Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1919

Page 1 of 368

 

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1919 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 368 of the 1919 volume:

e jlpz. HM ' CHET Beinq the Year book of Washing to a University r —_ __ ' - v - t e Volume ’ • St. Louis 1916. FOREWORD Since civilization dawned, there have come great crises when the institutions of centuries and their product — men and ideas — are placed to the test of determin¬ ing their value. The civilized world is now passing through such a crucial test. It is yet too soon to decide what institu¬ tions will he continued and what ideas previously held will have value for sur¬ vival and development. Universities have passed through such crises, and the rec¬ ord made by their graduates has added new lustre to the splendid record of the past. This has been true, because it is the function of a real university to pro¬ duce the rational man who always serves as a leader, living, as he does, not only in a present, but also in a future. To Professor William Franklin Gepkart,Pk. D. in Respectful Recognition of a Threefold Achievement— the Advancement of Theoretic Science, the Organization of its Instrument of Dissemination, the UniVersity, the Realization of its End in the Affairs of Life, this Sixteenth Volume of Tke Hatcket is Dedicated. ( ROLL HONOR WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Z TB.Abbott - J.cABroWii !mr r, fio rvi nnnryre; ■ .Cl ..J ,J l ! S£M3 ; v j V fi k . C. c ldamo - TIEiupke JI.D.c Ilbani - T£ urt JT . Ittiaon - r..E qpd QJlCdmpbdl JTTMrbuckle - I_ C.Cargile • 5.C.£ a.ll - WJICbenera ' ..Sappett - cA 1 .Cbeanea S.D.Eartlett - RjCbubo JJ DeaPd - EXIatbopne JlJIBell - J1£ C lopton I. fiepr f - J-jnConnoW J. J.Jbepp - ©Cobb J.£ laiP - WCook yi.b.tMttermein- cAD.Coopep AC.Sohm - c lJI.Costen J.C.t nai£ - J j .GoK TJ Brockman - J.Jl.Craig Pape Niue HONOR ROLL, WASHING TON UN IVERSITY ({yRSC ?ossen - JlTdare ' f tTWGrossen - WPJferrus 6? J.ACroWdas i LjtT ' tnkel3ein EXDakin - W. nschel - TO. DaVis. - T5JFT Tlsbep TEDaWson - G.OTbote G.P Dubuque - A £ .Tbx W. Dock - CPTreier BEDolcb - G.GTricKe FP Douglas - W t Trench J. 1 Douglas - OJi.Tuson J.V Dunbar - WJI.Gasaep cA.Vreu - OP Qua DT TVu5nip - J D PEDePbirst C.WEberback WC. Elliot C JiEyerman .AcATaftman Jl«J.Tarc% aKsm«fa ' M M .. rv «■ i% rtorun ryfjrvrvn ryn Pa K Tt’u HONOR ROLIv WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY W ' JIC.Gronept - T cflotsefield H.Gruner - 0_JTughes ' ‘JGupton - c lJdnnopoulo LTJIdckman - MCJones El.WJ1dgee - jt Johnson r 12,J1ammono- JTR. Johnson cJ.C.JIarrn - T? Jollea L.J1arTuson,Jp- CKsebauib Jl.JlJIausman — S.Keith CEJlarnltn - I.D.Kelle U.L.J1enbert - WKeU cMJierron - U.JIKinsella JWJlill,Jr? - oEKeougb ■■liriflliHil :j . .x ty ' i fit n rv t m «r o o. rvrynrvrAJ Page Eleven HONOR ROLL, WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY A EPEebmcin - dWJI Kee A.-Lindbolm -W.B.JI -Sopley CAI-Aeber - WJIelloW LLfIA ter - W TJ eu ' er W.Wi,oevfe - ■Wi.JlilcneU cJ.b.Logcin - JRJloll O.W..Lobr - aJ.JI.JIoore cbl.TXueking - JX.J1orge.n. O.Wi_aten - J RJlorr cflA.J1a.ack - Q.JIorrison GJIaguolo - RJL.JIo er 1 PJIarab - JI.JlQench C S.JIciaseck - TPJIarphc pPIJIatheWa - EJ1 bfahm JlKjiatbio - Jl. Kettle WG.J1 s Collea - tTE) pfoble A ' SJI-CormcKk- C D.O ' Keeje Jljl-Culloch - WJ1-Olmsted TELH-Tarlcind- E.L Opi ssmtsm Pagi’ Twelve HONOR ROUv WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY 0 s 3.J1.rforPish - T! Rowan O.T! Orlci m - E.dP.o ' Wleu L.C.Pddgett -W.TfSaunders V. Parkinson -HjiSchUeper JtD.Payne -E.L.5chrader RU-Payne - CfSchuUz H.B.Payaon - £ J1.Dchultze C.H.Persons- O.l.PchVab S. ' S . Phelan - P.W.«SchWarz GJTPolk -tSchwarlzenbacb L.UPost - T.cL 5cott Ji.W.Pote - J.J. Searcy, Jr E-.Jd Price - .L.W Settle wS8?i ; a ?-. m ryn rho, Pa 7£ Thirteen HONOR ROLL, WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Y JW.5pa.rgo - JTUucken D.Spankt - £ S Veeder ‘ C. Spalding - JI.GVenable ■RjISpWeu - u.T.Wdgner W. Stack - UC.WcafkeP Utl otahl - CRVdttons D. DStarke - ' Rudkins OStevJari - ' P.K ' Webb cJX-Stev irt - b-Weber J.CSUmson -JIV.Weihmuth l_.S.SUtei - SJ1 .William 3 CW.Stone - r. rf Wibon ■Tpstout - S.Vithers 5-Sutherland- H.ji.Young E. O.SWeetzer- W.pJYounp . . ' RSi ' oung C. G r au G.H.OWen cJi-Cdie j t Hire :v ; ' ‘ ’• ' • ' ' -• ’• ' __ Page Fifteen 3 it jiElemoriam QUinfam ©ernor oyt Jnstrurtor in (Cijrmistry fHao 9. 191 7 0L100 i3. jf. Cloottmt Assistant to tlir (Hreasurrr inly 7. 191 7 CDnntnD 2lrtl)itr £nglcr ®rcanurcr of the (Corporation January lfi, 1919 ©BinficlD Ikott Cljaplm (Eljanrellnr of tlir University 1991 to 19flr fflardj 12. 1919 1 -■ ■ ' ' -? ' ' A ' v ' i .M v- •: 1 9ic The Corporation The Corporation President Robert Somers Brookings First Vice-President William Keeney Bixby Second Vice-President Henry Ware Eliot Directors Henry Ware Eliot Robert Somers Brookings Charles Nagel George Oliver Carpenter Isaac Henry Lioniierger Alfred Lee SiiaplEigh David Rowland Francis Edward Mallinckrodt John Fitzgerald Lee William Keeney Bixby Robert McKittrick Jones Robert Henry Stockton- August Aniieuser Busch Benjamin Gratz Treasurer, and Secretary to the Corporation Edmund Arthur Engler Ludwig Kotany. Deceased I’aye Sixteen The University Frederic Alden Hall, A.M., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D. fi ' REDERIC ALDEN HALL, Chancellor of Washington University; A.B., Drury College, 1878; A.M., 1881; Litt.D., 1901, Drury College; L.H.D., ' Tufts College, 1912; LL.D., Washington University, 1913; LL.D., University of Missouri, 1917; Principal, Drury Academy, 1879-1892; Goodell Professor of Greek, Drury College, 1892-1901; Dean, Drury College, 1898-1901; Collier Professor of Greek, Wash¬ ington University, 1901-1917; Dean of the College, 1912-1913; Acting Chancellor, 1913- 1917; Chancell or, 1917; Trustee, Drury College; Director and Superintendent, St. Louis City Missionary Society, 1900-1910; Member. American Philological Association ; Member, American Institute of Archaeology and President St. Louis Branch; Member, Classical Association of the Middle West and South; Member, St. Louis Academy of Science; Member, St. Louis Country Club; Member, St. Louis Club; Member, Round Table; Author of “Homeric Studies for Young Readers,” “Outline of the Odyssey,” “Outline of the Orestrian Triology,” “Iphigenia in Literature.” Page Tzventy-five The School of Commerce and Finance INTENSIFIED methods have one by one made their way into commerce and finance. They have made their way in spite of the constant opposition of conservative men who have looked upon a theorist, an innovator, as a man of changing opinions and therefore unprincipled, a man in continual state of doubt and therefore inactive. When need of application is remote and failure of less conse¬ quence, such a man is given a hearing. But in commercial enterprise problems demand an immediate and certain solution, wit h a restraining tendency toward anything more. We can scarcely be surprised, then, at the lateness at which such problems have been allowed scientific treat¬ ment. Enterprise calls for men with principles pointing to a definite end, — fixed and held without hesitation to be true. It has usually found them as men of experience. Still, it is recognized that, forcible as experi¬ ence is in its impression, it presents to only a few men scope wide enough to admit of comparative study, or flexibility beyond its explicit problems which are shortly outlived. v-; The Washington University School of Commerce and Finance is in a sense the product of the convergence of the methods of science, and the new needs of a business life expanding beyond itself. We introduce in this review the first records of its activity and accomplishment. Page Tzi ' ciity-si.v hRTS m SCIENCES The llniversit y ' EORGE OSCAR JAMES, Dean of the College; A.B., Johns-Hopkins Uni¬ versity, 1905; Fellow, 189S-1899; Ph.D., 1899; Instructor in Physics, University of Utah, 1896-1897; Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy, Lehigh Uni¬ versity, 1902-1903; Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy, Washington University, 1903-1908; Assistant Professor, 1908-1914; Associate Professor, 1914-; Member. American Mathematical Society; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. ' age Twenty-eight Arts and Sciences v % V.. Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M.M.E. vV ' LEXANDER SUSS LANGSDORF, Dean of the Schools of Engineering and Architecture and Professor of Electrical Engineering; B.S. in M.E., Washing¬ ton University, 189S; M.M.E., Cornell University, 1901 ; Instructor in Physics, Washington University, 1898-1900; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, 1904-; Dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, 1910-; Member, Electrical Section, International Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Fellow, American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Member Engineers’ Club of St. Louis (President. 1912) ; Member, Academy of Science of St. Louis; Member, Society for the Promotion of Electrical Education; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Vice-Chairman, City Plan Commission of St. Louis; Author of “Principles of Direct Current Machines;” Honorary Member, Theta Xi; Sigma Xi. Page Twenty-nine • .-V-: i Arts and Sciences .✓ William Franklin Gephart, Ph.D. ilf ILLIAM F. GEPHART, Dean of the School of Commerce and Finance; A.B , f II Ohio State University, 1900; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1903; Professor of Economics, Ohio State University, 1905-1913; Professor of Economics, Wash¬ ington University, 1913-1917; Dean of the School of Commerce and Finance, 1917-; Special Expert in Marketing in the Department of Agriculture, 1917; Food Adminis¬ trator for the City of St. Louis, 1918-; Author of “Transportation and Industrial Development of the Middle West:” “Principles of Life Insurance;” “Insurance and the State;” “Principles of Insurance,” two vols.; “The Effect of the War on Insurance:” Contributor to American and European journals on economic topics; Member, Ameri¬ can Economic Association, Executive Committee; American Life Underwriters; University Club; City Club; Chamber of Commerce; Civic League; Algonquin Club; Round Table; Phi Beta Kappa. Page Thirty m The Faculty FACULTY THE COLLEGE Department of Accounting Associate Professor Robert Gordon Roukey, A.M. Associate Professor William S. Krebs, A.M. Department of Astronomy Associate Professor George Oscar James, Ph.D. Department of Botany Professor George Thomas Moore, Ph.D. Professor Benjamin Minge Duggar, Ph.D. Professor Jesse More Greenman, Ph.D. Associate Professor Edward Angus Burt, Ph.D. Mr. Joseph Warren Sf.very, A.B. Mr. Edwin Blake Payson, A.B. Department of Chemistry Professor LeRoy McMaster, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Theodore Rolly Ball, Ph.D. Mr. Elmer Edward Fickett, B.S. Mr. Earl Claudius Hamilton Davies, Ph.D. Miss Nellie Rogers, A.M. Mr. Albert Eli Goldstein, B.S. Mr. Edward Julius Ulbrecht, B.S. Department of Drawing Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. Mr. Maurice Kevin Dwyer, B.S. Department of Economics Professor William Franklin Gephart, Ph.D. Associate Professor Isaac Lippincott, Ph.D. Mr. Thomas Howard Chapman, A.B. On leave of absence. Service of the nation. - ' - - -- The Faculty Department of Education Professor Edgar James Swift, Ph.D. Mr. Wesley Raymond Wells, Ph.D. Department of English Professor John Livingston Lowes, Ph.D. Associate Professor William Roy Mackenzie, Ph.D. t Assistant Professor Francis Cox Walker, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Garnett Gladwin Sedgewick, Ph.D. Acting Assistant Professor Hun ley Whatley Herrington, Ph.D. Miss Martha Cause McCaulley, Ph.D. Miss Ethel Genevieve Sprague, A.B. Mr. Clinton Joseph Masseck, A.M. Mrs. William Roy Mackenzie, A.B. Miss Frances Howe Miller, A.M. Miss Claire Agnes Berry, A.B. Miss Susan Ferguson Fritsch, A.M. Miss Margaret Frances Johnson, A.B. Department of Finance Professor George Ellsworth Putnam, Ph.D. Department of French Professor Gaston Douay, A.M. Associate Professor Winthpop Holt Ciienery, Ph.D. Mr. John Hart Brown, A.M. Mr. Maurice Faure. Department of Geology Professor Walter Edward McCourt, A.M. Assistant Professor William Clifford Morse, A.M. Mr. Washburne Denning Shipton, M.S. Mr. Charles Wotring Studt, A.B. Miss Katharine Sloan Brookes, A.B. Department of German Professor Otto Heller, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Philipp Seiberth, A.M. Assistant Professor Archer Taylor, Ph.D. Mr. Erwin Hartung, A.M. Department of Greek Professor George Reeves Throop, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Walter Hobart Palmer, Ph.D. Mr. Shirley Howard Weber, Ph.D. Department of History Professor Roland Greene Usher, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Chauncey Samuel Boucher, Ph.D. Mr. Carl Stephenson, Ph.D. Miss Edna Victoria de Liniere, A.B. On leave of absence. In the French Army. fOn leave of absence. In the Canadian Army. Page Thirty-two ( •V The Faculty Department of History of Art Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. Mr. Maurice Kevin Dwyer, B.S. Department of Italian Associate Professor Winthrop Holt Chenery, Ph.D. Assistant Professor George Irving Dale, Ph.D. Department of Latin Professor Frederick William Shipley, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Walter Hop.art Palmer, Ph.D. Mr. Shirley Howard Weber, Ph.D. Department of Mathematics Professor Emeritus Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Ph. D. Professor William Henry Roever, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Otto Dunkei., Ph.D. Mr. Paul Reece Rider, Ph.D. Department of Mechanics Associate Professor George Oscar James, Ph.D. Department of Philosophy Associate Professor Charles Edward Cory, S.T.B., Ph.D. Mr. George Rowland Dodson, Ph.D. Department of Physical Training Mr. Richard Burr Rutherford, A.B. Miss Florence Grant, A.B. Miss Frances Lewis Bishop, M.D. Mr. Samuel Hudson McClung, A.B. Department of Physics Professor Emeritus Francis Eugene Nipher, A.M., LL.D. Associate Professor Lindley Pyle, A.M. Mr. Charles Henry Skinner, M.S. Department of Political Science Associate Professor William Alexander Robinson, Ph.D. Department of Psychology Professor Edgar James Swift, Ph.D. Department of Sociology ♦Associate Professor Charles Edward Persons, Ph.D. Department of Spanish Associate Professor Winthrop Holt Chenery, Ph.D. Assistant Professor George Irving Dale, Ph.D. On leave of absence. Service of the nation. Page Thirty-three ■ - ' 9i The Faculty Department of Zoology Professor James Francis Abbott, Ph.D. Mr. Frank Blair Hanson, A.M. Miss Myrtle M. Baumgartner Miss Helen Louise Davvley, A.B. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Civil Engineering Professor John Lane Van Ornum, C.E. Assistant Professor Ernest Oscoon Sweetser, C.E. Assistant Professor Charles Elijah Galt, C.E. Mr. William Chris. Emil Becker, B.S. Mechanical Engineering Professor Ernest Linwood Ohi.e, M.E. Assistant Professor Franz Alfred Berger, M.E. Mr. Edmund Siroicy, B.S. Mr. William Wallace MacDowell Mr. Ralph Jacob Sappf.r, B.S. Electrical Engineering Professor Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M.M.E. Assistant Professor Harry Gary Hake, M.S., E.E. Mr. Albert Shelby Blatterman, B.S. Chemical Engineering Professor I.eRoy McMaster, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Theodore Rolly Ball, Ph.D. Mr. Elmer Edward Fickett, B.S. Mr. Eari. Claudius Hamilton Davies, Ph.D. Miss Nellie Rogers, A.M. SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE Professor Holmes Smith, A.M. Professor Gabriel Ferrand, A.D.G. (Architecte diplotnedu Gouvernenient) Assistant Professor Lawrence PI ill, B.S. Mr. Austin Elliott Fitch, M. Arch. Mr. Maurice Kevin Dwyer, B.S. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE and FINANCE Professor William Franklin Gephart, Ph.D. Professor George Ellsworth Putnam, A.M. ♦Associate Professor Charles Edward Persons, Ph.D. Associate Professor Isaac Lippincott, Ph.D. Associate P’rofessor Robert G. Rodkey, A.M. Associate Professor William S. Krebs, A.M. On leave of absence. Service of the nation. Page Thirty-four y- ' C -i (] Helen Miriam Banister, K.A.4 . Arts St. Louis, Mo. Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4); Hockey Team (1, 2, 3) : V. W. C. A. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Hatchet Class Representative (2) ; Student Life (3) ; Thyrsus (1, 2, 3) ; Junior Prom. Committee; Poetry Club (3, 4) ; Chairman YV. U. Navy League (4). Student Council (4). Keod. Isabel Barrkiras, -VP Arts St. Louis, Mo. Roland LI. Buchmueller St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Collimation Club (3, 4) ; Chapel Choir (2, 3, 4) ; German Club (3). Mary Callahan, P‘I 15. Arts . St. Louis, Mo. Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Women’s Organization (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Hockey Team (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Captain (1) ; Basket-ball (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Captain (1); Baseball Team (2, 3); May Day Dances (2, 3) ; Elizabethan Pageant (2) ; Vice- Pres., McMillan Hall (4) ; Hikers’ Club, Secy.- Treas. (3, 4); Junior Prom Committee; Asso¬ ciate Editor of Hatchet. Clais. Pleiades. Page Thirty-seven Elizabeth Callaway, r. f .B. . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Y. W. C. A. (2, 3, 4) ; VV. A. A. (2, 3, 4) ; May Day Dances (2, 3). Bessie Campbell .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Y. W. C. A. (1, 2) ; W. A. A. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; May- Day Dances (1, 3) ; Thyrsus (2, 3, 4). William Corman .St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Collimation Club. Helen Crawford, A.r.St. Louis, Mo. Arts Entered from Smith College, September, 1915. Senior Hatchet Representative; W. A. A. (2, 3, 4) ; May Day Dances (2, 3) ; Y. W. C. A. (2, 3, 4) ; Shakespearean Pageant (2) ; Chairman Mobilization Committee (4). Arts and Sciences Adele Louise Dubuque, K.A.9. . . St. Louis, Mo. Arts Women’s Union; Women’s Athletic Association (1. 2, 3, 4) ; Class Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4) : Captain (2) : Class Basket-ball (3, 4) ; Class Baseball (1, 3) ; Class Tennis (Doubles) (4) ; Field Meet; Shakespearean Pageant; Junior Prom Committee. Pleiades. Genevieve Aimee Dubuque, K.A.O. . St. Louis, Mo. Arts Women ' s Union; Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Class Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Captain (3) ; Class Basket-ball (3, 4) ; Class Baseball (1, 3) ; Class Tennis (Doubles) (4) ; Field Meet; Shakespearean Pageant; Junior Prom Committee. Pleiades. Lucille Eisenkardt . . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Girls’ Athletic Association (3, 4). Susie Icie Entzeroth . . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts German Club (2) ; Y. W. C. A. Page Forty . St. Louis, Mo. Eleanor Erskine, A.l ' . Arts French Club (1) ; Secretary (1) ; Field Meet (3) ; Junior Baseball Team (3). Mamie N. Everley .St. Louis, Mo. Arts W. A. A. (1, 2, 3, 4); Hockey (1, 3) ; Y. W. C. A. (1) ; Women’s Union (3, 4). Else Marie Eyssei.i., n.li. i . Arts . St. Louis, Mo. Marguerite A. Fisci-i Arts St. Louis, Mo. German Club (2, 3, 4); Secretary (2); German Club Play (3) ; Vice-Pres., German Club (3). Page Forty-one Page Forty-three Arts and Sciences Samuel B. Grant, B.e.ir., N.2.N. . St. Louis, Mo. Medicine Lock and Chain. Wilma Grant, A.4 . Sparta, Ill. Arts Leland Stanford (1, 2). Goucher College (3). Heriiert Gronkmever St. Louis, Mo. Mechanical Engineering Engineers’ Council (Secy.-Treas.) (4). A. S. M. E. Milo Lawrence Heideman, A.K.A., T.n.E. St. Louis, Mo. Arts Class Swimming (1, 3) ; Pre-Medical Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Treasurer (3) ; Freshman Advisor (4) ; Washington Union. Page Forty- five Fred A. Jostes, A.K.A., N.2.X. . . St. Louis, Mo. Medicine Student Council (4) ; Glee Club Trip (2) ; W. U. Pre-Medical Association (1, 2) ; Shakespearean Pageant Cast (2); Pep Patrol (1, 2); W. U. Choir (1, 2); Treasurer; Hatchet Representative (2) ; German Club Annual (2) ; W. U. Chemical Society (1, 2) ; W. U. A. A.; W. U. U. Walter A. Kami-, B.r.st. Louis, Mo. Arts Entered from Leland Stanford U., 1915. President Senior Class; Business Manager 1918 Hatchet: Business Manager Student Life (4) ; Regent Advisor (4) ; Student Council (4) ; Secre¬ tary University Union (4) ; Pep Patrol (4). Artus. Pralma. Eugenie M. Keaney . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Patrick H. Kennedy, K.A., 4’.11.II. Youngstown. Ohio Medicine Basket-ball (1, 2); Pep Patrol (1, 2). Obelisk Society. Lock and Chain. Viola N. Kerckhoff . Arts . University City, Mo. Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Y. W. C. A. (1,2,3, 4). Mae Levy .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Hikers’ Club (4) ; Hockey (1, 2, 4) ; Women’s Council (4); May Day Dance (3). Clais. Keod. Grace Darling Lewis, . St. Louis, Mo. Arts: Entered from Harris Teachers’ College, September, 1915. May Day Dances (2, 3) ; Shakespearean Pageant Principal (2) ; Thyrsus (2, 3, 4) ; McMillan Vaudeville (3) ; Y.W.C.A. Robert Woodgrift Macdonald St. Louis, Mo. Electrical Engineering Class Sergeant-at-Arms (4) : Freshman Advisor (4); Junior Prom Committee (3); A.I.E.E.: Secretary (3) ; Chairman (4). Page Forty-six : • ' «. 4 ■ •.-ASJeiv ' - Marie Maull, A.I’. St. Louis, Mo Arts Class Vice-President (3) ; Women’s Athletic Association (2, 3, 4) ; May Day Dances (3) ; Shakespearean Pageant (2) ; Y.W.C.A. (2). Constance McLaughlin Arts St. Louis, Mo. Katherine McNulty, K.A.0. . Arts Rachel Metcalfe, K.A.0. . St. Louis, Mo. Omaha, Neb. Arts Thyrsus (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Vice-President (4) ; Annual Play (2); Student Life (1, 2, 3, 4); Exchange Editor (3) ; Associate Editor (4) ; Women’s Council (3, 4) ; Vice-President (4) ; McMillan Hall Association; Treasurer (2) ; President (3) : May Day Dances (1, 2) ; Hockey Team (2, 3, 4) ; Junior Prom Committee; French Club (1). Pleiades. Keod. Page Forty-seven . St. Louis, Mo. E. Gladys Moone, -VI ' . . Arts Hockey (4) ; May Day Dances (1, 21 ; Shake¬ spearean Pageant (2) ; French Club (1, 2, 3. 4) : Secretary (4) ; Hikers’ Club. Marguerite Forrester Morrill . Webster Groves, Mo. Arts Women’s Athletic Association Board: Manager of Canoeing and Rowing; Hockey (3, 4) ; May Dav Dances (31 ; French Club (2, 3) ; Hikers’ Club. Elias Adolph Neuman . . . .St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Class Football (2) ; Class Basket-ball (2, 3) : Varsity Track (2). Collimation Club. Jane K. Pelton, n.B.4 .St. Louis, Mo. Architecture Hatchet Board (3); Junior Prom Committee: Sophomore Honors; Architectural Year Book Committee. Page Forty-nine Arts and Sciences Walter V. L. Pittman, A.IC.A. . . St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Class Sergeant-at-Arms (3) ; Junior Prom Com¬ mittee. I. S. A. M. C. Collimation Club. Marion Celeste Plank . . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Women’s Athletic Association (4) ; May Day Dances (2); Y.W.C.A. (3, 4). Norville H. Predock Electrical Engineering A.I.E.E. . Maplewood, Mo. Jessamine Humphrey Price, K.A.e. . St. Louis, Mo. Arts Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4); Sec¬ retary (2) ; Vice-President (3) ; President (4) • Hockey (1, 2, 3, 4); Captain (4); Basket-bali (1, 2, 3); Captain (2); Tennis (1, 2, 3, 4); Singles Champion (3) ; Doubles Champion (3) ■ Swimming (1, 2, 3) ; Class Secretary (3) • Asso¬ ciate Editor, 1918 Hatchet; Junior Prom Com¬ mittee; Hikers’ Club (3, 4). Clais. Pleiades. Athletic “W.” Page Fifty Milton J. Schlagenhauf . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Bessie Aspley Seifert . . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts Samuel W. Shapiro . . .St. Louis, Mo. Arts John Jones Sharon, BiO.n. . . . Carrollton, Ill. Arts President, Student Body (4) ; Class President (3); Editor-in-Chief, 1918 Hatchet; Editor-in- .Chief, Eliot Literary Magazine (4) ; Thyrsus (1, 2, 3, 4); Annual Play (2); Class Football ( 2 ). Art us. “13.” Pralma. Page Fifty-hvo - — • Charles Edward Sharp, Jr., -.X. Civil Engineering Thyrsus (3, 4) ; President (4) ; Student Life (2, 3, 4) ; Circulation Manager (3) ; Associate Editor (4) ; Sport Editor (4) ; Chairman, Junior Prom Committee; Freshman Advisor (4); Class Track (2, 3) ; Varsity Track (2) ; Class Baseball (1) Civics Club (2); Pep Patrol (2, 3, 4); Secretary-Treasurer (3) ; President (4) : Mem¬ ber, Washington Union Governing Board (4). Collimation Club, President (4). 13.” Pralma. Anna Gibb Sheppard, A.r. Arts St. Louis, Mo. Women’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4); Student Life (2, 3, 4) ; Society Editor (4) : Hockey (2, 3) ; Vice-President, McMillan Hall (4) ; May Day Dances (1, 2, 3) ; Class Secretary (4); Elizabethan Pageant (2): Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4). Phillip S. Siteman Civil Engineering Collimation Club. St. Louis, Mo. Harry Dorsett Smith, X.A.rt . . East St. Louis, Ill. Electrical Engineering Class Treasurer (4) ; A.I.E.E. (2, 3. 4) ; Vice- Chairman (4). Page Fifty-three --- Katherine Starbuck, n.B.4 . . . St. Louis, Mo. Arts May Day Dances (1); Shakespearean Pageant (2); Junior Prom Committee; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Cabinet (4) ; Delegate, Student Volunteer Conference (4). Joseph F. Stickley, A.X.2 , . .St. Louis, Mo. Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineers’ Club. Obelisk. Erwin P. Stupp, K.2.St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Class Treasurer (3); Junior Prom Committee; Pep Patrol (1, 2). I. S. A. M. C. Collimation Club. Marjorie Thompson, A.r. . ; . Ferguson, Mo. Arts Women’s Council (3, 4) ; President (4) ; Secre¬ tary (3) ; Honor Committee (3, 4) ; Thyrsus (1, 2, 3, 4); Librarian (3); Secretary (4); Women ' s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Wo¬ men’s Union (3, 4) ; Vice-President (4) ; Secre¬ tary, Middle Western Intercollegiate Association for Student Self-Government; Y.W.C.A.; Cabinet (2, 3, 4) ; President (3) ; Delegate, Estes Park Conference (2) ; Class Vice-President (2) ; May Day Dances (1); Junior Prom Committee; Poetry Club (3, 4). Keod. Page Fifty-four (7 Arts and Science: Elmer L. Werner . . . .St. Charles, Mo. Mechanical Engineering Harvey Lester White .... Normal, Ill. Arts Alice K. Wills, AJ.St. Louis, Mo. Arts President, McMillan Hall (4) ; Thyrsus (3, 4) ; Librarian (4) ; Women’s Council (2, 4) ; Wo¬ men’s Athletic Association (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Y.W.C.A. (1, 2, 3, 4; ; Delegate, Holliater, Mo., Convention (Summer, 1917) ; Shakespearean Pageant (2) ; May Day Dances (1, 2, 3) ; Baseball (3) ; French Club (1) ; T. C. O. Z. Keod. Archie D. Carr . . Medicine William I. Koenig . Mechanical Engineering Frederick E. Morgan . Arts George P. Schmidt Arts Page Fifty-five Leona V. Shepherd Arts Peter F. Smith, Jr. . Arts Ernest E. Tremain Medicine St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Me. St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis, Mo. . Havana. Cuba Maplewood, Mo. is ' ? 