Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1908

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1908 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 460 of the 1908 volume:

fo The Stanford Quad Volume 14 M QUA OF THE JUNIOR CLASS, IF50 i: i ' t;= ' o S £) S?. OTscpHinc C Hewtort. TO James Francis Lanagan FOR HIS SERVICES TO STANFORD ATHLETICS : : THE CLASS OF 1908 DEDICATES THIS BOOK ENGRAVED. PRINTED AND BOUND BY THE STANLEY-TAYLOR PRESS SAN FRANCISCO nQST(gS3T as DEDICATION 3 THE EARTHQUAKE 10 IN MEMORIAM . 32 FOUNDERS 34 FACULTY 38 GRADUATE STUDENTS 51 CLASSES 56 FRATERNITIES 114 HONOR SOCIETIES 206 ORGANIZATIONS 214 MUSIC 246 PUBLICATIONS 258 DEBATING 266 ATHLETICS 276 DRAMATICS 16 LITERARY 328 COLLEGE YEAR 352 CALENDAR 364 JOSHES 368 Foreword Foreword The compilation of the 1908 Quad has not differed in any important particular from that of other Stanford Quads. While the Board, like all its predecessors, entered on the work full of amateur fire, with a multitude of unspeakably clever pos- sibilities looming up before them, each step toward the completion of the book has brought them closer to sea-level. That is to say, the first impulse of the Board — of all past and all coming boards — was to tear the established Quad to pieces, from beginning to end, and set up something truly original. But the editors have learned a lesson in practical evolution ; they have learned that the Stanford Quad is not a creation, but a growth. They found that they had to sift down from their novel conceptions into the accustomed grooves, for these grooves — worked out long before them — were the best possible channels for the interpretation of Stanford life. After coming to this conclusion it was with admiration, not criticism, that the editors followed the Quad traditions ; for they realized that the book, as handed down to them, was a typical expression of the ' Red-tiled Principality. It could have arisen among no other surroundings ; and, since, in many respects, the Stan- ford Quad differs from all other college annuals, it should be the effort of its editors to treasure and preserve its distinctiveness. Board of Editors. Stanford Quad 1908 A Plea for College Athletics HE mention of the word athletics calls to the mind of almost every Stanford man the different Varsity teams, Football, Baseball, Track, and Crew. Undergraduate interest is centered in the progress and success of these teams. The winning of the four great contests with California is the end and aim of our athletic effort. To the accomplishment of this object we devote all of our spare time and most of our money. Is this right ? Yes, for the men who are candidates for positions on the teams ; no, for those who sit on the bleachers night after night. Out of intercollegiate athletics men learn the lessons of obedience, unselfishness, and determination. What these three virtues have done for Stanford teams is a matter of history. But a very small proportion of the men ever get the opportunity to work for a season on a Varsity squad. The vast majority have neither the skill nor the intense, unselfish interest that marks the Varsity man. They are, therefore, barred from 8 taking part in the major sports, and are forced into indoor work in the Stanford gymnasium, or onto the bleachers. There is no place for the man of Quad mediocre skill — the man who plays for the fun of the game. Our great present need is a thorough organization of college athletics. The writer ventures to suggest a scheme for college baseball and football. Let each class elect a manager and provide funds necessary to buy balls. Uniforms for Rugby and baseball are so inexpensive that every player can easily furnish his own outfit. Let the managers arrange schedules of games to cover the entire season. A selection committee composed of the Varsity coaches and captains will certainly satisfy the candidates that merit alone determines the make-up of the teams. Every man ought to be given a fair chance to show his ability. When the teams are chosen for the final series, they will elect their captains. To carry out any such scheme as this we must have enthusiasm and a place to play. Enthusiasm is evident. But during the last Rugby season the coaches were at their wits ' end trying to keep a hundred men busy on one football field. Seventy-five men are now trying to play ball on one diamond. What we need is a place to play. When the trustees made a generous appropriation for laying out new athletic grounds, they took the first step in the solution of the college athletic problem at Stanford. But even with these new fields we will not have room enough for all. Besides the ' arsity grounds, we need two baseball diamonds and two football fields. Providing these fields is the one effectual remedy for overvaluation of intercollegiate athletics. The exaggerated importance attached to intercollegiate athletics is due primarily to the fact that we have no other athletics. Let us by all means continue in our endeavor to put the best team possible into the contests with California ; but let us also give ample opportunity to the man who plays outdoor games for the fun and exercise that he can get out of them. James L. nagan, 1900. The Earthquake n (J K D K D u u 9. THE CHEMISTRY BLII.UING THE MUSEUM Stanford Quad 1908 THE GATEWAY The Great Earthquake As when some great painter dips His pencil in the gloom of earthquake and eclipse. — Shelley ' s Revolt of Islam. Great calamities leave in the minds of those who experience them certain sensations of amazement and fear which are constantly recurring with every remembrance of the event. And as these sensations are more startling and more vivid than the sensations that we experience in every- day life, so are they more lasting and more nearly a repetition of our exact feelings when we were overwhelmed and bewildered by the great catastrophe. Thus the earthquake of the eighteenth of April, 1906, has left in our minds certain recollections which can never be effaced utterly, but will remain for years to come, rushing in upon us from time to time, even in the midst of the stress and excitement of a busy life. Only a few months ago, the newspaper dispatches describing the calamity that fell on Kingston, Jamaica, filled us with a startling sense of its reality. None of us will ever forget the nameless terror of the shock, the appalled 20 astonishment with which we gazed at the ruin around us, and the sense of our own utter helplessness. Yet, real as these feelings were, they were so confused that it is difficult at the present time to reproduce them with sufficient accuracy to give them reality in the mind of the reader. The earthquake occurred in the morning at eighteen minutes past five o ' clock, as was attested for months afterward by the motionless hands of the great clock in the tower of the Ferry Building in San l ' rancisco. The shock was preceded by a dull, heavy rumbling, and was accompanied by a deafening roar. The greatest confusion ensued. Few persons who went through the earthquake have ever been able to give a uniformly clear description of the details attending the phenomenon. Those who lived in frame houses probably received the more violent shaking, but in the stone dormitories the situation of the rudely awakened sleepers was fraught with far more danger. In Encina Hall there was a terrific grinding of masonry, as of stone upon stone, for the entire height and width of the walls. The shaking of the building was so violent that it was difficult for one to keep one ' s feet, and several who Stanford Quad 1908 INTERIOR OF ENCINA Stanford Quad 1908 leaped from their beds at the first shock were thrown to the floor. Large fragments of plas- ter fell from the ceilings and walls, blinding and half stifling the occupants of the rooms. The ever-repeated crash of falling masonry added to the uproar. The great ornamental chimney, hurled to the roof by the shock, dashed itself through four stories to the base- ment, carrying with it three rooms with their five occupants. One of these men, Junius Robert Hanna, of Bradford, Pennsylvania, was instantly killed by the tons of stone under which he was buried ; the other four escaped without serious injury. Practically everyone in Encina rushed half clad from the building. Vet with all the fright which naturally took possession of everybody, there was no real panic, and the men, with some few exceptions, displayed remarkable coolness and judgment. Roble Hall, the building which was con- structed of concrete, reinforced by steel wires, would have been jjractically undamaged, save in broken window panes and plastering, had it not been for a chimney similiar to that at Encina, which fell in luuch the same way, carrying down the three rooms that lay in its ])atli. h ' ortunately the occupants escaped with- out any severe injury, although one girl who went to bed on the third floor awoke in the ])arlor. At the power house, the great historic chinmey which towered high above the sur- rounding roofs, fell, burying and killing the fireman, Otto Gerdes, who had remained at his post to turn off the electric power. The 22 THROUGH THE ARCADES IN THE CHANCEL igoS Stanford fall of this chimney demolished the boiler room and the adjoining Quad building. On the Row, the frame houses shook like reeds with the force of the shock. But most of them escaped without any substantial damage. The Chi Psi lodge, however, was thrown from its foundations, and so bent and twisted within and without that the only wonder is that it was not torn to pieces. The duration of the earthquake, as officially recorded, was forty- seven seconds. There were in reality two separate shocks, one imme- diately following the other,, and displaying even greater violence than its predecessor. By the time of the ces.sation of the second shock, practi- cally the entire population of the campus was out of doors witnessing the havoc that had been wrought. Everywhere there was a disheartening spectacle of ruin such as none of those who saw it ever wish to see again. The spire of Memorial Church had fallen, and the tower of the edifice was a wreck, crowned by the square wooden portion of the belfry, which had not gone down with the tiling. The front wall of the nave had also fallen, leaving the organ exposed, and sending a bright flood of daylight into those precincts formerly unlit save by the storied windows, richly dight, on which were portrayed in the softest colors the deeds of Biblical heroes, from Abraham to the Maccabees. Behind the church, several hundred feet of arcades, which were not held up, as were the others, by being joined to the buildings, were completely leveled. Memorial Arch had lost its heavy stone cap, and the frieze, The Progress of Civilization, which was designed by Augustus St. Gaudens, was utterly destroyed. Down the sides of the Arch extended gaping seams, even to the bases. The falling fragments of the Arch had broken down the adjoining arcades, and crushed in a portion of the roof of Assembly Hall. In front of the Zoology Building, the statue of Louis Agassiz, which stood on a stone shelf above the three central arches of the arcade, had fallen head first, and was imbedded fully two feet in the concrete jiavement below. Strange to say, the statue was not broken, and is now restored to its old station. The Chemistry Building had lost all its numerous chimneys and a I 24 portion of its front wall. Both wings of the Museum were down, but the central part stood firm. One of the four statues that rested on the fagade above the entrance was dashed to pieces on the steps below. The extent of the damage inside of the Museum is not known by the general public even at the present time. By far the worst scenes of destruction were presented by the two uncompleted buildings, the Gymnasium and the Library. The great pillars that formed the entrance to the former had crumpled like paper and fallen. The small steel dome that crowned the edifice was twisted out of shape, and the walls were cracked from roof to basement. The Li- brary was a heap of wreck- age, but the great dome stood unscathed in the center. Such, in a mere glance, was the view of the Univer- sity that presented itself to the eyes of those who rushed out of doors that morning. Everyone feared a repetition of the shock, and few dared to venture back to their rooms. Almost immediately, A SECTION OF THE LIBRARY y j-dcr of the authorities, the buildings were surrounded by ropes and danger signs were posted. Guards were set at all entrances to prevent anyone from risking his life among the tottering walls. President Jordan, in order to calm the excitement and prevent a stampede, issued a statement at once declaring that the regular work of the University would be resumed on Friday ; but it was apparent to every- one that the c ondition of the buildings was such that this would be absolutely impossible. During the first day nearly everyone remained out of doors, avoiding stone walls, and spent the time in relating 25 Stanford Quad igo8 Stanford exciting experiences. No one at this time had any idea of the extent of Quad the earthquake, for trafific on the railroads ceased ahnost immediately, and telegraph and telephone communications were cut ofif. Some, how- ever, succeeded in catching trains to the north early that morning, thus arriving in San Francisco in time to witness the stirring events that occurred there on the three succeeding days. By noon rumors of the destructive force of the earthquake in other places began to reach us. Trains arriving from San Jose brought word that considerable loss of life and property had occurred there, and these rumors, always added to by the excitement of the narrat or, became, in some instances, truly startling. We soon heard that San Francisco was burning and without water to quench the fire. Later in the day auto- mobiles and men on horseback arrived from the north, and confirmed the rumor. The accounts which we received of the loss of life varied greatly, no person estimating the deaths at less than several thousand, and some placing it so high as to make it include fully a fifth of the population of the city. That night people slept out of doors, on their lawns, or in the fields. In Palo . lto tents were pitched in every vacant lot, and many persons, especially those whose houses had been badly damaged, continued to sleep out for several weeks. It seemed as if the entire city of San Francisco were doomed to destruction, for the flames were raging unchecked from the Potrero to Telegraph Hill. In the afternoon, the smoke of the burning metropolis had filled the northern sky, and the frequent explosions in the distance told of the efforts of the citizens to save it by fighting the fire with dynamite. Most of the students who had relatives or friends in San Francisco took trains to San ISruno, and from there made their way into town. That night the red glow of the flames lit the horizon in a wide glare, brightening or darkening by turns with changes of the wind. Those who saw the gleam of the conflagration through the gaps in the groves of oak and eucalyptus were filled with an appalling sense of fact that within forty miles of them, a great city was dying. All day Thursday, the conflagration continued, but by Friday more encouraging news began to arrive. The fire in San Francisco was under control, and reports of the loss of life in other places were now said to 26 be greatly exaggerated. That noon, a meeting of the student body was Stanford held in front of the Phi Delta Theta house, and a corps was organized Quad to go to the city to assist in the work of relief. Of those who took part ° in this work many rendered excellent service during the entire summer. On the same day. Doctor Jordan declared the University adjourned until ■ the following August. Within the next few days, communications with the outside world were restored, and the students were enabled to return to their homes. Thus passed the great Earthquake. Suddenly it came, suddenly it left; brief was its visitation — but its traces were deep and enduring. Though daily life, so roughly shaken from its groove, soon slipped back again, the massive stones of the University walls, which were hurled apart from their fellows, could not assume their places. They lay scattered and broken, dumb but eloquent witnesses of the wrath of the Temblor. They still serve as reminders of that memorable event, and often start fleeting images through the mind, throwing one again into the awed state which followed the terrible moment of that April morning. William Fr. ser Herron. 27 THK STANFORD RESIDENCE BEFORE ENCINA THE BOOKSTORE DR. JORDAN SPEAKS AN EARTHQUAKE PARTY STANFORD RELIEF EXPEDITION ROOM 23, ENCINA AN IMPROVISED KITCHEN THE CHI PSI LOKCE THE CHI PSI LODGE ( REMOVED ) l 1 l3 . • - ■mi iite 1 : ' ' .ai, ' w jji L Km. ■ - ' Qi ? ■« ■ ' _«. ' — , H ' . ; ffl - iai THE COMMON INTEREST THE EARTHQUAKE MOTTO IN AUGUST InM emoriam Julius R. Hanna, ' 08 Killed by the Earthquake. April 18, 1906 Otto Gerdes Killed by the Earthquake, April 18, 1906 Abel H. Toll, ' 98 Died September 13, 1906 Joseph Jarnick, ' 00 Died Novembers, 1906 Charles A. Jones, ' 08 Died January 1, 1907 Jessie G. Thomson, ' 06 Died January 9, 1907 Walter I. Simpson, ' 06 Died February 18, 1907 Charles L. Story, ' 98 Died March 24, 1907 Found ers F .. J « Stanford LELAND STANFORD tJANE LATHROP STANFORD 1908 Board of Trustees MR. TIMOTHY HOPKINS San Francisco THE HON. HORACE DAVIS San Francisco THE HON. THOMAS B. IVIcFARLAND .... San Francisco THE HON. GEORGE E. GRAY San Francisco MR. JOSEPH D. GRANT San Francisco MR. SAMUEL F. LEIB San Jose MR. LEON SLOSS San Francisco THE HON. THOMAS WELTON STANFORD . Melbourne, Ans. : IR. FRANK MILLER Sacramento MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP Stanford University THE HON. WHITELAW REID New York MR. GEORGE EDWARD CROTHERS San Francisco MR. CHARLES PARMALEE FELLS San Francisco MR. WILLIAM BABCOCK San Rafael MR. ' ANDERLYN STOWE San Francisco Officers of the Board of Trustees : IR. SAMUEL F. LEIB President MR. TIMOTHY HOPKINS Vice-President MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP Treasurer MR. GEORGE EDWARD CROTHERS Secretary Died June 21, 1893. tDied February 28, 190S. 37 Stanford Quad 1908 1 1 ' - - _ . . ' ' — -- Y -. ■ ( ) ' 1 ' , h - - - — - ■ 1 — ■ ■ 1 1 1 ii 1 flu f jr - 1 1 i ■! ' 1 Tm - ( Q 1 ! - -W T tTv 7- L_ , -— ' ] 1 I ii i! )( uWik i i 1 ! ■ ii i : wssk!f , k m 3 V- 1 Imi 1 i i i j M l,,i i SbStsBs in l; 1 H— ,L___i 1 ' , ! 1 v - : - . k 3 Faculty DAVID STARR JORDAN, President of the University. M.S., Cornell University, 1872; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1875; Ph.D., Butler University, 1878; LL.D., Cornell University, 1886; Johns Hopkins University, 1902. A T; 2 S JOHN CASPER BRANNER, Vice-President of the University and Professor of Geology. B.S., Cornell University, 1882; Ph.D., Indiana University, 1885; LL.D., University of Arkansas, 1897. A T; 2 E OLIVER PEEBLES JEXKINS, Professor of Physiology and His- tology. A.B., Moore ' s Hill College, 1869; A.M., 1872; M.S., Indiana University. 1886; Ph.D., 1889. ME LVILLE BEST ANDERSON, Professor of English Literature. A.M., Butler University, 1877; Professor of Modern Languages. Butler University, 1877-80. JOHN MAXSON STILLMAN, Professor of Chemistry. Ph.B., University of California, 1874; Ph.D., 1885; Assistant in Cheniisii-y, University of California, 1873-75. Z ' ! ' ; 2 S FERNANDO SANFORD, Professor of Physics. B.S., Carthage College, 1879; M.S., 1882. CHARLES DAVID RIARX, Professor of Civil Engineering. B.C.E., Cornell University, 1878; C.E., Karlsruhe Polytechnioum, Instructor in Civil Engineering, Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 1880-81. O 2 S CHARLES HENRY GILBERT, Professor of Zoology. B.S., Butler University, 1879; M.S., Indiana University, 1882; Ph.D., DOUGLAS HOUGHTON CAMPBELL, Professor of Botany. Ph.M., University of Michigan, 1882; Ph.D., 1886. 2 S 1881; A X: 18S.J, ' Absent on leave, 1906-07. 38 EWALD FLUGEL, Professor of English Philology. Stanford Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1886. Quad CHARLES BENJAMIN WING, Professor of Structural Engineer- igo8 ing. C.E., Cornell University, 1886. 2 2 FRANK ANGELL, Professor of Psychology. B.S., University of Vermont, 1878. 2 2 LEANDER MILLER HOSKINS, Professor of Applied Mathe- matics. B.C.E. and B.S., University of Wisconsin, 1883; M.S., 1885; C.E., 1887. d e ROBERT EDGAR ALLARDICE, Professor of Mathematics. A.M., University of Edinburgh, 1882. 2 2 ♦WILLIAM RUSSELL DUDLEY, Professor of Botany. B.S., Cornell University, 1874; M.S., 1876. A T; 2 2 AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY, Professor of Greek. A.B., Haverford College, 1885; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Universltj-, 1890; Fellow in Johns Hopkins University, 1887-88. ♦fNATHAN ABBOTT, Professor of Law. A.B., Yale University, 1877; LL.D., Boston University, 1893. ' T JOHN ERNST MATZKE, Professor of Romanic Languages. A.B., Hope College, 1882; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, l:S8,-(. • B K JAMES OWEN GRIFFIN, Professor of German. Graduate of Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1873. A T; Acacia. RUFUS LOT GREEN, Professor of Mathematics. B.S., Indiana University, 1885; A.M., 1890. ARLEY BARTHLOW SHOW, Professor of Mediseval History. A.B., Doane College, 1882; Graduate . ndover Theological Seminary, 1885; A.M., Doane College, 1892. ORRIN LESLIE ELLIOTT, Registrar. Ph.B., Cornell University, 1885; Ph.D., 1890. B K VERNON LYMAN KELLOGG, Professor of Entomology and Lecturer in Bionomics. B.S., University of Kansas, 1889; M.S., 1892. B K; 2 . ' 2; A 9 JAMES PERRIN SMITH, Professor of Paleontology. A.M., Vanderbilt University, 1886; Ph.D., University of Gottingen, 1892. Ben LIONEL REMOND LENOX, Professor of Analytical Chemistry. Ph.B., Columbia College, 1888. HENRY RUSHTON FAIRCLOUGH, Professor of Latin. A.B., University of Toronto, 1883; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1896. A A ; B K ♦Absent on leave, 1906-07. t Resigned, March, 1907. 39 Stanford -MAX FARRAND, Professor of History. Quad A.B., Princeton University, 1892; A.M., 1893; Ph.D., 1896; Boudinot Fellow IQ08 ' History, Princeton University, 1892-93. WILLIAM FREDERICK DURAND, Professor of Mechanical Engi- neering. Graduate U. S. Naval Academy, 1880; Ph.D., Lafayette College, 1888; Engi- neer Corps U. S. Navy, 1880-87. A 6; Acacia. HARRIS JOSEPH RYAN, Professor of Electrical Engineering. M.E., Cornell University, 1887. GEORGE HEMPL, Professor of Germanic Philology. A.B., University of Michigan. 1879; Ph.D., University of Jena, 1889; LL.D., University of Wisconsin, 1904. EPHRAIM DOUGLASS ADAMS, Professor of History. A.B., University of Michigan, 1887; Ph.D., 1890. 4 ' T EDWARD CURTIS FRANKLIN, Professor of Organic Chemistry. B.S., University of Kansas, 1888; M.S., 1890; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, 1894. A e ALPHONSO GERALD NEWCOMER, Professor of English. A.B., University of Michigan, 1887; A.M., Cornell University, 1888. r A ELLWOOD P. CUBBERLEY, Professor of Education. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., Columbia University, 1902. Ae CHARLES HENRY HUBERICH, Professor of Law. LL.B., University of Texas, 1897; LL.M., 1898; D.C.L., Yale University, 1899; J.U.D., University of Heidelberg, 1905. ARTHUR BRIDGMAN CLARK, Associate Professor of Drawing. B.Ar., Syracuse University, 1888; M.Ar., 1891. A T FRANK MACE McFARLAND, Associate Professor of Histology. Ph.B., DePauw University, 1889; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893; Ph.D., University of Wurtzburg, 1896. A K E JOHN CHARLES LOUNSBURY FISH, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. C.E., Cornell University, 1892. A T fi; 2 S GUIDO HUGO MARX, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engi- neering. M.E., Cornell University, 1893. A T; 2 S CLYDE AUGUSTUS DUNIWAY, Associate Professor of HLstory. A.B., Cornell University, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1894; Ph.D., 1897. B K GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, Secretary to the Pre.sident. B.L., University of Minnesota, 1891. A T GEORGE JAMES PIERCE, Associate Professor of Botany and Plant Physiology. B.S., Harvard University, 1890; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1894. Ab.sent on leave, 1906-07. 40 ♦HERMANN DE CLERCQ STEARNS, Associate Professor of Stanford Physics. Quad A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892; A.M., 1893. 1908 OLIVER MARTIN JOHNSTON, Associate Professor of Romanic Languages. A.B., Mississippi College, 1890; A.M., 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1896. ♦STEWART WOODFORD YOUNG, Associate Professor of Chem- istry. B.S., Cornell University, 1890. ATI) MELVIN GILBERT DODGE, Associate Librarian. A.B.. Hamilton College, 1890; A.M., 1894. A T; B K JOHN FLESHER NEWSOM, Associate Professor of Mining. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893; Ph.D., 1901. Ben HENRY WINCHESTER ROLFE, Associate Professor of Greek. A.B., Amherst College, 1880; A.M., 1885. A K K DAVID CHARLES GARDNER, Chaplain of the University Memo- rial Church. Scholar, Lord Scudamore ' s School, Hereford, England; Student under Far- quhar McKeron, Usk Grammar School, Monmouthshire, England; Grad- uate Church Divinity School of the Pacific, San Mateo, 1897. HAROLD HEATH, Associate Professor of Zoology. A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1893; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. A e WILLIAM FREEMAN SNOW, Associate Professor of Hygiene. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., 1897; M.D., Cooper Medical College, 1900. HANS FREDERICK BLICHFELDT, Associate Professor of Math- ematics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1898. ♦ALBERT CONSER WHITAKER, Associate Professor of Eco- nomics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1904. Ben ARTHUR MARTIN CATHCART, Associate Professor of Law. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. U|niversity, 1896. A T ALLYN A. YOUNG, Associate Professor of Economics. Ph.B., Hiram College, 1894; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1902. THORSTEIN B. VEBLEN, Associate Professor of Economics. A.B., Carleton College, 1880; Ph.D., Yale, 1884. ♦Absent on leave, 1906-07. 41 Stanford SIDNEY DEAN TOWNLEY, Associate Professor of Applied Math- Quad ematics. 1908 B.S., University of Wisconsin, 1890; M.S., 1892; Ph.D., University of Michi- gan, 1897; Astronomer International Latitude Observatory at Ukiah. IJOHN M. MOTLEY, Associate Professor in Political Science. A.B., William Jewell College, 1901; A.M., 1904; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1906. KARL G. RENDTORFF, Assistant Professor of German. A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1894; Ph.D., 1896. FREDERICK JOHN ROGERS, Assistant Professor of Physics. M.S., Cornell University, 1891. 2 3 LILLIEN JANE MARTIN, Assistant Professor of Psychology. A.B., Vassar College, 1880. GEORGE HENRY BOKE, Lecturer on Law. COLBERT SEARLES, Assistant Professor of Romanic Languages. A.B., Wesleyan University, 1895; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1899. X RAYMOND MACDONALD ALDEN, Assistant Professor of Eng- lish Literature and Rhetoric. A.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1894; A.M., Harvard University, 1896; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. WILLIAM ALPHA COOPER, Assistant Professor of German. A.B., Marietta College, 1892; A.M., 1897. A T; B K JEFFERSON ELMORE, Assistant Professor of Latin. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1895; A.M., 1895; Ph.D., 1901. JOHN OTTERBEIN SNYDER, Assistant Professor of Zoology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897; A.M., 1899. ROBERT ECKLES SWAIN, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; M.S., Yale University, 1901. HARRY ALVIN MILLIS, Assistant Professor of Economics. A.B., Indiana University, 1895: A.M., 1896; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1899. JAMES ROLLIN SLONAKER, Assistant Professor of Physiology. B.S., University of Washington, 1893; Ph.D., Clark University, 1896. WILLIAM RANKINE ECKART, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. M.E., Cornell University, 1895. HALCOTT CADWALADER MORENO, Assistant Professor of Applied Mathematics. A.B., University of Georgia, 1893; A.M., 1894; B.L., 1896: Ph.D., Clark University, 1900. A 6 CLARA S. STOLTENBERG, Assistant Professor of Physiology. A.B ., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., 1897. Absent on leave, 1906-07. t Beginning August, 1907. 42 fSAMUEL SWAYZE SEWARD, Assistant Professor of English. Stanford A.B., Columbia College, 1896; A.M., Columbia University, 1897; Scholar Quad in Literature, Columbia University, 1896-97. B K jgog BENJAMIN OLIVER FOSTER, Assistant Professor of Latin. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1895; A.M., Harvard University, 1897; Ph.D., 1899. A T DORSEY ALFRED LYON, Assistant Professor of Metallnrgy. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898; A.M., Harvard University, 1902. A T HENRY LEWIN CANNON, Assistant Professor of History. A.B., Western Reserve University, 1893; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. ATA HOWARD JUDSON HALL, Assistant Professor of English. B.S., Michigan State Agricultural College, 1890; A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., Harvard University, 1900. AUSTIN FLINT ROGERS, Assistant Professor of Mineralogy and Petrography. A.B., University of Kansas, 1899; A.M., 1900; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1902. MACY MILLMORE SKINNER, Assistant Professor of German. A.B., Harvard University, 1894; A.M., 1895; Ph.D., 1897; Harvard Fellow, University of Strassburg, 1897-98; University of Berlin, 1898-99. B K ELMER REGINALD DREW, Assistant Professor of Physics. B.S., University of California, 1888; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1903. LEE EMERSON BASSETT, Assistant Profes.sor of Elocution. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. HENRY SUZZALLO, Assistant Professor of Education. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; A.M., Columbia University, 1902; Ph.D., 1905. WILLIAM DINSMORE BRIGGS, Assistant Professor of English. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., Columbia University, 1902. LUTHER BURBANK, Lecturer on Plant Evolution. ERNEST WHITNEY : IARTIN, Assistant Professor of Latin and Greek. A.B., University of Chicago, 1900; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. ATA KENNETH LIVERMORE Cl ' RTIS, Assistant Professor of Elec- trical Engineering. B.S., University of Colorado, 1901. HENRY DAVID GRAY, Assistant Professor of English. Ph.B., Colgate University, 1897; A.M., Columbia University, 1898; Ph.D., 1904. A T; B K + Absent second semester, 1906-07. 43 Stanford WESLEY NEWCOMB HOHFELD, Assistant Professor of Law. Quad A.B., University of California, 1901; LL.B., Harvard University, 1904; San iqo8 Francisco Harvard Club at Harvard University, 1901-02. JOHN EZRA McDowell, Assistant Registrar. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1900. A e JULIUS EMBRET PETERSON, Foreman of the Forge. EDWIN CHAPIN STARKS, Curator in Zoology. Assistant in the United States Bureau of Biological Survey, 1897-99; Curator of the Museum, University of Washington, 1899-1900. ALVIN JOSEPH cox, Instructor in Chemistry. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; A.M., 1902; Ph.D., University of Breslau, 1904. CHARLES FREDERICK SCHMUTZLER, In.stnictor in German. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898; A.M.. 1899. JOSEPH GRANT BROWN, Instructor in Physics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; A.M., 1903. ANSTRUTHER ABERCROMBIE LAWSON, In.structor in Botany. B.S., University of California, 1897; M.S., 1898; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1901; Fellow in Botany, University of Chicago, 1900-01. HALBERT WILLIAM CHAPPEL, Instructor in Hygiene. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; LL.B., 1903. K 2 JAMES BENNETT LIGGETT, Foreman of the Foundry. WILLIAM ALBERT MANNING, Instructor in Mathematics. A.B., Willamette University, 1900; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902; Ph.D., 1904. CHLOE LESLEY STARKS, Instructor in Drawing. STANLEY SMITH, Instructor in Romanic Languages. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; A.M., 1905. THEODORE PALMATEER, Foreman of the Machine Shop. CLIFFORD GILMORE ALLEN, Instructor in Romanic Languages. A.B., Boston University, 1900; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; Student University of Paris, 1903-04; Fellow of Boston University and Student of Universities of Paris and Madrid. 1903-04. PAYSON JACKSON TREAT, Instructor in Hi.story. A.B., Wesleyan University, 1900; A.M., Columbia University 1903 A A ■ SAMUEL BARCLAY CHARTERS, Jr., Instructor in Electrical Engineering. M.E., Cornell University, 1904. LEON PATTERSON LEWIS, In.structor in Law. Ph.B., University of Chicago, 1902; J.D., 1905. r A HUBERT HARRY HALL, Instructor in Civil Engineering. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904. Z Absent on leave, 1906-07. 44 RENNIE WILBUR DOANE, Instructor and Curator in Entomology. Stanford A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. Quad HOMER PRICE EARLE, Instructor in Romanic Languages. igo8 A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904; Student Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1904-06. B K MARY ISABEL McCRACKEN, Instructor in Bionomics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904; A.M., 1905. CHARLES NORMAN CROSS, Instructor in Mechanical Engi- neering. M.E., Cornell University, 1906. LAWRENCE EDDMINSTER CUTTER, Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. FREDERICK A. MANCHESTER, Instructor in English. A.B., University of Wisconsin. ROYCE R. LONG, Instructor in Hygiene. CHARLES ANDREW HUSTON, Instructor in Law. A.B., University of Chicago, 1902. B K; A $GEORGE HOLLAND SABINE, Instructor in Philosophy. .• .B., Cornell University, 1903; Ph.D., 1906. B K; 2 S W. O. MENDENHALL, Instructor in Applied Mathematics. FRANK E. THOMPSON, Instructor in Education. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1905. tPIERRE COMERT, Instructor in French. ♦JOHN FRANCIS COWAN, Acting Instructor in Physiology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. 2 X WALTER KENRICK FISHER, Acting Instructor in Zoology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; A.M., 1903. JOHN PIERCE MITCHELL, Acting Instructor in Chemistry. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; A.M., 1904; Student University of Leipzig, 1904-05. A T; ! B K HARRY BAKER HUMPHREY, Acting Instructor in Chemistry. B.S., University of Minnesota, 1899. WILLL M EDMUND BURKE, Acting Instructor in Chemistry. LESLIE LEVI CARTER, Acting Instructor in Civil Engineering. THERESA PEET RUSSELL, Acting Instructor in English. Ph.B., University of Iowa, 1895. WILLIA: I HENRY SLOAN, Acting Instructor in Chemistry. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903. ♦Absent on leave, 1906-07. t Beginning August, 1907. 45 Stanford Quad Assistants 1908 German B. BOEZINGER. Romanic Languages E. H. SKINNER. LILLIAN GERTRUDE FLEISHER. MERCEDES DE LUNA. English EDITH R. MIRRIELEES. CATHERINE L. FIELDS. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University. WALTER YELLING WENTZ. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University. LOUISE KATE FLEMING. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. MISS A. M. ROBBINS. Psychology ESTHER CRANDALL. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; A.M., 1905. Education REBECCA BEATRICE FRENCH. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 190S. Drawing FLORENCE LUNDBERG. MAUD HOUSTON LANKTREE. A.B., University of California, 1902. History CHARLOTTE AI. LORD. Economics IRA B. CROSS. A.B., University of Wisconsin, 1905; A.M., 1906. Mathematics SADIE LOIS gil: iore. 46 Applied Mathematics Stanford EDWARD GWYN SHEIBLEY. HALBERT RAY THOMAS. ° CYRIL FRANK ELWELL. ROSS DUDLEY BRACKETT. GEORGE WILLL M McDANIEL. DONALD STEEL. Chemistry DANE MANSON GREER. _ A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1905. BERTON WOODFORD CRANDALL. HUGH LESLIE THOMSON. DENNIS ROBERT HOAGLAND. JOHN FRANKLIN ELLIS. LOVELL LANGSTROTH. JACOB ] IEDLEY PRICE. EDWARD WALDO RICE. HAZEL WOOD SEVERY. Botany RICHARD MORRIS HOLMAN. Systematic Botany OLIVE AGATHA HUMPHREY. B.S., University of Minnesota, 1899. JAMES IRA WILSON McMURPHY. Physiology and Histology LEO LEONIDAS STANLEY. HUBERT OLIVER JENKINS. DEXTER NEWELL RICHARDS. Hygiene and Physical Training FLORENCE BOLTON. EDITH MRGINIA MATZKE. M.D., Woman ' s Medical College, Philadelphia, 1895. VERA TOWNSEND. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. PEARL MYRTLE HORN. HARRY ALPHONSO WYCKOFF. FIELDEN KINLEY. 47 igo8 Stanford Entomology and Bionomics Quad ROSE W. PATTERSON. MISS B. A. WILTZ. Geology and Mining ROY SELDEN KELLOGG. LOUIS JOHN MAYREIS. MARGARET POST. Civil Engineering LOUIS JOHN MAYREIS. STUART MOSER. EVERETT ST. JOHN DUNBAR. CARL McKEE HOSKINSON. SANFORD BALLARD DOLE. CHARLES HUGH PAXTON. ARTHUR DICKINSON HUGHES. WILLIAM WATKINS EDWARDS. Mechanical Engineering WILLIAM CHRISTIAN THEILE. WILLIAM LEAVENWORTH DURAND. ROBERT RISDON PRATT. ALEX. M. THOMPSON. President ' s Office DAVID TIMMONS FULLAWAY, Stenographer. JOHN PARKS HEMPHILL, Stenographer. HELEN THOBURN, Assistant. Registrar ' s Office SUSAN BROWN BRISTOL, Secretary of Committee on Recom- mendation of Teachers. A.B., Leiand Stanford Jr. University, 1897. CECELIA FREEMAN ATHERTON. A.B., Leiand Stanford Jr. University, 1904. FRED DAN POST. 48 University Library Stanford FLORENCE HUGHES, Head Cataloguer. LILLIAN PEARLE GREEN, Reference Librarian. ' ° A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898. ALICE NEWMAN HAYES, Classifier. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. MARTHA ELIZABETH HAVEN, Supervisor Accessions. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. HARRIETTE MILES, Supervisor Serials. HELEN BINNINGER SUTLIFF, Cataloguer. A.B., University of Kansas, 1890. JOHN EDWARD GOODWIN, Supervisor Stocks and Loans. A.B., University of Wisconsin, 1901. BELLE HEBER THOMPSON, Chief Loan Desk Assistant. MILDRED IRENE CROSIER. ELIZABETH HADDEN, Cataloguer. ANNA GERTRUDE HALL. ALFRED LAWRENCE KOCHER. LETITIA PATTERSON. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. MAIDA ROSSITER. A.B., Cornell University, 1903. SETH BLAINE THOMPSON. ELMER ELLIS YOUNG. BLANCHE J. MOBLEY. PAUL E. MILLAR. MARY CECELIA BRUNTON. Law Library ALEXANDER DEUCHER LARNACH. EARL LAMB. THOMAS EDGAR ROBINSON. Memorial Church BENJAMIN COLMAN BLODGETT, Organist. Mus. Doc. Oxon., 1877; Student, University and Conservatory of Music, Leipzig, 1858-61; Principal of Music School, Pittsfield, Mass., 1865-78; Director of Music, Smith College, 1878-1903; Honorary Fellovi ' , London Society of Arts and Letters, 1880; Member, Wagner Musik- ' ■erein, Bay- reuth, 1883; New York Art Club, 1890. ■Absent on leave, 1906-07. 49 Stanford Leland Stanford Jr. Museum Quad HARRY C. PETERSON, Curator. igo8 Roble Hall LUCRETIA HOUSTON LANKTREE, Matron. Business Office LATHROP, Treasurer and Busines.s CHARLES GARDNER ] Ianager. H. W. BEEBE, Office Alanager. ALLEN KNIGHT, Auditor. SAMUEL H. RICH, Cashier. R. H. WORSLEY, Storekeeper. DAVID MONASCH, Purchasing Agent. J. H. TERRILL. Voucher Clerk. FANNIE HADDEN, Stenographer. C. P. HUGHES, Chief Engineer. P. J. HEISEL, Chief Electrician. F. A. STEVENS, Foreman Mechanician Shop. M. H. DORGAN, Chief Plumber. R. HAMILTON, Chief Carpenter. CHARLES F. MILLER, Chief Gardener. JEREMIAH CROWLEY, Foreman of the Farm. P. J. TULLY, Painter. A. A. QUINN, Clerk Encina Hall. ••- • ' - ' • so Stanford Quad 1908 Graduate Students Barrett, Richard Watts, Stanford University, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1904. Basu, Satis C, Pabtia, India, Chemistry University of Calcutta. Beardsley, Charles Alexander Campbell, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Berry, Harold R., Los Angeles, Psychology LL. B., Yale University, 1901. Boezinger, Bruno, Palo Alto, German A. B., Fort Worth University, 1893: A. : L. 1896. Bohnett, Lewis Dan, Campbell, Law B. L., University of California. 1906. Bradley, Nathaniel Forsyth. Visalia, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Bundy, Eudora Beaufort, Los Angeles, Latin A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Campbell, Jesse Eugene, Adin, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Charlebois, Emma Eulalie, Ventura, History A. B., Stanford University, 1907. 51 Stanford Choate, James Roy, Los Angeles, Law Quad A. B., Stanford University, 1906. 1908 Cone, Elizabeth Hiett, Palo Alto, English A. B., Stanford University, 1901. Cook, Jesse Loring, San Jose, History A. B., Stanford University, 1902. Cooper, Alice Cecilia, Los Angeles, English A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Crandall, Esther, Palo Alto, Psychology A. B., Stanford University, 1903; A. M., 1905. Crandall, Roderic, Palo Alto, Geol. and Min. A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Cross, Ira B., Madison, Wis., Economics A. M., University of Wisconsin, 1906. Crowder, Clifford Lee, Chico, Law B. L., University of California, 1905. Cruzan, Harold Ide, San Francisco, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Cutting, James Arthur, Palo Alto, English A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Doane, Rennie Wilbur, Pasadena, Entomology A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Dyer, Edwin Francis, Palo Alto, History A. B., Indiana University, 1891 ; LL. B., 1892. Fields, Catherine Leola, Ventura, English A. B., Stanford University, 1903. Fleisher, Lilian Gertrude, Santa Maria, Romanic Languages B. L., University of California, 1904. Fleming, Louise Kate, San Jose, English A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Fletcher, Arthur Ransford, Palo Alto, Geol. and Min. A. B., Stanford University, 1906. French, Beatrice Rebecca, San Jose, ' Education A. B., Stanford University, 1905. Gilbert, Ruth Hughes, Stanford University, English A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Greer, Dane Manson, Stanford University, Chemistry A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Herron, Josephine E., Elsinore, Drawing I A. B., Stanford University, 1907. 52 Higley, Rose Miriam, Pasadena, Zoology Stanford A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Quad Hiller, Rachel Rose, Springfield, III., Latin 1908 A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Hoover, Grace Amelia, Palo Alto, Drawing A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Hopkins, Prince Charles, Santa Barbara, Mech. Engineering Ph. B., Yale University, 1906. Humphrey, Harry Baker, Palo Alto, Botany B. S., University of Minnesota, 1899. Hyatt, Shirley, Riverside, Physics A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Jackson, Edward Royle, Redding, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Jordan, Harold Bowen, Stanford University, Chemistry A. B., Stanford L ' niversity, 1906. Kimball, Letizia Moulton, Eureka, History A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Kroeck, Louis Samuel, Los Angeles, Physiology A. M., Stanford University, 1895. Lamb, Earl, San Jose, L-aw A. B., Stanford University, 1905. Lanagan, James Francis, Palo Alto, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1900. Lanktree, Maud Houston, Stanford University, Drawing A. B., University of California, 1902. Leib, Roy Chilton, San Jose, Geol. and Min. A. B., Stanford University, 1904. Lewis, Ervin E., Brouniville, N . Y ., Education A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Lummis, Katherine, Baltimore, Md., Latin A. B., Lawrence University, 1890. McCracken, Mary Isabel, Oakland, Bionomics A. B., Stanford University, 1904; A. M., 1905. MacFarland, Mrs. Olive H., Palo Alto, Physiology A. B., Stanford University, 1906. McGovern, Edward Joseph, Palo Alto, Law A. B., Stanford University, 1904; LL. B., 1906. Mclntyre, John Malcolm, Phoenix, Ariz., Geol. and Min. A. B., Queens College, 1892. S3 Stanford [atthews, Helen Lucy, Salem, Ore., History Quad A. B., Stanford University, 1901. 