Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) - Class of 1914 Page 1 of 348
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lllaslunahm llnmcrstht ■ (L h c §clj u ol of illuttisfru ■ r? ¥ Being tbc gear Poofc of OTasfjtngton Umticrsiitp die deucntt) Annual Volume J3iib(i«brt bp iChe Clastf of 1014 t. toll • IJM3 1 I BUXTON SKINNER PRINTERS SAINT LOUIS 1 ;3C Erecting ear JXeaber, tofjen Cime has tingeb pour bair until grap, Sub fur rotueb pour fair cheek luitii care, Chink once again of baps tfjat are past, Daps tljat Uiere bright anb free as air. TjTook, then, tuitbin the pages Jl of tins boob, s% ee there POWt college frienbs, l eab of ebents anb beebs of pesterbap; dement her them until life’s pleasure enbs. m.h.w. OTtlltam Samuel Curtis ffiTo Mlilliam Samuel Curtis, 2Dcan of tljc jfaculty of tljc 2.abj rljool. tofjo ijas brbotrb fjis energies for a quarter of a century to tfjc builbittg of a ‘‘dSrrater ilOasfjington.” tljis book is gratefully DrDieatrti. Born in IS30 in Wllaync County. Jnbiana, S$r. Curtis rrrcibrb |)is preparatory eburation at barious Illlinois srfjools, atib tfjen grabuatrb from Cttasfjington dlniber= sity toiti) tljc brgrrrs of a. B. anb 1LJL. B. in 1S73 anb 1S7(5 rc3prrtibcly. 93r. Curtis tfjen taugljt in femitlj fleabrnty of ttflasijington Clnibersity. Jor ten years fje srrbeb tfjr best interests of tfce institution anb tfjen re= mobeb to ©ntafja tofjere fje rentatneb in tfjc practice of lato until IS94. 2During tljc latter part of fji5 resibenre in tfjat rity. fje teas one of tfjr trustees of tfjc public Library, a boork toljirfj fjas fjrlpcb fjim consiberably in builbing up tfjc library of ttjr lici to fe rfjool. Jn tS94. fjr rcturnrb to fe t. iouis to again srrbc our alma abater, tfjis time as SDean of tfjc lain rfjool. a position tofjiclj Or fjas fjrlb rbrr since, fllnbrr fjis able direction, tfjc 2.ato fe cfjool fjas ntabr surf) progress tfjat it note ranks toitfj tfjr fore most in tfjc country. ' Efje Unibersity rrrognijcb fjis acfjirbrmrnts by conferring tOe brgrer of JL1L. 2D. in 1905. 99r. Curtis, ably assistrb by fjis toifr. fjas been a potent factor in creating a spirit of closer intimacy brttoren tljc faculty anb tljc stubrnts. ' CEo tfjis able, rouragrous anb giftcb patron of learning anb brbotrb frienb of our alma Skater, tfjis boluntc is respectfully bebiratrb by tfjc Class of 1914. I DiAR. ALMA MaTER.THY AAME 15 SWEET TO ME, OUR. HEARTS ARE ArLL FOR THEE, FAIR SHIACTOA thy halls shall hoaored be , throughout this qreat couatry, to-r -all eternity, our yAsh a ;toa. | Those days of youth which all of us speat with thee Form a dear history, fair Vashv ygtoa . could THEY renewed be, we’d live our days ytith thee,) TOR ALL £T£RAITY, OUR YYoiflACJTO Y. k 3KAIU% CJjr Corporation Officers President Robert Somers Brookings First Vice-President William Keeney Bixby Second Vice-President Henry Ware Eliot Treasurer, and Secretary to the Corporation Edmund Arthur Engler Directors Henry Ware Eliot Robert Somers Brookings Charles Nagel George Oliver Carpenter Isaac Henry Lionberger Alfred Lee Shapleigh Adolphus Busch Edward Mallinckrodt John Fitzgerald Lee William Keeney Bixby William Taussig Robert McKittrick Jones Murray Carletox Robert Henry Stockton David Rowland Francis David Franklin Houston, A.M., LL. D. O A II) FRANKI.IN HOUSTON, Chancellor of the University; A. B., South Caro¬ lina College 1887; A. M., Harvard, 1892; LI..D., Tulane, 1903; LL.D., Wisconsin, 1900; Fellow at South Carolina College, 1887-1888; Superintendent of Schools, Spartanburg, S. C., 1888-1891; Graduate Student, Harvard, 1891-1894; President Harvard Graduate Club, 1893-1894; Adjunct Professor of Political Science, University of Texas, 1894-1897; Associate Professor, 1897-1000; Professor, 1900-1902; Dean of the Faculty, University of Texas, 1899-1902; President Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, 1902-1905; President University of Texas, 1905-1908; Secretary of Agriculture, 1913-; Member American Economic Association; Member Southern Education Board; Fellow Texas State Historical Society; Author “A Critical Study of Nullification in South Carolina”; Trustee John F. Slater Fund; Trustee Rockefeller Sanitary Com¬ mission. [8] DEPARTMENT OF ’ART5 AND SCIENCES •4- fa -f- m m m. m m m m m 1 m m m m ,ss I m m m m i §j E RKDER1C ALDIN HALL, Acting Chancellor of the University; A. 15., Drury College, 1S78; A. M., 1881; Litt. D. 1001, Drury College; L. H. D. Tufts College, 1012; Principal Drury Academy, 1878-01; Goodell Professor of Greek, Drury College, 1802-1001; Dean 1898-1901, Drury College; Collier Professor of Greek, Washington University, 1001; Dean of the College, 1012-13; Trustee Drury College; Director and Superintendent St. Louis City Missionary Society, 1900-1010; Member of American Philological Association; Member American Institute of Archae¬ ology; Member Classical Association of the Middle West and South; Author “Homeric Studies for Young Readers”, “Outline of the Odyssey”; “Outline of the Orestrian Triology”; “Iphigenia in Literature”. I 10 1 John Livingston Lowes, A. L, Ph. D. OI-IN LIVINGSTON LOWES, Acting Dean of the College; A. B., Washington and Jefferson College, 1888; A. M., Washington and Jefferson College, 1901; A. L, Harvard, 1903; Ph.D., Harvard, 1905; Adjunct Professor Mathematics, Washington and Jefferson College, 1888-91; Professor of English, Hanover College, 1895- 1902; Professor of English, Swarthmorc College, 1905-1909; Professor of English, Wash¬ ington University, 1909-; Member Modern Language Association of America; Member of Modern Language Association of Great Britain; Member American Folk-Lore Soci¬ ety; Member Goethe Gesellschaft (Weimar, Germany); Member Societd des Ancicns Textes Francais. 0 I 11 1 sm tg 22 Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M. M. F.. H LEXANDER SUSS LANGSDORF, Dean of the School of Engineering, B.S. in M.15., Washington University, 1 SOS; Cornell University, 1901; ln- strtietor in Physics, Washington University, 1898-1900; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering in charge of department, 1901-1904; Professor of Elec¬ trical Engineering, 1904- -; Dean School of Engineering, 1910-; Fellow American Insti¬ tute of Electrical Engineers; Engineers’ Club of St. Louis (Secretary, 1907-1911; V ice- President, 1911; President, 1912); Member Academy of Science of St. Louis; Member Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Sigma Xi. John Beverley Robinson —i ' OHN BEVERLEY ROBINSON, Professor in Charge, School of Architecture: 1 attended Columbia University, N. Y.; Fellow American Institute of Architects; Member Columbia University Club, Washington Architectural Society, St. Louis Artists’ Guild, University Club; Author of “Principles of Architectural Composition”, “Architectural Composition”. [13] gUfreb (Quinton Bennett V1Y r. SllfrcD Q. lien nett, tobo Dirt) suDDcnlp of pneumonia SDrccmbrr 27, 1912, in ftomr, tods born in fe t. Eouis on 3itilp 25, IS54. l)c toas prepared for college at feunitf) £caDemp anD rntcrrD tlje Jfcesfjman class at flfilasbington Qnibrrsitp in 1870. M 1871 fjc enterrD tlje opl omorc class at gale anD tccribcD the Degree of SI. 75. in 1S74. IKcturning to t. Eouis, be attcnDrD tlje Eato School of lillasbington Unibersitp anD toas aDmittrD to tlje bar but neber praeticcD. 31n 1900 Ijc rntcrrD tlje serbice of tljr ttfnibcrsitp, anD sontetoijat later toas maDc treasurer anD crrr= tarp to tlje Corporation, toljirlj office Ijc IjclD until bis ill health romprllcD bint to leabe for Iltalp, toljcrc be libeD until tbc time of bis Death. 99r. liennett toa3 a man of toiDc rraDing anD general culture. flDf absolute integrity in all bis af= fairs, fair atiD ronsiDeratr of all those toitb toljont be rantr in contact, abobr all, a gentleman in cbetp sense of the toorD; bis instinct anD brcrDing maDc bint manp frirnDs anD toon unibersal respect. i)r toill be gratefullp rrntcmbcrrD bp all tobo fcnrto bint here as a lopal member of our CUnibrrsitp, both Sin= cere anD unselfish in bis Drbotion to its interests. [141 ■lor-i K.S2, Jfacultj) Cftc College Department of Astronomy Assistant Professor Georce Oscar James, Ph, D. Department of Botany Professor George Thomas Moore, Ph. D. Assistant Professor Samuel Monds Coulter, Ph. D. Mr. W. W. Ohlweiler Department of Chemistry Associate Professor Leroy McMaster, Ph. D. Assistant Professor Robert Anderson Hall, Ph. D. Mr. James Kennedy Black, B.S. Department of Drawing Professor Holmes Smith, AM. Mr. Delos Charles Nicholson Department of Economics and Sociology Professor Allyn Abbott Young, Pii.D. Acting Associate Professor Theodore W. Glocker, Pii.D. Department of Education Professor Edgar James Swift, Pii.D. Department of English Professor John Livingston Lowes, Pii.D. Assistant Professor Robert Stinson Starbird, A.B. Assistant Professor William Ray Mackenzie, Pii.D. Mr. Francis Cox Walker, Pii.D. Miss Ethel Genevieve Sprague, A.B. Miss Ethel Leigh Richards, A.B. 15 Department of French Professor Gaston Douay, A.M. Assistant Professor. Winthrop Holt C’uenery, Ph.D. Mr. Maurice Faure Department of Geology Assistant Professor Walter Edward McCourt, A.M. Mr. Malcolm Earl Wilson, M.S. Department of German Professor Otto Heller, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Philipp Seiberth, A.M. Mr. Max Diez, A.M. Department of Greek Professor Frederic Addin Hall, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D Assistant Professor Georoe Reeves Throop, Ph.D. Department of History Associate Professor Roland Greene Usher. Ph.D. Mr. Harrison Clifford Dale, A.M. Department of History of Art Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. Mr. Delos Charles Nicholson, B.S. Department of Latin Professor Frederick William Shipley, Ph.D. Assistant Professor George Reeves Throop, Ph.D. Department of Mathematics Professor Emeritus Calvin Milton Woodward, Ph.D., LL.D, Professor Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Ph.D. Assistant Professor George Oscar James, Ph.D. Assistant Professor William Henry Roever, Ph.D. Mr. Joseph Chappell Rayworth, A.M. Mr. James Edward Donahue, A.M. Department of Mechanics Professor Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Ph.D. Assistant Professor George Oscar James, Ph.D. Department of Philosophy Assistant Professor Charles Edward Cory, S.T.B., Ph.D. Department of Physical Training Mr. Frank Henry Ewerhardt, M.D. Mr. Frank Mitchell Cayou Miss Frances Lewis Bishop, M.D. Miss Florence Grant, A.B. I 10 1 Department of Physics Professor Francis Nipher, A.M., LL.D. Assistant Professor Lindley Pyle, A.M. Mr. Charles F. Meyer, Ph.D. Department of Psychology and Education Professor Edgar James Swift, Ph.D. Department of Spanish Assistant Professor Winthrop Holt Chenery, Ph.D. Department of Zoology Professor James Francis Abbott, Ph.D. Mr. Albert Marion Brown, Pii.B., LL.B., A.M. djool of (Engineering Civil Engineering Professor John Lane Van Qrnum, C.FL Assistant Professor Ernest Osgood Sweetser, B.S. Mr. Charles Elijah Galt, B.S. Mechanical Engineering Professor Ernest I. inwood Ohi.e, M.E. Mr. Thomas H. Smith Assistant Professor Franz Alfred Mr. Edmund William Martin Berger, B.S., M.E. Mr. Arthur Seibert, M.E. Electrical Engineering Professor Alexander Suss Lancsdorf, M.M.E. Assistant Professor George William Lamke, B.S. Mr. Chester Harvey Hardy, B.S. Chemical Engineering Associate Professor Leroy McMaster, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Robert Anderson Hall, Pii.D. Mr. James Kennedy Black, B.S. cfjool of Urcijitectnre Professor John Beverly Robinson Mr. Lawrence Hill, B.S. Professor Charles Abella, A.D.G. Architecte Diplomv du Gouvcrncment Francais Class of 1913 Emma Thuener. Lewis Maverick. OmccRS Lewis Maverick Emma Thuener ANNY Barck David uTHBRMNd William Carson rWklenl Vice fWe. -Secretary rea urcr Arm$ 1 10 1 ..Hill If tlllllll mm © G ' Ai )elk Antoinette Agnes Aegerter College Entered in February, Mild; President Government Club, ' 12; Greek Play, ’12; Women’s Athletic Association, ’ll, ' 12, ’13; V. W. C. A. Pincknevvillc, III. Fanny Florence Baird College Entered as Junior from Illinois College. Shepard Barnes St. Louis, Mo. Electrical Engineering Varsity Football, ’ll, ' 12; Class Football, ’10; Class Basketball, ' 10, ’ll, ’12, ' 13; Class Base¬ ball, ’ll; Class Track, ' ll; Business Manager 1013 Hatchet; A.I.E.E., Vice-President, ’I2-’13, Talisman, Lock and Chain; “13,” Pralma. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Anny Barck St. Louis, Mo. College Class Secretary, 1013; Class Basketball, ’OO-’ltt. MO-’ll; V. W. C. A., ’00- ' 10; Women’s Athletic Association. Kappa Alpha Theta Thomas Lloyd Blakemore St. Louis, Mo. Mechanical Engineering A.S.M.E.; Chapel Choir; Y. M. C. A. Ralph Bryan ... St. Louis, Mo. Architecture Student Council, ' lO- ' ll, ' 11-’12, ’12-T3; Secretary; TI-T2, ’12-T3; Class Treasurer, TO-’ll; Class President, ’11-’12; Treasurer Yeatman High School Club; Glee Club, T1-T2, ’12-T3; President, ’11- ' 12, ' 12- ' 13; Vice-President W. U. Athletic Associ¬ ation, ’12-’13; W. U. Architectural Society, Presi¬ dent, ’12-’13; Art Editor, 1913 Hatchet; Class Football, ' 119, ’10; Thyrsus; Quadrangle Club. “13,” Pralma; Sigma Alpha Epsilon William Lawrence Bryan St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Collimation Club Hazel Olive Burch St. Louis, Mo. College Thyrsus, ’ll, T2, T3; Student Life; Quadrangle Club; Women’s Athletic Association; May Day Dances, ’12; Y. W. C. A. 121 1 William Glasgow Bruce Carson . St. Louis, Mo. College Student Life, Associate Editor, ’12, Managing Editor, ’12-’13; Chapel Choir, ’l()-’ll; Thyrsus Annual Play, ’12, ’13; Senior Play, ’10; Quadrangle Club. Hazel Virginia Carter . Kirkwood, Mo, College Entered as Junior from Missouri University; Quadrangle Club, T2, ’13; May Day Dances, ’12; Women’s Athletic Association. Kappa Kappa Gamma Dorothy Rudd Childs St. Louis, Mo. College Les Causeuses, Secretary, TO-11, President, 12- T3; Chapel Choir, ’10-T1-T2; Government Club, ’12-T3; Women’s Athletic Association, ' 12-T3; Sophomore Honors, ’ll; Greek Play, 12. Klco Norman Chivvis .St. Louis, Mo Chemical Engineering Varsity Basketball, ’13; Class Football, ' 10; Class Basketball, ’O8-’09-T0-’ll-’12-T3, Captain. ’13; Quadrangle Club, ’12; Kakodvl Club. Sigma Alpha Epsilon 4 J i 122 ) Paul Miller Ellman St. Louis, Mo. Mechanical Engineering Thyrsus, ’11-’12-’13, Assistant Business Manager, ’11-’12, Sergcant-at-Arms, ’12-T3; Chapel Choir, ’U-T2-T3; Civics Club, T2-M3, Secretary-Treas¬ urer, ' 13; A. S. M. E. John Fleming Chemical Engineering Clifford Godwin Mechanical Engineering Varsity Track, ’13. Kappa Sigma St. I.ouis, Mo. 122 ] Verne V. Gould . . St. Louis, Mo. College Financial Manager W. U. Athletic Association, M1-M2; President Student Council, ’11- ' 12; Quad¬ rangle Club, ’11-’12; Thyrsus, Business Manager, MO-Ml; Civics Club, Ml-M2- J 13; Business Manager Hatchet, 1!)12; “13,” Pralma. Phi Delta Phi, Bela Theta Pi Helen Hagin . St. Louis, Mo. College Greek Play, M2; Government Club, Vice-Presi¬ dent, M2; V. W. C. A. Gustav Adolimi Haseman St. Louis, Mo. Architecture W. U. Architectural Society Richard Allen Hatch St. Louis, Mo. College Debating Club, Vice-President, M2-M3, Sergcant- at-Arms, M2; Chess and Checker Club, Secretary, M2-M3; Y. M. C. A., Secretary, M3; Chapel Choir, M1-M2-M3; Greek Play, Ml, Principal, M2. 121 | ' I f r • f.C r W . ?n He sn eb eiee ri fr. rr. H ' lrl f r •r • ' ARTS S - SClLttCLS Oscar M. Hawkins St. Louis, Mo. College Greek Play, ’11-M2; Y. M. C. A.; Chess and Checker Club; Sophomore Honors. St. Louis, Mo. Elsie Margaret Hoolan College Kappa Alpha Theta George Murdock Jackson . St. Louis, Mo. College Thyrsus, ’11-T2-T3, Auditing Committee, ’12- T3; Debating Club, ’0S-’09-TO; Y. M. C. A., ’12- ' 13; Civics Club, ’11-’12-’13, Secretary and Treas¬ urer, ’12; Class Baseball, ’09-’10; Class Basket¬ ball, ’OS,’()!), 11, T2, T3; Class Track, ’09, ’HI; Class Cross Country Team, ’09, ’10; Varsity Track, ’12. Alice Jeiile . St. Louis, Mo. College Class Basketball, TO, Ml, ’12, M3, Captain, M2; Women’s Athletic Association, Vice-President, M1-M2, President, ’12-M3. ) rlwei [25] Fabian Miller Kannenstine Si. Louis, Mo. Electrical Engineering Sophomore Honors; A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E. Arthur G. Keller . . .. St. I.ouis, Mo. Civil Engineering Class Baseball, ’10, ’ll, Captain, ’ll; Class Foot¬ ball. ’10; Collitnation Club. Madie Elizabeth Klotz St. Louis, Mo. College Junior Representative Women’s Council, ’11-’12; President Women ' s Organization, ’12-’13; Women ' s Honor Committee, ’U-’12, ’12-’13; W. L. Con¬ sumers’ League, President, ’ 12-’ 13; Lcs Causcuscs, President, 11-12; Government Club, ’ 11—’12; W. A. G.. ' 10- ' ll; Student Life, ' 12-’I3; Chapel Choir, ’0I)-’10-’11-’12- ' 13. Frederick Adolph Kohlmeyer St. Louis, Mo. Mechanical Engineering A. S. M. E. I 20 ] Elmer Leslie Lacey Webster Groves, Mo. Mechanical Engineering Varsity Basketball, ’12-T3; Class Basketball, ’10-’l 1-’12-’13, Captain, ’12; Class Baseball, TO-’ll- T2-T3; Class Track, TO; A. S. M. E., Secretary- Treasurer, T2. “13” Theta Xi. . Theodore F. Leilich St. Louis, Mo. College Class Baseball, TO; Debating Club, Student Lite Representative, TO-’ll, Treasurer, T1-T2; Civics Club, President, T2-T3, Secretary-Treasurer, T2. Henry R. Lohmann Kansas City, Mo. Architecture Editor-in-Chief 1913 Hatchet; Student Life, Asso¬ ciate Editor, T2; Glee Club, Manager, T2-T3; Chapel Choir, President, ’11-T2; Thyrsus, Ser¬ geant-at-arms, T1-’ 12; W. L ' . Architectural Society, Vice-President, T2-T3. Obelisk, “13,” Pralma Beta Theta Pi Carolyn Williams Long St. Louis, Mo. College Y. W. C. A.. Intercollegiate Committee, TO; Dele¬ gate Y. W. C. A. Student Conference, TO; Secre¬ tary, TO- ' l 1; President,T2; ChapelChoir,Secretary, T1-T2; Student Life, T1-T2-T3, Associate Editor, T2; Associate Editor 1913 Hatchet; Les Causeuses; T1-T2; Government Club, T1-T2; VV. U. Con¬ sumer’s League, ' 12-T3; Senior Representative Women ' s Council, T2-T3; Class Secretary, ’12, Women’s Representative on Single Tax Com¬ mittee, T2-T3. I 27 | St. Louis, Mo. Lancelot L. Lurking . Electrical Engineering Glee Club, ’11-’12-’13; A. I. E. E. Leo McCarthy St. Louis, Mo. College President Student Body, ’12-’13; President VV. U. Athletic Association; Editor-in-Chief Student Life, ’12-’13; Thyrsus; Varsity Football, ’10-’ll- ' 12; Associate Editor 1913 Hatchet. Obelisk, “13,” Pralma Beta Theta Pi Robert VV. McElhinney Clayton, Mo. College Marcaret Manley Memphis, Tenn. College President McMillan Hall, ’12-T3; Treasurer McMillan, ’10-T1-T2; Class Basketball, ’09-T0- T1-T2-T3, Captain, ’lO-’ll; Class Secretary, ' 11- ' 12; Women’s Council, ’11- ' 12-’13, Secretary, ' 11-’12; Student Life, Tl-’12- ' 13, Exchange Editor, 12-T3; Women’s Athletic Association, Secretary- Treasurer, TO-’II; Lcs Causeuscs, Government Club. Lewis Adams Maverick San Antonio, Tex. M echanical Engineering Light Weight Wrestling Champion. ' 10-’U; De¬ bating Club, Treasurer, ’lO-’ll; Class Hatchet Representative; Associate Editor HUH Hatchet; A. S. M. E., Vice-President, 11-12; Student Council, ’U-T2-T3; Honor Committee, ' 11-T2; Financial Manager W. I ' . Athletic Association, ’12-T3; Class Treasurer. ' 1I-T2; Class President, ’12- ' 13. “13,” Pralma Phi Delta Theta Anna C. Mills St. Louis, Mo College Women’s Athletic Association; Class Basketball, TO- ' I ]-’12-T3; V. W. C. A.; Government Club: Les Causeuses. W. A. G. Pi Beta Phi Ben Moreeu. St. Louis. Mo. Civil Engineering Colliniation Club; Sophomore Honors; Varsity Football, TO, T1 ,’12; Varsity Track, ’ll, T2. T3, Captain. T3; Class Baseball, TO, ' ll; Class F’oot- baII. ’OH, TO; Class Basketball, ' ll, ' 12; Class Track, TO, ’ll; Sophomore Show. “13,” Pralma Julia Morse St. Louis, Mo. College Entered as Junior from Cape Girardeau Normal, ’ll. Pi Beta Phi ' ARTS SCIENCES $ a Garner West Penney, I,L. B. . St. Louis, Mo. College Entered Junior class from Princeton University; LL.B., Washington University, ’12; Civics Club, ’12-T3. Phi Delta Phi, Phi Della Theta Erma Bird Perham ... St. Louis, Mo. College Class Vice-President, ’09-T0; Student Life, ’10- ’11-T2-’13; Art Editor, ’11-T2-T3; Art Editor 1913 Hatchet; May Day Dances, ’10, ’11. ’12; Vice- President McMillan Hall, ’12-’13; Thyrsus, ’10- ’13, Vice-President, ’12-T3, Annual Play, ’ll; Quadrangle Club, ’12-’13, Principal “Quadrangle Town”, “Pierrette”, “Sun of O’Gun”. W. A. G. Talisman Pi Beta Phi Joseph Nathaniel Prensky . St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Varsity Football, TO, T2; Class Football, ’09, TO; Varsity Track, ’ll, T2; Class Track, ’ll), ’ll; Collimation Club; Sophomore Show, ’ll. John Thomas Ragsdale, Jr. St. Louis, Mo. Chemical Engineering Class Athletic Manager, ’11-T2; Secretary . U. A. A., T2-T3; Senior Member Single Tax Com¬ mittee, ’12-T3; Sophomore Honors. “13,” Pralma [ 30 ] Harvey Wall Ramsay . St. Louis, Mo. Che tnical Engineering Sophomore Show, ' ll; Glee Club, 11- 12- 1 3; Kakodyl Club, ’11-T2; Musical Director, W. U. Orchestra, ’12-’13. Kappa Sigma Gwynne Raymond Kansas City, Mo Civil Engineering Kntered as Junior from University of Kansas, ’ll; Thyrsus, ’1I-T2; Chapel Choir, ’ 11 12; Collima- tion Club, Secretary, ’12-T3; Student Life, ’13. Lorkuli Anna Rkthwilm St. Louis, Mo. College Class Basketball, TO-T1-T2-M3; Les Causeuscs, T0-T1-M2-T3, Secretary, ' 13; Women’s Athletic Association, ’11-T2-T3; W. U. Orchestra, Vice- President, ’13. Mary Helen Richards Si. Charles, Mo. College Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet, ’12-’13; Government Club; Greek Play, ’12; Women’s Athletic Association; Class Basketball, ’ 12-’ 13; Chapel Choir. mis Sc SClLtiCLS, ■ 1 c Albert Henry Ross St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Entered as Junior from James Milliken University; Class Basketball, ’12-’13; Varsity Basketball. ’13; Collimation Club. Helen Schlesinger St. Francesville, La. College Sophomore Honors, ' ll; Les Causeuses, ’ll-’12- ’13; Student Life, 11 ' 12-’13; Chapel Choir, ”11- ' 12- ’13, Secretary, ’12-13; Greek Play, 12. [ 32 | Carrie Noel Scott - St. Louis, Mo. College Student Life, ’10; Associate Lditor, 1913 Hatchet; Thyrsus, ’09-T0-T1-T2-T3, Annual Play, ' ll; Vice-President, McMillan Hall, T2. Kappa Alpha Theta Adele Seifert St. Louis, Mo. College Senior Representative Women ' s Council, T3; Women’s Athletic Association, T0-T1-’12-’13; Class Basketball, T3; Government Club, ’12-T3; Les Causeuses, T2. Pi Beta Phi Alice Hazel Sciielp . . . St. Louis, Mo. College Chapel Choir; Government Club; Quadrangle Club; Y. W. C. A. Hymen Shifrin .St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Collimation Club. [ 33 ] .1 71RT5S It SCILttCK Annie Adei.e Shreve . . .St. Louis, Mo. College . . C. A. Cabinet, I2-M3; Class Basketball. Ml 12; Captain, M3; Les Causeuses, ’0!)-M0; Gov¬ ernment Club, M1-M2-M3; May Day Dances, M1-M2; “Quadrangle Town,” MO. Pi Beta Phi Lela Sallie Lee Sparks ... St. Louis, Mo. College Thyrsus, M2-M3; Class Vice-President. Ml-M2; May Day Dances, M0-M1-M2; Quadrangle Club, M1-M2-M3. Pi Beta Phi B Paui. Schureman Stevens , St. Louis, Mo. Electrical Engineering Student Council, MO-MI; A. I. E. E., M1-M2. Chapel Choir, MO-M 1-M2-M3. Gerhart Schott Suppiger Chemical Engineering Obelisk, Lock and Chain Kappa Alpha Highland, 111; [ 34 ] David Harnett Sutherland St. Louis, Mo. Mechanical Engineering. A. S. M. F.., Chairman, ’12-T3; Photographer 1913 Hatchet; Class Treasurer, ’12-’13. Lock and Chain, “13,” Pralma Sigma Nu Julius Edward Tarling St. Louis, Mo, A rchitecture W. U. Architectural Society, Secretary-Treasurer, ’12-’I3; Acacia Club. F.mma Tiiuener . .St. Louis, Mo. College Class Vice-President, ’IO- ' l I, ’12-’13; Class Basket- haII, ’09-’10-’ll, Captain, ’09-T0; Chapel Choir, (19-’10; Y. W. C. A., ’09-’10; Thyrsus, T0-T1-T2- 13, Secretary, ’12-’13; Women’s Athletic Associa¬ tion. VV. A. G. Kappa Alpha Theta Joseph Edward Vollmar . .. St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Varsity Football, ’10-’11-’12, Captain, ' 12; Class Football, ’ll); Class Track, ’10; Assistant Manager Basketball, ’11-’12, Manager, ’ 12-’ 13; Sophomore Show, ’ll; Thyrsus, ’ll; Collimation Club, Vice- President, ’ll- ' 12. President, ’12-T3; Lock and Chain, “13” Sigma Nu Harry Clyde Pair - • New Haven, Mo. College Katherine Griffith Garetson . . St. Louis, Mo. College George Myers Hagee . . • St. Louis, Mo. College President Junior Law Class Sigma Chi John Augustus Hilumann . . St. Louis, Mo College Entered as Senior from Indiana University. m ) p ? Please tell to me Why Sal lie Lee Wears so much Sig Alpli jewelry, Why Hazel Burch Should knowledge search, And think it jolly to leave man in the lurch. And why the habit, To paint and dab it. Should make Miss Long so love the rabbit — I ' d like to know all oj these things, And also why Miss C. Scott sings. Please tell me is Miss A. A. A. ,4 s dangerous as she looks alwayl Does Erma oj the nimble toe, Ever feel the lack of a beau? Or Anna Mills with all her frills, Ever worry about her bills? Is little Anny just as merry, Since she was elected Secretary ?_ .1 question about gay Miss Iloolan, lias her midnight oil been burnt in schoolin ' ? For all of these answers where shall I gol 1 want them quick for “ ask to know. [ 37 | Senior Class history O MUSE! that dwellest on Olympus, born of the Gods and on Nectar and Ambrosia fed, givet o thy Groveling Servant but a Meagre Measure of thy Fire, that he may sing in Honeyed Words of the Deeds, and of the Glory of the Class of 1913. At their Birth the Gods smiled upon them, for e’en ere thet ' had cast aside their Swaddling Clothes, they were Full I ' ttr to look upon. And deep in the Archives of the “Student Fife”, may still be found the Winged W ords of a Soothsayer, a Scribe, whose Gifted Quill did mould these sayings, “Indica¬ tions are that vve may expect big things of 1913.” ’Tis a hoodoo number, but what of that! and yet again, “—these Freshmen are showing good spirit and as a class certainly show promise of making history at Washington.” Verily, verily, these were the Symbolic Sayings of a Far-Seeing Oracle. But the Days of their Youth were Days of Strife and they were Molested and Hampered by Pigmy Scions, Grotesque and Loathsome Creatures, who were called Sophomore. And ever and anon these Tribes did “mix it” and did rush together even as the Babbling Brook does rush to the Cold Gray Sea. But the Freshmen were Light of Heart for they did cover themselves with Naught but Glory. And when came the Day of Reckoning, even the Friday before Xmas, the Sons of 1913, lead by one James, Son of Lincoln, Long ol Bone and Lank of Limb, did again outwit their Cowardly Enemies, who, in their Puny Cunning had Trusted the Safeguarding of their Miserable Pennant to a mere Layman, fearful, lest in defending it, they themselves might come to Harm. But each Silver Lining hath its Cloud, for the First Year had scarce run Half its Course ere a Grievous Pestilence descended upon those of 1913 and many there were that suffered therefrom, for the God of Blue Books strode among their Ranks and with Blue Pencil smote them down. Great was the Wailing and Gnashing of 1 ccth. But when the Season of Plague was past, they Dwelt for a Space in Peace and Har¬ mony. And it was the Close of the First Dynasty. Then for the Second Time they got themselves together on the Hill and well they bore their new name, for they were called Sophomores. And as was the Custom, toward the Close of the Twelfth Month the Sons of 1913 were called forth to defend their irgin Banner from the Puny Onslaughts of a Race called Freshmen. And for three Long Hours were the Sacred Numerals well defended and the Combat was a Mighty one. And when the Freshmen saw that their efforts availed them Naught, they did hold Converse with the Judges, and by Dint of d en Cent Cigars, of Drinks of Rum, and of 1 ainted Gold, did bring the Weakling Judges to disqualify certain of the Defenders. And so was the Pure Emblem soiled, and the Freshmen rejoiced in their Ill-gotten Victory. But enough of the d ales of War! Followed Days of Comfort and Prosperity. And the Bonds of Friendship grew ever stronger and there were Eve¬ nings spent in Feasting and in all Manner of Good him. Some there were who did triumph for 1913 in the Games of Athletic Skill and Prowess, and others who did Put to Rout the Demons Mathematics and Science, and the Like. So ended the Second Dynasty. And in Like Manner were the Third and the Fourth ears prosperous. O! would 1 had Four Score Books with each a Hundred Leaves that I might further Extol the Loyally, the Great Deeds and the Virtues of this Class of Classes. But the Muse faileth me, the Editor-in-Chief berateth me and my Parchment runneth out. And now, may the Peace, and the Joy, and the Prosperity that has so far Dwelt with the Loyal Sons and Daughters of the Class of 1913 be forever with them. Selali! 1 have finished. —R. B. 1 33 ) Kurt Schenk Marguerite Monteath President Officers. Kurt Schenk Vice-President Marguerite Monteath Secretary Herold West Treasurer Theodore Maenner [«] Junior Class Eoll Carmelita Anderson Ciaire Agnes Berry I Iorti nse Deborah Bowi.es Dorothy Grace Calm an Helen I .must Davvley Mildred Claire DeCourcy Royal Alexander Dickie I ' .UML ' .ND CONRADES Do.NK Helen Mary Donnelly Helen Elizabeth Duffett Charles Henry Dunceer W illiam Arthur Dunham Ruth Katherine Felker Hazel Lees Forsyth Arthur Jerome Freund Frederick R. Griffith, Jr. Charles William Happel Paul William Baker Albert Shelby Blatterman Arthur Brady John B. Clayton, Jr. Arthur Leonard Cutter Rowland W heeler Dodson Robert D. Duncan. Jr. Louis Richter Flint Harry Walker Foster Albert Eucene French College Bine May Hawken Ruth Herring Hunter Jones Otto I,. Kochtitzky, Jr. Donald Sangree Lamm Claudia Clayton Lide Frederick Dan Lynch Meredith H. McCargo Alice Lillian McClevey .Mary E. N. Macdonald Ruth Carol Mobley Marguerite G. Monteath Paul Edwin Nelson Lucy Cocar Newton Ada Nicholson Elizabeth Sponsler Nixon June Ilda Oehler School of Engineering Ruth Calhoun Pickel Dorothy Samuel Barbara T. Senseney Charles Eugene Smith Anne Holme Souther Helen Stix Harry Rutherford Stocker James Roy Stockton Samuel Fari.ow Trelease Elsie Ueberle Frederick E. Vanderhoof Percy Torbert Vickroy Mary Herold West William H. Wingfield, Jr. Wilbur Wtttler Wood Jessica May Young Isaac IIaiin Godi.ovf. Clifeord Burgess Godwin Louis Good, Jr. Wallace Duncan Hardaway Warren Irving Jolley Arthur George Keller Elmer Niemoeller Raymond Adie Perry Kurt Schenk George Frederick Scherf.r Armin Oscar Schi.f.iffartii Harry F Schwarting Walter Siege rist Richard G. Souther Minor Woolfolk Stout Leroy Milton Sweet Monroe Van Raaltf. Harrison Weber Orni Widman Edward Siiervin Winfree School of Architecture John F. W. Dehnert Raymond Edward Maritz Theodore Henry Maennf.u Joseph Harold Senne 142 1 Miller Franklin C. Cann Neal Corbett Davis Junior Class Instorp Q EYER was there so versatile a class as that of 1914. When it first appeared upon the campus three years ago, it looked at. the Library, and, freshmanlike, decided to study. It did and made such wonderful grades that people gasp “5 A’s-—Oh, dear!” After this resolve, 1914 walked further across the campus and viewed the theatre. 