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George Oscar James, Ph. D.
eEORGE OSCAR JAMES, Dean of the College; A. B., Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity, 1895; Fellow, 1898-1899; Ph. D., 1899; Instructor in
Physics, Uni- versity of Utah, 1896-1897; Instructor in Mathematics
and Astronomy, Le-
high University, 1902-1903; Instructor in. Mathematics and
Astronomy, Washington Uni- versity, 1903-1908; Assistant Professor,
1908 ; Member, American Mathematical So- ciety; Mitgleid der
Gesellschaft fuer Positivische Philosophic; Corresponding Secre-
tary of the Academy of Science of St. Louis; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma
Xi.
- Fourteen —
Alexander Suss Langsdorf, M. M. E.
aLEXANDER SUSS LANGSDORF, Dean of the Schools of Engineering and
Architecture and Professor of Electrical Engineering; B. S. in M.
E., Wash- ington University, 1898; M. M. E., Cornell University,
1901; Instructor in
Physics, Washington University, 1898-1900; Assistant Professor of
Electrical Engi- neering, 1904 ; Dean.of the Schools of Engineering
and Architecture, 1910 ; Member Electrical Section, International
Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Expo- sition, 1904; Fellow,
American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Member, Engineers' Club
of St. Louis (President, 1912) ; Member, Academy of Science of St.
Louis; Mem- ber, Society for the Promotion of Electrical Education
(Member of Council) ; Fel- low, American Association for the
Advancement of Science; Sigma Xi.
F=*\
Fifteen —
John Beverly Robinson.
WOHN BEVERLY ROBINSON, Professor in Charge of the School of Archi-
\^J, tecture; attended Columbia University, N. Y.; Fellow, American
Institute
of Architects; Member, Columbia University Club; Member, Washington
Architectural Society; Member, St. Louis Artists' Guild; Member,
University Club • Author of "Principles of Architectural
Composition," "Architectural Composition"
— Sixteen —
DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY
PROFESSOR GEORGE THOMAS MOORE, PH. D. PROFESSOR BENJAMIN MINGE
DUGGAR, PH. D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR JESSE MORE GREENMAN, PH. D.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR EDWARD ANGUS BURT, PH. D. MR. JACOB RICHARD
SCHRAMM, PH. D. MR. FRANK BURKETT WANN, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR LE ROY MCMASTER, PH. D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
LLOYD FRANCIS NICKELL, PH. D. MR. JAMES KENNEDY BLACK, B. S. MR.
EUGENE P. WIGHTMAN, PH. D. MR. FRED REESE GRIFFITH, A. B. MR.
EDWARD MASON, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF DRAWING
PROFESSOR HOLMES SMITH, A. M. MR. DELOS CHARLES NICHOLSON MR.
GEORGE BERNARD PROETZ
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
PROFESSOR WILLIAM FRANKLIN GEBHART, PH. D. MR. ISAAC LIPPINCOTT,
PH. D. MR. JAMES EKIN ALLISON, A. B. MR. HERBERT FRANK
BOETTLER
JOB 35—Then he sheweth them their work.—DEAN JAMES.
- Seventeen
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
PROFESSOR JOHN LIVINGSTON LOWES, PH. D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR WILLIAM
ROY MACKENZIE, PH. D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR FRANCIS COX WALKER, PH.
D. MISS MARTHA GAUSE MCCAULLEY, PH. D. MISS ETHEL GENEVIEVE
SPRAGUE, A. B. MR. GARNETT GLADWIN SEDGEWICK, PH. D. MR. CLINTON
JOSEPH MASSECK, A. M. MRS. WILLIAM ROY MACKENZIE, A. B. MR. WALTER
JOHN HIPPLE, A. B. MR. WILLIAM GLASGOW BRUCE CARSON, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH
PROFESSOR GASTON DOUAY, A. M. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR WINTHROP HOLT
CHENERY, PH. D. MR. JOHN HART BROWN, A. M. MR. MAURICE FAURE*
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR WALTER EDWARD MCCOURT, A. M. MR. HALBERT P.
BYBEE, PH. D. MR. DONALD C. BARTON, PH. D. MR. WILLIAM CLIFFORD
MORSE, PH. D. MR. ROYAL A. DICKIE, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN
PROFESSOR OTTO HELLER, PH. D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR PHILIPP SEIBERTH,
A. M. MR. MAX DIEZ, A. M. MR. ERWIN HARTRUNG, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF GREEK
PROFESSOR FREDERICK ALDIN HALL, A. M., Litt. D., L H. D., LL. D
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR GEORGE REEVES THROOP, PH. D. ASSISTANT
PROFESSOR ROBERT MAXWELL SCOON, PH. D. MR. FREDERICK DAN LYNCH, A.
B.
DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY
PROFESSOR EMERITUS MARSHALL SOLOMON SNOW, A. M., LL D. PROFESSOR
ROLAND GREENE USHER, PH. D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR CHAUNCEY S.
BOUCHER, PH. D. MR. HARRISON CLIFFORD DALE, A. M. Miss MATHILDA
HELMERS WATSON
♦Absent on leave.
Jon 8—He filleth thy mouth with laughing and thy lips with
rejoicing.—DR. WALKER.
,F^\
— Eighteen —
DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY OF ART
PROFESSOR HOLMES SMITH, A. M. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR LAWRENCE HILL, B.
S. MR. DELOS CHARLES NICHOLSON
DEPARTMENT OF ITALIAN
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR WINTHROP HOLT CHENERY, PH. D. MR. JOHN
HORNICEK, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF LATIN
PROFESSOR FREDERICK WILLIAM SHIPLEY, PH. D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
GEORGE REEVES THROOP, PH. D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR ROBERT MAXWELL
SCOON
DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS
PROFESSOR CLARENCE ABIATHAR WALDO, PH. D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
GEORGE OSCAR JAMES, PH. D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR WILLIAM HENRY
ROEVER, PH. D. MR. JOSEPH CHAPPEL RAYWORTH, A. M. MR. RAYMOND DU
HADWAY
DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICS
PROFESSOR CLARENCE ABIATHAR WALDO, PH. D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
GEORGE OSCAR JAMES, PH. D.
DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR CHARLES EDWARD CORY, S. T. B., PH. D.
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL TRAINING
MR. WILLIAM PHILIP EDMUNDS, M. D. MISS FLORENCE GRANT MR. ROBERT
LEONARD THOMAS MISS FRANCES LEWIS BISHOP MR. WALTER GOTTFRIED
KRAUSE
DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS
PROFESSOR EMERITUS FRANCIS EUGENE NIPHER, A. M., LL. D. ASSOCIATE
PROFESSOR LINDLEY PYLE, PH. D. MR. HOWARD HARTZLER BELTZ, PH.
D.
DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY
PROFESSOR EDGAR JAMES SWIFT, PH. D.
SONG OF SOL. 2—I sat down in his shadow.—DR. MACMASTER.
Nineteen —
HHHHHBHHHMHI
DEPARTMENT OF SPANISH
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR WINTHROP HOLT CHENERY, PH. D. MR. JOHN
HORNICEK, A. B.
DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY
PROFESSOR JAMES FRANCIS ABBOTT, PH. D. MR. JOSEPH CLARK STEPHEN SON
MR. FRED REESE GRIFFITH, JR., A. B.
i^rljnol af Engineering CIVIL ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR JOHN LANE VAN ORNUM, C. E. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR ERNEST
OSGOOD SWEETSER, C. E. MR. CHARLES ELIJAH GALT, B. S.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR ERNEST LINWOOD OHLE, M. E. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR FRANZ
ALFRED BERGER, M. E. MR. THOMAS HOLT SMITH MR. ARTHUR SEUBERT, M.