19i Juniors Junior Class Roll Daisy Anneli.e Balson Fences Martha Barbour Gladys Marie Beal Mary Elizabeth Blackburn Sarah Thayer Booth Jeannette Wilhelmina Brinkman Jean Ingram Brookes Dorothy Brown Otto Jacob Burian Margaret May Caffall Elizabeth Chapin Mildred Edith Cohn May Bouchelle Cornwall Susan Coultas Mary Esther Darley William Joseph Dieckmann Helen Dyer Arthur Esserman Helen Ette Mary Jane Fields Marguerite Fleming William James Anderson, Jr. Martin Morris Blufston John Searlf.s Boulden Everett Lee Brooks Frank Jack Danglade George Fred Driemeyer Chris Louis Fontana Samuel Gregory Hallett, Reed Bone Harkness Harold Hall Harvey College Lois Stevenson Forsythe Minna Louise Fox Mable Freeman Carla Louise Gevve Adele Grafeman Mariel Esther Hafner Adolph Mason Hoenny Clara Frieda Hopman Dorothy Jackes Helen James Helen Tattersall Johnston Mildred Lucile Kalbfleisch Marion Elizabeth Keene Margaret Knight Bertha Johanne Koehler Helen Sarah Korngoi.d Harry William Kroeger Helen Johnston Kropp Randolph Smith Lyon Margaret Gray Martin Wilditii Lucile Martin Martha Meyer School of Engineering Charles Crabb Johann Arthur Albert Joraschicy Charles Harry Katz Harold Ellsworth Mateer Lester Solomon Munchweiler William Mason Perry Sam Polinsky Eugene Charles Renard Albert William Roth Max Starkloff Muencii Mildred Edith Phelps Faith Genevieve Putnam Margaretta Sophia Rapp Margaret Ellen Ray Junietta Emily Rei.i.er Frances Allene Richardson Lucile Sophie Riedel Nellie Robnett Alice Dorothy Rubelman Norma Elizabeth Sante Inez Marie Schageman Olivia Stocke Schroeter Grace Estelle Sewing Zelda Ysobei. Siegfried Esther Rebecca Simon Lillian Laura Stupp Lucy Taylor Olive Margaret Underhill Hester Wade Mildred Longfellow Wass Mary Irma Willett Grace Miller Woods Leon Schwartzman Philip Lf.on Siteman Walter Joseph Skrainka Herbert Arthur Strain Erwin Peter Stupp Irwin William Tureczek Harold Morgan Van Horn John Richard Weipert Sidney Weiss School of Architecture Burton Leonard Austin Frank Brien Rowan School of Commerce and Finance Charles Aucustus Cruikshank Henry Philip Duncker Page Fifty-eight is I •4 § ) Juniors The Junior Prom. HE war played a great part in deciding the activities to be undertaken by the Class of 1919. The class started out in its Freshman year with an enrollment of approximately two hundred and fifty students, of which number about one hundred and twenty-five were men. Now the class number has been cut down to a little less than one hun¬ dred. The men number thirty-three. When these facts are considered it is readily seen why a curtailment in some form or other had to take place. At a meeting in February it was decided not to have the Junior Prom which has been one of the time-honored customs of the class. It was thought that the expenses, besides being con¬ trary to the customs of the time, would be rather high for the limited number of the class to bear. It was decided to substitute, however, an informal dance to be given later in the year. j ■ Page Fifty-nine I I Sophomores Pre5.At)|urW Becker-V.P. Price 5ecDorol)p] if I erc er e).d!tc l. Edward L JP)(Wle3. rjargercj ' LK egdr -Clp’le.i Wclirger , -.. ' .,V : Sophom ores Sophomore Class Roll College Evadne Alden Carmen Sylva Kahn Lyle McDowell Allen Dorothy Mary Kalbfkll Clara Bell Aloe Charles Burton Keeble Beth Barnett William Benjamin Knight Edward Coleman Barnidge Herminie Lena Kurz Francis Harold Barnidge Stella Louise Lange Bertram Louis Bersciie Martin Lasersohn Thomas Charles Birusall Ruth Leeper Mabel Blumenstock Mary Parks Lewis Amalia Carolina Boettler Curtis Harry Lour Margaret Elizabeth Braun Sheridan Knight Loy Theodore Christian Braun Gertrude Augusta Lucas William Hugo Biioeder Louise Elise Luedekinc Fern Brokaw Frances Woodward Mabley Dorothea Regina Burbach Helen Louise May Howard Burt Lansden McCandless Francis John Canei-a Josephine Margaret Michael Morris Carnovsky Warren Seward Miller Carol Skinner Cole Paul Franklin Morse Elsie Jane Cook Gladys Mueller Harvey Mubd Cravens Irene Ciiusius Mueller Helen Curtiss Judith Maria Nelson Reinhold Emil Dietzchold Joseph Newman Marie Odille Dodge George Nobbe Martha Emily Dyer Nelson Tinsley Pearson Irwin Herman Eskeles Bernard Wesley Peck Dorothy Mary Falk Howard Bryan Poole Hazel Kathryn Farmer Mary Frances Price Margery Esther Finigan Leslie Elridce Prichard Clare Bessie Flanagan Justus Bulkley Rice Julia Marie Flanagan Carl Rippin Hazeljane Friton Beulah Rodes Ralph Follen Fuchs Mignon Jeanette Rosenthal Marian Gardner Sylvia Birdie Rosenzweig J. Walter Goldstein Marie Rothman Maud Emma Guhman Walter Edward Roush Dorothy Haase Abe Sachar Margaret Haase Theodore Schindewolf Theodore Henry Hanser Celeste Marie Schramm Mildred Asbury Hess Ben Druze Senturia Dorothy Garfielda IIetlage Adele Shea Virginia Hilliker Frank Havelock Simmons Fannie Hoffman John Sperandeo Armin C. Hofsommer Charles Erwin Staudixger Mary Hope Mabel Williams Stillwell Elizabeth Ruth Hunt Anne Leonore Studt Helen Eliza Hutchens Frank Justin Tracy Tane Durfee Tohns Irl George Them a in Tohn Jay Johns Mao-te Tsao Florence Sarah Johnston Elfrieda Augusta Uthoff Julia Annette Jonah Minnie Anna Vavra ) Page Sixty-two r - - ---- — . ' ' • ' -9ie Sophomores — === Z if | M) College Bryant Brey Voris Harry Osborn Vosburgh William Charles Wayne Fred William Wedel Dean Welch Pauline Westphaelinger William Edward White Harry William Wiese Mary Jean Williams Emma Wolff Roberta Woodson Faith Lillian Young School of Engineering Donald Berry Baker Robert Lee Bankson Arthur William Becker, Jr. Elmer Henry Bender George FIenry Berger Edward Xavier Boeschenstein Edward Lindley Bowles Herbert Frederick Briner Walter Estaugh Browne Douglas Miller Bryden James Robert Chandler Marshall Tilden Cree Harold Hite Francis George DeWitt Graves Warren Cobb Healey Calvin Hermer Morris Jacks Ray Outhouse Jackson Sidney Pockels Kollme Richard Henry Kremer William Frederick Krenning Leonard Harold Theodore Lange Wilson Lewis Robert Lee Maupin, Jr. Jamerson Carson McCormack Samuel Marion McElvain Barclay Francis Meador Charles Edward Morgan Lawrence Myers Russell Braxton Nash Glenn Roth Newby Edward Joseph O’Brien Joseph Razek Lloyd Bryan Ringo Robert Glenn Sheriff Nicholas Ralph Skrainka Charles Thomas Spalding Dewey St. John Don Tripodi Raymond Roche Tucker William Roth well Watts Eugene Stix Weil Robert Woods School of Architecture Van Alvin Denison Edward Wellington Mateer Clemens Nicklaus James Jasper Searcy, Jr. Page Sixty-three M mmm ; : .y Freshmen Freshman Class Roll Oliver Abel Rogers Bradley Allen Ma rgaret Rachel Anderson Montgomery Drummond Anderson Charles Donald Andrews Lucy Rogers Andrews Pauline Elizabeth Annin Martha Barkley Harry Alvin Barth Jett McCormick Batts Roland Richard Bauer Marie Esther Baumann Norman Begemann PJarry Edward Bergsikker Robert McCoy Berkley Dorothy Ester Bernet Ira Edward Berry David Biederman Virginia Blome Black josiAii Clendennen Boggs, Jr. Elmer Oesterle Breckenridge Alvina Peakle Brickey Frances Broermann Louis Broida J ames Barrett Brown Margaret Millard Browne Marion Leonie Broyer Leliaetta Marie Bruns Norma Elaine Burgee Mildred Roselund Candy John Baptist Canepa Prudance Ethel Ciiappell Mildred Burt Child William John Coburn Forrest Lee Cogswell Amelia Josephine Connor Emerson Lewis Conzelman Warren Holmes Cowdery Ruth Elizabeth Cunliff Orson Lloyd Curtis Katherine Lucille Cushing Fanita Damie James Harold Danglade Kenneth Gordon Davis Elmer Matthew Dax Virginia de Liniere Marian Denyven Walter Earl Dickie Kathryn Angeline Dillie Grace Gregory Donnelly John Eugene Eggers Hup.ert Eichhammer Eleanor Rosborough Engel William Hermann Engelsmann College Martin Francis Eng.man, Jr. Mary Ethyl Evans Robert David Evans Florence Funsten Forbes Hilda Foreman Ruth Deloros Fraser Loren King Freeman Corinne Lois Fuller Ruth Princle George David Marshall Gibson Edward Henry Giessow, Jr. Wilbur William Goessling Walter Goldman Helen Jeanette Goldstein Lester Irwin Goldstene Arthur Summerville Goodall Romaine Palmer Grant William Carlton Green Myron Guthrie Grigg Ruth Octavia Gronert Vera Gilda Gruner Mollie Gubin Ophelia Doratiiea Hack I one Ann Louise Hagnauer Elizabeth Regina Harter Lucille Clara Hausciiulte Esther FIay Alvin Herman Hellmich Herbert George Herchenreder Jean FIerrin Henry Guy PIerring Reginald Westall Heys Melba Lloyd Hill Marie Olive Hodges Beth M. Holloway Henrietta Josephine Hosek Esther Mary Johnson Scott Johnson Waldo Lee Johnston Bertha Jorndt Robert Louis Kimmel John Henry Kinealy, Jr. Marquise Klepper Esther Laura Knapp Elmer Cornelius Koch Maurice Jay Kopelowitz Margarets Charlotte Kronsbein Albert Bernhardt Kurrus Fitziiugh Lee Adele Rose Levy Joanna May Lindsey Albert Drey Lippmann Leon Lipschitz Lincoln Ulysses Lister William Herman Luyties John Boyd Maize Marjorie Lindell Manger Josephine Marguerite Marks Eugenia Louise Marsh Lucille Dorothy Martin Melvin Meyer Mathes James William McConnell Vivien Lois McDaris Pinckney Glasgow McElwee Dorothy McGinnis Ken nett Rosborough McMath Alfred Arnold Meyer Evelyn Ripley Miller Ruth Agnes Moffat Susan Elizabeth Moore Aimee Selma Morgan Dorothy Morris Marshall Royle Moseley Elmer Mueller Alice Mary Mullally Craig Wilson Munter Loretta Murphy Carolyn Taylor Nettleshif Dorothy Adele Neuhoff Margaret Niekamp Josephine Nitschke Mosco Fernando Nunez Ann O’Neill Viola Spangler Orth Eleanor Belle Osgood William O’Sullivan, Jr. Ida Louise Parker Lillie Pattiz Charles Edward Paule Lucile Pearson Laura Catherine Pickel Frances Armina Pinkel Abe Platt Thelma Claudine Pollard Ethel Lynne Pulliam Velma Majorie Reinhart Clifford Campbell Rens Hanna Evelyn Rose Alfred Nathaniel Sack Elliott Brown Scherr Adele Catherine Scherrer George Albert Schlagenhauf Martin Henry Sciilieper Frederick Carey Shipley Meta Vivian Small Leo Sophir Edward Spiegelhalter Phineas David Stahl Herbert Arthur Stainton Marion Waller Staples Erwin Steinberg Page Sixty-six sv- tax-- vu• : - Freshmen College Janet Stern Gladys Marguerite Stone Grace Rowland Strong Genevra Wyatt Sturdevant Doris Mary Talbot Gladys Elizabeth Tate Morris Tenenbaum Eldred Victor Thiehoff Helen Tholen John William Thompson Mary Olive Thornton Lillian Rosalind Tiger Israel Treiman Frances Summa Treutler Florence Turcott Ben Franklin Turner Henry John Ulrich Alma Cashion Urban Rachel Fram Vogel Lillian Merwin Wait Irwin Walker, Jr. Lida Crenshaw Waller Gertrude Lynn Walther Louis Wasserman Anita Page Weakley Richard Weisert Albert Frederick Welle, Jr. Leland Stanford Wetzel Mary Anielka Whaley Earle Cooper Whitley Gilbert Leslie Whitley George Melville Whitson, Jr. Richard Alderson Whitton Kenneth Wilson Thomas Wimber Charlotte Wolf John Wolfe, Jr. Elizabeth May Wood Eunice Virginia Lice Woods Frances Woods Warren Moore Weight Robert Everett Young Louise Zelnicker Edwin Zimmerman School of Engineering Mark Joseph Anderson W ' infield Scott Anderson William Walter Aulf.pp Edgar Alloy Bai.dus Lyman Fuller Barrows Warren Raymond Becker Theodore Albin Bf.ffa Julius Block William Theodore Both man John Sylvan Bowers William Casimir Burgdorff Joseph Bernard Catanzaro Henri Chomf.au John Driscoll Conaty Clifford John Cook Frank Corby Albert Cox Leslie Irwin Dean Herbert Derks Bernard Carl Dietrich Richard Wray Drake Major Bloom Einstein Chase Clement Feldmann Lester Frank Newell Leslie Freeman Fred Granville Frisbie Martin Frisch Vincent Strother Gaines James Lewis Garst Phillip Percy Glick Henry Christopher Griesedieck Joseph Rawlins, Hickman, Jr. John Bryan Hinchey Henry Ridge Hutchinson Raymond Israel William Henry Jacobs Henry Gray Kilpatrick Earl Frederick Klippel Otto August Krone Emil Gust Kuichn Walter Edward Lang John Gordon Lewis Abe Manuel Magidson Clarence Edwin Mange Kipling Masen Ronald McCune Octavius Mendez Donald Grant Miller Robert Butler Miller Arthur Thomas Nash Ghion Scott Parsons Sam Leonard Perlman William Henry Petring Robert Warren Pilcher Edith Balson Samuel Wilks Bihr, Jr. Douglas Condie Richard Armstrong Farnsworth Page Sixty-seven School of Architecture Mildred Louise Graf Elsa Mathilda Griesser Carl Oliver Hoffmann Fred Kramer John Shelby Pipkin John Raymond Puig Herbert Louis Rauch James Virgil Rohan Robert Earl Salveter Lisle Chester Sciiaub Elmer John Schewe Fred William Schramm Walter Francis Schueler Raymond Sciiuermann Ralph Lloyd Shriner Jacob Emanuel Silberman Edison Herbert Smith Charles Logan Stone, Jr. Henry Quirk Stoutz Oscar Century Stupp Charles Myer Tarlow William John Urban Karl Kittson Van Meter Byron Lester Vaughan William Albert Wetteroth John Henry Winn John Edwin Withers Ralph Edwin Woeriieide Robert Edwin Woods Ernesto Wulff Sam Zadeck Henry Gesa Zehr Roy Eugene Lowey Adrian Wn.soN Gf.rad William Woi.f William Norval Wright t Unclassified Students College Anna Anderson Foster Goldspouough Barnard Charlie Henderson Beasley Anne Montgomery Block Foster Hightower Brown Herbert Edward Bryant Robert Holdren Burd Thomas Stowers Burnett William Woodward Case Elizabeth Mortimer Champion Sarah Ross Brown Cole Clarence Drew Cowdery Sarah Isabel Croxton Charles Augustus Cruiksiiank Clara Louise Danclade Riley Russell Deal Henry Philip Duncker George Encelsmann, Jr. Mrs. Andrew Lugar Finlay Fred Richard Foelsch Arnold Dehner Fries Lynn Hamilton Gamble Stella Anna Garden Russell Gibson Isabel Donnelly Glynn Mary Randolph Gordon Marion Greenfield Florence Groschan Rudolph Gruen Dorothy Hackman Dorothy Hart Clarence Elmer Hasting Florence Hendricks Leaii Weiner ITirsh Henry Anthony Hoeffer Marie Nolen Houston Carl Otto Kamp Sarah Amelia Kennedy Jessie Allen Koeciiig Karol Abraham Korngold William Kountz Mrs. Gustav Lippmann Wesley Lueders George Kerr Macbeth William Claiborne Martin Margaret Elinor Maxwell Marie Catherine McCloskey Lex Glin McCutchen Frances Bingham McIntyre Lawrence John McKim Charles Corbett McMtnn Allen Ford Modisette Eugenia Frances Nolen Theodore Oberman E. Kate Owen Haysler Ai.len Poague Payne Harry Ratnkr Marguerite Lucii.e Reid Ethel Louise Reith Sarah Leah Rifkin Enos Jennings Rowley Mary Hamilton Skeen William Bigler Spotts Fielding Peery Stapleton Hyman Gordon Stein George Anastas Stoychoff Alice May Vallette Martha Theodosia Young Harry Gibson Zelle Louis Gabriel Zelson School of Architecture Elmer Brunson Daniel Carroll School of Commerce and Finance Ralph Cole Hall Wilfrid Burritt Verity William Woodward Case Riley Russell Deal Jacob Forth, Jr. Aaron Harold Shanvet n Richard L. Goode, A.B., A.M., LL.D. ... ICHARD L. GOODE, Dean of the Faculty of the Law School, born in Henry County, Kentucky, February 4, 1855; A.B., Drury College, 1876; M.A., Drury College; LL.D., Drurv College; Principal High School of Springfield, Mo.; Superintendent of Schools, Springfield, Mo.; practiced law, 1879-1901; doing general professional business, acting for four years as attorney for the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railway Company; also served as city attorney of the city of Springfield, as President of the Board of Education for six years, and was for years one of the trustees of Drury College. In January, 1901, he took his seat as a member of the St. Louis Court of Appeals, having been elected to that office in November, 1900: remained a member of said Court until September, 1910, when he became counsel for the Mercantile Trust Company of St. Louis, in which capacity he served until January, 1915. Became Dean of Washington University Law School, July, 1915. Page Seventy Richard Livingston Goode, A.M., LLD. William Winchester Keysor, I.itt.B., LL.B Frederick August Wislizenus, A.B., LL.B. Tyrrell Williams, A.B., LL.B. . Joseph Henry Zumbalen, LL.B. Ernest Bancroft Conant, A.B., LL.B Rhodes Estil Cave, A.B., LL.B. . Edward Cranch Eliot, A.M., LL.B. . Jacob Marx Lashly, LL.B. Thomas George Rutledge, A.B., LL.B Real Property Lecturer on International Law Lecturer on Bankruptcy Lecturer on Insurance Law Page Seventy-one The Law School Senior Law Class of 1918 Vi Foster H. Brown Officers President . . . Foster Highwater Brown Vice-President . Gertrude M. Kipp Secretary-Treasurer . Vernon L. Turner Student Council .. James H. Kei.ley Hatchet Representative . John Grossman Page Seventy-three fi 1 : ' Foster Hightower Brown, 1 .A. I . St. Louis, Mo. Pres. Law Class (4). Managing Editor, St. Louis Law Review. John Grossman . St. Louis, Mo. Varsity Football (2, 3, 4). Varsity Basket-ball (2). Class Basket-ball (2, 3). “13.” Stanford Hollocher, K.2., I A.4 . St. Louis, Mo. Thomas S. A. Horn, A.K.A. St. Louis, Mo. Glee Club (3, 4) : Vice-Pres., Combined Clubs (4) Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Pres. (2). German Club (1, 2, 3, 4). Washington Union. Page Seventy-four Page Seventy-five The Law School James H. Kelley, K.2., 4 .A. i . . . Fayette, Mo. Class President (2). Basket-ball (2, 3); Captain (3). Baseball (3). Student Council (4). Washington Union, Law Representative (4). Law Librarian (4). Gertrude M. Kipi , n.M.A. . . .St. Louis, Mo. Clais. Hockey (1). William Claidorxe Martin, K.A., A.OF. . Troy, Mo. Pep Patrol (2, 3, 4) ; Vice-Pres. (4). Treas., Pan-Hellenic Ass’n (4). Dr. W. F. Martin, F.A.I’. . . .St. Louis, Mo. M.D. Degree, Hahnemann Medical College. Page Seventy-six ( 1 Irving G. McCann . . Webster Groves, Mo. A.B. Degree, Southern University. A. M. Degree, University of Chicago. B. D. Degree, Vanderbilt University. Harry John Neuling . . Ellis Grove, Mo. Haysler Allen Poague, 2.A.E., A.0.d . . Clinton, Mo. LL.B. Degree, Cumberland University. Member of Editorial Bd., St. Louis Law Review. Washington Union. Vernon L. Turner .... Glendale, Mo. The Law School The Law School v.v The Middle Law Class of 1919 Members Herbert Edward Bryant Clarence Drew Cowdery Stanley Berkson Friedman Joseph Harry Grand Fritz Kluender Grolock Clarence Elmer Hastings Henry Anthony Hoeffer Hiram Newton Holladay Elton Marvin Hyder Carl Otto Kamp Charles Keebaugh Andrew William Kurrus Ruby Laventhal Ben Phillips Manheimer Paul B. McCann, A.B. Robert Henry McRoberts Harold Holmes Milligan Irl Benjamin Rosenblum, John Joseph Sheerin Will Mont Smith William Edwin Stewart Sol Weinberg Murrell Wilson Fred Morris Wolfe Frederick Herder Wulfing A.B. Page Seventy-eight m 19| Members Edward A. Barbour, Jr. Julius Henry Frederick Becker Robert Tiiomas Burch Robert Holdren Burd George Engelsmann, Jr. Erwin Jacob Doerner Stella Anna Garden Elmer J. Gaylord, Jr. William Edwin Guy, A.B. Ervin Christian Hartman John Burton Higgins, A.B. Karol Abraham Korngold Wesley August Leuders Elliott W. Major, Jr. John Waterhouse Mather Lawrence John McKim Allen Ford Modisette Gilbert Hempstead Meyers Paul Frank Plummer Harry Payne Ratner Enos Jennings Rowley Sol Rubenstein Don Onnis Russell Aaron Harold Shan vet Fielding Peery Stapleton Hyman Gordon Stein Max Weinberg Harry Gibson Zelle Dominick Vincent Gallo John Hogan Lon Kelly Albert Levin Guy Mullen Fred Lewis Naumer F. Joe Reiciiman Samuel Rizer Frank Stuart Yantis Harold Ruel Page Eighty Wesley A. Lueders Officers President . Wesley A. Lueders Vice-President . Herold Ruel Secretary-Treasurer .... Edwin Gray Hatchet Representative .... Allen Modisette Student Council . E. W. Major, Jr. Sergeant-at-Arms . John Higgins Page Eighty-one Philip A. Shaffer, Ph.D. Q HIL1P A. SHAFFER, Ph.D., Professor of Biological Chemistry and Dean of the Medical School. A.B., West Virginia University, 1900; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1904; Assistant, Fellow, and Instructor in Chemical Pathology, Cornell University, 1904-1910; Resident Assistant Pathological Chemist, McLean Hospital, Waverley, Mass., 1900-03; Chemist to Huntington Fund for Cancer Research, 1906-10; Pathological Chemist and Head of Chemical Section of the Laboratory of Bellevue Hospital, 1909-10; Chemist to the Barnes Plospital. Now on leave of absence in the war service of the United States Government. Page Eighty-four ( f Philip Anderson Shaffer. Ph.D. George Canby Robinson, M.D. Edward W. Saunders, M.D. Norman B. Carson, M.D. John B. Shapleigii, M.D. George Dock, Sc.D., M.D. Joseph Erlanger, M.D. JEugenf. L. Opie, M.D. Robert J. Terry, M.D. tFred Towsley Murphy, M.D. Lea Loeb, M.D. . •William M. Marriott, M.D. Benjamin M. Duggar, Ph.D. Louis H. Burlingiiam, M.D. Henry Schwarz, M.D. Paul Y. Tupper, M.D. Francis R. Fry, M.D. Harvey G. Mudd, M.D. George M. Tuttle, M.D. . Elsworth S. Smith. M.D. Arthur E. Ewing, M.D. . Adolf Alt, M.D. Greenfield Sluder, M.D. . Martin E. F.ngman, M.D. tBoRDEN S. Veeder, M.D. . Ernst F. Tiedermann, M.D. Albert E. Taussig, M.D. Ernst Sachs, M.D. . Dennis E. Jackson, Ph.D.. M.D. Charles H. Danforth, Ph.D. JNatiianiei. Allison, M.D. Robert A. Gesell, M.D. rSiDNEY I. Schwab, M.D. . Philip C. Jeans, M.D. Montrose T. Burrows. M.D. JHarry S. Crossen, M.D. . Willard Bartlett, M.D. . fViLRAY P. Blair, M.D. Meyer Wiener, M.D. George Gellhorn, M.D. Fred J. Taussig, M.D. fMALVERN B. Clopton, M.D. Francis M. Barnes, Jr.. M.D. Ralph Walter Mills, M.D. Edwin E. Baumgartner, Ph.D. Albert F. Koetter, M.D . John Roberts Caulk, M.D. Page Eighty-five Dean of Medical and Professor of Biological Chemistry Acting Dean and Associate Professor of Medicine Professor Emeritus of Diseases of Children and Clinical Midwifery Professor Emeritus of Surgery Clinical Professor of Otology Professor of Medicine Professor of Physiology Professor of Pathology Professor of Anatomy Professor of Surgery Professor of Comparative Pathology Professor o Pediatrics Acting Professor of Biological Chemistry Lecturer on Hospital Administration 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 Professor Emeritus of Ophthalmology Clinical Professor of Laryngology and Rhiiwlogy Clinical Professor of Dermatology Professor of Clinical Pediatrics Associate Professor of Bacteriology Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine Associate Professor of Surgery Associate Professor of Pharmacology Associate Professor of Anatomy Associate Professor of Clinical Orthopedic Surgery Associate Professor of Physiology Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology Associate Professor of Pediatrics Associate Professor of Pathology Associate in Clinical Gynecology Associate in Clinical Surgery Associate in Clinical Surgery Associate in Clinical Ophthalmology Associate in Clinical Gynecology Associate in Clinical Gynecology Associate in Clitiical Surgery Associate in Clinical Psychiatry Associate in Clinical Medicine Associate in Anatomy Associate in Clinical Otology Associate in Clinical Genito-Urinary Surgery I9i 1 The M e d ical School i Barney Brooks, M.D. Associate in Surgery V . f Ai.an M. Chesney, M.D. Associate in Medicine Jean Valjean Cooke, M.D. Associate (Elect) in Pediatrics Edward R. Allen, Ph.D. Acting Associ ate in Biological Chemistry Malcolm A. Bliss, M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Psychiatry Walter Baumgartner, M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Medicine William Emil Sauer. M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Laryngology Henry I. Storrs, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Obstetrics 1 William H. Mook, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Dermatology Fredrick T. Fahlen, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Medicine Jerome E. Cook, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Medicine Arthur O. Fisiif.r, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Surgery 1. eland B. Alford, M.D. . Instructor in Neurology Grandison D. Royston, M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Obstetrics Henry E. Miller, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology Charles A. Gundelach, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology fLLEWELLYN SALE, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Medicine Adrien S. Bleyer, M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Pediatrics Louis H. Hempelmann, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Medicine f Hugh McCulloch, M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Pediatrics tHoward Homer Bell, M.D. Instructor in Pathology Herbert S. Gasser, M.D. . Instructor in Physiology f Frank N. Wilson, M.D. . Instructor in Medicine George C. Mackav, LL.B. Instructor in Medical Jurisprudence Harry W. Lyman, M.D. . Instructor in Clinical Otology Iohn Green, Jr., M.D. Instructor in Clinical Ophthalmology William E. Shaham, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Ophthalmology Tacoh J. Singer, M.D. Instructor in Clinical Medicine Samuel W. Clausen, M.D. Instructor in Pediatrics Adolph G. Schlossstein, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Obstetrics James A. O’Reilly, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Orthopedic Surgery Julius H. Gross, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology tW alter Fischel, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Medicine Louis K. Guggenheim, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Medicine fM eredith R. Johnston, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Otology Quitman U. Newell, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Pediatrics Walter C. G. Kirchner, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Obstetrics Charles E. Hyndman, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Surgery Phelps G. Hurford, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Surgery Charles A. Stone, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Pediatrics William M. Robertson, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Orthopedic Surgery tHENRY M. Young, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Surgery Frank H. Ewerhardt, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Surgery Omar S. Sevin, M.D. Assistant iti Clinical Medicine Otto H. Schwartz, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Surgery tW illiam H. Olmsted, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Obstetrics t Drew W. Luten, M.D. Assistant in Medicine f Joseph W Larimore, M.D. Assistant in Medicine George Ives, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Medicine JEdwin P. Lehman, M.D. Assistant in Surgery fO liver H. Campbell, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Medicine tCHARLES H. Eyermann, M.D Assistant in Clinical Medicine Sherwood Moore, M.D. Assistant in Surgery Ellis Fischel, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Surgery Frank I. Darrow, M.D. Assistant in Pathology Michael Kasak. M.D. Assistant in Medicine Leo C. Bean, M.D. Assistant in Pathology Leith Hollinshead Slocumb, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Medicine Alphonse F. Dames. M.D. Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology William F. Hardy, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology ' tMlLLARD F. Arbuckle, M.D. Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology William M. C. Bryam, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology Richard S. Weiss, M.D. . Assistant in Clinical Dermatology r ; . On leave of absence. tOn leave of absence. Service of the nation. ' sx . Page Eighty-six r o • i§£ -- v y m Si % ' • i The Medical School 1 (L. I ' 41 _ a , ' ■ : . ' J -V , ■ ■ ■ ' iiP I - i|f5 .-. .. -J. xyS ' ’ - - ' ' j i i •• ?« MEDICAL SCHOOL Anthony B. Day . St. Louis, Mo. James Reeve Dean, A.S I ., N’.-.N. . Madison, Wis. Wilbur G. Gillett, A.T.A., N.Z.N., A.Q.A., Kingman, Kan. A.B. Degree, University of Kansas. Elmer N. Liljedahl . Red Oak, Iowa Page Ninety ( •. ' 9k MEDICAL SCHOOL i ij Oi-OF Sundwall, ' I’.B.II. . . . Fairvicw, Utah A.B. Degree, University of Utah, ’15. Page Ninety-two H. H. Shackelford, ‘b.B.H., A.X.S., 2.E. St. Louis, Mo. A.B., 1910; A.M., 1913, University of Missouri. Class Pres. (2). Pres. Graduate Club, ’16. Assistant in Biological Chemistry. Pres. Student Medical Society, ’15. Wiii.iam E. Stone, -.X., X.Z.X. . . Columbia, Mo. A.B. Degree, William Jewell, ' 12. Vice-Pres. Senior Medical Class. E. Alvin Stranquist, ' I’.B.II. . Salt Lake City, Utah B. C. Ball . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 M. J. Fardy . . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 L. P. Gay . . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 Paul C. Hodges . . St. Louis, Mo. H. F. Lucking . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 Hugh W. Maxey . . Mt. Vernon, 111. J. YV. McKee . . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 W. L. Mitc hell . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 Hugo Muench, Jr. . . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 T. B. Noble . . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 C. D. O’Keefe . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 E. C. Padgett . . In Service, Hospital Unit 21 G. M. Polk . In Service, Hospital Unit 2! Page Ninety-three The Medical School The Junior Medical Class of 1919 Members Duff Shedric Allen Hans Peter Anderson Noresh Chandra Atorthy, A.B Oscar Vivian Batson, A.B. Edwin A. Baumgartner, A.B. George Wilson Belcher, B.S. Edward Alphonse Blondin Harry William Bond, B.S. Arthur Charles Brooks, B.S. Urban Justus Busier, B.S. Warren Browning Chapman, A.B. Homer Tullock Clay, A.B. William Goodwin Coleman, B.S. Benjamin Landis Elliott, B.S. Selmes Paul Funkhousf.r William Henry Geistweit, Jr., Ph.B. Clifford Lawrence Gilles, A.B. Lawrence Kramer Gun-drum, B.S. Edward Hagerman Hashingf.r, A.B. Lloyd Oscar Helmes, B.S. Howard Hull Heuston Morris Fred Jenner Hodges Guy Huskinson Hopkins, A.B. Francis Clemont Howard, A.B. William Warren Knipmeyer, A.B. Carl Otto Kohlbry, B.S. Otto St. Clair Krebs, B.S. Marriott True Morrison Edward Everett Hale Munro, A.B. Raymond Lester Murdoch, A.B. Mort D. Pelz Samuel Edward Pesetke Howard Addison Plank, A.B. Lee George Potter, A.B. Arthur Ben Raffl, B.S. Robert Peter Roantree, B.S. Edwin Henry Rohlfing Abraham Jerome Sparks, B.S. Leo Joseph Starry Harrison Chamberlain Trippe, A.B. George Henry Waiile, A.B. Archie Lester Walter, A.B. Weiner, B.S. Page Ninety-four A. B. Raffl Officers President . Pice-President .... Treasurer . Secretary . Student Council Representative Hatchet Representative . Arthur Bex Raffl Oscar Vivtax Batson Robert Peter Roaxtree Wm. Hexry Geistweit Geo. Wir.sox Beecher Abraham Jerome Sparks Page Ninety-five The Medical School The Sophomore Medical Class of 1920 PiRAXSFGRD LOUIS ADELSBERGER Robert Lee Andrae Goichi Asami, A.B. Paul Siurmer Barker, A.B. Carl Ellsworth Black, A.B. Clifton H. Briggs Archie Dreyfus Carr William Stokf.ly Carter Harold Carl Gaebe Alfred Goldman, A.B. Samuel Becker Grant William Andrew Hudson Frederick Augustus Jostes Members Patrick Harlan Kennedy Hiram Shaw Licgett Herman Moses Meyer Walter Roger Moore Stuart Mudd, B.S. Leonard Joseph Owen Grider Penick, A.B. Walter Scott Priest, A.B. Charles Melvin Schiek Ernest Elwood Tremain Herman William Wellmerlinc, B.S. Harvey Lester White Leo Lester Williams Page Ninety-six I—— Members John Paul Altheide Emanuel Arnovitz Karl John Balazs Robert Mitchell Brannon Iris McKy Chamberlain Louis Cohen ' Frederick Ernest Dyche Lester J. Evans , V Edward Benedict Grogan. B.S. 5; Alexis Frank Hartmann Samuel Hermann Kahn a ’ Ralph Edwin Kleinschmidt v William Benjamin Lewis ■jgj John Collins McKitterick William Alexander Michael Howard Stephens Miller, A.B. Millard Tarsten Xei.sen Richard Paddock Allen Brewer Potter, A.B. Harvey Schenck Rusk Louis John Seifert Edgar Walter Spinzig Paul Vance Stratton Caldwell Blanford Summers Horace Edward Thornton Albert Wall William Charles Weinsberg Oscar Charles Zink Page Ninety-eight W. A. Michael J. C. McKitterick E. W. Spinzig L. J. Evans A. F. Hartman R. Paddock W. A. Michael Officers President . Vice-President . Treasurer . Secretary . Hatchet Representative Student Council Representath Page Ninety-nine ' r ’ - --iV.: ViV ' W The School for Nurses THE + jm. m _ ILpjs FACULTY. ♦Julia C. Stinson, R.N. Head of the Department of Nursing, Superintendent of Nurses Helen Lillian Bridge, R.N Josephine B. Clark, R.N. . Olive E. Elliot, R.N. . Erba Dillman Naomi Skogberg, R.N. . Acting Superintendent of Nurses Assistant Superintendent of Nurses Second Ass’t Superintendent of Nurses Third Ass’t Superintendent of Nurses Night Superintendent of Nurses Ruth L. Cassels . Dietitian ♦Leave of absence. Service of the nation The School for Nurses c ,1- The Senior Nurses Class of 1918 Members Ruth Averitt Mariana La Rue Cravens Pauune Cook Laura Franklin Anna Hall Helen R. Harrison Edna E. Hunt Katherine O’Dile McCormick Alvira C. Philips Gladys Regnier Mary M. Reynolds Helen Smith Thelma J. Tibiis Renta Whitaker Mae Wright Page One Hundred Four The School for Nurses % THE + A l SENIORS. President . Secretary-Treasurer Page One Hundred Five Miss Minnie Stallings Officers Minnie Stallings Anna L. Page - - Vys ' - - ' The School for Nurses The Intermediate Nurses Class Members Marguerite Brennan Lola Breitenstein Laura Belden Carles Eleanor Case Georgia Coleman Mary G. Carnahan Elsie Edmonson Margaret Finnell Louise Finnell Florence Foreman Louise Gartiser Eula M. Inlovv Elsie G. Momrerger Irene M. Peach Polly Powell Mary F.oux Fern Rusk Natalie Salls Hazel Southard Lauda Stein Mabel A. Skaggs Velma F. Sutherland Ruth Tolly Carrie Turner May Williams Laura N. Willis Gertrude Hufschmidt Virginia E. Hill Merle Johnston Page One Hundred Six •V -«y Miss Lucy Tuttle Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer . || ) Page One Hundred Seven Lucy Tuttle Polly Anna Powell Alice L. Porter Alma Jean Appel The S c ho o1 for Nurses The Junior Nurses Class Members Ellen Estes Eugenia Klinefelter Lillian Reid H EN RIETTA PliLTASON Mildred McCloskey Dorothy Wright Agnes Jones Sylva Wills YVINI FRED TlTTM A N Hilda Schlutius Beryle Corley Grace Rodgers Myrtle Funsch Lanore Simmons Cora Hudson Tai.ea Schudde Marie Creasy Alma Patton Dorothea Duncan Mildred Lehm Mae Thierfelder Louise Knapp Loraine Galvin Emma Hencher Della Meyers Edna Harney Gerty Moore Beulah Elder Pauline Perry Margaret Block Ruth Priest Florence Alhime Margaret Schwartz Henrietta Decker Eleanor Chase Marie Wolf Margaret Furness Lucille McBean Page One Hundred Eight The School for Nurses % THE + _ 1 JUNIORS. Miss Grace Rodgers Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer . Grace Rodgers Agnes Jones Marie Wolff E UGE.V IA Ku XEFEI.TER Page One Hundred Nine John Hanger Kennerly, M.D., D.D.S. ' tf ' OHN HANGER KENNERLY, M.D., D.D.S., Dean of the Faculty of the y. Dental School, and 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 Pedagogies; President of the Dental Faculties Association of American Universities. Page One Hundred Twelve The Dental School $WW?J C£P atorniw John Hanger Kennerly, D.D.S., M.D. Walter Manny Bartlett, D.D.S. Benno Edward Li sc her, D.M.D. Bland Nixon Pippin, D.M.D. . tO liver Howard Campbell, M.D. JVilray Papin Bi.air. A.M., M.D. Jerome Epstein Cook, M.D. . JJames Alexander Brown, D.D.S. Ewing Paul Brady, D.D.S. Marsh Pitzman, M.D. Lionel Sinclair Luton, M.D. . Arthur Oscar Fisher, M.D. . Jesse Duncan White, D.M.D. . Louis George Neuhoff, D.D.S. John Richard Pendleton, D.D.S. fF red John Brockman, D.D.S. . ♦Walter Fritz Neuhoff Frank Henry Foerster, D.D.S. George Emir Morgan, D.D.S. . Paris Clifton Elzea, D.D.S. . Carrol Lester Moore, D.D.S. . Edgar Hayden Keys, D.D.S. Harry Moll Fisher, D.M.D. . Leighton Shields, A.B., L.L.B. ♦Otto William Brandhorst, D.D.S Ellis F ischel, M.D. . Ludwig Orlando Muexch, A.B., M ♦Robert Vinyard, M.D. D. Professor of Clinical Dentistry and History and Economics of Dentistry and Dean of the Dental School. Secretary and Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry Professor of Orthodontics Professor of Operative Dentistry Professor of Physiology Professor of Oral Surgery Professor of Bacteriology and General Pathology Professor of Histology Professor of Chemistry, Materia Medico, Metallurgy, Pathology and Therapeutics Professor of Anatomy Acting Professor of Physiology Acting Professor of Oral Surgery Associate Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry, and Lecturer on Crown and Bridge Work and Porcelain Art Associate Professor of Dental Anatomy Instructor in Technic Clinical Instructor in Operative Dentistry Instructor in Oral Surgery Instructor in Prosthetic Dentistry Clinical Instructor in Prosthetic Technic Clinical Instructor in Prosthetic Dentistry Clinical Instructor in Operative Dentistry Clinical Instructor in Prosthetic Dentistry Lecturer on Oral Hygiene Lecturer on Anccsthetics and Extraction Lecturer on Jurisprudence Assistant in Histology Assistant in Anatomy Assistant in Pathology Assistant in Anatomy and ♦On leave of absence. fOn leave of absence—Service of the nation. Page One Hundred Thirteen .;A: 19 | L - -■ V- ■ - The George I-I. Bredall . Walter L. Buck, S. ' F. ' h. Hatchet Representative (3). Charles R. Clifford, 2. ' I ' .4 Leonard Francis Connell, S. ' F. ' h. Page One Hundred Seventeen Dental School Missouri Illinois . Illinois . Missouri m n V DENTAL SCHOOL, C, Herbert Dean, S. ' K ' F Erwin C. Elsner William Howard Freshour Bertram C. Gilster, A.2.A . . Missouri Missouri Illinois Illinois Page Otic Hundred Eighteen Wycliffe Everett Kuxc, B.e.IT., A.2 A. . Missouri Class Scrgeant-at-Arms (1): Class Football (1, 2) ; Class Basket-ball (1) ; Class Basket-ball (2, 3) ; Varsity Football (2, 3, 4); Captain, ’17; Member of “13”: Pralma; Union Board (3): Thyrsus (3, 4) ; Class President (3) ; Class Track (1, 2) ; Hatchet Representative (2) ; Student Council (4). James D. Nelson, S. ' k.‘b.Missouri Varsity Football (3) ; Class Sergeant-at-Arms (2, 3, 4). Harry Oksner . . Missouri m R. C. Parkhill, A.2A .Illinois Class Treasurer (1) ; Class Vice-President (4). m : ■ DENTAL SCHOOL J| Page One Hundred Twenty-two D. Perry, Illinois Wili.iam Petty Class Treasurer (1). Illinois Reibert Missouri D. Rkisixg Missouri The Dental School —— Alvin V. Sanders Arthur John Schank, Jr. Lawrence Andrew Snavely . Larkin E. Stark, 2. ' I ' .‘1 . . Class President (4). Page One Hundred Twenty-three Missouri Illinois Missouri Missouri DENTAL SCHOOL The Dental School W. Stroh, -. ' I ' .t. Missouri Wesley H. Tempel. Illinois Seth C. Thomas. Illinois Thurle T. Weir. S. ' ivT Illinois Page One Hundred Twenty-four Walter W. Wieman .Missouri Samuel F. Wilmesher .Missouri Glee Club (2, 3, 4). Jack V. Woodson. Missouri James L. Bowman Harold H. Brummall Grover Clay Bernis E. Dickson . Rodert F. Lentz . Hilry P. Loudermilk Lizzie R. Powell Edward L. Stroh Robert J. Tiiogmorton Missouri Missouri Missouri . Illinois Missouri Missouri Missouri Missouri Page One Hundred Twenty-five The Dental Schoo The junior Dental Class of 1919 Members Edmond Beaureccd Arnold Alfred Davis Barnett Carl Joshua Benning Norman Porter Brown Harry Bond Burton Georce Adolph Clipner John Francis Conroy Archie Donald Cooper Elmer Nesbitt Cox Samuel Nelson Daley Scott McKinley Davidson Fred Elmore George Lewis Fearheiley Sylvester Edward Fendi er Edward Harold Fishcall William Lloyd Glenn Robert Monroe I-Iarlan Forrest DeWitt Harrison Vern Lester Heath Leslie Charles Hilderbrand Herman Grand Jean Frank G. Kavanaugii Paul A. Keller Sam Kippel Leonard Henry Kohm William Joseph Kolii Fred Maupin Lavender Maurice London Harvf.y Joseph Long Stanley Joseph McCarthy James Martin McLellan Eugene Harold Mahle Edward Alfred Marouard Roland Thomas Mathews Denver Nance Loren O. Newport Alphonsus Patrick O’Hare Alvin Joseph Pesf.tke Christ William Pieper Frank Oviatt Raney Leo Woodruff Reid Arthur John Reimers John Jesse Rodden Mack Taylor William Clinton Travis George Henry Van Dusen Russell Charles Wheeler Joe Christopher Wieneke Launcelct Aubrey Williams Henry Louis Wohlwend James Lester Wood Page One Hundred Twenty-six H. J. Long Officers H. J. Long Geo. Fkarhieley S. E. Fendler Leo Reed L. O. Newport G. H. Van Dusen S. N. Dalby President . Vice-President . Secretary . Trcasurer . Sergcan t-at-Arms Student Council Student Life . Page One Hundred Tiecnlv-scl ' i Art School Edmund Henry Wuerpel f DMUND HENRY WUERPEL, Director of the School of Fine Arts; First Sellcw 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 of Jury of Selection and Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Active Member and Vice-President, 2x4 f lub, 1895-1897; Silver Medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Silver Medal, Lewis and Clark Exposition, 1905; Member Conference of Cities Committee, and Program Committee, St. Louis Pageant, 1914; Member Advisory Com¬ mittee of the Middle West, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915; Member Special Com¬ mittee of Paintings of the Middle West; Member of the Jury of Selection and the International Jury of Awards, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915. Paye One Hundred Thirty Edmund Henry Wuerpel, Director . Faculty Henrietta Ord Jones Cordelia Taylor Baker . Gustav von Schlegell Victor Soph us Holm Fred Green Carpenter Gustav Friedrich Goetsch Leola Bullivant Philip Henry Pratt . . Lecturer and Instructor in Composition and Artistic Anatomy Instructor in Ceramic Decoration and Pottery Instructor in Bookbinding and Leather Work Instructor in Drawing, Painting and Monotyping Instructor in Modeling Instructor in Draining, Painting and Joinery Instructor in Antique Instructor in Metal Work Instructor in Decorative Design and Interior Decoration lnstructor in Saturday Draining Class On leave of absence—Service of the nation. Art School Art School Students Calvin Atkins Carl Bretzman Geo. Conrey Chas. F. Dieckman VVm. Forrest Harland Frazer Emil Frei, Jr. Arthur Friedrich Julius Guvimer Elmer Hahn John M. Heller, Jr. Frank Hughes RODERICK KENISON David Newell Harry Rubin Clifford Schofield Albert Smith Geo. VVettle Robert Wright Lewis Maynard Warren Ludwig Gladys Alexander Erwin Bender Mrs. Bernheimer Hope Bissland Mrs. Blankenstein Helen Boweles John Braffish Margaret Brown Roy Buehrle Mrs. Bullivant Edward Clark Hallie Clarkson Nell Cleage Helen Coatsworth Carrie Collins Fred Conway Henrietta Davis Blanche Druse Clara L. Danglade Fanetta Dudley Marian Duncan Helen Eichholz Manuel Essman Mildred Flinn Anita Forsyth Emma Frei Anna Gifford Louis Gelber Lillian Gerell Harriet Gross Lenora Gross Frances Happley Anna Harrington Estelle Hite Marie Hughes Dorothy Hockaday Hugh Hockaday Isabel Howard Margert Jones Miriam Kennedy Sarah Kinealy Mathilde Klotz Amelia Krag Helen Long Marjorie Luecke Zeli.a Mahon Myra Marglous Margaret McGines Ediih McCormack Florence Miller Beatrice Moore Lucille Moore Cyrus B. More Lucille Moore Thelma Morehouse Joe Oglesby Alice Osmond Francis Orrick Kathryn Pates Harold Pirie Marguerite Powel Mabel Quick Edna Rali. Bessie Reciit Virginia Ricketts Alice Rubelman Ethel Rieth Margaret Roetter Hilda Ruhl Eli Schnaider Ilda Schott Jack Siierly Emma Stuyvesant Marvel Taylor Ethel Teasdale Louise Thomas Berenice Todd Ruby Tuck Sister Villanova Henrietta Wahlert Lucili.e Wald Edna Wider Louise Wingfield Mildred Woelk James Querio Page One Hundred Thirly-lwo Shaw School of Botany George Thomas Moore, A.B., B.S., A.M., Ph.D. 1 EORGE THOMAS MOORE, Director of the Henry Shaw School of Botany: B.S., Wabash, 1894; A.B., Harvard, 1895, A.M., 1896, Ph.D., 1900; Assistant Cryptogamic Laboratory, Harvard, 1897-1899; Instructor in Cryptogamic Bot¬ any, Radcliffe, 1898-1899; in charge Botanical Department, Dartmouth, 1899-1901 : Physiologist and Algologist, Bureau of Plant Industry, U. S. Department of Agri¬ culture, 1901-1902; in charge of Laboratory, Plant Physiology, 1902-1905; Professor of Plant Physiology and Applied Botany, Henry Shaw School of Botany; Plant Physiologist, Missouri Botanical Gardens, 1909-1912; Engelman Professor of Botany, Washington University; Director, Henry Shaw School of Botany; Director, Missouri Botanical Gardens, 1912 - ; Instructor Cryptogamic Botany, Marine Biological Laboratory, 1896-1907; Head of Department of Botany, 1907; Lecturer, “Contamination of Water Supplies,” Thayer School of Engineering, 1900-1902; “Economic Botany,” Dartmouth, 1901-1902; Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science; Secretary ' , Botanical Society of America, 1910 - ; President, Engelman of Science: Secretary ' , Botanical Society of America, 1910 - ; President, Engelman Botany Club, 1912-; President of St. Louis Biological 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 Rott Nodule Organisms,” “Morphology and Physiology of the Algae.” k ICHARD BURR RUTHERFORD, Physical Director; A.B. and Normal Cer¬ tificate of Physical Education, Nebraska University, 1915; Freshman Football, 1912; Varsity Football, 1913-14-15; Captain, 1915; All-Western Team, 1914-15; All-Missouri Valley Team, 1913-14-15; Freshman Basket-ball, 1912; Varsity Basket¬ ball, 1913-14-15; All-Missouri Valley Team, 1913-14-15; Baseball, 1913-14-15; Wrestling, 1913-14-15; Western Intercollegiate Champion at 158 lbs., 1913-14-15; Gym Team; Assistant Coach, Nebraska University, 1916-17; Physical Director, Washington Uni¬ versity, 1917 - . Page One Hundred Thirty-seven A Word of Appreciation H URING the 1917-1918 season Coach Rutherford was greatly aided in coaching the various teams by the following men, some members of the University, some alumni, and others interested outsiders. The services of these volunteers were of the utmost value, and it is doubtful whether ath¬ letics this season could have been nearly as good was it not for the assistance rendered the Coach by these willing workers. Sam H. McClung—Sam was assistant football coach, had charge of the gymnasium work and was general aid out at all doings at Francis Field. He showed his football “brains” when the illness of the Coach necessitated his taking charge of the football squad just before the St. Louis U. battle. Eddie Grogan—Eddie coached the gang of candidates for the Frosh eleven. He was very r efficient at teaching his yearlings the plays of other teams with which they would practice against the Varsity. Drs. Lund and Smith — It is not necessary to say that Dr. Lund attended every game, practice, etc. He was some “pep” dispenser. Due to his and Dr. Smith ' s constant attention, the Varsity was able to go into the Thanksgiving game in A-l condition, despite vaccinations. Judge Calhoun, “Dog” Krause, Mr. Nelson, and others just as loyal — The presence of such men, which could al ways he counted upon, was an added incentive to the team to win and for the rooters in the stands to cheer the louder. We take this opportunity to thank each and every one of them. ' £ Prof. W. E. McCourt, Chairman Faculty Prof. W. E. McCourt Prof. W. F. Gepiiart Prof. J. L. Van Ornum Dr. F. FI. Ewerhardt Mr. R. B. Rutherford Alumni Dr. FI. G. Lund Judge John W. Calhoun Urban Busier Wycliffe Kling Student Body Fred Foelscii Carl Kamp Page One Hundred Thirty-nine ■ : -VIQ| Athletics The 1917 Football Team McCarthy, Mgr. Benway Brooks Harvey Foelsch Berger Meyers Rutherford, Coach Kremer Kurrus Nobbe Kling, Captain Newport Grossman Page One Hundred Forty-tzvo Athletics FOOT RECOR Captain Manager . Assistant Managers Coach Assistant Coaches . Wycliffe E. Kuxc, ' 18 Stanley McCarthy, ’19 f Ben Knight, ’19 Warren Healey, ' 20 Richard Burr Rutherford 1 Sam H. McClung 1 Ed B. Grogan The Team Emphy Benway George Berger Everett Brooks Herbert Bryant John Grossman Fred Foelsch Harold Harvey Clarence Hasting Morris Jacks Don Russell Leonard Woods Richard Kremer Andrew Kurrus Alfred Marquard Gilbert Meyers Loren Newport George Nobbe Frank Rowan Harry Smith Wycliffe Klinc Substitutes Harold Van Horn Harry Vosburgii Albert Roth October 13 October 20 October 27 November 3 November 10 November 17 November 29 Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington Record of Games 26—Lombard 14 0—Kansas Aggies 61 7—Rose Polytechnic 0 21—Rolla 2 20—Drake 0 3 —Missouri 19 0—St. Louis U. 13 . Francis Field Manhattan, Kans. Francis Field Francis Field Des Moines, Iowa Francis Field Sportsmen’s Park One Hundred Forty-three The Varsity Scoring Against Lombard WYCLIFFE E. KLING (Captain and End) “Buddy” was not only a cool and aggressive lead¬ er, but a fine tackier and one of the best receivers of passes in the Valley. His ability to boot goals from the field helped win the Lombard game. ANDREW ICURRUS (Captain-elect and Tackle) Smiling Andy” was al¬ ways hustling and was never beaten until the final whistle blew. The leader for 1918 is the logical man to drive away the football “blues” and keep the “pep¬ per pot boiling. JOHN GROSSMAN (Tackle) Running plays through tackle against “Big Jawn” was rather hazardous for the enemy, for his tackling was too sure. He also was very skillful in opening up holes for the Washington back to plough through. Page One Hundred Forty-four Holding Rose Poly. FRED R. FOELSCII (Halfback) Fritz ' s throwing of for¬ ward passes was always an outstanding feature of the Varsity ' s play. He was good at end runs and a fair punter. On the sec¬ ondary defense he was ab¬ solutely impassable. EMPHY BENWAY (Quarterback) Little Benny” could do anything from calling sig¬ nals to scoring touchdowns. His excellent open field running won the Rose Poly game and was always an important factor in the work of the team. “Umph was the pivot about which the team revolved. GEORGE BERGER (Halfback and End) George threw his big bulk against the opponent ' s line much as a British tank goes against trenches. He simply couldn’t be stopped and was the Var¬ sity ' s most consistent ground gainer. Page One Hundred Forty-five Foelsch Punting LOREN NEWPORT (Guard) AL MARQUARD (Center and Guard) His first year out and without previous experi¬ ence, A1 learned more foot¬ ball than the average play¬ er learns in two years. Ought to become a whizz in the middle of next year ' s line. Newp was handicapped by injuries early in the season, but he recovered sufficiently to play a bang- up game against Mizzou and St. Louis. He is bound to improve in his position. RICHARD KREMER (End and Center) Dick clearly demonstrat¬ ed his first year that he is ualified to become a star end. He is fast and in¬ variably gets down the field under punts. He play¬ ed a nice game at center before Marquard developed. Page One Hundred Fortv-six ■ 19 1 EVERETT BROOKS (Quarterback and Fullback) Evvy was considered the surest tackier on the team and an elusive runner had little chance with him in the way. He ran the team in fine fashion when¬ ever called upon to replace Benway. Page One Hundred Forty-seven Hitting the Miners HAROLD HARVEY (Fullback and End) “Jack fitted in nicely at either of the above posi¬ tions. He was especially strong on the defensive and occasionally made good gains with the ball. He played a fine fullback game against St. Louis. ■ GILBERT MEYERS (Fullback) Gil made a name for himself in the now memor¬ able Drake scuffle by grab¬ bing a forward pass and running the length of the field for a touchdown. He promises to become a back- field star on the 191S eleven. A t h leticj football c efl.son FOO1 BALI, season during a war year is not the easiest thing to write about. There is too much temptation to use the always handy alibi: the star this or that joined the navy; the much counted on Freshman eleven was “shot” through enlistment; the students failed, for ob¬ vious reasons, to give the team the support it merited. It is therefore our intention to stick strictly to facts in trac¬ ing the destinies of the Piker squad, deeming it sufficient to say that Washington, like all colleges, lost her quota of football material and enthusiasm and interest on the part of the students, who did, however, redeem themselves later in the season. As for the season itself, everything considered, the members of the team acquitted themselves in a very satisfactory manner. Victories outnumbered defeats four to three, the boys played hard and clean, and the new coach, Dick Rutherford from Nebraska, showed plainly that he was a competent mentor. Coach Rutherford worked with a squad of some twenty men all season. Consequently, to select both a team and capable substitutes was no easy task. Injuries, luckily, were few and far between, so that when the fightin fifteen”—as the V arsity was known —entered a game, there were few substitutions. Yes, it was a better sea¬ son than expected. The Varsity opened auspiciously by a comparatively easy victory over the strong eleven from Lombard College, 26 to 14. We saw a powerful offense, a good pair of running backs, but an almost woefully ' ' e k line. Capt Kling played a nice game, booting two goals from the held and being on the receiving end of a long pass over the goal line. Berger went over twice for touchdowns. Rowan, who joined the navy before the next game, was a bright light through his excellent punting. The next contest was quite the reverse of the initial battle. The Kansas Aggies entertained the Varsity at Manhattan. Perhaps the team missed support from the stands, or perhaps it was too mussed up by strenuous practice on the home lot, but anvhow the Aggies gave the boys a 61 to 0 thrashing. After the Kansas atrocity, changes in the line-up made the Varsity a more determined and much improved eleven. Berger was placed at end and Harvey in the backfield. Consequently when the hippopotamus Page One Hundred Forty-nine •••••ft- 1 : Athletics proportioned members of the Rose Poly team of Terre Haute, Ind., ar¬ rived in town, the two elements of brawn vs. brain were so well matched that for three quarters the tide of battle rolled up and down the field with neither side giving or taking an inch. Benway saved the day. Howard of Poly, punting from his 20-yard line, “fliwered,” and Benway caught the ball on the 30-yard mark. Twisting and squirming he ran through the entire Indiana team for the only score of the day. Rolla called next and took the short end of a 21-2 score. The team seemed lazy and marked only once the first three periods, when Kling fell on a blocked punt behind the Rolla line. In the third period, in quick succession, Kling and Benway caught long forwards for scores. The rest was easy. More rearrangement followed the Rolla visit. Marquard started his career as a center and Kremer was placed at the end to strengthen the wings. At Des Moines, Iowa, the much hated and long-lived seven year Drake hoodoo fell before the power of the avenging Pikers, 20 to 0. Gil Meyers made himself famous by grabbing a Drake pass and running some 80 yards for a score. Benway wriggled over for the other two Washington marks. Confidence ran rampant after the Drake battle, and Mizzoo, while feared, was counted on as a victim. But something “non-dopeable” went wrong, “staleness” being the verdict of a great many fans. The line didn’t try to hold and only an extreme number of penalties incurred by the Tigers kept the score down. Consequently the state school men walked off the field with nineteen points to their credit against the Varsity’s three. With the exception of one or two successful forwards and nice line bucks by Berger the Varsity was helpless. Benway saved a shut-out by toeing the pigskin between the uprights for three points just before the whistle blew. The annual St. Louis U. “Turkey” game was a big disappointment in every way. Thanksgiving was a cold, dismal day, rain the night before made the field good for a swimming meet, the weather kept the spirit and size of the rival crowds down. Then, a week before the