©partes Strfptumb i^nitersflttCONTENTS*I The University K) 8II The Faculty . . . . 27III The Activities of the Classes 4iIV The Activities of the Colleges 9iV Academic Honors upVI Publications 131VII Dramatics 145VIII Music . 16sIX Organizations 173X Oratory and Debate 199XI Men's Athletics 209XII Women's Athletics . 269XIII Fraternities 283XIV Women's Organizations 375XV Honor Societies 395XVI Divinity 413XVII Medicine . , 423XVIII law 427XIX Society 443XX The Lighter Side 467lookOR the thirteenth year since thesegray walls rose by the azure inlandsea, the Cap & Gown presentsits record of life in the University of Chicago. It tells of effortin laboratory and classroom, of activity in college and class, of the whirl of college journalism,and the glitter of college drama, of the rush ofsociety, of triumph and defeat on the athletic field— of all that actually is on and about the campus.To portray this life simply, truthfully, and withunderstanding has been our aim, as representatives of the Junior Class.WARREN DUNHAM FOSTERHARRY ARTHUR HANSENHELEN FISHER PECKWILLIAM PATTERSON MacCRACKEN, JR.WALTER STUART MORRISONftirfptumd %s nht raottO every generation of graduates from the University of Chicago, Dr. Charles Richmond Henderson, to whom this bookis dedicated, is known. After the turmoil of registration isover, the first clear impression which the freshman receivesis of the kindly personality of the University Chaplain as heattends his first Junior College chapel; four years later, ashe swings out of Mandel with his diploma, the same gentle-voiced figure isin his mind. Dr. Henderson has won world-wide reputation as a sociologist,but it is as chaplain that he has obtained the firm individual grip on the soulof every Chicago man and woman.Dr. Henderson was born at Covington, Ind., December 18, 1848, the sonof Albert Henderson. His grandfather, Dr. John Lambert Richmond, aphysician of Indianapolis, was a friend of Henry Ward Beecher. Himself ateacher of medicine, he was one of the founders of Denison University andFranklin College. After having studied at the Lafayette, Ind., High Schooland Kalamazoo College, Dr. Henderson received the degree of A.B. in 1870from the old Chicago University. He was awarded honors in the Junior andSenior years. After studying political economy under Van Buren Denslowhe was graduated from the Theological Seminary in 1873 and in the sameyear was granted the degree of A.M. from the old University. Both. of thesebaccalaureate degrees were confirmed by the new University. In 1883, hereceived the degree of D.D. from the Seminary. In 1901 he received thedegree of Ph.D., summa cum laude, at the University of Leipsic in economicsand statistics.In 1873, Dr. Henderson became pastor at Terre Haute, Ind. While therehe established the Charity Organization Society, was a trustee of the RoseOrphans' Home, helped to secure legislation needed for public libraries, andprovided lectures for workingmen. Leaving Terre Haute in 1882, he becamepastor of the Woodward Avenue Baptist Church in Detroit and remainedthere until he came to the University at its inception in 1892. While pastorin Detroit, he was made chairman of the committee which settled the streetcar strike of 1891-2.Dr. Henderson is a member of various societies, among which are theAmerican Economic Association,, the American Sociological Society; he waspresident of the National Conference of Charities and Corrections in 1899and president of the National Prison Association in 1902, and has been president of the National Children's Home Society since 1899. He has been a8of charitable organizations in Terre Haute and Detroit and is oneof the prime movers of the Chicago Bureau of Charities. Governor Deneenappointed him secretary of the Industrial Insurance Commission. He wentas the official delegate of the United States to the International PrisonCongress at Budapest in 1905, and in that year was appointed by the permanent committee of the International Workingmen's Insurance Congressas American representative ; in 1908 he was reappointed to report on the progress of industrial insurance at the congress at Rome in October.The publications of Dr. Henderson have been as numerous as his activities have been vigorous.He is a contributor to the "American Journal of Sociology," "AmericanJournal of Theology," "Journal of Political Economy," "Dial," "Proceedingsof the National Prison Association," the "National Conference of Charitiesand Corrections," and the "International Congress of Charities, Correctionand Philanthrophy," and "Charities Review" (now "Charities and Commons"),and various other papers. He wrote an article for "Jahrbuecher fuer Nation-aloekonomie und Statistik," 1898, on "Poor Relief in the United States."Among his books are "Introduction to the Study of the Dependent, Defectiveand Delinquent Classes ;" "The Social Spirit in America ;" "Social Settlements" ; "Social Elements" (now translated into Japanese) ; ' 'Modern Methodsof Charity," and "Modern Prison Systems," and "Industrial Insurance" (inGerman and English), and the "Poor Laws of Indiana" (in French), the "Economic Problems of the Smaller Colleges of Illinois" (dissertation in German).Since its founding he has been Chaplain of the University. He is nowProfessor of Sociology and head of the Department of Ecclesiastical Sociology. From 1892 to 1894 he was Recorder of the LTniversity in addition to hisother duties. Since 1883 he has also been a trustee of Kalamazoo College.For professional uses, Dr. Henderson has studied Latin, Greek, Hebrew,German, French, Italian, Spanish and more recently Russian.But after all is said, the more intangible elements of Dr. Henderson'sachievements have made the greatest impression upon succeeding Universityclasses. * Whether on the stage in Mandel, or in the little office in Cobb, orsomewhere about the campus, Chaplain Henderson always radiates the sameuniversal kindness. To the student in trouble or perplexity he has alwaysrendered encouragement that really counted because it came from his heart.Dr. Henderson is great as a sociologist and practical reformer, but he isgreater as a man.9Alto Wrnttmn ptlm?r GUjtm*0LICE Freeman Palmer, in whose memory the sweet-tonedchimes are to ring forth from Mitchell Tower for many yearsto come, is remembered in the University of Chicago as agreat and noble woman who spread her kindly influence inthe early days of the University. From 1893 to 1895 she wasdean of women in the University. She died December 61902.The chimes cost $10,000 and were made in London by the world-famedmakers of the chimes in St. Paul's and Westminster. The money was raisedby contributions secured by the University Memorial Committee, of whichMr. Charles L. Hutchinson was treasurer. Each bell bears an inscriptionrelating one of the qualities for which Mrs. Palmer was loved. The lines havebeen selected from the Scriptures by her husband, Professor George HerbertPalmer of Harvard University, and are as follows :a gracious woman, retaining honor.Rooted and grounded in love.Easy to be entreated.Fervent in spirit.Always rejoicing.Making the lame to walk, .the blind to see.The sweetness of her lips increasing learning.Great in council and mighty in work.In God's law meditating day and night.Professor Palmer also has suggested that the following inscription beplaced on a tablet in Mitchell Tower :Joyfully to recallAlice Freeman PalmerDean of Womenin this University1893-1895These Bells Make Music.Albert A. MichelsonIfOttorB to f vaUssov IHiriplaimHE first Nobel prize to come to this country was awardedthis year to Professor Albert A. Michelson,, head of the Department of Physics of. the University of Chicago. Simultaneously with the receipt of the Nobel prize, ProfessorMichelson had conferred upon him the Copley medal, thehighest honor within the gift of the Royal Society of GreatBritain. This is a combination of honors which is probablyunique in the history of science. rAccording to the terms of the award, the Copley medal was bestowedupon Professor Michelson for his "investigations in optics." Since practicallyall of Professor Michelson's researches have been in the field of optics, itis probable that the medal was intended as a recognition of his work as awhole, rather than of any particular part of it. The most salient features ofthis work may be summarized as follows :1. Determinations of the velocity of light (1879-1886). Thermal valueobtained, namely 299,860 kilometers per second, is still the world's standard.2. Experiments on the relative motion of the earth and ether (1886-1887).3. Investigations with the interferometer (1888-1895). This is an instrument devised by Prof. Michelson and used for the double purpose of makingaccurate linear measurements and studying the nature of the bright lines ofthe sceptra of incandescent gases and vapors. This latter problem is one ofespecial importance since there seems to be no more promising means ofextending our knowledge of that most fundamental of all the problems ofscience — the problem of the nature of matter, than by studying with sufficiently powerful instruments the character of the light waves emitted byincandescent gases and vapors, the simplest types of matter available forexperiments. The chief result of Professor Michelson's investigations withthe interferometer in this field was to show that light from even the simplestsources is much more complex than had been supposed, and to determine ina measure the character of the complexity.4. The invention of the echelon spectroscope (1898). The echelon isanother instrument of great power for analyzing light waves, and one whichhas the advantage over the interferometer of giving more direct indications.5. The improvement of the diffraction grating (1903-1908). The gratings which are now being produced at 'Ryerson Physical Laboratory areconsiderably more powerful and more perfect than any others which havehitherto been made, and some interesting and new results on the nature ofcertain simple kinds of light have just been obtained with them. It was theseresults in part which led to the award of the Nobel prize.According to the terms of this year's award, the Nobel prize was given"to Albert A. Michelson for his optical instruments of precision and hisspectroscopic and metalogical investigations carried out therewith." Theoptical instruments of precision refer, doubtless, to the interferometer, theechelon spectroscope, and the new ten-inch gratings, including under thislast head the ruling engine with which these gratings were made. *^«*Robert Andrews Milliken.13llmue r0ttg of (EJifoujtf f$? Kit meniLTHOUGH slowly changing in thedetails of its activity, the University ofChicago Settlement has been for thepast year as ever the same vital effective force for social righteousness in thesordid territory "back of the yards."Miss McDowell and her fellow workershave always aimed to perform the necessary functions of the community only as long as the community has been unable to perform them for itself. This year through the fuller utilization ofDavis Square, the reaction against the saloon —one of which yet exists for every twenty-threevoters, and the dawning consciousness of decencyand social economy of the men and women forwhom they labor, the residents of the Settlementhave been able to devote more of their energiesto developing new phases of their work. The"School of Citizenship" has been established, thescope of the kindergarten enlarged, and more attention paid to the purelysocial side of the institution.The outlook for next year is particularly bright because of the addedinterest aroused among the undergraduates by the two Settlement socials oflast winter. A ConstituentI K^"°»« 4 cS^JJ*g1 ■^P' .9 .t * V r '•' *-<«!* "^ fe* >^r~^' *...■ * -"£*%* v W #► f SI MM g *1 H *■ ■*rtv•ri' ' ;^i-i.\^15lEggpttatt lExprititfmt of % Hmwrattg of ©t|ti:agnARLY in summer of 1905, the University of Chicago decidedto enter Egyptian archeological research the following winter. Dr. James Henry Breasted, Professor of Egyptology,was selected as director of the expedition, and at once beganto devise a plan for making the first complete and accuraterecords of the Nubian monuments of the Middle Empire,with their inscriptions, so that their data might be availablefor scientific research.Christmas day, 1906, saw the expedition embark in its houseboat atAssuan, below the first cataract, for the 200 mile trip to Wady Haifa at thefoot of the second cataract. Its equipment for measuring and photographingmonuments and copying the inscriptions on them was more thorough thanthat possessed by any previous expedition, -and the use of the camera, asplanned and carried out, was successful to an extent never attempted before.The speed shown in making preparations was due to the cordial assistancerendered by the Egyptian government, the Sudanese government and the Department of Antiquities. It was, seemingly, unprecedented in this land ofbuckra (tomorrow).The monuments between the first and second cataracts were recordedthe first year, and during the second year the territory between the secondand the fourth cataracts was covered, completing the work south of thefirst cataract. It is at the first cataract that the ancient Egyptians believedthe Nile sprang from the interior of the earth.The climax of achievement came with the discovery and exact locationof the lost city of Amenhotep IV, Ikhnaton, the dreamer king, who knew butone God, although- he lived centuries before Abraham. This wonderful capital lay far to the South in the land of the Sudan and a few columns whichstill remain testify by their defaced inscriptions and reliefs to later effortsto stamp out this heresy as well as to the extent and magnificence of thisempire.Whether the expedition drifted down the placid Nile or remained forweeks before the great Cliff temple Abu Simbel, the inspiration of the worknever slackened. Just the charm of the land is most powerful. Althoughbirdless and treeless, the soft winds from the desert plains seem to whisperirresistible stories of enchantment. This fascination increased the eagernesswith which photographic records were made of panel after panel of that greatwall of the Abu Simbel temple which is entirely given over to the scenes ofthe battle of Kadesh, the oldest battle whose tactics are recorded.But Egypt, which has hidden its secrets so long, gives them up whimsically and grudgingly, and its mysteries will continue to challenge thethoughtful efforts of the world for centuries to come as it has done for mil-leniums past. Victor Persons, Engineer.16STELAEFROM THE MAST HEADUtaitnrfiO speak of the many visitors to the University of Chicagowho in the course of a year come to lecture for us or to look,at least, upon us is impossible in a Cap and Gown review.As a matter of record, however, it is interesting here to setdown the names of those who have honored us with theirpresence. In addition to those who have come as visitors —President Eliot of Harvard, President Wheeler of California, Professor Gros-venor of Amherst, the head of the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa— those who have come as speakers on educational topics — President G.Stanley Hall, Superintendent Chancellor of Washington — and those menof letters and the. stage who have spoken for various clubs in the University — Hamlin Garland, Donald Robertson, and a host of others — therehave been five principal groups of contributors to extra interest in our University life. The formation of the Germanistic Society of Chicago, of whichPresident Judson is chairman, has made it possible to bring to our city German scholars of prominence, active in the Fatherland or in their adoptedcountry. Some of these have come to the University; notably ProfessorKuno Francke and Professor Hugo Miinsterberg. The relationship of theUniversity to the Alliance Francaise has fostered a friendship, too, withFrance; hence this year we have had visits from M. f Madelin of the Alliance Francaise, M. Henry LaBrue, editor of Le Temps, and, most conspicuous ofour French guests, the Abbe Klein, who conductedduring the summer quarter an unusually interestingreligious service in Mandel Hall. The work of theHistorical group of departments has been illustratedby lectures formal and informal by Professor Burr ofCornell and Professors Daggett and Goebel of Harvard, McPherson of Johns Hopkins, Judge Clellandof the Municipal Court of Chicago, R. R. McCormick,president of the Sanitary District of Chicago, andWilliam Jennings Bryan. In the religious field the twomost notable visitors have been the Reverend CharlesCuthbert Hall, who twice represented the University of Chicago in the Far East as lecturer on the18foundation, a man who while delivering his important series of lectures at the University in December endeared himself more than ever to theUniversity community, and whose death therefore has been felt as keenlyby our institution as by the Union Theological Seminary, over which hepresided. General William Booth of the Salvation Army while on his American tour inspired an audience in Mandel with increased respect for the courage and self-sacrificemanifested by the members of his great body in theireffort to uplift the most despondent members ofsociety. In addition to these lectures many onscience might be listed. So numerous, however, arethey that it is impossible to say more than that theUniversity of Chicago was during the Christmas holidays the meeting-place of the American Associationfor the Advancement of Science. The unusual success of this meeting as regards number in attendanceas well as the quality of the discussions culminatedin a distinctively University of Chicago triumph —the great dinner to Prof. Michelson on his returnwith the Nobel prize. At this dinner in the Auditorium all the prominent scientists of America werepresent. So close was their relationship to theUniversity during the days of the meetings that thisconvocation of scientists may be considered one ofmost interesting and important features of our extra-University interests during the past year.David Allan Robertson. abbe Kleinan tiff (EamjmaITHIN the last three years $45,000 has been spent in improving the '"University campus. It may be difficult to comprehend how so large a sum has been invested, as improvementshave been gradual, and very often below the surface of theground. It is this steady work of the Department of Buildings and Grounds that has converted the main campus fromthe original marsh and sand lot to its present beauty.Work underground has included the laying of new sewer systems, waterpipes, and steam heating conduits. On the surface new concrete walks havebeen laid; trees have been planted and lawns graded. The planting of atree calls for the removal of over six feet of sand, this being replaced by richsoil. A foot of sand has been removed from the permanent lawns.The department is now engaged in planting sixty-four elm trees in tworows, along each side of the cement driveway between Cobb Hall and Lexington. The trees are fifteen years old and consequently about six inches indiameter. As soon as this has been completed all the lawns on the norththird of the Quadrangles will be brought to grade and made permanent. Thispart of the campus will then be practically in a finished condition.The next improvement which Superintendent McLean will undertakewill be the building of an underground cement cellar behind Kent Theater toprovide storage room for explosives and inflammables which are used in thelaboratory. When this is completed the remainder of the season will be givenover to building drives, laying walks, and planting trees in the central openspace in front of the laboratories. It is hoped that by the end of the seasonone may drive through the campus from Hull gate on Fifty-fifth street tothe new entrance on Fifty-ninth street.1!f arjrcr Mt mortal HthrargfS^?3^\X 7* THIN another fiscal year the students may expect to see groundig|^v<2 VV broken along the Midway between Foster Hall and South Divinitynr^J£frrv*^r*fl ^or the newest anc* most important of University buildings, the^^^^^^^y William Rainey Harper Memorial Library. Already $157,000^^Q^^^^\ \ nas been raised by a vigorous campaign. When the funds reachff^Mw^^Mt]ie $200>000 on July h 1908> Mr- John D. Rockefeller, the founder^^^^^rg^^of the University, will present the trustees with $3.00 for every$1.00 subscribed, making a total of $600,000 for the new library.At the same time that the library is erected the new classical building will bebuilt. Money for this handsome building is already at hand and the plans are complete. It will stand on the Midway, with the library proper on the East and SouthDivinity on the West. Together with the library and a building to be erected nearFoster Hall it will constitute what will be known as the William Rainey Harper Memorial group.Plans for these new buildings are in the hands of the architects, Shepley, Rutan& Coolidge, who have prepared a plaster cast of the new library. These plans showthat the group will be an important addition to the architectural beauty of the University of Chicago. In keeping with the general styles which has made Chicago themecca of architects these new structures will reflect a wonderful consistency and at thesame time the newest development and growth of that architecture which is madefamous in Ryerson and the Tower group of buildings.Dr. Ernest DeWitt Burton, chairman of the faculty committee on buildings andgrounds recently gave in detail the proposed new library system. He said :'As long ago as 1898 President Harper appointed a committee of the Senate to* consider on the basis of the six years experience already had the educational questionsconnected with the library building, and from that day the problem of the librarybuilding has been under almost daily consideration in some one or more of the governing bodies of the University. The relatively large development of the depart-, mental library system at the University makes the problem of a general library building a peculiarly difficult one. The ideal is that every departmental building shall, have its own departmental library in close contact with lecture rooms and seminarrooms; and that all these departmental libraries shall be in close contact with theGeneral Library, and with one another. With a view to realizing this impossible idealas nearly as practicable the Board of Trustees in 1902 approved a plan by which theGeneral Library was to be located on the Midway frontage of the main campus, halfway between Ellis and Lexington Avenues, and connected with the departmentalbuildings of the Historical and Social Sciences, Philosophy, Law, Modern LanguagesClassics, Oriental Languages and Theology, the whole constituting a splendid group ofeight buildings with the library building itself as the commanding member of thewhole."The help of every student in the University of Chicago is needed for an earlyrealization of this great plan. The united effort of the alumni associations all overthe country is already making itself felt. The student body will be ready to expressits loyalty by a hearty response to the call for subscriptions to the new William RaineyHarper Memorial Library.