1908 Milliken, Edward R., Pasadena, Law A. B., Pomona College, 1904. !Mirrie lees, Edith R., Bigtimber, Mont., English A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Mitchell, John Pierce, Palo Alto, Chemistry A. B., Stanford University, 1903; A. M., 1904. IMoulton, Mary Esther, Palo Alto, Entomology A. B., Stanford University, 1905. Xicholson, Anne Mary, San Jose, A. B., Stanford University, 1904. Nobs, Hattie Elsa, Redwood, A. B., Stanford University, 1905. Olsson-Seffer, Ragnar Michael, Fruitvale, A. B., Helsingsfors and Ursula, 1900 Patterson, Rose W., San Jose, A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Patzwald, Otto Reinhold, Adenlo Park, A. M., University of Missouri, 1905. Ransom, Ruth, Palo Alto, A. B., Vassar College, 1906. Rawdon, Mary Ellen, Carmel, A. B., Stanford LIniversity, 1905. Reed, Haines Wadsworth, Los Angeles, A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Robinson, Sarah Alice, Oakland, A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Ross, Lee Thornton, Belmont, A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Rowell, Gertrude Frances, San Jose, A. B., Stanford University, 1901. Ryan, John Joseph, San Jose, A. B., Stanford University, 1903. Sales, Dudley Daniel, Denver, Colo., A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Sampson, George Henry. Portland, Ore., A. B., Stanford University, 1897. Scherzer, Mary Ann, Dorchester, Neb., A. B., University of Nebraska, 1900. Education German Physiology Entomology German Mathematics Drawing Economics Drawing- Law Education History Law Geol. and Min. I -at in 54 Searey, Charles Louis, Sinita Rosa, A. B., Stanford University, 1904. Seibert, Donald Kingsland, San Francisco. A. B., Stanford University, 1905. Seitz, Joseph William, Mountain Vieiv, A. M., Georgetown University, 1904. Shedd, Solon, Pullman, IVash., A. B., Stanford University, 1896. Simpson, Walter Irving, MayHcld, A. B., Stanford University, 1907. Skinner, Edwin Hume, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford University. 1903. Skinner, Marian Weymouth, Stanford Uniirrsity, A. B., Radcliffe College. 1903. Snyder, Edwin Reagan. San Jose, A. B., Stanford University, 1905. Stone, Alice Grace, San Jose, A. B., Stanford University. 1905. Walker, Richard Washington, Glen Moore, Pa., C. E., Lehigh University, 1884. Wentz, Walter Yeeling, San Diego, A. B., Stanford University, 1906. Wilson, Julia Edna, Palo Alto, . A. B.,- Stanford University, 1906. Mathematics Stanford Quad Law 1908 Law Geology Education French English Education Latin Education English French ' yH-t c i-i ' - ' : ' ' : 55 CI asses Stanford Quad 1908 P. T. BURTIS L. W. Barbur W. A. Campbfxl A. G. Proctor Senior Committees Senior Week Committee H. J. Heffron A. M. Porter G. J. Presley S. M. Salisbury F. Zimmerman J. M. Ward, Chairman Finance Committee Miss E. B. Bundy Miss E. Thompson Miss C. L. Moise Miss E. L. Officer Miss C. C. Pedlar Miss J. Derby Miss E. D. Owen Miss H. W. Severy C. E. Stacker I. Dillon, Chairman Program Committee J. R. Dillon W. A. Clark, Chairman Senior Farce Committee R. S. Kellogg G. C. Mansfield J. E. Stewart F. H. Bernard, Chairman Senior Ball Committee J. C. Macfarland A. ROSENFELD W. H. Tucker H. P. Daily, Chairman Miss C. Cotton Miss I. L. Johnston Miss G. Lyman Miss E. McGeorge Miss I. M. Miller Miss C. Bryant Miss L. Pearce Senior Promenade Committee Miss I. J. Zschokke R. A. Beebee R. M. Blodgett D. M. Davis J. K, Dotten J. S. Mitchell D. M. Richards S. B. Thompson H. Rhyne, Chairman Class Plate Committee F. E. E. P. Stott, Chairman A. Crittenden J, Nash Encina Reception Committee Miss D. French J. W. Maloy Miss M. E. Turner E. H. Pier B. R. Brooke G. Knupp, Chairman Alumni Reunion Committee Miss P. Gartzmann A. J. Chalmers Miss F. Sevier B. S. Morrow Miss M. L. Squire G. O. Spurrier N. P. Bryan C. R. Crider, Chairman C. R. Crider, Permanent Class Secretary D. H. Clift, Class Will L. M. Edwards, Class History F. A. Fisher, Class Orator 58 The Senior Class Officers First Semester President E. P. Stott Vice-President H. K. Savage Secretary Miss M. B. Stallcup Treasurer R S. Lacey Sergeant-at-Anns J. C. Macfarland Second Semester President J. M. Ward Vice-President M. C. Burr Secretary Miss M. L. Squire Treasurer I. Dillon Sergeant-at-Arms E. P. Stott Yell: Stanford! Stanford! Zip! Boom! Ah! A ' a ugh ty-set en ! Naugh ty-seven ! Rah! Rah! Rah! Stanford Quad 1908 E. P. STOTT J. M. WARD Stanford Quad Seniors, 1 907 1908 Anderson, Roscoe James, Lincoln, Neb., History Atwood, Clarence Goodrich, Monrovia, Law -I) A $; Encina Club (i), (2), (3), (4), (5); Executive Committee and Treasurer (2) ; Press Club (3), (4), Sec- retary-Treasurer (5); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2), Associate Editor (2), (3) ; English Club; Social Ser- vice Club; Tennis Club (2), (3), (4), Vice-President (5) ; Law Association, Charter Member ; Senior Plate Committee (4); President ' s Conference (5). Ball, Chester Alexander, Woodland, Law Track Team (2), (3). Barbur, LeRoy Wright, Los Angeles, Geol. and Alin. Bateman, William George, Salt Lake City, Utah, Chemistry B K; Sophomore Play Committee (2) ; Encina Club (3), (4) ; Author 07 Junior Farce, Stanford, the Life Strenu- ous ; Mandolin Club (2), (3) ; Chemical Society (3), (4) ; President (4) ; Assistant in Elementary Chemistry (3) ; Assistant in Qualitative Analysis (4). Bates, Callie H., Laivrence, German Beard, Ethel G., Modesto, German Beattie, William Alfred, Campbell, Economics Beebee, Ralph A., Palo Alto, Civil Engineering Band (i), (2), (3), (4); Orchestra (i), (2), (3); Civil Engineering Society (3), (4). Behlow, William Wallace, Redlands, German $ A 0. Bell, Rosa Edith, Santa Rosa, English Bernard, Fred Horton, Tucson. Ari.c., Law ATA; Cast ' 05 Senior Farce (2) ; Cast ' 07 Plug Ugly (3) ; Cast Football Farce (3); Glee Club (3), (4); Cast ' 07 Junior Farce (3) ; Cast of Two Gentlemen of Verona (4) ; Cast 06 Senior Farce (4) ; Sword and Sandals (3), (4) ; Chairman 07 Senior Farce Committee. Bickel, Karl August, Genesco, Illinois, History r A; Quadrangle Club; Press Club; Skull and Snakes; President English Club; Editor Sequoia: Editor 1907 QuAi!,- Social Service Club; Joint Author Princess Enone ; 1905 Plug Ugly. 60 Bittner, Harvey Peter, Albuquerque, AL M., German Encina Club (i), (2), (3), (4); Quadrangle Club (4); Press Club (3), (4); English Club (3), (4); Deutsche Verein (2), (3), (4); Euphronia Debating Society (i), (2) ; Assistant Daily Palo Alto (i) ; Associate (2) ; News Editor (3) ; Editor-in-Chief (3) ; Chaparral Staff (3), (4) ; 1907 Plug Ugly Committee (3) ; Memorial Flower Com- mittee (4) ; Cast Plug Ugly Pirates (3) ; Cast Minna von Barnhelm (4) ; Member President ' s Conference (4) ; 1907 Quad Investigating Committee. Blodget, Rush Maxwell, Bakersfield, Law Acacia; A X; Nestoria ; Bench and Bar; Glee Club (2), (3) ; Executive Committee Student Body (2). Blodget, Percy Langdon, Bakersfield, Mech. Engineering Acacia ; Mechanical Engineering Association. Blood, Herbert T., Denver, Colo., History 2 N. Bodley, Grace M., Bootes, Bertha Burnham, A . Bothwell, Ina G., Britton, Raymond Morris, Brown, Samuel Windsor, Bryant, Claribel, German Club ; and Gown. Bundy, Eudora Beaufort, Stanford University, Latin A r. Burr, !Myron Carlos, Monrovia, Civil Engineering Treasurer Class (3) ; Interclass Tennis Doubles Team (3), (4) ; Treasurer Encina Club (4) ; Vice-President Asso- ciated Civil Engineers (4) ; Assistant in Civil Engineering (3), (4); Vice-President Class (4). Burtis, Prentis Townsend. San Francisco, Economics A K E; Class Baseball (2). Campbell, William Archy, Kendallvillc, Indiana, Law AX. Center, Inez, Santa Clara, History 61 Stanford Quad igo8 San Jose, History Berkeley, English Salt Lake City, Utah, French Lawrence, History San Jose, Education Sioux City, Iowa, German Woman ' s Athletic Association Board ; Cap Stanford University, Stanford Chalmers, Alexander J., Forest Grove, Ore., Physiology Quad $ A ; Quadrangle Club ; Skull and Snakes ; Physiology 1908 Club; Varsity Football (i), (2), (3), (4); Captain ' 05; Varsity Baseball (i), (2), (3); Glee Club (i), (2), (3); Chairman Junior Prom Committee. Clark, Willis A., Greeley, Colo., Mech. Engineering 2 A E; Leader Orchestra (3). Clift, Denison Halley, San Francisco, History Encina Club (i), (2), (3); Chairman Sophomore Play Committee (2) ; 1907 Quad Board (3) ; Sequoia Staff (2), (3), (4); Chaparral Board (2), (3) ; Editor-in- Chief, Volume VIII (4) ; Cast Ben Greet Plays (2) ; Junior Farce Committee (3) ; English Club (2), (3), (4) ; Social Service Club (4) ; Hammer and Coffin (3), (4) ; Football Farce Committee (3) ; Senior Class Will (4). Cooper, Alice Cecelia, Los Angeles, English President ' s Conference for Young Women (4). Cottle, Everett R., San Jose, Elec. Engineering Encina Club; S. E. E. Society. Cox, Katherine, Santa Clara, History Crider, Clay R., San Jose, Law AX; Class Treasurer (2) ; Manager Rivals (2) ; Euphro- nia Literary Society; Secretary Euphronia (4) ; Chairman Plug Ugly Committee ; Plug Ugly Cast ; Junior Opera Com- mittee ; Secretary Associated Students (4) ; Auditing Com- mittee Associated Students (4) ; President ' s Conference (4) ; Encina Club; Secretary Board of Control (4). Crittenden, Franklin Avery, Cupertino, Law $ r A ; A $ ; Glee Club. Cunha, Edward Anthony, Milpitas, Law $ A 4 ; Carnot Debating Team ; President Associated Stu- dents ; Quadrangle Club ; Business Manager Daily Palo Alto; Head Yell Leader; Euphronia (President); Alter- nate Intercollegiate Debating Team ; Nevada Debating Team; Arcade Moot Court; Class President (2) ; ' 06 Class Debating Teams ; ' 06 Class Baseball Team ; ' 06 Class Track Team ; Chairman 06 Junior Prom Committee ; Chairman ' 06 Senior Prom Committee ; Class Orator ' 06. Daily, Harry Parker, Fort Smith, Ark., Law A Y; $ A ! ; Skull and Snakes; Class Baseball (i), (2). 62 Davis, Dwight Moody. Kansas City, Mo., Law Stanford K ; 4 A ; Daily Palo Alto (i); Casts The Rivals ; Quad ' 07 Plug Ugly ; Stanford, the Life Strenuous ; Class Base- 1908 ball (2). Davis, Warren A., Crockett, Elec. Engineering Devendorf, Ada, Los Angeles, Botany Dillon, James Root, San Francisco, Physiology Acacia ; Art Editor ' 07 Quad; President ' s Conference (4) ; Physiology Club. Dorn. Grace B.. Coming, English Dotten, John Knowles, Riverside, Economics A X. Dudley. Ernest Griswold, Guilford, Conn., Botany A Y; Varsity Baseball Team (2), (3); ' 06 Quad Board; Botanical Society. Du Flon, Thaddeus A. V., Plainfield, A ' ezc Jersey, English Z . Dunne, James Leonard, Ft. Benton, Mont., Civil Eng. Durand, William Leavenworth. Stanford Uniz ' ersity, Elec. Eng. $ A © ; President E. E. Society. Eby, Benton A., Howard, Kansas, English Ben. Edwards, LeRoy Mallory, Los Angeles, Law 2N; $A$; Varsity Track Team (2), (3), (4); Varsity Football Team (4) ; Basketball Team {2), (3) ; Class Track Team (i), (2), (3), (4); Captain (3); Manager ' 07 Senior Circus ; Class Baseball Team ( i ) ; ' 07 Qu. d Board; Alternate Intercollegiate Carnot Team (4); Eu- phronia Debating Society (i), (2), (3), (4) ; Joint Author ' 07 Plug Ugly; ' 05 Senior Farce Cast (2) ; ' 07 Plug Ugly Cast (3) ; Abbott ' s Inn Moot Court (3), (4) ; Chairman Sophomore Hat Committee (2) ; Chairman Junior Plug Committee (3). Edwards, William Watkyn, San Jose, Civil Engineering © A X. Elliott, Charlotte, Dell Rapids, S. Dak., Zoology A 4 ; 1906 Junior Prom Committee. 63 Stanford Elvvell, Cyril, Stanford University, Elec. Eng. Quad Varsity Track Team (i), (2), (3); Class Track Team 1908 (i), (2), (3); President Junior Class (3) ; Spanish Club; Electrical Engineering Society ; Assistant Applied Mathe- matics. Elwood, Roby Theresa, Alhambra, German Engle, Alfred J., Philadelphia, Pa., Law Fay, William Styles, San Diego, Civil Engineering Treasurer Encina Club (4) ; Secretary Civil Engineeering Society (4). Ferguson, Carl Augustus, Col ton, Elec. Engineering A X ; Mandolin Club ; Stanford Electrical Engineering Society. Ferguson, Roy Noble, Cotton, Geol. and Min. A X. Fisher, Frank Alma, Salt Lake City, Utah, Law K ; $ A ; Euphronia (2), (3), (4) ; President (4) ; Sophomore Debating Team (2) ; Junior Day Committee (3) ; President ' s Conference (4) ; Chairman ' 07 Qu. d In- vestigating Committee (4) ; Intersociety Debating League (4). Fuller, Mrs. Edith Fairfield, Palo Alto, German Foy, Florence, Los Angeles, Economics A $; Secretary of Woman ' s League (3). French, Davida, Stanford University, History A $ ; Vice-President English Club ; Assistant on .Staff of Daily Palo Alto; Associate Editor Sequoia: Chairman Edu- cational Section of Social Service Club ; Executive Com- mittee of English Club ; Executive Committee of Social Service Club; Encina Reception Committee. Fuller, Raymond A., Palo Alto, Geol. and Min. Var.sity Chess Team (i), (2), (3); Vice-President Chess Club (2) ; President (3) ; Captain Chess Team (3) ; Uni- versity Chess Champion (i, ' 03), (2, ' 04). Gardner, Dian Rathbun, Orange, Law Acacia ; I A $ ; Nestoria ; Bench and Bar Moot Court. Gardner, Henri Reginald, Oramrc. Civil Engineering Associated Civil Engineers; Boat Club. 64 Garfias, Valentine Richard, Mexico City, Mexico, Civil Eng. Stanford Class Track Team ; Civil Engineering Society ; Spanish Quad Club; Mandolin Club. 1908 Gartzmann, Pauline. Long Beach, English r B ; Cap and Gown ; English Club ; Director W. A. A. ( I ) ; Executive Board Woman ' s League ; Secretary-Treas- urer W. A. A: (4) ; Vice-President Y. W. C. A. (3). Geer, Charles Lester, Campbell, English Nestoria Literary Society ; Bonnheim Prize. Gilbert, Grace McMillan, Santa Barbara, History Gilmore, Sadie Lois, San Jose, Mathematics Missionary Chairman Y. W. C. A. Goodspeed, Lillian Mildred, Sehna, Latin Goudy, Franklin Burris, Denver, Colo., Geo!, and Min. 5 A E; Mandolin Club (i), (2), (3), (4); Freshman Class Track Team; President Geological Society (4). Grau, Miriam Stedman, San Francisco, Physiology Grau, Otto Karl, Sacramento, History 5 N; Quadrangle Club; Glee Club (i), (3), (4): Skull and Snakes; Junior Farce (3) ; Sophomore Minstrels (2). Gude, Julie. Los Angeles. English de Haas, J. Anton, The Hague, Holland, German Hall, Ethel Blanche, Sacramento, French A $; Senior Ball Committee, 1906. Halsey, Mildred, IVoodside, German Heffron, Harold J.. Los Angeles, Civil Engineering O A ; Civil Engineering Society. Henderson, Charles William, Portland, Ore., Geol. and Min. r A ; Geological Society of American L ' niversities ; Stan- ford Boat Club. Higley, Rose Miriam, Pasadena, Zoology Hoag, Bessie Belle, Palo Alto, Latin Hoagland, Dennis Robt., Denver, Colo., Chemistry Chemistry Society ; Encina Club. Hodgdon, Florette, Sacramento, French A 4 ; Cap and Gown (3); Memorial Flower Committee (4); Secretary Junior Class; Junior Prom Committee; French Club. 65 Stanford Holly, Jesse Blaine, Dixon, Civil Engineering Quad Holman, Mary Persis, Palo Alto, Education 9° Holman, Richard Morris, Palo Alto, Botany Hopkins, Ralph Allen, Pasadena, Elec. Engineering Secretary Electrical Engineering Society. Hosford, Ada, Menominee, Wis., Latin Hudson, Robert Henry, Watsonville, Law Hull, Delia Mae, Palo Alto, Latin Ichihashi, Yamato, Nagoya, Japan, Economics President Japanese Student Association ; Nestoria Literary Society; Secretary-Treasurer (i). James, Grace Louise, Santa Monica, History Jarman, Edith Louise, San Jose, History Jenkins, Hubert Oliver, Stanford University, Zoology Jorgensen, Henry Garfield, Palo Alto, Law Kellogg, Roy Seldon, Pasadena, Chemistry A Y; Sword and Sandals; Yell Leader; Glee Club (i), (2), (3) ; Band (i), (2) ; Orchestra (i) ; Class Earce. Kimball, Letizia Moulton, Eureka, History Knupp, Guy, Porterville, Law A X; Euphronia Debating Society (2), (3), (4) ; President (4); Intersociety Debating League; University Band (i), (2), (3), (4); Manager (3), (4) ; President Encina Club (4); President ' s Conference (4) ; Track Team; Chairman Encina Reception Committee. Lambert, Llamae, Woodland, English n B 4 ; Staff Women ' s Edition Daily Palo Alto, 1906; Cap and Gown. Laumeister, Clarence Eilbert, San Francisco, I-aw $ A ; Quadrangle Club ; Skull and Snakes ; Encina Club, Director (2) ; Varsity Eootball Squad (i). (2), (3) ; Var- sity Eootball Team (4) ; Executive Committee, Associated . Students (3), (4); President Associated Students (4); Board of Control (4) ; Board of Governors Interscholastic Athletic Association of Stanford University (3), (4), Secretary (3), (4); 1907 Quad Board; 1907 Plug Ugly Committee; 1907 Plug Ugly Cast; Senior Circus Com- mittee; Social Service Club. 66 Lipscombe, Maud M., Saratoga, Latin Stanford Lyman, Elizabeth M., Yuba City, English Quad Lyman, Georgina, Fort Smith, Ark., English 1908 K A 0.. Lyons, Willard Everett, Los Angeles, Law X ; A ; V arsity Football Team (3) ; Skull and Snakes; Vice-President Social Service Club (4). McDowell, Alice Nagel, Stanford University, Mathematics McFadden, Ralph John, Fullerton, Geology Varsity Football Team (i), (2), (3); 1904 Freshman Team. Macfarland, John Cobb, Los Angeles, Law Z ; $ A I ; Quadrangle Club ; Senior Society ; Court of Abbott ' s Inn ; President ' s Conference ; Executive Committee (3) ; Athletic Committtee (3) ; Class President (2) ; Glee Club (3); Interscholastic Athletic Association; President (3). (4) ; Quad Board (3) ; Treasurer Students ' Guild (4) ; Cast of Rivals (2) ; Plug Ugly Cast (3) ; Varsity Track (i), (2), (3), (4); Captain (3), (4); Substitute Varsity Football (4). McGeorge, Edith, Eureka, German Treasurer Roble Club (3) ; President Roble Club (4) ; Sec- retary German Club (4) ; Advisory Board Women ' s League (4). McGilvray, Jessie Dufif, Stanford University, History A r ; Cap and Gown ; Senior Prom Committee. McNeil, Warren Truett, Tracy, Physiology Varsity Track Team (2), (3); Winning Relay Team against California, 1905; Encina Club; Physiology Club. Maloy, John W., San Jose, Law A $ ; Freshman Track Team ; President Freshman De- bating Society; Alternate Freshman Debating Team : Soph- omore Debating Team; Intercollegiate Finals (2), (3); Carnot Debating Finals (3) ; Bonnheim Prize (4) ; Eu- phronia. Mansfield, George Curtis, Los Angeles, Law 2 N; 4 A $; President ' s Conference (4); Sophomore Farce (2) ; Senior Farce (2) ; Plug Ugly (3). 67 Stanford de Mattos, Augustine Edward Watsonville, Law Quad ] Ienker, Raymond C, San Jose, Psychology 1908 Merrill, John Albert, Mountain Viezv, Law Meyer, Adele, Coronado, German Millar, Paul Everett, San Rafael, Latin Stanford Gymnasium Club (2), (3), (4); President (3); Secretary-Treasurer (4) ; Foil and Mask (3), (4) ; Secre- tary-Treasurer (3), (4) ; President (4) ; Library Club (2), (3) ; Secretary (3) ; Encina Club; Social Service Club. Miller, Iva M., Santa Ana, German English Club ; German Club ; President ' s Conference ; Cap and Gown ; President Roble Club. Mirrielees, Edith Ronald, Bigtinibcr, Mont., English $ B K; Sequoia Assistant (i) ; Associate (2) ; Editor (3) ; History Assistant (3) ; English Assistant (4) ; Women ' s Edition Chaparral, Associate Editor (2) ; Editor (3) ; Eng- lish Club Executive Committee ; Vice-President ; Qu. d Board ; Quad Auditing Committee ; Junior Earce Com- mittee ; Vice-President Senior Class ; Vice-President Stu- dents ' Guild Board ; Cap and Gown. Mitchell, John Shepard, Ontario, Law A X. Moise, Clarice Sara, San Francisco, French Role in The Rivals ; Role in All Tangled Up ; Chairman ■ of Junior Farce Committee. Moise, Hazel Irene, San Francisco, Latin 1907 Junior Opera; Social Service Club. Moore, Edith Harriet. Pasadena, German Captain Freshman Basketball Team in 1903. Morrow, Ben Stogden, Portland, Ore., Civil Engineering 2 A E ; Freshman Football Team ; Class Baseball Team (I), (3)- Nims, Charles Brewster, Muskegon. Mich., Geol. and Min. Z ; Geological Society ; Senior Prom Committee. Norvell, Louise, Merced. History Sophomore Earce Committee; 1907 Quad Board; 1906 Woman ' s Edition Daily Palo Alto; Girls ' Mandolin Club (i), (2) ; Senior Director Roble Club; Cap and Gown. 68 Officer. Elizabeth Logan, Denver, Colo., English Stanford II B ; Cast of The Rivals (2) ; Cast of Two Gentlemen Quad of Verona (4) ; Member of Cap and Gown (4) ; Member ' 1908 of President ' s Conference of Women (4); English Club (4) ; Cast of The Original Miss Tewksberry ( 06 Senior Farce). Ogier, Margaret, Sail Jose, Zoology A $. Owen, Elise Dorrance, Stockton, History r B: Cap and Gown; Director W. A. A. (2), (3), (4) ; Executive Board of Women ' s League (2), (3) ; Captain Tennis Team (3), (4) ; Junior Prom Committee; President Y. W. C. A. (4). Packard, Ashley Burdett, Naco, Arizona, Law A K E; I A $; Freshman Football Team; Glee Club (2), (3), (4) ; Manager Glee Club (3 ) ; President Musical Clubs (4) ; Senior Circus Committee. Paine, William Craig, Rcdlands. Elec. Engineering Member Electrical Engineering Society. Patterson, Rose Wentworth, San Jose, Entomology Assistant in Entomology (2), (4) ; iVfember of Botanical Society ; Member of Entomological Society. Paxton, Charles Hugh, Orange, Mech. Engineering President Mechanical Engineers ' Association (4). Pearce, Louise, Los Angeles, Physiology n B . Pedlar, Calla Claire, San Francisco, English Cap and Gown (4) ; President ' s Conference (4) ; Memorial Flower Committee (4); English Club (3), (4); Spanish Club (4); Patience Chorus (i); Cast of The Rivals (2) ; Cast of Every Man in His Humor (2) ; Class Vice- President (2) ; Cast of Boat Club Show (3) ; Junior Farce Committee (3) ; Football Show Committee (3) ; Cast of Junior Farce (3) ; Class Secretary (3) ; Senior Farce Com- mittee (4). Pepper, Helen X., Los Angeles, Latin Pettingill, Tallahatchie, Redlands, History Philippi, Beatrice G., Los Angeles, English 69 Stanford Quad 1908 Pier, Earl H.. Pierce, Samuel Hatch, Poage, Johanna Lelia, Poison, Anna, Poor, Herbert Emery, Porter, Arthur M., Pratt, Robert Risdon, Santa Clara, Erie, Pa., Pasadena, San Jose, Kansas City, Mo., Great Falls, Mont., San Francisco, Law Law Mathematics History Civil Eng. Civil Eng. Mech. Eng. Encina Club ; Vice-President Mechanical Engineering Asso- ciation. Presley, George Joseph, San Francisco, Law $ A ; Senior Society ; Quadrangle Club ; Skull and Snakes; Class Baseball Team (i), (2), (3); Captain (3) ; Varsity Baseball Team (2), (3), (4); Captain (4); Var- sity Football Team (4) ; Basketball Team (3) ; Gymnasium Club (i), (2), (3), (4); President (3); President ' s Con- ference (4) ; Business Manager Sequoia. (3) ; Director En- cina Club ( I ) ; Class President ( i ) ; Executive Committee Associated Students (2), (4) ; Nestoria Debating Society (i); Director Students ' Guild (3), (4); President (4). Price, Berdella, Soquel, Latin Pridam, Edwin Stewart, Glee Club; Y. M. C. A. San Gabriel, Physics Procter, James Norris, 5 A E. Ventura, Zoology Proctor, Asa G., Encina Club (i), (2), Finance Committee. (3) Woodland, , (4) ; Plug Ugly Cast; Civil Eng. Senior Redman, Frank M., Fargo, N. D., Elec. Eng. Rhyne, Homer, Paso Rabies, Geol. and Min. Class Baseball Team; Substitute Varsity Football Team (3) ; Student Body Executive Committee (4). Robinson, Lucy Adeline, Los Angeles, Mathematics Robinson, Sarah Alice, Oakland, Drawing Roop, Wendell Prescott, Rosenfeld, Arthur, Stanford University, Portland, Ore., Physics Physiology B K; Freshman Crew (i); Band (i), (2); Orchestra (i) ; Physiology Club (3), (4) ; Secretary-Treasurer (4) ; Senior Ball Committee. 70 Ross, Parley Ason, Fallbrook, Physics Stanford Ruggles, Howard Edwin, Ross, Physiology Quad Physiology Club; Mandolin Club (2), (4). 1908 Salisbury, Stuart McFarland, Los Angeles, Law A Y ; A ; Press Club ; Abbott ' s Inn Moot Court ; Tennis Club; Manager 1907 Quad; Class Baseball Team (2), (3) ; Class Tennis Team (4) ; Y. M. C. A. Savage, Harry K., Stanford University, Civil Eng. Junior Day Committee ; Vice-President Senior Class ; Presi- dent Civil Engineering Society ; Member of House Commit- tee of Encina Club. Schaaf. Daniel Louis, East San Jose, Elec. Eng. Schneider, Florence ]Margaret, Palo Alto, Botany Schwabacher, Samuel Isaac, San Francisco, Chemistry Severy, Hazel Wood, Pasadena, Chemistry Roble Club Director (3) ; President ' s Conference for Young Women (4) ; Cap and Gown (4). Sevier, Florence, Eureka, Latin Cast of Faculty Farce (3) ; Treasurer of Roble Club (3). Shaner, George Franklin, Los Gatos, Law 2 A E ; Freshman Football Team ( i ) . Shigeroku, Nohara, Kyoto, Japan, Economics Shohachi, Anju, Saga, Japan, Economics President Japanese Student Association (4) ; Member of President ' s Conference. Shutt, Nathan E., Santa Monica, Chemistry Chemical Society. Simpson, Walter Irving, Mayfield, Education Sinnock, Frank Brown, Quincy, III., Civil Engineering K A. Slusher, Dale, Pendleton, Ore., Geol. and Min. A Y; Skull and Snakes: Geology Society (4); ' arsity Football Team (3) ; Junior Day Committee (3). Smith, Avis Katharine, San Luis Obispo, Greek Smith, Edgar C. Pocatello. Idaho, Civil Eng. Member Associated Civil Engineers. Smith, Harold Fred, Campbell, History 71 Stanford Smith, Stuart Sawyer, Campbell, Economics Quad Assistant Manager Daily Palo Alto (i), (2), (3); Sec- 1908 retary Y. M. C. A. (i) ; Treasurer (2), (3), (4) ; Nestoria (3), (4); Encina Club; Business Manager 1907 Quad. Sowles, Lewis Wm., Salt Lake City, Utah, Elec. Eng. Spaulding, Charles Edgar, Los Angeles, Elec. Eng. Class Baseball Team (2), (3), (4); Electrical Engineering Society; President ' s Conference (4); Encina Club; Chess Club (2), (3), (4) ; Manager Y. M. C. A. Handbook (3). Spurrier, George O., Paso Robles, Economics ATA; Editor Daily Palo Alto, Vol. XXIX (4) ; Quad- rangle Club; Press Club; English Club; Junior Day Com- mittee (3) ; Alumni Reunion Committee (4). Squire, Mary Louise, Visalia, Physiology Cap and Gown ; President ' s Conference ; Secretary of .Senior Class. Stadtmiiller, Ellen Smith, San Francisco , Physiology K A ; Cap and Gown. Stagner, Charles Elmer, Wheatland, Physiology K A; Physiology Club; Class Baseball Team (i), (3). Stallcup, Margery Bruen, Tacoma, Wash., Law Stanford, James Nichols, Olympia, Wash., English Quadrangle Club; Skull and Snakes; English Club; ' 04 Fresliman Football Team (i) ; Varsity Substitute (i ), (2) ; Varsity Football (3), (4); Encina Club (2), (3), (4); Executive Committee and Treasurer (3) ; Program Com- mittee (3) ; Invitation Committee (3) ; Chairman (4) ; Treasurer Class of igoS (3) ; Chairman Class Floral Com- mittee Mrs. Stanford ' s Funeral (3) ; Executive Com- mittee and Secretary Students ' Guild (3) ; Treasurer (4) ; President (4); Senior Ball Committee (4); Cast Senior Farce (4) ; President Encina Club (4). Stanley, Leo Leonidas, San Miguel, Physiology Stevenson, Cornelia, Seattle, JVash., German K A ©. Stillman, Edgar, San Francisco, German Z . 72 Stockwell, pAigene L., Encina Club. Cottage Grove, Ore., Law Stott, Edmund Plowden, Portland. Ore., Law Z ; $ A ; Quadrangle Club ; Senior Society ; Presi- dent ' s Conference; Intercollegiate Committee (3), (4); President Senior Class, First Semester; Junior Day Com- mittee; Athletic Committee (3); Freshman Football Cap- tain; Varsity Football (2), (3), (4); Captain (4); Var- sity Baseball (2), (3). Stuntz, William O., Palo Alto, Winner of Prohibition League Oratorical Contest Northern California in 1906. Suits, Charlotte B., Santa Monica. Swart, Frank, AVtc Paris, hid., A X ; Arcade Moot Court. Santa Monica, Santa Monica, Taft, Muriel C, Taft, Harris W.. Encina Club Botany for English Law English Law Tarbell, George A., Taylor, Alfred Loomis, Cumberland, B. C, Elec. Eng. Irzvin, Pa., Chemistry K 5; Skull and Snakes; Mandolin Club (4), (5) ; Cast ' 05 Senior Farce (3). Taylor, Nain, San Diego, English Thayer, Jessie Thirlaw, San Francisco, Latin Thobum, Helen, Palo Alto, German r B; B K; 1907 Qu.ad Board; English Club (2), (3), (4) ; Secretary-Treasurer English Club (4). Thomas, Halbert Ray, Los Angeles, Elec. Eng. Prize Song, 1904; University Orchestra (i), (2), (3), (4); Vice-President Electrical Engineering Society (4). Thompson. Seth Blaine, Butte, Mont., Law K 2; $ A ; Skull and Snakes; Substitute Varsity Foot- ball (2), (3) ; Glee Club (i), (2), (3) ; Leader Glee Club (4); Vice-President Student Body (4). Stanford Quad igo8 72, Stanford Thomson, Hugh Leslie, Burlington, Vermont, Chemistry Quad Lecturer Assistant Chernistry Department ; Member Chem- 1908 istry Society. Topp, Roger, New York, N. Y., Mech. Eng. A K E; Class Baseball (3), (4) ; Mechanical Engineering Society (4). Tucker, William H., Columbus Junction, Iowa, Law A X. Turner, Maude Elizabeth, Ukiah, Latin Class Secretary (2) ; Roble Club Director (2) ; Roble Club Secretary (2) ; Junior Farce Committee (3) ; Women ' s Edition of Dmly Palo Alto (3) ; President ' s Conference for Young Women (4); Senior Reception Committee (4). Ward, John McCartney, San Diego, Law A $; Encina Club; Sword and Sandals; Glee Club (4) ; President Senior Class (Second Semester). Wassman, Max, Jr., San Jose, Law Wilhelm, Victor H., Portland, Ore., Geol. and Min. Geological Society of American Universities. Williams, Mary Wilhelmina, Newman, History Wilson, Wm. Webster, Los Angeles, Elec. Engineering Encina Club ; Stanford Electrical Engineering Club. ' Winslow, Mercel a Anna, Monrovia, Drawing A r; Senior Program Committee ' 06; Cast of ' 06 Senior Farce; Social Service Club. Woods, Robert S., Los Angeles, Elec. Engineering Wynne, Stella Frances, San Francisco, English English Club; Cap and Gown; Social Service Club; Women ' s Edition Chaparral (2), (3), (4) ; Sequoia Staff (2), (3), (4); ' 05 Quad Prize Story; Author of ' 06 Senior Farce. Young, William Thomas, Fort Jones, Physiology A X; Physiology Club. 74 Zimmerman, Fred, Portland, Ore., Economics r A ; Skull and Snakes ; Quadrangle Club ; Captain of Freshman Crew ; Captain of Varsity Crew ; Class Crew (i), (2), (3); Varsity Crew (3) ; Second Varsity Eleven; Senior Week Committee. Zschokke, Irma J., Palo Alto, History Basket Ball Team (i); Junior Prom Committee (3); Board of Women ' s League (4) ; Senior Prom Committee (4) ; Girls ' Glee Club (i), (2), (3), (4). Stanford Quad J908 iMmlrLL MillMiilii, 75 Stanford Quad 1908 Junior Committees Junior Farce Committee Miss M. Hyatt Miss V. A. Steele Miss M. F. Osborne J. J. Hill Miss A. Ellerbeck J. F. Reilly L. Newland E. J. Swift, Chairman J. R. Pemberton W. F. Eastham D. H. F ' erry Junior Day Committee N. A. Johnson R. E. Hodge K. L. Fenton C. C. Johnson, Chairman Junior Prom Committee Miss J. E. Clithero Miss E. L. Murdoch Miss M. E. Hutchins C. L. Bradley Miss M. Monteith C. N. Leach G. C. CoE F. W. Turner, Chairman 76 Stanford Quad igo8 The Junior Class Officers First Semester President C. N. Leach Vice-President J- F. Ellis Secretary Miss G. Albrecht Treasurer F. H. Abbott Sergeant-at-Arms E. N. Smith Second Semester President A. A. Murphy Vice-President D. H. Ferry Secretary Miss L. J. Warmoth Treasurer A. D. Hughes Sergeant-at-Arms C. N. Leach Veil: Rah! Hoo! Rah! Hoo! L! S! J! U! Naugh ty-cigh t ! Naugh ty-cigh t ! Stanford! c. N. leach 77 A. A. MURPHY Stanford Quad ::|; 1908 CANTO ONE. ? Though others, with laborious frills, Have glossed their petty chronicles, In only verse can we relate The deeds of Nineteen Hundred Tilightr The theme, as everybody knows, ' ' Transcends the vulgar plane of prose, An l flutters midway in the air, Beyond abuse, beyond compare. Since Naught-Naught, and Naught-One were heard, Apollo has not said a word; For from the other classes ' acts — The insignificant-est facts. Unworthy, meagre, and forlorn — The Muse has turned away in scorn. But let us run the record o ' er: ' Twas in the good year Nineteen Four, Hopped down Naught-Eight from every train With entrance exes on the brain. The campus, soaked in August heat, Was blistering their tender feet. And yet, should we the truth unfold. Those tender feet were also cold ; Because the fellows gathered there Assumed an easy, swagger air, And further, everything they wore Conduced to frighten Naught-Eight more (Arriving in Milpitic duds. Imported from the hindmost woods). Yet, though Their surfaces were crude, Still They were diamonds in the rude. By half an hour, ' twas plain to see Naught-Seven was Their enemy, And with the scent of blood elate. Their, very eyeballs glittered hate. At length, as everybody knew, Was come the night of Water-loo; Together bunched, the Naught-Eight men Were herded in the old Bull-pen, The very while Naught-Seven grim Was mobilizing at the gym. The signal! — and the Freshmen all Went dashing through the Bull-pen hall, And down the stairs, but scarcely stepped, More like an avalanche they swept. And charged along the first floor dim To tear Naught-Seven limb from limb. They clashed, and then with fury ' s might. They grappled in the deadly fight; But soon the Freshmen triumphed, and The situation had in hand: They packed the Sophs, in nelpless wrath, To some apartments of the bath — To give their pride the worst of rubs— And chucked them in the yawning tubs. Down in the clubroom They begin To drink the Stanford Spirit in. For there was fellowship of all, And there the crack of billiard-ball. And there a sliding, scraping beat Came from a hundred dancing feet. And as the Autumn evenings go, ' Twas there the Freshmen came to know, At that, the Secondary Stage, About the grand Heroic Age; For ' round the wall, from door to door. There hung the sturdy Teams of Yore — Full thrilling stories, mutely told, About the Stanford Men of Old. 78 N To Naught-Eight first the duty came To go and win the Freshman Game. And the Eleven, who were they? Fat Coe, Walt Sumner. Leslie Gay, Big Tomasini, Wilson ( Short ), And Moody, Cad, and Vandervoort, Red Overman, of Stanford hue. And Handsome Harry Horton, too, With Kenny Fenton at the helm. Though Berkeley thought she ' d overwhelm That Team, ' twas more than she could do — They hung it on the Gold and Blue; And Nineteen Eight, with colors bright, Began Their four-year journey right. Then, in that same eventful year, It was Their privilege to cheer That celebrated Varsity, Carved deep in Stanford History — • The fastest, heaviest, the best That ever wore the Stanford S. For Captain Clark, and Hyde, and Sprott, And Bansbach, Roosevelt, and Stott, And Thompson, Dole, and Butterfield, And Weller, Chalmers, West, and Shields, Such weight and speed and strength combine That thrice they crossed the Berkeley line. In early springtime came to pass The baseball series — Interclass; Naught-Eight fell to, with vim and snap, Naughty-Seven, backing off the map, Got scared, and with Soph ' moric gall, Broke up the game and stole the ball. Naught-Eight came later to the front; The class track-meet — They would have won ' t. But Naught-Five entered on the track Hang-overs, lo, from nine years back; By which inequitable feat. The Seniors carried off the meet. Remained, that year, we hate to say. Track victory across the Bay, The meet was in a driving rain. And Stanford splashed with might and main, But as they weren ' t amphibious, They couldn ' t win the day for us— And though the weather did the work. The dripping laurel went to Berk. Name who the Naught-Eight heroes were: Young Giebel, he who paced for Burr, Big Horton, Kocher, Lanagan, And Or Jawn Miller — how he ran All veterans upon the shelf And scooped eleven points himself! The Baseball Hoodoo hovered near To Stanford, as for many a year. Nor did the stubborn creature budge Till fat he fed his evil grudge. In rowing, Naught-Eight was so fast The other crews were all outclassed; Yet further still. They proved Their worth. And with the Varsity went North, And swiftly from the Freshmen won Of Berkeley and of Washington. That spring, when Mrs. Stanford died. In Isles of the Pacific wide. The message came, and over all Descended Death ' s depressing pall. From far away across the foam. They reverently brought Her home ; From far away across the land. They came to pay a tribute grand To what was beautiful and good. And what was great, in Womanhood. And at the long procession ' s head, Naught-Eight — Her Youngest Children— led, Through trees and flowers in springtide bloom. Their Alma Mater to the tomb. CANTO TWO. Returned, next August, Nineteen-Eight From where They had been separate — New England, Tampa, Yakima, Ontario, or Tonopah. Of course the Freshmen dwindled far, In Soph ' more vision, under par; But more than this, Naught-Nine, it happed. Began existence handicapped ; Their Name is difficult to say. The words get in each other ' s way — Not like Naught-Eight slips off the tongue. As though the sound were heaven-sprung ' . This time no rush began the year The faculty must interfere ; The reason was, we do opine, Naught-Eight might injure Naughty-Nine. Besides, there were no more that fall Than thirty Freshmen in the hall; The most, when it had reached its fill. Stanford Quad 1908 79 Stanford 1908 Had gone and settled in the villa. So Naught-Eight had a cinch, for fair, Quad To haze the lonely thirty there. And many daring stunts were planned, When, lo, the leading Sophs were canned! The first good-sized event that came Was, naturally, the Freshman Game; But Naughty-Nine did not come through The way they had been booked to do. And wandered home, with scalps laid bare. For Berkeley kept their after-hair. As for the Varsity, the dope Conduced to throttle Stanford hope; Three veterans were all we had, While California owned a scad. With only football in the head. We fidgeted and fidgeted. The Game! ' Twould not misrepresent To call that game magnificent! Again the rooters were on hand With colors, shout, and song, and band; Again the bleachers, with success. Performed the human Stanford S ; Again upon the field was seen — Our own field now — the Serpentine. The Varsity just waded through And waltzed around the Gold and Blue, At twelve to five; and falling night Found Stanford crazy with delight. The names on that distinguished roll Were Captain Chalmers, Lyons, Dole, Frizzelle and Thompson, Horton, Stott, And Crawford, Koerner, Vandervoort, Molfino, Stanford, Slusher — men Whose deeds we would recall again. Naught-Eight, at last of proper age. In February, trod the stage; She Stoops to Conquer was the bill That people are applauding still. The Naught-Eight maidens, every one. Possessed the qualities to stun— And girls, though maybe you ' ve been more Or less neglected heretofore Through this account, we deeply bow With honorable mention, now. We ' re not in any rush to state The next concern of Nineteen-Eight, For our vocabulary lacks The power to gild the homely facts, And shine ' em up, and make ' em sound Just like the other way around. However; in the nation ' s game, Naught-Eight showed up excessive tame, And drank the bitter bottom dreg:- The Freshmen took Them down a peg. But such a thing, as Naught-Eight knew. If unavenged, would never do, And so deciding in result, To settle grievance with insult. The injured champions of Right Swoop down on Freshmen in the night. And by the bumping-process, take Them up, and hurl them in the lake. In track Naught-Eight was now aroused; Their rivals in chagrin They soused, Because it is an honest fact That Naught-Eight ' s total figure stacked Some way beyond what could combine Naught-Six, Naught-Seven, and Naught-Nine. In .rowing, also we must say. They had so much a walk-away — That three Naught-Eights made Stanford ' s Four; Bill Pemberton assumes an oar, Les Gay, Rex Conant also face Deep Turner, in the coxswain ' s place. The Berkeley Baseball Series stood With both teams one game to the good; The final struggle was at hand — In track the difference was thin; Both sides had doped ft up to win. Naught-Eight had surely men enough Who promised to have Vars ' ty stuff, In Horton, Kocher, Davis, Cope, Ross, Sterling, Miller (Stanford ' s hope), And Vandervoort and Lanagan, And Giebel — each a Track Team man. That week was little study done. All waited for the starting-gun, And then the Earthquake came — Ah, yes, the Earthquake came, And caught within its frightful spans, There were a million human plans Obliterated at their worth, With but a twitch of Mother Earth. And Death came, too, though sparingly, To Stanford ' s young community; And yet, the sacrifice was great, And fell to Nineteen Hundred Eight. When, as the first excitement did. And men and women, stupefied, Beheld the University A mass of pitiful debris, 80 Twas with uncompreheiuiing eyes, For they could scarcely realize That secoiuls cancelled years. that dawn. And Stanford ' s majesty was gone. How could that beautiful design. With purpose only to refine — A light and glory to the world — Be thus to ugly ruins hurled? But few there were had aught to say, Or talked of other things that day. Since words were lacking to declare The overwhelming i)athos there; And syllables could not alone Express that Tragedy in Stone. When evening closed upon the sight. Began the saddest, blackest night That Letand Stanford ever knew; The — endless — seconds — lingered —through. And then, against the darkness, high .• nd far across the northern sky. There glowed a sheet of lurid Red; And helpless in this awful bed — Forever widening its ring — Lay San Francisco, perishing. CANTO THREE. Now, at the Quake, without delay. In one impulsive get-away. Full many students, in retreat. Shook California from their feet; And yet, without exception, they Were back on Registration Day. At once atfairs began to seethe. And no one had a chance to breathe. The spring elections then went through. The Nineteen Six Commencement, too. And other things came in a lump. To keep the college on the jump. Around the campus, one could vouch. There was a universal grouch. For Football went, and it was said. We had a Lemon in its stead. There wasn ' t much desire to root Behind the English substitute; Yet, out of curiosity. The bleachers filled repeatedly; They dropped their h ' s with a clang, .• nd tried to get an English twang; Habitually snickered some. To mention Five-eighths or the Scrum. And while this attitude prevailed. The class of Nineteen Ten assailed The Freshmen of the Gold and Blue, .And from a jumbled fracas drew -■ cipher to the Berkeley three — Which made the Stanford men agree That Rugby, on the whole, was naught. Than lemon-er than first they thought. However, when ' ancouver played. The merits of the game were weighed. For all the crowd, which came to scoff. Just howled their cerebellums off. On California ' s native ground. The Berkeley Bear was caught and downed, -And branded with a 6 to 3 — -Xnother Stanford victory. With Chalmers, Koerner, Captain Stott, Thorpe, Cheda, .Minturn, Edwards, fought, .And Stanford, Presley, Holman were. With Fenton, Owen, Laumeister, .Molfino, and Bill Pemberton, The men by whom Old Berk was done. The contest failed, to some extent, -And left divided sentiment. For every Stanford student has The firm belief that Rugby, as ancouver played it, is a game; As Berkeley played it, is a shame. The Plug Ugly was an event Where Naught-Eight shone, to some extent. The skit that Leo Levy wrote Drew the committee ' s ardent vote; The leading purpose of the plot — The roasting the professors got — Was represented very well. Because the scene was laid in hell. The Seniors, though, with clumsy wit. To raise a little more of it. Threw cannon-crackers at the cast, -And drowned the show out with their blast. The Juniors donned their plugs and trod Triumphant, round the Inner Quad. The P. O. steps Naught-Seven manned, .And there they made their final stand: -Vaught-Eight soon crossed, and for encore To please the crowd— crossed one time more. Before the year was very old, M just a glance it could be told That something ailed the Faculty — Some shift, or change of policy. . nd many, then, a college star Could scent the finish from afar. The finish came: but we ' re averse The fatal figures to rehearse: However— eighty-eight were lost: It was a frightful holocaust! Naught-Eight, this spring, has come to be The source of public policy. Stanford Quad igo8 81 Stanford ' Herron and John Gushing sway Sequoia and the D. P. A. V Ua.a And Herron captured, with his talk. IQO8 ' ' ' Carnot Medal, in a walk; McColloch, Shelton, all Naught-Eight. Were Stanford ' s Team in the Debate. ♦ ■ Although it is somewhat abrupt, These annals we must interru])t; The future holds a fairer store Than all that has occurred before. And Naught-Eight men can scarcely count Their class achievements, as they mount; Mount, when in Her maturer power, Her glory and Her honor flower. 