struggle, Coach Rutherford took sick with smallpox, was rushed to quarantine, the entire team was vaccinated and sore arms resulted. However, Assistant Coach McClung took charge of the boys and every¬ body worked night and day, disregarding sore arms and the fact that the Coach was not on hand to advise. Under these conditions the game was played and the Billikens came out victorious for the first time in four years, 13 to 0. They sent a heavy, well-conditioned team to Sportsmen’s Park with which the tired Varsity was no match. The first half was all St. Louis, but the second half was mainly Washington, even if the Varsity did fail to make up either of the touchdowns made by the Grand Avenue bunch earlier in the game. Benway depended upon the open field style of attack. Big Fritz Folsch was in excellent hurling form while Benway, Berger. Kling and Kremer seldom failed to get under the throws. Though beaten, the Varsity won universal commendation for the plucky fight they had put up under such discouraging circumstances. Officers Coach Captain Em phy Bexway, ' IS Carl Otto Kamp, ’19 Jesse Rodden, ’19 The Team Forwards Guards Richard Burr Rutherford Carl Otto Kamp Henry Duncker, ’19 Fielding Stapleton, ’19 Center Alfred Marquard, ’19 Substitutes Don Onnis Russell, ’20 Henry Miller, ’18 Schedule and Scores January 5 Washington 25—Missouri Athletic Club 24 . . Francis Gymnasium January 10 Washington 47—Drake 24 . . Francis Gymnasium January 17 Washington 14 — Missouri 17 . . Francis Gymnasium January 18 Washington 23 — Missouri 26 . . Francis Gymnasium January 23 Washington 33—Alpen Braus 29 . . Francis Gymnasium 1anuary 28 Washington 13—Alpen Braus 11 . . Francis Gymnasium February 6 Washington 44—Nebraska 14 . . Francis Gymnasium February 8 Washington 30—Kansas Aggies 36 . . Manhattan, Kan. February 9 Washington 31—Kansas Aggies 40 . . Manhattan, Kan. February 11 Washington 22—Kansas 51 . . Lawrence, Kan. February 12 Washington 25—Kansas 40 . . Lawrence, Kan. February 22 Washington 47—Kansas 23 . . Francis Gymnasium February 23 Washington 32—Kansas 18 . . Francis Gymnasium February 27 Washington 21—St. Louis University 19 . . Mueggc’s Gymnasium March 2 Washington 30—St. Louis University 23 . . Coliseum March 4 Washington 13 —Missouri 34 . . Columbia, Mo. March 5 Washington 18 — Missouri 32 . . Columbia, Mo. Won 9; Lost 8 468 461 Summary of Games Conference Games: Won 4; Lost 8 CARL O. KAMP (Captain and Guard) One of the strongest as¬ sets of a team, a capable roving guard, was supplied by “Toddy. lie is a fine floor man and a sure shot. EM PHY BEN WAY (Forward) Beautiful floor work and dribbling of a high order w ere Benny ' s” chief points. He is extremely fast and hard to stop when going full speed up the cou rt. 1918 Basketball Men FIELDING STAPLETON (Guard) “Stape” combined the properties of being able to shoot and at the same time to guard effectively. AL MARQUARD (Center) The selection of Old Re¬ liable” as All-Valley cen¬ ter did not surprise Wash¬ ingtonians in the least. A1 knows the game from A to Z. HENRY DUNCKER (Forward) Henry is the type of player who keeps cool, is consistent and is in the game to win. HENRY MILLER (Guard and Forward) Henry was a good sub¬ stitute in any position on the team although not a brilliant player. JESSE RODDEN (Guard) The Rock of Gibraltar has nothing on Happy” as a standing guard if said rock chose to play basket¬ ball. Jess had no trouble taking care of two for¬ wards if the other guard was up court. DON RUSSELL (Forward and Guard) “Little, but Oh, My” Rus¬ sell was an invaluable sub¬ stitute through his ability to play both guard and for¬ ward. Pape One Hundred Fifty-four fSaskelball Season HE hopes of Washingtonians, which always are tending towards a Conference basket-ball championship, were ma¬ terially strengthened this year for next year by the great showing made by the 1918 Varsity. Coach Rutherford’s first call for candidates was answered by three veterans of last year, several promising 1917 ineligibles and more or less “unknowns.” The men worked hard, and competition for the five positions was so intense that the squad which the Coach finally evolved was, as the figures prove, a star aggregation in every sense of the word. The 1918 season brought to Washington more Con¬ ference victories than have been obtained in a single season for many a moon, the city collegiate championship for the fourth successive time, and victories over the strong Alpen Brau and M. A. A. fives of the St. Louis municipal leagues. The Conference standing, which represents four victories and twice as many defeats, (six of which were suffered off the home course), might have been higher if the Pikers had not had to contend with their old failing—stagefright and wobbly knees during the early minutes of the battle while playing on foreign fields. The team itself played well together, had capable substitutes, and showed the ability to “come through” when things looked bad. Bemvay, by his floor work, and Duncker, by his shooting, made an exceptional pair of forwards. Marquard at center scored half of the team’s points and was the star of stars at every angle of the game. Capt. Kamp and Stapleton, together with Rodden who alternated with them, reminded Washington rooters of Bill Berry in his prime. Little Russell and Henry Miller were subs of no mean ability, who came in very handy on several occasions, noticeably during the St. Louis U. struggles and whenever Lamp’s water on the knee kept him on the sidelines. The first game of the season was a nip and tuck battle with the men of the M. A. A. At the end of the forty minutes of play the score stood at .22 all. On the playoff a Cherry Diamond man shot a basket immedi¬ ately, but Marquard followed up a circus shot by Benway with a suc¬ cessful free throw just before the whistle, making the final result 25 to 21 in favor of Rutherford’s men. The next caller, Drake, was easy for the Pikers as the 47-24 score indicates, Washington started the Conference season “right.” Duncker and Marquard ran rings around the bulldogs. ■ ' • - ' A t h 1 e t i c s Then followed two heart-breaking losses to the Missouri Tigers, each by the small margin of 3 points. These two games were the hardest and tightest of the season and the work of both teams on offense and defense was of the highest order. Wackher of the Tigers proved a sen¬ sation at guard while Kamp clung to Shirkey and nullified his efforts to shoot baskets. Missouri’s wonderful pivoting, however, which com¬ pletely baffled the Pikers, gave the state institution the extra points necessary to pull the chestnuts out of the fire. The Myrtle and Maroon took revenge the next week by thrashing the powerful Alpen Braus in two games, although the rtiuny leaguers came near turning the tables both times. The results were 33-29 and 13-11, the latter indicating how evenly matched the quintets were. Nebraska’s team of football players parading as basket-ball men played superior football but inferior basket-ball here and as a result left town with the short end of the 44-14 score. Once that Kamp, Marquard Co. got going, there was no stopping them, even if the opponents were the Coach’s Alma Mater paying their first visit. The next four games were part of a trip through Kansas enjoyed by everyone but the Varsity and its followers. The boys left in high hopes, but the aforementioned stagefright added two victories apiece to the record of both the Kansas Aggies and the Jayhawkers. The Aggies had no easy time of it, but they managed to come out, in the last minutes of play, on top by the scores of 36-30 and 40-31. Erratic shooting by the forwards and poor guarding by the guards — the only times the entire season — gave Kansas U. two easy victories over the temporarilv de¬ moralized St. Louisans. Marquard was the only man on the trip to play consistent, strong basket-ball. Revenge is sweet. When Kansas U. called at Francis Gym, with two victories over Washington to its credit, the Pikers played like super¬ champions and brought home the bacon in two games by the score of 47-23 and 32-18. Shooting, guarding, dribbling and floorwork on the Varsity’s part was perfect. Duncker and Marquard dropped in basket after basket while Rodden and Kamp held the Kansas forwards down. Kamp doing so well that Uhrlaub, the star Kansas forward, failed to get a goal both battles. The next two games won the city intercollegiate championship. The first, a hard fought, rough and tumble affair, was won the very last minute when little Don Russell sneaked under the St. Louis U. basket, took a long pass from Marquard and dropped the ball in for a marker, which put his side two points to the good. The second, played as the feature of a monster athletic carnival, was even throughout until the superior play of the Pikers drew them ahead. Jess Rodden’s guarding served to keep the St. Louis total down just as A1 Marquard’s work on the offense helped the team to its 30 points. The less said about the two games at Columbia which terminated the season the better. The champion Tigers were at that time traveling at top speed and were simply unstoppable. The Varsity tried hard and fought like demons, but the charges of Dr. Meanwell piled up totals of 34 and 32 against 13 and IS. These games closed the careers of Benway and Plenry Miller. Page One Hundred Fifty-six Women’s Athletic Association Stupp President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Director . Price Officers Lucas Luedeking Jessamine Price Lillian Stupp Gertrude Lucas Louise Luedeking Florence Grant Members Evadne Alden Lucy Andrews Pauline Annin Helen Banister Ester Bennet Virginia Black Mary Blackburn Sarah Booth Margaret Braun Frances Brokrmann Jean Brookes Katherine Brookes Leonie Buoyer Dorothea Burbach Norma Burgee Mildred Candy Elizabeth Calloway Elizabeth Chapin May Cornwall Helen Crawford Ruth Cunliff Helen Curtiss Clara Louise Danglade Marian Denyven Marian Denyuere Grace Donnelly Martha Dyer Lucile Eisenhardt Eleanor Engel Helen Ette Ethyl Evens Mary Jane Fields Margery Finigan Florence Forbes June Forshaw Lois Forsythe Minna Fox Marion Gardner Helen Goldstein Wilma Grant Ruth Grover Mariel Hafnf.r Elizabeth Harter Mildred Hess Dorothy Hetlage Marie Hodges Mary Hope Dorothy Jackes Jane Johns Esther Johnson Helen Johnston Julia Jonah Bertha Jorndt Carmen Kahn Dorothy Kalbfell Mildred Kalbfleisch Marian Keene Sarah Kennedy Viola Keuchkoff Marquise Klepper Jessie Koechig Margarete Kronsrein Herminie Kurz Ruth Lef.per Adele Levy Mae Levy Mary Lewis Gertrude Lucas Louise Luedeking Frances Mahley Margaret Martin Marie Maull Lois McDaris Katherine McNulty Rachael Metcalf Josephine Michael Ruth Moffat Marguerite Morrill Dorothy Morris Gladys Mueller Alice Mulally Loretta Murphy Carolyn Nettleship Margaret Niekamp Eleanor Osgood Ida Parker Lucille Perism Armina Pinkel Jessamine Price Mary Frances Price Margaretta Rapp Margaret Ray Velma Reinhardt Etta Reller Ai.ine Richardson Lucile Riedel Charlotte Robertson Sylvia Rosenswetc Margaretfia Roth Page One Hundred Fifty-eight ( : ' ' ■ ' .K ' .P ' .Cdfl K U ' -Av - Fl.ORE.NXE RUNGF. Adele Scherer Ilda Schott Olivia Schroeter Grace Strong Anne Studt Lillian Stlti Elfriede Uthoff Organizations Gladys Tate Lucy Taylor Mildred Wass Dean Welch Mary Whaley Alice Wills Frances Woods Gertrude Walther Faith Young Marguerite Zoff Marjorie Thompson Mary Thoreau Florence Turcott Olive Underhill Alma Urban Women’s Athletics NTEREST in girls’ athletics has been greatly increased this year by the institution of a point system. A certain number of points is given for participation in each sport and to a girl who has 1000 points, a large W is given, and it is for this that everyone works. Under this system, sports are divided into two classes, major and minor. The major sports are hockey, baseball, basketball, and rowing. The following number of points is given for each one: Rowing . . 100 points Hockey . 100 ” Baseball . 100 ” Basketball . 100 ” Members of champion team . 25 points extra Members of second team . 25 The minor sports are tennis, handball, fencing, archery and swim¬ ming. They are listed as follows: Archery—One representative from each class . 50 points Fencing — Winner of final bout . 25 ” Handball — One representative from each class . 50 ” Winner of finals . (extra) 50 ” Tennis — Winner of finals . 50 Swimming — One representative from each class . 50 ” The following points are given also in addition to those awarded for the regular sports: Hiking—100 miles in a school year ....... 50 points Field meet — 1st place . 25 ” 2nd place . 15 ” 3rd place . 5 ” Winner of meet . (extra) 50 ” Breaking record . 50 ” It is evident that it is fairly easy for a girl to earn her W, pro¬ vided she begins in her Freshman year. Many of the girls have made great progress in securing the reward. A ) Page One Hundred Fifty-nine :•••• ••■xi9, Girls’ Basketball Teams Athletics Hockey Seniors Helen Johnston, Center Jessamine Price (Capt.) p , Genevieve Dubuque Florence Runge ' a as Adele Dubuque [■ Wings Margaretha Roth Mae Levy Gladys Moone ■ Half-backs Rachael Metcalf Mary Callahan Marguerite Morrill June Forshaw J- Full-backs ■ Goal Lillian Stupp Jean Brookes Juniors Dorothy Jackes (Capt.) Center Forzoards Mary Blackburn Marian Keene Wings Half-backs Mary Hope Etta Reller Irma Willett ( r “ r-oac K s Grace Sewing Louise Luedeking j Helen Korngold Substitutes: Taylor, Hess, Ray, Martin, Chapin, Kalbfell, Barbour, Underhill, Rubelman, Schageman Herminie Kurz c , , Norma Sante f Full -backs | Goal Dorothea Burbach (Capt.) 1 . Mildred Candy } Forwards Sophomores Evadne Alden, Center Elfriede Uthoff Ruth Moffat Faith Young Margaret Haase Half-backs Dorothy Hetlagf. } Wings J Full-backs Gertrude Lucas Frances Broerman Carmen Kahn, Goal Substitutes: Price, Falk, Curtiss, Klipper, Hilliker, Rodes. Evelyn Miller Beth Hollaway Ruth George Adele Levy Virginia DeLiniere J- Forwards Freshmen Norma Burgee (Capt.) Center Lois McDaris l Ester Bennet !- Wings Esther Johnson j Half-backs Florence Forbes Ida Parker j- Full-backs Pauline Annin, Goal Substitutes: F. Woods, E. Woods, Hodges Denyven, Murphy, Cushing Championship Games December 3 December 4 December 6 Seniors Seniors Seniors 4 Juniors 3 Juniors . • • . 5 Juniors . 1917 Hockey Championship won by the Seniors Page One Hundred Sixty-three ; .Vl9 i -. -—— _ J ' Organizations •j; • ■ ( . Organizations at Washington General Alumni W. U. Union Governing Men’s Council Women’s Council Engineers’ Council Theatrical Thyrsus Musical Chapel Choir Glee Club Mandolin Club Professional A.I.E.E. Chemical Engineers’ Club A.S.M.E. Collimation W. U. Architectural Society Pre-Medics Publishing Eliot Magazine Hatchet Student Life Miscellaneous Deutscher Verein The Stump Les Caseuses V. W. C. A. Poetry Club The Hikers The Wainwright Knitting Unit ) Page One Hundred Sixty-five ( rv Officers President . Prof. W. E. McCourt Secretary . . Walter A. Kamp Treasurer . GOVERNING BOARD College E. A. Marquard Walter A. Kamp S. L. Morton School of Engineering Prof. Isaac Lippincott C. E. Sharp, Jr. W. W. Horner School of Architecture Prof. F. A. Berger Burton L. Austin A. E. Fitch Law School Prof. Lawrence Hill J. H. Kelley Judge J. W. Calhoun Dental School Prof. Tyrrell Williams E. A. Marquard Dr. E. M. Carson Medical School Dr. H. M. Fisher P. H. Kennedy Ur. Wm. Keuvvin School of Fine Arts Dr. F. H. Ewerhardt Carl Chalfant Horace Graf P. J. Pratt Members at Large Walter Krause Wm. Schaumberg Rodowe Abeken Prof. W. E. McCourt Page One Hundred Sixty-six pH ••• • Organizatii Officers President . Vice-President . Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer . A NX A W. Astroth, ’12 Marjorie Thompson, ’18 Margaretha Roth, T8 Hei.en L. Davvley, T6 Mary W. Trail, ’00 Board of Directors Maria Bain, ’16 Mrs. YV. E. Wittrig, ’01 Mrs. Carl Stephenson Florence Grant, Tl Vocational Committee Meta Gruner, Chairman Helen Gorse Julia Griswold Florence Sisler Hortense Bowles Publicity Committee Rachel Metcalfe, Chairman Edith Hammond Entertainment Committee Claudia Lide, Chairman Katherine Brookes Marjorie Thompson Page One Hundred Sixty-seven fiSit v OMENS UNION ■■■■ :. V-J iS uii Men’s Council Jostes Kling Kremer C. Kamp Driemeyer Kelley Meyers Paddock W. Kamp Duncker Sharon Muench Miller Johann Page One Hundred Sixty-eight Organizations President . Secretary . Treasurer . Senior Representatives Alice Wills Rae Metcalf Junior Representatives Sarah Booth Lillian Stupp Sophomore Representatives Evaunf. Aldf.n Listener Esther Johnson Page One Hundred Seventy-one Pep Patrol Page One Hundred Scventy-livo ( Sha rp Martens Gamble Simmons Healey Zelle Kurrus Ratner Furtli Staudinger Goldstein Hastings Boulden Engelsmann Lyon Muench Atkins Kamp Barnidge Organizations Pep Patrol Officers First Semester President .En Sharp Vice-President .W. Martin Secretary-Treasurer .R. Lyon Second Semester President . Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Randolph Lyon Max Muexch Harold Van Horn Payne Ratner Jack Boulden George Englesman Andrew Kurrus Jack Furtii Francis Barnidge Lynn Gamble Members R. Lyon G. Englesman M. Muexch Irwin Staudinger Clarence Hastings Harry Zelle Edward Sharp Warren Healey Calvin Atkins William Martin Walter Kamp Walter Goldstein Frank Simmons Pep Patrol was reorganized in 1917 after a period of several years’ inactivity. Its membership is limited to twenty men, of known energetic character. ) Page One Hundred Seventy-three Organizations a % 7 v ' J8 % President . Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer . Librarian . Business Manager Sergeant-at- Arms Ester Bernet Mary Blackburn Dorothea Burbach Bessie Campbell Helen Curtiss Emily Dauernheim Vera Dauernheim Margery Finnegan June Forshaw Adele Grafeman Mildred Hess Dorothy Jacres Aphrodite Jannopoulo Julia Jonah Mary Lewis Helen May Lois McDaris Marie McGinnis Rachel Metcalfe Officers ) Max S. Muench i Charles Edward Sharp Rachel Metcalfe Marjorie Thompson Calvin Hermer Alice Wills Fritz Grolock A. W. Kurrus Members Lucille Morgan Gladys Mueller Mary Frances Price Allean Richardson Etta Rf.i.ler Genevra Sturdevant Marjorie Thompson Gertrude Walther Alice Wills Grace Woods Faith Young Ira Berry Thomas Birdsall Louis Broida Orson Curtis Ralph Fuchs J. Walter Goldstein Fritz Grolock Clarence Hastings Calvin Hermer Charles Johann Wycliffe Kling Andrew Kurrus Howard Poole Clifford Rens Albert Sack John Sharon C. Edward Sharp Israel Treiman Rogers Allen Arthur Becker Josiah Boggs Morris Carnowsky Warren Miller Max S. Muench Payne Ratner E. P. Schf.er H. G. Stein Henry Stoutz Page One Hundred Seventy-five .-v 9|e ■ 9 ■ Organizations Thyrsus Review N writing a review of Thyrsus and its accomplishments duing the past year, it might be well to begin with the alibi so popular at the present time — on account of the war — etc. But enough of that for the time being. For the annual performance, Thyrsus chose “The Truth” by Clyde Fitch, which was presented at the Victoria Theatre, April 19th. “The Truth” offered many opportunities for dramatic ability which were very well handled by the cast which could be called an all-star cast. The character of the un¬ truthful wife, portrayed by Alice Johann and of her husband, portrayed by Wyllis Bliss, were exceptionally well done. With the opening of the University in the fall, Thyrsus was obliged to start from the ground up. The entire executive staff of the previous year had left and not returned. It was therefore necessary to form an organization of those who had taken no active part in the management of the society previously. Thyrsus also gave up its theatre in Cupples 2 to the Red Cross Society to be used as a workshop. Thyrsus admittedly began the 1917-18 season under very unfavorable circumstances; How¬ ever, the depleted ranks were soon Idled from the Freshman and Sopho¬ more classes. Some very good actors in embryo were obtained. The first monthly performance of Thyrsus was presented in the auditorium of Mary Institute on December 17. Three one-act plays were given, “The Rising of the Moon,” “The Twelve-Pound Look” and “Be¬ tween the Soup and the Savoury.” Though the plays were all of the lighter order and offered no real dramatic moments, the casts handled them admirably before a very appreciative audience. The society has made an innovation in regard to the monthly business meetings. At each meeting some one prominent in theatrical work either of St. Louis or with some visiting company, is invited to address the club on some subject bearing on the stage and the drama. This has greatly increased the interest of the members in the organization as well as proving very instructive. In spite of the war and other unfavorable circumstances, Thyrsus has passed through a very successful year and shows fine promise of even further improvement. Page One Hundred Seventy-seven The Stump Stoutz Lippman Goldman Scherr Abel Barth Sack Batts Engman Boggs Turner Zatek Rens Steinberg Broida Frisch Shipley Page One Hundred Seventy-eight Organizations v - - ■ ‘Te5hn euv Bebs tirv Society , Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary . Treasiircr . Scrgcant-at-Arms Louis Broida Erwin Steinberg Martin Frisch Clifford C. Rens Frederick C. Shipley Members Harry Barth Alfred N. Sack Israel Treiman Oliver Abel, Jr. J. B. Maize Henry Stoutz Sam Zadeck Patrick Kinnealy Myron G. Grigg Wm. Engelman Ben F. Turner Joe Boggs Louis Broida Erwin Steinberg Martin Frisch Clifford C. Rens Frederick C. Shipley Elliott B. Sherr Elmer C. Kocii Martin F. Engman, Jr. Jett McC. Batts David Biederman Albert Lippman Walter Goldman Page One Hundred Seventy-nine Organizations V m GLEE AND MANDOLIN CLUBS m Everett Brooks, business Manager Officers, Combined Clubs President . Secretary-Treasurer . Business Manager ....... Assistant Business Manager . G. Fred Drif.meykr Wm. Perry Everett Brooks Cuas. E. Stai-dinoer President . I ’ ice-President Secretary . Director Glee Club First Tenors Emerson L. Conzei.man Forrest Cogswell Forrest Harrison ♦Thomas Horn Ben Knight Roisert Harlan C. L. Fontana John Bohn ♦Ben Knight William O ' Sullivan Edgar White THEO. SCHINDEVVOI.F ♦George Cupner ♦Chris Fontana S. Knight Lov Pinckney McElvvee Calvin Atkins Edward C. Barniixie Nelson Dai.iiy ♦Robert Harlan Second Tenors A i.len Modisktte ♦Christ W. Pieper ♦Howard Poole Junior Bihk First Basses Lansden McCandless ♦William Perry ♦Mao-Te Tsao ♦George H. Van Dusen ♦John Boi lden Page One Hundred Eighty-one -r Organizations ♦ORSON CURTIS Walter E. Dickie Harold Francis Arthur Goodall President . Vice-President Business Manager Director . G. Fred Driemeyer ♦Geo. Graves ♦Berthold Lange Lawerence Meyers ♦Charles Spalding Leonard Woods Second Basses ♦Fred C. Wolf Mandolin Club First Mandolins Second Mandolins John H. Kinealy, Jr. Reginald W. Heys Martin Sciilieper Elmer L. Wernf.r Jasper Searcy G. Fred Driemeyer A. A. Joraschicy Alfred Westphalen ♦Wesley Lueders ♦Wilson Lewis ♦Jasper Searcy Irl G. Tremain ♦Arthur Nash ♦Ralph N. Skrainka ♦A. A. Jorasceiky Guitars ♦Harold Mateer Violin ♦William J. Koenig ♦Waldo Johnson ♦Trip men. Glee and Mandolin Clubs’ Trip Season 1918 ECEMBER 30th, the Glee and Mandolin Clubs again ar¬ ranged their mandolins and suit cases so that they would not fall upon some budding genius. The census taking pro¬ duced the usual results, owing to repeaters and slackers. However, when the train gave the lurch indicating de¬ parture, no one or anything had been left behind ex¬ cept a comb and a toothbrush or two. The concert at Sikeston was very successful in all respect in spite of the fact that the town “newspaper” referred to them as the “Glee and Musical Clubs.” Having been told that a dance in their honor was to be given after the performance at the City Club, the G. M. men set out for the said club. It was finally found and lighted. The dance was delightful and the wading back to the Pullman was a fitting end to a perfect day. Memphis, the next stop, boasted a swimming pool. The whole gang set out for the natatorium in spite of the fact that it was only Tuesday. To advertise the concert the banjo quintet and the glee club gave several sample performances. The afternoon at Memphis was whiled away in two lower boxes viewing a show called “Pretty Baby.” The dance after the performance at the Tennessee Club was well worth attending. When the Glee and Mandolin men talk about Paducah, they skim Page One Hundred Eighty-two over the concert and rave about the Rotary Club dance—not because the concert was not good, but because the dance was better. A few dances with the Paducah Queens, cream of the South, and past and future Locks and Proms were forgotten. The concert at the Kentucky Theater in Paducah was very well given and very much appreciated. The concert given at the town of Jackson was not quite up to the usual standard, due to the fact that the village cut-ups are allowed to run about loose. The town wits pulled the old gallery stuff. The barber at Marion, Ill., who charged twenty cents for a shave will be remembered long after the rest of the trip is forgotten. Also the board of censorship whose approval of the performance was required as the concert was given in a church. The town people gave the men a very nice dance, but as it was the last night of the trip and the Sacred rites of Whiffletree were to be administered, the thoughts of dancing were abandoned early for more serious things. The Senior Whiffletrees, in order to throw the uninitiated off their guard, waited until all had retired before starting the ceremonies. The old men all procured their sacred emblems (slippers, coat hangers, razor strops) and formd a line on each side of the aisle. The neophytes then were persuaded to go from one end of the car to the other. Lueder and Higgins were said to have been initiated most thoroughly. However, that is a mooted point among the newest Whiffletrees. In conclusion, the Glee and Mandolin Clubs did both the University and themselves honor on their last trip. Glee and Mandolin Clubs’ Concert HE date of the Glee and Mandolin Clubs’ Concert, Jan- uary 11, was the coldest night in the memory of man. However, the crowd that braved the cold and defied pneu¬ monia to attend was comparatively large. Comparatively is used in reference to the weather and not the hall, for the audience was lost in the Odeon, which might even be called large for its size. The size of the crowd and the size of the hall caused a very ' demoralizing echo. The work of the Glee Club ensemble was open to one criticism only ' —it appeared on the program in only ' three numbers, “Wayfaring Men,” by Jungst; “Doan Ye Cry, Ma Honey,” by Noll; and “On the Sea.” by Dudley Buck. The Mandolin Club in Butterfly,” by Andreef; “Manza¬ nillo,” by Robyn; and “Serenade,” by Drigo, also appeared to advantage, but they lacked the volume and technique of former years. The Banjo Quintet with their ragtime selections were encored several times. The quartet, composed of new men, performed very creditably. According to the critic, they had the sweetest voices he had heard at Washington. Messrs. Stein and Higgins presented a blackface dialogue. Orson Curtis, who was billed for the early part of the program, did not appear until late, caused by ' the East St. Louis car system. However, his solo was well worth waiting for. William Koenig gave a violin solo. Robert Harlan, Harry Lauder, II, was better than last year, if that is possible. The clubs put under very discouraging conditions presented a very good performance, well worth chancing a frozen ear or two. Page One Hundred Eighty-three Officers Director .Me. Charles Galloway President . Thomas Horn Secretary . . . . • . Marguerite Fleming Librarian .Roland Buchmueller Members .Soloist .Marie Becker Sopranos Marie Becker Ida Morschell Hazeljane Friton Minnie Morschell Maude Guhman Irene Mueller Mariel Hafner Marie Rothman Aphrodite Jannopoulo Adele Siiea Olive Underhill Altos Margaret Caffel Vera Gruner Marguerite Fleming Eola Hyatt Hilda Foreman Marjorie Manger Tenors C. Louis Fontana Thomas Horn Benjamin Knight Basses Roland Buchmueller Arthur Goodall Orson Curtis Sidney Weiss Fred Wolff I Orga n i z a t i o n s Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer . Elizabeth Chapin Dorothy Jacres Lucy Taylor Lucile Reidei. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Devotion . Mission Philanthropic Poster Social Membership Finance Room Hath i.r i ne Starijuck Mabel Freeman Jean Brookes Sarah Booth Louise Luedeiung Dorothy Jackes Lucile Reidel Jane Johns Members Evadne Alden Beth Barnett Sarah Booth Leonie Broyer Elizabeth Callaway Elizabeth Champion Susan Coultas Helen Crawford Martha Dyer Eleanor Engel Margery Finigan Florence Forbes Lois Forsythe Minna Fox Mabel Freeman Carla Gewe Adele Grafeman Page One Hundred Eighty-seven Romaine Grant Mariel Hafner Mildred Hess Dorothy Hetlage Melba Hill Mary Hope Dorothy Jackes Julia Jonah Jane Johns Helen Johnston Dorothy Kalbfell Viola Kerch koff Jessie Koechig Helen Knapp Ruth Leeper Louise Luedeking Margaret Martin Wildith Martin Lois McDaris Martha Meyer Josephine Michael Izeyl Miller Ruth Moffat Eleanor Osgood Laura Pickel Celeste Plank Margaret Ray Lucile Reidel Beulah Rodes Mazie Rath man Norma Saute Inez Schageman Grace Sewing Anna Sheppard Esther Simon Grace Strong Officers President .Margaretha Roth Secretary-Treasurer .Mary Callahan Mary Callahan Aphrodite Jannopolo Mae Levy Katherine McNulty Members 1918 Gladys Moone Marguerite Morrill Jessamine Price Margaretha Rotii 1919 Helen Ette Lots Forsythe Louise Luedeking Evadne Alden Mildred Candy 1920 1921 Florence Forbes Pauline Sarason Lillian Stupp Grace Woods Beulah Rodes Margery Finican Page One Hundred Eighty-eight The Wainright Knitting Unit N Wednesday, May 23rd, 19J 7, an enthusiastic group of knitters met at McMillan Hall to organize a University Knitting Unit. Miss Helen Banister, who was elected president at a previous informal gathering, took charge of our first formal meeting. The membership was open to all women of the University. Two hundred and fifteen dollars were raised to buy rvool. The greater part of this sum was donated by friends outside the University who were interested in furthering our Unit. It was decided that during the sum¬ mer a group system would be inaugurated to insure an efficient dis¬ tribution and collection of knitted articles. Each group was to consist of ten girls and a captain — all living in the same neighborhood. At the beginning of the fall semester the name of the Knitting Unit was changed to the “Wainright” in appreciation of all that Mr. Nixon had done for the organization in providing funds. Mr. Nixon was par¬ ticularly interested in the U. S. S. Wainright.” There has been a tremendous amount of work turned out by the unit. On all two hundred and seventy-two articles have been sent to the battleship. There are twenty-seven articles not yet completed. Though the unit has not supplied the whole ship, they expect to work consistently on throughout the duration of the war to supply as many men as possible with the much needed articles. Page One Hundred Eighty-nine 1 Officers President . Vice-President . Secretary-Treasurer Mildred Kalbfleisch Dorothy Kaliifell Gladys Moone Members Leona Broyer Elizabeth Harter Dorothy Kaliifell Mildred Kaldfleisch Eugenie Keaney Marjorie Manger Gladys Moone Inez Schageman Dorothea Blruach Dorothy Falk Virginia IIilliker Dorothy Jackes Gladys Mueller Alice Mullally Margaret Ray Mignon Rosenthal Norma Sante Inez Schageman Meta Small Grace Strong Faith Young Page One Hundred Ninety ( POETRY CLVB Members Helen Banister Frances Broerman Mildred Hess Norma Sante Bessie Seifert Leona Shepherd Marjorie Thompson Rob ' t Evans Adolph Hoenny George Nobbe Howard Poole John Sharon In order to satisfy students of the University who were interested in discussing not only the poetry of “real poets” hut also their own compositions, the Poetry Club was formed. In order to prove to the Committee for Admissions that he is truly interested in the writing of poetry an applicant must write an original poem. The Poetry Club has no formal meetings nor organizations, but meets twice a month with a despot, chosen from its members, presiding. Page One Hundred Ninety-one Organizations Architectural Society Brunson Condie Wright Hoffman Wilson Wolf Lowey Nicklaus Bihr Denison Hall Mateer Austin Verity Carrol Prof. Ferrand Page One Hundred Ninety-four Organization: ! ARCHITECTS SOCrETY. m 5 gf OFFICERS BURTDri I_. AUSTltt — PRiyiDErtT J. JASPER. 3E.ARCY — VICl-PREyO WILFRg.0 B. VERITY — 3E.CTREA5 VAH.A. DE.m OM — SOUS-MA5SVER, FACULTY PR9H G. FERPArtP — PROF HOLHtS OniTH AS3PROF. LAWRE.NCE. HILL- AUSTIN EJ1TCH H.C.E.LLI30H HONORARY ntnBLRS PRQF.WE..n GOURT; - PROF J. VAM ORNUr STUDENT HEnHEJS POSTGRADUATES RAYMOND L. HERgERJ- GEORGE. HAGUOLO 191S BURTON L AUSTIN FRANK. B. ROWAtT J. J ADPLR.5LARCY 1920 VAN. A. DENISON DAN CARROLL L.W. nATELR. cLtntns racKLAUs 192.1 iW BIHR JR. R.L. LOWLY DOUGLAS K.CONDIE A J. WILSON RICHARD A.FARNSWORTH GERALD W.WOLF CARL HOFFNAN V.tt.WR HT 5PE.CIALO fi r rv a. brunson Ralph c hall WILFRED B.VLRDY. a m urn m lll l ' l .ft ' ■ r- y yT y- Page One Hundred Ninety-five • l: Tureczek Strain Werner Weipert Mr. Siroky Weiss Koenig Page One Hundred Ninety-six ' •v ■B ■ Hi A. I. E. E. Freeman Newby Langey Watts Ringo Klippel Prof. Hake Glasgow Buck Lewis Meyer R. Miller Smith Maupon Murphy N. Skrainka Prof. Langsdorf W. Skrainka Tripodi Briner Zatek Tarlow Katz Dean Fontana Page One Hundred Ninety-eight ( Chairman . Vice-Chairman .... Secretary-Treasurer Engineering Council Representative Robert W. Macdonald Harry D. Smith Walter Skrainka C. Louis Fontana Members N. Skrainka Roy Glasgow Harold Lange Collimation Club Wetteroth Browne Miller Schuermann O. Stupp Neuman Mr. Becker Beffa Joraschky Brooks Renard Ra .ek Mr. Galt Schewe Becker Siteman Miller Deicke Corman Sharp Stupp Buchmueller Pitthan Page Two Hundred Chemical Engineers’ Club Boulden Harvey Berger Jacks Kollme Mange Graves Francis Pipkin Sclnvartznian Perry Van Horn Mateer Weil Dr. MacMaster Mr. Fickett Dr. Davies Dr. Ball Cree Vaughn Bothman Stoutz Shriner St. John Page Two Hundred Tzvo Organizations CHEMICAL NGINEXR-’S CLU Faculty Members Dr. L. McMaster Dr. T. R. Ball President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Harold H. Harvey J. S. Boulden F. J. Danglade G. Fred Driemeyer W. M. Perry Officers Dr. E. C. H. Davies Mr. E. E. Fickett Harold Van Horn .T. F. Danglade George Graves G. F. Driemeyer Members 1918 J. F. Stickley 1919 H. M. Van Horn 1920 H. Mateer S. PoLIXSKY A. W. Roth L. Schwarz man C. J. Studt McCormack Edw. Boeschenstein Bender Geo. Berger Eugene Weil Harold Francis Breiden Cree Jack Becker Morris Jacks George Graves Sam McElvaine Arthur Nash Dewey St. John Sidney Kollme Cal Hermer 1921 J. L. Block Wm. Bothman J. D. Conaty F. G. Frisbie M. Frisch C. E. Mange Ranald MacCune A. M. Magidson K. Masen G. Parsons B. S. Vaughn S. L. Perlman Robt. Pilcher J. S. Pipkin Walter Schueler J. E. Silberman R. L. Shriner Ralph Shrines F. H. Smith H. Stoutz K. Van Meter Hundred Three Pre-Medical Association Ullrich Engman Mueller Thompson Gibson Wimber Paule Heyes Batts Abel Munter Freeman Kiebel Tracy Wiese Broeder Hanser Lohr Dieckmann Bersche Eskeles Tremain Birdsall Stahl President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Officers Thomas Birds all P. D. Stahl S. Johnson Irl G. Tremain Members William Dieckman Theodore Schindewolf Harry Wieze Justus Rice William White Esserman Lansden McCandless Edward Giessow Armin PIofsommer Charles Paule William Wayne Herbert Stanton Leslie E. Prichard John Thompson Fred Wedel Henry Ulrich William Bersche Kenneth Wilson Nelson Pierson F. Lee Frank Tracy J. H. Danglade Mao-te Tsao Thomas Wimber Frank Smith David Gibson William Kuntz Oliver Abel Curtiss Lohr Leon Lipschitz Theodore Hanser Abe Platt Irwin Eskeles Edwin Zimmerman William Luyties E. W. Mueler Harvey M. Cravens Alvin Heilmich Walter Rousch Martin Engman Charles Keeble E. V. Thiehoff William Broeder Harry Berjsieker Francis CXnepa Munter Page Tzvo Hundred Five BurfonL.Aurfmi I Arf.Edifor D) I H.P.Dun.cker EdiforinChie MevxS.Muen.ch Buj’inej’j ' Mcvrvcxg Randolph S.Lyorv Afklefic Edifor Dorofky Jackey Ayroci feEdifor Greece M Woody Ayrociecfe E difor Publications Page Two Hundred Eight ,) Publications J | ■ , : ' £ The Eliot Literary Magazine Officers Editor-in-Chief . John Jones Sharon Managing Editor . Max S. Muench Business Manager . Charles F. Keebaugh Assistant Business Manager . Melvin Mathis Circulation Manager . Adolph Hoenny Active Members Morris Carnovsky Leona Shepherd George Nobbe Grace Woods Founders Dei.ius Kotthoff Alice Johann Kendall Harrison Earl A. Amos Adolph Drey Douglas Voss Martin ■ Edward D. Nix Charles Study i Emanuel Hahn , y f Y • | i ) .. . Page Two Hundred Ten ( ' -■ ■ ■ • . ' 9iofA Secret Societies Secret Societies CLASS SOCIETIES Men’s Societies Name Esta £ icd Pralma (Senior Honorary). “13” (Junior Honorary). Lock and Chain (Sophomore). Obelisk (Freshman). . . . Women’s Societies Keod (Senior Honorary ' ). Clais (Freshman) .. Pleiades (Honorary Hockey Society). FRATERNITIES Phi Beta Kappa (Classical) . Sigma Xi (Scientific) Alpha Omega Alpha (Aledical) Scarab (Architectural) Artus (Economics) . Honorary Missouri Beta Missouri Alpha Phi Delta Phi (Legal) Phi Beta Pi (Medical) Chi Zeta Chi (Medical) Nu Sigma Nu (Medical) Xi Psi Phi (Dental) . Delta Sigma Delta (Dental) Alpha CTii Sigma (Chemical) Tau Pi Epsilon (Pre-medical) Delta Theta Phi (Legal) . Phi Delta Theta . Sigma Alpha Epsilon Beta Theta Pi . Sigma Chi . Sigma Nu . Kappa Alpha (So.) Theta Xi Kappa Sigma Alpha Kappa Delta Chi Alpha Pi Kappa Alpha Theta Pi Beta Phi Delta Gamma Gamma Phi Beta Pi Mu Alpha Page Tzc’O Hundred Eleven Professional Cooley Mu . Omicron Alpha Kappa Phi Tau Upsilon Alpha Epsilon . Local . Benton Senate . 1914 1910 1905 1914 1915 1882 1903 1906 1900 1901 1904 1917 1917 1918 Social Missouri Gamma 1891 Missouri Beta . 1892 Alpha lota .... 1901 Tau Tau .... 1902 . Gamma Omicron 1903 Beta Theta 1905 Iota. 1905 . Beta Sigma 1902 . Local. 1916 . Local. 1917 SORORITIES Alpha Iota .... 1906 Missouri Beta . 1907 Alpha Epsilon . 1914 Phi. 1917 . Local. 1917 Junior Honorary Society ■■- ' jiis ■:■ wt tvereU L. ”E rocA ■ M ' z M£ A ' Henry P. Dur-cker fr e d Tb e 15 C : lv ;: ' V ' • r ' . vV.V S-i- ' ' • • •. ' . ' I ' .;. « •; . ' . ,• ' i.-ti ■: ' j . • « L -v.-. AUy- vS-i v V ' 5 ' ■ ' |V.i r ■ i ' ' ' X - • v v . : v ■ ' Clarence P. Havings ■ G? r ' i K a rr p ' ' • : Andrew W. IfWas ‘;xl| .. ' PC. Alfred Harvard..:-V Pax 5 P u en c(v •• •.v. ' -vh • ' .•• . « • • •• ‘ • ' Vt ; -7 V ■ : {Q r trips P • . ( .• .■ ?• Y ,J .’{ • I w Al .! ■ , ' •■ ; 7 ... • . .• _ _ :■ ' : •■••••; ' .•• ., i ' ■■C-■: : ■.’ yVy - I ' ' ’ ' ■ ' ■ ' V .. . • . VvV ■. ■■ ' •• • ' ,•••.■ ■ ■ • . • . • , , .« . • •. 4 . - Page Two Hundred Thirteen -P- ; :V ' - 3C $ W ) -12.0 LL“- Helen Banister. Mae Levy Rachel Metcalfe Maegaretha Loth Marjorie THoMPSoh Alice Wills iL Page Two Hundred Eighteen Pan-Hellenic Association Establshed 1917 Reorganized 1917 Officers President First Semester President Second Semester . Secretary First Semester Secretary Second Semester . Treasurer first Semester Treasurer Second Semester . Fraternities Phi Delta Theta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Beta Theta Pi Sigma Chi F. Jack Danglahe Walter Pitthan Walter Pittham W. Watts W. C. Martin W. C. Martin Represented Kappa Sigma Sigma Nu Kappa Alpha Theta Xi Alpha Kappa Delta Pan-Hellenic Corkball First Round Alpha Kappa Delta 17 VS. Kappa Alpha 0 Beta Theta Pi 3 vs. Phi Delta Theta . 0 Sigma Nu . 1 vs. Sigma Chi .... 0 Theta Xi . .- 1 vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon . 0 Second Round Sigma Nu forfeited to Alpha Kappa Delta Beta The;ta Pi ... 3 vs. Theta Xi.0 Final Round Beta Theta Pi Beta Theta Pi 7 vs. Alpha Kappa Delta 3 9 vs. Alpha Kappa Delta ... 5 On account of the unsettled conditions during last spring, it was thought to be impractical to carry out the customary baseball schedule. To meet this deficiency thus created, a corkball league was established. The Drosten Trophy did not go to the winner. Page Two Hundred Twenty-five Fraternities Phi Delta Theta Page Tien Hundred Twenty-six Aulepp McMinn Johns Petring Corby Kinealy Van Meter Goessling Brown Wetzel J. Lewis Parsons Watts McRoberts Wuhlfing Strain W. Lewis Berkeley Lowey Allen Ratner McElwee G. Engelsmann W. Engelsmann McConnell Denison McCarthy Johann Poague McCormack Page Tzuo Hundred Twenty-eight Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856 Missouri Beta Chapter Established 1892 Fratres in Facultate Rhodes E. Cave, LL.D. Charles Elijah Galt, B.S. Fratres in Universitate 1918 Charles C. Johann Stanley McCarthy Rogers Bradley Allen Jamerson McCormack Robert Berkley Pinckney G. McEiavee Van Denison 1921 R. Eugene Lowey Pledged Mack Tayi.or Payne H. Ratnkr George Engelsmann, Jr. James McConnell William Engelsmann Duncan McCallum Scott Johnson Milton E. Meier Page Tzi’o Hundred Twenty-nine Sigma Chi Birdsall R. Miller Coburn Spalding Woerheide W. Miller Kremer Salveter Rowley Keebaugh Van Horn Harvey Sharp Stapleton H. Miller Page Tzl ' o Hundred Thirty-two Sigma Chi Founded at Miami University, 1855 Tau Tau Chapter Established 1902 Fratre in Facilitate Ernest O. Sweetser, B.S. Fratres in Universitate 1918 F. Stapleton FI. Miller C. E. Sharp H. Harvey 1 Van Horn W. Miller C. Keebaugh C. Spalding R. Miller W. Coburn 1919 Wm. Perry 1920 1921 Birdsall R. Rremer E. J. Rowley D. Sparks E. Salveter R. Woerheide Page Two Hundred Thirty-three Sigma Nu H. Danglade Priest Barbour Voris Carr Francis Grolock Deal Hesslir.ger Green Werner Darkness Danglade Liggett Hollinshead Page Two Hundred Thirty-four Fraternities Sigma Nu Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1869 Gamma Omicron Chapter Established 1903 Fratres in Universitate 1918 Elmer Werner Hiram Liggett Archie Carr 1919 Jack Danglade Reed I-Iarkness Fred Grolock Ray Hollinshead Russel Deal 1920 Harold Francis Pledged Carleton Green Bryant Voris Harold Danglade Page Two Hundred Thirty-five dll ; l9 iaira Kappa Alpha L. Woods Tucker R. Woods Welle Whitton Israel Spiegelhalter Wiercke Boggs Rodden Cogswell Moseley Staudinger Healey Barnidge Burd Dalby Rohan Becker Lyons Dricmeyer Martin Muench Lov F. Barnidge Page Two Hundred Thirty-six Frater in Facultate Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M.M.E. Fratres in Universitate 1918 Walter A. Kamp Fred R. Foelsch Robert Bankson Jra Berry Herbert Briner Dan Carroll Warren Cowdery Carl O. Kamp William Krenning Gilbert H. Meyers Edward O ' Brien Page Two Hundred Thirty-nine I) Fraternities Kappa Sigma Established 1869, University of Virginia Beta Sigma Chapter Established 1902 Fratres in Facilitate Thomas Howard Chapman, A.B. Wesley Raymond Wells, Ph.D. William Alexander Robinson, Ph.D. -4 ' Fratres in Universitate 1918 Stanford Hollochek Erwin Peter Stupp James Hiram Kelley Elmer Deicke 1919 Albert William Roth 1921 Walter Earl Dickie Pledged John Eugene Eggers Henry Christopher Griesedieck Clarence Griesedieck George Ken Macbeth Alfred Arnold Meyer John Joseph Sheerin Page Two Hundred Forty-one ; ' • i’A ' J9|e Fraternities Alpha Kappa Delta Jostes Vosburgh Bryant Bryden Wolfe Wetteroth Walker Johnston O’Donnell Hickman Fontana Horn O’Sullivan Schewe Conzelman Whitson Goodall Knight Glasgow Pitthan Heideman Hartman Page Two Hundred Forty-two Alpha Kappa Delta Local Organized 1916 Fratres in Universitate 1918 Roy Stanley Glasgow Thomas Stanislaus Horn Milo Lawrence Heideman Frederick August Jostes Walter V. L. Pittman Alexis Franz Hartmann William Ben Knicht, Jr. Harry Osborn Vosburgh Irwin Walker, Jr. William Albert Wetteroth George Melvin Whitson Gerad William Wolf Harold Frederick O’Donnell William O’Sullivan Herbert Edward Bryant Christopher Louis Fontana Douglas Miller Bryden Waldo Lf.e Johnston Emerson Lewis Conzelman Arthur S. Goodall Elmer J. F. Schewe Roland Richard Baver Joseph Rawlins Hickman 1919 1920 1921 Pledged Page Two Hundred. Porty-tlirce Chi Alpha Pi Page Two Hundred Forty-four Bihr Hoffman Pilcher Hall Gibson Klippel Joraschky Austin Smith Boeschenstein i ■i ' Local Fraternities Chi Alpha Pi Fratre in Facultate Lawrence Hill, B.S. Fratres in Universitate 1918 Harry D. Smith 1919 Burton L. Austin Arthur A. Joraschky Sam W. Bihr, Jr. Earl Klippel 1920 1921 David Girson Pledged Established 1917 John Wolf Page Two Hundred Forty-five E. X. Boeschenstein Carl Hoffman Rod’t Pilcher Ralph C. Hall ; . ‘ i 91 Phi Delta Phi Cooley Chapter Established 1882 Founded at University of Michigan, 1869 Fratres in Facultate Ernest Bancroft Conant, A.B.. LI..B. Richard Livingston Goode, A.M., LL.D. William Winchester Keysor, Litt.B., LL.B. Jacob Marx Lashley, LL.B. Thomas George Rutledge, A.B., LL.B. Tyrrell Williams, A.B., LL.B. Frederick August Wislizf.nus, A.B., LL.B. Josefh Henry Zumbalen. LL.B. Fratres in Universitate 1918 Foster Hightower Brown Stanford Hollocher James Hiram Kelly 1919 Stanley Berksox Friedman Henry Anthony Hoeffer Robert Harvey McRoberts Frederick Herder Wulfing 1920 William Edwin Guy Wesley August Lueders Page Two Hundred Forty-seven Formerly Beta Rho Founded at University of Wisconsin in 1902 Alpha Epsilon Chapter Established 1917 Fratres in Facultate Honorary Leroy McMaster, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry Active Elmer Edward Fickett, B.S. Affiliated j Lloyd Francis Nickell, Ph.D. James Black, B.S. Frederick Burton Langrf.ck, B.S. Fratres in Universitate Graduate Student Charles Wotring Studt, A.B. 1918 Joseph F. Stickley 1919 John S. Boulden G. Fred Driemeyer Albert W. Roth Leon Schwarzman Harold M. Van Horn Arthur W. Becker Elmer H. Bender Eugene Weil Page Two Hundred Fifty-one Fraternities Tau Pi Epsilon Alpha Chapter Founded at Washington University, May, 1917 Charter Members Thomas Charles Birdsall, T9 Theodore Wright Crossen, T9 Edward Benedict Grogan, B.S. Arthur Esserman, T9 Milo Lawrence Heideman, T8 John Collins McKitterick, T9 William Alexander Michael, T9 Horace Wiley Pote, T9 Clyde Heffner Smith, T8 Peter Frank Smith, T8 Active Members William Joseph Dieckmann, ’20 Irwin Herman Eskei.es, ’20 Theodore Henry Hanser, ’20 William B. Kountz, ' 20 Curtis Harry Lohr, ’20 Mao-Te Tsao, ’20 Charles William Wayne, ’20 Fred William Wedel, ’20 Irl George Tremain, ’20 Harry William Wiese, ’20 Tau Pi Epsilon is an honorary fraternity in the Pre-Mcdica! Department, election to which is based upon the noteworthy work of the members chosen by the fraternity. Members are chosen from the Sophomore Class. Page Tzvo Hundred Fifty-three Fraternities Phi Beta Pi Hannon Murdock Rumreich Hclmes Knipmeyer Michael Zink Nelson Summers Allen Hopkins Murphy Kennedy Altheide Johnson Walters Miller Thompson Lewis Krebs Howard Hodges Black Starry Plank Blondin Sundwall Hodges Strandquist Rupc Terrill Shackelford Bergstrom Copher Pac c Two Hundred Fifty-four Fraternities Phi Beta Pi issssaa) Mu Chapter Fratres in Facultate Established 1903 I. B. Shapleigh, M.D. . E. L. Opie, M.D. A. E. Ewing, M.D. W. S. Thomas, M.D. E. A. Baumgartner, Ph.D. J. R. Caulk, M.D. L. B. Alford, M.D. H. W. Lyman, M.D. J. H. Gross, M.D. H. McC. Young, M.D. O. R. Sevin, M.D. C. H. Eyermann, M.D. John Green, M.D. Greenfield Sluder, M.D. Willard Bartlett, M.D. Meyer Wiener, M.D. George Gellhorn, M.D. W. E. Sauer, M.D. A. O. Fisher, M.D. Llewellyn Sale, M.D. Barney Brooks, M.D. L. K. Guggenheim, M.D. F. W. Everhardt, M.D. J. W. Larrimore, M.D. M. A. Bliss, M.D. Fratres in Universitate G. C. COPHER 1918 E. A. Stranquist P. C. Hodges H. H. Shackleford H. W. Maxey 0. Sundwall W. A. Rupe J. A. Tesson D. S. Allen E. H. Terrill 1919 R. L. Murdock E. A. Blondin L. J. Starry F. C. Howard F. J. Hodges G. H. Hopkins E. E. Brown A. L. Walter L. 0. Helmes Thompson H. A. Plank 0. S. Krebs W. B. Chapman W. W. Knipmeyf.r G. D. Johnson C. E. Black Hannon 1920 P. H. Kennedy A. B. Potter 1921 J. P. Altheide C. B. Summers M. T. Nelsen W. R. Michael W. B. Lewis H. S. Miller 0. C. Zink Page Two Hundred Fifty-fire ; - . v Fraternities Chi Zeta Chi Omicron Chapter Fratres in Universitate G. F. Cresswell W. E. Stone 1918 G. M. Polk J. F. Pessel S. M. Withers G. W. Belcher W. G. Coleman C. H. Briggs E. W. Spinzig 1919 U. J. Busier 1920 Pledged A. C. Brooks A. B. Raffl H. C. Gaebe R. Paddock s- Page Tivo Hundred Fifty-seven Established 1906 19ic Page Two Hundred Fifty-eight ( Nu Sigma Nu Clay Gilles Carr Rohlfing Jostes Dean Gillett Mahle Liggett Moore Roantree Day Adclsberger Barker Wellmerling Andrae Kohlbry Williams Priest Wander Mudd Bond Hashinger Hartmann Fraternities Nu Sigma Nu Fratres in Facultate Geo. Dock, M.D. Henry Schwarz, M.D. Harvey C. Mudd, M.D. Geo. M. Tuttle, M.D. Malvin B. Clopton, M.D. G. Canby Robinson, M.D. Dennes E. Jackson, M.D. Philip C. Jeans, M.D. H. Edward Miller, M.D. Oliver H. Campbell, M.D. Fred T. Murphy, M.D. Paul G. Topper, M.D. Marsh Pitzman, M.D. Ellsworth Smith, M.D. Frances R. Fry, M.D. Nathaniel Allison, M.D. Walter Baumgarten, M.D. Adrien S. Bleyer, M.D. Meredith R. Johnson, M.D. Otto Schwarz, M.D. C. E. Hyndman, M.D. Fred Rahlen, M.D. H. M. Young, M. D. David E. Smith, M.D. Jno. Judy, M.D. Edmund Bichtold, M.D. Dalton K. Rose, M.D. Wm. H. Omstead, M.D. Philip P. Green, M.D. M. J. Arbuckle, M.D. J. E. Stewart, M.D. P. F. Bradford, M.D. D. W. Luten, M.D. H. H. Hagin, M.D. B. Landis Elliott, M.D. C. W. Tooker, M.D. D. B. Garstang, M.D. Francis M. Barnes, M.D. Montrose Burrows, M.D. Martin F Engman, M.D. Fratres in Universitate W. G. Gillet A. E. Mahle C. B Kallery B. L. Elliott C. L. Gilles B. L. Adelsberger R. L. Andrae Paul Barker W. S. Carter Page Two Hundred Fifty-nine 1918 A. B. Day James Dean 1919 E. H. Harbine, Jr. R. P. Roantree H. T. Clay W. G. Wander H. W. Bond E. H. Rohlfing 1920 A. D. Carr S. B. Grant F. Jostes H. S. Liggett W. S. Priest Pledged Hartmann W. R. Moore S. Mudd H. Wei.lmerling L. L. Williams ;y ' :F-v: ' 9ie Xi Psi Phi Harding McCarthy Reid Tempel Hanson Brown Nelson McGinnis Clifford Newport Connell Cooper, McLellan W. Stroll Diminitt Herbert O’Hare Perry Taylor Eisner Dickson Benway Buck Brandenburg Stark Limbaugli Long Wheeler Baker eir Fendler Thomas Beinker Davidson Laudermilk Fearhiely Page Two Hundred Sixty Fraternities Xi Psi Phi Tau Chapter Fratres in Facultate Established 1901 Walter M. Bartlett, D.D.S. Benno E. Lischer, D.M.D. Jesse D. White, D.M.D. ♦James A. Brown, D.D.S. ♦William H. Seifert. Louis G. Neuhoff, D.D.S. Edgar H. Keys, D.D.S. Carroll L. Moore, D.D.S. ♦Walter F. Neuhoff, D.D.S. D.D.S. ♦In U. S. Service. Fratres in Universitate 1918 Carl J. Blinker Emphy Ben way F. J. Brandenburg Walter L. Buck Charles R. Clifford Leonard F. Connell C. Herbert Dean B. E. Dickson Erwin C. Elsnkr Thurlo T. Weir 1919 Norman P. Brown A. D. Cooper Scott M. Davidson G. L. Fearheiley Sylvester E. Fendler F. G. Kavanaucii H. J. Long Miles L. Baker L. E. Byrd F. Ellison Dim mitt 1921 O. Ellis Ed M. Ewing C. W. Limbaugh Pledged D. R. Robertson James E. Harding George H. Herbert H. Pratt Laudermilk J. D. Nelson Lyle D. Perry Larkin E. Stark W. Stroh Wesley H. Tempel Setii C. Thomas Stanley J. McCarthy James M. McLellan Loren O. Newport A. P. O’Hare Leo W. Reid Mack Taylor Russell C. Wheeler R. G. Fobes H. L. Hanson Remmel H. Hill V. L. Heath L. G. McGinnis Pane Two Hundred Sixty-one Fraternities Delta Sigma Delta Page Tien Hundred Sixly-two Harlan Rodden Hall Glenn Kolb Reimers Barnett Pieper Burton Harrison Matthews Sanders Hollinshead Arnold Benning Wiencke Dalby Marquard Clipner Dr. Carson Parkhill Gilster Hilderbrand Orton Fraternities - . ■■ - Delta Sigma Delta Fratres in Facultate E. P. Brady, D.D.S. F. H. Foerster, D.D.S. C. F. Elzeae, D.D.S. G. E. Morgan Dr. E. M. Carson, Deputy Fratres in Universitate 1918 V. A. Sanders R. C. Parkhill B. E. Gilster T. Ray Hollinshead W. E. ICling R. S. Hall 1919 L . C . Hilderbrand E. Alfred Marquard G. H. Van Dusen 0. F. Orton Wm. J. Kolb G. A. Clipner A. J. Reimers J. C. WlENEKE C. J. Benninc R. T. Mathews C. W. ICoch H. B. Burton Forrest Harrison Jesse Rodden Christ Pieper ' Edward Arnold Robert Harlan S. Nelson Dalby W. L. Glenn A. D. Barnett E. W. Petty W. W. Weiman Pledged E. D. Reising F. F. Rainey Page Tivo Hundred Sixty-three Fraternities ■t L . . Phi Beta Kappa Officers President Hun ley Whatley Herrington Vice-President .William Franklin Gei-hart Secretary-Treasurer .Benjamin Mince Duggar Active Members James Francis Abbott, Ph.D. Chauncey Samuel Boucher, Ph.D. Winthrop Holt Chenery, Ph.D. George Irving Dale, Ph.D. Benjamin Mince Duggar, Ph.D. William Franklin Gepiiart, Pii.D. Frederic Ai.din Hall, A.B., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D. Otto Heller, Ph.D. Hunley Whatley Herrington, Ph.D. George Oscar James, Ph.D. John Livingston Lowes, Ph.D. Leroy McM aster, Ph.D. George Thomas Moore, Ph.D. William Alexander Robinson, Ph.D, William Henry Roever, Ph.D. Frederick William Shipley, Ph.D. Charles Henry Skinner, M.S. Ethel Genevieve Sprague, A.B. Carl Stephenson, Ph.D. Edgar James Swift, Ph.D. Robert James Terry, M.D. George Reeves Tiiroop, Ph.D. Shirley Howard Weber, Ph.D. Wesley Raymond Wells, Ph.D. Undergraduate Students Elected from the Class of 1918 Else Marie Eyssell Jacob Furth, Jr. Marguerite Fiscii Vato Carl Ilgen Leona Virginia Shepherd Phi Beta Kappa is an honorary classical fraternity whose members are chosen because of their exceedingly high standard of scholarship in classical subjects. Fraternities Sigma Xi Washington University Chapter President . Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer . Established 1910 Officers Professor A. S. Langsdorf Professor G. T. Moore Professor C. H. Danforth Professor L. McMaster Active Members Professor J. F. Abbott Dr. E. R. Allen Dr. T. R. Ball Dr. E. A. Baumgartner Mr. W. C. E. Becker Mr. W. W. Boxxs Dr. Barney Brooks Professor E. A. Burt Professor C. FI. Danforth Dr. E. C. H. Davies Dr. Geo. Dock Mr. C. W. Dodge Professor B. M. Duggak Dr. Otto Dunkel Professor Joseph Erlanger Dr. A. E. Ewing Mr. G. W. Freiberg Mr. C. E. Galt Dr. H. S. Gasser Mr. Alfred Goldman Professor J. M. Greenman Professor H. G. FIake Professor D. E. Jackson Professor G. O. James Dr. P. C. Jeans Mr. H. M. Jennison Dr. W. E. G. Kirchner Mr. G. W. Lamke Professor A. S. Langsdorf Dr. J. W. Larimore Dr. Leo Loeb Professor W. E. McCourt Professor LeRoy McMaster Professor Geo. T. Moore Professor W. C. Morse Professor F. E. Nipher Professor E. L. Oiilk Professor Lindley Pyle Dr. Paul R. Rider Professor G. Candy Robinson Professor W. H. Roever Miss Nellie Rogers Professor Ernest Sachs Professor P. A. Shaffer Mr. H. H. Shackelford Dr. W. E. Shahan Mr. D. W. Shipton Mr. E. R. Siroky Professor Greenfield Sluder Mr. Forest FI. Staley Professor E. O. Sweetser Dr. F. J. Taussig Professor R. J. Terry Professor J. L. Van Ornum Dr. S. M. Zeller LIST OF ELECTIONS From the Corps of Instruction Charles Henry Skinner, A.B., M.S. v IN- ' Graduate Students Charles Wotiung Studt, A.B. Stuart Mudd, B.S. William Corman Roy Stanley Glasgow Undergraduates Herbert William Gronemeyer Ei.ias Adolph Neuman Joseph Frederick Stickley The Society of Sigma Xi is an honorary society, election to which, from faculty and alumni, is based upon noteworthy achievement in some branch of pure or applied science, and from graduate students and Seniors, upon promise of ability in scientific endeavor. Page Two Hundred Sixty-five ■Vy-vS ' v : - : - Omega Alpha vfroc ofttelv rove ’akyndvrar President . Dr. Ernest Sachs S ecretary-Treasurer Dr. F. S. Staley Counsellor Dr. Geo. Dock Faculty Members Dr. Barney Brooks Dr. J. C. Kopelowitz Dr. R. A. Gesell Dr. G. E. Hourn Dr. H. S. Gasser Dr. A. R. Tormey Dr. R. J. Terry Dr. D. K. Rose Dr. Ernest Sacus Dr. F. H. Staley Dr. H. G. Greditzer Dr. H. D. Lamb Dr. C. A. Gundelach Dr. J. A. Seabold Dr. Rich Weiss Dr. Harry Sandpearl Dr. E. S. Smith Dr. M. PlTZMAN Dr. L. H. Hempleman Dr. E. L. SlIEAHAN Dr. F. H. Clausen Dr. T. H. Tuholski Dr. W. B. Carson Dr. T. W. Taylor Dr. F. M. Barnes, Jr. Dr. F. J. Sullivan Dr. P. G. Hurford Dr. S. T. Bassett Dr. Ellis Fisciiel Dr. Geo. Dock Mr. Mr. Mr. Undergraduate Members W. G. Giixett G. A. Copher B. L. Elliott Dr. E. A. Baumgartner Mr. E. H. Terrill Mr. A. B. Day Alpha Omega Alpha is an honorary medical fraternity. Page Two Hundred Sixty-six Artus Washington University Chapter Established 1915 Active Members Walter A. Kamp, ’IS John Jones Sharon, ' 18 Carl Vato Ilgen, ’IS Jacob Furth, Jr., ’18 Thomas Howard Chapman, A.B., T7 Henry Philip Duncker, ’19 Adolph Mason I-Ioenny, T9 Charles A. Cruikshank, T9 Robert F. Miller, T8 •r Associate Members Herbert S. Boettler, A.B., ’IS Fred W. Boettler, A.M., T5 Frank Berryhill, A.B., T4 Royal A. Dickie, A.M., T4 Charles Duncker, Jr., A.B., T4 Arthur J. Freund, A.B., T3 Dr. William F. Gephart, Pii.D. J. Wilbur Gonterman, A.B., T5 Robert H. Sparks, A.B., T5 Robert Gordon Rodkey, A.M. Joseph A. Bernard, A.B., T7 Robert W. Brooks, A.B., T 7 Irwin K. Cozzens, A.B., T7 Adolph Drey. A.B., T7 John B. Ewing, A.B., T7 Edwin R. Alfred H. Finkelstein, A.B., T7 Roland M. Hoerr, A.B., T5 Elmer L. Lacey, B.S., T4 Kenneth C. Larkey, A.B., T5 Dr. Isaac Lippincott, Ph.D. Leo McCarthy, A.M., T3 Du. Charles E. Persons, Ph.D. Milton Russell, A.B., T5 Dr. William A. Robinson, Ph.D. William S. Krebs, A.M. George S. Metcalfe, A.B., T6 James A. Preston, A.B., T7 Irl B. Rosenblum, A.B., ' 15 Frank Scott, A.B., T7 Chester C. Smithers, A.B., T6 Thomas, A.B., T7 Artus is an honorary fraternity in Economics and Political Science, election to which is based on the noteworthy work of the members chosen by the organization. Selection is made from Juniors and Seniors. Patjc Two Hundred Sixty-eight Kappa Alpha Theta Murphy Cushing Jorndt Denyvan Pearson Walther Nettleship Johnson Gruner Candy Studt Finnegan Skeen Waller Lewis M. Price Bernet Brookes Ette Fields Keller Taylor Knight Rubelman Haffner Dubuque J. Price Metcalfe Banister Zoff McNulty Roth Dubuque Kappa Alpha Theta Alpha lota Chapter Established 1906 Sorores in Universitate 1918 Helen Banister Adele Dubuque Genevieve Dubuque Rachei. Metcalfe Katherine McNulty Jessamine Price Margaretha Rotii Marguerite Zoff Jean Brookes Helen Ette Mary Jane Fields Martel Hafner Beth Barnett Mildred Candy Margery Finigan Margaret Haase Vera Gruner Katherine Cushing Marian Denyvan Esther Johnson Bf.rtha Jorndt Beulah Rodes Page Two Hundred Seventy-one 1919 Margaret Knight Etta Reller Alice Rubelman Lucy Taylor 1920 Mary Lewis Mary Frances Price Mary Skeen Ann Studt Crenshaw Waller 1921 Loretta Murphy Carolyn Nettleshtp Lucille Pierson Gertrude Walther Pledged Lillian Waite Osgood Pelton Vagnauer Donnelly Hess Hackman Jackes Bernet Engel G. Woods Miller Williams Burbach Johnston Burgee May Moffat Alden Gardner F. Woods Martin Wass Starbuck Forshaw Hope Johns 4 Page Two Hundred Seventy-two ' V- ---:---:- Mulally Curtiss Braun Kronsbein Young Hunt Harter Johnston Tate Mueller Kropp Forsythe Rapp Kalbfell Blackburn Pickel Gronert Phelps Stupp Erskine Sheppard E. Dauernheim Maull Longmire Moone Luedeking Kalhfleiseh Thompson Meyer Wills Crawford V Dauernheim Page Two Hundred Seventy-four Gamma Phi Beta Talbot Urban Chapin Black Jonah Kennedy Michael Hetlage Strong Fox Evans Riedel Callahan Callaway Lewis Sewing Page Two Hundred Seventy-six Sororities Gamma Phi Beta Phi Chapter Established 1917 Sorores in Universitate 1918 Elizabeth Callaway Mary Callahan Grace Lewis 1919 Elizabeth Chapin Minna Fox Lucile Riedel Grace Sewing 1920 Dorothy Hetlage Julia Jonah Doris Talbot Virginia Black Page Two Hundred Seventy-seven VAS-:: ' Sarah Kennedy Josephine Michael 1921 Grace Strong Pledged Madge Bartlett Alma Urban Ethyl Evans .?a.- tM-giSiiSpi Sororities Pi Mu Alpha Local Established 1917 Sorores in Universitate 1918 Aphrouitl Jannopoulo Gertrude Kipp Annabel Remnitz 1919 Jeannette Brinkman Maude Guhman Esther Darley Margaret Ray Inez Schageman 1920 Amalia Boettler Fern Brokaw Hazel Farmer Adele Shea 1921 Leonie Broyer ( ' Page Two Hundred Seventy-nine Review do so. The Year ESPITE the drain which the war has made upon our student body and, indeed, our faculty, leaving few men in the Junior and Senior classes, work and activities at Wash¬ ington have, with considerable effort, been carried on quite as usual. The service flag donated by the women of the University shows the number of men who have entered the service, giving up the completion of their education to A feature of the year has been the establishment of the School of Commerce and Finance which is designed to give training in banking and commercial lines. In athletics, a branch of activity which would be expected to suffer most from the war, the students have made an admirable showing. The increased interest manifested by the women in athletics is a great ad¬ vance over previous years. The establishment of the Red Cross Shop on the Campus is a great thing for the University. To this shop, which is the only branch in the West End, come many outsiders as well as the men and women of the University. Through this means, St. Louis people have been better able to become acquainted with our school. Several new organizations, among which the knitting unit is promi¬ nent, have been formed throughout the year. Social activities, though giving way at all times to war work and the patriotic duties of the students, have continued to make life at Wash¬ ington pleasant and agreeable. ( Page Two Hundred Eighty-one Review Hospital and Ambulance Units HE first Washingtonians to depart for service abroad after the declaration of war were, probably, the members of Base Hospital Unit No. 21. The Unit was ready to sail very shortly after the outbreak of the war, and awaited orders for some weeks. Some members of the Unit who had not completed two years’ work as medical students resigned upon the recommendation that it was their patri¬ otic duty to continue their work. The Unit departed from Union Station on Thursday, May IT. It comprised 28 officers, 1-11 enlisted men, and (15 nurses. The officers were: Major J. D. Fife, commanding; Capt. Thomas C. Austin, Adjutant; Capt. Gus S. Kopple, Quartermaster. Dr. F. T. Murphy was medical director with rank of Major. The other officers were: Major Malvern B. Clopton, Assistant Director, in charge of surgical service; Major Walter Fischel, Assistant Director in charge of medical service; Capt. Nathaniel Allison, Adjutant; Capt. Eugene E. Opie, Capt. Sidney I. Schwab, Capt. Lawrence F. Post, Capt. Hugh McCullock, Capt. Warren R. Rainey, Capt. Meredith R. Johnston, Capt. Charles II. Eyermann, Lieut. Howard II. Bell. Lieut. Alan McChesney, Lieut. Edwin C. Ernst, Lieut. Roland F. Fischer, Lieut. Alan A. Gilbert, Lieut. J. W. Larimer, Lieut. Arthur W. Proetz, Lieut. Frederick B. Abbott, Lieut. Philip P. Green, Lieut. James A. Brown and Lieut. Reginald Murdock. Several changes in the personnel of the officers occurred recently. Among the enlisted men were these Washingtonians: H. A. Alvis, E. F. Dakin, Henry F. Leuking, David L. Millar, W. Leland Mitchell. Hugo Muench, Jr.; Bert C. Ball, M. J. F ardv, Wm. P. Gasser, L. P. Gay. J. M . McKee, Jr.; Charles D. O Keefe and E. C. Padgett. Most of them were medical students. Only two were from the Campus. A cablegram received by Dr. Lowes on Thursday, May .‘51, an¬ nounced the arrival of the Unit in France. A cable from H. F. Leuking had previously stated that the Unit arrived in England on the steamer St. Paul of the White Star Line on Saturday, May 24. On W ednesday, May 18, sixteen Washington University men de¬ parted for ambulance service in France. They sailed from New York on the following Saturday on the liner Rochambcau.” Those who left were: Eugene Adams, Ed Byrd, Johnston Craig, Tom Dawson, William Dock, Francis Douglas, Chaunccy Frier, Jack Harris, Ralph Hill, Pierce Johnson, Towner Phelan, Donald Stewart, Stewart Sutherland, Thomas W agner and Charles Watkins. The contingent was under comm and of Stewart and Byrd, until its arrival at Paris. At the expiration of their six months’ term of service the men were free to do as they pleased about further military service. Several enlisted as privates in the French army or as aviators, and others have relumed home. l J age Two Hundred F.ighiy-three Review M 2 • ■ The Red Cross Shop ASHINGTON’S newest Campus activity, the Red Cross workshop, although not an activity in the truest sense of the word, plays, nevertheless, an important part in the daily life of the University. One might say nightly life, too, for the shop is open four nights every week, and the evening classes are perhaps the most interesting, if not the most enjoyable. Many of the college women give at least one afternoon a week to this work, so vitally important for our country’s victory. The shop is not meant only for University students, however, and women come from all parts of the West End. a fact which helps to strengthen the ties between the University and the community. Even a few venturous professors don caps and aprons and engage in the unpedagogical labor of making “four by eights.” The shop, which is under the direction of Mrs. Lowes, is an inde¬ pendent one. It receives its orders from the Red Cross headquarters at ashington, has it own electric cutting machine, and does its own pack¬ ing and shipping. The dressings made are five yard bandages, four by eight compresses, and two kinds of sponges, four by fours, and two by twos. In a few weeks, the shop used nine hundred yards of gauze and sent many thousands of dressing to France. In one evening alone, two thousand small sponges were made by thirty-five people. These figures all show that the shop is not lacking in efficiency, skill and “speed.” Each bundle of dressings is marked with a Washington University workshop stamp, so that, if any of our boys should be wounded, they might find solace in knowing that bandages from dear old Washington were helping them to become strong again. The Advertising Men’s Convention HE thirteenth annual convention of the Associated Adver¬ tising Clubs of the World opened on Sunday, May 3, on the Quadrangle of Washington University, with a gigantic mass meeting. Six thousand delegates to the convention were present, together with a few thousand citizens. A stage had been erected in front of Busch Hall, upon wh ich were seated the speakers, as well as the officers of the association. The chief speakers were Senator Hiram Johnson, former Governor of California; Governor Gardner of Missouri, Herbert Hous¬ ton, the retiring president of the association, and acting Mayor Aloe. aye Tivo Hundred Eighty-five Review The French Commission N Monday morning. May 7, 1917, Washington University was extremely fortunate to be visited by the French com¬ mission which was then touring the country. The com¬ mission included one of the foremost statesmen of France, and several of its war heroes. It was made up of M. A iviani, chairman of the commission, and Minister of Justice of France; General Joffre, hero of the Marne, and Field Marshal of France; Lieutenant-Colonel Fabry, of the French army staff, better known as the Blue Devil of France;” Lieutenant dc Tcs- san, aide to Marshal Joffre; Marquis de Chambrun, great-grandson of General Lafayette, and member of the French Chamber of Deputies; M. Hovelacque, French Inspector General of Public Instruction; and Vice-Admiral Chocheprat. Breckenridge Long, Third Assistant Secre¬ tary of State; Lieutenant-Colonel Spencer Crosby, U. S. A.; Warren D. Robbins, Secretary of the Embassy Bureau of State; and Viscount de Jean, counsellor of the French embassy, accompanied the commission. An escort of honor was formed by two companies of the First Regi¬ ment of Missouri Infantry. About 10 minutes after the appearance of the militiamen on the Campus, the first automobile of the parade passed up the driveway in front of University Hall. Here in front of the arch¬ way, the Student Body and faculty had assembled. Flags of France and America, which had been distributed as the crowd gathered, were waved enthusiastically as the pre-eminent Frenchmen passed in review. Instead of greeting the visitors with singing or a brass band, the yell leader, Stewart, led the students with a series of yells ending in Joffre, Joffre, Rah! Rah! Rah! The cheers of “Vive la France” and “Vive la A iviani” visibly pleased the visiting commission. The towers that day bore French and American flags. As soon as the cars paused in front of the archway, the guests stood up and saluted the flags. They seemed to appreciate the royal reception given them, and they departed beaming great smiles upon those assembled to wel¬ come them. The volunteers for American ambulance service in France occupied the place of honor at the bottom of the steps. The men who had been the student body took up the remainder of step-space and the group accepted for the training camps stood behind them. The faculty and themselves on the lawn in front of the wings of University Hall. Page Two Hundred Eighty-seven The Washington Service Flag N Wednesday, December 19, 1917, a service flag was raised over the north tower of University Hall. This flag bore 200 stars in honor of the students and faculty members of Washington now in the nation’s service. Chan cellor F. A. Hall made the dedicatory speech, in which he explained that the stars represent only active people who actually stopped work to enlist. The flag does not take into account several hundred alumni and students who later enlisted. Preceding the flag-raising, a large crowd attended the General Assembly, where Dean C. M. Davis, recently returned from France, told nf his experiences in connection with Base Hospital Unit No. 21. Capt. C. J. Messeck, on leave from Camp Funston, made an inspiring address. Dandelion Day N May the tenth, 1917, the men of the Freshman class assembled on the Quad to dig dandelions to he used as votes in electing the most popular girl of their class as “Dandelion Queen.” It was soon evident that out of the half dozen contestants for this honor, the race was to be between Miss Fvadne Alden and Miss Mary Frances Price. The men supporting each candidate fought with so much ardor that not only did many come out battered and bruised, but some were even bleeding. Warren Miller and Eugene Schrader issued forth from the conflict with bloody hands,” while some zealous Freshman attempted to use a part of Francis Barnidge’s ear for a vote. Up to the last minute it was uncertain as to which candidate would have the majority of votes and such wild scrambling after the yellow weed has seldom been seen on the Quad. However, when the contest closed, Miss Alden proved to be the victor, but when they sought her, she was nowhere to be found. Scouts were sent out, while the crowd waited. She made a dramatic entrance just in time to be crowned with a wreath of daisies, before the crowd dispersed to 12 o ' clock classes. Page Two Hundred Eighty-nine Review May Day HE Annual McMillan May Day Festival was presented May If) in McMillan Hall Court, the ideal place always chosen for this traditional performance. The fifty girls of the cast deserve more than ordinary praise for the amount of effort expended, for owing to the vagaries of the impar¬ tial weather man, they were allowed only two weeks in which to perfect the play. The story of the play is beautifully staged in the land of the Fairies, and is that of a poor peasant girl who bewails the fact that she, through the fault of poverty, is not lik e others. Puck, taking pity upon her, sends his gnomes over the whole world to bring gifts of happiness to this little maid. The play opens with Winifred’s sad tale and the dance of the gnomes. Puck having told them of Winifred, dispatches them imme¬ diately to all parts of the globe. The story progresses with the fulfilling of this mission. 1 he first gnome returns with the Boys and Girls, who bring outh as their gift to Winifred. The Sea Nymphs are ushered in, bringing Wealth and Wis¬ dom. Finally, as a culmination of her new-found joy, Winifred receives Love and the Prince from the Fairies. Puck crowns her Queen of the May, and her happiness is celebrated by the May Pole dance of the fairy folk. NO, NOT THE CHEER LEADER HAT ' S that you say, Freshman; you saw the cheer leader to-dav? Why, what on earth makes you think that? You know by the way he was dressed? Why, how in the world was he dressed? Soft white hat — yes — smoking a cigarette, swinging a cane — yes — sport coat and white flan¬ nel trousers — yes — and white shoes. Do I know whom ? Of course, I do, Freshman; that’s no more the vou mean. cheer leader than you are — that’s the Dean! Page Two Hundred Ninety-one Following the Team Being the chronicle of the sojourn of fifteen Quo V adisers through Missouri, Illinois, and Iowa, in search of the Holy Trail. Furthermore we saw those fifteen fightin’ Pikers kill and quarter the Drake Bulldog. Hereby hangs the tail: FRIDAY. 6:25 a. m— Roll call. Gus Kamp—“HereFrank Simmons—“Coming upBill Watts —“Rarin’ to go;’’ Fuzzy Engleman—“Let’s go from here;” Peter Duncker—“Givemell Pikers;” Colonel Pogue—“I’m from Tainessee, suh;” Scoop Goldstein—“Well, I ain’t absent;” Walter Aulepp—“You know what the bulldog said to the bear;” John Sharon—“How about some silent prayer, fellas?” Pud Lewis—“Hell, no; Jack Boulden “Let’s eat;” Johnny Lewis—“Only 400 miles to go;” Ham Gamble— “On deck;” Pete Pietring—“Is ever’body here?” Moddy Modisette— “Here 1 am.” 6:30—We’re oil. 6:38—Only 305 miles left. 7:02—Just missed the ferry at St. Charles. 7:20—Self-starter on the Overland’s busted. 7:25—The Pierce is missing on two. 8:00—We just now passed a whole lotta animal and Jack says to a farmer, “Mister, how much do you want for one of the ponies?” and the farmer says, “Gwan, yuh nut, them’s jackasses,” and ever’body laughed. 8:02—Foot-throttle on the Overland is busted. 9 : 17—We just passed through a town but couldn’t stop because there was a toll gate. 9 ; 58—We ain’t seen the Dorris for two hours and guess those fellows got lost. 10:20—Fuzzy ran the Overland eight miles with his emergency on and the brake-band got all burnt. 10 :49—I just saw a cow. 11 :16—Overland got another puncture. 12:14 —Ditto. We got out to eat and the potato salad was all busted on everything, but we et it anyhow. Everybody feels sorry for those fellows in the Dorris who probably took the wrong road and never will get to Des Moines. 1:22—Hannibal. This is the town that Mark Twain lived in and his name is written all over the place. Somebody said that there was a picture of Mark Twain in one of the saloons so everybody went in to look at it. 1 :32—Darn good picture. ] :35—We’re crossing the bridge over the Mississippi River and going over to Illinois. A man at the entrance says, “Six bits, please,” and Kamp wants to know why, and the man says, “Because I tolled you so.” 1:40 —There ain’t much difference between Missouri and Illinois. 2:00 to 4:30—Nothing much happened except we skidded twice, and run over two chickens, and had a puncture, and passed through Quincy. Page Two Hundred Ninety-three V • ■■ • - -. Over There” ' ) Frank fco t w namq ac F f ona mec a for mar tmanj ijfi. Tran r aL uv c? 7. - 6 Page Tzvo Hundred Ninety-foil ; Revie w 5 ; 07 — Once again we are looking on the grandeur of the Mississippi River and the Keokuk Dam and it sure is beautiful. But a guy can’t paint no pictures With a’ toothbrush and gasoline. Would that I my pastels had To paint this gorgeous scene, Of course that don’t give much of a description of the Mississippi River, but it shows that we think it is a pretty good thing. 5:15—In Iowa. The policeman says it is dry. 5:18—Just saw a statue of Mr. Keokuk. He’s on a horse. 6:02 — The Pierce is now hitting on all six. Oh boy, ain t it a gra-a-a-nd and glore-yus feeling? 6 : 30—This is some state. We ain’t had a puncture yet. 6:37—The horn and the clock and one of the lamps on the Overland got busted. 7:58—Hillsboro. This Hillsboro is just like all the rest of ’em. We et supper and bought some gasoline. I think they mixed the coffee and the gas. 8:20—Ottumwa. Everybody went to the hotel and washed his face. Some of the guys want to sleep here and some want to go to Oskaloosa, but l think Ottumwa sounds bad enough. 9 : 02 —We’re gonna look the town over. 9:05—Wc did. 9:20—We met some girls and talked to them a few minutes and one of ’em says, “Gee, I’m feeling hungry;’’ so we said “Good-bye” and went back to the hotel. 9 ;50—Too bad the guys in the Dorris got lost. 10 : 00 —Zzzz-z-z-z-z-z-z. SATURDAY 5:30—The clerk phoned and said that somebody told him to wake us up. and the Colonel pulls that old joke about using the sheets for the table-cloth. 5 :54 — Our first meal since last night. 6:10 — We hit the trail. 6:20 — It rained last night and we started skidding and I told Fuzzy that he better be careful, so he slowed down to 46. 8:17 — These popular songs are all bunk. I been in Iowa since yesterday and ain t seen a milkmaid yet. 9:30—Oskaloosa. It’s a darn shame to put that kind o’ name on a good town like this. Fuzzy led us in a yell and some Alfalfa Aleck comes out says, “Hey, young fellers, that ain’t the name of this here town.” 10:14 — Overland got another puncture and the Colonel is saying bad words. 10:40 — Simmons says he sees smoke, but Modisette says we passed East St. Louis yesterday. 11 :10 — Des Moines at last. Too bad the Dorris got lost. 11 :30—We came down to the best hotel in the city and didn’t register; but we walked around the lobby and used the stationery and soap and everything and acted just like we lived there. I saw the manager talking to the clerk and I guess they were saying we were a swell-looking bunch of fellahs. 11 ; 39 — We just found out that the Dorris got here last night. Everybody is sorry that they were sorry for those fellows. 12:30—No consomme, thank you, I prefer plain soup. Pane Two Hundred Ninety-five Review 3:00—The football game. Vcnimus, vidimus, vincimus. 19 to 0. (For further information concerning game see athletic section. We can ' t see the game and write a diary at the same time.) 5 :30 to 6:30—Hurray, hurray. 6:45—Lift anchor. 10:24—Oskaloosa again, and nobody’s waiting tor us. 12:21—Ottumwa. Wonder if those girls are still hungry? 1 .15—Overland’s got a puncture. 1 :16—It’s raining and the tire’s still punctured. I :49—Another puncture. Why did I ever come on this journey? 2:20—Fairfield. Fuel, feed and Humber—I mean slumber. SUNDAY 5:30—The Colonel couldn’t pull the sheet joke, because we didn ' t see any. 6:11—It’s Sunday so we had a little hymn scrimmage. 6:15—I’ve switched from the Overland to the Pierce, because I don’t think the Over¬ land will ever get to St. Louis, and I want to be at class to-morrow. 10:00—This is some state. We haven’t hit a poll gate yet. 10:40—Keokuk and Mr. Keokuk is still on his horse. So long, Iowa. (We’re two hours ahead of schedule, so I think we will be in St. Louis for evening mess.) 11:13—Mud. 11 :14—We’re stuck. 11 ;15—Everybody pushed and we’re out of the mud. 11:16—The Dorris is stuck. II :17—It’s out. 11:1S—Both of us are stuck. 1:52—We’ve gone six miles in the last two and a half hours and have been stuck 47 times, so I’ve been pushing so much I couldn’t write. 1:53—Everybody is thinking of the fine meal we will have when we get to Quincy. 2:14—Quincy, and lunch. I had three cheese sandwiches, a dime’s worth of cakes, a cherry coke, and another cheese sandwich. 2:30—We haven’t seen Fuzzy and the Overland since this morning. Guess they got stuck some place and everybody is worried. 3:17—Hannibal. To-day is Sunday, so we can’t go in to look at Mark Twain’s pic¬ ture. The machines are awful muddy and all the girls are waving at us. Henry Duncker says he is never going to take the mud off of the Pierce. 4:17—Gamble is shooting craps with Watts his name. 6:59—Louisiana. I guess we were going so fast that we never saw this town on our way’ up. It’s a wonder we didn’t miss Des Moines. We ate here but nobody got away without paying for his meal. 8:20—Hope that Fuzzy and Colonel and Jack didn ' t get killed. 9:17—It’s dark and nobody can see nothing. 11 :40—Been sleeping. 12:48—Think I’ll go up to the front seat. 12:55—I fell out of the machine going up to the front seat and everybody is laughing, but I don’t think I got hurt. 12:32—We missed the ferry by two minutes. 1 ;00—The ferryman says that Engelsman crossed the river at a quarter to eight on a spark plug, a half of carburetor, two wheels, and a license. Everybody is sorry that they worried. 1:28—God’s own country. Page Two Hundred Ninety-seven University Campus Guide Places of interest to nobody that the visitor can ill afford to miss. 1. The Architects’ Candy Store—This palace of sweets is located in Cupples I, three points removed from Burt Austin’s untidy desk. All kinds of dainties arc on sale, housed in beautiful paper coverings. The prices, 5c to Gc, are reasonable considering the fact that this emporium saves the spender a trip down to the Washington Pharmacy. (There are many, however, whom sad experience has driven to said pharmacy, re¬ gardless of distance.) Mr. Clem Nicklaus is the genial proprietor. His policy is “pay-as-you-enter” and his goods are worse. But if your newly-purchased Magnet has stale peanuts in it, or if that package of Spearmint has lain for days, don’t blame him. You should have had better sense than to go there. Try patronizing the Thetas for your chocolate. 2. The Student Life Office — ’1 his little cove in the archway was intended originally for an office for the Student Life Association. Since then, however, it has degenerated into a polling place, an office for any organization which has the nerve to usurp it, and a haven for Campus bums on windy days. The box marked “Copy’’ means nothing to the average student; the typewriter dates from 1840; the desk is two years its senior. The railing was put up to keep Fritz Foelsch from getting too noisy and to keep the co-eds away from the Editor of Student Life when busy. Mr. Staudinger (the man with his feet on the desk) will be glad to answer questions relating to anything, any time, anywhere. Loafers always welcome, but don’t leave your books on the desk. 4. Gus Kamp’s Room—Imagine two beds, a table, a row of books and the Kamp brothers and you will accurately visualize this portion of Sec. B, lower, the bed at the left is of historical value because it is evidently self-expanding, having grown sufficiently one evening to ac¬ commodate Bud Kling, A1 Marquard and Dutch Whitley. Toddy’s Page Two Hundred Ni)iety-cight ____ Review chorus girl pictures are in Al’s book on Dental Surgery. The room is a general lounging place for Theta Xis, Scoop Goldstein and even the Colonel. Fat Hasting and Gus can always be seen exchanging confi¬ dences over the table after the rest of the gang retire and twilight is approaching. The habitation is never empty. 