-Ntrljnka &?xmNicholas Senn, M.D., Ph.D., LL.D., C.M., Professor of Surgery in the University ofChicago and in Rush Medical College, diedat his home in Chicago, of chronic myocarditisand dilitatum of the heart, January 2, 1908.He was born in Buchs, Cautin Yall,Switzerland, October 31, 1844, and came tothis country in 1852, with his parents. Fromthe beginning of his practice in 1874 he spentmuch time in experimental work and his contributions to surgical science, embodied in along series of monographs, mark an epochin the history of American surgery, notonly for their intrinsic value, but becausethey inspired many young men to take up investigation along similar lines. In large parthis enduring fame will rest on the fact thathe was the founder of experimental surgeryin America.He became professor of surgery in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, in1884, professor of the principles of surgery inRush Medical College in 1888, and professorof the principles and practice of surgery, in the same institution, in 1892, on the deathof Professor Parks. At this time he removed to Chicago, and began that remarkableseries of clinical lectures which attracted students and practitioners from all parts ofthe world. It was his constant habit to work from sixteen to eighteen hours a daythroughout his life. His clinics, conducted after an arduous forenoon of operating onprivate patients at the St. Joseph's Hospital, usually extended from 2 o'clock in theafternoon until 7 or 8 in the evening, five or six hours of continuous operating and lecturing. The evenings far into the night and early morning were devoted to experimenting and writing, and the fruit of this unremitting toil, in addition to numerouspapers and addresses, was some twenty volumes on surgical subjects.Dr. Senn was especially interested in military surgery, rendered invaluable serviceto his country in the Spanish-American war, founded the American Association ofMilitary Surgeons, and at least two state associations of similar character, was surgeon-general of the State of Wisconsin and later of Illinois. He gave nearly $100,000 toRush Medical College, a magnificent collection of medical books to the NewberryLibrary, and many lesser gifts to other institutions.He had been president of the American Medical Association, of the AmericanSurgical Association, the American Association of Military Surgeons, and several otherstate and local societies. He was a member of numerous medical and scientific bodiesthroughout the world. He was elected Professor of Surgery in the University of Chicago in 190S.Master surgeon, wise physician, great teacher, brilliant and fruitful investigator,prolific and forceful writer, extensive and observing traveler, generous benefactor tomedical institutions — few men in its history have reflected so great honor upon themedical profession or attained such distinction as Nicholas Senn.John M. Dodson.the first time in the sixteen yearsof its history the Department of Mathematics is called upon to mourn the loss bydeath of a member of its faculty. Tendays before his departure, ProfessorMaschke would have been considered theone least likely to be summoned. He hadbeen in robust health, and was in theprime of his usefulness, when he was suddenly called upon to make a choice whichwould likely end his life at once, butwhich might save it. With great courageand remarkable composure he met thecrisis and succumbed to the inevitable.Professor Maschke was born in Bres-lau, Germany, in 1853. His universitytraining was in Breslau, Heidelberg, Berlin and Gdttingen. After receiving thedoctor's degree in Gottingen in 1880, hetaught for ten years in SuisenstadischeGymnasium of Berlin, and with the opening of the University of Chicago in 1892,he became Assistant Professor of Mathematics in the new institution. In 1896 he was promoted to the rank of Associate Professor, and in 1906, to the full professorship. Professor Maschkewas well known both in this country and abroad as a scholar of high rank inthe line of his chosen specialty, and his contributions to scientific literatureare numerous and constructively effective.A certain personal charm endeared Professor Maschke to his students,his colleagues and his friends. This cannot be adequately described in a fewwords, but here are some of the elements which entered into his unique personality; — A genuine courtesy which led him always to consider the rightsand feelings of others ; a keen sympathy which led him to anoreciate thestandpoint of another, whether a student in difficulty or a college on the opposite side of the question; an artistic sense, manifested in his love of musicand his appreciation of the beautiful in whatever form ; a devotion to the scientific spirit, which led him to be satisfied with nothing short of his best andhighest endeavor in whatever occupied his attention ; and finally a devotionto his friends and especially to his chosen helpmate which was beautiful inits simplicity and its sincerity. Herbert E. Slaught.25Wakefield GoodspeedOFFICERSMartin A. Ryerson, PresidentAndrew MacLeish, Vice President Charles L. Hutchinson, TreasurerThomas W. Goodspeed, SecretaryWallace Heckman, Counsel and Business ManagerTrevor Arnett, AuditorMEMBERSClass 1. Term expires in 1908Jesse A. Baldwin Thomas W. GoodspeedAndrew MacLeish David G. Hamilton -Frank J. Llewellyn Enos M. BartonJohn D. Rockefeller, Jr.Class 2. Term expires in 1909Fred T. Gates Francis W. ParkerCharles L. Hutchinson Frederick A. SmithEdward Goodman Howard G. GreyAdolphus C. BartlettClass 3. Term expires in 1910Eli B. Felsenthal Harold F. McCormickHarry P. Judson Martin A. RyersonFranklin MacVeagh Willard A. SmithFrank O. Lowden28PRATT JUDSONPresident of the University'Alonzo Ketcham ParkerCharles Richmond HendersonThomas Wakefield GoodspeedWallace HeckmanTrevor ArnettDavid Allan RobertsonGeorge Edgar VincentAlbion Woodbury SmallRollin D. SalisburyMarion Talbot .Sophonisba Preston BreckinridgeJames Hayden TuftsRobert Morss LovettAlexander Smith .James Westfall Thompson . *William Darnall McClintockMarion TalbotSophonisba Preston BreckinridgeElizabeth WallaceCharles Edward MerriamShailer Mathews . . *.Carl Gustav LagergrenHenrik Gundersen ..James Parker HallJohn Milton DodsonHarry Gideon WellsNathaniel ButlerThomas Chrowder ChamberlinEdwin Brant FrostNewman MillerAmos Alonzo Stagg . . . . Recorder. ChaplainRegistrarCounsel and Business Manager. AuditorSecretary to .the PresidentDEANSDean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature and ScienceDean of the Graduate School of Arts and Literature. Dean of the Ogden (Graduate) School of ScienceDean of WomenAssistant Dean of WomenDean of the Senior CollegesDean of the Junior CollegesDean in the Junior CollegesDean in the Junior CollegesDean in the Junior CollegesDean in the Junior Colleges, Dean in the Junior CollegesDean in the Junior CollegesDean in the Junior CollegesDean of the Divinity SchoolDean of the Swedish Theological Seminaryof the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary. Dean of the Law School. Dean of the Medical StudentsDean in Medical WorkDean of the College of EducationDirector of MuseumsDirector of the Observatory. Director The University PressDirector of Physical Culture and Athletics29Dean$nmlt%Harry Pratt Judson, A.M., LL.D., President of the University; Professor of Comparative Politics and Diplomacy, and Head of the Department of Political Science.Galusha Anderson, A.M., S.T.D., LL.D., Professor of Homiletics.William Cleaver Wilkinson, A.M., D.D., Professor of Poetry and Criticism.Henry Holmes Belfield, A.M., Ph.D., Dean of the Technological Course of the UniversityHigh School.Franklin Johnson, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Church History and Homiletics.Thomas Wakefield Goodspeed, D.D., Secretary of the Board of Trustees, and University Registrar.Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D., Professor and Head of the Departmentof Geology ; Director of Museums.Charles Otis Whitman, Ph.D., LL.D., Sc.D., Professor and Head of the Department ofZoology; Curator of the Zoological Museum.^Nicholas Senn, M.D., Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Surgery.Richard Green Moulton; Ph.D., Professor of Literary Theory and Interpretation and Head ofthe Department of General Literature.Carl Gustaf Lagergren, A.B., D.B., Professor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) of Systematic Theology, and Dean of the Seminary.John Merle Coulter, Ph.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Botany.William Gardner Hale, A.B., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Latin.Charles Richmond Henderson, A.M., Ph.D., D.D., Professor of Sociology and Head of theDepartment of Ecclesiastical Sociology ; University Chaplain.Sherburne Wesley Burnham, A.M., Professor of Practical Astronomy, and Astronomer in theYerkes Observatory. <Charles Chandler; A.M., Professor of Latin.Emil Gustav Hirsch, A.M., LL.D., Lit.D., D.D., Professor of Rabbinical Literature and Philosophy.Henrick-Gundersen, A.M., D.B., Professor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) ofSystematic Theology, New Testament Interpretation and Biblical Literature, and Dean of theSeminary.Samuel' Wendell Williston, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Paleontology.*Heinrich Maschke, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics.James Laurence Laughlin, Ph.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Political Economy.Albert Abraham Michelson, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D., F.R.S., Professor and Head of the Department of Physics.Nathaniel Butler, A.M., D.D., LL.D., Professor of Education ; Director of Cooperating Work ;Dean of the College of Education.Frank Bigelow Tarbell, Ph.D., Professor of Classical Archaeology.Oskar Bolza, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics.Ernest DeWitt Burton, D.D., Professor and Head of the Department of New Testament Literature and Interpretation.Albion Woodbury Small, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology;Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Literature.Joseph Paxson Iddings, Ph.B., ScD., Professor of Petrology.Charles Reid Barnes, Ph.D., Professor of Plant Physiology; Examiner for Colleges.Paul Shorey, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Greek.^Deceased.30Terry, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Mediaeval and English History.William Darnall MacClintock, A.M., Professor of English Literature; Dean of the JuniorCollege of Philosophy (Women).George Burman Foster, A.M., Ph.D., Professor of the Philosophy of Religion.Ira Maurice Price, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures.Floyd Russell Mechem, A.M., Professor of Law.Horace Kent Tenney, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.Marion Talbot, A.M., LL.D., Professor of Household Administration ; Dean of Women, and Headof Green House.Rollin D. Salisbury, A.M., LL.D., Professor of Geographic Geology and Head of the Department of Geography; Dean of the Ogden (Graduate) School of Science.Starr Willard Cutting, Ph.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Germanic Languagesand Literatures.Ernst Freund J.U.D., Ph.D., Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law.Frank Billings,, S.M., M.D., Professor of Medicine.*Frank Frost Abbott, Ph.D., Professor of Latin.Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin, A.M., LL.B., Professor and Head of the Department ofHistory.John Matthews Manly, Ph.D., Professor and Head of the Department of English.Eliakim Hastings Moore, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Mathematics.Robert Francis Harper, Ph.D., Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures; Curatorof Assyrian Collections in the Haskell Oriental Museum.Ludvig Hektoen, M.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Pathology and Bacteriology.George Herbert Mead, A.B., Professor of Philosophy.John Ulric Nef, Ph.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Chemistry.Shailer Mathews, A.M., D.D., Professor of Historical and Comparative Theology and Head ofthe Department of Theology ; Dean of the Divinity School.James Hayden Tufts, Ph.D., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Philosophy andDean of the Senior Colleges.James Richard Jewett, Ph.D., Professor of the Arabic Language and Literature.r *Edwix Erle Sparks, Ph.D., Professor of American History ; Curator of the Historical Museum.George Edgar Vincent, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology;Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature, and Science.Edwin Brant Frost, A.M., Professor of Astrophysics, andDirector of the Yerkes Observatory.Carl Darling Buck, Ph.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Sanskrit and Indo-European ComparativePhilology.Alexander Smith, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry and Director of General and Physical Chemistry ; Dean in theJunior Colleges.Julius Stiegutz, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry.Edward Emerson Barnard, A.M., Sc.D., Professor of Practical Astronomy, and Astronomer in the Yerkes Observatory.*George Lincoln Hendrickson, A.B., L.H.D., Professor ofLatin.The Home of Dean Vincent31T. W. Goodspeed felling a pine onParadise Island, Wis. Charles Zueblin, Ph.B., D.B., Professor of Sociology.Julian William Mack, LL.B., Professor of Law.Amos Alonzo Stagg, A.B., Professor and Director of theDivision of Physical Culture.James Henry Breasted, Ph.D., Professor of Egyptologyand Oriental History; Director of Haskell OrientalMuseum; Director of the Egyptian Expedition of theUniversity of Chicago.George William Myers, Ph.D., Professor of the Teachingof Mathematics and Astronomy, the School of Education.Edwin Oakes Jordan, Ph.D., Professor of BacteriologyRobert Russell Bensley, A.B., M.B., Professor of Anatomy.George Ellery Hale, S.B., ScD., LL.D., Non-Resident Professor of Astrophysics.James Rowland Angell, A.M., Professor and Head ofthe Department of Psychojogy; Director of the Psychological Laboratory.Franklin Winslow Johnson, A.M., Assistant Dean ofHigh School.Robert Herrick, A.B., Professor of English.Theodore Gerald Soares, Ph.D., D.D., Professor of Homiletics.Frank Rattray Lillie, Ph.D., Professor of Embyrology; Assistant Curator of the ZoologicalMuseum.Charles Judson Herrick, Ph.D., Professor of Neurology.Albert Prescott Mathews, Ph.D., Professor of Physiological Chemistry.Heinrich August Alexander Kraeger, Ph.D., Professor of the History of German Art.Clarke Butler Whittier, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.James Parker Hall, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law; Dean of the Law School.Charles Kenneth Leith, Ph.D., Non-resident Professor of Structural and MetamorphicGeology.James Nevins Hyde, A.M., M.D., Professorial Lecturer on Deramtology.Alonzo Ketcham Parker, D.D., Professorial Lecturer on Modern Missions in the DivinitySchool ; University Recorder ; and Head of Hitchcock House.Henry Varnum Freeman, A.M., Professorial Lecturer on Legal Ethics.Graham Taylor, D.D., LL.D., Professorial Lecturer on Sociology.Ephraim Fletcher Ingals, A.M., M.D., Professorial Lecturer on Medicine.♦Charles Cuthbert Hall, D.D., LL.D., Professorial Lecturer on the Barrows Lectureship.Walter Stanley Haines, A.M., M.D., Professorial Lecturer on Toxicology.Charles Edward Kremer, Professorial Lecturer on Admiralty Law.Frank Fremont Reed, A.B., Professorial Lecturer on Copyright and Trade Marks.John Milton Dodson, A.M., M.D., Professorial Lecturer on Medicine; Dean of MedicalStudents.John Clarence Webster, A.B., M.D., Professorial Lecturer on Obstetrics and Gynecology.Arthur Dean Bevan, M.D., Professorial Lecturer on Surgery.John Maxcy Zane, A.B., Professorial Lecturer on Mining and Irrigation Law.Charles Edmund Hewitt, D.D., Student Secretary in the Divinity School.•Deceased.32ProfessorAssociate ProfessorThe Home of Professor Shepardson Francis Adelbert Blackburn, Ph.D.,of the English Language.John Wildman Moncrief, A.M., D.D..of Church History.Albert Harris Tolman, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English Literature.Frank Justus Miller, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Latin ;Examiner for Secondary Schools.Karl Pietsch, Ph.D., Associate Professor of RomancePhilology.Clarence Fassett Castle, Ph.D., Associate. Professor ofGreek on the Edward Olson Foundation.Zella Allen Dixson, A.M., L.H.D., Associate Librarian.Myra Reynolds, Ph.D., Associate Professor of EnglishLiterature ; Head of Foster House.Frederick Starr, Ph.D., Sc.D,, Associate Professor of Anthropology ; Curator of the Anthropological Section ofWalker Museum.Francis Wayland Shepardson, Ph. D., LL.D., AssociateProfessor of American History .William Isaac Thomas, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Sociology, and Superintendent of Departmental Libraries.Frederick Ives Carpenter, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English.William Bishop Owen, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Education; Dean of the Academic Courseof the University High School.Thomas Atkinson Jenkins, Ph.D., Associate Professor of French Philology.Clyde Weber Votaw, D.B., Ph.D., Associate Professor of New Testament Literature.Ferdinand Schwill, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Modern History.Addison Webster Moore, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Philosophy.Charles Riborg Mann, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics.Gerald Birney Smith, A.M., D.B., Associate Professor ofSystematic Theology.Gordon Jennings Laing, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofLatin.Robert Andrews Millikan, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofPhysics.Jerome Hall Raymond, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofSociology.Robert Morss Lovett, A.B., Associate Professor of English ;Dean of the Junior Colleges.Jared G. Carter Troop, A.M., Associate Professor of English.Charles Edward Merriam, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofPolitical Science; Dean in the Junior Colleges.Leonard Eugene Dickson, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofMathematics.Herbert Joseph Davenport, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofPolitical Economy; Head of North House. The President's House33Ellsworth Slausrht Thomas Allan Hoben, Ph.D., Associate in Homilitics ; Divinity School.Otis William Caldwell, Ph.D., Associate Professor ofBotany, and Supervisor of Nature-Study, the School ofEducation.Harry Augustus Bigelow, A.B., LL.B., Associate Professor of Law.Solomon Henry Clark, Ph.B., Associate Professor ofPublic Speaking.Emily Jane Rice, Ph.B., Associate Professor of the Teaching of History, the College of Education.Martha Fleming, Associate Professor of the Teaching ofSpeech, Oral Reading, and Dramatic Art, the College ofEducation.Zonia Barber, S.B., Associate Professor of the Teaching ofGeography and Geology, the College of Education.William F. E. Gurley, Associate Curator in Paleontology.