E. MR. WILLIAM WALLACE MACDOWELL
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
PROFESSOR ALEXANDER SUSS LANGSDORF, M. M. E. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
HARRY GRAY HAKE, M. S., E. E. MR. MORRIS KIRSCHSTEIN, A. M., E.
E.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR LE ROY MCMASTER, PH. D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
LLOYD FRANCIS NICKELL, PH. D. MR. JAMES KENNEDY BLACK, B. S. MR.
EUGENE P. WIGHTMAN, PH. D. MR. FRED REESE GRIFFITH, A. B. MR.
EDWARD MASON, A. B.
§>rljnfll of ArrljttMturp PROFESSOR JOHN BEVERLY ROBINSON
PROFESSOR GABRIEL FERRAND, A. D. G.
(Architecte Diplome du Gouvernement Francais) ACTING PROFESSOR
SAMUEL HOLLIDAY ALLEN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR LAWRENCE HILL, B.
S.
I COR. 10—/ speak as to wise men; judge ye tvhat I say.—DEAN
LANGSDORF.
F=*I
St. Louis, Mo.
St. Louis, Mo.
LEON A JULIETTE BECK MAN N - - St. Louis, Mo. College May Day,
'13-'14; Y. W. C. A., '11-'15; Cabinet, '12-'15; Vice-President,
'13-'14; Delegate to Con- ference at Lebanon, 111., '13; Women's
Athletic Association, '13-'14. Kappa Alpha Theta Keod
JAMES R. BELLEVILLE Electrical Engineering A. I. E. E. Phi Zeta
Iota
Clayton, Mo.
.rw&uocn^
— Twenty-three
HHHH
EDWARD L. BAKER - Civil Engineering Collimation Club; Delta Pau
Delta
- Kingsville, Mo.
St. Louis, Mo.
St. Louis, Mo.
I THESS. 5—Prove all things.—MATH. DEPARTMENT.
HERBERT F. BOETTLER - College Chess Champion, '12-'13; President W.
U. Chess Club, '13-'14; Civics Club; Debating Club.
BEAUFORT IVAN BUCHANAN Civil Engineering Collimation Club. Lock and
Chain
St. Louis, Mo
Louis HERMAN ADRIAN BUSCHMANN, Edwardsville, 111
HAROLD A. CONRAD - - - St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Glee Club,
'12-'1S; President Combined Glee and Mandolin Clubs, '14-'15;
Assistant Business Man- ager, '14-'1S; Collimation Club. Kappa
Alpha
mai-ioto--
Ps. 89—All that pass by the way spoil him.—IRWIN COZZENS.
Twenty-five -
KENNETH M. COGGESHALL - Webster Groves, Mo. Electrical Engineering
Lock and Chain; A. I. E. E.; Y. M. C. A.; char ter member, Pep
Patrol; Class Football, '12. Phi Zeta Iota
MARGARET FRANCES DEGARMO - St. Louis, Mo. College Senior
Representative Woman's Council, '14-'15; Woman's Athletic
Association, '11-'1S; Basket- ball, '11-'14; May Day Dances,
'13-'14; Con- sumers' League, '12-'1S ; Government Club, '14-'15;
French Club, '13-'15; Secretary, '14-'15; Y. W. C. A., '11-'1S;
Cabinet, '12-'13; Keod. Pi Beta Phi
EDWARD WILLIAM DOLCH, JR. - St. Louis, Mo. College Architectural
Society, '09-'10; Y. M. C. A., Presi- dent, '11; Student Life,
'11-'12; Quadrangle Club, '11-'12; Choir, '09-15.
COL. 2—-Touch not, taste not, handle not.— CONTENTS OF CHEM.
LAB.
* m bzy/zr-—-nzy'/-z=T-^y'/^ 2^= J.£- -^L^ ^5/ ~T"^=Cv^=^=^\^^ -%^r
A^ =k^= -A
— 1 wenty-six —
FANNY BAKEWELL CUSHING - College Quadrangle Club, '12-'13; Student
Life, '12-'15; Thyrsus, '12-'1S; Consumers' League; Govern- ment
Club, '12-'15; May Day, '12-'1S; Society Editor, Student Life,
'14-'15. Kappa Alpha Theta
"A
B. LANDIS ELLIOT - - - . - St. Louis, Mo. Medicine Glee Club,
'12-'14; Chess and Checker Club, '11- '12; Class Football, '12-'13;
Sophomore Honors; President Second Year Medics, '14-'1S; M. E. M.
W. Nu Sigma Nu
DANIEL EVANS Civil Engineering Collimation Club.
St. Louis, Mo.
CLASS or 1915
COL. 2—Beware lest any man spoil you through Philosophy.—CLASS IN
PHILOSOPHY 3.
J=I
A rK>C'Uor«-
SPENCER B. FIELD Electrical Engineering A. I. E. E. Phi Zeta
Iota
ISAAC HAHN GODLOVE Chemical Engineering
St. Louis, Mo.
St. Louis, Mo.
II CCR. 13—/ am become a fool in glorying.—BERT BRATNEY.
f=^,
Twenty-eight —
FLOSSIE MAY FLETCHER - - East St. Louis, 111. College First two
years at Illinois Woman's College, Jacksonville, 111.; Y. W. C. A.,
'14-'15; German Club, '14-'15; French Club, '14-'1S; Government
Club, '13-'15.
Creve Coeur, Mo MILDRED A. C. GLEDITZSCH College Y. W. C. A.,
'12-'1S; Government Club, '12-'15; Consumers' League, '12-'1S;
Chapel Choir, '13- '14; Sophomore Honors; German Club, '13-'15;
Secretary, '15; Athletic Association, '13-'1S; Class Basketball,
'14-'1S; Class Hockey, 'IS. Phi Beta Kappa
J. WILBUR GOUNTERMAN - - Granite City, 111. College Student Life
Association, '13-'1S; Circulating Manager, '14-'1S; Class
Treasurer, '14-'1S; De- bating Club, '12-'14; Y. M. C. A., '11-'15;
Civics Club, '15; Pep Patrol, '15.
EDWARD L. HORNER Mechanical Engineering A. S. M. E.; Obelisk Theta
Xi
St. Louis, Mo
.r-WGUOLO—
11 COR. 13—And I will very gladly spend.—MARQ. FORSTER.
Twenty-nine —
CHAKI,ES C. HARDY - Electrical Engineering W. U. A. A. Secretary,
'14; A. I. E. E. Secretary- Treasurer, '14; Chairman, '15;
Engineers' Coun- cil Secretary, '14; Chairman, 'IS; Class Basket-
ball, 'IS. Theta Xi
Tr
RICHARD V. HENKEE - - - St. Louis, Mo. Mechanical Engineering A. S.
M. E., Chairman, '14-'1S; Engineers' Coun- cil.
WIEUAM DUNSDON HOU.AND - Jerseyville, 111. Civil Engineering
Debating Club, '11-'12; Y. M. C. A.; Collimation Club, Secretary,
'14-'1S; Pep Patrol; Cabinet, '14; President, '15; Photographer
1915 Hatchet. Lock and Chain Kappa Sigma
ROEAND MILTON HOERR - - - St. Louis, Mo. College W. U. Tennis
Championship, '12-'14; Varsity Tennis Team, '14; Varsity Baseball,
'14; Mo. Valley Tennis Champion, '14. Obelisk. Beta Theta Pi
[CLASS OF 1915
I COR. 14—/ speak with tongues more than you all.—PROF.
CHENERY.
— Thirty —
f=\
ALLEN GEORGE JEHLE - Electrical Engineering Vice-President W. U. A.