1 hough soon, before the church, a plate Will fit. with just a plain ' ' Naught-Eight, And while this little space appears — This bound ' ry of Their college years — A humble mark, yet They will try To make it catch the passing eye, Hy leaving fastened to the name A sjiecial heritage of fame. —Earl J. Hadley. 82 The Clothes for Vacation Time Are essentially Siegel clothes, if you would have the wear and the looks, but at the same time keep as much money as possible for pleasure ex- penses. Siegel clothes are all that any young man wants, and are moderately priced as well. We ' ve some dandy outing styles this season. 8-230 A I N CENTUHy PiilNTINC, SALT MKK. - i ' T!?? ' ; ■ s --rrr ' -? ' ' T ' v- ' ' T ? .V ' ' ' - ' V ? r Stanford Quad igo8 y ffSj l )£ . :::— := — -j- V — J j J ® The Sophomore Class Officers First Semester President F. K. Wyatt Vice-President C. B. Bradford Secretary Miss Laura Wells Treasurer F. K. Jackson Sergeant-at-Arms E. A. Rogers Second Semester President T. R. Cadwalader Vice-President D, P. Crawford Secretary Miss P. B. Botts Treasurer N, E. Doane Sergeant-at-Arms F. K. Wyatt Yell: Naughty-nine: Rah! Rah! Naughty-nine! Rah! Rail! Naugh ty-n ine ! Naugh ty-nine! Stanford! F. K. WYATT T. R. CADWALADER Stanford Quad 1908 The Freshman Class Officers First Semester President B. W. Utter Vice-President S. J. Talbot Secretary Miss M. MacDonald Treasurer A. H. Myer Sergeant-at-Arms W. L. Crowley Second Semester President H. P. Cheda Vice-President H. P. George Secretary Miss M. L. Kirk Treasurer R. M. Burgunder Sergeant-at-Arms B. W. Utter Yell: Nineteen-ten! Ninetcen-ten! Stanford! Stanford! Nincteen-ten! B. W. UTTER H. P. CHEDA Fraternities rMTEF iilT CS iNowKR or isnwsmuwr Zeta Psi 1 Lasuen Street Phi Delta Theta 6 Lasuen Street Phi Kappa Psi University Heights Sigma u 15 Alvarado Row Phi Gamma Delta 17 Alvarado Row Sigma Chi 10 Lasuen Street Sigma Alpha Epsilon 6 Salvatierra Street Delta Tau Delta 7 Lasuen Street Beta Theta Pi 11 Lasuen Street Chi Psi S Lasuen Street Kappa Alpha 16 Lasuen Street Delta Upsilon 8 Salvatierra Street Kappa Sigma 14 Lasuien Street Delta Kappa Epsilon 18 Lasuen Street Theta Delta Chi 16 Alvarado Row Acacia 4 Salvatierra Street Phi Delta Phi (legal) Delta Chi (legal) Sigma Xi (scientific) Phi Beta Kappa Kappa -Alpha Theta 15 Lasuen Street Kappa Kappa Gamma 12 Lasuen Street Pi Beta Phi 17 Salvatierra Street Delta Gamma .... 8 Lasuen Street Alpha Phi 17 Lasuen Street Gamma Phi Beta 1 Alvarado Row Pan-Hellenic -Association of Women Stanford Quad igo8 117 Stanford Quad 1908 Zeta P SI Mu Chapter, Established October 5, 1891 Fratres in Facultate John Maxson Stillman Hubert Harry Hall Fratres in Universitate Postgraduate Roy Chilton Leib, A.B. Edmund Plowden Stott George Brundage McLain 1907 John Cobb Macfarland Thaddeus a. V. Du Flon Edgar Stillman Eugene Watson Rockey 1908 Francis Blackburn Langstroth LovELL Langstroth Philip Royal Johnson John Kennedy Branner 1909 John Raymond Holman Stephen Norris Gage 1910 David Ervvin Nims Frederick Winfield McCartney Alfred Wright Ralph Hubbard Reynolds Mowatt Merrill Mitchell 118 Zeta Psi f - Founded at New York University, June 1, 1847 1908 Chapter Roll Phi, New York University Beta, University of Virginia Zeta, Williams College Psi, Cornell University Delta, Rutgers College Iota, University of California Sigma, University of Pennsylvania Theta Xi, University of Toronto Chi, Colby College Alpha Psi, McGill University Epsilon, Brown University Nu, Case School of Applied Science Kappa, Tufts College Eta, Yale University Tau, Lafayette College Mu, Leland Stanford Jr. University Upsilon, University of North Carolina Alpha Beta, University of Minnesota Xi, University of Michigan Lambda, Bowdoin College Gamma, Syracuse University Alumni Associations Northwestern Association of Zeta Psi, Chicago, III. Capital City Association of Zeta Psi, Washington, D. C. Zeta Psi Association, Cleveland, Ohio Zeta Psi Club, New York City, N. Y. Metropolitan Chapter of Zeta Psi, Philadelphia, Pa. New England Chapter of Zeta Psi,i Boston, Mass. Pacific Association of Zeta Psi, San Francisco 121 Stanford Quad 1908 Phi Delta Theta California Beta Chapter, Estalilished October 22, 1891 Fratres in Facultate Leander Miller Hoskins, M.S., C.E. Harold Heath, M.S., Ph.D. Vernon Lyman Kellogg, M.S. HalcotT Cadwalader Moreno, Ph.D. Ellwood p. Cubberly, A.M. William Frederick Durand, Ph.D. Edward Curtis Franklin. M.S., Ph.D. John Ezra McDowell, A.B. Fratres in Universitate Graduate Hugh Leslie Thomson. A.B., Dec. 1906 1907 William Wallace Behlow Xoel Swane Burge William Leavenworth Durand Harold J. Heffron Alexander Jessiman Chalmers Leigh Kelley Harry Robertson 1908 William Denison Spalding 1909 Horton T. Dennis William Chester McDuffie Nelson Taylor John Walter Roberts Lex Hugh Cochran Clarkson Beem Bradford James Frederick Pieper 1910 Lawrence Osgood Macomber Stuart Eldreiige Weaver Cyrus P. Happy, Jr. Thomas Woodruff Halliday 122 Phi Delta Theta Founded at Miami University, December 26, Chapter Roll Alpha Province New York 1848 Stanford Quad igo8 ?iiitbec Alpha, McGil! University laine AU na. Colby College New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth College Vermont Alpha, University of ' ermont Massachusetts Alpha, Williams College Massachusetts Beta, Amherst College Rhode Island Alpha. Brown University New York Alpha, Cornell University New York Beta, Union College New York Delta, Columbia University Epsilon. Syracuse University Pennsylvania Alpha, Lafayette College Pennsylvania Beta, Pennsylvania College Penn. Gamma, Washington and Jefferson Col- lege Pennsylvania Delta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania Epsilon. Dickinson College Pennsylvania Beta, University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Eta, Lehigh University Pennsylvania Theta, Pennsylvania State College Beta, University of North Beta Province Virginia Beta, University of Virginia North Carolina Virginia (lamma, Randolph-Macon College Carolina Virginia Zeta, Washington and Lee University Gamma Province Kentucky Alpha-Delta, Central University Tennessee Alpha, ' anderbilt University Kentucky Epsilon Kentucky State College Tennessee Beta, University of the South Delta Province Ohio Eta, Case School of Applied Science Ohio Theta, University of Cincinnati Michigan Alpha, L niversity of Michigan Epsilon Province Indiana Epsilon, Hanover College Indiana Zeta. DePauw University Indiana Theta, Purdue University Ohio Alpha, Miami L ' niversity Ohio Beta. Ohio-Wesleyan University Ohio Gamma. Ohio University Ohio Zeta, Ohio State University Indiana Alpha. Indiana University Indiana Beta, Wabash College Indiana Gamma. Butler College Indiana Delta, Franklin College Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University Illinois Beta. L ' niversity of Chicago Illinois Delta, Knox College Illinois Zeta, I mbard College Illinois Eta. University of Illinois Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Minnesota Alpha, University of ilinnesota Iowa Alpha, Iowa Wesleyan Iowa Beta, University of Iowa Eta Province Georgia Alpha, University of Georgia Georgia Beta, Emory College Georgia Gamma, Mercer L ' niversity Zeta Province Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri Missouri Beta, Westminster College Missouri Gamma, Washington University Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska Colorado Alpha, University of Colorado South Dakota Alpha, University of South Dakota Georgia Delta, Georgia School of Technology Alabama Alpha, University of Alabama Alabama Beta, -Mabama Polytechnic Institute Theta Province ' niversity of Mississippi Texas Beta, University of Texas Texas Gamma, Southwestern University Iota Province California Alpha, L ' niversity of California California Beta, Leiand Stanford Jr. University Kappa Province ' ashington Alpha. University of Washington Alumni Clubs Mississippi Alpha. I Louisiana Alpha, Tulane University Boston, Mass. Harvard University Providence. R. I. New York, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. Schenectady, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Pittsburg, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Washtngfton, D. C. Richmond, V ' a. Louisville, Ky. Nashville, Tenn, Columbus, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Macon, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Selma, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Mobile, Ala. New Orleans, La. Cincinnati. Ohio Akron, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Athens, Ohio loledo, Ohio Hamilton, Ohio Detroit, Mich. Franklin, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. Crawfordsville, Ind. Chicago. 111. Galesburg, HI. Bloomington, 111. Peoria, III. La Crosse, Wis. Milwaukee. Wis. Men ash a, Wis. Minneapolis, and St. Paul, Minn. Kansas City, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. Omaha, Neb. Denver. Colo. 125 Meridian, Miss. Oklahoma City, O. T. Austin, Texas Salt Lake City, Utah San Francisco, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal. Portland, Ore. Spokane, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Burlington, Vt. Warren. Pa. Lexington, Ky. Sioux City, Iowa Hutchinson, Kans, Stanford Quad 1908 Phi Kappa Psi California Beta Chapter. Establislied Xovcniber 10, 1891 Frater in Facultate Harris Joskph Ryan, M. E. Fratres in Universitate 1905 Samuei, Rohert Downing 1907 DwiGHT Moody Davis Frank Alma Fisher Arthur Adelbert Mathewson John Henry Bell John Eugene Gallois James Vivian Hart John Nelson Alexander Robert Dunbar Brooke George Whiting Hendry Leslie Nash George Etheridge Mills Losse Arthur Alexander Phinney 1908 1909 1910 John Bayard Hyde-Smith Stanley Marshall Vail John Blackwood White Augustus MacDonald Joseph Drumm M alloy James Sheldon Woodbury Will Carleton Phinney Charles Harry Robbins Frederick Leroy Stanton SiGFRlD MaRMADUKE UnaNDER i. . ..crim-. Ill ■ ILUU rKidl F ' -w..A.tfT i 4. i«as ■ -ts ' imsaiiaan:r ..:.iimlB !■ ' 1 ■■■i inii 1 126 Phi Kappa Psi Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 Stanford Quad igoS Chapter Roll Pennsylvania Alpha, Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Beta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania Gamma, Bucknell Univer- sity Pennsylvania Epsilon, Gettysburg Col- lege Pennsylvania Zeta, Dickinson College Pennsylvania Eta, Franklin and Mar- shall College Pennsylvania Theta, Lafayette College Pennsylvania Iota, University of Penn- sylvania. Pemisylvania Kappa, Swarthmore Col- lege 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 Rhode Island Alpha, Brown University New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth Col- lege Virginia Alpha, University of Virginia Virginia Beta, Washington and Lee University West Virginia Alpha, University of West Virginia Maryland Alpha, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity Mississippi Alpha, University of Mis- sissippi Tennessee Delta, Vanderbilt University Texas Alpha, University of Texas Ohio Alpha, Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Beta, Wittenberg College Ohio Delta, University of Ohio Ohio Epsilon, Case School of Applied Science Indiana Alpha, DePauw University Indiana Beta, University of Indiana Indiana Delta, Purdue University Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Chicago Illinois Delta, University of Illinois Michigan Alpha, University of Michigan Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wis- consin Wisconsin Gamma, Beloit College Iowa Alpha, University of Iowa Minnesota Beta, University of Minnesota Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska California Beta, Leland Stanford Junior University California Gamma, University of Cali- fornia Philadelphia, Pa. Newark, N. J. Washington, D. C. Bucyrus, Ohio Anderson. Ind. Minneapolis, Minn. San Francisco, Cal. Omaha, Xeb. Johnston, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. Syracuse, N. Y. Alumni Associations Sunbury, Pa. Easton, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. New York City Cleveland, Ohio Indianapolis, Ind. Chicago, III. Denver, Colo. Cincinnati, Ohio Boston, Mass. Salt Lake City, Utah Baltimore, Md. Meadville, Pa. Buffalo, N. Y. Springfield, Ohio Toledo. Ohio Kansas City, Mo. Portland, Ore. Columbus, Ohio Seattle, Wash. Duluth, Minn. Iowa City, Neb. Colors : Pink and Lavender Flower: Sweet Pea. 129 Stanford Quad 1908 Mgma Nu Beta Chi Chapter, Established November 17, 1891 Fratres in Universitate 1906 Otto Karl Grau 1907 Herbert Theodore Blood Phillip Nicola Hartzell Le Roy Mallory Edwards Walter Poundstone Kelly George Curtis Mansfield James Alexander Gibson Glen Weston Lull 1908 Percy Friars Valentine Horace Sanders Wilson William Sherrit Barkley Walter William Blood William Thomas Blow Donald George Heinly 1909 Hector Keesling OcTAVius Wells Morgan Robert Clark Peyton Eri Horner Richardson 1910 Elbert Merwin Kerchkval Walter Scott McGii.vray Edwin Rowley Sheldon 130 1 ' T Lu4i H i j - ;mi 1 1 - . I ffi iii . ■ ■■ ffei 1 ' ' ■ t F ' ' J T hHI 1 ' W M VS lfed}l y - k fe: ' I ll J Sigma Nu Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1864 Stanford Quad igo8 Chapter Roll Beta, University of Virgina Delta, University of South Carolina Zeta, Central University Eta, Mercer University Theta, University of Alabama Kappa, North Georgia A. and M. College Lambda, Washington and Lee University Mu, University of Georgia Nu, University of Kansas Xi, Emory College Omicron, Bethel College Pi, Lehigh 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, DePauw University Beta Zeta, Purdue University Beta Theta, Alabama A. and M. Col- lege Beta Mu, University of Iowa Beta Nu, Ohio State University Beta Rho, University of Pennsylvania 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 Insti- tute of Arts Delta Theta, Lombard University Gamma Gamma, Albion College Gamma Alpha, Georgia School of Tech- nology Gamma Delta, Stevens Institute Gamma Beta, Northwestern University Gamma Epsilon, Lafayette College Gamma Chi, University of Washington Gamma Zeta, University of Oregon Gamma Eta, Colorado State School of Mines Gamma Lambda, University of Wis- consin Gamma Mu, Illinois State University Gamma Xu, University of Michigan Gamma Iota, Kentucky State University Gamma Kappa, Colorado State Uni- versity Gamma Theta, Cornell University Gamma Sigma, Iowa State College Gamma Xi, University of Minnesota Beta Xi, William Jewell College Gamma Psi, University of Syracuse Delta Iota, Case School of Applied Sct- Alumni Associations Dallas, Texas New Orleans, La. Belle Plains, Iowa Brookfield, Wis. New York City, N. Columbus, Ohio Chicago, 111. Shelbyville. Ky. St Louis, Mo. Seattle, Wash. Y. Athens. Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Charlotte, N. C. Bessemer, Ala. Louisville, Ky. Birmingham, Ala. San Francisco, Cal. Kansas City, Mo. Greencastle. Ind. Tacoma, Wash. Colors: Black, White and Gold Flower: White Rose 133 Stanford Quad 1908 Phi Gamma Delta Lambda Sigma Chapter, Established November 30, 1891 Fratres in Facultate Alphonso G. Newcomer Leon P. Lewis Fratres in Universitate 1907 Karl August Bickel Franklin Avery Crittenden Chilton Hampton Benjamin Franklin Ogden Virgil Franklin Bellows Charles Edward Clowe Lewis Reginald Eaton Dell Bernie Arrell Basil Fritz Bickel 1908 1909 Charles William Henderson Albert Loftus Young Fred Zimmerman Frank William Oliver Charles Austin Prevost Shirley Glidden Sweet Edward Cyril Wynne 1910 George Norris Cox Howard Borland Patrick Merle Ballard Rounds 134 -41 « r v fl)! m-: ' . ' ' --.- ' j : _, i r . ii- -] r Phi Gamma Delta Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848 Stanford Quad 1908 Chapter Roll University of Maine Massachusetts Institute of Technology Worcester Brown Dartmouth Amherst Trinity Yale Columbia New York University Colgate Cornell Union Syracuse Pennsylvania Lafayette Lehigh Johns Hopkins Bucknell Gettysburg State Virginia Washington and Lee Richmond Washington and Jefferson Allegheny Wooster Leland Stanford Adelbert Denison Wittenberg Ohio State Ohio Wesleyan Indiana DePauw Hanover Wabash Purdue Tennessee Bethel Alabama Texas Illinois Wesleyan Knox Illinois Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota Chicago William Jewell Missouri Kansas Nebraska California Washington Jr. Lafayette, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. Kansas City, Mo. Chicago, 111. Seattle, Wash. Denver, Colo. San Francisco, Cat. Chattanooga, Tenn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. Lincoln, Neb. Graduate Chapters Bloomington, 111. New York City Pittsburg, Pa. Toledo, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Philadelphia, Pa. Minneapolis, Minn. Washington, D. C. Dayton, Ohio 137 Stanford Quad 1908 Sigma Chi Alpha Omega Chapter, Established December 19, 1891 Fratres in Universitate 1907 Louis Duzzett Farnsworth Carl Franklin Braun 1908 Thomas Tankkrville Bennett Roy Crawford Qlektrrmovs James Evans Montgomery 1909 William Dorsey Dalton Frank Alexander Robertson James Tullius Tupper Robert McKinnie Hofer 1910 David Theodore Ringheim Arthur Homer Drew Frank Luquker Wilde ,138 Sigma Chi Founded at Miami University, 1855 Stanford Quad igo8 Chapter Roll Alpha. Miami University Beta, University of Wooster Gamma, Ohio Wesleyan University Epsilon, George Washington University Zeta, Washington and Lee University Eta, University of Mississippi Theta, Pennsylvania College Kappa, Bucknell University Lambda, Indiana University Mu, Denison University Xi, DePauw University Omicron, Dickinson College Rho, Butler 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, University of Nebraska Alpha Zeta, Beloit College Alpha Eta, State University of Iowa Alpha Theta, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alpha Iota, Illinois Wesleyan University Alpha Lambda, University of Wisconsin Alpha Nu, University of Texas Alpha Xi, University of Kansas Alpha Omicron, Tulane University Alpha Pi. Albion College Alpha Rho, Lehigh University Alpha Sigma, University of Minnesota Alpha Upsilon, University of Southern California Alpha Phi, Cornell University Alpha Chi, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Psi, Vanderbilt University Alpha Omega, Leland Stanford Jr. Uni- versity Beta Gamma, Colorado College Delta Delta, Purdue University Zeta Zeta, Central University Zeta Psi, University of Cincinnati Eta Eta, Dartmouth College Theta Theta, University of Michigan Kappa Kappa, University of Illinois Lambda Lambda, Kentucky State Col- lege Mu Mu, West Virginia University Nu Nu, Columbia University Xi Xi, University of the State of Mis- souri Omicron Omicron, University of Chi- cago Rho Rho, University of Maine Tau Tau, Washington University Upsilon Upsilon, University of Wash- ington Phi Phi, University of Pennsylvania Psi Psi, Syracuse University Omega Omega, University of Arkansas Beta Delta, University of Montana Alumni Chapters Atlanta Boston Baltimore Charleston Chicago Cincinnati Columbus St. Louis Springfield, 111. Detroit Denver Indianapolis Kansas City Cleveland Los Angeles Milwaukee San Francisco Washington, D. C. Nashville New Orleans New York Peoria Philadelphia Pitt,sburg St. Paul-Minneapolis Louisville Toledo Colors: Light Blue and Gold Flower: White Rose 141 Stanford Quad igo8 Sigma Alpha Epsilon California Alpha, listablislicd March 5, 1892 Frater in Facultate Allan Ahiiott Youxg, Ph.D. Fratres in Universitate 1906 Daniel Dudley Sales 1907 Willis Arthur Clark Ben Stogden Morrow George Wade McIntosh James Duillard Patterson George Franklin Shaner 1908 Howard Dearborn Ainsworth Frederick Rodgers Lanagan Amos Newton Cole Claudius Raymond Frederick Warren Turner Carl Bkeer Harry Frederick Bruning Norman Eugene Doan Allen Field GoRHAM Lane Goodell George Chapman William Palmer Fuller, Jr. Paul C. Giesy 1909 1910 Eliot Holcomb Philip Ries Faymonville a. g. luchsinger John D. Phelps William Harvey Stark Shelton K. Johnston David G. Martin Harold H. Maundrell 142 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 Stanford Quad 1908 Chapter Roll Maine Alpha, University of Maine Mass. Beta-Upsilon, Boston University Mass. lota- ' lau, Massachusetts Institute Technology Mass. Gamma. Harvard University Mass. l elta, U ' orcester Polytechnic Institute N. Y. Alpha, Cornell University N. Y. Mu, Columbia University N. Y. Sigma-Phi, St. Stephen ' s College Pa. Omega, Allegheny College Pa. Alpha-Zeta, Pennsylvania State College Pa. Sigma-Phi, Dickinson College Pa. Zeta, Ilucknell University Pa. Delta, Gettysburg College Pa. Theta, University of Pennsylvania Washin on Citv Rho, Washington, D. C. Va. Omicron, University of V ' irginia Va. Sigma. Washington and Lee University N. C. Ai, University of North Carolina N. C. Theta, Davidson College S. C. Gamma, Wofford College Ga. Beta. University of Georgia Ga. Psi, Mercer University Ga. Epsilon, Emory College (ia. Phi, (ieorgia School of Technology Mich. Iota-Beta, University of Michigan Mich. .Alpha, Adrian College Ohio Sigma, Mt. Union College Ohio Delta, Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Epsilon, University of Cincinnati Ohio Theta. Ohio State University Ohio Rho, Cleveland, Ohio Indiana Alpha, Franklin College Indiana Beta, Purdue University Illinois Psi-Omega, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Illinois of Illinois Theta, University of Chicago Minn. Alpha, University of Minnesota Wis. Alpha, University of Wisconsin Kentucky Kappa, Central University Kentucky Iota, Bethel College Kentucky Epsilon, Kentucky State College Tenn. Zeta, Southwestern Presbyterian Uni- versity Tenn. Lambda, Cumberland L niversity Tenn. Nu, ' anderbilt University Tenn. Kappa, University of Tennessee Tenn. Omega, University of the South Tenn. Eta, Southwestern Baptist University Ala. Mu, University of Alabama Ala. Iota, Southern University Ala. Alpha-Mu, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri Missouri Beta, Washington University Neb. Lambda-Pi, University of Nebraska Ark. Alpha-Upsilon, University of Arkansas Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Iowa Beta, Iowa City, Iowa Iowa Gamma, Ames, Iowa Colorado Chi. University of Colorado. Colorado Zeta, Denver University Colorado Lambda, Colorado School of Mines Cal. Alpha, Leland Stanford Jr. University Cal. Beta, University of California La. Epsilon, Louisiana State University La. Tau-Upsilon, Tulane University Miss. Gamma, University of Mississippi Texas Rho, University of Texas Wilmington, N. C. Worcester, Mass. Adrian, Mich. Alliance, O. Amcricus, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Augusta, Ga. Birmingham, Ala. Boston. Mass. Chattanooga, Tenn. Alumni Chicago, 111. Cincinnati, O. Cleveland, O. Dayton, O. Denver, Colo. Detroit, Mich. Florence, Ala. Indianapolis, Ind. Jackson, Miss. Kansas City, Mo. Associations Lexington, Ky. Knoxville, Tenn. Little Rock. Ark. Louisville, Ky. Los Angeles, Cal. Macon. Ga. Madison, Wis. Milwaukee. Wis. Memphis, Tenn. New Orleans, La. New York, N. Y. Schenectady, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. San Francisco, Cal. Savannah, Ga. St. Louis, Mo. Talladega, Ala. Washington, D. C. Washington, Ga. Colors : Royal Purple and Old Gold Yell: Phi Alpha Alicasee! Phi Alpha Alicazon! Sigma Alpha! Sigma Alpha! Sigma Alpha Epsilon! 145 Stanford Quad 1908 Delta Tau Delta Beta Rho Chapter, Established August 13, 1893. Fratres in Facultate Ernest Whitney Martin, A.M. Henry Lewin G. nnon, p ' li.D. John Kester Bonnell; A.B: Fratres in Universitate 1907 Frederick Horton Bern. rd Chester Silent - - . George Otis Spurrier-. 1908 Ross Wallace Harbaugh Walter Hamilton Hill KiRKE TONNER MoORE Harley Johnson Boyle Arthur Jewell Govvan Thomas Brotherton Griffith Walter Elliott, Jr. Adolph Edward Ehrhorn Charles Combes Koehler Evan Kirkpatrick Meredith 1909- Joseph Kellogg Hutchinson Arthur Talbert Josselyn George Francis Zimmer 1910 Lynn Merriman Harvey Seeley Mudd Wayland Augustus Morrison Cleveland Ross Wright 146 Delta Tau Delta Founded at Bethany College, 1859 Stanford Quad igo8 Chapter Roll Southern Division Lambda. Vanderbilt University Beta Xi, Tulane University Pi, University of Mississippi Gamma Eta, George Washington Uni- Phi, Washington and Lee University versity Beta Epsilon, Emory College Gamma Iota, University of Texas Beta Iota, University of Virginia Beta Theta, University of the South Division Beta Omega, University of California Gamma Alpha, University of Chicago Gamma Beta, Armour Institute of Tech- nology Gamma Theta, Baker University Beta Tau, University of Nebraska Gamma Kappa, University of Missouri Western Oniicron, University of Iowa Beta Gamma, University of Wisconsin Beta Eta, University of Minnesota Beta Kappa, University of Colorado Beta Pi, Northwestern University Beta Rho, Leland Stanford Jr. Uni- versity Beta Upsilon, University of Illinois Northern Division Beta, Ohio University Beta Beta, DePauw University Delta, University of Michigan Beta Zeta, University of Indianapolis Epsilon, Albion College Beta Phi, Ohio State University Zeta. Adelbert College Beta Psi. Wabash College Kappa, Hillsdale College Gamma Delta, University of West Vir- Mu. Ohio Wesleyan University ginia Beta Alpha, Indiana University Chi. Kenyon College Eastern Alpha, Allegheny College Gamma, Washington and Jefferson Col- lege Rho. Stevens Institute of Technology Upsilon, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Omega, University of Pennsylvania Beta Lambda, Lehigh University Beta Mu, Tufts College Division Beta Nu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beta Oniicron, Cornell University Beta Chi, Brown University Gamma Gamma, Columbia University Gamma Epsilon, Dartmouth College Gamma Zeta, Wesleyan University Nu, Lafayette College Alumni Chapters Chicago Columbus Atlanta Jackson New York Indianapolis Toledo New Orleans Cincinnati Boston St. Louis Washington San Francisco Twin City Richmond Los Angeles Philadelphia Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Pittsburg Manila, P. I. Colors: Purple, White and Gold. Flower : Pansy Yell: Rah! Rah! Delta Delta Tau Delta! Rah! Rah! Delta Tau! Delta Tau Delta! 149 Stanford Quad 1908 Beta Theta P 1 Lambda Sigma Chapter, Established July 26, 1894 Benton A. Eby Fratres in Universitate 1907 Bryant Mathews Leslie Rowell Gay Raymond Howard Moore 1908 1909 Hunter Carlile Perry Roland Tracy Will Sanford Ballard Dole Charles Alfred Thorpe Theodore Royer Cadwalader Tom Mason Gibson Lester Sinclair Walbridge 1910 SiLSBY Morse Spaulding Rorbins Little Lorrain Banks Mackey Alden Karl Martin Alvah Bartlett Doe ISO Beta Theta P 1 Founded at Miami University, 1839 Stanford Quad 1908 Chapter Roll Beta Iota. Amherst College Upsilon. Boston University Beta Sigma, Bowdoin College Kappa, Brown University Alpha Omega, Dartmouth College Beta Eta, University of Maine Alpha Alpha, Columbia University Beta Gamma, Rutgers College Sigma Beta, Stevens Institute of Tech- nology Mu Epsilon, Wesleyan University Phi Chi. Yale University Beta Theta, Colgate University Beta Delta, Cornell University Beta Zeta, St. Lawrence University Beta Epsilon. University of Syracuse Theta Zeta, University of Toronto ■ Nu. Union College Alpha Sigma. Dickinson College Alpha Chi. Johns Hopkins University Beta Chi. Lehigh University Phi, University of Pennsylvania Alpha Up ilon. Pennsylvania State Col- lege Gamma, Washington and Jefferson Col- lege Phi Alpha, Davidson College Zeta, Hampden-Sidney College Eta Beta, University of North Carolina Omicron, University of Virginia Epsilon, Central University Beta Omicron. University of Texas Beta Alpha, Vanderbilt University Psi, Bethany College Beta Nu, University of Cincinnati Alpha, Miami University Beta Kappa, Ohio University Theta Delta. Ohio State University Beta Psi, University of West Virginia Alpha Gamma, Wittenberg College Alpha Kappa, Case School of Applied Science Alpha Eta, Denison University Beta Alpha, Kenyon College Theta, Ohio Wesleyan University Beta, Western Reserve University Alpha Lambda, Wooster University Delta, DePauw University Iota, Hanover College Pi, Indiana University Beta Mu, Purdue University Tau, Wabash College Chi, Beloit College Lambda Rho, University of Chicago Sigma Rho, University of Illinois Alpha Xi, Knox College Lambda, University of Michigan Rho, Northwestern University Alpha Pi, University of Wisconsin Alpha Beta, University of Iowa Tau Sigma, Iowa State College Alpha Epsilon, Iowa Wesleyan Univer- sity Beta Pi. University of Minnesota Aloha Tau, University of Nebraska Beta Tau, University of Colorado Alpha Zeta, University of Denver Alpha Nu, University of Kansas Zeta Phi, University of Missouri Lambda Iota, Washington University Lambda Delta, Westminster College Omega, University of California Lambda Sigma, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta Omega, University of Washington 153 ChiP SI Stanford Quad 1908 Alpha Gamma Delta Chapter, Established April 24, 1895 Frater in Facultate Colbert Seakles, Ph.D. Fratres in Universitate 1907 Russell Platt Hastings Willlvm Griffith Macdonald WiLLARD Everett Lyons 1908 Everett St. John Dunbar Francis Andrew Curtin John Eldridge Gushing Ernest Xath.aniel Smith 1909 Raymond Houston Lyons Frederic Albert Hale Edwin Marion Stark Ward Walpo Todd Arthur Wynne Lewis 1910 Allan Lee Green Charles . rthur Green 154 Chi Psi Founded at Union College, 1841 Stanford Quad igo8 Alpha Roll Pi, Union College Theta, Williams College Mu, Middlebury College Alpha, Wesleyan College Phi, Hamilton College Epsilon, University of Michigan Chi, Amherst College Psi, Cornell University Tau, Wofford College Iota, University of Wisconsin Rho, Rutgers College Xi, Stevens Institute of Technology Alpha Delta, University of Georgia Beta Delta, Lehigh University Gamma Delta, Leland Stanford Jr. University Delta Delta, University of California Epsilon Delta, University of Chicago Nu, University of Minnesota Alumni Associations New York Milwaukee Atlanta, Ga. Boston Minneapolis St. Louis Chicago Duluth Portland, Ore. Pittsburg Schenectady Des Moines Detroit Washington, D. C. Los Angeles San Francisco Colors Purple and Gold. Flowed : Fleur-de-lis. 157 Stanford Quad .1908 Kappa Alpha Alpha Pi Chapter, Established October 27, 1895 Fratres in Universitate 1907 Charles Elmer Stagner Frank Brown Sinnock pREDERrcK William Dorr Cale Clark McQuaid Dal Millington Lemmon 1908 John Rothwell Pemberton William Arthur Quinn, Jr. 1909 Stanley Clayton Bias George Donald Hussey Frank Bernard Mayers Vance Edward Skahen Harry Ignatius Stafford Edwin Francis Hai.i.oran Frederick Roger Macpherson John Angelo Parma Francis Marshall Smith Chester Charles Terrill 1910 Forrest Marlin Ackley Emerson Lamont Duff Kenneth Milton Green Harry Ward Nason Thurman Alden De Bolt Lester Welling Finlay Charles William Mason Cyril Eugene Pemberton - 2! M, iwiEElTTj w 4 £ ' 1 ► M HiE ' H LE 1 • m ft. 1 1 158 Kappa Alpha Founded at Washingrton and Lee University, 186S Stanford Quad igo8 Chapter Roll Alpha, Washington and Lee University Gamma, University of Georgia Delta, Wofford College Epsilon, Emory College Zeta, Randolph-Macon College Eta, Richmond College Theta, Kentucky State College Kappa, Mercer University Lambda. University of Virginia Nu, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Xi, Southwestern University Omicron, University of Texas Pi, University of Tennessee Sigma, Davidson College Upsilon, University of North Carolina Phi, Southern University Chi, Vanderbilt University Psi, Tulane University Omega, Central University of Kentucky Alpha Alpha, University of the South Alpha Beta, University of Alabama Alpha Gamma, Louisiana State Univer- sity Alpha Delta, William Jewell College Alpha Zeta, William and Mary College Alpha Eta, Westminster College Alpha Theta, Kentucky University Alpha Kappa, University of Missouri Alpha Lambda, Johns Hopkins Univer- sit} ' Millsaps College George Washington Univer- Alpha Mu, Alpha Nu, sity Alpha Xi, University of California Alpha Omicron, University of Arkansas Alpha Pi, Leland Stanford Jr. Univer- sity Alpha Rho, University of West Virginia Alpha Sigma, Georgia School of Tech- nology Alpha Tau, Hampden-Sidney College Alpha Upsilon, University of Mississippi Alpha Phi, Trinity College Alpha Chi, Kentucky Wesleyan Univer- sity Alpha Omega, N. C. A. M. College Beta Alpha, Missouri School of Mines Beta Beta, Bethany College Beta Gamma, College of Charleston Beta Delta, Georgetown College Beta Epsilon, Delaware College Beta Zeta, University of Florida Beta Eta, University of Oklahoma Beta Theta, Washington University Alexandria, La. Anniston, Ala. Asheville, N. C. At ' anta, Ga. Augusta. Ga. Baltimore, Md . Baton Rouge, La. Boston. Mass. Canal Zone Charlotte, N. C. Charleston, W. Va. Chattanooga, Tenn. Centreville, Miss. Columbia, Ga. Dallas, Texas. Franklin. La. Griffin, Ga. Hampton, Newport News, Va. Hattiesburg. Miss. liouston, Texas Alumni Chapters Huntington, W. Va. Jacksonville, Fla. Jackson, Miss. Jonesboro, Ark. Kansas City, Mo. Knoxville, Tenn. Lexington, Ky. Little Rock, Ark. Los Angeles, Cal. Louisville, Ky. Macon, Ga. Memphis, Tenn. Mobile, Ala. Montgomery, Ala. Muskogee, Ind. Ter. Nashville. Tenn. Natchitoches, La. New Orleans, La. New York City Norfolk, Va. Oklahoma City, Okla. Petersburg, Va. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. Raleigh, N. C. Richmond, Va. San Francisco Savannah, Ga. Selma, Ala. Shreveport, La. Spartanburg. S. C. St. Louis, Mo. Staunton, Va. Tallahassee, Fla. Talladega, Ala. Tampa, Fla. Thomasville, Ga. Washington, D. C. Wilmington, N. C. Colors : Crimson and Old Gold. Flowers : Magnolia and Red Rose. 161 Stanford Quad igo8 Delta Upsilon Stanford Chapter, Established March 13, 1896 Fratres in Facultate David Starr Jordan. LL.D. William Russel Dudley, M.S. James Owen Grifun Arthur Bridgman Clark, M.A. John Caspar Branner, LL.D. George Archibald Clark, B.L. Melvin Gilbert Dodge, M.A. Wi 1.1.1 AM Alph. Cooper, AM. GuiDO Hugo Marx, M.E. Benjamin Oliver Foster, A.B. Dorsey Alfred Lyon, A.M. John Pearce Mitchell, A.B. Arthur Martin Cathcart, A.B. H. D. Gray, A.B. Fratres in Universitate Postgraduate Dane Manson Greer Harry Parker Daily Ernest Griswold Dudley Raymond Hornby Roy Seldon Kellogg Harry Scott Ross Clarence Luther Severy Clarence Coonan James Grant Ferguson Elwood Campbell Boobar Sheldon Morse Batterson 1907 1908 1909 Robert Brkck Moran James Chan dler Ray Stuart McFarland Salisbury Dale Slusher William Christian Theile William Moore Walker John Denning Mereen Chauncey Carroll Owen 1910 William Hayes Hammond, Jr. Knight Starr Jordan Benjamin F. Morris 162 Stanford Delta Upsilon g d Founded at Williams College, 1834 1 908 Chapter Roll Williams, Williams College Union, Union College Hamilton, Hamilton College Amherst, Amherst College Adelbert, Western Reserve University Colby, Colby University Rochester, Rochester University Middlebury, Middlebury College Bowdoin, Bowdoin College Rutgers, Rutgers College Brown, Brown University Colgate, Colgate University New York, University of City of N. Y. Cornell, Cornell University Marietta, Marietta College Syracuse, Syracuse University Michigan, University of Michigan Northwestern, Northwestern University Harvard, Harvard University Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin Lafayette, Lafayette College Columbia, Columbia University Lehigh, Lehigh University Tufts, Tufts College DePauw, DePauw University Pennsylvania, University of Penn. Minnesota, University of Minnesota Technolog -, Mass. Institute of Tech. Swarthmore, Swarthmore College Stanford, Leland Stanford Jr. Univ. California, University of California McGill, McGill University Nebraska, University of Nebraska Toronto, University of Toronto Chicago, University of Chicago Ohio, Ohio State University Illinois, University of Illinois 165 Stanford Quad igo8 Kappa Sigma Beta Zeta Chapter, Established .May 19, 1899 Fratres in Universitate 1907 Alfred Loom is Taylor Seth Blaine Thompson 1908 Kenneth Lucas Fenton William Koerner Earl Jonathan Hadley Francis Douhlas Mahone ■ Edward Eben Haskell Claude Charles McColloch Ernest John Swift 1909 Herbert Philander Bell Orland Franklynn Montgomery Raymond Arthur Gott Robert Allen Rattray Frank Jewell Macomber Lucas Folsom Smith Roy Cook Witmer William Lucas Crowley James Henry Polhemus ' 1910 Harold Eugene Reed i ' rancis goodspeed wilson 166 Kappa Sigma Founded at University of Virginia, 1867 Stanford Quad igo8 Chapter Roll Pst, University of Maine Alpha Rho, Bowdoin College Alpha Lambda. University of ' ermont Beta Alpha, Brown University Beta Kappa, New Hampshire College Alpha Alpha, University of Maryland Pi. Swarthmorc College Alpha Delta, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Eta. Columbian University Alpha Epsilon, University of Pennsylvania Alpha Kappa, Cornell University Alpha Phi, Bucknelt University Beta Delta, Washington and Jefferson College Beta Iota, Lehigh University Beta Pi, Dickinson College Delta, Davidson College Upsilon, Hampden-Sydney College Zeta, University of ' irginia Eta, Randolph-Macon College Nu, William and Mary College Beta Beta, Richmond College Eta Prime, Trinity College Alpha Mu, University of North Carolina Beta, University of Alabama Alpha Beta, Mercer University Alpha Nu, Wofford College Alpha Tau, Georgia School of Technology Beta Eta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Beta Lambda, University of Georgia Theta, Cumberland University Kappa, Vanderbilt University Lambda, University of Tennessee Phi, Southwestern Presbyterian University Omega, University of the South Alpha Theta, Southwestern Baptist University Beta Nu, Kentucky State College Alpha Upsilon, Millsaps College Gamma. I.«uisiana State University Iota, Southwestern University Sigma, Tulane University Tau, University of Texas Xi, University of Arkansas Alpha Psi, University of Nebraska Alpha Omega, William Jewell College Beta Gamma, Missouri State University Beta Omicron, University of Denver Beta Sigma, Washington University Chi, Purdue University Alpha Gamma, University of Illinois Alpha Zeta, University of Michigan Beta Theta, University of Indiana Alpha Pi, Wabash College Alpha Sigma, Ohio State University Alpha Chi, Lake Forest University Beta Epsilon, University of Wisconsin Beta Mu, University of Minnesota Beta Rho. University of Iowa Beta Zeta, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta Xi, University of California Beta Phi, Case School of Applied Science Beta Chi, Missouri School of Mines Beta Psi, University of Washington Gamma Delta, Massachusetts State College Mu, Washington and Lee University Beta Upsilon, North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical College Beta Tau, Baker University Gamma Beta, University of Chicago Gamma Alpha, University of Oregon Gamma Theta, University of Idaho Gamma Kappa, University of Oklahoma Gamma Epsilon, Dartmouth College Beta Omega, Colorado College Gamma Gamma, Colorado School of Mines Gamma Eta, Harvard University Gamma Zeta, New York University Gamma Iota, Syracuse University Alumni Chapters Boston, Mass. Norfolk, Va. Pittsburg, Pa. Indianapolis, Ind. Memphis, Tenn. Louisville, Ky. Los Angeles, Cal. Waco. Texas Yazoo City, Miss. New Orleans, La. Pine Bluff, Ark. San Francisco, Cal. Ithaca, N. Y. Lynchburg, Va. Salt I-ake City, Utah Nashville, Tenn. Milwaukee, Wis. Kansas City, Mo. Durham, N. C. Chattanooga, Tenn. Birmingham, La. Danville, Va. Atlanta, Ga. New York, N. Y. St. Louis, Mo. Buffalo. N. Y. Concord, N. C. Little Rock, Ark. Washington, D. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Chicago, 111. Ruston, La. Colors: Scarlet, White, and Emerald Green. Flower: Lily of the Valley. Yeti: Rah! Rah! Rah! Crescent and Star! Vive la! Vive la! Kappa Sigma! Denver, Col. Fort Smith, Ark. Vicksburg, Miss. Portland, Ore. Seattle, Wash. Mobile, Ala. Kingston, N. C. Jackson, Miss. Covington, Tenn. Spokane, Wash. 169 Stanford Quad 1908 Delta Kappa Epsilon Sigma RIio Chapter, I ' stablislied February 8, 1902 Fratres in Facultate George Clinton Price, Ph.D. Henry Winchester Roi.fk, A.. 1. Frank Mace McFarland, Ph.B. Ashley Burdett Packard Fratres in Universitate 1907 Pkentis Townsend Bcrtis Roger Topp Edvv.ard Canfield Sterling Harold McCuller Haver 1908 Xewton Ale.xander Johnson Stuart Curtis Morton George Fowler Morell Girard Nye Richardson Carlos Eugene Sampson 1909 Morgan Orland Adams Le Roy Minturn Halsey Luthkr Ri.xford David S. Barmore John Charles Weston Thomas Cecil Henry 1910 BuRCHELL Williams Upson Leland Stanford Scott - iinrMgn 170 4 9 . i 7 .. iiiyil ' t — g) ' ' Hf -«c1W sh Delta Kappa Epsilon Founded at Yale University, 1844 Chapter Roll Phi, Yale University Xi, Colby University Psi, University of Alabama Beta, University of North Carolina Eta, University of Virginia Pi, Dartmouth College Aloha Alpha, Middlebury College Epsilon, Williams College Tau, Hamilton College Rho. Lafayette College Phi Chi, Rutgers College Gamma Phi, Wesleyan University Beta Chi, Adelbert College Phi Gamma, Syracuse University Alpha Chi, Trinity College Delta Delta, University of Chicago Kappa, Miami University Sigma Tau, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alpha Phi, University of Toronto Tau Aloha, McGill College Theta, Bowdoin College Stanford Quad igo8 Sigma, Amherst College Upsilon, Brown University Chi, University of Mississippi Lambda, Kenyon College Iota, Central University Omicron, University of Michigan Nu, College of City of New York Mu, Colgate University Beta Phi, University of Rochester Psi Phi, DePauw University Psi Omega, Rensselaer Polytechnic Delta Chi, Cornell University Gamma Beta, Columbia University Theta Zeta, University of California Gamma, Vanderbilt University Phi Epsilon, University of Minnesota Tau Lambda, Tulane University Delta Kappa, University of Pennsylvania Sigma Rho, Stanford University Delta Pi, University of Illinois Delta Rho, University of Wisconsin Alumni Associations New York Northwestern Pacific Coast Rhode Island Kentucky Northwest Rochester Mississippi Valley Western Michigan Central New York Rocky Mountain Wisconsin Detroit Washington Buffalo Cleveland Eastern New York Connecticut Chattanooga Southern Harvard Indiana Western Massachusetts Central Tennessee Southern California New England Colors : Crimson, Azure and Gold Yell: Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. E.! Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. E.! Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. £. Sigma Rho! 173 Stanford Quad igo8 Theta Delta Chi Eta Deuteron Charge, Established April 25, 1903 Fratres in Facultate Clifford Gilmore Allen Charles David Marx Fratres in Universitate 1906 Robert Allan Hudson 1907 ' Henry Trueman Beckwith Carl Augustus Ferguson John Knowles Dotten Roy Noble Ferguson William Watkye Edwards Walter Tullidge Ogier William Thomas Young 1908 Rexford Hutchings Conant Dallas England Wood 1909 Harry Frederick George Frank Charles Nye Lowell Jay Hart Charles Loring Roberts 1910 Merwin Bishop Carson Charles Loring Hudson William Webb Wheeler 4 rn .M. • ' m I . . 