*Hans M. Schmidt-Wartenberg, Ph.D., Assistant Professorof Germanic Philology.Paul Oskar Kern, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Germanic Philology.Francis Asbury Wood, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Germanic Philology.Olof Hedeen, A.B., Assistant Professor (in the Swedish Theological Seminary) of PracticalTheology and Exegesis.Alice Peloubet Norton, A.M., Assistant Professor of Household Administration.Herbert Ellsworth Slaught, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Mathematics ; Secretary of theBoard of Recommendations.George Carter Howland, A.M., Assistant Professor of Italian Philology.Ira Woods Howerth, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Sociology.David Judson Lingle, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology.John Gordon Wilson, A.M., M.B., CM., Assistant Professor of Anatomy.Martin Schutze, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German Literature.Herbert Lockwood Willett, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures ; Dean of the Disciples' Divinity House.Kurt Laves, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Astronomy.Elizabeth Wallace, S.B., Assistant Professor of French Literature ; Head of Beecher House ;Dean of the Junior College of Literature (Women).Jacob William Albert Young, Ph.D., Associate Professor of the Pedagogy of Mathematics.George Amos Dorsey, Ph.D.' Assistant Professor of Anthropology.Charles Joseph Chamberlain, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Botany.John Paul Goode, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Geography.William Hill, A.M., Associate Professor of Political Economy.Charles Manning Child, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Zoology.Edgar Johnson Goodspeed, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biblical and Patristic Greek; AssistantDirector of Haskell Oriental Museum.Philip Schuyler Allen, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German Literature.John Cummings, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Political Economy.Herbert Newbry McCoy, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physical Chemistry.James Westfall Thompson, Ph.D., Associate Professor of European History ; Dean of the JuniorCollege of Philosophy (Men).* Absent on leave. 34William Jones, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Analytical Chemistry.*Newman Miller, Ph.B., Director of the University Press.fWiLLiAM Vaughn Moody, A.M., Assistant Professor of English and Rhetoric.Frederic Mason Blanchard, A.M., Assistant Professor of Public Speaking. "Carl Kinsley, A.M., M.E., Assistant Professor of Physics.Henry Chandler Cowles, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Ecology.Stuart Weller, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Paleontologic Geology.Forest Ray Moulton, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Astronomy.Willard Clark Gore, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology, the College of Education.Norman MacLeod Harris, M.B., Assistant Professor of Bacteriology.Howard Taylor Ricketts, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology.Walter A. Payne, Ph.B., Assistant Professor and Secretary of the University Extension LectureStudy Department.Harry Gideon Wells, Ph.D., M.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology; Dean in Medical Work.Shirley J. Case, Assistant Professor in New Testament Department in Divinity School.Samuel Alexander Matthews, M.D., Assistant Professor of Experimental Therapeutics.Reginald Campbell Thompson, M.A., F.R.G.S., Assistant Professor of Semitic Languages.Preston Keyes, A.M., M.D., Assistant Professor of Experimental Pathology.Joseph Edward Raycroft, A.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Physical Culture, and ExaminingPhysician ; Supervisor of Physical Culture in School of Education.Henry Gordon Gale, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics.Waldemar Koch, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physiological Chemistry.Anton Julius Carlson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology.James Weber Lynn, Assistant Professor of English.Hiram Parker Williamson, Assistant Professor of French.Trevor Arnett, A.B., University Auditor.Leon Carroll Marshall, A.M., Associate Professor of Political Economy.William Lawrence Tower, S.B., Assistant Professor of Embryology.Eric Sandell, D.D., Assistant Professor (in • the SwedishTheological Seminary) of Church History.Frederic James Gurney, A.B., D.B., Assistant Recorder,with rank of Assistant Professor.Theodore Lee Neff, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in French.Luanna Robertson, Ph.D., Instructor in German; Head ofKelly House.Thor Rothstein, A.B., M.L., Instructor in Neuropathology.Christian Jorginius Olsen, Instructor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) in Homiletics, ChurchPolity, and Pastoral Duties.Charles Porter Small, M.D., University Physician.John Adelbert Parkhurst, S.M., Instructor in PracticalAstronomy.Edward Ambrose Bechtel, Ph.D., Instructor in Latin.Sophonisba Preston Breckinridge, Ph.D., J.D., Instructorin Household Administration ; Assistant Dean of Women ;Dean of the Junior College of Arts (Women).♦Resigned. Dean Butler on his vacationfAbsent on leave.35^ \z>-Dean Vincent at his summer home Edward Scribner Ames, Ph.D., Instructor in Philosophy.Reuben Myron Strong, Instructor in Zoology.Storrs Barrows Barrett, A.B., Instructor and Secretaryand Librarian of the Yerkes Observatory.Brown Pusey, M.D., Instructor in Pathology of the Eye.Clarence Almon Torrey, Ph.B., Inspector of DepartmentalLibraries.Hervey Foster Mallory, A.B., Assistant Professor and Secretary of the Correspondence-study Department.Robert Johnson Bonner, Ph.D., Assistant Professor inGreek.Josephine Chester Robertson, A.B., Head Cataloguer.George Elmer Shambaugh, M.D., Instructor in Anatomyof the Ear, Nose and Throat.Ella Adams Moore, Ph.B., Extension Instructor in English.George Linnaeus Marsh, Ph.D., Extension Instructor inEnglish.George Breed Zug, A.B., Assistant Professor in the Historyof Art.John Merlin Powis Smith, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Old Testament Language and Literature.Robert Franklin Hoxie, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Political Economy.Adolf Charles von Noe, Ph.D., Instructor in German Literature.Charles Henry Beeson, A.M., Instructor in Latin.Basil Coleman Hyatt Harvey, A.B., M.B., Assistant Professor in Anatomy.Nels Sorenson Lawdahl, Instructor (in the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary) in ChurchHistory and Greek.*John Charles Hessler, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry.Joseph Parker Warren, Ph.D., Instructor in History.Thomas Bruce Freas, A.B., Instructor and Curator in Chemistry.Wallace Walter Atwood, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Physiography and General Geology.Percy Holmes Boynton, A.M., Instructor in English.Robert Morris, LL.B., A.M., Instructor in Political Economy.Edith Foster Flint, Ph.B., Instructor in English.Susan Helen Ballou, Ph.B., Instructor in Latin.Philip Fox, S.M., Instructor in Astrophysics.William Pierce Gorsuch, A.B., Instructor in Public Speaking.Gertrude Van Hoeson, Instructor in Metal Work, College of Education.Marcus Wilson Jernegan, Instructor in History.Arthur Constant Lunn, Ph.D., Instructor in Applied Mathematics.♦John Broadus Watson, Ph.D., Instructor in Experimental Psychology.Ralph Emerson House, A.M., Instructor in Romance Languages.Henry Porter Chandler, A.B., J.D., Instructor in English.Chester Whitney Wright, Ph.D., Instructor in Political Economy.Charles Goettsch, Ph.D., Instructor in German.David Allan Robertson, A.B., Instructor in English ; Secretary of University College ; Secretaryto the President.^Resigned.36Charles Edouard David, A.M., Instructor in French.Earle Brownell Babcock, Ph.B., Instructor in French.Frederick D. Branshall, Instructor in Political Sciences.Bertha Payne, Ph.B., Instructor in Kindergarten Training, the School of Education.fCLARA Isabel Mitchell, Instructor in Art and Textiles, the College of Education.Robert James Wallace, Instructor in Photophysics.Gertrude Dudley, Instructor in Physical Culture.Lillian Sophia Cushman, Instructor in Art, the College of Education.Eleanor Smith, Instructor in Music, the School of Education.Ira Benton Meyers, Instructor in the Teaching of the Natural Sciences, and Curator of theMuseum, College of Education.Harlan Harland Barrows, Instructor in Geography.Andrew Fridley McLeod, Instructor in Chemistry.Antoinette Belle Hollister, Instructor in Clay-working and Ceramics, the College of Education.Georgia Louise Chamberlin, Secretary in the American Institute of Sacred Literature, the University Extension Division.Percy Bernard Eckhart, Ph.B., LL.B., Lecturer on Public Service Companies and Carriers, andDamages.Elizabeth Hopkins Dunn, A.M., M.D., Associate in Anatomy.John Jacob Meyer, Ph.D., Instructor in German.*Willis Boit Holmes, Ph.D., Associate in Chemistry.William Kelley Wright, Associate in Philosophy.Lemuel Charles Raiford, Associate in Chemistry.Elizabeth Langley, Associate in Shop Work, College of Education.Lester Bartlett Jones, A.B., Associate, and Director of Music.Julian Pleasant Bretz, Ph.D., Instructor in History.Albert Ellsworth Hill, A.B., Associate in English.Albert Woelfel, M.D., Instructor in Physiology.Samuel Northrup Harper, A.B., Associate in the RussianLanguage and Literature.Bertram Griffith Nelson, A.B., Associate in Public Speaking.Edward Benjamin Krehbiel, Ph.D., Instructor in History.William Jesse Goad Land, Ph.D., Instructor in Morphology-Frank Grant Lewis, Associate in New Testament Greek inDivinity School.Edwin Garvey Kirk, S.B., Instructor in Anatomy.Thomas Albert Knott, A.B., Associate in English.Edith Ethel Barnard, S.B., Instructor in Quantitative Analysis.*Emil Goettsch, Ph.D., Associate in Anatomy.Victor Ernest Shelford, S.B., Associate in Zoology.Hermann Irving Schlesinger, Ph.D., Associate in Chemistry.Frank Henry Pike, A.B., Instructor in Physiology. . A corner of Hitchcock Hall♦Resigned.t Absent on leave.37T. Waugh, Ph.D., Associate in Psychology.Walter Eugene Clark, Ph.D., Associate in Sanskrit andIndo-European Comparative Philology.Daniel David Luckenbill, Assistant in Semitics.Hans Ernest Gronow, Associate in German.William Duncan MacMillan, Associate in Mathematicsand Astronomy.Annette Butler, Associate in Woodworking, the School ofEducation.Frederick William Schenk, Law Librarian.Irene Warren, Librarian, and Associate in School- LibraryEconomy, the College of Education.Mary E. McDowell, Head Resident of the University ofChicago Settlement ; Assistant in Sociology.Frances Ada Knox, A.B., Assistant in History.Errett Gates, D.B., Ph.D., Assistant (the Disciples' Divinity House) in Church History.Cora Belle Perrine, A.B., Head of Accession Department.Trevor Amett Maude Radford Warren, Ph.B., Ph.M., Assistant in English, University College.Anna Sophia Packer, A.B., Accession Assistant.Gertrude Smith, Assistant in Music, College of Education.Charles E. Suiter, Assistant in Physical Culture.Paul S. Wagner, Assistant in Physical Culture.Mary Hefferan, Ph.D., Assistant and Curator of the Bacteriological Museum.Cora Margaret Gettys, A.B., Second Loan Desk Assistant.Anne Stuart Duncan, B.L., Loan Desk Assistant.Shinkishi Hatai, Ph.D., Assistant in Neurology.Oscar Riddle, Ph.D., Assistant in Experimental Therapeutics.Georgio Abetti, Voluntary Research Assistant, Yerkes Observatory.Paul Miller, Preparator in Paleontology.William Crocker, Ph.D., Assistant in Plant Physiology.Jacob Harold Heinzelman, A.B., Assistant in German.J. Claude Jones, A.B., Research Assistant in English.Tilden Hendricks Stearns, A.B., Assistant in Physical Culture, High School.John Thomas Patterson, S.B., Laboratory Assistant inZoology.Frank Adolph St. Sure, S.B., Assistant in Anatomy.Carl Henry Grabo, Ph.B., Assistant in English.David Anderson Covington, A.M., Assistant in Greek.Ruth Abbott, B.L.S., Assistant in Library, the School ofEducation.John Leonard Hancock, Assistant in Greek.Leonard Bloomfield, Assistant in German.Frank Christian Becht, Assistant in Physiology.♦Resigned. H. S. Fiske38E. Sheldon, Assistant in Anatomy.Elbert Clark, Laboratory Assistant in Anatomy.Leonas L. Burlingame, Assistant in Physiology.Ernest Anderson, Assistant in Chemistry.H. M. Goodman, Laboratory Assistant in Bacteriology.Robert Earl Buchanan, S.M., Assistant in Bacteriology and Pathology.♦Dennis Emerson Jackson, A.M., Assistant in Pharmacology.James Patterson, S.B., Technical Assistant in Anatomy.James Richard Greer, S.B., Assistant in Physiology.Sabella Randolph, S.B., Assistant in Clay-Working and Ceramics, the College of Education.Herbert Horace Bunzel, S.B., Assistant in Physiology.Arthur Carleton Trowbridge, S.B., Assistant in Geology.Charles S. Blair, Research Assistant in Geology.Hannah Louisa Livermore, Assistant in Physical Culture.Margaret Gleason, Assistant in Home Economics, College of Education.Charles Brookover, Technical Assistant in Anatomy.W. Peterson, Laboratory Assistant in Anatomy.John G. Lee, Assistant in Physics.Achilles DeKotinski, Assistant in Physics.Elizabeth C Sprague, Assistant (College of Education) in Home Economics.Mary Louise Bates, Librarian of the Historical Group Library.Esther Mabel Crawford, Assistant in Textiles, the College of Education.Oscar Andrew Knudson, Assistant in Physical Culture.Ruth Morgan, Assistant in the General Library.Sophie Miriam Shanks, Librarian of the Classical Library.Emily Bancroft Cox, Ph.B., Assistant in Library, Lexington Hall.Sarah Ellen Mills, Assistant in Library.Constan Geanji Holmstrom, Technician in Anatomy.Oliver J. Lee, Computer, Yerkes Observatory.William Clinton Alden, Ph.D., Docent in Geology.Margaret Davidson, Reader in English.Ruth Raymond, Assistant in Art in School of Education.Erastus Edgerton, Laboratory Assistant in Anatomy.♦Resigned.39if of£F,i.pRIPCr£TheC lassesGhey Go Marchinc. OnHEN the chimes ring out from Mitchell tower this June, another great class passes into every activity of modern life.The sixty-seventh convocation of the University of Chicagois another memorable occasion. in the building up of a greatinstitution. The presence of Professor George HerbertPalmer of Harvard University, as the convocation orator isa reminder of the work done by a noble woman, Mrs. AliceFreeman Palmer, in what Chicago people love to speak of as "early days." Itrecalls the fields of waving golden rod and the lanes of scrub oaks; theswampy road overgrown with grasses and wild shrubbery, long since obliterated by the coming of the City Gray. As convocation follows convocation,and class succeeds class, the spirit of Chicago goes out like a great ripple on awater — a great circle of hearty interest spreading wider and wider into everyland and among every people. *The sixty-sixth convocation was held on March 17, 1908, in Leon MandelAssembly Hall. The address was delivered by Andrew Sloan Draper, commissioner of .education for the state of New York, who spoke on the subject,"The Rational Limits of Academic Freedom/' The title of associate wasawarded to thirty-four candidates; six received the degree of Bachelor ofArts, twenty-four the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy and six the degreeof Bachelor or Science. There were eight elections to Phi Beta Kappa andnine to Sigma Xi. Honorable mention for excellence in the work of the Juniorcolleges was awarded to eight and in the Senior colleges to seventeen.The sixty-fifth convocation, held in Leon Man-del Assembly Hall on December 17, 1907, was notable for the address by Professor William HenryWelch, M.D., LL.D., Professor of Pathology inJohns Hopkins University. His subject was, "Medicine and the University." Six received the degreeof Bachelor of Arts, seventeen the degree of .Bachelor of Philosophy and twenty the degree of Bachelor of Science. Forty-one candidates took the titleof associate. Twenty-four members of the Seniorcolleges were elected to Sigma Xi and eleven toPhi Beta Kappa. Honorable mention was awardedto twelve in the Junior colleges and sixteen in theSenior colleges. KbeWmvflsitsof Chicago'rXtyfy*»S~» /„„SrrS«,„/^,ra£6» Mr/-/y t>r/fr-/U"^r/„*„/t;#„//// '/r„,„„,42the summer convocation, on. August 30, 1907, Walter Hines Pagemade his address on "The Writer and the University," which started a discussion on the ability of schools to train practical writers. Twenty degreesof Bachelor of Arts were awarded, forty degrees of Bachelor of Philosophyand eighteen of Bachelor of Science. Fifteen titles of associate were given.Honorable mention was extended to two in the Junior colleges and eleven inthe Senior colleges..The sixty-third convocation must always be of interest for the conferringof the degree of Doctor of Laws upon the Right Honorable James Bryce,ambassador from Great Britain to the United States. Mr. Bryce gave theconvocation address, speaking on "What University Instruction May Do toProvide Intellectual Pleasures for Later Life."The award of honors followed the address. Twenty-six students receivedhonorable mention for work in the Junior colleges, forty-six for work in theSenior colleges. Sixteen members were elected to the Beta of Illinois Chapterof Phi Beta Kappa.Of the candidates for Bachelor degrees, tewenty-seven took the degree ofBachelor of Arts, one hundred and four the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy,twenty-nine the degree of Bachelor of Science and seventeen the degree ofBachelor of Education. There were ninety-one candidates for the title ofassociate.This convocation was without doubt the most impressive ever held in theUniversity of Chicago. On account of the large demand for tickets the exercises were early announced for Bartlett gymnasium, the seating capacity ofMandel hall being inadequate for the crowds. The day was ideal. Spectators who gathered along the walks will long remember the rows of candidatesfor degrees filing out of the corridor of Mitchell tower and into the spaciousgymnasium; the black academic gowns marking a wonderful contrast to thewhite dresses of the women. Impressive too, was the scene in the Bartlettgymnasium. Here the faculty sat in a great semi-circle on the newlyerected platform; the candidates for degrees, arranged in order of seniority,occupied the fore part of the auditorium ; behind them were massed thethousands who had come to witness this, the greatest annual event in theUniversity of Chicago.The bells ring out again this June, telling their story of the progression —another, newer, larger class passing from the doors of the University.Again the year has been one of growth and progress and as the well-wisherlooks forward into those years when classes unnumbered shall pass out asthese classes pass, he can see nothing but a large growth, a more, profoundaccomplishment of the University's aims; a more successful realization ofthe University ideal.43of w minus oC tiroNorman BarkerHelen Tytler SunnyEleanor Chapman DayPaul Arthur BuhligCharles B. JordanLuther D. FernaldFrank S. BevanHelen GunsaulusAlice GreenacreMary HeapAnna M. MontgomeryEdith Moore COMMITTEESExecutive CommitteeAlvin F. Kramer,, ChairmanEdward G. FelsenthalFrank H. TempletonClass Day CommitteeCharles B. Jordan, ChairmanHenry Roney . PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurerHarriett GrimClass Gift CommitteeLuther D. Fernald, ChairmanRuth Porter/ Arthur A. GoesReception CommitteeFrank S. Bevan, ChairmanFlorence HarperMax Rhode Karl H. DixonHannibal H. Chandler, Jr.Paul A. BuhligLeo W. HoffmanCharles C. StaehlingClarence RussellClyde StackhousePaul