A., '14-'15; Vice-Chair- man A. I. E. E., '14; Mandolin Club,
'12-'14; Quartette, '13-'14; Class Football, '12-'13; Varsity
Football, '13. Sigma Alpha Epsilon
BEATRICE JENNINGS - - - - College Quadrangle Club, '11-'12; May Day
Dances, '14; Class Hockey Team ; Senior Basketball, 'IS; Con-
sumers' League, '12-'1S; Y. W. C. A., '11-'1S; W. W. A.,
'12-'15.
JEANETTE JENNINGS - - - St. Louis, Mo. College Thyrsus, '13-'14;
Secretary Women's Council, '13-'14; Y. W. C. A., '12-'15; Women's
A. A. Hockey Team, '14-'IS; May Day Dances, '12- '14; Consumers'
League, '12-'15. Kappa Alpha Theta
TOduom~
p^,
— Thirty-one —
1X2 S&
KENNETH C. LARKEY College President Student Body, '14-'15; Chairman
Honor Committee, '14-'15; Y. M. C. A. Executive Sec- retary,
'13-'14; Cabinet, '14-'15; Thyrsus, Assist- ant Treasurer, '13-'14;
Civics Club; Pep Patrol, Junior Prom Committee.
GERTRUDE DOROTHY MAY - - St. Louis, Mo. College Y. W. C. A.;
Quadrangle Club, '13.
HERBERT G. MCELHINNEY - - Clayton, Mo. Mechanical Engineering A. B.
Westminster College, 1912; Student Coun- cil, '14-'1S; A. S. M. E.
Phi Delta Theta
TIM. 6—Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy
stomach's sake.—JACK POWELL.
f^\
Thirty-two
— Thirty-three —
KIRK MCFARLAND St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering Collimation Club,
'13-'15; Orchestra, '13-'14; Y. M. C. A., '13-'1S.
RUTH MEINHOLTZ St. Louis, Mo. College Hatchet Photographer, '14; Y.
W. C. A., '12-'1S; Consumers' League, '13-'1S; President, '14-'15;
Secretary-Treasurer, '13-'14; May Day, '12-'13. Keod Pi Beta
Phi
LlNDLEY C. MlLFORD - - ' - St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering
Captain, Sophomore Football Team; Athletic Manager, Junior Class;
Varsity Basketball, '15; Varsity Football, '12-'14; Varsity
Baseball, '14- '15; Captain, '14; President, Collimation Club, '14-
'15; President, Athletic Association, '14-'15. "13," Pralma Phi
Delta Theta
JOHN ROY RANSON - Decatur, Texas Medicine Football "W," '13;
Treasurer Medical Y. M. C. A., '13-'14; Football "W," '14;
President Fresh- man Medical Class, '13-'14; Student Council, '14-
'15; Medic "17." Chi Zeta Chi
I THESS. 5—Therefore let us not sleep, as do others.—SECTION B,
TOWER.
• Thirty-four -
FRANK POWELL MCNALLEY - - St. Louis, Mo. Medicine Gill Prize for
Anatomy, '14; 1917 Medic. Chi Zeta Chi
CLIFTON TRIETS MILLER - Webster Groves, Mo. Electrical Engineering
Varsity Track, '14; Y. M. C. A.; A. I. E. E. Phi Zeta Iota
RICHARD HENRY MINK College
St. Louis, Mo.
ISA. 1—And I ivill take away all thy tin.—THE PI PHIS.
Thirty-five —
jF^\
CHARI.ES NORTON MONTEITH - - St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering
Assistant Football Manager, '13; Manager, '14; Student Council,
'13; Honor Committee, '13. Lock and Chain "13" Sigma Nu
MARGUERITE DEAN MOTT - - St. Louis, Mo. College Y. W. C. A„
'11-'1S; W. A. A., '11-'1S; Basket- ball; Hockev Team, '15; German
Club, '13-'1S; Government Club, '12-'15; May Day Dances, '14;
Sophomore Honors. Phi Beta Kappa
ROBERT MUELLER St. Louis, Mo. Medicine Class Football, '12-'13; M.
E. M. W. Phi Beta Pi
GEORGE MARSHALL MYERS Medicine M. E. M. W. Nu Sigma Nu
St. Louis, Mo.
DEUT. 33—Let Asher be blessed with heirs.—ARTHUR FREUND.
— Thirty-six
MARION CAMPBELL ORR - - Idaho Falls, Idaho College Entered from
College of Montana, Deer Lodge, Montana, '13; Y. W. C. A, '13-'15;
W. A. A., '13-'15; Hockey, '14; Government Club, '14-'1S.
ELIZABETH SPOUSLER NIXON - St. Louis, Mo. College Chapel Choir,
'10-'ll; Y. W. C. A., '10-'1S; Thyr- sus, '10-'13; Fairy Queen, May
Day Dances, '14. Delta Gamma
IVER NELSON College
St. Louis, Mo
St. Louis, Mo PERCY ELWOOD RAMSAY Architecture Thyrsus; Annual,
'14; Glee Club; Orchestra Student Council, '13-'14; Quadrangle
Club; W U. A. S., Vice-President, '14-'1S. Scarab Kappa Sigma
I COR. IS—Be not deceived: evil communications corrupt good
manners.—LAYMAN BROWN.
— Thirty-seven —
RUTH ELIZABETH PRITCHARD - St. Louis, Mo. College Basketball,
Ml-'13; Captain, '11-'12; Y. W. C. A. '12-'15; Treasurer, '12-'13;
Secretary, *14-'1S; Y. W. C. A. Convention Delegate, '12; Hatchet
Rep- resentative, '12-'13; W. A. A., '11-'14; Women's Council,
'13-'14; Treasurer Women's Organiza- tion, '12-'13; Student Life,
'12-'13. Delta Gamma.
GRACE RODGERS - - - Webster Groves, Mo. College Y. W. C. A.,
Cabinet, '12;-'14; Class Basketball. '11-'1S; Captain, '13;
Secretary W. A. A., '12-'13; President Women's Council, '14-'15.
Keod
NELLIE ROGERS College Delta Gamma
St. Louis, Mo.
I COR. 15—/ trust to tarry awhile with you.—WALKER BROTHERTON TO
DRUE.
r^,
ROBERT MILTON RUSSELL - - St. Louis, Mo. College Mandolin Club,
'11-'1S; Business Manager, '12- '15; Class Treasurer, '13-'14;
Hatchet Representa- tive, '14-15; Associate Editor 1915 Hatchet;
Stu- dent Life Association, '12-'15; Managing Editor, '13-'14;
Editor-in-Chief, '14-'15. Phi Delta Theta
EDWIN CARL SCHISLER Mechanical Engineering Glee Club, '11-'12.
'14-'15; tary, '14-15. Sigma Nu
Kirkwood, Mo.
A. S. M. E., Secre-
ESTHER FRANCES SCHNEIDER - - St. Louis, Mo. College W. A. A.; Y. W.
C. A.; Government Club, Vice- President. '13-'14; German Club,
'13-'15; Chapel Choir, '13; May Day Dances, '13-'14; Sophomore
Honors. Phi Beta Kappa
I COR. 15—But if any man be ignorant, let him be ignorant.—"SUSIE"
W.
— Thirty-nine
LAURA EDNA ROEHRICH - - St. Louis, College Thyrsus, '13-'15;
Annual, '14; Secretary, '14-'1S; Government Club, '12-'15;
President, '14-'15; Student Life Association, '13-'15; Y. W. C. A.,
'11-'15; Sophomore Honors.