5. The Library Lecture Hall—The University maintains for the benefit of the students a lecture course in Ridgcly Library under the personal supervision of Maginn, Krausnick Co. The hall is long and rangy and acoustics are perfect both for lecturer and lectured. Lectures are given to individuals or to groups of two or more, and two or three of them may take place at a time. Often these talks get so interesting and instructive that the hearers are compelled, under the stress of sudden emotion, to leave the library and not come back for days at a stretch. Scoop Goldstein says: “I find that this course has this very same effect upon me often.” 6. The School of Commerce and Finance Building—Information as to this building is very hard to obtain. At present the best thing that the visitor can do will be to enter the south wing of University Hall and see if he or she can discover the place. If this method is unsuccessful, let him or her ask some prof in the referred to department where it is. He may be able to tell you where it will be in the futur, if — 3. The Turkish Baths at the Gym—These refreshing and revivify¬ ing baths are maintained at Francis Gym for the benefit of those who come there to exercise or because they have to. There are four sets of them and at any given time any one of the four can be guaranteed to give forth the amount of hot water requisite for a good Turkish bath. But by the time the victim has found the lucky set, he is usually content to take a cold shower. This saves the management money because it saves it hot water. Clever, not? Then, too, when the water does come hot, the unfortunate taking the treatment gets so much heat that he has enough to last him several more occasions. These Turkish baths are very well patronized, though it is rumored through necessity only. Page Two Hundred Ninety-nine 7 - ’ ;.t; ; ■ ■IO. Review Over There” Somewhere- n Fr m r ranee. Ffaquo o draw rn? for the 1319 Hatchet under f re Page Three Hundred y d ' rn. r O ' of the boys y iSppmiS y to them. - tT-durh Review 9 Mother Goose at Washington Old Bill Perry sat on a wall, Old Bill Perry had a great fall; All the “Chem. Es.” and the other “E” men Cannot put poor Bill Perry together again. Y=f Sing a song of football, pig-skin full of air; Eleven husky creatures to make the poor “coach” swear. When the game was opened, the gang began to fight Along came the “referee” and bawled ’em out of sight! Little Miss Moffat sat on a “toffat” To open a letter from Eddie: Along came the “bunch,” and they all had a hunch That she knew what was in it already! Jake be nimble, Jake be quick! Turn on the heat or we’ll all be sick!! s Review Someone was a bad guy, someone was a crook, Someone in the girls’ room has swiped my “Econ” book. I’ll go to someone’s house while some¬ one is in bed And I’ll take a Geology book and hit ’em on the head ! There was an old woman who lived in the “dorm” Who had lots of children to keep out of harm; She fed them on porridge, a lovely repast, And bought a “player-piano” but that didn’t last! Old King Coal was a merry old soul And a very “rare” soul was he. He stayed away from school one day, And a frozen crew were we! Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How do you get your “A ' s?” Is your brain full, or have you got “pull?” With the “Sedgewicks” and “Douays?” Diddle diddle dumpling, my friend “Johnny,” Knitting sox for a soldier “sonny” One half-finished, the other one done, Diddle diddle dumpling, faithful John! Bye Baby Biting, Daddy’s gone a-fighting, Gone to get the “Kaiser’s” skin To buy some books for Miss McGinn. Page Three Hundred Tzvo I had a Latin pony And it was “easy riding” I loaned it to a fellow Who took it from its hiding. He used it and he showed it To my friend and college “Dean I’ll never trust another friend Upon this campus green ! Hey diddle diddle, call “Leftwich and Bittcl,” My Ford is stuck in the mud ! If anyone laughs to see such sport, He’ll go home “minus blood!” SB S There was a man in our school And he was wondrous wise: He posted history by the ream — Assignments we despise. Of course no names we mention, For that would be too rude! But if he keeps the bad work up, This Prof.” will sure be sued! Page Three Hundred Three Hickory Dickory “Dock” He gave us all a shock Went over to France and saw bis chance To be “Hero” Dickorv Dock. L’Envoi sincere wish. UR work is done. Throughout the year we have been beset by many difficulties, and we have tried as best we could to overcome them. We hope therefore that you will excuse any slight irregularities which you find in the foregoing pages. That this year’s Hatchet may be worthy of the institution for which it stands and that it may prove of lasting interest to all, is our THE Advertising Section and Calendar 1917-1918 The reader is urged to remember, while looking through the fol¬ lowing pages, that the business firms represented therein have made possible the 1919 Hatchet, and deserve, on that account, the patronage of University men and women. Business men advertise in the Hatchet because they have goods and service to sell; and unless it is demonstrated that this advertising does aid them to secure the desired results, their future support of the student publications of Washington University cannot justly be expected. Advertising Manager. Page Three Hundred Five The Newspaper to Tie Tight to The successful men and women of St. Louis and its wide spreading district find it pays to keep in closest touch with the live hews of the day. That’s why they ALL read the ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH You’ll be just so much ahead of the “other fellow when you ' re a constant reader of this favorite newspaper that “goes home” day after day with worth-while people to worth-while homes. Do you know that the POST-DISPATCH sells more papers every day in the year in St. I.ouis and suburbs than there are homes in the city? It does, and has for many years. Sunday (Average Circulation Entire Month of March, 1918) 400,179 Daily and Sunday (Average Circulation Entire Month of March, 1918) 217,347 “St. Louis’ ONE BIG Newspaper” First in News, First in Features, First in Circulation, First in Advertisin g —FIRST IN EVERYTHING! Page There Hundred Six APRIL 1 Women’s Club of Washington U. hold re¬ ception. 4 Marjorie Thompson elected president of Women’s Council for 1917-18. 5 Fussing denounced by Chancellor Hall and Miss MacCaulley. 6 Coach Edmunds formally calls off all ath¬ letics. 11th Division of Sigma Nu hold convention at Washington. 7 Hikers’ Club organized. Girls walk from Meramec Highlands to Valley Park and back. Rush on Blue Jays and Tiz. By making use of the Alphabetical List of Advertisers to be found in the back of this book, and on the bulletin boards, you will show the same sort of spirit you do by coming out to root for the team. Don’t forget that you are one of those who can help to make the publications of this University an assured success. A Knock with the “Hatchet” is a Boost for The Only High-Grade Ice Cream Banner Creamery Company Geo. A. Bang, President. Page Three Hundred Seven Let Tests on Roughest Roads De¬ cide Which Car Excels Will you accept this proposal to make a practical comparison of the Marmon 34 and any other comparable car? You to name the car, and the roads on which we will demonstrate the Marmon in competition with it. Pick out the roughest ground you know, and have the demonstrator for the second car drive you over it at any touring speed. Try it at several speeds, up to that car’s limit. Then let us take you in a Marmon 34 across the same rough stretches at identical speeds. Or if you prefer, do the driving yourself in both demonstrations. In addition to that, have the gasoline meas¬ ured at the start and finish. The performance of the Marmon in tests like this has surprised experienced motorists. It will bring home to you the lesson in advanced engineering this car has taught. Observe the ease in starting and stopping, the ciuick acceleration—and how this light-weight car adheres to the road at speeds up to 55 miles an hour without the least side-sway. Observe the luxurious riding comfort due to the low-hung body, low center of gravity, per¬ fect balance front and rear, extra long wheel¬ base and Marmon special spring suspension. This light-weight car omits a half-ton extra load that you do not have to pul! when you start and you do not have to carry on your tires while you’re going. Marmon not only reduces personal exertion, but saves from 40 to 50 per cent in tire ex¬ pense, and from 50 to 75 per cent in gasoline. All we ask is a chance to prove these facts in comparison with any other car of this size and power. Early Deliveries Can Be Made MORE AUTOMOBILE CO. 3005-7 LOCUST STREET ST. LOUIS, MO. Page Three Hundred Eight F. H. WEBER -HSKrTg 61 FLORIST OUR NEW STORE—Cor. TAYLOR and OLIVE We are local members of the Florists’ Telegraph Delivery Association, and will see that you receive the best floral service no matter where you wish delivery made in United Stares of America or Canada. APRIL 11 13 14 17 18 19 20 21 24 25 27 28 Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished Page Three Hundred Nine APR. 21. Girls make and follow programs at Clais Annual. 1918 Hatchet, prize at Junior Raffle dance. Lieut. Buswell of American Ambulance lectures on service in France. Co-eds serve at French War Exhibit. McMillanites present clever vaudeville show. “Wanted — a Wife.” Annual dinner of the Chem. E. Club. Cliem. Es. advised not to rush into service. “Good Ship McMillan” lands co-eds on Ellis Island at party of Women’s Ath¬ letic Assn. Thyrsus presents “The Truth” in decidedly professional style. Lock and Chain gives a “strictly Washing¬ ton” dance. Jane Felton wins Scarab medal. Robert Chubb carries off the honors for Washington in Missouri Valley Confer¬ ence Debate. Betas and A. K. Ds. triumph over Phi Deltas and K. As. respectively in cork- ball tournament. Kappa Sigma and Alpha Kappa Delta ad mitted to Pan-Hellenic. Clyde Smith elected president of Glee Club. Fat Hastings leaves for Duemveg, Mo. Frosh disconsolate. Pi Phis hold annual banquet at M. A. A. Grace Lewis. June Forshaw and Frances Lucas chosen as principals for May Day Play. by W. Schiller Co. Page Three Hundred Ten MAY 9. MAY 1 Seven Juniors appear with Skull of “13.” Hatchet issued on time as unusual. 2 Co-ed Carnival includes everything from dancing to track. 3 Sophomores elect Francis Douglas to edit 1919 Hatchet. 4 Pralnta chooses six men. Union gives farewell banquet in honor of men leaving for service. 7 Dan Bartlett elected to head Thyrsus. 8 Junior and Freshmen Girls tie for first place in swimming meet. 9 Freshmen team wins. Vadne Alden crowned Dandelion Queen. Mary Francis Price runs close second. Jessamine Price elected VV. A. A. president. Bell, Main 2294; Main 2295 Kinloch, Central 10 MISSOURI TENT AND AWNING CO. Established 1873 D. JANNOPOULO, Pres. Incorporated 18S4 206-212 CHESTNUT STREET Sole Manufacturers for CARPENTER PATENT SPRING ROLLER SHADE Awning Open. This awning is without doubt the neatest and best thing in the window awning line ever invented. It is operated with one cord only, is easier to put up than any other awning and cannot get out of order. When open for use it is a decided ornament, and when closed is on a line with the sash in the center of the window and can be scarcely noticed from the street. CANVAS GOODS Of Every Description and CAMPING EQUIPMENTS. For Rent, Sidewalk Canopies, Carpet Covers and Tents. Decorations Done on Short Notice. Awning Closed. Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by W. Schiller Co. Page Three Hundred Eleven A Savings Account—A Mercantile Savings Account—has very aptly been called trouble insurance.” With a Mercantile Savings Account you can better face difficulties. It is a cash reserve. Generally the most difficult part of saving is the beginning. After you actually open your account, you easily fall into the habit of making- regular deposits. With the Mercantile your savings are under United States Government Protection. Mercantile Trust Co. Eighth and Locust—to St. Charles Member Federal Reserve System — United States Government Protection MAY 10. BjX - MAY 10 Thirty-nine men leave for Ft. Riley. Lock and Chain pledges to funeral march. 12 Sixteen leave Washington to join American Ambulance Service. 16 Half-a-hundred co-eds present Bessie Seifert’s May Day Play to large appre¬ ciative audience. W. U. Knitting Unit formed. Helen Banister, president. 17 Base Hospital Unit No. 21 leaves for France. 21 Pre-Lovefest party of Sophs and Frosh enjoyed by Sophs. Frosh still unc on¬ scious. 22 Luncheon ends year’s activity of W.A.A. Lower classmen bury the “Hatchet.” Two Sophs enliven the usual dance. Page Three Hundred Twelve AMERICAN NATIONAL ASSURANCE COMPANY SAINT LOUIS :-: :-: :-: MISSOURI Extends to readers of the Hatciiet the road to success in selling life insurance. Operating under the compulsory deposit law of Missouri with exceptional policy contracts to offer the General Public. When thinking of Life Insurance, write W. FRANK SMITH, Agency Manager, 5th Floor, 3rd Nat’l Bank Bldg. St. Louis, Missouri. Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by W. Schiller Co. Page Three Hundred Thirteen Swagger Clothes for Young Men Thinking men eliminate risk these days of uncertain values and look for substantial brands of clothes such as vc offer. Be fair with yourself and look at our wonderful clothes. ONE PRICE ALWAYS $20 Delivery SANDPERL’S BETTER CLOTHES Seventh at Olive Open Saturday Evenings Until Nine MAY 23 24 25 26 28 29 IUNE 3 8 9 11 12 Joint Jones Sharon elected head of Men’s Council for 17-18. Tau Pi Epsilon, honorary Tre-medic So¬ ciety formed. Keod picks six Juniors. Mo. Valley Conference votes to continue athletics. Announcement of new local fraternity, Chi Alpha Pi. Beaming sunshine does not daunt Sheeps Club pledges from carrying umbrellas. Mooted question whether they are sheep or goats. Students decide they had better begin studying. Exams approach. Ad Men open their convention on Quad. Welcome to our city. Architects hold annual exhibition. Herbcr, Pelton, Leimkuehler and Simpson award¬ ed honors. Alpha Chi Sigma, National Chemical fra¬ ternity grants charter to Beta Rho. Juniors lay down on the job and senior co-eds have to buy their own feed. No Senior banquet. No Class Play. No Pilgrimage. No Tree Planting. No Class Luncheon. No Faculty-Senior baseball game. Sherman’s vocabulary was sure mild. MAY 29. nAY £8. Page Three Hundred Fourteen to you—the future leaders in the thought and business of this world this talk is addressed My Friends :— You are preparing for life. It rests with you what you will make of that life. Soon you will graduate and come out into the world. You will enter upon careers. Some of you will become famous. All of you will, I know, do the things that will make your Alma Mater proud of you. Some of you will become great engineers, some great artists, others master busi¬ ness men, a few perhaps will see the wonderful good life insurance does, the immense throngs of women and chil¬ dren it saves from want, the prisons it keeps from overflowing, the young men and the young women it educates (there must be many of you who are getting your education at this universi¬ ty through life insurance). You will see the men life insurance enables to enter business, the wonder¬ ful teaching it gives for thrift and the many other good things this greatest thing in the world does for humanity. Those of you who do enter this beautiful profession will be more than amply re¬ paid in accumulation of the world’s goods alone, but in addition they will have earned what is better still, the satisfaction of creating happiness, for happiness is what life insurance brings to those who take advantage of it and who secure its comforts and its pro¬ tecting arm. I know, my friends, that with your highly trained mentality ' , none of you will neglect having insurance protec¬ tion on your own lives and I am cer¬ tain that many of you will enter the extremely lucrative profession of sell¬ ing it. As for these, they, at the twi¬ light of their lives will look back into the past and say to themselves, “I am happy for I lived a useful life and have added to the sum total of human happiness. Sincerely, E UGENE I OEB T S A A C S, General Agent QUITABLE JL IFE INSURANCE CO., OF IOWA Suite: 400 Third Nat ' l Bank Bldg., St. Louis Phones: Bell, Olive 389; Kinloch No. Central 6549 Page Three Hundred Fifteen Cotrell Leonard Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume MAKERS OF Caps, Gowns and Hoods to the Ameri¬ can Universities from the Atlantic to the Pacific, to University of Missouri, University of Colorado, Yale, Harvard and 600 others. CLASS CONTRACTS A SPECIALTY SUNSHINE CLOVER LEAVES — a charming sugar wafer with delicious cream filling. SUNSHINE PERFETTO — appropriate for every dessert. SUNSHINE TAN-SAN —truly a confection, with a flavor you remember pleasantly; better than candy. Yes, These Dainty Goodies Are Biscuits Made only by lqOSE- yiLES glSCUIT (OMPANY The Strong Arm of Missouri Guards Every Night and Day Account Times Are Good Save KTonv Take advantage of these prosperous days and open a Savings Account with the Night and Day Bank, where any week-day from nine in the morning until nine at night you may make a deposit; Saturday night until as late as ten. You do not have to go out of your way to come to this bank, as it is in the very center of downtown business, on the city’s most traveled thoroughfare, and at night the lightest. One dollar is sufficient to start an ac¬ count in the Night and Day Bank, the regular additions to which of even small deposits, with the 3j4% interest we pay, soon amount to a substantial sum. Night and Da}) Bank THE BANK OF CONVENIENCE 808 OLIVE STREET Page Three Hundred Sixteen JUNE 14 56th Commencement. 48 of 218 degrees awarded in absentia to Seniors in Service. No Senior Prom. 28 Sigma Chi hold Grand Chapter on Campus. SEPTEMBER 22 Civil Engineers end annual surveying trip. Three weeks spent on Campus to save R. R. fare. 24 Registration day. 27 Classes begin. Co-eds and a few men to be seen on Campus. Co-eds have that ‘ ' over there” look in their eyes. 28 Quad decorated with pledge ribbons and flowers. Much osculation in greeting new sisters. A Mississippi Valley Account means to you- 1— A place to keep your money safe. 2 — A place to make your money earn compound interest. A place where the smallest sum can be deposited safely and quickly. A place where as much as you need can be withdrawn as soon as you need it. 5—A place where courtesy, attention, good advice and good service will help you build up a competence. We ivant you for a customer Mississippi Valley Trust Co. FOURTH nml PINE Member Federal Reserve System of the United States Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by W. Schiller Co. Page Three Hundred Seventeen THE MOST POPULAR PLACE NEAR W. U. Washington Pharmacy Soda Fountain Drop in here at 11 :30 any Wednesday to be convinced. QUALITY explains the popularity of our Fountain. Goods of equal QUALITY are carried in these lines: Pennants and Pillow Tops. Cameras and Photo Supplies. Johnston and Lowney Candies. Popular Brands Cigars and Cigarettes. Writing Paper, Fountain Pens, and Supplies. Our PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT is second to none. WASHINGTON PHARMACY F. A. Hoch SKINKER AND BERLIN Cabany 1441 Cabany 6050 Delmar 391 OCTOBER 3 Sophs entertain Frosh for first time. No casualties. 5 J ohn Jones explains honor system to the strangers in our midst. Juniors and Seniors play model hockey game. 6 Frosh give varsity good opposition, but lose 12 to 6. S Upper classmen elect. Seniors pick Walter Kamp and Margretha Roth. Juniors choose Bill Perry sergeant-at-arms, John Boulden, pres., and Mildred Wass, vice- pres. Henry Duncker to edit 1919 Hatchet. 9 Lower classmen follow example set by uppers; Arthur Becker and Mary Frances Price head Sophs, while Frosh elect Wm. Aulepp and Catherine Cushing. 11 Fraternities announce spiking of 57. Alice Wills chosen president of McMillan. 12 Webster High defeats Frosh, 12 to 7. Peppy crowd attends Union Mixer. Regu¬ lar eats and dancing. Frosh tablerace and crewrace. Greased pig gives up with¬ out a squeal. 13 Varsity starts season right: Lombard, 14; Washington, 26. Lock and Chain pledges give native dances betwe en halves. Co-eds shocked. 13 Women told at Council’s athletic luncheon to wave handkerchiefs as it is more lady¬ like than vocal cheering. Page Three Hundred Eighteen ‘Something Electrical for Everybody” We are manufacturers and distributors of elec¬ trical supplies, and have a complete stock always. Your attention is particularly called to our stock of “Wireless Apparatus. We have, in our opinion, the most complete stock in the West. MANHATTAN ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO., Inc. 1106 PINE STREET ( ' .RANCHES AND FACTORIES New York Chicago Jersey City, N. J. Ravenna, Ohio San Francisco FACIAL MASSAGE SCALP TREATMENT CHILD’S HAIR CUTTING VIOLET RAY TREATMENT HAIRDRESSING MANICURING SHAMPOOING MARCEL WAVE M aison B1 anche Student in the College, Washington University Beautj) Shop MISS MARY DOUGHERTY Concerts - Recitals - Musicales Serious students accepted. EXPERTS IN ALL KINDS OF HAIR WORK Bell Phone, Caiiany 46 282 SKINKER ROAD, ST. LOUIS 5095 CABANNE AVENUE Phone, Forest 7852 Page Three Hundred Nineteen OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER 1919 HATCHET 3826 OLIVE STREET BELL, LINDELL 2015 KINLOCH, DELMAR 2027 Page Three Hundred Twenty Sold in St. Louis by The Friend of All Students CORONA weighs only six pounds yet has all the features of the heavier and bulkier typewriters and can be folded compactly into a dust-proof case which one can easily carry or slip out of the way when the machine is not in use. Price, $50.00 CORONA TYPEWRITER SALES CO. Olive 3505 40S N. SEVENTH ST. Central 4377R BROADWAY SAVINGS TRUST CO. BROADWAY AND LUCAS AVE. (Opposite Union Market ) RESOURCES $1,700,000.00 OFFICERS F. R. JACKES, President. GEO. F. COTTRILL, Vice-President. H. D. CON DIE, Vice-President. A. L. STOCKE, Vice-President. THEO. BOTHMANN, Secretary and Treasurer. H. F. IIOENER, Assistant Secretary. CHAS. W. Df.LARGY, Real Estate Officer. DIRECTORS C. F. BEARDSLEY, President Picker Beardsley Com. Co. O. P. Blake, Asst. Genl. Mgr. Sales, Inland Steel Co. CHARLES S. BROWN, President Hall Brown Woodworking Machine Co. THEO. BOTHMANN, Secretary and Treasurer. H. D. CO ' NDIE, President Condie-Bray Glass Paint Co. GEO. F. COTTRILL, Vice-President Green’s Car Wheel Mfg. Co. II. P. HUBBELL, Manager of Sales, Midvale Steel and Ordnance Co. F. R. JACKES, President Jackes-Evans Manu¬ facturing Co. GEO. E. RAITHEL, Geo. E. Raithel Manufacturing Co. T. W. REMMERS, President Diagraph Stencil Machine Corporation. PHILIP A. ROHAN, President Philip A. Rohan Boat Boiler and Tank Co. A. L. STOCKE, President St. Louis Oil Co. LAMBERT E. WALTIIER, Muench, Walther Muench, Attorneys. GEO. WIEGAND. President Standard Stamping Co. Highest rate of interest paid on deposits. Safe deposit boxes, $3.50 per year and upwards. We render prompt and efficient service and extend liberal accommodations for legitimate needs. OPEN MONDAYS UNTIL 7:30 P. M. Page Three Hundred Twenty-one “The Right Tackle” Here are the right clothes to tackle, if 3 f ou would look your best. This is true of your overcoat as well as your suit. The quality of Kaminer ' s Clothes goes beneath the surface. They pre¬ serve their style—their ‘‘shape keep” regardless of war or weather. Consult us before buying your next suit or overcoat. $ 15 , $ 17 . 50 , $20 KAMINER’S N. V. COR BROADWAY AND PINE HORS MAN Tennis Rackets Unsurpassed in 38 years. Fulfill every demand of the Tennis Player. Do not select a Racket for 1918 until you have seen the new HORS MAN MODELS If your dealer can ' t show them, write to us. The PERFECT Tennis Ball is the “AYRES” Used the world over by players who know. We are sole U. S. Distributors. Write for catalogue. E. I. Horsman Co. 11-15 Union Square, New York City. of WEBSTER’S New International DICTIONARIES are in use by business men, en¬ gineers. bankers, judges, architects, physicians, farmers, teachers, librarians, clergymen, by suc¬ cessful men and women the world over. ARE YOU EQUIPPED TO WIN? The New International provides the means to success. It is an all-knowing teacher, a universal question answerer. If you seek efficiency and advancement why not makedaily use of this vastfund of information? 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. 2700Pages. 6000 Illustrations. Colored Plates. 30,000 Geo¬ graphical Subjects. 12,000 Bio¬ graphical Entries. Regular and India-Papcr Editions. Write for specimen panes, il¬ lustrations. etc. Free, a set of I’ocket Maps if you name this paper. G. C. M ERR! AM CO., Springfield, Mass. TOUR CREDIT Is Good With Us Meyer T ailoring Company 614 PINE ST. Suits to your Measure $25.00 to $45.00 Page Three Hundred Twenty-two OCT 16. 3 i OCTOBER 16 Women Dormers give annual dance. Frosli prove to have natural ability as perform¬ ers. 17 Men vote to revise athletic council. 19 Lock and Chain initiates eight men at first dance of year. 20 Ten men, six women and one jinx accom¬ pany team to Manhattan. 61-0. 26 Sumptuous and painful initiation of Art School Frosh. 27 Rose Poly loses to tune of 7 to 0. 31 Women’s Union discuss war work. NOVEMBER 2 Pep Patrol revived. Establishment of Delta Theta Pi, Legal Fraternity an¬ nounced. Ask the Commons Chef for some B urina Dranzos H urryups a delicious muffin made from Purina Branzos. They are delicious, nutritious, laxative. Also Try Ralston Wheat Food as a Breakfast Porridge Both products made in St. Louis by IVasliington U. graduates Photo supplies for the Hatchet furnished by W. Schiller Co. Page Three Hundred Twenty-three TYPEWRITERS RENTED Non-visibles, 3 nios. $5.00 Visibles 3 mos. $7.50 and up REBUILT TYPEWRITERS $25.00 to $75.00 TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES American Writing Machine Co. 807 PINE ST. Main 4413 Central 1215 We Have Furnished Costumes for WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY PLAYS, PAGEANTS, FESTIVALS, BANQUETS, UNIVEE SURKUS And all other occasions and always with satisfaction, for several years. Robt. Schmidt The Costumer 206 and 208 S. 4th St. St. Louis Olive 682 Central 4903L A. H. Fetting Manufacturing J ewelry Co. Manufacturer of GREEK LETTER FRATERNITY JEWELRY 213 N. Liberty St. Baltimore, Md. Special designs and estimates on class rings, pins, etc. FRESH FLOWERS — the kind you ' re proud to give — can always be had from C. D. Hecht, Florist The House of Flowers’’ 6600 DELMAR AVE. “The right flowers at the right time and at the right price” is not merely a slogan but a promise that “The House of Flowers” will unfailingly keep. Simply telephone on the Bell Cabany 519 Page Three Hundred Twenty-four Incomparable Success ,£ Peerless Harvard Dental Chair is demonstrated by the character of its purchasers. The U. S. Government sought to purchase more PEERLESS HAPtVARDS than its manufacturers could deliver in the required time owing to tremendous private purchases having already depleted the stock of the Dental Depots and the manufac¬ turer; yet the requisitions for and The Harvard Company deliveries of PEER¬ LESS 11ARVARDS have been unprece¬ dented. Already delivered for use in the U. S. Army and Navy. In fact all the per¬ manent Dental Chairs bought for the Navy have been PEERLESS HAR- VARDS. All by the Red Cross, 50 in addition to the above, have been PEERLESS TIARVARDS. All for the Motor Dental Cars. furnished by Amer¬ ican Dentists, Dr. S. M. Weaver, of Cleveland, Chairman of the purchasing committee for Army use, are PEER¬ LESS HARVARDS. The purchasing hoards for all these departments seek first of all the highest quality. The PEERLESS HARVARD is being more rapidly installed in the highest class offices and industrial corporation Dental Departments than any other chair. This also could not prevail were it not the best chair. The Harvard Company, - Canton, Ohio -- NOV. 19. NOVEMBER 3 Varsity defeats Rolla 21 to 2 in spite of loose playing. Girls’ Athletic luncheon. 