V. HarperHortense L. BeckerDavie HendricksGertrude GreenbaumMary NortonMary PitkinLouise CobbLois Kauffman Program CommitteeEdward G. Felsenthal, ChairmanViolet E. Higley Hart E. BakerSong CommitteeFrank H. Templeton, ChairmanInez Busenbenz Charles H. IrelandPlay CommitteeKarl H. Dixon , ChairmanPhebe Bell Max Richards R. D. PenneyHarry W. HarrimanSocial CommitteeH. H. Chandler, ChairmanWinifred KelsoHarriet E. WilkesArthur E. GoesKenneth O. CrosbyPin CommitteePaul A. Buhlig, ChairmanF. C. McLeanFlorence Chaney Marcus A. HirschlCharles B. JordanGeorge H. AndersonHarvey Fuller, Jr.P. W. PinkertonClass OratorThomas H. SandersonCustodian Senior BenchHenry B. Roney46©to of 1900HAT the Senior class of the University will leave behind itthe example of a compact, coherent organization seems certain as plans for the final Convocation celebrations progress.Not only will the class have set a good example by actingquickly and in unison but it will have revived many of thosecustoms which make so impressive a week of the last sevendays of school in older Universities.To show that the class is a unit its members decided early in the yearto sit together in Senior college chapel; to wear the cap and gown onSenior day, and to march around the campus to say farewell to every building as a last tribute. The class gift committee is making 'considerableprogress and the class day committee has prepared a program of exceptionalmerit.The pin committee this year decided on a different style of pin from thatused by the Class of 1907, agreeing on a small square button bearing the classnumerals and the name of the University.Three class dances were given during the year, the final social eventbeing held in the Reynolds club on May 13. Each dance was decidedly successful. Informal plans prevailed, the idea urged by the committee in chargebeing to get the members of the big organization acquainted with each other.The programs are neatly bound in leather and are illustrated with engravings of prominent University buildings.Convocation exercises include the Baccalaureate sermon on Sunday,June 7, in Mandel hall. The Convocation exercises proper take place , onTuesday, June 9. Senior day will see a repetition of those class exercises thathave come to mean so much to University of Chicago Seniors : the classplay, the class oration, the handing down of the Senior bench and the Seniorhammer. On that day too the flag of the Senior class will fly from the tallpole in the center of the main campus, marking the passing of another classfrom the field of University activities.47Barker, A K E, $ A $Hyde Park High School ; Treasurer of FreshmanClass ; Freshman Football Team ; Captain Freshman Track Team ; Varsity Track Team, '05, '06,'07; Varsity Relay Team, '06, '07; Varsity Football Squad, '04, '05, '06; Cross Country Club; "R"Football, '05, Track, '05 ; "C" Track, '06, '07 ;Score Club ; General Chairman Junior Prom, '06 ;Chairman Reception Committee Senior Prom, '08 ;Guardian of Senior Bench ; Athletic Editor Capand Gown, '07; Honor Societies Cap and Gown,'08 ; Senior College Council, Spring, '07, Winter andSpring, '08; James Parker Hall Law Club; Guardof Honor ; University Marshal ; Owl and Serpent ;President of Senior Class.Helen Tytler Sunny, The QuadranglersThe University School for Girls ; UniversityAide ; Vice President of Senior Class.Eleanor Chapman DayBlue Island, 111., High School ; Executive Committee Philosophy College ; Decoration CommitteeSenior Prom, '08; Literary Committee Cap andGown, '07, '08; Cast of "The Schoolmistress;"Dramatic Club ; Women's Glee Club, '05 ; Secretary Dramatic Club, '07 ; Secretary Senior Class.Paul BuhligLake High School ; Entrance Scholarship ; Scholarship for Excellence of Work During FreshmanYear ; Senior College Scholarship ; Honorable Mention in Junior Colleges ; Literature College Executive Committee ; President Literature College,■Spring, '06; Athletic Committee Junior Day, '06;Senior College Council ; Printing Committee Washington Prom, '07 ; Varsity Basketball Team, 'o6-'o7-'08 ; Student Coach in Basketball, '06 ; Assistant inSurveying, 'o7-'o8 ; Business Manager Cap andGown, '07 ; Commercial Club ; Chairman Class PinCommittee ; Executive Committee, Senior Class ;University Marshal, 'o6-'o7-Y>8 ; Treasurer of theSenior Class.48AkersBloomington, 111., High School ; * B K ; EntranceScholarship ; Junior College Scholarship, 'o6-:o7 ;Honor Scholarship, 'o7-'o8 ; Honorable MentionJunior Colleges ; Commonwealth Club ; PoliticalEconomy Club ; Investigators' Club.George Harold AndersonElgin High School ; Entrance Scholarship ; Honorable Mention, Junior and Senior Colleges ; * B K ;Lincoln House. .Hattie Rebecca AndersonLa Crosse, Wis., High School ; Milwaukee Downer College.John Emil AndersonNorth Park College ; Freshman Football Team ;Varsity Football Squad, '05 ; Varsity FootballTeam, '06 and '07; Pre-Legal Club; Order of the C.Stella AndersonUniversity Aide ; Secretary Y. W. C. A., '05-'06 ; Honorable Mention in the Junior Colleges.Wilson Alfred Austin, $TABusiness Manager Cap and Gown, '07 ; ScoreClub; Sphinx; Three Quarters Club; Blackfriars— "King's Kalendar Keeper," "Rushing of Raxes,""Sure Enough Segregation."49Chester Badger, $ K 5Amboy High School ; Morgan Park Academy.Frances Catherine Baker, X P 2Englewood High School ; Honors in SeniorCollege ; Honors in Romance Department ; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges ; Senior CollegeScholarship in French ; Arrangements Committee,Senior Prom, '08 ; Secretary Senior College Council, '08 ; Chairman Program Committee FrenchClub, '08.Hart Edward BakerEnglewood High School ; Honorable Mentiontion in the Junior and Senior Colleges ; PresidentPhilosophy College ; Vice-President Junior CollegeCouncil, '06 ; Senior College Council, '07 ; Washington House ; Blackfriars, "Sure Enough Segregation ;" Assistant Business Manager Cap and Gown,1907 ; Finance Committee Senior Prom, 1908 ; Program Committee Senior Class.Clarence BalesHortense Lucile BeckerKenwood Institute.Judson G. Bennett, 2 XColorado Springs High School ; Entrance Scholarship ; Senior College Scholarship in Mathematics.SOScott Benton, X *Fort Scott, Iowa, High School ; Reynolds Commission, '07 ; Inter-Fraternity Commission, '08 ;Three Quarters Club ; Freshman Football Team,'04; Winner Reynolds Club Pool Tournament, '06.Louis BerlinNorthwest Division High School ; Manager University Employment Bureau ; Advertising ManagerMonthly Maroon, 'o6-'07 ; Medic Councilor, '06 ;Business Manager Daily Maroon, '07-'o8 ; EditorMedical Section Cap and Gown, '08; Commonwealth Club.Floyd Edwin Bernard, A YLeland Stanford Jr. University ; TreasurerStump ; Masonic Club ; Brotherhood of St. Andrew ; Cross Country Club ; Secretary Pre-Min-isterial Club.Frank Bevan, 2 NEntrance Scholarship ; Fencibles ; ChairmanLiterature College, '05 ; Junior College Council,'05; President Y. M. C. A., 'o6-'o7; CommonwealthClub ; Chairman Senior College Council, Summer,'07 ; Usher Settlement Dance, '08 ; Reynolds ClubEntertainment Committee ; Law School Council ;Chairman Program Committee Washington Prom ;Chairman Senior Class Reception Committee.Penelope Helen BowmanDenver Manual Training High School.Jessie Cecilia Boyington, X P 2Hyde Park High School.51Freda BraunlichDavenport, la., High School; * B K; EntranceLatin Scholarship; Senior Latin Scholarship;Junior College Hockey Team, '06; Senior CollegeHockey Team, '07.Irma Parker Brayton, KKTIndianapolis High School ; Butler College. '07.Jesse LaMar BrennemanGoshen, Ind., High School ; Goshen College, '06.Albert Dudley BrokawHyde Park High School; * B K; HonorableMention Junior Colleges ; Lincoln House ; TrackSquad, '08.John Carlton Burton, B ® nWest Aurora High School ; Dartmouth College,'03-'04 ; The Blackfriars, "The Rushing of Raxes ;"Cast, "The Sign of the Double Eagle ;" Sphinx ;Faculty Committee Cap and Gown, '07.Inez BusenbenzLake View High School.52CarnesAssociate, Lewis Institute.Mary Eleanor CarrKansas City High School.George Frederick CassellJohn Marshall Higji School ; Lewis Institute ;Scholarship from Lewis Institute.Gertrude Chalmers, WyvernBeloit College, 'o5-'o6Hannibal Harlow Chandler, X *Florence Jeanette ChaneyEnglewood High School ; Public SpeakingScholarship, Autumn, '06; Cabinet of Y. W. C. L.,'08 ; Junior and Senior Hockey Teams, '05, '06, '07,'08 ; Athletic Committee Cap and Gown, '07 ;Senior Class Pin Committee ; Arrangements Committee Senior Prom, '08 ; Senior College Council,'08; Student Volunteer Band, '06, '07, '08.53ChapinState Normal, New Haven, Ct.Melbourne Clements, 2 A E, $ p 2Montgomery Bell Academy; Blackfriars; University Choir.Charles Wallace Collins, AT!)Prairieville, Ala.; S. B., Alabama PolytechnicInstitute, l8qq.Florence ComptonEnglewood High School, '04; Secretary of German Club, '07.Delphine Zarilda CorkellHyde Park High School ; Lewis Institute.Charles McLain CorrellS. B., Kansas State Agricultural College; Honorable Mention in Senior Colleges ; Honors in History ; Graduate Scholarship in History.54Owen Crosby, K 2Hyde Park High School ; Blackfriars ; TigersHead; Glee Club.Evelyn CulverNorth Park College; * B K.Hazel CummingsMilwaukee Downer College ; Francis ShimerAcademy.May Agnes CunniffAssociate Lewis Institute, '06.Solomon Menahem DelsonJoseph Medill High School; * B K; EntranceScholarship, '05 ; Teaching Certificate in French,June, '06 ; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges, '06 ;Honor Senior Scholarship ; Honor Scholarship inFrench ; Honorable Mention Senior College ; Honors in Romance.Franc DelzellBay City, Mich., High School ; Kalamazoo College ; Spelman House.55Alexander Logan DerbyS. B., Battle Creek College.Leo Carter DeTray, $TANorth Division High School ;cent; Football ; Track.Gertrude Olive Dickerman Skull and Cres-Blue Island High School; Junior Basketball,'06 ; Manager Senior Basketball Team, '07.Solomon Karl DiebelA. B., McMinnville College, '05.Karl Hale Dixon, 2 XCalumet High School ; Junior College Council,'o;-'o6 ; Chairman Philosophy College, '06 ; Student Representative Board of Physical Culture andAthletics, '06 ; Guard of Honor, '06 ; ReynoldsClub Commission, 'o6-'o7 ; Reynolds Club, Secretary, 'o7-'o8; Treasurer, '07; Printing Committee,Pan-Hellenic, '05 ; Finance Committee, WashingtonProm, '08 ; Literary Committee, Cap and Gown,'07; Law Editor, '08; Chairman Play Committee,Executive Committee, Senior Class, '08 ; Blackfriars, King Augustus, in "The King's KalendarKeeper," '05 ; The Freshman in "The Rushing ofRaxes," '06; Scribe, '07; Dramatic Club, SirHumphreys, in "The Knight of the BurningPestle," '05 ; Glee Club, '05 ; Score Club ; TigersHead ; Mummers ; Hall Law Club ; Commonwealth Club.Ivy Hunter DodgeGoshen, Ind., High School ; Indiana State Normal School ; Senior College Council, '07 ; SecretarySenior Council, '08 ; Council Woman's Union, '07-'08 ; Girls' Glee Club ; Philosophy College Dramatic Club ; French Club.56Bell DottsFt. Collins, Col., High School ; Maryland Collegefor Women.Lucy Catherine DriscollRobert Waller High School; * B K; SeniorCollege Greek Scholarship ; Chairman ProgramCommittee Arts College ; Arts College Dramatics ;Chairman Art Committee, '07, and Dance Committee, '07 ; Woman's Union ; Delegate to MunicipalArt League, '06, '07, '08; Design Committee Capand Gown, '08.John Franklin EbersoleNorth Tonawanda, N. Y., High School ; GoshenCollege, 'o4-'o6; Honorable Mention Senior Colleges ; Honors in Political Economy.Benjamin Edelstein ElliottHyde Park High School.George Reinhard FaustLewis Institute.Edward George FelsenthalMorgan Park Academy; Chairman Junior College Arts ; Junior College Council ; Junior CollegeRepresentative Board of Athletic Control ; Arrangements Committee Junior Day, '06 ; DailyMaroon Reporter, Associate Editor, News Editor ;Resmolds Club, Librarian, 'o5-'o6, Secretary, '06-'07; Literary Committee Cap and Gown, '07; Assistant Law Editor, Cap and Gown, '08 ; ReynoldsCommission ; Chorus, Blackfriars, "Rushing ofRaxes ;" University Golf Team ; Guard of Honor ;University Marshal ; Chairman Program Committee, Senior Class ; Executive Committee, SeniorClass ; C. B. Whittier Law Club.57Dana Fernald, A YStaten Island, N. Y., Academy; Colonial DamesScholarship, 'o6-'o7 ; Northern Oratorical Five,'08 ; University Marshal ; Treasurer Junior Class ;Guard of Honor ; Managing Editor MonthlyMaroon ; Managing Editor Daily Maroon ; Chairman Senior Gift Committee ; Chairman Arrangements Committee, Washington Prom, '08 ; PresidentFreshman Debating Club ; President Fencibles ;History Club ; Skull and Crescent ; Owl and Serpent; Chairman, Senior College Council, '08.Ella FlynnRobert A. Waller High School.George Elmer Fuller, A YEnglewood High School; Three Quarters Club;Score Club ; Fencibles ; Assistant Business Manager Daily Maroon, 'oS-'o6 ; Business Manager DailyMaroon, 'o6-'o7; Business Manager The Universityof Chicago Weekly, '07 ; Blackfriars ; Charter Member Commonwealth Club.Harvey Benjamin Fuller, A YSt. Paul Central High School; Art EditorMonthly Maroon, 'o5-'o6; Reporter Daily MaroonStaff, 'o6-'o7, 'o7-'o8 ; Associate Editor ChicagoAlumni Magazine, '07 ; Art Committee, Cap andGown, '07; Art Editor, Cap and Gown, '08; Secretary Executive Committee, Philosophy College,'05 ; Mandolin Club, 'o4-'o5, 'o5-'o6 ; The Commonwealth Club; The Skull and Crescent; The Orderof the Iron Mask ; Social Committee, Senior Class ;Chairman Refreshment Committee, SettlementDance, '08 ; Reception Committee, Senior Prom, '08 ;Honorable Mention for the work in the Juniorand Senior Colleges ; Honorable Mention in thecontest for the Colonial Dames Scholarship, '07;Sophomore and Senior Honor Scholarships, '06,'08; University Marshal, 'o7-'o8 ; * B K.James Henry GagnierKalamazoo College ; Associate Editor The University of Chicago Weekly, '07; President Pre-Ministerial Club, 'o7-'o8; Divinity School EditorCap and Gown, '08.Arthur Alfred Goes, A K EMorgan Park Academy; Three Quarters Club;Swimming Team "C," '05, '06, '07, '08; ScienceCollege Council; Social Committee Senior Class;President Inter-Fraternity Association Track Squad,'08.58Belle GreenB. S., Parsons College.Alice GreenacreEnglewood High School ; * B K ; HonorableMention Junior Colleges ; University Aide ; Y. W.C. L. Cabinet; Class Gift Committee Senior Class.Gertrude GreenbaumDramatic Club ; Cast "Good-Natured Man ;" Secretary Sophomore Class, 'o6-'o7; Leader JuniorProm, '07; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges, '07;Social Committee Cap and Gown, '07 ; DecorationCommittee Senior Prom, '08.Harriett GrimCanton High School; Winner Central OratoricalIntercollegiate Contest ; Declamatory Contest ;Speaker for Associates ; Senior College Council ;Equal Suffrage League ; Dramatic Club.Gudrun Cornelia GundersonNorthwest Division High School; John Marshall High School.Helen Cowen Gunsaulus, The Mortar BoardCap and Gown, '08.59Lorinda HallSouth Side Academy ; Secretary Freshman Class,'03 ; Social Committee Cap and Gown, '07 ; KalailuClub; N n 2.Florence May Harper, 2Kenwood Institute ; Kalailu ; Decoration Committee Junior Prom, '06 ; Chairman Carnival Committee for Literature College, '07 ; Reception Committee Senior Prom, '08.Paul Vincent Harper, A A $Morgan Park Academy ; $ B K ; Three Quarters Club ; Dramatic Club, '06, Business Manager, '07 ; President, '08 ; Junior College Council ;Charter Member Pen Club ; University SwimmingTeam, 'o7-'o8 ; Order of the Iron Mask ; Blackfriars ; Finance Committee Senior Prom ; University Marshal ; Owl and Serpent.Harry Winfred Harriman, $ A AWayland Academy ; Public Speaking Scholarship, '04 ; University Glee Club, '03-'04 ; Sophomore Debating Team, '05 ; University Choir, '05,'07, '08 ; Ivy Orator, '06 ; Lincoln House ; University Band, 'o7-'o8 ; Chairman Senior CollegeCouncil ; Vice President Commercial Club ; LawBasketball Team, '08 ; Inter College All-Star Basketball Team, '08.Jane Merwine HavenOttumwa, Iowa, High School.Mary Fiske HeapEnglewood High School ; Spelman House ; University Aide ; Executive Committee Arts College,'o5-'o6 ; Winner of Second Place Gymnastic Contest, '05 ; Advisory Board, '05 ; Winner of SecondPlace Gymnastic Contest, '06 ; Vice President, W.A. A., '06 ; Captain Basketball Team, '06 ; Baseball Team, '06; Junior Day Committee, '06; Director Varsity Carnival, '06; Athletic CommitteeCap and Gown, '07 ; President W. A. A., '07 ;Vice President Y. W. C. I,., 'o7-'o8 ; Directorof Folk Carnival, '07; Senior Councilor, '07; Chairman Quadrangle Fete, '07 ; Winner of GymnasticContest, '07 ; Senior Basketball Team, '07 ; SeniorBaseball Team, '07 ; Athletic Committee Cap andGown, '08 ; Senior Prom Committee, '08 ; ClassGift Committee Senior Class ; Business ManagerW. A. A. Vaudeville, '08; Winner of GymnasticContest, '08.60Bertha May HendersonHyde Park High School, '04; Junior BaseballTeam, 'o5-'o6 ; Senior Baseball Team.Elias Hickman HenchmanUnited States Naval Academy.Davie HendricksThe Mortar Board ; University High School.Emma HenneMarquette High School ; Northern Normal ofMichigan.rcsn William Francis Hewitt, B © IIArmour Institute ; Hyde Park High School ;Three Quarters Club ; Skull and Crescent ; Orderof the Iron Mask; Owl and Serpent; FreshmanFootball Team ; Reserves, '05 ; Football Team, '06and '07; Chairman Finance Committee JuniorProm, '06; President Junior Class; President ofReynolds Club, 'o7-'o8 ; President of ReynoldsCommission, '07 ; Decoration Committee, SeniorProm, '07 ; Blackfriars, '06, "Rushing of Raxes"Executive Committee "Sure Enough Segregation ;"Senior College Council.Alfred Charles Hicks, A Y, $ A 2Pratt Institute.61Elizabeth Higley, X P 2Waukegan High School; # B K; HonorableMention Junior and Senior Colleges; ChairmanProgram Committee Literature College; JuniorDay Committee, '06; Fraternities Committee Capand Gown, '07.Hilda Evelyn HiemenzCentral High School ; Washington University,St. Louis.Florence HillElkhart, Ind., High School ; Lewis Institute ;Oshkosh, Wis., State Normal School.Donald Stanley HinckleySouth Division High School ; Chairman SeniorCollege Council, Summer, '06 ; Senior College Council, winter, '06 ; Stump.Marcus Andrew Hirschl, A K E, $ A $Hyde Park High School ; Freshman Track Team,'04 ; Freshman Football Team, '04 ; Cross CountryClub ; Swimming Team, '05, '06, '08 ; Commonwealth Club, Settlement Dance Committee, '08 ;Reception Committee Senior Prom, '08 ; Senior DayCommittee, '08.Harry Richard HoffmanWest Division High School; Medic Council,Autumn, '07, Winter, '08.62Weil Hoffman$ B K; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges;Freshman Debating Team, '05 ; Literature CollegeDebating Team, '06; Executive Committee, Literature College, '06; Senior College Council, 'o6-'o7;Commonwealth Club ; Political Science Club ; Whittier Law Club ; Honors in Political Science.Angeline Beth HostetterFrances Shimer Academy; * B K; EntranceScholarship ; Honorable Mention Junior and SeniorColleges.Arthur William HummelMorgan Park Academy; Ferdinand Peck Prizein Declamation, '05; Student Volunteer Band;Lincoln House.William Frederick HummelMorgan Park Academy; Scholarship in Declamation, '06; Student Volunteer Band; LincolnHouse.Hobart Russell Hunter, B © n, N 2 NUniversity of Wisconsin ; Cross Country Team,'06 ; Medic Councilor, '07.Helen Ingham, BfA$Englewood High School.63Hammer Ireland, K 2Tiger's Head ; Blackfriars ; Sphinx.Vesta Lenore JamesonCentral High School ; Junior Basketball Team,'06 ; Senior Basketball Team, '07 ; Executive Committee, Literature College, 'o5-'o6.Jacob Martin Johlin, Jr.Toledo High School ; Cross Country Club, '05-'07 ; Cross Country Team, '07 ; Track Team, '08.Helen McCarthy Johnson, X OEvanston Township High School ; University ofWisconsin ; Girls' Glee Club.Flora Thomson JonesSt. Mary's Academy, Notre Dame ; Girls' GleeClub.Una May JonesUniversity of Tennessee ; Virginia Institute.64Downing Jones, A K EUniversity High School ; Entrance Scholarship ;Honorable Mention Junior and Senior Colleges ;Colonial Dames Scholarship, '07 ; Freshman Football Team ; Varsity Football Team, '06, '07 ; Entertainment Committee Reynolds Club, '07 ; Order ofthe Iron Mask ; Hospitaller of Blackfriars ; Owl andSerpent.Paul King Judson, A YCulver Military Academy, Culver, Indiana;Three Quarters Club ; Score Club ; Blackfriars ;Commonwealth Club ; Freshman Debating Club ;Fencibles; Property Manager Blackfriars, '06;Chairman Fraternities Committee Cap and Gown,'07 ; Speaker for Associates Winter Quarter, '07.Lois Ballard Kauffman, 2University High School ; Kalailu ; Sign of theSickle ; Arrangement Committee Junior Prom, '06 ;Classes and Honor Societies Committee Cap andGown ; Junior Class Social Committee, '07 ; University Settlement Dance Committee, '08; UsherSettlement Dance, '08 ; Senior Pin Committee, '08.Madge KayBroken Bow, Neb., State Normal, '05.Hazel Dell KellyLewis Institute.4Isabelle KelleySouth Chicago High School.65Adela Kendall, X P 2University of Michigan.Agnes Janet KendrickMichigan City High School ; Lewis Institute.Robert Joseph KernerWest Division High School, Lewis Institute ;Scholarship, 'o7-'o8.Adelaide Sipes KibbeyMankato, Minn., State Normal School ; Moore-head, Minn., State Normal School ; Senior Scholarship ; Leland Stanford Jr. and Minnesota Universities.Edna Anita KlineSusquehanna Preparatory School, Selinsgrove,Pa.Frank Oswald Koepke, Jr., 2 XAssociate in Arts, Lewis Institute.66KralJoseph Medill High School.Alvin Frederick KramerWashington House ; Scholarship for Excellenceof Work in the Freshman Year; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges ; Chairman Literature College,'06; Junior College Council, 'o5-'o6; ChairmanJunior College Council, Spring, '06 ; Senior CollegeCouncil, '07; Chairman of the Day, Junior Day,'06; Secretary Student Harper Memorial Fund, 06;Managing Editor Cap and Gown, '07 ; LibrarianReynolds Club, 'o7-'o8; General Chairman Settlement Dance, '08 ; Chairman Finance CommitteeWashington Promenade, '08 ; Chairman ExecutiveCommittee Senior Class ; University Marshal, '06-'08; Head Marshal, '07-'o8; Owl and Serpent.Etta May LacyStephens College, Columbia, Mo. ; Missouri StateNormal ; The University of Missouri.Gustav Petrus LagergrenSouth Side Academy ; Bradley Polytechnic Institute ; Senior College Scholarship.Jeanette Barry Lane, The QuadranglersLeavensworth, Kan., High School ; Kalailu ; Entrance Scholarship ; Honorable Mention JuniorColleges. 