MARION ORVIIAE SCROGCIN - Little Rock, Ark. College Entered as
Junior from Harrison College, San Antonio, Tex. Pi Beta Phi
ELMIRA CHARLOTTE SEWING College
St. Louis, Mo.
CLASS or 1915
I COR. 14—He speaketh in an unknown tongue.—PROE. DOUAY.
DRUE CLINTON SMALLING College Secretary McMillan Hall, '11-'12; May
Day, '11- '12; Vice-President Sophomore Class; Quad- rangle Club,
'12-'14; May Day, '12-'13; Art Edi- tor Hatchet, '13-'14;
Vice-President McMillan Hall, '14-'15; Hockey Team, '14-'1S. Pink
Kittens Pi Beta Phi
HELEN KIMBALL SMART - - St. Louis, Mo. College Class
Vice-President, '13-'14; Hatchet Representa- tive, '14-'15; Woman's
Athletic Association, '12- '15; Tennis Tournament, '14; Y. W. C.
A.; May Dav Dances, '14; Government Club, '14. Keod
FRANCES E. SPAULDING College Phi Beta Kappa
Webster Groves, Mo.
HELEN STEVENS - - -" - St. Louis, Mo. College Thyrsus, '13-'15;
Vice-President, '14-'1S; Annual, '14; Student Life Association,
'12-'1S; Associate Editor, '14-'15; Class Hatchet Representative,
'11- '12; Class Secretary, '13-'14; Class Vice-Presi- dent,
'14-'15; Associate Editor 1915 Hatchet; Government Club, '12-'14;
Consumers' League, '12-'15; Vice-President, '12-'13; Y. W. C. A.,
'11- '-15; Treasurer, '14-'15; Quadrangle Club, '11-'14; May Day
Dances, '12-'13; Sophomore Honors. Keod. Pi Beta Phi
— Forty-one
— Forty-two —
St. Louis. Mo.
ALMA LOUISE TIEMANN - - St. Louis, Mo. College Secretary Freshman
Class, '11; Secretary Senior Class, '15; Quadrangle Club; Y. W. C.
A.; Mc- Millan Day Dances, '14; Consumers' League.
FEROI, CLAUDIA TILLES - - Fort Smith, Ark. College Entered 1913
from University of Chicago and Vassar College; Y. W. C. A.
AMOS 5—Seek ye me and ye shall live.—ARTHUR CAFE.
Forty-three -
ELEANOR IRENE TUCKER . - - - St. Louis, Mo. College Student Life
Association, '11-'1S; Associate Edi- tor, '13-'14; Associate Editor
1915 Hatchet; Les Causeuses, '11-'14; Government Club, '11-'15;
Chapel Choir, '11-'13; Consumers' League, '12-'15; Women's A. A.,
'11-'1S; Class Hockey, 'IS; Y. W. C. A, '1.1-'1S; May Day Dances,
'14; Dele- gate Missouri State Suffrage Convention, '14; Equal
Suffrage League, '14-'1S; President, '14-'15; Class Secretary, 'IS.
Keod
MARIE ANNE UPDIKE St. Louis, Mo. College Vice-President McMillan
Hall, '14-'15; Govern- ment Club, '12-15; Secretary, '12-13;
President, '13-'14; Les Causeuses, '12-'15; Secretary, '13-'14;
German Club, '13-'15; Consumers' League, '12- '15; May Day Dances,
'13; Sophomore Honors. Delta Gamma Phi Beta Kappa
IDA DELL UPDIKE St. Louis, Mo. College Government Club, '12-'1S;
Les Causeuses, '14-'1S; German Club, '14-'1S; May Day Dances, '13;
Con- sumers' League, '13-'15. Delta Gamma
MATT. 9—He crossed over and came into his own city.—BURKE.
FRANK BARNETT WALLACE Medicine M. E. M. W. Nu Sigma Nu
MATHILDE HELLMERS WATSON - - Chicago, 111. College Thyrsus,
'13-'15; Annual, '14-'1S; Librarian, '15; French Club, '12-'15;
Government Club, '14-'15; May Day, '14; Y. W. C. A., '14-'1S.
•
GEORGE W. WELLMEYER - - - St. Louis, Mo. Civil Engineering
Collimation Club; Freshman Baseball, '12; Sophomore Baseball,
'13.
OTTO JULIUS WILHELMI, JR. - St. Louis, Mo. Medicine Class Football,
'13; Class Track, '13; Student Life, '12-'13; Varsity Tennis, '13.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
MATT. 9—Arise and take up thy beds.—HOLMES SMITH, ATEND OF
LECTURE.
- Forty-five —
St. Louis, Mo.
VVlNONA WuERTENBUECHER - - St. Louis, Mo. po liege Quadrangle Club,
11-'13; Thyrsus, '12-'1S; Mc- Millan Day, '12-'14. Pi Beta
Phi
I CHFON. 9—On the four sides were the porters.—FRESHMEN AT JUNIOR
PROM.
— Forty-six
OLIVER MANN Mechanical Engineering
Slje £>mwt Class •prefare to a Btatonj of Jtjr (Elasa of
1915
^J^^S HE aim of this little volume is to present, in as brief a
manner as a C~\ possible, a sympathetic interpretation of the more
important ^ J events and movements that filled the epoch-making
period of ^^^^ 1911-15. To the modern Washington student,
especially, it should be a matter of intense interest to reflect
that this little body of men and women, at first promising in its
size and enthusiasm, but gradually robbed of the one and
consequently barely escaping the loss of the other, actually wended
its intellectual way across the fine old quadrangles, and trod the
well-worn walk to Graham Memorial Chapel. In the following chapters
I have attempted to narrate what befell the class during this
journey.
The old school of class historians, in dividing their narratives
into the Freshman, Sophomore, Junior and Senior years, did not
grasp the spirit of the past; they merely wrote the annals of class
presidential administrations. I chose to treat my subject from the
broader point of view—that of move- ments and the events which were
their outward expression. Accordingly, the reader will find that I
have presented my subject under the following heads: first, Desire
to beat the Sophomores; second, Desire to beat the Fresh- men;
third, Desire to give a big Prom; fourth, Desire to obtain
Degrees.
We shall see in the first three chapters that the desire to beat
the Class of 1914 expressed itself in the choice of a big man for
leader—one Moulton
I CIIRON. 16—Tremble before him, all the earth.—MUNROE.
Forty-seven
$ht ffiatthet ^^
Green—and in the consequent overwhelming victory over the
Sophomores in a greased pole contest. A few paragraphs are also
given to a description of the 1915 Freshman Prom, omitting no
important detail such as the pista- chio ice-cream. The second
tendency, namely, the desire to beat the Fresh- men, unfortunately,
failed of realization; for by a coup d'etat of the as- sembled
Student Body the war god was brought to his former battle-
ground—the platform overhanging a creek; and the barbarians worsted
1915 by means of procedure most foul—sulphur fumes, to be explicit.
Military events not being deemed important, I have briefly passed
over the fight itself, and have devoted several pages to the after
effects of defeat. These were an increase of spirit, manifested in
the display of green-and-white hats bearing the class numerals, a
clash with the Student Council over the question of whether the
Sophomores should or should not be made take off the afore- said
insignia, a small locker-room fire, and the dramatic flight of the
class treasurer to Mexico. Other things may have happened, but they
do not strictly belong to a work of this kind. For "Love Fest," see
Henderson and Smalling; Indoor Picnics, Good Taste in.
The bulk of this volume is given over to the interesting period
com- monly known as "Coste's Year," or "The Reign of Terror."
