University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA)

 - Class of 1916

Page 1 of 512

 

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 512 of the 1916 volume:

■■■„- ,.n ' ' viv,:;x:: :„ ' ' .jf,;;fj . ubliaiirlt by of tI|P Printed by METROPOLITAN PRESS Central Building Seattle Gr tmg ®ljp llnihfraitii in tta broalitBt ttitprprr- tattntt ta tl)p syntpatI)Ptir haixh bttwnn tl|f ppnplp of fflaaljiugton aitii tl t tats. 3ltt an far aa llif Uniupraity Uahs Hnuti| tn tnan- ifooh. butliia rittjpita from rate material anJi rnuaprratpa ttarlf to tlip moulding of ;iublur opinion, it ia npI olDing ita biglfpat iiifala. iHay thp nrui Maal ington lay ita founia- tiona on lIi? rpnptupii faitl) ani gooii will of tlfp Koph of tljia atatr. anii may ita intprrata an lI|Pira alteaya faork for tljp aamp pni. JSo PrnfFSBor (JrFunr IKturatb Wlioar ktitblincfiB has rnftrarrii him In all aitJi uihnsr fnrrrful prrsonality anb untiring rfforla in tl|P ftpli of sricnrc Ijaup bane sn nturli to plarr him amnnij our Mbeal Alumni. ffioBtugly Sf Jitratf ®I)p S pp nf 1915 M ? X5¥ BookH Saok Oh c - Uuiurrjjilu iBuok Sutn - AtljldtrB nuk El}m - (lampua iHnok iFnur - (naaspB Innk iFibp - Artilitltps IBaok S ix - (§rgam2atimiB M ' Mlm: ' ' - J ' : ,■:,■ flf HENRY SUZZALLO AND THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University. HIS ceremonial in which we are engaged is of no ordinary significance. It is the formal induction into high office of an American who is set apart to perform a conspicuous and distinguished service to the people of the state of Washington and to the nation. In the inauguration of a new president of the University of g Washington we are not merely investing with the robes of office a new business executive or a new educational manager, but we are celebratmg the commencement of the life-work of a scholar who is to be a leader among scholars, and to take a responsible part in repre- senting scholarship in the life of this people. Here on this Pacific Coast, standing on a hill to look its people full m the face, spreading its beams and rays out over the Pacific ocean to the west, as well as over the mountains and plains to the east and south, this University of Washington, bearing in its heart the traditions of Bologna, of Paris and of Oxford, will stand through the ages as the creation of the people of this commonwealth in order that scholarship and the zeal foi scholarship may be kept alive and cherished, and in order that generation after genera- lion of Americans may be taught to see life steadily and to see it whole. To the guidance of the company of scholars devoted to this high purpose, we are today setting apart the life of a scholar, an orator, a philosopher and a citizen. His place will be not to command, but to guide; not to order, but to persuade; not to break down, but to cooperate. He knows full well the significance of the university tradition and the distinction between true and false democracy. Resting secure in the support and affection of the body of scholars associated with him, and resting secure in the support and affection of the people of the State of Wash- ington, the course of this University for the next generation under his leadership is as certain of distinction and of high usefulness as anything human can be. FORMAL INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT HENRY SUZZALLO h EFORE an audience composed of great educators of the country, leading citizens of the Northwest and college men gathered to do him honor, Henry Suzzailo, son of emigrants from the shores of the Adriatic sea, on the afternoon of March 2 1 , dedicated his life to the tremendous service of making the University of Washington a vital force in democratic America. The inaugural ceremony was impressive and unique in the annals of the Northwest. When faculty, regents, alumni, students and citizens pledged their loyalty and support to the new president, rising to their feet and remaining standing to indicate their homage. Dr. Suzzailo received an ovation such as had never before been witnessed on the Wash- ington campus, and has few equals in American academic history. America ' s future is safe only in the degree in which the public mind can be put in the mood to invest in serviceable men. Such Americans as behold their immaturity must unite their numbers to achieve the nation ' s strength. Americans must think particularly of their country ' s part in all history that is yet to be made. With these words as his keynote. Dr. Henry Suzzailo thrilled the audience packing the huge auditorium of Meany Hall with a sturdy appeal for the continuance of that idealism which has made America ' s patriotism broad enough to include the whole world ' s good. Speaking on the question of leadership, the newly-installed executive emphatically declared that the fine humanistic qualities within America can only be perpetuated by protecting the integrity of the state that fosters them. For this country to go down, proclaimed Dr. Suzzallo, in the competitions of commerce or war would be the saddest tragedy that history could record. The development of expert service is the first step in adding efficiency to our modern social life, Dr. Suzzallo asserted ; and the second requires its utilization. The rampant individualism of America was regretted, notwithstanding its good side; and the bringing out of leaders was declared to be as much a necessity in a democracy as anywhere else. Dr. Suzzallo dedicated his life and work to making the University a virile, forceful and dependable agent in the efficient and democratic America that is to be. He bespoke the cooperation of the Faculty, Alumni, regents, students and citizens of the state in upholding the University ideal. To Henry Suzzallo, ' 99, a regular fellow. This was the principal toast Monday night, March 20, offered by Judge Kenneth Mackintosh, who spoke at the College Night ceremonies at the gymnasium, on behalf of the Alumni of Leland Stanford Junior University. While his new friends proclaim him a university president, Stanford graduates give him a laurel wreath bearing this inscription, said Judge Mackintosh. The gymnasium was filled to overflowing with fifteen hundred Alumni of Wash- ington and other institutions, and the members of the senior class. From an institution for the promotion of scholarship alone the American university has been transformed at the hands of the democracy to an institution for the promotion of scholarship conceived in terms of the highest human service, declared Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, in an address delivered at the inaugural exercises. The University of Washington, he said, will stand through the ages as the creation of the people of this commonwealth in order that scholarship and the zeal for scholarship may be kept alive and cherished, and in order that generation after generation of Americans may be taught to see life steadily and to see it whole. 4 TRANSITION FROM TERRITORIAL TO STATE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON Edmond S. Meany. HERE is but one man whose name is listed with the Faculty now and who was also a member of the Faculty during the last years of the Territorial University of Wash- ington. That man is Orson Bennett Johnson, Professor Emeritus of Zoology. In the last Territorial catalogue he appears simply as O. B. Johnson, LL. B., Natural History. Professor J. M. Taylor, who then held the chair of mathematics, served through the transition to statehood and until 1897. He is now principal of schools at Newcastle, King County. I was a preparatory student in the University in 1878 before either of those veterans had joined the Faculty. Graduating in 1885, there was a gap of nine years before I joined the staff as secretary in April, 1894. During those nine years my closest contact with the institution was through such services as were possible as president of the Alumni Association and as chairman of the University committee in the Slate Legislative sessions of 1891 and 1893. Out of the friendship with the two men named and with others who have gone and out of my own memory, I will try to sketch briefly a record of that important period of transition. fe l m Professor Johnson ' s Territorial title. Professor of Natural History, indicates some- what of the condition in those days. President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard, during a visit, asked him what chair he held. When Professor Johnson told him the subjects he taught, President Eliot waved his hand and uttered his famous joke: Oh, I see. you occupy a settee instead of a chair. Tuition fees were twice as high then as those provided in the recent law. Thai was the only source of maintenance. The Territorial Legislatures made small appropria- tions but they were to be applied to pay the tuition of such free students as were appointed by the Governor, the three Judges and the members of the Legislature. I have a distinct recollection of those fees for I delivered milk about town and carried papers to earn the necessary money. I was relieved from the payment for a time when my bills were paid by Dexter Horton. But I did not learn who that good friend was until both he and President Anderson, who kept the secret, were dead. The curriculum in those days was not extensive but I have a firm conviction that much of the work was thoroughly intensive. Study and work was about all the students had to do. One week of our present social activities could not have been matched by the record of a whole college generation of four years then. I saw but one dress-suit in my college days. That was when Dr. Thomas T. Minor came to give us an evening address. I never before had seen a man so arrayed except in picture books. I have long since forgotten the subject of his discourse, but the fine figure of the speaker is one of the clear mental pictures of my boyhood. Our only gymnasium was in the yard. We had a small field for baseball and chose sides rather than having organized teams. We had one big round football and kicked it for distance until W. H. Whittlesey, from Princeton, showed the boys how to line up for a game. I think that was about 1887. We had one big iron dumb-bell and played all kinds of weight games vilh that. Charles L. Denny held the record of jumping with it. We had a pair of boxing gloves, but I don ' t care to tell what happened to me with them. About where the Henry Building now stands we had a trapeze, some rings and a horizontal bar. We thought we were having lots of fun, and some of my old classmates have not ceased to marvel over Washington ' s great change in the matter of athletics. The people of Washington Territor - had agitated the question for more than a dozen years before they attained statehood in 1 889. The changes wrought were rapid and remarkable. All the potential wealth of forest and field and sea were laid hold of vsnth vigor. The University shared the general impulse. The wooden buildings were deemed inadequate, the campus too small, the standards too provincial. In the second session of the State Legislature. 1891, and again in 1893. laws were enacted securing the new campus, erecting new buildings of stone, iron and brick. Tuition was made free and money was appropriated directly for maintenance. Of course the student body increased rapidly. The old settees wtre divided up into more comfortable chairs. A huge gymnasium was provided and an instructor was secured for the athletic work. The institution was moved to the new campus in September, 1895. Very soon thereafter the Faculty began to arrange the curriculum into groups. Schools and colleges emerged and the institution was a university in fact as well as in name. Measured by clocks and calendars, that time is not so very long ago, but I notice that my classmates are all growing gray. I must not acknowledge that we are growing old, for I have so much to do. Anyway, the University is still young and earnestly striving toward the highest ideals. m THE WINGED YEARS Henry Landes. Dean of College of Science. rTjTlT SEEMS but yesterday, so kind have been the winged years, that the telegram came I 1 1 announcing that we were to go to the University of Washington. From our house on li ' bn ' ' small hill, overlooking a most beautiful rock-bound bay on the coast of Maine, we ' ' took one last look at the deep-blue waters of the Atlantic, and never tarried until we had crossed the continent to our new home on the Pacific border. It was on an afternoon in September, 1895, that our train arrived in Seattle, and we alighted on a broad street near the water-front. 1 he low buildmgs, the general lack of paving, the hilly streets, and the straggling nature of the city afforded to our eastern eyes some strange contrasts with Boston and New ork. First street, then called Front street, had a most dilapidated plank pavement, over which cable-cars careened in such a way that a passenger could imagine he was a child again and engaged in a game of see-saw. Second avenue was paved for a short distance with brick, and so was a section of Pike street. Third street was planked but it abounded in hills and hollows and in profile resembled some letter w ' s placed side by side. It was on Third street that the University ca r-line ran — one of the six independent lines of the city — without transfers. The running time from Yesler Way to the University was fort ' -five minutes, if the car remained on the track, which was unusual. I will never forget with what absorbing interest I made my first trip to the University over that line. After we had rattled along for an interminable time we got out of the city into the woods and it required much reassurance on the part of the conductor to make me believe that the University was yet ahead of us. I remember that I counted the abrupt turns on the way and there were twenty-two of them. There was an occasional turn-out on the track, which was hardly necessary because there were but three cars operating at one time. A rambling trail led from the car-line, through the woods and among the big stumps, to Denny Hall. This was then called the Administration building, and was not yet finished, although occupied by teachers and students. The obser ator ' was com- pleted and the instrument mounted. (An observatory had been built because the Presi- dent at that time was an astronomer. He could not be censured for preferring to look at the stars rather than at the terrestral things around about him). Peering through the straggling trees, in the distance, one could see the outlines of the gymnasium. When I first saw it I thought it was a train-shed and I expected to see a smoking engine run out of it. It was then regarded as a mere makeshift — to stand only until something better could be had. To my knowledge it has had a new roof, new walls, a new foundation and new floors — and is today the same temporar ' structure. In those early days there were very few houses north of Lake Union and faculty and students in their places of living were widely scattered. Some students lived in shacks on the University grounds and in the neighboring woods. A few members of the faculty were brave enough to live nearby, and followed the devious and winding paths which centered at the University. The President, returning home one night from some function, fell over a cow that had grown weary at night-fall and had made her do Tiy couch athwart the trail that lead to Prexy ' s house. The embarrassment was mutual. (This was not the astronomer previously mentioned. We swapped Presidents might) ' fast in those days). 18 fa When I reported for duly a few days after the term had opened, I was assigned a small room as yet unfurnished. With the help of willing students we rustled a few boards for seats, a big box which I used for a desk, improvised a blackboard, and started on the rocky road to some knowledge of geology. Naturally 1 asked for an early intro- duction to the pay-roll, when I found that in seniority I was number eleven on the teaching staff. The faculty was so small that we held our meetings in a semi-circle around the President ' s desk. I was immediately impressed by the enthusiasm, the earnest- ness and the hopefulness of my colleagues. Those were the days of frequent changes. New teachers were rapidly added, and one by one the older ones withdrew. I desire to mention a few of the earlier instructors who are yet in service, and to give in a word a tribute of my appreciation of their inestimable value to the institution. In the order of the catalogue list the first is Professor Meany — eloquent, gifted, tireless, wholly unselfish, extremely helpful to student and colleague alike, and consumed by his burning zeal for Washington; Dean Smith — judicial, scholarly, a stimulator of vigorous thinking, coura- geous with no knowledge of fear, and a seeker after the everlasting better; Professor Ober — esteemed, enthusiastic, gracious, patient and kind, beloved by her students, and greatly respected by her colleagues; Dean Fuller — courteous and conscientious, capable, modest but vigorous, possessed of a fine professional spirit and filled with high ideals; Dean Condon — forceful, indefatigable, public spirited, insistent upon work of the highest quality, practically the founder and since its beginning the head of a law school of great value and influence; Professor Byers — intrepid, talented, a close student, foe of the slothful, exacting but warmly sympathetic, possessing a gruff exterior but all heart within ; Professor Kincaid — brilliant, tireless, inspiring, forever youthful, the lamp of genius always aglow, he has done more than anyone else to make Washington widely known. I ha ve mentioned only those instructors who were members of the Faculty within the first five years of my service and who are known to this generation of students. If space permitted it would be a joy for me to speak in a similar manner of my associates who have joined the staff in later years. The student makes a great mistake who does not break through the reserve of the class-room and become well acquainted with the real men and women who are to be found within the teaching exterior. You will find them companionable, inspiring, interested in you, and intensely human. They are placing their lives of service at your command, and the friendships you form with them should be among your most valued possessions for all future time. In the five generations of students that I have seen pass through the halls of the University it would be strange if I had not obser ved marked changes in them in a host of ways. The average student of today may possess limited means, but twenty years ago substantially every student was well-nigh penniless. Instances of students living in cheap quarters and cooking their own meals were common. Courses were elected where there were no laboratory fees and where the text-books were the least expensive. Books, cadet and gym suits and other things, used by students were generally passed along from person to person as long as they would hang together. It was a time when stern necessity compelled the simple life. It was a time when dress-suits, banquets, box parties, taxicabs and such things were words in a foreign and alien tongue. And yet the students were wide-awake and enthusiastic. They were eager to learn from their teachers of the ways and habits of students in other institutions. Many were the efforts to launch a tradition or a custom at once and under full-sail. One of the early classes decided to wear caps and gowns at graduation and this was continued for a few brief years. I recall that my own cap and gown (the Faculty did not wear them) were always loaned to some senior and they graduated regularly until the gown came to grief at the hands (no, the feet) of a short fellow who walked all over the hem of the garment and tore it to shreds. As the years sped by many changes came about in the University membership. The number of students increased in a notable degree, and class spirit became strong and dominant. Students were drawn from everywhere and not alone from the shadows of the institution. The enrollment became cosmopolitan and no longer provincial. The high schools had an amazing development and the students entered the University younger in years and at the same time better prepared for college work. Games and sports came to their own as the institution waxed strong in numbers, and out of it all has been evolved the present elaborate series of intercollegiate contests of brawn and muscle. In my twenty years of daily association with the Washington student I have come to know him thoroughly and it is with genuine pleasure that I take this opportunity of giving him a word of tribute for his many fine qualities. As I have found him he is unusually versatile — rich in profitable experiences — ready to meet every emergency; he is an honorable contender — undismayed in defeat — magnanimous in victory; he has -in intense pride in his institution — faith in himself — and optimism unbounded for the future; he is sincere in his desire to learn, and is determined to make ample preparation to do his share of the world ' s work; he is chivalrous — brave — eager to make sure that his ' scutcheon has no blot; he believes in the nobility of character, and the best traditions of the purple and gold v ll always be safe in his hands. One is said to show the shelf-mark of Time when he delights in reminiscences or indulges in retrospect. I will admit that judged by years alone or by the natural span of a life-time I have reached a place where my shadow falls a little to the eastward. But in hope, in enthusiasm, and in everything that belongs to the spirit I wall not admit that the winged years have left a single furrow. At Washington we have found the fountain of perpetual youth and a time of old age is unthinkable. p IMPRESSIONS THEN AND NOW Arthur R. Priest, Dean of Men. N THE years from 1 900 to 1 9 1 the University of Washington was so busy grow- ing that it had little time to take stock. With a rapidly changing student body and a constant influx of new instructors, the establishment of traditions was almost an im- possibility. Com.mon standards of scholarship or common ideals of life were not to be found either among the students or among the Faculty. The students on the whole were ingenious and, on first registering, were overflowing with undirected enthusiasm. The mem- bers of the Faculty, under the burden of too many instructional hours per week, were trying to get the best possible results out of classes generally too large. The result was inevitabi-; discouragement not only to the Faculty but to many, many students who were lost in the mass and who failed to get a proper conception of the real purpose of University training. Such students soon dropped from the college rolls; they had never been in college in spirit. These years were also years of financial good times and many young people came to the University because they had sufficient money and not because they had a vision of true education. Such students rarely graced the campus more than one or two semesters before moving on. The greatest weakness of all, however, was the feeling on the Campus in both student and Faculty circles, that leadership was lacking. There was little disposition on the part of a freshman to look up to and take advice from a senior. The freshman rarely felt that he was passing through a trying-out period. What if he should fail in studies! He felt it no disgrace or reproof, for he could immediately turn his attention to business and possibly make more money in a month selling real estate than his former instructors were receiving for a year ' s grind of teaching! Instructors also felt the pull of outside distractions and many times held to their legitimate work more from a sense of duty than because of single-hearted love for their teaching. Yet through these years of confusion and immaturity there were two notable factors making for stability, two forces at work to make an abiding institution. One of these forces was the Board of Control of the Associated Students. This Board was the one continuous body running through the student life of these years always working for definite standards and laboring at all times for a uniform policy of efficiency in student affairs. This Board it was that conserved whatever of good there was in one generation of students and carried it on to the next. The other favorable factor was a group of a few leading spirits among the Faculty who were deeply interested in every student enrolled in their classes and who sought to point the students to higher ideals of service through scholarship. These men and women toiled early and late to create an enthusiasm for ' he things of the mind. On the Campus today there is a marked contrast to the conditions of ten r: even five years ago. The ingenuousness of that period still exists, but it is taking the form of openmindedness and candor rather than naivete; and openmindedness is the sure fore- runner of progress and scholarship. So on every hand there is cause for hope and great expectations. Our freshmen are uniformly better prepared than formerly and they are beginning to regard an E ' mark as a badge of dishonor. Our seniors are uniformly more serious in their class-room work and in their leadership they assume an attitude that commands respect and confidence. Our graduate student group has grown from a neg- ligible factor to one of much potency and influence. The men and women of this group if are giving their undivided altention to mental advancement and are making their presence felt more surely than any other single group on the Campus. Finally the Faculty of today is inspired to supreme effort by an untiring leader, a man of rare enthusiasm and of uncompromising ethical standards; so that down to the humblest instructor no one has any disposition to complain, for he is too much interested in his task and too eager to help to think of himself with pity. The entire University has gained immensely in quiet dignity and self-respect. We are entering on what may easily be our Golden Age. THE LIFE OF THE CAMPUS Tr Kii If Afi COMPLETE census of the animal life of the campus would unquestionably be Irtj a revelation to the uninitiated, and a mere enumeration of the species would l ' '  l require a volume of considerable size. Most of the living things about us would be classified by the majority of those unfamiliar with zoological science as no-see-ums , as they are out of range of the ordinary vision, and multitudes are actually microscopic. Our summary would begin with the one-celled animals, which swarm in the waters of the lakes, and exist in all the pools and marshy spots on the campus, and would end with the birds and mammals, unless we were to include that bipedal type, classified by zoologists as Homo sapiens, as a constituent of the campus fauna. The most extensive series of animals, so far as numbers of kinds is concerned, would undoubtedly be the insects, of which many thousands of species tenant the University district, ranging through the winged hosts from the tiny beetle and gnat through the bees and flies up to the relatively large butterflies and moths. The shifts these creatures makf for a living would make a story more remarkable than any fiction that might be written, and would require volumes for the telling. An entomologist with the genius of a Fabre might spend a lifetime upon the campus and still leave great tasks unfinished. The animal life that appeals to most of us is of course the representatives of the feathered world. Of upwards of four hundred birds known to occur in Washington, either as permanent denizens or as passing migrants, probably several hundreds might well be recorded from the campus during the course of the year if careful scrutiny were m.ade of the flying hosts from day to day. Fortunately many of our bird friends are with us during the entire year, or at least most of the season, and at times some of the species appear in such numbers as to attract the attention of the least observant. The great flocks of sea-gulls that on occasion disport themselves upon the greensward about the buildings excite the admiration of all who view them, and when a company of grosbeaks swarms into the campus all beholders are struck with amazement. Other birds, of a more retiring nature, do not appeal to the eye, but by their curious calls or sweet music draw the attention of those with ears attuned to the harmonies of nature. The solo of the song-sparrow, uttered from the midst of one of the campus thickets, is as tine a bit of natural music as the feathered world is capable of producing. Among the mammals we have many lowly denizens that wend their way about the campus at night, by secret paths hidden from the eye of man, and take to the trenches during the day. Chief of these is the mountain beaver, who mines the hillsides to provide a happy home for his beady-eyed family. This line of tenantry also included the shrews, mice and moles. More agreeable society for the human species is the presence of the chipmunks and squirrels that subsist upon the provender supplied by the hazel nuts and berries growing in the less frequented copses. Time was when the lordly elk and the black-tailed deer threaded their cautious way through the underbrush along the lakeside, and the black bear and slinking timber wolf terrified the lesser life dwelling in the great forest that covered the district out of which our campus was eventually carved. Men are still living who hunted the great game animals among the thickets bordering upon Union bay. Many changes have been wrought in the life of the campus through the advent and continued activities of man. Much of the original life has passed away, never to return. Many new forms have come in to replace those destroyed through changed conditions. The general tendency is, however, towards a constant reduction in the number of animal forms tenanting the area, and this will continue to manifest itself as the grounds are brought under the control of the landscape gardener, and as the area occupied by buildings increases. It is to be hoped that a few portions of the campus may be retained in a semi-wild state, so as to give those who follow us an idea of the marvelous beauty of the site of the Uni- versity as it came into our hands when the tract was secured from the state to serve as a setting for the then small institution. Some thought for the future of our animate neighbors, especially those of the more desirable type, will not be amiss, and our reward will come in the thanks of those who follow us in treading the campus byways. 2C TECHNICAL TRAINING IN THE SERVICE OF THE STATE Henry K. Benson, Director of the Bureau of Industrial Re ch. 1 UBLIC interest has been greatly aroused by the tremendous results accruing from the application of science to the problems of industry and to the well being of nations. A recent editorial in the Independent ascribes to A Mistake in Chemistry the loss of thousands of lives. More frequently our failure to apply the discoveries of science or our neglect to make use of technical training has meant a great loss in trade and con- sequent dependence upon other and distant lands for the satisfaction of our daily needs. It is of interest, therefore, to briefly review the possibilities that lie in store for the tech- nically trained men and women of this state in the part that must be taken in the awakened response to a larger responsibility. We have in the past been chief ly engaged in the construction of the state ' s industrial framework — settlement, transportation, and the discovery of resources. Now it remains for us to fill in this framework with the more highly fabricated products of the manufac- turing and agricultural industries. An inventory of the resources of the state shows a great wealth of forest products — enough timber to last another century at the present rate of cutting. Each year, however, twice as much timber is cut as the lumber produced. In other words, half of it may be described as waste wood in the form of sawdust, slabs and logging waste. In other countries and in certain portions of this country this waste constitutes the raw material for the manufacture of other commodities, such as ethyl alcohol, paper, gas, and distillation products. The utilization of wood waste is a highly technical problem and calls for technically trained men whenever attempted. Great quantities of waste result from the operations of the fisheries industry and some progress has already been made in utilizing it for fertilizer and oil production, but the field is largely unoccupied. In the waters of Puget Sound and the North Pacific are immense beds of kelp from which more potash can be extracted than is imported from Germany in normal times. The process of commercial extraction is not only tech- nical but problematical. Great quantities of fuel in the beds of coal and mountain streams and lakes for water power constitute sources of power. It is doubtful if any better location can be found in the United States for the fixation of nitrogen than the Pacific Northwest. The initiation of this industry and its operation are dependent upon technical skill. The catalogue of technical possibilities might be greatly extended. In the conquest of great areas of logged-off lands and of arid deserts ; in the products of the mines, and in the utilization of natural resources lie great opportunities for the upbuilding of a great and diversified manufacturing industry. Its possibilities are greatly amplified when we consider that here also are certain gateways through which the products of Alaska and of the Orient enter for distribution throughout the country. To intercept many of the raw materials for use in manufacturing is not a commercial impossibility. The University of Washington is not only willing but eager to cooperate with the industries in the study of their problems. By this contact with the industries it is believed that not only can service be rendered to the industries themselves, but our University men can be trained to enter upon their technical careers more directly and more efficiently. 27 m BACK AT MICHIGAN Frank G. Kane. NE HUNDRED THIRT Y-SEVEN rules, with many a footnote and a super- imposed glossary, frequently serve to remind me of my days in college — in a univer- sity which tried to enforce only one specific regulation. That was: You must not go away early on vacation, nor come back late. Outside that, we Michiganders lived under the sreat, wholesome rule of good citizenship. The university did not see us in any other lichl than ordinary young men and women, with a full share of the good things of opportunity. If one of us bulged from the beauties of discipline, and, for inciting a riot or removing a red lantern from a street excavation, suffered conviction and fine in police court, the university merely fired him. There was no uprising of democracy or downbearing of crushing tyranny about it. Once my roommate stood in line for some time to present an oral petition to the dean. No, no; we don ' t do that here, said the dean. Next! Strangely enough, my roommate, who was a splendid student of philosophy and the most radical thinker I ever knew, started no recall movement against the dean. In our relations with each other, we were simple and straightforward, we students at Michigan. If I wanted to go visit Duke Neville, I went over to Duke ' s rooming house, went right in and up to his room. It might be I o ' the clock in the morning, and Duke badly in need of sleep. But the good soul got right up, ready for any adven- ture, from a discussion of Calhoun ' s doctrine of nullification to a raid on Bill Kelsey ' s trousers pockets for the wherewithal to have rice, tea and chop suey extra fine at George Yee Bow ' s. George was the most heavenly of Celestials — but this is not about cooks and places to eat. At luncheon or dinner time, one was as like to be at another fraternity house as his own, to the great discomfit of the steward, who that night had thoughtfully scheduled a slab of corned beef and a single boiled potato for the body of the meal. One stayed there, and helped sing the songs of that fraternity, and when the house rules came on went up to the room of someone in one of his classes and got to work. A surveying crew, running an imaginary line in a most imaginary study of engineering, would stack instruments at the corner of the nearest place where a meal was being served, and have at the chow, as plainly welcome as the doormat. Running for office was a great joy among us. I don ' t believe even the candidates took it seriously, though when they were in office they worked seriously to develop the activity beyond what it had been. The only time Deac Ellis ever visited the Daily, as a member of the board of control of student publications, he pied a form. The only time I stood in the hustings, Don Sterling, my manager, now Sunday editor of the Oregon Journal, overslept and didn ' t get out nearly as many votes as were polled for Octy Graham. We gradually got to know oui teachers unusually well. We began, of course, with the benefit of a whole body of tradition transmitted about them ; they had no such initial advantage with us, but must learn about us through a process of experimentation. We didn ' t bother them much either before or after class; their attitude toward us, even in the biggest lecture classes, was such that we came to feel their personalities strongly. Now and then one of us was privileged to help Lloyd of philosophy do a bit of amateur plumbing in his basement, or play with Van Tyne and his boys at Prussian soldier. p 29 f Others, like Wenley and Scott, Hildner and Adams, we met in student clubs and hon- orary societies. Fred Taylor had a brace of winsome daughters. But in the main, the men like Cooley and Israel C. Russell exerted their influence — how, one never could quite know — in the classroom, and to such purpose that not even the wildest and least attentive of us can look back on those hours without feeling that in them he was blest out of all his rightful proportion. None of them, as I recall, rushed about giving talks before various groups. But they did give us wonderful lectures in class. We used to show our appreciation of those lectures in two outward manifestations. When anyone came in late, disturbing the lecturer, he was shufHed to his place by the whole class. At the end of the course, we applauded the lecturer as cordially as we could, for his effort and his toleration with us. We learned a great deal from each other, we students. We were great discussers. One night Steiner and Neville came in dripping wet from seeing Michigan and Illinois fight it out on the gridiron, and instead of contending about the game, entered into a furious debate on the merits of William Randolph Hearst for Governor of New YorL Both seemed to know where New York was and what some of its problems were. We went on walks, on moonht nights in Spring, not always with young women for com- panions. We got up lists of points on the merits and defects of members of our groups. Lee White still has one such list that shows exactly what his fellows thought of him and his disposition. We touched things with all the imagination we could bring to them. Al Weeks got up at a performance of Twelfth Night and called lustily for Author! Author! We went in a milling mass to watch the ' varsity practice or to line with red fire for miles and miles eastward of Ann Arbor the route of our track squad returning from Cambridge. We crowded University Hall at May festival time. We toned down our rah-rahism, but we never became blase. All in all, we lived simply, heartily, freshly with each other, and I think we learned som.ething about things and not a little about men, at Michigan. STUDENT TRADITIONS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Osgood Murdock, Editor of The Daily Californian, University of California. Is x«|N ENUMERATION and a description of one ' s holidays is perhaps the worst K? - representation of daily life and the spirit in which he lives that one can give for those who are interested but far away. So an outline and rapid sketch of the gala days and traditions and show-habits of the students of the University of California may give an impression by no means correct. Yet every-day life at college only changes in degree and tenancy from place to place, while the festivals of the various universities are often widely various, and sometimes narrowly typical of their home. So we will at- tempt to fly from hill-top to hill-top with an ordinary Californian throughout a year. The freshman-sophomore pushball game and tug of war comes first. This event is held on the first Saturday afternoon of the fall semester. Originating in the natural class rush, the scramble has been tamed and reduced to a ceremony. All the male members of both classes turn out in old clothes for various forms of competition. First picked men advance on each other with hard-spouting water hoses in combat which is exhilarating from the side-lines but always indecisive. Then the assembled mob takes part in a push- ball game on opposite sides of a ten-foot rubber bag. Later a few men from each class are picked for a second pushball game along more scientific lines. The afternoon is closed with a tug of war which stretches diagonally across the football field in solid line, the winning side pulling the losers through a stream of water. Everybody then settles down to work for at least two months. Some fair night about the middle of October, every man in the university attires himself in pajamas and class hat and serpentines up the hill to the Greek Theatre with his class for the annual Pajamarino Rally. A small fire blazes in the pit of the theater, the students sit by classes just above it, and eight thousand women and townspeople fill the seats above that. There are a few speeches, a song or two, perhaps a dance, and the big class stunts. Each class produces a feature ad, and the rivalry of years has been known to resort to aeroplanes, electric signs, fireworks, artillery, and elaborate pageants to win the viva voce decision of the audience. As a spectacle, the Pajamarino is famous in University annals and among the outsiders for miles about. It is now necessary to charge admission to outsiders in order that the attendance may be limited. The Skull and Keys Running about the end of October is the next performance of importance. This organization, founded by Frank Norris during his undergraduate days, IS an interfraternity honor society for upperclassmen. Twenty-five or thirty men are publicly initiated every year. They appear on the campus the first thing some Friday morning, dressed in a full dress coat, white ducks rolled up to the knees, and variegated hosiery. Carrying books and babies in valiant chivalry until I 1 o ' clock, the neophytes then assemble and lock step single-file up to the football field, chanting a club song. Every man recites an original limerick and announces the afternoon ' s program, also on the field, when skits and acts of terrible and perilous nature are performed in surprising costumes for the benefit of the brave ones who have ventured onto the bleachers. The night before the Big Game, formerly with Stanford, but last year and hence- forth with Washington, the sophomore class men climb Charier Hill directly behind the m f campus and spend the night camped on the thirty foot concrete C to guard it against possible baths in crimson paint. A huge bonfire blazes, the C is outlined with electric lights, and the men pass the night in story and song, coffee and pie being served shortly after midnight. Lusty are the cheers when daylight comes, and few are the winks which nervous householders immediately below enjoy. The day of the Big Game has of course always been the show day of the year. 1 he contest has alternated between Berkeley and Palo Alto from year to year. The rooting section ordinarily contains one thousand vocally powerful souls. Three yell leaders and a rally committee make elaborate preparations for a rooting stunt, involving cloth cloaks which paint bears and axes and C ' s on human tapestry. Here too, fireworks are often introduced ; sometimes it is confetti or toy balloons or pigeons which are liberated spectacularly. Stanford capped the climax by engaging an aviator to fly over the field with Cardinal colors on the occasion of the last Big Game in 1914. This same year considerable rivalry developed between the two universities the week before the game over the matter of burning each other ' s bonfires and spreading each other ' s colors over the othe r campus. A systematic campus guard was maintained here for four nights before the game, with watch fires, sentinels, and military examination of all who would cross the campus borders. Immediately after the Big Game a diligent period of study sets in, in preparation for the mid-year examinations which are held before the close of college in December. At trie opening of the spring semester, almost two months of preparation and organization preceed the rush of events and contests which bring the college year to a grand close in April and May. Charter Day, the annual commemoration of the founding of the University, is the accasion when the guaidianship of the Big C is turned over to the freshman class by the ophomores who have been responsible during the year previous. On the afternoon of he same day, general student games and a carnival are held on the turf, followed by a baseball same between the faculty and the Skull i and Keys Society. Charter Day falls about the middle of March. Up until last year the women of the University asserted their collective rights on February 22, which was known as Women ' s Day. The custom has been abandoned with the advent of universal suffrage. However, the Partheneia, held about the end of March, is a pleasing substitute. This is a pageant, written, produced and acted by the women of the University and in which a large proportion of the women can take part. It is held in a beauti- ful oak-grown glade, and the dancing, music, cos- tuming and poetic theme make this afternoon one of poetic influence over the campus. During the baseball season, the famous Stan- ford axe is taken from the bank vault and paraded up to the field for its annual airing at the Axe Ral- ly, on which occasion it is turned over to its new guardian, usually a baseball player of promin- ence. The weapon was captured from Stanford at a baseball game more than ten years ago, and is a highly prized trophy. It is carried through the streets, heavily guarded, and although the always rumored raid has never come, it is always expected. Commencement week is especially characterized by the Senior Extravaganza, held n the Greek Theater and displaying the dramatic, musical, and artistic ability of the graduating class in spectacular fashion. The musical comedy is written by a member of he class and set to original music. Great chorus effects and ensembles group two or hree hundred seniors on the huge stage, the whole made gay by elaborate costuming and ■xtensive electric display. The evening ' s performance packs the theater with 8,000 spectators, and many alumni make this the occasion of their annual pilgrimage back to he University. Last year an Alumni Day was held shortly after the close of the emester. Games by the undergraduates, a meeting for the alumni, a barbecue for all, and a general reunion laid the foundation for a tradition which should grow in import- ance in years to come. Of special interest, and well worthy of last notice as a student tradition in the Uni- versity, is the custom of declaring a general holiday on the 29th of February every four years. This is Labor Day, and the entire student body turns out to do some one manual ask which will be of permanent use to the University. Road