University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX)

 - Class of 2003

Page 17 of 128

 

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2003 Edition, Page 17 of 128
Page 17 of 128



University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2003 Edition, Page 16
Previous Page

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2003 Edition, Page 18
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 17 text:

1900 PereyrinLis horn from the mind of a savage, namely RlisscH Savatje, a student in Justice Simkins ' lec- tures. 1901 The hanner hearing a Peregrinus insignia is sei:ed and shredded. 1902 The Cactus yearbook features a humorous song ahout the Peregrinus. 1908 Alexander Frederic Claire unveiled as the patron saint of engineering students on April Fools Day. 1910 Law students kidnap Alec from the engineers on his second birthday. 1912 Peregrinus dismembered and shipped to the far comers of the state. 1913 Law students hide Alec on a Ptlugerville Engineering students retrieve the statue and put bank vault. 1916 Law students charge Alec with vagrancy. He is It Go -. Imi Pa Ferguson pardons the mascot ma returns hnn to the engineering students. This flyer circulated in the law school after the theft. No culprits were ever named, but the Peregrinus was surrendered to the engineering dean, whose staff returned the mascot to the law library. Tm not sure where it will ultimately reside, but it is safe for now, law librarian Tobe Liebert said 19 lo Law students seize and shred Alec. Pieces are mailed to engineering alumni around the world. Perry is put in a bank vault and law students boast that Never has the begrimed, uncouth and hairy hand of a flannel- shirted minion of Alec been laid upon his sacred person. 1921 Engineers capture Peregrinus. He is returned in 1925. 1927 Engineers fail to capture Perry as several law stu- dents carry him from the bank vault to their annual ban- quet. They succeed three years later, and the law banquet is suspended for several years after Perry is dismembered.. 1934 Law students again lose a Peregrinus to the engi- neers at the annual banquet. 1937 Alec and the Peregrinus appear together tor the irst time in a Loyalty Day parade. The Daily Texan calls the event the first treaty of alliance for the rivals. 1938 Peace is short-lived as law students steal Alec, dis- member him and hang his torso froin a tree on campus. The torso is later displayed with Perry in the law library. 1939 A fistfight breaks out at the heavily-secured law banquet when eng«eers attfmpt to capture Perr 1943 s nab Ijec wh the ileers ar ftheir annual dance. Two weeks later, engineers dunk a few laws in the Littlefield fountain and shave the heads of a few others. The laws return Alec a week later in exchange for hair. Both groups buy V-Day bonds as restitution. 1950 Perry returns to his bank vault. 1953 The original Peregrinus head is dis covered by Texan reporters in a campus building during renovation. 1 968 A Peregrinus sketch appears in the Hmiston Chronicle. 1978 The Student Bar Association authorizes the casting of 100 bronze Peregrinus sculptures to raise money for a first-year student loan fund. 1987 Two engineers steal Alec ' s torso from the law brary and demand the Peregrinus as ransom. Judge Harley Clark, a UT Law alumnus, orders that the torso be surrendered to the court. Law Dean Mark Yudof and stu- dent Paul Begala represent the law school in court, but the engineers regain custody of the Alec torso. 1998 Engineers fill Townes Hall with fliers claiming that 26th Street, renamed for former law dean Page Keeton, has been renamed for Alexander Frederic Claire. 2002 The Peregrinus goes missing yet again, as does Alec. Perry is returned in early 2003 and sequestered.

Page 16 text:

