Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1924

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 602 of the 1924 volume:

- arri on CUa .cile.v JUNE 1923 Chas. B. White Carl S. Shoup SET ON A STANKORD RC 1924 QUAD STflnFORD PAST PRESenT FUTURE PUBLISHED By TM CLASS QF nineieen njjeniy four June 1923 7 _i w STAFF ec7iTOR • monflGGR CdH 5. Shoup ehos. B. LUhihe M DePflRTmenTflL eciroRS I Lqvjis L. Bucklin Donald 6. Licbendorfer LIcyd C aruer Henry C rDdck IDildrcd Dannenbaum Barbara rHillcr HurthcuK €ly Philip tOcujiil IT)ol HiGui Q. Tobrincr fqssiSTflHT €DiTORs ojomen mtqnflGeRS RobGr H. edoiards Lillian eoUrcll Daniel D. Gage IDarian Gouucr aRT eDITOR B Frederic R. Fisher fqRT flSSISTflDTS TFiecdore VJan Puesen Jchn C n ) Ht75C i PHOTOGRflPHie eOlTORS Edoiard LU.Sh-ong Richard Fulicrj-un Jr. Si L;L LI ri TI ?i NT 7 r ' y v .  vv v v r T ' T - v Ty vr jvr onT BnTS CedicaHcn In nOemoriam 5 tan Ford qF IbcJay THE SIX BOOKS SfanFurd of fhe Future VInivjersihy 3tydenF Q juernmcnl fl T I vj I X y College Uear Jt7urnali5m [7ramahes Pebate music flXH L -rivzs Uear in fllhleHcs Football Baskefbaii Track Baseball Tennis llTinor Sports intra -VJnivjersity Sports UJomen ' s flthlctics « CZ f=1 I3 fldministratiuc Diviisiuns Classes m Id flssoczi flxion Organizations Livjing Groups Razz S-9 ION 13 33 39 51 61 79 99 IZ5 135 149 151 177 191 207 219 227 241 247 2 I 271 327 3S3 489 TO THE FUTURE OF STANFORD BRIGHT WITH ITS PROMISE OF THE BEST IN UNIVERSITY LIFE THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED fflemcmram CHARLES AXDRl ' .W mSTON Stanford lost one of its best men when Dean Huston died. Stable, thoUKhtful, hitilily intelligent, human, lovable, effective and thoroughly constructive, his influence was felt on all sides of the Quadrangle. He guided men and understood the marshalling of ideas and iirinoiplcs. Universities are built up out of the lives of such men. Stanford University will profit In.in him and his service in all the years to come. R. Y l.VMAX Wii.iuu F.mVARD W. MOULTON ALUMNI IRENE HARDY, gr. ALFI ED LOUIS BERNARDIN. ex ' 04 ROI ' .ERT M. LOESER, gr. MILTON PALMER BAKER, ' 16 MRS. ELMER GRAINGER, ' 05 (. urora Peterson) CL.XRENCE LEROY CHILDS, ex ' 07 ROBERT FREDERICK STEN ' ER, ex ' 1 M.SRGARET CASKEY, ex ' 19 GERALD HENRY SCHELLENIi.VCII, HELEN MAY HOGUE, ' 01 WILLIAM WIGHTMAN PRICE, ' 97 MRS CII. RLES PRINGLE SONNT. G. LILLIAN LUCILE McQUOVVN, ' Il.VROLD FRANCIS DESMOND, MERRILL WR.AY ROWE, ' 21 KDWIN L. RUSSELL, ' 96 (Reichenbach) ETTA LAURA MILLER, gr. RUFUS . LBERTUS LEITER, ' 99 KATIIERINE FLORENCE GLEASON, SAXE MILTON McCLINTOCK, ex ' 02 MRS. GERTRUDE ROBERTS SIIERl ' MRS. II. M. I10LLENI;E. K, ' 97 (Je MRS. CLARA GRA ES FRENCH, OSCAR FRED PLAGEMANN, ex ' E. RL E ' ERETT MILLER, ' 05 J.VMES EDGAR McDOUGALL, ex HAMPSON, ex MRS. ALFRED . (Ethel McQu ' 03 id) ZENTARO MORIKUBO, ' 04 FRANK ALFRED HOBSON, ex ' 18 GEORGE WASHINGTON CUTIIBERTSON, SUSAN FOWLER HOWE, ex ' 00 MRS. AUGUSTUS T. PARSONS (Helen Louise Sprague) RICHARD DERBY, ex ' 19 ' 06 UNDERGRADUATES RUi ' .V iRE EDW. J flCH levjemenx i N 111 I Ji - — . jJaC i NORTH WING OF TOYON IIAI.L, AS IT WILL AITKAR WIIKN FINISHED NEW EATIXC; IIAI.I. CORRIDOR AND COrKT r 7ii 3 INNER COURT OF TOVON HALL I .. ' . r ' I ,!y LOllItY OF TOVOX IIAI.I.. AS IT WII.I. UK WIIF.N COMPI.KTF. ! ' liii;i %■ WKST VVINf; OF TIIK NEW liORMITOin 1 isp ' i,®rf,:i i B « j mM m THE EATING HALL TOWER STAHFORD OF THC FVITVIRt FOREWORD Three years ago, adniiiiistratidii (itlicials had a vision; they saw Stanford in ideal — new quadrangles, wherein arched huiklings housed university departments leading the West in science and art ; the tiled roofs of new dormitories, within whose walls the students of the University were perfectly cared for; laboratories in which the latest equipment of science gave opportunity to earnest workers constantly to advance the knowledge of the world. What was three years ago no more than a dream is todav started on the road to realization. STA.XKORDS w y: TiN ' (; hall A GLIMPSE INTO THE FUTURE Hy I ' ll 11. Newill, ' 24 Re5,nstration Hay, 1 ' ' 43. l ' ive thousand students, loaded down witli lu-w note- hooks. ' pencils, and dignity, are strolling through the arched colonnades of the three Quadrangles. Some, ' already bent with academic worries, are rushing through the mi ' nutiie of registration ; others, postiwning writing cramjjs, are returning to old haunts, swarming through the court of the Union square, visiting the A. S. S. U., organization and club offices on the second floor of the new Union, jrolishing elbows on the mahoganv bar of Rough ' s Koost (where once Y. M. C. . . offices were located), or consuming malt goos at the soda fountain below (installed back in l ' )24 when the cafeteria moved into the old eating club dining rooms). To such prodigals registration books are of indifferent importance comjjared to the real celebration of the day. . • • , There are three registration ot ' tices in which tlie usual long hnes wait, with e iual parts of anxietv and boredom, for official rubber stamps. Besides the Admin- istration building on the old quad, the new law Imilding (on the site of tiie defunct Inn), and the bacteriology building, on the corner of the West quad, have been pressed into service to accommodate the increasing numbers. Gloom in large brown clouds was once the rule in lines leading up to any window marked cashier. Todav there are several broad grins extant, these coming from the faces of returned ' students. A donation from one of California ' s most famous mun has made i)ossil)le a return to the ideal of Senator Stanford— free education for all who can meet its requirements. Thus has Stanford gone hack to its former hasis as a self-sustaining university, and its students return witii nothing to worry them heyond incidental fees and their own sustenance. To the graduate of 1923, returning perhaps to take up special work, the Quad now the old Quad— is not the spacious place it once was. Like the wings of an -, airplane, two other quadrangles, the Kast and ' est Quads, join it closely on either ' side. One is dominated hy the iuige pile of the Stanford library, the other hy the ' •iJ equally impressive War Memorial, in which all the valuable collections which used - to lie about in l)asements for the proper education of janitors are now fittingly displaved. In the biology building next door is the famous ichtyological collection ' of Dr. Jordan; among the cases a few professors stand talking and wishing the C ' J] registration crowd would leave so that they may return to work on their fro, ; S . specimens. Sequoia Hall, after having served in two similar capacities previously. is now part of the West Quad, and houses still other specimens,— these being put up in alcohol and quite dead. South of the ' est Quad, and directly back of the new Mining Building on its south corner, looms up the high roof of the new women ' s gymnasium, toward which there is a continual stream of women. Others are headed for the cozv-looking women ' s clubhouse, across from the old corporation yards, and still more of the five hundred are going to Koiile, or its new four-square wing, in which all the sororities are now housed. Back of Koble and its new sister gleams Lagunita — for an ingenious system oi drainage and pijjing from Searsville. now deodorized, allows the lake to remain full the vear around. Passing hastily by the big building supertluou l marked postoHu-e. across I.asuen from the Union, one gets into anotiicr jam at tlic Law building, which is built as the counterpart of the . rt (killery and tlic new I ' .nglish building ad- jn;,,,,!- tlu ' l.ilnary un tin- ..tlu-r side. What niii;ht x mistaken for an incipient riot in its interior proves to he the rumhle of giant presses in the journalism huikhng next door, printing the first i sue of the sixteen-page Daily I ' lilc Alto. Down in the stadium there i a different kind of jam. The var- sity and scru1)s, getting into form after two weeks with a coach wli - graduated under the fammi Warner system, are heginning to show the foothall that has hit California with the customary thud for some years past. Prospective rooters are al- ready climbing the embankment, this time to stone arcades around the rim, which help to support a canopied balcony. This balcony was part of the original plan of Professor C. B. Wing and the Stanford engineers, only recently completed when the crowds be- came too great to be accommo- dated in the old bowl. Over in the arboretum, now a teeming game preserve togetlier with the rest of the Stanford property, the usual fall fires are burning in the dusk; up towards the L ' niversity buildings the lights from the three Quads gradually give way to those of the eleven dormitories. In the various towers and arcades of four new buildings like Toyon and 15ranner Halls, in the four smaller dormitories, gleaming dully with their new yellow paint, through the arcade joining Encina dining halls and their counterpart across a si acious courtyard, and in the courts of old Encina itself, still dominant among the dormitory buildings, are heard a series of foghorn voices vellin : Kev down ! m vjniueRsiTU To Dr. David Starr Jordan, first President of tlie University, Stan- ford men and women will always attribute the ideals which have be- come an ingrown part of the insti- tution ; ideals which are still being inculcated in the minds of students —And to Dr. Ray Lyman Wil- bur students will attribute the steady growth of the University from a small college somewhere out west to a great institution making its an- nual contribution of citizens trained in mind and body to cope with the problems of tomorrow. DR. JORn.VN DR. WIT.F.l ' R ODminisTRnTion THE ADMINISTRATION POLICY .In ,„l,;ricu ' by Henry Mack-. ' Jl What would von do it you were faced with tiie ])r()l)lcni of directing: the | !)Hciesof the University through the next ten years? asked President Ray Ljiiian Wilbur, in response to a question as to the administration attitude toward athletics. After we had confessed total ignorance, the President answered himself: Directing the athletic policies of the University is a (juestion of sound general- ship. Vou would not think of this year alone, nor the next two. but you would strive to build a soinid basis for com])etition for the next ten. Too Much All-Star Stuff. The trouble with Stanford athletics now is that it is all-star stuff, and any one knows that it is the second and third ]:)lace men who win most athletic meets Where are Stanford ' s second and third places to come from? Stanford is faced with the difficulties of drawing the talent from two thousand that Berkeley can draw from ten thousand, and under those conditions we will have to make the ver best of our opportunities. The solution of our difficulties lies in a sound revival of class spirit. Ilou-in ' all new men in a freshman dormitory will lead to mutn;d ac(|uaintance. not only throughout the class, but throughout the University. Interclass Contests Better Than Intramural. .Ml classes should have organized teams. Tbi- will lead to the universal par- ticipation in .sports necessary to the physical well-being of the men. and at the .sanu- time give us the opportunity of choosing the best to rejjresent us in intercollegiate athletics. Interclass contests give a bigger field than the intramural contests be cause every member of the class is interested in turning u]i athletes, regardless oi living place. In order to further this object it is imimrtant for the classes to organize as soon as possible after arriving. Do you think that the freshman-sojihomore fight helps in this organization? we ask ed. It seems that a class struggle with the Miphoniores is a necessary evil that is se for coercive measures rsity an enormous waste set back the majoritv of undesirable but iianl l: avoid, it should lie on the lan-e l basis possible and (in the open, (hirini;- dayh. ht. When it is over the members of eacii clasN she mid e down to make ' ( ' (1 i the I ' niversity in every direction. ■ ' Do -on think that freshman di ciiiline helped to et the freshmen intere.- in athletics? we aski-il. Discipline Does Not Help Athletics. N ' o. I do not, answered the President. 1 ha of any kind in the physical sense. It has cost this of sood material, has lost us innumerable good me students from one to four years. The thing needed when a young man comes tci college, breaking the Imme ties for the first time, generally, is to learn to run himse lf, lie nuist take his own lessons. Everyliody knows the sophomores. They are just out from the blanket of freshman discipline which they suiTered. They are cocky, and determined that the coming freshman class shall suffer what they did. If you can ' t make it attractive for a .student to enter into student athletics and other atTairs, you can ' t even make a start in the athletic world. The University can win no fame from class fights, but it can win fame in other fields, and it is up to us to interest men in those fields. .- .nd your idea is that the class should put its energies into development of ath- letics through interclass competitions in- stead of wasting them in trying to drive men into these sports when they are fresh- men, by some form of coercion? ' Some Form of Sponsor System Neces- sary. That is it. Of course, some form of sponsor system is necessary for the first- year men, went on the President, by which the most thoughtful men of the up- per classes, thinking ahead of the reputa- tion of the University and its graduates, will lead, not drive, the freshmen down some particular path. The University needs athletics ; we want to be able to hold up our lieads, either in victory or defeat. To do that, sane thinking on the part of all of us is necessarv, not blind clinging to tradition. r.usT OF DR. JORD.XN PRESENTED TO J,-, abolishing the fre-shman hazing, and in Ti : : I ' o ' % . the beginning of interclass competition, we nooK, ■-1IIK n.ws OF A M. N have taken a big step forward. BOARD OF TRUSTEES III the hands of the fifteen men who compose the Board of Trustees of the rnivtisity Hcs the general well-being of the institution, its general management and control. Originally a body of twenty-four, it was limited to fifteen in 1899, and the term of office was changed from a life term to one of ten years. The duties of the Board of Trustees are outlined as follows in these excerjits from the I ' ounding Grant: To appoint a { resident of the University, wiio shall not be one of tlieir num- ber, and to remove him at will. . . . To fix the salaries of the President. Professors, and Teachers, and to fix them at such rates as will secure to the rni ersit - the ser ices of men of the very highest attainments. Ten of the fifteen men who now compose the Board are graduates of the I ' ni- versity. The president is William Mayo Newhall ; the vice-president is Marcus ( aulTman .Sloss ; the treasurer is Timothy Hopkins; and the se.-retary Is Thomas T. C. ( ;n-L;iir . I. l.ind Wliitman Cutkr 1 ' ' ■ ' ' ' ■ ■■ nuu-h- IV- ' .!.-.- i-.;k QQQ Tllomas Tingcy Craven C.regory Franklin Leib Marcns Cauffman SI„ fl L J m n I UNIVERSITY DAY REUNITES ALUMNI Saturdav. Mav _ ' (). V 22. is a day that has a warm plact- in tlic hearts (it livt- liundred Stanford alumni, for on that day Stanford invited her alumni hack— and they responded. Train after train discharged its crowds, and autos brought visitors who did not need to ask directions. At noon. President Wilbur, Dr. Jordan, and the i ' .oard of Trustees joined in the official welcome at the President ' s house. Stanford ' s new place in the educa- tional svstem was outlined by Professor D. L. Webster. Dr. Alonzo Taylor, and Professor Lewis M. Terman ' . Later the Procession of the Years was held m the inner cjuadrangie. Representatives of every year were there, one lone alumnus representing the class of ' ' ' 2. The leunion banquet was held in the pavilion, during which President Wilbur. Dr. Jordan. Professor Ryan, T. C. Gregory, and Charles Field addre -e.l the alumni. BELGIAN MEMOIRAL TO HOOVER III the name of the King of I ' elfiiuni and of the lielgian people, I dedicate this niiinunient to Herbert Hoover for the work he has done in the preservation of tlie hie teni])oral and life spiritual of the Belgians, said Senator Albert Lejeune. in presenting a memorial statue of the goddess Isis to Hoover for his work as I ' o ' kI Administrator during the war. The statue was ])resented at an unveiling ceremony held in the Art Gallery on December 4. It was the gift of the Belgian nation and the work of the late sculp- tor. I ' uttemans. . t an assembly held in the Memorial Church previous to the unveiling, Senator l.ejcune. who traveled six thousand miles to present the gift, eulogized the work (lone by Hoover for the ravished nation during the war. He spoke also of the sense of gratitude that had sprung up in the hearts of the lielgian people. While we were e.xiled in England. said Lejeune, there originated the idea of presenting a token of our thankfulness to Herbert Hoover for his work. You know that refugees are not in possession of their effects, and so the task was a difficult one. But in our midst was the sculptor Puttenians, and to him was entrusted the FT TO HOOVKR UWEl care ot making- the nifiiiorial. The subject chosen was one symboHc of the Hfe pre- served to our unfortunate peoples remaining in the war zone. The statue was made through the contributions of the refugees, first of ah. Those who could not give their pounds gave their pennies. In responding to the presentation, Herbert Hoover said : It is impossible to find within the human heart or within the human mind an adequate tribute for the gift that I have received today. I feel that the accomi)lish- ments of the Conimission for the Relief of Belgium were not made by one man. but by some two hundred Americans, the majority of whom were from this state, and practically all of these from Stanford and California. It was fortunate that we should have been entrusted with the task of expressing the spirit of loyalty and service that everywhere arose and sought expression in the dark days of the war. I thank you. Senator, for this tribute to the men and women of the University, concluded Hoover. Senator Lejeune was presented by President Wilbur in an address of welcome. Mr. Frank Deering, trustee of the University, acknowledged the honor of having the gift placed on the Stanford campus. The 1 hmorable Egertnn Shore spoke as a representative of Governor Stephens. enDQUumenr Endowment Campaign Shows Progress The endowment canii)ai,L;n i v three millions of dollars, started after carefid prejiaration on January ' ' . 1M22, has progressed to the extent of virtually com- ])leting ' the first million, while the second and third millions are well on the wa to fulfillment. The campaign for the second million, started a year ago last Ai)ril among friends of the l ' ni ersity outside the immediate locality, has not heen pushed to its limit as yet, and still ofTers a large field for development. As the campaign progresess, the field of appeal for this secom million will grow larger and larger, extending beyond the borders of California -preading over a large section of the United States. The third million, known I- the Medical Million. was larted with a sudden push in an Francisco during Xovem- lier, and in less than a month nearly half the total sum wa-- subscribed. This million, when c()mi)leted. will allow the Medi- r.il School in San Francisco to have, as additions, a women hospital, a children ' s hospital. a clinical building, and an or tho])edic hosiiital. The cam ])aign in San b ' rancisco was marked by stunt feats at a banquet. )1C. SfiidrnI Contiiiiialii THE FIRST MILLION FOR STANFORD . L. Harold AxDKKSo.N. ' 2J Helen H. Greene, 73 Louis B. Minskv. ' 23 William M. Black, Jr., ' 23 Kenneth Shipp, ' 23 WilliamG. Lee.Jr.. ' 24 C. Victor Smith, ' 19 John C. Lane, ' 22 Robert C. Connolly, ' 22 L. Harold Anderson, ' 23 E. Mabel Jones, ' 23 ;nkr nr. n. win THF, r.AtK(;Kor STVJDeni GoueRnmenT Increased Interest Shown By Students Increased student interest was manifested during the past year by oft-expressed student sentiment on such matters as the athletic policy of the University, the advisability of continuing certain traditions such as Roughs ' Day and freshman discipline, and the possibility of closer cooperation with the faculty. The Committee of Fifteen, of which Willard Johnson was founder and Dudley DeGroot chairman, was organized in the winter quarter. Its policies as outlined are (1) to suggest practical plans to meet the student problems which arise every year; and (2) to enlist the active cooperation of the faculty in the solution of those problems which are connected with the administration. The Awards xAssembly was the first concrete illustration of what the committee can accomplish. The .Senior Control Committee, also organized in the winter quarter, has as its aim the enforcing of student opinion and traditions which are recognized by the campus as desirable. The vote at the mid-year election, January l. was the heaviest ever recorded for winter quarter balloting. Thirty-one candidates ran for office. In addition to the adoption of senior control, and a new A. S. S. U. constitution, which remedied many existing defects, the following students were elected to office : Board of Athletic Control, Charles G. Fletcher, ' 24: secretary A. S. S. U., Percy Heckendorf, ' 23; Executive Committee: junior representative, J. C. McHose: sophomore representative, Norman Dole (long term), Harry H. Shipkey (sliort term ). PHILIP F. LANDIS— elected to tlie stiuleiit body presidency last J line in as close a contest as tiie cain])us has had the good fortune to witness for many years, has proven tiiat the choice went to the man who could carry the job. Landis has car- ried many new ideas over w ith an eners y that is in- disjiensable to the suc- cessful handling of the task he was given. Biindick I.andis Roth I 1 [I ■ Stewart Ross Dole STUDENT EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Pkksii.kxt Phii.ipF.Landis, ' 23, juiu, l ' )22-June, 192.5 Vice-President Thomas G. Irwin, ' 2.5, Juiu, 1 ' I22 June, 1923 Secretary Theodore E. Bowen. ' 2.1 liiiu, l ' i22 Feb., 1923 Secretary Percy C. Heckendork. ' 23, i-.h. l ' )23 jime. 1923 1923 REPRESENTATIVES Kenneth N. Stewart October. 1922-Fcbruarv, 1923 Pearl BuNDicK June, 1922-June, 1923 Tames C. Ross June, 1922-February, 1923 Clalde E. Peavy February, 1923-June, 1923 1924 REPRESENTATIVES John C. McHose October, 1922-June, 1923 Alice Roth June, 1922-June, 1923 Robert Titus June, 1922-October, 1923 1925 REPRESENTATIVES RollandW, Hoffman October, 1922-January, 1923 Norman D. Dole January, 192,3-February, 1923 Harry Shipkey February, 192.3-June, 1923 Norman Dole February, 192.3-Februarv, 1924 Jsj l EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE CALENDAR ( )ctoljcr 3. I ' JiJ — C ' unimitlL ' cs aiipuintcd to handle I ' re-sliman-Suijliumore tieup and Poster fight; Ouad tryout hoard a])i)ointed. Octoljer 10 — Associated Students vote to send 100 copies of the Pictorial to taiifornia high schools; Alumni Association asked to hold foothall hanquet on campus. ( )etoher 2-1 — Executive Committee asks for suggestions on Freshman- Sophomore fights from Skull and Snakes, Organized Women, and others, recom- mending that night fighting and the use of water he hanned. Sequoia ' s afternoon telephonic party is sanctioned. November 7 — Stanford .song hooks to he sent to alumni cluhs to help them sing; assistant yell leaders granted right to wear megaphone insignia on white sweaters ; Stanford to erect a memorial mile stone along French battle front to commemorate the University ' s part in the war. November 14 — Junior class given monopoly in selling hot dogs at the bonfire and rally. November 28 — Twenty-three athletic awards made; apologies sent for Roughs ' Day roughnesses. December 12 — Night fighting and use of water in Poster fight prohibited by E.xecutive Committee. Chicago walk banned. Sk January 9 — Twenty-one block letters awarded members of JKT football team. ■ January 16 — Stanford Cardinal and Pictorial merge; ip Spectator Ijorn. Mid-year election set for February 14. BI S Senior Control Committee officially recognized. Block S V H cards recommended for yell leaders. No more bills to be posted H l on trees and telephone poles. V H H January 23 — Assembly for presentation of student body ] |V H awards i)lanned. Committee appointed to draft new consti- y h ' ebruary () — Plans for interdass sport competition drafted. High cost of dramatics comes to attention of E.Kecutive Com- mittee. I ' ebruary 16 — New system formed for student control of the drama as presented by tudent organizations. March 6 — Seven block letters awarded for basketball. Point system of regulating activities deferred. . pril 1 1 — . 11 may qualify for interclass numerals in sports, m football, basketball, baseball, swimming, soccer, track and tennis. April 12 — New plans for election of yell leader adopted. .Ml U])per classmen to be eligible, and office is to be hlled at Mav elections. J K i MiiiEi Q ' i ' Tr TfW If i lU- :. Dl MEN ' S COUNCIL Chairman- . Walter H. Hales Sfxretarv . Alkrku R. Masters MEMBERS Walter H. Hales, ' 20 Alfred R. Masters. ' 23 Dudley S. DeGroot, ' Zi Myron Reed, ' 23 Linn M. Parish. ' 23 ■ 5 Ul ti5 n«= C ovitir-il i -S Skfh Ai r§W4w S W Vw r W r — — .u.,.„co,,«u «..op..« .uc. .cr., M«««T«„,« OFFICF.R. ' President Margaret White. ' 23 Vice-Presidext .... Helen Greene, ' 23 .Se( RETARY Alice Roth, ' 24 WOMEN ' S CONFERENCE President . .Marcaret White. 23 .Secretary l,rciE E. Hartzei.l. 24 Treasurer Gr.vce M. Brown. 73 MEMBERS Elizabeth Gregory, ' 23 Ijiythk Baylis, 24 Dorothy F. Herrington, ' 2i Irene A. Campbell, ' 24 Wanda Lee Johnson, ' 23 Marian R. Gower, ' 24 Mary Learnard, ' 23 Margaret H. Hood, ' 24 Evelyn Mabel Jones. ' 23 Kathryn Eloise McCleave. 24 Lira L. Spangler, ' 23 Constance A. Tamplin, ' 24 Dorothy R. Sudden, ' 23 Eva M. Williams, ' 24 Pauline D. Stanton, ' 23 Lucie E. Hartzell, ' 24 Grace M. Brown, ' 23 Mabel F. McKibbin, ' 25 Margaret E. White, ' 23 SOCIAL WELFARE COMMISSION . ' RKSIUKNT liING SkCRETARY Sl ' ONDING SecRKTARY Lkona Mayer. ' 23 Ellen Callander, ' 25 Mabel McKibbin, ' 25 Norma Meads, ' 23 Mar(,aui:tUietrich, ' 26 ■ACULTV MEMBER Marjorie Woolsey Ellen Callander, ' 25 Margaret Dietrich; ' 26 Mabel Jones, ' 23 Alice Roth, ' 24 Mabel McKihuin. ' Leona Mayeu. ' 23 Norma Meads. ' 23 WOMEN ' S BIDDING DATE CHANGED H ' a large majority, the freshmen women at Ruble voted on April 16 to change the date originally set for bidding by the contract made by the sororities. Thns the first plan, as outlined on page 459, was abandoned. Bids were sent by the houses to the Pan Hellenic president on April 19, and on April 20, at noon, eighty- nine women sought their way up the Row for luncheon in their chosen houses. Both freshmen and sorority women welcomed the relief from the long uncertainty they had been under during the period of restricted entertainment. It seemed advisable to both groups of women to end the increasingly unsettled state which existed. The numbers of new women pledged by the various houses averaged approximately the same under the new system as previously under the old regime with the three rushing seasons. The .general expression seems to be one of satisfaction since it is all over. Another event of great interest to the women of the University came during the first weeks of April, when the new A. W. S. officers were elected. Alice Rotli, ' 24, was elected president of Women ' s Council and of Associated Women Students. The women chosen for senior representatives were Lillian Cottrell and Eunice Biddle, and those for junior representatives were Ellen Callander and Carolan Strouse. During the last week in April and the first of May. a convention was held at Columbus, ( )hio. of the jiresidents of . ' ssociated Women Students from all over the United States, Stanford women sent both old and new presidents. Margaret White and .Mice Roth. fl CT I VJ ITU -cciEF ■;srf sr sr i f fX 7 f: ' xj ' ' ' ' ' v: - i CQLLElGe ueoR SVJmmeR QVJflRXeR ACTIVITIES LIVEN SUMMER QUARTER Sports, niii-ic. welfare — all these furnished a share in niakin- the snnimer quarter of 1922 one of interest and usefulness to the students, as well as did the practical side of educational features. Directly in the line of practical field work was the trip made by forty of tlie geology students of the University into Northern California for the purpose of making a detailed study of the strip of country around . lameda Creek and Hay- ward Pass. On June 19 three camps were established at advantageous points along this strip, which was seven miles wide and sixty-five miles long. On Augu.st 26, the survey was completed ; the parties broke camp and returned to the University. .A. somewhat similar trip was taken by four advanced biology students under the direction of Professor Abrams. They covered the points of interest in three Pacific States, making a thorough search for specimens suited to the her- bariums of the University. Some of the most fertile fields traversed were the Columbia River region, the Hood River vallev, .Mount Rainier, and the Sacramento River. . nother group of stu- dents, twenty-three in number, attended the sum- mer cam]) of the Reserve ( Xticers ' Training Corps at Camp Lewis. The en- 419 IC W % canipment lasted from Inne IS to July ' 26, and luring this time the stu- lents were engaged in irtillery maneuvers and )ractice firing. Major Collins of Stan- ford was in command of tile entire artillery camp. liovk-. ■•| Iu- trip of thu l)ascl)all team to the Hawaiian Isles was the biggest sptirt event of the summer. 1 if teen games were jilayed a t Honohihi (luring the two inoiiths ' trip. Native ami army teams were L-ncuuntered. Stanford won seven and lost eight games in the series, five of the eight heing lost by one run each. Stanford alumni in the islands accorded the wearers of the Cardinal their hearty hospitality and support, adding greatly to the pleasure of the trip. One of the biggest achievements of the spring was consummated when Maestro Gaetano Merola brought to the University a complete cast of grand opera singers for the presentation of three operas in the Stanford stadium. A special stage was constructed, and grand opera was produced outdoors for the first time in America. I ' Pagliacci was given on June 3, Faust on June 10, Carmen on June 7, and again on June 16. The cast included Giavanni Martinelli, Ina Bourskaja, ' incente Ballester, Bionca Saroya, and Leon Rothier, all nationally known to music lovers. The Stanford Glee Club took over the chorus work in Faust. SSROOM SETTING FOR AMERICA ' S FIRST OUTnoOR OPER. ' SENIORS RECEIVE DIPLOMAS Five hundred thirty-three members of the class of 1922 received their diplomas at the thirty-first annual Commencement exercises, held in .Memorial Church on .Monday. June 1 ' ' , 1922. The Commencement address was delivered by Dr. Alonzo Englebert Taylor, of the Food Research Institute. June 18 was Baccalaureate Sunday. Dr. Hugh Black, head of the Theological Seminary of New York, delivered the Baccalaureate sermon. Alumni and class day was crowded with events. The seniors gathered at U) a.m. in the Memorial Church for their last official meeting, . fter an address bv Albert Taylor, president, the class will, history, and poem were read. Daniel Gtjod ' - win delivered the class oration. Immediately after the laying of the Class Plate in its place in the inner Ouad, the pilgrimage to the Stanford Tomb was made. On I ' riday night the Senior ball was given in the new L ' nion, which was deco- rated in the Mission stvle for the occasion. flVJTUmn QUARTER A Hj Huipi ' jr l 1 ,«ff Hi SOPHOMORES WIN POSTER FIGHT At five o ' clock on tlie afternoon of I ' riday, October 6, two small armies of warmly clad men started for camps in different pnrtiuns of the Stanford hills. In their eye was the lust of battle; in tlieir hands sandwiches and chocolate bars til sta e olT hnnyer until the whistle should IiImw the call to arms fur the auiuial freshman-sophomore FLASH OF THE POSTER FII IIT AT wiches, and sent out its si. tucked into a hollow of I ' Ve Raiding parties of soph on the freshman camp resulted in the demol- ishing of food sup- plies and a drop in the confidence of the first- year men. Scouts brought i n victiius from time to time to furnish entertainment to the wearied watchers in the camjis. One o ' clock came, and with it the com- mand to move. r oth armies arose from their cramited resting; lake 1 msus nore arm it its fires 1- freslim d in T BEFORF, THE RATTLE H-i 4- i places and formed into marching order — sophomores noisily conlident, freshmen quiet, uncertain of the outcome. The lawns and faucets of the Kappa Sii ma. Kappa Alpha, and Beta Theta Pi houses were the battlegrounds. Here the armies met, the signal was given, and the water fight was on. For the first five minutes the superior numbers of the first-year men told heav- ily; one of the sophomores ' faucets fell, and another was in danger. . plucky iii iiwi Ki I h ini s rally recaptured it. and sufX ' rior organiza- tion and acquaintance with one another enabled the sophomores to sweep the freshmen before them. Soon the Kappa Sigma faucet was in possession of the soi homores ; attention then turned to the I ' eta lawn, where the battle centered. I ' irst freshmen, then sophomores, held the controlling hand : reserves from the fight on the Kajjjia . lpha lawn turned the tide and n t the second-year men in command of the situation. .At the end of the fight the freshmen were completely routed ; only the Kappa .Alpha faucet remained in their possession. During the thick of the battle the poster committee of the .second-year class was busy putting down the warnings designed to lead the erring freshmen back to the paths of virtue. By morning not a ])Iace of prominence on the campus had failed to receive its burden of paste and poster. TIE-UP ENDS QUICKLY All the fight that had characterized 1 water-scrinimage the night before had Hed ball field the next afternoon. By 4:30 a small, anxious group of first staunch warriors of the night before were missing. Yelling, shouting, strijiped to the waist and greased with butter, the sophomores trotted out onto the field, outnumbering the freshmen almost two to one. After ten minutes, large, blood- thirsty s(|ua(ls of sophomores roamed the arid wastes of the diamond in a fu- tile hunt for freshmen ; they could not tie foinid. The bull-pen had swallowed them all. Thus the clash between twenty-five and twenty-six jjassed into history. le freshmen during the poster- and before the tie-up on the varsity base- ■ar men had gathered : manv of the PAVILION NEW SCENE OF BIG GAME RALLY This spirit is unique. So said Little Andy Kerr iu the three thousand fodlhaU fans wlio yatliered in the basketball pavilion on Thursday, November 23, to prove to coaches, team, and alumni that Stanford still knows how to supi ort her teams. I ' Vom the time Captain Dud DeGroot led the team throutijh the howlinj mass of students in the jiavilion, until the bonfire fell into a glowint; heap )f embers, the noise never abated, the spirit never slackened. The rally started from three ditiferent points; one parade came dnwu the Row, merged with one from Sequoia, and then marched across to join that fmni iMicina, finally jjouring into the pavilion, a solid mass of rooters. For ten minutes there was p andemonium ; yell leaders were unnecessary. A wild hubbub of noise beat against the walls, echoed from the roof and shook the painted beams and girders. Then came a skyrocket for Coach Andy Kerr and more pandemonium, . fter many starts, each of which was drowned out in an outburst of cheering. Kerr had a chance to tell Stanford students for the first time what he thought of the Cardinal team. . fter Kerr came Tiny Thornhill, line coach. His remarks were few and to the point: Football is played by the whole student body. He further remarked that if the student body played as good a game Saturday as they had at the rally, there was no need to worry. The rooters assured him there wasn ' t. Tom Gregory, ' 99, and Jim Reynolds, e.x- ' lO, president of the Southern Cali- fornia . lumni Association, expressed the support of the old-timers After Hail. W.AITING FOR ANOTHER CII.XNCE TO YELT.. Stanford. Hail, had been sung In three thou- sand husky throats, the bonfire was hi, aii l the yell-leader led the serpentine around tlu blazing pyre. Discordant funeral music and the shouts of Sequoia men accompanied the annual wake before the Big Game rally, as the huge black coffin, mounted on a wagon an l guarded by red-shirted football stalwarts, was ])araded past Roble, up the Row, and over t 5 the bonfire near Encina. Here the coffin was placed on the top of the pyre, to be consumed by flames the following night. Two station turn-outs, on the occasion of the football team ' s trip north, and four bleacher rallies, assisted in getting the rooters in good condition during the fall quarter. Encina Hall ' s ])ajanied paraders had their night on October 11. Through the library arches, past Roble, up the Row, and back again to Encina, went the winding line of night-clad men, accompanying themselves with all the variety of noise-making instru- ments which always help to make a pajama- rino a success. EXECUnCN Novjjfffla ON TIIK TKAII. OF TUK lORPSE opened the fall quarter with an address of welcome to the new- students in the Assembly hall. l ' ol- knving President Wilbur ' s wel- ct)me, the freshmen were guided along the right paths at Stanford by a series of ( ' n the I ' xiat as- semblies, under the ans|)ice of the Y. M. C. A. Every ' J ' uesday evening dur- ing the quarter, students ami fac- ulty had an oi)]iortunity to hear discussions of current to|)ics b - promineiU peo|ile in the l-ittle first KAr.i.v IS hki.d i i ' w ii im. Theatre. Campus fraternity men gathered for an evening of eats, entertainment speeches in the Pavilion on December 4. The primary purpose of the gathering to bring the Row men into greater relationship with one another. The l ' axilion was decorated to represent a garden on December S, when sophomores in ited campus snakes and roughs to be their guests at the . ophon fotiUion. ROUGHS- DAY— NOVEMBER 22, 1922 uuinyeR quarter Founders ' Day Features Winter Quarter Founders ' Dav. l-rulav. March ' . was celc-lirated littinj;ly in niemnry of ilie two who made the University possible. A special service was held at eleven o ' clock in the Memorial Church, with Dr. Jordan as the chief speaker. He outlined briefly the unique beginnin.? of Stanford University as compared with the foundation movements of Yale. Harvard, and Johns Hopkins. At the conclusion of the services, the Senior Class transferred the memorial flower duty to the Class of 1924. at the Stanford Tomb. This transfer will be made at this tinie in the future, instead f at Commencement. a was formerly the rule. iT THE ST. NFORl) In the (.•viMiiiii; the University choir, acconipanifil hy a Iwcnl) live jnece orcliestra from San h ' rancisco, presented I laydn ' s famous oratorio, Creation. In tlie past it has been customary to have the Irish Marathon and Holdover Show as i art of the celebration of Founders ' Day. but this year March 3 was set aside especially for these two events. The Cruise of the Good Ship Stanford was vividly presented by the Sophomore Class, under the direction of the holdovers. .After Stanford ' s athletic policy had been raked over the coals of white-hot pub- licity, the Marathon race was run, with the seniors taking the lead in the lir l l;ip and holding- it unchallenged throughout the race. . fter the Marathon, novelty races were staged — the 100-yard backward da li. won by Dick Macintosh, ' 24; the 3-legged race, captured by Lane Falk and . 1 l ' ()rste ' r. both ' 23 ; and the 440-yard walk, won by Lowell Berry, ' 24. Don Snedden, ' 2,?, captured the greased i)ig. ;iiul the numerous chickens that were chased were linallv rounded up. Three assemblies were held dining; llic winter (|uancr. The tir t one w;is called to hear Dr. Rufus B. von Kleinsniid, president of the University of Southern Cali- fornia, talk on . gencies of Education for Civic Kesixinsibility. On January 2.?. Raymond Robbins, authority on modern social and industrial problems, spoke on Lcadcrshiii — the Crux of i )cmocratic Society. Tuesday, h ' eliruary 13. the stu- dent awards assenilil was revixed. and students ' h: had Ljiven Stanford dis- tinguished ser ice on the athletic tield, on the st;ige, V in deli.ite. were given sub- stantial recognition. . sudden revival in ii ' terest in election results was demonstrated in the mid- year balloting on January 15. The onlv formal dance of the (juarter was the Militarv Ball, helil in the Pavilion on M;irch 2. Why Go To a Circus? Irish Marathon Day Surp? Ringling Brothers SAM McDO.NALU GREASES THE PlC.-nUT THE PIG DIDN ' T HAVE A CHANCK -t-;iS«-. ? = PRIZE CHICKEN CHASE EiCiciiidiKasa SPRIHG QVJORTeR JUNIOR WEEK FEATURES SPRING QUARTER From the staiKli)oint of the recorder of all except scholastic activities, the spring quarter is the one in which most opjiortunity is given for description of accomplish- ments and events — athletic, social, and of grave political conse(|uence. Mav 10-12 stands out on the spring calendar as the best-rememhered date of the c|uarter — Junior Week. Thursday afternoon. Ma - 10. saw the inauguration of the first two of the many new events planned by the class of ' 24. The first Junior Week Programs ever jntlilished at Stanford went on sale, containing a complete list of the events to come. Then from five until eight there was held a Corduroy Ball. which was an innova- tion in being the only event of the week restricted to juniors alone. Campus clothes were the proper at- tire at this event. As a new method cele- brating, the towers of the new Union stood out red with the glow of colored ,. -• -m m | p IT V ' V lights concealed _ JsL i Bai H ' l wlBL. -- within. The effect produced was so successful that it will be used in all future celebrations. such as at Big Game time, and other milestones in the years ' events. ( )n Thursday- evening, immedi- alclv lolluwiiig the L ' orduroy Ball, the W aai Cai nival ai l.aj;unila had a- a new feature a canoe flotilla, in which twenty organizations comijcled for lirst place. The women ' s prize went to Alpha Phi. Chi Omega came .second and . lpha Umicron I ' i was third. In the men ' s grouj). Sigma Chi took first honors, with Chi Psi and .Seciiioia next. It is expected that the canoe flotilla feature of junior week, inaugu- rated bv the class of ' 24. will he a permanent custom at Stanford. Other events of the evening were diving exhibitions by Al White and Don Snedden. Snedden did a sijectacular flame dive. The customary fireworks were given their rounds after the rest of the events had been run off. Friday night was marked by the biggest social event of the year — the Junior Prom. A false ceiling which covered the entire pavilion floor, and from which ■suspended searchlights cast colored beams over the (lancers, was a feature of the evening. Desiiite the fact tliat there were a little over a thousand people on the floor, the dance was not a crowded one, partly due to the fact that arrangements for serving the food were made 1 111 the tennis courts outside. The lake sports of the following day were staged in iIk ' afternoon instead of in the morning, as had been the previous custom. In addition to the sports at Lagunita, events were held at Encina jraol. The P. . . . . junior ciiampionship for the 220-yard swim went to Gilson. of the Olypmic Club. Wright of Stanford took third. The junior cham] ionship in diving was won by Giblrons. of Stanford. Smith of Stanford, finished third. The lake sports fumi.shed the spectators a chance to -le some of the best swimmers on the Pacific Coast in Mnii)etition. In the cross-lake swim. Wallace O ' Connor, Jii. beat Lester Smith of the Olympic Club out for first lace. Allen, of Stanford, finished third. .McDonald and Cleaveland won the canoe race, while he canoe tilting contest went to the team of Burnett and 1 .unsignan. The old clothes race ended with Schmeider utor. and White second. The attempt to make Saturday afternoon mean some- thing definite in Junior Week was the idea behind the 1 ringing together of well-known coast swimmers to com- pete. Ten vears ago, when crew ranked among the major -l orts. the feature of the lake sports was an interclass ( rew race. Whether or not something of the same nature may be produced rests upon the measure of revival in •KSSOK T. p. SMITH, WHO -reW PRESENTED WITH $10,000 g, Junior Week, the Masque Ball shines forth as A C.KOUP OF Ill.S FARMER flEOI.OdV STUDENTS a sprmg quarter ev ent not to be forgotten. The ball was a new feature of Stanford social life, and was inaugurated to take tlie place of the Carnival of past years. The Carnival was dropped because the need for its profits had jiassed. and it was felt that what was necessary was some function where amuse- ment and not mr)ney should he the goal. The Masque l ' all, not to he outdone li fdinicr ewnts, liail its kini; ami i|urcn. The royalty were elected by popular vote, Imt the result was imt made known until the night of the ball, when the coronation ceremonies look jjlace, with President Wilbur officiating as crowner, and Sam Mendenhall and Peggy Richardson as crt)wnees. Specialty acts in dancing and singing were put on by student choruses under the direction of Mendenhall. .Xssemhlies held during the spring quarter included that which Admiral Sims addressed on April 4, and one where S. K. Ratcliffe, noted hjiglish editor, gave his viewpoint on April 24 on European affairs. Tuesday evening lectures continued to bring interesting speakers to the campus. Bird Balwin, director of the Children ' s Welfare Research Station at Iowa, spoke on April 7. Frances Rand Smith. ' ' 7. gave a talk on April 10, as did Madame Slavko Grouitch on Ajiril 17. . t a student assembly held on April 11, Comptroller Roth gave a resume of the plans for Stanford ' s future and the facts of the i resent day campus. A fea- ture of this asseml)ly was the revival of interest in student singing under the leader- ship of the Glee Club. (3n May 2, there was launched the combined drive for the Convalescent Chil- dren ' s Horiie at Stanford, and the Kimber Memorial fellowship, to commemorate the deeds of those first college students from America who took an active part in the war. Labor Day was held mi .May 2, . and under the systematized direction of b ' d P utler. a general clean-up was eff ' ected around the grounds of the Con alescent 1 lome. The I ' Viday b ' risk, inaugurated during the winter quarter by Caj) and Gown, F.USV SPRING I). V IX TIIK was carried on over into the sprinjj (jiiarter with success. These dances were held in the Women ' s Ckil)- house every other Friday after- noon during the first part of the (juarter. The admission charge was fifteen cents for the hour and half of dancing. Theta Sigma Phi later joined Cap and Gown in .sponsoring the afi ' air. A grey-brown felt hat with a red band was chosen as the sopho- more hat for next year, and follow- ing this choice came the suggestion that the Senior Board of Control recommend a permanent style of second-year hat for all the sopho- mores of future years. In the middle of the quarter. an additional fire unit was installed on the campus. The Cadillac hose wagon and the chemical truck were housed in the R. O. T. C. gun.sheds. to provide adequate protection for that part of the campus remote from the firehouse. The Ford chemical engine will lie used for grass fires and as a spark chaser at the large fires. The personnel of the campus fire department now consists of a fire marshal, a chief, and twenty men. joyRHflLism HIS JOURNALISM 9 tdi orial flssisfan ' 909 9999 SCHEDULE OF 1924 QUAD st cojjy to press. .T.s for 480 pages hn- Jiine If) -Preliminary con I ' erei ices made with printers and eni, ' ravers for contracts. ( )ctol)er 5— Photograi)liic contracts signed. October 7 — First managerial meeting — 24 men and h wnnun -tart tr (iuts. OctolierS — First editorial tryout meeting — 10 men and 1. wonnn start work. October 10 — Staff appointed ; engraving contract signed. October 25 — Printing contract signed ; four tons ])a] er ordered. October 26 — Staff dinner held in New Union. , 11 those Cf)nnectcd with the ])ro- duction of the 1924 Quad give their points of view. Xovem1)er 11 — Fir.st pictures sent to engraver. lanuarv 25 — Five paintings contracted for; agreement reached for pen and ink sketches. b bruary 15 — 1 ' ' March 20— Bor( printe l. March 27— First color work ished and sent to engravers. . liril 1 — Total number of pictures sent to engravers conies to 208. April 2 — Two hundred and fiftv yards of 50-inch fabricoid (3.212 s(|uare feet) ordered from Newark, New Jersey, for covers. April iO— First form (pp. 385- 416) is printed, cut, and folded. A])ril 12 — Last of color work completed and sent to engravers. April 13 — Quad all-campus dance given for benefit of Endowment Inmd. . pril 14 — E.xclusive airplane pictures taken by Quad photd Strong, ' 24. April 18— Contract for 1.700 covers signed. April 20— Six forms (pp. 28 ' ' 480) are i.rinted. cut. and folded. Ajjril 21 — Exclusive moving pictures of liig rajjher. -May 7 — Total numlier of individual i)ictures taken comes t( June 2 — Comliined edituvial an l managerial staff ban(|uet- given out. ■:ws SI her— Ed re taken by Quad photog- 860. ' A ( )uads are CfllLU PALO ALTO NEWS WORK EFFICIENTLY SYSTEMATIZED Daily Palo Alto is sul)si ' 1)V the W ilh a Int.il c.i.t per clav of S 0.. A. S. S. L ' . fund onlv to the extent of $24. Advertising provides for this deficiency and also for salaries ' and other expenses. It is the function of the business director to supervise this financial side of the paper, and also to provide for the distribution of over 2.900 copies daily. The editorial system of promotion is effective. Reporters, mostly freshmen and sophomores, are rated weekly as to quantity and quality of work. Department head vacancies are filled from the reporters ranks on tlie basis of highest rntmp;. An editor is elected semi-annually by the staff. The position has in effect become apimintive. DAILY PALO ALTO STAFF KDITORIAl. SI ' Al ' l ' October 1, 1922. to F.l.ru.ii y l.i. mJ.l KDITOR TOM IRWIX MANAGING EDITOR KKNNETII STKWAUT WOMEN ' S EDITOR MAI ' RIXK, 0KK ;K DEPARTMENT EIMTORS Telegraph E..,t„r ' . nn i) ' ■- ' Sporting Editok (.m kett Elmork Dramatics ' i- Shoup Women ' s Activities - Peari. liuNrncK Intercollegiate News Editor... - - Robert Ehwards REPORTERS P.RMHKV RiTFR WanaKeesling Donald Adams Meribeth Camero ir,vV;,, ! iVBrNnORFFIi ( ' H ESI F V DofGLAS MaRVBaKER NoRTHCITTLlV ROBFRT iVoYNTON l. A N Cl. ARLES HoWARD P.ISSELL He.VTRICE P.RAILSFO John Marble ' Iames Muir Hugh Hollembeak Hloise McCleave Henry M CK Louis I ' .ucklin Dorothv Muller C ranston Stroup Maxwell Stiles Mildred Dannenbaum Miriam Hilton Febritary 15, 1923, to May 29, 1923 EDITOR - KENNETH STEWART MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP NEWU.I. ASSOCI. TE EDITOR PEARL liUNDICK DEPARTMENT EDITORS News -■« ' - Siiorp Exchanges Kmf.ert Edwards Features .Henry M. ck Sports Donald Liebenoorfer REPORTERS William Wright Howard Bissell Allene Thorpe Jack Hardy Iames Muir Eloise McCle.we Helen Broughall Grove Day LLAN Charles Meribeth Cameron William Gosslin Herbert Sommer ioHN Marble David Meiklejohn Robert Boynton Edwin Roodhouse Miriam Hilton Walter Campbell Margaret McDowell Peggy Lee Mary Baker Wallace Knox Esther Greenacre Rarbar.x Miller Mildred Dannenbaum Katherine Capell Marjorie Allen Burnham Beckwi BUSINESS STAFF William R. Gage, ' 24 Business Director Cecil I. Haley, ' 24 Assistant Manager R. L. Rothschild, ' 25 Assistant Manager M. C. Sh. rp. ' 24 Merchandising Henry C. Lamb, ' 2.- Circulation Manager BUSINESS BOARD Cecil L Truf. ' 26 Harold G. King. ' 26 Howard W. Martin, ' 26 Theodore F. Miller, Al F. SCHEU ECKER, ' 26 L. II. Rogers, ' 25 Ray Kay. ' 26 Fred C . S.«er, 26 ni]. C.revn Maek Tulhill Tyl. Dt-uscn Newill Rorke Yo,,ng HAMMER AND COFFIN ■siNESS Director XuKTiirrTT Ki.Y. ' 24 Charles A. Young. ' 24 FACULTY MEMBER Everett Wallace Smith Ei.vvix A.Wells. ' 14 Da.nielW. Evans. ' ill Warren [• . Lewis, ' 21 Arthur R. Tyler. ' 21 Harry J. Borba. ' 22 Ralph H. Cowing. ' 22 Thomas E. Green. ' 22 George Thompson, ' 22 Edward E. Waful, ' 22 Howard M. Clark, ' 23 Thomas G. Irwin. ' 23 hiLLiARD McDonald, ' 25 Richard C. S.mith. ' 23 David B. Tuthill, ' 23 Northcutt Ely, ' 24 I- ' rederic R. Fisher, ' 24 Harry F. Kennedy. ' 24 Iohn C. McHose. ' 24 Henry C. Mack. ' 24 Philip Newill. ' 24 Harold B. Rorke. ' 24 Carl S. Shoup. ' 24 Lee Sandberg. ' 24 Theodore Van Deisen. ' 24 Charles A. ' S ' oing. ' 24 CHAPPIES WIN NATIONAL CONTEST NOW THAT great victory was mightily welcome, a]l the Cli Capturing first jilace in Judge ' s College Wits Contesi i;ave II; highest rank among all like organizations in the I ' niteil States. A came in the awarding of the individual prize to Xnrthcutt l- ' .ly. i of Sir Gawaine and the Athletic Ogre. appies are agreed, inmer and Coffin PRESS CLUB Harry J. Borba, ' 22 JOIKT PUBLICATIONS COMMITTF.K Harry J. Borba. ' 22 Garrett H. Elmore, ' 23 Paii. H. Ci.YDK. ' 20 Thomas G. Irwin, 23 1 hu.ii ' . kuii.i..-2-4 I-ACUl.TV MHMHHRS PaI 1. Il.Cl.YllK ImUVARI) MA. ' il.lN Hi I- . krkjt W.m.i.ace Smith Robert I.vmax Tempi.f.tox Robert C. Bi.nkley. ' 2(t Harry J. Borba. ' 22 Ross C. Fisher. ' 22 F.I) ward D. Lax dels, ' 22 Andrew R. Boone, ' 23 Theodore F. Bowen. ' 23 Garrett H. Elmore. ' 23 Thomas G. Irwin. ' 23 (iLKNN H. Pollard. ' 23 Kenneth N. Stewart, ' 23 NORTHCTTT ElY, ' 24 William R. Gage, ' 24 NoRRis E. James, ' 24 Henry C. Mack, ' 24 Philip Newill. ' 24 Carl S. Shoi ' p. ' 24 n SPECTATOR PICTORIAL AND CARDINAL MERGE ]U ' cau c tlie Stanford student body was found to he a field too small to support jiroperly two undergraduate magazines of a serious nature, the C ' ardmal and the Pictorial, in the winter quarter, joined their interests. The result was the Stanford Spectator. The merger was eiTected in February by discontinuing the former pub- lications entirely, and appointing two committees of live members each, from Press Club and English Club. The editor and busi- ness manager of the new magazine were elected l)y these committees. P lward Landels, ' 22. was chosen editor, and Donald Mcljucen, ' 2?. man- ager. The magazine has a circulation of JIUU, and has proven a financial success. The debt inherited from its predecessors is being rapidly paid off. Composing the editorial staff are: Donald C. McKay, ' 25, assistant editor; Garrett El- more, ' 23, athletic editor; Robert Hawkins, ' 23. photographic editor (succeeded bv A. Dean Storey, ' 26) ; Robert C. Binkley, ' 20, and Meribeth Cameron, ' 25, contributing editors ; Frank L. Fenton, ' 23, exchange editor; Harold Davis, ' 23, editor theatre and music reviews ; Edwin R. Clapp, ' 24. editor book reviews; Francis Kauttman. ' 24. editor moving picture reviews. Enghsh Club assumed the debt of the old Sequoia which had been carried partly by the Cardinal, thus giving the new magazine a better chance for a start towarfl financial success. ILLVJSTRPieD ReUIEUU CIRCULATION NEARS SIX THOUSAND With a circulation of l.clwccn live and six thousand. Tlic Stan lord Illustrated Review reaches alumni in almost every quarter of the globe. Former Stanford students now living in California receive the largest number of copies; Xew York ' s circulation is second; and the magazine ' s foreign circulation includes France. E ngland. Canada, Japan. China, and other countries. Outlining the purpose of The Review. Paul H. Clyde. ' 20. its present editor, said : The Illustrated Review attempts to fill the position of a dignified newspaper to the alumni. Its principal jnirpose is to cover all branches of university activity and policy which are of interest to Stanford people. The Review is open to contributions from undergraduates and faculty in addition to those from alumni. Problems directly concerning student life are pre- pnted by undergraduate writers; a means of -iving tlie alumni the student viewpoint. The magazine should constitute an important link between undergraduates and alumni. The Review is owned and published by the Stanford Alumni Association. Direct control of the policies of the magazine is vested in the editor, who appoints in turn an alumni hoard of editors. The eight members composing the board this vear are Klinor Cogswell, ' 16; Alice W. Kimball. ' 04; lulith R. .Mirrielees. ' 07; ( ieorge Morell. ' 09 ; W. B. Owens. ' 14; Mildred Haves Roth. ' 11; Warren P. Staniford. ' 16; and Marian A. Tri.st. ' 21. J. E. McDowell. W. secretary-treasurer of the Alumni .Association. is business manager; as his assistant, Charles S. I ' rankliTi. ' 2.1. supervises advertising and cir- culation. STANFORD ADVERTISING CLUB First Term William R. Gage. 74 Cecil I. Haley, ' 24 . President Secretary-Treasurer Second Term Thomas F. Faucette, ' 23 Ren ' e L. RoTHSCHiLn. ' 25 FACULTY MFMBKKS Everett W. Smith John E. McUowf Thomas F. Faucette. ' 2 James F. Knappen, ' 23 William R. Gage. ' 24 Cecil I. Haley. ' 24 Chester N. Hess. ' 24 V. Lee Sandberg. ' 24 MiLoC. Sharp. ' 24 Charles B. White, ' 24 Charles A. Young, ' 24 James R. Bullock. ' 25 Harold W. Cameron. ' 25 John B.Irwin. Jr., ' 25 Donald H. McQueen. ' 25 Rene L. Rothschild. ' 25 .- STANFORD CHAPTER OF AMERICAN JOURNALISTS ' ASSOCIATION I ' KARI. BrXDK MAriuNE VoKU l,K ,N T. Day FACULTY MEMBERS MEMBERS ,rl,:;i llumlrrd and 7 kvh v-7 ' wo Frances W. M.W, rtrri, Hundred and T-arnly-Tlirrc Andrew R. Boone Pearl BrNDicK A. Wilson Davis Garrett H. Elmcre Thomas F. Faucette Virginia Gibbons Thomas G. Irwin Charles H. Prior Carlton A. Shefheld Donald S. Snehhen Kenneth N. Stewert Maurine Voer{;e Carl Wilhelmson Frances Williams Hundred and l i.-cntv-Pn Howard S. Bissell Mariorie Cohen t ' nARLEs B. Cross Mili.kkiiDannenb. Rom i;t H. Edwarii; Will. AM R.GacE Nnl.lM- I NMl - I),r, Ml. I II 1:1 l.nKI Henry Mack S a M U EL H . M E N n E N H A Barbara Miller Philip Newill John Richer Braulev Riter Harold B. Rorke Carl Shoui ' Archie Steele rn Hundred and Ti ' Mary Baker Robert Boynton Meribeth Camer Allan Charles Mary Chaney Leon T. David SIGMA DELTA CHI m President K K N N et H N . Stewart. ' 23 SE(-HETAK ■ . . Charles H. Prior. ' 23 1- ACl ' L ' TV Ml ' ■.Ml! IKK Pai- lH . Ci. YllK Ml -.MBKRS UonERTC. BlXKLEV. iO Glenn E. Pollard. ' 23 DanielW. Evans, ' 20 Charles H. Prior, ' 23 Wii.i.iAM F. Leiser. ' 21 Kenneth N. Stewart. ' 23 Warren F.Lewis. ' 21 Carl Wilhelmsox. ' 23 Harry J. BoRnA. ' 22 Robert H. Edwards. Jr.. 24 Andrew R. Boone. ' 23 N ' oRRis E. Iames, ' 24 Garrett H. Elmore. ' 23 H.A,ROLdB. R0RKE. ' 24 Chester N. Hess. ' 23 Donald E. Liebendorfer. ' 24 Thomas G.Irwin. ' 23 Philip Newill, ' 24 I W THE DAILY DINK f SEVEN OEFMIS BilNS£l Imsis 10 SiyD[NlS ON fOUNO[RS m Pottt-r Dannenbaum Nocrgc- liiindick Drachnian Williams Colun Hilton THETA SIGMA PHI OFFICERS President ' ick-Presii)ent Secretary Tkeasi-rer Keeper OF Archive MairineV ' oerc.e Marion Potter Pearl Bindick Moi.i.ieWindish Miriam Hilton HONORARY MFMP,1:KS Xaldro Hartley Mari.erv Bailey Elisapet Marjorie Driscoli. Kith Sampson Rcth Comfort MnciiEi.i. C. wn. Green Wilson I BlCKINl.HAM F ' .niTII MiRRIEI.EES MEMBERS Marion Potter. ' 22 I rances Williams. ' 23 MOLLIE WiNDISH. ' 22 Mavrine Voerge. ' 23 Winifred Johnston. ' 22 Marjorie Cohen. ' 24 Pearl Bindick, ' 23 M ildred Dannenbaum. ' 24 Mii.iAM Hilton. -24 S T fl G e A NEW SYSTEM FOR A YEAR Wlu-ii (jorduii Davis was yrauted a year ' s leave of absence. Richard Bentinck was chosen to take his place until Davis should return. During his vear here Bentinck has introduced several new ideas in Stanford dramatics. He has been instru- mental in arranging new lighting etifects that were shown during the autumn quarter, and has shown his ability in grouping large casts of characters on the stage so that the maximum effect of position mav be obtained. ' Bentinck directed every campus .show this year with the exception of Ram ' s Head ' s two produc- tions, where student directors were employed. DRAMATIC COUNCIL ABOLISHED IS (1 one rciircsentativc ea A .sii nilicant step was taken by tlie l- ' xccutive Committee of the A. S. S. I , tliis year when itaholished the Dra- matic Council and sul)stituted in its place the Dramatic Committee. Tiie 1 )raniatic Council was established three years ago to provide a more effi- cient means of management for stu- dent productions. Previous to that time each production had been man- aged by the society sponsoring it. The Dramatic Council afforded centralized management by creating a group con- sisting of the dramatic coach, a busi- from the English Club. Masquers, Ram ; 1 lead. Sword and Sandals, and the .sophomore, junior, and senior classes. The business manager was elected by the Dramatic Council from a group of tryoutees. lie sui)ervised the financial management of every production, and had under him a staff of technical assistants who directed all work on the .stage. Twenty per cent of the gross receipts went to the Dramatic Council revolving fund to provide for stage n])keep. salaries ard other cx])enses. The principal objection to the Dramatic Council was the lack of harmony be- tween the dramatic coach and the technical staff, in whose apix)intment the coach had no voice. The condition was remedied by creating the Dramatic Committee. consisting of the dramatic coach, the student manager of the A. S. S. U.. a business manager, and a rejiresentative of the society or class sponsoring the production. The successful tryoutee for business manager must be recommended by a unani- mous vote of the coach, business manager, and student manager. Their decision nuist be ratified by the Executive Committee. The same three appoint the techni- cal staff ' . A complete budget of each producti in. copies of which are put in the hands of each of the business manager ' s assistants, is a feature of the new plan, h ' ifty per cent of the net receipts go to the Dramatic Committee revolving fund and the other fifty ])er cent to the sponsoring organization. Exception is made to this rule in the case of class productions, the class usually receiving more than fifty ])er cent of the proceeds. John D. Richer served as business manager for the Dramatic Council the first l)art of the year and was later aiipointed to the same position by the Dramatic Committee. During the year Richer ' s technical staff included, at one time or another. Clyde E. Coaklcy and Harvey M. Lytel, stage managers: William D. Lucas. Harold P.. Minsky, and Elmer C. Rasnuissen, property men: David Stod- dard . twood, T. Hume Vest, and Ernest Greppin, electricians : Samuel E. ' aughan .