work has been the general rend of the operations, but this year the student body united in constructing a path up he hill to the big C, besides grading various other paths on this upper end of the campus. Three thousand men toil steadily all morning. At noon the women serve coffee and beans ind sandwiches, and in the afternoon both sexes join in a general program of revelry and :elebration. STUDENT LIFE AND ACTIVITIES AT THE OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE ' s g ' 3 fortable distance, the students at the Oregon Agricultural College may be found f)l- engaged in activities not dissimilar to those n vogue at the other Northwest in- stitutions. Local student customs and college traditions, however, go to make the atmosphere of student life wholly distinctive. In September the wayward freshman who has forgotten his green skull cap, the in- signia of all first year men, is escorted to the fountain by members of the sophomore vigil- ance committee. During the remainder of the year freshmen are never seen without their official passport. The annual freshman-sophomore bag rush on the athletic field, is the first class scrap of the year. Eleven bags stuffed with oily excelsior, and one hundred huskies, picked to represent their classes are in the play, the object of which is to see which side can carrv ' the most bags over their opponents ' goal line. The big football rally before the annual state championship game with the Uni- versity of Oregon is the climax of the football season. At this rally the huge fresh- man bonfire, the result of some months ' labor, goes up in smoke. It is the custom of the Junior Class to cut classes on a certain day, known only to Juniors, and to start on a picnic partv . The information as to the date generally leaks out the night before and a friendly scrap between the Juniors and Seniors follows, the latter attempting to spoil the plans of the third year men by t -ing them up. The Seniors ' attempts are usually frustrated and the Juniors plans for a good time materialize without the loss of life or the shedding of much blood. Junior week-end festi ' ities are staged during the early part of May, at which time the Junior Prom, Junior Play, Freshmen-Sophomore Tug-of-war across Marv ' s River and Junior Vespers are held. It is heralded as the one big gala event of the spring months. Inspection Day, at which time the cadet regiment is inspected by an appointed United States officer, followed by a large mihtary ball in the evening is a climax to the military work for the year. With but about three weeks remaining in which to call themselves undergraduates, the Seniors give their annual Rhododendron Excursion to Ne sport, a distance of some miles, where the day is spent in surf bathing, clam digging, and taking long hikes up and do%s ' n the beach. scerves fY OTn flgrieultural College Campus 35 f THE STATE COLLEGE OF WASHINGTON here hi h toucn in light t iil fit na Greet the risi ig su i ; A 111 their last glance I ' ieirs the siinwt If hen the {lay is d ' ine : Tinvcring o ' er the grtiin-rlad hill-tops, J long the If esterri lan ls; Hope and stre igth of poiv ' r and progress, Al ia ] Iate sta uls. Mother of a sturdy people. Blood of pioneers. May thy na ne increase in glory, JVith the passing years! — fVashington State College Ah ia Mater So ALF a mile above sea level, nearly i-wo hundred feet higher than picturesque little Pullman, on an eminence which overlooks the yellovsf wheatfields of the Inland Empire, and commands to the north and west a view of the violet-hazed Potlatch country, the high towers of Washington State College form the golden crown of Eastern Washington. The college is truly set upon a hilltop, a light which cannot be hidden. .Small wonder that in the bracing air of the high country, in the virile, gusty climate of the Palouse hills, a college, planted by pioneers, fostered by a union of the best from East and West, should develop a distinctive college Spirit, marked by loyalty and demo- cracy — a Spirit which has given birth to many fine traditions, and which is daily making history. Upon the athletic field the Spirit has been the cause of many victories. In less than four years the college has garnered many championships. And the present year is spoken of in reverent tones as the Great Year, the year when anything is possible. The Spirit has always been considerate of other colleges. In athletics it has con- sistently stood for the Northwest, and for the development and encouragement of the small colleges. The Spirit has been alive in the activities of the students. Music, art, and literature have not been neglected for athletics or for technical education. Debate teams, glee clubs, orchestras, dramatic companies, and college publications have made names for themselves in the college and in the state. In the lives of the students themselves the Spirit has wrought that democracy which so many colleges claim and so few realize. Outwardly, the college life is very much like that of other colleges. Fraternities, clubs, homes, and dormitories — all organized on a simple, wholesome basis — claim their shares, as elsewhere, but all groups mingle freely and upon equal terms. Men and women are judged on merit, and the college comes first. In the building of wholesome traditions which invoke the reverence and love of the students, the Spirit has not been idle. The bell which is rung for victory only ; the m sKirvtftDrv Stzste. College Carwpvis m I ■ Homeric struggles of Freshman and Sophomore; the rallies, the yells, and the songs — all B are regarded with reverence and respect. Even the curriculum of the college itself is pervaded by the Spirit. In popularity ii the liberal arts share alike with the pure and applied sciences. The highest ideal of t Senator Morrill — an harmonious combination of the liberal and practical — has been g realized. And in the realization Service and Democracy are the key-words. The finest and most intense accomplishment of the college Spirit is found in the Alumni, and it increases with the years. They are men and women with real views and practical knowledge, men and women who are entering into the life of the state and making themselves part of it, loyal children of their Alma Mater and their state, builders of a true commonwealth Spirit. THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON WALK nestling close under the fragrance of fir trees, and Deady Hall ' s gray tower and face in the background — that is one ' s first glimpse of Oregon. A picturesqueness hangs over it all. One is not impressed with magnitude nor vastness; one is not inspired by architectural beauty — but rather a feeling of lonesome happiness, that repressed satisfaction for home that is not home, permeates one at the first glimpse through the black trunks and swaying needles. You will let me be your cicerone. There is little to see; but we love it all, with an affection built up by but few places. Let us go up between the trees. On our right is the old baseball field, where a new Commerce Building is to be erected. The men are going to play the great American game over in a thirty acre cow pasture which the Faculty is transforming into a playground of inter-mural activity. On our left are tennis courts, and beyond, a bare spot where the Duck Pond of hazing days lay. The Faculty states it was filled up because the water seeped into the basement of private residences below; however, we know this action followed a movement to quell student exuberance along haz- ing lines. Up the slope among the trees — that gray, vine-colored building is Villard Hall. It did duty from 1885, when Henry Villard presented it to the University, until last year, as the Administration Building, but has been relegated to the domain of simple recitation building since the new one has been erected. Yes, this is historic Deady — it seems a great grey Sphinx, questioning and judging us as we pass each day. Four stories of odd architecture. It was built in 1875, and for ten long years sturdily fulfilled its purpose as the home of Higher Education in Oregon. Now the modern structures stand aloof, each filling their place, but somehow connected with this patriarch. Here comes Dean Straub, seventy years old, hale, hearty ; dean of men, and pro- fessor of Greek. He has been with the University, fighting its battles since 1879. He is the connecting link between past and present, but a link stronger than most of those newly welded. No! That was not an act honoring him alone; we take off our hats to each and all of our professors. Let us turn to our right and walk down Hello Lane. Yes, the Frosh all wear 38 Views from ' © ' he Univeri ' ityoi ' Or iv Campus __ 39 m the insignia of their verdure — and the Freshman Vigilance Committee, The Hand That Flies at Night, fully punishes any departure from this custom. Hello, fellows. Cer- tainly ! Everyone speaks to everyone at Oregon, and everyone is more than just acquainted, too. That bronze Calla Lily spurting water into the cement basis is the memorial of the Class of 1913. The Library is the building just ahead of us: and see — through those trees, across the street — those Ionic columns. That is the new Administration building. We are all justly proud of it. Let us cross the street. Here is historic Kincaid Field, where so many of our campus heroes of the past have fought — ever displaying our Oregon Spirit. Here the Temple- ton brothers, Moulen, Kelly, Hawkins, Pinkham, Latourette, Johns, Fenton, and many others took their work and fought their battles. Now, up the south side of the Quadrangle. Here is a sun dial, and there, among those trees, is the President ' s home, with Mary Spiller Hall in the background. We ' ll walk down the eastern side of the Quad to the mill-race. The gymnasium — home of Hayward and Bezdek — is there on the corner. This is Friendly Hall — closer to us. Now we are passing McClure Hall, where the Science Department is housed. All the buildings since we left Deady have been added since 1909. This little odd structure is the Woman ' s Gym, rather old, but still serviceable. The Commerce and Music Halls are at our right as we pass. And last, the mill-race. Get into my canoe, and we will paddle and drift an hour or so. Fine, I should say so. I love the willows, dipping their wisps into the water and writing their song on its surface. More living romances are enacted here than writers ever wrote. The delicate bouquet of wild flowers permeates the air. See the purple hills, far away over the water, at our bow. The banks are mottled with their intermittent sunshine and shadow. Let ' s rest here for a moment. Surely the Oregon poet had this place in his memory when he wrote: Spring ' s green icitchery is Hearing Braid and border for her side; Grace forever haunts her journey. Beauty dimples on her tide; Through the purple gates of Morning Now the roseate ripples dance. Golden then, when day returning On the li-atcrs trails his lance. — Chester Anders Fee. FROM THE DIARY OF A PEACEMAKER Nov. 29 — Wire comes from Henry Ford, asking Dr. Suzzallo to appoint stu- dent to be his guest on European peace mission. Called to president ' s office, Dean Haggett asks me if I have a belief m better international understanding and fed- eration . I reply affirmatively. Nov. 30 — On three hours ' notice, start for New York. Didn ' t sleep much durina the night, for I didn ' t know but what I might be called back. Dec. I — In misery all day, until con- ductor hands me wire at Missoula. It is from Dr. Suzzallo. He says Ford ' s secre- tary has made reservations for me on second peace ship. Dec. 3 — Arrive in Chicago. Dec. 4 — First peace ship sails while I ' m on Twentieth Century Limited bound for New York. Dec. 5 — Reach New York. Dec. 6 — My passport fails to arrive; I ' m badly worried. Dec. 7 — Still no word of the passport. If it doesn ' t come before noon tomorrow, I don ' t go on second ship. Dec. 8 — Passport bureau fails to an- swer my telegrams. Finally get them by long-distance telephone. Passport arrives and I embark on steamship Frederick VIII of Scandinavian-American line, along with 2 1 other pacificists, for Europe. Dec. 9 — Introductions all around. Peace delegates hold a meeting. We don ' t know where we ' re going, but we ' re on our way. Dec. 1 1 — Confessional. All peace delegates answer to question: Why I am here? One fellow, a minister, said he wanted to enlarge his sphere. He had made peace in many families in his time and now he ' s willing to tackle nations. Dec. I 3 — Ship ' s wireless paper reports that main peace party is in throes of war. We don ' t believe it. Dec. 1 5 — We get eight meals a day on board ship, so most of us are sleeping through lunch, as we still have four meals left. Dec. 16 — Three cruisers hail us; one of them comes up close and sends over boarding party of sailors. Our passports examined and after an exchange of signals between boarding party and British cruiser, we start for Kirkwall, Scotland. Dec. 1 7 — Steaming through narrow channels of Orkney islands, we are greeted with wonderful sight of 60 English war vessels steaming out of secret coaling station. Torpedo boat escorts us to Kirk- wall through the mine fields. Just as we f? Tooze. OreKon. ami Emil Hurja. Washingto reach harbor, Oscar II, main peace ship, pulls out. Dec. 1 8 — Three German doctors taken off. All mail matter removed from ship. Students hold mock trial. Dec. 1 9 — We leave Kirkwall in the morning. Dec. 20 — Norwegian coast comes into view, rocky hills covered with snow. We stop at Christiansaand and get some fresh fish. We ' ve had nothing but fish it seems for two weeks. Deckhands find two German stowaways in the baggage hold, where they had been for 1 1 days. Dec. 21 — We reach Christiania. It is fifty below zero. We meet Mr. Lochner, secretary of the expedition, and he tells us the plan of the expedition. Student delegation holds its first meeting. Met Olav Havrevold, former University of Washington student. Dec. 23 — Off for Sweden in the slow- est train in the world. Not a berth on the whole train and we are on it 20 hours. The countiy looks gloomy and cold from the car window. Lou Lozier, of Uni- versity of Missouri, sleeps in parcel rack on wall. Dec. 24 — Taxicabs take us to our hotels in Stockholm. Swedish people busy celebrating Christmas. Big flakes of snow falling, real story-book Christmas. Ma- dame Inez Milholland Boissevain finds time between puffs of her cigarette to start an excuse for a row ' . ' Dec. 25 — Most lonely Christmas I ' ve ever spent. I ' m farther away from home than any other member of the whole party. Fairbanks, Alaska, looks far off on the map. Dec. 27 — Swedish co-eds chief attrac- tion of day. They take us around to the galleries and museums. Dec. 28 — American minister, Ira Mor- ns, holds open house for the student members of the party. Dec. 29 — Went to the royal opera with a Tri Delt from Iowa State Uni- versity. Dec. 31 — Reach Denmark. Attend banquet at a Royal Hunt Club, soldiers stand around to see that none of us leave the banquet hall before the event is over. Am thinking of Seattle tonight, for I remember that the state went dry at the last election. Jan. 1 — Spend all afternoon viewing the art treasures in the New Glyptotek. Some wonderful Rodin sculptures and a lot of excellent Scandinavian art. rORD PEACE EXPEDITION ' Tins Got the Meals ami Taxi Ricks Jan. 3 — John Paul Frazee, of Wis- consin; John Neal Campbell, of Vander- bilt, and I draw to a dinner party at the Ilium mansion. The elevator man at the hotel tells us the Illums are the Marshal Fields of Copenhagen. Borrow silk top- per from Davis, of Yale. Some party, boys. After dinner, all the girls smoke cigarettes and the mother a big, fat stogie. Jan. 5 — Spend the day at the old castle at Helsingor, where Hamlet lived when he was a boy. Jan. 6 — Had half-hour chat with Dr. Frederick A. Cook, of North Pole fame. He ' s on his way back to America after studying the wild men of Borneo. Jan. 7 — Leaving Copenhagen at 1 o ' clock, we land at Warnemunde, Ger- many, at 3 in the afternoon. First thing we see is a squad of German soldiers with spiked helmets and guns. Our train speeds across Germany, through cities of Hamburg, Bremen and Osnabruck. We get a night-time glimpse of a country busy in war. Jan. 8 — We cross picturesque Holland by rail and reach The Hague, the capital, in the morning. Jan. 9 — Put off a Dutch street car because there were more than the legal number of persons on it. Had no busi- ness hopping it on the run anyway. Jan. 10 — Student delegation holds final farewell banquet. I prevail upon committee to classify me as a delegate now, when the students are going back. Went to Rotterdam to see them off. Jan. 1 2 — Spend the afternoon in the Ryks museum in Amsterdam. Half hour seeing Rembrandt ' s masterpiece, The Night Watch . Met Dr. Hugo DeVries. the great botanist. Jan. 1 3 — Tried to get some wooden shoes to take back with me. The depart- ment store clerk told me they didn ' t make ' em that big. Jan. 1 5 — Spend the morning in Ut- recht, looking around. Off in the evening from Rotterdam for the United States. Jan. 16 — Spend the day off the cliffs of Dover. Over a hundred ships in sight. French shore visible in the distance. Jan. 1 8 — Move on to Falmouth, where the English officers look over our passports again. Take off the mail and search some of the passengers for spy notes. Jan. 22 — Celebrate my birthday. Jan. 29 — Statute of Liberty, looming up through the dusk, looks mighty fine. Feb. 5 — Have dinner with Andrew Eldred, 1 3, U. of W., in Washington, D. C. Feb. 6 — Enjoy half hour interview with Secretary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane. Feb. 7 — Have lunch with Farnsworth Wright, ' 15, U. of W., in Chicago. Feb. 15— Back Home. Feb. 1 6 — Interview Recorder Stone and Comptroller Condon. Register for second semester. p iWemoriam 44 p 31n ilpmnrtam span Hlaabrlla Auattit rnffasDr iFrauk EliuiariJ Jnljitson lEtlfplyu Sauiiiia Varolii rlixtniarljrr Soualii (Sag iFrattk Manlig IFrpiirrir (irosBP BJilltam PBBPtt mpa pptprsmt 1 47 Logi? Leafier Xoble NOIil.i: IMKIUIXC C ALIFOKXIA ' S LINE THE FOOTBALL TEAM Captain Ray Hunt Left End Elmer Leader Left Tackle Harry Wirt, Will Grimm Left Guard Dave Logg, Tom Cushman Center Captain-Elect Louis Seagrave Right Guard Tom Markham, Will Grimm Right Tackle Ernest Murphy, George Smith Right End Allan Young Quarter Cedric Miller, Ross MacKechnie Left Half Elmer Noble Left Half Walter Shiel Fullback FOOTBALL SCORES, 191 5 October 2_U. of W 31 ; Ballard Meteors ' October 9— U. of W 64; Washmgton Park October 23 — U. of W 21 ; Gonzaga (Spokane) 7 October 30— U. of W 27 ; Whitman November 6 — U. of W 72 ; University of California November 1 3 — U. of W 13; University of California 7 November 25 — U. of W 46; University of Colorado 274 14 .« i« ' FOOTBALL Is x«| TRUE history of intercollegiate athletics in the Northwest would record 1915-16 l ?Y as the Big Year; for during the football season the attention of sport critics • j from coast to coast was focused upon the Northwest as much as upon any other section of the country. Washington and two of her most formidable rivals in the old conference gained national reputation on the gridiron, and it was unfortunate that Coach Gilmour Dobie ' s undefeated eleven was unable to meet either of the others to decide a disputed title. The new coast conference, based on the one-year residence rule which Washington and California fostered on the coast, was formed immediately after the football season closed. The members are California, Ore- gon, O. A. C. and Washington. The outlook at the first football turnout was unusually poor. Fewer letter men and experienced scrubs reported to Dobie than ever before, and it was those players upon whom he would have to depend in the Cali- fornia games. However, several seasoned veterans straggled in during the next two weeks, so Dobie, with the assistance of Wayne Sutton and Jack Fancher, was able to present a fairly formidable lineup for the first practice game. Washington scored only 31 points against the Ballard Meteors, indicating the weakness of the varsity. Dobie ' s .4S biggest job was to develop a center to fill the hole resulting from Gellatly ' s failure to return and to nurse Bud Young back into his old form. Young was badly injured the next week, and his understudy. Woods, suffered a torn ligament two nights later, so Bronson played quarter against Washington Park. The varsity played much better ball and won easily, 64 to 0. The regular season opened with a 2 1 -to-7 victory over Gonzaga in Spokane on October 23. Dobie ' s machine was scored upon for the first time in history by means of a forward pass. The event occurred in the last quarter, when Captain Tom Berry, of Wee Coyle ' s aggregation, eluded the backs who were assigned to cover him, caught the ball and ran forty yards for a touchdown. Miller ' s line plunging and Young ' s kicking were the most predominant points of the contest. 3 Frequent fumbling proved costly for the varsity. Washington made her scores by three touchdowns, one in each of the first, third and fourth quarters, and by a drop kick by Young in the second quarter. Miller carried the ball over the line in each instance. Three tries at goal failed. The slowness of Dobie ' s men was not so evident when the varsity easily defeated Whi tman, 27 to 0, on Denny Field a week later. Washington showed no more than ordinary speed, but it smothered Whitman ' s plays so quickly and so consistently that Bor- leske ' s speedy backs could not get started. The varsity failed to score in the first quarter, but Young succeeded in carrying the ball over the line immediately after the short intermission. Miller was easily the star of the victors. All during the first half he was called upon to do the major share of work in advancing the ball for the varsity. His accurate forward | passing was responsible for two touchdowns. Hoover was Whitman ' s big man. He bore the brunt of most of the attack and was the only man who made any consistent gains. Two touchdowns were made by Miller and one each by Shiel and Murphy. Miller kicked three goals. On November 6 Washington crushed the fast but inexperienced University of California eleven under a score of 72 to in Berkeley. Outplayed and outgeneraled, the Golden Bears went down to an overwhelming but not disgraceful defeat. Only straight football on Washington ' s part was needed to smother the southerners. It was the first time the two institutions had met on the football field for eleven years. In 1 904 teams representing the two universities clashed on Denny Field J Thanksgiving Day and the 6-to-6 tie was declared afterwards by many to be the greatest ' - game of football ever played in Seattle. No athletic event at California in years had aroused such great enthusiasm among the students as the big game with Washington. The California men fought bitterly, but were simply outclassed at every move by more experienced players. After each touchdown the Californians rushed Dobie ' s men with renewed vigor, but each attempt was crushed with such celerity that few gains were made against the seven-time champions. The playing of the entire Purple and Gold eleven was of a high order. The de- fensive vk ' ork was superb and the spectators marveled at the ease with which California ' s best plays were spilled. On offensive Miller, Shiel, Young and Hunt were the luminaries. The northerners, accustomed as they are to a cold, crisp climate, were not seemingly bothered by the warm winds over the field as they raced up and down the field in their mad race for touchdowns. They made eleven, or one every five and one-half minutes of play. Quarterback Sharpe was the star of the vanquished eleven. A fast, shifty man, he gave the victors their only worries early in the game, when he twice broke away for short gains, with but only one man between him and the coveted last chalk mark. California kicked off to Hunt and then fol- lowed Washington ' s triumphant march seventy yards down the field on line plays for the first score. It took just three and one-half minutes. Miller made the touchdown and then kicked goal. Eight minutes later Young slipped around end for fifteen yards and scored the second touchdown. Goal was missed. Just before the end of the quarter Shiel was sent over with the third score after line plays had brought the ball up to the two-yard mark. Again goal was missed. With the opening of the second quarter California kicked and held Washington for downs, and Young punted to California ' s 20-yard line. A Washington man recovered Canfield ' s fumble, but two uncompleted for- ward passes prevented Washington from scoring. Still adhering to straight football, the Washington backs smashed through Cali- ' ' ' ' fornia ten yards at a crack and Noble took ' ar lam the ball over for the fourth score. Goal was missed. Brooks kicked and Washington advanced to the 35-yard line, when ' oung tried his only drop kick of the game and narrowly missed the posts. Washington again began its march for California ' s goal and Young went over. Miller kicked goal. The score at the end of the half was 32 to 0. f In the third quarter Brooks kicked to Noble, who made a 35-yard gain. Straight foot- ball was used and Noble went over for another touchdown. Miller kicked goal. California kicked off, and on an interchange of punts Washington got the ball on California ' s 40-yard line. A forward pass. Miller to Murphy, took the ball to the five-yard line and Noble bucked over. Miller kicked goal. California again kicked, and in an- other interchange of punts Washington got the ball on the 35-yard mark. Tackle smashes brought the ball to the one-yard mark and Young slipped through center for the next score. Miller kicked goal. Brooks kicked to Shiel and after two forward passes and a tackle play Hunt raced over for a score. Miller kicked goal. A deluge of substitutes was sent in by both coaches at the opening of the last quarter. Gardner scored the next touchdown. Dobie then sent in every MacKechnie available man and MacKechnie made i:riiiiin the last touchdown a minute before the game ended. Washington bowed down to California ' s fighting spirit the following Saturday on Denny Field. The score gave the Purple and Gold a 1 3 to 7 victory, but because Cali- fornia had been supposedly flattened out completely by the 72 to defeat which Wash- ington administered on California a week before, the victory in reality belonged to the Blue and Gold. Never in the history of football in the Northwest has such an interesting game of football been seen. The fighting Californians put up a defense many times stronger than 55 in their first game, so strong, in fact, that Washington made yardage only eight times during the entire game. Washington was held scoreless until the last eight minutes of play. Then she made a touchdown. After a long pass. Miller to Smith, and several bucks, Shiel carried the ball over for the first score. Miller kicked goal. California tied the score a moment later with a sensational forward pass, Sharpe to Gianelli, who crossed the line on a 55-yard run. Brooks kicked goal. Miller then made a remarkable 30-yard run around left end along the goal line and Noble plunged over for the winning touchdown in the last minute of play. Sharpe, the tiny California quarterback, was the hero of the game. His speedy work, open field running and generalship of the Blue and Gold squad, was brilliant. Wash- ington rooters carried him off the field on their shoulders. Catching a punt on his own two-yard line, he wiggled, twisted and squirmed, dodged and slipped through ten Wash- ington men, but was caught by Young at the middle of the field after a 50-yard run. Another time he scooted 30 yards on a fake shift, which put Washington on the defensive to save a score. All in all, Sharpe was the whole California offense. At Berkeley the California freshmen were playing Los Angeles high school when the game here was going on. Returns were recorded on the big scoreboard. The crowd went wild when the news of the remarkable fight of the Blue and Gold varsity was given to them. After the game the crowd serpentined about the field, the score being deemed m Leailer I,K. DKI! TACKLIXC; . tAI.IFOKNIA BACK li equivalent to a victory by the students. It was the first time that Californians have ser- pentined on their field in more than four years. Washington closed the season on Thanksgiving Day by defeating the University of Colorado on Denny Field, 46 to 0. With this game the varsity completed its eighth consecutive year without having lost a single contest. The game also marked what then was believed to be the end of Coach Gilmour Dobie ' s career as Purple and Gold mentor, for soon after the teams had left the field he tendered his resignation, which later was accepted by the board. However, after a special committee had searched several weeks without success for a man of Dobie ' s ability to fill the vacancy, the invincible coach recon- sidered his resignation upon being approached by President Suzzallo, Dean Priest and others. The outcome of the game was not m doubt after the first mmute of play. Shiel received the kickofi on the 20-yard line and ran the ball back 20 yards. MacKechnie, substituting for Miller, who had been injured in practice, gained ten yards off tackle, and Noble and Shiel added two yards each through the line. Young skirted left end for 1 1 yards. After four and one-half minutes of play Noble scored the first touch-down and Shiel kicked goal. MacKechnie also crossed the line in the first quarter, but Shiel missed goal. In the second period, Shiel scored two touchdowns and kicked one goal. Wash- ington did not annex any points in the third quarter, but she put over three touchdowns in the final period. Noble, MacKechnie and Young crossing the line and Shiel kicking two goals. Captain Mike Hunt, Ex-Captain Walt Shiel, Hap Miller and Elmer Leader wore a Purple and Gold football suit for the last time. Hunt and Miller, together with Captain-Elect Seagrave, were given places on Varnell ' s All-Northwest eleven, and Leader, Shiel and Young were picked for his second team. Elmer Leader was awarded the Flaherty medal for being the greatest inspiration to the team. THE ROYAL TRIUMVIRATE Duke Mmiips Thon Kin Jininiie Easles Duke Chink Moore WRESTLING [viTT ASHINGTON won the conference wrestling championship by defeating the I aJi O. a. C. team, 19 to 1 2, in the campus gym on March 4, and by winning from 1 2 1 Washington State College, 12 to 8, a week later in Pullman. Much credit for such a successful season is due Captain Van de Bogart, especially for his work in the second meet, in which he won two successive matches. Just before Christmas aspirants for the team began turning out for preliminary practice under the direction of Bennie Robbins, 158-pound varsity wrestler of considerable ex- perience. Captain Van de Bogart was unable to come out at first, and the turnout looked pretty slim for varsity material. Only twenty men worked on the mat each night during those early days. With the opening of the second semester, more interest was displayed in the sport and competition became harder for each of the weights. The 1 25 and I 35-pound classes were the most hotly contested. Eight men were out for honors in each division. The rest of the weights were evenly divided, with about four men each, except in the 1 08 and 1 75-pound classes, in which Yamada and Van de Bogart held full sway. The University team easily defeated the Seattle Y. M. C. A. late in January, winning nine falls and two decisions in twelve matches. An unusually large crowd watched Washington win her first victory of the season on the mat from O. A. C. The varsity made I 9 points on three falls and a decision, and the visitors 12 points on three decisions. Washington entered Boulton, 108; Easterbrook, 125; Talbot, 135; Williams, 145; LaChapelle, 138, and Captain Van de Bogart, 175, all of whom were awarded letters. With just a few days of trainmg, the varsity was off the following Thursday night to meet the Pullman wrestlers on their own mat. Five matches had been chosen for this meet. As Washmgton was the visitor, she had choice of three of the weights, and picked 125, 135 and 175 as her best chances. W. S. C. chose the 145 and heavyweight classes. This meant that Captain Van de Bogart would have to wrestle in two consecutive matches. In spite of his handicap, the doughty varsity captain was equal to the conditions, and won decisions in both his bouts. Arthur Easterbrook also won a decision in his weight, making the score 1 2 to 8 in favor of the Washington men. n 1915-16 BASKET BALL SEASON Jan. 8- -U. of W., 40; College of Puget Sound, 1 7 Jan. 10- -U. of W., 42; Chauncey Wright 6. Jan. 12- -U. of W., 47; Broadway, 1 7. Jan. 14- -U. of W., 24; California, 30. Jan. 15- -U. of W., 20; California, 25. Jan. 21- -U. of W., 24; O. A. C, 21. Jan. 22- -U. of W., 22; O. A. C, 25. Jan. 28- u. of W., 18; Multnomah Club, 24. Jan. 29- -U. of W., 30; Willamette, 26. Jan. 31- -U. of W., 35; California, 27. Feb. 1- -U. of W. 35 Stanford, 19. Feb. 2- -U. of W., 33; California 35. Feb. 4- -U. of W., 21; O. A. C, 26. Feb. 5- -U. of W., 9; O. A. C, 25. BASKET BALL HE graduation of most of the star players of last year ' s unexcelled varsity basket ball squad left the success of the I 91 5-1 91 6 season much in doubt from the very first. Later developments greatly heightened this doubt, for, by the first practice, only one letter man was able to play. Jack Fancher, elected captain the preceding season, was unable to be m college. Ralph Robinson took up the job of coaching the men. He had been at it only a week before he discovered that he couldn ' t even turn out. That left the job of coaching to Jack Davidson. Jack took hold of the immense job before him as one accustomed to such tasks. About fifty were out for the team at that time. Some of them had had experience on high school fives, a few were former players on varsity second teams, and some had no experience at all. The plucky little coach watched them carefully, and by means of scrub games and practices every afternoon in the gym he gradually cut the squad down to fifteen men. On January 8 Washington won the first practice game from the College of Puget Sound, 40 to 1 7. In the next two weeks the squad met and defeated two other outside teams. The Chauncey Wright aggregation and Broadway High School were trounced 42 to 6 and 47 to 17, respectively. This last practice game was played on January 12, just two days before the University of California quintet came north to play Washington, on January 1 4 and 15, for the first time in the history of the institutions. The Californians had quite a reputation up and down the coast. Try as it might, the varsity could not get away from the excellent team work of the southerners. For indi- vidual ability, the teams were evenly matched, but the visitors were used to playing with one another, and Davy and his men went down to a 30-24 defeat in the first game, and a 25-20 defeat in the second. The first victory of the season came on Friday, January 2 1 , when Washington beat the Oregon Aggies, 24 to 2 1 . It surprised everyone, and the attendance at the second game showed that the students were begmnmg to take an interest in events. But the boys couldn ' t do it again. The Aggies went into the game bound to win, and they did. In spite of a number of rallies, the Washmgton men lost the lead they held during the first of the game and the Aggies won, 25-22. The boys had a week to prepare for the southern trip. They lost to Multnomah, 28 to I 8, but won from Willamette, 30 to 26. On January 31 they slipped over a surprise by whipping California in the Berkeley gymnasium, 35-27. The next day they -went to Palo Alto and duplicated their per- formance by defeating the Stanford five, 35 to 1 9. That was the end of the winning streak, for the strain of playing a hard team every night on a different floor for four days was beginning to tell on the men. However, they were in good enough shape to hold the Californians down to a 35-33 score in the game the next night. They also lost to O. A. C, 26 to 21 and 25 to 9. Six men participated in enough games to win their letters: Captain Jack Davidson, Jesse Balmer, Dick Schively, Dick Deutsche, Stanley Riddle and George Smith. fn k -- 65 m TENNIS ENNIS is the only University spring sport that is not well under way by the time The Tyee goes to press. All tournaments are held so late in the season that only the outlook at the time the players first begin to turn out can be recorded. With the three members of last year ' s championship team in school, Wash- ington has a good chance to wm the conference title again this season. Captam Kauffman and Miura, both of whom have played for two years, together with some of the best entries in the University tournament, began to work out regularly after the spring vacation. Ex-Captain Canfield did not report until late, owing to an mjured foot. The varsity is scheduled to meet Oregon in Eugene the latter part of May. Washington won the conference championship last year by defeating Oregon in Seattle May 21 and 22. The varsity took all the games. The Oregon men did not have the staying powers of the locals and were outplayed throughout the series. The closest match was between Kauffman and Noren. The Oregon man took the first two sets from Kauffman with little difficulty, but the Washingtonian became steadier as the game progressed and took the next three sets. Another hard match was between Captain Canfield and Kauffman and Noren and Church on. the first day. The visitors forced the set to twenty-four games, Washington winning 13-11. In this match the Oregon men took one set. Miura had an easy time winning in the singles. He lost the first same in the first set to Wheeler and then took the next eighteen games straight, winning the match 6-1, 6-0, 6-0. Summary of games: Miura beat Wheeler, 6-1, 6-0, 6-0; Canfield and Kauffman beat Noren and Church, 13-11, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2; Kauffman beat Noren, 4-6, 5-7, 6-3, 7-5, 6-1 ; Canfield and Miura beat Wheeler and Church, 6-1, 6-2, 6-4; Canfield beat Church, 6-0, 6-1, 6-4. F Kv Ui.. iim) ' 1 : 5 l . ■X t Hi Rcudy lui- Work THE LINEUP Clyde Brokaw Bow Edwin Leader No. 2 Paul McConihe No. 3 Tom Cushman No. 4 Max Walske No. 5 Charles Newton No. 6 Adolph Harr No. 7 Ward Kumm Stroke Carroll Ebright Cox ii CREW m ASHINGTON ' S prospects for a varsity crew of the first order were bright from the first day of the turnout, when it was found that seven letter men were back in college and eligible to row. Coach Conibear had been holding the boathouse open all fall for those men in college interested enough m the aquatic sport to turn out before the season opened. The turnout was fair sized at first, but when it was found impossible to hold an interclass and mterclub regatta, the number dropped off considerably and finally few besides the freshmen coxes were practicing daily. But when the varsity turnout was called just after the begin- ning of the second semester, between fifty and sixty men answered the call for material. There were enough for four boats of upper- class men and two freshmen shells. Coach Hiram B. Conibear divided the turnout into two parts, taking personal charge of the varsity and renting a launch for Heinie Zimmerman to coach the freshmen from. The seven letter men, with Carroll Ebright as coxswain and one other upperclassman, immediately showed themselves superior to the rest of the crews, and from almost the very start of the season they gave the scrub boats large handicaps in all the practice races. The early training was hindered a great deal by the heavy snowfall. For two weeks it was impossible to hold any turnouts at all, then cold weather and an excessive amount of rainfall held things up for a time longer, and it was almost the middle of March before turn- outs began in real earnest. The Stanford race was scheduled for April 8, and that was the goal toward which everyone directed his efforts. It was under- stood that the southern crew had practically the same line-up this season as last year, when they made such a wonderful showing in the annual Poughkeepsie regatta. The crew men were on their toes, and they regarded the second varsity in the same light as they would regard the California oarsmen. The week just prior to the great race was the annual spring vacation. The crev ' men did not leave Seattle, but stayed at the boathouse, training hard for the struggle at the end of the week. The Stanford oarsmen arrived Sunday night and took up training quarters at the Delta Upsilon house. For a week both crews did some of the stiffest rowing and training they had gone through during the entire season. Conny had his men out twice a day at first, but as the day of the race drew near, the men took just enough to keep them in condition and saved their energies. The consensus of opinion was that the visitors would jump the varsity on the start, and that if the Washington oarsmen were to win, their part of the job would be to decrease % w ii w % w the lead during the remainder of the race. The race was scheduled for 4:30 in the after- noon, as the lake would more than likely be quiet at that time in the afternoon. The shores along the entire course from Leschi to Madison Park were lined with onlookers in automobiles and on top of every building. Every available craft in the vicinity was filled with spectators. The Stanford Alumni in Seattle had chartered a steamer to follow the shells, and the Cardmal and White mixed with the Purple and Gold streamers on many of the other boats. With the starter ' s gun the oars from both shells caught the water at the same time, and before five seconds had passed, the Washmg- ton boat began to pull away from the visitors. At the first mile post a length of open water showed between the rival shells, and the open space kept steadily increasing with the slow, even stroke of the Washington oars, and they finally swept across the finish line, winners by seven lengths. The Washington crew seemed to be a perfect machine. None but an expert could notice any imperfections in the way the oars- men pulled their boat to victory. After the first ten strokes of the racing start the men came back to a steady thirty-one-to-the-minute stroke and held it throughout. The Stanford crew seemed to be in rather bad shape. The men were rowing poorly, and Captain Orme ■ afterward said that there did not seem to be s any run in the boat at all. When they finished a stroke, the boat stopped and seemed to be a log in the water. fd t? . w 1 Immediately after the wonderful showing the varsity had made, people began talking about sending the crew back each year to compete in the Poughkeepsie regatta. The business men took it up and began negotia- tions with eastern crews, either to bring them out here to row in a regatta on Lake Washint ton or to take the varsity back to the Hudson classic. 