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UiJSii VXSii-t l JUitsS tL.tm:7iJJ T I, li XvtW ;WWW«WM ' aWMWMBMlM! WlWlMltwaW Situated on El Camino Real, that somber highway which stretches its tawny length for hundreds of miles along the coast — once the narrow footpath beaten by P ' ranciscan sandals, now the throbbing thoroughfare of a modern commonwealth — the estate on which Stanford University now stands has seen much of California history. It is closely identified with the significant events of the Golden State, chiefly 1)ecause I.eland Stanford is an outstanding figure in the development of the state from a pastoral province to the most advanced of economic, political, and intel- lectual entities. Not only is Stanford University significant as the great in.stitution which lived after a great man to carry on his ideals, but its very spirit, suggested by the architecture of its buildings, is typically Californian. In a number of progressive color paintings, an attem]5t has been made to depict the relation of Stanford University to California history. From the day, three hundred and eighty-two years ago, when Cabrillo, the first white man to see California, beheld Point San Luis from his caravel, down to the ])re.sent time, the history of the land now occupied by the Univer- sity has been closely related to the history of the state. It was from beneath the huge branches of the Palo Alto tree that Portola first caught sight of San Francisco bay. A few years later Santa Clara mission was founded, its domain e.xtending over all of what is now the University estate. The vast oak-studde l plain was the grazing i)lace of the cattle of the Spanish rancheros. Through its boundaries marched the doughty b ' remont and his staunch ])atriots. Soon followed the gold ru,sh, and the fertile plain became the bone of contention among squatters. .Attracted by the sudden prosperity in the far west. Leland Stanford came to California in 1852, and amassed a fortune in business. He became identified with California politics, was elected governor in 1861, senator in 1885, and. more than any other, made jMssible the linking of east and west bv the first trans-continental railway. He was a lover of nature and thL- out-of-doors. T-ured by the jilacid Palo ; lto countryside, in 1870, he purcha.sed the country residence of James Ciordon. who ten years before had come to live on the verdant plain between the foothills and the bay. In 1884 the Stanfords ' only child, a boy of fifteen years, died, and Stanford University, as the most fitting memorial to young Leland, was founded — destined to become the west ' s great privately endowed institution of learning. lA e Nin Wn I we nil) ive (Xu A D Bd e n Annual STANFORD UNIVERSITY PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS 1054 SiPWVlMlM.W.M.WWftMll!; ww««)MMWMIW«m.« M« The Golden Gate was probably passed unperceived in fog or storm by Cabrillo ' s sailors, and the discovery of San Francisco bay was left for Don Gaspar Portola who. in 1769, with a small party of friars and sol- diers, set out from San Diego mission to take possession of Monterey bay. Although the party followed the shoreline as closely as possible, they passed the bay and., turning inland at a point where Pescadero is now situated, made their way down San Fran- cisquito creek untd they came upon the Palo Alto tree. Says Carolus Agcr. In a spirit of helpfulness the men. who first looked ' from the foothills to the bay. ' planted a cross by the Tall Tree on the bank of San Francisquito creek to mark the sight of a future mission. One hun- dred years later the mission was realized at the hands of those who. having lost their son, were moved to serve the children of others. Portola ' s expedition camped beneath the Tall Tree for three days while a party was sent to explore the coast of the bay. Late in the autumn the expedition turned south- ward, unaware that the body of water which they had discovered was the Bay of San Francisco. TWO STANFORD PRESIDENTS Bv Orrin Leslie Elliott RAY LYMAN WILBUR President of Stanford University since 1916 When Dr. Wilbur became president, Stanford universitv had reached something Hke an im- passe. With nothing- fundamentally wrong, the engines had about ceased working. The available income had apparently reached its maximum, with increased expenditure a necessity. When Dr. Wilbur took command, the good ship was si)eedily gotten under way. There were no more divided counsels. New sources of income were found, and expansions immediately projected. Dr. Wilbur ' s administration, still in its early stages, has been one of ceaseless activity and vigorous growth. A mere enumeration of some of the striking headlines will indicate its sub- stantial contribution to the greater Stanford that is clearly foreshadowed: the library build- ing-, the three modern dormitories, the new Union, the stadium and basketball pavilion, the Food Research institute, the Hoover War library, the increase in salaries, the expansion of depart- ments, the support of research, the beautifying of the grounds, the four-(iuarter system, the limitation of entering men, the lower division. The President is mak- ing good. DAVID STARR JORDAN President of Stanford Uni-t ' ersity, 1S91 to 191S Before Dr. Jordan there existed the outline of a university, broadly planned, and a material foundation uniquely beautiful. Stanford uni- versity was set going by a band of argonauts, in an atmosphere of romance, of the golden fleece just over the heights. Dr. Jordan was the fit leader for such an enterprise — unconventional, daring, resourceful. His was the dominating ])ersonality. He gave to the university its free- dom of outlook, its keynote of simplicity, its fearlessness in following the truth. The teacher was not to be directed by others. The student was a partner in the quest for knowledge. Rules were means to orderliness, not masters to be served. For twenty-two years it was Dr. Jor- dan ' s task to carry on in this spirit, through evil fortune and good fortune, through vicissitudes of every sort, to amend, to adapt, to retrench, to expand, as the occasion demanded, but al- ways to go forward. The essential Stanford, the essential Stanford spirit — these are fundamentally the creation of David Starr Jordan. 27 Fkank IJ. Anderson Selah Chamberlain IIarrv K. Chandler I.eland W. Cuti.kk Frank P. Deering Joseph Donohoe Grant T. T. C. Gregory Herbert Clark ' Hoover Timothy Hopkins Ira Shell Lillick C. O. G. Miller William Mayo Newhall John Thomas Xourse Paul Shoup Marcus C. Sloss THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Changes in the Board of Trustees during the year bring the alumni representation on the board u]) to one-third; five of the fifteen members of the present l)oard are graduates of the university. New members of the l)()ard are: Paul Shoup, Ira S. Lillick, Harry F. Chandler, and C. O. G. iMiller. The vacancies filled resulted from the retirement of Judge Samuel F. Leib, Charles P. Eells. William P . P ourn. and J. Leroy Nickel. Paul Sh(jup is vice-president of the Southern Pacific company, and active in many industrial and financial enter]:)rises in various parts of the state. Ira S. Lillick, 1897, of San Francisco, is an admiralty lawyer of wide reputation, and is the fifth alumnus of the university on the board. Harry S. Chandler, editor of the Los Angeles Times, is not a Stanford man himself, but has a son in the university at present and two daughters who are graduates of Stanford. C. O. G. Miller is a San Franciscan and since 1886 has constantly been a director and officer in many important commer- cial enterprises. During the war he was general manager of the War Trade board in San Francisco. Judge Leib was one of the original board appointed by Senator and Mrs. Stanford, and was the legal advisor of Mrs. Stanford during the university ' s long financial struggle. The resignation of Mr. Eells, a trustee since 1915, comes as he is embarking on a trip around the world. Mr. Bourn became a trustee in 1917. Ill health has compelled his resignation before the end of his ten-year term. Mr. Nickel ' s resignation before the ex])iration of his second term in 1929 was made necessary by his business, which retjuires his frequent absence from San Francisco. 28 HIGH LIGHTS IN ADMINISTRATIVE PROGRESS By John M. Marble STANFORD may well be proud of the fact that she is a young university. Life at Stanford follows no well worn channels, continuing from one college generation to the next; no moss-covered traditions bind all her sons to a certain course, and no hide- bound rules hinder her progress. So long as Stanford refuses to be bound by the past, although not refusing to accept the lessons of past experience, so long wdl she continue to be a young university and to follow a course of consistent progress. If the record of Stanford ' s progress in the year 1923-1924 may be taken as any indication, it will be long before she drops into any state of disastrous self satisfac- tion. The past year has been one of realiza- tion, and of planning. Policies of the past have matured and new policies have been carefully formulated. Accomplishments of the university dur- ing the year, which are indicative of its progress, mav be divided into three general Staimay in one of the iiezv dorm tones: a study in , c ' • • i u • i symmetrical curves classes : hrst, improvements in the physical plant — athletic equipment, dormitories, eat- ing clubs, and various other buildings: second, changes in curricular and admini- strative organization; and, finally, additions to the endowment. Additions to University Plant Important The most apparent changes of the past year, from the standpoint of an outside observer, have been in the physical plant of the university. Two new dormitories, Toyon and Branner halls, have been erected; new dining halls in connection with Encina have furnished food for over 500 men throughout the year; a program of athletic expansion has been adopted which will eventually give Stanford the finest outdoor athletic equip- ment of any university in the country; a new unit has been added to the Stanford convalescent home ; and numerous other improvements have been made, particularly in the Union. These im- provements mean that Stanford is gradually nearing the ideal of hav- ing every student a resi- dent on the campus, with university responsibility 29 Cloisters of the Renaissance: the lobby of Toyon hall for student feeding and opportunity for every student to take part in some kind of athletic exercise. In Toyon hall 154 men are enjoy- i n g a dormitory whose beauty and convenience are not surpassed any- where. In plan Toy- on is built to house four groups of about thirty men each. This year it housed members of Tlic iirii ' Eiicina kitchen is in many u ' ays the finest on the coast SCVeU Catmg ClUDS as well as a few men who are not affiiliated with any small group. The present idea is that succeed- ing dormitories will follow the same general architectural scheme. At the ends of the four wings are group sitting rooms, each with its fireplace and many windows. The high ceilinged, finely proportioned ballroom is the most beautiful and impres- sive room on the campus, excepting, perhaps, only the IJranner dining hall, not yet quite completed. Branner hall, named after the late John Casper Branner, the university ' s sec- ond president, is a contribution of athletics to the university. When the old dor- mitories had become so crowded that a large proportion of men in the university were uncomfortably housed, the Board of Athletic Control conceived the idea of relieving the situation by vising a part of the stadium earnings. This appropria- tion for Branner hall is one of the first cases, if not the only one, on record in which college athletics have given support to a university building plan anywhere. Unlike Toyon, Branner hall is built for men who prefer to live without any affiliation except that provided by a large group organization. Its rooms are arranged like those of Toyon: for the most part in suites of sleeping porch, dressing room, and study, or of bedroom and study, ac- commodating two men each. But it has not the group sitting rooms. As has been indicated, it has a remarkably beautiful and imposing dining hall. The two halls, con- structed of reinforced concrete designed for earthquake resistance, 30 Colonnades connect the neiu Encina dining rooms with each other and with Encina hall ■i Ill Toyoii hall 154 men are enjoying a dormitory zvhose beauty and convenience are not surpassed anywhere were erected at a cost of $450,000 each. This figure includes furnishings in either case. The Encina dining halls, with their high beamed ceilings, sturdy walls, and great windows, are among the most attractive spots on the campus. In this well designed building, two main dining rooms, in which freshmen are required to board for their first year, form the largest single unit of the new boarding system; six smaller dining rooms are occupied by eating clubs and transient boarders. All of these rooms are furnished with tables and chairs of special Spanish design. The new Encina kitchen is in many ways the finest on the coast. It has a staff of twenty- one professionals, and although less than a year old, already feeds 580 persons three times a day. The object of the new boarding system is to make each unit as homelike as possible. A student board of governors, meeting with Comptroller A. E. Roth and Miss Etta H. Handy, director of dining halls, not only decides the general scheme of operation, but actually determines the menus, rules and regulations, and various other details. An addition to the Stanford convalescent home, built by Mrs. Henry Crocker in mem- ory of Mrs. Kate D. Mc- Laughlin, was completed during the year. This beautiful addition, which accommodates twenty children in addition to the sixteen already pro- vided for by the home, cost, with equipment, nearly $50,000. Serra house, a beau- tiful home in Spanish architecture, built by the university last fall, was Strength and simplicity of style V;jti ;, «( ■to the nevj Toyon ballroom 31 occupied by David ■Stan- Jordan in December. It lies a few rods south of Xazniin house, for many years the residence of Dr. Jordan. The latter, now Manzanita House, has been made a dormitory for graduate women. In the front of the old Union building a store with a small soda foun- tain in connection has been completed. In the basement of the old Union, w ' here a cafeteria was operated last year, a Branner hall as seen from the roof of Toyon. This ' iew bidicajes clearly complete and Up-tO-datC the quadrangular plan on zvhich the dormitories are to be built, . ' i i Toyan and Branner halls forming two sides of the first ICC Cream parlor and SOQa quadrangle. Connected withBranner hall is a spacious fountain have been in- dininq room, shown in the center. 11 i a i i- -ij: ■' Stalled. Addmg an ettec- tive finishing touch to the beauty of the Union courtyard, a fountain recently has been constructed. Stanford ' s plan of athletic expansion will eventually give her a most complete equipment for the physical development of every student. It will be twenty years or more before this program is completely carried out, but in the past year several new athletic fields have been completed. The seating capacity of the Basketball pavilion was enlarged by the installation of i)ermanent bleachers. The program of athletic expansion is discussed in more detail in another section of this volume of the Quad. Administrative and Ciniuicu LAR Chances Administrative and curricular changes are not so readily observed by the casual onlooker as are changes in the physical plant, but they are of an even greater sig- nificance to those who are a part of the university, and who have its welfare most at heart. During the year the Board of Trustees created a new body, known as the Stanford National Board, to assist in planning the future development of the uni- versity. It is made up of thirty members appointed by the ISoard of Trustees, and representative of all parts of the country, and its object is to bring directly to the aid of Stan- ford the information and ideas of men of experience and wis- dom from all ])arts of the nation. Its membership includes both alumni and friends of the uni- versity. Having as its object the pro- viding of a general course of study in .social .science and pviblic affairs, and following out a ])lan inaugurated last year, a school of social sciences was this year or- 32 Serra house is the new home of Stanford ' s first president, David Starr Jordan Sleeping porches arc a feature of the second floor suites in Toyon and Branner halls ganized. Like the. school of biology, this new school draws its faculty from several existing departments, including among others, economics, history, philosophy and political science. The Hoover War library, now one of the four largest collections of its kind in the world, has been placed in charge of ten directors. The purpose of this step is to in- sure its future development being con- ducted along lines that will make it most useful to scholars utilizing its resources — already in many respects unequaled in any other collection. The new board of direc- tors includes Herbert C. Hoover, Ray Lyman Wilbur, E. D. Adams (chairman), G. T. Clark, J. S. Davis, H. H. Fisher, F. A. Colder, R. H. Lutz, C. H. Stuart, and INL S. Wildman. Lack of coordination in the three courses in citizenship formerly required of all lower division students resulted in a special course being substituted this year as the lower division requirement. This course, under the direction of Professor Edgar E. Robinson, aims to present the salient features and background of present day society, to consider the place of education in modern life, and to examine fundamental political, social and economic problems of the present. A development in harmony with the change already made in the department of mining and metallurgy is the new requirement of six years ' work for the engineer ' s degree in both chemistry and electrical engineering. Nine out of every ten ablebodied men in the university taking active part each quarter in some form of physical exercise is the result of the program of the physi- cal education department in carrying out its slogan of Active participation in athletics for all. At the beginning of the present academic year the Stanford faculty was strengthened by the addition of six able and experienced professors. Dr. Harley L. Lutz, recently head of the department of economics at Oberlin, is professor of economics. Added to the law faculty are Professor Ceorge E. Osborne and Professor Harold Shepherd, the latter of the class of ' 19, who was acting dean of the University of Wyoming law school before he became associ- ate professor of law at Stanford. Professor Osborne had been for two years professor of law at the University of Minnesota. Vlajor William D. Ceary, field artillery, who succeeded Major Leroy P. Collins as head of the depart- ment of military science and tactics, was graduated from 33 The suites in the new dormitories are models of convenience and comfort IVith the complclioji oj the Kate D. McLaughlin unit, thirty-six kiddies can now be cared for at the Stanford convalescent home West Point in 1907, when he entered the cavah-y. In 1916 he was transferred to the field artillery. Professor Graham Henry Stuart, a recognized authority on international poli- tics, came from the University of Wisconsin to become a mem- ber of the department of politi- cal science. Buford O. Brown, formerly a member of the jour- nalism faculty at the University of Texas, became a member of the faculty of the division of journalism. Stanford loses the services of Professor William Frederick Durand and Profes- sor William Herbert Carruth by retirement at the end of the present academic year. Professor Durand has been at Stanford since 1904. His work in the field of aeronautics has been significant and he has rendered splendid service as head of the department of mechanical engineering, and chairman of the advisory board of the academic council. Professor Carruth, who joined the Stan- ford faculty in 1913, is now professor of comparative literature. He is widely known for the depth and beauty of his Each in His Own Tongue and other poems. Endowment Drive Progresses Endowment work has been placed in charge of John A. Sellards, a former Stan- ford man, who has been given the title of endowment secretary. It is his business to continue the endowment work for the war memorial, the second million, the medi- cal million, and any special endowments which may be needed in the future. The first million, which is to be used for faculty salaries, has been oversubscribed $65,424.12, including the $300,000 contribution from the General Education board. The second million is to provide funds for building a law library, women ' s gym- nasium, school of biology, and additional dormitories. The construction of a new law building and women ' s gymnasium are the most pressing needs and will take precedence over all other structures built from these funds. The library, perhaps the best in the west, contain- ing much valuable and irreplaceable material, is now housed in a building altogether too small and not fireproof. The gymnasium has long been inade- quate to the women ' s needs. Special ef- forts will be made to enlist the aid of graduates of the law school and alum- nae to obtain these buildings. The med- ical million has practically reached the half-way mark, with a total subscrip- tion of $406,875.50, while the amount subscribed for the war memorial is over $100,000. 34 Beamed ceilings and J-rrnch windows are features of the individual dining rooms in the recently completed Encitxa unit Significant ami Interesting Facts About Members of the Stanford Faculty Thirty-three years ago this summer a little group of fifteen men arrived at Stanford to assume the duties of the univer- sity ' s original faculty. Most of them were young men — men to whom Senator Stanford ' s new enterprise appealed. some- what in the light of an intellectual adventure in a country as yet isolated from the cultural influences of long established eastern universities. At first the new memorial was openly scoffed at : there was no place and certainly no need for such an institution in the undeveloped west, declared its critics. But the first term had scarcely begun when the number of students enrolled made it apparent that the colony of fifteen professors was distin ctly inadequate in number. Since that time the faculty has grown steadily, until today it numbers several hundred. Many of these men have achieved marked distinction ; some of them occupy positions of unique importance in their fields. Who ' s Who in America lists seventy-three names from Palo Alto, nearly all of which are those of Stanford professors. Realizing the futility of attempting to deal adequately with the faculty as a whole, the Quad has this year selected a group of thirty-two representative members, concerning whose ac- complishments brief accounts have been given. In making these selections especial emphasis has been laid upon recent achievements and upon those of national or world importance. A conscientious attempt has also been made to depict these men in a personal way — as teachers of Stanford men and women as well as scholars whose researches are of vastly wider significance. •II J! I I • U M LEROY ABRAMS pROFESSOR Abrams, professor of botany, and curator of the Dudley herbarium, has recently completed the initial volume of the second comprehensive flora ever pub- lished in this country. An Illustrated Flora of the Pacific States is an authentic reference work for those interested in native plant life in the Pacific states as well as for the trained botanist. Every species of fern, flower, tree, and shrub known to grow wild in the west coast states is to be described and illustrated. This first volume, printed last summer by the Stanford University Press, contains 3,000 The completed work, consisting of three volumes, will involve several years more of In addition to its comprehensive data, the work is important in that there is an illustra- drawings research, tion for every species I- J V- FIMIRAIM DOUGLASS ADAMS pROFESSOR . dams, who has been director of the Hoover War library since its conception, and who is now chairman of the newly organized permanent board of directors, has divided his energies between this great col- lection of war documents and the writing of a work on I ' ritish-American diplomatic relations. Before printing, approval of the two-volume manuscript must be secured from the cen.sors of the British foreign office, since the work is a result of the use of diplomatic materials bearing on the American Civil war, which heretofore have not been used by any historian. The Hoover War library at Stanford is one of the four great war collections in the world, the other three being : Musee de la Guerre, Paris ; Kriegesarchiv, Berlin ; and the Library of the Imperial War Museum, London. CARL LUCAS ALSBERG r OMING to Stanford from Washington, D. C, in 1921, where he was for nine years chief of the Bureau of r - 1 n m ' 1 % m -. ■■■i B Hff ■Chemistry in the Department of Agriculture, Dr. Alsberg of the Stanford Food Research institute has since then devoted his energies to the chemistry of food manufacture and of agriculture. His work has centered about statistical methods and the starch content of many varieties of wheat. The institute is seeking for satisfactory statistical methods for an analysis of the world wheat position. Under Dr. .Alsberg ' s guidance, important research vvork in crop e.sti- mating and reporting methods in the United States and abroad is being carried on with a view of determining the reliability of crop statistics and of im])roving the accuracy of forecasts and reports of crops. _ MELVILLE BEST ANDERSON If npHE translation of Dante ' s La Divina Commedia -Un triple rhyme has been the chief occupation of Dr. .Anderson for nearly twenty years. This monumental work, com])leted in 1921, stands exalted in the literary world as a master]3iece of translation. Among the other notable works of Dr. Anderson are his edition of Bacon ' s E.ssays and his books and papers on La Salle and early French explorers. He came to Stanford in 1891 as executive head of the Department of English, and became professor emeritus in 1910, retiring under a special provision of the Carnegie founilation to engage in research studies for his Dante translation. Although his home is in Menlo Park, Dr. Anderson has spent many years of his life in Florence, Italy, living in the environment in which Dante wrote. 36 ELIOT BLACKWELDER A FTER receiving his A.B. from the University of Chi- • cago in 1901, Professor Blackwelder, head of the Geology department, spent a year with a geological ex- ploring party in i:orthern China. Later, for the Geological survey, he made ten expeditions to the Rocky mountains and two to Alaska, working out the geologic structure and studying the mineral resources. Poinding that the sedi- mentary rocks contain the chief record of the earth ' s physi- cal history, a subject in which he is much interested, Pro- fessor Blackwelder has devoted much of the last fifteen years to such investigations, and in 1913 was the first to give a formal course in sedimentation. Prominent among Professor Blackwelder ' s works are The Geology of the United States, and an elementary text-book of geology, of which he is co-author. ii- J ' ELLWOOD PATTERSON CUBBERLEY pROFESSOR Cubberley — teacher, writer, author, and school surveyor — has achieved notable recognition as the editor of the Riverside Text-books on Education, a library which now numbers 504 volumes. His most impor- tant and scholarly work is A History of Education ; his most recent book, The Principal and His School. Although he has been on the Stanford faculty since 1898, he really teaches all over the United States, since his texts on school administration and history of education are used in colleges and universities generally. Professor Cubberley is author of over a dozen text-books and has been director of a number of school surveys. He was recently a member of the National Educational Finance inquiry, a commission studying educational costs, and is now a member of the Commonwealth Fund (N.Y.) Educational Research commmittee. iil l [ m. : IE. m ' ' z w i o - - . mk . I WILLIAM FREDERICK DURAND . MPORTANT research work in the field of aeronautics for the government has been the task of Professor Durand for the past three years. In the aerodynamics laboratorj- a huge wind tunnel has been constructed for testing various types of propellers. At present Professor Durand is testing diflferent designs of cross sections of aeroplane wings in order that a ' plane may be designed which will carry fuel in the wings instead of in the fuel tank, thus eliminating the friction offered by fuel tanks to windage. Professor Durand is head of the IMechanical Engineering department. In 1918 he was made Scientific . ttache at the American embassy at Paris, as well as a member of the Interallied Commission on Inventions. Professor Durand is also a member of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. HENRY RUSHTON FAIRCLOUGH pERHAPS the most eminent philologist in . merica today is Professor Fairclough of the Stanford Department of Classical Literature, who has for some time been occupied in editing the complete works of ' irgil and the Satires and Epistles of Horace for the I eb Classical library. He has recently returned from Montenegro, where for two years he was a lieutenant-colonel in the American Red Cross, and commander in that country. While in Europe he received the Order of Saint Sava HI. from Serbia, and was deco- rated with the Order of the White Eagle by Crown Prince Alexander. He is also Officier de I ' ordre la couronne, .Belgium. The chair of Professor of Latin in the American School of Classical Studies in Rome was held by Professor Fairclough in 1911. He has been conducting classes in classical studies at Stanford since 1893. 37 BENJAMIN OLIVER FOSTER tpOUR volumes of Professor Foster ' s contribution to the Loeb Classical library have already been completed. Three of these have been published. The task assigned to Professor Foster by the board of editors of the library has been the translation of Livy, of which several volumes are still to be translated. The Loeb library, conceived by James Loeb, a New York banker, will consist, when completed, of some 400 volumes of the classics. The work has been organ- ized under three editors, two Englishmen and one American, and has already given to the world 150 volumes of classical translations. Professor Foster graduated from Stanford in 1895, and since then, besides his work as a teacher and his Loeb translations, has contributed to contemporary journals several papers on the works of Livy, Homer, Propertius, and other classical subjects. EDWARD CURTIS FRANKLIN PROFESSOR FRANKLIN ' S recent researches in am- monia chemistry have been characterized as the most notable contribution to chemical science in the last forty vears. In his laljoratory of organic chemistry at Stanford, Professor Franklin completed the ammonia cycle, an achieve- ment of vast significance in chemical science. Coming to Stanford in 1903, he is now dean of graduate study in the Chemistry department. Last year Professor Franklin achieved the signal honor of being the first man from a western university to be elected president of the American Chemical society. Professor Franklin is also a member of the American Philosophical society, the National Academy of Sciences, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. His reputation among his students as teacher and friend rivals his distinction in the scientific world. H HjH W BB - ■■I V Bf - ' d ' r B BK j k ' w PAUL JOHN HANZLIK ■p R. HANZLIK is one of the foremost experimental phar- macologists in the United States. He is chairman of the section on pharmacology of the American Medical asso- ciation, he is associate editor of the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, and is assisting the Journal of California and Western Medicine in promoting rational therapeutics. He is now publishing a Laboratory Manual on Pharmacology, in conjunction with Professor Torald Sollman of Cleveland. Researches on edema by foreign agents, anaphylactoid reactions and the fate of foreign sub- stan ces in the body are at present being pursued by Dr. Planzlik. This year he has also contributed, by invitation, an article to the Festschrift in honor of the seventieth birthday of his former teacher in Vienna, Professor Hans Horst Meyer. Fr f| ALBION WALTER HEWLETT „„ ! ' XVT ' HEN Dr. Wilbur became president of the university, F I Dr. Hewlett was elected to take his place as professor ' ' of medicine. Dr. Hewlett has always been particularly interested in the application of physiology to internal medi- cine. He has made several valuable contributions to this subject. His textbook on Pathological Physiology of Inter- nal Disease is widely known and used. He was one of the first to develop the modern conceptions of heart disease and is now testing the efTect of exercise upon this condition. It was largely on account of his j rominence that John D. Rockefeller, Jr., recently gave a $10,000 fund to the Stanford hospital for the purpose of investigat- ing the new insulin treatment of diabetes. During the war Dr. Hewlett was a member of Stanford Naval Base Unit Number 2 at Strathpfeflfer, Scotland. 38 Ti jjMi. THEODORE JESSE HOOVER pROFESSOR Theodore Hoover, Stanford ' 01, after • spending eighteen years as superintendent, consult- ing engineer, managing director, and president of min- ing companies in America, Europe, Asia, and Africa, ac- cepted a professorship at Stanford in 1919. Since then, besides his work in the curriculum, he has been engaged on a short history which will stress the economic influence of metals on historical episodes, a unique and original con- ception in the field of economic history. The trend of mod- ern chroniclers has been to seek economic causes for his- torical movements. Professor Hoover approaches history from an entirely new point of view, and discusses it with a highly metallurgical flavor. The context of the course History of Mining and Metallurgy, which Professor Hoover has given since 1919, forms the basis for this work. DAVID STARR JORDAN A S naturalist and educator, as philosopher and author, David Starr Jordan has achieved world-wide recogni- tion. His papers on ichthyology, a science in which he is perhaps the greatest living authority, have been produced in abundance of late years. His eagerly anticipated auto- biography, The Days of a lan, has come recently from the press and enjoys a universal circulation. Dr. Jordan ' s efforts to bring peace among the nations participating in the World War and his peace appeals since 1918 have earned for him a place among the internationally known political figures of the world. Dr. Jordan, selected by Senator Stanford to be president of Stan- ford university at its inception, retired from the presidency in 1913 and has since devoted him- self principally to scientific and political studies. MARION RICE KIRKWOOD p ' lFTEEN years ago Marion Rice Kirkwood was a mem- ber of the senior pilgrimage of the class of ' 09. Two years later he took his J.D. degree in the Stanford law school, and the following year accepted an assistant pro- fessorship at Stanford. Since then he has c (jnstantly been identified with the law department. Last year he became dean of the law school, thus attaining the distinction of being the youngest dean of a large law school in America, Soon after, he was again honored by being elected president of the Order of the Coif. The law school has already responded to the guidance of this youthful — and extremely modern — helmsman. Chiefly has his influence been marked in the exclusion from the school of all but those whose major subject is law. A C average constitutes the new entrance requirement. ERNEST GALE MARTIN CINCE 1916, when he came to Stanford as professor of physiology. Professor Martin has carried on research bearing on theories of the action of the nervous system. He has also been engaged in research work on brine shrimps (Artemia Salinaj, in the development of tests of physical efficiency, and in the writing of papers and texts on physiology. A theory of nervous action, known as the all or nothing principle, a revolutionary conception fifteen years ago, has made necessary the re-interpretation of many old experiments, a task in which Dr. Martin is now engaged. Among his recent works are the ninth volume of Collier ' s Popular Science library, entitled Physiology, the textbook for the present Stanford course in general biology (written in collaboration with three Stanford professors) , and the second revision of The Human Body. 39 CHARLES DAVID MARX pROFESSOR Marx, known to Stanford students and alumni for the past thirty-four years as Daddy Marx, retired from the headship of the Engineering department and became professor emeritus in 1923. Not only as teacher and executive is he well known, but his work as consulting engineer of many civic undertakings on the Pacific coast has gained wide recognition. He is now consulting engineer for the projected San Jose outfall sewer, and is chairman of the Joint Council of Engineering Societies in San Francisco, an organization composed of members of all national engineering societies, which takes up matters of interest to the community and the state. As chairman of the Highway Commission of the Commonwealth club (San Francisco), he has made a thorough study of the highway situation in California. AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY pROFESSOR Murray returned last fall from Greece, where, during the year 1922-23, he was visiting pro- fessor in the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. Professor Murray is one of three Stanford profes- sors numbered among the editors of the Loeb Classical library. His translation of the Odyssey, in two volumes, has already been published. The Iliad, translated by him, is now being printed. The volumes in the Loeb library are so arranged that the translation is on the page facing the original Greek or Latin, thus enabling the reader to follow the native language with the English. Professor Murray is also editor of Xenophon ' s Anabasis, is author of a text-book on Greek composition, and has contributed to numerous philological journals. He is co-editor, with Professor Fairclough, of the Antigone of Sophocles. D WILLIAM OPHtJLS |R. Ophiils, dean of the Stanford Medical school and professor of Pathology, is one of the foremost patholo- gists of the country. He is particularly interested in the study of chronic diseases. The life history of a vegetable parasite of a disease resembling tuberculosis — a disease which is more or less limited to California — was discovered by Dr. Ophiils. His recent studies have centered about the diseases of the heart, blood vessels, and kidneys and their interrelation to one another. Dr. Ophiils has been patholo- gist for the Lane hospital since 1898, and joined the Stanford faculty in 1909. He received the degree of doctor of medicine from the University of Gottingen, and is at present a member of the National Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists. in this same is a member gery in the T 40 EMMET RIXFORD r R. Rixford, in charge of the surgical service at the San Francisco hospital of the Stanford Medical school, joined the faculty at the time that the school was estab- lished. His most important contributions to the field of surgery have been concerned with the study of fractures. Before beginning his work in surgery, Dr. Rixford received a degree in engineering from the University of California. As a result, he has been particularly interested in the appli- cation of physical factors to surgery. He was for fourteen years visiting .surgeon of the Lane hospital, and has acted capacity for the City and County hospital of San I ' rancisco since 189 . Dr. Rixford of the American Surgical association. During the war he was an instructor in sur- raining School for Military Ofificers. HARRIS JOSEPH RYAN C TAX FORD will have a field laboratory for high voltage transmission which will rank among the most impor- tant experiment stations in the world, due mainly to the creative genius of Professor Ryan, present head of the Electrical Engineering department and president of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. The project comes as recognition of the vast amount of research which has been carried on in the present Stanford high voltage laboratory by Professor Ryan and his students. One product of this laboratory has been the Flashover ring, which made possible the Pitt river project, where one of the highest voltage transmission apparatus in existence is used. Professor Ryan, coming to Stanford from the Cornell faculty in 1905, is recognized as the foremost authority on high power transmission in the west. JAMES PERRIN SMITH pROFESSOR Smith, J. P., as he is fondly called by the men who learn the double-roll under him on Geology corner, is recognized throughout the world as the leading authority on ammonites, a species of sea-shell. At present he is working on a series of fossil shells which have been sent to the Stanford Geology department from the Island of Timor, near Borneo. Ammonites gravitate toward Professor Smith, is the way his departmental col- leagues express their admiration. Several papers and gov- ernment reports on ammonites and numerous monographs on scientific topics constitute an invaluable library from the pen of J. P. He has been a geolo- gist with the United States Geological survey since 1895. Professor Smith is one of the Stanford Old Guard, having joined the faculty in 1892. ALFRED BAKER SPALDING T R. Spalding, the same Al Spalding, ' 96, of Cardinal - - athletic fame, has been head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology since the beginning of the Stan- ford School of Medicine. He is a recognized authority on the subject, being a member of the American Medical association, the American College of Surgeons, and the American Gynecological society. Being primarily interested in the prevention of many of the major disorders of women, Dr. Spalding ' s research work has had to do with procidentia, cancer of the uterus and results of the Cae- sarian section. He has also carried on work with Dr. Thomas Addis on the toxaemias of preg- nancy, and, with Dr. W. E. Chamberlain of the X-ray department, has made important discov- eries in X-ray measurement of the pelvis and X-ray diagnosis of intra-uterine death. I STANLEY STILLMAN N 1910, when the Stanford School of Medicine was es- tablished in San Francisco, Dr. Stanley Stillman, one of the leading surgeons of the United States, organized the Department of Surgery, and has been head of that division since that time. He is now president of the California Academy of Medicine, as well as chairman of the California branch of the American College of Surgeons, and a member of the American Surgical association. The better part of his time and energy has been taken up by the work of the medical school. Under his competent guidance many of the prominent younger surgeons of the west have received their training. During the war Dr. Stillman was in charge of the Stanford Naval Base Unit Number 2 at Strathpfefifer. Scotland. 41 ROBERT ECKLES SWAIN pOR tile most notable work in Chemistry in America for the year 1920, Professor Swain received the Perkins Medal from Columbia university. The work which won for him this distinction was done in connection with the smoke investigations made by the federal government in the Utah mining regions. In this work he acted as a com- missioner of the United States Federal court in the settle- ment of the smelter smoke litigation. Professor Swain ' s principal work has been in the field of biochemistry. Pro- fessor Swain received his A.B. at Stanford in 1899, and has been connected with the university since that time. In 1917, with the retirement of the late Dr. Stillman, he assumed the chair of executive head of the Department of Chemistry. He is presi- dent of the American Society of Chemical Engineers. JOHN S. P. TATLOCK A CHAUCER Concordance has just been completely edited by Professor Tatlo-ck, eminent philologist, and head of the English department. In this important work, begun by his predecessor at Stanford, Professor Fliigel, Professor Tatlock has been acting as a research associate of the Carnegie institute at Washington, D. C. Medieval literature has been the source of most of his studies during the past few years. He is actively engaged in work on the Research Committee on Medieval Latin, a national philo- logical organization. He is, perhaps, the most noted scholar in medieval literature in the west. At present, when not conducting classes in literature and philology in the Stanford English department, he is acting in his capacity of associate on an investigation of the general examination for the Bachelor of Arts degree at Harvard. D ALONZO ENGLEBERT TAYLOR R. TAYLOR, who is head of the Food Research insti- tute at Stanford and director of the field of physiology and chemical nutrition, was, during the war, aide in food economy to Herbert Hoover. Dr. Taylor was formerly professor of pathological chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania. During the past year he has attended con- ferences with food experts in the east, who have been making an intensive study of the economic problems of the commercial baking industry. Since its beginning the Food Research institute has occupied an important position in the economic activities of the Pacific Coast. It gives to food producers, distributers, and con- sumers advice which has done much in effecting savings in industrial methods and conservation of food commodities. 1 ■B H||HH| B||H| w a| 1 tf — P JM .- e dffla K . -....—■• - ••■.■• . ' ' ' %i.lWi LEWIS MADISON TERMAN pROFESSOR Terman, head of the Department of Psy- chology, has been called the Father of American Intelligence Testing. Besides being recognized as one of the greatest authorities on the application of the Binet system of intelligence testing, he is regarded as the ulti- mate authority in the field of child intelligence, and is at ]5resent occujjied in carrying on work provided for by a $34,000 fund from the Commonwealth fund for the study of gifted children. As virtual head of the Army Intelli- gen ce Testing division during the war, he superintended the giving of intelligence tests to nearly three million men. After the var he was made a member of a board of psychologists appointed to revise the army tests for use in the public schools. This year Professor Terman was president of the American Psychological association. 42 DAVID LOCKE WEBSTER T MPORTAXT and interesting research work in the field of the X-ray is being done by Professor Webster, head of the Physics department. Having published last spring his text-book for first-year college Physics, he has devoted most of his energies to an intense investigation of the laws of exertion of X-rays with special reference to questions on the disturbances around the X-ray tube which seem to show that the electrons producing the X-rays emit rays while still in rapid motion. This phase of X-ray experiment has occupied Professor Webster ' s attention since his arrival at Stanford, three years ago. The first year was entirely consumed in erecting the apparatus, an interesting feature of which is an outfit for producing steady direct current at voltage up to 100,000. Professor Webster was elected to the American Academy of Sciences last spring. RAY LYMAN WILBUR IXE years ago, on January 22, 1915, Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur, then dean of the Stanford Medical school, became president of Stanford university. The materiali- zation of the building program, the increased interest of the alumni in the university, the lower division, and high standards of admission and scholarship are all attributed to Dr. Wilbur ' s administration. Dr. ilbur has gained recog- nition in the scientific world as one of the greatest diagnos- ticians of the day. He is president of the American Medical association, president of the Association of Medical colleges, and is a trustee of the Rockefeller foundation. Dr. Wilbur was president of the American Academy of jMedicine in 1913, and president of the California Academy of Medi- cine in 1918. BAILEY WILLIS T N a mission to South America for the Carnegie institute. Dr. Willis, emeritus since 1922, recently spent several months in Chile studying earthquake phenomena. Not only has his study been of tremendous benefit to seismic science, but a booklet published and distributed to the natives will be an aid in compelling suitable building materials to be used in the ' quake regions. Dr. Willis was selected for the mission on account of his first-hand knowledge of the California rifts (which are similar to those in Chile), gained through a minute survey of the path of the 1906 earthquake. During the years 1911-13, Dr. Willis was consulting geologist to the Argentine Minister of Public Works. Since 1921 he has been president of the Seismology Society of America. He is an honorary member of the Royal Geographical society. CHARLES BENJAMIN WING T ESIGNING one of the greatest radios in the world has fallen to the honor of Professor Wing, a member of the Stanford Old Guard, who has been teaching classes in Civil Engineering on the Quad since 1892. The radio will have seven towers, each one a thousand feet high. It is to be erected at Shanghai by the Federal Telegraph company, for which Professor Wing is acting in the capacity of consulting engineer. For experimental pur- poses, he has installed an apparatus in the aerodynamics laboratory of the university which reproduces the actual wind conditions that exist at Shanghai. During the war. Professor Wing was a lieutenant- colonel with the Twenty-third Engineers with the First Army in the Argonne-Meuse. He was designer of the Stanford stadium, until recently the second largest in the country. 43 3Ct?chc of tl)c 5Uai rc0 The Franciscan friars, that tireless group of monastic clergy to whom California is in- debted for the establishment of the first out- posts of civilization in her far-western territory, founded their seventh mission, November 1, 1776, naming it after John of Capistrano, the Revivalist. The ruins of Mis- sion Capistrano, with its red tile roofs, its Romanesque arches, and its inner court, were later to be the inspiration of the architecture of the Stanford quadrangle. To implant the seed of Christianity among the Indians, the devout members of this order established a system of missions from San Diego to Sonoma, and connected them with a path well beaten by the sandals of itinerant friars : El Camino Real. Under the leader- ship of Frey Junipero Serra, the missions flourished ; thousands of Indians were con- verted to the faith ; large areas of land were cultivated. The Spanish government gave wide grants of land to the California missions ; one of chief concern to us being that of Santa Clara, which included the present university prop- erty. For nearly a century, under Franciscan influence, a pastoral civilization thrived on the far-flung Pacific shores. -fZ y fc j;ii :: stiC Hiy ' iVi ' I lures lu( li THE YEAR By AIary C. Chaney SENIOR WEEK ENDS SPRING, 1923 On University Day. June 2, Stanford wel- comed back her alumni for a brief visit. Then came the end-of-the-quarter scramble, and finally senior week. On Wednesday, June 13, the class farce, The Hottentot, was presented. Friday night, the senior ball was held in the Wome n ' s clubhouse, made brilliant, with vividly colored dec- orations. Saturday was Alumni day. That eve- ning also marked the last social affair of the grad- uating class, the senior prom. Dr. Albert Parker Fitch of Amherst gave the baccalaureate sermon on Sunday. Class day exercises took place the same day. Monday, June 18, Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan, president of the California Institute of Technology, delivered the commencement address in the Memorial church. Degrees granted num- bered 666. The college life of the class of 1923 was over. SUMMER During summer quarter at Stanford, regular activities were suspended. It proved a period of study and research. In addition to classes on the campus, courses were given at the Hopkins Ma- rine Station and at the medical school in San Francisco. The geology department conducted a field trip, lasting from Jvme 20 to September 1. Three weeks were spent in studying geological formations about Alameda cre k. Then the camp moved to Sargent oil fields where it split up into three spike camps. On August 1, all the men were recalled to the main camp to begin a contour map of the locality, the work being completed about September 1. Professor Cyrus F. Tolman, Jr., was in charge of the expedition, which numbered forty-two students. Alumni arc entertained in the liaskelbaU pai ' ilion, Uni ' t ' crsity Day, June 2 50 Siiiiuncr Gcoloijy Xninbcr I: The problem ' u tnpog. amuses Bev Ball- ard and Al Masters, soiiietiiiie student president. (Copy of Snappy Stories is out of viezi. ' behind drauing paper.) On the campus an effort was made to enliven the warm days and nights. On July 6 was held an all university jolly-up; on July 13, Phi Delta Theta gave an open dan ce for the benefit of the Convales- cent home: a moving- picture program in the as- sembly hall, followed by a dance at the clubhouse, created diversion on July 20. The first messenger of fall is Scotchy Cani]!- bell, captain of the 1923 varsity, who returns in the middle of August to make ready ' for football prac- tice, scheduled to begin on September 15. Autumn quarter is near. AUTUMN A joyous rush and surge, hundreds of students .flooding in upon the campus. In the Administra- tion building, confusion, bewilderment, hilarious greetings, a rebirth of college spirit — that is autumn registration day, October 2. And Stan- ford has the biggest enrollment in her history, 2731. At a dance in the basketball pavilion that night, campus queeners renew old acquaintance, or begin fresh concjuest. Roughs take up their old duties as critics, with a zest born of three months off the job. The year of 1923-24 is formally launched. President Wilbur welcomes the new students in a student body assembly, October 4, declaring that good, bad or indifferent the new men and women belong to the University and bear the good name of Stanford in their keeping. Next day the freshmen lose to the sophomores in the first mud battle ever fought on the campus. For fifteen mirey minutes, each of the two classes tries to throw its opponents into the huge mud pits that have been made in the dry bed of Lagunita. To see fair play, upperclass officials hover close. Tom Irwin, ' 22, who wrote the rules for the fight, is unceremoniously thrust into the murky pit. A last-minute rally gives the decision to the second-year scrappers. That night the victors play host to the freshmen at a big barbecue at Frenchman ' s cut. Sutnmer Geology, Number II: Al Taylor pronounces blessing at breakfast. (The management certifies tliat all the individuals in the picture are Stanford students.) Xmclccn Twenty-Three lengthens the Bronze Line 51 a I ■a 1 ■,[--4 . M m U ii, !MI Hugo Lcistncr holds lucky number Lnwerclass fight, Xuinbcr I: Where Tom Irn ' in makes a big st !ash A. W. Smith, author of Stanford hymu, is assembly sfeakcr Frosh act as dr,i teams: ahf-ro.r iiiately y KldJkHl.dlKl.OOO feet of lumber go into Big fne file The annual pajamarino, October 9, kindles the flame of Cardinal football hopes. Cowbells, shrill calls, screams, pistol shots echo, from the hilltops. At Roble the best runners go through their foot- ball yells, and wait for the stragglers. Then, down the Row, the pajamarino continues its howling way, ending at the Delta Upsilon house. The annual present of apples appears, and the puffing pajamarinites return homeward. Alfred R. Masters, ' 23, president of the Asso- ciated Students, in an assembly, on October 11, urges: Let us think, talk, and breathe football so that on November 24 there will be a great victory for Stanford. On October 18, the first bleacher rally of the year is held in the stadium to give the varsity a send-ofT before it leaves for Los Angeles. ' The fall social season reaches its climax ivith the Sophomore Cotillion 52 Roughs ' Day crozvd as seen from the fourth floor of the library The following Wednesday evening, a throng at the pavilion cheers on the team before the U.S.C. game. The rooting act over, a desperate attempt is made to put on a half-hour dance, but the eager roughs crowd in to the center and literally take the floor. Undaunted dancers have another try when Skull and Snakes rounds up the students Saturday evening, October 26, for a Jolly-up. The tradi- tional trucks duly call to transport the women to the pavilion. Men come to dance and stay to watch — and to make witty comments. The Rally committee still has a few tricks under its sombreros. The student body goes en masse, on the afternoon of November 7, to the stadium to watch Ram ' s Head, campus dramatic society, clash with Sigma Delta Chi. national journalistic fraternity, in a sensational, but dis- puted, game of football. Hugo Leistner and Freshmen entertain at law steps Lowerclass fight. Number II: Another victim is thrust into the murky pit More than five thousand Cardinal supporters yell themselves hoarse at the California game rally— the biggest in Stanford history S3 All ages and lyp. Roughs ' Da.y: How ahoiil the nionkey. ' Some Ipzv-Ufers 1 u Pajamarino: Knights perforin for Roble maids Roughs ' Day: And the Men ' s Council says the custom offends the girls Off for the of en road 54 L ■■i 1 1 m [ V j m rf Roughs ' Day: Latest from Parisian shot s; choose your l ich I ' t Roughs ' Ihiy: .1 broad- minded t ' uir Idalw game raily before the stampede begins A campus Romeo Roughs ' Pay: Columbus, world in hand, tells em hozi ' Hlue and Uold 55 The Huj I ' ilr ijrii Donald B. ( Red ) Richardson vin trips to Port- land. The whole crowd chases madly to the Palo Alto depot to see the varsity off for the Oregon game. A wait. Wild enthusiasm and cheers as the team appears. And the lid is oft ' as the train pulls out. Hopes of a Stanford victory — and Burt Lapp pleading with the students to spare the campus street cars and walk home. On November 15, by the light of flickering torches, Stanford rooters get up enthusiasm for the Idaho game at an evening rally on the shores of Lagunita. Noise, speeches, yells, give way to a cross-country run as a fire flares up. Stanford men dash to save the Big Game bonfire, built by freshman labor. But it is only Palo Alto high school students touching off their own pile. From the moment of the stampede, the lake rally is a total loss. Football is forgotten for a night and frivolity reigns, as the fall social season reaches its climax with the Sophomore cotillion, November 16. A colonial scheme of decoration, blue tones, unusual programs, an eight-piece orchestra, make a distinctive dance. Professor A. W. Smith, author of the words of Hail, Stanford, Hail, a for- mer member of the Stanford faculty, and at one time acting president of Cornell University, speaks in an assemblv, November 20, on A Personal Attitude Toward Life. Hey, Frosh ! Kiss the Law Steps — Stanford ' s first quiet roughs ' day, Novem- ber 22, under supervision of the Senior Control committee. Bizarre costumes are few. Whiskers are plentiful, neckties are scarce. Most of the celebrating cen- ters around law steps, with a few demonstrations at the engineering corner. Tense excitement prevails as the Big Game approaches. More than 5,000 join in the stadium rally. A parade, six-shooters, cannon, fireworks, yells announce the gathering of the rooters. Coach Andy Kerr, Captain Scotchy Campbell, Wil- liam Parmer Fviller. Jr., ' 10, Edward A. Cunha, ' 07, Comptroller Almon E. Roth, speak. A burlesque of the California pajamarino, staged by Ram ' s Head, proves popular. Then comes a running, swirling serpentine that leads to the bonfire. It flames high, with a scorching heat. Enthusiasm, .hope, optimism, mount. The exodus to Berkeley begins on Friday, No- vember 23. Every train, every bus, carries Car- dinal supporters from the Farm. The highway is crowded with automobiles, pennant hung. .Sat- urday afternoon finds a determined Stanford root- ing section in the impressive new California stadium — a rooting section keyed to back a fight- ing, smashing team. And then — a Bruin victory. Stanford night at the Fairmont is not quite as hilarious as it might have been, had the Berkeley team gone down to defeat. But a wait till next year .spirit is strong. The Cardinal is never counted out. The rest of the (juarter slips quietly by. Finals come. With a weary thrill, the gang goes home for Christmas. 56 Interested forticipants in graduation cere- monies. Left to right: Dr. Gardner, Dr. Jordan. J. D. Grant, member Board of Trustees, and President iVilbur WINTER Quietly, on January 2, winter quarter com- mences. After the traditional registration dance — held this time at the women ' s clubhouse and spon- sored by the English club — there is a general set- tling down to the routine of classes. Few social events are scheduled. On the first day of the term, Branner hall, new dormitory for men, opens, and there is a rush of incomers, although construction is not yet quite complete. After the removal, January 10, of David Starr Jordan, chancellor emeritus, to his new home, Serra house, his former residence is remodeled and becomes Manzanita house, dormi- tory for graduate women. For a few days campus diversions lose in im- portance as interest grows in the Bok peace plan referendum. At various lectures and discussion meetings, merits and defects of the project are brought out. Balloting, conducted January 21 to 23 by Professor Graham H. Stuart of the political science department, shows that 1,450 of 1,613 campus voters favor the Bok scheme. Chemistry will exercise an influence on the future world that cannot be com- pared to the power of any other science, declares Dr. Edwin E. Slosson, noted lecturer and author, in speaking on January 24 at the first student as- sembly of the quarter. He points out the practical worth of chemistry and need for more widespread knowledge of science among people generally. Julius H. Barnes, president of the American chamber of commerce, and former director of the United States food administration grain corpora- tion, talks before the student assembly on January 31, on the ideals of self-government, saying that self-government for free people is on trial and that the success of American democracy depends upon its adherence to fundamental standards. Tennis fans turn out en masse on the afternoon Julius H. Banns ilcjti. and Dr. Wilbur. Mr. Barnes, president of the American chamber of commerce, speaks on the ideals of self-government Professor Graham H. Stuart conducts the balloting on the Bok peace plan to follow the exhibition match on the varsity courts. Richard H. T. Mertz of agamst Branner hail, second new dormitory for men to be completed this year. opens on the first day of the ivinter quarter of February 5 Hinckley and V. Stanford go up the internationally known doubles team, Robert and Howard Kinsey. In a hard fought encounter, the Cardinal men lose, 8- 6; 6-4; -3. At noon of February 6, faculty and students gather in the Memorial church to pay brief trib- ute to the memory of AVoodrow Wilson, at the 57 lit Famous Kinscy doubles team comes to Stanford for exhibition match. Left to right: Robert Kinscv, Hoivard Kinsey. Richard Hinckley, V. T. Merts time of his funeral in Washington. Dr. D. Charles Gardner, chaplain, speaks briefly. China has the beginnings of an educa- tional system which is already taking the lead, states Dr. Edward H. Hume, president of the Yale in China college at Shang-Sha, China, and assembly speaker on February 8. He gives an ilkmiinating discussion of Chinese school methods. There is a big turnout on Thursday after- noon, February 28, to see the senior team take the Irish marathon, averaging :53.7 to the lap. The holdover show satirizes the sponsor sys- tem, depicting a meeting of the freshman spon- sor committee, at which a cocky freshman ap- pears and reprimands the sponsors for not tak- ing better care of the first-year men. A 100-yard three-legged race, a 100-yard backwards dash, a 440-yard ' walk, and a chicken chase, provide additional entertain- ment. There is more excitement that night, when at 10:30 the women ' s boathouse on the shore of Lagunita burns down. Only a __ few charred timbers of the old building are saved despite efforts of the fire crew. Few important dances are given during the quarter. Two hundred are invited to the Sigma Alpha Epsilon annual masque, held at the women ' s clubhouse, on February 21. The dancers in bizarre costumes glide about a huge Turkish tent, hung with blue and Persian orange. Parchment candle shades and panels, with their pictured mosques and desert sand- storms, carry out the motif. On March 8, Branner hall entertains with its first dance, given in the Toyon ballroom, which is trans- formed into a Hawaiian beach scene. Be- tween dances, native musicians play u])6n the darkened balcony. Founders ' day proves especially significant this year since it is the anniversary of the one-hundredth birthday of Senator Stanford. Services in the Memorial church Sunday evening, March 9, commemorate the event. Professor Augustus T. Mur- ray of the Classical Literature department reads a chapter from Ecclesiasticus, and Professor William F . Durand, acting presi- dent of the university during Dr. Wilbur ' s absence, reads selec- tions from the Stanford founding grant. The address of the evening is delivered by Bishop William Ford Nichols, an inti- mate friend of the Stanford family. Bishop Nichols speaks of the early days at Stanford and of the long stiaiggle which fol- lowed the death of Senator Stanford. He stres.ses particularly Mrs. Stanford ' s work in the establishment of the institution. At the last assembly of the quarter, March 12, Paul Blan- shard, field secretary of the League of Industrial Democracy, ; ■. Edunn E. siosson, ])redicts the rise of the labor movement in every nation of the noted lecturer and au- world. Desi)ite the lure of the library as finals approach, a good thor, speaks on Creattvc , ' , . Chemistry. crowd attends. 58 Tlie annual holdover show satiri ses the sponsor system Beneath the varicolored flags of the tiations: the Military ball is one of the year ' s most successful dajices SPRING Better try it. It ' s a pipe, is the sinister advice on Monday, March 31, spring registration day. For Stanford ' s gayest season is beginning, and snake and queen prepare for a glorious reign. Their preliminary workout conies on the first evening, when Theta Sigma Phi sponsors an unusually well-attended quarterly registration dance at the Women ' s clubhouse. Dr. Alexander Meiklejohn, former president of Amherst college, is the speaker at the first university assembly of the quarter, April 2. Democracv is education, he declares. To make a democracy is to make an educated people. . . . America has not yet the beginning of an educational system. It is still in the preliminary stages of making the external shell. On Frid ay night, April 4, the R. O. T. C. unit gives its annual military ball in the basketball pavilion. A false ceiling, composed of the flags of the nations, makes a brilliant color note. Cadets in uniform, a camp scene at one end, lend atmosphere. About 200 couples attend. A busy week opens on Monday, April 21. The contest for king and queen of the second annual masque ball, set for Friday. April 25, has begun and voting is carried on daily under the keen eyes of campus politicians. Track and baseball men are speeding up for the P)ig Meet and game with California on Sat- urday, April 26, and final preparations are also being made for University day, planned for the same date. ' ednesday evening, April 23, a parade starts at 7 from the top of the Row, picking up rooters at the various fraternity houses, and at Encina, Toyon, and Branner halls. It comes to a stop at the pavilion, where the Big Meet rally is held. The atmosphere is one of victory. Stanford graduates all over the jj Alexander Meiklc- country are expecting next Saturday to be one of the most john. assembly speaker, glorious davs in the historv of StanfoVd, Dr. Harrv Revnolds, f •, - ' . ' • ' ' ' ' ' vo, says m the principal s])eech of the evening. Coach Dink educational system: ' 59 Biy Meet rally: The Atmosphere Is One of Victory. Templeton confidently asserts, I never felt so sure of anything as I do now that this bunch will come through next Saturday. The team mounts the plat- form — a prolonged ovation. The cheering is enthusiastic, the stunts successful. A tiny bear and a surprised goat take promi- nent places on the platform. The National board meets for the first time, Friday, April 25. This body of thirty, includ- ing men from every part of the country, has been organized to discuss conditions and problems of the university and to ascertain the opinions of men in various sections of the country, thereby giving to Stanford a national character. The morning is spent in an inspection of various campus buildings. At noon, members of the board are guests of the freshmen at Encina dining hall. A meeting with the trustees fills the afternoon. The members of the board have dinner with President and Mrs. Wilbur in the evening. They remain over for the events of University day, and for a further inspection of buildings and the medical school during the following morning. At a university assembly on Friday, April 25, Charles K. Field, ' 95, editor of the Sunset magazine, reads from his book of Stanford verse, a publication of twenty-five yea rs ago. His Nest of Dinosaur ' s Eggs, so-called be- cause it is the lay of the first minstrel, is as intei pre- tative of undergraduate si)irit as it was when the verses were written. Shirley Baker, 95, Field ' s old partner in song and dance, is also on the program — one which recalls the exuberance of pioneer days. Together they sing In the Cold, Cold World, a favorite of the early days. In spectacular and original costumes, campus men and women make merry that night at the A. S. S. U. carnival masc|ue in the pavilion. Ever shifting lights of brilliant colors are reflected again and again by a revolving crystal suspended from the ceiling. Dancers wear masks until after the coronation ceremony, presided over by HoUis Chalmers, when Dana Fuller and Muriel Saxon Utunasked royalty: left to right — Muriel Saxon, Dana Ful- ler, Dorothy Dahter, Juilliard McDonald. ' 99ers gather at 1 ' resident II itbur ' s home to coniinentorale the Izcenlx-lijlh annnwrsary of the class graduation 60 become reigning mon- archs. At eleven, a variety bill of four acts opens. Arnold Bayley, as the ex- quisitely gowned Mad- ame Blitzen, makes a thoroughly successful im- personation. Dick Mal- aby accompanies the tem- peramental prima donna at the console. Ted ' an Deusen and Gardner Lip- pincott step through an ingenious soft-shoe dance number, representing an under- class brawl between ' 98 and ' 99. Piquantly costumed, the women of the Ram ' s Head chorus put on two entertaining song and dance numbers. Saturdav morning: the alumni arrive in large numbers for the homecoming cele- Annual ajuiiiiii reunion dinner in the Basketh,ill puz ilion follows the Big Meet bv the University day committee, headed bv bration. The morning is left free Charles P. Cutten, 99. Student guides, however, are provided to conduct trips to old and new parts of the campus. Living groups hold open house for the alumni. At a luncheon at President W ' il- bur ' s home, the class of ' 99 com- memorates its twenty-fifth anniver- sary by pledging $50,000 to be used as the university sees fit. T. T. C. Gregory, member of the Board of Trustees, introduces as the origi- nator of the idea, Xewton Cleave- land, president of the alumni asso- ciation, who explains the project. The sum, known as the ' 99 bowl, is to be raised by members of the class within ten years. Milnor Roberts, dean of the school of mines. University of Wa.shing- ton, presents the original sombrero to Stanford. Roberts wore this somb while attending Stanford, and it was taken as a model when the senior hat was first chosen. In order to save vocal power for critical moments of the track meet, mem- The Carnival Masque calls out spectacular and original costumes Memhers of the National Board and the l ' ..jard of Trustees m et and discuss university problems. In the picture are: stand ing— Frederick F. Peabody, John T. Nourse, Jr.. ' 02, Ira S. Lillick, ' 97. Xewton Cleaveland, 99, Guy Knupp, ' 07, Nathaniel .-V Carle, ' 98, Forrest S. Fisher, ' 99, Ray Lyman Wilbur, ' 96, Charles . . Shurtletf, Edgar .A. Luce, ' 05, George A. Ditz, 11, Fred erick W. Nobs, ' 05, John T. Cooper, ' 04, C. O. G. Miller, Charles K. Field, ' 95, John C. McFarland, ' 07; sitting— Frank Flint, Frank L Guerena, ' 11, Harold P. Kuhn, ' 04, Hugh H. Brown, ' 96, Leland W. Cutler, ' 06, Hans C. Nelson, ' 10, Richard . Bar rett. ' 04, Timothy Hopkins, W. Mayo Newhall, Joseph D. Grant, Frank P. Deering, Brodie G. Higley, ' 99, Charles M. Cram Nathaniel G. Symonds, ' 01, Milton Esberg, Wallace Alexander. 