-mil I ' reilcrick M. Hughes, assistant stage man:igers : Chrysella Dunker. technical Bv Robert H. Edwards ADAM AND EVA ADD ZEST TO SENIOR WEEK Adan m- the s] it ' in tlK ' put Dan Evans, as Adam Smith, left in charge of a iiuust-hoUl which apiiHed frenzied finance to personal expenditures, gave to his characterization a naturalness which was refreshing. Robert Patten doininated the scenes in which the head of the house appeared, consistently portraying the master of finance, impatient and stem at all times. Playing the feminine lead of Little h ' .va, anda Leach won appreciation for her stage ability and pleasing personality. Hollis Chalmers and William Shiels did admirable work in their character parts. Chalmers played Uncle Horace who came to spend a week-end and stayed fifteen years. Shiels finished impersonation stcod out as one of the best bits of acting in the plav. Roberta Barton asserted herself as the elder (lau, ;bter, and Hal I ' .um- baugh, Mr. Clinton DeW ' itt, changed like a chameleon from a parasitic tea-hound to a salesman of knock - em-dead shirts. Paul Talbert was a good- looking fortune-hmit- ing doctor, while Thel- ma Grace made the most of the p art of the conventional sister-in- law ; Virginia Burks, the maid, was the of- ficial adviser of , dam Smith. CIIARAeTKUISTIC POSKS of TIIK SF.XlnR FARCE HER HUSBAND ' S WIFE Coach Riilianl r.cnliiKk • iflivcil imiuciliatc pro l ' that he could maintain the higli standard of la: e protUicliuns set by Ciordon Davis, when the Sword and Sandals play, Her Husband ' s Wife. opened the dramatic season. If the comedy seemed to lack something of the zip which always delights campus audiences, it nevertheless had a humorous domestic situation and a smoothness of action which combined to make a pleasant entertainment. Close observation of details by the small cast of six players resulted in a perfection of stage technique difficult to surpass. Playing the technical feminine lead of Irene Randolph. Gertrude McLeod had to assume a role devoid of vivacity, and she may be compliniented for keeping her own personality out of the characterization. Excellent poise and charming ap- l)earance were strong factors in Miss McLeod ' s successful entrance into Stanford dramatics. Emily Ladew. chosen to he her husband ' s wife, was ably transformed by Emily Wardman from the ])rim. sedate person of the first act into a fascinating vampire. To Miss Wardman went the laurels for the best character work of the evening. Most at ease on tlic stage, and an able dispenser of witty remarks, was Dave :F.RTRl-nF. McI.EOn i. vn MANNOCCIK. KLS. were to c; a i raiul i) MannoL-cir, who made a decided hit as Incle John. Maimoe- cir ' s gestures were somewhat numerous, Init the use of his arms, a la Charlotte Greenwood, eaused more thsin one quiet chuckle in the audience. Mannoccir showed considerable im- provement in his articulation, which has a U ' ndeni y of lieinti nisufiicient at times. Interest never slackened when L ' nck ' lohn was meddling in household affairs. .Arthur Conover, taking the part of Stuart Randolph, who so often ui)set logical sequences by paying a great deal of attention to Emily Ladew, gave a creditable performance as the nw : siMrtsman— society type. He exhibited a humor- :uislv happv abandon in the last act with just enough exag- -era ' linn to ' still seem reali.stic— a not infrecpient consequence Hf sampling private stock or beating the prohibition officer to the bootleg. if vou are feeling blue and everything seems dead wrong — ulia ' t ' s the answe ' r? Uncle John nodded his head sagely and aiil. Whenever a man isn ' t having a good time, it ' s a woman. Paul ( Tex ) Talbert took on his shoulders the troubles of Dick Belden and disposed of them gracefully. A nood listener might have heard some of the feminine portion of the audience remark that Talbert made love rather nicely. . 11 stage households must have a maid, and Elsa Barber, as Xora, made everv appearance interesting— whether it )harmaceutical array of medicines for Irene, or to announce such as the ostypath. THREE LIVE GHOSTb ■■ ' Ihnc l.i -- dluists i rovided a very modern drama, full of humorous com- ])licatioiis and many character parts, in which the members of the sophomore class niight make their jjremier appearance in campus dramatics. Those who gave the he.st ])erformances should he given great credit because of the exceptional difti- culty of the portrayals. Throughout the ])lay the cockney dialect of the East Side was efifectively employed by the leading characters. A general criticism as to the choice of the plav might be that it contained parts necessitating to.) great submergence of per- sonalities for a large cast of inexperienced players to do well. The easy manner in which Harold Minsky assumed the role of Jimmy (iubbins marks him as a very promising addition to Stanford dramatics. His admirable assurance and exi)ressiveness of voice and action were united in an excellent char- acterization of the self-confident memlicr of London ' s cockney district who had so surprisingly come from the dead. The hardest portrayal of the evening was allotted to Evelyn an Horn, who did splendid work as Mrs. (nibbins. Old Sweetheart ' s shrewdness was well interpreted. Miss ' an Horn imitated the hobble of a lame old woman to ])erfection. and her superstitious solilo(|uies regarding spirits were very amusing. I ' hil I ' nier made syst (.-malic use n the klc]il(imamae habits « Spoofy, and his l)lank staiX ' and hii;h-i itchc(l voice were constant reminders of the shell-shocked condition of this ojhost. After seeing the story on the screen, the part of Spoofy on the stage was disappointiiiti-. Carl Anderson as liill was the American repre- sentative of the ghost trio, and in general his acting was good. The best efforts of Carol Klink were unable to make much of the rather colorless role which the author created in Rose Gordon. luiresta Hodgson was well selected for the part of Lady Leister, and made a striking appearance in a short scene of the last act. Dorothy Dahler did some clever work as the amusing Peggy Woofers, possessed of a considerable interest in the affairs of the (kibbins, and her yes, sir cross-examination was esiiecially humorous. The dramatic entrances and methods of Harold Lundberg as lioiton of Scotland Yard accelerated events considerably. Talbot r.ielefeldt was TSolton ' s right-hand man. The more .American lyjie of cigar- chewing detective was ])ortrayed by Al Ro-ers. bA-erett Smith and ilarry . nl;m were the essential i)air of I ' jiglisb I ' lulibies. tcin-N iul(l have f fortunate. L ' iihaii ' s HE WHO GETS SLAPPED . u campus prodiictiun tor several years has created so much varied discussio n of its worth as has the Masquers ' play. He Who (iets Slapped. It may be said that Leoniil Andreyev ' s underlying ideas and symbolic characters arc too difficult for amateurs to in- ter])ret. On the other hand. He Who CJets Sla])ped was something different, an experi- ment that was successful — in all. a perform- ance lit unusual excellence. In this drama of the circus, the Russian author presents a philosophy of life which shows truth and beauty ])ushed aside by a world i)aying homage to money and unearned distinction. To interpret the character of He. the man of intellect who is continually being jeered at and slapped because of his love for the beautiful, was a task at which most ama- i ' .nt the selection of A. D. Cohan for the title role was was b - far the best of the student dramatic year, and worthy of a professional standard. Cohan frequently sustained the entire weight of a scene, and his ability to grip the interest of the audience was nothing less than a personal tribute. . judicious cutting of the longer scenes might have eased the difficulty under which he worked. The interview between He and A Gentle- man, one who had stolen his wife and his ideas, and the climax of the play in which He sacrifices Consuelo, were two powerful bits of drama in which Cohan did especially well. .Although he appeared for onl) ' one short scene, L. Maynard Staufter, as A Gentleman, deserves praise. It would have been easy to put too much comedy into tlu- part of the Count Manchini, but Delnier Daves showed real ability in portraying the amusing vanity of the exuberant Italian, whose overbearing self-importance was founded on the aristocracy of a vanished day, while still retaining the tragic bitterness of the Count ' s ])osition. Daves ' acting in the final scene was no t quite up to his former standard, yet altogether his work was surpassed only by Cohan ' s. The impetuous, jealous Zinida, the lion-tamer, was convincingly characterized by Edythe Baylis. Easy poise, and excellent facial expression are two of the attributes which alwavs assure the audience of an excellent performance bv Miss Baylis. Peggy Richardson was well chosen as Consuelo, the beautiful e(|uestrienne of the circus. Despite the fact that Miss Richardson seemed to act under a nervous strain, her work was consistently good, and her appearance charming. A lower pitched voice and more of her natural vivacit - would have been desirable. Stiiddard Atwood re- versed the general type of bombastic circus manager, and made a kindly personage of the master of the company. Loved by both Consuelo and Zinida was the superb, black - haired Bezano, a fitting char- acter for Charles Benedict. Looking like an ad. for U. S. Steel, Murray Ward adequately maintained the cold exterior of Baron Reg nard, the villain. Just ojjpo- site in temperament was the chief clown, who had an apt masquer in Charles Cross. Among the many other men - bers of the cast, special u ' .en- tion should be given Walter .Alexander and Charles Parks for their clever antics as cir- cus clowns. ■■ZIMD.V .AND ' 111,- l.MH :U,K l.N I ' i m.0S01 ' ll WILL SHAKESPEARE ClenK ' iicc Dane ' s inventidn di ' tin- I ' lnolinnal fxi)cri(. ' nces of Sliakcspcart- may l)e alternately praised and blanieil. I ' he play should be jiraised tor its dramatic force, the ixiwer and sheer beauty of its lines — rhythmic lines forming a descriptive pattern of the Slial cs])carcan age — and praised for a brilliant portrayal of feminine ])sycliology. lUit the jjopular conception of Sluikcspeare can never be displaced by such a figure as Miss Dane has created. In her attempt to humanize Shakespeare sh e has taken awMy the heroic traits associated with the greatest name in English litera- ture, and has reduced this incomparable poet to the level of one who must be si)urred to iiis best work by a shrewd old cjueen. a vacillating plaything in the hands of women. The immortal plays of Shakespeare will not allow such a char- acterization to 1 e convincing. . fairly wild (nmg Shakcsiiearc might be easily imagined, but a Shakespeare always virile and with the saving grace of humor — the latter, especially, being a quality liainfully absent in the author ' s idea of him — not a man who deserts his wife on a fiim.sy ])re- tcnse. who is kept from the bedside of hi- (lying son by the clinging arms of a flirt. All of which brings up the subject of luimor. Will Shakespeare was probably the Imgest play of any kind ever presented at Stanford. l ' our hours or more of analysis of contrasting characters, of powerful dramatic situations, arc too long for pleasure, anyway. and undoubtedly so when not one of the many ])eopk ' of the play had anything humorous to say in all that time. But whatever the faults or merits of the play itself, the campus performance of Will Shakespeare was decidedly the ablest and most finished dramatic presentation of the year. .Moreover, the production was distinguished by the mcst successful lighting effects yet obtained 11 the stage and by artistic settings which I voked applause. Several scenes, especially in ct I. in which the strolling players sang thc I .nndon airs and where the Shadows of Shakesi)earc ' s future characters appeared, cre- ated for the audience a living tapestry of soft colors. The length of the pla alone prevented the -Stanford performance from attaining the sue- CO- it ,lc crvol. 1 Inwcvcr. it was a praiscw.irtliy attempt to pro.luci- a M-ridiH play wliicli -IkiuM In- cue mrag-ed. One drama like this ,liirin- a car (if oimcilu-s ami nuiMral liM 1- well worth while. , ,. . , Richard I ' .entinck ' s portrayal of Shakespeare demniisirated that direclmg the actiiii;- of a score of players, looking: after the innumerahle details of a large pro- duction and at the same time interpreting the leading character ahout whom the entire plav is built, is too great a task to be done well. Nevertheless, his acting and reading of the poetic lines were often superb. I ' .entinck ' s fault was that of over-acting. Even the author ' s version of artistic temi)erament did not require the emotional expression .sui)plie,I In T.entinck in several of the dramatic climaxes. A. D. Cohan put his li le perMinality in the discard and became Henslowe, the rugged old actor wliu e persuasive phrases induced Shakespeare to seek his fame af the court of the (Jueen. Cohan ' s characterization had the well-poised assurance of the professional actor, and was the most finished wurk i the evennig. His performance in this play, added to that of He Who (.eis Sla|iped, cinches Cohan ' s claim to the dramatic honors of the year. Mrs. Louise Wallis was a fascinating iMary Fitt:in. a true mirror ..f the ever- changing moods of the Dark Lady of the Sonnets. hether a -Mary sniilin- ni nirtanon, or flushed with the triumph of her success in Juliet, or tense with an-er. Airs. WalHs took her part with an ea.se that was gratifying. 1 ler el(.(|uence ..f speech was always sufficiently restrained, and her gestures natural. The emotional role of Anne Hathaway, whom Shakespeare traded for his love of fame, was splendidly handled by Miriam Hilton, who stripped bare the soul of the tragic woman in an admirably controlled and sincere manner. Delme ' r Daves was a politely mild Kit Marlowe, great poet and faithless friend of Shakespeare. One felt that Daves had an air rather too languid for the reckless Kit, and that he tended too often to transfer the platitudes of Marlowe over into the realms of wit. But although his wnrk was not as finished as that of the ()tlier l)rincipals, he gave a good performance- additional promise for good w(jrk in the three vears ahead of him. Kathryn McCahan was well cast in the part of the dominant, tireless Oueen Elizabeth ' and. although her long rhetorical speeches were somewhat uncertain, her first appearance on the Stanford stage was a creditable one. Minor roles in campus plays usually warrant considerable adverse criticism, but ' Shakespeare had people wi ' th real ability in these parts. Katholeen Hillis, as Mrs. Hathaway; Archie Steele, as the innkeeper in the uproarious tavern scene; Kenneth Chantrv and Fred Harding, in the stagehand and juvenile i)arts; Winifred Smeaton and Helen Turner, as ladies-in-waiting to the Queen ; and Kouie Best, as the street vender, merit praise for good performances. THEATRE WORKSHOP ACTIVITIES Wall till- iir ' anization oi what amnuiits to a i)r i(liKinj, ' company, tlu- ' I ' ht-ater Workshop class, known officially as English 2 . under the supervision of K. C. Hentinck, acting director of campus dramatics, rcacluil its highest point of efficiency this year. liy the formation of a group of technical experts and assistants, who handle every ])hase of stage production, hoth in class and assembly hall presentations. Hentinck succeeded in bringing the class to a jwint of development where it is of the greatest benefit to its meml)ers and to the camjuis stage. Under his producing company plan, students are allowed to choo.se the depart- ments in which they wish to work, including lighting, properties, costuming, direc- tion, .scene painting, scene construction, and publicity. Department heads are appointed by Bentinck. and the work is carried on under his supervision. This technical organization has been used in the i)roduction of .Assembly Hall plays, such as He Who Gets Slai)iicd and Will Shakespeare. Those interested in acting and directing are given opportunity in the one-act play groups undertaken bv the class each quarter, in which all work, from direction to scene-shifting, is (lone by the .students. Practical experience in every branch of the profession, gained through actual work, is the reward offered the students in the class, while the Assembly stage gains in efficiency and economy under this system. .• mong the members of the class during the past ear have been some students of unusual talent. Their ability was noted in such productions as Will .Shake- speare, in which .scene designs by Edward Farmer. ' 23. and lighting etTects by Ernest Greppin, ' 24, were features; and in Knightie Knight where the scenes were designed by Ted Van Duesen, ' 24; while the setting by Farmer in He Who ( jets Slapped deserves praise. Previous to the organization of the producing company. Theater Workshop class members were in charge of the technical details of fall-quarter productions. In every case, the work of construction has been done by students of this class, serving as stage hands, stage carpenters, wardrobe mistresses, property men, elec- tricians, call boys, and press agents. In Will Shakespeare. English Club offering, students spent days of research to determine manners, costumes, and customs of the period of the play. It is Hentinck ' s hope that the class may be even further developed to a jwint where it will be jiossible to turn over to its members the selection and even the direction of the productions. Two groups of one-act plays, together witli a nunilier of class ])roductions. formed the basis of the work of the class aside from its assembly hall activities. The first, produced at the end of the winter (|uarter, included the Queen ' s Enemies. Minnikin and .Mannikin. and a scene from Shakespeare ' s King Henry I ' . In the sjiriui, ' (|iiarler. the second group included Si)irits. by Sherl Lew. ' 24, The Slave iib Iwci i ' aces, and a dance fantasv. LOONG FAT li i a rare ].kaMirc fur theatre-goers to lie liermitted to witness some i)ertormance different Irom the ordinary run. I ' -reathiny the spirit of the Orient with its colorful ta])estries and robes, its baffling and humor- ous conjuring acts, jingling music, and typical Chi- nese folk-dances. Loong Fat, presented Friday night. Xovember 18. by the Chinese students at Stanford for the benefit of the Second Million, struck a new note in tlie long list of Distinctly DitTerent productions which have been plaved over tlic Assembly Hall footlights. Bedecked in a richly flowing Chinese robe, and carrying a huge casaija-shaped headgear with dang- ling tassels. Hock How. ' 25, in the role of chief magician, went through his long repertoire of tricks and illusions with relatively few breaks. .Much credit was due How and his co-worker, t ' . H. Lee. ' 23: for the ])roduction gave ample evi- iioi K now (lence that the Chinese students were awake to the ojiportunities which Stanford as a University has to offer them. I low and Lee arc both accomplished wizards, having given success- ful performances in San Francisco and Stockton vaudeville houses. They also are in great demand for lodge and club entertainments. The transformation of three goblets of confetti into milk, coffee, and candy was probably the most uintsual illusion in the entire show. A young man called from the audience was much embarrassed when the magician placed a fumiel at his elbow, and then, working the other arm as a pum] . forcerl coffee out through the spout of the funnel. The singing and dancing skit presented by Xellie Leong and . nnie Chan, two little Chinese girls from San I- rancisco. was daintily reeled off, and receivetl one of the most hearty bursts of ajjplause given during the evening. T. S. Wong, 26. performing on the Chinese harp, which is conceded by authori- ties to be one of the best of Oriental musical instruments ; .S. F. Lee ; and the Misses Chan and Chien of JJerkeley gave good interjiretations of Chinese music. With a quick manipulation of the feet, a conijilicaled punch with the hands, and an intricate side-step. Xah Chen, an eighteen-year-old Chinese girl, exhibited the technique of Oriental pugilistic art. Appropriate atmosphere was given Loong Fat by rich, multi-colored ta])es- tries hanging in the background of the stage. The raiment worn by How and Lee was particularlv eft ' ecti c. C. W. Midglev and i ivcrsity Orchestra assisted the due What Richard Bentinck Thinks of the Stanford Stage I Editor ' s Notic: h ' icliard licntinck has spent i yrar al StaiifonI as drauiatic coach, takiiuj Ihc place Cordon Da is left vacant when he roiwi on his year ' s leinu- of absence. During this year Bentinck has proruked nnieh discussimi by his method of handlinci pla s and his choice of them. In this article lie oii ' cs his an.sieer to those of his critics le ' ho hare thoiujht the :eroii,i track ;eas beiiu, taken. BEHIND THE CURTAIN May 1, . I ' LM. A few weeks nidie, and, with the final euiiain .if tile Senior FaiTC. tlie Stanlmd Iraniatic seasnn of I ' L ' J _ ' .i will eluse. A nKimeiit for reflection. .surel - ! What is the i)lace tilled hy the drama at Stanft)rd L ' niversity ? And what is the jilaei- Stan- ford Universitv fills in the American drama of today? Many thonj hts that rise to suhstantiate the answer to the first (luestion iiii,i;ht do likewise for the second. Ahout these thoughts, more presently ' V Imth (|iies- tions. the answer in a nutshell is just ahout no place at all. In Intention and Purpose, As Apart As the Two Poles l?ut putting things in a nutshell is as tempting as turning epigrams and even less explanatory. Yet a full explanation puts itself as tersely: Stanford dramatics and the drama at Stanford are, in intention and purpose, as apart as the two poles. Can they he Ijrought together ? . nd. brought together, can the marriage prosper in the interest and with the interest of the undergraduates? The answer is. Yes. The task will test the mettle of more than one hardworking, even inspired, man. That the eflfort will he in the interest of the undergraduates cannot he doulited. n ir that it will be ultimately with their interest as well. This Desire to Fill the House It needs no telling that Stanford dramatics are activities, settled by tradition upon certain societies or organizations, each of which once a year gives a show. Aside from political and social and perhaps financial advantages to be reaped, there exists, no doubt, the natural desire to have as big an audience for the show as can be induced to pay the too-high admission fee. Waiving all reference to group con- trol and its pernicious influence, among other evils, upon the choice of the cast, there remains for present consideration this desire to fill the house. Excellent and indeed essential as it is, it has led those who give plays into the same pitfall into which tumbled the Broadway theatre managers, whose standard of dramatic art is that which pleases the largest number of money-spenders. Like them, our campus luagnates have made themselves the guardian of the cam])us public taste. Like an - Shubert. h langer or Klaw. they wail. ( )ur audience won ' t like this! or shriek. That ' ll be a ' knock-out ! Broadway Acting Is Sophisticated, Empty There is no sjiace nor es])ecial occasion to expand on the i)sychological and other ett ' ects of these wails or shrieks. The tioints to be made are these : P.roadway acting is hard, polished, sophisticated, adequate, empty. Campus acting is not. and can never he. Uroadway plays are given in sharp competition for financial proiit. Campus plays need never he, must not he. What a cam])us play can he is an attempt at art. There is talent on the campus; there always must he among nearly three thousand men and women. Like all things that are a part of nature, talent In- itself alone, through its own manifestation, can convey itself — highly trained in techni(|ue or not — to an audience. Let that talent have a chance. It is lietter for acting, for any branch of the theatre arts, to have faulty attempts at good art than not much hetter attempts at imitating the had art that so often succeeds in Xiw Hrk. Remember ' He ' and Will Shakespeare ' Those concerned in Stanford dramatics need only rememher He and Will Shakespeare. Roth were good art. As drama, they were interesting, remarkahle. sui)erb here and there. He certainly was, though Will might have fallen, in s])ots, below that. The jieople in these plays, from star to stagehand, found some- thing in it they liked, an element, at least, of complete satisfaction. And the audience? One need not see a perfect performance of a really fine play to know more or less exactly how good an excellent example of the thing may be. One makes a synthesis, as happens in the forming of any ideal. Suddenly all the little, felicitous moments and near-])erfections that one has recognized as such in the jilay under observation, are fused into .something that ai)peals to the imagination as the ideal. The imagination abstracts the essential quality out of the welter of faulty and fair moments, and there sjirings in the mind something that has the beautiful pcrsua-ion of tin- idr.il enilnulinu-nt c,t tiiat (|u;ility. The Taste of the Audience Will Have To Change What if the audience, used to mental paj) or well-nigh musical froth, unused to bringing their imaginations or their intelligences with them to the Assembly Hall (truly they ai)pear insulted when accredited with these attributes) — what if the audience clamored, or was said to clamor, against another He ? Let those most interested in the art of the theatre go in for w hat they like, for what satisfies them, and do it. Let those not interested in the art of the theater tat earmutFs for the starving Suahelis. . ' Ks for the audience, if their taste does not ajiprove the work of the former, then the taste of the audience will have to change. It can be done. Oidv in this way may Stanford dramatics and the drama at Stanford come to- gether and flouri.sh as should l)e. When Stanford L ' niversity enters the field of (Irama it will do so with merit and distinction, as it has entered other fields. With drama something of significance in the minds of its undergraduates, something other than triumjjhs for the hou.se, jazz, knock-outs, and political manipulations, Stan- ford men and women will soon rank with those of the other universities, increasingly numerous, which are active toward an American theatre artistically, socially and spiritually — rather than commercially — valuable. KllU.VRD Bknti.xck mUSICflL SHOUUS By Robert H. Edwards TOOTBALL FROTHIES OF 1922 lIulililiiiL; hilaridu h tlirough two acts and fifteen scenes, the Football Frothies of V 22 (irtV-rctl a tuneful travesty on Stanford life for the entertainment of a packed house which a few hours before had witnessed the l ' i. ;- (iame classic. Under the direction of Mollis Chalmers, assisted by . rnold I ' .ayley and Sam Alendenhall, Ram s Head Society put on a football show this year that surpassed all campus records in the number of specialty acts. It was further featured by fifteen changes of sets, accomplished with profes- sional smoothness. Unity was be- stowed on the Frothies by that veteran maker of plays and lyrics. Dan Evans, who wrote the book as well as the words for tlie eleven soni;s. What will 1 majnr in? was the awc-inspirin ' enigma confronting Jack, played by Jerry Pow-ell. Jack had just transferred to Stanford from Jawn Harvard ' s school, and when the unofficial registrar signed him up as a major in love, the trouble began, for the right girl was missing. . fter pursuing his ]3hantoni queen from scene to scene, regis- trar ' s office, Javanese temple, boot- black shop, and women ' s pageant. Jack finally saw the light and real- akxoi.d n.WLEV . ND dki.mf.r THE BOUNCING liUBiiLES ized that Jill, played by Dorothy Roniinger, was the only girl. Jerry Powell put necessary fire into the part of love major, and Dorothy Rominger s appearance and singing made a pleasing combination. Milly and Tilly, the freshmen co-eds. impersonated by Arnold Bayley and Delmer Daves, drew a young volcano of laughs. Gene Trago, allegorical inter- preter as priestess of the milk fairies, added to the number of laughs in the world. The burlescjue theme was sidetracked for a while with the entrance of Helen Whit- ney in a graceful dance to the tune of Javanese Twilight. amid lavish Oriental settings. Grant Corby ' s vibrating xylophor.e hammers and the jjopular melodies coaxed forth by the Ram ' s Head orchestra received the greatest applause of the evening. A novelty effect was introduced in the Salon de Shine scene by using radiolite costumes for the chorus on a darkened stage. Baldy Ouintero and Etl Harris, the clog-dancing baseball battlers, gave a prophetic glimpse into the future, while the past (did someone say the present, also?) was ably represented by the dignified entrances and exits of Eddie ' aful, playing the meditative souse. The musical theme of the show was lidgley ' s I Want to Major in Love. and a close second in popularity was Behind the Mask, by Alice Dodds. Myron Iligby and Clu Carey contributed several good songs. The Bouncing Bubbles and the Beautiful Bubbles, arrayed in sixirt clothes, gowns, or striking costumes, were the froth of the Frothies, and they put a delightful zip into the show. ' KNIGHTIE KNIGHT Besides being in a critical frame of mind after the pro and con discusMon m l Ic Who Gets Slai)ped, the campus was exiwcting i1k- fanlastic iniaL;niatinn an I roar- ing hilarity of last year ' s Koo Koo Kubistown. ' The plot, written by Northcutt Ely, ' 24, and Phil Xewill, ' 24, was built around a clever idea, and substantially fixed with good lines. Arnold liayley did very well as a new stage director, but should have had a week longer in which to smooth out the rough spots. The chorus was nuich too large, and as a rc-ult nioM of the work wa- unlni- ished. Moreover. se eral nnmhrrs with excellent possiliilitu--, were nnned by good actors with weak voices. The really artistic opeinng .and closnig. with coniplcte absence of a musical linalc. would liaye lii ' cn more elTeitixe if ihr show had not been a burlesque. All this does not mean that Knightie Knight was not replete with good points. The musical numbers were unusually fine, semi-classical compositions being in the majority. Richard Malaby, ' 23, deserves special mention for composing eiglit of the fourteen songs, most of them the ballad ty])e. which |iroved effective. Charles Midgley, Myron Higby, and Lewis .M.abaNtcr. nuisical program, contributed catchy numbers. Act two opened and closed like a Broadway success, lads and lligby ' s Susie featuring as the song hits of ih scene with a colorfully attired company of hunters singing large of the ■ ' s three bal- English Inn was a fanci- v.Ml ' -- r,FA().Mi; fill picture uf the fux hunt, liile tlif duuble-(|uartet which liarnionized the Inn of the (iolden Horn, made this num- ber the best of the evening. Mentioning Susie in- volves also tli€ most entertain- ing member of the cast — Gene Trago, who is fortu- nately possessed with a good voice, clear enunciation, and. above all, with that Al Jolson assurance which puts it over. .-Xided by James (Jillen, as the demure Susie ( white as a lily, but green as a pea ) . Trago rang the bell with five encores. King Chicago, the opening chorus number of the third act, was a clever lyric which Trago sang. Chet Hess was a knightly api)earing Sir (7avador, and won the royal glove b his above-average singing and acting. The chief laugh-makers of the play were William Fitzhugh. the Squire, and Dave Mannoccir. his wife. James Muir had the mechanics of the Julian Kltinge art down pat. and in his walk, smile, and dance steps, he was a graceful Elsinore. John Murphy was rather too muscular for a heroine lead, but his work was clever enough to satisfy. Paul P euter acted like a true stage Englishman. Fred Hughes. Kewp S])roull, r.ill Lucas, Dave I.aniiison, Ken Stewart, and Jerr INiwcll made good use of minor parts. sPRori.i FORE! ••!•(. re ' an.l fruni thai stanKn- tiLnncm wlu-ii a .iiipin.; -..If liall shattered nth tlK ' llawii ' ss -la and aristocratic atinnsphcrc nl ' the SeaMcK- ( otintry Chil). mil the hilarious tiiiak- chorus of the third act, the l ' L ' 4 Juiiior ( )iH-ra provoked minds of laut hs and apijlause with a rapidity of action ami lini-lied ea e of per- orniance which kept interest at high pitch all the time. Dorothy was the one and only feminine lead, and h ' sther I ' lowers made an ni;ai;iiig ' personality of this much sought-after youni - ladw ' Ihe clear, sweet iprano which Miss Flowers possesses was very pleasing. Gene Trago fitted into the part of the confident Bill Jones with that matinee lol style that has characterized all of his successes. Albert Gregersen displayed le aristocratic hearing of the true blue blood. He had the best male voice in the I )ick b ' aville. in the role of . rt Kelly, looked and acted the part, and the rehearsal of his proiKjsal to Dorothy was one of the biggest laugh-gatherers of the show. -Murray Vard maintained at all times the precise, serious demeanor of the fashion- able doctor. Robert Carr did a good bit of restrained acting in maintaining the attitude of the Swami, the mystic crystal gazer. The animated gestures and et)ually animated remarks of Dave Mannoccir, as Chesley Stuyvesant, were cjuite amusing, l- ' lizabeth Xoyes put real ability into the part of Mrs. Stuyvesant, who was con- tinually directing a corrective tirade against Chesley. Ralph Anschutz was the living example of a golf-maniac. I-Lxcellent pantoniinie was done by Everett Brown, the butler. Marjorie Anderson made a most approved flapper, and Anita Kerr was a typical w orshiper of athletes. Fore! was filled with song-hits, and it is difficult to choose the best numbers. The theme songs. All Teed Up, by Dick Malaby, and Fore ! written by Lewis Alabaster and Clu Carey, were peinul nieltHlies wliicli oiJeiied and closed the show with a genuine musical comedy bang. Popular chorus numbers were Carey ' s ■ Gazing. Day Dreams. a beautiful fox-trot by Alabaster, and Earl Glauber ' s waltz. Malaby ' s sentimental song. I Got a I ' eelin ' . liad a rythmic swing which niatle it worthy of being a big chorus number instead of a solo. Ted ' an Deusen ' s Mv Queen of Gasoline. closing the second act. was a clever composition of the musical revue type. The specialties which were inserted into the opera were unusually clever, and deserved the repeated encores which they received. Dorothy Dahlcr and William Lucas, in Seven or Eleven. well earned thunderous ajjplause. which called them back five times. Miss Dahler ' s Southern blues voice and the extremely comical appearance of Lucas with his vibrating feet combined to make this feature the most entertaining part of the show. Ted an Deusen, singing 1 . in ' t Xobody Much. was one of the hits of the evening, and his clogging antics with Gardner Lippincott were most enjoyable. Miss McGovern added a distinctly professional touch to the specialties with a dance and song. Led by ' an Deusen. apjjarently playing an accordion, the two harmonica handlers. Ed Strong and Kenyon Fay. gave a tuneful resume. Richard Bentinck did a good job in his direction of the cast, and too much praise can hardly be given Miss Margaret McGovern. of Miss Marker ' s School, for the ])rofessional finish displayed by the choruses, which she selected and trained. Simplicity of chorus movements and perfection of dance steps proved more effec- tive than the usual attempt at intricate group work. The lx)ok was the work of Hal Rorkc and Carl Shr RAM ' S HEAD PKF.SinENT Dwd.iitW. TA •lor. ' 23 HONORARY MEMBERS . Ch AKLES W. MUK.LKV . Jr., ■23 GoRDnx A. Davis Henry David Gray 1 ' d A UD Benjamin Krei rIBIEL Charles K. Field John E. Hewston Payson Jackson Treat PROFESSIONAL MEMBER Julian Eltinge MEMBERS Ei.wix A. Wells. ' 14 Frederick M. Hughes, ' 23 e ' LARl ■NCE W. Carey, ' 24 Jack Schnier. ' 16 Thomas (;.IinviN, ' 23 NoRT! hcutt Ely. ' 24 DanielW. Evans, ' 20 John Ki. n mp M iahy. ' 23 Fredf :ricR. Fisher. ' 24 Homer I. Mitchell. ' 21 V.T Mm-, F. Da vidMannoicir 11. ' 24 Paul C. Claflin, ' 22 Chahii - W , . l iKv. Jr.. ' 23 Sam I ■ElH. MlMilNHAL L. ' 24 Grant W.Corby, ' 22 Geor,,,,T. Powell. ' 23 Phim r Xi II 1 , ' 4 MVRON C. Hl(}BV. ' 12 Henry F. Si-roull. ' 23 loHN 1 1 1 ' . ■•■ ■_ ' ( Arnold B. Bavley. ' 23 DwightW.Tayu.r, ' 23 The,. ■24 H. Mollis Chalmers, ' 2.3 Eu(,ENEN.TRA(iO. ' 23 Hoka ( 1 i; i I i-i- , ' . ' ,s CHE.STER N. Hess, ' 23 Lewis P. Alabaster. ' 24 Davii 1 .X. l.A L-ON. ' 2 SWORD AND SANDALS SOCIETY offici-:rs Presidknt David Stoddard . t V()od, ' 22 SKCRETARV-TREAStUKli . . . Frederkk Marshal!. HiiiiiEs ' 23 l-Al UI.TV . IK.Mlil-;R w ILLLVM B. Owens H() ( )RARV MF.MBKRS I.F.E Kmf.rson Bassett ChrvsellaDinkek KunARnC. Bentinik Samvel S. Seward. Jr. MF.MBKRS Kdwin A. Wells, ' 14 Edw ARD M. Farmer, ' 2.? Daniel W.Evans, ' 20 Frederick M. Hic;hes. ' 2i 1). Stoddard Atwood, ' 22 Dean R. Ross, ' 23 PailC. Clai.li. . ' 22 Dwight W. Taylor. ' 23 Clvmk 1 . r..AKII,V. ' 22 Robert T. Pattox, ' 23 Arn.mi. I;. l; Ml , -2.? F. DavidMannoccir, II. ' 24 H. 1 Inl 1 |v ( II l i m;s. ' 2.1 Cecil M. Morris. 2A lonN D. Richer. ' 24 MASQUERS OFFICKKS President Helen Whitney, ' 24 Secretary-Treasl-rer Edythe Baylis, ' 24 Librarian Rosemary Drachman, ' 22 FACULTY MEMBFRS Husabeth BrcKiN(,HAM . L R(,ery Bailey MKMB1 ' :RS Chrysella DixKKR, ' 21 EiJYTHE Baylis. 24 Rosemary Drach man. ' 22 Margaret Bailie. ' 24 Florence Pixley. ' 23 Foresta Hodgson. 24 Augl-sta Corey. ' 23 Margaret Richardson. ' 24 Helen Whitney, ' 24 Alice Dodds, ' 24 l-: ELYx Van Horn, ' 25 DRAMATIC COMMITTEE Chairman Comptroller . Business Manager Kr hardC. Bentinck Walter H. Hales. -23 loHN D. Richer, ' 24 GROUP RKI ' RKSENTATIVES English Club Junior Class . Masquers Ram ' s Head . Senior Class . Sophomore Class Sword and Sandals Elizabeth Spilman. XoRRis E. James. Helen Whitney. Dwight W. Taylor, ■rkiierick M. Hughes, D. Lloyd Davies. Arnold Bayley. [7 e B fl T e DEBATE YEAR IS SUCCESSFUL In the past ten years there has been no equal of the success that has attended Stanford debate this last year. With ten victories out of eleven contests, Stanford debaters defeated the University of California in the Joffre debate and in the Freshman debates ; the University of Southern California in the Tri-State debate ; the University of Washington and the University of Oregon in the Tri-State de- l)ates; the deljating societies of the College of the Pacific, St. Mary ' s, Santa Clara, and the University of California in the Inter-Society debates. - t the Pacific Coast debating conference, which met in the earl - part of l ' ' 2. it was decided that in next year ' s debates the audience should render the decision rather than three judges. To make debating more interesting, the length of the speeches was reduced and the order of rebuttal reversed, the change in rebuttal avoiding two successive speeches on the part of the negative and giving the affirma- tive the benefit of the last speech by a three-minute final rejoinder. With very limited numbers, and more limited finances, Stanford must struggle with strong opponents. Last year the University of California appropriated $2,500 for debating; the University ' of Southern California, $4,000; Stanford, $450. At one debate California turned out an audience of over three thousand people, and now she lias made debating a major activity besides securing a debating scholarship for a high school graduate each ear. As this article goes to press, Stanford enters tiie last deiiate of this year, a i ublic speaking contest to be held at Los Angeles on the suljject, The Constitution, ( )ur Citadel of Freedom. The Cardinal sends one representative with liopc i f dujilicating last year ' s victory. TRI-DeBflTE NEW DEBATE RESULTS IN TRIPLE TIE Stanford. California, and tiic I ' nivi-rsitN i Soullitrn t ' alifdrnia niaui uratcd a new (lel)ate on Xovemlier 6, 1922 — a triple simultaneous contest, it ended in a three-way tie, all the affirmative teams winning. The subject of the deliate was the passage of the i)ro]x)se(l Water and Power Act which w-as about to come before il). I , ' ,,;. 1, ,i! I aliforina for a vote. John Hall. 25. and Robert Lewis. ' 24. composed the Stanford affirmative team, and won their debate with the Univer- sity of Southern Cali- fornia. Hall proved the necessity of the meas- ure, and Lewis worked on the problem of the operation of this jilan in Canada. On the negative. Stanford was defended by Mathew Tobriner. 24, and Edward Lan- ilels, ' 22. Tobriner dem- onstrated that there was no need for the measure, a n (1 Landels showed that it was inadvisable. The debate was lield in the Scottish Rite audi- torium in San I ' ran- cisco before a large crowd. The vote of the one judge who was pres- ent went to the ncL ' ative. B TRI-STflTG DeBflTE STANFORD WINS THE TRI-STATE DEBATE J ' Vir the first time in its history Stanford won the ' i ' ri-State iJeiwte, securing a unanimous decision from the University of Oregon at Eugene, and a two-to-one decision from the University of Washington at Palo Alto. As is the custom with the tri-state teams, two men. Emmet IMcCaffery. ' 24, and Thomas Bailey. 24, went north to ujihold the negative of the question, Resolved : That the Federal Govern- ment should legalize the sale of light wines and heers. while Claude Minard, 2. , and Roh ert Lewis, ' 2. rcni.-iined at Stanford to ar-iu- the affirmative John Hall. ' 24, who was sched- uled to debate at Eugene, was taken sick, and McCaf- fery took his place. M c C a f f e r y claimed that there could be no half- way step in no- hibition. That the efificiency of lal)(ir had been in- creased, was I iailey ' s conten- tion. The del)ate Kinged o n the point of enforce- ment, at Eugene as well as at Stan- ford. Bert W. Levit. ' 24, gave the team hel]). STANFORD FRESHMEN MAKE CLEAN SWEEP ' I ' lu ' Stanldnl-Calildniia fit ' shinan ck-ban- was Ix-ld a]L;aiii this year on . i)ril IS for the first time sime l ' ' il. There- were two simultaneous debates, each university keeping its affirmative team at liome and sending its negative team to the rival insti- tution. Both the contests were won by the Stanford freshmen — by a unanimous decision at California, and by a two-to-one decision on the campus. The question was: Resolved. That Stanford and California should restrict their intercollegiate competition to the contests with each other. The affirmative team consisted of William Gosslin and Walter Odemar. and the negative, of Stanley W ' eigel and Burnham Beckwith. The negative team, which deljated at California, showed that while there were defects in intercollegiate athletics, these defects were not due to any inherent flaws in the present system, but rather to its rai)id growth. Both teams were coached by Bert Levit, ' 24, whose keen analysis of the various arguments was a contributing factor to the freshman victory. Of less importance, jjerhaps, but of no less interest, was another freshman debate held this year between the ' 26 members of Wranglers and Euphronia. On January 31, Wranglers upheld the affirmative of the question: Resolved, That .Stanford should abolish professional coaches from athletic competition, while luiphronia defended the negative. The Euphronians were rei)resented bv (ack Hardy an l Walter Cam] bell ; the Wranglers, by IClizabeth McCall and ' l sther. Greenacre. wlm wnn the decision. DEBATING PROSPECTS FOR NEXT YEAR . s for Stanford ' s prospects. said Debating Coach (;. Emerson, when asked about next year ' s chances, we face always the situation of a lack of general student interest in debating. Nor have we a wealth of debate material upon which to draw, although what we have is good. But by confining ourselves to fewer debates we are able to keep up our standards. This year, unfortunately, we lose several good men through graduation: Knox Miller, who started the winning habit at Stanford In- capturing the Joft ' re Medal last year ; Edward Eandels, who won the Public Speaking Contest at Pullman, Oregon; C. R. Minard, T. E. Bowen. and James Anglin, who have debated upon varsity teams. Ikit we have some i)romising material coming up from the fre.shman teams, which, consisting of Burnham Beckwith, William Gosslin, Walter Odemar, and Stanley Weigel, achieved very gratifying results in a struggle with an almost impossible question. Besides, we have the alternate of last year ' s s(|uad, B. W. Levit, and the following men who remain in college: Tom Bailey, licrtrand Comparet, John Hall. Richard Jenkins. l ol)crt I.cwis, I ' .mmet McCalTerv. I. eland Stanford, aiul Mathew Tol)riner. ' ' ' JOFFRE meuRL STANFORD WINS THE JOFFRE Friday, the thirteenih debate when it brought l:i ' hat is considered the first forensic prize of the year — the Joffre Medal — was won by Bertrand Comparet, ' 24, tlie other Stanford contestants. Mathew O. Tobriner, ' 24. and Thomas Bailey. ' 24, gaining second and fourth places respectively. Knox Miller captured the meda for Stanford last year. TIk ' Joffre Debate is peculia r in that the specific subject for discussion is not an- nounced until three hours l)efore the debate. The general subject was an- nounced in January as French Policies on the Continent. At five o ' clock of the day of the debate. A Solution of the Franco-German Problem was given as the specific topic. The work of Bert W. Levit, ' 24, contribute materiallv to the day ' s sue JOFFRE nF.r,. Cumijaret (Winner), inieR-socieTy peBflies Euphronia Wins League Championship In 1921-22. the first year in the life of the League of College Debatini Societies, EujAronia of Stanford took second place. This year it emerged the champion. Winning its first and second debates, it found itself pitted against an old rival, Nestoria. for the championship. The other societies, of the College of the Pacific. .St. Mary ' s, Santa Clara, and the University of California, had already fallen by the wayside, leaving first place as the i rize to be contested for by the Stanford organizations. The first league debate, held on November 17. l ' )23, was a .Vestorian victory, lunmet AlcCaffery, ' 24, and Ray l- arley, ' 24. defeated the speakers of the College of the Pacific on the question of the advisability of the Federal government owning and controlling the coal mines of the I ' nited States. Pointing out that a labor autocracy would result from sucli nationalization, the Xestorian speakers won a two-to-one decision. One week later. l- ui)hronia met its opponent, tlic Congress Debating Society of California, when P. I. ' . .S])encer, ' 25. and Richard Jenkins. ' 25. debated the |uestion : Resolved, That the L ' nited States Government should supervise and control the public education of the Cnited States. The Stanford team proposed a definite plan for federal action which the opposing speakers were unable to demolish. In the second series of tlie deliates. Nestoria, represented by Rol)ert Lewis, ' 24, and Claude -Minard, ' 23, met the Senate of Santa Clara to argue that light wines and beers should be legalized. Nestoria was given a three-to-nothing decision. . week later. luii)hronia defeated the I louse of Santa Clara on the Kansas court ([uestion. P. 1. ' . Spencer, ' 25, and M. ). Tobriner. 24. composed the winning team. Tlie championshiii deliate took jilace on . pril 2r in llie Little Theatre. Argu- ing tlie (|uestion, Resolved, That the issuance of tax-exempt securities should be abolished. were P. I. ' . Spencer. ' 23. and B. V. Levit, 24, of Eu!)hronia, on the affirmative. Emmet McCaffery, 24. and Robert Lewis, ' 24, of Nestoria, upheld the negative, ]Kiinting out the evils of the i)ractice. DELTA SIGMA RHO Ilonnya. PcIhi, Fralc FACULTY MEMBERS Arthur M. Cathcart James G. Emerson Edgar E. Robinson William B. Owens GRADUATE MEMBERS Robert C. Binkley. ' 21 DanielW. Evans, ' 21 Mervyn Crobauch. ' 21 Laurence Martin. ' 22 W. Edwards, ' 21 William F. Leiser, ' 21 Harold A. Fendler, ' 22 Ross C. Fisher, ' 22 MEMBERS Hundred and Tiv Knox Miller Theodore E. Bowen -Three James H. Anglim Claude R. Minakd Robert E. Lewis Nineteen Hundred and Tzi -nly-Fonr Mathew O. Tobriner Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five John Hall i imsii.ou.JalTL- Maija.ian Odemar Diclefddt Kylbc-rg I. Tobriner Palmer Lindsey EUPHRONIA DEBATING SOCIETY Fall Quarter Winter Quarter :atiiew O. Tobriner I ' HES.DF.NT Burton W. Palmer. ' 24 URTON W. Pa,,n,er,;24 . Richard P. Gross. ' 24 Sf.cretarvTrkasurer FACULTY MEMBER ArthirM. Catiicart GRADUATE MEMBERS Percival I. V. Spencer. ' 25 Alonzo L. Crawford. ' 19 William F. Leiser. ' 21 Herbert B. Alexander. ' 21 C. Victor Smith, ' 19 Ellis IIiRSCHFELD. ' 21 George W. Burch, -22 Robert C. Binklev. ' 20 EdwardO. Landels, -21 HaroldA. Fendler. ' 22 JOSEPIIUS P. Maxdl. ' 20 Homer W. Patterson. ' 21 SvDNEV S. Grossman. ' 22 B. Martin, ' 22 Louis B. MEMBERS MiNSKV. ' 22 DeWittC. Hertrani). ' 23 Frank L. Crist. ' 24 Brother L. Kvlberc. ' 25 Chester S. Uowen, ' 2} Herbert G. Florcken. ' 24 Hugh M. Lindsev. ' 25 Theodore E. Bowen. ' 23 Richard P. Gross. ' 24 IraL. Sherman. -25 William L. Bradshaw. ' 23 Bertram W. Levit, ' 24 Percival I. V. Spencer, ' 25 John Field 2d., ' 23 Talbot Bielefeldt. ' 25 Frederic S. Ludeke. ' 24 lilRNHAM P. BeCKWITH. ' 26 Gasper H. Magarian, ' 24 Walter McN. Campbell. Jr.. ' 26 Marion L. Crist. ' 25 Burton W. Palmer. ' 24 Charles R. Clifford. ' 26 Alva Crobauch. ' 25 MathewO. Tobriner. ' 24 Hartley W. Devlin, ' 26 Charles McE. Fueller, ' 25 Russell H. Varian. ' 24 .V HaleDinsmoor. ' 26 i : c ' T ?jrcn.ss. S LOTON D. Wells. ' 24 Tack W. Hardy, ' 26 Louis L. Jaffe. ' 26 Clyde II. Babcock. ' 25 Llovd C. Carver. ' 24 Richard 1.. Ienkins. ' 25 James B. Masnon. ' 26 Walter H , Odemar, ' 26 St.kni lev a. Weicel, ' 26 NESTORIA DEBATING SOCIETY Fall and Winter Quarters Emmf.t McCafkery, ' 24 . . RoBKRT E. Lewis, ' 23 . . . Lki.axii G. Stanford. ' 24 . . RrssKLi. L.Walter, ' 24 . . Herbf.rt a. Davis, ' 20 L MKsT. McMknamin VllM M H, Mm i.fk, OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS IloMKk W. L;k(,un. ' 23 Kenneth D. Gardner, ' 23 Robert E, Lewis, ' 23 Claude R. Minard, ' 23 Otto C. Barby. ' 24 Adelbert J. Buttrey, ' 24 Bertrand L. Comparet, ' 24 Raymond M. Farlf;y, ' 24 Spring Quarter . , Robert E. Lewis, ' 23 Russell L. Walter, ' 24 William L. Enderud, ' 26 Archie T. Steele, ' 24 Davii.W. C. Haukis, ' : Francis iLKAiiFM a: EgkfktW. 1, i r.. ' - ' 4 Emmm M. I M inn - ' RlCHAMI. k. M N-. ,ir. ' . WiLLAKilU. I ' AIM.. - ' 4 Leland G. Stankjki). ■ Archie T. Steele, ' 24 Russell L. Walter, ' 2 Robert Z. Hawkins. ' 2 William G. Hawkins Philip R. Berger, ' 26 Lfon B. Brown, ' 26 William L. Enderud, ' 26 Van Norden WRANGLERS Prf.si IF.NT .... Sfxri: r.XHV-TREASURER I.AIHA ArsTi.x. 23 KLIZABKTHr.RIXORV. -23 MarikMkrriu.. ' 23 ViR..iNiA V....i.RrrK. ' 23 Marj()RikCohkn. ' 24 Sii.NKY Hawkins, ' 24 Marie Merrill. ' 23 LiNPA Van Norden. ' 24 IvLIZABETH PeIRCE, ' 24 Ruth Lee Spilman, ' 24 Grace Strobel, ' 24 Linda Van Norden, ' 24 El.sa Barber. ' 25 Helen Brant, ' 25 m vj s I c MUSIC COURSES NEEDED, SAYS ALLEN 1 hiiiic that the ])rfscnt music organi- zations arc ])a inLi: the way for the proper recognition of music in the curricuhnii, ' says Warren D. Allen, University organist, in regard to the place of music on the camjHis. The Glee Club, the Choir, the Sclnil)ert Club, and the Band are doing the musical work of the University. There should be. in addition, regular courses designed to be of especial interest to students of music offered in the University curriculum, ac- cording to Allen. The enthusiasm at the recent student body song-fest was evidence of a desire for more music. The band concerts, given Thursday afternoons in the court of the New Union, have proven an attractive in- novation. The oratorios have also been ac- claimed with enthusiasm. Music has, in the ])ast year, assured itself of a firm position among student activities. i) ' - STANFORD UNIVERSITY BAND UlUKCTOR Stldkxt Leadkr. I- ' am. (Jl ' akteu Student LEAnsK, Winter Quarter Student Leader. Spring Quarter Manager I ' .. W. Martin William Haikktt, ' 22 Joseph C. Vinetz, ' 23 John. M. Willits, ' 25 Lowell W. Berry, ' 24 SOLO CORNETS H.«8Y J. Edwards, ' 23 William Hackett. ' 22 Joseph F. Kelly, ' 24 John M. Willits, ' 23 FIRST CORNETS Frank B. Frye, ' 26 William H. Taylor, ' 2.1 SECOND CORNETS Maywood L. Brockway. ' 26 William Gottschalk. Jr., THIRD CORNETS . rthurG. Nevins, ' 26 Clarence C. . ' shfori), ' 25 NES cKenney. -24 Kene L. Kothschtld, ' 25 James H. Rusk, ' 24 SECOND TROMBONES Fred R. Ingram, ' 25 I.OUIS G. Van Vorhis. ' 26 HORNS Ephraim . dams. ' 25 Otto C. B. rby, ' 24 D.wiD W. C. Harris, ' 24 Edward Neisser, ' 26 Ivan M. Redekf.r, ' 23 FRENCH HORNS Earl Ramey, ' 25 Paul E. Norris, ' 24 SNARE DRUMS Horace B. Allison, ' 25 Wheeler F. Schall, ' 22 SOLO CLARINETS Donald K. Harger, ' 25 Frank I. Schultzberg, FIRST CLARINETS Clarence H. Dawson, ' ; Percy W. Lewis, ' 26 Raymond L. Spangler, ' SECOND CLARINET Joseph Y. Sano, ' 24 THIRD CLARINETS Ralph E. Barby, ' 24 James E. Mannon, ' 26 ■■£•■ FLAT CLARINET James A. Will. rd. ' 25 ALTO SAXOPHONES Rupert F. McCooK, Howard D. McEach Mahlon D. McPh£ BASSES ' aldo H. Brazil Claude A. Bryni Don DeB. Peeha PICCOLO Wallace A. GiLi TYMPANI STANFORD GLEE CLUB President Arnold Bayley Vice-President Manager Assistant Man Librarian Sidney Laughlin Charles Sortor ACER Charles Beardsley Harold Spalding FACULTY MKMB1 ' :R Warren D. Allen GRADUATE MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Titwnty-Tivo C. Albert Kulmann W. Edwards Beach Lawrence E. Millerd William W. Tampmn Clarence E. Weaver Harold S. Spalding Archie McVey MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twntx-Thrce J. Richard Malaby DeWitt C. Bertrand Harold F. Vermilya Theodore H. Shepherd JoH N W. Weigiitman Theodore M. Matson Donald E. King James S. Gillen Frank L. Fenton Charles H. Sortor Arnold B. Baylev Dermont N. Macconel Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Cecil M. Morris Byron C. Hunkins William E. Tempel Morgan J. McGrath William E. Burdick George H. Wiijon Hal R. Brokaw Thayer W. Whitcomb George K. Smith Oscar W. Mulford Charles B. Cross Sam H. Mendenhall Elton T. Bozarth Byron T. Badham Jr. Glen H. McIntyre H. Sidney Laughlin Ernest K. Bramblett Harry F. Kennedy Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five LeRoy Sloan Harold C. Lundburg Robert D. Boynton Lafe T. Browne H. Walter Broenkow Leon T. David William Archer Frank P. Isensee Howard Booth Horace E. Swing Robert H. Rinn Calvin H. Conron Philip S. Urner Burton A. Noble Wilbert J. Hammond Robert J. White Nineteen Hundred and Ttccntv-Si.v Ralph I. Anschutz Charles C. Stratton f. Bvrox Kissinger Giles Gilbert Walter P. Walsh George M. Frazier Kenneth N. Chantry DeWitt Montgomery Jr. Glenn E. Whitfield Raitt Boren John Deffebach Jr. Delmar Daves Kenneth Hess Charles H. Sumner GLEE CLUB MAKES SOUTHERN TOUR ' r viMity-LM,i, ' ht mcmliers of the Stanford (Ik-c C ' luli compoM-il tlic i)arty that left Marcli i3 for the South on the annual (llee Cluh tour. Director Warren U. Allen and Manager Charles M. Sorter accomjianied the men on the trij). which included a series of concerts in coast cities from Carmel to Los Angeles. Concerts were also given at Del Monte. Pacific Grove, Salinas, Paso Kohles, Santa Barbara, Pasadena, and Long Reach. The trij) was a fitting culmination for the intensive preparation of the duh which hegan in Octoher. J. Richard Malaby directed the work from Octolier until the return of Mr. Allen in December. Malaby was commended by Los Angeles music critics for the excellence of his playing, both as accompanist and as soloist. Arnold B. Bayley distinguished himself by his clever parody of music for a movie. Bayley was assisted by David A. Lainson who read titles for the picture. The two were quite pojjular with southern audiences. The !)allroom of the Ambassador Hotel in Los .Angeles was the .scene of the Cdncluding and most inijiortant concert of the tour, given Sunday evening, A])ril 1. The club ' s program was particularly well received on that oc- casion. While in the South, in addition to its concerts, the club was entertained by the Alumni. The club ' s itiner- ary and finances were managed by Sortor in a manner which demonstrated the continued practica- bility of such trips. It has been Mr. .Allen ' s aim to have the club give pro- grams of the best type of music, cor- rectly interpreted, and at the same time to make the concerts so varied that they might have a general ai)])eal. The south- ern tour was a direct ai)])lication of this princijile. THE AMBASSADOR Announces a Special Eastlr Evenlng Concert B the Famous STANFORD UNIVERSH V GLEE CLUB (With Soloists) Sunday Night, April First In the ' Ball Roomat8:lS P. . L 1 ICKETS ONE DOLLAR EACH i I Ambassador Ticket Brokerage, .Arcade t •I . iiiiitl and al The .Alexandria News Siand. PROGRAMME M. LCOLM IliVISp.V, ' 24, ' (. ' •■IlisI ViciiAF 23, Hiiss ' i CCTHIIER T B. TlUB?, ' 24, litlSiP .Arnold H -«j. Wilv.n n.