11 4 Captain Clyde Brokaw ' s crew lined up as follows: Ward Kumm, stroke; Adolph Harr, No. 7; Charles Newton, No. 6; Max Walske, No. 5; Thomas Cushman, No. 4; Paul McConihe, No. 3; Edwin Leader, No. 2; Clyde Brokaw, bow, and Carroll Ebright, coxswain. The varsity will have its second race of the year on May 27, when it meets the University of California crew on Lake Washington. In the recent race with Stanford the Berkeleyites were defeated by seven lengths of open water. But the winner made the three miles in 16:37, which is 27 seconds faster than the Washington varsity made the same distance on Lake Washington in the race with Stanford. Taking that into consideration, the race with the Californians may not be such a walkaway as was first imagmed, if conditions in the coming race are similar to those in the contest with the Cardinal crew. But the Washington varsity has bettered the time made in that race by more than a minute in some of the practice races, so there is really no way to tell what the varsity can do in a pinch. After the big race Coach Conibear let his -v- ' h men off from their strict training rules until it was known whether the varsity would have , , any more contests this season. They began training again on May 1 , with about three ? weeks ' time to get ready for the California w MUm crew. I The line-up for the coming race will prob- ; j ably be the same as that which met the Stan- ford oarsmen. There has been some talk of nf the coach substituting certain members of the -i ; second crew who have been going in very good form all season, but who were not quite good enough to make the crew in its big race. T It is not probable, however, that Conny will . w take any chances on losing the race by putting M new men in the shell just now. In the meantime, the members of the scrub crews are getting excited over the interclass races, and training hard for the competition in the different sized shells, from the singles up C l ii to the eight-oared boats. ■nt Coach Conibear, as The Tyee goes to press, is paying more attention to the under- classmen now than he has been able to spend on them at any time during the season. The varsity should get back into shape again easily. Everything the freshmen and sophomores learn about the art of rowing will, in the opinion of the coach, make it that much easier to develop a good crew next year after the present varsity has graduated. There will be very Httle rest for the beginners until college closes. S — ™H WflSHINOTON ' s WINNER. THE LINEUP Leader, Wilson Catchers Rogers, Carey, T. Thompson Pitchers Ladner, Young First Base Rembe, Davis Second Base Beem, Rembe Third Base Smith, McDermott Shortstop Taylor Left Field Captain G. Thompson Center Field Young, Smith Right Field First Oregon Game — Oregon Washington 2 Second Oregon Game — Oregon Washington First O. A. C. Game — O. A. C 1 Washington Second O. A. C. Game- O. A. C Washmgton 1 THE SCORES 3 1 R. 0—0 — 6 H. 6 7 E. 2 2 1 2 I 2 2 3 1 2 1 R. 0—7 — 8 H. 14 II E. 2 5 2 1 1 I 2 1 R. 0—7 0—2 H. 6 8 E. 1 8 1 1 1 I R. 0—2 — 3 H. 7 10 E. 2 77 BASEBALL HE baseball players, under the excellent coaching of Dode Brinker, former varsity man and Northwestern Leaguer, started the season like veterans, and by the middle of the season Washington ' s chances for a championship looked unusually bright. By the time The Tyee went to press, the varsity had three victories and but one defeat to its credit, and was preparing to make the southern trip, with several fast, ' • hard-hitting men in the lineup. Early turnouts in the season were delayed and hampered by bad weather, and, as a consequence, the entire squad made a poor start. The first practice games were miser- able exhibitions of baseball, and the coach realized that he had a big job in trying to whip the team into shape. The batting was even weaker than last year, and the pitching staff, without a single veteran, was an un- known quantity. Neither Bryant, Murray nor Foran, of last year ' s staff, were back in col- lege this year, and Ed Leader decided to turn out for crew. This meant that Coach Brinker had to develop dependable pitchers from what material there was at hand ; and his success is indicated by the number of hits and runs opposing teams obtained off his twirlers. Soon the infield began to tighten up and the entire team began to hit consistently. Also some of the pitchers began to show up unusually well. The team rounded nicely into shape about the middle of the spring vacation. The Ballard High School team surprised Brinker ' s boys in the opening game of the vacation series, winning by a 2 to score. Miles Carey pitched a good game, but his teammates could not hit when hits meant runs and they played very listlessly in the field. In the second game, after holding the ei Seattle Giants on the short end of a 2 to Wilson score for six innings, the varsity quit thinking and before the bell sounded the leaguers had chalked up four runs. Two more were added in the following period, making the count 6 to 2, with the Giants on the long end. Tip Thompson pitched a splendid game and with any support would have won. Charley Rogers pitched the varsity to a 2 to 1 victory over the Giants the next after- Brinker noon. In the eighth, with the able assistance of a couple of errors on the part of the varsity and a hit on their own account, the Giants scored their only run. Rogers pitched a mag- nificent game, having the situation well in hand at all times. The lack of pep which had characterized the earlier games had entirely disappeared and the bunch played like veterans. Ladner ' s hitting was a feature. The varsity won a lopsided game from the Beliingham normal at Bellingham the follow- ing day by a I 3 to score. Only one normal man got as far as second base. Miles Carey pitched in big-league style and Bellingham only got one hit. The Vancouver club of the Northwestern League took the varsity ' s scalp the next afternoon in Vancouver, the count being 9 to 3. For six innings the Uni- versity men led, being on the safe side of a 3 to score, and then they blew. In the last two innings the Beavers scored 9 runs. In the final game of the week, the Univer- sity won from the Beavers by a score of 4 to 2. It was Charley Rogers again who humbled the leaguers, and for seven innings he held Bob Brown ' s men hitless. The varsity scored once in the second and three times in the fifth. After this game, Rogers received an offer of a contract from Bob Brown, owner of the Canadian team. This is the first time a Washington man has de- veloped into what might be called league form since Brinker was here before. Washington opened the conference season on Denny Field April 1 4 by taking two games from Oregon. Charley Rogers held the visitors scoreless in the first contest and the varsity won, 6 to 0. Bezdeks men hit more freely the next day and furnished the Purple and Gold an exciting battle. Wash- ington won, 8 to 7. ul.l; The pitching staff showed up unusually well in the opening series. The batting also was better than had been predicted early in the season. The fielding and batting of Rembe in both games marks him as one of the most valuable additions to the team this year. He made two hits in the first game and he came back the next day with two more, one of which was a home run. He can play either second or third base or the outfield. Thompson Washington started scoring in the first inning of the opening game. Rembe led off with a single. Beem reached first on an error. Thompson fanned. Both runners moved up on a passed ball. Smith doubled over the right field stand, scoring Rembe and Beem. Three more runs were made in the sixth. Thompson walked and Smith was safe on an error. Ladner scored both with a two-base hit. Young reached first on a fielder ' s choice. _ Taylor singled, scoring Ladner. Rembe scored the last run in the next inning. He opened with a hit and took second on a passed ball. He scored when Thompson hit for two bases. The second game was a real thriller. First one team would lead and then the other. Both lineups were changed for this game. Rembe was shifted from second to third to replace Beem, who was injured in the first contest. Davis appeared at second. Bezdek had a grand shakeup with his team. Ore- gon scored in the second inning, but Wash- ton forged ahead with two runs in the third inning and another in the fourth. Oregon tied the score in the fifth. The varsity made two more runs in the last of the fifth, but the visitors made three when they came to bat. Brinker ' s men won the game in the last of the seventh, when Davis and Smith scored. Ore- gon started a rally in the eighth, but Grebe ' s lone tally was not enough to overcome Wash- ington ' s lead. Tip Thompson started the game on the mound for the varsity, but was relieved by Carey in the sixth inning. Washington broke even with the Oregon Aggies on Denny Field the following week. After the infield had booted his first game away, Rogers went into the box again the next day and held the visitors to two runs, while timely hitting by the outfield drove in three scores. O. A. C. took the first contest, 7 to 2. The varsity came back strong the next day and gave the Aggies a great fight. With the score tied and two down in the last half of the eighth inning. Smith drove the ball far into left field for a homer, the winning run. Captain Thompson also delivered hits when most needed. Perfect playing would have given Washington the opening game, for Williams ' home run was the visitors ' only earned run, while Washington made two. Rogers pitched in splendid form, holding his opponents to two hits in the first seven innings. O. A. C. scored in the first round on a muffed fly, an infield out and an error. In the next inning. Funk drove the ball over the old stand, but was out for failing to touch third base. The Oregon team scored twice in the fifth on a passed ball and three errors. Williams hit over the stand in the next innmg for another run. Smith, varsity shortstop, also made a home run in the same inning. O. A. C. scored one in the seventh on a base on balls, a passed ball, two hits and a sacrifice fly. A single by Thompson and a double by Smith in the eighth gave Wash- ington her second run. Coach Brinker made several changes in the lineup for the second game. He sent Young from right field to Ladner ' s place at first base, shifted Smith from short to the right garden and used McDermott at short. Rembe opened the second game with a triple to left, and scored on Thompson ' s single. In the fifth inning Beem also tripled to left and scored on Thompson ' s third consecutive hit. O. A. C. scored in the next round on a single, a pass and a hit to right, and tied the score in the eighth on a single, a double and a sac- rifice fly. Smith ' s drive in the last of the eighth put the varsity in the lead. The team left the following Monday night, April 24, to play O. A. C. and Oregon in the south. The outcome of the four conference games on this trip will determine whether Washington will win the championship of the western division and whether she will send a team to California to play in Berkeley and Palo Alto. Ralph Smith and Captain Guy Thompson were the big men with the stick during the first half of the season. Each went to bat 1 4 times and each pounded out six hits, a batting average of .429. Smith, however, hit for more extra bases than Thompson. He made two home runs and three doubles as compared to one two-base hit by Thompson. The batting averages of all Washington men who played in more than one game during the first half of the season are as follows: Smith, .429; Captain Thompson, .429; Leader, .333; Rembe, .278; Beem, .273; Young, .230; Taylor, .200; Ladner, .182; Rogers, .125; Wilson, .125. REVIEW OF 1915 BASEBALL SEASON 1 £ LTHOUGH the varsity nine had fair success during the first half of last season, the finish was unusually weak for a Washington team. The varsity had broken even with O. A. C. and Oregon on Denny Field by the time the Tyee went to press last year. Later the purple and gold team lost three games straight in Oregon, two to the Aggies and one to Bezdek ' s nine. Rain prevented the second Oregon game. The Oregon Aggies, with five victories and one defeat, won the championship of the western division, but lost the conference title to Pullman by dropping two games east of the mountains. The first game ended 4 to 2, and the second went twelve innings, 4 to 3. Both Hartman, of W. S. C, and Williams, of O. A. C, pitched the entire twenty-one innings on the two consecutive days. It was Pullman ' s fourth championship in five years. The Washington nine, coached by Gilmour Dobie, opened the season April 1 6 with a I 7-to-O victory over Oregon, but lost the next day, 2 to 1 . O. A. C. won the following Friday, 5 to I . Washington took the second game, 1 to 6. A week before the southern trip. Captain George Graham, second baseman, decided to leave school, owing to the death of his father. Glenn ( Peck ) Davis played Graham ' s position for the remainder of the season and Lee Howard was acting captain. Washington lost a twelve-inning battle to Oregon May 1 2 by a 2 to I score. Bryant pitched fine ball. Rain prevented the second game. The varsity closed the season by losing to the Aggies, 5 to I and 14 to 2, on May 1 4 and I 5 respectively. The Washington players were: Catcher, Elmer Leader; pitchers, Bryant, Foran, Murray and Edwin Leader; first base; McDermott and Ammon; second base, Graham and Davis; shortstop. Smith; third base, Howard; left field, Thompson; center field, Taylor; right field, Wilson, Sweeney and Roussellot. m MANAGER YOUNGER , T ARTHUR YOUNGER was elected ' - ' by the Board of Control to serve his second term as general manager of the Associated Students of the Uni- versity of Washington at its first meeting last fall. Mr. Younger had been elected the pre- ceding year to fill out the unexpired term of Ralph A. Horr, who was unable to com- plete his term in office because of the press of outside work in the law business. A retrenchment policy has enabled the new general manager to at once reduce the gen- eral indebtedness of the associated students and carry out some of the largest schemes for advertisement of the University in the way of athletic contests with outside universities. Washington is badly in need of a new athletic field, and General Manager Younger IS now working on a plan for a large perma- nent stadium somewhere along the lake shore. The snowfall destroyed the roofs of the present stands on Denny Field last winter and brought to the minds of the students the pressing need of a new field, or at least new stands, before the football season begins next fall. Several sites have been suggested for the Mimas;. r .iini4 ' i (jg|j During the A. Y. P. Exposition all athletic contests were held in a stadium on the shore of Lake Washington, near the varsity shell house. The building erected at that time was, of course, not permanent, but the ground was leveled off, and thus takes away a large part of the expense that would have to be met if an entirely new excavation had to be made into the hillside and the result- ant leveling done. Football brought a loss to the A. S. U. W. of $3,500 last fall. Last September the association was in debt $1,1 00, but the loss in the fall sport put finances back so that next September the debt will be approximately $2,500. All of the other college activities have run easily under the budget made out for them, and Manager Younger beheves that if the association is run on the same basis next year and football pays for itself, the total debt will be completely wiped out. With the debt removed, the association would run at a profit of nearly $3,000 a year, thereby making it possible to broaden out the various college activities and make permanent provision for future affairs of the University. Manager Younger plans in this way for the erection of the final permanent athletic field. COACH C. W. VANDER VEER w HEN General Manager Younger was looking around for a new track coach, some one reminded him of the little man who had done so much to put Washington on the map in the early days when athletics were just being started at the University of Washington. C. W. Vander Veer finished Union Col- lege way back in ' 80. For a number of years he was director of athletics at eastern and middle western colleges. He came out west and was physical director in the Seattle Ath- letic Club for two years, until those interested in athletics at the University procured his services for Washington in 1895. In those days there was no such thing as Denny Field — it was a hillside, sloping down toward the lake. But the little coach went to work on the construction of a suitable athletic field and the result of his efforts now stands in the Denny Field of today. His men were behind him in everything he did. For early training one season they got to work with the rake and hoe and made the track on which they fin- ished their training. Regent Duk Caches, Dr. Don Palmer, and others prominent in the walks of life today donned their overalls for Washington. And he developed some mighty good men, who hung up records which var- sity athletes still are trying to equal. In 1 905 the little coach went over to Idaho and remained there until he received the offer to return and coach Washington athletes once more. He brought his old enthu- siasm along with him, and although his hair and moustache are not the shiny black they used to be, he still has his ability to lead men. His turnout for track this year is the largest in the history of the University. More than a hundred men answered his first call, and most of them stayed with the trainmg until the elimination process weeded them down to the select few. O.Mil V. M i:U VKEU m REVIEW OF 1915 TRACK SEASON ESPITE the fact that Washington failed to win a relatively high number of points in her four meets last year, the season has been regarded by track en- thusiasts as unusually successful in comparison with the results of several previ- ous years. The varsity easily won the Pullman dual meet, took third in the conference meet, lost to Oregon and finished seventh in the coast meet. The scores do not indicate the spirit behind the sport. In Larry Martin, Washing- ton had an energetic young man who could be classed among the best coaches that ever trained athletes in the West. It was due almost entirely to his untiring efforts that a greater interest was taken in track last spring than in any year since Brailey Gish, Ira Courtney and other stars won firsts for the purple and gold. He had few veterans upon whom he could depend for many points, and it was his task to develop inexperienced men who might place. Four members of the squad represented Washington in the Pacific Coast meet in San Francisco, May 8. Edmonds took second place in the discus, Stenstrom third in the 1 00-yard dash and Cochran third in the pole vault. Walter failed to place in the broad jump. Captam Clyde, who previously lowered the coast record for the mile at the previous meet, did not make the trip because of outside work. Cahfornia, with 36 points, won the meet from a field of eleven teams. Gra; it Coach Martin and his four men were delayed by a landshde on the return trip and, as Washington was scheduled to compete with Oregon in Eugene the following Friday, it was necessary for Captain Clyde to pick eight men and meet the delayed squad in Oregon. The meet was postponed a day, due to rain. Oregon won 86 to 44 on a hea ' y track. The varsity took all three places in the 100-yard dash, Stenstrom, Knapp and Crites finishmg in order. Crites also finished third in the 220. Walter won first in the broad jump and third in the high. Edmonds took first in the discus, sec- ond in the shot and third in the javelin. Clyde won the mile and Van de Bogart took third in the mile and in the discus. Gleason placed second in the javelin. Woodbridge and Patton took second and third in the pole vault and Gib- son finished third in the low hurdles. Edmonds broke the American intercollegiate record for the discus with a heave of 1 40 feet I 1 inches in the Pullman dual meet on Denny Field, Monday, May 24, won by Washington, 2 to 58. On the previous Saturday, Mucks of Wisconsin had broken the ten-year record in that event made by Garrels of Michigan in 1905. Edmonds ' throw was three inches better than that of Mucks. Smith of Pullman lowered the conference two-mile record made by McClelland of Wash- ington in 1913. Smith ' s time was 9:454-5. Clyde won firsts in the mile and in the 880-yard run. Edmonds was first in the discus, second in the shot and third in the javelin. Macdonald finished second in the mile and third in the two- mile. Woodbridge took third in the half-mile. Walter won first in the broad jump and tied with Cochran for second in the high. Cochran also took first in the pole vault. Anderson won first in the javelin and Gleason second. Anderson also took third in the shot. Gray won the quarter. Gibson took fir st in the high hurdles stenstrom low. Stenstrom won the hundred and took third in the 220. Knapp hundred, while Crites placed second in the 220. with 24 points, took third place in the conference meet in Corvallis, May 28. The other scores were Oregon, 42; O. A. C, 29; Pullman, 16; Idaho, 14; Whitman, 1 2. The meet was held indoors because of a wet field. This upset the dope .Cl i the Knapp and second i finished third in the Washington, Tflb and several stars fell down. Several conference indoor records were broken. Payne of Oregon, ran two miles in 9:35, which was 10 4-5 seconds better than Smith ' s new record. Kadderly of O. A. C. ran his quarter in the relay in 49 4-5 seconds, two-fifths of a second better than the time for the quarter. Clyde and Macdonald took first and second in the mile. Stenstrom won the 85-yard dash. Cochran took third in the pole. Edmonds ,  . took second m the discus and Walter won the ' i broad jump. ▼ . The summary of the conference meet was as follows. : Mile run — Clyde, Washington, first; Mac- donald, Washington, second; Dewey, O. A. C, third. Time, 4:26 4-5. f I H 440-yard dash— Kadderly, O. A. C, first; ■ Loucks, Oreson, second; Massey, Idaho, third. WW Time, :50 1-5. W W Shot put — Cook, Oregon, first, 41.6 feet; B m Johnson, O. A. C, 40.2 feet; Kmg, W. S. C, n 39.9 feet. l fcaH H 85-yard dash — Stenstrom, Washington, first; H Fee, Oregon, second; McCrosky, W. S. C, m g third. Matflonai.i 85-yard high hurdles — Muirhead, Oregon, irst; Thompson, Whitman, second; Morrison, Idaho, third. Time, :8 3-5. 880-yard run — Massey, Idaho, O regon, second ; Monroe, W. S. Height, 5 feet 1 1 inches. 220-yard low hurdles — Hoover, ■ first; McCrosky, W. S. C, second; Whitman, third. Time, :26 1-5. , 220-yard dash — Kadderly, O. A. C, first; ' 7 Loucks, Oregon, second; Miller, W. S. C, iJhfH third. Time, :23 2-5. Two-mile run — Payne, Oregon, first; Hob- good, O. A. C, second; Smith, W. S. C, third. Time, 9:35. Pole vault — Thompson, W. S. C, first; Fee, Oregon, second; Cochran, Washmgton, third. Height, I I feet 6 inches. Relay race— O. A. C, first; W. S. C, second; Idaho, third. Time, 3:33. -Cole, O. A. C, first, 137.5 feet; Edmonds, Washington, second; m ) -f first; C, Fee, third. Whitman, Dement, Phillips, McDonald, Whitman, second; Fee, Discus- Idaho, third. Broad jump — Walter, Washington, first; Oregon, third. Distance, 20.92 feet. Javelin throw — Phillips, Idaho, first, 164 feet 3 inches; Fee, Oregon, second, 159 feet 5 inches; Damon, O. A. C, third, 157 feet 3 inches. INTERCLASS TRACK The sophomore class track team captured first place in the annual interclass track meet Wednesday, April 19, when it rolled up 40 points as compared with 35 for the juniors, the nearest competitors. The freshmen were third with 24 pomts, and the seniors finished m last place with 1 4 points. Rain threatened throughout the day, which was so cold and windy that record time was impossible. Coach Vander Veer is well pleased with the results, however, and believes some excellent varsity material was uncovered. Chuck Rose, freshman, and Newton, junior, were high point winners for their respective classes, each winning two firsts. Rose, ' 1 9, captured both the quarter and the half. Newton, 17, romped off with the century dash and the 220 in easy fashion. Corbitt, ' 18, in the two-mile race, easily outdistanced Dill, 16, who had been doped to win. In the mile Embree, ' 1 7, was the dark horse, for he finished easily in front of his classmate, Carlander, and agam upset the dopesters ' figures. Three pole vaulters, Stuchell, ' 17; Hurlbert, ' 18, and Patton, ' 19, tied at 1 1 feet in this event. All failed to clear the bar at 1 1 feet 6 inches. The high wind was responsible for this failure. The hurdle races were not held because sufficient hurdles were not available at the time. The results: 100-yard dash — Newton, 17, first; Knight, 18, second; Laughbun, 18, third. Time, 1 2-5 seconds. 220-yard dash — Newton, 17, first; Knight, 18, second; Laughbun, 18, third. Time, 23 2-5 seconds. 440-yard run — Rose, 19, first; Drummond, 16, second; Woods, 19, third. Time, 53 2-5 seconds. 880-yard run — Rose, 19, first; Fox, 16, second; Hodge, 18, third. Time, 2:03. Mile — Embree, 17, first; Carlander, 17, second; Herring, 18, third. Time, 4:47 4-5. Shot put — Wirt, ' 17, first (distance, 37 feet 7 1-2 inches); Brown, 18, second (distance, 37 feet 7 inches); Bozarlh, ' 19, third. Discus — Bozarth, ' 19, first; Bonnell, ' 18, second; Cochran, ' 19, third. Distance, 1 22 feet 1 1 inches. Javelin — Chambers, 18, first; Bonnell, 18, second; Fix, ' 17, third. Distance, 1 52 feet 9 inches. Broad jump — Hayner, 18, first; Stuchell, 17, second; Harris, ' 18, third. Pole vault — Stuchell, ' 17; Hurlbert, ' 18; Patton, ' 1 9, all tied for first place at 1 I feet. High jump — Young, 17, first; Grant, 18, second; Hoffman, 18, third. Height, 5 feet 4 inches. Two-mile run — Corbitt, 18, first; Dill, 16, second; Herring, 18, third. Time, 10:46 1-5. Relay — Sophomore team first; team composed of Knight, Shepherd, Kimsey and Hayner. The freshmen were the only other entry. T CROSS COUNTRY HE sophomores, for the third consecutive year, took first place in the annual cross- country race on October 30. The sophomores finished first with a score of 122 points, the juniors second with 89 points, and the seniors third with 18 points. Willis Corbitt, a sophomore, runnmg his first University cross-country race, sprung the surprise of the day by running the four miles in 22:6 1-5, and beating Car- lander, an experienced runner, to the tape by ten yards. Although his time was nearly a minute slower than the campus record set last year by the four-time champion, Zell Mc- Clelland, Corbitt ' s perform.arce is considered very creditable in point of his experience. Corbitt ' s time is 6 1-5 seconds faster than McClelland ' s winning time in his sophomore year. William Hayner, winner of the cross-country race at Willamette last year, was third, finishing ten yards behind Carlander. George Dill was the first senior to place, finishing in ninth place. He finished third in the race last year. Interest lagged in the sport this season and only nineteen runners toed the mark for the race. The freshmen did not have a single entry. The sophomores were the only class to enter the allowed quota of ten runners. The juniors had six entries and seniors three. The personnel of the wmning team was composed of Hering (captain), Corbit ' , Hayner, Stranack, Woodridge, Baker, Garrison, Bollman and Selleck. The nineteen entries finished in the following order: Corbitt, ' 18: Carlander, ' 17; Hayner, ' 18; Stranack, ' 18; Langenback, ' 17; Hering, ' 18; Talbot, ' 17; Woodbridge, ' 18; Dill, ' 16; Lawson, ' 17; Baker, ' 18; Garrison, ' 18; Bollman, ' 18; Selleck, ' 18; O ' Conner, ' 17; Roslmg, ' 16; McCrackren, ' 16; Parker, ' 17; Wapato, ' 16. m i INTHKCLASS FOOTBALL HE sophomores won a clear title to the interclass football championship when they defeated the freshman team on November 22, and finished the season without a defeat. Before this game the sophomores had beaten the seniors 6-0, and the juniors I 3-0. The interclass scrap had centered to a pomt where a tie would have resulted between the three lower classes if the freshmen had defeated the sophomores m their annual game, for the freshmen and juniors had each lost one game, while the second-year men had not been defeated. The sophomores squelched any chance of prolongmg the series, however, by winning 9-0 in a stiffly contested game. In the first two quarters no scores were made. In the third quarter Sanders broke through the freshman line and scored a touchdown. Biel then kicked a field goal, which ended the scoring. Biel, Sanders, Brandenthaler and Shaw did stellar work in this game. Riddle, Buzz Goodwin and Nordoff did consistent playing throughout the season for the champions. The sophomores defeated Everett, 7 to 6; Queen Anne, 1 7 to 3, and Bellingham Normal, I 3 to 0. The men who played on the championship team were Nordoff, Luther, Pigott, Coder, Lindberg, McFarland, Weatherby, Sanders, Whitney, Shaw, Elmore, Riddle, Goodwin, Brandenthaler, Biel and Esterbrook. Norman H. Hill coached the team and Floyd Ellis managed it. INTERCLASS BASKET BALL T THE first of the season the sophomores had been conceded the best chance to win the class championship in basket ball because they had a lineup very much like the one which had won the championship for them the year before. The freshmen were thought to have the next best chance. But the dopesters forgot to count the junior team. Most of the ' 17 men had been turning out for the varsity five throughout the season and were right in trim when the class schedule began. The freshmen were put out of the running the first game of the series when the seniors defeated them 25-22. During the first half, the upperclassmen had it all their own way, but something happened to the frosh between halves and they came back like demons and played up to within one point of their opponents. But a senior got away for another basket and definitely salted the game away for his class. In the next contest, before the juniors had awakened to the fact that they were in a game the sophomores had run up a 6-1 score. Then they began to really play, and reversed conditions at the end of the half, leading by an 1 8-9 score. The sophomores had no comeback and the ' 17 men kept up their teamwork and had doubled their end of the score by the end of the game, making it 36 to 10 in their favor. The juniors won the championship by whipping the seniors, 31 to 16. Inasmuch as both had been badly beaten in the race for the championship, the underclassmen wanted to fight for the cellar championship. The freshmen landed the coveted place when they were beaten 28 to 9. The champions lined up as follows: Aubrey Beem, LeRoy Swanson and Harold Fix, forwards; Albert Slack, Robert Woodyard and Elmer Startup, guards; Dave Logg, center. INTERCLASS WRESTLING HE junior class won the interclass wrestling championship this year by winning three out of the seven matches scheduled. The sophomores were next with two victories, and the freshmen and seniors took one match each. The sophomores were the only ones who had men to put up in each weight ; the freshmen forfeited the I 08 and 145-pound classes; the juniors forfeited the 108-pound class, and the seniors had no one to wrestle at 1 35 pounds. The results of the semi-finals were as follows: Bolton defeated Wilson, and Yamada defeated Cutler, I 15-pound; Easterbrook won from Baird, and Laughlin defeated Sartoris in the 125-pound class; McCready drew a bye, and Talbot defeated Bollman in the 135-pound class; Clark drew a bye, and Brown defeated Aalto at 145 pounds; Johnson won a decision over Williams, and Talbot defeated Rawson in the 158-pound class; LaClapelle won from Rogers, and Van de Bogart defeated May field in the 1 7 5 -pound class. The finals were much more closely contested than any of the other bouts, resulting as follows: Yamada won the only senior match, defeating French at I 1 5 pounds; Easter- brook made one point for the sophomores when he threw Laughlin at 125 pounds; Talbot defeated McCready in the 135-pound class, winning one of the junior matches; Brown won the other sophomore bout by defeating Clark at I 45 pounds. In the heavyweight class Van de Bogart won the second match for the juniors when he threw LaChapelle. Bolton won the third junior match by throwing Yamada in the 1 1 5-pound weight. Ching Johnson won the only freshmen match when he threw Talbot in the 158-pound class. w THE BIG W CLUB T THE beginning of the year the Big W Club was composed of but few members because of the action of the society last year in allowing only letter men of football, baseball, crew, track and basket ball to become members of the club. Later the club voted to admit all men in college who had won a letter in any of major sports. The officers were John Davidson, president; Bill Macdonald, vice president; Bud McDermott, secretary; Gordon Dickson, treasurer. Football — Walter Shiel, Cedric Miller, Raymond Hunt, Elmer Noble, Louis Sea- grave, Elmer Leader, Donald Abel, George Smith, Edwin Leader, Allan Young, Thomas Cushman, David Logg, Ernest Murphy, John Markham, William Grimm, Harry Wirt and Ross MacKechnie. Basket ball — John Davidson, Dick Deutsche, Jesse Balmer, Stanley Riddle, George Smith, Dick Schively and Ralph Robinson. Baseball — Guy Thompson, Ed Leader, Elmer Leader, Ralph Robinson, Ross Wilson, Roy Taylor, Glenn Davis, Paul McDermott and Ralph Smith. Track — Paul Clyde, Alvin Cochran, Ernest Walters, John Gibson, Ocky Ander- son, Sam Stenstrom, W. J. MacDonald, Dudley Woodbridge and H. E. Gray. Crew — Russell Callow, Ward Kumm, Clyde Brokaw, Henry Zimmerman, Adolph Harr, Tom Cushman, Edwin Leader, Mox Walske, Carroll Ebright, Paul McConihe and Charles Newton. Tennis — Florian Canfield, Mataji Miura and Walter Kauffman. Wrestling — Paul Van de Bogart, Fred Yamada, Henry Talbot, Gordon Dickson, Oliver LaChapelle, Walter Williams, Arthur Easterbrook and Henry Bolton. ' A THORN 4 AMOMG- : - V T HE- ROSES WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Officers 1915-1916. Marion Southard President Gladys Hitt Vice President Clara Knausenberger .Secretary Dorothy Hes.s Treasurer Ruth Entz Historian Erna Meerscheidt Senior Representative Hannah Bonnell Junior Representative Ann Baker Hoclcey Representative Marjorie White Crew Representative Marion Southard Basket Ball Representative Florence Bass Track Representative Louise Hall Baseball Representative Hilda Knausenberger Tennis Representative Lail Ake Frances Anderson .A.nn Baker Gertrude Barnum Florence Bass Blanche Bollinger Aura Bonnell Hannah Bonnell Beatrice Carpenter Claire McDonald Lou Condron Gladys Easterbrooke Claire xvlcuonald Frances Fisk tva McKay -Margaret McLean Sophia McFee Erna Meerscheidt Aimee Michelson Alice Miller Virginia Mosely Hertha ONeill MEMBERS. Ysabel Patton Vera Peckenpaugh Cornelia Powell Margaret Powell Jean Reekie .Antoinette Rehmke Gertrude Rose Rhea Rupert Gertrude Schreiner Harriet Smith Linnea Soderberg Marion Southard May Stewart Fredricka Sully Leona Sundquist Garnet Swartzbaugh Gezina Thomas Mary Todd Daisy Hassett Ethel Glen Lois Glen Jane Good Evelyn Goodrich Marion Griffiths Dorothy Hess Gladys Hitt Clara Knausenberger Hilda Knausenberger Edith Lundgrin Ruth Martin Helen McGee Enola Mclntyre Vera Waite Mary Walsh Margaret Wayland Marjorie White Marion Vhitlock Ann Williams Ruby Woodruff Mariette Worthington Goldie Bryan Hazel Jones HOCKEY Due to the illness of Miss Catherine Eastman, coach of the hockey teams, the games did not come off this year. However, the teams were chosen and ready for the contest they would otherwise have played. HOCKEY FINALS. Seniors. Juniors. Clara Bryant Centerfield Arlie Anderson Mariette NX ' orthmgton Right Infield Clara Knausenberge: Nellie Alben Left Infield Florence Bass Ruth Entz Right Wing Dorothy Elliott Camilla Dunbar Left Wing Iphigene Banker Alice Miller Center Half Hilda Knausenberger Gertrude Rose Right Half Margaret Bliss Francis Coughlin Left Half Hannah Bonnell Ruth Ellis Right Fullback Fredericka Sully Left Fullback Helen Hirschheimer Sophomores Freshmen Bessie Butcher Centerfield Helen Miller Marion Griffiths Right Infield Josephine Tucker Lodie Briggs Left Infield Zilla Thompson Claire McDonald Right Wing Ruth Fr e Gertrude Schreiner Left Wing Frances Elliott Frances Fisk Center Half Clara Crogstad Daisy Hassett Right Half Genevieve Gieldsmith Anne Holmes Left Half Shirley Skewis Leona Lundquist Right Fullback Eleanor Hallen Gladys Easterbrooke Left Fullback Helen Goode W — — :— --trjg™ V m BASKET BALL B EFORE college audiences, ranging from 250 to 350, the women ' s basket ball games, interclass and interfraternity, were played. Enthusiasm for women ' s athletics is growing rapidly, as is evident from the turnouts. True to their former record the Junior girls won the interclass game and now hold a perfect score of nine games for the three years past. In the Ail- Varsity-Independent game the former were the victors. VARSITY-INDEPENDENT— 31 to II All-Varsity Independents Antoinette Rehmke Center Marion Griffiths Clara Knausenberger Side-Center Vera Waite Frances Anderson Forward Leonore Collins Mayme McDonald Forward Grace Enyart Marion Southard Guard Lola Friars Margaret Bruggerhoff Guard Leona Sundquist Hilda Knausenberger Guard Juniors Seniors Gladys Hitt Center Mary Todd Clara Knausenberger Side-Center Ysabel Patton Frances Anderson Forward Tony Rehmke Omega Hillon Forward Hertha O ' Neill Hilda Knausenberger Guard Marion Southard Vera Waite Guard Lail Ake Freshmen Sophomores Ruth Frye Center Marion Griffiths Susan Crawford Side-Center Ava Cochran Grace Enyart Forward Ruth Martin Leonore Collins Forward Mayme McDonald Margaret Bruggerho.f Guard Gladys Easterbrooke Lola Friars Guard Leona Sundquist CREW For the first time in the history of the A. S. U. W. the women of the University were given a real eight-oared shell for their own use. On December 7, the date of the fall regatta — there being two, one in the fall and one in the spring — just before the races, the women launched the 1915 Coed . A Varsity crew made up of the best women rowers in all the classes was chosen to row the initial voyage across Lake Union. After the launchmg the regatta came off and the Seniors claimed the victor) ' . VARSITY. Ann Baker Cox and Captain Marjorie White Stroke Cornelia Powell Seven Helen York Six Bessie Yerger Five Ava Cochran Four Vera Waite Three Evelyn Goodrich Two Ruth Entz Bow Leslie Davi.s, Marjorie Judy Substitutes Senior Crew. Junior Crew. Ann Baker Ccx Lucy Shelton Bessie Yerger stroke Marjorie White Ruth Entz 7 Vera Waite Mary Todd 6 Leslie Davis Marion Southard 5 Ellen JoUiffe Dorothy Hess 4 Irene Higgens Hertha O ' Neill 3 Helen Ames Beatrice Carpenter 2 Dea Imel Mona Morgan Bow Gwendolyn Green Sophomores. Freshmen. Dorothy Jloorhouse Cox Doris Dimock Evelyn Goodrich Stroke Helen York Margaret Powell 7 Grace Enyart A vadane Cochran 6 Jeannette Sholes Harriet Smith 5 Marjorie Judy Rita Moore 4 Vivian Ford Cornelia Powell 3 Marion Lewis Rosamond Parsons 2 Cornelia Hooper Linnea Soderberg Bow jUV n f I 107 DRAMATIC CALENDAR Nov. 1 2. Junior Girls ' Vaudeville. Dec. 4. Pomander Walk University Dramatic Association April 27. The Winning of Hawaii Mask and Quill; Ukulele Club May 20. The Girl With the Green Eyes University Dramatic Association JUNIOR GIRLS ' VAUDEVILLE The annual vaudeville staged by the Junior Girls was given in Meany Hall November 12. The headliner of the bill was The Summer Countess, a miniature musical comedy, composed by Harold Allen and Lester Wilson. Gudrun Andersen sang and smiled her way into the hearts of her audience as the dainty shop girl, who was a countess for a week; and Jack Kelliher ' s rich Irish brogue was irresistible as he besought her to allow him to make her a countess the rest of her life. The Sing Sing Quartette, composed of John Gibson. Chester Healy, Paul Mc- Dermott and Larry Martin, presented an animated travesty, which they called An Hour in a Cabaret. They were assisted by Daisy Hassett and John Fancher, who demonstrated several of the modern dances. Red Domino staged ' Cp o ' My Thumb, a one-act playlet, in which Maude Adams made her debut. The role of the little orphan waif, who forgets the gray sordidness of her existence in a fabric of dreams, was exquisitely interpreted by Dorothy Constantine, and the gruff teamster about whom the little laundress ' dearest dream was vainly woven, was splendidly handled by Wesley Rennie. Helene Ames and Helen Allen danced; and an octette of ukulele and guitar players, clad in white and decked with orange leis, played Hawaiian airs, varying from The Beach at Waikiki to Burning Love. A specially arranged musical program was the offering of the University Orchestra. mgi 1 m POMANDER WALK Louis N. Parker ' s comedy, Pomander Walk, was presented December 4 in Meany Hall by the University Dramatic Association. The play is the story of the lives and loves of six families who lived in six little red brick houses built side by side on a crescent-shaped street on the bank of the Thames, just outside of London. The story is laid in 1805, and is exquisitely intimate in its unfoldment. Ray Greenwood came gloriously into his own in the role of the brusque Sir Peter Antrobus, who was king of the walk and would abide no interference whatsoever. Mr. Greenwood ' s interpretation was distinguished by an artful restraint in a characterization that might be easily overplayed. John Happy proved himself a rising star by his handling of the bashful young violinist, Basil Pringle, who had one crooked shoulder and a great love in his heart. Dorothy Constantine was a dainty and delightful Barbara, who taught her parrot to tell her bashful lover the proper thing to do. Elizabeth McLean, as Mrs. Poskett, and Floyd Ellis, as Lord Otford, offered artistic conceptions of their respective roles. Harold Burdick made Jack Sayle, the young sailor son of Lord Otford, a very pleasing person, indeed, and he caught with rare consistency the spirit of the England of King George the Third. The play was produced under the direction of William P. Gorsuch, and the costumes were designed by Ruth Kerr. p THE CAST Sir Peter Antrobus Ray Greenwood Jerome Brooke-Hoskyn H. S. Ostrander Jim Matthew Hill Basil Pringle John Happy Rev. Jacob Sternroyd Donald Lewis Lord Otford Floyd Ellis Jack Sayle Harold Burdick The Eyesore Ray Ryan iMuffin Man Carl Ostrander Lamplighter Walter Tuesley Mrs. Pamela Poskett Elizabeth McLean Madame Lachesnais Mary Walsh Marjolaine Lachesnais Cornelia Glass Barbara Pennymint Dorothy Constantine Ruth Pennymint Mary Wright Caroline Thring Madeline Woodworth Nanestte Kathryn Ken- Jane Ruth Kerr THE WINNING OF HAWAII The Winning of Hawaii, produced by Mask and Quill and the Ukulele Club in Meany Hall April 27, has the distinction of being the first comedy-drama ever written by a University of Washin gton student and produced on the campus. The play was written by Rollit Coe, and is conceived like a musical comedy. The scene of the play is laid in the lanai, the palace of the King of Hawaii, on the beach at Waikiki. In the harbor outside towers Diamond Head, with her extinct volcano, so closely woven in the Hawaiian superstitions. THE CAST King of Hawaii Wesley Rennie Young American Rollit Coe Commodore of U. S. Navy Ray Dumett Li Matthew Hill His Excellency, Ambassador from Great Britain Colin Clements Monsieur, Ambassador from France Bill Beymer Mein Herr, Ambassador from Germany Arthur Simon Princess Lehua, Spirit of Hawaii Frances Bowie Her Cousins at Court — Maui Geneviene Thompson Kaui Mildred Dorgan Hawaii Enola McEntyre Hula Girls — Victoria McLean, Dorothy Deersveister, Mabel Church, Claire Townsend, Helen Allen, Marguerite Brueggerhoff, Ava Cochran, Helene Ames. Americans — John Gibson, Harold Sharkey, Paul McDermott. Wilbert Slemmons, Jack Hermans, Ernest Murphy, Tom Cushman, Clarence Moore. Waikiki Octette — Paul Stebbins, Norman Bellingham, Robert Nichols, Walter Kaufman, Bruce MacDougall, Franklyn Chapm.an, Lewis Beaman, Sam Crawford. MUSICAL PROGRAM Act I Waialae Orchestra Kawaiahau Waltz Orchestra Hilo March, Solo Dance Enola McEntyre Kahola Orchestra Act II Fair Hawaii Hula Girls Paradise Isles Ensemble Burning Love Lehua and Hula Girls Forget Me Not Hula Girls Old Plantation Ensemble Maid of Honolulu Commodore American Medley Americans Hula Dance Hula Girls Honolulu March, Solo Dance Enola McEntyre Finale: America, I Love You Ensemble Aloha Oe Ensemble THE GIRL WITH THE GREEN EYES LYDE FITCH ' S comedy drama, The Girl With the Green Eyes, was pre- sented by the University Dramatic Association May 20th in Meany Hall. The theme of the play is centered around the jealousy of a young wife, which brings the utmost unhappiness to everyone, including herself, almost terminating in the wrecking of her home. Fitch has woven mto his drama a delicate mingling of humor and pathos that is irresistible. He has dealt with human people acting under the stimulus of real situations, and has created personalities that are living and full of charm. Jinny herself, who is the wife, is an adorable mixture of inconsistency and good sense, and save for her absolutely unreasoning jealousy, is a very lovable person. Her husband. Jack Austin, whose love for her and desire to save her pain causes him to involuntarily give her many an excuse for a jealous rage, is a convincingly consistent man, with very little imagination, but with a char- acter which dominates everyone he meets. Geoffrey Tillman, the more or less worthless brother of Jinny , whom she idolizes, causes all the complications in the play by being in every sort of trouble imaginable, and having to be gotten out of all of them by his brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Tillman are two charming old people, who have lived their married life through in a delightfully congenial state of peaceful jealousy, and bequeathed that jealousy, in a concentrated form, to their son and daughter. The various characters were well interpreted by the members of the Dramatic Asso- ciation, the role of Susie, Jinny ' s small cousin, being particularly pleasing in the hands of Dorothy Constantine. Floyd Ellis ably handled the difficult Geoffrey, and Arthur Simon, a new member of the organization, made a delightful Mr. Tillman. The first of the four acts is laid in the drawing room of the Tillman home in New York, about five minutes after the wedding of John and Jinny . The second is in the Vatican in Rome, during the honeymoon. The third and fourth are the same; the library of the Austin ' s apartment in New York. PERSONS IN THE PLAY John Austin Harold Burdick Jinny Austin Cornelia Glass Ruth Chester Fern Kramer Geoffrey Tillman Floyd Ellis Mrs. Tillman Elizabeth McLean Mr. Tillman Arthur Simon Maggie Ruth Kerr Mrs. Lopp Mary Wright Carrie Lopp Kathryn Kerr Susie Dorothy Constantine Mrs. Cullingham Madeline Woodworth Peter Cullingham Donald Lewis Guide Ray Ryan Butler H. S. Ostrander Footman Matthew Hill Tourists, Bridesmaids, etc. m UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION (J HE purpose of the University Dramatic Association is to present the latest and best plays on the campus and to encourage participation by the students in dramatics. Membership is limited to thirty-five, who are selected for their ability. The Dramatic Association was founded in 1 908. OFFICERS President, Ray Greenwood Vice President and Manager, Harold Burdick Treasurer, Floyd Ellis Secretary, Gudrun Andersen Historian, Anna Baker MEMBERS Ray Greenwood Harold Burdick Ray Ryan Ysabel Patton Walter Tuesley Cornelia Glass Anne Williams Barrett Herrick Anna Baker H. S. Ostrander Victoria McLean Floyd Ellis Dorothy Constantine Jack Kelliher John Happy David Cleeland Don Lewis Carl Ostrander Elizabeth McLean Katherine Kerr Madeline Woodworth Ruth Kerr Mary Walsh Matthew Hill Fern Kramer Arthur Simon Gudrun Andersen m RED DOMINO Red Domino is a national dramatic honor society for women. It was founded at Wisconsin, and Washington Chapter was chartered in I 9 1 1 . Its aim is to foster interest in dramatic work among its members. HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. J. C. Herbsman Frances Bowie Win ifred Coe Frances Craig Gudrun Andersen Dorothy Constantine 1916 1917 1918 Mrs. M. L. Daggy Ysabel Patton Anne Williams Ella Winslow Mary Wright lornelia Glass 116 MI Patton Howie Vinslo« Amlerson Crais Williams Wright Constantin Glass UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON GLEE CLUB Ining M. Glen, Director First Tenors — Wilfred Lewis, Leader William Beymer Anthony Corbierre Richard Robertson Second Tenors — Raymond Ryan Thomas Hemes Charles Zimmerman Reuben Benz Accompanist, Harold Fix Specialty, Clarence Moore First Basses — Paul McDermott John Happy Jack Kelliher Francis Pern. ' Harold Sharkey Second Basses- Paul Gibson Fred Havel John Heermans Paul Wright MANDOLIN CLUB Conrad Brevick. Director Norman Bellingham Chester Healy Walter Kauffman Richard Luther Bruce MacDoug Lester Da is Roy Marryatt UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON GLEE AND MANDOLIN CLUB CONCERT Irving Glen, Director Part I Alma Mater g H j Vagabondia Glee Club Popular Airs Mandolin Club You Better Ask Me Lohr Jack Kelliher Alice, Where Art Thou Glee Club Part II Quartet: In Those Dear Old College Days ; Oskee-wow-wow ; Dear Old Pals, Jolly Old Pals ; A ' outh Resolved to Go to College ; Sing Me a Song of College Days . Trio: Old Green River . Specialty; Chink Moore . Quartet: My Little Gipsy Sweetheart ; When the Harbor Lijhts Are Burning . Trio; Float On . Specialty; Ned Edris. Quartet; In Waid . Trio; Tokio . Quartet and Trio; Bow Down to Washington . Part III Syncopations Mandolin Club In Vocal Combat Buck Glee Club Mandolin Solo Conrad Brevick Musical Trust Glee Club February 10, 1916 in Meany Hall ORCHESTRA OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON Frist Violin — ' Cellos- Mr. Rosen Miss E. French Mr. H. Rosen Miss Canfield Mr. L. Rosen Miss H. Bonnell Mr. Clay Harrison Miss Taylor Miss Philbrook Mr. H. Gieser Miss Burlingains Mr. Ferguson Miss A. Bonnell Mr. J. Houch Miss McKenzie Miss Douglas Oboe- Mr. E. H. McDougall Flutes — Mr. Burns Second Violins- - Mr. F. Smelser Miss L. Glenn Mr. West Miss Collins Miss E. Coleman Miss L. Benton Miss Clark Trumpets — Mr. MacDougall Mr. Pingo ' Miss McGee Bassoon — Mr. Thomas Miss H. Kelly Mr. Mondschau Horns — Bass- Mr. Coon Mr. Adams Mr. C. Cleveland Mr. Diggett Mr. G. Cleveland Clarinets — Mr. DoUofl Mr. F. Pettit Mr. E. Leo Mr. Wilson Trombones — Mr. J. St. John Mr. Himmelsbach Mr. Merriwether Violas- Mr. Gardner Mr. A. Francis Timpany — Mr. H. Pelatier Mr. G. Beck Drums — Mr. Ruggles Mr. Christianson M iss Etha Cook at the Piano GOLDEN LEGEND Irving M. Glen, Director Eileen French, Soprano Wilfred Lewis, Tenor Lucy Gallup, Contralto Dr. Rudolph Ernst, Bass Scene I — Prologue — Spire of Strasburg Cathedral; night and storm; Lucifer, with the powers of the air, trying to pull down the Cross. Lucifer Bass Powers of the Air Women ' s Chorus The Bells Male Chorus Scene II — Recit. and Air, I Cannot Sleep Tenor A chamber in Prince Henry ' s Castle. The Prince alone, ill and restless; midnight. Scene III — Duo and ensemble Bass, Tenor, Chorus Lucifer, Prince Henry and Chorus. Lucifer in garb of traveling physician. Scene IV — Quartet (unaccompanied), O Gladsome Light. Scene V — Soprano Solo, My Redeemer and My Lord. Elsie ' s chamber; night in prayer. Scene VI — Drinking Song Bass and Male Chorus Scene VII — Revel and Appearance of the Abbot Orchestra Scene VIII — Soprano Solo and Chorus, The Night Is Calm and Cloudless. Scene IX — Barcarole Orchestra Scene X — At Sea ' Chorus of Sailors Scene XI — Dialogue. Prince Henry, Lucifer, Elsie and Chorus. The College of Salerno. Scene XII — Behold the Hilltops All Aglow Duet, Soprano and Tenor Scene XIII — Epilogue and Finale. O Beauty of Holiness Chorus P vy erl the— GLEECLM6 || W IS-N ' T IN6IM6 1 ■ i- s _ LOG OF THE GOOD SHIP ' MUSICAL MERCEDES Friday, Dec. I 7 — Foregoing the pleasure of the last day of school, we made an eight o ' clock at the depot. Left at 8:20 on the big trip. J. Arthur and Daddy Glen give roll call continuously. Mrs. Bryan wins all hearts as chaperon. Cle Elum 12:30. Met at the station by undergraduate reception committee from high school, who gave vent to rousing cheers. Took possession of best (and only) hot ' l. Real snow. Manhattan quartet exhibit for prospective customers. Spent afternoon seeing sights, and learning coal industry. Chief diversion punching score board for candy. The big show, our initiation as one-night slanders. Take encores whether we earn them or not. Dance after. Pete Davis and Fred Havell attempt three-step. Rest unlimber for two-step and waltz. Saturday, Dec. 1 8 — Leave metropolis of Cle Elum 1 2 :40. Numerous pmochle tournaments and bum harmony gangsters. Yakima 3:30. Rehearse 15 minutes later. Great town. Fine house. Reception and dance after. Whale of a time. Unanimous vote in favor of North Yak. and its inhabitants. Sunday, Dec. 19 — Up a few hours after hitting the hay night before. Off at 7:45. In transit, Chet evolves the Yannigan quartet, who rise to fame with the universal favorite, I Want to Powder By Doze. Spokane 4:20. Lucky ones go to Davenport ' s palace. Rest of us are farmed out Monday, Dec. 20 — Rehearsal a. m. Clemmer 3, 5, 8 and 9:30. The loyal band or- ganizes. Beginning with rehearsal, they didn ' t miss one performance during our stay. We break in as real footlight luminaries. Jack Kelleher outshines the bunch. Spokane press raves over him. Conny Brevick averages three mandolin picks per piece. Chink and the Yannigans actually make Manager Clemmer smile. Tuesday, Dec. 2! — Up at daybreak and over to North Central High. Dick Robertson has lots of fun kidding the high school girls, and Bill L. decides to sing Trust Her Nut. Merry party withal. Quartet eats lunch out. Two shows aft. W. S. C. banquet eve. Vagabones goes big league. Tear away to make 8 o ' clock at Clemmer. Bill and Jack comede as usual on the Combat. Back. Tear away again for 9:30 show. Little concert in lobby of Davenport ' s palace after. Dancing and song in the restaurant. The fussers fuss. The stagge rs stag. Wednesday, Dec. 22 — Again we greet the rising sun and look into the smiling young faces of Lewis and Clarke ' s prep schoolers. The merry musikers arrive one at a time. Bill Beymer getting there just in time for the finale. Best cheering we ' ve heard in a long time. Quartet again sponges lunch off some victims. 