61 Arnold Bavli ' V. ns Madame Blitzcn. appears in one of the feature numbers given at the alumni banquet bcrs of the class are provided with whisthng balloons, inscribed Inflated we stand, deflated we fall ! Judging from the noise, the ' 99ers are de- termined to stand. After lunch, alumni and undergrad- uates head for the stadium, where the track meet w ' ith California begins at 1 :30 o ' clock. Stanford spectators go wild as the Cardinal team runs up a score of 83 to 48. It is Stanford ' s turn to serpentine and to perform before the California rooters — the chance is seized with high enthusiasm. The Bruins also 7 to 6. lose the baseball game, held at 3 :30 o ' clock on the varsity diamond, After this double victory, the University day program continues with a recital by Warren D. Allen, university organist, and inspection of the new dormitories and dining hall. At 7 in the evening the alumni gather in the pavilion for a reunion dinner. Charles D. Cutten, ' 99, acting as toastmaster. introduces Dr. Jordan and President Wilbur, who speak briefly. Following the dinner, comes a student entertainment arranged by Dan Evans, ' 21, and Hollis Chalmers, ' 23. The program is substantially the same as that of the masque ball. Additions are a variation of the radio stunt by Dave Lamson, two of Field ' s songs sung by the Glee club, and Field ' s Ideal Co-ed, sung by Shirley Baker, ' 95. Gene Trago gives a song and dance travesty on California, Here I Come, assisted by the pony chorus. A dance follows, with a large number of undergraduates present. More than 150 high school editors and business managers attend the state-wide high school journalists ' convention at Stan- ford, Friday and Saturday, May 2 and 3, held under the auspices of Sigma Delta Chi, men ' s jovirnalistic fraternity. The most sig- nificant step of the convention is the formation of the California Interscholastic Press association. The pur- ]X)se of the organization is to provide for the unification of high school journalism, the exchange of news and cuts, and the organization of annual meetings. President Wilbur and Alfred R. Masters, presi- dent of A. S. S. U., welcome the delegates in a university assembly on Friday morning. Andrew M. Lawrence, pub- lisher of the San Francisco Journal, emphasizes the need fc ' R B H for clean journalism, and r H James Swinnerton, creator of Little Jimmie, amusingly burlesques the usual inspira- tional talk. Carefully planned sessions cover much ground. Most of the work of the convention is Charles K. Field. ' 95. poet of the pioneer class, speak s before an assembly April 25. Shirley Baker, V5, is featured with Charles K. Field on the assem- bly program, April 25. Senior class plate, the n ' ork of Alfred T. ton, left, and Eldon A. Long Fat- 62 A recent I ' lVzi ' of the iieiL ' Union, the Union court, and the old Union, taken from the roof of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. The Union group has been the locus of many spring activities, including the Corduroy ball during Junior iceek. done by round table talks, the visiting students being divided into seven groups, led by journalists from the professional field and from the university. At a banquet held in the new Union on Friday evening. President Wilbur, Dr. Jordan, Charles K. Field, and Everett W. Smith, head of the Stanford jour- nalism division, speak. A dance in the lobby of the old Union follows. At the last general meeting in the Little theater on Sat- urday afternoon, prizes are awarded for the best newspapers and annuals, and out- standing individual contributions. At 4 Saturday afternoon, the women of the university stage their second biennial pageant on the shores of Lagunita. Attractive costumes, efifective staging and well executed dances characterize the production of The Legend of the Lavu-el. On the same afternoon, Stanford swimmers win the P. A. A. junior swimming meet in the Encina pool with a total of 46 out of a possible 64 points. Arden Allen of Stanford breaks the P. A. A. junior record in the 150-yard back stroke in the fast time of 1:58 2-5. Five other Cardinal swimmers — Robert Williams, Carl Stevenson, James Hanley, John Kenney, and Wayne Smith — become P. A. A. junior champions by winning first places. At the annual awards assembly, vinder auspices of Quadrangle club, Thursday, May 8, twenty-two men who won points in the Stanford-California track meet are awarded block S sweaters. Twelve baseball men receive the same recognition. Medals are given for boxing, tennis, debating, and dramatics. Frank Guerena, ' 11, San Francisco lawyer, and former crew man, makes all awards except boxing, Harry Maloney, director of minor sports, presenting medals to the ring champions. Junior week op6ns with the Corduroy ball dn the old Union at 5 Thursday afternoon, INIay 8. It is an upperclass affair and is distinctly informal, the men appearing in their cords and ancient sweaters, the women in their smartest sport costumes. A hundred couples pass three hours in dancing. Later the annual exhi- More than 150 editors and managers from high schools in all parts of the state attend the conz ' ention sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi. 63 A group of the Haicaiian siviminers who gave exhibitions in the ivater carnival. May 9, a part of Junior week actiz ' ities. Standing: H. Lunning, A. G. Harris, Pua Kealoha, Warren Kealoha, Sam Kahanamoku, ' Bill Kirschbaum, Charles PUNG. Kneeling: H. P. Chilton (trainer), Hiram Anahu, D. L. Conk- LiN (manager), David Kahanamoku, A. C. Zane. bition of fireworks on the shores of Lagunita takes place. Arne Borg, Swedish swimming champion, breaks his own world ' s rec- ord in the half-mile free style event, covering the distance in 10:35 3-5, and beating each one of a relay team of eight of Stanford ' s fastest swimmers, at Encina pool on Friday afternoon at 4. The Hawaiian Olympic swimming team stages a water carnival with such stars as Warren Kealoha, Pua Kealoha, Charles Pung, Sam Kahanamoku, and Bill Kirschbaum competing in free style, breast stroke, and back stroke races. On Friday night comes the most important social event of the college year — the Junior Prom. The ordinarily prosaic Basketball pavilion, elaborately decorated, breathes the romance of a tropical smuggler ' s island. A lively Berkeley orchestra syncopates alluringly. Between 11 and 12:30 supper is served in the Encina dining halls. More than 300 couples agree that it is one of the big- gest successes in years. As part of Junior week sports pro- gram, the inter fraternity and intra- mural swimming contests are held on Saturday at Encina pool. Phi Delta Theta wins both meets. Breakers takes second in the intramural events. Arne Borg, in another exhibition swim, fails by fovir-fifths of a second to break the 220-yard free style tank record, held by Norman Ross. Canoe tilting contests, a fat men ' s race, a blind- fold race, diving, plunging, relays, and an exhibition water polo game are other features. An automobile float parade at 4:30 takes the place of the usual canoe flotilla, impossible this year because of the dryness of Lagunita. The Chi Psi house, with a locomotive float represent- ing the famous old Governor Stanford, takes first prize for the men ' s living groups, and the Delta Delta Delta sorority wins the women ' s award with a colorful canary cage. Dancing from 4:30 to 6:30 at Toyon and Branner halls concludes the program for the afternoon. The Junior opera, So This Is Eden, opens at 8:15 that night. It is a vivid production, marked by numerous song hits, colorful chorus costumes, and good character work. Enthusiastic encores prolong the opera until nearly 11. A cast dance, with the whole cc ' ntly broke 7iis own campus invited, follows at the Women ' s clubhouse. And with umrid record for the j g ]ast notc of the orchestra at midnight, Junior week is half-mile sii rim, in the Encina track. OVCl . The start of the l A. A. jiuiior 22u-yard breast stroke zivn by Haiiley of Stanford (left) 64 STUDENT GOVERNMENT !!M1 A LFREU R. IMASTERS, president of the ' ' ■■student body, a man who has proved him- self a conscientious and able leader, has given to the Stanford student body a year of sig- nificant, though quiet, accomplishment. Free from scandals and practically unmarred by petty squabbles, the year has been characterized by harmonious and far-thinking management constantly looking toward the betterment of student body policy and administration, and the improvement of university student bodies generally on the Pacific coast. In short, the Stanford student body has chosen for itself a set of the highest ethical principles, and in striving for its goal, has developed ideals which have proved of interest and benefit to other stu- dent bodies on the coast. It was largely with this idea- in view, that of presenting to other student bodies the ideas which are being devel- oped at Stanford (such as the new status of the Stanford freshman), that President Mas- ters represented the university at two confer- ences of Pacific coast student body presidents held during the year; the first at the Pacific Students ' association at Moscow, Idaho; the second at the University of California, Los Angeles. The outstanding example of work for the year was the adoption by the executive com- mittee of a standardized set of rules for grant- ing athletic awards. This document definitely sets forth the requirement to be fulfilled before a letter will be granted in every sport, and specifies the type of letter to be awarded. It is hoped that these rules will be retained by executive committees of the future in order that a certain award will mean the same thing in the next generation that it means today. Increased interest was manifested by the student body at the polls, a significant indication that the steps taken three years ago for a more intense organization of the student government at Stanford has met with approval. In the May, 1923, elec- tions, a vote of 1,452 was cast, this being nearly forty per cent larger than any other student body vote ever recorded at Stanford, blasters received a total of 817 votes, a plurality of more than 200 over his opponent, J. C. McHose. William G. Lee, ' 24, was elected vice-president on a white ballot; Orville H. Tucker, Jr., ' 24, was chosen secretary on a white ballot. When Lee did not return to the uni- versity, Herbert C. Hoover, Jr., ' 25, was elected to take his place. Eunice Biddle re- ceived 847 votes in the race for 1924 member of the executive committee, while Philip Xewill was elected men ' s representative to the same office on a white ballot. Meribeth E. Cameron, with 701 votes, and Lewis G. Hitchcock, with 824 votes, were elected 1925 members on the executive committee. Charles B. White, George H. Baker, Junior J. Collins, Carl S. Shoup, and Northcutt Ely, all ' 24, were elected to the men ' s council. A proposed amendment to restrict automobiles on the campus needed a two-thirds majority to pass, and was defeated decisively. 65 Alfred R. Masters Student Body President CAEL SHOUP CHABLE5 WMITt MEN ' S COUNCIL Junior Jennings Collins Carl Sumner Shoup NoRTHCUTT Ely Charles B. White George Harold ISaker, President A DETERMINED effort to make the honor system a respected Stanford tradition has characterized the work of the Men ' s council this year. It has been the object of the council to increase the individual feeling of student responsi- bility, an attitude essential to the successful operation of the system. The members of the council have fostered this feeling by speeches touching on the ideals which prompted the founding of the honor system, given before practically every living group on the campus. Fewer violations have been brought before the council this year than in the past, a condition which indicates that the system is working its way into the consciousness of the student body, according to George H. Baker, president of the council. 66 WOMEN ' S COUNCIL Left to right: Diddle, Roth, Watson, Strouse OFFICERS President Secretary Alice C. Roth, ' 24 Carolan M. Strouse, ' 25 MEMBERS Eunice K. Biddle, ' 24 Alice C. Roth, ' 24 Lillian Cottrell, ' 24 Carolax M. Strouse, ' 25 Margaret E. Watson, ' 25 WOMEN ' S CONFERENCE Hack row: Tolman. Lorraine, Hull. Franklin, Judd, Meyer Second row: Peirce. Stichter, Learnard, Peterson, Hood First row: Dodds, Xewlin, Feusier. Roth. Fitzhugh. Lyons OFFICERS President Secretary Alice C. Roth, ' 24 F. Elizabeth Reynolds, ' 25 B. HiLDEGARDE ToLMAN, ' 25 Emeline H. Williams, ' 25 MEMBERS Josephine Franklin, ' 24 M. Virginia Gibbons, ' 24 Margaret H. Hood, ' 24 Mary E. Hull, ' 24 Ruth A. Newlin, ' 24 Alice C. Roth, ' 24 Eva M. Williams, ' 24 Alice Dodds, ' 25 Anna T. Fitzhugh, ' 25 Grace Judd, ' 25 Polly D. Learnard, ' 25 Laura M. Lorraine, ' 25 Dorothy F. Meyer, ' 25 Carolyn Peirce, ' 25 Jennie M. Petersen, ' 25 Dorotha R. Pollock, ' 25 F. Elizabeth Reynolds, ' 25 Genevieve S. Stichter, ' 25 Margaret E. Watson, ' 25 Barbara A. Wellington, ' 25 Emeline H. Williams, ' 25 Cecile M. Feusier, ' 26 Susan M. Hyde, ' 26 Frances A. Jongeneel, ' 26 Barbara Lyon, ' 26 B. HiLDEGARDE ToLMAX, ' 26 67 EUNICE BIDOLE MERIBETH CAMERON HACTLEY DEVLIN NORMAN DOLE LEWIS HITCHCOCK HEKBERT HOOVEE JOHN MCHOSE ALFEED MA5TEE5 PHILIP NEWILL HAEBY NOLAND OBVILLE TUCIiEa EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President Vice President Secretary OFFICERS Alfred R. Masters, ' 23, June, 1923-June, 1924 Herbert Hoover, Jr., ' 25, October. 1923-June, 1924 Orville H. Tucker, Jr., ' 24, June, 1923-June, 1924 John C. McHose Eunice K. Biddle Philip Newill 1924 REPRESENTATIVES February, 1923-February, 1924 June, 1923-Jui e, 1924 June, 1923-June, 1924 1 J Dudley S. DeGroot, ' 23 who served as Student Man- ager from October, 1923, until April, 1924. when he left for Europe with the American rugby team 68 1925 REPRESENTATIVES Norman D. Dole February, 1923-February, 1924 February, 1924-February, 1925 Meribeth E. Cameron June, 1923-June, 1924 Lewis G. Hitchcock June, 1923-April, 1924 Harry L. Noland April, 1924-June, 1924 1926 REPRESENTATIVE Hartley W. Devlin February, 1924-February, 1925 Henry G. Symonds, ' 24 ivho was appointed Student Manager by the Executiiv Committee to fill the vacancy left by DeGroot ' s resignation THE STAGE CAP ' N APPLEJACK ' There ' s Nothing Like Good Grog ' T OT only has the past dramatic season offered a - varied and exceptionally well presented group of plays to campus theatre-goers, but it has been the biggest financial success in years. The four dramatic productions presented during fall and winter cjuarters not only added materially to the dramatic fund but also covered deficits incurred by 1923 productions. At present there is not only no Stanford dramatic organization in debt, but there is a surplus on hand which will make possible the complete reequipment of the stage next year. To Gordon Davis, director of Stanford dramatic productions, too much credit cannot be given. Davis returned from his tour in the Orient in the fall and for two quarters his presence insured the success of dra- matic productions. Androcles, Cap ' n Applejack. ' ' and Milestones all bore witness to the excellence of his work. Davis left for New York at the beginning of the spring quarter to make a comprehensive study of drama in the eastern universities. Eleven major dramatic awards were gi en this year to students who took prominent part in campus theatrical productions. Those receiving the awards were: Marjorie S. Allen, Arnold B. Bayley, Aileene S. Burks, H. Hollis Chalmers, Delmer L. Daves, Xorris E. James, David A. Lamson, Helen M. Lewis, Cecil M. Morris, Lloyd B. Xolan, and Charles H. Parks. Edward W. Butler, ' 23, who managed Androcles and the Lion, ' ' Cap ' n Applejack, and Milestones, resigned on February 5 in order to graduate. His place as dramatic manager was filled by Delmer L. Daves, ' 26, who managed The Merchant of Menace, So This Is Eden, and the senior farce. Chrysella Dunker, ' 21, was art director of all the plays. Her costuming gained much favorable com- ment. Frederick M. Hughes, ' 23, was stage manager for the first two pro- ductions of the season. W. Eugene Trace, ' 24, was stage manager for Milestones, and the Ram ' s Head show, while Harvey I L Lytel, ' 24, acted in that capacity for the Junior Opera. Lytel also acted as technical director for the Ram ' s Head show. T. Hume West, ' 25, was stage elec- trician for the entire season ' s pro- ductions. The lighting eft ' ects in Cap ' n Applejack were particularly fine. Arnold B. Bayley handled the properties for Milestones, John A. Dillman, ' 25, for Cap ' n Applejack, ' ' and William A. Clark, ' 25, for Junior Opera. Edward W. Butler Dramatic Manager, October to February Dei.mer L. Daves Drajnatic Manager. Succeed- ing Butler 69 N MM Gordon A. Davis AN OUTLINE OF DRAMATIC HISTORY From the Earliest Proterozoic Ages (Senior Farce, 1 923) To the Present Cenozoic Age (Junior Opera, 1924) By Carl S. Shoup T OOKING back over the vast period covered by the last ' twelve months, the most potent lesson taught in cam]nis dramatics seems to be one of fewer and better shows. There were seven stage offerings from June, 1923, to May. 1924, inclusive, compared with nine during the same period the year before. There is little doubt that on the whole the standard was raised. This was due, partl} , to the return of Gordon Davis after he had received new ideas and experience from a year ' s trip through the Orient. Nevertheless, the fact that The Hotten- tot, student-directed, was a decided success, shows that Davis ' work was far from the sole cause. Evidently there is proceeding on the campus an encouragingly steady, though slow, growth in the talent available. Ranking the shows of the year is a personal-opinion job only ; but for the benefit of those who like comparisons above all else, we here give our idea of how the contestants iinished : First: Captain Applejack ; second: The Hottentot ; third: Milestones. Also ran : So This Is Eden ; The Merchant of Menace ; The Legend of the Laurel ; Androcles and the Lion. THE HOTTENTOT Like the occurrence of legal holidays during summer vacation, or a birthday near Christmas, the senior farce seems always to be one of life ' s little ironies. The best play of the year, and usually the best actors, too, are exhibited at a time when most of the campus is gone. The Hottentot was a laughter-compelling success; and someone might just as well ask the Fates right now why they insist on leaving something like Will Shakespeare out where everybody can see it, and then tuck a gem like The Hottentot away in the murky shadows of senior week. Remember Adam and Eva ? — and Clarence ? They were about high-water mark in their respective seasons, and they were in senior week, too. There seems to be nothing to do about it except abolish senior week. All present at The Hottentot ' had that thrill that comes from realizing one is witnessing the uncovering of a dramatic find — Lloyd Xolan, in his first dramatic part on the campus, being the said find. He played opposite the feminine lead, Helen Whitney, who also did well enough to get a cheer in the papers the next day. Mabel Ferry was the third of the three-star team that kept the audience from looking at its collective watch. Just to show the world what a university can do when it gets really excited, the direction was entirely under student control — A. D. Cohan did a good job of a thankless one. Norris James, Kenneth Chantry, Cecil Morris, a,nd Charles Parks all aided in the general hilarity. ' ' One lesson that The Hottentot teaches is that intelligent play committees can do a world of good. By a little extra effort, the 1923 committee secured a comedy that had been a Xew York hit but recently, and which, furthermore, had not yet been shown extensively on the Pacific coast. Often the committee ' s work is for- gotten by the audience; but if the committee itself forgets it, no work on the part of actors or director can save the situation. 70 ' ■. lii m THE HOTTENTOT: Peggy Fairfax tries to patch things up The merits of The Hottentot are extolled bv one leho thinks he knozvs AN DROL LES : Lavinia tries using the Captain ' s love to sxivy the Emperor Androcles uses his pull with the Lion to sai ' e the Emperor ANDROCLES: Thirty-five actors on the stage at once gire Cordon Davis his chance at mob technique n CAP ' N APPLEJACK: Apphjohn is puzclcd by the villain ' s toy But Applejack feels quite at ease gazing over his muzzle-loader at the mutinous crev) MILESTONES: Rose hears John Rhead ' s earnest avozi ' als of love MILESTONES: Emily Rhead holds eoiirt with tzvo eonflieting generations Youth again triumphs in the Play of Three Ages 72 ANDROCLES AND THE LION We went to Androcles with a noble determination to enjoy it at all costs; for wasn ' t it one of the higher comedies, written by Shaw, and full of pungent satire? Absolutely, you guessed it. The unadulterated comedy stretches of the show made all that forehanded preparation unnecessary; but the lesson for today must have been caught only by the gallery fans, for it certainly went over our head. Whether this was the fault of Shaw, or the cast, or the weather, is merely a question for the senate. It isn ' t a very important question anyway; for, due to the really ku ' e eiTorts of the cast, the audience derived enjoyment from the play, even if it wasn ' t the special kind of enjoyment Shaw was striving for, when he wrote Androcles. For in- stance, Arnold Bayley, in the lion make-up, extracted a laugh every time he wanted to; and Hollis Chalmers had the audience with him from the start. Only two of the seventeen character parts were taken by women — Helen Lewis portraying Lavinia, and Barbara Burks, Megaera. David Mannoccir (Ferrovius) and David Lamson (The Emperor) came next in effectiveness after Chalmers and Bayley. Xorris James had one of the most difficult parts of the show in playing the captain of the guards. A cast totalling forty-five gave Gordon Davis, back after a year ' s absence, plenty of chance to show courage, patience, skill, and strategy. That vital query, What is the hardest play for campus talent to stage? has no definite answer; but the Androcles type reaches the high water mark of difficulty in one sense. It is not as apt to fall flat as is one of the Will Shakespeare or He brand; but the real meaning of the author ' s lines is harder to bring out. Those very facts, however, make a play such as Androcles an admirable one for campus dra- matists to practice on. The audience has a reassuring feeling that boredom is some distance away as yet, and the actors have a high mark at which to shoot in trying to put over the thought behind the words. All this, of course, with the reservation that we had a much better time when seeing Captain Applejack. CAPTAIN APPLEJACK The most enjoyable of the student drama presentations (note that this excludes musical shows) was Captain Applejack. It was good enough to make the audi- ence forget that they were there to pick flaws in campus technique, and anything that makes an audience that forgetful has a great deal of power behind it some- where. Pleasant memories are stirred by the recollection of Ambrose Applejohn, Poppy Faire, Anna aleska, Mr. and Mrs. Pengard, Ivan Borolsky, and the rest of the gentlemen and cut-throats. To those out in front, it appeared a simple play to put over, when compared to Androcles or Milestones. Walter Hackett had lubricated his plot with an easy flow of humor quite suited for interpretation by amateurs. In addition, there was the natural ability displayed by Lloyd Nolan. Without going into any fireworks, we should like to describe his work in this play as the outstanding dramatic perform- ance of the year. The results of the performance were exceedingly happy in another way. Four new stars rose above the dramatic horizon — Lloyd Xolan (already somewhat in the limelight as a result of The Hottentot ), Aileene Burks, Marjorie Allen, and Pa- trice Xauman. Whether or not some of them are only meteors, due for an early fall, rests with the future; but their performance December 7 gave great promise. The most remarkable thing about it all is that here is a production which can be rated the best all ' round presentation of the year; yet it was the only play of the season in which the selection of the cast was limited to one class (sophomore). It I 1:4 ii! n Authors of MERCHANT OF MENACE Carl Shoup, Henry Mack, Mike Ely might well be that if more truly ' ' class plays were staged, more encouragement would be given for hidden dramatic talent to show itself, and the burden of assuming the leads in every play would not fall on the shoulders of a few% as it does now. There are usually five dramas presented during the college year. If three or four of them were class plays in the real sense, and two — or one — unrestricted in selection of cast much more talent might be brought to light. Judging from the sophomore plays of the past few years, the standard of cam- pus dramatics would not suffer. MILESTONES The curtain went up on February 1 on a good old reliable heart-throbbing yon- shall-not-marry-him-Rose-Sibley-I-forbid-it drama, which, after a couple of falter- ings on the backstretch, finally broke the tape exhausted, but a winner. Milestones is the type of play that high schools so often try to put over, with the same uncom- fortable effect as that produced by a college junior writing poetry about the bitter things of life. P ' ortunately, the actors in the present instance were mature enough to clamber above the line that marks the boundary between pain and pleasure for the audience, although the altitude nearly got them at times. The training of Captain Applejack showed in the performance of Marjorie Allen, Aileene Burks, and Patrice Nauman; and two of Androcles pupils — David Lamson and Charles Parks — did their old master proud. Cecil Morris, Wil- liam Thornton, Edythe Baylis, Dorothy Dahler, Philip Urner, Adelaide Kelly, James Rusk, Carlton Byrne, and Wilfred Hunkins were other members of the cast. First prize for effectiveness among the male leads probably goes to David Lam- son, who seemed to have completely convinced himself — and, therefore, the audi- ence — that he was really living in London in 1885 intsead of on the Stanford cam- pus, 1924. Aileene Burks and Marjorie Allen stood out predominantly among the women in the play. Special credit goes to Miss Allen for keeping her poise in the midst of a moron one-ring circus staged by roughs in the gallery, who suddenly hit upon the novel idea that a difficult love scene ' was just the place for a good hearty guffaw. As in Androcles and Captain Applejack, the setting was constructed by the theatre workshop class; the business end was conducted by Ed Butler; the art direction was by Chrysella Dunker; and the electricity was nursed by Hume West. Milestones marked the temporary termination of Gordon Davis ' return to the campus directorship, as during spring qttarter he took out a leave of absence. Davis has had so many words of cheer that he doesn ' t need one here, but this is a good place to say that his presence seems to be a guarantee of steady improvement in Stanford dramatics. THE MERCHANT OF MENACE This being the year of classic revivals. Ram ' s Head could not afford to be left in the rear; and so the campus was given a dose of Shakespeare, slightly tinctured by the interpolation of music, dances, vegetables from the gallery, etc. The charm- ing thing about a Ram ' s Head show is that nobody takes it too seriously, except j)erhai)s some small portion of the audience. Unlike a women ' s pageant, a Ram ' s 74 ' • MERCHAXT 01- MHX.ICE: From north to south, in a straight Hue: Bassanio. Portia.. Mary Miles Mintcr, and Antonio, in earnest consultation Shylock and Taya ' ii.v SO THIS IS EDEN: Parson Hiyyins is shocked and Aunt Abayail delighted at the- ginhounds ' discovery The one and only chorus in Ram ' s Head shoiv- ivhat ' s the use of men anyhow? The Pony chorus: a feic reasons tf iv the house sold out for Junior opera 75 THE LEGEND OF THE LAUREL The old soothsayer of Dclos brings a feather of the sacred Swatt of Apollo as an evil omen to the god Apollo, hoping to allay the fated omen of the Szvan ' s feather, burns it on the altar of fire ' - % i ' - ' Artemis, sister ti .IpoUo. dujifex in appreciation of the nni.sical .■ikill of her brother as he plays in the contest against Pan The Rainbow maidens dance in honor of Apollo after the Dezi: Sprites have been driven off by the Sun 76 Head show generally finds the audience with a concrete idea of what it wants — i. e., laughs. In the main, its success or failure largely depends on the amount of chuckles per capita extracted during the evening. All this psycho-analysis is merely bait leading up to the opinion that The Merchant of Menace was certainly not a fai lure. Further probing reveals the facts that the specialty acts — in particular, a clog affair by Van Deusen and Lippin- cott — received the biggest hand, as they usually do : and that Cuthbert Tibbe, Evert Young, Lloyd Nolan, Charles Simons, Louis Miller, and Irving Anschutz afforded the audience the most enjoyment from the cast. The truest types of the eve- ning were ] lary Miles Minter, as portrayed by Aliller; Sako Tagawa, impersonated by Young; and Shylock, whose true character was bared to the audience by Tibbe. Dick Taylor and Chet Gunther also did yeoman work on the other lead- ing parts. The chorus, due to the fact that it did not act perfectly technically, but did act perfectly carefree, was the source of much innocent merriment. The plot and lyrics were shaped by Northcutt Ely, Henry Mack, and Carl Shoup, and were not considered bad enough to call out the police force. The music was the work of Lewis Alabaster, Ted ' an Deusen, Cference Carey, Earl Glauber, and John Wiggin; and while Irving Berlin was not reported worried, neither was the audience. Harvey Lytel was technical director, and W. E. Trace, stage manager. Special mention must go to Delmer Daves for the successful way in which he handled the show from the business end, it being his first attempt in his new job. ' ' ' liimigMri«Mt«(irtfiiinimM« George W. Thompson Author of SO THIS IS EDEN THE LEGEND OF THE LAUREL Passing judgment on a women ' s pageant at the present is somewhat like giving a final decision on the value of a good-looking infant. In both cases, it is the future that counts. The Legend of the Laurel was the second attempt of its kind ever made at Stanford; ' The Crowning of Randalin, two years ago, being the first of the series. It is evident that this pageant business is still in its childhood. How much its effec- tiveness will grow in the future depends largely on how closely its producers adhere to simplicity of theme in plot and power of color in setting and costumes. Probably the most striking thing about this year ' s pageant was the oftentimes brilliant group efifect, given value by colorful costumes and harmonious background. It is doubtful if any individual performances stood out well enough to attract great attention, although Velma Randall carried the lead with refreshing simplicity and grace; while Anna McAnear, Carolan Strouse, Gertrude Byler and ] Iarjorie Allen likewise did well. To one who watched the bewildering maze of actresses come on and off the greensward without colliding with each other, it appears that the lion ' s share of the credit for the whole thing must go to Edythe Baylis, the director. The University orchestra ' s musical program added greatly to the effectiveness of the presentation. To an outsider looking on, the pageant seems by far the most difficult of all the campus dramatic efiforts. How in the world to write an intelligible plot without using any lines — not even stage signs such as This Is Greece or End oi Act Two — is a mystery to us, and we dofT our hat to Evelyn Brownell for the intelli- 77 Evelyn B. Browxell Author of LEGEND OF THE LAUREL gent job she made of it. ]n short, future pageants will have to be the result of a huge amount of work if The Legend of the Laurel is to be surpassed; but that work must, of course, be forthcoming if the pageant idea is to succeed. If it stays always at the present level, the would-be audience will know exactly what to expect, and will, in time, stay at home. But the enthusiasm and effort shown by the women this year under the leadership of Helen Greene augurs well for the future. SO THIS IS EDEN! McNamara passed the jug to McCoy ; two elderly gentle- men in the rear of the audience rose and left hurriedly, with bowed heads. Outside, we interviewed them. Why did you leave so abruptly? Too life-like, too life-like, sobbed the tallest, brokenly. Made me homesick first time twelve years, muttered the other. Delicately we withdrew. The above true story is related to illustrate one of the outstanding virtues of So This Is Eden! The show seemed real. For the first time in many years, the plot and char- acter action, rather than the music, were the mainstay of the opera. Credit for this goes to George Thompson, who upset precedent in writing a Junior opera by hav- ing no co-author. One of the most encouraging features of the performance was the promise it gave for an exceptionally bright future on the Stanford stage. Lloyd Xolan, Aileene Burks, Marjorie Allen, and Delmer Daves are a group of sophomores that will probably raise campus dramatics to a new level if they keep on developing as they have this year. Charles Simons and Sidney Lewis, the two detectives, are freshmen who will also be great assets as soon as they realize the dangers of over- acting. Now, if Mabel Ferry and Hollis Chalmers (who, by the way, were the hits of the show) were only freshmen, too ! Helen Broughall and David Mannoccir forcibly portrayed the troubles of a bootlegger ' s family; Murray Ward and Llewellyn Forrest gnashed their respective teeth at each other with gusto ; and Wayne Clark did butler service quite acceptably. If distribution of praise were done on the basis of reward for work, each mem- ber of the three choruses wovild get a full-page write-up in this dramatic section. Repeated applause from the audience proved the success of the dancers ' efforts. Speaking of dancing. Van Deusen and Lippincott haven ' t outworn the campus wel- come to their clog-dancing. Ask anyone that saw the Woolworth Lurch. There was no one piece of music that stood out above its fellows. Mah Jongg, by Al Loewenstein, and Celestina, by Alice Dodds, probably led the list. Kenneth Hess, John Wiggin, Gene White, James Snell, Clarence Carey, and Lewis Alabaster were responsible for the rest of the music. Cranston Stroup and Margaret Cosgrave helped in the lyric writing. Distinguished service crosses also go to : Gene Trago, who, in addition to directing the show, stepped in one day be- fore the performance and took the place of a chorus man who had inadvertently developed measles ; Harvey Lytel, stage manager extraordinary ; Lewis Alabaster, who labored long and successfully on the music ; Eileen Eyre, chorus director ; and Chrysella Dunker and Leslie Kiler, for designing the sets. The opera was a record-breaker in one respect — i. e., financially. Under the management of Delmer Daves, a total of $2,300 was received from the cash cus- tomers. This whipped all previous money marks for campus shows by $280. Increasing patronage means more money, and more money means better shows. 78 Warren D. Allen Director of the Glee Club MUSIC GLEE CLUB CONCERTS A WEEK of performances in Los Angeles marked ' ' the climax of a successful year for the Stanford Glee club. Between November and April the club gave some twenty-five concerts, going from Chico in the north to Los Angeles in the south. The southern trip was the outstanding feature of the schedule. The club, sixty voices strong, left March 22, bound for Bakersfield. There they took a leading part in the ceremonies at which Bakersfield high school was awarded the silver model of the Stanford Stadium. Bakersfield was given the trophy for hav- ing three times won the state football championship. On Monday, March 24, the club reached Los Angeles, and began their series of concerts at Cocoa- nut Grove in the Ambassador hotel. They remained there through Saturday, March 29, appearing every evening as the main attraction. Friday, March 28, was Stanford night at the Ambassador, and the club sang before a crowd of Cardinal supporters. While their evenings were spent at the Ambassador, the Stanford singers gave a number of other concerts. They appeared before Lincoln and Hollywood high schools and also gave numbers at luncheons of the Rotary, City, and University clubs. A northern trip was taken during the Thanksgiving recess. Thanksgiving Day the club sang at Marysville high school, and the next day appeared at Colusa. Con- certs were given in Chico at the State Teachers ' college and the Methodist-Episcopal church. The new auditorium at Galileo high school, San Francisco, was dedicated Feb- ruary 29, by a Glee club concert. The home concert was given March 7. The assembly hall was packed for the afifair. During the year, the club has been assisted by various soloists. Principal among these was Martin A. D ' Andrea, ' 25, who appeared on nearly every program. D ' Andrea, a tenor, gave both sacred numbers and Neapolitan folk-songs. Charles C. Stratton, ' 26, baritone, appeared several times, accompanied by the club. The instrumental soloists were C. Bolton White, ' 27, violinist, and Malcolm Davison, ' 25, ' celHst. Warren D. Allen, Stanford University organist, directed the club in its home concert and during rehearsals. On the southern trip, most of the concerts were directed by R. W ' illis-Porter, club accompanist. The big hit of the season was Arnold B. Bayley ' s Radio Robot. As the Robot, Bayley gave all his most popular imitations and many new ones. He was assisted by David A. Lamson, ' 25, as barker. A double quartette of Glee club members appeared several times. They sang, April 9, before the Interfraternity Alumni association of California, and before the San Jose Alumni association April 15. The quartette also aided and abetted Charles K. Field, ' 95, in the assembly preceding the Big Meet. The evening of April 26, they sang old time Stanford songs as part of the program given at the Alumni banquet in the Basketball pavilion at the close of University day. On May 9, the Glee club gave a concert in Harmon gymnasium with a varied program of classical and popular songs, to which all the school children of Berkeley were invited. 79 liRli n I u k n I V ' i ' H ! nr f-r r ! :;l Back row: Hansell, Boren, Van Druten, Weaver, Deffebach, Hoi-lembeak, McIntyre, McCook, Wells Third row; Magee, McClellan, Warrington, Martins, Zieber, Bayley, Price, Olsen Second row: Sand, Tempel, Kulmann, Dobbins, Taylor, Clark, Evans, Rinn, Dobson, Goldwater First row: Thompson, Brooks, Bye, Daves, Hammond, Laughlin, Badham, Fay, Niemann, Burress STANFORD GLEE CLUB President Maxa(;er Vice-President Assistant Manager Librarian Assistant Director Arnold Blakeman Baylev Donald C. Brooks Byron Jack Badham Orion Fred Clark Herbert Sidney Laughlin George Irwin Anderson Charles E. Beardslev William B. Brown Sigurd Edward Bye Thomas Allen Campbell Martin Angelo D ' Andrea OFFICERS Herbert Sidne y Laughlin Charles Edward Beardsley Samuel Hardin Mendenhall Byron Jack Badham WiLBERT John Hammond R. Willis- Porter MEMBERS Xhictcen Hundred and Tzt ' enty Zenas Howland Taylor Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Harold Sheerer Spaulding Clarence Eugene Weaver Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Frank L. Fenton C. Albert Kulmann Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Samuel Hardin Mendenhall Glenn H. McIntyre Cecil M. Morris Nineteen Hundred and Txventy-Fivc Jerome Loyal Devoto Tarance Smith Magee WiLBERT John Hammond Samuel M. Martins Christian W. Niemann Burton Avery Noble Daniel Minter Olsen Henry B. Price, Jr. Theodore Malvin Matson Robert Sinclair Murray Joseph Yuzuru Sano William Edward Tempel George Howard Wilson Winston C. Black Raitt Stanford Boren Delmer Lawrence Daves Elvan Amos Hansell Hugh Ryan Hollembeak Wilfred R. Hunkins David Albert Lamson Henry James Willis Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Lewis T. Dobbins Richard M. Goldwater Leonard Garrard Dobson Rupert Francis McCook Charles Orrick Evans Charles Hawley Sumner Robert Henry Rinn Raymond L. Spangler Horace F verett Swing Philip Summerfield Urner Arthur A. Van Druten PIdward E. Wells, Jr. John Dekfebach, Jr. Phillips Gardner Brooks Albert Anderson Brouse Harold Drown Burress Sheldon Paige Fay Kenneth Wade Thompson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Carlton Earley Byrne Wilfrid L. Davis Leslie Edwin Dobbins Louis Billings Lundborg Walter Pernau Walsh Peirce Edmund WARRINGTO Glenn Everett Whitfield Thomas Lane McClellan Donald Hooper McKee Fred Henry Zieber 80 Back row: Toll, Brown, Brennan, Nelson, IIknderson, Overfelt, Boeseke, Director Willis-Porter Second row: Dressor, Jameson, Harter, Lawrence, Adams, Olsen, Hall, Curtner First row: McCracken, Manchee, Gooden, Friebel, Davidson, Hyde, Lasater SCHUBERT CLUB President Secretary-Treasurer Librarian Director Doris Irene Harter, ' 25 Helen Elizabeth Xelson, ' 23 Esther Eggers Brown, ' 24 R. Willis-Porter , Dorothy Louise Clark MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Txventy-Threc Marjorie K. McDonald Helen Elizabeth Nelson Louise M. Wilber RouiE Alice Best Mary Madeline Brennan Esther Eggers Brown Helen P. Davidson Xinetcen Hundred and Tzcenty-Four Margaret Irene Dressor Carol Elizabeth Hyde Ruth Avis Jameson lOLET IRGINIA KnOWLES Alice Evelyn Lundberg Adele Mary Newcomer Dorothy Louise Overfelt Helen Katherine Schardin Ruth Dickinson Ackley Jane Elizabeth Adams Joanna Maria Anderson Alberta Curtner Xineteen Hundred and Tii. ' enly-Fii ' e Dorothy Curtner Dorothy Inez Dahler Mildred S. Hall Doris Irene Harter Virginia June Henderson Blanche Davis Hicks Carol Klink Carol Lasater Dorotha Rutter Pollock f . Felecita Elisa Boeseke Helen Mae Friebel Juanita Kathryn Gross Carolyn Frances Gooden Xineteen Hundred and Tzk.-enty-Si.v Pauline May Hoffmann Frances Lawrence Catherine Lawshe McVey Harriet Elizabeth Oliver Muriel Dorothy Saxon- Marian Louise Toll Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Sez ' en. Margaret Elizabeth McCracken Marie Manchee Margaret Elizabeth Olsen III-: 81 Back row: Wilson, King, Laughlin, Allen, Spaulding, Clark, Daves, Hunkins, Moody, Garrison, Thompson, Prince, Zieber lilLLER Third row: A. McV ' ey, Herz, Brooks, Kulmann, Harter, F. Shepherd, Webster, Burlingame, Parker, Dobson, Hammond, Ropes, Evans, Harding Second row: D ' Andrea, Olsen, Williams, Friebel, Jameson, Brailsford, McCracken, Wilber, Estabrook, Adams, Toll, Stich- TER, C. McV ' ey, Badham First row: Murray, Schall, Darling, Simonton, Foster, Kirkbride, Lofland, Newcomer, Pollock, N. Shepherd, Stucky, Mac- Nair, McCook, Dillman STANFORD UNIVERSITY CHOIR Warren D. Allen, Director MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-One Everett Kingsley Mohr Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Archibald Peet McVey Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Charles Albert Kulmann Nineteen Hundred and T venty-Four Winifred Frances Estabrook Wileert John Hammond Raymond Earle Hiller Ruth Avis Jameson Edward Dimmick King Herbert Sidney Laughlin Donald C. Brooks Jane Elizabeth Adams Byron Jack Badham Arnold Blakeman Bayley Orion Fred Clark John A. Dillman Leonard Garrard Dobson Robert Sinclair Murray Warren Glenn Moody Cecil Martin Morris Mary Adele Newcomer Dorothy Jean Simonton Alice Myrmida Smith Harold Sheerer Spaulding Cuthbert Jack Tibbe Alice Ellen Wilber Beatrice L. Brailsford Velva Gertrude Darling Frances Belden Foster Helen Mae Friebel M. Ruth Stucky Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five Doris Irene Harter Wilfred Romayne Hunkins Helen D. MacNair Daniel Minter Olsen Elizabeth Parker Dorotha Rutter Pollock Frances Elizabe th Shepherd Genevieve Susan Stichter Albert Wilson Martin ANctxo D ' Andrea Delmer Lawrence Daves John Deffebach, Jr. Charles Orrick Evans Lucile Anna Burlingame R, Charmion Cotton Audrey Martha Kirkbride Louis Billings Lundborg Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v LoN A, Garrison Frederic Warner Harding LuDWiG Ernest Herz Evelyn Lofland Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Seven Margaret E. McCracken David Treadway Prince Richard Walter Ropes Myron Reed Schall Rupert Francis McCook Catherine L. McVey Kexneth Wade Thompson Marian Louise Toll Nellie Louise Shepherd Dorothy Elizabeth Webster Eva Mae Williams Fred Henry Zieber 82 ELWYN BUOC.L MEBIBFJM CAMtKON MACTIN DANDCEA MAGNU5 GSEeERSEN CAKU... nvUE CAEOL LASATER LYDIA MUREAY LOIS OLMSTED ELIZABETH PEIWCE LJELLA k ' ACkLiFF THE STANFORD MUSIC CLUB President • Secretary Treasurer Meribeth MEMBERS Elliott Cameron Elizabeth Peirce Malcolm Davison . Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Tzvo ■i) Hi DoNuiL Marshall HlLLIS i uTH Anna Langer Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three 1 i k3! Clarence Irvin Burnett John Richard Magnus Ingstrup Gregersen Marjorie McDonald j Malady M. Louise Wilber j Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four ii V ) i Eljah Barricklow Perry Arthur Bonar Elwyn Baidon Bugge Malcolm Davison Dorothy Lucille Forch Florence Thompson Fredrick Sidney William Hawkins Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five Carol Elizabeth Hyde ' Elizabeth Peirce Luella Marie Rackliff i rij Joanna Maria Anderson Meribeth Elliott Cameron Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Martin Ancelo D ' Andrea 1 Carol Lasater Lydia Murray Lois May Olmsted 83 STANFORD UNIVERSITY BAND Founded 1893 Director Ernest Whitney Martin BOARD OF BAND President Vice-President Manager Assistant Manager Librarian Ex Officio Ex Officio Solo Cornels Harry Jack Edwards, ' 23 John M. Willits, ' 25 Maywood L. Brockwav, ' 26 Wesley DeLa Evans, ' 27 First Cornets John Allen Bradley, ' 26 Arthur Garth Nevins, ' 26 CONTROL John M. Willits James Henry Rusk Claude Albert Bryner George Thomas Kearns Donald K. Harger Ernest Whitney Martin Paul Herbert Davis MEMBERS Second Cornets Ervin Hicks Bra m hall, ' 26 Harold Dreher Towers, ' 27 Third Cornet George Garner Green, ' 27 First Trombones Fred Raymond Ingram. ' 25 Rene L. Rothschild. ' 25 Bill Barbee, ' 27 Seond Trombones Robert Henry Geisler, ' 27 George Dewitt Line, ' 27 Horns Samuel R. Dows, ' 23 Ivan Monroe Redeker. ' Z3 Earl Ramey, ' 25 Edward Neisser, ' 26 William Gottschalk. Jr.. ' 26 Carlton Farley Byrne, ' 27 Ernest Whitney Martin Director 84 Snare Drums Horace Burgess Allison, ' 25 Mahlon Daniel McPherson, ' 25 Bass Drum Theodore K. Sawyer. ' 24 Cymbals Ernest King Bramblett, ' 24 Solo Clarinets Clarence H. Dawson, ' 24 Donald K. Harger, ' 25 Raymond L. Spangler, ' 25 Charles Elliot Parson, ' 26 F ' rst Clarinets George Thomas Kearns, ' 25 Gf;orge Cecil Philip, ' 27 Second Clarinets Lewis Reese, Jr.. ' 24 Ioseph Yuzuru Sano, ' 24 Third Clarinets Ralph Earl Barby, ' 24 George Sydney Heller ' £ ' Flat Clarinet C. A. KULMANN, ' 22 Baritones James Henry Rusk, ' 24 Spencer Monroe Munson, Jr., ' 24 Basses Claude Albert Bryner. ' 23 David W. C. Harris, ' 24 Don De Blois Perham, ' 24 Saxofhoncs William Clarence Carey. ' 25 Adelbert Hale Dinsmoor. ' 26 John Woodhull Clark, ' 27 Norman Winfifld Cotton. ' 27 Lloyd Edwin Wildberg, ' 27 i-.-l; IH The Press Build ' unj at Night JOURNALISM HE coming to Stanford - ' • of Buford (). Brown as assistant professor of journalism this year marked in son:e ways the most significant step forward in the training of students for the profession that w-e have been able to make here since we started to work in a small way, fourteen years ago, declared Professor Everett W. Smith, head of the journalism division. The small city and country newspapers in the growing west offer wonderful opportunities for influence and leadership. Professor Brown is remarkably fitted to instruct in that field, since he has had successful experience both as practical manager of small city publications and as a college teacher. His joining our forces at Stanford fulfills an ambition that I have had for a long time. Professor Brown is a graduate of the University of Missouri, successively manager of three small papers in Texas, instructor in advertising and newspaper management at the University of Texas, and manager of the Electra News, Texas. He takes the place of Paul H. Clyde, instructor, who resigned to complete his work for a doctor ' s degree in history. The division confines its activities to class work, the various campus publications running independently. There is, however, a very close cooperation between these editors and the two faculty members. Conferences are held to thrash out difificult problems, but always at the initiative of the students. Formerly an active newspaper man. Professor Smith is able, through his touch with official university circles, to see that students acting as correspondents to off- cam])us papers get such advance information as is of value. He is, in efifect. the head of the publicity bureau. It is interesting to note that practically all of the men and women graduating from the division enter the field of professional jour- nalism. Tn choice of ])rofession. and in the many other problems which confront student jotu-nalists. Professor Smith has ])roved an invaluable aid. His insight into the problems of mod- ern journalism and study of their solution, and his presentation of the difficulties and hardships, as w-ell as t h e interesting and alluring side of the newspaper man ' s life, has helped many to p r e p a r e themselves more wisely for the profession. PLvERETT W. Smith Head of the Division of Journalism Buford O. Brown Assistant Professor of Journalism 85 Spring Sports Edition TOtjmlgJ pa faHate Spring Sports Edition EDITOR. FIRST TERM PHILIP NEWILL y lEDITOR SECONDTERMf] ml DONALD LIESEMDOR.FEB.J DAILY PALO ALTO STAFF Philip Newill Robert H. Edwards, Jr. Donald E. Liebendorfer R. Bradley Riter William L. Wright Harold B. Rorke Allan E. Charles Miriam Hilton John M. Marble Mildred D. Dannenbaum Howard S. Bissell David C. Meiklejohn Raymond L. Spangler Katherine F. Capell Wallace W. Knox Mary Baker Helen E. Nelson Donald G. Adams Esther F. Greenacre Donald E. Liebendorfer R. Bradley Riter William L, Wright Howard S. Bissell Mildred D. Dannenbaum John M. Marble Harold B. Rorke Katherine F. Capell David C. Meiklejohn Wallace W. Knox Mary Baker Raymond L. Spangler Beatrice E. Flesher Don C. Hines Allene W. Thorpe ?Zsther F. Greenacre Donald G. Adams Barbara Miller Bertrand a. Andrews Cecil I. Haley Rene L. Rothschild Lee H. Rogers Cecil L. True Harold G. King Henry C. Lamb Paul Bissinger David A. Borwick Robert H. Cummings EDIT0RL L STAFF FIRST TERM NEWS EDITORS NEWS STAFF Kenneth W. Hess A. Grove Day Beatrice E. Flesher Don C. Hines Aileen L. Hicks James C. Muir Ross A. Urquhart Douglas W. Meservey SECOND TERM NEWS EDITORS Editor Associate Editor Managing Editor Campus Sports Assemblies Dramatics Feature Section Faculty Woman ' s Athletics Exchanges Allene W. Thorpe Mary V. Dugan Marjorie S. Allen Grace Judd Paul H. Wayte Bertrand A. Andrews Marjorie E. Morehead Alfred B. Post, Jr. Editor Associate Editor Managing Editor Sporting Editor Woman ' s Editor Assemblies Dramatics Campus Exchanges Assistant Sporting Editor Proof Feature Section 86 NEWS STAFF Kenneth W. Hess Marjorie S. Allen Grace Judd Helen M. Knight Douglas W. Meservey Eleanor B. Klauber Helen E. Nelson Paul H. Wayte Ross A. Urquhart Alfred B. Post r , Marjorie E. Morehead Theodore C. Achilles W ILLIAM j.K enney BUSINESS STAFF Btisiness Manager Assistant Manager L ocal Advertising Maniager San Francisco Advertising Manager M erchandising Manager Circulation Manager BUSINESS BOARD Frank C. Dice Spenser S. Shattuck Victor P. Greisser Allene W. Thorpe James A. Habegger Eugene K. Walker Andrew A. Roberts ■. EDITORIAL STAFF Back row: Hess, Charles, Knox, Wright, Meservev, Urquhart. Kiter, Adams. Spangler, Liebendorfer Second row: Duncan, Miller. Allen, Hicks, Thorpe, Nelson, Baker, Hilton, Capell, Dannenbaum, Flesher, Greenacre First row: Newill, Edwards, Marble, Shoup, Bissell, Meiklejohn DAILY PALO ALTO ' OMBIXIXG the missions of a purveyor of collegiate news and a general training school in journalism, the Daily Palo Alto occupies the position of a classroom in which the grades must necessarily be well-nigh perfect. A staff of about sixty, headed by an editor and a business manager, puts out a four-page, six-column paper five days a week, and by seniority and merit the cubs — some of them — eventually rise to positions of great responsibility and trust. The editor, who is elected by his staff, formulates the policy and exercises general super- vision over all departments. The business manager has complete charge over his staff, and is answerable only to the editor. Then come the managing and associate editors, who are given training in executive and mechanical work in preparation for the position of editor. The wom- en ' s editor has partial charge of the women reporters, and edi ts the annual spring women ' s edition. Continuing down the mast-head comes the sporting editor, whose department handles by far the greatest volume of news of any in the paper, and campus, feature, dramatic, exchange, and other departmental executives. These men and women combine the work of putting out the paper with the actual administration of the reporters under their charge, and are, also, under observation for promotion. The business staff handle the financial end of the Daily; securing advertisements and soliciting off-campus subscriptions. They also distribute the Daily and mail exchange copies to man ' universities in the United States and Canada. Xew members gain place on either the edi- torial or business staff only after a successful tryout period. The chosen cubs then show their gratitude by setting the veterans up to a banquet. By way of return courtesy, the em- bryo journalists are later initiated into the .Afternoon club, official recreational society of the Dail . BUSINESS ST.VFF Back row: Walker, Shattuck, Habegger Second row: Trte, Lamb, Greisser, Borwick First row: Rothschild. King, Haley, Rogers, Bissisger 87 STANFORD CHAPAOOAL COLP lfMA JESTER NUMDER CHAPARRAL By C. S. S. The college year of Our Lord 1923-1924 has provided good things for Chaparral and its sponsoring society, Hammer and Coffin. Two events stand out especially prominent. They are: (1) The combined issue of the Stanford Chaparral and the Columbia Jester — a species of hands-across-the-continent effort which, though entailing much preparation and labor, was clearly worth all of it. Chappie and the Jester each shipped to the other sixteen electrotyped pages, and the rest was child ' s play. (2) Two more Hammer and Coffin societies were in- stalled during the year — one at the University of Chicago (yes, in Illinois), and the other across the slough at California. The credit for all this goes to Northcutt Ely, serving his second year as editor, and to Jim Bullock, who has kept an eagle eye on the cur- rency. All the Chappies agree in voting them the laurel wreath or whatever it is that goes with success. -li XoKTHcuTT Ely liditor-iu-Chief The Chappies G K ORG E T H O M PSO N Art Editor J. MES Bullock Business Director . rthur Br. gg R. LPH Cowing David Lam,son Associate Editors Henry Mack Philip Newill Harold Rorke William W ' uicht Lee Sandberg Carl Shoup Arthur Tovvnsend Howard Clark Kenneth Eerguson Associate Art Editors Harry Kennedy Juilliard McDon. ld John McHose Theodore Van Deusen Janice Dunker Honorary Eliz.mieth Ropkk Della Taylor ' t 1 ' 88 SPECTATOR Stanford Spectator, formed by the com- bination of the Stanford Cardinal and Pic- torial in February, 1923, under the joint man- agement of Sigma Delta Chi and English club, has devoted most of the present year to the formulation of a sound financial and a sound editorial policy. Handicapped in the former by the debts incurred by its predecessors, Sf cc- tator has naturally taken a conservative tone in the field of editorial, as well as financial, policy. The editorial policy laid down at the beginning of the year, and followed as well as funds would permit, is to give to every form of student literary ambition a proper field in which to expand — a place to blossom under the public eye. For the young short story writer, for the young feature article journal- ist, for the camera fan and the cartoonist, for the poet or the essayist. Spectator provides a field. That the field has been narrowed this year is unfortunate ; it is hoped that sound finan- cial plans will soon remedy this situation. EDITOR l {. HENRY MACK -. DI JANUARY . IV-t -iWANAGER, , HENRY HELSER. 1 Hexry C. M.xck Byron R. Reixemuxd Webster F. Street Edward D. Lax dels Douglas S. Aiken Bl ' rnham p. Beckwith EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL BOARD Carl Wilhelmson STAFF Editor Associate Editor Book Rcfieics HfeXRV C. M. CK Fred C. Sauer Arthur ' ild BUSINESS STAFF J. Hexrv Helser John H. Schacht, Jr. Lawrence S. Wheate Leslie P. Hertii Business Manager Assistant Manager Staff Illustrator Circulation Manager ASSISTANTS W. Elrov Averv Robert L. Grutz.macher 89 ILLUSTRATED REVIEW The Stanford Illustrated Review has main- tained its high level of excellence and is recog- nized as one of the best alnmni magazines of the country. As its name indicates, the Review attempts to furnish an illustrated account of Stanford affairs and matters of especial interest to Stanford people. Its articles deal with changes or developments in university admin- istration and policy ; with the progress of building and campus improvements ; and with the achievements and affairs of Stanford men and women, trustees, faculty, alumni and un- dergraduates. Its personal news of the alumni has filled several pages each month. The Review has served as an efficient tie for knitting the close relations which exist between the alumni and the university. This year the Review has issued about 3,500 copies each month. It is owned by the Alumni association. Paul H. Clyde, ' 20, editor for three years, was this year succeeded by May Hurlburt Smith, 02, EDITORIAL STAFF May Hurlburt Smith, ' 02 Joii.v Ezra McDowell, ' 00 Editor Business Manager % ALL ' MXI BOARD OF EDITORS Alice W. Kimb. ll, ' 04 Edith R. Mirrielees. ' 07 Georce Morell, ' 09 Mildred H.wes Roth, ' 11 VV. B. Owens, ' 14 Elinor Cogswell, ' 16 W.arren p. Staniford, 16 Paul H. Clyde, ' 20 M.vrian a. Trist, ' 21 mA 90 QUAD A change in the page size of the Quad and the developing of a plan of staff reorgani- zation have been the outstanding features of the policy of this year ' s management. The plan of reorganization, based upon a scheme first suggested by Carl S. Shoup and Charles B. White of the 1924 Quad, is embodied in an amendment which was presented to the stu- dent body in the spring election. The nfew ])lan calls for the publishing of the Qu. d by the student body instead of by the junior class, and the appointment of the editor and manager by a Board of Control in place of their elec- tion by the class. Under the new system the editor and manager, although selected at the end of the sophomore year, will not direct the management of the annual until the senior year. The change in page size, which is in har- mony with similar changes which are being made quite generally by college annuals, aims at greater variety in layout, more artistic design, economy in printing and engraving, and the elimination of certain binding difficulties. John B. Irwin, Jr. Donald C. McKay Manager Editor EDITORIAL STAFF John Hall Lillian F. Bidwell Elizabeth H. Roper Leon T. D.vvid William L. Wright David A. Lamson John M. Marble Assistant Editor Associate Editor Clubs Athletics Revelation Revelation A Stanford Year Gale C. Griswold Robert D. Boynton Helen K. Broughall Anna T. Fitzhugh Kenneth L. Ferguson Mary C. Chaney Mary Baker IMeribeth E. Cameron Carol Klink Photography, Administration ' R. 0. T. C. MANAGERIAL STAFF William A. Clark Assistant Manager Grace Judd EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS, 1926 Organisations Junior History Art The Year IV omen ' s Athletics Living Groups Living Groups Robert J. Triest Marjorie S. Allen Leon B. Brown Delmer L. Daves Margaret C. Dietrich Cecile M. Feusier Richard M. Goldwater Jack W. Hardy Aileen L. Hicks Basil L. McGann Helen E. Nelson Allene W. Thorpe Frances R. Vaughan Dorothy D. Verbarg Byron D. Williams Norma K. Wright I IANAGERIAL ASSISTANTS, 1926 Margaret E. Cosgrave Helen M. Erskine William I. Fitzhugh Raymond M. Kay David L. King Eleanor B. Kl. ui!er Marie E. Largey F. Lowell Matthay Enid D. Root Doris C. Swayze m n ' I ' ll 91 mmJwlWI MMfSMS H IB II HERE AND THERE WITH THE JOURNALISTS it--) |f r !(? Daily staff meets for a session of the Afternoon club Sam McDonald is barbecue host % :: ; C ' oiirriilidii delegates are guests at barbecue A group of the Chappie business staff ail ■ttefeiate- tt( ■•• MC ANO ALUll REONION lOiRROW ni FHHMI lun to MB H unusncum m DOTE FAVWS mm 10 mm mm m «« «• « «, « f jieik foin tass ' Kfai T.At- mmiBf UIBKill t«.ia— ini,«-as v4 banquet in the new Union zvas a feature of the State High School Journalists ' convention Pacsiniilc of the tzvehe-pa e Daily edition of April 25, the largest in its history Convention barbecue; high school journalists luive eager appetites after three hours of round table workout 94 J. G. Kmkrsox Debating Coach Robert M. C. Littler Joffre Medal Winner DEBATE Oxford university will send a de- bating team to meet Stanford at Palo Alto or San Francisco next winter, according to plans announced from the office of Robert I I. C. Littler, ' 25, debating manager, who succeeded Robert E. Lewis in ] Iarch. This de- bate will be perhaps the most impor- tant forensic event in the history of Stanford. Stanford debaters have just com- ])leted the second of two particularly successful seasons. Last year Stan- ford won ten out of eleven contests. This year Stanford defeated Cali- fornia in the Joffre and freshman de- bates, won the Triangular debate with California and the College of the Pacific, and took second honors in both the Triangular debate wath the University of California and the University of Southern California, and the Tri-State debate. Professor Emerson is largely responsible for the recent success of Stanford debaters. Com- ing to Stanford in 1921, he has developed teams which more than hold their own against the foremost collegiate debaters on the coast. Professor Emerson w-as elected president of the Pacific Coast Public Speaking conference at Eugene, Oregon, on November 16, 1923. The conference will meet at Stanford next fall. Stanford chances to take laurels on the platform next year are good. Although Thomas A. Bailey, ' 24, Bertram W. Levit, ' 24, Robert E. Lewis, ' 23, and Percival L V. Spencer, ' 25, will not be eligible, they can participate in the Oxford debate. The remaining varsity debaters, Stanley A. Weigel, ' 26, A. Ronald Button, ' 25, George N. Crocker, ' 26, and Robert Littler, will add much to the team ' s strength. Littler won the Joflfre debate against California on April 9. Previouslv, on November 16, 1923, he took second to Ned Lewis, University of California, in the Coast Extemporaneous contest, held at Eugene, Oregon. Littler ' s topic was The Future of Criminal Syndicalism Laws. The freshmen won from California, April 12, on the question: Resolved, that the United States should immediately recognize the Russian government. The affirmative was upheld by Raymond R. Bruce, Theodore F. Baer, Llovd L, Sul- livan. C. Craven Scott, Harold W. Peterson, and Rex W. Kramer defended the negative side of the question. This is the second winning freshman team to be coached by Bertram W. Levit. On April 17, Phi Delta Phi won the second consecutive victory from Phi Alpha Delta in the annual legal debate between the two societies. Arthur H. Kent, ' 17, recently elected president of the Law School association, and P. Eugene Glenn. ' 23, represented the former ; while the Phi Alpha Delta representatives were Joseph C. Prior, ' 23, and Edward D. Landels, ' 22. The subject of the debate concerned a case involving the nature of the wife ' s interest in community property under Cali- fornia law of 1917. Nestoria debating society won from Euphronia in their twenty-fifth annual de- bate on May 7. The winning team, Vicor H. Harding, ' 26. and B. Emmet McCaffery, ' 24, upheld the negative side of the question: Resolved, that the Senate should immediately pass the Mellon tax bill. They were opposed by Bertram Levit and Richard L. Jenkins, ' 25. 95 j ,h •. Ill i ;- ! ;- ' t i; IS W ' eigel, Bailey, Lk it, Litti.kr TRI-DEBATE Stanford debaters won from California and lost to the Uni- versity of Southern California in the annual Triangular debate held at Stanford, Berkeley, and Los Angeles on November 8. The University of Southern Cal- ifornia carried ofif the honors by the victory of her afifirmative team over California at Berkeley, 320 to 300, and the defeat of Stanford, 190 to 97, at the hands of her negative team at l os Angeles. The simultaneous debate, in- augurated last year, when it ended in a tri])le tie, was this year stibjected to an innovation; that of having the audience render the decision. The question was an interesting one, Resolved: that the California criminal syndicalism law shotild be repealed. ' Th s law makes the advocacy of revolution a criminal act. By getting out among the c ' ass of people with whom the law is con- cerned, the members of the debatmg team carried on an interesting as well as fruitful research. Stanley A. Weigel, ' 26, and Thomas A. Bailey, ' 24, remained on the campus to uphold the affirmative, winning 183 to 18, while the negative team, composed of Robert M. C. Littler, ' 23, and Bertram W. Levit, ' 24, lost in the south by a vote of 190 to 97. The speeches of the Stanford debating team will be published in the Debaters ' Handbook for 1923-24, which contains ten representative debates selected from university contests throughout the United States. TRI-STATE DEBATE Stanford took second place in the annual Tri-State debate, held on March 6, winning a two-to- one decision from the University of Oregon at Palo Alto and los- ing a similar decision to the Uni- versity of Yashington at Seattle. This debate was won by Stan- ford for the first time in her his- tory last year, when both Washington and Oregon were defeated by Cardinal teams. All contests this year were close, no tmanimous decision being given even to the winning team, the University of Washington, which defeated the University of Oregon at Eugene. George N. Crocker, ' 26, and Percival I. V. Spencer, ' 25, met the Oregon team in the Little Theatre, upholding the affirmative side of the question, Resolved: that the United States should enter the World Court, while Robert E. Lewis, ' 23, and A. Ronald Button, ' 25, went north and, after a hard fight, lost to Washington. The affirmative team had won on the same question from the California Institute of Technology at Redwood City a few nights before. They urged American en- trance into the tribunal for two reasons : that such a step would be a natural outgrowth of our past international policy, and that it was necessary for the reali- zation of American aims in international affairs. The Stanford negative team ])ointed out that United States partici])ation would involve America in a direct relationshi]) with the League of Nations and that the World Court possessed in- herent weaknesses. 96 Crocker, Button, Lewis, Spencer McCafff.ry (alternate), IUiley, Jknkins (alternate), Weigel, Littler JOFFRE DEBATE STANFORD won the Joffre debate for the third consecutive time in as many years, when Robert M. C. J.ittler, ' 25 gave what was considered l)y the judges the best extemporaneous speech ever given in an intercollegiate debate on the coast. The debate was held at Berkeley, April 9. Littler upheld the negative side of the question: Resolved, that the Present French Alliances are a Menac-e to the World. He maintained that any nation which joins forces with other nations to protect itself from obvious danger when there is no other means of protection is not a menace but rather a security to the world. He justified the French alliances on the ground of absolute necessity, showing that Germany was preparing to attack France as soon as she was strong enough. Second place was won by California, H. R. Cherninn and B. E. Witkin tying for the honors. Both speakers upheld the affirmative. Stanley A. Weigel, ' 26, and Thomas A. Bailey, ' 24, of Stanford, made strong bids for places. Weigel displayed great versatility in arguing for the affirmative, while Bailey, participating in his sec- ond Joflfre debate, delivered a powerful speech in defense of the negative side of the question. Paul Stanbury, the third California debater, took the negative side of the discussion. Littler is the third successive Stanford man to wear the Joffre medal, the high- est distinction in intercollegiate debating in the west. Knox Miller, ' 23, won the honor in 1922, and Bertrand L. Comparet, ' 24, was the winner of the debate last year. The Joflfre debate, formerly known as the Carnot debate, in honor of the mar- tyred president of France, is the most important annual debate for both California and Stanford. The Joffre medal was ofifered by the late Baron de Coubertin in 1895, for extemporaneous discussion of vital topics relating to the policies of France. The debating method is unusual, perhaps unique: Two hours before the debate the three representatives of each university are given the specific topic, chosen from the general subject upon which the debaters have prepared to speak. Each speaker then makes an extemporaneous speech, depending upon the information which he has acquired during the months devoted to a study of the general topic. 97 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS Bv Robert D. Boynton f. 4 IV r ILITAR ' training- was given at ' 1 A Stanford in the early nineties, but 1-HI Typical artillery action: a modern field piece in full recoil it was not until 1916 that a ])ernianenl Reserve Officers Training Corps unit was established. An infantry battalion of nearly four htindred men was organ- ized at that time, and many of its mem- bers did honor to their university and their country during the World war. About a year after the signing of the armistice, a field artillery unit was es- tablished. It soon became evident that the artillery, because of its more inter- esting training and movmted instruc- tion, -was preferred by the majority of the students. As a result the infantry unit was discontinued in January, 1921. Major William D. Geary, U. S. A., Captain Charles E. Boyle, Jr., U. S. A., and Lieutenant Harold A. Cooney, U. S. A., are the present officers in charge of the unit. Major Geary, the commandant, replaced Major Leroy P. Collins at the beginning of the academic year. This will be the last year at Stanford for Captain Boyle and Lieutenant Cooney, by reason of a regulation of the war department which i)ro- vides that an officer can serve without troops not more than three years. Captain Boyle is a Stanford graduate, and Lieutenant Cooney is a West Point man. Major Geary summarizes the purpose of the Reserve Officers Training Corps in the following words: While we do not want war, and while we ho])e that some ])lan will be found that will end war for all time, we know that such hopes are not yet realized, and we should be prepared to do our share in the defense of our country if there ever be need. The purpose of the Reserve Officers Training Cor])s instruction is to prepare the educated young men of the nation to take their proper i)laces as officers in the army of the United States in the eventuality of a war. The Stanford battalion is composed of two batteries: Battery A is of three- inch guns, horse drawn, and Battery B, motorized, comprises one 4.7 howitzer, one 155 mm. howitzer, and one 155 mm. rifle { tractor drawn), a reconnaissance car, and three ammunition and baggage trucks. In addition to the foregoing ordnance the unit has 75 mm. guns of French, American and British makes for instruction u.se. The practical work of the spring quarter is set aside for the battalion drill. The c ompletion of four vears ' work and one summer camp is re(|tusite for liiliiiliilidii . lOie iif the ini ' orliinl jtlhi. es of inslniclian 98 — . % Miii m 1 7 ic Ihitlrry firrs a fo r_v Ihrec ivchcis. The tratiihu in nrtillcry fire gives an insight into one of the really scientific tisfects of modern zearfarc securing the second lieutenant ' s commission in the reserve corps of the United States army. The four years ' vorl ; is varied and interesting. Topography and Orientation ' ' teach the matcing and reading of topographic maps and panoramic sketches. Motors offers instruction, not only in the intricacies and vicissitudes of gasoline engines and vehicles, but also in the operation of tractors, trucks, and motorcycles. In the equitation classes one learns riding and jumping in all their forms. Students qualifying in the pistol course receive the regular army marks- man, sharpshooter, and expert medals. Artillery firing (with smoke bombs on the county road in extension of Lasuen avenue, and observed from behind the library) teaches one to grasp fleeting impressions, comprehend them (juickly, and make decisions accordingly. All students enrolled in the R. O. T. C. unit are furnished, without cost, uniforms and equipment, including the necessary text books. Those in the advance course receive throughout the year pay amounting to about nine dollars a month. The annual summer camp is from five to six weeks ' duration. It immediately follows commencement, and is a period of interesting and instructive work, with the physical development of the students well provided for. The student can attend camp without any cost to himself; transportation, clothing, and subsistence being furnished by the government. In addition, those in the advance course receive pay while at camp at the regular army rate. One summer camp is required during either the first or second year of the advance course. The camps during the summers of 1920 and 1921 were held at Camp Knox, Kentucky, and that of 1922 was at Camp Lewis, Washington. Eleven institutions were represented at the camp held last summer at Del Monte, California. The University of Utah battery reported at Stanford, combined with the Stanford bat- tery, and a six-day march with the horses and material was made to the camp. Camps were made en route at San Jose, Morgan Hill, Sargent, Tarpy Ranch, and Castroville. The usual dav ' s program consisted of firing on the artillery range in the morn- ' - Sr m ' ' ' ■student officers an tl ' i ' ' en a .... ,., . , ,i,- in fiistol (iraeticc 99 Motorized equipment is used exelusi ' i ' ely by Battery B ing and pistol practice at the Monterey Presidio in the afternoon. Wednesday after- noons were devoted to athletics, in which the Stanford Battery acquitted itself very creditably, the boxing and polo- teams defeating all comers. From Saturday noon until reveille Monday morning the embryo officer had for his own use. Camp this summer will be held for the second time at Camp Lewis, Washing- ton. Lewis is situated on the Puget Sound, in one of the most beautiful and extensive of the government reservations. Those who attended the camp there in 1922 will recall trips to Tacoma and Seattle, to the glaciers of Mount Rainier, and the trip home via the Canadian cities of Vancouver and Victoria, British Colum- bia. Although polo is a first-class minor sport in the university, it is carried on under the supervision of the Military department. Polo is fostered by field artillery authorities because it teaches daring and skillful horsemanship, a love and respect for horseflesh, a true eye and hand, and a courage that few other games can instill. Upon completing the basic course in equitation students may participate in the sport. Equitation or some form of riding is open to the students throughout their four- year course. The ninety-odd horses have been placed at the disposal of the faculty and women students through faculty and women ' s riding classes. Riding passes are open to all students in the R. O. T . C. unit every day. The annual horse show, held late in May or early in June, is the last sport activity Smoke bonil ' s are used in practice for observation and range finding A class in military Inpography starts a traz ' ersc 100 l!--- m Battery A, mounted, employs three-inch guns, horse draiim of the academic year, and, as such, usually has a large attendance. The half-mile track around the highway polo field is the scene of the spectacular Roman and Cos- sack races, the close finishes of the flat race, the spills accompanying the steeple- chase, and other riding and jumping events which test the skill of the rider and the hardiness of the mount. The Military ball, one of the year ' s few formals open to all students, is held early in the spring quarter. This year April 4 saw the most successful ball that has been given since the war. The colors of the ensign — red, white and blue — were the color scheme, and guns, cais- sons, observing and range-finding in- struments, and other artillery equipment of various kinds, were placed about for the members of the unit to demonstrate to their guests. Pi Kappa Tau, an honorary military society, was organized at Stanford by a group of reserve and cadet officers of the Stanford R. O. T. C. unit in 1921 jumping and hurdling teach skillful and duriny horsemanship and functioned for two years. Club- rooms were furnished in the second story of the military de])artment headtjuarters. During the spring of 1923 Pi Kappa Tau petitioned the national honorary Mili- tary society, Scabbard and Blade, for a chapter at Stanford. This petition was granted in -December, at which time installation ceremonies were held. Each year Pi Kappa Tau has organized mounted picnics and j)ickecl the elite of the mounted equestriennes as partners. This year Scabbard jyid Blade continued the custom by ])icnicking at Lake Searsville on Washington ' s birthday. Obsenalion and correction of fire is a branch of the training 101 ©alifotrnia fJaatofal Fremont and Don Robles When Spain ' s glory faded, Mexico gained her independence, and the gradual disinte- gration of the pastoral system began. Under Mexican rule the vast mission grants were divided into ranchos, and these im- mense tracts of land supported tens of thousands of cattle. A typical rancho was that of Don Secundini Robles, who ob- tained a parcel of land lying north of Santa Clara and established the Robles rancho. He built a low, rambling adobe hacienda on a spot a few miles south of where the university is now situated. Here, perhaps, Pico, Alvarado, and other Mexican governors, and such Americans as Fremont, Stockton, and Carson tarried on their jour- neys up and down the coast. Gold was discovered in 1848, and the fol- lowing spring the snow-clad slopes of the Sierras witnessed long wagon trains wind- ing their way toward the Pacific. Even before this the Mexican regime had become intolerable to the spirited Yankees, and the stars and stripes were raised at Monterey. The period of Spanish influence had ended; California was a commonwealth of the United States. i uiMii«MiMiMimiiujiujiMiminmi| }M WVamMmMMUl MM9HWAW 9WM K9 AVA f 9f immmmmmummq A croii ' d of 85,000 people witnessed the Big Game between Stanford and California this year — probably the 1923 record for attendance at an intercollegiaje football contest in America. ' .