-ipi. Ander on Pitt Hicks 1 ,ic I I.mi.llicrg Ili-nderson Besvvick Montgome y Mack Clark ' 1 ,,U lu ' Ihtrt-i S.iMiii 1 li.i i. Ilobson Schai-.Hn Knowle s Kiml Xol.n,, Wright Klu,k Kerry Toll r.i. «:i . ckl. SCHUBERT CLUB First Term OFF Cl ' RS Second Term Mabel Ferry. ' 23 Presiiient Carol Klink, ' 25 Katherine Beswick, ' 23 . . Sec retar f-TREASURER . . Martha Montgomery, ' 23 Carol Klin K, ' 25 LiBRARIA.N- . . . . Helen Mack, ' 23 Marjorie McDoxald. ' 23 . Accompanist Latham True .... Director Mrs. Latham True .... Honorary Member MEMBERS ' 1V]AN H0BS0S. ' 19 Ruth Wilson, ' 23 Elizabeth Lacombe, ' J. ' Ruth Ackley, ' 24 Katherine Beswick, ' J.l Esther E. Brown, ' 24 Dorothy Clakk, ' 23 Lillian Cottrell, ' 24 Mabel Ferry, ' 23 M. Irene Dressor, ' 24 Flora Linn, ' 23 Carol Hyde, ' 24 Helen Mack, ' 23 Violet Knowles, ' 24 Martha Montgomery, -2. Alice Lundberc, ' 24 Helen E. Nelson, ' 23 Louise Wilber. ' h Dorics Wrig ' ht, ' ' 24 Maria Anderson, -25 SaraMeskimmons, ' 25 Elizabeth Chase, ' 25 Dorothy Pitts. ' 25 Dorothy Dahler, ' 25 Felicita B ' oeseke, ' 26 Helen Friebel, ' 25 Elizabeth Clapp, ' 26 Doris Harter, ' 25 Ruth Cull, ' 26 Virginia Henderson, ' 25 Catherine Lawshe, ' 26 Blanche Hicks, ' 25 M. RGARET Miller, ' 26 Isabelle Kimball, ' 25 Muriel Sa.non, ' 26 Carol Klink, ' 2. Marian Toll, ' 26 llusic Cl Jb tlJAM eABOMTMOW ClACt 099d  J90 ' I THE STANFORD MUSIC CLUB OFFICERS Prfsipfnt Makjohik McUoNAi.n •24 Secretary ' . ' . ' . ' . Merihkth Cameron ' 25 Treasurer Ai.hkrtCregersen ' 23 FACULTY MEMBERS Warren D. Allen George Pkiiu e Henry Lanz Albert C. W i i it a k eu MEMBERS Nw. lcru Hundred and Turnly-Onc DoxriL HiLLis Nineteen Hundred and Tzcenty-Tn ' O EVGENE PoNCELET Mneteen Hundred and Tzventy-Tliree Eljah Barricklow Mar jorie McDonald Perry Bonar Charles Midgley Clarence Burnett Louse Wilber Albert Gregersen Margaret White Richard Malaby Virginia Woodruff Mneteen Hundred and T-weuty-Four Malcolm Davison Luella Rackliff Elizabeth Peirce Geraldine Watt Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-five Maria Anderson Martino d ' Andrea Meribeth Cameron Charles Foye Earl Glauber STANFORD ORCHESTRA CLUB PRESinENT Vice-Presidext Secretary-Tkeasurki Charles V. Midgley. Jr.. ' 23 EnwiN C. Moore. ' 22 Oliver V. Johnson, 20 FACULTY MEMBERS Wakrex D. Ai.i.i Albert C. Whitake MEMliERS OliverW. JoHXsox. ' 20 l- ' iiwiN C. Moore, ' 22 Charles Wm. Middle v. Jr.. ' 23 Malcolm Davison, ' 24 DIRLIXB. H. UK ETT. ' 22 B.C.White (Associate) VictorJ. Minner, ' 23 George C. Kelso, ' 24 w flTHL€TI S I m % _Y_ ; yeflR ir? flTHLeiics MINOR SPORTS FARE BETTER THAN MAJOR n atliletics at Stan for intL-sts. Such a review tlii STANFORD means a resume of the ear would be discouraging at first sight, as the records fail to show a single Cardinal victory in the realm of major sports. A n d y Smith ' s Bear eleven defeat- ed the Stanford varsity 28-0 in one of the hardest fought contests in the history of Big Games. The game, nevertheless, was not as one-sided as the .score would seem to indicate. On the basis of early season rec- ords in basketliall, Stanford had the edge, l)ut the Bruins wun three (if tlie four j ames jilaycd. ' Ilie C ards forfeited tlie fifth and decithiif; i ame in order to s ive tlie California (|uintet a rest hefore the northern invasion. Mvidently tlie Hears hit their stride just at the right time, when Andy Kerr ' s squad was sutTering from a gruelling southern trip and a prolonged ])reliminary season. California was again ictorious in tennis, three matches to two. The Bruin S([uad was made up entirely of elerans, while the Stanford men were less e. ]ierienced. Experience again, this time coupled with breaks, gave the Blue and Gold an 82 ' J to 48 ' - victory in the annual I ' ig .Meet. California ' s overwhelming superiority in the field events and unexpected strength on the track turned the trick. Coach W ' olter. in his first year as baseball mentor on the farm, developed a strong, well-balanced nine, but it was unable to cojie with the smashing offensive of the Piruin diamond team. The Cardinal ])itchers ccntld not stand the test, and Zamloch ' s team won three .straight games. The freshmen teams fared little better. In football, the Cardinal babes were sadly outclassed, and lost to the Bear cubs, 54—0. In baskelliall, they dropped two straight games, doing the same thing in baseball. They failed to win a single tennis match in the tournament with the Blue and Gold yearlings, and wound up the year by submitting to a 91V, to 395 . defeat in the Little Big Meet. The Cardinal 145 and 130-pound basketball fives succeeded in downing their Blue and Gold opponents two out of three games in each case. The ' 45 ' s won their two games by one-point margins while the ' 30 ' s had less trouble in establishing their sui)eriority. In minor sports, a review shows a land- slide the other way. Stanford dropped only one minor sport to the Blue and Gold. In addition to winning the University and Club League title, the soccer varsity downed the Bruins in two straight games. The fresh- men broke even. The Blue and Gold swimming teams were woefully weak, and Ernie Brand- sten ' s freshman and varsit}- squads were easy winners. Wrestling went to the Blue and Gold. The annual boxing matches were cancelled when the trans-bay institution refused to respect Stanford ' s drawing of the color line. Water i)olo and handball both were added to tlie Cardinal minor sjiort vic- tories. The water jiolo varsity went to Chicago where they placed second in the national meet, being beaten only by the TR.MNER DENNV Illinois .Athletic Club ' s famous team. FOOTBALL Football Interest Reaches New Heights Football, during the past year, proved itself lieyond doubt to be the ultimate center of athletic attraction. Reports from all over the United States showed ever-increasing crowds at the big games ' of universities scattered from Maine to California. Vith this increased public interest came the renewed agitation for reform in many lines, with the result that many of the eastern colleges hinted at drastic changes in the future. Reports received from Harvard and Yale indicated the possibility that intercollegiate competition would to a great extent be aban- doned, because of what the faculty considered a menace in the growing so-called commercialism of the game. Stanford met the problem in a way that should give direct refutation to the statement that athletics on the Farm are becoming commercialized. The proceeds from athletic events to be held in the stadium during the next twenty years were in great part diverted toward building a new dormitory unit. For the second time in succession, the Big Game was held in the Stanford stadium, as California ' s site had not been definitely located so that work on the new Blue and Gold stadium could proceed at once. Stanford ' s first post-season game with an eastern team featured the Christmas holidays, when Glenn Warner, future coach of Cardinal teams, brought his team of Pitt Panthers from the East. While the crowd that attended the game was not as large as an optimistic box- ofifice agent could have wished for, the contest was successful in making for a closer feeling between the universities of the East and West. It also offered a unique chance to see a famous football coach put into action a system of his own, directed against that same system as taught by one of his pupils. As training started on September 15, the football players of necessity kept in condition for a period exceeding three months. U fl R S I T y ANDY KERR AND •TINY ' THORNHILL— v c I (1 t- d tnj ctlier a well-halancecl and Iiaril fighting aggregation in their first year at Stan ford. I ' or the nio-t part, they had incx])er-- enced men to w r,i I; with, and the rcsnks oi their work will he no- ticed most next year. Kerr coached the hack- field and Thornhill the line. Both are very popular a ni o n g the players and the student hodv as a whole. DUDLEY S. DEGROOT— pioxcil liiniself one of the hard- est tijihting- captains that ever wore the Cardinal colors on the football field. He played cen- ter and was the unanimous choice of sporting writers for All-Coast center position. He was a valuable man on both offense and defense and a hard . fighter. When fans and sport- ing writers expected him to witness the Big Game from the bench, he played through until the last few minutes with a knee that would have sent most men to the hospital. His graduation this year will leave a gapini; ' hole in the Cardinal line which will present a serious ]in)l leni for the coaches to consider. •i m m , THE BIG GAME OF 1922 California 28, Stanford When a good defensive eleven meets another that is e(|iially strong in this de- ])artnient and in addition much more powerful on the offensive, the final score hould be decisively — though not overwhelmingly — in favor of the latter. All of which explains partially why the University of California ' s football team defeated Andy Kerr ' s Stanford eleven by a score of 28-0 in the football classic of the West, played in the Stanford Stadium on November 25. I ' efore the game many of the wise ones shook their heads and sighed, Pour Stanford ! They judged the final score should rise close to fifty points in favor of the I due and Gold. Their sympathy, however, was wasted. The showing made by Little .Andy ' s fighting gridders (as they were dubbed by sport writers after the game ) , bore out the statement he had made early in the season. The men were to learn football if they did not win a single game. As it turned out, they did win games ; at the same time they were learning football. The men wlm faced . ndy Smith ' s I ' .rnin eleven followed the ball at all times, tackled hard. r;in interfercncr. and put uj) a stonewall defence. ' J ' he strength of the Cardinal line caused Charley Erb, fiery California quar- terback, to change his tactics early in the first quarter. This change in attack crossed up the Cardi- nal defense and paved the way for the first touchdown, w h i c h was made by Muller on a pass from -X i c h o 1 s. None o f Kerr ' s m en were closer than fifteen feet to the big end when he caught the ball. Early in the sec- ond period Stew lieam broke througii and blocked one of V .AM) Wilcox ' s kicks. Ik- scooped up the b all and carried it to tiie five-yard line, where he was brought to earth hy Wilcox. Here the Cardi- nal defense showed to its best advantage. Three onslaughts by the Blue and Gold backs netted scant gains, but on the fourth down Duke Morrison, who had just entered the game, went over fur the second Califurnia Toward the end of the half the liruins opened up with a passing game that gave them their third touchdown. Nichols throw over the goal line to . Spalding did the necessary work. Tliis ended the scoring for the first half, . -itanford 0. California 21. Then came that never-to-be- forgotten second half. Sixty thousand sjjectators marvelled as Little .Andy ' s team turned back the Blue and Gold time and time again, finally opening up with an o (Tensive strength no one thought they possessed. The third quarter was bare of scores, and in the PKKi ' ARK i-OR TIIE KUKoi-i ' tourth period A ichols made Cali- fornia s final touchdown. I hen events that gave Stanford supporters cheer hapj)ened in quick order. iHillowing the kick-off, California was held on the Cardinal thirty-five-yard mark. Campbell, who had taken Cuddeback ' s place at fullback, tore through the line for first down, l- ' ollowing a fifteen-yard penalty on the Blue and Gold. ' ilc ix and Cami)l)ell fought their way to another first down. Wilcox went around end f(jr six yards more, and the ball rested on the Bruin ' s ten-yard line. The California line held, and Wilcox dropped back for a place kick. The Cardinal line cracked, and Beam crashed through, blocking Wilcox ' s kick. Wilcox recovered. Then on an attempted end run, the Cardinal lost nine yards. The game was almost over. . s the timekeejier reached for his gun, Wilcox dropped back to try once more for a field goal. The ball was on the thirty-five-yard mark, and near the side-lines. The pigskin came back fmm center into the waiting hands of Campbell. The line held, and Wilcox ' s toe met the ball -quarely. arching it i)erfectly on a line l)ct vceii the goal posts. It struck the cross-bar, hesitated, and dropped back into the field just ,is the timer ' s gun ended one of the hardest- fought Stanford - Califor- nia struggles on record. Special nientinn should go to all who played for the Cardinal that day; but the names of Captain Dud De- Groot and Art Wil- cox stand out above the rest. Wilcox played his last game for the Stanford varsity, and he was at his best. He kicked, passed, bucked the line, ran the ends, and was the backbone of the secondary de- fense. In the last quarter, when Kerr sent in a continual stream of substitutes, Wilcox alone of the original lineup remained until the final gun. As he turned to walk ofif the field, he fell, exhausted, and was carried from the sta lium. Captain Dud DeGroot furnished what was undoubtedly the nerviest exhibition of the day. iJefore the game, stu- dents, physicians. sport :te l f .Titers and pred that his injured knee would keep him out of the fray. It did not. DeGroot stayed through the entire contest until the last two min- utes, when he was relieved by Baker. Mis defensive work was of its usual high calibre, and on the offensive it was he who opened wir.fDX SI many holes for Cuddehack. Wilcox, and the other hacks on their line pluiifjes. The work of the line was one of the most surprising features of the game. Cravens and Faville more than held their own with the Bruin veteran guards. Clark and Dean. Shipkey and Johnston, playing their first year on the varsity, showed to good advantage against I ' eam and Witter in their tackle positions. Jim Law son and Shorty Alertz tot)k .Muller and I ' erkey out of many plays, and were always down under punts. In s]3eaking of the backtield, it is hard to mention one name without following it closely by several others. There were Campbell, Dennis, Doughty, Cuddeback, Murray. Wheat, and Woodward. Every one of these men deserves the highest ])raise for his work. The teams lined up as follows: Stanford— Mertz (LE) ; Shipkey (LT) ; Cravens (LG) ; DeGroot (C); Faville (RG); John.ston (RT) ; Lawson (RE); Woodward (Q) ; Wilcox (LH) ; Doughtv (RH) ; Cuddeback (F). California— Muller (RE); Witter (RT) ; Clark (RG) ; Gallagher (C) ; Dean (LG) ; Beam (LT) ; Berkey (LE) ; Erb (Q) ; Nichols ( RH ) ; Dunn (LH) ; Nisbet (F). Substitutions: Stanford— Cleaveland for Cuddeback; Houck for Faville; Pheney for Cravens; Campbell for Woodward; Dennis for Wilcox; Dole for Lawson; Murray for Doughty; Janssen for Mertz; Thomas for Janssen; Douglass for Pheney; Ludeke for Shipkey; Xeill for Johnston; Sproull for Lawson; Loomis for Douglass; Baker for DeGroot. California— O ' Brien for Muller; Morrison for Nisbet; Spalding for Dunn; Bell for m forward passes completed : S, ; C, 14S. Yds. by kickoffs returned: S, 63; C. 0. Yds. by punts returned: S, 38; C, 134. Number of penalties: S, 5 ; C, 9. Y ' ds. lost on penalties: S, 42; C, 52. Number punts: S, 21; C, 11. Av. length of punts: S, 33.7; C, 40. Av. length punt returned: S, 3.4; C. 6.4. Times failed to gain : S, 20;C, 6. First downs : S. 4;C. 7. No. passes attempted : S, 2; C, 15. No. passes completed: S, ; C, 9. Y ' ds. advanced on kickoffs: S, 0; C. 2. . ' ds. advanced on punts : S, 701 ; C, 444. DENNIS IS STOPPED BY DEEKEY AND THE BI.OODYNOSED IRON DUKE H € €1 ' ' ' - l  .. B «4 • - Pittsburgh Game Makes Warner Victor The ■■( till .Master was triuniiihant on December 30. wlien ■ ' IVip Warner ami his Pittsburgh Panthers clashed with Andy Kerr ' s Cardinal eleven in the Stanford Stadium. Pitt won, 16-7. It wa.s the case of one team, coached by the onguiator of the Warner system, against another just being initiated into the mysteries i if the type of game his team plavs. ' For three quarters and part of the fourth, the .Stanford machme seemed unable to function properly. On the defense, the Cards were struggling desperately to stop Hewitt ' s powerful thrusts at the line and the short forward passes that gamed regularly for the Pitt team. On the offense, Kerr ' s team looked almost pitifully weak in ' comparison with the smooth-working combination of the Easterners. Two touchdowns, an extra point, and a i:)lace kick carried the Panthers through the first three periods and a part of the final one with a 16-0 lead. Then the Cards suddenly came to life and displayed a punch that carried them over the Pittsburgh goal line in the closing minute . The opening period was a good example of how football should not be played. Stanford was helpless before the varied attack of the Easterners. The Ime could not hold, and the secondarv defense was weak. Each Cardinal backfield man took a turn at fumbling the bal ' l, with the result that Pitt threatened the Stanford goal line several times. ( )n each occasion the tide turned just in time to prevent a touchdown. In the second quarter, Pitt started out as in the first. Stanford held twice within its own thirtv-vard line, and then lost the ball on a fumble on the twenty- tive-yard mark. IJowser recov- crititi: lor Pittsbiirgli. Hewitt made first down on two plays. A pass, Flanat an to Winter- burn, and a line buck by Hew- itt made another first down Then the bis; fullback took the )all on three successive plays, and Pittsburgh had its first score. Williams kicked goal, and the scorelward read; Pittsburgh 7, Stanford 0. Neither team was able to score in the third quarter, but Pitt again opened up in the first part of the fourth. Cleave- land punted to midfield. Flan- agan dropped back for a pass. . n Ierson. surrounded by his teammates, received the ball. Aided by perfect interference, he sprinted forty -one yards across the last white marker for Pitt ' s last score. Williams failed to add the extra point. Pittsburgh 16. Stanford 0. At this point the CanHnal machine began to take an interest in the proceed- ings. Cuddeback returned the kick-off to midfield. and the fun began. Woodward abandoned his attempts to gain through the line, and uncorked the passing game. Cleaveland tossed one to Thomas for a fifteen-yard gain and things began to look promising for the Cardinal. Hewitt, however, intercepted a pass and halted the advance temiiorarilv. Williams kicked. Murray returning to the center of the field, Kerr sent in a flock of substitutes. Dennis passed twenty-four yards to Cani])- Dennis and Cuddeback then took the ball to the Pittsburgh five-yard line for KIVAL CWPT.MNS . ND CENTERS lOWSEK . N1) DECKOOT U ' K THAT WAS ALMOST r.I.OCKKI first down. Two luif bucks lailc.l lu , aiii. A .li..rl i.a.s, Ueiiiii,. l.. I gained three yards: two yards lay between Stanford anda touchdown Denni vardas took the ball, hesitated, and dove through a hole opened for him by Johnston— and the scoring was over for the afternoon. Pittsburgh 16, Stanford 7. The Pittsburgh eleven lived up to all advance stories of its strength. Warner ' s team played a tight defensive game, and displayed a varied attack which com- pletely baffled the Cardinal. ' ' Tiny Hewitt, the human battering ram. tore through the line almost at will, rarely failing to make the Pittsburgh also used the short pass to good advan- tage. Warner had his interference worked out so perfectly that his team ' s short passes were a constant puzzle to the Cards. The Pitt game gave the Cardinal supporters a glimpse at what Pop Warner ' s two henchmen, Andy Kerr and Tiny Thornhill. are trying to in- still into the Stanford varsity. Warner ' s team knew football better than any team seen on the Stadium turf this year, with the possible exception of Andy Smith ' s Bruin eleven. One thing is certain. There is no more material in the East than in the ' est. Practically every man on the Pitt squad had been made into a football player. Warner and his stafif of assistants will have to do the same thing if thev are to make a winning combination out of the Stanfnrd varsity. . ._ __. . % f LSowser and Hewitt were everytliing tliat .m eastern sporting writers claimed them to mp%l- . ' ' ' e. Bowser opened gaping holes in the line H Kt Ji repeatedly when Pitt had the ball, and on Jf l k t ' le defense he was a tower of strength. He . KI M recovered several fumbles and backed up ' H his line to perfection. Hewitt was also a strong defensive man and fully as danger- ous a line i)lunger as the famous Duke Morrison. The future of intersectional contests. Mich as the Pittsburgh game, has been the ., .. ' ■ ' ■ ' - iilijcct of contention among universities all i ir the country. The scheduling of the r.oii CRAVEN ' S. iM i ' utsburgh game was enough to call down a question from the Conference, which for a while tin (.ateneil m cause Stanford ' s resignation. A mutual understanding was reached, however, which jirevented any serious clash. Post-season contests at the Tournament of Roses took on a new angle when U. S. C. played Penn State at the annual New Year festival at Pasadena. The advisability of staging further post-season games at Pasadena with any Conference team taking part in them was brought up as being perhaps inadvisable, due to the fact that throughout the country the cry of commercialism was being raised wherever large sums of money were taken in for games that were played off the college campus. Many faculty members in Eastern universities have voiced a pro- test against allowing students to be away from their studies for the length of time required by a transcontinental trip. . T TIIK I£N1 OF TIIK FIRST II.M PRELIMINARY SEASON OLYMPIC CLUB WINS OPENING GAME Coach Andy Kerr ' s Stanford varsity eleven lost its first game of the season to l ' ,ol) livans ' powerful Olympic Club team ])y a 27-9 score. Jack Patrick, captain and fullback on the 1921 Cardinal varsity, was easily the star of the oanie. accountiut; for two of the Winged O touchdowns. The brilliant attack of the Olympics, dircctr.! by ' •R.-ibbil liradslniw. together with their stone-wall defense, was too much fur Kerr ' s inexperieiued iiien. I ' dor tackling and overeagerness on the part of the Cardinal eleven were nistly cm several occasions. liradshaw opened the game by running Cudtleback ' s kickt)ft ' back to the twenty-two-yard line, where he fumbled on the first play. Stanford recovered antl the club team was penalized five yards on the next play. The Cardinal backs could make no headway through the Olympic line, and Cuddehack gave Stanford a 3-0 lead with a place kick from the seventeen-yard mark. During the rest of the first quarter, Williams and Wilcox engaged in a punting duel, with honors about even. The second quarter began with the ball in the club team ' s ])ossession in mid- field. Bradshaw made fifteen yards through the line, and Williams added five more, but was thrown for a loss on the next play by Doughty. Further line plays failed, and King tried a place kick fnun the thirty-yard line. The ball went wild and Wilcox kicked back to midfield. Here the Olympic offensive began to show itself. A long pass, I ' .r.idshaw to Swan, and line bucks by Needles and Patrick jilaced the ball mi Stanf. yard line. -A pass from Needles to King i)ut the ball on the four-yar Williams went over just as the half ended. The Cardinal defense seemed unable to stop Patrick in the third s twelve- lark, and md OT (CENTER) COMES TO MKKr IIIM ■SllORTV MERTZ, I.KFT END tlic l)i,!4 fullback ran wild. The cluh uku lo.ik the ball on their own forty-live yard line shortly after the kick-off. and D. Kinjj made thirty ards. On the next ])lay, Patrick found a gap- ing hole in the line, and dashed twenty-five yards for the second touchdown. He made the third score a little later by a forty-yard run. End of the third (|uarter: .Stanford 3, Olvmpic Clul. _ ' l. In the fourth quarter, Stanford opened up with an aerial attack. Two passes, Cleaveland U) Woodward, and Cleaveland to Campbell, put the ball on the Olympic Club ' s two-yard line. I ' leaveland made two yards on a criss-cross, and in two more attempts Taylor bucked the hall over. This ended the scoring for the day, and shortly afterward the timer ' s gun closed the contest. SANTA CLARA BEATEN BY ONE TOUCHDOWN One lone touchdown proved enough for the Stanford varsity to beat .Santa Clara and at the same time earn for itself the title of the ten-minute team. The score was 7-0, and that single tally came in the first few minutes of play. The gaine was interesting for most of the first half, and during the initial ten minutes it apjjeared that the Stanford varsity would roll up a decisive score. Its defense w-as almost impenetrable, and the backs were niaking substantial gains by using passes, line bucks, and criss-crosses. I ollo ving the kick-oft ' , Stanford worked the ball down the field by means of alternating line plunges and the passing game, to the Saints ' ten-yard line. Cudde- back, hitting the line three times, made but five yards. On the fourth down, how- ever, Rae Doughty tot)k the ball and tore through left tackle for the only touch- down of the game. This was seven minutes alter the ojiening whistle. . t this ]ioint Referee Hum- phries took a hand in the ])roceed- ings. and then the game became, not a football contest, but a suc- cession of penalties. The Stanford backs had to make at least five ards. and sometimes ten or fifteen, to oft ' set the jienalty that was al- most certain to come. The third cpiarter saw 1 falloran of Santa Clara trot over the Cardi- nal goal line, but it was on an off- side play. O. Schwill missed a cliaiicc at a field txith teams missed game ended as W field goal. CUDDEBACK ' S FIELD GOALS BEAT ST. MARY ' S M: Ker IM r.AWSON, RIGHT END Stanttird tailed In li(i v otteiiM ' in the third game of the season, with as an opponent, and Cnddehack ' s h goals were needed to win, 9-0. In the first twelve minutes of play men took the hall inside the St. Mary ' s twenty vard line on three occasions. Each time, with the goal line near, their offensive crumpled. ( ) ' . the third time, after Wilco.x had made twenty- five yards on a criss-cross and the Phoenix meii had held, Cuddeback sent one lietween the bar from placement. St. Mary ' s then started an offensive that stni)i)(_-d only on the Cardinal sixteen- yard line, when Stanford recovered on a fumble. Wilcox punted out of danger, and the St. Mary ' s offensive was through for the afternoon. In the third quarter. Wilcox passed to Woodward, who va downed on the St. Mary ' s twenty-yard line. Cuddeback was called upon and added three points. In the final period, ' Cuddeback made his third contribution to Stanford ' s score by kicking a field goal from the fifteen-yard line just before the gun sounded. AGGIE MUD BATTLE GOES TO STANFORD lireaks of the game, together with straight football, gave the Stanford varsity a touchdown and a 6-0 victory over the Oregon Aggies in the fir- t twrKc nmnite of a hard-fought mud battle at Corvallis on October 28. The initial break favored Kerr ' s team in the opening minutes of the first quarter. The Aggies had the ball, and, with one yard to go to make their downs, were thrown for a twelve-yard loss. A Stan- ford place kick failed at the O A C ten-yard line, and Mc- Cart of the Aggies fell back to punt out of danger. His backs did 11 ' it jirotect him, and from his own nine-yard line, lie kicked ix ards nut i bounds. Tlieii Ciiddel)ack and Wilcox made the fifteen necessary yards, the fornier going throii,L;h for the touchdown. During the second and third quarters, neither team was able to gain much advantage. Wilcox and McCart engaged in a ])unting duel, the ball beini; most of the time in mid-field. The .- ggies opene l up in the fourth quarter, but a pass over the Stan- hird goal line fell incomplete. NEVADA DEFEATED EASILY, 17-7 riu- Wolf I ' ack from Nevada failed to thruv, much of a scare into the Stanford varsity, and Kerr s men defeated them handily by a 17-7 score. Wilcox was the individual star of the game, far out- shining the much-talked of Runny Hug. who could not penetrate the Cardinal defen.se. oi . Kil•.Kl.. l Doughty uiadc the first touchdown on a twelve- yard run around Ilarri.son ' s end in the ' first quarter. In the second period, a Nevada linesman blocked a pass from Wilcox, and the ball fell i nto Captam Hobb ' s arms. The big end dashed eighty-five yards for Nevada ' s only touch- down. Doughty. Cuddeback. and Wilcox accounted for twenty-five yards in a row that made ' Stanford ' s second touchdown, in the third quarter. Cuddeback added three points in the fourth period with a place kick from the fifteen-yard line. woonw. RD, fe U. S. C. SHOWS POWERFUL DEFENSIVE TACTICS CVach lk-iulerson L . S. C. Trojans iiroved tvo much fur_ Andy Kerr ' s crip- pled Cardinal eleven, and the Stanford men bowed to a 6-0 defeat. Rae Doughty was out of the game with an injured shoulder, and when Art Wilcox was knocked unconscious as he tackled Otto Anderson in the first few minutes of play, Kerr was without an experienced backfield man. It wa.s a case of two powerful defensive teams pitted against each other. Following a fifteen- yard penalty in the first five minutes, the Trojrni battering ram swung into action, and when the smoke of liattle had lifted, the U. S. C. team had scored the only touchdown of the game. Straight football carried the ball to the Cardinal ten-yard line, and on a double criss-cross, Campbell fought his way through the line for nine yards. Dolley made the necessary yard. Dud DeGroot, who had just come from the hospital, played the best defensive game of the day. Whenever a Trojan back eluded the Stan- ford defense, the big center inevitably brought him to earth before he had traveled far. The game was a demonstration nf modern de- fensive football tactics oi)erating in full force. R. E DOUGHTY, RIGHT H.M.F WASHINGTON GAME PROVES THRILLING CONTEST late i)l:iye(l into the IkiikN of I ' -iwcli Itradshaw and his ikiiig team at the climax of as tlirillinjj a gridiron battle as was seen in the Stadium during the season. The Stanford varsity went down to defeat, 12-8. a score which means absolutely nothing. Kerr ' s team battled the northerners to a standstill for three quarters, and although the count was knotted at ()-() at the beginning of the fourth quarter, the Cardinal s(iuad ai)])eared to have the edge. Then came that heart-breaking final period. Follow- ing the drive which gave the Washington team their oiily touchdown of the game, the Cardinal offense started. Rae Doughty got loose in mid-field, and, aided b - ])erfect interference, dashed fifty-five yards over tiie last white line, o: ly to be called back for stepping out- side. The Cardinal backfield was by this time made u]i entirely of substitutes. The ' ikings were driven back . to their seven-yard line. With a minute to play, Ziel dropped back to punt. Shipkey broke through and blocked the kick. Closely followed by Pheney. he started after the ball, which had rolled over the goal line. Both reached the elusive oval at the same time, and dove for it. It appeared as though Stanford had tied the score, but, for some unknown reason, that slipi)ery pigskin freed itself from the two Cardinal linesmen. Before either of them knew what had ha]ipened, little Dailey, substitute Washington quarterback, had fallen upon it. That was a safety, CUDDEBACK, FULLliACK ami lacko.! luur j uiin.-. oi Ijciiij ciiuuyli lo tic tlic sciire. In the first few minutes of play, a break of the i aine gave liraclshaw ' s team a chance to draw- first blood. Wilcox fumbled, and Hanley recov- ered. Ziel i assed to liryan, who was stojiped on the Cardinal fifteen-yard line. The Stanford de- i iwe held, and Ziel booted one between the posts. W .i liington 3, Stanford 0. Ureak number two went to the Cardinal, and Cuddeback returned the compliment by tying the score with a place kick from the fifteen-yard mark. In the second quarter, Cuddeback added three more jxiints. . nother field goal by Ziel tied the count again. The only touchdown of the game came in the fourth quarter, when Ziel tore through a hole on the right side of the line on the five-yard mark, after three previous attempts had netted nothing. Thus ended the i)reliminary sea- son, with a week to go before Hig (iame time came. r k Second Varsity Has Regular Schedule After a liii lily successful preliuunan scaM.n. the Stanlord (.rays went .lowii before the California Goofs to the tune of 18-0 on California field, December 11. It was the first time in Stanford history that a second varsity football stjuad had a regular schedule. 1-. A. ( Red ) Betts coached the C.rays ' squad, which was made up of men ineligible to play on the varsity and others who needed ex- perience, r.etts had learned his football under I ' .i .b bA-ans on the ' 1 ' ' varsity, and developed a hard-fighting, well-trained eleven. Both the Blue and Gold Goofs and the Grays were strong; on the defensive and comparatively weak on the olTensive. The first score came early in the opening jieriod of play. I ' uUer, (luarterback for the Grays, ran the kick-ofT back and the Cardinal team made yardage steadily until a fumlile by Hamilton gave the Goofs the ball on the Grays ' forty-five-yard line. On the first play, the I51ue and Gold fullback took the ball on a fake punt formation, and, aided by perfect interference, ran forty-five yards to a touchdown. The Goofs ' second touchdown came early in the second quarter. A twenty-three- yard end run, followed by a twenty-yard oiT-tackle buck, made the score 12-0. Results of preliminary games: Grays 18, California I ' nlytec Grays 14, Santa Cruz High School 6: Grays 0, Mare Island . 1 18, U. S. S. Camden 0. .. . The line-up used by the Grays in most of their games was as follows: dliams, center; Haves (captain) and Rogers, guards: Long and McCombs, tackles; RoIj- in.son and Widaman, ends: Erhorn and Hamilton, halves; Fuller, quarterback; Wright, fullback. Substitutes; Bugbee, Black, Grondona. Dunbar, Blacker, Cary, Crawford, Woodhead, Coverley, and McKenney. Development of second varsity teams with a regular schedule is being recog- nized as the surest way to provide for the future, and at the same time give the varsity the practice needed to develop teamwork steadily throughout the season. Institute 0: ■s 20 ; ( irays .K.W.-- IN ACTION IN CAIJFOR FRESHmen After a successful preliminary season, the WZb football team went down to defeat to the tune of 54—0 before the strong Bruin Cub eleven on California field, November 11. The turf was slippery, and the light Cardinal babes could not hold their own at;:ainst their heavier rivals. The Stanford freshmen were also somewhat weakened from the hard i ' amc with the U. S. C. yearlings at Los . ngclc; the week before. Kj J - .1 Hunt (C-nach) N.-v,r. Shnl,-01.-.v . u Cameron Sn.iH. ( M «■ ) fl.v.. r. Cook A TWO-MAN Crip Tooniev s team started their drive early, carrying the ball tu the Cardinal freshman five-yard line in the first few minutes. A fumble here cost them the ball and their first chance to score. After Cook had punted, Dixon and Blewett carried the pellet over for the initial touchdown from the thirty-five-yard line. This was the only score of the first period, but with the opening of the second quarter, Dixon got loose again and ran twenty-three yards to another touchdown In the middle of the second period, Tut Imlay substituted for Blewett and plaved havoc with the Cardinal defense by his end runs. After Smoke Francis, giant negro tackle for the Cubs, had intercepted a pass, Imlay sprmted fifty- one yards. He carried the ball across from a fifteen-yard pass on the next play. Francis again got into action and made a hole for Dixon, who ran twenty-three yards across the last white marker. Just before the end of the first half, Imlay broke loose again and dashed thirtv ' ards to the seven-yard line, lirown carried it over on the next play. Score at half time; California freshmen. _ ' ; Stanfonl freshmen, 0. , . Brown opened the third quarter by adding the only Cub touchdown ot the I)eriod. Captain Solomon and Bill Cook gave the Cardinal yearlings two first downs on line bucks, but here the California babes held and forced Cook to kick. In the final period, the Cubs scored twice — once on a pass from Dixon to Tait, and once on a line buck by Dixon after Imlay had run twenty yards. A last minute rally by the Stanford freshmen brought the Cardinal supporters to their feet, but the ' tim ' er ' s gun ended hostilities as Cook and Clayes got within striking distance. The Cardinal babe eleven wim their most spectacular victory of the season from the I ' . S. C. freshmen at I ' .ovard Field, Los Angeles, the week before the Little Big Game, by a score of 10-9. The Stanford freshmen went into battle on the short end of the odds, and only won the contest in the last two minutes on a drop kick from the twenty-five-yard line by I ' .uck Faust. The U. S. C. yearlings scored first on a drop kick, and the first half ended with Coach Hunt ' s aggregation trailing on the short end of a 3-0 score. The Cardinal babes ste|)i)ed into the lead in the third period when Solomon passed thirty yards to McDermont, and Faust took the ball across on the next play. The big halfback made the try for point, which proved enough to win the game. Coach Hill Hess ' aggregation came back strong, however, and again assumed the lead in the latter part of the third quarter. LeFebvre got the ball within striking distance, and Loustalot and Adams took it across. Dorsey missed the try for point, and incidentally lost the game by so doing. Solomon and I ' aust bucked the ball to the ten-yard line in the latter part of the fourth quarter, only to lose it on an intercejited forward pass. Dorsey punted forty-five yards, and Bill Cook ran the pellet back twenty. With a minute to go. Faust stepped back and dropped one squarely between the posts. The complete record of the Cardinal freshman gridiron team ' s preliminary season is as follows; ()ctol)er 7 — Freshmen 41, Long Beach High School 0; October 1-1 — Freshmen 34, Lowell High School 0; C ctober 21 — Freshmen 27, Berkeley High School 26; October 28 — Freshmen 27. Fresno Normal 3; Novem- ber 4 — Freshmen 10, U. S. C. F-reshmen 9. END OF . T m BflSKeTBflLL SUMMARY OF VARSITY SEASON After l)reez!ng through a long prehminary season with but one defeat, and that at the hands of a team of former Stanford stars, the 1923 Cardinal basketball (|uintet lost three of four games to the Blue and ( jold team. With the loss of the California series, the Cards also lost the right to play tiie winner of the nonhern section for the Pacific Coast title. Too much credit cannot be given Andy Kerr for the showing the Stanford quintet made. He took the same players, with one additional guard, that had made up a mediocre team in 1922, and welded them into a strong, well-balanced, and hard- fighting aggregation that knew basketball thoroughly. From the first game, it was evident that the Cardinal five was to have a tight defense. The oflfensive strength was a matter of some doubt, and it took time before the red shirt forwards began to find the hoop with any consistency. Kerr ' s squad sufifered its only defeat of the preliminary season in the opening game with the 1921 varsity, los ' ing 23-19. Then came eleven straight victories. The College of the Pacific five was the first victim, 18- ' ), and the strong Olympic Club team was vanquished next, 18-14. St. Ignatius was repaid for its surjirise tactics of a year ago by being forced to a 25-19 defeat. Nevada lost two games, 18-12, and 17-10. Santa Clara and St. Mary ' s made the sixth and seventh sacrifices for Kerr ' s victorious crew. Then came the four victories over U. S. C, and, following on its heels, the California series with its three defeats and one victory. Thus ended a basketball season that was in many respects one of the most successful ever exi)erienced by a Cardinal quintet. WILLIAM LISTER ( LEFTY ) ROGERS— fiKluini, ' skipper of the 1923 Cardinal liaskftliall i|uintet. was one of the most valual)le men on the sciuad. liis work was not of the flashy and hrilliant tyi)e, Ijut he was always consistent and could he counted on in the ])inches. ( )n the defense, he was nearly as valuable as Kerr ' s jjuards. It was because of his sure and steady feeding that his i)artner. Mci lose. w;is able to ] enetrate o])]jonents ' defenses. U fl w i R S I T y PRELIMINARY SEASON SHOWS BUT ONE DEFEAT 1923 Varsity 19, 1921 Varsity 23 Amlv Kerr ' s e ' anliiial (|uiiitct oiiencd the sea- son by losing a hard-fought game to the l '  21 Varsity by a 23-19 score. The old-timers had practically the same line- up that brought the Pacific Coast title to the Farm in 1921. Swede Righter and Jimmie Davies at the forward positions, Bert Mills at center. Fred Adams at standing guard, and Harry Austin at running guard made up the team whicli was lacking only in condition. Stanford 18. College of the Pacific 9 The Cardinal defense vv;is Uni much for Swede Righter ' s Methodist quintet and the lat- ter submitted to an 18-9 walloping. The San Jose lads were alile to score but twn goals from the field. Both teams played rougli basketball in the first five minutes, a large num- l)er of personal fouls being called. Oliva, at standing guard, proved that he was going to help the fans to forget the loss of Fred- die Adams and Dud DeGroot. Anderson, at run- ning guard, ])laved a brilliant defensive game and score.l a field basket. Stanford 18, Olympic Club 14 Superior condition together with a tight de- fense and an improved otTense, gave the Cardinal quintet an 18-14 win over the powerful Olympic f the second ])t ' rii)(I. md a field goal, and N( C ' lul) live. . iuleiM)ii and Rogers were the .stars ul the game. Andy wa invalu- able on the defense, and helped greatly with his speed in getting down the llonr cm the ofFense. Rogers was everywhere on the defense, and in addition scored a field goal and twehe tree throws nut of si.xteen attempts. Stanford 25, St. Ignatius 19 .St. Ignatius was ihe next victim of Kerr ' s iiuinlel in ;i hard-iought and rough game. The score was 25-1 ' ' . The Cardinal team came to life sud(leiil with tlie (i|ien Rogers got into action, scoring five jioiuls (,n three tree tin- giving his team a lead that was ne cr attain reliii(|iiished. Stanford 18, 17; Nevada 12, 10 Ragged basketball characterized the Card fne ' s dimlile team, by 18-12 and 17-10 scores. The ' first game was slowed up by the strong defensive put u y liotli teams. The Cards ' passing game was not certain, and many long shots fell short of the basket by good margins. The Nevadans had no semblance of an offensive, and seemed content to wait for Kerr ' s forwards to start something. Both teams opened up in the second half. Nevada broke loose with an (]lleiis. e that none of the spectators thought they possessed, but they had waited too long and .Stanford had little difficulty in keeping in the lead. In the second game, Nevada showed even less than in the first. So ettective was the Cardinal defensive that Courtwright ' s team could garner ijli ,; but two field goals, and both of these came in the first half. The game was slower than the first and a less interesting contest to watch. Most of the time there was a mad scramljle in the middle of the floor, for both coaches had their charges working the five-man defense overtime. The two-game series with the Nevadans was the best example seen on the Pavilion court this year of how the five-man defense is slowing down the game of basketball. Stanford 22, Santa Clara 16 Erratic basketliall marred the game when Stanford de- feated the Red and White team from Santa Clara. 22-16. On the defense the Cards showed their expected strength, but on the offense they lost many chances to score, through bad Iiasses and fumbles. The second half was more like a basket- ball game. Santa Clara rolled up eight points while Stanford was accumulating nine. Stanford 35, St. Mary ' s 13 Stanford ' s court (|uiii posedly strong St. .Mary tune of 35-1. . Instead of the usual had little trouble handing the sup- c|uad an artistic trimming to the e-man defense. Stanford used a ;sult f strcnt;tli ill e Cards had ( l,splave 1. and Kcrt illation. Mel ose, Rogers. . anssen. and Andcr olTensive, wl lie )liva, An Icrson. and Ku er- irdest hut a better organized attack. It was the best show of olTc seemed to have found the rit,dit e son were carrying the brunt of took care of the defense. Stanford 29, 23; U. S. C. 14, 12 (At Stanford) Stanford triumphed over the L ' . S. C. quintet in two of the roughest fought games ever seen on the Pavilion court, by scores of 29-14 and 23-12. In the first game, the southerners opened up with their rough tactics early in the first half. They seemed to lack in both organized defense and effective oft ' ense. McHose dribbled past, around, and through the gigantic Swede Anderson re- peatedly, scoring liaskets from all angles. When the first half ended, the score stood 19-3 in favor of Stanford. Nip McHose was the star performer, scoring six field goals and seven free ones for a total of nineteen points. Bob Janssen was next with three field goals. The second game was even rougher than the first. Referee Sam Moyer had his hands full at all times. In s])ite of the fact that the Stanford five was out- weighed, the rough going did not keep them from run- ning up thirteen points to two for the southerners in the first half. Twelve personal fouls were called in die second half, which was even rougher than the first. Each team scored ten points in the final period. Nip McHose was again the most brilliant player. He sunk two field baskets and rang up fourteen free throws out of fifteen attempts for a total of eighteen markers. Bone was easily the outstanding man for the southern team. He scored twenty-one of the twenty-six points his team accumulated in the two contests. Stanford 17, 24; U. S. C. 13. 21 (At Los Angeles) When the Cards journeyed south to do battle with the Trojans on their own court, dopesters shook their heads and declared that Kerr s team was in for a drub- bing. Yet U. S. C. was forced to bow twice more, in bitterlv fought contests. The scores were 17-13 and 2- 21 : The second game went twenty extra minutes be- fore Kerr ' s team came out on the long end of a 24—21 count. As in the first contest, the Trojans led at half time, liy uiu- iii int. The lead see-sawed back and forth in the second lialf and at ilu- end of the game the score stood at 18-18. The four five-minute extra periods were the most nerve racking seen on the coast in years. In the first, neither team was al)le to score and the count remained knotted at eighteen all. In the second period, the Trojans stepped into the lead with a field basket, only to lose it in the last minute when the Cards made two points. The third period was also scoreless, with both teams fighting desperately to get the odd point. In the fourth and final i)eriod. things began to happen rapidly. With little more than a minute to ])lay. Steele, who had substituted for janssen at center, committed a foul. Hone was sure and the southerners led by one lone digit. Then the Cards came to life with a jerk. Two field baskets in ra])id succession gave them a three-jjoint lead which they did not lose. Steele scored the first one from a mad scramble under the Stanford ba.sket. Then the .Anderson-Rogers-McHose combination got into action and before the U. S. C. guards knew what was going on. Xip slippecl through them with the basket that cinched the contest. CALIFORNIA SERIES Stanford 23, California 26 (At Berkeley) With but four days ' rest after the gruelling southern trip, the Cardinal quintet journeyed to Herkeley. where they lost the first game to the Bruin five by a s;ore of 26-23. Kerr ' s quintet was weakened by the absence of McHo.se and Janssen from the line-up during half of the game. Coach Wigiit seemed to have found his best combination and the Bears played better basketball than they had exhibited all season. With McHose and Janssen doing the .scoring for Stanford and Talt. Louvenin. and Thompson for California, the first half ended with the Bruins on tlie long end of a 17-10 score. McHose and Janssen retired from the game in the middle of the first half. Janssen returned at the beginning of the second jieriod. Init the little forward was kej)! out ten minutes inger. hen Xii) returned to the fracas, the Card scoring machine began to function and ran up thir- teen i)oints while the California offensive could hang but nine. The seven-point lead of the first half was too much to overcome, however. McHose with seven points, and Rogers with six were the high-point men for Kerr ' s team. Talt made twelve markers for the Blue and Gold team. Jimmie Davies handled the Stanford quintet in the absence of .Andy Kerr, who was confined to his bed with an attack of the influenza. The coach was up in time to witness the remaining games. Stanford 18. California 17 (At Stanford) A frcT throw in the ia t I ' cw niinult prcjvrd cnnui h tci win tlif scvond lianic of the California series for the Cards hy a score of 18-17. This contest was easily the hardest-fought and nuiNt thiiHniL; M-t-n on the Pavilion court this year. California took an early lead and led !_ ' d at half time. ' i he contest looked I ' ike a walk-away for the I ' .ruins as the teams trotted oil tiie lloor for the ten-minute rest. The Card scoring maeliine ran wild in the lir t few nnnutes of the second iialf. McHose scored a pretty one from side court and Dave ( )liva followed suit from the center of the floor a minute later. A free one hy Nip and two iield haskets in rapid succession hy Anderson, gave the Stanford C|uintet a three-i)oint lead in such quick order that the Bears were taken coini)IeteIy hy surprise. Xip ma k ' it 17-12 with another free throw. Wight liegan to send in fresh men. and tiie Cardinal offensive stopped. I ' ive free throws hy Talt hrought the Bruin total to 17, hut McHose added the last marker on another free one. The game ended a Kyte failed to cage a long one. Talt, with eleven free throws, was high-point man. lie was clo.sely followed hy Mcllose, who acctmnted for ten markers on eight free ones and a field basket. Stanford 20, California 30 (At Berkeley) California w on the third game of the series. 30-20, when the Stanford (|uintet failed to stage the second-cjuarter comeback the fans had learned ti Stanford took an early lead in the first half, when McHose sunk two field goals and a free one in rapid succession. Talt tied the score with three free throws and a field goal. , Field goals by Anderson, Rogers, and Janssen and a free throw by Nip put the Cards on the long end of a 12-5 score. - Then the Bruin ofifensive swung into action and soon held a ' ' 15-12 lead. Stanford tied the score again. The half ended with California clinging to the heavy end of a 19-17 score. Long shots by Douthit, O ' Neill, Talt, and Kyte, put the Bruins far out in front in the second half, and the Cards scored but three digits while California was accounting for eleven. Talt with twelve jioints, McHose with ten, Douthit with eight, and ( ) ' Xeill with six. were high-point men. ■ - Stanford 17, California 33 (At Stanford) With the (. ' alifornia machine working perfectly liotli on offense and defense, the Cards went down in the fourth game of the series to the tune of , ,V17. A landslide in the latter part of the first half gave the Bruins a 19-9 lead which the Stanford team could never overcome. tt Xip Mil lose was hiyli-iHiim man of tlie contcsl witli two field baskets and seven free throws. I3outhit with five, and Kyte with four field goals were next. Although the California victory in the fourth game tied the two teams in the conference .standing, the Cardinal team withdrew and granted Coach Wight ' s squad the right to go north to meet the Idaho team, winner of the northern title for the Pacific Coast championship. THE FUTURE OF BASKETBALL From tile intense interest tlial lias been evident tlirouLjhont the last three basketball .seasons, it seems evident thai the sport will grow in importance each year for at least the next decade. Universities all over the country have found that what they suppo.sed at one time to be ample room for basketball contests, has turned out to ' be a mere fraction of the space required to seat the spectators and still allow the players room enough to play their game. Five years ago basketball was made a major sport at Stanford, and it now draws crowds tliat pack the new Pavilion to cajjacity. With the increased interest has come, naturally, a better game. Each year the rival coaches are working their men up to a faster speed, and at the same time developing the defense of the team in a highly scientific way. The manner in which the well-known five-man defense w-as in some cases worked overtime during the past year shows the study and careful preparation that is being put into the game. Prospects of an intersectional basketball contest with a team from the Atlantic seaboard some time within the next few years raises the interesting ques- tion of a conii)arison of the styles of play. S])ort critics declare that tlie Eastern teams go at a much faster rate tlinm-hiiut the two halves than do the quintets west 111 ihc Mis-i-si])]M. This is said to be due to the greater s— , iisc oi substitutes, allowing a man to go his full speed rA I for a few minutes, and then replacing him with one ' 1 ' — ' who can carry on the terrific pace set. Whether or HI f not the Western teams have worked uj) a defense that W can be relied upon to meet the most smashing attack W is a question that will have to await settlement at an M [ intersectional contest between quintets from the East and the West. It is not improbable that such a con- H test would attract practically as much attention as an intersectional football game. What of championshi]) basketball games at future Qlymi)ic games? That is a question being asked by «-_j., many, who feel that basketball should furnish a phase W ' of the world title contests. . t jiresent no answer is available. . 145- lb. Team Whips California The Staiitunl 145-i iuiul l);i.ski-tl):il! ti-;un I ' lidrd ils scasdii by dcfeatiiii, ' the Bears tor the seeond time, on Fel)ruary 14, l)y a seore of . . . 1. The Cardinal players faced a hardship all ' season in the lack if cnachin.i;. .Mo t of their teamwork they had to develop themselves. StetTen and Cornell did most of the v(irk at foiw.ard. while the center ]insition was taken care of l)y Tiggott or Logan, (m.-uc. I ' . ) ' ll,ira, J. ) ' llara. and l ggles- ton were the other members of the .squad. In the first game with the California 145-pound team, the Cardin;d team ]iut up a good fight, hut lost 26 to 13. The Bears had better teamwork. Stanford upset the clojje in the next game, and nosed out the Hears, after a thrilling batttle. by the score of 18 to 17. The Red .Shirts showed the result of [iractice in the linal California contest and turned the Blue and Gold down 33 to 31. California led at half time by 18 to 11, but Stanford came back strong at the start of the second half. Other games during the season were: St;uiford 1(1, I ' ahi Alto 5; Stanford 11, Santa Clara 15; Stanford I ' l. Lowell 14. Paul ) ' llara was chosen to captain ne.xt year ' s hght heavyweights at the end of the season. 130-lb. Team Goes Undefeated The Staiifortl loU-iiiiund liaskctliall team maintained its nii-ik ' t ' eat record durinj, ' tlie past season. Tlie liglitweif ht men won their preliminary schedule with ease, and manat ed to turn down the Bears with two straight defeats, making the third game unnecessary. The memiiers of the 1922 team to don suits were Young. Meyer. Blosser. Hohro. and Mollingsworth. In addition to these veterans, the team was strengthened by the addition of Thompson. Shaw, and Schultzherg. In tlieir first game with California on January 26 at Berkeley, the Stanford men had little difficulty in winning by a score of 21 to 9. California was comiiletely out- ])layed in every department of the game. The second contest with the Blue and Gold was played at Stanford on Fel)ruary 9. and the Cards managed to keep ahead in the last half, winning the game. 19-i6. Young, a three-year veteran of the team, was the outstanding star of the season. He coached the s(|uad. and when Meyer was injured he also served as captain. ' oung was high-point man in all of the games, and was the most valuable player on both (itTense or defense. Tlie results of the jireliminary games were : Stanford 18. Palo . lto 5 ; Stanford .?7. .Mountain iew 15; Stanford 15. San Mateo 8; Stanford 21. Palo . lto 6. .?: ,- -:.|[:.J :f j jl FR SHmfln BflSKETBALL FRESHMEN WIN SIXTEEN GAMES The ' 26 liasketl)all team started out in the season with a handicap — a small s(iiiad. However, out of a schedule of twenty games, Coach Husky Hunt ' s nu ' n won all but four contests. When the lineup of the team was stabilized Nevers and Frazier occupied forward berths, McDermont and Captain Mitchell were guards, and Carter and Morrison took turns at center. Barnett and Frank were the first string relief men for forward, and Kirwan and Harris substituted at guard. Early in the season, the Babes suffered their first set-back when the San Jose High School five rang up a 14-7 victory. The 1926 men faced about and administered a 42-12 defeat to Lowell High School, and continued the work b - vanquishing Fivermore Fligh 22-13 and Sacramento Fligh 37-11. Another surprise came to the campus in the form of the i ' ledmont lli.i h School five. This team defeated the fre.shmen. 28-1. V The l ' ' 2r. men played erratic basketball. The best exhibition which the freshmen put up was m the first contest with California. The Stanford forwards played an aggressive game, which swept the California team before them, and for a time shot baskets at will. Nevers and Frazier were in fine shape, and the team worked well. Chances for a Cardinal victory looked bright until the final gun sounded, with the score standing at 20 to 17 in favor of California. The Stanford freshmen continued to ].la - in good form m the game with the Oakland Fligh School. For a good part of the contest it looked as if the high school boys had the e dge of things, the teams being locked in a see-saw contest. The right end of the teeter was up when the final whistle blew, the Stanford fresh- men winning, 26 to 25. Outside of the first California game, this contest was the best in which the 1926 men engaged. The freshmen journeyed to Berkeley for the second game with the California Cubs, with hopes for a win. even though the odds seemed greatly against them. However, the flu had done its work, and had weakened some of the members of the team. ' The fight which had characterized the first California game, and which was so essential in llie scconil. secnn.nl lacking. The llahe lurwaiiU. . e ei? and I ' razter. could not seem to get started, and close guarding hy the California men ])revented accurate shooting. It was a jjarade, the University of California freshmen gathering 29 jxiints to the 9 of the Stanford team. This ended the freshman haskelhall season. It was not a success, judging it hy the California series. When the smallness of the squad is considered, the main reason is apparent. Lack of stars among the material which was available further compli- cated the situation, although Xevers and Mitchell and Frazier came through occa- sionally with hursts of brilliant playing. Carter and Morrison at center, Harnett and Frank at forward, and Kirwan and Harris at guard played steady games and did their best. Coach Huskv I lunt is not discouraged with the basketball prospects, however. (;iven the material from which to build a team. Coach Hunt should be able to develop a first-year outfit this coming fall tliat will give Stanford a victorious fresh- man basketball five. Hope for the year to come in freshman basketball lies largely in the chance that the class may be a ba.sketball class, developing a large number of men, even if individual stars are not as frequent as a sporting writer might wish. Hum (t ' ...iclu Frazier Cari.r M. rri-n narnctt Cr.inclall (.Man.lgcr TRACK •DINK TEMPLETON— as track coach, has shown himself a match for any veteran track mentor when con- fronted with a task of building up a team out of the remains of the casualty list. Templeton has worked against more diffi- culties than any other major sport mentor. His sport, extending as it does over a training period of three quarters, is so liable to sudden reversals that all his in- genuity has been needed to keep the level of efficiency high. LANE C. FALK— Cardinal track cai)tain, came through with two first ])laces in the Hi{( Meet, when many of the wiseacres said he was through. Not only did he win two firsts, but he hroke the existing records in lioth the hurdle races he won, making the high sticks in 15 1-10 and the low in 23 9-10. He was awarded the . upperle Medal hy his teammates for l)eing the most valuable man on the l '  23 track squad. VJflRSIJy TRPeK BIG MEET GOES TO BLUE AND GOLD factor that mars many other- wise good track teams, caused the downfall of the Stanford varsity in the annual r.ii; Meet this year. California triumphed by an 82i to 48 ' .. score when dopesters had said that the meet would be a close one. Few thought that more than five points would hcj Pi- rate the rival teams at the finish. The meet was close, much more so than the score would indicate, and was replete with thrills from first to last. Dink Templeton. the Cardinal track menti ir. started the season with onl a sliadow of the squad that battled the Bruins to a standstill last year. Hartranft. practically sure of firsts in the shot and discus and of a place in the sprints, did not return to college. Smith, good for places in ' ' ' ' ' ;S ICTORV hdtli thi- mile and half was gone, as was Eddie Sudden, sensational sprinter. Willi (inl promising material to work with, and with only a few months to develop it into a point-winning aggregation. Dink sent his squad through a suc- cessful iireliminary season, only to lose out in the T.ig Meet tn the nmre seasoned California team. Five Stanford-California records went the wav of all good records, three of them being broken by Stanford track stars. Captain Lane Falk ran the two best races of his career, winning both hurdle events and setting a new record in each. His time for the high hurdles was 15 1-10 and for the low hurdles. 