174 ■ H. -. - ' ii . ,.. v. ■,-.. .-. ' -%■ -  f| ' .urdi jii% r 1 i. --. fi i ,4!f4l i- -  jm is?fLi M iSfl v Theta Delta Chi !, t ' ' Quad Founded at Union College, 1848 1908 Chapter Roll Beta, Cornell University Gamma Deuteron, University of Michigan Delta Deuteron, University of California Epsilon, William and Mary College Zeta, Brown University Zeta Deuteron, McGill University Eta, Bowdoin College Eta Deuteron, Leiand Stanford Jr. University Iota, Harvard University Iota Deuteron, Williams College Kappa, Tufts College Lambda, Boston University Mu Deuteron, Amherst College Nu Deuteron, Lehigh University Xi, Hobart College Omicron Deuteron, Dartmouth College Pi Deuteron, College of the City of New York Rho Deuteron, Columbia University Sigma Deuteron, University of Wisconsin Tau Deuteron, L-niversity of Minnesota Phi, Lafayette College Chi. University of Rochester Chi Deuteron, George Washington University Psi, Hamilton College Colors : Black, White and Blue Flower : Ruby-red Carnation 177 Stanford Quad 1908 Acacia Beth Chapter, Established November 14, 1904 Fratres in Facultate William Frederick Durand James Owen Griffin Fratres in Universitate Graduate Ward Huey Wheeler 1907 Benjamin Rankin Saunders Percy Langdon Blodget Samuel Hatch Pierce John Hamer Thompson Rush Maxwell Blodget James Root Dillon DiAN Rathbun Gardner 1908 Paul McDonnell Davis Charles Arch Jones Charles Marvin Taylor Frank Adolph Herrmann Stanley Carrollton Herold Ralph Le Roy Milliken Homer Grant Keesling 1909 Arthur Burton Shutts George Edward Schuele Alexander Macbeth Cuthbertson 1910 Jesse Adams Bumgarner Died January 2, 1907 178 Acacia It- Founded at University of Michigan, May 27, 1904 igo8 Chapter Roll Aleph, University of Michigan Beth, Leland Stanford Junior University Gimmel, University of Kansas Daleth, University of Nebraska He, University of California Waw, University of Ohio Za Yin, Dartmouth College Heth, University of Illinois Teth, Harvard University Yodh, University of Pennsylvania Kaph, University of Minnesota La Medth, University of Wisconsin Colors : Black and Gold 181 Stanford Quad 1908 Phi Delta Ph 1 Miller Chapter, Established April 10, 1897 Fratres in Facultate Nathan Abbott, L.L.B., T Charles A. Huston Leon Patterson Lewis. Ph.B., r A Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld, L.L.B. Fratres in Universitate Graduates William James Galbraith, Jr. Dudley Daniel Sales, 2 A E 1907 Ben Shannon Allen Clarence Goodrich Atwood Franklin Avery Crittenden, r A Edward Anthony Cunha Harry Parker Daily, A T DwiGHT M. Davis, K Le Roy Mai.lory Edwards, 2 N Frank Alma Fisher, K • ! ' Harold Fitch Dian Rathbun Gardner WiLLARD Everett Lyons, X Clarence F. Laumeister John Cobb M. cfarland, Z 4 ' George Curtis Mansfield 2 N Jeff L. Maloy John W. Maloy George Joseph Presley Ashley Burdett Packard, A K E Edmund Plowden Stott, Z •if Stuart McFarland Salisbury, A T Seth Blaine Thompson, K 2 John McCartney Ward Thomas Tankerville Bennett, 2 X Francis Andrew Curtin, X 4 ' John Eldridge Gushing, X 4 ' Kenneth Lucas Fenton, K 2 1908 James Vivian Hart, K 4 ' Newton Alexander Johnson, A K E Frederic Rodgers Lanagan, 2 A E Alexander Deuchar Larnach Arthur Alban Murphy 182 - ' 3l|r ft Phi Delta Phi tal ' 1Q08 Chapter Roll 1869. Kent. Law Department, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 1878. Benjamin. Law Department, Illinois VVesleyan University, Bloomington 1880. Booth, Northwestern University Law School, Chicago, Illinois 1881. Storj-, School of Law, Columbia University, New York City 1882. Cooley, St. Louis Law School, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 1883. Pomeroy, Hastings College of Law, San Francisco, California 1884. Marshall. George Washington University. Washington, D. C. 1884. Jay, .Mbany I w School, Union University, Albany, New York 1885. Webster. School of Law. Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 1886. Hamilton, Law School of the University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 1886. Gibson, Department of Law, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 1887. Choate, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1887. Waite, Yale Law School, New Haven, Connecticut 1887. Field. Department of Law, New York University 1888. Conkling. School of Law, Cornell University. Ithaca, New York 1890. Tiedeman. Law Department. University of Missouri. Columbia, Missouri 1890. Minor. Law Department. University of Virginia, Charlottsville, Virginia 1891. Dillon, Department of Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 1891. Daniels, Buffalo Law School, Buffalo, New York 1891. Chase, School of Law, University of Oregon, Portland, Oregon 1891. Harlan. School of Law, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 1893. Swan. Law Department, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 1893. McClain, Law Department, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 1895. Lincoln. College of Law, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 1896. Osgoode. Law School of Upper Canada, Toronto 1896. Fuller. Chicago-Kent College of Law. Chicago, Illinois 1897. Miller. Law Department, Leland Stanford Jr. University, Palo Alto, Cal. 1897. Green. School of Law, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 1899. Comstock, College of Law, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 1899. Dwight, New York Law School, 35 Nassau Street, New York City 1900. Foster, Law Department, University of Indiana, Bloomington, Indiana 1901. Ranney. Western Reserve Law School, Cleveland, Ohio 1901. Langdeil, Law Department, University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois 1902. Brewer, School of Law, University of Denver, Denver, Colorado 1903. Douglas, L ' niversity of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 185 Stanford Quad 1908 Delta Chi Stanford Chapter, Established May 19, 1905 Frater in Facultate Arthur Martin Cathcart, A.B., A T Fratres in Universitate Graduates Nathaniel Forsyth Bradley, A.B. Earl Lamb, A.B. Jesse Eugene Campbell, A.B. Edward Joseph McGovern LL.B. James Roy Choate, A.B. Donald Seibert, A.B. Ward Huey Wheeler, B.S. 1907 Rush Maxwell Blodget William Archy Campbell Clay Russell Crider Irving Deane Gibson Guy Knupp John Shepard Mitchell Earl Harriman Pier Samuel Hatch Pierce Thomas Edgar Robinson Lee Thornton Ross John Elmer Stewart Frank Swart William Henry Tucker Royle Angelo Carter Wallis Fearnside Eastham Ralph Kerr Marshall 1908 Lloyd Newland John Franklin Reilly Robert McKinney Hofer, Sp., S X Paul Stewart 186 X m aPH -Cfl €S . T ' H ' Delta Chi rf ' ' Founded at Cornell University, October 13, 1890 1908 Chapter Roll Cornell. Cornell University New York, New York University Minnesota, University of Minnesota Michigan, University of Michigan Dickinson, Dickinson University Northwestern, Northwestern University Chicago-Kent, Chicago-Kent Law School Buffalo, University of Buffalo Osgoode Hall, Osgoode Hall of Toronto Syracuse, Syracuse University Union, Albany Law School, Union University West Virginia, University of West Virginia Ohio State, Ohio State University New York Law, New York Law School Chicago, University of Chicago Georgetown, Georgetown University Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania Virginia, University of Virginia Stanford, Leland Stanford Junior University Washington, Washington University Alumni Chapters Chicago, III. New York, N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y. 189 Stanford Quad 1908 Sigma XI Stanford Chapter Officers President Vice-President . . Recording Secretary . Corresponding Secretary Treasurer . . . . Le Roy Abrams R. E. Allardice Frank Angell H. F. Blichfeldt J. C. Branner W. E. Burke D. H. Campbell W, R. DOANE E. R. Drew W. R. Dudley W. F. DURAND W. R. EcKART, Jr. W. K. Fisher E. C. Franklin Harold Heath H. B. Humphrey D. S. Jordan V. L. Kellorg W. A. Manning Members W F Durand . . J. R. Slonaker Walter K. Fisher . R. E. Swain H. C. Moreno Miss L. J. Martin C. D. Marx G. H. Marx P. J. Mitchell H. C, Moreno J. F. Newson G. J. Peirce A. F. Rogers F. J. Rogers H. J. Ryan S. Shedd J. R. Slonaker J. P. Smith J. O. Snyder E. C. Starks J. M. Stillman R. E. Swain C. B. Wing 190 ■ «a s Stanford - 1908 Phi Beta Kappa Officers President . Vernon Lyman Kellogg (Kansas) Samuel Swayze Seward, Jr. (Columbia) . Arthur Martin Cathcart, ' 96 Secrctarj ' • Orrin Leslie Elliott (Cornell) Treasurer ... John Pearce Mitchell, ' 03 Vice-Presidents I Faculty Members Ray.mond Macdonald Alden (Pennsylvania) Lee Emerson Bassett, ' 01 William Dinsmore Briggs, ' 96 Henry Lewin Cannon (Western Reserve) Arthur Martin Cathcart, ' 96 William .Alpha Cooper (Marietta) Alvin Joseph Cox, ' 01 Melvin Gilbert Dodge (Hamilton) Clyde .Augustus Duniway (Cornell) Homer Price Earle, ' 04 Orrin Leslie Elliott (Cornell) Jefferson Elmore, ' 95 Henry Rushton Fairclough (Johns Hopkins) Benjamin Oliver Foster, ' 95 Edward Curtis Franklin (Kansas) Henry ' David Gray (Colgate) Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld (California) David Starr Jordan Vernon Lyman Kellogg (Kansas) William Albert Manning, ' 02 Ernest Whitney Martin (Chicago) John Ernst Matzke (Johns Hopkins) John Pearce Mitchell, ' 03 Augustus Taber Murray (California) Henry Wellington Rolfe (Amherst) Samuel Swayze Sew. rd, Jr. (Columbia) Macy Millmore Skinner (Harvard) Stanley Smith, ' 03 Henry Suzzallo. ' 99 Robert Eckles Swain, ' 99 Albert Conser Whitaker, ' 99 Other Resident Members William George Bateman, ' 07 Arthur Rosenfeld, ' 07 Charles Alexander Beardsley, ' 06 Donald Kingsland Seibert, ' 05 Grace Mims Brown, ' 02 Gertrude Mary Smith, ' 04 AitTHtni Ransford Fletcher, ' 06 Minna Stillman, ' 03 Rachel Rose Hiller, ' 06 Helen Thoburn, ' 07 Charlotte Mabel Lord, ' 02 Walter Yeeling Wentz, ' 06 Edith R. Mirrielees, ' 07 Ray Lyman Wilbur, ' 95 191 Stanford Quad 1908 Kappa Alpha Theta Phi Chapter, Established at University of Pacific, April 4, Transferred to Stanford University, January, 1892 Sorores in Urbe Lydia W. Bodley, Alpha Edith Basye Price, Alpha Julia Gilbert, Beta Florence Hughes, Beta Elizabeth G. Hughes, Beta Adelaide Perry Newsom, Beta Alberta Perry Kelley, Beta Helen Van Uxem Cubberley, Beta Harriet G. Marx, Iota Gertrude Van Duxen Marx, Iota Bertha Colt Rolfe, Iota Maida Rossiter, Iota Clelia Mosher, Psi Martha Haven, Phi Pearle Green, Phi Letitia Patterson, Phi Frances D. Patterson, Phi Elsie Shelley Hea th, Phi Dora Moody Williams, Phi Minna Stillman, Phi Elizabeth Hocue, Phi Barbara Hitt Alden, Phi Clara Stevenson, Phi Alice Meyer, Phi Sorores in Universitate 1907 Ellen Smith Stadtmuller Karoline Silliman Hammond Georgina Lyman Mary Hutchins Alice Agnes Hutchins Mary Caroline Baker Ruth Edna Robertson Vita Vincent Florence Cotton Burrell Edna Alice Barlow Maybei.le Bertha Barlow 1908 1909 1910 Helen Green Georgiana Wallser Gilbert Elsie Branner Kathryn Lee Culver Anna Louise Perring Vera Reppy Hazel Maud White Winifred Milspaugh Helen Monroe 192 Kappa Alpha Theta Founded at DePauw University, January 27, 1870 Stanford Quad 1908 Chapter Roll Iota, Cornell University Lambda, University of Vermont Sigma, University of Toronto Chi, Syracuse University Alpha Beta, Swarthmore College Alpha Delta, Woman ' s College of Bal- timore Alpha Epsilon, Brown University Alpha Zeta, Barnard College Alpha, De Pauw University Beta, University of Indiana Epsilon, Wooster University Eta, University of Michigan Mu, Allegheny College Pi, Albion College Gamma, Butler College Alpha Gamma, University of Ohio Alpha Eta, Vanderbilt University Delta, University of Illinois Kappa, University of Kansas Rho, University of Nebraska Tau, Northwestern University Upsilon, University of Minnesota Alpha Iota, Washington University Alpha Theta, University of Texas Phi, Stanford University Omega, University of California Alumni Associations Uamma, New York City Nu, Syracuse, N. Y. Eta, Burlington, Vt. Kappa, Pittsburg, Pa. Epsilon, Columbus, O. Mu, Cleveland, O. Lambda, Athens, O. Zeta, Indianapolis, Ind. Alpha, Greencastle, Ind. Beta, Minneapolis, Minn. Delta, Chicago, 111. Xi, Kansas City, Mo. Iota, Los Angeles, Calif. Colors: Black and Gold Flower: Black and Yellow Pansy 193 Stanford Quad igo8 Kappa Kappa Gamma Beta Eta Chapter, Established June 10, 1892 Sorores in Urbe Edna Wallace Cathcart, Mu Loretta B. Hart, Alpha Minnie Sullivan, Pi Soror in Facultate Theresa Russell, Beta Zeta Maria Mercedes dk Luna Beth Hughson Margaret Murta Miriam Alice Harris Hazel Claire Maddox Adeline Wright Emily Johnson Francis Burkhalter Addie Larkins Sorores in Universitate 1907 Claudine Cotton Hazel Dell Burge 1908 May Alice Cunningham Ethel Wallace . Jean Henry 1909 1910 Sarah Helen Starr Florence Ridgway Berry Ruth Evelyn Maddox Marion Du Bois Alexine Mitchell Marion Mitchell Lillian McLaine Farnsworth 194 Stanford fvappa Is appa L amma Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 1908 Chapter Roll Phi, Boston University Beta Epsilon, Barnard Q)llege Psi, Cornell University Beta Tau, Syracuse University Beta Alpha, University of Pennsylvania Beta Iota, Swarthmore College Gamma Rho, Allegheny College Lambda, Buchtel College Beta Gamma, Wooster University Beta Nu, Ohio State University Beta Delta, University of Michigan Xi, Adrian College Kappa, Hillsdale College Delta, Indiana State University Iota, DePauw University Mu, Butler College Eta, University of Wisconsin Beta Lambda, University of Illinois Upsilon, Xorthwestern University Epsilon, Illinois Wesleyan University Chi, University of Minnesota Beta Zeta, University of Iowa Theta, University of Missouri Sigma, University of Xebraska Omega, University of Kansas Beta Mu, University of Colorado Beta Xi, University of Texas Pi, University of California Beta Eta, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta Omicron, Tulane University Beta Pi, University of Washington Colors : Dark and Light Blue Flower : Fleur-de-lis 195 Stanford Quad 1908 Pi Beta Ph 1 California Alpha Chapter, Established September 13, 1893 Sorores in Urbe Frances Rand Smith Effie Scott Franklin Harriette Miles Hermine Haines Gabel Helen Binninger Sutliff Sorores in Universitate 1907 Laura Ruth Adkinson May Franklin Elamae Lambert Elizabeth Officer Louise Pearce Ethel C. Duncan Alice H. Gabel Marjorie H. Little Olga Adams May Brunton Bonnie Carter Mildred Hadley 1909 Frances C. Hen king Ruth E. Lewis Rubie Roberts Ruth Sterne Della Thompson 196 p, Beta Phi irr Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 igo8 Alpha Province Vermont Alpha, Middlebury College Pennsylvania Gamma, Dickinson Col- Vermont Beta, University of Vermont lege Columbia Alpha, George Washington New York Alpha, Syracuse University University New York Beta, Barnard College Pennsylvania Alpha, Swarthmore Col- Massachusetts Alpha, Boston University lege Maryland Alpha, Woman ' s College of Pennsylvania Beta, Bucknell University Baltimore Beta Province Ohio Alpha, University of Ohio Indiana Alpha, Franklin College Ohio Beta, Ohio State University Indiana Beta, University of Indiana Illinois Beta, Lombard College Indiana Gamma, Butler College Illinois Delta. Knox College Michigan Alpha, Hillsdale College Illinois Epsilon, Northwestern Univer- Michigan Beta. University of Michigan sity Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wis- Illinois Zeta, University of Illinois consin Gamma Province Iowa Alpha, Iowa Wesleyan University Kansas Alpha, Kansas University Iowa Beta, Simpson College Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri Iowa Gamma, Iowa State College Nebraska Beta, University of Nebraska Iowa Zeta, Iowa State University Louisiana Alpha, Newcomb College Minnesota Alpha. University of Minne- Texas Alpha, University of Texas seta Delta Province Colorado Alpha, University of Colorado California Beta, University of California Colorado Beta. Denver University Washington Alpha, University of Wash- California Alpha. Leland Stanford Jr. ington University Colors: Wine and Silver Blue Flower : Wine-colored Carnation 197 Stanford Quad 1908 Delta Gamma Upsilon Chapter, Established March 6, 1897. Soror in Urbe Alice Windsor Kimball Sorores in Universitate 1907 Jessie Duff McGilvray Eudora Beaufort Bundy Mercile Win slow Edna Robotham. Elizabeth Julia Crumby 1908 Julia Derby Ella Naomi Hill Edna Lucile Brown Lucy Elizabeth Howell Beatrice Gavagan Genevieve Helen Thornley Elizabeth Hislop AURANIA EllERBECK Maud Huntsberger Mae Browne Mary Guyer Hill Jessie Caroline Morgan 1909 1910 Marjorie Jennison Maude Teresa Howell Hazel Tomblin 198 Dl. « Stanford elta Uamma q Founded at the University of Mississippi, 1872 1908 Chapter Roll Alpha, Mount Union College Zeta, Albion College Eta, Buchtel College Kappa, University of Nebraska Psi, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Chi, Cornell University Phi, University of Colorado Tau, University of Iowa Sigma, Northwestern University Xi, University of Michigan Lambda, University of Minnesota Omega, University of Wisconsin Theta, University of Indiana Rho, Syracuse University Upsilon, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta, University of Washington Alumnae Associations Psi Omicron, Baltimore Omega Alpha, Omaha Kappa Theta, Lincoln Chi Upsilon, New York Colors : Bronze Pink and Blue. Flower: Marechal Niel Rose. 199 Stanford Quad 1908 Alpha Phi 1 Kappa Chapter, Established May 20, 1899 Sorores in Urbe Constance Smith Hyde, Beta Clara Earle Lanagan, Kappa Carolyn Edwards Hall, Kappa Margaret Post, Kappa Mary Ishbel Lockey, Kappa Katherine Loeser, Kappa Sorores in Universitate 1906 Ethel B. Hall Charlotte Elliott Florence Foy Bertha Burnham Bootes Esther Stuart Stevens Eva Pearsall Alida Vail Laura Wells Hazel Johnston 1907 Florette Hodgdon Ila Lee Johnston David A French Margaret Ogier 1908 Carolyn Rowell Smith Mabelle Frances Osborne Alice Louise Roedel 1909 Mercedes Huffman Grace Coolidge Dorothea Macpherson 1910 Mary Bolton Post Anna Shumate 200 Alpha Phi Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 1908 Stanford Quad Chapter Roll Alpha, Syracuse University Beta, Northwestern University Gamma, DePauw University Delta, Gjrnell University Epsilon, University of Minnesota Zeta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Eta, Boston University Theta, University of Michigan Iota, University of Wisconsin Kappa, Leland Stanford Jr. University Lambda, University of California Iota, University of California Mu, Barnard College Nu, University of Nebraska Xi, University of Toronto Alumnae Associations Chicago Central New York Boston Minnesota New York City Southern Western New York Colors : Bordeaux and Silver Gray. Flowers : Lily of the Valley and Forget-me-not. 201 Stanford Quad 1908 Gamma Phi Beta Mil Chapter, Established January 9, 1905 Soror in Urbe Marian Junkins Skinner Ruth Hughes Gilbert Helen Thoburn Mabel Sabrina Gray Florence Forbes Sorores in Universitate Postgraduates Emma Eulalie Charlebois 1907 Elise Dorrance Owen Pauline Gartzmann 1908 Winifred Gilbert 1909 Edna Earle Grace Rachel Beard Jeanette Cole 1910 Ethel Rebecca Palmer Sarah Elizabeth Bundy Laura Eliot Dudley Norine Graves Gertrude Gardner Brainerd Helen Annette Lewis Winifred Higgins 202 Gamma Phi Beta Stanford Quad Founded November 11, 1874 1908 Chapter Roll Alpha, Syracuse University Beta, University of Michigan Gamma, University of Wisconsin Delta, Boston College Epsilon, Northwestern University Zeta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Eta, University of California Theta, University of Denver Iota, Barnard College Kappa, University of Minnesota Lambda, University of Washington Mu, Leland Stanford Jr. University Alumnae Associations Syracuse Boston New York Chicago Milwaukee San Francisco Colors : Mode and Brown. Flower : Carnation. 203 Stanford Quad 1908 Pan-Hellenic Association of Women Organized at Stanford University, January 19, 1896 Membership All women of national Greek letter fraternities are eligible to membership. Fraternities Represented Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Kap pa Gamma ■ Pi Beta Phi Delta Gamma Alpha Phi Gamma Phi Beta Executive Committee President Elise Owen, r B Secretary Alice Roedel, A Treasurer Louise Pearce, II B Ethel Wallace, K K r Edna Brown, A V Elsie Branner, K A e 204 , . ■-4, -A From the Chaparral. Honor Societies Stanford Quad 1908 Members Frank Angell Max Farrand D. D. Sales E. A. CUNHA p. C. Edwards B. S. Allen O. K. Grau K. A. BiCKEL G. O. Spurrier A. J. Chalmers H. P. BlTTNER E. P. Stott J. C. Macfarland C. F. Laumeister F. Zimmerman G. J. Presley 208 Active Members John Cobb Macfarland Georce Joseph Presley Edmund Plowden Stott Stanford Quad 1908 Alumni Members Frank R. Dray O. V. Eaton John James Hollister Martin Herbert Kennedy Tracey George Russell Hugh H. Brown Robert Willis Campbell Joseph Paul Fife John Tarn McGrew Maurice Morrison W. L. McLaine Harry T. Poindexter Wilson Clark Price John Mason Ross Chester A. Thomas Lewis S. Beedy George H. Francis Wilson C. McNeil Eugene Y. Sayer Edward C. Sewell Roy N. Strohn Paul E. Walker Harry S. Sladen h. w. durrell Ray Everett Smith T. T. C. Gregory Henry Taylor Brantly Jean A. Van Kaatoven Milnor Roberts F. B. Braden George Lewis Seward Chester Griffin Murphy William C arr Morrow Charles Edward Gilman Phillip Kingsworth Gilman Frank Allen Leib David Cowden Frank Bennett John Kester Bonnell Charles Abraham Cantwell Reginald Goodwin Fernald Walter Benedict Barnhj ' ,el Clarence H. Crawford Carl Shelby McNaught Cleveland Hall Baker L. P. Bansbach George H. Clark Wilfred H. Dole P. J. Treat Louis R. Weinmann Rudolph C. Bertheau George Hodge 209 Stanford Quad 1908 SKYLLAND SNAICLS Members f QNaSON E. D. Adams A. H. Suzzaixo V. L. Kellogg 1906 0. K. Grau W. E. Lyons P. C. Edwards J. N. Stanford B. S. Allen 1907 H. P. Daily K. A. BiCKEL A. J. Chalmers J. C. Ray F. Zimmerman D. D. Slusher P. W. King H. Fitch S. B. Thompson C. F. Laumeister A. L. Taylor 1908 G. J. Presley E. J. Swift C. C. McCoi.loch J. E. Gushing E. J. Hadley F. A. CURTIN L. R. Gay K. L. Fenton J, R. Pembkrton E. N. Smith R. H. CONANT W. Koerner W. F. Herron J. H. Bell 210 Stanford Quad 1908 (Q Q mm Honorary Members Mrs. J. C. Branner Mrs. H. J. Ry. n Mrs. C. a. Duniway 1906 Alice Sedonie Hayes Jane McCormick Spalding Emma Hayward Kaleneorn Mary Thornly Graham Julia Salter Boynton Nora Kathleen Dunn Mary Hazel Pedlar Florence Mary Grace Mary Elizabeth Betz Edith Ronald Mirrielees Estella Frances Wynne Myrtle Leonore Timmons 1907 Ellen Smith Stadtmuller Elizabeth Logan Officer Emma Florette Hodgdon Jessie Duff McGilvray Hazel Wood Severy Calla Claire Pedlar Elamae Lambert Claribel Bryant Louise Norvell Iva Myrtle Miller Elise Dorrance Owen Pauline Gartzmann Mary Louise Squire Elsie Branner 1908 Julia Derby Mary Caroline Baker 212 From the Chaparral. Organizations Stanford Quad 1908 Associated Students of Stanford University President , . C. F. Laumeister, ' 07 Vice-President JS. B. Thompson, ' 07 Secretary C. R. Crider, ' 07 Graduate Manager D. D. Sales, ' 06 Executive Committee H. Rhyne, ' 07 J. E. CUSHING, 08 T. R. Cadwalader, tJ. O. Miller, ' 08 ■ H. Fitch, ' 07 J. H. Bell, ' 08 C. E. Sampson, ' 09 tG. J. Presley, ' 07 ' 09 First Semester. t Second Semester. Resigned March 26. t Elected president to fill unexpired term. 216 PRE ffJENTj-iC ONFERENCElQ) Stanford Quad 1908 President ' s Conference of Young Men Skull and Snakes Ben Allen Japanese Students Shohachi Anju Nestoria C. A. Beardsley Phi Gamma Delta F. Zimmerman Euphronia N. P. Bryan Delta Chi William A. Campbell Phi Delta Theta A. J. Chalmers Phi Delta Phi Edward A. Cunha Chi Psi J. E. CusHiNG Acacia James R. Dillon Quadrangle Club F. Zimmerman Theta Delta Chi. William W. Edwards Sigma Chi R. C. Quertermous Phi Kappa Psi Frank A. Fisher Press Club { J ° ' - ? ' 5« I tC O. Atwood Palo Alto Students. First Semester, t Second Semester. Beta Theta Phi Leslie R. Gay Sigma Alpha Epsilon F. B. Goudy Delta Upsilon Roy S. Kellogg Sigma Nu Walter P. Kelly Encina Club Guy Knupp Zeta Psi J. C. Macfarland Delta Tau Delta K. T. Moore Delta Kappa Epsilon. .. .A. B. Packard Encina Club George J. Presley Encina Club C. R. Crider Y. M. C. A C. E. Spaulding Kappa Alpha Charles E. Stagner S - Wearers E. P. Stott Social Service Club.. Walter Y. Wentz Kappa Sigma S. B. Thompson Sword and Sandals J. E. Stewart ...Lloyd Newland President ' s Conference of Young Women Social Service Club Elsie Branner Woman ' s Athletic Association May Dunn Roble Club Alice Cooper Roble Club Maude Turner Roble Club Hazel Severy Gamma Phi Beta. Pauline Gartzmann Delta Gamma Alice Kimball Pi Beta Phi Elizabeth Officer Y. W. C. A Gertrude Smith First Semester, t Second Semester. Madrono Hall Mary L. Squire Kappa Alpha Theta. Ellen Stadtmuller Aloha Phi I . . URA Wells I tMargaret Ogier Cap and Gown IvA Miller Palo Alto I Matilda BiLLE I Adele Meyer Out of Town Jennet Johnson At Large | . Claire Pedlar I Josephine Randall 217 Stanford Quad 1908 Officers First Semester President J. X. Stanford, ' 06 Secretary , J. B. Holly, ' 06 Treasurer M. C. Burr, ' 07 Directors M. C. Burr, ' 07 J. B. Holly, ' 06 L. Halloran, ' 08 M. R. Colwell, ' 08 J. McGregor, ' 09 E. E. Young, ' 09 Second Semester President G. Knupp, ' 07 Secretary W. H. Masters, ' 09 Treasurer W. Fay, ' 07 W. Fay, ' 07 A. A. Murphy, ' 08 W. H. Masters, ' 09 C. F. Ganong, ' 10 Directors J. D. Phelps, ' 07 H. H. Fitting, ' 08 E. P. Tallant, ' 09 K. S. Mackenzee, ' 10 House Committee H. K. Savage, ' 07 G. Knupp, 07 J, F. Reilly, ' 08 W. C. Theile, ' 08 J. E. Stewart, ' 07 tE. A. NissoN, ' 07 C. C. Johnson, ' 08 tC. N. Leach, ' 08 First Semester. t Second Semester. J. N. STANFORD, ' 06 218 G. KNUPP. 07 Stanford Quad igo8 Officers First Semester. President Iva Miller, ' 07 Treasurer Jean E. Clithero, ' 08 Secretary Ruth Blodget, ' 09 Senior Director Edith McGeorgf Junior Director Lenna J. Warmoth Sophomore Director Mary Hayden Freshman Director May Bailiff Second Semester. President Edith McGeorge, ' 07 Treasurer Lenna J. Warmoth, 08 Secretary Effie Gillett, 09 Senior Director Louise Norvell Junior Director Effie Murdock Sophomore Director Fay McKinley Freshman Director Alice Chapman 220 Stanford Quad 1908 Sword and Sandals Officers President J. E. Stewart, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer F. H. Bernard, ' 07 Stage Manager E. J. Swift, ' 08 Warden of Properties J. M. Ward, ' 07 Members D. D. Sales, ' 06 P. C. Edwards, ' 06 R. S. Kellogg, ' 07 E. R. May, ' 06 J. C. Ray, ' 07 W. M. Walker, ' 08 Honorary Members L. E. Bassett S. S. Seward 221 Stanford Quad igo8 Press Club Officers President B. S. Allen, ' 07 Vice-President P. C. Edwards, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer C. G. Atwood, ' 07 Toastmaster K. A. Bickel. ' 07 Members B. S. Allen, ' 07 S. M. Salisbury, ' 07 P. C. Edwards, ' 07 J. E. Gushing, ' 08 C. G. Atwood, ' 07 W. E. Herron, ' 08 K. A. Bickel, ' 07 F. A. Curtin, ' 08 G. O. Spurrier, ' 07 E. J. Hadley, ' 08 H. P. BiTTNER, ' 07 P. B. Delano, ' 08 H. Pitch, ' 07 D, H. Eerry, ' 08 E. X. Smith, ' 08 Resigned 222 Stanford Quad 1908 Stanford Gymnasium Club Officers First Semester President J. A. Cutting, Gr. Secretary-Treasurer . . P. E. Millar, ' 07 Second Semester President F. K. Wyatt, ' 09 Secretary-Treasurer B. R. Brooke, ' 07 Members Dr. C. W. McCowen, Penn. ' 02 Dr. W. F. Snow, ' 99 B. R. Brooke, ' 07 J. A. Cutting, ' 07 P. W. King, ' 07 P. E. Millar, ' 07 G. J. Presley. ' 07 H. A. Wyckoff, ' 07 J. F. Chapman, ' 08 H. A. Gilman, ' 08 R. R. Long. ' 08 F. K. Wyatt, ' 09 E. G. McCann, ' 10 A. F. Meston, ' 10 223 Stanford Quad 1908 Foil and Mask Officers First Semester President R- H. Baker, ' 08 Secretary-Treasurer P. E. Millar, ' 07 Second Semester President .... P. E. Millar, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer R. L. MoTZ, ' 07 Members R. H. Baker, ' 08 J. J. Hill, ' 08 J. S. Mitchell, ' 07 H. W. Reed, ' 07 P. B. Delano, ' 08 P. E. Millar, ' 07 R. L. Motz, ' 07 H. A. Wyckoff, ' 07 224 Stanford Quad 1908 Stanford Chess Club Officers President L. Newland, ' 08 Secretary-Treasurer . . . T. T. Bennett, ' 08 Members J. E. Carpenter, ' 08 F. L. Wilde, ' 10 A. G. MoTT, ' 07 S. B. Show, ' 09 C. E. Spaulding, ' 06 W. F. Herron, ' 08 C. J. Chandler, ' 08 T. R. W. F. FiGC-HoBLYN, ' 08 W. M. Davidson, ' 10 L. Newland, ' 08 T. T. Bennett, ' 08 W. P. Fuller, Jr., ' 10 E. H. Richardson, ' 09 Members of 1906 Intercollegiate Chess Team F. E. Which G. E. Dole M. M. Stearns L. N ' ewland H. W. Strong E. Billman T. T. Bennett S. B. Show, Alternate 225 Stanford Quad igo8 English Club Officers First Semester President K. A. Bickel, ' 07 Vice-President Miss E. R. Mirrielees, ' 06 Secretary-Treasurer P. B. Dfxano, ' 08 Executive Committee 1 lie Officers above named and Professor S. S. Seward E. J. Hapley, ' 08 Miss H. Thoburn, ' 07 P. C. Edwards, ' 07 B. S. Allen, ' 07 Second Semester President ' B. S. Allen, ' 07 Vice-President fMiss Davida French, ' 07 Secretary- Treasurer Miss H. Thoburn, ' 07 Executive Committee Tlie Officers named above and Professor L. E. Bassett E. N. Smith, ' 08 E. J. Hadley, ' 08 P. B. Delano, ' 08 Members Undergraduates B. S. Allen, ' 07 Miss D. C. French, ' 07 Miss E. L. Officer, ' 07 V. F. Bellows, ' 09 Miss P. Gartzmann, ' 07 Miss C. Pedlar. ' 07 H. P. Bittner, ' 07 Miss H. Green, ' 08 H. L. Rixford, ' 09 K. A. Bickel, ' 07 Miss R. H. Gilbert, ' 06 G. O. Spurrier. ' 07 Miss E. L. Buckingham, ' 08 J. K. Hutchinson, ' 09 Miss E. S. Stevens, ' 08 D. H. Clift, ' 07 Miss A. G. Hall, ' 07 E. N. Smith, ' 08 Miss A. Crawford, ' 08 R. S. Harris, ' 08 J. N. Stanford, ' 07 J. E. Gushing, ' 08 W. F. Herron, ' 08 Miss H. Thoburn, ' 07 F. a. Curtin, ' 08 E. J. Hadley, ' 08 P. F. Valentine, ' 08 P. B. Delano, ' 08 Miss E. R. Mirrielees, ' 06 Miss L. Wells, ' 09 Miss A. Ellerbeck, ' 08 Miss I. Miller, ' 07 D. H. Walker, Jr., ' 09 H. Fitch, ' 07 L. S, Levy, ' 08 W. Y. Wentz, ' 07 Graduates A. J. Newcomer H. W. Rolfe H. D. Gray R. M. Alden W. D. Briggs H. J. Hall L. E. Bassett F. A. Manchester S. S. Seward M. B. Anderson V. L. Kellogg H. P. Earle D. C. Gardner Faculty Miss L. J. Culver Miss R. L. Kimball Miss B, K. Freeman ' - - Miss E. A. Needles Miss M. F. Haven .ss A, W. Kimball j Fletcher Honorary President Jordan Mrs. O. L. Elliott Miss M. I. Lockey Resigned. t Elected President to fill unexpired term. 226 Tertulia Espanola Officers President Haines W. Reed, ' 06 Vice-President Miss M. Hyatt, ' 08 Secretary-Treasurer F. W. Crawford, ' 09 Members C. G. Allen I. Melczer, ' 08 Miss E. G. Beard, ' 07 Miss C. C. Pedlar, ' 07 Miss P. B. Botts, ' 09 A. A. Preciado, ' 09 Miss E. S. Burritt, ' 08 Miss M. M. Seybolt, ' 08 Miss M. M. de Luna, ' 07 C. Sferlazzo, ' 09 H. P. Earle W. C. Shelton, ' 08 C. F. El WELL, ' 07 E. H. Skinner, Graduate Miss S. G. Fleisher G. C. Smith, ' 09 Miss J. E. Herron, ' 06 Miss M. S. Smith, ' 07 W. A. Manning Miss G. H. Thornley, ' 08 Miss A. Wright, ' 10 Stanford Quad igo8 Der Deutsche Verein Von Stanford University Officers President Chas. Reining, ' 09 Secretarj ' -Treasurer Miss E. McGeorge, ' 07 Members Miss M. E. Rawdon, Gr Miss A. M. Bille. ' 07 Miss A. Meyer, ' 07 Miss E. A. Wright, ' 08 Miss C. Bryant, 07 Miss B. Philippi. ' 07 Miss A. Gabel, ' 07 Miss Stauf, ' 07 Miss E. Beard, ' 07 Miss I. M. Miller, ' 07 Miss H. T. Thompson, ' 10 Miss E. E. Rowe, ' 08 Miss A. M. Robbins, ' 09 J. A. de Haas, ' 08 H. Peters, ' 07 H. p. Bittner, ' 07 E. G. ScHAUPP. ' 08 J. W. Smith, ' 08 Honorary Members Prof. K. G. Rendtdorff Prof. W. A. Cooper H. B. Humphrey Prof. K. L. Curtis Prof. George Hempl Mrs. K. G. Rendtdorff B. Boezinger Mrs. H. B. Humphrey 227 Stanford Quad 1908 GEDL-OGICAL lEZTY J.e.Cr- SC Of American Universities Stanford Section Officers President B. R. Saunders, ' 07 Vice-President R. Crandall, ' 07 Secretary H. Rhyne, ' 07 Treasurer R. N. Ferguson, ' 07 Members D. Slusher, ' 07 L. W. Barbur, ' 07 C. W. Henderson, ' 07 L. J. Mayreis, ' 07 W. H. OCHSNER, ' 07 H. F. Beckwith, ' 07 C. B. Osborne, ' 07 V. H. WiLHELM, ' 07 B. Prescott, ' 08 J. R. Pemberton, ' 08 A. C. Luhrs, ' 08 F. W. Turner, ' 08 E. A. SopER, ' 08 C. A. Randall, ' 08 C. I. Chandler, ' 08 Honorary Members Dr. J. C. Branner Dr. J. P. Smith Dr. J. F. Nevvsom Prof. D. A. Lyon Prof. A. F. Rogers 228 Stanford Quad 1908 The Chemical Society of Stanford University Organized December 4, 1906 Officers President W. G. Bateman, ' 07 Vice-President D. R. Hoac.land, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer J. M. Price, ' 07 Executive Council W. G. Bateman, ' 07 J. M. Price, ' 07 D. R. Hoagland, ' 07 J. P. Mitchell, ' 03 L. Langstroth, ' 08 Members J. P. Mitchell, ' 03 D. M. Greer, ' 05 B. W. Crandall, ' 06 H. L. Thompson, ' 06 W. G. Bateman, ' 07 A. F. GiLMAN, ' 07 D. R. Hoagland. ' 07 J. M. Price, ' 07 N. E. Shutt. ' 07 H. H. Ross. ' 07 J. F. Ellis, ' 08 L. Langstroth. ' 08 E. W. Rice. ' 07 Honorary Members Prof. J. M. Stillman Prof. L. R. Lenox Prof. S. W. Young Prof. E. C. I- ' ranklin Prof. R. E. Swain W. H. Sloan 230 H-EDVCATION-CLVB ' Stanford Quad 1908 Organized September 22. 1906 The Education Club is an organization primarily instituted to generate the aims and interests of the department under which it is formed. Officers President . Secretary-Treasurer E. E. Lewis, Gr. E. B. Dykes, ' 09 Executive Committee C. C. Hill, ' 08 A. M. Croop, ' 08 J. S. Bayley, ' 10 Charter Members J. Fred Smith G. S. Wells George W. McIntyre J. P. Rawson J. W. Meyers J. S. Bayley S. W. Brower VV. R. McDonald William Baker C. C. Hill J. B. Sears E. E. Lewis A. M. Croop E. B. Dykes E. R. Snyder 231 Stanford Quad 1908 Stanford Physiology Club Officers President . Secretary-Treasurer S. R. Downing, ' 06 A. ROSENFELD, ' 07 Members A. J. Chalmers. ' 07 G. C. CoE, ' 08 I. Dillon, ' 07 J. R. Dillon, ' 07 W. T. McNeil, ' 07 D. N. Richards, ' 07 H. E. RUGGLES, ' 07 C. E. Stagner, ' 07 H. A. Wyckoff, ' 06 J. Q. Young, ' 07 W. T. Young, ' 07 232 Stanford Quad igo8 .oology lUD Officers President . . . . H. O. Jenkins, ' 07 pr tarv- ' Prpjmurer ; . . . J. X. Procter, ' 07 OC .l Cldl y 1 1 CaoUi tl . Members W. F. Derby, ' 07 Miss J. D. Randall, ' 08 Miss C. Elliott, ' 07 Miss O. L. Rowell, ' 08 Miss R. M. Hici.ey, ' 07 E. V. Warren, ' 08 T. KiMURA, ' 07 S. S. Berry, ' 09 Miss W. G. Lord. ' 07 Miss M. C. Burke, ' 09 J. M. Miller, ' 07 Miss E. A. Foshay, ' 09 Miss M. Ocier, ' 07 Miss G. E. Hadden, ' 09 Miss R. Richmond. ' 07 Miss H. C. Maddox. ' 09 C. V. Burke, ' 07 Y. Manabe, ' 09 J. X. Procter, ' 07 Miss R. .A.. Roberts, ' 09 H. O. Jenkins, ' 07 F. W. Weymouth, ' 09 Miss M. Hyatt, ' 08 Miss F. Burrell, ' 10 E. A. McGregor, ' 08 Miss H. Flickinger, ' 10 J. I. W. McMuRPHY, ' 08 Miss M. L. MacDonald, ' 10 Miss V C. Vincent , ' 10 Honorary Members Dr. C. H. Gilbert Dr. G. C. Price Dr. H. Heath Prof. J. O. Snyder Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Starks Dr. W. K. Fisher Dr. W. F. Snow Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Humphrey 233 Stanford Quad 1908 Bench and Bar Moot Court Graduate — Founded 1895 Members EnWARD J. MCGOVERN DiAN R. Gardner Rush M. Bloixjf.t Earl Lamb James F. Lanagan J. R. Choate Charles A. Beardsley G. Levin Aynesworth 234 Stanford Quad igoS Arcade Moot Court Undergraduate Members E. A. CuNHA, ' 07 K. T. Moore, W A. D. Larnach, ' 08 S. H. Pierce, ' 07 T. E. Robinson, ' 09 D. D. Sales. ' 06 D. Seibert, Graduate F. Swart, ' 07 235 Stanford Quad 1908 rLfCT Z C fZ. Organized September 28, 1906 Officers Pi ' csicient William L. Dcrand, ' 07 Vice-President Halbert R. Thomas, ' 07 Secretary Ralph A. Hopkins, ' 07 Treasurer George A. Tarbell, ' 07 Executive Committee William L. Durand, ' 07 William C. Paine. ' 07 Ralph A. Hopkins, ' 07 Lewis W. Sowles. ' 07 W. Webster Wilson, ' 07 Everett R, Cottle, ' 07 Warren A. Davis, ' 07 William L. Durand, ' 07 Cyril F. Elwell, ' 07 Louis D. Farnsvvorth, ' 07 Carl A. Ferguson, ' 07 Walter Haynes, ' 07 Lloyd Henley, ' 07 Ralph A. Hopkins, ' 07 William S. Johnson. ' 07 Masaki Kawara, ' 07 Ralph B. Mathews, ' 07 Jesse Members John N. Miano. ' 07 Taiz o Mitoma, ' 07 William C. Paine. ' 07 Frank M. Redman. ' 07 Daniel L. Schaaf. ' 07 Lewis W. Sowles, ' 07 Charles. E. Spaulding. ' 07 George A. Tarbell, ' 07 Alexander A. Terry, ' 07 Halbert R. Thomas, ' 07 W. Webster Wilson, ' 07 Robert S. Woods, ' 07 a. bumgardner, ' 10 Honorary Members Prof. Harris J. Ryan Prof. Kenneth L. Curtis S. B. Charters. Jr. Stanford Quad 1908 Mechanical Engineering Association Organized October 10, 1906 ty lC urf -% Officers First Semester President C. H. Paxton, ' 07 Vice-President R. R. Pratt, W Secretary-Treasurer . . . . T. Barkelew, ' 08 Second Semester President R. R. Pratt, ' 07 Vice-President C. F. Braun, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer . . . . C. C. McKay, ' 08 Members C. H. Paxton, ' 07 W. W. Joukdin, ' 08 R. Topp. ' 07 R. R. Pratt, ' 07 C. C. McKay, ' 08 E. H. Herbert, ' 08 C. F. Braun, ' 07 W. F. Crane, ' 08 J. M. Goodell. ' 08 F. Nakayama, ' 07 Y. T. Frazee, ' 08 P. M. Davis, ' 08 P. C. Hopkins, ' 07 N. D. Cook, ' OS G. Klein, ' 08 L. F. Halloran, ' 08 C. Breer, ' 09 Honorary Members Prof. W. F. Durand Prof. W. R. Eckhart Prof. G. H. Marx C. N. Cross L. E. Cutter Associate Members R. A. Hudson, ' 06 P. L. Bi.oix;et, ex. ' 07 R. D. Howard, ' 06 T. Barkelew, ' 08 Q Stanford Quad 1908 Y. M. C. A. Officers President . . . , C. C. Sanborn, ' 08 Vice-President R. A. Kocher, ' 08 Secretary B. S. Chaffee, ' 08 Treasurer s. S. Smith, ' 07 Cabinet Bible Study Committee W. A. Beattie, ' 07 Social Service E. E. Lewis, ' 07 Missionary H. F. Smith, ' 07 Social C. E. Spaulding, ' 07 Finance S. S. Smith, ' 07 Religious Meetings H. C. Green, ' 08 Membership B. S. Chaffee, ' 08 Y. W. C. A. Officers President Elise Owen, ' 07 Vice-President Mary Baker, ' 08 Recording Secretary Katherine Hazelton, ' 09 Corresponding Secretary Mrs. J. E. McDowell, ' 07 Treasurer . Marv Louise Squire, ' 07 General Secretary Gertrude Smith, ' 04 Cabinet Bible Study Committee Pauline Gartzmann, ' 07 Mission Study  Sadie Gilmore, ' 07 Membership Mary Baker, ' 08 Finance Mary Louise Squire, ' 07 Devotional .... Ruth Lewis, ' 09 Music .... Alice Gabel, ' 07 Poster Sarah Robinson, ' 07 Intercollegiate Mrs. J. E. McDowell, ' 07 Social Service Ada Devendorf, ' 07 Social . Elizabeth Crumby, ' 07 242 Stanford Quad igo8 Japanese Student Association Officers First Semester President S. Anju, ' 07 Kawara, ' 07 MiTOMA, ' 07 Treasurer T. Watanabe, ' 08 Secretary Y. Shibamiya, ' 08 Executive Committee ( M. K I T. M Second Semester Y. ICHIHASHI, ' 07 T. MiTOMA, ' 07 K. Yascda. ' 08 S. MOTOMURA, ' 09 Y. Manabe. ' 09 S. Anju Y. Ichihashi K. Ik A KARA T. Kawai S. Aniya A. HoRi Y. Shibamiya E. Katsumata T. Kobayashi Y. Manabe U. Kawashima Members 1906 T. KiMURA 1907 1908 1909 1910 M. Kawara T. MiTOMA F. Nakayama S. Xohara J. Katakura T. Watanabe K. Yasuda S. MOTOMURA S. Yamakawa K. Yoshida M. Yabe 243 Women ' s League Stanford Quad 1908 Officers President Alice Kimball, ' 04 Vice-President Mrs. David S. Jordan, Secretary ; . . A. E. Shinn, ' 09 Treasurer Shirley Hyatt, ' 06 Executive Committee Mrs. J, C. Braxner IvA Miller, ' 07 Edith McGeorge, ' 07 Irma Zschokke, ' 07 Carolyn E. Hall May Hutchins, ' 08 Ethel Wallace, ' 08 Pauline Gartzmann, ' 07 Temperance Study League Officers President Wm. O. Stuntz, ' 07 Vice-President G. C. McPheeters, ' 10 Treasurer Miss Elizabeth Gerard, ' 08 Secretary R. ?il. Holman, ' 07 The Palo Alto League of Stanford Women Organized January, 1907 President Adele Meyer, ' 07 Secretary Ruth Foster, ' 09 Representative to Women ' s Conference Matild. Bille, ' 08 244 Stanford Social Service Club ' ' Founded Marcli 22, 1906 Officers President Walter Y. Wentz, ' 06 Vice-President Willard E. Lyons, ' 07 Secretary Elsie Branner, ' 07 Treasurer John E. McDowell, ' 00 Executive Committee The Officers named above and Rev. D. Charles Gardner Karl A. Bickel, ' 07 Davioa C. French, ' 07 Prof. H. W. Suzzallo Ben S. Allen, ' 07 Paul C. Edwards, ' 07 Students ' Guild Officers „ . , ( J. N. Stanford, ' 06 P ' I tG. J. Presley, ' 07 Vice-President Miss E. R. Mirriei.ees. ' 06 Treasurer J. C. Macfarland, 07 Secretarj- D. T. Flllaway, ' 07 Committee on Ways and Means Miss E. R. Mirrielees. ' 06. Chairman D. T. Fullaway, ' 07 Prof. R. E. Swain Finance Committee J. C. Macfarland, ' 07, Chairman G. J. Presley, ' 07 Prof. J. O. Griffin Committee on Cases Prof. W. V. Sxow. Chairman J. N. Stanford, ' 06 Stanford Alumni Association President Dennis Searles. ' 95 Secretar ' -Treasurer Charles F. Wright. ' 96 Executive Committee Ray L. Wilbl-r, ' 96, Chairman Dr. T. M. Willia.ms. ' 95 S. W. Collins, ' 95 First Semester t Second Semester 245 igo8 Musi USIC •VAKI). Stanford Quad 1908 Leader S. B. Thompson, ' 07 Manager F. H. Bernard, ' 07 First Tenor J. J. Hill. ' 08 C. C. Marchant. ' 10 E. S. Pridham, ' 07 C. Rand, ' 10 E. J. Swift, ' 08 Second Tenor F. H. Bernard, ' 07 C. B. Bradford, ' 09 B. A. Eby, ' 07 H. S. Hunter, ' 08 F. W. Oliver, Jr., ' 08 S. B. Tho.mpson, ' 07 J. M. Van Deursen, ' 10 R. H. Brown, ' 10 G. N. Cox, ' 10 F. A. Crittenden, ' 07 C. P. Happy, ' 10 Fir.st Bass E. R. MiLLiKiN, (Gr.) O. F. Montgomery, ' 09 E. H. Richard.son. ' 09 J. M. Ward. ' 07 T. W. Ward. ' 10 Second Bass C. D. Hui;hes, ' 08 C. A. Lantz, ' 08 A. W. Morehouse, ' 08 C. E. Sampson. ' 09 E. A. Smith. ' 09 M. Vestal, ' 07 248 Stanford Quad igo8 Mandolin: F. B. GouDY, ' 07 R. B. Mathews, ' 07 G. D. Perry, ' 10 Leader F. R. Lanagan, ' 08 Manager C. A. Ferguson, ' 07 First Mandolins H. D. AlNSWORTH, ' 08 L. G. Avery, ' 10 C. S. Brewster, ' 10 F. W. Dorr, ' 08 F. R. Lanagan, ' 08 R. H. Lyons, ' 09 H. E. RuGCLES, ' 07 G. Wallace, ' 08 Second Mandolins J. K. Branner, ' 09 E. L. COOLIDGE, ' 08 R. GoTT, ' 09 G. B. McLain, ' 07 R. H. Moore, ' 08 S. M. Spaulding, ' 10 Guitars E. H. Richardson, ' 09 J E. K. SopER, ' 08 A. L. Taylor, ' 07 250 Stanford Quad igo8 Qrdh straL University Orchestra Leader E. G. Sheibley. Manager F. W. Turner, Executive Committee H. H. Fitting, ' 08 H. R. Thomas. ' 07 F. K. Wyatt, ' 09 First Violins P. H. Clements, ' 09 J. J. Hill, ' 08 R. GoTT, ' 09 E. G. Sheibley, ' 08 C. L. Bradley, H. G. Hill, ' 09 Second Violins Bass M. Wenk, ' 09 Flutes L. S. Levy, ' 08 W. H. OCHSNER, ' 07 Clarinets H. H. Canterbury, ' 10 A. L. Winter, ' 10 Cornets D. N. Richards, ' 07 F. K. Wyatt, ' 09 Trombones H. H. Fitting, ' 08 H. P. Harrison, ' 10 Horns J. W. Fitting, ' 10 H. G. Keesling, ' 08 Drum F. W. Turner, ' 08 Piano H. R. Thomas, ' 07 252 Stanford Quad 1908 University Band Leader . . . ' . Manager — First Semester Second Semester C. C. Anthony, ' 09 R. A. Beebee, ' 07 D. X. Richards, 07 S. M. Batterson, ' 10 W. D. BURCHAM, ' 09 D. X. Richards. ' 07 G. Knupp. ' 07 H. G. Keesling, ' 08 J. B. BuBii. ' 10 J. W. Fitting, ' 10 E. J. Helslev, ' 10 J. A. KooNTZ, ' 08 B. E. Jenney, ' 08 R. A. Carter, ' 08 Cornets F. K. Wyatt. ' 09 Clnrinets A. L. Winter, ' 10 Piccolo W. H. Ochsner, ' 07 Trombones A. W. Morehouse, ' Oi Tenors Altos H. S. Ross, ' 08 Basses Baritones Drums L. L. Stanley, ' 07 Property Man C. N. Leach, ' 08 254 G. E. SCHUELE, ' 09 L. J. Smallpage, ' 09 A. McD. Stevens, ' 08 H. H. Canterbury, ' 10. R. A. Jones, ' 07 H. H. Fitting, ' 08 E. A. Nisson, ' 07 G. Knupp, ' 07 C. R. Revburn, ' 10 H. G. Keesling, ' 08 VV. W. Ward. ' 07 Stanford Quad 1908 President Secretary-Treasurer Lois Millar, ' 08 Helen Wilkins, ' 08 First Soprano Theda Burnham, ' 10 Georgina Lyman. ' 07 LoiMiA Fay, ' 10 Lois Millar, ' 08 Ruth Foster, ' 09 Bessie Stone, ' 09 Pauline Hayes, ' 10 Helen Wilkins, ' 08 Edna Wilson, (Gr.) Second Soprano Grace Davis, ' 10 Castle Gammon, ' 10 Florence Metzner, ' 10 Effie Murdock, ' 08 Alice Best, ' 08 Grace Dorn, ' 07 Lois Field, ' 10 First Alto Lillian Ramsay, ' 08 Second Alto Irma Zschokke. ' 07 Marian Osgood, ' 09 Jennie Roller, (Gr.) Helen Starr. ' 09 Pansy Woods. ' 10 Cornelia Hanna. ' 10 Eva Hoff, ' 10 Caroline Wassox. ' 08 Hazel White. ' 09 256 Publications ' ■i ' .