6 Collimation Club cat, drink and are merry. 8 Junior girls have luncheon. 9 Second Lock and Chain. 10 Seven years’ hoodoo ends when Drake loses 20-0. Pikers tincan Bulldogs. 13 Dignified Seniors forget themselves and en¬ joy second childhood at their first party and play drop the handkerchief. 14 War is forgotten. German Club gives very good presentation of “Kopnickerstrasse 120 .” Women arrange to buy service flag for Uni¬ versity. 16 Lively pre-game mass meeting in Gym. Party at Lenox counter attraction. 17 Mizzoo plays under handicap but wins 20-3. Norma Santc’s song wins Keod contest at luncheon. 19 Washington gives more than $1500 to Y. M. C. A. 21 Louise elopes with Washington dents. St. L. U. closes to locate her. Support the Red Cross Page Three Hundred Twenty-five Quality - Accuracy - Character Consistency in the maintenance cf standards of quality and accuracy are two of the basic operative principles cf this complete plant, equipped with modern machinery, operated by skilled mechanics, and devoted exclusively to the manufacture cf Ritter Dental Equip¬ ment. These standards are reflected in the character of work being done with the tens of thousands of Ritter Chairs, Engines, Lathes, Air Compressors, Distributing Panels and Unit Equipments that are in daily use in dental offices throughout the world. Free upcn request:—Interesting illustrated literature describing our product and service to the profession and also, if so desired, a little booklet explaining the practical and convenient deferred payment purchase plan, which makes it possible to install and have the use of a complete modern outfit, while paying for same. THE RITTER DENTAL MEG. CO. ROCHESTER, N. Y. CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK Page Three Hundred Twenty-six We only handle Highest Quality of Dental Goods THAU AND NOLDE DENTAL SUPPLIES FRISCO BLDG. ST. LOUIS EVE SELL EVERYTHING A DENTIST USES Thilenius Summersby Dental Laboratory The Best Dentists and Most Successful Men in the Profession, in St. Louis and the surrounding territory, are our Regular Customers. 1 hey Knoie. Olive 808 FRISCO BUILDING Central 1511 SAINT LOUIS YOU CAN ALWAYS DEPEND ON “The Old Reliable St. Louis Dental Mfg. Co. (Hettinger Bros.) Tenth and Olive Streets ST. LOUIS, MO. The Largest and Most Complete Dental Depot in St. Louis NOV 28. NOVEMBER 22 Coach quarantined and squad vaccinated to prevent spread of smallpox. 23 Juniors and Seniors win hockey semi-finals. Delta Sigma Delta give their informal. 24 Girls ‘‘make barrel of money” at. Y. W. C. A. Carnival. 26 Junior party—hot dogs and cider. Jumping rope vies with dancing. 28 Colonel treats men to turkey dinner (at 50c a head). Shirt tail peerade to Garavellis. Police persuade marchers to disband. Pape Three Hundred Twenty-seven Next to a Liberty Bond a bottle of Union Dairy milk daily is the best invest¬ ment you can make. It pays interest in the form of better health and gives greater food value than can be obtained from an equal investment in any other known food. It is Nature’s food. Union Dairy Company NOVEMBER 29 Washington, 0; St. Louis U., 13. No re¬ marks fit for publication. 30 Juniors give peppy “Benefit” dance. Junior benefits now traditional. DECEMBER 1 Freshmen eleven again cleans up on Prin- cipia, 35 to 0. 4 Prof. Van Ornum entertains Collimation Club. Eats and cider. 5 Middleyear Lawyers banquet and visit Orpheum. Nuff sed. Page Three Hundred Twenty-eight CARTER WILSON Printers GAY BLDG. THIRD and PINE Telephone: Bell Olive 1788 M. J. CLARKE THEATRICAL COSTUMER AND WIG MAKER Costumes and TVigs Rented for PLAYS. OPERAS, PARADES. MASQUERADES, PAGEANTS, Etc. Schools and College Dramatic Societies Furnished Complete. Theatrical, Street Wigs and Toupees MADE TO ORDER. American Pageants—We make a special feature of renting Costumes for Pageants, whether State, National or local. Our line of Costumes for these events, from the landing of Columbus down to Civil War time and after, are complete and cannot be outclassed. 315 N. TENTH STREET (Fourth Floor) ST. LOUIS, MO. M DRINK M Old Judge Coffee ASK YOUR GROCER IT BRIGHTENS THE INTELLECT AND IS SO GOOD MEYER BROS. COFFEE AND SPICE COMPANY Page Three Hundred Twenty-nine WHEN IN NEED OF Glasses or Kodaks CALL ON THE Fisker Optical Company Give the Kiddie’s Feet a Treat THE T illikert SHOE America’s Most Successful Shoe for the Younger Generation McElroy-Sl oan Skoe Co. ST. LOUIS, MO. Geo. Kilgen Son Pipe Organ Builders .3820-3825 Laclede Avenue ST. LOUIS, MO. Builders of Organs — Graham Chapel, Washington Uni¬ versity. Over 200 in St. Louis churches, and 2,000 in all parts of the U. S. Service — is the word em¬ bodying the pres¬ ent American spirit of patriotism, — service for the dag and the nation. S ERVICE—long and efficient—has be in the principle upon which the KEEN KuTTER HATCHET, an example of the high grade tools made by the Simmons Hardware Company, is constructed. It is mad e to serve a life-time, and its efficiency will increase with its length of service. It is the spirit of serving which has directed the policies of the Simmons Hard¬ ware Company in the past and which guides its present work. In the spirit of greatest service to the nation’s workers, the principle that Quality comes first has been insisted upon ; and the trade-mark, KEEN KUTTER, has now come to mean Service. The Recollection of Quality Remains Long After the Price is Forgotten —E. C. Simmons. Trade Mark Reg. in U. S. Pat. Off. Page Three Hundred Thirty-one Cover on this Annual furnished by The David J. M0II03) Company 633 Plymouth Ct. Chicago, III. Samples cheerfully furnishe l your binder upon request. WHY IS IT THAT during tile entire school year, the volumes of the ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA are never lying idle on the shelves of Ridgely Library? WHY IS IT THAT just before the “finals” the student always consults the articles in the ENCYCLO¬ PAEDIA BRITANNICA, New Eleventh Edition ? Because the student knows and profes¬ sors and teachers know that the ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA contains factsfcaccurately stated and logical¬ ly arranged on every subject prepared by the leading scholars of the world. Ask us about Britannica Service. Encyclopaedia Britannica 204 PIERCE BUILDING, St. Louis, Mo. GRIMM’S 14 N. Fourth Street Olive 3467 Costumes and Wigs Select COSTUMES for Ladies and Gentlemen Rented for Mas¬ querades, Plays, Entertainments, Minstrel Shows, Operas, Musical Comedies, etc. We make a Specialty of Circus and Street Parades. Estimates Given 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 BUILDING, e St. Louis, Mo. Works, Cheltenham, Mo. Page Three Hundred Thirty-two Kinloch. Central 1692L Bell, Olive 1254 David Millar Manufacturer CANDIES POP CORN SPECIALTIES X w i 621-623 NORTH FIRST STREET ST. LOUIS. MO. I never fail to please those who want the best Morris J. Yawitz TAILOR i ! 4906 DELMAR AVENUE Bell, Forest 376 Kinloch, Delmar 300 DECEMBER Henry Duncker joins Collegiate Temper¬ ance Society. ’Atta boy, Henry. 6 Hockey Championship again goes to 1918 girls. Frosh start out bad—fight over ice cream at their first party. 7 Eleven men initiated at Obelisk Dance. 8 Faculty places ban on Soph-Frosh clash. Class differences to be settled in spring. Probably a championship croquet game on quad. 10 Senior Hockey team hostess at party to losing teams who entertain the conquer¬ ors. 12 Sigma Nu gives an informal dance. IS Andy Kurrus elected captain of 1918 Var¬ sity at annual football banquet. 17 Thyrsus presents three one-act plays at Mary Institute. Lots of leg-room. Nu, Freshmen society to arouse pep, formed. 18 Men Dormers give dance to McMillanites. Danglades win dancing contest. 19 14 Ws. awarded to football men at Union meeting. Service flag presented by women raised on the other toothpick. Capt. Masseck speaks at Chapel. 20. Flags form decoration for Freshmen Prom. No German flags visible. 21 His Satanic Majesty, aided by Go-eds Page Three Hundred Thirty-three BELL, MAIN 5113 KINLOCH, CENTRAL 94 NEWMAN-SCHNECK-POWERS-JOYCE TAILORING COMPANY 1009 Olive Street Saint Louis Bell, Lindell 188 Kinloch, Central 5348 Dormites and McMillanites We Can Pack and Ship Your Furniture at Very Reasonable Rates THE J. BROWN STORAGE COMPANY MOVING—PACKING—SHIPPING—PIANO MOVING SAINT LOUIS, MISSOURI Our Men ark Teni ' kratk, Careful and Courteous 3446-48 LINDELL AVENUE A WONDERFUL NEW POLICY THAT PROTECTS YOUR LOVED ONES IN EVENT OF YOUR DEATH AND PROTECTS YOU IF YOU BECOME INCAPACITATED FOR WORK Issued by THK NhW ORk Abh from $1)0 oo to $25,000 Assume you apply for $10,000. If you die from any cause, the Company pays.. .$10,000 If you die on account of accident, caused while traveling as a passenger on a street car, railway train, licensed steamship, jitney, taxi, or other public conveyance, they pay .$20,000 If you become totally incapacitated for work all future payments are waived, and the Company pays you $1,000 per annum as long as you live, and at your death pays your loved ones.. • • .$10,000 If you live and are incapacitated 10 years, you receive .$10,000 If you live and are incapacitated 20 years, you receive.$20,000 If you live and are incapacitated 30 years, you receive.$30,000 And then your family or estate will receive.$10,000 full particulars without G . W . r I A Y L O R TELEPHONE OLIVE 3870 SPECIAL REPRESENTAX1VE CHARGE-LET ME SHOW YOU 700 DOLPH BUILDING ith FLOOR DOLPH BLDG. Page Three Hundred Thirty-four DEC 31 Central 2723 Olive 4758 Walter G. Krause 202 PIERCE BLDG. “Everything in Insurance” DECEMBER with pitchforks, “entertain” the faculty in effigy. Junior lawyers wallop Middles and claim basket-ball championship. 22 Open house: doughnuts, cider and cider. 24 Vacation begins. 31 Glee and Mandolin Clubs leave on annual trip. JANUARY 2 Vacation ends, grind begins. 3 Miss Denison qualifies as United Railways road boss and gets students out in time for 9 o’clock. Guaranteed 6000 Miles Reduce the Operating Cost of Your Car W HERE other tires have yielded, inch by inch, to the pressure and temptations of big volume production. Globe standards have stood unshaken for that supreme quality that embodies longest uninterrupted mileage. Globe Tire Sales Co. 1415 Pine St. Page Three Hundred Thirty-five JANUARY 11 Glee and Mandolin Clubs outdo themselves in annual concert. Cold? Ears frozen? Stump, Frosh debating society formed. 17 Tigers win, 17 to 14. IS Funeral services of Dr. Engler, Treasurer of Washington U. 22 John Sharon leaves Washington to enter active service of Navy. 24 Examinations begin. Lots of pale faces on the quad. FEBRUARY 1 Things begin to come in for our advertising manager, who decides that 3rd National Bank protection is best. 2 Examinations end. Gott sei dank. Jubilee Lock with caps and serpentine helps stuges forget the exam. 4 26 new students enroll for second semester. 6 Varsity takes games from Nebraska, 44 to 14. 7 Soph Co-eds beat Seniors in basket-ball, 23 to 22. 8. Kansas Aggies defeat Varsity, 36 to 30. 9 Performance repeated with a little worse score, 40 to 31. 11 Jayhawkers wallop the Varsity, 51 to 22. 12 Once more, 40 to 25. Dr. Pyle lectures before the W. U. Assn, on “The War and Physics.” 13 Student Lifers meet and dance. 14 Clais Freshmen ride the goat. Muench elected president of Thyrsus. Frank P. Hays, Pres. H. T. Little, Vice-Pres. Edw. J. Heitzeberg, Secy. When You Want to Buy or Sell U. S. Government Bonds SEE Little Hays Investment Company ST. LOUIS Stifel- Nicolaus Investment Company 207 N. Broadway St. Louis Main 1889 509 Omve St. Bell: Cabany 1918 Night Bell: Cabany 0059 Established over a quarter century Mrs. Ben Westhus MUNICIPAL Florist BONDS SKINKER ROAD and BERLIN AVE. Local Investment Seclrities Special Attention Paid to University Patronage Receptions Weddings Funerals Page Three Hundred Thirty-six THE WATERMAN PEN STORE—S2.50 to $25.00 ADAMS—412 N. SIXTH TOUR FUTURE W OL ' LD you like to talk over your future plans with an alumnus who has played the game for nearly fifteen years? Your problem of adjusting yourself to the best possible conditions for success is both interesting and important. Y hat field of endeavor will best fit your personal qualities? loom my experience I may be able to make you a helpful suggestion. My phone is Olive 3389. George Barnes, ’05 506 La Salle Building, St. Louis, Mo. Page Three Hundred Thirty-seven The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America Established 1860 Policies provide for Waiver of Pre¬ miums and Annuity in case of Disability; also Double Indemnity in case of death by accident. Insurance in Force - $170,000,000 Assets. 54,664,135 Kronsbein Senn, Mg,rs. 709 BOATMEN’S BANK BLDG., Sr. Louis, Mo. Main 2717 PHONES Central 1380 “Cleco” in St. Louis Means dependable mer¬ chandise, Prompt and Efficient Service at the Lowest possible Market prices. Anything and Everything the Phy¬ sician, Surgeon and Hospital uses in one shipment with one invoice and from one source. Su rgical Instruments and Dressings, Drugs, Chemicals and Biological Products, Hos¬ pital, Office Furniture and Equipment, X-Ray Alachines, Plates and Accessories, Truss¬ es, Elastic Hosiery and Sup¬ porters. W. G. Cleveland DRUG and SURGICAL CO. 1112 Locust St. St. Louis, Mo. American Hotel and Annex ST. LOUIS’ MOST POPULAR HOTELS Three direct car lines from Union Station, ten minutes’ ride. European plan; every room has a private bath and circulating ice water. Rates, $1.50 a Day and Up. Rooms for Conventions and Banquets IVe also do outside catering. This issue of the Hatchet is printed on our INDIA COLORCOAT We specialize on fine Coated Papers for College Publications. ACME PAPER CO., 115-125 S. 8th St. St. Louts, Mo. Page Three Hundred Thirty-eight Page Three Hundred Thirty-nine Page Three Hundred Forty Attention—Washington University Students If you want one of the best Life Insurance Policies extant yourself, or if you have leisure time to sell such Policies to your friends and University mates, your time will be well spent to call and see, or communicate with THE MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CO., with offices on the Fifth Floor of the Bank of Commerce Bldg. GEO. E. BLACK, General Agent. Telephones : Bell, Main 933 Kinloch, Central 656. FEBRUARY 18 James Jocko tried; sentenced to death by the water route and executed at Union meeting. Eight new “13” skulls appear. 19 Chem Es. have no refreshments at party. Why not? You will have to ask the lawyers. 21 Payne Ratncr chosen as Washington’s dele¬ gate to Missouri Valley Conference Ora¬ torical Contest. 22 Thetas give their annual “pink.” Washington gets even with Jayhawkers, 47-23. 23 Washington takes another game from Jayhawkers, 32-18. 27 Washington takes close game from St. L. U., 21-19. MARCH 1 Sixth Lock and Chain. Hot dogs sold for tobacco fund. 2 Washington wins City Basket-ball Cham¬ pionship, defeating St. Louis U. at Mu¬ nicipal Athletic Carnival, 30-23. 4 Varsity loses to Mizzoo, 34-13. 5 Tigers again romp, 32-18. 6 Sophomore girls declared Washington U. Basket-ball Champs. 8 Patriotic dinner replaces Alumni banquet. Barnes, president. Engineers give annual smoker — lots of sandwiches and stogies. Madam Humann addresses YVV.C.A. 13 Funeral of Ex-chancellor Chaplin from Graham Memorial. 16 Eleven medics with Base Hospital Unit re¬ ceive degrees. Delta Sigma Delta holds annual banquet. 19 Mathematical Club organized. 20 Senior girls frolic at their party. Dr. Waddel lectures before engineers of St. Louis. Lieut. Roselli addresses Mid-week Assem¬ bly. 22 Eight men receive Ws. at basket-ball Lock and Chain. 27 Dr. Chenery addresses student body at Chapel exercises. 28 Corporation approves compulsory military training at Washington. 31 Vain attempt made to set the sun dial ahead. Page Three Hundred Porty-onc Printers to growing business houses Experience of an Authority “T DO not see how I am to blame for the ■ way it turned out,” said Henderson. Henderson was distinctly unhappy. For the Old Man had just said that the new booklet looked like something the cat had brought in. And he had said other things with simple and sententious eloquence that hit, says D. W. Chats. Henderson had just tried to save the House some money—that’s all. He had received a promotion recently, and the promotion carried with it the buying of all printing. He had glimpsed the files of his predecessor on the job and it seemed to him that printing cost a lot of money-—much too much. He would change all that. And he certainly did. It wasn’t the Printer’s fault—that booklet. The new broom was thorough. Hen¬ derson practically said to the Printer that he himself had set the figure for the job and that it couldn’t go over that. So the printer took the work—and did the best he could. But he didn’t put his imprimatur on it. “We’ll not discuss the matter of whose fault it is,” said the Old Man. “Fact is, the very best economy folks can practice these days is to economize only where economy is profitable. We can ' t afford to cut down on the quality of our sales literature—not after the kind we’ve been sending out. And it won’t break us if we have to bale this lot of booklets and sell ’em for old paper. Maybe we will. I suggest that you get in touch with a Printer who .will sell you something other than just paper and ink. You’ll then get pointers that will help this business more than any additional cost it may entail.” And when Henderson emerged from the Old Man’s office he looked like a man who had seen a great light. Let us help you analyze your Advertising and Printing require¬ ments — you’ll get better results — because it’s not w hat you pay, but what you get for what you pay that counts. WALNUT-NINTH OLIVE 4822-4823 — S. W. CORNER CENTRAL 3006 Page Thre e Hundred Fofly-twj ■ . 1 9i g li HOOD TIRES The Best Tire in the World A Broad But True Statement It is not so much the car, it is the Tire That Gives That Feeling of Security and the Thrill of Genuine Satisfac¬ tion. HOOD TIRES are made with the most exacting care and of the finest possible material. Will give you more mileage, provide more safety, save you more money and satisfy you with the length of service that you never expected to get out of any tire. TRY ONE, YOU WILL WANT FOUR For a high-class TIRE at a standard tire price, we recommend the Puritan Tire made by the HOOD TIRE CO. under the same supervision as the wonderful HOOD. PURITAN TIRES will give you a wear and a life far beyond any of the usual standard types on the market. MILEAGE GUARANTEED ON HOOD AND PURITAN TIRES Hood, Arrow Tread, 3 and 3%, 7,500 miles Mood, Plain Tread, 3 and 3%. 6,000 miles Hood, Arrow Tread, 4, 4 , 5, 5%, 6,000 miles Puritan, Gripper Tread, all sizes, 4,000 miles Hood, Plain Tread, 4, 4%, 5, 5 l ,4. 5,000 miles Puritan, Plain Tread, all sizes, 3,500 miles ■miiiiiiiiiiimnniiiiiiiiiiinmimiiiuiuiimitiiiiiiiiiiiiiintii)iiiiiiimiiiiinmiimiiHii!uiuiiimuiiimmiimumiiiiiiituiiiiimim mimiiiiimimiiiim We Have Everything in Automobile Accessories Always Remember What You Buy From Us Is Good! mmniniiDumiiiiiiiinnaniiiniiuminimiiiuiummmmiiumiiiiniimmmniiiiiimiiimiitimiiiinnnninininnnmiinnDomiiiiiinrimitiiniiiw Geller, Ward CSb Hasner ST. LOUIS, MO. Main Store, 412-414 N. 4th St. Branch Store, 3328-32 Olive St. The Best Place to Buy the Best Goods Page Three Hundred Forty-four Index to Advertisers — Continued Little Hays Investment Co.336 Loose-AViles Biscuit Co.316 Maison, Blanche . 319 Manhattan Electric Supply Co.319 Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.310 McElroy-Sloan Shoe Co.330 Melsheimer ' s Cafe .34S Mercantile Trust Co. 312 Mermod, Jaceard, King-, Jewelers.310 Meyer Bros. Coffee Co.329 Meyer Tailoring Co.322 Merriam. G. C., Co., Dictionaries.322 Millar, David, Candy Co.333 Mississippi Valley Trust Co.317 Missouri Tent Awning Co. 311 More Automobile Co.30S Molloy, D. .!., Co.332 Mutual Benefit Life of New Jersey.341 Newman, Schneclc, Powers, Joyce.334 Night Day Bank.316 Pevely Dairy . 348 Post-Dispatch .306 Quirk, J. A„ Trunk Co.339 Ralston Purina Co . 323 Ritter Dental Mfg. Co . 326 St. Louis Dental Mfg. Co . 327 Sandperl’s Clothing . 314 Schiller, Photo Supplies . Schmidt, Robt., Costumer . 324 Shattinger, Music House . 348 Simmons Hardware Co . 331 Sport Shop . 316 Stifel-Nicolaus . 336 Taylor, Geo. W., Life Insurance . 334 Thau Nolde . 327 Thilenius Summersby . 327 Union Dairy Co . 328 University City Dyeing Cleaning.340 Walk-Over Shoe Co . 339 Washington Pharmacy . 318 Weber, F. H., Florist . 309 Whiting, Sid., Photographer . 310 Windier, Florist . 339 Winkle Terra Cotta Co . 332 Yawitz, Tailor . 333 Yellow Cab Co . . 310 BUY w. s. s. and Help Win the War Julius Friton, Pres. Albert G. Rubin, Vice-Prcs. Ernest T. Friton, Sec. Established 1859 Julius Friton Jewelry and Gem Co. St. Louis’ Most Exclusive Jewelry Shop FINE PEARLS A YpECIALTY Awarded Gold Medal at the San Francisco World’s Fair De Menil Building 121 N. Seventh St. Telephone: Bell, Olive 49 SAINT LOUIS Pane Three Hundred l ' orly-five Page Three Hundred Forty-six BE A 100 % AMERICAN Don’t Forget to Support the Y. M. C. A. For Real Satisfaction, Patronize KUNTZMANN’S 6192 DELMAR (Near Stinker) The 100% Clean and Sanitary BARBER SHOP Only 5 blocks from the University. % )e §2 L Corns; Ctmes “The Paper That Goes Home” Page Three Hundred Forty-seven The Shattinger Fios Photo Studio Piano Music 509 N. Broadway Company STUDENT WORK A SPECIALTY Olive 1322 910 OLIVE ST., ST. LOUIS, MO. PUBLISHERS Sheet Music Cabany 3365 Night No., Cabany 2975 Music Books and Studies Morrison Auto Trucks IMPORTERS Bonded Express Co. (Formerly Morrison Express Co.) Music Accessories J. A. Morrison, Mgr. 6139 DELMAR AVENUE Melsheimer’s “Best Place to Eat” NINTH and WASHINGTON AVE. Pevely Dairy “High-Class Entertainment” The Best Milk We Offer Special Inducements to W. U. Parties and Banquets Page Three Hundred Forty-eight Index Advertisements .306 A. L E. E.—.198. 199 Alpha Kappa Delta.242, 243 Alpha Omega Alpha....266 Alpha Chi Sigma.250. 251 Alumni Association, The.184 Architectural Society.194, 195 Art School, The.129 Director . 130 Faculty .131 Arts and Sciences, Department of Deans ...2S, 29 Faculty . 31 Senior Class. 35 Junior Class.57 Sophomore Class.61 Freshman Class . 65 Unclassified . 6 S Artus . 268 A. S. M. E.196, 197 Basket-ball .151 Picture of Team.152 Pictures of Players.154- Record . 15S Review . 155 Girls ' . 160, 161 Beta Theta Pi.230, 231 Botany, The Shaw School of.133 Director .134 Faculty . 135 Bridges, Miss (Ass ' t Nurse) Portrait of.102 Chancellor, The, Portrait of.25 Chemical Engineers’ Club, The.202, 203 Chi Alpha Pi.244, 245 Chi Zeta Chi.256, 257 Choir, The Chapel...185 Clais... 220 , 221 Collimation Club, The.200, 201 Corporation, The...16 Dedication . 8 Delta Gamma .274, 275 Delta Sigma Delta....262, 263 Dental School, The. Ill Dean .112 Faculty ...113 Senior Class. 115 Junior Class...127 Eliot Magazine, The.210 Engineers ' Council, The. 193 Football .,. 241 Picture of the Team. 142 Pictures of Players. 144 Views of Games... 114 Record . 443 Review . 449 Foreword . 5 Frontispiece .. Gamma Phi Beta.„.276, 277 Gephart, Dr. W. F., Portrait. 9 German Club.. 492 Glee Club, The. 134 Goode, Dean R. L. (Law School) Portrait of . 70 Hatchet Board, The.208, 209 Hikers . 188 Hockey, Girls’.162, 163 In Memoriam . 15 James, Dean G. O. (College).28 Kappa Alpha .236, 237 Kappa Alpha Theta._...204 Kappa Sigma.—.240, 241 Kennerly, Dean J. H. (Dental) Portrait of . 112 Keod (Women’s Senior Honorary).218 Knitting Unit . 189 Langsdorf, Dean A. S. (Arch, and Eng.) Portrait of .29 Law School, The..69 Dean . 70 Faculty .71 Senior Class.72 Middle Class. 79 Junior Class..—.81 L’Envoi . 304 Les Caseuses . 190 Lock and Chain, The (Sophomore Society) .214, 215 Page Three Hundred Forty-nine Index Mandolin Club, The . 181 Medical School, The . 83 Dean . g,| Faculty . 85 Senior Class . 37 Junior Class . 95 Sophomore Class . 97 Freshman Class . 99 Medics (Pictures) . 39 Men’s Council, The ._. 1G8, 169 Moore, Prof. G. T. (Botany) Portrait of . . Nurses, School for Head Nurses . 192 Faculty ._...10:i Senior Class .105 Intermediate Class . 107 Junior Class . . Nu Sigma Nu . Obelisk (Freshman Society)... Organizations . .216, Pan-Hellenic Conference, The Pan-Hellenic Corltball Series, The . Pep Patrol . Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Beta Pi. Phi Delta Phi. Phi Delta Theta. Pi Beta Phi. Pi Mu Alpha. Pleiades (Women’s Hockey) P etry Club, The. Pralma (Senior Honorary). Pre-Medic Society, The.. . .204, Review Section . 255 227 304 Rutherford, R. B., Portrait. 137 Scarab . 267 Secret Societies, List of.211 Shaffer. Dean P. A. (Medical) Portrait of . 81 Sigma Alpha Epsilon . 228, 229 Sigma Chi .... 232, 233 Sigma Nu . 234, 235 Sigma Xi . 265 Stimson, Miss (Head Nurse) Portrait of . 102 Student Life ... 206, 207 The Stump . 173 , 179 Tau Pi Epsilon . 252, 253 Theti Xi . 238, 239 ' ' 13 ” . 213 Thyrsus . . Title Page . . Towers, The (Paintings).. 5 Union, The Washington . igg Views of the University. . 17 , 24 “W” Men .. 140 Women ' s Athletic Association . 158 Women ' s Council . 179 , 171 Women’s Union . . Wuerpel, Prof. E. H. (Art School) . 130 Xi Psi Phi . 260, 261 Year, The . 2S1 Y. W. C. A . 1 S 6 , 187 Page Three Hundred Fiftv In Appreciation 1 ho 1919 Hatchet Board wishes to express its appreciation for the valuable aid given it by the following persons, to whom any of the success achieved is largely due: Evadne Alden Calvin Atkins Betii Barnett Francis Barnidge Jack Becker George Berger Ira Berry Elmer Brunson William Both man Dorothea B urbach Robert Burd Helen Curtiss Ralph Fuchs S. P. Funkhouser Jacob Furth Lynn Gamble Ralph Hall Dorothy Hetlage Carl Hoffm an Morris Jacks Jane Johns Julia Jonah Walter A. Kamp Knight Loy Helen May Helen Minus Warren Miller Paul Morse Gladys Mueller Loretta Murphy Arthur Nash Joseph Newman George Nop,be Howard Poole Payne Ratner Leo Reid Beulah Rodes Alfred Sack John Sharon Frank Simmons Walter Skrainka Minnie Stallings C. E. Staudinger Emma Stuyvf.sant W. B. Verity Richard Whitton Adrian Wilson Robert Woods Faith Young Harry Zelle I ' atjc Three Hundred Fifty-one —


Suggestions in the Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Washington University Saint Louis - Hatchet Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922


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