts. Amount of premium depends on reputation and habits of party to be insured and the course of study being followed. Premium highest in Geology and Law. Kxact rates made known on application. In writing fir Infirm jtlm fltjn mrntlm thr 11 £fuad. S JKonforfe Quad 1902 Now this is the story they’re telling of a Girl who leaves this year. Who holds quite a proud position in the High Society sphere ; She has a dog, and a “Steady, and a lien on a certain Frat — For they all seem to dance attendance on this Girl in the Senior Hat. The Girl, of course, had expected to be at the Sophomore seen. But the wicked, perfidious “Steady, he asked another Queen ! So, when an Encina Man asked her, she jumped at the chance, she did, For she’d been most awfully shaky that she wouldn’t get a bid. She let the Man have three dances, she asked him for her card, Then with the dog for escort, to the Frat House ran she hard ; And she and the men together put up a keen little plan, And the list of the Lady’s dances was filled by the Phi Diddle clan. But the Man was up against it when to fill his card he tried ; The Phi Delts were horror-stricken, some of them even cried As they thought of their social standing—that youthful plant and green— Being killed if a Man from Encina danced with a Phi Diddle Queen ! 259 JKaitford So a Phi Dclt who wasn't going a little stag program ran 0“ Whereon were placed the dances that belonged to the Other Man ; 1902 The Lady approved most fully,—and what did the Other Man do? Why, he simply didn’t take her ! and I’m glad of it. Aren’t you? But she went, for a Phi Diddle took her ; such little things don’t faze A crowd who are busily working their social stand to raise. And every one heard the story, in every kind of a way — But what we all think about it, we’re too scared of Mack to say ! 260 JHanforb 1902 For Good and Iiad alike arc fond of Fame. H. S. Mucki.eston : Squire of Dames.” S. S. Seward: What shall I do to be forever known. And make the age to come mv own ? ” W. A. Manning : Meagre were his looks.” C. R. Dktrick : Oh, why did I wake! When shall I sleep again?” Jack Reynolds: Girl wanted.” Miss Piercy: Prosperity to the man who ventures most to please her.” Miss Bootes: As brown in hue As hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the kernels.” M. F. McCormick: God bless thy lungs, Sir Knight.” F. H. Boren: A head to contrive, a tongue to persuade, and a hand to execute any mischief.” Miss Baum: She held a dozen men to heel.” Miss Kidder: Alas! my treasure's gone. Why do I stay ? ” 261 JHanford Quab 1902 W. A. Morris: He arose and put his right hand in his Prince Albert coat, and began. H. L. Younger : “ Of gentle manners as of generous race.” J. P. Mitchell: “ His voice was thin, as voices from the grave.” E. Berwick, Jr.: “No sadder proof can be given by a man of his own littleness than disbelief in great men.” S. L. Davis : “ ’ Tis better to have loved and lost. Than never to have loved at all.” R. McComas: As fresh as mountain air.” H. S. Cop.: ' What position does that Chicago full-back play on the team?” J. F. English : “Tile little great man of a clique.” C. L. Merriam : “With head unkempt and awkward frock forlorn.” Miss Gilman: “She danced away her days in careless glee.” A. C. Ryon: “Get a good make-up, and the part plays itself.” A. P. H. Hudson : “ What a fine man your tailor hath made you ! ” J. K. Bonnkll: “ Where was it I kissed her? Or could I have missed her! ” Miss Hkinkmann: My mind to me a kingdom is.” A. W. Baird : I am the hero of a Sunday-school book. I shall die young.” N. C. Powers : ” O Ma! May I be a dude, too ? ” F. H. Foster : “ His one ambition — to be tough ; And as he knew not what to say. he swore.” 262 Miss M. A. Davis : Just because she made those goo-goo eyes.’ A. L. Walker : “ All hail him victor in both gifts of song, Who sings so loudly and who sings so long. Miss Sweetman : ‘‘A maiden mannish grown. Glee Club: We have seen better days. E. Warren : He never worked but moments odd, But many a bluff wrought he. L. K. Baldwin: ' Go it while you’re young ; When you’re old, you can’t. C. B. Raitt : A good little man of his inches. Miss Caswell: I’ve had my flirtation days. Miss Haskell : “ There never was a minute when Billy wasn't in it. E. G. Potter : “ The man without a shadow.” Miss Stanford : “ With mincing step, small voice, and manners mild. C. M. Stowe : “ Even the hairs of your head are numbered. Miss Hendricks : Mighty hearts are held by slender chains. F. E. Naptzgbr : Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendidly null. Miss Alice Cole : “They mocked me for too much curiosity. W. B. Walling : “ And a great big fat man said : ‘ Oh, golly ! For heaven's sake, just look at Wally! ’ Miss Merritt: “ Her independence adds a zest unto her speech and piquant jest. z63 JHcutforb (Juab 1902 JKanforfe ($uab 1902 Miss H. E. Martin: “Clever and witty and kind withal.” S. Wilson : “ All as a partridge, plump, full-fed and fair.” R. B. Knight: “ Here he comes, swelling like a turkey cock.” 1 . A. Martin : “ I do know him by his gait.” W. C. Morrow : “ He could converse in many styles, and withal was a most convincing man.” Miss Daly : “ She was clever, witty and brilliant beyond most of her kind.” P. K. Gilman : “ For my voice, I lost it with hallooing and singing of anthems.” Miss Nichols : “ You can not live on giggles.” C. E. Holbrook : I have an exposition of sleep come upon me.” R. J. McFaddkn : “ A lion among ladies is a most dreadful thing.” L. Ferrari : “Not to know me argues yourself unknown.” A. B. Lemmon: “ I.et him l e kept from paj er, pen and ink. That he may cease to write and learn to think.” M iss Foster : “She that was ever fair and never proud.” A. N. Merritt: “ Nature hath framed strange fellows in her time.” Phi Delta Theta : “Our humble province is to tend the Fair.” 6 Miss Souli?: “There is a garden in her face Where roses and white lilies blow.” L. MacF. Bowman : “ He was clever in many ways, and good to look at.” G. R. Lawrknck: A solemn youth, with sober phiz.” K. A. Richardson : It’s fun to see him strut about and try to Ik a man. Miss Holmes: ” With a perfect taste in dresses, and a badly bitted tongue.” R. G. Fernald: “ Most mistakenly furnished with the head of a cherub.” H. S. Babcock : ” He is given to sport, to wildness and much company.” Miss Bonnkll: Her lively looks a sprightly mind disclose. J. M. Hyde: “I am Sir Oracle, And when 1 ope my lips, let no dog bark.” Miss Arquks: ” Favors to none, to all she smiles extends.” Sigma Nit: A woman is only a woman. But a good cigar is a Smoke.” T. J. Hoover : “ He thinks too much. Such men are dangerous. Miss R. M. Stephenson: “Oh. we fell out, I know not why! H. W. Chappel: ” Night after night he sat and bleared his eyes with books. R. L. Brooke : “Shaved like a harvest field at stubble time. Robi.k : They talk, ye gods, how they talk ! ” S. H. Adams: An’ the long black curses was sliding out av his innocint mouth like mornin’ jew from a rose! JHanf (Qua 1902 265 Jftanforb ($uab 1902 J A. Givens: “ He who boasts of mighty mischiefs done.” E. M. Ciiaohocrnk: ” You think every one is looking at you.” C. T. Stephens : “ Oh, to be wroth with one we love doth work like madness in the brain! R. H. Kimball: Shows in his cheeks the roses of eighteen.” C. M. Richards: With wealth of yellow ringlets like a girl ” Haven Edwards: A man who’s not afraid to say his say Though the whole town's against him.” J. S. Cone: With earnest eyes and round, unthinking face. Miss Phillips: “ He’s gone, whom she alone desired to please.” S. Uri: Pride of thy age and glory of thy race.” C. DeW. Scott: His gloomy presence saddens all the scene.” Miss Dryer : A maiden tall and stately.” H. L. Roberts : Stuffed with all honorable virtues.” R. E. Renaud: 44 Made up of wisdom and of fun.” Miss Corker : “ She patronized extensively a man.” C. A. Cantwell : He has common sense in a way that’s uncommon.’ Miss Grace Barnhiskl : Grace shines around her with serenest beams.” Bristow Adams : “ I am nothing if not critical.” R. V. Rkppy : Thy life a long dead calm of fixed repose, No pulse that riots and no blood that flows.” 