-.t ' y- ■■■■■■ ' Stanford Quad 1908 Editor Manager The Stanford Quad— Vol. XIV E. J. Hadley W. C. Theile Associate Editors C. L. Bradley H. R. Brown J. E. Gushing Eva E. Dickover D. H. Ferry W. F. Herron R. E. Hodge F. W. Turner Vol Former Editors A. Lewis Vol W. D. Briggs Vol E. M. Hulme Vol F. V. Keesling Vol C. M. Bradley Vol Wallace Irwin Vol H. L. Langnecker .... Vol M. E. McDoUGALD .... Vol R. E. Renaud Vol Isaac Russeli Vol D. M. Reynolds Vol. 11—1905 E. R. May Vol. 12—1906 Year 1—1895 2—1896 3—1897 4—1898 5—1899 6—1900 7—1901 8—1902 9—1903 10—1904 K. A. BlCKEL Vol. 13—1907 C. N. Leach L. S. Levy D. V. Marceau C. C. McCoLLOCH Mabelle F. Osdorn E. N. Smith P. Stewart Former Managers N. G. Buxton J. B. Frankenheimer R. H. Spencer F. M. Ayer F. H. Greenbaum H. H. Taylor H. A. Friedman JL F. McCormick . C. Naramore . A. S. Henley True Van Sickle J. L. Maloy S. M. Salisbury S. S. Smith 260 Stanford Quad 1908 The Stanford Sequoia — Vol. XVI. First Semester Editor-in-Chief Karl A. Bickel Managing Editor H. C. Green Associate Editors Paul C. Edwards Stella F. Wynne Edith R. Mirrielees J. E. Gushing W. F. Herron Assistant Editors Laura Wells Antoinette Grawford J. K. Hutchinson Virgil F. Bellows W. Y. Wentz Anna G. Hall Second Semester Editor-in-Chief W. F. Herron Managing Editor H. G. Green Art Editor Virgil F. Bellows Associate Editors J. E. CUSHING B. S. Allen Laura Wells Antoinette Crawford E. N. Smith Former Editors Vol. 1 — W. Nicholson, ' 92 Vol. 2— R. T. Buchanan, ' 93 Vol. 3— W. P. CHA.VIBERLAIN, 95 Vol. 4— W. W. GuTH. ' 95 Vol. 5— W. J. Xeidig, ' 96 Vol. 6— E. M. HuLME. ' 97 Vol. 7 — Dane Coolidce, ' 98 Vol. 8— Bristow Adams, ' 00 Vol. 9 R. W. Hartwell, ' 00 Vol. 10— L. B. Everrett, ' 01 Vol. 11— J. K. Bonn ELL, ' 02 Vol. 12 — Waldemar Young. ' 04 Vol. 13 — Irene A. Wright, ' 04 Vol. 14 — Edith R. Mirrielees, ' 06 Vol. 15— P. C. Edwards, ' 06 261 Stanford Quad igo8 The Chaparral —Vol. VIII Published by the Hammer and Coffin Society Editor D. H. Cufi Manager ' C. R. Raymond E. J. Hauley E. E. Horowitz Associate Editors L. S. Levy D. H. Ferry F. A. CURTIN Former Editors Vol. 1 — Bristow Adams, ' 00 Vol. 2 — Bristow Adams, ' 00 R. E. Renaud, ' 03 Isaac Russell, ' 04 Vol. 3 Vol. 4 — Isaac Russell, ' 04 Vol. S — Isaac Russell, ' 04 Vol. 6— D. M. Reynolds, ' 05 Vol. 7— M. Oppenheim, ' 05 262 Stanford Quad igo8 The Daily Palo Alto First Semester — Vol. 29 Editor-in-Chief G. O. Spurrier, ' 07 Business Manager E. A. Cunha, ' 07 Managing Editor H. Fitch, ' 07 News Editor J. E. Gushing, ' 08 Associates P. B. Delano, ' 08 H. L. Rixford, 09 J. K. Hutchinson, ' 09 Assistants Miss L. Wells, ' 09 Miss P. B. Botts, ' 09 E. X. Smith, ' 08 W. P. Fuller, Jr., ' 10 D. H. Walker, Jr., ' 09 E. C. Boobar, ' 10 Miss D. C. French. ' 07 W. J. Telfer, ' 09 L. Merriman, ' 10 Second Semester — Vol. 30 Editor-in-Chief J- E. Gushing, ' 08 Business Manager E. A. Cunha, ' 07 Managing Editor C. C. McCqlloch, ' 08 News Editor . P- B- Delano, ' 08 Associates H. L. Rixford, W E. N. Smith, 08 Assistants Miss L. Wells. ' 09 E. G. Boobar, ' 10 Miss D. C. French, W W. J. Telfer, ' 09 W. P. Fuller, Jr., ' 10 F. A. Adams, ' 10 Miss P. B. Botts, ' 09 S. M. Spaulding, ' 10 C. H. Hails, ' 10 L. G. Avery, ' 10 263 Stanford Quad 1908 First Semester The Stanford Alumnus E ' J ' tor Joseph H. Timmons, ' 97 Manager S . ' i.,. , . . . O. A. Wilson, ' 04 Second Semester Editor .... William H. Thomson. ' 04 Manager O. A. Wilson, ' 04 University Publications HISTORY AND ECONOMICS The Tariff Controversy in the United States, to 1833 . . Orrin Leslie Elliott Official Relations between the United States and the Sioux Indians . . . Lucy Elicabcth Tcxtor THE HOPKINS LABORATORY Numbers 1-33. THE LIBRARY Catalogue of the Hopkins Railway Library .... Frederick J. Teggart UNIVERSITY ADDRESSES, ETC. Commencement Addresses : In Terms of Life. Sermons and Talks to College Students, IVilbur W. Thoburn Directory of Officers and Students Specimen Entrance Examination Questions. Announcement of Courses of Instruction Schedule of Lectures and Laboratory Work The University Register 264 The Year in Stanford Journalism Stanford Quad Here at Stanfonl vc slum professionalism as we shun the unelean sportsman, igo8 pointing with pride at our athletic record, untainted by this breach of holy amateurism ; at our spirit, which forbids it ; at our morals, which will not tolerate it. Accuse us of nursing the evil, and we are up in arms. Do we see its appear- ance in the make-up of our friends across the bay, and the city papers fairly bristle with indignant Stanford correspondence. And yet, with all this intense hatred of the thing, during the past year professionalism has flourished here with all its rabidness — in Stanford journalism. For what was the Saiiioia-ClKifiarral controversy, but professional journalism? And the yellow journalistic raiment that Sequoia donned? And Chaparral ' s art work? And the D. P. .• . Sophomore election fraud? All of it professional: every word and line of it real, solid, worldly journalism — the kind that adorns our breakfast tables : the cause of the street-car seat-hog ' s oblivion ; the stuflf that goes to make up the intellectual meals of the great mass of common people — and professors. The Sequoia-Chaparral controversy is unfamiliar. We know it better as the Chappie-Squalor scrap. And it zvas a scrap — a merry one. Words flew with the frequency and velocity of brickbats in the hands of peaceable Irishmen. Chappie called his rival unmaidenly ; Squalor replied that he was another. Chappie hurled printed epithets; Squalor retorted verbally. For weeks the war raged. Interest was intense. Finally came the crisis with L ' Enfant Terrible, the bogie circulated at midnight by Squalor, lampooning the editor of Chappie, in order to precede the next day ' s issue of the comic paper lam- pooning his rival for literary honors. Suflice it to say that at this point a belligerent dove of peace, in the shape of college opinion, took a hand and cooed Enough. Squalor went back to her household duties ; Chappie busied himself taking the dents out of his hammer. All is quiet along Stanford ' s campus tonight, save semi- occasionally, when Chappie says ungentlemanly things about the lady The new Sequoia was a surprise : it sold, and it was read. Neither the change in form, from that of the characteristic college lit to the make-up of the popular magazine ; nor the innovation of illustrations, was responsible for this extraordinary state of affairs. The matter between the covers was the cause of it all. Shrieking, popular yellow journalism had taken the place of the staid, stale, stupid stuflf of other days. Sequoia is far from the weak piece of femininity that Chappie likes to dub her. It is a strong, healthy, vigorous bunch of masculine muscularity; readable, popular, and — barring the catchpenny advertising cards — eminently respectable. Last semester, a certain former prominent Stanford man, traveling in the East, called on his old friend Wallace Irwin. He found the famous humorist reading a copy of Chaparral and chuckling over a take-off on his Shame of the Colleges. Soon after, Irwin voluntarily contributed to the Stanford paper. The incident tells better than we can of the position that Chaparral occupies up near the pro- fessional field. As for art, there is no other college comic that approaches it. Horowitz ' s girls could just as well have seen the light of day in the art rooms of Life as on an Encina study-table. The vein of professionalism that has been running through the D. P. A. has been a narrow one. For, after all, the Daily has little license to deviate from the beaten path of doling out the news and talking about it. Once in a while it does deviate, and professional-like, exposes something; the next day, also profes- sional-like, it exposes its exposure. But, on the whole, it is a well-edited paper, and can aflFord to leave the yellow characteristics to its partners in Stanford journalism. Leo. S. Levy. 265 Debating Stanford Quad 1908 Thirteenth Intercollegiate Debate Intercollegiate Finals Chapel, March 24. 1906 Question Resolved. That the American game of football has done more harm than good to the ideal for which a university should exist. Speakers First Squad Affirmative A. R. Fletcher, ' 06 W. L. Blair, ' 06 W. F. Herron, ' 08 Negative i E. A. CuNHA, ' 06 D, D. Sales, ' 06 Second Squad Affirmative C. A. Beardsley, ' 06 C. C. McCOLLOCH, ' 08 J. L. Maloy, ' 07 L. Newland, ' 08 Negative J. E. Campbell, ' 06 J. 1- . Brennan, ' 07 The judges. Professors Duniway and Suzzallo, and Instructor Lewis, picked W. L. Blair, ' 06, W. F. Herron, ' 08, and D. D. Sales, ' 06, as the first team to debate California, with C. C. McCoUoch, ' 08, as alternate. The second team picked to debate Nevada was composed of C. A. Beardsley, ' 06, J. F. Brennan, ' 07, and E. A. Cunha, ' 06, with J. L. Maloy, ' 06, as alternate. Chairman C. S. Osgood, ' 06 Record of Former Debates 1893— Won 1894— Won 1895- Won 1896— Won 1897— Won 1898— Won by Stanford by Stanford by California by California by Stanford by California 1905— Won Prevented by the Earthquake. 1899— Won 1900— Won 1901— Won 1902— Won 1903— Won 1904— Won by Stanford 268 by California by Stanford by California by California by Stanford by Stanford Stanford Quad 1908 Thirteenth Annual Carnot Debate Stanford University vs. University of California, Assembly Hall, Stanford Uni- versity, February 1, 1907. Question Rcsohed, That the success of French Socialism, as defined by recent party programs of the French Socialist party, would make for international peace. Presiding Officer, D. vid St. kr Jord. n, Stanford University Stanford Affirmative C. C. MrCoLLOCH, ' 08 V. C. Shelto.n, ' 08 Negative VV. F. Herron, ' 08 Speakers California Affirmative M. E. H.ARRISON, ' 08 E. M. Pei.xotto, ' 07 Negative Savre M. cNeil, ' 08 Medal awarded to W. F. Herron. Judges Judge Peter Shields, of Sacramento Rev. H. H. McQuilken, of San Jose Alfred Bonnhei.m, of Sacramento Stanford Carnot Medal Winners Richard L. Sandwick. 1895 William .A. Morris, 1901 William F. Herron, 1907 Fletcher B. Wagner, 1902 Alexander Sherriffs, 1905 269 Stanford Quad igo8 Euphronia Literary Society Officers First Semester President . G. Knupp, ' 07 Vice-President L. M. Edwards, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer C. R. Crider, ' 07 Sergeant-at-Arms . ... E. A. Cunh. , ' 06 Representative to Pres. Conference J. E. C. .mpisell, ' 06 Second Semester President F, A. Fisher, ' 07 Vice-President N. P. Bry. N ' , ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer .... J. F. Reii.ly, ' 08 Sergeant-at-Arms G. Knupp, ' 07 Representative to Pres. Conference ... ... X. P. Brv.x.v, ' 07 Members 1906 D. D. S.ALES J. L. MALO-i J. E. Campbell B. R. Brooke 1907 C. R. Crider I. B. Cross E. A. CUNHA L. M. Edw. rds G. Knupp N. P. Bryan F. A. Fisher J. E. Stewart T. T. Bennett 1908 R. H. Borland W. F. Herron VV. H. Kerr C. C. McCoLLOCH A. A. Murphy L. Newland J. F. Reilly VV. C. S HELTON W. C. Theile H. F. Bruning 1909 G. D. Ferrell J. M. POLITZER E. C. Wyn.ne E. E. Young P. J. B.vtkin 1910 S. Bryan D. F. Conway F. F. Munier J. E. Shelton S. J. Talbot 270 Stanford Quad 1908 Nestoria Literary Society Officers First Semester President W. A. Campbell, ' 07 Vice-President W. A. Beattie, W Secretary-Treasurer Y. Ichihashi, ' 07 Sergeant-at-Arms I. D. Gibson, ' 06 Representative to Pres. Conference C. A. Beardsley, ' 06 Second Semester President . . H. W. Reed, ' 06 Vice-President R. E. Hodge, ' 08 Secretary-Treasurer J. S. Mitchell, ' 07 Sergeant-at-Arms W. A. Campbell, ' 07 Representative to Pres. Conference W. H. Tucker, ' 07 Members 1906 R. M. Blodget D. R. Gardner H. W. Reed A. R. Fletcher E. E. Lewis C. A. Beardsley • W. F. Bradley 1907 R. J. Anderson W. H. Wheeler W. A. Beattie E. Baker C. L. Geer W. a. Campbell J. S. Mitchell Y. Ichihashi W. H. Tucker S. S. Smith VV. S. ' i ' oder 1908 F. T. Bates H. C. Halsey R. E. Hodge B. S. Chaffee R. L. MlLLIKEN 1909 G. B. Bush R. Worthington C. Coonan R. H. Walker L. Craven 1910 S A. Lindauer 272 ' ' guld University Debating Club 1908 President W. F. Herron, ' 08 Members Prof. C. A. Duniway D. D. Sales, ' 06 E. A. CuNHA, ' 06 Prof. R. M. Aluen Prof. W. N. Hohfeld C. C. McCou.och, ' 08 W. C. Shelton, ' 08 Prof. A. M. Cathcart Prof. A. H. Suzzallo W. F. Herron, ' 08 L. M. Edwards, . ' 07 Instructor L. P. Lewis Intersociety Debating League Officers President W. F. Herron, ' 08 Secretary W. H. Tucker, ' 07 Members A. R. Fletcher. ' 05 G. Knupp, ' 07 F. A. Flsher. ' 07 J. S. Mitchell, ' 07 Ninth Annual Sophomore-Freshman Debate laiiversity Cliaiicl. l l)ruary IS, J907 Question Resolved, That the annexation of Cuba l)y tlie United States would present the best solution of the Cuban problem. Speakers Affirmative Negative D. F. Conway | G. B. Bush T J. E. Shelton Freshmen H. F. Bruning Sophomores F. F. Munier J G. D. Ferrell J Decision for the Negative • Judges Prof. R. M. Alden •■■ Instructor H. P. Earle E. A. CuNHA, ' 06 Chairman, G. Knupp, ' 07 Freshman Debating Society Officers First Semester President ' ! . . P. J. Batkin Vice-President S. Bryan Secretary A. L. Tuttle Treasurer B. Wood Second Semester President S. J. Talbot Vice-President P. J. B.«kin Secretary .... Miss M. McDonald Treasurer C. C. Wetmore 274 Debating Stanford Quad The intercollegiate debates of 1906, with the University of California and the 1908 University of N ' evada, were among the events which the earthquake took out of human hands. This was a real pity, for not only did Stanford have a pair of good teams, but they were to debate the football question, which was so absorbing last year in all university circles. It is not often that one hears an intercollegiate debate on a subject of vital interest at the time to college men. The interest was increased by the fact that the team chosen to debate against California (consisting of Blair, flerron. and Sales) was to attack football, and that chosen to debate against Xevada (Beardslcy, Brennan, and Cunha) was to defend it. The football side of the question was, of course, the more popular, while the opposition was regarded as the stronger for purposes of debate. As it is, we shall never be certain whether football has done more harm than good, having missed hearing both these debates. Tt is to be hoped, however, that some future debate can be held on a subject which, like this one, gives college men a chance to talk on a basis of personal knowledge. The Carnot debate, although dealing with subjects about which the audience cannot be expected to get up any excitement, seems to awaken more interest than the intercollegiate, — probably because the glory of victory is concentrated in the person of one man. This year the difficulty in choosing an interesting subject was reduced to a minimum by taking the field of Socialism, which is now attracting so much attention in .-Xmerica, as well as in Europe. The exact topic to be debated ( That the Success of French Socialism Would Make for International Peace ) was chosen and announced after the usual form to the debaters only two hours before the time of the debate. Since the first adoption of this plan there has been a good deal of suspicion as to its success in securing genuinely extemporaneous debate, but the doubt seems to have lessened each successive year. The outcome depends on the ability of the committee to find a subject which is fairly within the range of the general field, but at the same time is so stated as to require rapid thinking and extemporaneous phrasing, in order to fit it to the general preparation made by the speakers. This year the question met this requirement more perfectly than ever before, and the result was most gratifying. With the possible exception of a part of one speech, all six speakers appeared to follow the spirit of the rules con- sistently, and did not show that raggedness of style which may almost always be expected under such conditions. The contest was also close enough to be properly exciting. All the contestants did good work in the general effectiveness of their speaking. Any of the Stanford men ( Herron. McColloch. or Shelton) could easily be thought of as winning a medal, under favorable conditions; and the same thing was true of the Berkeley team. But the real contest was between Herron — who had made a decided impres- sion in the Carnot debate of 1906, while still a sophomore — and MacXeil of Cali- fornia. In their apparent mastery of their material and the cogent presentation of their arguments, there was little to choose between these two; but Herron ' s more forcible style, and the skill with which he condensed a good deal of refutation into a three-minute speech, were sufficient to turn the balance. All this is only guessing what the judges may have thought : for in these games they only announce the score, and no one is quite certain of the way it is counted. The standards set for our debaters were probably never higher than at present. R.WMOND M. CDON.ALD . lDEN. 275 Athletics Stanford Quad 1908 Wearers of Four Stars R. A. Thompson, ' OS H. W. Bell, ' OS A. J. Chalmers, ' 07 J. Taylor, ' 03. Track Team, ' 02 D. D. Sales, ' 06, Baseball Team, ' 04, ' OS, ' 06; Captain, ' 06 P. T. Frizzell, ' 06, Football Team, ' OS J. N. Stanford, ' 06, Football Team, ' OS, ' 06 E. Lyons, ' 06, Football Team, ' 05 W. Wirt. m. Baseball Team, ' 04 E. P. Stott, ' 07, Football Team, ' 04, ' 05, ' 06; Captain, ' 06. Baseball team, ' OS, ' 06 A. J. Chalmers, ' 07, Football Team, ' 03, ' 04, ' 05, ' 06; Captain, ' OS. Baseball Team, ' 04, ' 05, ' 06 L. M. Edwards, ' 07, Track Team, ' 05. Football Team, ' 06 A. A. Molfino, ' 07, Football Team, ' OS, ' 06 C. F. Laumeister. ' 07, Football Team, ' 06 G. J. Presley, ' 07, Baseball Team, ' OS, ' 06. Football Team, ' 06. J. C. Macfarland, ' 07, Track Team, ' 04, ' OS; Captain, ' 06 E. G. Dudley, ' 07, Baseball Team. ' OS, ' 06 C. F. Elwell, ' 07, Track Team, ' OS W. T. McXeil, ' 07, Track Team, ' OS D. Slusher, ' 07, Football Team, ' OS T. Vandervoort, ' 08, Football Team, ' OS K. L. Fenton, ' 08, Baseball Team, ' 05, ' 06. Football Team, ' 06 W. KoERNER, ' 08, Football Team, ' 05, ' 06 J. R. Pemberton, ' 08, Football Team, ' 06 J. H. Bell, ' 08, Baseball Team, ' OS, ' 06 J. O. Miller, ' 08, Track Team, ' OS H. L. Horton, ' 08, Football Team, ' OS. Track Team, ' 05 R. A. KocHER, ' 08, Track Team, ' OS F. R. Lanagan, ' 08, Track Team. ' 05 L. R. Minturn, ' 09, Football Team, ' 06 C. A. Thorpe, ' 09, Football Team, ' 06 C. C. Owen, ' 09, Football Team, ' 06. Baseball Team. ' 06. C. E. Sampson, ' 09. Baseball Team, ' 06 T. R. Cadvvalader, ' 09, Baseball Team, ' 06 D. P. Crawford, ' 09, Football Team, ' 05 J. R. HoLMAN. ' 09, Football Team. ' 06 G. E. Cheda, ' 10, Football Team, ' 06 278 JAMES F. LANAGAN, ' 00 FOOTBALL AND BASEBALL COACH, 1905-06 E. P. STOTT, ' 07 FOOTBALL CAPTAIN, 1906 Stanford Quad igo8 STANFORD VS. NEVADA The First Rugby Season In the small space alloted to this review, it is impossible to set forth the difficulties which beset the Stanford football leaders when Rugby was formally adopted in the spring of 1906. Coach Lanagan knew nothing of the game, and on his hurried summer trip to Vancouver he acquired practically all the knowledge of Rugbv which he possessed at the opening of the season. Encouraged by the reports that Rugby was any man ' s game, one of the largest squads that ever turned out at Stanford confronted the coaches in September. The men were started in at the rudiments of the English game — a practice which did not serve to endear the sport to the bleachers. The lack of preliminary contests with outside colleges also served to hurt the sport, and the Freshman game left everybody dissatisfied. Nineteen hundred and ten lost by a score of 3 to 0, on a penalty kick, which seemed to demonstrate to the bleachers that Rugby was a one-man affair pure and simple — the one man being the referee. Nevada was beaten in a listless game, and Pomona went down to defeat by an overwhelming score on a Los Angele s field; but the bleachers had their first chance to see some real Rugby when Vancouver arrived on the campus late in October. The Canadians were defeated in two whirlwind games, played under the English rules with the monotony of the scrum practically eliminated. The speed and fighting spirit which characterized the work of both teams in this series drove the bleachers wild with enthusiasm and ended by almost popularizing the game. To these brilliant exhibitions, the Intercollegiate contest on California field came as a sort of anti-clima.x. Coach Taylor of California had a heavy scrum, and he relied upon it to smother every play, never allowing the fast Cardinal backs to show what they could do in the open field. The Blue and Gold scored one try by the sheer weight of her scrum, and Stanford won the game on two penalty goals, kicked by I ' enton. Lanagan and Bansbach worked wonders with green material at a game with which they were themselves scarcely familiar, and Stott was a worthy successor to the long line of great captains who have registered from Portland. Captain-elect Koerner and Field Coach Presley are both men who have demonstrated their fitness as leaders in the new game, and under their guidance, and playing the new English rules, with the controlling hand of Lanagan in the background, the season of 1907 should be a brilliant success. J. E. Cushing. 281 L. P. BANSBACH, ' 0 ASSISTANT COACI Stanford Quad igo8 Varsity Football Team, 1906 Jamks F. Lanagan, ' 00 Head Coach Louis Philip Bansbach, ' 05 Assistant Coach Edmund Plowden Stott, ' 07 Captain Dudley Daniel Sales, ' 06 Manager E. W. MouLTON Trainer William Koerner, ' 08 Forward Albert Andrew Molfino, ' 07 Forward John Rothwell Pemberton, ' 08 Forward LeRoy Minturn, ' 09 Forward James Nichols Stanford, ' 06 Forward Gilbert Ernest Cheda, ' 10 Forward Charles Alfred Thorpe, ' 09 Forward George Joseph Presley, ' 07 Wing F ' orward Chauncey Carroll Owen, ' 09 Scrum Half Edmund Plowden Stott, ' 07 Five-Eighths Alexander Jessiman Chalmers, ' 07 Center Leroy Mallory Edwards, ' 07 Center Clarence Filbert Laumeister, ' 07 Wing John Raymond Holman, ' 09 Wing Kenneth Lucas Fenton, ' 08 . . . Full Substitutes — J. C. Macfarland, ' 07, R. H. Conant, G. D. Hussey, ' 09, A. B. Cook, ' 10. W. H. Stark, ' 09, Schedule, 1906 Score Score Oct. 20 Varsity . 11 Nevada . Oct. 27 Varsity . 26 Pomona . Oct. 31 Varsity 5 Vancouver . 3 Nov. 3 Varsity . 16 Vancouver . 6 Nov. 11 Varsity 6 California . 3 (At Vancouver) Dec. 25 Varsity 9 Vancouver . 11 Dec. 29 Varsity Vancouver . . 3 Jan. 1 Varsity 3 Vancouver . 3 (At Seattle) Jan. 5 Varsity 11 Victoria . Totals Varsity . 87 Games Games Games Opponents won, 6. lost, 2. tied, 1. . 29 U G. J. PRESLEY, ' 07 FIELD coach-elect w. koerner, ' 08 captain-elect STANFORD VS. CALIFORNIA STANFORD VS. CALIFORNIA Stanford Quad 1908 Intercollegiate Record Year 1892 ' J- 1892 C. 1893 J. 1894 P. 1895 G. 1896 C. 1897 S. 1898 F. 1899 C. 1900 W 1901 R. 1902 H. 1903 iL. 1904 JG. 1905 A. 1906 iE. R. Whittemore, L. Clemans. ' 93 F. Wilson, ' 94. . M. Downing. ' 95 H. Cochran. ' 96 M. FiCKERT, ' 98. W. Cotton. ' 98. S. Fisher, ' 98. . . G. Murphy. ' 00. W. Burnett. . . S. Fisher. ' 02. . . S. Lee. ' 03 P. Bansbach. ' OS H. Clark. ' 05. . J. Chalmers. ' 07 P. Stott. ' 07. . . . Totals ' 92 Walter Camp. . Pop Bliss Pop Bliss Walter Camp.. H. P. Cross.... G. H. Brooke. . . H. P. Cross. . . . B. Chamberlain F. H. Yost C. M. Fickert. ' 98 C. L. Clemans, ' 93 J. F. Lanagan. ' 00 J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 C. L. Clemans, ' 93.. G. B. Champlin. ' 95 R. E. Maynard. ' 94. H. S. Hicks, ' 96. . . . O. V. Eaton, ' 95.... D. E. Brown. ' 97.... J. M. SWITZER. ' 98.. W. A. Prichari). ' 98 F. L. Berry, ' 99 G. B. Gildersleeve, ' 03 H. J. Edwards, ' 01. . H. J. Edwards, ' 01. . D. V. COWDEN, ' 03.. R. J. Barrett, ' 04. . . R. J. Barrett. ' 04. . . D. D. Sales. ' 06. . . . 14 10 6 6 6 20 28 5 6 18 12 6 10 10 6 6 22 30 2 16 6 5 3 137 116 Games won, 8. Games lost, 4. Games tied. 4. STANFORD VS. VANCOUVER Stanford Quad 1908 IFIRl L. P. B. NSBACH, ' OS R. A. Little . D. D. Sales, ' 06 . P. C GlESY . . R. Reynolds . J. Fitting C. A. Thorpe . R. S. Worthington G. E. Cheda . E. Meredith . C. Pemberton R M DH n = U= 1910 Team Coach Captain Manager Forward Forward Forward Forward Forward Forward Forward Wing Forward Little Scrum Half M. Mitchell Five-Eighths K. S. Jordan Center C. Ganong Center A. B. Cook Wing A. McDonald Wing G. Faulkner Full Schedule, 1906 Score Score Sept. 29 . Freshmen . Santa Cruz . 3 Oct 13 . Freshmen ' . California Freshmen . 3 Totals . Freshmen . Opponents . . 6 Intercollegiate Record Stanford Year California Stanford Year California . . 1894 ... 4 11 . . . 1901 . . 5 . 1895 44 . . . 1902 . . 12 14 . 1896 4 12 . . . 1903 . . 16 . 1897 8 6 . . . 1904 . . 5 . 1898 21 . . . 1905 . . 6 6 . 1899 . . . 1906 . . 3 5 . 1900 Total, 70 Total, 112 288 1NTKK101.LK(;1ATK FKKSHMAN ( AMK The Canadian Invasion The first American college football team ever to play on foreign soil against a team of foreigners wore the Cardinal of Stanford. At the end of the fall semester of 1906, the Vancouver Rugby Union extended to the victorious Stanford fifteen a cordial invitation to make a Christmas trip to British Columbia. The invitation was accepted, and the team left immediately upon the close of college. The Canadian invasion was a success throughout. Three games were played against the Vancouver team, which was composed of the pick of the Rugby players in and around that city. The first two games went to the Canadians by small scores and the third was a tie. All of these games were hotly contested, and the showing of the Stanford team against their more experienced opponents was almost remarkable. All the games were played with the mercury close around the zero mark, and in one of them the snow had to l e scraped from the turf of the tield before the contest could begin. Such climatic conditions were new to the majority of the Stanford players, and this, coupled with the fact that they were opposed to the crack men of the Province, makes their showing all the more creditable. On the return trip the team easily defeated Victoria in Seattle, before a crowd made up largely of Stanford alumni. Everywhere the team was royally entertained. .At Vancouver, the clubs were thrown open to the Stanford men, and there were numerous banquets in their honor. At Portland and Seattle, the Stanford alumni were the hosts. Financially also the trip was a success, as the team stayed well within the two hundred dollars voted by the E.xecutive Committee, in addition to the fifteen hundred dollar guarantee made by Vancouver. Aside from the greater knowledge of Rugby gained by every man on the team, the trip was highly beneficial to Stanford. The influence of the visit of the football men on the alumni of the Northwest was great and will undoubtedly result in the entrance of many strong men from that region in years to come. The fact that Seattle High School entered a team in this year ' s Interscholastic meet is strong evidence that the name of Stanford is gaining ground in the Xorth. Stanford Quad 1908 •rf 1 r 0 . .-(P V. R.SITV TK. M AT V. NC0UVER E. W. MOULION TRAINER, 1906 J. C. MACFAkLAND. ' 07 TRACK CAPTAIN, 1906 Stanford Quad 1908 The track season of 1906 was at the same time one of the most disappointing and one of the most satisfactory in Stanford history. The Cardinal had a strong, well-balanced team, which stood more than an even chance to win the Intercollegiate meet. Three days before the contest with the Blue and Gold came the great Earthquake, of April 18, which deprived Stanford of a chance to win a third victory on track and field, and prevented as capable and conscientious a team as ever wore the Cardinal from gaining their Varsity emblems. As a result, the season of 1906 must be counted as one of development only, and as most of the menil ers of the team that never ran, will compete in the meet this spring, its place in Stanford track history must rest largely upon the results of the season of 1907. During the season of 1906, Stanford lost to an All-Southern California team by a close score, the result of the meet turning upon a disputed decision in the relay. The Cardinal was handicapped by the absence of the 1909 athletes, who were prevented from competing by the Freshman Intercollegiate meet on the following day. Stanford lost this first Freshman Intercollegiate meet, overwhelmed by the weight of the Blue and Gold entries. Owen and Ford in the weights, Stolz in the jumps, and Rawles, Coonan, and Holman on the track fought a good fight, while Morell ' s game finish in the two mile was admittedly one of the grittiest pieces of running ever seen on the California oval. In a first-place meet the Olympic Club defeated the Varsity a week later, and the annual Interclass event resulted in an overwhelming victory for 190S, which class scored more points than the other classes combined could total. The statistics of the sea.son tell the story lietter than words, and show the promise of the team that was deprived of its chance to undergo the final test. With such a trainer as Moulton, with such a captain as Macfarland, and with such performers as Cope. Edwards, Vandervoort, McXeil, and Hol- man, in the sprints ; Rawles, Davis, Edwards, Elwell, Mil- ler, Severy, Shearer, and Rus- sell, in the middle distances, and Xash, in the two mile ; Macfarland and Horton in the hurdles, and Lanagan, Kocher, Vandervoort. and Horton in the field, the 1906 aggregation deserves to 1)e ranked with any th;it ever fought for Stanford in an Intercollegiate meet. HOKTON, SHOT-PUTTING 294 L. N. C. N, VAULTING SEASON PICTURES, 1906 Stanford Quad 1908 ' 06 Varsity Track Squad E. W. MouLTON Trainer J. C. Macfarlanu, ' 07 Captain R. W. Barrett, ' 04 Manager G. L. Aynesworth, C. A. Ball, ' 06 L. W. Barbur, ' 07 T. T. Bennett, ' 08 C. B. Bradford, ' 09 A. B. Cox, ' 07 E. C. Cope, ' 08 R. W. Cummins, ' 08 J. P. Dunn, ' 08 P. M. Davis, ' 08 L. M. Edwards, ' 07 C. F. Elwf.ll, ' 07 W. K. Ford, ' 09 A. C. Freeman, ' 06 C. D. Geibel, ' 08 08 J. R. Holman, ' 09 H. L. HoRTON, ' 08 A. D. Hughes, ' 08 G. Knupp, ' 07 R, A. KocHER, ' 08 F. R. Lanagan, ' 08 J. C. Macfarland, ' 07 J. O. Miller, ' 08 W. T. McNeil, ' 07 G. F. MORELL, ' 09 R. F. Morris, ' 08 F. R. MUGLER, ' 08 H. McCowEN, ' 09 G. W. McDaniel, ' 08 E. A. McGre(;or, ' 08 Intercollegiate Record E. J. Nash, ' 07 C. C. Owen, ' 09 W. D. Peaslee, ' 09 J. D. Phelps, ' 07 E. G. Russell, ' 06 W. M. Rawles, ' 09 F. M. Redman, ' 07 E. C. Sterling, ' 08 H. R. Stolz, ' 09 C. L. Severy, ' 08 W. M. Shearer, Gr. J. B. Swickari), ' 09 A. TOMASINI, ' 08 T. Vandervoort, ' 08 Meets won, 2. Meets lost, 10. 296 Meets tied, 1. Varsity VS. All-Southern California, Stanford Oval, March 30, i go6 Event First Skcond Third KtCORD s S C Bird. S. C. Cope, S. 1 Vandervoort. S. o;io 4 5 220 yard dash Bird. S. C. McNeil. S. Macfarland, S. 4 5 440-yard dash Bird, S. C. Hussey, S. Davis, S. 0:52% 4 5 880-yard rua Brown, S. C. f Shearer, S., and 1 Severy, S., tied 2:03 4 5 I -mile run Chapin, S. C. Sorbeer. S. C. Miller, S. 4:44 1 8 Nash. S. Himrod. S. C. Roth, S. C. 10:27 s 120-yard hurdles Ilagerman, S. C. Breitkreutz, S. C. Ball. S. 1 Hagerman. S.C, and 1 ( Spurgeon. S.C.tied o:i6M 1 8 220-yard hurdles Macfarland, S. Horton. S. 0:27 8 1 ' Won by S. C. Relay ! (Spurgeon, Hodge, fl 5 ' Hagerman, Breikrutz) 1 High jump Munger, S. C. Thomas. S. C. Mugler, S. 5 ft. 9 in. 1 8 Hagerman, S. C. Vandervoort, S. Thomas, b. C. 21 ft. 8 in. J Shot put ; Horton. S. V. E. Crawford, S D. P. Crawford, S. 40 ft. syi in. 9 Hammer throw IW. E. Crawford, S. Moorman, S. C. ,D. P. Crawford, S. 149 ft. b 3 Pole vault ! f Lanagan, S., and t Kocher, S.. tied ( f Cummins, S., and 1 Corastock, S. Ctied 10 ft. 6 in. 8K 54 1 5S% ' 63 ' A Totals tVarsity vs. Olympic Club, Stanford Oval, April 9, 1906 Event First Second Third Record S loo-yard dash Gehrhardt, O. Cope, S. Vandervoort, S. onoj 1 220-yard dash Ciehrhardt, O. Holman, S. Berliner. O. 0:23 1 440-yard dash Rawles, S. Davis, S. Elwell, S. 0:51 1 880-yard dash Shearer, S. Miller, S. Severy, S. 2:02 1 i-mile run Glamer. O. Miller, S. Geibel, S. 4:47? u 1 2-mile run Conolly, 0. Nash, S. No third 9:5i W 1 120-vard hurdles Powell, 0. Horton, S. No third o:i5t 1 220-yard hurdles Macfarland, S. Horton, S. Powell, 0. 0:25 1 High jump Powell, 0. Bell, S., and Sterling, S., tied 5 ft. g in. 21 ft. s ' A in. 1 Broad jump andervoort, S. Stolz. S. . ynesworth, S. 1 Hammer throw Plaw. 0. Crawford. S. Tomasini. S. j i66 ft. lo in. 1 Shot put Ptaw, 0. (Stanford (Rawles, Horton, S. Crawford, S. 41 ft. 9 in. 1 Relay won by - Freeman, Davis. (Elwell. McNeil) •3:2 1 1 No pole vault 3 Stanford men qualified. i 1 f Only first p aces counted in score. Totals 6 s New coast r =cord. Interclass Meet, Stanford Oval, April ii, 1906 Event First loo-yard dash 220- yard dash 440-yard dash 880-yard dash I -mile run 2-mile run j 120-yard hurdles 220-yard hurdles Shot put Hammer throw Broad jump High jump Pole vault Relay Second Holman, ' 09 Cope. ' 08 Rawles, ' og Severy, ' 08 I Miller, ' 08 i j Nash, ' 07 Horton, o8 ! Macfarland. ' 07 1 Horton, ' 08 I Crawford, ' 09 i Vandervoort, ' 08; Mugler, ' 08 and ' Lanagan, ' 08 ; 1909 ; Vandervoort, ' 08 Holman, ' 09 Hussey, ' 09 Russell, ' 06 Bradford. ' 09 Morell, ' 09 Macfarland, 07 Horton, ' 08 Ford, ' 09 Cox, ' 07 Aynesworth. ' 08 Sterling, ' 08, tied Kocher, ' 08 1907 Third Cope, ' 08 Edwards, ' 07 Davts, o8 f Bennett, ' 08 and i Dunn, ' 08, tie ; Geibel. ' 08 ' f McDaniel. ' oSand 1 McGregor, ' 08 Peastee. ' 09 Swickard, ' 09 Crawford, ' 09 Tomasini. ' 08 Redman, ' 07 Stolz, o9 Cummins, ' 08 1908 Record o:ioJ 0:23 4:48 10:49 o:r6 0:255 41 ft. 9 in. 136 ft. 8 in. 21 ft. 8J4 in. 5 ft. 7 in. II ft. 2H in. •3:30.4 ' 06 • New Stanford record, four- man relav. 07 ' 08 ' 09 18 297 Stanford Quad 1908 RAWLES WINS THE 440 09 Freshman Intercollegiate Track Team E. W. MouLTON Trainer W. M. Ravvles Captain C. B. Bradford J. F. Clark C. COONAN J. G. Fergusson W. K. Ford B. L. Gregg E. F. Halloran J. R. HOLMAN G. F. MOREI.L C. C. Owen W. D. Peaslee W. M. Rawles E. H. RiCHARD.SON E. A. Smith H. R. Stoi-z J. B. SWICKARD H. McCowEN First Freshman Intercollegiate Meet, Berkeley Oval, March 31, 1906 Eve 100-yard dash 220-yard dash 440-yard dash 880-yard dash 1-mile run 2-mile run 120-yard hurdles 220-yard hurdles High jump liroad jump Shot put Hammer throw Pole vault Relay won by Stanton, C. Stanton, C. Rawles, S. Dozier, C. and Erskine, C. Morell, S. Cowles, C. Cowles, C. Hall, C. Stolz, S. Ford, S. Owen. S. Sheridan, C. Stanford (Peaslee, ' i ' lIIRD Crossfield, C. Holman, S. Coonan, S. Leggett, C, tie Keyes, C. Lang, C. E. Dozier, C. Swickard, S. Burk, C. f Crossfield, C. Hell, C. j Eord, S. Cowles, C. and Gregg, Swickard, Holman, S. Rawles, S. Walker, C. Coonan, S. IJradford, S. (iaines, C. Peaslee, S. Peaslee, S. f Stolz, S., and I Paul, C, tie Paul, C. I ' isk, C. Glazier, C. Grinstead, C, tie Holman, Rawles) Recoro o:ioH 0:23 0:555- 2:12 10:49 0:18 0:28 6 ft. 2 in. 20 ft. 1 1 J in 39 ft. 7 4 in. 114 ft. 5 in. 10 ft. 3 in. 3:30.4 S , C 5 5 8 5 Totals. 8 5 1 8 8 4 8 5 8M 4 4 1 9 48 7354 298 Stanford Quad igo8 ON Tin; MW Stanford Records (Recognized by the Executive Committee) EVENT RECORD 100- Yard Dash W ' s . 220- Yard Dash 22) 440-Yard Dash 51j , 880-Yard Run 1:59 1-Mile Run 4:36 2- Mile Run 10:14f , 120- Yard Hurdles 16 220- Yard Hurdles 25 High Jump 5 ft. 11 in.. HOLDER . . H. L. Hamilton, ' 04 . . . . W. F. Dunn, ' 04 . . . . E. A. Smith, ' 03 . . . E. B. COPELAND, ' 95 . . . . D. E. Brown, ' 97 .... E. J. Nash, ' 07 E. Morgan, ' 00 . . J. C. Macfarland, ' 07 r N. E. Dole, ' 03 ■ • • • I H. W. Bell, ' 05 D 1 T T) t Ti ■ f H. W. Bell, ' 05 Broad Jump 22 ft. 2f in R F West ' 07 Pole Vault 12 ft. P , in N. E. Dole, ' ' 03 Shot-Put 45 ft. 6 in O. E. Hyde, ' OS Hammer Throw .... 143 ft. 6 in W. E. Crawford, ' 05 NASH LOWERS THE .STANFORD TWO-MILE RECORD 299 Stanford Quad 1908 The Interscholastic Track Meet In the spring of 1906, W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06, offered a perpetual challenge cup, known as the Stanford University Cup, to be competed for in an annual track meet by the Preparatory Schools of the Pacilic Coast. Interscholastic Athletic Association (Founded 1906) Board of Governors J. C. Macfarland, ' 07 President J. O. Miller, ' 08 Vice-President C F. Laumeister, ' 07 Secretary F. Angell Treasurer J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 J. R. HiCKEY, ex- ' 08 W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 H. Fitch, ' 07 B. S. Allen, ' 07 D. D. Sales, ' 06 F.. J. Nash, ' 07 H. L. Horton, ex- ' 08 First Meet, March 24, 1906 (23 Schools, 168 Entries) Stanford University Cup (first place — perpetual) . . Sigma Sigma Cup ( first place — to be won three times) Thiele Trophy (second place) Harvard School Bittncr Relay Cup California School of Mechanical Arts (Lick) Encina Club Cup (highest individual point, winner) . A. Munn, of Oakland High Second Meet, March 23, 1907 (31 Schools, 203 Entries) Stanford University Cup Oakland High School Sigma Sigma Cup Oakland High School Thiele Trophy Harvard School Bittner Relay Cup Los Angeles High School Encina Club Cup A. Munn, of Oakland W. H. B. FOWLER, ' 06 Oakland High Scliool Oakland High School Point Winners, 1906 Oakland High School 21 Harvard School 18 San Jose High School 15 Lowell High School lO- Palo Alto High School 7 California School of Mechanical Arts (Lick) 6 Belmont School 6 Santa Rosa High School 6 Pacific Grove High School 5 Flanford High School 5 Berkeley High School 3 Alameda High School 2 Ukiah High School V i Santa Clara High School 1 Santa Clara Academv 1 Point Winners, 1907 Oakland High School 24 Harvard School 13 Los Angeles High School 12 Alameda High School 10 Belmont School 8 Los Angeles Polytechnic 7 Santa Clara High School 7 Hoitt ' s School 5 Lick 5 Berkeley High School 4 Santa Rosa High School 4 San Jose High School 3 Wilmerding School 3 Vallejo High School 2 Pasadena High School 1 300 f . I9W6 D. D. SALES, ' 06 BASEBALL CAPTAIN, 1906 Stanford Quad 1908 Varsity Baseball Team, 1906 James F. Lanagan, ' 00 Coach Dudley Daniel Sales, ' 06 . Captain Richard W. Barrett, ' 04 Manager Edmund Plovvden Stott, ' 07 Catcher Dudley Daniel Sales, ' 06 Pitcher George Joseph Presley, ' 07 . First Base John Henry Bell, ' 08 Second Base Carlos Eugene Sampson, ' 09 Short Stop Kenneth Lucas Fenton, ' 08 Third Base Alexander Jessiman Chalmers, ' 07 1 t Field Theodore Royer Cadwalader, ' 09 . Chauncey Carroll Owen, ' 09 Center Field Ernest Griswold Dudley, ' 06 Right Fleid H. P. Daily, ' 07 . ] W. C. Theile, ' 08 Substitntes J. S. Woodbury, ' 09 J Baseball Review With a veteran team and Lanagan as coach, Stanford ' s prospects for breaking the ' Baseball Hoodoo were never brighter than in 1906. The Cardinal Nine played through a long, hard schedule and held its own, even against the strong teams from Santa Clara and St. Mary ' s. In the first game of the Intercollegiate series, Stanford scored the first shut-out in the history of the contests with the Blue and Gold. Captain Sales pitched remarkable ball, and clever base-running by Presley put over the winning score. The following week California evened up matters in a heart-breaking game. The series was so well contested that it aroused more interest than had been shown in college basebal l for many seasons. The students of both universities were eagerly looking forward toward the deciding game, when the Earthquake put an end to the controversy by postponing the decision of the 1906 championship forever. With Sales and Theile both pitching good ball; with a fast infield; and with a team which showed up fairly well at the bat; Stanford had good reason to expect a victory in the final game. Unfortunately the partisans of California can say the same, and so the matter must rest as one of the unsolvable mysteries of Inter- collegiate history. The Interclass series of 1906 went to the class of 1907, which clearly outplayed all the other classes andjemonstrated for the second time its right to the University championship. 302 Stanford Quad 1908 SAFE ON FIRST Varsity Baseball Record, 1 906 Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Apr. Apr. Apr. Apr. Apr. 27 1 4 6 8 10 23 1 2 8 10 17 22 29 7 10 11 12 14 Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford 2 1 10 2 2 10 30 6 7 1 IS 8 3 St. Mary ' s . . . . Santa Clara Elks Alameda High School . Santa Chira Elks Alameda State League . Gantner-Mattern St. Mary ' s . . . . Santa Clara Twenty-second Infantry- Fort McDowell . Santa Clara .... Santa Clara .... California . . . . St. Mary ' s . . . . Alumni St. Mary ' s . . . . California . . . . 10 innings Games played, 19. Summary of Season Games won, 10. 4 5 2 4 9 1 2 4 S 3 1 2 2 2 2 9 4 Interclass Series, igo6 March 6 . . . Freshmen . . 12 Sophomores ... 3 March 7 . . . Juniors ... 2 Seniors March 9 . . . Juniors ... 6 Freshmen .... 3 University Championship won by the Class of 1907. 304 Line-up of Class Teams 1 ' 06 h endricks Spaulding Gamblk Wein.mann (c). Meikle Dudley Matthews swinnerton ... 1 Greer, Cunha.. ' 07 ' 08 ' 09 Pitcher Catcher First Hase Chalmers Stagner Presley (c) Salisbury Kelly Menardi ... Cole MOULTON . . Bell (c)... Pl. gemann Fenton . Koerner . . . Vandervoort McCoLLOCH 4 Goodell, Witmer. Richardson Owen Second Base.. Thir i Base. . Woodbury Naylor Short Stop. . . Left Field... Rhyne Sampson (c) .Alexander HOLMAN Morrow, Nissen McLain Topp Right Field.. Cadwalader Stanford Quad 1908 Intercollegiate Baseball Record Year 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 IC. C. Adams, ' 95.... H. A. Walton. -95.. J. F. Sheehan, ' 95.. H. 1 . Dyer, ' 97 W. T. McLaine, ' 96. I C. L. Thompson. ' 97. j H. E. Lough eed, ' 00. I G. M. Beckett, ' 00. . H. E. LOUGHEED. ' 00 C. B. Strohn, ' 01 ... . H. J. Edwards. ' 01 . . D. V. COWDEN, ' 03... F. a. Brown. ' 03.... R. B. Ball, ' 04 A. L. Trowbridge, ' 05 D. D. S. LES, ' 06 W. Lang J. F. Sheehan, ' 95. . J. F. Sheehan. ' 95: . Dr. W. H. Murphy. Dr. W. H. Murphy. C. J. Swindells, ' 01 . C. J. Swindells, ' 01. C. Doyle D. V. Cowden, ' 03... J. F. Lanagan, ' 00. . M. L. Rosenfeld. E. D. Grove .H. E. Cox. ' 95... R. R. Zion, ' 94... J. O. Watson. ' 96 H. James. ' 98... F. V. Keesling, ' 98 J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 -A. B. Haslacher, ' 00 E. Warren, ' 01. . . H. J. Edwards, ' 01 H. J. Edwards, ' 01 D. V. CoWDEN, ' 03. R. W. Barrett, ' 04 R. W. Barrett, ' 04 Summary: Series won, 6; lost, ' 8; tied, 1. Games won, 18; lost, 19. Lougheed elected to fill vacancy caused by death of Beckett. DAN MURPHY ROWING COACH F. ZIMMERMAN, ' 07 CREW CAPTAIN Stanford Quad 1908 nd succeeded in winning Rowing at Stanford University was given its first real impetus when the ' 08 crew won the Fresh- man Intercollegiate race on Lake Washington. This was Stanford ' s first victory on the water, and since then rowing has had a slow but sure development, until it is now the hope of rowing enthusiasts that the Stanford Cardinal will soon be seen in the big Eastern regattas. Without a doubt, Stanford ' s facili- ties for training and handling crews (when the electric car line is completed to Redwood City) will be equal to those of any college on the Coast. Our mild climate allows rowing to be carried on the year round, and since the crew worked steadily through the last rainy season without losing a day, it seems even more adapted to this climate than some of the other sports. Stanford ' s achievements on the water last year were brought to the same sudden end as were the other spring athletics. During the summer, how- ever, two of the crew, Fred Zimmerman, ' 07, and J. R. Pemberton, ' 08, were members of the Portland Rowing Club ' s Senior Four, which defeated every- thing in the Northwest and took second in the International race at Worcester, Mass. The last issue of the Daily Palo Alto previous to the Earth- quake announced the personnel of the crew which was to row against California. The first issue of the same paper for this college year announced that they had all returned to college to compete again. Fred Zimmerman, ' 07, was elected captain, and a movement was started at once to secure Dan Murphy again as coach and to institute eight-oared races with California. Murphy was signed up again, and the Executive Committee voted $500 to the Boat Club to assist them in purchasing a new eight-oared shell in the East. Murphy arrived January first and commenced imme- diately to get the boats and rowing machines in readiness for the season ' s work. At the same time the members of the Boat Club were building and repairing the flume, in order to fill Lake Lagunita, the maintenance of which had been abandoned by the Board of Trustees. Rowing commenced in earnest the first week of college, when over sixty men signed up. From then on the squad dwindled down, until at the first of April there were about twenty-five men who were working every day. On March 30, 1907, Stanford entered a Varsity Four and Second Varsity Four in the Senior and Junior events at the Naples regatta at Naples, California, both cups from the southern crews. I ' . W. Tl ' J N ' er. 308 VARSITY FOUR, 1906 VARSITY SQUAD Stanford Varsity Four, 1906 and 1907 Winners of Naples Cup for 1908 Senior Fours, igo L. R. Gay, ' 08 Bow F. Zimmerman, ' 08 No. 3 J. R. Pemberton, ' 08 No. 2 R. H. Conant, ' 08 Stroke F. W. Turner, ' 08 ... . Coxswain Second Varsity Four, 1907 Winners of the A ' a pies Cup for Junior Fours, i()0 ' A. N. Cole, ' 08 Bow J. C. Huston, ' 10 . ' ..... No. 3 H. B. Patrick, ' 10 No. 2 A. B. Shutts, ' 09 Stroke J. W. Roberts, ' 10 ... . Co.xswain 1908 Crew Wiiuiers Iitterclass Regatta, 1906, igoy A. N. Cole Bow J. R. Pemberton No. 3 L. R. Gay ........ No. 2 R. H. Conant Stroke F. W. Turner Coxswain This crew, with E. N. Smith in the place of J. R, Pemberton, also won the Interclass Regatta in 1905. Boating Records Varsity Regattas captain coach winner 1904 . . . R. A. Gaither, ' 06 . . . ' . W. Smith California 1905 . . . W. H. Dole, ' 05 . . . R. A. Gaither, ' 06 .... California 1906 D. Murphy No Race Triangular with Washington. Freshman Regattas captain coach winner 1904 . . . F. Zimmerman ... A. W. Smith California 1905 . . . L. R. Gay R. A. Gaither Stanford 1906 D. Murphy No Race Triangular with Washington. Freshman Intercollegiate Crew, 1906 Stroke A. B. Shutts No. 3 P, A. Robinson No. 2 R. W. Hornby Bow H. Q. Hatch Coxswain S. C. Bias 310 3! 3 ' Til p ■ |. B f B — 1 1 ' Stanford Quad 1908 Stanford Boat Club Members of National Association of Amateur Oarsmen President F. W. Turner, ' 08 Vice-President R. H. Conant, ' 08 Treasurer S. B. Dole, ' 09 Secretary E. N. Smith, ' 08 F. Zimmerman, ' 07 R. Gardner, ' 07 A. J. Chalmers, ' 07 C. A. Fer(;uson, ' 07 C. W. Henderson, ' 07 F. W. Turner, ' 08 L. R. Gay, ' 08 A. N. Cole, ' 08 R. H. Conant, ' 08 J. R. Pemberton, ' 08 E. N. Smith, ' 08 Members R. A. Carter, ' 08 S. B. Dole, ' 09 . S. C. Bias, ' 09 A. B. Shutts, ' 09 R. W. Hornby, ' 09 W. H. Stark, ' 09 G. Costar, ' 09 H. B. Patrick, ' 10 J. C. Huston, ' 10 J. Fitting, ' 10 R. Reynolds, ' 10 W. Roberts, ' 10 STANFORD FOUR AT NAPLES 312 TENNIS Stanford Quad 1908 I he tonni.s season of 1906 was largely one of development, with an eye more to the future than to the present. The team was chosen after the usual preliminary tournaments. Gowan and Cassell were selected as the doubles representatives of the Cardinal, and the former was coupled with Delano in the singles. The Inter- collegiate tournament, which affords the only standard by which a tennis team can be judged, was called off on account of the Earthquake. A notable feature of the season was the trip of the three Stanford men to the Ojai Valley, where they participated in the annual Ojai tournament. All of them made very creditable showings, but no one of them worked his way out into the finals of the tournament. Tennis Season, 1906 RicH.ARD W. B. RRETT, ' 04 Manager Preston B. Del.ano, ' 08 ) c- i Arthur J. Gowan. ' 09 singles John F. Cvssell. ' 07 | O , Arthur J. Gow. n. 09 f i- u-ji Intercollegiate Tennis Record 1892 1893 Stanford Stanford 3 won University bv default of California 4 1894 Stanford 1 University of California S 1895 Stanford 1 University of California 5 1896 Stanford 5 University of California 1 1897 Stanford 3 University of California 5 1898 Stanford University of California 3 1899 Stanford 2 University of California 1 1900 Stanford 2 University of California 1 1901 Stanford University of California 3 1902 Stanford University of California 3 1903 Stanford University of California 3 1904 Stanford University of California 3 1905 Stanford University of California 3 1906 N ' o Tourname Won 5. I nt ..ost 9. 313 DEL. •o, AND GOWAN, ' 09 Stanford Quad igo8 W O M A N ' S lATHLETICASOCIATlON Officers President . Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Senior Director Junior Director . Sophomore Director Freshman Director Faculty Director . Julia Derby, ' 07 Claribel Bryant, ' 07 . Pauline Gartzman, ' 07 Elise Owen, ' 07 . May Dunn, ' 08 . Myra Sinclair, ' 09 Mabel Van Zwalenburg, ' 10 . . . Mrs. H. J. Ryan Committees Tennis Ruth Sterne, ' 09 Lucy Howell, ' 08 Elise Owen, ' 07, Chairman Basketball Ruth Lewis, ' 09 Beatrice Maine, ' 09 Minerva Monteith, ' 08, Chairman Rowing Lavina Fay, ' 10 Frances Henkinc, ' 09 Myra Sinclair, ' 09, Chairman Squads Basketball Captain, Minerva Monteith. ' 0 Manager, Ruth Lewis, ' 09 Tennis Captain, Elise Owen, ' 07 Manager, Ruth Sterne, ' 09 Hockey Captain, Ethel Palmer, ' 10 Mae Browne, ' 09 Elizabeth Buckingham, ' 08 Freshman Basketball Squad Captain, Sarah Bundy, ' 10 314 H X Dramatics Stanford Quad 1908 DRAMATICS Their Exits and Their Entrances Being a drama of five widely varying acts, presented by and for Stanford University, during the year 1906-1907 ACT I. Time — ' 06 Commencement, earthquaked from May to September 14, 1906. Scene — The home of The Original Miss Tewksberry. Synopsis — Herein, thanks to the cleverness of one Stella F. Wynne, we see Barney Bernard ]5retend to be the French poet, who is really Runt May; whereupon the latter is mistaken for the expected French waiter who he is not. In this deception the towering figure of Dudley Sales poses incongruously as that of the supposed poet ' s secretary. Very soon three ladies further complicate matters — first, Mercile Winslow as Alicia Tewksberry, who collects human and superhuman oddities for her salon, and is shocked to find herself falling in love with — not the celebrity (nor the waiter), but the private secretary of the celebrity. Her Cousin Philippa, who much resembles Susan Carpenter, is likewise amazed to discover that the pretended poet can court other dames as well as the lyric muse. Elizabeth Officer assumes a lorgnette and a psychic talent for seeing everything in colors, and, as Mrs. Harman, 318 THE ORIGINAL MISS TEWKSBERRY chaperones Alicia ' s extraordinary party. We are amused from beginning to end of this act, and decide that, for the purposes of a farce, there may be other settings more effective than the dear old Quad, and that an ingenious plot and a sprightly dialogue are better than a lavish use of local color, even though that color be Stanford Red. Stanford Quad 1908 ACT II. Time — Quite a while ago — probably even Shakespeare looked over his shoulder at The Two Gentlemen of erona. Scene — ' erona and Milan, but especially the moonlit garden of the Duke ' s palace. Synopsis — Herein we have, for the first time on the Stanford stage, a love scene which does not strike the college as humorous. We see 319 Stanford Quad 1908 THE TWO GENTLEMEN OE VERONA Jimmy Ray as passionate Proteus — passionate as he is fickle ; Nora Dunn as Lady Silvia, a virtuous gentlewoman, mild and beautiful ; Dudley Sales as honest Valentine, a gentleman who credits Proteus with all the honor which he himself possesses. We are filled with mirth unspeakable by Speed and Launce, for in R oy Kellogg and Runt May there dwells the very spirit of comedy. And here it is that Aurania Ellerbeck plays Julia with a charm and pathos that we shall not soon forget. It is in this act that the little page ' s soul is torn by discovering the falseness of Proteus, whom she loves. It is here that she expresses all her suffering without a word, and lets the voices of the strings and of the serenaders speak for her. And so do they speak even now, if one but hears the first few inquiring notes of Who is Silvia? ' It is not, perhaps, merely because we are friends of Sword and Sandals, that most of us like best this second act of our play ; but there is a magic about the old comedy, a beauty in the lines, a distinction about the whole performance, all of which will set it apart from the 320 rest of the year ' s dramatics, Stanford MISS ELLERBECK AND RAY rather the Marine Hotel, or perhaps the office of a five- shilhng dentist, named like one of the Two Gentlemen, ' alentine. Synolysis — Gerard Rich- ardson shows us how a dentist may begin his practice by pulling a young lady ' s tooth, and then suddenly falling in love with her sister a few min- utes later. This same Valen- tine stands forth as a part both individual and entertain- ing, and its interpreter as an and keep it in its separate place. The reason is not far to seek — a little more altruism in the motive, perhaps, a little more love of the work, a little more artistic devotion than we ordinarily attain here at col- lege — that is all. ACT III. Time — No longer the Middle Ages, but the Twen- tieth Century. Scene — Not the Mantuan forest, but a seaside resort; not quite the ducal palace — Quad 1908 MAY AND KELLOGG 321 Stanford Quad 1908 mm Hjj v . -JH H Mf ' vUi l K-. i.Ji H MISS ROBERTS against matrimony, and is heeded as much as is custom- ary in such matters by her daughter Gloria. Phyllis Rosenthal as Mrs. Clandon also dem- onstrates that Stan- ford has some •w omen students who can take char- acter parts with actor of more than ordinary amateur ability. Ruby Rob- erts shows us how piquant and charming Dolly can be ; how she can tease Valentine, torment Gloria, lead Bohun a merry chase, and alternately bully and flirt with poor Mc- Comas. Aiding and abetting her always is Phil, the other irrepressible, who joins her in the quest for their father and in the repudiation of their crotchety parent when he is discovered. The Twentieth Century woman, Mrs. Clan- don, is a terrible warning MIS.S ROSENTHAL. MISS FI.KMING AND RICHARDSON 322 success. In this third act we are moved to cast due laurels at the Sophomore Class, and to pass over the foot- lights a bouquet for the originator of the under-classman play, which insures a smal- ler number of undis- covered stars and a larger supply of new talent than was pos- sible in former years. ACT IV. Time — Back again, this time to the Eighteenth Century, to the youth of Minna von Barnhelm. Scene — Der Saal dues IVirtsIiauses und eiiiein da ran stossen- den Zinimer. Jawohl! Synopsis — In this act there is required not even a reading knowledge of German Stanford Quad 1908 323 Stanford to convince us that J. A. de Haas is the possessor of marked dramatic Quad igoS abihty. In playing two roles, each of which he creates for his audience, his characterization of Just differs so thoroughly from the portrayal of Riccaut de la Marliniere that we must consult our programs before we are assured that there is but one actor for the two parts. Miss Stauflf is a Minna whose womanly trust in the man she loves cannot be shaken by any evidence against him; she and Franziska (Miss E. A. Wright) create interest by acting quite independent of the lines. We may wish that our German conversation had not been so badly neglected by us, but for all that we decide that the German Club has given a play which ranks with the successes of past years at Stanford. And the curtain falls and we leave the Assembly Hall with the music of old German operas ringing in our ears, for the orchestra, too, has for this one evening tuned up to the harmonies of a more melodious nation than ours. ACT V. Time — Almost any, but chiefly Now. Scene — La Serena — now do you know ? Well, neither do we ! Synopsis — Herein occur many events, such as battle, attempted murder, and sudden engagements. In other words, this is a modern musical comedy which we witness : We see Roy Kellogg, erstwhile Frank Allerton, of New York, assume another name, which causes trouble — trouble chiefly in the entirely adequate form of Juanita, the human volcano. So, although we realize that Barney Bernar d probably does not intend to use those two sharp knives, there is an exciting climax at the camp when everybody and everything comes at once. We show loudly how much we like to hear Georgina Lyman sing the songs of Dorothy Irwin, and how unanimously willing we are to have her on the stage, especially in a certain Red Cross nurse ' s costume. In 324 n 5! Stanford Quad igo8 MISS LYMAN AND KELLOGG with some plot to begin with, those college actors who co- operated with the Junior Class could not fail to score a success. So while the watch-fire at Camp Corey burns out, and the last chorus girl trips ofif arm-in-arm with the end-man of the soldier-chorus, we watch the historic red cur- tains swing together, marking Finis for Act V of the year ' s play of 1906-07. Per- the midst of the varied com- plications of love, war, and intrigue, we are not in the least grieved by the interrup- tion of the chorus — twelve jiretty seiioritas in the crim- son and gold of Spain, their hats cocked coquettishly over one ear. They, with a soldier apiece, do many fancy steps and sing many a swinging chorus. We are not too criti- cal, perhaps, for with bright colors, music, and rhythmic motion to help out an opera ROSS, SWIFT AND ZIMMER 326 haps there has been a lack of continuity in the plot ; one act may not seem to depend on those which precede it, and to introduce the situations that follow; but how about variety? From the Middle Ages to now and back again; from Italy to Honduras (or somewhere) ; hero es and hero- ines of all descriptions ; and it was all interesting, all creditable, perhaps more unifomily so than in any previous year at Stanford. We are all glad to go home and talk it over. The play ' s the thing. Alice Windsor Kimb. ll, ' 04. Stanford Quad 1908 LA SERENA 327 Literary Stanford Quad igo8 The Welding of the Stanford Spirit Henry Suzzallo, ' 99. ( ) man or woman with a responsive soul can live at the University and long withstand the spell of the Stanford spirit. Sooner or later its subtle force commands, and each human pays his tribute and becomes a worshipper of tlie University ideals after the Stanford way. The Stan- ford spirit is the dream element, the idealism in our common social life. It is the higher urge of the college atmosphere. It is the command of the place to our finer feelings and our better impulses. It is the institutional mood of the Stanford life, recreat- ing itself by the subtle force of suggestion in the individual life of every stranger who comes to join the Stanford kith and kin. THE STEWARDSHIP OF STANFORD MEN The world is a very old world. The experience of age has made it wise. Part of its wisdom lies in its ideals, selected through the trials and errors of the centuries; part, in its ways of doing things, winnowed out of the false methods of facing life. Its wisdom it gives freely to all. The only denial is the self-denial of the blind. Against this blindness of men to the best, institutions have been set up. They have been erected to safeguard some holy side of life. The university is one of these institu- tions. And to imiversity men, students and professors alike, has been given the special stewardship of seeing that the best committed to them shall not die out. Now the spirit of the Stanford life is the spirit of the Stanford stewardship. It is the sum of our devotions to a trust which a wise old world has given to those who are young and seeking after the deepest truth of life. THE CODE OF OUR LITTLE WORLD It has been said many times that our college life is a little world. But it can be a true world only if it keep in tune with the highest and sweetest and strongest notes of the great world outside. It can only be a world worth while to live in for a passing year or more if it makes us keenly sensitive to the part we ought to play in the world at large. The spi rit of our little Stanford world must sound no false note, none out of harmony with the eternal truths of the race life. A tradition that is bad for the world to live on, is bad for college men — for Stanford 330 men ! The outlived code of morals which the old world is hastening to Stanford put aside, Stanford men must make still greater haste to put away. The Quad swipe, that violates the right of property; the bogy, that negates the 1908 sense of fair play ; the hazing, that does not discriminate between the right of discipline and the sanctity of person; the political trade, that throttles the rewarding of efficiency with its due distinction; the press scarehead, that glosses truth with a false impression ; the fraternity rushing, that sets men apart with unwarranted class distinction; the hunger for athletic victory at any cost, that corrupts the moral aus- terity needed for a long life of true success, — all these must be put out of the Stanford code of life. They can be no lasting part of our little Stanford world, for they are notes out of tune with the highest and sweetest and strongest notes of the larger world. STANFORD TRADITION AND STANFORD VISION To the undergraduate, too frequently, the Stanford spirit is a mere tradition, a cluster of memories out of Stanford ' s olden times, to invoke which is to obtain a sure rule of privileged student conduct. Enough that Stanford men have done this thing once ! Stanford men may do it again ! It may have been a crude act of the University ' s infant days, but, then, it is a Stanford tradition. The half-lisped moralities of the college ' s swaddling-clothes days are slow to be outgrown ; the clear, vigorous, moral tones of grown men, slow to be given unhesitant ex- p ression. To the faculty-man, on the other hand, the Stanford spirit is, too often, a mere vision, the far-away call of remote ideals beckoning the Stanford men and women away from their roseate youth to nobilities which they cannot understand. Enough that some seer has pointed out the perfect way upward, that the teacher has taught it in words of wisdom and counsel in classroom and playfield, it is the student ' s obliga- tion to follow. That the student follows haltingly, often not at all, is the tragedy of the teacher ' s life. The master grows older from year to year, and closer to his own vision. His students seem as far behind as ever, and they are, for they are always eighteen or twenty-two years old, or, better, young! Perchance, if he has missed the thought that his work is always with the .same, imperfect, youthful kind, tiding them over the same stage of the imperfect way, he will despair of the college student, live a little less with him, teach him a bit more perfunctorily, counsel him a little less hopefully, and, at last, find his own refuge from it all in the enchantment of seclusion and scholarly research. To him 331 Stanford the Stanford spirit is a vision, and the Stanford student has failed to Quad behold it. 1908 THE WELDING OF THE STANFORD SPIRIT The Stanford spirit is both a tradition and a vision. It is both a memory and a promise. It is the old days, but the finest soul of the old days, guiding us to better things. It is the vision of the days to come, giving meaning to the days that are past. Yet how often in our college history have students and faculty been apart ! There is need for a welding of the Stanford spirit, the welding of the student tradition and the teacher ' s vision. How often, too, in the reaches of human history have the lesser world of college and the greater world of life been apart. The Stanford spirit must be welded of the best of race tradition and the best of college history. Then will the university be a fit instrument for the service of human causes, a tower of strength welded of the sturdy things that have endured. THE INDIVIDUALITY OF COLLEGE LIFE Every college or university that is worthy of the name will be dominated by its own college spirit. All of them will be alike, in that they will stand together for the maintenance of certain ancient standards of righteousness. Above all else they will stand for a rigid devotion to truth. Everywhere they will apply it to hvmian affairs, with a larger generosity and a better logic than is the common wont. All the sanctities will have their due place, a clean personal life, a loyal citizenship, a broad humanity, and all the rest. But each college will be different in its way of expressing its worship of high ideals, for each will speak through the genius of its own life, from the particular hillside where it is set down to speak its message to growing men and women. So while the Stanford spirit will be the best of the world spirit, holding common ideals with every college in the land, it will have a personality of its own. The Stanford spirit will be as different from the Harvard spirit or the Yale spirit as one good man ' s soul is different from another ' s. It will stand for the world aspiration, but it will have become its own aspiration, part and parcel of its institutional life. THE STANFORD PERSONALITY What Stanford life can come to be is determined by its place in the days and among the peoples. Its outlook is fixed by its traditions, its 332 promises by its memories. As one of the youngest of American colleges, it will stand for an institutional hopefulness that older places cannot know. We shall dare to try what others do not dare to think. As the westwardmost of universities, we are farthest removed from the deaden- ing hands of traditions that reach across from the East. We shall be more occidental in our virtues and in our restless vigor than any other. As a learned place upon California soil, the last new ground taken over as a mixing place of the nations, we shall be more cosmopolitan and more democratic. As an institution born of a great love and a great service, here shall grow no men of mere subtle cleverness of mind. Loving, serviceful men and women of intellect will go to their world ' s work from these quadrangles every year. They will carry in their souls the hopeful- ness of youth, the courage of radicalism, the democracy of the Western frontier, the love born of a great foundation— for of all these the Stanford devotion and the Stanford spirit are welded. Stanford Quad igo8 el ' : ' , ' ' - ' VN ' - ' .. ;•• ' ' 333 Stanford Quad igo8 O e (Tailing of t e Sda 3ames T5cmpl ' Ji Tfear6 tl)c awful calling of l )e. sua — lf (Toma, come, an6 be at rest wltl) me: (Tome, O eartl)-born slave, for 3 am free: (Tome, for 3 am Oime.TEternlty. (Lome, for 3 ave neither isle nor sljore Xil ' it ln my bounds, come, come from sullen so6 ZAnb b tavr. cUnsins air forevermore— (Tome, for 3 am wl)at tl)OU namest (Bo6. 3 turned anb fled before tl)e ipearnlng wav s. If ax reac lns gljostlip arms to drag me down Ol)e long, green slopes of deatl) so falsely fair. ZA-llTfell seemed opening In a thousand graves, l nd mingled walls rose up wltl) tears to drown Ol)e wild sea ' s undertone of false despair. 334 Stanford Quad igo8 The Sin of the Fathers (Prize Story) Antoinette Crawford OX reached the sidewalk in a rush and stopped short. A gust of foggy sea-breeze full in the face brought him to. There was, however, no time to loiter. The bull-dog he had stepped on in his mad flight down the stairs from the office had started up with ominous yelps and snarls. Pull- ing his hat down over his eyes, turning up his over-coat collar and pushing his hands viciously down into his pockets, Fox started ofif abruptly, breaking his way through the crowd of shoppers, turning corners at random and in many cases unconsciously retracing his steps. It was nearly half-past four. The sea-breeze was rapidly scudding the damp fOg from the hills down into the city streets. A few early arc lights sizzed and sputtered. The clang of the street-car bells, the cries of newsboys and street hawkers, the rush and hum of a busy moving mul- titude, the clatter of wagons, the honk of horns, the scream and shriek of whistles — all the sounds of a throbbing city ' s late afternoon in the com- mercial district came to Fox ' s ears as a murmuring roar that seethed about him and around him, as a mere echo of the tumult that held his inner consciousness oblivious to material surroundings. Rage was writ large on his features, rage at the employer from whose service he had freed himself, and rage at himself because he had done so. It was not the deed but the manner of doing that enraged him. When he had walked a half dozen blocks his anger began to settle and a feeling of failure began to rise and permeate his being, and dampen the ardor of his wrath. He had telephoned his wife that he would be home early. That was before the trouble. He concluded, after a few more blocks, that he might just as well go, because she would have to know sooner or later. He stopped walking and collected his thoughts, as if in eff ort to master himself. The fit of anger had subsided, but he felt he must somehow get a grip on himself again. He started to cross the street in the direction of a car, when a hand laid on his arm and a loud voice calling his name detained him. Hullo, Fox ! What ' s the row ? You looked awful bum. 336 Hullo Logan. Stanford Fox started to cross again, but the grasp tightened. Quad Come an ' have a drink. 1908 No thanks, I can ' t, I ' m in a hurry. Oh, sure you can, come on. Just a little one. The thought that possibly the red-faced, burly Logan might help him changed Fox ' s mind. After all, a drink or two might help him to brace up again. His and Marian ' s married life had been so serenely commonplace that he was not sure how she would meet this crisis, as it seemed to him. When they were seated at the little round table with the drinks before them, Fox. who had been parrying Logan ' s attempts at extended con- versation, began : I threw up my job today. The deuce you did. Yes, I did. How did that come? Fox ' s head dropped forward until his chin rested on the edges of his collar. He twisted his glass round and round with fingers that twitched a bit nervously. Well, he said, suddenly straightening up and leaning across the table, I did a thing I haven ' t done for more than three years — not since before I was married. I lost my temper. Well? You might as well know why. ' ' There was a note of resentment in Fox ' s tone, that deepened as he went on. Some of your fine inside tips you gave me left me altogether on the outside. Logan frowned and gnmted, but Fox made an impatient gesture for silence and continued, slowly and deliberately : I know it wasn ' t much — g ess lots of men lose twice as much in a single day and don ' t even miss it, but I have no money except what I earn every month, and you knew it, Logan. I ' ve got a wife and child, too, and that ' s the hard part of it. I worried over it and it haunted me so, I couldn ' t work right. I made some bad mistakes in the boss ' s private reports and he gave me a going over. I wouldn ' t have minded that so much. I could have kept still and taken it and done better next time, but he — here Fox stopped speaking and thrust his glass out at arm ' s length and looked fixedly at the lights shining reflected in the liquid. When he spoke again his voice was low and restrained — He jumped me for playing the ponies and read me a lecture on 337 Stanford gambling, which was all very good, but he — insinuated that that might Quad account for the shortage on the books. 1908 And he fired you for that? asked Logan. No. Fox spoke through clenched teeth. No. He didn ' t fire me. I didn ' t give him the chance. I wouldn ' t take talk like that from the King of England, so I called him a liar and a damned old grafter, and took my hat and coat and quit. What ' re you going to do? God knows, I don ' t. Logan ordered more drinks and Fox made no protest. Say, Fox, why don ' t you try the track? Come over to the track with me and Fll try and fix you up. Probably you could get a start making books. It ' s better than digging your life out in a close office. Well, I don ' t know. I guess you ' re right, partly. Fm sorry I made a fool of myself, though, because I needed the money. Still Fm half glad I ' m out of there. Old Wheaton didn ' t give me half I was worth and he ' d never dream of raising a man. As for the track — its so uncertain and — and my wife would not like it. = ' ■■ ' ' Logan ' s fat, florid face wrinkled into a scornful smile. Your wife ! Buy her some new duds and see if she ' ll like it. Say, come along, and have dinner with me, and we ' ll talk it over. Fox winced, but without a word he went with Logan. Marian can ' t expect me to be an angel, he told himself. H Fox took oflf his shoes and tip-toed upstairs without turning on the light. The house was dark. He hoped Marian was asleep. Is that you, Jim? came in a half-stifled voice, as he entered the room. He switched on the light and found his wife lying, dressed, on the bed, holding the sleeping baby in the hollow of her arm. Oh, Jim, dear, why did you stay so late? ' Her pale eyes looked reproachingly at him through a mist of tears. Some loose strands of hair straggled over her wet cheeks and the drooping mouth quivered in warning of a fresh out-break. Fox stood and stared dully at her. Then he crossed and sat down on the edge of the bed. I hope you haven ' t worried, Marian, he began with a note of tenderness in his voice, which was as leaden and dull as the ache in his eyes. Oh, you know I did, she fretted. You said you would come early, Jim. A tear started from each eye. Well — hang it all. I couldn ' t bear to come home and tell you 338 what ' s happened. No, don ' t cry and don ' t interrupt. I ' m out of work, Stanford I tell you, and I don ' t know what I ' ll do. Old Wheaton insulted me Quad today — insinuated that I was taking his rotten money to play the ponies, 1908 so. I up and cussed him and quit before he could fire me. But why didn ' t you come home, Jim? Didn ' t you know I ' d worry? Wellj ybU ' ve a whole lot more to worry about now. I ' m out of work and don ' t, eeM ' here I can get any. And you know we haven ' t a cent in the world (t(ut my salary — Oh,;iJlm Ht ' s so late and I ' m so tired and sleepy. God, ' ' ,Jh«liburst out, grasping the hand that lay limply on the bed-cover. He squeezed it until she cried aloud, but he seemed not to mind her pain. Be a woman, can ' t you? Don ' t you understand? There won ' t be any more money until I get more work. Stop that whininsf, will vou? ,..He tent back her wrist until she moaned, then he . , • ' , . ' 7 . ' jnnTlvfij ivrl irjj i ;: ■. . ...1 -JCnuO let go with an exclamatib ' n , of disgust. , , . , .,;.;. ? ' Why didn ' t you come bonne and tell riie ?. ' Marian persisted. Fox sat immovable as if he had not heard her. His brows met in a scowl of pain and anger that he truggl d, tp suppress. His lips were a thin line. He clenched his fist.s until the blood, spurted from his palms and trickled warm and red between his fingers. ■ . .. -.g r., .,, ; This, then, was the way she took it. ■ . He stooped and kissed her. Then he switched off the light. Fox slept little that night. He lay staring into the blackness, until the blackness paled into the dim indistinct greyness that precedes the dawn. He felt he was losing his grip. He knew he had lost it in the afternoon, he knew he could rely on no one but himself to get it again, and no one else could help him hold it. Marian, in the blindness of non- sympathy and non-comprehension that her negative goodness made inevitable, but threatened to push him over the edge whereon he was trying to gain a foot-hold, down into an abyss where burnt the flames of innate, elemental, uncontrolled passion. The next day he met Logan by appointment. They were to go over to the track together to see what could be done for Fox. He accepted from him a loan which Logan was to place for him. On the ferry boat crossing the bay, on the way over to the track. Fox was taciturn, even sullen. He felt that he was heaping on straws and which would be the last he could not tell. His breeding, the tendency of his whole life, had been toward calm, steady living. In it, he knew, was his only safe- guard. The old wild spirit, the ghost that he thought he had laid years ago was rising, only stronger for its sleep. 339 Stanford By the end of the day he was heavily indebted to Logan. He had Quad won but a trifle, and had lost more than he could earn in a year. Coming 1908 home on the boat he stood at the stern and watched the long, white trail foam and fade into the twilight haze. The water was cool and his head and hands and heart were hot. But he wouldn ' t do it that way — at least, not yet. He knew if he saw Logan that night he would throttle him. He had lost his grip and he knew it and he did not care, but he had torn away from Logan at the track and had gone oflf alone, for his own and Logan ' s safety. He was going home to Marian, but he had no hope of strength or solace from her. That little bubble of blown glass was shattered. She did not know it, but he did. Say, Marian, Fox had said as he was leaving that morni ng, if that old hen comes here today, don ' t tell her anything, will you ? Fox had relatives and he had kept his wife out of their reach but an elderly maiden sister took occasion to call on young Mrs. Fox every two weeks, on Wednesdays. Her coming was always more or less of an annoyance to Fox, who would question his wife closely concerning the visits, and seemed always afraid of something that his sister might tell her. Marian cleared up the breakfast and washed and dressed the baby without a troubled thought. In the calmer mood of the morning Jim had told her again what had happened, and expressed even sanguine hopes of getting work, probably with big pay. And then he had petted her and told her to forget he had been so cross. The appointment with Logan he did not mention. Miss Fox arrived a little before noon, immaculate in a stiffly-starched white waist. She elevated her eyebrows the fraction of an inch at Marian ' s faded pink wrapper, and the baby ' s blue calico dress. Children should always be dressed in white and as for wrappers — well. Miss Fox ' s eyebrows, as has been said, were elevated. She was a tall, large-boned woman with tobacco brown eyes, set close together in a long sallow face, the lower half of which was slashed by a thin mouth. Yes, she would stay for lunch, but she didn ' t wish to trouble her. Miss Fox, watched Marian set the table. I ' ll watch the child while you dress, she said, pointedly, looking at Marian ' s wrapper. Just let him lie there. Marian ' s mouth twitched as if she were about to say something. She had no intention of changing her dress until after lunch, but she left the room feeling that the brown eyes were burning deep holes in her back. At the table she tried to keep the conversation away from anything 340 that touched her husband and succeeded until the end of the meal. Miss Stanford Fox, however, seemed to detect a strained atmosphere. She began by Quad inquiring after his health. iQoS Oh, he is very well, thank you, said Marian. Very well, indeed. Does he ever have spells of anything? Miss Fox ' s eyes narrowed inquisitively. Oh, no, not to mention. He rarely complains of anything. Jim has lots of patience. Ye-es. Oh, yes, indeed. But take care not to annoy him. No, I won ' t. Marian ' s meekness but thinly veiled her petulance. And he is fond of the baby, isn ' t he? Yes, indeed. Jim is a good husband and he gets everything he can for me and he ' s — he ' s steady. Marian ' s cheeks were flushed and there was a note of anger in her voice. She felt herself tremble under the gaze of Miss Fox. Well, what are you so excited about? the cold voice asked. He ' s my brother, that is, my half brother, she corrected. You probably didn ' t know that, she finished with a malicious nod. He never told you any family history, did he? Marian felt her face burn. Her fingers tingled with an unexplainable, insane desire to slap Miss Fox or pull her hair. Why should he? she asked, and her voice was husky. I could tell you why he shouldn ' t. Well, I don ' t care. Jim is good to me, and that ' s all I care about. Then Miss Fox changed the subject. Marian was not a tactful woman. She was not even a thinking woman. She was merely a passively good woman who loved her husband and who was content to be loved by him. She never comprehended any emotion outside her own rather limited range. In fact, it never occurred to her that anybody else ever possessed any. The idea of falling into a mood with her husband was an entirely foreign one. When he came home that night to dinner with a despair darkening his eyes and tightening his lips, she immediately repeated as exactly as she could her conversation with Miss Fox. She was blind to the bright hot sparks that burned through the dark troubled eyes, to the clenched fists and the white, drawn lips. She found her husband at a well of bitter waters and unwittingly she was making him drink of it. She led him to an open grave and she could not see that the skeleton was rising. But Fox saw it and he felt its grasp 341 Stanford about his heart. He must tell her, something — it might as well be the Quad truth. 1908 I ' ll tell you all you want to know. His sentence ended in almost a shriek. My father ' s second wife was my mother, not hers. He gasped, so hard was he struggling for self-control. Her father — my grand- father — murdered his wife in a burst of temper. And they used to say I was like him. And inherited the temper. And — well, I have. He laughed harshly, But I conquered it. Oh, I ' ll show them — Jim, dear, eat. The dinner will be all cold. Dinner — cold, he shouted, won ' t you please hear me out? And the skeleton arose and took flesh and lived again. With a great cry of anguish Fox fell forward on the table and clawed about among the dishes in the wild impotency of rage. For three years he had cherished this woman and she cared no more for his sorrow than that the dinner would get cold. How he hated, hated, hated her. He gritted his teeth and bit his lips until the blood ran. She leaned across the table and touched him with one damp, cold hand. With an inarticulate yell he sprang up, his hand closing over the fork that lay at his place. If you won ' t hear me, I ' ll show you, he cried. He was beside her. With one hand under her chin he jerked back her head. The light caught the gleam of silver in his other hand as it rose and fell in spasmodic thrusts. — From the Sequoia. 342 ' - y.m- ' C fr- u : ' Quad Reminiscences of Men and Things Isaac Russell, ' 04 To be asked to reconstruct an article which was written in ante- earthquake days, and which went into the San Francisco ruins, along with the rest of Bickel ' s ' 07 Quad, is a privilege too much in harmony with general California problems to be overlooked. To respond is a pleasure, even if the result resembles the gymnastics of the Gymnasium Building on the clever i8th of April. For Stanford I hold certain truths to be self-evident. One is that a Stanford man is never one who merely went to college as an incident in his life, but rather is one to whom the Quad is a mainspring of inspira- tion. Ever after his college days he thinks and dreams and talks Stan- ford, and forces into his daily life certain standards and ideals of which the campus was the breeding-place. Stanford is his life, and he is servant of what the place made him hope he could be. His journey to the grave is divided into the era before Stanford, and that which comes after. I was asked the other day, in an off-hand manner, to state what I thought was Dr. Jordan ' s chief contribution to the age in which he has worked. I replied that I didn ' t know as to his work with the seals in the north, nor the fishes in the Rockies, but the thing that seemed to me most vital was his molding into the Stanford idea, a resolute protest against daily effort that seeks to get something out of nothing. Into his students has been ground the fundamental principle of pay, pay, pay; pay every time and all the time for every value received. In our generation we learned it by driving out the athletic hoboes who sought to graft a living oft ' the good will of students, and also in paying up for the failure of the Inn which our own board of directors had brought upon us. For the general college community it is expressed in the bit of philosophy that if you can ' t pay your way from the cradle to the grave you have no right , to make the journey, — also in the fighting motto, that you will find the world ready to stand aside when you know where you are going. This idea leads directly up to the topic in hand, — that of the rela- tionship between the Quad, its editor, and the college community; and the obligation the Quad tries to carry out in fulfilling the purpose of its creation. Most important to hold in mind then, is the fact that Stanford spirit is not Cornell spirit warmed over, or Princeton spirit transplanted. Recollected from an article written for the original 1907 Quad, entitled Quads and Quad-making. 344 Every college has the spirit that comes from libraries, recitation rooms, Stanford and recreations, but in Stanford the thing to look for is that elusive. Quad unexpressive thing that ties one ' s heart to the Quad beyond all hope of 1908 untying, and that makes for the element in Stanford spirit which is apart from all libraries, books, recreation, and the stock properties of colleges. The glory of a Quad editor is in catching such manifestations of this spirit as have expressed themselves during the year, and cementing them down in cold type for the direction and guidance of Freshmen, and for the elucidation of his particular generation. There are certain courses all Stanford people ought to elect, by com- mon consent. One is Dr. Jordan ' s evolution course. Those who have taken it will recall two rabbits which are held up, one black and the other white. It is pointed out that they are the same in blood and sinew, but the hawks got all the black ones in the snows of Canada, so the species whitened in color, and the hawks got all the white ones in the lava of Mexico, so the species blackened. What is it lays on the color in Stanford to make a true tone for a separate species of men and women? Go down in the arboretum, where Leland Stanford, Jr. first slept, and read what is written on the stone tablet standing there. The sentiment is that a message came from the whispering trees, and that this is sacred ground because of the in- spiration that came to one sitting there alone. In listening to the tale of the University ' s founding, we find that it was here that Senator Stanford dreamed the dream of his great Uni- versity. He was not its creator. He was a child of the same sunshine, the same breezes, the same vastness of expanse in hill and valley that is the inheritance of every Stanford man and woman. It made Senator Stanford dream big, and plan big, and the same inspiration is there for every one who walks the Quad alone at night. There are many places on the earth where a man never could have figured out the ideas that led to the making of Stanford. Just as the Encina man from his window watches the sun go to its daily rest, behind the wonderful Palo Alto hills, and sees the giant Sequoias on the ridge-top silhouetted against the even- ing twilight glow, so will he catch in his soul something of the bigness of life, that will make him plan in the Stanford manner and begin to talk for a sentiment against profaning the inner Quad with quarrels, tobacco smoke, or any of the commonplace things of life. The Senior Prom, with the lanterns on the inner eaves of the Quad, and the music to speed the night of parting, is a creation of the campus 345 Stanford which symbolizes something of its native spirit, and to catch this is the Quad highest possible work of any editor or Stanford writer. 