4 :20, off again. Lind is next stop a few hours later. Bud goes stale. Chink goes wild and they nearly wreck the Yannigans. Manly John Gibson saves the day with a beautiful curtain speech. Rox D. entertains the boys. Thursday, Dec. 23 — Off at 10:45. Customary bum harmonizing till 3:30. Art provides some luscious feed. Toppenish. Back to the movie life. Finish last performance without a single showing of violence or vegetable shower. Midnight — we split up after one fine trip. Vote of appreciation to J. Arthur and Daddy Glen. Friday, Dec. 24 — Home. Ye gods! IRISH. THE RED MILL A Comic Opera in Two Acts, Presented by the Associated Students of the University of Washington at the Moore Theater WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1916 Irving M. Glen, Director J. Arthur Younger, Manager CAST Gretchen Mary Wright (The Burgomaster ' s Daughter) Bertha Lucy Gallup (The Burgomaster ' s Sister) Tina Violet Shepard (Barmaid. Willem ' s Daughter) Countess De La Fere Emily Hall (Automobiling with Her Son Through Holland) Con Kidder John Happy (American Tourist) Kid Conner Clarence Moore (American Tourist) Jan Van Borkem Harold Burdick (Burgomaster of Katwyk-ann-zee) Franz Paul Wright (Sheriff of Katwyz-ann-zee) Willem James Harden (Keeper of the Red Mill Inn) Captain Doris Van Dam Richard Robertson (In Love with Gretchen) Governor of Zeeland Jack Kelliher (Engaged to Gretchen) Jo shua Pennefeather Floyd Ellis (English Lawyer) SONGS Act I Mignonette Tina You Never Can Tell About a Woman Burgomaster and Willem Whistle It Con, Kid and Tina The Isle of Our Dreams Gretchen and Doris It ' s Go, While the Goin ' Is Good Con, Kid, Bertha and Tina Moonbeams Gretchen, Doris and Quartet Act II A Legend of the Mill Bertha and Chorus Good-a-bye, John Con and Kid If You Love But Me Tina and Chorus Every Day Is Ladies ' Day With Me Governor and Male Chorus Because You ' re You Governor and Bertha The Streets of Old New York Con, Kid and Chorus SYNOPSIS The love of Gretchen forms many a perplexing problem and many a humorous situ- ation which brings on her her fond parent ' s wrath, the worthy Burgomaster, who earnestly desires the linking of his daughter to the Governor o f Zeeland in the holy bonds of matri- mony. Gretchen ' s eyes have turned elsewhere, however, and met those of the gallant Captain Van Dam, the result bemg mutual conflagration, and many vows of love. The part the two empty-pursed, but light-hearted Yankee tourists. Con Kidder and Kid Conner, play is of no small consequence. They enlist themselves with the lovers, and with Bertha ' s aid (the Burgomaster ' s sister) start in the adventure in behalf of love. Hapless Gretchen goes to the famed Red Mill, around which gruesome legend is woven, to meet the young Doris Van Dam. Enter the Burgomaster who, upon finding his daughter there in what appears to him, and rightly, a secret trysting place, flies into a rage, and locks Gretchen in. But the indefatiguable Con comes to Gretchen ' s rescue and, taking her in his arms, climbs out on the windmill ' s wings, which carry them down to earth and safety. The opening of the second act finds the Burgomaster in a fine state of hysteria, over the disappearance of his erring daughter. He offers a reward to anybody who will bring her back. Here the resourceful Yankees enter again, both in interests of Gretchen and their empty purses. But their activities are carried out under different roles now; gone are Kid Conner and Con Kidder; in their stead enter the famous Sheriock Holmes and Dr. Watson. These detectives offer to find the missing damsel, and the Burgomaster gives them free leeway. Needless to say, the disguised Con and Kid are not long in producing the lovers, who are presented to the Burgomaster firmly handcuffed together. In the meantime Bertha has been applying herself diligently to the task of making the honorable Governor forget his disappointment over the missing Gretchen and she has succeeded so well that their betrothal is announced. There is nothing for the Bur gomaster to do to the truant lovers but give them his unqualified consent, seeing that Bertha has .stolen his first choice. This the Burgomaster does amid happy embraces, while the happy Con and Kid, chortling over the reward that they have so cleverly obtained, regale them- selves in the blissful anticipation of what they will do when they get back on The Streets of Old New York. P m CALIFORNIA -rciD efrie Thonpscn VARSITY BALL Hippodrome, December 10, 1915 Professor and Mrs. Frank Kane Professor and Mrs. Orville Cockerill Dr. and Mrs. David Hall Regent and Mrs. Charles Caches COMMITTEE Russell Horton, Chairman Ruth Fosdick Victoria McLean Antoinette Rehmke Marjorie White Ray Dumett Harold Foran Karl Schmaelzle Clare Sexsmith PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Governor and Mrs. Ernest Lister President and Mrs Henry Suzzallo Professor and Mrs. Edmund Meany Professor and Mrs. David Thomson Comptroller and Mrs. Herbert Condon Professor and Mrs. Arthur Priest Dean El el Coldwell Dean and Mrs. Arthur Haggett Dean Milnor Roberts Regent and Mrs. Winlock Miller Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hedges Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Thatcher Mr. and Mrs. Arthur ounser CADET BALL Armory, May 12, 1916 Major Carl V. Draves, Chair.xan First Lieutenant Alfred Miller Lieutenant-Colonel Edgar Draper First Lieutenant Willard Herron Company A- Company B- Company C- Company D- Company E- Company F- -Charles Zimmerman -John Happy -Richard Luther -Crawford Goodwin -Clayton Bolinger -Cramer Thomas Company G — Raymond Ryan Company H — Alfred Hall Company I — Raymond Bell Company K — Warren Beuschline Company L — Monte Coleman Band — Marcus Shanks PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Governor and Mrs. Ernest Lister General and Mrs. Morris Thompson Colonel and Mrs. Richard Wilson Colonel and Mrs. William Perkins Captain Marion Lieutenant and Mrs. Edward McCammon Dean and Mrs. Almon Fuller Regent and Mrs. Charles Gaches Regent and Mrs. William Wheeler Regent and Mrs. John Rea Professor and Mrs. Edmund Meany Miss Jessie President and Mrs. Henr ' Suzzallo Lieutenant-Colonel and Mrs. J. H. Dar- lington Colonel and Mrs. Howard Hanson Major and Mrs. William Jones Captain and Mrs. William Patten Dean and Mrs. Arthur Priest Dean Ethel Coldwell Regent and Mrs. Winlock Miller Regent and Mrs. Oscar Fechter Regent and Mrs. William Shannon Merrick J JUNIOR PROMENADE Hippodrome, May 5, 1916 COMMITTEE IN CHARGE Judson Faulknor, Chairman Betty Hills Louise Dally Irene Gross Helen Wilson Helen Sully Martha Townsend Jessie Home Gene a Sims Lucy Morton Fredricka Sully Jean McPhee FRESHMEN SERX ' ING Marion Sowles De Stevenson Katherine Goodheart Helen ' ork Cyria Allan Aimee Michelson Earl MacLaughlin James Reed Edwin Stuchell Bryant MacDougall Mildred Copeland PATRONS AND PATRONESSES President and Mrs Henry Suzzallo Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaches Dean and Mrs. Irving Glen Professor and Mrs. Frederick Padelford Dean and Mrs. Arthur Haggett Regent and Mrs. William Perkins Professor and Mrs. Edmund Meany Dean Ethel Coldwell Dean Milnor Roberts DECORATIONS Apple blossoms against a black and white striped background OVAL CLUB INFORMAL Gymnasium, October 15, 191 5 COMMITTEE IN CHARGE Harold Foran Phillip Weiss Edward Franklin 3 ' k ROOTERS ' CLUB DANCE October 2Q, 1Q15, at the Gymnasium James Eagleson, Chairman. PATRONS AND PATRONESSES. President and Mrs. Henry Suzzallo. Professor and Mrs. Edmund Meany. Dean Ethel Coldwell. Professor and Mrs. Frank Kane. Dr. and Mrs. David Hall. Mr. and Mr Dr. William Dehn Dean and Mrs. John Condon. Professor and Mrs. Orville Cockerill Professor and Mrs Edward McMahon Professor and Mrs. Fred Kennedy Wilfred Lewis. u eyi SENIOR SOIREE Gymnasium, November 19, 1915 Mary Brace Alice Miller. Howard McCallum. William Totten. SOCIAL COMMITTEE: Ray Cook, Chairman. May Stewart. Beatrice Mercer. Jack Kelliher. Forest Goodfellow. PATRONS AND PATRONESSES. President and Mrs. Henry Suzzallo. Dr. and Mrs. Harry Smith. Professor and Mrs. Orville Cockerill Bursar and Mrs. Herbert Condon. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Givler. Professor and Mrs. Frank Kane. FIRST WOMEN ' S INFORMAL Gymnasium, September 25, 1915 COMMITTEE Grace McDonald, Chairman Margaret Wilson Mildred Larsen Evelyn Wilson Lois Skinner Gezina Thomas SOPHOMORE GLEE Redding ' s Hall, November 19, 19 15 SOCIAL COMMITTEE: Raymond Ryan, Chairman. Elizabeth Boyd. Frances Elliott. Luther Ellmore. Fulton Magill. Marjorie Miller. Wynne Mowry. Harriet Parker. Vera Peckenpaugh. Russell Peterson. Malcolm Reed. Scott Sanders. Garnet Swartzbaugh. PATRONS AND PATRONESSES. Judge and Mrs. King Dykeman. Dean and Mrs. Arthur Priest. Mr. and Mrs. John Heines. Professor Charles Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Tammany. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Smith. SECOND WOMEN ' S INFORMAL Gymnasium, February 1, 1916 Margaret Breck, Chairman Ruth Henry Marjorie Wilson Christine Thomas Bertha Overmeyer Grace Colton Martha Davis Susie Paige FRESHMAN FROLIC Gymnasium, December 11, 1Q15 COMMITTEE: John Sutoff, Chairman Cyrus Campion. Mildred Copeland. Paul Ellsworth. Willard Herron. Florence Johnson. Marion Lewis. Elizabeth McClaine. Helen Miller. John Reynolds. Marthena Rhodes. Albert Ross. Lewis Ryan Shirley Skewis. Wellington Woods. TOLO LEAP YEAR INFORMAL Gymnasium, February 4, 1916 CREW DANCE Gymnasium, April 8, 1916 COMMITTEE Cletus Minahan, Chairman Arthur Simons - 4s HU::.• Raymond Gardi ' |Siie. ' sv;k; ?H :::H:V Carroll Ebright Moraan Van Winkle _Jt:?;M!. . . ' .:-:J:: PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Coach and Mrs. Hiram Conibear Dean and Mrs John Condon Comptroller and Mrs. Herbert Condon Dean Milnor Roberts INAUGURAL RECEPTION Mrs. Henry Suzzallo and the women of the Faculty were hostesses at a reception in honor of the wives of the Alumni of Washington and other universities on Monday, March 20. The rooms were attractively decorated, the reception rooms and hall carrying the spring note in the tall vases of snap dragons, which shaded from the palest pink to rose with contrasting touches of yellow. In the dining room pink roses, white tulips and hyacinths were combined artistically to form a setting. Those in the receiving line were: Mrs. Heniv Suzzallo, Miss Ottilie Boetzkes, Mrs. Winlock Miller, Mrs. Charles Caches, Mrs. William Shannon. Mrs. William Perkins, Miss Glass, Governor Ernest Lister, President Nicholas Murray Butler, President E. O. Holland and President Henry Suzzallo. MICHIGAN DANCE Given by the Independent Union in Honor of the Michi- gan Glee and Mandolin Clubs and Michigan Alumni, April 14, 1916, in the Gymnasium COMMITTEE Carl Young, Chairman Frank Whitney LeRoy Brooks George Beardsley Curtis Aller Max Silver Walter Hodge .;,;h, ' !. ' -V ' I! ' . FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS President, John Saunders First Vice President, Floyd Vammon Second Vice President, Julia Fisher Secretary, Irma Warner Treasurer, Ed Lee Athletic Manager, Lawrence Smith Yell Leader, Ed Riley Marthina Rhodes Marion Lewis Mildred Copeland Elizabeth McClare Florence Johnson SOCIAL COMMITTEE Jack Sutthoff, Chairman Helen Miller Shirley Skewis Paul Ellsworth Willard Herron Jack Reynolds Cyrus Campion Albert Roos Louis Ryan Wellington Wood FRESHMAN HISTORY Sept. 15. Fifteen Frosh answer Dobie ' s call. Sept. 1 7. First assembly. The freshmen are welcomed by Dr. Suzzallo. Prexy. Sept. 1 8. Freshmen men ' s mixer. Dr. Suzzallo nominates himself for Frosh Sept. 2 1 . Prof. Milliman says freshmen don ' t know 8th grade grammar. First freshmen meeting held and nomination for officers made. Sept. 24. Freshmen election. Johnnie Saunders, president. Sept. 28. Freshmen strongest man in college. Sept. 30. Freshman runs for soph yell leader. Oct. 4. Dorm men duck frosh. Oct. 6. Frosh vote for green caps. Oct. 1 4. Freshmen don caps. Oct. 26. Freshmen girls wear green ribbons. Nov. 4. Freshmen choose orange and black for class colors. Juniors beat frosh 3-0. Nov. 6. Frosh round-up. Nov. 20. Sophs beat frosh 9-0. Nov. 24. Freshmen rule adopted by Washington. Nov. 25. Frosh take off green caps until March I 7. Dec. I I . Freshmen frolic. Dec. I 5. Frosh wear cadet uniforms for the first time. First basket ball turnoui. Jan. 1 9. Frosh want honor system. March 2. Sophs beat frosh at basket ball 28-9. March 1 7. Freshmen wear caps again. May I 3. Frosh picnic. 0F1®M0 SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS President, Earl Nelson Vice President, Kathryn Burnside Secretary, Effie Thompson Treasurer, Thomas Nash Athletic Manager, Floyd Ellis Yell Leader, John Thompson SOCIAL COMMITTEE Ray Ryan, Chairman Scott Sanders Garnet Swartzbaugh Malcolm Reed Mark Shaw Russel Peterson Elizabeth Boyd Luther Elmore Harriet Parker Fulton Magil! Marjorie Miller EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Floyd Ellis John Thompson Wallace Greig Vera Peckenpaugh Frances Elliott Avadana Cochran Ben Butler Anthony Brandenthaler Earl Nelson Kathryn Burnside Effie Thompson Thomas Nash VARSITY- BALL SOPHOMORE BOOTH Fulton Magill, Chairman Jack Carrigan Cornelia Glass Crawford Goodwin Avadana Cochran COMMITTEE ON DISTINCTIVE DRESS John Happy Jack Carrigan Malcolm Otis INTERCLASS DEBATE COMMITTEE John Coffee, Chairman VIGILANCE COMMITTEE Russell Peterson, Chairman CONSTITUTIONAL COMMITTEE Anne Holmes Mark Shaw Cornelia Glass Thomas Nash Tom Kelly SOPHOMORE HISTORY o HE class of 1918 was formally instituted as the sophomore class on September 29, 1915, when Earl Nelson took the executive chair. Following the precedent set in the freshmen year, there was a contested election, and the adoption of a new constitution. The sophomore class made the worthy record of wmnmg three athletic championships — football, cross-country, and track — and finished second in wresthng. They held their own in the social whirl of University life as well. A mixer dance was held on October 23 and a 10:30 dance on March 25. The Soph Glee was held in Redding ' s Hall on November 19 and the picnic at Fortuna Park on May 13. The class of 1918 will be noted in the annals of the University of Washmgton as the first sophomore class of that mstitution to adopt a distmctive dress. At a mass meeting of the men on November 12, it was decided that corduroy trousers would be the insignia of the class. The following week the donning of the cords was celebrated by a smoker and the Vigilance Committee began its work. The women voted against a distinctive emblem. The Girl ' s Club of the previous year was perpetuated after a vote of the class, and the work of providing a Christmas tree for the unfortunate children of the city was effected. A committee of forty-five girls was appointed for this occasion. The class of 1918 will go on record as the first sophomore class to go through the year without a class-scrap. There were no tie-ups or rough-houses to blight the general University standing, and, as would be expected under these circumstances, the scholastic average of the class was relatively high. R ' 145 m OFFICERS OF THE CLASS OF 1917. President, Charles H. Walker. Vice President, Gudrun C. Andersen. Secretary, Frances K. Smith Treasurer, Harold Sharkey. COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN. Junior Prom, Judson Falknor. Junior Picnic, Donald Abel. Junior Day, Alvin Dyer. Varsity Ball Booth, Temple Fay. Junior Girl ' s Vaudeville, Gudren Andersen. Colors, Maroon and Gold. YELL. Rip-Rah-Row-Reven, One-Nine-One-Seven. Yell Leader, Clarence Moore. Athletic Manager, Irving Thomas. F ry HE Junior Class was confronted at the beginning of the year by a debt that repre-  sented the deaciency of the past years and by a desire on the part of the Faculty lF I and class alike to cut down the social program of the class. So the social program was revised. By a vote of the class the Junior Jinx, the class informal, was aban- doned. At the suggestion of the student affairs committee the Junior play was given up and the Prom retained. In thus simplifying the social calendar the class has set a precedent that has been welcomed by class and Faculty alike. The energies of the class during the first semester were centered on the Junior Vaude- ville, given under th-; direction of Gudrun Andersen in Meany Hall on November 1 2. Fhe performance was received by the most enthusiastic audience that ever welcomed a troupe of amateur players in Meany Hall. The performance was well worth the work it cost the class and was a big money-maker for the activities of the Junior women. In a tiry forest of palms the Juniors entertained the guests at the Varsity ball. A reproduction of a Hawaiian hut before which native beauties served punch was one of the centres of attraction at the big formal. The Junior Prom was the event of the year that will linger longest in the memory of all who danced that night under the greenery that carried out the motif of springtime. Against the background of black and white the soft colors of spring flowers made the dancing hall into a May day scene. Judson Falknor and. committee were responsible for the success of the function. The planting of the Junior tree and the afternoon of water sports at the foot of the Pay Streak were the principal events of Junior Day, May 6. Alvin Dyer was in charge of the events of the day. The social season of the class closed in a literal burst of song for the picnic at Wild- wood on May 1 3 proved to be the merriest event of the year. The affair was handled by Don Abel. The custom of distinctive class garb was taken up rather late in the school year and the sombrero which was adopted as the Junior ' s own appeared on the camous about Thanksgiving time. The custom did not meet with as ready response as had been hoped, hut the custom which was started by the class of 1917 has a fair chance of gaining in time the distinction of being a Washington tradition. H HBoar, m Mary Walsh Roy Fox Mary Brace Howard M, cCa SENIOR CLASS George Dill, President Amy Olmstead, Vice President Phil Weiss, Treasurer Ysabel Patton, Secretarj ' Roy Fox, Executive Member SENIOR COUNCIL Margaret Breck Antoinette Rehmke Walter Shiel James Studley Walter Williams, Chairman SOIREE Alice Miller May Stewart William Totten John Kelliher Ray Cook, Chairman MEMORIAL Gertrude Rose Karl Schmaelzle Winifred Coe Colin Clements Lewis Schwellenback, Chairman FAREWELL Sophia McPhee Ernest McKeen Lulu Condron James Eagleson Fred Lind, Chairman COMMENCEMENT Grace McDonald Mary McEntee Ruth Merling Harold Burdick Russell Callow, Chairman VARSITY ' BALL BOOTH COMMITTEE Eunice Spencer Rex Beisel Hertha O ' Neill Beatrice Carpenter Hollister Sprague Frank Waterhouse, Chairman Hazel Jones Dorothy Wad Mona Morgan Helen Anderson Anne Baker Ward Kumm Beatrice Mercer Forrest Goodfellow Clarence Shivvcrs Stewart Simpson Fred Pederson Ed Franklin Carl Young Edgar Draper Poet, Winifred Coe Historian, Eunice Spencer Cole Prophet, Irma Lindsey Athletic Manager, Carroll YELL Lots of pep. Lots of steam; U. of W., ' 16. rs — Blue and Gold. Byrd WASHINGTON FAREWELL [FTER four years of endeavor we have at last reached the center of the stage in the drama of College Days, and standing, as we do, in the full glare of the spot ght, something of the philosopher is developed within us. Looking back over the past we recall our many hopes, memories, desires, successes and failures, for the drama in which we have all taken part and which has meant so much to us has not been a comedy, neither has it been a tragedy, but a complex problem play of earnest striving, high endeavor, and at last successful achievement. Our cue has been, Lots of pep, lots of steam . We learned our parts well during our first year at Washington and at the close of it demonstrated the fact by winning I 8 Ws , 6 of which were for football, a record that has never been equaled by any class in the history of the University. During our second year we learned that after all there is only one Frosh year, and after that, one is sort ' o growed up . You own the town; you are no longer amenable to advice or discipline ; the world steps into the street while you take the sidewalk. Beating the class below, when the Faculty decrees a game of parlor tennis shall take the place of class scraps, isn ' t worth while. In the Spring — well, that ' s different. You need the exercise, and as far as bothering with administration perplexities — no use at all when the 1916 steam is up. Do you remember? We got into difficulties in subordinating the Frosh, but even yet some of us beHeve that fight was worth the price. Then, too, that is the last real class scrap the University of Washington has ever seen. Constitutionally conceded and traditionally recorded, 1 9 i 6 ' s Junior year was on the crest of the wave the same as all Junior classes are — or should be. It was during this year that we held the interclass boxing championship, and the girls won the co-ed regatta on Lake Union. Some of our members sneaked into the cook ' s shanty and brought home the bacon. Walt Shiel copped the presidency of the Y. M. C. A., Mike Hunt was chosen varsity football captain. Jack Fancher was chosen varsity basket ball manager, Louis Seagrave assumed the editorship of the Daily, and Walt Williams got himself rushed Phi Beta Kappa, not to mention the jobs that Fred Lind, Ward Kumm, Lewis Conner, Paul Clyde and a bunch of others got away with But in our Senior year the spirit which began as class rivalry and enthusiasm broad- ened and developed into an ideal of a greater Washington. During our Senior year we have seen the coming of President Suzzallo; the construction of the first new building of the future campus; the establishing of the Freshman non-eligibility rule; the development of a warm friendship between our University and her sister institution in the south ; in short, we have seen Washington come into her own as the leading institution of the Northwest. This, coming as it has, during our Senior year, has instilled within us a greater power of endeavor and efficiency. When we leave this college drama for the bigger one of life. It will be with the spirit and ideals which make for achievement and success. In a few moments the curtain will be rung down. Somewhere out under the trees a long line of black-robed men and women, headed by their President — with a capital P — George Dill, will wind forth in the last journey on beloved campus trails. For what- ever the future holds for them, for whatever they may acco mplish in life, be it great or small, those sons and daughters of Washington ' I 6 acknowledge all to their Alma Mater. 10 SENIOR COUNCIL Margaret Breck Antoinette Rhemke Anna Baker Mary Walsh Walter Williams, Chairman Roy Fox Donald Studley Walter Shiel Ward Kumm p m FOREST TIDINGS Dedicated to the Class of 1916 Junior Day 1915 Edmond S. Meany Good tidings, O forest morning! Awak ' ning songs arise, All shaking with rhythmic promise To fresh and rosy skies. Each bud with its dew-gemmed trumpet Proclaims a joy to be. Good tidings, O forest morning! The day is young and free. Good tidings, O forest noonday! Soft gold is on the floor To beckon the harvest passion. To greet the day ' s wide door With welcome for stalwart labor. For labor ' s honest grime. Good tidings, O forest noonday! O life at brimming prime! Good tidings, O forest evening! The birds are lulled to sleep By crickets in drowsy gossip As lengthened shadows creep. Ah, dimly I see the falling, The red leaves, one by one. Good tidings, O forest evening! For lo ! the day is done. Good tidings, O forest midnight! How cold the moonbeams show rhe owl on his stealthy winging Through corridors of snow! A pause at the white world threshold. The star-pinned curtain drawn ! Good tidings? As, yes, in slumber, To wait a day ' s new dawn. ELLEN GERDA ALBEN Liberal Arts Vii NELLIE EDNA ALBEN Liberal Arts V, VIDA ALVERSON Liberal Arts Seattle Alpha Xi Delta County Fair Committee ll); Junior Jin : Chorus ETTA ANDREWS Liberal Arts ' a(icouve CLARENCE R. ANDERSON WOODWORTH ANDERSON Mechanical Engineering Seattle Alpha Sigma Phi Juiior Jinx Committee. fi w IRENE MARGARET ARMSTRONG Liberal Arts Tacoma Chi Omega ANNA LELAND BAKER Liberal Arts Seattle Gamma Phi Beta, Phi Beta Kappa Treasurer Women ' s Athletic Association; Dra- matic Association: Secretary class (2); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Chairman Jubilee Committee: Senior Council ; Women ' s League Scholarship ; Tolo Club. ETTA ELIZABETH BARTER Liberal Arts Seattle REX B. BEISEL Mechanical Engineering Tau Beta Pi FRANCES BOWIE Liberal Arts President of Clark Hall. MARGARET BRECK Liberal Arts Seattle Kappa Kappa Gamma Varsity Ball Committee (3 ; Junior Prom Committee; Y. W. C. A. Social Committee; Chairman AVomen ' s Informal Committee ( 4 ) ; Senior Council; Tolo Club. CLYDE W. BROKAW Liberal Arts Stanwooil Delta Upsilon Varsity Boat Club; Class crew (2, 3); Captain Club crew (3); Varsitv crew (2, 3, 4): Captain Varsity; W Club; Oval Club. DEMING BRONSON Liberal Arts Seattle Delta Kappa Epsilon Football (2. 3, 4); Senior Soiree Committee. MARION BROWN Liberal Arts Seattle ROBERT Q. BROWN Electrical En ineerint; Goldenilale Theta Xi, Tau Beta Pi Student Member A. L E. E. DONALD R. BROXON Forestry Boise, Idaho Pi Tau Upsilon, Xi Sigma Pi ROLAND P. BURNHAM Forestry Boulder, Colorado Forestry Club; Rifle Club; Ukulele Club. F iir GENEVIEVE ELIZABETH CAFP REY Science Seattle RUSSELL STANLEY CALLOW Liberal Arts Sheltoii Phi Kappa, Phi Delta Kappa. Signia I ' psilon Varfity crew (2, 3, 4): Captain (4): Prusi- tlent Varsity Boat Club; Senior Council: Board of Control (4): Club: President Associated Students; Oval Club; Fir Tree Society. J. ERASER CAMERON ivil Engineering Seattle Phi Kappa . M. C. A. Cabinet (1, 2. 3); Senior Booth Committee: Sophomore Cross Country. LOIS CAMPBELL HERBERT FLORIAN CANFIELD nsineerins Seattle ERNEST C. CARR Electrical Engineering Acacia Associate Member A. I. E. E. EMMETT R. CARROLL, Jr. Science Seattle ALBERT ALEXANDER CARSON Law Seattle Karipa Sigma. Phi Delta Phi CLARENCE CHAMBERS Pi Kaiipa Alpha KEE H. CHIN Civil Ensrineering Cosmopolitan Club; Civil Engine Seattle Societ.v. ELNORA CHRISTENSEN Science Taconia . lpha Xi Delta HANS CHRISTENSEN Liberal Arts Ol.vnipia Delta Kappa Epsilon Orchestra (1. 2. 3, 4). P m lOLENE CHRISTENSEN Alpha Xi Delta FLORENCE CLARKE Liberal Arts Olympia Clii Omega (. ' anipiis Day Staff (1); Crew (2); University COLIN C. CLEMENTS Liberal Arts Seattle Sigma Chi, Sigma L ' psilon Daily Staff; Tyee Staff; Assistant Editor Wash- ingtonian; Mask and Quill. CHARLES ROLLITT COE Liberal Arts Seattle Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Upsilon Mask and Quill. EVA MARSDEN COLE Liberal Arts Seattle Sigma Kappa Chorus; Y. W. C. A. (1. 2, 3, 4). ESTHER COLEMAN Liberal Arts Tacom Theta Sigma Phi University Orchestra (1, 2, 3, 4); Daily Staff (3. 4). MARIE ANNA COLLINS Liberal Arts Seattle OPAL H. COLLINS Liberal Arts Seattle Kl a-How-Yah (1, 2. 3. 4); V. V. c. v.: Track LOU CONDRON Science Hoquiam Chi Omega Hockey (2, 3); Basketball (2, 3); Womens Athletic Association; Secretary Class (3); Junior Prom Committee ; Campus Day Staff (1. 2, 3); Vice President Home Economics Club. LEWIS C. CONNER Liberal Arts Everett Phi Kappa Psi. Sigma Delta Chi Class Treasurer ( 1 ) : Sophomore Representative Board of Control (2); Cadet Ball Committee ( 2 ) ; Student Football Manager ( 2 ) ; Circu- lation Manager Daily (2); Business Manager Daily (4); Oval Club. MARY CECELIA COSTELLO Liberal Arts Hurke. Idaho FRANCES GERTRUDE COUGHLIN Science Spokane Baseball (3); Hockey Team (4). m FRANCES ANN CRAIG Liberal Arts Knob Xoster. Mo. Alpha Gamma Delta Home Economics Club; Red Domino; Y. V. C. A.; Junior Vaudeville. SEAMORE A. CRANDALL Theta Xi llember A. I. M. E.; Mines Societ}-. EDWARD IRWIX CRAWFORD enco Se.ittle INEZ CRIPPEN Liberal .Arts Spoka Alpha Chi Omega MELZAR H, CUSHING Law Seattle Beta Theta Pi HAROLD M. DAKIN Law- Entered from Hamline University (2). DOROTHY de LAPINB DARRIN Liberal Arts Seattle RUTH GENEVIEVE DAVIS Liberal Arts Tacoma DOROTHY DAVISON Alpha Gamma Delta Home Economics Club; Y. V. C. A. MARTIN DEGGELLER Civil Engineering Chehalis LEO A. DE MERCHANT Science Oroville WALCOTT DENNIS Engineering Seattle MADGE D. DENNY Liljcral Arts Delta Gamma ial Committed GORDON H. DICKSON Law Seattle Sigma Chi Scabbard and Blade; Board of Control (3); WrestlinK (1, 2, 3, 4); Captain: Colonel Cadets; Officers ' Club; W Club; Chairman Cadet Ball Committee (3); Chairman Cadet Day Committee (4); Cross Country CI, 2, 3, 4). GEORGE DILL Liberal Arts Bellingham Cross Country (1, 2, 3, 4); Track (2, 3, 4); Varsity Ball Committee (3); Chairman Ju- nior Day Committee; Board of Control (3); Class President ( 4 ) ; Oval Club. CHARLES TENNY DONWORTH aw Seattle EDGAR M. DRAPER Liberal Arts Ontario, Oregon Pi Tau Ipsilon, Phi Beta Kappa Scabbard and Blade; Lieutenant Colonel in Cadet Corps; Secretary Officers ' Club (4); Senior Scholar; iMilitary W. CARL ZENO DRAVES Engineering Seattle Theta Chi. Phi Lamba Upsilon Scabbard and Blade; Chairman Cadet Ball (4); President Officers ' Club. SAMUEL MARION DRIVER Law Wamic, Oregon Kappa Siffma, Phi Delta Phi Varsitv Wrestling Team (2); Varsity Debating Team (2); Member Board of Control (3); Oval Club: Oregon Chib. CAMILLA KENNON DUNBAR ience North Vakini Pi Beta Phi lonis n 2. 3. 4): Y. W. C. A.: Hocke Team (4): Campus Day Committee (II. HAROLD A. DURFEE Forestry Los Angeles. Cal. Theta Delta Chi, Xi Sigma Pi Track (1, 2 . LLOYD BUTLER DYSART Liberal Arts Centralia MARTIN HAMILTON EASTON Law Seattle Kappa Sigma. Phi Delta Phi. A. B.. University of Washingto MARY MARGARET EATON Science DruninionJ, Montana m CARROLT. 11. EBRIGHT Liberal Arts Seattle Alpha Tau Omega ROBERT WALDERMAN ELLISON chemical Engineering Seattle rhi Kappa Psi, Tau Beta Pi, Phi Lamba Upsilon RUTH ENTZ Science Seattle Vice President Women ' s Athletic Association: Hockey (2. 3, 4); Basketball (2, 3); Track (2); Baseball (1, 2); Crew (4); Women ' s W Club; County Fair Committee (3). ALBERT MERRILL FARMER Civil Engineering Seattle RALPH B. FAULKNOR Science Aberde ISABEL FITTS Science Seattle Delta Delta Delta Home Economics Social Committee (4); 1915 Senior Girl ' s Kinness. HAROLD D. FO XER Civil Engineering: Seattle PAUL WARREN FRAME EDWARD S. FRANKLIN Law Seattle Phi Alpha Delta Cadet Ball Committee (2); Junior Prom Com- mittee; Associate Editor Daily (3, 4); Asso- ciate Editor Tyee (3, 5); Assistant Editor Tjee (4); Senior Council (4); Vice Presi- dent Washin(;ton Law Association ( 5 ) ; Oval Club; Senior Farewell Committee (4). DORA ELIZABETH FREDSON Science Shelton Alpha Chi Omega EtLENE FRENCH Fine Arts Seattle Mu Phi Epsilon. Phi Beta Kappa Secretar - Athena Debating Club (2): President Athena (4): Soloist Holy City and Golden Legend ; Secretarj Mask and Quill. BERNARD FREYD Libel al Arts P 167 ■ 19 W. R. GAILEY Chemical Enerineerin? Seattle Phi Lamba Upsilon, Tau Beta Pi Captain Cadets (3); Officers Club (2, 3). CELIA LOUISE GERHARDT Science Seattle ROSEWELL S. GILLETTE Engineering Orondo RUTH GLEASOX GAYLORD WILSON GREENE Liberal Arts Seattle Acacia, Phi Delta Kappa RAY R. GREENWOOD Law Seattle Delta Chi Dailr Staff (1); Class President (2); Oregon- Washington Debate (3); Oregon-Washington Oratorical Contest (3): Treasurer Washing- ton Law Association (3); Washington-Reed Debate { 3 ) : President University Dramatic Association ( 4 ) ; President Washington Law Association (4). ARTHUR GUNN, Jr. HERMAN M. GUSTAFSON MERLE L. HALL Liheral Arts Seattle y. V. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Secretary-Treasurer Deutseher Vereiii (2); Kla-How-Yah. RHEA R. HAYNES Liberal Arts Seattle HARRY F. HEATH Science Drya l Phi Delta Kaippa, Phi Beta Kappa President Kahpho Commons Club; Executive Council V. I. U. ; Chorus. BIRDIE HEDGES Liberal - rts p JEROME T. HEERMANS Liberal Arts Olvmpia Beta Theta Pi LLOYD PETERSON HENDERSON Liberal Arts Seattle SOL A. HERZOG Liberal Arts Portland, Oregon Tau Kappa Alpha VarsitT Debate (1, 2); President Menorah So- ciety: Secretary Debating Council: Executive Board Independent L ' nion; Judge Alfred Bat- tle Prize. DOROTHY HESS Sigma Kappa, Delta Phi President Sacajawea Debating Club; Crew (3, 4); W in Debate. HUBERT GRIDLEY HIGGINS Science NORMAN HOWARD HILL Civil Engineering Seattle Sigma Chi, Tau Beta Pi, Tyes Tyon LILLIE HOFMEISTER Liberal Arts Seattle KATHLEEN HOLLAND Liberal Arts Davenport MARY VIRGINIA HOOPER Liberal Arts Seattle Kappa Kappa Gamma HUBERT U. HOPKINS Chemical Engineering Seattle Phi Lamba Upsilon Scabbard and Blade: President Officers Club (4); Cadet Ball Committee (1, 2, 3); Chair- man (4); Colonel Cadets. PERSIS MARGARET HORTON Fine Arts Seattle RUSSELL B. HORTON Liberal Arts Seattle Alpha Tail Omega President Boxing Club (3, 4); Varsity Ball Committee (3): Chairman Junior Prom Committee; Chairman Varsity Ball Com- mittee (4). F RAY C. HUNT )Iinins Engineering North Vakima Delta Cpsilon Football n, 2, 3, 4); Captain (4); Big W Club; Oval Club. HKLEX HUSTON Liberal Arts Seattle Kappa Kappa Gamma JAMES F. HUTTON foitstry Portland. Oregon Xi Sigma Pi Football (2, 3, 4); Crew (2, 3, 4): Varsitv Boat Club. EARLE C. HUTCHINSON acy Port Townsend Theta Chi, Kappa Psi ETHEL PEARL IVEY Liberal Arts Seattle JULL A. JACOBSOX Science Seattle Chorus (2. 3, 4): Y. W. C. A. (4). ARTHUR RUDOLPH JERBERT ;ifnci Sfattle Phi Beta Kappa FANNIE JOHNSON Liberal Arts (Jreat Falls. Montana GEORGE E. JOHNSON Civil Enaineerina Seattle Tail Heta Pi Captain Ca.lets: Military W (3). JACK KELLIHER Mining Engineering Ihvaco Alpha Sigma Phi Glee Clnb (2, 3, 4); Dramatic Association; Mask and Quill; Senior Soiree. CHARLOTTE ESTELLE KELLOGG Liberal Arts Tacoma SAMUEL P. KELLY Liberal Arts lUllingl: Delta Kapi a Epsilon m ERMAN A. KING Whitehall, Montana A, B., Illinois Wesleyan University BEATRICE KITTRELL Liberal Arts Seattle ARTHUR KOLSTAD Liberal Arts East Stanwood ADA M. KRAUS Science Seattle Alpha Omicron Pi Home Economics Club. ETHEL MARGARET KRAUS Liberal Arts Seattle Alpha Omicron Pi Women ' s Athletic Association (4); Crew (3); Hockey (4): Y. W. C. A.; Social Service Committee (3, 4). JAMES A. LAUGHLIN Senior Farewell Committee (3); Wrestlii Squad. ETHEL JOSEPHINE LA VIOLETTE Liberal Arts Seattle HELEN RICHARDS LATHE Liberal Arts Seattle ARTHUR R. LINDBURG Law Seattle Phi Gamma Delta OLGA LISKA Science Seattle VICTORIA McLEAN JESSE F. LEVERICH Pharmacy Olvnipi: Theta Chi, Kappa Psi Mandolin Club (2). ir 176 LORETTA LOHMANN s Chinook. Monta Kappa Alpha Theta NELL FRANCES LOVELY Fire Arts Arlington Alpha Gamma Delta, Mu Phi Klisilrin Tvc EDITH LUNGREEN ilent Seattle •omen ' s Athletic Association; Y. W. C. A.; Hockey Team (2); Home Economics Club; Vice President Scandinavian Club (4); Kla- How-Yah. LOIS McBRIDE Gamma Phi Beta; Phi Beta Kappa Tolo Club. HELENA RILLA McCLELLAN Science Steilacoom GRACE McDonald aw Seattle . B. Vellesley College: Secretary- Treasurer Washington Law Association (3); Cha ' Women ' s Informal; Chairman County Committee (3); Tolo Club. BRUCE MacDOUGALl. Law Seattle Alpha Tail Omega, Phi Alpha Delta Scabbard and Blade; Band Leader, Mandolin Club; Oval Club. J. CLINTON McDOUGALL Electrical Engineering S Theta Xi Student Member A. I. E. E. ; Cross Cc (2, 3). MARY E. McENTEE Liberal Arts Spok: Beta Phi nglish Club (2, 3, 4); Secretary (3); Junior Prom Committee: Junior Vaudeville Commit- tee: Chairman Women ' s League Social Com- mittee; Erminie . ENOLA McINTYRE Liberal Arts Taconia Kappa Alpha Theta Hockey (1, 2, 3); Crew (2, 3): Women ' s . thletie Association; Mask and Quill; Dra- matic Association; Junior Vaudeville. IVA VIRGINIA McKAY Liberal Arts Seattle Delta Delta Delta Home Economics Club; Women ' s . thletic . sso- ciation: Campus Day Committee (1, 2); County Fair Committee ( 1 ) . ERNEST EDWARD MclTEEN Electrical Engineering Hidgeflelil Pi Kappa . lpha Basketball (3); Member A. L E. E. DONALD GRANT McLBOD Mining Engineering Taconia Class Football (1, 2, 3, 4); Captain Class Football (4). EDWIN LOCKWOOD MacLEAN Law Minneapolis, Minnesota Yale Book and Gavel, Phi Alpha Delta Coach Washington Junior Class Football. En- tered from Yale University. .JOSEPH P. McMURTREY Law Troy, Montana President Lewis Hall. ALETHA SOPHIA McPHEE Liberal .Arts .Seattle Delta Phi ' arsity Debate (2); Women ' s Athletic Asso- ciation: Kla-How-Yah Treasurer (2, 3); Se- nior Representative (4): Secretary Mask and Quill. HENRY WIL1,IAM McROBBIE Electrical Engineering Seattle Chairman Washingtonian Electrical Committee ( 2 ) ; General Chairman Engineering Open House; Chairman University Branch of A. L E. E. ARCHIE M. MAJOR Law Seattle Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Delta Chi, Phi Delta Phi A. B. University of Washington FRANK B. MALLOY RALPH WILLARD MALLOY Liberal Arts Seattle Delta Chi Baseball (1, 2, 3); Track (3). JOHN HENRY MARTIN GEORGE EUGENE MATHIEU Law Seattle Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Delta Phi Sophomore Social Committee; Class Yell Leader (2, 3, 4); Yell King: Treasurer Junior Class; Dramatic Club; Chairman Junior Prom Com- mittee: Oval Club. BEATRICE MERCER Kappa Alpha Theta RUTH EVELYN MERLING Science Seattle Iota Sigma Pi, Phi Beta Eappa Kla-How-Yah: Senior Scholar; Senior Repre- sentative Kla-How-Yah Board. 179 LOTTIE ELSIE MILLAY Liberal Arts Chewelah ALICE MILLER Etiiiculion Snoliomisli Achoth Treasurer At liena Debating Club ; Campus Day Staff; Women ' s Athletic Association; Wom- en ' s W Club; Vice President Women ' s Leaarue ; President Kla-How-Yah. E. CLARENCE MILLER Eng:ineering ' Seattle CLETUS L. MINAHAN Liberal Arts Seattle Phi Kappa 1916 Freshmen Crew; Varsity Crew Squad (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsity Boat Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Junior Prom Committee ( 3 ) . GRACE EDITH MINER Liberal Arts Colville WESLEY MINNIS Science Seattle Phi Beta Kappa President Badger Debating Club (4); Senior Scholar. VALEDA LOUISE MONGERSON Liberal Arts St. Charles, I ELIZABETH MOREHEAD Liberal Arts Xahcotta MONA MARGARET MORGAN Science Marysville H. LOREN MORRISON Law Anacortes Phi Kappa Psi. Phi Delta Phi LILY MORRISON Liberal Arts Bellirghain MICHAEL J. NAIMY Liberal Arts Walla Walla VICTOR NELSON Chemical Engineering Seattle MATHEW STXTART NORRIS Law Burlington Delta Chi Football (2, 3); Junior Girl ' s Vaudeville. JOE NORTON JOHN E. NORTON Liberal Arts Taconia AGNES E. O ' CONNELL Liberal Arts Taconia CARRIE ELVIDA OLESON Liberal Arts Seattle Alpha Gamma Delta Countv Fair Committee; Y. W. C. A.; Junior- 182 AMY CATHERINE OLMSTED Liberal Arts Enterprise, Oregon Alplia Gamma Delta Ensemble Club; Junior Vaudeville Committee; Junior Informal Committee; Y. NV. C. A. Cabinet ; Senior Vice President ; Chorus. OSCAR E. OLSON Lindsbortf. Kansas JAMES PHILIP O ' NEILL Liberal Arts Seattle Daily Staff; Tjee Staff. RAYMOND E. ONEILL Chemical Engineering Phi Lamba Upsilon, Tau Beta Pi Captain Cadets (2); Officers ' Club. HERTHA O ' NEIL cience Castle Roc! Delta Zeta ' omen ' s Athletic Association; Crew f4 ); Bas ket-ball (1); Senior Booth Committee; Treas urer Sacajawea Debating Club (3), ARNOLD ERWIN OSTERBERG Chemical Engineering Seattle m 183 CARL E. OSTRANDER Pliarmacy Dillon. Montana Phi Kappa Psi, Kappa Psi Dramatic Associati.m; Crew (1): Footliall f2). HENRY OSTRANDER V Dillon. Montana Plii Kappa Psi : Association (3. 4); Pharmacy Club. SUSIE BOONE PAIGE Science Portland, Oregon Alpha Omicron Pi, Phi Beta Kappa Sacajawea Debating Club (2, 3, 4); Y. W. C. A. Treasurer (4); Co-ed Informal Committee: Women ' s Athletic Association. MARIE FLOWERS PARR Home Kconomics Seattle Alpha Xi Delta Junior Informal Committee: Senior Women ' s Kirmess; Orchestra (1, 2, 3, 4). YSABEL PATTON Kappa Alpha Theta Dramatic Association: Red Domino; Baseball (2): Crew (3); Track (3): Campus Day Conmiittee; Women ' s . thletic Association: Senior Class Secretary. FREDERICK LOUIS PEDERSON .iberal Arts Skagwav, Alask: ELSABETTA CARINA PENNELL Science Seattle Iota Sigma Pi; Phi lieta Kappa Y. W. C. A. ; Home Economics Club. ESTHER STUART FERINE Liberal Arts Seattle Kappa Kappa Gamma Y. V. C. A. Finance antl Membership Commit- tee: Senior County Fair Committee. HOWARD W. PETERS civil Engineering Bellingha Pi Tau L ' psilon Vice President Civil Engineering Society: S nior Football. GENEVA PETERSON EARL R. PILGRIM Mining Seattle Theta XI Mines Society; Cross Country Team (1. 2, 3); Captain (3); Engineers Open House. FRED S. PORTER Mining Seattle Phi Kappa Wrestling (3); Football (3, 4); Vice Presi- dent Mining Society (3): President Mining Society. F MABEL POTTER Alpha Omi( ics Club. SARGENT G. POWELL Scierce Seattle Phi Laniba Tpsilon JOHAN WILLEM PRINS Liberal Arts Seattle JOEL J. PRYDE Liberal Arts CARL W. PYLE ANTOINETTE REHMKE Fine Arts Ellensburg President Girl ' s Club (2); Campus Dav Staff (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsity Ball Committee (3. 4); Women ' s W Club (4); Basket Ball (1, 2, 3); Hockey (1, 2. 3); Crew (3); Track (3); World ' s High Jump Record (3); Presi- dent Women ' s Athletic Association. RUTH MARGARET REYNOLDS Liberal Arts Chehali; JOHN S. RICHARDS Liberal Arts Nortli Yakima RUSSELL B. RING Civil Engincerins Seattle Pi Tau LTpsilon Scabbard and Blade: Military W ; Secretary Officers Club (3); Vice President Officer ' s Club. GEORGE W. ROBERTS Walla Walla RALPH ROBINSON Law Spokane Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Alpha Delta Basket Ball (1. 2. 3, 4); Baseball CI); Presi- ' lent Spokane Club: President Fir Tree; Oval Club. ESTEI.LA E. ROBINSON Liberal Arts Tacoma P 187 MAUDE ISABEL ROBINSON Science Seattle GERTRUDE ROSE Science Seattle Delta Delta Delta Women ' s Athletic Association; Vice President Atliena Debating Club; Y. V. C. A.; Senior Memorial Committee; Women ' s League Presi- dent; Tolo Club. RHEA RUPERT Liberal Arts Aberdeen Chi Omeg Hockey (1, 2, 3. 4); Basliet Ball (1. 2. 3): Women ' s Athletic Association ; Sophomore Representative Women ' s League; President Junior Girl ' s Club; Secretar - Grays Harbor Club (3); Junior Vaude ille Committee; Tolo Club. ROGER TLI.IAM RYAN GRACE M. SABOE Delta Delta Delta ROBERT FRANI ' O.IN SANDALL iw York. Xebrasl FRAXK S. SALISBURY Liberal Arts Farmington LUCILLE SAUNDERS Science Seattle DIXON SCHIVELY Mecliaiiical Eng:ineerjng Seattle Phi Delta Theta Foothall (4, 5); Track (4); Basket Ball (2, 3, 4, 5); Varsity Basket Ball (5): Chair- man Engineer Open House Committee (.5); Fir Tree. JOHN SCHOPPER Liberal Arts Eudora, Kans; ELIZABETH SCHUMAKER Fine Arts Sultan Pi Beta Phi, llu Phi Epsilon Women ' s League Point System Committee; Mask and Quill (3, 4). BETH SCUDDER Liberal Arts Seattle P IRENE SEAL Liberal Arts Colville MARJORIE DEE SEIBERT Liberal Arts Seattle ISABEL SELIG Liberal Arts Seattle CLARE WILDE SEXSMITH Science Seattle W. EARL SHANLEY Electrical Engineering Bellingham Theta Chi Football (1. 2): Basket Ball (3. 4): Varsitv Wrestling: ( 4 ) : Sargeant Major of Cadets ' ; A. L E. E. MARY MADELINE SHEEHAN Liberal Arts Walla Walla Alpha Xi Delta Secretarj ' Sacajawea Debating Club; Secretary Newman Club. ETHELYN SHIPLEY Science Seattle Alpha Gamma Delta Vice President Y. W. C. A.; Delegate to Na- tional Student Volunteer Convention; County Fair Committee; Senior Council; Secretary A. S. r. W.; Tolo Club. CIJVRENCE H. SHIVVERS Liberal Arts Tacoma Phi Kappa, Sigma Delta Chi Glee Club (1); Treasurer Tacoma Cluli: Daily Staff (2, 3, 4); Senior Memorial Committee. EDITH SIFTON Science .Seattle Alpha Omicron Pi. Phi Beta Kappa Mathematics Club. MAX SILVER LIBBIE SILVERSTONE Liberal Arts Seattle STEWART L. SIMPSON Mechanical Engineering Seattle 191 LILLIAN LOUISE SIMSON Liberal Arts Nome, .■ ALICE SMITH GEORGE SHERMAN SMITH Electrical Engineering Centrali; Tau Beta Pi Secretary A. I. E. E. HARRIET SMITH Liberal Arts Gamma Phi Beta Sophomore Social Committee. MARION SOUTHARD Liberal Arts Seattle Sigma Kappa Basket Ball (1, 2, 3); Hockey (2. 3): Crew (3, 4); Captain Crew (4): Women ' s Ath- letic Association; Junior Jinx Committee; County Fair Committee (4); President Italian Club (2); Tolo Club. KENNETH JESSE SOULE Phi Lamba Upsik JOE AI. SOWERS Science S Class Athleti Chi, Pi Mil Chi EUNICE A. SPENCER Liberal Arts Seattle Phi Beta Kappa Kla-How-Yah; Cabinet Y. W. C. A.; Treasurer (3); Vice President (1); County Fair Com- mittee; Junior-Senior Picnic Committee; Tolo Club. HOLLISTER SPRAGUE Delta Upsilon. Tau Be CLARK ALFRED SQUIRE Liberal Arts Seattle Delta Ipsilon, Sigma Delta Chi Sporting Editor Daily (3); Associate Editor (4); Assistant Sporting Editor Tyee; Sport- ing Editor Tyee (4); Vice President Uni- versity Press Club; Editor Daily. HENRY B. STERNBERG MAY STEWART Science Tacoma Chi Omega, Phi Beta Kappa Hockey (2, 4); Women ' s Athletic .Association; County Fair Committee (3, 4); Junior Day Committee; Senior Soiree Committee; Vice President Tacoma Club (4); Tolo Club. P ARTHUR STRANDBERG Civil Engineering Seattle Phi Kappa Psi Captain Sopliomore Basket Ball. PEARL ETTA SUTTER Science Seattle MARTHA TAYLOR Science Seattle Pi Beta Phi Y. W. C. A. Social Service Committee; 1915 Commencement Committee: Montana Club (1, 2, 3. 4, 5). GEZIXA THOMAS Liberal Arts Seattle Gamma Phi Beta. Phi Beta Kappa Women ' s Athletic Association; Treasurer (4); Athena Debating Club (1, 2, 3, 4): Vice President (3); Treasurer Junior Girl ' s Club (3); Hockey (3. 4); Junior Informal Com- mittee. LUCILE THOALA.S Alpha Phi ALEX, NDER THOMSON Engineering Seattle ALICIA GENEVIEVE THOMPSON Fine Arts North Vakjiii GUY W. THOMPSON Lilicral Arts Seattle Theta Delta Chi Varsity Baseball (1, 2, 3); Captain Baseball (4); Treasurer Junior Class; Secretarv Bis VV Club. LEONARD R. THOMPSON Science E erett Beta Theta Pi RUTH THOMPSON Liberal Arts Seattle Kappa Kappa Gamma, Theta Sisnia Phi Daily Staff (2. 