266 JMonforb Quai 1902 L. K. WlSEHART : “ There is a gift beyond the reach of art, of being eloquently silent.” Miss Corbett : “With moving softness and majestic grace.” Miss Brownlie : “ I’ve ’ad my pickin' o’ sweet ’earts.” Leslie Johnson : “ A youthful, modest, loving pair.” Miss Ballard: She moves among them, Though not of them.” Miss J. Cook : “ Lizards ! Ugh ! ” A . E. Cooley : “ I am what others have made me.” J. T. Nolrse : “ Never a man was loved as I.” Miss Bromfield : “ Many a girl wears a sailor hat who doesn't own a yacht.” L. F. Clinton: “ He stuck in his thumb and pulled out a plum. And said, ‘ What a great boy am I! ’ ” Miss Everett: “She wrote, too, in a quiet way, small treatises and smaller verses.” C. Pollard: The talkative listen to no one, for they are ever talking.” H. Trader: “ Practised to lisp and hang the head aside, Faints into airs and languishes with pride. Miss Sobev: “What a spendthrift she is of her tongue.” Zbta Psi: “Sprightly our nights, polite are all our days.” C. I). McComish: “ I wish to be called a great man.” C. D. Montgomery: “ He posed as the horror of horrors, a misunderstood man.” 167 Stanford Quad 1902 W. I. Traegkr : “There's nothing like livin’ in the hoight of society.” Miss Zuckbr : “She was kittenish in her manners, wearing generally an air of soft and fluffy innocence.” H. S. Gay: In length and slenderness of limb, Blit few or any could e’er equal him.” A. G. Thies: “One of Nature’s gentlemen.” R. VV. Thompson : “ Verily, thou talkest large for such a small man! ” H. A. Friedman : “ Get money; still get money, boy. No matter by what means.” R. E. Snodgrass : “ A mighty pain to love, it is, And tis a pain that pain to miss; But of all pains, the greatest pain, It is to love, but love in vain.” W. J. Nikdig : “ Write a book entitled, ‘ Thinks I have thought concerning the thoughtfulness of think.’ ” F. W. Bennett: “Those about him, from him shall read the perfect ways of honor.” Miss Avery : Zounds, madam, thy soul is in thy clothes! ” E. H. Nutter : “Cultivate the society of women, and study English composition.” E. S. Page : The gentleman is learned and a most rare speaker.” T. L. McFadden : Oh, it’s Tommy this, and Tommy that! J. F. Cowan : Now, I aren’t no ’and with the ladies.” N.G.Svmonds: “ He proved best man i’ the field.” F. A. Gaddis: I have met many of these rattles that made a noise and buzzed. They had their hum, and no more.” 268 Miss Chase : “The world hath not her equal.” T. Ckonvn : “Ask how to live? Write, write, write anything. The world’s a fine believing world — write news. Miss Edith Hale : She is pretty to walk with. And witty to talk with. And pleasant, too, to think on.” JManforb (Juab 1902 269 Hartkr I’m preparing a big mansion in the sky, I'll join the Bible big bugs by-and-by. With my sweet V. M. C. A., And employment agency. I'm building so much better than you know. In politics I'm just about the thing. You’re not in it if you're not within the ring Of the great Y. M. C. A., Which has the most to say; I’m president, picnic agent, red-hot l eau. Ryan I rather like to make a show Of my sweet self in swell attire ; To be a tailor’s “Ad,” you know. Is really all that I desire. 270 —1 Com 1 lere’s another example of a poor martyred man; With Bostonian beans his education began. Like a transplanted plant he at Stanford arrived, And has since taken root and for eminence strived. When | oor Joe De Forest got the faculty lx ot. Old Copp blew his horn with a vigorous toot; The Junior Class gave him its treasurer job, Tlie business he had would make Carnegie sob. But Coop took a fall when in the city one day,— He took a saloon “ad because it would pay. And the Faculty got at him with its sharp little stick, And forced resignation for his dastardly trick. Gkisslkr You ask me why I wear a Plug, And seem to ouestion my intent. As if a thing like “hours” meant A rap to me! How impudent! Karr I'm an unappreciated man, that's what I am. But I lo not give a —darn, that's what I don't. For I’m a |H litician bom, And you'll wake up some bright morn To find me president or senator or something great. I’m the leader of the Knocker’s Club, and not a sub; And. besides, I'm not a saint, so I ain't; But of every evolution Of a scheme of revolution I’m the supreme grand high-you-jub-jub potentate. F.i) Gilman I’m the whole show! Pidn’t know? Well, you’re slow. I run oolitics And all sorts of tricks On the poor common sticks. Oh. they love me ! You bet! I'm the sweet little | et Of the very best set! 27S Levy That’s my former nomenclature, Now my name is Lee. Had it changed by legislature, Reasons known to me. Lee looks better on a shingle, “I)r. Lee” sounds fine; Lee will make the money jingle In this purse of mine. SOBBY I’m Sobey. See? You bet! That’s me, A leader in society. I’ve thrown the frats in town All down; Their misery they can not drown. I’m Sobey. See? WlGLE I’m not a gem of ray serene, I wasn’t born to blush unseen. I’m correspondent and Ih ss Of papers till it makes me cross. I’ve got the “pull to put me through Just any place I want it to. Wesley Reach My name is Reach. I am a peach. I really run the I.ibraree! Rabine and Nash They cut no dash — The Ruler of the place is Me ! 274 Lowbnthal ! love the abstract, concrete girl. For boys 1 have no use; The ladies set my heart awhirl Just like the very deuce. So when the Juniors gave a show, I spent my money free. And bought the biggest flowers that grow Upon a rosebud tree. And armed with them so big and great I went all dressed up fine, And sent them in the 'greatest state To a little friend of mine. Fisiikr All the frats and clubs implore me To be theirs, but I decline! All the maidens, they adore me; Fact is, I am superfine. Stanford couldn’t run without me, I hob-nob with all the swells. Well, there’s something great about me, And it’s greatness, boys, that tells. I’m a perfect king at queening, iust mv presence on the Quad ’ills all eyes with tender meaning — I’m a co-ed demi-god. 7$ Perrin They call me lady-like, I’m really very sweet; 1 never swear or smoke, 1 always dress quite neat. I love the little girls, I think they all love me; I study very hard A real good boy to be. Erb The world's a stage, without a doubt, And when the roles were parceled out The part that I was cast to play Was hero of the gallery. And so with speeches smart or sage I hold the center of the stage. With only now and then a pause To give the cue for the applause. The scenes they shift, but here stand I Forever in the public eye ; And first to last, unceasingly. The calcium is turned on me. 276 Wagner Teacher pats me on the head ’Cause I'm awful clever! Other afternoon, she said ’At she hadn’t ever Knowed a smarter boy’n me! Could 'a-told her that before. Guess I know as much as she! Guess — I know a little more. 77 Parker We went to the cotillion, 1 and she; Her home's in Palo Alto — pity me! It rained that night! I saw her h me, of course. But Bell refused to send a single horse Back to Encina! Pleas were all in vain. I couldn't wear my dress suit in the rain! Besides, twas late—oh, very, very late! The stable was the only place to wait; So tucked up warm in Bell's fresh hay I lay and slept till break of day. Clearance Sale! To be disposed of May 29, 1901, Room 53, Encina Hall, for a mere song and dance The Remnants of Four Years Glory Odds and Fnds of Political Influence Pointers on Running the University Drag with the Y. W. C. A. Maxims for Young Orators Deep-Laid Plots for Farces Interviews for Frequent Publication An Impervious Self-Esteem ...ANO... The Love of the Student Body Being my Stock in Trade in the Brilliant Career now passing into history 27 Thk 1 hkee Paths Hark! all ye students. List to me. Above you reign the fearful three Endowed with awful power. Cower! all ye students. Cower! From the woof of credits Clotho spins The thread where college life begins; Behind her desk she grins. Cower! all ye students. Cower! Lachesis does detective tricks, With telescope and measuring sticks: Unwary students soon convicts, Especially those who make a name Beyond the roll of study fame. Unseen his ear’s at every door: Your span of life is o’er before You have a chance to tower. Cower! all ye students. Cower! Atropos, spectacled and thin (To be like Janus is no sin). Smiles and snaps the slender spin That binds us to our college kin. No mercy shown to men renowned, But rather persecution’s hound. He scents the trail of laxity And runs he quarry to the ground ; To all appeals is sour. Cower! all ye students. Cower! 79 The editors of the Quad desire to express their thanks to all those who have so generously aided in preparing the book. They are especially indebted to Miss Sophie Schoenheit. Mr. R. H. Bacon, Mr. R. E. Warfield, Mr. A. O. Austin, Mr. J. S. Donaghho for the use of photographs, and to the following artists: Mr. L. MacF. Bowman, Mr. Ralph E. Renaud, Mr. Bristow Adams, Mr. R. Keith Culver, Mr. Henry R. Johnson, Mr. Wm. C. Francis, Mr. Lawrence Lawson, Mr. Wm. Davenport, Miss Theodora Holly, Mr. Randall W. Borough. Mr. C. deQ.Whittle. Index Page Alpha Phi..................................140 Alumni Associations.....................154 Alumnus....................................172 Associated Students (Officers) • • -144 Athletic Captains and Managers - - 177 Athletic Committee (Faculty) • . - 176 Athletic Committee (Student) ... 