- I r 1 lit THE BIG GAME, NOVEMBER 24, 1923 CALIFORNIA 9; STANFORD By Leon T. David ' X ' HE character of a people is well expressed in its games, and football is the game which summarizes the spirit of America. The coordination of mind and body, the quick ada])tation of methods to situation, stamina, unceasing struggle towards conquest, and unwillingness to admit defeat, are all wonderfully presented in the game of football. The Stanford-California Big Game never fails to present these elements of human experience and of American life. That is one reason why 85,000 people for one short hour hung breathless on every tack and turn in the Stanford-Cali- fornia game on November 24. 1923. If the struggle of the competing teams showed in miniature the elements of American national achievement, the gathered crowds who backed those teams pre- sented the ideal of loyalty to a cause, a loyalty akin to that which had inspired the men in whose honor the California Memorial stadium was erected to go for- ward to deeds of valor and their final sacrifice. The Memorial stadium was, with such a purpose, a fitting locus of magnificent proportions for the staging of a game which would present in deed the evidences of the American ideal. In its resemblance to the Roman Coliseum it linked the valor of the past with the valor of the present, and in itself it represented achieve- ment in a struggle with human elements and with nature. A Cat, J, drr: -■ii ' irl: the Cardinal defense proved almost impregnable 108 The great Memorial stadium has a capacity of 72,000. It was estimated that at least 13,000 viewed the con- test from the nearby hills. This panorama- vjas taken near the south scoreboard, zcith the California rootinij section on the rii ht and the Stanford section on the left. — PItoto by Morton and Company The very Big Game atmosphere was one of struggle. The frenzied, yet orderly, adherents of each university joined in the Big Game stunts, expressing their parti- sanship and their loyalty. The Stanford thunderbolt, wreaking vengeance upon the C, the California bear gobbling the S were tangible evidences that, though eleven men from each university represented it on the field, there were thousands in the stands whose hearts and desires were wrapped up in those of their champions. Into his atmosphere of intense feeling came the Stanford and California bands, playing the airs which had inspired many thousands of loyal sons an d daughters of the alma maters through the years; and, as if to emphasize the common heritage of everyone in that assemblage, the Star Spangled Banner was played and sung, and it took a deep hold on an audience already inspired by the occasion. The teams which took the field were opponents worthy of such enthusiasm and of such a setting. When Stanford went on to the field, preceded by the bagpipers playing the martial strains of The Campbells Are Coming, in honor of Stan- ford ' s fighting captain, she went on with a bare chance to win. By winning she could have broken a string of California victories dating to the return of Ameri- can football in 1918. By winning she could have been the champion of the West. Every Stanford man who played in the sixty minutes of almost deadlocked struggle gave his best to win. Cravens, Faville, Ludeke, and Captain Campbell were making their last fight on the gridiron. The Stanford team outbucked, outpunted, and outpassed California, but it lost. Yet in defeat the team gained honor. And, though the Blue and Gold was great in victory the fight of Stanford will, perhaps, live longer amid the crowded recol- lections of the game of 1923. .m. Chuck Johnston was only one of three Stanford men to reach the California runner and stop this play 109 The California and Stanford bands, joining to fylay the Xalional Anthem, add a fitting touch to the dedication of the California memorial stadium Stanford men and women are proud of that team, and hail it as the one which ushered Stanford athletics from their dark days into a renaissance of prestige. With the 1923 game, the faltering steps in the dark were supplanted by a firm stride under a sky in which there was the Cardinal tinge of a coming day. The uncertainty of the contest, as it started, made for an intensity of feeling which almost caused hearts to stop beating when the gun sounded and California kicked off. The ball sailed out of bounds, the tension passed, and the game really began. The first half was largely a punting battle. Both sides were making trial of their opponents. California finally took the offensive. Nevers consistently out- kicked his California opponent, and California was unable to gain by that method. A series of plays carried the ball through a fighting Stanford defense to the Stanford forty-five-yard line. Blewett, the triple threat man, was sent in to drop-kick for California, but his attempt at a fake kick play failed and later his attempted drop-kick missed the bar. Nevers punted. Nichols received, and was downed. The Stanford line held, and Witter kicked again. The first break in the even struggle came in a fumble of a fair catch on this kick. The ball bounded to the turf and Mell of California recovered it on Stanford ' s forty-one-yard line. Blew- ett tried another drop-kick which went out of bounds on Stanford ' s five-yard line. Nevers prepared to kick for Stanford. Horrell of the California team, on a well exe- cuted defensive play, got through and blocked the kick, falling on the ball for the only touchdown of the game, which was converted. California 7. Stanford 0. Then Stanford made the offensive which was the feature of the day. Undaunted by the score tallied against them, the men determinedly started their counter - attack, which was felled only by a lack of time. Beam kicked oft ' to Campbell, who returned the ball to Stanford ' s twenty-five-yard line. Bleivctt ' s kick, nearly ' locked, went mid when li ' o Stanford men broke through the Hruin line 110 B. — «i , - ,i J ■rvl Md HH ' 1 ■■f ' -J i W I V H Tl ' U A totsc nwiiiciit before the strut gic: llic bauds play and the great throng cheers as the Cardinal team conies on the field Wheat was sent over right tackle and made three yards. Nevers made four yards through right guard and then four through right tackle — Stanford ' s first down on her thirty-eight-yard line. Nevers made another five yards through right guard. Faville and Johnston were opening wonderful holes, as were Cravens and Shipkey, on the other side of the line when occasion required. Then Wheat passed to Camp- bell for a two-yard gain. Nevers bucked for four yards. Wheat passed to Nevers for a four-yard gain. And so it went. With the ball on California ' s forty-six-yard line, Nevers went through center for three yards ; then through right tackle for four more; then, on a fake buck, he went around left end for seventeen yards, straight-arming three California men on the way. The ball was on California ' s twenty-yard line. Nevers again was called upon, and he went through right guard for four more yards. California, so badly threatened, was over-eager and was penalized five yards for being ofifside. Cuddeback passed to Wheat for a four-yard gain. It was third down on California ' s seven-yard line. There were onlv twenty seconds left in which to play. It would have taken Nevers two bucks and possibly three to make the yards. There was not time, and a pass seemed the only possible play. Cuddeback hurled it, straight and true, but Newmeyer of California inter- cepted it and saved his team from what looked like an inevitable score and i)Os- sible defeat. He ran the ball back to his own forty-two-yard line as the half ended. Nevers had been the center of the Stanford attack. His work earned him a place on the third All Ameri- can, selected by Walter Camp. The third ([uarter gave little advantage to either side. Cleaveland made a pretty twenty-one-yard run, and a score was again in prospect until he was injured and forced to leave the game. Horrell finally intercepted a pass on Stanford ' s twenty- yard line. Blewett again tried a drop-kick, but failed. Nevers punted into California territory. Cali- fornia punted back. Stan- ford tried to buck the line, but lost the ball on downs Stanford bleacher stunts were elaborate and particularly effective at this year ' s Big Game 111 H H ' f ?- Sili .-i screened t axs fdilrd and the shifty Scotchman was nabbed in his tracks on her forty-seven-yard line. California couldn ' t get through the Stanford line. The individual linemen were playing a wonderful game, and the men who replaced them as the struggle went on were equal to the task, showing that Stanford ' s reserve strength was well trained and ready for any demand put upon it. Cuddeback tried a pass, but it was intercepted on the twenty-five-yard line, and Blewett, for California, tried another drop-kick. The kick went low, hitting a Stan- ford man, and rolling over the goal line. Another break; Campbell recovered, and made a desperate attempt to run it back when there was only a fighting chance to do so. He was tackled, and thrown for a safety. The score was 9 to 0. A few minutes later the gtin sounded and the game was over. The victory was California ' s. Two years before a Stanford team, with no chance to win, had dedicated the Stanford stadium with the first touchdown. Cali- fornia had secured the one touchdown in 1923 necessary for the purpose to dedi- cate her stadium, but no more. This year Stanford was not fighting merely to keep the score down, and when the final gun sounded everyone realized that the day of unquestioned football supremacy on the part of California was ended. The starting lineup for the Big Game follows: STANFORD Position CALIFORNIA Right End Left Right Tackle Left Right Guard Left Center Left Guard Right Left Tackle Right Left End Right Quarterback Right Halfback Left Left Halfback Right Fullback Substitutions : Dennis for Cleaveland ; Neill for Cravens ; Cuddeback for Dennis ; Cleaveland for Cuddeback ; Woodward for Wheat; Dennis for Cleaveland; Neill for Faville ; Cuddeback for Dennis; Solomon for Nevers ; I.udeke for Johnston. J. Lawson johnstox Faville Baker Cravens Shipkey Thomas Campbell (captain) Wheat Cleaveland Nevers HUFFORI) Newmeyer Perry HORRELL Carey Beam Mell Evans DUXN (captain) Nichols Witter Captain Nichols, California, starts an end run. Ca.niphcU. standing, although blocked by a California man, freed himself and dropped Sichols behind his oven line I ' U 112 CALIFORNIA-STANFORD BASKETBALL SERIES CALIFORNIA 3; STANFORD 1 WT ITH two fast teams competing in games whicli were decided on hairbreadth elements of time, the Stanford-California series of 1924 will stand out as one of the most thrilling basketball climaxes wit- nessed since basketball w-as made a major sport at Stanford. The Cardinal entered the California series without a defeat. Word had come from the south that the Trojans w-ere a strong team, and they proved to be. Following the first two games with the Univer- sity of Southern California, in which either team won a game, Stanford played the first game with Cali- fornia in the Stanford pavilion on February 9. The crowd at that game demonstrated that the team had the full support of the student body, and hundreds were turned away becattse of lack of seating capac- ity, in spite of the added facilities provided by the new bleachers. This inability to accommodate the crowds was evident throughout the season, and spoke for the growing popularity of the basket game. Califorxia 17; Stanford 18 The first California-Stanford game was perhaps the most thrilling of the season. As was so often true in games this year, the contest hinged upon an ability to convert free throws, and w ' hen Captain Nip McHose of Stanford walked to the ring and shot two consecutive goals, the first one tying the game, and the second winning it by a score of 18 to 17, there was a Stanford riot. Ernie Nevers was perhaps the individual star of the game but jNIcHose won lasting fame in the last minute of the struggle. Stanford led, 7 to 0, at the end of the first ten minutes. California then pulled out of her hole, and the half ended 9 to 7 for Stanford. In the second half Stanford climbed into a 15 to 11 lead. Then California mad e a desperate spurt which brought her to the short end of a 16-15 score. On a ball out-of-bounds which apparently should have been Stanford ' s, California shot a goal without the inter- ference of Stanford players. It was allowed, however, and the Bruin rooters were preparing to serpentine, when ] IcHose was fouled, and proceeded to annex the two points which brought the game to Stanford, just before the half ended. This win placed Stanford in the lead in the conference. California 26; Stanford 25 The second California game w as played in the Oakland auditorium on February 16. Stanford had broken even with U. S. C. in the south, and was leading the southern half of the conference. In the second game with the Bears, the tables were turned, and the California team had the victory by a score of 26 to 25. The game was close and hard fought. Stanford at the end of the first half had a two- point lead, the score standing 14 to 12. In the second half, California climbed up to a 21 to 17 lead, which was soon 26 to 23. Just as the gun was fired, McHose was fouled, and stepped up to make his two throws. The crowd, thinking that the game 113 ' IB David M. Oliva Captain-Elect GuRDON D. Steele Center was over, surged on to the court, and it was some time before order was restored. AIcHose then converted the first throw. The second throw also went in, and the game was over. McHose had a chance to score two points if he converted his two foul throws. Both attempts were successful, but Stanford dropped the second game of the series to the Bears by a lone point. The result made for a triple tie in the con- ference standing in California. Stanford had won three games and lost three; California had won two and lost two; and the U. S. C. had won three and lost three. California 27 ; Stanford 23 Stanford went into the next game determined to win. The Cardinals started off strong in the beginning, earning eleven points before California made her first two. Cali- fornia broke out of her slump and brought the score up to 14 to 11 at the end of the half. In the second half, the battle resolved into a nip and tuck affair, in which the Bears made full use of their reserve strength, substituting freely. With two minutes to go, a rally put California ahead from a 19 to 19 tie to a 27 to 19 lead, which AIcHose cut down by four points before the end of the game, the final score being 27 to 23. The California victory came in this game because of better reserve strength; Houvenin and Kyte came in at the crucial moment. Captain Nip McHose was the high-point man of the evening. Nevers was too closely guarded to shoot well, and the other Stanford men seemed unlucky in their shots. California 26; Stanford 22 The third game put California in th = lead in the southern half of the confer- ence and also in the Stanford-California series. The fourth game was crucial for Stanford; if she won, it would tie both the conference and the series. Coach Kerr and the team went to Oakland February 26 for the game. California again came out victor — another triumph of reserve strength. Next to the first g me of the series, the last game was the most exciting of the four California-Stanford contests. More than 6,000 people gathered to see it. With so much depending on the contest, fouls were closely called, on both sides, thirty-one being registered during the game. Stanford made twelve ])oints on fouls, but fouls also cost the team the leadership of McHose in the middle of the second half — a very serious blow. Stanford took the lead at the beginning of the game, the half-time score being 12 to 9. In the middle of the second half the score was 17 to 12 in favor of Stanford, but after McHose went from the game, the Cardinal had a hard time of it. Steffen, Moody, and Mitchell were sent into the game, as well as Dave Oliva, in an attempt to stop the California attack, but their attempts were unavailing; after McHose and Steele left the game, the backbone of the Cardinal defense seemed shattered. The final score stood 26 to 22 in favor of California. The line-up for the season was: Xevers, McHose, Steffen, forwards; Steele, Moody, cen- Erme Nevers ters; Shipkey, McBurney, Oliva, Mitchell, guards. Fonvard 114 THE BIG MEET, APRIL 26, 192+ CALIFORNIA 48: STANFORD 83 By Leon T. David So rat our words. O Berkeley, nor ever be too hold. Your prehistoric leadership is o ' er; Our cardinal has burned your blue and tarnished all your gold, And the glitter of that glamor is no more! — Carolus Ager A section of llic crozvd and tlic Stanford rooting section: cstiniatcs placed the attendance at more than 15.000 rather than as the stubborn response in the face of defeat. April 26 was cool, and at first in- clined to be overcast ; but as Sons of the Stanford Red rang out upon the air, the sun came out in welcome fashion, and the thirty-first annual California- Stanford track meet began. The mile runners lined up for the first race of the day, Kerr of Stanford drawing the ])ole. The gun was heard, the runners leaped from their marks, and the meet com- npHE Stanford Day, for which - - thousands of students and alumni have been waiting for four years, has arrived. 1 1 arrived in dra- matic fashion on April 26, when the California Bear was routed, utterly cowed on the track by an 83 to 48 defeat, and then sent home with a 7 to 6 score in Stanford ' s favor in the final game of the baseball series. California ' s winning streak in the major sports was broken. Hundreds of Stanford students, hundreds of alumni, took part in their first Stan- ford serpentine before the Califor- nia bleachers, and for the first time in four years, Hail, Stanford, Hail ! rang out as a paean of victory A ' ine points for the Cardinal in the mile: Kerr, first; Smith, second; Elliott, third menced. Smith of Stanford drew into the lead in the third lap, with Kerr and Elliott at his heels. Pace by pace, these three Stanford men drew away from the rest of the field, and came into the home stretch in one, two, three order : Kerr, first, then Smith, and then Elliott, with scarcely two yards separating them as they crossed the finish line. Time, 4 :26.8. California 0, Stanford 9. Over on the shot-put level, Tiny ' erses from a poem written by Charles K. Field after the first California-Stanford football game, which the Cardinal won. 14 to 10. Shortly after Stanford opened, a California ]irofessor had derided the new institution and declared that the publicity was fading out already. The glitter of that glamor is no more, said he. The above is from Field ' s reply. 115 Over the bar at 6 feel 2 1-2 inches: Anderson surprises xvith a first iMle Ludekc ties Witherspoon for second in the high jump Richardson breaks the tape inches aliead of Macintosh in the half-mile ezvnt; Szvayne and Daly finish third and fourth Hartranft wanned up for his later record-breaking performance. As the 100- yard dash was called, tliere was an atmosphere of tense expectation on both sides. Would Hale liest Barber, or would the California sprinter break the tape? The question was soon answered to the delight of the Cardinal. The 100-yard men lined up, but there was too much eagerness, and some were set back, among them Caspar of Stanford. The gun finally barked once, and the men were away, Farnsworth and Barber of California leaping into the lead. Half way to the finish. Hale and Campbell, stride by stride, passed the California men, and finished ahead of the field, Campbell, first; Hale, second; and Farnsworth of California, third. Caspar, who had been set back, made a strong bid for third, and lost out by a matter of inches. Time, 10 seconds flat, tying the California-Stanford record. Score, California 1, Stanford 17. The trials in the pole vault were called, and the men were clearing the low heights with precision when the 440-yard dash was announced. As the quarter-milers became anxious and broke the gun, it was announced that Hartranft was putting the shot over 49 feet. The 440 started. The California hope, Hurst, led the race until the last hundred yards, when he was passed by Miller, Storie, and Van Judah of Stan- ford, who finished in that order. Miller ' s time was 49.5 seconds, a new Stanford- California record. Storie ran well considering his recent illness, and Captain Van Judah displayed his great ability to pull into a winning place from behind. Score, California 1, Stanford 26. While fervent Stanford rooters sang Hail, Alma Mater, the hurdles were lined up for the high barrier race. Can Leistner best Becker? was Stanford ' s ques- tion. It was efifectively answered when the big Cardinal hurdler broke the tape, a winner by five yards. Becker led for half the race, and finished ahead of Boles (Stanford) for a second place. Time, :15.5 seconds. Score, Cali- fornia 4, Stanford 32. The shot-put had been under way for some time, and the results, an- nounced after the hurdle race, showed Hartranft Profircssivc pictures of the relay, the thriller of the day: left, Hurst, Cali- first with anew Stanford- foruia, is given a big lead over Miller ai the hcyinning of the final lap; r -i • i- 1 ' right, Miller breasts the tape with yards to spare Calliornia reCOrd tO lllS 116 II ale lakes I he furlong, -u ' ith Campbell a close second .Inother finish ivhich was mostly Cardinal: Campbell beats Hale to the tape in the hundred while Farnszvorth (C), takes third credit, while Xeufeldt and Witter of California took second and third places, respectively. The record put was 49 feet 8 1-2 inches. The two-milers took their marks. The runners went round and round with even, methodical strides, until the last lap. From the middle of the race, Charles of Stanford was well in the lead, running with ease, though handicapped by injuries, and Hayes followed. Then in the last fifty yards came an upset in California ' s favor when Charles and Hayes weakened, and three California men swept past them. Charles niade a brave efTort to outsprint them but dropped exhausted five yards from the finish. Jensen, jNIulvaney, and Turner of California finished in the order named, in 9:55.5. Score, California 17, Stanford 2 7. The field events were hotly contested by California, the Blue and Gold taking the majority of the points in these events. Anderson of Stanford took the high jump at 6 feet 2 1-2 inches, and Ludeke of Stanford furnished a further sensa- tion by tying Witherspoon, California jumping ace, for second place. Upson of California won the pole vault with a mark of 12 feet 3 inches and Dennis of Stanford was second at 12 feet. Scofield of Stanford, the most promising Car- dinal competitor, who was still handi- capped by the injured ankle which at- tended his efforts a short time before, took third. The half-mile saw the Cardinal runners shut out Chase of California entirely. The Stanford runners were spread out among the many contestants until the last 220 vards, when Richardson and Macintosh, closely followed by Daly, left the remainder of the field behind. Macintosh and Richardson raced to the tape, while in the back field, Swayne of Stanford passed his teammate, Daly, in a wonderful spurt, and finished third. Richardson won by inches from ] Iacintosh, and the an- nounced time, 1 minute 55.8 seconds, was the fastest done on the coast, in all prob- ability, since Bonnett of Stanford made the pres- ent California-Stanford record of 1 :54.6. Score, 57 to 24. The furlong was next in the order of events. The men were anxious, even as in the hundred, and were called back once before they got away from the holes. Barber of „ , , •, • , .,• ■, , x r • . i £ ■, c „ . . . 1, 1 J Becker, California hurdling ace, is no match for Leistner, zvho finishes five Calltornia took the lead, yards in the lead. Boles, who took third, is just out of viezv behind Becker 117 Stanford rooters serpentine for the first time in years Id IB The Cardinal scores another shutout: Miller breaks the tape in the quarter mile and sets a nexv record. Storie and Judah finish in second and third places but again he was passed by Hale and Campbell of Stanford, who took first and second, respectively. Barber finished a close third behind Campbell. Time, :22.2. Score, 65 to 25. Only two points more were needed to give Stan- ford victory in the meet, and the low hurdles, next in order, furnished the opportunity. Leistner of Stanford finished two feet in the lead of Morris of California. Boles of Stanford, running fourth, tripped on a hurdle and was out of the race, Corley of California taking third. Leistner finished in 25.1 seconds. Morris of California took second, when Becker, the favorite, lost his stride by hitting a hurdle near the last flight. As predicted, Hartranft of Stanford was an easy winner in the discus. His first throw, 145 feet 11 1-4 inches, beat the old record by eight and a half feet, and was his best attempt of the after- noon. Neufeldt of California, former record holder, was second, and Francis of California, freshman record holder, was third. California scored its second shutout in the javelin, V. Dodson taking first. IKlEE TIME EVEN ilHILElf ' loK eS SHO. DBT SCDRE 12QHH6 3 15 5 PVA8D4 5 12 2 K IE 9 9555 B.JUMP3 623 6 4B 8V.:V 9 1558 DISCUS 5 ♦ W5IH 2?nyi8 1222 RELAY5032e3 8CDRED A sununary ivhich speaks for itself Neufeldt second, and G. Dodson third. ' . Dodson ' s winning mark was 190 feet. In the broad jump, MacRae of Stanford took second place, with Boren and Bonshu of California taking the first and third ])laces. Boren ' s splendid jump of 23 feet 9 inches set a new Stanford-California record. The relay was the thriller of the day. Ted Miller ]M-oved to be the nemesis of Berkeley hopes. The first lap was almost even. Coverley was two yards behind Aggeler at the finish of the second lap. Then poor handling of the baton by Stanford gave McMillan a six-yard lead on Judah at the beginning of the third lap. The plucky Card captain gained, but he could not f)vercome the handicap. Miller was the only ho])e of the Cards. Hurst, California ' s star (|uarter-miler, was given a good lead, which he held until the last turn. At that point, Miller opened with a sprint that warmed the heart of the most stoic, and led Hurst to the tape by three yards. Thus ended the track season of 1924. Stanford rooters, ser])entining for the first time since 1919, paraded in front of the California section, while happy alunmi watched or paraded proudly with the undergraduates. That furnished a ])erfect finish to a perfect day. 118 Marshal Hale, Jr. Track Captain-Elect CALIFORNIA-STANFORD BASEBALL SERIES CALIFORNIA 1 ; STANFORD 2 Fiiuil game: Woodzcard safe on first after an attempted sacrifice Pi R ' E thousand specta- -■■tors (the largest crowd ever assembled at a Stan- ford-California baseball game) saw Stanford win the 1924 baseball series from California in the last and crucial game at Stanford on April 26. The score of 7 to 6 was not wholly indicative of the Stanford ' s power, but it was close enough to keep spectators and players intensely interested in last minutes of the game, until Captain Woodward ' s successful play for Nicholas off first base brought the victory to the Cardinal. Thus for the first time since 1919, Stanford won the baseball series. Coach Harry Wolter is entitled to much credit for turning out the winning ball team. His faithful work with the players and his skillful handling of the team have been essential factors in the varsity ' s success this year. At Berkeley on April 12 the Stan- ford varsity lost the first game of the California series by a 5 to 4 score, when California came out from behind in the ninth inning, and with two men out scored two runs. Stanford tri- umphed 7 to 2 in the second game of the series on April 19 at Berkeley. Nevers pitched a good game throughout, contributing a home run in the third, scoring Stanford ' s first rim. Johnston went across in the fourth. May drove out a home run in the eighth, adding four to the Card .score. In the ninth, Johnston came home on an error, making the final score 7 to 2. Oviatt ' s bullet-throw from pitcher ' s box to Woodward at first base which caught Nicholas, the California runner, napping, was the deciding thrill of the final contest. At the end of the first seven innings Stanford was leading 7 to 1, In the eighth, with two men out, California filled the bases, and when Solomon, who went in for Nevers, was unable to stop the rush, the Bruins tallied five runs. The score stood 7 to 6 in the ninth inning with California trying desperately to tie it, but they were outwitted by Stanford ' s quick play. Johnston, McCandless, and Fuller each made two runs, and Roberts scored one in the third inning. 119 ■' ( '  ( ;,,;,;;, . M.iuihiy is nearly out at first base. Rossell, California second baseman, takes the throw ti ' lien K te closes in to take the bunt. C. F. Chuck Johxsto.v Caf ' tain-Elect CALIFORNIA-STANFORD TENNIS SERIES CALIFORNIA 4; STANFORD 1 Tussing, of the zvinning doubles team, gets off a fast serve in the California series STANFORD varsity tennis players, handicapped by lack of first-class pre-season competition, entered the Stanford-California tennis matches at Berkeley on April 19, under a decided disadvantage. This factor had much to do with the 4 to 1 victory of the Blue and Gold racketers. When de Back and Tussing won the doubles match from Stratford and Dar- henian of California, Stanford scored the only victory of the day. The Stan- ford team took this event in straight sets, 6-2, 6-2. Good teamwork in handling the play at the net, and excellent back court play were the factors deciding this match. The most hotly contested match of the tournament, and the one which occa- sioned the most interest, was that between Mertz, Stanford captain, and Bettens, captain of the California team. After going nineteen serves in one game of the first set of the singles, Bettens won out 6-4. The second set was very even throughout, Bettens finally winning this by an 8-6 score. Overfelt, whose sensational rise to ranking player on the Stanford varsity squad, a feature of the Cardinal season, was nervous in the California matches. This fact had much to do with the de- feat he sufifered from Weinstein of California, 6-1, 6-4, in a singles match. Hinckley of Stanford went down be- fore Chandler of California in the third singles match 6-3, 6-3. Chandler is an exceptional player, and with Bettens as his teammate, the doubles match of the day went to California, 6-3, 6-3, Mertz and Hinckley contending for Stanford. Stanford ' s varsity players were rather unfortunate throughout the early season in that they were vmable to secure outside competition of a caliber that would de- velop their best possibilities. During the tennis season players on a university tennis team may not compete in an out- side organization, under the conference rules. The only other possible source of competition open to Stanford players this year was to compete in the univer- sity and club league, or some other such organization. Inasmuch as Stanford teams have been subject to the local rule against Sunday competition, par- ticipation in the.se leagues has been im- possible. de Back was Tussing ' s teammate in the winning match of the series and shared honors in the victory Captain Mertz lost a hard fought set to Bettens, the California captain, 6-4, 8-6 120 Yell leaders; Bell, Lapp, McCallister BLEACHER STUNTS ' I HE rally committee is - ' - a new organization which has proved valuable for the promotion of in- terest and enthusiasm in athletic contests this year. This committee, after several successful pre- season affairs, including the Sigma Delta Chi and Basketball pavilion rallies, staged the biggest rally yet seen at Stanford, in the stadium on the night of November 21, when more than five thousand Cardinal supporters gave the varsity an uproarious send-off for its three-day retirement period before the Big Game. Under the direction of Burt Lapp and the rally committee, the bleacher stunts executed at the Big Game provided several new features. The march of the Scotch bagpipers on to the field to the strains of The Campbells Are Coming, followed by Captain Scotchy Campbell and the varsity, was the surprise stunt of the day and threw the Stanford rooting section into pandemonium. Stanford ' s specialty bleacher stunt was the rending of a blue California C by a red thunderbolt. The smoke of the encounter was represented by flying confetti. As a fitting reply to Cali- fornia ' s cry of Who ' s got the axe? We ' ve got the axe! ' ' the Stanford rooting section formed a huge padlock. California ' s new stunt was the displaying on a blue field of a golden bear w h i c h graduallv swallowed a Cardinal S and then winked to ex- press its satisfaction. Burt Lapp, Red Bell and Dutch McCal- lister helped dedicate the new California stadium to the yells of the most pow- erful-lunged Stanford rooting section ever seen in Berkeley. The enthusi- kally committee asm which Lapp put into the organization of the program and the rooting in the final contest re- sulted in his near-collapse at the end of the game. Back row: William Hobro, John Marble, Calvin Conron, David Oliva, Dudley DeGroot, JiURTON Lapp, James Muir Third row: Claude Minard, Henry Symonds, Eunice Biddle, Jean Ward, Theo- dore Van Dkusen, Lewis .Alabaster, Norris James Second row: F. Fancher Bell, Lewis Hitchcock, Earle May, Albert Huneke, Oscar Trippet, Henry Mack, Northcutt Ely First row; Rolland Hoffman, Robert Titus, Charles McCallister, Leslie Peter, John McHose Those not appearing in picture: John Campbell, Loraine Cleaveland, Dorothy 1 ahler, John Hall, Sidney Laughlin, John Marble, . lfred Masters, Philip Newill, Alfred Patton, .Alice Roth, Bruce Seymour, Carl Shoup, Ford Tus- siNG, Tyler Woodward, Nelson Van Judah 121 Pi STANFORD AT THE OLYMPIAD Bv Leon T. David i HI Tl Ernst M. Bnindslcn, zvhosc phenomenal record has re- sulted in his selection as coach of America ' s u ' ater polo and divinn teams. Albert C. li ' hitc, national senior high and low board champion, ivho is assured of a place on America ' s Olym- pic team HE Olympic games as originally carried on in the shadow of Mount Olympus were restricted in scope : to them came only the Greeks. in modern times, with the resurrec- tion of the Olympic idea, there has come to be an almost universal ])ar- ticipation by the nations of the world in this struggle of sport which knows no national lines. In the Olympic games of 1920, Stanford was represented by sixteen men. In the 1924 Olympiad, it will be her privilege to send that many and more to strive for honor in the inter- national athletic events in France. Xine Stanford men were members of the American rugby squad which, by defeating Roumania and France, won the world ' s title in that sport. The rugby win was the first American victory in the Olympiad, and this fact, together with the decisive scores of the games, is one at which Stanford sport enthusiasts can i)oint with particular pride, Charles Doe, William L. Rogers, Dud DeGroot, Dick Hyland, Robert Devereaux, Norman Cleaveland, Jack Patrick, Linn Farish, and Philip Clark, all Stanford men, were the backbone of the team which left early in April for Europe. After playing several practice games in England, with indifferent success, the team arrived in Paris. There, on May 11, they defeated Roumania by a score of 37 to 0. It was the fast work of Dick Hyland which was mainly responsible for the scor- ing, w-hile Patrick and Cleaveland also shared in point honors. The Euro- pean critics, while stating that the Americans did not show the finesse of the Europeans, conceded that their long spiral kicks and their ferocious tackling were amazing. The second and decid- ing game of the Olympic series played May 18, the American team took from France by a .score of 17 to 3. The game was fea- tured by the flashy runs of Patrick, and by the al- most c(|uallv excellent 122 Wallace O ' Connor, Zi. ' ho with Charles Collett. zcill represent Stanford on America ' s ivater polo team. O ' Connor may also enter some of the .•iwimmin; events William L. Roi.ers XuK.MAX Cli:a kla. ii Charles Doe ' Dick Hyland ])laying of Hyland. The French stands insistently jeered the efiforts of the American team, and gave what was termed by one newspaper, the most shameful display of ])Oor sportsmanship ever witnessed at the Olympic games. Albert C. White, national senior high and low board diving champion, is as- sured of a place on the Olympic team. Wallace O ' Connor and Charles E. Collett have earned places on the Olympic water polo team which will represent America, and O ' Connor will also have a chance in the swimming events. Dave Fall, na- tional junior low board diving champion, is another possibility. Fall took third in the national senior low board championships and is progressing rapidly to star- dom. Charles Fletcher, whose record breaking performances in the 220-yard breast stroke have brought him to the fore, is a possibility. Clarence Pinkston, world high diving champion, a title which he won at the last Olympiad, and Norman Ross, who at one time was holder of ten world ' s swimming records, should both be strong contenders in their respective sports. Both stars were developed by Coach Brand- sten. Pinkston, who won the National A. A. U. high diving championship from Dvu DeGroot Linx Farish Philip Llakk Rcklrt De ekeaux ' Jack Patrick, captain of the 1921 football team and a member of several Stanford rugby teams, was also one of the members of .Xmerica ' s rugby team, although his picture does not appear in this section 123 Tiny Ilartraiift, zi. ' Jwsc re- markable performances dur- ing the past season make it likely that he will break two world ' s records at the Olympiad «j T Al White, at Lake Searsville, May 18, is particularly ! W- strong. White and Pinkston may have to fight it out for first place again in the Olympiad. In boxing, Stanford had three Olympic candidates, who however, had ill-luck in the tryouts. Myron Schall, Vincent Martin, and Rollin Farmin were the best that Stanford could offer, and they were only defeated after hard tussles. In wrestling, Orton C. Woodhead qualified in the sectional try- outs, and there is some possibility that he may try in the finals in the east. Stanford has several strong potential champions in track this year who may get to the games. In the Far Western tryouts, held at Stanford, May 17, many Stanford men were point winners. There were several performances of note. The first thrill of the day came when Lockhart, of the Sacra- mento athletic club, tied the Olympic games record in the 1500-meter run with a mark of 4 minutes 1 4-5 seconds, closely followed by Smith of Stanford. Kerr of Stanford led the race vintil the beginning of the final 220 meters, when he slipped off the track. Undoubtedly he would have placed. The second thrill came when the famous Racehorse Cochran, pushed hard by Ted Miller of Stanford, broke the 1920 Olympic record in the 440-meter run by covering the distance in 48 7-10 seconds. The 1920 record was 49 3-5 seconds. Miller finished barely five yards behind the Racehorse. Hartranft was high point man among the Stanford participants, taking first in the shot and the discus throw, although his marks did not break the Olympic records. He was only surpassed in individual points by Brick MuUer, former California star, who took thirteen points by himself in the meet. Eddie Sudden, former Stanford sprinter, running for the Olympic club, beat out Hale by inches in the 100-meter run, in 11 seconds flat, a fifth of a second over the mark made by Paddock in the last Olympiad. In the 200-meter run. Hale did not compete. Barber of California staged a comeback by winning from Campbell in the time of 22 1-5 seconds, a fifth of a second over the Olympic mark. Norman Dole stepped over the 400-meter hurdles with ease, and won this event, an unusual one in collegiate competition. Leistner won his heat of this event but did not compete in the finals. Others features of the competition were the mark of 6 feet 4 inches in the high jump, won by Hampton, California freshman; the mark of 12 feet 10 inches in the pole vault, made by Gartley of Hawaii; and the mark of Kelly of the Olympic club in the hop, step, and jump, within three inches of the Olympic games record of 47 feet 3 1-16 inches. The scores made at the meet, counting three places, were as follows: Olympic club, 55; Stanford, 48 1-2; California, 22; Brick Muller, unattached, 13; Ha- waiian islands, 5 1-2; Sacramento athletic club, 5; California freshmen, 5; Italia Virtus, 3; Humboldt club, 1; Wells (of Stanford), unattached, 1. Whether fourth place would count had not been determined when the Quad went to press. Stanford was further honored in the Olympic games selections when it was announced that Ernst M. Brandsten, coach of water sports, had been named as diving and water polo coach of the American team. Harry Maloney is a member of the California committee for the Olympic games, and was offered the berth as assistant coach of the rugby team, which he declined, however, as he will accom- pany the Stanford tennis team to Australia this summer. 124 STANFORD THIRD IN THE I.C. A. A.A. A. MEET Hartranft again stars in field competition Written c.vclusii ' cly for the Quad By Walter Eckersall Iiitenwtioiwlly l iiozeit sfiort aiitlioritv CREATURE]) by the sparkling per- - ■forniances of Glenn Hartranft, who earned a place on the American team which will compete in the Olympic games in France next month, Lcland Stanford, abl}- coached by Dink Tem- pleton, finished third in the intercol- legiate track and field championships, held in the Harvard stadium on i Iay 30 and 31. The Calif ornians scored 24 1-2 points and fought all the way for the top position in the point column, which was won by Yale with a total of 28 points, one unit ahead of Pennsyl- vania, coached by Lawson Robertson, head mentor of the American Olympic track and field team. .- sf ' Ieudid jump sends Anderson over tlie bar at 6 feet. 5-S inches, tying hijn for second place. While some great races were run on the track and there was spirited competition in the field events, the phenomenal performances of Hartranft in winning the shot- put and discus throw were easily the most outstanding. The Palo Alto Giant, as they call him in the far east, won the discus with a throw of 158 feet 8 inches, and the shotput with an efl: ' ort of 49 feet 5 7-8 inches. In winning his specialties, Hart- ranft established new intercollegiate records in both. The old record in the shotput was 48 feet 10 3-4 inches, and was made in 1912 by R. L. Beatty of Columbia University. Back in 1916, Archie Mucks of Wisconsin hurled the discus 155 feet 2 inches, and this performance stood as an intercollegiate record until this year. Hartranft is the type of athlete whom any coach would be ])leased to have on his team. He is a reliable and consistent performer. He knows what he is sent out on the field for, and he generally accomplishes his purpose, something which can- not be said of all star athletes and record breakers. There is no disputing the fact that Hartranft will perform just as creditably in France as he has in this country, and there is a strong possibility that he may shatter the world ' s shotput record of 51 feet, made bv Ralph Rose back in 1909. B SBBhkWL. v ' . IVl 1 kvW V H Bi w yj l Sn ' nJv HM 91 P J r, t -- - J -j DBr SbJ B ' ' t laT .- ' jM -I ' lifa m KiJ M Start of the third heat of tlie half-mile eliminations, won by Macintosh (third from riyht). In tlie finals Macintosh took fourth place, finishing just behind Richardson. 124-A The ten i)cjints garnered b} ' Hartranft enaljled liini to share individual lienors with Hill of Pennsylvania, who won both dashes. The Penn sprinter was one of the other surprises of the games, as it was generally thought that I ownian of Syracuse was about the fleetest sprinter in the eastern universities and colleges. Hartranft was given able support by his teammates who gathered enough points to keep Leland Stanford in the running for the championship until the last event had been decided. Leistner of Stanford was only inches behind Moore of Penn State, who breasted the tape first in the 120-}ard high hurdles. Richardson of Stan- ford ran a great race in the half-mile and finished an excellent third. The event was won by Watters of Harvard, with . llan Helfifrich of Penn State in second ])Osition. The winner ' s time was 1 :55 4-5. According to re])orts from the east, Richardson had a task to keep out of pockets, was jostled repeatedly on the turns, and forced to chop his stride many times. However, he ran a very creditable race. Macintosh of Stanford followed close on Richardson ' s heels for a fourth place. Anderson of Stanford contributed his quota of points by tying for second ])lace in the running high jump at 6 feet 5-8 inch, while Arthiu of Stanford ])ulled up third in the discus throw with an effort of 154 feet 8 1-2 inches. Tn fact, all ] laces in the discus went to California, representatives of the Universities of California and Southern California taking the remaining ])oints. Considering the transcontinental trip, competing on a strange track, and the handicaps which the Stanford boys had to overcome, the showing of Coach Tem- pleton ' s team is commendable. While Stanford did not win the meet, it made its presence felt all the way. The team never was out of striking distance for first place, and it was not until near the close of the games that Stanford had to admit defeat, but gioriouslv so. Coach Templeton and his band of athletes are to be con- gratulated for their splendid showing, which went still further to show the athletic world that the Pacific Coast is the producer of athletes who are the ecpials, if not the superiors, of those in other sections of the country. The results of the meet in points follow : ' ale, 28 ; Pennsylvania. 27 ; Stan- ford, 24 1-2; Princeton, 23; Penn State, 21; Southern California. 14; Johns Hop- kins, 13 1-2; California, 13; Harvard, 13; P.oston College, 12; Cornell, 10 1-2; Dartmouth, 8; Georgetown, 7; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 5; Syra- cuse, 5; Colgate, 1-2. PACIFIC COAST CONFERENCE MEET When Boles, Charles, and Storie were unable to place in their events in the Pacific Coast Conference meet at Eugene, Oregon, on lay 31, Stanford lost her chance to take first honors and won only a third place, tying with Oregon Agri- cultural College. The University of Oregon took the contest with 7 points, while the University of Washington was second with 36. First places were taken by Richards in the shotput, Evers in the javelin and Dole in the high hurdles. The performances of all three of these men came more or less as surprises. Richards put the shot 43 feet 1-2 inch; Dole made ;15 5-10 in the high sticks; and Evers tossed the javelin 185 feet 5 inches. Charles Daly ran a strong race in the half-mile against Dodge of O. A. C, taking second. The win- ner ' s time was 1 :5r)2-5, and Daly performed better than ever before. Kemnitzer in the high jump took second at 5 feet 10 inches, which was an upset, for he had been doing better than that in practice. Gasjiar made only a third in the 220- ard dash and failed to i)lace in the hundred. Coverley took third in the 440-yard dash, Scofield placed fourth in the i)ole vault, and Wright took third in the broad jump. Caspar, Coverley, Daly, Dole, Richards, Evers, Kemnitzer, Scofield. ' right. Charles. Storie. Hayes. Coach Kerr, and Cirachiate Manager Davis made the trip. 124-B I CAPTAIN John Donald scotcky Campbell . % X Back row; TnoRNFin.L (assistant coach), Soi.om . . . .1 :., r.on.Mis. Dennv (trainer), Ayres, (manager), Hunt, Mitchell, Cuddeback, Middleton, Kerr {coacin Front row: Thomas. James W. Lawson (captai n-elect). Johnston, Shipkey, Haker, Campbell (captain). Cravens, Faville, Cleaveland, Xevebs, Wheat FOOTBALL SEASON, 1923 7ICTORY, like a sportive spectre, has beckoned year after year for five seasons to Stanford football teams, and like a true chimera, has faded away as the hand went out to grasp it. Stanford has heretofore pursued the spectre in the dark. Rut the 1923 football season showed that, as surely as the sun appears after the dawn, the Cardinal is coming into its own ; though clouds may rise out of the mists, momentarily dimming the sunrise, yet the Stanford day is at hand. The beginning of the 1923 season was accompanied by a renewal of the Stanford spirit, an attitude toward football distinctly different from that two years ago. In the latter half of September, when fall football practice commenced, there was a feeling of confidence in the coaches and in the players which was auspicious for a successful season. At the outset, Coach Andy Kerr cautioned against too high hopes. Football is an evolutionary process, in which mushroom developments do not sustain the strain put upon them, and above all it was the aim of the coaches and the players to get football as a whole upon a sound founda- tion, and then to win games. That has been consistently the attitude of the new Stanford coaches. On November 24, the team was ready, however, to grapple with California and to do better than at any time in the past four years. The 85,000 onlookers at the Big Game saw two of the best-coached and strongest teams in the L ' nited States before them. The score was 9 to against Stanford when the final gun sounded: still the game pointed to the com- ing of a Stanford day despite the disai - pointment at the outcome after the Stanford team had showed superiority in many de- ])artments of the game. Had this year ' s Stanford team been that of any recent year, the plucky little Xe- vadans might well have had a victory. But the 1923 Cardinal eleven had a drive which more than offset the efforts of the solid Nevada line, and earned its 27 to victory. The first (|uarter of the game saw a .Stan- f(jrd touchdown. Nevada, driven back to Andy Kerr Coach James W. Jim Lawson Captain-Elect 126 U. S. C. (jaine: Murray bucks through for a touchdown — almost. The hole zm.t closed and Stanford lost the ball. Soon after, on another drive, Murray carried the ball over for the Cardinal ' s only touchdoiwi. Stanford met Occidental and fans to the eame. her goal line, was forced to kick behind it. Johnston, playing at tackle, broke through and blocked the kick, and to finish the job, fell upon it and scored. Captain Campbell converted. The second quarter saw another score. Xevad i again kicked from behind her goal line. Xevers blocked the kick, and again Johnston recovered for a touchdown. Stanford, playing straight foot- ball, carried the ball across again in the third q larter, Murray making the score. In the last period, Xevers, Cleaveland, and Murray took the ball on a forty-five-yard march for another tally. The game showed that the Stanford team had a punch. Santa Clara came to Palo Alto on the following Saturday. The Stanford team showed an attack which could not be stopped and a defense which would not give way, coupled with a reserve strength which delighted football fans. Stanford ' s first three elevens took part in the game, winning 55 to 6. Football followers now turned their eyes to Los Angeles, where College. October 20. Stanford ' s comeback drew flocks of alumni Occidental had stage fright ; the new coliseum was oven-hot, and the Stanford eleven did not hit its previous stride. Yet the score of 42 to indicated latent power. Stanford started the conference schedule by playing the Universitv of Southern California at Stanford on October 27. The Trojan team came to Stanford fighting mad and out for blood due to the defeat handed out to them by Washington the previous week. It was an inopportune time for the Stanford eleven to have an off-day, and for incon- sistencies to develop. The 14 to 7 win which C S. C. carried away was a sicken- ing blow, and the more disheartening be- cause of the realization that Stanford had had victory in her grasp. Ihit the loss of the game was a tonic through the rest of the sea.son, just the sort which L ' . S. C. received from the Washington tilt. The first quarter saw a relentless march toward the Trojan goal line. Murray. Xevers, and Cleaveland carried the ball from midfield to the six-yard line. On the fourth down, Murray received the ball „ „„ „ „ Claude E. Tiny TiioKxiiu.i. on a short pass, but fell one foot from Assistant Coach 127 Rich Faville rn ti m m ROI ' .KKI ' I . I ii. ' iio J-. 1 [. 1 ' .. ki:k. (. ciiirr the goal line, stumbling over one of his teammates. Stanford began the march all over again a few minutes later, and Murray went over for Stanford ' s only score, Cuddeback converting. Then Harold Adams blocked Xevers ' ki ck, and Holly Adams carried it over for a touchdown. The half ended 7 to 7. ' ' ' The Trojans scored again in the second half when Anderson blocked a punt on the fifteen- yard line. Holly Adams again recovering and romping over for a touchdown. Stanford tried several attacks, but fumbling and indecision at the wrong time prevented results, and the game ended with the score at 14 to 7. Twenty thousand people witnessed the game. Stanford staged its comeback against the Olympic Club. Stung by disappointment, the men on the squad developed a spirit of combat which enabled them to run up a 40 to 7 score on the clubmen, whom California had put by with a 16 to win. The Cardinal ' s decisive victory was particularly creditable since four Stanford regulars, injured in the U. S. C. battle, were on the sidelines. Wheat, Solomon, and Cuddeback took the ball over for the first score, five minutes after the game had started. Six minutes later, Cuddeback ran seventy-five yards, scoring again. Minus Nevers, Cleaveland, Thomas, and Murray, the Cardinal attack reached its full power in the third quarter. Wheat and Solomon, on six plays, mad; forty-three yards. Then a pass from Solomon to Campbell scored, after the Scotchman had made a thirty-yard run. Armour blocked one of Schwill ' s kicks and TilcDermont recovered, going fifteen yards and over the line. Later, McDer- MuRRAY W. Cuddeback Halfback 128 Eknie Neveks Fullback A. Blake Tommy Thomas End Charles !• ' Chuck Tackle niont scored again. Kelly went over for another touchdown after a series of passes in which Cudde- back, Mitchell, and Dennis were instrumental. Then the (Olympic Club resorted to a desperate pass- ing game, which resulted in a touchdown by Hauser for the clubmen. The Oregon game was the Car- dinal ' s next objective. In Portland on November 10, Kerr s men dis- played a versatile attack and a strong defense to gladden the eyes of Stanford ' s loyal alumni who turned out in force to witness a Cardinal victory. Forward passes, Xevers ' line bucks and spectacular runs by Captain Scotch Campbell opened the game. Nevers made the first touchdown after Wheat, Camp- bell, Lawson, and Cleaveland had carried the ball toward the goal line. The second half had barely started when Thomas blocked Latham ' s punt, scooping it up and going over for the second Stanford score. The thrill of the day came for Oregon in the last quarter. Fighting desperately to score, Oregon, after a drive into Stanford territory which had been stopped by the interception of a forward pass by Campbell, with but a minute to play, had carried the ball to the Stanford thirty- five-yard line. Here from a difficult angle Chapman calmly booted the ball between the goal posts for an Oregon score. But Stanford had won, 14 to 3, and a thousand of her alumni joined in the ovation. After having a wonderful preliminary season during which they were not once scored upon, Idaho came to Stanford on, November 17 determined to win. The only reason that the Idaho boys did not take Stanford into camp was that S tanford played her best game of football during the 1923 season. The Idaho game was a hard contest to have the week before the California struggle. Solomon was the star of the day fcr Stanford, making sixty-seven yards from scrim- mage on line plays. FolloWyi ' g .Solomon were Nevers, Campbell, Cuddeback, Wheat, and Dennis. Fitzke and Stivers of Idaho .played a wonderful game. H. RRy H. Shifkey Tackle Fred F. Solly Solomon Fullback Norman Peabody Cleaveland Halfback Gilbert C. Gil Wheat Halfback 29 Nczada game: An end run carries Murray toward the goal line Johnston blocks a Nevada kick and carries the ball over for a touchdown Six of the Cardinal ' s fifty-five I ' oints in the Santa Clara game arc ai the bottom of this pile 130 Ill I ' I ' j ' i ' iii-ilis ' iciiiii Willi him Stanford neatly blocks an Occidental kick Cuddeback gets under way against the clubmen f ■■1 he cardinal opens a Ing hole Santa Clara game: Gil Wheat slips through a flying tackle 131 ■-.■i; Ncvcrs, using steam-roller tactics, ploughs through the Oregon team for the first touchdown III the first quarter, both teams kicked and played for breaks which did not arrive. Fitzke and Xevers punted well: for the game Nevers advanced the ball. 525 yards on punts, while Idaho gained 519. Neve g, Cuddeback, Campbell, and Wheat carried the ball down the field to the Idaho line, whiqh ' 6pddeback crossed for the first score. Then the great Idaho attack, in which Stivers and Fitzke were the king-pins, carried the ball over the Stailford line, tying the score. Stanford terminated another kicking duel in the third quarter ' hen Cuddeback sent over a place-kick froni jthe twenty-two-yard line. Then Idaho opened the most brilliant passing attack seen upon the coast in years. With uncanny accuracy, pass after pass was completed. Campbell, intercepting one of them, turned the tide, and Stanford made a counter-attack. On the fourth down, the screen pass, Solomon to Campbell, worked perfectly, and ' ' Scotchy ' ' ran forty-three yards for a touchdown. Then came another fierce Idaho attack ; time after time the ball was advanced by pa ijig only ,td have the; atta ck fail when deep in Stanford ground, due in a large measure to Capt in Campbell ' s stellar .defensive work, and the game ended with only 7 points to Idaho ' s credit as against Stanford ' s 17. . ., , STANFORD GRAYS, 26 ' ; CALIFORNIA GRAYS, 6 ■•(.-■' ■■■, The Stanford Grays, after a short preliminary season, shared with the Freshmen the honor of ' being one Stanford football team to defeat its California opponents. -The Stanford Grays, coached by Mike Reed and Dud DeGroot, completely outclassed Pesky Sprott ' s proteges in the game in the Stanford stadium on Xoveml)er 15. Stratton crossed the California line for the initial touchdown during the first quar- ter. Dwight scored in the third quarter, after the ball had Ijeen carried sixty yards down the field on straight plays. He con- verted two of the three touchdowns. Stratton went over for the third touch- down in the last quarter. California ' s s:ore came in the second quarter when Reed went over. In the same period, Sholes, at right tackle, broke through and blocked Smith ' s drop-kick. Dwight, Strat- ton, William.son, and Kirwan were the c -d ,„  r„. „,.,...,. Tyler F. Bud Woodward outstanding players of the day. Quarterback Paul H. Davis Graduate Manager 132 ■■■«1 . ' ' f «iliriPri t Back row: Ayres (manager), Anderson, Price, Raffetto, Moore, Greisser. Shifkey, Doerr, Post, Adams, Poulson, Hertii. Hunt (coach) Front row: Morrison, Scott. Phillips, Hyland, Ryan, Baldwin, Swan (captain), Garthwaite, Trombetta. Xat( her. Mahan, BOCUE THE CALIFORNIA FRESHMAN GAME FOR the first time in ten years a Stanford freshman football team met and defeated a first- year team from California. November 10, Cardinal rooters witnessed a well trained football machine buck and pass its way to a hard fought and well earned 12 to victory in the Little Big Game classic. California fought, but the Stanford babes outfought them. When the Bruin cubs lo.st the ball on Stanford ' s one-foot line, after four attempts had failed to carry the ball across, there was no doubt of the outcome. The Cardinals took the oflfensive. In the second quarter, Hyland and Herth by beautiful running carried the ball to California ' s fifteen-yard line, Stanford lost the ball on tne seven-yard line, and then California kicked. The ball went out of bounds on the twenty-five-yard line. A snappy twenty-yard pass from Hyland to Adams put the ball within striking distance. California held for two downs. Bogue, on the bench because of injuries, was sent in. Two bucks, and the ball was over. The goal was not converted. The forward pass route was again utilized for the Stanford oflfen- sive in the third quarter. Phillips made a forty-yard pass to Shipkey. who was downed on the California four- yard line. Again Bogue went in. and again he carried the ball oyer. Stanford failed to convert, but the game was won. Cali- fornia, threatening always, never was able to rally sufficiently to score. The backfield men did their work well. Hyland, Doerr, Herth, Trombetta, Moore. Ryan, Phillips, Morrison, Garthwaite and Bogue all came through in fine shape. The line men did equally good work. Shipkey, Adams, Post, Natcher, Price, Scott, Mahan, Poulson, and not least. Captain Fred Swan, showed that Coach Husky Hunt and his assistants had done their work well in molding the team. From the freshman team Coach Warner will he able to pick a number of men who will add strength to the 1925 varsity. Wall. ' ce Denny Trainer Ernest P. Husky Hlnt Freshman Coach 133 Calif ornia 1 1 yhind starts on an end run which netted many yards for the fresJ. PRE-CALIFORNIA GAMES To develop a winning freshman team is a hard task, one which is Ijecoming more diiificult each year because of the large number of prospects who, must be coordinated in a style of play other than that which they have used at high school. This year, however, Stanford freshmen were extremely successful. In the first game with San Diego high school, the freshmen proceeded to run up a 54 to .score. Hyland, who scored four touchdowns and converted six goals, was the first star of promise to appear. The game between the second Stanford squad and Berkeley high resulted in a to tie. The game against Davis Farm, which the Aggies won 7 to 6, was an open contest, full of breaks. The freshmen did not play well against a more seasoned team. The game with Modesto junior college the following week was equally uncertain, Stanford ' s only score coming when a long chance was taken successfully on a forty-yard pass from Moore to Greisser. Garthwaite going over and Phillips converting. The team bucked up the next Saturday and ran up the record score of the season against the San Jose teachers ' college. There was new ])ower evident in the combination which ran up a 79 to score. Despite the flashes of form which had been shown, there was much vmcertainty about the game with the Trojan freshmen. .Although the U. S. C. men defeated the Stanford babes 10 to 0. the Cardinal team might well have won but for the .stellar work of the U. S. C. fullback, Lee. Caj)tain Swan played his best game of the year in this contest. The ne.xt Saturday, first-string men who were not watching the California freshmen play, met the California Institute of Technology team, and ran up a 33 to Hyland is n ibbed in a flying tackle score. during the California game Pogue bucks the ball over for the freshmen in the California game. The heady freshman back was sent into the game from the bench ttnce during the game and scored both touchdowns 134 Hack row: Wallace (manager), Shipkey, Steele, Kerr (coach) Front row: McBurney, McHose (captain), Nevers, Oliva (captain elect) BASKETBALL SEASON T T was a brilliant Stanford team which played through the basketball season of A 1924, coming into the final games of the southern branch of the conference as one of the favorites. Stanford, California, and the University of Southern California proved to be very evenly matched, and the season was strenuous. California emerged a victor in the conference, after Stanford had made a hard fight, handi- capped by the lack of substitutes, and her strength impaired through the loss of Dave Oliva, by the injury route, after the first California game. With a limited number of men of varsity caliber on the squad, Coach Andy Kerr and Trainer Tiny Thornhill faced a difiicult task in the developing of a strong team. Captain Nip McHose was the star of the season. Ernie Nevers, the other forward, was a close second. Gurdon Steele, who tipped the ball at center for Stanford, won the admiration of all for his hard fighting qualities, and his occa- sional brilliant playing. McBurney, who was a recruit at the first of the season, proved one of its greatest finds. When the team hit the conference series, he was playing like a veteran, and his long shots were a feature of many games. Harry Shipkey, who replaced Oliva at standing guard after the latter ' s injury, came through in a most remarkable manner. He had a very difficult position to fill, with but little experience to aid him. The 1925 season will also find him available for the varsity. David Oliva, captain-elect of the 1925 varsity team, has always been noted for his aggressiveness and his ability to direct the team from his berth under- neath the Stanford basket. It was a .sore blow to the team to lose Oliva ' s services at the very opening of the conference season, but much is expected of the 1925 team under his leadership. Moody, who substituted for Steele at center, has ])ossibilities in 1925. With his present experience, he will be another veteran to add to the squad of next year. The substitutes on the 1924 team were few. Besides Moody, Steffen and Mitchell were outstanding relief men. Stefifen performed very creditably when either Nevers or Captain McHose was unable to play. IMitchell is fast learning basketball and is a comer who will be heard of on future teams. The 1924 season opened with a bang during the Christmas vacation. Displaying 136 Harry H. Shipkf.y Staiidiity Guard better condition than their opponents, the Stanford five first won from the San Jose Y. M. C. A. team by a 21 to 13 score. For an opening game, the Stanford five showed very credit- able bursts of speed. McHose, Steele, and Xevers made clever shots, and Oliva did stellar work at guard. Xevers and McHose, working as a pair, had little trouble in finding the basket in the next game which Stanford won from the Ellery Arms team by a score of 33 to 15. The College of the Pacific team exhibited excellent teamwork, but every man on Kerr ' s squad showed to advantage and Stanford registered a 38 to 9 win against them January 5. Stanford next played the Olympic club, January 12, expect- ing the first real test of the season. The clubmen were out- fought and outclassed, as the 31 to 11 score showed. Nevers was the iron man of the Stanford combination, while Xip McHose again had his eye on the basket. In the Santa Clara game, January 19, both teams used the five-man defense to the limit. As a result the game was not strenuous, but it gave the Stanford men experience against an opponent ' s five-man defense, which was pierced sufficiently in this case to giv e the Cardinal a 27 to 16 win. Steele was the all-around star in this game, though X evers and McHose were the best basketmen. The Xevada Wolves, following their games with California, came to Stanford Januarv 31 for a two-game series, and were taken into camp by Stanford both times. The first game was rather listless, Stanford winning by a score of 28 to 13. Stanford could not find the basket consistently, and the Xevada men were even less consistent. In the second game, played February 2, Stanford won by a score of 30 to 10. The Blue and Silver show-ed little offensive strength, but had an eft ' ective defense, especially in the first half. Shipkey and Moody started the game, with McBurnev and Steele on the bench, and the game was very even for some time. The deadlock was broken when Steele and McBurney returned to the floor. X ' evada led with a 5 to 4 score at the end of the first half, but once the Stanford men passed this tally, thev were never threatened. McBurnev came into his own in this game, his guarding, floorwork and shooting being exceptional. A see-saw contest, a dreary exhibition of two teams vising ______________________ the five-man defense to the limit, coupled with spectacular rushes to score, were the outstanding impressions left by the first Stanford-University of Southern California game, which the Trojans won by a score of 20 to 17, January 25. In the second U. S. C. game, played the following evening, seven points scored in the critical five minutes of extra play brought a 25 to 19 victory to Stanford. Stanford fight was in evidence throughout the evening, and every player came through at the right moment. INIcHose, however, was the hero of the occasion. With two minutes to play, and with the Trojans leading, he made a basket, tieing the score at 18 all. One minute after the extra period commenced, he put Stan- ford in the lead with a field goal. X evers then put two foul throws through the ring. U. S. C. made one point on a foul. Oliva converted another foul, and McHose caged a field goal just as the final gun .sounded. The Stanford offensive was Raymond D. McBurney Rumiing Guard Strong throughout the game, due to McHose ' s efforts. 137 ' ■.;!l IM Warren G. Moody Center Following the Nevada series, the first game with Cali- fornia was played. The injury in this game of Oliva was to be far-reaching in its effect on the outcome of the conference games. After the California game, the team went to Los Angeles to complete the series with the University of South- ern California. Three thousand people were gathered to see the third U. S. C. game, won by the Trojans, 24 to 20, after one of the most thrilling battles of the year. The game was played February 12. At half time the score was 13 to 6 in favor of Stanford, and the U. S. C. team was in a bad way. Campbell had been injured in the early part of the game, and until Rice took the leadership in the second half, Stanford kept ahead. U. S. C. tied the score at 18 all two minutes before the final whistle sounded. McBurney shot a foul, giving Stanford a 19 to 18 lead. Then U. S. C. tied the score again. A double foul which Nevers converted for Stanford but which the opponents missed, gave Stanford another point. At the next touchoff, U. S. C. scored a basket, followed by a converted foul. Playing fast and furiously, fouls were again called on Stanford, the result being that the Southerners made two points more before the game ended. Trojan supporters came back the next night anticipating another victory, but at the final whistle the score stood 31 to 23 for Stanford. Stanford played a running- game. Captain Nip McHose was in his prime, rvmning up a total of sixteen points during the evening. The Trojans led in the first half until i Ievers and McHose uncorked a burst of speed, leaving the score at 11 all when the half ended. In the second half, McHose, almost single handed, brought home the Stanford victory. McBurney and Shipkey played hard and kept the Trojans away from the basket at critical times. Steft ' en replaced Nevers when the latter went out on fouls, and took care of the forward job very creditably. This victory gave Stanford a lead in the southern half of the conference, and the team prepared for the final series with California. The team played well against California, and probably only the lack of substi- tutes prevented the Cardinal from taking the remaining three games. The 1924 team was one of the strongest seen at Stanford during the nine seasons of basketball as a major sport. Oliva, Steele, Shipkey, Moody, Nevers, Mitchell, and others will be on hand in 1925, and the victorious 1927 fresh- man team will doubtless give the 1925 varsity the substitutes and regulars necessary to make it a winning combination. The basketball team has been handicapped in the early season by the fact that football season does not end much before the basketball season is due to start. To offset this disadvantage, the coaches are now planning to have light workouts throughout the spring and the fall in order that the men may have the feel of the ball and be in some condition when the season begins. Captain-elect Oliva has been holding turnouts on the court this spring, and the ])rospect for the 1925 season is bright. With the basketball talent now on hand, Stanford men should make a strong bid next year for victory over California and for the Pacific Coast conference Theodore j TEn Steffex title. Fonvard 138 Mack row: Wallacf. (manager), Williams, Anderson, Southworth, Hunt (coach) Front row: Joseph, I avii), Price (captain), Shipkey, Jayred FRESHMAN BASKETBALL AFTER a whirlwind preliminary series, during which they won all of the twelve games on the schedvile, Stanford freshmen captured the California series, three games to two — the first series won by Stanford babes since 1917. California, 22; Stanford, 29 By a brilliant show of teamwork and smooth playing, the freshmen defeated the California Cubs decisively, 29 to 22, in. the Harmon gymnasium, February 13 David and Price, who had been the mainstays of the team all season, shot with great accuracy. Jayred and Anderson alternated at center. Both played a con- sistent game. Robie, the flashy Bear forward, was held to one field goal during the game, largely through the stellar work of Newhouse and Shipkey at guard. California, 14; Stanford. 9 The second game of the series was played in the Stanford pavilion, February 20, and the Card Babes lost by a 9 to 14 score. The dope favored Stanford to repeat the first victory: but California gained an early lead and held it throughout the game. California 20; Stanford 27 In a dramatic comeback, the Stanford freshmen took the final game and the series by registering a 27 to 20 win in the Oakland auditorium, February 26. After a see-saw contest, the half ended in a 12 to 12 tie. The frosh came back with a vengeance in the second period, and their teamwork was rewarded by baskets by Price, Jayred, and David. Newhouse was again the star of the Stanford de- fense. Jayred and Price each accounted for eleven points, and David for four. The preliminary season victories won by the freshmen and the scores follow : Placer Union high school, 29 to 14; San Mateo junior college, 28 to 11; Oakland Technical high .school, 10 to 7; Santa Clara freshmen, 22 to 9; Santa Rosa junior college, 29 to 5 ; San Jose State Teachers ' college, 20 to 18; Fresno State Teachers ' college, 26 to 17; San Jose high school, 29 to 12; Berkeley high school, 23 to 7; Piedmont high school, 22 to 8; Willits high school, 22 to 16; Livermore high, 26 to 14. 139 !M 4 iiackrow; i-usiGNAN, Smith, Stkwart, Knox, Thornhill (coach; Front row: Frank, Cornell, Kunzel, James 145-POUND TEAM Stanford weight teams on the whole had a very unsatisfac- tory season in basl ;etball this year. In the case of the 145- pound team, the jinx was not shaken in time to avoid defeat in the California series. The first game with CaHfor- nia was played in the Oakland auditorium on February 16, as a preliminary to the second Stanford-California varsity con- test, and the Cardinals . were the losers by a score of 32;t ' o 25. ' - ' .At half time California was leading 23 to 6. The Stanford rally in tli ' second half was not sufiicient to turn the tide. In the second California game, a ' t Stanford o ' h February 23, the Stanford 145 ' s played better basketball, but the improvement was not sufficient to bring the team victory. The final score was 34 to 20. The Stanford team included Neer, Cornell, O ' Hara, and Alexander, forwards; Knox and Stewart, centers; Mangin, O ' Hara, and Lund, guards. The season ' s scores for the 145-pound team follow: January 18, Stanford 23, San Jose Circle Y. M. C. A. 28; January 25, Stanford 21, California Affiliated Colleges 14; February 1, Stanford 18, Palo Alto high school 25; February 8, Stanford 20, San Mateo junior college 14; February 16, Stanford 25, California 145 ' s 32; February 23, Stanford 20, California 145 ' s 34. 