Prominent events under this head to which I have devoted chapters
are: The Coste- Dunker Debate over the Regulation of Prom Rates;
the Difficulties in fund- ing the Public Debt and in collecting
Tithes; February 24, the Final Tri- umph. The description of the
Prom itself was from an eye-witness, who said, "The Gymnasium was a
veritable fairy-land of light and color. Above the dancers
thousands of pink roses drooped from a leafy bower, below which
were suspended fantastic lamps of varied hues. Myriads of lights,
too, skirted the edge of the bower. Grecian columns, supporting
clinging rose vines, shut in the floor, while the orchestra was
confined in a dainty pavilion at the end of the hall. During the
'Dance of the Seasons,' first rose- petals, then snow-balls were
scattered among the gay company, and in a climactic moment a dozen
of white doves were released from a central dome to flit about the
bower. 1915 set a precedent in Proms which no subse- quent class
has ever been able to equal." For this important period in the
history of this famous class I have borrowed freely from Sparks,
The Ele- ments of Prom Committee Chairmanship; Helen Stevens, The
Structure of the Rose; and an anonymous work on meteorology,
relating Proms to in- tense cold waves. Miss Helen Smart also has
an interesting book entitled Vice-Presidency and What it
Means.
The spirit of the Senior Year, which I have designated as the
Desire to obtain Degrees, cannot be demonstrated effectively in a
work of this mod- est size. It is an uninteresting period at best.
Caps and gowns reduce all Senior Classes to the same level; the
individuality disappears with the first Wednesday of the last
semester. Hence my rather hasty sketch of the last few months can
be included in the final chapter. The Appendix, however, contains
some interesting documents relating to certain famous
individuals
PROV. 30—Remove far from me vanity.—LES BARE.
,1*^,
— Forty-eight -
a
whom the Class of 1915 is proud to claim as members. I commend to
the student's attention especially the short biographies of Milford
and Potthoff, quarter-back and left-half-back, respectively, on
what was known as the football team, football being at that time
the greatest game of the age.
In order that topics not fully treated in this rather brief work
may be open to the ambitious student of this period, I append the
following incom- plete, but authentic, bibliography:
Sparks: The Character of Men Who Attend Class Meetings. Martin: The
Contemplative Life at College. Turk: Political Spirit among the
Engineers. Tieman, Shryock and Rodgers: Class Enthusiasm. E.
Tucker: The Taxation of Women. Etc., etc.
Consult also the columns of Student Life for detailed accounts of
parties and meetings. THE AUTHOR,
Washington University. R. M. R. and H. S.
PROV. 37—He thundereth marvellously with his voice.—RALPH
HUFFESD.
— Forty-nine —
~*mattl
Ihs ©lass nf 191fi
HARVEY B. ALBAN HELEN H. ANDERSON MARIA BAIN HEEEN MAURINE BARNES
OSCAR F. BENTE JOSEPH A. BERNARD GRACE D. BISSEAND EDWARD A.
BLONDIN MARY BEOTHERTON PAUL H. BURG MARY ADELE CEUNDT HELEN L.
DAWLEY RUDOLPH H. DETJEN FRANCES L. DUFFETT ALICE ERNST GLADYS
FLARSHEIM MILDRED FOX LYLE B. GODBEY
THE COLLEGE
JOSEPH M. GREEN GLADYS GREGG DELPHINE HAMEL EDWARD K. HARRISON
FRANK S. HAWKEN NOAH H. HENLEY BENJAMIN HORTON HELEN HUMPHREY
DOROTHY JENNINGS EDITH JONES ADA M. KELLY WARD W. KELLEY RUTH KELSO
ESTHER L. LUCAS GEORGE S. METCALFE KATHERINE MIDDLETON RUTH E.'
MILLER LORA OTTO
SENTA RETTER' VIRGINIA RHODES MARY C. ROACH HARRIET L. ROTH MAN
LEONARD RUSSIE MILDRED R. SEARCY CHESTER C. SMTTHER MARGARET STEARN
CHARLES STUDT SIBYL DEAN TATE THEODORA THACHER THURWOOD VAN ORNUM
MARY MALVINA VOOHERS SYLVIA C. WEDEL LILLIAN B. WESTBROOK GEORGIA
FLORA WITTICH LETA WRIGHT RUTH ELIZABETH ZACHER j(,
-^ /. THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
ft WILLIAM C. BERNARD WILLIAM CHAPMAN BERRY CHARLES VINCENT BRADY
WALKER PAYNE BROTHERTON FRANK WILLIAM BUBB PAUL HENRY FELKER RALPH
LARRABEE GRAY EDMUND LOUIS GREEN EMANUEL LEOPOLD HAHN PAUL JOHN
HEWITT FRANK ROSMAN INGALLS
JAMES HARDIN JEANS MAXIMILLIAN S. JONES WALTER ROBERT JORASCHKY
WEBB LOUIS KAM MERER MAXWELL KENNEDY, JR. DAVID KIPPLE FREDERICK
BURTON LANGRECK PERCY NEIL LUBKE SAMUEL BUCHANAN MAY HERBERT
WILLIAM MEINHOLTZ WALTER FREDERICK MEISTER JULIUS HENRY
OETTING
\
THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
JOHN MARTIN BATSCHY JOHN TETER BORGSTEADT JOHN HARRY CROCKER
FREDERICK R. HAMMOND
STEWART MCCORMACK HARRY DANIEL PAYNE GLENN PHELPS
LUSBY SIMPSON HENRIETTA MAY STEIN MESCH CLIFFORD TAUSSIG ARNOLD
JACOB TUCHSCHMIDT
JOB 35—By reason of multitude of oppressions they cry out.—SECTION
D, TOWER.
— Fifty-two —
To THE EDITOR OP THE HATCHET.
OEAR SIR: Because this class has always prided itself on the orig-
inality that has marked it since its first visit to the Campus, now
in its third year, 1916 has decided not to submit a history to the
Year Book. It is realized that the custom of describing the
antics
and prowess of each class in the Hatchet is one of long standing,
even one that has become monotonous through constant repetition. So
many times in the past three years has our fame been spread abroad,
and so hard are we striving to break away from all time-honored
rules, that we were forced to the decision above mentioned.
We will leave to our readers the responsibility of investigating
our buoyant arrival on the Campus, and the ways in which we won the
admira- tion of the upper classes. We will not mention the pennies
we rolled or the bicycles milked by some of our enterprising
athletes. Nor do we consider it necessary to describe the three
Freshmen parties or the brilliant Prom. It might even seem boastful
to give a true review of the Numeral Battle which first gave us a
place in the Sun, and our opponents one in the Creek. Had we
desired to summarize the success of 1916 in athletics, an account
could have been given of the football victory and of the hard fight
for the Drosten cup.
Another reason may be offered for not contributing an article to
this book of ours which will be a sufficient endorsement, namely,
the space al- lowed is not sufficient. Pages could be devoted to
the year of the class 1913- 1914, beginning with the tortures of
molasses dances and twenty-hour pray- ers on the goal posts
inflicted on the newcomers. Then the class football game, in which
we were again victorious, the successful defense of the flag in the
annual Bird Nest romp, and the Drosten series would fill another
vol- ume. Again, there were parties and dances.
Assuming now that we had accepted your invitation, we would now
have to cover our great third year. It would be our task to
describe the many experiences as upper classmen, how readily we
answered such medi- eval queries as "How much does it cost to ride
in a jitney?" with such stun- ning replies as "Ask Dr. Nickell,"
how also we had a "dancing-forbidden" party for the benefit of the
Engineers. It is all too recent to speak of the re- markable talent
shown in the Junior Minstrel Show, and of the splendor of our
Junior Prom.
Still, if you insist on an exhibit of some sort in the Hatchet, we
might tell how our girls won the Hockey championship, or give a
list of classmates who have become engaged.