1 lere, too, it conquered, furnishing two of its number tor leading roles in “The Professor’s Love Story”, filled the three leading parts in “An Enemv of the People”, and the four leading roles in “The World and His Wife.” Then one day, as 1914 stood watching a football practice, the desire to play football came upon it. It played, and so well that it defeated 1913, tied 1915, and now furnishes four men on the Varsity eleven. The first taste of football created a desire for fiercer contest. As a result, it entered the numeral battle with ’13 so fiercely and with such courage that ’13 was overwhelm¬ ingly defeated. So wonderful was 1914’s ability that the Student Council feared for the safety of the timid fifteeners who entered the next Fall. They changed the scrap from a tree fight to a flag rush and made 1914 stand at the foot of the pole, so that .the Frosh could reach the flag easier, via their shoulders. Finally, one night while still a Freshman, 1914 ventured to a Lock and Chain and enjoyed the dance so much that it decided to have one of its own. The brilliant and successful Freshman Prom was the result. After two years of class dances, 1914 determined to show the University what a real dance was, and produced the Junior Prom, with its enchanted garden and enchanting music. Then 1914 became serious and decided to enter the business world. Ittakcscarcofthefinancialaffairs of Student Life, Thyrsus, QuadrangleClub, in short everythingthat needs a business manager. So, whether burning the midnight oil, tearing its hair behind the footlights, kicking the pigskin, gliding, sylphlike, over the glassy floors, or in the realms of high finance, 1914 has been, and here’s hoping ever will be, a Success. —M. H. W. [ 43 ] Gale E. Henderson Drue Smalling President . Officers Gale Henderson Vice-President Drue Smalling Secretary Mildred Clayton T reasurer . Carl Stifel Athletic Manager Moulton Green Hatchet Representatives . (Ruth Pritchard | James Tully [45 1 ss opf)omore Class l oll College Samuel Frank Abrams Claire Marie Bacon Kathrix Marie Baker Merritt C. Barrem, •Leona Juliette Beckmann Abe Burton Bender Herbert Frank Boettler Henry Spencf. Brookes, Jr. Helen Beatrice Bryars R urn Busciiart Esther Elizabeth Boswell Alfred Clark, Jr. Mildred Clayton Fanny Bakeweli. Cushino F.dward William Doi.ch. Jr. Margaret F. DeGarmo Benjamin Landis Elliott Thomas Russell Ferguson Frances Esther Fox Ernst August Freund Mildred Clara Gi.editzsch Harry Samuel Gleick Ben. Franklin Goldstein Morris Enoch Goldstein Joseph W ilbur Gonter.max Moulton Green- Grace Gregory Roland Jay Grimm Louise Haldeman Edward Kendall Harrison Roland Milton Hoerr Julia Holt Marjorie D. Hopkins Ralph William Hupferd Beatrice Jennings Jeanette Jennings Harold Clark Keysor Zinaida Kol Delius Henry Kotthokf Julia Matilda Krausnick Kenneth Clayton Larkey Elizabeth Me Burney Frank Powell McNai ley Douglas Voss Martin, Jr. Gertrude M. Dorothy May Ruth Meinuoltz Richard Henry Mink -Marguerite Dean Mott Robert Mueller George Marshall Myers Iver Nelson Dorothy Nicholson Ethel Parks Joseph Laurence Patton Helen Pierce Marguerite Pierce Ruth Elizabeth Pritchard .Margaret Luella Quinn John Roy Ran son ■Grace Rodgers Laura Edna Roeiirich Nellie Rogers Irl Benjamin Rosenbi.um Marie Pm lupine Ruebei. Robert Milton Russell Esther Frances Schneidfr Elmyra Sewing Margaret Anna Sharp Helen Shryock Florence Julia Sisi.f.r Julia Dupre Sisson Drue Clinton Smalung Helen Kimball Smart Robert Henry Sparks Frances E. Spaulding Helen Stevens Carl Godfried Stifei. Glenn Edward Thurston Alma Louise ' Piemanx Eleanor Irene Tucker Ida Dell Updike Marie Anne Updike F rank Bar nett Wa llack Mathii.de IIkllmers Watson Eunice Mildred Wetzei. Otto Julius Wilhelmi, Jr. Cori.nne Jane Wolff Wi NONA W UERTKNBAECHER Klviria Zimmerman School of Engineering Edward L, Baker N-Spencer Bond Field “William C. Emil Becker Edward Sinciair Garvey James Roy Bellvu.le Alfred Lincoln Gibkrt William Charles Bernard Charles Hardy Beaufort Ivan Buchanan William T. Haydock Kenneth M. C. Coggeshall Richard V. Henkel Harold Armin Conrad George Charles Heti.ace Kenneth Heltzell Cope William D. Holland Oliver Mann Jacob Markham Lindley Charles Milford Clifton Trefts Miller Frederick II. Moellenhoif Charles Norton Montfitii John Ben Reichman Edwin Carl Scuisler Hi Paul Coste Edward Fester Horner Milton Moses DkVorkin Frank Rosman Incalls William McKinley Enscork Allen George Jehi.f Daniel Evans ' ' Edward Arthur Jeude Joseph Felberbaum Herbert G. McEliiinney Harry August Feldbush Kirk McFarland School of Architecture Gale Evens Henderson Percy Ramsay Palmer David Rogers ®fje oplj’tst’rp O UR first appearance on the campus was, in our own minds at least, a triumphal entry, the class marching in a body to the main Quadrangle. The Sophomores were all wrought up about it and in the course of the next week or so, they raided our locker room. We were obliged to muss their back hair all up before we broke them of this habit, but at last they saw the error of their ways and the scrapping was postponed until the inter-class football game which left a five-to-five score and a smell of arnica in its wake. All the while, the Freshman girls were showing the proper spirit in observing the school traditions and were bearing with due humility the indignities heaped upon them by their Sopho¬ more tormentors, for tradition hath it that no Freshman girl shall avail herself of profane language, brick-bats, or other suitable means of reply. As a reward for their good conduct they were given a dance in the “Gymmie”, by the upper class girls and they enjoyed every feature of it, even trying to accept the bouquets of lettuce and spinach as though they were quite the proper thing. Next they attended a party where they were ministered to as children by Sophomore girls in the role of nurses, who compelled them to recite Mother Goose rhymes, eat animal crackers soaked in water and otherwise disport themselves for the amusement of their hostesses. Just before the Christmas holidays, an expurgated edition of a “class scrap” diverted our attention. The stringency of 147 | John |. Summersby, Jr. Alexander F. Suss James Kivas ’Fully David Turk James Ai.len Watkins, Jr. George W. Wellmeyer the Student Council rules against unlady-like conduct alone prevented our mussing up the Stadium with the Soph Class. Evidently the Council thought we had mauled the Sophs sufficiently before, so we perforce contented ourselves with merely tramping them into the ground when they attempted to hinder us from climbing the greased pole to get their flag. We devoted ourselves to our studies until the Erosh-Soph “Love- Eest” in the Spring, made “the voice of the turtle dove heard in the land.” Imagine our disgust upon returning last Eall to find a motley crew of half-baked youngsters posing as Freshmen. We saw no chance of their ever becoming dangerous, so after impressing our superiority upon a few of the obstreperous ones and removing high school pins, monograms and other gewgaws, we left them to their own devices. At the Sophomore Party, the girls told us a merry tale of what befell the Freshman girls when they all unsuspectingly attended a surprise party given them by the Sophs. As the time passed swiftly by, we fell to talking over the very satisfactory set of rules the Student Council had drawn up for a “tree-fight”. When the night of the fight arrived, we built our platform about a stout tree in careful observance of the Council rules. The next morning we were rewarded by having the Freshmen, in cheerful disregard of all rules, chop it to pieces beneath us and try to smoke us out with sulphur smudges. Our reputation, however, did not suffer by the unfortunate outcome of the scrap, for twelve men on the wrecked platform made the Freshman class think they were attending a “Donnybrook Fair” when, in the final assault, they got within range of the inch ropes wielded with telling effect. All things considered, the Freshmen showed great restraint, for they did not attempt to bite us while we were securely tied up, nor did they bring dynamite or field artillery into use against the platform. A brief mention of a delightful party given us after the scrap by the girls of the class brings this chronicle to a peaceful end. —J. K. T. and R. P. Webb Kammcrer Ruth Zaeher Officers President Vice-President Secretary Treasure r Hatchet Representative Webb Kammerer Ruth Zaciier Helen Murray Luke Stites Maxwell Kennedy [511 Jfreshman Class Boll Agnes Adams Harvey Byars Alban Carl Althaus Earle Holmes Amos George Richard Anderson Helen Hoblitt Anderson Maria Bain Elizabeth Barnard Herbert Louis Barthels Machine Barnes Florence Osborn Bassford William Gustavf. Bauman Oscar Frederick Bente Elbert Wilson Biby Grace Dobson Bissland Oscar Ernst Blank Rosii.yn Bertha Bloch Rutii Bowkrman Raymond Louts Bracy Pauline Brooks Ambrose Otto Brossard Mary Bkotherton Layman Beckett Brown Marion Clarkson Brown Paul Henry Burg William E. Candler Anna Florentine Casey Bruce Ebe.n Champion Waldo Woods Clayton Auele Mary Clundt Felix Wilkins Costf. Mildred Gould Cowdrey Ftiiel Crane Rudolph Henry Detjkn Melitta Diez Frances Duffett Elizabeth Milburn Ehi.ers Alice Ernst Nathan William Fisciimann Paul Gordon F ' isher Gladys Flarsiieim College Marquard Forster Mildred Bass Fox Emanuel A. Friedman Louis George Fki mson Marie S. Gallenkamp Frank Henry Gerhart L.yle Bird Godbey Beatrice Goldman Ethel Grant Joseph Martin Green Gladys Gregg John Charles Hagin Delpiiine Hamel Noah Gilbert Henley Edward August Hen ski: Mary V. Higginbotham Benjamin Horton, Jr. Helen Humphrey Harry M. Hundley, Jr. Hubert Kinc Jackson Harry B. Jacobson Dorothy Jennings Edith Carrington Jones Marie Ram merer Lois Kieffer Marie Kirsch Lucile Madeline Klein Dorothy Damon Lamb Claude Lapham Irvin Julian Leopold Monroe Cuming Lewis Esther Lucas Fremont Luekinc Helen May McMackin Mildred M. Mascii.meier George S. Metcalfe Ruth Elizabeth Miller Ralph Edcarton Mooney Ralph Robert Nkuhofe Harriette S. Newman I,ora Otto Robert Boyd Perry Johannes F. Pksski. Arthur Poss, Jr. Sent Ritter Virginia Rhodes Kenneth A. Robertson Winxifred Davis Rogers Isadore Rosenfielh Ada Esther Ross Leonard Russie Ella Marie Schneider Russell Score Mildred Rosi.yx Searcy Gordon B. Sommers Gertrude Sparks Margaret Stern Charles Wotrixg Orville Bernard Suck Esther Ann Swineiiart Sibyl Dean Tate Clarence EmilTexny Theodora Thacher Mary Virginia Thomas Xesta Mary Thompson Olive Thurman Clio Daphne Tili.es Mildred Kathryn Turner Bern hard A. Uhlesdore Thurwood Van Ornum Mary Malvina Voohers Antoinette Wallis Berenice M. Wetzel Margaret Louise Winter Sanford Withers Georgia Wittich Leonora Woodward I.eta Wright F ' lorencf. Cecilia Wuenscii Ruth Zac iier Frieda Zi.ngrk William Chapman Berry William Carter Buss Charles Vincent Brady William Anderson Bray Joseph Linton Brewer Durand Brock Walker Payne Brotherton Frank William Bubb Elmer Herman Bdrgdorf Kenneth Sells Chenery Harold Glf.nn Elrod Walter Henry Fatu Paul Henry Felkf.r Ralph Gray Edmund Louis Green Herman C. Gkunewald Emanuel Leopold Hahn Leland Lee Harper Lee Harrison, Jr. John Martin Batschy John Teeter Borcsteadt John Harry Crocker Grady Gafford Frank Goldman Frederick R. Hammond School of Engineering Frank Sobieski IIawken Paul John H ewitt Max Starklokf Jones Walter Robert Joraschky Webb Louis Kammerer Maxwell Kennedy, Jr. David Kippei. Berthold Lambert Lange Fredrick 15. Laxgreck Howard E. Lillingston Percy Neil Lubke Samuel Buchanan May Francis R. McMatii Herbert W. Meinholtz Waiter F. Meister Roi.land Everett Meyers Carl I.ouis Nordmeyer Julius Henry Oettinc Cyril Cunningham Penny School of Architecture Stewart McCormack Harry Daniel Paynf. Mac Williams Remington Angei Rugarcia Edward Sciiaumberg, Jr. Lusby Simpson Charles Proetz Powell Clayton Roberts Charles Paul Seeger Ferdinand Sievers Edmond Siroky Walter Be vans Skinner Aubrey Stanhope Luke Sei.ls Stites Ernst Joseph Straub Walton Bell Strincfellow Abraham Tabachnik Wesley Van Schoick John Charles Walker, Jr. Henry Herman Walser Emanuel Forster Werner Herbert Henry A. Wind Robert ReniDck Wright Ellsworth Young Ben Victor Zillman Bernard John Steckkr Henrietta May Steinmesch Clifford Taussig Ross Henry Thiele Arnold Jacob Tuchschmidt l tstorp Jfresfjman Class X T must be admitted that, on September 20, when we congregated around the Freshman wall, we were a motley looking crowd. The only similarity between any two of us was our headgear, which appeared to be exceedingly regular. However, it took us but a short time to redeem our looks by our prowess as a class. The Sophomores bothered us but little, as the} ' did not enjoy running to Delmar Avenue or hunting places of retreat. Our few attempts to bother them were frustrated by their excellent ability to hide. At our first meeting, October 2, the most important officers were elected, the minor offices being filled at our second meeting a week later. Our first party was held in the “Gymmie” on October 12. Little interference on the part of the Sophomores was expected and little received. The party was enjoyed immensely by all. About two weeks later the girls of the class had a very enjoyable time at a party given by ' the girls of the upper classes, while the men looked on enviously from the Dorm windows. A party three days later was not quite as enjoyable, as the Freshman girls were formally initiated. The footba but out of modesty we refrain from saying anything of that, further than that several of the Freshman men proved to be stars, so that Washington need not fear for her football teams for four years to come. On December 6, the Freshman Prom was held. The time was ideal, being one of those clear, crisp evenings; the place was beautifully and artistically decorated in the class colors; and the rest was all that could possibly be desired. The dance was enjoyed by all, and a white leather card case with “W. I . 1916” in the corner will serve for some years to come as a reminder of a good time. The fight was duly planned, duly won, and duly celebrated in the “Gymmie” immediately afterwards. The sleepy warri¬ ors were so refreshed by the hot coffee and sandwiches served by the girls of the class, that they were able to dance for some¬ time before retiring. We have won our share of attention from every one in general, and have won everything else desirable to win. We also have obeyed the rules, and if the class continues as it has begun, there are great prospects for the class of 1916. 54 -M. K., Jr. Special ifetubents Caroline G. Barnwell Harold Kinkade Beers Ethel Boogher Edward Wylie Brown esta Ryerson Brown Bronwen Chubb Patti Marie Clayton Eleanor Odun Dei.ano Martha Evans Maurice Faure College T Norris B. Greco, Jr. Edith Amalia Gundei.acii Carl Adolf Haltenhoff Forrest Perin Hays Sarah Ross B. Jeffers Mary Kent Killian Kolb Christine Graham Kong Helen Morse Murray Lucy Norveli. Frances Russell Ferguson Peter Arthur Pfaender Virginia Speck Flad Glenn Phelps Bertha Caroline Freund Mary Lee Pickel Clara Frotimngham Josephine M. Pickerii.l Alice Maud Glatfelter Marie Daviess Pittman ‘Students who meet the requirements for admission degree, and are pursuing fewer than the required number II “ Michael Harold Alch Gertrude Barrows Elise Boocher Susan Boogher Isabel Creagan Harriet Rees Curtis Harry Davis Charles Ernest Drees Anne Kennett Farrar George Herbert Green Frederick G. Grossart Cleveland X. Henning Robert Emmet Hussey Howard Durant James Walker Jones William Ellis Keysor “Students not candidates for a degree (a) who have school course or its equivalent, but lack preparation in of mature age and general culture. School of Engineering Frederick Chamberlain John Calvin Griffith Bernard George Proetz School of Architecture Archibald Elmer Albert Charles Donald Cuthbert Sidney Emile Bears George Harold Hargett Bertrand H. Bratney William Lewis Jackson Paul Bunnell George Walter Kahrs Leland Chivvis William Percy Lodge Mabel Marion Pitzeli. Clay Preston Elsie Kohn Rauh Homer Earl Ref.d Florence Marion Sammons Annabel Sims Palmer Stacy Mary Oakley St. John Babett Straus Edith Wright Taylor Mrs. Ford W. Thompson Thomas Byron Waters Celeste Dorothy Weil Mary Spencer Whitlow Edythe Virginia Young but are not candidates for a of courses. Ben William Lewis, Jr. Margaret McKittrick Rachel Stix Michael William Owen Ruth Aline Raphael Tom Randolph, Jr. Belle Tracy Smith Dorothy S. Werner completed a four years’ high some one subject; (b) or are Martin Hutchison Harris Katherine Middleton John Hobbs Miles William Edward Suehrk Humphrey F. Woolrych, Jr. I 55 ] William Samuel Curtis, I.L. 13., LL. D. Vj lI.UAM SAMUEL CURTIS, LL. 13., LL.D., Dean of the Law Faculty; born I j Wayne County, Indiana, 1850; A.13., Washington University, IX7I3; LI..13., St. Louis Law School, 1876; practiced law in Omaha, Neb., with firm of Curtis and Keysor, later Curtis and Shields; LL.D., Washington University, 1905; Dean of Law Faculty in Washington University since September, 1894. 1581 Jf acuity William Samuel Curtis, A. B., 1.1,.15., LL.D. William Winchester Keysor, Litt.B., LL.B. Frederick August Wizlizenus, A.B., LL.B. Tyrrell Williams, A.B., LL.B. Arthur Behn Shepley, A.B., LL.B. Marion C. Early, LL.B. Edward Crancii Eliot, A.M., LL.B. Percy Werner, B.S., LL.B. Charles P. Williams, A.B. Harry Clyde Fair . Dean of the Law School Professor of Law Professor of Law Professor of Law Mad-ill Professor of Equity Madill Professor of Contracts Lecturer on International Law Lecturer on Insurance Law Lecturer on Constitutional Law Librarian [ 59 ] Grover C. Sibley Officers President Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer Sergeanl-at-A rms Hatchet Representative Grover C. Sibley Loins E. Trieseler Harry Swope John Oepts Alonzo G. Heman Irwin Sale 160 ] Wwmwmr?{.’’ trmnmrm Harold Kinkade Beers St. Louis, Mo. Students’ Practice Court 10, ’ll. ' Ll; Law School Baseball, ’ll. T2; Class Baseball, ’ll. ' 12, ’LL Delta Phi Della Armin Calvin Beste Troy, 111. Clerk Student Court, ’10; Class Baseball, ’11-12; Orchestra; Blackstone Debating Society. Xu Sigma Xu. Kappa Alpha George Julian Breaker ... St. Louis, Mo. A. B. Jewel! College, 11)10; Student Life, TO. ’ll. TI-T2; Business Manager Student Life, TO- ' ll; ' 11-12; President Pan Hellenic Association, ’ll; Student Council Representative, ’12-T3; Thyrsus, ’11-T2-T3; V. M. C. A., ’Ll; Blackstone. Sigma Nu August Mathias Brinkman Si. Louis, Mo. Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha Kpsilon [01 1 LAW SCHOOL iiin ' iTii William James Brown’ . .St. Louis, Mo. B. S. Washington University, 1906; Acacia Club ’ll, ’12. Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Arthur Charles Eckert ... St. Louis, Mo. B. S. in Science and Literature, 11)10; B. S. in M. E., 1912; Glee Club, ’1)7, ’OS, ’09; A. S. M. E. Acacia Club James Skddon Gray .... St. Louis, Mo. Class Basketball. ’09-’10, ’12-’13; Law Basketball, ’1I-T2, ’12-’13, Captain, ’12-’13; Manager V arsity Football, ’12; Varsity Track and Relay Team, ’12. Student Council, ’ 11 -’ 12; Civics Club, ’ll. ’12, T3; S. C. C.; Blackstonc; Obelisk. Phi Delta Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Alonzo Gaynel Heman ... St. Louis, Mo. S. C. C.; Blackstone; W. U. Law Research Society; Class Sergeant-at-Arms, ’13. r Charles Dixon Long ... St. Louis, Mo. Class Baseball, ’ll, ’12; Blackstone, ’10, ’ll, ’12. John Oepts .Jennings, Mo. Class Treasurer, ’13; Chess and Checkers Club; Class Baseball, ’10, ’ll, ’12; Practice Court, TO, ’ll; Blackstone; S. C. C. Delta Phi Delta Irwin Sale .St. Louis, Mo. A. B. Missouri University, 1910; Acacia Club, ’11-T2, T3; Treasurer, ’11-T2; Class Hatchet Representative, T3; Practice Court, TO, ’ll, T2, Secretary, TO; Civics Club, TO, ’ll, T2, T3; Chess and Checkers Club; Blackstone; S. C. C. Grover Cleveland Sibley ... St. Louis. Mo. Class President, ’13; Blackstone Debating Club; Debating Council. Phi Delta Phi Alfred T. Suker .St. Louis, Mo. Varsity Football, ’00. ’10, ' ll; Class Football, ’ON, ’(H); Class Basketball, ’OS. ’00. 10; Class Baseball. ’OS, ’(H); Class Track, ’09; Law School Baseball, ’ll, ’Id. ’ 13 ; Student Life Association. ’OS-’(H)-’H); Glee Club, ’08, ' Id; Sophomore Show, ’09; Thyrsus, ’OS, ’09, ’10; Asst. Treasurer, ' 09; Treasurer, TO; Quadrangle Club; ’’Quadrangle Town”, ’09, TO; “Pierrette”, ’Id; Editor-in-Chief “Hatchet 1912”; Civics Club, ’Id; Talisman; Blackstone; Lock and Chain; “13”, Pralma. Phi Delta Phi, Beta Theta Pi Lloyd Quincy Blackstone St. Louis, Mo. Harry Swope ..... Mankato, Kan. Class Basketball; Class Track; Manager Track. ’13; Class Secretary. ’13; S. C. C.; Blackstone. Phi Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta 61 Louis Ernest Triesei.er St. Louis, Mo. A. B. Washington University, 1911; Class Vice- President, ’13; Acacia Club, ’08-’13; President. ’12; Blackstonc. Delta Phi Delta Eorrest Montgomery Van Dyke East Louis, 111. Kappa Alpha Roland Henry Wiechert Belleville, 111. Illinois Law Club; Civics Club; Debating Club; Blackstone; S. C. C.; Secretary-Treasurer Prac¬ tice Court; Football, ' 12; Class Baseball; Class Basketball; Middle Weight Wrestling Champion, ’ll. I 65 ] F, |b sp r.p e| jbbusj Sm Senior Class History ' TWENTY-FIVE years ago, on or about June the twelfth, f O 1913, the Dean of the Law School presented to the Chancellor, twenty-one of his then young hopefuls, whom he, as well as his colleagues of the faculty, had often pronounced the most systematic and consistent laboi savers that had ever darkened the portals of the St. Louis Law School. To trace the diverse paths which their various careers, during the past quarter of a century, have taken, would be impossible, but the writer will attempt to give some of the results of the extra-ordinary energy displayed in the pursuit o their studies, especially Roman Law. I his branch had been their favorite course because the territory from which the students of the Law r School were recruited was inhabited so largely by people with Roman noses. Beers (“Yea Bo”) upon graduation found a philanthropic man who paid his expenses to Washington, D. C., where he sought to convince the Supreme Court that “the rule of reason in the Standard Oil and Tobacco cases was erroneous. 1 hey soon convinced him, that, although a vigorous dissenter, he was not a Judge Harlan. He profited by this lesson and is now- writing dissenting opinions on the Missouri Supreme bench. He is also a legal writer of some note, his chief work being, “Estoppels in Law School Catalogues. 1 . Beste practiced for three months, and then, because of his handsome figure, became a model in a local haberdasher} of which he is now the owmer. _ Breaker’s first ten years were spent in a collection othce where he became thoroughly versed in the law of garnishment and attachment in which he soon became so proficient that he found five years’ time to study law ' . Having learned the value of relevancy, and to rid himself of an excess of superheated nitrogen and oxygen (commonly called air), he has for the past ten years been very successful. Brinkman practiced real property law as a side line tor a few years but soon became the owner of the St. Louis Cardinals, 160 i in which his old side partner Gray owns quite a large block of stock. Wm. Brown (“Old Squire”) forged gradually to the front by modest perseverance and is now chief counsel for the United Railways. Carter (“P. J.”) is a prosperous land owner of Jasper County, Missouri and has been mayor oi Greater Carthage four consecutive terms. Our old friend Charlie Williams always predicted a great future for “Mr. Cah-tah. Eckert, a famous patent lawyer, contributed to the pro¬ fession, a patented “Electric Fee Collector,” for which he was elected a life member of the Cokc-Blackstone-Kent-Marshall Society. Gray (“Jim”) soon retired from the law to become a basket¬ ball coach. He is jointly interested in the Cardinals, his legal training availing him “muchly” in his numerous controversies with his managers. He is also author of “Mancipatio, or the Origin of Striking a Bargain.” Heman (“Lonnie”) is still married. His wife finally con¬ vinced him that they could not live on his fees so he went into the contracting and building business. He still plays his cards face up. Long, immediately upon graduating, entered upon his career as adviser to Supreme Courts. His contributions to legal writings are, “My Opinions,” and the Law as I See It. Oepts (“Banker John”) found the metropolis of Jennings too narrow a field, so returned to St. Louis, and is now the president of a “real” bank which lie erected on the site of the old Park Hotel. Much to the astonishment of Prol. Wizlizenus he was an early success as a real property lawyer. Price became a judge of the county court of St. Louis County. He is now a wealthy man, and when last seen remarked, “The Dean should worry.” Sibley, as prophesied by his Law School work, became a good lawyer. For certain principles which he was supposed to hold, he was elected President of the Supreme Council of In¬ dustrial Workers, when lo! to their great astonishment and regret he was after “four” years elected a member of the “Pluts” (limited). He is now a contributor to the “Feirb,” the chief organ of the ‘Pluts.” Sihlcr (“Si”) has continuously smiled his way through the past quarter of a century, his countenance having been his fortune. His practice has been largely divorce suits, with feminine clients his specialty, despite which he was successful in not falling into their snares until about ten years after gradua¬ tion, when he became a benedict. Slocumb (“L. Quintus”) practiced law and became one of the most energetic members of the bar (not “Jimmy’s” Bar). He has recently published a work on the “Downfall of the American Republic.” Swope (“Mankato”) ten years after graduation, became Governor of Kansas, and is now U. S. Senator. He has recently introduccd a bill in the Senate making poker a felony, without benefit of clergy. He has not practiced law but has contributed to the profession a valuable book on “Judicial Notice,” a subject in which he appeared even as a junior to have a very “penetrating” knowledge. Trieseler (“Looie”) rose rapidly in political fields until he finally succeeded “Tub” Becker as committeeman from the eighth ward. He is now a Justice of the Peace in “Sout Saint Looie.” He still keeps “de law in his note books. ' He says that in another twenty-five years he will be on the Supreme Bench of Missouri, but his old friend Oepts says, “he wou ' nt ’cause he cou’nt.” Van Dyke finished and Waters still organizes. Wiechert practiced in Belleville and soon purchased a brewery. He has called a meeting of “Shakespeare” for next year and has invited all of the old guard. The writer of this review would fondly ramble further into the realms of past recollections; but he must discontinue to resume labor on a book which he has been writing for the past twenty-five years, entitled “The Place of the Dean s Aloot Court in Our Scheme of Judicial Tribunals.’ I. W. S. fttibble ILato Class George Richard Anderson Harold James Bandy Paul Afton Beckett Frederick Henry Eschmann Harry Clyde Fair Charles Oscar Gallenkamp Archibald Mueller Gaskill Verne William Gould, A.B. Lloyd Hagood, Pii.B. Roy Hamlin Charles Happei. Christo Dimitroff Kapidencheff John Shepley Lionbercer, A.B. James Joseph McMullen Frank Johnson Merryman, A.B. Glen Hall Mohler Milton Murphy Henry Clay Patterson, A.B. Louis Jackson Portner, A.B. Robert Alfred Roessel Elwood Miller Stokes Steward, A.B. Ira Julian Underwood, A.B. 3ti Eel Wt je Jffltbblemen C HEIR mission is one of peace. Not “to pluck the berries harsh and crude of war” do they come, but to sow the olive seeds from which the olive branches grow is their task. And who are those whose brows are white in this great cause, indeed whose battle cry is “pax vobiscum:” The an¬ swer is, the Middlemen. 7 Tis of them this is penned. But mark you, there is no purpose here to lift the gentle leaflets of obscur¬ ing modesty from off the blooming, blushing, unseen violets of potential genius. No, no. Res ipsa loquitur. Votaries of the goddess “Justitia” are the Middlemen. At her shrine for nearly two years agone, link by link, they have been forging for themselves the mailed armor of the Law. At the worthy, well-worn anvils of Curtis, Wizlizenus, Iveysor, et ah, out of the stern metal of Greenlief, Tiedeman, Benjamin, et ah, have they been forging said links. Last year they came with faces fresh and youth was in their veins. In their eyes glowed the eagerness to know. In¬ trepid they plunged into the crystal current of the legal Empy¬ rean, impatient to drink deep of her sapient waters. Daunt- lessly thev swam toward the first, faint rays of the rising sun [701 of Rights Wrongs and Remedies. And out of the darkness the To® las,, year they saw said rays « •£ « ■ there were those among them whom some But color of truth only is said allegation. W e shall ferret out its falsity. Indeed we specifically deny that there is any iu in it And now to verify. . . -it Ask of these Middlemen, severally or jointly as you will, and have the cash to pay for brains concerning the death- defying power of an “agency coupled with an interest Indeed would vou know how shifts or springs a i or the why of a “statute de donis conditional ”, .ask the Middlemen Ma - haps no body of men in esse can with greater finesse and form lead vou through the tangled labyrinths of the ‘ speaal traverse than can the Middlemen. Qui feat per ahum fecit per se avow the Middlemen. Especially if you are a horse trader C f ve “ emptor warn the Middlemen. Would you ascertain how far to “retreat” before you take a solar plexus wallop at ° ur dver ‘ sarv and, if he is a better man than you are, what you can collect for his superior fistic faculties—ask the Middlemen. And to any or all of vour rogations, they whose advice you seek will laugh, ha, ha, at your ignorantia and—render you an equivalent for your money. And by the bye, 1 doting papa anticipating the inevitable termination of thing, here, and would defeat the financial claims of coverture of some gold seeking swain who would woo and win the hand of vour Beauty, the Middlemen can tell you how to annex the swain and save a fortune. Marvelous, you exclaim. The Midd men admit it. Fittingly do you stand in awe. For backed by the authorin ' of res adjudicata and stare decisis of thousands of perused pages, and some unperused ones, armed with then tools of buckram, and clothed in the aforesaid, well forged armor, the Middlemen stand with their faces toward the supreme tribunals of the nation. Selah. , t As most years do, last year sped by. With the Cheops of Egypt has it taken its place in the temples of recollection. Last September came. Back came the Middlemen. But ah, their ranks were depicted. One had become a party to that i 71 1 most solemn and binding of contracts (where creditors haven’t even a look in), for some the current was too strong. Indeed, when the roll was read out of the old gray book, but twenty-one out of the old guard of thirty answered “here.” Feelingly do we tread past the milestones of the last few months agone. In pace requiescat. Real property-—Evidence. To those who know why need more be said. What means the vindictive fire burning in those eyes wherein once did lurk the aforementioned youthful glow? What bodes those onerous lines on the erstwhile youthful physiognomies? This year the Middlemen learned why so many lawyers have hard faces, why so many lawyers charge high fees. Reason —quantum velebat. cs we are, numerically speaking, twenty-one. But, lest we forget, not how many, but how good is our criterion. Yet we would have this lisped by other lips and told by other tongues than ours, for, we would have it remembered—we arc modest. -V. W. G. President Vice-President Secretary-Trettsnrer Athletic Manager Hatchet Representative George IIacee Ulrich F. Potthoff Samuel S. Dk Kins DeMott Modisette W. C. Grant [73| Junior llatu Class Michael Harold Alch Merritt Carter Barrell William Gustave Bauman Samuel Bender John Frank Bushman Louis Adrian Bushman Samuel Schieffei.in DeKins Richard Homer Eckert Samuel Walker Forder, B.S. Charles Lewis Graham William Chalmers Grant George Myers Hagek Michael Jeremiah Hart, A.B. Edward August Hensky Russell Crawford Hudler Ira Augustus Hunt Chester William Kotsrean Donald Sangree Lamm Theodore Frank Leilich Austin Ivan Lodge, A.B. DeMott Modisette Alexander Sloan Oliver Norman Webber Pemberton Maurice Paul Phillips Ui.rich Frederick Potthoff Victor Henry Rhodes Evan Lemuel Searcy, A.B. Solomon Suppiger George Palmer Stacy Frederick Elmer Vanderiioof Albert Louis Wiebe junior Class istorp n OWDY! To all y e highbrows of the Hill we slant-heads of legal learning hereby make our official salutation. Behold, ve, the Legal Mind! It is said the Legal Mind occurs only once in many generations. Like the century plant, it blooms but a single moment in a hundred years. Primordial ages and eons of weary years, we feel conscious-, have been necessary to produce this priceless product which collectively, we exemplify. Contes across our historic recollection a certain banquet hall, where, painful to relate, we were held in duress vile, while a greedy, blonde haired demon took from each of us a silver dollar’. Alms, for Allah, it was worth the coin, this banquet! There was grub, to be sure, but the thing that pleased our gullet most was the spiritual food that iollowed. In heroic grandeur stood Abraham Lincoln DeMott Modisette and crammed us full of oratory. From ictor Henry Dusty Rhodes we learned how the cow goes. 1 he Legal Mind dis- 71 played itself in many ways on this eventful night, but not more brilliant in any one instance than in the notable achievement of Samuel Sc ' hieffelin DeKins. 