176 Athletics (Illustration)................173 Athletic Records, Comparative 188 Athletics, Review of the Year’s - - -174 Band.......................................182 Basrhall, Class Games...................193 Baseball, Team and Record • - - 182 Bench and Bar...........................152 Beta Theta Pi..............................108 Board of Trustees.......................20 CHapatral...............................171 Chi Psi....................................112 Christian Associations..................145 Commencement...............................216 Cross-Country...........................19t Daily 1‘alo AUo.........................169 Day’s Work (Poem)..........................241 Debate. Carnot..........................201 Debate, Intercollegiate .... 200 Delating (Illustration).................197 Debating Records, Carnot • • - 201 Debating Records, Intercollegiate • • 200 Debating, Review of........................198 Dedication ....... 7 Delta Gamma................................138 Delta Tau Delta.........................104 Delta Upsilon ...... 114 Kncina Club.............................148 English Club...............................147 Euphrouia Literary Society - 202 Faculty, I.ist of...........................21 Faculty-Senior Game.....................218 Field Club.................................151 Field Day, Intercollegiate - - - 186 First Decade of the University - - 13 Football. Class Games...................193 Football Coaches (Picture) 180 Football, Freshmen, Record and Team - 190 Football Game (Pictures) 181 Football. Varsity, Record and Team - - 178 Founders................................ 20 Founders' Day - - - - - 221 Page Freshman Class (Officers and S’cll) - 78 Freshman Debating Society ... 209 Freshman’s Dream (Illustration) - • 210 Freshman Game (Pictures) - - - - 181 Freshman Glee............................74 Glee Club. Girls’.......................161 Glee Club, Varsity......................156 Golf Club...............................151 Graduation (Poem).......................236 Growth of the Quadrangle ... 15 Gymnasium Club..........................150 Ideals of Stanford.......................11 In Meinoriam ...... 17 Josh (Illustration).....................245 Junior Class History.....................45 Junior Class (Officers and Yell) 44 Junior Class Pictures .... 49 Junior Day -.............................69 Junior Farce.............................70 Junior Plug Ugly..........................- 72 Junior Prom -............................70 Kappa Alpha Theta.......................134 Kappa Kappa Gamma - • - - 1 6 Kappa Sigma -...........................118 Literary Page (Illustration) • • • 223 Loveless. The (Poem)....................224 Mnudolin Club. Girls’...................162 Mandolin Club. Varsity - - - - 156 Miscellaneous (Illustration) • - -211 Musical Clubs (Illustration) - - - 155 Nestoria Literary Society 204 Orchestra ........ 166 Organizations (Illustration) • - - 143 Passing of the Snaps, The .... 235 Phi Delta Phi...........................122 Phi Delta Theta..........................84 Phi Kappa Psi............................88 Philolexia Debating Society .... 206 Press Club..............................153 Publications (Illustration) .... 157 Qr. D Board ....... 168 Roble Reception (Illustration) • - - 215 Page Saturday Night Club.....................206 Senior Clans, List of....................31 Senior Class (Officers and Yell) • - 30 Senior Farce............................217 Senior Society....................129 Serenade................................237 Sigma Alpha Kpsiton .... too Sigma Chi................................96 Sigma Nu...........................92 Sigma Rho Kta...........................126 Sigma Sigma • • - • - • 130 Sophomore Class (Officers and Yell) - - 76 Sophomore Cotillion......................74 Sororities (Illustration)...............133 Stanford Amendment......................213 Stanford Clubs..........................134 Page Students' Guild Students' RubaiytU .... 162 • - 244 Tennis, Team Through the Medium of the Press Track Team Training-house Corporation 192 - - 226 184 • 212 Wearers of Stanford S • Wearers of Stanford Debating S’' Women’s Athletic Association • 196 • 201 - 195 Verses to Barbara .... - 18 Zeta Rpsilon at Home Zeta Psi . 238 80 MR. CLAUS SPRECKELS MATRON or THE INDUSTRIES OF THE PACIFIC COAST The industry that brought the Hawaiian Islands most prominently before the American people is sugar, conceived and worked out by the persistent energy and mechanical ingenuity of Claus Spreckels. Few men in American history have placed before us an example more enviable. Starting at the bottom round of the ladder of fame he worked against the greatest opposition, until at the present date he stands acknowledged the Sugar King. Resisting the influence of his native country to force him into the German army, he started for America. Arriving in Charleston, S. C., in 1S48 with but three dollars in his pocket, but with the right kind of material in his make-up — health common sense, good judgment and a mountain of energy, with trustworthiness and strict attention to business—he built the foundation of success. At that time, weighing sugar by the pound, he has gotten to the point where shiploads are the prevailing feature which one figures on. In the case of Claus Spreckels it may be said that not only has he gained fame by his industry, but as a public-spirited man his great wealth has been the means of helping the tradesman and farmer and causing capital to be distributed on the Pacific Coast, developing the resources of California. His motto is, What is worth doing is worth doing well.” It would be well for the young men of the State to bear this in mind. The thoughtful student whose goal is in the future, and whose ambition is to be at the top, should follow the footsteps of the great leaders, study the economy, the persistency and energy, rely upon the fact that the position which has been obtained by the fiercest struggle is the position most appreciated. Architecture, art and music, agriculture and railroad industry have placed the name of Mr. Claus Spreckels indelibly upon the pages of the history of California. Ai c.i si 15 —Gildcrsleeve meets Yost and shows him the sights of San Francisco. September 11 —Charlie Field transplants a College Custom. September 14 — The Betas rush Roughan in his Gym suit. Let us See That your eyes are perfectly fitted, and save your health and relieve those headaches Our reputation of the past for fitting eyes unequaled Berteling Optical Co. 16 Kearny Street, San Francisco, California Twenty-five years established Harry Nor Smart, Vrce-President and Manager si. IV. Kirk, M. D., Secretary At Last!!! A Good and Reliable Smoke has been found at Ben Adler’s lot Powell Street, Northwest Cor. Ellis Branch: 730 Market Street Bel. Kearny and Gram Ave. Remember the Name El Tanforan Havana Cigar September 21 — Encina stag. Raitt and Knight settle old scores. September 22— Pi Smith goes after the girl, but too late to save the honor of the frat. I Q r p nPd Vl OP f°T FishinS’ Shooting Sailing, Rowing A (XY Y Swimming, Mountain Climbing........ and all summer vacation sports, visit this unsurpassed resort. The railroad between Truckcc and Tahoe follows the line of the Truckcc River which makes a beautiful trip in itself. Sixteen Hours Only from San Francisco By leaving San Francisco at six in the evening, you can lunch on the magnificent lake steamers the following noon For particular , for regular and excursion rates, IX L. HllSS, Jr., Superintendent apply to any Southern Pacific Ticket Agent or to Tahoe, California Business College 24 Post Street, San Francisco, Cal. The Leading Commercial School in the West. An International School. Established nearly forty years. Was one of the six schools officially selected out of the large number throughout the United States to represent the development of commercial education at the Paris Exposition. Its departments of Bookkeeping and Business Practice, Shorthand and Typewriting, Penmanship, Modern languages, English Branches, Telegraphy, Civil, Mining and Electrical Engineering, Surveying, Assaying, etc. , arc practical in every detail, as is attested bv the 17,000 graduates who arc now successfully applying their knowledge; over 300 of our graduates placed in positions annually. Twenty-five (25) teachers. Sixty (60) typewriters. Students can enter for any course at any time. Individual instruction. Both sexes. Day and