Sincerely yours, CLASS OE 1916,
G. S. M. S. R.
JOB 36—I will fetch my knowledge from afar.—GONTERMAN, BLUFFING
PHIL. 7.
Fifty-three —
— Fifty-four —
®fj# i§>0plj0twir£ QJlasis DUFF SHEDEKICK ALLEN MARIE FRANCES
ALOFS MARGARET MARY AMEND ELIZABETH HELEN BAKER GERTRUDE MAE BANDY
GEORGE WILSON BELCHER SALLY EMILY BENEDICT LUCILLE ADELE BISHOP
KATHARINE SLOAN BROOKES FRANCES A. BROOKS FARLOW BURT URBAN JUSTUS
BUSIER WILLIAM GOODWIN COLEMAN IRWIN KINGSLEY COZZENS HELEN VIOLET
CUPPAIGE MARY AGNES DALTON IRENE, MAE DEICKE EDNA VICTORIA DE
LINIERE HOWARD BARTH DICKIE MARGARET DONAN ADOLF DREY MARGARET
FRANCES EWING THOMAS RUSSELL FERGUSON MILDRED BASS FOX
COLLEGE
STANLEY VETSBURG FRIEDHEIM SELMES PAUL FUNKHOUSER ARTHUR B.
GLEDITZSCH ALFRED GOLDMAN MARION ELIZABETH GRIFFITH EDITH LUCY
HAMMOND ALMA ALFARETTA HERMANN HENRY ANTHONY HOEFFER HUBERT KING
JACKSON ALICE MAY JOHANN IRENE JANE KAVANAGH MARIE ANNE KIRSCH CARL
OTTO KOHLBRY OTTO ST. CLAIR KREBS DOROTHY EUGENIA KREMER DOROTHY
DAMON LAMB LUCILE MILDRED LEWIS OLIVER WILLIAM LOHR MARY KATHLEEN
LUCY AGNES RUTH MANLEY MIRIAM MOLLY MARTEN HELEN HOLMAN MCCARGO
ROBERT HARVEY MCROBERTS HELEN CORNELIA MOHORTER
MARRIOTT TRUE MORRISON WILLIAM H. NIEDERLUECKE EDWARD DANIEL NIX
AUGUSTA BREY PARKER MARY LEE PICKEL GEORGE EDWIN POPKESS JAMES
ALEXANDER PRESTON ARTHUR BEN RAFFL JOSEPH RUVLIN RASKAS WINNIFRED
DAVIS ROGERS MELBA KATHERINE RYAN MORRIS SIMON MARY CECELIA SMITH
ABRAHAM JEROME SPARKS CARL MCDOWELL SPITZER EDWIN ROOSEVELT THOMAS
GRATIA ROSEBUD THOMPSON NESTA MARY THOMPSON ELIZABETH TOOMEY BERTHA
LOUISE UHLEMEYER EDITH BEATRICE VARNEY EMMA HAZEL VOGT BLANCHE
MARIE WALSH LEONORA WOODWARD
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING WILLIAM EDWARD BANK LESLIE MYRON BARE WALTER
OTTO BODE DURAND BROCK PHILIP DAVID BRYAN ROLAND HENRY BUCHMUELLER
JOHN WILSON CONZELMAN BRUCE EUGENE DOLCH FRED LOVETT EAMES ARTHUR
AUGUST FATTMANN ALBERT ELI GOLDSTEIN FORREST GERALD
GOODFELLOW
LEO FRANKEL ABRAMS ANGELA BURDEAU RAYMOND LOUIS HERBERT
ARTHUR NELSON GREENE LEE HARRISON, JR. MINORU HIRATA ELMER LISLE
HUGHES LON FREDERICK ISRAEL JAMES CLINTON JOHNSTON RUSSELL LA
GRANGE JOLLEY WALTER HENRY KURTZ CHARLES ALBERT LIEBER JOSHUA
SUTHERLIN LOGAN FRANK RAY MCFARLAND WILLIAM B. MCSORLEY, JR.
RICHARD WESLEY MELLOW
ARCHITECTS
FRANCIS RAY LEIMKUEHLER ALBERT CARL MAACK GEORGE JOHN MAGUOLO
WENDELL POTTER MONROE CLARENCE C. MUEHLBERG NELSON MOODY POPE
EDWARD HUMPHREY PRICE BENJAMIN HARRISON ROBERTS BENEDICT HENRY
SCHULZE HARRY DORSET SMITH SYLVESTER WATTS SMYTH LUKE SELLS STITES
ROBERT CHARLES THUMSER EDWIN JULIUS ULBRICHT FOREST BURKHARDT
WETZEL
CLIFFORD TAUSSIG WALTER COURTNEY WERNER EDMUND ELLIOT WILLS
All the world's a stage And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances ; And one man in his time
plays many parts. His acts being seven ages.
JOB 36—Who is a teacher like unto him?—DR SWIFT t \
y.. t > — rifty-six —
© perioc
HAT worthy Shakespeare said of the world may also fit the stage of
college days, with one exception, perhaps, that of the seventh age,
"the second childishness and mere oblivion." This fate we hope we
may be spared. Therefore, we have reduced to six the
of college life. 'Tis true they may be slightly overlapped to come
within the circling four short years.
Look back with us now for a moment and recall, if you can, those
in- fant days of our Freshman year, when first we tiptoed
timorously to the Dean and asked what we might be permitted to
study. We were verdant indeed those first few weeks early in
October, when we attended our first lectures and decided that the
professors surely could not realize our ability, or they would not
waste time with all those admonitions. Yes, those were our infant
days; but they were short, and crowding close upon them came the
schoolboy stage, marked by class elections, football games, and a
little hazing. We of the gray caps and cherry buttons gathered
together during that first term and talked "fight," "strategy" and
"victory" all in whispers lest some crouching Sophomore should hear
and divulge our plans. But, sad to say, it was useless; we were
still in the schoolboy stage of college life. The best laid plans
"o' mice an' men gang aft agley;" and so it was with us when we
bowed to the superior strength of the Sophomores on that memorable
night of the Class Fight. Those who saw the fight saw only boys
struggling against men, and that was all. But during that night and
early morning a change had been wrought. Had there been another
fight, it would not have been boy against man, but man to man. At
the end of the track season, for the first time in the history of
our class, we carried off all the honors.
After this came the Love Fest, and that strain of the lover—which
in everyday life is classed as the third stage, but which in
college commands a place from the date of the first informal
Freshman party down through the Prom, bobbing up serenely every
Chapel hour, reappeared in full force. Our entire first year was
spent in battle between the two sides of our dual nature, the
schoolboy, or girl, as the case may be, and the lover, sometimes
the one victorious over the other, but more often the other
victorious over the one.
When we returned this fall, we entered the soldier stage. We found
it our duty to keep subdued those disturbers of dignity, the
Freshmen. Sus- cess has greeted us on all sides. We have learned
through the hard knocks of our schoolboy stage that it is not brute
force, but strategy, that counts, and so by our superior intellect
we won the Class Fight. We have become leaders on the gridiron;
five of our men played on the Varsity team. No longer feeling the
scornful laugh of the other classes, we dared to give a children's
party in the Gym after a big supper at McMillan Hall, which was
attended by almost every member of our class. From one victory to
another we have marched, even conquering in the examinations. That
is the spirit of 1917. D. B. and J. P.
PROV. 14—The fool beareth himself insolently and is confident.—DOUG
MARTIN.