2. ' ' -10. Camp- bell set a new mark of 21 2-5 seconds in the 220-yard dash. Upsets started with the fir.st events. Denton of California outwitted (iurlex- and eased into second place while the latter had to fight it out with another Hruin runner for third. Judah. captain-elect, and Blink Williamson were exjiected to place one. two. in the 440-yard dash. .Xs it happened. Sa.xby and Lindstrum of California took the first two ])iaces. with Judah running third. Williamson took the lead, and at the first curve, Lindstrum cut in on him. P.link elbowed him. and it ajipeared that he was justified in doing .so. but the judges disqualified him. The flock of Bear entries kept Judah securely boxed for 350 yards and the handicap was too great for him to overcome, although he ])ulled from fifth to third place in the last fifty yards. The high hurdle race, between h ' alk and I ' ecker. was one of the closest of the day. Becker led by inches down to the last hurdle, where l- ' alk oxertook him and won by two ards. I.eistner ran in at third. I ' ;dk ;uid l.eiMner bad no troulile in leavins the P.niin l(i v hurdlers far to the rear in the 220-yard liarrier race. Campbell proved hini clf to he as good if not better than critics gave him credit for being. He ran second to h ' arnsworth of California in the century by inches, and easily bested Shepherd, the P.ruin star, in the 220. Old man Dope sutTered the most severe sel l.;uk n the dav m t he half-mile. The wise ones had Dalv and Elliott of Stanford and I ' .aunian, 1 Vane, and Blemmer of the Bears picked to ' fight it out for the three places. None of them placed. Daly and Bauman were fighting for the lead on the backstretch of the second lap, w-ith the others trailing. They rounded the curve on to the home stretch. Then the kni began. First, Dole, next Swavne, and then Macinldsh, all wearing the red S, passed them and finished in the order named. The tn t live men t.. finish were Stanford runners. The relay was the real thriller of the meet. Stanford was e.xpected to win easily. Williamson, running the first lap, sent Daly away to a three-yard lead on the second lap. Dalv was in no shape, and Hurst made up the three yards and two more. Scofield and Lindstrum ran the third lap, finishing in a dead heat. Saxby and Judah started even, on the final round, with Saxby on the pole. The Bruin runner got awav to a two-yard lead which he kept down to the home stretch, where Judah ' s .superior reserve sent him to the tape first by two yards in a sen- sational finish. Bill Black, one of the greatest come through athletes that ever wore the Cardinal, put up the gamest exhibition of the meet. With an ankle that would have kept most men in the hospi- tal, he vaulted into a tie at twelve feet one inch, with Norris of Cali- fornia. Had Black ' s ankle been in good shape, he would have had a chance to break the rec- ord for this event. bl.xck goes over, despite ED . NKLE IKiW IHI-: CAKDlXAr. TOTAL Breaking Stanford-California record of WAS MADE 0:213-5 made bv Murrav (S) in 1916. l;ilk 10 Campl.cll 8 440-yard dash-Won by Saxby (C): Lindstrum (C), second; Judah (S), third. Time, 0:51 flat. 880-yard dash — Won by Dole (S) ; Elliott 5 Doll- 5 Swayne (S), second; Mcintosh (S), third Black 4 Time. 2:00 7-10. SwaviH- 3 One-mile run-Won by Elliott (S) ; Den IiKJali 2J4 ton (C), second; Gurlev (S), third. Time, ' ' ' . - ' Willi: ns..n m 4:38. ScolKl.) VA Two-mile run— Won bv Mulvanev (C) ; Dalv 154 Caulkins (C), second; Jensen (C), third. Clark 1 Time, 10:03 6-10. ' ■ ' ' .-K Mcintosh 1 (uirk-y 1 120-yard high hurdles-Won bv Falk (S) ; Becker (C), second; Leistner (S), third. Kciiinitzii Time. 0:15 1-10. Total AS ' A This breaks the intercollegiate record of 0:15 1-5 held jointly by Thompson (Dart- Leading point scorers: Neufeldt (C). 13; mouth) in 1920, and Whitted of Stanford in y Falk (S), 10; Treyer (C), 9; Campbell 1913. (S),8; Muller (C), 6. 220-yard low hurdles- Won by Falk (S) ; Stanford ' s new block S men in track: Leistner (S), second; Havens (C), third. Dole, Campbell, Leistner, Swaync, Scorield. Time, 0:23 9-10. Clark. Mcintosh, Gurley. and Kemnitzer. Breaking Califonna-Stanford record, 0:24 1-5, held by Norton (S) and House POINT SCORE BY EVENTS (S). Norton in 1915 and House in 1916. Shotput— Won bv Neufeldt (C) ; Witter Cal. Stan. (C). second; Matthews (C). third. Dis- 100-vard dash . o 3 tance, 45 feet 3 1-8 inches. 220-yard dash .? (, High jump— Muller (C), Treyer (C), 440-vard dasli 8 1 tied for first; Dalton (C), and Kemn.tzer 880-yard run il ; (S), tied for third. Height, 6 feet. Mile run o (, Two-mile run y (1 120-vard high hunlK- ,! (, 220-yard low hur.ll. . 1 ,8 Pole vault 5 -4 Shotput ' ' n Broad jump ii High jump S Discus— Won by Neufeldt (C) ; Bcrkey (C). second; Muller (C), third. Distance. 137 feet 4 inches. This breaks the California record held by Hartranft, Stanford, 137 feet, 1922. Javelin— Won by Sorrenti (C) ; Neufeldt (C), second; Peterson (C), third. Dis- tance. 193 feet S inches, breaking California- i - - lavelin 9 II Stanford record of 184 feet 9 ' A inches, held ■ f ' ■■ Relay 5 by Liverscdge, California. Broad jump— Won bv Treyer (C) ; Boren ' ' ,:■ Totals 82 ' , 48K ' (C). second: Muller (C). third. Distance. 22 feet 2 inches. 100-yard dash— Won by Earns worth (C) ; Pole vault— Black (S) and Norris (C). i ■ Campbell (S). second; Rvan (C), third. tied for lirst ; Garner (C), third. Height, ' r Time, 0:10 2-10. 12 feet 1 inch. 220-yard dash— Won by Campbell ( S ) ; Relav race— Won bv Stanford: team com- Sheppard (C). second; Clarke (S). third. posed of Williamson. Daly. Judah. and Sco- Tinu-. 0:21-4-1(1 ticld Tim,- .V_ ' , 2-]n ill CMld Stanford 74, Olympic Club 57 The Card trackstn-. l: l■u•d ui. Uliii- tlu- (lope in the In when thev turned hack the i.dweilul ( )lyni]uc C hih a.i -re,!;; of a 7+-57 count. The cluhnien had a strong and well-halanced squad and were expected to give Tenipleton ' s team a fine druhhing. That druhhing failed to materialize, however, and the meet was well worth seeing. It hecame evident in this meet that there were two verv i)eculiar facts ahout the 192.3 Stanford track team. In the first place, it was to he composed, not of a few individual stars, hut oi a large nuniher of hard workers that were to he dei)ended ujion at all times, hi the .second place, the Cards were going to he weak, wciefully mi. in the lield events, and exceptionally strong on the track. Stanford 75, U. S. C. 56 (At Los Angeles) Charlie l ' ;i ld(iek and )tlo .Viiderson accounted fur t vent_ points when the Card squad in- aiKl . . nderson took 1) o t h hurdles and the hroad jtmip and came in second in the The Cards ' lay in the held events and the distances. They made a clean sweep of the 880, mile, two- !ir. MEET mile, and jave- lin. and alldwi-d llie M)Utlicriicis only a lialt |K)iin in the pole vault. The feature event of the meet was the relay, which ended in a dead heat. The fir.st three Cardinal runners had piled up a fifteen-yard lead which Judah inherited to start the final lap. Martz, star U. S. C. C|uarter miler. trained steadily on Van and in a sensational sprint, caught him on the iiome stretch. Martz also won the 440. Williamson set the pace with Johnson, dusky Trojan, running second. The pace was too hot for Johnson, however, and he was forced into third ])lace when Martz and Judah both i)asscd him on the home stretch. Martz won hy five yards in the fast time of 0:49 4-5. The sunimarv of the meet is as follows : KHI-vard (lasli— Paddock (U.S.C), first; Oth. Aiukrsoii (U.S.C), second; Clark (S), tliird. TiiiH-, 0:10 1-5. Mile nm— l- ' .llintl, Thayer, and Gurley, all of Stanford, tied for first. Time, 5:22. 120-vard high hurdles — OUo Andersmi (U.S.C.). first; Falk (S.), second; Dole (S i, third. Time, 0:15 3-5. 440-yard dash— Martz (U.S.C), first; Van Judah (S.), second; Johnson (U.S.C), third. Time, 0:49 4-5. Shot put— Anderson (U.S.C), first; Rich- ards (S.), second; Ludeke (S.), third. Dis- tance. 46 feet 1 1-2 inches. Two-mile run — Gurley (S.), first; Hayes (S.), second; French (S.), third. Time, 10 :29. 880-yard run— Elliott (S.), first; Daly (S.). second; Macintosh (S.), third. Time. 220-yar(l hurdles— Otto AiuU- C), fir.st; Falk (S.). second; Rogers (U.S. C). third. Time, 0:25 flat. 220-yard dash— Paddock (U.S.C), first; ' illiamson (S.), second; Clark (S.), third. Tinu. (1:214-5. I1il:Ii jump — Davis (U.S.C.) and Kem- iiil . r I S.), tied for first; Ludeke (S.). third. lKiL:lil, 5 feet 11 inches. Pole vault— Black (S.), first; Dennis (S.), second; Scofield (S.), and White (U.S.C), tied for third. Height, 12 feet. Discu.s — Norman Anderson (U.S.C). first; Richards (S.), second; Hawkins (U.S.C), third. Distance, 123 feet 2 inches. Javelin— Harlow (S.), first; Parish (S. ). second; Eskew (S.), third. Distance, 181 feet 3 inches. Broad jump — Otto Anderson (U.S.C). first; Jiminez (U.S.C). second; Wright (S.). third. Distance. 22 feet 5 1-2 inches. Relay — Ended in tie. Stanford 72, U. S. C. 57 (At Stanford) teams met for the second eight points, but their teammates ccuild l.i Imi nuv iMimt lielter than tlu-v iiad dune in Los Angeles, and the Cards came out nu ny ni a 72-57 score. The 440 was the thriller of the dav. ••I ' .lnik William.son had the ]Mile and took the lead at the start. Coverlev was the hero of this race, in spite of the fact that he failed to place, for he kept Johnson so well ho.xed in the first hundred yards that the dusky southerner was shut out. Williamson kept his lead on the hackstretch. closely followed hv judah. M.-irt . l ' . S. ( ' . ace. was in third place. As lliey rounded the curve on to the imme Mretch. .Mart . printed. p;issnig Judah an.l pullin- uji lie ide Williamson. There was a wonderful battle, but in the last twcntv-fni ' :irds, .Mart torged ahead and won by less than two feet. Judah came ni fast on the middle lane and almost nosed Williamson out of second place. The surprise of the day came when Paddock toed the marks for the first lap of the relay. The U. S. C. team won when Martz passed Williamson in the last lap. .Anderson again beat b ' alk in both hurdle races. In the absence of Bill Black, Dennis look first in the pole vault. .SLAl.M Milt- run— Giirlev (S), first; Thayer (S.). scamd; Woods (U.S.C), third. Time, 4 :32 2-5. 44(l-vard dash— Martz (U.S.C), t rst ; Wilhainsdii (S.). second; Van Judah (S.), third. Time, 0:5i2-S. 120 liiuli hurdles— O. Anderson (U.S.C). lir t; Dole (S.), second. Time, 0:152-5. lOO-vard dash— Paddock (U.S.C), fir.st ; O. .Anderson (U.S.C). second; Campbell (S.). third. Time, 10 flat. 880-yard run— Daly (S.), first; Dole (S.), second; Macintosh (S.), third. Time, 2 :02 1-5. Two-mile run— Havs (S.), first; French (S ). second. Time. 9:53 2-5. 22(l-vard dash— Paddock (U.S.C), first; Campbell (S.). second; Clark (S.). third. Time. :21 i- . Pole vault— Dennis (S. ). first; White KV (U.S.C), second; .Scofield (S.), third. Height, 11 feet 9 inches. Shot put— N. Anderson (U.S.C), first; Richards (S.), second; Ludeke (S.), third. Distance, 46 feet 2 inches. High jump— Kemnitzer (S.), first; Arthur (S.), second; Davis (U.S.C). third. Height, 6 feet. Discn.s— N. Anderson (U.S.C), first; Campbell (S.), second; Arthur (S.), third. Distance, 131 feet 8 inches. Javeliii— Parish (S.), first; Eskew (S.). second; Kelly (S.), third. Distance, 178 feet 3 inches. Broad jump— O. Anderson (U.S.C). first; Rogers (U.S.C), second; Minsky (S.), third. Distance, 22 feet. Mile relay— U.S.C. (Paddock, Hughes, lohnsnn. Martz) ; Stanford (Sherman. Scho- field, Van hidah. Williamson). Time 3 :25 4-5. Interclass Meet The Class of 1023 walke l away with the annual interclass inert with 54 points. The freshmeti were second with 41, the juniors third with , 7. and thr Miphomores fnurtli with 28. Lane Falk, varsity captain, was the iiulividual star nf the meet. He won hdtb hurdles, and took fourth in hoth the javelin and shot put. Ihll lilaek cleared the har at 13 feet in the pole : showed that the har sa.sjs ' ed and the hcij ht wa 1 _ ' feet, I. C. A. A. A. A. Meet Stanford ' s ten-man team went east last e:u- and ]ilac( A. A. meet at Harvard with _ ' () 1-2 points. California Princeton second with . 1. Misfortune followed Dink Templeton ' s charges in the preliminaries. William- .son ran in a fast heat in the 440 and was shut out in . 0 seconds flat ; I ' alk hit ;i hurdk and fell down in his first race. Tiny Ilartranft came throu.yh with ten points, winning; hoth the shot am discus. Sudden anne.xed a fourth place in the KM) and a second in the 220. Kirkse ran in at fourth in the furlong. Hayes placed third in the low hurdles, and Bill Black got a fourth in the pok vault. Hanner, who had heen expected to win the javelin, was heaten hy hotl Bronder of Penns lvaiiia and Sorrenti of California at 185 feet 3 inches. Acta inchi d in the 1. I rst with 40 P. A. A. Stanford ]daced second in the annual May 5, with 46 points. The powerful l )ly the University of California third with 44 with the Bruin Cuhs with four points. Meet r. . . A. Meet : nipic Club team . The Cardinal 1 t Berkeley, Satui ,vas first until 7 , reshmen tied for fifth SUMMARY 100-vard dash— Sudden (O.C), first; Bar- ber (U.C), second; Campbell (S), third; Walker (O.H.S.), fourth. Time, 10 seconds. Hammer throw — Merchant (O.C), first; McSachern (O.C), second; Ludeke (S), third; Boone (S.Fr.), fourth. Distance, 166 text 4 inches. 440-vard dash — Storey (S.J.Y.M.C.A.), first; hidah (S), second; O ' Brien (O.C). third; Waterman (O.C), fourth. Time. :50 4-5. Mile run — Gurley (S), first; Bierbaum (O.C). second; Cypher (S.Fr.), third; Cliarlrs ( S ), fourth. Time, 4 :32 1-10. llivh iiinip — Muller (C), first; Kemnitzer ( 1, irMiid; Treyer (C), third; Garrett {( I. N ' lirtb. Height, 6 feet 1 inch. .S(j-pound weight — McEachern (O.C), I ' irst; MacGurn (O.C), second; Merchant (O.C), third; Ludeke (S), fourth. Dis- tance, 31 feet 2 inches. J- ' O-vard dash — Sudden (O.C). first: CampLcll (S), second; Walker (O.H.), third: Lindstrum (C), fourth. Time, 0:22 1-5. Shotput — MacGurn (O.C), first; Neu- fcldt (C), second; Witter (C), third; Lang (C), fourth. Distance, 46 feet 4 1-4 inches. 220-yard low hurdles— Leistncr (S), first; Falk (S), second; Havens (C), third; Enos (O.C), fourth. Time. 0:24 5-10. 120-vard high hurdle.s— Leistner (S), first; Krogness (O.C), second; Falk (S), third; Boles (S.Fr.), fourth. Time, :15 2-5. Five-mile run — Hunter (O.C), first; Hooper (O.C), second: Charles (S), third; Lindner (Unattached). fourth. Time. 20 :38. Pole vault— Garner (C). lust: JMhn-..n ( ' 11 ill. Kichards (Humlj), third: I ' hiliips (U.t.i. fourth. Height, 11 feet 8 inches. Broad jump — Boren (C), first; Merchant (O.C), second; Trcyer (C). third; Muller (C), fourth. Distance. 23 feet 3 inches. Discus— Neufeldt (C), first; .Arthur (S). second; MacGurn (O.C), third; Bcrkey (C). fourth. Distance. 1-38 feet 9 inches. 880-yard run — Smith (O.C), first; Siemens (O.C), second; Daly (S), third; Dole (S), fourth. Hop, skip and jump — Kelly (O.C), first; Minskey (S), second; Krogness (O.C), third; Dodson (C), fourth. Javelin — Sorrenti (C) , first; Manner (O.C), second; Neufcldt (C), third; Peter- -iin (C). fourth. Distance. 194 feet 2 inches. Stanford 66, All Southern Conference Team, 74 A week lui ' ore the California meet, in the final preliminary encounter of the iTir, the tar linal tracksters went up against an all-star team from the colleges composing the Southern California Conference, including Pomona, Occidental. Southern Branch of the University of California. California Institute of Tech- nology, and W ' hittier College. Stanford was doped to win. hut very little was known aliout the southern comhination. ()n paper the All-Southern Conference representatives looked strong, but not dangerously .so. ( )n the Cardinal track they were strong enough to take the measure of the .Stanford varsitv. 7-1—66. WINS TlIK CKNTrUV IN TUK f. S. C. MKKT TIk- meet was a nip and tuck alTair thiDiii liDnt. with tin- ii:mi -it -awmij hack and iDurtli in and out of the lead. Dagf(.s of I ' nnnina heat Falk in hoth hurdle races, in fast time. For the Cardinal supporters, there was just (jne real iiright spot in the entire meet, and that was the sprinting of Camphell. who won the 100-yard dash in 10 flat and the 220 in 0:22 1-5. On the hasis of past ])erformance .Argue of Pomona was do])ed to win hoth the sprints. In the century Cam])l)ell i)ulleci uj) in the last few yards and won hy inches. In the 220 he easily won and showed that this was his he-st race, as he had too slow a start for the hundred. The relay was the best race of the day and the closest seen on the local oval this year. Williamson started the last la] with a one-yard lead which he kei)t down to the home stretch, where Powers |iilU(l up and won 1) - inches. FRESHmflD TRfl K FRESHMEN HAVE ERRATIC TRACK SEASON ' riie preliminary freshman track season resulted in three victories for the Cardinal. The first was a triangular meet against the Berkeley and Modesto high schools. The final score was ' ' 0-40-12. resiirctixcly. The second victory was over the comhined Oakland High School tvacksk ' i , 1U6-46. Bill Richard.son was the outstanding star in hoth nicet . wninnig ihc SSO in 1 :58 3-5 in the first encounter. He was elected captain just liefore the San l- ' rancisco- Peninsula High Schools meet, which the freshmen won, ' ' . l-,i-31 1-3. Wt -IF i S ■ - flt fl H liOYDON HOES California won the Litllc IHg Meet on the Stanford oval. April 14. by a 93 ' to 37y2 score. Four records were shattered. Roles, of Stanford, broke high hurdles races by traveling the distance in :15 1-5. Kerr, also of Stanford, lowered the existing record in the mile by seven seconds, making the four laps in 4:30 4-5. The feat ure race of the day was the 880, in which the two rival captains. Richard- son and Boydon, were matched. In the second lap Richardson took the lead from a California pacer. Closely followed by Boydon. he was forced into a sprint on the last turn. Richard.son kept even with Boydon to within ten yards of the finish, and the California man won by inches in the final pull. The time. 1 :57 1-5, broke the previous record of 2:01. SUMMARY OF EVENTS— 100-yd dash— Barber (C) first; Blume (C) second; Caspar (S) thirl Time. 10 seconds (Tying record made by Eddie Sudden (S) in 1921). 220-yard dash— Barber (C) tir-t; .Miller (S) second; Caspar (S) third. Time. 0:22 2-5. 440-yd. dash— Silverman C) first; Dixon (l) second; Chase (S) third. Time, 0:52 4-5. 800-yd. run— Boydon (C) first; Richardson (S) second; Ross (C; third. Time, 1:57 1-5. (Breaking record of 2:01 held by Bauman of California.) Mile-run — Kerr (S) hrsi; Cypher (S) second; Orme (C), third. Time. 4:30 4-5. (Breaking former record of 4:37.) Two-mile run— Kerr (S) first; Damon (C) second; Clifford (S) third. Time. 10:31. 120-yd. high hurdles— Boles (S) first; Corley (C) second; Dodson (C) third. Time, 0:15 1-5. (Breaking record held by Gurtskey of 0:15 2-5.) 220-yd. low hurdles— Boles (S) first; Corley (C) second; Dodson (C) third. Time. 0:25 3-5. Shot-put — Rogers (C) first; Blewett (C) second; Boone (S) third. Distance. 40 feet 11 inches. High jump — Kobick (C) first; Francis (C) second; Thompson (S) and McGowan (C), tied for third. Height. 5 feet 10 inches. Discus— Francis (C) first; King (C) second; Nevers (S) third. Distance 129 feet 6 inches. (Breaking the record made by Kearns of California of 118 feet 5 inches.) Broad jump — Dodson (C) first; Bondshu (C) and Watkins (C) tied for second. Distance, 21 feet 6 inches. Javelin— Dodson (C) first; Willi (C) second; Cock (C) third. Distance, 157 feet 1 inch. Pole vault— Upson (C) first; Bradley (C). Starkweather (C). Scofield (S). and Lloyd (S), tied for second. Height 11 feet 3 inches. Relay r.icc— Won bv California (Bussr. Dixon. Silvirm.-in, and Hoydon). Time. 3:28 3-5. ....•V Mill Humphrey ISuunr Waggoner Koss Miller Cypher lioles Rich;i Carlsmith Kerr Fay Chase Hay Caspar Norherg Uriggs Voung : B fl SeBfl LL HARRY WOLTER— has brought a new regime and a (hfferent system to Stanford base- hall. Teaching the men the funda- mentals of the game, he has in- sisted upon strict oljedience and faithful work, with the result that the team this year displayed a l)et- ter working spirit than has been seen for many seasons. Wolter ' s experience as a professional player in the Big Leagues showed plainly in the efficient manner in which he directed the squad. CLAUDE E. PEAVY— elected caiitain to take the place of George (ireeii, who did not return to the Uni- versity, showed himself a heady skipper around second base, where he played durinj most of the season. Peavy s specialty, since he broke into the ranks of Stanford ball players, has been his fielding, init diirin.g the past year his hitting improved to a great degree over that of former U fl R S I T y BASEBALL SEASON EVEN BREAK Stanford ' s 1923 varsity baseball season was not a notable success, but was suffi- ciently over tlie head of last year ' s per- formance to justify Cardinal trust for the future. The varsity won twelve games and lost eleven — including three defeats by CaH- foriiia. Seven veterans and a llnck of l ' ' J,i freshman champions responded to Coach Harry W ' olter ' s call on January 4, and the squad opened the struggle against inclem- ent weather, which lasted throughout the season. Wolter found it necessary to start in at the bottom, and the team did not reallv catcli its stride until the middle of Marcli. Mis ciiachini;- will be felt next year even mure than it was during the past season. He succeeded in turning out a team which hit fairly well, fielded better tlian the average, and had three first-string The Cards opened the season February o. with the Jefiferson ' s Club of San Fran- cisco. Ten hits and numerous Jefierson errors netted a 13 to 3 victory, and Cap- tain Peavv ' s team seemed to be off for a Then the . mljrose Tailors came down uid took an 8 to 4 game, and the truth caiiK- out. I III- I arcK, at tirst. were a sfven-imiiii club. The early fraiiu - wni,- tii iit, witli Stanford pcrlia]) in the lead, but defeat after defeat came in the last two or three times at bat. This was Coach Welter ' s problem, and he solved it, as .several extra-inning contests will prove. The second defeat of the year came from the Frcnch-.Kmerican Bank, and was marked 9 to 1. Score tied at one all in the seventh — then eight runs. The Olympic Club won a game and then threw it away again in the ninth, breaking the incipient losing streak. Stanford 7, Olympics 6. Cliff Ireland ' s annual course in baseball brought him two games and left the Cards one. Cliff took the first match and the second went fourteen innings before the Indei endents bunched four hits for a 6-to-4 victory. Stanford came back in the third contest and won, 12 to 8, in a free-hitting, loosely-fielded game. St. Mary ' s sent the Redshirts down for the count with a 10 to defeat, which was wiped out when the home team slammed .Santa Clara. 13 to 1. The ne.xt St. Mary ' s game went to the Phoenix men by the more respectable count of 4 to 2. and Santa Clara lost a return engagement in twelve innings. Thus inspired, the Cards finally took St. Mary ' s down by . to -i in the la-t encounter of the winter (luarter. During the sjiring recess the Cniversity of .Soutliern California was defeated twice. The first brush was even up until the eighth, when Patterson parked the ball outside the fence with two aboard. With this impetus. Stanford brought out a 7 to 3 .score. The batting rally continued through the second match. Woodward and Lawson each contributing a circuit clout. The final score was 10 to 2. With a string of four consecutive wins, Stanford entered the California series with bright prospects. Comparative scores based on recent games gave the Cards a four or five run margin of superiority, and the team seemed to he at top form. ( )ne of the upsets was the murderous hitting of the California batsmen. California 10, Stanford 5 Toomey and Kelle - ])itciiing for California: Solomon and Teague for . Stanford. Three hits off Toomey and a brace of Bear errors gave Wolter ' s team a four- run lead in the first iiming. Two hits, two walks, and a double steal netted three tallies to the Bruins in the third, and hits, bunts, walks, and errors put them in front, 6 to 4, two innings later. Heavy stick-work brought in the last four California tallies, while the Cards were touching Kelley for only two blows in eight innings. Stanford ' s fifth run was scored by Woodward during a general blow-up of the California infield. Roberts was the only Stanford man to get more than one hit. He connected with two singles. The game was ragged, five errors being chalked up against Cali- fornia, while the Cardinal had four. .Solomon pitched the first four innings, and was then relieved by Teague. Both Stanford and California catchers worked to good advantage, as only one stolen base was garnered during the whole game — and that by Patterson. The game was a long one for an opener, lasting two hours and twenty minutes. Schaller and McCov officiated behind the bat and in the field. BOX SCORE California — AB Scars, rf 6 Hcrmle. lb 4 Thompson, c 4 Doulhit, cf 4 Bowcn. If 4 Bill, 2b 3 Gerlach, 3b 5 King, ss 2 Toomcy, p Kellcy. p 5 Totals .37 10 11 Stanford- AB R H PC E Roberts, ss 5 Parker. If .i Carver, cf .? McCantlless. ri 4 Woodward, lb 2 Patterson, c 4 Heckendorf, 3b 4 Peavy, 2b 3 Solomon, p 1 Teague. p 1 May 1 La vson 2 3 2 2 2 1 . . (1 (1 6 .=; 1 1 (1 2 1 ( (1 1 u n ♦Batted for Peavy in nintli. Batted for Teaguc in ninth. The score by innings — California 3 3 3 Stanford 4 1 Struck out — By Kellcy 3, by Solomon 3. Bases on balls— Off Toomey 1, off Kelley 2. off .• A- w ill .=;, off Teague 3. Sacrifice hits— Bowen, Parker. Double plays— Bill to Hermle. King to r.ill t . Hermle. Carver to Roberts. Two-base hits— Bill, Heckendorf. Innings pitched— By I. Mill. A 1, by Kelley 8, by Solomon 4, by Teaguc 5. Runs scored— Off Toomcy 4 in 1 inning, Mil Krlliv 1 in 8 innings, off Solomon 4 in 4 innings, off Teague 6 in 5 innings. Stolen base— Patterson. Winning pitcher— Kelley. Losing pitcher- Teague. Time of game— 2 hours 20 miiuites. Umpires— Schallcr and McCoy. California 9, Stanford 8 Kellcv, Solomon, and Teague pitching fur .Stanford: Kelley for California. There were twelve innings of technically terrible baseball, with a thrill every minute. The Bears soaked out sixteen hits, and got off to a four-run lead in the first two innings. Stanford brought it to 4 to 3 in the third, but yielded two more counters in the same inning. Captain Peavy brought his team back into the running by a home run with one on the base during the ne.xt frame. Each team scored once, and Stanford trailed by one run. Dick Lawson. i)inch-liitting, tied the .score with a single which drove Mulchay in from second. This removed Woodward from the line-up, and weakened the team seriously. A hit, biint, and error ])ut Douthit across the platter in the eleventh, but Sliortv Roberts tied it up again, with a single, aided by a sacrifice hit, sacrifice fly, and the usual error. California ' s ninth and winning tally came on an error, a stolen base, and a single. BOX SCORE California— AB King, ss 7 Hermle, lb 6 Tliompson, c D.nithit, cf 7 Howell, If 5 Bill, 2b 4 Spalding, rf 4 Gerlach, 3b 6 Kellcy, p S Stanford — Roberts, ss DclTcbacli, If.- Batted lor Woodward in iiiiitb. Ran for May in nintli. Score by innings — California -- 2 2 2 Stanford -.0 3 Siriirk liui r. KrlKy 5, by Teague 2. Ti-a-iu J .i.iiri.r liiis Hermle, Bowen, IKcUcnd..it. IVavv, 2b... Solomon, p.. Teague, p.- Lawson .... Mulchay Totals 2 U U 1 1 1) 1 8 Bases on balls— Off Kelley 8, off Solomon 1, off ill, Spalding, Deffebach, Carver, Peavy. Double t— He berts to Woodward, Kellcy to Bill to Hermle. Home run— Peavy. California 4, Stanford 1 Tianning- pitching for California: Clark and Teague for Stanford. California scored in the first on a walk, sacrifice, and error. Hermle hit int the bleachers for the circuit during the sixth, and three more hits in the sam inning brought in another run. An error, stolen base, infield out, and s(|iii.. ' eze play accounted for tlie fourt Bruin score in the eighth. A fielder ' s chciicc, walk, and twn hits liy l awson an McCandless made Stanford ' s only marker. , BOX SCORE California— AB K I! I ' c King, ss 3 - I ' 1 Hcrmlc, lb 3 1 _ ' S Thompson, c .2 1 1 5 Khv, I- (1 II Doulhit, it 4 (I .1 Bowcii, If 4 1 3 Bill, rf - 3 II 2 .i Gerladi, 31i --3 1 Erb, 2b 2 d Phenig, 2b 1 1 Banning, p 3 (I Totals 28 4 r. 27 ♦Batted for Clark in scvi-nth. Batted for Peavy in ninth. Batted for Teague in ninth. Score by inning.s— California 1 Stanford U U 1 1 Struck out— Bv Banning 3, by Clark 2, by Teague 1. Bases on balls— Off Banning 4, off Clark 1. Sacrifice hits— Hcrnile, Thompson 2. Double play— Lawson to Mulchay to W oodward. Home runs— Hermle. Time of game— 1 hour 50 minutes. Umpire— McCoy. Post Season Games A week after the California series the Cards defeated the ( )lynii)ie Cluli, 5 to (). playing as fine hasehall as one eould wish. Kellew who tamed Stanford twice while pitching for California, twirled for the Cluh. ;ind the Keilshirts hattered him shamefully. It was a complete reversal of form. The year closed with a ten-day, five-t;ame trip thnm. h . riz(ina and . nuthern California. Tile first game of the trip, played with the I ' .akersfield Standard ( )il nine, on Ala - 5. resulted in a 7 to 2 Cardinal victory. The team was on a heavy-hitting rampage. Captain I ' e.ivy and Carver Imlh gathered home nms. Solomon pitched well, fanning nine of the I ' akerstield men, and allowing- seven hits, which he kept well scattered. Car -er ' s h:ime run came in the fifth, when he drove Parker in ahead of him. In the ninlh, l ' e:ivv duplicated Carver ' s feat with McCandless on hase. Victory continued for Stanford ' s nine on May 7. when Occidental College went down to a 21-8 defeat. Teague and Clark had an easy time in keeping the Ox players .safely in hand, especially with the commanding lead given them by heavy hitting. One or more Stanford ' runs crossed the plate in every inning except the second. Zeb Terry and Doc Hays, both former captains of Cardinal nines, were on hand to witness the game. Arizona Series The first game with tlu- University of Arizona at liic son on iay 10. resulted in ,i 1. -5 victory for the southern sluggers. Solomon started on the mound for Stanford. Ful- ler was catching; Woodward. Peavy, Roberts and llecken- dorf covered the infield ; and Parker, Carver and McCand- less occupied the outfield i)o- sitions. Stanford ' s five runs came in three separate innings. In the second. Woodward walked, stole second, and came home when the Arizona third baseman hobbled Fuller ' s grounder. Three more runs came in the seventh. With two down. Inillcr singled, and went to third on a ])assed l)all. Solomon singled, bringing liim in. and l ()1)erts and Parker came through with doubles that accounted for the other two. P. TTERSOX OFF TO . r.OOD START Hits I 1 0J0024xlfl Arizona made it two straight on May 11. by winning 9-1. Clark was on the mound for Stanford. Mulchay broke into the game in the infield. Stanford ' s only tally came in the third. Roberts walked, took second on Parker ' s out. and was scored l)y Carver ' s timely single. SCORE BY INNINGS 1 2 .; J ., ; .s 9Tot.ii Stanford retaliated on the next day by cajJturing the third and last game of the series, 8-1. Teague was in fine form, and allowed only five scattered hits. Carver connected for a home run in the first inning, driving in ahead of him Roberts, who had singled, lleckendorf singled in the second and came liome on infield outs. Mulchay brought McCandless in with a trijjle in the third, and in tlie fourtli a doul)le l)y Heckendorf and a single by Peavy netted another tally. Peavy scored his third baseman again in the sixth, this time by a double. In the ninth frame, {■ullcr got the second Cardinal home run of the day. SCORE l!V INNINGS FReSHtDfln BflSEBPLL FRESHMEN WIN FOURTEEN GAMES In -spite of the fact that Coach ' ■Husky Hunt was busy coaching the fresh- man basketball squad at the same time the baseball team was rounding into shape, the first-year men stepped on to the diamond on February 10 for their first contest, and won ' it from Hayward by a score of 11-0. The babes had little trouble in crashing- the ball over the field, and with Ditzler making thirteen strikeouts, there was no chance to lose. Two more games were won by the freshmen before they lost their first contest to .St. Mary ' s I ' reps, l- ' -O. with Xevers and Draper trying their turns in the box. Two more decisive victories followed, and then another defeat, this time by Oakland Tech, with an 8-7 score. Then came five straight wins with Ditzler, Oviatt, and Nevers doing the mound work. JMost of the burden of the early season pitching fell to Ditzler, and he proved the most effective of the trio. By the time the spring southern trip was taken during the vacation, Ditzler was rather tired, and Oviatt got the best results, hurling most of the games during the middle of the season. Three contests were played on the southern tour. Ditzler lost one and won one. Xevers twirled the third game, which the first-vear men won from Hanford, 13-1. With three good pitchers in Xevers, Ditzler, and Oviatt, the freshmen had no excuse to lose ball games if they would but hit the ball for a few runs themselves. Kohler caught all three men, McDermont played on first, Draper and Smith alter- nated at second, Lucas nalolied the grounders around shortstop, and Captain Green handled the hot corner of the diamond. In the outfield. :Meiklejohn played center field, with Lovelace in right, and Dickey in left. Ditzler and Nevers also covered one of the outfield gardens occasionall} . This combination approached the first of the annual Stanford-California fresh- man series with a display of heavy hitting — on occasions — good pitching, and steady fielding. On Ai)ril 7, the first-year men met their rivals on the Berkeley diamond in a close game, which the latter won, . -0. Xounan. the California pitcher, could not be hit, and allowed only one bingle during the whulc game, a single bv Xevers. A week later the tieshmen met California in tiie second game. tlii time on the Stanford diaTiiond. McEncaiiy was on the mound for the l-iliie and Gold, and Xevers worked for Stanford. The former, with Stark, who relieved him in the se enth innins ' , allowed only three hits to Xevers ' five. It was a close gnme, which Xevers nearly won himself. In the third inning California started the scoring with two runs on a pass, sacrifice, a double and a single. Again in the fifth they scored on a pass and two infield singles. In the ne.xt frame another tally crossed the plate on a pass and two errors. Then the freshmen had their chance. McEneany became wild and could not locate the plate. A single and two passes filled the bases, with Nevers up. With the count three and two on him. he lined a single to right field, scoring two men ahead of him. Xo further chance to score came until the ninth, when an error put Lovelace on fir.st. lie stole second, and Xevers was up again. The big pitcher could not repeat this time, and filed out, ending the game and the California series, which was the climax of the freshman schedule. Several post-season games were played to give the varsity coach, Harry W ' olter, a line on the material for ne.xt year. The first-year men won tw-o of them with ease, downing Hayward, 1+-2, and San Jose Xormal School. 12-6. Which of the freshmen will furnish varsity material for next year is prob- lematical at the present, due to the erratic showing made by the ' 26 men throughout the season. Ditzler, Oviatt, and Nevers all have a chance to develoj) into first string hurlers if they gain sufficient experience. Tennis Stanford Wins National Recognition riiil W-rr, Dick Hinckley, and jimniif Davies. Stanford ' s tennis team, left for the East immediately after the close of the spring quarter last year, to uphold the honors which they ha d won the year hefore in the intercollegiate tennis tourna- ment at Haverford. Pennsylvania, Neer held the intercollegiate singles champion- ship of the L ' nited States, and was president of the Intercollegiate Tennis Associa- tion. The team of Davies and Xeer succeeded in annexmg the mtercollegiate doubles crown last year, but in the singles Xeer was defeated b - Lucien Williams of Yale, who won the title. Neer was not up to his best game because of an injured knee, but he was again elected president of the intercollegiate tennis body. Colleges from all over the United States were represented at Haverford. .- total of thirlv-one colleges, rejiresented by seventy-ime entries, participated in the tournament. Following the intercollegiate tournament, the Stanford team entered the open tournaments ' of the East, competing against the best players of the United States and many foreign stars. Davies made an exceptionally fine record against some of the foremost players in the senior ranks. His most notable performance was the defeat of Andre Gobert, captain of the French Davis cup team. Negotiations are now being carried on for international matches between Stan- ford and Princeton on one side and Cambridge and Oxford on the other. Neer and Davies, although ineligible for Pacific Coast collegiate tournaments, are eli- gible to compete again in the national intercollegiates. RICHARD H. HINCKLEY— w lio has shown himself to c a reniarkalile handler of tlu- rac(|uet throughout the sea- son. Although only a junior. Hinckley showed that class rating made no difTerence when it came to being an c ' liicient cajjtain. Hinckley was captain of his freshman team (luring the year tennis marie lis debut as a major sport at Stanford, a n d his steady -tring of victories earned him the right to ca])tain the var- sitv in his third vcar. m U Fl R sijy CALIFORNIA TAKES TENNIS MATCHES California won the annual dual tennis toi the five matches ])layed. The meet, staged close affair, the edge going to California. )wings it was hard to judge hetween the two teams iiid Gold to win. In the early part of the season l)oth Stanford and California had informally entered the University and Cluh Tennis League, where such nationally known stars as the Kin- sey brothers, Roland Roberts and George .Straachan were met. Previous to the California meet Stanford had a slight edge over the Bruins in the league rating. It was on this that Stan- ford based her hopes. For almost ten days preceding the annual tournament the Cardinal tennis squad were handicapped by heavy rain and wind, preventing sufficient practice. This condition of the weather sent the .Stanford men into the tourney not in the best of form. The first singles match was played between Norman deBack and Wallace Bates, the Cali- fornia captain. The veteran Bates was forced to extend himself to win, 8-6, 6-3. DeBack [ilayed a cutting, placing game that was hard for the California to meet. Several times dur- ing the match he pulled ahead of his opponent and seemed in a position to win, but P)ates ' re- serve power and speed ]iroved too much for him in the pinches. ' The second singles between Dick Hinckley. the Cardinal caiitain, and I ' liil Hctlc-ns ui California was the feature match of the dav Although Rettens won in straight sets. 6-4, 8-6. the playing was close and si)ectacular at all stages. Hoth Hinckley and Bettens played a smashing, driving game. Hinckley ' s back-hand drive worked well, the .Stanford captain hardly missing a shot on his port side. The speed and aggressiveness of the wiry little Californian. however, were effective, and he steadily pulled ahead to win the match. Ted Mertz defeated Weinstein of the California s(|uad. 6-1, 6-1, in the last of the singles matches. Mertz ' s fine drives and accurate placing were too much for the Blue and (lold player. Ted overwhelmed his ojiponent and waltzed away with two sets, overturning the dope as he went. This match turned the tide for the Cardinals, and they came back into the doubles with a determination to win. Cali ' fornia. however, after a terrific struggle succeeded in annexing the lirst douliles when Bates and Stratford of the Bears won from Mertz and Hinckley of Stanford. 6-4. 7-5. The Stanford players fought well, and were in a position to win several times, but always the Blue and Gold players pulled ahead. The pace set was terrific, and it seemed that superior condition alone won for the Bears. In spite of the rather disheartening outcome of the previous matches. Tussing and deBack of Stanford came back strong in their doubles match against Conrad and Coombs, and won rather ra,Ml . ( ' . , 6-3. Never during the two sets did the out- come seem in doubt. Tin- suikiuu net work and volleying of the Cardinal duo was sufficient to give them ;i driKlrd edge throughout the match. Following the matches with the University of California, Dick Hinckley and Ted Mertz. of the Cardinal team, journeyed south to the Ojai Valley, in Ventura County, where they competed in the intercollegiate classes of the Annual Ojai ' alley Tennis Tournament. The Stanford pair fought their way to the final round of the doubles play where they met Wallace Bates and Phil Bettens of the Universit}- of California. The Stanford men lost the first set. 6-.3. but they came back strong m the second set and won. 7-5. Bates and Bettens took the final and deciding set, 6-3. In the singles tournament both Stanford players were eliminated at the semifinal stage of play. In a preliminary tournament the Olympic Club tennis stars succeeded m carry- ing off six of the nine matches played with Stanford on April 9. The biggest upset of the dav occurred when Captain Hinckley of Stanford defeated Bob Kinsey. 6-4. 6-3. and when Overfelt defeated Roberts of the Olypmic Club. C)-!. 4-6, S-6. The results of the other matches were as follows: Singles— H. Kinsey- (O.C.) defeated Davies (S.). 6-1. 7-5; Fottrell (O.C.) defeated Tussing (S), 9-7, 6-3; Leavison (O.C.) defeated Mertz (S.), 6-1. 6-1 ; .Straachan (O.C.) defeated deBack (S.), 6-1. 6-1. Doubles— Davies and Overfelt (S.) defeated Leavison and Fottrell (O.C). 6-3, 6-3; Kinsey brothers (O.C.) defeated Hinckley and : Iertz (S.), 6-2, 3-6. 6-3; Roberts and Straachan (O.C.) defeated Tussing and deBack (S), 3-6. 6-2, 6-4. MAJOR SPORT OR MINOR SPORT? ' IV ' iinis was i:ii cil imtu iIk- rriiiU nf a minor ])nrt to majnr staiulinjj tliree ears ago wlien Stanford players stood at the head of the collegiate tennis ranks ill the United States. During the last few years, when minor s])orts have been the only bright spots in the setting of gloom surrounding Stanford athletics, some discussion has arisen as to the advisability of making swimming and soccer major sports. This year for the first time the executive committee awarded block S ' s ' to swimmers — not on the same terms as major sport men ; but a man winning first place again.st California for three consecutive years will hereafter l)e awarded a l)lock S. Those who do not qualify for the block will be awarded the circle letter on the same terms as formerly. Harry Maloney. Stanford ' s veteran director of minor sports, is op])osed to any further extension of major sports. In an interview, he said, it would be a great mistake to make any more major sports ; we already have too nian -. A block letter is the greatest athletic honor a man can achieve in college, and we don ' t want to cheapen it. . t the pre.sent time too many block S ' s are given away, and we should get back to the old rugby regulation of giving letters to only three substi- tutes, instead of giving out enough letters for two complete varsities. Maloney believes that minor sports have a very great function to perform, but that they should be an adjunct to major sports, rather than taking the center of the stage themselves. The function of minor si)orts, he says, is to furnish recreation for the great body of students who are not and never will be fitted to take part in major sports, and to develop athletic material for major sports. It is difficult to determine just where the division between major and minor sports should take place, but Dr. Barrow, Stanford physical director, believes, the difference between major sports and minor sports should be based on the number of men who are able to take part in the activity, and the amount of skill which a man has to develop in order to make the varsity. A ditTerent view of the situation is taken by Ernst Brandsten, who has been res]:)onsible for turning out the winning Stanford tank coml)inations of the past few years. Me is opposed to making soccer and swimming major sports on the same basis as football or track, but he l)elieves that the system which was put into effect this year in regard to swimming is the logical one. He says, Because of opposition, the only basis on which swimming could become a major sport would l)e to award blocks to first place men only, and this would be hard on the second and third place swimmers. The present system, under which a man may win a lilock .S by taking first place for three consecutive years, affords the necessary incentive to keej) a man on his toes throughout his three years of competition, and yet it does not cheapen the award. It would be wise to apply this system to all of ihe more inijtortant minor s])c)rts. as soccer and boxing. FRESH m € n CALIFORNIA WINS MATCHES The freshman tenuis seabun ended with the defeat of the Cardinal liv Cahfornia. Chandler (C). heat McCleave (S.). 6-2, 6-4. Stauf (C.) beat Ogde ' n (S.). 6-2, 0-6. 11-9. Burk (C.) beat Fairchild (S.), 6-4. 4-6, 6-3. Chandler and Jacobs (C.) defeated Fairchild and Ogden (S.), 6-0, 6-3. Hyde and Hdier (C.) beat Cof=fin and McCleave. 6-4. 7-5. F.iircl,il,l Mcriea« Cffin Og.lL-n Should Intramural Sports Be Abolished? With the increase in number of minor si)orts demandini,- reC(ii;nition at Stan- ford, there has arisen a flood of diver ent opinions as to their place in Stanford athletics. When from time to time the Executive Committee is asked to give major recognition to this or that athletic activity, the matter has come to a crux in student discussion. Particularly have the so-called intramural sports been the subject of dissension, especially in regard to their relation and effect on major athletics. Opinions on several ' interesting phases of the matter have been gained from coaches in the various sports and from representative students. Some of these follow below : Major sports exist for the few. If we did not have the others, it would be like having a class of stars in English. After the first week the ordinary men would be dropped, and they would be on the rocks as far as English was concerned. In these days of specialized preparation and strenuous competition in sports like foot- ball, the ' man of little ability along that line has no chance. It is for his develop- ment and enjoyment that th ' cse other sports exist and that intramural athletics have come into their own. — Charles ' . Davis. Director Intramural Sports. These minor sports are the bunk. Instead of having all the fellows out for football or baseball or basketball or track, every little gang that gets together goes in for something different, and we have so few men here that this wrecks us when we ' re up against Cal. — A Stanford Senior. These weekly track meets which have been held all through the fall and spring, with everyone coming out and doing something, have been the mamstay of the track team. ' Williamson. Van Judali, Hale, Campbell, Clark, all were found in them. I would say that our intramural track has been a success. ' — Coach Dink Templeton. Intramural sports should be cut down in number. Where there are a great many teams, the student body interest is divided, and there is not the necessary support of major sports. A united student body interest is what we most need in athletics, not so much a scheme where everyone would have to go out for major sports. — . 1 Masters, ' 23. There are three functions of our athletics; first, to get as many as jjossible interested and doing something which they enjoy ; second, to develop good teams for varsity competition ; and third, to promote acquaintanceship and good feehng among th ' e different groups of men who meet in competition. We must consider all three aims. Intramural athletics get large groups of men interested in sport and doing something for it. Thev create good feeling between campus groups, and to some extent thev develop men into varsity material. The same might be said for minor sports hJtxveen the universities. — Coach Harry Maloney, Director of Minor Sports. . , , • ■ Our major athletics are too commercial. There is ' ii ' ' ' ' ' ' . re sp : cedui win- ning a game than in having fun fpini i he shoukl receive a major award. — A If a fellow does his best m any sixirt. minoR SPORTS COACH ERNST IVRANDSTEN, WHO HAS SUSTAINED A RECORn OF ICTORIES SO CONSISTENTLY IN SWIMMING AND WATER POLO THAT IT IS WELL SAID THAT HIS TEAMS DON ' T KNOW HOW TO LOSE. s o e c e R SOCCER TEAM CONTINUES TRIUMPHANT The reasons for the continued success of soccer may he summed up in ( 1 ) Coach Maloney ' s direction; and (2) the active interest taken in the si)ort. The former factor is a famihar one to Stanford men. The latter element has heen fostered par- ticularly by various systems of awards which reward special merit — such as the University and Club Soccer League emblems, the Silvio Pellas trophy, and the Reynolds award. The latter is in the form of a gold football, and is given annually to the player on the Stanford team who the coach considers the most valuable man. T. E. W ' althers, who has played on the varsity for three seasons, was this year awarded the Reynolds trophy. Coach Harry Maloney ' s soccer varsity proved itself to 1)C one of the liest teams on the coast last season, when it succeeded in winning both games from the University of California, and captured the championship of the University and Club Soccer League. Although the Blue and Gold made very little showing in the league, they put a strong team in the field against the Cardinals. In the first game the winning Stanford goal came in the last five minutes of play. The final score was 2 to 1. In the first half Stanford was held scoreless by the Berkeley players, while they man- aged to mark up one tally for themselves, but the second period told a different story. Charles Franklin, inside right on the varsity, evened up matters at the out- set of the second half, and later in the game Franklin scored again when a series of short passes by the forward line put him in an advantageous position. Coach Marry Maloney ' s men were not |)laying their usual flashy game, and although their team- work was good they seemed to lack their customary jiunch and snap. The ' California contest ended the first half of the University and Club league .schedule. Stanford met every team in the league and did not suffer a defeat. In the second half of the league schedule, the club teams gave the Stanford soccerites more competition than they had experienced during the initial round of the schedule. All of the teams seemed to have improved, and the Lards had some narrow escai)es from defeat. The ( )lyni])ic Club aggregation was the only one wliic-li was al)U ' to coii(|uer the varsity, however. ' I ' he Wiii.i ed ( ) i)Iayer had more teamwork and aggressiveness than any other squad encountered 1) Stan lord this year. ' J ' hev had added several star players to their lineup since their di-leat ril the hands of tlie Cards in the first half of the schedule. The second game with the Bears proved easier than the first and the Cardnial squad returned from Berkeley with a 3-1 victory. This is the third consecutive year that Stanford has won from ' California in. this sport. The competition between the two universities was started in 1912. Since that time there have been twenty-seven games played. Stanford has won seventeen, tied five, and lost five. Three of the games lost were played during 1919 and 1920, when Stanford had no .soccer coach. By defeating the Californians, Stanford won the third leg on the Silvio Pellas trophy, given by Silvio Pellas. captain of the Stanford soccer team in 1913, for intercollegiate competition between the two universities. The University winning the majority out of ten games to be played, two a year for five years, will be awarded the trophy as a permanent possession. In the first game, played last year, the two universities tied, 1-1 ; in the second contest Stanford won, 1-0; in the third game, played last fall, the Cards were the victors. 2-1 ; and in the final game of this season California was defeated, 3-1. By winning the two games next year. Stanford may win permanent possession of the cup. In defeating California, Stanford also won the championship of the University and Club Soccer League for the third consecutive season, and fifteen gold soccer balls were awarded to the members of the team who had contributed most toward the success of the squad. In the three years during which Stanford has retained the title, only two games have been lost out of a total of 42 played. The varsity also won one leg on the Samuel Goodman perpetual trophy, by winning the league championship this year. The trophy was donated by Samuel Goodman, president of the Pacific Athletic Association, and chairman of the executive committee of the California Soccer Football Association. For the most part the varsity was made up of experienced men. Such players as Captain Al Masters. Elmore, ' Hayes, Green, Franklin, and Hamilton, have been on the varsity for three vears. Dwight and Deffebach have each played two years, and will be back again ne ' xt season to play for the Cards. Clark, Howe, and Quigley came up from last vear ' s freshman team, and showed up well in their first varsity year. Howe especially has been showing up to good advantage, and some experi- ' enced players who ha ' ve seen him in action, predict that he will be one of the best soccer plavers on the coast before his college days are over. The graduation of Masters, Elmore, Hayes, Green, Franklin, and Hamilton will be a severe loss to next year ' s varsity and Maloney will have a hard time to find players who will adequately fill their positions on the lineup. Masters in particular will be a loss to the team. ' He captained the sciuad during his last season, and for three years he has been the mainstay of the varsity. He played goal, and on many occasions has saved the Cards from impending defeat. Freshman soccer did not fare as well this year as the varsity, luit the yearling players have gained much valualile experience which should be of use to th possible future years of varsity competition. nem Tile 15al)es lost their first game with California hv a score of -4-0. This was due largely to the inexperience of the first year inen, some of whom had never played soccer hefore coming to college. The freshmen had had no games previously to the California contest. In second game with their Berkeley opponents the Cards won. 3-2. The Babes showed the results of good training and hard practice in this contest, and they had gotten over their earlier very obvious lack of e.xperience. Captain Campbell, Devlin. Ashley. Dobbins. Espy, Franklin. Hooker. Laughlin, McGann, Motheral. Xewland, Pond, Polland, Richardson, Roodhouse, Shillock, Showen. and Whitehead are the men who were awarded circle numerals. In order that substitutes on the teams of the University and Club Soccer League might have competition other than of their own team, a second division of the league was formed. Five clubs and the universities of California and Stanford, entered second teams. A regular schedule was played off in this division and the second string players gained valuable experience and development which may fit them for future competition in the first division. Early in the season the first year squad suffered from lack of experience and material but before the end of the season Maloney had developed a good team with excellent teamwork, and in addition he had uncovered some promising players. Next year will be a hard year for Stanford soccer fans, because of the graduation of a number of the more experienced men. The varsity lined up practically as follows for most of the games during the season: Masters (Captain), goal; Hayes and Clark, fullbacks; Walthers, Howe, and Swayne, halfbacks; Green, Franklin, Ta ' am, Deffebach, and Quigley, forwards. U.E.Clark Walthers Tucker Rogers Masters Swayne Howe U.B.Clark Fr; OiiigKy Uwight Ta ' am Elmore Johnson UUflTER PQLQ Water Polo Team Gains Second In Nationals Water polo is in ascendcncv at Stanford. Interest in it has been keen during the past year, ever since the team won second place in the national junior champion- ships in ' 1922. The season this year culminated in the trip to Chicago, where the team again took second in the championship tournament. The Olympic Club and the University of California teams had hopes of makmg the trip east The Olympics were vanquished after a hard struggle, and on March 9 in the game which was crucial, the Blue and Gold were defeated by the Cardinal team. 7-4. At the beginning of the Easter vacation, Brandsten and his squad, composed of Lacey, Austin, McCallister, O ' Connor, Fletcher, DeGroot, Schmeider, and Col- lett left for Chicago. Arriving there, the team drew a bye in the first contest, and met the team of the Illinois Athletic Club in the second round on April 2. At the end of a hard-fought contest, Stanford lost to the I. A. C. men by a score of 11 to 5, thereby losing the chance for the coveted national championship. On the next day, Stanford met the team of the Chicago Athletic Association to fight out_the tie for second. At the end of the time period of the game the score was a tie. 7 to 7. The time was extended for another three minutes. Stanford men then showed their ability to come through in a pinch. Fletcher and Austin each made a goal m the extra ' period, clinching the game and second place for Stanford. The freshman water polo team had little competition in the preliminary season, and so were an unknown quality when they played the California freshmen on March 9 The game resulted in an easy 6 to victory for Stanford. The freshman squad was made up of Mask, O ' Connor, Allen, Lewis, Langley, McGettigan, Shoe- maker, and Cole. To further encourage the liking of water sports, Brandsten recently secured a lease of properties at Searsville. where he is preparing for a successful summer season. . . Brandsten is a great believer in the use of apparatus for the trainers ot swimmers and divers. He has patented a springboard which he believes is the best m the world. MINOR SPORTS COACHING Maloiu-y. Rran.lsun, ami I); I ' art of his training for diving I .insists of exercises on a spring- l.oard mounted in a sandpile. and a belt and rope system so arranged that over, and other move- ments, can he constantly prac- ticed away from the water. In water polo, as in swimming and diving, Brandsten ' s coaching lias heen a most important ele- ment in Stanford successes. From his com]5etition in the Olympic uames and his title-holding ex- periences in Sweden, he has amassed a thorough and practical knowledge of water sports, the ai)plication of which has meant the development of such diving champions as White and Pinks- ton, and such swimmers as Nor- man Ross, to say nothing of the iinifiirnilv successful water polo suu I m mm G SWIMMERS ACHIEVE SUCCESS Swimniin- thi.s c;ir went im it- ict(iri(ius wa - tu which llie Stanliird campus lias now lieionic accustunicd. ' I iiunii)hant over the Bkie an l Gold, hii diest amoiif the colleges of the United States in the national ranking, and second in the whole country only to the Illinois Athletic Club, the swimming squad of l ' )22-23 has had a year of which it may well be proud. During the early part of the season, there was the usual routine of comljing over the new material that had come in, and seeing how far the veterans of the team had progressed since the year before. Many of the squad had secured valual)le practice during the year in life-guard service, and were already nearly in the best of shape at the start of the training period. As tlic time for the meet witli C ' alitoriiia aiii)r()aclie(l, tliere were few who (loiihted tlie outcome. I ' lranclsten ' s teams had been so uniformly successful in the ])ast that to the camjjus at large the only reasonable thing that could he expected to happen was a California defeat. Desjjite this general feeling, however, Stanford did not enter the meet with that overconfidence that so often spells defeat. When the last jubilant mermen climbed out of the waters of Encina pool on the afternoon of . pril 14. Ernst lirandsten, hard-working coach of the Stanford swim- mers, was happy. Once again Stanford had scored an aquatic victory over the L ' niversity of California in no uncertain manner. The varsity men had scored 44 ])oints to their o])ponents ' 24, and the freshmen had finished the day with a 59 to 9 victory chalked up to their credit. To make the day more satisfactory was the fact that the final results showed five new Stanford-California records established and one tied ; three new marks having been made by the varsity and the others by the In the varsit_ - conipelitiMU, California started the meet with wins in the relay and in the fifty-yard swim. l)ut from that [xiint on the Cardinal fmislu-d every race ahead of the liluc and Gold. The first record was eclipsed when Captain Charles Fletcher clipped two seconds from the former 100-yard breaststroke mark. A few minutes later. .Austin, in the 220-yard free-style event, broke the former record which he made last year, and set a new one of 2:41 2-5. Ilawley made the third record when he traveled 72 feet in the plunge for distance, a font further than the former mark made by Lyons of California in 1916. The freshmen started olT in their gala competition by setting a new relay record of 1 minute 7 2-5 seconds, the former mark being 1 :09. Then Wallace O ' Connor set a mark of 2 minutes 33 seconds for the 220-yard free-style swim, making the distance in 18 seconds less than the former record, and incidentally establishing a freshman record which is better than the varsity time in the same event. Soon after this, OCcmnor entered the UK) yard backstroke and tied the record ot 1 minute 1X4-3 seconds. The resnlts of the Cahfornia meets were as follows: VARSITY Relay— Won by California (Carter, Rau, Mitchell, Parton) 1:08 2-5. SO-yard swim— Ran (C) ; McCallister (S) ; Carter (C) :26 4-5. 