night sessions. Copies of our new eighty-page illustrated Catalogue and Heald’s College Journal (the oldest commercial educational paper in the United States) mailed free on application September 25 — Retiring President Bancroft elected sergeant-at-arms of Junior Class. September 28— Freshies paint the numerals on the fence. General Electric Company Schenectady, N. Y. ..Manufacturers of Electrical Apparatus.. This includes everything essential or incidental to Long Distance Transmission Electric Railways Incandescent Lighting Arc Lighting Electric Motors in their various forms and applications San Francisco Branch Office, Claus Spreckels Building THE LATEST The Berlin Photograph $3.00 Per Dozen POPULAR IN BERLIN. PARIS. AND LONDON Views of Pacific Coast Scenery The Leader in Artistic Photography Carbons Platinums Iridiums Bas-Relief 121 Post Street, San Francisco The Sculptograph In relief bifbest achieve meat in Photography $15.00 Per Dozen THE VERY LATEST THE VICTORIA CAMEO Just being introduced to the Photographic World by this Studio $10.00 Per Dozen UNIQUE IN DESIGN AND FINISH September 29 — Upper-classmen instigate a rush. October 2 — Prof Green “ At Home ” to Freshmen, 3 to 6. Symposium on rushing. School Officers have found that the best teachers and the safest to employ are recommended by Boynton Sc Esterly, managers of the Fisk 'Teachers Agencies, 420 Parrott Building, San Francisco, and 525 Stimson Block, Los Angeles. The best California teachers will he registered in both offices for one fee. The demand for them is never failing, and they are the ones whom we can benefit the most. Remember that for the best positions in location, salary and work we must have The Very..... Best Teachers Over 15,000 positions filled—1,047 n California. Send for manual. Levi Strauss Co. Importers IO to 24 Battery Street, San Francisco, California Heywood Brothers and Wakefield Company MAMUPACTl.'RBK OP Cane and Wood Scat Chairs, Bent Wood Chairs, Reed and Rattan Furniture, Children’s Carriages, Chair Cane, Cane Webbing, Car Scats, Opera and Folding Chairs, Rattan Mats and Matting and Rattan Specialties WAREHOUSES Xew York. X. Y. San Francisco. Cal. Buffalo, X. Y. Lo« Angelos Cal. Chicago, III. Portland. Ore. Boston, Man. London. Eng. Philadelphia. Pa. Liverpool. Eng. Baltimore. Md. FACTORIES Gardner, Man. Chicago. III. Wakefield, Mass San Francisco, Cal. 659 to 663 Mission Street SAN FRANCISCO October 3 — Prof Green “At Home to upper-classmen, 3 to 6. Same entertainment. October 6 — Prof Green orders liquor ads out of the College publications. T. P. Martin J. Martin Martin Bros. Fine Tailoring Special Importers i7 Stockton Street, near Market, San Francisco Special Importations Phone Black 2711 Jaa. H. Doolittle J. Knowlton President and Manager Secretary and Ata’t M'g'r Ira R. Doolittle T reaiurer Hotel St. Nicholas Junction Market, Hayes, Larkin and Ninth Streets San Francisco, Cal. Ira and J. H. Doolittle Hotel Company Incorporated First-class Family and Commercial Hotel...... SuBscaiar.n Capital, 2,500,000 Paid-up Capital, 2,000,000 Reserve Funp, 925,000 London, Paris and American Bank, Limited Incorporated January, 1XK4 Head Office, 40 Threadneedle Street, London, E. C. Agenciei: Messrs. lizard Freres Cic., 17 Boulevard Poivsonniere, Paris; Messrs, hazard Freres, 10 Wall Street, New York San Francisco Office : Northwest Corner Sansome and Sutter Streets Sir;. C.kkkn krausi, Manager C. Altschul, Manager R. Altscmul, Cashier Qctober ft — Ruble fancy-dress party. Night-shirt parade wakes the baby. October 9— Larrey Bowman wins the football song prize. Honolulu, Japan, China and the Far East by the Pacific Mail Steamship Company’s First-class, Full-powered Express Steamers Only Six Days to the Hawaiian Islands, the “Paradise of the Pacific” Specially reduced rates for parties Shortest and Most Direct Route to the Philippines Around-thc-world 'Pickets via all routes at very low rates Liberal baggage allowances Full information at all principal Railroad Offices and Tourist Agencies in the United States and Europe General Office: 421 Market Street, San Francisco, California Call or write for descriptive folders and pamphlets October 11 —Tod Sloan appeals for justice to the bleachers. October 12- -I)r. and Mrs. Gilbert chaperone a camping party, THE PELTON WATER WHEEL Embracing In it variations of construction and application THE PELTON SYSTEM OF POWER. In timplicity of construction, sbtence of wearinc parti, bij h efficiency sn i farility of adaptation to varying condition of service, the Pelton m«ti more fully all requirement tban anv other wheel on the market. Proportion i en for the development of water-power bared upon direct application, or ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION under any head and any requirement at to capacity. Correspondence Invited. Catalogue furnished upon application. Address PELTON WATER WHEEL CO. 125-129 Main Street, SAN FRANCISCO. CAL., or 143 Liberty Street, NEW YORK California College of Pharmacy (Department of Pharmacy, University of California) This College is well equipped with laboratories for practical work iti Chemistry. Pharmacy. Pharmacognosy. Urinalysis and Toxicology. Lectures on all of these subjects, ami also on Physiology and Pharmaceutical Jurisprudence, are delivered by experienced Professors atnl Lecturers, ami reviews follow all of the work, both didactic and practical. The course leading to the degree of Graduate in Pharmacy consists of two terms of thirty-two weeks each, including two weeks' vacation at Christmas A third-year course for the degree of Ph C. or Phar. M. will probably be iu operation in 1901. The hours of instruction are from 8:30 a. m. to 12.30 r. m. daily. Sundays excepted. For further particulars apply to W. M. Sear by, Dean 400 Sutter Street, San Franciuro, California Halsted Co. Undertakers and Embalmers 946 Mission Street Tslephons South 163 San FranciSCO M. J. Brandensfein Co. Tea Coffee Matting lni|)orters 11 o and 120 Mamet St. is and 17 California 51. =3—Okh Francisco October 13— Russell makes a mistake about the V’. M. C. A. wheeling party. October 15 —Freshmen and Sophomores play a “tie ” football game. O SUNSET OGDEN SHASTA Z! W ROUTES rt The... Pioneer Railroad of the West Thoroughly Equipped Affords the Best Service Ogden Route THREE DAILY TRAINS each way between San Francisco and Chicago, including Salt Lake City, Denver, Omaha and Kansas City. This is the route of the OVERLAND LIMITED. Has over 4,000 miles of railway in California and adjoining States. Is the only line by which all the great attractions of California are reached. Sunset Route Has an unexcelled train service for both through and local travel. ONE DAILY TRAIN between San Francisco and New Orleans. SUNSET IIMITED tri-weekly, between San Francisco and New Orleans during the winter tourist season. FOUR DAILY TRAINS between San Francisco and Los Angeles. Has a most complete system of Excursion Rates, which comprehends every point of interest in the Pacific States. Has a splendid system of Through Tourist Cars between California and Eastern Cities. Shasta Route TWO DAILY TRAINS between San Francisco and Portland. Publishes attractive and instructive literature about all points of interest in California. Send for it. It is for free distribution. Trains to All Portions of the State Almost Hourly t. 0. McCORMICK, Pawnger Traffic Mdnagrr 1. M. GOODMAN, General Passenger Agent San Francisco, California October 10 — Juniors and Seniors play football. “ Wardall off-side.” October 1 — Editor of the Daily Palo Alio publishes an awful threat. MOTEL PEL M©KTE nOfSTERET, CrtLlfORNM The most magnificent resort and watering-place in America. Hundreds of distinguished personages of both Europe and America have been its guests, and uniformly give that as their verdict. Its artificial excellence is enough to make it famous, but combined with its natural charms of climate, scenery and variety of delightful environment, where it is never winter or summer, or any other fixed season, but all-thc-ycar-round,” and it is vastly more than famous ; it is superb, wonderful, matchless. The opportunity for pleasurable pastime at Del Monte is simply limitless — riding, driving, wheeling, boating, bathing, hunting, fishing, etc., — and the management wishes to especially announce that a fine golf course has been established. This charming resort is wholly distinct and unique ; there is no basis of comparison by which its attractions can be measured. None other in the world has such a climate ; none is planned on so vast and elaborate a scale; none so absolutely exempt from every annoyance and inconvenience. It is the « Garden of Eden ” transplanted to the shores of the Western Sea.” There is but one Hotel Del Monte. Send for souvenirs and other information to W. A. JUNKER, Manager, Monterey, California. October 18 — Freshmen elect a member of the Executive Committee. October 19 — Senior hat episode. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Fourteenth Street, Between Mission and Valencia San Francisco MEDICINE DENTISTRY PHARMACY FACULTIES WINSLOW ANDBRSON. A. M.. M. D.. M. R. C. P. I... Prof. Gymccol. and Ahdora. Surg., President. W. PRKKMAN SOUTHARD. A. M., M. D.. Prof. Ophthal., Otol., Rhinol., Laryngol.. Treasurer. ANTRIM HDC.AR OSBORNE, Ph. D.. M D.. Prof, of Diseases of Mind and Nervous System, See. D. A. HODGHKAD A. M.. M. D., Prof. Obstet. and Diseases ol Children, Dean of Faculties. THOS. MORPPEW. D. D. S . Prof, of Operat. Dent, and Dent. Histol., President Dental Faculty. CHA8. BOXTON. D. D. S.. Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry and Metallurgy. Dean Dental Faculty. EDWARD G. FRISBIK, M. D., Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery. PRANK H. PAYNE, M. D.. Prof. Hyg. Dictet. W. S. WIIITWELL. A. M.. M. D., Prof, ol Materia Medica, Pharmacology and Therapeutics. ELMER E. KELLY, Ph. M.. M. D., Prof. Anatomy. JOHN H. HEALY. M. D., Prof, of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. A. W. MORTON, M. D., Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. C. H. ROSENTHAL. M. D.. Professor of Clinical Medicine. II. D’ARCY POWER. L. S. A. Eng.. L. R. C. P. Ireland, Prof, of Prin. and Prac. of Medicine. E. M. PATERSON. M.D., Professor Phys. it Histology. GEORGE ADAM. M I).. Prof. Electro-Therapeutics. J. L. ASAY, M. D., Prof. Dental Pathology and Therapeutics. PRANK C. PAGUE. D. D. S., Prof, of Orthodontia. E. S. PILLSBURY, SI. I)., Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology. WM. J. JACKSON, Ph. G., M. D.. Prof, of Theory and Practice of Pharmacy. Dean Pharmacy Faculty. A. P. WOODWARD. M. D.. Professor Dermatology. REDMOND W. PAYNE. M. D.. Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology. A. SCHLOSS, M. D . Clinical Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology. A. C. HQTHE. A. M . M. D.. Professor of Chemistry. J. P. DILLON. A. M.. M. D., Professor of Materia Mcdica and Therapeutics. P. A. DI'BOIS, Ph. G.. Professor of Materia Medica Phm. Dept. A. P. WERNER. A. M., M. D.. Professor of Botany. Microscopy and Vegetable Histology. E. S. HOWARD, M. D.. Adjunct to Chair of Surgery and Demonstrator of Anatomy. WILLIAM A. BRYANT. M. D.. D. D. S„ Professor of Oral Surgery. CORYDON B. ROOT, M. I).. D. D. 8., Clinic Professor of Amcsthetics. A. T. DERBY. D. D. S., Clinic Professor of Crown and Bridgeworlc. CIIAS. B. JONES, A. B„ M. I)., Adjunct to Chair ol Chemistry. SOPHIE B. KOBICKE, M. D., Adjunct to Chair of Gyn (ecology. MAX 8TRUNSKY. M. D.. Adj. Chair Orthopedic . ROBERT E. O’CONNELL, D. D. S.. Adjunct to Chair Operat. Dent.and Instruc. Operat. Technique. CHAS W. MILLS, M. D., I). D. S., Adjunct to Chair of Dental Pathology and Therapeutics. P. P. KNORP. M. D.. Lecturer on Anatomy. FRED. W. LUX. M D.. Lee. Physical Diagnosis. THOS. FLETCHER. D. I). S., Lecturer on Dental Chemistry and Metallurgy. WALTER P. LEWIS. I). D. S.. I.ec. Dent. P.sthet. LOLITA B. DAY. M. I).. Asst.Chair Pediatrics. WILLIAM BURPEIND. D. I). S., Asst, to Chair of Orthodontia and Instructor in Orthodontia Technique. W. T. CONNELLY. Ph. C., Assistant to Chair of Phar-macy and Instructor in Materia Medica. A. W. TAYLOR. D. D. S., Instructor in Operative Instrument Technique. C. W. KNOWLES. D. I) S.. Demonstrator in Operative Technique. A. P. MERRIMAN. Jr., D. D. S., Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry. J. C. IIKNNESSY, D. D S.. Demonstrator of Operative I cntistry. A. W. McKENZIE, D. D. S., Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry. J. S. KNOWLTON. D. I). S.. Demonstrator of Prosthetic Dentistry. OTTO LAIST. Ph. G.. Dem. Pharma. Laboratory. P. M. BALDWIN. D. D. S.. Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry. J. A. EASON, D. D. S., Demonstrator of 0| erative Dentistry. FRANK II. CRANZ. D. I). S., Assistant Demonstrator of Prosthetic Dentistry. 8. E KNOWLES. M. D.. D. D 8.. H. E. FORRESTER. D. D. S.. L. I.ORAN PEASE, D. D. S.. RUSSELL II. COOL. D. I . S.. C. C. CONWELL. I). D. S.. R. W. MEEK. D. D. S.. H. E. MINOR. I . I). S.. M. E. CLARK. D. D. S., I.. A. TEAGUE. D. D. S.. C. W. RICHARDS. I . D S.. H. G. RICHARDS. D. D. S.. I). II. LATIMER. D. I . S.. DR. MAX SICHEL, Clinical Instructors in Operative and Prosthetic Dentistry. The full Medical course comprises four annual (winter) terms of lectures, recitations, clinics, etc., of six months'actual work, l eginning the second of January and ending the first of July. The full Dental course is a graded one extending over three years. The Pharmaceutical course is of two years’ duration. The Intermediate course in Medicine begins about October 1st and ends at Christmas. The Regular courses in Dentistry aud in Pharmacy begin In November and continue seven months. Both the Medical and Dental courses may l e pursued at the same time leading to the degrees of M. D. and D. D. S. Medical and Pharmaceutical course , may be taken at the same time leading to the degrees ol M. D. and Ph. G. The fees for all departments are: Matriculation. $5 ; Intermediate course, J25 ; Regular course, J75. For regulations concerning advanced standing and for further information address, D. A. HODGHKAD, M. I)., Dean of the Faculties. 1035 Sutter Street. San Francisco, Cal. CHARLES BOXTON. D. D. S., Dean of the Dental Faculty, 231 Post Street. San Francisco. Cal. or WM. J. JACKSON. Pn. G.. M. D.. Dean of Pharmaceutical Paculty. 44 Third Street, San Francisco. Cal. October 22 —A Sorority tries to buy second-hand furniture of Mrs. Angell. October 27 — Freshmen win. Stanford’s little brother wants to know if he’s hurt. Telephone Main jJo8 Bolton Strong Engravers of High-class Printing Plates Half-tones, Zinc Etchings Color Plates, Etc. 510-512-514 Montgomery St. San Francisco, California Sole Hflent for=----- --- fzLWAS NOBLE and PRIMA LUCIA -r=rz HAVANA CIGARS The Yellowstone Cigar Store SIC,. 0 1 ll:H University Trade Es|)eciallv Solicited Telephone bi« 3390 October 29 —Juniors make money out of the Plug Ugly October 31 — Hallowe’en party at Madrono. Apologies follow. Six Stories of comfort and elegance in modern Furniture Carpets and Draperies One side of on© story of ovir six stories M. Friedman ca Co. 233-235-237 Post Street San Francisco November 3 — Stanford defeats Reliance 44 0. November 8 —Amendment passed. Cooper Medical College Corner Sacramento and Webster Streets San Francisco, Cal. FACULTY I.. C. I.anr, A. M.. M. I)., M. R. C. S.. F.tig., LL. D., Professor of Surgery, and President. C. N. K 1.1.1 swoon, M. 1).. fhofessor of l hytiology. AiK)t.rii Barkan, M. I).. Professor of Ophthalmology, Otology and Laryngology. Jos. II. Wvtiik. M ! .. LI. I .. F. R. M. S.. F.meritus Prof uor of Microscopy a nd fistolog y. Husky Gibbons. Jr.. A. M.. M. I), ‘rofessor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, and Dean. Jos. O. IIIRSCiiFKi.nRR, M. I).. Prof uor of Clinical Median . Clinton CobiiinO, M. I)., Emeritus Professor of Gynecology. A. M Gardnkr, M. D.. Professor of Isgat Medicine. Mental and Serious Diseases. W. T. WkNzKLL. M. ! .. Ph. M.. Professor of Chemistry. Staslky Stillman. M. I).. Professor of Surgery. Emmkt RixFord, B. S.. M. D.. Professor of Surgery. William Fitch Ciirnky, B. I... M. D., Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine, and .Secretary. Wu. Oi'iiu ls, M. I).. Professor of Pathology. Gko. F. Hanson. Fh. G.. M. 1 „ Professor of Materia Medico and Therapeutics. Gko. B. Somkrs. A. B.. M. D., Professor of Grnecotogy A. H Taylor, M. D.. Acting Professor of Anatomy. Waltkr R. Garhky, l’h. VS.. Acting Professor of Physiology. Attendance- is required upon four regular course of lectures, of eight months each. The next regular course of lectures will begin August 15.1901. Graduates in Sciences or Arts, of recognized Colleges or Universities, will be credited with one course, and admitted to the second course of medical lectures. Matriculates who have passed the regular examinations for admission to Stanford University, or the Univer-silyof California, or any other university or college whose standard of admission Is equivalent, will be admitted to Cooper Medical College without entrance examinations For detailed information see the Annual Announcement of the College, which will be mailed upon request. HENRY GIBBONS, Jr., M. D„ Dean WILLIAM FITCH CHENEY, M. D., Secretary The Greatest Assortment and Largest Stock on the Pacific Coast