1 here was an oration on the “Young Attorney” by Sam DeKins, and a sermon on the same subject by Samuel S. DeKins. Then another member of out¬ class, S. S. DeKins, depicted the bloody horrors of a great prize fight, while S. Schieffelin DeKins played interlocutor in the Modisette-DeKins minstrels. Among us there are such immortals as Charles Lewis Graham, our billiken, “the god of things as they ain’t”; Michael Jeremiah Hart, “other girls may have their beaux whom they really like, but I’ll do anything for the love of Alike”; Edward Augusust Henske, the Bowery kid with the red necktie; Theodore Frank Leilich, the knight of the mailed fist who handles the law with gloves; Alexander Sloan Oliver, “where the Sam hill IS Cape Girardeau?” Maurice Paul Phillips, a replication de injuria from the common law wilds of Illinois; Evan Lemuel Searcy, the doubled named youngster, “Searcy, where is Sarcy?”; Richard Homer Eckert, whose hard headed sense comes from the rock that’s in his feet; Ira Augustus Hunt, who has Rip Van Winkle with his 20 year sleep faded a mile. Chester William Kotsrean, our beardless, skirtless femme sole, and George Palmer Stacy, the wingless cupid. We call your attention to the iron cage on the right where sits, in solitary confinement our champion traverser, Russel Crawford Hudler, convicted of trespass, the application of direct force, vie el annis. In the museum compartment there is perpetual motion, Albert Louis Wiebc, who jigs while he sleeps. Also we here call your attention to the appendix of Bill Gustave Bauman, the loss ol which he charges to mayhem. In the next tier you will note the gentleman holding the world aloft. That is Merritt Carter Barrell, our Hercules of labor, whose favorite pastime is studying law in the quiet hours just before dawn. But of all the immortal names in our cannery there is none more worthy to be preserved than that of Flavius Josephus Fight, the old Roman gladiator. Such is the Legal Mind. — W. C. C . V Kandeler Portrait Eugene L. Opie, M. D. e r _ ' GENE L. OPIE, M.D., Professor of Pathology, and Dean of the Medical School; A.H., Johns Hopkins University, 1893, and M.D., 1897; Resident House Officer, Johns Hopkins Hospital. 1897-98; Fellow, Assistant Instructor and Associate in Pathology, Johns Hopkins Medical School, 1897-1904; Associate and Member of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York, 1904-10; Pathologist to the Presbyterian Hospital of New ork, 1907-10; Co-editor, Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1904-10; Pathologist to the Washington University and St. Louis Children’s Hospitals. Jf acuity -Eugene L. Opie, M.D. Paul Gf.rvais Robinson, M.D., LL.D. Jerome Keating Bauduy, M.D., LL.D. John Green, M.D., LL.D. Edward Watts Saunders, M.D. . Wash ington E. Fischel, M.D. Norman B. Carson, M.D. John Blasdel Shapleigh, M.D. George Dock, Sc.D. M.D. Joseph Erlanger, M.D. Philip A. Shaffer, Ph.D. Robert J. Terry, M.D. Fred T. Murphy, M.D. . Henry Schwarz, M.D. Paul Yoer Tupfer, M.D. Francis Rhodes Fry, M.D. . ' Harvey Gilmer Mudd, M.D. George Marvine Tuttle, M.D. . F.lsworth Smith, Jr., M.D. . Arthur Eugene Ewinc, M.D. Frank J. Lutz, M.D. Adolf Alt, M.D. .... Greenfield Sluder, M.D. Professor of Pathology and Dean of the Medical School Professor Emeritus of the Principles and Practice of Medicine Professor Emeritus of Psychological Medi¬ cine and Diseases of the Nervous System Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology Professor Emeritus of Diseases oj Children and Clinical Midwifery Clinical Professor of Medicine Clinical Professor of Surgery Clinical Professor of Otology Professor of Medicine Professor of Physiology Professor of Biological Chemistry Professor of Anatomy Professor of Surgery Clinical Professor of Obstetrics . Clinical Professor of Surgery Clinical Professor of Neurology Clinical Professor of Surgery Clinical Professor of Pediatrics Clinical Professor of Medicine Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology Clinical Professor of Surgery . Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology Clinical Professor of Diseases of the Nose and Throat 7 !) Martin F. Kngman, M.D. Ernst Friedrich Tiedemann, M.D. Walter E. Garret, Ph.D., M.D. Rocer S. Morris, M.D. Henry Sturgeon Crossen, M.D. Willard Bartlett, M.D. Harry McCabe Johnson, M.D. Vi lray P. Blair, M.D. Albert E. Taussig, M.D. Meyer Wiener, M.D. Dennis K. Jackson, Ph D. Walter R. Bloor. Ph.D. Victor E. Emmel, Ph.D. George M. Smith, M.D. Ernest Sachs, M.D. Jesse S. Myer, M.D. George Gelliiorn, M.D. Fred J. Taussig, M.D. Nathaniel Allison, M.D. Malcolm A. Bliss, M.D. Walter Baumcarten, M.D. Russell Daniel Carman, M.D. Cleveland A. Newton Malvern B. Clopton, M.D. William E. Sauer, M.D. Charles II. Danfortii, Ph.D. W. McKim Marriott, M.D. Walter S. Thomas, M.D. Henry C. Storrs, M.D. . Borden S. Veeder, M.D. John R. Caulk, M.D. Robert A. Gesell, A.B. William H. Mook, M.D. John C. Salter, M.D. Adrien S. Bi.eyer, M.D. Adolph G. Schi.osstein, M.D. Albert F. Koetier, M.D. Fred Fahlen.M.D. . Ralph Walter Mills, M.D. Archer O’Reilly, M.D. . Louis H. IIempelmann, M.D. Julius H. Gross, M.D. Nathaniel M. Semple, M.D. Frederick Eno Woodruff, M.D. Walter Fischel, M.D. Leo Christian FIuelsmann. M.D. Jerome E. Cook, M.D. William H. Vogt, M.D. Victor H. K. Mookhouse, M.D Richard II. McBaine, M.D. Arthur O. Fischer, M.D. John Green, Jr., M.D. Barney Brooks, M.D. I’hilip C. Jeans, M.D. Clinical Professor of Dermatology Associate Professor of Bacteriology Associate Professor of Physiology Associate Professor of Medicine Associate in Gynecology Associate in Surgery Associate in Genito-Urinary Surgery Associate in Surgery Associate in Medicine Associate in Ophthalmology Associate in Pharmacology Associate in Biological Chemistry Associate in Anatomy Associate in Pathology Associate in Surgery Associate in Medicine Associate in Gynecology Associate in Gynecology Associate in Orthopedic Surgery Instructor in Psychiatry Instructor in Medicine Instructor in Surgery in Charge of Ac i- nngraphy Instructor in Medical Jurisprudence Instructor in Surgery Instructor in Laryngology Instructor in Anatomy Instructor in Biological Chemistry Instructor in Pathology Instructor in Obstetrics Instructor in Pediatrics Instructor in Genito-Urinary Surgery Instructor in Physiology Instructor in Dermatology Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Pediatrics Assistant in Obstetrics Assistant in Otology Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Orthopedic Surgery Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Ophthalmology Assistant in Ophthalmology Assistant in Ophthalmology Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Medicine A ssistant in Obstetrics Assistant in Physiology and Pharmacology Assistant in Medicine Assistant in Surgery Assistant in Ophthalmology Assistant in Surgery Assistant in Pediatrics 1 II. A. Goodrich President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Hatchet Representative Officers H. A. Goodrich D. H. Bell L. D. Darner M. R. Johnston 181 1 « James Brown Biggs Bowling Green, Mo. Junior Hatchet Representative; Class History, ’13; Acacia. Phi Della H Floyd Amsler Burger San Diego, Cal. Varsity Football, ’10; Junior Class President. Chi Zcta Chi Leslie Dorse Darner |unior Secretary-Treasurer; A., ’12. Granite City, Ill. Secretary Y. M. C. I 2| Lawrence David Enloe . Jefferson City, Mo. Chi Zeta Chi MEDICAL i .SCHOOL Ralph H. Focht .Abilene, Kan. Fred Leonard Gibbs .... Sophomore Hatchet Representat Phi Beta Pi Curryville, Mo. ive. Harold Arrott Goodrich . . New Haven,Mo. Senior Class President. I S3] Meredith Rutherford Johnston St. Louis, Mo. I ' reshman Vice-President; Senior Hatchet Repre¬ sentative. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Nu Sigma Nu Raymond John Joseph ... Freeburg, III. Freshman Class President. Acacia, Phi Delta Fred Oscar Kettlekamp Nokomis, III. A. B., Central Wesleyan University; Secretary- Treasurer Y. M. C. A., ’11- ' 12. Phi Delta Leo Julius Kilian .St. Louis, Mo. Phi Beta Pi 185) Leith Hollingshead Slocumb . . St. Louis, Mo. Junior Secretary-Treasurer. Acacia, Kappa Sigma, Nu Sigma Nu ; s7 Senior Class: History O NCE upon a time Sixty Earnest Young Men, impelled by an Honest Desire to Aid Humanity, decided that they would be Doctors. Not the Kind of a Doctor that comes to Town every Spring with a Min¬ strel Show and sells “Herb-Root”, guaranteed to cure Everything from the Cigarette Habit to a Passionate Desire for Automobiles or even a ' Tooth Doctor. No indeed. These ambitious Young Men would be Regular Doctors, with an Office next Door to the Drug Store, and a Nobby little Medicine Grip to carry back and forth from Home. ' To that end they descended upon the Washington University Medical School in the Fall of 1909, and decided to allow the Professors to Impart Real Gems of Wisdom to them during their Spare Moments. After a Few Months of Imparting, a number of the Prides of their Respective Cities decided that Medicine was a Course best adapted to Sharks and Boobs. So, being too Proud to Admit that they were the Latter, and having been told frequently for the Past Few Weeks that they were Em¬ phatically not the Former, they packed their Carpet-bags for the Christmas Holidays, and blew to return No More. ' This was an Awful Blow to the Interests of Science, but She managed to Worry Along with the Few who were left.. This Wceding-out Process continued throughout the Term, and by the beginning of the Second Year scarcely Forty of the Original Sixty were on hand to Gloriously Advance in the Cause of Learning. By the end of their Sophomore Year they had begun to take Themselves Seriously. Any Day you could hear one of them call another one “Doctor”, and never turn a Hair. At this Time it was discovered, however, that a Few of Them were then being Taken Seriously only by Themselves, and every time their names were Mentioned at Faculty Meeting, some Member of the Staff Ground his Teeth in Silent Rage. lit other words, they were In Dutch, and it required no Clair¬ voyant to know that the Only Way they would ever get a 1st) I “Doctor” in front of their Name, would be to Bribe a Sign- painter, and escape from the Community before the Board of Health got Hep. During the Third Year, the Thirty who Remained after the Reaper had gathered the Fair Young Flowers and passed them on to St. Louis U., et cetera, assumed that degree of Dignity and Indifference seen only in Street Car Conductors and Hospital Internes. They let it be Generally Understood that the Bloodiest Operations were Nothing to them, (which was Unqualifiedly True) and professed an Intimate Acquaintance¬ ship with Osier, which if true, would have made his Immediate Family appear as Perfect Strangers. They were, as a matter of fact, quite ready to Start Out on Their Mission of Mercy, and practice Medicine, but Decided they would return the Following Fall for Another Year, the same being Customary and Doubtlessly needed by other Classes of Marked Inferior Intelligence. At the Beginning of their Fourth Year of Confinement, the Remaining Twenty-eight Benefactors of Humanity gathered together and talked Learnedly of Operations and Cases seen during the Summer Months. It was only possible to tell them from Real Doctors by the Way they Acted when Addressed as Such. All that was needed for their Permanent Establishment was a Location and Practice, both of which, it was thought, could be found lying Around Loose on Any Off Day. But by the End of the Year a Great Change appeared. All those who had, up to a Short Time Ago been Perfectly Prepared to handle a Ten Thousand Dollar Practice, now began Surrep¬ titiously to Inquire when the City Llospital Examination would be, while Others evinced a Flitherto Unknown illingness to help make this a Greater Washington. In Other Words, they were all Looking for a Place to Light. At Present any sort of a Job affording Free Food and Shelter is Entirely Apt to be Looked Upon Favorably by any Member of the Class of Thirteen. Moral: It Never Looks the Same when you Get There as it did Before you Started. —J. B. B. I no ] Joseph F. Bredeck Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer . Hatchet Representative . Joseph F. Bredeck Philip P. Green Ora F. McKittrick Allan A. Gilbert 191 | Junior itlebical Class Frederick Book Abbott Joseph Francis Bredeck, A.B. Thomas Ecner Cooper, A.B. Walcott Denison, A.B. Robert Albert Gesell, A.B. Allan A. Gilbert Philip Palmer Green, B.S. John Dee Jackson George David Kettelkamp, A.B. Ora Francis Mckittrick John ThomasMcLarxey, A.B. Herbert Spencer Maxwell, .B. Ellsworth Eurit Moody, A.B. David English Smith Samuel Harrison Snider, A.B. Shutior Class l|)tstorp • ' UNIORS! It sounds big, but nevertheless it’s true. O 1 After seeing our numbers gradually diminish, from the _ r original sixteen which entered the Medical School as Freshmen almost three years ago, to a bare eight last June, few of us thought that we should ever have the honor of being called Juniors. We feel that we have passed the most trying parts of the Medical curriculum, and believe that, in another short year, we shall be able to sign our names as Doctors of Medicine. All of the men of last year’s class are with us again this year except Albert Grassel who on account of ill health, was unable to return. We deeply regret that he was forced to give up the study of medicine and sincerely wish that he was still one of us. We were very fortunate however in receiving into our midst several new and aspiring Fhrlichs, Salkowskis and Mctschnikoffs. Three wise men have come to us, not from the “East” but from Missouri State University. In Ellsworth E. Moody we have gained an eminent pediatrician, at least he tells us so. Sam H. Snider and Thomas E. Cooper, considering the fact that they come from “Mizzoo”, are exceptionally good looking, unusually ' intelligent, and are sure to bring honor to the class of “ ’14” in years to come. Herbert S. Maxwell is our representative from the “Jay- hawker” state. Herbert Spencer attended the University of Kansas which is the best that we can sav for him. He is the : «2 | Touchstone and the Esau of the class, and at present is trying to grow a moustache. George 1). Kettelkamp, our other new member, returns to Washington after a year’s vacation, he having formerly been a member of the present Senior class. As for the old members, the less said the better. The shovels used last year are sadly bent, but aided by new ones run by “gas” and operated by Moody, Snider, Green and Company, we shall not fall below the record. “Call me Kiddo” Denison has developed into quite a favorite with the Sopho¬ more class and has entertained them delightfully on several occasions. Bredeck, our worthy President, is rapidly accumu¬ lating a library which he will some day give to the University, while Smith, the staid and steady, has become the best anato¬ mist in the school. “Fritzie” Abbott and “Gilly” Gilbert, the two minister’s sons, are model young men, whom the rest of the class pattern after. McLarney and Jackson arc still doing yeoman service in the shovel gang, while “little Mae”McKit- trick is still as much a bureau of information as ever. —A. A. G. Class of 11)14 I 113 I Lux H. Bock Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer . Hatchet Representative . Lux H. Bock Charles Curtis Allen I’red F. Alsop E. R. Kellersberger 104 ] Sophomore £i3cDical Class Charles Curtis Allen Frederick Franklin Alsop, A. B. Edmond Bechtold I.ux Hugo Bock Elliott Knight Dixon Lister Irenaeus Foulon Levi Harrison Fuson Harold Houston Jones Eucene Roland Kellersderger Jay M. Kuhns Herbert Sidney Langsdorf Royal H. McCutcheon, A.B., A M Dalton Keats Rose Julius Albert Rossen Harry Watson Squibb Joseph Emmerson Strode Robert Vinyard Samuel Franklin Wennf.rman William Theodore Wilkening Sophomore Class Jlistorp g FTER all the hard work of the last year and the intimate acquaintances formed through constant association, it was almost a family reunion when we came back this Fall hungry for more of the wonderful facts revealed to us during our Freshman existence. The Fates decreed that eight of the original family of twenty-five should not return. After the trials, worries and midnight labors of the first year, we felt that our safe return was a good omen for the future, and, as the interested reader pours over these pages now and in after years, he will say: Truly that was an unequalled class. VVehave welcomed into our class four new men this year. R. H. McCutcheon, H. 11. Jones, Robt. Vinyard and Harry Squibb. After one year’s rubbing together the family has not failed to show its individual characteristics. The following is an itemized account of how each member sees the others: “Right Away” Bechtold, “Spearmint” Rose, “Fatty” Wennerman, “Kleinie” Allen, “Slick” Alsop, “Slim” Strode, “Germany-Webfoot” Wilkening, “Honolulu” Kuhns, “Curly” Fuson, “Doctor” Dixon, “Sandy” Vinyard, “Scrubb” Squibb, “Casey” Jones, “Hermann” Langsdorf, “Shorty” Rossen, “The Original” Bock, “Goat” McCutcheon, “Kelly” Kellers- berger, and “Pop” Foulon. 95 ■ • srrp El One of the interesting events of the year was the organiza¬ tion of the “Married Man’s Club.” “Texas” Kellersberger sneaked off down to Texas and brought her back. The con¬ tagion spread and “Curly” Fuson became a “benedict”. “Pop” Foulon and “Fatty” Wennerman secretly confided their hearts’ desire on the subject. Down in the secret depths of the hearts of some other Sophomores the benedict idea is brooding. “Webfoot” Wilkening spends a large part of his time around the mail box, and “Slick” Alsop is the happy recipient of good home-made fudge very often. Even bashful “Slim’ Strode has fallen a victim. This record would not be complete without mentioning some of the very notable contributions offered to science by some members of our well known class. The most recent and beyond doubt the most startling and original contribution to science was made by Dr. Strode on “The Functions and the Location of the Sciatic Nerve.” This article alone would give a sufficient idea of the type of men represented, but further mention must be made of Dr. Dixon’s work, who signally hon¬ ored the class through a successful completion of advanced research work in neurology during the summer. Soon to be published is Dr. Bock’s contribution on “How to Cure Infec¬ tious Diseases.” Space does not permit to mention the main other contributions of note published, or in process of publi¬ cation. They speak for themselves. The Class Party was pulled off on February 8th and every¬ body had a big time. Several practical applications of some of the principles illustrated by Dr. Jackson in his lectures, were successfully carried out and the whole class benefitted by them. In the midst of all these thoughts, there comes a serious one that finally outweighs them all—the vision of the Ideal Physician to heal the sick, to care for the poor and the fallen, and ever to remember that as physicians we have a life work that should call out the very best that God has given us, be¬ cause we are dealing with human beings and not things. Mat- each man ever have a vision of the Ideal Physician. —E. R. K. 1 ! « 1 Noble D. McCormack President Officers Noble D. McCormack Secretary . Frank 15. Weik Treasurer .... Walter L. Hennericii Hatchet Representative Paul H. Stevenson [ 97 ] JfreSfjman Jflebtcal Class Walter Emil Hennerich Paul Huston Stevenson Noble DuBois McCormack Frank Benjamin Weik Jfresifjman Class Jlistorp VAUCITY” is the word that most aptly characterizes the I M Freshman Class of the Medical School. Whether it be in numbers, good looks, or morals, “not much” is the phrase strictly adhered to. When King Servy sum¬ mons his subjects to the throne room, there appears before him an Iowan farmer who can always be heard even when not seen, a Dutchman from south St. Louis who studies only when he hasn’t a date out on West Pine Boulevard, a canny Scotch¬ man (four-fifths Irish, by the way) called “Mac” who has one redeeming feature which we are unfortunately unable to think of at this time, and lastly the possessor of an oriental mug who would be unable to stand the test were he to apply for admission to t he human race. That’s all—these four and no more. The characteristic brevity first manifested itself in connec¬ tion with the morals of this abbreviation of a class. When a class organization became necessary the members gambled for the various positions. “Mac”, by virtue of his being far ahead of the rest of the class in the fine points of the art, won the opportunity of having his picture in the “Hatchet” as President of the Class. The remaining positions fell to the lot of the other members of the class in direct proportion to their lesser degree of crookedness. To admit of a humble beginning seems to be required of all persons or classes which afterwards attain greatness. With this in mind, the class cheerfully admits the humbleness of its origin, in order to lay claim with greater assurance to its future greatness. In the brains and the originality of the class are found the two exceptions to the characterizing brevity. Already the discovery of the thirteenth cranial nerve and many other equally remarkable improvements in the anatomy of man presage extraordinary heights of fame for the members of the class in the field of Surgery and Medicine. —P. H. S. I 98 | (irrliard Portrait John Hanger Kcnnerley, D. D. S., M. D. —I ' OHN HANGER KENNERLEY, D.D.S., M.D., Dean of Dental Faculty and 1, Professor of Clinical Dentistry; member and Ex-President of Missouri State Dental Association; member and Ex-President of the St. Louis Dental Society; member of the National Dental Association; Ex-President and Ex-Secretary of the National Association of Dental Faculties; member of the Central District Dental Society of Missouri; corresponding member of the Illinois State Dental Association; Ex-President of the Institute of Dental Pedagogics; Delta Sigma Delta. I 100 1 IfacultP John Hanger Kennerly .D.D.S..M.D..Dean Hermann Prinz, D.D.S., M.D. Walter Manny Bartlett, D.D.S. Benno Fdward Lischer, D.M.D. Bland Nixon Pippin, D.M.D. Gustav F. Decker, LL.B. Oliver Howard Campbell, M.D. Vilray Papin Blair, A.M., M.D. Jerome Epstein Cook, M.D. James Alexander Brown, D.D.S. F.wing Paul Brady, D.D.S. Marsh Pitzman, M.D. Jesse Duncan White, D.M.D. I.ecrand Marvin Cox. D.D.S.. M.D. Louis George Neuhoff, D.D.S. Louis Phillip Thomas, D.D.S. John Richard Pendleton, D.D.S Fred John Brockman, D.D.S. Wiley Andrew Wright .... Delafayette Rf.id. Samuel Rhode . Greenfield Sluder. Russell Daniel Carmen, M.D. Hermann Prinz, D.D.S., M.D. Professor of Clinical Dentistry and Dean of the Dental School Professor of Materia Medico , Therapeutics and Dental Pathology Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry Professor of Orthodontics Professor of Operative Dentistry Professor of Dental Jurisprudence Professor of Physiology Professor of Oral Surgery Professor of Bacteriology and General Pa¬ thology Professor of Histology Professor of Chemistry Professor of Anatomy Associate Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry and Lecturer on Crown and Bridge Work and Porcelain Art Lecturer on Anesthetics and Extraction Associate Professor of Dental Anatomy and Instructor in Technic Clinical Instructor in Operative Dentistry Clinical Instructor in Operative Dentistry Clinical Instructor in Prosthetic Dentistry Assistant in Histological Laboratory Assistant in Anatomical Laboratory Assistant in Chemical Laboratory Special Lecturer on Diseases of the Nose and Throat. Special Lecturer on Roentgenology Librarian [101 ] Officers President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Hatchet Representative Harry L. Gruner Floyd A. Hays Charles A. Ebling C. E. Berrymax [102] Charles Edgar Berryman . . . Piedmont, Mo. Class Hatchet Representative, ’13. Delta Sigma Delta Harvey Henley Bonds . Brunswick. Mo. Class Vice-President, ’ll. Delta Sigma Delta Fred John Brockman .... Nokomis, Ill. Class Secretary-Treasurer, ’ 11 -’12. Delta Sigma Delta Marvin Burton. Urbana, Va. Class President, ’ll. Xi Psi Phi l 103 1 Mt. Pleasant, Tex. [ 101 ] Campbell Hopson Glascock . New London, Mo. Class Vice-President, ’12; Class Secretary-Treas¬ urer, ’ll. Xi Psi Phi Harry Lee Granier Delta Sigma Delta Raymond, Ill. Harry Lee Groner ... Farmington, Mo. Class President, ' 13. Delta Sigma Delta Floyd Alvin Hays .... Mo. Class Vice-President, ’13. Delta Sigma Delta ( 105 ] Senior Class Historp 1NCE the date October 3, 1910, when we matriculated and received the customary name of “red-necks,” good fellowship and congeniality have been the words characterizing our class. The Freshman year, crowded as it was, with events, resulted in each of us except Funkhouser and Berryman, receiving nick¬ names. Burton was called “Greek” because of his color and brogue, although he is strictly Virginian and civilized. “Irish” Flays and “Foolish” Bonds have nicknames, appropriate in every sense of the words. “ ' Texas” Meador hails from the Lone Star state but “Mickey” Wright’s name has very little significance when applied to him. “Doll Face” for a man of Granier’s physique is not at all appropriate. “Noisy” Reid always displays his wonderful high tenor. Ebling received the name “Sister” on account of being modesty personified. “Dutchman” Stroll is a native of this city. “Shorty” Smith is the “littlest man” but is not “short” in his studies. ' Thompson is the “Dad” of his class; with Glascock, we use the latter part of his name with an “ic” attached. “Mule” Carter is so called because of the rather large sized aural appendages. At the beginning of our Junior year, we lost Karabashia and Haworth, but Kemper, Ferguson, Gruner and the two Thompsons increased our number to twenty. Our Senior year, is, of course, the most important to us, and, with the indication of the mid-year grades before us, the prospects seem very good for new dentists. On June 13, 1913, we shall receive our degrees of Doctor of Dental Surgery, and issue forth into the world to practice the science which we have learned during our three years of schooling. When that day arrives, and we depart for our scattered homes, we will all realize that we are leaving a number of very desirable acquaint¬ ances, and when the time for last farewells comes, everyone will wish everyone else a most successful iuture. C. E. B. 110S] fumor Class Ciare Alexander Alcorn John Albert McCarroi.l James Munford Ashley Georce Arcus Miller John Franklin Baber DeWilton Hewes Milstbad Isaac Owen Bird Paxton Morrison Oris B. Brite Walter Fritz Neuhoff Roscoe Thomas Burns Henry Nomura Albert William Caplin John Thomas Obert Maurice Harold Caplin William Edward Poole Harry Henderson Chapman Samuel John Rhode William LichtnEr Conrad Clifford Allen Ross Charles Fisher Elder Otto Schlicht Grant Clayborne Gentry Harry Robert Shanley Victor Dale Grice William Thomas Simmons Mardiros Hagopian Clyde Price Springgate Charles Brown Harrison Charles Owen Thompson James Anthony IIeieck James Titterincton Oscar John Hirth Harold Owing Weir Osee Melvin Hex Henry Fred Westhoff Elmer Henry Jacobsmeykr John H. White Saitaro Kageyama Victor Dale Winters Francis M. Kane Lloyd Brew Wright Charles Elva Line Marion James Yount Ira Thomas Maupin James V. Zanesiikff Junior Class jMStorp H ORTY-SIX students, coming from eight different states and two countries across the pond, make up the Junior Class of 1912-T3. On the morning of October 2, when we assembled at the school for the second year’s instruction there was little change in personnel from the Freshman year. The look of fright and strangeness worn by most of us at our first appear¬ ance had changed to a bolder one by which each seemed desirous to impress the “red necks” that the Juniors were to be the principal actors around there, and were ready to stage a better and more important show this year. While our class was large in number, the lirst year, it is larger this year due to the annexation of four boys from the I no | St. Louis Dental College, one from California and one from Tennessee, making a total of forty-six, the largest class Wash¬ ington Dental School has had in ten years. As a class we will not only make some enviable records as tooth pullers, but in several athletic organizations we are well represented. H. E. Weir, C. A. Ross, and W. E. Poole did much to win fame as kickers with the football delegation, while Id. R. Shanley was lined up with the ball-tossing squad, and played with the Browns the past season and will go to Detroit this year. We are also represented in basketball circles by I. A. Bird and G. C. Gentry, the latter being captain, and under his leadership the team has become near professional. In regard to our work, the class is making a good showing, and manifests a keen interest in all the new features with which we have to deal, and in most cases the efforts of able instructors are being rewarded by signs of a better and broader understand¬ ing, also some “real human intelligence” is being shown. There is still much more to be done in the few months which remain of our Junior year, and from the present forecast, ample opportunity will be given each one to dispense with all surplus energy in the real work of making good and so prevent their name from being forgotten when the roll is called next year. As a few closing remarks to this class-history 1 might add that a feeling of good-fellowship exists between each and every member of the class, which seems to strengthen as the end of our association draws nearer, and when time destines that we shall each go our way, may this tie continue through the years to come. —I. T. M. II. R. Duncan was drowned in the Mississippi river, July 21, 1912, while in swimming. Duncan was a member of the Junior Dental Class during the Freshman year and had intended entering again this year. Me was an intelligent, courteous and gentlemanly student and a memory of the pleasant associations with him is borne by each of his former classmates. H. E. Stevenson Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer Sergeant-at-A rms . Hatchet Representative H. E. Stevenson J. L. Quillman R. P. Blanchard M. L. Bradbury F. W. Henselmeier [ 112] Benjamin Harrison Barton Raymond Blanchard Henry Fred Bohle Earl A. Bohner Marion Leslie Bradbury Otto William Brandhorst Lon Ashmore Brazelton Archie Sterling Brown Roger Q. Mills Chandler James Willmott Coleman Hanson Maiuon Conner Harrison Hyram Cornwall John Harry Dawe Davis Bedell Douon Maurice Gredingkr Ignatius Gross Frederick William Henselmkier Benjamin Washington Karri.eman Benjamin Franklin Keller Edwin Francis Koiim Robert Larkin Lowry Elmer Mace Guy Archer Macroijer Benjamin Franklin Mann Dysart Benjamin Moore John Pantei.e Chester Bumgardner Parkinson James Leonard Quili.man Lincoln Sanders Hugh Edward Stephenson Henry Ambrose Taylor Saul Weiss Rudolph Wild Herbert Christian Wili Jf.sse Albert Williams Harry Ed wa r d W uesi Jfrefifjman Class Ijtstorp ® E regret very much that we must coniine the noble and eventful history of the Freshman class to a few lines. Our class is not the largest in the history of the school, but what it lacks in number it makes up in the quality of its students. VVc constitute the only class which possesses a reverend father, who, clothed in a simple yet dignified robe of white, visits us bi-weekly to give his benediction. The class is honored by having as leading officer, the Professor of Science from the University of Sparta. That most of us pass the exams is due largely to his valuable assistance. The bright stars of the Swiss mountains arc here. One especially deserves honorable men¬ tion, for how often have we not been charmed by his vivid presentation of life in every European city! One of the youngest Freshmen has become quite proficient in target practice during his leisure moments in Prosthesis. It is to be regretted that he has a natural aversion for the foreigners. 