3, 4): Women ' s Athletic Eilitor Tyec (3J: Editor Tvee (4 1. V ' MARY TODD Science V. Seattle Sigma Kappa Women ' s - thletic .Association; Crew (4); Hockev (31: Track (2): Baseball (SI. WILLIAM PHEI.PS TOTTEN Law Seattle Washingtonian Executive Board; President In- dependent Union. f if JAMES TOY rliemical Kngineering Portland, Oregon Phi Lamba Uiisilon Cosmopolitan Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Chinese Students Club. JOSEPH PLATT TRACY A. M.. Monmouth College WALTER WILLIAM TUTTLE Engineerine Harper EWART STEELE UPPER Liberal Arts : ROBERT BOWMAN VAN HORN chemical Engineering Oakland. California Pi Tau Cpsilon Class Football (3, 4): Secretary-Treasurer En- gineering Society; President Campus Social Co litte DOROTHY WADE Science Seattle Phi Beta Kappa Kla-How-Yah; Y. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club; President; Senior Memorial Committee; Tolo Club. 196 JAMES R. WALLIN MARY WALSH cience Wenatchee Alpha Xi Delta ramatic Association; Women ' s Athletic Asso- ciation; County Fair Committee (3, 4); Senior Kirmess; Women ' s League Cabinet; Senior Council; Chairman Point System Com- mittee. MARY BLANCHE WALSTAD Liberal Arts Seattle Phi Beta Kapp: RUTH EASTERDAY -WARREN Science Fort Morgan, Coloratlo Alpha Phi PHIL -WEIS Liberal Arts Seattle Sigma Chi, Tau Kappa Alpha Varsity Debate (2); President Badger Debate Club; Treasurer Y. M. C. A.; Treasurer Se- nior Class; Oval Club. MARION WHITLOCK Liberal Arts Seattle Chi Omega Vice President Women ' s Athletic Association (3); Hockev (1. 2. 3); Crew ( ); Presi- dent Classical Club (3, 4). 197 W. HARRISON WHITTIER MiiiiiiK Si Thcta Xi Junior Member A. I. M. E. ; Mines Society. CLARK E. WILL Miiiine Seattle Delta Tau Delta Freshman Crew: Varsity Crew (2, 3, 4); W Club: Oval Club. ETHEL COMBS WILLARD Seience .Seattle . choth ANNE JANE WILLIAMS Liberal . rts Uutte, Monta Delta Delta Delta WALTER W. WILLIAMS Chemical Engineering Seattle Sigma Chi, Phi Lamba Upsilon, Tau Beta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa President Y. M. C. A.: President of Senior Council: Lord High Chimer; Wrestling Team; Oval Club. ELLA WINSLOW Liberal Arts Seattle ■ Ganlma Phi Beta, Phi Beta Kappa Senior Scholar: Red Domino; Junior Vaudeville. EARL H. WINTER Law Kverett Theta Chi Officers Ckib; Seton.l Lieutenant Cailets. RALPH S. WITTENBERG Lil.eral Arts IVirtlaiicl, Orego rootball (3); Oregon Club. MADELINE E. WiOODWORTH Liberal Arts Seattle Alplia Xi Delta Dramatic Club; Jpnior Vau.leville; .liuiior Play. MARIETTE WORTHINGTON Liberal Arts ( uilcene Phi Beta Kappa Women ' s Athletic Association (2, 3, i): Cap- tain Hockev Team (4); Secretary Classical Club (3); Y. AV. C. A. BESSIE YERGER Liberal Arts Seattle Girls ' Crew (3. 41; All-Star Varsity Crew (4). MASA YOSKIOKA Enaineeriie.- Seattle CLAIRE LAIL AKE Science Mountain Home, Idaho Delta Delta Delta. BORIS ARONOW Law Seattle LL. B., I ' niversity of Moscow, Russia: M. D., Rossosk Universit} ' , Russia. HARRY M. BARDIN Electrical Engineering Seattle CATHERINE BAXTER Liberal -Arts Seattle i a[ipa Kappa (Janinia ROBERT FREDERICK DOWN Liberal . rts Taconia ETHAA ' ALLAN BRIDGMAN ilines Richmond Beach LELAND PENNOCK BROWN Liberal . rts Auburn CLARA BRYAN Educatii Montesano FRANK JONES CLARK Education Seattle KATHERINE COLEY Liberal Arts Seattle EDNA ELIZA CONNORS Education Seattle LEO DASHLEY Engineering Seattle LLOYD L. DAVIS Chemical Engineering Bellingham Phi Laniba Tpsilon J, ARTHUR YOUNG HENRY ZI.MMERMAN Chemical Engineering Everett Phi Kappa Psi Crew (2, 3, 4); Varsity Captain (4); Fresh- Football: Club; Oval Club. ■sitv Boat Club: Big W FRED L, DELKIN Liberal Arts ask and Q ciate Edit GRACE THOMPSON BOWLING Liberal , rts Seattle THOMAS DRISCOLL, Jr, Civil Engineering Bremerton EMILY DUBUQUE Liberal Arts Seattle HAROLD G. FORAN Science Seattle Sigma N ' u Vice President of the A. S. U. W. ALBERT L. GIBERTSON Liberal Arts Seattle Education Science ARTHUR S. GIST ISABEL GRAY CLAUDE HALLAN Seattle Spokane Engineering Monroe EDWARD WILLIAM HOFFMAN Education Seattle MINNIE LORNA JOHNSON Liberal Arts Seattle Phi Beta Kappa HAZEL JONES Liberal Arts Seattle Pi Beta Phi Baseball (1, 2): Sophomore Social Committee; Women ' s Athletic Association (2, 3. 4); President Y. W. C. . . ; President Junior Cirl ' s Club; Senior Memorial Committee 200 LYNUS A. KIBBE Liberal Arts Olynipii HELENA LACOCK EDWIN O. LEADER Law Portland, Oregon Delta I ' psilon, Phi Alpha Delta Crew; Football Team; Baseball Team; Oval Club; Fir Tree. ELMER W. LEADER Law Portland, Oregon Delta Lpsilon, Phi Alpha Delta Crew; Football Team; Paseball Tram; Oval Club; Fir Tree. IRMA LINDSAY Liberal Arts Seattle Chi Omega, Phi Beta Kappa RALPH D. MAJOR Law Seattle Phi Delta Theta A. B. L ' niversity of Washington CLARENCE MALMO Liberal Arts Seattle University of Washington Daily (1); Lieutenant Cadets (1); Cadet Officers ' Club (1. 2): Treasurer Badger Debating Club (2); Chair- man Committee Class Contests (2); Cap- tain Cadets (2); President Badger Debating Club (3); Chairman Class Memorial Com- mittee (3); President Debating Associa- tion (3). ROY L. MARYATT Civil Engineering Seattle Sigma Chi, Tau Beta Pi, Tyes Tyon President Senior Class; Chairman Junior Prom; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (5); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3, 4, 5); Oval Club. ERNA MEERSCHEIDT Liberal Arts Seattle Gamma Phi Beta Y. W. C. A. ; Secretary-Treasurer Freshmen Girl ' s Club; Secretary Pan-Hellenic; Treas- urer Home Economics Club; Treasurer Saca- jawea Debating Club; Advisory Board Wom- en ' s Athletic Association. MARJORIE E. MINNIS Liberal Arts Seattle GEORGE K. NAKASAWA Engineering Seattle WILLIAM ROBERT NICHOLS Liberal Arts Tacon ORIN J. OLIPHANT Liberal Arts Elbertou Phi Beta Kappa ARTHUR E. OOGHE Liberal Arts Seattle MRS. Le FAY PACKARD Liberal Arts Seattle FLORA ETTA SALLADAY Liberal Arts Seattle KARL J. SCHMAELZLE Forestry Seattle Xi Sigma Pi Chairman Social Committee; President Class (3); Varsity Ball Committee (3, 4); Class Memorial Committee (4); Campus Day Com- mittee (3); Washington Executive Board (3); Oval Club. GEORGE JOSEPH SCHOFIELD Mining Engineering Redmond ADELINE SMITH Liberal Arts Seattle Phi Beta Kappa BENJAMIN L. SNODDY Engineering Seattle AGNES SALISBURY THOMPSON Liberal Arts Seattle RUTH TURNER Liberal Arts Seattle LOUIE WAPATO Law Manson J. FREDRIK WESTERBERG Science Mill Valley, Cal. FLORENCE M. WILKIE Liberal Arts Seattle ALFRED S. WILSON Mines Seattle Phi Beta Kappa fS NANCY CELIA NEIGHBORS Liberal Arts Seattle FRED T. YAMODA Engineering Seattle p -:L. ' .,( ' i il- ' ,iif;.:.Mi il« : ' ' ' ' ' Qublicationsi fs The University of Washington Daily The Washingtonian The Tyee TYEE STAFF Editor-in-Chief — Ruth Thompson Associate Board — Bryant MacDougall Louis Seagrave Emil E. Hurja Edward Franklin Gertrude Barnum Sport Editor — Clark Squire; Assistant, Tom Dobbs Women ' s Sport Editor — Marjorie White Dramatics — Cornelia Glass Society and Music — Dorothy Constantine Military — Mathew O ' Connor Debate and Oratory — Ray Dumett Features — Stacy Jones Jack Carrigan Assistants — Dave Cleeland Chester Wilson Class Editors — Freshmen, Richard Haynes Sophomores, Roy Rosenthal Juniors, Harold Allen Seniors, Colin Clements Ili ts Wilson Glass Allen MacDougall fonstantine Squire Jones Cairigan Hurja White Clceland Rosenthal numett Barniini Seagrave Dobbs Haynes 205 THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DAILY FIRST SEMESTER Emil Edward Hurja, Editor-in-Chief Bryant MacDougall, Managing Editor Phil O ' Neill, News Editor ASSOCIATE BOARD Stacy Jones Harold Allen Clark Squire Ruth Thompson Louis Seagrave COPYREADERS Matthew Gertrude O ' Connor Ethel Gies Barnum Conrad Brevick DEPARTMENTS Sports — Thomas Dobbs, Editor; Darwin Meisnest, Assistant Society — Dorothy Constantine, Editor; Helen Stone, Assistant Exchange — Felix Embree Music — Gudrun Andersen Special Writers — J. Orin Oliphant, Jack Carrigan REPORTERS 1 Marjorie White Clarence Shivvers Ed Harwood Paul Neill Marie Leghorn Doris Smith Winifred Larrison Mary Gleeson Colin Clements Edward Condion Margaret Crahan Esther Coleman Byron Christian Alvin Dyer Eleanor Washburn Grace McKinney BUSINESS STAFF Lewis Conner, Manager Walter Tuesley, Assistant Manager ASSISTANTS Fulton Magill Walter Potter Bradford Eyman Carl Wilson Donald Coleman Floyd Vammon James Read, Circulation Manager m I.c-licrii AlUii St, .lie Cliri ti LM Crahan MacDousall White Tuesley Bamiim ConcHon Constantine Dobbs Brevick ( omicr Oeis O ' Connor Andersen Jones Embrec .Meisnest Carrigan Seagravc Thompson Shivvers THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DAILY SECOND SEMESTER Clark Squire, Editor-in-Chie Bryant MacDougall, Managing Editor 1 EDITORIAL BOARD Harold Allen (Chief) Paul Neill J. Orin Oliphant Emil Edward Hurja Louis Seagrave Bert Brintnall COPYREADERS Conrad Brevick (Chief) Clarence Shivvers Roy Rosenthal Wilson Schiffer Anthony Corbiere Ethel Gies Kirby Torrance Jerrine Ramage Felix Embree DEPARTMENTS Sports — Thomas Dobbs , Editor; Malcolm Moran, Chester Wilson, John Gibson, Assistants | Society — Ziudrun Andersen, Editor; Frances Smith, Assistant 1 Personals- — Helen Stone, Editor; Isabella F offman. Assistant 1 Exchange — Darwin Meisnest 1 Special Writers — Ed ward Condlon, Jack Carrigan, Margaret Crahan, Cornelia Glass 1 REPORTERS Dorothy Constantine George Pierrot Grace McKinney Eleanor Washburn Edwin Badger Curtis Shoemaker Marjorie Kohlman Marjorie White James Broulette Esther Coleman Mark Haas Harold Gieser Byron Christian Mike Mitchell Colin Clements Frank Dunn David Cleeland Eber Angle BUSINESS STAFF Lewis Conner, Manager Mary Gleeson Walter Tuesley, Assistant Manager 1 ASSISTANTS Fulton Magill Donald Coleman Floyd Vammon Walter Potter Carl Wilson James Read, Circulation Mana ger ::Tr5nKS. !i4 ' r iT-;i ' ' - ' T:T;5; m Q nAeoi s Gibson Moran Shoe maker Potter Schiffer Corbiere Haas Magill O ' Neil Vammon Kohlnian Coleman Rcail Cleeland Hanvood Engle Coleman Washburn Kosenthal Glass Torrence Smith Badger Wilson Hoffman Smith 3 THE WASHINGTONIAN Monthly Literary Magazine of A. S. U. W. FIRST SEMESTER George Hipkoe, Editor Colin C. Clements Samuel Craig ASSOCIATE EDITORS Ford K. Brown Wil Wils Fred Delkin SECOND SEMESTER Matthew O ' Connor, Editor Colm C. Clements, Assistant Editor Agnes K. Anderson Edwin H. Badger Harold B. Allen ASSOCIATE EDITORS William R. Wilson Cornelia Glass Charles Rollitt Coe Alfred Baker, Business Manager John Moore George Hipkoe Wilson Clements Coe Delkin Debat fif ' ( liwi-lli-iiliaih DEBATE HE University of Washington has just closed the most brilhant debating season of its history. Under the leadership of Dean Arthur J. Priest the Washington debaters entered ten contests and secured nine victories, winning the Women ' s Northwest championship, the International championship, the Northwest Tri- angular championship, and, for the first time since 1912, the championship of the Pacific Coast. Dual League — Washington-Reed Resolved : That the military forces of the United States should be substantially increased. MEANY HALL, JANUARY 14, 1916 Affirmative — Floyd Ellis, ' 18 Lewis Schwellenbach, ' 1 6 Negative — Clarence Young Horace Miller Two to one for Washington PORTLAND, OREGON, JANUARY 14, 1916 Afiinriative — Charles Cohn Samuel Wemstein Negative — Ray Dumett, ' 1 7 Matthew Hill, ' 16 Two to one for Reed Northwest Triangular League Resolved: That a military and naval program embodymg the general features proposed by President Wilson should be adopted by the United States. WASHINGTON-W. S. C. Meany Hall, February 24, 1916 Affirmative — Arthur Simon, ' 1 7 Marsh Corbitt, ' 1 7 Negative — Joseph Passonneau Thomas Parry Two to one for Washmgton WHITMAN-WASHINGTON Walla Walla, February 24, 1916 Affirmative — Emery Hoover Arthur Lee, Negative Louis Kastner, ' 1 7 Sol Herzog, ' 1 7 Two to one for Washinston International League — Washington-British Columbia Resolved : That the monarchial form of government is at present more beneficial to China than the republican. MEANY HALL, FEBRUARY 3, Affirmative — Ford Brown, ' 18 Phil Weiss, ' 16 Negative — Marion Hatch James Galloway Unanimous for Washington 1916 VANCOUVER. B. C, FEBRUARY 3, 1916 Affirmative — Thomas Shearman Paul H. Clyde Negative — Max Silver, ' 16 Allan Rickles, ' 16 Unanimous for Washington Duniett Hill Kills Schwcllt-nbadi Coast Triangular League Resolved: That the United States should maintain a na ' y above third rank in fighting efficiency. WASHINGTON-OREGON Meany Hall. March 24, 1916 Affirmative — Ray Dumett, ' 17 Matthew Hill, ' 16 Nicholas Jaureguy C. O. Dawson Two to one for Washington STANFORD- WASHINGTON Affirmative — Negative — H. S. Fields McClintock Negative — Floyd Ellis. ' 18 Lewris Schwellenbach, ' 1 6 Two to one for Washington Oregon-Washington Oratorical Contest At the tryout held on April 20th Lewis Schwellenbach, a junior in the Law School, was chosen to represent the University of Washington in the Oregon-Washington Oratorical Contest at Eugene, Oregon, on May 20. 1916. Fred Delkin was second choice. Mr. Schwellenbach is an experienced speaker, having been a leader of varsity debating teams for the past four years. The subject of his oration is The New Pan- Americanism. This achievement is a splendid climax to a forensic career that has done honor to the University of Washington. m STEVENS DEBATING CLUB MEMBERS— 1898-1916 First Semester Second Semester Harold Everest President Harold Everest Hays Jones Vice President Ford Brown Ford Brown Secretary-Treasurer Hays Jones Cyril Taylor Sergeant-at-Arms Matthew Hill Stevens Honor Men — W Men on Intercollegiate Debating Teams Schwellenbach, Hill, Ellis, Brown Badger-Stevens Interclub Debating Team — Hill, Ellis, Schwellenbach Athena-Stevens Debate — Gilbert, Healy Stevens-Social Democrats Debate — Jones, Friedman Badger-Stevens Freshmen Debate — Healy, Friedman Hovey Stuss.T Cutf.c ll.aly Itu-iliM!.- Ncargard Jonts Ellis Baker Allison Gilbert ItcConnel Friedman lio.Ie Brown Everest Roegner Schwellcnbach Schollniejer Carothers Hill Crell BADGER DEBATING CLUB Reynold Jackson President Marsh Corbitl Louis Kastner Vice President Robert Guitteau Donald Coleman Secretary G. A. Carmichae! Paul Hodge Treasurer Spencer Gray MEMBERS Spencer Gray William Starr Louis Stanton G. Albert Carmichael Edwin Badger Marsh Corbitt Alvin Dyer Louis Kastner Reynold Jackson George Pucher Sol A. Herzog Thomas Kelley George Hering Donald Coleman Russell Peterson Paul Shepherd Henry Agnew Dean Bollman F. R. Benz Felix Embree Herbert Bachrach Howard Swigert David Logg William Totlen George Talbot Paul Hodge Ray Dumett Wendell Black John Langenbach Phil Weiss Cecil Blogg Russell Adams Robert Woodyard Raymond Dalton Ofel Johnson Virgil Whitehead Barnett Harwitz Bu rton Wheelon Byrom Kimsey A. Victor Kelmitz Cyrus Haugum Leslie Bechner Alfred Miller Bernard Bates W. Earl Shanly Edwin Rinker Claude Collins J. B. McDougall Arthur S. Beardsley James Wallen Robert Carey Allan Phillips Earl Nelson Jerry Moore Arnold Smith G. W. Williams Robert Guitteau 220 ©sus .Jatl,-..i, II...:.. k., .i,..r i .. ' . !ii..- Badger Alkn Slarr ShupijarJ Phillips Totten Sweigart Logg Kelly Moore Diimett Nelson Peterson Johnson Corbitt Weiss BoUnian Dyer Badger Embree Miller Shanly Stanton Bacbrach Carmichael Blogg Woodward Black McDougall Gray Herzog ATHENA DEBATING OFFICERS SOCIETY First Semester Second Semester | Eilene French .... President Ruth Tewinkel 1 Ruth Tewinkel . . Vice President . Zella Swarls | Ruth Gleason . . . . Secretary .... Margaret Desmond 1 Zella Swarts . . . Treasurer .... Mercedes Kronschnable 1 HONORARY MEMBERS Eilene French Lois McEride Catherine Montgomery Frances Smith Ruth Gleason Lucile McCabe Ruth Pepper Gezina Thomas ACTIVE MEMBERS Lael Bradley Esther Simonds Rebecca Hawthorne Priscilla White Nellie McNurtrey Gladys Lauthers Evangehne Starr Minnie McDougall Cariotta Elliot Florence Freyd Violet Tarp Jean Reekie Patty Clark Zella Swarts Viola Kelton Virginia Moseley Pauline Olson Lorna Dysart Ruth Tewinkel Mary Albin Evelyn Cooper Frances Coughlin Elizabeth Parolini Margaret Wendler Margaret Desmond Maida Crippen Mercedes Kronschnabl e Marguerite Brakel m McCabe Glfa-.m -I ' li]. l)i,;iri Schwartz Unffniaii KrunsLlmablt Desmon.l ■ ■■olini Elliott Luathers Simonils Smith McBritle Cooper Mosley C ' ousrhliii French Reekie CTippen Tewinkle Alben m SACAJAWEA DEBATING CLUB OFFICERS 1915-1916 First Semester Dorothy Hess President Ruth Fosdick Vice President Madeline Sheehan Secretary Agnes Sims Treasurer Mildred Baker Historian Second Semester . . Dorothy Hess . Elizabeth Boyd . . Marie Vining . . . Ermine Clark . Catherine Grant MEMBERS Irma Bowman Elizabeth Boyd Ermine Clark Ruth Fosdick Catherine Grant Dorothy Hess Dorothy Morehouse Hertha O ' Neill Mildred Baker Estelle Hawkins Marjorie Wilson Margaret McGuire Evelyn Wilson Agnes Sims Marie Vining Helen Bennett Madeline Sheehan Dorothea Taylor Olive Cutting Inez Petersen Susie Paige Gudrun Andersen Hilda Hendrikson 1 f 1 0 ' omen s Triangular League Resolved: That the La Follette Seaman ' s Act should be repealed. WASHINGTON-WHITMAN Meany Hall, April 15, 1916 Affirmative — Margaret Desmond Agnes Sims Negative — Hazel Milligan Elizabeth Starr Two to one for Washington W. S. C.-WASHINGTON Pullman, April 15, 1916 Affirmative — Inez Williams Lucille Davis Negative — Dorothy Hess Ruth Tewinkle Unanimous for Washington MILITARY n Captain William Taylor Patten, who replaced Lieutenant E. E. McCammon as com- mandant of the cadet corps at the beginning of the present year, is serving his second term in this capacity, having directed the affairs of the corps from 1 909 through 1912. Captain Patten entered West Point from the Central High School, Washington, D. C, graduating with the class of ' 98. He was immediately dispatched to the Philippines, where, though but a second lieutenant, he commanded Company I in the expeditions against the natives. He graduated from the Infantry and Cavalry School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in ' 05. Four years later he was detailed to be commandant of the University of Washington cadets, which position he held until 1912. Upon returning to the University, Captain Patten inaugurated a series of lecture courses, which have done much toward popularizing drill. 2d Lieutenant Hubert V. Hopkins, who has served as student colonel and com- mander of the regiment for several terms, has drilled for five years at the University of Washington. After four years military training at Colorado Springs High School, he entered the corps, where he rose to the rank of major, followed by an appointment to be colonel. He was the University of Washington representative at the War Department Camp at Monterey, California, in 1914, and in the National Reserve Corps as western secretary. He is at present cabinet representative of nine western states in the Military Training Camps Association. He is a commissioned officer in the National Guard of Washington, and aide-de-camp to Brig.-Gen. Maurice Thompson, by whom he was recently detailed to be commandant of the Junior Guard of Seattle. He has served on all Cadet Ball committees, having been chairman last year. Both the annual Cadet Day exhibition and the idea of awarding the military W were originated by Lieutenant Hopkins. He is a member of Scabbard and Blade. MILITARY OFFICERS CADET CORPS Captain William T. Patten, U. S. A., Retired, Commandant Colonel Hubert V. Hopkins, Commanding Regiment Lieut. -Colonel Edgar M. Draper Captain E. A. Easterbrook, Regimental Adjutant Captain J. Gordon Pritchard, Regimental Quartermaster Captain Arthur E. Wenzel, Regimental Commissary Sergeant Wallace L. Maney, Regimental Sergeant-Major SECOND BATTALION Major Emmett Legg, Commanding 2d Battalion 1st Lieutenant H. Sherman Mitchell, Battalion Adjutant Sergeant H. H. Robertson, Battalion Sergeant-Major COMPANY A Captain Max A. Silver 1 St Lieut. E. L. Rosling 2d Lieut. George P. Ward Sergeants — C. L. Zimmerman Hays Jones L. C. Calvert V. M. Upton L. A. Price M. A. Robbins Corporals — William Pigott E. T. Smith W. H. Grimm D. S. Sanders W. D. Yerkes B. G. Barkwill H. D. Guie R. Friedman COMPANY B Captain Frank M. Preston 1st Lieut. Robert C. Martin 2d Lieut. Thomas Dobbs Sergeants — John Happy Gerald Moore C. R. Fleishman Angus O ' Neill C. J. Oliver Arthur Luther Corporals — George Smith Richard Thompson D. M. Campbell M. H. Gray H. Schweinbold COMPANY C Captain William R. Wilson 1st Lieut. M. F. LaViolette 2d Lieut. D. R. DeVoe Sergeants — Lawrence F. Shirley Richard Luther Ford Kl. Brown Donald Rader W. Everett Searle C. A. Martin BAND John H. Gibson, Drum Major Harold F. Gieser, Chief Musician George S. Pingry, Chief Bugler Sergeants — Clark Squire Hans Christensen George Beck Ralph E. Dolloff Color Sergeants — Carl E. Ostrander Russell Peterson m FIRST BATTALION Major Carl Z. Draves, Commanding 1st Battalion | 1st Lieutenant F. Kellner. Battalion Q. M. and Commissary | Sergeant Wal er E. P otter. Battalion Sergeant-Major COMPANY D COMPANY F Captain Curtiss R. Gilbert 1 St Lieut. Luther Elmore 2d Lieut. Roy G. Rosenthal Captain J. Beverly Alexander 1 st Lieut. A. C. Anderson 2d Lieut. Ernest G. Murphy Sergeants — Crawford Goodwin Sergeants — Gayton L. Knight Ben Mayfield Kramer Thomas Eugene W. Rudow C. G. Freidenthal Kirby Torrance W. K. Keller J. A. McKeen Earle Hutchinson Roger Hardie Corporals — C. C. Kelton C. V. Morrison Corporals — Oscar W. Rosen quist C. M. Coffinberry Alvin J. Powers Sterling Haley Robert E. Bale E. Jerbert J. Arthur Anderson Kenneth Campbell Wendell Morse COMPANY G COMPANY E Captain James W. Read Captain Burton Scott 1 St Lieut. Harry Wickstrom 1 St Lieut. Oscar A. Glaeser 2d Lieut. Raymond L. Gardner 2d Lieut. Frank L White Sergeants — Sergeants — Donald C. Wilson Wade Hargraves John Coffee H. M. Chittenden Paul C. Shepherd Floyd Ellis Donald G. Abel Merton Hill J. M. Judd W. L. Stein Vernon A. Douglas Corporals — Dean Bolinger Corporals — Cyrus Haugum W. T. Nightingale Paul M. Higgs H. W. Lutz Charles A. Williams Darwin Meisnest Floyd Hamel H. J. Folsom Bailey Dinkelspiel D. L. Leehey John Saunders Clarence Weaver w ODmpany ' A - Capt-Max Silver - commanding w ] u Compan B- Capt. Frank Prestotl Cbminandin 1 I Company C - Capt-WmMlsoa-Commandiri; m THIRD BATTALION Major Thomas O. Nash, Commanding 3d Battalion | 1st Lieutenant Albert Sergeant Male Speyers, B attalion Q. M. and Commissary olm J. Otis Battal on Sergeant-Major COMPANY H COMPANY K Captain Lloyd B. Dysart Captain Barrett Herrick 1st Lieut. John M. Bond 1st Lieut. Willard Herron 2d Lieut. Alfred F. Hall 2d Lieut. George Pierrot Sergeants — Sergeants — Ralph R. Smith J. Goettge John Larsen G. Kantzler Walter Brewer Jerome Simson Walter E. Lawson P. Slayden Orville R. Graves R. Hodge Melville L. Kilbourne Corporals — Corporals — Reuben G. Benz Howard Hanson Warren Beuschlein C. Bonnell Alan Jones Erroll Rawson Harold Dodge Wesley K. Roberts Clarence F. Evanson Anthony J. Sells Myron Ringstad Everett Bardin COMPANY L COMPANY ' I Captain Alfred H. Miller 1 st Lieut. Ernest W. Campbell Captain Eric Johnston 2d Lieut. Emery H. Lee 1st Lieut. Gordon W. Ro gers 2d Lieut. Fulton Magill Sergeants — William J. Slater Sergeants — C. Hector Slater Montie R. Coleman Raymond W. Beil Frank W. Bjorkman Alfred N. Whealdon Fairman B. Lee E. W. Conroy Ralph E. DollofI E. R. Beaman Corporals — Corporals — Ralph E. Johnson C. Chester Weythman L. X. Coder Albert W. Hervin Fred Havel Paul A. Woolfolk D. E. Dickerman W. E. Hendricks L. M. DeCan Donald Coleman |«r m f ' OFFICERS ' CLUB Major Carl Z. Draves, President Captain Russell B. Ring, Vice President Lieut. -Col. Edgar M. Draper, Secretary Major Emmett Legg, Treasurer Captain William T. Patten, U. S. A., Retired Colonel Hubert V. Hopkins 1st Lieu . M. F. LaViolette Lieut. -Col. Edgar M. Draper 1st Lieu . Luther Elmore Major Emmett Legg ist Lieu . Harry Wickstrom Major Carl Z. Draves 1st Lieu . A. C. Anderson Major Thomas O. Nash 1st Lieu . Oscar Glaeser Captain E. A. Easterbrook 1st Lieu . John M. Bond Captain J. Gordon Pritchard 1st Lieu . Gordon W. Rogers Captain Arthur E. Wenzel 1st Lieu . Willard Herron Captain Barrett Herrick 1st Lieu t. Ernest Campbell Captain Max A. Silver 2d Lieu . George Pierrot Captain Frank M. Preston 2d Lieu . George P. Ward Captain William R. Wilson 2d Lieu . Thomas Dobbs Captain Curtiss R. Gilbert 2d Lieu . D. R. DeVoe Captain Burton Scott 2d Lieu . Roy G. Rosenthal Captain J. Beverly Alexander 2d Lieu . Frank I. White Captain James W. Read 2d Lieu . Ernest C. Murphy 1st Lieut. H. Sherman Mitchell 2d Lieu . Raymond L. Gardner 1 st Lieut. F. Kellner 2d Lieu . Alfred F. Hall 1st Lieut. Albert Speyers 2d Lieu . Fulton Magill 1st Lieut. E. L. Rosling 2d Lieu . Emery H. Lee 1st Lieut. Robert C. Martin w igiment Passing ia Review CAD6T Day capt Wna T- Patten-UiS fl Retired commanGantr Co! Hubeit V Hopl? ' ms- ■ Waill Scalirxg ' COf t St commanding -R mentr J ■--_y p UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON REGIMENTAL BAND Ban dmaster, Albert P. Adams 1 Cadet Leader, Bruce MacDougall | Chi( f Musician, Harold Geiser 1 Principal Musician, Geo. Pir grey Drum Major, John Gibson INSTRUMENTATION Flutes — Cornets — Gary MacDougall, B. Link Shanks Oboes— Pingry MacDougal, E . A. Leichart Wetzel Bibb Clarinets — Wilson Tanner Phelps Roos Leo Squire White Sangster Gwinn Logan Oertel Martin, J. Trombones — Taylor Geiser Barnes Corcoran Yedica Merriweather Saxophones- — Reinhold Turnure Young Kingsbury Driftmeyer Martin, L. Pingrey Bassoon — Baritones — Holden Verran Horns — Schollmeyer Dolloff Basses — Beardsley Beck Altos — Somerville Mowry Drums — Heacock Christenson Cooper Condlon Langbon Durland SCABBARD AND BLADE Honorary Military Society Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1 905 Company I — Chartered 1913 HONORARY MEMBERS Captain Wm. T. Patten, U. S. A., Retired Lieut. E. E. McCammon, U. S. A. Gen. Maurice Thompson, N. G. W. Col. Wm. McClure, C. A. R. C. Retired Lieut. Col. J. H. Darlmgton, N. G. W. Major Howard A. Hanson, C. A. R. C. Major Wilfred Lewis, Ohio State U. C, Retired ACTIVE MEMBERS Colonel Hubert V. Hopkins Colonel Gordon H. Dickson, Retired Lieut. Col. Edgar M. Draper Major Emmett J. Legg Major Carl Z. Draves Major Thomas O. Nash Captain J. Beverly Alexander Captain Russell B. Ring Captain C. Barrett Herrick Captain James W. Read Captain Donald H. Clark Captain Eric A. Johnston Captain Paul J. McConihe Captain Kramer Thomas Captain J. Bruce MacDougall Captain Wallace G. Drummond Lieut. Jesse C. Johnson Lieut. Stanley W. Staatz Colors — Red, White and Blue Publication — Scabbard and Blade Journal F 244 f FIR TREE Senior Honor Society Organized 1907 ACTIVE MEMBERS Elmer Leader Edwin Leader Ralph Robinson Russell Callow Louis Seagrave Walter Shiel Dixon Schively RECENTLY INITIATED MEMBERS OF FIR TREE Ray Hunt John Davidson George Dill Walter Tuesley Clark Will Adolph Harr Charles Newton Emil Hurja Clyde Brokaw Elmer Noble Barrett Herrick Henry Zimmerman OVAL CLUB Senior-Junior Honor Society FACULTY MEMBERS President Henry Suzzallo Russell Callow Prof. E. S. Meany Prof. David Thomson Comptroller H. T. Condon Prof. Henry Landes STUDENT MEMBERS George Dill Russel Callow Lewis Conner Walter Williams Phil Weiss Louis Seagrave Fred Lind Walter Shiel J. Arthur Younger Ed Franklin Harold Foran Ed Leader Ray Hunt Charles Newton S. Marion Driver Clyde Brokaw Clark Will Elmer Noble Ralph Robinson Cedric Miller Paul Clyde Emil Hurja George Mathieu Walter Tuesley Bruce MacDougall Karl Schmaelzle Henry Zimmerman Roy Maryatt George Hipkoe ' Elmer Leader Ward Krumm TOLO CLUB Senior Women ' s Honor Society Orzanized 1909 MEMBERS Lois McBride Ethelyn Shipley Rhea Rupert Eunice Spencer Anna Baker Gertrude Rose Color — Royal Purple Dorothy Wade Marion Southard May Stewart Grace MacDonald Margaret Breck Tolo is the Indian word meaning achievement of success. The members are chosen each year from the ranks of the junior class. Personality, scholarship and prominence in student activities are considered the bases in election to this society. Shipley Wailc McBritle Rose Southard Breck PHI BETA KAPPA S Founded at the Collf ge of William and Mary, December 3, 1776 ft University of Was lington Alpha — Chartered April 29. 1914 Devoted to the Inculcation and Reward of Scholarship in the Humanities and the Pure Math ematics Among Undergrac uates FACULTY MEMBERS Edmond Stephen Meany Harlan Leo Trumbull Irving Mackey Glen Charles Church More Luther Ewing Wear Herbert Henry Gowen Hjalmar Laurits Osterud John Weinzirl Edwin Ray Guthrie Frederick Morgan Padelford Walter Bell Whittlesey Arthur Sewall Haggett Arthur Ragan Priest Henrj- Slater Wilcox Joseph Barlow Harrison Oliver Huntington Richardson Ernest George Atkin George Milton Janes Newell Wheeler Sawyer Walter Greenwood Beach Joel Marcus Johanson | Lloyd Leroy Smail Allen Rogers Benham Leo Jones Harry Edwin Smith Ottilie Boetzkes Frank George Kane J. Allen Smith Herman G. A. Brauer Trevor Kincaid Edwin Augustus Start Grace Goldena Denny Edward McMahon Charles Munro Strong Curt John Ducasse Theresa Schmid McMahon Henry Suzzallo William Duckering David Thomson Almon Homer Fuller GRADUATE STUDENTS | George Glockler George S. Parks Annie May Hurd Frank Harrison Ailie L. Laird Mattie J. Lincoln Kate L. Gregg George Turnbull Gladys Genevra Ide 1916 Edgar M. Draper J. Orin Oliphant Lois McBride Susie Paige Elisabetta Pennell Edith Sifton Birdie Hedges Adeline Smith Ruth Merling Kenneth Soule Arthur Jerbert Eunice Spencer Wesley Minnis May Stewart Anna L. Baker Gezma Thomas R. Frederick Bown Dorothy Wade Eilene French Mary B. Walsted Mrs. Lena A. Hartge Walter W. Williams Harry F. Heath Alfred S. R. Wilson Minnie Johnson Ella P. Winslow Irma Lindsay 1917 Mariette Worthington Harry C. Donaldson Kate Ludgate Leo Goodman Arthur E. Simon Reynold Jackson Elizabeth Vinsonhaler Hilda Knausenberger Margaret Wayland p PH] DELTA PHI Honoran, ' Law Fraterniti, Founded at Universitj- of Michig m. 1869 Ballinger Chapter — Chartered 1907 FACULTY John T. Condon Clark P. Bissett Ivan W. Goodner 1916 J. Grattan O ' Brien Albert A. Carson A. M. Major C. T. Donworth G. A. Mathieu S. M. Driver H. L. Morrison M. H. Easton 1917 V. S. Tucker H. E. Brown M. R. McMicken L. T. Cochran W. J. A. Macdonald R. C. Dean A. J. Shannon Wallace Mount, Jr. 1918 L. 1. Tolman O. D. Anderson G. P. Haight F. R. Benz A. M. Newton J. M. Connell C. L. Rogers L. B. Dysart Roy E. Wood Pub ication — The Brief MfMicken Driver ' i - . liogers Nfwtoii . hM i- Brown Moiiiit Mathieu An.lcrsor Morrison Kastoii Dvsart Macdonalil Tucker Connell Dean M PHI ALPHA DELTA Honorary Law Fraternity Founded at Kent College of Law, 1 898 Dunbar Chapter — Chartered May, 1914 1916 Bruce MacDougaii Edwin Leader Ralph Robinson Edward Franklin Elmer Leader George Roberts 1917 Edwin MacLean Leon Ellis Walter Shiel George Hall Harold Burdick Carl Hendricks Matt Hill Harold Moore Ned Edris Ray Fox 1918 Charles Moriarity Frank Harrison Ray Dumett Lloyd Toomey Colors — Purple and Gold Publication — Phi Alpha Delta Quarterly p l:n I -.ill l;.,l.: ' -M MiRl,,ari Humett Hendrick; Hall Leader Shicl Fos Edris Roberts Leader Moriarity Franklin Hill SIGMA DELTA CHI National Journalism Fraternity Founded at De Pauw, 1907 Zeta Chapter — Chartered 1909 FACULTY Frank G. Kan e Fred S. Kennedy Lee A. White Edmond S. Meany GRADUATE George Turnbull Lewis C. Conner Clark Squire 1916 Clarence Shiwers Louis Seagrave 1917 Stacy Jones Emil Hurja Walter Tuesley Edward J. Condlon Matthew O ' Connor B. W. Brintnall Harold Allen Bryant MacDougal: Conrad Brevick Felix Embree Alan Phillips Paul Neill Thomas Dobbs Anthony Corbiere 1918 Colors — Black and White Publication — The Quill J. B. Carrigan Chester V. Healy f Tuesley Shivvers Allen 259 TAU BETA PI Honorary Engineering Fraternity | Founded at Lehigh University, 1885 Washington Alpha, Chartered 1912 FACULTY Joseph Daniels Almon Homer Fuller Charles Church More Everett Owen Eastwood Edgar Allen Loew William Elmhirst Duckering Charles William Harris George Samuel Wilson Carl Edward Magnusson Frank Melville Warner Chauncey Wernicke Frederick Kurt Kirsten Edwin Leonard Strandber g GRADUATE STUDENTS Sydney Raht Burbank, ' 15 1916 Rex Buren Beisel Walter Raymond Gailey Raymond Edward O ' Neill Robert Quixote BrowTi Howard Norman Hill Edward Reed Powell Herbert Florian Canfield Curtis Lane Hill George Sherman Smith Ernest Perry Dean George Edward Johnson Hollister Thompson Sprague Martin Mey Deggeller Laurence Fuller Livingston William Walter Williams Wolcott Dennis Edmond Clarence Miller Alfred Snyder Wilson Charles Henry Strandberg 1917 Russell Horace Dean Talcott Moore Brayton Wilbur William Richard Hainsworth Albert Kalin Roland George Mayer Linas Car! Klein Jess Charles Johnson Clarence Henry Carlander ? Brou O ' Neill Hill CanfieM AViibnr Dean Deggelier Strandberg- Beisel Johnson Mayer Livingstoi Carlander Sprague Powell Gailey Dennis Johnson AViUiams 261 M XI SIGMA PI Honorarj ' Fores!r ' Fraternity ALPHA CHAPTER Founded at the University of Washington in I 908 for the Purpose of Stimulating Scholar- ship and to Offer an Opportunity for Closer Fellowship Among Sincere Forestry Students F. G. Miller, M. F. Hugo A. Winkenwerder, M. F. Samuel A. Stamm, M. F. Clarence Anderson, ' 1 2 Dean D. Ballard, ' 1 2 Philip E. Barrett, ' 1 6 Frank W. Beard, ' 1 5 J. H. Billmgslea, Jr., ' 14 Parker S. Bonney, 1 3 Jos. A. Brinkley, ' 1 I M. M. Burris, ' 15 Noai F. Cayvvood, ' 1 5 William S. Cahill, 1 3 Arthur F. Cook, 15 Lee R. DeCamp, ' 1 4 Ohver Ericson, ' I 3 Wiley E. Escher, ' 1 4 C. Ross Ganey, ' 14 Edward J. Gibson, ' 13 HONORARY Burt P. Kirkland, A. B. Elias T. Clark, M. F. Bror L. Grondal, M. S. F. Conrad W. Zimmerman GRADUATES Geo. W. Gilbert, ' 14 Claude E. Grieder, ' I 3 Edward J. Hanzlik, ' 1 1 Henn, ' Harmeling, ' 1 2 Everett E. Harpham, ' 1 1 Geo. W. Hutton, ' 1 3 Benj. C. Keith, ' 1 1 Frank J. Klobucher, ' 14 L. K. Larson, ' I 2 V. M. McKibbon, ' 12 G. Hamilton Martin, ' 13 Howard I. Monks, ' 14 Joseph G. G. Morgan, ' 13 Moritz L. Mueller, ' 14 Edward J. Murnen, ' 1 3 Justin W. Ottestad, ' 12 O. P. M. Goss, C. E Donald M. Knapp, M .S. F. Charles E. Newton, E. M. Clarence R. Pope, ' 1 Kenneth Redman, ' I 3 Karl J. Schmaelzle, ' 1 6 J. D. Schoeller, ' 13 Henn,- B. Sternberg, ' 1 5 Henr ' C. Stinson, ' 14 Philip A. Stuart, ' 14 George Thompson, ' I 5 Lewis A. Treen, ' 1 I Russell Watson, ' 1 5 Arthur E. Welch, ' 14 R. F. White, ' 12 Wendell R. Whitney, ' 1 J. S. Williams, ' 14 Newell L. Wrisht, ' 13 XI SIGMA PI Honorary Forestr ' Fraternity Founded at the University of Washington HONORARY MEMBERS Dean Hugo A. Winkenwerder Professor Burt P. Kirkland Professor Elias T. Clark 1908 Professor Bror L. Grondahl Professor Charles E. Newton Professor Conrad Zimmerman GRADUATES Henrv Schmitz W. Vincent Evans 1916 Donald Broxon Harold A. Durfee Donald Clark Ralph Faulkner James F. Hutton J. D. Studley 1917 Arthur Bevan Ralph Brindiey Timon Torkelson Clifford Wright Broxon Torkelson t5e an Hutton Evans Duriee Stuille Wridht Brimilev (. ' lark Schmitz PHI DELTA KAPPA ACTIVE MEMBERS. 1915-16 Leo B. Baisden Charles King Bliss Robert Frederick Bown Russell Callow J. L. Crozier James A. Dallas William Herman Ellert Albert N. French Arthur S. Gist Frank Harrison Frederick Elmer Bolton David Allen Anderson Henry F. Heath Robertson Riley Hollings- worth Archie Lewis Ida Arthur E. Lindborg M. Evan Morgan J. Orin Oliphant William C. Poage William K. Price Joel J. Pryde FACULTY MEMBERS Dallas D. Johnson Paul J. Kruse Hosea A. Whitneck William Asker Omar A. Bums Clifford Carpenter Frank J. Clark Gaylard W. Greene Rolla W. Moore Frank S. Salisbury George Bernard Welch Herbert G. Lull OFFICERS President, Arthur S. Gist Vice President, H. Hale Smith Corresponding Secretary, J. Orin Oliphant Recording Secretary and Treasurer, Albert French PHI LAMBDA UPSILON Honorary Chemistry Fraternity Founded at the University of Illinois, 1 889 Epsilon Chapter — Chartered February, 1910 FACULTY Horace G. Byers Harlan L. Trumbull William Dehn Henry K. Benson Seth C. Langdon James E. Bell Alexander Smith Robert E. Rose John Weinzirl ACTIVE MEMBERS George Glockler Thonrias G. Thompson Robert W. Ellison George L. Schwartz Curtis W. Thing George S. Parks Wmfield Scott John Herrick Sargent C. Powell SENIORS Carl Z. Draves Kenneth J. Soule E. R. Powell Hubert V. Hopkins A. Erwin Osterberg Walter W. Williams Walter R. Gailey Arthur Gunn James Toy Lloyd L. Davis R. E. O ' Neill Clifford Lord Hubert G. Higgins JUNIORS Clarence H. Carlander Walter E. Lawson Wilbert S. Slemmons William R. Hamsworth Judson F. Falknor Thompson Carlamler Williiims Powell Gailev Ciinn Draves Osterberg Scott Hopkins Thing Tov Hfirick O ' Neill Falknor Ilainsworth SIGMA UPSILON Honorarj- Literar ' FraterniU ' Founded at the University of the South. 1 906 Grub Street Chapter — Chartered 1914 Presiden t Henr ' Suzzallo Joel M. Johar.son Russell Callow Rollit Coe Harold B. Allen Alvin Dyer Matthew W. Hill Mathew O ' Conner FACULTY ' Roswell Ham Joseph B. Harrison GRADUATES George Hipkoe 1916 I9I7 Curtis Shoemaker William R. Wilson Jack Carrigan Floyd E. Ellis Flower — Yellow Jonquil Colors — Green and Gold Victor L. O. Chittick Colin Clements Russell Peterson Donald S. Rockwell Donald C. Wilson ' 268 p Rockwell Clements Tetersi Carrigan Vi)si TAU KAPPA ALPHA National Forensic Fraternity Founded at De Pauw, 1908 Washington Chap.ter — Chartered 1 908 FACULTY Dean Arthur R. Priest Leo Jones ACTIVE MEMBERS Marsh M. Corbitt Louis Kastner Frank Harrison Sol A. Herzog Pincus A. Rickles Arthur Simon Phil Weiss Ray Dumett Max A. Silver Matthew Hill Publication — Speaker ?? KAPPI PSI Beta Omicron Chapter, Washington — Chartered 1916 Established 1879 National Pharmacy and Pre-Medical Fraternity FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. C. W. Johnson Prof. A. W. Linton E. M. Piatt GRADUATE MEMBERS J. F. McGogy E. H. Lamb F. J. Goodrich C. I. Peckenpaugh 1916 J. C. Palmer 1917 E. N. Peterson J. D. Fields 1918 C. E. Harris T. H. Loan J. J. Larsen H. S. Ostrander E. C. Hutchinson R. P. Gauss LaRoy H. Geil J. F. Leverich C. E. Ostrander Geo S. Pingry PI MU CHI Honorary Premedic Fraternity Founded at the University o f Washir gton, 1911 FACULTY Dr. E. Victor Smith Dr. William M. Dehn 1916 James M. Eagleson Vaughn Lee Lowell Williams 1917 Joe Sowers Leslie Schutt Charles Walker Harold Rodman Tom Cushman Temple Fay 1918 Wilbert Slemmons Carl Emmons 1919 Kenneth Whyte Harold Davis Fred Austin Carl Wallace Joe Urner J ? THETA SIGMA PHI Honorary Journalism Sorority Alpha Chapter Founded at University of Washington, 1 909 Nationalized 1910 1916 Esther Coleman 1917 Ruth Thompson Ethel Gies 1918 Hazel Benjamin Mary Gleason Dorothy Constantine Jerrine Ramage Margaret Crahan Eleanor Washburn Cornelia Glass Flower — Violet Colors — Violet and Green Publication — The Matrix Tl I — n CiC ' S Washburn Bt-njani Constantine Colciiia li IOTA SIGMA PI National Honoran, ' Chemistrv ' Sorority, Founded 1911 Oxygen Chapter HONORARY ' MEMBERS Mrs. Horace G. Bvers FACULTY MEMBERS Irene Hunt Davis Glenola E. Behling Effie Isabel Raitt Grace Golden Denny Elizabeth Rothermell Frances Edith Hindman STUDENT MEMBERS Mar?- Bedell Josephine Johnson Zahlia Jeucks Bertha Gannon Ruth Merlins? Elizabeth Vinsonhaler Omega Hilton Lois McBride Joanne Karrer Elizabeth Pennell Ruth West Color s — Cedar Green, Gold and White Flower — Narcissus DELTA PHI Honorary Forensic Sorority for Women Organized, University of Washington, 1915 Alpha Chapter — Chartered 1915 HONORARY MEMBERS Emma Lindsay-Squier Lettie Lee Rochester Doily McLean ACTIVE MEMBERS Dorothy Hess Ruth Tewinkel Sophia McPhee Lois McBride PLEDGES Agnes Sims Margaret Desmond m 1 DELTA GAMMA i Founded at Warren Female Institute, 1872 1 Beta Chapter — Chartered 1903 1 ft -V 1 . H k ™ i 1 JMt. E 2 Madge Denny 1916 Bertha Brackett Ohve Harris Mary Brace Marjorie White 1917 Geneva Sims Ehzabeth Denny Edith Ritter Charlotte Davis Edith Bailey Mary Swearingen Agnes Sims Cornelia Powell 1918 Elizabeth Boyd Emma Thornley Jerrine Ramage Adele Small Josephine Gilmer Margaret Powell Doris Wilson Margaret Delabarre 1919 Lucile Bordeaux Sue Crawford Martha Townsend Lilian Hart Alta Clarke Jeanette Sholes Dorothy Bevis Flower — Cream Rose 1 Colors — Bronze, Pink anc Blue Pu blication — The And era m Sims Denny Townsend Royd Hrackett TliornIe Hampton Ramage Delabarre Powell Hart Crawford Ritter Small Bordeaux Powell Wilson White Sims Braee Denny Sholes Davis Swearinsen Bailey Oilmer GAMMA PHI BETA Founded at Syracuse, 1874 Lambda Chapter — Chartered May 3, 1903 Elizabeth Rothermel Lois McBride Erna Meerscheidt Harriet Smith Grace Listmann Willow Coffman Fredericka Sully Lulu Waynick Christine Thomas Pauline Smith Harriet Parker Shirley Skewis Rita Cornett Eleanor Hedden Violet Shephard Helen Beard Dorothy Condon Dorothy Leavitt 1917 1918 1919 Flower — Pink Carnation Colors — Buff and Brown Publication — The Crescent Gertrude Elliott Anna Baker Gezma Thomas Ella Winslow Margaret Wayland Marianne King Helen Byles Imogene Cornett Charlotte Mann Catherine Kerr Helen Allen Esther Gilpin Ruth Frye Elfrieda Smith Helen Sully Charlotte Doheny WujUn.J („lliM.u, Byles Heard Doln-iu Leavitt Gilpin WavnicI, Frye He.ld.-ii Sullv Smith Kerr Skewis MT Mi-ersul eidt I ' arker Tliomas Smith McBriile 1!. Coniett I. Cornett Mann Slieliluir.l 287 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 Beta Pi Chapter— Chartered 1905 1916 Catherine Baxter Mary Hooper Margaret Breck Helen Huston Ruth Thompson Genevieve Thompson Esther Ferine 1917 Lorraine Bean Millie Pritchard Elizabeth Daulton Agnes McDonald Mae Trenholme 1918 Jean McFee Marguerite Grant Marguerite Carlberg Corinth Doris Smith Margaret Crahan Catharine Burnside Anne Holmes Zella Thompson Mildred Walsh Hazel Benjamin Rosamond Parsons Louise Gates 1919 Norma Holman Marian Lewis Marie Leghorn Cornelia Hooper Monica Hughes Elizabeth Falmer Helen Eagleson Katherine Goodheart Laura Robinson Julia Fisher Miriam Cole Gertrude Fulierton PLEDGE Esther Snoddy Flower — Fleur de Lis Colors- —Dark and Light Blue Publ ication — The Key m e Smith Cok- Bt-njainiti Perine Holnuiii Burnsiile Huston Lewis Hooper Grant Cralian Baxter Fullerton Holmes Gates McDonahl Hughes Coo-lheart Parsons Thompson Hooper Trenliolnie McFee Ea leson Leghorn Fisher Breck Palmer Walsh Thompson Daulton Robinson Thompson Pritchanl 289 m PI BETA PHI Founded at Monmouth College, 1 867 Washington Alpha — Chartered 1907 Martha Taylor Elizabeth Schumacher Hazel Jones Leslie Davis Adele Carlin Mildred Dean Alleen Hamilton Jean Jaycox Mary Elliott Mane Michener Janet Wardall Kathleen Delaney Frances Hertges Frances Titus Dorothy Richards Ruth Benton Dorothy Newell Ruth Kerr 1916 1917 1913 1919 Dorothy Ewmg Laura Turner PLEDGES Mary McEntee Camilla Dunbar Doris Misner Blanche Bolinger Irene Steel Frances Tanner Margaret Jackson Dorothy Elliott Olive Moore Cornelia Glass Emily Hall Caroline Bash Josephine Lane Marion Sovvle Hazel Reed Marian Lee Winifred Heitchu li %lfl ALPHA XI DELTA Founded at Lombard College, 1893 Nu Chapter— Chartered May 30, 1907 Madeline Sheehan lolene Christensen Vida Alverson Marie Parr Neva Bucher Adelaide Calderhead Genevieve Boltoi Cuma Joiner Erma Martin Dorothy Myers Mary Campbell Lucile McCabe Alice Moore Irene Grass Phyllis Griffith Florence Welts Mildred Thornburg GRADUATE Margaret Myers 1916 1917 1918 1919 Madeline Woodworth Elnora Christensen Mary Walsh Lindabel Smith Florence Peterson Nadine Risbell Doris Bell Lois Dickenson Ruth Martin Rita Moore Garnet Swartzbaugh Delight Conner Virginia Menach Fern Kramer Bonnie Bell Flower — Pink Rose Colors — Light and Dark Blue and Gold Publication — Alpha Xi Delta Journal ! R. Maniii Smith K. Miirtin A. Moort- M .r- Thornbiirs D. Bell Wilts R. Moore B. Bell Grass Alverson Mcnach Campbell Holton Wooilworth Joiner Swartzbaugh E. Christensen Kramer Risbald McCabe Peterson Sheehan Parr I- Christensen Bucber Walsh Calderhead Dickenson Griffith Conner ? KAPPA ALPHA THETA Founded 1870 Local Chapter Installed 1908 1916 Enola Mclntyre Ysabel Patton Leotta Foreman Lucy Morton Grace Pntchard Gladys Johnson Martha Davis Elizabeth Drummond 1917 Loretto Lehman Beatrice Mercer Margaret McLean Grace Uhl Elizabeth Vinsonhaler Sigrid Hall Claire McDonald Helen Bolster Mary Wright 1918 Mildred White Lois Gilbert Marjorie Kohlman Martha Knapp Avadana Cochran Evelyn Goodrich Kathryn Kerr Alice English Elizabeth Henry Edith Brawley Carrie Smith Gladys Easterbrook Marguerite Mann 1919 Harriet Smith Elizabeth MacLean Dorothy Jones Edna Bolster Laura Dickson Helen Donley Helen Goode Helen York Helen Gordon Leotta Morris PLEDGES Louise Corbin Marie Cook Marjorie Whitelaw Helen Sengfelder Col ors — Black and Gold Flower- — Black and Gold Pansy | Publication — - Kappa Alpha Th eta 1 m Mk k : m fi fi m B s I H BP ' Hall Jones Drunimond Gordon White Vinsonhaler Goode Mercer Wright Sims Kohlman Ken- Davis Lohman Knapp Smith Easterbrook McLean Henry Patton Foreman Morton McDonald Ihl Johnson Mann E. Bolster Goodrich McLean lirawloy Uonley H. Bolster York Morris Gilbert ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Founded at Syracuse University, 1 904 Iota Chapter — Chartered 1908 Carrie Oleson Frances Craig Frances Lovely Etta Barter 1916 Amy Olmsted Ethelyn Shipley Dorothy Davidson Frances Anderson Violet Francis Helen McFaul Alice Dowell Helen Corbett Beatrice Mathieu Rachael Reed Yvonne Dorean 1917 1918 Ella Barter Evelyn Flanley Bernardine Hallei Mildred Dorgan Mabel McGregor Gladys Smallwood Mabel Church Grace Fenn Frances Moll Myrtle Anderson Elizabeth Moore 1919 Marie Johns Frances McKenzie Doris Summers Flovkfer — Red and Buff Roses Colors — Red, Buff and Green Publication — A. G. D. Quarterly f Daviilson Matliicu SuimiuTs Y. Dorsaii Corbitt Shiplev Olson Moore Lovoly Olmsted McKenzie Haller Flanley Johns Anderson M. Dorgan { ' raiy Barter Reed Francis McFaul Dowell Moll Church p CHI OMEGA Founded at University of Arkansas, 1 895 Alpha Chapter — Chartered 1908 Lou Condron Estelle Robinson Irene Armstrong -Esther Hammond 1916 Florence Clarke Irma Lindsay Marion Whitlock 1917 Beulah Pmneo Rhea Rupert Cecile Ferry May Stewart Vera Casen Muriel Hutchmson Florence Agassiz Katherine Matheson Frances Adams Erma Warner Louise Fulton Gay Lawson Helen Miller Zura Karshner Mary Gyllenberg 1918 Ina Fletcher Isabel Jacobs Gertrude Calloway Helen Ferryman 1919 Lena Abel Mary Johnston Jeanette Hainsworth Rose Shortall Ruth Thurston Adalaid Adams Colors — Cardinal and Straw Flower — White Carnation Publication — Eleusis Helen Koren Jean Reekie Cyria Allen Bessie Kuepferle Marie O ' Hare Frances Cline l.awson rinml Warner Koren Hainsworth Shortall Gyllenberj? Condron Allen Ilutehinson Fletcher Adams Calloway (line (- ' larke A lanis Miller liu|jert Fulton Aliel Robinson Kastner I ' asen .laeohs Hammond Agassiz O ' Hare Johnston Stewart Thurston Armstrong Lindsay Matheson Whitlock liiekie Ferryman 299 DELTA DELTA DELTA Founded at Boston, 1 888 Theta Alpha Chapter — Chartered 1909 Lail Ake Iva McKay Mabel Fraser 1916 Lois Tweed Isabel Fitts Gertrude Rose Anne Williams Victoria McLean Grace Saboe Gudrun Andersen Pearl David Esther Gearheart 1917 Corrine Ruttle Helene Ames Edith McGuire Marjory Wilson Ermine Clark Ina DeCan Genevieve Sheurer Esther Walsworth 1918 Dorothy Deerweister Frances Elliott Margret McGuire Evelyn Wilson Mary Wright Marie Rowe Joyce Lucile 1919 Backus De Stevenson Hyndman Lucile Tweec Rhea Billings Eva Houck PLEDGES Elva Derr Bernice Brokaw Irene Haskell Grace Hallahan Colors — Silver, Gold and Blue Publication — The Trident Flovifer — Pansy N p K j p i p SIGMA KAPPA Founded at Colby College, 1874 Mu Chapter— Chartered 1910 Marian Southard Helen Doud Helen Anderson Gwendolyn Green Estelle Hawkins Louise Kelsey Gertrude Phillips Elizabeth Draper Dorothy Roseleaf Victoria Morrison Dorothy Anderson Josephine Bogert Eugenia Craver Ruth Hunter 1916 1917 1918 1919 Mary Todd Eva M. Cole Dorothy Hess Muriel Douglas Mildred Anderson Ollie Reynolds Helen Stone Ruth Carlson Dorothy Stalbert Nellie Lou Irene Tully Cora Anthes Erma Bowman Flower — Violet Colors — Maroon and Lavender Publication — The Triangle f llniit.T Phillips Hawkins D. Aji.Ursoii M. Ari.k-ison Cole Draper Green Todd Stalbert H.