'Elfreda Marie C. LarsonRock Island, 111., High School; Entrance Scholarship ; Secretary Freshman Debating Club, Winter, '05 ; President Quibblers, Winter, '06 ; Secretary Junior Class; Honorable Mention, Junior Colleges ; Faculty Committee Cap and Gown, '07 ; Secretary Student Volunteer Band, '07; MissionaryCommittee Y. W. C. L., 'o6-'o7; * B K; Honorable Mention Senior Colleges, '07 ; Honors in Department of Mathematics, '07.67Leona LaufmanMcMinnville College, Ore.Anna Emelia LaurenHyde Park High School.Mabel Emma LeaClinton, la., High School ; University of Wis-Fountain Pierce LeighDu Quoin High School ; Entrance Scholarship ;Sophomore Scholarship.Eloise Lock hart, * B ACabinet Y. W. C. L., 'o4-'o7.Louise Bosley LymanHyde Park High School ; Spelman House ; Entrance Scholarship ; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges ; Vice President Y. W. C. L., 'o6-'o7 ; HockeyTeam, '07 ; Vaudeville Committee W. A. A.68Elizabeth Malloy, n A *Englewood High School.Marguerite Ellen MarksHyde Park High School.Fletcher Olin McFarland, A K E, * P 2DePauw University, '04-'o6; Track Team, '08.Helen McKeeHyde Park High School; Spelman House.Richard C. McClaskeyTerre Haute, Ind., High School.Franklin Chambers McLean, $ P 2, T AMaroa, 111., High School; * B K, 2 3; Honorable Mention, Junior Colleges; Senior Scholarshipin Mathematics ; Medic Council, 'o6-'o7 ; PrintingCommittee Senior Prom; Pin Committee SeniorClass ; Secretary Freshman Medical Class ; Printing Committee Junior Day; Treasurer Science College, Winter, '06 ; President Science College, Spring'06 ; University Band, 'o4-'o8.69Willing McMullinTerre Haute, Ind., High School; Indiana StateNormal.Wilfrid Katherine McPartlinJoliet High School ; Entrance Scholarship.Oscar Eugene MerrillLawrence University, Appleton, Wis.Leon MetzingerIndiana State Normal School ; German Club ;French Club.Michael I. MeyerJoseph Medill High School; Honorable Mentionfor work in Junior Colleges.Ruth Tillotson MillerCaledonia, N. Y., High School ; University ofRochester ; Spelman House.70S. Miller, A A $Morgan Park Academy ; Debating Scholarship,'06 ; Philosophy College Debating Team, '06 ; Blackfriars, "Rushing of Raxes ;" Skull and Crescent ;Speaker for Associates, August, '06 ; PresidentFencibles, 'o7-'o8 ; Commonwealth Club.Grace MillsKansas City Manual Training High School.Robert R. MixAnna M. MontgomeryOshkosh, Wis., High School ; . Iowa State Normal ; University of Washington ; Executive Committee College of Philosophy, '06 ; Scholarship inPublic Speaking, '06 ; Ferdinand Peck Prize, '06 ;Decoration Committee Junior Day, '06 ; Junior College Council, Spring, '06 ; Senior College Council,Winter and Spring, '07 ; Student Activities Committee, Cap and Gown ,'07; Senior College HockeyTeam, '07 ; Honorable Mention Senior College.Edith Moore, The QuadranglersKansas City Central High School.Mary Eleanor MooreHyde Park High School.71Reynolds Morton, The Mortar BoardKenwood Institute.Elton James MoultonAlbion College, '03-'o5 ; * B K ; HonorableMention in Senior Colleges ; Special Mention inMathematics ; Scholarships in Astronomy and Mathematics ; Freshman Football, '09 ; Varsity Football, '07 ; Reporter The University of ChicagoWeekly, '07; Senior College Council; The Stump;Washington House.Lena Rosella MovitzAshland, Wis., High School.Mary J. MoynihanRobert A. Waller High School ; Entrance Scholarship ; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges ; Junior Baseball Team, '06 ; Senior Baseball Team, '07 ;Brownson Club ; Girls' Glee Club ; Women's Athletic Association.Frank Clay MurrahShurtleff Academy ; Creal Springs College ; Captain Gymnasium Team, '08.Louis Abraham NewbergerJoseph Medill High School ; Maimonides Club.72NortonUniversity High School ; Entrance Scholarship ;Honorable Mention Senior Colleges ; Vice President W. A. A., 'o6-'o7 ; President Y. W. C. L., '07 ;Kalailu.Frances Nowak, QuadranglersSign of the Sickle; N LT 2.Bessie Ann NoyesWayland Academy, '03 ; Mt. Holyoke College,'o4-'o6.Elizabeth Anthony O'ConnellEnglewood High School ; Honorable MentionJunior Colleges ; Brownson Club.Clarence OhlendorfLewis Institute.Mary Francis O'MalleyMt. St. Joseph Academy; Brownson Club.73C. Pope, 2 NPurdue University.Viola I. ParadiseHyde Park High School.Elizabeth McNeil ParkerGeorgetown, Colo., High School ; University ofColorado.Elsie Gertrude ParkerJohn Marshall High School ; Entrance Scholarship.Irving Perrill, $P2Lewis Institute, '04 ; Captain Gymnasium Team,'o6-'o7.Elmore Waite Phelps, $ A ©Ovid, Mich., High School ; Kalamazoo College,'o4-'o7 ; Freshman Football Team, '07 ; BaseballSquad, '08 ; President The Stump.74f% » Catherine Rosalie PiantaEnglewood High School, '05.Paul Whittier PinkertonMorgan Park Academy; Blackfriars, "King'sKalendar Keeper," "Rushing of Raxes," Play Committee, '07; Electrician for "Sure Enough Segregation ;" Executive Committee, Secretary and Treasurer of Arts College ; Freshman Debating Society ;Executive Committee Pen Club ; President Mummers, 'o7-'o8 ; President and Manager of Arts College Dramatic Club ; President Chess Club, '07 ;Decoration Committee Junior Prom, '06 ; Decoration Committee Senior Prom, '07 ; Captain Arts College Baseball Team, '06; Arts College BasketballTeam, '06 ; Senior College Basketball Teams, '07-'08 ; Captain, '08 ; Pin Committee Senior Class, '08 ;Reporter The Daily Maroon, 'o5-'o6, AssociateEditor, '07 ; Athletic Committee Junior Day, '06 ;Athletic Committee Cap and Gown, '07.Mary Adelaide PitkinSouth Division High School ; Junior CollegeCouncil, '06; Social Committee Junior Class, '07;Decoration Committee Junior Prom, '06 ; SocialCommittee Senior Class, '08.Walter Shoemaker Pond, K 2Shattuck School; Blackfriars.Ruth Mary Porter, QuadranglersDramatic Club ; Kalailu ; Junior College Council, '05 ; Secretary Sophomore Class, '06 ; Cast,"Good Natured Man," "The Schoolmistress."Edith A. PowelHyde Park High School.75PrestonWendell Phillips High School; * B K; Spelman House ; President Arts College, '05 ; JuniorCollege Council, '07; Honorable Mention JuniorCollege ; Cabinet Y. W. C. L., '07 ; President W. A.A., '08; Chairman Women's Athletics Cap andGown, '08.Stella RadebaughHyde Park High School.Signore Muzaffar RaffieThe Royal Polytechnic College, Teheran, Persia ;Morgan Park Academy ; Executive Committee International Club, 'o7-'o8 ; Executive CommitteeOriental Club, '08 ; Commonwealth Club ; Lecturerat the University, '06 ; Daily News Lecturer, '07-'08 ; Holder of Lowey Scholarship, 'o5-'o8 ; OfficialInterpreter of General Morteza Khan, Ambassadorfrom Persia to the United States, '07.Annie C. Templeton, The QuadranglersMax Richards, A A $South Side Academy ; Mandolin Club ; Tiger'sHead ; Junior College Councilor, '05 ; Blackfriars ;Printing Committee Junior Prom, '05 ; Assis*antManager Blackfriars, '06 ; Chairman ReceptionCommittee Junior Prom, '06; President SophomoreClass, '07 ; Iron Mask ; Manager Blackfriars, '07 ;Prior, Abbot ; Arrangements Committee SeniorProm, '08.Althea Ricker76Ross Rogers, A T Q, A K KSouth Side Academy.Wilbur RogersLawrence, Kan., High School; University ofKansas.Max Rohde, A K ESouth Side Academy; Guard of Honor; Reception Committee Senior Class; Freshman FootballTeam; Three Quarters Club; Executive Committee Science College, '06; Junior College Councilor,'06 ; Chairman Junior College Council, '06 ; WaterPolo Team, '06; Captain, 'o7-'o8; Varsity FootballTeam, '07.Henry Buell Roney, * YBurlington, Iowa, High School; Entrance Scholarship; Ivy Spade, '06; Custodian Senior Bench;Order of the Iron Mask; The Score Club; Blackfriars.Hazel Elise RowlandSouth Side Academy; St. Petersburg, Fla., HighSchool ; John B. Stetson University, 'o4-'o6 ; Girls'Glee Club.Theodore RubovitsHyde Park High School.77Russell, A YOskaloosa, Iowa, High School ; Football Team,'04, '05, '06; Track Team, '05, 'd6, '07; Captain,'07; University Band.John Gaston Ryan, A K K, r APenn College; 2 3; Fellow in Physiology;Honorable Mention in . Physiology and Anatomy.Thomas Harvey Sanderson, * A AWayland Academy ; Lincoln House ; PublicSpeaking Scholarship, '05 ; Sophomore DeclamationContest, '05 ; Guard of Honor ; Honorable MentionJunior Colleges ; Cheer Leader, '06 ; Vice PresidentY. M. C. A., '06; Literary Editor Cap and Gown,'07 ; Vice President Junior Law Class, '08 ; Captain Law Basketball Team, '08 ; University Debating Team, '08 ; Class Orator, '08.Ella SatterthwaiteHyde Park High School.Harold Henry Schlabach, A A $DeWitt, Iowa, High School ; Vice PresidentJunior Class, '06 ; University Marshal, 'o7-'o8 ;Blackfriars, 'o5-'o6.Elsie SchobingerMorgan Park High School; $ B K; HonorableMention Junior Colleges; Junior College Council;Cabinet Y. W. C. L., '08; Advisory Board W. A.A., '08.78J. SeitzWendell Phillips High School.Marye Olga ShakesPlymouth, Ind., High School; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges ; Honor Scholarship.Many Zachary ShapiroEveleth, Minn., High School.Annette SilverbergJoseph Medill High School ; Associate in ArtsLewis Institute.Mamie SimonJohn Marshall High School.Julia Kate SommerWest Division High School.79Gertrude Van Riper SpenceLewis Institute.Leo SpitzSouth Division High School ; Philosophy CollegeBasketball Team, '06; Captain Senior BasketballTeam, '07 ; Commonwealth Club.Addie Albertina SpohnRobert A. Waller High School.Clyde Ernest Stackhouse, 2 A EEnglewood High School ; Freshmen FootballTeam, '04; Skull and Crescent; Blackfriars.Charles Christian StaehlingKankakee, 111., High School ; Entrance Scholarship ; Senior College Scholarship ; Secretary andTreasurer Literature College, 'o5-'o6 ; ExecutiveCommittee Literature College, 'o5-'o6 ; DecorationCommittee Senior Prom, '08 ; Gift Committee Senior Class, '08 ; Reserve in Baseball, '05 ; VarsityBaseball Squad, '06 ; Varsity Baseball Team, '07-'08 ; University Glee Club.Oswald George StarkDavenport, Iowa, High School.80mm mel Leon Parley StarrHyde Park High School; Junior College Scholarship in Geology, '06 ; Lincoln House.Inca Lucile StebbinsTopeka, Kas., High School; Secretary Freshman Debating Club, '04; President Quibblers, '05.Earl Chester Steffa, * K 2Colorado College ; Freshman Track Team, '07 ;Cross Country Club, '07; Varsity Track Team, '08.i v F, »< Joseph Clark StephensonSheridan, Ind., High School ; Entrance Scholarship; Senior College Scholarship in Zoology;Honorable Mention Senior Colleges ; Special Honors in Zoology and Botany ; Glee Club ; GermanClub.Nora Belle' StevensonPolitical Economy Club.I Elizabeth Anna StoneJoliet Township High School; Entrance Scholarship, '04-'05; General Scholarship, 'os-'o6; Senior Hockey Team, '07.81Jane StoughEnglewood High School ; Kalailu.Frank Herbert Templeton, A A *Baseball.George Franklin ThompsonOberlin, Ohio, Academy.William Riggs TrowbridgeUniversity of Michigan.Vivien Madeleine UllmerKansas City Central High School ; Secretaryand President The Quibblers ; Volunteer Band.George John Ulrich, A YHutchinson, Minn., High School; Fannie A.Talcott Scholarship, 'o7-'o8; Commonwealth Club.82Van CleefEnglewood High School ; Vice President CameraClub, 'o6-'o7 ; Secretary Knickerbocker Club, '05-'06 ; University Band.Clara Keturah Van NestDubuque, Iowa, High School.Olga VondracekCedar Rapids, Mich., High School ; Iowa StateNormal School.Paul WanderNorthwest Division High School ; Senior Scholarship, '07 ; Literature College Debating Society,'oS-'o6 ; President Maimonides Club, 'o6-'o7 ; Chairman, executive committee, 'o7-'o8 ; Boynton Ora-matic Circle, 'o6-'o7-'o8 ; University Oratorical Contest, '07; Investigators Club, '08; Corresponding Secretary International Club, '08; MandolinClub.Althea Hester WarrenWaukegan High School ; $ B K ; Senior HockeyTeam, '07; Cabinet Y. W. C. L., 'o7-'o8.Edna Weldon, X P 2Englewood High School; Freshman DebatingClub ; Vice President and Treasurer BrownsonClub; Vice President Quibblers; Girls' Glee Club.83Elizabeth WendelTopeka High School ; Kansas State Normal.Russell Morse Wilder, A K E, N 2 NSouth Side Academy; Guard of Honor; Scholarship in Chemistry; Honorable Mention SeniorColleges ; Freshman Track Team ; Chairman Senior College Council ; Blackfriars ; Business Manager Dramatic Club; Rush Medical College; Secretary Freshman Medical Class, '08.Harriet Estabrook Wilkes, * B AHyde Park High School.Marie Demming WilliamsWashington Central High School, Washington,D. C.Ruth Elizabeth WilsonEnglewood High School ; Spelman House.Ethel Miriam WitkowskyHyde Park High School.84Harriet WolcottElgin High School.Lela Mildred WrightBradley Polytechnic Institute.William Kixmiller, A XVincennes High School and Vincennes University ; Honorable Mention Junior Colleges ; Philosophy College Councilor; Washington House; T. P.Hall Law Club, The Stump.Charles Butler Jordan, ATAOttumwa, Iowa, High School ; Vice President'08 Freshman Class ; General Chairman '08 Washington Prom ; Chairman '08 Senior Class Day ;University Marshall ; Three Quarters Club ; Skulland Crescent ; Blackfriars ; Owl and Serpent.Winifred KelsoJames D. Lightbody, ATAMuncie, Ind., High School ; DePauw Preparatory School; Freshman Football Team, '03; CaptainFreshman Track, '04; Freshman Baseball, '04;Cross Country Club, '03-'o4-'o5 ; Pred. C. C. C,'04, Capt., 'o4-'o5 ; University Representative, W. I.C. C. A., '04, '05, '06, '07; Pred. W. I. C. C. A.,'o4-'o5-'o6-'o7 ; Winner of Henery Cup, 'o3-'o4-'o5 ;Sophomore Football, '04, Sophomore Baseball, '05 ;Glee Club, '05 ; Guard of Honor ; Varsity TrackTeam, '05 ; University Representative and PointWinner at "Olympic Games," Athens, '06.85flUauB of 1309HE class of 1909 has two distinctions that must for all timebe recorded in its annals. First, it furnishes the brains and —what is more important- — the cash for the publication of theCap and Gown ; second, it has Harvey Meagher as its treasurer. Harvey Meagher is the man with the adjustable name.the smile that it is beyond the invention of man to eradicate,and the treasury of the Junior class. In company with Bill MacCracken,Wince Henry, Rens Sherer and other lights, he engineered the smoker of theclass so well that this body has not given any since. This occurred some timein the Winter quarter, on the same night when the girls had a feed in Lex, andPaul Harper took three girls home because there were enough to go around.The class is proud of the fact that it has Fred Carr for its president, andits members greatly regretted his absence in the winter quarter, caused byillness. With a large and enthusiastic body of members, many of them thebest workers among the undergraduates, the class looks forward to a recordyear in 1909, when it steps into its place as the Senior class.87(EIiibb of 1010HE cares of the Sophomore class in the University of Chicago have to do largely with the saying that coming eventscast their shadows before. During the Sophomore year preparations are made for the election of a Cap and Gown board,the Junior Promenade comes with its share of responsibilities and honors and Junior day adds to the sphere of activities. While the men of the first two years are included in these events theburden of the work falls on the Sophomores.The present Sophomore class completes an active year, full of importanceto its members. The Junior Promenade on June 5 is the last big social activityin which Sophomores engage. Junior day during Convocation week will bethe final event of the year.88011*00 Of 10118^?\?5 T UST when the class of 1911 sprang into being is not a matter^wm J of record. As far as the general student body is concerned,MLaj^lMpE^s^ the class got together one day in Kent Theater, elected^^C^^^^^m officers and appointed a social committee right after the cleansMj^a[w"t\^)Jo declared that the Freshman class did not exist in the Uni-$3&v/ts&!l££&£3 versity of Chicago. President Smith did not seem to bebothered by the fact that there was no class — as he says there seemed to beenough votes for the opposing candidates to place him on the anxious seat fora while. Neither did this bother the gay crowd that gathered on February11 at the Reynolds Club for the first real Freshman dance.This dance was without question a success. The chaperones were Deanand Mrs. R. M. Lovett, Dean and Mrs. F.'J. Miller, Miss Marion Talbot andMr. Julian P. Bretz. The committee in charge was composed of the following:Harold Smith, Hargrave Long, Dorothy Buckley, Morris Briggs, AlecWhitfield, Ralph Lidster, George Roulston, Charles Sullivan, Robert Owen,Ned Earle, John Scott, Jeanette Thielens, Virginia Freeman, KatharineJohnston, Mary Chaney, Fred Bate, Percival Gottfried, Paul Gardner, JoyClark, Raymond Madden, Greta Hole, Helen Ailing, Edith Young, BerniceLe Claire, Theo Leonard, Margaret MacCracken, Ethel Kawin and ElizabethBurke.89g>mwt (EoUeg* (EomtrtlINCE its organization in 1905 the council system has expanded until to-day it stands as the court of last resort instudent activities.. By virtue of being representative of theupper two years of undergraduate life the Senior CollegeCouncil is naturally of first importance. Since the spring of1907 the council has initiated a new plan for elections, meansfor relieving the congestion in Cobb Hall and has improved conditions inLexington Commons. The fall quarter was a busy one, resulting in theconduct of football mass-meetings, plans for celebrations, and a considerationof demonstrations, vaccination, and other questions. In the winter the councilendorsed the Blackfriars' plan for a trip outside of Chicago, arranged for asuccessful Washington Prom, adopted a design for an official university pinand discussed other matters of importance to students.Council members are. elected from the six divisions of the Senior colleges, one representative being chosen every quarter. Each member servestwo quarters. An iniporfant part of the work of the Senior college councilis to conduct the elections in the Junior and Senior classes. The Senior college council, too, is the only undergraduate body that has regular meetingswith President Judson. On such occasions plans for the betterment ofstudent interests are discussed.MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL.Winter Quarter, 1908. — William Embry Wrather, president ; William Patterson MacCracken,vice-president ; Frances Catherine Baker, secretary ; Florence Jeanette Chaney, Harriett Grim,Ruth Marion Kellogg, Harry Winfred Harriman, Harry Arthur Hansen, Norman Barker, HenryRowland Halsey, Paul Peter Princell.Autumn Quarter, 1907. — Harry Winfred Harriman, president; Ivy Hunter Dodge, secretary;Alvin Frederick Kramer, Frank Samuel Bevan, Hugo Frank Bezdek, Harriett Grim, Henry Rowland Halsey, Harry Arthur Hansen, William Francis Hewitt, Elton James Moulton, Edith ShopeReider, William Embry Wrather. ■Summer Quarter, 1907. — Frank Samuel Bevan, president; Elton James Moulton, secretary;Hugo Frank Bezdek, Ivy Hunter Dodge, Alvin Frederick Kramer, Edith Shope Reider.Spring Quarter, 1907. — Harold Higgins Swift, president; Anna Montgomery, secretary;Hart Edward Baker, Norman Barker, Helen