113 i The entire class has joined the Freshman Choral Club conducted by one of the leading professors of Alton Conserva¬ tory. Although there was great difficulty at first, the members have gained enough proficiency to sing grand opera with such perfection that our Dean rushes back from dinner so that he may stand at the foot of the stairs and hear the melodious strain. Our Class Football Team, because of its able manager, has never lost a game! A brilliant record. It is rumored that we are to organize a Base Ball Team also. May the same success attend them. The Basket Ball Team is really “the thing” of the Dental School. The fellows have toured the Eastern and Western States, and were only once defeated—if I remember rightly, by Harvard. It is rumored that the officials of the University- proper are thinking very seriously of having this team represent it next year. The Freshman Class is the pride and glory of the entire family. They attend regularly, are always on time, exercise great honesty in all their work, never “cut up and make brilliant marks in Chemistry. If the fellows keep up such good habits for three years what may they not develop into! There is no doubt but that they will become great Dentists, who will do honor to their Alma Mater and their chosen profession. F. W. H. Jfresfnnan Dental JFootbaU Ceam E. Mann—C. G. McGruder—Q. B. J. Doll— L. 11. M. Gredinger— R. H., Manager I,. Sanders— F. B. II. Taylor— R. G. J. Pantelli—L. G. J. Williams— R. T. F. Rohm—L. K. L. Quillman— L. T., Captain L . Wild E. II. Bohle— R. E. jFresbmati 15askct T5all Ceam G Gentry— C ., Captain R. Dowry— L. F. J. Coleman, R. F. D. Doran— R. G. I. Bird— I.. G. D. Moore— L. G I 1H I Edmund Henry Wuerpel 0 fDMUND HENRY WUERPEL, Director of School of Fine Arts; First Sellew Medal, Manual Training School; Secretary (1891-1893) and honorary member (1894), American Art Association, Paris; Recording Secretary, Paris Advisory Committee, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Member of Jury of Selection, American Section, Universal Exposition, Paris, 1900; Member Jury of Selection and Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904; Active Member and 1 ice- President Society of Western Artists; President St. Louis Artists’ Guild, 1897-1898; President 2x4 Club, 1895-1897; Silver Medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Silver Medal, Lewis and Clark Exposition, Portland, 1905. [ HO] Jfacultp Edmund H. Wuerpel, Director Charles P. Davis Henrietta Ord Jones Cordelia T. Baker Dawson Dawson Watson Gustav von Sculegeli. Gustav F. Goetscii Victor S. Holm Margaret F.. Barnes Frederick G. Carpenter Anna L. Kasper F.stelle Bowles Fanny E. Perkins Lecturer and Instructor in Composition and Artistic Anatomy Instructor in Antique and Metal Work Instructor in Ceramic Decoration and Pottery Instructor in Bookbinding and Leatherwork Instructor in Drawing, Painting and Wood Carving Instructor in Draining, Painting and Monotyping Instructor in Drawing, Painting, Etching and Illustration Instructor in Modeling Instructor in Decorative Design and A pplied Art Instructor in Drawing, Painting and Joinery Instructor in Saturday Drawing Class Librarian Secretary of the School [ 117 ) Eegular Urt tubents Archie E. Albert Rosamond Anderson Mildred Lockwood Baiiey Elanor Barry Beatrice Bastian John Martin Batscuy Hazel Beal Helen Beattie Rhea Carson Blake Irene Marie Blondin Grace C. Bohn Goilda Bringhurst Wyatt Coffin Brodix Clara Bromeyer R. Bryan Mary E. Bui.ki.ey Mrs. I.eola Bulliyant Paul Bunnell Doris Burgheim Hazel Ernestine Bush Miller Franklin C. Cann Emma Sutton Carter Margery E. Chase Frances Williams Clark Marcaret Cohn Gladys Margaret Colemai Madeline K. Colfer Philip A. Conrath Rhoda M. Coxwell Morotiiy Deane Hazel Deane Mrs. Arthur DeCamp John Dehnf.rt Mrs. W. B. Douglas Lillian Ruth Durham Helene Enscore Jof. E. Fedor Ruth Katel Felker Madeline Rose Flint Margaret Franz Katherine B. Frederick Emil H. Frei, Jr. Wm, Howard French Julius Andrew Gewinner Wilfred B. Goddard Gertrude D. Goldwasser Mrs. Esther B. Gowenloc Horace Graf Philip A. Cronemeyer Geo. Gustantinopui.is Mary Piers Hallett Mrs. Wm. John Harris Mrs. Harry B. Halves Laura Mabel Heath Gustav Hasemann John M. Heller, Jr. Mildred Henkel Magenta Hilger Raymond Hill Elizabeth Hoffman Louise A. V. Homeyer Elanor Marie Hopkins Mabel Huthmacher Sophie Ruth Isaacs Hilda Dunbar Jamieson Emily June Chas. D. Jarrett i Theresa Jessel Jones Anna Louise ICasper Maude Klein Juanita Knight Ruth Newcomer LeCron Margaret D. Little Henry Lohmann Loretta Longinotti Gladys Lynwall Elizabeth S. McLellan Margaret Moser Lois Ella Maxon Margaret E. McAdoo Grace Adelaide Miller Mollie Mueller Milly Oertel Nancy Lucas O’F’allon Josephine Oliver George Pappas Marjorie Hewitt Pease Mrs. Joseph A. Prichard Walter Edw. Quermann Percy F.. Ramsay Eugenia Lucille Randall Rowena Ray Samuel Romero Beulah Ruth Gladys Salmon Mrs. Alice Ethel Sanford Katherine T. Semmes Joseph Harold Senne Mrs. Vivian L. Shaw Geo. Leonard Shultz Laurene F. Shumate John H. Smith Irene Sperring Ruby Spurlock Dorothea Stahl Mrs. Naomi Stevens Wm. Edw. Suehrk Minnie Stoecker Babette Straus Daisy Taake Mrs. Geo. J. Tansey J ulius F,. Tarling Edith Wright Taylor Howard August Tiiain Lillian Thole Mary Agnes Thomson Freda Catherine Udf. Mrs. G. Von Schlegeli. Edna Louise Vossler Dorothy E. Wallace Hattie Augusta Wangelin Owen Tiusk W ' ard Hildegard Weinhagen Carl Walter Willi Cleo Adele Wolf Geneva Youngs [1191 Urt School © IY do art students decide to study art? This is a ques¬ tion at all times largely discussed in our midst and we find students are actuated by several distinct reasons. First, of course, are those, and fortunately they are in the minority, who come because of a conviction (fostered by doting parents and friends) that they possess real talent- nay, even genius. But alas, one can be so easily wrong about this matter of genius, and, even having it, it is very problematical it it will ever be recognized, for arc there not cases in plenty of those who have been here in the past having a very real and recognized ability and who yet remain obscure in spite of it? Then there are those who come because they cannot be happy unless they do; they love art and some force within pushes them on and they will find some way to get to study. They will fight through against all odds and no amount ol dis¬ couragement will discourage; no obstacle obstruct. It is surely a case of “love will find the way,” for having this single hearted devotion they will gain the looked-for end—it is inevitable. In almost any other profession one can, provided he exercises pa¬ tience and industry, achieve some sort of success but not so in art. No amount of patience and industry, unless combined with enthusiasm, love and a very real conviction that his choice is the only right one, can make even a third-rate artist. For even the smallest success one must work “con amore.” The student who works in this spirit blesses himself and all those around him, for he feels the zeal of a creator, and this happily is not at all in proportion to the greatness of the creation, for whether a masterpiece or the most abortive infant effort, he is possessed of that joy which is the reward of all sincere produc¬ tion. Nor are these students grinds, for it is not the grind who turns out the brilliant things. They may be single minded re¬ garding their work, but they are not at all one idea-ed. They can enter into the student activities with eagerness. Often those who play the hardest work the hardest too. for all work and no play produces very dull efforts in art. Often one hour of spontaneous work, prompted by enthusiasm or inspiration, will accomplish more than a full half day or even a week of laborious effort. But there is a time to work and a time to play and the right kind of student feels it no temptation to play at the wrong time. Then there are that large number who come to study art in order to make a living out of it, and these perhaps stir things up the most, at least in words. Can one make a living out of it? Yes, but to all who would study art with a view to making money we would look at with pitt ing eyes for they are sure to be disappointed. To such we would say, “Go into commer¬ cial life, run a picture show or open a hotel,” for rich artists are the exception all over the world. But if one is satisfied with mere comforts and doesn ' t demand the luxuries, then we can tell with pride of the many painters, designers and craft workers now scattered all over the country in schools, colleges and pri¬ vate studios, from one old student, now one of the Faculty of the New York Art League, to another successful teacher in San Francisco, who are making a comfortable support from loved and congenial labor. So if you love money and the ease that money brings more than anything else, do not study art hoping to gain it, for it is a rare thing to find an artist who has made a fortune from his art. But if one can be satisfied with less, surely there is no happier life on earth than to rise each morning to a day filled with the work one loves. So to any thinking of coming to us we would say, be an all around good student, have your name every morning among the few posted in the entrance hall for punctuality, have your work good enough to be shown sometimes in the gallery for a month after passing the criticism of that terrible jury, a faculty meet¬ ing. Join the Art Students Association. Attend our social affairs, be friendly and get in touch with the teachers and students, work and play and be one of us. -M. K. F. 1 121 ] i 123] f m r-I it George Thomas Moore, A. M., Ph. D. e EORGE THOMAS MOORE, Director Henry Shaw School of Botany; B.S., Wabash, 1894; A.B.. Harvard, 1895, A.M., 1896, Ph.D., 1900; Asst. Cryptogamic Laboratory, Harvard, 1897-9; instructor cryptogamic botany, Radcliffe, 1898-9; in charge botanical dept. Dartmouth, 1899-1901; physiologist and algologist, Bureau of Plant Industry, U. S. Dept, of Agriculture, 1901-2; in charge of laboratory plant physiology, 1902-1905; Prof. Plant Physiology and Applied Botany, Henry Shaw School of Botany, and Plant Physiologist, Missouri Botanical Garden, 1909-12; Engel- mann Prof, of Botany, Washington University, Director Henry Shaw School of Botany and Director Missouri Botanical Garden, 1912-. Instructor cryptogamic botany, Marine Biological Laboratory, 1896-1907, head Dept, botany, 1907-; lecturer “Contamination of Water Supplies”, Thayer School of Eng. 1900-2; “Economic Botany”, Dartmouth, 1901-2. Fellow American Association for Advancement of Science; Secy. Botanical Society of America, 1910-; Pres. Engelmann Botany Club, 1912-;Pres. St. Louis Biologi¬ cal Club, 1912. Member of Society of Bacteriologists; Philosophical Society, Washington Academy of Science; St. Louis Academy of Science. Published “On the Contamination of Water Supplies by Algae”, “The Fixation of Free Nitrogen by Root Nodule Organ¬ isms”, “Morphology and Physiology of the Algae.” ©fficcrs of instruction George Thomas Moore, Ph.D., Director, Engelman Professor of Botany Benjamin Mince Duggar Professor of Plant Physiology Samuel Monies Coulter Assistant Professor in Botany William Woodwaro Ohlweiler Teaching Fellow in Botany F.llek C, Clark Assistant at Mary Institute tuDcnrs in the School of 15otanp Candidates for the degree of Dm tor of Philosophy with major in botany C. O. Chambers W. H. Kminc J. S. Cooley W. W. Ohi-weiler A. R. Davis L. O. Overholts Marcaret DeMeritt J. R. Schramm Mildred W. Spargo Candidate fur the degree of Doctor of Philosophy with minor in botany A. M. Brown Candidate far the degree of Muster of Arts August Nolte Graduate students not candidates for a degree Ruth Beattie Mary Bryan !• ' B. Morgan I 123 I General Statement X N June 1885, Mr. Henry Shaw, of St. Louis, authorized the Chancellor of Washington University to place be¬ fore the Corporation the following plan: With the concurrence of the Corporation, to endow a School of Botany as a department of Washington University, by donation of improved real estate yielding over $5,000 revenue, and to place it in such relation to the Missouri Botanical Garden and Arboretum as practically to secure their best uses, for scientific study and investigation, to the professors and students of said School of Botany, for all time to come. The plan was accepted and The Henry Shaw School of Botany established in the Fall of 1885. Work in the Shaw School of Botany is broadly divided into undergraduate instruction, graduate instruction and research. The undergraduate work is designed to meet the needs of the University represented on the Quadrangle, emphasis being placed on the fundamental principles of botanical science rather than on special phases of the subject. While this is true in general, the work in sanitary engineering meets a special requirement of the chemical engineers. The graduate instruction and research work are carried on in the Missouri Botanical Garden because of the very unusual opportunities and facilities offered to advanced students in botany in the way of collections of living plants, experimental greenhouses, out door experimental grounds, herbarium and library. The instruction is planned with a view toward supply¬ ing the individual needs of graduate students. In the research work, endeavor is not limited to one or a few phases of botany. As much freedom as possible is given the students engaged in research work to follow up lines of investigation for which they arc peculiarly fitted, either by previous training and contact or by natural inclination and aptitude. 1 126 | I 127] George Benjamin Mangold, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. e F.ORGE BENJAMIN MANGOLD, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Director School of Social Economy; A.B., Cornell College, 1901; A.M., University of Chicago, 1903; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1900; Instructor in Economics, Washington State College, 1903-04; Instructor in Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, 1905-07; Associate Director, St. Louis School of Social Economy, 1908-12; Director, School of Social Economy, 1912-. Member American Economic Association, American Association for Labor Legislation, National Conference of Charities and Corrections; Chairman, Children’s Committee of Missouri State Conference of Charities and Correc¬ tion; Secretary, Social Service Conference of St. Louis; Secretary, Board of Civil Service Examiners for the Juvenile Court, St. Louis. Author of “Child Problems.” I 128 ] SDfficccs of Instruction George B. Mangold, Pu.D. Director Theodore W. Glocker, Ph.D. Associate Director Charles E. Persons, Ph.D. Assistant Director Ora A. Kelley, A.M. Assistant in Research and Adviser of Women Bertha Beatrice Lash Supervisor of Physical Education The Young Women ' s Christian Association, Lecturer, 1912-13 Charlotte Rumbold Secretary, Public Recreation Commission, Lecturer, 1912-13 Edith Short Librarian Anna Henke Secretary to the Director 1 129 ] 9 C ' b ' 7 ) tutient£ in tf)e Hdjool of foetal Cconomp Sophie Abramson Clair E. Ames Mrs. J. S. Anderson Sarah Bair Mary Bell Barlow Blanche Bass Helen Bernard Jennie Blustein Frieda E. Bowen Mrs. Anna Bradley Mrs. Maude Brady Wanda Clotilda Brown Ernest F. Bush Elsa M. Butler Mrs. D. K. Catlin Eva M. Clark Anna M. Clinton Abby Willis Cobb Ruth B. Cobb Lillie E. Colby William A. Crossland Bertha A. Day Mrs. Adele C. Danforth Miss Deerson Mrs. R. Holliday Dobbins Bertie Drey Alice M. Duckworth Catherine R. Dunn Anne Evans A. Fairbank Mrs. J. G. Gertig Jacob George F ' ertig Anne Palmer Fisher Jannett G. Flanagan Margaret Fleishman Jane Frankenthal Anna Frein Louise Friedman Ida L. Gerding Bessie Glassman Lulu Elizabeth Gordon Mary Gunn C. L. Gurney Leonora Habihorst Anna L. FIarris Josephine R. Hay Ida Hegel Anna Henke Mrs. Mark Hollingshead Mrs. G. L. H. Holton Charlotte Howland C. M. Hubbard Mrs. G. 1. Hodges William E. Hudson Mrs. Harry January Mrs. Puof.be Kelley Elizabeth Bartlett Kelly Lucile Lederer Mrs. Oscar Leonard Charlotte Lomax Anna Love Louise E. I.owe I. otta Luckow Cora Agnes McKfllip Constance Madison Mary Maguire J. W. Major Evelyn Milius Margaret Molloy Mrs. J. F. Molney Harry R. McClain Margaret McClure M. Louise Nivin Mrs. M. H. Noonan Georgia A. O’Neill Petrina Overland Anna E. Parrisu Mrs. W. H. Pate Cecella Razovsky John M. Roche Miss Rogers Mrs. Martha Roos Isabel Russell Edith M. Short Frances Shouse Helen Pilley Shultz Annabel Sims Jesse Phelps Smith Mrs. Olga S’Renco Sigmlind S’Renco Ci.ara L. Stein Julia C. Stimson Anna Struckmeyer George Sutherland Clara Taylor Melinda J. Thias M. Genevieve Tierney Lou E. Tillson Edna Eugenia Switzer Lavinia Thomas Annie L. Thomson Mrs. Belle T. Tracy Johanna M. Walsh Stella Wasserman Benjamin Clay Weakley Mrs. Minnie D. Weiss Louise Helen Wenzel Annie L. Whittaker Laura Willits Wilma B. Wislocka Lillian D. Wright Dr. Eulalie Wood General Statement School of Social Economy had its beginning in a ■ Cj series of round table meetings of the workers in the St. Louis Provident Association, from which it developed into the St. Louis School of Philanthropy and became affiliated with the University of Missouri. In 1909 this affilia¬ tion terminated and the School was transferred to Washington University, with the incidental change of name to the St. Louis School of Social Economy. In February, 1913, the School was made a department of the Washington University, and will hereafter be known as the School of Social Economy of Wash¬ ington University. The aim of the School is to provide training for charitable and social workers, and to carry on research and investigation for the purpose of social betterment. The work in the school is divided into the Departments of Instruction, Practice and Research. This last Department, through its co-operation with the Russell Sage Foundation, af¬ fords unusual opportunities for work in original social investi¬ gations. 1131 ] jFoorball 1912 SEPH Prensky, 13 Paul E. Nelson, ’14 Shepard Barnes, ’13 Leo McCarthy, ’13 Ulrich Potthoff, ’15 Lindi.ey Milford, ’15 Harold Weir, ’14 Russell Hudler, ’15 basketball James S. Gray, ’13, Captain Theodore Maenner, T4 DeMott Modisette, ’15 Joseph E. Vollm William Poole, ’14 Joseph E. Vollmak, ’13, Captain George F. Scherer, ’14 Wallace Hardaway, ’14 Ben Moreell, T3 George C. Hetlage, ' 15 Albert Ross, ’13 James Gray, T3, Manager 1912=1913 Norman Chivvis, ’13 Elmer Lacey, ’13 Edmund C. Donk, ’14 .r, ’13, Manager Crack 1912 James Gray, ’13 Edwin T. Nipiier, ’12 Theodore Maenner, T4 Ben Moreell, ’12 Arthur W. Lambert, ’12 Paul Nelson, ’14 Ccitnis 1912 Wyatt C. Brodix, ’14 Elmer C. Adkins, ’12 jfinancial Manager 1912 Lewis A. Maverick, ’13 Coach Cayou Hctlage Hudler Wiechert Moreel! McCarthy Green Poole Scherer Hardaway Milford Capt. Vollmar Potthoff Prensky Manager Gray Manager. . . James Gray, 13 Assistant Manager A. V. Brady, ’14 Captain. Joseph YV. You.mar, ’13 Coach . . ■ ■ F. M. Cayou FOOTBALL r RECORD Left End . Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard . Right Tackle . Right End Quarter Back . Right Half Back Full Back . Left Half Back The Team Joseph Prensky, ’13 Paul Nelson, ’14 Shepard Barnes, ’13 Leo McCarthy,’13 William Poole, ’14 Joseph Vollmar, Captain, ’13 George Scherer, ’14 Wallace Hardaway, ’14 Lindley Milford, ’15 Ben Moreell, ’13 Ulrich F. Potthoff, ’15 Russell Hudler John Ranson Harold Weir Moulton Green Substitutes Albert Ross George C. Hetlace El wood Steward Richard Souther Schedule of Games October 5. October 12. October 19. October 26. November 2. November 9. November 16. November 23. Shurtleff College—Francis Field Illinois University—Champaign Westminster College—Francis Field Rolla School of Mines—Francis Field Drake University—Francis Field Drury College—Francis Field Missouri Liniversity—Columbia . Arkansas University—Francis Field . 48— 0 0-13 54— 0 13— 6 13—33 27—13 0-33 7—13 1910— Washington 1911— Washington 1912— Washington Summary of Scores 78 Opponents . . 132 107 Opponents 28 162 Opponents . . Ill Eebteto of tfje 1912 Jfootball Reason ' T the close of the 1912 season, prospects for as good a team for this year as last, seemed dim. The entire back- field and a lineman had been graduated and one of the regular ends had dropped out of the University, neces¬ sitating the developing of six players for regular positions. By the first game, however, this had been accomplished and Shurtleff was defeated in a slow but well played game, showing plenty of fumbles and an absence of team work. By the following Saturday these defects had been eliminated and Washington played by far the best game of the season; the line charged uniformly, opened up holes for the backfield and broke up Illinois’ plays before they were well under way. The t 13 J) Capt. J. Volimar Right Tackle Leo McCarthy Center backfield played well together, gave their teammates good interference and ran back punts better than the Illinois backs. In other words the team out¬ played Illinois and, but for breaks in luck and lack of judgment at times, should have won the game. Then came the game with Westminster, when it reached the highest point of its devel¬ opment, plays were executed perfectly, the ball handled with an entire absence of fumbles and the defensive play in¬ vincible. The Rolla game showed the first backward step; the players seemed to have lost the vigor and aggressiveness of former games and played sluggish football; this was thought to be a temporary relapse or due to an “off day,” and indeed this seemed to be a fact until the last quarter of the Drake game, when, leading by the score of 13 - 12 , the team seemed suddenly to go to pieces and become disorganized. As Drake was a much heavier and better conditioned team, it was a case of wearing down a team without capable substitutes to replace the tired men. Drury was defeated in a game in which the ends seemed unable to break up the forward pass. Then came Mis¬ souri, the team we would rather beat than all the rest on our schedule. Leav¬ ing St. Louis, with the hope, not so much of winning but of holding them to a small score, Washington was swept off its feet in the first few minutes of play and in the first half was outplayed g B inles at every angle. Coming back strong Left Guard B. Moreell Full Back I HO] in the second half, it was able to prevent further scoring. The one bright and shining light in this game was Hetlage. Many pounds lighter than the lightest of Missouri’s men, he played with such gameness that, although forced to take time out on several occasions, he played through the entire game and time and time again brought the Missouri rooters to their feet by stopping Knoble, their star player. As in the Illinois game, the breaks went against us and Arkansas won the last game of the season by the score of 13-7. Of the individual players, it can be Wm. E. Poole Right Guard P. Nelson Left Tackle said that the four were Capt. Vollmar and McCarthy in the line and Aloreell and Milford in the backfield. 1 hese men plaved consistently good football during the entire season and outplayed their opponents on almost every occasion. Capt. Vollmar showed wonderful defensive ability and broke through and stopped plays time and again ; he was fast for his weight and often got down the field with the ends on a punt or kick¬ off. McCarthy seemed to instinctively know where the opponents’ plays would be directed and would always be there to break it up. He never made a bad pass and never allowed the opposing center to get the jump on him. Moreell was the best full-back Washington has had in years; lie was the most consistent player on the team and could always be relied upon to make the required number of yards on the last down; he had the knack of running low and picking his holes Qu’arfcr Back through the line. Milford was an ex- |. Prcnslev l.efl End ' I Ml 1 © Ulrich Potthoff I -eft Half Back Lindley Milford Right Half Back Both were cellent defensive man and a hard line plunger; he went through the Drake and Missouri lines for five and ten yards at a time. The regular guards were Barnes and Poole, though Green would have supplanted one of them had he not been injured early in the season. Of the three, Green was the more aggressive and the quicker, while the other two were on par and both played a steady game. Nelson, who played the opposite tackle from Capt. Vollmar did not reach his true form during the entire season, though he played brilliantly in the Illinois game. Prensky and Scherer were the ’varsity ends, fast men down the field on a punt, but allowed themselves to be too easily blocked by the enemy’s backs. Prensky was a good tackier, but Scherer seemed to be out of place at end and did not have the faculty of leaving his feet when hitting a man; he would have been a star at tackle or guard. Hetlage, though developed late in the season, was the best end of the three; he was fast, aggressive and a sure tackier. At quarter back, Hardaway showed ability at directing the team and was the hardest tackier on the team; no man ever got by him when he stood between him and the goal. _ Potthoff, who, at the beginning of the season, promised to be the star of the team, seemed to be become overtrained and slowed down, butTievertheless was a brilliant player and a strong open field Geo. I ' . Scherer Right End runner. James Gray Manager [112 | Of the substitutes, Ross, Weir and Hudler we and a fast man, but as a quarterback he was inclined to slow the team up by hesitating in calling the signals. Weir was a good sub-center and ' ' A Hudler a good man to put in at either end or halfback. All four of these men will £l Jp be with us next year and should give a good account W of themselves. Ranson and Steward, who played in several games, must not be overlooked. Ranson, though new at football, shows promise of being one of the coming star linemen, and, in fact, seems to be a good man to take Yollmar’s place. He played so hard in the Missouri game that he had to be assisted off the field. Steward should be heard from next year and should fill in the hole left by McCarthy. Souther, Bryan, Wiechert, Long and Bernard, though light, were hard workers and did a great deal toward building up the team by coming out every night and “scrub¬ bing” against the Varsity. Manager. IUU33 ni }gi jaqstegi Vollmar Ross Jackson Scherer Donk Chivvis Coach Cayou Lacey Modiscttc Gray Berryhill Maenner Manager .... Joseph Vollmar, ' 13 Assistant Manager Chari.es Gallf.nkamp, ' 14 Captain . James S. Gray, ’13 Coach .F. M. Cayou The Team Forwards Guards Elmer Lacey, ’13 James Gray, ’13 Theodore Maenner, ’14 Edmund Donk, ' 14 Norman Chivvis, ’13 Center De Mott Modisette, ’15 George Jackson, George Scherer, Substitutes ’13 Albert H. Ross, ’13 ’14 Grant C. Gentry, ’14 F. L. Berryhill, T4 January J anuary January February February February February February February 17. February 18. 11 . 13. 14. 1 . 5. ( 5 . 7. 8 . Schedule and Scores 1913 Basketball Season Central Wesleyan—Francis F’icld Ames—Francis Field Ames —Francis Field Shurtleff— Francis Field Missouri University—Columbia Missouri Uni vers it —Columbia Kansas University—Lawrence . Kansas University—Lawrence Missouri University—Francis Field Missouri University—Francis Field March 1 . Kansas University—Francis Field ... 42- Was hington Summary of Scores 1912 313 Opponents . 275 Was hington 1913 • • • . 324 Opponents . . 