130-POUND TEAM After an erratic season, the Stanford 130- pound basketball team met hard luck in the Cali- fornia series in the form of in- juries to players, with the result that California gained the light- weight basketball title for the first year since 1914. At half time in the first con- test, played at Berkeley on Feb- ruary 13, the Stanford team was leading 12 to 10. They held the lead until late in the last half, when injuries began to hamper the team. Schultzberg and Hogle left because of injuries, and Meyer went out on fouls. Substitutions availed little, and California won, 35 to 32. The second game was won by the California men in much the same manner, the final score being 23 to 16. The game was the roughest ever held in the Stanford pavilion, Kitow and Schultzberg being sent to the hospital during the evening. At half time the Cubs led by a score of 14 to 12, and had the injuries not occurred Stanford might have taken the game. Players who went in against California were Hobro, Meyer, Morrison, Kitow, forwards ; McClellan and Hogle, centers ; Schultzberg, Hugo, Blosser, guards. 140 Hack row : Schultzb?:rg, O ' Donnei.l, (coach), Mkyer (captain), Hogle Front row; Kitow, Hugo, Hobro, Morrison, McClellan, Krotz, Blosser TllORNlIILL m Back row: Denny (trainer), Arthur, Ludeke, ■E., Campbell, Hartranft, Dole, Evers, Templeton (coach), McCready, Boles, Kemnitzer, Kerr, Tucker (manager) Second row: Richardson, Swayne, Kelly, Anderson, Murphy, Coverley. Allen, Miller, Smith, Elliott, Daly, Harlow, P. Scofield, Dennij First row: Hays, Whisler, Richards, ,Mixon, I.Campbell, Caspar, MacRae, Leistner, Judah (captain), Hale, Macintosh. Bragg, Charles TRACK SEASON, 1924 pROSPECTS for the 1924 track season looked bright from the moment it was - ' ■announced that Glenn Hartranft would return this year. With many developed athletes beginning to round into form, the team which Coach Templeton had been working upon for more than three years began to be more than a mere skeleton com- posed of a few stars. In the javelin alone, Stanford was weak in the preliminary season. Following the Irish marathon and the interclass meet, the first competition of the season came March 15 when Stanford met the Olympic club. Before the con- test, dopesters conceded an easy victory to the San Francisco team; the final score of 84 5-6 to 46 1-6 in favor of the varsity was a distinct upset. In the mile and in the half-mile, the Stanford men shut out the Olympians completely. When Hale won the century in ten seconds flat, and Caspar took second, there was more joy. Kerr won the mile in 4:29.2 and Richardson placed first in the half, with a mark of 1 :57. Campbell raced into first place in the 220-yard dash in the fast, early season, time of 21 4-5 sec- onds. Anderson went 6 feet 1-4 inch in the high jump, tying with Green for first place. Hartranft won the shot and discus easily, and Leistner made the low hurdles in 24 2-5 seconds. The real thrill of the day came when Scofield tied with Red Norris in the pole vault at 12 feet 6 inches and Dennis took points in the triple tie for third. R. L. Dink Templeton Coach 142 A close finish: Covcrlcy ' s sprint takes him to the tape ahead of his Olympic club opponent in the relay Start of the 880-yard run in the I ' . S. C . meet. Richardson, who won the race, is in the second lane The Olympians led the relay for three laps, when Coverley took the baton. He trailed the Olympic runner until the last fifty yards, where they ran stride for stride, but Cov- erley ' s sprint led him to the tape and a Cardinal victory. W i t h the Olympic meet indicating that the dope on the 1924 Stan- ford track team would have to be recast, the Stanford varsity entrained for Los Angeles. On March 29, Stanford won the Uni- versity of Southern California meet by a score of 79 to 52, before 7,000 spectators ' who gathered in the Los Angeles coliseum. Tiny Hartranft was the sensation of the meet, winning the discus throw with a heave of 154 feet 4 1-4 inches, the fourth best throw ever made; and with equal facility shoving the 16-pound shot 51 feet 4 inches (over the world ' s record), but fouling the foot board by a half-inch in the attempt. Hale won the 100-yard dash in : 10 flat with Campbell close at his heels. Campbell made 21.7 seconds in the 220-yard dash. In the half-mile Richardson won from the touted Niersbach in the easy time of 1 :58.2. Defeated by the All-Southern Conference track team last year, Stanford went into the contest with the southerners on April 12 as underdogs. The 87 to 44 victory which the Cardinal scored was another upset to the pre-season forecast. In the mile Kerr, Smith, and Elliott took their marks, all looking anxiously to where Carter, Occidental star, dug his holes on the pole. Smith and Kerr, though forced bv Carter, were well in the lead toward the end of the race. Then Elliott came from behind and by a very pretty sprint beat out Carter by inches. Kerr ' s time of 4:24 4-10 seconds was the best made at Stanford in many years. Hale of Stanford came in half a yard ahead of the famous Argue in the 100-yard dash, covering the distance in the exceptional time of 9.9 seconds. Miller of Stanford took the quarter-mile in 49 6-10 seconds, with Van Judah running strong in third place. Then Anderson won the high jump at 6 feet 1 inch, and Kemnitzer went over six feet. The bleachers went wild when Tiny Hartranft made his mark of 50 feet 111-2 inches in the shot- put, an American inter- collegiate record, and the second best throw ever made. The put was within half an inch of Rose ' s world mark. Stanford scored a shutout in the half-mile. Last year the All-Conference team won from Stanford by taking the relay. The relay team from Pomona was on its way to the national relays in the east, and when the Stanford men came over 143 Hale wins the 100-yard dash in 9 9-10 seconds in the Southern Conference meet. Argue and Bucknian. both of Occidental, tie for second. (Argue on left) IS the final line as winners in the time of 3:247-10 seconds, the day ' s victory was complete. There was no doubt that Stanford was ready for California. The Southern Confer- ence team included Po- mona college, Occidental college, University of Cal- ifornia (Los Angeles), and California Institute of Technology. Results of the U. S. C. meet were as follows: mile run — Kerr (S), Elwood (U. S. C), Murphy (S), time, 4:32 7-10; 100-yard dash— Hale (S), Campbell (S), Martz (U. S. C), time, 10 seconds; shot put— Hartranft (S), Anderson (U. S. C), Houser (U. S. C), distance, 49 feet, 4 inches; 120-vard high hurdles— Dye (U. S. C), Leistner (S), Stevers (U. S. C), time, :15 2-10; 440-yard dash— Miller (S), Van Judah (S), Torkelson (U. S. C), time, :50 3-5; two-mile— Charles (S), Kerr (S), Hays (S), time. 10:00 3-5; high jump— Ross (U. S. C), Kemnitzer (S), B. Rvder (U. S. C.) and D. Ryder (U. S. C.) tied for third, height, 5 feet 11 1-2 inches; 880- vard run— Richardson (S), Niersbach (U. S. C), Macintosh (S), time, 1 :58 2-10; pole vault— White (U. S. C), Dennis (S) and Wright (U. S. C), tied for second, height, 12 feet; 220-yard dash— Campbell (S), Martz (U. S. C), Caspar (S), time, :21 7-10; 220-yard low hurdles— Leistner (S), Grumbles (U. S. C), Anderson (U. S. C), time, :24 2-10; discus— Hartranft (S), Anderson (U. S. C). Houser (U. S. C), distance, 154 feet AYz inches; javelin — Harlow (S), Weinbird (U. S. C), Wingard (U. S. C), distance, 163 feet 10 inches; broad jump — Wil- son (U. S. C), MacRae (S), Anderson (U. S. C), distance, 22 feet 8f inches; relay — won by Stanford team, time. 3:24 8-10. Hale wins the hundred against the Olympic club in 10 seconds. Caniphcll icas boxed by two Olympian runners and failed to place Kji STANFORD AT THE N. C. A. A. TRACK MEET With a team of ten men, Stanford accounted for fourteen and a half points and a second place in the annual National Collegiate Athletic association meet at Chicago, June 16, 1923. The victory is the more remarkable in that the Stanford representatives did not take a single first place. Michigan won the meet with thirty-one points. Johns Hopkins and Iowa tied for third place with fourteen points each; Penn State was fourth with thirteen and one-half points; Illinois and All in the Air at Once A remarkable picture taMen of the last flight of the 120-yard hiyh hurdles at the N. C. A. A. meet last June. Leistner of .Stanford, in the center lane, placed second. Left to right are: L ' ra::ier of Baylor, zvho did not place; Riley of Kansas Aggies, the zvinner; Brickman of Chicago, si.vth; LeLftner of Stanford, second; Taylor of Grin- licll, third; Hubbard of Michigan, fifth; and Johnson of Illinois, fourth. 144 Ml Mississippi A. . M. each won thirteen points, tying for fifth place; University of Southern Cahfornia placed sixth with twelve and one-half points, respectively. Ludeke, Campbell, Leistner, Williamson, Arthur, Black, Judah, Falk, Eskew, and Elliott made the trip, accompanied by Coach Dink Templeton and Acting Manager Orville H. Tucker, Jr. Ludeke took fourth in the hammer; Cami)bell, sixth in the hundred; Leistner, second in the high hurdles and fourth in the low hurdles; Williamson, fifth in the 440; Arthur, third in the discus and fourth in the shot, Eskew and Elliott took seventh places in the javelin and in the mile, respectively, thus being runners-up in the events. CROSS-COUNTRY RUNNING Stanford distance men scored a signal victory over cross-country runners from the University of California on December 6, taking seven out of the first ten places in the meet. Charles ran the four miles in 26 minutes, 19.2 seconds, taking first place. Hayes came second, followed closely by Cypher, Clifford, and lurphy. The order of finish was: Charles (S), F. Hayes (S), Cypher (S), Clifford (S), P. IMurphv (S), A. L. Jensen (C), McClellan (S), W. Peasoner (C), L. Bell (S), W. Whitman (C). Al Charles was elected captain of the cross-country team for 1924, and can look forward to a promising season, as most of the men who ran this year will yet be eligible. The season was opened with an intramural meet, and later the Olympic club runners came to Stanford as a prelude to the Stanford-Idaho football game, November 17. Charlie Hunter of the Olympic club made the five miles in 39 min- utes, 21 seconds, nosing out Charles, who was second. The order of finish was: Hunter (OC), Charles (S), Hooper (OC). Murphy (S), Cypher (S), Hayes (S), ] IcClelland (S). The men finished the race in front of the rooting section in the stadium. The club men won the meet, but the victory over Idaho was compensating to the men on the team, who turned about and proceeded to give California a virtual shutout. Intramural cross-country running has more than justified its continuation by de- veloping an increasingly large number of promising varsity distance runners each year. This year saw Luther Bell, Breakers, come to the fore in the intramural contest, placing later in the California-Stanford cross-country meet. The intra- mural cross-country was won for the second time in succession by El Campo, the winning team being made up of Moody, Haseltine, Meyers, Paris, and Pearce. though Cummings of En- cina was the first man across the line. The meet was held on November 1 7, at the same time that the varsity was meeting the Olympic club. El Toro placed second in the meet, McBurney, Boren, and Belanger finishing. The runners finished in the following order : C u m- m i n g s, Bell, Hayashi, Moody, McBurney, Has- e 1 t i n e, Boren, Meyer, Paris, Pearce, Belanger. Clifford, Mubphy, Cvphkr, ljiaki-ks. ii 145 Back row: Tucker (manager), Toffelmier, Anderson, Spencer. Evans, Work, Truman, Hoffman, Mann, Somavia, McCol- LOCK, Templeton (coacli) Second row: Mosher, Harrison, Macabee, Wool, Williams, Cummings, West (captain), Allen, Shipkey, Meeks, Lee, Mc- Dermott First row: Craft, Doerr, Ridley, Templeton, Babcock, McOougall. Joseph, Casad, Adams, Aiken FRESHMAN TRACK u iW B ' r ■' ij IN iE T OR the first time in the history of freshman track competition against California, - ■the ' 27 track team defeated the wearers of the blue and gold by the decisive score of SS ' A to 47M. The meet was held at Berkeley on April 12. This victory alone would have been a singular achieve- ment for the freshmen, but instead, it served as a fitting climax to a season which was already marked by a series of successes never before eciualled in the history of freshman athletics at Stanford. The fresh- men defeated the California football ma- chine for the first victory in ten years. In basketball, the babes also chalked up the only defeat that a California freshman team had sufifered at Stanford ' s hands in seven years. The string of victories was Hoffman not only takes first in the discus and shot but surprises the field mth a second in the javelin continued in the minor sports. California freshmen were decisively ' defeated in soc- cer, swimming, and water polo. The only setbacks that the yearlings sufifered were in tennis and baseball. In this year ' s Little Big meet, the fresh- men took twelve of the fifteen first places, and a majority of the seconds and thirds. Hoffman of Stanford was high point man for the day, taking firsts in the shot and discus and then .surprising everyone by tak- 146 Meeks ' leap of 22 feet 3 inches takes first honors in the broad jump Adams (S), and Sclnmlb (C) , break the tape together in the 100-yard dash, with Babcock (S), a close third ing a second in the javelin with a throw of 162 feet. Work surprised the liear Cubs by defeating Hamp- ton, high jump favorite, with a leap of 6 feet 2 inches. I I e e k s ' broad jumping, in which he made 22 feet 3 inches, was a feature of the field competition. Spencer, Adams, and West bore the brunt of the track competition. The 100-yard dash in which Adams of Stanford and Schwalb of California tied for first was one of the most exciting finishes of the day. Spencer also upset the dope when he successfully took the low hurdles from Enos. West defeated Enos in the high hurdles. Spencer, winner of the low hurdles, was the national interscholastic champion in that event. He also won the quarter-mile race, and later ran the final lap in the relay. A note of sadness was evident when word reached the campus that Spencer had been injured in an automobile accident after leaving the meet. The result was the complete loss of sight of one eye, an accident which may affect seriously his future success in track competition. The freshmen met unqualified success in the preliminary meets of the season, de- feating the combined high schools of Sacra- mento, Chico, and Modesto, and Sacra- mento and Chico junior colleges, 70 1-2 to 51 1-2; the combined Oakland Technical, Alameda, Fremont, McClymond, Berkeley, and Richmond high schools, 84 to 33 ; and the combined Peninsula high schools, San Francisco Polytechnic and Salinas high, 97 to 25. In the second meet Hofifman ' s mark of 137 feet 4 inches in the discus tied the Stanford-California varsity record, made last year. The results of the California meet follow: 100-yard , ,- dash — Adams (S). and Schwalb (C), tied for first; Bab- cock (S), third; time, 10 3-5; 440-yard dash — Spencer (S), Richman (S), Bertillon (C) ; time. 54 2-5; mile run — Schwobeda (C), Stevens (C), Cummings (S) ; time, 4:32 7-10; 120-yard high hurdles— West (S), Enos (C), Javred (S); time. 15 4-5; two-mile run — Stevens (C). Ri ' dlev (S). Truman (S) ; time, 10:31 5-10; 220-vard dash —Adams (S), Babcock (S), Schwalb (C) ; time, 22 9-10; 880-yard run- -Schwobeda (C), Howard (C), McColloch (S); time, 2:07 7-10; 220-yard hurdles— Spencer (S), Enos (C), Allen (S) ; time, 25 5-10; discus— Hoffman (S), Levy (C), Macabee (S); distance, 126 feet 10 inches; broad jump — Meeks (S). Hampton (C), Bailey (C) ; dis- tance, 22 feet 3 inches; high jump — Work (S), Hampton (C), West (S) ; height. 6 feet 2 inches; pole vault— Wil- liams (S), and McDermott (S), tied for first; Templcton (S), Chambers (C), Shaw (C), and Mize (C), tied for third; height, 10 feet 6 3-4 inches; shot put — Hoffman (S), Cox (C), Anderson (C) ; distance, 41 feet 10 inches; javelin — Shipkey (.S), Hoffman (S), Anderson (S) ; dis- tance, 164 feet; relay — won by Stanford; time, 3:36 2-5. 147 Work clears the bar at 6 feet 2 inches for a first in the high jump Spencer breaks the tape inches ahead of Richman in the 440-yard dash 1 -■• ' i| Tyler F. Bud Woodward Captain Harry Woi.ter Coach BASEBALL SEASON PJ OR the first time in some years, - ■the Stanford baseball team opened the season with brilliant prospects. Having a hard-hitting aggregation, which gave the pitching staff excel- lent support, the Stanford team won seven straight games at the opening of the season, preliminary to the California series. Three scattered games with Ireland ' s Independents opened the Stanford season. The first game, on January 23, was won by Johnston ' s homer in the ninth inning, giving the Cards a 3 to 2 victory. In the second battle, on the day following, darkness prevented an 8 to 8 tie from being played off. The final game,, on Feb- ruary 16, resulted in winning the series from Ireland ' s Independents by handing them the small end of a 6 to 4 score. Nine runs in the fourth inning of the first Stanford-Olympic club game, on Feb- rviary 2, gave Stanford a lead which the clubmen could not overcome, the final score being 11 to 3. On February 23, in a return game which lasted eleven innings, a hit by Roberts, which brought Mulchay home, gave Stanford a 5 to 4 victory over the San Franciscans. On March 8, Stanford lost to the clubmen, 5 to 2. Nevers, pitching his first game, was hit freely, and was relieved by Oviatt. On February 12, the varsity, with Teague in the box, had little trouble in win- ning from the Redwood City police by a score of 8 to 0. The Northern Alumni who came to Stanford to test their come-back powers were defeated, 10 to 0, on Feb- ruary 22. Oviatt allowed but two hits, and made a home run in the fourth inning. After seven straight wins, the eighth game was lost to the Ambrose Tailors, on Februarv 27. Teague got away with a bad start, and the six runs which the Tailors secured in the first inning were too much of a handicap to overcome, the final score being 7 to 2 for the Cardinal opponents. Loewenstein replaced Teague and jiitched a good game. The first game with Kenealy ' s Seals came on February 9 with a win for Stanford of 4 to 3. On March 1 the Seals took the measure of the varsity in a 5 to game, Oviatt allowing seven hits in the three innings in which the scores were made. The first game of the Santa Clara series followed on March 5. The losing streak of the varsity continued in the first game against the Mis- sionites, Santa Clara winning, 3 to 2, after Randazzo poled out a home run in the sixth inning. Teague and Solomon were in the box. After an uphill battle, on March 12, Stanford came back into the win column by defeating Santa Clara, 3 to 2. The Santa Clara men drove Loewenstein from the box in the seventh. Solomon replaced him. Through poor judgment, the Missionites lost the chance to score a win. May, Lawson, Fuller, and Woodward each accounted for two hits during the game. At the opening of this game, Tyler Bud ' Woodward was elected captain of the Stanford team, succeeding Ed Patterson, who was declared ineligible. The final game of the Santa Clara series, played April 9, ended with a 6 to 2 win for Stanford. Ernie Nevers, in the box, allowed but three hits, while Stanford men took nine hits from Scherf of Santa Clara. 148 liackrow: Symonds (manager), T.avvson. McCanulfss, May, Oviatt. ' olter (coach) Front row: Mulchay, Johnston (captain-t ' Iect ), Woodward (captain), Xevers, Roberts, Fuller, Cuddeback Twelve errors in the first game with St. Mary ' s, on March 15, lost the game for Stanford, 12 to 2. Oviatt, Nevers, ancJ Teague went in to stem the tide, but to no avail. On April 2, Stanford gave St. Mary ' s her first defeat of the season in a 1 to win over the Oakland college. Xevers allowed six hits, while the Stanford men connected with Farrell for ten. Fuller made three hits in the game. On March 22, the Stanford varsity played excellent ball against the second team of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Until the sixth inning, Stanford had the edge, but the Yanningans finally pulled out and won, 5 to 2. McCandless made four hits in as many times at bat. Teague pitched his best game of the preliminary season, allow- ing only seven hits, Stanford gathering eight from Hollister of Pittsburgh. On March 24, the final series of the ])reliminary season opened with the first Stanford-University of Southern California game, at Stanford, won in a see-saw contest, 6 to 5. Oviatt and Solomon pitched for Stanford. In the second game, at Los Angeles, on March 23, U. S. C. gained an advantage when Solomon was knocked out of the box in the first two innings, the Trojans getting nine runs. Xevers went in and pitched a steady game, but the final score was 10 to 6 for the Trojans. In the final game of the series, Teague was accorded the same fate that attended Solomon the day before, Oviatt going in after Ramey had made a homer for the Trojans in the second inning, the game ending with a score of 8 to 5 for the Trojans. On the return trip to Stanford, the team ])layed the Standard Oil nine at Bakersfield. Solomon was on the mound, and the team won handily, 5 to 1. Thus ended the preliminary season, with a record of eleven wins, eight losses, and one tie game. The varsity went into the California series with an even chance to win. Immediately after the California series the captain for the 1925 baseball season was elected. Charles Johnston was the man chosen by his teammates to lead the squad next year. Johnston proved the most valuable man on this year ' s varsity. He started the season in left field, where he played flawless ball. Later he played first base, and when Jim Lawson, the regular catcher, hurt his hand, Johnston stepped in and ably filled Lawson ' s place. It was largely due to his stellar work behind the bat that Stanford was able to annex the California series for the first t ime in five years. Besides playing baseball, Johnston is a stellar football player, having held a tackle berth on the varsity for the past two years. 149 Back row: Symonds (manager). J. A. Stkwart. Lindquist, Mackkrsie. Rikse, David, Hunt (coach) Front row: Collins, Southwobth, Hlazier, G. Stewart (captain) . IUilard, Morrill, Osthaus B FRESHMAN BASEBALL THE bviilding of a freshman baseball team this year presented a difficult task, which Coach Hunt undertook with much misgiving. It was a question of placing such material as was available to best advantage, even as had been the case in football, basketball, and track. In these sports the freshmen won from the California babes, but the 1927 baseball nine was less fortunate in the California contests. In the first game with the California freshmen played at Berkeley April 12, the Stanford babes were nosed out, 5 to 4. They got of? to a good start, with Collins in the box. In the first two innings neither side scored. In the third, Lindquist made the first run for Stanford, and South- worth came in for the second. The California freshmen, however, connected with Collins for four hits in this inning, scoring three runs. In the fifth, Southworth came across the home plate again, and tied the score. In the eighth inning, the California babes brought in two more runs. G. Stewart came in with one run for Stanford in the ninth, which left the final score 5 to 4 in favor of California. On April 19, playing at Berkeley again, the Stanford freshmen lost, 7 to 4. The score was 2 to 2 in the sixth inning, but in the seventh, California pulled in four runs, and in the eighth, another. Osthaus came home before the inning was over, and Mackersie scored in the ninth. Init the final score stood 7 to 4, and the California-Stanford freshman series was ended. The preliminary season for the Stanford babes was rather hectic. February 2, San Mateo high school won, 5 to 3 ; February 9, Oakland Technical high school lost, 6 to 4 ; February 16, Hay- ward high school lost, 11 to 4 : February 20, William Warren lost, 4 to 3 ; I ' ebruary 22, University of California Dental college was defeated, 13 to 4: February 23. Chico lost, 10 to 4; February 27, Los Gatos high school was vanquished, 24 to 1; March 1, Alameda high school won, 5 to 3 : March 5, Palo Alto high scored, 4 to 5 ; March 8, Lick-Wilmerding high school lost, 13 to 1 ; March 12, the U. C. Dentists won revenge, 6 to ,t ; March S, Oakland high school lost by a 16 to 2 score. Dur ing spring vacation, the freshman nine toured San Joaquin valley. On March 28, Visalia high went down to an 11 to defeat: March 29, Hanford high school lost. 6 to 5. Coming back to Stanford, the freshmen beat Ixnvell high, 10 to 5, on April 5 ; and the game with the Stockton high school on April IS. played as an interlude in the California-Stanford freshman series, resulted in a 14 to 10 victory for the freshmen. 150 V. T. Ted Mertz Captain D TENNIS I KECTLY after the close of spring ([iiarter, Coach Harry Maloney and four members of the varsity tennis squad will embark for Australia for a summer six)rt tour of that continent. Confronted with the possibilities of going to England or Australia, the Stanford men elected the latter. Leaving San Francisco June 18, the team will arrive at Sydney July 12. On July 18 and 19, the first test matches will be played with the all-Australian universities team. The schedule includes games with Mel- bourne university at Melbourne on July 25 and 26 ; with the Melbourne IMetropolitan team on August 1 and 2 ; with Adelaide university at Adelaide on August 9 ; and with New South Wales State team at Syd- ney on August 15 and 16. On August 22 and 23. the second test match with the Australian universities team will take place at Sydney. The combined Australian and American college teams will meet the all-Australia team at Syd- ney on August 29 and 30. The last matches will be those against the all-. ustralian universities on September 5 and 6. The Stanford four will return to San Francisco, October 1. On May 1, the ranking players were Overfelt, Mertz. Hinckley, de Back, and Tussing, in the order named. Four of these five will lie selected to make the trip. The rise of Harold Overfelt to ranking position on the varsity resulted in his election to the captaincy of the 1925 team. Following the California :ontests, Stanford closed the tennis season by administering a 6-0 defeat to the racketers from the University of California, Los Angeles, on April 21. Harold M. Davis Coach Overfelt. Hinckley (captain), Mertz, de Back, Tussing, Gunther (manager) 151 GuNTHER (manager), Kurihara, Holman (captain), I , IK, Davis (coach) FRESHMAN TENNIS Yf ' RESHMAN tennis stars from Stanford were defeated by California in the dual ■■meet held at Berkeley on the morning of April 12, the final score being 4 to 1. Captain Cranston Holman, national municipal tennis champion, won the only match for Stanford from Stow of California in the singles event, score 6-2, 6-3. Hol- man ' s playing was of varsity caliber, and was the one bright light of the day. Injuries and illness at the time of the contests weighed in California ' s favor. Gardner of Stanford turned his ankle early in the game, and was easily defeated by Petty, 6-1, 6-2, in the second singles match. Kurihara, the other freshman star, was expected to take his matches, and played an excellent game until the middle of the third set, when he became ill. He had split the first two sets with Wise, his opponent, 6-3, 6-8, and the score in the third match was 4—4 when he was overcome and lost the last two games, the final tally being 6-4 for Wise. Holman and Kurihara of Stanford opposed Stow and Petty in the doubles. With Kurihara under the weather the going was difificult, as the California men presented an excellent combination, winning 6-3, 7-5. The final event, doubles in which Gardner and Baer of Stanford met Wise and Stearns, was also won by California, 6-4, 6-0. Lack of experience was a handicap to both teams. Cranston Holman, captain of the freshman team, is national municipal cham- pion and junior coast champion, as well as having won the southern California junior title. His addition to the varsity squad next year should add materially to the strength of the tennis team. Much is expected also of Kurihara. He was the recent winner of the Stanford novice tennis tournament in which there were sixty- four entries, and his playing on the freshman team drew favorable comment. Baer, who was also on the freshman team, was the runner up in the novice tour- ney, losing to Kurihara 6-2, 4-6, 6-1 . The team was coached in the 1924 season by H. M. Davis, who came to Stan- ford this fall as a new member of the physical education department. He has given much time to tennis and the tennis men, and states enthusiastically that the younger players of this season will develop into excellent varsity players before their college days are over. 152 VARSITY SWIMMING ARDEN ALLEN, by breaking the Stan- ford-California record in the 220-yard free style event in the annual meet with the University of California on February 19 in the Olympic pool, put the finishing touch on an emphatic 52 to 16 victory over the Blue and Gold swimmers. Every first place in the meet went to Stanford. Winning the relay in Stanford ' s only other dual meet. November 23, the Olympic Club bested the Cardinal swimmers, 37 to 31. Hawley, of Stanford, set a new Pacific Coast record of 73 feet 3 inches in the plunge for distance, and Wallace O ' Connor won the 220-yard free .style in 2 minutes 31 1-5 seconds, better than the new Stanford-Cali- fornia record, set by Allen. At the National Intercollegiate meet at the College of the City of New York in March, Charles Fletcher took second in the 220-yard breast stroke, and O ' Connor captured both the 220-yard and 440-yard free style events. giving .Stanford .second place in the meet. Fletcher swam the 220-yard breast stroke in better time than the former record of 2:47 2-5. al- though only jjlacing second. O ' Connor set new marks of 2:29 in the 220-yard swim and of 5:26 1-5 in the 440-yard event. Fletcher at Coronado August 19, 1923, broke the American record for the 220-yard breast stroke over a hundred-yard course by swimming it in 3 minutes 3 1-5 seconds. Albert White, diving at the A. A. U. meet at the Illinois Athletic Club in April, won both the national high and low board diving championships, giving Stanford fourth place. Dave Fall of Stanford won the national low board junior title in diving at the Hollywood Athletic Club in a meet held March 6. and John B. Dorcy took third. The results of the California meet follow: SO-yard free style — O ' Connor (S). Mitchell (C), Rau (C) ; time, 26 1-5; 100-yard free style— O ' Connor (S), Mitchell (C). Allen (S) ; time. :S8; 220-yard free style— Allen (S), Wright (S). O ' Brien (C) ; time. 2:38 1-5, breaking old record of 2:41 3-5: 100-yard breast stroke— Fletcher (S), Kracmer (S). Castleman (C) ; time. 1:15 4-5; 100-yard back stroke— DeGroot (S). White (S), SackeU (C) ; time, 1:15; relay — won by Stanford (McCallister. O ' Connor. Carlsmith and Hirschman) ; time. 1:07; diving — White (S). De Ferrari (C), Brown (S) ; plunge for distance — FuUerton (S), Barbat (C), Rosenbaum (S) ; dis- tance. 68 feet. 9 inches. Albert C. Al White Captain Wallace Wally O ' Connor Captain-Elect i.-ij-s afH ' fP ifttfff 1fft liackrow: Hrandsten (coach), Melcher, Kraemeb, Wright, Coli-ett. Fletcher. Schmieder, Rosenbaum, Ambrose Front row: O ' Connor, Ali.en, McCale-isteh, Carlsmith, Hirschman, Hubbard, IIrown. Myers 154 Back row: Ambrose (manager) . _K on vi n, Hki-iuks. Sieibktt, S i i i Front row: Schwartz, Stewart, IIanley (captain), Trojanovich Fletcher, Brandsten (coach) FRESHMEN THE swimming season for the 1927 freshman team was a successful one from the time that the first-year men pressed the seniors for the second place in the interclass meet, through the final emphatic victory over the California swimmers. In the three meets in which they engaged, the freshmen ran up a point total of 161 to 35 against their opponents. The dual meets of the season, aside from interclass and the California series, were with the Alameda high school swimmers and with the Junior Olympic club team. Against Alameda, the freshmen ran up a 50 to 18 score. In this meet, the times were slow, though Doerr won the 50- yard dash in :26 1-5, and Cundall of Alameda won the 100-yard breast stroke in 1 :19 2-5, barely nosing out Hanley. In the Olympic club meet, the freshmen scored 52 out of a possible 60 points. The meet with the University of California Babes was held at the Olympic club pool in San Francisco on February 19, as a preliminary to the Stanford-California varsity meet. When the last dripping swimmer emerged from the tank, the score stood 59 to 9 in favor of the Stanford first- year men, and one record had been broken, that for the plunge, Xewhouse setting a new mark of 68 feet even. Stanford took every first place in the meet. Every man on the freshman team was a potential star, and it would be difficult to pick out- standing performances during the sea.son. Coach Ernst M. Brandsten is much pleased with the work of the team, and to him must be given much of the credit for the string of overwhelming victories. Dorsey, who won first place in the diving in the Stanford-California freshman meet, is developing fast in his event, and took third place in the national junior low board diving cham- pionships held at the Hollywood Athletic Club on March 6, the junior title being won by Dave Fall of Stanford the same evening. Doerr, Hanley, Stevenson, and Fletcher showed up especially well in the swimming events during the season, and Newhouse was making long plunges before the season was over. The results of the California meet were as follows: 50-yard free style — Doerr (S), Mayne (C), Trojanovich (S), time :26 1-5; 100-yard free style— Doerr (S), Schwartz (S), O ' Neill (C), time 1 :03 ; 220-yard free style— Stevenson (S), Sibbett (S), Peterson (C), time 2:48; 100-yard breast stroke — Hanley (S), Kenney (S), Lederman (C), time 1:23; 100-yard backstroke — Fletcher (S), Stewart (S), McVey (C), time 1:18; relay — won by Stanford freshmen (Doerr, Fletcher, Stewart, Trojanovich), time 1:08 4-5; diving — Dorsey (S), Kenney (S), Mayne (C) ; plunge for distance Newhouse (S), Goodwin (S), Muller (C), distance 68 feet. 155 WATER POLO STANFORD ' S water polo teams lived up to their past reputation by administering crushing defeats to the University of Cali- fornia varsity and freshmen. The varsity team also made a strong bid for the right to go East for the national senior champion- ships, being nosed out by the Olympic club in the deciding contest. Holding the national junior water polo championship, won last year, the Stanford varsity water polo men won the California game in easy fashion. Five hundred people gathered at Encina pool to watch the fresh- man and varsity games on February 29. In the first minute of play, the Stanford varsity scored twice, and though California rallied later in the game, it was of no avail, the final score being 10 to 3 in favor of Stan- ford. Captain Myers scored five goals for Stanford, followed by Charles Fletcher, with three, and McCallister and Allen with one each. The freshmen, in the preliminary game, registered a decisive victory, 13 to 1. Brooks and Captain Stewart were the stars. California was completely outclassed in each game, and never once took the ball at the opening of a try. With a $2,000 guarantee to the winner, for expenses to the National meet at Chicago, the game between the Olympic club and Stanford was hard fought, but when the final gun sounded, the clubmen were the winners by a score of 5 to 3. The national junior water polo championships were scheduled at Stanford this year, and Stan- ford again took the title by default, when no contesting teams apj eared. The varsity squad included the following : Allen, McCallister, Belcher, Hubbard, Wright and Schmieder, backs ; Myers, O ' Con- nor and Fletcher, forwards; Collett, goal. Freshmen playing against California were Sibbett, Graham, Herth, backs; Brooks, Stewart, Fletcher, forwards; Poulson and Hinckle, goal. Robert P. Myers Captain Charles H. McCallister Captain-Elect Il;uk ro : IIk.wdstkn (C ' nnrlu, ScnMiKDKK, Relcher, Coli-ett, Fi.ktchek. O ' Connor. Ambrose (Manager) Front row: Allen, McCallister (Captain Elect), Myers (Captain), Hubbard, Wright 156 SOCCER Starting the season with but three expe- rienced players, the soccer varsity, under the guidance of Coach Harry Maloney, was rounded into one of the most formidable college teams on the Pacific coast. After several early season setbacks the varsity, one by one, downed the opponents at whose hands it had suffered defeat at the begin- ning of the season, and finally finished sec- ond in the university and club league. The first two games resulted in Cardinal victories, one from the Italia Mrtus, by a score of 3 to 1, and the other from the Palo Alto American Legion, 5 to 0. The varsity was then the victim of the Olympic club, the Sons of Norway, the Sons of St. George, and the Clan MacDonald, the ma- jority of whom it afterwards defeated. The first California game was played at Berkeley, November 10, the Califomians winning 4 to 3. It was by far the most spectacular and hotly-contested battle waged between the two institutions since the war. On Lincoln ' s birthday, a rejuvenated varsity, greatly strengthened by the return of four veterans, who were ineligible to play during the fall quarter, trounced the Calif ornians in the last game of the league play 3 to 2. Stanford made the first goal, but the Califomians evened the score before half time. During the first five minutes of the second half Howe was given a free kick and Franklin scored from the center of the field on the pass. Before the half ended Franklin had shot two goals and Dwight one. Captain de Sousa made the other California score. The freshmen caught something of the increasing spirit of aggressiveness of the varsity with the result that after tying the first game with the Blue and Gold babes they won the second and their series by a 3 to score. The freshmen receiving circle ' 27 ' s were: Forrest, Evans, Wheaton, Smith, Bushnell, Coleman, West, Strong, Bailard (captain), Lewis. Page, Macaya. Miron, David. William W. Swavne Captain Rali ' ii D. Howe Captain-Elect Hack row: Malowey (coach), Clark, Bucklin, Munford, Howe (captain-elect), Schoen, Tucker, Smith (manager) .Second row; Cardoza. Off, J. F ' ranklin, Rogers, Polland First row; MiRON, P.Franklin, Dwight, Swayne (captain), Quigley, Hoover 157 T ' POLO HE Stanford polo team emerged from the 1923-24 season intercollegiate champions of the Pacific coast, and claim- ants to the western title, having lost but three of twenty-three games played. At the R. O. T. C. summer camp at Del .Monte the Stanford team won all six games played with the Oregon Agricultural col- lege, the Thirtieth U. S. Infantry, the lierkeley polo club, and the Santa Cruz polo club. ' ith the opening of college, a twelve-game schedule was arranged, calling for three off-campus series. The Berkeley aiul the Palo Alto polo clubs were easy vic- tims, as was the ' J ' hirtieth Infantry. A trip to Corvallis, Washington, in October re- sulted in a win from the Beavers, who were also twice defeated in return games, played at Stanford. The trip to play the Santa Cruz polo club brought the first loss of the season. Efforts were made to bring to Stanford the Uni- versity of Arizona team, which won the championship of the southwest, but the . rizonans did not accept Stanford ' s offer. In the interlude between the winter and spring quarters the Peninsular tournament was held on the university field. The Eleventh Cavalry, San Mateo, the Thirtieth Infantry, the Berkeley polo club, and the Seventy-sixth Field Artillery were invited. Stanford lost to the Eleventh Cavalry, and the San Mateo polo club, but tied with the Cavalry for second place, the San Mateans winning the tourney. Capt. C. E. Boyle, Jr., U.S.A. Coach Otto C. Barby Captain Tkemaine, Irwin, R. Barby, Laub 158 BOXING For the second time, failure to ad- just the color hue question pre- vented Stanford boxers from meetini; ' those from the University of Califor- nia. The main events of the season, therefore, were the two meets with Davis Farm, and the meet with the University of California, Los Angeles. On February 14, Stanford met and defeated Davis Farm, five bouts to two. Two of Stanfords victories were won by the knockout route. The other three were won on decisions. Martin and Tull, both of Stanford, scored knockouts. The two wins that Davis registered were scored by Milne over Simmons, and Bernshouse over Armbruster. ' an Hook, Harward, and Irwin, of Stanford, also won their bouts. A return match was held at Davis, March 7, and Gurdon Steele won his bout from Fioroni, and Martin won from Spillman. These were the only Stanford victories. The best bouts of the season were those on April 12 against the University of California, Los .Vngeles, when the southern branch won four bouts to three. Martin of Stanford defeated Good- man ; Hall won from Cashon, and Robinson won a fine bout against Sergei. On the other hand. Wood of the southerners defeated both Irwin and ' an Hook. Feeney won from Armbruster. and Frost from Harward. Back row : Maloney (manager), Adams, Harward, Schall, . rmbruster, Martin, Bissell Front row; Free.man, ' an Hook, Steele, Irwin, Tull, Robinson, Farmin GYMNASIUM In the annual Stanford-California gymnastic meet held at Stanford on the evening of March 14, Captain Paul Wilbur and Albert C. White were the only Stanford men who placed ; the final score being 41 to 13 in favor of the Blue and Gold. White, in tumbling, was the only Stanford man to take a first position. The results of the meet were as follows: Parallel bars: Basset (C), first; Debely (C) and Samaniego (C), tied for second. Horizontal bars : Debely (C) first: Wilbur (S) second; : Iiller (C), third. Side horse : Samaniego (C) first; Debely (C), second; Miller (C), third. Long horse: Debely (C), first ; Wilbur (S) and Auger (C), tied for second. Tumbling: White (S), first; Debely (C), second; Miller (C), third. All-around: Debely (C), first; Wil- bur (S), second; Bassett (C), third; Samaniego (C), fourth; Hopper (S) and Taylor (S), tied for fifth. Captain Paul C. Wilbur, Albert C. White, Max F. Hopper, Albert R. Taylor, George C. Baker, Charles B. White, Harry W. Stevenson, Harrell B. Pearson, Earle F. Smith, Sterling Beckwith, Guy R. King, Rudolph J. Nittler, and Edward A. Smith composed the Stanford gym team. Following the California meet. Max F. Hopper, manager of the 1924 team, was elected captain for the next season. Back row: .A.C.White, Farmin, Davis (coacli). Stevenson, Smith Front row: Hopper, King, Wilbur (captain), C.B.White, Taylor 159 HANDBALL For the second successive year, Stanford handball men defeated Cali- fornia, winning three out of four matches played at the San Francisco v. M. C. A. courts on F ' riday evening, March 7. Stanford won both singles matches, and one of the doubles events. In the singles, Loewenstein won the in- tercollegiate championship for the third time by defeating O ' Shaughnessy of California, 21 to 1, and 21 to 8. Richards downed his California oppo- nent. Smith, in the other singles match. Both men played good handball, and the match was more evenly contested than that between Loewenstein and O ' Shaughnessy, Rich- ards winning by scores of 21 to 16 and 21 to 16. In the first doubles event, C. Rutter and R. Reticker won from Davies and Dently of Cali- fornia, 21 to 8 and 21 to 13. California ' s team then turned the tables and took the final doubles match. Currier and Ekhoos defeating F. Murray and F. Koba of Stanford by scores of 21 to 14 and 21 to 18. The most exciting part of the contest came in the latter game when at one time the teams stood tied at 18 all before California rallied and won by a three-ix)int margin. Next year ' s handball varsity will be strengthened by some promising freshman material. In addition, Richards, Murray, and Koba of the 1924 team will return to continue the chain of Card victories. RkTICKKK, liLTTKK, I -OKWh.N ' STEl N . D.WIS (cuacll), KuUAKUS, MURRAY GOLF Although the Stanford varsity golf team was defeated by the California golfers by a 22 to 5 score in the tour- ney on November 31, the Stanford first-year team came back with a 10 to 6 victory over the University of Cali- fornia freshmen on April 5. The first annual intercollegiate golf match was held at Del Monte on Feb- ruary 22. The match was won by Lauren Upson of California. The all- university event was won by Frank Ditzler and Harold Miller on the sec- ond flight. The results in the California-Stanford varsity meet were: singles — Upson (C) won from Ditz- ler (S), 3 points; Haight (C) won from Byerly (S), 3 points; Nounan (C) won from Hines (S), 2 points; Villain (C) won from Hirschman (S), 3 points; Clark (S), won from Jacobs (C), 2 points; Lang (S) won from Stephens (C) by default, 3 points; four-ball matches — Up.son and Haight (C) won from Ditzler and Byerly (S), 4 points; Jacobs and DeArmond (C) won from Clark and Carter (S), 4 points; Villain and Nounan (C) defeated Hines and Hirsch- man (S), 3 ix)ints. The results of the freshman golf meet with the Blue and Gold were as follows: Byerly (S) and Giddings (C), all square, each 1 point; Lang (S) won from Dalzill (C), 3 points; McLean (S) lost to Henshaw (C), 3 points; Klauber (S) defeated Confer (C), 3 points; Byerly and McLean (S) defeated Confer and Giddings (C), 3 points; Dalzill and Hen- shaw (C) defeated Lang and Newmark (S), 2 points. 160 P ack row : IIincklky, Clark, Carter Front row: Ditzlkr, Hirschman (captain), Byerly, Lang FENCING Cardinal fencers, coached by Harry Maloney, defeat ed California on March 14 for the fourth successive year, the score being 20 matches to 5 in Stan- ford ' s favor. The five-man team which won from the Blue and Gold, and which upheld the Cardinal throughout the season, was composed of Captain Kenneth Gardner, Elwyn Bugge, Michel de Cazotte, Jack Wallace, and Scott Smith. On April 8, a three-man team, Gardner, Bugge, and Smith, won the Pacific Coast team championship by defeating the Olympic club 7 matches to 2. This match also gave Stanford the championship of the Amateur Fencing League of America. During spring vacation, Gardner, de Cazotte, and Bugge went to Los Angeles to meet the Los Angeles Athletic Club for the third successive year. The club won in the foils by a 6-3 score and the duelling sword contests by a tally of 5-3, its team consisting of a former national intercollegiate champion and other men of great experience. This was the first match since the war in which com])etition was held with duelling swords as well as foils. Stanford fencers won first and second place ; in the individual championships of the North Pacific Coast section of the Amateur Fencing League of America, held in San Francisco April 15. Bugge annexed the junior championship, and de Cazotte took second in his class. IJack row : Front row : Law (manager), Smith, Maloney (coach), Wallace DE Cazotte, Gardner (captain), Bugge m WRESTLING Stanford wrestlers did not compete with California this year, the diffi- culties arising in the boxing relations between the two universities applying as well to wrestling. Throughout the year, however, a squad of some twenty men made it their sport, and from this squad there have been developed some men who bid fair to win in next year ' s competition, if relations are re- sumed. Four men of the 1924 squad had been selected to compete in the Olym- pic tryouts at the Olympic club, San Francisco, May 8, when this form of the Quad went to press. R. L. Nicholson represents Stanford in the middleweight class; O. O. Woodhead is in the welterweight division; W. C. Snitjer is the bantamweight contender; and V. M. Hosepian, several times intercollegiate champion and P. A. A. contender, will also compete in the featherweight class. Hosepian is now attending the medical school in San Francisco and is not eligible for varsity competition. The three other men will continue to represent Stanford next year. S. G. Waggoner in the 125-pound class, L. G. Dobson in the 135-pound class, and Edward E. Sandys, a heavyweight, are also promising candidates for next year ' s team. Quinn, Whitney, and Rogers were other faithful performers during the present year. H. E. Davis, new assistant in the intramural department, is acting as coach, while Harry Maloney also helps to impart the fine points of the game. 161 IJackrow: Qu!nn, Snitjer, Whitnkv, Front row: Waggoner, Woodhead, Davis (coach), Nicholson, Uobson ATHLETIC FIELDS TO BE EXTENDED Plan Calls for Expansion Oz ' Cr Period of Twenty Years; Landscaping Will Enhance Attractiveness of Athletic Group By Gardner A. Dailey, Ex- ' 24 Landscape Architect ' I HE original idea in the planning of large universities was the informal placing -■■of the various units in the allotted area. Buildings were dotted about the land- scape in an informal manner, the idea in mind being that expansion could be more easily taken care of by the simple introduction of new buildings between the old ones. This might be termed planning without a plan. It proved wasteful both of space and money, as is instanced by the old plan of the University of California. When Stanford university was being planned, about 1886, this idea of scatter- ing buildings at random was falling into disuse. Senator and Mrs. Stanford, observ- ing the examples of architectural failure exhibited by other institutions on the Pacific, brought from the east Frederick Law Olmsted, often called the father of landscape architecture in America. Mr. Olmsted was given the task of planning the Stanford university group, and some time later submitted a scheme which formed the skeleton of the plan with which we are familiar today, a plan which time has not changed or custom staled. I say this with possibly one exception. In the eighties, athletics in America were still in the crawling stage — at least university athletics. Could Olmsted have fore- seen, on his first visit to the campus site, beautiful in its park-like aspect as it is today, ten thousand automobiles parked beneath the spreading oaks ? He could have foreseen this no more than he could have visioned sixty thousand persons gath- ered to witness one athletic event, an event which in those days was not much more than a pleasingly informal adjunct to university life. Today the situation is dififerent. In 1923, of the 2,200 men enrolled at Stanford, 1,900 were eligible to compete in athletic contests. Of this number, more than 1,700 participated in various events. It is on the basis of this phenomenal increase in the importance of athletics in university life and the added amount of space needed for game courts and fields, that the Board of Athletic Control has adopted a policy of planning ahead for their needs for the next twenty years. They are planning for enlargement without encroachment, and are aiming to utilize to the best advantage the space allotted to them, a space which on the original Olmsted plan was not even considered important enough for any attention, and which is now claiming for its .needs more area than that covered by the academic groups. Athletic fields will be situated in proper relation to the traffic they will have to bear, according to the plan decided upon by the athletic stafif. Tennis, swimming, handball, and other minor sports will be nearest the dormitories. A very important part of the program is the aim to secure beauty as well as ampleness. The realization that the group could be given a park-like character without ])rejudicing its purpose was a wise step in the direction of making the Stan- ford campus world-famed for its beauty — not that sort of beauty of cold archi- tectural austerity, but rather of refreshing greens, of leafy vistas, and shady groves of trees which harmonize more sympathetically with the surrounding countryside. First efforts will be concentrated on the stadium, which marks the chief accent of the group. It will be brought into the general design of the campus by dignifying its approach, and parking its entrances with bands of verdure. After that, the other fields will be tied into the group by plantations of trees and shrubs. The service yards will be screened, the axial avenues will be lined with shade trees, the courts and fields covered with turf, their edge lined with flowering shrubs, and the athletic group will form an intrinsic part of the beauty of the campus. 162 Al U L AN L,. 5 11 g q ATliLtTlC,, GIOYP i ©Irtjtcc inti? the $utnvs Above is a sketch by Gardiner A. Dailey of the men ' s athletic area as it will appear when completed. The extensive plan for enlarging the men ' s athletic facilities will include nine football fields, seven baseball fields, rnore than twenty tennis courts, five basketball courts, two polo fields and two soccer fields. The Encina gymnasium will have two new wings in front and two in the rear which will extend to the basketball pavilion (not depicted), thus forming a gymnasium quadrangle. The present football and baseball practice fields will be enlarged; the old track will be used for practice only. The stadium, with a seating capacity of 60,000, contains the varsity track as well as the varsity football field. A footpath will lead straight from the stadium to Palo Alto through the arboretum. The second varsity polo field lies to the right of the present one. both on El Camino Real. The Yard will be a branch of the corporation yard, removed from its present location near the stadium entrance to a point more remote from the principal athletic fields. 163 ACTION GLIMPSES IN MINOR SPORTS CONTESTS Stanford poloists in action against Oregon Agricultural col- lege, from whom they won the Pacific Coast championship: John Irwin, crack shot, is shozvn play- ing the ball along the sideboard, while his teammate rides off an opponent. Polo requires a keen eye and a steady nerve; szvinging polo mallets and lively horses add an element of danger zvhich gives it a :est. M n In tliis picture of the Stanford- California water polo game O ' Con- nor, the star Cardinal forzvard, is beating Herrington of California to the ball on the touehoff. It ivas in considerable measure due to O ' Connor ' s speed in getting the ball on the start that Stanford won from the Blue and Gold ivater poloists by a score of 10 to 3. ■' .-1 A tense moment in the game betiveen the Reds and Rlucs. which determined the monbershif ' of .Imer- ica ' s Olympic Gajnes rugby squad: Hyland (Stanford) is carrying the ball u-hile Cleaveland is coming up on his left ; Kirksey, e.rtreme right, will head off Hyland if the tackier tnisses. 164 INTERCLASS ATHLETICS By Jack W. Hardy Backi FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM, CLASS CHAMPIONS row: SpROULL (coach), Patterson, DeTuncq, Hayden, Riese, New- kirk, Peterson, McAllister Third row: Harvev, Hunt, Mann, Williams, Rehm, Rhine, Wright Second row : Clark, Johnson, Sandwick, Jergins, Read, Snyder. Baxter First row: Wents, Pegram, Walker, Yoakum, Arnstein, Carniato, Mc- DoUGALL, Springer FEELING that interclass athletics should have a place in Stanford ' s athletic program, C. W. Davis two years ago organized an interclass schedule. Since that time the growth of interclass competition has been phenomenal. This year over five hun- dred men participated in the various sports on the class program, and it is expected that this number will be still further increased next year. This year the senior class won the interclass championship with 23 points, and will accordingly have their class numerals engraved on the interclass cup. The 1923-1924 season started on October 25 with the football series. It was expected that the experienced senior eleven would defeat all comers, but the dope was badly upset, and the yearling gridders were the only team to come through the season without a defeat. The seniors were second with only one defeat: the juniors came third, having lost two games ; and the sophomores, with three defeats, were last. The football series included the following games: October 25 — juniors 0. freshmen 0; October 27 — seniors 13, sophomores 7 ; November 3 — freshmen 6, seniors 2 : November 3 — juniors 14, sophomores ; November 10 — freshmen 26, sophomores 0; November 10 — seniors 19, juniors 6. The sophomores, still smarting from their football humiliation, were determined to vindicate themselves in basketball. As a result a strong team was put on the court, and under the coaching of Walter Campbell, the squad quickly rounded into shape. Many members of the freshman team were candidates for the 1927 freshman squad. This factor was a help in their interclass games, but did not prove sufficient to give them the series. In the first game, the sophomores took the freshmen into the woods by a score of 1 1 to 9. The contest was a nip-and-tuck afifair, and it was only after rallies on both sides that the sophomores won the game. This was the only defeat for the first-year men. The seniors finished behind the freshmen, and the junior class was anchor team. The results of the series follow : December 4 — sophomores 12, freshmen 5 : Decem- ber 5 — seniors 19. juniors 11; December 6 — freshmen 11, juniors 9; December 11 — sophomores 8, juniors 5: December 12 — freshmen 23, seniors 10; December 13 — -sophomores 17, seniors 11. In swimming, the next event on the class calendar, the sophomores again distinguished themselves by taking first honors. The opening event of the meet, held F ' ebruary 8, was the relay, and the sophomore team, compo.sed of O ' Connor, Allen, Cole, and Carlsmith, took the race from the freshmen, who finished only a couple of feet behind. The seniors were third and the juniors last in the relay. In the diving events. White, the national champion, took first honors. Wally O ' Connor, holder of two Pacific Coast records, was the individual star of the day. He copped first in the back stroke and first in the 50-yard event, besides swimming on the winning relay team. In the 50-yard sprint O ' Connor was hard pressed by Karl Doerr, the freshman paddler. In the 220- yard swim, Allen, ' 26, nosed out Dutch Fletcher of the ' 27 mermen for first. The final rating was: sophomores, 29 points; seniors, 26 points; freshmen, 25 points; juniors, 16 points. Experience beats enthusiasm. That, in brief, was the result of the interclass track and field meet held March 8. The seniors had several star performers and their experience and ability was too much of a handicap for the underclassmen to overcome. Some of the sophomores, how- 165 SOPHOMOKi .s IMMINX. TEAM, INTERCl.ASS 1111, Cole, O ' Connor. Allen, Carlsmith, Fall H)I.I)ERS ever, turned in fast times. Ted Miller, ' 26. won the 440-yard dash in 50 sec- onds flat. Bill Richardson, the speedy half-miler, led the field to the tape in the fast time of 1 :57 flat. Al Smith of the junior class led almost the whole _ _ „_ -_ _ _ distance, but was forced to take sec- p ■i ■T Bff ffP WW B ond when Richardson uncorked a r Jl ■1 ' 1 K I ]w ' f sprint at the finish. In the two-mile , run, Al Charles had things his own L.- —■Il I ' ll I f ' H way, and took the race handily in 9 :54. ' ' - -• ' -- ' -  . j j g javelin throw, Ted Shipkey, a freshman, won with a toss of 166 feet 11 inches. Hartranft of the seniors had no difficulty in winning both the shot put and discus throw. He put the shot 46 feet and threw the platter 144 feet 3 inches. Anderson, for the seniors, sprang a surprise when he jumped 6 feet }i inches for first place. The result of the annual Irish Marathon, held March 6, was included in this year ' s track rating. Last year the seniors won this event and the freshmen were second. Since that winning team had graduated it was conceded that the sophomores would win this year. Again, however, the advance dope was upset, and the senior class finished first, while the sophomores had to be content with second. The juniors were last, for the second time in two years. Ten points were added to the track score of the winners of the marathon. This made the senior track score 63)4 points. The other classes finished with the following scores: juniors 45, sophomores 36)4, fresh- men 29 . The interclass meet was first held in the new stadium. Baseball was the next event on the schedule. The fact that freshmen were organized, and had been training, gave them a decided edge over the others. In the opening game, March 3, the seniors defeated the juniors by a 13 to count. The sophomores were late in getting organized, and were compelled to forfeit the first game to the freshman nine. The freshmen then won from the juniors, on March 5, in a one-sided game, in which the final count was 17 to 1. The senior team was the next victim of the freshman nine. In a hard-fought game, on March 12, the babes downed the upperclassmen by an 8 to 5 count. I ' lnally the ' 26 team got started, on March 17, and accounted for a 10 to 7 win over the juniors. The teams finished in the following order: freshmen, 1.000; seniors, .667; sophomores, .333; juniors, .000. Soccer followed baseball on the interclass schedule, and in this sport the jvmiors were winners. They won all three of their games, and were closely followed by the sophomores who won two games, losing only to the juniors in the final contest. In the first game of the series the sophomores won from the freshmen by a 2 to score. The juniors then defeated the seniors in a 3 to 1 game. The sophs continued their winning streak, and took the seniors down for their second defeat, 1 to 0. The freshmen did not put a team in the field after their first game and so forfeited to the juniors and to the seniors. In the final game the juniors put their strongest team into the field and succeeded in putting a 1 to win over on the .sophomores. Had the freshmen played their .schedule of games, the sophomores might have won the series, becau.se the first-year men had a capable team, and might have beaten the juniors. This would have put the second-year men in the lead. The following men were captains of their resi)ective teams: seniors, Swayne; juniors, Clark; sophomores, Carr; fresh- men, Bailard. Tennis was the final event on the program. The seniors went through the tournament without a defeat from any class. Overfelt, number one man on the varsity, won every set in which he played, although this was not enough to put the juniors in the lead. The sophomores were second to the seniors, losing only to them. The juniors were third and the freshmen last, having lost every series. Results of the irterclass swimming meet follow: 50-yard free .style — O ' Connor (S), Doerr (F), Carlsmith (S), l!r(X)ks (l- ' j; time, 26.1; 100-yard free style— Wright (Sr), Brooks (F), 166 Allen (S). Schwartz (F); time. 1:03.2; 220-yard free style— Allen (S), Fletcher (F). Belcher (J), Stev- ensen ( F) ; time, 2 :44 ; 100-yard breast stroke — Fletcher (Sr), Kraemer (St), Hanley (F), Kenny (F) ; time, 1 :16.1 ; 100-yard back stroke — O ' Connor (S). DeGroot (Sr), White (J). Fletcher (Sr); time, 1.14.4; relay — won by sophomores (O ' Connor, Allen, Cole, Carlsmith) ; time, 1:07; plunge — Rosenbaum (J). Ogden (J), New- house (F), Stewart (F) ; distance, 60 feet; diving — White (Sr), Gibbons (J), Fall (S), Dorsey (F); totals- sophomores, 29 ; seniors, 26 ; freshmen, 25 ; juniors, 16. SENIOR TRACK TKAM. CLASS C ' lI.XMPIONS Left to right: MacRae, Hale. Van Judaii, Arthur. Coverley. Mixon, Macintosh, Kemnitzer, Campbell, McCready, Scofield, Hartranft The complete resu ' .ts of the year ' s interclass competition follow : Class Seniors 3 Juniors 2 Sophomores 1 Freshmen 5 Basket- Swim- Football ball miiig 2 1 5 3 Track BaseLall Soccer Tennis Total 5 3 2 5 23 3 1 5 2 15 2 2 3 3 21 1 5 1 1 18 Results of the interclass track meet follow: Mile — Murphy (J), Thayer (J), McClellan (J), Cummings (F) ; time, 4:35 4-5; 100-yard dash — Campbell (Sr), Caspar (S), Storie (J), Adams (F) ; time, 0:10; 440-yard dash— Miller (S), Coverley (Sr), Chase (S), Mixon (Sr) ; time, :50; 120-yard high hurdles— Leistner (J), Boles (S), West (F), Spencer (F) ; time, :15 4-5; 880-yard dash — Richardson ( S), Smith (J), Macintosh (Sr). Swayne (Sr) ; time, 1 :57; 2-mile run — Charles (J), Hayes (Sr), Cliflford (S). Bell (J) : time,9:54; javelin— Shipkey (F), Harlow (J), Evers (J). Rathman (J) : di.stance, 166 feet 11 inches: 220-yard dash — Storie (J), Adams (F), Camp- bell (Sr), Caspar (S) : time, :22 3-5 : 220-yard liw hurdle.s — Leistner (J), Spencer (F), Boles (S), Heston (F) ; time. :25 2-5 ; high jumji — Anderson (Sr). Richman (F), Kemnitzer (Sr), Ludeke (Sr), Muhs (S), We-st (F), Engelcke (S), tie for fourth; height 6 feet ■)4 inch; shot put — Hartranft (Sr), Hoffman (F), Ludeke (Sr). Evans (F), Toffelmier (F) ; distance. 46 feet 2 inches ; discus — Hartranft (Sr), Hoffman (F), Macabee (F), Wankowski (S) ; distance, 144 feet 3 inches; pole vault — P. Scofield (Sr), Whisler (J), E. Scofield (S), Dennis (J); height, 11 feet 9 inches; broad jump— MacRae (Sr). Wright (Sr), Bragg (Sr), Meeks (F) ; distance, 22 feet 4J inches : relay — class of 1926 (team composed of Miller. Caspar. Briggs, and Fry). 167 SENIOR TENNIS TE. M. CLASS CHAMPIONS Ja.mes. Leeds. Steffen. Mertz, Edwards INTRAMURAL SPORTS fiVj DELTA TAU DELTA TEAM, INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL CHAMPS Back row : Front row : MiXON, COLLETT, MoRRISON DE Back, Meyers (captain), James, Colgan TT HE growth of interest in intra- - ' - mural sports has paralleled that in interclass athletics. More men than ever before competed on the teams of the various groups during the year. In basketball alone, nearly 400 men competed during the season. Intra- mural athletics have been a means of giving the coaches a line on new mate- rial with varsity possibilities. To this end alone, the program has been suc- cessful. The intramural cross country race, November 17, was the first event on the intramural calendar. A complete account of the race is given in this volume of the Quad under Cross Country Running. The intramural basketball season opened soon after the cross country race. The forty-two teams that were entered were divided into seven leagues of six teams each, and each team had a five-game schedule. The winners of the different leagues were determined by round- robin play-oiTs. Again this season, the runners-up for the intramural title were Delta Tau Delta and Beta Theta Pi, the former winning in the final game, played February 27, by a 12 to 10 score. Meyer and Morrison were the Delta Tau mainstays, while Alabaster and Smith were the Beta ' s most consistent players. One of the biggest upsets of the whole tournament was the string of victories which the Japanese club won. They were stopped from annexing the championship only when they were downed by the fast Delta Tau team in a semi-final game in which their cleverness and skill was nullified by the teamwork and weight of their opponents. After the championship of each league had been decided, the winners met one another to decide the university title. The following organizations won the championships of their re- spective leagues, and each received a plaque: League 1, El Toro ; League 2, Phi Delta Theta; League 3, Beta Theta Pi; League 4, Japanese club; League 5, Kappa Sigma; League 6, Delta Tau Delta ; League 7, El Cuadro. In the first round of the play-offs Japanese club defeated El Cuadro, 7 to 6, Phi Delta Theta won from Kappa Sigma, 16 to 8, Delta Tau Delta bested El Toro, 20 to 4, and Beta Theta Pi had a bye. The second round saw the Delta Tau Deltas win from the Japanese club, 22 to 5, and Beta Theta Pi defeat Phi Delta Theta, 10 to 3. The spring quarter was particularly active from the standpoint of intramural athletics. Base- ball, swimming, track, and the relay championships were held. At the time the Quad went to press none of the winners of the spring sports had been decided. In the diamond game the Sigma Xus were conceded an edge on the other teams due to the fact that they had won the cham- pionship last year and that nearly all their players were back again this year. The Phi Delta Thetas were also doped to win the swimming championships due to the presence of such stars as Wallace O ' Connor and Charles Fletcher. The track was more dubious because several organiza- tions could put strong teams in the field, and because upsets are frequent. The relay title was also doubtful, due to the many new contestants. Delta L ' psilon, however, was the favorite in the light of past records and performances. It is highly probable that in the near future several new sports will be added to the intra- mural ])rogram, and that this i)art of the university athletic program will be enlarged consider- ably more. 168 Grace Strobe! on the offense: Stanford seniors defeat Unlrcrsity of California juniors 6 to 1, November 27 HOCKEY By Mary Baker In the two intercollegiate hockey competitions with the champion class teams of Mills college and the University of California, the Stanford seniors won an unofficial championship of the Triangle conference of Mills. California, and Stanford. The seniors also took first place in the university interclass series. ( nly two teams played in each of the intercollegiate contests, one representing lowerclassmen and one upperclassmen. lifter elimination competitions, the seniors and sophomores met the California juniors and sophomores, on November 17. Again. November 24. the same two teams were chosen to play the Mills juniors and sophomores. The California matches were played on the Stanford turf. During the latter part of the upper- class game the Stanford seniors gave an exhibition of one of the most scientifically played games that a Stanford team has played in several years. They did not play as well again at any time during the quarter. In the first half of the senior tilt the Blue and Gold juniors took the offensive but quick interference by the Cards held them to only a 1-0 advantage at the end of the half. Beginning with the second half Stanford played a fast game of forward jiassing, and shot six cages with precision and rapidity. The California eleven spent its I energies defending its territory and did not score again. The game ended 6-1. The sophomores defeated themselves 6-5 because of poor team work during the first half. They began their game by driv- ing a goal. but. immediately after scoring, they forgot team work, blocking their own ])lays. Once the Berkleyites secured the ball, they had no interference, and in the first iialf they piled up six points. During the second half the so])homores made a desperate effort to recover, and drove through the Berkeley defense for four scores. The Cardinal again divided honors with lills ii: the games played on the Mills campus, the seniors winning and the sopho- mores losing. The Stanford seniors, with their characteristic last passing and hard offensive, won their game 4-0. The score at the close of the half was 1-0. After a close game in which the Cardinal sophomores let slip many chances to get the ball they lost the match 2-,3. Their chief trouble was failure to follow the ball closely and to rush it when theyjiad gotten it into Mills territory. During December the interclass hockey matches were played, SKXIOK TKA.M .N ' eWI.IN. IjRENHnLTS, .MUZZEV, Back row PORTEH S coiui row: K owi.f=, iddle. Roth Jameson, Strobei.. J. Franklin First row: Beli-. Siiepard, (i. Frankmn Myde 170 . ! W .- JUXIOR TEAM Back row: Stucky. Judd, Peirce. Ray- mond, BURLINGAME Second row: IJalcomb. Dahler, Capps (coach), Strouse, Simmons First row: Davis, Harter, Watson, Mc- KlBBlN sui ' iioMoRi-: ti:a. i Back row: Ebright, Hardy, Wilbur, EaRLE, TOGNAZZINI, FeUSIER Second row: Snedden, Ward, Burk (coach), Hyde, Worswick First row: Vredenburgii, Jongoneel, Stanley, Lawrence and the season culminated in ;he game between the seniors and sophomores, both unde- feated, on December 14 to decide the interclass cham- ])ionship. The fourth year team ])roved itself too much for the underclassmen who were not able to break through the line for a single score. The game was won 5-0 by the seniors. At the conclusion of the hockey series, the 1923 all- star hockey team was chosen by the coaches, Miss Georg- ina Burk, Miss Lsabel Capps, and Miss Helen Masters Bunting. It was made up of five seniors, five sophomores,, three freshmen, and two juniors. Following are the mem- bers: Muriel Bell, Carol Davis, Cecile Feusier, Josephine Franklin, Millison Hardy, Marie Man- chee, Alice Roth, Ruth Snedden, Ruth Vredenburgh, Margaret Watson, Elizabeth Williams ; substitutes. Ruth Jameson, Nellie Shepherd, Carolan Strouse, Mildred Worswick. Results of the interclass games gave the seniors first place, sophomores second, juniors third, and freshmen fourth. The first game on the schedule was between the seniors and freshmen in which the upperclassmen overwhelmed their opponents 9-0. Considering that the seniors had been in two intercollegiate games and the freshmen were playing their first season of hockey, the score was not so one-sided. Muriel Bell, center forward on the senior team, made a good part of the senior scores this year, Grace Strobel, Eunice Biddle and Geraldine and Josephine Franklin were other spec- tacular players on the 1924 eleven, which was almost an all-star team in itself. Marie Manchee, cen- ter forward on the freshman team, was one of the finds of the season. At times she was the whole first-year team and was able to score without aid from her squad and in the face of experienced opposition. , The sophomores rather unexpectedly defeated the juniors, last year ' s champions, in the second game of the season l)y a score of 4-2. The juniors played out of luck all season and at no time did they show the spirit that won first place for them last year. When Margaret Watson, leader of the 1925 team, once started dribbling the ball down the field, few could keep up with her. Carolan Strouse, Mal el McKibbin and Doris Harter were among others who showed up well. The seniors were held to a close score of 2-0 by the juniors in the third contest. They played a poor game as a whole and the juniors pressed in dangerous fashion every advantage they gained. The .seniors were able to recover the ball when it was critically near their goal, but inaccuracy of shots and passing kept them from making a higher score. Playing a hard game and a very good one for so inexperienced a team, the freshmen scored once against the sophomores, but finally lost the match 4-1. In Aileene Burks, Ruth Vreden- burgh, Cecile Feusier and Millison Hardy the sophomores have excellent material for a championship team next year. In the season ' s final game the freshmen lost to the juniors 3-2. FRESHMAN TEAM Back row: Gooden, Murray, Hicks, Fen- WICK, BURLINGAME, WiLLIAMS Second row: Jordan, Schaufelbergek. Manchee, Bunting (coach). Shepherd, LOVEKIN First row: Whittaker, Musto, Wood, Webster 171 iH! BASKETBALL UNDEFEATED through- out the season, the senior women ' s basketball team won the interclass series champion- ship for the second consecu- tive year. The freshmen seven took second place in the league, with sophomores and juniors in third and fourth po- sitions, respectively. With teamwork characterized by swift, accurate passing, the seniors won all their matches by large scores. Under the disadvantage of never before having played together, the first-year basketball squad made an excellent showing. The season opened Febru- ary 20, when the sophomores defeated the juniors 26 to 16. Grace Judd, upperclass forward, won credit for a large part of the junior scores. In the second game, played the same day, the seniors defeated the freshmen 14 to 4. On February 27, the seniors took a game from the sophomores 12 to 10. The juniors were unfortunate in losing all their games. Poor team work was the explanation. On February 28, they lost to the freshmen 32 to 12, and March 6 to the seniors, 49 to 11. In the final game of the season, played March 7, the freshmen, contesting for second place in the league, scored 15 to 9 on the sophomores. At the close of the series, an all-star selection was announced as follows: Eunice Biddle, Aileene Burks, Barbara Fenwick, Josephine Franklin, Geraldine Franklin, Charlotte Lovekin, Grace Strobel; substitutes, Millison Hardy, Grace Judd, Marie Manchee. The championship team included: Josephine Franklin (captain), Mabel McCanse, Alice Roth, Eunice Biddle, Grace Strobel, Constance Tamplin, and Geraldine Franklin. The remaining teams follow: juniors — Dorothy Dahler (captain), Grace Judd, Doris Harter, Kathryn McCahan, Emeline Williams, Carolyn Peirce, Ruth SEXIOR BASKETB.M.L TEAM, IXTERCLASS CHAMPIONS Back row: Muzzey, McCanse, Biddle, Strobel Front row: Roth, Adams, Tamplin 1 AWic h ' lilh, with lite ball, outplays her guards, Carolyn Peine and Eugenia Benlley, in the game between the juniors and seniors, the championship match of the basketball series 172 Stucky; sophomores — Lois Wilbur (captain), Aileene Burks, Flelen Erskine, Janet Wallace, Ruth Vredenburgh, Millison Hardy, Cecile Feusier; freshmen — Charlotte Lovekin (cap- tain), Marie Manchee, Laura Gardiner, Al- berta Williamson, Margaret Schaufelberger, Barbara Fenwick, Elizabeth Williams. Basketball was confined to interclass com- petition this year. The customary intercol- legiate games were not scheduled with Mills college and the University of California, owing to a decision reached by the Women ' s Athletic .Association board that it would be more desirable for the women of the university to devote their time to work in prepara- tion for the spring festival, La Fiesta Lagunita. Alice Roth (left) and Margaret Watson, high point scorers in last spring ' s track and field meet, who were expected to plate well again this year • TRACK Mth a score of 25 points the sophomores won tlie inter- class track and field meet, which was included in women ' s regular spring sports for the first time last year as part of the Field day schedule, May 26. Seniors were second with 12 points, juniors third with 10, and freshmen fourth with 8 points. Margaret W a t s o n, ' 25, made the best individual rec- ord, tying the Pacific Coast Intercollegiate record of :6 4-5 seconds in the 50- yard dash. Her time was within two-fifths of a second of the world ' s record. She placed second in the high jump and ran in the relay. Alice Roth won second honors. She took first in the shot, with a put of 29 feet ly inches, captured third place in the 50-yard dash, and was a member of the junior relay team. The broad jump and the high and low hurdles were this year added to the program of the interclass meet scheduled for the annual Field day, May 29. Following is a summary of the meet: 50-yard dash — Watson ( ' 25), Robson ( ' 23), Roth ( ' 24), time. 0:6 4-5; 7S-yard dash— Spilman ( ' 25), Davis ( ' 25), Churchman ( ' 23), time 0:101-5; shot put— Roth ( ' 24). Spilman ( ' 25), Churchman ( ' 23), distance, 29 feet 2 1-2 inches; high jump — McCall ( ' 26), Watson ( ' 25), Robson ( ' 23), height. 