Indianapolis Furniture Company Furniture and Carpets Wholesale and Retail 750 Mission Street San Francisco, Cal. Telephone Main 5621 November 8— Ruble dance; 175 bids to the cream of society. November 9 —Girls Musical Clubs at West Side. Admission, two garments. STM ENTS’ 3RIFS, VrfLISES SMIT CASES TRUNKS, ETC. CLOTHIER. HATTERS.. Kmmi STREET sm ERflMCISCO, . . . WE OSTER TO COLLEGE MEN . . . iitc4 knitJtingco. Remooed to no. oo Geary Street, San TranctKo ««« ...fieadquartm for Sporting and Athletic goods... Knitters of Underwear in Linen, Cotton, Ulool and Silk November 10— Decker starts for a drive from the Kappa House. November 19 — Glee Concert on Campus. Girls mired. Miss Wanzer sings in rubbers. Medical Department University of California Looiion: Affiliated Colleges, San Francisco The sessions begin September ist and continue until April 30th. Attendance is required upon four annual sessions. Graduates ot the scientific departments of recognized Universities are admitted to the Second Year. For further information address I)r. A. A. D’Ancona, Dean 1022 Sutter Street San Francisco, Cal. The Largest and Best for Faculty and Students The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New Yorh Richard A. McCurdy -A. B. Forbes ®L Son Mutual Life Building..... San Francisco, California Novkmhkk 22 — Seminary in Child Study experiment on football squad. College Worh our DeligHt JZ7 Got any November 23 — Ward all and others organize Rooter’s Club. University of California Dental Department New Building, Parniwu Ave., San Franci co Faculty Bknjamin Idk Whkklkr, LI.. D., President of the University, and ex-officio President of the Faculty. Joseph LkContk, M. D.. LI.. I .. Honorary Professor of Biology. W. K. Taylor. M. D., Emeritus Professor of Surgery. L. I.. DtJNBAR, D. D. 8., Emeritus Professor of Operative Dentistry. C. I.. GODDAkG. A. M., D. I). 8.. Professor of Orthodontia. and Dean. Mavrick J. Sullivan. D. D. S.. Professor of Dental Pathology. Therapeutics and Materia Mrdica. William B. I.itwiTT, M. D.. Professor of the Principles and Practice of Surgery. A. A. D'Ancona, A. B., M. D., Professor of Physiology and Histology. John M. Williamson, M. I).. Professor of Anatomy. W. F. SitARr, I). D. S., D. M. D , Professor of Mechanical Deotistry. Harry P. Carlton. D. D. S.. Professor of Operative Dentistry. J. D. Hodobn, D. D. S., Professor of Chemistry and Metallurgy. Lecturers. Demonstrators and Assistants Jambs G. Shari . M. D., D. D. S., Assistant to the Chair of Physiology and Histology. II. K. Wilky a’. B., I.I.. B.. Special Lecturer on Dental Jurisprudence. Charlks A. Litton. D. D S , Superintendent of Infirmary. M. J. St'LLivan, D. D. S., Instructor in Clinical Operative Dentistry. Bknj. M. Sticu, D. 1). S., Demonstrator of Operative Dentistry. H. D. Noni.K. D. D. S . Instructor of Orthodontist Technic. F. W. Harndkx, D. D. S., Instructor in Operative Technic. P. C. Krharot. D. D. S., Demonstrator of Ojierative Dentistry. W.M. M. Hkrrington. D. D. S.. Demonstrator of Clin ical Mechanical Dentistry. Ch as. P. Hai ski.t, I). D. S.. Demonstrator of Mechanical Dentistry. Stki'HBn Clrary. M. D.. Demonstrator of Anatomy. Chas. D. McGkttic.an, A. B., M. D.. Demonstrator of Anatomy. The Nineteenth Session will close May 81, 1901. The Twentieth Session will open Monday, September 2. 1901. and close May SI. 1902. No student can lie admitted after September 12th. The preliminary examination for admission will be held at the new College Building, Friday and Saturday, August SO and 31. 1001. KRoriRKMKNTB FOR Adwission — Three years of high school work, including one year’s study of Latin. High school diplomas or certificates covering this amount of work will lie accepted in lieu of an examination. Lists of studies and blank applications will be furnished on application. For further information and announcement, apply to C. L. Goddard, Dean, 406 Sutler Street, San KrancLco, Cal., or Dental Department University of California, Parnatsut Ave. Telephone Subscribers on Busy 10 Party Lines can obtain 2 party line service as follows: Guarantee of 20 cents per day for Business ...and... Guarantee of 10 cents per day for Residences Apply : 216 Bush Street Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph to. Main Street Iron Works Wa. Deacon. Sale Proprietor Marine Engines All Kinds of Marine Engine Repairing Steam Launches Complete Iron Ship Repairing Jobbing and All Kinds of Repairing at Short Notice 131,133 and 135 Main St., San Francisco, Cal. Telephone No. Main 1605 November 24 — Ralph McFadden plays the gallant at Encina “ At Home.” November 2 ' — Raitt returns to college. C. M. MCRMICH. «•■ 0. HOLMIt. VICl'MIt. W. H. TtKOT, TRIM. r. w. pkmon. tier San Frandaco s' Pacific Pine Company San' Francisco Exporters, Wholesalers and Jobbers of Puget Sound Lumber Yard Manager, F. K. McComber Agencies: New York, London and Paria Cable Address Pepaco Use A.B.C. (Atb Cdn) Uebera A A 1 W.U. Codes c. m. McnniCK, Mtt. a. w. j c «on. vier-Nlt. e. • moimci t i i r. w. pacnaoM. arc Grays Harbor Commercial Co. Pacific Coast Lumber, Shingles, Tanks, Boxes Mills, Factories and Stores, Cosmopolia, Wash., C. F. White, Manager Commercial Bos Factory, Commercial Line of Steamers, San Francisco, L H. Pierson, Manager Principal Office, 237 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. ------------------------------ Kl PLI N G FR0NT2'ilN. BACK 2 IN. V- J Latest Styles The Reception The Tuxedo The London The Autowear The Dalton Cuffs Touraine Parlimant Odon Ogden St. Regis Geo. P. Ide Co., Makers Pacific Coast Branch 526 Market St., San Francisco November 28 — Seeley and others speak at Football rally. November 29 — Stanford once more on top. Traeger makes place kick. W. W. Montague Co. Cooking Ranges and Complete Kitchen Outfits for Residences, Hotels, Restaurants, Club-houses and Boarding-houses. Heating Apparatus for Residences, Churches, Halls, Schoolhouses and Public Buildings Sole Agent for Sale of the Alaska Refrigerators San Francisco, Cal. y. Smith Tjailoriny Comp any 3JO OJush St root ZJe f Aono STtoed SS7 San J ranc seo, Cat. If you want to know where to go this Summer Whether to a mineral spring resort, where you can get the benefit of medicinal waters ; or to a farm where you can enjoy the comfort and quiet home life of the farmer ; or to a picturesque town from which you can, in a short walk or drive, commune with nature in her valleys, foothills and mountain canons; or to a camp along the bank of some shady stream, call or write for :::::::::: : 44 Vacation Iyoi ” This is a little book just issued by the California NartkwtUem Rail-way Company, and it profusely illustrated. It gives camping locations, hotels and mineral spring resorts in Marin, Sonoma, Mendocino and Lake Counties. Betides, it contains a list of about two hundred farms and homes where board during the summer months can be procured at from £5.00 to fio.oo per week ::::::::::::::::: R. X. Ryan, Genera! Pauenger Agent H. C. Wbiting. General Manager I id it 0 l,6j0 Slrtrl (CFrtnielt Building) and Tlfnrom Ferry, General 0fee. Mutual Lift Building, Saniome S' California Sit., San Franeltto December 3 — Mrs. Stanford cables congratulations from Paris. December 5 — Columbia Theater people send thanks for “gentlemanly conduct” of Stanford students. H. E. Skinner Co. 416 Market Street San Francisco Guns Fishing Tackle, Tents, Tennis Golf, Baseball, Football Everything for Outing B. KATSCHINSKI SKtfK! 10 Third Street, San Francisco Latest Designs in Men’s Oxford Ties, Tan or Black. $2.60 Novelties in Men's Shoes, Patent Leather Vicl Kid or Box Calf, Price, $3.50 December 6—Glee Club Trip declared off. December 7 — Fisher elected football captain. Wells. Fargo Co’S Express Money Orders A Desirable Meant of Sending Money; Paying Bills, Subscriptions, Dues, Etc., Etc. Convenience. Safety. Dispatch. Our Agents Sell Them The very best way to pay Bills, Dues, Subscriptions, etc., is by Wells Fargo Co. Express Money Orders RATES Not over $2.60, 6 canta 5.00, 7 •• • 10.00, 10 •• •• • 20.00, 12 •• •• •• 30.00. 