100-yard breaststroke— Fletcher (S) ; Kraemer (S) ; Castkman (C). New record— 1:15 2-5. 200-vard freestyle— Austin (S) ; Flanagan (C) ; Belcher (S). New record— 2:41 2-5. 100-yard backstroke- DeGroot (S) ; Carter (C) ; Sackett (C) 1 :15 4-5. 100-yard freestyle— Austin (S) ; Rau (C) ; Wright (S) :59 4-5. Plunge for distance— Hawicy (S) ; Miller (S) ; Dyer (C). New record— 72 feet. Diving— White (S) ; Snedden (S) ; Hart (C). FRESHMEN Relay— Won by Stanford (Allen, O ' Connor, Ackerman, Baxter). New record— 1 :07 2-5. 50-yard swim— Allen (S) ; Ackerman (S) ; Seaburn (C) :27. 100-yard breaststroke— Kay (S) ; Flagler (S) ; Jacobs (C) 1:28 3-5. 220-vard freestyle— O ' Connor (S) : Langley (S) ; Normandelli (C). New record— 2 :. 3, lOO- ' vard backstroke— O ' Connor (S) ; Canfield (S) ; Legge (C). Tied record— 1 : 18 4-5. lOO- ' vard freestyle— Allen (S) ; Seaburn (S) ; Carlsmith (S) 1:02 4-5. Plunge for distance— Langley (S) ; Reynolds (S) ; Barhctt (C) 62 feet. Diving— Smith (S) ; King (S) ; Swett (C). Following the California meet, the Babes met and defeated the I ' .elmont svvini- mers by a score of 48 to 29. Every event was close, and the freshmen count this as their best competition during the season. Most of the varsity swimmers went to Chicago with the water polo team. While there, a relay team made up of Austin, McCallister, O ' Connor, and I)e(;root. swam against a good field, taking third place. The team of the Illinois Athletic Club was first, and the Northwestern University swimmers were second. The climax to the varsity season came in the annual P. A. A. meet held at San Francisco on April 20. Stanford won five of the six first places, and Austin, Kraemer and Allen took championships in the 100-yard free style, the 220 back- stroke, and the 500-yard free style swims respectively. Wayne Smith, in competition in the national low board diving meet at Los Angeles on April 26, won second place. A distinction seldom won by any university was gained this year when Stanford placed second in the A. A. U. rating for the national all-around swimming cham- pionship, with a total of 19 points. The only other two colleges who figured in the running at all were Northwestern and Yale, ' which finished fifth and sixth, respec- tively. At both these institutions, swimming is a major sport. Stanford ' s points were ' gained as follows : Second in water polo, 9 ; third in national relay, 2 ; first in 10- foot board diving (White), 5; second in low-board diving (Smith). 3. lUinois .Athletic Club was the only organization capable of surpassing this record. As a fitting climax to the .season, Al White, ' 24, retained his position as national champion of ten-foot board diving. The contest took place at Cleveland on May 3. B Q X I n G TEAM SPLITS TWO MEETS Despite the fact that ixith the varsity and fre hmaii hmit.- witli Cahlornia were called oft , due to a niisutiderstandinj, ' on the color line. the boxing team had a fairly successful year, splitting wins in two meets with the Davis I ' arm aggrega- tion and with the University of Southern California. In the first tourney, at Davis Farm on January 27. the Cardinal boxers lost five out of the seven Iwuts. In the 115-pound class Barnard (D) defeated Hard (S). Miller (D) defeated Taine (S) in the 125-pound bout. Hall (S) lost to Gerson (D) in the 135-pound bout. Stanford men were victorious in the 145- and 158- pound events, Adams (S ) downiiiL; I ' .aiita ( D i. ami Irwin ( S ) outclassin,!;- I ' .arlow (D). McKee (S) and Johns.m (Di, liravywn-hts, put on a close IkiuI, which was given to the Davis man. In the return meet, held at Stanford on March _ ' , the tahles were turned, tin- Cards takini,-- four out of the seven bouts. Mihle (D) knocked out Hard (S) in the ]15-iK)und class. Armhruster (S) sent Miller (D) out for the count in the first round of the 125-pound event. Miller had defeated the University of Cali- fornia boxer in his weight the week Ijefore. The ujjset came when Clerson (D) outpointed Captain Jimmic Ross in the 135-pound class. Two years ago Ross won a decision from Gerson, and the latter has been waiting his chance ever since. The Stanford captain, though out of condition, held up for his scheduled three rounds. Lane (S) took a decision from Johnson (D) in the 145-ixjuiid tout. In the middleweight class Irwin (S) outclassed I ' .artli (1)1, showing himself to be one of Coach Harry Maloney ' s best boxers. an I look (S) was defeated by Hagen ( D ) in the heavyweight event. During the .spring vacation, Maloney took his boxers south to meet the Uni- versity of Southern California. The Trojans made a clean sweep of the card, although the 125- and 145-pound events went an extra round for a decision. On the return tourney, April 9, the Cards reversed matters again, as they had with Davis Farm, and won all the bouts, . rmbruster ( S ) gained a decision over Far- low (USC) in the featherweight mix-up. The week liefore in Los Angeles Farlow was given the decision over Armhruster. Hall ( S i ; ained a knockout over Fox (USC) in two rounds of the bout in the Lx iK.niid .lass. Hall, who is a sopho- more, showed himself to be a worthy succc sm- of lv ss. Lane (S) outpointed Sevmour (LTSO in the welterweight event, having the best of every round. nmirctto liugtrc WRESTLING TEAM— LOST TO CALIFORNIA. 4-1. HOSEPIAN TOOK HIS MATCH FOR THIRD CONSECUTIVE YEAR. CONTESTS WITH CALIFORNIA AGGIES WERE HALXKU CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM- -EASILY WHIPPED FIR.ST J ' CALIFORNIA. S: ND SECOND WITH AND MURPHY Fl MSllEl) i 1? I i 1 i 1 ll i 1 L Wilbur 1 Hor ! ' n Myers m White 1 Smitli 1 ■ Snedck f! I Dav r GYM TEAM— LOST TO CALIFORNIA, 28-26. SCORED; SNEDDEN WHITE ' SECONl WON GOLD MEDAL ), SMITH THIRD FOR MOST POINTS CIRCLE S SOCIETY President Vice-President Secretary-Treasii HONORARY MEMBERS Thomas E. Green, ' 22 Arthur Austin, ' Zh Herbert M. Dwicht, ' 24 H W. Maloney Wi Kknst Brandsten GRADUATE MEMBERS Iere Robinson, ' 19 Philip C, Clark. ' 21 LoHiN D. Lacey, ' 21 Heaton L. Wkenx, 21 Arthur Austin, ' 23 Linn M. Farish, ' 23 Don S. Snedden, ' 23 William L. Rogers, ' 23 Alfred R. Masters. ' 23 James G. Ross. ' 23 FredL. Anderson. ' 21 Harold !• . Lynn. ' 23 NoRRis L.Welsh. ' 23 Nn-:MBERS Mark Evans, ' 21 Thomas E. Green. ' 22 GeoroE S. Clark, ' 22 JamesM. Davies, ' 22 Kin nkthShipp, ' 23 1)11.1 IV S. DeGroot. ' 23 i.iii i;r I- ' orster. ' 23 Win I M G. Bl-RKHARD. ' 23 AL.HN M.HOSEPIAX. ' 23 Hiki ' .iktM. Dwicht. ' 24 Ai.KiKT White. ' 24 Charles G. FLETtiiKR. ' 24 Iohn D. Campdell. ' 24 IDTRfl UniU€RSITU SP9RTS INTERCLASS SPORTS SHOWN ESSENTIAL Stanfunl is weak in numerical strength as comiwred to her chief rivals, and success for the Cardinal in athletic competition will depend upon the participation in sports of every man who is not a cripple, said Doctor William H. Barrow, instructor in physical education, and medical adviser of men, in an interview on the future of interclass and intramural contests. The means to hring every man into athletic competition is interclass competition, in the opinion of Doctor Barrow. Inter-organization contests insure participation for all ; interclass contests afford hii hlv developed team work and real competition. The class is a large group, a cos- nin],nlitan group, a real division of the University. As such it is a logical and sound hasis for the formation of representative athletic teams. Interclass sports are under general supervision of the varsity coaches. I think it is fair to assume that with proper support interclass athletics will in a few years develop into the real founda- tion and hackground for a successful varsity athletic system. When this system is perfected. Doctor Barrow helieves Stanford men will again he ahle to make their rivals bow before their organized strength. Here at Stanford, intercollegiate athletics, interclass contests, and intramural competition are, or should be, intimately related. Intercollegiate activity is the big brother that sets the pace in ideals and achievement for the younger brothers to emulate. We cannot all of us make varsity teams but the weakest of us can at least go out for some of the lesser teams. The nmrc nu-n we have out for any one sport, the more effort the man at the top must make t.. h(.l l his pcsition, and the greater stimulus he will get. IDTERCLflSS SPORTS INTERCLASS SPORTS REVIVED For tin- In-st time since prt ' -rusj:li_v days. Sianldvd has liad a ciiniiilctc schedule of intcrclass sports. This year teams were organized by the classes and ec|uipped by the Hoard of Control, studer.t managers and coaches were appointed for each team, and players practiced for the games with their rival classes. A system of scoring was devised whereby the interclass championship of the University can be determined. In the middle of the spring quarter the seniors were leading in the chami)ionship race, as they had 21 points. The freshmen were second with 13 ' points, so])homores third with lO l points, and the juniors at the bottom with 10 digits. Jntcrclass tennis and soccer were not yet played off. The freshmen could have won the championship by taking a first in b Jth of these events, but there was little likelilKiod that the ' _ ' ( m ' en would do m.. _ -  WgTl 11111 1 A haiulsumc silver loving (. ' Up was ol)tainc(l wilh donatKins Irom the classes and Board of Athletic Control, as a i)erpetual tn.pliy to be awarded t. . tlu- iiitc-r- class chaniiMons of the University each year. One hundred and thirty men turned out for the niterclass fnothall dunn- ' the fall quarter. The men we ' re e(|uippcd with suits and, after practicing for three weeks, the season was on. The .sophomores succeeded in defeating the freshman eleven ' 7-0, and the seniors handed the juniors the short end of a 14-0 score in the first games of the season. The champions were not decided hy the ]inicess oi a mnud n liiii, l)nt the two winning and losing teams of the first round i.ilayed each other. ' I he senior and sophoniore .i- re atiuns met for the championship and the ' 2.5 men won, 6-0. ' . large s ker ii uthall, donated by the Board of Athletic Control, w as presented to the SL ' i iiors alter the game. This trophy is per]x-tual and will not become the permanent possession of the ' 23 men. As soon as the football schedule was cdiupleted. Director C. W. Davis announced plans for an interclass basketball tourney. . first and secnud team were organized by each of the classes. The seniors again put two strong squads in the field, but it was expected that the freshmen, whose team had been training for some time, would give them some stiff competition. The basketball tournament was conducted in the form of a round robin. Both of the senior quintets came through their schedules without a defeat. The sojjho- mores won second place, with the freshmen third. Interclass track has long been a tradition at Stanford, and it was incorporated into the new scheme of interclass competition. The seniors won the annual Irish Marathon with the freshmen following in second place. Bill Richardson_, a fresh- man, turned in the fastest non-varsity time of the day. His time was 51 3-3 seconds. In the interclass track meet, the seniors easily won with 54 points to the 41 of the freshmen, wdio were their nearest rivals, as in the Irish Marathon. Bill Black made the be.st height of his career in the pole vault when he topped the bar at 12 feet 9 3-8 inches. Baseball gave the seemingly unbeatable seniors a scare from which they were hardly able to recover in time to again win the championship. .At tlie completion of the regular schedule, the seniors were tied with the juniors for first place. _ .- playofif w-as arranged, and in the final game the seniors won by defeating their ' 24 rivals. 5-4. after playing extra innings. Up to this point the seniors had been undefeated. Init when the ' had to get oft ' dry land and into the Encina pool to compete, they did not show up as well. In the interclass swimtning meet, which w as held during the winter quarter, the freshmen swamped their competitors. The yearlings won with 38 points, ' 24 took second with 28, sophomores 19, and the seniors trailed with 9 digits. W ' ally O ' Connor. ' 26. was the individual star of the tank meet, winning the 50-yard free-style, 220-yard free-style, and taking second in the backstroke, besides swimming a laj) in the relay. He accounted for thirteen points himself and helped win three more in the relay. During the spring quarter the only interclass contests were tennis and soccer. In tlie interclass tennis tournament eight men were chosen to represent each class In iti allik-tic iiiiiiiager. The jiinioi api-carcil to have the etlye on lliis i: ciu. aitliough the freshmen had a strong comhination. Class atlilctic managers were apiwinted to take charge of the arrangements for and coaching of their teams. Glenn Pollard coached and managed the winning senior comhinations. Al llnncke had charge of the juniors, Harold (lertmcnian was the sophomore manager, and Harold Edmonson managed the freshmen. Much interest was manifested in intcrclass sports during the year, and several men have been develojied who, in the opinion of the coaches, maj ' be possible varsity material in the future. Ill the o])inion of the administration, the salvation of the Stanford class spirit is its direction into channels of athletic rivalry instead of hazing and night fights, and it is not imixissible that the problem has been solved for once and all, this year, by the successful introduction of this interclass sports program. In addition to the regular i rogram of interclass competition a track meet was held between the freshman and sophomore classes on . pril 27. It was suggested that the contest might take the i)lace of the now defunct baseball fight. Handi- capiied by the absence of two of their best runners, Kerr and Coles, the freshmen were unable to make much of a showing, and the sophomores won by a score of 7H to . .?. The meet ' , ' ' - - : ' • ■ • ' - ••• ' .i noteworthy perft)rmanoes were turned in. m inTROmVJRflL SPORTS FIVE INTRAMURAL SPORTS PLAYED OFF inter-liviii!;- i;roup contests were chcduk-d and played off in Ija.skethall, l)a el)all, cross-country, swimming, and track this year. Cross-country was the first sport to attract the attention of intramural fans. Twenty-eight runners signed up to represent their living groups in the four-mile race, which finished in the Stadium as a preliminary to the Stanford-Washington football game. Charles R. Clifford, running for El Toro, breasted the tape in the lead. James W. Kerr, representing Delta Tau Delta, took second, with Clark Cypher, of Delta Chi, third. Thirty-eight organizations entered teams in the basketliall tnurnament. which was held during the winter quarter. The teams were divided into si. leagues. League champions were determined by a round robin tournament, and then the winners in the various leagues played off for the intramural basketball champion- ship. Over 250 men participated in the games, and nearly 150 contests were held. Plaques were awarded to the league winners and the University champions were presented with a pennant. Winners in the various leagues were as follow s : Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, Delta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, and Sigma Chi. Beta Theta Pi won the intramural basketball championshi]) of the University by defeating Delta Tau Delta. 11-7, a preliminary to the Stanford-California basketball game. The game was featured by close guarding on both sides, but the forward work of the Beta quintet surpassed that of the Delta Tau five. Norman Dole put up a strong exhibition at guard for the winners, and Elmer Collett showed up well in the same position for the Delta Taus. Alabaster ' and Granger did some good dribbling and passing for the Betas, although on the whole the team work was a little ragged. Baseball was well under way in the middle of the spring |uarter. with thirty- six nines signed up. Organizations showed much interest in the contests, as jira ' c- lil.l .11] liuLi ' .jic i.ite competition d- .M .i i.m ilic year ami iiuramural L-.iUot-. remained the only attractions for fans. With interclass and intercollegiate meets over, thoughts began to turn to intra- mural track. Nearly every year some unknown steps suddenly into the limelight fur some performance which he turns in during the post season intramural track schedule. Director Uavis believes that it is in these intramural contests that Stan- ford must hope to find her future varsity material, and he is designing the sched- ule in order to develop men. particularly in the events where Stanford sliowed her- self to be weak during the past intercollegiate season. IJesides the plaque to be awarded to the winning organization, individual awards will be made to men turn- ing in the best records in each event. In this way Davis hopes to encourage men unaffiliated with any organization to compete. The last contest on the intramural program was to be the swimming meet. Coach Ernst l randsten has charge of this event. A plaque is awarded to the win- ning organization. E. tension of intramural activity to other branches of sjxjrt seems unlikely at this time, as the increased interest being taken in interclass contests uses up much of the energy that would otherwise go into inter-organization meets. Nevertheless, there is little chance for intramural activitv to ' k ' crea e. lUOmenSflTHLCTICS W. A. A. CONFERENCE HELD AT STANFORD At Ihc end of the wcuncirs allilctic sca-oii, ami after the intercciUc-iate toiirna- ments had hccii played n {. Stanl ' nrd .nuen ' Athletic A sneiati.ni turned its attention to acting the part of hostess at the Western Section of Women ' s Athletic Association Conference, which was held on the campus on I ' Yiday and Saturday. AjDril 27 and 28. Sixty delegates from the colleges belonging to the Western Section of W. A. .A. were present at the convention. During the first day of the conference a joint meeting was held with the directors of the Western Society of V. A. A., who were also having a conclave at Stanford. On Friday evening W. . . A. entertained the delegates at a baiKiuet at the I ' nion. and ended the first day ' s program with a dance at the Women ' s Cluli- house. A closed meeting occupied Saturday morning. At noon a barbecue, which was given at the lake, concluded the conference program. This s])ring the women ' s ])hysical education schedule included a course i track. With the e.vception of the pole-vault and the javelin throw, the women went into training for all the field events, the 100-yard dash. J2()-yanl da h, the .|narter- mile run. and the low and high hurdles. A new track-field will be built on the hockey fields hi back ol Koble gym nasium. This year there was no intercollegiate competition in track, but class teams had a track meet at the end of the quarter. This year W. A. . . i)resented four women with block S sweater- at an I ' followiiiL; received sweaters during winter (luarti-r: M. ar- awards assembly garet Carlsmith, Strobel. ' 24. ■1 t ' 2.?, -M; d i; uuomens Ho Key HOCKEY TEAMS BREAK EVEN Intercollegiate hockey .gainer iuv this year were limited to the contest in which tlie four Stanford class teams met their respective- ojjponents from California on the morning of November 25. The Stanford and ISerkelcy hockey squads broke even. The Cardinal upperclass teams came off the field victorious, while the Cali- fornia sophomores won 4—1 and the freshman eleven defeated the Stanford first- )ear team, 3-2. In the senior match, Captain I hizel Chnrchnian made tlic iily L;oal (hn-in - the first half. The Berkeley advance was checked by the excellent work of the Cardinal backfield. Flora Scott, left-fiillback, played a steady defensive game. During the last half, each team shot tw. goals, making the tinal score i-2 in favor of Stanford. The contest between the jnnior mhi,-i.1s ended with a J -0 score. C;ililMrnia ' s strong backfield held the Stanfia ' d junior-- f. one .L;oal in the first half. During the last part of the game, Grace Strobel. center forward, -hot thmu h the enemy ' s defense for the second point. Later in the .season an interclass tournament was held to determine the l ' 22 championship. Every team played three games with the (jther class squads. I ' .y defeating the juniors and freshmen, and tying with the seniors, the sophomore team claimed the championship. The seniors ran the second-year squad a close race, winning one and tying two. The speed of the sophomore eleven and the skill of its halfback line were the essential qualities that made it the winning team. The following players were selected for the 1922 all-star hockey eleven: Seniors — Josephine Flora Scott, left fullback ; Muriel Bell, center forward ; Hazel Churchman (captain), left wing; Thelm a Tegner, substitute. Juniors — Geraldine Franklin, left halfback; Josephine Franklin, right halfback; Alice Roth, center halfback; Dorothy Overfelt, substitute. Sophomores — Doris Harter, center for- ward; Carol Davis, substitute; Margaret Watson, substitute; Carolyn Strouse, center halfback; Mildred P.urlingame, right halfback. Freshmen — Ruth Weden- lUOmenS BflSKCTBALL BASKETBALL HONORS ARE DIVIDED Stanford and Mills dividctl honors equally in this year ' s basketball tournament. The Cardinal upperclass teams won from their opponents, while the Mills sopho- more and freshman sextets defeated their Stanford rivals. Fast teamwork displayed by the senior centers and the ability of the forwards to shoot field oals helped the Cardinal squad to win an easy victory 21-2 from the Mills seniors. Inability of the Mills centers to play a fast offensive nme kept their forwards from caging shots from the field. In the junior game Josephine and Geraldinc Franklin, guards, were largely responsible for the Cardinal sextet ' s victory, 21-7. The speed and excellent team- work of the Stanford players held down Mills ' end of the score. Alice Roth did the best work at forward jxjsition, netting 14 of Stanford ' s 21 points. Even though Mills sophomores won a victory 42-14 over their Cardinal op- ])onents. the game was much faster than the score indicates. Helen Warrack, who could locate the basket from any position on the field, made 38 tallies for Mills. Tlic Stanford trc-hinen were defeated bv Mills 22-11. Poor guarding gave Mills the lead 11-7 at the end of the first Imlf. After the intermission the Cardinal S ' liards played a much faster game, but the Mills forwards broke loose and tacked 11 more points to their end of the score. Susan Hyde and Cecile I ' Vusier. ujuards, played a .splendid defensive game during; the last half. In the intercla.ss basketball tournament the junior team, hv winning fmin Xhv senior and freshman .squads and tving the score w ith thr -uphnmorc tt-am, claimed the V)23 intcrclass champinnship. The juniors tic.l the so .re 1. 1. with the sophomores. |)ile(l u]) a 44-1 score against the freshmen, and defeated the seniors, 23-10. The senior squad, which made the second best record in the interclass tourna- ment, won from the sophomores and freshmen and lost to the juniors. Third ])lace in the basketball contest went to the .sophomores. Although the freshman sextet lost all three games, in their tilts with the sophomores and seniors they were defeated by only one ]OTint. The personnel of the l ' )23 all-star basketball team is as follows: Virginia Burks. ' 23. (substitute); Hazel Churchman, ' 23; Alice Roth, ' 24; Geraldine Franklin, ' 24; Josephine Franklin, ' 24; Grace Strobel, 24; Eunice Biddle, ' 24; Polly Learnard, ' 2 : Dorothy Dahler, ' 23, (substitute) ; Cecile P ' eusier. ' 26. (sub- stitute). WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION President Vice-Presil Secretary Treasurer Eunice Biddle, ' 24 Josephine Franklin, ' 24 Laura Kennedy, ' 24 Kathleen Evans, ' 24 Senior Junior SOFHOMC Fresh m; CLASS REPRESENTATIVES Joyce Robson Alice Roth AROLAN StROUSE Ruth Snedden SPORTS MANAGERS Hockey . Basketball Swimming Tennis . Archery . Hiking . Thelma Tegner, ' 23 Mary Learnard, ' 23 Doris Stevenson, ' 22 Virginia Burks, ' 23 Anna Merrill, ' 24 Hazel Churchman, ' 23 suji mmi nc SWIMMING TEAMS SPLIT HONORS Stanford and California each claimed an equal share of the honors in the women ' s swimming tournament, which took place at P.erkeley on the morning of A])ril 21. The Cardinal underclass team defeated their lilue and Gold opponents 42-26. and the Berkeley ui)i)erclass squad ran away from the Stanford swimmers with a 55-9 score. The underclass team won only three first places, but were able to run up a high .score hv taking second and third place in nearly all the events. Lois W ' ilhur took first place in the 50-yard breaststroke. and also captured the diving honors. Marian Roades. the only other Cardinal swimmer who secured a first place, won the plunge for distance. The underclass relay team, composed of Kuth ' ri lenburgh. Adelaide Kelly. Marian Roades. and He ' rmine W ' ocker, won from tiu- i ' .erkeley squad, and finished the race in 1:11 2-5. Stanford underclass swimmers acquired second ])Iace in every event. Ruth Wendenlmrgh finished second in the 25-yard freestyle, and Mal)el McKibbin took third. Margaret Watson got first and second jilaces in the 50-yard breaststroke. In the 50-vard freestyle. Hermine Wocker came in second, and Ruth ' redenburgh finished third. Anne Stewart won second place in the ])Iunge for distance. Marian Roades and Hermine W ' ocker took second and third, res])ectively. in the 25-yard backstroke, and Mabel McKibbin and Ruth ' redenburgh came in second and third in the 75-yard freestyle. Carolan Strouse took second in the diving events. The Stanford upperclass team ofi ' ered little competition against the Blue and (Jold swimmers. The Berkeley women cai)tured first place in every event, and second place in everything excei)t the plunge for distance, which went to Dorothy Brenholtz. Sidney Hawkins came in first in the 5()-yar(l breaststroke. but was disqualified for touching only one hand at the finish. .She also took third place in the diving events. Virginia Burks finished third in tiie 25-yard l);ukslroke. the 50-yard freestyle, and the 25-yard freestyle. The relay team In-t to the Blue ami (lold. Previous to this Vfur. it has liufii the custom to sflirt Inur class teanis to enter the swimming tournament against C ' ahfornia. This si)ring it was decided that only two squads should compete in the meet. At the beginning of the spring (|uarter. swimming trvouts were held for the California contest, and four class teams were, made up from the women who qualified. The best swimmers were chosen from the senior and junior teams to compose the upperclass squad. The sophomore and freshman women who had done the best work in the swimming jiractices were picked to compose the underclass team. During the latter i)art of May. the four class teams Cduiiieted in .n tciurne In decide this year ' s swimming champions. The class s(|uads enlereil contestants in the freestyle strokes, the breaststrokes, the backstrokes, and the diving events. The schedule as given out during the first of May was as follows: May 15: freshmen v. sophomores; juniors v. seniors. May 17: fre.shmen v. juniors; sophomores v. seniors. May 22: freshmen v. seniors; sophomores v. juniors. (In May 26 there was to be held the annual field day. This is the day on which takes place every year competition between classes in swimming, track, archery, and tennis. It is more for ds(.o ering noteworth individual performances, how- ever, than for establishing interchss chamjjions especialh in swimming. In tennis there are held the interthss finals This ear singles onU were phved. doubles • ■ -- T. — « . St.inlL-v Kellv Wibur Stevenson L.Rurlingan,,- ren lenburgh Ilo soke Renzd Stronse M.l!.,rling.-in.e IViandsten McKil,l,e,. fl R C H e R y ARCHERS REPEAT LAST YEAR ' S VICTORY Stanford archers had little trouble in rejjeating last year ' s feat of winning from Mills, and taking nine out of twelve places in the spring archery tourney. Senior and junior squads won all three places from their rivals, and the freshman team rated first and sec- ond honors. Poor shooting on the part of the sojihomore women gave Mills the first two places a!id forced the Stanford women to take third. ' irginia P.urks, shooting for the 192?) squad. l)iled up the highest .score that has ever been re- corded in an archery contest by making 191 points on .V) out of 40 arrows. Mary Learnard ranked second among the senior contestants with 96 points, and Carolyn Willis fini.shed third with 91 tallies. For the junior team Yvonne Pastiuale won first place with a .score of 141. Madeline Ziller came in for second-place honors with 130 points. The third best record wms made by Kathleen 1-3 vans, who had 127 counts to her credit. Tiie sophomore archers could not find the target. ' ili c Beckman won third place for the 1925 squad 1 running up a score of 93 points. Stanford freshmen defeated the Mills archers li taking first and second places in the contest. Millison Hardy placed first with 145 tallies and Pauline MofFman came in second with 123 points. The tournament was held on the University of California campus on the morning of . pril 21. Interest shown in archery has been increasing with the number of successful seasons, and the next vear should see a duplication of past events. Carlsmith Steve WOMEN ' S S SOCIETY Prksiiiknt Sf.ckktaky-Tii Doris Stkvkxson-, ' 22 Hazel Churchmax. ' 2,5 MEMBERS Mildred Maurer, ' 21 Mari.aket Carlsmith, ' 2,3 M M ' ln-, Mnm,,,!!. ' 22 1).,|.|- MM ■.-nX, ' 22 Al i ' , n I HI X,, LOVE. ' 22 11 w.H 1 Ml iM iiman, ' 23 Mary Llar.naru, ' 23 Eunice Biddle. ' 24 Geraldine Franklin, ' 24 Josephine Fraxklix, ' 24 Alice Roth, ' 24 fl eo D€ m I e = flDminisTRflTivie oiviisions The University As a Modern Business Unit Tilt ' administrative (.iViccrs (if the L ' niversity are grouped into three main classes : the r.iianl (if Trnstees, I ' nuersitv ( )fficers, and Department Executives. From the trustees the primary authority and power comes. The fifteen officers of the Univer- sitv are distrlhuting jioints for this source (if authority, and the forty-three depart- ment executives have charge of the de- tailed needs of the University subdivi- sions. Comparison of a university w ith a luodern business corporation shows that for the smooth working of the whole edu- cational plant, a large amount of organi- zation and division of duties is essential. The original endowment of Stanford, ]ilus comparatively minor additions, totaled twenty-eight millions. Industrial concerns of such capitalization are exam- ples of the trend toward efficient organi- zation. The university may well be studied as a large unit whose parts work together in harmony because of intelligent grouping and distribution of power. That the finished product is men instead of materials does not lessen the necessity for modern organization. SCHOLASTIC DepflRTmenis Statistics which arc availalilu cwry ila -, Init usually not uncuvcrcd, may prove rather startling to those unfamiliar with the scope of the scholastic departments. To many people, Academic Council denotes a small group who gather around a table; yet there are listed one hundred and fifty-eight members. The Council, how ever, does not include all the officers of instruction and administration, for there are three hundred and thirty-six of these. This number does not include the ninety-two assistants in instruction and research. . s to the courses offered by these professors ami instructors, the total number mounts u]) beyond the most c inservative guess of the uninformed. During the ■. RT OF TIIK KOUIPMENT WITH W IIUI IK.NT OF I ' llV.SICS, 1I. S M. DE IMI ' OKT MEC1I. NISMS Win FORGE TUU ' HAMMER USED l.N DRAWING OLT l.ARGK. MATERIAL. A GREAT LAIiOR SAVER. DOING . S Ml ' CH IN FIVE MINUTES AS A MAN CAN POrND OI ' T IN IIOI-I! LIQUID -MR MACIHNK IX TllK til E.M I S ll{ - LAIiOR.ATORV. LKJUID AIR IS USED AS A COOLING AGENT IN MANY CIIEMICAL INXESTIi; TIONS CHEMISTRY RESEARC m FOREGROU N D 1 BsrnKcy 1 ■ifilUX ' ASSAY i. i;oi; i ASSAYS OK COLl LABORATORY University year 1922-23, there were one thousand and ninety-two different courses offered, averaging nearly one course for every two students enrolled. This total does not include the numerous classes in the Physical Education departments. The Romanic Languages department led in numher, offering ninety-eight different courses, while the English department came in a close second with nmety-seven Third place went to the Classical Literature department, with a total of si t fi e APPARATUS FOR K.VKE JKRK KXPKK I.MK.VT SYLIIOI.OCY DEPART.ME.XT LAI ' .ORATORV I r-TT-r  ai « ' iK f --rryVtws: CUAPinr ART STUDIO. DESIGNS FOR TEXTII.F.S. WAI.I. HANGIXCS. AND EMI ' .ROinF.KIES TllK WORK OF EI.EMENTAKV STUDENTS IN COLOR DESKIN, llANCilM ' . OX TIIK W All.. iERor;i.vpiiic? Tii.sT MUST r.v. F. rKD v.y those whose rnou-E is m.xtiiematic: univjeRSiry uniTS The Wide Scope of the University ' s Interest Under the headitiij of University Units may be grouped those sections of the University, which, not directly connected with any scholastic department, nevertheless are intended primarily for the Stanford student ' s broader education. There is no course, for instance, given in the Art Gallery ; but for any Stanford man or woman who wishes to enter, there lies there a great store of information. Furthermore, this information is not static and never-changing, as that in text- books often is, hut has a vital interest of its own by reuMin of its varying nature. ACCESSION ROOM OF OVER 100.000 ITEMS HAVE P. SSED THREE YEARS. The Library is a unit too well-known to require comment. Its size may be appreciated from the fact that twenty-three names are listed under its section of Assistants in Administration. The Mu.seum is a building which cannot be appreciated in one visit, yet its fame has travelled over the country to such an extent that visitors from the East make a s]5ecial point of taking a trip to Stanford to see it. On the night of A])ril 14, thieves broke into the Museum and looted it of miscellaneous valuables. .Mthough the damage at the time was estimated at close to $5,000, the value of the Museum to the casual observer was imi aired but little, due to the great amount of treasures it possesses which were left untouched. .Significant of its fame was the remark of a disgruntled Easterner the following Monday when he found the Museum closed for inspection by the deputies: I ' ve traveled four thousand miles to see this building, and I ' m not going back until it ' s opened. In mentioning University units, the one from which perhaps the most cheering news of all has come deserves special mention. The fire department, under the efficient eye of Marshal Ed Lamb, ])rocured a new Seagrave fire-fighting machine of the most modern type, with the result that a 20 per cent reduction on insurance jxjlicies for campus buildings was granted by the 15oard of Underwriters. Clean-up days with which the campus is now familiar have aided in clearing Stanford of a fire menace which was a deadly serious one when at its worst. Eire-traps have been converted into safe dwelling places by a systematic campaign, in which the students have taken an active ]r. rt. THE GOVERNOR STANFORD. FIRST PASSFN(;ER LOrOMOTl E OF THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILWAY. SHIPPED TO CALIFORNIA BY W.- Y OF C PE HORN. AND NOW AN EXHIBIT IN THE STANFORD MUSEUM. . 1 .MKET A.Mi LOl NCK IX COMFORT. e LPi ss es THE GROWTH OF CLASS ACTIVITY The past year has seen a marked revival in the spirit of competition between classes in a healthy way. This competition has been fostered by the administration of the University as being beneficial to the campus as a whole. President Wilbur believes that a revival ofclass competition in sports will be in a large measure a solution of any athletic problem that may face Stanford due to lack of material. Having a wider range than intramural sports, class athletics enlists the active sup- port of any students who are in the slightest degree interested. Class functions still hold the same important part in the University life that they have in the past. Senior Week. Junior Week, and the week of the sophomore cotillon and play are carried along on a support that comes, not alone from the class most concerned, but in addition from the rest of the student body. There has been talk of establishing a similar custom for the freshmen by placing the date of any dance the freshmen may give in the same week as the issuance of the fresh- man green sheet edition of the Daily Palo Alto, and adding a freshman farce. In this way the necessity of class cooperation and group spirit would be inculcated early in the college career of Stanford men and women. this is the second year of publication of senior pictures in the Qtad in place of the old custom of printing junior pictures; and this year the number has jumped from the 400 in the last annual to 460 in the present l ook, indicating that the growth of the University is proceeding in a faster measure than many suspect. Further increase in the size of the graduating classes in the same jiroportions leaves room for wonderment where the space will be found in the annuals of twentv vears from now. s e n I Q R s SENIOR WEEK CHAIRMEN SI-.MOR HALL Myron RF.F.n SENIOR FARCE C. W. MiDGLEY Al.l-.UXr RECEPTIOX Margaret Whitk ENDOWMENT Frederick Loom is SENIOR PROM Dudley DeGroot PROGRAMS Garrett Elmore CLASS PLATE Richard Johnson H .V7 ' 0« .(.V Kenneth Stewart CLASS II ILL Katherine Beswick CLASS ORATOR Knox Miller CLASS POET Harold Davis PERMANENT CLASS SECRETARY Mervin Rosenbal ' m MEMBER OF THE ALIMNI ADIISORY BOARD Dudley DeGroot Al Masters Mervin Rosen baum Myron Reed Tom Irwin Nelson N Jihah Occidental College, Los Angeles. 1921 Geology and Mining Sc Alexander, Alilon Riverside Pre-Clinical Encina Club Transferred fro ■niversity of Califoin Alexander, Walter S. Los Angeles MccUauical Engineering Beta Theta Pi Transferred from California Institute of Ted nology, Pasadena, 1920 Mechanical Engineering Sc ciety; Charm School (3) He Who Gets Slapped (4) Soccer Squad (4) Amberg. Gustav A. Anderson, Frederick L. For. 7lici}iical Engineering le S Society: Alph Sigma: Pi Alpha Phi ihman Basketball; Circl in Soccer: Block S i B.isketball (3, 4) Appk ' whitt, Samuel P. Douglas, Arizona Gcoloffy Phi Kappa Sigma )g ' and Minin Track Manage- Arimori, Yoshikiyo Okayama, Japan Austin, Art hur Oakland Austin, Laura Virginia Fresno Cii-il Engineering Roble Club Transferred from Fresno Junior College, October, 1921 Wranglers Bacigalupi, Riim San Francisco Botany Encina Zoology Club; Cere Francais liky, Marguerite Doris Red Bluff Education-Graphic Art Alpha Omicron Pi lialmat, Cecil Hastings Spokane, Washington Mechanical Engineering Encina Club Los Arcos Barnes, Edwin Rex ford Ceres Harnett. Charles W. Santa Rosa Chemistry Alpha Kappa Lambda Phi Lambda L ' psilon Barricklow, Eljah Turlock English Gamma Phi Beta m i Bakmaii. AllxTt J..lin Kncina Club Haylcy. ArnuUl U. 1,1, AngcK-s Alpha Sigma I ' ll Sword and Sandal , 1 Head; Glee Club l| , d, ,-; ' •KnntlKdl ' mh,W . . I ' .jl ' : ■ku,, K,i„ Kuli.s- (,.«,,■■; ' ■! |. (h, a Ladder ; A i-l.ii.l lln.ilM,- -F, .all FrutliKs ut IVJJ ' ' ; Di.ector -KnightK- Kiiighf Bcardsley, Frank Dey Taylorsville Mechanical Enginecrm,j Sequoia Club Transferred from Iowa State College, 1920 Bell, Muriel Frances Beltz, Samuel Stewa Pasadena Economics Palo Alto W edict, Howard C. Palo Alto Chemistry Benson, Allen O. rntington, Pennsylvai Civil Engineering Sigma Nu Bernstein, Frank S. San Francisco ' .erry, Othmar Berarde Bertrand, DeWitt C. ;- . i Aberdeen, Washington Mechanical Engineering El Campo ;b, i-]uU (3, 4); President ;,,n,fM,d F. E. Society (4); J Beswick, Katherinc Roble Cap and Gown; English Clul Bcutcr. Paul Henry Los Angeles Econottiics Encina Club Circle S in Cross Couni (2); Trelawney of i Wells : Maid to Ordi (3); Knightie Knight (- Chmn. junior Lake Spo Bianchi, Marie Lucy Biggar, Virginia Kcitli Los Angeles Economics Kappa Kappa Gamma Transferred from Mills College, 1921 Black, William M., Paso Robles Ciz-il Engineering Delta Upsilon :. E. Society; Skull nakes; Pi Aliiha Phi; I ( Inha I ' h ack (2) Blacker, Carroll C. Bakersfield Cifit Engineering ' ■ Encina Club iford Glee Club; Los • Club; Stanford Band lilackman, Birt GrifTin Ogden, Utah Economics Encina Club Arcos Club; Rifle Club ¥ Blcy Irma Lillian San Francisco Spanish Roble Transferred from rsily of California. 1922 sh Club. Secretary (4) ithe. Lysle Palo Alto English W. C. A. Cabinet (1. 2. 3, 4i; Hockey Team (2) j illot. Margaret Judd m N Bnoksiii, JcaniU ' ttc I.nui Philosophy Gamma Phi Beta Beauty Chorus; Junior I) eras (2,3); Ram ' s Hc Chorus; Carnivals (2, } Pony Chorus; Football Sho (3); Senior Reception Coi Booiic, Andrew R. San Diego Economics-Law Stanford Union Club Transferred from San Diego Junior College. Sigma Del El jtli. Bates Walter Bootli. Edwin Spci Ruseberg, Oregon Bowen, Chester S. North Vancouver, B. C icina Club Debating Soci ea iwcn, Theodore E. Twin Kails, Idaho Encina Club iro Club; Phi Delta Phi; Sigma Rho; Press Club; rtising Club; Secretary A. S. S. U (4) radsliaw, William L. )itan; Masonic Club; nia Debating Society; ited Federal Students Bramkamp, Paul Jay San Jose Mechanical Engineering Encina Club Mechanical Engineering Branimcr, George Edncatinn Brinkmaii, Newton Sacramento Sequoia Club ss Treasurer (4); Elec- 1 Hoard (4); Senior Con- Brolyer, Cecil Rohc Brown, E. Stanley Winncmucca, Nevada Chemistry Sequoia Club Brown, Grace Mary Mathemalics Delta Delta Delta Cap and Gown; Y. W. C. A (1,2); Vice-President Scl.u hert Club (2,3); Yello« Jacket (2) ; Treasurer Worn en ' s Conference (3); Junioi Representative. Execuiivi Committee (3); Executivt Committee Women ' s Pagt-aiii (3); Women ' s Council (4): Senior Flower Committet (4); Senior Reception Com mittee (4) Brown, Merwvn Harold ,vn. Williain Hon San Diego Ecotwmics Phi Delta Theta Mgr. Baseball ' .runet, Harold Joseph Portland, Oregon Palo Alto Bugbcc, James McKean Hollywood Geotogy Sigma Alpha Epsilon lundick, Susie Pearl Roble Club . and Gown: Theta Sigma : Daily Palo Alto (3, 4); men ' s Editor, and Asso I Editor (4); Executive nmittee (4); V. W. C. A. iinet, Treasurer, and Un- k ' raduate Representative : Vice-President of Class : Committee of Fifteen ; American Journalists ' Bunt Robert Gillis Santa Monica Economics Delta Kappa Epsilon Economics Club I ' .urdick, Donald Lowe San Jose |si I ?iii-kc, S. Walter S;iii FrancisL-o Gi-oloijy Burklianl, William ( .. San Francisco Medicine Encina Club EI Cuadro Club; Circle S ' Society; Omega Upsilon i ' ln Circle S in BoNing (2.3) Block Numerals Freshmai Basketball and Baseball Burks, Virginia Venice Ecouomics iurnett, Clarence Ir Ely, Nevada Medicine U. S. Naval Acailcmy, Omega Upsilon Phi; St; onglis, John H. Jusli, Lorc-n SiiiUli Boise, Idaho echanical Enginccriiuj Encina Club lanical Engineering Butler, Edward W. San Diego Mechanical Engineerino Sequoia Club ss Treasurer (2); Glee ,l (2); Election Board Senior Control Commit- (4); Senior Hall Com- ivl. Diiiiald Hcnncgen San Jose Mechanical Emjineering Cain, Brighton C. Ziiology Club; Lens Cameron, Francii m -■• - ' 1 1 Cami., Jerry P. Hatticsbiirg, Mississippi Eccwmics Sigma Chi Transferred from Washington and Lee Pi Alpha Xu Card, George Holt Denver. Colorado Eco«o mcs Chi Psi Transferred from University of Colorado. October, 1921 Carlson, Osborn Herman Kingsburg Ciz-il Engineering Encina Club Civil Engineering Society Carver, Roy William Artesia Economics Sigma Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Phi; Block ' ' S in Baseball (2, 3. 4) Cassel, Chester I.os Angeles Geology Sequoia Club Transferred from Occidental College. 1920 Geological and Mining I lialmers, Harry Hollis Salt Lake City, Utah Law Kappa Alpha ' - Kh Tir ' ' ■ ( hamberlin, Joseph C. Salt Lake City, Utah Entomology Lobata Lodge Transferred from 1 .nversity of Utah, October, 1920 I ns and Plate: Zoology I lub; Associated Federal Students I harles. Shirley Weston Palo Alto French w man ' s Athletic Associa- :n (1); Numerals in Hockey (1,2) vnn Christierson, F. F. San Jose i Psychology 1 Encina Club Churchman. Hazel ' . Santa Rosa Zoology Roble Club w :..c„-s S Society; Hoc- .4 ; All-Star Hockey (3,4); Basketball (1. 4); All-Star Basketball 1 (4): Sub on All-Star .tballTeam (1.3): Base- : .2); Women ' s Athletic ..ation Hiking Mgr. (4) 9 a riniiinHiinimnj] a |: Claiicv, Edward Bisclictt ' ' 1 Clark, Howard Marshall Ashland, Ohio Economics San Diego -mi Phi Delta Thcta Plii Kappa Sigma ■ J m ll.iiuTMer and CofTin; Eco- nomies Club Clapp, Kdwiii Roosa Santa Rosa Exghsh Sequoia Club English Club; Cardinal StalT; Spectator Staff (4) z f% Clarke, Bniiita Fravel San Jose History Koble Club Cleaveland, Norman Clark, Dorothy Louise flA iFm Berkeley Mechanical Engineeruig Pctaluma History rnm m- Sigma Chi m. H Pi Kappa Tau; Mechanical Roble Club — • H L-m KuEineerin Society; Pi Transferred from LJ Alpha Phi; Ram ' s Head Mills College. 19JJ Schubert Club mi 111; Track (I); Cross-country iJl: niock S in Football (4); Basketball ii) Clark, Everett Leonard mm v Fresno ■ H W m Conard, Harold Shaver Ci-il Engineering ■ r H B rV San Diego Encina Club Al3l A LS C.f.V Engineering Transferred from Delta Chi Fresno Junior College, W2 H W rM Civil Engineering Society WTJ «9 Clark, George Dickson m% WM Coplen. James Ballon Menlo Park K 1 Corona Civil Engineering ■b 1 ■ I H Economics Theta Xi L. 1 Delta Chi Civil Enginering Society; Circle S in Soccer (.1); Block S in Track (4) K A _ l Transferred from KJ ■Kl University of California, 1922 Cornell, Elton Fred Costello, Lorenz C.iii Claire-. Wisconsir Coulter, James Sclioll Fiankfort. Indiana Hconomtc, Sequoia Club Diego Junior College. 1920 Club: Nestoria De Tr cty Coulthurst, Lawrence J. San Diego Chemical Engiticcring Phi Kappa Sigma Transferred from San Diego Junior College, 1921 Alpha Chi Sigma: Varsitj Basketball Squad (4); Varsin Baseball Squad (3) Covey, Frederick A. Friend, Oregon Mechanical Engineering Sequoia Club Masonic Club; Treasurer Se quoia Club (2); VicePresi dent Sequoia Club (3) m t ' raig, Joseph Allen Piedmont rhyiiology-Mcdicine Kappa Sigma randall, Richard R Los Angeles Phi Kappa Sigma ;.iskclball Manager (4 Crase. Herbert R. Los Angeles Physiology-Medicine Encina Club Transferred from Iniversitv of Southern Cilifornia, 1921 Craven, Leonard T. Spokane, Washington Economics-Law 19 Cabrillo Transferred from niversity of Washington. 1921 Cravens, Robert L Los Angeles Economics Zcta Psi ill and Snakes: Phi Phi: Mpha Phi: Block S in tlall (2, 3): Freshman !..ill: Senior n,ill Com- i.h; Executive Committee (2) M Cundali, Kenneth Nc Chemical Etigtu Davis. Arcliibald W N ' utlcy. New Jcrse; Davis, Harold H Salt Lake City, Vl: Sequoia Club Transferred from deAberle, Sophie Slanforti Universitj ChemistrvMclicne Alpha Phi DcGroot, Dudley Sargent Sigma Nu Quadrangle Club; Skull Snakes; Circle S ciety; Phi Phi; Pi Ah Phi; Pi Kappa Tau; Bl. S in Football (2, 4); Captain (4); Dlock in Basketball (2); Circle in Swimming (2. 3); Wa Polo (2); Freshman N merals in Football; IVaski ball. Swimming. ,i Polo; Men ' s (n- DcVault, Ayleft French lioisc. Idaho Mechanical Engineering Encina Club Transferred from University of Idaho, 1920 F.lectrical Engineering _ So- ciety; Mechanical Engineer- ing Society; Masonic Club; Stanford Band Dexter, VVinfield Curtis Portland, Oregon Mechanical Engineering Kappa Sigma Masonic Club Dobbel, Lillian May l Donohoe, Thomas Miller Cor.lova, Alaska Poliucal SoenccLa-.e Chi Psi Phi Alpha n-Ita: Alpha Pi Zeta QQ m H?VE-flf., feralfi J- ' 0H sc QO A E s . CaESDs Eoi.-. lOG - ; dirnr t.mcii rnmnr En Faucettc, Thomas F. A M WIk Rcxburg. Idaho M 1 9 EnglishJournalism Palo Alto E ' M ■ '  H Transferred from College- of Idaho. 1921 P ' 1 ' W Stanford Advertising Club: Cosmopolitan Club K -a H B iP A P MM Favillc. Richard W. . ■r mm w Portland. Oregon Mechanical Engineering H Hli Beta Thcta Pi v l V H Skull and Snakes; Pi Kappa Tau; Pi Alpha Phi; Mechani- K ' f ' H v l cal Engineering Society; R. ■ C H W H O. T. C. Lieutenant (4); mock S in Football (.1. -4 1; l fln r ' J H Freshman Football; Miliiarv Ball Committee Chairman ( J. AnM 1 Ni H 3. 4); Labor Day Committi-e a. -1): Tunior Opera (1); vyp wi V Basketball (.1); Prom Con,: ■ft MHft Fenncr, Beatrice Alclht-a Qi3 Palo Alto Mathcmalus iS Fentoii, Frank L. Ua Mm Santa Rosa Bik ' ik English Wr k wT H Encina Club III ! 1 il Tra nsferred from University of Washington. 1921 IL 1 i H Los Arcos; English Club; Bt A m iS Glee Club; Spectator Staff; (4) WkS mW Ferry. Mabel Farwell San DiiRo m mmt . jm m English H P l Roble Club M l 1 Transferred from F H F = M University of California Alpha Delta Pi; Tailor w l ■ j H Made Man (3) Football Show (3): Up on a Ladder (3); President Schubert Ml . fl jJ H Club (4); Senior Control r r B Committee: Senior Farce Committee | l- ' ielcl. John. II I i.lelphia, Pennsylvania C ffi«ijtr.v Palo Alto ! Ir mia Debating Society; ' - Club; 1923 Sophomore t ating Team; Chess Team; Vellow Jacket Frances Cecilia PaU. Alto sher, Frederic R. Manila. P. I. Economics Delta Upsilon K-r and Coffin; Ram ' s Art Editor Chaparral; -t Editor 1924 Quad L er. Willi; Sequoia Club ransferred from a Junior College, 1920 Forster, Albert Stanford Universily Ceotogv Theta Xi m m (iardncr, Rcmictli D. Oakland Prc-CUnical Encina Club M.kurs Club: Mason Inl,; Omega Upsilon Pli French. David Dv irner, Dwight A. Grinnell, Iowa Economics Palo Alto (.ai-ten, Ruth Muriel French, Samuel Wilcox Ashtabula, Ohio Mechanical Eitginccring Preclinical Roble Club Transferred from liversity of Southe California, 1921 linen ' s Conference ( Fucndeling, Mervyn yer, Harold Clinton Burley, Iflaho Econoinics Encina Club Fuller, Lon Luvois El Centro Law Delta Chi m Gibbons, M. Virginia San Francisco English Sigma Kappa 1 Vt JUUJ Gill. I ke S. Palo Alto Encin.l Cliil. Gillen, James Simon Sheboygan, Wisconsin Glenn, Paul Eugene Hakersficld Grace, Thclma San Francisco History Chi Omega Graves, Dick Wcdgcwi Ogdcti. Utah I ' hilosophy Phi Kappa Psi Gravestock, Warren E. ■ Palo Alto Economics Green. Copeland Long Beach MccUaHicat Engineering Encina Club Green, Frances Myers Cikndalc Uoblc Club Green, Thomas E. Stanford University Economics Greene, Helen Hartley Columbia. Missouri Zoology Kappa Alpha Thela Transferred from I ' nivcrsity of Missouri, 1921 Cap and Gown; Zoology Club; Y. V. C. A. Cabinet; Wom- ; Hockey (3); vice Doard; Senior Week %1 m , RaymoiKl G js, M,.iitana Grcgcrsen. AUk-.I I Gregory, Elizabctl Pasadena Hislorv-L.i:.- Griffin. Carnill Bi Granville. Ohio Griiistead. Marion O Palo .Mto CliemistryMclical Delta Upsilon ( .riissman, Sydney S. Los Angeles Economics Union rUil) Gurlev, Lee Sivlcy Redwood City Mechanical Engineering Sigma Nu -aisity Track (2, 3, 4) : W- silv Cross Country Tean Irma Siglinde til, Mildred Jessica HaiTiill. James M. klahoma City, Oklahon Geology Stanford Union Transferred from Oklahoma University ' III Kappa .- lpha; Signi Hamilton, Kriicst Pasadena Mcclianical EngincerinK Beta Thcta Pi Mechanical EngineerinR S cietv. Circle S in Swimming Hancock. Vckla Hanson. Frederic UooK- Los Angeks Mining Encina Club ?ferr Harris, Edwin Lo Harris. Helen Estellc Los Angdcs Graphic Art Kappa Kappa Camni.i iwley, James LeRoy Palo Alto , .hanical Engineering . Palo Alto .nical Engineering So uty. Circle S in Swimming Heater, W. Earl Rilzvillc. Washington Geology Heaton. Korris Paul Paso Rohles Encina Llub Transferred from liversitv of California Heckcndorf, Percy C. ..• ; ' San Jose Low Encina Club ,11 and Snakes: Phi Delta S ■• in Baseball (.2. 3. 4) ' 4 IKiiderson, Alex D.. Jr. Lovelock. Nevada Geology Sigma . lpha Epsilon Hcrriiii ' ton. Don.thy 1 Og.U-n. Uiah French Alplin ().iiici .n Pi Hei-n.n, Jessie Ktucrs .«s AngiKs Eitglisl, Uoblc Hall Transfiir.d fn,m University of Califciniir Sonthern liranch Hess, Chester Newt. Og.l.-n. L-lah linghsh Stanford Ad Club, Signi: Delta Chi; Ram ' s Head Sd cietv: American Journali f Assoc.; Band (1); Cardina Staff (.1, 4); Manager Cardi nal (4); l ' ..otl,all Shmv (3) niec Clul. (1); Ram ' s Ilea, Edward, Jr Hicks, James Hcnide San Diego Economics Clii Psi HiRgiiis, Clyde Randolph Redwood City Mechanical Engineering Redwood City Hilgescn, James Mayfield Pre-Clinical Palo Alto Transferred from Northwestern University, October. 1921 ,Iasonic Club; Chairman Ex .laday. Perry W; ecology San .lose HoUingsworth, Lytic W San Jose Mechanical Engineering Theta Chi Mechanical Engineering So ciety; Circle S in IJi pound basketball (3, 4) mes, William Willart Clii Omi-ga ransfcrrcd from .Tsity of Colorado Committee (2): Y. V. C. World Fellowship Commit (4): Stanford - Califor Hoscpiaii. ' aughn M. PhysiologyMcilical Encina Club :i Cami o; Masonic Chi ircle S Society: Cin S in Wrestling (2. 3, 4 Captain Wrestling Team (1, 2, 4) Howarth. Kiiigsley K. Kitchlmrg. Massacluisetts Thcta Delta Chi Transferred from University of Pennsylvania Assistant Manager of Sp. tator Staff (4) Hiiglx ' S. Frcikrick M. Palo Alto Economics Delta Chi Hurtl. Too Bry MeiHord, Orego licouomics Alplia Sigma P Iiitchcns, Francis Case Los Angeles Classical Literature -Encina Club I ' .ela Kappa: 1923 Quad Staff (3) Ilydc, William Avery Los Altos Chemistry Encina Club Phi lieta Kaiipa Igo, All)ert J. Long Beach C ir iij r,v Stanford Union Club Transferred from liversitv of Southcrr California Imokawa, John Kiiclii Fukuoka, Japan Mechanical Engineering Japanese Student Club r)4 li! Wells Williams vita Tau Delta Irwin, Thomas George Twin Falls, Idaho Eco)iomi A- Journalism fs. Wright Compton GcoU.-y Joliii, Harold Thumas Flo Colorado Mechanical Engineering Encina Club 1. E. Society: E. E. Society; rcakers Club: Masonic Club; Circle S in Soccer (4) Johnst Mechanical Enginct Encina Club El Campo; E. E. S M. E. Society; Mason Johnson, Wanda Ontario ihnson, Willard :-Chairnian (4) ; s, Evelyn Ma Santa Clara Judah, Nelson Van Los Angeles Economics Delta Upsilon Alpha Phi; Phi Phi; ill and Snakes; Interfra- nity Conference; Track ) ; Block S in Track Kaseberg. Helen H. Portland, Oregon Mathematics Roble Club Keller. Walter Paul Porllnn.l. Oregon Sigma Alplia Epsilo Kellogg. Dorothy W. Kappa Allilia Tin Kcngla, Blanche M. Kennedy. Laura . Pal.) . lto . Economics is r ' Women ' s Economics Clul) !? President Women ' s Eco ' S nomics Club (4): Secretar l ' W. . . A. (-1) ; IIockL-y Tear Kiggens. Clarence K Kilpatrick, Wylie New York Cily l.au-Folitical Science Encina Club l. ro Club; Phi . ; Sigma Delta ■ I ,S E )a Kho; .: Mnviness Manag I ' l. ' .i Class Pn-l.U-nt Daily Palo Alto (1, 2): News Editor (2) King, Donald Eliot Porterville Medicine Mayflcid ;i.e Club; Phi Chi King. John Preston Jasper. .-Mabania Palo Alto The Phi; Ma LMiih King. Raymond Irvin Porterville Mayfield iiigrev. Waive I.otlia Kirkwood, Arthur C. Colorado Springs, Colorad Mechanical Engineering Phi Kappa Psi American Society MechaniL-; Engineers; Swiin ball Knapiii ii. Foot Sequoia Club Koeliler, Max Conrad San Jose Cnil E„g,;ccr,„g Encina Club Kocpfli, Jo.upli Blak Los Angtles Chemistry Alpha Tau OniL-ga Kulberg. Krick E. shi, William Hiroslii Lenioore (la Graiidfield Barbara Landis, Philip Flint Oakland Polilical Science Sequoia Club Alpha Pi Zeta; Masonic Club; Quad Manager (3); President A. S. S. U. (4); Quad Board Lane, Juhn Calhoun Oakland Mechanical Engineering Encina Club i:i Cuadro; E. E. Society: M. E. Society; Circle S (2, 3, ident En ittee ( 4) : Club (4). Lanj;. Rohcrt Kdward l)all.-.s. Texas Economics Stanfonl I ' nion Cliih Langcrnian. Encina Club Transferred from University of Oregon, Oclober, 1922 Langford. Russell K. North Platte. Nebraska Polilical Science-Lav. ' Phi Delta Theta Alphi Phi Zcta; Secrctar Treasurer of Interfraternil Conference; Treasurer 1 ' Delta Phi; President Alpl Pi Zeta Laniach. Donald W. Honolulu. T. 11. Mechanical Enginecrint Stanford Union Clvtb Radio Club Law, Raymond Frakc Stanford University Psychology Tra nsferred from University of Nevada (2) Sequoia Club; PsychoI ii; Club each, Wanda Coniicll llollywomi y.lucalion-Craphic Art Chi Omega Leaniard, Mary Gilroy :.nd Gown (4) ; W. , . . i. 4); Women ' s S So- .; Committee of Fifteen ; Hockey (2, 3, 4); All r (1. i); Basketball (1, 2, .., Captain (2); Manager President of Roble; President of Roblc Club Women ' s Conference (3, I ' .ascball (2 ; All Star (2) hten, Alice Madeleine San Krancisco .■ Literature and French Transferred from iversity of California, 1920 1. Club; Cerclc Fran ;aii; Classical Club L-ffinswcll, Marion P. Pasadena Economus ■ . -.,. ; ' Rohle Club 1 . Lies. Margaret Anna K. Walerville. Washington s Economics •I Gamma Phi Beta ■ ' ll Transferred from ■; ■, j versity of Washington, January, 1922 ' ■- ' I! ii.mics Club; Executive • M nnittec (2); Secretary 1 ..r Class; Cast Junior .1 (2); Football Show (3) LiljensU ' in, (iiistal Mi Liiin, Fliira Kan-;as City, Mi ' Englisli Long, Hubert Edward Palo Alto Zoology Long, Raymond Wal Ashland. Or.i;..!! yiahnnical Enginccrui Loomis, Frederick C. Pasa.lena Alpha Delta Phi McBurney. Raymr Los Augflcs Prc-Climcal Encina Club Transferred fro I ' niviTsityof Califor.i McClure, Thomas C. Macconel, Robert L Transferred from University of Hawaii, 19- ' J Assistant Business Manager Stanford Pictorial, 921-2i McCrca, Alexander W. Stanford Union Club Ita Phi Theta; Kar Block S Manager, Tennis 1922 McCulclmn. John S. Ki-..kuk, Iowa Alpha Delta Phi Phi Alpha Delta: Economic- Cliib: Junior Opera Daily Palo Alto Staff (2 Cotillion Committee ant naskctb.nll McDonald, Marjorie K Toppenish. Washington Frencli McDonald. Robert E I ' .rrkcKy McDonnell. Mary Ag Tnconi.T. Washington Roble Transfcrre(i from Mcintosh, F. Russell Salt Lake City Mack, Helen Elizabeth Oakland Alpha Phi Transferred from Mills. 1921 Schubert Club; French Club McKair, Sarah Great Falls. Montana Kappa Kappa Gamma Transferred from of Montana, 192 MacRoberts, James M. Los Angeles Magarian. Caspar H. EcoHOmics-Lazc Encina Club Cosmopolitan Club; Ei l hronia Debating Society Maier, Herman Louis nurlinganic Economics Iturlingame ■ ! — r M alaln -.jnl i,n Kidiard E,:g. (r.( , Alpha , Ta u Omega Trail isferi •ed from Uni ivcrsity of Kansas. 1920 Glee Club; Ram ' s Head; Mu- iic Club; Soi ihomore Play (2): Ram ■s h ' cad (2, 3, -1); I uni or Ol lera (3); Football Sho«-; Git ■e CI t Director (4) Marinel, Ke Spokane. V: Masters, Alfred Ricli; Hreakers; Circle ... Soccer (3. 4) ; Capt: (4); Secretary Men ' s Coun (4); Class President (- Senior Control Commiti Matson, Theodore M. Mitchell. Nebraska Chemical Engineering Encina . lpha Chi Sigma; Glee Clul Class Football Team (41 Mayer, Leona Minna San Francisco Chemistry Roble Club Transferred from University of California. 19 Iota Sigma Pi: Quad St (3): Daily Palo Alto U ' men ' s Service Board ' • President Social Wilt. Commission (4) Mertz, Laurenc Chicago, mil orthwcstcrn Univers 1920 I ' .lock S in Footh; Mertz. X ' ictli Theodo Chicag.i. Illiuoi. Meyer, Charles Lorcntz Sebastopol Mechanical Engineering Encina Club Midgley, Charles V.. Ji Oakland Economics Sigma Nu l;,im ' ITcad; Economic Clnl,: t,. i.- Cli.li: Orchestr Miller, Frederick H. Sov ,th Pasadena MeclHU. ,..■ . Engince, ■ing Encina .on. Encina Club Transferred from I ' niversity of Arizona. 