4 feet; relay — won by seniors (Churchman, Robson, Stewart), time 0:412-5. TENNIS Tennis honors in last spring ' s interclass singles series went to Jean ' ard, ' 26, underclass champion, when she defeated ' irginia Burks, ' 2i, upperclass champion, ()-2, 6-2, and won the University cup. No intercollegiate matches were held. Preparatory to the interclass tournament, a preliminary schedule was played ofif. Jean Ward defeated Ruth ' redenburgh, 6-4, ( -2, for the freshman title. Ruth Lee Spilman took first place in the sophomore class by winning from Dorothy Herdman, (S-l, 6-3. Elizabeth Peirce lead the juniors when she took her sets, 6-2. (3-4, from Dorothy Ehrhorn. irginia Burks was senior champion, defeating Caroline Willis, (3-3, (3-4, and won upper division honors from Elizabeth Peirce, ( -l, 6-4. Jean Ward defeated Ruth Lee Spilman, 7-S, 7- ' , in the lower division finals. Of last year ' s players who again were competitors for first place on their teams this year were Doris Harter, Carolan Strouse, Mary Hull, Eleanor Klauber, Ruth ' redenburgh, and Elizabeth Peirce. Charlotte Lovekin, Kathleen Musto, Margaret Earle, Laura Gardiner, Alberta Williamson, and Kathreen Clock were among the new women of special ability in the sport. Only single matches were played this year. The results of the inter- class tournament had not been decided when the Qu.ad went to press. The final tournament matches were to be played Field day. May 29. ■Jean Ward, leiniier of last year ' s interclass singles series and a strong contender again this year. 173 SWIMMING iHi X interclass swimming meet, won women on Field day, by the 1926 class lay 26. concluded last year ' s Clarita Hunsbi ' iycr does the front jack dive from tht high board in Roble pool program in Roble jxiol. Mabel McKibbin was awarded the swimmer ' s cup for individual ability. The freshmen took first place in the competition with a score of 42 points. The sophomores had a total of 31 points, juniors 12 points, and seniors 4 points. Clarita Hunsberger, ' 27, holder of the Southern Cali- fornia low springboard championship, was a valuable addi- tion to the Roble jx)ol aggregation this year. Elizabeth Williams. ' 27, ] Iabel McKibbin, ' 25. and Ruth X ' redenburgh, ' 26, were also outstanding swimmers of the season. Mrs. Greta J. Brandsten completed her eighth year as women ' s swimming coach in the university, and retired at the end of this spring quarter. She was assisted in scheduling the meets by Mabel McKibbin, swimming manager. This year ' s swimming competition consisted of an inter- class contest on Field day. May 29. The results were announced at a date too late to be included in this volume of the Qu.M). The Women ' s Athletic Association board planned a meet with the University of California, April 19, which California forfeited because of inability to prepare an adequate team. On May 25 Clarita Hunsberger competed at Searsville Lake in the far western tryouts for the Olympic games. She entered the springboard and high diving competitions. The results had not yet been announced when the Qu.vu went to press. A large number of this year ' s swimmers placed in the events last spring. In the plunge for distance, Dorothy Brenholts, with a score of 61 feet in 60 seconds, nearly equaled the Roble pool champion record of 62 2 feet in 60 seconds. Another Roble record was almost reached when Mabel McKibbin won the 75-yard free style in 1 minute 3 1-3 seconds. The record time is 1 minute 3 1-5 seconds. Ade- laide Kelly won the 25-yard free style in 0:16 1-5. Florence Stanley came within 1 4-5 seconds of record time, 0:19, in the 25-yard back stroke. The summary of last year ' s interclass meet is as follows: 25-yard free style — Adelaide Kelly ( ' 26), first; Mabel McKibbin ( ' 25), second: Hermine Wocker ( ' 25 ) , third ; time, : 16 1-5 ; 50-yard free style — Her- mine Wocker ( ' 25), first; Adelaide Kelly ( ' 26), second; Cecile Feusier ( ' 26), third; time, 0:37 2-5: 75-yard free style — Mabel Mc- Kibbin ( ' 25), first; Adelaide Kelly ( ' 26). second; Lucile Burlingame ( ' 26), third; time, 1:3 1-3; 25-yard back stroke — Florence Stanley ( ' 26), first; Virginia Burks ( ' 23), second; Hermine Wocker ( ' 25), third; time, 204-5; 50-yard breast stroke — Lois Wilbur ( ' 26), first: Felicita Boeseke ( ' 26), second: Grace Judd ( ' 25), third; time, 0:49: relay — freshmen (Felicita Boeseke, Lucile Burlingame, Cecile Feusier, Morence Stanley) ; sophomores (Elizabeth Parker, Grace Judd. Mil- dred Burlingame, Mabel McKibbin): won by the freshmen; time. 1:19 3-5; diving — Lois Wilbur ( ' 26), first; Ruth Jameson ( ' 24), sec- ond: Dorothy Brenholts ( ' 24), third; jjlunge for distance — Dorothy Brenholts ( ' 24), first: Mildred Burlingame ( ' 25), second; Ruth Jameson ( ' 24), third: distance, 61 feet in 60 seconds. Greta J. Brandsten Simmming Coach 174 QLARITA HUXSBERGER. ' 27, swimniinsr tor the Los Angeles Athletic club last June, won the Southern California low-board chanii)ionship. In August she took second place in the Junior National ten-foot board competition. In May this year she again entered the Junior National meet. O UTH REDENP.URGH is the most proficient and versatile swimmer among the lower division women, with the crawl stroke as her main event. She is a sprinter competing in the 25-yard and 50-yard free style swims. She has been on Stanford swimming teams for two years. A f.VBEL McKIBBIN. here seen in an exhibition back stroke in Roble pool, has been swimming for the university three years and now leads the upper- class women in pool events. She specializes in short- distance sprinting. She is also interclass manager, and captain of the junior class team. i li 175 i;h!. Back row: Learnard, G. Franklin, Watson, J. Franklin, Muzzev Front row: Strouse, Robson, Burks, Roth, Jameson WOMEN ' S S SOCIETY Founded at Stanford University, 1915 il ' M ■■i- ■U I -111 OFFICERS President Secret ary-Tre A surer Virginia Burks Ruth A. Jameson MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen Roxana S. Ferris Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tivo Doris M. Stevenson lil IB! Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Three ' iRGiNiA Burks D. Joyce Robson Eunice K. Biddle Geraldixe Franklin Polly D. Learnard Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-F our Josephine Franklin Ruth A. Jameson Isabella G. Muzzey Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Fivc Carolan M. Strouse Alice C. Roth Grace M. Strobel Margaret E. Watson 1 ., : v 1 1 1 ' I ' U3 1 MP 176 Hack ro ' .v: McKirbin, Evans. TTarpy. Muzzky St ' cund row: Roth, Strobei.. Martkr, Franklin. Cleavrland. Ward First row: Peihce, Williams, Uunting, I ' .iddlk, Watson, Lkarnard, Strouse WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION iMiuiulcd at Stanford riiivcrsity. 1902 I ' ACULTY MKMBER Hei.f.n Mastkrs Bunting OFriCEr« President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Eunice K. Biddle, ' 24 Carolan M. Strouse. ' 25 Margaret E. Watson, ' 25 Polly D. Learnard, ' 25 Gradiate Senior Junior Sophomore 1 ' reshman CLASS REPRESENTATU ' ES Virginia 1 ' urks, ' 23 GeRALDINE [ ' ran KLIN, ' 24 Carolyn Peirce, ' 25 Millison C. Hardy, ' 26 Elizabeth M. Williams, ' Zl SPORT MANAGERS Hockey p.asketball Tennis Archery Swimming Track Hiking Yell Leader Isabella G. Muzzky, ' 24 Grace M. Strobel. ' 24 Jean Ward, ' 26 Kathleen Evans, ' 24 Mabel I . McKibbin, ' 25 Alice C. Roth, ' 24 Doris L Harter, ' 25 Loraine Cleaveland, ' 24 177 ©he ®lb gtanforb c9i encc The luxuriously beautiful grounds sur- rounding the Stanford country residence were the environment, in his childhood days, of the boy Leland Stanford — an environment which contributed much to his poetic nature. From James Gordon, a San Franciscan, Governor Stanford in 1870 obtained the country residence, part of wdiich is now included in the Stanford Convalescent Home. From the wide- canopied veranda could be seen long line ; of rambling whitewashed buildings shim- mering through the trees — the Palo Alto stock farm, where Stanford was wont to spend his leisure time in breeding race horses. Here little Leland spent many happy hours. He was an exceptionally gifted child ; his collections in the Stanford museum today exhibit an extraordinary intellect. On his second trip abroad, when only fifteen, he contracted Roman fever, and quietly passed away on the night of March 13, 1884. It was in that night of anguish that the grief-stricken father uttered those words which were to be of such far-reaching significance : The chil- dren of California shall be my children! S i m m SENIOR CLASS Graduating June, 1924 FIRST TERM Daniel D. Gage, Jr. Helen M. Whitney- Margaret H. Hood H. Gardiner Symonds Harry F. Kennedy President I ' ice-President Secretary Manager Athletic Maiiaifcr Daniel D. Gage, Jk. President First Term u ;!-■-! ' ;:i; II Hi •Pa B ' i-.-i ii SECOND TERM CiL Ri.i:.s G. I ' le ' iciier Takgaret a. I ' .AiLii-; I [. Sidney I aikihlin C ' hakles 1!. W ' iuti-: 1 ' kan( IS M. Kateeman President Vice-President Secretary Manager Athletic Manager Charles G. Fletcher President Second Term 182 Back row: W. (Iage, Kauffman. White. Sunup. Mack, Ely, I itus Second row: RoTU, MclIosE. Williams. Alabaster. Biddle, Symonds, Whitney First row: Kicher, I ' atton, iloDGiON, Fletcher, Hood, Dills Senior JVcck Coininittre Chairmen Charles G. Fi.ktcher Robert C. Titus Leslie H. Dills John D. Richer Henry G. Symonds Carl S. Shoup John C. McHose Northcutt Ely William R. Gage Lewis P. Alabaster Alfred T. Patton Chairman Senior Week Senior Ball Senior Reception Senior Social Senior Commemoration Senior Commencement Senior Promenade Senior Program Senior Class Da Senior Farce Senior Plate Committee Committee Committee Committee Committee Committee Committee Committee y Exercises Committee- Committee George H. Baker Senior hloivcr Committee I ' oKESTA Hodgson Eunice K. Biddle I ' homas a. Bailey Eva M. Williams Henry C. Mack Class Will Class Orator Class Historian Class Poet John L. Mace John D. Campbell I ' ermuncnt Class Officers Class Secretary Class Representative on Alumni . Idvisory Board Permanent Class lixecutive Cainmittce I ' ATNICE K. BlDDl.E Charles G. I- ' LintiiiCK loii.N C. McHosK Alice C. I (ii ii Carl S. Shoup Charles B. White I 1i;li:. .M. Whitney 183 Jane Elizabeth Adams San Diego liducat ' oi! Kohk- Chill ; Transferred from Pomona College, 1923; Cosmopoli- tan Clnl), Schubert Club, Y. W. C. A. Lewis P. Alabaster Riverside Ecoiwiitics Beta Theta Pi; Ram ' s Head, President (-4); Freshman Basket- ball; Junior Prom Committee, Musical Director Knightie Knight. and Fore!, Cheeri-o Revue (2), Football Frothies of 1922, Senior Class Farce Committee, IiUerfraternity Council, Secretary (4) A. Edward Alekian Fresno Economics I ' nion Club; Transferred from Fresno State College, 1922 Lloyu Jeffery Allen Economics Delta Chi; Track John T. Allmand, Jr. Law Branner Club Palo Alto Highland Park, Michigan Hollywood James K. Anderson Economics Branner Club; Transferred from Wisconsin University, 1922; Junipero Scrra Club Makjorie H. Anderson Burbank I ' liblic Sf ' eakiny Aliiba Omicron I ' i : Transferred from I ' nivcrsity of California. 1923; V. W. C. A.; Androcles and the Lion (4), Fore! (3) Michael Henry Antonacci Cii ' il f.)iginecrin( Se(|uoia Club; Orchestra Marsden Str. tton Arc.all Eni lish Transferred from College of the Pacitic, 1921 San Jose Milpitas Long Beach Richard L. Arcue Law Sigma Nu; Transferred from University of Oklahoma, 1922 Hammond Ashley Palo Alto Mechanical Engineering Aliiba Kappa Lambda: Mechanical Engineering Society, American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Cercle Fran(;ais Clement Finley Atwater Economics Alpha Tan Omega Hollywood Ei) ARi) Robert Atwill San Gabriel (icolo( y Delta Upsilon; Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball (21. Freshman Baseball; Maid to Order (2J, Football Frothies of 1922 (3) iM.LlOT ' r 1 1. .AVRES Palo Alto EU ' onoinics Associated Federal Students. President (2); Block S Football Manager (4) in Norman John de Back San Francisco Ecnnoiiiics Delta Tau Delta; Freshman Tennis, Varsity Tennis (2), Block ' S Tennis (3) BvRON Jack Badham Law Los Angeles El Capitan, Toyon Cluh; Delta Theta Phi, Clerk of Rolls (4); CJIee Club (3, 4), Assistant Manager (4); Class Secretary (2), Senior Control Committee Beverly Bailard Carpinteria Geology Breakers, Encina Club; Geological and Mining Society; Fresh- man Wrestling, Block Circle 24 ' Wrestling, Varsity Wrestling (2), Block Circle S Wrestling; Freshman Sponsor (4), Chair- man Election Committee (4) Thomas A. Bailey San Jose History-Classical Literature Delta Sigma Rho, Phi Beta Kappa; Tri-State Debate (3), Joffre Debate (3, 4), Triangular Debate (4), Senior Class Orator (4) Everett Graves Bailie Spanish Toyon Club; Cercle Frangais, Spanish Club Los Angeles Kiangsi, China Li Hwai Bain Ilducat ' oii Chinese Club; Transferred from Government Nanking Teachers ' College, China, 1923 George H. Baker Santa Ana Economies l elta L ' psilon; Phi Phi, Skull and Snakes; Block ' S Football (3, 4); Interfraternity Board of Control (4), President Men ' s Council (4), Freshman Sponsor, Senior Flower Committee Fremont O. Ballou Hotaiiv Los Angeles I ' nion Club: Transferred from University of California, 1923; Zoology Club Charles C. Baptie Bakersfield Mechanical Engineering Sigma Nu; Mechanical Engineering Society; Masonic Club Knowles, Oklahoma Otto Carl Barby Law El Tigre, Encina Club; Phi Alpha Delta, Pi Kappa Tau, Scab- bard and Blade (4); Band, Xestoria, Y. M. C. A.; Varsity Polo (2, 3, 4), Captain (4), Circle S Polo (3, 4); Assistant Law Librarian (4), Captain, R. O. T. C. (4), Freshman Sponsor (4), Executive Committee (3) Ralph E. Barby Knowles, Oklahoma Economics El Tigre, Encina Club; Scabbard and Blade, Vice-President (4); Band; Circle S Polo (3, 4); Major, R. O. T. C. (4) Charles Victor Barley Long Beach Medicine Encina Club; Transferred from University of Southern Cali- fornia, 1921; Phi Rho Sigma; Masonic Club, Secretary (4) Eric Thornhill Barnett Mechanical Engineering Theta Xi Lower Lake Salt Lake City, Utah Mary Bateman Economics Roble Club, Gannna Sigma; Transferred from University of Utah, 1923; Women ' s Economics Club 185 Edythe Goodwin Baylis Los Angeles English-Public Speaking Chi Omega; Cap and Gown, Treasurer (4), Masquers, President (4): Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Director Women ' s Fiesta (4); Football Frothies of 1922, He Wlio Cets Slappsd, Mile- stones, Up On a Ladder, You Never Can Tell Rachel Beach History Sigma Kappa; History Club Palo Alto Arthur William Becker Mechanical Engineering Ali)ha Kappa Lambda; American Institute of Electrical Engineer Springerville, Arizona electrical Engineers San Francisco Charles Bknninger, Jr. Prc-Mcdicinc Delta Tau Delta; V arsity Football (2), Freshman Numerals in Track, Football Henry H. Berk Mechanical Engineering Los Arcos; Rifle Club Morris Berman Chemical Engineering Encina Club Lowell W. Berry Economics Band Manager, Glee Club Waterville, Washington San Francisco Asotin, Washington Riverside RouiE Alice Best History Sigma kappa; Transferred from Riverside Junior College, 1922; Schubert Club; Will Shakespeare Eunice Katherine Biddle Long Beach English Delta Gannna; Cap and (Jown, Gamma Eta, Women ' s S Society; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2, 3, 4); Basketball (1, 2, 3. 4). All Star Basketball (2, 3). Hockey (2, i, 4), All Star Substitute Hockey (2); President W. A. A. (3, 4), Executive ( oiinnittee (4), Women ' s Council (4), Permanent 1924 Class Executive- Committee, Senior Class Will Howard Seymour Bissell Cleveland, Ohio Economics El Cuadro; Transferred from Dartmouth College, 1922; Daily Palo Alto (3, 4), Boxing Manager (4), Senior Control Com- mittee (4) Bertrand a. Bley San Francisco Lazi, ' • Union Club; Euphronia, Spanish Club Fred Claire Blosser Fresno I.atv ( )livia Boezinger Ercnch (ianima Phi Beta; Cercle Francais. (lerinan Club Im.drkd 1 ' . 1 ()1.lin(;kr Chemical Engineering Alpha Chi Sigma Menlo Heights Cupertino 1 Pembina, North Dakota Eugene R. Booker Mathematics Sigma Chi; Transferred from University of North Dakota, 1920 T. Harold Boone Medicine Chi Psi; Soccer Squad (3, 4) RoBisoN E. Booth Mechanical Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineering Society Carol H. Botsford Los Angeles History Delta Gamma; Transferred from University of California, 1923; Swimming (4) Palo Alto Butte, Montana Kendall Myers Bower Mechanical Engineering Rifle Club Menlo Park Arthur Dickinson Bragg Carmel Mechanical Engineering Sigma Nu; Hammer and Coffin; Freshman Basketball S(iuad, Varsity Track Squad (3, 4) Helen Brant San Francisco English Gamma Phi Beta; Wranglers, President (4), V. W. C. A. Cabinet; Swimming (2); Daily Palo Alto, Randalin ' s Crowning Dorothy Brenholts Los Angeles Philosophy Roble Club, President (4), Alpha Delta Pi; Transferred from University of California, 1923; Cap and Gown, Delta Epsilon, Gamma Eta; Swimming (3, 4), All Star Swimming (3), Hockey (4), Basketball (3); Executive Committee Women ' s Fiesta (4) Mary Madeleine Brennan Classical Literature-English Los Angeles Roble Club; Transferred from College of the Holy Names, 1922 Richnioiul Franklin Brooks Political Science Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Transferred from University of Nevada, 1923 Esther Eggers Brown Riverside English Roble Club; Transferred from Riverside Junior College, 1922; German Club, Schubert Club Paul Charles Bryan Economics Louis Lapham Bucklin Law San Jose John Cassel Buckwaltkk Mechanical Engineering Los Arcos, Toyon Club; Mechanical Engineering Society Palo Alto Palo Alto Ei.wvN B. BuGGE San Francisco Economics Sec|Uoia Club; Transferred from Universitv of Washington, 1922: Library Club, Music Club; Varsity Fencing (3, 4), Block Circle S Fencing WiLLI.AM AdLAI BuLLIS Law Beta Theta Pi Ix)s Antreles Harold L. Bumbaugh Los Angeles Electrical Engineering Phi Kappa Psi; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineering Society, Sword and Sandals; Track (2) WiLLLVM Elliott Bitrdick Minneapolis, Minnesota Mining and Metallurgy El Toro; Glee Club Barbara Burks Psychology Berkeley Roble Club; Transferred from I ' niversity of California, 1923; Androcles and the Lion, Contributor to Spectator (4) ali)i Rounds Bush Oakland Physiology Roble Club ' ; Transferred from University of California, 1923 Laura Louise Butler Berkeley History Delta Delta Delta; Transferred from University of California, 1922; History Club, Secretary-Treasurer (4) Homer G. Cain Santa Ana Mathematics j r- i Transferred from Santa Ana Junior College, f1 Daniel McPeak Campbell Glendale Economics Sigma Chi; Transferred from California Institute of Technology, 1923; Varsity Baseball (4) Edward S. Campbell --. Mechanical Engineering Chi Psi; Mechanical Engineering Society Mare Island San Jose Irene A. Campbell Economics Delta Delta Delta; Transferred from San Jose State Teachers ' College, 1922; Women ' s Economics Club, Y. W. C. A. Vocational Committee; Women ' s Conference (3) John Donald Campbell San Francisco Ci7 ' il Engineering Alpha Delta Phi; Circle S Society, Phi Phi. (Juadrangle Club, Scalpers, Skull and Snakes; lilock S Football (2, 3, 4), Captani (4), Varsity Basketball (2), X ' arsity Track (2, 3, 4), Circle S Rugby (2, 3), Freshman Football, Basketball, Track J. Frank Campbell Pasadena Economics Sequoia Club; Transferred from Occidenlal College. 1921; Polo George E. Carey I ' alo Alto Economics Kappa Sigma; Transferred from I ' niversity of Santa Clara, ' 921 j lunipcro Serra Club; Freshman Football Scpiad, Circle S Varsity Soccer, Circle S Varsity Rugby Kenneth Emerson Carnauan History Chi Psi San Jose Santa Paula Marion Bernice Carpenter Enfflish Roble Club; Transferred from L ni% ' ersity of California, 1923: Cosmopolitan Club, Y. . C. A. William George Carr English Transferred from University of California, Southern Branch, 1923 Los Angeles ;rn Branch, 1923 Trident, Montana Li.OYn C. Carver Law Phi Sigma Kappa: Exiphronia, Masonic Club: 1924 Quad Staff, Interfraternity Conference, If I Were King (2.) Robert D. Cavanaugh Los Angeles Economics Chi Psi: Transferred from University of Michigan, 1921; Eco- nomics Club; Koo Koo Kubistown (2), l p On a Ladder (2). Knightie Knight (3), Football Show Michel he Cazotte San Mateo Chemistry Clare S. Chaffee Garden Grove Chemistry Toyon Club; Transferred from Santa Ana Junior College, 1922: Alpha Chi Sigma; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4) Lewis W. C-handler Los Angeles Economics Sequoia Club; Transferred from Occidental College, 1923 Irving E. Chapman Arlington Heights, Illinois Ci? ' i7 Engineering Transferred from Lewis Institute, 1923; American .Society of Civil Engineers; Rifle Club Benjamin Cliffe Charles Economics Alpha Delta Phi Los Angeles Arthur W. Cheoister Civil Engineering Sequoia Club; American Society of Civil Engineers Clovis Joseph Edward Clark Geology Zeta Psi; Scalpers Los Angeles Orion Frederick Clark Los Angeles Law El Capitan, Toyon Club; Glee Club (4); Class President (1), Yellow Jacket (1), Quad Staff (2), Endowment Committee (2); Cotillion Committee (2) LORAINE ClEAVELAND Economics Berkeley Kappa Kappa Gamma; Transferred from University of New Mexico, 1921; Gamma Eta; Women ' s Economics Club; Basketball (2, 3); Randalin ' s Crowning (2), W. A. A. (4), Women ' s Yell Leader (4) Bi m 1 Mi m Albert C. Clough Alhambra Economics Alpha Sigma Phi; Transferred from University of California, Southern Branch, 1922 Frank H. Coen Monrovia Economics Phi Kappa Sigma; Transferred from Occidental College, 1922 Marjorie a. Cohen San Francisco English- J ournalism Roble Club; Theta Sigma Phi; Wranglers Ralph Emerson Cole Los Angeles English Union Club; Transferred from Cornell University, 1923 Eugene Colgan Elyria, Ohio Economics Delta Tau Delta; Transferred from Georgetown University, 1922; Junipero Serra Club; Track (3, 4), Class Basketball (3, 4) Charles Elmer Collett San Francisco Law Delta Tau Delta; Circle S Society; Junipero Serra Club; Circle S Water Polo (3, 4), Interclass Football (4); The Tailor-Made Man (2) Junior J. Collins Fresno Law Sequoia Club; Delta Theta Phi; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Class President (3), Men ' s Council (4) Timothy Edward Colvin Piedmont Mechanical Engineering Phi Gamma Delta; ' 24 Baseball, Circle S Handball (1, 2, 3) Bertrand L. Comparet San Diego Law Transferred from San Diego Junior College, 1921; Nestoria; Tri- State Debate Team (2), Joftre Debate Team (2), Winner Joflfre Medal (3) RussELL L. CoMPTON San Diego Economics Phi Sigma Kappa; Transferred from San Diego Junior College, 1921; Football Squad (2, 3, 4) Mildred Conard History Pi Beta Phi John B. Connolly Law El Tigre, Toyon Club Lloyd E. Cooper Mechanical Engineering San Diego San Francisco Roseville Sequoia Club; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineering Society; Class Basketball (1) Kenneth Ri ley Coppock Economics Branner Club Calgary, Canada Ralph Clifton Coppock, Jr. Economics Branner Club Calgary, Canada Hebron, Nebraska LlLLL N COTTRKLL Bacteriology Roble Club; Can and Gown; Schubert Club, President (2); Club- house Board; junior Week Committee, Woman Manager 1924 ' uad, Senior Control Committee, Women ' s Council (3, 4), Vomen ' s Service Board, Treasurer (2) Hollywood 6u; Wo Harvey Mills Coverley Laiv Delta Upsilon; Phi Delta Phi, Scalpers, Secretary (2); Varsity Track (2, 3, 4), Second Varsity Football (3, 4), Freshman Track Chappaqua, New York Hope Cox Laiv Roble Club; Transferred from Swarthmore College, 1922; Eng- lish Club Daniel K. Coyle San Jose Electrical Engineering American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineer- ing Society; Associated Federal .Students, Masonic Club Daniel O. Cozzi Civil Engineering Union Club Los Banos Colfax, Washington Eileen Cr.v.m Economics Sigma Kappa; Transferred from Washington State College, 1922; Women ' s Economics Club Caspar Glenn Crawford Dickinson, North Dakota Mechanical Engineering Sequoia Club; American Institute of Electrical Engineers Frank Lee Crist ' San Francisco Law Encina Club; Transferred from Kansas State Normal, 1921; Euphronia Ross O. Crump Economics George J. Gulp Chemistry Sequoia Club San Jose Pacific Grove San Francisco McDowell Cunninc;ham Economics Kl Canipo, Tan Kappa Epsilon; Transferred from University of California. 1923; Varsity Basketball (2), Freshman Basketball, Interclass Football and Basketball (4), Rugby (2) Charles F. Daly Eureka Economics El Toro, Toyon Club; Transferred from L niversity of Santa Clara, 1921; Junipero Serra Club; Block S Track (2, 3). Varsity Track (4) Mildred Dannenbai ' m History-Journalism Parsons, Kansas Grack Darling History Salt Lake City, Utah Roble Club; Transferred from I ' niversity of Utah, 1922 Leon Thomas David ' allejo Laiv El Campo, Union Cluh; Phi Alpha Delta. Marsha! (4), Scabbard and Blade; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (I, 2); Track (1, 2); Daily Palo Alto (1, 2), 1925 Quad Staff, Publicity Manager (4), First Lieutenant B Battery, K. ( . T. (. . (4), Enaowtnent Com- mittee (2) New Westminster, B. C. Rohle Cluh; Tau Psi Ejisilon; .Schubert Club Bethany, Connecticut Sequoia Club; Transferred froni Yale L niversity, 1921 Helen P. Davidson Psychology Roi.. ND Gilbert D.wid.son Philosophy Malcolm Davison Ontario Mechanical Engineering El Tigre, Encina Club: Transferred from Chaffey Junior College. 1921; Glee Club (J, 4), Music Clnb, Trea.surer (4), Orchestra a, 4); Second Varsity Football (3) Rupert Tru.man Dawes Santa Ana Laiv Theta Delta Chi; Cheerio Revue (2), Fore! (3) Aruvs Thelo De. n English Encina Club; Bubbling Bohemia (1) Berkeley Los Angeles Ei.i.owENE Delahomie Historv Alpha Omicron Pi; History Cluh, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; All Star Hockey (1) ITenry Cari, Dellepl ne Chemical Engineering American Chemical Society (3, 4) San I ' rancisco L. wrence Everett Detrick Medicine Encina Club; Omega Upsilon Plii; I ens and Plate Bishop Charles William Dickenson Madison, Tennessee Electrical Engineering Sequoia Club; Transferred from Central .Junior College, 1921; American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Masonic Club, Presi- dent (3, 4), Y. M. C. a.; Track Squad (3) John A. Dillman Los Angeles Economics Union Club; Transferred from University of California, Southern Branch, 1923; . udrocles and the Lion (4), Property Man Captain Applejack (4) Leslie Harri.son Dills Yakima, Washington Law Phi Gamma Delta; Interfraternity Board of Control (4), Sopho- more Cotillion Committee (2), Senior Reception Committee Robert Allen Dixon Tulsa, Oklahoma Philosophy Union Club ; Transferred from University of Southern California, 1923; Cosmopolitan Club, Masonic Club, Y. M. C. A. Alice Dodds San Jose Spanish Chi Omega; Masquers, Secretary-Treasurer (3); Y. W. C. A. Committees; Pan Hellenic, Women ' s Conference, Musical Com- positions for ' Cp On a Ladder and Football Frothies of 1922. Randalin ' s Crowning (2) Edward E. Dorrfstfn Los Angeles Economics Alpha Tail Omega; Transferred from California Institute of Technology, 1922 fiLDRED DoRRLS Phoeiiix, Arizona Mathenictics Alpha Omicron Pi; Transferred from Mills College, 1922; Women ' s Economics Club W ' li.sox FisK Douglass Chemistry Council Bluffs, Iowa El Cuadro, Toyon Clu l); Phi Lambda L ' psilon; 130-Pound Foot- ball (2) M. Irene Dressor Holtville Spanish Delta Delta Delta: Transferred from University of Southern California, 1922; Schubert Club, Spanish Club ITarvey Linfori) Driav Geology Theta Xi Alhambra Geor(;e Sidxey Drysd.vle Palo Alto Mining and Metallurgy El Campo, Encina Club; Geological and Mining Society, Scab- bard and Blade; Masonic Club, Rifle Club, President Samuel Pearson Dunmire Greensburg, Pennsylvania Economics Phi Delta Theta; Transferred from Washington and Jefferson College, 1923; Varsity Football Squad (4) Wayne A. Durstox Biology Sequoia Club Lodi Eureka IIi-:riiert M. Dwicht Icchanical Engineering Sigma Xu; Circle S Society, Secretary (3, 4), Mechanical Engineering Society; Varsity Football, Block S Football (4J, Circle S Soccer (2, 3, 4) Alfred Thomas Dye Logan, Kansas Economics Branner Club; Transferred from University of Illinois, 1921 James J. Easly Lazv I ' nion Clutj Los Angeles Los Angeles Robert H. Edwards, Jr. Law Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Delta Chi; American Journalists ' Association, President (4), Assistant Editor 1924 Quad, Daily Palo Alto (1, 2, 3), Associate Editor (4) Dorothy Ehrhorx History Mountain View :ici til : ' ,. I ' Jack AIacfarlane Ehrhorn Mining Geological and Mining Society T Iountaiu View Phoenix, Arizona XoRTHCuTT Ely Law Sigma Nu; Hammer and Coffin, President (3, 4), Phi Delta Phi. Quadrangle Club. Ram ' s Head, Sigma Delta Chi; Varsity Track -Squad (2), Daily Palo Alto (2). 1924 Quad Staff, Quad Board of Control, Co-author Knightie Knight and Merchant of Menace. Men ' s Council (4), Editor Chaparral (3, 4), Senior Program Commi ttee Kenmore Leon Emerson Brattleboro, Vermont Economics Beta Thcta Pi; Transferred from Dartmouth College, 1923 Harlow De Wolfe English, Jr. Mechanical Engineering EI Cuadro; American Institute of Electrical Engineers Lindsav E.VWRENCE M. EnOS Laiv .Se(iuoia Club •San l uis Obispo Kalispell, Montana A ' axci . V . Errickson C ' licniistry EI Capital!, Toyon Club; Alpha Chi Sigma. Treasurer (4) W ' l.MFRicu EsTAP.ROoK Los Gatos liducat ' on Roble Club; Transferred from San Jose Teachers ' College, 1923; Mv Club Riverside Kathleen Evans History Pi Beta Phi; Transferred from University of California, 1921; Gamma Eta; Archery (1, 2, 3), Hockey (2), Basketball (3); W. A. A. Board (3. 4), Flower Committee (4), Fore! (3), The Tailor-Made Man (2), Up On a Ladder Catharine D. Ewell Mathematics Roble Club; Women ' s Economics Club; Hockey (1) Xi:i.LiE Irene F.mrchild French Roble Club Canon City, Colorado ; Hockey (1) Kearney, Nebraska K. ■.vl(lM) M. 1 . RLEY San I-Vancisco Laii ' El Tigrc, Branner Club; Nestoria-ColUge of the Pacific Debate. 1923 Cari. Theodore Feelhaver Hampton, Nebraska Law rank M. Findlev Palo . lto Economics Zeta I ' si • k ' oiiN EuGENh: Fish BURN. Jl - Los Angeles 1 } Economics Delta Kai pa Epsilon ClIAKI.I-S C, Lmv I ' lkisciiman I ' ran CISCO Branner Club San Diego Chari.ks Gross Fi.ktcher Political Science I ' hi U-.lta Theta; Circle S Society (3). President (4), Phi Phi, President (4), Scalpers (2); Circle S in Water Polo and Swimming (2, 3. 4), Swimming Captain (1, 3). IJlock S in Swimming (4). Varsity Basketball (2), Circle 24 in Water I ' olo and Swimming; Board of Athletic Control (3, 4), Senior Class President Raymond O. Fi.oon San IVancisco Mechanical Engineering Phi Delta Theta; Mechanical Kngineering Society; Freshman Football. Varsity Football Squad (2, 3, 4), Rugby (1), Fresh- man Water Polo Hkrhfrt Gfrdts I ' i.orckex Los Angeles Economics Phi lleta Kappa, Phi Delta Kappa; Masonic Club EsTiiicR ; rAv Flowkrs Pasadena Education-Graphic Art Kappa Alpha Theta; Finance Board Y. W. C. A. (2); The First Born (2), A Leap Year Leap (2), Fore! (3) DoROTin- Lucille T- ' orcii English- Journalism Horde Club, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Transferred from Bellinghain Normal. 1922; German Club, Junipero Serra Club, Music Clut). V. W. C. A. Xanipa, Idaho W ' alter P)Lair Foster Economics Zeta Psi ; Scalpers Geraldine Franklin Hislorv San Francisco Carpinteria Delta Gamma; Women ' s S Society; Membership Committee Y. W. C. A.; Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4), All Star Basketball (1, 2, 3), Hockey (1, 2, 3. 4) Captain (1). All Star Hockey (1, 2, 3), Hockey Manager (2), Swimming (1); Junior Prom Committee Josephine Franklin History Carpinteria Delta Gamma; Women ' s S Society; Membership Committee V. W. C. A. (1, 3); Hockey (1, 2, 3. 4), All Star Hockey (2, 3, 4), Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4), All Star Basketball (1, 2, 3), Swimming (1); W. A. A. (2, 3), Vice-President (3), Women ' s Conference (3), Pan Hellenic Florence Thompson Fredrick History Roble Club; Transferred from University of California, 1923; History Club, Music Club Farjorie Mae Frink Palo Alto Economics Transferred from College of the Pacific, 1923 Frank W. Fuller, Jr. San Francisco Laiv Delta Kappa Epsilon; V ' arsity Football (2, 3), Numerals in Football and Baseball, Varsity Baseball (3, 4), Block S Base- ball (3) Ojai San l ' rancisco Dick P. Fullerton, Jr. Electrical Engineering Beta Theta Pi; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Lens atid Plate, Mechanical Engineering Society; Swimming (1, 2), Circle S Swimming Daniel Dudley Gage, Jr. Los Angeles La ' Li) El Capitan, Toyon Club; Daily Palo Alto Staff (2), You Never Can Tell (2), Class Manager (3), Chairman, Lake Sports Junior Week (3), Assistant Editor 1924 Quad, Class President (4; u William R. G. i;k Los Angeles Political Science Toyon Club, President (4); Sigma Delta Chi; Masonic Club; Manager Daily Palo Alto (3), Senior Control Commit tee (4), Union Board of Governors (4), Chairman Senior Class Day Exercises Raymond P. Gexkrkaux Chemical Engineering New York Citv Plii Kapjja Psi; Aljiha Chi Sigma, President (4) R. Roi.AN ' i) Jeromi-; Gill Law Alpha Delta Phi; Phi Delta Phi Spokane, Washington San Francisco Robert Louis Goldman Economics Brar.ner Club; Ct-rcle Frangais, Chess Club, Euphronia; Bub bling Bohemia (1) Leslie Gorrell San Jose Mining Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Geological and Mining Society Fariax Ri ' Tii GowEK Santa Ilarliara History Delta Delta Delta; Transferred from I ' niversity of Southern California, 1921; History Clut), Women ' s Economics Club, V, W, C. A.; Woman Manager 1924 Quad, Jimior Lake Sports Com- mittee Xeil Granger Orange Economics Beta Theta.Pi; Scalpers; Y. M. C. A.; ' 24 Basketball; Junior Opera Committee, Senior Flower Connnittee, 1924 Quad Board John Dunb ar Graves Economics Alpha Tau Omega Hollywood Hollywood Kappa AI])Iia Theta; Transferred from De Pauw University, 192. Virginia Roussicau Gr.vves English Portland, Oregon Chester Oliver Gunther Econotnics Beta Theta Pi; Tennis Manager; Merchant of Menace (4) Elizai ' .i:th A. Halbert Psvchologv Roble Club; Tau Psi Epsilon; Hockey (2) Marshal Hali:. Jr. Law Sigma Nu Lon - r each San I ' Vancisco Cecil 1r tng Haley San Jose Journalism-Economics Theta Delta Chi: Plii Delta Phi; Interclass Track (2); Inter- fraternity Conference ( , 4); Business Manager Daily Palo Alto (4), Class Treasurer (1), .Secretary (2), Bonfire Committee, i ' oster Eight Connnittee, Election Board A. S. S. U. (4) WiLLi.v.vi Loins 1T. LL Economics Chi Psi Palo Alto m , . V 8 1 ' ! ' 1 i i IHli W ' ll.l.IAM E. llARCOfRT Setiuoia i ' lub Ja.mi:s I!. TIarker Chemistry Sfciuoia Club; Alpha Chi Sigma Millers. Nevada Los Anyeles Ckorge S. Harm an CiT ' iV Encjinecring San I ' rancisco El Campo, Toyon Club; Junipero Serra Club; Freshman Football Pasadena David W. C. Harris Medicine Setjuoia Club; Transferred from Trinity University, 1921; f mcga Cpsilon Phi; Band (2, 3, -I), Cosmopolitan Club, Clee Club, Nestoria StA I.1; ' I I AWKIXS Laiv I ' hi .Sigma Kappa ( iKORCK [ ' , II.WS Economics Chi Psi; Freshman Football Squad, Greys (2, 3) Harford 1 1, Havs Economics Delta Chi W.M.TFR G. Hays Laiv Chi Psi; Freshman Football S quad Mountain iew Palo Alto Palo Alto Palo Alto ' iKc,iMA Henderson Philosophy Roble Club; Schubert Club Los Angeles San Francisco Cl.. RENCE T. HeSSELMEVER Mechanical Engineering L ' nion Club; American Institute of Electrical Engineers Cedric Ed v. rd Hesthaf, Physics San I ' rancisco Reading, Pennsylvania R.WMOND E, R1.E Hll.I.ER Late Transferred from I ' niversity of California, 1923 Portland, Oregon llKIAM IT I ETON English Kappa Alpha Theta; English Club. Theta Sigma Phi. President (3); Daily Palo Alto, Women ' s Editor Daily Palo Alto (4). Will Shakespeare (3) Parti N .A. Hinckley Hollywood Economics Phi .Sigma Kappa; Masonic Club; Swimming Team (1), Circle 24 .Swinuning (1); Interfraternity Conference (4) Rici lARD H. ITlXCKLEY Hollywood Economics Delta Kappa Eps Skull and Snakes; Ion; Phi Phi, Economics Club Quadrangle ; Tennis, C Club, Scalpers, aptain (3) Rk(; [. Ar,D AIarion History Kncina Club; Hist Varsity Swimming HiRSCHMAN ory Club; Varsity Coif (3, (3), Circle S Swimming San Mateo 4), Captain (4), C Wilfred Hobson Wliittier Law Sequoia Club; Transferred from Wliittier College, 1920; Phi Alpha Delta, Historian, Clerk (4) I ' oRESTA Hodgson Philosophy Yonkers. New York Pi lieta Phi; Gamma Eta, Masquers; Hockey (3); Up On a Ladder (2), Three Live Ghosts (3), Randalin ' s Crowning (2), Pore: (3), Senior Flower Committee J iERNARD D. HOLBROOK Physics Ann Arbor, Michigan Alpha Delta Phi; Transferred from University of Michigan, 1921 Long Beach Margaret Hood English Roble Club; Phi Beta Kajipa; Women ' s Economics Club; W ' omen ' s Conference {3, 4), Secretary of .Senior Class Edward A. Howard Economics Zeta Psi Los Angeles ' uhu, China CiiiNG-SzE Huang Education Chinese Club; Transferred from Teachers ' College, Peking, 1923 lAR ' Elizabeth Hit.p.ard Hollywood English Pi Bet a Phi; Transferred from LTniversity of California, 1922; Y. W. C. A. Membership Committee Mi;rrill S. Hligo La Porte, Indiana Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Society; Freshman Baseball, 130-Pound Basketball Marv Ellen Hull San ] Lnteo Economics Roble Club; Junipero Serra Club, Women ' s Economics Club, President (4) ; Basketball (2), Hockey (3, 4); Executive Com- mittee Women ' s Fiesta (4), Women ' s Conference, Treasurer (4) .Vl.r.ERT HUSSEV HUNEKK History Los Angeles Alpha Delta Phi; Scalpers; Rally Committee, Chairman (4), Senior Control Committee C. R()L E. HvDE Palo Alto English Roble Club; Phi Beta Kappa; Cosmopolitan Club, Music Club, Schubert Club; Hoclicv (2, 3, 4); Executive Committee Women ' s Fiesta (4) William H. Irwin Entomology .Se iuoia ( lub lirookdale XoRRis E. Jamks Palo Alto Law Alpha Kappa Lambda; Sigma Delta Clii; Sword and Sandals; American Journalists ' Association; Androcles and the Kion (4), Dramatic Council (3), The Hottentot (3), You Never Can Tell (2) Stewart D. Jamks Conipton Economics Phi Gamma Delta; Transferred from University of California, 1922 W ' lLLiA.M R. Jamks Los Angeles Law Zeta Psi: Transferred from University of California, Southern Branch, 1922; Phi Delta Phi Corona Ruth Avis Jamksox Econoiiiics Roble Cluh; Women ' s S Society (3, 4), Wranglers (2), Schu- bert Club (1, 4), Women ' s Economics Club (2, 3, 4), Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (1, 4): Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4), All Star Hockey (2, 4), Basketball (I), Swimming (1, 2, 3) Kkn ' dai.f. Rekd Jknkins Ciz ' il Engineering Charles C. Johnson Medicine Transferred from University of Utah, 1923 LouLs Ernkst Joxks Prc-CHnical Sciences Omega Upsilon Phi (4) Glendale American Falls, Idalio Roseville Er ic Kmc.ht Jordan Geology Delta Upsilon Stanford University Paul M. Joseph Los Angeles Laiv Branner Club; If I Were King (2), Yellow Jacket (1), 1924 Quad Staff Eliz. i!Kth CiRACK JoYCE Missoula, Montana French Roble Club; Junijiero Serra Club, Spanish Club Chicago, Illinois Francis M. Kaukfman Economics Sequoia Club, President (4); Scalpers; Freshman Track; Class President (2), Class Athletic Manager (4) L. Frank Kkllocg ' Santa Ana Mathcmcitics Transferred from Santa Ana Junior College, 1922 LuLS Emmett Kemnitzer Oakland Geology Delta Upsilon; Glee Club (2); Freshman Track, Varsity Track (4), Freshman Football; Cheeri-o Revue (2) Harry F. Kennedy Ontario Economics Kapjia Alpha; Hammer and Coffin; Daily Palo Alto (1, 2, 3, 4), Chaparral (2, 3, 4) :Mii RoisKRT Baxkkrt Kennedy Economics- Jounwlisvt Stanley Kimbali, Ci ' i ' iV Engineering San Jose ' ancouver, Washington Phi Sigma Kappa; Transferred from Oregon Agricultural Col- lege, 1922; American Society of Civil Engineers; Class Football 4), Class Basketball (4) u i) Dim. MICK King East Tavvas, Michigan Zoology Toyon Club; Transferred from Michigan Agricultural College, 1921; Cosmopolitan Club, Zoology Club Ernest C. Kinc Mechanical Engineering Mountain ' ie v Corona James M. Kirisv Geology El Cuadro; (ieological and Alining Society, Treasurer (4), Phi Beta Kai i)a; Glee Club II. M. Kirk Bozeman, Montana Geology Se iuoia Club; Geological and Mining Society ' i()1.i-:t ' iu(;inia Knowles Los Angeles Mathematics Koble Club. President (4); Transferred from San Diego Junior College, 1922; Junipero Serra Club; Basketball (3, 4), Hockey (4) Fred Michio Koba San Francisco Economies lapanese Club; Y. M. C. A.; Varsity Basketball (2, 3), Handball (2, 3), Circle S Handball (3), 130-Pound Basketball (1), 145- Pound Basketball (3) Ge()R(;e O. Koch San Francisco Mechanical Engineering El Tigre, Toyon Chili; American Institute of Electrical Engi- neers. Mechanical Engineering Society Eric Kr. emer Electrical Engineering San Diego Phi Kappa Sigma; Circle S Swimming (2, 3, 4) G. L. KuiiNEL San Francisco Mechanical Enginccrina Breakers: Masonic Club, Radio Club . i)RE E. L. Ndweer Santa Clara Mechanical Enginccrina Branner Club; Y. M. C. A. LicsTER Watts L.wgi ' ord Economics-Law Phi Delta Theta North Platte, Nebraska San Jose Pii-KTox L. Lapp Lazv El Toro; Delta Thcta Phi; Junior Tennis Manager; It I Were King (2), Junior IVoin Committee, Rally Committee (3, 4), -Will Shakespeare (3), Yell Leader (4) in :Ui! u U IP Ml E(;i!i:rt W. I.auii Santa Cruz Chfinical Engineering EI Tigre, Encina Club; Scabbard and Blade, Treasurer (4); Xestoria; Circle S Polo (4); R. O. T. C. First Lieutenant (4) H. SiDXEY Lauc.iii.in Los Angeles Laiv Sequoia Club, President (4); Glee Club, President (4), V. M. C. A. Cabinet (2, 3, 4) William Myers Lalmax Rochester, Xew York German Sigma Chi; Transferred from University of Rochester, 1923 Helex Jeax Lawuexce San [atco Economics Delta Gamma; Freshman V. V. C, A, Cabinet, Women ' s Eco- nomics Club; Tennis (1), Hockey (2, 3), Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4). Swimming (1) Be. trice Lee Historv Al|iha Omicron Pi; V. V. C. A.; Daily Palo Alto (1) Las Animas, Colorado Palo Alto (1) kledford. Oregon F. I ' arclav Leeds Economics Kaiipa Alpha; Varsity Tennis (2, 3), 24 Tennis fARCus DeWitt Leii Geology Trident, Montana Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Geological and Mining Society San Francisco Walter H. Levison Econoinics El Toro. Toyon Club; Glee Club (1, 2); Quad Staff (2) Bert ' . Levit San Francisco Laiv L ' nion Club; Delta -Sigma Rho; Euphronia, President (4), Spanish Club; Yellow Jacket (1), Triangular Debate (4) SCIIERL MaIRICE Le V English Richard C. Lewis Electrical Engineering Joplin, Missouri Mountain View RoiiERT E. Lewis Los Angeles Laii ' El Capitan, L ' nion Club; Delta Sigma Rho, President (3), Delta Theta Phi; Xestoria. President (3); Varsity Debating (1. 2, 3, 4). Intercollegiate Debate Conunittee (2, 3, 4), Manager (3. 4) DOXALD E. LlEREXIXIREER Economics- Journalism Modesto Breakers, P ncina Club; American Journalists ' Association, Quad- rangle Club, Sigma Delta Chi, Skull and Snakes; Daily Palo . lto (2, 3, 4). Managing Editor (4), Editor (4), 1924 Quad -Staff, -Sjiectator Staff (4), Freshman Sponsor (4) LaWREXCE L LiXXE.MAX Law EI Tigre, Encina Club Watsonvillc Eugene Andrew Lockton Mechanical Engineering Alpha Kappa Lambda ITakkis D. Loe Pre-Clinical Sciences El Tigre, Encina Club Lelaxd H. Loewenson Economics L ' nion Club Windsor Wilsall, Montana Portland, Oregon San Francisco Al.l-REn T). LOEWENSTEIN Economics-History Breakers, Toyon Club; Scalpers; Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball (2. 3, 4), Freshman Basketball, Handball (1, 2, 3, 4) Eureka El. DON Addixgton Long Median ical Engineering Toyon Club; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Me- chanical Engineering Society; Masonic Club Francis B. Looiris Burlingame Economics Kappa Alpha; Transferred from United States Xaval Academy, 1922 Farcus Lothrop Mechanical Engineering Sequoia Club Osgood Sten ' ens Lovekin Physiology San Bernardino Riverside Joseph Ellsworth Loveless, Johnson City, New York Economics Sequoia Clul); Oval Club 1 rederic S. Ludeke Shandon Law El Toro, Toyon Club; Phi Alpha Delta. Scalpers. Skull and Snakes; Euplironia; Freshman Football, Freshman Track, Block S Football (2, 3, 4), Varsity Track (2, 4). Block S Track (3); Executive Committee (2), Senior Control Committee . lice E. Lundberg History Alpha Omicron Pi; Transfi Schubert Club Salt Lake City, Utah erred from University of Utah, 1923; Pasadena George E. Lusk Economics Beta Theta Pi; Transferred from Colorado College, 1922; Orchestra (3) George W. Lysaght Economics Branner Club San I ' rancisco Portland, Oregon B. Emmet McCaffery Law Branner Club; Tunipero Serra Club. Nestoria, President (3); Manager, Fencing (3); Tri-State Debate (3), Freshman Cali- fornia Debate, Freshman-Sophomore Debate (1), Jofire Debate S(|uad (4) m MAiiEF. L. McCaxse History Roble Club; History Club; Basketball (i) Santa Rosa Berkeley KaTHRYN ElOISE McCl.EAVE Economics Gamma Phi Heta; Transferred from University of California, 92 ; Daily Palo Alto (.3). Randalin ' s Crowning (3), Women ' s Conference (3) John Donald McCreadv Redlands Ecoiwinics Theta Delta Chi John Lyndon Mace San Francisco Law Zeta Psi; Permanent 1924 Class Secretary Sara Gwendolyn IMacGovern English Roble Club; Transferred from Mills College. 1922; Y. W. C. A. J. Morgan McGrath Economics Glee Club, Junijiero Serra Club Merl L. McHenry Law Zeta Psi Vallejo w. c. a. Palo Alto Alameda John C. McHose Ashland, Ohio Law Phi Delta Theta; Hammer and Coifin, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Phi, Quadrangle Club, Scalpers, Skull and Snakes; Freshman Basket- ball, Block S Basketball (2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Class President (2), Executive Committee (3. 4), Class Manager (3), Chairman Junior Prom Committee, Chairman Senior Promenade Committee Santa Monica Richard Rookledge Macintosh Mechanical Engineering Sigma Nu; Block 24 in Track, Varsity Track (2, 3), Block S Track (3) Glenn H. rdNTYRE Santa Clara Chemical Engineering Alpha Kappa Lambda; Alpha Chi Sigma; Glee Club Henry Clayton Mac k Bakersfield Law Delta Chi; English Club, Hammer and Coffin, Rain ' s Head, Sigma Delta Chi; Associate Editor Chaparral (3, 4), Daily Palo Alto (1. 2, 3, 4). 1924 Quad Staff, Editor Spectator (4), Co- author Merchant of Menace (4), Senior Class Poet Philip Wash McKenney Pre-Clinical Sciences El Tigre, Toyon Club; Band (1, 2, 3, 4) Oakland Margaret Gilbert Mackey Los Angeles Fretuh Gamma Phi Beta; Cercle Fran ais, Music Club, Y. W. C. A. Freshman Cabinet; Fore! (3) Willi m Ellis McLean Electrical Eiigineering Rifle Club Portland, Oreg-on Richard Loomis MacRae Los Angeles Lmv Delta Upsilon; Track (2, 3), Freshman Football, Freshman Track, Numerals in Freshman Swimming JovcF Malixowskv History Patterson Dora J. Iai.lory Fresno History Rohle Clul); Cosmoi olitan Club, History Club, Student Volun- teers, Leader (4), Y. W. C. A.; Freshman Basketball; Girl Reserves Leader, The Hottentot (3) I ' . David Maxnoccir II Hollywood Laiv lieta Theta Pi: Rani ' s Head. Scalpers, Sword and Sandals; I ' .asketball (1, 2, 4), Football (1, 3), Tennis (1, 2); Androcles and the Lion (4), Dramatic Medal (3), Fore! (3), Her Husband ' s Wife (3), Kniglitie Knight (3) Cecil Marquis Twin Falls, Idaho Economics Breakers. Toyon Club; Transferred from Phillips University, 1920; .Senior Control Committee Georcia Steirly ] Iason Watsonville History Kapi a Alpha Theta; Transferred from University of California, E. Ri.i ' : May Los Angeles Economics Se([uoia Clul); Block S Baseball (3); Senior Control Com- mittee, Rally Committee (4) Axx. F. Merrill Salt Lake City, Utah Erench Delta Ciamma; Transferred from University of Utah, 1921; Cercle FranQais; Archery (2, 3), Archery Award (2), Archery Manager (3); W. . . . . Board (3), Forel E. X. Merrill Mechanical Engineering Redwood City Theta Xi ; Mechanical Engineering Society Seattle, Washington Alfred A. Miller Laiv Transferred from University of Washington, 1923 P). Rr.ARA Miller Los Angeles English-Joiirnahsin Delta Ciamma; Transferred from University of Southern Cali- fornia, 1922; . merican Tournalists ' Association, Theta Sigma Phi; Daily Palo .Mto (3, 4). 1924 Quad Staff I ' ll II. IP J. Miller Visalia Pre-Clinical Sciences Transferred from University of Southern California, 1923; Phi Rho .Sigma I Ii-.RiiicRT IT. Mitchell Pasadena Economics Se(|uoia Club; Transferred from University of California, South- ern Branch, 1923 lucii C. MixoN Marianna, .Vrkansas Economics Delta Tan Delta; Transferred from Vandcrbilt University, 1923 11 :1 V- ' c 204 Gkorc.k S. Mizota Ecoiiomics-Lazv I ' ukuoka, Japan Japanese Club; Cosmopolitan Club, President (4), Y. M. C. A. Cabinet loRRis J. Mode Mechanical Engineering El Campo, Brauiier Club Oriox G. Moe Mechanical Engineering Secjuoia Club Uinuba Los Angeles San Diego Katherine Maddox !Mo tc,o.merv English Roble Club, Gamma Pbi Beta; Transferred from University of Arizona, 1923 ' ARREN Gi.EXX M(X)DV Fresno Economies Los Arcos, Tovon Club; Transferred from Fresno State College, 1923; Varsity Basketball (4) Theodore DAvm Tooxev Palo Alto Mechanical Engineering Transferred from College of the Pacific, 1922; Circle S Wrestling Arthur Moore Laiv Phi Kappa Sigma Dallas, Texas Billings. -Montana Cech, Martin Morris Economics Alpha Sigma Phi; Sword and Sandals; Cdee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Freshman Soccer; ' ellow Tacket (1), Maid to Order (1). The Tailor-Made Man (2), Charm School (2), The Hot- tentot (3), Alumni Show (2), Football Frothies of 1922 (3), Milestones (4) Bernadixe Moser English Lewiston, Idaho Roble Club, Gamma Pbi Beta; Transferred from University of Idaho, 1923 Wilbur, Washington James C. Muir English Phi Gamma Delta; Ram ' s Head, Scabbard and Blade; Freshman Swimming Team; Daily Palo Alto (1, 2, 3), 1925 Quad Board (3), Koo Koo Kubistown (1), Knightie Knight (2), Foot- hall Frothies of 1922 (2), Merchant of Menace (3), Rally Committee (3), Secretary Junior Class Oscar W.wxe Mulford Economics Delta Chi Los Angeles Spexcer M. Mixsox, Jr. Pasadena Civil Engineering Setiuoia Club; Transferred from California Institute of Tech- nology, 1922; American Society of Civil Engineers; Band, Cosmo- politan Club, Masonic Club; Stanford Scholar Joiix Matthew Murphi ' , Jr. Petaluma Pre-ClinicaJ Sciences Sequoia Club; Transferred from St. Mary ' s College, 1922; Junipero Serra Club Robert Sixci.air Murray Redwood City Economics Transferred from Xew Y ' ork University, 1923; Glee Club rwsi i msimr 205 IsABELLE G. MuzzEY Pasadcna Economics Koble Club, Vice-President (3) ; Transferred from University of California, Southern Branch, 1921; Women ' s S Society; Women ' s Economics Club, Zoology Club; Hockey (2, 3, 4), Al l Star Hockey (2), Basketball (3), Hockey Manager (3) RuEL R. Neiger Alhambra Economics Setiuoia Club; Transferred from University of California, South- ern Branch, 1923 Robert Hatch Nelson Mining Jefferson City, Missouri Branner Club; Transferred from Colorado School of Mines, 1923 ' Il.I.lAM K. Nelsox Santa Ana Chemical Engineering Transferred from Santa Ana Junior College, 1921; Phi Lambda Upsilon Phoenix, Arizona AI. .Adei.e Newcomer Mathematics Chi Omega; Transferred from University of Arizona, 1922 Philip Newill Portland, Oregon English El Toro; English Club, Hammer and Coffin, Ram ' s Head, Sigma Delta Chi; American Journalists ' Association; Daily Palo Alto (1, 2, 3, 4), Editor (4), Executive Committee (4), 1924 Quad Staff, Publications Committee (3, 4), Rally Committee (4) Ri ' Tii . xxE Newlix Chemistry Fresno Roble Club; lota Sigma Pi, Secretary-Treasurer (4); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2, 3, 4), Treasurer (4); Hockey (2, 3, 4), Archery (2) Gladys Newnan Bacteriology lota Sigma Pi Glexn D. Newtox Political Sciencc-Lazv Union Club Mountain View Glendale ATarcaret E. Noxon Alhambra P ducation Roble Club; Transferred from University of California, Southern Branch, 1923 ATarsiiall Elbert Nunn Colorado Springs, Colorado Spanish Transferred from Colorado College, 1922; Spanish Club, Secre- tary (4), Y. M. C. A. P. UL O ' Hara San Diego Pre-Clinical Sciences Phi Delta Theta; Transferred from San Diego Junior College, 1921; Xu Sigma Xu; H5-Pound Basketball (2, 3, 4), Captain (4) ATaui) O ' Neil Mountain A ' iew English Transferred from Pacific Union College, 1923 DoROTin ' LoiasE Overfelt San Jose Economics Delta Delta Delta; Schubert Club, Women ' s Economics Club, Secretary-Treasurer (3), Vice-President (4), Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (H: Hockey fl), -Ml Star Hockey (2, 3); The Tailor- Made Man ;iH ii Burton W. Palmer Economics Encina Club; Euphronia, President (3), Rifle Club, Y. M. C. A. Chester B. Palmer Civil Engineering L ' tiioii Club; American Society of Civil Engineers Lit.r.L x Parlier San Jose i ' . M. c. A. Mountain ' ie v Fresno Spanish Chi Omega Y ().NXE A. Pasouale San Francisco History Kappa Kappa Gamma; Gamma Eta; Up On a I-adder (J) Gregorio C. Patacsil Political Science Alpha Pi Zeta Frkd T. Pat TON ' Mechanical Engineering Bauang, Philippine Islands Berkeley El Toro, Toyon Club; Mechanical Engineering Society, Rally Committee (4), Senior Plate Committee George Cali, Pearce Redwood Cit Mechanical Engineering El Campo, Branner Club; American Institute of Electrical Engineers Don DeP i.ois Peru am Palo Alto English Earlene Phelps Phoenix, Arizona English Alpha Omicron Pi Hakri- Ravmoni) Phelps Omaha, Nebraska Economics Alpha Delta Phi Adoi.ph L. Piedmonte Turlock Pre-Medicine Branner Club; Transferred from Junipero Serra Club University of Santa Clara; Elizabeth Peirce Palo Alto School of Biology Kappa Alpha Theta; Music Club, Wranglers, Y. W. C. A.; Hockey (I, 2), Tennis (2, 3) Raymon a. Pike Modesto Economics Sefjuoia Club; Transferred from College of the Pacific, 1923 Robert 1 ra. klix Playter Geology Phi Delta Theta Joplin, Missouri 1 raxc:ks l i.KASAXTS Nampa, Idaho History Ali ha I ' hi; Transferred from College of Idaho, 1921; Gamma Eta W ' avnk I ' oi.i.ocK Clarksburg Pie-Clinical Sciences Kl Tigre, Toyon Club; Transferred from University of Indiana, Elizai ' .etii 1 ' rances Pooler San Francisco History Chi Omega; Transferred from University of California, 1922; History Club, Women ' s Economics Club, V. W. C. A. Member- ship Committee Dorothy P ' raxces Porter Bacteriology Rohle Club; ' Transferred from Mills College, 1923 Fresno Ai.Exis E. Post Berkeley Mechanical Engineering Zeta Psi; Transferred from I ' nited States Xaval Academy, 1922; Mechanical Engineering Society; Freshman Football Line Coach 3, 4) VV. R. I ' OSTLICWAITE San Antonio, Texas Mechanical Engineering Thcta Xi; Mechanical Engineering Society Antioch William J. Putcamp Mechanical Engineering I ' nion Club; Transferred from University of Southern California, 1922; Associated Federal Students, President, American Insti- tute of Electrical Engineers FuEi.LA Marie Rackliff Hollister Mathematics Delta Delta Delta; Transferred from ,San Benito County Junior College, 1922; Music Club, Y. W. C. A. |. Carletox Rear ' ancouver, British Columbia Mechanical Engineering Tiranner Club; Transferre i from University of Britisli Colum- bia, 1922 l ' ) •Rox Russell Reixe.muxd English San Dies;o .Setjuoia Club; Transferred from Oregon Agricultural College, 1921; English Club ITexr - C. Reinhart Economics Transferred from Kenynn College, 1923 Toledo, Ohio Marcaret Louise Richard.sox Los Angeles Economics Delta C.anuua: Gamma Eta, Masquers; Pan Hellenic (3), Presi- dent (4), Executive Conuuittee Women ' s Fiesta (4), Cheeri-o Revue (2), Eootball Frothies of 1922 (3), He Who Gets Slapped (3), Up On a Ladder (2), Fore! (3) JoHX D. Richer Los Angeles Lazii Alpha Tau Omega; Ram ' s Head, Sword and Sandals; Business Manager Dramatic Council (3), Chairman of Junior Opera Conuuittee (3), of Senior Control Committer, of Sophomore Cotillion Committee (f), If I Were King (2) Raxdolimi 1)RAI)ley Riter Logan, Utah Economics- Journalism . l|)ba Sigma Phi: American Tournalists ' Associ Delta Chi; Desk Plditor Daily Palo Alto (3, 4), Associate Editor IJaily Palo Alto (4), Joint Puldication Committee of S|iectator an Joiirnalists ' Association, Sigma in: 208 W. Price Robinson English-Journalism Fresno Encina Club; Transferred from Fresno State College, 1922; Boxing Team, Circle S Boxing (2), Varsity Football Squad Russell Roscoe Robison Jackson Medianical Engineering El Cuadro, Toyon Club; Mechanical Engineering Society; Block 24 in Track (1), Varsity Track (2, 3, 4) BiRDELLA Rogers Hanford Classical Literature Kappa Alpha Theta; Classical Club, Y. W. C. A. Publicity Committee (2) Josephine Ranii Rogers San Jose Psychology Kappa Kappa Gamma; Transferred from Mills College, 1922 Alice Caroline Roth Philosophy Willits Gamma Phi Beta; Cap and Gown, Women ' s S Society; Basket- ball (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (3), All Star (2, 3), Hockey Captain (2), All Star (I, 2, 3, 4), All Star Track (3); President A. W. S., Women ' s Council (3, 4), Executive Committee (3) Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Martin Arm el Row Economics-Law Sequoia Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Class Tennis (2) Milo Edwin Rowell Law Alpha Sigma Phi; Phi Alpha Delta. Treasurer (4) DeWitt Clark Rowland Geology Fresno Tacoma, Washington El Toro, Toyon Club; Geological and Mining Society; Class Secretary (3), Student Endowment Committee Richard Charles Rugen Law Sequoia Club; Transferred from University of Chicago, 1923 Y. M. C. A. Glenview, IlHnois sity of Chicago, 1923; PaHsades, Colorado James H. Rusk History-Law Union Club; Transferred from University of Colorado, 1922; Delta Theta Phft Band (3, 4), History Club; Interclass Football (3); Milestones (4) Milton H. Saier Fresno Chemistry Theta Xi; Alpha Chi Sigma, Vice-President Richard Hunt Sampson Los Angeles Law Delta Kappa Epsilon Conrad, Montana W. Lee Sandberg Economics Delta Chi; Hammer and Coffin; Advertising Club; Associate Editor Chaparral (3, 4) Joseph Yuzuru Sano Mechanical Engineering San Francisco Japanese Club; Band, Cosmopolitan Club, Vice-President (3), Glee Club Charles Murrell Sayles Abilene, Texas Civil Engineering Transferred from Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1923; American Society of Civil Engineers RoiiKRT Toi.Axn ScHAEFER Ontario Medicine Sequoia Club; Transferred from Pomona College, 1923 Helen Katherine Schardin Sacramento Classical Literature Delta Delta Delta; Cap and Gown, Vice-President (4); Classical Club, Secretary (3), Schubert Club, Y. W. C. A., President (4); Hockey (2, 3) Harold W. Schmid Mechanical Engineering Fremont R. Schmieder Mechanical Engineering Oberon, North Dakota San Francisco El Campo, Toyon Club; Mechanical Engineering Society; Swim- ming (1, 2, 3, 4), Manager (2), Water Polo (1, 2, 3, 4), Manager (2), Circle S Water Polo; Bonfire Committee; Junior Week Committee, Senior Board of Control Philtp Forest Scofield Palo Alto Mechanical Engineering Theta Xi; Mechanical Engineering Society; Numerals. Freshman Football, Freshman Track, Block S Track (2, 3); Interfra- ternity Conference (3) Theodore E. Scrthner Economics San Francisco Santa Rosa El Cuadro, Toyon Club; Circle S Cross Country (1, 3) D. r)RUCE Seymour Geology Ethel Mae Shaull Los Angeles Psychologv Roble Club; Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Psi Epsilon; Zoology Club; Swimming (2} S. Dorothy Shepard Palo Alto History Roble Ciub, Treasurer (3); History Club, Vice-President; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3, 4); Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4); Junior Control Com- mittee Theodore A. Sherman English Phi Delta Theta; Transferred from I ' niversity of Idaho, 1923 George John Shoenhair, Jr. Economics Delta Upsilon P)Oise, Idaho • of Idaho, 1923 Los Angeles Carl S. Shoup Los Altos Lazv Phi Delta Theta; Hammer and Coffin, Phi Delta Phi, Quadrangle Club, Scalpers, Sigma Delta Chi, President (4); Co-author of Fore! (3) and Merchant of Menace (4); Daily Palo .Mto, Editor 1924 Quad, Permanent 1924 Executive Committee, Senior Commencement Committee Dorothy Jean Simonton History Delta Delta Delta Wendell, Idaho lip I IP Jacob Slingerland History-Law EI Tigre; Transferred from Harvard L ' niversity, 1922 Kasson, Minnesota ty, 1922 San Francisco Richard Louis Sloss History Branner Club; Cercle Framais, Chess Club, Euphronia; The Yellow Jacket (1) Kansas City, Missouri Alice Myrmida Smith Ecotwmics-J ournalism Roble Club; Transferred from University of Southern Cali- fornia, 1922; Y. W. C. A. Cecil Jules Smith Medicine Toyon Club Los Angeles Earle Smith Palo Alto Economics Transferred from College of the Pacific, 1923; Soccer, Gymna- sium Team George Keil Smith Law El Campo; Glee Club . L M. ScoTT Smith Law ' allejo San Francisco Ralph Day Smith Hutchinson, Kansas Civil Engineering Union Club; Transferred from Missouri School of Mines, 1921; American Society of Civil Engineers William Chandler Snitjer Mechanical Engineering Claude C. Stafford Medicine San Jose Long Beacli Union Club; Transferred from University of Southern Cali- fornia, 1921 Walter Augustus Starr, Jr. Law Delta Kappa Epsilon Piedmont Salt Lake City, Utah Paul Lewis Stayner French Transferred from L ' niversity of Utah, 1922; Cercle Frangais, Spanish Club Archie T. Steele Boise, Idaho Economics- Journalism Encina Club; American Journalists Association, Secretary, Cos- mopolitan Club, Nestoria. Vice-President, Rifle Club, Secretary, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Daily Palo Alto (2, 3), Trelawney of the Wells (1), Will Shakespeare (3) Portland, Oregon Theodore Johx Steffen Economics Delta Kappa Epsilon; Transferred from Reed College, Circle Block S Basketball (4) 1922 !f: il Howard Stevens Ecmiomics Theta Chi Donald Kenneth Stewart Mechanical Engineering Rockford, Illinois Palo Alto Arthur T. Stollmack Hollywood Law Union Club; Transferred from University of California, South- ern Branch, 1923 John Bear Stone Chemistry Haroi,d Henry Strain Chemistry Grace M. Strobee Economics San Francisco Mayfield Han ford Sigma Kappa; Cap and Gown, Secretary (4), Women ' s S Society; Women ' s Economics Club, Wranglers, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; S Sweater (3), Hockey (1, 2, 3. 4), Basketball (1, 2, 3, 4), Diving (2), Tennis (1), Basketball Manager (4) Artemas J. Strong Medicine Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Numerals in Baseball Santa Paula Edward William Strong Philosophy Gresham, Oregon ' ore! (3), 1924 Sequoia Club; English Club; Lens and Plate Quad Staff, Stanford Cardinal Da ID Selden Summers Tucson, Arizona Civil Engineering Union Club; Transferred from University of Hawaii, 1921; American Society of Civil Engineers Frances Maude Summers History San Jose Chi Omega; Fellowship Committee Y. W. C. A. (3); Fore! ' (3), Football Frothies of 1922 (3), Randalin ' s Crowning Clarence S. Swabey Civil Engineering American Society of ( ivil Engineers Palo Alto Jacob Pierpont Swartz AUentown, Pennsylvania Law Sequoia Club; Oval Club; Business Staff Daily Palo Alto (1, 2), Circulation Manager Daily Palo Alto (3) William Wacer Swayne Paris, France Chemistry Phi Kappa Psi; Alpha Chi Sigma. Circle S Society; Cercle Frangais; Block S Track (3), Numerals in Track (1), Circle S Varsity Soccer (2, 3, 4), Captain Varsity Soccer (4), Numerals in Freshman Soccer, Numerals in Soccer (2, 3) Henry Gardiner Symonds Hinsdale, Illinois Geology Kappa Sigma; Geological and Mining Society; Block S, Baseball Manager (4); Class Manager (4), Corduroy Ball Com- mittee (3), Rally Committee (4), Senior Control Committee (4), Senior Commemoration Committee, Student Body Manager (4) CoLuv DuTOT Tari.eton Honolulu, Hawaii Ciiil Engineering Breakers; Transferred from University of Hawaii, 1923; Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers William Edward Tempel Los Angeles Economics Branner Club; Oval Club; German Club, Glee Club (3, 4) Robert Jones Ten n ant Economics Sequoia Club Helen Terman Economics Delta Delta Delta L. Carvll Thompson Economics Sequoia Club Colusa Stanford University Los Ang-eles Los Angeles Colin Willis Timmons Philosophy Sigma Chi; Transferred from California Institute of Technology, 1922; Alpha Chi Sigma; He Who Gets Slapped (3) Berkeley Robert C. Titus Economics El Toro, Toyon Club; Scalpers, Presi lent ( 2); Chairman Base- ball Fight Committee (2), Executive Committee (2), Rally Com- mittee (4), Senior Ball Committee Mathew Oscar Tobriner San Francisco Economics Branner Club; Delta Sigina Rho, English Club, Phi Beta Kappa; Euphronia, President (3); 1924 Ouad Staff, California Debate (2, 3), Joffre Debate (3), If I Were King (2), Chairman Sopho- more Play Committee, Stanford Scholar Harold Elworthy Todd Electrical Engineering Hollywood Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Transferred from University of California, 1921; Y. M. C. A.; Cross Country Run (3); Assistant Stage Electrician (4) Roland Erw ' in Tognazzini Law Delta Tau Delta; Phi Delta Phi Donald Torrey History El Cuadro Tsong-Hsun Tsui Political Science Chinese Club San Francisco l- ' resno Ho-Nan, China Prescott, Arizona Orville H. Tucker Cizil Engineering El Toro, Encina Club; American Society of Civil Engineers; Block S Track Manager (4); Junior Prom ( onunittee (3), Freshman Sponsor (4), Secretary A. S. S. U. Marion Turner English Adelaida Delta Delta Delta; Education Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2, 3, 4); Hockey (2), Track (3); Randalin ' s Crowning (2) Ford M. Tussing Pasadena History Delta Tau Delta; Circle S Society, Vice-President (4), Skull and Snakes; Economics Club; Block S Tennis. Circle S Tennis; Assistant Graduate Manager (4), Baseball Manager 14) Helen Tuthill Portland, Oregon Economics Delta Gamma; Women ' s Economics Club; Pan Hellenic (3) George G. Updegraff Portland, Oregon Lmv Transferred from Oregon Agricultural College, 1922 Theodore Van Deusen Los Angeles (trophic Art Alpha Tau Omega; Hammer and Coffin, Ram ' s Head Linda VanNorden Palo Alto English Kappa Alpha Theta; English Club, Treasurer (4), Phi Beta Kappa; Classical Club, Vice-President (3), President (4), Wranglers, Secretary-Treasurer (3), Y. W. C. A. Committees; Stanford Scholar, Lower Division Honors Earle D. Van Valin San Mateo Pre-Clinical Sciences Union Club; Transferred from College of the Pacific, 1923 John Orren Vaughn Pasadena Pre-Clinical Sciences El Campo, Toyon Club; Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Chi; Bubbling Bohemia (1), You Never Can Tell (2), Charm School (2) Helen Louise Vocel FuUerton, Nebraska English Rohle Club; Transferred from llniversity of Nebraska, 1923; Cosmopolitan Club, Education Club Claude Emerson Wakefield Tacoma, Washington Lmw Sigma Nu; Transferred from University of Washington, 1923; Scabbard and Blade Hugh H. Wallace Auburn Geology Breakers, Encina Club; Block S Basketball Manager (4) Russell Lincoln Walter Chicago, Illinois Economics Sequoia Club. Treasurer (4); Oval Club; Masonic Club, Treas- urer (4), Nestoria, Vice-President (3), President (4), Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Interclass Football (3); Daily Palo Alto Margaret Ware Chico Enghsh Roble Club; Transferred from Chico Slate Teachers ' College, 1922; English Club; Stanford Scholar Joseph C. Waterman San Jose Cix ' il Engineering El Campo, Toyon Club; American Society of Civil Engineers Jerome Wilfred Watterson Bishop Economics Toyon Club W ' hittier C. Watterson Chemistry Toyon Club Makc.i ' eritk Vi;iciisi;i.i-i:i.ui:r Ecoiwiiiics Women ' s Economics Club Conrad Weil. Jr. Mechanical Enyineeriiii El Campo Bishop I ' alu . lto Redwood City Sail I ' rancisco LOTON DUTREUX WeLI.S Lazv El Tigre, Branner Club; Christian Science Society, Vice-Presi- dent (4). Euphronia, Y. M. C. A.; Triangular Debate Team (4), Business Staff, Daily Palo Alto (1) Gilbert Collins Wheat Los . ngele.s Law Delta Kappa Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi, Phi Phi, Freshman Football, Freshman Track, Varsity Football (2, 3), Block S Football Thayer W. Whitcomb Chemical Engineering Fessenden, North Dakota Los . rcos, Toyon Club; Transferred from University of North Dakota, 1921; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Glee Club (2, 3) Albert Cosad White Oakland Mechanical Engineering El Capitan; Circle .S Society, Mechanical Engineering Society: Block ' S Swimming, Circle S Swimming, National Spring- board Diving Chamnionshin (2, 3). Circle S Gymnastics, Captain Gymnasium Team (2), Captain Swimming Team (4) Charles B. White Economics-Lazv Pasadena El Toro, Toyon Club; Advertising Club; CWmnasium Team (4); Manager 1924 Quad, Class President (3). Class Manager (2. 4), Union Board of Governors (3, 4), Men ' s Council, Secretary (4), Permanent 1924 Class Executive Committee Harold B. Whitney Economics Transferred from Friends University, Wichita. Kansas 1922 Berkeley Helen W ' hitney Laiv Alpha Phi; Transferred from University of California, 1920: Cap and Gown, English Club. Masquers, President (3) : Chairman Quad Board of Control, ' ou Never Can Tell. If I Were King. Randalin ' s Crowning (2), j i On a Ladder, The Hottentot (3), Permanent 1924 Class Executive Committee Joe E. Wight San Diego Electrical Engineering Theta Xi; Transferred from L ' niversity of California, 1923; Mechanical Engineering Society; Masonic Club . lice E. Wilber Inillertoii English Roble Club; Transferred from L ' niversity of California, 1923 Paul Curtis Wilp.ur Chemical Engineering ... •• •■a. Phi B C. A. Cabinet ( San Francisco Alpha Chi Sigma. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Lambda I ' psilon, Presi- dent (4); V. M. ' ■' •= ' - ' — - - 1 - - - - Captain (4) !); Gymnasium Team (1, 2, 3), Eva Mae Willia.ms Redlands English Roble Club, Vice-President (4); Transferred from University of Redlands, 1920; Y. W. C. A. Membership Committee (3. 