— Fifty-seven —
• Fifty-eight
®lj? iffr^Ijman QUasB COLLEGE
WILBUR COOK ADAMS GLADYS MARIE GAUTIER HERBERT ALLEN ALVIS JOHN
WILLIAM GEPPERT GRACE AVERY HELEN RUTH GOLDSTEIN HELEN MIRIAM
BANISTER MARGUERITE ANASTATIA GRACE CUTHBERT CHARLES BARNES SAMUEL
BECKER GRANT GEORGE DANIEL BARTLETT GENEVIEVE M. GRASS MUCK
FRITZ KLUENDER GROLOCK DWIGHT LYMAN HAMPSON MILO LAWRENCE HEIDEMAN
HIRAM NEWTON HOLLADAY
DOROTHEA HELEN BLODGETT STANFORD HOLLOCHER
HENRY ADOLPH BEHRENS EVELYN BERG GEORGIA LEE BERKLEY MARGARET F.
BLACKBURN
JEANNETTE W. BRINKMAN ARTHUR CHARLES BROOKS
TRAUBEL THOMAS BURKE EDWARD HAROLD BUSCH EDWARD RUSSELL BYRD MARY
CALLAHAN BESSIE CAMPBELL HERBERT STANTON CARNEY ARCHIE DREYFUS CARR
MARIE LOUISE CARTER CARRIE MORRIS CLIFTON HELEN EMILY COMSTOCK
IRENE MAE COOGAN EDITH NEWELL DALE
SYLVESTER CHARLES HORN THOMAS STANISLAUS HORN WILLIAM ANDREW HUDSON
WALTER ROBERT HUGHES DOROTHY KRIDLER HUSTON VATO CARL ILGEN
MARGARET FRANCES JOHNSON HELEN TATTERSALL JOHNSTON FREDERICK
AUGUSTUS JOSTEES WILLIAM FREDERICK KEIL PATRICK HARLAN KENNEDY
VIOLA NELLIE KERCKHOFF
ALONZO ROUSE KIEFFER GERTRUDE MARGARET KIPP
EMILY MARIE DAUERNHEIM WYCLIFFE EVERETT KLING VERA DAUERNHEIM
ADRIENNE MILDRED KLINGE JAMES MARSH DOUGLAS ANDREW WILLIAM KURRUS
ADELE LOUISE DUBUQUE MAE LEVY GENEVIEVE AIMEE DUBUQUE FRANCES
KATHERINE LIERMANN ISIDORE EISENBERC HIRAM SHAW LIGGETT WILLIAM
CRANCH ELIOT LUCILE HARSHAW LOGAN
MONTAGUE LYON, JR. WILLIAM EDWARD MARTENS WILLIAM CLAIBORNE MARTIN
IDA KATHARINE MCNULTY
RACHEL METCALFE CARL EDWARD R. METHUDY MARTHA MARIE MEYSENBURG
IZEYL EVA MILLER GLADYS ELMA MOONE MARGUERITE F. MORRILL
SUSIE ICIE ENTZEROTH ELEANOR ERSKINE HELEN ETTE MAMIE NADIN EVERLEY
ARTHUR RAYMOND FELSEN MARGUERITE FISCH NATHAN W. FISCH MANN JUNE
EDNA FORSHAW GEORGE DAVID FRAME JACOB FURTH, JR.
GEORGE CONRAD NAGEL HARRY NETTLE WALTER ALLYN NUGENT HELEN MARGARET
O'BRIEN HOWARD BRYAN POOLE RUDOLPH VIRCHOW POWELL JESSAMINE
HUMPHREY PRICE MARGARET LUELLA QUINN CHARLES E. M. RICHARDSON MARIE
EVELYN ROBINSON MARGARETHA FRANCES ROTH EDITH'ROW ADELINE WYLMA
RUBINSTEIN BLANCHE SALE CLARKSON CORDRY SCHELP MILTON JOHN
SCHLAGENHAUF EDITH MILLER SCHULEIN JULIUS SACHS SCHWEICH NELLIE
LEOLA SCOVILLE ROBERT SCUDAMORE BESSIE ASPLEY SEIFERT ANNA SHAPIRO
SAMUEL SHAPIRO JOHN JONES SHARON LEONA VIRGINIA SHEPHERD ANNA GIBB
SHEPPARD JOHN WEBSTER SPARGO KATHERINE MARY STARBUCK DONALD WILSON
STEWART ELIZABETH MARTIN STOCKTON LYALL LOVE STUART WILLIAM H.
STUBBLEFIELD BROOKE STILWELL THOMPSON MARJORIE C THOMPSON ERNEST
ELWOOD TREMAIN BERTHA TRORLICHT
FRANK WAYNE VALENTINE LAW SON MOORE WATTS FRANCES WENDL ALICE
KATHARINE WILLS YEAGER WOODWARD MARGUERITE ZOFF
ISA. 65—The lion shall eat straw like the bullock.—TRAINING
TABLE.
• Sixty -
f=^.
ROBERT MORAN ARBUCKLE CALEB WARD BALDWIN DANIEL BARTFELD LACKLAND
BEEDING JOHN SMALL BRAY OTTO FRED BRECKENKAMP JOSEPH STEPHEN CASEY
WILLIAM ARST CORMAN JOHNSTON GWIN CRAIG HAROLD SHILOH CUNLIFF ELMER
LOUIS DEICKE WESLEY ALBERT DUNKER FRED EMERSON FINLEY SAMUEL
ERASTUS FOOTE CARL ALFRED FUELLE ROY STANLEY GLASGOW LOUIS
GOLDSTEIN HERBERT W. GRONEMEYER JOHN GROSSMAN THEODORE GUPTON SAM
HALLETT DWIGHT BUEL HARPER
ROBERT HARLEY HARTZOG HAROLD HALL HARVEY WILLIAM HENRY HAUCK VICTOR
HECTOR PAUL ALEXANDER HOE ALBERT RICHARD HORN RAY OUTHOUSE JACKSON
HENRY ANTON JACOBS ACHILLES E. JANNOPOULO DEMOSTHENES C. JANNOPOULO
CHARLES CRABB JOHANN HUGH C. H. DODGE OSCAR EDWIN KELLER WILLIAM
JOSEPH KOENIG ROBERT W. MACDONALD PAUL GRAHAM MARSH HAROLD
ELLSWORTH MATEER WILLIAM YOUNG MCBURNEY GEORGE EDWARD MELLOW HENRY
STEVENSON MILLER ROBERT FRANK MILLER ALBERT FRANK MORROW
ELIAS ADOLPH NEUMAN ROBERT CROW NIFONG THEMISTOCLES PIIIAMBOLIS
WALTER V. L. PITTHAN NORVILL HARRY PRECOCK WALTER KING RICHARDSON
FERDINAND CARL OTTO RUEHL EDWARD ROY RUNGE JULIUS SACHS SCHWEICH
CHARLES EDWARD SHARP JAMES CECIL SHEPHERD PHILIP LEON SITEMAN
JOSEPH FREDERICK STICKLEY EDWIN PETER STUPP THEODORE WILLIAM
SVOBODA
LUZERNE MAURICE TIDD MALCOLM MICHAEL TRAVIS HAROLD MORGAN VAN HORN
HENRY THEODORE WENSEL ELMER LOUIS WERNER CLIFFORD FLOYD ZELL JOHN
WESLEY ZIEGLER
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
HERBERT J. R. BARRETT JOHN RAY MOLL TORREY THRIFT MCKINNEYJANE KUHN
PELTON HELEN DINAH MILIUS FRANK BRIEN ROWAN
JAMES JASPER SEARCY, JR. EDWARD POWELL THOMAS RUSSEL JOHN
TIBBE
®Ij£ Dfosljmatt (£fa&& "^^fc^HE CLASS of 1918 assembled at
Washington University for the a t\ first time on September 24,
1914. They were believers in signs ^. J and all held the doctrine
"Safety First" in high esteem, so they ^*^ all invested in little
gray caps and, in spite of the usual difficulty
of small sizes, did their best to appear graceful in them.