Whodunnit? For a century, law and engineering students have traded insults and schemed to capture the other group ' s mascot. After more than a decade of relative harmony, the mascot controversy flared up in the summer of 2 002. Perry had been displayed on and off in the law library until the theft. After its return, the statue was tucked away in a safe, secret corner of the law school. The statue was created by a prominent Swiss woodcarver named Peter Mansbendel who did lots of carvings at the University. The Institute of Texan Cultures featured the Peregrinus in an exhibit devoted to Mansbendel in the 1970s. The rivalry between engineering and law .students began at the turn of the 20th century when there were only three classes on campus: the laws, the engineers and the academs. The two groups traded insults and snatched each others ' mascots throughout the century. Things seemed peaceful at the turn of the 21st century, but the rivalry flared up once again with the mysterious disappearance of both statues. Unknown culprits stole Alec late in summer 2002. A few weeks later, the Peregrinus on display in a locked case in the law library reserve room disappeared. One Monday morning when we opened the library, we discovered that the statue was missing, law librarian Mike Widener said. He called UTPD and looked for evi- dence. It appeared that a door might have been propped open - a door to the fire escape - and it wasn ' t clear whether that had been done by a construction crew that was actu.dly working during that period the thief, Widener said. UTPD conducted an investigation, but nothmg turned up. Then fliers bearing a picture o( the Peregrinus appeared, first at the engineering school, then also at the law school. Unexpectedly one day I got a call from Dean Powers ' office, who said that they had just received a call from the engineering dean ' s office that they were bringing the statue over, Widener said. Staff from the engineering dean ' s office and Dean Powers ' office brought it to the library in a large cardboard box full of fliers and covered in an old plastic trash bag. No one ever admitted to the theft, but Dean Powers suspected that the dean of engineering negotiated a safe haven until the statue could be returned to the law school. We do consider it a crime to come in and steal our Peregrinus, Powers said. But 1 think bygones are bygones.



Page 18 text:

9i Ai, r r . ' .i tufnn i • Its bushy tail brushes aside technicalities in favor of justice. •hs ong, pointeA. nose searches out truth. •The boots on its front feet signify sympa- thy with the rank and file of the workin.t; class. •The hoxxng gloves on its hind feet show a preparedness to fight for equity and the law. •Its arched back is ready to spring, just as the law is ever ready to protect rights and defend wrongs. •A white cap of truth crowns its head. Pereerinus William S. Simkins joined the Vxw faculty of the Unn ' crsity of Texas m 1899 and began a 30-year career as the most colorful character ever connected with the law school. Peregrinus, the symbol of the law school, came from a Simkins lecture, and he was often referred to as Old Peregrinoos. Simkins ' long white hair, his love of applause, his traditional lecture on the Ku Klux Klan and his encounter with temperance crusader Carrie Nation also became a part of law school lore. This is his own account of the birth of Peregrinus: Many years ago I was trying to explain to the class in Equity, the origin of the system in Rome and the sources of equity in the Roman Empire. At the time fledglings just from the high schools were admitted to the Law School. Many of them had never heard of the Roman Empire, and not a few spelled cow with a K. Well, 1 explained to them that when Rome conquered a nation it was incorporated into the Roman Empire subject to its own law and not to the laws of Rome — that the Roman citizen was not subject of the laws of these incorporated nations — that in due course commerce sprang up between the citizens of Rome and barbaric nations, and there was no law to determine and settle their contractual relations. The Roman Emperor, to settle the troubles arising out of the fact that there was no law applicable to control their contracts, appointed a Praetor or chancellor to travel among these nations and to settle all disputes without reference to the Laws of Rome, or of the incorporated Nations, but to do justice and decide all dis- putes, alone by the conscience o{ the Praetor. Peregrinating [traveling] from one nation to the other, he was called a Praetor Peregrinus. The boneheads of the class evidently thought that Peregrinus was an internal organ o{ the body tor they contin- ually greeted each other, ' How is your Peregrinus today? This fact seems to have developed the humorous side ot the incident, and Russell Savage developed a concrete expression of it on the blackboard and thus the tradition began. Russell drew better than he kne«-, for the nondescript animal symbolizes both in limb and attitude the maxims in equi- ty that guide the administration of the system. For instance, on one of the front feet as originally drawn was an Irish ditcher ' s boot — indicating the law ' s protection to the least of mankind. On the other front foot were naked claws, indicating that the greatest of mankind must fear its power. The arched back in the attitude of springing, indicated that the law was ever ready to protect right or prevent wrong. The sharp beak indicated the power to penetrate the myster- ies of the law which the true student must obtain by study. The bushy tail indicated that Equity brushes away the tech- nicalities of the law and does justice to the merits. History of Peregrinus

Suggestions in the University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) collection:

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1998 Edition, Page 1

1998

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 1999 Edition, Page 1

1999

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2000 Edition, Page 1

2000

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2001 Edition, Page 1

2001

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2002 Edition, Page 1

2002

University of Texas School of Law - Peregrinus Yearbook (Austin, TX) online collection, 2004 Edition, Page 1

2004


Searching for more yearbooks in Texas?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Texas yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.