1908 And here it should be said that Stanford was favored far above her sisters in the first generation. Not many colleges could boast of a Charley Field to start things off right, and catch the very essence of the place before it was a day old. Most people, perhaps, would say that Field pointed the path of Stanford spirit, but I prefer to think that the Stanford spirit rather pointed the future of his life, and that, in the same mood in which he wrote, hundreds of Stanford souls have sat mute, and in full enjoyment of the sentiments it was his privilege to record. In your day you know these sentiments as general college truths. In my day it was different, and therefore is much credit due to a few good men who kept the fire burning dimly, and almost at a flicker for years and years, while they were fighting to have their ideas generally comprehended and expressed i n laws of campus conduct. :J; :|: :)= -fi -i There is one thing of which I never could approve in Stanford, and that was the rigid flunking system that caught everybody alike, under the enforcement of men who were too old when they came to catch the Stanford idea, and who, it was my fond delusion, were born old and never got young. I sometimes used to think that the first endowment that ought to be made from an alumni association would be one to pay for the damage to the rules done by good souls who came to Stanford and wrote verse like Wallace Irwin brought out in his Quad. I would have had such show of talent constitute a right to remain on the campus greater than any display of ten good hours in plus marks, for in the very atmosphere of the place there is a liberal education for the man who prefers to take it that way rather than in digging at Greek roots or making new Chaucerian dictionaries. To the great credit of all those who have walked the plank out of our college life, let it be said that they have taken away no bitterness towards the University, and have blamed only the men who wielded the axe, not wisely but too well. Will Irwin had this great advantage over the Committee : he could talk about him- self exactly in the tone which they employed, and could call himself sin- cerely all the names they could think of in referring to his alleged actions. But as for them, they could never, by all the limitations of genius and breeding, think of themselves in the manner he thought of them and analyze themselves as he analyzed them in saying that, if he were rich to the point of a spare million, the first thing he would do would be to 346 ask certain men how much they wanted as a retiring fee, to get them out Stanford of the way between the Stanford spirit and its expression in practical Quad college life. The great sin of that committee in the old days was its iqo8 judgment as vital constituents of some man ' s character, the surface attributes he merely affected in a spirit of college play. In five years of Stanford — Irwin always said they liked him so much they encored his senior year — Bill learned to master the thought of the campus. In two years of San Francisco he learned to master the spirit of the Pacific Coast, and in two years of New York he has learned to master enough of its spirit to become one of the great forces in the literary world. Next we will hear of him as a master of national spirit, for this is the Irwin that is in the making. The spirit of the Qu.ad, which drew him down from San Francisco on the night train when he heard the Press Club was in session at the usual place, is what, it seems to me, is working out in the kind of force he is using to plow his way through the ranks in his profession. Irwin collaborated with Field in thinking out what Stanford meant at first, and around the Press Club dinner-tables this idea was talked over and rounded out through a whole Stanford generation before it took real hold on the campus. And here let me say the first good word I ever said for the L ' kiah push, for time was when that political organization was composed of men who felt, and knew — and came together because they felt and knew what was good for Stanford. It was only the decadent form of it that was brought into hostility with all good college policy and caused its final discrediting. Earlier in the game it was known as the Chocolate Club, and fought only for the general good. The Chocolate Club thrived on the system of putting out lights at 10:30 in Encina, and in ' 99 and 1900 its members congregated as the lights dimmed to brew a friendly cup of chocolate by candle light before retiring. There was among them Bristow Adams, who first laid down the law that the Y. M. C. A. must back up and out of college politics, and who spoke for many things that are now so common in Stanford practice that the day when it was not so is forgotten. There was Henry Taylor, who went out into the world to make beautiful books, and to work for a training house : since, then the hope of a gym had not dawned. Then, too, there were Chris Bradley, Forrest Fisher, Jack Bonnell, Will Erb, and Larrey Bowman, and when the gang got together over fried steaks smothered in onions at Mayfield they soon reached united conclusions, which Erb or Bowman perhaps expressed in a senior farce, Fisher in a football policy, Adams in a Chaparral editorial, and Irwin in a conference with the Committee. This generation had the friction of new ideas to carry, while the new ideas were taking hold. In December, 1900, the load of carrying into 347 Stanford effect these ideas became so great that almost every one of the men on Quad whose shoulders the work rested was gathered in i)y the flunking com- igo8 mittee, and the college was left destitute of its choicest spirits. Stanford spirit flunked with them for a year, and then the upward growth again began, with Irwin coming down often to talk confidentially to Max Farrand, and Charley Field comin g back, with parade of faculty approval, to tell his story to the college at large in the first University assembly. Lanagan came, too, with the assemblies, and Farrand took up the tale, causing to spread over college life like a new-born day the ideals in concrete form that had been worked out in silence by the few through almost a decade. Then it was that the girl students found they had responsibilities, that men found it was a sucker trick to borrow a paper instead of subscribing, that the dig and diggozel discovered they were grafters in that they did not carry their share of the burden in making Stanford life, and then it was that the Stanford product became seventy-five or eighty per cent pure goods instead of only twenty or thirty per cent. After that it was easy for every cardinal heart to echo the sentiment of Dr. Jordan when he said that the earthquake would strengthen the next Stanford gener ation by scaring away only the weak in heart and spirit. As time rolls on and each generation echoes the song of its predecessor, each Quad editor will have his privilege of recording, along with the commonplace, the routine, the regular, that little manner in which for the first time the peculiar resident spirit manifested itself for his classmates. For the ninety-fiver, it was about the pioneer oak that sentiment clustered. Five years later the cruel axe of the builder had laid low the oak, and the century class was discovering the cactus garden, the stock farm, the estate, and all the outlying environs of hill and bay- side. Four years later, again, the men of my own era were pinning their faith to an Inner Quad, set like a jewel, the poets told us, inside the bulwark of arches, two-story buildings, and fagade, which reached their final glory just before the earthquake. What will come after is for you to determine, but whatever the new generation discovers, and the old generation finds has passed away, the essential source of the native Stanford spirit will remain, for it breeds new arboretums of giant height, it whispers its messages in the twilight glow, and comes down in the starlight from the great divide between Stanford and the sea, where the Sequoias grow, and the autumn browns take on their favorite shades. It will bring other organ lofts from which sweet music may enchant the waking hours within the Quad, and other steeple towers from which chimes may ring farewell to other generations, and it will raise new leaders to sense for each generation what is vital to the place. 348 The Omnipotence of Chappie l ' ; ' Morris Oppenheim, ' 05 LL the world knocks a knocker. Nobody loves the editor of the Chaparral. The sacred, sanctified, intellectual Press Club loathes him, and the sweet, kind, loving, womanly Sequoia at times thinks almost unkindly of him. But devil a bit does Chappie care. He still refuses to repair to the Arboretum and dine on willy-worms and woolly-bugs. He of the hammer, mirror and bells fortnightly champeth on the bit, and, like the indomitable Maud, sends with a jolly good kick the afore- mentioned Press Club and Sequoia on a painful journey to the Guild. If you do not like Chappie, watch out, or he will wallop you with his mighty hind leg. ' Ware of Chappie, for he is omnipotent. While Chappie is omnipotent, he is not, of course, the only omnipo- tent fellow around here. Other folks hereabouts are just as omnipotent as Chappie, and may be omnipotenter. Now, just for example, there is the faculty. The faculty greatly resembles the Press Club, only it can fight. The sacred faculty and Chappie once had a fight, and this is how it came about. Chappie is the college humorist, and, being a humorist, curiously enough, he is supposed to be funny, at all times deucedly, ludicrously, frightfully funny. So one day Chappie thought of a merry disport, and the silly editor adverted to our serene faculty. A frugal professor was said to be acquiring an independent fortune by mulcting guileless students. The course he gave looked like one of those pipes, and, lured by the look, they registered. They were compelled to buy the syllabus at a fabulous price. Chappie gently insinuated that the commercialistic pedagogue was naught but a greedy grafter and respectfully suggested a Grand Jury investigation and eight thousand indictments. Being in an inexpressibly humorous mood, he went further and proposed that the late-lamented head of the now defunct Committee on Student Affairs was a professional persecutor and blackmailer, who retained a whole army of Hawkshaws to spy on good students and pry into and exploit their private lives. The morning after all this was aired 349 igo8 Stanford before the public, the funny editor became the butt of a practical joke Quad played on him by the faculty. In the mails there came a passionate, 9 violet-scented missive, and in substance it ran like this : My dear ' Chappie ' : I write you these few lines to let you know that, in view of the gratuitous insults to the faculty appearing in your paper, you may consider yourself down and out. With love, Doc. Jordan. The point the writer would make is, it is all right for Chappie to be funny, but he must nfever get tod funny. The Martyr once said, The college jokes must ever be heedful of the tender feelings of me. But the silly editor took the warning not. He had just about made up his mind to make light of a certain obscure organization, full conscious of the fact that The Martyr belonged thereto. When the news of this came to the ears of The Martyr, he casually dropped in on the editor and nonchalantly informed Chappie that he would be constrained to break his face if the josh were perpetrated. But the editor well knew that the joke would make the undergraduates laugh, and, after all, that is really the only thing to be considered. The josh was published, and the students giggled. The Martyr subsequently called on the editor to deliver the wallop. But Chappie delivered first, and he heed and he hawed triumphantly. Chappie is a hero, too. Only a hero can endure what Chappie endures. He conceives a joke and then laughs himself sick. And then he proceeds to publish it. Proud of himself and proud of his joke he waltzes around the Quad the morning the sheet comes out. Oh, goody ! says he, see all the people reading my paper. How they will laugh when they see my joke. Pretty soon the faces of the people who are reading the paper take on a thoughtful expression. Strong men begin to snififle, and fair women to sob. Suddenly the editor is rudely arrested by a formidable looking beast who holds a copy of the magazine in his hand. Say, kid, says he, clenching his big hairy paw menacingly, did you write this? He points to the funny joke. Chappie giggles and stammers, but fear is gnawing at his kidney. He tries to elucidate 350 igo8 and explain the joke. He simply can not. The joke seemed funny when Stanford he was first inspired with it, but now — . It ' s all right, kid, observes the Quad big fellow in dramatic accents, I ' ll see you in the bathroom at half-past ten tonight. As Chappie wends his way dozens of men stop him and plead and even dare him to interpret the joke. To escape the revenge- ful and persistent rabble Chappie flees to his room, bolts the door and takes from a drawer in his desk a large bottle containing a brownish liquid. He must end it all. With quivering hand he places the bottle to his lips, takes a long, painful swallow, and smiles. It was a bum joke, but Chappie will not stand for being chided. And just for that he raised the price of the paper from fifteen cents to a quarter. By golly, but Chappie is omnipotent. It is better to have lived and laughed at that fierce joke and pay fifteen cents for your Chaparral than to have wept and have to pay ten cents more. The distinguished writer of this essay modestly believes he has made himself sufficiently clear in his elegant and forceful style that Chappie is most omnipotent. In fact he trusts he has brought home the fact to his readers that he is about the whole theatrical around here. In conclusion he takes this opportvmity to announce that he knows who wrote the Bogie, but he will never tell. 351 The College Year THEL COLLLCL YLARj aii-t ' iftfiiiii Stanford Quad 1908 RKGISTRATION DAY The College Year 1906-7 has been a strange year in some ways, and yet, above all a normal and prosperous year. At the opening of the University, the build- ings and surroundings were badly littered with the efifects of the Earth- quake. During the summer vacation some impression had been made upon the debris, but it looked as though it would be impossible for instruction to begin at the appointed time. And yet, almost automatically, the stones and boards receded before the final moments, and by Registration Day, the class-rooms were ready for occupancy. Registration figures fell off somewhat, but not nearly so largely as had been expected. In fact there was actual increase in the number of old students. The lesser number of new students was ])robably due to the fact that Eastern- ers — Freshmen and Transfers — were afraid to come for their college work to the seat of the great Earthquake. In several respects, the opening of the year more nearly resembled a closing, and so it was — the postponed closing of the spring semester. As many of the 1906 class 1910 SOON SHINES 354 ' 06 SENIOR-FACULTY (iAME had returned as could reach the University, and they soon decided to carry forward their commencement exercises in due form. On the 15th of September, the class of 1906 was graduated. In the morning the class-day exercises were held in the chapel, and the plate was laid before the church. In the afternoon occurred the Faculty-Senior baseball game ; and in the evening, the degrees were conferred in Assembly Hall. The Senior ball was supplanted by an informal reception in Encina Club room, after the conclusion of the program in Assembly Hall. Coincident with the delayed commencement of 1906, came the spring elections. The ' 06 men, being entitled to vote, took a farewell dip into college politics. The surprising feature of the contest was, that, after a Stanford Quad igo8 1906 COMMENCEMENT ENCINA NIGHT-SHIRT PARADE FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL RUSH ALL-NIGHT TICKET LINE FOR THE BIG GAME four months ' vacation, cam- paigns could be organized so quickly and so effectively as was done by the two tickets involved. In order to do away with the rather dangerous ' Tub- rush of former years, in En- cina Hall, between the Fresh- men and the Sophomores, the Faculty decreed that the two under-classes could decide the debated question of physical supremacy by a game of asso- ciation football ; the matter was settled on Stanford field. The Sopho- mores won ; but in the large crowd so great was the difficulty of locating a small football that the participants could not use their strength intelli- gently. For the most part the ball hung dead in the center of the pushing throng; but once or twice it worked loose, and over the Freshman goal-line. Encina Hall, of course, soon made its night-shirt debut. Over the Row, the Quad, and around the halls, the spectral procession lock-stepped along, and as the first hint of the year of what was emphasized later — the strong grip that campus traditions are getting upon Stanford students — the night-shirt parade was larger this year than ever before. Although Rugby had been accepted somewhat sullenly at first on the part of the students, by the end of the season, enthusiasm had risen to such a point that the greatest football rally in Stanford his- tory preceded the Varsity game. The night ticket line on the Quad was as long as ever ; and what is more a matter of surprise (consider- ing the Earthquake), the crowd which attended the game at Berkeley was as great as ever. The Junior Plug Ugly was late owing to the great Stanford Quad igo8 PLUG UGLY NIGHT 357 Stanford Quad igo8 difficulty the Juniors experienced in secur- ing plugs. They finally managed to get a supply made from felt hats, and these looked just as disreputable after the ugly as any bona fide plugs have ever looked. Following the farce, The Fleecers, the Juniors marched and fought the Seniors around the Inner Quad, after which they wound up with a final battle on the post- ofiice steps. The Senior circus, indeed, ivas a cir- cus ; 1907 made such a success of this inno- vation that it will probably become a per- petual event of the college year. From the parade, the public caught the spirit of the thing, and in the evening they yielded up their money to the successive fakes ' with the greatest good humor. During the Christmas holidays the Varsity football team made a trip to British Columbia. There they played the Rugby teams of Vancouver and Victoria. The men were received to the fullest extent of Canadian hospitality. During the holidays, too, many students found the occupation of cleaning brick for the University, an enjoy- able as well as a lucrative occupation. On Washington ' s birthday appeared the annual parade of the Row — its contri- bution to campus entertainment in return for the Encina night-shirt parade. The Washington ' s birthday parade came with the present Junior class, and has grown in popularity ever since. The houses are ran- sacked for outlandish and impossible cos- tumes, which are combined and worn as outlandishly and impossibly as possible. Junior day, this year, was a great suc- cess. Although the day was cold and dis- agreeable, a large crowd braved the in- clement weather, and went to Lagunita to SENIOR CIRCUS 358 S o a! THE VARSITY QUEENS IN BRITISH COLUMBIA see the aquatic sports. Tilting, canoeing and tub racing were the features, besides the Interclass regatta. 1908 captured this event for the third successive time. The conclusion to the Junior festivities, which had begun with the musical comedy, La Serena, the night before, was the Junior Prom in LLEAXl.XG BRICK 360 H -. pife, ,. ' i L i .,,• ., . „ --. .. -. . . i ,■ , i ii.. ... •• •. --. ' .-; ■ ■ ■f ' W - • • ' - ' • ' ' ■Wi! ' ;v ■ ' ' i?x ' A« ' :,. . •■ v% l , ; • •V-M .. ' i rts 1 ?V ' . ' • ' j , ' r X. J ■ ' , . -ji mu jr-- sH ' H Stanford Quad 1908 JUNIOR DAY Encina Club room. One of the most unique features of the dance was the grand march, which executed the figures ' 08. According to the Prom Committee, who conceived this plan, it can not be repeated until the class of 1980. Taken as a whole, the year has been busy, eventful, successful — extraordinarily successful, — and although the work of recounting this spring ' s victories belongs to the 1909 Quad, so vitally are they a part of the present college year that we can not refrain from mentioning them. In 1906-07. Stanford has won the Varsity football game, the Carnot Medal, the Intercollegiate track meet, the first eight-oared regatta, Inter- 1908 WINS AGAIN 361 Stanford Quad 1908 THE VASSAR CREW collegiate tennis, and Intercollegiate baseball (for the first time since 1898). The University of California won chess — but one of the Stanford players was disabled. In a scholastic line, a marked change has been apparent. The stan- dard of work has been noticeably raised, and residence at the University has been made much more problematical. Yet, with some eighty-eight Christmas exceptions, the relations between the students and faculty have been better and more confidential than ever before. There has been more than usual excitement in literary and journalistic circles — in- volving the boycott of a magazine by the women, the removal of an editor from office, and countless inches of thrilling descriptions of the same in the city papers. In- deed, every issue of a cer- tain publication came to be viewed as live news matter by the San Francisco dailies — a tribute, whether positive or negative, very unprecedented. Politically the year has been sultry, beginning with the five-cornered Quad elec- canoe racks tion of the Sophomore class. The consecutive contests to ferret out the winner, follow ed by the other class and the student-body elections, have made the ballot-box almost a permanent fixture on the Quadrangle. One 362 of the changes in University policy which has done a little toward altering the serenity of campus life is the allowing of automobiles on certain roads and driveways. And whereas in the old days of exclusion the atmosphere was quiet and scholarly, at the present time it is full of dust and the siren whistling of flying machines. The University has become a magnet for all the automobiles in the Santa Clara Valley — which is not at all surpris- ing, for it is a good place to come. But while their first entrance seemed novel enough to merit mention as an event of the year, yet the campus soon ceased to give them notice and became engrossed again in its own affairs. Stanford Quad 1908 1 M fi R n i 1 ' ly m V W Jll i M m fi j m SHi PHI DELT. PHI INITI. TION 363 Stanford Quad 1908 Saturday, March 24. Thursday, March 29. Thursday, March 29. Friday, March 30. Saturday, March 31. Saturday, March 31. Saturday, April 7. Saturday, April 7. Tuesday, April 10. Wednesday, April 11. Wednesday, April 11. Thursday, April 12. Thursday, April 12. Saturday, April 14. Tuesday, April 17. Wednesday, April 18. Thursday, April 19. Tuesday, Aug. 28. Wednesday, Aug. 29. Friday, Aug. 31. Friday, Aug. 31. Friday, Aug. 31. Friday, Aug. 31. Saturday, Sept. 1. Monday, Sept. 3. Tuesday, Sept. 4. Tuesday, Sept. 4. Tuesday, Sept. 4. Wednesday, Sept. 5. Wednesday, Sept. 5. Wednesday, Sept. 5. Wednesday, Sept. 5. Friday, Sept. 7. Saturday, Sept. 8. Monday, Sept. 10. Tuesday, Sept. 11. Tuesday, Sept. 11. Calendar 1906 First Interscholastic Meet. Won by Oakland High School. 1907 presents Stanford — the Life Strenuous. Baseball. Varsity, 7 ; Santa Clara, 0. Junior Day. Track, All-Southern California, 63J 2 ; Stanford, S8H- Stanford loses first Intercollegiate Freshman Meet, 48 2 ; Mid-semester Vacation begins. First Intercollegiate baseball game. Stanford, 1 ; Califor- nia, 0. Varsity Track Meet. Olympic Club, 8 ; Stanford, 6. St. Mary ' s defeats Varsity, 2-0. University As.scmbly. Dean Hodges and Dr. Gardner speak. 1908 wins Interclass Field Day. Baseball. Stanford, 15; Alumni, 2. Gowan and Delano make Varsity Tennis Team. Second Intercollegiate baseball game. California, 4; Stan- ford, 3. Pemberton, ' 08 ; Conant, ' 08 ; Zimmerman, ' 07 ; Gay, ' 08 ; Turner, ' 08 ; make Varsity Crew. The earthquake, at 5:13 a. m. University work suspended. Registration Day. Formation of President ' s Conference. Class of 1906 votes to hold commencement exercises. Class of 1906 accepts Miss Stella Wynne ' s farce, The Original Miss Tewksberry. B. W. Utter elected Freshman President, student Body election. C. F. Laumeister, ' 07, elected President. Sophomore-Freshman Rush. Sophomores win. Women ' s Conference formed. Alumni Reunion planned. 1906 issues general invitation to Alumni. Editors of 1907 Annual plan a Record Book to replace Quad. Encina Night-shirt Parade. J. C. Macfarland, ' 07, re-elected Varsity Track Captain. F. Zimmerman, ' 07, elected Captain of Varsity Crew. F. R. Lanagan, ' 08, re-elected Leader of the Mandolin Club. Openmg of Stanford Golf Links. First Rugby Rally held in Encina. 116 men sign up. Annual Freshman Reception held in Encina Gymnasium. First Rugby practice. E. P. Stott, elected Senior President. G. J. Presley, ' 07, elected Captai n of the Varsity Baseball Team. 364 Tuesday, Sept. 11. Tuesday, Sept. 11. Wednesday, Sept. 12. Thursday, Sept. 13. Thursday, Sept. 13. Friday, Sept. 14. Saturday Sept. 15. Saturday Sept. 15. Saturday Sept. IS. Sunday, Sept. 16. Wednesday, Sept. 19. Wednesday, Sept. 19. Thursday, Sept. 20. Thursday, Sept. 20. Friday, Sept. 21. Saturday, Sept. 22. Wednesday, Sept. 26. Thursday, Sept. 27. Thursday, Sept. 27. Saturday, Sept. 29. Saturday, Sept. 29. Tuesday, Oct. 2. Thursday, Oct. 4. Friday, Oct. 5. Saturday, Oct. 6. Saturday, Oct. 6. Wednesday, Oct. 10. Thursday, Oct. 11. Thursday, Oct. 11. Saturday, Oct. 13. Saturday, Oct. 13. Wednesday, Oct. 17. Wednesday, Oct. 17. Saturday, Oct. Monday, Oct. Wednesday, Oct. Wednesday, Oct. Saturday, Oct. Saturday, Oct. Monday, Oct. Wednesday, Oct. Wednesday, Oct. 20. 22. 24. 24. 27. 27. 29. 31. 31. F. K. Wyatt elected Sophomore President. S. B. Thompson, ' 07, elected Leader of the Glee Club. Cap and Gown Society organized by ' 06 women. C. M. Leach elected Junior President. First track rally. Class of ' 06 presents The Original Miss Tewksberry. 1906 Commencement. Faculty-Senior baseball game. Seniors win. Senior Reception in Encina. Baccalaureate sermon by Bishop Nichols in Assembly Hall. First University Assembly. Dr. Jordan, Dad Moulton, and C. F. Laumeister, ' 07, speak. R. S. Kellogg, ' 07, elected Yell Leader. First meeting of President ' s Conference. Professor Green resigns from Student Affairs Committee. Tennis tryouts for class teams. First Rugby game. Varsity Reds vs. Varsity Blacks, 3-0. Varsity Reds defeat Freshmen at Rugby, 25-0. Varsity Blacks defeat Freshmen at Rugby, 5-3. Social Service Club organized. Work on new track begins. Santa Cruz defeats Freshmen at Rugby, 3-0. P. B. Delano wins Junior Class Tennis Tournament. A. J. Gowan wins ' 09 tennis tryout. University Assembly. Prof. Thomas A. Bacon, of the University of California, speaks. Freshmen adopt class cap. Freshmen Reds defeat Freshmen Blacks at Rugby, 16-0. Varsity Reds defeat Varsity Blacks at Rugby. 3-0. . . J. Gowan, ' 09, wins Interclass Tennis Tournament. Freshman rally in Assembly Hall. Dr. Angell, Dr. Gard- ner, Prof. C. Searles, and Prof. Durand speak. Robert Little elected Captain of Freshman Team. Freshman Intercollegiate game. California, 3; Stanford, 0. L. S. Levy, ' 08, wins first prize for Plug Ugly manuscript. University Assembly. Robert E. Spear and Luther Bur- bank speak. Constance Crawley presents Ibsen ' s Hedda Gabler in Assembly Hall. Varsity defeats Nevada at Rugby, 11-0. Freshmen defeat Sophomores in Interclass Tennis doubles. Juniors defeat Seniors in Interclass Tennis doubles. Interscholastic Association elects officers. J. C. Macfar- land, ' 07, elected President. Varsity defeats Pomona at Los Angeles, 26-0. Juniors defeat Freshmen in final Interclass Tennis doubles. Vancouver team arrives on Campus. Varsity defeats Vancouver, 5-3. University Assembly. James D. Phelan speaks. Stanford Quad 1908 365 Stanford Friday, Nov. 2. Quad Saturday, Nov. 3. 1908 Wednesday, Nov. 7. Thursday, Nov. 8. Thursday, Nov. 8. Saturday, Nov. 10. Wednesday, Nov. 14. Friday, Nov. 16. Friday, Nov. 23. Saturday. Nov. 24. Monday, Nov. 26. Tuesday, Nov. 27. Wednesday, Dec. 5. Thursday, Dec. 6. Friday, Dec. 7. Friday, Dec. 7. Monday, Dec. 10. Thursday, Dec. 13. Monday, Dec. 17. Wednesday, Dec. 19. Sword and Sandals present Two Gentlemen of Verona. Stanford defeats Vancouver, 16-6. Last scrimmage practice. Final Rugby rally. J. F. Lanagan, Dad Moulton, Dr. Gardner, and Prof. A. H. Suzzallo speak. Stanford Varsity chosen. Intercollegiate game at Berkeley. Stanford, 6; California, 3. University Assembly. R. M. Hotaling and Douglas Erskine speak. Junior Plug Ugly. The Fleecers presented by class of 1908. Senior Circus. Fall Track Meet. Open meeting of Phi Beta Kappa. Executive Committee orders 8-oared shell. Last University Assembly. Fairfax Wheelan speaks. H. Fitch, ' 07, elected Editor of the Daily Palo Alto. Mackenzie Gordon gives concert. W. Koerner, ' 08, elected Football Captain. J. W. Maloy, ' 07, wins Bonnheim contest. Final examination begins. 1907 Quad appears. Jan. 8 Xmas holidays. Varsity Team goes to British Co- lumbia. Tuesday, Jan. Thursday, Jan. Friday, Monday, Jan. Jan. Wednesday, Jan. Thursday Jan. Friday, Jan. Saturday, Jan. Wednesday, Jan. Wednesday, Jan. Monday, Jan. Tuesday, Jan. Wednesday, Jan. Friday, Feb. Tuesday, Feb. 1907 8. Registration Day. 10. Executive Committee appoints J. E. Gushing Editor pro tem. of the Daily Palo Alto and W. F. Herron Editor pro tem. of Sequoia. 11. Academic Council grants degrees. 14. J. E. Gushing, ' 08, elected Editor of the Daily Palo Alto. W. F. Herron, ' 08, elected Editor of the Scqxioia. 16. University Assembly. Dr. Jordan and Dr. Hempl speak. 17. Track rally. Track men sign up. 18. Baseball practice begins. 19. W. F. Herron, ' 08, G. G. McCoUoch, Shelton, ' 08, chosen for Garnot Team ' 07, alternate. 23. A. A. Murphy elected Junior President. 23. J. M. Ward elected Senior President. 28. Trustees make appropriations for athletics. 29. Miss Laura Wells, G. N. Richardson, H. I J. Telfer and T. B. Griffith nominated for Editor of the ' 09 Quad; D. W. Burbank and S. G. Bias nomi- nated for manager. 30. University Assembly. Ex-Governor Pardee speaks. 1. W. F. Herron, ' 08, wins the Garnot Medal. 5. First ' 09 Quad election ; Griffiths and Telfer drop out. D. W. Burbank elected manager. 08, and W. G. L. M. Edwards, Bruning. W. 366 Thursday, Feb. ' Thursday, Feb. 7. Friday. Feb. 8. Saturday, Feb. 9. Tuesday, Feb. 12. Tuesday, Feb. 12. Tuesday, Feb. 12. Wednesday, Feb. 13 Monday, Feb. 18. Wednesday, Feb. 20 Wednesday, Feb. 20 Monday, Feb. 25 Wednesday, Feb. 27 Friday, Marc h 1 Saturday, March 2. Wednesday, March 6. Thursday, March 7. Friday, Tuesday, Wednesday Wednesday Thursday, Thursday, Friday, Friday, Saturday, Thursday, Friday, March 8. March 12. March 13. March 13. March 14. March 14. March IS. March 15. March 16. March 21. March 22. Saturday, March 23. Varsity baseball. Stanford, 4; Santa Clara, 3. Second ' 09 Qu.M) election ; G. X. Richardson drops out. 1909 wins Sophomore-Freshman Debate. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 4; Santa Clara, 1. Third ' 09 Qu. D election ; H. F. Bruning elected Editor. K. L. Fenton, ' 08, awarded Punting Cup. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 2; Santa Clara, 2. (13 innings.) Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 1 ; St. Mary ' s, 6. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 3 ; Presidio, 1. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 4; Elks, 1. L. S. Levy, ' 08, wins Junior Farce Competition. J. F. Lanagan tenders resignation as Coach. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 2; HeitmuUer ' s All-Star Team. 1. Class of 1909 presents Bernard Shaw ' s Comedy You Never Can Tell. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 5; Gallagher-Marsh, 6. University . ssembly. W. R. George, of the George Jr. Republic, speaks. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 3; Santa Clara, 4 (12 in- nings). Women ' s Conference votes to walk to the Junior Prom. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 4; Santa Clara, 6. University Assembly. Dr. Jordan speaks. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 0; St. Mary ' s, 4. Eight-oared shell arrives. E. J. Hadley, ' 08, elected Editor of the Chafarral for 1907-08. Stanford waives right to Track Meet. German Club presents Minna von Barnhelm. Freshman Track Team defeats Bay Counties Track Team, 69-44. Class of 1908 presents La Serena. Junior Day. . ' Kquatic Sports. 1908 wins Interclass Regatta. Junior Prom. Second Interscholastic Meet. Won by Oakland High School. Stanford Quad igo8 367 Josh ' es Here is Clarence from the Mission, Queener, rough-neck politician, Where is Clarence going? Delta Gamma does he go. Or still farther up the Row, Or (more probably) Menlo, Is there way of knowing? Ah. my friends, you are mistaken All these things are now forsaken ; Clarence, more ' s the pity. Toward the Frisco road is turning Stripped of all his legal learning As his life work is discerning Brick-piles of the city. 370 x_ a. V '   -vX-t.5it -  .a-T ., ,jj  - _ tf -iSU t - J-f-VLft AMjt 2 , , . BUT — A CORRESPONDENCE LIKE THIS WOULD DRIVE ANY STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT OUT OF COLLEGE The night was dark and stormy, And not a soul in sight. Our agile Mac would gallant be, And play the hero, quite. The night was dark and stormy — Ah, Mac, show not surprise ! Tho ' no one was within your view, Night has a thousand eyes. 372 Stott He also ran for captain once — no harm ! He also ran the second time — the charm. A third time did he run — without alarm. The moral I would point, mj- little ones, Is Everything will come to him who runs. Politics in Enema Hall What are the people talking of? a Stanford student cried. About Guy Knupp, about Guy Knupp, the House Committee sighed. I never liked him very much, the Stanford student cried. He suits Y. M. C. A. all right, the house mother replied. He ' s organized Encina and has cornered all the votes, And at elections he will try to ram them down our throats ; The Band will play sweet Tammany and we will be the goats, Since Knupp and Riley organized Encina. What is Encina coming to? a Stanford student cried. To Mr. Knupp ; to Mr. Knupp, the House Committee sighed. O what will happen then, pray tell, a Stanford student sighed. God only knows, God only knows, the house mother replied. 373 (PKESLEV DOES NOT KNOW THAT THE Ol ' AD HAS THIS PICTURE) foolish ben POSING AS A SPORT For heaven ' s sake ! go call the Prex Such sights as this the students vex. We really hope, our thoughts to vent, This meeting was an accident. 375 o wen Behold the handsome Carrie, with his mitt out for the sweater ! He holds the palm for numbers, and he goes himself one better. This Y. M. C. A. champeen — there ' s the medal for his stunts, And in all his decorations he enwraps himself at once. Ward election to office, and endless variety, Exert an influence that ' s bad for sobriety. 1 was good as might be through my whole Stanford residency Till benevolent Seniors thrust on me the presidency. Since then I wear clothes such as students should wear, I have learned how to smoke and to go on a tear. I have taken to queening (don ' t doubt my veracity) And for liquor I ' ve gained an enormous capacity. 376 Zimmerman Upon the Row, This famous bore, Tells his achievements Oar and oar. -! tl:: ! W u m— ' M (wunderful) Manchester The poet, in the course of his work, will some- times run across a subject where even common verse fails him. This is one of them. Clark There is an instructor named Clark, Who ought to be kept in the dark; He is happiest when He can call down the men. And with the Co-eds he can spark. MVMOTro:: FLUNlC ' Cn AtL 6oT Sl . AMO TMtM yuUNK THEn As to Carter O would that I had in my make-up a lurid vocabulary. And the editor would let nie utter the thoughts that arise in me. Spanish Smith Absent on leave. 378 VOmC -S «Tml£TiC association ' C UCa iAJ-fid ydjUl(yu. i ru ZAji aco jL yiATiXP . bA-Axit- a - f J u i a i i, -t X . SlanjoTd Unmrsily, Califortiul, 190... t . -J. ' I (iL.JU - y- i fcr oj is -t x. o± b.so T ' .m - tu,, — - , i , «a:z vX o-- S -- L Lv C(_XT - fey fJJyUL- Ut i. w .o ua - -OMX. 379 BILL Some Things That Might Have Been Les(s) Gay. A poorer class than ' 09. A representative Bogy Committee. More kids in the law faculty. A better class president than Murphy. A bigger graft than Doc Wilbur ' s. Can You Answer These } What will the Phi Delts do when Bull Chalmers leaves? Will Bull Chalmers leave until 6$- ' (-) ? Is Steve Gage or is he not? Has Bill Herron sworn off or is there a woman in the case? Is the Delta Tau grand fraternity paying Zimmer ' s board? Are the fraternities strong for the Interscholastic? 380 THE SENTINEU LUKNI NOTMN St lmford. r.u. SlerlinB. 04, ha« bfome !■ manaiier of the DflU Kappa Epsilo ter houae. But ia «] ' « ' ' ' ' ■ tion. he is atill proud of the fact thai ia ail ahimiiUR of Harvard. llarvan (Special dispatch to the Delta Gamma Anchora.) Stanford University, April 23. — Much comment has been created about the Campus by the sudden and unexpected resignation of Bull (Aleck) Chalmers from all branches of athletics. Bull has been a constant caller at our house for three years (on the Q. T. we think he is strung), and by the popular athlete ' s retirement we lose a Varsity S. Aleck quit baseball for rowing, and later gave up the water when it looked as if there might be eight other oarsmen better than he. Bull says it is his heart, but we know better, for we have it right here in the house and it is in perfect condition. We keep it in a glass cage. Later talk has it that Bull has joined the ranks of the Willie Walkers. Maybe. We hope so. Yours in the Anchors, CoRRV Spondent. 381 The Gossip C lub Purpose — Organized for the purpose of investigating, illuminating, magnitudinizing, and disseminating such private and personal affairs as do not concern the members of the Gossip Club. Membership — The gossipiest girls on the campus. Place— make ' s, Cafe. Time — When they have to tell somebody, or die. Act I (and II, etc.) (The curtain rises discovering the Club seated around the table, eating some, glaring more, talking most.) Chairlady — The meeting will please come to order. Omnes — Whir — r — r — r — r ! ! ! Chair — Will the meeting please come to order? Omnes — Whir — r — r r r Chair — Thank you ! We will have the opening hymn : Omnes (rising) — Coy-eds we, Tra-la lee, Sweeter girls you never see. We ' re the pick of Stanford ' s famous beauty show. Brewing tea and making fudges, Gossiping and paying grudges Is our very busy business, you know. Chair — We will now proceed with the regular business. Have you all brought your packages ? Ah ! I see you have. Pass them up, please. {A deluge of packages floods the table, almost dro ' cuning the chairlady, but not quite.) One at a time, one at a time! I am delighted at the interest taken in our noble, uplifting work. What have we here? A package for Gwendolynn Jones ! Omnes — Whir — r — r — r r ! ! ! Chair — Silence! I agree, she certainly qualifies. Here ' s another! Mr. Goodfellow. {Cries of Bravo! Keen work! ) Girls! We must not be so demonstrative. Third : — Well, here are twenty-three packages ; we ' ll take them up alphabetically. 382 Omnes — Whir — r — r r! ! Chair — I will not ask again for order ! You must be silent. OwHM— SILENT!!! (Five girls faint.) Chair — And here Omitcs — Oh, that ' s enough. We know whom they ' re for. Cliair — ery well ! We will proceed with our special work. It seems to me we should have a constitution. Omnes — Yes ! Yes ! Chair (Taking a thick roll of manuscript from her pocket) — I have prepared a constitution for your approval. Shall I read it? Omnes- — Aye ! Chair (reads) — Preamble: W ' e, the Gossip Club, feeling that in us has been vested a heaven-gifted right to stand aloof and above our fellow students, and criticize their actions, do hereby knit our interests closer together by this constitution. The reasons for our existence we do set forth as follows : i. The superior wisdom we possess. 2. Our gift of gab. 3. Our ability to criticize. 4. Our freedom from fault. 5. The pretty picture we make seated around this table, talking down the rest of the college. (Great cheering. The waiter distributes hales. Red tire.) Slow Curtain. 383 Crittenden Ah Crit ! could you and I conspire, To clasp this beauteous bunch of femmes en- tire, Would we not drink our fill of loving looks, And hold ' em nearer — to our heart ' s desire? LI BENNY AND DENNY (rotETHEK) ' ' OH. if I COULD ONLY FIND HIM! ' @ BENNY AND OEKNY O ET HE K ?) BENNY AND DENNY(togETHER) YOU OUGHT TO HAVE SEEN ME LICK HIM 385 SENIOR LIST Please fill out and return at once iP you wish to be included in the 1908 Quad. Name (in full; ' tocLxjJOj J-Xh  KjiJR Tr oJ2Go Home Address i-jjo CX vm !Ia-4 — e -«_ Honors taken in College (J) A j VaAcJ T. ' u.c Ii xm t J (J4{WJ -jVlvvwiq fro v Ju .xJt to -A ' V x v- XXxcxX cx cLdjui. ' to 386 ■|i{ ' I ' r()l)lem at Meyers Cl)c Stanford Sequoia THE STANFORD WOMAN Bruning ' Tis strange the way Fortune ' s vicissitudes claim us. I woke up one morning to find myself famous, I go about now with surprising elateness, And realize fully the scope of my greatness. The source of my fame — a campaign well directed ; I am great, since it happened that I was elected. 387 KELLOGG MAKES HIS VARSITY S Cap and Gown Meets Heavily veiled, the Cap and Gown Society met this afternoon. The meeting was the result of a rumor persistently whispered around the Campus of late, that the University Library contains the works of one William Shakespeare, one Lord Byron, and other equally indecent publications. Hiding their awe-stricken faces from view, the Society crept into solemn meeting. The consensus of opinion seemed to be that Cap and Gown should stand upon its ear. The members forthwith stood upon their ears. But this, to these women who so abhor sensation (in others) did not seem sensational enough. Conse- quently they passed resolutions declaring that the English Department must boycott said Shakespeare, Byron, ct al; and that the Library should be compelled to resign. 