On the following Monday the class elections were held. The Sopho-
mores did their best to relieve the tedium of this affair by
attempting to kid- nap the presidential nominees, relying as usual
upon superior numbers, and taking to their heels as soon as they
found themselves matched. Perhaps they can console themselves if
this and other efforts failed of the desired effect.
HEB. 13—Obey them that have the rule over you and submit
yourselves.—THE FROSH.
— Sixty-one —
By the fourteenth of October the class had begun to appreciate
itself so much that it decided on a little party to become better
acquainted with itself. The experiment was a grand success, and
nothing could satisfy the delighted members but another party two
weeks later. The male portion of the class drew lots for the ladies
who were to confer upon them the honor of their company for these
occasions. Some of these worthies evinced a won- derful degree of
acumen in judging girls by the looks of their names, and it is to
be feared that some of them drew lots of lots. But let their con-
science judge and punish them.
Another memorable event was the Freshman Prom, held in Gymnasium on
the fourteenth of December. All who were present, and the upper
class- men not the least among the number, were loud in their
praise of the enter- tainment afforded them, the additional
advantage of informal dress belong- ing to the Freshmen
alone.
The Class Fight this year was a strange trial of worth, and with
good reason it is denied that its outcome was a moral defeat for
the Freshmen. Foreseeing this and thinking of the expense, the
Class of 1918 started a movement (which has since become universal)
to ,abolish the fight. It failed then, but the class easily
repudiated the charge of cowardice, for by sunrise on the
twenty-third, when the fight was to occur, they had stormed and
wrecked the Sophomore defenses and captured all of the defenders.
But some few of them had remained in hiding during the night and
had erected a platform so far away from the other that the
attacking party did not reach it in time to erect a scaffold and
make a real assault upon it. Be- sides a decoy platform had been
erected near the one previously wrecked, and the discovery that it
was a fake was not made until it became light enough to see that
there was no flag in it. That is how the fight was lost, but it is
plain that with half a chance the Class of 1918 would have served
the third platform as it had the first, and more easily
besides.
On the other hand, the class acknowledges itself defeated in
football. But the spring athletic contests are at hand, and the
class does not propose to acknowledge any more defeats, if it can
help it.
I COR. 9—Know ye not that they that run in a race run all, but one
receiveth the prize.- HATCHET BEAUTY CONTEST.
- Sixty-two —
Inrlaaatfaii g'titfotttH*
LYMAN SINCLAIR ABBOTT MRS. GRACE VALLE ADREON MICHAEL HAROLD ALCH
CHARLES ELMER ALTENBERND RUTH BARKER MRS. EDWIN A. BAUMGARTNER
ROBERT ALFRED BELL DAVID BERGER MRS. MABEL B. BERNINGHAUS HELEN
BUFFO BERTINI WILEIAM A. BLACKSTAD ANNA FERNANDO BREDIES CLARISSA
B. BROCKSTEDT MILDRED ADELE BROOKS ROBERT WRAY BROOKS CONSTANCE
AGATHA BROWN SARAH ROSS BROWN PHILIP D. BRYAN RALPH PICOT BUTLER
MAY HENRIETTA CERE DELLA D. CHAMBERLAIN SYLVIA CRAIG CORLEY ALBERT
HENRY CROISSANT DOROTHY LOUISE DALLY OLGA TIETJENS DAMMERT ANTHONY
BIGELOW DAY MINNIE MARY DIBBLE MRS. EDWARD W. DOLCH CHARLES ERNEST
DREES RICHARD HOMER ECKERT ELSE MARIE EYSSELL PAUL FREDERICK FARISH
MRS. FRANCES R. FERGUSON ALFRED HIRSCH FINKELSTEIN HENRY FIX MAN
HILDA FORSTER ARTHUR JEROME FREUND MICHAEL WURZEL FREUND HELEN
WILONA GLASER
COLLEGE
NIGEL CLAUDINE GONTERMAN CHARLES LEWIS GRAHAM ANTIONETTE GREINER
HILDEGARDE DAGNEY HALLEN GILBERT HARRIS WALTER HEHMAN EDWARD AUGUST
HENSKE VIOLA MAGDALF.NA HESS JAMES WILSON HILL RALPH BROWNELL HILL
MRS. BERTHA KNOX HUDSON MARGARET ELIZABETH JACKES APHRODITE M.
JANNOPOULO MEREDITH CRAIG JONES MRS. GRACE G. KEEBAUGH LOIS KEIM
ELOISE KOCH RICHARD LEE KORTKAMP WILLIAM JOSEPH KOTSREAN MARTHA
MARIE KREBS RICHARD CLARK KROEGER ADELAIDE LABEAUME LESLEY LABEAUME
ROGER ALEXANDER LEONHARDT MILDRED LOUISE LOGEMAN JOHN DANIEL LUTHER
GEORGETTE ALEXANDRA MADILL GERTRUDE MAGINN GERTRUDE MALPE HUGH
WORTHINGTON MAXEY MEREDITH HOLMAN MCCARGO RALPH S. MCFADDEN EDWARD
WALDO MCGHEE MAUDE JOSEPHINE MILLER WILLIAM LELAND MITCHELL
BEATRICE JEWELL MOORE GORDON GLENN MORRISON HILDEGARD NAGEL MARY
ETHEL NEUHOFF
HARRY JOHN NEULING CHARLES LOAN NEWPORT WILLIAM CLARENCE OEPTS
JAMES CLARKSON OGILVIE VERNON MCCLURE PARKINSON CLARA ODELE PARKS
CHARLES PERETTI, JR. SAMUEL EDWARD PESETKE RAYMOND WILLIAM PETERS
MRS. HENRY S. PRIEST ROWENA REBECCA RAY ANNABEL REMNITZ MRS. FLORA
RESNICK MARY ELIZABETH ROBERTSON ORVILLE VINTON RULER BEULAH RUTH
FREDERICK W. SCHWARTZ NORMA BEA SCHWARTZ FRANK SCOTT, JR. MARY
AGNES SCHOOLER MRS. BELLE TRACY SMITH GORDON BAIKIE SOMMERS
WINIFRED STIX BABETTE LAURA STRAUS JAMES OSCAR SUNWALL HUBERT
WATTLES SWENDER HARRY LEE THOMAS LOUISE LENOIR THOMAS DAVID
ANDERSON THOMPSON WILLIAM T. THOMPSON MILTON HENRY TUCKER VERNON
LEROY TURNER FRANCES M. VAN DEUSEN BEATRICE WADE GRANT PLIBERN WARD
MRS. ETHEL W. WHITE GRACE WILSON SANFORD M. WITHERS ANNE
HILDEGARDE. WULFING
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
FREDERIC B. CHAMBERLAIN WILLIAM MCKINLEY ENSCORE CYRIL CUNNINGHAM
PENNY ROBERT ALLERTON CUSHMAN KOAN MUY LOUIS
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
JOHN SPENCER BAEN • Louis ELI KOONTZ ROBERT LOUIS TOENGES MANLY
LEWIS KELLER CHESTER MARSON ROUTLEDGE
*Students who meet the requirements for admission, but are not
candidates for a degree; or students not candidates for a degree
(a) who have completed a four years' high school course or its
equivalent, but lack preparation in some one subject, (b) or who
are of mature age and general culture.
JOB 36—And they shall die without knowledge.—FLUNKERS.
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