19J Kncina Club President (4) Delta Sigma Rllo: Phi Alph Dilta: California - Stanfor Debate, 1921: Class Orato (•1); Joffre Medal Winne MilUr. I-eland V. Los Angelfs Palo Alto Transferred froui University of Iowa Circle S in Golf: Manag of Golf Team (3, 4) Miller, Walter George Mechanical nnginecring Millard. Claude Kussi Kresno Encina Club F.l Campo; Delta Thel Delta Sigma Rho: Nest., Daily Palo Alto (1, 2); Q Mi Louis Bernard Hollywood Economicf-La ' i ' Kl Toro: Eiipbronia; Law , ssociation: Class DebatinB Team (2): Track (2. 3, 4) ; Lake Sports Committee (3); Class Treasurer (3): Assist ant Yell Leader (3); Yell Leader (4): R ' oard of .Vdmin isirators of Encina Hall (4): Chairman Rally Committee (4): Endowment Committer (4): Chairman .Senior trol Committee (4) Monroe, Marshall V. Chula Vista French Stanfo ' fd Union Club ;iee Club (3. 4); Soloist Memorial Church (4) Montgomery. Martha New .Albany. Indiana Kappa Kappa Gamma Transferred from Butler College. 1922 Schubert Club Moody, Frank M. Glendale Economics Sequoia Club Transferred from 1 . i.lent.il College. 192 dy. Irwin Waller Mining Encina Club Morrison. Roland Santa Clara Economics Santa Clara merican Journalists ' f K Mors, George L. Palo Alto M.-chomcalEugif,ccri,K Palo Alto Mortimer, W oiulell Rii-I Palo Alto ni-oitoiiiics Palo Alto ic.--Pi-.-siclent Psycliol,. ; Mosiicr, AllK-rt Rawlins. Wvoniing .Sigma . lpha Kpsil,,,, Phi Alplia Delta Mulrvan, Heiirv Beresfoid Geology Tlieta Chi ecology and Mining Soci.-iy Murdoch, Christine Klamath Falls, Oregon .,.:c ' Koble Clnh ElB =- -p Myers, Edwin F. V M r ■ CMl E,,gi,.eeri„g 1 ■ M m Masonic Club; Civil Engi- , ' ■ ■ B: M orcring Society; Circle S WM  H • (3): Track r « Rj Nelson. Holcn Klizalul Neuman, Arthur Newlin. Carl A1k-ii Hustonvillc, Illinois Economics Phi Kappa Psi Xicholas. Wan- Transferred from nivt-rsity of Southern California, 1920 1- (1. 2. 3): Glee Clnh Nichols. Howard 1! Transferred from iversity of Washingtc vil Engineering Societ; Nicholson, Harold H. Long Iteach Economics Mela Theta Pi Niebergall, Herbert A. Encina Club Xiclson, Adonis Haiglii Oakley. Idaho Late Encina Club Transferred from University of Utah Helta Theta Phi North, Agnes Martha Pasadena Cliusical Literature Delta Delta Delta Norwood. Julius Lane Los Angeles Thct.i l)elt:i Chi coiiomics Club; IMii . .iiii ' or Prom Committet Noycs. F.liziilx ' t Ficu-h Club Delta Delta Dill.- V ' nivJi-s ' itVJf ' fali ' f ;. Henry Palo Alt O ' Neill. Francis I. San Kranciiico Pliysialogicat Chemistry Encina Club Transferred from St. Ignatius, California lii Lambda Upsilon; Jvi pero Serra Club Parish, J,. Twin Fs Patterson. Kdwin A. Oakland Prc-Cliiiical Pbi Kappa Psi u .Sigma Nu; Rasehall (1 Baseball (. ' , :k S Baseball Hollywood English Utciatiirc Menlo Park Transferred from lona College. Califo Polo atton. Rnhcrt Tayk Spokane. W ashinglou Alpha Delta Phi 11 Ouad Staff; .- dam Eva O) aulsen, Helen Carolyn Eihictition-Gfdphu Lavy. elaude luhvard Mcchanicat Eiigiuccnng Encina Club akers Club; Skull an.l Society; Block ball (3, 4), Captain Circle S Soccer (2. Block ; ' 23 in Baseball Executive Committee Senior Committee (4 Pl-iuvcH, Lewis l-ixd Helena, Muntaiia Economics Sequoia Club l i xing (.1); Lightweight Foul ball (3); Sequoia Wake Con miltee (2, 3, 4) Peterson. Algol Julii Kingsbuig Encina Club Delta Thcta Phi: Euphn Hebating Society; Kng riub; Los Arcos; Circula Manager Cardinal (2) tray. Marian Sliirle Oakland E„gl,. l, Sigma Kaiipa TransfL-rretl from Mills College Knglish dull Phelps. John E.. Jr. Economic!: Alpha Tau Omega ior Control Commil Phillips. Merrill Newman La Ilabra Phiiincy, Alfred Earl Kansas City, Missouri igott, Paul Richard Seattle. Washington ey. Florence Adeline Orange English Alpha Omicron Pi ler ' s Society: Sopho- Play; Senior Farce (2 ' r Opera Committee (3 [■ Farce Committee (4 retary of Junior Class lesta. Loyal James Economics Fncina Club •S in Water Polo (31 Hard, Glenn Eugene I ' ikane. Washington Mining . lpha Delta Phi 1 Delta Chi; Press Club: lean Journalists . sso- n ; Geology and Mining Seni. News Editor thletic Man- Junior Opera R 1 i 4 ; 19 Play Yellow JacI Tailor Made M . ssistant Editor 1 Qu.id (3) ' owell, George T. Preston, Harold Oriim Preston, William C, New York City Price, Joseph Presslx Oakland Mechanical EngiiU ' cniig Encina Club Prior, Cliarles Henry Slu-ffiel.l, Illiiioi Seijuoia Clul) igma Delta Chi; Dailv Pa ilto (J, ,1): Xews Editor (3 923 Ouad Staff li); On: ■ ' Board (3) CO i«iri r, Joseph Clifford ihefficld, Illinois ncoiwmics-I.aw Sequoia Club hi Alpha Delta; nt Sequoia Club (-1) ■roctor. Ruth V. ' iiUiatn, Ernest Gordon Cushing, Oklahoma Economics Purvis, Ralph Clarke Tipton, Indiana Economics Palo Alto fe,l Pntiiam, Cecil Monroe Al.im.-da Law Sigma Nu Circle S Golf (1, 2, 3); Captain of Golf Team (2, 3) Rasmussen, Elmer C San Jose Signia Chi Glee Club Ratzcll, Pauline M:i Rawliauser, John Gambel Willows Cil ' iV Engineering Encina Club Civil Engineering Society Reavis, James Ogden BakersfieUl Phi Delta Theta Delta Theta Phi; Masquer ' s (1); Class Seci Rcdekcr, Ivan Monr Palo Alto Mechanical Engineering Palo Alto Reed, Myron Nelson Portland, Oregon Economics -.Beta Theta Pi Freshman Football; Class President (4) Ri-ticker, Roland Wilson Los Angeles Delta Chi Transferred from ITniversity of California, 1920 Richardson, Paul Eddy Ci:il Engineer, Sigma Chi Richardson, Robert D. Wynnewood, Oklahoma Encina Club Ridley, Daniel Graves Foliticat Science-Linv Palo .Mto !0- f! University of Calif. Southern Branch, Masonic Club Encina Club Transferred froi University Farm, I Muiuig Delta Upsilon Transferred from lental College, Octobe Robertson, Donald L. Robertson, Kenneth G. Robinson, Floyd A. I,s,,n. Dnrothy Joyce Campbell Roble Club .rv Club; Hockey (1, 2. ; Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4); )r Representative Wom- . tbletic Association (4) , Robert San Jose Geology Palo Alto rs, WilHam Lister Hayward Physiology Kappa Sigma nul ruil); Skull and I I ' hi; Nu Sigma niiger, L),)rotliy I Long Beach History ipa Kappa Gamm; notball Show (4) Rosciibaum. Mc-rvin V. Encina Club I.rns and Plalc Society; Swimming Team 1._2 ; Water Polo (I): Rally Com mittec (4); Permanent Clas- Sccretary: Secretary Senm. Class; Senior Endowment Committee; Senior Contr I Committee Ross, Blanch Emline Redwood City Alpha Phi Spanish Club; Y. V. C. A.. Treasurer (2) ; Secretary (3); Class Secretary (1); Pan Hellenic Secretary (4) : V. C. A. Cabinet (1): Swim ning Teat Ross, Dean Kalpl Alpha Tau Omega Swords and Sandals; H matic Council (3); Jun Ross, James Gordon Economics Union Club •i Alpha Phi; Circle S ioxing (2. 3. 4) Cai.t Roystoii. Frank Feurt Portland, Oregon Samuel, Kdmuiid V. t. Carmcl, Pennsylvania Mechanical Engineering Sigma Chi Transferred from knell University, October, 1920 I ' hanical Engineering ;LndreUu, Paul J. B. Fosteria tcchanical Engineering Encina Club lianical Engineering So- :; Electrical Engineering ctv; President M. E. So- ,: Circle S in Fen cing .!. 4); Captain Fencing Team (4) Sansone, John Baptist Toronto, Canada Encina Club nipcro Scrra Club, Presi- nt (4); Dramatics (3, 4); rde S Handball (4); anager 1301b. Basketball ..m (2); Manager 135-Ib. ketball Team (3); Assist 1 Manager Varsity Daskct- (4 Saiit, George Reiishaw San Francisco Zeta Psi Sapcro, Kalmen Y. Long Beach Sequoia Club e Club (2. 3); Ram ' s Burlesque Boxing Squad (2, 3. 4 ; Football Frothies of 1922 (4) Sargent, Aaron More San Francisco Mechanical r.,:gl,:ecrli:i; Sawyer, Theodore K. Swarthniore, Pennsylvania Encina Clnb Schiiciilcr, Philli lterl eley Economics Zeta Psi Scott. Josephine Los Angeles Scwell, Charles Alvin Elko, Nevada Shaw. Perry ' . P,erkcky •ffield. Carlt.m Allyn Long lieacli English- Journalism Encina Club Jour- Lo. 11. France.s E. Angeles Law Gamma Phi Beta lleta Kappa; Wranglers, tary - Treasurer (2). ' lent (3); Secretary- ■urer Law School Asso- n (4): Stanford Law rian; Pan-Hellenic (2. Endowment Committee; |)ean Students ' Relief Committee Sliepherd, Theodore H. Hollywood Mechanical Engineering Sequoia Club ic Club; Glee Club: Electrical Engineering So- Sliipp, Kenneth J. tilli: Delta Chi Circle S Society; Ki nomics Club: Interclass l ' .. ing (2); Circle S in V.. ing (3): Endowment ( ' ■■ mittee (-1) Shott, Ralph N. liirmingham, Iowa Political Scicttcc Se.| oia rUih Siddle. Robert William Sloan. Thomas Kemp Mountain ' iew Chemistry Alpha Kappa Lambda Alpha Chi Sigma Smith, Charles He Saratoga Mechanical Eneincc Sequoia Club Muith, Harold Williai Tort Huron, Michigan liconomics-Engineering Encina Club Transferred from I ' niversity of California, 1921 Smith, J. Howell nig Crcik Economics Zeta Psi ill and Snakes; Pi Alpha : Block S as Football iiager (4); Track (1): ■is Treasurer (2); Quad Board (3) Smith, Lemuel C, Jr. El Paso, Texas Mechanical Engineering Encina Club El Campo Club Stnith, Richard C. N w York, N. V. Sncdden, Donald Scott Vonkcrs, New York Phihsofhy Alpha Tau Omega .Mpna I au umcga - y,- ' ixk- S Society Gym- a. ' ' i .um Team (1, 3. 4); IS ■.shman Swimming Team; W i nnming Team (3, 4); Cir- W ■S In Gymnasium and [ Swinuning (3. 4) kf  , Snow, William H Niw York City Encina Club Transferred from Case School of Appl Sorter, Charles Hn Kl Uampo ; tute of Electrical En, Glee Club (.?. 4 Clee Chlb Spaiigler, Lura Lee Spanish Kappa Kappa Gamma Transf.-rrr.l fr,.,n Spears, Julia Buckucr Dallas. Texas English Stanford University igineers Sproull, Henry Franklin Los Angeles Chemical Engineering Beta Theta Pi Alpha Chi Sigma; Pi Alplw Phi: Ram ' s Head; Chemistry C ' lnb; Freshman Football X.nsitv Football (2, 3, 4) l ' .|...k ' S- ' in Football (3) V.,i,r Polo (1); Knighli, Knight; Sin Sin iiibcry, William Los Angeles igma ,Mpha Epsilo m, Paul Pasadena Sta Stauf ks, Ucrothy J. Palo Alto rreClinual Roble Chlb fer, Leo Mavuard Pasadena Elec trical Engineering Union Uni Dn Committee (4) r ' ■ ' 1 StiiKiT, KatlicriiR- acavilk- Eco,wwks Alplia Omicron Pi Sterling, Theodore K. ncnver, Colorado Lazv Sigma Alpha Epsilon Transferred from Denver University, 1919 Phi Helta Phi; TrelawnLv of the Wells: Fooit.;,ll Show: Assistant Husiiu-, Manager Chaparral Stern. Ruth Esther Portland. Oregon Economics Roble Club Women ' s Economics Clnh; Hockey (2. 3. 4) Stewart. Francis S. San Diego Chemistry Palo Alto Stewart, Kenneth K. Eureka EnglishJountalism Union Club Sigma Delta Chi: Quadra.iKl. Club; Press Club; Americ:iii Journalists ' Association; Dailv Palo Alto (1, 2, 3). Editor (4); Executive Commiti. . (4); Secretary Intcrfrati- nity Conference (4): 1 ' Ouad Staff; Kni,,.!,. Knight cast (4); Class II torian; Committee of Fift- Stewart. Muriel Phoenix. Arizona PrcMcdical Roble Club D.ving (J. 3); Swimming Captain (3, 4) Stockton, Andrew B. r.rangeville, Idaho CooloeyMediciiie Omega Upsilon Phi Stoddard, Harvey C. Mechanical Engineering Encina Club Transferred from Fl Tigre; Lens and Plate; Boxing (4) Stray. George Ross Campbell l fr iaiiiro Engineering Sequoia Club Electric.-,! Engineering Society Strouse. Clarence A. Altadena Economics-Late Encina Club lis ad @r3 Stiinii. Franz nuaiin. V;ishini;t. Club Sigmri: n; Kl T S in Vi Sud.k-n, Dorotliy Kos Pi lieta ri.i Transferred from Mills College. 1920 Women ' s Athletic Asset- lion (3): Finance Committ Y. W. C. A. (3); Juni Prom Committee (3); Pre (lent Pan-Hellenic (4) Summy. Archibald Po Long Beach Eco,wmics Sigma Alpha Epsilon Transferred from University of Washingto Sutlierlaiid. Hug Los Angeles Enslisl, Swabey, Marjorie Ruth Palo Alto Transferred Mills College appcnbcck, Ha Transferred from of Zurich, Switz rnell University, 19JJ ayl.ir, Dwight W, Los Angeles Law Alpha Tail Omega iimittee; Junior Opera iimittee; Senior Farce nmittee; Interfraternity Taylor, William H. Eagle Rock Enghsli Menlo Park Transferred from Pomona College, 1922 Stanford P.and (4) Tcgiier, Thclina BodcU Eco. Delta Delta Delta Transferred from liversity ,.f Califor Thomson, William L Mod.-StO PliysiologyMcdicinc Encina Clnl, Kl Campo Club: Track (.M Timpany. Charles R, Tinglcy. Mary E. Colorado Springs, Colora io Trago, Eugene N. Stanford I ' nivcrsily Economics Theta Delia Chi Pi Alpha Phi; Ram ' s Head; Freshman Football Tiaiii (■lie Club (O; Football Show of 1922: Ram ' s Ilea.l U. Irfmaine, Harry Los Angeles Transferred from niversity of Minnesota. 1922 Sigma Chi l .lppa Tau; Union noaid •veniors; Alpha Pi Zela; ' iry Ball Committee (4); . Mit Major R. O. T. C. (■•) Tritle, Lloyd H. Phoenix, Arizona Economics-Law t.i Chi; Pi Alpha Phi: omics Club: basketball : Circle S in Rugby Sophomore Cotillion iniiiitce: Daily Palo Alto - ' ): Quad Staff (3): rinan Junior Prom Com- : Senior Flower Com- i ' ; Vice-President Senior -: Senior Prom Commit- Interclass Football. Basketball (4) Trummer, Dav id J- Ilayward ' . ' rchanical Engineering Encina Club Mican Institute of Elec- trical Engineering Cross Country (2) Tuliy, Esther Carol Modesto Psychology .• lpha Omicron Pi Transferred from MTsity of Wisconsin, 1922 ' ■logy Club: Swimming I (2); Sophomore Cotil- c ..mmittce (2): Football (4): Senior Flowt-r lill, David Bogcrt Saratoga Ecotwmics Delta UpsHon Tau; Mechanical ing Society; Th nical Staff; See Assistant Stage M Van Keuren, Sidney S Chil Engineering Stanford Union Club N ' augli; Mechanical E Sequoia Club; Pi_ Kappa ' ial. Robert Duncan Portland, Oregon V ' ocrge, Maurine Grace Cleburne Spanish Roble Club Theta Sigma Phi President (4); American Journalist ' s Association; 1923 Quad Staff (3): Women ' s Ktlitor Daily Palo Alto (4); Committee of inical Engin Theta Xi inical Engir Walker, Tlieodore S. Wcstwood Mechanical Engineering Chi Psi Transferred from Walsh, Mona Desmond Redwood City K.-tppa Kappa Gamma French Club liipipero Serra Club: Pan Ml.nic; Vice-President CIas= of 1923 (1) Walther. The. .dure R. 1 : m Ward, Kallitiiiic Soulli Pasailfiia Classical Literature Roble Club mminK (1): Hockey ( or Plate Committee; C. A. Committees (1, 3,4) Ward. Murray Arthur Wardman, Kniil SparxisU Delta Gamma Transferred from rniversity of California, The Yellow Jacket unior Week Sports I ' omen ' s Yell Leader Her Husband ' s Wife Public Speaking Transferred from liversity of Californi Roble Club Waterman, Edward C ' Palo Alto Mechanical Engineering Mechanical EnRineering S ciety: Electrical Engincerii Society: Manager ' s S Boxing and Wrestling (-1 1 ' ightman, John W. -_ Economics Union Club Welsh, Norris L. Los Angeles Economics Alpha Sigma Phi Wliite. Margaret Emily Palo Alto Zoology Koble Ciub P and Gown: Music Club: ' I.Ky Club: Y. W. C. A.: 1 ; President Class (2); lualescent Home Commit- r (2. 3); Tennis Manager i Chairman 1923 Quad ■ 1 (3): Women ' s Council (4) W liittomore. James A. Palo Alto Geology Wilber, Louise Myrtle San Francisco Economics Transferred from University of California, 1922 Roble Club: Music Club: Club: Wo Club Wilbur, Dwight Locke Stanford University ZoohgyMedicwe Sequoia Club Zoology Club; Uiflc Club; Williamson. R. SL-bastopoI Economics Delta Kappa Ep? iill an,l Snakes; P Wilson, Dorothy W. Los Angeles Wilson, R uth Eleanor Hebron, Nebraska E„gl,slt Roble Club Schubert Club; Masquers ' Club Play (4) W ilsoii, Wendell Rogers C; Pi Kappa T.-! inn, Montgomery E. Warsaw. Kentucky Political Scieuce Wi.snuni, Robert F. San Mateo Economics Chi Psi ,,h ' s Head (2); Juni. icia (2); Football Sho Witherbee, Don Los Angeles Economics Kappa Sigma Class Secretary ( W.Kidruff, ' irginia M. Worell, Harriet 1-. Ogtlen, Pennsylvania Political Science Madrono Transferred from Swarthmorc College October, 192. ' Alpha Pi Zeta Wright. Gleniia Alii Wright. Rohcrt Franklii San Jose iteclianical Engineering Delta Tau Delta Senior Control Committee Mechanical Engineering S.. ciety: Freshman Track Term I ' an Wyck, Cecil van A The Hague. Holland Mechanical Engineering Delta Upsilon Young. Dwight iJmili; Chemislry Alpha Sigma Phi inig. Forest Herbert Hillings. Montana Cial Engineering poling, Wilmer Wlieclo an Institute of Electri- ingincers; Swimming ennis (1); Circle S lib. Basketball (3. 4) ..unglove, Howard P. Balboa Economics Reta Theta Pi lie. Margaret Coleman Woodside Economics Kappa Alpha Thei.i Z lhart, George Edgar Wchanical Engineerit m J j n I o R s OFFICF.RS President vice-preside Secretary . Manager First Term .1 in kir j. cou.ins IIklen Whitney UeWitt C. Rowland . . Daniei.D.Gace Second Term President .... Charles B. White Vice-President . . William E. Wright Sec ' y and PlBLICITY . D. E. LlEBENDORFER Manager John C. McHose COM.MITTEES HuL EN Whitney Ed TIIF. llAYLlS Honorary rKOM COMMITTEE Lewis P. .Alabuter liURTON L. Lapp Frederic R. Fisher H. SiD.VEV Laugulin JoH.v E. Plimpton- Eunice Uiddle .Alice Roth TheilixeMcC.ee Orville H. Tucker. Jr. JCMOR WEEK PROGRAMS Philip Newill. Editor William G. Lee, Jr.. Manag JCNIOR IVEEK FUKCTIOSS Lillian Cottrell, Chairniar Henry G. .Svmonds Beverly B. Bailard Ellowene Delauoyde LAKE SPORTS (Tluirs Iay Nig Daniel tl. Gage, Chairniaii Junior .I.Collins Ma Rai Howard Wittenberg iturday Afternoon) Charles G. Fletcher Henry C. Mack Fremont R. Schmieder Geraldine Franklin soPHomoRes First Term Charles E. BEARnsLEV Frederick O. Sherrili. Ric HARD L. Jenkins I.iiiN M. Marble . OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Trkasihek Second Tfrm Lewis G. Hitchcock Meribeth Cameron K. ZiEMER Hawkins Talbot Bielefeldt COM. HTTEES BOS FIRE COMMITTEE GcRDON D. Steele. Chairman Lewis G. Hitchcock COTILUOX COMMITTEE John Hall. Chairman Gail Thomi ' son Meribeth Cameron John M. Marble George C. Hadley Joel D. Middleton PL.-iy COMMITTEE D. Lloyii Davies. Chairma Lewis G. Hitchu ck KniTH Gronen FResumen Hkatuicf. Hii.i. . Kkxnkth R. McDd OFFICERS Scfoiul Tv Pkesident HoRAcr. L. EiiMoNii; Vice-President Clakexce M. Fkaz Secretary Ieax W. Treascrer IlAkiiiv V. Dkv COMMITTJ-: BOX f I RE COMMITTEE Delmer Daves. Chairmar Frederic N. Tyroler George F. Wasson Jack W. Hardy Phil W. Shi- maker POSTER EIGHT COMMITTEE Delmer Daves, Chairman Jack W. Hardy Raymond M. Kay Georce M. Frazier William R. Johnston m flssocmTion QRGflnizflTions New Organizations Mark University ' s Growth Tlie growth of the Uiinersity has brought with it an increase in the number of organizations, some of which have expired shortly after coming into existence, while -have become firmly established. Classi at best, although the (lixision generally i eties. Deiiarlnieiilal .Societies. Clu these societies IS h others — the majority- is an arbitrary matter Fraternities and . oc Societies. During the ])ast year several new (jrgani camjnts. Among these have been Scal] er . I ' i . 1]i1ki I ' hi, Helta ' I ' heta I ' hi. and the -Senior Control Committee. Scalpers Society was founded by members of the class of 1924 during their sophomore year. It is a perpetual sophomore honor society, the members electing their successors from the freshman class at the end of the year. Thus each year brings an entirely new membership. Usually two itiniors are retained to act as advisory members of the societv. Pi . li)ha Phi was founded by the T ' i, class in their snphumnre year, but unlike -Scalpers, it is not designed to pass on from class to class. It is solely a class of 1 ' ' 2. organization, and will cease to be acti e on the caniims when its ])res ' nt members have left. The Senior Control Committee w;is formed in the winter (luarter in an effort to afTord a centralized control for underchis ' - di ciplin Stanford traditions. Delta Theta Phi is the newdy established chapter of tl and makes the third of its tvpe on the campus, the tw( being Phi Delta Phi and PhiAlpha Delta. the : S- PHI BETA KAPPA Foumlcd at William and Mary Culkgc, Uccciiiljcr 5. 1776 Beta of California Chapter. Stanford. Established Xovi-mbcr 1, 1904 Pkksiiiknt Prokessor Horatio Ward Stebbi.ns V ' ick-Prfsiki NT-; ) Professor Ephraim Douglass Adams ' ( Professor Edgar Eigexe Robinson Sfxrf;tarv Doctor Orrin Leslie Elliott Trkasi RKK Gertrude May Trace STUDENT MEMBERS XiiiclCi-n Hundred and Tzvcnty-Tu-o Walter Ehwarms Beach Myrtle Klah n Robert Cedric Bixkley Harry E. Lixdersmith CoxxELL Cliffford Dell Theodore Lindqiist Mary Lida Corxes Thomas William McQlarrie Halfdax Ixgstrl-p Gregersex Lawrexce R. Serrurier Bernard Fraxcis Haley Homer Pearson Strlble Amelia Hedges Hallie Watteks Blake Coi.niKN Wilbur . hwliu-i, 1 Hundred ,in , T ■.enily-Three Gilbert Thereon Benson jniKv Francis Goux Edwin Roosa Clapp i:-ii 1 1 A Hoisholt Carl Dudley Duncan- Ik ANc Is Case Hutchexs Mary Brooks Eyre Un.LiAM Avery Hyde Garrett Henry Elmore Thkodor S. Jacobsen Franklin Smith Fearing Doyle Starr Peckham Beatrice Alethea Fexner Anita Starr Risdox Mildred Dinsmore Fixlky Dorothy .•Vhdinf Shkrrar Doroth ' .■ Joh AN ;xA Starks QUADRANGLE CLUB Pres Secreta C. Arthur Wilcox Walter H. Hales Treasurer I a ' ' ■ ' ' ■ ' 1-ACUI.TV MKMI ' .I ' RS Fr. nk n(;kll Almon Fiiwakd Roth, ' Oy George Bliss Culvek, ' 97 Kverett Wallace Smith, ' 99 William Daly Fleti hkr. ' 11 Robert Lyman Templeton. 18 MI ' AII ' .FKS Ml u-tccn riuiulrrd and X hh eleen Paul H. Davis C. Arthur Wilcox Xi m-lcn, Hundred and l eenty Daniel W. Evans Clarence .1. Tauzi k Walter 11. Hales .Vni,- tern Hundred and ' lu ' cn v-7 ' ic ' o Harry .1. P.oriia Philip F. Neer James M. Davies .V  ,-, U-rn Hundred and Tz.rnI y-Three DniLEY S. DeGkciot Alfred R. Masters C. Lane Falk Claude F. Peavy Thomas G. Irwin Kenneth X. Stewart William L. Rogers Xiuc, teen Hundred and ' l eer „y-ronr John D. Campbell John C. McHose Richard H. Hinckley 1 ■ ■ m CAP AND GOWN Pre SHIE.NT Marion Dwight. ' 22 Yici e-Presihent Helen Greene. ' 23 Tre ASIRER Marion Potter. ' 22 SEd KETAR - Mabel Jones. ' 23 ij Vj FA ULT ■ mi- :. iBi •RS k ' . Mrs. H. 1. KVA.N .Mrs. K. D. .Ada.ms Wj V Mrs. I ' .J.Tre.vi- Mrs. a. K. Roth % Mrs.J.C. Branner Mrs. Theresa Rissell Si Mrs. J. M. Stillman Mrs. D. C. Gardner Miss M. I. McCracken Mrs. R. L. Wilbur Miss Margaret Lothrop Miss F,nrrH Mirrielees Miss Mary Yost Miss Jessie Smith 3 Mrs. Bailey Willis Mrs. David Starr Jordan Mrs. Fred Fowler Mrs. E. p. Cvbberley Miss C. S. SroLTENnERr, Miss Elisabeth Bickingham Miss Rosemary Draci MEMBERS iman k X Mario.n Dwight. ' 22 Mabel Jones, ' 2. lO Marion Potter. ' 22 Grace Brown, ' 23 Sv Helen Green K.2.) Pearl Bundick, ' 23 Margaret WiMTK. ' 2. Katherine Beswu k, ' 23 MlLMREl.L. M M kM;.-M M.VUV I.IAUNAUI.. ' 23 PHI PHI IK ). ()RAk ■ MEMBERS KiMIKAIM I)(.r ,I.ASS. l. AMs ChaulksDaviiiNLnrx Thomas TiNGEV Craven Grecokv MEMBERS Xiiu Miii-l, ■U-rii Uumtrcd ami Sinrlrni CArthir Wilcox ■,■)( Iluiidr,-d and Tu ' cnty-Onc Hkatox L. Wrexx Xi,i,-lr Di llmuircd ami Tx ' cnly-Tico J.OrloHaves.Jr. Philip F.Neer JAMis M. Damfs Kim-U-c 71 lluudvcd and 1 z.riil Y-Tlucc Robert L Cravens Dudley S. DeGkoot Elmer E. Elliott C. Lane Falk Linn M. Parish Fkederick C. Loom is Laurence L. Mertz Paul C.Murray Myron N. Reed William L. Rogers Nelson Van Judah Roy F.Williamson Mnric; :n Hundred and Tzih-nly-Foiir Gi-oRGK H.Baker John D. Campbell Charles G. Fletcher Tyler F. Woonw. Richard H. Hinckley Clayton R. Janssen JohnC. McHosE SKULL AND SNAKES OFFICERS Pres Robert I. Cravk Secretary ' . . F.i.mek E. Elliot r Tr Walter H. Hales HONORARY MI ' .MBICKS Ephraim Douglass Adams Ralph Reynolds William Daly Fletcher Almon Edward Roth ToiiN Thomas Nourse Thomas M. Williams MEMl ' .ERS Xmrlrcn Hundred and Ei,ihlccu Montaville D. Flowers Robekt Lyman Templeton NinciL -n Ilmidrcd and Nineteen Forest A. Betts Emery F. Mitchell Chester A. Wilcox Nuieleeu Hundred and Twenty Daniel W. Exans Clarence J. Tauzer Walter H. Hales Charles R. Wayland A '  ,- ,v ( Hundred .ind Tieenly-One Eugene L.Davis William F. Leiser KarlW. Shlaudeman Xmei ■eeu Hundred and Tuvnix-Tzco Harry .T. Borba James M.Davies RossC. Fisher A '  ,- , -en Hundred nnd Tiwnty-Three William M.Bi.. ck..I Robert L Cravexs Dudley S. DeGroot Raeburn Doughty Elmer E. Eiliott C. Laxe Falk ,(. Percy C. Heckexdorf NelsoxVaxJudah Clack E.P,x v n INM 1, KuMMS LllnUII 1 SmIIII R„V Iv WIMIAMSOX RichsrdW. Favii.i.e Mne. teen Hundred and Twnly-Fonr ToHX D. Campbell Claytox R. Jaxssex IohxC.McHose Tyler F. Woohw ard i 4 PHI DELTA PHI MillcT fhaiitiT F,sl.il.li-h..l April 1(1. 1S ' )7 Al.M I ' ACLM.TN ' Ml-.MBKRS ,)x Imiwaki. R(n II, I.D. Chk.stkk (iAni iki.i. Vkkxikk. J.D. Ci.aukkBiti.kkWihttif.r.LL.H. MF.MBKRS Xiiirlrrii Hundred and Fourteen |-|,W1N AUAMSWI-I.I.S .V,m- ,v« llnudrcd and I ' lftccn liAUOLl. C Al.ll.K-N- SOI-HK FOKI, Ninrlrni Hundred and Nineteen :fst Ahth lk Bi-tts Em khv pKRiiusoN M itchell Fkan-klin (ioKDON West W.M Nineteen Hundred and Twenty iKKX Drax Liiosk Clarence jArw;EN Taizer e ' liARi-Es Rn Ki-R Wayland Wii, Nineteen Hundred and T:.enty-()ne i.iAM Fkederk K Leiser Homer Iu ix(, Mitchell Heatox LcseWkexx Nineteen Hu ' udred and TiKVnty-T ' a ' O Ralph Hiffaker Co vix , Charles Ahthir Defeerac i Jame:s F Davies James A. Flaxa(,ax RoLAXii Thomas Kinney Nineteen Hundred and r-a ' enty-Three Theodore E. Bowen Walter Paul Keller Harry Hollis Chalmers Rissell R. Langform John D. Fredericks, Jr. Orlando Hunter Rhodes Paul Eugene Glenn Richard Hunt Sampson Percy Charles Heckendouf Theodore Kesler Sterling Roy Fraxklix Williamson Nineteen Hundred and Turnty-four Harvey Mills Co erley William Robert James Cecil Irvixg Haley John C. McHose CaklS. Shoui- II . -1 •« jJI • ' 49$! ' i m- -i ii . «c :T i ! mMm i aS i iiF I 4Mi aSR ■rtifi lte a I H dl I H j: - i H i5P • . -« . -j ' l :r ' K PHI ALPHA DELTA (.KADLATI-; Ml ' .MBERS ' ,;,.■ ,■,■)( Hundred and Nincti-cn C ' k TOU Sm ITH Mnclcni Hundred and Turnly Daniel W.Evans XinrU ' cn Hundred and Twcnty-Onc Matthew C. Simpsox Homer W. Patterso: Philip H. Godhaiui Wesley A. Seamax Xindern Hundred and Tii ' cnly-Tn ' O Clair M. Senior Rnss C. Fisher Stanley A. Steindore Edward D. Laxdels Nineteen Hundred and Tiwnly-Thrcc Philip G. Smith AlrertMhstikr Merwyn H. Brown Wardwell D. Evans Joseph C. Prior ) j i ' ' ' Garrett H. Elmore ' I i i i i i -. M Robert T. I ' attox Nineteen Hundred and Tz.rnty-five Leon T. David DELTA THETA PHI Prolrssional Law Fratiriiity Founded Chicago, 1913 Root Senate ICstablished at Stanford 1922 OFFICERS ])i, , . Faki. A. Everett ni-|)i x . ' ' ■ Laurence B. Martin |., iii,,|, ' Joseph V. Gomes l|.in ' i, .... Edwin W. Hauley Ci.KKK OK ExcHi.o. .-.; Herbert A. Davis Clerk OF r ' olls ■ . . Frank L. Miri-hv GRADUATE MEMBERS Ninclccii Hundred and Nineteen Edwin W. Hadlev I--Ari. A. Everett Nineteen Hundred and T ' u ' enty Ameglio Andrexccetti James W. Bucklin Herbert A. Davis James T. McMenamin Frank L. Murphy Vernon A. Vrooman Nineteen Hundred aud T arnly-One Albert V. Mueller Irving M. Smith Wii-LiAM L. Southwell Nineteen Hundred and Ti ' enty-Two George V. Burch Harmon E. Cutler Joseph V. Gomes Laurence B. Martin Thomas E. McDonald Milton Wright Albert W. Cupid MEMBERS Nineteen John P.King Arthur W.Loder Alexander W. McCrea Algot J. Peterson Nmeteei Byron J. Badham Louis L. Bucklin Henry C. Mack Hundred and Tzvent James H.Snell 1 Hundred and Tifcnt, James P. Warner y-Three Harry E. Lindersmit Claude R.Minard Adonis H. Nielson James 0. Reavis y-Four John L. Hofflund Kenneth C. Hardwic James P. Smith ' ■■1 ■ : lw. n i L. Hl ' •r L . 1 ' t 1 ■l HlHI OMEGA UPSILON PHI rr,it ssi,m,- il . lI..|,alliK- iM-.iUTinty stal.lishr.l Si-litmilirr ,1. l ' ' (ll I ' Wl ' l l. ' iV .NU ' IMBEKS Til Fk. Ha Til Jos oMAs Addis, M.D., Ch.B., M. I ' .., . 1,K,, NK Ellsworth Blaisdeli., .MIL N- -., CriMrx. A.B.. M.D. nM • . ■ .M, N, Ph.G., M.D. IN 1 1). C.l ' . Wilfred Hamilton Manwarinc;. . L ,. . I D. KuFUs Lee Rigdon, M.D. I ' :mmet Ri.nfokii. B.S.. LD. Geokoe IUuhank .Sumik . |;.. M,D. Hi.ward Shmlk-, I;..s. . 1.D. Julian Mast Wih i moi n . i:., . LS.. M.D. MEMBERS „ Intrnic John A. Azevedo, A.B. ThoI.OW BlNKLEY, A.B. Ih-Ycar Medicine Harry . Baker, A.K. H.VROLD I. Be.wer. A.B. loHN J. boYLE, A.B. Paul W. Frame. A.B. Percy B. Gallecos, A.B. Homer E. Marston, A.B. William H. Murphy, A.B. Granville Wo:, 11. A.B. , Ll.B. Tlw d-Vrar Mrduinc Albert K. Chorbajian, A. B. H. William FRmcHEN, A. B. Harry . Ernest M. Hall, A.B. Herbert Wells, A.B. . SO.MERFIELD. A.B. Sccoi. id-Ycar Medicine Charles A. Fernish, A.B. Dudley P. Sanford, A.B. William 0. French, Jr., A.B., M.A. Emmett E. Sappington. A.B. ' ernon F. Kennedy, A.B. Rexford William McBride, A.B. firs l-Vear Medicine William G. Burkharu Kenneth D. Gardner Clarence I. Burnett Harold N. King James R. Enricht Donald L. Rorert.son . ndrew B. Stockton Pre-Mcdical Lucas W. Em pey MeRVYN J. FuENDELINC, D.midW. C.Harris Paul Edward Hoffmann Albert P. Krueger Oliver L. Lawson PHI CHI Professional Medical igma Upsilon Chapter. Rstablii FACULTY MEM1 ' ,KRS Jean Redman Oi.iveu Henuy Augustus Stephenson IN INTERNK GonuoN R. FoRTSoN Clarence B. Cowan Archibald W. Warnock FOURTH YEAR MEDICAL Lewis H. Sanborn J. Paul Sweeney Donald B. Tressider Chester A. Love, Jr. THIRD YEAR MEDICAL George D. Brown Willia.m L. Garth Bernard A. Cody Reed M. Nesbit Frank A. McDonald Stanley Ducan A.G.Rawlins SECOND YEAR MEDICAL Augustus C. Beattik Leonard B. Barnard Robert T. Boyd William C. Cooke Donald A. Dallas Frederick H. Krock Rodolko E. Monaco Raymond R. Scott Shirley D. Wimmer Dave F. Dozier FIRST YEAR MEDICAL Curtis B. Gorham Donald E. King Oscar C. Railsback William L. Thompson L. R. Seruurier PRE-MEDICAL John O. ' aughn IJ« 1 NU SIGMA FACLLT ' MKM NU :krs 1 Harry Everett Alderson Hans Barkan Walter Whitney Boarum. W ILLIAM R. P. Clark JOHN Fra.ncis Cowan Harold Kniest Faber Frank Robert Girard Harold Phillips Hill Albert Brown McKee Arthur William Meyer Chester Biven Moore J. P. Strickli- MEMBERS Iiilcntct William Ophuls Albert Victor Pettit H. J. Pruitt Alfred Cummixgs Reed M. E. Rum WELL Walter Frank Schaller Karl Ludvvig Schaupp Chester Durbix Sewall Edward Cecil Sewall Stanley Stillman Alfred Baker Spauldixg r ir ' - ' i C. W. AXKELE. 70 L. B. Chandler. ' IS F. R. Johnston. ' 17 Merlin Maynard. ' 2(1 A. F. Warren. fourth Year .I ,-, H. L. Xeibel. ' 18 D. K. Pischel. ' 19 R. P. Seitz. ' 19 P. V. Thompson. ' 20 •19 Heal ' ' ■■ i Everett Carlson. ' 20 Hans Hartman, ' 20 Third Year Med John- K. Morris, ' 20 M. Nelson. ' 19 al Rf.o B. Armitstead. ' 20 Russel C. Chilcote. ' 20 Second Ycr Ma Paul B. Kinney, ' 21 Arthur C. McKennv, ' 19 Heal Herbert H. Darling. ' 21 Francisco L. Gonzales. ' 22 James L. Maupix. Jr., ' 21 Wallace J. Miller. ' 22 Cletus S. Sullivax. ' 22 Benjamin H. Page, ' 22 First Year Medical M. Owen Grixstead. ' 2i Jack R. J imerson. ' 22 Richard T. Tavlc Carleton Mathewscx. ' 22 Edwin A. Patterson, ' 23 R, ' 22 pi V i Ki a PHI LAMBDA UPSILON OI- ' l- ' lCI ' -.RS Presipkxt Vn.i.Ai(i)F..SL-r,i.ivAx. ' 22 VicE-PuKsiDKNT Russici. A. Fearson, ' 22 Secketarv ... Franz Sturm, ' 23 Treasurer Francis A. Smith. ' 22 FACULTY MEMBERS EnwARn Curtis Franklin Norris W. Rakestraw Albert I . C). Cermann John Russel LioMJ. Ki h in ii 1.1 xox William Henry Sloan Chari I s I ),, i, l.i.w KY. Jr. John Max.son Stillman JoH l ' i i;ii MihiiEiL Robert EcKLEs Swain Geuri.e .Sl iiii.N I ' akks Stewart Woopi-ord Young MEMBERS Xiiu-U-n, Hundred and Eleven Louis D. Elliott Xiiictccn Hundred and Sixteen Robert N. Wenzel Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Alanson W. McDermoth Nineteen Hundred ami Tzcenty Mii.o A. Bird Oliver W. Johnson Nineteen Hundred ami Tteenlx-One HoMEU P. Struhle Nineteen Hundred and ' Iwenty-Tzvo William U. Eii is Russel A. Pearson Ray L. Hamilton Carl W. Reheuss Theodor S. Jacobsex Lawrence R. Serrurier Dell T. Lunhquist Francis A. Smith WiLLARn E. Sullivan Nineteen Hundred and Tzeenly-Three Charles W. Harnett John R. Hawes Cecil R. Brolver William A. Hyde Elton F. Cornell Kenneth K. Kelley Franz Sturm Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' euty-Four E. Stanley Brown William K. Nelson Paul C. Wii.iiur Nineteen Hundred and T ' U ' enty-Fiz ' e GaleC. Gkiswolii ii ALPHA CHI SIGMA Professional Chemistry Fraternity Alpha Alpha Chapter, Established May 5. 1916 FACULTY MEMBERS Edward C. Franklin, B.S., M.S.. Ph.D Aldert F. O. German n Charles D. Lowry, Jr. John Pearce Mitchell, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. George S. Parks John Russell John- Maxson Stillman, Ph.B., Ph.D. Robert Eckles Swain. A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Stewart W. Youxo. B.S. MEMBERS Xhu-U-cn Hundred ,ind lu ' Cnty Eugene L. Dam MiLoA. Bi J. A.Carv U-rii Hundred and l ' wr QUIMBY V. William Newman. Jk. Kenneth S. Ritchie Warren H. Kraft RussEL A. Pearson CarlW. Rehfuss Nineteen Hundred and ' luYntv-Tzvo . i.AN C. Richardson Lawrence R. Serruri WiLLARD E. Sullivan Hundred and 7 i Kenneth W.Brown Elton F. Cornell Lawrence J. Coulthurst KlONNETH N. CUNUAI.I. e ' HARLES A. GrONDONA Kenneth K. Kelley -Three Gustaf M. Liljenstei Frederick C. Loomis Theodore M. Matson Thomas K. Sloan Henry F. Si ' eoull Francis S. Stew. rt Franz Sturm Clare S. Chaffee Raymond P. Gene VANt:E B. F.RICKSOl Glenn H. McIntv y-l-our Milton H. Saier William W. Swayne Colin W. Timmons Paul C. Wilbur ' 4 h ' : PI KAPPA TAU HONORARY M KM HERS El VVAKl) LaTIMKR lltAllI LeKOV I ' lKHCK Coi.LlNS CiiAKLKS Emeksun Buvle, J r. Hakold a. Cooney R. H. Powers MEMliERS Xiiirlccn Hundred and Tz. ' cnly James T. McMenamix NincUrn Hundred and Turnly-T ' a ' o Wii.iJAM A. B. Hav.n-e William W. Patterson Allen- A. Patterson Remond W. Richaruson Xindi-cn Hundred and Tzvcnty-Thrcc Norman Cleaveland Paul C. Murray jjjLi Dudley S. DeGroot Alfred W. Nash [ S !! Gerald J. Edwards Harry R. Tremaine ' - ,■■,! Richard W. Faville Lyall C. Vanderburgh Thomas G. Greene, Jr. Samuel E. Vaughan Edward B. Harper Murray A. Ward Wendell R. Wilson Nineteen Hundred and Ticenly-Four r ! Otto C. Barby Egbert W. Laub i ' Vi Ralph E. Barby Adolph Neuman Donald K. Stewart 1 P ENGLISH CLUB President Molly VVindish. ' 22 Vice-President Elizadeth B. Sfilman, ' 22 Secretary Harold H. Davis. ' 23 Treasurer Howard Pease. ' 23 Faculty Adviser Edith Ronald Mirrielees Alumni Secretary Elinor V. Cogswell HONORARY MEMBERS David Starr Jordan Charles K. Field Mrs. David Stark Jordan Will H. Irwin Mrs. Ourin L. Elliott George B, Culver D.wid Charles Gardner FACULTY MEMBERS Raymond M. Alden Elisabeth L. Buckingham Melville B. Anderson William H. Carruth Margery Bailey Henry R. Fairclouch Lee Emerson Bassett Henry D. Gray Richard C. Bentinck Alice R. Hand William D. Briggs Frances T. Russell Harold C. Brown Samuel S. Seward. Jr. JoiinS. P.Tati.ock GRADUATl- MEMBERS Ninclrrii limufrcd and Xiiu-lrcn MekxvxH.Ckobak.h Niuctrn, Ihoulrcd and Ticcnly Robert C. Binklky Daniel W. Evans MEMBERS A ' ii;.- iT(i llundird and T-. ' cniy-T ' u ' o Germaine Collette Charles L. McNichols Rosemary Drachman Dorothy D. Pierce Edward D. Landels Milton S. Rosenfield Elizabeth B. Spilman Mollie Windish Nineteen Hundred and Ttcenty-Thrce Katherine Beswick Thomas G. Irwin Margaret J. Boillott Howard Pease Edwin R. Clapp Marian S. Petray Harold H. Davis Carl Wilhelmson Mary B. Eyre Frank L. Fenton Nineteen Hundred and Tt. ' enty-foiir Frederick R. Fisher Mathew 0. Tobriner Ruth A. McBride Linda Van Norden Edward V. Strong Helen Whitney ALPHA PI ZETA President Recording Secretary CoRRESPoxnixG Secretary Treasurer RvssELL R. Laxcford Fraxces E. Willis Gilford G. Rowlaxd Slsax Blrk FACULTY MEMBERS Edwix Axgell Cottrell Henry Waldgrave Stuart Victor J. West Mlrray Shipley Wilumax Rlfus Lot Green Edgar El ' gexe Robinson • ' -. ii - i-.. GRADUATES Slsan Burr Natalye Colfelt Marguerite Drew Amelia Hedges Frances Willis Harold E. McCombie L RCARET M ILLIKEX Gilford G. Rowlaxd Dewey L. Strickler Xincleci Hundred and Ttirnly Thomas M. Uhnohoe William M. Haberkern Philip F. La NDis Russell R. Laxgford -Three Arthur Neum AX Hexry L. Oberg Bemer Robixsox Harold R. Tremaixe i Nineteen Hundred and 7i,r ( Grecorio Patacsil ■-Four Harriet Worrel 1 Nineteen Hundred and Twent Allax E. Charles y-Fize Si.roiill Cravens Brown W PI ALPHA PHI SENIOR CLASS Frederick L. Anpersox. ' li James Austin, ' 23 William M. Black, Jr., ' 23 William H. Brown, ' 23 Roy W. Carver, ' 23 Norman P. Cleaveland, ' 23 Robert I. Cravens, ' 23 Dl-i)levS.DeGroot, ' 23 Elmer E. Elliott, ' 23 C. Lane Falk, ' 23 Linn M. Parish, ' 23 Richard W. Faville, ' 23 TV Nelson ' Van Judah, ' 23 ViETH Theodore Mertz, ' 23 Nfx-;ox T KnwF.LL, ' 23 r,ln|,:,,,,T. l ' nUKLL, ' 23 Mvimx X. Knl,, ' 23 W ILMAM L. K.K.ERS, ' 23 James G.Ross. ' 23 J. HovvELL Smith, ' 23 Henry F. Sproull, ' 23 Eugene N. Trago, ' 23 Llovd Tritle, ' 23 Roy F. Williamson. ' 23 Francis E. Wilson, ' 23 SCALPERS Prksidk ;nt Norman D. Dole Skckkt. ' iry-Treasirer Robert D. Boynton Senior Advisor .... Clarence J. Tauzer I Charles G. Fletcher • 1 Clayton K. Janssen Junior . dvisors .... MF.MBERS Charles E. Beardslev, ' 25 William W. McCandless. ' 25 Robert D. Boynton, ' 25 Jlilliaru McDonald, ' 25 Allan E. Charles, ' 25 John M. Marble. ' 25 Arthur B. Conover, ' 25 loEL D. MiDDLETON. ' 25 Guy H. Dennis, ' 25 Paul I. Murphy, ' 25 Norman D. Dole, ' 25 David M. Oliva, ' 25 John A. Driscoll, ' 25 Charles H. P. rks. ' 25 Thomas J. Grace, ' 25 Georc.e D, Roberts, ' 25 William L. Hobko, ' 25 Harry H. Shipkey, ' 25 James W. Lawson, ' 25 Gurix)n D. Steele, ' 25 Archie Logan, ' 25 Milton M. Tkacue. ' 25 John . . Williams, ' 25 SENIOR CONTROL COMMITTEE 1922-23 Chairman Lou Minsky Secretary Lura Spangler MRMBF.RS Louis B. Minsky CKcn, Putnam Edwin R.Barnes Jn-rrii I ' l-im,: Newton Brinkman NUm, Is ' im Edward W.Butler 1 ' - i n l .i i !■ i son Dudley DeGroot . Iii i knn m.aum Elmer E. Elliott Charles Sr.u all Wardwell D. Evans Edward Waterman LinnFarish Robert Wright Thomas G. Irwin Bradley Wyatt Frederick C. Loomis Lura Spangler Al Masters Mabel Ferry Claude Peavy Mabel Jones loHN Phelps Freda Kuhne Katharine Steiglr IOTA SIGMA PI Women ' s Honorary Chemistry Fraternity President Flouence Whittier, ' 21 Vice-President Ruth Lee. ' 22 Secretary-Treasurer Dorothy Pierce. 22 Corresponding Secretary Mildred Hall, ' 23 HONORARY MEMBERS Miss B. Bercer Mrs. W. H. Sloan Miss A. Boulware Mrs. J. M. Stillman Mrs. J. P. Mitchell Mrs. R. E. Swain MEMBERS Ruth Fulton, ' 22 Florence Whittier, ' 21 Edith Hawley, ' 11 Mildred Hall, ' 23 Ruth Lee, ' 22 Leona Mayer, ' 23 Dorothy Pierce, ' 22 Dorothy Starks, ' 23 Seldon Sponslor, ' 18 Honora McCartv, ' IZ Gladys Newnan. ' 24 DepflRTmeniflL soaeiies American Institute of Electrical Engineers STANFORD UNIVERSITY BRANCH OFFICKRS President .... DeWittC. Bertrand Vice-President Leo M. Stauffer Secretary-Treasurer . . Theodore H. Shepherd FACULTY MEMBERS James Cameron Clar WARnB.KixDv Harry Harrison Hen LINE Theodore Harding Morgan Harris J )SEPH Ryan MEMBERS Nin •tccn Huna red and T ' u ' cniy Paul H. Davis Leo M. Stauffer Jere W. Robinson Nhu-U en H tndrcd and Tivculy-One Philip C.C lark Florencio M. Cota Ninclc •n II indrc i and r .■i-nty-Tu ' o D. Stoddard Atwood Charles E. Miller Edwin K. Baum Kenneth D. Nff Edwin M. Blakeslee Horace E. Overacker Charles B. Carpenter Harold W. Scriener George S. Clark William C. Stevenson Robert C. Connolly Gerard G. Wilson Glen N A. WiNGAl D Ninctc nH, ndn-d and Tzirnty-Thrcc DeWitt C. Bertrand Walter G. Miller LoREN S. Bush Claude E. Pe.avy AvLETT F. DeVault Paul J. B. Sandretto Harry A. Greene Theodore H. Shepherd Harold T. John Lemuel C. Smith Richard E.Johnson Charles H. Sortor John C. Lane George R. Stray Charles L. Meyer David J. Trummer WiL MER W. Youh JG Niiu-ti- n Hi ndrcc and Tiivnty-Four William G. Lee William J. PuTtAMP m. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY OFFICERS First Term Sccmul Turm RicHAKii E. Johnson Presibent Pali, I. B. Sandketto Kenneth D. Nef Vice-President Dermont N. Macconei. Charles L. Meyer Sec. -Treasurer Claude E. Peavy l ' ' rancisco Br Bruce Lloyd Wynn Meredith H. P. Phillips FACULTY MEMBERS IIORATIOW. StEBB KvERETT P. Lesley Charles N. Cross GRADUATE MEMBERS Nincln-n Htmdrcl and Ninctc, Niiu-lrc nH iindred ai id T: went V-One Kenne LORE iH D. Nef ICIO M. COTA I ' ll ilipC .Clark II. Hartm Nineteen Hundred ai ' id 7 ' zceni ■y-Tw ■0 Edwin M. Blakeslee Robert C. Connolly George S. Clark Xoi manM.S. COFTF William Camillu! David S. C. Steve: i R. Stani Atwood MEMBI- :rs Nineteen Hn ndred an - T: went y-Thr Robert . n. Sandretto f. Wright Ei. Cii 1.0 mfN s. ' . Watekn L; Mfvr Lemuel C. Smith Richard W. Faville Claude E. Peavy Harold T. John Dermont N. Macconel Ernest Hamilton Lloyd J. Franklin Arthur C. Kirkwood Paul Jay Bramkamp STANFORD STUDENT CHAPTER American Society of Civil Engineers Ol-FICICKS First Term Second Term William M. Black. Jr. . . President . . . Russell G. Hackett RusselG. Hackett . . . Vice-President .... Harold S. Conard Bradley W. Wyatt . . . Secretary . . . Howard B. Nichols Edwin F. Myers .... Treasurer . . . Edwin F. Myers Harold S. Conard Correspondence Sec ' y . . . L. Harold Anderson F. CULTY MEMBERS J. C. L. Fish Charles Moser L. M. HosKiNS E.C.Thomas C.D.M.vR.x C. B.WiNG MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen William C. Brown Franklin O. Rose Nineteen Hnndred and Tiventy RussEL G. Hackett Lawrence E. Millerd Nineteen Hundred and ncenty-One Paul F. Henderson .Arthur R. Tyler Nineteen Hnndred and Tiventy-Tu ' o Benjamin Alvord. Jr. Clayton B. Neill JohnH. Colton Horace C. Sherer Lewis H. Kennedy Eugene W. Silitch Nineteen Hnndred and Tzcenty-Three Gustav a. Amrerg James Kazan L. Harold .Anderson Edward S. Loder Albert J. Bateman Eugene E. Miller William M. Bl. ck, Jr. Edwin C. Moore OsBORN H. Carlson Edwin V. Myers Everett L. Clark Howard B. Nichols George D. Clark Sidney Van Keuren Clyde E. Coakley Wendell R. Wilson Harold S. Conard Bradley W. Wyatt Nineteen Hundred and Tzeenty-Four John D. Campbell John G. Rawhauser W. Stanley Miller Hugh L. Stewart Elmer J. Nelson David S. Summers STANFORD SECTION Geological and Mining Societies of American Universities ()I ' FkI ' :rs President .... Vice-President Merlk.M. K ' ir ., ' _ ' l Thomas 1) Km., m , i , . ' n Charles W 1 i iri! i ' ' 2 Treasurer .... Carlto.n . LLai .m,.s . ' I FACULTY MEMBERS Eliot Blackwelder Theodore J. Hoover James P. Smith Harry W. Mo James M. Hyde Austin F. Rogers CyrusF. ToLMAN. Jr. R.D.I Welton J. Crook Waldemar F. Dietrich Frederick G. Tickell Reeii GRADUATE MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Sei ' i •nteeu Harold Peterson Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Harold H. Wright Nil leteen Hundred am! Nine ■leen Everett Hurt Herbert E. Browning William D. Pheney A i neteen Hundred and Tit ' , cnly P. F. Boswell Eugene L. Davis Paul L. Henderson Donald D. Hughes Paul F. Kerr Donald R.Knowi.ton JohnB. Newsom Thomas D.Radcliffe Robert G. Rogers Nine Ircii Hundred and T-avnt y-One Bradford Bishop Carlton M. Carson Edmund A. Culkin Leo G. Hertlein Alvin p. Loskamp Leonard C. Lundquist Francis E. Marshall Merle M. Repass Dale D. Sparks SolisM.Zandmer Ninel •em Hundred and T ' arnI: •-Tzco Albert A. Carrey Grant Corby Loran a. Creglow Richard C. Harris Elmer E. Maillot Joseph T. Silviera Charles W. Merrill Frith JOE W. Nelson Remond W. Richardson Lowell W. Saunders William W. Tamplin Nineti ■en Hundred and Ticenty •-Thre Delos Abrams,Jr. Albert L Grf.gerse.n Samuel P. Applewhite. Jr. Daniel M. Bernt James K. Brooke Chester Cassel Richard R. Crandall Sydney C. Ewing Albert A. Forster Charles D. Gifford William F. Hinton Kenneth F. LeMarinel Albert R. Masters Henry Mulryan PaulC. Murray Norman A. Rousselot Herbert R. Simons Glen M. Earl i — e;. - ;;.;v ■ ( )t) — g = = tKaiasaiaKaiiiiia „;::;;:::::::::;;„ii L VJ B S ECONOMICS CLUB OFFICERS Pkesidext Theodore Mertz Secretary-Treasurer Nokris L. Welsh MEMBERS A ' iurli ' cii Hundred and Ti.rnty-Ttco Myron C. Hicby Ford M. Tussing NoRRis L. Welsh Nhu ' lrn, Hundred and Ti, ' ,-iily-Tlircc Arthur Austin James M. MacRoberts Othmar B. Berky Theodore Mertz Paul H. Beuter Charles W. MmciLEY. Jr. Robert G. Bundy Harold B. Nicholson Edward B. Clancy Nelson T. Nowell Howard M. Clark Myron N. Reed Elmer E. Elliott James G. Ross Clarence E. Kiggens Kenneth J. Shipp James F.Knappen Lloyd Tritle John S. McCutcheon David B. Tuthii.l MASONIC CLUB iio. ( ll K MiMi;i-,KS I.ERov p. Collins William F. Dlrand Iames 0. (iRiEHN C. G. Lambert • OHN E. MrDinvELL « U - L ' =cett James Marshall T. J. Palmateer ' k. ' l ' ; ' Al ' i il ' . ' ' K.RK Chester G. Vern . Welton I. Crook H. N. Vandkrvoort A. M. Cl ' thbeutson ASSOCIATK MKMBERS W.B.Allen 1). A. C. Olgivie C.E.Jordan E. C. Tho.ts Frank A LeSuer William O. IIorabin Frank J.Miller Joseph Horden E. U. Nolan 0. A. Wideman Alfred Seale James B. Blois C. V. Decker ACTIVE MEMBERS Cecil V. Abbott Harold T. John Noel O. P.aer Elmer W. Johnson Charles C. Baptie Richard E. Johnson Charles W Barley Willard L. Johnson I. T Benwell Paul F.Kerr Daniel M. Bernt, Jr. John P. King P. F. BoswELL Brother L. Kvlberg William L. ISradsiiaw Philip F. I.andis Ralph . . P.rant Laurence B. Martin Walter R. B.HOWN Walter G. Miller Herbert E. Browning Homer L Mitchell Chester L. Cooley Richard .S. Mitchell Lawrence H. Cook Everett K. Mohh Tames Coulter Robert M. Moore Frederick A. Covey Albert ' . Mueller Daniel K. Covle Oscar W. Mulford Edmund A. Culkin C. F. Myers Eugene L. D.wis Finley F. Neal Aylett F. 1 )eVault John B Newsom Winfield C. Dexter Homer W. Patterson Charles W. Dickenson George W. Patterson Sanford M. Dickey. Tr. Russel A. Pe. rson Cheslev M. Douglas ' Frank M. Penepacker.. George S. Drysdale Douglas L. Penfield R.vouL Edmonds Leo F. Pierce Fred -S. Evans Mark A. Postlewaite Mark Evans William J. Putcamp Curtis E. Flint E. Gordon Pulliam George G. Freer Thomas D. Radcliffe William O. French, Jr. John Riecle, Jr. Mervyn J. Fuendeling .;. W. Robinson, Jr. George C. Fish John H. Robinson WiilmmR Gage Harry F. Schumann Kenneth D. Gardner Raymond R. Scott Tames M.Hamill E.T.Smith William G. Hawkins Francis A. Smith Paul Hayfer Theodore H. Shepherd Frank B. Hays Tames Hilgesen Barton A. HiNC Ford M. Tussing Russell L. Walti Walter M. X. W m COSMOPOLITAN CLUB First Term Don M. Chase. ' 24 Joseph Sano, ' 25 Kenneth Gagos. ' 22 Talbot Bielefeldt, ' 25 Evelyn Olsen, ' 22 Otto C. Barby, ' 24 Hatto Tappenbeck, ' 23 Doha Mallory, ' 24 Thomas Faucette, ' 23 President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Secretary American Stideni Secreatry for Students Secretary Social Affairs Secretary Publicity HOXORARV MF.MBKRS Mrs. E. C. Ewell Rev. C. F. Hutslai Harold C. Brown Charles S. Botsford William H. Cakruth aurelio m. espinosa Gordon F. Ferris Frank A. Morgan Percy A. Martin Second Term Thomas F. Faucette, ' 23 WuTa ' am. ' 25 • Hallie E. Queen, Gr. Paul W. Orr. ' 25 Anna M. Lopin, ' 22 Don M Chase, ' 24 Adelbert Buttrey. ' 24 R. Carol Davis, ' 25 Doris Harter, ' 25 Ray Ly.man Wilbur David Starr Jordan FACULTY MEMBERS Bailey Willis Henry R. Fairclouch William M. Proctor William S. Schwartz John M. Stillman Samuel S. Seward, Jr. John S. P. Tatlock Payson J. Treat ' ASSOCLA.TE MEMBERS Barbara Addington Edith Mears -I graduatI ' : members ■ ' X Germaine Collette, ' 22 Anna M. Lopin. ' 22 V Kenneth Gagos, ' 22 Evelyn Olsen, ' 22 Gertrude J. Joseph. ' 22 Michel Lecraye ' ■ ) IyeHarada Hallie E. Queen . Shen-Chwan Tan Liang-Kung Yang MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enl -rhrec Ottilia C. Anderson Willard L. Johnson Francis S. Stewart Thomas F. Faucette Caspar H. Magarian Pen-Tung Sah K)i Nineteen Hundred and T-arnty-fonr ;X Otto C. Barby Hatto Tappenbeck ' =•1=1 Adelbert Buttrey Henry H. Berk 7 1 Ralph E. Barby Dora Mallory Don M. Chase John L Bourke Geor(;eMizoto ' jf Nineteen Hundred and Twenly-Five : V Violet Balcomb Doris Harter Talbot Bielefeldt Toichi Demoto Lillian Bidwell Wu Ta ' am Ruth Carol Davis Francis Hayashi Ruth Stucky Joseph Sano Nineteen Hundred and Tzeenty-Six Kaniiaiva Dixit Bertha Siiedd STANFORD CHESS CLUB ■ MUHi. VV. French. ' 23 Richard L. Sloss. ' 24 Mervyn Crobauch, ' 20 Albert V. Mueller, ' 21 WnxARi) E. Sullivan. ' 22 Mkl ix R. Shmii;.. -22 HKXin I W 11 I iMM. ' 23 U)HN I II,- ' ,; H.Cnl lUMI l;i „MlilCT, ' 2 Samuel W. French, ' 23 Richard L. Sloss, ' 24 Robert L. Goldman, ' 24 Richard P. Gross, ' 24 Eric K. Jordan. ' 24 Richard Coblentz, ' 25 ZiEMAR Hawkins, ' 25 CLASSICAL CLUB offici-:rs President Francis Hutchens. ' 23 Vice-President Helen Schardin, ' 24 Secretary ... Linda Van Norden, ' 24 Treasurer Myrtle Klahn. ' 22 FACULTY MEMBERS Proiessor and Mrs. J. Elmore Professor and Mrs. B. O. Foster Proeessor and Mrs. H. R. Fairclough Professor and Mrs. E. W. Martin Mrs. Hallie Watteks MEMBERS Mary L. Cornes. ' 22 Mildred M. Estus. ' 22 Harold Davis. ' 23 Vera Reppy, ' 23 Mary Brennan, ' 24 Linda Van Norden. ' 24 Winifred Smeaton, ' 24 Eakl Ramey, ' 25 George Purnell, ' 26 Myrtle Klahn. ' 22 Willard Johnson, ' 23 Francis Hutchens, ' 23 Madki.hm Li. iiii , . ' 24 Helkn ,s. m ihi-., - ' 4 ZlEMU: II « KU, -, ' 23 MAROAKhTLiii.ii;iiii, ' 26 FRENCH CLUB President Secretarv Treaslrkr Halfd ' ax I. Gregersex Elizabeth Lacombe Elizabeth Noyes FACLl.TV MEMI ' .I ' RS Oliver Martix Johnstox, Ph.D. . lrelio Macedonio Espinosa, Ph.l Clifford Gil.more Allen, A. M. Stanley Astredo Smith, A.M. William Leonard Schwartz I ' IaI.PII PiASVVELL LuTZ Elizai rii WoormRiDCE . LFRED COKSTER. Ph.D. Percy Alvix Martin, Ph.D. Clelia Due l Mosher, M.D. Frederick . nderson John Arm.stroxg Sellards Jessie Edxa S.mith MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen Laurence D. Bailiff Nineteen Hundred and Ttventy George Lacombe teen Hundred and T-Mnty-T-a-o m Kaoi-l Edmonps Halfdan I. Greceksen lu.lZABETH LaCOMBE Eugene Poncelet Mneteen Hundred and Ttcenty-Three Harold Bruxet James Delkin Dorothy Herrixgton Mary Learnard Madeleine Lechtex Elizabeth Noyes MoNA Walsh Kinelee, Hundred and I ' uvnty-Four Santiago Aguerrevere Hammond Ashley Olivia Boezinger Alexander Briccs Sidney Hawkins Helen Mack en Hundred and Tzu-ent} Ai.khida Poco HISTORY CLUB A( LI.TN ' MKMl Hmikaim I)mi .,1 ss Aia.M Km.i-ii HasvvellLl-tz EUWARI.I.MIMIK r.l , H I ' l i;i V Alvin Martin PAI-I. liM:l:MM ( IMM 1 j; MM Whitney Martin MeKVVN I l,n,:N, ,,,, Imk.ar l- ' ,r ,ENE Robinson JEFKKUMIN IMMU.,. Kaul (ji stay Rendtorff F.uwAKi. Maimin Hn.MK RE(iiNALii CjEorge Trotter Mr s. Hall E W ' atters GRADUATE STUDENTS Hkrbkkt B. Alexamikr Helen- Payne Robert C. Binklev MaRV r.PALMKR Lois M. Cottuell l-J.llll 1 ' . SiH KNKY Oscar Falnes Wl 11 I.H 1. 1). Si V Rowland H. Harvey WMii . J i Elizabeth Lacombe Ki.ui;w . Wlu... Clara Os.;ood Frances Willis Sarah Young MEMBERS Margaret Craven, ' 23 Josephine Scott, ' 23 Mabel McCanse, ' 23 Frances Williams, ' 23 Joyce Robsox. ' 2i Dorothy Shei ' Ari.. ' 24 m ' A PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Harold Chapma John Edgar Coover Maud Amanda Merrill FACULTY MEMBERS Brown Calvin P. Stone Lewis Madison Terman Gertrude May Trace . D. Whitmire GRADUATE STUDENTS George Bram mer Mary B. Eyre Franklin S. Fearing Florence Goodenough Herbert R. Laslett Nellie B. Sulliv. ' MEMBERS Frank von Christierson, ' 23 Wendell R. Mortimer. ' 23 Philip F. Landis, ThayxeM.Livesay Helen Marshall Simon P. Nanninga Thomas W. MacQuarrie Albert S. Raubenheimer Esther C.TuLLV. ' 23 RaymondF. Law, ' 23 1 ! ASSOCIATED FEDERAL STUDENTS I ' m.iultJ at Stanford Univeisily, Oclolicr 1, lyiy Fall Quarter Winter Quarter Walter M. Warren. ' 22 ... . President Aionzo 1 Crawford ' ? James HiLGESEN, ' 23 Vice-President . ■ J;mes Kazan ' . ' 23 Earl Ramav, ' 2, Secretary Edwin C. Moore. ' Zi James Kazan, ' 23 Treasurer WiLLAM J. Putcamp. ' 25 GRADUATE MEMBERS Wii.i.iAM 1. . llexsaiit IraW. Kibby Remond W. Richardson Ki Mi . I 11,1, oTE Donald R. Knowlton Kavm.ink M. Robertson ' ii ' D Homer E. Likely .Mil M.N S. Rosenfield l ' ■ . • ThayneM. Livesav liiM N 1.. Rush 1 M ii ■. i II ( Frank C. Lynch I ' M i II l v i Thomas E. McDonald WlsiJ;v , . ' ' sea.vian Ilr.iii 11. I),..M,VAN Oscar C. Marshall Dale D. Sparks William O. French William L. Merrili OuiMBY W. Taylor Chalmers (;. Graham Casper A. Michelson Vernon A. Vrooman Sidney N. C.reenleaf Simon P. Nanninga Edwin A. VVelis DoNAi-D D. Hughes Ceorce W. Patterson Ernest A. Wilson Everett P. Hurt Merle M. Repass Walter M. Warren MEMP.ERS Mnrtn-n Hundred and Tzccnty-Thrcc Noel O. Baer Harmon E. Cutler James A. Marsh Chester O. Blackburn Clarence E. Eskew LiiAM. VV. Miller Cordon R. Bo ver Herbert G. Florcken Ki.wLvC. .Moore Charles L. Bradbury Charles D. Gifford Roy W. Carver Durlin B. Hackett V heeler ' F. ' ' schall Joseph C. Chameerlin Thomas G. Irwin Richard C. Smith Arthur D. Cohan James Kazan Alonzo L. Crawford Roland E. Kinney Walter D. Thornton Raymond 0. Wright Robert T. Patton James Hi Nineteen Hundred and Tzwntv-Four Elliott H. Avres Raymond G. Greene Paul E. Norris Fremont 0. Ballou Diamond E. Gregerson Roger A. O ' Connor Charles C. Baptie James M. Hamii.l Lamar F. Phyfer William L. Bradshaw Alfred G. Heidic Alexis E. Post William C. Brown Leonard W. Hunt William R. Brown John P. King Herbert E. Browning James M. K.rby Alfred F. Sciiultz Frank L. Smith Eugene C. Colgan George E. Lusk George K. Smith Daniel K. Coyle John M. McClelland Ruth C. Crutcher Howard A. McDonald Harold C. Soper Patrick Templeton Charles W. Dickenson George F. McGill Norton E. Wattenberger Herbert V. Douglas Everett K. Mohr Albert C. White Donald C. Follis Oscar R. Murray Carl Wilhelmson Forest H. Young Ninelren Hundred and Tivenlv-fhe Richard L. Argue Kdward A. Howard William E. Miller Joseph L. Baker Frank P. Isensee Robert Burnett Burton H. Jayne KosNA L. Mitchell Robert T. Molseed LoRENZ CosTEi.Lo Claude M. Johnson William I. Putcamp Leonard T. Craven Howa rd M- Kirk Earl Ramev Martin A. l)-. NnHEA Ernest P. Kuckein Leslie F Rolley Lyman H. Daugherty Lewis Lagodzinski (inR|„iN M. RmSS Earl A. Everett Michael J. Lavelle Tn..--., I-- ' rr,,rp Jacob B. Gladstone Daniel P Lewis Elmer H. Hammond Charles L. McNichols IrlR. Harcourt L. I.Maine 1 . 1 ' . i ■ M E R James C. IIeai.ey Stanley Marvin 111, 1 ' , , 1 V, [ William H. Henry William I. Meeiian John L. Hofflund Kincsley ' R. Miller ' Eliu. 11. Wiley Arthur F. Winier Nineteen Hundred and T ' avnty- ix Claude A. Bryner Guv R. Merrill Arthur A. Ross George W. Colby Gilbert W. Pettibone William G. Hawkins Lawrence W. Rideout Charles A. Snyder Richard T. Lapiere Norrell E. Ross Webster F. Street 1- LENS AND PLATE President ice-Prf.sidext Secretary-Treasurek ExxETH S. Ritchie Philip B. Hooker Gale C. Griswold m William S. Gary, ' 21 Kenneth S. Ritchie, ' 21 George I . Calvin, ' 22 Brighton C. Cain, ' 23 Lawrence M. Duryee, ' 23 Harvey C. Stoddard, ' 23 Mervin F. Rosexbai ' m. ' 23 Kdward V. Stuoxc. ' 24 DUK P. I ' lLLEKTOX. ' 24 Lawrexce K. Uetrick, ' 24 Robert D. Boynton, ' 25 Franklin H. CaEx, ' 25 Gale C. Griswold. ' 25 Marshall I. Mason. ' 25 Jerome P. Newbauer. ' 25 Paul W. Orr. ' 25 Charles W. Rosexbaum, Philip N. Baxter. ' 26 Philip B. Hooker, ' 26 Donald E. Reinoehl, ' 26 4 ' i ' 61 WOMEN ' S ECONOMICS CLUB First Term Laura Kknxedv. ' 23 Josephine Scott. ' 23 Ruth E. Stern. ' 23 OFFICERS Preshient . Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer . FACULTY MEMBERS Second Term Grace Strobel, ' 24 Mary Hull. ' 24 Dorothy Ovekfelt, ' 24 M. S. WiLllMA Virginia Burks. ' 23 Mabel Jones, ' 23 Laura Kennedy, ' 23 Waive Kingrey, ' 23 Marion Lefeincvvell, Josephine Scott, ' 23 Ruth E. Stern, ' 23 Gladys Swacker, ' 23 Thelma Tegner, ' 23 Louise Wileer. ' 23 Susan Beach, ' 24 Mary Hull, ' 24 Ruth Jameson, ' 24 Isabelle Muzzey, ' 24 Margaret Lies. ' 24 Dorothy Overeelt. ' 24 Margaret Richarhsox, Grace Strobel, ' 24 STANFORD ZOOLOGY CLUB Phesirent .... VlCE-pKESinENT . M. Edith Lang! ' 22 SECRET. RY ' r EASURER . Robert W. Siddle. ' 23 HONORARY MEMBERS I.iU.iv .Xbhams E. G. Martin J. P. Smith I.. (;. M. Haas Becking F. M. .McFarland J. O. Snvder M. I. McCracken K. VV. DOANE G. C. Price e ' c. Starks B W KvERMANN G. D. SlIAI-ER Clara S, Stoltenberg G. F. Ferris I.ANCE.SCOFIELD A, G. Vestal Walter K. Fisher N.I). SCOEIELD F. W. Weymouth C. II. Gil BERT Flora M. Scott Ray Lyman Wilbur llARniDllEATM AiviN Seale David Starr Jord MEMBERS ,N Olive Willoughby Nmxava . . Ferris. ' 15 Dorothy L. Burke. ' 23 Wi II lAM II, Irwin. ' 24 III. . N l.nis Dale. ' 20 1 Mil II Duncan, -20 Brighton C. Cain. ' 23 TosEPH C. Chamberlin. ' 1IM II, Ml ,- KV. ' 24 •23 1 i: l - - ■■•24 1 h M 1  R. Davis, ' 21 Hazel V. Churchman. •23 }•■ ' II l; ., M,-i .St, ' 25 1 Kl liESSON. ' 22 Dudley S. DeGroot, ' 23 KIK Kt-.,,IORFF. ' 25 TaI 1. liuNNOT. ' 22 Lake S. Gill. ' 23 .K.L 1. i.:,- . ■_•; H.isimA McrARTV, ' 22 Albert P. Kruegkr. ' 23 i ' li ilii ' N. Baxter. ' 26 DoKoTiiv J. Starks, ' 22 MarjorieSwabev. ' 23 Ma .RCARET EaRLE. ' 26 IlARRiNcrroN Wells. 22 Margaret White. ' 23 }} ' i.DRED S. Hall. ' 26 Blake Wilbur, ' 22 DwiGiiT I.. Wilbur, ' 23 He LEN E. Nelson. ' 26 RiMo Bacigalupi. 