Dewhurst, Mary Fiske Heap, Earl DeWitt Hostetter,Robert Eddy Mathews, Marion Milne, William Patterson MacCracken, William Embry Wrather.93Junior (Eoltej? (EomtrilHE Junior College Council, composed of eight representativeselected bi-quarterly from the Junior Colleges of Arts,. Literature, Science and Philosophy, has developed important functions. The two most important functions of the council,however, are to act on matters of student interest and to serveas a medium between students and faculty. Such acts asbringing to the notice of the proper authorities the need of better sidewalks,better lighting facilities, clocks, mirrors and other small accommodations,seemingly unessential but nevertheless important to the welfare of the studentbody, constitute no small contribution to the general life, and are worthy ofrecognition. Matters of greater interest to the students, such as the, selectionof college seal and pin, the election of officers for Junior day and the Promenade, the suggestion of changes in the curriculum, have been treatedeffectively and with care. With much already accomplished, the council isonly in the initial stage of. its sphere of usefulness.In the Spring quarter the Junior College Council acts as an auditingcommittee for the Junior Promenade. The records of Junior day activitiesare kept, the Council having supervision over the entire event. Since theadoption of the new constitution of the Junior Colleges the members of theCouncil hold no other office within their college, but are responsible to theexecutive committees and receive instructions from their colleges throughthis medium.MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL.Winter Quarter, 1908. — Albert Dean Henderson, president ; Willowdean Chatterson, secretary ;Bradford Gill, Raymond . Deforest Penney, Edith Prindeville, Allen Sayles, Katharine Slaught,Clara Bertha Spohn.Autumn Quarter, 1907. — Albert Dean Henderson,, president ; Ruth Marion Kellogg, secretary; Mary Lillian Kenney, Willowdean Chatterson, Katharine May Slaught, David FrancisDavid, Raymond Deforest Penney, Robert Brent Sullivan.Spring Quarter, 1907. — Harry Arthur Hansen, president; Marjorie Day, secretary; FredCornelius Caldwell*, David Francis Davis, Mary Lillian Kenney, Bernard Herman Krog, EdithWhitten Osgood, Ethel Preston.95(Balks* of Art0— MmRTS college of men will never face the charge of being anunwieldy body. In the last few years its membership hasnever gone far above the thirty mark, which has given itsmeetings an informal character and made things easy forits chairman.Its size has not, however, limited the activities of itsmembers. The social calendar included a smoker at the Reynolds Club aadseveral dances. In the inter-college basketball relations the Arts teamworked hard and while it did not land very high its members were satisfiedwith the effort. The team was built around Exselsen and Leaf and was composed of these two men and Wolfram, Gilbert and Luckenbill. Several gameswent by the narrowest of margins — games hard to lose. The prospects for nextyear are very bright.Arts is also active in debating this year. Last year the team, FrankPutnam and Sayles, won the Junior College championship in debating andthis year's team is out for it again. The debaters this year are Carpenter,Gilbert and Sayles. Fichman could not serve and Gilbert, the alternate, tookhis place. Arts meets Philosophy first while Literature debates Science.The winners of these matches then contest in the finals.A large number of Arts men have won honors in various activities. Klingand Morgan are members of the Varsity cross-country and track teams.Wolfram won the Winter quarter finals in public speaking. Carpenter madethe Freshman debating team which met Northwestern's freshmen this spring,and Sayles was elected president of the Junior College Council for the springquarter. .The college officers and committees are :Winter quarter, 1908 — Paul L. V. Exselsen, chairman ; Allen Sayles, councilor ; SyreneLeaf, Leroy A. Kling, Freeman Morgan.Autumn quarter, 1907 — Paul L. V. Exsels.en, chairman; David F. Davis, councilor; SyreneLeaf, Freeman Morgan, Allen Sayles.96(Mkg? of Arts— Wamt ttY all other colleges Arts women are regarded as artistic andexclusive. Arts women are perfectly satisfied with the firstappellation, but object to any exclusiveness, in spite of thefact that the}^ have a better knowledge of the Classical librarythan less favored folk. They also assert that in spite of thefact that they consort with Cicero, Livy and Xenephon, theyare not to be regarded as dead ones, and point to a very lively social calendaras proof positive of their usefulness in the Junior College scheme of entertainment.Socially, Arts women have been very active. Almost every Friday therehas been something doing. Arts women meet in their college room forluncheons in order to get better acquainted and to talk shop. There was adance in Foster Hall on November 8, and a chocolate party in the Arts roomon November 15. On December 6 the college dressed dolls for the TuskegeeInstitute. A Christmas party was held on December 13, and a Valentinecotillion in Lexington hall for Arts and Science College.The following special addresses have been given to Arts College womenduring the year :October 22. — Mrs. William MacClintock — "Making a Friend."November 19. — Mrs. Krehbiel — "Graduate Work."November 22. — Miss Cushman — "Where to Find Places of Artistic Interest in Chicago."December 3. — Dr. Bonner— "Greek Athletics."January 17. — Prof. Shorey — "Interesting Facts About Greek."November 12. — Mr. Robertson— "History of the University," in Kent Theater.^January 14, February 25 and March 3. — Dean Vincent.Arts College has the following officers :Myra Nugent, president; Ina Rabb, secretary-treasurer; Alice Johnson, chairman programcommittee ; Marguerite Beeson, chairman room committee.Executive Committee, WTinter Quarter. — Edith Prindeville, . chairman ; Lucile Jarvis, HelenRiggs, Beulah Reed, Abigail Lazelle.Executive Committee, Autumn Quarter. — Ruth Kellogg, chairman; Lucile Jarvis, BessieBarker, Helen Riggs, Mary Clarke.98(Eoilnj? of Htfrraiure — Mt nIT took Literature College three years to gather sufficient energyto give a dance but when it was given it was worth waiting for.It was a leap-year cotillion held on St. Valentine's day at theReynold's Club in the face of the bitterest opposition fromthe men of Science and Arts who started a rival affair overin Lexington. Lit always claimed Science and Arts werejealous and laid a deep, dark, unholy conspiracy to get even. Anyhow thecasualties were slight and several stunts new to the college dance were carried through.The smoker the fall before was even more novel. For fear that thetheater of the Reynolds Club would not be large enough to hold all theguests whom they had invited none of the men of Lit came. The guests,likewise most courteous, must have felt the same scruples. Mr. Robertson'saggregation of after-dinner speakers, after having performed their parts inthe dining room of Hutchinson below, all came in a body and saved the day.Besides admiring the handiwork of a sporting cartoonist of The Daily News,the audience was victimized by the humor of one Bob Harris. The SnellHall collection of wit — the greatest and most unique in captivity, was alsopresented to view by Ivan Doseff.In 1907 Lit won the college basketball championship. In 1908, Litstruggled equally hard with Arts to see which would have the honor of bringing up the rear of the procession.Particular pains were taken during the Winter quarter to encourage theintellectual processes of the men. A number of the scientific members of thefaculty presented to them their estimate of the position of science as awhole and in various phases in the general scheme of things.An illustrated lecture — asserted to have been the first ever given by acollege independently, was delivered, Mr. David A. Robertson being thespeaker.The officers were :Winter Quarter, 1908-^Warren Dunham Foster, Chairman; Raymond Deforest Penney, councilor; Aleck Whitfield, Ben Newman, Jerome Frank.Autumn Quarter, 1907— Ben Frankly n Newman, chairman; Raymond Deforest Penney, councilor; Lester A. Stern, Warren D. Foster, Arthur Kay Wilson.SJg^ l o/^£g^* JW ^=£Q^vpl ° y) 0 JJ°- )]° *\fi^g «fF^-— -£7/*IOOdoling? of literature--- IJomftt/Spf^TMf T ITERATURE women are responsible for many recent inno-ffr^j^p^ jL-' vations in the programs of the Junior Colleges. They assertthat they started the combination meetings of the Juniorwomen, at which Hamlin Garland, Dean George E. Vincentand others spoke. Under the leadership of Miss ElizabethWallace they have preserved a spirit of unity hardly lookedfor in so large an organization, for Literature College has more members thanany other woman's college.Literature women have been leaders in the informal parties of the lastyear, having given dances, costume affairs, theatricals and weekly luncheons.Athletics also have not been ignored, and the results have been very gratifying. The Greenroom is a dramatic club composed of Literature women.During the Autumn quarter the college gave a dance on November 5.and a college luncheon on November 27. Another big luncheon took placeJanuary 9. The Winter quarter dance was given January 22 at the ReynoldsClub. On March 11 the college gave a luncheon to Mrs. Flint.Speakers for the College of Literature in the Spring quarter of 1907 were :Miss Breckenridge, Dean Barnes, Mr. Boynton, Miss Montgomery, Mr. Nelson and Lorado Taft. In the Autumn quarted, 1908, they were : Vida Sutton,Mrs. Elia W. Peattie, David A. Robertson, Miss Wallace and Prof. C. E. Merriam. Speakers in the Winter quarter were: Dean Vincent, Mrs. Vincent,Miss Talbot, Hamlin Garland and Katherine Coman of Wellesley.The organization of the college has been as follows :Winter Quarter. — Jessie Heckman, chairman; Katherine Slaught, councilor; Caroline Dickey,secretary; Dorothy Buckley, Mildred Dana, Mary Phister, Miss Hartwell, Florence Lawson, RuthAllen, Eva Schultz.Autumn Quarter. — Katherine Slaught, chairman and councilor; Caroline Dickey, secretary;Jessie Heckman, Mary Phister, Dorothy Buckley, Mildred Dana Hartwell, Ruth Allen, FlorenceLawson.102(talk 0? of f t}UoHoptf£--~ 0Lt nHILOSOPHY has always had the distinction of being thelargest of the men's Junior Colleges. One of the reasons forits size is believed to be the fact that it embraces men whoare training for large fields like that of law, business, newspaper work, banking and others allied with trade and industry.For this reason the speakers at Philosophy meetings haveaimed to present topics of especial value in the business and commercial fields.Among those who have addressed the college during the year have been Professors Laughlin, Salisbury, Vincent, Zueblin, Merriam, Clark, Blanchard,Moulton and others representing nine departments.Some of the lectures given for the college have been illustrated withstereopticon slides, this being made possible by the fact that Kent Theater,the meeting place of the college, is completely wired. Professor J. Paul Goodespoke on the resources of the great West on one occasion, illustrating his talkwith maps and photographs.Philosophy college has always ranked high in inter-college contests. Onlast Junior day, with a track team made up of Worthwine, D. W. Ferguson,Wertz, Friedstein, I. E. Ferguson, Tait, Adams, Bebb, Resnick, Silberman,Anderson, Merriam, Bliss, Kahn and Donovan the college won the championship banner. In basketball the college ranked second, taking first last year.On this year's team were Sabath, captain; Allison, Ferguson, Ford, Hergerand Levinson. In debate the college is represented by Sabath, Saulkey andKeyes.The officers and committee men of the college are :Winter quarter, 1908— Albert C. Donovan, chairman ; Albert D. Henderson, councilor ;Robert Allison, Ralph M. Cleary, Robert J. Hart, Carlyle M. Keyes, John W. MacNeish, HarveyE. Meagher, and Albert Sabath.Autumn quarter, 1907 — Albert D. Henderson, chairman and councilor ; Robert Allison, Benjamin H. Badenoch, Carlyle M. Keyes, Harvey E. Meagher and Frank J. O'Brien.104doling? of pi|tlo0opl|g— Hom^n' I SHEY say that if any one college keeps things moving in the*■ group of women's Junior colleges — it's Philosophy. Philosophy has been pushing ahead ever since it became famous asthe place where the Sock and Buskin society holds its secretconclave. The young women who plan its dramatic entertainments have long been suspected of being the main worksbehind the affairs of Philosophy.The social calendar of Philosophy has been very full. So has the calendar of general events. These explain better than a long description theactivities of this particular group. The secretary's record gives the following :Oct. 8 — Election of officers.Oct. i '5 — Dean MacClintock addresses the college.Oct. 22 — Addresses by representatives of the different committees on student activities.Oct. 23 — Harvest Home party in Lexington.Oct. 29 — College assembled and vaccinated.Nov. 5 — Prof. Clark's readings illustrative of the "Music Element in Lyric Poetry."Nov. 12 — Lecture in Kent by Mr. David A. Robertson, on the University.Nov. 19 — Business Meeting with Dean MacClintock.Nov. 22 — College entertained the men of Philosophy College at an informal afternoon dance,Reynolds Club.Nov. 26 — James O'Donnell Bennett on "How To See A Play," Kent Theater.Dec. 3 — Dean Vincent on a "Trip Through the East."Dec. 7 — The college was entertained by Philosophy men at an informal, Reynolds Club.Dec. 11 — The Junior College declamation contest in Mandel.Dec. 12 — "Children's Christmas Party" in Lexington Hall.WINTER QUARTER, 1908Jan. 7 — The president discussed business on hand.Jan. 14 — Joint meeting in Kent ; Dean Vincent on "Types."Jan. 21 — Dean MacClintock on "A Walking Trip Through the English Lake District.'"Jan. 28 — Inez Jackson and Alice Dunshee gave a program.Feb. 4 — College picture taken.Feb. 11 — Election of officers.Feb. 14 — Literature men entertained Philosophy men, Philosophy women and Literaturewomen at a Valentine cotillion, Reynold's Club.Feb. 18 — Prof. David on French girl's schools.Feb. 25 — Dean MacClintock's farewell talk before leaving for the Philippines.March 4 — The college entertained all the Junior Colleges at a dance, Reynold's Club.March 10 — Junior College Declamation contest — Mandel.The officers have been :Winter quarter, 1908 — Mildred Chamberlain, chairman ; Gertrude C. Fish, secretary andtreasurer ; Inez Jackson, Esther Hall, Ernestine Evans and Ethel Kawin.Autumn quarter, 1907 — Willowdeen Chatterson, chairman ; Mildred Chamberlin, secretaryand treasurer; Gertrude C. Fish, Sarah Wilkes, Ernestine Evans, and Marjorie Day106doll? g? of ^txmtt — Mt nASTERLY inactivity has characterized Science College menduring the past year. In the spring of 1907 Science won therelay at the Junior Day meet, and so much energy was thenconsumed that none has been left for anything else. Sciencealso won second place in that meet and the expansion of thegrin of one Bradford Gill, who lately has attained the dignityof the council, or perhaps has had it thrust upon him, has never been belowthe maximum— and that is saying much.Politics is unknown to the men of Science. At each election the dean orsome other charitably-minded individual has had to use a prod to force enoughnominations to fill the offices. Lit men have never believed this, but the Litmen are an unregenerate lot anyhow.Lately Oswald Frithiof Nelson has presided over the destiny of the college. Notwithstanding his first names and the fact that he comes from DesMoines, Fritz has been able to control the fate of his trustful charges at leastwithout great jar to their sensibilities — or much of anything else.Social events have been conspicuous by their absence from the activitiesof the college. "What need have we for smokers and dances since we won therelay last spring?" say the men of Science. However, in the course of thefirst few weeks of the Spring quarter something is going to happen. Whetherthis happening will be an entrance into the world of inter-college societyor preparation to win another relay at the next Junior Day meet or the formation of plans to capture second place, or, perhaps, even first, the men ofthe college will not disclose. Meanwhile the rest of the men of the Juniorcolleges wait in awesome suspense. What is going to happen? Will Sciencestir from its masterly lethargy? Will wild excitement break forth? Whatis developing in the mighty mind of Science?Anyhow, Science won the basketball championship. What more do youwant?The rulers of the college have been :Autumn Quarter, 1907. — Robert B. Sullivan, ' chairman and councilor ; Fred C. Caldwell,George H. Lindsay, Harlan O. Page, George H. Roulston, Leo C. De Tray.Winter Quarter, 1908. — Oswald F. Nelson, chairman ; Bradford Gill, councilor ; Leo C.DeTray, Charles T. Maxwell, George H. Roulston.108n1 jfrl*v9*» '<i<ll^» tl* tt ftV»*(Eolkg? of Bmntt—WammO think that, in all our varied career as an organization, wehave never been formally presented to the University throughthe Cap and Gown ; we, who are at present revising our charter; we, with alumnae to our credit; we, who are even nowplanning our third annual something or other. It seems anincreditable oversight, since we are quite old enough to be anestablished tradition.Not only are we an established tradition, but among ourselves, we haveestablished traditions, which cover wide fields. For instance, once a quarterwe give a reception to the Freshmen, which only Freshmen attend, decide toredecorate the electric lights with new yellow crepe paper, and devote oneentire meeting to the betterment of our beloved University. At this meetingwe decide any question which is weighing down the minds of the Faculty, suchas, "How the Incoming Student Can Best Solve Her New Problems," "Plowthe Student Body Can Be Better Ploused and Fed," and "Which Side-Walkthe Superintendent of Grounds Should Best Tear Up Next."On the athletic side, we always feel it our duty to be represented on everyfinal team, whether basketball, baseball or hockey, and to compete in the inter-college contest at least in the potato and sack races. No well regulatedoratorical contest can get along without us ; we are in demand all over thecampus. You will find a fair share of us in English I. and III., we are in psychology, the trigonometry class teems with our members, and even in publicspeaking, Mr. Nelson insists on our presence.But greater and more obligatory to every Science girl is "Busyness."What college can boast of laboratory hours from 8 :30 to 6 :00, of field-tripsarranged for weeks ahead, and references piled up by the score? What collegeis there but ours in which every member can be recognized as far as the eyecan reach, and whose whole life can be summed up in the simple word — Rush.We rush, but not in vain, for we get there.In social events Science women have been active. A characteristic eventwas a sewing bee, held in the Spring quarter. An informal tea party also wason the list. The Faculty also has not been neglected.Science women have had the following officers :Winter quarter — Carlie Souter, chairman ; Ella Martin, secretary ; Clara Spohn, councilor ;Mary Hull, Miriam Mathews, Charlotte Merrill.Autumn quarter — Clara Spohn, chairman ; Ella Martin, secretary ; Mary Kenney, councilor ;Carlie Souter, May Roberts, Adelaide Kleiminger, Myrta McCoy.Spring quarter, 1907 — Marjorie Bell, chairman; Villa Smith, secretary; Mary Kenney, councilor ; Adelaide Kleiminger, Carlie Souter, Miss Gordon, Clara Spohn.noOFDUCATION'(Hallmt of iEourattanAlthough the ranking of the work is the same as any other branch ofthe undergraduate colleges in giving a bachelor's degree, the College of Education is so nearly isolated both in location and in aims that it is very littleunderstood even by the University public. To a greater or less degree, students working for a B. Ed. do their work in Emmons Blaine Hall and seevery little of the campus. In the mind of the ordinary undergraduate a veryhazy notion is likely to exist as to what the general nature of the work maybe. As he casually scans the quarterly schedule, questions are very likely tosuggest themselves to him as to how the "Application of Heat to FoodMaterial" can be any different from what he would expect to be taught underthe title of "Cooking."The aim of the College is to turn out efficient, capable teachers. Themethods used to secure this end are a training in the psychological and socialproblems of the school room, and a training of the eye and hand by such workas basketry, pottery, metal working, and domestic