-ynolds Tully liosen Carlson Southard H. Anderson Douglas Morrison Kelsej- Stone Hess Lou Bowman ALPHA CHI OMEGA Founded at De Pauw University, 1 885 Rho Chapter— Chartered 1910 Inez Crippen Dora Fredson Maida Crippen Lenore Stilson Frances Smith Arlie Anderson Borghild Lee Edna Hindman Dorothy Graham Gladys Manson Gertrude Pusly Helen Wilson Mildred Nelson Florence Foran Katherine Honly 1916 1917 1918 1919 Mae Ottersen Margaret Wilson Gladys Wright Dea Imel Elizabeth Morgan Grace Proctor Frances Whalley Martha Hitch Margaret Larrison Irene Aitchison Gennevieve Myers Helena Elway Alice Faubert Hattie Carlson Neva Bell Flower — Red Carnation Colors — Scarlet and Olive Green Publication — The Lyre VT iwe V P mmik (■ni.l.en Hitch Iniel Myers Pusly Lee L:irrisun Honly Manson Morgan Crijipen Carlson Aitchison Bell HinJman Wrisht Craham Stilson Nelson Wilson Wilson Fanhert foran Elway Ottersen Whallev Anderson Freilson ALPHA PHI Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 Sigma Chapter — Chartered 1914 Beatrice Carpenter Lucile Thomas Jessie Home Dorothy Grout Helen Bennett Dorothy Constantine Linnea Soderburg Alma Burton Grace Colton Marthena Rhodes Ruth Greenleaf Ellen Turner GRADUATE Madell Gille 1916 1917 1918 1919 Ruth Warren Genevieve Grout Ruth Sharpe Florence Elford Dorothy Case Lucile MacRae Helen Wright Eloise Virtue Helen Newson Sally Tuttle Flowers — Lily of the Valley and Forget-Me-Nots Colors — Silver Gray and Bordeaux Publication — Alpha Phi Quarterly ( Constanlhiu lili.vi.s Bcniiftt ( ' ..ll,,!! rase Su.l.-ilmrs VirtiTe Burton Carpenter Thomas Turner Wriaht Newton Grout Ikune Sharpe Tuttle Greenleaf Grout Warren ACHOTH Founded at the University of Nebraska, 1910 He Chapter— Chartered 1914 Mary Hoard Alice Miller Lucile Saunders Edith Warren Louisa Eckhart Mildred Larson Vivian Gill Bonnie Gilman Maude Hall Mabel Totten, ' 18 Helen Herner, ' I 8 1917 1918 1919 PLEDGES Ruth West Ethel Willard Zelma Holman Alice Johnson Katherine Stanton Genevieve Gieldseth Lenore Pike Maude Tatchell, ' 1 g Martha Simpson Colors — Sapphire, Blue and White Flower — Lily of the Valley Publication — Kochov Simpson Gill Warren Willard Johnson West Totten Tatchell Larson Saunders Eckhart Hall Gilnian Herner Pike Gieldseth Stanton Miller m DELTA ZETA Founded at Miami University, 1 902 Kappa Chapter — Chartered 1914 Rhea Haynes Hertha O ' Neill Gladys Hitt Hilda Knausenberger Clara Knausenberger Caroline Bailey Martha Liska Mabel Kennedy Esther Nelson Esther Campbell Dorothy Darr Beatrice Fryer Clara Murray Helen Robinson 1916 1917 1918 1919 Olga Liska Lottie Kellogg Lucy Shelton Irene Jones Margaret Jones Esther Mitchell Edith Monk Virginia Smith Dorothy Morehouse Gertrude Sisler Consuelo Welty Viola Rawles Cariotta Elliott Olive Cutting Flower — Pink Rose Colors — Old Rose and Nile Green Publication — Delta Zeta Lamp Sisler Uawk ' s Joni ' s Hainis Monk Hitt Kelloffi; Darr Sbolton Kiiausenberger aiisi ' iil .Tj. ' i_.r Klliott I.iska FryiT (.) N(m11 Jones Wtltv Liska CamplicU Nelsi Ciittins Morolious Kennedy Robinso ' r ALPHA OMICRON PI Founded at Barnard College, 1 896 Upsilon Chapter — Chartered 1915 Susie Paige Edith Sifton Ada Kraus Charlotte Hall Irma McCormick Ellen Jolliffe Mildred Jeans Ruth Lusby Helen Brewster Helen Legg Ruth Abelset Hilda Hendrickson Ruth Haslett 1916 1917 1918 1919 Flower — Jacminoet Rose Colors — Cardinal Publication — To Dragma ' Mabel Potter Ethel Kraus Mildred Baker Madge Philbrook Ruth Fosdick Margery Miller Esther Knudson Eunice Leumere Rose Elwood Eugenia Garrett Louise Benton Eloise Elri ht ElriKht Jolliffe Abelset Jeans Sifton Paige Lege Kraus Fosdick Elwood Baker McCormiok Lusbv Haslett Hall I ' otter Brewster Miller Garrett Kniulson Benton Kraus I ' hilbrook m ALPHA DELTA Local, Founded 1916 Beatrice Kittrell Mona Morgan Elizabeth C. Parolini Clerice Canfield Mary E. McKee Flora Russell Adilene Nelson Elizabeth M. Rothenhoefer Kathryn Byers Arella E. Tomlinson Rose M. Stalp La Vida Hilson 1916 1917 1918 1919 Le Day Packard Marie Wiegman Zella Jane Swarts Vivian Hollinger Merle Hall Helen Simpson Eva M. Conner Florence Sutton Jean E. Sutherland m Xelson I ' arolini Canliil.l Sutton Tomlinscin Unthcnlioefcr llolliiiser •cKw Stalp Morsaii Sutherland Swarts Kittrell Bvers Conner DIRECTORY OF SORORITIES Achoth Kenwood 1 88 . Alpha Chi Omega Kenwood 659 . Alpha Delta Kenwood 955 . Alpha Gamma Delta Kenwood 20 . Alpha Omicron Pi Kenwood 26 . Alpha Phi Kenwood 954 . Alpha Xi Delta Kenwood 1 99 . Chi Omega Kenwood 23 . Delta Delta Delta Kenwood 2253. Delta Gamma Kenwood 2645 . Delta Zeta Kenwood 2826. Gamma Phi Beta Kenwood 2496 . Kappa Alpha Theta Kenwood 1857. Kappa Kappa Gamma Kenwood 1 46 . Pi Beta Phi Kenwood I 429 . Sigma Kappa Kenwood 2697 . 4514 18th Av. N. E 4543 University Blvd. 5043 18th Av. N. E 4534 University Blvd. 4732 21st Av. N. E 4710 19th Av. N. E 4540 University Blvd. 4547 19th Av. N. E 4714 University Blvd. 4736 18th Av. N. E 4746 16th Av. N. E 4530 University Blvd. 4710 University Blvd. 4504 18th Av. N. E 4535 18th Av. N. E 4515 15th Av. N. E 317 SIGMA NU Founded at Virginia Military institute, 1869 Gamma Chi Chapter — Chartered 1 896 Edmond S. Meany George Roberts Harold Foran FACULTY 1916 Dr. Clement Akerman John Martin Lloyd Dysart Harold Sharkey Raymond Buckley John Coffman John Markham Howard Hansen John Larsen John Allen Merrit Williams 1917 Elmer Noble Henry Wheeler Edward Faubert Charles Guerrier 1918 Fulton Magill Alfred Whealdon 1919 William Grimm Walter Draham Flower — White Rose Colors — Black, White and Gold Publication — The Delta Frank Olmstead Walter Doty George Douglas George Kantzler Jack Urner George Sears Fred Strong w Faubert Allen Oliiist. .il i:riii,in Foraii Markham Xnlile l)v art Williams Coffnian StroriK Doiislas Kantzler Sharkc-v llrahain InuT lincklev Larson Sears WheeliT Olmsteail Salioe ' Mnrrow Magill Hanson Mea.l Doty Hawkins Hoberts fiucrrier 319 r™ PHI GAMMA DELTA Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, Sigma Tau Chapter — Chartered 1 900 FACULTY John T. Condon Joseph B. Harrison 1916 Ralph Faulkner Conrad Zimmerman Lawrence F. Livingston Henry Schmitz Walter H. Tuesley Brayton Wilbur Edward M. Shelton D. Scott Sanders Roy Franklin Taylor R ichard K. Beymer Willard George Lindberg Willard George Herron Arthur Lindberg Walter P. Shiel 1917 George Edwards Lester Evans Alvis M. Sanders 1918 Clement Connell Glenn C. Hubbard 1919 Earl H. Latimer Charles H. Grinnell John T. Bibb Flower — Heliotrope Colors — Royal Purple Publication — Phi Gamma Delt James M. Eagleson Ralph Robinson William R. Hainsworth Edward A. Mullen Robert M. Hurlbut Floyd E. Ellis Joe B. Colesworthy Theo. E. Faulk Gerald W. Relf p I mm llartnian Mullcr Hurlliiirt Tueslev Ilainswortli Eau ' lcsoii nihil K.lwards Griiinell Faulk Beymer Shelton Herron Hublianl Ellis Taylor S. Sanders Smith Latimer M. Sanders Wilbur Robinson Relf Colesworthy Schniitz Sliiel Young Faulkner Livingston Connell Lindberg if PHI DELTA THETA Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1 863 Gamma Pi Chapter — Chartered 1 906 Arthur R. Priest Leland I. Tolman F. Wayne Durham Glenn Davis Richard Deutsche Philip Engiehart Ray Gardner Ralph Smith Wellington Wood William ' erkes Harry Markey Harold Poison FACULTY 1916 C. Narrett Herrick Jack L. Ford 1917 Harold Fix Charles Rogers Paul E. McDermott Joseph Markey 1918 George Smith Arthur Nordoff Edwin Hogg 1919 Jack Claypool Lawrence Calvert Martin Wiley Joseph Hovey Flower — White Carnation Colors — Azure and Argent Publication — The Scroll C. W. David E. Dixon Schively Carroll F. Byrd Wilbur McKibbon Vincent Sylliaasen Harold Priest Crawford Goodwin William Pigott Edgar Branchflower Ray Dalton Joe Rogers Robert Griffin in Syliiaasen ' - lurd Priest Rranchflower Gardner l)...;. ;;i i._.u McDermott Wilev Nordoff I ' ol.-un Dallon G. Smith Ycrkes Tolman Goodwin Hovey H. Markey Herrick Deutsrhe Englehart Davis .1. Jtarkev Fix C. Rogers McKibbon J. Rogers R. Smitli Griffin Wood Hogg Byrd 323 p BETA THETA PI Founded at Miami University, 1839 Beta Omega Chapter — Chartered 1901 FACULTY J. Allen Smith Joel M. Johanson GRADUATES Ralph R. Rawson 1916 C. Rollit Coe G. Howard MacCallum Melzar H. Gushing Ralph C. Dean Curtiss L. Hill Leonard R. Thompson Jerome T. Heermans Cyril E. Taylor Kramer Thomas 1917 Walter H. Covey Carl E. McClelland 1918 Erroll Rawson R. Wade Hargrave Wm. P. Gorsuch F. H. Young Clyde B. Rose Paul D. Clyde Edwin S. Booth Lament Cochran Hiram Chittenden Donald G. Godman W. Verran, Jr. Ben Fisher Edward P. Tremper 1919 Kingsley Barham Donald Heermans PLEDGES Lewis Ryan Paul Curtis Flower — Rose Colors — Blue and Pink Publication — Beta Theta Pi Wm. G. Pinney Karl Saboe Marcus Shanks Covey Trcm|ii Saboe Hargrave ' e raI Chittenden Barham Godnian Cochran Fislier Clvde Cushhig Thonipsc Booth Curtis D. Heermans Hill w Gordon Dickson Walter Williams Colin Clements H. Norman Hill Donald Brassier Miles Carey Ray Dumett Fred Austin Alfred Baker Ernest Barron Ollie Cordz Clarke Johnson Lemyit Knettle Fred Heath SIGMA CHI Founded at Miami University, 1855 Upsilon Upsilon Chapter — Chartered 1903 1916 Ralph Hoover Frank Lewis Roy Maryatt William Mountain John Siedenbaum 1917 Adolph Harr Owen Lovejoy Clarence Moore 1918 Donald Coleman Arthur Easterbrook 1919 Harry Lind Don Lewis Darwm Meisnest Kenneth Morford Victor Nelson Joseph Sowers Phil Weiss Harvey Lmne Fred Lind Lester Davis Cecil Dickson Ellsworth Lovejoy A. Ross MacKechnie Claude O ' Callaghan Paul Shuey William Tompkins John Saunders Flower — White Rose Colors — Blue and Gold Publication — Sigma Chi Quarterly m QQmm ®@f 0©O KAPPA SIGMA Founded at the University of Virginia, 1 867 Beta Psi Chapter — Chartered 1903 Ralph Lutz Charles M. Strong Albert A. Carson S. Marion Driver Joseph R. Blunt Franklin E. Chapman Garret A. Fraser Emil E. Hurja Leslie D. Carson Richard S. Mitchell Erroll C. Briggs Clarence B. Garrett Roland W. Burke Edgar R. Henninssen Frank G. De Kay- Robert S. Robe Harold C. Lutz FACULTY 1916 1917 1918 1919 PLEDGES Reno Odlii Albert H. David C. Hall John W. Miller Martin H. Easton W. J. A. Macdonald Elmer G. A. Startup Ross S. Wilson George W. O ' Brien Frank E. Landsburg Ernest C. Murphy George S. Pingry Alfred F. Hall Donald O. Dirks Hugh Lutz David L. Cleeland Charles N. Fletcher Dwyer C. McLean Charles H. Canfield Flower — Lilly of the Valley Colors — Scarlet, White and Emerald Publication — The Caduceus p Mac.iuiial.l Henningson Kaston Blunt Fraser Landsbur? De Kav Hurja O ' Brien Dirks A. Carson Hall H. Lntz Wilson Burke Chapman I ' in ' . ' ry Carson McLean Fletiher Briggs Bell Lutz Murphy Garrett Robe Driver Startup Mitchell Oillin 32 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 Gamma Pi Chapter — Chartered 1 906 1916 Bruce MacDougall Roy C. Fox Wade Stewart John Martin Carroll Ebriaht Harry Ayres Russell Horton 1917 Maurice Duffy Harold Gray Charles Mulvey Clarence Morrison Wilson Schiffer Walker Thorn Carl Harris Lowell Rooks Bryant MacDougall 1918 Raymond Gauss Cecil Gwinn Lawrence DeCan Winn Mowrey Lyle Johnson John Thompson Albert Stubb 1919 Gibson Spelger Clarence George Clarence Yedica Mac Nesbit Walter Funfson Joseph Riley Mark Haas Harry Kingsbury DeLance Price Flower — White Tea Rose Colors — Blue and Gold Publication — Alpha Tau Omega Palm Iir MacDougall Stubb ii Mowrey Thorn Spcleer Stewart Fox EbriEht Xcsbit Yedica Kingsbury ( Morrison Thompson MacDougall SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Founded at University of Alabama, 1 856 Washington Alpha — Chartered 1906 Frank G. Kane N. W. Sawyer FACULT - Walter Squire Everett O. Eastwood Claude Wallace 1916 Catlin Drummond Claire Sexsmith John E. Norton 1917 Sheldon Glover Rogers Hardie Conrad Brevick Henry A. Skog 1918 Sianley W. Staatz Stacy V. Jones Edward Bickel Jesmond Balmer Fred Barron John H. Gibson Chester V. Healy Earl Hoisinston Kenneth A. Roegner Edward L. Rosling Allan B. Rushmer Samuel A. Sterstrom 1919 Kirby E. Torrance James M. Thomas George P. Ward Ross E. Culver Jay M. Connell Duncan M. Smith Norman Bellingham Ansley Strom James F. Cameron Edward A. Lee Edmund Garvey Don J. Leehey Don W. Sinclair Clarence Browne Flower — Violet Colors — Old Gold and Royal Purple PubHcation — S. A. E. Record p Stenstrom Staatz Druninion I !,.. Hoisingtoii Glover Smith Leehey i.i1..m.ii i iilver Thomas Connell Rushmer Torrance SLXsmitli Ganey Barron Catlin Healey Roegner Sinclair Norton Bickel Strom Ward Jones Brevick Hardie Sko? Rosling p DELTA TAU DELTA Founded at Bethany College, 1 859 Gamma Mu Chapter — Chartered 1 908 Ray C. Cook Ned Curtis Edris FACULTY ' Edward Godfrey Cox 1916 Leon Ellis Frederick H. Cedric Miller Madi! Louis H. Seagrave E. Clark Will 1917 Athol Blair Gorrill Edwin W. Stuchell John Beardslee Carrigan Richard R. Luther Donald Rader Mark English Neal Weber 1918 Richard R. Robertson Rox Donaldson Harry Schweinbold 1919 Howard G. Stewart Kelley M. Reid Charles R. Fleishman Harold B. Shaffer Flower — Pansy Colors — Purple, White and Gold Publication — The Rainbow fa 0©@©€ ©09 I.mher Schwfinbol.lt Si ' au ' rave Enslish Milk-r Carrisian Cook Dnnaliisoii Shaffer Ma.iiitan Ellis Stuchi-U Reid Robertson Wel.er Eilris Will tlorrell Stewart Ka.ler jli DELTA CHI Founded at Cornell, 1891 Washington Chapter — Chartered 1 908 Stuart M. Norris Joseph E. Norton FACULTY ' Orville P. Cockerill 1916— LAW James A. Laughlin Ray R. Greenwood 1916— ARTS Ralph Malloy 1917— LAW Lewis B. Schwell Ward C. Kumm ibach 1918— LAW Donald G. Harper G. Abel Grimes Earl Nelson Randall S. Case John M. Wilson Alfred E. Rode William Corcoran Ernest Kershaw 1918— ARTS Harold Everest Marcus Abelset Russel E. Carothers Charles Harris 1919— ARTS Joseph Cheney Chester Leichhardt Frank B. Malloy Benjamin I. Robbins Ray L. Baker Clarence R. Peck John H. Neergaard Earl Smith Robert Abel Boyed Campbell Francis W. Perry Carl Driftmier Flower — White Carnation Colors — Red and Bufi Publication — Delta Chi Quarterly ' ® ©0 p QQQQ N iris Grimes Laushliii Schwellenibach Corcoran Kershaw Wilson (iieenwooil H. Al)el Carothers eeri. ' aar.l Campljell lioile Alu-lset Roljl i Smith Kverest D. Abel Kimim Peck DELTA UPSILON Founded at Williams College, 1834 Washington Chapter — Chartered 1910 Almon H. Fuller Walter Clyde Brokaw Frank Harrison Elmer Leader Edwin Leader Matthew Hill Marsh Corbitt Jack Davidson James Read William Wirt Raymond Beil Mark Shaw Louis Nederles Wallace Strong Sanford Wick FACULTY G. Beach H. E. Sn SENIORS Harold Moore Max Walske James McRay Raymond Hunt JUNIORS Clifford Wright Harry Wirt Kenneth Goodall Frank Ward E. E. McCammon Hollister Sprague Clark Squire Hubert Higgens Curtis Gilbert Robert Woodyard John Adams SOPHOMORES Stanley Riddle Benjamin Tidball Hugh McClung Wesley Roberts FRESHMEN Gerald Summersett Chester Wilson Burton Vheelon Flower — Violet Colors — Old Gold and Peacock Blue Publication — Delta Upsilon Quarterly Willis Corbitt Louis Stanton Sherman Bushnell Charles Reynolds Maurice Patten w Sprague A.lams Writ ' ht Summersett W. Wirt Gilbert M Corbitt Woodvard Wilson Davidson Ward Bushnell Riddle Beil W. Corbitt H. Wirt Goodall Tidball Higgins McHav Shaw Reynolds Squire McClung Stanton Walske Elmer Leader Ed Leader Moore Read Wick Hill Roberts Stienz Hunt Wli.i-lon Xeederlee Brokaw Harrison DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Founded Yale University, 1 844 Kappa Epsilon Chapter — Chartered 1911 Dean Prof. Prof. FRATRES A. S. Haggett Harvey Lantz F. M. Padelford IN FACULTATE Di Deming Bronson Harold P. Burdick Mark E. Smith Irving W. Thomas Lowell E. Williams Thomas Hemes William Deming John H. Happy Gayton Knight Wendall Black Ray Ryan Bruce S. MacDonald Frederick W. Keator, Jr Horace McCurdy Charles R. Collins, Jr. Paul Ellsworth 1916 1917 1918 1919 PLEDGES William S. Dehn John C. Heines Samuel P. Kelly Hans Christenson Arthur Newton Arthur Simon Alvin Powers Louis McCarthy Donald Spratley Charles L. Zimmerman Eugene Rudow Montie Coleman Malcom E. Moran Cyrus Campion Spencer Armstrong Richard Klussman Ross P. Williams Cla Cole Colors — Crimson, Blue and Gold Publication — D. K. E. Quarterly (? MillunaM l -. Thomas Coleman l)i-minix Klussiiian I,. Williani, N.utoii Happy MfCur.ly Keator Hyan Kelly Christenson Rudow EllswortU Simon Uronson Burdick K. Williams Powers Collins Black Smith Spratley Moran Armstrone; Heines Zimincrmau ACACIA Fraternity of Master Masons Washington Chapter — Chartered 1910 Thos. K. Sidey Hiram Conibear Joseph Daniels FACULTY ' Wm. M. Dehn George S. Wilson Jas. E. Bell SENIORS J. Clarence Palmer Ernest C. Carr Thomas P. Evans Cecil F. Blogg Clarence M. Coffinbery Arthur Y. Boyce William E. Hendricks Arthur E. Carlson Arthur Anderson Carl Andersen JUNIORS A. S. Grenland Clarence Anderson Robert E. Bale Harold Rodman SOPHOMORES William O. French George A. Jensen Arthur O. Luther FRESHMEN Dwight S. Benton Earl Gunther Flower — Acacia Colors — Black and Gold Publication — Acacia Journal ' Dallas D. Johnson Frederick E. Bolton Henry Suzzallo Stewart L. Simpson Ralph S. Wittenberg Charles F. Morris U. V. Webb F. O. Sundholm Armin C. Rembe Maurice Spaulding George O. Scott fS SpauMing French Bale Boyce Giinther Bioa:? Grenland Simpson Carlson Benton Anderson Rembe Jensen Carr Sundholm Evans Palmer Hendricks Cofflnberry p ALPHA SIGMA PHI Founded at ' ale, 1845 Mu Chapter — Chartered 1912 Paul V. Davis Woodworth Anderson Alex M. Vierhus Harold B. Scovell Leonard B. Martin Fred Havel F. Lynn Peterson Lewis C. Witherbee, Jr. SENIORS Roland A. G. Mayer John W. Keliiher JUNIORS Victor J. Moore IrMng W. Winslow William F. Jones SOPHOMORES Eugene Clark Davis Jessis H. R. Seliick Llovd X. Coder FRESHMEN W. Gordon Rogers J. Blaine Murray Albert Kalin Arthur A. Brandenthaler Claude G. Sanders Roland B. Johnston Philip G. Johnson Ronald F. Baker H. Sherman Mitchell John M. Coffee Chester T. O. Mueller Harold F. McCredy PLEDGES Don Burdick Jack E. Buchanan Flower — Red Rose Colors — Cardinal and Stone Publication — The Tomahawk John M. Murchison Bailey G. Dinkelspiel ■QifiaSBii JW iS ?: mmQ f Davis Murchison Jones .Mitrliell An.l.rsoii Murray McCre.ly Moore Dinkelspi, Martin Scovell Johnson Peterson Rogers ■erras Sanders Kelliher Johnston Ma er Coder Winslow Mueller Witherbee P. Davis Baker Sellick Burdick Havel John N. Wilson Harold A. Durfee Harold E. Potter Phil E. French Foster L. McGovern Walter E. Potter Ernest L. Johnson Harold J. Gotts Achilles P. Davis Charles V. Farrell THETA DELTA CHI Founded at Union College, 1847 Xi Deuteron Charge — Chartered 1913 SENIORS Frank G. Waterhouse Luther Sutherland JUNIORS E. Allen Johnston Walter Lee Kaufman SOPHOMORES Thomas O. Nash Myron V. Judd Thomas T. Thompson FRESHMEN Walter N. Richards Carl K. Nelson Guy W. Thompson Frank E. Preston Judson E. Falknor Frederick C. Fowler Kimball B. Palmer Robert W. Bender Edward F. Riley PLEDGES Joseph M. Allen Roy F. South Fremone L. South John W. Quigg Flower — Ruby Carnation Colors— Black, White and Blue Publication — The Shield 6i@P p Dulree Sutherland Waterhouse Thonipson Wilson Preston H. Potter Falknor Kautlnian Johnston French Johnson McGovern Xash T. Thompson Otis W Potter Bender Fowler Jml.l Palmer Gotts Riley Farrell Davis Richanls C. Wilson Quigg M. South South Allan n PI KAPPA ALPHA Founded at the University of Virginia, I 868 Beta Beta Chapter — Chartered. 1914 Ernest E. McKeen Herman Schollmeyer James T. Gillespie Carl E. Backstrand GRADUATE Marc Darrin FACULTY ' r. Luther E. Wear SENIORS JUNIORS George J. Cropper Philip J. Martin Thomas J. Allen R. Albert Osborne Charles C. Chambers George L. Falk Norman E. Rostedt SOPHOMORES Thoman H. Loan Conrad Jaconson John J. Goettge FRESHMEN James C. Reynolds C. Ward Kief PLEDGES Arthur Anderson Gail C. White Clarence C. Chambers J. Gordon Pritchard Percy G. Dobson Jeflery Hilton Walter H. Schlack Ernest L. McKav Daniel T. Oertel J. Albert McKeen Albert C. Anderson Vance R. Carpenter Georsre V. Wood Flower — Lily of the Valley Colors — Garnet and Old Rose Publication — The Shield and Diamond '  ' ' r i o@ee Reynolds Dobson Pritchard C. i 1 A. Anderson A McKeen White Schlack Kief C. Chambers JIartin Goettce Gillespie A. C. Anderson , Carpenter Backstrand E. McKeen Schollnieyer Ocrtel ' Cropiier McKay Hilton Loan Falk Osborne Allen m PHI KAPPA PSI Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 Washington Alpha — Chartered 1914 H. K. Rubev C. C. More ' Henry W. Zimmerman H. Lome Morrison Jack B. Swale William E. Durrant Charles A. Williams Phil L. Peterson Anson B. Moody Richard O. Havnes Jack W. Reynolds James Gilluly Frank Smart FACULl ' ' E. F. Burdick W. E. Henry 1916 George E. Mathieu Lewis C. Conner Robert Ellison 1917 Otto D. Anderson Temple S. Fay 1918 Arnold S. Allen William Roy McAdam William T. Nightingale 1919 Clarke Nicholson Edward Alonzo Swift Floyd A. Vammon Everett Turner Flower — Sweet Pea Colors — Lavender and Pink Publication — The Shield E. L. Strandberg Edmund G. Tyra Arthur M. Strandberg Roy E. Wood Conrad J. Oppermann Car Phi E. Ostrander L. Slayden Reed Sangster Guy Morg an D. Elwood McDonald 350 u mom ©030 mm Durrant Haynes Swift Oppernian Ellison Morgan McAdam Swale McDonald Morrison Anderson Nightingale Wood Reynolds Turner Conner Smart Fay Allen Peterson Mathieu Strandberg Slayden Ostrander Zimmernian Vammon Nicholson Gilluly Williams p THETA XI Founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1864 Upsilon Chapter — Chartered 1915 Robert Q. Brown S. A. Crandall S. I. Gleason V. Earl Bracken Clarie L. Egtvedt 1916 Henry B. Sternbeig Perry L. Charles W. Harrison Whi ' tier 1917 Harry H. Sisler Richard R. Tipton Harry L. Burmeister E. Lee Tucker Harold T. Dodge, ' H Herbert Jaqueth, ' 1 8 1918 PLEDGES J. Clinton McDougall narl R. Pikrim Felix R. Zaugg Roscoe N. Mcjannet Ward Catching Hilmer R. Esan Clarence Bell, ' 1 8 Walter F. Brown, ' 11 Burdett A. Winn, 19 Colors — Blue and White Publication — Theta Xi Quarterly PHI KAPPA Local Founded December 1 3, 1 909 ' ir ia] iiiji -•-y -:Aiii fc.i l . Russell Callow Frazer Cameron Ewart Upper Cletus Minahan 1916 Fred Porter Clarence Shivvers Phil Barrett Mathew W. O ' Connor Marcus Manson Thomas Cushman George Parker Wilbert Slemmons 1917 Paul McConihe Clarence Carlander Charles Walker Herbert Phillips Eber Angle Angus O ' Neil Thomas Dobbs Frank White Thomas Grant 1918 Clayton Bollinger Virgil Upton Melville Kilbourne Kenneth C. Campbe John Parker Carl Wallace Hugo Haakons John Allen 1919 PLEDGES Leroy Pratt John Sutthoff Paul Flagg Arthur Keyes Colors — Magenta, Red and White Carlander Uaakons ll.imlt Sutthoff Minalian l-. I ' .uk.T Walker Kilbourne I ' hillirs Bollinger Angle White O ' Neil Dolibs UiJper Cameron O ' Connor Callow Cuslimai THETA CHI Local Organized 1911 FACULTY Earl L. Packard S. C. Langdo GRADUATE STUDENTS Wesley Rennie Harry M. Nardin Carl Z. Draves Felix V. Embree Jess C. Johnson Benjamin H. Mayfield Bernard R. Bates Ralph E. DollofI Alfred Miller Harold Enger Hugh Young 1916 Jesse F. Leverich H. Florian Canfield Earl C. Hutchison 1917 H. Curtis Shoemaker Edwin E. Severns Reynold D. Jackson Roy F. Jones 1918 Howard Swigart Frank W. Bjorkman Thomas C. Talbot 1919 George Taylor G. Russel Rice PLEDGES Colors — Maroon and White Thomas G. Thompson W. Earl Shanly H. Earle Winter Alan A. Phillips Guy T. Stegner John A. Talbot Russel Peterson George S. Talbot Glen Wilson Byron Christian Sui-;iit ' rhni,ii,-..,n Dravcs ik ' ox Kinbrce MayticM Peterson Jackson CunticLI DoUofiE Rennie Shanly Stegner Christian J. Talbot Hutchinson Young Rice Johnson Taylor lijorkman Severns Shoemaker Jones Levorich riiillips Eng:er Miller 357 PI TAU UPSILON Local Founded 1914 ;f ' ri E ] Dr. Jacob N. Bowman FACULTY Dr. William Savery Donald R. Bresen Donald H. Clark Edgar M. Draper 1916 Martin Deggeller Robert C. Van Horn Howard W. Peters Edward P. Perry Russell B. Ring Ralph C. Robinson Harold B. Allen Ralph Brindleg Harry C. Donaldson 1917 Emmett J. Legg William R. Wilson Winfield S. Meyer Everett N. Peterson Hugh W. Pendergast Burton F. Scott George F. Beck John Bond Edward R. Beaman 1918 Ford K. Brown Anthony S. Corbiere Floyd R. Hamel Valentine Hoffman Robert C. Martin Wallace L. Maney Donald C. Wilson Carl W. Emmens Albert W. Hervin PLEDGES Elmer A. Johnson Manford Magnusen Henry H. Robertson Donaldson Beanian C. Wilson Maney Mairnusen Peterson Bond Perrv Corbiere Hervin Pemlersast W. Wilson Clark Martin Frolic Brown Broxon Meyer Deseeler Hoffman Eniniens Hantel Robertson Allen Brindley Draper Peters Legg Johnson Scott Beck Van Horn Ring ORDER OF BETH QOPH. (Episcopal) Vanderveer Curtis Carl F. Gould FACULl ! Frederick M. Padelford R. M. Garrett Thomas Withers Herbert H. Gowen George S. Wilson POST-GRADUATE Lloyd P. Joubert A. Wendell Brackett Horace L. Cook Edward J. Condlon 1917 C. Bertis Neely Edward R. Powell Colin C. Clements Jay M. Connell Thomas W. Sherman Lester A. Davis Matthew O ' Conror Harry G. Post Frederick C. Austm Llewellyn I. Graham Harold B. Guernsey William Hardy 1918 Raymond L. Ryan Donald J. Colemai 1919 Albert H. Roos T. Schoiield Handforth Stanley L. Handforth Donald Spratley James McKim D. Anneslev Somerville W. H. Gerrard Rhodes Gustafson PLEDGES Eugene L. Van Houghten Walter Giles Fred Barrett Ray Hay Gayton L. Knight McKiiii colciiwiii Spratley Con.lloa Clements Powell Davis Knislit Van Houghten (ierrani Somi-rville Graham Giles Barrett C ' oiinell llvan Guernsey Brackctt Roos ShcTuian Tost ' Gustafson Han.lforth DIRECTORY OF FRATERNITIES Acacia Kenwood Alpha Sigma Phi Kenwood Alpha Tau Omega Kenwood Beta Theta Pi Kenwood Beth Qoph Kenwood Delta Chi Kenwood Delta Kappa Epsiion Kenwood Delta Tau Delta Kenwood Delta Upsilon Kenwood Kappa Sigma Kenwood Phi Delta Theta Kenwood Phi Gamma Delta Kenwood Phi Kappa Kenwood Phi Kappa Psi Kenwood Pi Kappa Alpha Kenwood Pi Tau Upsilon Kenwood Sigma Alpha Epsiion Kenwood Sigma Chi Kenwood Sigma Nu Kenwood Theta Chi Kenwood Theta Delta Chi Kenwood Theta Xi Kenwood 967 4760 983 1905 992 1605 955 4530 2804 5015 119 4704 2600 4520 500 4522 647 4504 618 5235 1176 2120 236 4503 2827 4532 598 4554 187 4550 2193 5625 291 4506 333 4505 149 4325 963 5212 784 4703 1578 5022 21st Av. N. E. E. 45th St. E. 47th St. 14th Av. N. E. University Blvd. 18th Av. N. E. 21st Av. N. E. 18th Av. N. E. 16th Av. N. E. University Blvd. E. 47th St. University Blvd. 18th Av. N. E. 16th Av. N. E. 18th Av. N. E. 15th Av. N. E. University Blvd. 18th Av. N. E. 15th Av. N. E. 18th Av. N. E. 18th Av. N. E. University Blvd. THE INDEPENDENT UNION Organized 1 13 Chartered under National Association of Commons Clubs 1915 Names of Clubs: ALAMO VILLA CAMBRIDGE KAPHO PIONEERS CAPITOL HILL MYLROIE THE INDEPENDENT UNION OFFICERS William P. Totten, President Spencer Gray, Secretary Curtis Aller, Vice President Charles C. Kelton, Treasurer EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS George Beardsley Oddie L. Lemley F. Cranston Young Luther Elmore Paul Hodge Harry F. Heath Walter Hodge J. F. Younastrom J. Vernon Sullivan Alvin E. Dyer Ralph B. Weaver Carl W. Pyle Carl Young Joseph McMurtry George A. Carmichael James R. Wallin THE INDEPENDENT UNION OF COMMON CLUBS fe l HE Independent Union of Commons Clubs is the result of a four-year struggle by the non-fraternity men to set together for their welfare on the campus. Known first as The Washingtonians , the independent men changed their community name in 1915 to The Independent Union and became a member of the National Federation of Commons Clubs. Prior to 1915 the Independents met on the campus en masse and were impeded by the diversity of residence of the town members. An organization committee headed by Bill Totten formulated a plan to bring the Inde- pendents together with a iew of creatmg a closer feeling of fellowship, democracy and a spirit of help and boost your brother. The movement was readily accepted by most Independents, notwithstandmg that many waited to see it work first. It is plain to most students that the interests of all unaffiliated men are the same, and it is hoped that those Independent houses which were reluctant to join in the movement will take charters from the central union. This is espe- cially desirable since affiliating with the National Federation of Commons Clubs a very powerful and extensive association of Wesleyian origin. There are few and small burdens imposed. The advantages are equal to those of any national fraternity. The results of the year ' s work shows a tenfold increase in the athletic interests on the part of the club members. Harry Heath organized basket ball, baseball and tennis teams in all of the clubs. They carried on a successful schedule of athletic contests. The social program of the year contained some of the most successful affairs of the two semesters. The first event was the cabaret smoker in October, which 500 men enjoyed. A lively mixer was staged Hallowe en rijht in the gym, where dancing, vaude- ville acts and moving pictures were featured on the program. In December another suc- cessful mixer was on the social calendar which followed several political and business meetings whose purpose was to interest the members in student activities. On February 1 2 an enjoyable entertainment was given at Alamo Villa, the new headquarters. On Feb- ruary I 8 the Independent Union gave the all-uni versity informal dance. Another informal was given jointly with the Kla-How-Yahs on April 14. The biggest and most successful all-university social function of the year was the Michigan Glee Club concert and informal which was managed by the Independent Union. It was well supported by the fraternity men as well as by the barbs. These social and athletic successes have given much pleasure to the members of the Independent Union who have grown closer to each other, and who have created a spirit of greater democracy that stands for the University of Washington first. K. D. G. Tottfii Lemlcv Weaver Carmichail Sullivan l Ho.lfre McMurety Wallin W. Ho.Ikc lliath F. C. Yoiiii? Pylc C. Yo THE INDEPENDENT UNION ALAMO VILLA Curtis C. AUer Claude Hallam Roy Muncaster 1916 John H. Schopper Carl L. Young James R. Wallin Alvin E. Dyer Carl H. Hendricks 1917 J. Lewis Crozier Frank W. Peterson Lester B. CowgiU David Hurwitch Hays Jones Charles C. Keltor 1918 Everett Searle Fred C. Shantz Albert W. Speyers Kenneth G. Whvte George Biener Perr ' W. Blackler Frank C. Dunn C. Carlston Glasscock 1919 Timothy Healy Edwin R. Rinker Wellington Rupp Samuel H. Woody 1 Wallin Kianson Dunn Rupp CowKill Aller Hiirwitcli 367 KAHPHO COMMONS A Commons Club Organized Dec. 9, 1915. Kahpho, from the Indian, Signifyii Elder Brother , Embodies the Organization ' s Ideals of Fellowship and Co-operation GRADUATE Curtis W. Thing Harry F. Heath 1916 William P. Totten LeRoy W. Brooks Walter Roth 1917 Jesse R. Himmelsbach Fred T. Downing Paul M. Higgs J. Vernon Sullivan Ward Heacock 1918 George F. Meyer Ferris Eldridge Maynard O. White Iver W. Carlson Oddie L. Lemley George J. Sielk 1919 J. Lee Cooper Dwight T. Lopp Frank W. McClure 368 Mi( lur.- (Voper Liipi Totten Brooks Sielk Leniley Heath Hfacock Myers Sulliian Carlson CAMBRIDGE COMMONS MEMBERSHIP GRADUATE George A. Hipkoe 1916 James R. Wallin Frederick L. Pedersen Leo A. DeMerchant 1917 Harold M. Dakin Ewan Clague I. A. Aalto Arthur J. King 1918 Luther Elmore Lester B. Cowgill Wellington Rupp Lester B. Pickering George Beardsley 1919 Russell Louden Clarence F. Evanson George A. Cuddy J. Lea Peterson Albert L. Puddicome p J ?W5 F«??3liW Dyer DeMerchaiit King Girard Peterson 371 MILROY COMMONS 1916 Carl W. Pyle 1917 F. Cranston Young Warren Gilbert Roy Nelles 1918 J. H. Lange Paul A. Woolfolk Edgar E. Smith Walter W. Johnson 1919 Eric Bittner Fred Rohwer Ralph Dreitzler Harry Mosier o w KLA-HOW-YAH Kla-how-yah, the Indian word for Greeting, has welcomed many a woman on the campus this year. Many of those who wjnild otherwise have found no friendly lie to hold them to the University and to the campus as something more than a place where education is procured from books and professors, have come into the organization and have become actively interested in Washington as their beloved ideal. Kla-how-yah was organized in 1913 as a result of a long-felt need among the non-sorority women for an independent organization, which would give better opportunities for personal acquaintance with one another and supply that social phase which every university woman should enjoy. The purpose of the organization is four-fold : to support the highest ideal of democracy; to support every good thing in college no matter where it origmates; to support and foster student activity and endeavor to be neither butterflies nor grinds. The fireside mixers, which have been held twice a month by the members of the organization, have been most delightful this year and have enabled many women to become interested in the affairs of the University. A true feeling of sisterhood and friendship marks ihese informal evening meetings. The women gather around the big fireplace in the Women ' s League building and eat their lunches while friendships become cemented with love and cooperation that can come only from intimate acquaintance. The two informals, one of which was given each semester, have been the biggest social features of the club. The good times enjoyed by those who attended these functions will long remain as bright spots in the college year. The annual picnic given in the spring by the Kla-how-yahs is a time when the women forget the coming crisis of examinations and turn to the woods and lake, where nature in reslfulness and quietude comes to be appreciated. OFFICERS Second Semester President Esther Proctor Vice President Vera Waite Ruth Henry Secretary Vera Clement Sophia McPhee Treasurer Mildred Melkild First Semester Alice Miller. . Goldie Bryan . EXECUTIVE BOARD Ruth Merling Senior Representative Sophia McPhee Helen Winsor Junior Representative Pearl Ward Mildred Larson Sophomore Representative Esther Simonds Clara Crogstad Freshmen Representative Ebba Dahlin Ethel Gies Daily Reporter Esther Coleman May Ward, Alumni Member Dr. Theresa McMahon, Honorary Member Esther Proctor Sophia MePhce Vera AVaite Mililrcd MelkiM Alice Miller Vera Clement 375 m CLARKE HALL Ellen Alben Nellie Alben Frances Bowie Mary Eaton Mildred Brown Evelyn Culver Lydia Jamieson Lois Flint Grace McKinney Frances Mullis Frances Fisk Leona Sundquist Anna Lynch Erma Cole Florence Wharton Bernice Oliphant Ruth Curti Myrtle Fisher Leda Culver Hazel Maeowan Wilhemetta Miller Elizabeth Farquhar Comfort Whitmore 1916 1917 1918 1919 Elizabeth Scudder Dorothy Darrin Marie Lindstrom Georgia Donnell Hannah Bonell Gladys Lauthers Agnes Arthur Mary Gleason Gertrude Harshman Thelma Shannon Aura Bonell Esther Short Jessie Howes Dorothy Baker Leila Boyce Margaret Brown Gladys Dulgar Margaret McLean Clara Moberg Louise Cutts SPECIAL Adeline Dana if l.amhirs Brown Maker Eaton t ' ole Mcsowan Wharton [■:. Alln-ii MiiIIk . Allien Short K. Ciilve l.inilstrom Miller .Shannon A. Ronell Harshnian Howie 379 ) LEWIS HALL ' Hi ' - - fli nTli i H . ! ; ES B 1511 131 81113 33 J iiiiiUiii GRADUATE Vincent W. Evans 1916 George D. Dill Roger W. Ryan Donald G. McLeod Walter W. Tuttle Joseph P. McMurtrey Noble W. White Edward P. Perry 1917 Arthur S. Beardsley Walter E. Lawson Winfield G. Boyd Everett N. Peterson Spencer Gray Frank Peterson Oliver LaChapelle 1918 George F. Beck Frank F. Whitney Robert L. Dykeman William M. Eraser Elmer H. Maxey A. Martin Larson 1919 Alfred Briem Arthur Ness Leonard S. Langlow Charles E. Porter Eugene Link Morris Sigel Joseph E. Kreigler Louis V. Stevenson 380 White Dill liovil I i.i- i Beanlsk-y F. I ' ettrson Btck Whitney Dykeman Ryan Maxey Tuttle N - Kriegler Lawson Langlow Sigel Peterson McLeoil Gray Stevenson McMurtrey Perry Larson Rriem La Chapelle jM HYLAND HALL GRADUATE Frances Farnham 1916 Mariette Worthinston Alice Nigh Mabel Meyer 1917 Margaret Schumacher Mary Arney Pauline Giudici 1918 Elsie Chandler Alice Scovill Luia Keller Josephine Gray Violet Thompson Elsie Hill 1919 Ruphell DollofI Ruth Babb Margaret Jenkins Eleanor Leslie 382 pr 383 BOULEVARD HALL Organized 1914 GRADUATE G. F. Richardson, Jr 1916 Arthur Kolstad 1917 Don C. Harmon Frank E. Keilner Oscar W. Rosenquist Herbert Bachrach Walter T. Brewer Holt Guerin Corwin P. Rummel Walter A. Kleist Ronald J. Kegley Mortimer A. Whitman 1918 1919 M. Dixon Calder Emerson Fisher Ralph E. Johnson Harold J. Pinkerton Oscar A. Glaeser John Murchison Stephen K. Smith Bernard Slaugenhaupt Arthur K. Roberts .J .Iol:ii (..ii Roberts Smith liiiliiinls, KoKley iliuupt Brewe Glaes Kellner HaniKii Murciii Whitman Kleist •f ? GENERAL ORGANIZATIONS c BOARD OF CONTROL The Governing Body of the Associated Students of the University of Washington President, Russell Callovv ' Vice President, Harold Foran Secretary, E ' helyn Shnley FACULTY MEMBEFIS Prof. David Thomson Prof. William Gorsuch Dean Milnor Roberts ALUMNI MEMBERS Tom Alderson Celia Shelton Russell Mackey GRADUATE REPRESENTATIVE Wesley Rennie SENIOR REPRESENTATIVES Fred Lind Ward Kumm JUNIOR REPRESENTATIVES Marjorie White Walter Tuesley SOPHOMORE REPRESENTATIVE Ray Gardner ? 389 w K WOMEN ' S LEAGUE Founded March 4, 1907 HIS organization, of which all women in college are considered members, exists for the purpose of creating and promoting good fellowship among, and furthering the interests of, the women of the University. The State Federation of Women ' s Clubs, of which it is a member, gave to the women the Women ' s League Building, in which are held regular meetings, mixers and receptions. The activities include the Women ' s Informals, County Fair, Campus Day Lunch, and regulation of Point System for women participating in college activities. This year special work has been done in the raising and administering a scholarship for freshmen, which shall be known as the Isabella Austin Memorial Scholarship. OFFICERS President, Gertrude Rose Vice President, Winifred Coe Secretary, Margaret Wayland Treasurer, Vera Waite EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Chairman, May Ward Senior Representative, Mary Walsh Junior Representative, Margaret Schumacker Sophomore Representative, Cornelia Powell Freshman Representative, Josephine Tucker fS Y. W. C. A. CABINET OFFICERS Hazel Jones, President Eunice Spencer, Vice President Gladys Easterbrook, Secretary Susie Paige, Treasurer COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Grace McDonald Visitation Catherine Burnside, Association News Helen Hanson, Meetings Dorothy Myers, Finance Marjorie White, Daily Reporter Helen Anderson, Mission Anna Baker, Social Dorothea Taylor, Conference Dorothy Wade, Social Service Carolyn Bash, Bible Study Ruth Pepper, Annual Membership Amy Omsted, Eight Weeks Club ADVISORY BOARD Mrs. A. H. Fuller, President Miss Effie Raitt, Vice President Mrs. Wilfred Lewis, Secretary Mrs. Victor Smith, Treasurer Mrs. Samuel Wingate Mrs. Henry Landes Mrs. A. S. Haggett Mrs. W. B. Lovejoy Mrs. A. O. Powell Dean Ethel Coldwell Mrs. Herbert T. Condon Mrs. Harry Smi ' h Mrs. J. M. Eagleson Mrs. F. J. Fassett Mrs. C. A. Bemis Mrs. J. Arthur Younger Miss Ethel Scribner, a graduate of the Y. W. C. A. Training School in New York, came to the campus organization last fall and took upon herself the direction of the work of the University women. Under Miss Scribner the association progressed both financially and in the number of new members. The purpose of the Y. W. C. A. Association is to make a better Christian of every student who bears the name, to make the Christian life comprehensible and compellingly attractive to those who have not yet found their way into it, and to make the community life of the University truly Christian. •■J YOUNG MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION President, F. A. Lind First Vice President, Floyd Ellis Second Vice President, Harry Donaldson Secretary, Randall Case Treasurer, Darwin Meisnest Deputation — E. W. Campbell Industrial — E. M. Shelton, Jr. Boys ' Work — Earl Hoisington Service — Allan Phillips Bible Study — F. P. Lardau Meetings — R. O. Haynes World Problems— F. P. Wisner Employment — O. D. Anderson Publicity — Colin Clements Socials — Alfred Baker Church Relations — Harold Moritz Membership — Crawford Goodwin Finance — Walter L. Doty m Donaldson Clements Slielton Goo dwin IMiillips r.ind Doty WASHINGTON LAW ASSOCIATION Ray Greenwood, President Edward Franklin, Vice President Grace MacDonald, Secretary and Treasurer The Law Association is composed of all students enrolled in the School of Law. It aims to promote friendship among its members and bring them in closer touch with the legal profession. Addresses by prominent jurists and attorneys are scheduled at regular intervals. The principal activity of the Law Association is the staging of the annual law school smoker. This year ' s smoker was held March 25th in the Men ' s Building and was a decided success. The committee in charge consisted of Albert Carson, chairman ; Matthew Hill and Charles Moriarity. 397 ■ ipi FOREST CLUB OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON HE Forest Club of the University of Washington was founded in 1909 for the purpose of promoting fellowship among the students of forestry and to bring before the undergraduates some of the men most prominent in forestry and related indus- tries. The present membership includes all of the faculty and the students regularly enrolled in the College of Forestry. OFFICERS FOR 1915-16 Donald H. Clark, President Harold A. Durfee, Vice President Willis G. Corbitt, Secretary-Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE James F. Hutton, Chairman Arthur Bevan James D. Studley PUBLICITY BOARD Harold A. Brownmg, Editor-m-Chief Arthur Bevan, Associate Editor, Forest Club Annual Donald Studley, Associate Editor, West Coast Lumberman Page Fred Madigan, Associate Editor, Newspaper Publicity Willis Corbitt, Assistant Editor Timon Torkelson, Assistant Editor Charles Brady, Assistant Editor Victor Powers, Assistant Editor MEMBERS OF THE FOREST CLUB 1915-16 Albert C. Anderson Jesmond D. Balmer Phillip E. Barrett Arthur Bevan Joe Blunt Robert W. Boughter Clifford Bozorth Alfred Brien Ralph Brindley Charles C. Brady Harold A. Browning Donald R. Broxon Roland P. Burnham James F. Cameron Alex Charleson W. E. Colton Donald H. Clark Elias T. Clark Lamont Cochran Willis G. Corbitt Ross E. Culver Amaury A. de Turrene Ralph F. Dreitzler Harold A. Durfee William D. Durland F. E. Eldridge Vincent Evans Ralph B. Faulkner Harold G. Fish Harold G. Foran Clarence B. Garrett James T. Gillespie Dewey E. Oilman Bror L. Grondal C. W. Harris David G. Hartsuck Roland Huff James F. Hutton William H. Jacobson William Jager William K. Keller Robert F. King Burt P. Kirkland George J. Landess Arthur Larson Harry W. Lind Fred H. Madigan Ed H. McDougall C. B. McFarland Alan K. Moody Charles W. Mortimer M. Mower Roy Muncaster Alf Oass George W. O ' Brien Victor S. Powers Erwin H. Rengstorff Arthur K. Roberts Wesley K. Roberts Sidney Robison Karl Schmaelzle Henry Schmitz Henry P. Seymour B. I. Shannon Howard S. Smith Louis G. Stanton J. Donald Studley Fred Sundholm James Thomas Timon J. Torkelson J. Morgan Van Wickle Joshua F. Westerberg Hugo Winkenwerder William H. Wirt Clifford A. Wright J. Arthur Young f PHARMACY CLUB GRADUATES Forest J. Goodrich Earl M. Piatt Wm. Maske 1916 James C. Palmer May Ottesen Hugh Sewell 1917 Ruth Carroll Harry Norman James D. Fields Everett N. Peterson Jeffery Hilton Henry L. Kath Omega Hilton T. W. Smith Claude V. Hope 1918 Floyd Beck John J. Larson Loddie Biggs Jesse F. Leverich Chas. W. Beaver Thos. H. Loan Arthur Boyce Marcus Manson Walter Brewer Carl Ostrander Cecile Ferry Henry Ostrander Raymond Gauss George Pingry John E. Goettge Merrill O. Rawson Earle C. Hutchison Walter Schlack Eugene Johnson Raymond Moffat Carl E. Harris 1919 Harry W. Ayers Marjorie Kenney Yasukichi Chiba Andrew Marcus Chas. Coflman Charlotte McHugh J. E. Collins Albert McKeen Chas. Fletcher Verne Lee Gertrude Pusey Fred J. Stuteross Earle J. Gunther J. R. McGregor Edwm F. Hammerlund George L. Sears George Heyes Anthony Sells Margaret D. Henry Gertrude E. Smith William E. Hendricks Albert Van Cott Albert M. Nash C. Whitmore Robert Shapiro Oliver Devenport E. W. Hawn Ernest Johnson S. Hultgren 401 VARSITY BOAT CLUB ACTIVE MEMBERS OFFICERS Presider t, Fred Lind V ice Presid ent. Max Walsk e Secretary, Roger Hardie Commodore, Paul M. McConihe 1 MEMBERS Russell Callow H. C. Hughes Claude Cathn Adolph B. Harr Prof. Densmore Rogers Hardie Prof. Johanson Claire Kinney Ed Leader James Hutton Prof. Padelford Paul McConihe Elmer Leader Charles Newton Max Walske Arthur Simon Clark Will Irving Thomas Henry Zimmerman Arthur Brandenthaler Clyde Brokaw Erroll Briggs J. B. Alexander Charles Fleishman Tom Cushman Carey Whitney Carroll Ebright Raymond Beil Harold Fowler Roy McAdam Ward Kumm Wilbert Slemmons Fred Lind Charles Walker Cletus Minahan Claude Snider Clyde Rose Jack Swale Clarence Anderson Almon Bogardus Cecil Blogg Carl Wilson Kenneth Goodall Hugh Lutz p €i6€0 iODO Will Hrigss Hlosta Catlin Han- Kiimm Lind Kliriirht l.ntz Callow MinahaTi Ziiiini,.rniaii Wilson Simmons McA.lanis Walker lluiAlM- aisiM- «.ih- IS Lpton (iooilall Anflerson Leader Thomas Covey Cushnian Beil Harily Leader Brokaw Wilson Fowler Butler THE UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE Percy Dearie, Manager David Thomson, Chairman Finance Committee Smith, Robertson and Moorehouse, Accountants HE University Book Store, owned and controlled by the A. S. U. W., is now the sixth largest store of its kind in the United States. During the last ten years the book store has more than kept up with the phenomenal growth of the Uni- versity, its sales mounting from $4,000 to approximately $60,000 in that time. It has already outgrown its quarters three times and is now getting too large for its present accommodations. Plans are already afoot to obtain larger quarters in the near future, and this time it expects to be housed permanently in a wring of the A. S. U. W. building, between the two quadrangles called for in the new campus plans. The University Book Store is run on a strictly co-operative basis, the students getting a discount on all goods at the time of purchase and not as a premium at the end of the year. The discount given ranges from ten per cent on new books to twenty-five per cent on some athletic supplies. The store sells only to students and only such goods as are of a University nature. Class books, new and second-hand; note books and all kinds of note paper; pencils, fountain pens, ink, and other articles of stationery; laboratory sup- plies; engineering supplies; art supplies; athletic goods, such as shoes, gym suits and tennis goods; pennants and pillows; University jewelry; memory books; University views in books and on post cards; University stationery, and other miscellaneous articles demanded by the varied instruction given by the University. The University Book Store is under the direct charge of a manager, Percy Dearie being the present incumbent, having held that position for the last twelve years. It is under the general supervision of the A. S. U. W. Board of Control, and more specifically under that of the finance committee of that board, of which Professor David Thomson is chairman. All matters of general policy are decided by the board. Through its finance committee it keeps a close tab on all the book store transactions. The detail work is left to the manager. Naturally, the book store at its inception had to start out with an indebtedness. This has all been paid, and now the store has a balance in the bank each spring, enough so that it has to borrow very little money to stock up for the big fall opening of school. Under a ruling of the Board of Control the book store is not allowed to make a profit on its sales, but five per cent is set aside for growth and depreciation. Under this system the store has been enabled by the growth of its sales to give greater discounts each year. Ten years ago it had to sell all goods at list price, while now it can give the discounts quoted above. If the sales keep on increasing the students will be able to save even more on their supplies because they own and operate their own store. 