4). and Social ' elfare Committee (3); Women ' s Conference (3, 4), If I Were King (2), . ndroclcs and the Lion (4), A. S. S. U. Election Board (4), Senior Class Historian loLA Williams Economics Pi Beta Phi Madera George Howard Wilson Los Angeles I.atv Alpha Delta Phi; Phi Alpha Delta; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Up On a Ladder. Knightie Knight, Maid to Order, Trc- lawney of the Wells, Koo, Koo, Kubistown Kkmp Julius Winkler English Kncina Club Los Angeles Terre Haute, Indiana Howard E. Wittenherg Economics Phi Kappa Psi; Freshman Football; Senior Board of Control Carleton B. Wood Oakdale Law Union Club; Glee Club (2); Freshman Track Squad; Cheeri-o Revue (2) ' iNTON T. Woods Los Angeles Law Branner Club; Transferred from Illinois College, 1922 Paul Drury Working El Tigre, Toyon Club; Nestoria Andrew Curtis Wright Electrical Engineering Wilsall, Montana Palo Alto Theta Chi; American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Mechani- cal Engineering Society; Swimming Numerals, Circle S Swim- ming (2), Circle S Water Polo (2); Androcles and the Lion Robert Edward Wright Manila, Philippine Islands History Encina Club William E. Wright Stockton Lazv Theta Chi; Varsity Track (3, 4); Senior Control Committee .Si:izi Ya. l saki Economics Japanese Club Kagoshima, Japan Anhwei, China KoCiiLiEN Yang Mathematics Chinese Club; Transferred from Peking Teachers ' College, 1923 Russell T. Yost Economics El Toro, Encina Club Madeline V. Ziller Ilistorv Roble Club Stockton Cloverdale m 1 Back row : Matson, Davis, Wilkie, Kyle, Hamlin, Landis, Cannon, Hitzfeldt, De Blaquiere Second row: Morgan, Lorenz, Hultberg, Cuneo, Weferling. Elphick, G. Smith, Van Dreuten, Colman, Borges, Avery Third row: Bolger. Shuffleton, Schillerstrom, Tavernetti Fourth row: Cuthbert, M. Smith, Lane, Foster, Perry First row: Long, H. Smith, Bennett, Harkin, Saver GRADUATING CLASS OF STANFORD SCHOOL OF NURSING OFFICERS Louise Amidon Cannon President Grace Elizabeth S: mith Vice-President Hazel Marguerite Cuthbert Secretary E. Margaret Avery GRADUATES Treasurer E. Margaret Avery Mildred Elizabeth Foster Emmalyn Abbie Morgan Antoinette Bennett ALaude Green Nelly Rosalind Perry AiLEEN DE Blaquiere Helen Hamlin Anna Elizabeth Sayer Esse C. Bolger Katherine Rebecca Harkin Mrs. Inez H. Schillerstrom Mary Julia Borges Isolde Hitzfeldt Mrs. Edith B. Shuffleton Louise Amidon Cannon Hazel O. Hultberg Grace Elizabeth Smith Constance Elise Clkakv Martha James Helen Alice Smith Kathleen Colman Janet Kyle Mary Smith Mrs. Estelle Davies Cuneo IClizabeth Adelle Lane Lena Elvira Tavernetti Hazel ALarguerite Ci ihhert Janice Ilene Long Norma T. J. Van Dreuten Hazel Davis INFarjokie Mae Lorenz Louise Weferling Elkie E. Delbon Philomene Marshall Ruth Avery Westcott Esther B. Elphick Emily C. Matson Margaret Hope McClanahan Georgette Marie Wilkie (iraduates from the Conibiiied Cour.se, with the Degree of . .B. Louise Amido.n Cannon Lena El ir. Tavernetti Norma T. J. ' an Dreuten From the College of the Pacific 217 [OR CLASS ating June, 1925 FIRST TERAl Thomas J. Grace President Dorothy I. Dahi.er Vice-President James C. Muir Secretary J. Robert White, III Treasurer Hugo G. Hornlein Athletic Manager Thomas J. Grace President First Term II SECOND TERM Charles H. McCallister Dorothy I. Dahi,er I.ESi.H . H. Peter. Jr. I loRACE I . Allison Hugo G. Hornlein President I ' ice-President Secretary Treasurer Athletic Manager Charles H. McCallister President Second Term 218 Back row: MuiR, Davies. Beardsley, Driscoll, Peter Second row: Bovnton, Broughall, Hornlein, Dahler, Ham mono First row; Parks, Simmons, McCallister, McLeod, Allison Junior Prom Committee J. Robert White, III Robert D. Boynton Ellen Callander John M. Marble Horace B. Allison David A. Lamson Charles E. Beardsley Refreshments Programs Decorations Decorations Music Publicity Chairman Vll Junior Week Committee Mary Baker Helen K. Broughall John A. Driscoll Robert J. Triest William L. Wright Thomas J. Grace, Chairman Junior Opera Committee D. Lloyd Davies Gertrude E. McLeod Wilbert J. Hammond Elisabeth C. Simmons Charles H. Parks, Chairman 219 MORE CLASS ating June, 1926 ' : ' , i y.. FIRST TERM Louis A. R. Caspar President Donald J. Kropp Vice-President Ruth Snedden Secretary James B. Mannon Treasurer Frederic N. Tyroler Athletic Manager I ' - Louis A. R. Caspar President First Term SECOND TERM Frederick D. Thomson Audrey M. Traugii (Gladys M. McLeod I ' niEip T. Meyers I ' uiL W. Shumaker President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Athletic Manager Frederick D. Thomson President Second Term 220 R ' ' ' 1 ■■K ' l K ' F K V ' 4 M ' ' 1 B ' I H ' ■- J B H ' PKiH., B | H !h PJLw Ki W li K I -r ' I H r ' 1 V 1 Kj M ♦ • B k:. f 1 H ' rll ¥M 4 ' ! ' |9 IJ Hf-v liivn iilk ' ■ynj H V ci ft - H V B H B i H m 1 jl H 1 ■ k I B ' 1 lP B : j|fl w t t F A L 9: H I T Mp ' i fl m rj J U Hl ■k Sfi IBI fll LVv ifll HH fHr r 1 T H Back row: Dave?. Mannon, Lloyd, Hardy, Shumaker, Deffeeach, Morri; Second row: Meyers, Widaman, Traugh, Tyroler, Poco, Gollwater First row: Carlsmith, Hyland, McLeod, Kropp, Sxedden, Quinn, Kay Marjorte S. Allen, IVomeit ' s Tryotits John Deffebach, Jr., Men ' s Costumes Esther F. Greenacre Kenneth W. Hess Sophomore Play Committee Aileen L. Hicks, Publicity Fred Kunzel Helen M. Lewis Gardner P. Lippincott Dei.mer L. Daves, Chairman Lloyd B. Nolan, Men ' s Tryouts Alfrida F. Poco. IVoincn ' s Costumes Audrey M. Traugh Frederic N. Tyroler, Music Richard M. Goldwater Decorations Marion F. Cross Richard T. Harville J. William Kerr Joseph B. Mahoney Marcia E. Morton Horace E. Pastorius Aileen ' . Tognazzini Jean Ward, Sub-Chairman Walter M. Campbell, Chairman Music Harry T. Coffin Gladys M. McLeod Frank W. Hyland, Jr., Chairman Publicity E. Lucille Alison Eddie Frank David L. King David C. Meiklejohn Evert H. Young Jack W. Hardy, Chairman Poster Committee Erwin G. Morrison Sophomore Cotillion Committee Raymond M. Kay, Clwirman Chapcrones George C. Baker Leo.n B. Brown Miriam Ebright Jule X ' anVleck Carl W. Carlsmith. Cliairman Refreshments Marion D. Bolman Charles R. Clifford Edward W. Lloyd Harriet E. Oliver Philip T. Meyers, Chairman Programs Katherine F. Capell Leonard G. Dobson Cecile M. Feusier Erwin G. Morrison John Quinn, Chairman Tickets Helen M. Erskine Elizabeth F. McCall Chester E. Ross Stanley A. Weicel Wendell O. Widaman, Chairman Edward W. Lloyd, Chairman i; Ml ;i:j! i .-. . ' ij ■; l: FRESHMAN CLASS Graduating June, 1927 FIRST TERM Arthur C. Stewart Eugene K. Walker Ethel M. Haydock Howard Anawalt President Vice-President Secretary Athletic Manager Arthur C. Stewart President First Term m U SECOND TERM James A. Stewart Caroline Moore Louis B. Lundborg Howard Anawalt President Vice-President Secretary Athletic Manager James A. Stewart President Second Term 222 SENIOR SPONSORS Back row: Barby. Leiser, Loomis, Liebendorklr. llECKExricRF Second row: Irwin, Baker, Tucker, Hoover First row: DeGroot, McHo;e, Smith, Ci-eavei.and, Masters Beverly Bailard George H. Baker Otto C. Barby Arthur D. Bragg Brighton C. Cain Joseph E. Clark XORMAN ClEAVELAND Dudley S. DeGroot Percy C. Heckendorf Jacob C. Irwin Thomas G. Irwin William F. Leiser Donald E. Liebendorfer Frederick C. Loomis John C. McHose AlkrkdR. Masters Roland B. Mulchav DeWitt C. Rowland James L. Shelly J. Howell Smith Henry F . Sproull Roland E. Tognazzini Orville H. Tucker, Jr. Herbert HooN ' ER. ]r.. Chairman Back row: Dekker, Jayred, Graham. Osthaus, Brooks Front row: Habegger, Moore, Herrington, Wood, Lundborg FRESHMAN COMMITTEES Bonfire Committee William X. Dekker Stanlus Z. Natcher Kenneth C. Graham Charles C. Scott Wallace B. Jayred Franz Osthaus, Chairman Dance Committee James A. Habegger J. Shirley Wood Lovic P. Herrington, Chairman H 223 Stanford University stands today as the realization of the vision of a master builder. It typifies, too, a contemporary stage in a story whose opening page revealed Cali- fornia ' s golden strand to Cabrillo. In slow succession conqueror and settler came to the ■far-western country and to that very tranquil, sloping plain which lies between the foothills and the bay; in turn its grassy lanes were trod by the iron-shod heel of the Conquista- dore, the buckskin sandal of the friar, the leathern boot of the American frontiersman. Then came Leland Stanford, empire builder. With the death of his only son, the father ' s dominant energies were turned to the found- ing of a memorial. The result was Stan- ford University, founded November 11, 1885. In 1891 the modest buildings of a single quadrangle were completed, and from every quarter of the globe students sought admission. Thirty-three years have passed. The infant university has survived the strug- gles which followed long after its inception. Today the first double quadrangle stands completed ; a second is projected to the west ; the cornerstone of a third is laid in the art museum ; and farther to the east the towers of Toyon rise — the first of a great series of dormitories. And these are but the outward manifestations of the upward striving spirit of a Stanford which is rendering signal service to a California with whose history its name is so significantly connected. I Back row: Gbondona, Chaffee, Wilson, Xoble, Draper, Burks, Bollinger, Harger, Erickson Second row: Ritchie, Lang, Coulthurst, Anderson, Clark, Harker, Timpany, Wright, Wilbur First row: Cornell, Lowry, McIntyre, Genereaux, Mitchell, Swayne, Kelley ALPHA CHI SIGMA Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1902 Alpha Alpha Chapter Established May 5, 1916 Edward Curtis Franklin, Ph.D. Albert F. O. Germann, Sc.D. faculty members Charles Doak Lowry, A.M. John Pearce Mitchell, Ph.D. Georc;e Sutton Parks, Ph.D. Robert Eckles Swain, Ph.D. Stewart Woodford Young, B.S. MEMBERS Niiiclccii Hundred and Txvcnty-Onc Kenneth S. Ritchie Alan C. Richardson Xinctccii Hundred and ' l vcnty-Tivo Willard E. Sullivan Gerard Wilson FREDERici T,. .Anderson Kenneth W. Brown Ei.To.N I ' . Cornell Laurence J. Coulthurst Ninclccn Hundred and Twcniy-Thrcc Charles A. Gkondona Kenneth K. Kelley ( )tto W. Lang I ' RKDERicK C. Loom IS THEom)RE M. Matson Henry !■. Sproui.l F ' rancis S. Stewart Charles R. Timpany Iu.DREI) I ' . lioLI.INGEK Dana Burks, Jr. Clare .S. Chaffee .Winrlccn Hundred and Twcniy-Vour ' aNCE B. F RK ' KSON Raymond P. Generkau.x Ja.mes 1). Marker Glenn H. McIntyre Milton H. Saier WrLLiAM W. Swayne Paul C. Wilbur (;. Howard Wilson Donald V.. Clark I ' . Douglas Draper Xinrli ' cn Hundred and Ii ' cniy-Vivc Do.NAi.i! K. Harger Burton .- . Noble Ia. ies C. Wru;ht Professional Chemistry I ' rciteniity 230 Back row: Liebendorfer, Hardy, Knox, Adams, Meservey Fourth row: Urql ' Hart, Wright, Meiklejohn, Charles. Steei-E, Shoip, Spangler Third row: Ely. Lamson, Xewill, Marble, Edwards, Riter, James, Bissell Second row: Greenacre, IIicks, Capell, Judd, Cameron, Flesiier, Nelson, Broughall, Thorpe First row: Duncan, Miller, Keesling Stanford Chapter of AMERICAN JOURNALISTS ' ASSOCIATION Founded at Stanford University, 1920 FACULTY MEMBERS BuFORD Otis Brown, B.J. Everett Wallace Smith, A.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tz ' enty-Three Andrew R. I ' .done MaurineG. Voerce Howard S. Bissell Marjosie Cohen Mildred D. D. nnen ' baum Robert H. Edwards, Jr. Xorthcutt Ely Xineleen Hundred and Ticenty-F our William R. Gage Norris E. James DoN. LD E. Liebendorfer K. Eloise Mt Cleave Henry C. Mack Barbara Miller Philip Newill John D. Richer R. Bradley Riter Carl S. Shoup Archie T. Steele M. RV Baker Helen K. Broughall Meribeth E. Cameron Mary C. Chaney Allan E. Charles Xineleen Hundred and Tzi ' e)ily-Fi-,( Mary ' ' . Dungan Beatrice E. Flesher Miriam Hilton Grace JuDD Wana M. Keesling David . . La.mson John M. Marble James C. Muir Raymond L. Spanglkr William L.Wright Donald G. .-Xdams Marjorie S. .4llen Katherine F. Capei.i. Esther P. Greenacre Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v Jack W. Hardy Kenneth W. Hess AiLEEN L. Hicks Wallace W. Knox David C. Meiklejohn Douglas W. Meskrvey Helen E. Nelson Ali.ene W. Thorpe Ross A. Urquiiakt Professional Jounialislic Society 231 Rack row: Weidmann, Hesselmeyer, Greene, Crawford, Koch, Price, Wilson, Wright, X ' insonhaler. Duncan Third row: Booth, Cook, Walker, Cooper, Dickenson, Hecker, Pearce, Lissman, Stray, I ' irown .SecotKlrow: Thalheimer, Benson, English, Peterson, IJumbaugh, Imokawa, Coyle, Carroll, Long First row: Morgan, Kindy, IIenhne, Ryan, Clark Stanford University Branch AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS Founded in New York City, 1884 Stanford University Branch Established Decenilicr 1,5, 1907 FACULTY MEMBERS James Cameron Clark, E.E. Henry Harrison Heni.ine, B.S. Ward P.. Kinuy, B.E.F. Theodore Hardino Morgan, A. JosKFH S. Carroll Leland H. P)Rown Harold L. IUlmfsaugii Oaniel K. Coyle Pierre DkUoeck Harry A. Greene Io}iN K. Imokawa Arthl ' R W. 1!k( kek l-toBisoN E. Booth Lloyd E. Cooper C. Glenn Crawford Harris Joseimi Ryan, M.E. MEMBERS Xiiielrrii Hundred and liiglitccn Nineteen Hundred und Nineteen Chester A. Wuxox Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tzvo W. P)RYAN Duncan Ihl R. Harcourt Nineteen Hundred and ' rwenly-Tliree DonaldW. p. Larnach Thomas !• . Peterson Ivan M. Rkiieker Lemuel C. Smith, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and ' I ' centy-l- ' our Charles W. Du kenson Harlow D. English Dick P. ' ullerton, Jr. Clarence T, Hesselmeyer L ' lrich S. Thalheimer Harold S, Spaulding Gerard Wilson Hakvev C. Stoddard George R. Stray George R. insonhai.kr Theodore S. Walker George (). Koch Elix)n a. Long (JEoRiiE C. Pearce J. Pressly Price William J. Putcamp .Andrew C. Wright Nineteeti Hundred and ' I ' u ' enly-I ' i: e Ce( II. K. IIe.nson RoHERT C. Cook I ' KKii F. Crkver MaRI EL . . LlSSMAX Milton L. Wikhmann Honorary linii ' inecrin; Society 232 I Hack row: Palmer, Williams, Ingram, Kimball, Chapman, McKinney, Anderson, Loder, A. White, Tucker Second row: Swabey, Sayles, Morrison, Mcnson, H, White, Professor Fish, Rawhauser, Smith, Clark, Summers, Crist Front row: Millerd, McKee, Silitch, Waterman, Professor Marx, Nelson, Professor Wing, Professor Reynolds, Miller, Tarleton, Chedister Stanford University Student Chapter of the AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS Founded in New York City, 1852 Stanford Student Chapter Established, 1920 FACULTY MEMBERS John Charles Lounsbury Fish, C.E.Charles David Marx, LL.D. Leander Miller Hoskins, C.E. Russell G. Hackett Eugene W. Silitch L. Harold Anderson . llen G. Benson Robert N. Burnett Charles Moser, C.E. Leo.n Benedict Reynolds, A.B. MEMBERS Xiiiftccii Hundred and Seventeen William C. Brown Xineteen Hundred and Twenty Xineteen Hundred and Tifenty-Two Hugh L. P. Stewart Xineteen Hundred and Tn-enty-Thrcc Earl Charles Thomas, A.B. Charles Benjamin Wing, C.E. L.AWRENCE E. Millerd George W. Wiles Everett L. Clark James Kazan Edward S. Loder Chester B. P.almer Donald McKee Eugene E. Miller El.mer J. Xelson Iohn G. Rawhauser Carroll L. Blacker John D. Campbell Irving E. Chapman Arthur W. Chedister Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Stanley Kimball Ralph D. Smith John W. McKinney David S. Su.mmers Spencer M. Munson, Jr. Clarence S. Swabey Charles M. Savles Colby D. Tarleton Orville H. Tucker, Jr. Joseph C. Waterman Marion L. Crist Theodore R. Haseltine Xineteen Hundred and Tzi ' cnty-fivc I ' REii R. Ingram Deming W. Morrison Allen C. White Harold L. White Harry A. Willia.ms Honorary Engineering Society 233 Back row: Harcoukt. Postlewaite, Dwight, Campbell, Fullerton, Cleaveland, Patton, Long, Cooper, Schmieder, Robison, Wright, Franklin, Pyzel, Hugo, Coyle, C. Smith, Wight Second row: Booth, Duryee, Merrill, Buckwalter, Sidway, Baptie, Scofield, Sproull, Thompson, Hays, Matson, Ashley, Stoddard, L, Smith, Mors, X ' aughan, Dows First row: Green, Eckart, Marx, Bumbaugh, Durand, Cross, Stebbins, Cutter Stanford Student Branch AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Founded in New York City, 1880 Stanford Student Branch Established, 1908 FACULTY MEMBERS Charles Norman Cross, M.E. William Frederick Durand, Ph.D. Boynton Morris Green, M.E. Lawrence Edminster Cutter, A.B. William Rankine Eckart, M.E. Everett Parker Lesley, M.M.E. GuiDO Hugo Marx, M.E. Horatio Ward Stebbins, B.S. MEMBERS Xiiicfi ' oi Uiiiidrrd and Nineteen 1 ' aul Hehbekt D.wis Chester Arthur Wilcox Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-One Philip Corriston Clark Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tzvo George Stuart Clark Samuel R. Dows Lloyd J. Franklin Irl Roy Harcourt Frank Bellchambers Hays Walter S. . lexani)Kr Paul J. Bramkamp Harold L. Bumbaugh Norman Cleaveland Frederick A. Covey Daniel K. Coyle Lawrence M. Durvek Hammond .X sulky Charles C. Baptie Robison E. Booth John C. Buckwalter Edward W. Butler Edward S. Campbell Lloyd E. Cooper Nineteen Hundred and Tu enty-T hrec Thomas H. Ec.gleston Richard W. ■' aville James L. Hawlev Merrill S. Hugo Tiieoikire M. Matson George L. Mors Alexis E. Post Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-four Herbert M. DwuiHT Raymond O. Flood Dick P. Fullerton, Jr. Eldon a. Long Ernest N. Merrill Alfred T. Patton William R. 1 ' ostlkwaitk Charles H. Smith Lemuel C. Smith, Jr. Hknrv I . Sproull Samuel E. Vaughan Robert D. ial George H. Walker Joseph E. Wight Fwald Pyzel Ri:ssELL K. Robison Fremont R. Sch.mieder Philip F. Scofield Charles L. Sidway Harvey C. Stoddard Harlan S. Thompson . i.HKRT C. White .Andrew C. Wright Honorary Eii inccrmi;, Society 234 Back row: Whitney, Biddle, Brenholts, Roth, Mrs. Ferris Second row: Strobel, Bcrks, Greene, Baylis, Schardin First row: Mrs. Jordan, Mrs. Branner, Mrs. Gardner, Miss Lothrop CAP AND GOWN I ' ouiidcd at Stanford University, 1906 HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. Edwin Angell Cottrell Mrs. Herbert Clark Hoover ' t«: Mrs Efhrai.m Douglass .Auams Mrs. John Casper Braxner Elisabeth Lee Buckingham Mrs. Ell wood Patterson Cubberley Mrs. George Bliss Culver LisETTE Emery Fast Mrs. Roxana Stinchfield Ferris Mrs. Fred Fowler FACULTY MEMBERS Mrs. David Charles Gardner Mrs. David Starr Jordan Alice Kimball Margaret Lothrop Mary Isabel McCracken Edith R. Mirrielees Mrs. . lmon Edward Roth Mrs. Frances Theresa Russell Mrs. Harris Joseph Ryan Jessie Smith Mrs. John Ma.xson Stillman Clara S. Stoltenberg Mrs. Payson Jackson Treat Mrs. Ray Lyman Wilbur Mrs. Bailey Willis Mary Yost Katherine Beswick MEMBERS Xiiiflccn Hundred and Tivcnty-Thrcc iKGiNiA Burks Helen H. Greene Margaret E. White EdytheG. Bavlis Eunice K. Biddle Xiiictcot Hundred and Tuvniy-Four Dorothy Brenholts Lillian Cottrell . LUE C Roth Helen Schardin Grace M. Strobel Helen M. Whitney ;!Vj!) Senior Woincit ' s Honorary Society 235 .ti . Back row: Maloney, Brandsten, Deffebach, I- ' letcher, McCallister, Swayne, Davis Front row: Meyer, Irwin, Dwight, Masters, Myers, Collett CIRCLE S SOCIETY Founded at Stanford University, 1913 HONORARY MEMBERS EkNST M. IiKANDSTEN ' HeNKY WlLKKED MaLONEY MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Paul Davis ' ! ' ..,; ?-:; ! Nineteen Hundred and ' I ' -wenty-One Heaton Luse Wrenn Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-T ' wo Ford Mari.ow Tussing Nineteen Unudred and Twenty-Tlirec F ' kederkk L. Andkkson Dudlkv S. DeGkoot Albert E. F ' orster WlLLL M G. BuKKHARI) LiNN M. I ' ARISH Al(iHN M. HoSEIMAN Harold I ' . Lynn Altreii R. Masters Nineteen Hundred and T:centy-Four John 1). Cami-hell Charles A. Dekkebacii ' Charles G. Fletcher Charles E. Collett Herhert M. I)wi(;ht Jaioii C. Irwin Wh.ll m W. Swayne Alhert C. White Nineteen Hundred and Twenly-I ' ire Ralimi I). Howe W. Ari hie Lo(;an Philip N. Meyer Charles H. Mi Callister Robert P. Mvkrs Honorary Minor Sports Society 23r, Back row: Minard. Littler, Levit, Hall Front row: Warner, Button, Emerson, Lewis DELTA SIGMA RHO Founded at Chicago, 1906 Stanford Chapter Established December 4, 1911 mi Arthir Martin Cathcart, A.B. FACULTY MEMBERS James Gordon Emerson. J.D. Edgar Euhene Robinson, A.M. William Brownlee Owens, LL.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One William F. Leiser James H. Anclim Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Robert E. Lewis Claude R. Minard James P. Warner Thomas A. Bailey Robert M. C. Littler Kineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Tour A. Ronald Button Bertram W. Levit Mathew O. Tobriner Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five John Hall I ' 4 !!i-ii National Honorary Forensic fraternity 237 ' ■:i (■■■N t; I! :P IP iaii Rack row: Cromwell, Bucklin, Badham. Reavis, Lapp Second row: Peterson, Rusk, Sievers, Gomes, Minard First row: IIasselbalch, Collins, Lewis, Warner, Halverson, Beeman DELTA THETA PHI Founded Cleveland Law School, 1900 Root Senate Chapter Established October 13, 1922 MEMBERS Niiu-tcni Hundred and Twenty-One Amf.glio ANnREuccKTTi Thomas E. McDonald I- - ' I J. HoRTON Beeman George W. Burch, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tivo Joseph V. Gomes John P. King Harry E. Lindersmith Milton E.Wright Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Threc Earl L. Hasselbalch Arthur W. Loder Claude R. Minard Robert E. Lewis H. Sloane Millspaugh Ai.got J. Peterson J. Ogden Reavis J. Prentice Warner Nineteen Hundred and Ttcenty-Four Byron J. Badham Junior J. Collins John L. Hofflund Louis L. Bucklin Lewis H. Cromwell Burton L. Lapp Tames H. Rusk J. Hall Snell Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Cutler W. Halverson J. Paul Sievers Honorary Laze Fraternity 238 9996 ' M RCeERT BINKLEV MERISCTH CAMEOON OtITMAIME COLLtnt l-0 t COX OACMEL DuNLOO SCDOE ED=MifeVSKY FPA K vtNTON ELCANOW OU DDCN MIPlAM WILTON 99999 aaVlD LAMSON EDWARD LANOCLS SCMLCL LEW QUTWMtReiDC WfcN. ' i ' y MACK DOf.;AL0VS «:ay CUASLiS MtMtOOLS PWtUP NCWiLt CRCDCRICK POND gvCON QClNtMOI4D KCNNCTM ROBtRTSON MILTON OCiSENHtlD COWAOD STRONG MATHtW TDBDiNCR UNChA VAN NOPDCN MAJ3GAPET WAKE MAOV WILDMAN CABL W1LHELM90N ENGLISH CLUB Founded at Stanford University, February 14, 1901 HONORARY MEMBERS Charles K. Field David Charles Gardner Will H. Irwin FACULTY MEMBERS Raymond MacDonald Alden, Ph.D. Harold Chapman Brown, Ph.D. John Breck George Bliss Culver Mrs. Orrin L. Elliott David Starr Jordan ' Mrs. David Starr Jordan John Ezra McDowell Melville Best Anderson, LL.D. Margery Bailey, A.M. Lee Emerson Bassett, A.B. Richard C. Bentinck William Dinsmore Briggs, Ph.D. Germaine H. Collette Serge A. Eremievsky Edward D. Landels Elisabeth Lee Buckingham. A.M. William Herbert Carruth, Ph.D. Gordon A. Davis, A.B. Henry Rushton [ ' aircloiu-.h, Ph.D. Henry David Gray, Ph.D. Howard JuDso.N Hall, A.M. MEMBERS Xiiu ' trcii Hundred and Twenty Robert C. Binkley Nineteen Hundred and Ttvcnty-Two Robin Lampson Charles L. McNichols I ' RANCEs I. Price Alice R. Hand Arthur Garfield Kennedy, Ph.D. Edith Ronald Mirrielees, A.B. Frances Theresa Russell, Ph.B. Samuel Swayze Seward, Jr., A.M. John S. P. Tati.ock, Ph.I . Milton S. Rosenfield Eliz. beth B. Spilman MaRY F. WlLDMAN Nineteen Hundred and T ' iCenty-Tliree K.vtherine Beswick Frank L. F ' enton Mabel F. Ferry Eleanor D. Glidden Archibald A. Hill Scherl M. Levy Kenneth G. Robertson Howard Pease Doyle S. Peckham Frederick R. Pond Carl Wilhelmson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Hope Cox Ruth A. McBride Henry C. Mack Philip Newill Byron R. Reinemund Edward W. Strong Mathew O. Tobriner Linda Van Norden Margaret Ware Helen M. Whitney Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Fize Meribeth E. Cameron Sidney W. Hawkins David A. Lam son Miriam Hilton Donald C. McKay Nineteen Hundred and Ticenty-Six Rachel T. Dunlop Webster F. Street Honorary Lit, 239 Hack row: J!Ai nr.Kv. T.ynn. Ktrk, T.ktt. Corkei.t.. TTan ' sox, TIkrti.kin. P(iwkrs, Moretti, Tamplix, TToots, Baii.ard, Drysdale. l- ' ruiit luw; KukiiukN, Mtlr an. Pkoekssor Smith, I ' hoekssor llvin:, I- ' orstkr, Masters, I roekssdr ' J ' oi.man, Professor Crook, Maillot, Kirbv GEOLOGICAL AND MINING SOCIETY OF AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES Founded at Stanford University, 1892 HONORARY MEMBER Bailey Willis, Ph.D. Eliot Blackweldkr, Ph.D. Welton Joseph Crook, A.B. Waldemar Fenn Dietrich, A.B. Theodore Jesse Hoover, A.B. George L. Green Elmer R. Baddlev Chester A. Baird FACULTY MEMBERS James MacDonald Hyde, A.B. Paul F. Kerr, B.S. Roy Parmelee McLaughlin, A.B. Louis David Mills, A.B. Harry Wheeler Morse, Ph.D. members Nineteen Hundred and Nine Stanley C. Herold Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen Dale D. Sparks Nineteen Hundred and Txventy Benjamin F. Hake Donald R. Knowlton Nineteen Hundred and Tivcnty-One WiLLARD J. Classen Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two LoRAN A. Creglow Harold W. Hoots Leo G. Hertlein F ' lmer E. Maillot Austin Flint Rogers, Ph.D. James Perrin Smith. LL.D. Frederick George Tickell, B.S. Cyrus Fisher Tolman. B.S. John B. Newsom William W. Tamplin Charles W. Merrill William Olmsted Earlr . V. Thomas ._ I James M. Bl ' gbee James W. Byrkit, Jr. Chester Cassel Lillian M. Dobbel George S. Drysdale Beverly Baii.ard Leslie M. Clark Jack M. Eiirhorx Nineteen Hundre Linn M. Farish Albert E. Forster C. Dickenson Gifford Leslie E. Gorrell Frederic D. Hanson James A. Nineteen Hundrt W. Elwood James F Ric K. Jordan James M. Kirby Henry I and TK ' enty-Three Harold F. Lynn F. Russell McIntosh Alfred R. Masters Louis R. Moretti Henry Mulryan Whittemore ed and Tiventy-Foitr Howard M. Kirk Marcus D. Leh Irwin W. Moody G. Svmonds Paul C. Murray Glenn E. Pollard DwiGHT C. Roberts Herbert R. Simons Murray A. Ward Ernest K. Parks DeWitt C. Rowland Albert W. Sands Honorary Engineering Society 240 Hack row; Newill, Clark. Mack, Ely, McIIose. ' a Deusen, Kenned Front row: Shoup, Ferguson, Bullock, Thompson ' , Bragg, Law i! i - ' -ji fl HAMMER AND COFFIN Founded at Stanford University, 1906 Chaparral Chapter Established April 17, 1906 HONORARY MEMBERS Elizabeth H. Roper Della L. Taylor FACULTY MEMBER Everett Wallace Smith, A.B. Ralph H. Cowing MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzi ' enty-Tzi ' o George W. Thompson Arthur I. Towxsend Howard M. Clark Nineteen Hundred and Tzi. enty-Thre Thomas G. Irwin Raymond F. Law Richard C. Smith Arthur D. Bragg Northcutt Ely- Harry F. Kennedy Nineteen fltmdred and ' lH ' cnty-four John C. McHose Henry C. Mack Philip Newill Harold B. Rorke W. Lee Sandberg Carl S. Shoup Theodore G. Van Deusen Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five James R. Bullock Kenneth L. Ferguson David A. Lamson JuiLLiARD McDonald William L. Wright Honorary Puhlishing Socictx 241 Back row: Duxker, Burks, Dodds, Nauman, Allen, Lewis Front row: Richardson, Whitney, Baylis, Hodgson, Dahler, Bailie MASQUERS Marcery Bailey. Ph.D. FACULTY MEMBERS Elisabeth Lee Buckingham, A.M. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-One Chrysella Dunker iS H Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three . UGUSTA Corey Mabel F. Ferry Margaret A. Bailie Edythe G. Baylis Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Alice Dodds Foresta Hodgson Margaret L. Richardson Helen M. Whitney Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five Dorothy L Dahler Evelyn A. Van Horn m B ' i Marjorie S. Allen Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six AiLEENE S. Burks Helen M. Lewis J. Patrice Nauman Honorary Women ' s Dramatic Society 242 Back row: Strcing, McKenney, Si ., Morris, O ' Hara, Hazeltine, Rogers Second row: Young, Dr. Swett. Maupin. Rathbone, McGuinness, Boyd, Mathewson, Darling First row: Brieson, Thygeson, Sutton, Chilcote, Armitstead, Grinstead NU SIGMA NU Founded at University of Michigan, March 2, 1882 Upsilon Chapter Established September 7, 1900 Harry Everett Alderson. M.D. Rea Ernest Ashley, M.D. Haxs Barkan, M.D. Walter Whitney Boardman. M.D. Sterling Bunnell, M.D. William Redwood Price Clark. M.D. Harry Carson Coe, M.D. John Francis Cowan, M.D. Harold Kxiest Faber, M.D. Chester HowarB Woolsey, M LoREx R. Ch. xdler. M.D. Everett Carlson Reo B. Armitstead Russell C. Chilcote Herbert H. Darling Marion O. Grinstead J.ACK R. Jimerson Hans ' . Briesek John E. McGuinness FACULTY MEMBERS Henry Walter Gibbons, M.D. Morton Raymond Gibbons. M.D Frank Robert Girard, M.D. Harold Phillips Hill, M.D. Russell von Arsdale Lee, M.D. Albert Brown McKee, M.D. Arthur William Meyer. M.D. WiLLiA.M Ophuls, M.D. Albert Victor Pettit, M.D. .D. Henry Herbert MEMBERS Senior Internes DoHRMANN K. Pischel, M.D. Junior Internes Hans Hartman John K. Morris, Jr. Fourth-Year Medical Jay Marion Reed, M.D. Walter Frank Schaller. M.D. Karl Ludwig Schaupp, M.D. Edward Cecil Sew all, M.D. Dwight E. Shepardson. M.D. Alfred Baker Spalding, M.D. Stanley Stillman, M.D. Wilbur F. Swett, M.D. Sigurd VON Christierson, M.D. Yeringtox, M.D. Rolaxd p. Seitz. M.D. Roy ¥. Xelsox Walter H. Boyd Paul B. Kixxey Matthew E. Hazeltine Arthur C. McKexxey Third-Year Medical Eaton M. McKay James L. Maupin Benjamin H. Page Second-Year Medical Carleton Mathewson Edwin A. Patterson Thomas L. Sutton First- Year Medical Francis P. O ' Hara Robert H. Rathbone William L. Rogers Cletus S, Sullivan- Richard T. Taylor Dwight D. Young Artemas J. Strong Phillips Thygeson Professional Medical Fraternity 243 liack vow: Fritschen, Fuendeling, Robert: on, Harris, Hughes, Mason, (iAspAR Second row: Rixford, Chorbajian, French, Dietrich, Jones, Burnett, Northway, Empey First row: Stockton, Read, Lawson, Hall, Kruegeb, Gardner, Hoffmann, Burkhard OMEGA UPSILON PHI Founded at University of Buffalo, Novemlier 15, 1894 Iota Chapter Established Septenilier 3, 1901 Thomas Addis, M.D. Martin J. Benzin(;er. M.D. Fraam Ellsworth Blaisdell, M.D. Charles Haskell Danforth, Ph.D. James Root Dillon, M.D. Ehler H. Eiskamp, M.D. FACULTY MEMBERS Hans von Geldern, M.D. Philip Kingsnorth Oilman, M.D. Norbert J. Gottbrath, M.D. Gordon Friedrich Helsey, M.D. Thom, s George In man, M.D. Josiah Herman Kirk, M.D. Frederick Walter Kroll, M.D. Wilfred Hamilton Manwaring, M.D. Philip Hale Pierson, AI.D. Emmet Rixford, M.D. RuFUs Lee Rigdon, M.D. George Burbank Somers, M.D. Harry Alphonso Wyckoff, M.D. Julian Mast Wolfsohn, M.D. Harry B. Baker Harold J. Beaver Internes John J. Doyle Paul W. Frame William H. Murphy Percy B. Gallegos Homer E. Marstox Granville N. Wood Fourth-Year Medical •Albert K. Chorbajiax H. William Fritschen Ernest M. Hall Robert E. Hughes Harry A. Somerfield William O. 1 ' kench, ]r. William G. Burkhard Clarence T. Burnett Third-Year Medical Vernon F. Kennedy Second-Year M edical James R. Enright Kenneth D. Gardner Emmet H Sappington Rexford W. McBride Andrew B. Stockton Lawrence V.. Dietrich Lucas W. Empky First- Year Medical Mervyn J. Fuendeling Louis E. Jones Donald L. Robertson Dudley P. Sanford Slij Louis A. R. Caspar David W. C. Harris Paul E. Hoffmann Prc-M edical .Albert P. Krueger Oliver L. Lawson Marshall I. Mason- William H. Northway ' , Jr. Jesse W. Read Henry C. Rixford Professional Medical Fraternity 244 Back row: Willis, Gektmeman, Loveless, May, Texnant Second row: North way, Rinn, Tyroler, Swartz, Harding First row: Eckhoff, Merritt, Strong, Hoover, Burkhard, Walter OVAL CLUB Founded at Stanford University, 1921 Robert C. Binkley Abraham H. Brazil honorary members William G. Burkhard Edward T. Parish Edward D. La n dels Joseph C. Prior Junior J. Collins Lloyd E. Cooper Francis M. Kauffman members Xinctcen Hundred and Twenty-Four H. Sidney Laughlix Joseph E. Loveless J. Earle May Edward W. Strong Jacob P. Swartz Robert J. Tex x ant Russell L. Walter Leonard R. Avilla D. Lloyd Davies Harold A. Gertmenian Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Fke Robert Z. Hawkins Herbert Hoover, Jr. Russell S. Merritt Hugh L. Whisler Robert H. Rixn Gurdox D. Steele Robert I. Triest H.Paul Willis Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Thaddeus C. Binkley Robert H. Eckhoff Frederic W. Harding William H. Northway, Jr. Frederic N. Tyroler Freshman Honor Society 245 m Back row: liARBV, Wilson, Rowell, Ludeke. Mh.lerd. Patton Second row: I)a id, Wright, Rinn, Angi.im, Smith, Senior, Hob. on Front row : Mosher, Mathews, Professor Kirkwood, Prior, Hall, IIarrell PHI ALPHA DELTA Founded at University of Chicago, 1902 Holmes Chapter Established May 13, 1911 FACULTY MEMBERS Joseph Walter P)1xgham, J.D. Arthur Martin Cathcart, A.B, Marion Rkk Kirkwood, J.D. William I ' rowni.ee Owens, L.L.B. Harold Shepherd, J.D. MEMBERS Xinctccn Hundred and Xiuctecn Homer H. Mathews John L. Rush Xinctccn Hundred and Twcniy-Onc Edward I). I,axdels Wesley .A. Seaman Thomas M. Donohoe Frederic A. Millerd Xinctccn Hundred and Ttventy-Two Albert Mosher Robert T. Patton Philip G. Smith Stanley A. Steindorf James H. .-Vngi.im Xincteen Hundred and Tzvenly-Three Otto C. Barby Phil I ' . Neer Joseph C. Prior Wilson Craven Leon T. 1)a id Xinctccn Hundred and Twenty-Pour Charles W. Hobson Frederic S. Ludeke MiLO E. Rowell Georce Howard Wilson William E. Wright John Hall Xinctccn Hundred and Tumty-Fizc LoRIMER B. HaRRELL Robert H. Rinn aymond T. Senior Hoiuirary Lcn ' Fraternity 246 PHI BETA KAPPA Founded at William and Mary College, 1776 California Beta Chapter Established November 1, 1904 Joseph C. Chamberlain Richard R. Craxdall Thomas A. Bailey Herbert G. Florcken Magnus I. Grecersen Marcaret H. Hood MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Frederic D. Hanson Frederick R. Pond Joseph C. Prior Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Four Carol E. Hyde James M. Kirby Scherl M. Levy Osgood S. Lovekin Ethel M. Shaull Morris P. Taylor Howard O. Welty Mathew O. Tobriner Linda Van Norden John O. Vaughn Paul C. Wilbur te ' n !i Honorary Scholarship Fraternity IOTA SIGMA PI HONORARY MEMBERS Alice R. Berger Mrs. John Pearce Mitchell MarikReimar Edna Boulware Elizabeth Perry Mrs. William Henry Sloan Mrs. John Maxson Stillman Mrs. Robert Eckles Swain MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Edith Hawley Evelyn M. . nderson Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enly-One Effie C. Ross Seldo.v Si ' o.nsi.ar Sophie de -Aberle Ruth ' . Fulton Ninetcen Hundred and Twenty-Three Mildred J. H. ll YoLANDE HoLDEREQUE Leona M. Mayer Ruth C. Mermod Dorothy J. St.arks Evelyn Howard Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Dorothy R. McKee Ruth . Newlin Ml RIKL StKWAKT Honorary Women ' s Chemistry Fraternity 247 Mack row: Moore. Thomson, Wimmer Second row; Vaugji n, Scott, Beattie, Cooi.ev, Brown First row: Gorham, Dozier, Dugax, Cooke PHI CHI Founded at Louisville, Kentucky, 1894 Sigma Upsilon Chapter Established October 12, 1911 Jamks Walter Jones, M.U. Arthur Lee Munger, M.D. FACULTY MEMBERS J. C. Neal, M.D. Jean Redman Oliver, M.D. Lloyd Robinson Reynolds, M.D. Henry Augustus Stephenson, M.D. Charles A. Love, Jr. Internes Robert B. McKenzie J. Paul Sweeney Lewis H. Sanborn Donald B. Tresidder George D. I ' jROWN -Bernard A. Cody Fourth-Year Medical Stanley Dugan William L. Garth Aubrey G. Rawlins I ' RAXK A. MacDoxald Reed M. Kesbit F. A. Wilson .Augustus C. Beattie William C. Cooke Third-Year Medical Donald A. Dallas Dave F. Dozier Raymond R. Scott Shirley D. Wimmer Donald E. King Second-Year Medical Oscar C. Railsback Wii.LLAM L. Thomson Chester L. Coolev First-Year Medical Curtis B. Gorham Jack B. Moore John O. V ' aughn Professional Mcdieal Fraternity 248 Back row: Jarvis, Gill, Kent, Licking, Cowing Second row: Tognazzini, Glenn, Brooks, Ely, Wheat. Oliva, Sampson First row: Deffebach, Coverley, Flanagan, Shoup, Edwards, Hitchcock PHI DELTA PHI Founded at University of Micliigan, 1869 Miller Chapter Established April 10, 1897 FACULTY MEMBERS George Bliss Culver. LL.B. George Edward Osborne, J.D. Almon Edvv ' ard Roth. J.D. Chester Garfield X ' erxier, J.D. Clarke Butler Whittier. LL.B. MEMBERS Xinctccn Hundred and I ' iftccn Harold C. Soper Xiiictcen Hundred and Seventeen Arthur H. Kent William E. Licking Xincteen Hundred and Twenty Rus.sELL B. Jarvis Warrkx D. Loose Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Arthur I. Towxsend F. Seymour Turner ■Karl Brooks Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tv. ' o Ralph H. Cowing Charles A. Deffebach Ja.mes A. Flanagan Xineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Three H. HoLLis Chalmers Roland J. Gill Percy C. Heckexdorf John D. Fredericks, Jr. P. Eugene Glenn Orlando H. Rhodes Richard H. Sampson Theoiwre K. Sterling Harvey M. Coverley Robert H. Edwards, Jr. Xorthcutt Ely ' Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Lewis G. Hitchcock Carl S. Shoup William R.James John C. McHose Xincteen Hundred and Twenty-Five David M. Oliva Roland E. Tognazzini Gilbert C. Wheat Honorary Latu Fratcrnily 249 I I «. lUi Back row: (Jriswold, Clark, Hopper, Cornell, Whitcomb, Kelley, O ' Xeill Front row: Hurks, Lowrv, Wilbur. Nelson, Mitchell, Douglass PHI LAMBDA UPSILON Founded at University of Illinois, 1899 Stanford Iota Chapter Established. 1913 FACULTY MEMBERS William Lerov Burdick. Ph.D. Lionel RemondLeno-x, Ph.B. George Sutton P. rks, Ph.D. Edward Curtis Franklin. Ph.D Charles Doak Lowry, Jr., A.M. William Henry Sloan, A.M. Albert F. O. Germann, Sc.D. John Pearce Mitchell, Ph.D. Robert Eckles Swain, Ph.D. Robert Nicolas Wenzel. A.B. Stewart Woodford Young, B.S. MEMBERS Xiuctccn Hundred and Eighteen Dana Burks, Jr. A ' ineteen Hundred and Tzvenly Oliver W. Johnson Xinefeen Hundred and Tzventy-One HoMKR P. Struble ; r-ii I V - ' i i Deli. T. Lundquist Xinetcen Hundred and Twentx-Two Alan C. Rich. rdson Francis . . Smith Wii.lard E. Sullivan Ei.TCN F. Cornell Xinetcen Hundred and Twenty-Thn Kenneth K. Kelley Francis I. O ' Neill Wilson 1 . Douglass Xineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four William K. Nelson Thayer W. Whitcomb Paul C. Wilbur m Donald E. Clark Xineteen Hundred and Twcnty-Fii Gale C. Griswold Max I ' . Hopper Honorary Chemistry I ' ratcrnity 2.S(I iL MB ,p i 1 i f f fl . Jt i . w? « 1 JlTi I W ' _fl T ' ' ' H .V 3 Imu V ' V Vy Ur%- .™ V %jJUmm t til i.- w ' Back row: McHose, Cleaveland, Fletcher, D. Lawsox, Deffebacii Second row; Wheat. Dennis, Woodward. J, Lawsqn First row; Oviatt, Hinckley, Roberts, Mertz, McCallister Ephraim Douglass Adams PHI PHI HONORARY MEMBERS Thomas Tincey Craven Gregorv Charles David Marx MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-One Heaton L. Wrexx Xineteen Hundred and Tzi ' enty-Txi ' O Charles A. Deffebach Phil F. Neer Normax Cleaveland Robert I. Cravens Dudley S. DeGroot Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Tliree Linn M. Farish Frederick C. Loomis ' . Theodore Mertz PaulC. Murray Myron X. Reed Nelson Van Judah Roy F. Williamson m George H. Baker John D. Campbell Charles G. Fletcher Nineteen Hundred and Tii ' enty-Four Clifford L. Hey Richard H. Hinckley John C. McHose Arthur B. Thomas Gilbert C. Wheat Tyler F. Woodward m Guy H. Dennis Dick Lawson Nineteen Hundred and Tzirnty-Pii e James W. Lawson Charles H. McCallister William C. Neill, Ir. G. Todd Oviatt George D. Roberts Xational Senior Society 251 :P ' Back row: Hall, Beede, Huntington ' , Barley, Mercer, Marshall, Buttereield, O ' Neill Second row: Somers, Walker, Struble, Marsh, Lundquist, Miller, Niebergall, Gentry First row: Kramar, McCrea, Hunnicutt, Henderson, Ambler, DeEds PHI RHO SIGMA Founded at Northwestern University Medical School, 1891 Alpha Zeta Chapter Established June 1, 1923 William Hulbeht 1!akkow, M.D. Floyd DeEds, A.M. FACULTY MEMBERS Ernest Charles Dickson, M.D. Robert Steele Irvine, M.D. Robert Francis Kile, M.D. Edward Bancroft Towne, M.D. (P--, li 1 ames G. Henderson Akthir H. Beede Harold G. Gentry UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS IN MEDICINE Fourth-Year Medical Francis R. McCrea Maurice L, Tainter Third-Year Medical Victor E. Hall Leland G. Hunnicutt Oscar C. Marshall Herbert A. Huntington Chester Marsh Homer P. Struble ,,• ;i: Alfred C. Ambler Scoiid-Ycar Medical Albert E. Butterfield Herbert A. Niebergall Dell T. Lundquist :t r -- Charles W Barley Lowell G. Kramar First- Year Medical Andrew Mercer Philip J. Miller Francis I. O ' Neill Melvin R. Somers Samuel T. Walker Professional Medical Fraternity QUADRANGLE CLUB HONORARY MEMBERS George Bliss Culver, LL.B. John Thomas Nourse, A.B. FACULTY MEMBERS Frank Axgell, Ph.D. Almox Edward Roth, J.D. Pall Herbert Davis. E.E. Everett Wallace Smith, A.B. William Brovvnlee Owens, LL.B. Robert Lyman Templeton, A.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Phil F. Neer Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Three Dudley S. DeGroot Alfred R. Masters Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four John D. Campbell John C. McHose KoRMAN Cleaveland ' . Theodore Mertz Northcutt Ely Edwin A. Patterson Richard H. Hinckley Carl S. Shoup James W. Lawson Xelson Van Judah Donald E. Liebendorfer Tyler F. Woodward Men ' s Honor Society 253 s r Hack row: Alabaster, Trago, Taylor, Mertz, Mannoccir, Van Deusen, Lamson, Mendenhall Second row: Richer, Mack, Lytel, Sproull, Gillen, Ely, Bayley, Allison First row: MuiR, Lippincott, Anschutz, Cavanaugh, Hammond, Shoup, Nolan RAM ' S HEAD Honorary Drarriatic Society Fouiidecl at Stanford University, September 13, 1911 I 4 Charles K. Field HONORARY MEMBERS John E. Hewston Edward Bexjamin Krehbiel Gordon Arthur Davis, A.B. Arnold B. Bavley H. HoLLis Chalmers FACULTY MEMBERS Henry David Gray, Ph.D. PROFESSIONAL MEMBER Julian Eltinge MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three James S. Gillen 1. Richard Malaby Payson Jackson Treat, Ph.D. DwiGHT W. Taylor Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four V. Theodore Mertz Henry 1 . Sproull Eugene N. Trago Lewis P. Alabaster Robert D. Cavanaugh Northcutt Ely Harvey M. Lytel Henry C. Mack F. David Mannoccir H Samuel H. Mendenhall Philip Newill John D. Richer Carl S. Shoup Cuthbert J. Tibbe Theodore G. Van Deusen I I a ' hi M Horace B. Allison R. Irving Anschutz A ' ineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Clarence W. Carey David A. Lamson Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Si.r Gardner P. Lippincott Wilbert J. Hammond James C. Muir Lloyd B. Nolan Honorary Men ' s Dramatic Society 254 Rack row: Nel ' Man, Drysdale, Chamberlain, O. Barby, David, Boone, Cole Front row: Greene, Vaughan, Tremaine, Geary, Cooney, R, IJarby. Muir, Patterson SCABBARD AND BLADE Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1905 Company F, Fifth Regiment. Established December 24. 1923 HONORARY MEMBERS C. PTAix Ch. rles E. Boyle, U.S.A. Lieut. Harold A. Cooney, U.S.A. Major William D. Geary, U.S.A. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tivo Allen .A. Patterson Xiiietcen Hundred and Twenty-Three Andrew R. Boone Dudley S. DeGroot Thomas G. Greene, Jr. XoRMAN Cleaveland Richard W. Faville H. Raymond Tre.maine Samuel E. Vaughan Murray A. Ward Xineteeii Hundred and Txuenty-Foiir Otto C. Barby Ralph E. Cole Egbert W. Laub Ralph E. Barby George S. Drysdale . dolph Xeuman H. Steele Thompson Claude E. Wakefield Nineteen Hundred and Txvcnty-Five Robert S. Chamberlain Leon T. David i James C. Muir Honorary Military Fraternity 255 L; |i i ,r m liack row: Fairchild, Thomson, Morrison, Hunt, Kerr Second row: Armour. Hardy, Harville, Young, Chase, Richardson, Franklin, Cypher First row: Kirwan, McDermott Stratton, IJoi.es. O ' Connor, Briggs, Clifford, Edmondson, Lloyd SCALPERS Foimdod at Stanford University, January 5, 1921 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Walter B. I ' oster Neil P. Grant.er S. Glenx Hartranft RicHARn H. Hinckley Albert H. Huneke m . John D. Campbell Joseph E. Clark Harvey M. Coverley John E. Fishburn, Jr. Charles G. F ' letcher Carl S. Shoup Robert C. Titus Francis M. Kauffman Albert B, Loewenstein Frederic S. Ludeke John C. McHose F. David Mannoccir II Charles E. 1)Eardsley Robert D. Boynton Allan E. Charles Arthur B. Conover Guv H. Dennis Norma D. Dole John A. Driscoll A ' ineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Fivc Thomas J. Grace Lewis G. Hitchcock William L. Hobro James W. Lawson W. Archie Loc.an William W. McCa dless JuiLLiARD McDonald John M. Marble Joel D. Middleton Paul J. Murphy David M. Oliva Charles H. Parks George D. Roberts Harry H. Shipkey GuRDON D. Steele Milton M. Teague Merrill Armour Harold E. Boles Charles W. Briggs Edwin M. Chase Charles R. Clifford S. Clark Cypher Horace L. Edmondson Paul L. Fair( hild Sophomore Honor Socictv 236 Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v John C. Franklin Frank A, Frye, Jr. Jack W. Hardy Richard T. Harville Robert W. Hunt James W. Kerr Nicholas P. Kirwan Edward W. Lloyd Gilbert R. McDermont Erwin G. Morrison Ernest Nevers James W. O ' Connor William H. Richardson Charles C. Stratton I ' rederick D. Thomson Evert H. Young Back row: Landels, Leiser, Gage, Boone, Irwin, Charles Second row; Wilhelmson, Edwards, Lamson, Marble. Wright First row: Ely, Liebendorfer, James, Siioup, Mack, Riter SIGMA DELTA CHI Founded at DtPauw University, 1909 Stanford Chapter Established February, 1915 FACULTY MEMBERS Gordon Arthur Davis, A.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty Robert C. BiNKLEY • Paul H. Clyde Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One William F. Leiser Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Edward D. Landels Carl Wilhelmson Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Three Andrew R. Boone Chester N. Hess Thomas G. Irwin Glenn E. Pollard Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Robert H. Edwards NoRTHCUTT Ely William R. Gage NoRRis E. James Carl S. Shoup Donald E. Liebendorfer Henry C. Mack Philip Newill R. Bradley Riter I k-.-l: t— I ' n I J ' Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Allan E. Charles David A. Lam SON William L. Wright John M. Marble Donald C. McKay . Professional Journalistic Fraternity 257 li V.nck row: Shipkev, Steele, Ludeke, Oltva. Eli.tott, Patterson, Haktranft Second row: Dennis, Anderson, Mertz, McHose, Wheat, Hinckley, LiKBENnoRFER First row: Cleaveland, J. I.awson, Roberts, Woodward, Culver, Roth SKULL AND SNAKES I 4 u B V EpHRAiM Douglass Adams George Bliss Culver Paul Herbert Davis HONORARY MEMBERS William Daly Fletcher Fillmore Gary Henry Wilfred Maloney John Thomas Nourse MEMBERS NinclccH Hundred and Eighteen- Robert L. Templeton Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Chester A. Wilcox Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-One William F. Leiser Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Ralph Reynolds Almon Edward Roth Thomas M. Williams Phil F. Neer Frederick L. Anderson Norman Cleaveland Robert I. Cravens Dudley S. DeGroot Ford M. Tussing Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Elmer E. Elliott Richard W. Faville Percy C. Heckendorf V. Theodore Mertz Nelson Van Judah Roy F. Williamson Paul C. Murray Edwin A. Patterson Myron N. Reed J. Howell Smith George H. Baker John D. Campbell S. Glenn Hartranft Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Richard H. Hinckley Donald E. Liebendorfer Frederic S. Ludeke John C. McHose Arthur B. Thomas Gilbert C. Wheat Albert C. White Tyler F. Woodward Murray W. Cuddeback Guy H. Dennis Charles C. Johnson Men ' s Honor Society 258 Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five James W. Lawson Hugo Leistner David M. Oliva George D. Roberts Harry H. Shipkey Fred F. Solomon GuRDON D. Steele I rd! riackrow: Davis, Richer, Mannoccir, Taylor, Claflin Second row; Morris, Bayley, Hughes, Chalmers Fiist row: Lamson, West, Parks, Powell, Ward, Bumbaugh SWORD AND SANDALS HONORARY MEMBER Chrysella Dunker FACULTY MEMBERS Lee Emerson Bassett, A.B. Gordon Arthur Davis, A.B. Samuel Swayze Seward, Jr., A.B. William Brownlee Owen.s, LL.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Harold L. Bumbaugh Paul C. Claflin !i K Arnold B. Bayley Harry H. Chalmers Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Frederick M. Hughes George T. Powell DwiGHT W. Taylor Murray A. Ward id. Norris E. James Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four F. David Mannoccir John D. Richer Cecil M. Morris Thomas H. West Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five David A. Lamson Charles H. Parks Honorary Men ' s Dramatic Society 259 Jiack row : JIilton, Baker, Capell Front row: Miller, Koper, Chaney, Cohen, Dannknbaum THETA SIGMA PHI Founded at University of Washington, April 19, 1909 Iota Chapter Established February IS, 1916 i:Nti HONORARY MEMBERS Margery Bailey Elisabeth Lee Buckingham Edith Ronald Mirrielees Nalbro Hartley Marjorie Driscoll Ruth Comfort Mitchell Ruth Sampson Carol Gref.n Wilson MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Lisette E. Fast ill 1 j ( 1 i 1 f ' - ' 1 j ' -A I 1 ' I ,r7 u j ' r •: ti ; ( j i. 1 Worn 260 .- . Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Maurine G. Voerge Frances H. Williams Marjorie Cohen Mary Baker Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Mildred D. Dannenbaum Miriam Hilton Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Mary C. Chanev Meribeth E. Cameron Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Katherine F. Capell Women ' s National Journalistic Fraternity Barbara Miller Elizabeth H. Roper Mii Rack row : Front row; D ' Andrea, Ashley, Milliken, Swayne, Alexander Poco, Walsh, Boezinger, Anderson, Collette CERCLE FRANCAIS FACULTY MEMBERS Clifford G. Allen, A.M. Aurelio M. Espinosa, Ph.D. Frederick Anderson, Ph.D. Oliver M. Johnson, Ph.D. Alfred Coester, Ph.D. Ralph H. Lutz, Ph.D. Stanley A. Smith, A.M. Percy A. Martin, Ph.D. Clelia D. Mosher, M.D. William L. Schwartz, A.M. Ida Stauf, A.M. iH I t ! i- I MEMBERS Pierre Hachez, Gr. Pierre De Boeck, Gr. Germaine H. Collette, ' 22 Walter S. Alexander, ' 23 Ottilia C. Anderson, ' 23 Olivia Boezinger, ' 23 Mary K. Chase, ' 23 Benjamin F. Cummings, ' 23 Mary F. Wildman, ' 23 Muriel F. Bell, ' 24 Virginia R. Graves, ' 24 Margaret G. Mackey, ' 24 Marion I. Anna P. Merrill, ' 24 Yvonne A. Pasquale. ' 24 Elizabeth Peirce, ' 24 Paul L. Stayner, ' 24 Genevieve S. Stichter, ' 24 William W. Swayne, ' 24 Harry D. Todd, ' 24 Linda VanNorden, ' 24 Mona D. Walsh, ' 24 George W. Berkalew, ' 25 Margaret Harroun, ' 25 Sidney W. Hawkins, ' 25 Nicholas, ' 27 Gaetan M Joanna O. Holbrook, ' 25 Gertrude E. McLeod, ' 25 Sheldon S. Milliken, ' 25 Harold L. Parent, ' 25 Elisabeth C. Simmons, ' 25 Hammond . shley, ' 26 Martin A. D ' Andrea, ' 26 Alfrida F. C. Poco, ' 26 Theodore B. Criley, ' 27 Aurelio M. Espinosa, Jr., ' 27 Mary F. Harwood, ' 27 Charlotte Lovekin, ' 27 Zucco, ' 27 !i; ' . ' 262 Back row: Wight, Long, Barley, Hoffmann, Pettibone Second row; White, Rolley, Dickenson, Munson, Colby First row: Hilgeson, Binkley, Walter, Gardner, Marvin, Green MASONIC CLUB Welton J. Crook William F. Durand James O. Griffin Andrew Kerr HONORARY MEMBERS JosiAH H. Kirk C. G. Lambert James B. Liggett John E. McDowell James Marshall Theron J. Palmateer Edwin W. Shultz H. N. X ' andervoort Chester G. Vernier Warren D. Allen James B. Blois Joseph Borden C. W. Decker assocl te members William O. Horabin Frank A. LeSuer Frank J. Miller E. D. Nolan D. A. C. Oglivie Alfred Seale W. C. Thoits O. W. WiDEMAN Cecil V. Abbott Charles C. Baptie Charles V. Barley Charles H. Binkley William L. Bradshaw Lloyd C. Carver George W. Colby Lawrence H. Cook Chester L. Cooley Daniel K. Coyle Caspar G. Crawford Charles W. Dickenson Cheslev M. Douglas George S. Drysdale David D. French William O. French, Jk ACTIVE MEMBERS MeRVIN J. FUENDELING LoN L. Fuller William R. Gage Kenneth D. Gardner George L. Green Frank B. Hays James Hilgesen Barton A. Hinckley Paul E. Hoffmann Vaughn M. Hosepian W. Elwood James John P. King Eldon a. Long Floyd M. McCord Harry A. March Stanley Marvin Joseph E. Wight Kemp J. Everett K. Mohr Oscar W. Mulford Spencer M. Munson, Jr. George W. Patterson Frank M. Penepacker Gilbert W. Pettibone William J. Putcamp Leslie E. Rolley Raymond R. Scott Edgar T. Smith Francis A, Smith George R, Stray Ford M. Tussing Bruce M. Wallace Russell L. Walter Albert C. White Winkler 263 Rack row: Morgan, Ambrose, Peery, Davies, Mizota, Laughlin, Collins Second row: Spaulding, Chaffee, Dawson, Griswold, Orr, Robertson First row: Butterfield, Chase, Row, Chang, Lindsev, Harris l- STANFORD YOUNG MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION J. E. Borden Artur M. Cathcart Orrin Leslie Elliott BOARD OF DIRECTORS D. Charles Gardner RuFUs Lot Green Gale C. Griswold Donald L. Robertson Almon E, Roth Carl S. Shoup George H. Whisler I U II M i CABINET ( r-ih President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer General Secretary Assistant Secretary Discussion Groups Membership Conferences 1 ' reshman Assemblies Chapel Boys ' Work Hospital Service I ' -OREiGN Students Deputations Handbook Social Committee Freshman Cabinet Missions Church Relations Meetings Americanization Donald L, Robertson, ' 24 DavidW. C.Harris, ' 24 David K. Chang, ' 22 Gale C. Griswold, ' 25 Frederick E. Morgan Edward J. Sparling Harold S. Spaulding, ' 24 Junior J. Collins, ' 24 AdELBERT J. BUTTREY, ' 24 Norman W. Ambrose, ' 25 George R. Stray, ' 24 Elmer J. Peery, ' 26 Albert E. Butterfield, ' 22 George S. Mizota, ' 24 Hugh M. Lindsey, ' 25 Clarence H. Dawson, ' 24 David L. Davies, ' 25 H. Sidney Laughlin, ' 24 Don M. Chase, ' 24 Martin A. Row, ' 24 Clare S. Chaffee, ' 24 Paul W. Orr, ' 25 IHl u 264 I WOMEN ' S ECONOMICS CLUB Rack row: Lawrence, Judd, Hull, Tuthill. Gower Second row; Muzzey, Jameson, Terman, Ewell, Bateman First row: Cleaveland, Campbell, Knight, Pooler, Hood, Weichselfelder First Term Mary E. Hull Dorothy L. Overfelt Ruth A. Jameson Margaret Mulford Lothrop, A.M. OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS Albert Conser Whitaker, Ph.D. MEMBERS Second Term Ruth A. Jameson Catherine D. Ewell Marian R. Gower Murray Shipley Wildman, Ph.D. Mary F. Wildman, ' 22 Loraine Cleaveland, ' 24 Mary E. Hull, ' 24 Virginia Burks, ' 23 M. Louise Wilber. ' 23 Mary Bateman, ' 24 Susan E. Beach, ' 24 Irene A. Campbell, ' 24 Eileen M. Cram, ' 24 Mildred Dorris, ' 24 Catherine D. Ewell, ' 24 Marian R. Gower, ' 24 Margaret H. Hood, ' 24 Mary Katherine Chase, ' 22 Ruth A. Jameson, ' 24 Helen J. Lawrence, ' 24 IsABELLE G. Muzzey, ' 24 Dorothy L. Overfelt, ' 24 Elizabeth F. Pooler, ' 24 Margaret L. Richardson, ' 24 Grace M. Strobel, ' 24 Helen L. Terman, ' 24 Helen Tuthill, ' 24 Grace JuDD, ' 25 Helen M. Knight, ' 25 Marguerite Weichselfelder, ' 24 JUNIPERO SERRA CLUB Back row: McCaffery, Kranzthor, Sanguiketti, McGrath, Stapleton Third row: O ' Shea, Miron, Stanton, Espv, Murphv, Piedmonte, Porter Second row: W ' . Enderud, A. Enderud, Ziller, Forch, Smith, Brennan, Espinosa First row: Murray, Conners, Cypher, Dahler, Grace, Leonard, Conroy OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Thomas J. Grace Dorothy I. Dahler M. Madeleine Brennan Clark Cypher HONORARY MEMBER Reverend Joseph M. Gleason FACULTY MEMBERS AURELIO MaCEDONIO EsPlNOSA, Ph.D. Harry Wolter Henry Wilfred Maloney 265 Back row: Odemar, Bielefeldt, Palmer, Jenkins, Spencer, Toeriner Second row: Weigei., Kramer, C ' athcart, Leiter, Summers, Jaffe, Bley, Littler First row: Karr, Widaman, Levit, Lindsev, Crist, Gosslin, Crocker EUPHRONIA DEBATING SOCIETY ' B Bertrand a. Bley, ' 24 William L. Bradshaw, ' 24 Frank L. Crist, ' 24 Bertram W. Levit, ' 24 Burton W. Palmer, ' 24 David S. Summers, ' 24 Mathew O. Tobriner, ' 24 Talbot Bielefeldt, ' 25 Richard L. Jenkins, ' 25 John A. Leiter, MEMBERS Hugh M. Lindsey, ' 25 Robert M. C. Littler, ' 25 David M. Oliva, ' 25 Percival I. Spencer, ' 25 Burnham p. Beckwith, ' 26 George N. Crocker, ' 26 Eddie Frank, ' 26 William L. Gosslin, ' 26 Louis L. Jafke, ' 26 ' 27 Harold W. F. Randolph Karr, ' 26 Walter H. Odemar, ' 26 Stanley A. Weigel, ' 26 Wendell O. Widaman, ' 26 Wallace D. Cathcart, ' 27 Donald M. Clark, ' 27 Philander O. Clough, ' 27 Richard K. Hubbard, ' 27 Rex W. Kramer, ' 27 Peterson, ' 27 m IN m • ' d A Back row: Berger, Steele, Kauffman Second row: Harding, Barby, Stanford, Hawkins, Kaaf l- ' irst row: McCaffery, Brown, Walter, Gardner, Avij.la, Wood Yamato Ichihashi, Ph.D. Joseph V. Gomes, ' 22 Samuel R. Daws, ' 23 Kenneth D. Gardner, ' 23 Victor H. Harding, ' 23 Robert E. Lewis, ' 23 Claude R. Minard, ' 23 Leonard R. Avtlla, ' 24 Otto C. Barby, ' 24 AdELBERT J. BUTTREY, ' 24 John E. Raak, NESTORIA DEBATING SOCIETY ' 26 FACULTY MEMBERS Charles V. Park, A.B. MEMBERS Bertrand L. Comparet, ' 24 Raymond M. Farley, ' 24 David W. C. Harris, ' 24 Francis M. Kauffman, ' 24 Egbert W. Laub, ' 24 Emmet McCaffery, ' 24 Leland G. Stanford, ' 24 Archie T. Steele, ' 24 WiLLARD D. Paine, ' 24 David A. Harold Shepherd, J.D. Russell L. Walter, ' 24 Horace W. Dryden, ' 25 Robert Z. Hawkins, ' 25 Philip R. Berger, ' 26 Leon B. Brown, ' 26 William L. Enderud, ' 26 Frederic W. Harding, ' 26 Donald J. Kropp, ' 26 William H. Northway, ' 26 Wood, ' 26 itdi M ai I 266 GERMAN CLUB i J St fi Back ro w: Pond, Bailey, Herz, Bryant, Stanton Second row: Mohr, Verbarg, Hablutzel, Boezinger, Tempel First row: Leistner, Means, Kluver, Brown President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer OFFICERS HONORARY MEMBER A. C. Mohr Heinrich Kluver- Marie J. Weiss Esther E. Brown MEMBERS Heinrich Kluver, Gr. Joseph G. Martin, ' 21 Germaine H. Collette, ' 22 Frederick R. Pond, ' 23 Olivia Boezinger, ' 24 Esther E. Brown, ' 24 Dorothy Forch, ' 24 Ernest J. Kelley, ' 24 William E. Tempel, ' 24 Hugo Leistner, ' 25 Lucy W. Means, ' 25 Eva Schwartz, ' 25 Marie J. Weiss, ' 25 Katherine F. Zener, ' Wilbur P. Bailey, ' 26 Edwin F. Bryant, ' 26 Gertrude E. Rendtorfk, ' 25 Hartley W. Df.vlin, Edwin M. Soderstrom, ' 27 C. Edward Hablutzel, ' 26 Ludwig E. Herz, ' 26 25 Frank C. Stanton, ' 26 Dorothy D. Verbarg, ' 26 John F. Fenn, ' 27 26 Wilhelm E. Junkert, ' 27 SPANISH CLUB Back row: Miron, Park, Willits, Espinosa, Mitchell, Levit Front row: Guerra, Nunn, Borton, Dressor, Stayner, Bley OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Carlo E. P. Guerra AuRELio M. Espinosa, Jr. Marshall E. Xunn Roma L. Mitchell MEMBERS Marie L. Bianchi, ' 23 Montana Delbon, ' 23 Herman A. Klenck, ' 23 Everett G. Bailie, ' 24 6ertrand a. Bley, ' 24 M. Irene Dressor, ' 24 Bertram W. Levit, ' 24 Marshall E. Nunn, ' 24 Paul L. Stayner. ' 24 Cecil V. Abbott, ' 25 Angel D. Aguerrevere, ' 25 M. Elizabeth Borton, ' 25 Carlos E. P. Guerra, ' 25 Laura May Lorraine, ' 25 Dorothy F. Meyer. ' 25 Roma L. Mitchell, ' 25 M. Ruth Stucky, ' 25 John M. Willits, ' 25 Marvin O. Adams, ' 26 Elizabeth G. Joyce. ' 26 Donald J. Kropp, ' 26 Kenneth M. Park, ' 27 Helen M. Lewis, ' 26 Rhoda V. Lewis, ' 26 Carlos A. Miron, ' 26 Philip Selig, Jr.. ' 26 David A. Wood, ' 26 AuRELio M. Espinosa, Jr., ' 27 Samuel Miller, ' 27 267 I ;---i. J DELTA EPSILON Back row: Irwin, Thompson, Hodgson, Ropkr, Ferguson, Van Deusen Front row: Whitney, Brenholts, Clark, Starks, McKibbin OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Corresponding- Secretary Dorothy Brenholts Elizabeth H. Roper Kenneth L. Ferguson Theodore G. Van Deusen FACULTY MEMBERS Arthur B. Clark, M.Ar. Chrysella Dunker, ' 22 Janice Dunker, ' 22 George W. Thompson, ' 22 Doris Bailey, ' 23 MEMBERS Dorothy Brenholts, ' 24 William H. Irwin, ' 24 Theoix)re G. Van Deusen, ' 24 Helen M. Whitney, ' 24 Chloe L. Starks Kenneth L. Ferguson, ' 25 Mabel F. Mckibbin, ' 2S Elizabeth H. Roper, ' 25 Daphne Hodgson, ' 26 . ' ■t f .lii m Rack row: MacRae, Huneke, Ludeke, Schmieder, May, Wright Second row: Wheat, Biddle, Collins, Bailie, Granger, Roth, Bissell First row: Wittenberg, Gage, Cottrell, Richer, Jameson, Badham, Tognazzini SENIOR CONTROL COMMITTEE Chairman Secretary OFFICERS John D. Richer Lillian Cottrell B. Jack Badham Margaret A. Bailie Eunice K. ISiddle Howard S. Bissell Junior J. Collins William R. Gage Leslie E. Gorrell Neil P. Granger MEMBERS Kenneth C. Hardwicke Albert H. Huneke Ruth A. Jameson 1 ' rederic S. Ludeke Richard L. MacRae Cecil I. Marquis J. Earle May Alic e C. Roth Fremont R. Schmieder Gardner Simonds Roland E. Tognazzini Gilbert C. Wheat Howard E. Wittenberg Robert E. Wright William E.Wright Charles A. Young 268 YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Back row: Watson, Brant, Dunlavy, Snedden, Roth Second row: Overfelt, Shepard, Simmons, Jameson, Riddle First row: Woolsey, Newlin, Schardin, Fitzhugii, Turner OFFICERS President Helen Schardin, ' 24 Vice-President Dorothy C. Dunlavy, ' 25 Secretary Margaret E. Watson, ' 25 Treasurer Ruth A. Newlin, ' 24 Undergraduate Representative Eunice K. Biddle, ' 24 CABINET General Secretary I ' inance Committee Social Committee Social Service Committee Girl Scouts Committee Conference Committee Membership Committee Meetings Committee Publicity Committee Church Cooperation Committee World F ' ellowship Committee ' ocational Committee Marjorie Woolsey Elisabeth C. Simmons, ' 25 Ruth Snedden, ' 26 Alice C. Roth, ' 24 Helen R. Brant, ' 24 S. Dorothy Shepard, ' 24 Ellowene D. Delahoyde, ' 24 Edythe G. Baylis, ' 24 Anna T. Fitzhugh, ' 25 Ruth A. Jameson, ' 24 Dorothy L. Overfelt, ' 24 Marion E. Turner, ' 24 SOCIAL WELFARE COMMISSION Back row: Feusier, Roth, Raymond Front row: Harroun, Dietrich, Woolsey President Secretary-Treasurer OFFICERS Margaret C. Dietrich Mabel F. McKibbin FACULTY MEMBER Marjorie Woolsey MEMBERS Alice C. Roth, ' 24 Margaret Harroun, ' 25 Mabel F. McKibbin, ' 25 Natalie M. Raymond, ' 25 Margaret C. Dietrich, ' 26 Cecile M. Feusier, ' 26 269 ■: i! . II i!! WRANGLERS Back row; Muller, Brant, Allen, Vaughn Front row: McCall, VanNorpen, Gkeenacre, Austin President Secretary-Treasurer OFFICERS Helen R. Brant Esther F. Gkeenacre MEMBERS Laura V. Austin, ' 23 Linda Van Norden, ' 23 Helen R. Brant, ' 24 Grace M. Strobel, ' 24 Mary Virginia Duncan, ' 25 Dorothy Muller, ' 25 Natalie M. Raymond, ' 25 Elizabeth P. Allen, ' 26 Marjorie S. Allen, ' 26 Margaret C. Dietrich, ' 26 Esther F. Greenacre, ' 26 Elizabeth F. McCall, ' 26 Alfrida F. Poco, ' 26 Frances R. Vaughn, ' 26 Back row: Rowland, Beardsley, Hardy, Reavis Front row: Baptie, Oliver, Dietrich, Kay OFFICERS Student Continuation Committee for THE FIRST MILLION FOR STANFORD Chairman J. Ogden Reavis MEMBERS J. Ogden Reavis, ' 23 Charles C. Baptie, ' 24 De Witt C. Rowland, ' 24 Charles E. Beardsley, ' 25 Margaret C. Dietrich, ' 26 Jack W. Hardy, ' 26 Raymond M. Kay, ' 26 Harriet E. Oliver, ' 26 Hi-i 270 ECONOMICS 1 CLUB 1 BB B ' i ,4 P| H 1 j i Bh BH (i j ■L ' V H B hL ' - tlHiHD9IH Hack row: Alabaster, dk Back, Coen, Berry Front row: Hinckley, Mertz, FisHBURN, Allison, Cavanaugh OFFICERS President Othmar B. Berry Secretary-Tre; surer Howard M. Clark MEMBERS Ford M. Tussing, ' 22 Lewis P. Alabaster, ' 24 John E. Fishburn. ' 24 Othmar B. Berry, ' 23 Horace B. Allison, ' 24 Neil P. Granger, ' 24 Howard M. Clark, ' 23 Norman J. de Back, ' 24 Richard H. Hinckley, ' 24 V. Theodore Mertz, ' 23 Robert D. Cavanaugh, ' 24 Richard D. Coen, ' 24 HISTORY CLUE OFFICERS John A. Driscoll, ' 25 Honorary Preside NT Payson Jackson Treat, Ph.D. , President R. Willis- Porter jl Vice-President Ayleen E. Goepfert : ' Secretary-Treasu RER FACULTY MEMBERS Laura L. Butler Ephraim Douglass Adams, Ph.D. Edward Maslin Hulme, A.M. Karl Gustav Rendtorff, Ph.D. Edward Latimer Beach Ralph Haswell Lutz, Ph.D. Edgar Eugene Robinson, A.M. Jefferson Elmore, Ph.D. Ernest Whitney Martin, Ph. D. Payson Jackson Treat, Ph.D. Frank Alfred Golder, Ph.D. i Percy Alvin Martin, Ph. D. MEMBERS Reginald George Trotter, Ph.D. 3 Nina E. Almond Mary E. Dooling John H. Poole Robert C. Bin kley Kathrine Fairclough Elizabeth F. Pooler ' 1 Laura L. Butler Ayleen E. Goepfert James H. Rusk Adelbert j. Buttrey Marian R. Gower S. Dorothy Shepard Paul H. Clyde Reginald M. Hirschman Edith P. Stickney Mildred R. Conard Handel W. Kelly Paul G. Vigness 1 Helen L. Connell ! D. Ellowene Delahoyde Gertrude E. Knox Oswald H. Wedel Ophelia Moe Frances Williams i! Edith Dobie Howard Pease R. Willis-Porter  271 Pi |:P:!i - 11 ASSOCIATED FEDERAL STUDENTS ] ' ' ounded at Stanford University, October 1, 1919 Richard L. Argue Elliott H. Ayres Fremont O. Ballou Charles O. Baptie Allen G. Benson William L. Bradshaw Donald C. Brooks William B. Brown Claude A. Bryner Robert N. Burnett James W. Byrkit George W. Colby Eugene C. Colgan Lorenz Costello Daniel K. Coyle Alonzo L. Crawford Ruth C. Crutcher Martin A. D ' Andrea Lyman H. Daugherty Charles W. Dickenson Herbert V. Douglas Ralph V. Ellis Donald M. Elvey Robert B. Fitzgerald James A. Flanagan Herbert G. Florcken Donald C. Follis C. Dickenson Gifford Raymond G. Greene Sidney N. Greenleaf Elmer H. Hammond Irl R. Harcourt Victor H. Harding JosiAS M. Harper James C. Healey MEMBERS Alfred G. Heidig James Hilgesen Raymond E. Hiller John L. Hofflund Edward A. Howard Lester B. Hutchinson Frank P. Isensee Burton H. Jayne Claude M. Johnson Ira W. Kibby Russell Kiltin John P. King James M. Kirby Howard M. Kirk Donald R. Knowlton Fred Kunzel Lewis Lagodzinski Richard T. Lapiore Michael J. Lavelle ThAYNE M. LlVESAY Robert McCallum John M. McClelland Howard A. McDonald Charles L. McNichols George G. Maine James A. Marsh Stanley Marvin William J. Meehan Henry L. Millar Kingsley R. Miller Roma L. Mitchell Everett K. Mohr Paul E. Norris Joseph A. O ' Leary George W. Robert T. Patton Gilbert W. Pettibone Alan Porter Alexis E. Post Baldwin P. Quintero Earl Ramey Leslie E. Rolley NoRRELL E. Rose Arthur A. Ross Gordon M. Ross W. Lee Sandberg Alfred F. Schultz Thomas F. Seeger Frank L. Smith Raymond W. Smith Harold C. Soper Dale D. Sparks Edward L. Stewart Hugh L. Stewart Webster F. Street Bruce L. Urquhart Paul G. Vigness George R. Vinsonhaler John C. Walker William K. Wallace Norton E. Wattenbesger Calvin Webster Clarence N. Westicard Albert C. White Harry D. White Joseph E. Wight Carl Wilhelmson Arthur F. Winter Raymond O. Wright Patterson k HI Ml m -: i CLASSICAL CLUB OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Linda Van Norden H.Joseph Brunet M. Madeleine Brennan Arthur Wild FACULTY MEMBERS Professor and Mrs. Jefferson Elmore Professor and Mrs. Benjamin Oliver Foster Professor and Mrs. Henry Rushton Fairclough Professor and Mrs. Ernest Whitney Martin Professor and Mrs. Augustus Taber Murray MEMBERS H. Joseph Brunet, Gr. Cecile M. Coulthard, Gr. Rev. John J. Doran, Gr. Collice Henry, Gr. Ralph C. Hofmeister, Gr. George R. Mitchell, Gr. Linda Van Norden, Gr. Gwladys L. Williams, Gr. Archibald P. McVey, ' 22 Thomas A. Bailey, ' 24 M. Madeleine Brennan, ' 24 Ralph E. Cole, ' 24 James J. Easly, ' 24 A. Birdella Rogers, ' 24 Helen K. Schardin, ' 24 David Birnie, ' 25 Ernest S. Fujinasa, ' 25 Polly D. Learnard, ' 25 Elizabeth Newton, ' 25 Arthur Wild, ' 25 Iti 272 4 STANFORD COSMOPOLITAN CLUB Mrs. E. C. Ewell HONORARY MEMBERS David Starr Jordan Ray Lyman Wilbur Frank A. Morgan ASSOCIATE MEMBER E. J. Sparling FACULTY MEMBERS Harold Chapman Brown, Ph.D. Gordon Floyd Ferris, A.M. William Herbert Carruth, Ph.D. Percy Alvin Martin, Ph.D. Alrelio Macedonio Espinosa, Ph.D. Joseph Gregory Maytin Henry Rushton Fairclough, Ph.D. William Martin Proctor, Ph.D. Samuel Swayze Seward, Jr., Ph.D. William Leonard Schwartz, A.M. John S. P. Tatlock, Ph.D. Payso.n Jackson Treat, Ph.D. MEMBERS Mahesh Chandra, Gr. Pierre Hachez, Gr. Gregorio C. Patacsil, Gr. Russell N. Shiras, Gr. Laur. D. Soper, Gr. H. Willis-Porter, Gr. Liang K. Yang, Gr. Kuo-LiANG Chi, ' 22 Ottilia C. Anderson, ' 23 Pierre DeBoeck, ' 23 Thomas G. Greene, ' 23 Joseph Klecka. ' 23 Gasper H. Magarian, ' 23 Jane E. Adams, ' 24 Yoshikiyo Arimori, ' 24 Adelbert J. Buttrey, ' 24 Marion B. Carpenter, ' 24 Don M. Chase, ' 24 Tung Ho Cheng, ' 24 Clarence H. Dawson, ' 24 David W. C. Harris, ' 24 Carol E. Hyde, ' 24 Dora Mallory, ' 24 George S. Mizota, ' 24 Martin A. Row, ' 24 Pen T. Sah, ' 24 Joseph Y. Sano. ' 24 Tsong-Hsun Tsui, ' 24 Helen L. Vogel, ' 24 Violet M. Balcomb, ' 25 Lillian F. Bidwell, ' 25 Talbot Bielefeldt, ' 25 Tseng-Ku Chuan, ' 25 R. Carol David, ' 25 Ernest S. Fujinaga, ' 25 Mildred S. Hall, ' 25 Doris L Harter, ' 25 yoshio ichikawa, ' 25 Richard Jenkins, ' 25 Hele.v MacNair, ' 25 PaulW. Orr, ' 25 Er-Chang Ping. ' 25 EWALD Pyzel, ' 25 Frederik M. Pyzel, ' ' 25 Earl Ramey, ' 25 Harold L. Rorden, ' 25 Frances E. Shepherd, ' 25 M. Ruth Stucky, ' 25 WuTaam. ' 25 Francis M. Hayashi, ' 26 John H. How, ' 26 Stanley Marvin, ' 26 Allan J. Meadowcroft, ' 26 Anselmo G. Patacsil, ' 26 Ada J. Roberts, ' 26 Bertha L. Shedd, ' 26 Raymo.nd S. Stanley, ' 26 Marian Toll, ' 26 Dorothy D. Verbarg, ' 26 Elmer M. Buttrey, ' 27 Wallace D. Cathcart. ' 27 W. Keisuke Iriki, ' 27 Gordon L. Knapp, ' 27 Nellie L. Shepherd, ' 27 STANFORD ZOOLOGY CLUB OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Ernest H. Quayle Marjorie Swabey Philip N. Baxter HONORARY MEMBERS Leroy Abrams Lawrence B. Becking George B. Culver Rennie W. Doane B. W. Everman Gk)Rix)N F. Ferris Walter K. Fisher Charles H. Gilbert Harold Heath David Starr Jordan Ernest Gale Martin Mary Isabel McCracken Frank Mace McFarland George Clinton Price Alvin Seale Lance Scofield F. M. Scott George Daniel Shafer Olive Willoughby James Perrin Smith John Otterbein Snyder Edwin Chapin Starks Clara S. Stoltenberg Arthur Gibson Vestal Frank Walter Weymouth Ray Lyman Wilbur MEMBERS Ro.xANA S. Ferris, ' IS Carl D. Duncan, ' 20 Ernest H. Quayle, ' 20 Gilbert T. Benson, ' 22 Hester D. Bonnot, ' 22 Paul Bonnot, ' 22 DwiGHT L. Wilbur, ' 22 RiMO Bacigalupi, ' 23 Brighton C. Cain, ' 23 Joseph C. Chamberlin, ' 23 Helen H. Greene, ' 23 Albert P. Krueger, ' 23 Dorothy J. Starks, ' 23 Marjorie R. Swabey, ' 23 Harrington Wells, ' 23 Margaret E. White, ' 23 Fremont O. Ballou, ' 24 William H. Irwin, ' 24 Isabella G. Mvzzey, ' 24 Ethel M. Shaull, ' 24 Harold H. Greene, ' 25 Laura M. Lorraine, ' 25 Gertrude E. Rendtorff, ' 25 George A. Rounsefell, ' 25 Marie J. Weiss, ' 25 Philip N. Baxter, ' 26 Edward L. Brandon, ' 26 Margaret M. Earle, ' 26 Charles H. Eller, ' 26 Mildred S. Hall, ' 26 Helen E. Nelson, ' 26 Gene Scofield, ' 26 Bertha L. Shedd, ' 26 W. C. Van Deventer, ' 26 Harold L. P. Wight, ' 26 George M. Sayre, ' 27 273 : _ £ PLAN FOR REPLANTING ARBORETUM Legend: 17-18-19 unit be planted in members of the rose family; also flowering peaches, cherries, apples and related plants. This will give spring flowers. Hawthornes, Pyratantha, Cotoneastcr, and other berry plants will give fall color. 20-21 ivill be devoted to plants chiefly from the southern hemisphere , including Grevillea, Hakea, and Pittosporum. 22-23 will be planted in Saxifrage family and Leguminoseae. This area will include a special feature of Acacias, emphasising the Australian species. 27-28 will include the Myrtle family, chiefly confined to Australian and southern European species. 2 to 9 will be planted in a specially developed collection of conifers. REPLANTING OF ARBORETUM PLANNED STANFORD will have the finest collection of trees and shrubs in America when the present plans for the replanting of the arboretum are realized. It is planned to grow plants from regions having the California type of climate, such as Australia, New Zealand, Chile, South Africa, and Southern Europe. Space has been provided for from 8,000 to 10,000 different kinds of trees and shrubs. This will make the Stanford arboretum possibly surpass the only other ex- tensive collection of its kind in America, that of the Arnold arboretum at Harvard. In New England the severe winters make it impossible to grow any plant which comes from anywhere south of the cold climate of this hemisphere. At Stanford, however, can be grown not only plants from the arboreal regions of the northern hemisphere, but also plants from all parts of the world except strictly tropical areas. Plants in the arboretum at present include representatives from Norway, Central Europe, China, Japan, India, Australia, New Zealand, the Mediterranean regions, and South Africa ; while Canada, Alaska, Mexico, and Chile and Brazil are represented from the new world. The Stanford arlx)retum will be unique in that the plants are to be arranged in groups according to their families. Professor LeRoy Abrams, curator of the Dudley Herbarium ; John MacLaren, consulting landscape architect for the university and superintendent of Golden Gate Park; and Gardiner A. Dailey, San Francisco architect, have worked out this scientific arrange- ment, which will be the only one of its kind in tlie western hemisphere. One of the chief diffi- culties to be encountered is the lack of funds to maintain the gardens after they are ])ut in. It is hoped that an income will be found which will maintain the planting, a necessarily slow process. 274 NEW LIVING CONDITIONS Freshman Dormitory and Revised Rushing Systems for Both Men and Women Significant Steps By Basil L. McGann MEN ' HAT every man may use the Encina hall has become a melting pot, a crucible in whicli fn men are subjected to neiv situations and given tlw test of Stanford life. sh- -pi ■• four years of his college course to the greatest advantage, both for himself and for the university, has been the purpose of the living group ])lans which were put into effect last October. Under the old system of allowing the new men to live where they would, freshmen were hustled off into living groups which narrowed their accjuaintanceship, seldom imbued them with the true democratic spirit which characterized the early days of the university, and frequently ham- pered their scholarship. For this con- dition has been substituted a closely cooperative scheme between the stu- dents and the university administration. Two new dormitories, Toyon and Branner halls, were built to house the second-, third-, and fourth-year men. In the new Encina dining halls, the freshmen have been fortunate in having particularly good fare, served in good taste and in pleasant surroundings. Encina hall has become the melting ix)t, a crucible in which freshmen are subjected to new situations and given the test of Stanford life. Despite some rather strenuous objections to the system and some justifiable criticism, it has on the whole been successful. The phenomenal record of the class of ' 27 stands as the most effective answer to the system ' s critics. The most essential point about this record is that there has been no breaking down of the individual spirit. The biggest thing to be considered from the adminis- tration standpoint is that the class of ' 27 made the best scholastic record of any freshman class at Stanford for three decades. What is particularly pleasing to the students and alumni is that the freshmen have demonstrated their athletic ability by winning three major athletic contests from California, a record hitherto unheard of in Stanford history. The housing system is this : All men entering Stanford for the first time with less than eighty hours ' credit are housed in Encina and boarded in the Encina dining hall. The first-year men work out their salvation together, with the aid and advice of a group of specially chosen sponsors and a vigilance committee chosen from their own number. There will be no changes in tlie housing system, according to Dean George B. Culver. The administration feels certain that the freshmen have made more friends for themselves than any other class since the beginning of the university ■— and that was one of the chief objects of the system. One minor difficulty will be eliminated: there will be absolutely no one in the hall next year but freshmen, sponsors, and a few graduate students on the fifth floor. This will give the freshmen more room and eliminate all disturbing factors. The fraternities moulded their rushing plans to cooperate with the spirit of the new system, although they met with less success. It is generally agreed that the rushing period was too long, although the number of dates with the freshmen was not more than is desirable. During the entire autumn quarter the freshmen were absolutely unmolested by fraternity cultivation of any kind. Fraternity men were not allowed to speak to freshmen except upon urgent business, and were not allowed to enter Encina without obtaining permission from a s])onsor. Wednesday dinner and week-end meals were set aside for cultivation of freshmen by fraternities during the 276 I_« ■-f  ..Jill 9 r . ■! ' ' ■1 JB ' ' H ' ' if frcsliiiicn arc scn ' rd in tivo spacious and ' cccll-lightcd rooms in the new Enciiia. dining hulls winter quarter. Rushing at other times was forbidden, and off-cainpns rusli- ing was not permitted at any time. In the spring pledging took place through a lawyer after two weeks more of re- stricted rushing. One hundred and seventy-six freshmen accepted fra- ternity bids on pledging day. and a number who were undecided at that time were pledged during the follow- ing week. Tliis is the largest number of men ever pledged by the Stanford fraternities on a regular pledging day. That some fraternities pledged an unusually large number of men is ac- counted for by the fact that they chose them from an exceptionally good class, says Eugene N. Trago, presi- dent of the Interfraternity council. We used the extended rushing period because every fraternity felt that as long as the freshmen couldn ' t live in the houses with the consent of the administration, there was no need of having them affiliated with the fraternities. ' A great many changes were made in the rushing system for next fall. The system as adopted this May has practically the same number of dates as the old system, but it does not extend over as long a period of time. There will be no rushing during the fall and winter quarters. Rushing will begin the first week after spring mid-quarters, and will last three weeks. The first week will be devoted to allowing the freshmen and fraternities to get acquainted ; each fraternity will be allowed one date with each freshman. The following two weeks will be occupied with intensive rushing, which closes on the Saturday of the third week. Bidding takes place the next day through a fraternity lawyer. Another radical change was made this spring in the status of the Interfraternity Board of Control, consisting of four undergraduates, the president of the council, two alumni, two fac- ulty members, and the Dean of Men. This board barred three fraternities from pledging for two quarters, and severely reprimanded two others for violation of the council rules at the begin- ning of spring quarter. The board has now been given both legislative and unlimited disciplinary powers, subject to the approval of the university president, thus making the Interfraternity council, composed of two delegates from each fraternity, merely an advisory body. It is hoped that the new rushing plan will also include a provision to make pledging the final wind-up of the year and that initiation will take place in the sophomore year, says Leslie Dills, member of the Interfraternity Board of Control. WOMEN As in the past, all women entering Stanford for the first time were required to live in Roble hall during their entire first year, except in the case of transfers already members of sororities, of whom only one quarter ' s Roble residence was required. The sororities have tried to do away with intensive rushing entirely by extending the period. Teas were given on the first Saturday and Sunday of each quarter for the new women. The At Homes were the only rushing functions given during the fall quarter. A week was set aside during the winter quarter for rushing and eight days during the spring quarter. On Bay 18, bids were to be extended to the new women liy the sororities through a lawyer. The plan has relieved both the sororities and the entering women of much of the interference usually attendant on a rushing season which extends throughout the year, and yet it has given ample time for the sorority women and the freshmen to become acquainted. Another advantage of the long period rushing system is the friendly spirit which it has created between the women of the row and those of Roble. 