science. The close connection with the Elementary School and Kindergarten affords an unusuallygood opportunity to do actual "laboratory work" in teaching. The incorporation of the College as a part of the University proper offers opportunities todo specialized work along certain lines which will be taken into account moreand more by students generally.114OF EDUCATIONAdelaide Chapin Gertrude DickermanHazel Cummings Mathilde DroegeNellie Belle Greencandidates for the degree of bachelor of educationLucy BarrollGladys Russell BaxterPenelope BowmanJessie C. BoyingtonSarah Eudocia DrakeFlorence HillIrene Kawin Hazel KelleyIsabelle KelleyHelen KendallJean KruegerBessie O'ConnellMary Frances O'Malley Edith PowellAlthea Ricker.Martha SherwoodEdna L. WatkinsEdna WeldonMaude Harriet WolcottUsta HagenCANDIDATES FOR TWO YEAR CERTIFICATESJennie Olga AdamsLillian Rosalie BeifeldLola BuckinghamHazel CushingAlice DollingBertha DonaldsonCarrie ElmstromFlorence FarwellAlice M. FriedmanAllene GatesBessie GrippingGladys HallamMinnie HigleyAdah JandtEva Miriam Leonard Edith LynnHelen MatternFlorence MorganrothKatharine Bone MacauleyMay Agnes McCleveyMinnie Page McDevittEllen Gray MacduffLaura Tisdale OsmanAlma RadzinskiAlina Roggeveenestelle simmsGertrude J. ShawMyrtle SholtyGladys ThomsonEdith Gregory Van DeusenIda May Waters"5Uomen 0 flUjriHttan Ctas**Estilene PendletonBernice WhippleBessie GriffingRuth Bestor. .Miriam RitcheyFlorence Ames .Helen Angus .Caryl Ames COLLEGE OF EDUCATION BRANCHOfficers. President. Vice President and Chairman of Membership Committee. SecretaryTreasurer and Chairman of Finance CommitteeChairman Devotional CommitteeChairman Bible Study Committee. Chairman Intercollegiate CommitteeChairman Social CommitteeAdvisory CommitteeDr. Nathaniel Butler • Mrs. Charles HitchcockActivitiesBesides the regular weekly vesper services on Thursdays, the Leaguehas conducted a Bible Class throughout the year. Delegates have been sentto the more important conventions held near Chicago. Miss Helen TossWeeks, General Secretary for Illinois, made her usual visit to the organization.116(Hounril of % <BaU*g* of lEourationJessie B. Strate .Lucy Barroll ChairmanSecretaryFlorence BrechtAdah May JandtMargaret Stevens117Irta KappaThe Beta of Illinois ChapterEstablished April 4, 1889Elected December 17, 1907Alice Freda BraunlichAlbert Dudley BrokawEvelyn CulverSolomon Menahem DelsonAlice GreenacreVi6let Elizabeth HigleyBertha Elizabeth LangElfreda Marie Catherina LarsonElton James MoultonEthel PrestonIda Agnes Shaver120Irta KappaElected March 17, 1908Dwight LaBrae AkersGeorge Harold AndersonHattie Rebecca AndersonMathilde DroegeHarvey Benjamin Fuller, Jr.Jeanette Barry LaneElsie SchobingerRose Josephine SeitzXiElected December 17, 1907Ernest AndersonHarold DeForest ArnoldRobert Louis BensonCharles BrookoverLeonas Lancelot BurlingameR. D. CalkinsBenjamin Ball FreudRobert Anderson HallWilliam Ross HamLeRoy Harris HarveyTheophil Henry HildebrandtHenry Hinds J. Claude JonesWinford Lee LewisArno Benedict LuckhardtDonald Francis McDonaldJames PattersonWanda May PfeifferJohn Gaston RyanArthur Richard SchweitzerCharles Houston ShattuckLaetitia Morris SnowAlma Gracey StokeyArthur Carleton TrowbridgeElected March 77, 1908George Cromwell AshmanRobert Earle BuchananWilliam Weldon HickmanNilsine Johanna Kildahl Elwood S. MooreFranklin Chambers McLean'Herman Augustus SpoehrFrank Adolph St. SureDavid Duke Todd123Scholarships — Co-operating SchoolsHigh Schools outside of ChicagoEarl E. Bowlby .Alfred LinkLeonard P. Fox .Donald T. Grey .Ethelyn HarringtonEdith HigleyLucile JarvisMargaret LennonJ. E. Peak .Vallee O. AppelFlorence BrechtHerman M. CohenCharlqtta GreenwaldClarence GulbransonElmer H. Lewis .Ali MostromReno ReeveGlen Stibbs .Frank H. Shackelford, Jr,Florence ClarkHoward Davis .Anna HilesIsa Ward .Chicago High SchoolsEsther M. Karnopp .Moses Leviton .George Sutherland .Otto WitteElizabeth H. JohnsonHarold B. SmithMollie Carroll .Hargrave A. LongHelen PlattFrances L. Schulte .Helen L. Valentine .Gertrude PaulsenAmanda ManskeHelen Zuraski . . Rock Island, 111.La Porte, Ind.Fond du Lac, Wis.Evanston, 111.Pittsburg, Pa.Waukegan, 111,Council Bluffs, la.. Joliet, 111.. South Bend, Ind.. Springfield, 111.Cedar Rapids, la.Louisville, Ky,. Leadville, Colo... De Kalb, 111.Morgan Park, 111.. Clinton, la.Pontiac, 111.Dayton, Ohio. St. Joseph, Mo.. Blue Island, 111.Ottumwa, la.East Chicago, 111.. Morris, 111.Murray F. TuleyJoseph MedillJohn MarshallWendell PhillipsJeffersonEnglewoodCalumetHyde ParkHyde ParkHyde ParkCalumet. AustinRobert WallerLake124to % junior dolfcs^sfor excellence in the work of the Junior CollegesAlice F. Braunlich . LatinConrad R. G. Borchardt . ChemistryFred Cornelius Caldwell . PhysicsEdgar R. Congdon GermanSolomon M. Delson . . RomanceValentina J. Denton HistoryCharles Leviton EnglishNorma E. Pfeiffer . BotanyPaul P. Princell MathematicsRobert W. Savidge . GreekJoseph C. Stephenson ZoologyClyde M. Bauer . GeologyScholarships in the Graduate Schools for excellence in the work ofthe Senior CollegesT. S. GravesTheodore Calvin PeaseJohn Y. LeeJ. R. GerstlyWard NewmanCarl Leo RahnMeyer GabaBarbara SpaydArrie BambergerGeorge M. Crabbe EnglishHistoryPhysicsPhysiologyPolitical SciencePsychologyMathematicsSociologyBacteriology. Neurology^rl|0larai|tjjsPublic Speakings — Autumn Quarter 1907Isaac Edward Ferguson Edward John DykstraMabel Jennette Dodge Carlie Bell SouterPublic Speaking — Winter Quarter 1908P. H. Wolfram Eveline Phillips. Sons of Revolution ScholarshipAlbert Henderson Fay FulkersonColonial Dames ScholarshipWellington Downing JonesSelz ScholarshipMarie B. OuryEnglish Prize ScholarshipVerna Anderson .... West Aurora High SchoolGerman Prize ScholarshipLinda Rodenbeck .... Michigan City High SchoolLatin Prize ScholarshipBjorne Lunde ..... Des Plaines High SchoolMathematics Prize ScholarshipHenry O'Brien . . . Kansas City Central High SchoolWinners of contest in declamations, by representatives from seniorclasses in Cooperating SchoolsEdwin Schmidt . . . . Robert Waller High SchoolFlorence Canavan . . . Appleton, Wis., High School126■ MM"WWWMM**^Mt ^^F ■*• **^lwmt ij g^j^wr»j 1*^(Eoll?s* AttoaStella AndersonSarah Louise CappsMary Ethel Courtenay Mary Fisk HeapWinifred KelsoHelen Tytler SunnyAlice Greenacre127Joseph Edward Raycroft . . Marshal of the University CongregationCollege MarshalsAlvin Frederick Kramer . \ . . . . . Head MarshalNorman Barker Neil Mackay GunnPaul Arthur Buhlig Paul Vincent HarperEdward George Felsenthal Charles Butler JordanLuther Dana Fernald Harold Henry SchlabachHarvey Benjamin Fuller^ Jr. William Embry WratherFormer Head Marshalls'93-'96 Joseph Edward Raycroft'96-91 William Scott Bond^'97-'98 Nott William Flint'98-'99 Willoughby George Walling'99-'00 Walter J. Schmahl'00-'01 Leroy Tudor Vernon'01-'02 Walter Lawrence Hudson'02-'03 James Milton Sheldon'04-'05 Lee Wilder Maxwell'05-'06 Hugo Morris Friend'06-'07 John Fryer Moulds128=alailg ilaronnThe Official Student Publication of theUniversity of Chicago.Catered as Second-class Mall at the ChicagoPostoffice, Chicago, Illinois, March 18,1903, under Act of March 3, 1879.Published dally, except Sundays, Mondays and holidays, during three Quartersof the University year.FormerlyThe University of Chicago Weekly.FoundedThe Weekly. Oct. 1, 1892.The Dally, Oct.*l, 1902.Subscription price, $3.00 per year ; $1.00for 3 months. Subscriptions received atthe Maroon Office, Ellis Hall, or at theFaculty Exchange, Cobb Hall.Editorial office Before 8 p. m.f EUIbHall, University. Tel. Hyde Park 426.After 8 p. m., Maroon Press, 474 E. 55tbStreet. Tel. Hyde Park 3691.AUTUMN QUARTERLuther f). Fernald . . Managing EditorPreston F. Gass - News EditorMelvin J. Adams . . Athletic EditorLouis S. Berlin . . . Business ManagerASSOCIATE EDITORSWarren D. FosterHarry A. Hansen Jerome FrankP. W. PinkertonWINTER QUARTERLuther D. Fernald . . Managing EditorPreston F. Gass .... News EditorM.elvin J. A.dams . . Athletic EditorLouis S. Berlin . . Business ManagerASSOCIATE EDITORSWarren D. Foster Jerome FrankHarry A. Hansen Albert D. HendersonA. L. FridsteinSPRING QUARTERLuther D. Fernald . . Managing EditorPreston F. Gass . . . News EditorMelvin J. Adams . . . Athletic EditorLouis S. Berlin . . . Business ManagerEDITORSJerome N- Frank A. L. Fri dsteinAlbert D. HendersonREPORTERS DURING THE YEARA. L. Fridstein. Albert D. Henderson, Walter A.Ford, M\ss Esther Hall, Harvey B. Fuller, Jr., FredW. Carr, W. A. Weaver, A. N. Pfeffer. J. Sidney Sal-key. Robert B. Owen, S. Bose, Miss Mamie LillyMiss Caroline Dickey, A. W. Wheeler, A. W. Whitfield, H. R. Baukhage."A twenty, often thirty and occasionallya forty column morning college journal,reaching practically everyoneAbout of the 5,000 students in thethe University, almost 1,000 alum-Daily n*> 25° members of the faculty, 350 high schools and100 other institutions of learning — this isThe Daily Maroon of 1907-8. With acirculation that is 300 per cent greater thanthe circulation of 1906-7, with double theadvertising patronage, it has more trian succeeded in maintaining the place modestlyattributed to it last year as 'the best newspaper in the world of college journalism.' "True, indeed, it is that this advertisingtalk of the business manager is enthusiastic, but it is not overdrawn. The advanceof the Daily in the early part of 1907 produced and developed a general hearty sentiment in its favor on the campus, whichis dearly indicated by the fact that at thevery start of the present college year, thecirculation of the preceding year was quadrupled. This extraordinary advance incirculation bringing, as it did, a live andwell printed sheet, naturally had thehealthy result of securing liberal advertising patronage — a result obtained in spiteof a 25 per cent, increase of rate and anabsolute refusal of considerable and profitable but doubtful advertising matter.Following this auspicious beginning, theDaily continued to grow and by spring,six-page issues of 30 columns were requiredtwice a week while special occasions calledfor eight-page issues to handle the increased amount of news and advertising.This marked growth of the Daily hasbeen all the more remarkable in view ofthe financial stringency which cut off per-a thousand dollars of its most advantageous advertising patronage. Whileother publications were more or less influenced during. this period, the Daily kepton without a break.The complete and accurate handling ofnews in which the University public is interested has been of course, the prevailingsource of pride to its editors. Not unlikeits larger contemporaries in the city, inregard to its editorial management, theDaily has covered its news field thoroughly, consistently maintaining its claim asthe official student publication. A goodamount of journalistic ingenuity and foresight has not infrequently resulted in agenerous "scooping" of the city dailies.Among its readers the editorial influenceof the Daily has been marked. In variouscases where inaction on the part of thoseresponsible has interfered with or delayed,University activities, the Daily has ablytaken it upon itself to "start something."If a lack of authority prevents the callingof a mass meeting, it is the' Daily thatassumes the perogative of calling and carrying out successful demonstrations. Ifit be that an athletic team is shirking itsduty, it is the prod of the Daily's scornthat turns defeat into victory. If it bethat a Varsity student cries out for aid fora thousand of his starving countrymen, itis again the Daily that stimulates its success of the most worthy cause.A live range of news and an influentialeditorial treatment have not, however, meantsensationalism or radicalism. While theother papers of the west ranted on the conference situation, the Daily, consistent andconservative through it all, maintained aliberal attitude which proved the keynote of the student attitude that finally led toseven games and other improvements.Small pox scare's, attempted suicides, inconsequential fires, petty scandals — "stories" of little value but of considerablejournalistic promise — have conservativelybeen assigned merely the space and attention they deserved among the news whichthe University public wanted.In addition to scouring the news field ofUniversity activities, the Daily of the pastyear has presented a great improvementin typographic appearance, resulting froma more careful and systematic supervision.Availing itself for the first time of theartists among the student body, the Dailyhas in the present school year, gained aunique reputation as a systematic publisherof cartoons, cleverly satirizing campus menand methods at the Midway. Owing to thecontinued activity of the campus photographer, the Daily has also been able toliven up its sheet with frequent pertinentillustrations of' the "day's doings." Anothervaluable feature has been the numerous .minor departments, taking care of the dailycalendar, announcements, club and fraternity and other vital news.Despite its setbacks, the past year'srecord for the Daily shows the largest circulation of any other college daily, thedaily publication of from three to six columns more news than any college dailypublication, the publication of more illustrations than all the other college publications put together, and an advertisingpatronage, surpassed, if at all, only by oneor two of its older contemporaries in theEast who have the distinct advantage ofdrawing liberally on alumni support.134©rgamzatum of % dap mth (gottmOLUME XIII of the Cap and Gown is the first book published by the Junior class in which all the plans embodiedin the new constitution have been observed. These plansare an outgrowth of two years of effort on the part of theclass to secure a system whereby the Cap and Gown mighthave its editors and managers chosen early enough to geta good start in the work for the new year.The present editors of the Cap and Gown were chosen in May, 1907, asis prescribed in the constitution ratified by the Junior class sometime earlierin that year. Election day came the third Wednesday in May. This makesthe Cap and Gown board in reality a body that is continuous and does notcease its activity the year around. The new board begins work with the oldboard still active and even before the new book is published.Nominations for Cap and Gown positions are made in a caucus of theJunior class, called by the president, or by petitions signed by five membersof the class.The Cap and Gown board aims to have a permanent office in the nearfuture. A place where records may be kept is indispensable. There are manyarticles, which can be prepared early in the school year. A place to preservethem, and an office in which to meet people and consult with them isneeded to improve the organization of the book. The editors look forwardto having a permanent home for the Annual in the next few years.In the last two years the Annual has seen a steady improvement. Thereis no reason why this should not continue. The book, as a representativeChicago Annual is still in its embryonic stages. A great University withits manifold activities presents a wide field for editorial ingenuity. To depictthis Chicago life is to portray something entirely different from the life ofany other University. For that reason the Cap and Gown should stand apartfrom other annuals having its own distinct place as the representative bookof the University of Chicago.135%, V*F ^"W ft-eston®In> (Hup unh dnum for 1908THE BOARDManaging EditorsWarren Dunham Foster Harry Arthur HansenLiterary EditorHelen Fisher PeckBusiness ManagersWilliam Patterson MacCracken, Jr. Walter Stuart MorrisonThe Associate EditorsHarvey Benjamin Fuller ArtMelvin J. AdamsEthel Preston .Louise Norton .Edith OsgoodKatherine SlaughtJames H. GagnierRoy BaldridgeNorman BarkerMary CourtenayMarjorie DayEleanor DayHelen GunsaulusAleck Whitfield . Men's AthleticsWomen's AthleticsFacultyClassesCollegesDivinity SchoolThe StaffEsther HallMary HeapPaul HarperHelen JacobyRenslow ShererRoma VogtPaul Davis137$tttt«>nntg of Olijirago ib?klgTHE STAFFWarren Dunham Foster . '. . . . Managing EditorGeorge Elmer Fuller Business ManagerASSOCIATE EDITORSJerome New Frank Winston P. HenryJ. Sydney Salkey James H. GagnierREPORTERSJulius R. Klawans Alfred E. StokesElton J. Moulton Beatrice HillFlorence Ruth OldhamThe old University of Chicago -Weekly, the original student publication,was revived in the Summer quarter of 1907, in a form unique in collegejournalism. To the characteristics of a national magazine, the new weeklyadded those of the rural newspaper. To articles of student interest presentedby men of national prominence both within and without the University, itemsof local interest, of a nature personal enough to suit the tastes of the editorof the Hayslope Weekly Intelligencer were added. The first issue showeda collection of idiosyncracies of typography which would have put to shameeven the Daily in its palmiest days ; the remaining issues were virtually without mechanical error.The following authorities wrote leading articles : Edgar T. Davies, Illinois factory inspector; James A. Woodburn of Indiana University; Dr.Charles R. Henderson; Abbe Felix Klein ; Dr. Herbert L. Willett; W. L.Bodine, superintendent of compulsory education, Chicago; and W. M. R.French, director of the Art Institute. "Suez and Panama," a remarkablepoem by President William W. Smith of Randolph-Macon Woman's College,was first published in the Weekly. "My Impressions," by Abbe Klein, a mostunusual plea for toleration, created much interest both in America andFrance. The reports of his lectures and sermon wer,e characterized by himas the most accurate in his experience. The article by Director French waswell illustrated.The local news field was adequately covered. The Weekly scored oneof the greatest "beats" of college newspapers in publishing the first accountof some of the most important results of the Egyptian expedition of Dr.Breasted. Accounts of the University's open lectures, such a promising fieldfor journalistic freebooting, were given with accuracy and vigor.Student literary efforts also found a place in the pages of the Weekly.Out of deference to the weather nothing of any very startling nature waspresented but the quality of the matter equalled that of the average collegeliterary magazine. Several studies of southern life were perhaps of the greatest interest.x39organization of the Weekly was on the same basis as that of anyother University publication. According to the constitution granted by theBoard of Control, the first board of associate editors and reporters wasnamed by the managing editor, subject to the approval of Dean RobertMorss Lovett and Mr. David Allan Robertson.What the Weekly thought that it had done was expressed in the lastnumber in this form :" 'After five summers have elapsed without a publication, The Universityof Chicago Weekly with this number makes its initial appearance as theofficial student publication of the University of Chicago for the Summerquarter of 1907. Many circumstances combine to render the publication ofa student paper through the summer of the utmost difficulty, yet The University of Chicago Weekly enters the field confident that the students nowin residence will recognize the need for the paper and respond adequately.The success or failure of the paper rests with the student body; if it takesan active, aggressive interest — if it manifests the true Chicago spirit, theWeekly will succeed; if not, it will fail.'Thus opened the leading editorial of the first number of this volume. Thestudent body has taken an active, aggressive interest — it has manifested thetrue Chicago spirit, and as a consequence The University of Chicago Weeklyhas succeeded. That is all there is to it.The last editorial of a managing editor is traditionally a wail of sorrowat the conclusion of his activity, but The University of Chicago Weeklybelieves that during the last three months it has shown itself superior enoughto useless tradition to disregard this convention. The Weekly has nothingto be sorry for; it set out to do a definite thing and, having done it. can retirewith satisfaction.The Weekly has endeavored to fulfill its purpose as set forth in the constitution granted by the Board of Student Control 'and printed in the firstissue. How adequately the field of University news has been covered isanswered, it is believed, by the publication of such exclusive and authenticaccounts as those of the discoveries of the Egyptian expedition of Dr.Breasted and the departure of the Cowles expedition. In matters of editorialuolicy, an aggressive attitude has been maintained for what was thought tohave been the best