3 TYES TYON Ray Gardner Crawford Goodwin Ralph Smith John Gibson Ed Bickle Chester Healy Ross McKechnie SOPHOMORE SOCIETY Organized 1906 Malcolm Reed Kenneth Startup George O ' Brien Al Hall Wade Hargraves Enol Rawson Karl Saboe Mark Shaw Eugene McClung Ray Bail John Larsen Alfred Whealdon Fulton Magill ir MONTANA CLUB OFFICERS Colin C. Clements, Chairman 1 Mary Gleeson, Vice Chairman 1 Jay Connell, Treasurer Irene Haskell, Secretary MEMBERS Emmett Carroll Frances Laney Grace McDonald Martha Knapp Anne Williams Martha Taylor Esther Walsworth Stella Bateman Mary Delia Wright Anna Lynch Lucile Hindman Wmfred Larnson Clara Louise Wood Joseph McMeurtrey Hazel Myers Edward Conroy Maude Calkins Melvin F. Boice Herbert Jaqueth Mrs. Susan M. Keppell Goodman Mottleson Ollie Cordz Agnes Widitz Miittli ' soii TavlDr Haskell .7. CoiiiK ' ll C. Clements UillKnii 1,1 rich Mrs. Kri.pi-l Walsworth .lae.|ii lliii.lniaii Calkins (lleason Cuiinell Wi.litz WriRlit Mvers Mc.Meurtrev UKULELE CLUB v HE Ukulele Club was organized in the fall of 1915 and is therefore the youngest musical organization upon the campus. It was founded with the intention of furthermg the interest in Hawaiian music and of furnishing musical numbers for all college gatherings. The enthusiasm which was felt for the undertaking was evinced by the fact that seventy-live students attended the meeting called for the purpose of organization and fifty members were finally admitted by the tryout committee. During the year the club has appeared at meetings of nearly every organization at Washington, until the demand for quartets and double quartets grew too large to be fully taken care of. However, every effort has been made to comply with requests for entertainment and an average of two appearances a week has been maintained, sometimes arrangements being made to play at two functions on the same evening. The climax of the year ' s work came with the presentation of the first student light opera, The Winning of Hawaii, for which the club furnished the musical features. Twenty-five members of the Ukulele Club appeared in the production in conjunction with the members of Masque and Quill, which provided the dramatic talent. Ukuleles — John Parker Dorothy Deerweister Harold Potter Dorothy Case Helen Donley Charles Grinnell Lucy Gallup Franklin Chapman Walter Kauffman Harriet Smith Frederick Keator Don Spratley Irene Atkinson Ava Cochran Edith Brawley Genevieve Schuerer Walter Covey Olive Moore Ruth Sharp Ralph Falknor Victoria McLean Ruth Frye Francis Titus Lienor Crawford Amy Michaelson Beatrice Mathieu Shirley Skewis Virgil Upton Dorothy Elliot Kieth Goodman Grace Crawford Mable Church William Beymer Steel Guitars — Rollit Coe Paul Stebbins Albert Spiers Amalia Carkeek Spanish Guitars — Edward Beaman Bruce MacDougall Russell Crawford Gayton Knight Mandolins — Robert Nichols Francis Fiske Madeline Woodworth Norman Bellingham Roland Burnham Stanley Handforth Francis Mullis Walter Hodge p Bra vk Mil Kauffnian Skcwis Ho.Ikc ii i.i 1 Holliiii- ' liam Falknor (• ryi- K,;ii.ir Matiiit ' U Cocliran Michener Gniiiiell Parker fiallup Mullis Coe Sharp rptoii Dcerweister Spratlev Donley Elliott McLean ' Kni lit AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ENGINEERS University of Washington Branch E. Clarence Miller, Chairman George S. Smith, Secretary ELECTRICAL Professor C. E. Magnusson Professor F. K. Kirsten ASSOLIAIE MEMBERS E. C. Carr Instructor L. F. Curtis Professor E. A. Loew H. W. McRobbie H. M. Barden R. Q. Brown S. R. Burbank H. F. Canfield A. A. Edison R. S. Gillette A. S. Grenland H. M. Gustafson Claude Hallan C. L. Hill J. R. Himmelsbach Adolph Huelsdonk Stanley Hunter G. L. Hoard STUDENT MEMBERS Albert Kalin C. H. Kallander R. E. Leith J. C. McDougall E. E. McKeen E. C. Miller E. F. Morns A. J. Motz G. K. Nakasawa R. H. Nelles W. J. Olson C. W. Pyle C. W. Peterson L. B. Robinson W. S. Roth F. M. Ryan W. E. Shanly Helen Simpson G. S. Smith J. R. Tolmie W. W. Tuttle G. J. Vandenberg F. T. Yamada M. Yoshioka Carl ' oung F. C. ' oung p SOURDOUGH CLUB Organized 1913 Composed of Students from Alaska or Yukon Territory who have lived there one year, thus acquiring the title Sourdough OFFICERS Charles Kelton, Sourdough Chief George Herring, Sourdough Vice Chief Hilda Johnson, Sourdough Totem Carver Grace McKinney, Sourdough Keeper of the Cache Viola Kelton, Sourdough Musher Clarence Anderson Gudrun Andersen T. L. Delkin C. B. Garrett George Hermg Emil E. Hurja Hilda Johnson Viola Kelton Charles Kelton MEMBERS Josephine La Violette MeKin La Violette Dwight Lopp Roland Mayer Grace McKinney Mary Otteson Ralph M. Pedersen Fred L. Pedersen Fred S. Porter George Pucher Clyde Rose Jerome Simson Hester Dickey Willard Herron Elizabeth Hartle Frank Landsburg Lillian Simson MASK AND QUILL Dramatic and Musical Society HONORARY ' MEMBERS Dr. Frederick M. Padelford Mr. W. Whittlesey Mr. Joel Harrison MEMBERS Wesley Rennie Florence Bergh 1 George Hipkoe Arlh ur Simon 1 Genevieve Thompson Rolli t Coe 1 Colin Clements Paul Stebbins | Eilene French Fritz Keator 1 Enola Mclntyre Herschel Silverstone 1 Tom Heines Jack Kelliher Elizabeth Schumaker Hare Id Gieser Mary Swearingen Gore on Dickson Man,- Wright Ray Dumett Donald Wilson John Happy Harold Allen Soph la McPhee Fred Delkin m M.Iiil.iir ll.-r- l. IlrlK.i, lUlinie Fn-mli KiIHIk r Kelly Silverstone Simon Happy Dickson Sclniniakt ' r Coe AVilso p GRAYS HARBOR CLUB MEMBERS Don Abel Robert Abel Lena Abel Arthur Anderson Cyria Allen Ralph Johnson Mary Johnston Elmer Peterson Helena Elway William Moulton Leslie French Clarence Garrison Ted Faulk Ysabel Fatten Lou Condron Percy Sparks Guy Morgan Elizabeth Morgan Roy Wood Rhea Rupert Zura Karshner Walter Breuer Mildred Nelson Horace Cook Marie O ' Hare Rosahne Brachvogel Neva Bell Clara Bryan Reynold Jackson Joel Pryde Ray Baker Jozef Zelasko Floyd Vammen John Murchison Joe Cheney Genevieve Van Winkle Russell Callow Margaret Wilson Helen Wilson Charles Willian-s Florence Hooke Llewellyn Graham Ralph Faulkner Dixon Calder Eunice Semmen Ralph Hoover John Langenbach OREGON CLUB Composed of University of Washington Students from the State of Oregon 1 OFFICERS James W. Read, President Fulton Magill, Vice Presiden t Rose Elwood, Secretary Frank Lewis, Treasurer MEMBERS Elta Aikins Mary Gyllenburg Amy Olmsted John Allen George Hallmg Susie Paige Albert C. Anderson Floyd Hamel William Pinney Arthur W. Anderson Adolph Harr Lulu Hakestraw Ruth Babb Phil Henderson James Read Carl Backstrand Hilda Hendrickson Malcolm Reed Dorothy Baker Helen Herner Rachael Reed Anna Beat Sol Herzog John Richards Albert H. Bell Edna Hindman Emily Rupert Elva Best Ruth Hoerr Herman Schoolmeyer Elizabeth Boyd Norma Holman Henry Sellick Anna Brakel Katherine Honey Doris Smith Raymond J. Buckley F loyd Hopper Harold Sproul Vera Cason Jessie Howes Portia Steel He Quong Chan James Hutton Louis Stevenson Donald H. Clark Dea Imel Wallace Streng Joseph Colesworthy Margaret Jackson Fredrick Strong Mildred Copeland Alice Johnson Vera Stubblefield Louise Corbin Josephine Lane Zella Thompson Samuel Craig Fred Laudan Walker Thorn Paul W. Davis Edwin Leader Richard Tipton Rae Dellar Elmer Leader Frances Titus Elva J. Derr Frank Lewis Timon Torkelson Carl Dillinger Helen McFaul James Toy Fred Downmg Frances MacKenzie Clyde Tucker Edgar Draper Fulton Magill Harold Turnure Marion Driver Rd?ar Mitchner George Ward Rose Elwood Marie Mitchner Lola Warnock Myrtle Fisher Sherman Mitchell Frank Waterhouse Charles Fleischman Elizabeth Moore Alfred Whealdon Inez Gardinier Victor Moore Ralph Wittenberg Esther Gearhart Lester Moroney Clifford Wright Kenneth Goodall Jackson Morrow F. H. Young Robert Griffin Curtiss Moses William Nightingale Helen Zimmerman m JAPANESE STUDENTS CLUB Organized 1912 OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester T. F. Yamada President R. K. Otaka M. Hirata Secretary S. Ohtake S. Ohtake Treasurer ACTIVE MEMBERS Y. Chiba O. Aono Koshiyama Yuki Osaw a Y. Chiba T. Maejima M. Ozaki T. Fukuzawa T. F. Matsumoto D. Sakai Y. Fujimaki M. Miura S. Tanaka M. Hirata K. Nakazawa H. Yaeno S. Ivesaka S. Ohtake T. F. Yamada S. Iwamura R. K. Otaka M. Yoshioka DEDICATION There is all of the good fellow, all of the helpful teacher, and nothing of the pedant in him. He is newspaper man, faculty mem- ber and college boy rolled into one plump and enthusiastic per- sonality. His name stands on the rolls of his alma mater as Francis George Kane ; as head of the department of journalism at the University of Washington he is Professor Frank Kane; inform- ally, he is Frank Kane; famil- iarly, he IS Frank. To him, however styled, this feeble attempt at fun and non- sense is respectfully and affec- tionately dedicated. THE POT OF PURPLE PEARS or THE STRANGEST ADVENTURE Tl HE captain pulled the gottle tress I And held it with his knee. |c iHe called the bosun up from mess To show him what he see. Throw out of the neezer; can the spledge; We needn ' t search no more. By sailmg all around the edge. At last we ' ve found the shore! The mate cned aye and slapped his thigh. And roared with rorp delight, Because he knew that all the crew Were in a nanko plight. How did he know it? Can you axe Such foolish, simple things? He got it from the larboard placks. Which got it from the grings. Oh, many a bunker of coal, pardee. And many a platter of glue. It took to shave Good Captain Dave And all of his motley crew! (So the Coxun sang.) All the sailors ran ashore. And all the boarders too. Because they couldn ' t wait no more To do what they would do. Running and jumping and springing about Over the patches of sauer kraut. Hither and yonder. Right in the gonder Galloped the broughty chuys. Chewing tobacco and spitting it out Into the patches of sauer kraut Whether and whither Thether and thither, Roddled the Faint Surmise. But halt; You ' re getting Off the path. Best halt. And stay the Reader ' s wrath. The cap and sailors, full of glee. But surely nothing else. Worked their grub utensils free. And lengthened out their belts. They caught and throttled Irving Glen, That darling paragon of men. And put him on to boil; They grabbed Doc Garrett, full of verbs. And seasoned him with spice and herbs. And cooked him up in oil. And Tubby Osborn grabbed they eke. And slapped him on a grid. He made a most delicious wreak. The sizzling Tubby did. The crew at eve had fed its fill; It took its pipes to smoke. When, lo! the friend of Avon Bill, Appeared before these folk. Padelford — it was really he — Discouraged Captain Dave. That such poor food could really be. Made all the bandits grave. This is no place for us, they said. And gathered up their duds. We ' d have to give up meat for bread. And live on milk and spuds. And so the pirates sailed away, And all account of Fred; While warfs of meachers pagged the cray. And peemed the judies red. We are the ' oung Men ' s Christian Associa- tion, campus chapter. We have a nice building, in which we run a combination poolroom and chess hall where the hoi-polloi gather to enjoy their child- ish pleasures. We do a great work. We have mixers, and serve cider and wienies. In our laboratory for humanity we teach the poor boy to play checkers. We let him look at pure magazines, unlike Life and Judge. If he has money, we let him play billiards. but never pool. Why? Because pool are a bad indoor sport. Because the guys that have give the bad name to cigarettes play pool. The chess contests have seriously damaged the furniture and tapestries lately. We are thinking of discarding the sport as it makes the boys hoarse from applauding, and is injurious in the extreme. But one thing we never do is dabble in politics. Tut, no. ENTRANCE INFORMATION The University of Washington HE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS, com- , -L prising many acres and little else, is bounded on the north by the northern boundary, on the south by the southern boundary, on the east by the eastern boundary and on the west by the western boundary. It is best reached by streetcar, automobile, aeroplane, boat or shank ' s mare. The Faculty will look after all de- partures. Registration for old and new students is held at the same time, but the new students will be en- tirely worn out by the time they get through any- how, so it doesn ' t matter. The Faculty will de- lay as many as possible after the second day so as to get their dollar fines. All credentials should be sent in early in the summer by prospective students. Otherwise it may not be possible to lose them in time. Students are admitted to the university provision- ally, and are then required to make up two years ' high school work. Students are classified as graduates and under- graduates, done and underdone. The underdones are classified as Regular Guys, those without any class at all, and those Especially So. Students will be admitted to full freshman stand- ing upon having done so and such, just such and so. Any candidate who fulfills these requirements will either die young or make Phi Beta Kappa. Anyone can be admitted to the university as a special student if he has enough guff and bluff to get by the Faculty. He can also get out of drill if he puts up a stiff enough stall. Normal school graduates are admitted under regulations which may be simply stated as fol- lows: Normal school graduates of the department: concerned in cases of exemption they must earn 74 hours of astronomy fully covering college entrance requirements with a dash of salt and pepper, and must satisfy the stated degree of bachelor of science, ancient foreign language, advanced courses of ap- proved subject for which they have completed a fair equivalent. For further inflammation, inquire of Victor Soup, recorder ' s office. lings Ev-er-y child who has the use Or his sen-ses knows a goose. See them in psy-chol-o-gy Gath-er ' d round Prof. Giv-ler ' s knee While he reads them by the ton Pag-es from his Cross-sec-tion. How pa-tient-ly the geese at-tend. But do they real-ly com-pre-hend What the prof, is driving at? Nei-ther do I; nei-ther do they; Nor does Giv-ler — so they say. Bcchc-dc-Mcr Une petite peche dans la ecole fleurit, Attendez a mon narration triste. Une petite peche verdante fleurit. Grace a chaleur de soleil, et moisture de miste. II fleurit, il fleurit, And got away with a fraternity pin. THE INSIDE RING By Lincoln Stuffins. If OGROLLING tictacs typify the administra- f I - ' 1 tion of student activities in Bagley All, we jJN are reliably informed. Shouldering the burden which is thrust upon us as a social agency, we proceed to rake, harrow and plow muck, and shall deem the amelioration of Chem- shack affairs sufficient reward for our labors. A gang, alias clique, known dorsally, as it were, by the name of The Skulls, have been running things along with a rattle and clang, leaving the majority gaping (and yapping) by the roadside. The members of the active chapter of Skulls are Wesley Minnis, chief death ' s head and editor of The Common Ion ; Sargent Powell, associate editor and honorable mention Skull; George Parks, prmt- ers devil; Seth C. Langdon, Thomas Thompson, Ole Edwin Osterberg, George Schwartz, Charles Stark, George Glockler and Flossie Davis. There are also a couple of members of the gentler and more wiley sex, but we will not drag in their names. The Skulls are charged by the hoi polloi with the crime of appearing to hold title to the earth, as well as a few other planets, and thus giving the Bottle Shanty a dark lamp with the rest of the world, which comes infrequently into a building to rubber and to olifact. It is alleged that in the contest for the choice of a name for the Smellshack annual, said name was handplucked by the Skulls. The label suggested by one of the staff was chosen from a field of fifty others which might, possibly, have suited the sub- scribers belter. Thus the two Orpheum tickets, which were offered as a prize for the best sugges- tion, were kept in the official family. The name itself, the Washington Common Ion, was suggested to the prize-winner by one of the judges, and it is said that the two shared the tickets. The board, according to reliable information reaching the Nut Staff by way of leased wire, was self-appointed, and was not chosen by the election of stockholders, as is the custom in democratic com- monwealths. It will probably be hereditary unless the tractor tictax are thwarted. The foundation of the publication was linked with the origin of Mu Mu, national guzzling society, and of Chi Chi Chi, the honorary, question mark in parentheses, which was formally caused to cease by order of the Powers that Was. History tells us that Minnis, Powell, Walter Gailey, Harmon Keyes and Flossie Davis started the Yip Yip Yip society, and, after its requested demise, turned their idle hands to the inception of Mu Mu, in cohoots with Red Graham, who reaped the benefits of the sales forced upon the unwilling but thirsty pledges. Several of the loyal Mu Mu ' s then, runs the tale, foregathered together and nominated themselves editors of a magazine which was to be paid for by the other, and more humble, denizens of the Brick Palace. The machine that says Chunk, chunk, chunk all day from somewhere in the entrails of the Odor- iferous Hangout, is part of the fiendish schemes of the Skulls. The victim, usually a freshman, is laid out on a board and a mechanical arm waves a bunch of celery in his face until he dies of mortifi- cation. Minnis IS known as Jeff. Doc Byers once char- acterized him as Penrod Schofield. His attempted dignity is comical in one so tall. He and Powell like to be called fussers. Powell does the fussing and Wesley hangs on Sarge ' s coat tails. Mr. Parks, who is a grad, knows chemistry and knows he knows it, but as to what else he knows, we don ' t know. His main contention is that a shaved neck is a sign of great intellect. His slick dorsal column is indeed his main claim to genius. Six bits, or eight bits, were expended on a sign to set forth that a penny-a-voie contest for the most popular man and woman in Bagley Hall was on. About twenty votes were cast, but there was no public count and the gang controlled the ballot box. The proceeds were not enough, however, due to the wariness of the public, to pay for one of the tickets offered as the prize. The day after the election Minnis would not recognize some of his acquaintances. Powell won. Another complaint registered against the admin- istration of the Skulls is the type of humor they display in 1 he Common Ion, which is Greek for Common Bum. It is said by a m.an who once read the Ion that the humor is just killingly Philamb- daupsilon. At any rate, this article has aided in tilling up the terrible allotment thrust at us by the editor. And we hope that we have not made anybody sore. Not that we care a whoop for his feelings, but we are afraid he miaht throw bricks. IN MEMORIAM TTI AM one of the faithful, but unbaptised and jJ- I unconfirmed. I claim brotherhood and the ' jS?]| fraternal bonds, yet have never been mi- tiated. I ' m here but I feel that it is only under sufferance, and whenever 1 see an upperclass- man I realize that I really don ' t belong. In simpler words, I am a soph that was never in a tieup, who was never ducked in frosh basin and never saw a kangaroo court. When I was a frosh I only wore a green cap when I felt like it; I smoked and fussed girls on the campus and I stood on Denny steps by the hour. But it wasn ' t because I wanted it that way; I was an iconoclast by compulsion ; I busted idols at the Faculty ' s bidding. other is of the famous 1912 tieup that I have only heard about. That was the night when the pass- word of the frosh was Sweet Evening Breezes, These are pictures of ihe days of real sport. They are the things that I never saw. That snap- shot of the fellow in the basin is of Bill Morrow, the strong man of the class of 1917, who wouldn ' t stay ducked and who climbed out of the basm four times, still fighting, only to sail back again, pro- pelled by the most of the sophomore class. The a phrase which has lasted through a college genera- tion. The challenge I can not put in writing. These snapshots arouse vain memories of wild nights that are past; they recall artists in green pamt and the human zebras they painted, desperate fights and unexpected ambuscades, rollickmg rides to Bothell and all-night walks home, rows of cap- tives held in stocks, duckings and counter-duckings, and all of the crazy ritual in the initiation of the frosh. But the surface of frosh basm has long been undisturbed, green paint is no longer an article of local trade and the night traffic to Bothell has gone to the dogs. I am a Washingtonian of the new dispensation and I long for the old rule of tyranny and might. I am sick of loving my brother and long to be party to an exquisite hothand. I am with you but not of you. I am the Wash- ingtonian who never was hothanded. THOUGHTS OF A JUNIOR JUNIOR — and by a junior, I mean a person who wears a sombrero and a $ 1 5 suit — never has any real thoughts about anything. He cannot be expected to have any at his age and ex- perience. He has passed through so many conflicting experiences, elementary philosophy, for in- stance, and he knows very well that there is no such thing as matter or spirit or malted milks or truth or moonlight waltzes. He is completely and thoroughly disillusioned. Then, too, he has passed under the gentle ministrations of the sterner .McMahon and realizes that after all perhaps Washington (the same gentleman we used to hail) was a little incompetent, and that Franklin, the well-known inventor of electricity, wa somewhat of a grafter in a polite first-story way. We cannot expect him to have thoughts in a period when all his faith and his once firmly-rooted beliefs have been so rudely snatched from him by iconoclas ' ic professors. Perhaps it ' s just as well. Thoughts would b; embarrassing in one ' s junior year. There are so many other things to concern oneself with that it sesms a pity that we must have thought. Thoughts are suggestive of a deep and abstruse mind. Fancy a junior with that. Fancy, indeed, a deep mind under a sombrero. It would be as easy to fancy an intelligent person wearing corduroys or a real lawyer carrying a bright red cane. THE HOPELESS WARD This young lady with the Snookums tooth is offering apparently unwelcome attentions to some one whom we recognize as Ward Kumm. Ward has apparently repulsed her. As shown by the shadow on the ground, however, there is another man approaching, and she has turned toward him with the intention of deserting her first love. We do not approve of the practice of embracing, except as a form of exercise, and had some doubt about reproducing this picture. f 44 This is a moving picture of the evolution of Miss Monica Hughes from a nebulous mist to a student of the Mechanics of Printing. Reading from left to right we have a happily grinning nebula, a nearly formed cartoon, and lastly Miss Hughes herself. It is unfortunate indeed that as a student of printing m.echanics she seems to have lost her cheery smile. Her smile may be restored to some extent, however, when she learns that Fred only flunked half the class. The student body thinks it elects the editor of the Daily each semester. But it doesn ' t. Not a bit of it. This is the man who edits the efforts of quasi journalists. He growls and grunts, as if about to throw a pig of metal at you, but there isn ' t a better-natured man in the universe than dear old Bruce. Here he is caught with one of his winsome and all-too-infrequent smiles. Besides looking like Hi Gill, Bruce is an automobile owner. A special garage has been architected by Freylinghuysen- heimer Gould for the new building. THE HOPELESS WARD Pep Kauffman, the funny-paper college man with the big W and pearl-studded Theta Delta Chi pin, is snapped while at play. Pep will do lots towards keeping up the drooping spirits of the brothers till next Thanksgiving. He submitted six pictures of himself with his W to the Tyee this year for use, but at the urgent request of Miss Garnet Swartsbaugh, Alpha Xi Delta, it was de- cided to use the above. Pep ' s companion is an Alpha Phi. Here we have a loup garou and a purple Dwerger. They are the only remaining specimens of the specie ick. These were the gentlemen that the county fair committee made such a wild effort to obtain for their parade. As it will be remem- bered by copy readers of the Daily, the scheme was blasted owing to an unexpected war breaking out among the two tribes in their home at the Chimes Tower. The gentleman on the left, who is Mr. P. Dwerger, was the contractor of the press agents ' chariot of worms. As a consequence of his being unable to construct the cage of vipers, the county fair press agent was forced to attend the festivities in an ordinary bird cage. This IS Goodie Goodie, the African heiress, enjoying a sunny p. m. on Lake Wash- ington. She is reading an article in the Frank- furter Z e i t u n g on Doughnuts; Their Nurture and Propaga- tion, by Emil Edward Hurja. I a iiositKin vlii( h ,il lirst gasp looks very dangerous. But it isn ' t. Not at all. If you will observe closely, you will see that the horse is tied to the saddle by a rope around his neck, and cannot get away. The picture was taken on the Fiji lawn, in one of the most cultivated nooks. For the benefit of shorthorns and others we will say that the party with the excessively fuzzy exterior is Mrs. Robbie. THE HOPELESS WARD Charlotte Chaplin, Delta Gamma, is basking in the afternoon sunshine after killing four men with bricks, making love to five beauteous damosels, and drinking six bottles of moving-picture hootch. The jaunty mustache is still there, however, showing pro-central-power leanings. Charlotte is smoking soft coal, and the smudge to the northeast is fumes just belched forth. The cigarette will be seen con- cealed behind the wetgoods box. It now becomes our unhappy duly to blast Mr. Michael Hunt ' s aspirations to become a member of the Kultur Klub. His name is now under con- sideration as a prospective Kulter owing to his having overcome the habit of eating soup with a canoe paddle. When it is learned by the brothers that he once worked on a farm and now hails from North Yakima, he will be undoubtedly blackballed, as all members of the Kultur Kult are liable to the same rules that prevail at Henley. Besides having once worked with his hands the other snapshot will disclose the unkultured size of Mr. Hunt ' s foot. Altogether he is quite an impossible person and no Kulter with fine feelings could tolerate him. And, oh, yes, while it is not generally known, he also plays football. JAYSEEGRAPHS When a man says he is quite beyond pretense, pretense is usually quite beyond him. If there are word artists, some of the Daily reporters are rhetorical hod carriers. Gildobiea is a foot disease that attacks football players. The first symptom is the appearance on the horizon of a gray angora sweater wearing long hairs. In a big town you learn a little about a whole lot; in a small town you learn a lot about d — n little. For all of us there is only a few years at best, then Thanatopsis. A Washington sport writer invented the Fireside W, but the field is still o pen for the founding of a Cozy Corner C at California or a Hotstove H at Harvard. If some of the Ymca powdered sugar politicians were to suddenly find themselves weak, and start to collapse m the arms of their friends, they would wake up on the hard, hard cement. The effort of some prominent co-eds seems to b? to consistently register chained lightning. If a notice were printed in the Daily requesting that all prominent students report at the Auditorium in white suits, the list of those present would make rich fishfood. Paris ' . ' ; .1 Base. • . iofSea ' t ' OWa v SW i,s 0 , toseoce  Cite , .... ' i lo . , X 5-1 ' - ' « 4i My Bonnie Lay oven the ocean THE FIVE SENSES After the French of Harold Foran SLATHERS of sensation, gobbets Of feeling, slant through the atmosphere Hither, thither, thenceforth and yon. Crossing the campus, one way Or another. Note the perceptions you get. Olifaction Odors of eggs, forlorn and forgotten. Stenches of chemicals, worst of their kind. Whiffs of the dead things they pickle in bottles, All this and more will Wrinkle your nostrils. Passing the Chemistry Shack. Sound Noises that threaten to Shatter your eardrum, sounds which Appear like the whales of lost Souls, Come with a terrible clatter of Cymbals, straight from the haunt of Irving M. Glen. Oh, Orpheus, Orpheus, Rear up your forehead and tell us. Poke up your noggin from the midst Of your tomb, What m the dickens they try to Teach music for when a calliope ' d Do much more well. Taste Delectable dainties that Tickle the palate. Terrible turmoil of taste apperceptions. Indigestion provoking, teeth rotting Anemia producers — what ho, and For this we have daughters. Who plash in the batter and splatter the butter Up there by the bookstore. Hurrah for the scientifically domesticated damsels. Touch Beach Jones, the befreckled and dreamy Minion of ex-Boozer Herbert T. Condon, Rakes in the shekels and duros that come near His wicket, with nonchalant avarice, cunning and crookedness. There, friends, making a bum pun, he touches you, touches you. Pull the veil; let us pass. Sight Fifth, but not least, we come To Denny hall, hangout of rubber Necks; here is the place for an idle half-hour. Stand there and pipe off the feminme pe-rade. You ' ll get your eyefull, we warrant you. There you are now, with all but the sixth sense. One for each finger. As we aren ' t polydactyl. Let us stop here. Dudhjl Woodbridgc at Tea At the Gj iii Daiiee Stepper: Shall we dance or talk? Co-ed: I ' m awfully tired: let ' s dance. THE ENGINEER pipe. The engineer knows three things: Hi: his math and his slipstick. Of the three he knows the pipe probably the best, and it does him the most good because it keeps him quiet. He never is interested in engi- neering, never talks of it outside of the class room, and absorbs as little of it as possible. He figures a degree means he is educated — it means a job. The engineer memorizes his text book, and fails to use his head. When he gets out in life he dis- cards his text book, and, armed with his degree, sets forth. He finds the degree worthless, but that his head is still with him, and proceeds to learn to use it. He then begins his education. Hail the engineer. Coeducation Girls are obstacles in the path to culture, when they come to a university. They get in the way, clog the wheels of class thought, ask foolish ques- tions, have numerous and heavy books to be carried, take a fellow ' s mind off his studies, and must be tipped to. They repress discussion and hamper expression. They contribute nothing to the Uni- versity education except a sort of social veneer, which does not beautify, but hides. Altogether, they are indispensable. M y fooi. oi coo K Bfll BeR PoiE J WHAT ' S THE USE, ANYHOW? ELENE was to home. Sure she was to home. He could see the light around the blinds and knew the parlor lamp was lit. He stopped, spat out his gum, took a lozenge for the Bull Durham odor, gripped his courage by the nape of the neck, and turned the bell handle. The bell, however, wouldn ' t work — it believed in the equality of bells, and a reform in system. So Throckmorton whacked the fir panels with his thumb. Helene opened the door. It should not have been Helene who opened the door. Helen should have opened it. But along in her second, and final, high school year, her name had become diseased in the same epidemic which carried off Edith and created Edyth, and turned a number of other good grandmotherly nomenclatures into Secil and Alys and Kathryn and Mae. So our heroine had never been herself since. Hello, burst Helene, and gurgled as she dragged him in before the family trium- virate, meaning Pa and Ma and Granma. The triumvirate beamed on him. He was Meat. He might become bread and butter for them in their old age. They had visions of Soft Things. Oh, yes, Throckmorton had prospects. But that was all. He came of a brewer ' s family. He had an education. He knew who Pluto, and Omar, and Chaplin and Mozart were, although he might not have been able to give their initials. Stacked about his room at home, he had enough shingles to cover a roof, from his maternity, his honoraries, and Miss Alma Mater. And he almost had a job. So Throckmorton sat before the Harpies and dropped educated terms, which increased the rotundity of their orbs and the cordiality of their expressions. They eyed him as a robin might a worm. The door grumbled and creaked again. Helene bounced up and hauled in another lamb. It was Jim. Jim was buttered and docked as to hair, blunt as to shoon, double- breasted, string-tied and studded, but he was there. Why? Because he had the cash. Throckmorton tried Schiller on him. No effect. He tried Nietzsche, Bergson, Maeterlinck, Anatole France. These were terrible blows, but brought no blood. His supply of bombs exhausted, Throckmorton withdrew into his English suit as far as possible, and watched Helene smear herself figuratively and optically all over Jim. Then he departed. Two days later he felicitated Helene on a diamond. Then he bearded her Old Man, and put it up to him in the word, Why? Throckmorton was a fine fellow, the Old Man told him, and had fine prospects. Jim had no education and no prospects, but he owned a many-cylindered gasbuggy, an imitation brick front mansion, and a bank president was glad to call him by his first name. Jim had started four years before as a bricklayer. He didn ' t need no education ; he didn ' t need no prospects. He was there. e 2 4 4 O, whither goest thou, new student. Within the wood so fur? Art on the chokesome cherry bent? Dost seek the chestnut burr? Ye Stcnc Dent In there the wooden chuck doth tread. And from the (IV) columns top The red, red squirrels on thy head The frequent pledge pins drop. Turn back, turn back, thou pale student. Nor in the forest fare: In there thou ' lt lose thy last red cent In Wilfred ' s Y. M. snare. The Y. W. girls sell fudge and pie. And lots of other things — There ' s blood spilt there — oh, my! Whene ' er the glee club sings. There, while thy thirsty glances drink The wondrous fair co-ed. Thy heart within the ooze shall sink And ' round shall go thy head. Farewell! Farewell! But this I tell To thee, thou new student. Ere cons have fell, thou ' lt rue it well That woodward thou didst went. 435 lEGAL ethics are defined as usages prevalent among lawyers after centuries of struggle for the elusive dollar and clients. No code of moral etiquette produces results as does The following set of rules are yearly annun- ciated by Dean John T. Condon for the benefit of the law school seniors. I. On entering the legal profession, one must culti- vate a fireman ' s moustache and wear a Prince Albert and love to talk about The Flag. He must join as many fraternal organizations as possible. His long suit must be glittering generalities. II. Avoid joining moral uplift societies. You will not be able to work in harmony with their ideals, and besides the members are notoriously poor pay. III. Whenever the Foresters have a clambake and invite you to make the principal address (because you are the only orator who can beat out the merry- go-round) speak for hours about our heroic dead on a Hundred Battlefields. Never use a word of less than four syllables in length. IV. While waiting for clients you can pass away the time by running for office. Cultivate a life-long friendship with ambulance drivers and be able to call deputy coroners, morgue attendants and police- men by their first names. They constitute an effec- tive steering committee. In assessing fees, the rule is All the traffic will bear. LEGAL ETHICS By Ed FranUin, ' 06. V. WTien a client has been lured into your office and been relieved of a retaining fee, and gives you a case that would make a freshman law blush at accepting it, after brushing away a tear with your red bandana, tell your client Nothing but dastardly injustice, and an absolute disregard of the funda- mental principles of honesty and equity upon which the law is based, will deny you the relief you seek. VI. On addressing the jury, frequently state that there is not a scintilla nor an iota of evidence that the defendant is guilty and demand of the jury if they are going to send Spider Murphy, who only assaulted three policemen, to jail. When testi- mony is being put in which is proper, vociferously object to its introduction, as being incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial ; on being overruled, mut- ter under your breath that you didn ' t care anyway whether it went in or not. VII. If, after taking a noon recess of three hours, the judge holds against you, tell your client that the judge is a congenital idiot, and probably related to his opponent; that the opposing counsel is a notori- ous jury fixer, a shyster, a crook, and worked hard to elect the judge to the bench. A rigid adherence to these rules, states Dean Condon, will insure success and a prosperous future in the profession. Pius Pins are what you wear coats to curtain. The charm of the unrevealed and the mystery of defunct- language lettering lends them enchantment. They are not worth much. They are not much to look at. They cost a lot to get. Were it not for pins we would not stand with our hands in our sidepockets so as to throw back our coats. Were it not for pins campus scandal would not so soon be noised abroad. Before the first of the year they were used by authorities as identification marks to sort out inebri- ates. Since then they have only served, like auto licenses, to let the authorities and the co-eds get your number. r }e.P r Oe ts ' vec ?Jq it on t }e car nB ' - ■ 303 • TKeir 5waddlii p . a- m ClotKei ' P TKeta. 1907 0 ' I Storied SK2iCk.s SOME UNPRINTED CONTRIBUTIONS To the Editor of the Daily. Dear Sir: Will you please insert the included article in the Daily as plainly visible as possible. Articels about the German club given to the Daily-staff have been treated very step-motherly last Friday and yesterday, perhaps on account of anti-German feeling. Under the column of Announcements, please, insert the following. Today meetmg of the Deutscher Verem m Men ' s Building at 7:30. Interesting program. Everybody welcome. With thanks in advance, ours truly, Paul Kvirsten. 4240 9th avenue, N. E. Phone 1935 N. To the Editor: — As a believer that college morals should be of the highest possible type, I would like to object to the immodest pictures taken from the pictorial sup- plements of Eastern papers which greet one ' s eyes as he enters the Daily Building. Pictures of female bathers at the Florida beaches whose wearing ap- parel IS conspicuous by its absence, predominate in this unwholesome art array. They are so shocking to taste and decency that no reputable saloon would tolerate them. To any pure minded student, especially to our women, this immoral art gallery cannot fail to bring a blush of shame. And the further fact that the professors in the department of journalism bra- zenly flaunt these objectionable pictures before our eyes should not go unnoticed. In the name of purity and honor, I demand (heir instant removal. Edward S. Franklin ' 15. THE REFRIGERAKE The Kappa house — an icy lake On whose cold brink I stand ; Oh, buckle on my spirit ' s skate. And lead, thou living saint, the way To where the ice is thm — That it may break beneath my feet And let a lover in! A QUIET EVENING IN ANY FRATERNITY HOUSE OUSE rule: Study hours shall be from 7:30 to 10:00. No noise or disturbance shall take place during this time.) 7:30 p. m. House Pappa: All you underclassmen get out to that yell rally tonight. We don ' t want to be down at the bottom of the pep list. Ignorant Frosh: Hey, who got my hat? (Vituperations ensue; disturbance is quelled by iron-willed house manager.) At this juncture a whining soph is brought to light from the cavernous depths of a clothes closet, where he has secreted himself to escape the bore of a yell rally. Give ' im the tub, says his nibs. (Business of tubbing a husky soph takes place. Here, dear readers, let us consider the atrocity of tubbmg. After the victim has been held in the cold water inhaling the said moisture and after he has the fraternity initials written across that proverbial part of his anatomy, he is ready to sign anything, even a subscription to the Y. M. C. A.) 8:15. Underclass riffraff return. Some frosh, pledged because he knew how to play a piano, starts the execution of Beatrice Fairfax. Let us again philosophically observe that light music is conducive to light talk, verbose verbiage and ribald laughter. This slight disturbance is subdued by the upper-classmen coming down stairs en masse with blood in their collective eye. 9:00. Rare old gold silence prevails, wonderful to relate. But hist! A stealthy sound of some one groping his way through the hall reaches our ears. A door creaks and then all is silent. A typewriter, somewhere on the lower floor, ticks away incessantly, unceasingly and monotonously. But what is that slowly increasing hum we hear? Suddenly a voice says: Naw, don ' t take her out; she ' s a sad bird to my way of thinking. Says another voice: Where ' d yuh get that old stuff? She gets by like a million. (This, ignorant readers, is the scientific business of discussing fussing.) Well, anyway, she says Then I says Yuh see she ' s a great kidder. You gotta hand it to her. Now we have a picture of ten or twelve frosh gathered in a dimly-lighted room, thick with cigarette smoke, discussing — well just discussing. This we may philosophically (again) add is the regular old college stuff where all the boys smoke cigarettes, wear sweaters, call each other old hoss and old man, and have a girl named Dorothy or Ruth. The fellows, that is those keen guys, who never forget to say, ' Scuse the glove, old man, when they shake hands with you, usually go by the name Jack or Fat (i. e., the fellows ). 1 :00 p. m. But these b ' festa are romantically broken up by the cold-hearted H. M. About 1 2 p. X. we all make attempts to go to bed. Around that time somewhere we crawl into the bunks. But fear not, the day ' s jests are not over, for the jester must needs carry his jokes even to the sleeping chamber of the assembled bretheren ; for we crawl in on a bunch of coat-hangers, old shoes, ropes, toothbrushes and tin cans. Having quietly removed these small articles by dumping them on the floor, we make attempt to reparate our shattered nerves. 1 or 2 p. g. At last silence pervades the night and we sink into the drowsy arms of Morpheus. Ed. Note: — This is a true story. It happened one night while the author was trying to dig the cosmological argument out of Descartes ' remains. The Central Boulevard Country Being a Guide to the Territory Between 45th and 5oth Avenues and 14th and 2 1st Avenues hiclusive, Excluding the Cow Counties and Tacoma A Handbook for Freshmen By KARL BAEDEKER Second and one-half edition, not yet revised. Being a practical guide for fraternity rushees and an invaluable aid to mothers in picking their darlings ' eating clubs. With 1 00 maps, 1 3 plans, a panorama of the Campus, pastels of the New Home Ec. Shack, Ruins of the Armory, Law Building and Daily Coop, and an illuminated table of deceased presidents of the Y. M. C. A. Podunk: KARL BAEDEKER, Publisher. London, 623 Rue Morgue; New ' ork, inquire at Bustanoby ' s: Seattle, in the neighborhood of the War College. 1950 All rights reserved at the box office. 