377 Oft—33 28—20 20—15 29—11 29—11 36—13 44—26 62— 8 23—15 33—31 29—28 I 147] p Capt. J. Gray Eebteto of 1913 llasfeetfjall Reason TART IN G the season with but two of last year’s letter Basketball men and a limited supply of able sub¬ stitutes, the Washington team finished its schedule in a fashion unlike championship style only in percentage. It cannot be said that Washington was not well represented in the Missouri Valley Conference, for Big Chief Cayou had his men trained to play at top speed and only weight and inexperi¬ ence kept them from gaining more distinction. W hen we con¬ sider losing to Kansas by a single point and by two lone points to Missouri, we wonder why Dame Fortune could not have boosted us one more basket, thereby rewarding our team for their hard and consistent work. Then, again. Coach Cayou had his troubles in picking a final team. BerryhilPs absence at the first of the season and the exclusion of two good candidates as a consequence of the mid-year exams, caused considerable delay in selecting the five men. In spite of these handicaps, the first game of the season, played with Central Wesleyan, was easily won. This game was t 1-48 ] E. Lacey E or ward bWs! simply one of practice and most everyone on the squad was given a show in the fray. The following week the Ames team showed up at our gymnasium and our team took two games from them in handy fashion. From the style of play showed in these games much was expected from the locals. Next came Shurtleff, and we defeated them one Saturday as a brush up for the trip, the team leaving for Columbia the following Wednesday morning. That night Washington met her first defeat. The following evening a like result was obtained but at the Ctl hands of men outweighing us 25 pounds per man. In both these games, the team had trouble in keeping their feet on the slippery floor and at the same time plat ing a game of misnamed football. The following two nights, Kansas put over the third and fourth defeat for the Pikers. In the first game, Berryhill was crippled and due to the fact that the remaining men had not played together previous to the trip, Coach Cayou was forced to try several combinations which resulted disastrously in the last game. Here the team felt that they had been beaten fairly and squarely, but returned home fully determined to show Kansas and Missouri some basketball at home. After a week’s rest, Missouri arrived. In two fast and brilliant contests they barely won the edge in each game. The following week. Kansas, by some exceptionally brilliant team work, won the first game by an advantage of one point, while the second was in our favor until the middle of the second half. So we ended the schedule, not discouraged but proud that our team held its own at the very end with the odds against them. The following men deserve credit for their hard, consistent work on the squad, e. g. Captain Gray, N chiwis Maenner, Chiwis, Lacey, Donk, Modisette, Scherer, Forward T. Maenner Forward I HU I D.Modiscttc Center jfe Berryhill, Jackson and Ross. Capt. Gray was noted for his speed and aggressiveness and his ability in tak¬ ing the ball up the field. Also, he and Donk, who ably filled the other guard position, followed their men closely, intercepting many a pass. Lacey, the midget of the team, proved to be an A Xo. 1 utility man. His work at guard, hindered as it was by his lack of height, was exceptionally good, while his ability at forward made other men hustle to guard him. His quickness at recovering the ball and his hard playing won for him the popularity of ever}’ audi¬ ence. Maenner’s work at forward showed him as a hard and consistent worker and anyone could pick Ted out as a veteran at the game. The other forward position was filled by Chivvis, Berryhill and Jackson successively, they dividing honors about equally. Chivvis played the greater part of the season as the regular forward and it was he who threw seven baskets in the second half of the first Kansas game. “Minute-and-a-half” Berryhill, due to his lateness in reporting for the team, his sprained ankle, and his broken rib, was kept from repeating his fTS record of last year, although he, as well as Jackson, played the forward position re¬ markably well. At center, Modisette proved a tower of strength. He invariably got the jump off and his work on the field was exceptional for the first year in ’Varsity circles. His substitute, Scherer, was always ready and capable, but, like Ross, was seldom used, except at the end of the game, and did not have as many chances to show his real ability. At the close of the season, Macnner was elected captain for the next year and to him we wish the best results for the 1914 season. J. Vollmar M a linger E. Donk Guard Jos. E. Vollmar, Manager. 1 150 | Coach Cayou Cutter Jackson Manager Nebe Gray Moreell Maenncr Lambert Nipher Prensky Winfree §wm5iij Manager .J. Nebf., ’12 Assistant Manager . . IIarry Swope, ’14 Captain .... A. VV. Lambert, ’12 Coach . F. M. Cayou The Team James Gray, ’13 Edwin T. Nipher, T2 Theodore Maenner, ’14 Ben Moreell, ’12 Arthur W. Lambert, ’12 Paul Nelson, ’14 Substitutes Geo. Jackson, T4 Ed. Winfree, ’14 Arthur Cutter, ’14 Drake Qmucrsitp us. Kaasf)ington CJniUersitp May 4, 1912 Won by Drake, 644 to 44 1 i 100 yard Dash Dyson (D) First Redfern (D) Second . Time : 10 1-5 One Mile Run Feike (O) First Redfern (D) Second . “ 4:46 2-5 120 yard Hurdles . Bishop (D) First Nipher (W) Second . “ :16 2-5 440 yard Dash Moreell (W) First Havens (D) Second . “ :53 220 yard Hurdles . Simmons (D) First Macnner (VV) Second . “ :2C Two Mile Run Redfern ID) First Thomas (D) Second “ 10:45 S80 yard Run Leibslc (D) First Feike (D) Second “ 2:03 1-5 Pole Vault Lambert (W) First J Cutter (W) Second lift. Roe (D) Discus .... Simon (D) First Nelson (W) Second . . 114J ft. Running High Jump Nelson (W) First Cutter (W) Second . 5 ft. 5 in. Shot Put .... Nelson (W) First Crull (D) Second 38 ft. 1 in. Running Broad Jump . Hardesty (D) First Jackson (W) Second 21ft. 3J in. One Mile Relay Macnner, G ray, Nipher, Moreell (W) Time 3:33 I 153 1 JUbteto of tfje 1912 fKracfe tension w lTH no baseball for the Spring of 1912, a great eflort was ill made to re-establish track work as a major sport at V | Washington. Coach Cayou found great difficulty, how¬ ever, in getting men to tryout and did not have a large number from which to pick his team. He developed a good relay team and some of the men showed promising signs of de¬ veloping into sprinters while Nelson and Lambert were already developed in previous work. At the Relay Carnival held at Des Moines, April 20, 1912, we were represented by a team composed of Nipher, Moreell, Gray, Macnner and Winfree, (substitute). This team won second place in the 880 yard race which is quite worthy of praise since most of the schools of the Big Eight Conference were represented by teams at this meet. In the mile relay, we were running a strong third when a Kansas runner directly in front of Moreell stumbled and fell, tripping “Big Ben” and cost¬ ing us a good chance to place in this event. The Annual Field Day served more as a tryout for the Drake Meet than as a real field day. On May 4, 1912, Drake met us on Francis Field in a dual meet and carried away the honors to the tune of 64l 2 to 4V . Paul Nelson was our indi¬ vidual star scoring 13 of our points. He won first place in the high jump and the shot put, and took second in the discus throw. As usual, Lambert took the pole vault, doing 11 feet without serious competition. Our relay team easily won the relay race establishing a record for Washington of 3 minutes and 33 seconds. All of the men except Nipher and Lambert are returned this t ear and, with the experience they have had supplemented by good coaching, should develop still further this year. I lot | Washington Unitiersittp Annual ®cnnts( ZEouniametit May 1912 1st. Round 2nd. Round 3rd. Round 4th. Round Donk Donk Hardaway ] Default J ackson Rosborough ] Jackson 6-4,7-9,6-3 Jackson 4-6, 6-2, 6-0 Adkins Adkins McNally ] Default Adkins Ncbe Hewitt 6-0, 6-0 Hewitt 6-1, 6-2 Barnes Barnes Patton 6-4, 6-4 Stifcl 1 Stifcl Stifcl Default Stockton 6-1, 6-3 Wismath Brodix Brodix Default Brodix R. Sparks R. Sparks p 4-6, 7-5,7-5 F. Costc 4-6, 10-8, 7-5 Gallenkamp Wilhelmi Gallenkamp 6-0, 6-0 Gallenkamp Default Blattcrman Blattcrman Scherer 6-2, 6-3 Brookes Brookes Sihler Brookes 6-0, 6-2 Default Brookes 6-3, 6-1 Leilich Mcrryman Mcrryman 6-3, 6-7 Conrades Sell Sell 6-4, 7-5 Hoerr Lohman Hoerr 6-1, 6-4 Hoerr Default Lockwood Lockwood Ryan Default Wright Bauman Wright Default Wright 6-4,5-7,7-5 Boettler McCormack McCormack 6-2, 6-3 Lionberger VVidman Lionberger 2-6,6-2,6-2 Lionberger ) 6-1, 8-6 5th. Round Adkins 0-0, 6-0 Brodix 6-0, 6-1 Hoerr Default Lionberger 6-1,6-S, 6-2 6th. Round Brodix 9-11,6-4,6-2 Hoerr 6-1, 6-4 7th. Round 1 Hoerr 60,6-2,6-1 I 156 1 Varsity Tennis Team Elmer C. Adkins, ’12 Wyatt C. Brodix, ’14 Substitute Charles Gallenkamp, ’14 Varsity Tennis Champion Roland Hoerr, ’15 Conference Tennis Tournament at Columbia, Mo. 1st. Round Jackson, D. Summers, A. N’ees, K. Brodix, W. Kansas Missouri 2nd. Round Burnett, K. Cannon, M. Nicholson. Adkins, W. Chang, M. Cave, A. Jackson (G-3, 6-3) Brodix (2-6, 6-3, 7-5) Washington Drake Ames Kansas (4-6, 6-5, 6-4) Singles 3rd. Round Cannon (6-4, 6-2) 1 Adkins I (6-2,6-2) | Cave ; (7-5,6-2) B rod ix (6-2, 6-3) Doubles ] Washington ) ' (6-1,6-3) Kansas ( 6 - 1 , 6 - 2 ) 4th. Round Cannon ( 6 - 1 , 11 - 9 ) Brodix (6-2, 6-3) Washington (6-3,64,6-1) . Cannon (6-3, 6-1, 6-2) J 1 167 1 £ 1912 tennis Reason The 1912 Tennis season showed that Washington continues to send out some of the best men in the Missouri Valley Confer¬ ence to compete for laurels under her name. The excellent work of Brodix and Adkins at the Conference Tournament at Columbia brought back championship honors for us at the expense of four competing Universi- ties. They won the doubles championship ... _ handily from the strong Kansas team and „ .... W. Brodix i r i r , . A .. li. C. Adkins Varsity Team Captured first place with 9 points to Mis- Varsity Team souri’s 6. the nearest competitor. In the singles, Brodix worked his way out to the finals, but was de¬ feated by Cannon of Missouri, the state Champion, who had also defeated Adkins in the previous round after hard fighting. The local Annual Tournament was quite successful, thirty- six men contesting in it. Hoerr took the final from Brodix, 6-0, 6-2, 6-4, after the latter had won two very stiff matches from Adkins and Gallenkamp. Stifel and Lionberger also showed good form, the latter getting into the semi-finals. Although we have lost Adkins, one of the best men in the Valiev when he gave his attention and time to the game, we have left men who are fully capable of up¬ holding Washington’s name in the Valley, and it is to be hoped they will have a chance at schools outside the Conference this C. Gallenkamp Substitute season. R. M. Hoerr Champion 1 15S | Snterdasis; IBagfeethall Class Teams 1913 Elmer Lacey, L. F. Shepard Barnes, C. Albert Ross, L. G. Norman Chivvis, R. F. George Jackson, C. Harry Swope, L. G. James Gray, R. G. 1914 Theodore Maenner, L. F. Ira Underwood, C. Edmund Donk, R. G. Eugene French, R. F. Charles Gallenkamp, L. G. 1915 Paul Hewitt, L. F. DeMott Modisette, C. Russell Hudler, L. G. Harry Brookes, R. F. Carl Althaus, L. G. H. Gruenwald, R. G. 1916 William Berry, L. F. M. C. Lewis, C. John Crocker, R. G. Samuel May, R. F. Edward Schaumberg, L. G. The Schedule Sophomores December 11 . 22 Seniors . January 4 68 Juniors . December 14 . 14 Freshmen January S 8 Juniors . 54 Seniors . 33 Freshmen December IS 10 Sophomores March 6 . . 14 Seniors . . 26 Sophomores 55 Juniors . 12 Freshmen . . 3 Summary of Games Won Lost Percentage Seniors— Class of 1913 3 0 1.000 Sophomores—C lass of 1915.2 1 .666 Juniors— Class of 1914. 1 2 .333 Freshmen— Class of 1916. 0 3 .000 l 101 I 11 cl First Game, 7 Sophomores| Sccond Game 6 Van Raaltf. .... McCormack ... CoSTE. Hardaway .... Brodix. Finch. Maenner . Stockton. Donk. Baseball 1912 3rd Base . Catcher . 2nd Base . Pitcher 1st Base . Left Field Short Stop Center Field . Right Field Freshmen { First Game, 9 Second Game, 3 Barth els Henske Hewitt Hoerr Althaus Jones Milford Brookes Cum mincs Track 1912 Sophomores, 45 WlNFREE .... Nelson. Maenner . Freshmen, 63 Modisette POTTHOFF Bauman Sophomores, 0 Bernard—Suck . Hayes DeVorkin Jehle Miller CoGGESHALL Hewitt Wehelmi-Fercuson Hetlage . McElhinney Graham . Football 1912 Left End . Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle . Right End Quarter Back . Left Half Back Right Half Back F ' ull Back . Freshmen, 14 Leu king Kammerer V e r ne r-Li lli n gsto n McMath Gregg Lewis-Jones Berry Chenery Gray Elrod Jones-Lewis 1 103] ©roSten Cup Series W on by the Freshmen (1915) IE Drosten Cup series, which is a series of contests each £ year between the Freshman and Sophomore classes, was won in the Spring of 1912 by the class of 1915 then Freshmen. By their victories in the three de¬ partments of sport—basketball, baseball and track—the win¬ ners gained the privilege of having their numerals engraved on the Drosten Cup which is kept in Francis Gymnasium. A tie was the result of the football game which the 1914 men wanted to continue until one side or the other scored. The Freshmen would not consent, however. In basketball, the 1915 men found little trouble in taking two out of three games, while in basebaH only two games were necessary to determine their supremacy. In the field meet, the first-year men were clearly the victors, winning by a score of 63 to 45. Washington vs. Arkansas. [164] OTomett’s tf)lettcs g THLETICS, among the women, are, at present, composed of three branches; Gymnasium, which includes lloor- work, fencing, and aesthetic dancing, Basketball, and Tennis. In the gymnasium work, there is an Annual Interclass Indoor Meet held each Spring. In basketball, the four class teams compete with each other in a series of games, the winning team having its numerals engraved on the Association Basket¬ ball Cup. For the further honor of being proclaimed Cham¬ pions of the University, however, the winning team must play the post graduate and the Art school teams. With the advent of Spring, indoor athletics arc abandoned and practice for the Tennis Tournament begins. The winner of the tournament has her name engraved upon the handsome Brookings Cup. There is also a Class Tennis Tournament, the winners of which are awarded medals At the close of each season the Athletic Association gives a banquet which all the members are expected to attend. Ivohert 30roolungs’ Cup tennis tournament 1912-13 Julia Brookes. Julia Sisson ...... Julia Krausnick ... Louise Wenzel. Brookes Krausnick | Brookes Margaret Sharpe . Mary McDonald . . . . Sharpe 1 Pickcl Marjorie Schrocder Ruth Pickel . . Pickcl ) Picket Juniors . Sophomores Interclass Tennis Tournament 1912-13 Sophomores Sophomores ! . ! j Sophomores Sophomores Freshmen Sophomores 1 166 1 Annual 3nboor Jffleet—1912 Won by the Class of 1914 Traveling Rings 1st place Dorothy Calman, T4. 4 ' r ' n B a 2nd Lorruli Rethwilm, ’13 ... 37 rings Running High Jump 1st place Dorothy Calman, T4. 45 in. Jessica Young, T4 . . . 2nd Julia Brooks, T2 . ' n - 3rd Lorruli Rethwilm, T3 . . .I 40 in. Margaret Manley, ’13 . ’ Shot Put 1st place Lorruli Rethwilm, ' 13 . 2nd Dorothy Calman, ’14 3rd Elsie Ueberi.e, ’14 . 22 ft. 21 ft. IS ft. 41 in. Standing Broad Jump 1st place Dorothy Calman, ’ll ... 2nd E. McLellan, Art. 3rd Jessica Young, ’14. 6 ft. 7 in. ( ft. 0 in. 5 ft. 8 in. Combination Jump 1st place Dorothy Calman, ’14 ... 2nd Lorruli Rethwilm, ’13 3rd Milly Oertel, Art. BO in. 54 in. 52 in. Horse Work 1st place Lorruli Rethwilm, ’13 2nd Jessica Young, ’14 3rd Helen Dawley, T4 Pole Climbing Dorothy Calman, ' 14 Standing High Jump 1st place Dorothy Cai.man, ' 14 2nd E. McLellan, Art 3rd Jessica Young, ’14 Lorruli Rethwilm, ’13 8 min. J sec. 301 in. 30 in. I 107 ] ) 37 in. Girls’ JBaSfcettiaU Seniors Adelf. Seifert Alice McClevey Dorothy Childs Lucy Newton Hortense Bowles Mildred DeCourcy Ethel Barks Florence Wuexscii Mildred Gi.editzsch Marcaret DeGarmo Marguerite Mott Art School Mildred Bailey Schedule Feb. 14 Seniors 10 Sophomores 11 Feb. 21 Juniors 13 Sophomores 8 Feb. 28 Seniors !) Juniors 12 F ' eb. 14 Juniors 8 Art School . 0 Feb. 21 Seniors 13 Art School . 12 Feb. 26 Sophomores 9 Art School . 8 March 5 Juniors 10 Sophomores 8 March o Juniors 10 Sophomores 7 College Champions—Juniors-1014 Challenge Game—Juniors vs. Art School, forfeited by Juniors [ 109 1 Hilda Jameson, Forward Mildred Oertel, Forward Elizabeth McLeli.an, Center Margery Chase, Guard Guilda Bringhearst, Guard Margaret Manley, Farwurd Lorruli Rethwilm, Forward Alice Jehle, Center Annie Adei.e Shreve, ( Cap !.) Guard Helen Richards-Anna Mills, Guard Juniors Dorothy Calman, Forward Florence Sisler, Forward Jessica Young, Center Elsie Ueberle, Guard ( Cap!.) Ruth Picket, Guard Sophomores Ruth Pritchard, Forward Helen Shryock, Forward Julia Sisson, Center Grace Rodgers, Guard (Capl.) Julia Krausnick, Guard ttiDcnt Council m Long Manley Samuel Wenzel Flint Lidc Seifert Klotz Pritchard V oHENS CoVHCIL O Z O o Organized 1910 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Officers Madie Klotz Adele Seifert Claudia Lide .Rutii Pritchard Carolyn Long Senior Representatives Margaret Manley Adele Seifert Claudia Lide Junior Representatives Dorothy Samuel Sophomore Representative Ruth Pritchard School of Social Economy Representative Louise Wenzel Madie Klotz School of Fine Arts Representative Madeline Flint Honor Committee Rutii Pritchard Dorothy Samuel The Woman’s Organization is composed of all women students in all departments of the University. It acts in all matters pertaining to their welfare. It is governed by a council consisting of a President, seven representatives from the different classes and departments, and the President of McMillan Hall. Officers 1912-13 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Financial Manager Managers Football Basketball Track Baseball Leo McCarthy Ralph Bryan John T. Ragsdale, Jr. Dr. F. H. Ewerhardt Lewis A. Maverick James S. Gray Joseph Vollmar Harry Swope Walter Will Athletic Council Dr. F. H. Ewerhardt, Chairman Dean Wm. S. Curtis Hugh M. Fullerton, ’OS James Gray Dean A. S. Langsdorf Prof. W. E. McCourt, Secretary Lewis Maverick Leo McCarthy Harry Swope Joseph Vollmar W alter Will [ 176 ] President Vice-President Sec rein ry - 7 ' rea s nrer Director Mildred Bailey Maria Bain Kathrin Baker Grace Bissland Elsie Boogher Marietta Boon Hortense Bowles Gilda Brunkhurst Helen Bryars Hazel Burch Dorothy Calman Hazel Carter Dorothy Childs Isabel Creager Marjorie Chase Mildred Clayton Helen Dawley Helen Donnelly Helen Duffett Mildred Df.Courcy Margaret DeGarmo F.lsif. Fackt Virginia I’lad Clara Frothingham Mildred Gleditzsch Ethel Grant Grace Gregory Louise Haldf.man Bine Hawken Ruth Herring Mary Higginbotham Helen Humphrey Louise Anna Homeyer Organized 19)1 Alice Jeiilf. Ruth Pickel Grace Rodgers Miss Florence Grant Members Hilda Jameson Alice J bhle Beatrice Jennings Edith Jones Lucile Klein Madie Ki.otz Lillian Kolb Julia Krausnick Claudia Lidf. Carolyn Long Margaret Manley Mildred Maschmeier Ruth Meinholtz Anna Mills Ruth Mobley Marguerite Montkath Marguerite Mott Meredith McCarco Alice McClevey Mary MacDonald F.I.IZABF.TH McLe I.I.A N Helen McMackin Ada Nicholson Dorothy Nicholson Harriett Newman Lucy Newton Mildred Oertel Kthel Parks Erma Perham Ruth Pickel Marguerite Pierce Ruth Pritchard Lorruli Rethvyilm Virginia Rhodes Helen Richards Grace Rodgers Laura Roehricii Dorothy Samuel F.sthkr Schneider Carrie Scott Adei.e Seifert Barbara Senseney Annie Adei.e Skreve Theodora Shreve IIelen Shryock Florence Sisler Julia Sisson Helen Smart Anne Souther Henrietta Sti:i nmescii Helen Stevens Sybil Tate Edith Taylor Mary Virginia Thomas Helen Thompson Emma Thuener Eleanor Tucker Elsie Ueberle Ida Updike Marie Updike Mary Vookers Mathii.de Watson Leva Wright W (NONA WuERTEN BAECIIF.K Florence Wuenscii I essica Young 177 12 P. Ramsay Breaker Elrod Batschy Green Amos Rogers Dickey Burch Meyers Mobley Denison A. Nicholson Larkcy Bowles DoKins Taylor Payne DcCourcy Rocssel F. DufTett Mooney Ochlcr Carson S. Suppigcr Ellman Thuencr Smith Perham Cann Washington University Dramatic Club Organized 1904 Officers President ...... . . C. Eugene Smith Vice-President . . . Erma B. Perham Secretary . . F.mma K. Thuener Treasurer . Arthur Brady Assistant Treasurer .... .... Solomon Suppiger Business Manager ...M. F. Cann Assistant Business Managers . . I l? AR0Lr ' . ROD i Holland Meyers Sergeant-at-Anns . Paul Ellman Earle Amos Members Harold Elrod Marguerite Pierce John Batschy Lulu Gordon Percy Ramsay Hortense Bowles Moulton Green Gwynne Raymond Arthur Brady George Jackson Robert Roessel George Breaker Kenneth Larkey Palmer Rogers Ralph Bryan Rolland Meyers Carrie Scott Hazel Burch Leo McCarthy Margaret Sharp Frank Cann Ruth Mobley Eugene Smith William Carson Marguerite Monteath Gordon Sommers Mildred Clayton Ralph Mooney Sallie Lee Sparks Mildred DeCourcy Ada Nicholson Orville Suck Sam DeKins Elizabeth Nixon Solomon Suppigf.r Walcott Denison June Of.hler Edith Taylor Royal Dickie Joseph Patton Emma Thuener Frances Dufff.tt Harry Payne Matilda Watson Paul Ellman Erma Perham Herold West Pauline Brooks Waiting List Jeanette Jennings 1.0 ra Otto Fannie Cushing Esther Lucas Helen Stevens Mr. Carson Winona Wuertenbaecher Wearers of the Mask Mr. Grf.en Mr. Roessel Mr. DeKins Mr. McCarthy Miss Scott Miss DeCourcy Miss Monteath Mr. Smith Miss Gordon Miss Perham Miss West I 179 ] Cast “Cbc J0igbt EiOers” “Cftc Ji igbt RiDcrs” By Frank Dumont Presented at Thyrsus Theatre, May HI, 13, and 15, 1912. Judge Harbeck Colonei. Shelby George Flimflam Ikey Bloomingai.l Mabel Shelby Jack Willis Louise Clair villi. Edgar Harbeck Becky Shelby Susie Sparks Aunt Cissie Clem Pascoe Silas Stickney Mosely Holden Sparks Henry Nelson John Garrett Wyatt Brodix- Frank Cann - Mary DeGarmo- Rai.pii Bryan- Erma Perham- Eugene Smith •• Elizabeth Nixon Hazel Burch Paula Wii.helmi Solomon Suppiger Arthur Brady Leo McCarthy William Carson Paul Ellman I ISO 1 Cast “j crt Door” “jT3crt Door” By Eleanor Maude Crane Presented at Thyrsus Theatre, November 13 and 14, 11112 George Chester . Prof. Courtney Martin Mrs. Joseph Thornton Bf.tty Armstead Orange Will Webster Alice Armstead Kathleen Covington Fred Harper . Bobs .... John Batschy Harold Elrod Marcaret Sharp EmmaThuener George Jackson Ralph Mooney Ada Nicholson Sallie Lee Sparks Paul Ellman Himself [ 1S1 ] “OBrntJcrs” Presented at Thyrsus Theatre, March 26 and 27, 1912. Hon. Mason Kino Ruth Harrington Jasper Maid Henry C. Patterson Herold West Royal Dickie Ruth Mobley “00tss Citoili ation” Presented vr Thyrsus Theatre, March 26 and 27, 1913. Alice Gardner Joseph Hatch Reddy, the Kid Harry Hayes Capt. Lucas June Oehler George Breaker Solomon Suppiger Joseph Patton Harry Payne “Cbc MlorlD anD !i)ts Mlifc” By Nirdlinger Presented at Victoria Theatre, April 9, 1913 Don Ernesto Don Julian Donna Teodora, his wife Don Severo Donna Mercedes, his wife Don Pepito, their son Capt. Beaulieu, of the British Legation Genaro, con cierge. Butler. Robt. A. Roessel Eugene Smith Miss Mildred DeCourcy Samuel DeKins Miss Rita Monteatii Wm. G. Carson Moulton Green Leo McCarthy Paul Eli.man [1S2] EfjprsttS ebieto C HYRSUS closed the season of 1911—1912 last May with The Night Riders, the most exciting and blood thirsty melodrama in its history. Miss DeGarmo made a very realistic and highly emotional heroine and her soft Southern accent fitted naturally into the “Kain- tucky” setting of the play. Mr. Brodix was a typical Yankee “speculator”, and Mr. Cann created a furore in his role of the Hebrew peddler, I key Bloomingall. Mr. Bryan was a heroic hero who appeared always just in the nick of time and saved the heroine. Miss Perham was the sensation of the play in her part as the lady adventuress. Mr. Smith was a well hissed villian. The opening play this year was “Next Door”, which was presented in November. Miss Sharp, as Mrs. Joseph Thornton, had a very pleasing and dignified stage presence. Mr. Batschy, as George Chester, Mr. Elrod, as Professor Courtney Martin, and Miss Thuener and Miss Nicholson, as Betty and Alice Armstead, were consistently good. Mr. Mooney, who repre¬ sented Will Webster, and Miss Sparks, who played the part of Kathleen Covington, were the most attractive and their work is especially to be commended. The comedy role was admirably filled by Mr. George Jackson, as Orange the colored gentleman. The March performance witnessed an innovation in Thyr¬ sus dramatics. Two separate plays were presented, each one being one act long. “Embers” and “Miss Civilization”, were the two plays, the former a serious play and the latter a farce. The work of Mr. Patterson and Miss West in “Embers” was up to their usual high standard. Mr. Dickie, as the son, played his initial performance before Thyrsus audiences very creditably. Miss Oehler, as Alice Gardner, and Mr. Suppiger, as “Rcddv the Kid” carried off the honors in “Miss Civilization”, Mr. Suppiger carrying almost the whole of the comedy of the play on his shoulders. I 183 ] w mrnm . m Ellman Carson Green DeKins- Monteath Cann Mr. Solari Smith Rocssc! DeCourcy je Morlb anb %it Wift O N April 9th, at the new ictoria Theatre, Thyrsus pre¬ sented the most ambitious and the most successful dramatic performance in the history of Washington. The Dramatic Club has, almost since its inception, borne a reputation for ambitious undertaking and successful achievement, but the performance of “The World and His Wife” was so surpassingly good that, as its result, Thyrsus takes its just rank as the most considerable dramatic organization in St. Louis, and establishes a standard which cannot but assure us of superior work in the future. The play was one of modern society, its scene being laid in Spain. The cast was, in the main, very cosmopolitan, though, with one or two exceptions, Spanish in name, and the play was one which was very applicable to life in any cosmopolitan society. The acting was, throughout, of professional quality; sure, finished, sustained. Some small defects in the speaking of lines were now and then visible, but of such forcefulness and compell¬ ing magnetism was the acting that they were hardly to be noticed. The whole presentation had about it a refinement of taste, a delicacy of suggestion, which differentiated it complete¬ ly from the usual amateur performance, and from previous Thyrsus performances even from so good a one as “The Enemy of the People”. The perfect balance of the acting, the well-rounded and nice interpretation of character, spoke more plainly than words of the intense application, the earnest endeavor to realize the feeling of the part, which, under such experienced and critical training as that of Mr. Solari, resulted intheattain- ment of truly professional playing. A large and not easily satis¬ fied audience expressed its appreciation in the fullest terms; rec¬ ognized authorities praised the play with sincerity, and all Washington was proud of Thyrsus. If future annuals maintain the high standard set by “The World and His Wife,” Thyrsus will long hold without dispute the position which her talent and her persistent endeavor have won. —E. K. H. 1 1S5 1 McClevey Green Brodix Proetz Perham Perham Smith Proetz Harrison Bryars Gorse Organized 1010 The purpose of Quadrangle Club is to present each year a play, written, staged and acted by Washington men and women. This year’s play was “The Sun of O’Gun.” Officers Director Business Manager Secretary Arthur VV. Proetz Robert A. Roessf.l C. Eugene Smith Members Spencer Thomas, ’III Wyatt C. Brodix Moulton Green Arthur W. Proetz, ' 10 C. Eugene Smith Kendall Harrison Miss Alice L. McClevey Miss Helen Bryars Miss Helen Gorse, ’ll) Miss Erma Perham Harry Payne Paul Coste Ralph Bryan Harold Elrod Miss Marie Gallenkamp Miss Harrietts Newman Miss Julia Sisson Miss Marguerite Pierce Miss Marie Bacon Miss Helen Stevens Miss W. Wuertenbaecher Miss Mildred Fox Miss Sallie Lee Sparks Miss Mary Brotherton Miss Drue Smalling Miss Hazel Carter Miss Mildred DeCourcy Miss Edith Taylor Miss Alma Tiemann Miss Senta Ritter Miss Gertrude May Miss Hazel Shelp Miss Josephine Pickerii.l Miss Mildred Searcy Miss Hazel Burch Miss Emma Carter John Batschy Harvey Alban II. K. Jackson R. H. Sparks Earle Amos John W. Deiinert Arthur Poss William Carson H. B. Jacobson Ralph Mooney Walter G. Haenschen, ' I ' d I 187 1 ttn of € =(§uti” he’s a romping, roaring Sun of O-Gun, he rules the earth and he runs the sun”and so lie ruled the big audience which filled the Odeon on February 13, to witness Quadrangle Club’s fourth production “The Sun of O-Gun’’. The play, novel in its plot, clever in its pre¬ sentation, was an unqualified success, so much so that the Princess Company realized its professional qualities and re¬ produced it. The play justified its success as it. possessed not only va¬ riety, but clever situations and catchy music. Opening with the thunder’s crash, the roaring of the wind, the lightning’s flash, with the dirge, the death dance, and the funeral pro¬ cession of the late monarch, it suddenly changed to laughable comedy. The two comedians, Ali Moil’d and Ali Carte blown into the temple by the storm, proceed to tell the audience what they would do if they were King. These two roles as presented by Mr. Moulton Green and Mr. Wyatt Brodix succeeded in winning their audience. Their drunken scene and Mr. Green’s scene with the ponies culminating with the “Tea Time Tete Tete” song were features of the performance. Miss F.rma Perham as Morgiana, the captive Princess, performed excellently; her “Dance of the Dawn” was exquisite in its grace and wonderful in its effectiveness. Miss Alice McClevey as the Princess Ahmee, daughter of the late King, was consistent in her rendition of her part and pleasing in her interpretation. Dr. Arthur W. Proetz, as Tommy Tucker, the American “the ripping, roaring Sun of O-Gun, who rose up out of the roaring sea and fixed everything as it ought to be”, presented a character whose effectiveness was hampered by Dr. Proetz’s laborious duties in directing the production. The big successes of the evening were the Ponies and the Oc¬ tet. The former, as usual, won immediate and deserved attention by their “Death Dance” and closed with the “Tea Time Tete l iss ] Tete” which called forth six encores. The latter, in their song and dance, “Woo-Woo,” acted, danced and sang a diffi¬ cult song which rivaled the “Tete-a-Tete” in applause. The artisans in their songs “YV hy” and “Slang” were well received and succeeded in creating quite an impression. Mr. Eugene Smith, Air. Spencer Thomas, Miss Helen Corse, Mr. Kendall Harrison and Miss Helen Bryars, all did excellent work and contributed materially to the ultimate suc¬ cess of the show. “Let credit be to whom credit is due” for Quadrangle Club, in producing the “Sun of O-Gun,” did something which few Universities have attempted—they gave a play, written, acted, staged, and the music orchestrated by. Washington men and women, and for this they are to be commended. They undertook an enterprise of large proportions, they successfully completed it, and by so doing reflected credit not only on them¬ selves but also on Washington Universitv. R. A. R. “Cbc un of SD im” Music by A. W. Proktz Book by A. Carter Wehh Rustum, Kahn Princess Ah.meli Ai.i Karto l ' . l Au Mohammed Tommy. Tucker Prof. Stoningham Morgia,na Algernon Bki.laik Elaine. Bellai r Sylvf.stria ParkhuRST Earl Thomas Alice McClevey Wyatt Brodix Moulton Green- Dr. A. W. Proktz C. Eugene Smith Erma Perham E. Kendall Harrison Helen Bryars ! I ELEN Gorse I IS!) I McCormack Amos Tabachnik Hahn Studt Straub Poss Simpson Robertson Ingalls Grimm Jackson Hayes Albers Donk Batschy Harris Dehnert McMath Modisctte Stifel Metcalfe Hoerr Rosborough Lucking Haydock H. Ramsay Elrod Lohmann Bryan Green Hardaway Stacy President Organized 1911 Officers Ralph Bryan Secret-ary . Moulton Green Treasurer . Charles Gai.lenkam Business Manager Henry Lohmann Librarian and Sergeant-al-Arms Harold Elrod Director . Mr. Glenn Woods Archie Albert First Tenors Wm. Haydock Charles Gallknkamp Harry Payne George Lamar Frank Bills Second Tenors Stewart McCormack Wyatt Brodix DeMott Modisette Walker Brotiierton Johannes Pessel Paul Coste Bernard G. Proetz Edmund Donk Harvey Ramsay Martin Harris Kenneth Robertson Emanuel Hahn A. C. Stanhope Launcelot Luekinc Ernst Straub Earle Amos First Basses Henry Lohmann Ralph Bryan George Metcalfe John Dehnert Francis R. McMath Moulton Green Arthur Poss, Jr. Hubert Jackson Carl Stifel Harry Jacobson Charles Studt John Batschy Second Basses Roland Hoerr August Brinkman Frank Ingalls H. A. Conrad Howard E. Lillingston B. Landis Elliot Graham Rosborough Harold Elrod Palmer Stacy Wallace Hardaway Elwood Steward Forrest P. Hayes First Tenor Harry Payne Glee Club Quartette Second Tenor First Bass Wyatt Brodix Moulton Green Second Bass Wallace Hardaway 191 Hammond Bratney Lanrcck Jackson Taussig Studt Stocker Brady Russell Suelirk Organized 1911 Director Assistant Director Librarian Business Manager Arthur Brady Hubert Jackson Bert I.anreck Officers .Harry Stocker Allen Jehle Charles Studt Milton Russei.i. First Mandolins Carl Stifel Harry Stocker W. E. SUEHRK Second Mandolins Bert Bratney Raymond Perri Milton Russell Charles Studt Guitars Clifford Taussig Allen Jeiile Fred R. Hammond Banjos Thomas Ferguson Bert L an reck 1 193 ] 13 P. Ramsay Kotthoff Stifel Roscnblum 1. Nelson Enscore Phelps Hahn Suppiger Rcthwilm H. Ramsay Turk E. Freund Pessel ©rcfjestra Organized 1012 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Librarian Director Ernst Freund Esther Lucas Kirk McFarland David Turk Officers Tver Nelson Lorruli Rethwilm Emanuel Hahn Ernst Freund Kirk McFarland .Harvey Ramsay First Violins Solomon Suppiger Cari. Stifel I.orruli Rethwilm Charles Happel Second Violins Delius