14 Over $100 Not over $ 40.00, 17 cente 60.00, 20 ' • 60.00, 22 75.00, 27 “ • •• 100.00, 32 • above rates llscg . Hahnemann Hospital College Cos. Mafle ani Sacsamknto Sts. SAN FRANCISCO The nineteenth annual session will begin Wednesday, May 15, 1901, and will continue seven months. Women accepted on equal terms with men. The course of instruction covers four years. It is given by didactic and clinical lectures, by recitations, and, beside, observations at the several institutions associated. Homeopathy, the science of therapeutics, is conscientiously taught. The college offers laboratory instruction in normal and pathological histology, physiology, bacteriology, physics, physiological and pathological chemistry, and clinical microscopy. Advanced standing to the Sophomore year is granted to graduates in science and arts. For further information, address JAMES W. WARD, M. D., Dean 606 Sutter Street December 10 —Miss De Witt and Miss Kifield spend the night killing the wrong mouse. Dkckmiikk 12—Bill Parkin gets fetter addressed to the Alpha Phi House. V. A. Brn ofl f. tv r San Jose Wire and Iron Works Manufacturers of Bank, Office and Counter Railings Elevator Enclosures of Plain and Ornamental Wire and Grill Work Wire Signs, Wire and Iron Fencing Iron Folding Gates Wire and Iron Guards for All Purposes Wrought Iron Cresting Wire Settees and Chairs Fruit Grading Screens Flower Stands and Hanging Baskets Wire Cloth and All Kinds of Fruit Growers Wire Work Made to Order Fire Fenders and Spark Guards Jardiniere Stands 324-326 West Santa Clara Street, San Jose, California Telephone Red 1292 Pbckmbkk 13 — Bassett plays “ Digby in Professor Hudson’s romantic comedietta. December 26 — Betas begin to paint their house. Save $137.60 in cold cash. Isaias W. Hell man, President John F. Bigelow, Vice-President I. W. Hellman, Jr., ad Vice-Pre . George Grant, Cashier W. McGavin, Asst. Cashier The Nevada National Bank of San Francisco Capital Paid Up $3,000,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profits - - 1,000,000.00 New York Corre,ponJr„s:1 American Exchange National Bank ( Importer and Trader National Bank linden Bankers; Union Bank of London, Limited Paris Bankers: Credit Lyonnais Letters of Credit Issued, Available in all Parts of the World • Director • John W. Mackay James L. Flood Lewis Gentle l aia W. Heilman Henrjr K. Allen C. DeCuigne Robert Walt l.e l Strauss I. W. Heilman. Jr. H. L. Dodge John F. Bigelow Conveniences for our Patrons Parlors—Mezzanine floor, Fourth Street side—luxuriously furnished — supplied with free writing materials, daily-papers and periodicals. Emergency Hospital— Mezzanine floor next to Parlor — for sudden cases of sickness — trained nurse in attendance during business hour . Very necessary in a store visited by many thousand daily, and having a force of t,coo to a,ooo people, according to the season. Ladies' Lavatories — adjoining Parlor—Mezzanine floor. Fourth Street side. Telephones — Main floor, otf Rotunda— four booths with double doors, insuring privacy—comfortable seats, long distance 'phones. City switch, 5c. Telegraph Office—Western Union—Mezzanine floor, Fifth Street side. Post‘Office — Station O—issues money orders, rell stamps, etc. Mezzanine floor, Fifth Street side. Information Bureau — Mam floor near elevator — panels tbftkej free—information about the store, places of amusement, car lines, steamers, trains, etc. Cafe — Serving breakfast, lunch and Afternoon Tea, and all kinds of light refreshments, oysters, etc.— in Rotunda. Barber Shop— Mezzanine floor, Fifth Street side. First class. Chiropodist — Adjoining Barber Shop—Dr. Carl Dehmel, Chiropodist and Masseur. Ladies Hair Dressing — Main floor — private apartments under Barber Shop. Children's Nursery — Children may be left in charge of nurse, while you shop. Mezzanine floor, adjoining Ladies' Parlors. Superintendent's Office— Main floor at Jessie Street entrance. Applications for positions, complaints, etc., should be made at this office. The Emporium, San Francisco Dbcbmhkk 27 —The ax falls on the foremost men in college. Survival of the unfittest. December 2 — Keith goes to txxl with the electric light globe. ....THE. HARTFORD Fire Insurance Company OKGANIZBD I7V4 Assets $11,002,588.02 Net Surplus 3.810,204.50 H. K. BKLDKN, Manager Pacific Department WHITNEY PALACHE, Assistant Manager Special Agents and Adjusters : J. J. ACARD j.j. DENNIS W. O. MORGAN JOHN M. HOLMES CALIFORNIA STREET SAN FRANCISCO William Alford, President Thomas Brown, Cashier H. Danirl , Asst. Cashier Cmas. R. Bishop, Vice-President ai.i.kn M. Clay, Secretary Ikying F. MouLTOK, id Assi. Cashier Bank of California surpIus.s,.ooo.ooo SAN FRANCISCO Profit and I.oss Account, January I, 1900,52,321,212 CORRESPONDENTS: SPW vnu k- . J Messrs. I.aidlaw Co. NEW 1 ORK }The Bank of New York, N. B. A BALTIMORE ; The National Exchange Bank BOSTON : The National Shawmut Bank omoi 'n I Illinois Trust and Savings Bank CHICAC.O : j Union Naliona, |Unk CHINA, JAPAN AND EAST INDIES: Chartered Bank of India, Australia and China AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND i The Union Rank of Australia, Limited, and Bank of New Zealand haters of Credit Issued, Available in all Parts of tbe IVor Id PHILADELPHIA: The Philadelphia National Rank ST. LOUIS : Boatmen's Rank VIRGINIA CITY, NEV , Agency of the Bank of California LONDON : Messrs. N. M. Rothschild Sc Sons PARIS: Mcssrs.de Rothschild Freres BERLIN : Direction der Disconto Geselltchaft Capital, 52,000,000 The JOSEPH L. RON RAO TCLCPHONC BROWN 331 CCORGC READ California Belting Co. OAK-TANNED LEATHER and RAW-HIDE BELTING, LACE LEATHER, Etc. factory: NOC « o iotn sts. 523 ANO 525 MISSION STREET, SAN FRANCISCO 9£ m. r on, nrst’rftnf ?£ . 9 . Norton. S r nrjr €Union Pacific Salt Company 2 6 eSacrarnonto Street ( neor rom erf SGS) Salt c?7 anufacturors San S’rane sco Oa . December 30—Jones, Chi Psi, follows Keith’s example. January 8 — Sobey — Blue Book, second edition. Continental Building and Loan Association of California ....Established ia 1889.... Subscribed Capital - - $11,000,000 Paid in Capital - - 2.000.000 Profit and Reserve Fund - 250.000 Monthly Income over - - 100,000 Its Purpose is To help its members to build homes; also to make loans on improved property, the members giving first liens on their real estate as security. To help its stockholders to cam from io to 12 per cent interest on their stock and allow them to open deposit accounts bearing interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum on Ordinary deposits and 6 per cent per annum on 'Perm deposits. home Office, 222 Sansome Street Sa Fraacitco. Cal. WILLIAM COR KIN, Secretary and General Manager ROYAL Insurance Company Edward Brown Sons 4II-413 California Street San Francisco, Cal. QUEEN Insurance Company A B S O L U r B 1 N D E M N I T r General Insurance Agents Svea Insurance Co. of Gothenburg American Fire Insurance Co. of Philadelphia Agricultural Insurance Co. of New York The Delaware Insurance Co. of Philadelphia J «3 «J ROLLA V. WATT, Mgr. Pacific Dept. Koval Insurance Building Cor. Pint and Samome Strttn J. J. Morris Real Estate and Insurance Broker Resident Agent SAN FRANCISCO Palo Alto, Cal. January 11 — Wertheimer | ays $30 for honor of leading the yell. Jancakv 12—Anzini loses a dozen glasses. PARKE LACY CO. 21 and 23 Fremont St., San Francisco, Cal. Hoisting and Pumping Machinery GOLD, SILVER AND COPPER STAMPING AND DRESSING MACHINERY ... AIR ... COMPRESSORS SMELTING MACHINERY ROCK DRILLS DIAMOND DRILLS ROCK BREAKERS CORNISH ROLLS PULVERIZERS CONCEN- TRATORS ORE FEEDERS MINING SUPPLIES CONCEN- TRATING MACHINERY AMALGA- MATING MACHINERY ROASTING FURNACES Straight Line and Vertical DRYING FURNACES BLAST FURNACES REVERBERATORY and MATTE FURNACES MINING SUPPLIES INGKRSOI.L “ECLIPSE ROCK DRILL V e carry in stock Horizontal, Vertical and Portable Engines and Boilers, Hoisting Engines, Horse-Power Hoisting Whints, Water Wheels, Steam Pumps, Ore Cars, Wire Rope, Ore Buckets,.Water Buckets, Skips, Blowers and Exhaust Fans, Shafting and Pulleys, Belting, Oils and Mine Supplies SOLE AGENT rOR MANGANESE STEEL SHOES AND DIES BULLOCK DIAMOND DRILLS KNOWLES PUMPS AND PULSOMETER PUMPS Estimates Furnished for Complete IMant for Hoisting Works, Smelters, Concentrating and Stamp Mills Jancakv 15 — Paul Davis Rets f 150 from home on strength of the closing of the University. January 16 —Harry Edwards elected baseball captain. L. P. DEGEN MANUFACTURER OF LEATHER and RAWHIDE BELTING AND LACE LEATHER 105-107 MISSION STREET, SAN FRANCISCO Telephone Main 662 Dynamo Belting a Speoialty The Giant Powder Company Consolidated Manufacturer Giant and Safety Nitro Dynamite Gelatine and Gelatine Dynamite Clipper Mills Black Blasting Judson Improved Powder Nobel Blasting Gelatine Dealer In Caps and Fuse 430 California Street San Francisco Cbas. M. Sorensen ....Tailor.... J22 Post Street Rrtwrrn Ptivtll and Maim Slrnli Sdfl fr rddcisco January 17 — Taylor resigns. Committee makes known another rule. January 18— Wertheimer, among others, contributes $6.00 for a spread. Vulcan... Ice Making and Refrigerating Machines of say desired capacity, on the simplest and most economical system Built by the Vulcan Iron Works Scad lor cauiotue San Francisco, Cal. CALIFORNIA POWDER WORKS