2vmbiriouS 5orv6 isx good y— JT ' Air eating duh. { y T S t ' iKefA CKi 1 uC ._Kay,pa . i ; n ,- j foo late tb rUssify- Koose LL ' . =1 1 J nl A If DRAMATICS Yah, hoo! Yah, hoo! Bam, bam! Bang! 10 cents, two nickels, one dime! Rum, tiddy um, boom, boom! This is da joint! On your left you have the red, white and blue peanut roaster where dwells the spirit of Euripides. If you look closely you can see him feed the twittering Guarchero. Then on the right, wildly waving their wooden lees, are the marvelous troup of trained fleas, led by Pavlowa herself. And all the wa y down this bullevard of theatrical grab-bags and garbage jabbers the divine spirit of the drama, supported by other lean and whimpering aschcans. We have been informed by a disreputable source that in another part of this bible there is interred an entire section dissicated to the Drahama. But whether there be a grain of quinine in this threat or not, such a depart- ment not written by us can be nothing more than a hollow mockery, a fake, and a white- washed sepulchre. Because there can ' t be two spirits of the Drahama uncaged and before we started to write this we drank all of it that there was extant at Kinney ' s, Mort ' s and all other alleviating emporiums. Here is the real spirit of the theatre. Right here is she caught and chloroformed. But to kon-tin-you: THE FOLLIES OF 1915 AND 1916 A Pink and Green Revue of the Washington Theatrical Season, Garnished With Nuts and Inverted Tripe Bowls Act Won POMANDER TROT Ten Acts of Lingering Death by Pouis En Larker Daniel Web-steer, the duckfooted cow, says that Pomander was an unctuous oint- ment carried on the person of superstitious people to guard against infection. But if Pomander is a medicine we don ' t see what the student body had done to deserve the cure. The first nine acts, as was the tenth, were set in a quaint old English lane in London, where things seemed to have lain forever in quiet sleep. Out of seven rat holes in the front of the $200 set (as advertised) crawled the characters, whenever Harold Burdick whistled the signals. Over in the left-hand corner was a Gazabo (a place to eat tea and kiss Cor- nelia Glass) and back of it sat the Eyesore, the only character in the agony who didn ' t recite large extracts from Ecclesiastes. On the program he was labeled the Eyesore, but alth ough we waited all through the first six acts for him to turn around and show his sore eyes, when he did, he was only Ray Ryan, and he didn ' t even wear glasses. Oh, well, after about the first thirty scenes Harold got his mitts on Cornelia and things began to move a little faster. In fact, the love germ was so infectious that before the last curtain everybody, including the old maids and the Admiral, got tied beyond hope of escape. In the last gasp somebody swiped Scoop Tuesley ' s pie and he forgot to light the lamps, so as we were in the dark when the play began, even so it ended. And somewhere out of the dusky stage we heard a resounding smack. Some thought it was Harold and Cornelia, but it sounded more like Scoop uppercutting the pie thief. The libretto is interred in the Deke ash kan; the audience is resting easily at Mount Cavalary. j . THE WHINNYING OF HAWAII Being a Light Opera of Dark Deeds, Typewritten by Rollicking Coe at the Instigation of an Unapprehended Muse — Dancing by Coeds and Singing by Students The main idea was an excuse for pounding the steel guitar and uncorking a few corking hulas. In Act I entered a chorus of ambadsores from prominent European countries. They all tried to kid the kink into presenting them Hawaii on a silver platter garnished with poi and more poi. But the kink smiled uxoriously and beat it off to indulge in a little siesta, the national indoor and outdoor sport. Then we discovered the young American on the screen and within five minutes we have the princess with her arms around him loving out his life. (Chorus of Hulas and a whining of steel and ukes from behind a trench of plams.) Act tew disclosed the Princess Lewhew still loving our hero and the ambadsores entwined by a hula maiden each. If you here got the idea that the Princess was the spirit of Hawaii and that the young American sugar magnate was American whiskey, their marriage will become highly Maeterlinckian. The music and the dancing wasn ' t so Ibsenite, but had rather a Strindbergian outch. And furthermore the scene was set on the beach at Waikiki, which perhaps explains the loving. In the background was an extinct volcano. We don ' t know because we didn ' t smell it. j LE MOULIN ROUGE By Messieur La Rue Morgue and Mademoiselle Champs Elsies. The annual spring hoparound, produced at the instigation of Arthur Younger by young ladies not so young and their faithful bookracks. We are forced to disguise the headline of this potpourri and give it an allied sound in order to slip it by the editress, who is suspiciously anti Joe ' s Place. We are now safe to remark that it was really Dutch, in as much as the ed will never get past that Champing Elsie stuff. Hist! The mill was haunted. Grasping his indecision firmly in one hand and the windmill in the other, our John gave a Happy little gurgle and sailed out into space. In a moment he disappeared into the grinning maw of the Mill window. Ah, but there he was again, swinging out on the pawing sail he cascaded softly to the ground. But what was that burden in his left digit? Ah, it was a woman; it was Mary Wright, and he held her by her tonsorial drapings! Now it can never be doubted again that her hair is not just Wright. The setting was magnificently buttermilk with x y z stripes of cheese and wurtemberg. The historic hundred herded bovines were this year joined by fifty more of their beefy brothers, and 1 50 of the glorious goulashes galloped beneath the proscenium and waved their arms and clapped their wooden shoes. It is claimed that they sang at the rehearsals. Dean Glen got down in the middle of the orchestra and waved his arms and blew the windmill sails around. Next day we registered a whine at the Governor of Zeeland wearing red trou and cypress kicks, and made a stirring appeal for his national costume of gee-string and beads, and the bums tried to say that Zeeland wasn ' t New Zeeland at all but a province of Bohemia. However, we ' ve had commercial geography and ethnology and they can ' t pan off a Caucasian on us for a boomerang-slinging bushman. But, however that may be, the next day the papers said that the production had a strong cast. Well maybe, maybe, but that ' s what they say about cheese. Act Fore THE CHICK WITH THE VERDIENT LAMPS Introducing the Sex Element to College Conversation In the first scene the joyous bride did a buck-and-wing to the accompaniment of a chorus of bridesmaids and old shoes. The scenery all pointed towards a happy for ever and ever, but Geoffery had been a naughty boy. You see, Jeff had gone and married the housemaid and then in a moment of absent-mindedness had married Ruthie, the regular queen. Ruthie soon smelled the rodent and started coming to the bride ' s happy husband for aid. That was where the green eyes blew in, oodles and oodles of them, buckets and tubs full. All the rest of the play those green eyes kept mussing up the family soup and gelloussy raged unincinerated. Then in the last act the tables were revolved. Ruthie and Hubby proved their inno- cence, but Hub beat it off in a high dudgeon, with an electric starter and wire wheels. We then had the bride ' s big strangulation scene in which the deserted wiff turned on the win- dow shades and pulled down the gas, or vice a verses. It was grand; I enjoyed every strangle. But they had to mess it up by resuscitating the corpse. There isn ' t much use for a corpse m a legitimate drama any more. Morgue scenes seem to have gone out. But what we want to know is whom Jeff finally married — was it the lady or the housemaid? And between housemaids jilted and well-fed tigers, gimme the tiger, to have and to hold. Akt Five THE KOUNTY FARE A Melange of Mortified Mew Mews, Gratified Gumps and Stilted Stool Pigeons Fried in Bear ' s Grease Last year, being short of dramatics, we dragged in the County Fair to save thinking up something that hadn ' t happened, and so having done it once, it is now a tradition to be worn by nuteditors like corduroy pants or sombreros, and never to be taken off, except in the presence of ladies, that is, I mean the hats. As usual the fare was a mixed one and presented a facial contortion closely allied to an inebriated ick or a nut eating avus. Not to mention the wealth of tonsorial grace and medicinal beauty that was dripping on every hand and shoulder, we understand that there were several licensed shows. It is unnecessary to say that the vaudeville and dancing was extremely Mordkin, not to say Karsivina. Furthermore, there was the Fatal Necklace, with its salamander slouch, its wineglasses and its Bull-Durham-smoking revolver, and the dead forms draped around. Then there was unearthed in the Southwest corner of the Gym the unnalloyed disaster of the Mandarin ' s Datter, this year ' s Boilermaker Bertha. The plot was obtained by mixing two drams of ancestors with 1 00 pounds of datter, a dash of mother and a lit tle garden gate. But the Mandarin ' s offspring still had her red, red nose. The effort of the old Lady to excommunicate Fauchon ' s head from his body waxed rather weak and finally drowned itself in a kup of poisoned tea. And midst the crashing of hollow heads, the gyratings of gingerbread and the eman- cipation of earrings, the County Fare was put on the eternal black list, until death do us part. Pepilog So, midst a rain of catsup and mothballs, endeth the tripe bowl revue, and, ' mongst the flashing of spacious spectrums and the bellowing of bloated bugles, I reel and stagger. And from the floor in front of my Underwood rises a great writhing worm with forked fangs and a Knox hat, and, as it waves in front of me and wiggles its orange and blue coils, I hear a distant hissing, and suddenly it dawns upon me that before me wags the spirit of the Drahama. And it ' s midnight and there ain ' t anybody else in the Daily building, and it ' s cold, and I ' ve lost my prescription, and everything I got at Kinney ' s is gone. Ah, not quite gone! Guzzle, et al! There, that ' s better! Ah! Avaunt, worms! Away, Dramah! Go way and let me shleep! JAYSEE. GORDON H. DICKSON Law Seattle Y. M. C. A. Scabs and Blood; board of idiots; Rasseling; chief pest in cadet corps; cross lots; chairman com- mittee on amelioration of expectoration ; senior honors in Tyee (4, 5 and 6) ; sliver collector. Gasp and Squeal; book agent for Mandel Nieder (5 and 6) ; motorcycle messenger (5 and 6). ( Paid advertisement. ) Look em over. They are the intellectual cream of the University, selected not only for the marks they drag, but for the amount of dust they have kicked up in college circles. They are gathered for a little self-appreciation picture. A deep sense of propriety has compelled them to separate, brethren from sistren. These do not constitute the whole gang ; these are but the loyal few who were resolved to expose themselves to the elements and at any cost to get their phizzes in. The fuzzy chaperon with Mrs. Benham ' s umb. ' ella is in the English department. He with the brazen stare who stands next is Lt.-Col. Ed. Draper, chief Pi Tau U. The one upstairs, with the sneer, is Tack Williams, ex-president of the campus missionary society. Below his left ear is Art Simon, of Spokane, who is some guy. The society stood, soon after its foundation, for classicism, and fought for the retention of Greek. Next it had to transfer its loyalty to the humanities, and in the present age of technical speciahzation is casting about for another ideal. PcnurioiiH man has the Life reputation among don ' t know the a curriculum and much cash and a indigestion. This The The college the heckers back home who architectural distinction between a stadium of being a sower of reaper of nothing but boils and bad reputation was given by a few stingy parents, and should not gain the credence of intelligent men and women. A university, at least this one, is a gymnasium for the practice of the most abjectly penurious methods. Penurious is not exactly the term for it, although good as far as it goes. Penurious, says D. Webster, means niggardly, avaricious, covet- ous. Any college student, who, looking upon John the grocer ' s boy puffing a fat Huevo Malo, does not become avaricious, bloodthirsty, socially democratic and red in the flags must have a bunch of government bonds salted away somewhere. It is more than penury. It is wiping the nose of pride into the dust of social humiliation. College life has been penurious ever since Carlyle spoiled his indigestion eating oat meal mush during his undergraduate days. Don ' t let any tightpurse string you. College life is poverty, humility and squalor. RAWTHER PERSONAL Few studes are aware that in the approximate center of our midst is one of the country ' s future so- cial reformers. Not many years ago, back m Spokane, Al E. Dyer organized an anti-cigarette league. It was founded on the high moral standards to which only men of Al ' s character can attain. Al has the ability to or- ganize anything from a Bible class to a national bank. Not uncommonly he rises upon the platform and gives a lirst-class political talk. He will be glad to meet with all anti-booze, anti-cubeb, and religious or- ganizations and instruct them in moral conduct. Al symbolizes the spirit of democracy. He is an ardent follower of Dr. I. Allen Smith and Hi Gill. He is opposed to all socie- ties which require the mem- bership ' s vote to effect en- trance, such as Phi Beta Kappa, Si ma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, Oval Club and Fir Tree. ALMOST A DOCTOR or THE OPENING OF AN ANCIENT GRAVE This is not an ad for a Brooklyn avenue board- ing house. It is the disclosure of an ancient scandal. The two-story shanty in the foreground of this engraving is full of dark and deep meaning for each and every other Phi Psi. Because it no longer is, they are! But to get down to the story. In the old Tyees, from ' 05 to ' 08, the picture of the house appears as that of the Phi Chi, a national medical fraternity. But after 1910 this national organization disappears. A local historian, however, with a dangerous mem- ory, has disclosed the skeleton. Phi Chi, being unable to obtain enough medics to pay expenses, started promiscuous pledging. But when the na- tional chapter got hep, the Washington charter was jerked. Disconsolate, the gang reorganized as Sigma Delta, a local, and was so known until the next col- lege generation. Then they removed to 4554 Six- teenth avenue northeast. In 1913 they changed their name to Phi Phi and in 1914 they dragged a charter from the fraternity to which President Wil- son belongs. So the old house stands on Brooklyn avenue as a monument to the clos e shave each and every Phi Psi can consider himself to have had. For each and every one of them might be a sawbones, a grave robber and a Phi Chi. Those interested may obtain information con- cerning Phi Chi in Baird ' s Manual of American Fraternities. 451 THE GIFTIE By One of Us WALK from Denny Hall down the steep to The Wreck, on a fair day, keeps the mind jumping about from one hummock to another to avoid sinking to oblivious insanity in the mental quagmire into which college life draws so many of our hopefuls. To begin with the raw material, he is not always the small-town smirker he is drawn. Most of us came from city high schools and modeled ourselves after the Hart, Schaffner Marx Apollos who always stand waiting in the reception hall just behind the front door of the Saturday Evening Post. So our transmutation was not marked. We contributed, on our arrival, to the conglomerate, and did our little mite to keep the campus citizenry from becoming sartorially as well as mentally homogenous. And most of us remained through the four years in the class wherein we started. Not that remaining in any one class implies that we missed a chance to evolve into something better. As far as I know, they all run parallel like stalks of macaroni in the paper tomb which comes at I 5 cents. But still, there are varieties worthy of note in a section which requires as much to fill it as does this. Along with the ideas of hazing which we gained from George Fitch and the colored cartoons sold for mural discoloration, we received the impression that in coming to a juni- versity we had to adopt peg-tops, sorethroat sweaters, shapes, pipes, pennants, steins, beer and fluffy co-eds. This style a certain class in high school aped, and kept on aping while monkeying away their time in classroom and poolhall until their parents withdrew them from school on account of their health. We were accordingly surprised, on crossing the campus for the first time, to observe the closeness of our schoolfellows ' appearance to that of the rational, legal-aged but unreg- istered population. As we went on, however, we began to note some of the stripes in the campus suit of clothes. The most freakish is the type that gangles along, sticking out of its alleged natty clothes at all points possible, which include the terminations and junctures of the different garments. From one pocket peers a silk handkerchief, and from some hidden anchorage a broad black ribbon sweeps up to a pair of horn-rimmed blinders which cause the figure to remind one of a diver just emerging from a six-month sojourn among the finny, wishing to renew old acquaintances with the world at large. Spats and a deflated derby, with a dinky overcoat which sticks out like a lampshade, usually complete this creature ' s attire. Violet Milo cigarettes, an inane smile and possibly a wrist watch are other symptoms. Bug spectacles and a vapid air also indicate a variety of student whose habitat is the German-Law-Skandihoovian building. Although the glance is unseeing and un-verstehing, it is straight ahead, over obstacles and into a mist. The clothes are tight, and the trousers round and unpressed like stovepipe with a bend at the knee. The person ' s legs are spraddled, if you know what I mean. They con- verge at a point about half way to the ground, and then diverge. This is apparently caused by the enormous weight of the books which are carried under each arm, and lend dignity to an otherwise puerile personality. But let us pass. The dapper and dolled let us next mention. Prerequisite, birth with small bones, curly hair, pink cheeks, kale, and a per- verted taste. This is the gentleman who gets club rates from T. Clarke Mieir, puts on a clean starched shirt each a. m., goes home every noon to change his tie, and blacks his shoes. He is dangerous for the girls, and a source of revenue for Cheasty ' s and Ed the Schwartz. Something of the high school lingers in the class dress freak, the boy who by his appearance shouts, Rah-rah, I ' m from the University. In sophomore pants is realized ihe worst of this sick ego stuff. The junior hat is not so bad. The green cap is necessary for other reasons. With this classification belong those who wear azure unies, with gold epaulettes and deficiency medals, after the regular hours of military torture. The really tailored are few, and yet they are inconspicuous because of their nature. Cash, taste and tone are rare, especially in combination. Let us touch our forelocks to them, and consider others. He who has passed the first two years of his university career, not at the university, but at that most vitiating of institutions, the normal school, is apparent blocks off. He has rubbers, an overcoat, an umbrella, specs, a loose soft hat, a tread, a net satchel full of books, and an inquirmg, calf-Hke expression. He is mild, studious and impossible. He is going to make a good citizen, and mould the plastic mind of youth in such form that the interests can handle it efficiently. Elsewhere, Beppo, no fruit here. Another kind is the Artful Artless, the affected carelessness gentleman, who wears a sweater on the campus and a soft collar to entertainments, but shows by his swagger and glance that he could wear real apparel if he wanted to. He usually has in addition the defiant demeanor of the tough guy, and recognizes only the chosen few. The engineer, miner and forester, and sometimes the chemic, wear the homely gar- ments of the worker, and pass to and fro with all the atmosphere of the ditch except tlie tin lunch bucket. The stride, the heavy shoes, the placid, ponderous gaze, all are there. The flannel shirt, the overalls and the dirt are distinctive; they functionate in making this blot on the landscape. Those of us who would be if we could be. who have the taste, we think, and the class, but not the money, remain in a categorv ' which may be referred to as Upstairs Bill ' s. We are forced to walk up ten flights in order to save ten dollars, and in so doing lose two-fifths of our suit of clothes. We of this class are in sad case, a travesty and a tragedy. From the backwoods come stalwart sons with an ingrained habit of cutting the hair only at certain stages of the moon and of wearing highwater trousers so they will be tucked easily into boots, and with a manner of walking as if they had calks and seventeen miles to go to reach the next stack of hotcakes. The backwoods store, in clearing off some old stock, has foisted on them several suits of the linsey-woolsey kind, which refuse to fit and refuse to wear out. This wardrobe may be varied with one of the hecker suits which are advertised in the 25-cent-a-year magazines as Your Pick of $30 Tailored Suits, Boys, at $13.50. Here rows of buttons on the cuffs, breadth of cloth and tremendous double seams evidence the most approved college taste. The Russian Refugee is indescribable, and yet deserves mention. He is an interesting hodge-podge of sweeping garment, matted hair, and broad accent. 1 have said in this grouchy treatise nothing, you see, of the co-ed, but much of the ed. It is because, as you might divine, I am afraid to say what I think. Thou, tender reader, art beyond me, so thou, tough masculine, receivest the whacks. BIT OF INFORMATION Prof. Trevor Kincaid is the man who looks after all the freaks who take zoology. Some of them he keeps, and those he can ' t keep he cans. NQKTGIN AX 0€ ' S fe HIS is Hea ' y Luther, sometime checker champ of the campus. Lately he was the center of interest in the checkers world when his title was attacked by a certain Ed Stuchell of the same soup kitchen. The title was finally awarded to Luther, however, when it was learned that he had gone through the entire checker season without receiving an injury. Stuchell was disqualified when several splinters from the checker board were discovered in his hands. Stuchell indignantly claimed that these wounds were not re- ceived during the actual play, but were the result of a little scrap outside of tournament hours. When the judges learned that the scrap, in which the splinters entered his hands, consisted of an attempt to bat Mr. Luther over the head with the checker board, shortly following a Heavy defeat, he was disqualified for championship. To console him for losing the prize, the beautiful red, white and blue football that Mr. Luther holds in his left hand, Stuchell was given a pair of tweezers and a package of court plaster. He is now resting easily in the homes of his friends. 5 Harold Burdick Aoii- P aying 1 at the LYRIC TenntJsw 1 COLLEGE BOYS AND GIRLS ' DON ' T KNOW BOW TO THINK Professor of Journalism Difficulties in the C ?mf , RtOS ' toVw ..- ' . %r Vr THROUGH Tl-IE LOOKING % , , ' m T WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS HAT Barrett Herrick gets to every sorority formal on the campus. That Al Dyer thinks he is a lady-killer That she has to be able to shake her feet to be stepped about by Lelar.d Tolman and the lovely Bud McDermott. That Keith Goodman uses a curling iron. That the Delt formal means real food. That this chatter the fellows get off about liking level-headed girls is all bunk. That the Dekes have a scholarship cup and John Happy. That she must conceal her feelings and register admiration when her cadet ball escort says he considers it more noble to wear his cadet suit than evening clothes. That Emil Hurja is taken. That Rusty Callow is a regular devil. v That Babe Knapp isn ' t half so thrilling as he looks. That if she stops talking during a dance the only sound she ' ll hear is the music. That if a fellow calls her a mighty good friend he ' ll never ask her anywhere. That Ed Hogg likes intellectual women. That the best way to give a man a good time is to let him put his line over. That when a man tells her about his business affairs he doesn ' t expect her to under- stand. That Harry Freeman likes heavy discussions. That Wilson Schiffer likes to have the look of a man who has lived lurking in his tired eyes appreciated. That Margaret Crahan has all the scalps in the Daily building except those That Cornelia Glass gets by her brilliancy line. We ' re as simple We Look. Too. The Xiit St.iff. Sears, Roebuck and Co. SEATTLE, WASH. WESTERN ' BRANCH OF The Largest Mail Order House in the World We carry a complete stock of General Merchandise OUR NEW BUILDING. COMPLETED 1915 : 40 ft. wi.le. 330 ft. Ion ' . ' , (l stories limli Originators of the Guarantee That Stands the Test In the Scales of Justice READ OUR GUARANTEE WE GUARANTEE: That tarh and every article- in this catalog is exactly as .lescribed ami illustrated. We guarantee that any article purchased from us will satisfy you perfectly; that it will give the service you ha e a rit;ht to exppci: that it represents full value for the price you pay. If for any reason whatever you are dissatisfied with any article purchased from us, we expect you to return it to us at our expense. We will then exchange it for exaotlv what vou want, or will return vour nionev. including anv transportation charses you have paid. Sears, Roebuck and Co. Utah Avenue and I ander Street NITRATE FOR PROFIT Do you know that NITRATE OF SODA properly applied will absolutely insure a profitable farm or orchard — a beautiful lawn or garden? Ask the SUCCESSFUL FARMER or write us for free literature NITRATE AGENCIES CO. Direct Importers SEATTLE. U. S. A. Distributors Hotel Seattle INIeet your friends at the Seattle Fijis and Phi Delta Theta Lunch- eon every Saturday noon. Ovu- menu offers a wide variety of deliciously prepared foods. Luncheon 50c If you are one of the regulars, luiff said. Our 75c Dinner is the talk of the town. Special attention given to Ban- quets and Private Parties. HOTEL SEATTLE GRILL The National Bank of Commerce OF SEATTLE invites tlie accounts of responsible corporations, firms and individuals, and is prepared to extend every cour- tesy and accommodation consistent with conservative banking. It acts as administrator, executor and trustee, and will be glad to con- sult with those having business of this nature. The Brtmswick-Balke-Collender Co, Billiard Tables, Bowling Alleys and Supplies R. M. DYER Iowa State College, ' 91 S. H. HEDGES Iowa State College, ' 86 CABLE ADDRESS: DREDGIXG SEATTLE Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company, Inc. Engineers and Contractors SPECIALTIES BRIDGP S. STRUCTURAL WORK PIERS AND FOUNDATIONS DREDGING BY ALL METHODS 4.32 Central Buildins ' SEATTLE, WASH. PACIFIC-ALASKA NAVIGATION CO. The Admiral Line SS ADMIRAL DEWEY SS A1)MII!AI, K ANS SS ADMIRAL SCHLEY SS ADMIRAL WATSON SS ADMIRAL FARRAGIT SS AROLINK California — Alaska Service Surpassed bi Xotie For information call or address Pacific-Alaska Navigation Co. S Second Ave., Main 6590 SEATTI Jos. Mayer Bros. Manufai ' tiircrs of Fniteniity and Sorority JEWELRY Medals and Tro[)liy Cups for All Occasions An Inspei ' tion of Our Factory and Salesrooms Invitt ' d Special Designs and Estimates Furnished on Request SALESROOM AND FACTORY 359 col:man building seattle, wash. Hu h A.Wilson Electrical Contractor All Kinds of Electrical IVork Fid ' tiirc.s and Supplies Students ' Lamps and Supplies 4329 14th Ave. X. E. Phone Ken. 315 Eslahthhed 1S7S J. M. E. ATKINSON SON General Insurance HOGE BUILDING SEATTLE Main 7056 Carlisle Packing Company Packers of Puget Sound Canned Salmon FRANK WRIGHT. President and Manager BELLINGHAI I, WASHINGTON Manual Training We Have Furnished 75 per cent OF THE INDUSTRIAL PLANTS IN THE STATE OF WASHINGTON CAN WE NOT SERVE YOU? Ferine Machinery Co. SEATTLE. WASH. Be sure to get a copy of the I . of W. Trize Song, ' i.ie Bow Down to Washington By Lester J. Wilson ' 13 Echo Music Publishing Co. 305 Pine St. SEATTLE, WASH. B. W. CORNWALL SON Fuel Dealers UNIVERSITY STATION NORTH 19 BUILDERS BRICK COMPANY 527 Pioneei- Building, Seattle, Washington Coats, Suits, Dresses, Millinery Shoes, Neckwear, Hosiery and Gloves For Women, Misses and Children A Men ' s Shop for Particular Men MacDoli all oUthwicK Second Avenue and Pike Street Telephone North 125 RANNING LUMBER COMPANY ALL KIXDS OF Dressed Lumber, Sash, Doors, Etc. Hardwood Flooring Specialties 3903 Fourteenth Avenue X. E. : L IX . ' 8(iti Finne Gjarde General Contractors 725 Xorthern Bank and Trust Building SEATTLE, WASH. Seattle Trunk Factory Manufacturers and Dealers in TRUNKS, SUITCASES AND LEATHER GOODS 817 Second Avenue Epler Block SEATTLE, WASH. Eckart Plumbing Heating Company HIGH GRADE Plumbing and Heating 1614 THIRD AVENUE SEATTLE, U. S. A. M. SELLER CO. NORTHWEST DISTRIBUTORS FOR O. p. C. Syracuse China EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS AND MONOGRAMS MADE TO ORDER FOR Fraternities and Sororities Estimates Cheerfully Furnished r, ■ Phone Elliott 1805 The Hamilton Studio PORTRAITS ROOMS 675-680 COLMAN BLDG. 811 FIRST AVENL7E SKATTLE WASHINGTON VJ J College Hotel W. J. STANHOPE. Manafler 4Uth and 14th Ave. N. E. Main l- ' ntrance to University Campus SEA TTLE Phone North 9 European Plan Popular Prices, Strictly Modern Barber Shop, Billiard Room. Lunch Counter Telephone Capitol 1255 Our Drij Cleaning Will Please You Washington Laundry Company Our Carpet Cleaning Department Is Complete 1165 EASTLAKE AVENUE SEATTLE, WASH. Society Stationery Shop 214 MADISON ST. Opposite Orpheum Theatre p]ugraved Weddinu- Amiouneemeuts Cards. Danee Programmes Invitations and Calling Cards Kurd ' s Fiue Stationerv Elliott 4350 E. J. Hartney The Metropolitan BuOding Co. Operates These Buildings: ■White Building Ot¥ice Building Henry Building - - - Office Building Stuart Building Office Building Cobb Building Specialized Medical Building Post Intelligencer Building - - Office Building iletropolitan Theatre Otis Elevator Building Greelev Building - - - Store Building Seattle Art Bldg. Store Building Metropolitan Garage Building Olympic Building - -Garage Building Press Club Building Hippodrome Building Whitson Building College Club Building Uhl Building Store Building Women ' s Univ. Club Bldg. Xeyhart Building Store Building Fisheries Building Arena Building - Auditorium Sawyer Building - - - Store Building The Buildings are all located on the University Tract and adjoining the Post Office Building. The Service furnished tenants in the Company ' s Buildings is the best that can be given and is unvarying. The tenants in the buildings are of the best class, and the company discriminates against the undesirable class, thereby protecting the I ' t ' putation of both its buildings and tenants. Is it not an advantage to have your offices in the midst of good .surroundings? Metropolitan Building Company MAIN 4!IS4 ll ) WHITE BUILDING Kilbourne Clark Manufacturing Company 71 Columbia Street SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, U. S. A. Electrical Engineers Manufacturers of RADIO TELEGRAPH APPARATUS For Commercial, Ship and Shore Stations C. C. BELKN ' Al ' . President H. F. CONLV, Secretary PHONE MAIN 2269 C. C. Belknap Glass Company Ini[,ortcrs ami Wholesalers of Plate and Window Glass Manufacturers of Mirrors and Art Glass and Dealers in GLASS OF ALL KINDS Office and Factory RAILROAD AVE. AND STEWART ST. Across from Pier 10 SEATTLE, WASH Office Phone North 2510 Res. Phone North :il2:! Varsity Garage JACK EOSESKRANZ 4029-31 14TH AVENl ' E X. E. General Auto Repairing Magnetos, Carbtiretors and Engines Tuned Is. Grease and Sundries Bargains in Used Autos Brooklyn Laundry Foot of Brooklyn Aveuue Phone North 966 D. R. TEVIS, Ma SEATTLE. WASH. V. V. WAI.l.IN .1. W. NORDSTROM Wallin Nordstrom Dealers in Up-to-Date Footwear Agents for Stacy Adams Shoes Phone Main 2427 1422 Second Ave. SEATTLE, WASH. .An old established office fully equipped in department of Real Estate Albert B. Lord Suite 312 Northern Bank Building Cor. 4th and Pike, Seattle PHONE MAIN .S942 ELLIOTT 1478 MAIN 1371 Trick Murray Trickuality stationers, Printers, Binders Embossers Steel and Copper Plate Engravers Office Supplies 72 Columbia Street SEATTLE I ' liL.iK- Main a. II, [.. WILLIAMS. Ma Seattle Sand Gravel Co., Inc. Washed and Screened Gravel In any Size an.l Quantity CONCRETE SAND AND GRAVEL CO. S. . . PHILLIPS. City Salesman OFFICK 90 7 Northern Mank ; Trust BIdg. SEATTLE, WASH. North . ' SM Brooklyn Ave. and East 40th St. Brooklyn Service Garage E. .1. KKNNKDY. Manacer Storage, Repairing, Accessories, Tires Ford Specialists We Recharge Batteries Service Station Gasoline, Oils and Greases Tucker, Hanford Co. Lithographers All Kinds of Labels Blank Book Make Bank, Insurance and Commercial JJork 703 Westlake Ave. N. SEATTLE, WASH. Lady Attendant Phone North 212 W. E. FORKNER Licensed Embalmer University I ' udertalving Parlors 4214 14TH AVENUE N. E. SEATTLE, WASH. EXCEPTIONAL OFFER In Ladies ' Made to Order Suits $75. SUITS $75. VALUE In Every Respect for Only $ Twenty -Five Dollars $ 723 Union Street. Corner of 8th Ave. The Store Below Hotel Rhein Frank L. Horsfall !.. .. M.D., CM. Physician Surgeon SUITE 709 COBB BLDG. SEATTLE, U. S. A. Elliott 4223 Hours, 9 to 5 C.R.Oman,D.D.S. 1010 Joshna Green Bldg. SKATTLE Osseward ' s Prescription Pharmacy Cobb Buildin,tc Curtis The Curtis Studio wishes to thank the Students of the University of Washington for their kind patronage in the past, and to hope for a con- tinuance of our pleasant relations in the future. The Curtis Studio Downs Block, 709 Second Ave. SEATTLE E. S. Cl ' RTIS. Sole Owner and Manager W. Martius Music House, Inc. IflOP Fir. ' t Ave. SEATTLE, WASH. SHEET MUSIC MUSICAL MERCHANDISE For Sale PIANOS ° ' Special Attention Given to Orders From Universitie.s and Public Schools ELECTRICAL Engineering and Construction Repairs, Rentals General Nlachinen ' A. H. COX CO., Inc. 3(11) First Avenue South Elliott 1164 Main 1121 Leschi Boat House S. A. CARMEN Proprietor Fast ] Iotor Boats Siwa.sh ' ' and Swastika for charter at any time of Day or Kight. Launches. Row Boats and Canoes for Hire Canoe Storage Space and Lockers for Rent Telephone Beacon 2344 LESCHI PARK Lake Washington A. L. SMITH, President W. R. OSBORX. Manager East 4845 North 971 F. C. HARPER, Sec ' }- Capitol S04 HARPER BARGE LIGHTERAGE CO. Lightering and ToiL ' ing H S Scows 50 to TOO Tons Cap. Fish, Water and Oil Scows 2112 L. C. Smith Bids Phone Main 234 2 SEATTLE G. E. WARNER The Collegetown Jeweler Over ao Years Experience 4345 14TH AVENUE N. E. Near Cor. 4 5th St. Iniversit.v Phone Kcinv.Ki.l V.M S1-. TTLE. W. SH. All JV Sweaters Made by Saxony Knitting Co. Manufacturers of Sicifnt?iing Suits, Jerseys and Athletic Goods Compliments of The Commercial Boiler Works FOX JENKINS, PROPS. Telephone Main 1127 27 LANDER STREET SEATTLE, U. S. A. Seattle Ice Cream Go ' s Cream of Qualty Creams PURE DELICIOUS Especial Attention Given to Fraternity and University Orders H. L. Bennett Box Factory, Manufacturers of All Kinds of Boxes and Crates Inc. Phone I :iliott 429 J. T. ROBINSON, President anc I Manager 2r)no Ninth Avenue South CHICKERING AND LESSER PRICED PIANOS Player Pianos - Grand Pianos Sold On Easy Payments Renting a Specialty EILERS MUSIC HOUSE THIRD AT UNIVERSITY LENNON ' S Headquarters for Gloves, Hosiery, Umbrellas, Hand- kerchiefs and Men ' s Ties LENNON ' S 1106 SECOND AVENUE Paul P. Whitham C on suit i n g Civil Engineer Railway and Harbor Terminal Work 423-24-25 New York Blk. SEATTLE, WASH. Phone Elliott 163S J.J. Agutter Co. Electrical Engineers and Contractors 622 FOURTH AVENUE SEATTLE in The Finest Equipped Photographit Studio in the Northwest J.W. LOTHROP PHOTOGRAPHER HIGH-GRADE PORTRAITURE PHONE MAIN 5403 425 Walker Building, Seattle, Wash. Second and University Costumes, Wifis Telephones and Tights Store, Elliott 5041 Res., Main 2540 Established 1889 COSTUMES UEBEN H Costuming Co, , . LUKBEN, Manager 1923 THIRD AVENUE Rear Moore Theatre We Rent, Sell and Make to Order SEATTLE Home Phone Queen Anne 2410 Queen Anne 3755 Henrikson Co. Inc. Engineers and General Contractors OFFICE 233 GLOBE BLDG. Phone Elliott 3492 SEATTLE, WASH. Established 1892 PHILIP J. BEADV, Pres BRADY CO. Shipping and Commission OIL— FERTILIZERS— SALMON Globe Building SEATTLE, WASH, Phone Main 5433 TJrO - ' 1322 — 5 ' — AVE  V ' Seattle Wash lOp Theatrical and Masquerade Costumes Wigs. Tights, Etc. Full Line of Children ' s Costumes of All Periods ALL FOR RENT OR FOR SALE Manufacturer and Dealer in High Class Monuments and Mausoleums in All Foreign and Domestic Marbles and Granites WHOLKSALE AND RETAIL We Own and Operate Three Granite Quarries Index Granite and Monumental Works J. A. SODKltliERG. I ' rop. 310 Alaska Building Phone Main 4674 SEATTLE, WASH. Sanitary Public Market The Most Complete Establishment In the West First Avenue, between Pike and Pine Our Free Delivery System Covers University District Daily Most Centrally Located Flower Shop in the City L. W. McCOY Florist SECOND AVENUE AT MARION Elliott S38 Compliments of Brooklyn Dairy Company Seattle ' s Cleanest Dairy F. W. BICHHOLZ Cheever Buchholz PI limbing and Heating FIRST-CLASS REPAIR WORK Sewer Tile, Conductor Pipe Shop 5625 14th Ave. N. E. Office Phone Kenwood 174 Compliments of Lehmann Bros. City Mills Seattle, Washington STEWART AND HOLMES DRUG CO. JVholesciIc Druggists Importers and Manufacturers Assayers ' and Chemists ' Supplies Northwestern Distributors LOWNEY ' S CHOCOLATES Our Home Is in Seattle Special Rates to Students Seattle V. A. PINN ' KV, Mi. ' r Fine Portraits at Popular Prices Northern Bank Building Westlake, Fourth and Pike Streets Northwest School Furniture Co. 409 Maritime Bldg. Seattle School Equipment Theatre, Church and Public Seating Great Western Smelt ing Refining Co. Manufacturers of Babbitt, Typemetah, Solder 1924 NINTH AVE. SOUTH SEATTLE, WASH. We Recommend Corona Blend Coffee 100% Pure The A ristocrat of Coffees Imported, Roasted and Ground Daily by Commercial Importing Co. SEATTLE 1012 Western Ave. Main 1061 Link- Belt and Dodge Products Co. Transmission and Labor Saving Machinery Seattle Portland YANKEE HILL ' S 1891 Brand GRANULATED CANE MAPLE SUGAR BLENDED SYRUP 1891 3RAHP. TRYCORNO SYRUP 1916 Brand Hotel Wasliijigtoii Annex A perfectly appointed hotel with an exceptional per sonal service. Excellent facilities for dinners ant functions of a arieil character. .1. H. DAVIS. I ' roi.rietor. Hitt Fireworks Company at their factory manufacture everything of importance in the fireworks line. Patent Safety Rockets, Radium Flares for taking Moving Pictures, and a number of other inventions. They were the sole pyrotech- nists for the San Francisco World ' s Fair and received highest award for fireworks — .Medal of Honoi ' . OFFICE AND WORKS COLUMBIA STATION SEATTLE, WASH. $4 Regal Shoes Forty Styles at 4.00 Nothing Over 5.00 SEATTLE STORE 1118 SECOND AVENUE LUMBER Where You Want It When You Want It BRACE HERGERT MILL CO Center of Seattle A Board or a Building NICK BRACE, Sales Agent (■ -j Ash You Grocer f for Carstens ' Wasliiiigtoti Brand HAMS Compliments of Capt. a. a. Paysse Harbor Master BACON Pier No. 1 and LARD i: y j fl 1 ' DEALERS IN HIDES, PELTS, WOOL AND FURS (i -| rilOXK MAIN 2324 ' l he H. F. Norton Co. Leather and Findings Compliments of Pacific Coast Company Shoe Store Supplies 206 Third Avenue South SEATTLE, WASH. J L— 1) Puget Mill Company LUMBER MANUFACTURERS Cargoes a Specialty Mills at Port Gamble and Port Ludlow, Washington OWNERS OEFICE WashingtonPark Addition 208 Walker Buildin| SHELL SERVICE STATIONS Sell Shell Motor Oil So Do Many Dealers. It Is a Splendid Lubricant A Trial Will Convince Hew Washington Hotel SEATTLE, U.S.A. The New Washington represents the best that local pride and en- thusiasm can oit ' er the visitor and ex- presses in structure and social atmos- phere the highest ideals of Seattle. ' I ' ntler the Management of J. C. Marmaduke The Erickson Construction Company C ' antrdctor.s Railroads, Dredging, Harbor Improvement and Heavy Masonry 25 Downs Bids., SEATTLE Tel. Main 307 BRODERICK BASCOM LOGGERS SUPPLY CO. Sole Distributors of thi Fanintis ■ ' Yellow Sti-and ' and Otlier Staudard Grades t)t ' WIRE ROPE Supplies for Camp and Mill 623-25 Western Avenue SEATTLE, WASH. San Juan Fishing and Packing Co. (INC) Wholesale Dealers, Packers and Shippers of Fresh, Frozen, Salt, Smoked and Canned Fish SEATTLE, WASHINGTON The CoUegetown Shop The popular Haberdashery patronized by all the Students ' ' You Know Where ' Is Not Wise to leave valuables in some in- secure place where burglars may steal them or fire con- sume them. Put them in our Fire and Burglar Proof Vault, where you can rent a Safe Deposit Box for $3.00 and up per year People ' s Savings Bank SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE, WASH. Established 1891 0 . SruAMA i Importers and E.xporters Japanese Fine Arts and General Merchandise 21f; SECOND AVENCK SOCTII :ind l:!()4 SECOND AVENUE SEATTLE, WASH. In matters as highly technical and inii ortant tliose relating to PATENTS it is of the greatest importance that you have both lionest and capable advice and service. Investigate I he experience and record of an attorney before em- ploying him. H. L. REYNOLDS 548 Central Bldg.. Seattle Phone Main 3407 Graduate in Slechanical Engineering of Iniversitv f Illipois. Formerly Examiner in U. S. Patent Of- fice. 30 years specializing in patent worlv. Charles L. Reynolds, i Compliments 0 CRANE CO. 419 Second Ave. So. Seattle Branch of Crane Co., Chicago Founded by R. T. Crane 1855 THE ANDERSON STEAMBOAT CO. 8 Steamers Can Be Chartered for Parties Day or Evening Telephone Beacon 183 Leschi Park Seattk Lowman Hanford Company Booksellers Stationers Printers Engravers First Avenue and Cherry Street SEATTLE 476 Your Success Depends upon your ability to Save We pay -i c on savings deposits and our $100 bonds net as high as ! ' ,• with entire safety. THE GUARDIAN TRUST SAVINGS BANK First Avenue at Columbia SEATTLE Gas Is Raising the Standard and Lowering the Cost of Living ONCE a luxury, later a convenience, gas i. ? now classed anions the necessities of modern life. Its utility in the home and in business is fully recognized, its value as an economic force is fixed. In no other way. for so small a price, is it possible to obtain the great service which it gives. Seattle Lighting Company STUART BUILDING ICE SKATING Three Sessions Daily 10 a.m. to 12 noon 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. 8:15 p m. to lC:30p.m Except Monday Night and Sundays Get ill the ' 4anie (lint join ill our healthy sport Open about Oct. 27, ' 16 Specialist in PIPES Monograms Inlaid in Briar Pipes Meerschaums 3Iade Expert Pipe Repairing Agents Charles the Great CIGARS Spring Cigar Co., Inc. 707 FIRST AVENUE liranchcs — 911 Socoii.l . vomio: Butler Hotel Staii.l Schwabacher Bros. Co. Inc. Wholesale Grocers Manufacturers, Importers and Tobacconists SEATTLE, WASHINGTON Paid Up Capital $200,000 Directors: C. C. rawsey. John Hastie, J. M. Doupan, L. Lohse, Jr. Sound Construction Engineering Co. inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS OFFICE U. S. Immigration Office Western an.l Union BRANCH OFFICES Portland — San Francisco — Los Angeles Piper Taft Where You Should Buy Your Athletic Goods Sporting Goods ' ' Safety First ' ' Vitrified Brick Pavements Denny-Renton Clay Coal Company SEATTLE Smoke- Juan de Fuca Manufactured in Bond Clear Havana Cigar Morgan Cigar Co. Tampa, Florida (( Compliments of Portland Cordage Company J Pure Food Products Grescent BAKING POWDER Flavoring Extracts Mapleine Spices Crescent Cream Coffee Ask Your Grocer 479 Good wishes to every stu- dent of this great university. May your future be all you wish yourself. Cheasty ' s O. C. GRAVES, President and Manager Value Tells Everything for Men SECOXD AVENUE AND SPRING Our ' ictor Victrola Dipaiimi ' iit has a cartful nyslcin of checking al l orders for I ' ictrolas and Victor Records An order by mail, however, receives extra- ordinary care to insure continued satisfac- tion to our growing mail order patronage. Write for Records, Record Catalogue or Victor Victrolas — $15 to $400. Sherman . May Go. Third Avenue at Pine Street. SEATTLE HARRY S. LARSON Merchant Tailor As a man dresses so is he in the estimation of the public. Have your suits made at Larson ' s the Tailor, and take no chances. 1312 E. 45th Street Kenwood 131 A. R. BURTT. Pres. B. G. CAMPBELL. Sec.-Treas. Paget Timber Co. PILING. DERRICK STICKS, CEDAR POLES AND SPARS 1701-2 HOGE BUILDING Phone Main 1303 SEATTLE, WASH. Pug-et Sound Navigation Company Steamers to All Points on Puget Sound General Office, C0L:MAX DOCK Tel. Main 3993 JohnA.Whalley Co. Security Bonds and General Insurance General Agents: Fidelity Deposit Co. of Md. Maryland Casualty Co. New Hampshire Fire Ins. Co. Granite State Fire Ins. Co. County Fire Ins. Co. of Pliila. COLM. N BLOCK SEATTLE SEEDS Garden. Flower and Field Fertilizers for Lawn.s. etc. For Lawns, Etc. Poultry Supplies Seattle Seed Company SlO-12 WESTERN AVE. Phone Main 156 The Gold Medal Winner Maplewood Brand Certified Milk and Ice Cream Delivered Everi ichere Pure Milk Dairy, Inc. 1512 Seventh Avenue Compli iieiils of GEORGE A. LEE Republican Candidate for Governor Start a Savings Account OF A DOLLAR OR MORE with The Oldest and Largest Strictly Savings Institution in Washington Assets $5,400,000.00 Washington Savings and Loan Association Established 26 Years SIO Second Avenue RAYMOND R. FKAZIER President WW. THAANtM Vice-President H. D. CAMPBKLI Secretary Conservative Real Estate Investments Loans, Rentals, Insurance West Wheeler COMIAN BLOCK National Ladies Tailors Phone JIain 2259 Suiis made to order $20. 00 Over 50 Styles of Cloth to Select From Fit and Workmanship Guaranteed 419 Union Street SEATTLE, WASH. ROSLYN FURNACE COAL bf)9 Lou.maii BIdg. The Roslyn Fuel Company Scattlf, Hash. n5EATTLE MUNICIPAL PLAN rn of 9375 kilo System is the foremost municipal syste al caoacity of 7500 kilowatts, with ove )n Lake Union at Eastlake and Nelson ic generating station at Cedar Falls. 482 FAST DYt Isti BERLIN BRAND HOSIERY For Mill, JV ' jiiicii and (Uiildren 25c and 50c Ask Your Liical Dealer for Tliis Brand WESTERN DRY GOODS CO. Wholesale Distributors SEATTLE Harper- ■ Hill Brick Co. BRICK Common, Face, Sewer TILE Partition, Drain, Building 7113 Central Blc g. Phone Main 1334 ij Your Confidence will not be niisplaced if you put into oiH- hands the responsihility of handling all the details. We specialize in giving the kind of service that many friends have been kind enough to pronounce perfect. Sincerely yours, E. R. BUTTERWORTH SONS Established 33 Ye Tested Seeds Rosel)ushes, Seeds, Bulhsr Etc. Get Our Beautiful Catalogue Aabling-Boyce Seed Co. Aabling Ebright Co. 89 PIIvE STREET SEATTLE Safety and Service- University State Bank P. J, McHugh Paving Construction Co. GENERAL CONTRACTOR SEATTLE. WASIL 483 Ask for and Demand BOYD ' S Overcoats, Raincoats. Gabardines and Cravenette Proof COATS for Ladies and Gentlemen John L. Boyd, Jr «1I0LESALE DISTRIBUTOR 318 OCCIDENTAL AVENUE SEATTLE, WASH. Wm. D. Perkins Co. BANKERS 211 Chen-y St.. Seattle Dealers In School District Bonds Improvement Bonds Bank Stocks First Mortgages Warrants Safe Deposit Vaults Established 22 Years ' J Compliments of FREDERICK NELSON MOUNT VERNON CREAM COMPANY Seattle, Washington NORTHERN CLAY COMPANY MANUFACTURERS OF ARCHITECTURAL TERRA COTTA THE BEST FACING MATERIAL ARTISTIC FIREPROOF PERMANENT Auburn Washington Sol Due Hot Springs HOTEL AND SANITARIUM In the Heart of the Olympics Unexcelled aceonnnodatioiis for 400 sniests. If you would be well, strong and cheerful go to Sol Due. Nature has provided a remedy in the hot mineral water. 140 degrees Fahrenheit. Rheumatism in all forms, liver, stomach and kidney disorders, gout, blood and skin diseases vanish quickly under the magical intluence of Sol Dm- thermal water. Its action is specitic in the cuie of diabetes and goitre. Various forms of amusements and siili ' iidid trmit tishing in Sdl Dm- river. Majestic mountain scenery. Steamer leaves Colman Dock at 12 o ' clock iiii lHight daily, and jiasseugers arrive Sol Due mnm the same day. Rates American plan only, $2.50 a da. - and u|). For descriptive literature and general information wiite or wire II. ( ' . Bowers, lanager. Sol Due. Washington: Seattle Oftice. 740 Henry Building. Phone Elliott 202. Luncheons Ice Cream Fruit Candy And Many Other Thinos ti Delight Vou Eicriithing Home Made GiOCOlATZS lake Rogers ' Lunch and Ice Cream Pari jrs your resort and meeting place Uogcrs ' aiiiliitidii is ta clwaf s Jidve the best of cvcr ffJiing Phone K-576 4;33lt FOURTEEXTII AVE. X. E. ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Copper River Xorthw estern Ry. City Ticket Office 707 Second Avenue, Seattle TELEPHONE MAIN 6686 JOHN H. BUNCH. EVERETT P. CLARK. General Freight and Passenger Agent Asst. Gen. Freight and Passenger Agent See us in our New Home 509 QUEEN ANNE AVENUE The Queen Anne Dye Works Has Four Points oj Superiority T- ' , I Kvery department is HiQUlplflCilt equipped with the latest and most modern devices Ivnown to the dyeing and cleaning trade. Every article for Dependability Z Z French Dry Cleaning is carefully handled and returned absolutely uninjured. T ' ' T T From .M a n a s e r Know now down, every one about the plant is an expert. Some are graduated chemists. ± VUnUrH y .,ble. As an example, we clean short while kid gloves for 5 cents, and long ones for l. ' i cents. Queen Anne Dye Works 519 Queen Anne Ave. CHAS. .MURRAY, Hana.ger, Telephone: Queen Anne i:!ii Louisa K. Lepper Institute of Physical Arts DauriiiL; : Aesthetic P.nllet, Classic and .Modern. l ' iMicinL; ' . Ilcaltli and ( ' on-ective (i iii- Hiistir. I ' hysical Training ' and Swiiii- niini; ' . Halls For Rent (,!uren Anne Ave. and Hoston Odd Fellows Temple East 4: (i 917 E. Pine Mnif. !, ■] pir .Wi Mr. CliarliK IJath ■ivaikil.li- lor L)(•ln..ll tratinll. Speller Hurlbut Second at Union, Seattle Tlie Store Tliat Docs 7 ii)iSs Distributors oj REACH, WRIGHT DITSON and SPALDING l (l , ATHLETIC GOODS Ihc ' cK ' csf ill Go f Supplies ELECTRICITY IN THE HOME TIk ' ytndents and Faculty of the DomestiL- 8t ' ienee Department of the University of Washington are cordially invited to call at any time at tlir Demonstration and Show Rooms of Electrical Household Appliances on the grouncl floor of the Stuart Building. Fourth Avenue and University Place, conducted by Puget Sound Light, Traction Power Company The attendants will be glad to show and explain the advances that Electricity is mak- ing in Domestic Economics and Labor Saving, This invitation is also extended to all members of the Student Body and their friends Electricity Is the Clean, Cheap and Easy Way Puget Sound Tuactiox, Light Poavku Company Amateur Finishing, Bromicle Enlarging, Copying, Lantern Slides WEBSTER STEVENS Commercial Photographers Phone Main 3743 4137-40 ARCADE ANNEX SEATTLE mill DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY of PRINTING WASHINGTON —On the Campus — Education Building SPALDING Athletic Goods Is a trade-marked line assur- ing the purchaser the hest grade of guaranteed goods. Latest ideas at reasonable ])rices. A.G. Spalding Bro. 711 SECOND AVEXTTE SEATTLE. WASH. KcoTiomy Floor System Telephone Main 36.55 Wooden Floor Domes Feigensen Engineering Company 653 Empire Building, Seattle Reinforced Concrete Constructiou Form Specialists Feigcnson ' s Economy Floor System is now being used in the Home Kcononiics Buildins: on the Campus


Suggestions in the University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) collection:

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919


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