23 Fremont O. Bai.i.ou. 24 Be RTIIA L. SlIEDD. ' 26 E. II. Brunquist, ' 23 Fred S. Evans. ' 24 Harold Wicht. ' 26 ReLiGious soeieiies CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY JUNIPERO SERRA CLUB President Vice-President Secretary Treasirer John Baptist Sansome, ' 23 Margaret Duff, ' 23 Dorothy Dahler, ' 25 F.DWARi) C. Waterman, ' 23 m MEMBERS GRADUATES Florencio M. Cota Maky Jane Clabk Hugh H. Donovan- Leo S. Fox Ynez Henderson Marcella Kartiieiser Elizabeth LaCombe Inez Specking Ninctcc) Hundred and 7 « ' •lily-Three Doris Bailey Paul H. Beuter fc k roiE Francis Cameron Donald W. P. Larnack Paul R. Pigott Paul J. B. Sandretio John Baptist Sansone Franz Sturm C. Russell Stanley C. LaneFalk Edward C.Wat Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Four James K. Anderson Violet Knowle -- - •• A. McDo: McClRAl Madeleine Br Gerald G. Cleary Charles E. Collett Dorothy Forch James S. Gillen Percy Heckendorff Marie Hull Kauffma Rob ■J. Ke Dorothy Dahler Thomas J. Grace Gertrude McLeod John J. Macrorie Horace E. Martin Nineteen Hu J. Martin Adams James K. Anderson Albert Abmanini John M. Boone John G. Carriere Mary Conway Beulah Cum MINGS S. Clark Cypher Miriam Ebright William C. Enderud William C. Espey, Jr. Leo F. Finneran Irwin A. Frasse Louis A. R. Caspar Nicholas P. Kirwan Donald J. Kropp Ma F. Davii Francis P. O ' Hara Joseph J. O ' Hara Francis L O ' Neill Cecil J. ndred and Twenty-Five Acnes North Harry J. O ' Carroll Edith Rossabini James L. Shelley Edward T.Smith Edward N. Sylva ndrcd and Twenty-Six Alfred F. Lucas Charles C. McGettigan John A. Mancini William J. Meehan Lloyd B. Nolan Walter K. Olds Thomas B. Quinn Thornton S. Scribner Herbert A. Sewell Florence E. Stanley Frank C. Stanton Charles W. Tully Richard R. Turner Roland G. Watt Charles A. Widmann J. . llan Willard i ' Collins Shipp Le Davis Steele Plimpton Faucctte Earby Stanford Young Men ' s Christian Associati( OFFICE FORCE lES F. Knappen, AS F. Faucette. NETH J. Shipp, lAM G. Lee, Jr., F. E. Morgan J. Sparling, ' 20 S. Stewart, ' 23 Handbook Social . Meetings Church Relations Church and Chapel Americanization . World Fellowship Publicity Conferences . t Lauchi ■RT BuTTt ; H. Daws Ralph Barbv. ' 24 LussELL Walter, ' 24 Leon T. David, ' 25 IAS F. Faucette, ' 23 Young Women ' s Christian Association Pkksidext i( k-Prksident Skcketahv TRKAJ lKhn U.NDERCRADLATK I ' ll Makkin- Potter, -22 Helkx Whitney. ' 24 Rlth Lke Se ' ilman. ' 25 Lysle Bi-ythe. ' 23 Helen Schardin. ' 24 General Secretary Finance Committee Social Committee . Social Service Committee Girl Scouts .... CdNEERENCE .... Membership Committee Meetings Committee PiBLiciTY Committee . CniRCH Co-Ol ' ERATION . WoRLii Felwwship Committee Vocational Co.mmittee. Marjorie Woolsey, Helen Greene. RiTH Newlin. Alice Roth. Helen Brant. Dorothy Shepard. El.l.OWEXE Delahoyde. Edythe Baylis. . nNA FlTZHlCH. Grace Strodel. Helen Schardin. -Marion Lekfixgwell, LlUin GROUPS New Systems of Living, and the Fraternity Problem The next few years will he significant ones for Stanford living groups. The University Administration will have under operation, side by side, three typical living group schemes — first, the fraternities, housed in their own buildings, and existing in their customary ways ; second, Toyon Hall, a unit which provides for group living, with the groups close together ; and third, Branner Hall, which will be not unlike the present Sequoia Hall — a larger, more loosely formed group than will be found either in Toyon Hall or among the fraternity houses. Encina will be the abode of all freshmen for their entire first year. The fraternities will not be allowed to move from their own houses into either Toyon or Branner Halls. These latter are sorely needed for the overflow of men who at present have no suitable living quarters. The old Interfraternity Conference has been discarded except as a discussion group to determine general policies. Its former disciplinary powers have been taken over by an Interfraternity Board of Control, composed of the president of the Con- ference, four other members of the Conference chosen by a vote of that body, and two faculty members and two alumni, all four of whom are fraternity men. These are selected by the president of the University. Unrestricted rushing followed the abandonment of the thirteen-day period, but May pledging for next year seems in view at present. If the fraternities will adupt the honor system in their dealings with each other, says President ' ill)ur. they will go right to the top. There is no real fraternity ' problem ' . Disruption of the Conference l)y withdrawal of some of the memiiers has brought about the realization that harmonious relations are essential if the fraternities are to overcome the petty troubles which hinder development. FRflTERniTieS INTERFRATERNITY CONFERENCE KKSK. TAT1 ' OFFICERS President Secretary Dudley DeGroot, ' 23 Russell Langford, ' 23 ALPHA DELTA PHI Fred Loom is. ' 23 Howard Wii.sox. ' 24 ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA Alvin Van Berber, ' 2i NoRRis James. ' 24 ALPHA SIGMA PHI Cecil Morris. ' 24 Henry Longfellow. ' 25 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Clayton Neill, ' 22 Dwicht Taylor, ' 23 BETA THETA PI Henry Sproull, ' 2i Lewis Alabaster, ' 24 CHI PSl Robert Wisnom, ' 23 Walter G. Hays. ' 24 DELTA CHI Kenneth Shut, ' 23 Harold Anderson, ' 23 DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Richard Sami-son, ' 23 DELTA TAU DELTA Elmer Scherf, ' 23 Norman de Bai k. ' 24 DELTA UPSILON Nelson Van Judah. ' 23 George Baker. ' 24 KAPPA ALPHA Alfred Phinney. ' 23 Barclay Leeds, ' 23 KAPPA SIGMA Linn Parish, ' 23 Murray Ward, ' 23 PHI DELTA THETA James Clark, ' 23 Russell Langford, ' 23 PHI GAMMA DELTA Leslie Dills. ' 24 Robert Boynton. ' 25 PHI KAPPA PSI John Rush, ' 19 Charles Parks, ' 25 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Mkkwyn Brown. ' 23 Charles Gifford, ' 20 SIGMA CHI Leo Fox, ' 21 Harlan Thompson, ' 24 SIGMA NU Cecil Putnam, ' 23 Dudley DeGroot, ' 23 THETA CHI Raoul Edmonds. ' 23 James Brooke, ' 22 THETA DELTA CHI Eugene Trago, ' 23 Nelson Nowell, ' 23 THETA XI Norman Scofield, ' 21 Robert Porterfield, ' 25 PHI KAPPA SIGMA ZETA PSI Samuel Applewhite, ' 23 J. Howell Smith, ' 23 Arthur Thomas, ' 24 Robert Cravens, ' 23 Fouiulcd Mu C Edward Cecil Sewall. M ZETA PSI at Kcw York UiiivcrHty. June 1 haptcr Established October 1. U FACULTY MEMBERS . D. John Ma Stanley Stillman, M. D. MEMBERS in,-l,-rn IluuiUcd and Eiyhtccn William Howard Henry nclccn Hundred and T-.. ' nil -On, Ai.viN I ' owell ' Loskamp Richard Charles Harris John Criley Hazeltine en Hundred and Tzeenty-Tzvo Roland Thomas Kinney Francis Haynes Lindi.ey Xin, -leen Hundred and I ' urnty-Thrcc Robert I. Cravens Raymond G. Greene George Renshaw Sant Phillips S. Schneider Samuel Bradford Summons J. Howell Smith Nin eleen Hundred and Tzvenly-Four Joseph Edward Clark Thcrmond Clarke Frank Miller Findley Walter Blair Foster Edward Athelstone Howar: William Robert James John Lyndon Mace Mekl Langdon McHenry Alexis Everett Post Nil leteen Hundred and Tzcenty-Five McKRAY William Cvddeback Charles Francis Johnston William James Dickey James Graham Sharp. Jr. M. BoNSALL Hazeltine Albert Edward Smith Fred Frank Solomon A ' ; George Alfred Brock Robert Bernard Dickey Ralph Clayton Draper neleen Hundred and Tzeenty-Si.v L .N KL Burr Lovelace Homer C. Oatman, Jr. Wavxk Mingus Smith PHI DELTA THETA Founded at Miami University. DcCL-nibcr 26, 184S California Beta Chapter, Established October 11, 1891 FACULTY MEMBERS George Deforest Barnf.tt, M.D. Hak rinii ir- llii Harold Chapman Brown, Ph.D. Lkanm i.M m i i i i 1- EnWIN A. COTTRELL. PH.D. VKKNnN , ia:, I I I William Frederick Durand. Ph.D. Joh EnvvARD CvRTis Franklin. Ph.D. Harold Heath, Ph.D. McUoUKLL, A.B. Halcott Cadvvalader Moreno. Ph Henry Waldgrave Stuart, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Onc Wayne Locklin Merrill Shirley Douglas Wimmer Frederick Sherwood Wheaton Heaton Luse Wrenn Ni Paul Cuddeback Clafli Jay Orlo Hayes. Jr. Nil William Howard Brown Howard Marshall Clak Harry Jack Edwards Hh Hired and Tzfenly-Tivo Warren Hamilton Kra Paul Fisher Stewart Hundred and T; Russell Raymond Langford Paul Richard Pigott Robert Duncan V ' ial James Ogden Reavis n Hundred and T-u ' enlx-Four Charles Theodore Chandler. Jr. Charles Gross Fletcher Raymond Oliver Flood Lester Watts Langford John Cresco McHose Nineteen h Norton Sager Brown Allan Earle Charles Geok(,e D nctecn Hundred and Tv Ralph Selleck Miller, Jr. Joseph Jerome O ' Hara Paul Francis O ' Hara Carl Sumner Shoup Simeon LessardZane Tzeenty-FiTc William Archibald Logan Gilbert Tod Oviatt N Roberts Douglas Ackerman John Curtis Franklin nty-Six James Wallace O ' Conner Evert Hale Young PHI KAPPA PSI ' a-.liingt(in and Jefferson College, l i rnia I ' .eta Chapter Establislied Novmili HKHiiERT Lke Nikbki-. A. B. Hauhis Joseph Ryan, M. E. •ACULTV MEMBERS ; Bi Ti. Hekm Whittihk. L.L. B. Yeuixgto.n, M. D. MEMBERS •en Hundred and Ninete Iniix l.,.iis Rush Dick Wedcewoou Gra V. Earl Heater Arthur C. KniKwooD Ravmonh Paul Gexh A ' ( ,- , ■en Hundred „nl Tieenly-T-u;, Ninele en Hundred . and Tzeenty-Three Carl Allen Newlin Edwin Alexander Patterson Orlando Hunter Rhodes eteot Himdred and Tzi. ' enty-Four X William Wagi HiiwAKD E, Wtttenberg Nineteen Hi, Erederick Walter Barlow Willis Sherman Clayton, Jk. Charles Harold McCallister Herbert Newkll Millka Robert Pearck Myers Charles Helmer Parks Martin Pattison Hu Huntlfa • Cas TNER Clarenci -: M. Im azier Wallace ; Wii .LIAM K; ' dred and Tiecnly-Fivc Alan Hazelton Robertson John Stewart Stephens Philip Harvey Stephens Harry Steward, Jr. Stuart Guillot Van Hook Hal Fred Warner Francis Hugh Wood udred and Tzi ' enly-Six John Erick Mack Ralph Nye Rai.i ' h K. Wittenberg SIGMA NU nded at Virginia Military Institute. Janiiar; Beta Clii Chapter Establislied Novuiiber 17, FACULTY MEMBER Eliot Jones, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Lamar Fontaine Phvm.r Nineteen Hmidrcd and Nineteen CoNNF.LL Clifford Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Onc Frederick Henry Krock Nineteen Hundred and Tzvenly-Tz. ' o m Lee Sivley Gurley Oscar C. Railsback Nineteen Hundred and Tivcnty-Threc Frederick L. Anderson Raymon Wallace Long Allen G. Benson George Franklin McGill Dudley Sargent DeGroot Charles William Midgley, Jr. Joe Garner Douglass Paul Chaney Murray George William Kleiser, Jl !. Cecil Monroe Putnam Theodore R. Walther Nineteen 1 Hundred and Tz ' enty-Four Richard Lawrence Argue Northcutt Ely Charles Christopher Bapt IE Marshall Hale. Jr. Arthur Dickinson BrA(,g Richard R. Macintosh Herbert McGilvray Dwigh T Archie Alexander Smith Nineteen • Hundred and Ticeuly-rire James Lee Aydelott 111 1 |m 1 I ' M Ijl-AGELLI Charles Edward Foye 1 1 . 1 m:ii Rising, Jr. John Henry Helser . 1 I ' hede Ramund R. Murphy I1. 1,K U.Yi i ;M Ninctee. n Hundred and Tzirnty-Six Chester Richard Andrews JamesA. Kohler Frank Lee Aydelott Thomas Brennan Quinn Charles Willers Briggs Beach Miller Risinc; Curtis Earl Flint Franklin DeKalb Wolfe. Jr. PHI GAMMA DELTA Founded at Jefferson College, May 1. 1848 Lambda Sigma Chapter, Established N ovember 30, 1.S91 FACULTY MKMBER.S JosKPH Walter Bixcham. J.D. AL J0R Leuoy p. Collins, A.B. Victor J. West, Ph.B Erxest Gale Martix, Ph.D. MEMBERS Hundred and Tzccnt Preston Sch.nier Hundred and Tivi Delos Abrams, Jr. Elmer Ellsworth Elliott Wright Elwooii James Clarence Edward Kiggens Francis Eugene Wilson Hundred and Tuwitv-Fou Wellington Folsom Bonner Timothy Edward Colvin Leslie Harrison Dills Stewart Daniel James John Andrew Murphy Harold Bandow Rorke Robert Davis Boynton Herman Walter Broenkow Thomas Joseph Grace Hundred and Tkv George Porter Lombard Joseph Doble Mullendei James Creighton Muir Nineteen Hundred and Tu-entx-Si.v Edwin Morey Chase Thomas Stewart Clark Thomas Ayers Condit Robert Walter Hunt Nicholas Pierce Kirwin Norman Millett Tucker SIGMA CHI Founded at Miami University, 1855 Alpha Omega Chapter, Established December 18, 1891 FACULTY MEMBERS John SicLLAiitis Percy E. D. ' MEMBERS Niiictcni Hundred and Fifteen Nincti Donald Alkxandkk D Leo Sanor Fox E. WiLLARD Samuel en Hundred and T-wei iLLAS Ken Mklvij Nineleen Hu William Clifford Cooke nIx-One NETH DUNLAP NeF Edward Langstroth W( Parker •( and Tzvenly-Tu ' O William Weber Patterson Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-TJirce Norman Cleaveland Elmer Christian Rasml ' ssen Hubert Edwards Long Paul Eddy Richardson Robert Emmett McDonald Harry Raymond Tremaine Dermot N. Macconel Harrington Wells Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy- Daniel McPeak Campbell Albert Harlan Steele Thompson Crawford Ninet Melville Krogness Glendon Louis Trem Nineleen Hu 1 Carskadon ired and Tzventy-Five Philip Summerfield Urner John Robert White, HI dred and Tzvcnty-Six Harold George King Richard Shaw ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 California Beta Psi Chapter, Established December 2 FACULTY MEMBERS William Rankine Eckart, Ji John Charles Fish, C.E. :im,E Pope Shannon, A.B. lUATio Ward Stebbins, M.E. Edgar Eugene Robinson. A.M. Si ewaut Woodford Yo MEMBERS Niiiclrcii Hundred and 11 Dana Burks. Jr. itibteen . Nineteen Hundred and Tie, •nty-TuHi David Stoddard Atwood Ge Grant White Cokhv W Claykjn Bewlev Ne ;oi« E Gavlord Freer illiam J.Garth :iLL Nineteen Hundred and Tzih nty-Three Kenneth William Brow JosEi ' H Blake Koei ' fli John Richard Malaby Elmer John Nelson Clement Finley Atwatek Edward E. Dorrestein Robert Horatio Edwards, Jr Herbert Hutton Pre George Charles Had Jon Bui Th ■, and r-cee. John Edmund Phelps Dean Ralph Ross Donald Scott Snedden DwiGHT Warren Taylor Tii.Tnt -Fonr Dunbar Graves N Sted.man Hard joRE Van Duesen -Fivi Robert J E Nineteen Hundr. Merrill A. Armour David Dunbar Graves Jean Willis Hard George Mavhew Houck Harold Connor Lundberg . White ( and Twenty-Six Kenneth William Hess John Grahame Motheral Charles Cullen Stratton hi 111 1 5 s S i J 111 3 ? :!_ = ? ¥1 ■J -T ■A SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Fiiuiulcd at University of Alabama, 1S56 California Alpha Chapter, Established March 5, 1892 FACULTY MEMBER Alfred Baker Spalding, M.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Seventeen Arthur Harold Kent Nineteen Hundred and Eiyhteen Homer Hamilton Mathews Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen IS Howard Hamlin George Thom Nmeleen Hundred and Twnty ChAKIK. DiCKIXSOX (.IFfOKD III. idred Maki -One Nine Merwyn Harold Brown James McKean BrciisEE Roy William Carver Raebirn DOICHTV Alex D. Henderson, Jr. Walter Paul Keller Nine Leslie Ewint, Gorrell, Jr. Marcus DeWitt Leh Leichton McLellon Bled Lafe Todd Browne Lee Charles Fowle Cyril T. Gammon Delmar Lawrence Daves Harold Eugene Humphrey William John Kenney Joh; dred and Tzeenly-Three Albert Mosher Charles Alvin Sewell William Barber Stanberv Theodore Kesler Sterling Archibald Peers Sum my George Warren Wedgwood Hired and T-M-nty-Four Artemas Jacob Strong Harold Elworthy Todd ndred and Twenly-Fire Lewis Albert Gibbons Morton Raymond Gibbons Lorimer Benton Harrell W. Scott Polland Scott Quigley ndred and Twenty-Six Gilbert Roy McDermot Phil William Shumaker Eugene Maxwell Stevenson ■■ M DELTA TAU DELTA Founded at Bethany College. 1.S59 Beta Rho Chapter, Established August 13. 1893 FACULTY MEMBERS ErnestW. Martin, Ph.D. Frederick G. Tickf.ll MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzirnfy-Tzvo Maynard Pomeroy Davison Arthur George Miller Charles Arata Grondona Ford Marlow Tussing Charles Daniels Wilkie Nineteen Hundred and Tzwnty-TIirec Arthur Austin Wells William Innes Eugene Cyril Colgan Erick Kolberg Chesley McKinley Douglas Elmer Emil Scherf Edwin Loring Harris Robert Franklin Wright Nineteen Hundred and Ticrnty-Four Norman John de Back Charles Elmer Collett Charles Benninger Hugh Clarke Mixon Charles Vance Carter Roland Tognazzini Nineteen Hundred and ' Hu ' enty-Five Thomas Alexander Arthur Ashley Maklow Howard Stephen Chase Philip Meyer Arthur Jesse Gouey William Henry Parsons Horace Everett Swing Nineteen Hundred and rz.rnty-Six James William Kerr Charles McGettigan Walter Keogh Olds Erwin Gorham Morrison Ill BETA THETA PI Founded at Miami Cmvcrsity. IS.? ' ) 1 Signi.1 Chapter EstahlislK-d July 2 FACULTY MEMBERS RAVM.ixn MAriKixAi.i. Ai.den. Ph.D. WiLLiA.M Heruekt Cakklth, Ph.D. James Perrin Smith. Ph.D. Albert Conser Whitaker, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tz.rnly-One Wesley Albert Seaman Nineteen Hundred and Tzvenly-Tii ' O Stanley Earnest Bichsel Walter S. Alexander Richard W. Faville Ernest Hamilton Laurence Lewis Mert z V. Theodore Mertz •dred and Twenty-Three Harold Buxton Nicholson Myron Nelson Reed Henry Franklin Si ' roull Sidney Sutton VanKeuren Raymond Marvin Welch Howard Phillii-s V(-inglove Nineteen Hundred and T-t rnty-fou Lewis Plimpton Alabaster Chestki William A. Bullis F. Davi Dick P. Fullerton. Jr. Alden . Neil P. Granger Phimis Hu Theodore C. Achilles Cornelius Cole H John Munford Grecorv Richard Towner Harvii : and Tzi ' enty-Fivc Norman Dorset Dole iTE PaLLETTE en Hundred and T-urnty-Six J. Byron Kissinger Gardner P. Lipi ' incott E Edson P. Watekhouse RoLLAND George Watt A CHI PSI Founded at Union College, 1S41 Aljiha Gamma Chapter Established April MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Chester Arthuk Wilcox Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy Karl Whitman Shlaudeman Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-T-ii Ralph Hhffaker Cowixg Nineteen Hundred and T-u-enty-Thr George Holt Card Thomas Miller Don Robert Freem ■teen Hundred and 1 James Herndon Hi Theodore S. Walkb WiSNOM Thomas Harold Boone Edward Strong Campbell Kenneth E. Carnahan Robert Daniel Cavanaugh Ninel, y-Four William H. K. Dunbar George P. Hays Walter Grant Hays William Dennis Lucas William W. McCandless Ni, John Dunwoody Bousfiei Frank Wickham Ditzlei William Louis Hall Clarence Van H. King WiLLARD BiSSELL POPE teen Hundred and Tzirnly-Six ) David Litchard King Charles St. George Pope David Lander Reeves Fletcher Loren Walker, Jr. 1  KAPPA ALPHA Founded at Washington and Let University, 1865 Alpha Pi Chapter, Established October 27, 1895 Lloyu Gibes Hi Hundred cvid Turiilx-Oiu- BrlceCakkou. McKague en Hundred «nd l centV ' Thr Perry Arthur Bonar Everett Brown Thomas C. McClure Alfred Earl Phin: Hugh Sanford Sui George Wright Harold Gera Merrill Eva: Fred Barclay Leeds Fraxcis B. Loom is Nineteen Hundred and l eenty-Fk ' e Richard Fennemore Otto Hammer Ralph Conrad Shermi Oscar A. Trippet Max Montgomery Whitm William Lawton Wright een Hundred and ' A, Robert Clark Hartwell Philip Burton Hooker Archie Gordon Mahan Delbert Austin Mowers Ernest Nevers Frederick Haviside Swan ' DELTA UPSILON Founded at Williams College. 1834 Stanford Chapter, Established March 13, 1896 FACULTY MEMBERS David Starr Jordan. Ll.D. Arthur Bridgman Clark, M.A. Jamks Owen Griffen, Ll.D. Benjami n Oliver Foster, A.M. Or Ill r,(i Marx, Ll.D. Edgar Davidson Congdon, M.D. lull Ti i 1 iM 1 1. Ill I 1. rii.D. Arthur Martin CATHC.A.RT, J. D. Ill ., li I I, ,,,riil) William DiNSMORE Brigcs, A.M. M ! ' , 1,1 I , I.D. Harry Leslie Langnf.cker, M.D. (Inii.i i;ii I I I I I,, A I ' .. Philip Kingsnorth Oilman, M.D. W ' li.LiAM .Vli ' iia Cinii ' KK. Litt.D Walter Greenwood Beach, A.M. Philip Corriston Clark Niuclr, George Stuart Clark Thomas Edwards Green Ninctrri. William Madison Black Curtis Lane Falk Marion Owen Grinstead Nelson Van Judah George Harold Baker Frank Wolsey Bireley Frederic Russell Fisher Ninctr. William Davidson LIarley Corwin Hubbard John Borland Irwin. Jr. La Harold Everett Boles Harry Tristam Coffin, Jr. Thomas Crooke McCleave, J MEMBERS i( Hundred and Twnity-Onc Lokin Daryl Lacey II Hundred and Twenty-Tzvo Wallace Jenks Miller William Pitkin Olmsted Hundred and Tiwnty-Thrce James Melvin MacRoberts bwicHT Conklin Roberts David Bogert Tuthill Cecil van A. van Wyck II Hundred and Twenty-Four -. c Knight Jordan RicHAUii LooMis MacRae (ii ' .oKi.E John Shoenhair, Jr. • Hundred and Tzwnty-Fhe Allen Andrew Jerc ins, Jr, David Harold Peery Ernest de Reynier w KExcF. Wayne Richards en Hundred and Twenty-Six Kenneth Mortsolf William Hord Richardson 3. George Weslv Tackabury KAPPA SIGMA Founded at University of Virginia, 1867 eta Zeta Chapter Established May 19, 1899 Florian a. Cajori Bradford Bishop FACULTY MEMBERS Ei Rali ' H Haswell Lutz. Ph.D. MEMBERS Winctccn Hundred and Eighta Fred Bresee, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Tii ' ent-_ Clarence Eugene Eskew Ma.slixHulme,A.M. dred md Ti ' enty-One Lee-Roy E. Middleton ;s Canfield Beattih Joseph Allen Craig Linn Markley Farish George Townsend Powei George Edward Carey S. Glenn Hartranft Clifford Lester Hey Xinelee Glen Charles Barnes Stanley Smith Belcher Clarence William Carey Arthur Brooks Conover Ninete, Reynolds Lawrence Buzard James Hamilton Coke Cleo Francis Davis Richard Reid Turner I Hundred and Tivei James B, Kelly Hundred and Tweni Charles Arthur Deffebach ■-Three William Lister Rogers Murray Arthur Ward Donald Witherbee HundredMud Twenty-Four • ._ .- . J ' Donaldson G. Hood --t fio- K j - Henry Gardiner Symonds — - Phillips Thygeson .lES Alexantier Toner Hundred and TiK ' enty-Five Joel Dugger Middleton Harold A. Miller James L. Shelly Harry Hector Shipkey Hundred and ' A ity-Six Russell Harry Haviside Malcolm Winslow Lamb Charles H. McAllister Alva A. Newland DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Founded at Yale Uoiversilv. 1844 Sigma Rho Chapter. Established February 8, 1902 FACULTY MEMBERS Albion Walter Hewlett, M.D. Frank Mace McFarland, Ph.D. George Clinton Price. Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty RussEL Hackett Niueleen Hundred and Twenty-One James A. Flanai.an Nineteen Hundred and Tivcnty-Tico James M. Davies Nineteen Hnndred and Twenty-Three Robert Gillis Bundy Richard Hunt Sampson Howard Chandler Christie Roy Franklin Willia.mson Hundred and Ticenty-Fonr Richard Hoagland Hinckley Theodore J. Stek fen Gilbert Collins Wheat Francis Woodward dred and Tzventy-Five JrLLi. RD McDonald Walter A. Starr, Jr. John Austin Williams ;r White Henry ndrcd and Tzventy-Six George Stevenson Whiting Welch Lloyd Coleman Young, Jr. Nine teen Hu Howard W. Black JoHnE. FlSHBURN.jR. Frank W. Fuller. Jr. Tyler F Nin, eteen Hu Dana Lloyd Fuller James W. Lawson Dick Lawson Warn Nin eteen H, Harrison Chandler Lloyd Benedict Nolan Lionel Edward Ogden, , Jr. THETA DELTA CHI Founded at Union College. October 31. 1. 47 Eta Deutenm Chapter. Established April 2. I ' MJ,) FACULTY MEMBERS Clh-ford Gilmore Allen. Ph.D. Charles David Mar.x. C.E. MEMBERS . iiii-t,-i-n Hundred and Ticcnlx Pall LeRoy Henderson KincU-cn Hundrrd and l ccnly-Oue Homer Irvin(, Mitchell Nwctrni Hundred and Tu ' cnly-Tlircr Eugene K.Tra,,o Nklsox T. KiNOSLEY KlTTREDl.E HoWAUTH Xhu ' lcrn Hundred and Tie enly-Iour Leonard E:d vin Barham Rupert Truman Dawes John Donald McCri Cecil Irvin., H.m.ey James THo L s Kelly ■ADV iXinelern Hundred and Vtc, enly-F,ve Horace BuRoEss Allison ayne Gerald Clark Harry Austin Wip. Charles Francis Gambell WilbertJohn Hammond Nineteen Hundred and 7; ■enly-Six Gordon Shaw . sHLEY Tack Hiram Graves Radclieee Conner Johnson John Herchel Neikirk Charles Lee Reynolds. Jr. Frank Edward Thomp.son p I i es DELTA CHI Founded at Cornell L ' niv Stanford Chapter, Esta sity October l.i, 1890 islied Mav 19. 1905 Arthi ' r Martin Cathcart, A.B. Marion Rice Kirkwood. J.D. Joseph Wai.te FACULTY MEMBERS Ralph Haswf.ll Lutz. Ph.D. William Brovvnlee Owens. LL.B. Bingham. J.D. QriMBY Whi Lowell Morui Nim-I,: L. Harold Anderson Harold Shaver Conard Frederick Marshall Hughes James Ballou Coplen Nhictcc-ii Huiidr Lloyd Jeffreys Allen Jackson Tyler Carle Harford Holmes Hays Henry Clayton Mack MEMBERS . Hundred and en Hundred and Tu ■n Hundred and T-a: ■nty-One Hugh Leo P. P. Qvintero Stew . V Lf IS FCLLEI enty-Four Ci.ouDSLEY Damon Rutter Winfrid Lee Sandberg Oscar Wayne Mulford Harvey Maxwell Lytel Ninete George Albert Marks A ' i Ralph Irving Anschitz Kenneth Neal Chantry S. Clark Cypher George Martin Frazier Jack W. Hardy en Hundred and T ' .irnty-Fk ' e Norwood Brow: Alfred Emery Rogers een Hundred and Tu ' enty-Six Thomas Howard Hood Glenn Everett Whitfield William Henry Suffern Philip Thomas Meyers Gerald Myers Hay THETA XI Tail Chapter Hstablislied Februar KinviN M. Blakksi.kk, Ei.MKK Eli.swokth M.« Gf.okge Dickson Ci Robert A. Elgin Albert Forster Charles Scott Fr. Eric Gordon Barnett Elton P. Bozarth Ernest Nathaniel Mi- Robert BaRR CAMIMiELL. Ju Harvey Linford Drew- George S. FOLLANSBEE, Jr. FACULTY MEMBER Ward B. Kindv, B. E. E Nt MEMBERS nclrcn Himdred and Paul Herbert D. Nine I een Xin, ■ ,-.•), Hundred and 7 ernh -One Norm AN M Cray Scoi (LLOl ■Iccn Hundred ani ) Glenn Adrian W: INGAR y- ' lwo Mark A Alan C. . POSTLEWAITE Richardson Wine tern Hundred and V ' ; Brad:.ev William laenty-Thrcc Edward Stark Loder Harold Fredric Lynn Remond W. Richardsi George Hall Walker W vatt Xim •leen Hundred and 1 wenl y-ronr I ' H E. uired i William R. Postlewaite Milton Herman Saier I ' hilip Forest Scofield enty-Fi2-c Grove Lawrence Roland Bernard Mci.chav Robert Ramey Pokterfield Lloyd Hamlin Ashley Eugene Cottle Scofield Edward Ari.an Shoi.ks Louis Graves Van Vorhis Seward S. Whitehead Francis Eugene Wingard I c = I a PHI KAPPA SIGMA Founded at University ul Pennsylvania, 1850 Alpha Tau Chapter Established 1915 FACULTY MEMBER ;.;tt Parkku Lesley, M. M. E. MEMBERS •en Hundred and Twcniy-Tifc Lowell W. Saunders Samuel P. Applewhite, Ju OthMAR BeRARDE BElUiV Francis Cameron Edward Bischoff Clancv rn Hundred and Tii ' cnly-Threc Lawrence Joseph Coulthurst Richard Robbins Crandall Lawrence M. Duryee Frank Cooper Gh.christe F. Russell McIntosh Emile W. Breidenbach Franklin Hugenin Coen Kenneth H. Crandall Hundred und Tiventy-F, Eric Eugene Kraemj Arthur Moore Edgar Tevis Smith Hundred and Vj Richard Davis Coen Donald Wilkinson Graha] Dallas Ramsey McCaulev William C. Neill Herm an W. Straube Henry Edward Timbv .-;, Hundred and 7« ' Peter Pierce Beaver William Arnold Burgess Hartley William Devlin Frank Augustus Frye, Jr. -.S i.v Basil Louis McGann George F. Wasson, Jr. Eugene Loren White Selden Stuart Wright ALPHA DELTA PHI lUiKkd at Haniilti III Cliaptcr, VMhW ■ACULTV MI ' .MI GoRnnN Arthur Davis. A.M. Leon.mu) Whkeler Ei.v. M.D. ;h, Ph.D. Ph.D. Hans von Brh:se ; Ross Clark Fisher John Doonan Frei Roland Jerome Gn, Kenneth Ferdina: MRMDl ' RS (■ i ' (-)i Hundred and ' Itvi-nly-Onc Herbert Henry Darling rU-rii Hundred and Ticctily-Tivo Philip Franklin Neer George W. Thompson ■Irru Hundred and Tz. ' cnly-Three Ks. Jr. John Stanley McCltchan Freiierick Claxton Loomis ■Marinkl Rorert Taylor Patton Glenn Eigeke Pollarh Ninete John Donald Campbell Benjamin Ci.ifke Chari.e? Bernard David Holbrook Earl Watson Cairns Miles Cobb Guy Hewitt Dennis Hundred and T ' crnly-four Albert Hussey Huneke Clayton Robson Janssen George Howard Wilson ■, and Tz. ' entx-Fk ' Charles Keep Be John Houser Paul Lee Fairchi Giles Stark Half . . John Maclaren M. ' Perry Davisson Wi enly-Six Edward Warren Li William Rowland ErederukD. TiioM ALPHA SIGMA PHI I ' i)iin(lcd at Yale University, 1845 Tau Chapter Established December 22. 1917 Leslie J. Ayer FACULTY MKMP.ERS Joh: Bennett C.i MEMBERS Niiiclcrii Hundred and Tu-nity-Onc Matthew Cheney Simpson Philip Hubbauii (ioiiiiAR Mnrtrru Hundred and Tuicnly-Tn ' O GoHDON Bkixe Haves Mvro.n Claude Hi a!V NdRRis Lawrence Welsh Nineteen Hundred and Ttecnty-Thrcc Arnold Blakeman Ba jAiMES Simon Gillen Jovbert Bryan Huru Albert Clarence Ci Ernest H. Greppin Henry W. Lonc;eei,l James Fravel Clarke Kenneth Loveland Ferguson Frank Granvil Jopson Montgomery E. Winn DwiGHT Dunham Young Hundred and Tuvntv-Pi Cecil Martin Morris Randolph Bradley Riter Mn.o Edwin Rowell Hundred and Tzwuty-Flvt Grayson Bard Graham David Albert Lam son Charles C. Lockett Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Si Walter McN. Campbell. Jb Robert James Clendenin John Deeeebach, Jr. Rolland Ament Langley Harold James Lewis Horace E. Pastorius, Jr. Perry Staples Pond George W. Shillock m I Fciunded at Norwich University, 1856 Alplia Epsilon Chapter Established May 23, 102(1 FACULTY MEMP.ERS ■ 1 [,,,;,.tt Murray Shii ' levW Cyrus Fisher Tolman, Jr.. B. S. MEMBERS Miii-tcoi Hundred and Tzi -nly Leonard Bryan Barnard Nhu ' tccn Hundred and T .ccnty-One Walter King Franklin John Chester Sharp Nineteen Hundred and ' I ' M-nly- ' lwo Daniel MaktinBernt. Jr. Jamks Kenneth Brooke Lloyd Jackson Franklin Xineteen Hundred and Tzvcnty-Thrcc Werner Eugene Anhf.rson Robert Carlii.e Fleming Raoul Leland Edmonds Lytle Webster Hollixgsworth Hexry Mulryax Nineleen Hundred and Tzvenly-Four S. E. Aguerrevere George James Smith Fred Claire Blosser I ' ercy Howard Stevens Ian James Campbell William Edward Wright Nineleen Hundred and Tzventy-Fire Carl William Anderson Clifford H. Power Thomas Edward Connolly. Jr. Frank Irwin Schultzberc Paul Jacksox Dalton Albert Edward Slos.son Floyd Edward Hoffmann Frank B. Tolman Nineleen Hundred and Tzventy-Six loHN Martin Ada.ms Wilton Dow Goodrich Robert Mack Carr Bert Marion Green Emmet Lane Rixford P. h im ' m ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA l- ' oiiiukd at University of California. April 22. 1914 Beta Chapter Established October 2i. 192(1 FACULTY MEMBER Lf.r Emerson Bassett, A. B. MEMBERS Nineteen Flundrcd nnd 7 ' icr i v-O ir Aubrey Gati.iff RAWi.rxs Mneteen Hundred and Tzceulv-Tlircc Chari.es Wentworth Bakm- Ei.TON Fred Cornell Thomas Kemp Sloan Alvin Wesley Van Bebber Hammond Ashley Arthlr W. C. Becker Kenneth C. Hardwicke BiiooKs Edward Hindes Nineteen Hundred and Twenly-Fonr XoRKis E. James Elgene Anijhkw Loc kton Glenn H. McIntyre LvallClyman Vanderri Nineteen Hundred and rzeeuly-Five Rali ' h Denny Howe Donald Howard Miller Sheldon Spencer Millikex Leslie Harder Peter, Jr. Nineteen Hundred nnd Tzeenty-Si.v Ellsworth Lansing Barnett Percy Williams Lewis Trcma.n Howe Clark Kenneth Ray.mond McDouga Fred Allen Miller .«f n PHI SIGMA KAPPA Founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1873 Nu Deuteron Chapter, Kstablislied 1923 FACULTY Ml ' MHKRS Percy Alvin Martin Harvard Young McNaught John Otterbein Snyder MEMBERS Ni)iclci ' ii llitiidrrd and Twenty-Tzvo George F. Caiatn Truman L. Donoho Herman Henry Chrisman Forest Herbert Young Nineteen Hundred and T ' .ihvUy-Thrce James Robert Fnright h ' im-trrn Hundred and Tweiily-four RoBisoN Eyre Booth Russell Leslie Compton Lloyd Charles Carver Barton Armin Hinckley Don Michael Taylor Nineteen Hundred end Tzcenly-Fivc John Ellis Dutton Richard David Husband James Meredith Eva Elmer William Johnson Cutler Worthington Hal erson L. Hershey Rogers Kenneth Dudley Sanson Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Walter C. Lyne Robert Mii.ey Stoner Abram Mitchell Morrison Dudley H. Van Deusen 2-, m ns CLUBS ENCINA CLUB OFFICERS First Term Second Term Knox D. Miller, ' 23 Pkesidknt John C. Lane, 23 !)ANiEr. D.Gage, Jr., ' 24 Secretary Daniel D. Gage. Jr., 74 Theodore E. BowEN, ' 23 Manager Theopore E. Bowen. ' 23 BOARD OF . ' DMIXISTR. T0RS First Term Claude E. Peavy, 23 DeWitt C. Bertrand, ' 23 Louis B. Minsky. ' 23 William F. Leiser, ' 21 Second Term William F. Leiser, ' 21 Richard E. Johnson, ' 23 Alfred R. Masters, ' 23 Albert W. Cupid, ' 22 HOUSE CO.MMl ' l ri-.l ' . First Term John C. Lane, ' 23 Wardweli. D. Evans, ' 23 R. RoscoE RoBisoN, ' 24 DeWitt C. Rowland, ' 24 Charles E. Beardsley, ' 25 Second Term Thomas H. Ecgleston, ' 23 WilmerW. Young, ' 23 Fred S. Ludeke, ' 24 R. RoscoE RoBisoN, ' 24 William L. Hodro, ' 25 SEQUOIA CLUB First Term Joseph C. Prior, ' 23 Junior J. Collins, ' 24 . R. Ziemer Hawkins, ' 25 James F. Knappen, ' 23 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Second Term Donald L. Robertson, ' 23 . . Junior J Collins, ' 24 . . Ross R. Hastings, 26 . , Charles H. Prior, ' 23 HOUSE COMMITTEF. FrankD. Beardsley, 73 Junior J. Collins, ' 24 Howard N. Booth. ' 25 Herbert Sidney Lauchlin, ' 24 Ch. rles H.Smith, ' 23 SOCIAL COMMITTEE !■ Louis C. Thompson, ' 24, Cliairman ll ■fe Sidney W. Cole, ' 25 1 ■ Robert H. Eckhoff, ' 26 Herbert C.Hoover. Jr., ' 25 o f v Robert J. Triest, ' 25 If .■ thletic committee m ki ■1 Lloyd E. Cooper, ' 24, Chairman ■ 1 ■ ■ David E. Brown, Jr., ' 25 ■ I Jl ArthurW. Chedister, ' 24 11 PRIOR ROBERTSON BREAKERS GRADUATE MEMBERS A ' V u-lrai llumlrrd and Xmclccn Forrest A. Betts Franklin G. West A ' , Hc-lrci llmuircd and ' fwcnlx Walter H. Hales EceneL, Uavis Thomas D. Radcliffe Niurti •en Hundred and Tzvcnty-Ticv Harry J. Borba Albert A. Carrey. Jr. MEMBERS Ninctc ■en Ihindvcd and Tn ' cnly-Thrcc Kenneth D. Gardner Percy C. Heckendorf Harold T.John Alfred R. Ma.sters Claude E. Peavy James G. Ross Xiiu-I cai Hundred and T-a; ' nty-l-our Beverly B. Bailard Alfred B. Bonnett Harvey M. Coverley Alfred S. Hooper Cecil L Marquis Donald E. Liebendorfer Alfred B. Loewenstein Carleton B. Wood Ninct. r.-ji Hundred and It u-nty-Fkr Frederick F. Bell Luther S. Bell Lynn H. Crawford Charles V. Harlow Jacob C. Irwin David M. Oliva inr leen Hundred and Tu ' enly-Six Carl W. Carlsmith John W.Carter Henry G. Faust Louis A. R. Caspar George R. Lane Howard L. Mitchell Robert L. Nicholson Edwin G. Roohhouse Chester E. Ross EL TORO GRADUATE MEMBERS iWinclccn Hundred and Twt-nly Clarence J. Tauzer Nineteen llnndrcd -riid I K ' rnly-Oiu- William F. Lkisek Xuirli-rn Hundred and ' I ' lvcnly-Txco Harold H. Wru.ht Marion W. Grothe William C. Connolly MKMIU-RS Xinelcci Hundred and lieeni y-T hree Theodore E. Bow en Tilden Righetti Paul E. Glenn Raymond D. McBurney Louis B. Minsky Sydney S, Grossman ALan Koehler Xineleen Hundred and Tieemy-Four James Arthur Robert Wright Orville H. Tucker. Jk. Ai ri.FH T, I ' ntton Philip Newill I ' .i ' ■ ••■ 1 1 i i ' Charles B.White WM m r 1 i 1 im .x Frederic S. Ludeke Wh m m 1- I ' .i kiuck George Thompson R.ihkkt Titus Charles F. Daly Mneteen Hundred and Tzcenty-I ' kr William L. Thayer Walter Maas Calvin H. Conron, Jr. Donald F. Forster Henry A. Martin Lewis G. Hitchcock Harry L. Noland Hugo Leistner O. Law.son Crook Harold B. Minsky Rolland W. Hofemax Robert D. Patterson Xineleen Hundred and Tzeenly-Si.v James B. Mannon Charles R. Clifford Howard W. Martin Pierre M. Barcei.ou.x Elmer J. Peery Raitt S. Boren tJ5 - EL CAMPO GRADUATE MEMBERS Nwctcni Hundred and TicvH v Daniel W.Evans -hu-U-rn Hundred and Tzvcnlv-Onc Nim-tc, Charles VV. Mekkill Norman C. McKke Hundred and ' A cnty- ' l vo Albert W. Citid Stanley Steindorf Richard E. Johnson Charles H. Sortor Claude R. Minard Vaughn M. HosEPIA Wardwell D. Evans MEMBERS Hundred and Tiventy-Threc Irwin W. Moouy De Witt C. Bertrand Lemuel C. Smith William L. Thomson AxiiKEW R. Boone George E. Zelhart Ninete, Georc.e S. Harman John O. Vaughn Fremont R. Schmieder ' -l ' our George K. Smith John Wyman Beakdsley George S. Drysdale Ninelern Hundred and Tu ' enty-Fivi Charles E. Beakdsley Frank M. Penepacker John H. Wallace, Jr. Norton Meyer William L. Hokro Harrison E. Holliway Leon T. David Arthur C. Schoen Paul J. Murphy Harold W. Cameron Charles E. Luckhardt J. Paul Sievers FredR. Mlhs.Jh :• Hundred and Tzcenlx-Si Clifford S. Cameron EL CUADRO MEMBERS Nhu-lc,;, Hundred and liuihlccn Wlll.lAM P.. r,A, Kl.l NH Nineteen Hundred and Xmeleen C.Vu.nKSMrn, Kineleen Hundred and Tieenly-Oue MiM.ARU N. Watters Nineteen Hundred and T ' a-entx-Tivo Robert J. KEXTENnuRc. Albert W. Sanps Marion S. Monfort Henry S. Titls Nineleen Hundred and Ti ' euly-Tliree William G. Burkhari. I-hwarh . Farmer Thomas H.Egglestox John L. Lane I-IIIVII A. KcJBINSON Nineleen Hundred and Tivi-nty-Fuur Howard S. Bissell Russell R. Robison Wilson F. Douglass D. Bruce Seymour Handel W. Kelly Cecil J. Smith James M. Kirby Donald M. Torrey Nineleen Hundred and Tzeeuly-PizY Ralph E. Anderson Fkei.eku k O. Sherrill Raymond W. Norberg Kenneth j. Thompson Nineleen Hundred and T:aenly-Si.v Laurence P. Caneield Theodore A. Hopkins Homer Domeaugh Alfred F. Lucas Leo a. Harris Marlin E. Newlove EL CAPITAN GRADUATK MEMBERS Ninclrcn Hundred and EiyhU-cn JkueW. Robinson-, Jh. Nineteen Hundred and Tz. ' entv Herbekt a. Davis Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Ci.AUDE W. Moore Nineteen Hundred and T ' .wnty-Tzvo Donald T. Dl ' ncan Horace E. Overackek William L. Southwell Chester W. Dunn MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three William L. Bradshaw Alexander W. McCrea Fred H. Miller Gustav H. Amberg Robert E. Lewis Norris P. Heaton Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-four Byron T. Badham, Iu. Albert C. White William R. Gage Lee F. Walker Daniel D. Gage. Jk. V. Lief Erickson MiLo C. Sharp Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five Christian W. Niemann J. Chalmers Wright Burton A. Noble H. Garvin Hobnlein Donald K. Har(,er Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Donald G. Adams Charles Orrick Evans Loveridge W. Marsh William H. Fain Charles E. Fagg LOS ARCOS MEMBERS Niiiclc-u llundn-d ,uui TuhvUy-Onc Paul F. Henderson John W. McKinney Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-T ' U ' O CoPELAND Green Joseph V. Gomes Archu-; McVey Nineteen Hnndred and Tiventy-Thrcc Cecil H. Balm at Frank L. Fenton Carroll C. Blacker Alcot J. Peterson BiRT G. Blackman Carlton A. Sheffield Brighton C. Cain Harold W. Smith Alvin V. Taylor, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twnty-Four Kenneth H, Hamilton X ' rtiir J. Minnkr Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Uivc William Van V, Ewekt John Hall Landa Van A. Gillette Donald C. McKay C. Vernon Givan Harold L. White Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Six Leonard G. Dobson Thornton S. Scribxer Kenneth W. Haley A. Dean Storey John Quinn Frederick R. Taylor William C. Van Deventer ! s i EL TIGRE Ml MBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzvenlv Homer Edmlinii Likhxy Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-One Florencio M. Cota Hundred and Tzeenty-T-iVO Edwin Kennith Baum Albert Edward Butterfield William A. B. Hayne John Mears Horner Lewis Harold Kennedy Charles Emerson Miller RussEL A. Pearson Carl William Rehfuss Lawrence R. Serrurier Gerard George Wilson Nineteen H Donald Hennegen Byl Joseph Pressly Price ily-Tliree Harvey Charles Stoddard Franz Sturm Charles L. Watson Nineteen Hundred t John B. Connolly Malcolm Davison George Otto Koch Egbert Warren Laub ,d Tu-entv-Four Harold L. McEwen Philip Wash McKenney Arthur Neuman Freeman Linn Stillman Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five Peter R. Hurley Willard D. Paine Mahlon Daniel McPherson Donald Frank Stikeman Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Morton Baldwin Helm Peirce E. Warrington Farley B. Hornbeak Harold Wilson JAPANESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION PRESiniM- Vice-Pkksiiiknt Recording Secketar Corresponding Seci Trea.sl ' rer Manager MiNMl HlRll- YosHI GRADUATE MP:MBERS IvE Har.a Masl MKMBKRS Nhu-lcni Uiwtrrd and T-.,rnl -Thrcc KazuoEbisuya Hiroshi Konisih KiicHi Imokawa YosHiKivo Arimori .V; ,- ,--„ lluudrrd and T ' uvniy-rour MrcHioKciBA Vuzurl ' Sano Shiichi MizoTA Seizi Yamasaki KlVOACHI M ATS f MARA Xinclrni Hundred and Twnty-Firc ToiCHI DCMOTO YosHio Ighikawa Minoru Havashi Ernest S. Fujinaga ToMIO MURATA Nineteen Ilnndred and Tzventy-Siv Naoichi Ishiguro Hideo Koda Henry Tashiro Morio Sera i ! CHINESE CLUB Founded, Stanford University 1910 Presii ent Hao-ToHo. ' 23 Manager Hung C. Wong, ' 25 Secretary . . Young D. Hahn, ' 22 Treasurer Pen-Tung Sah, 23 GRADUATES Yao-TungHao Kuo-LiangChi Liang-Kung Yang Song-Ping Tsao Shen-Chwan Tan Shulin L. Tan Young D. Hahn Kiong Dai Chang Faw-Yap Chuck King Y. Chang MEMBERS Niiu-trcn Hundred and Twenty-Three Hao-Jo Ho Pen-Tung Sah Eugene Y. Shen Chiu-Hung Lee Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Four Er-ChangPing Chun-KeoTeng Wei-Ping Chang Xineteen Hundred and Tzfenty-Fire Hung C.Wong WuK.Ta ' am Hock H. How Henry D. Cheu Nineteen Hundred and T ' ,eenty-Si.v Tsz Sun Wong V. Tuck Yee PANHELLENIC PltKSIDF.NT Skchktarv TitEASVRER Dorothy Sudden Bi.ANcn Ross ' lRr,INIA WoODRUFK FACULTY MEMRF.R Miss Mary Yost m Virginia Gibbons, ' 23 Irma Gutsch, ' 23 Kathryn Irwin, ' 23 WaiveKingrey. ' 23 Marian Petray. ' 23 Blanch Ross. ' 23 Dorothy Sidden, ' 23 MoNA Walsh. ' 23 Virginia WooDRiFF, ' 23 Margaret Zane, ' 23 Alice Dodds. ' 24 Kathleen Evans, ' 24 Josephine Franklin, ' 24 Frances Pleasants, ' 24 Helen TuTHiLL, ' 24 Wana Keesling. ' 25 F-LisABETH Simmons, ' 25 Fdith Rossarini, ' 25 ;,v- I ' .A SQRQRITieS New Rushing System Tried By Sororities Universities in all parts of the Ignited States have iieen especially interested in Stanford this year, for the year rushing system has been on trial among the sororities. Before this time all freshmen women have been pledged at the end of the usual week of formal rushing, hut have been re(|uire(l to live in Roble Hall for three quarters. Carrying the idea a step further, bidding has been postponed until the iifteenth of May. ' with informal rushing in etifect for nearly eight months. Xo formal period has been allowed, the spirit of the plan being to get acquainted. A change in the original contract occurred in March, when the houses agreed that April ninth to fifteenth should be set aside for a last time of activity, to be followed by a month of absolute silence. Later an attempt was made to change the bidding date to April twentieth, preceded by four days of silence. This move- ment failed. The month of silence which was in this year ' s contract had certain very definite regulations concerning it. No sorority woman was allowed to be seen with a fresh- man woman except on the Quad or on the athletic fields without forfeiting the right of the house to bid that freshman. Talking with a freshman in the I ibrary or walking with her off the Quad were among the things tabooed during this month. Various results of the system are apparent. Roble has been over-crowded, due to the fact that formerly women were allowed to move into their houses at the end of two quarters, if a large number of freshmen were admitted at the beginning of any quarter. However, the usual freshmen grades are said to be higher than the average. Has the new system come to stay? This is a hotly debated question which will not be decided until the end of the year. Pan-Hellenic, the inter-sorority council, is the governing body for the houses. It is com]iosed of two representatives from each sorority. The ofiice of president, held this vear bv Pi Heta Phi, rotates in the order of the founding of the chapters. KAPPA ALPHA THETA Founded at De Pauw University, January, Zl, 1870 Phi Chapter. Estal.Hshcd April 4. 1888, at the College of the Pacific Transferred to Stanford University, January, 1892 FACULTY MEMBERS Margaret Lothrop Claire S. Seav Clelia Mosher Mary Yost MEMBERS Ninclcen Hundred and Seventeen Marjorie Curry Williams Nineteen Hundred and Tieenly-One Mildred Maurer Margaret Robertson Nine!. ;■,•)( Hundred and Ticenty-Tico Elizabeth Spilman Pauline Stanton Helen Greene Esther Flowers Miriam Hilton A ' ; ,- ,- en Hundred and Tzeenly-Tliree Dorothy Kellogg Margaret Zane Georgia Mason Mnet. ecu Hundred and Tiveniy-Fcur Birdella Rogers Ruth Lee Spilman Linda ' an Norden Elizabeth Peirce Ninet( ■en Hundred and Tzveuty-Five Anna Melrose Carolyn Peirce Margaret Wats MDOlNiA BURKS ELLEN CALLANDEP. mo9 lODAlNt CteAVELAND HEUN MAROlS SAHAH M NAiB MAOrnA MiXToOnEOV KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA FACULTY MKMI DoiUITHY PfTNAM TlIEKESA V. RrssK Ni Violet Andrews Virginia Biggar Virginia Burks Marion Gibbs Helen Harris r)0ROTHV HlRLBUT MEMBERS ciccn Hundred and Ti.c, ly-lhrce Sarah MrNAii; Martha Montcomerv Ruth Whitaker Proct( Dorothy Rominger LuRA Spangler MoNA Walsh Loraine Cleavei.an Yvonne Pasquale Hundred and Tzvnily-Fo Martha Spangler Frances Thompson Nint ' trcn Hundred and T ' wcnty-fhc ,i)ER Elisabeth Simmc Barbara Wellington FOBESIA HODOSON m m [ OOOTHV WILLIAMS PI BETA PHI FouiKkd at Monm..iith Cnllcyr. lS(i7 Caliloniia Alpha Cliaiikr. J ' lstahlishfd ScplciiilxT 13, 1893 FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Georgina Burke Mrs. P. A. Martin Mrs. W. B. Owens Miss Helen Sutliff MEMBERS . - ,■;(,•;.■,■;, Hundred and Tu rnty-Tu ' o Mauion Potter Margaret Yount.i.ove Ninrlrrn Hundred and Twenty-Three Madelaixe Dallas Freda Kuh e Mary Hi-ubakh Dorothy Slohen Nineteen Hundred and Tzeenly-Four Mildred Conard Foresta Hodgson K. thlf.en Evans Geraldine Watt 1.. LA Williams Nineteen Hundred and Twnty-Five Dorothy Herpman Florence Gail Thomi Lucy Means Dorothy Williams DELTA GAMMA I ' uuiulud at L ' iiivLr ity of Mississippi, Upsilon Chapter, Established March 6, FACULTY MEMBERS ClIRYSELLA DUNKER Marion Dvvight Katharine Reid MEMBERS tccn Hundred and Tzwnty-Tzvo 1 ' rances Merril Emily Wakdma Frances Fish Hundred and Tzf Ruth Qcinn v-Thrci Hundred ,ind Tzernt: Elizabeth Bentley Eunice Biddle Ruth Crutches Geraldine Franklin Josephine Franklin Lucie Hartzell -Four Helen Lawrence Theilene McGee Barbara Miller Anna Merrill Margaret Richardson Helen Tuthill Eugenia Bentley Barbara Bledsoe Edith Gronen rn Hundred and T ' .venty-Fire Margaret Harrou Gertrude McLeod Angie Parkhurst ALPHA PHI Kappa Cliapter. Establislu-d May 20. 1899 Founded at Syracuse University. 1872 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzcenty Gerai-Dine Johxstox Sophie de Aberle ' leen Hundred and Tz rnly-Tzvo Neva Muscio Dorothy Addine Sherrakd Nineteen Hundred Axita Marguerite Berendsen Helex Elizabeth Mack Blaxche Margaret Kexgla id T ' wenty-Three Blanch EmelineRoss Mary Isabel Wocker Axx Elizabeth Woodhead Nineteen Hundred and 7 Margaret Allen Bailie Florence Kent Harrison Nineteen Hundred and T Joanna Maria Anderson Helen Katherine Broughall Dorothy Cornelia Duxlavy Carol Klin K Kathryn Cochran McCahan ■zvenly-Four Frances Pleasants Helen Mason Whitney i rnty-Five Mabel Ferris McKibdin Frances Elizabeth Reynold? Elizabeth Virginia Roper Emeline Helmbold William; Hermine Wocker GAMMA PHI BETA Founded at S Mil CliapttT. F,stallli hcd Jainiar FACULTY MEMBER Mrs. Mary A. Hill iC: MEMBERS Mncl rcii Hundred and Tzcenty-Onc Doris Axuersox Nine, trcn Hundred and -lu ' enty-T ' a ' O Margaret Duff Niiu-t, Mary Jamison •,•« Hundred and Tzeenty-Three Ruth Lee Eljah Barricklow Waive Kingrey Franxes Sheldon Niih-I Jeannette Booksin Marjorie McDonald een Hundred and Tzventy-Four Lillian Dobbel Margaret Lies Virginia Woodruff Helen- Brant Margaret Mackey Nine Olivia Boezinger Charlotte Mayfield Winifred Smeaton (•. '  Hundred and Tzventy-Pive Eloise McCleave Alice Roth Elsa Barber Alice Peck Dorothy Swain i m m i DELTA DELTA DELTA Founded at Boston University, November 22, 188J Omega Chapter, Established January 16, 1909 m MEMBERS Ninctfcn Hundred and Nineteen Vivian- Hobson Ci.aka Osgood Nineteen Hundred and T:eenty-Tieo Prisciu.a Gauvix Elizabeth KE Nineteen Hundred and Tzeenly-Thr Grace Browx Elizabeth Nove; Agnes North T HELM A TeCNER Nineteen Hundred and Tzcent -f ' Marian Gower DOROT H V OvERI-ELT Helen Terman Marion Turner Ruby Walser Stevenson Helen Schardin Nineteen Hundred and l eenty-Fi ' e. Meribeth Cam Eli Grace Juim Edith Rossarin Helen Turner m i ALPHA OMICRON PI Lamlid.i Cliapter, Established November 5 MEMBERS Ninclccn Hundred and Ttwnty-Onc Virginia Flippen Nuu-tccn Hundred and l , ' cnn •-Three Doris Bailey IrmaGutsch Dorothy F. Herrington -elda Hancock • Norma M. Meads Florence Pixley KatherineSteiger Esther Carol Tully | k- Khwtccn Hundred and Tzcen, -Pflur i ELLOWENEUKLAHOVnE Earlene Phelps Beatrice Lee Ninclccn Hundred and T ' a ' ent: .■-Fkr fe}: Anna Thornton Fitzhugh Helen Gladding Wana Keesling Gladys Patrick Helen Dale Richardson Evelyn ' an Horn OODDS FPAhCfi ■ M ' aEU.AM DOOOI-iy MulLtP I LiLLiArt U AUIIIK DoaiS STEVENSON FRANCtS CHI OMEGA ; FoiiiKk-il at thu University nf Arkansas. 1895 i ' - Nu Alpha Chapter. Eslahlished March 6, 1915 ; ' - ' FACULTY MEMBER Elizabeth Lf.f. Buckingham li - - ' i ' , , MEMBERS V..,-_ ' , . ' i,u-lccn Hundred and Tuvnty-Tico (- ' Douis Stevenson- Elizabeth Lacombe Ninctc-n Hundred and T ' avnty-Thrcc Dorothy Wilson Elizabeth McClellan Veta Hopper Kathryn Irwin Thelma Grace Waniia Leach Mnctccn Hundred and Tzecnly-Four I EdytheBaylis Helen LuNSFORn ;: ,, Lillian Earlier Alice Dodds !--,; Frances Foster Frances Summers y ' i •; Ninelcrn Hundred and rzi ' cnty-Fivc J Dorothy MuLLER E elyn Huntington j! ' . ' ' ] i SIGMA KAPPA Founded at Colby College, 1874 Pi Chapter, Established August, 1915 FACULTY MEMISF.R Jessie Smith MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tii. ' enty-Tz ' o Mildred Cornell Yxez Hen Georgia Thompson Nineteen Hundred and -Reentx-Three Virginia Gibbons Elizabeth Gregory Marian Petkay Nineteen Hundred and 7 .v (v- r ' r Grace Strobel Kathryn Miller Nineteen Hundred and Tzeeuly-Five Rachel Beach Elizabeth Hall Blanche Hicks ROBL€ CLVJB OFFICERS First Term Second Term Mary Learnaru. 73 President Mary Learnard. •23 RtTHNK vux. ' 24 . . Vice-President IsabelleMuzzey, ' 23 Beatrick Brailsforu, ' 25 Secretary Helen Fuller, •24 Margaret Hoon, ' 24 . . Treasurer . Dorothy Shei ' ari). ■24 COMMITTEE OF NINE Myrtle Klahn. ' 22 Alice Hastings, ' 20 Mabei, Ferry. ' 23 Mabel Jones, 23 Mary Learnard, ' 23 Mary E. Hill, ' 24 Eva Williams. ' 24 Rlth Jameson. ' 24 Dorothy L.Burke. ' 24 Polly Dee Learnari •2.=; Carolan Strouse. ' 25 Beatrice Brailsforh, ' 25 RuthS.nedde.v, ' 26 Susan Hyde, ' 26 Margaret Dietrich, ' 26 Jean Ward, ' 26 §@ ©@« il-u I l ree 1 iiieheenTv-venhy 1 @O 0 ®i(iii fOioc t mmm i9@oio ®@®9@® __! ni ' ' ' ' ci T ' JJE ' il ' M Six @d@09e ®a@(90@ 0 ©9  00@0§0 ¥@Oi0 if flBsvjRDiry =EgJ - cH f THE RAZZ SECTION ol till. JUNIOR BOOK is luTC ' liy icsiiLvl fully ilcdiiali-il to SENIOR CONTROL F.xtract from IV-nal Code of California. Sec. 262626a— Any normal human lain); or University student who shall take seriously anything puhlished in the Razz Section of any book shall be Ruilty of a misdemeanor and shall be sentenced to the State Penitentiary for from four to forty- four years as being a menace to public welfare and safety ,1 I ,1, - M V- ,1,11 t,|, ■■ ' J..III,, - ,jiiii,; ' '  ' :iiii ' ' fii? ' !?!i;i; • ::iiPiir ' ' nii '  c ' ' ' ' ' i ic y n: 3Pic ' :ir ' i,j!ln„.«....,.i- ' ...i.l ' l l ;llhmi t .JhMlb.kjUlk.lllU 5TflnFORDQFTH€ FVJTVJRC A GLIMPSE INTO THE FUTURE Bv Mike i Gaze into the future, and what do you see? Why, the futiu-e. What does that future look like? Is it blonde or brunette, blue or brown-eyed? Is it bow-legged or knockkneed? Decide for yourself. Students of Stanford, the Future of Stanford is almost here. All that keeps it from being here right now is the Present. The only way to get the Future here is to do away with the Present. What is the best way of doing away with it? Why, by killing it, of course. Kill time every time you get the chance, and you bring the Future of Stanford that much nearer. Forty years from now — when you have got the A.B., for instance, — think what this place will look like. Where will the old familiar faces that we knew, be? For instance, where will Dink Templeton and his cigarette be? Probably at the Law steps, cussing at an Equity e.x. What will the Post-Office look like, in order to handle the vast increase in the student body? Probably about like thirty cents, the way it does now. There will be rows and rows of Quadrangles, stretching from the Union Barber Shop to Palo Alto. When you want to get to a class you will call a taxi and have it charged to the Lower Division Office. Dormitories? The place will be lousy with them. Just wait for Dormitory Bidding day. when Encina and Toyon and the twenty new dormitories will all vie with each other for the most likely looking preps. As for athletics — the place will be overrun with Block-Tea-Cups and Circle-Muffins. There won ' t be a college in the country that can take us on at a good, fair game of Mah Jongg. Yessir, it looks like the Era of Expansion was on us, much like a pair of suspenders with a bull pup on the gravity end. -TRACK IN I940 ,,, (lic TME PKeSeNr fLUNhllMto (WfivolEH PK6VAILS) Lf Vol. THE DAILY PALO ALTO Published BY permission of the I ' .xerutive CoiiDiiittec IL ' XI ' . 1, l ' i40 Xo. 4 CHESS TEAM IN TIEj CAPTAIN SPRAINS NUERONj CARD N-4L WOKERS CHECA:M- ' T£ BLU£ ND GOLD AjcN T05 SE S N ..)N- NUJI- t HESS ' E- ' -T STAFF to MEET a ' etcs Reporters ' o beihs- TRUCTED cJ.tor to TALK BEATS TO BE G VE.v LOSERS ARE DEFEATED The only reasons the Jugo-slavs can give for not revolting before this, said, Casper X. Milk- weed at The annual Tuesday evening lecture in Lit le Theatre No. 11 last night, is that they don ' t Know how. Mr. Milkweed did not state that the reasons which haveimpelled Iceland to declare war on Greenland. He did not say that there was a serious crop shortage, and he made no remarks on the prevelance of short-sightedness among sorority hashers. He did not explain the new Landis theory of evolution from a little stiff to a ' ' ig stiffo, and omitted to give his idea of the student movies now being shown at Sing-Sing. Milkweed comes from Almanac, Illinois, and has never spoken before college students yet. FOOTBALL GA.ME TOMORROW If all the players turn out. there will be a foot- ball game between California and Stanford to- morrow, says Ma ager Horatio Glunip. alumni to be present It was announced yesterday that an important meeting of THE daily palo alto STAFF will be u-W tomor- row afternoon. Almost every m- ber of the staff is asked to lie present. editorial The new sponsor system is the rocks! Fraj jmen are being made to study to hard! McGALLON DEAD, PERHAPS! News has been received tliat Downing McGallon was killed yes- terday by an shrdlu shrdlu etaoin hr yesterday by an infuriated mob of people at his home town. Celebra- tion is being held up to await con- formation of the news. TRACK CAPr.ilN ELECTED . It was rumored that a track capiam vas elected by the varsity squad last leak. His name has not yet been scertained. (Continued on page 3) ST r e n g t h West Coast Life is naturally proud of the strength represented in its tangible assets of seven million dollars. But it has cause for even greater pride in the ever-increasing strength it draws from the confidence and good will of those whom it serves. West Coast Life has grown from an ideal of the West into a powerful institution — proud of its strength and its jxiwer to serve. West Coast Life INSURANCE COMPANY YES, THIS WILL BE IN 1940 TOO Dan I-:vans. ' 20. Music by Chiik M; Lyric: Moontime, Spqontime, Junetime. I ' luiU ' tiiiie ; Crying ' , I ' m sighing, I ' m dying fur you. N ' ou break my heart in two — Yo u — y o u — y o ii . Eyes that Hes, I tries, I sighs, Late again, what the deuce, I ' m a l)um, so what ' s the use — I ' ATTY AX. ! (Music has liecn omitted at request of Men ' s Council.) The following was clipped from the D. P. A. of January 7, I ' HO: WANTED— CHORUS of flat voices, for feature song in Ram ' s Head Show. Solo parts are satisfactorily flat, but chorus ha been showing too much tune. See Dan F,vans Malaby, ' 44, at Dormitory No. 465. Quadrangle N. ticKets lO m Sections ih 1940- fSeen by ci-ty ■Paf ers) Be ' Photographed this Year on Your Birthday School Da y s THEY cement many lasting friendships. Soon you and your classmates will take different roads and it may be years before some of you meet again. Why not arrange to come to the Studio NOW and have that photograph taken ? 41 Grant Ave., San Francisco Oakland: 408 14th St. Six R. L. Stores Saijrandsco Oakland Sacramenlo Stockton Fresno Six-Store Buying ' Tower Gives Tou Better I ' alues e e -W Styl € Comes First For without style there can be no sucli thing as value in feminine charm. Here everything you buy is pre-eminently .stylish; and Si. -Store BuyinR Power assures vou of vaUif ' THE MOST CONVENIENT STORE TO STANFORD IS SAN JOSE, 117-119 SOUTH FIRST STREET ROUGH ' S DAY IN 1940 (Special dispatch to the Chronicbull) STANFORD UNIVERSITY. Nov. 14. 1940: A final count of casualties in the annual Rough ' s Day here showed that up to a late hour the students were leading by a slight margin. One professor had attempted to have late points scored because of a stu- dent ' s finger which he brought in after closing-time, but the authorities re- fused to etaoonshrdushrdlu. Heretofore it has been the custom for Rough ' s Day to go off in a quiet manner, but this year the customary faculty-student brawl was marred by unpleasant incidents. Up till noon there had been no unpleasantness. No one had slipped in the blood. P.ut about twelve o ' clock a faculty iiienilier delilierately slapped a student with a blue l)Ook. The student resented it ' and pulled off the professor ' s leg. After that there was no regard at all for the rules of the game and several are in the hospital as the result of inadvertently svvallowint an opponent ' s eye. One poor chap is in terrible pain as the result of swallowing a glass eye. It is popularly rumored that the authorities are on the jioint of interfering and modifying this ancient tradition. It will be a pity if they do. This little informal get-together, just after Mid-Quarter examinations, is one of the dearest traditions of Stanford. On that occasion the faculty assembles on one side of the Quad, armed with examination papers, and the student body lines up on the other side, armed with shotguns. At a given signal from the Registrar the two forces clash. Heretofore, while there has been a considerable turnover percentage in the faculty employment chart, the affair has l)een very pleasant. The students, particularly, are said to enjoy it. The Committee on Scholarship is now in session, and it is probable tliat a Faculty Chase will be substituted for the present encounter. Four faculty members will be released at a time, according to the new arrange- ments, and eighteen students, armed with bowie-knives, will give chase. A good time sboukl Icbad bv all. PALACE HOTEL BUILDING SAN FRANCISCO There is No Substitute for Good Merchandise Wegoda Ltd. London Overcoats Hickey Freeman Clothes Dunlap Hats Manhattan Shirts Interwoven Hosiery Bachrach De Luxe Cravats Blanchard Price Knitted Cravats Sxclushe Merchandise but Not High ' -Priced TI1J-: (JLAD ' S KIDDIK KORNICR (Notk: Sciiicirs may (il.tain c-xtr;i ccipii-s by wrilten i-c |ucst to I5 )X 100). OU£A C-W SECTION fi jCU YOU iG AVAI-DEN A£CW - AF yE£ -AVAEX HERE, CHILDREN, WE HA-VE THE MOST FAM-OUS ARCHSECTION KNOWN, SUR-PASSI-NG EV-EN THE GREAT ARCHSECTION OF THE LOI ' VRE IN PAR-IS. ARCH-TIS-TIC BEAU-TY IS RAM-PANT IN THIS MAS-TER-FRAG MFXT AKF VOr I;f ARCH 1ST ' REMEMBER THEN TH-AT YOU ARE AT-TE-NH-INC, . . l; ' II M Till I I Kl lU W 1 1 ICH EVEN PLUT-ARCH NEVER SAW. NOW RUN AL-OM., i MM 1 1 i; I wu i; I MINI l;i I; IllAT AN ARCH YOUNG WOM-AN DOFS-N I l-:i l-s IMI, 1 1 K KilW IJ-,i;S MISS MARKER ' S SCHOOL PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA A School in the Country for Girls College ' Preparatory Separate House for Girls Under 12 years Catherine Harlcer (l ,s.u,r) Sara D. Harlcer ■Principals Castilleja School H • Ml ' , aii.l l)a Scli.i.il lor (iirls. i ' rc- parcs tor Stanford and Eastern Col- leges. Six r.uildinus ; Xew Building for Art and Music Studios and Practice Rooms. I ' eautiful Gardens. Open . ir Swimming Pool. Fall Term begins Sejnember 17. 1923. kkcri-:ati(). sl-.mmer school, lnnc 25 to .August 17, 1 ' ' 2. . Pupils also ac- ! ted for a shorter ])eriod and course 1 l.mned accordingly. Scml for Illtislrolcd Calatogiii- and Snmnu-r School Folder Principal MARY I. LOCKEY THE CHILDREN ' S PAGE, CONTINUED .;,v Vou .Ishilr. C hihlnii: ll,-i c mir Iwinkliii.i; litlli ' minds ln ' cn iniiir(] I ' d y inir stay al crillci, ' f? IKtc- is a little uxt-nisi. ' to ciccupy your tin - lirains. ( ' _ ' . and hnldovcrs can setnuv lu ' lp hy wrilint tlir (Mn|il(i mcnl oflit f. ) I .ct us sec hiiw nian ' of the following- blanks you can till in : 1. Tom Irwin is a , and a , not to mention a , and a 2. The Men ' s Cou ncil are a good bunch of guys when sober, but when they are the s. 3. The Ex. Committee are a bunch of even when sober. 4. The Class of 1923 thinks it is the ' s 5. As a matter of fact, it is the Ah-ha, children, that was easy. P)Ut now try this one : ImII in the niissin.t,r letters. If you have ever had any, this should he e;isy. 1. D — d D — Groot had to be car — ied out of the P — lais R — y — le one night. 2. The Facul — y Clubhous — has a c — liar. 3. Lane Fal — is a h — rse th — ef. (iiicss lliat shm. ' s ' wlictlirr yini k-inn, ' yaiir alphabet: «w -i ritc an essay on ■■iriial I Think of the licon 1 )rparlnirnt . ' Start it out like this: -.My mother fold mc never to swear, but , and end it like this. ' ' e$ !S- ' c — ). ' :$ ! Well, children, now comes the real hard part. Here ' s your opportunity to show whether vou come from the great open spaces where men are men and children are ciiildren. or from where they are only registered students : .Select the right answer to each (|uestii n. Underline it. Then erase it so your Ixjok won ' t lie marked up : 1. All Daily Palo Alto editors are (1) morons, (2) misfits, (3) idiots. 2. Landis as a student body president is the (1) rocks, (2) berries, (3) scarlet fever. 3. Red Tauzer still hangs around because (1) he can ' t pass his hours, (2) he flunks all his courses, (3) his brain is weak. 4. Templeton goes around all the time putting on (1) airs, (2) the dog, (3) the bull. 5. So does (1) Scotch Campbell, (2) Harry Borba, (3) ' 26. 6. Next year we will have a strong team in (1) chess, (2) mah-jong, (3) pinochle, (4) the corporation yards. X AVHE your work nftt-r collefje days will lead you a loiif, ' way from the Quad. I ' erliaiJs you won ' t live in a comnnmity where there is a Wilson ' s confectaurant. Hut Wilson ' s candy will always be as close to you as the nearest mail route. Almost without exception (you ' ll bear us nut in this). Stanford men and women stand by their preference for Wilson ' s can(l . It ' s one of the tfood things they learn at .Stanford. COXFECTAiR-lXTS Stanford Palo Alio .V.m Jose Frcs to Stoikloii San Francisco C.MiLE ADDRESS ••.SERUMS ' TKI.KI ' UIINK si 1 1 KR ,.1J. ' Fred L Lackenbach ' biologic T epot Scrums. AntUoxms. liaclcnal l iccuics. Tubcrculm Fine Chemical Products, Diatjnostic Keat enis Ihictcrioloyical, Serological, and Chemical Work 9th Floor Butler Bldg. 135 Stockton Street San Francisco, Cal. ALICE M. KELLY PHOTOGRAPHS 944 Bryant Street Palo Alto, California Telephone 816 Totally zvithoiit jHsllfnalu Section. It is intonh ' il for llh The rest of you can htm c; to laugh at. H ' c hare trieil i f ictures in these f a( es. too. I ahlv «• , anyhozc. APOLOGY this srctio)! of pages is sandiviched into the Race siimll minority of our subscribers who read. ■ quiiklv the folloiving pages and find more pictures to make von think too hard, so there are a few if you can ' t read, you ' d better skip it. You prob- 1. ENCINA TELEPHONES Ever try to get anyone on the Encina telephones? Ever get your party? Neither has anyone else. A long, long while ago. when the telephone was in ' ts youth, they installed a couple of laboratory experiments in Encina— a good deal after the fas hion of trying a new serum on a dog. It didn ' t work very well. Becoming skeptical, the University lost all faith in telephones, and decided to give up the attempt. The instruments were left for the boys to play with. That was all right until some unsuspecting stranger thought that they were intended to be used, walked into a booth at Encina, and took down the receiver. You can see his skeleton standing there yet. Then there was another chap who got drunk — any sober man would have known better — and tried to phone Encina from the outside. He stood so long that his arm became permanently fixed in a listening position. This gent ' s sad fate was a warning and the coming of prohibition brought a great sigh of reUef to many in the back of whose minds had always lain the haunting fear that they, too, would get drunk and try to phone Encina and starve to death doing it. 2. FIRE DEPARTMENT ED L. MB I ' . SSES BV llllS AD MAY NOT BE WORTH MIC II: lU I OIR FLOW ' ERSll I ' HONK 11 -J PALO ALTO FLOW LR a,ul SEED SHOP 5 6 F.mcTsoii loitpositc Tost Otlk-fi ' IVk ' t raph St ' r irc Pure Milk Scioitifi cully l istcnrizccl CREJM iarri:R eggs THE PALO ALIO DAHIV PHONE 219 : 14 INIVERSnV AVE. Insurance Company of North America Alliance Insurance Co., of Philadelphia Yorkshire Insurance Co., Ltd. Northern Insurance Co., of New York FIRE . MAR1X1-: . .M ' To.MolUl.K 1 .XSfR.WCE Pacific Dcfaitmcnt 223 S. NsoMF. Sthket S n- Fr.v.ncisco IJIA (.t)UU PLACE TO STAY when visiting San Francisco : GOLDEN WEST HOTEL Comer FoiK ' cll and Ellis Slrcclx 200 ROOMS 100 WITH II.XTII F. P. PI.. GE.M. N, Propri 3. REGISTRATION No, Heloise, that is not the poster fight, nor yet the tie-up. That is the Registration battle going on. The smoke and dust arising comes from the trampling hordes trying to get to the Lower Division desks. Will they? They will not. The Faculty has too sure a barricade of red tape thrown about them for the seething mob of the proletariat ever to get registered. ' I ' hiiNL iiumylcd and turn bodies uvcr tlRic arc- tlic iurs wlm managed tii pierce ihe I ' aeuUy lino and were tlnown to the lions of the Mathematics Department. Those dejected looking souls over there are the prisoners ; those green papers in their hands are Petitions. They got to the desks and now wish they hadn ' t. Did you say yovi wanted to register, Heloise? Come around tlie first of next week, bucks for late registration, and do vour stuff. Only the dumbbells register on registration profiteth a man to Register and then Petition the rest of the Quarter to get bis Rcgistratior 1 Undone? 