388 The Shame of the Fraternities I object, I said with all the power I could command. Perhaps, observed the editor, you also object to eating next week, and the week after. I didn ' t. But, I remonstrated feebly, the fraternities ! Fraternities ! What of ' em ? It might be worse ! Suppose I asked you to discover the inside workings of the Business Office ? I didn ' t suppose. The picture was too horrible. Sadly I turned to go out on my assignment. The editor looked after me. Remember, he admonished. The question you are to ask is, ' What right have you got to live? ' If they won ' t answer why, — well they have to answer ! Don ' t you come back here without the entire bunch written up ! You do, and you lose your meal ticket ! Promising him that 1 would continue to live ofif his paper, I left. I must confess I didn ' t like the work. To have to ask fifteen fraternities what right they had to live is — er, well — there are some husky athletes on the Row. But I went, for I am possessed of that human failing — an appetite. Choosing an unpretentious-looking house to begin with, I went hesi- tatingly up the steps. I trembled like a cub reporter on his first interview. But the man who answered my ring reassured me. He was a small youth, and harmless. Excuse me, I began, is this the Delta Tau house? I am, he answered promptly. Well, says I then, what right have you got to live? He smiled broadly and bowed low. Come right in ; come right in ! Always glad to explain just why we have a right to live. Somehow, it seems to need a great deal of explanation. I took the chair he proffered me. and got my notebook in readiness. This was easy. Now, the harmless young man began, let me answer your question by asking one : Who wouldn ' t be a Delta Tau ? 389 I thought of some countless millions of people I had heard of. But I murmured in echo : Yes, who wouldn ' t be a Delta Tau ? He continued: We have lots of prominent men — in the City. Even in college, too. We ' ve an ex-editor, who is chairman of the new simple spelling system; a rumier up and chani])ion in golf; and a runner down in Quad elections. I left soon. My gentle little man told me numerous other reasons as to his right to inhabit this campus. I won ' t put them down here. He was too anxious to tell them. My first attempt was such an easy affair, that I determined to tackle something really worth while. The D. IJ. ' s happened to come to mind first, and I struck out up the Row. What right have you got to live? I shot at the fellow who opened the door. I don ' t quite remember what happened. All I do know is that the fellow wears an awfully heavy shoe. When I picked myself up I vowed vengeance. I ' d get my information if I had to invent it myself. For five minutes I thought. Then I knew what to do. Fifteen minutes later I stood before the smiling Charlie — he of the round table. Charlie, said I, after we had exchanged the usual er-greet- ings, send a case of Blue Ribbon up to the D. U. house. Charlie ' s jaw dropped about three inches. Huh? he gasped. Beer ! I repeated. D. U. house ! The stricken man looked fearfully at me for a moment, then turned and walked dazedly into the store room. He soon returned, dragging a case of the student ' s friend. Then he went outside to order the wagon. Like a flash I tore the ribbon off one of the bottles, tied it in my buttonhole, and, casting the inoffensive bottle from me — the first time I had ever done such a thing with a full one — I took its place in the case, completely disguised, and ready for my entrance into the house from which I had been booted. The delivery boy got the icy glance when he drove up to the back door of the house. Who sent that ? somebody thundered. It was ordered. 390 It was not ordered! Well then, sir, quavered the intimidated boy, I will take it back. and he began to put the case back on the wagon. A burly student shot out of the door, grabbed up the case with an ease that bespoke years of experience, took it into the dining-room and placed it gently on the table. It wasn ' t till lunch that I obtained the information I was looking for. Then the man with the number nines spoke up. A fresh young mutt asked me what right we had to exist, this morning. He did ! came from a bunch of horrified, scandalized D. U. ' s. Well, observed a strange person at the end of the table — I know he was a stranger by the longing on his face as he eyed the idle beer — what right hair you got to exi.st? Right! What right! Why we are the banner organization of the University. You can ' t attend our meetings any more because we are now a secret affair. We have the greatest rules known to run the house with. Once we said that any man who swore at the table would go in the tub. A lot of the fellows said that they were going in anyway, that month, so we had our meals served in the bathroom for a while. The rule worked so well that no one has been in the tub since. Isn ' t that a clean record? I gurgled aloud at that, and rolled off the table and out through the front door, in a fit of merriment. Once on the outside I removed my dis- guise. Chuckling, I noted down the reasons that the D. U. ' s have for living. For a time after that my work was easy. The next three places I visited proved almost — not quite — as willing as the Delta Taus. The Acacias came at me with the eagerness of a bus driver. Are You a Mason? said they, Why Smith Left Home, Twelve Nights in a Bar-Room, — these are all favorite mottoes of ours. We have more of a license to exist this year than ever before, for there have been a good many masons around the University for quite a while, and they came back -Stronger than ever after the (|uake. There are a few carpenters and brick- 391 cleaners also, but we have no connection with them. It must be remem- bered when you think of Acacia, that our bark is worse than our bite. We can add no more ; we are up a tree. I believed him, and got out. The S. A. E. hang-out was near-by so I dropped around there. By the way, if you don ' t believe that appearances are deceiving, take a good look at the exterior of the house and then go in. We have in the last year, I was informed, established a reputation for politics second only to Abe himself. Especially are we proud of all o ' ur alumni, and we never dare to make a move without consulting and bowing to their wishes. We consider that we are the best chapter in the fraternity, but even at that, etc., etc. Our type is striking from Fuller to Sales. Not a bit of doub t about it, I murmured as I withdrew into cooler air. The Sigma Chis were just a little bit reticent. You see, said they, we have decided to keep quiet for a few years. We used to be rough- housey and loud, but that is all over with. A little coaxing, however, brought the dope 1 was after. We are proud of our sophomores. Aren ' t they the real devils ? They never do anything on the campus, but they are something awful at Menlo. Our living expenses are made higher than any other frat on the place, owing to the fact that we keep Dorsey Dalton supplied with commutation tickets to Santa Cruz. He is going to take us all down there sometime. There ' s little use of telling you the methods I used to gain entrance to the other houses. Suffice it to say, I did, though I still carry a dusky optic, dealt me at one of the joints. Have you ever heard our crowd of high tenor conversationalists? the Beta Theta Pis asked. I hadn ' t. Well, listen some noon hour and hear our childish voices as we toss the ball around the lawn. We entertain an awful lot, because if we didn ' t people might forget we were around. We make a fine appearance, because ' Dooley ' Lewis sends us his old clothes, which, you understand, are new. I was disappointed with the results I obtained the rest of the day. 392 The fellows I saw did talk a lot, I admit, but they didn ' t seem to have any more of a right to live than the Business Office. Below I reproduce my notes, just as I took them down. Perhaps you, dear reader, will be able to fathom the deep-laid arguments. I pass. Chi Psi — Our most prominent man is the cook, who is president of the Campus Cook ' s Union. We threaten our political opponents on the Row through their culinary departments, and if the crowds don ' t come across, their cook leaves immediately. We like to help one another ; when we were crowded in our small house, about Christmas time, a number of the boys left in order to make room. They really didn ' t have to go if they didn ' t want to — until New Year ' s. Zeta Psi — Those mustaches we sprung on the campus were just about the nobbiest ornaments that ever graced a human face. Typically col- legiate, too ! The Delta Taus beat vis to our annual stunt — our smoker — and thereby took the edge off. We like to have the presidency of the Interscholastic in the house, because then we can prevent other people ' s guests from ever reaching them. When we agree to toss for a man and lose, we have the official machinery with which to lock him in the house anyway. Phi Delta Theta — We are known to college fame as the house where Bull once lived. He keeps his trunk here now, but he is awfully busy with his studies. As he works hard, we never josh him. Taken as a gen- eral thing, our ambitions may be divided into three classes : First — to queen. Second — to queen. Third — to queen. We almost regret we are not a sorority. Kappa Alphas — It is not true that we keep liquor in our house in tubs. We have often tried to keep it — even till morning — but have not yet succeeded. If you want to learn how to carry yourself at a bust, either at home or abroad, follow our lead — only keep out of Pein ' s range. Theta Delta Chi — Our motto is : Isn ' t it delightful to be on the boat ? We are the liveliest crowd on the campus, and many people spend 393 lots of time looking us up — that is, if they cannot get us by telephone. In just one semester we have bounded to the front, and are now represented in many organizations and activities. This is owing to the fact that we caught Rex Conant asleep one day. When he woke up it was too late. Next year, if we watch carefully, we may get two live men. Shades of Dr. Newton, I gasped next morning, as I was led into the Fiji house; is that a keg 1 see in what used to be the divine ' s study? Oh, yes. But never mind ! It ' s empty. Now you want to know a few things, don ' t you ? Well, we congratulate ourselves for hanging it on the other crowds. By the use of diplomacy we did Charlie Lathrop out of our new house, by going to the Trustees. Come over some night and hear ' Crit ' talk about love and its disastrous eflfects on college work. Without doubt ' Zim will tell you of his rowing exploits, and show you clippings written by himself. Prevost? Yes, this is his address. Some times he comes around ; but not when he can tag after Girard Richardson and Phil Johnson. Good-bye. There was no heresyourhatwhatsyourhurry tone in the voices of the Sigma Nus. They talked slowly, as if to impress. We have many college honors this year, somebody began. We don ' t have to do much now, because we were the biggest bunch on the campus once — when Tubby Lee was here, and Fat Lull has returned to remind us of Tubby. Our principal honors this year consisted of Dutch Bansbach, ' 63, a bull dog, and occasional letters from Al McGilvray telling us he has a new recipe for Scotch with butter in it ; but we consider this a rather scant showing, and recently negotiated for a job-lot of college honors. (See Edward ' s senior card.) I didn ' t want to hear more. Enough is enough of some things. I next approached a white house, trimmed in a particularly startling green. Doc, ' ' they replied to my dazed look of inquiry. What right have you to live? I queried. Why, they exclaimed, take our baseball pitchers. They were the 394 hit of the season — a big hit, and lots of singles. Mike Mahone came home up the back alley after his 22-1 game. Witmer never returned after the Freshman-Sophomore game. We also tackled politics, and got hit again. With fear and trembling (of their dog), I mounted the three impres- sive steps to the Deke house. What right have you to live? We are old Mamma Jollity ' s boys, they said, indignantly. And, anyhow, we are swells ; you can see it for yourself. Halsey and Dave set the styles for the campus. I asked if they could direct me to the barber-shop. But they said they didn ' t know where the place was. The social whirl is not complete without a Topp, who can lead anything from a butterfly waltz to a hot Scotch. This time it was I who said good-bye, and I went in a hurry, still worrying about the results of those political schemes. There was still another fraternity to interview, and it was far, far away. I stood at some distance from the Phi Psi house, and gazed upon some of the inhabitants lolling around the verandah-h-h. Then I turned sadly to my note-book and entered the following introduction to the stuff I was to get later on. The most prominent feature here, in contrast to the good old bunch, is the new crowd of teething millionaires, who use their father ' s money without their father ' s brains. ' ' Then I went on up the hill. A look through my notes will disclose but a short speech from the lips of the Phi Psis. Here it is: No, it is not true that we intend to put up a sound-proof fence between us and the profs ' houses on the hill. Nor is it a fact that we have closed the rear road to our grounds so that the per pie can slip in and out without being seen. Why did we move? Well, partly to get away from the name of the half-way house. Our new place just suits us. No one who drinks can ever get up the hill. Of course, we can get up, but then vvc know the road, anyway. :(: : :;; ;)i ;!: Hello! greeted the editor. Do you eat next week? 395 Yes, I answered wearily ; and say ! Don ' t you ever try to tell me that the real brand of heated atmosphere flows out of the Registrar ' s office. 1 396 ' Zt Afterword igo8 A declaration of general gratitude to any and all of those who have helped to make the 1908 Quad is not sufficient. The thanks should be specialized — and cor- respondingly raised in value. The art in the book has been handled by D. H. FERRY, who, in addition to his own numerous drawings, took the entire responsibility of outlining and securing the art from the editor ' s hands. He was assisted by MISS E. E. DICKOVER. The other artists who contributed were Misses Culver, Herron, Langtree, Winslow, Howard, Hayward, and Bundy; and Messrs. Oppenheim, Helmick, Bellows, Van Deursen, Coolidge, Nelson, McDonald, Holcomb, Hyde, and Dillon. The other departments were edited as follows : The Earthquake W. F. HERRON F. W. TURNER Founders, Faculty, and Classes D. V. MARCEAU Fraternities C. L. BRADLEY MISS M. F. OSBORN Organisations C. C. McCOLLOCH R. E. HODGE Music P. STEWART Publications L. S. LEVY Debating R. E. HODGE W. F. HERRON Athletics J. E. GUSHING H. R. BROWN Literary W. F. HERRON C. C. McCOLLOCH Dramatics C. N. LEACH E. N. SMITH College Year F. W. TURNER P. STEWART Joslies By the above persons the 1908 Qu. D was created, and, if it meets with approval, the credit should be theirs. The Stanley-Taylor Company have given us most courteous treatment, and have aided us in every way in their power. E. J. H. DLEV, Editor. 398 Advertisements Boyce Planing Mill TWELFTH AND HOWARD STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO General Mill Work Band Sawing Turning Shaping Planing Sticking, Etc. MOULDINGS OF ALL SORTS CONSTANTLY ON HAND Prompt Delivery a Specialty Boyce Lumber Company TWELFTH MISSION STS., SAN FRANCISCO Lumber, Laths and Shingles u u ■O 3 « u I O X « J o o w oa: ou b; q OH Sh O a I a u pi —--. ?. u J ii 2 STOPS : FOR EACH IF THE TUU .1 S wi 1 a h Slk- 1 C5 c« U Q -| H o tC , ...3 l HH h— 1 f j S BPIM -. a-i bi ' 1 a 2 !: ' 1 :S PC PC 1 S 1 IT! 1 0) PC fl -«- S S PC : H s O - 1 h 1 1 a CO be ' l a 73 ' ' H C3 k( I H J C3 O ' ' ' i l c a U ' 1 « c« ' 1 09 ■M NH ' H (U C 3 O SH c MH ;z; I ' H-5 O 1 ■ « 0) Q M ] b ta 1 ' iz: f S H 1 3 ?! 1 a| H ■ «+H tZ) i V 1 cs - ;. ' 1 i h f J J u CO LM I tm u ■ a 0 1 ■ u 3 a x Ui] = f- o CLi i 5 MB! ti. ;■  H W « ,„ r V POWE CROS! LEVEl r I 1 0 N Hotel Hamlin SAN FRANCISCO Eddy and Leavenworth Sts. Third Street Cars Transfer to Eddy, which stop in front of the door Special Rates to Stanford Students cZ ' ve encT GEO. HAMLIN FITCH. Proprietor KIRK HARRIS, Manager F. W. BRAUN CO. IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN ASSAYER ' S MATERIALS Manufacturers of Labor-Saving Appliances for Assayers Dealers in Laboratory Supplies of Every Description Scientific Apparatus for Colleges and Schools. Fire Clay, Crucibles, Muffles Scorifiers, Heavy Chemicals, Cyanide and Zinc LOS ANGELES 501 North Main Street SAN FRANCISCO Temporary Address 303 Marltet Street SAN DIEGO 5th and J Streets W. L. Growall Co. Third Floor, Mutual Savings Bank Building, Market Street Opposite Third, San Francisco Otis Elevators are the Best New Factory in San Francisco for every service Phone: MARKET 124 REV RNict- S) JOBBING PROMPTLY SJJM ipf yaBi BMHfc mB Q i WfteuTaflS: TELEPHONE MAIN 577£ ' EW.TfcJ W ' -l ! ' =g ' « i ' ' « ' ' ' WW{ ' «y ' WJDtOEAB i : S roHOERER (OPPKK Z1N( ()I{NV MKNTS 269 Potrero Avenue, near 16th St. — 2 blocks south from junction 10th and Brannan Streets F. E. 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C. THIELE Fine Tailoring PALO ALTO SAN FRANCISCO High Grade Wearing Apparel CORRECT NOVELTIES FOR COLLEGE WEAR Clothing, Hats and Fine Furnishings Carefully selected from America ' s High Class Clothes Artists showing exclusive patterns and distinctive designs Knox Hats Fine Tailoring Spring ' s,inc. San Jose, California Leather Goods Fine Trunks PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTIST Jordan Building, Palo Alto, California Groups, Landscapes, Enlargements, Portraits in Water Colors or Oils Portraits of the highest quality taken by Mr. Davey, who was educated in Europe as an Artist. Mr. Davey has had considerable experience in Paris, New York and London, with such men as Wallery, of Paris, Sarony, of New York, Taber, of San Francisco and Vander Weyde, of London. Mr. Davey has photographed more famous men than any other operator in California, and it is generally conceded that his work can be found in as many parts of the world as that of any other photographer in America. 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SAN FRANCISCO Defective Vision Accurately Corrected McGaw Lazarus 700 Van Ness Ave. Corner Turk San Francisco Oriental Turkish and Hammam Baths COLD WATER PLUNGE Eddy and Larkln Sts., Sari Francisco Bath Including Room $1.00 OPEN DAT AND NIGHT W. J. BLUMBERG ERG. Th Patronize Our Advertisers C Clothiers of San F: rancisco Stores Owned and Operated by College Men Roos Bros. FILLMORE AT O ' FARRELL TWO STORES VAN NESS AT BUSH SAN FRANCISCO HUGHES BANSBACH DRISCOLL Trade at ' D e Ogger ' Furnishers Hatters Tailors l]ialo Uo, (Tallfomla Established 1851 FISHER CO., Inc. Hatters and Furnishers Formerly, 9 Montgomery St. Now, 726 Market Street Lick House Opposite Call Bldg. $ Exclusi ' ve Agents Stetson Special Hats and the Finest $3.30 Hats in Town Pabst Blue Ribbon The Beer of Quality Ehrman Bros. Co. San Francisco, California DISTRIBUTERS John Rothschild Co. Wholesale Grocers and Liquor Merchants II, 13, 15 Spear Street, San Francisco Telephone Temporary 2412 Footwear Hi gh quality and exclusive styles characterize our shoe offerings 3 ;vmXr PALO ALTO Gentlemen, you may argue as you please, but my experience teaches me that the BEST printing in Palo Alto is furnished by Stuart l)e printer Everything in Commercial Printing 515 High Street Palo Alto W. F. Pennebaker New and Second-hand FURNITURE AND STOVES Phone White 497 538 Emerson Street Palo Alto, Cal. The Bank of Palo Alto Organized 1892 First National Bank Transacts a General PALO ALTO, CAL. Banking Business Interest Paid on Savings Accounts Will be located in its new and modern offices Corner University Ave. and Raniona St. July I, IQ07 COMMERCIAL AND SA VINGS Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent in Steel Lined Vault Students ' Accounts Welcomed OFFICERS C. E. CHILDS, Priildtnt ELI KING, Cathiir C. E. JORDAN, Asiiitant Cashitr OFOCERS AND DIRECTORS G. R. PARKINSON . . President JOSEPH HUTCHINSON . . Vice-President C. S. DOWNING .... Cashier H. F.CONCEXJN . AssisUnt Cashier PROF. CHAS. D. MARX D. L. SLOAN DIRECTORS C. E. CHILDS JOHN DUDFIELD E. P. GAMBLE H. W. SIMKINS JOS. D. RADFORD ELI KING DR. R. L. WILBUR H. W. Simkins Palo Alto, Cal. Fuller Co. Bookseller and Publisher Groceries Stanford Souvenir Books Views, Spoons, China and Die - Stamped Stationery Qyads on Sale HAVE THE CELEBRATED M.J.R. MOCHA AND JAVA Printing Department Makes a Specialty of School and College Work, Linotype Composition for the Trade Try It Publisher of Decennial of Stanford Song University Avenue, Palo Alto CITY MARKET FRESH AND SALTED MEATS OF ALL KINDS Orders Delivered Promptly 301 Union Ave. Phone Main 160 PALO ALTO Stanford Meat Company Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats 185 University Ave. Phone Main 67 Hudson The up-to-date J CiXJClCf OPPOSITE DEPOT Cut Rate Clothing Renovatory J. L. Simpson ■■ ' ILT ' Hatter. 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West End Branch : JJ Devisadero Mission Branch : 25 2 Mission, near 2 2d Up - Toivn Branch .- 1740 Fillmore, near Sutter IsAiAS W. Hellman, President I. W. Hellman. Jr., Vice-President George Grant, Asst. Cashier F. L. LiPMAN, Vice-President W. McGavin, Asst. Cashier Frank B. King, Cashier E. L. Jacobs, Asst. Cashier Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank OF SAN FRANCISCO Union Trust Building, No. 4 Montgomery Street Capital Paid Up Surplus and Undivided Profits Total $ 6,000,000.00 4.000,000.00 $10,000,000.00 Isaias W. Hellman Robert Watt Leon Sloss C. DeGuigne Dudlev Evans DIRECTORS E. IT. Harriman William Haas I. V. Hellman, Jr. Wm. F. Herrin Herbert E. Law James L. Flood F. W. Van Sicklen Percy T. Morgan J. Henry Meyer F. L. Lipman The Anglo- Calif ornian Bank LIMITED London Office, 18 AUSTIN FRIARS SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE N. E. 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Sales, Rentals, Garage and Repairs. Livery Service at All Hours Fire, Marine and Automobile Insurance Home California and Sansome San Francisco, California Gas for Heating Gasteam Radiators Steam Heat from Gas at a cost of only five- eights cents per hour to maintain a comfort- able temperature in a room 1 feet square. Quick Clean Economical Approved by Underwriters Backus Patent Gas Grates and Logs At :our service The Gas and Electric Appliance Company 1131-1133 Polk Street Salesrooms: -f n M- ' ll ' ? ' • 1 1260 Ninth Ave. 809a Turk St. 421 Presidio Ave. 925 Franklin St. San Francisco, California Risdon Iron Works Albion Lumber Company Manufacturers of OFFICES: MONADNOCK BLDG. Gold Dredgers Stamp Mills Smelting Machinery Engines Boilers Ship Builders Yards: Channel, Between Fifth and Sixth Street San Francisco U. S. A. Redwood DRY. CLEAR HEAVY TIMBERS SEND FOR CATALOGS Ties, Posts, Lumber Office: 298 STEUART STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA U RGE KILN CAPACITY Prompt Shipments by Cargo and Rail Associated Oil Company Producers and Dealers Fuel Oil, Engine Distillates, Gasoline, Etc. OFFICE : 1 1 th Floor, Kohl Building, San Francisco, Cal. EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL Palo Alto Electrical Works Construction and Repair Work Estimates Promptly Made LARGEST STOCK ON THE PENINSULA AGENTS Hall Incandescent Lamps Capital Electrical Co. (Denver Colo.) Fairbanks-Morse Engines and Scales Mission Electro Fixture Co. 235 UNIVERSITY AVENUE, PALO ALTO PHONE BLACK 184 CALIFORNIA ' S CHOICEST FOOD PRODUCTS Griffon Extras THE LARGEST PACKERS OF CANNED FRUITS VEGETABLES IN THE WORILD PURE AND WHOLESOME DRIED NUTS Honey OUR GUARANTEE FOLLOWS OUR GOODS OWNING OPERATING THIRTY CANNERIES ON THE PACinC COAST VULCAN Ice-Making and Re- frigerating Machines Of any desired Capacity 750 Machines in United States, Phil- ippines, Japan, Mexico, Central America, South America. Send for Catalogue. Pacific Mail Steamhip Co., JO machines. Pacific Coast Steamship Co., 16 machines. Oceanic Steamship Co., 10 machines. U. S. Transports, 1 2 machines. Built by the Vulcan Iron Works SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA U. S. A. TRADE MARK OF THE CUTTER IT MEANS QUICK SERVICE ACCURACY SATISFACTION Most Complete Stock C. W. MARWEDEL 256 to 260 Ninth Street, near Folsom SAN FRANCISCO, GAL. FINE TOOLS, MACHINERY Machine Shop Supplies BRASS, COPPER AND STEEL IN ALL SHAPES Agent B. F. Barnes Co. Morse Twist Drill Mach. Co. General Electric Company SCHENECTADY, N. Y. We carry a full line of MOTORS TRANSFORMERS San Francisco : Union Trust Building r (r Los Angeles : Delta Building WmceS : Portland : Worcester Building Seattle : Alaska Building AND SUPPLIES of all kinds Pacific Tool Supply Co. CHARLES STALLMAN, Manager Higli Grade Machine Tools and Shop Supplies. Fine Tools and Material for Workers in Metal. Temporary Building 556-560 Howard Street San Francisco Telephone Temporary 1365 Goodyear ' s Rubber Goods MACKINTOSHES, RAINCOATS, SPORTING BOOTS, ETC. Goodyear Rubber Company 573, 575, 577 and 579 Market Street, San Francisco Same Location as before the Fire Chas. C. Moore Co. Engineers INCORPORATED CONTRACTORS FOR COMPLETE PLANTS POWER LIGHTING PUMPING MINING MACHINERY OF THE HIGHEST GRADE CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED Main Office 63 First Street ... - San Francisco BRANCHES AT LOS ANGELES NEW YORK SEATTLE SALT LAKE Ring up Temporary 801 when you wish your baggage transferred by the largest transfer company in San Francisco, and you will receive prompt service Main Offices 53-55 Sacramento St. Phone Temporary 801 Branch Office 1450 Eddy Street Near Fillmore Union Ferry Depot Foot of Market St. Oakland Branch 4 1 8 Ninth Street Phone Oakland 325 SAN FRANCISCO BAGGAGE Transferred to and from all Trains, Steamers, Hotels, Residences, etc, also from one part of the city to another, including Oakland. Alameda, Berkeley, Fruitvale, and points between San Francisco, Mill Valley, Ross Valley, San Rafael. FREIGHT Transferred from all Depots, Wharves, etc., at low rates. Special rates to Merchants. Draying done in all parts of the city. PROMPT SERVICE REASONABLE RATES Business Suits to order $20 to $35 Dress Suits to order $30 to $35 AN GE VINE Leading Tailor 39 S. Second Street San Jose, California Leaders of Brohaska ' s Orchestra TILLIE Residence 199 Vine Street, San Jose, California FRED Phone Main 532 An in the hand of a good tailor, moulds the fine lines in your suit Klein of Palo Alto has the tailors who make Artistic Clothes Hoter 1 ouraine C. K. LOOMIS Proprietor Corner Fourteenth and Clay Sts. OAKLAND, CAL. Strictly American Plan Telephone Oakland 1072 Large Commercial Sample Rooms - Special Rates on Application Strictly First-Class Special Attention to Tourists and Family Trade. IJest American and French Cooking on the Coast. New and Modern in Every Department Suites with Private Baths. The Original CLICQUOT None Better A. VIGNIER, Inc. San Francisco Sole Agents for the Pacific Coast Th Piatt Iron Works Company You get the girl we ' ll do the rest Come right to us and arrange for credit — we furnish everything lor the home from bedding and curtains to carpets and furni- ture. We ' ll fix it so you can pay a little every month, as your salary allows — no embarassing investigations — moderate prices and a fine stock to choose from. So just go ahead and find the girl, we ' ll do all the rest, and you ' ll be pleased at the way we do business. Successor to Stilwell-Bierce and Smith- Vaile Co. Stejun and Power Pumping Machinery Filter Pressers Victor Turbines Feed Water Heaters JacKson Furniture PrtTnuanV 319-523 Twelfth St. l UIIipClllj OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA C. L. NEWCOMB, Jr., Manager 824-822 Monadnock Building $50 worth of Furniture for $1 a weeK San Francisco The Pennington Hammered Steel SHOES ' ' DIES Are the Best in the World OUR SPECIALTIES Manufactured only by Ourselves Cam. Crank and Steamboat Shafts; Rock-Breaker Plates. Connecting Rods; Best Refined Tool Steel, Drill Steel, Wedges, etc.. Hammer, Pick. Clerman and Machinery Steel; Iron and Steel Forgings of all descriptions Correspondence solicited and circulars mailed upon request Telephone Temporary 197 GEO. W. PENNINGTON SONS (Incorporated) OFFICERS D. Edward Collins. President directors : J.W.Phillips- William Rutherford Benjamin Smith D. Edward Collins Jas. p. Taylor J. S. Collins branch; 23rd Ave., East Oakland Wemvss Park, Manager J- - Richardson J. W. Phillips, Vice-President Frank H. Brooks. Cashier Geo. S. Lackie, Asst. Cashier CALIFORNIA BANK OAKLAND CALIFORNIA CAPITAL and SURPLUS $250,000 Commercial Banking Interest on Term Deposits Foreign and Domestic Exchange correspondence: Laidlaw Co.. New York Continental National Bank, Chicago San Francisco National Hank, San Francisco Bank of California, San Francisco TAFT PENNOYER Headquarters for Men s Furnishings Don ' t make the mi.stake of thinking this to be a store for women only. Our line of Men ' s Furnishmgs is more than favorably commented on by everyone around the bay. Everything is exclusive and the prices include a legitimate profit only. Broadway at Fourteenth St., OAKLAND s Collegiate Outfitter For the campus For the lecture-room For the reception For the graduation — the correct attire, from head to foot C. J. HEESEMAN 1107-1117 Washington St.— OAKLAND 2148 Center Street— BERKELEY Enjoy a Week- End Outing PLAY GOLF, AND ENJOY YOURSELF UNDER THE TREES AND AMONG THE FLOWERS OF Hotel Del Monte JTT Through Parlor Car on train leaving Third and Til Townsend Streets daily at 3:00, arriving at the Hotel in time for dinner. Also through Parlor Car on train leaving daily at 8:00 a. m., arriving at the Hotel in time for lunch. Through Parlor Cars for return trips. SPECIAL ROUND TRIP TICKETS, $10.00 Good on all trains, from Friday afternoon until Tuesday forenoon, including two days board at the hotel. For the Latest and Keenest in Artistic Apparel see Wideman The College Tailor Always Exclusive in styles and fabrics Garments specially designed to suit YOU H. LIEBES COMPANY INCORPORATED MANUFACTURERS C I M C C I IOC AND IMPORTERS OF I I 1 t. 1 U FA CJ 1442-1444 VAN NESS AVENUE SAN FRANCISCO Christensen-Darling Company Plumbing, Hardware, Stoves Phone Main 83 ' PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA rs Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees ia Glacier Point Wawona and Inspiration Point The Only Route Operating a Stage Line from Glacier Point The best views of Yosemite Valley are on this route. The Mariposa Grove of Big Trees, which belongs to the United States Government, contains the largest trees in the world, among them Grizzly Giant, The Fallen Monarch and The Wa- wona. The Mariposa Grove of Big Trees can be seen only by passengers holding tickets reading over the Wawona Route. Season Open April First For particulars apply to any agent of the Sauthern Pacific Company ortoA.S. MANN atthe Office of the South em Pacific Company FLOOD BUILDING 884 Market St. SAN fRANOSCO 14 Powell St. The World ' s Greatest Fire Insurance Co. FOR OYAL NSURANCEi COMPAHYi J. J. MORRIS REAL ESTATE CO., Palo Alto, California ROLLA V. WATT, Manager Pacific Department 122-124 Sansome Street San Francisco J3 ul5ont £xf lo5lves Hercules Dynamite Hercules Gelatine Judson Dynamite Judson Gelatine Vigforit Dynamite Stumping Powder Blasting Supplies Black Blasting- Powder Rifle and Shotgun Smokeless Powders emours owder (To. Berkeley. Cal. Portland, Ore. Seattle. Wash. Wilmington. Del. O e u6ltorlum A Skating Palace V. A. HANCOCK Manager Market Street, Opposite City Hall Park SAN JOSE O eTinest pavilion in t e State 32,000 Square Feet Maple Floor Ladies ' Parlors Gent ' s Smoking Room Ice Cream Parlors beautiful ftanquct 3fall Chas. Meyers That ' s All ! Therlallr ountainrvuliner [gi en Self Inking Won V Soil the Ruler Fingers Work or Desk Will rule Backward or Forward on any Paper using any Good Ink The simple construction of this Pen enables the operator to rule all day without dipping in the ink and without soiling the ruler. The wheelholders are interchangeable, being made to slip into the penholder instantly. All rulings will be uniform their entire length, not broad and heavy in one place and ' light and indistinct in another. The Hall Fountain Ruling Pen is equipped with three ruling wheels. No. I being a single light line- No. 2 a broad line. No. 3 a broken line. These Pens are made of the best hard rubber and brass, heavily nickel plated. Can be taken apart instantly for cleaning Price, - Including the three Ruling Wheels - $1.50 Sole Manufacturer and Inventor ALFRED HALL, - P. O. Box 347, Los Gatos, Cal. _ ' _ Qt THE Best Offer m Ever Made ' i T O MAGAZINE READERS IS = Sunset Magazine, One Year $1.30 Camera Craft, One Year 1 .00 The Road of a Thousand Wonders . . .50 $3.00 ALL THREE FOR $1.30 We pay our agents liberal commissions. Any student who will devote his vacation to our work, can easily earn enough to carry him through another college year. CALL OR WRITE SUNSET MAGAZINE 948 Flood Building SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA i a BUSHNELL — FOTOGRAFER- 632 VAN NESS AVENUE BRANCH STUDIOS Oakland Sacramento San Jose Special Rates Extended to Students Tljc. TypcWri-fer You See It Write It Writes In Sight VISIBLE Least Parts Best Angnment Heaviest Manifolder Sells on IVIerit What Blackstone is to Law What the Press is to Education — What Pharmacopceia is to Pharmacy — What the Telephone is to Business — What the Telescope is to Astronomy— What the Microscope is to Science — What Steam is to Transportation — What the Loom is to the Production of Fabric — W ' hat Palette. Brushes and Colors are to Art — What Electricity is to Illumination and to Transmission of Thought — What Energy, Invention and Exploration are to Progress— The OLIVER Typewriter IS TO MODERN BUSINESS METHODS AND TO EVERY WRITTEN CHARACTER, WORD, PHRASE AND SENTENCE VISIBLE Highest Speed Greatest Ease Best Work Smallest Keyboard ILLUSTRATED ART CATALOGUE FREE ON APPLICATION FRED W. VAUGH AN CO., Agents 907 Fillmore Street, San Francisco, Cal. Why not the Knabe-Angelus? There is a Best in everything. In player-pianos theie is one superlatively better than all others; one which stand-; in a class alone, in a sphere of musical excellence unknown pric.r to its advent, unapproachable since its first bow was made to the music-loving public. The Knabe-Angelus Piano is the combination of the peerless Knabe Piano with the Angelus Piano- Player in one complete instiument. Different from all others in that the piano is Knabe, the only one of the ■world ' s great pianos in which a piano-player is installed. Different because of the superiority of its construction, the handiness and completeness of its phrasing devices. Different because of new and exclusive features, including automatic self- opening pedals. Different, too, because it is best musically, artistically and structurally, and best because it ' s Knabe. To appreciate the Knabe-Angelus only means to see and compare it with all others. THE WILEY B. ALLEN CO. 1220-24 Van Ness Ave., :an Francisco, Cal. 510 12th St., Oakland, Cal. Other Stores : Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento, San Jose, Santa Rosa ; Reno, Nev. ; Phcenix, Ariz. f ' S- J. U. WINNINGER Ol)e ' Z rtistlc bailor 45 East Santa Clara St. Rooms 1, 2 and 3 (( SEE THAT FIT ' ' . 6? 3. Sloane (To. VAN NESS AVENUE AND SUTTER STREET SAN FRANCISCO (Tarpets Oriental anb Domestic ugs 2)raperlcs, tc. The Sloane display is strikingly individual in patterns and colorings. We control many desirable makes of carpets, etc., through our own mills in the East and our New York estab- lishment. We are continually adding to our display of Oriental Rugs — the largest in San Francisco. We show the choicest and rarest in all weaves and sizes. Inspection invited. The Purchase of a Rag from us is a Guarantee Tf urniturc We unquestionably have the largest Furniture display on the Pacific Coast. It abounds m novelties and is correct in styles. Our prices are reasonable and consistent with quality. draperies anb Snterlor 2)ecoratlon Our long experience and unequalled facilities enable us to execute any period style or original decorative scheme. 90, 1, Sloane (To. San Francisco X an ' yiiss Avenue aii6 Sutter Street NEW YORK LOS ANGELES PORTLAND SEATTLE Cooper Medical College Corner Sacramento and Webster Streets San Francisco Faculty ADOLPH BARKAN, U. D., LL. D., Professor of Ophthalmology, Otology and Laryngology. HENRY GIBBONS, Jr., M. A., M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Chil- dren, and Dean. JOS. O. HIRSCHFELDER, J[. D., Professor of Clinical Medicine. A. M. G.- RDNER, M. D., Professor of Legal Medicine and Mental Diseases. W. T. WENZELL, L D.. Ph. M.. Emeritus Professor of Chemistry and Toxicology. STANLEY STILLMAN, M. D., Professor of Surgery. EMMET RIXFORD, B. S., M. D., Professor of Surgery. WILLLVM FITCH CHENEY, B. L., M. D., Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine, and Secretary. WM. OPHULS, M. D., Professor of Pathology. GEO. F. H.ANSON, Ph. G., M. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. GEO. B. SOMERS, B. A., M. D., Professor of Gynecology. WALTER E. GARREY, B. S., Ph. D.. Professor of Physiology. FR. NK E. BLAISDELL. M. D., Associate Professor of .Anatomy. R. L. RIGDON, M. D., .Assistant Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases. FR. NK P. GRAY, M. D., Assistant Professor of Diseases of Women and Children. H. K. OLIVER, M. D., .Assistant Professor of Pathology. A. W. HEWLETT, M. D., Assistant Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine. .And a large corps of Instructors and Assistants. Attendance is required on four regular courses of lectures of eight and a half months each. Each regular course of lectures begins August 1 5th. The standard of admission is graduation from accredited High Schools, .Academies or Preparatory Schools or Matriculation Examinations for admission to Stanford University, the L ' niversity of California, or any other University or College whose standard of admission is equivalent. .Announcement of the College will be mailed upon request. .Address all communications to the Secretary at the College. HENRY GIBBONS, Jr., M. D. DEAN WILLIAM FITCH CHENEY, M. D. SECRETARY TWENTY CENTS A YEAR A Williams Typewriter used by a California concern has cost for mainte- nance and repairs but $1.00 in four and a half years, ne machine was hard worked, averaging fifty letters a day. Here is their letter: JOHN J. FULTON CO., 5910 San Pablo Avenue, (Oakland. Cal., June 20, 1Q06. Our Williams was burned in the big fire. We have been using another machine, but want to get back to the Williams as soon as possible, so send us over a No. 6 as soon as received. Just before the Quake our old No. 4 Williams was printing pale, and more ink didn ' t seem to help, and we thought we had a kick coming, when I discovered that we were still using tlie original pair of pads, bought with the machine four and a half years ago. A new pair put us all right again. Total cost for ink and repairs, four and a half years, $1.00. So you see the Williams does after all cost some- thing to operate and maintain, viz. : about 20c. a year. At least that is our experience. JOHN J. FULTON CO., A. E. Shattuck, Mgr. P. S. And our machine is hard worked — averages about 50 letters per day. This record can be equalled by no other typewriter on the market! You know that. And when you consider that during the whole time better work was secured than can be done by any other typewriter, you cannot afford to have your work done on any other machine. We guarantee cost of maintenance to not exceed $1.00 a year. WE KNOW THE TYPKWRiTER PROBLEMS with which cvcry user is confronted. Our business has been to seek a solution of these problems. Whether we have succeeded is for you to say when you have read our proofs. We have produced a machine which Reduces the cost of maintenance NINETY PER CENT. Increases the operator ' s capacitv TWENTY PER CENT. Turns out the most BEAUTIFUL WORK EVER KNOWN. Is so simple that REPAIRS COST ALMOST NOTHING. Is capable of a speed of 200 WORDS PER MINUTE. Is visible, light running and convenient. Possesses every KNOWN IMPROVEMENT of importance. The price is $100. 00, and it comes nearer giving value received than any machine heretofore manufactured. It is sold on easy payments, and always offered on ten days ' trial. We don ' t want a man ' s money until he has satisfied himself that he has bought the machine that comes nearer jjerfection than any other. WILLIAMS TYPEWRITER CO. LOS GATOS, CALIFORNIA Or TYPEWRITER INSPECTION CO. 24 so. SECOND STREET SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA Agents Santa Clara County ■CI i i Hastings Dress Suits and Tuxedos The Fit of a Hastings Suit i Perfect Our Dress Suits and Tuxedos are made in our own manufactory in New York City where our designers and tailors produce garments that are correct in every detail as decreed by fashion. You can wear Hastings dress clothes to any function and you can feel satisfied that you are prop erly dressed. The workmanship and fit cannot be excelled by custom tailors; but there is a difference in price; it is far better for you to buy at The Hastings. The Hastings Clothing Co. 1 0 ' ' • The Autopiano The Ideal Instrument for the Home The Autopiano Is the ideal instrument for the home where all the members do not play for themselves. It can be played by anyone with the aid of music rolls and, best of all, it can be played with feeling and with the most accurate expression. People of the finest musical tastes are realizing the boon that the Autopiano is in the home or in the club. The Autopiano has been the means of stimulating a liking for the better classes of music. It has appealed to grown people who never expected to be able to play for themselves just as it has been warmly accepted by young people because it has been the means of producing every class of composition without the labor of constant study and practice. The Autopiano is not a combination of a piano and a player mechanism. It is a single instrument built in one factory of the finest materials and by the most expert workmanship. There is but 006 genuine Autopiano. Send for beautiful Art Catalogue Eilers Music Company 1 1 30 Van Ness Avenue SAN FRANCISCO 1 220 Fillmore Street Other Stores — Oakland, San Jose, Stockton, Portland, Seattle, etc. Lake Tahoe, California WHY NOT LAKE TAHOE FOR YOUR SUMMER OUTING? Tahoe Tavem open from May 1 5 to October I 5 Mrs. Alice Richardson. Mgr. Excellent trout fishins in lake and streams; camping, boating, hunting, mountain climbing, etc. Low round trip rates itom all points. Largest lake in the United States at this altitude— 6240 feet. Write D. L. Bliss. Jr., Manager, Lake Tahoe Ry. Transpxirtation Co., Tahoe, Cal. or ask any Southern Pacific Agent for informadon and literature. Stanley -Taylor and College Printing have known each other for a long time Theirs is a lasting friendship (554 - 562 Bryant St., near Third St., San Francisco, 2 Blocks from Third Townsend Depot) Scenic attractions of the Coast Line — Road of a Thousand Wonders — 100 mile Seashore Ride — through Southern CaHfornia Orange Groves — Palisades of the Rio Grande, Cotton Fields of the South, and Washington, the capital city. Connections made at New Orleans with trains for the north and east, or Southern Pacific ' s largest new coastwise steamers for New York. Why not combine a delightful sea voyage with your rail trip ? Costs no more than for all rail ticket. Ask agents about this new route. Southern Pacific


Suggestions in the Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) collection:

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

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