277 Women ' s Living Groups ii ?: v,i Back row: Rogers, Whitney, Dunlavy, Pitts Second row: Watson, Beach, Simmons, Hardy, Cameron, PitEi.ps First row: Fuller, Dodds, Gibbons, Evans, Richardson, McLeod, Westerfield, Jongeneel PANHELLENIC President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer FACULTY MEMBER Mary Yost, Ph.D. OFFICERS Margaret L, Richardson Helen Mason Whitney Wanda Westerfield Helen Katherine Schardin MEMBERS Uflui Oiniifun Pi F ' rances Alberta Jongeneel, ' 26 Earlene Phelps, ' 24 Ciiiiuiia Phi Beta Jeannette Louise Booksin, ' 23 Wanda Westerfield, ' 26 Alt ha Phi Dorothy C. yuNLAVY, ' 25 Helen Mason Whitney, ' 24 Kappa Alpha I ' hcta . )x Birdei.la Rogers, ' 24 Margaret Eva Watson, ' 25 Chi Omega Alice Dodds, ' 24 Helen Baker Fuller, ' 25 Kappa Kappa Gamma Millison Cutler Hardy. ' 26 Elisabeth C. Simmons, ' 25 ),• ,; Delta Delta Mekii!f;th E. Cameron, ' 25 Helen Katherine Schardin, ' 24 ' ■Heta Phi Kathlf;en Evans, ' 24 Dorothy Sara Pitts, ' 25 Delta Gamma Gladys Marian McLeod, ' 26 Margaret L. Richardson, ' 24 278 Sigma Kappa Rachel Julia Beach, ' 25 Margaret Virginia Gibbons, ' 23 ' Jf ADA CCC RS CUTW SINCDOCM ELLZABCTM SOI LI LINDA VAN NOCDCN JANtT WALLACE MABGACCT WATSON KAPPA ALPHA THETA Founded at DePauw University, January 27, 1870 Phi Chapter, Established April 4, 1888. at the College of the Pacific Transferred to Stanford University, January, 1892 FACULTY MEMBERS Clelia D. Moshek, M.D. Margaret M. Lothrop, A.M. Mary Yost, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Elizabeth Brewer Spilman Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Helen Hartley Greene Linda VanNorden Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Esther May Flowers Virginia Rousseau Graves EvLYN McLaughlin Elizabeth Peirce Ada Birdella Rogers Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Edith Dorothy Brownfield Miriam Hilton Velva Gertrude Darling Carolyn Peirce Margaret Eva Watson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v Helen Jordan Ames Elizabeth Salisbury Bradford Miriam Ebright Rowena Steirly Mason Alfrida Francoise C. Poco Ruth Snedden Janet Wallace M1LLI30N MaBDY SUSAN MVDt HAOION UOVCKIh MAKi4B[T WDOWCLL BaUBlUS N0UB5t WONNt PiSQU4LL JOSLPHlNt 6CX5CBS I ELI54KIH arirWB JUII van VLECK MOHA WALSH JLAN WABD BACMl WLiUNSIOfi L(XJI5C WHITAKC KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 Beta Eta Chapter Established June 10, 1892 FACULTY MEMBERS Dorothy Putnam, A.B. Frances Theresa Russell MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three A. Violet Andrews Virginia Keith Biggar Virginia Burks MoNA Desmond Walsh Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Pour LoraineCleavelanu Yvonne a. Pasquale Josephine Rand Rogers Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Marion Roads Lovekin Elisabeth C. Simmons Barbara Anne Wellington Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Charlotte Hall Brown Elizabeth Earl Clapp Harriet Allena Ford MiLLisoN Cutler Hardy Susan McKee Hyde Margaret Deering McDowell Barbara E. Nourse JuLE Van Vleck Jean Ward Louise M. Whitaker OOCCTHY HECOMAN DAPhNC MOOOSON ECOMAN DAPHNC MOOOSON F08CSTA MOD SON MACY HUPBACD LLK: METANS 8DBE0TA MITCHELL «APCI K ' CTCN DOPOTHY PITTS GAIL THOMPSON QECALD ' iNEWAy iOLA WILLIAMS PI BETA PHI Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 California Alpha Chapter Established September 13, 1893 FACULTY MEMBERS Georgina Burk Foresta Hodgson Helen Binninger Sutliff, A.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Dorothy S. Cooke Mary Elizabeth Hubbard Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four ' Mildred Rovena Conard Foresta Hodgson Kathleen Evans Geraldine Estelle Watt Florence Iola Williams Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Helen Nelson Glassford Roberta Hasty Mitchell Dorothy Isabel Herdman Dorothy Sara Pitts Lucy Woodbridce Means F. Gail Thompson Dorothy Evelyn Williams Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Six Virginia Doyle Cecile Marie Feusier Daphne Hodgson Marcia Ellsworth Morton JOSEPMINC FBANI MABOAQET MAUeOVJN VIDA HAVS JOANMA HO BCOOk HtLEN LAWRENCE ■GECICUCL MSLEOD GLADVS M ' --LtOD eABBAHA MILLER ELIZABETH mVeES WTHICE NAyMAN HA RIEI OU. ' iR MABGABtT BICHARDSON HELEN TUTHILL DELTA GAMMA Founded at University of Mississippi, 1872 Upsilon Chapter Established March 6, 1897 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Eunice Katherine Biddle Carol Harriette Botsford Geraldine Franklin Josephine Franklin Helen Jean Lawrence Anna Frances Merrill Barbara Miller Margaret Louise Richardson Helen Tuthill Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Eugenia C. Bentley Barbara Shepler Bledsoe Frances Belden Foster Margaret Harroun ViDA Hays Joanna O. Holbrook Gertrude Eloise McLeod Alice Elizabeth Myers Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Marion Camille Chaquette Gladys Marian McLeod Jessie Patrice Nauman Harriet Elizabeth Oliver MABQABtr BAILIE MABGAOtT LOPtR MAOY STCINBE-Cfc: HILDEGACDE TOlMAN MABJOCIL ULLCN WHlTNtY ALPHA PHI Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 Kappa Chapter Established May 20, 1899 MEMBERS Nineteen HiDidred and Twenty-Two Sophie de Aberle Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Anita Marguerite Berendsen Blanche Margaret Kengla Blanch Emlixe Ross Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Margaret Allen Bailie Margaret Loper Frances Pleasants Helen Mason Whitney Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Joanna Maria Anderson Helen Katherine Broughall Dorothy Cornelia Dunlavy Carol Klink Kathryn Cochran McCahan Mabel Ferris McKibbin Frances Elizabeth Reynolds Elizabeth Hervey Roper Emeline Helmbold Williams Hermine Wocker Nineteen Hundred and Tzcenty-Si.v Mary Blanch Steinbeck Blanch Hildegarde Tolman Marjorie Nelson Vail 283 ®®§i SUIH ACKLEY ' EUAH BACKKIOW OlIVW BOtilNCEC MAPIONBOIMAN HELEN B04m DOCOIHV CLAW MABION ' C 05S EOITH DOBBEL LILLIAN OOBBEL WTHCYN GTO55 BE4TPICE HILL MRS M HILL DOBOTHV kINKEAO MARGACLL LEE MABSABtl HACkEY ANNA M ' ANEAC BUTH M ' BBIDt ELOISE M«CLEAVE §§ 0 OOBOTHY MEYEB ALICE PEOC ALICE BOTH MUBIEL 5AX0N FBANCES SHELDON DOPOTHY SWAIN AUDPEY TBAUOH WANDA Wt5TERriELD ! ■■-:i; GAMMA PHI BETA Founded at Syracuse University, 1874 Mu Chapter Established January 9, 1905 . FACULTY MEMBER Mary A. Hill, A.M. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tiijcnty-Threc Dorothy Louise Clark Frances Elizabeth Sheldon Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Eljah Barrtcklow Olivia Boezin(;er Helen Rankin Brant Lillian M. Dobbel Ruth Adella Mc-Bride Kathryn Eloisk McCleave Margaret Gilbert Mackey Alice Caroline Roth Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Ruth Dickinson Ackley Edith Elizabeth Dobbel Dorothy F. Meyer Dorothy Muriel Swain Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Marion De Wolfe Bolman Marion Francel Cross Juanita Kathryn Gross Beatrice E. Hill Dorothy E. Kinkead Margaret Eleanor Lee Anna McAnear Alice Hawley Peck M uriel Dorothy Saxon Audrey Minnie Traugh Wanda Westerfield MAOAN OOVVEC ESTHER GOEENACBt LOBlCE HOTALING GRACE JUDO ELltABETH KENNEY ELEANOC KLAUBEC HELEN KNIOHT OOCOTHY OVECrELT LUtLLA OACKLlFF HEi-EN SCNAQOlN DOROTHY SiMONTON 0£l,LA TAVlOB HELEN TECMAN ALLENE THOCPE MARION ruRNEft DELTA DELTA DELTA Founded at Boston University, 1888 Omega Chapter Established January 16, 1909 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Elizabeth Jane Kenney Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Florence Melvin Della Taylor Dorothy Jean Simonton Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Laura Louise Butler Irene A. Campbell Margaret Irene Dressor Marian Ruth Gower Helen Margaret Knight Dorothy Louise Overfelt Luella Marie Rackliff Helen Katherine Schardin Marion Esther Turner Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Meribeth E. Cameron Grace Judd Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v Felicita Elisa Boeseke Katherine F. Capell Helen Margaret Erskine Esther Florence Greenacre Eleanor Barrett Klauber Allene Warden Thorpe ceacc e AD 0L6A 5E16EKT MARINE. bOLLARS Florence Stanley Evelyn van horn Oil II Eli ip= ALPHA OMICRON PI Founded at Barnard College, 1897 Lambda Chapter Established November S, 1910 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Marguerite Doris Bailey Helen Dorothy Hoefer Olga Luella Setbert Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Marjorie Belle Anderson D. Ellowene Delahoyde Mildred Dorris Beatrice Lee Alice Evelyn Lundberg Earlene Phelps Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Mary Virginia Dungan Anna Thornton Fitzhugh Helen Adeline Gladding Wana Myrle Keesling Grace Fletcher Read Evelyn A dene Van Horn Nineteen Hundred and Ttventy-Six I ' rances Alberta Jongkneel Maxine Elizabeth Sollars Florence Ellen Stanley MAOjOCte ALLEN EOyTmE BAiL(5 MADOAKET COSOOAVE FCAftCCS FObTEEf AC ' ElE HEWCOMlB ULLIAW PftPL ' EC ELirASETH POOLgK _ CHI OMEGA Founded at University of Arkansas, 1895 Nu Alplia Chapter Established March 6, 1915 FACULTY MEMBER Elisabeth Lee Buckingham. A.M. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Edythe Goodwin Baylis Alice Dodds Mary Adele Newcomer Lillian Parlier Elizabeth F. Pooler Frances Maude Summers Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Frances Foster Helen Baker Fuller Evelyn Hope Huntington Dorothy Muller Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Marjorie Sarah Allen Margaret Clara Dietrich Evelyn Buckingham Browxell Aileen Leighton Hicks Margaret Eleanor Co.sgrave Adelaide Frances Kelly Marie Elizabeth Largey ALiOe 0O0[ S mCLEN FULLCB AILEEN H CK EVELVN HONTINGTOS ADELAIDE WllV MAQW. LAKOEt FRAHCtS SUMfEBS ftOUie BEST tlLtEN COAM JOSEPHINE kXiPM H-ATHI?N M MiLLEC iNiFPED NItXOLS 0OBOTW4 POLLtKK GO«E ■:-U:iPK:. BUTM VREE)ENBU« ' I SIGMA KAPPA Founded at Colby College, 1874 Pi Chapter Established July 16, 1915 FACULTY MEMBER Jessie Smith, A.M. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Margaret Virginia Gibbons S. Kathryn Miller Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Rachel Julia Beach RouiE Alice Best Eileen Mae Cram Grace May Strobel Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Elizabeth Pierson Hall Blanche Davis Hicks Dorotha Rutter Pollock Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Lotus Odeal Hargreaves L. Josephine Kopf Barbara Lyon Catherine Lawshe McVey Winifred Barton Nichols Ruth Vredenburgh ROBLE CLUB ■■■PH ■H FIRST TERM r ' I BLI I B9 OFFICERS HKsij H HK l Dorothy Brexholts, ' 24 President DiiuHk wl VflM Eva M. Williams, ' 24 Vice-President B QpjiK Hb Doris C. Swavze, ' 26 Secretary Bffl w Sara H. Meskimoxs, ' 25 Treasurer ■L i 4Kk Pauline M. Hoffmaxx, ' 26 Librarian flH COMMITTEE OF NINE vl pPH --- Dorothy Brexholts, •24 m r 1 Barbara K. Fenwick, . ' 27 F 1 Mi . H Rcth M. Gartex, ' 23 V v H| M m Jexxie M. Petersex. ' 25 I V iPl l H Charlotte A. Reynolds, ' 27 H F H H Bertha L. Shedd, ' 25 B j H H S. Dorothy Shepard, ' 24 bAI H I I H Carolax M. Strouse, Doris C. Swayze, ' 26 ' 25 Dorothy Bren holts President First Term Hi98IH SECOND TERM p PiH OFFICERS X ' lOLET V. Knowles, ' 24 Dorothy I. Dahler, ' 25 J President ' ice-President E. Lucille Alison. ' 26 Florexce E. Frexch, ' 25 Dorothy E. Hack, ' 26 Secretary Treasurer Librarian COMMITTEE OF NINE mw Beatrice L. Brailsford, ' 25 . r m Hope Cox, ' 24 Pauline M. Hoffmann, ' 26 Ruth E. Jordan, ' 27 V Violet V. Knowles, ' 24 V Bernadine Moser, ' 24 m I i Barbara M. Perkixs, ' 27 m MLA Jexxie M. Petersex. ' 25 ■■■MiVJIiBHA 1 - Bertha L. Shedd, ' 25 Violet V. Knovvles President Second Term 289 i o LE. c:lue JANE ADAMS tTHEL AKCV LUCILLE ALISON aiZABETH ALLEN VIOLET BALCOMB MAOV B TEMAN MABV CEDV LILLIAN BIOWCLL ELIZABETH BOCTON OOBOTWV BOWEN BEATRICE BOAILSFORO DOBOTUV BUENUOLIS MADtLElNE BRENNAN F5TWEiJ 6K0WN AILEENE BuakS BARBARA BURliS LUCILE BUKLINGAMt vfilDi t K GECTQUOE BYLER MARION CAQPENTEC MAeGflCET CARVELL CAROL CMANOLfB MABV CMANEV BEBNICE CUA5E kATUREEN CLOCk, MARJOCIE COHEN CtlARHION COTTON LILLIAN COTTBELL HOPE COX JANETF LCftlG MURItL CQEiSEV ALBERTA CURTNER. POCOTuy fuCINLa MELEN CURTNEft DOROIWV PAHLtR MIlOCiD MnntHBAlIM UCLEN MVIDUm CAOoi ami HA2EL DILLON VIVA oetw ■HOP t«LVN [AION 290 I OBLE CLUE HUBIEL E0WACD5. ALICE ENOECUD WiNiFBEO CSTABOOOk. 6A0BAPA fUBANKS CATHjWINE EWELL NElliE FAIOCHILD MABIAN FACft 6AQBACA FENWICK BEATBICt fLESHEO OOCOTHY FOBCH LOIS FOCT FlOCENCE FftEDRICK FLOOENCC FRENCH HELEN FRIEBEL ELIZABETH HA BEBT MILDOEO HALL fAV HARBISON DOnC HACTCR MARV HACWOOO HAZEL HATCH ETHEL HAVDOCK MARV HUU CLAfilTA HUN5BER0EC CAOOL HVOe VtB6INtA hVQE BOSAtjE JACOBV 8UTH JAMESON EDITU JOHNSON 291 Hi r OBL E. CLUB m i r ' -i ; ff eUTH JOBDAN ELIZABETH JOYCE KELfN l AStBEPG CUTH kLAHN VIOLEl tfNOWLES BUTH iCOCCK ■TMELMA LANl aCOL LUSMEK FBONCES UWtENCt 0S lt4k POLLY LEABNA2C 8UTM LEtff - t.i HEltN LtWtS OHODt LEWIS MADV LOVe LUCILE LVON ELIZABETH M CALL MABlL M CANSE MABOABET MCQACkEN MADIOH MACE ETHEL MSGOUCH QWENPOLVN MACOOVEPN HELEN MACNAIO. MAOQACCT M OMIE LOlS M QUlSTION DOBA MALLOEV HACIE MAUCHEE ELLEN MEAD BLPNlCE MIlLEB MAC0A5ET MILLER CATHERINE MOWQOMECY CAQOLlNE MOOCE MACJORIE MOREHEAO GEflALCHNE MOCELOCli SERNADlNE MOSCC $99 WW K4IHLESN MUSTO nElEN NELSON MELEN NELSON dUTIl NEWLIN ELIZftBtlH NEWION M4B10N NICN0L6S MABOABET NOXON 292 I OBLEL OLUB BABBABA PfRKINS JENNIt PCTCRStN 6BACE Pf lERSOM CANDACE POOTEOUS SABBAOA PCOBASCO NATALIE BAYMOND ELII BETH BENTON CHABLOTTE BEVNOtDS 5E ADA B08ECT5 MABOABET SCHAUFELBEBOtB EVA SCHWAOTZ ETHEL 5HAULL BEBTHA SHEOO OOCOTHY SHCMQD FBANCES SHEWiEOl) NElUt 5HEPHEB0 MIOIAM SKIFF BUTH S EVE05 , ALICE SMITH HVBMIDA SMITH BUTH SMITH UNA STAFFOBD OOOOTKV 3TAOKS MAUOAOET STE6B1NS MABGOETTA STBOUB C40CL4U 5TC0U5E BUTH STUCKV OOtlS 5WAVZE LOIS SWOBOOA ETHELIHD THOMPSON UABiAN TOLL BOSE TBAUTZ MABJOBIE VAIL 293 I O L.E CL,UE FCANCE5 VAUOHAN DOBOTHY VERBAEG HELEN VOOtL ANNE WALDCON MARGAOa WABE DOBOTHV WEBSTEU LVDIA WEEOEN MACIE WEISS ALICE WILBEE LOUISE WILBEIi ELIZABETH WILLIAMS EVA WILLIAMS ALBECTA WILLIAMSON MABJOBIE WILSON NOBMA WOIOMT kATMAUINt ZENER 3 MADELINE ZILLEU, 294 Men ' s Living Groups FRATERNITY REPRESENTATIVES Back row: Wrigeit. Dwight, Langford, Colvin, Baker, Dills. Leeds, Fuller, Fletcher Second row: Cornell. Harrell, Mace. Trago, McDonald, Hinckley, Berry ' First row: (iENEREAUX, Wilson, Hays, Tognazzini. Ward. Taylor, Alabaster, Haley, Porterfield INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL President Secretary OFFICERS Eugene N. Trago Lewis Plimpton Alabaster !§] Alpha Delia Phi Perry Davisson Widaman, ' 24 Guy Hew ITT Dennis, ' 25 MEMBERS Delia Tau Delta Roland Erwin Tognazzini, ' 24 Howard Stephen Chase. ' 25 Alpha Kappa Lambda Delia Upsiloii Kenneth Charleton Hardwicke, ' 24 George Harold Baker, ' 24 Leslie Harber Peter. Jr., ' 25 Allen Andrew Jergins, ' 25 Alpha Sigma Phi Albert Clarence Clouch. ' 24 Cecil Martin Morris, ' 24 Kappa Alpha Fred Barclay Leeds. ' 24 Oscar A. Trippet, H, ' 25 Phi Sig)iia Kappa Barton Armin Hinckley, ' 24 Elmer William Johnson, ' 25 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Marcus DeWitt Leh, ' 24 Phil William Shumaker, ' 26 Sigtna Chi RcBERT Em mett McDonald. ' 23 John Robert White. HI, ' 25 Alpha Tau Omega Dw ight Warren Taylor. ' 23 Joh.n Dunbar Graves, ' 24 Beta Theta Pi Neil P. Granger. ' 24 Norman Dorset Dole, ' 25 Kappa Sigma Murray Arthur Ward, ' 23 Glen Charles Barnes, ' 25 Phi Delia Thela Charles Gross Fletcher, ' 24 George Duncan Roberts, ' 25 Sigma Nu Frederick Leroy Anderson. ' 23 Ramuxd Robert Murphy, ' 25 Thela Delia Chi Cecil Irving Haley. ' 24 Horace Burgess Allison, ' 25 Chi Psi Walter Grant Hays. ' 24 William W. McCandless, ' 25 Phi Gamma Delta Timothy Edward Colvin. ' 24 Leslie Harrison Dills, ' 24 Theta Chi Ian James Campbell. ' 24 William Edward White, ' 24 Delia Chi LoN LuVois Fuller, ' 23 Roland Wilson Reticker. ' 23 Phi Kappa Psi Ray.mond Paul Genereaux. ' 24 Robert Pearce Myers. ' 25 Thela Xi Robert Anderson Elgin, ' 23 Robert Barney Porterfield, 25 Delta Kappa Epsilon Howard Chandler Christie, ' 23 Tyler Francis Woodward. ' 24 Phi Kappa Sigma Oth.mar Berarde Berry. ' 23 Arthur Blake Thomas, ' 24 Zeta Psi Walter Blair Foster, ' 24 John Lyndon Mace. ' 24 295 Hack row: Foster, Clark, Findley, Post, James, Cravens, J. H. Smith. Creen, Simmons Second row: Mace, Reese, Johnston, T.Dickey, Solomon, A.Smith, Cuddeback, Howard First row: Sharp, W. Smith, R. Dickey, Oatman, Draper, Matthay, Lovelace, McHenry ZETA PSI Founded at New York University, 1847 Mu Chapter Established October 1, 1891 f;-!i Kinv. Ki) Cfx ' il Sewall, M.D. FACULTY MEMBERS MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen WlLLL- M HowARn Henry Stanley Stillman, M.D. r ■II Robert Irving Cravens Joseph EnwARn Clark Frank Miller Findley Walter Blair Foster Murray William Cuddeback William James Dickey Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Raymond G. Greene S. Bradford Simmons Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Edward Athelstane Howard William Robert James John Lyndon Mace Nineteen Hundred and Txventy-Fivc Charles Francis Johnston James Graham Sharp J. Howell Smith Mkrl Lancdon McHenry Alexis Everett Post William M. Reese Albert Edward Smith Fred Frank Solomon Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Robert Bernard Dickey Ralph Clayton Draper Manuel Burr Lovelace Ferdinand Lowell Matthay Homer Clifton Oatman, Jr. Wayne Mingus Smith Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven m John Stephenson Collins Edward Custis Crimmins Clifford Pearson Hoffman Stanlus Z. Natcher William Armstrong Percy Henry Flood Robert Leonard Kelsey Schwartz Percy Ewing Sibbett J. Hackett Sickler Theodore Woods Sproul Reuel Robbins Sutton liackrow: J. k !s. Clark, Wrenn, Driscoll, Shoup, Playter Second row: Edwards, Dunmire, O ' Hara, Fletcher, Franklin, Langforp. McIIose First row: Logan, Roberts, Oviatt. O ' Connor. oUiNG. Brown PHI DELTA THETA Founded at Miami University, 1848 California Beta Chapter, October 22, 1891 FACULTY MEMBERS George De Forest Barnett, M.D. William Frederick Durand, Ph.D. Leander Miller Hoskins, Ph.D. Harold Chapman Brovvx. Ph.D. Harold Heath, Ph.D. Vernon Lvman Kellogg, Ph.D. Edwin Ancell Cottrell, Ph.D. Harold Phillips Hill John Ezra McDowell, A.B, Halcott Cadwalader Moreno, Ph.D. Henry Waldgrave Stuart, Ph.D. Russell Boyden Tarvis MEMBERS Niiu ' lccit Hundred and Tu-enty-Oiic Heaton Luse Wrenn Nineteen Hundred and Ticenty-Tivo Paul Cuddeback Claflin Nineteen Hundred and Turnty-Tlirec Howard Marshall Clark Harry Jack Edwards Russell Raymond Langkord Ja.mes Ogden Reavis Robert Duncan Vial Samuel Pearson Dun mire Charles Gross Fletcher Raymond Oliver Flood Norton Sager Brown- Allan Earle Charles Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Four Lester Watts Lancford John Cresco McHose Francis Paul O ' Hara Joseph Jerome O ' Hara Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five John Austin Driscoll William Archibald Logan- Robert Frankli.v Plavieu Carl Sumner Shoup Simeon LessardZane Gilbert Tod Oviatt George Duncan Roberts Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.x John Curtis Franklin John Henry S hacht, Jr. Fred Herbert Keunzel James Wallace O ' Connor Henri Edwin Todd Evert Hale Young Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Howard Anawalt John Edward Kenney William Elroy Avery Henry McCormick Phillips Gardner Brooks Elmer Frank Riese Lawrence Salmons Fletcher Clarence Christopher West P ir r;: i!i r ;ick row : Swavnk, Knox, (iKNKKKAUX. Loosi:. Rhodks. Pattkkson, an Hook Second row: Castner, Soper, Steward, Pattison, Parks, j. Stephens, Meyers, Rau First row: Bumbaugh, H.Wittenberg, McCallister, Taylor, Robertson, R.Wittenberg, P.Stephens PHI KAPPA PSI Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 California Beta Chapter Established November 10, 1891 Herbert Lee Niebei., A.B. Warrex Dean Loose Harold L. Bvmbaigh Dick Wedgwood Graves Raymond Paul Gexereaux FACULTY MEMBERS Harris Joseph Ryan, M.E. Clarke Butler Whittier, LL.B. MEMBERS A iiictccn Hundred and Fifteen Harold Calhoun Soper Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy Joseph Neville Mangin Henry Herbert Yekixgton, M:I). Ill John Louis Rush Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tivo Richard Thurston Taylor Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Edwin Alexander Patterson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Thomas Rudolph Rau William Wager Swayne Charles Harold McCallister Robert Pearce Myers Chaki.es Helmer Parks Hal Fred Warner Nineteen Hundred and Tzi ' enty-Five Martin Pattison Alan Hazelton Robertson John Stewart Stephens Orlando Hunter Rhodes Howard E. Wittenberg Philip Har ey Stephens Harrv Steward, Jr. Stuart Guillot Van Hook ih f Francis Hugh Wood Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v Huntley Castner J ;hn Erick Mack Clarence Mackay Frazier Herbert Gordon MacMii.lan Wallace William Knox Ralph Nye Ralph Ken Wittenberg Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Frederick E. Exgstrum. Jr. Charles Edward Mack Richard Wyman Grigg Giekord LeRoy Troyer Hack row: C. IUptie. Smith, A. Baptie, Bragg, Murphy, Hale. IIelser, Anderson Second row : Dwight, Ely, Argue, Todd, Foye, Macintosh, Wakefield. Benson First row: Overfelt, Mendenhall, Kohler, Andrews, Briggs, Wilson, Wolfe, Qlinn SIGMA NU Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1869 Beta Chi Chapter Established November 17, 1891 CoxNELL Clifford. A.B. FACULTY MEMBERS Major William D. Geary Eliot JoxEs, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzvcnty-Tzvo Oscar C. Railsback Freiierick Leroy Anderson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Albf.rt Sheldon Baptie Allen Gemmil Benson Dudley Sargent DeGroot Richard Lawrence Argue Charles Christopher Baptie Arthur Dickinson Bragg Nineteen Hundred and Tzfenty-Four Herbert McGilvray Dwight NoRTHCUTT Ely Marshal Hale, Jr. Richard R. Macintosh .Archie Alexander Smith Claude Emerson Wakefield James Hood Wilson Frank Lee Aydei.ott Charles Edward Foye J. Henry Helser Ni)ieleen Hundred and T%i:entx-Five John A. Kohler Ramund Robert Murphy Charles Harold Overfelt Henry Joseph Quagelli Franklin E. Rising, Jr. William Galbraith Storie Maurice Edwin Thede Harry D. y Todd Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Si.r Chester Richard Andrews Lee Otey Mendenhall Charles VV illers Briggs Thomas Brennan Quinn Franklin DeKalb Wolfe, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Arthur H. Greisser Victor P. Greisser Staxdish Harold Harrison Lovic Pierce Herringtox Kenneth Giles Krohx James Avery Watson 299 m Back row: V. James, Grace, Colvin, Dills, Abrams, Wilson Second row: Broenkow, Murphy, Phillips, Lombard, Muir, S. James First row: Tucker, Long, Condit, Hunt, Chase, Clark, Kirwan PHI GAMMA DELTA Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848 Lambda Sigma Chapter Established November 30, 1891 iSl! A - -! J V- 1 t ' r- , ; i . JosEi ' H Walter Bingham, J.D. Delos Abrams, Jr. FACULTY MEMBERS Ernest Gale Martin, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Elmer Ellsworth Elliott Clarence Edward Kiggens Francis Eugene Wilson Victor J. West, Ph.B. Wright El wood James Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Timothy Edward Colvin Leslie Harrison Dills Stewart Daniel James John Andrew Murphy Harold Bandow Rorke Robert Davis Boynton Herman Walter Broenkow Edwin Morey Chase Thomas Stewart Clark Nineteen Hundred and Ttventy-Five Thomas Jos?;ph Grace George Porter Lombard Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Thomas Ayers Condit Robert Walter Hunt Nicholas Pierce Kirwan Tames Creighton Muir LaForest Ethelbert Phillips Merrill Edward Long Norman Millett Tucker Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Wilbur Forest Adams Harold Emery Blazier James Dowd Frank Faylis Dean Paul Grunland William Ruel Johnson, Jr. Warren Graham Lane Robert Abram Welsh, Jr. Back row : Urner, Campbell, R. Tremaine, McDonald, Caldwell Second row: Dryden, Murphy, Cleaveland, G. Tremaine, Long, Timmons, Krogness First row: Fall, White, Roodkouse, King, Adams, Rodegerdts, Buttram SIGMA CHI Founded at Miami University, Ohio, 1855 Alpha Omega Chapter Established December 19, 1891 Percy Eruix DAvinsox, Ph.D. FACULTY MEMBERS Frank Alfred Golder, Ph.D. Clacde S. Thorn hill Clarence A. Buttram Norman Cleaveland Daniel McPeak Campbell Albert Hartley Crawford George V. Caldwell Melville Arthur Krogness MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Eugene Ryan Booker Nineteen Hundred and Tzfenty-Tzvo Harrington ' ells Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Hubert Edward Long Robert Emmett McDonald Nineteen Hundred and Txventy-Four Horace Walter Dryden William Myers Lauman Harlan Steele Thompson Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five Russell Nichols Murphy Glendon Louis Tremaine Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Elmore Cox Adams Harold George King Laurence Picknell Canfield Carl Ernst Rodegerdts David A. Fall Edwin Greenlee Roodhouse Nineteen Hundred and Ttcenty-Seven Robert Hill Bolman George Sydney Heller Earl Clyde Brady Thomas Lane McClellan Norton Coleman William M . vvell Ramsey Aurelio M. Espinosa. Jr. Edward Andrew Snook Frank Le Roy Hastings Eugene Kimball Walker Elmer Christian Rasmussen Harry Raymond Tremaine Colin Willis Timmons George Gavin Updegrafk Philip Summerfield Urner John Robert White, III ¥ ' B n Hack row: Urown, Taylor, Burks, Koepfli, Sutton, Phelps. Nelson Second row: Richer, Stratton, ' an Deusen, Graves. Armour, White, Atwater First row: Dorrestein, Edwards, Hadley, Hard, Motheral, Hess, Pegram ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 California Beta Psi Chapter Established December 21, 1891 William Raxkine Eckart, Jr., M.E. John Charles Lounsbury Fish, C.E. FACULTY MEMBERS Edgar Eugene Robinson, A.M. Gegkge Pope Shannon, A.B. Horatio Ward Stebbins, M.E. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Dana Buhks. Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Thomas Leonard Sutton- Graham H. Stewart, Ph.D. Stewart Woodford Young, B. S. Hi! n m. • i Kenneth William Brown Joseph Blake Koepfli Clement Finley Atwater EdwakI) Emile Dorrestein Herbert Hutton French Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tjiree John Richard Malaby F LMER John Nelson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Robert Horatio Edwards, Jr. John Dunbar Graves Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Five Geor(;e Charles Hadley John Edmund Phelps, Jr. Dwight Warren Taylor John Daniel Richer Theodore C. Van Deusen RoHERT Jenkins White Nineteen Hundred and Twentv-Si.v Merrill Armour Jean Willis Hard, Jr. Kenneth William Hess John Grahame Motheral Reginald Byrne Pegram Charles Cui.len ' Stratton Nineteen Hundred and Tzventv-Se ' iTii Feli. Howes Farwell Nelden An dole Hagbom Beryl Monroe Keene I-JKJAR Lionel Mariette Harold Gad Morga.n Bruce Cormack Toffelmier John Louis Wiggin Walter Jordan Wood m IJafk row: Strong, Leh, McHermont, Daves, L. A. Gibbons, Gifford, Kent, Beeman, Shumaker Second row: Wilson, Harrell, Polland, Stevenson, Kenney, M. R. Gibbons, Sterling, Kurtz First row: Gorrell, Mosher, Mathews, Quicley, Hamlin, Teague, Humphrey, Bledsoe SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 California Alpha Chapter Established March 5, 1892 FACULTY MEMBER Alfred Baker Spalding, M.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Seventeeti Arthur Harold Kent Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Homer Hamilton Mathews Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Harris Howard Hamlin Nineteen Hundred and Twenty Charles Dickenson Giffoud Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Tzcn Josiah HdRTON Beeman, Jr. Albert Mosher Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-l ' hree Theoiiork Kesi.eh Sterling Leslie Ewixf: Gorrell, Jr. Arte.mas Jacob Strong Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Four Andrew Jack Hoefer Marcus DeWitt Leh Harold Elworthy Todd Leighton McLellon Bledsoe Lake Todd Brow.ne Cyril Thomas Gammon Lewis Alberto Gibbons Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five MouTON R.wMOND Gibbons, Jr. LoRiMER Benton Harrell William Scott Polland He.nry B. Price, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Delmer Lawrence Daves Edward Fulton Kurtz Harold Eugene Humphrey Gilbf;rt Roy McDermont William John Kenney Phil Will iam Shumaker Eugene Maxwell Stevenson Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' entySeven .■lbert Drown Boardman Robert Alexander McInnes John Biddle Dorcy Thomas Flournoy McIn.nes Edmund C. Lister Reginald Shepherd Rood Harry Wyle Stevenson John Scott Quigley Milton McKevett League Martel D. Wilson Lt - 303 liackrow: Bf.nn ' inger, de Back, Carter, Draper, Benedict, Simons, Colgan, Innes Second row: Swing, Tussing, Kerb, Hoxie, Alexander, Meyer, Parsons, Grondqna, Johnson First row: Douglas, Collett, Marlow, Chase, Tognazzini, Morrison, McGettigan, Mixon, James m :r. W -i I ' Mi! !r-- Hans Barkax, M.D. DELTA TAU DELTA Founded at Bethany College, 1859 Beta Rho Chapter Established August 13, 1893 FACULTY MEMBERS Ernest Whitney Martin, Ph.D. Frederick George Tickei.l, B.S. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tn ' enty-Tii:o Herbert Rile Simons Ford Maklow Tussing Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Howard Courtney Benedict, Jr. Chesley M. Douglas Charles Arata Grondona Wells William Innes !iy| t •: ■,r ,1 Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Four Norman John de Back Charles Vance Carter Charles Elmer Collett Charles Bennincer, Jr. Eugene Cyril Colgan David John James Hugh Clarke Mixon Roland Erwin Tognazzini Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Tom Charles Alexander Fred Douglas Draper Arthur Ashley Marlow Howard Stephen Chase Robert Osborn Hoxie Philip Naramore Meyer William Henry Parsons Horace Everett Swing Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Erwin Gorham Morrison Walter Keogh Olds Duncan Oneal Samuel Raymond Johnson James William Kerr Carroll Charles McGettigan Nineteen Hundred and Ticenty-Seven Haughton C. Bickerton Hannon Barker Farr Hugh Harrison Brown James Leonard Hanley Hugh Stuart Center Burnell Edmund Richmond Robert Henry Cummings Howard Alex Sheets Henry Martin Eicher Emerson Lane Spencer Gerald Glenn Stewart ISackrow: Sproull, Alexander, Andrews, Bullis, Alabaster. Fullertox Second row: Mertz, Reed, Granger, Gunther, Pallette, Gregory First row: Waterhouse, Cole, Harville, Lippincott, Faville, Mannoccir BETA THETA PI Founded at Miami University, 1839 Lambda Sigma Chapter Established July 26, 1894 FACULTY MEMBERS Raymond Macdoxald Aldex, Ph.D. E ' ' ot G. Blackwelder, Ph.D. William Herbert Carruth, Ph.D. J. . iEs Perrin Smith, Ph.D. Albert Conser Whitaker, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzventx-Thrcc Walter Stevens Ale.xander Richard William Faville Lewis Plimptox Alabaster William Adlai Bullis Theodore Carter Achilles Cornelius Cole Edwin Llewellyn Forrest ViETH Theodore Mertz Myron Nelson Reed Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Fonr Dick Phelps Fullerton, Jr. Neil Pearson Granger Chester Oliver Gunther Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Bertrand Albert Andrews Norman Dorset Dole Nineteen Hundred and Tn ' cnty-Six John Munford Gregory Richard Towner Harville Gardner Pexxixgtox Lippincott Henry Franklin Sproull Sidney Sutton Vax Keuren Fernando David Maxxoccir. H Cuthbert Jack Tibbe Edward Choate Pallette Douglas Wvman Meservey Edsox Peter Waterhouse IB I ' ' I Hi h B. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Lewis Willitt Axdrews. Jr. Lawrexce Twyman Babcock Clelaxd Folinsbee Baxter Ackermax Briggs George Harley Bushnell Warren Sumxer Pallette Wardle Ellis Poulson Charles Cochran Simons Arthur C. Stewart Kenneth C. Strong Robert Eldred Williams Hack row; Hall, Walker, Carnahan, McCandless, Boone, Cavanaugh Second row: Martin, Card, Reeves, Pope, G. Hays, Donohoe, C. King First row: Campbell, D.King, Cooke, W.Hays, Cowing, Smith CHI PSI Founded at Union College, 1841 Alpha Gamma Delta Establiohed April 4, 1895 George Holt Card Thomas Harold Boone Edward Strong Campbell Kenneth Emerson Carnahan Wn,LiAM Hendrick Cooke John Dunwoody Bousfield Frank WicKHAM Ditzler MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Chester Arthur Wilcox Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Ttco Ralph H. Cowing Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Three Thomas Miller Donohoe Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Robert Daniel Cavanaugh Lewis Clark Coulter, Jr. William Louis Hall Nineteen Hundred and Ttvcnty-Five William W. McCandless, III Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Six Paul Noel Decker Fassoth Clarence Van Houden King Theodore Sammis Walker George P. Hays Walter Grant Hays Horace Edmund Martin Everett Russell Smith David Litchard King Charles St. George Pope David Lander Reeves Fletcher Loren Walker. Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Seven Carl Ankele John MacIntosh Menzies William Nicholas Dekker Norman Elliot Pierce James Arnold Habegger Richard Frederick Sandwick Charles A. McLean, Jr. James Ale.nander Stewart Kenneth Roswell Walker Hack row : Chalmers, Leeds, Trippet, Ashbv, Nevers, IJaldry Third row: Kennedy, Shermund, Mowers. Phinney, Beeson, Lucas, W. L. Wright Second row: IJonar, Lake, Hammer, Loomis, Rrown, Mahan First row: Hooker, W ' hitmore, Hartwell KAPPA ALPHA Founded at Washington and Lee University. 1866 Alpha Pi Chapter Established October 27, 1895 Robert Baldry Harold Gerard Beeson MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tiuenly-Three Perry Arthur Bonar Everett Brown Hakrv Hollis Chalmers Alfred Earl Phinney Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Four George Arthur Davies Harry Fowler Kennedy Merrill Evans Lake Fred Barclay Leeds Francis Butlkr Loomis, Jr. Henry Arthur Ashby Otto Hammer Nineteen Hundred and Ttfenly-Fizv Ralph Conrad Shermund Oscar A. Trippet. H Max Montgomery W ' hitmore William Lawton Wright William Quinby Wright, Jr. Robert Clark Hartwell Philip Burton Hooker Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.v Alfred Francis Lucas Archie Gordon Mahan Delbert Austin Mowers Ernest Nevers El.mus Vincent Shadomy Frederick Haviside Swan Nineteen Hundred and Tzcenty-Seven Charles Branch Cuenou Holden Edgar McManigal John Gilbert Garthwaite Clifton W. Morrill Sheldon P. Hartwell Phillip Edwards Wright Gerald Edward Mackersie Frank B. Yoakum Llii Walter Greenwood Beach, A.M. William Dinsmore Briggs, Ph.D. Arthur Martix Cathcart. A.B. Arthur Bridgman Clark, M.A. Edward Davidson ' Congdon, M.D. David Starr Jord. n. LL.D. Marion Rice Kirkwood, J.D. Harry Leslie Langnecker, M.D. Guido Hugo Marx, LL.D. John Pearce Mitchell, Ph.D. (1:-H; - Marion Owen Grixstead Edward Robert Atwill Gecrge Harold Baker liackrow: Peerv, ' an Wyck, Stewart, Tkh(;ins, Kichardso.n, 1 a idson. Coveri-ey Second row : Mortsole, Shoenhair, MacRae, deKeymer, Hubbard, Hyland, Tackaburv First row: Coffin, Manchester, McCleave, Boles, Atwill, Irwin, Jordan, Richards DELTA UPSILON Founded at Williams College, 1834 Stanford Chapter Kstablished March 13, 1896 FACULTY MEMBERS William Alpha Cooper, Litt.D. George Bliss Culver, LL.B. Benjamin Oliver Foster. Ph D. Philip Kingsnorth Gilman, M.D. Henry David Gray, Ph.D. James Owen Griffin, LL.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen Edward Charles LaForge Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-One Arthur Irving Townsend Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Two William Pitkin Olmsted Nineteen Hundred and Tiecnty-Three Nelson Van Judah dwight conklin roberts Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Four Harvey Mills Coverley Eric Knight Jordan Luis Emmett Kemnitzer !U- ' ; Cecil VAN Asch van Wyck Richard Loomis MacRae George John Shoenhair. Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five A. Ronald Button John Borland Irwin, Jr. Paul John Murphy William Oothout Davidson Allen Andrew Jergins David Harold Peery Harley Corwin Hubbard Francis Byers Manchester Ernest Eisen de Reynier Lawrence Wayne Richards James Douglas Stewart Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Si.r Harold Everett Boles Kenneth J. Mortsolf Harry Tri.stram Coffin, Jr. William Hord Richardson Frank William Hyland, Jr. George Wesleigh Tackabury Thomas Cr(K)ke McCleave, Jr. Ross Alexander Urquhart Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Sei ' en William Ray Baker Merritt Dean Jergins Byron S. Harvey Franz Osthaus John Joseph C. Ryan n .S(iS Back row: Newland, Ward, Kelly, Hey, Symonds, C. VV. Carey Second row: Deffebach, Powell, G. E. Carey, Haviside, Shelly, Conover, Miller, Harward First row: McAllister, Parish, Thygeson, Belcher, Barnes, Middleton, Shipkey KAPPA SIGMA Founded at University of Virginia. 1867 Beta Zeta Chapter Established May 19. 1899 FACULTY MEMBERS Edward Maslin Hulme. A.M. Ralph Haswfxl Lutz. Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Fred Bresee. Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Ticenty-Two Charles .Arthur Deffebach James Brydex Kelly Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Three Joe Allex Craig Linn Markley Parish George Townsend Powell Mirray Arthur Ward George Edward Carey Hexry Gardiner Symoxds Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four S. Glexn Hartraxft Clifford Lester Hey Phillips Thygeson Glex Charles Barnes Sta.xlev Smith Belcher Clarexce William Carey Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five Arthur Brooks Conover Elbert Jay Harward Joel Dugcer Middleton Harold Anderson Miller James Lawrence Shelly Harry Hector Shipkey Nineteen Hundred and Ttventy-Six Russell Harry Haviside Richard Harding Moule Charles Haxley McAllister Alva Adams Newland Richard Reid Turner Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Seven h d Lloyd .Alphoxsus Byerly Thomas Bristol Coughran Bexjamix Cole Craft Leslie P. trick Herth Arthur Newton Mann Francis Joseph Moore Dana Sheldon Newkirk James Ownby, Jr. EsTRAL Joseph Raffetto Charles Craven Scott Ted Edwi.v Shipkey Harry Fox Southworth Sidney Manon Williams Hack row: Wheat, McDonald, Sampson, IIknry, Christi?:, F. Fi ' ller Second row: D. Fuller, Hinckley, ' illiamson, Fishbuhn, Woodward, Steffen, J. Lawson First row: R. Lawson, Welch, Shlaudeman, Graves, Nolan, Ooden, Chandler DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Founded at Yale University. 1844 Sigma Rlio Chapter Established February 8, 1902 Albion Wai.tkr Hewlett, M.D. faculty members Frank Mace McFarland, Ph.D. George Clinton Price. Ph.D. members Ninctecti Hundred and Tzventy Russell Graham Hackett Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-One James A. Flanagan Howard Chandler Christie Nineteen Hundred and Tzi ' enly- ' riirec Sidney Nelson Greenleaf Richard Hunt Sampson Roy Franklin Williamson John Eugene Fishburn, Jr. Frank Wastie Fuller, Jr. Dana Lloyd Fuller Warner White Henry Nineteen Hundred and Tzi ' enty-Four Richard Hoaglan Hinckley Theodore John Steffen Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Fivc Dick Lawson James Wilmer Lawson JuiLLiARD McDonald Gilbert Collins Wheat Tyler Francis Woodward Theodore Roosevelt Off Walter Augustus Starr. Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Si.r Harrison Gray Otis Chandler David Dunbar Graves Lloyd Benedict Nolan Lionel Edward Ogden Frank Henry Shlaudeman George H. Stevenson- Whiting Welch Lloyd Coleman Young Nineteen Hundred and Tiventv-Seven Robert Langixjn Ackley Cyril Chappellet Karl Philip Doerr Robert Cahoone Duncan Alan Archer McCray Theodore Kinne Shoenhair Marcus Loomis Smythe Hack row: Haley, Dawes. McCready, Trago Second row: Allison, Clabk, Hammond, McKee, Gambell First row: Howarth, Downer, Metzgar, Finneran, Bohman, Reynolds THETA DEI-TA CHI Founded at Union College, 1847 Eta Deiiteron Chapter Established April 25, 1903 EACULTY MEMBERS Clifford Gilmore Allen, Ph.D. Charles D. vin Marx, C.E. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Eighteen Donald McKee Nineteen Hundred and Tiventv-TIiree Kingsley K. Howarth Eugene N. Trago Rlpert Truman Dawes Nineteen Hundred and Tzcenty-Four Cecil Irving Haley Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five John Donald McCready Horace Burgess . llison Wayne Gerald Clark Charles Erancis Gambell Wileert John Hammond James Hustead Metzgar Winston Churchill Black Ernest Bohman Nineteen Hundred and Tuvnty-Si.r Edward M. Downer, Jr. Leo Francis Finneran Jack Hiram Graves Charles Lee Reynolds, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Tivenly-Seven John Payson Adams Arthur Wellington Bowman Frank Andrew Compton, Jr. Eli Ellis Dorsey Charles Gorham Eckart Sidney William Lewis James Nesbit Reese Charles J. Wilson, Jr. 1 1 f il Back row: Cypher, Quintero, Smith, Fuller, Anderson, Sandys, Hardy. Witfield Second row: White, Retiker, Coplen, Mack, Lytel, Rogers, Rutter First row: Chantry, Frazier, Anschutz, Meyers, Hood, Hay, Suffern, Marks DELTA CHI Founded at Cornell University, 1890 Stanford Chapter Established May 19, 1905 FACULTY MEMBERS Joseph Walter Bingham, J.D. Arthur Martin Cathcart, A.B. Marion Rice Kirkwood, J.D. Ralph Haswell Lutz, Ph.D. William Brownlee Owens, LL.B. m John Edwin Carr members Nineteen Hundred and Twenty Baldwin Peter Quintero Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Lowell Morrison Miller Hugh Leo Paul Stewart Pil L. Harold Anderson Frederick Marshall Hughes Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three James Ballou Coplen Lox LuVois Fuller Roland Wilson Reticker - 1 Lloyd Jeffreys Allen Harford Holmes Hays Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Harvey Maxwell Lytel Henry Clayton Mack Oscar Wayne Mulford Cloud Damon Rutter W. Lee Sandberg Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five George Albert Marks Alfred Emery Rogers Edward English Sandys Norwood Browning Smith, Jr. Harold LeRoy White Nineteen Hundred and Tivcnty-Six Ralph Irving Anschutz Gerald Myers Hay Kenneth Neal Chantry Thomas Howard Hood S. Clark Cypher Philip Thomas Meyers George Martin Frazier William Henry Suffern Jack Wagner Hardy Glenn Everett Whitfield Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Jack Garner Allen Edward Behi.e Rowles Donald E. Fritts Norman Arthur Springer Ri chard Cloyd Parker Jesse Herbert Swift Eric Lyman Waite 312 Back row: P. F. Scofield. Wight, Lawrence, Barnett, Eller, Loder, Drew, Whitehead, Ashley Second row: Follansbee, Moretti. Porterfield, Merrill. Postlewaite, Spring, E. C. Scofield, an orhis, Maillot First row: Crook, Hotchkiss. Mulchay, Saier, Campbell, Kindy. Walker. Wingard THETA XI Founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1864 Tau Chapter Established February 21. 1914 FACULTY MEMBERS Welton Joseph Crook, Jr., Encr. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Tzvo Warp B. Kindy, B.E.E, Elmer Ellsworth Maillot Ala r C. Richardson Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Three Robert Anderson- Elgin Albert E. Forster Charles Scott Franklin Edward Stark Loder Harold Frederic Lynn Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Louis Ramon Moretti George Hall Walker Eric Gordon Barnett EltOxV Poole Bozarth Ernest Nathaniel Merrill William R. Postlewaite Milton Herman Saier Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Philip Fore.st Scofield Joseph Edward Wight Clyde Leroy Campbell Harvey ' Linford Drew George S. Follansbee, Jr. Theodcre Carroll Hotchkiss George Thomas Kearns Grove Lawrence Emil Moklofsky Roland Bernard Mulchay Robert R. Porterfield Carl William Spring Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Lloyd Hamlin Ashley Loltse Graves Van Vorhis Charles Howe Eller John Carlton Walker Eugene Cottle Scofield Seward Samuel Whitehead Francis Eugene Wingard Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Sevcn 1 igIr Hlr««i| William E. A. Be.st Marcus Ph Arthur Barry Casad L iLip Freeman ,.M ini ,Jiii L 313 Hack row: McIntosh. Smith, Thomas, Moore, Neill, Straube Third row: Wasson. Cromwell, F. Coen, Wright. Timby, Gilchriste. Uuryee Second row: Berrv, Coulthurst, Kraemer, Crandall, McCauley, R. Coen First row; Frye, Beaver, Devlin, McCIann PHI KAPPA SIGMA Founded at University of Pennsylvania, 1850 Alpha Tau Chapter Established November 19, 1915 FACULTY MEMBERS Everett Parker Lesley, M.M.E. Othmar Bekariik Berry Lawrexce Joseph Coulthirst MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Threc Richard Robbins Crandali. Lewis Hall Cromwell Lawrence M. Duryee Frank Cooper Gilchriste F. Russell McIntosh Frank HfGENiN Coen Kenneth Hartley Crandall Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-I- ' our Eric Eugene Kraemer Charles Arthur Moore Edgar Tevis Smith Arthur Blake Thomas Richard Davis Coen Dallas Ramsey McCauley Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-I-ive Warren Leslie Meeker William C. Neill, Jr. Herman William Straube Nineteen Hundred and Twcntv-Six Peter Peirce Beaver Hartley William Devlin Eugene L. White Robert Holland Eckhofk Frank Augustus Frye. Jr. Henry Edward Timby William Beatty Wright Basil Louis McGann George F. Wasson, Jr. Seldex Stewart Wright Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Seven Kenneth Campbell Graham William Hinckle Lkland Jordan McColloch James Edward McCormack John R. Ross Bruce Miller Stephens 314 Back row : Huneke, Charles, Osborne, Phelps Third row: LooMis, Gill, Dennis, Patton, Neer, VViuaman Second row: IIolbbook. Thompson, Wilson, Campbell, Marble, Lloyd First row: Wingate, McMullen, Williams, Houser, Johnston, Benedict, Fairchild, Thomson ALPHA DELTA PHI Founded at Hamilton College, 1832 Stanford Chapter Established April 28, 1916 FACULTY MEMBERS Gordon Arthir Davis, A. B. Lfonaro Whekler Ely, M.D. Henry Rushton Fairclolgh. Ph.D. William L. Holman, M.D.C.M. Payson Jackson Treat, Ph.D. Hans V. Briesen John D. Fredericks. Jr. Robert Taylor Patton John Donald Campbell Benjamin Cliffe Charles MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Tv. ' o Phil F. Neer Harry Raymond Phelps Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Roland Jerome Gill George W. Thompson Clarence Gladden Osborn Glenn Eugene Pollard Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Bernard D. Holbrook Albert Hussey Huneke Nineteen Hundred and Tn ' ent -Fivc Cedric Winship Tarr George Howard Wilson Earl Winston Cairns John Maclaren Marble Guy Hewitt Dennis Giles Stark Hall Perry Davisson Widaman Nineteen Hundred and Twent -Six Charles Keep Benedict Paul Lee Fairchild John Houser William Rowland Johnston Edward Warren Lloyd Richard K. McMullen Robert Holmes Officer Frederick David Thomson Gordon Harry Williams Harold Birkmyre Wingate Nineteen Hundred and Tiventv-Seven Gail Johnson Burck Harold Eugene Cox, Jr. Charles Milroy Dennis David LeCount W. Evans Cranston W. Holman Wallace Bierce Jayred Frank Allen Keith, Jr. James Alan McClurg Thomas Sidney Meeks Victor Frank Phillips George Sterett Wheaton 315 ir Rack row: Young, Langley, Ferguson, Campbell, Deffebach Second row: Lamsqn, Bayley, Freeman, McCook, Stewart, Pastorius First row: Clough, Riter, Kowell, Morris, Gillen ALPHA SIGMA PHI Founded at Yale University, 1845 Tau Chapter Established December 22, 1917 FACULTY MEMBERS John Bennet Canning, Ph.B. William Eli Maddock, A.B. !! Mi F- I ' m Arnold Blakeman Bayley MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three James Simon Gillen Montgomery Ellsworth Winn DwiGHT Dunham Young Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Four Albert Clarence Clough Cecil Martin Morris Henry Clayton Reinhart Randolh Bradley Riter Milo Edwin Rowell Robert Stoner Chamberlain Kenneth Loveland Ferguson Arnold Rum well Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Fleming Fontaine Freeman, IV David Albert Lamson Hugh Ryan Hollembeak Oscar E. Payne Holmes Richtpir Stewart Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Lawrence Hobbs Acres George Cook Baker John Allan Bradley Walter McNutt Campbell John Deffebach, Jr. Irvin Argues Frasse ROLLAND AmENT LaNGLEY Rupert Francis McCook Horace Evans Pastorius, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Tivenly-Se ' ' cn Thomas Harold Acres Bill Barbee Robert McKibben Eraser Harold Kidwell Hotchkiss t m Back row: C.Anderson, Rixford, Tolman, C.Wright, Hocle. W.Wright Second row: Hoffmann, Campbell, Riley, Franklin, True First row: Mulryan, I. Anderson, Worden, Dice, Stevens, Cosnqt.lv THETA CHI Founded at Norwich University, 1856 Alpha Epsilon Chapter Established May 23, 1920 James Bennett Liggett FACULTY MEMBERS Harold Shepherd, J.D. Cyrus Fisher Tolman, Jr. B.S. Murkay Shipley Wildman, Ph.D. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Lloyd Jackson Franklin 1 r- : 1 Robert Carlile Fleming Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Milton Monroe Hocle Henry Mulryan Fred Claire Blosser Ian James Campbell Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enly-Four George James Smith Percy Howard Stevens Andrew Curtis Wright William Edward Wright Carl William Anderson IvA.v Bert Anderson Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five Thomas Edward Connolly Floyd Edward Hoffm. ' nn James Ross Riley, Jr. Frank Irwin Schultzberg Frank Branson Tolman Nineteen Hundred and Twcnt -Si.v John Martin Adams Robert Mack Carr Frank Child Dice Bert Marion Green Walter Clarence Harrison Emmet Lane Rixkord Cecil Leslie True John Bairsto Worden Nineteen Hundred and Twentv-Seirn Fred Raymond Bourquin Stanley Le Baron Burchell Wesley DeLa Evans James Hunt Stedman Lewis Adams Thomas, III Alfred Virac ■-■■' ■t m vm m m ' IJackrow: McDougall, Howe, Milltken, James Second row: Lockton, McIntyre, Cornell, Ashley, IJecker First row: Miller, Hardwicke, IJarnett, Clark, Lewis, Peter ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA Founded at University of California, 1914 Beta Chapter Established October 23, 1920 FACULTY MEMBERS Lee Emerson Bassett, A.B. members Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Aubrey Gatliff Rawlins llili i ' f- Nincteen Hundred and Ttventy-Three Elton Fred Cornell Hammond Ashley Arthur W. C. Becker Ralph Denny Howe Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Four Kenneth Charleton Hardwicke NoRRis Edward James Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Fiz ' e Donald HbwARD Miller Sheldon Spencer Milliken Eugene Andrew Lockton Glenn H. McIntype Leslie Harber Peter, Jr. i- : t i SSJ wf e T?fi SaL- B 1 Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Ellsworth Lansing Barnett Truman Howe Clark Edward L. Brandon Percy Williams Lewis Kenneth Hare Burrell Kenneth Raymond McDolk;all Fred Allen Miller Nineteen Hundred and Tzvenly-Seven Ai.viN Joseph Cox, Jr. Albert Moores Dunfee Frederi ck Kellogg 318 Hack row: Carver. Eva, Shattuck, Tutman, IIalverson, Booth, Compton, McLellan Second row: Miller, Hinckley, Kimball. Enright. Rogers, Johnson. Samson First row: Stoner, Smith, Lyne, Tod. Morrison, ' an Deusen, Hawkins, Rowles PHI SIGMA KAPPA Founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1873 Nu Dcuteron Chapter Established May 2, 1923 William H. McCarthy honorary members Charles A. Colvin Preston E. Curry Louis B. Vogt Harvard Y. McNaught, M.D.C.M. faculty members Percy Alvin Martin, Ph.D. John Otterbein Snyder, A.M. members Nineteen Hundred and Tivenly James Robert Enright Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enly-Three Baldo Joseph Tutman ■, Nineteen Hundred and Txventy-Four RoBisoN Eyre Booth Russell Leslie Compton Barton Armin Hinckley Lloyd Charles Carver Stanley Lloyd Hawkins Stanley M. Kimball Fillmore Rowles H. Perrv Smith Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Fiiw James Meredith Eva Richard David Husband Roderick Irving McLellan Cutler Worthington Halverson Elmer William Johnson Roscoe Riehm Miller Lee Hershey Rogers Kenneth Dudley Sanson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Walter C. Lyne. Jr. Clair Curtis Smith Abram Mitchell Morrison Robert Meiley Stoner Spenser Sidney Shattuck Roy Stewart Tod Dudley H. Van Deusen Nineteen Hundred and Ttt ' enty-Sei ' en . lbert Anderson Brouse Donald Addison Hedges Raymond Robert Bruce Andrew Aldrich Roberts 319 I it---! ! FIRST TERM Fred V. Price Edward W. Anderson Francis J. Moore Wardle E. Poui.son Fred V. Price President First Term ENCINA CLUB OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer President of the House Coniinittee SECOA ' D TERM Wilbur F. Adams James W. McDougai.i, George H. Bushnell James L. Han ley m Si ' I iG H m 320 ENCINA CLUB DANCE COMMITTEE FIRST TERM Cyril H. Francis Stanlus Z. Natch er Franz Osthaus Victor F. Phillips Merritt D. Jergins, Chainitan SECOND TERM James L. Adams Byron S. Harvey Fred V. Price Theodore K. Shoenhair Ross A. Urouhart Merritt D. Jergins, Chairman Wilbur F. Adams President Second Term 321 SEQUOIA CLUB FIRST TERM OFFICERS H. Sidney Laughlin, ' 24 Robert J. Tennant, ' 24 Robert A. Riddele, ' 26 Herbert Hoover, Jr., ' 25 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer H. Sidney Laughlin President First Term HOUSE COMMITTEE Junior J. Collins, ' 24 Robert II. Rinn, ' 25 D. Lloyd Davies, ' 25 Edward W. Strong, ' 24 Stephen F. O ' Donnell, ' 26 H. Sidney Laughlin, ' 24, Chairman t SOCIAL COMMITTEE Harold A. Gertmenian, ' 25 Harold S. Spaulding, ' 22 ' CiLXRLES H. Smith, ' 23 Frederic N. Tyroler, ' 26 D. Lloyd ]Davies, ' 25, Cliainnan ATHLETIC COMMITTEE Arthur W. Chedister, ' 24 William H. Northway, Jr., ' 26 Lloyd E. Cooper, ' 24, Chairman 322 SEQUOIA CLUB SECOND TERM OFFICERS Francis M. Kauffman, ' 24 Byron R. Reinemund, ' 24 Stephen F. O ' Donnell, ' 26 Russell L. Wai-ter, ' 24 Presidem Vice-President Secretary Treasurer HOUSE COMMITTEE • Howard M. Kirk, ' 24 Joseph E. Loveless, ' 24 Vincent L. Martin, ' 25 John D. Toland, ' 25 Frederic N. Tyroler, ' 26 Francis M. Kauffman, ' 24, Chairman SOCIAL COMMITTEE C. Glenn Crawford, ' 24 Frederic N. Tyroler, ' 26 Elza L. Kiler, ' 24 Thomas H. West, ' 25 William H. Irwin, ' 24, Chairman ATHLETIC COMMITTEE Gage Lund, ' 24 Deming W. Morrison, ' 25 Edward W. Strong, ' 24, Chairman Francis M. Kauffman President Second Term 323 GuRDON n. Steele President Samuel H. Mendexhall Viee-President BRANNER CLUB OFFICERS GuRDON D. Steele, ' 25 Samuel H. Mendenhall, ' 24 Francis L. Sims, Jr., ' 25 Sigurd E. Bye, ' 25 George C. Pearce, ' 24 Henry B. Price, Jr., ' 25 Sheldon P. Fay, ' 26 President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Senior Representative Junior Representative Sophomore Representative : ' J ' :■-n m I ' i ■■324 !i - BRANNER CLUB ml DANCE COMMITTEE James K. Anderson, ' 24 Leslie O. Gordon, ' 26 Thomas G. Greene, Jr., ' 24 David A. Borwick, ' 24 R. Cl.IFTON COPPOCK, ' 24 Paul E. Xorris, ' 24 RoiiEKT H. Nelson, ' 24, Chairman FINANCE COMMITTEE SiiEi,DON P. Fay, ' 26 George C. Pearce, ' 24 • Henry B. Price, Jr., ' 25 Francis L. Sims, Jr., ' 25, Chainnan 325 fbi it TOYON CLUB FIRST TERM • OFFICERS William R. Gage, ' 24 Robert C. Titus, ' 24 Arthur C. Schoen, ' 25 Charles E. Beardsley, ' 25 President Vice-President Secretary Manager CAMPUS RELATIONS COMMITTEE Raitt S. Boren, ' 26 ' v- David M. Oliva, ' 25 Jacob C. Irwin, ' 25 IT ' Frederic S. Ludeke, ' 24 X R. Roscoe Robison, ' 24 Robert C. Titus, ' 24, Chairman William R. Gage President First Term DANCE COMMITTEE Orion F. Clark, ' 24 Ali ' Ki:i) T. Patton, ' 24 Norton MK ■l•;K, ' 24 Gkokce S. Harmon, 24. Chairman CLUB EQUIPMENT COMMITTEE Howard S. Bissell, ' 24 Adolph Neuman, ' 24 William H, Fain, ' 26 DeWitt C. Rowland, ' 24 Charles I . Wiini:, ' 24. Chairman SMOKER COMMITTEE F. Fancher Bell, ' 25 Joii n II. Wallace, Jr., ' 25 Fremont R. Scumieder, ' 24 Daniel D. Gage, Jr., ' 24, Chairman 326 — ■.■; ' T iri f • TOYON CLUB SECOND TERM OFFICERS Howard S. Bissei.l, ' 24 Hugo Leistner, ' 25 William L. Houro, ' 25 Charles E. Beardsley, ' 25 President Vice-President Secretary Manazer CAMPUS RELATIONS COMMITTEE F. Fancher Bell, ' 25 D. Bruce Seymour, ' 24 David C. Meiklejohn, ' 26 Edward P. Muller, ' 25 John A. Sutro, ' 26 Charles B. White, ' 24, Cliairiiian DANCE COMMITTEE Orion E. Clark, ' 24 (Jileord G. Rowland, ' 2.- Daniel D. Gage, Jr.. ' 24 Ward A. Hill, ' 26 JosEi ' H C. Waterman, ' 24 John H. Wallace, Jr., ' 25, Chairman CLCIi EQCIPMENT COMMITTICE Leonard G. DoiisoN, 26 Adolph Neu.man, ' 24 Louis A. R. Caspar, ' 26 Eugene H. Vallat, ' 26 James B. Mannon, ' 26 Donald M. Torrey, 24, Chainitan SMOKER COMMITTEE Wilson F. Douglass, ' 24 Vance B. Erickson, ' 24 William R. Gage, ' 24 David M. Oliva, ' 25 Fremont R. Schmieder, ' 24 George S. Harman, ' 24, Chairman Howard S. Bissell President Second Tern 327 j hB K ff Li ri .N. ' V 1 jm J Back row: C. Ross, Trace, Gardner, Oliva, Wankowski, Wallace, Marquis, Bogue, L. Bell Second row: Brown, Kuhnel, Tarleton, Becker, Irwin, Templeton, Mitchell, F. Bell, Foo First row: Kav, Allen, Caspar, Carlsmith, Nichols, Irving, Mancini, J, Ross BREAKERS Founded at Stanford University, 1911 Waldemar Fenn Dietrich, A.B. FACULTY MEMBERS Chauncey Tennent Keeper, A.B. Almox Edward Roth, J.D. Robert Lyman Templeton, A.B. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Kenneth Drake Gardner Percy Charles Heckendorf Alfred Richard Masters James Gordon Ross William Trace Beverly B. Bailard Gustaf L. Kuhnel Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Donald Eugene Liebendorfer Alfred B. Loewenstein Cecil Isaac Marquis Colby Dutot Tarleton Hugh H. Wallace John GREEiVouoH Becker F. Fancher Bell Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Five Jacob Carney Irwin Luther Shepard Bell Caryl Leonard Bundy Lynn Howard Crawford Charles Vendale Harlow David Melvin Oliva Arden Joseph Allen Leon Bernard Brown Carl Wendell Carlsmith Louis A. R. Caspar Nineteen Hundred and Ttventy-Six Donald Riek Irving Raymond Myer Kay John Adolph Mancini Theodore F. Miller Howard Lippert Mitchell Frank Culver Nichols Robert LeRoy Nicholson Chester Erwin Ross ictor Otto Wankowski Robert Edwards Bailard Nineteen Hundred and Tzvcnty-Sevcn George Richardson Bogue Knight Claywell Templeton 329 Back row: Ludeke, Leistner, Sing, H. A. Martin, Eardley. Patter on, R. Hoffman. Foster, Patton. Wright, Mannon Second row: Glenn, Rowland, Licking, Hayden, For ter, Daly, Thayer, Noland, H. W. Martin, Peery, K. Martin, Odemar, Tucker. White First row: Sutro, Anderson, Bullock, Belanger, Yost, Clifford, Boren, W ' allace, Levison, Sherrill EL TORO Founded at Stanford University, 1911 MEMBERS Nineteen Ihindred and Seventeen William Errol Licking Robert Aram Foster Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Paul Eugene Glenn Raymond Dean McBurney William Elliott Burdick Charles Francis Daly .)ack Macfarlane Ehrhorn Burton Leonard Lapp Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Walter Herman Levison Frederic Sebastian Ludeke Philip E. Newill Alfred Talbot Patton Robert Edward Wright Russell Thorpe Yost Donald Bird Richardson DeWitt Clark Rowland James Hall Snell Grvh.le H. Tucker, Jr. George Irwin Anderson Earl Armbrustkr James Rae Bullock Calvin H. Conron, Jr. Wendell Arthur Eardley Nineteen Hundred and Tu ' enty-Tii ' i Donald Francis Forster Lewis G. Hitchco ;:k Paul Edward Hoffmann RoLLAND William Hoffman Oliver L. Lawson Hugo Leistner Henry Adam Martin Harry Leslie Noland Robert Dari. Patterson John Huber Roberts William Lyman Thayer Joseph Belanger Raitt Stanford Boren Charles Randall Clifford Clifford Russfxl Hayden Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Six James Bramlf;t Mannon Howard Wilson Martin Kenneth George Martin Walter Henry Odemar Elmer J. Peery Gilbert Oren Sherrill John Alfred Sutro Bruce Weldon Wallace Nin-etcen Hundred and Tiecnty-Scvcn Paul Myron Baldwin 330 Back row: Moody, Paris, Smith, Sievers, Schmieder, Hosepiav, Thomson, Newman. HnBKd. Forsyth, Cunningham Second row: Steindorf, Pearce, Wallace. N. Meyer, Merrill, Sylva, Schoen, Mode, Hi.nls, llA.stLn.NK First row: Minard, Waterman, Harman, Muhs, Ackerman, Hill, W. Meyer EL CAMPO Founded at Stanford University, 1913 William Newman Jr. MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Horace Eldred Spurlock Charles White Merrill Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Two Stanley Archie Steindorf Karle Alling Thomas Andrew Richmond Boone McDowell Cunningham Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Vaughn M. Hosepian Claude Russell Minard William Lyon Thomson James Prentice Warner Irwin Walter Moody Lemuel Coats Smith, Jr. Leon Thomas David George Samuel Harman Charles Edward Luckhardt Morris John Mode Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four yoves montaire monroe George Call Pearce Fremont R. Schmieder George Keil Smith Charles Francis Sweigert John Orren Vaughn Joseph Carl Waterman Conrad Weil, Jr. Charles Edward Beardsley George Thomas Forsyth, Jr. Theodore Raymond Haseltine Don Carlos Hines William L. Hobro Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five William Fred Kaufman Norton Meyer Claude H. Paris Frank M. Penepacker Lewis V. Reese, Jr. Arthur Castle Schoen John Paul Sievers Edward Nuku Sylva John H. Wallace, Jr. Theodore Mitchell Weil Harry A. Williams Douglas K. Ackerman Ward Ames Hill Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Fred Norman Jones Fred H. Muhs William Wilfred Meyer James E. Taylor 331 Back row: Hopkins, Sands, Harris, Newlove, Anderson, Vallat Third row: English, Smith, Sewell, Eggleston, McKinnon, Torrey, Holstein Second row: Kirby, Robison, Snyder, Dombaugh, Thompson, Douglass First row : Norberg, Sherrill, Seymour, Bissell, Adams EL CUADRO Founded at Stanford University, 1920 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Two AlbkrtW. Sands Wii.i.iAM George Burkhard Nineteen Flundred and Tiventy-Thrce Thomas H. Eggleston ♦ Hugh Sanborn MacKinnon Howard Seymour Bissell Wilson Fisk Douglass Harlow De Wolfe English, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Four Handel Whittaker Kelly James Millard Kirby Russell Roscoe Robison David Bruce Seymour Cecil Jules Smith Donald Max Torrey iiiT Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five Bra dford Clarendon Adams Ralph Eugene Anderson Raymond William Norberg Frederick Orlo Sherrill Kenneth Joseph Thompson Homer Kent Dombaugh Leo Alvil Harris Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Theodore Amos Hopkins Marlin Edgar Newlove Herbert Allan Sewell Eugene Hopson Vallat Frank Troxell Beers, Jr. Thomas Francis Conroy, Jr. Robert McKibben Eraser Nineteen Hundred and Ttvenly-Scvcn Wai.demar Holstein James Stephen McCartney George Burns McCullough Ikvinc; I.kvekk Smith Stacy H. Smith, Jr. William Oilman Snyder u i i 332 Back row: White, Fain, Mab ii, Niemann, VV. CIage, Xeison, Bucklin. Hornlein Second row: Facc, Rusk, Badham, Harger, Mui.ler, Clark, Wright, Kvans First row: Erickson, Lewis, D. Gage. Ahams, Moore, Noble EL CAPITAN Founded at Stanford University, 1921 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Onc Claude Wilkins Moore Xinetecn Hundred and Twenty-Three Robert Ernest Lewis Arnold Harvey Nelson Byron Jack Badham Louis Lapham Bucklin Orion Fred Clark Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Vance Bryant Erickson Daniel Dudley Gage, Jr. William Richard Gage James Henry Rusk I. M. Scott Smith Albert Cosad White Donald K. Harger Hugo Garvin Hornlein Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Fiie Edward Pierre Muller Christian W. Niemann Burton Avery Xobi.e James Chalmers Wright r) Donald Galen Adams Charles Orrick Evans Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Charles Edward Fagg William Hart Fain Loveridge Warren Marsh Herbert Silvius 333 iiack row: Ewi ■...-- i; ... ,!.:., . k. ■: ■■,!...-:, McKinney, Thomp - ' . M ■l ■■.■■. ..■■;- ' . ■i ■. i M-vi- ntkh Second row; Gom es, Ksiileman, Uuckwalter, Bekk, Whitcomb, Morrison, Beer, Rowland, Dobson, Hall First row: Swift, Quinn, Perrine, Balmat, Haley, Moody, Hunkins, Walling. VVinterbotham, Cain LOS ARCOS Entre Nous Club founded at Stanford University, August 24, 1903 Reorganized as Los Arcos, 1922 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One John W. McKinney Joseph V. Gomes Nineteen Hwidred and Twenty-Two CoPELAND Green Archie McVey Frank B. Hays Gn,i 0RD G. Rowland Cecil H. Balmat Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Carroll L. Blacker Algot J. Peterson Brighton C. Cain Alvin V. Taylor, Jr. Henry H. Berk John C. Buckwalter Marion L. Crist Wallace C. Eshleman William V. Ewert Ga ' le C. Griswold Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Kenneth H. Hamilton Victor J. Minner Nineteen Hundred and Txventy-Five John Hall Harold J. Hjelm WiLKRED R. Hunkins Donald C. McKay Warren G. Moody Thayer W. Whitcomb Deming W. Morrison Kenneth D. Perrine Henry C. Rixford Howard N. Swift Curtis R. Walling Allen C. White Kenneth V. Beer Leonard G. Dobson Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Kenneth W. Haley John Quinn Thornton S. Scribner Kenneth W. Thompson William C. Van Deventer Carlton E. Byrne Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Seven Walter H. Jensen Myron R. Schall Edward L. Winterbotham 3J4 Back row: Connolly, McKenney, Working, Laub, Loe, Linneman Second row: Farley, Stoddard, Slincerland, Wells. Paine, Davison I ' irst row: (iooFREY, Wilson, Hurley, Price, Stockbridge, Warrington, Pollock EL TIGRE Founded at Stanford University, 1922 MEMBERS NiiH-li ' fii Ihindrcd and Tzt;eiity-Tzi. ' 0 Albert Edward BuTTF.RFiFxi) Gerard Wilson Joseph Pressly Price Nineteen Hundred and Twentv-Tlire Harvey Charles Stoddard Otto Carl Barby Ralph Earl Barby John Briggs Connolly Malcolm Davison Raymond Mervy Farley Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Egbert Warren Laub Lawrence Joseph Linneman Harris Davis Loe Philip Wash McKenney Adolph Nelman Glenn De Witt Newton Wayne Evans Pollock Jacob Slincerland LOTON DUTREUX WeLLS Orton Clifford Woodhead George Otto Koch Pavl Drury Working Peter Richard Hurley Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five Frank McKechnie WiLLARD D. Paine Donald Frank Stikeman Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Six Harry Allen Godfrey Morton Baldwin Helm Robert William Malloway Glenn Henry Stockbridge Peirce Edmund Warrington 333 m m Back row: How, Tsi, Ciieu, Huang, Tsri, Vu, li. Wong Third row: Sah, Bain, Tsao, T ' an, Hao, Chenu, K. Shex, Wang Second row; T ' aam, E. Shen, Fang, Yee. Cm, K. Yang, Teng, L. Yang First row: Chuck, Ping, Haiin, Chang, Chuan CHINESE CLUB Founded at Stanford University, 1910 M Mi . (■Yao-Tung Hao David Kiong Chang Kuo-LiANG Chi MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-One Song-Ping Tsao Shu Kai Wang Nineteen Hundred and Twcnry-riio Faw-Yap Chuck Young D. Hahn HuA-PiAS Huang LiANG-KuNG Yang Shulin Lincoln T ' an Nelson Y. Yee Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Pen-Tung Sah Eugene Shen Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Tung Ho Cheng Ching-Sze Huang Chiu-HungLee Er-Chang Ping TsoNG-HsuN Tsui Ko-Chuen Yang Kwan-Chun Shen Chun-KaoTeng Li Hwei Bain Henry Doo Foo Cheu Chih-HoChi Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Tseng Ku Chuan Roland Chung I ' ang John Hock How Wen Ping Hsieh Wu T ' aam Yu Fang Tsi Hung-Chau Wong Chin-Chuan Wu Back row: Iriki, Fukushima. Sera, Kodani, Kurihara Second row: Icihkawa, Fujinaga, Imokawa, Ebisuya, Murata, Hayasiii First row: Sano, Koba, Professor leriiiiASEii, President Wii-BUR, Vamasaki, Mizota JAPANESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION Founded at Stanford University, 1902 MEMBERS Nineteen Hundred and Tzvenly-Two Takashi Otsuki Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three YosHiKiYO Arimori Kazuo Ebisuya John Kiichi Imokawa Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Edwin K. Kitow Fred Michio Koba George Shuichi Mizota Joseph Yuzuru Sang KlYOSHI UONO Seizi Yamasaki Nineteen Hundred and Tzventy-Five Ernest Sota Fujinaga Francis Minoru Hayashi Yoshio Ichikawa Thomas Tomio Murata Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Hideo Kodani Morio Sera Hideo Toyoda Nineteen Hundred and Tiventy-Seven Thomas Noboru Fukushima Masuo Kurihara Walter Keisuke Iriki Masao Oyama Togo Shima ®3i HE W m , _ JM Kl 1 SS M pw B| Hi jj y H MFj f m 2pMk 1 vc gltquc l ale Noble California, that State of tlie Union second only to Intoxication in pop- ularity, fosters and nourishes within its borders a University of culture and re- finement, where one time reveled unham- pered Lo, the Poor Injun. Lo, simple but beautiful savage, yielded to the onslaughts of the predatory Spaniard, who, in turn, was conquered by the Church, gunpowder, and eventually enchiladas. Cabrillo was as.sassinated by Frostilla ; where once con- quistadores strode proudly, cuspidors now stand triumphant. And, awed by the changeless march of the dull centuries down the somber aisles of time, it remains for that University, meekly and in a spirit of humility, to bind those centuries com- pactly together ' neath the standard of the single lasting and permanent pagan deity — he who endureth, verily and verily, for all time — the Spirit of Razz. Jerry, turn the crank ! To i ' ' i IK in Wilbur, Ray L., Riverside, Cal., Physiology. Class Treasurer (2) ; Executive Committee Associated Students (4) ; Class President (4) ; Assistant in Physiology (3), (4). Our Severest Friend and Dearest Critic these pages are Respectably Dedicated 1 [ j; ; ti li m Hi 342 n tioii upon which ®utr xcvvi faculty Incrindualing and Recotidite Facts Responsible for the Glory of the Bloody Farm GEORGE BLISS CULVER y EAN George BHss Culver of Salvatierra street is sel- dom ranked with Hohnes or Burns, but that is merely because he doesn ' t deserve it. Moreover, it isn ' t his job — he leaves that to the Men ' s Council. Dean has a nose for Ixjoze, but concentrates his attack upon brass spitoons, bar- ber poles, and signs to the exclusion of the more profitable diamond trade. The western seaboard as far inland as Wyoming would do well to turn in a general alarm, so that the Dean may usefully employ the summer season in riotous devotion to his hobby. Service with a smile is the founda- uilt up his extensive activities. EDWARD MASLLX HCLME pROFESSOR Edward MasHn Hulme, he of the migra- tory character, can always be found in San Jose or Cupertino addressing a fashionable audience. Contrary to .slanderous report, the Professor ' s habit of waving the dukes while speaking is not the result of undergraduate visits to Menlo, in his day a Destination but now merely a Place on the road to a fashionable audience. He displays an agile command of wit, and has often been called the Kreis- ler of the Faculty. because no cough, sneeze, nor snicker ever interrupts his smooth, sinuous Bow of syllables. He .shares with the island of Yap the distinction of having an know how. We don ' t wish this yap business to be carried further, however. easy name to ])ronounce — after you LEWIS MADISON TERMAN P ROFESSOR Lewis Madison Terman is known through the surrounding schools, jails, and feeble minded insti- tutions of the locality for his intelligence-testing mania and his uniformly unfavorable results. Doubtless the Professor could find intelligence where there isn ' t any, but the nature of his apparatus brings about the ex-Termanation of what- f ' T , W  Y ° ' TV ' VM ' ' ' sparks of intellect may exist in the befuddled subject. J l J l i M And now the Professor has the privilege of assaying every high school hero who seeks admittance to the cloistered arches of the Farm. Courses in lunatic questionnaires had best be added by all secondary institutions of learning. BAILEY WILLIS r OURAGEOUS in action and indefatigible in purpose, Bailey Willis stands out today as the mightiest Nimrod of them all. As others hunt lion and minor disturbances of sorts, this intrejjid adventurer searches out earthquakes national in sco])e and reduces them to their lowest common denominator. Armed with an insignificant hammer and directing crowds of native beaters, our man prowls An- dalusian chains and California drug stores alike, and though he may go to South America for a Palo Alto earth- quake he seldom comes home without a neat bag of the quarry. Huzza ! Huzza ! H! H r ■' M k s ■-;: 1 u m. ' ■HP j mk ' -v v r w r M B y ■m IH k ■vi 343 EDITORIALS m Since Mr. Spectator has settled the matters of Roble food, automobile parking, higher tuition, the Ku Klux Klan, and world peace, it is only fair that we clear up the matter of the Honor System — you remember, it is an Institution in this University. The Honor System has efifected notable results at Stanford. It has brought joy into the lives of our Ymcas, has provided the Men ' s Council with a reason- to-be, and has made it possible for our long-suffering professors to grab oft ' a game of pinochle or a quiet cigar during examination periods. On the other hand, it has deprived the students of one of the few mental stimulants remaining to them by doing away with the game of foxing the profs, in exes. Nothing remains in quizzes now but to spew out that which your memory has swallowed during the cram- ming period. The Honor System appeals to your honor not to cheat in examinations, and provides severe penalties to be imposed if your honor weakens. Also, it is a part of the Honor System that you tell on anyone you see cheat- ing, thereby making every student into a detective and informer. And the anonymity of the chap who peaches is guaranteed by Men ' s Council. Honor System ! Of course, it doesn ' t work out that way, since the majority of our students are too honorable to use the Honor system as made and provided. . . . It looks like rain. Reserved for the next 9 9 YEAR LEASE California ' ' Wonder Team 99 YEAR LEASE V 344 DIE LUFT DER FREIHEIT WEHT M MMk — Courtesy Sail Francisco Police Dept. BOARD OF DIRECTORS Purity League of Stanford University (Motto: The Honor System is an Institution in this University) This Board, also known as the Men ' s Council, is perhaps one of the most deservedly popular institutions on the campus. The members are perhaps as fine a group of students as are to be found here. Their intelligence is perhaps only exceeded by their masculine beauty, and they are perhaps to be commended on their efficiency. You will perhaps believe this. The Men ' s Council was organized to help Mr. Volstead out of a hole. The boys also do the dirty work for Prexy when a conscientious objector to the honor system shows up. Nobody knows whether or not position on the Board carries privileges of immunity with it. Look at the pictures and judge for yourself. . . . Mike Ely is the lad who put Chappie on its present milk diet. Judge named him the most foolish college man in the U. S. last Spring. He was at once elected to Men ' s Council. He don ' t drink and he don ' t chew, and he don ' t go with girls that do. Carl Shoup is president of S. D. C, newspaper men ' s mutual admiration society. S. D. C. initiations are now as dry as Shoup ' s humor. He edited the 1924 Quad, and now has the use of a Lincoln touring car. (See below, C. B. White.) He don ' t drink and he don ' t chew. George Baker is the main squeeze in this outfit. If you see anybody cheating, just tell George and he ' ll fix it right up, and the guy you told on won ' t ever know who peached. George said so. Incidentally, he don ' t chew. Junior Collins. Sequoia Club; Delta Theta Phi; ' V. M. C. A. cabinet (3, 4); Class President (3); Men ' s Council (4). Oh, well. . . . This, now, Charley White is the guy who broke the check writing record as business manager of the 1924 Quad. He is the C. B. White of the financial report; you know — July 2, to C. B. White, $1,375.00; July 18, to C. B. White, $550.00; July 23, to C. B. White, $224.06, and so on. There are nineteen entries altogether. In our younger days, we used to know a song — its name was And That Ain ' t All . . . . Oh, yes, the 1924 Quad was very well managed. Carl Shoup, as we said, was editor. He ran Charley a close second, but never caught up. 345 --J tl! ' OUR LITERATURE DAILY PALO ALTO The circulation staff of the Daily Palo Alto is in love, like the rest of the paper. The sheet is written amid a perfect atmosphere of Cupid and cupidity, and is printed by a disgusted set of disillusioned and harassed cynics. What few copies manage to find their way to the outside world through unexpected efficiency on the i)art of one Mr. Lamb, circulation discourager, are eagerly welcomed and meritoriously criticized by the unofficial publishers — that is, all students, faculty members, and friends of the University not connected with the staff or the journalism department. The Daily constantly exhibits a reformatory tendency in its battle to change and otherwise improve dates of events, the spelling of names, political policies, grammar, and facts. The editors and reporters can tell a good news story anywhere. Their orders are to kill news on sight; it is a regular game at which the Daily staff, under the coaching of Those Higher Uj), has become (|uite adept. It has got so nowadays that a news yarn can hardly poke its head in the door before a hundred blue pencils have flashed upon it and its multilated carcass is fed to the ash can. Great inspiration may be gained from a study of the editorial columns of the Daily. After reading them consistently for two months, we have discovered that we should support our teams, and that spring is here. During the winter quarter, too, the Daily devoted itself largely to foster- ing an interest in debate. Far away over the blue- grey masses of the Santa Cruz range ring the echoes of Hail, Stanford, Hail, and at the foot of the purple moun- tains is gathered a group of determined men and women whose hopes rise high above the green forest-covered mountains behind the University they love so well try this for your lead Dudley. The Redshirts are sure enough r ' aring to go get that California bear which they are going to knock into a cocked hat and change the gold to yellow. The experts say that Stanford can ' t win but I ' m here to give you the dope straight from the shoulder and from one that knows. Man for Man the fighting Redshirts make the Bears look like the Monkeys they is and unless California has all the luck like she has been ge ' .ting we are going to knock them into a cocked hat like I said. Xow with the exception of a single position that I won ' t name the line is as good as last year and the fir.st backfield combination is a whiz. If I don ' t say a damn thing else I want to say that this backfield combination is a whiz. And so tomorrow when We ' re sailing up the bay we ' ll know darn well that we ' ll come sail- ing back with victory a concrete fact rather than an adorable probability if you want to change Uie darn to something worse you ' ll have to do it yourself Dudley. SPECTATOR NOW THAT Spectator supposed magazine is another argument against the destruction of our forests to make print paper. Nobody reads the rag unless it contains something carved out of pure ivory, and unless Mr. Spectator uses his head to great advantage the financial balance is alx)Ut as valuable as What About Crew? Tha iks to the Gridiron the editor can always find something written in a style sufficiently incomprehensible to satisfy English club, while occasional Police Gazette covers on the magazine serve to hoist the circulation past the 100 mark. An impor- tant change in the make-up of the magazine was noted this year. The editor now has his name set up in black face type. CHAPARRAL The Y. M. C. A. Handbook The Y. M. C. A. handbook is issued every now and then by the Hammer and Coffin .society, under the refined leadership of Northcutt Ely. Mike (Mike is a short cut for Northcutt and ])revents his father from finding out how he spends his time) also has a finger in the composition of Chaparral, the Frosh Bible distributed gratis for two bits by the .students of Dr. Morgan ' s theological gymnasium. Well, maybe we are a little mixed — it ' s only natural after looking over both publications. 