4. DOGS lipg:-j£ Si- NO, THE UNINERSITV IS 0T COINC Tl ) THE DOCS — IT ' S THE OTHER WAY . UOl ' N Phone Sutter 3720 Free Garage LANKERSHIM HOTEL 350 ROOMS OF COMFORT ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF rt] Fifth and Market Streets, opposite Mint San Francisco MICROSCOPES, MICROTOMES PROJECTION APPARATUS and other high grade OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS for University, College and School Laboratories BAUSCH : LOMB OPTICAL CO. OF CALIFORNIA 28 GEARY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO WILLIAM WARREN SCHOOL MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA Located within five minutes ' distance of Stanford University MILITARY, BOARDING and DAY SCHOOL giving ELEMENTARY and COLLEGE PREPARATORY COURSES HOTEL SUTTER SAN FK.-iNCJSCO. CALlt. FIREPROOF EUROPEAN PLAN KEARNY AND SUTTER STREETS TELEPHONE SUTTER 3060 Huul Sutler i a moikrii, triclly tii: t-ela.s,s hotel, iiuted far and wide fur it tine Uirni h- ings, splendid service, and popular prices. . . , , , , • •., No hotel in the city has a better location, in fact the Sutter is in the heart of the city, with the banking, business and shopping districts surrounding it on all sides. Nothing better could be said of the Sutter than that it is heartily cndnrsid by C ahtornians themselves, from one end of the State to the other. Managcnunt of George Warren Hooper CAMERON GETCHELL Marcelling, Hair T ressitig, Shampooing, Scalp Treatment, Hair Coloring, Hair Bobbing, Facial Massage and Manicuring TELEPHONE 389 360 UNIVERSITY AVE. Palo Alto, California DANCE Hercules Explosives (or Mining. Quan-ying and TO MUSIC YOU HERCULES CANT RESIST • The Ballroom of the Hotel Oakland scintillates with gaiety every Wednesday and Saturday night. M) Ernie Mil like n ' s jLL i U. C. Orehestra POWDEI{ HOTEL MiwkcU-ss Puzcdcrs: Infallible and E. C. OAKLAND HERCULES POWDER COMPANY OAKLAND CAL[FORNIA . eu .Standard Oil Htdi,-. San Francisco 5. HOLDOVER SHOW What would an Irish Marathon be without a Holdover Show? Great. The Holdovers must have a show, bless their little hearts, but it ' s too bad that they can ' t give it at La Honda. The big idea is to pick out something that several of the Holdover gentry aren ' t fond of; generally each picks out the guy that took his girl away from him, or lost his tux for him, or something of the sort, and the show is practically written. The lines aren ' t important, because the boys are generally in a state where punctuation is a mere nothing to them anyhow. The Holdovers and the audience play a little game; every time the audience hears a word, it counts one point for the audience; every time it hears a sentence, that ' s three points ; a whole paragraph carries five points for the audience. Every time the audience laughs, that ' s five points for the Holdovers. The scores for the last eight years have averaged Audience 7, Holdovers 3. 6. THE POST OFFICE The Post Office is Hint little st,nir hinldiiuj Unit they tell yon is the Taxi office the first day yon come here. The nuiiii pnrf ' ose of this hiiildiiuj is to [provide a con- venient place in wliicli to stand in line withont (jettimj rained on. Deposit a letter zvith our Post Office and it is just as safe as thonijh you had slipped it under the Pyramids. No one is ever going to get it a- eay from them. 7. UNION MEALS The Union buries its own dead, thank goodness. In fact, a great many people, financially embarrassed but still too proud to lie around dead, bother- ing people, take advantage of the Union ' s generosity. The method is this: first, walk into the main dining room, preferably, although one of the others will do if the main one is too littered up with corpses; second, sit down; third, feel to see if your will is well made out ; fourth, order hot cakes. That is the important point — of course other articles of diet will do in a pinch, but hot cakes will bring r esults every time. Fifth, eat the cakes. Don ' t hit yourself over the head with them, as some have done, because this method is not at all certain. Sixth, decease. This last instruction is superfluous. It is well to make arrangements with the head waiter ahead of time, as you may have to wait your turn for a coffin during the busy season. Tailored Clothes are a wise investment nPHEIR REAL ECONOMY is proved by the longer life of the matenals. And the STYLE and workmanship stay put to the end. TAILORED - TO -- YOUR -- MEASURE CLOTHES, compared with clothmg produced by other methods, cost but little more. Consid- enng the SERVICE rendered. Tailored Clothes are ultimately more economical. See our large display of exclusive woolens OHLSON : HOLMES Tailors and Importers 110 SUTTER STREET Fourth Floor French BanicBu.ld.ng SAN FR NCISCO ENXINA r ININ G HALLS The following firms have built Stanford ' s new buildings : GEORGE WAGNER Builder San Francisco BAKEWELL BROWX Architects San Francisco GEORGE H. TAV CO. Plumbing Fixtures San Francisco JAMES H. PIXKERTON Plumbing and Heating San Francisco POPE TALBOT LUMBER CO. Lumber San Francisco OLD MISSION PORTLAND CEMENT CO. Cement San Francisco THE REPUBLIC SUPPLY CO. Pipe San Francisco P. CIFIC COAST STEEL CO. Rein fordng Steel San Francisco ENTERPRISE ELECTRIC WORKS Electric Motors San Francisco H. S. TITTLE Electric Fixtures San Francisco R. NSOME McCLELL. ND Cement Machiner - San Francisco -, fe5£ ' -. - :.- JM KNOX SPORTS CLOTHES for COLLEGE MEN WOMEN KNOX HATS For College Men fVomen Knox llatj. Clothes and Accessories are possessions in which anv man or woman can take jnstilial)le pride. The smart style of Knox Hats and quality merchan- dise add distinction to the wearer. The excellent quality of the fabrics from which Knox wearing apparel is fashioned assures the retaining of its good appearance over a long period of useful wear. THE KNOX SHOP 51 GRANT AVENUE San Francisco 8. PALO ALTO 900 How To Get It and What To Do Then. (In simplified Question and Answer form.) Q. Hello, is this 900? Q. Hello, hello, is this 900? Q. Hello, hello, HELL-o! helUlloh ! is this Palo Alto 900? A. M- ■!■■-- ' - :- Q. Palo Alto 900. Q. I said Palo Alto 900. Q. Hey. I said Palo Alto 900! A. This is Palo .Alto -Mm: O. I want Kearny 8686. A. Ves. sir. Just a minut. .... V.n, wa,m-.i K.a.ny 8668? O. No, I want Kearny 6868 — I mean, 8686. X. Yes, sir. Just a tninuto Til call you. INTERMISSION OF TWO AND A HALF DAYS Q. Hello, hello, yes. . . . yes, I wanted Kearny 8686. Hello! Is this the American Hyde Tallow Company? But I wanted Kearny 8686. 9. MINOR SPORTS 11 OF 1940— GIVE -EM . SKYROCKET, Ml- G%EE TINGS jnnr. The Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. of CaliJornicJ ■THE GIANT OF THE PACIFIC ' OKCANIZKD I8(iS Famous for its Policy that PAYS FIVE WAYS Assets, Dec. 31, 1922 . . $ 7.1356,818 Insurance in force, Dec. 31, 1922 . 433,715,680 If you have not yet decided upon the nature of your life work, investigate the possibilities of Life Insurance Underwriting as a career. Instructive booklet sent on request. ARTHUR C. PARSONS Manager Life Department Alexander Bldg. San Francisco Branch Office San Francisco CHAS. C. MOORE 6c CO. ENGINEERS Machinery of the Hitrhest (jrade Contradors for Coynplete Plants for PoTsuer, dumping, Lighting, Mining HOME OFFICE: SHELDON BUILDING, SAN FRANCISCO Branch Offices SALT LAKE LOS ANGELES PORTLAND SEATTLE TUCSON HONOLULU, T. H. NEW YORK Camelline for the complexion HARMLESS EFFICIENT A California Production which has Stood all Tests FOR SALE EVERYWHERE LAW BOOKS SINCE 18 5 Men, Don ' t Throw itoAwayl WE ' LL FIX IT THE MENDING CLVB 5S6 Emerson St. PI I ONE 96 R Talo Alto Pleating and ' button Co. Pleating, Hemstitching, Buttonholes. Covered Buttons SEWING MACHINES FOR RENT F.xpcrt Repairing SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO., 536 Emerson St. W- University Creamery, I c. Wholesale and Retail ICE CREAM . ICES • BUTTER CANDY MANUFACTURERS AND ALL DAIRY PRODUCTS 309 I ' nivcrsity Ave. Phone P. A. . - a1o Alto. Calif. TRAVERS SURGICAL CO. Physicians ' and Hospital Supplies Special Discounts to Students Phone Sutter 4651 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. G AM PUS I GAR STORE W I,. CKF.KNE CAMPUS SHOh: SHOP lOR OOOD RKPAIRING UNION BUILDING 10. UNDERCLASS DISCIPLINE IL HONOR SOCIETIES Now Archibald Spivus McSappo McLean, Was the goofiest guy that the campus had seen. He couldn ' t play pingpong, nor tennis, nor chess, And what he COULD do is a thing we can ' t guess. His face was a thing to drive women to drinking, His head held his hat, but was no good for thinking. You ' d think that this guy didn ' t rate any clubs, Or that honor societies would throw out such dubs. THEY DID, but still Spivus wears ten more pins, For he found lots of guys with his very same sins. They raked all the dumb-eggs from obsolete shelves- Formed new societies — honored themselves ! , ETRIE ' S INC. DRIVER-BETTINGEN Clothiers Haberdashers 324 West Sixth Street LOS ANGELES Hatters Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland TRANS. c;i ' l-:i) MORI ' : lUJXDIXG AND IU;iv( il .AR V IXSUR- ANCK BUSIXKSS IN CALIFORNIA IX ! ' ' _ ' _ ' THAN ANY OTHER COM TAN V ASSETS IN EXCESS OF 15,000,000.00 Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland EXECUTIVE OFFICE, 516 INSURANCE EXCHANGE, SAN FRANCISCO Guy LeRoy Stf.vkk. Vice-President I.ij.am. W. Citikr, Pacific Manager Branch Office, 622 Insurance Exchange, San Francisco, Cal. C. K. Bennktt, Mana.uxr I ' . I ' -. Hkishink, Associate Manager Branch Office, H. W. Hellman Building, Los Angeles, Cal. H. D. ' amik kkr. ' ice-PreMcknt WM. M- Walker, Manager ff ie i You Conic Bcick Meet Me at JACK MEYEKS ENCINA STORE fe Two Big Surgical Stocks Instruments Pliysicians ' Furniture .■ i; -ii s for Wappler Electric Co. W. D. Allison Co. R. L. SCHERER CO. 205-9 Flood Bldfj., San Francisco, Cal. 621 Su. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. MARQUEE BARBER SHOP l Uh- SlikllU: M ' OSITI-. HANK OF PALO ALTO TEMPLE LAUNDRY CO. ' The 100 . Ldundry ' Phone San Jose 129 Hotel and Kitchen Equipment of every description made to order and installed Expert advice free No job too large or too small TILE OF EVERY KIND IN STOCK V. SHT ' |-Ill-: Tll.l-: AM) l)( I Till ' , M HI ( ( )MIM.KTE MANGRUM OTTER, hic. 827 MISSION STREET SAN FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA Phone Douglas 2269 Erbe Uniform Mfg. Co. MAXUI-ACTL ' RKR.S OF IINIM J. ETHEN. Prop. IIKADHUARTKRS fOR PIPES. IIOLDER.S. ■...t:c„Es. UNIFORMS iij ILu (11 r 1. KINKS, OF ALL DESCRIPTION ' .S ' HI - I ' .il I I l;l«s. Moved to 111 NEW MONTGOMERY STREET San Francisco, California The place where you tind what you want in CIGARS. TOBACCOS. CldARETTES UNITED CIGAR .STORES AGENCY 12. MAY PLEDGING A long time ago we had here what is vulgarly known as the knock-down-and- drag-out system. It worked fine. The first week was rather delicate, what with the frosh putting ice on their heads, generally just behind the ear, and the place littered up with gas-pipes. But after the first week everything went smoothly. After awhile there began to be hitches in the system. A few of the leagues got punier and couldn ' t swing as mean a ball-bat as they used to be able to. and some of the frosh began coming in with thicker domes than the first ones. The result was that some enterprising fraternity brother would sneak up on a frosh, swat him behind the ear as was his wont, and the frosh would shake his head a couple of times, turn around, and pull off the brother ' s leg and slap him in the face with it. a ' solution was suggested by some of those houses which were getting short of pipe-welders and long on cripples. They had the bright idea of holding off till May and taking a chance on the frosh getting sick, in which case it would be a conipara- tivelv simple matter to go down to the hospital and put a ].in m hini while he couldn ' t help himself. It may prove a good system. 13. THE HONOR SYSTEM Our u-iini is To have the Grads all REMEM- BER us; The Students all KNOW us; And those about to enter Stanford get ACQUAINTED with us; BcCilKSC We sell GOOD FOOTWEAR. ' ' Where iual ' ity Predomitujtes ' ' ' ' FREEMAN ' S ' Foto Shots and Framing 163 University .... PALO ALTO F. CTORV: 327-029 Minna Stixvt TI-.I.Kl ' HOXKS : Sutter 9.ta- ' « - JOHN G. ILS 6c CO. Mam„ nlur,;s FRENCH RANGES AND BROILERS 0 R 1X(, TAI!I.1-.S, COFFKF. UKXS, DISH HKATFRS, roKTAiu.!-: CAS i;akI ' (i i-; s COMPLETE KITCHEN AND BAKERY OUTFITS OI ' FRE AND SAI.I ' .SROOM 839-41 MISSION STREET IM l ' ..nitli and Fittli Sl . San Francisco. Cal. Aladdin Studio Tiffin Room San Francisco ' s most d,.uu,ct,vc Oriental Show Place 50c 75c $1.00 35c 50c 73c $1.00 and a la carte 363 Sutter Telephone: Douglas 3974 Oriental Salesroom and Gift Shop Adjoining Antiijiu-s Batiks Brasses and Embroideries Creative Millinery by Georges (Man Milliner) M. C. MOOSKK The House of Odorless Cleaning C I T Y O F P A R I S DYEING CLEANING WORKS OFFICE AND WORKS 62 5 Ramona Street PALO ALTO PHONE 1525 FOSTE% OREAR- ality Made Candy OUR BKE. KFAST • l.LXCll • DINNER You are Bound to Recogni::e the {Jiiality in Whatever Your Choice FOSTER O R R A R Phone Gar. 2500 137-139 Grant Ave. FERRY BUILDING ENCINA BARBER SHOP ' ' est Loca l Service Young Drug. Co. ' Dependable T)niggists Phone 36 351 University Ave. AGENTS FOR The Owl Drug Co. Products Brunswick-Columb: Phonographs and Records Sheet Mu Piar Wi t jHusic Ijop C. E. MARTIN 273 University Ave. Business Phone 425-J Palo Alto. Calif. Residence Phone 818-W MAKE-UP PRIVATE INSTRUCTION m the art of stage and motion pifture make-up. ED. A. MILLS 1061 Market St. San Francisco Phone Market 1637 Associated ■with De Recal Corporation Costumen De luxe MITSUI Qc CO, LTD. (Mitsui Bussan Kaisha, Ltd.) 1 General Importers and Exporters Coal Suppliers, Ship Operators ■ ' ••J ' Ship Owners, Ship Builders, Etc., Etc, V:;} H 1-: A D O I- I- 1 C H ■ TOKIO, JAPAN J SAX FRANCISCO O F F I C F. ■ ■■■% 301 MERCHANTS EXCHANGE BUILDING ■ , Other P. r a n i ' li c s New York, London, Seattle, Portland, Lyons, Hamburg, and All Other Important Centers of the World IT MAKES A DIFFERENCE y WMERF vol Bl V VOIR Lm B () X D S Y men ' s ' J DISTINCTIVE roOTWEAJL 4 Slfe Market S 5 5i go.Bwdv. 11 w. 7 } BLvrH, w rrri :R CO. M,r h i it ' i l-.. i Miii!;i-. SiDi Framisco 1 ONE-IN YO GHB OOD msES ■THE BETTER CHAIN STORE GROCERS k The initials of a friend You will find these letters on many tools by which electricity works. They are on great generators used by electric light and power companies ; and on lamps that light millions of homes. They are on big motors that pull railway trains ; and on tiny motors that make hard housework easy. By such tools electricity dispels the dark and lifts heavy burdens from human shoulders. Hence the letters G-E are more than a trademark. They are an emblem of service— the initials of a friend. GENERAL ELECTRIC GO CAMPING— But Go RIGHT ! Equipment that won ' t stand many trips is liable to fail on one. Practical outdoor men and women have proclaimed our offerings the last word in top-notch equipment. No doubtful goods at any price. Our Prices Mean Economy. A. ' Arms ' (pmpam 583-85 MARKET ST I llllfc FRANCISCO. — IGN OF Q }P oore and Clarke Portrait Photographers LichcS Building Telephone 177 Post Street Dow las 4718 14. TAG DAY 15. OFF-CAMPUS CORRESPONDENTS They write tumiiiyrot; yea, they write hogwash ; they ]nii STANFORD L ' XI ERSITY at the head of it and it is printed in the city papers. And the next clay we read that five hundred were hurt in a Stanford Riot; or that there is a ferrihle enraijemcnt enrat ins ' about amnnt; ' the c ' )-e(k because of an article ajipear- in,L; ' in a campus |iapcr sayiu; Kick ' F.ni ( )ut. 16. CORRECTOR SYSTEM il riJMiiciiit i MAKE A BANKING CONNECTION WITH THE SAME CARE THAT YOU SELECT YOUR UNIVERSITY The Crocker National Bank OF SAN FRANCISCO qA Half Century oAgo— tills bank was organized to meet the modest but no less urgent commercial requirements of a pioneer community. For fifty years it lias kept step, been inseparably identified with the develop- ment of San r- ' rancisco and the Pacific Coast. An .American institution, energized and directed by Western . mericans. serving .American busi- ness throughout the civilized world. The oAnglo and Loudon 1 aris l tional ' ank of San Fratuiico ,„vs ' B [B ! Il ' i Friends oAround the World Manx frirnd.shit ' s established bclivrrn this hunk and Stanfcrd sliidrnts iirr continiicd thnni(jli the years fuUowiiuj ijraduation ■ and today lee point witli pride to our aeeoants witJi Stanjord iiradiiates. who are uozc living in far-distant places Our Hankimj-by-Mail Department renders a hiiihly satisfactory service. The Bank of Palo Alto ASSETS OVER 3,000,000.00 FIRST NATIONAL BANK PALO Al.TO, CAL. C M M E K C I A L ' . A ' A. ' .V G ,i We pay 4 per cent on Term Deposits You can bank with us by mail. M E M B F. K F E D E R A I. R E S E R V E B A X K Coldwell, Cornwall cS. Banker R e a 1 1 r s F. E. PALMER. ' 13 G. H. BEURHAUS, -13 O. G. BRUN. ' 16 C, C. ZWINGMAN, -Vl PAUL TISSOT, ' 17 E. V. ARNOLD, ' 18 1 7 SLTTKR STREET : SAX FRAXflSCO ' ' The Hibernid Savings TH E FR ENCH and Loan Society AM ERICAN BANK HIBERNIA BANK 108 Sutter Street Incorporated 1864 = :: = COR. MARKET, McALLISTER and JONES STRhh IS, SAN FRANCISCO BRANCHES : 1009 Grant .-hrmic. and Third Slrccl and Palou Avcmu- 1 Assets . . 78,569,362 96 Reserve Fund . 3,950,243.06 TliU in.liliition ..lici . tlu- accounts of the -tudniix Mt Sianionl riiivrr ity and wishes iM iniprc- up. ill tluin v -implicity and con- Open Daily from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Saturdays from 10 a. m. to 12 m. ] ' f slwuld be pleased to handle your eheek-ing and jni ' iii( j aeeotinln. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS FROM 6 to 8 O ' CLOCK FOR DEPOSITS ONLY K.MMV WBJTE CS FOR MC JV  : CA1.DS AND 1. v 64 to ' 23 M h,%}i.. THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA, N. A. j f, Jm,f j NATIONAL ANK) California at S a n s o m e Streets, San Francisco PI ' W™s llllllll ' life c iooseyi. ititi III! nil mnJB iiii nil nil mi iiii nil nil nil iiii ini nil nn iin nil iii HEN you enter busi- ess or professional wyour bank itYWi ' — and you will have to choose but once. This bank has served many an enterprise from its small be innin , and watched and helped it j row to great proportions. Wells Fargo Nevada Northeast Corner of NatlOHal BaUlC Market and MortQomery Streets ot San Krancisco nn nn nn nn nn nn nn nn iiii nil nii ini hii nn nn nil iiii nn lui nn nn Identify Yourself With a Bmk fJ[Not only for direct worth and conven- ience, liut for the higher appraisement of your cre Ut and stabihty, a liank ac- count pays. JJI ' I ' his hank welcomes the accounts of ()ung men and wom- en at the outset of their careers. The advice and counsel of its officers is always theirs to command. oAmerican National Bank Callfoi-iila and M,mt,j, mcry Slr,-ct, San Francisco McDonnell Co. RonT. M. Ri RcsiJciit Parliicrs New York Stock Exchange New York Cotton Exchange New York Produce Exchange Chicago Board of Trade New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange San Francisco Stock Exchange We Conduct a Commission and Investment Business in All Its Branches -ies invited. Private Wire 11 Oitr Exclusively Leased If.nnrd and Competent Or- We Maintain a Special Investigating Department for the hcnefit of our customers and for prospective investors who may desire de- tail information regarding either listed or unlisted stocks and bonds before making commitments. Your name on our mailing list insures your This service is complimentary. you cannot conveniently call at our offices, zvrite or telephone for any information you may desire TEI.EPIIO.N ' E SUTTEU 7676 (i.U Marlcet Street at New Montgomery San Francisco XEW YORK LOS . NGELES S. W. STRAUS CO. INVESTMENT BONDS New York--Straus Bldg. Chicago-Straus Bldg. SAN FRANCISCO W. K. BOWES, 15 J- V. WOOD, -16 E. L. BOWES, ' 15 RITTER HOLMAN, ' 18 A. E. BARZEN, ' 15 LESLIE C. ROGERS, ' 17 FORTY-ONE YEARS WITHOUT LOSS TO ANY INVESTOR Union Trust Company o San Francisco Junction of Market and U ' l-arrcll Sts. and Grant Ave. Chark-s J. Dccring, President E. S. Heller, Vice-President trmiG - - Greene, Vice-President and Trust Officer OllUn jj Q Larsh, Vice-President and Secretary F. J. Brickwedel, Cashier and Treasurer . Charles dii Pare, Assistant Cashier iTOQTCSSlVC - - ' ' ' ' • ' ' Cashier O I. J. Gay, Assistant Cashier Marion Newman, Assistant Cashier CI. A. Miller, Assistant Cashier OWVenient I. W. Hcllman, Assistant Cashier R. J. Schradcr, Assistant Trust Officer P. A. Wood, Assistant Trust Officer J. F. Shields, Assistant Trust Officer Commercial. Trust and Savings Dc arlmcnts The Oldest Trust Comf ' any in the West Long Distance ' ' if When away from home re- 11 member the longdistance tele- II phone. II It means that separation is meas- II ured b - minutes, not miles. |i Lonjj distanee teleplione ser ice is II prompt, eri ' ieient and inexpensive. ' -: Every Bell Teleplione is a Lono li Distance station. The PACIFIC TELEPHONE and TELEGRAPH COMPANY M. H. Lewis Company GOVERNMENT, MUNICIPAL AND CORPORATION BONDS California Commercial l nion Bldg. Citizens National Bank Bldg. San Francisco Los Angeles BONDS FOR INVESTMENT ( A RSTENS F.ARLES, I NCORPORATED Grouiul Floor California Commercial Union Building SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA Established 1891 SEATTLE SAN FRANCISCO SAN DIEGO LOS ANGELES SPOKANE Schwabacher 6c Co. INVESTMENT SECURITIES Palace Hotel Building 665 Market St. DOUGLAS 500 SAN FRANCISCO Sound Bonds for Investors Clyde S. Cn..k Ex- 18 Roy King 19 Floyd W. Mosiman 19 F. R. Frederickson Ex- 22 Albert W. Taylor 22 F. Canner 1 C. F. Supple 21 Dewey H. Janney 21 Vernon W. Janney 19 James E. Micks Ex- ' J 1 T11IRT ■-S1X VI-. RS IN CALIRJRXIA INCK 1SS7 the Wni. R. Slaats Co. has inablcd S5 ' „s cherls to save and invest lhrough the buy ng of sound bonds. This long experience guides us in selecting thnsc .ssi.is which offer the maximum interest consistent with excellent security. g k I.. K. M.icy. -97 V. F. Siss on, -16 Blair Gv Co. IJiCOIU ' OHAjrEH) IXVKSTMKNT SHCL ' RITIES San Pniiicisco Los Angeles Xe7c York AKL RAISS CO. Stocks and Bonds 429 C.NLiFORN!. ' St. SUTTER 2J2 COMMERCIAL GROWERS BANK S.in Jose, Californi CROCKER SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS crocker building Junction Post and M. ' Vrket Streets s. N FR.WCISCO John P . C u n n i n j h a in Manaijfr SIGMA NEW sSv PHY SIGHMAH KAPPAH EMBARCADERO CLUB GOES ROW— The razz editor ran into diffi- culties when he came to shoot a picture of the Phi Sigma Kappa chapter house. He found the brothers in deep water; conflicting interests involved a choice between the occupancy of the empty half of the Alpha Kappa Lambda house, and a long lease on the seventh floor of Encina Hall. Objections to a large building are based on the fear that the brothers will not be all there next year. Meanwhile, work is progressing on Toyon Hall, and the Union continues its usual service in the transient dining room. .M)MIT till ed Phi lieta ice in physi V in differentiating fraternit ' appa Psi. The Phi Psis sho ;isfying to be at the top of THETA KIIII WE CANT REMEMBER WHO THE GENT WAS WHO PROPUKDED THIS STICKIER- HOW MANY TIMES WAS A THETA CHI PRESIDENT OE THE STUDENT BODY NOT. AND IN WHAT YEARS NOT? FRATERNITY COUNTS ILL THEN THERE WAS the fresh who thought that the fraternity council was an oriental organization including the Chinese Club, the Japanese Club, and the Fijis. Geo. H. Burr, Conrad tS Broom Incorfioralcd Kohl Building Citizens Xat. Bank Building San Francisco Los Angeles Seattle, Wash. Portland. Ore. J Z ' C S t }N c n t Bo }l (I s C. )N )N c r c i a Pap c r CORRESPOXDEXTS GEO. H. BURR i CO. XF.W YORK CHICAGO BOSTOX ST. LOUIS rHIL. DELFHIA CI.ENEl.AXU 1 ITLK IXSURANCE Ax D 1 RUST C()MP. NY LOS ANGELES, t ALII ORNLA State iicnt, January 3ht, 1923 RESOURCES LIABILITIES Mortgage Loans on Real Capital Stock $2,000,000.00 Estate - - $ 466,415.32 Surplus 850,000.00 Real Estate 369,176.50 Undivided Profits - - - 1,211,682.77 Real Estate and Building - 10,000.00 Advance Fund 47,480.90 Bonds 1,129,439.27 Bonds in State Treasury - 307,070.80 Mortgages in State Treasury 402,000.00 Stocks 596,651.97 Collateral Loans - - - - 66,880.47 Cash in Banks 730,353.49 Revenue Stamps - - - - 31,175.85 The Company oicHS, ill aJdilion to the resources shoixin aho ' ve, its title plant, ivliich ikouIJ cost more than $1,250,000.00 to reproduce and is nialued at o ver $3,000,000.00 3UTTEK STREET mear G AflT AVE SAN FRANCISCO COMPLETE FURNISHINGS and INTERIOR DECORATIONS for Homes, Clubs, Fraternities, Sororities, Lodges and Institutions Estimates Prepared Established in New YorL in 1843 80 Years Ago M-: , Riding Breeches Liuenes WILLIAMS AND BERG CO. General English Tailors 110 Sutter Street French American Bank Bldg. SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF. T e Fielding Hotel GEARY AND MASON STREETS SAN FRANCISCO Ell I vpcd t PI ill I . R(ih ( S2. 5l and S3, c h Every Room with Private Bath Absolutely Fireproof ERNEST F. PETERSON, manager CHI OH-MAY-GAH! PHY! DELTA!! THETA? I houSL ? Please send information to 100, for use by nL xt annual. How can you something nobody ever heard of? ALPHA TAW OMEGER WAl. TKR SKITZ. MCK. MaM.ii Street at (kary I ' lioiR ' Sutter 5050 KING GEORGE HO 1 EL .V(; Francisco. Californ ' hi NI.NK-STORY FIREPROOF BUILDING 20 Rooms Rurofam Plan All with rnvatr I ' .ath Siiiiil.- $2,(111 Day L ' p n.nihU- S. ' .50 Day Up GOLDSTEIN CO. Bush Eledric Corporation Theatrical Costumes 883 Market Street San Francisco X-RAY AND ELECTRO-PHYSICAL EQUIPMENT . ? 4 Sutter Street SAN ' I ' KAXrisri) Clancy Classy Tailor 1 — I spcciali .c in S45.()() inaclc-to-orclcr suits cV 7 ' - ' AV vr , S(i i Frd uisco WALTER A. SHAW ISO Poll Strict - SAN FRANCISCO h ® Toilet Articles is no longer associated solely with cliildhood pastimes. It is recog- nized as being just as necessary fur ttie b ly of sixty as for his grandchild — and Spalding ' s can e(|uip them both equally well. The Spalding trade mark un an athletic implement insures satisfaction and service H U S E H n L n R E M E D I E S Greatest Reliability am! Highest Meri ' t I5h l„.,„y . ' M,. S;,n Fi.ui. is ,, 4.!.S s s ' i ' .ri ' iig .St., ' Lns XngiT- IS -The lU-and of E rrlli■ncc■ Ask for il at ■..ur Drnngist Langley dc Michaels Co. I ' rorru ' tors S . N F R A X C I S C PALO ALTO ' S BEST Thompson ' s Bakery 210 Homer Arenue C. H. Christenson A. C. Anderson Christenson S C Anderson PLUMBING, SHEET METAL WORK (ias Ranges, Pumping Plants and Repairs, - Casing .nnd Irrigation Pipe OFFICK FIION ' F JSS RKS, PIIONF S7« .1 167 HAMILTON AVE. Palo Alto, Cal. QUALITY SERVICF VAll ' l Solari ' s Grill Eslabltsheci IWh Telephones: Douglas 2161 and 2162 354 Geary St., San Francisco Adjoining Hotel St. Francis Famous Tijhemer good cooking is talked about Phone P. A. 3S7R PRINTING Slonaker ' s ' •Printing House Post Office Building Clifton S. Slonaklr 225 Hamilton Ave. Stanford, ex-2Z Official aiul Guaraniccd ATHLETIC gOODS II s In hi i s h ,• , I u I .- : w ri(;h r c ditsox-xicior go. s. . i-k. . ci.sc() N vv V..,k ];.. l..n ll.i.ag.. THE NAME ON YOUR BEST PHOTO IS- BOUSSUM Califoniia ' s Leading Plwlographcr ' ' V. lUI!.l)lX(i. 133 (;K. R ■ STRF.I-.T S A X 1 ' K A X C 1 . ' r o special oAttention to Stanford Students and Faculty .Sacranu-nto : 1021 K Stn-tl . tccktdii: 25 Smith Siitti-r . tr Xalk ' jo: 413 (k ' ursia St. Oaklanrl : the Pos. C.ir. So. I- ' ir.-t and San Carl. 1142 .1 Street 1444 San I ' ahhi Ave. STIGMA CHI It was intended to simply put a group pic- ture of the brothers here; but_ by mistake they got in the organizations department It was all the printer ' s fault. We told him and anyway, he should have known better That freshman who asked if Chummy ' a Stigma Chi pledge was surely igno- and besides, think how Chummy ' must have felt. No, lady, he doesn ' t belong to our house he made a C average and bet- ter last quarter. SIGMA ALPHA EPSOMLON Delta Gamma rays and radium lips V evolved a fraternity intellisence test t( Sigma Alpha Epsilon in dctermming 1 ctive pledges ' capacity to learn their list of chapt :n mimeographed circular letter No. 7778, the f lity ' s national president recently announced tha irganization was prepared to establish five new i THETA DELTA CHI EN THE r.T.VF. CARPS C ' OMK AROUXD Stanford Students Are Always Welcome JOHN HOWELL IMPORTER BOOKS I ' L ' BLISHER 328 Post Street : Union Situate SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA PALO ALTO MARKET FANCY MEATS FRESH FISH and POULTRY 315 University Ave. Palo Alto THE NUGGET DE LUXE The Place to Lunch CLEANING AND DYEING WORKS For Lidies and Gentlemen HATS CLEANED AND BLOCKED Continuous Service 11 to 8 DINNER PARTIES A SPECIALTY Hist Equipped Plant on the Peninsula Finest Pies in Town Home-Madc Ravioli Try „s for Qmilily and Serricc ' Unequaled Salads and Specialties Palo Alto 41 POST STREET, near Montgomery 367 UNIVERSITY PHONE 739 Telephone Sutter 8816 M;,n, Oir,.-, :,n.i I ' hiiil : Kc-.iw..o.i City. Plinn.- JJl-.I NEWTON STVDIO WILLIAM EDWARD NEWTON, Artut HigHEST GRAOe PHOTOGRAPHIC PORT RAITU RE STUDIO, 126 UNIVERSITY AVENUE SITTINGS BY APPOINTMENT PALO ALTO BEAUTY PARLOR Mrs. Marie Montgomery MARCEL WAVING HAIRDRESSING SHAMPOOING FACIAL MASSAGE SCALP TREATMENT MANICLJRING cA Trial Will Conrince You Bldg., opposite First National Bank Phone 688 W 11. O. I.I. l.. Ml.MAN ... PrinopM VV„. I..AM KuwE, Cen ' I Supt. Engage 111 .-111 Branches nf Legitimate Detective Service. Legal Pafers Served. All Investiga- twns Strictly Confidential MORSE DKTKCTI ' l-. AND PATROL SF,R -1CE K,.,„M..I n, 1. 7S l,y Harry N. Morse i ' liifoniu-d Watchmen for Day and Night Service S tecial .Attention Given to the Watching of Stores, Banks. Ware- houses, Ships and Private Residences at Reasonable Terms Operatives in full dress furnished for weddings, receptions and other social officers supplied as ticket takers for balls, dances, and entertainments at reasc to protect property against fire and depredations of thieves during absence of o PHONE SUTTER 1900 60. ' C. LIF0RN1. ST., S. N functions. Uniformed .nable rates. Patrolmen FR, N ' CISCO TOOLS Shop Supplies metals Everything for the Artificer in Metals Bakelite, Hard Rubber and Fibre Sheet for Radio Outfits MOD EL ENGINES AND FITTINGS C. W. MARWEDEL 76 First Street . . San Francisco, Calih Pacific Sightseeing Co. BUSSES RENTRD BY THE DAY 745 Market St., San Francisco rlGHTSEEING TRIPS IN AND (J ABOUT SAN FRANCISCO SPECIAL TRIPS TO STANFORD UNIVERSITY TELEPHONE DOUGLAS 478 PHONE 167: ENDERSON FURNITURE CO. FURNITURE, RUGS, LINOLEUM AND STOVES 264 Hamilton Avenue Palo Alto, Cal. IIXIIVPRQITV Fancy Starched Work a Specialty FRENCH LAUNDRY 642 Ramona street Palo Alto Jligli Class Work Palo Alto .S47- V 334 Sutter Street (Above Gr.mt Ave.) LUNCHEON from 11:30- 2:30 TEA from 3-5 Special catering for bridge parties or evening banquets. Large room for dancing eM lRY HERETH CAROLINE JONES Douglas 7118 VARSITY and STANFORD Theatres Palo Alto PHONE 50} PHONE 40 •The Beit in Motion Pictures at all Times Phone Sutter 52 3S SCOLLIN GORDON FURS RcmoJcltiig a Specialty 101 Post St. Room 202 PI FIGH XOTA1U.I-; ADDITIONS m the house this year wire seven new pledges and two collie ' pups. The sisters want it understood that the nugh dawgs don ' t get all the petting. We understood also that tire apparatus in the form of dangling ropes is now stan- dard equipment on the house. During noc- turnal tiro drills, in sliding down ( ay, there ' s the nil ' i till isters are subject to divers anii-N, Mr.iinvhilc, six . ' T O ' s flunked i.ut 1,1 1 i|u,iit. 1 after standing night watch l,.r n-jlii ..l- ,11 a stretch. KAPPA ALPHA THETA DELTA WHOOPSILON that the initial letters of the house spell K. T, but there seems to be nothing in it except an interesting example of how the truth will out, after all. As one of the Kats — er — beg pardon— Thetas — remarked, We were particularly fortunate this year. We bid them all and got seven. However, it has been pointed out that a drowning person grasps at a straw, and the Thetas were pretty lucky — they got a whole handful. If only somebody would fake a lire alarm on our house, though, instead of on those Alpha Phi ' s! but ne these i Alpha y keeping the cap- for other politics, I ' hance, we ' ll show ike El Toro and ALPHA OMIKRON PYE (A Sorority; not a b ' ord factory; all tin: flat tires aren ' t on the machines.) The sisters were rejoiced when the recent game preserve bill was introduced into the state legislature. It was entitled, An Act for the Protection and Encouragement of Wild Life on the Stanford University C. ' mipus. It is rumored that the house has gener- ously subsidized both the sponsor of the bill and Tncnilicrs of the local Women ' s Council, bopint; to attract enough new pledges to keep the cigarette ashes swept out of the parlor carpet. DELTA DELTA DELTA The Tridelts li,i-. ' 1- n ' .i - ' 1 elsewhere in this book (see |h. . ' n --tafif). but they might as well ■ in dues here. If the engraving iuik;, 1 ,h1!: i run out, we would have put a picture of a bunch of good- sized stockings hanging on a mantelpiece with the inscription, If Santa can ' t fill them. DELTA TAW DELTA The best razz picture we had for this was put in the fraternities section, at the top of the house roll. The brothers all plead earnestly that the picture be removed, but this book stands for fearless truthfulness. The rushees might as well know the worst right away. ALPHA KAPPA LAMB (da) Shucks! Bother! (Iracious! We; first on the scholarship list this year! I Oh ! My ! THE EATING CLUBS- s thev rate:- -Oh, DELTA KAPPA EPSOM WHETHER IT BE or LI NCOLN Wc have a model to satisfy the discriminating motorist m. L. Hughson Co. Market at 11th SAX FRANCISCO iS FREMONT GARAGE MENLO PARK -ON THE HIGHWAY FORD and LINCOLN First-Class Repair Work. used cars Phone: Menlo Park 1261 The Spirit That Wins Much has lieen said and written iii tlie ' Stanl ' Drd Si)iril. ThcrL- is nothins i ' (liial to a spirit of loyaltv and determined effort to ptit one over the top. Loyalty to an ideal and a fixed determination to serve the tire user economically and efficiently continues as the key to the steady uphuilding of a scientifically expert tire indiistrv at McClatchik ' s Home of Kellys 515 High St. c HOOSE your motor oil with th e same care that you choose your car, for the life of the car depends upon the character of the oil. Cycol is the motor oil free from destructive sulpho compounds. ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY Executive Offices: 79 New Montgomery St., San Francisco Kl San Francisco Office 875 Folsoni St. I ' llONK KKAKNV 644 Palo Alto Office SIK l- ' niersoii St. (). K r.M.O . 1.T() 515.1 PIONEER GIBSON EXPRESS San Fkanlislo • 1 ' ai.(, . i.n, . Sa. ju.sii Express Serrice Twice Daily BAGGAGE HANDLED PROMPT DELIVERY PACIFIC AUTO STAGES lINC I (THE ORANGE CARS) San Francisco, Palo Alto, San Jose 30 MINUTE SERVICE ■ . I. .111111 Special ' ' Built Pierce Arrow Cars F. E. WOODARD J. D. WoODARD Cars for Hire Without Drivers PHONE PALO ALTO Kirkbride Cyclery FOR GOOD REPAIRS cAll Work Guaranteed 177 HAMILTON AVENUE PHONE 41 ScniceFnU FORD, FORDSON and LINCOLN WALTER G. BERNTHAL oAulhonzed ' VeaUr 525 ALMA STREET PALO ALTO Thk Sp:agra ' e Company . I.„.ufu J. F. CRIBBINS San Francisco Branch Motor I ' ire .-I f)f)(irciti(s COLUMBUS, OHIO THE PHI GAMS KAFPUH SIG, GENTS! DHEALTA GHAMMAH wishing debacle is over, the Deegeez have tire.l the seven assistant cooks cut out the I . and reverter! to the seven weakly ruunils of hash. Speaking of food, Professor Treat lice lunch course in cooperation with the sesters. The Far East has rated ace high since :i iikid out. All of which goes to show that indoor sports are not the only ones who visit the II . ti(1 thereto hangs another tale. K rusliing season we heard nothing but You really must kr ;— and the Kappas aren ' t rating this year. After rushing, hears them mostly of this Every streak of luck i ng season, the board bill at l BETA THETA PI-EYE ing but I this year. ' i flavor, Don ' t razz the butter, GAMMA PHI BETA o change, and the Gamma Phi ' s i that there are only two houses en the age of beans had return You ' ll he old yourself some da CHI PSY California Statute, 2323. reads: Red paint on all oil cans. Kinda ruff on the brothers. Address all communications to Robert Freeman Wisnom and Company (entered as third class matter at the Stanford Post Of- fice). EARL H. RUSH Redwood City, Cal. Star Cars Durant USED CARS SAVE one cent per gallon on your gasoline con- sumption. Use Union Coupon Books. Type ' writers nted AI.l. MAKHS Remington Portable ( luw i $60.00 American Writing Mm-hinc Co. 50 6 Marki-t Street m SU-Store Buying Power Gladding, 34cBean Co. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 3 ,ianufacturers of CLAY PRODUCTS M FACIAL MANICURE SHAMPOO SCALP TREATMENTS lOT OIL TREATMENTS Stanford Women ' s Beauty Parlor MJ.I. CoKM.lX MARCELLING A SPECIALTY PHONE 860-W Stanford Women ' s Clubhouse HOURS 9-6 INFORMATION This unique ' rt-staurant frcqucnU-d by the EHtc, Merchants, Famihes and San Francisco visitors for Luncheons, Dinners or Banquets. The best at a moderate price. Pri- vate dancing floor, music during St. Germain Restaurant San Francisco, Cahf. 60-66 Ellis Street K EEN KLOTHES FOR EEN BOYS UT BY A EEN KL TIER A N Ci K I N E I .cddiiiiT Tdilor 4i X.,rth First Street S. N JOSE, CAL KAPPA (KAPPA) SLAMMA K WK.KF. TliK ORUS 0UEEN5 ENCHINA STALL SECLUDED MONASTERY FOR MEDITATION AND STUDY Including within its confines a miscellaneous assortment of Rah-Rah boys and Phi Beta Kappas mingled in the following proportions, with tastes and antipathies as noted: Those who admit they ' re hard Remarks of latter 9243546583999 nuts to crack 93 ' ; (Particulars deleted by censor) Sisters of the Phi Betsy Circle . 7 ' - Those damning the Row on gen- Individuals who think it fashionable eral principles 78 ' - o use the new furniture for foot- Those not receiving fraternity °° ' , , , , ° l,i(js 77.5 ' , Those who don t know any better 50 T, , ,-,.,.. , Those who think table manners are Boys who think the ' no smok- ff „;„,,„ 47 ; . .. , r ,. etieminate - - 4 d mg rule for women applies to , , , . i,, the A. K. L. ' s 25 ■ ' , Those who haven t any 475 Those who don ' t think 75 ' , x. 5 Those who think the hall is misman- Hall membership 500 aged 495 Men entertaining ladies at tea in their rooms 2 Those who razz the sorority sisters 375 Those also present 498 Those not rating on the Row 375 A CLKAN PRESS Is One of the Best Ayeneies in the Makln.i of Good Cilhens Prints Clean News Unprejudiced Views The San Francisco Journal Siiul in Your Subscription to H. M. ROUSSELOT Phone Palo Alto 1038 S T A N K O K 11 r N I E K S I TV CXKFIEl. n 26 J 6 PALO ALTO DAVID H. WALKER, Jr., ' 09 Insurance Broker LIFE, ACCIDENT, FIRE, AUTO iii PiXE Street T AIRY LUNCH A Good Place to Eat QUA LIT y M EALS SAX FRANCISCO SATISFACTORY PRICES Mullen Manufacturing Company Ernest Brandsten ' s Spring Board has been adopted for diving contests by the High Grade Intercollegiate Swimming Association Cabinet Work BECAUSE THE BRANDSTEN SPRING BOARD IS uniform and dependable Manufacturers of all movable and fixed ftirniture in the New Thomas Welton Stanford Library ERNEST can GUARANTEE h,s BOARDS because WE are the SOLE MANUFAC- TURERS of SPRING BOARDS from the Brandsten specification. Factory and Office: 64-80 Rausch Street VAN ARSDALE-HARRIS between 7th and 8th, Howard and Folsom LUMBER COMPANY SAN FRANCISCO FiUh and Brannan Streets Telephone Market 976 SAN FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA A COMPLETE LINE OF LATE MODELS I ' lulnwotul ■ k ' riiiiiiijtini ■ h ' (i al I.. C. Smith ■ Xoisrirss and -.III Makes Mt utlur late iikkM Standard VWMv Writing Machinc■ , including wide and extra wide car- riages, and machines with adding and subtract- ing incchanism ; also Portable Typewriters. Rebuilt and Fully Guaranteed at a saving of 25 to 75 per cent from manufactur- ers ' prices. Machines sent anywhere on Pacific Coast for three days ' examination. Terms if ncsircd. All Makes Rented. Rates to Student. ' :. Kll I ' KICE LIST OR CAI.I INSPECT OUR STOCK THE WHOLESALE TYPEWRITER COMPANY, Inc. Main .Sales and AccoiDiling Depaiiineiif 530 Market Street, San Francisco. Phone Garfield 90 ,S(, .,,-.(. LOS . .Vi, :7. : . PORTL.-iND. SB.nTLn an, I S. ' ]LT LAKE CITY YALE PADLOCKS Sold by STANFORD BOOKSTORE University Campus Marshall-Newell Supply Co. ' Hatl, Stanford, Hail ' is in -The .Uo.-:t Pol ular College Soniis ( paper cover. 124 pages). It is one of 120 rousing College Songs Price 75 Cents Sherman. ay Go CALIFORNIA OREGON and WASHINGTON CHECKS CASHED RUSSELL WIARD HABERDASHER 41 POWELL S. F. OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT FULLER PAINTS and VARNISHES For every A O ' V high-grade products of this company you - ■ will find one especially adapted for the specific purpose you purpose have in mind, whether it be paint, varnish, stain, enamel or glass. Our products are the result of 74 years experience and skill. W. p. Kl l.LKR cK CO. MANUFACTURERS Main Office, San Francisco ' Branches in tnenty-tao Pacific Coast Cities PHI KAPPER SIGMER SEQUOIA HAUL Sequoia Hall is full of Important Figures. All of these Important Figures like to let you know of their Importance. A mere delineation of some of these Eminents will show the Gentle Reader what he has missed by overlooking Sequoia. Because, somehow or other, Sequoia IS overlooked. First, there is the President. He was elected by eight votes, which, considering the interest taken in the election, was a safe enough majority. He is by far the Most Important Figure. Then comes the Man Who Was Hurt in the Baseball Fight. He still has the scar on his head, and exhibits it proudly at every mention of the fight . . . which he mentions frequently. Then, contending with him for eminence, comes the Chairman of the Refreshment Committee. The Chairman of the Refreshment Committee was originally the Other Part of the Committee, but the original Chairman left, and now the great Honor comes to a Sequoia Man. It is useless to continue with the list. All of them are of equal eminence. In fact, as one of them once remarked, It is hard to find a place where there are more Men of Our Caliber than the Hall. And to that we heartily agreed. SIGMAH KAPPAH THETA ZI BULLOCK JONES g TAILORS SHIRTMAKFRS Pg FURNISHFRS HATTERS CORRECT LOTHES Conservati ' ve College Styles Our Sf ' ccialty READY-TO-U-RAR Suits and Overcoats $60 - $65 - $75 Made by Our O-a ' ii Tailors in Our O-.cii Shops Imported Ttvccd Caps $5 Polo Coats Englisli Collars rrcncit Xcckwcar Quality in Men ' s Wear Since 1853 Bullock Jones Company SAN FRANCISCO - KRARNY STREET.; POST Bender -Moss Company Law Book Publishers 11 C i I y Hall .1 IT. SANM ' RAWISO ) ■ CWLIFORXIA U u r L a t c .v C ■ c a t i o II FRUIT O ' CAL BETTER THAN FRUIT CAKE Just Ihc Tliiuii to Send East to ] ' (iiii- Frii ' iids HKLLWICrS 41 Stockton San Francisco The l.coduuj Stationers PALO ALTO, CAL. Tel. Douglas 2365 PHIL SCHUMAN Whitney Building Room 508 - 5th Floor 133 GEARY ST. Diamottdi, Pearls Jt ' nelry l ongfyt Calif. THE VARSITY TJ ,ORS CLEANERS and DYERS Suit Pressed ... 50c Suit Cleaned and Pressed L25 ' Dress anJ Tuxedo Suit ' Kemodeling Our Specially 12 Encina Hall Stanford University Phone 1442 W %OBERTSON BOOK STORE Harry Robertson. ' 10 US FR.ISCISCO 22 St. I eter ' s %estaurarit FRENCH DINNERS Phone Garfield 3221 San Francisco. Calit. 61 Broadway Whistle Hues It Is ) 11 r I ' 1 ea s u r e Palo Alto Soda Works to feature the Best in Groceries at all times. U hndi o ' SaJoi ind Bereragis - PHONE 950-W COOKES GROCERY 270 University Avenue Acme Tacoma PHONE ;o The Minton Company Tlic most lOiiipU-te nriLDIXG MATERIAL Coiurni on the PiVimsuLi Lumber, Millwork, Construction 13 ) U-xiv-ERSiTY Ave. Palo . ' lto PIIO.NE r. A 1-01.1 Frank J. Miller HTjoiesaU and Retail GROCERIES Delicatessen. Baker ' . and Catering PHO.SS;-5 University A«. and Entfnon Sc. rcamcrv Pho„e p. . . 9- YouMl Never Be Disappointed DID YOU GET LEFT OUT? NEVER MIND , ' ■ . -) — DON ' T FEEL j ' ' ' C BAD — HERE ' S a YOUR CHANCE - . TO ' , - ' Get Your Pic- ' ,; tuieinthe 1924 Quad. ,;]■ l- ' olluii. ' tlusi ' in- striictions closely, and you unll achieve that ' publiciiy zchich A is III a n It a from f heaven. (1) Select either A, or B, or C, or D. Or, if you are espe- ' - _ 9 - ' ° cially ambitious, take ; 9 • • ' 2_ . . J all four. ,g . ' - = ■ .n ' °,,B . (2) Draw from ■ ' ' - j f . - i ' Js dot to dot. starting. ' • ' ' • z of course, with 1. ix ,, ' ' ' ' • . ' . ' (3) Don ' t blame ' jA • • ' ' - NOW you can send the book home to the folks! D macRORiE - McLaren co. Landscape Engineers and Nurserymen Nurseries SAN MATEO, CAL. Phone San Mateo 1002 514-516 Phelan Bldg. SAN FRANCISCO Phone Douglas 4442 o UR SUCCESS is dependent upon your satisfac- tion with the service we render. If for any reason at any time, you are not entirely satisfied with PACIFIC SERVICE we will consider it a favor to have you notify us im- mediately. Pacific Gas and Electric Company .and PG •pacific SERVICE ' 1 lie Only li.v,lus,r.- GOLF SHOP San Francisco It Deserves Your Patronage Specializing In Golf Suits Stockings Knickers Sweaters Leather Coats Clubs Shoes Balls A (-.miplctr l.inc Caps Shirts Gloves Accessories GOLF LESSONS Expert Club Making and Repairing ADAMS GOLF CO. Douglas 7838 54 Kearny Street SERVICE--QUALITY--PRICE STANFORD S It DKXTS If id Projcssion Hdvc I ' oii Selected f nsurancc l)usiiu-ss offers to men tunitics than probably any other business vith College training greater oppor- the world today. It is the one business which requires no large investment of capital to enter — nothing, in fact, except Time, Effort and Study. The yEtna Affiliated Companies are developing hundreds of college men each year to large incomes and permanent stable businesses. We welcome the opportunity to discuss this subject in all phases with young men seriously attempting to make a decision on their own vocations. iETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY THE TNA CASULATY AND SURETY COMPANY THE AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY 333 PINE STREET J. R. MOLONY, Manager SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. PALO ALTO LAUNDRY Phone 523 644 Emerson American Building Maintenance Co. Im-orforalr,! Janitorial Service and Window Cleaning for all kinds of business pioperties We Carry Unlimited Comi)en,sation ami Employers Liability Insurance Los Angeles Expert Oakland Efficient San Jose lu ' imoniical Stanford University Mainteiiaiui- Phone Sutter 264-265 938 Howard St., San Franciscco Phones P. A. 252. P. A. 460-J MAHANY KREBS Cigars and Tobacco Billiards Pocket Billiards English Billiards 183 University . ve. 219 University Ave. Palo Alto Walters Surgical Company 441 SlTTl-R STKKKT S. l ' R. IS(() SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS HOSPITAL SUPPLIES PHYSICIANS ' EQUIPMENT SICK. ROOM NECESSITIES FOR DOCTOR. NURSE. STUDENT FISHING TACKLE Q GUNS and OUTING GOODS , V GOLF TENNIS iiml S ATHLETIC Q SUPPLIES H. C. Golcher Co. 50« Market St., San Francisco o For Every Oi Livingston oApparel For Quad, for ajicrnoon. jar spoyts. Of for riruiufi ?m!r— apparel tlitit is (lisliiirlirr in its iiuiiTidnalily aiitl willial most moderately ' priced! INSIST UPON %ri l ' ' l DRAWING MATERIALS SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS BLUE and BROWN PRINT PAPERS BLUE PRINTING and all OTHER DUPLICATING PROCESSES DiETERlCH-PoST CoMPANY 75 New Montjromery Street, San Francisco, Calif. The San Francisco Savings and Loan Society (HW: SAN 1RA. ( I.S( ii liA.NKi SAVINGS COMMKKCIAL Member Federal Reserve System and Associated Savings Banks ot San Francisco 526 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. DECEMBER 30th, 1922 Assets $80,671,392.53 Deposits 76,921,392.53 Capital Actually Paid Up 1,000,000.00 Reserve and Contingent Funds 2,750,000.00 Employees ' Pension Fund 400,613.61 MISSION BRANCH Mission and 2tst Streets PARK-PRESIDIO DISTRICT BRANCH Clement St. and 7th Ave. HAIGHT STREET BRANCH Haight and Belvedere Streets WEST PORTAL BRANCH West Portal Ave. and Ulloa St. A Dividend to Depositors of Four and One-quarter (4} ) per cent per annum was declared for the six months ending December 31st, 1922. California Pine Box Distributors 1019 FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING SAN F R A X L I S (.■ ) . C A [. 1 l- , Phone GARFIl . LD 2S,S5 AsTKicriA ' co-oi ' i-.RA ' rix ' i-: skllixc; ACI ' AHA ' comiK.scl nl tlic principal I ' int- ManufacturerMif C aliforma anil Snuthern ( )rcj;on. with an output of - ' UU.OOO.DOO feet of shooks— 10.000 car.. We manufacture Soft White I ' ine l ' ruit l ' .n. es. Cannery Cases and Shook for every other known use, either in car lots or direct to consumer from any of our branches located in the great fruit pro- ducing centers in California at the following jioints : San Dicijii Los .hu clcs Prrs)io Sacniiiicnto San lose iratsonrillr llrau ' lry (Iniprrial rallcy) USE PINE MADE BOXES ality . ' . Service .: antity ha ' ve dressed Stanfora men well for twenty years Carl F. Yunker 12 GEARY STREET FLOOR TWO SAN FRANCISCO Agriculture Dairying Holsteins Agriculture in America i.s a l)a.-.io iiulubtry. ami tlic Kfcatcst o) all agricultural pursuits is dairying. No matter what walk of life you may now be following, the success of agriculture and of dairying will influence your prosperity. Holstein-Fricsian cattle have proved successful in dairying, as indicated by the U. S. census, which shows that 60 per cent of all pure-bred dairy cattle in the United States are Holsteins. Wherever you have an influence in determining the branch of agriculture to be followed, investigate dairying, and where dairying is considered, investigate Holsteins. They hold all world ' s records and average highest over all breeds lor both buttrrfat and milk yield. } L.-l ,,. irll you „h, ul ll. ' IsU-iiis EXTENSION SERVICE The Holstein-Friesian Association of America 230 East Ohio Street, Chicago, 111. CONCLUSION As the 1924 Qvad goes to press, we wish to thank tliosc who have helped us in puttini; out the hook. Mere thanks seem very insufficient in some of the cases, where those who derived no special ginrv or other henefit from the annual, have worked with an energy that was indispcn ' ;:ililc if this OrAr was to be tnilv a liti.ik that Stanford might It prond nf. First in.iiih.n l-., , i,. ihe jnnii.r and -oi.h .nioiv - :,( . Dan Gage ami i:.-!. ImI-a:,,.! . as assistant i-dii-i , lux. Ii. l|u,l the hoi.k over ni,ni i-iiljIi sp ' .is. Gage took charu. ,,i tin ii ,,.ntr -s earlvin tlir x..n, :.ihl iii .i.ldilion, l,.ukedaftrr tlir mull il ii.lr nf details .if the ni ,..,,i. .,n. .1. . Mi,.n. in.m lakiii ih. i-hiui.- l- ,o,M|..,inu ilir mlU IwluanN umtr all llir dram.Hh m h ■■, ] vri |--,Olrr un,k ..s ,,,l r.hl,., .p ' .li- !■ - ' ll Wllll-UI luin. til. (J. Mi .nuM 1,..l ,.r... l:,rl itS i., l,tx-,Kl,l lu.,.l,ii..v ' ul I .illMii.n .,..,i,.l III, iMinil ..I 111. ' U...U .il ,.l.. .!....,,, .In. ..in-., until he left sdK...I H, III.: «in.,., .,,,,,,1.,, ,,.,.1 1.1 Sti.m.4 |....k ,1 up n-ni tluT.. Slr.,n. r.-nlt are well shown in the airplane vi. v ..n.l .....nhi-j i.utm.s ulii.h li. ' t,...K. The rest of the jniii.ir statT, as department editors and ,-is ri.iiii . Ii.n. .aim. I tlii..ii ' jl! tli.n w.irk well. The sophomores who iinilu.l ili. .,ir were; D.mal.l M.;Kay. John Marhle, Leon David. Robert Boynton, John Hall, . lar i;.iker, Lillian Kuluell. Helen liroughalt, Meribeth Cam- eron, Marv Chancy, . nna 1-itzhuKh, Carol Klink, and Elizabeth Roper. Many of these stayed on and worked faithfully, even though they knew they had no chance for the editor- ship, and to them especially are thanks given. The editor wishes to thank Ed Tilton, Kenneth Ferguson, George Thompson, Juilliard McDonald, Bradley Riter, and David Lamson for the assistance they have given at various times. On the managerial side, the work of Marion Gower and Lillian Cottrell, as women managers, has been especially appreciated. They have helped organize the work of the sopho- m..res in a fashion that has helped materially. They are the first women managers in the Qi Ai) history. The following sophomores went through the year with a record of faithful performance for the manager : John Irwin. Harry Noland. Harold Cameron. Calvin Conron, Grace Judd. Henriette Woolf, Dorothy Dahler, and Edith Rossarini. They have the satisfaction of know- ing that hut for each one of them the 1924 Quad would have been less than it is had their w.irk been absent. T.I Mr. John T. E. Stoll of San Francisco, the Quad and the University owe thanks for the gratuitous service he has done, both for this and last year ' s book. In both cases he drew especially for the annual the pen and ink sketches which have appeared, and donated them for exclusive use. Mr. Stoll is open for commercial work in designing bookplates, etc., and we can sincerely recommend his work to anyone. In art work. Mr. Pedro Lemos and Mr. John Lemos have given of their time and talent in a manner for which we shall always be grateful. Mr. James Swinnerton also gave freely special time and effort in turning out for the Quad the frontispiece painting. Mr. Harold v.m Schmidt ' of San Francisco exhibited an appreciation of Stanford, in his paintings, that marks him as keeping close in touch with L ' niversity life. The photographs in the fr.nit section of the bo.ik were taken specially for the t_J I sn l. Mr (lalin.l Xl.iuliii.il Sail l- ' raiui .. .. At the University Pre ■ . li ill In. n.l I...- li..ii .1 ■-ir.ai li. h. 111 keeping the editor on the right path, and in iniin-lnnv i.|.,i mi tli, 1 1. Mr I;,liii.-, Mr. Smith, and Mr. Borsdamm. of the composing r... nu. i.n .- r.i..ui. aii.i l.in.l.n. ' , , r. sp. . ti . I . Ii.ive also been helpful. Feg Murray, ' 16, as he still prefers to be known, helped out the razz section w ith his full-page cartoon. Mr. C. B. Stone aided materially not only in mounting all the senior pictures, but in preparing other photographic sections as well. Mr. Glenn Kenyon, of Kenyon and Crow-e, proved himself a high-class photographer in shooting action and group pictures. John Kitchin, Jr.. Company of San Francisco made the 1,700 covers, and all the engrav- ing in the book is the w ork of the Commercial .. rt Company. Thanks are due to Walter Fox of Palo Alto for his aid in filming the moving pictures. Carl S. Shoup ChARLFS B. WyTITF JVheti a Man Orders a Suit of Clothes— He wants what? — A gtwd. tlepciulable, practical, ser- viceable suit — of good material, appropriately styled — and tailored by a man who knows his trade. Stiegeler ' s sells just this kind of clothes — and nothing else. Hun- dreds of our customers re-order again and again — and again. STIEGELER ' S It must fit 732 MARKET ST. SAN FRANCISCO D. SPA L LO N E M c r c h a n t fa i o r Students have jound that a custom tailored suit greatly cnhauccs personality — and fycrsonality is a wonderful asset in business or the social z ' orld. Then look your best by lunin; a Custom T (I i 1 1) r c (I S t i i t Telephone 2972-J Rooms 35-36-37 Ryland Building 1st and San Fernando Sts. San Jose STRKL CASTINCJS from oiu- pouml to ()U,UUU pouiuls cmU CARBON MANGANRSK AI.I.OY Larffcst Steel I ' omidry II ' .st of the Rockies STKEL BARS Plain, square and round Reformed, square and round Reinforcing steel bars our speeialn Most Modern RoUi f r Mill on the Wicific (Joust COLUMBIA STEEL CORPORATION 351 CALIFORNIA STRKKT SAN FRANCISCO, CAI.IF. The World ' s Leading Fire Insurance Company FIRE ALIRIXh rouRisr All Automobile Hazards W. E. SOUTHWOOD RESIDENT AGENT PALO ALTO graduates ..111 t:ikc BOOKSTORE service witli them when they leave the FARM. A letter brings a prompt shipment hy mail, parrel post or express. The Stanford Bookstore Supplement Your Educational Training By Reading the Examiner Everyday ! n A few moments devoted to reading the F-xaminer each morning will dovetail excellently into your school work. It will l)n) ide a bracing mental tonic — and shariK-n your intelligence to better cope with the ilaih- studies. ■J he hlxaniiner in itself is a liberal edu- cation everyday — furnishing a full report of the important happenings of the day — a virile analysis of the world ' s news by the master Editorial writer . rthur Bris- bane in his column Today — I ' usiness and financial comment by 15. C. Forbes — a page of amusing comics — Marine News — Articles of Education and enter- tainment by such well known celebrities as Bruno Lessing. Dr. Charles Fleischer, K-C-B, Bugs Baer, The Spectator- Cartoons and editorial comment by emi- nent artists and writers. Subscribe for it NOW Mxnmixttv SAN FR.XNCISCOS ONE BKi M.W SI ' .M ' KR INDEX A Page Pag,- A.Uiin anil Kva nil Conclusion 577 Ailministration Attitude , 40-41 Contents ... Advertising Club 37(1 Airplane Views....33, 3S, 37, 45, 50, 61. 149, 214. 270 Cross C.unlry 239 Alpha Chi Sigma .14S .149 D .Mpha Delta Phi 4J4-423 Alpha Kappa Lambda 4.iii 4,U Daily Palo Alto Staff 84 Alpha Omicrnn Pi 474 475 Debating Prospects 128 Alpha Phi 46X-469 Dedication 8 9 Alpha Pi Z.l;, . .154 Delta Chi 418 419 Alpha -Sigma Ph, 4J6 427 Delta Delta Delta 472 473 Alpha Tau O.ncga .V H ,t99 Delta Gamma 466 467 Alumni 44 Delta Kappa Epsilo.i 414-41.1 American Journalists ' Association . 94-95 Delta Sigma Rho 131 Associate.1 Federal Students 374 Delta Tau Delta . 402 403 Autumn Quarter 65 Delta Theta Phi Delta Upsilon 338-339 B MaT.d 1.16H7 E llasehall. Fi.shniau S,|ua,l 217 Economics Club 366-367 ' arsitv Sc|uad 211 Elections . 51.57 Hasketball. Action Picti.i. l.HIl Electrical Engineering S„ei -ly 358 359 California Series 17 ' ) El Campii 44-45 Freshman Sciuad 1X9 El Capitan . 448 449 145-pound TeaiTi . 1X7 EI Cuadn. 446 447 130-pound Team IXX El Tigre 452 453 Varsity Squad 1X2 El Ton. 4.12 443 Belgian Memorial 46 47 Encina Club 434 436 Richard C. Bentinck 99 Endowment 48 Bentinck ' s Statement 49 Beta Theta Pi 404 405 English Club 332-353 lio i- ' K 236 Euphronia , 132 Breakers 440-441 Executive Committee 53-54 c .t.iil Fencing F 238 Chaparral 89 Football. Calif,. rnia Ca me 154 CIkss did, .171 Freshman S.piad . 174 Chinese Club .156 .157 Cays 173 Ciii Omesa 476-477 Pittsburgh Came 16 1 Chi Psi . 406 407 Preliminary S,■a ,. 165 C mn 145 N ' arsily S.pia.l I60 Christian Science Society 379 Football Frolhie- 115 Circle S Society... 24U Fore I 1 I ' ' Civil Engineering Society 362-363 French Club 372 Classical Club 371 Freshman Cla-s . 2. Committee of Fifteen... 51 Freshman Debat.s ,28 The 1924 QUAD Is On Sale Here Old QUADS Bought and Sold 525 Emerson S.reet SEQUOIA BOOK SHOP Palo Alto C. iM. SPENCER, ropr ■Phone San Jose 3350-fV The WONDER MILLINERY HAT, FLOWER and FEATHER STORE S..n Jose. Cal iforni; The LONDON SHOPS of Amt-nai - Tailors to the U ' ell-DresseJ 41M) HIGH STREET Palo Alto, California Telephone li6SR Sport C ' lotlies ;i Spcci;ilt Geology ami Glee Club Golf Gyn, Tean, Illustrated Keview In Memoriam Interciass Sports _. Interfraternity ' Confcrir Intersociety Debates Irisli Marathon. Phi Sigma Ka Photographic Pi Alpha Ph, 364- 365 350-351 237 Japanese Club Joffre Debate lunior Week PicturL s 78 Junipfro Serra Club. K 380 Ram ' s Hea.l R 1 ' 1 Kappa Alpha . 408-409 Roble 4S1I 4SS Kappa Alpha Theta..- 460-461 Roughs ' -Day , 7 1 Kappa Kapi)a Gamma . 462-463 Rushing Change- =7 Kappa Sigma L 412-413 S Lens an.l Plat:- 376 Scalners .-... 356 Loong Fat 112 Scholastic Deparli Clll Los Arcos 450-451 357 M Senior Commitl.es . 272 Masonic Club 368-369 Senior Control -51 Masquers 123 Senior Pictures ;. 273-319 Mechanical Engineei n-g Society 360-361 Senior Week . 64 Mo-s Council 55 Sequoia . ;. 432-439 Music Chib 142-143 Sigma Alpha K.|..-.i .n . 400-401 N Sigma Chi 396-397 96 Xu Sigma Nu 344-345 Sigma Kappa .. .. 478-479 Page u Pnge Sigma Nu .192-39.? University Unil 267 Skull and Snake- .1.12-333 Soccer - ' - ' 8 w Social Welfare Coinmis-...i. 57 Water Polo 231 Sophomore Class ■ ' - ' - Wilbur. Ray Ly.na.. 39 Spectator 91 Will Shakespeare 108 •, Spring Quarter ' 5 Winter Quarter 72 ■ i Stanford Orchestra Clnl. 144 Women ' s Athletic Association... 253 Stoirs Sketches J7-32 Women ' s .Mhletic Association C -, } Swimming J33 Women ' s Conference -?6 Sword and Sandals ' - ' - ' T Women ' s Economics Club Women ' s Sports, . r.lury :-(, Tennis, Freshman Squad I ' .asketball : • arsity Squad J J J Hockey _MS Theatre Workshop 110 Swimming - ' M Theta Chi 4J8-429 Women ' s S Sociel.v - - Thcta Delta Clii 416-417 Wranglers 1 .U Theta Sigma Ph, 98 Wrestling - ' ' Theta Xi 420-421 Y Three Live Gh.. t- 1114 Tri Debate 1114 ■S.ll I ...ders Tri-State Debate. .. !- ' 7 I C A 181 Track. California Meet 19,! W C A 382 Freshman Squad Z Moving Pictures 211,1-204 Varsity Squad 200 Zeta Psi .; .= 42-43 Zoology Club ' ? ' h ' ■ ' . ' .f i ,■ ' ■■ ! ' i i ' j i


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

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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