Smokeless Sporting and Rifle Powder MANUFACTURERS OF HERCULES Shot Gun Cartridges Black and Smokeless Cannon, Sporting and Mining Powder Works at Hercules and Santa Cru 330 Market Street, San Francisco BooKbinding... In the very best of style at some prices thot you would have to pay for inferior worh. This edition of Stanford “Quad was bound by us. Our Agents at Stanford University. the Stanford University Boohstore. who will quote prices and show samples The HicKs-Judd Co. 2a i irst St.. San Francisco. Col. January 25 —Alpha Phis line up at Sophomore election to vote for Bayard Nourse. January 29 — Miss Mabel Brown joins the Choral Society. Yosemite Engraving Company 2-4' Montgomery Street San Francisco, Calif. Telephone bush Two - Nine - Nought February 1 — Miss Genevieve Evans and Miss Lou McDougald save money by walking to college. February 4 — Bracchi dons lively. C. I r. Hkhnstrom FomirKLV with Nomdwki.i. A Co. TAILOR 1117 XlONTOOMEKY s-r. Koomm B to lO TKI.KPMONK lli.tm 271 san Francisco, Cal. February 7 — Koblc Sophomores capture the '04 mascot pig. IKMH February 8 —Morris wins the Carnot. February 11 — Bacon scours Encina and Frat Houses for dances at 6 a. m. February 14—Freshmen object to paying for their sweaters. GEORGE GOODMAN PATENTEE AND MANUFACTURER OF Jfiishcr Co. Briffiosill Stt©nneooo HATTERS Sidewalk and Garden-walk a Specialty 9 Montgomery St.. San Francisco. Cal. Sample of work can be seen at Lick House Stanford Univeroty ALL GOODS STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS offick : 307 Montgomery Street San Francisco The Original f F.iuHlibrJ tSjO.. kJOJUlfl J Bakery and Restaurant 21J Sutter Street, San Franeheo The Family Dining-room connected with our ettabliibmen! otTcri the ben inducement to viiitori who are in search of a cosy, quiet, elegantly appointed restaurant of undoubted eaccllence. Overland Lunches carefully prepared. Wedding Cakes a specialty. Goods shipped to all pans of the Coast.......... Fred. P. Plagemann Robert Wieneei Golden West Hotel Wirmkkr Plagfm asm, Proprietors Cor. Ellis and Powell Sts. San Francisco, California Smoke La Flor de Leland Stanford Clear Havana Cigars M. A. Gunst 6c Co., Sole Pacific Coast Agents, San Francisco, Cal. February 15— Dick l ockcy finds tailor shop closed, and cuts 1). I. X. party. February 18— Erb and Fisher threatened with arrest for stealing Freshman’s feed. Geo. P. Snell, Manager Hotel Vendome San Jose, California Recognized headquarters for Stanford students and visiting tourists. This beautiful hotel is situated in the « Garden City” of the Pacific Coast. Only fifty miles from San Francisco. The Vendome is strictly first class, modern, up to date. From here (Hotel Vendome) stages of the Mt. Hamilton Stage Company leave daily.: : : : : : oooo ttnewSungi (Emm Blowpipe Apparatus, Platinum Crucibles, Platinum Ware, Chemicals, Chemical Glassware, Laboratory Supplies, Mining Supplies, Mining and Scientific Text-Books PuiCM ON ArPLICATION JOHN TAYLOR CO. 63 First Street San Francisco FEBRfARV 22—Sophomore Cotillion. Billy Erb delegated to jolly up electricians. Fkhki'aky 2-3— Paul Parker spends early morning in Ben Bell’s hay-mow. O. W. XoRDWELL DKAl'KH a i rrAIIX K 117 Montoomkhy f T. San I' rancihco. Cau A A j. TUT 000 mm 000 t V V TlIKO. fioilllMAN Hunky Harris Henrv Harris 6c Co. Wholesale I4 INK ClGARS and Retail 3 and 5 Stockton Street Branch 315 Pine St. San Francisco, Cal. Have you been up Mt. Tamalpais If not—why not ? Via. Mill Valiev and Mt. Tamalpais Railroad March 1 — Miss Short, armed with a whip, drives the Phi Delta Theta dog from Madrono. March 4 — Bowman’s and Adam's farce chosen for Junior Day. FRED H. SMITH ENCINA GYMNASIUM STANFORD UNIVERSITY CAMPUS PROVING COMFORT CAN BE OBTAINED ON A WHEEL COLUMBIA HARTFORD and PIERCE BICYCLES RENTING, REPAIRING AND SUNDRIES First-class Tailoring at Moderate Prices l8 7 1901 H. M. HUDSON B. P. LAUSTEN Watchmaker and Scientific Optician Merchant DIALKK IN Tailor Watches, Jewelry, Diamonds, Etc. Opposite Depot, Menlo Park Watches, Clocks and Jewelry repaired in the best manner Repairing of Old English and Swiss Watches a specialty V — Riding Breeches and All kinds of Repairing Liveries a Specialty and Cleaning Done.... Opposite Depot, Palo Alto Coxin Block, Menlo Park References: Cili ens of Menlo Park March 6— The Thetas go into the college-custom-making business. March 9— Education majors go on a picnic. _ Carriage Trimming . Whip . Robe , Bru.he , Currycomb , Bool , Oil , Etc. General Repairing Ncaily Done Students’ Headquarters I. STEWART Eagle Drug Company Successor to B. F. Hall MANVrACTVKU OT AND PKALKR IN HARNESS AND SADDLERY 135 University Avenue Telephone Main 4 Palo AltO, Csl. Trunk , Valise , Suit Cases, Satchels, Telescope Baskets, Shawl Strap . Ladies' and Gent ' Fine Oriving Gloves PALO ALTO CALIFORNIA y hm DuJjfelJ U'. J. Ursn Vandervoort Bros., Prop . Grace Dudfield Fine Single or Double 'Teams Lumber Dealers Palo Alto Agentt for Heath Milligan Best Prepared Paint and University Stables (Jfc ni rsrj; Alma Street, Opposite Depot, Palo Alto, Cal. Fine New Rubber-'Tired Rigs Tt ephone Red Telephone Black aoi March 11 — Professor Rendtorff tries to gag the steam engine. March 14 — Symonds hits Haberdasher sign and wins (?) a hat. Palace Pharmacy The Lowest Price tor the Best Cut, Fit and Workmanship in California University Avenue = F. C. THIELE Palo Alto and University Drug Store FINE TAILORING OTTER BLOCK, PALO ALTO, CAL. Telephone i( Cm as. H. Calpe Tel. Rr.n 71 I argc stock of Domestic and Foreign Woolens and Trimmings on hand Where is the Best place to buy Student's Furniture ? at BELL’S F. IV. Sherman Co.'s STABLES Tkty Man Jit a tvt I aiiorttd ttotk of tbt lattit design! PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA PINE SINGLE AND IKll'BLE TJAMI Having bttn establitked tintt St}j they art acquainted ■with tit nrtJi of student CARRIAGES MEET TRAINS AT DEPOT Call and see them 266 University Avenue, Pnlo Alto, Cal. March 16 — “Skin Howard throws up his job in the tenth inning. March 20—Thetas paint their cat. LIGHT CYCLERY F. A. Dinsmoee 216 University Avenue Phone Black 123 A Racvclc is a Bicycle—hut a Bicycle is not a Racvclc Our Crank Hanger docs it ! Does IVbat ? Makei the racycle run ea ier than any other wheel became the ballbearing are outtide the tprockct. Call at Olmmore' and ee thi wheel before buying. Sold at different price to uit all. Agent for the Light. leaders in all things The Fair Olympic Butter is hest Lamps, Waste-Ba'kets, Telescope , Crocker)-, Glassware, Silverware, Tinware, Agateware, Woodenwarc, Hammocks, Toilet Soap and Groceries. Thy us ro« Teas and Coffees Palo Alto, California Choice Ice Cream ami Candies The Spa J. At. Douglan, proprietor i6.f University Avenue, Palo Alto Fine Footwear Reliable Repairing Thoits’ Shoe Store (Hanan Shoes) University Ave. Palo Alto, Cal. STOVES AND RANGES Telephone Black III PUMPS AND WINDMILLS S. McADAM CO. Sanitary Plumbing General Repair Work Ledyard Building, Cor. University Avc. and Emerson St., Palo Alto Tinning and Ca -Fitting J. W. PokiiKS, Agent Telephone Black 114 Kelley Laundry Co. (Incorporated) Laundry : Cor. Taylor and San Pedro Sts. 267 University Avenue, Palo Alto, Cal. Painting, Whitening and Tinting Plain and Decorative Paper-Hanging Stroner Backus Wholesale and Retail Dealer in VVaLL PaPER, HARDWARE, WlNDOW Gl.ASS, PaINTS AND OlLS 210-212 University Avenue, Palo Alto March 22—Phi Delta Phi initiation. “Scotty” makes a blunder. March 23— Luck goes duck-hunting with a sling-shot. UMPHREY’S CANDY : : : THE Humburg Carpet Cleaner and Awning Maker BANK OF PALO ALTO Tel. John 711 PAI.O ALTO, CAL. San Jose, California San Jose Laundry Association Incorporated Slade Bros., Agents, Palo Alto M. K. Sblzbr, Proprietor Phone Black 95 The Stanford Pharmacy The place where they distill that famous Stanford Violet Toilet Water 117 Univeraity Avenue Palo Alto, California Miniatures, $1.00 to $2.00 per dozen Special care in finishing for amateurs Plat i notype Collodio-Carbon Aristo Platino S. DONAGHHO Photographer “ Peck’s Studio,” Palo Alto e. •. wnioMT Established i860 c. wwont N. GRAY CO. UNDERTAKERS 641-643-645 SACRAMENTO STREET, Corner Webb SAN FRANCISCO Emdalmino a Specialty Telephone Main No. 43 March 24 — “Sigma ” Frats play baseball at Woodside. March 25— Alpha Phi received bids for the oat crop UNION GAS ENGINE COMPANY 244-246 First Street San Francisco BUILDERS OF THE “UNION” GAS AND OIL ENGINES FOR MARINE AND STATIONARY SERVICE GASOLINE MINING HOISTS AND PUMPING PLANTS March 27 — Mr. Muckleston conducts an hour recitation with Miss Loeser. the only one present.
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