Kotthoff Viola ’Cello Emanuel Hahn Johannes Pessel Contra-bass Irl Rosenblum Clarinet Glenn Phelps Flute Elizabeth Facht Cornet William Enscore Trombone Iver Nelson Pianist Percy Ramsay [ 193 ] Cftoir Albers Sweet E. Carter Borgstcadt Blakemore Richards Nicmoeller Mobley Batschv Young Raymond Shelp Straub Klotz Dolch Long Dunham Turner Ellman Schlesinger Mr. Galloway Stout Flint Schwarting Organized 1910 President Secretary Librarian Minor W. Stout Helen Schlesixgkr Harry F. Schwarting Dorothy Calm an F.mma Carter Delphine Hamel Carolyn Long Members Sopranos Ruth Mobley Helen Richards Hazel Shelp Dorothy Stahl Mildred Turner Ruth Buschart Madeline Flint Madie Klotz AJtos Helen Schlesinger Florence Sisler Eleanor Tucker Jessica Young Tenors Archie Albert Edward William Dolch.Jr. Louis Flint Ernst Joseph Straub Basses John Batschy Thomas L. Blakemore John Borcsteadt Arthur Dunham Paul M. Ei.lman Richard Hatch Elmer Niemoeller Gnvynne Raymond Harry Schwarting Minor Stout Paul S. Stevens Leroy M. Sweet I 10“ | CGasbingron CJnfoersitp architectural orictp Borgstcadt Crocker Payne Henderson Taussig Stecker Goldman Tuchschmidt Remington Galford Phelps Bogey Miles llammond Scliaumberg Maenner Culhbert Lodge Rogers Woolrych Hargitt McCormack Batschy Bears Maritz Tarling Cann Steinmcsch Bryan Middleton Delmert Davis Bunnell Suchrk Albert Simpson Lohmann Prof. Smith Prof. Abella Mr. Hill Hascman Sennc Officers President 1 ’ice-Prcsidcnt Secretary-Treasurer Sergeant-at-A rms Ralph Bryan Hf.nky Lohmann Julies E. Taklinc Raymond K. Makitz Prof. Chas. Abella Mr. L. Hill Ralph Bryan John Dehnert Faculty Members Mr. D. C. Nicholson Prop. J. B. Robinson Prof. Holmes Smith Student Members 1913 Gustav A. Hasemann Henry Lohmann Julius K. Tarlinu Miller Franklin Cann 1914 Theodore Maennek Neal C. Davis Raymond E. Maritz Gale Henderson Joseph Sense 1916 Palmer Rogers Percy Ramsay Harry Payne John Batschy 1916 Angel Rucarcia John Borcsteadt Edward Sciiaumberg Harry Crocker Lusby Simpson Grady Gafforo John Stecker Robinson Hammond Ross Thiele Stewart McCormack Clifford Taussig MacWilliams Remington Arnold Tuchschmidt Archibald Albert Special Students Harold Hargett Emile Beers Percy Lodge Herbert Bkatney John Miles Pail Bunnell Edward Suehkk The Civil Engineering Society Established 1906 President 1 ' ice-Presidenl Secretary Treasurer Officers Joseph E. Vollmar John B. Clayton, Jr. Gwynne Raymond Prof. K. O. Sweetser Faculty Members Prof. J. L. Van Ornum Asst. Prof. E. O. Sweetser Mr. Cmas. K. Galt W. L. Bryan A. G. Kei.i.er Ben Moreell Joseph N. Prensky Members 1913 Walter G. Will Gwynne Raymond Al.bert Ross Hymen Shifrin IoSEPH VoLLMAR Arthur Brady J. B. Clayton, Jr. Wm. T. Hay dock 1914 W. I. Jolley Monroe Van Raalte Harrison Weder Orni Widman Edward Baker C. E. Becker William Bernard Beaufort Buchanan M. M. DeVorkin Daniel Evans H. C. Grunewald 1915 George Hetlage Wm. D. Holland Kirk McFarland Bindley Milford Norton Monteith Alex. F. Suss George Wellmeyer [201 | Schwarting Stevens Lucking Cutter Sweet Sieger C. Griffith Proetz Niemoeilcr Winfree Harris Kanncnstinc Duncan Mr. Hardy Prof. ' Lamke Prof. Langsdorf Wright Barnes Biatterman Washington University Branch Organized 1007 Officers Chairman . . C. E. Wright Vice-Chairman Shepard Barnes Secretary-Treasurer ... A. S. Blatterman Faculty Members Prof. A. S. Lancsdorf Prof. G. W. Lamke Mr. C. H. Hardy Members P. W. Baker i,. I,. Lueking Shepard Barnes E. F. Niemof.i.ler A. S. Blatterman B. G. Prof.tz A. I.. Cutter H. F. Schwarting R. D. Duncan P. S. Stevens J. C. Griffith E. S. WlNFREE F. M. Kannenstine C. E. Wright [ 203 ] Berger Prof. Olilc Schleiffarth Seubert Martin Dodson Souther Stout Schenk Rosborough Goode Blakemore Mr. Smith dully Godwin Sutherland Kohlmeyer Ellman Siegerist Maverick Kannenstine Flint AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Washington University Branch Organized 1010 Honorary Chairman Chairman . Vice-Chairman Secretary-Treasurer Officers Prof. E. L. Ohle David B. Sutherland Rowland Dodson Armin ' O. Schleiffarth Faculty Members Prof. E. L. Ohle Mr. A. Seubert Mr. F. A. Berger Mr. Thos. Smith Mr. E. V. Martin Members T. L. Blakemore K.. Cope Rowland Dodson P. M. Eli.man E. R. Flint C. B. Godwin E. Good, Jr. M. H. Harris F. M. Kannenstine F. A. Kohlmeyer E. L. Lacey E. A. MAVERtCK J. G. Rosborough, Jr. K. Schenk A. O. Schleiffarth W. SlEGERIST R. Souther David B. Sutherland J. K. Tully [205] Ingalls Sweet Kotthoff Bills Coggeshall Dunham . M. Green Hawkins Stout Gontcrman Niemoeller Flint Borgsteadt Jackson Nelson Hatch Dolch Washington University Branch Organized 1912 Officers President Paul Nelson Executive Secretary Kenneth I.arkey Faculty Members Prof. F. A. Hall, A.M., Litt. D. Prof. Wm. H. Roever, Ph. D. Prof. C. A. Waldo, Ph. D. Mr. Thos. H. Smith Student Members Archie Albert Gale Henderson A. B. Bender Ira A. Hunt Frank Bills F ' rank Ingalls Thomas I.. Bi.akemore George M. Jackson Wm. C. Bliss Chester W. Kotsrean John Borgsteadt D. H. Kotthoff George Breaker Kenneth I.arkey K. M. COCCESHALL A. J. Lodge Kenneth Cope W. P. Lodge Sam DeKins Kirk McFarland F. W. Dolch Clifford Miller Arthur Dunham Paul Nelson R. H. Kckf.rt Elmer Niemoeller B. Landis Elliot Harry Payne Thomas Ferguson J. F. Pessei. Louis Flint Ulrich Potthoff B. F. Goldstein Victor H. Rhodes J. W. Gonterman Robert A. Roessei. J. M. Green Irl Rosenbi.um Chas. Happel I.usby Simpson Wallace D. Hardaway Harry Stocker Kendall Harrison Minor Stout Richard Hatch L. M. Sweet Oscar M. Hawkins F ' red Vanderhoof F. P. Hays P. T. Viceroy J. C. F. Walker [207 | Shreve Lide Richards Rodgers De Garmo Samuel Long Pritchard Organized 1909 Cabinet Officers President . .. Vice-Presidents Secretary Treasurer ..... Chairmen of Committees Devotional ....... Intercollegiate Philanthropic Social Membership Claudia Lide Helen Richards Anna Adele Shrevf. Margaret DeGarmo Leon a Beckmann Caroly f; Long Grace Rodgers Leona Beckmann Dorothy Samuel Ruth Pritchard Gertrude Prack Adf.le Aegerter Helen Anderson Marie Bacon- Marie Bain Leona Beckmann Claire Berry Helen Bryars Hazel Burch Dorothy Calman Mildred Clayton Adele Clundt Mildred Cowdrey Frances Duffett Alice Ernst Gladys Florsheim Hazel Forsy-the Mildred Gleditzsch E. Gundelach Helen Hagen Delphine Hamel Bine Hawken J ulia Holt Helen Humphrey Mary Higginbotham Beatrice Jennings Dorothy Jennings Jeanette Jennings Advisory Board Edith Souther Members Lillian Kalb Marie Kammerer Lois Kieffer Marie Kirsk Lucile Klein Dorothy Lamb Carolyn Long Esther Lucas Gertrude May Ruth Miller Anna Mills Ruth Mobley Lucy Newton Lora Otto Mary Lee Pickel Ruth Pickel Marguerite Pierce Ruth Pritchard Helen Richards Grace Rodgers Laura Roehrich Marie Ruehel Florence Sammons Dorothy Samuel Esther Schneider Elmyra Sewing Alice Hazel Shelp Mrs. Seldon Spencer Helen Shryock Florence Sissler Helen Smart Frances Spaulding Margaret Stern Esther Swine hart Sibyl Tate Emma Tuuener Eleanor Tucker Elsie L ' eberle Antoinette Wallis Heroi.d West Georgia Wittich Mrs. J. A. Whitlow Leta Wright Jessica Young Ruth Zacher Elvira Zimmermann Hortense Bowles Frances Fox Claudia Lide Marguerite Mott Oakley St. John Mildred Turner Corinne Wolff [ 209 | 14 eoaennmeDn c La 6 3 S.I..BXWVI. ( Organized 1011 Officers President Vice-President Secretary Claudia Lide Helen Donnelly Marie Updike Adele Aegerter Catherine Baker Ruth Buschart Dorothy Childs Helen Donnelly Mildred Gleditzsch Helen Hagin Edith Jones Madie Ki.otz Claudia Lide Carrie Long Members Margaret Manley ' Mildred Maschmeier Anna Mills Ruth Mobley Marguerite Mott Ruth Pickel Helen Richards Laura Roehrich Esther Schneider Carrie Scott Adele Seifert Elmyra Sewing Hazel Shelp Annie Adele Shreve FRANCES Spauldinc Ada Ross Eleanor Tucker Ida Dell Updike Marie Updike Matilde Watson IIerold West Mrs. Florence Usher The Government Club is an organization composed of women students chosen from all departments of the University for high scholarship or for unusual ability. Questions of broad public significance are studied and discussed. [ 210 | GTfje SnterCollegiate Bebating Irani Arthur Dunham Harry S. Gleick Glen H. Mohler Alternate Theodore Leilich Head Coach Associate Professor Roland G. Usher Manager of the Debate Delius H. Kotthoff Washington held a debate with Drury College on April 11th, at St. Louis, on the SUt i Resolved: “That the Policy of Regulation of Monopoly is Preferable to the Policy of Prohibition of Monopoly.” Was hington upheld the negative. CClasbington Onitoersitp Debating Council President .Harry S. Gleick Secretary .Grover C. Sibley Faculty Members Associate Professor Roland G. Usher Dean William S. Curtis Assistant Professor Charles E. Cory Student Members Arthur Dunham Ben F. Goldstein Harry S. Gleick Grover Siblf.y The Debating Council represents all of the debating interests of the University and exercises complete control over intercollegiate debates. Glcick Kotsrean Gontcrman Dolch Larkcy Modisettc Harrison Goldstein Neuhoff Sibley KoithofT Dunham Hatch A. Freund Officers President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-A rms Student Life Representative Arthur Dunham Richard A. Hatch Delius H. Kotthoff Arthur J. Freund Ralph R. Neuhoff Thomas R. Ferguson Members H. F. Boettler Edward Dolcii R. H. Eckert H. S. Glfick B. F. Goldstein J. W. Gonterman Kendall Harrison J. A. Hunt C. Kotsrean K. C. Larkey T. F. Leilich DeMott Modisette R. R. Neuhoff A. S. Oliver Arthur Poss G. C. Sibley Arthur Dunham R. A. Hatch D. H. Kotthoff A. J. Freund T. R. Ferguson A [ 213 ] Officers President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Committeeman H. F. Boettler M. V. Stout F. D. Lynch Delius Kotthoff Paul F.. Xki.son Members Class A Class B Class B Boettler Bracey P. Nelson Godlove Elliott I. Nelson Hatch Felker Rosenblu.m Keysor Gleick Russie Kotthoff Hahn Sieger Lynch Jacobson Stifel The team which won the tournament with the University of Illinois was composed of: Boettler Godlove Lynch 1214 ) Officers President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Marik Ki.otz Helen Stevens Marguerite Monteath Members Adele Aegerter Helen Anderson Marie Bacon- Maria Bain Florence Baird Anny Barck Hortense Bowles Helen Bryars Miss Bushmann Mildred Clayton Fanny Cushing Margaret DeGarmo Helen Donnelly Helen Duefett Mildred Gleiditzscii Bine Haw ken Helen Humphrey Beatrice Jennings Jeanette Jennings Madie Ki.otz E. Koppes Julia Krausnick Claudia Lide Carrie Long Mary MacDonald Margaret Manley Gertrude May Miss McCaulley Alice McClevey Marguerite Monteath Julia Morse Lucy Newton Elizabeth Nixon June Oehi.er Ruth Pickel Ruth Pritchard Nellie Rogers Dorothy Samuel Mrs. Shipley Helen Stevens Julia Sisson Helen Stix Mrs. Swift Emma Thuener Alma Tikmann Eleanor Tucker Marie Updike Leonora Woodward 12151 Cito ' cs Clul) Buschman Patterson Gould Smith Moreell Uuncker Sale Wiechert Kotsrean A. Freund Penney B. Goldstein Gleick Stocker Fllman Vanderhoof Hagee Jackson Leilich Happel Roessel Organized 1910 President Vice-President Secrelary-Treasvrer Theodore F. Leilich Leo McCarthy George M. Jackson Faculty Members Prof. Allyn A. Young, Ph.D. Associate Prof. Roland Greene Lsher, Ph.D. William G. Bauman L. A. Bushman Frank M. Debatin ' Ciias. H. Duncker Paul M. Ellman Thomas R. Ferguson Arthur J. Freund Edward S. Garvey Harry S. Gleick Ben. F. Goldstein Verne W . Gould James S. Gray Georce M. Hagee Charles W. Hapfel Gale E. Henderson Members Richard Hudler George Jackson Chester W. Kotsrean Theodore F. Leilich John S. Lionberger Leo McCarthy Ben Moreell Henry C. Patterson Garner W. Penney Robert A. Roessel Irwin Sale C. Eugene Smith Harry R. Stocker Fred Vanderhoof Roland H. Wieciiert 1217| The French Club Organized 1910 Officers President .Dorothy Childs Secretary .Lorruli Rethwilm Membership Katherine Baker Anny Barck Claire Berry IIortense Bowles Klsie Fackt Fannie Fox Bine Hawken Madie Klotz Marie Claudia Lide Margaret Manley Anna Mills Ruth Mobley Eleanor Tucker Lorruli Rethwilm Helen Schlesingeii Esther Schneider Updike 12181 Established 1911 President ....... Jacob Schramm (Shaw School of Botany.) Executive Committee Albert M. Brown (Department of Sciences.) Wa. A. Crossi.and (School of Social Economy.) Gustav I.auterbach (Department of Arts.) Mildred Webster Spargo (Shaw School of Botany.) Ruth Beattie August J. Brocki.and Albert M. Brown Miss Mary Bryan S. A. Burgess Ernest F. Bush Pattie M. Clayton Sadie Connor J. S. Cooley Wm. A. Crossland Mary G. Cummings A. R. Davis Frank W. Debatin ' Margaret De Meritt Wm. A. Dittmer W. H. Emig Membership Mrs. L. R. Essex Arthur E. Ewing, M.D. Elizabeth L. Facht Anne P. Fisher Elizabeth B. Fletcher Lulu Gordon Julia B. Griswold Ruth M. Harper WlLlIELMINA HeIMBERC George R. Hill, Jr. Ernest G. Hoffsten Grace E. Jencke C. C. Kociienderfer Gertrude Krausnick Lucile I.ederer Gustav A. I.auterbach Emily Maguire Cora McKellip Fred B. Morgan August Noi.te Wm. W. Ohiaveiler Lee 0. Overholts Zila A. Robbins W. H. Schleuter Jacob R. Schramm Helen P. Shultz Mary D. Spalding Mildred Spargo Sei.den P. Spencer, Jr. Benj. C. Weakley Louise H. Wenzel Harriet F.. Worthington The Graduate Club was organized in October, 1911, in response to a desire that the eraduatc students of the various schools and departments of the University be brought into closer contact and sympathy and to foster among them a spirit of fellow¬ ship and co-operation. The meetings, which are held monthly, are designed to acquaint the members with the work of other departments, to overcome the lack of articulation between the various schools because of their wide separation geographically, to counteract, in part, the narrowing effects of specialization and to provide a medium of social contact for all advanced students. [ 219 ] Published weekly by the Students of the University. Organized 1S78 Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief .... .. Leo McCarthy Managing, Editor William Carson Business Manager Robert A. Roessel Assistant Business Manager Sam DeKins Circulation Manager Thomas Ferguson Associate Editor ... .Charles Duncker Associate Editor Eleanor Tucker Art Editor . Kendall Harrison Athletic Editor Douglas Martin Literary Editor Bine Hawken Exchange Editor . Margaret Manley Members Earle Amos Leo McCarthy Hazel Burch Margaret Manley William Carson Douclas Martin Felix Coste Paul Nelson Sam DeKins Arthur Poss Charles Duncker Ruth Pritchard Thomas Ferguson Gvvynne Raymond Madeleine Flint Robert Roessel Moulton Green Milton Russell Kendall Harrison Helen Schlesinger Bine Hawken Harry Stocker Madie Klotz Eleanor Tucker Delius Kotthoef IIerold West Carolyn Long Otto Wilhelmi Honorary Members Dr. A. W. Proetz Blossom Bloss ft 1014 ft att!)ct jBoarti Editor-in-Chief Business Manager . Charles H. Duncker, Robert A. Roessel Associate Editors Edmund Done Martin Harris Ada Nicholson Marguerite Monteath Dorothy Samuel C. Eugene Smith Art Editors Wyatt C. Brodix Mary Emily MacDonald Photographers Sam F. Trelease Roland Grimm Class Representatives Arts and Science Medical 1913, Henry I.ohmann 1914, Heroi.d West 1915 J James Fully ’ l Ruth Pritchard 1910, Maxwell Kennedy 1913, Meredith Johnson 1914, A. A. Gilbert 1915, E. R. Kellersbercer 1910, Pai;l H. Stevenson Law Dental 1913, Irwin Sale 1914, Verne Gould 1915, George 1 Iacek 1913, Chas. F. Berryman 1914, Ira T. Maupin 1915, F. W. Henselmeier Art Madeline K. Flint I I 223 1 T3oarD of Publication Otto Heller, Ph.D. . Roland Greene Usher, Ph.D. William Roy Mackenzie, Ph.D. Prancis Cox Walker, Ph.D. Robert James Terry, M.D. George Oscar Ja mes, Ph.D. . Alexander Suss Lancsdorf, M.M.E. George Thomas Moore, Ph.D. Allyn Abbott Young, Ph.D. Robert Stinson Starbird, A.B. Mary Blossom Bloss Chairman and General Editor Editor of the Record Editors of the Catalogues Editor of the Medical Bulletin ■Editors of the Quarterly Secretary to the Board. Series I. The Washington University Record, issued monthly from November to May, contains a resume of the principal activities of the University for the period covered, together with articles of a non-technical character on literary and scientific subjects. Series Jl. The Catalogues. This series includes the Annual Catalogue of the Uni¬ versity and the individual catalogues of the various departments. Series III. The Medical Bulletin reprints papers by members of the Medical School Faculty. Series IV. The Washington University Quarterly is a series containing technical articles and monographs upon linguistics, philosophy, history, etc. [ 224 ] [ 220 ] Holland Clark Coggeshall Watkins Buchanan Bauman F. Costc Grimm Monteith M. Green Honorary Sophomore Society Organized 1904 3cti )c Members, Class of 1915 Wii.liam Bauman Beaufort Buchanan Alfred Clark Kenneth Cocceshall Felix V. Coste Moulton Green Roland Grimm William Holland Norton Monteitii James Watkins [229 ] Bray Harrison Amos Metcalfe W. Clayton Jackson Taussig Tenny Tuchschmidt Mcister Kennedy The Honorary Freshman Society Organized 11HI4 actiuc a3ctubcrs, Class of 1916 Earle Amos Will Bray Waldo Clayton Lee Harrison Hubert Jackson Arnold Maxwell Kennedy Walter Meister George Metcalfe Clifford Taussig Clarence Tenney Tuchschmidt [233| “ • . vV ' - ' ' if Established 1911 President First Semester ...... IIarrv Stocker, Kappa Sigma President Second Semester . Wallace D. Hardaway, Theta Xi Secretary . Martin Harris, Kappa Alpha. Fraternities Represented Phi Delta Theta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Beta Theta Pi Kappa Sigma Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Theta Xi Kappa Alpha The Pan-Hellenic Association is composed of the eight general men’s fraternities in the Department of Arts and Sciences and exercises jurisdiction ever the affairs pertain¬ ing to the common interests of the fraternities represented. Each year it gives a Smoker to which the members of any fraternity are invited. It has passed and en¬ forced, the following scholarship rule: “Any candidate for admission into a fraternity of the Association shall pass two quarters work with an average grade.of ‘C’, or no grade below ‘D’, immediately prior to his initiation.” [234] Pan=i eUemc IJafietmll Series 1912 Won by Theta Xi 1st Division 2nd Division Sigma Nu . Sigma Chi . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Theta Xi Kappa Alpha . Kappa Sigma Beta Theta Pi . Phi Delta Theta . Won by Theta Xi Beta Theta Pi Theta Xi The Pan-Hellenic Association each spring arranges for a series of inter-fraternity baseball games, the winner of which has its name engraved on the Pan-Hellenic I rophy and has possession of the trophy for one year or until another team wins the champion¬ ship. Theta Xi was the winning team in 1(112. [ 235 1 Delta Cbcta Milford Brown Harrison M. Lewis Myers Feldbush Rogers P. Coste Blatterman Russell Brookes F. Costc Lamm Smith McF.lhinney Summersby Preston Maverick Penney Swope $fjt ©elta QTfjeta Missouri Gamma Chapter Fratres in Facultate David Franklin Houston, A.M., Samuel Monos Coulter, Ph.D. George Reeves Throop, Ph.D. John Kennedy Black, B.S, John Hart Brown, A.M. Kugenk Tower Senseney, A.B., M.D. Ralph Walter Mills, B.S., M.D. Walter Fischel, A.B., M.D. Charles Parker Williams, A.B. Francis Mitchell Cayou, A.B. Fratres in Universitate 1913 Lewis Adams Maverick Garner West Penney, LL.B Aluert Shelby Blattekman Henry Spence Brookes, Jr. Felix Wilkins Coste j aul Coste Harry August Feldbush George Charles Hetlage 1914 1915 Clay Preston Harry Swope Charles Eugene Smith DonaldSangree Lamm Herbert Gerald McEi.hinney Lindley Charles Milford Palmer David Rogers Robert Milton Russell John James Summersby, Jr. Layman Beckett Brown Lee Harrison, Jr. 1916 Roli.and Kverett Meyers Ralph Kdgarton Mooney Monroe Cuming Lewis Pledged Cyril Cunningham Penny 1237| Bray Studt B. Lewis Jehlc Gibert Brotherton Grimm Henderson Barrell Garvey French Gallenkamp Brodix Martin Brinkman Bryan Barnes Gray Chivvis Keysor Stites Batschy Modisctte Metcalfe Kochtitzky Green Clayton N. McCormack Rocssel Dixon S. McCormack Sparks Schaumbcrg Elrod Will Gould Duncker Sillier Patterson Hocrr Cann I5eta dicta Alpha lota Chapter Established ISfii) Re-established 1001 Fratres in Facilitate h kancik Eugene Niphf.r, A.M., EE.I). John Lane Van Ornum, C.E. Eft Roy McMaster, Eh.D. Paul Voer T upper, M.D. Joseph W. Charles, A.B., M.D. John Blaisdel Shapleich, A.B., M.D. Fratres in Universitate 1913 Henry Rudolph I.ohmann Leo McCarthy 1914 Miller Franklin C. Cann John Benjamin Clayton, Jr. Charles Henry Duxckek. Jr. Verne William Gould 1915 Moulton Green Roland Milton Hour it Harold Clark Keysor 1916 ohn Martin Batschy Iarold Glenn Klrod A. Stewart McCormack 1241 ] Alfred Theodore Siiii.er Walter George Will Otto I.eandek Kochtitzky, Jr. John Shepi.ey Eionberger Henry Clay Patterson Robert Alfred Roessel Noble Dubois McCormack DeMott Mooisette Robert Henry Sparks George Strodtmann Metcalfe Edward Georce Schaumburg, Jr. Luke Sells Stites 1C Gaskill Godwin H. Ramsay Suck • P. Ramsay Amos Dickey Vanderhoof Potthoff Stifel Holland Stocker Barthcls DeKins Path Hundley i appa tgma Reta Sigma Chapter Established 1902 Fratres in Universitate 1913 Ciifford Burgess Godwin Harvey Wall Ramsay 1914 Harry Rutherford Stocker Herbert L. Barthels Archibald Mueller Gaskii.l Royal Alexander Dickie Fred Vanderhof Ulrich PorriiOFF Samuel DeKixs Carl Stifel Karle Amos Walter Path 1915 Percy Ramsay William D. Holland Orville Suck 1916 Marvin Hundley Howard D. James Pledged Kendall Harrison I 243 | Brigham Harper Bratncy Clayton Henning Searcy Bauman Bliss Widman Hewitt Ferguson Payne Bills llagcc Steward Perry Tau Tau Chapter Robert D. Duncan- Frank Berryhill Raymond A. Perry )i igma Cf)t Fra ter in Facultate Ernest O. Sweetser, B.S. Fratres in Universitate 1913 George M. Hagee Frank Biles 1914 Paul E. Nelson Orni VVidman Elavood Steward William G. Bauman Thomas R. Ferguson Carter Bliss Bertrand Bratney 1915 Harry D. Payne Evan Searcy Paul Hewitt 1916 Lee Harper Cleveland X. Henning James Brigham Pledged Erwin Cozzens Arthur Poss, Jr. 1245 | Patton Monteith Watkins Trelcase Dodson Graham Meister Rhodes Brussard Schisler Vollmar Breaker Sutherland Davis Horner Gray Hardy Haydock Gruenewald . Proetz Foster Berry Schleiffarth Chcnery C. Griffith Lacey Hardaway Donk Dehncrt B. Proetz Robertson Kammerer Maenner Anderson Conrad Clark Fair ' Fully Tcnny S. Sup piger Mohler Van Dyke Souther G. Suppiger Harris Beste IXappa Hlplja Beta Theta Chapter Frater in Facilitate Established 1905 William McKjm Marriott. A.B., M.D. Fratres in Universitate 1913 Gerhart S. Suppicer Armin C. Beste F. M. V an Dyke George R. Anderson Edward W. Brown Harry C. Fair 1914 Martin H. Harris Theodore K. Maenner Glen Hali. Mohler Richard G. Souther Alfred S. Clark, Jr. Harold A. Conrad Webb Louis Kammf.rer 1915 Solomon Suppicer James K. Tully 1916 Clarence C. Tenny Pledged Kennett A. Robertson |251 | Fair Gallenkamp Barrell Gould Steward Lamm Patterson Lionberger Penney Sibley Gray Sihlcr Brinkman Swope Brown Mi ©elta mi Cooley Chapter Kstablished 1SS2 Fratres in Facultate William Samuel Curtis, A.B., I.L.B., U..D, W illiam Winchester Klysok. Litt.B., IJ..B. Frederick August Wizlizlxus, A.B., I.I..B. Tyrrell Meade Williams, A.B.. 1,1,. B. Arthur Bliin Sheplky, A.B., 1.I..B. Fratres in Universitate 1913 August M. Brinkman William J. Brown, B.S. James S. Gray Harry C. Fair Charles O. Gali.enkamp Verne W. Gould Hourn Rose Horst Green Bcchtold Perrings Moody McCormack Vinyard Alsop Smith Dixon Johnston Slocumb McKelvey J$u !§ tgma J2u Alpha Kappa Phi Chapter Established 1900 Fratres in Facultate Georck Dock, Sc.D., M.D. Henry Schwarz, M.D. Frank R. Fry, M.D. George M. Tuttle, A.B., M.D. Adrien S. Bi.eyer, M.D. Nathaniel Allison, M.D. Malvern B. Clopton, M.D. Sa muel T. Nicholson, M.D. Roger S. Morris, M.D. Paul Y. Tupper, M.D. Harvey G. Mudd, M.D. Ellsworth Smith. Jr., A.M., M.D. Selden Spencer, M.D. Walter Baumgarten, M.D. Fred Fahlen, M.D. 0. H. Campbell, M.D. Walter W. Horst George F. Hourn Meredith R. Johnston Philip P. Green Frederick F. Alsop F.dmond Beciitold Fratres in Universitate 1913 S. W. McKei.vky Fred S. Perrings Otto H. Schwarz I.KITH II. SLOCOMB 1914 Ellsworth E. Moody David E. Smith 1915 Elliott K. Dixon Dalton K. Rose Robert Yinyard 1916 Noble McCormack I 255 1 Abbott Thompson Strode Kopclowitz Sevin Rodcnheiscr Wilkening Koppenbrink Snider Fuson Cooper Allen Kuhns Denison Kilian Gibbs Kellersberger Mu Chapter $l)t Peta $i Fratres in Facultate Tames F. Abbott, Ph.D. Leland B. Alford, M.D. Malcolm A. Bliss, M.D. Given Campbell. M.D. Norman B. Carson, M.D. W. L. Clapper, M.D. Frank L. Davis, M.D. Robt. C. Derivaux, M.D. Arthur E. Ewing, A.M.. M.D. Frank H. Ewerhardt, M.D. George Gellhorn, M.D. Frederick E. John Green, B.S., A.M., M.D., LL.D. Julius H. Gross, M.D. Louis K. Guggenheim, M.D. Harry McC. Johnson, M.D. VV alter L. Johnson, M.D. Jesse S. Myer, A.B., M.D. VVm. E. Sauer, M.D. John B. Shapleigh, A.M., M.D. Selig Simon, M.D. Greenfield Sluder. M.D. Meyer Wiener, M.D. Woodruff, M.D. Fred L. Gibbs LeoJ. Kilian Jonas C. Kopelowitz Fred B. Abbott Thomas E. Cooper Fratres in Universitate 1913 Walter E. Koppenbrink Edw. W. Rodenheiser Omar R. Sevin Preston Thompson Walcott Denison Sam. H. Snider Chas. Curtis Allen L. H. Fuson Eugene R. Kellersberger Jay M. Kuhns Joseph E. Strode William T. Wilkening 1916 Paul H. Stevenson Squibb F. O. Kcttlekamp G. D. Kettlekamp Jackson Foulon Joseph Biggs McLarney $f)t Belta Alpha Zeta Chapter Established 1905 Fratres in Facultate Edmond A. Babler, M.D. Vilray P. Blair, M.D. R. Walter Mills, M.D. Harry M. Moore, M.D., A.B. Robert E. Schleuter, M.D., Ph.D. Carl A. W. Zimmerman, M.D. A. C. Kimball, M.D., A.B. Herman A. Manser, M.D. Albert F. Koetter, M.D. R. H. Fuhrman, M.D. Theo. Grenier, Frederick Hall, M.D. M. E. Hoce, M.D. G. H. Raithel, M.D. William Kerwin, M.D. Henry Bevvic, M.D. I. R. Clark, M.D. Percy Newman, M.D. G. D. Royston, M.D. J. McAnliffe, M.D. R. G. Hurford, M.D. M.D. Fratres in Universitate 1913 Raymond J. Joseph James B. Biggs Frederick Oscar Kettlekamp John D. Jackson Irenakus L. Foui.on 1914 George David Kettlekamp John ' 1 ' . McEarney 1916 Harry Squibb 1916 Frank B. Weik Pledged R. Barney I 259 | Langsdorf Gilbert Bock Jones Wennerman Enloc Burger Sante Wagenbach Spangler Carter Ferguson Kemper Glascock Smith Thompson Hux Gentry Ashley Grice Bradbury Cornwall Wills Stroll Burton Reid Shanlcy Winters Maupin Wright Alcorn Weir Parkinson Stevenson Bohncr Conrad Neuholf Doran Moore ?u m ifjt Fratres in Facultate Waiter M. Bartlett, D.D.S. Benno E. Lischer. D.D.S. Jesse D. White, D.D.S. Edgar H. Keyes, D. D.S. James A. Brown, D.D.S. !• ' . A. Xf-uhoff. D.D.S. Frederick W. Horstmas, D.D.S. L. G. Veuhoff, D.D.S. V. C. Ruckstuiil, D.D.S. J. C. Triska, D.D.S. Fratres in Universitate De Lafayette Rf.id Marvin Burton Christian Stroii William C. Carter H. Victor Grice Harry R. Shanley Charles O. Thomson William L. Conrad Harold E. Weir Clare A. Alcorn Davis B. Doron Chester B. Parkinson Hugh E. Stevenson Harrison H. Cornwall 1913 Boyd I,. Smith Campbell H. Glascock J. W. Ferguson E. E. Thompson T. Kemper 1914 Lloyd B. Wright Walter F. Neuhoff Grant C. Gentry Victor D. Winters James M. Ashley I ra T. Maupin 1915 Earl A. Bohner Marion I.. Bradbury Herbert C. Will Dysart B. Moore [ 263 ] Obert Wright Rhode Elder Baber WesthofF Barton Wild Poole Miller Bright Thompson Milstead Granier Carson Meador Bonds Brown Berryman Sutcliff Tetterington Williams Bruner Wust Sante Funkhouser Hays Schlicht Belta is igma ©elta Upsilon Chapter Established 1904 Fratres in Facilitate John Hanger Kennerley, D.D.S., M.D. Le Grand M. Cox, D.D.S., M.D. Ewing P. Brady, D.D.S. Louis P. Thomas, D.D.S. Fratres in Universitate Charles E. Berryman Harvey H. Bonds Joseph T. Funkhouser Harry Lee Grainer 1913 Armour R. Meador Robert A. Sutcliff Edward T. Thompson Wiley A. Wright James Titterington John F. Baber Charles F. Elder 1914 Fred H. Westhoff Charles H. Brown De Wilton H. Milstead John S. Rhode Benjamin H. Barton James L. Quillman 1915 Lincoln Sanders Harry E. Wuest | 265 1 Xi Washington University Chapter Officers President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Established 1910 V. K. McCourt R. J. Terry J. C. Ray worth E. L. Ohle J. F. Abbott Active Members James Francis Abbott A. M. Brom n George Dock William Harrison Emig Victor E. Emmel Edmund Arthur F.ngi.er Joseph Erlanger A. E . Ewing Charles Elijah Galt Walter E. Garrey Robert A. Gesell R. A. Hall Chester Harvey Hardy Dennis E. Jackson George Oscar James George William Lamke Alexander Suss Lancsdorf Walter E. McCourt LeRoy McMaster George Thomas Moore Francis Eugene Nipher Ernest L. Ohle William W. Ohlweiler Eugene L. Opie Joseph C. Rayworth Ethel Eeich Richards William H. Roevf.r Philip A. Shaffer Robert James Terry John Lane Van Ornum Clarence Abiathar Waldo Calvin Milton Woodward B. M. Duggar G. R. Hill Jacob Schramm Members Elected 1912 From the Faculty Robert A. Gesell Lindley Pyle Alumni Gurdon Black Wesley U. Horner Graduate Students A. E. Ewing Geo. L. Peltier A. M. Brown Seniors Paul E. Conrades Mary Cora DeGvrmo I.. B. McCarthy Edwin T. Niphf.r G. B. Wislocki [266 ] Pi 15cta Pbf —Gerhard Sisters Meinholtz DcGarmo Alden l’ox Senseney Brown Morse Ehlers Herring Duffett Taylor Kieffer Brothcrton Stevens Ochlcr Parker Seifert Brooks Mills Sparks Clayton Otto Bacon Bryars McCargo Wuertenbaccher Perham Smalling Shreve DeCourccy i li Ikta mi Missouri Beta Chapter Organized 1!I07 1913 Alice McClevey Erma Periiam Anna Mills Annie Adele Shreve Julia Morse Adele Seifert Sallie Lee Sparks Mildred DeCourcy 1914 June Oeiiler Ruth Herring Barbara Senseney Meridith McCargo Edith Taylor Marik Bacon 1915 Ruth Meinholtz Helen Bryars Drue Smalling Mildred Clayton 1 Ielen Stevens Margaret DeGarmo Winona Wuertenbaeci Pauline Brooks 1916 Elizabeth Eulers Mary Brother-ton Mildred Fox Prances Duffett Lora Otto Pledged Mona Aeden Augusta Parker Lois Kieffer w Forsythe Voohers Bissland R. Pickel E. Updike Bowles Newton Ernst M. Pickel Manley Pritchard F. Fox Rogers Lide M. Updike Childs Sisson Nixon lUeo Organized 1909 1913 Margaret Manley 1914 Dorothy Childs Hortense Bowles Lucy Newton Claudia I.ide 1916 Elizabeth Nixon Roth Pickel Hazel Forsythe Marie Updike Nell Rogers Frances Fox 1916 Julia Sisson Ruth Pritchard Ida Updike GRAtF. BlSSLAND Alice Ernst Mary I.ee Pickel Special Charlotte Lomax Pledged Mary Vooheks 1273 1 IS 10 Pierrette Trip to Springfield.—The show was enjoyed by both of the audience. 18 Co-edition of Student Life.—“Heinie” ’el- son is the center of attraction. 19 Sophomore -Minstrels.—Harry Stocker sines “In the Shadows.” 20 Annual Athletic Association Smoker.— “Chief” Cayou delivers his annual oration. 26 Lock and Chain. 30 Greek Play “Antigone”.—It may be al¬ right but it’s all Greek to us. 8 Univec Surkuss.—The Campus Cops catch our coin. Drake-W ashington Track Meet.—We lose to the visitors—OH to -141. 11 Open House Day.—We entertain despite the rain. 11 McMillan Day.—Large Terpsichorean feat. 15 Single Tax Passed.—Get ready to part with live dollars. 18 University Field Meet.— Pralma elects its men. 21 Sophomore Dance.—Automobile rides are more attractive than dancing. 7 Lock and Chain Pledge Dance.—Many are called but few are chosen. Pi Phi Reception for Miss Smith. 8-13 Senior W eek. 8 Senior Faculty Baseball Game.—Prof. Cory, despite his derby, plays an excellent game. 10 Chancellor’s Reception. 11 Girl’s Luncheon.—Seniors see themselves as others see them. Class Play and Reception. 12 Farewell Pilgrimage.—Budding orators make their debut. Class Day.—Cherry Price arrives late as usual. 13 Commencement. Luncheon.—Last taste of University eats. Prom.—Curtain falls on the class of 1912. • June S [ 276 j Sept. 2-23 C. E. Trip. 26 Opening of College.