346 IHi These little volume,s spread ii ' looni and pure ( ' Gawd, how pure) amazement wherever they are sent. The Galahad tendency to suppress co-ed. prohibition and carbonized jokes has brought Stanford (and Mike) more publicity than even the activities of the medical school or the Class in Yell Leadin j. For a college paper to be pure is apparently startling. On the basis of this, we are waiting for someone to break into print with the thunderous announcement that he eats eggs for breakfast. COMMUTERS ' CLUB B S f 3 • BILL BROGAN, the middle-class Messiah of the Daily Palo Alto (vulgarly known as the Love Nest) — Bill Brogan pedalled madly up the unfamiliar Row from his hashing job in Palo Alto. Bill ' s painfully loyal Stanford spirit had just led him into a searching investigation of Stanford fra- ternity and sorority life, and Bill rushed into the Theta Xi house, where he feels right at home, and proceeded to unburden himself. Most fraternities and all sororities are da bunk, said Bill, elegantly waving his hand in imitation of a Deke sweeping the bottles ofif a table. ' ' The main difiference between them is that the men don ' t pull the shades down and the women do, dag nab it I Sororitosis is a disease that most women like to expose themselves to, and when it takes, God help ' em I They take on the snootiness of the Four Hundred and the soul of a gabby fishwife. That is the insidious thing about sororitosis. But the .sororities insure a fifty-fifty break at matrimony, and the pin is a sure sign of sophistication, even though the chapter house is the one place in the world where an outworn Puritanism forbids women to smoke or drink. The educational element is represented by large libraries of unexpurgated edi- tions, and by their ability to teach almost any woman to succeed socially. Anyhow, being a sorority woman gives prestige among people who don ' t know what sororities are. Now, fraternities are good things until you either make one or don ' t make one, and, once in a great while, afterwards. The fraternity man is bent on being different from anyone else, although the reason for his anxiety is not quite clear, since no sane man would ever want to be like a Greek. But the Row bird, with this in mind, becomes as much like other Row birds as possible. Individuality becomes collective — we all know the Delta Tau slink, the Zete breath, and the Phi Sigma Kappa self-consciousness. The advantages of fraternity life include doing janitor ' s and second-boy ' s work during the freshman year — and getting yourself paddled for your pains; having your clothes, your money, and your women taken by your brothers; attending house meet- ings at which you either go to sleep or get your knuckles skinned and your nose bloodied ; paying bigger and better bills; getting eight or ten good meals during rushing season along with Sun- day night beans the rest of the year; having to listen to the most intimate secrets of the less intelligent brethren (always in the majority) ; being awakened at any hour of the night by any inspired idiot who has returned from a queening date and wants to tell you all about it, and so on. A fraternity is also the home of the Gillette boys — ' Gillette me use your soap, ' ' Gillette me have your tuk, ' and so on. Row men may expand this to suit. 347 INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Page A Aetna Insurance Company 383 Aetna Fire Insurance Company 362 American Bank 375 Anglo and London Paris National Bank 362 Associated Oil Company 360 B Bancroft Whitney 377 Bank of California 403 Bank of Palo Alto 351 Bausch and Lomb Optical Company 364 Buckbee Thorne and Company 368 Bullock and Jones 352, 353 c California Pine Box Distributors 380 Camelline 388 Cameron and Getchell 389 Camp Curry 407 City Market 400 Clinton Cafeteria 401 Costello-Lang Company 393 D Thomas Day Company 399 Desmond ' s 407 Dieterich Post Company 400 E Ellery Arms Company.. 382 Fielding Hotel 382 First National Bank of Palo Alto 384 Fidelity and Deposit Company 389 Foster and Orear 370 Frazer and Company 381 French American Bank 366 Fuller, W. P. and Company 368 G General Electric Company 374 Gladding, McBean and Company 356 Golcher ' s 367 Golden West Hotel 366 H Haas Brothers 367 Halbriter ' s 357 Hercules Powder Company 375 Hotel Oakland 383 Hotel Sutter 392 Howard Automobile Company 372 Howell, John 369 I lis, John G., and Company 389 K Knox Shop 361 Langley and Michaels Company 383 Larkins and Company 399 LaFayette Studio 409 M Page Magnin, I. and Company 362 Molloy, David J., Company 409 Marwedel. C. W . 370 Marshall Newell 378 Moore, Charles C, and Company 364 Mullen Manufacturing Company 370 Mullen and Bluett 367 N National Ice Cream Company 391 Newbegin, John J 368 Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company.... 397 P Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company 387 Pacific Sightseeing Company 394 Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company 359 Palo Alto Furniture Company 369 Peninsula Building Material Company 386 Petrie ' s, Incorporated 354 Podesta and Baldocchi 368 Red Star Laundry Company 400 Roos Brothers 373 Salt Lake Tribune 377 San Francisco Chronicle 371 San Francisco Examiner 379 San Francisco Savings and Loan Society 378 Shaw, Walter A : 402 Shell Company 371 Sloane, W. and J 363 Spaulding 369 Spaulding Hotel 389 Staats, William R., Company 383 Stanford Bank 405 Stanford Bookstore 401 Strauss, Levi, and Company 406 Swift, Incorporated 365 T Thoits 358 Times Print Shop 385 Tait ' s Coffee Shops 385 u University Creamery 384 V Van Arsdale-Harris Lumber Company 393 w Wells Fargo Bank 372 West Coast Life 350 Western Sports 385 Wholesale Typewriter Company 355 Willard ' s 402 William Warren School 376 Wilson ' s 408 Yokohama Specie Bank .- 381 ■• : Cooperation is the watchword of any successful organization. It is as essential to an undertaking of the restricted scope of the college annual as it is to that of an enterprise in Big Business, with its many ramifications. In the cage of the college publication such cooperation means to the casual observer only the harmonious func- tioning of the statt. It is not readily evi- dent that a capable staff, and even a brilliant plan of design, can accomplish almost nothing without ample fina.nce. This income is in a very considerable measure derived from advertising. The support received from this source is an example of cooperation on a large scale from a group of firms whose connection with the university is in most cases only very slight but whose interest in Stanford, as evidenced by this generous response, can not be questioned. The advertisers whose names appear in the following pages are all STANFORD FIRMS, and as such they merit the full support of Stanford men and women. THE COURSE OF EMPI Across the shadowy stretches of past centuries, the march of man was eternally Westward. The empires of antiquity flourished in his path. History repeats itself. Here on the Pacific Coast is building a vast new empire of unbounded possibilities. And firmly established in this empire, intimately bound up with its growth, is West Coast Life. The future of West Coast Life is as secure as the future of the West itself. Than this, there can be no better evidence of permanence and stability. Wi c EST OAST Life INSURANCE COMPANY HOME OFFICE-S AN FRANCISCO 350 Friendly Bank HOUSANDS of Stanford students have found this bank a good friend during college days, and many have continued their friendly banking relationship after grad- uation. Stanford men and women who travel abroad or who are located where there are not satisfactory banking facilities find Bank of Palo Alto Service a real convenience. Our banking-by-mail department takes care of out of town patrons in a surprisingly satisfactory way. THE BANK 0 PALO ALTO Assets Over $3,000,000.00 351 r V OPPOSITE UNION SQUARE ON POST STREET IN SAN FRANCISCO THE SPLENDID NEW HOME OF Bullock (Sf jones Co. A stately monument to the fine traditions of an institution faithfully ajid famously in the service of men since 1853 a notable strudhire that with extraordinary qualities to be seen from without manifests the excellence of all things within ■? KeaA-j-laWored Clothes « CusiomTailored Clothes Men ' s Furnishings « Men ' s Hdts Men ' s Caps Bullock Jones Co SAN FRANCISCO a M LOS ANGELES Opposite Union Square .jE Corner Seventh and on Post Street Hope Streets It is this most remarkable men ' s wear establishment in America that has introduced to Californians Unprecedented Excellence in Hand -Tailored Clothes s READY TO WEAR qA new store, a new order of things, and finer clothes that mostly are in patterns and models such as are not to be seen anywhere else on the Pacific Coast. S A new store, but a business that is almost as old as San Francisco. ' ' A new order of things, but the old, established policies and principles of Bullock Jones Co. the granite founda- tion of ' ' new success. S Men ' s and young men ' s suits and topcoats of select imported fabrics, in patterns and styles strikingly genteel — and PRICED AS LOW AS 55 Exclusive California representatives for Whalley-Ford, Ltd. finest British footwear for men. Exponents of the fashionable English cut in men ' s attire — the preference of the man of discriminating taste. l)ETRIE ' SiNc Tdriver-bettingen 324 WEST SIXTH STREET LOS ANGELES IMPORTERS Illustrated is a two- button, soft front English Lounge suit. $65 CLOTHIERS HATTERS HABERDASHERS 354 A Complete Line of Late Models Underwood - Remington - Royal L. C. Smith and All Makes of other late model Standard Visible- Writing Machines, including wide-carriage models and machines with adding and subtracting mechanism; also Portable Typewriters. REBUILT AND FULLY GUARANTEED At a saving of 25% to 75% from manufacturers ' prices. Machines sent anywhere on Pacific Coast for five days ' examination Terms if desired. cAll makes rented. Rates to students SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED PRICE LIST OR CALL AND INSPECT OUR STOCK Retail Department The Wholesale Typewriter Company, Incorporated }30 Market Slreel, San Jrancisco, California Phone Garfield 90 Branch Stores: LOS ANGELES :: PORTLAND SEATTLE :: SALT LAKE CITY 355 Beautiful pieces of exquisite design and coIorm ,inhi h fired.stron and durable Terra Cottas. Prices moderate. Send for Catalo ue. GLADDlNCMcBEAN CQ 147 Minna SiSan Francisco. California. 356 m f of HALBRITER ' S, Inc. (J Men ' s Wear, 6SS S. Olke, Los Angeles .j-WC Co-Cf ' 1 , . . „ O M 357 ANOTHER HAUL MAN Good Footwear cannot l)e made from Cheap Leathers ; neither can it be made from Fine Leather WITHOUT Expert WORKMANSHIP. It ' s Genuine QUALITY in Materials and Skill in designing and making Shoes that entitles them to he called GOOD. Because of their QUALITY through and through THOITS Shoes have made GOOD with Stanford Men and Women since ' 93. Special Agents for HAN AN flf SON, Netv York 174 University Avenue Palo Alto, Calif. Where Quality Predomin ates 3 o 358 cr ?f LONG DISTANCE When away from home remember the long distance telephone. It means that separation is measured by minutes, not miles. Send the message of cheer and affection. You will be giving pleasure to others which will be reflected in your own satisfaction. Long distance telephone service is prompt, efficient, inexpensive. Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance telephone. The Pacific Telephone And Telegraph Company ASSOCIATED SERVICE STATIONS Service is more than a promise at Associated SERVICE stations.You get willing service from attendants the most economical service iiotn Associated Gasoline and CYCOL motor oil ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY EXECUTIVE OFFICES - 79 NEW MONTGOMEKY STREET SAN FRANCISCO 360 KNOX SPORTS CLOTHES for COLLEGE MEN WOMEN V T TT T TT • r IT KNOX HATS For College Men fVomen • Knox Hats, Clothes and Accessories are pos- sessions in which any man or woman can take justifiable pride. The smart style of Knox Hats and quality merchandise 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 361 From Canada to Mexico Throughout the length and breadth of the Pacific Coast and Intermountain states great pubHc, semi-public and private enterprises stand as monuments to this bank ' s faith in the west. For fifty years has been in- separably identified with the development not of a single Cf)mmunity but all the Pacific Coast. The Anglo and London Paris National Bank OF SAN FRANCISCO The Etna Fireman says: Our record of more than a century of service is an inspiration to our represent- atives and a source of satisfaction to our policy- holders. ETNA INSURANCE CO. HARTFORD, CONN. RALPH B. IVES, President PACIFIC DEPARTMENT 219-221 Sansome St., San Francisco F. H. RHOADS, Manager H. F. Mills, Ass ' t Mgr. P. Tomlinson, Agency Supt. Losses Paid Since Organization, $235,000,000.00 362 . ]. SLOAME SUTTER Street ear gi awt ave SAN FRANCISCO For 81 years the experience and resources of our Nation-wide organization have been devoted to the furnishing and decora- tion of homes, clubs, and institutions. Oriental— Domestic and Chinese Rugs Furniture — Carpets — Draperies Wall Coverings— Decorating 363. Our motto, To Greater Vision Through Optical Science, means continuous control of every pr-ocess through glass making and scien- tific computation to finished product. Our lines include Microscopes — Photographic Lenses — Projection and Photomicrographic Apparatus — Optical Measur- ing Instruments — Telescopes — Binoculars — Magnifiers and other High Grade Optical Products. BAUSCH LOME OPTICAL CO, « CALIFORNIA 28 Geary Street, San Francisco, Calif. Chas. C. Moore 6C ' Co. Engineers COMPLETE POWER PLANTS Power, Lighting, Mining, Pumping HIGH GRADE MACHINERY [t] HOME OFKKE : Sheldon Building, San Francisco Information and Catalogues at Our Nearest Office Sax Francisco, Sheldon Bldg. Los Angeles, Central Bldg. Seattle, L. C. Smith Bldg. Phoenix, Heard Bldg. Salt Lake City, Kearns Building New York City, Fulton Building Honolulu, T. H. 364 lurift PALACE f HOTEL BUILDING San Francisco AGENTS FOR HICKEY-FREEMAN CLOTHES DUNLAP HATS ALLEN SOLLY, Ltd., London Hosiery Sweaters WELSH-MARGETSON, Ltd., London N ecj wear Suspenders, etc. DELAME-LELIEVRE FILS, Paris Ha?ifi kerchiefs Silk Robes 365 ZETA PSI Every morning is the morning after the night before with the ' terrible Zetes. ' Between getting the brothers to their eight o ' clocks and promising the alumni an ' A ' average, the house president must weary of his crew of thugs. A RESERVE, consisting of funds in a savings bank, is the first step toward perma- nent success You can bank with us by mail just as easy and more conve- niently than by personal visit. Just mail in your opening deposit and we will write you fully how to proceed We Now Pay 4; % on Savings The French American Bank 108 Slitter Street San Francisco GOLDEN WEST HOTEL CORNER POWELL aud ELLIS STREETS San Francisco Modern, Reasonable Rates Center of Shopping and Theatre District V. P. PLACEMAN, Proprietor 366 Mullen Bluett Clothiers to Young Men Extend cordial congratulations and good wishes to the Class of ' 24 on the occasion of its graduation LOS ANGELES HOLLYWOOD u ' ) ' ) Trupak SUPER QUALITY Canned Fruits, Vegetables and other food products froffi the most Javored localities HAAS BROTHERS Distributors San Francisco Fresno California Fishing Tackle Firearms Outing Goods Golf, Tennis and Athletic Supplies H. C. Golcher Co. 508 Market St.. San Franci.sco 367 W. p. FULLER CO. Manufacturers PAINTS ENAMELS STAINS VARNISHES PIONEER WHITE LEAD GLASS BRUSHES FULLER PA I N T S P VARNISHES PIONEER. WHITE LEAD Branches in 22 Pacific Coast Cities Houses Rented Business Leases Rents Collected Appraisements Insurance Placed Loans Buckbee Thorne dC Co. Real Estate 151 SUTTER STREET San Francisco California Telephone Douglas 47 PODESTA ■AND- BALDOCCHI Flo wers of Superior Quality 224-226 Grant Avenue San Francisco Telephone Kearny 4975 J ohn J. Newbegin BOOKSELLER SETS AND BINDINGS FIRST EDITIONS NEW BOOKS RARE BOOKS 358 Post Street Opposite Union Square San Francisco 368 T OHN HOfVELL R O O 1 I UNION SQUARE 328 POST STREET _ V_ JL X Jj Literature Art San Francisco History Reading Copies Biography Gift Editions In Editions for Every Purpose Rare and Old Books First Editions Books of every period of literature may be found at John Howell ' s Bookshop, in editions ranging from in- expensive copies for study or reading to rare and old hooks for the fine library. There is a small but carefully selected section of new books and many gift books for every occasion, in bindings and finely printed. DELTA DELTA DELTA ' These are the girls that liked themselves so well that the - named themselves three times, as witness this clipping. Ce T cr 156 Geary St., San Francisco, Calif. Nothing Is Too Good for Your Home Of course we can ' t have everything! But a , well furnished home is something we can ' t af- ford not to have, for it is a part of our lives — the permanent golden section of existence. PALO ALTO FURNITURE COMPANY The House of Quality Phone 12 369 MULLEN MANUFACTURING COMPANY High Grade Cabinet Work Manufacturers of All Movable and Fixed Furniture in the NEW THOMAS WELTON STANFORD LIBRARY Factory and Office : 64-80 Rausch Street between 7th and 8th, Howard and Fol som SAN FRANCISCO Tclf phone Hemlock 2858 FOSTER dc OREAR Stalky £Made Candy OUR BREAKFAST LUNCH - DINNER You are l)ound to recog- nize the quality in what- ever vour choice FOSTER OREAR Phone Gar. 2500 137 139 GRANT AVENUE FERRY BUILDING rr The Leading Tool and Supply House ?? BRASS COPPER STEEL METALS BRONZE ALUMINUM MONEL SHEETS - RODS - TUBES - AND - WIRE BOSTON STANDARDIZED GEARS, MORSE DRILLS, TAPS. REAMERS Worm Gear Reduction Units, Silent Chain Drives, Annular Ball Bearings, Flexihle Shafts, Grooved Pulleys, Pillow Blocks, Fibre and Hard Rubber — In Sheets, Rods and Tubes Bakclite for Radio Panels Screws, Nuts, Bolts, Washers, Rivets — Full Line of Specialties Main Store 76 First St. C. W. MARWEDEL Established 1872 SAN FRANCISCO, C A L. Metal Warehouse 31 Jessie St. 370 NEW HOME of the Bnn IffraitrtBrn Qllirnmrk M. H. cle YOUNG Fifth and Mission Streets ALCHirtCTULt ANB • [MCINtELIMO- IN THE WEST WHEREVER you see the yellow and red Shell signs at service stations, at garages and other dealers, there you can count upon get- ting uniformly good gasoline, good motor oil, and good service. Shell gasoline is quick to start, is quick in action, is powerful, dependable, and economical. shell company OF CALIFORNIA 371 .Illllllllllllll. .ifiimirnaiiii, i ' nion IP X Old Friends are best, and it is wise to choose care- fully those who are to be comrades through the years. A banking connexion of long - standing is a great asset. - - It should be made early and carefully. IVe invite the accounts of young men and leomen Dt FargbBank Uiiton Trust Co. San Francisco •-AMD A BC UTIFOL MOA e AkLL REAkDV, ANOA BUICK ' HOWARD AUTOMOBILE CO. SAN FRANCISCO: VAN NESS AND CALIFORNIA Oakland Portland Los Angeles 372 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Oh, them women! They ' re mostly engaged in training down the last year ' s additions, who are becoming too well-nourished. In between times . . . I wish I were a Kappa And wore a Kappa key, Then ordinary people Would not appeal to me. ' And ask Yellowstone Park — it knows ! SIGMA NU It took me two quarters to figure out that there were no worms on the Sigma Xu pin. I haven ' t yet figured out why not. Why waste time figuring on the Sigma Nils? What we know about Stanford Ninety per cent of Stanford men are active men — they participate in some form of sport. And they keenly relish the roominess that fashion allows in the suits of today. Stanford women welcome the colorful sport garb of the day, the youthful clothing of mannish trimness for which ROOS stores have ever been famous. • • • And we guess that alumni never quite out- grow the zest of wearing clothes that are trimly tailored and to the mode of the moment. So the RooS roster of customers ever ex- pands with the names of Stanford men and women. 373 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 374 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON This tenement, which has been con- demned Idv the Fire Inspectors, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Imbeciles, and the lorons ' League of America, has a strong chapter here. The Sardine Canners of Xorvvay ought to hold a convention at that joint and learn something about how to pack ixior fish. ' HERCULES EXPLOSIVES for Mining, Quarrying and Construction Work HBIipULES POWDEli Smokeless Powders: Infallible and E. C. for Field and Trap-shooting HERCULES POWDER CO. J. B. RICE, Manager Standard Oil BIdg. San Francisco Identify yourself with a bank Whether you start a savinj s account with one dollar, open a commercial account for the orderly handling of your funds, or rent a Safe Deposit box, you. will find it good business — in more senses than one — to identify yourself with a bank. This bank, young in spirit, forward-looking in viewpoint, deems it a privilege to include among its customers the type of young men and young women who attend the universities. Come in and talk over financial matters with one of our officers. You ' ll find an atmosphere of friendliness. The AMERICAN BANK rjf San Francisco CALIFORNIA AT MONTGOMERY 2626 MISSION STREET AT 22d 375 WILLIAM WARREN SCHOOL MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA Located wtthin Jive minutes ' distance of Stanford University Military, Boarding and Day School giving Elementary and College Preparatory Courses 376 Law Books Bancroft -Whitney Company 200-214 McAllister Street San Francisco Since 1858 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE The daily newspaper is an educational factor, whose value is constantly increasing The newspaper is civilization ' s nearest approach to a uni- versal intelligence. Your daily journal is aware of the events and thought re- actions that sweep the world from Palo Alto to Moscow and from Capetown to Nome. To you it brings the intelligence of the globe, systematized and co-ordinated, yet with a fresh individuality. As history is written, the newspaper is written. || The Salt Lake Triliune fulfills to a high degree the newspaper ideal of rehahility, efficiency and at- tention to duty. Its news service is thorough and complete. Every issue contains special articles written by the foremost observers of the old and the new hemispheres. Editorial comment is thoughtful, well considered and au- thoritative. (I In the Intermountain West, a great industrial, social and cultural region. The Salt Lake Tribune is everywhere justly recognized as a leader in meritorious projects and as an influence for the best in American citizenship. (| To the college man ' s ideal of service it gives the utmost devotion. THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE 377 MARSHALL NEWELL SUPPl YALE LOCKS AND BUILDERS HARDWARE PI BETA PHI ' Ring ching ching, ring ching ching ' is the Pi Phi motto, more or less, and how it does fit ! The sisters aren ' t gokl- :hggers at heart, hut the men just can ' t hear to date them for anything inex- pensive — at least, not more than once. They aren ' t getting away with it as well as thev used to. 378 The Ideal Nenvspaper for the College Student! — As wide as is the scope of the modern college curriculum the students who win are those who supplement their courses with a thorough knowledge of current history; world, national and local — the work and opinions of men of affairs — modern writers and artists and their works. The Examiner spares no expense to supply such infor- mation for the student who wants it in an understandahle form that is concise, ac- curate and of world-wide .scope. — The sport section — The Peach — with articles hy Al Baum. Jack James, J. P. Cuenin. Harry Hayward, Ernest Smith, Bobs, Alec McCausland, Damon Run- yon, Ring Lardper, Bugs Baer, T. L. Cummisky and other famous writers — and miscellaneous matter. — National and world news is furnished hy International News Service, Universal News Service and the As.sociated Press. State news is sent hy correspondents located in practically every town in Central and Northern California. News of local events is gathered by a large staff of expert reporters. — Daily features include Arthur Brisbane ' s Today, B. C. Forljes ' Business and Finance, George Wheeler Hinman on National and World finance; special articles by The Spectator. Bruno Lessing, Dr. Charles Fleisher ; topical cartoons ; more than a full page of world-famous comics ; two great magazine pages. — Articles by such famous writers as : Elinor Glyn, W. L. George, Irvine Cobb, Lloyd George, H. G. Wells, Thomas R. Marshall, Josephus Daniels, Herbert Kauf- man. Upton Sinclair, Stephen Leacock, Ring Lardner, George Ade, Kathleen Norris, Gertrucle Atherton, Nina Wilco.x Putnam and manv others. These features are all contained in the newspaper for the winners — for college students who want the best — it is San Francisco ' s one big newspaper. mm i ]Rion rrh «S Read it EVERY DAY ni6.US.MT.OFr Subscribe NOW!  { t 379 California Pine Box Distributors 1019 FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. Phone GARFIELD 2885 A STRICTLY CO-OPERATIVE SELLING - AGENCY composed of the principal Pine Manufacturers of CaHfornia and Southern Ore- gon, with an output of 300,000,000 feet of shocks. We manufacture Soft White Pine Fruit Boxes, 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 CaHfornia at the following points: L,os Angeles Fresno Sacramento San Jose JVatsonville Brawley EI Centro (Imperial Valley) USE PINE MADE BOXES Quality . . Service . . Quantity ■380 DELTA UPSILON D. U. is a great driving power — on the faculty. A pledge-button includes full Kappa social privileges and a cor- responding mortality of intelligence. The faculty members don ' t use Kappa privileges. THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK, Ltd. Commercial Head Office, Yokohama, Japan Established 1880 Capital Subscribed (Paid Up) Yen 100,000.00 Reserve Fund Yen 73,000.00 President Vice-President K. KoDAMA, Esq. R. IcHiNOMiYA, Esq. Branches: Tokyo, Nagoya, Kobe, Osaka, Shimonoseki, Nagasaki, London, Lyons, Hamburg, Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seat- tle, Honolulu, Bombay, Calcutta, Rangoon, Sydney, Sourabaya, Batavia, Semarang, Manila, Singapore, Sai- gon. Shanghai, Hongkong, Tsingtau, Canton, Hankow, Tientsin, Tsinan, Newchwang. Peking, Fengtien, Dairen, Changchun, Kai-Yuan, Vladivostock, Harbin. Branches in California: San Francisco, 415 Sansome Street. Los Angeles, 100 North Main Street. K. KOJIMA, Manager All kinds of International Exchange business transacted. U n iv c r s i t y Ave. at High St. Phone 458-R PALO ALTO KNOX HATS REGARDLESS of where such supremacy may have rested in the past, today the mere mention of Knox as the foremost authority in men ' s headwear decides any possible style argument. A ' ozi ' showing KNOX CELEBRATED ' ' UNIVERSITY and ' ' FIFTH AVENUE HATS at $7.00 We x ' re Exclusive Agents We Feature i( Fashion Park ' ' Clothes for Men 2 and 3-Button English IModels Custom Service Without the Annoyance of a Try-on 381 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 offer- ings the last word in top-notch equipment. No doubtful goods at any price. Our Prices Mean Economy. T he Ellery Arms Company THE SIGN OF QUALITY 583-85 Market Street : San Francisco, California Inviting Stanford ' s Attention to the supreme service, convenience, and comforts afforded to guests of the Fielding Hotel. Stanford men and women have been numbered among the guests of this modern hostelry for a number of years. Close to theatres and close to the better shops makes the Fielding an ideal place to spend that week-end. Make the Fielding your headquarters the next time you come to San Francisco. FIELDING HOTEL Geary at Mason San Francisco Absolutely fireproof Bath ill every room Rates : $2,50 and $3.00 382 THIS BRAND WHEREVER FOUND ON Toilet Preparations Household Remedies and Specialties Is a Guarantee of Highest Quality and Medicinal Worth ' It Is the Brand of Excellence Sold by All Drug Stores Langley Michaels Co. San Francisco Fresno STANFORD STUDENTS What Profession Have You Selected? The insurance business offers to men with College training greater opportunities than probably any other business in the world today. It is tlie one business which requires no large invest- ment of capital to enter — nothing, in fact, except Time, Effort and Study. The Etna 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. .KTNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY TiiK .i-:tna c. su. lty and surety company THE . UT0M01iILE INSURANCE COMPANY of Hartford, Connecticut J. R. MOLONY. Manager Western Branch Office 3ii Pink Street S.AN Fr.ancisco, Calif. 37 Years IN THE BOND BUSINESS IN CALIFORNIA The Wm. R. Staats Co. since 1887 has afforded to careful investors a thorough knowledge of honds which combine excellent security with consistent interest returns. Ray C. Maple, ' 14 W. F. SissoN, ' 16 Howard E. Coggeshall, ' 21 R. L. Green, ' 23 Mastrn ' .Spencer, ex- ' 25 R. STAATS CO, EatablUhed 1887 Alexander BuilcJing MonteoT.cry Street, comei of Buib San Francisco Lo- Anre.ei Sao Dieeo Patadena First Bond House to Originate in California Qyic of California ' s Finest Hotels Hotel Oakland Oakland, California Centrally and conveniently located to all points in the Bay Region. Luxurious accommodations ; exceptional service and cuisine. Dancing Wednesday and Saturday evenings. Management, W. C. Jurgexs 383 THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK PJLO ALTO, CALIFORNIA Has given satisfaction to Stanford people for over twenty years. We shall be pleased to offer our services to You Packard ' sh STEFFEN dc WILLIAMS PACKARD and NASH Dealers 632 Alma Street PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA H. H. Williams E. C. Steffen Telephone: Palo Alio 241 THE VARSITY TAILORS Cleaners and Dyers DRESS AND TUXEDO SUIT REMODELING OUR. SPECIALTY 12 Encina Hall Stanford University Phone 1442-W KAPPA SIGMA A Kappa Sig must be born and not made. I don ' t know of any environment that conld turn them out. The fact that there are so many of them bears out that theory of the ' deterioration of the species ' . HOME MADE CANDIES Compliments of UNIVERSITY CREAMERY Next to Stanford Theatre MALTS WAFFLES 384 CXlestern Sports A Sports Magazine of the West COLLEGE ATHLETICS GOLF AND CLUB NEWS A CHRONICLE OF WORLD SPORTS Editor and Publisher, Marion Kyle, Stanford, ' 21 cp riming is the inseparable companion of achievement. For thirty years the Times Print Shop has helped Palo Alto business firms achieve success. You, too, may benefit by our superior service. Times Print Shop Ed L. Warner, Prop. Mtiltigrapliing, Mimeographing, Complete Direct- mail Advertising Sennce 220 Hamilton Ave. Phone P. A. 1931 ¥ « ALPHA TAU OMEGA That harsh, grating sound is the gnashing of teeth up at the A( vful) T(ough) O(mbre) house, caused by the break-up of the good old Dramatic Man- ager combination. This was a wealthy house once, but the Ex Committee slipped the goose into somebody else ' s nest for the present golden egg-laying season. Now they run a laundry, and need it. JOHN TAIT ' S COFFEE SHOPS Open All Night 24 Ellis Street 24 Turk Street San Francisco 12th Street, near Broadway, Oakland, Cal. 168 O ' Farrell Street SPECIAL DINNER, INCLUDING COFFEE, FIFTY CENTS 385 Peninsula Building Material Company ON THE HIGHWAY, AT MENLO PARK PHONE P. A. 1661 BBBB W -i.. mIP B B - ' ■•■■■■' 5 ' ' m Kmm-- %. s-.sAii is v : ' ■■' -. Sif - ■' ■■■' •- ww SAND, ROCK AND GRAVEL Cement, Lime, Plaster and Clay Commodities a Specialty THE MOST MODERN AND COMPLETELY EQUIPPED PLANT IN THE STATE, WHICH FACILITATES QUICK AND RELIABLE SERVICE 386 ALPHA DELTA PHI The Alpha Belts sport a headless figure in the side yard which, when completed, is probably a part of the ritual and the original Alpha Delt. Proximity and knickerbockers are get- ting in their deadly work, and the Car- dinal club must be heartily ashamed of its offspring. Their colors are green for purity and white for virility. THETA DELTA CHI Oh, Lord ! Well, they have Trago. TWO LEADERS STANFORD UNIVERSITY AND THE PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA tJOTH institutions founded and fathered by that hardy Pioneer, Leland Stanford. It is most interesting to re- member that Senator Stanford was the first President of the Pacific Mutual and the holder of the first policy written by the Pacific Mutual, Policy No. 1 hav- ing been issued to him in 1868. In the 56 years intervening, the Company has grown and pros- pered until now (December 31, 1923), it has assets of $81,913,- 265.91, and insurance in force $499,040,161.00. When you think insurance, Life, Accident, or Sickness, think Pacific Mutual, the Big California Company. ARTHUR C. PARSONS Vice-President and Manager SAN FRANCISCO BRANCH OFFICE 155 Montgomery Street 387 Christinas WRITTEN WITH THE PARKER BY COLLEGE LEADERS ' T Caliiomia ' s Star Football and Track Man ' 23 Stanlord, ' 24 • ■Star FooAall and Track Man IS Sianlo d, ' 25 rinceton ' s Sur Kicker Calitomia, ' 23 Michigan ' s Ail-American Star ' 22— Capt. ' 23 jRfltrJi6 s =£2 i ALPHA OMICRON PI T h e A 1 p h a O queener tells me that this advertise- ment is framed and hung over the Awful Owe fire- place. The Awful Lows are wonder- ing whether it is real fame or only passing popularity. I ' ve heard that the fountain pen fac- tory apologized to several people. CHINO-JAPANESE CLUBS These training schools for second boys are composed largely of Cornell Delta Kappa Epsilons who r efused to affiliate with the local chapter. The Dekes built an addition, but even that bait failed. References: City Cafe, Palo Alto. CAMELLINE for the complexion HARMLESS EFFICIENT A CALIFORNIA PRODUCTION WHICH HAS STOOD ALL TESTS — For Sale Everywhere 388 Cameron G etc hell CONTINUE TO PRESENT FOR THE USE OF STANFORD STUDENTS An Expert Hair Cutter A Fully Equipped Shop A Competent Staff of Assistants A Full Line of Hair Goods Factory : 327-329 Minna Street Telephones : Sutter 936-937 JOHN G. ILS CO. Manufacturers French Ranges and Broilers Carving Tables, Coffee Urns, Dish Heaters, Portable Gas Bake Ovens COMPLETE KITCHEN AND BAKERY OUTFITS Office and Salesroom: 839-41 Mission Street lietween Fourth and Fifth Sts., San Francisco, Cal. Under Management of FRANK ROYSTON,:23 Stanford Headquarters in San Francisco Operated by a Stanford Man 2W O ' FARRELL STREET Right off Poivell Street FIREPROOF The Spaulding Hotel The Home of Good Beds RATES: Without. Bath, 1.50 - With Bath, 2.00 ; the Heart of all Activity MODERN FIDELITY AND DEPOSIT COMPANY OF MARYLAND ASSETS IN EXCESS OF 15,000,000.00 Executive Office, 516 Insurance E.vchange, San Francisco Guv LeRoy Stevick, Vice-President Leland W. Cutler, Pacific Manager Branch Office: 622 Insurance H.vchanye. San Francisco, Cal. C. K. Bennett, Manager F. E. Brisbane, Associate Manager Branch Office: H. W. HcUman Building, Los Angeles, Cal. H. D. Vandeveer, Vice-President Wm. M. Walker, Manager 389 WM. CAVALIER CO. INVESTMENT SECURITIES Members San Francisco Stock and Bond Exchange Insurance Exchange Building WiNFiELD S. Davis Burt L. Davis I- B. F. DAVIS SON General Insurance Brokers Personal representation and advice in relation to Costs Protection Contracts Disaster Claims SAN FRANCISCO SEATTLE Pictures Gifts Framing THE PICTURE SHOPPE MORTIMER R. FREEMAN 163 University Ave. I ' ilins - Developing NUGGET Cafe and Grill 41-53 Post Street A la Carte Dinner Served Every Night Till 8 0 ' Clock Best place to lunch for ladies and gents. High class food, (juick service. Finest home-made pies and best raviolis Open 11 a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone Sutter 8816 Blair 8 • Co. INCORPORATED INVESTMENT SECURITIES San Francisco Los Angeles New York Let This Man Be YOUR REALTY AGENT He takes especial interest in Stanford folks and renders real service in finding them HOMES ORCHARDS ,nid INVESTMENTS W. D. WASSON 120 University Ave. Phone P. A. 43 THE NEW EDISON PHONOGRAPH Comparison with living artist reveals no difference Latest Hits from Broadway Real music by real artists on the New Edison GLANN ' S MUSIC SHOP LiuDicoAT Market LIFE INSURANCE FOR STANFORD MEN 333 Pine St., San Francisco DAVE WALKER, ' 09 390 HnHR f JT Pf ' ' ' - ' ' - -T ' % S I CHI OMEGA In view of the recent demand for in- genues, the Chi O age limit for pledges has been reduced from fifteen to fourteen. When seen across the footlights, cherub faces seem to fit quite pleasingly on scrawny necks, at that. Either a Chi O pledge pans out to be an actress, or she doesn ' t pan out at all. They now have three actresses. PHI DELTA THETA Any swimmer can get himself pledged Phi Delt by putting on a clean shirt, said Bill, un- buttoning his collar. If another flood comes along, the girls are going to look to the fishy Phi Delts as a second Noah ' s Ark, and the Dee Jeez won ' t be left holding the bag, either. I ' m told that they ' re going to combine to save cook ' s wages, but both of them deny it coyly. 0 DADDY, DON ' T FORGET TO BR1(N6 HOME SOME. ICE CREAM TONIGHT, p.(NO MOTHER SAYS TO BE SURE IT ' S NAnonAL CAUSE THAT5THE (jEST THERE IS. San Francbca: MtrrkH 93 OkkUnd: Oaklaml 16 Sold-urhtre you S€€ the National Red Sign, or tetephone NATIONAL ICE CREAM COMPANY 391 BETA THETA PI The Betas speak for themselves — early and frequent. If the guy that wrote ' I Love Me ' wasn ' t a Beta he ought to have been. The place looks like a filling station or a bootlegger ' s country home when all the boys get their cars out in front. We say filling station ; as a matter of fact, the only kinds of oil you can get there are fusel and hair. (We manfully refrain from doing something clever on ' oil cans ' at this point.) As to the other angle : a chap actually drove up to the house one time and asked for a quart of Scotch. The funny part of it is, he didn ' t get it. PHI SIGMA KAPPA Knickers, Scotch, swagger, and casual references to ' Old Phi Sig ' will turn these impressive dust- storms into regular bred-in-the- bottle ' frat fellers ' in a couple of hundred years, maybe. In the mean- time they wear knickers, drink Scotch, and swagger. HOTEL SUTTER SITUATED at the great crossways of Kearny and Sutter streets, the only hotel in the city having street car service at the door (without transfer), to both Third and Town- send and the Ferry sta- tions, stands the Sutter, San Francisco ' s modern, popular priced, fireproof hotel. It is located in the center of the city, in the heart of the best retail sliopping district and banking section, and near all places of amu.se- ment. It is noted for its elaborate equipment, fine furnishings, splendid service and reasonable rates. FIREPROOF EUROPEAN PLAN SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF., KEARNY AND SUTTER STREETS GEORGE W. HOOPER, Manager Telephone Sutter 3060 392 Compliments of ADOLF RICHTER FURNITURE and UPHOLSTERING of the Finest Quality Phone P. A. 852-M 636 Ramona St. YOUNG DRUG CO. Dependable Druggists Phone 36 351 University Ave. Agents for Owl Drug Co. Products Ernst Brandsten ' s SPRING BOARD wmv . ii Niii [11 1 :i ' ii:i;;ii[;!f ii ' ! i::iy iiiii:iUi{ii:Kiii ' nii!:!iiii:i iiiiJi;i[ii iii ' iiiiiiii! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiigiiiiRiiiiiM Has been adopted for diving con- tests by the Intercollegiate Svi im- ming Association because the Brand- sten spring board is uniform and dependable. Ernst can guarantee his boards because we are the sole manufac- turers of spring boards from the Brandsten specification. VAN ARSDALE- HARRIS LUMBER COMPANY Fifth and Brannan Streets SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA FALLS EVERGRIP CORDS Standard and Balloon Sizes COSTELLO- LANG CO. [Inc.] 556 Golden Gate Ave. Phone Prospect 121 SAN FRANCISCO WHEN IN THE PALACF HOTEL VISIT THE | JEWEL SHOP DISPLAY Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry of the Latest Design J- E. BIRMINGHAM HAIULY DIXON METAL WORIL STUDIO 5 TI LLMANJ PL.OFF CHANT AVE- OrPOSITE THE WHITE HOUSE SPECIAL DESIGNS AND REPLICAS OF ANTIQliES HAND VRX)UGHT IN COPPEP..BPASS fe-SILVER INDIVIDUALLY DESIGNED LIGHTING FIXTURES TELEPHONE GARFIELD 1 6 Beside Temple Bar San Francisco 393 Pacific Sightseeing Company SIGHTSEEING TRIPS IN SAN FRANCISCO AND OAKLAND CARS RENTED BY THE DAY OR PRIVATE PARTIES AT REASONABLE RATES 745 Market Street San Francisco, Calif, DIAMONDS On a Money-back Guarantee At Lower than City Prices NIELSEN anj CULVER 165 University Avenue, Palo Alto Luncheon, 65c A Restful Atmosphere for the Business Man Refined Surroundings for tlie Lady Shopper ? W c Are Prepared to Serve SUMPTUOUS OR MODEST DINNER PARTIES BANQUET HALLS WITH DANCING FLOORS DELTA GAMMA Funny how the Dee Jeez with eight o ' clocks are always so much better dressed than the ones who have nine o ' clocks. The sisters don ' t need the Daily Dozen any more, since they have the Com- munity Closet to fight over. Their prayer ought to be ' Lord, make me smaller, so sister ' s clothes will fit. ' And that ' s the Dee Jeez. Management Wm. M. Dean 250 Kearny St., San Francisco Meet Your Friends at the HOTEL STANFORD Moderate Rates Coast Costume Co. THEATRICAL MASQUERADE 1035 Market Street NEAR SIXTH STREET SAN FRANCISCO Phone Park 5104 Costumes Rented, Sold and Made to Order Wigs and Make-up of all Descriptions .W4 Marquee Barber Shop —for Service OPPOSITE BANK OF PALO ALTO PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA Moses — buys old clothes and pays a good price — That Settles It If you want me just Phoxe p. a. 790-J Mariposa Hotel SIS Emerson St. Good Food Emerson trgjz Peninsula Creamery Ready to Serve you with Frozen Dainties Punch Ice Cream Ices Opposite Post Office Palo Alto, Calif. Wl HEN in need of anything in the Bakery Hne think of the Stan- ford Bakery. We sell anything from a cookie to the largest Wedding Cake. Remember our motto — Q not Q STANFORD BAKERY TelephoM 1698 541 EiMrson Encina Barber Shop LOBBY OF ENCINA HALL Equipped to Render Service of the Highest ality J. G. Penington, Proprietor CLEANLINESS 0 - .l of o; Prompt, Pleasing Service QUALITY FOOD UNIVERSITY GRILL 118 University Ave., Palo Alto Pies a Specialty, Home Cooking 39S ROBERTSON Book Store SAN FRANCISCO 222 Stockton St. Harry Robertson, ' 10 THE LEADING STATIONERS Palo Alto, California Palo Alto ' s Best Thompson ' s Bakery 210 Homer Avenue CAMPUS SHOE SHOP for Good Repairing Union Buiuung VARSITY and STANFORD Theatres PALO ALTO The Best in Motion Pictures at all Times Phone 503 Phone 40 FRANK J. MILLER Wholesale and Retail Groceries DELICATESSEN, BAKERY, and CATERING Phones: 1616- 1617 University Avenue and Emerson Street PRINTING SLONAKER ' S Printing House POST OFFICE liUILDING 225 HAMILTON AVE. Phone P. A. 387-R Clifton S. Si.onaker, Stanford, cx- ' 22 SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE 875 Folsom St. Phone Kearny 644 Pioneer Gibson Express PAF.O ALTO OFFICE 818 Emerson St. Phone Palo Alto 315-J BAGGAGE HANDLED San Francisco - Palo Alto - San Jose Express Service Twice Daily PROMPT DELIVERY 396 What Is Your Life Work To Be? President Coolidge says: He who sells an insurance policy sells a certificate of Character, an evidence of good citizenship, an unimpeachable title to the right of self-government. THE need for insurance is as old as it is universal and more urgent in hard times than in prosperous periods. The life insurance agent is his own master, controlling his own time, earning in exact proportion to his successful effort, and finding no limit to the new applications of insurance to needs. The economic human value is now scarcely more than one-seventh protected. Will you let us tell you more about this great business and especially concerning The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin Once a Policyholder, Always a Prospect SMITH, THOMAS 6c THOMAS, General Agents 704 M. RKET St., S. n Francisco 397 Phone 949 Lighting Fixtures STANFORD ELECTRIC WORKS A. B. Peterson, Proprietor ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING 234 University Avenue PALO ALTO, CAL. THE NELSON MEAT COMPANY Supplies the Campus California ' s Leading Surgical Supply House TRAVER SURGICAL CO. Surgical Instruments and Physician Supplies At Reasonable Prices SAN FRANCISCO Phone Douglas 9477 372 Sutter Street . ALE E. NELSON Copper Plate and Steel Die Engraving Telephone 17 South First St. San Jose 3324 J San Jose, California WALK-OVER You Know — The NAME The QUALITY The STYLE The FIT What More Can We Say EdZwierlein ' s WALKOVER BOOT SHOP Palo Alto Phone Sutter 4996 EAMES COMPANY Manufacturers and Repairers of FLOOR TRUCKS OF ALL DESCRIPTION We Carry a Large Assortment of Wheels at All Times TRUCKS MADE TO ORDER AT OUR FACTORY 920 Howard Street San Francisco Ttvo Big Surgical Stocks R. L. SCHERER CO. PHYSICIANS ' FURNITURE INSTRUMENTS Agents for Wappler Electric Co. W. D. Allison Co. 679 Sutter St. San Francisco 7i6 So. Flower St. Los Angeles STULL SONNIKSEN San Jose Women ' s Exclusive Apparel Since 1884 Make Your San Jose Headquarters Here Use Our Public Phone 398 DELTA TAU DELTA This house is shaken to its founda- tions by the controversy between Fun- damentalists and Modernists in the Protestant church. What this means I don ' t know, but it is the outstanding feature of that good Delt house. LARKINS RYNAMEL USING DuPONT DUCO Enamels Endures beyond a expectation.s. It can be cleaned with gasoline, turpentine or kerosene. Before having your car painted be sure and investigate Larkins Rynamel LARKINS CO. Geary and First Ave. San Francisco THOMAS DAY COMPANY Largest manufacturers on the Coast of Lighting Fixtures Oakland Burlingame Sacramento of every description. 725 Mission St., San Francisco, Cal. Salt Lake ' City Los Angeles [DECDRATE. I WITH , LIGHTING ; FIXTURES Among our more recent installations at the University are: TOYON ENCINA and BRANNER HALLS NEW DESIGNS for bungalows and small residences constantly kept in stock. Automatic Oil Heating Plants for Residences and . partments PHI GAMMA DELTA That exotic purple light on the Mji porch has seduced for them the name of ' The Pas- sion Flowers. ' It ' s a long way to the house, but the pledges think it ' s worth it until they ' ve been initiated. The Fijis have recently be- come convinced that it ' s wrong to drink, and are quite pathetic about it. 399 Satisfaction- YOU WANT IT WE GIVE IT THE RED STAR LAUNDRY CO. Oldest on the Campus S. J. 69 Owned and Operated by Jimmie Leaman, ex- ' 13 Insist upon goods bearing the label of DIETERICH POST COMPANY 75 New Montgomery St., San Francisco DRAWING MATERIALS SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS BLUE AND BROWN PRINT PAPERS BLUE PRINTING and ALL OTHER DUPLICATING PROCESSES U. S. Government Inspected Meats O FISH POULTRY ' - C C 244 Main Street %s - Redwood 1 6 j38 BUTTEK AND The Reliable House 244 Main Street We Guarantee Service and Quality Redwood City 400 The Protit Returned to Students by this Co- operative Store Because this store is purely cooperative, the profits which accrue during the year are returned as rebates. During the past three years these have averaged ten per cent — a saving well worth while. The Bookstore is owned by eighteen stockholders (chiefly faculty members) none of whom has ever realized a penny in dividends from his original one dollar investment. When it ' s time to buy. remember The Bookstore where you pocket the profit. The Bookstore COOPERATIVE STANFORD UNIVERSITY PHI KAPPA PSI According to Baird ' s Manual, the Phi Psis were founded during an epidemic of typhoid fever, and grew directly out of the disease. This may account for the sick- ly character of the ag- gregation. SIGMA KAPPA An unprecedented act of kindness was shown ■by nine sororities on the campus this fall when they agreed in Panhellenic not to rush relatives of Sigma Kappa women. Sisters and cousins arc cinched now. unless they prefer Roble. At that. was Panhell really being unselfish? WE W E L C O M E YOU CLINTON Cafeterias 136 O ' Farrell Street Opposite the Orp heum Theatre 18 Powell Street Near Market SAN FRANCISCO Orchestral Music at Lunch and Dinner Continuous Sen ' ini From 7:00 a. m. to 8:00 . m. 401 GAMMA PHI BETA ' What are the Gamma Phi Betas? ' ' ■- ' -J r ' -- ' JBW ■•ir., 1 ■n r Vw ' ' ' 1 UNION In Union there is strength (yes — we couldn ' t resist that) in the long run. This is the assembly of all the bright, purposeful lads who couldn ' t get along anywhere else. Which is a strong rec- ommendation for everything except the Union. ' Designer and Maker of IHnc Platmum and Gold Work — College Fraternity Insignia Heraldic Engraving and Stationery — Cups, Trophies and Medals Bronse Memorials ISO Post Street, San Francisco American Bank Building, Seattle ■feminine oApparel of distinction WILL ARD ' S 139 Geary Street San Francisco 402 PHI KAPPA SIGMA The boys grew older, of course, but they haven ' t as yet been taught to use a knife and fork. Phi Kap works on the principle of pledging to capacity and then culling the lot for a good man. Still, their optimism persists. ALPHA SIGMA PHI The Alpha Sig house is even more a glaring tomb since the addition of new paint. Arnold Bayley ' s noises may be a bit uncouth, but no more so than the natural gyrations of the rest of the brotherhood. ' 64 to ' 24 «5?« BANKOF CALIFORNIA GOMPLCn BANKING SERVICE CA af ona CAssociation ' A NATIONAL BANK) San Francisco COMMERCIAL TMXSl Siuwa ACoouMn 403 ROBLE Rol)le has a dining room, and, tliere- fore, must be classed with the living ' grouiJS. Serenades beneath its unprom- ising windows were a favorite initia- tion stunt until the neophytes began to talk. This young man is just leaving a Roble 6 to 8, and wears the typical half-sheepish, half-defiant expressioi. I fe will never attend another one, as one such narrow escape is memorable throughout a lifetime. The ad Says Bill Brogan: The QuAn (we inean the book, not the place, although one is about as lively as the other) is a literary mausoleum in which are entombed the records of the year. Entombed is the word, because after the purchaser has ruffled the pages in a hasty search for his own name and face, the book is never opened. It becomes a parlor ornament along with the Dresden China shepherdess and the bust of Napoleon. For this reason the Princeton year book may be said to have the best name on record : the Bric-A-Brac. The Quad may or may not be a good thing; it probably is for the guys that run it, although noth- ing has ever been proved. Which may or may not be the reason for the proposed Quad Board of Control, although it seems more likely that the Board rose out of the natural desire of some of those on the outside to get their spoons in the gravy. If you want some tangible evidence of having received a college education to take home to the folks, nothing could be better than the Quad. It will allow you to pay it for the privilege of printing your picture, and will run your record free gratis for nothing. Laugh at the Quad if you will ; the boys who put it out get the last chortle, for you are the guys who are simple enough to pay from $5.50 up for it. Laugh that off ! Brunswick-Columbia Phonographs and Records Musical Instruments Sheet Music Pianos THE MUSIC SHOP C. E. Martix 273 University Ave. Palo Alto, Calif. Business Phone 425-J Residence Phone 818-W GootJ Costumes- One or One Thousand NORMA N ' S Ulf)l Market Street, San Francisco Coin ' Hiiieitls of RALPH- -PUGH CO. Manufacturers ' Agents 5,32 Howard Street San Francisco The House nf Odorless Cleaning CITY OF PARIS DYEING CLEANING WORKS Office and Works 625 Ramona Street, Palo Alto I ' hone 1525 404 KAPPA ALPHA The K. A. ' s (pronounced ' Case ' from the way they order the stutT) have the oldest cars and the newest Hquid of any house on the cam- pus. They are noted for their fine Southern chivalry and for their semi-quarterly dances. One is as much a K. A. Institution as the other. This is the trihe to which Nevers be- longs, but don ' t hold it against him. ALPHA PHI The heavy Alpha Phi line, aver- aging 176 pounds from tackle to tackle, is spectacular on a wet held, such as the Junior Prom. The hack- field is lighter, not especially fast. and easy to take out if you want to trv it. DUDFIELD LUMBER COMPANY Lumber and Millwork PALO ALTO 0 Years of Siiliifactory Scrr ' .cc Palo Alto Sheet Metal Works C. B. Spangler Warm Air Heating Systems TIN. GALVANIZED IRON AND COPPER WORK OF ALL KINDS Phone Palo Alto 145 521 Ramoxa Street Palo Alto FAD OrFICE: PALO ALTO. CALiF. Safety and Service We offer a bank large enough to ins])ire the confidence of its cus- tomers, yet not too large to give every consideration to the smallest account. MAYFICLD BHANCM,MAvriCLD,CAL THE STANFORD BANK 405 WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? Stanford Won All Right, but Wasn ' t California Second Here ' £ Reprinted from S. F. C Ian Campbell of Stanford is breaking the tape in the 100-yard dash, most aston- ishing event in yesterday ' s California- Stanford track meet. The judges, after argument, gave second place to Hale of Stanford on the right, but Farnsworth of California, in the dark blue (upper), seems to have him beaten in the pict ure. The Bears expected to win the century. Stanford made the touchdown, all right, but didn ' t Nevers fail to touch second here? Al White is breaking training in the 40-yard back stroke, most illuminating event of yesterday ' s polo match. The judges gave a leather medal to Steve Brodie, but the photographer seems to have him beaten in that picture. Paints : Wall Paper UHL BROS. Xan Francisco Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Portland Success! to the class of ' 25 WlDEMAhl ' d SON Palo Alto OUTFITTERS TO STANFORD MEN for MORE THAN EIGHTEEN YEARS Here ' s the UNION SUIT for your Daily Dozen Slip on a RICHMOND UNION SUIT and yon ' vc taken the first big step towards a perfect day. Built to conform to every movement of your body. Made in a variety of weights of yarn, colors and styles to meet the needs of every man. Richmond - VCLOSED CROTCH UNION SUITS r MnM l Oclobar SI . I9lt Your dealer will explain the superiority of Richmond over other union suits AT ALL GOOD DEALERS 406 KAPPA ALPHA THETA I ' ve been smelling a rat around this house for some time, and it turns out that it was one deserting a sinking ship. Where is the older generation, and why is the newer? In September — 616 South Broadway A GREATER Desmond ' s — incidentally a greater serv- ice to college men. In the interim — at Spring near Sixth. Drop in and see us any time — you can count on feeling right at home LOS ANGELES Spend Your Vacation at Camp Curry Nearest the trails and all points of interest. 100 Bungalow Rooms; Private Baths RATES : A.MEKicA.N Plan: $4.00 i er day intents $6.00 per day in bungalows (including private bath) European Plan : $1.50 per day in tents (cafeteria or dining room service) Camp Curry is conducted under the personal nianagcmcnt of the following officers, each one a former Stanford student : Mrs. D. a. Curry, gr., President Don Trksioder, ' 18 Manaycrs Robert T. Willla.ms, ' 18 Mrs. Mary Curry TRKsn)i)ER. ' 15. Secretary Mrs. Marjorie Curry Williams. ' 18, Hostess n ' -V - m- 1 1 ' Uosemtte ValleirW ' 407 I advise young ladies who contemplate matrimony to eat often at Wilson ' s, and coax the Wilson chef for some of the wonderful South ern recipes. Wilson ' s Wilson s CONFECTAURANT ' The Candy with a College Education PALO ALTO SAN FRANCISCO SAN JOSE FRESNO STOCKTON Treating the LADY to a box .-t Wilson ' s delicious candv is AN- OTHER of the poptilar pastime- KING GEORGE HOTEL NINK-STORY FIREPROOF BUILDING Mason Street at Geary : Phone Sutter 5050 SAN FRANCISCO - - - CALIFORNIA 200 Rooms—All With Pri ' vate Bath KUROPEAN PLAN Single, $2.00 day up Double, $2.50 day up WALTER SEITZ, Manager G reek Field Day I ' llCSC arc those as starred in the recent athl ' tic carnival on Layuni a field Top — Hartranft finishes ahead in the two-mile run. R i y li t — Kid Boots stops Hefty Hoozit in a fast 4-r()und bout. .( ' — Sapolio, favorite in the Graces Handicap, wins in a walk. The photograph shows her pass- ing the judges ' stand. Bctow — I ' rize winning dogs at the start of the coursing events. Shoes by Hanan. Loxivr left — The man who won llie audience ' s guessing contest as to what it was all about. He re- ceived the first prize of a pair of smoked glasses decorated with laurel sprigs. I ' lwtos courtesy the Police Gazette 408 The La Fayette Studio takes pride in the part it has had in the production of the 1925 Quad. To have made over one thousand photographic negatives of individuals and groups, with prints for reproduction, has been a big task that we feel we have creditably performed; with no sacrifice to quality, and with a strict maintenance of prompt, efficient service. The many friends we have made at Stanford are invited to visit our new studio in San Francisco, where we make fine portraits at fair prices. La Fayette Studio - San Francisco, Cal. Sachs Building, 140 Geary Street • ' T ' he cover for JL this annual was created by The DAVID J. MOLLOY CO- 2857 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois ©very Molloy Made Cover hears this trade mark on (he back lid. 409 INDEX Page A Abrams, LeRoy 36, 274 Adams, Ephraim Douglass 33, 36 Administration 23- 44 Administrative Progress, Highlights in 29- 34 Afternoon club - 94 Allen. Warren D 79 Alpha Chi Sigma 230 Alpha Delta Phi-...- 315 Alpha Kappa Lambda 318 Alpha Omicron Pi -- 286 Alpha Phi 283 Alpha Sigma Phi 316 Alpha Tau Omega. 302 Alsberg, Carl L 36 Alumni day-. - -.-- SO American Institute of Electrical Engineers 232 American Journalists ' association 231 American Society of Civil Engineers 40, 233 Atnerican Society of Mechanical Engineers 234 Anderson, Frank Bartow 28 Anderson, Melville Best 36 Androcles and the Lion 69- 71 Angel of Grief 12 Arboretum. Replanting of 274 Arches of the Padres, in color 46- 47 Associated Federal Students 272 A. S. S. U. Masque Ball 60- 61 Athletics 103-177 Men ' s athletics 103-168 Women ' s athletics 169-177 Athletic Fields to Be Extended 162-163 Autumn quarter 51- 56 Awards assembly 63 B Band 80, 109-110 Baker, George H 66, 128 Baker, Shirley ; 60, 62 Baseball Baseball season 148-150 California series 149 Freshman baseball 150 Interclass baseball 166 Preliminary games. ,... 148 Basketball pavilion 32, 178 Basketball Basketball season _ ...135—140 California series 113-114, 138 Freshman basketball 139 Interclass basketball 165 Preliminary games 137 Nevada-Stanford 137 Olympic club- Stan ford 137 U. S. C. -Stanford 137-138 Weight teams 140 Women ' s basketball 172 Beta Theta Pi 168. 305 Big Meet .115-118 Big Game 56, 107-112, 126 Biology, School of 33 Board of Athletic Control 30, 162 Board of Trustees 28, 32 Bok peace plan 57 Bonfire 50, 52, 56 Borg, Arne 64 Bourn, William B. 28 Boxing 159 Boyle, Charles E 98, 158 Brandsten, Ernst M 122, 155 Brandsten, Greta J 174 Branner hall 29-32, 57, 276, 324-325 Branner, John Casper 30 Breakers 329 Brown, Buford O 34, 85 Brownell, Evelyn 78 Bullock, James R. 88 Bunting, Helen Masters 173 Butler, Edward W 69 c California Pastoral, in color 104-105 California memorial stadium 56, 107 California versus Stanford 107-120 Baseball series 119 Basketball series 138, 113-114 Big Game 108-112 Big Meet Tennis series Campbell, John D Cap and Gown Capps, Isabel-- - Captain Applejack Carruth, William H Cercle Francais - Chamberlain, Selah - Chandler, Harry F Chaparral - Chinese club Chi Omega - Chi Psi Choir . Circle S society Class of ' 99 Classes Classical club - Clubs Collins, Leroy P Collins, Junior J - The Conquistadore, in color.. Convalescent home Cooney, Harold A Cosmopolitan club Crocker, Mrs. Henry Culver, George B Cunha, Edward A Cutten, Charles P Cutler, Leland W Page 115-118 120 .51, 56, 109, 125, 127 235 173 69, 72 34 262 28 28 88, 94 336 287 306 82 236 60 179-223 272 261-273 34, 98 66 24-25, 226 29, 31, 50, 180 98 273 31 276 56 61- 62 28 D Dailey, Gardner A Daily Palo Alto Daves, Delmer L Davis, Charles W Davis, Gordon A Davis, Harold M Davis, Paul H The Days of a Man Debate Dedication Deering, Frank P DeGroot, Dudley S Delta Chi Delta Delta Delta Delta Epsilon Delta Gamma Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Sigma Rho Delta Tau Delta Delta Theta Phi Delta Upsilon Denny, Wallace. Discovery, in color Dramatic History, An Outline of.. Durand, William F. .162-163, 274 ...86-87, 94 69 165 69- 70 151-152 132 39 95- 97 10- 11 28 32, 68, 123 312 285 268 282 310 237 168, 304 238 308 133 69- 78 34 E Economics club Eels, Charles P El Campo El Capitan El Cuadro Elliott, Orrin L Kly, Northcutt EI Tigre El Toro Emerson, J, G Encina hall Endowment English club.. Escenas de Noche Euphronia Debating society.. Executive committee 271 28 145, 331 333 332 27 66, 74, 88 335 330 95 ..29-30, 224, 276, 320-321 34 239 15- 21 95-266 65- 68 Faculty Fairclough, Henry R Fencing Field Artillery unit Field, Charles K Fletcher, Charles G Food Research institute.... Football Football season, 1923.. Action Pictures 35- 43 40 161 98-101 .60, 62, 79 182 36, 42 .125-134 ..130-131 INDEX (Continued) Page Big Game 108-112 Freshman football 133-134 Grays 132 Idaho-Stanford game 129, 132 Interclass football 1 165 Nevada -Stanford game 126-127 Occidental college-Stanford game 127 Olympic club-Stanford game 128-129 Oregon-Stanford game 129 Santa Clara-Stanford game 127 U. S. C.-Stanford game 127-128 Varsity team 126 Foreword 7 Foster. Benjamin O. 38 Founders ' day 58 Franklin, Edward C 38 Freshmen Baseball 150 Basketball 139 Class officers 222-223 Dormitory system 276 Football - .133-134 Soccer 157 Swimming 155 Tennis 152 Track 146-147 Freshman-Sophomore fig ht 51- 53 Fuller, William Parmer, Jr 56 G Gage, Daniel D. J 182 Gamma Phi Beta 284 Gardner, David Charles 56, 58 Gaspar, Louis 220 Geary, William D 34. 98 Geological and Mining society 240 Geology, Summer field trip 50- 51 German club 267 Glee club 79- 80 Golf 160 Grace, Thomas J 218 Grant, Joseph Donohue 28, 56 Gregory, T. T. C 28, 61 Gymnasium 159 H Haley, C. 1 86 Hale, Marshal, Jr 116-118 Hammer and Coffin 241 Handball 160 Handy, Etta H 31 Hanzlik, Paul John 38 Hawaiian Olympic swimmers 64 Helser, J. Henry 89 Hewlett, Albion Walter 38 High School Journalists ' convention 62— 63 Highlights in Administrative Progress 29- 34 History club 271 Hockey 170-171 Honorary and Professional societies 229-260 Honor system.. Page 66 Hoover, Herbert C 28, 33 Hoover, Theodore Jesse 39 Hoover War library 33, 36 Hopkins, Timothy 28 Hopkins marine station 50 The Hottentot 69, 71 Hunt, Ernest P 133, ISO I Idaho-Stanford football 55, 129, 132 Illustrated Review, The Stanford 90 In Memoriam 12— 14 Intelligence tests 42 Interclass Athletics 165-167 Interfraternity council 277, 295 Intramural sports 64, 168 Iota Sigma Pi 247 Irish Marathon 58, 166 Kappa Alpha 307 Kappa Alpha Theta 279 Kappa Kappa Gamma 280 Kappa Sigma 309 Kerr. Andrew 56, 112, 114, 126, 132, 136 Kirkwood, Marion Rice 39 Lapp, Burton L 53, 121 Laurence, Andrew M 62 Lawson, James W 126 Legend of the Laurel 63, 76- 78 Leib, Samuel F 28 Liebendorfer. Donald E 86 Lillick, Ira Shell 28 Littler, Robert M. C 95- 97 Living groups ; 275-337 Los Arcos 334 Living conditions 276—277 M McCallistcr, Charles H 121, 218 McDowell, J. E 91 Mack, Henry C 66, 74, 89 McHose, John C 135, 113-114 McLaughlin, Kate D 31 Maloney, Harry 161, 151, 153 Manzanita house 32, 57 Martin, Ernest Gale 39 Martin, Ernest Whitney 84 Marx, Charles David 10, 40 Masonic club 263 Masquers 242 Masters, Alfred R 51-52, 65 Meiklejohn, Alexander 59 Memorial church 22, 49 Men ' s council 65- 66 Merchant of Menace 74— 75 Milestones 69— 72 Military ball 59, 101 Miller, C. O. G 28 Millikan, Robert Andrews 50, 156 Mills college-Stanford hockey 170 Minor Sports 153-168 Murray, Augustus Taber 40 Music 79- 84 Music club 83 N National Collegiate Athletic association 144-145 Nestoria debating society 95, 266 Nevada-Stanford, Basketball 137 Football 126 Nevers, Ernest 113-114, 128, 136, 148 Newhall, William Mayo 28 Xewill. Philip 86 Nickel, J. Leroy 28 Nourse, John Thomas 28 Nurses, Senior 217 Nu Sigma Nu 243 Old Stanford Residence, in color 180-181 Oliva, David M 113-114, 136 Olympic Club-Stanford, Baseball 148 Basketball 137 Cross Country 145 Football 128-129 Track 142 Water polo 156 Omega Upsilon Phi 244 Ophiils, William 40 Oregon-Stanford, Football 53, 129 Debate 96 Organizations 225-337 Oval club 245 Japanese club 337 JofFre Debate 95, 97 Jordan, David Starr 27, 32, 39, 56 Journalism 85 Judah, Nelson Van 145,118 Junipero Serra club 265 Junior class 218-219 Junior week 63-64, 219 Pajamarino parade 51-52, 54 Panhellenic 278 Peninsula tournament 158 Phi Alpha Delta 95,246 Phi Beta Kappa 247 Phi Chi 248 Phi Delta Phi 95, 249 Phi Delta Theta 50,297 INDEX (Continued) Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Lambda Upsilon.. Phi Phi Phi Rho Sigma Phi Sigma Kappa Physical education Pi Beta Phi Pi Kappa Tau Polo Page 300 298 314 250 251 252 319 33 281 101 100, 158 Professional Societies, Honorary and 229-260 I ' ublications 85- 94 Quad - 91- 93 Quadrangle club 63, 253 Rallies and Bleacher stunts 52, 55, 59, 109, 111, 121 Rally committee - - 53, 121 Ram ' s Head 53, 56, 254 Reserve Officers ' training corps 98-101 Revelation 339 Rixford, Emmet 40 RoMes, Don Secundini, in color 98, 104-105 Uoble 289-294 Roth, Almon E 31, 56 Roughs ' day S3- 56 Rushing systems 276-277 Ryan, Harris J 41 Summer quarter Swimming Freshman Interclass P. A. A. Junior meet.. Varsity Women ' s Sword and Sandals Swain, Robert E Swinnerton, James Symonds, Henry G Page 50- 51 155 165 63 154 .174-175 . 71, 259 . 13, 42 62 68 Underclassmen I ' niversity day U. S. C. -Stanford, baseball.. Basketball Debate Football Track I ' pperclassmen Scabbard and Blade 101, 255 Scalpers 256 Schubert club 81 Scholars of Note 35- 43 Sellards, John A 34 Senior class 182-183 Senior Farce 50, 71 Senior Nurses 217 Senior pictures.... 184-216 Senior week 50-51, 56 Senior Control committee 56, 268 Sequoia 322-323 Serra house 31-32, 57 Shoup, Carl S 66, 69, 74 Shoup, Paul 28 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 58, 303 Sigma Chi 301 Sigma Delta Chi .53, 62, 94, 257 Sigma Kappa 288 Sigma Nu 299 Skull and Snakes 52, 258 Sloss, Marcus P 28 Smith, A. W 52, 56 Smith, Everett W 85 Smith, J. P 41 Smith, May H 90 Soccer 157, 166 Social Welfare commission 269 Sollman. Torald 38 Sophomore class 220-221 Sophomore cotillion 52, 56 Sophomore play 72 So This Is Eden 64, 75, 78- 79 Spanish club 267 Spaulding, Alfred B 41 Sponsors 223 Spring quarter, 1923 50 Spring quarter, 1924 59- 64 Stage 69- 78 Stanford at Olympic Games 122-124 Stanford convalescent home 29, 31, 180 Stanford family 35, 180, 226 Stanford medical school 38, 40, 50 Stanford National board 32, 60, 61 Stanford Spectator 89 Stanford I ' nion 29, 32 Stanford Year 45- 64 Stewart, Arthur C 222 Stewart, James A : 222 Stillman, John Maxon 13 Stillman, Stanley 41 Stuart, (i. H 34, 57 Student Continuation committee 270 Zeta Psi Student Government 65- 68 Zoology club . Tatlock, John S. P Taylor, Alonzo E Tennis, California-Stanford . Freshman Interclass Varsity Women ' s Templeton, Robert L Terman, Lewis M Theta Chi Theta Delta Chi Theta Sigma Phi Theta Xi Thompson, Fred Thompson, George W Thornhill, Claude E Tolman, Cyrus F., Jr Toy on Track Track season...: Big Meet Cross Country Freshman Interclass N. C. A. A. meet Women ' s Triangle Debate Tri- State Debate Trustees 42 42 120 : 152 167 151 173 .- 142, 146 42 317 : 311 260 313 220 ; 77- 78 112, 127, 136 50 .29-31, 226, 276, 326-328 .141-147 .115-118 145 .146-147 165 .144-145 173 .. 95- 96 . 95- 96 . 28, 32 u 220-223 50, 61- 62 149 138 96 127-128 143 182-219 A Vision Fulfilled, in color.. w Warner, Glenn S Water polo Webster, David L White, Charles B Wilbur, Ray Lyman Willis. Bailey Wing, Charles B Winter quarter Wolter, Harry Women ' s Athletics Basketball Field day Hockey Swimming Tennis Track Women ' s Athletic association.. Women ' s conference Women ' s council Women ' s Economics club Women ' s S society Wranglers Wrestling 106, 112 156 43 66 .27,33,38,43,51, 56 43 43 58- 59 148 169-177 172 173 - 170-171 174-175 173 173 177 67 67 265 176 270 ,: 161 Year, A Stanford.. ' ell Leaders Y. M. C. A Y. W. C. A 50- 64 121 137, 264 269 296 273 s As these paragraphs are written, the last forms of the Quad are going to press. At this time the management wishes to express us deep appreciation to the many people who have given ireeiy oi their time and energies to make tnis vo.ume aii acceptable and representative Stanlord publication. Unfortunately, lack ot space preciuaes mention ot more than a tew oi these. The junior staflf has worked diligently and eiTectively. Of the editorial members, John Hall has been the most vamabie. .- s assistant editor, he has directed the work of the sophomore assistants and has given much helpful advice, particularly on questions ot poiicy. As associa te eoitor, Lniian Bidweli has been the mo.n laithiui worker among the women. Gale Griswold, as Qu. ' d photographer, has rendered the book professional service of the highest order. The excellence of Griswold ' s results are readily evident in the Scholars of Note and Stanford Year sections. The work of Bill right and Dave Lamson, of the Razz board, given at times when they were burdened with a multiplicity of other duties, is particularly appreciated. Almost the entire athletic section is the work of Leon David. Punctuality has characterized David ' s handling of this section, the most extensive in the book. Other members of the staff who have served faithfully are : John Marble, Helen Broughall, Anna Fitzhugh, Ken- neth Ferguson, Mary Chaney, Mary Baker, Meribeth Cameron, Carol Klink, Robert Boynton, and Elizabeth Roper. As an editor, the writer is in a position to say something of the managerial staff. Despite the increase in rates, John Irwin has set a new advertising record by selling fifteen per cent more space than has ever before been sold. In addition, the last of the entire edition of l,bOU books was sold some time ago, a record unique in (Jlai) history. Bill Clark has ably assisted in sales organizations. Grace Judd and Robert Triest have also worked faithfully. Oi tne euitonai tryoutets special mention goes to Leon Brown, Basil McGann, De.mer Daves, Jack Hardy, and Helen Nelson. Raymond Kay, Lowell Matthay, William Fitzhugh, Helen trskme, and Margaret Cosgrave were the outstanding workers among the managerial assistants, ' ihe other sophomore assistants, who have worked consistently, and well, are: Marjorie Alien, Margaret Dietrich, Cecile Feusier, Richard Goldwater, Aileen Hicks, Allene Thorpe, Frances Vaughan, Dorothy Verbarg, Byron Williams, and Norma Wright, of the editorial staff; David King, Eleanor Klauber, Marie Largey, Enid Root, and Doris Swayze, of the managerial staff. Ui tnose wno uid tecnnical and prolessional work on the book, the University Press, the Sierra Art and Engraving company, the LaFayette studio, and Gabriel Moulin deserve special mention. Will A. Friend, A. C. Barnes, C. B. Smith, and John Borsdamm oi the Lniversity Press have given the book their caretul supervision and have borne patiently w ith the many mistakes which are inevitably made by student publishers. Hubert J. Langton, of the Sierra Art and Engraving company, has toiled unceasingly to give the Quad new ideas in design and high-class work- manship in printing plates. To Langton is due the greater part of the credit for the whoie scheme of this year ' s design. The actual execution of his ideas was carried out by Leo Krumel, who is responsible for the color sketches and the division pages for the athletics section, and by Felice L. Martini, who executed the elaborate set ot borders. Ihe indiviauai anu group pictures taken in the studio, over a thousand in number, are the work of the LaFayette studio. L. R. Carlton, head of that concern, has given both careful workmanship and consistent service to the book. Gabriel Moulin, who is responsible for the pictures in Escenas de Noche and many others, has done his utmost to make this phase of the Quad attractive. Many others have made valuable contributions. Dean George B. Culver, Dr. Orrin Leslie Elliott, and Professor R. E. Swain have responded genertiusly to requests of various kinds. Carl Shoup, 1924 Quad editor, is the writer of the entire drama section. Both Shoup and Charles White, 1924 Quad manager, have given advice on difficult questions. Miss Bertha Berner, Professor E. E. Robinson, and Miss Alice N. Hays gave assistance in preparing the historical sketches. Donald C. McKav. ■«. P.JWi mm Kms
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