—We find Cupid has been busy during the summer. Oct. 1 Sophomore Class Elections. 2 Senior Class Elections. Marriage No. 1.—Freshman marries stray cur, all present kissing the bride. Freshman Class Elections.—Straub pleads for his “fair unknown.” 3 Mrs. I.ong’s Automobile Burns.—“Pinkie” to the rescue witha nickel for car fare. 5 Shurtleff-Washington Football Game.— Shurtleff is defeated, 48-7. Barnes Hospital Cornerstone Laid. 9 Mary McDonald and “Shop” Barnes start for Chapel, but— 10 “Omar” begins to versify in Student Life. 11 Y. M. C. A. Organizes. Lock and Chain Initiation.—Sophs are unu¬ sually ' gallant. 12 Freshman Parly.—Morris routs the Sophs. Illinois-Washington Game.—The game we almost won, 12-0. 14 Architect’s Initiation.—Ash pits much in demand. 18 First Lock and Chain. 19 Woman’s Mass Meeting.—Much of the feminine of gas.” Wcstminstcr-Washington Game.—We win, 54-0. 24 Brazilian Celebration.—Tree planted to commemorate site of Brazilian World’s Fair Building. 25 Woman’s Organization Dance. Orchestra Organizes. Press Feeders Club Organized.—Large waiting list. 26 Rolia-Washington Game.—A hard game, won by 13-6. 27 Receptions at McMillan on Sundays inaugu¬ rated by Miss McCauiley. 28 Strike at Commons.— Dorntites leave for Mother Bonds where Mabel is kept busy ' . 29 Junior Party. 31 Student Life considers giving cigarette cou¬ pons with each subscription. n«ft, Loinv, 15 soven rco« n neanioLS r«ri o, i e IviVo ' ■ ‘V ' . ' V 0 erf 3 ' 0 0.+ 11 • ■ 0o+ 15 • OH 3-s- .Uofic • Oft’ I 277 | 4 , O 8- oor TMt fisf o v. 20 • t)e- C. 6 Nov. 1 Dec. Mass Meeting in Gymnasium.—“Yell fest.” Single Tax Committee Elected. Drake-Washington Game.—Drake wins the game in last quarter, 33-13. Senior Party. The “Colonel” breaks up Bull Moose funeral procession. McMillan Dance for Faculty. Drury-Washington Game.—The game was ours 27-12. Monkey, in search of higher learning, finds his visit to the Quad very lucrative, as well as filling. Sophomore Hats Appear.—The Quad wears a verdant aspect. 14-15 Thyrsus Monthly Play “Next Door”.— “This measly dirty little dime.” Missouri-Washington Game.—The Tiger overwhelms us 33-0; Paul Nelson hurt. Return of Student Body from Columbia. “If-, then-” Freight Cars Burn.—Rock Island furnishes amusement, at least. Chapel Services Changed.—University loses its religion. Lock and Chain.—No chaperones. Arkansas-Washington Game.—We lose de¬ spite a big “snake dance” between halves, 13-7. Thanksgiving Holiday.—University gets a weil-earned rest. Freshman-Sophomore Football Game.—Pi Phis root unescorted. Sophs remove numerals from caps. Freshman Dance.—1916 makes its debut. Pan Hellenic admits Freshmen under scholarship requirements.—Mantel-piece meals much the vogue. Oshkosh High School will not receive Stu¬ dent Life because of cigarette ads. Obelisk Initiation.—Terrible fatalities on Quad; many proposals. 12 14 16 IS 20 28 30 10 11 1278 ] Dec. 11 Frank Cann and Kclith Taylor “make plans for the Junior Prom —on Lindell Boule¬ vard. 13 I.ock and Chain. 14 Marriage No. 2.—Heman-Smith affair. 17 Obelisk Dance.—“Tangoing in vestibules only.” 18 Mock Trial.—“Was Jennie Brice Mur¬ dered r” lfi-20 V. W. C. A. Candy Sale.—“The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.” 20 Mrs. Neman bakes biscuits and receives recognition. 21 Annual Flag Rush.—The two under classes show their athletic prowess. Dec22-Jan2 Christmas Holidays. Marriage No. 3. James, a Freshman elopes with Miss Pauk. Christmas presents become noticeable. 3 Lew Maverick mistaken for Daniel Boone. 10 Lock and Chain. 14-15 Washington defeats Ames in basketball scores. 18 St. Fatima ' s Day.—“History of Art catches cold.” 21 Dr. Usher vanquishes the Irish in one of the Ten Decisive Battles of the World. Jan21-Febl Mid-year Examinations. 25 Women receive larger locker room—more room for scandal. 31 Glee Club Trip to Washington, Mo.—Men become weary carrying hotel keys. Feb. 2 Ground hog seen peeping out of Chancellor’s office. Shurtlcff-Washington Basketball Game.— We win. • Dec- ' 3 ’ . Nek ' Ll I 279 ] Fct • 3 ' Feb. 3 4 5-6 7 10 12 13 14 20 21 21-22 26-27 Bon-firc.—Co-eds seek cheerful warmth elsewhere. Proetz-can’t-sing—Green-can’t-dancc Con¬ troversy. Senior Garden Party.—“The Good Old Sum¬ mertime” re-enacted. Missouri-Washington Basketball Game. I.ock and Chain. Snowball catches up with Prof. Lamke.— 10 round fight imminent. Carson hangs in undignified position to advertise Sun of O’Gun. Epidemic of green hats on Quad. “Sun of O’Gun” Presentation.—The owl goes astray. Prof. Heller misquoted by Student Life.— Fireworks ! ! ! ? Business Manager Roessel wears the “smile that won’t come off.” Slavery Debate in History 22;—Herold West, “though crushed to earth,” rises and vanquishes Harry Stocker. Junior Prom.—Beautiful Decorations—the best yet—Felix Coste brings Louise Helde- man. Washington’s Birthday Holiday. Theta Tea.—Stocker and Amos rival the furniture for staying qualities. Glee Club Concert at V. M. C. A. Raymond Perry seen with his 8th fair “dame.” Large donation from University toward Athletics. Chancellor Houston chosen for Secretary of Agriculture by President Wilson. Basketball Lock and Chain.—All the “new” dances allowed. Section D Orchestra Show. Reception to Chancellor on Quad.—-We shiveringly salute a funeral procession. Easter Holidays. Thyrsus shows, “Embers” and “Miss Civili¬ zation”; June Oehler successfully w ' restles with the burglars. “The World and His Wife” at Festus, Mo. [280] e passing ijofcu ® E present for your approval, reader, the following rec¬ ord, by pen and picture, of the events of one year of college life. We hope our poor efforts will serve to recall the pleasant and joyous hours spent within the walls of our Alma Mater. Qlltocc urktiss. — Who could read the flaming circulars announcing a “Dazzling Effulgence of Divers Joyous Diversions Delightfully Intermingled in Promiscuous Pandemonium” and not attend the I nivee Surkuss of May 8th? We, to be sure, could not resist the appeal so we entered the Stadium with expectations of a jolly good time which were more than realized. “Everybody ' s doing it—slide the slood—taste the joys of childhood barked a leather-lunged individual and we, with many others, experienced the exhilarating descent on “Ye Olde Back Cellar Door.” Then there were the “Careless Coins, the ever-popular “Puppet Profs” and the “Univee Celebs . We noticed a large crowd surging about the tent in which the “Missing Link was imprisoned and were just about to enter to see this celebrated wonder when a heavy hand fell upon our shoulder and we were informed by a fierce looking “cop that we were “pinched”. We suffered ourselves to be led to the “Calaboose” where a solemn looking judge fined us for speaking English. Then of course, there were the Sophomore Minstrels and the Quartette who catered to the musically inclined, and the “Dodging Ducks” as well as the “Magic Wheel where the usual crowd of reckless gamblers enjoyed themselves. We delved deep into our pockets for some change when we reached the Student Life Booth, and were dumbfounded when presented with a free copy of the “Scandal Sheet”. To cap it all, we adjourned to the nearby Gymnasium, there to “trip the light fantastic toe” before boarding the car for home. Sophomore boUl.—The next event of interest was the Sophomore Minstrel Show in which the class of 1914 dis¬ played their histrionic ability. From Brodix’s new roach powder to Ilaydock’s forty foot corn, the jokes and personalities kept the audience in an uproar. The Mandolin Quartette played some of the latest songs, and Tandy and Hardaway sang some pleasing ballads. After the show was over, the floor was cleared and dancing continued until a late hour. 12S11 3. 3. Smoker. — Never before in the history of the Athletic Association has a crowd been seen at an annual smoker as large as the one which filled the gymnasium on the evening of April 17. Professor McCourt made the principal talk of the evening on Our High Standard in Athletics” and Coach Cayou delivered his annual exhortation. Between the addresses and reports, the Glee add Mandolin Clubs and the Quartette enter¬ tained with their latest selections. Mr. Gould gave a short dis¬ cussion of the single tax; the football manager announced his schedule for 1912; the officers for next year were introduced, and the meeting closed with singing the “Alma Mater.” 0rcck Plap. T lie Greek department of the University gave an excellent presentation of Sophocles’ famous tragedy, “Antigone” before a large and ap preciative audience in Found¬ er’s Hall, Mary Institute, April 30. This tragedy has been fre¬ quently portrayed on stages of American Universities, but Washington University is one of three to present the play in the original Greek. The acting was exceptionally good and that with a cast whose dramatic experience was almost “nil.” By far the most ability was shown by Alice Miller, who filled the title role. Mr. Frank Debatin did excellent work as Crcon, the King. ' Flic portrayal of the other characters of the play was creditably executed by Miss Helen Donnelly, Mr. Roy Stahl, Mr. Richard Hatch, Mr. Goldstein, Mr. Lockwood and Mr. Karl Tiedemann. ©yell |I)0U8C s?flp. — The reception given Saturday, May 11, by the Washington University Association to the people of St. 1 ouis was one of the most, brilliant events of the Spring, and, next to Senior W eek, the most important. Every building and department on the campus was opened and, despite the threatening weather, the grounds were well filled. ' Fhc St. Louis Symphony Orchestra entertained the visi¬ tors on the Quad, the Glee and Mandolin Clubs united in con¬ cert in Old Chapel, and Thyrsus played Lady Gregory’s “The Gaol Gate” to overflowing houses in the theatre. Graham Memorial Chapel was filled far beyond its capacity long before the hour for the recital given there by Mr. Galloway and the Chapel Choir. I2S3I I Cl3ceaillcin Oiip. Whether it was due to special prayers, the holding of thumbs or what not, the weather was ideal for the McMillan May Day, held May 14 in McMillan Court. The exercises this year did not consist of the usual Shakespearean Play, but were composed of the May Pole dance together with folk-dances of all nations, thereby afford¬ ing an opportunity for a larger number of girls to participate, without making the burden on any one person too heavy. A platform had been erected along one side of McMillan Court, and it was here that the Queen of the May, Miss Eliza¬ beth Evans, surrounded by her maids of honor, held court and watched the dance given in her honor. From one side of the court, twisting, turning, leaping and dancing, came a mot- let ' crowd, whose light and graceful movements were well suited to a Snowstorm dance. Tyrolienne, Russian, Spanish, Dutch, Irish and Italian folk-dances followed in quick succession and were all justly well applauded, even by those whose stature only permitted a glimpse of the performance now and then. These unfortunate individuals, however, totally disregarded the prohibitory signs, “Do not stand on these Benches” and dared the still more ominous frowns of “our Colonel” to mount to a point of vantage when Erma Perharn danced the hit of the evening “The ind and ave Dance.” Following these dances, came the Maypole dance, and so well were the girls trained, that nary a ribbon was twisted and nary a foot lost step. In the afternoon, the festivities were brought to a close by the usual custom of planting the ivy, which signified that another group of girls was about to assume the cares and mastery of the Kingdom. Mary DcGarmo, vice-president of the Senior Class, planted the slip of ivy and Sallie Lee Sparks made a verv appropriate answering address. Single Cai atJoptcO. An important event in the history oi our college life occurred with the passage of the Single Tax on May 1 ), 1912, by a mass meeting held in Graham Memorial Chapel. The system was amended by the Corporation of the l Diversity so that a large part of its benefits was lost, but was nevertheless passed in its amended form by the Student Body. Senior (KDlCCk. — The first event of the week was the annual Senior-Faculty Baseball game which occurred on Francis Field, June S. The students, having old scores to settle, played with a determination to completely annihilate the stylishly dressed profs. This they did so well that the total score has never been correctly tabulated. After the congenial reception given by Chancellor and Mrs. Houston, the class adjourned to the Algonquin Club where they participated in a success¬ ful banquet, concluding with that song which every Washing¬ ton Student loves best—the Alma Mater. On Tuesday, the underclasses gave the Senior girls a ban¬ quet at the Glen Echo Club, where they saw themselves mim¬ icked by their hostesses. In the evening, the class play en¬ titled “Learning How” was presented in a highly creditable manner, and was followed by a reception on the terrace of the Art School. The “Farewell Pilgrimage” around the Campus occurred on Wednesday morning, June 12. From the Chapel, the class marched to Cupples I where Professor Woodward officiated at the planting of the class tree. The historical and impressive feature of the week occurred on Thursday morning, June 13, when Dean Marshall Snow, for the last time in his position as Dean, led the procession of professors and Seniors around the main quadrangle and into the large tent where the closing ceremonies were held, and the presentation of diplomas was made by Chancellor Flouston. In the evening, the Seniors held their final Prom in the Art School gardens. Amid flowers which shed their fragrance, beneath swinging lanterns, the faint hum of conversation min¬ gled with the strains of music and happy couples wandered about the gardens, or threaded the mazes of the dance. Thus passed the evening, carrying with it the memories of an active college life with its anticipations for the future. The class of 1912 welcomed its tomorrow unafraid of what the future had in store. The Senior Prom was a thing of the past but the happy thought remained that old acquaintances should not be forgot, for the days of “Auld Lang Syne.” [2S7] C. Crip. The summer passed all too quickly and vve were once more back at the “Hill” ready for another year’s labor. The Civil Engineers’ Trip was the chief topic of discussion. Most of the C. E’s left St. Louis on September 2, picking up Mr. Sweetser and Ben Moreell at Chicago and arriving at Devil’s Lake, Wisconsin, the scene of this year’s trip, somewhat later that day. W ork started in earnest next day. Ben Moreell did some very efficient service, for he routed every engineer out of bed each morning promptly at six-thirty. At first, the fellows rebelled, but soon became so accustomed to this type of inhuman treatment that they accepted the inevitable and were so well trained that they could distinguish the cross-hairs of a telescope at seven-thirty in the morning. From this hour until four in the afternoon, they labored hard to locate each tree, fence-post and ant-hill in the immediate vicinity, dragging the heavy rods to almost inaccessible places. From four to seven was allowed for recreation and seven to nine was occupied by computations of the day’s work. After four o’clock, everybody took a plunge into the lake despite the drawback of coming to the surface covered with green, slimy vegetation like a second Father Neptune. After the computations were finished at night, various forms of amuse¬ ment were indulged in. For instance, Jolley and Clayton were writing a few post cards home when Brady and Widman came along and decided that a bath was really necessary for the former two. During the complications which followed, Mr. Sweetser dropped in and remarked that something seemed to be leaking through the ceiling of his room, and, in the investigation which followed, the bath was forgotten. Sundays were employed in an ex¬ ploration of the surrounding country. Baraboo,the winter quarters of Ringling Bros. Circus, and good places to dance were listed among the discoveries. At the dance, on one Saturday night, Orni Widman coralled most of the girls, regardless of size, but Joe Vollmar was the most consistent “fusser” during the stay. After almost three weeks of this delightful mixture of work and play, the bunch packed up, and it was the twenty-second of September before the fellows reached St. Louis, ready to start in with another year’s work at college. | 2S9 1 19 jFrCShman IDanCC. On December sixteenth, the Freshman class held their annual dance in Francis Gymnasium. The hall was very attractively decorated in the class colors—white and gold, and these same colors were carried out in the leather programs. Ci)C J3umeral T5attlc. —The flag rush this year between the two lower classes witnessed a return to the old style tree fight, considerably modified but still retaining the all-night vigil. Hostilities began at seven o’clock Friday evening Dec¬ ember 20. From eleven o’clock until four, the Freshmen were prohibited from entering the territory and accordingly they retired to the vicinity of the gymnasium. Meanwhile, as soon as it was certain that the Freshmen had withdrawn, the Sopho¬ mores’ platform “gang” set to work and labored for five hours in the low temperature to get the platform built and raised. Shortly after daybreak, the dormitories began to stir at the news that the Freshmen had set out with their moving van, carrying wooden horses, long boards, and other articles of attack, to seek the Sophomore flag. By seven o’clock, a large crowd were gathered around the tree awaiting the Freshman approach. The position of the tree and the construction of the platform were b oth ideal. The tree stood at the foot of a steep embankment which surrounded it on three sides, the fourth being protected by a creek, thus making it impossible to drive a wagon of any kind under the platform. The Freshmen brought up their attacking apparatus and constructed a platform level with that of the Sophomores. As the P ' reshmen began to clamber up on their platform, the Sopho¬ more reserve forces rushed down, and, in the struggle which en¬ sued, the whole apparatus was upset into the creek. Finally all the Sophs were tied up and the Freshmen, wading out into the icy water, rescued their paraphernalia, and set it up again. Prying off the ramparts of the Sophomore platform, they began to charge, but time after time, the Sophomores held firm and rolled back the attack. At length, however, above the swarming mass of humanity on and about the platform, appeared a Fresh- man, Frank Bubb, who slowly climbed the tree and cut down the flag to the cheers of the spectators. I 201 i JFatima’S Day. —On Saturday, January 18, St. Fatima, attended by licr gorgeous retinue, entered the Quad¬ rangle and beseeched aid for the architects in the coining ex¬ aminations. The awe-inspiring spectacle began when a herald, arrayed in wondrous splendor, and blowing a musical blast on his magnificent horn, announced the approach of that most potent of all monarch®—King Ralph Bryan. This stately ruler was borne in his triumphal chair to the midst ol his admir¬ ing and bowing subjects and then the sleeping form of the great Saint, heavily swathed except for two large protuberant pedal extremities, was borne before His Majesty. King Ralph gracefully descended from his soap box and imprinted the Kiss of Life upon the divine lips of the Saint who awoke, and, with the King, bowed to Allah for aid. After this prayer, King Bryan chose Theodore Maenner as his successor, while Senne was selected by the Divine Saint as worthy to fill her place. Amid acclamations, and the smoke ot incense, the Divine Saint fell into a deep slumber and was borne away to repose for another year until the architects should again need her aid. 01CC Clllt) Crip. —On January 31, the Glee Club gave their first out-of-town performance at Washington, Mo. The bunch piled into the special car (shared with some convicts and their guards), arriving at W ashington about 11:30, and, after a “Sizzle-sazzle” in response to the huge sign “Welcome Washing¬ ton”, repaired to the “hotels”, for we were divided in two main parties, while Brady and Lanreck were sent to still another place where the beds were somewhat longer. Our efforts that night were well applauded, and the quartette were encored io the full extent of their repertoire. After the performance, the Club were the guests at a dance given in their honor. At the close of this entertainment in the wee stna’ hours, we repaired to our igloo- hotels. With the heat of excitement still in us, it wasn’t so bad turning in, but oh, that cold gray dawn and the ice in our basins! Four worthy individuals had stayed awake all night rather than experience the cold (we hope) but the rest of us broke all dress¬ ing records. Our return home was not as hilarious as our de¬ parture, but the little recreation was doubly welcome after the strenuous mid-years. [ 293 ] wm Junior prom. — Needless to say, Ninctecn-Fourteen’s was the best Junior Prom yet. Haven’t we always distinguished ourselves? On the evening of February twenty-first, Francis Gym was crowded with the most numerous and joyous throng that ever adorned its floor. What a beautiful scene it was, with the garlands of dainty sweet peas, and brightly colored lights trans¬ forming its rather ordinary roof into a bower of summer flowers. Say what you please there was something vastly romantic about that Venetian scene on the west wall of the Gymnasium. Contrary ' to the expectations of several doubters, we rcallv did have a good time even if we didn’t Tango. P ' or us the climax of the evening came when we had real ice cream and cake served on real plates. That Nineteen-Fourteen class ranks with the salt of the earth. You think so too? Well then, here goes- three cheers for the class of Fourteen! Houston Celebration. —On March 0, President W ilson officially announced his Cabinet selections which included the name of Chancellor D. F. Houston as Secretary of Agriculture. The Corporation granted Secretary ' Houston a four years’ leave of absence and made Dean Hall acting Chancellor for that period. Professor Lowes became acting Dean of the College to fill the vacancy created by the removal of Dean Hall. On March lo,the membersof the Student Council with aband and parade of automobiles, conducted the Secretary ' to the Quad¬ rangle, where large crowds were assembled, awaiting his arrival. To the salute of bombs, and the click of moving picture ma¬ chines, the automobile procession approached, and the Secretary was ushered by the Senior member of the Council to the stand erected in the entrance to Ridgely Library. After Mr. Brookings had made a short congratulatory address, to which Secretary Houston replied, Leo McCarthy as Presidentof the Student Body, presented him with a silver loving cup in behalf of the students. The large crowd then adjourned to the second Quadrangle where the Houston elm was planted with proper ceremonies. To com¬ plete the celebration, the Secretary was accompanied home by the crowd, who performed a snake dance to the tune of “Hail, the Conquering Hero Comes.” I 25(5 | Jfact attb Jfiction The Light That Failed Candle Harrison. Ten Nights in a Bar-room—A dormite’s weekly life. An Enemy of the People— Morris Boors tin. The Man of the Hour - Dr. Houston, The Thinking Machine Percy Torbcrt Vickroy. The House of Mirth -Cupples I Annals of a Quiet Neighborhood Section D Tower. Our Mutual Friend Miss Page. Heart’s Desire—To fuss. Sense and Sensibility Carrie Long Beyond the Dreams of Avarice—A Good Vital at Commons. A Hand-made Gentleman—‘Pinkie Car- son. Cabbages and Kings—Frosli and Prof. A Man Without a Shadow— Shorty Schleiffarth. The Reckoning—Mid-year and Finals. The Crisis—Three It’s and two F’s. The Court of Love—The Quad on Chapel Hour. Tarry Thou Till I Come—Prof. Voting ' s request to his nine o’clock classes. The Price of Silence- For an estimate, see Miss Maginn. Where Love Is The Library Corridor. The Call of the Wild Modisetie ' s “har¬ mony . Men with the Bark On—The Civil Engi¬ neers. Seats of the Mighty -South Wall of the Quad. A Man Who Laughs -Dr. Walker. Interrupted Friendship—Cutting In. It Never Can Happen Again—P. Coste passed in everything. A Well in the Desert—jimmy Smith ' s. Love In Old Clothes—Obelisk initiation. Matrimonial Bureau Student Life-Office. Only a Girl Madic klutz. Passers-by—Felix and Louise. Prisoners of Chance—The Hatchet Boa rd. Day-dreamer—Otto Kocluitzky. Dear Irish Girl—Mary Brotherlon. Great Expectations -Week vacation at Easter. Old Curiosity Shop -Saalburg Collection. Egyptian Princess Erma Pcrham. Foiks from Dixie—Emma Carter, Lay¬ man Brown, Margaret Manley. Louis Maverick, Drue J malling, Eugene Smith, Edward Winfree. Gentle Grafter—Dr. Englcr. Heavenly Twins—Hazel Burch and Hazel Carter. Shadow of the Rope—Best part of the brand Pollhoff smokes. Ruling Passion—Starting petitions. Silent Places—Section A. Liggett. True Love—“Shep” and Mary. The School for Scandal—Washington University. As A ManThinks -Student Life Editorials. What Every Woman Knows M a graders. A Man’s World—Cupples II. Baby Mine—Ruby Spurlock Con and Co. Si- erno. The Inferior Sex (r) The Never Homes—Drue Smalling and Mary MacDonald. Cease Firing—The plea of those on pro¬ bation. His Worldly Goods -“Dug” Martin’s top. A Maker of History -“Doc” Usher. The Man Higher Up—Prof. Hall. The Long Shadow—Brady-. Kindling—Sandwiches at Commons. Much Ado About Nothing- Philosophy 3. A Doctor of the Old School—Prof. Swift. The Rivals- Modiscttc vs. Elrod. The Slim Princess—Alice McClevev. The Pillars of Society—Brodix, Tully. Perry. Blue Beard Noble McCormack. World of Chance Park Hotel. Different Girls Pi Phis, Thetas, Kleos. Quaint Courtships—Dr. Dale and Ruth Herring. Image of Eve—Helen Bryars. In the Shadow—Under the Arcade, Iron Heel - Dr. Rohr. A. Hull. Country Doctor Walcott Denison. To Have and to Hold—Women’s offices. Just for Two— ' Gym track during Lock and Chains. Last Hope—12:15 car. Looking Backward—The Hatchet. TheGirlofMyDreams Thel.ittie Lady. Man and Superman—Proetz and Mc¬ Carthy. Diary of a Saint Dunham ' s note book. Happy Boy Arthur Freund. Three of a Kind—Lynch, Wingfield, Vick- roy. Raiders—Morris and Stiebel. Crooked Trails—The Frosh-Soph Fight. Bleak House—The dorms in Christmas Week. Little Men—-Dr. Lowes, M. Abella, “Pete” Bender, A. Suss, Ernst Freund, “Shorty” Will, “Doc” Cory. Wild Animals I Have Known—Slarbird, Martin, Wolff, Maverick, Fox, Her¬ ring, Mink, Crane, Lamb, Pickcrill. | 297 | Hxebiseb CDttton, “Umber Dictionary” Architect (or-ky-tect), «. [ v Gr. Orcus , King of the Shades Below, and OE tael, smoothness, amiability! a cross between an Engineer and an Art-school student; one ashamed to go openly to art-school and with too much self respect to be an Engineer. Basket-ball n. 1. [ Football and track men] A pleasant means of passing the winter. 2. ( Basket-ball Candidates) A cruel method of reducing. 3. (Co-ed) A harmless diverson. Beet h. [corrupt form of beaten ,meaning humbled) 1. A lowly form of sustenance exalted into a foodstuff by Commons. 2. Material for Editorials q. t ' .( Blue-book n. [From Amer. Wwe-melan- choly and Texan buck meaning toshake.l A method of torture used unsparingly by the Faculty [q. v.) Book-store. A place of isolation sup¬ plied by a beneficent Providence to des¬ pairing fussers. Bomb it. [From low Amer. bum meaning something useless] a means of dissipating class assessments in smoke; used by Student Council to herald approach of funerals. Bond’s adj. Of, or belonging to Bond; Washington University Dialect for eat¬ ing-house. Bonfire n. [From Fr. bon meaning good, and her. feier, meaning celebration. Ironical Dcriv.j A species of insanity; an excuse for the imbibing of caustic stimulants. Synonym for latter meaning Class-fight, [q. v.] Class Election n. |From Mod. E. clawss a stratum of society, and Lat. electio meaning choice.! The place at which the choice of the select is ratified; often a synonym for Class-Meeting, [q. v.] Class-fight n. 1. (Underclassmen.) A sacrificial atonement. 2, (Upperclassmen) A gladsome spec¬ tacle. Synonyms, Gladiatorial Games, Joust, Tourney. 3 (l,mv.) An irresistible temptation to. the convivial clement. In thi sense synonymous with Lion-fire. Class-meeting An infallible cure for insomnia. Coach it. A person possessing a flex¬ ible vocabulary and destitute of all traits of humanity. Coed n. IMispelling for code] The l.aw by which social affairs at the Uni¬ versity are governed. , College n. East stand of learning and culture in a University. Editorial n. [From editor and yell.] 1. A loud cry from the Editor. 2. A futile attempt at reform, the biased product of a superheated brain. I.ate synonyms, phi I lippic, tirade, dogma, damphulishness (general meaning.) 3. Bold strokes of genius, noble martyrdom (a highly localized appli¬ cation.) Faculty it. [From Lat. facilis meaning “easy.” This derivation is much in dis¬ pute.] 1. Unnatural and inhuman afflic¬ tion, paid to abuse students. 2. A collective name for a body of intelligent men trying to direct crass ignorance and stupidity. (These two meanings are used by entirely different classes of people.) Fight it. An indication of the presence of Hudlcr or of Sophomore Pre-medics. Girl’s Room it. A philosophic term in¬ dicating the source of disturbance of any genial philosophic discussion. Gymmie n. [From Gr. gymnasion, a place of exercise.) 1. The Home of Physi¬ cal Culture |R.arc, Obs.j 2. The Home of Parties and Dances. Lawyer n. [Americanization of Irish “loiar”.] 1. An exclusively male being who delights in profanity and soft-collars. Proverbial. “The lawyers are out” comment upon strange sounds. When a lawyer studies”— Bromide for “never” or “during exam, periods.” 2. person who is bent on remaining at Washington even after graduating from College. Princess «. A theater which gives pro¬ fessional performances of Quad Club Musical Comedies. Railroad Crossing n. A place where a great corporation puts humorous signs. Shops H. Any mysterious retiring- place; invented for engineers. Student-Life n. 1. A method of enrich¬ ing the business manager. 2. An instrument of expression for an Editor. Sun of O ' Gun n. [From low Amer. Son of-a-gim] 1. (Theoretical) The luminous effulgent body forming the significant symbol of the insular body, or regency, of O ' gun. Temperament 1. [From temper meaning passion and Eat. omens meaning without a mind.| A violent disposition; when ac¬ companied by profanity, the exclusive property of Robert Rocsscl. Us ©tljers :§ ee Baker, P. W.—Paulina Wilhelmina; member of firm Sweet, Stout, Baker and Co., sole distributors of “Rweetser ' s Testing of Materials.” Paulina is also candidate for athletic director at W. L. Bain, Maria —Following the footsteps of Carrie SgoU. Baird, Florence- Drue ' s Nurse. Barck, An nv—S ecretary of Senior Class (1013); Understudy of Emma Thuener. Barnes, Mauri ne— Minor partner of Barnes, Alden Co. Barnes, Siif.p —I am the night clerk, also the house detective and the greater half of the working force of A. S. l.angsdorf Co., Mfrs. of Homo-polar Dynamos, Bassford, Florence —Theta’s “best-looker”. Beckmann, I.eona - Vice-President of Y. YV. C. A., 1913; eternally boosting Y. W. C. A. Bernard, “Bill” —Known as “the Imbecile” by the diplomatic Mr. Boorstin. Berra ' , YV.. “Bill”, His favorite occupation is hitting Jones on the head. Berryiiill, Frank Lemon —Varsity basketball; renowned basket tosser and joshcr; chief occupation: horsing some one. Blakemore, Titos.—“Tom” Soprano, Chapel Choir; faithful lover; protector of Louis Flint; eats six meals a day, and is still hungry. Bi.atterman, S. A.—The “Cute One”. Shelby is envied by all his class-mates because he needs a shave only once a fortnight. Bliss, V. C.—Never fusses; lucky in drawing names for the “Frosh Party . Brotherton, Mary- -Embodiment of grace. Brotiierton. Walker— Freshman fusser—on the job every chapel hour. Bryan, Ralph —Chief Chirper of the Song Squad; Former King to St. Fatima, but now a Worshipper of the Goddess. Bryaks, Helen Occupation, rushing the unknown. Buchanan, Beaufort Isaac —Lock and Chain; some people say that B. 1. B. means born in Belleville, but the owner says Beaufort I. Buchanan. Calm an, Dorothy— Star-gazer. Carson, William Glasgow Bruce —(“Pinky, “Bill”)—Student Life Managing Editor; Senior Sergcant-at-Arms; plays ttvo phonographs; anxious to meet some of the Co-eds. Chenery, K.— “Ken”, “She’s a bear dancer. The leading comedian of the 1910 class. Childs, Dorothy —President of French Club; Professor Demay’s Shadow. Clayton, Mildred —Secretary of the Sophomore Class; “Like the Sun, she smiles on all alike.” Coccesiiai.l —Lock and Chain; hails from Webster. Conrad, Harold —Prof. Rayworth put the con in Conrad. Coste, Felix —Student Council, 1913; Lock and Chain; owns a combination tortoise¬ shell spcctacles-goggles- and telescope. This explains why he lives in the library. Coste. Paul —Student Council, 1912-1913; favorite occupation is singing and dancing “Why”. “Everybody for his own country—Hurrah for H— — Cushing, Fanny —“The stump speaker.” DeGarmo, Margaret— Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Favorite expression—“Simply paync- ful, my dear!” Dehnert, John—O nly member of the Architectural School who swears, but it isn’t his fault. DeKins, Samuel “The World and His Wife”; owns the controlling interest in i lie University since the Annual Play , “Well now, I ' ll tell you, here’s a chance- Dodson, Rowland —“Rowena” Class Poet; member of Dodson and Co., manufacturers of motorboats, marine engines and automatic cravat tie-ers for those having 9 o’clock classes. Dolch, Edward William —Tenor (or bass) in Chapel Choir; divides his time between trying to get back in Quad Club and arguing with the professor in American Lit. Done-, Edmund C, Varsity basketball; Assistant Editor Hatchet; member of green hat brigade. He of the satirical smile. Donnelly, Helen —Whom Grecian robes become. Duffett, Frances —Organizer of “Blue Puppies.” Duffett, Helen — Chief occupation worshiping Fran” and bumming with Bine; ambition ill life—to keep from sneezing. Dunham, William Arthur —Pres. Debating Club; Intercollegiate Debating Team. Dunnic’s” chief distinctions are his talking abilities and his hat. [ 301 ] Ellman, Paul M. Past President Pressfeeders Guild; grass widower; hobby, purple- suits; understudy to Lewis A. Maverick; prominent Thespian. Elrod, Harold— “Daddie”, a star football player and a famous actor. Why did lie want to trade girls with Jor- for the party: Path, W.—Was called just, plain Path but now Prof. Path. Punt. Louts R.—Shrimps Club; horrible example of the effects of cigarettes and over¬ study; organ-grinder; ward of Thos. L. B. Forsythe, Hazel —The Wonder of the Age—A “logic-al” woman. Fox, Frances —Owner of the cheerful smile and the curly- hair. French, Eugene —The Hard Guv-; chief recipient of the Grinds’ amorous attentions; sometimes forgets what he wants to prove. Freund, Arthur Jerome —The original of Herpicidc’s advertisement: “Going! Going!! Gone!!!” Gafford, Grady —Some heavy weight; defied the world at the bonfire. Gi.eick. Harry- Intercollegiate Debating Team; one of Nelson ' s greatest admirers. Godwin, Clifford B. “Cliff” —Long distance jumper; Fussers Club; Prcssfecders Guild, First President; Class Artist, Econ. Shark. Good. Louis, Jr. — Salmon pink hair; Pressfeeders Guild, Sergeant-at-Arms; under¬ study to Fabian Kannensteinmetz; ambitious to succeed. Green, Moulton, “Boob”—Lock and Chain; Thyrsus Mask; “The World and Ills Wife”; one-half plus of the Brodix-Green combination, lias a lot to do. Gray, James —Varsity basketball; no sparking allowed during basketball. Griffith, Frederick: Reece, Jn.— Small of stature, but mighty of intellect; chief occupation studying and looking for more courses in zoology. Grimm, Roland —Hatchet photographer. Pete spends his time fussing and bumming with Martin, he of the green hat fame. Hagee, George —Pres. Junior Law Class—will he bring home the Bacon? Hagin, Helen—I nventor of Peerless hair-curler. Haldeman, Louise —Often seen strolling with Felix Coste; rushing-the season. Hamel, Delphine —Chief occupation, talking about little sister Hermoid—Cousin to “Nonie”. Harrison, Lee —Hero of Section D Tower Washday, sacrificed his perfectly good soap. Hatch, Richard Allen— Sky Pilot. Hawken, Bine —Literary Editor of Student Life; leading lady in the farce-comedr, “The Star of English 4”. Henderson, Gale, “Nervy Joe”—Pres. Sophomore Class, Student Council, 1012-HII3; noise provoker and yell leader. Herring, Ruth- —Heroine of the “Professor’s Romance”. Holland, William, “Red Bill”—Lock and Chain; call him “Midget Engineer” and you will both see red. PIudler, Russell Crawford —Varsity Football; lawyer, hero and “regular” athlete. Chief occupation, bowing to the tumultuous applause of admiring audiences. Jackson, George Murdock —Member of the Senior Basketball Team. Ambition—to capture a “W” dead or alive. Jennings, Beatrice —Main occupation, trying to overlook a De Baliverc sign. Jennings, Jeannette —Ever thoughtful and studious — she should worry. Jolley, Irving —He of the purple shirt; human bean pole; habitual lady fusser; chief victim of the ironing treatment given only in the C. E. department. Jones, Max —“Go jump in the lake. Easily picked out because of his walk, laugh, and hair-comb. Kammerer, Marie —Keeps the Co-eds posted on Webb. K am merer, V ebb —President of the F reshman Class; in fact, best president they ever had. Kennedy, Maxwell —“Irish,” Obelisk. Favorite occupations are blowing glass and making class signs. Klotz, Madie —President. Consumer’s League; President Woman’s Council; “Monarch of all 1 survey.” Kochtitzky, Otto Leander, Jr —Occupation, beating the car company out of nickels. Kohlmeyf.r, Fred A., “Arch” Awful Fusser; Student for the Class; Efficiency Engineer. Kotthoff, Delius —Is racing Hatch for the Long Hair prize. Lacey, Elmer L. “Boogey”—Shrimps Club; star basketball player; skirt chaser; caught in the wilds of Webster; hobby, red suits. Lide, Claudia —President of the Government Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Secretary of the Woman’s Council. Main desire is to become a public speaker. 1303 ) Lohmanx, Henry —Ex-Assistant Editor Student Life and Business Managerof Glee Club. Chief occupation is giving advice to the lady architects. Long, Carrie —President Y, W, C. A. (1012); member of Single Tax Committee; Repre¬ sentative on Woman ' s Council; Secretary Senior Class (1012). “Long” on Y. W. C. A. “Come, let me whisper in your long and furry ear.” Lynch, Frederick D. —Alias “Bow-wow”. Debater, chess shark and original village cut up. Noted for his boisterousness. Claims room in the Hall of Fame because of his discovery that Dreamland is not a moving picture show. McCarthy, Leo — (1 ) President of Student Body; (2) President of Athletic Association; (3) EditOr-in-Chief of Student Life. As (1) thinks for the University and acts. As (3) Makes the University think as he does. Senior Week Committee; Three years Varsity center; “Pope of the L’niversity.” MacDonald, Mary —Art Editor of Hatchet. Author of “flow to grow fat on Sundaes.” McIlhenney, Herbert —“McNutt”. Owner, manager and chief resident of Clayton. McMath, Francis —“Mac”, “Woof , he’ll be a big help to his mother when he grows up. Manley, Margaret —President of McMillan Hall; Exchange Editor of Student Life; Representative on Woman’s Council; The tyrant of the Dorm . Maverick, Lewis A.—“Dam,” Section “D” Orchestra; F. P. P. G. ( Frequent); employs “Pinkie” as press agent; gambling fiend and card sharp; understudies for Professors; disappointed in love; popular with the Pi Phis; admirer of Miss Buschman; owns eoonskin cap. Meister, Walter —Obelisk. Ambition is to become a Pullman car conductor. Middleton, Katherine— “Pat”, Reformer of Architects. Milford, Lin —Varsity football; leader of the Section D Symphony Orchestra. Mills, Anna —The maid with the frills. Mobley, Ruth —Treasurer of McMillan, 11113; chief characteristic—pouting; budding orator of the History 22 Class. MoelleKhoff, Fred— “The noisiest of the bunch.” Monteath, Rita— Vice-President of the Junior Class; Secretary-Treasurer of the Con¬ sumer’s League; Associate Editor of the Hatchet; Humorist of the Quad, “How happy could I be with either, were t’other fair charmer away.” Monteith, Norton —Lock and Chain: 1 Alexander Suss- f Before and after taking. Newman, Hariuette The better “half” of the Frosh Program Committee. “Few of us are worth $14. Nicholson, Ada —Associate Editor of the Hatchet. The hard worked member of the Hatchet Board. Nie.moeller, Elmer —Member of Red and Nie”; loves to read his slide rule to the tenth place with a pocket microscope. Nixon, Elizabeth —Mrs. Tom Thumb; heroine of the “Mellowdramcr”. Patterson, Henry Clay— All the world’s a stage, even the Law School. Perham, Erma- -Vice-President of Thyrsus; acting on a stage all her own. Pickel, Ruth— Athletic shark. The boisterous college rough-neck.” Potthoff, L ' lrich —“Boise,” Varsity football; thinks he will be a lawyer some day. Pritchard, Ruth —V. W. C. A. Treasurer; Treasurer of Women ' s Council; “The Life- Saver of W. U.” Would lose her head if it wasn ' t attached. Proetz, Bernard W.—Official electrician for Junior Proms; uses all his time in lectures trying to teach Professors pronunciation of his name. Ramsay, Percy- —Occupation: following in Brother Harvey’s footsteps. Retter, Senta —Boosting Kappa Sig— Rodgers, Grace —-Vice-President of V. W. C. A.. 11)12; President of V. W. C. A., 1913; walking advertisement for athletics, Rogers, “Jack” Member of the Section D Symphony Orchestra. Palmer David is some Symphony tympanist—accent on the phony, Rogers, Nellie— “The College Censor.” Known for iicr bold words towards Dr. Heller. Rosborouch, J. Graham, Jr.— Pressfeeders Guild; somnambulist; insomniac; voice like the south end of a base horn; awful grind; likes girls. Row, Edith —Occupation, steering clear of Mires”. Russell, Milton— According to the refreshment committee of the Student Life Asso¬ ciation, a man with an awful appetite. Sale, Irwin— The man who elected Wilson. Samuel, Dorothy —Associate Editor of Hatchet; Secretary of V. W. C. A.; Junior Representative on Women’s Council; “Sh! They say she wears a K. A. PinH” I 305j SchaumbEkg, Ed ward— “Buzz , “Well, boys, lock up your tools, here comes a C. E.” Schenk, K.—See. A. Liggett; Pres. Junior Class; understudy to the grind, also E. E. shark. He of the soulful eyes. Sciu.f.iffarth, Armin —“Shorty”. His chief recommendation is his perfect chapel attendance. Schlesincer, Helen- -Noted for her pugilistic abilities in Latin Class. Schwarting, Harry- —“Red”. Famous for his silky locks and pink complexion. Scott , Carrie Noel —Scotland forever! “Westward Ho! Searcy, Mildred —Occupation, wearing Howers; paying “Rills”. Seifert, Adei.e —Senior Representative on Women’s Council. See Mills for further information. StiELr, Hazel- —Organizer of the “Black Band”. Sibley, G. C.—President Senior Law Class; a judicial mind—read moot court decision number two. Smalmng, Drue — Vice-President of the Sophomore Class; fond of “Bob” sleighing, but oh! you Wisconsin Prom. Smith. Charles Eugene —Pres, of Thyrsus, Thyrsus Mask, “The World and His Wife.” Charles Eugene is an excellent actor. Souther, Richard —The “Lady Eusser”. His delight is to please his professors by coming to class fifteen minutes before the hour. Sparks, Robert —“Bob”. Green hat brigade; principal occupation and pastime is fussing. Sparks, Sallie Lee— -Chief occupation: Boosting S. A. E. Charter member of the “Ponies”. Spaulding, Frances —The epitome of neatness. Stites, Luke —“To the best of my knowledge, it’s this way.” Disliked by all Freshmen because of his ability to collect class dues. Stocker, Harry Rutherford —Rutherford is distinguished by bis ability to talk on any subject. He is also the envy of all the Co-eds because of his rosy cheeks and fair complexion. Favorite expression, “It’s this way. fellows”- Sutherland, David B. Married man; teacher’s pet; boss of t he gang; prominent engineer. Suppiger, Solomon —Solly is a lawyer, but is trying to get over it; lie is also known as “little Soup”; tiiis cognomen however, does not arise from any connection with Miss Buschman’s establishment. Taylor, Edith —Partner to “Shrimp”. If you can ' t he Frank, be as Frank as you Cann. Tenney, Clarence—F amous for bis brain power. Thacher, Theodora —A short branch to a large family tree. Thomas, Mary Virginia— Chief occupation: Trying to ta-alk. Thuener, Emma —Secretary of Thyrsus; Vice-President of Senior Class. Although firm in pursuit of knowledge, finds time to stop and “fuss” on the way. Tiemann, Alma— Occupation: ’Peaching the Tango; successor to .Mice Martin. Trelease, Samuel Farlow —Hatchet Photographer. If your picture in the Hatchet docs not flatter you, see Sam, lie’s responsible. Tuchschmiot, Arnold J.—A modern Demosthenes. He practices on the Freshman Architects. Tucker, Eleanor —Associate Editor of Student Life. “My dear, can you give me some gossip for Student Life?” Yandekhooe. I-red— “Vannie’s” chief glory is his seraphic smile. Voohers, Mary —Successor to “Cutie”. Watson, Mathildk —The tongue that never speaks. Occupation: Fighting for the South. Weber, Harrison — “Bridgic”. E. E. shark; contractor for new cinder path between corners of Liggett and ' Power Halls. Werner, E.—“Noisy”. A fusser; ambition is to become a French Prof. Favorite ex¬ pression is “You know”. West, Herded —Thyrsus Librarian; Secretary of the Junior Class; Singer of the famous song, “I’ve got the Mumps!” Wineree, Ldward —He of the walk or stride. Sec. A’s peewee. Wingfield, William Darkless, Jr. —“Willie’s” claim to greatness comes from taking more courses than are required and getting away with it. Wright, Clarence E.—Of banquet fame. President A. I. E. E.; former Society Editor for G. D. Zacher, Ruth—“B uzzing” about a “Webb”. I dare say that after reading this stuff you’ll be inclined to remark with the old lady who got the tough bacon at breakfast, “What an awful old bore!” WB orb a t ®fjanfe£ The “1914 Hatchet” Board wish to extend their heartfelt thanks to the following contributors who have aided greatly in producing the book: A. E. Albert Mildred Bailey J. M. Batschy W.m. Bauman S. E. Bears John Borgsteadt Estelle Bowles Ralph Bryan Paul Bunnell William Carson C. D. Cuthbert N. C. Davis J. Dehnert Harry Foster W. French A. Freund Calvin Griffith E. K. Harrison G. A. Haseman Theresa Jones Delius Kotthoit Lucille Klein Arthur Lambert Le Mertha, Times Henry Lohmann Noble McCormack Stewart McCormack Francis McMath Theodore Maenner R. E. Maritz D. V. Martin, Jr. Rolland Meyers Harry Payne Dr. A. W. Proetz Gwynne Raymond C. Scott E. Schaumberg J. II. Senne Drue Smalling R. Spurlock W. E. Suehrk D. B. Sutherland J. E. Tarling E. W. Taylor Emma Thuener Joseph Vollmar M. H. West W. Wolfe Heaton Higfjts; of History “All roads lead to Rome”, cried Cicero, “All except the one leading to Magrudcr’s” answered Shep Barnes, as he and Mary started out in the direction of the corner. Napoleon was flying from Elba. “The only reason I hate to go is that I can’t get a rebate on my seven day ticket.” Noah had just entered the Ark. “At any rate we will escape Common’s grub for a while.” So saying he hastily raised the anchor and sailed away. Adam and Eve were being driven from the Garden of Eden. “Miss Maginn is death on fussers”, they exclaimed wending their way along the arcade. “Veni, vidi, vici”, cried Caesar. “Me too”, answered Drue Smalling, as she heard a machine turn into the McMillan drive. Alexander was sighing for more worlds to conquer. “We great men have our troub¬ les”, sympathized ’Gene Smith. Snbcx Advertisements. 310-320 Alma Mater . . 0 Athletics ( Book II.).. 133-170 Basketball. 145-150 Class Athletics... 150-104 Football. 135-144 Tennis. 155-158 Track. 151-154 Wearers of the W. 134 Women s Athletics .. 165-170 Art School. 115-122 Faculty. 116-117 Honors.. 118 Students. 119 Arts and Sciences. 9-56 Class of 1913. 18-39 Class of 1914. . 4t -43 Class of 1915. 44-48 Class of 1916. .. 50-54 Faculty.. 10-17 Special Students. 55 B Botany. School of. 123-126 Faculty. 124-125 Statement. 126 Students. 125 C Calendar of the Year. 276-280 Corporation. The.. 7 D Dedication . 4 Dental School. 99-114 Class of 1913. . 102-108 Class of 1914 109-111 Class of 1915. 112-114 Faculty — . . 100-101 F Fraternities. 233-266 Beta Theta Pi. 241 Chi Zeta Chi. 261 Delta Sigma Delta .. 265 Kappa Alpha. 251 Kappa Sigma. 243 Nu Sigma Nu_ 255 Phi Beta Pi. 257 Phi Delta. 259 Phi Delta Theta . 237 Phi Delta Phi 253 Sigma Alpha Epsilon . . 239 Sigma Chi. 245 Sigma Nu . 247 Sigma Xi. 266 Theta Xi. 249 Xi Psi Phi. 263 G Greeting. 3 H Houston, Chancellor David F.. 8 K Kennett, Alfred Quinton, obituary of 14 L Law School. 57-76 Class of 1913.. . 60-68 Class of 1914 . .. . 69-72 Class of 1915. .. 73-75 Faculty .58-59 M Medical School. 77-98 Class of 1913 .. . 81-90 Class of 1914. 91-93 Class of 1915. 94-96 Class of 1916_ 97-98 Facult y. . 78- SO O Organizations. 171-224 A. I. E. E. 203 A. S. M. E. 205 Athletic Association. 176 Architectural Society 199 Chess and Checkers Club 214 Choir. 197 Civics Club. 217 Collimation Club . . .. 201 Consumer ' s League 215 Debating Club. . 213 Debating Council.. . 211 Glee Club. 191 Government Club. 210 Graduate Club.. 219 Hatchet Board.... 223 Les Causeuses .. 218 Mandolin Club .. 193 Orchestra... . 195 Publications. 224 Quadrangle Club 187-189 Student Council. 173 Student Life. 221 Thyrsus. 179-185 Women’s Athletic Organization. 177 Women’s Council. 175 Y. M.C.A. 209 Y. W.C.A. ... 207 R Review ' of Year (BookV.). . 275 (Story 28] S Secret Societies ( Book IV.). 225-273 Lock and Chain. . 229 Obelisk. 231 Pralma. 226 “13 . 227 Social Economy, School of 127-132 Faculty . . 128-129 Statement. 131 Students.. 130 Sororities. 267-274 Kappa Alpha Theta . 269 Kleo. 273 Pi Beta Phi. 271 T Title Page. 1 U University, The ( Book I.). 5 Any Man’s Ideals The man in any walk of life, professional or business, who is looking for careful, painstaking and correct tailoring, will find his ideals worked out in Losse Clothes Suits to order in 24 hours from $20.00 to $50.00 Trousers to order in 8 hours from $5.00 to $1 5.00 J. W. LOSSE PROGRESSIVE TAILORING COMPANY, 807-9 N. Sixth Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. WRITE FOR Geo. Kilgen Son Pipe Organ Builders 3820-3825 Laclede Ave. St. Louis, Mo. Builders of Organs— Graham Chapel. Washington University. Over 200 in St. Louis churches, and 2000 in all parts of the U. S. CATALOGUE Large Number of Designs in Stock. Estimates and Designs Furnished on Application WINKLE TERRA COTTA CO. MANUFACTURERS OF ARCHITECTURAL TERRA COTTA ALL COLORS OFFICE, 502-503 CENTURY BLDG., ST. LOUIS, MO. Works, Cheltenham, Mo. [ 310 ] Ik 1014 HatclKt incerelp fjanks its ibbertiscrs anb heartily Commenbs them to its patrons anb JfrienbS as toortfjp of tljetr Remembrance. 1311 1 Boehmer Coal Co. Fifth Floor Commercial Building S. E. Cor. 6th and Olive Sts. “No soot, no clinker, But a red-hot fire. Superior Coal Is what you desire.” Just The Right Gift No Matter What The Occasion There is always something new and decidedly “different” that will suggest the individuality you desire to express in your gift, not necessarily costly but distinctive. Much admiring comment has been ex¬ pressed regarding our beautiful new store, and we cordially invite you to consider it one of St. Louis’ “Show Places” and visit it often. Whelan-Aehle-Jfukhinsoii Jewelry Company LOCUS! ' AT TENTH The genius and experience of three generations of practical builders is crystalized in 1 it rHE ESTEY PIANO is the attainment of an ambition to create a piano befitting the name «s The Estey Company 1116 OLIVE STREET For Twenty-Three Years For twenty-three years this Trust Company has been known as one of the substantially progressive institutions of the United States. Its business has grown steadily because it rested on “all possible protection and really superior service.” DIRECTORS Henry Semple Ames William Bagnell John 1. Bcggs Eugene H. Benoist James E. Brock Murray Carleton Horiato N. Davis John D. Davis David R. Francis S. E. Hoffman Breckinridge Jones William G. Lackey W. J. McBride Nelson W. McLeod Saunders Norvell Robert J. O’Reilly, M. D. Win. D. Orthwein Henry W. Peters H. Clay Pierce Henry S. Priest Charles E. Schaff R. H. Stockton Julius S. Walsh Rolla Wells. Mississippi Valley Trust Co. Fourth and Pine Streets, St. Louis I 313 ] CHAS. F. THAU EMIL C. NOLDE THAU NOLDE DENTAL SUPPLIES 506-7-8-9-10 Benoist Building ST. LOUIS, MO. Fastest Growing Dental House in the West Coat and Trousers Cleaned Ladies Suits Cleaned and Pressed, $1.00 and Pressed, $1.50 We call for and deliver work in One Day when necessary S. E. Cor. Whittier St. and Suburban Tracks Kinloch, Delmar 595 Bell. Lindell 2819 ST. LOUIS. MO. Exclusive Weaves For College Men SUITS OR OVERCOATS TO ORDER. $25-$30-$35 Nicoll, The Tailor Incorporated WM. JERREMS ' SONS 717 OLIVE STREET. ST. LOUIS. MO. 1314 ] [ 315 ] Erker Brothers Optical Company High Glass Optical Goods, Kodaks and Supplies Art Material S t e r e o p t i c o n s and Slides 608 Olive St. 511 N. Grand Ave. ST. LOUIS POWERS BOYD Manufacturers of Fire Proof Metal Windows and Doors General Sheet Metal Work 3614-3616 Laclede Avenue WE DO REPAIRING I 316 ] t to ponr to onr unfjcctUtiJ farUUfcss for fwmteHitB omrUi statfoti rg, jcjr Wfr carte, mVn a Horio anv 1 fv?tei «3 antt nrwimrts: ShomJ-ti | w tvM? Jo £?? fof fofozi te ?W plt sio?C Jo nmU yon £p?rw?tt? npon A ) . !■% Buxton i ’lmnu ' r Stationery p«i 3Fp-nrU -Strffti itfur 0t V r ifiaijt 3480 THIS E0ITI0N OF ' •THE HATCHET ' WAS PRINTED BY BUXTON 4 SKINNER 1317 ] Any engineer, young or old, who is not familiar with HEINE BOILERS -AND- HEINE SUPERHEATERS should at once send for Boiler Logic and Superheating HEINE SAFETY BOILER CO. 2449-E. Marcus Avenue, Saint Louis, Mo. Main 348 Central 205 Win. A. Corrao Electric Co. CONTRACTORS AND ENGINEERS SAINT LOUIS Geo. Corrao, Genl. Mgr. 1008 SYNDICATE TRUST BUILDING COTTRELL LEONARD INTERCOLLEGIATE BUREAU OF ACADEMIC COSTUME Makers of Caps,Gowns and Hoods to the American Universities from the Atlantic to the Pacific, to University of Missouri, Uni¬ versity of Colorado, Yale, Harvard and (iOO others. .1 Class Contracts a Specialty pillllllllllllllllllllllllll||l|l|||l||||||||U||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||{||||||llt|||||||||||| | Here isYourAnswenm § Webster’s 1 New International I - Th e M erriam Webster = Even as you read this publication you likely = question the meaning of some new word. A = friend asks: “What makes mortar harden? ’ You seek the location of Loch Katrine or the = E miunmaUpn of jujutsu. What is white coal? This NEW CREATION answers all kinds of = questions in Language, History, Biography, Fic- = tion. Foreign Words,Trades, Arts and {Sciences, = with final authority. = 400,000 Wordsand PhrnsesDefined. = 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. H Cost $400,000. = The only dictionary with = the new divided page, = characterized as “A Stroke = of Genius. = Write for sped = men pages,illus- = trations, etc. = Mention thi« pato¬ is lication and =s receive FREE a = set of pocket maps. 1 G. C. | MERRIAM CO., = Springfield, Mass. Horsman Tennis Rackets NONE BETTER MADE Horsman “MODEL A-X embodies the latest ideas, and stands in a class by it¬ self. Don’t buy until you have seen it. If your dealer cannot show it. write to us. We are the Sole Agents in tbc United States for the Celebrated Ayres Champion - ship l.awn Tennis Halls. 1913 Balls now ready for distribution Send for Catalogue [. I. HORSMAN CO., 365 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CIIY I 318] m A D i s tine five Ch a i r THE IDEAL COLUMBIA I S one which will increase I lie charm of your office by reflecting your own character in its selection, and exert a positive influence upon your patients by the good impression it creates in your favor, by its subtle suggestion of heauty, strength, re¬ liability and endurance. And it is the only dental chair made which will enable an operator to accommodate every class of physically perfect or deformed patients. This is very importunt, for a great many patients are exceptionally sensitive about their physical peculiarities, and in gaining their confidence by catering to their wants and needs, you will require a chair which will aid you in the very best way. Such a chair is The Ideal Columbia. A New Electric Engine COLUMBIA OMDEL “C” T 0 the dentist who wants an electric engine of the folding bracket type, this new Columbia Model “C will appeal with an irresistible fascination. For it combines a more highly perfected bracket than any other on the market, with the motor supported in a swivel and balanced by the main belted arm and short arm, so that the motor itself is always away from the patient, while the arm and handpiece is most convenient for the operator. Because of its greater range, smoother action and almost universal adaptability, it is believed this new type will supersede all other makes of this kind on the market. Investigate it and you will he convinced of this beyond a doubt, when you have seen the details of its construction. In addition to the highest types of Columbia Chairs and Electric Engines, you can get the furniture and other appliances of first-class manufacturers to complete your equipment , on the most liberal instal¬ ment terms, through your regular dentul depot. ■ SEND FOR OUR CATALOG TO GIVE YOU FURTHER PARTICULARS THE HITTER DENTAL MANUFACTURING CO., Rochester, N. Y. J1 West Lake Street. CHICAGO. ILL 200 Fifth Avenue. NEW FORK CUT. 1121 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA, PA. MILL WORK BARNES HOSPITAL (Washington University) WAS FURNISHED BY Riddle - Rehbein The O’Brien Worthen Company St. Louis Kansas City Keokuk Joplin Quincy Des Moines Sioux City Davenport Dubuque Iowa City MANUFACTURING COMPANY PROPRIETORS OF The Mississippi Planing Mill 13th and O’Fallon Streets Tone and Touch YOU CAN ALWAYS DEPEND ON DE PACHMANN says: “The Old Reliable” UTfje IBalbtotn iPtano St. Louis Dental Mfg. Co. Has a tone and touch Like No Other. HETTINGER BROS.) It is a Magnificent Instrument. I play two recitals on it with less fatigue 10th. and Olive Streets than one on any other piano I have St. Louis, Mo. ever used.” We invite inspection, comparison and expert criticism. The Baldwin Company The largest and most complete Manufacturers Dental Depot in St. Louis. 1111 Olive Street St. Louis, Mo. [:120 1 Our Photographs Always Please. Because we portray you as you are, natural and at ease, not artificial but characteristic; we portray you as you would look speak¬ ing to that friend or dear one. Schwei Art Nouveau Studio 4927 Delmar Boulevard PHOTOGRAPHIC PORTRAITURE Three Phones All the Photographs in this “Hatchet” were taken by us The Very Finest Tools and Cutlery Bear This Trade Mark ' DiftMOf b Edge is Qu iuty ( Pledgf Always look for the Diamond Edge Trade Mark. We guar¬ antee all tools and cutlery with this brand upon it to be good or money refunded .... Shapleigh Hardware Co. Established 1843 St. Louis R. M. B. TIDD President We hold our customers— the real test of service Send us your printing or engraving orders and be convinced. R. G. HOPPER CO. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllHllillllllllillUIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Registered Plumbers and Drain Layers IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW 214 SOUTH TWELFTH STREET Photographs - Sid Whiting I .Photographer Studio located at 520 N. Grand I am each day demonstrating the fact that Photographs made in my Studio have a distinctive Quality over all others. Student rates on request. INSURE WITH EDWIN P. SHORT Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company 310 Chemical Building Central 4880 Main 3306 Lindell 377 Lindell 772 Delmar 1808 Bell Bell Kinloch Dorr Zeller Catering Co. Weddings and Parties Supplied on Short Notice 3924 Washington Blvd. Saint Louis MARSHALL BROS. Main office 5263 Delmar Ave. I FOREST 2174 FOREST 204 No. 4 — 5263 Delmar Ave.J delmar i«e 5 No. 6—1122 Chestnut St. S™ 5 ,,, High-grade Limousines and Touring Cars for hire with careful Chauffeurs Also Carriages, Saddle Horses and light Livery at reasonable rates A. TA1T, V-Pres. and Treas. JOHN HILL. President PHIL C. GRUNDY, Sec y and Mgr. John Hill Construction Co. Bell, Main 4564 1413 Syndicate Trust Building 915 Olive Street Kinloch, Central 1682 THE CHOICEST PRODUCT OF THE BREWERS’ ART” Made And Bottled Exclusively In THE BREWERY of ST. LOUIS,U.S.A. ALL BOTTLES AND CROWNS FOR CITY USE BRANDED WITH OUR TRADE MARK ORIGINAL D BEER Frats! Classes! Clubs! We would appreciate A Banquet ? Dance ? Spread ? pour checking account Hi No need to worry, just phone Schwarz Sons West End Bank Catere rs West Gate and Delmar 6005 Kingsbury Pierce-Arrow Pleasure Cars and Trucks The best that can be built Western Automobile Co. 4701 Washington Ave. St. Louis, Mo. Harvard New designs and un¬ surpassed features of beauty and utility mark the Harvard accomplishments of the season. For Artistic Effects for convenience to yourself and com¬ fort to your patients, see Harvard Chairs, Cabinets, Electric Engines and have them demonstrated to you. “Seeing is believing.” For advantageous prices and terms, consult Harvard representatives. “To be informed is to be profited Write for catalog. The Harvard Company Canton, Ohio, U. S. A. Manufacturers of Dental Furniture of Every Description Medical and Dental Students We publish a very complete and up-to-date line of Med¬ ical, Dental and Surgical Books—books that have a message for you—and shall be glad to have you corres¬ pond with us as regards our terms to those who are just entering practice. The C. V. Mosby Company Medical Publishers Metropolitan Bldg. St. Louis, U. S. A. Wangler Boilers and Smoke Preventers In operation at the Main Power House Washington University Joseph F. Wangler Boiler and Sheet Iron Works Co. Office: 1547 N. 9th Street In business nearly half Century St. Louis, Mo. FOR APPETITE, HEALTH and VIGOR fA H E- U s c yy TRADE MARK. A LIQUID FOOD Declared by U. S. Revenue Department A Pure Malt Product Sold by DRUGGISTS AND GROCERS BURGESS PRINTING CO. [ Olive 1200 Benoist Bldg., 9th and Pine Central 2002R DANCE PROGRAMS AND GENERAL SOCIETY PRINTING a □ t? d □ a C th Electric City Engraving Co. B U F FALO, N.Y. -pg- WE MADE THE ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK. Carter JBtlson Printers OrJRrml IMbu. Fth anil inr Telephone : Bell, Olive 1788 FOSTER, Florist Cut Flowers and Floral Designs our Specialties Special attention given to Wedding Parties and Funeral Decorations Estimates cheerfully given Both Phones S. W. Corner Kingshighway and Delmar (Courteous tsf tiirrrr lUislics Rock Ballast—No Dust The Alton double track roadbed is rock ballasted and dustless, always insuring a comfortable journey when traveling on the Alton. That is a part of the Alton service—it’s one of the things that make seasoned travelers look upon the Alton as “The Only Wag” To Chicago and Kansas City Seven Daily Trains City Ticket Office: Sixth and Olive Streets R. J. McKAY, First Assistant General Passenger Agent
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