interests of the University. Discussion of questions ofvital interest to campus life has been provoked. It may be ill form for theWeekly thus to tell of what it has done, but the staff, tired from the hard workof the summer, may perhaps be pardoned for loquacity in the complacence ofthe successful conclusion of its labors The University of Chicago Weekly now retires from the center of thestage to make way for the Daily Maroon, and again thanks the students of theSummer quarter of 1907 for their interest which has resulted in its success."140dfytrago Alumni iiagazmeHE first volume of the Chicago Alumni Magazine has passedinto history. It has seen this child of the Alumni Associationat times submerged under almost over-powering difficulties,but in a certain sense it has been very good for both thealumni and the Alumni Association. It has served to pointout in a very forcible way both the need of the Alumni Association for an organ of this sort and the need of the University for an activeinterested body of alumni who were constantly in touch with the life of theinstitution. The difficulties which beset this infant journal and the means bywhich they were overcome, serve to prove conclusively for all time that thereare a number of alumni of the university whose loyalty is beyond reproach.This is a fact which had never been questioned and probably would have neverbeen seriously doubted, but the exigencies of the past year have made numerous demonstrations of this fact, and also there is the further gratifying knowledge that a large body of alumni are willing to adhere to the movement withan abundance of faith in things unseen. It is believed that at least a portionof their faith has been justified, and that month by month their loyalty is beingproved worth while.During the past year a number of changes have been made upon the staffof the Magazine. The first undergraduate woman editor, Miss Helen Peck,'09, has been succeeded at her own request by Miss Esther Hall, '09. FredCarr, '09, was forced to retire because of illness, and Harvey B. Fuller, Jr., '08.through pressure of other duties, handed in his resignation, to be succeededby Albert D. Henderson, '09. Harry Arthur Hansen, '09, has continued in hisposition as associate editor throughout the year. The first business manager,Francis H. Welling, '09, upon leaving the University, was succeeded by Benjamin J. Wilk, the present incumbent.The Magazine aims to be the one great literary and news publication devoted to the interests of the University at large. It is the official organ of theAlumni Association and of all affiliated and local clubs. It is also a great newsmedium through which the interests of every department and phase of theUniversity life and work are carried month by month to alumni and friends ofChicago in all parts of the world. A new feature was developed during thecourse of the year in an undergraduate literary department. The undergraduate interest are also served in the, monthly review of University and campus141as well as in the general articles which appear regularly on matters oflarger and more serious concern to the University and its alumni.A number of special issues have appeared, notably the Law School number and the Old University number,while other special issues devoted tothe School of Education, the Divinity School and the Medical Schoolwill appear shortly. Each monthappear leading articles which discuss the important changes in thelife and work of the University. Ina word, the Magazine has beenheaded toward the ultimate goal ofserving not only as the organ of thegraduates, a very restricted field indeed, but as the great University monthly, gathering within its columns all ofthe important news of the University, its men and its women.The staff is as follows :Percy B. Eckhart, '99 Board of ControlBurt Brown Barker, '97 David A. Robertson, '02Editor-in-ChiefGeorge Owen Fairweather, '07Associate EditorsGeorge Washington Thomas, '62Maude L. 'Radford Warren, '94Delia Austrian, '98Albert D. Henderson, '10Esther M. Hall, '10 Edgar A. Buzzell, '86Burt Brown Barker, '97Angeline Loesch, '98Harry Arthur Hansen, '09Business ManagerBenjamin J. Wilk, '10142(grmutlj of % Alrotmt Aasonattim"To advance the interests, influence and efficiency of the University of Chicago ; to promoteacquaintance among the graduates, and to strengthen the connection between the alumni and theirAlma Mater by various publications, meetings and other means."HE reorganized Alumni Association, which adopted the abovequotation as the object of its existence, has passed throughthe first year of its history. In speculating upon the extentto which its aims have been realized, a number of things maybe said, both in the way of developing old lines of activity andinstalling new features of alumni interest.The alumni year was well inaugurated by a distinct departure in the conduct of Alumni Day, 1907. In originality of treatment andespecially in its relief from the sombre dignity and heaviness of previous occasions, this celebration opened up the possibilities of the day as they had neverbefore been entirely realized. *- During the larger part of the first half year the effort to organize localalumni clubs in various sections of the country was given considerable attention, with the result that during the holidays and the month following, thepresident of the University himself spoke at seven alumni clubs in variousparts of the country, Dean Lovett addressed another, and our friends in thePhilippine Islands held a very successful preliminary meeting.The operation of the Alumni Magazine, serving as the organ for all of thealumni groups, has demonstrated the desirability of one central alumni organization, with subsidiary groups under special secretaries to take care of thespecial group interests. There certainly are a number of interests, which theseseveral bodies have in common, which would well justify the organizationslike those of the Doctors of Philosophy and Divinity Graduates in seeking toregulate and develop through some central demonstration.So far as the internal workings of the association are concerned, it isbelieved that a change in the annual dues to $2.00 per year, thereby makingthe change conform with the annual subscription rate of the Magazine, whichin turn includes the alumni dues, would further simplify matters.The association hopes to secure at a date not far in the future a centralmeeting place for all alumni of the University, a location for the alumni library,class memorabilia, records and pictures. But its strongest effort at the presenttime is being made to build up the association, and to include in its membership all graduates of the University.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO ALUMNI ASSOCIATION.OfficersBurt Brown Barker, '97 John Edwin Rhodes, '76 Kate Gordon, '00 Thomas J. Hair, '03 Executive Committee1905-08 — Emily Thompson Sheets, '97 ; Arthur E. Lord, '04.1906-09 — Maude T. Clendening, '04; George Eddy Newcomb, '86; Burt Brown Barker, '97;Fred D. Bramhall, '02.1907-10 — Edgar A. Buzzell, '86 ; Agnes Wayman, '03 ; Percy B. Eckhart, '99. PresidentFirst Vice PresidentSecond Vice PresidentThird Vice PresidentH3BLACKFRIARSOf the University of Chicago present their Fourth Annual ComiSure EnouaSea,verett.07.the drop of the curtain they all said 'twas truly the bestproduction of the Blackfriars. So thought the audiences onthose memorable evenings, May 10 and 11, 1907, when "SureEnough Segregation" passed into history. How they laughedat the witticisms and take-offs, at the clever repartee, at theeccentric comedy of Harold Swift, who was the lovelorn and impecunious Monsieur Beaucoup, and at Bernard I. Bell, who played the incomparable Professor Gazer; how they hummed with the soloists the catchy refrains of"Pretty Little Co-ed"* and uMy Sweet Old Brier," and lastly, how they walkedout of the theater with the rhythmic thump, thump, thump, of "The Man WhoWears the C" in their hearts — all that has long ago been inscribed on theBlackfriar annals."Sure Enough Segregation" marked the beginning of a new period ofdevelopment in the Blackfriars. The first was that of the Founders, in whichAdams, Flavin and Gregory guided the infant craft over the storm-besethistrionic seas. With the competition of 1907 came another generation — theplaywriting firm of Hansen and Klein, destined to usher in new ideas inBlackfriar comic opera. Their predecessors had gone to far-off lands fortheir themes ; Hansen and Klein stopped close at home, made Lake Genevatheir scene and developed a campus story, filled with local allusions andcharacteristic Chicago life.In the cast, too, many of the names were new to fame. Beck Herdmanas "Spuds" Allen, the athlete who wears the "C" ; Howard Blackford as thequiet and retiring Mrs. Greenwad, and Winston Henry as the tittering,blushing heroine, were distinct Blackfriar acquisitions. Paul Harper wassweetness itself as Peche, the little Parisienne, and June Chandler, "promoted from the chorus," made up so well that somebody entered his picturein the Tribune beauty contest. Adolph Pierrot was there, too, in his owneccentric comedy role, and Artie Bovee sang and acted so sweetly that hisencores wore out the pony ballet.H7musical direction of the play was, as before, Gil CO£ZZl&in the hands of Earle Scott Smith, whose fame will ™7> ""■"""^long be sung around the Blackfriar banquet table. ^l&&FG£Again he wielded the baton, and drilled the choruses £q^ Qnnuc? 3lac& friarwith his old-time care. Max Richards made a very Production Zttizsi $&capable manager and found a fairly good counter- Subrnified J3ookfpart of the billows at Lake Geneva in some prop, fyrics V?$ tniesfc Srtfireroom down town. They do say, too, that Bartlev * f?t* * fxdpe? on or &e-Cushmg smiled once, and thought the boys did well, Ciatre acidres s£ P7considering the fact that they were young, that it Contrniffe^l1itiJaoz.x^was May and that it looked like rain in El Paso. K •H.Xixctl tTexas. Chairman*The story of "Sure Enough Segregation" was easy enough for the mostcallous theater-goer to digest. It dealt with the University, with Paris, withathletics, society and everything else that could have any bearing whateveron University life. If anything was overlooked it was only because the showhad to be concluded some time before midnight. In detail it told of the tripof Monsieur Merci Beaucoup to the summer camp -of the University of Chicago at Williams Bay, Lake Geneva, Wis. Monsieur Beaucoup arrived without money and two Parisian coeds oh his hands ; he fell in love with theheroine and got into trouble with the hero for his pains. At the end of thefirst act "Spuds" Allen was beside himself with jealousy, Monsieur Beaucouphad been ducked in the lake ; Willie Green Had won Clarice Gazer fromunder the watchful eyes of the scheming sophomores and Mrs. Greenwadwas ready to transfer her youthful affections to whoever would share hersorrow. In spite of these complications each character had managed to unload some fifty-seven odd varieties of puns, roasts, grinds and generalknocks that exhausted the supply of the Daily Maroon and left the SeniorCollege Council without anything to kick about for a week."Sure Enough Segregation" was chosen in a hot play competition thatcalled out some of the best efforts of the Blackfriar authors. The judging committee read the manuscripts several times and had special audiences with theauthors and composers, Avho played their music and explained their books.The material offered was better than ever before presented to a judging committee. Books, lyrics and music, in complete form, were demanded by theBlackfriar play committee, and when the final day arrived the judges foundthree complete plays ready, and any number of plot suggestions and immature plans on hand. The judging committee was composed of Charles Jordan,Harold Swift, P. W. Pinkerton, William Hewitt and Bartley Cushing.148Enough SegregationAct I — The summer camp of the University of Chicago at the Yerkes Observatory, Williams Bay,Wis. A morning in August.Act II — The summer party at the camp. The evening following.CAST OF CHARACTERSBert Wise, an undergrad who goes in for love ..... Weaver Chamberlain"Jiggers" Dean, who goes in for politics .......... Fred KayWillie B. Green, who has less than three majors credit . . . . . Kenneth CrosbyClarice Gazer, who does not take after her father Arthur G. BoveeMrs. Greenwad Howard P. BlackfordProfessor I. M. A. Gazer,' Ph. D., S. D., Professor of Applied Astronomy at the University Bernard I. BellSam Battem of the Chicago American Adolph G. PierrotElizabeth Gordon, "Betty" Winston HenryWatson, Master of Transportation . . ...... Frank OrchardMon. Merci Beaucoup, B. es Lettres, of Paris Harold H. SwiftMile. Peche / _ , . .,_ . , _ . . j . . Paul Harpern C Coeds of FEcole des Beaux Arts 1 TT TT _Mile. Creme ' I Hannibal H. ChandlerBilly, cheerleader Bert HendersonRichard Allen, "Spuds," the greatest athlete of them all . . . . Samuel Beck HerdmanMiss Veri Winsome, Chaperon Cola G. ParkerMEMBERS OF CHORUSYachtsmen and Women — Baker, Funkhauser, Morse, Hopkins, Nelson, Ellis, Kennedy,Meagher.Tennis Men and Women — McBride, Kenner, O'Brien, Lightner, Brown, MacNeish, NewmanMoffat.Golf Men and Girls— Bliss, Ford, Lake, Trimble, Fuller, Heflin, Young, Gittler.Oarsmen — James, Cavanor, Koepke, Chambers, Smith, Taylor, MacCracken, Badenoch.Coxswain — Collings.Janitors — James, Badenoch, Bliss, Trimble, Lightner, Chambers, McBride, Ford.Moon Ballet — Ellis, Kennedy, Moffat, Brown, Gittler, Heflin, Fuller, Nelson.MUSICAL PROGRAMAct OneOpening Chorus."Politics" > . Dean and Chorus"I'm A Bookish Man" Prof. Gazer"The Janitor of Snell" Watson and Janitors"The Man Who Wears the C" Allen and Full ChorusFinale Ensemble.Act TwoOpening Chorus — College Medley."My Sweet Old Briar" Allen and Double Quartet"Under the Moon" (By Friars B. I. Bell and E. S. Smith) .... Clarice and Ballet"In Gay Paree" . Dean, Beaucoup and Wise"Pretty Little Coed" Allen and Betty"The Same Old Game" ......... Battem, Peche, Creme. GreenFinale Ensemble149the game, just the just the same ;Superiors of the OrderThe AbbottThe Prior .The ScribeThe Hospitaler .George E. VincentCharles F. BeckFrank R. AdamsMelvile E. ColemanVictor J. RiceRay DeversFrank B. HutchinsonHarry W. FordOvid R. SellersHoward J. SloanStrong Vincent NortonMelbourne ClementsHuntington B. HenryWalter L. GregoryHulbert S. BlakeyEarle S. SmithJ. Howard DennedyGeorge H. McHenryRiley H. AllenEdwin De Forest Butterfield Friar Max L. RichardsFriar Charles B. JordanFriar Kenneth O. Crosby. Friar Henry B. RoneyArthur G. BoveeKarl H. DixonP. W. PinkertonPaul K. JudsonAllan Carter Henry B. RoneyKenneth C. CrosbyWalter S. PondWilliam F. HewittClyde E. StackhouseLay Brothers of the OrderMartin A. FlavinArthur C. AllynEvon Z. VogtGeorge R. MartinEdwin M. KerwinHelmut BerensWilliam F. BrownJ. H. WeddellCarl GraboH. A. ToddHenry D. SulcerDon M. Compton 'Felix T. HughesArthur E. LordRobert F. TrumballGeorge R. BeachHunter C. PerryVernon C. BeebeWalter F. FulghumJ. M. HillSamuel J. PeaseFriars in the OrderHarry A. HansenFloyd A. KleinD. M. KennedyWinston P. HenryWeaver ChamberlinRussell M. WilderVictor J. WestClare C. HosmerJohn L. ShipleyJames H. Greene*Harry W. SpauldingReuben SchutzEdward W. AllenWm. Edw. ThomasNewman L. FitzhenryNewton A. FuessleWarren P. SightsBenjamin C. AllinH. Mendell, Jr.C. J. V. PettiboneHarley C. DarlingtonArthur E. MauheimerS. Beck HerdmanS. M. BrownClifford B. JonesJ. W. MacNeishBen H. BadenochDeWitt B. LightnerWalter A. FordPaul B. HeflinHarold H. Schlabach Albert B. Houghton Howard P. Blackford Ben F. NewmanCharles H. Ireland H. H. Chandler, Jr.Wellington D. Jones John C. BurtonWilson A. AustinCharles B. JordanMax L. RichardsTom S. Miller* Deceased. Herschel G. ShawEdward L. McBrideCharles H. SpenceC. Arthur BruceJ. Craig Bowman Paul V. HarperA. D. HendersonCola G. ParkerGeorge E. FullerE. Raymond BlissStuart M. Chambers Walter H. MorseHarvey E. MeagherHart E. BakerHURNARD KENNERPerry D. TrimpleFrancis M. OrchardF. H. WellingKHICHTor THEIHC FBTLf, ESERTING the modern muse and retreating to the realmof the Elizabethan drama, the Dramatic Club chose for theWinter quarter production, Beaumont & Fletcher's amusing comedy, "The Knight of the Burning Pestle." At firstthere was doubt in the minds of some whether Elizabethanxd) comedy would be comedy to a modern audience. With theprogression of the rehearsals, however, all such dismal forebodings vanished,as under Mr. Robertson's skillful direction the ridiculous situations and amusing characters were well developed.The original story of the play which deals with the turbulent love affairof Jasper and Luse is augmented by a second story of a grocer, who at therequest of his master and mistress in the audience, enters the cast in thecharacter of the Knight of the Burning Pestle. His amusing conflicts withthe other characters and wrongly placed sympathy and the absurdly ignorantcriticism of the grocer and his wife furnish great opportunity for rollicking wit.In a note on the program the audience's attention was called to the factthat the performance was not a revival, the club merely aiming to suggestthe British theater in which "The Knight of the Burning Pestle" was firstplayed.The title role was taken by Ralph Benzies. This part of the mock-heroic errant, that always dangerous style or caricature and burlesque, Benzies took with careful discrimination. He kept the audience laughing and atthe same time maintained a safe distance from the slap stick.Arthur Bruce gave an. excellent piece of character acting as the citizenand with the splendid work ofNthe wife, done by Miss Harriett Grim, produced no end of merriment. Frank Shackleford carried the one heavy partof Venturewell, the choleric merchant, in a very creditable manner. KarlDixon in the part of the brainless Lord Humphrey gave a well roundeddelineation of this mirth-provoking character, consistently maintaining itthrough the most ludicrous situations. Merrythought was given a remarkable characterization by Hilmar Baukhage, who played the part with suchabandon as to bring roars of laughter time and again. Jasper, the one153part and the lover, was capably handled by Douglas Scott. Withcareful enunciation and a dignified fervor he courted and won his lady to thesatisfaction of "all the world." Michael, the younger brother of Jaspar, wascreditably played by Paul Harper in an original and satisfactory manner.He gave an original and thoroughly creditable rendition of the part of thestupid goody-goody.Luce, the beloved, was played byMiss Inez Jackson. Sweet and happythrough the pleasant lines, she was equally good where sober action was called for,and from first to last she "got over" thefootlights and kept the audience in thorough sympathy with the heroine. MissPhebe Bell played the spit-fire wife ofMerrythought. This work, quite a departure from anything that Miss Bell hasbeen seen in before, furnished opportunity for proving her versatility. ThePomponia, the Princess Beautiful, wasportrayed by Miss Esther Flail. "Beautiful" quite characterizes Miss Hall inthis part. Tim, the Squire, and George,the dwarf, were played by Albert Henderson and Herschel Shaw respectively, whotogether were accountable for much ofthe hilarity of the evening. Henderson At the Dramatic Club Vaudeviiiewas also seen as the Speaker of the Prologue and rendered the introduction with dignity and skill. Renslow Sherer,as the Boy, was not very much in evidence, but his work as "the man behind"was felt and appreciated. The second Boy, played by Paul Davis, also asmall part, was well handled and brought out deserved praise.i546. 4 A egg* __ "OST successful was the presentation of Arthur Wing Pinero's"The Schoolmistress," by the Dramatic Club on Junior Day,June 7, 1907. Those present will long remember the pure funproduced by the excellent characterizations of Admiral Rankling, by James Hickey, and Vere Queckett, by Bernard I.Bell. Howard Woodhead made much of the role of Tyler,and Harold Swift was excellent as Lieutenant Melloy. Adolph Pierrot playedtwo parts with credit to himself, especially awakening the risibilities of theaudience in the role of the eccentric Mr. Bernstein. Miss Phebe Bell appeared to good advantage as Peggy, while Miss Mary Johnson and Miss RuthPorter carried the two character parts admirably. The dinner scene in thesecond act was a laugh from one end to the other, demonstrating Pinero'scommand of farce as well as more serious forms of drama. The completecast was as follows :Hon. Vere QueckettMiss Dyott .Rear Admiral RanklingMrs. RanklingDinahReginald PauloverPeggy HessleriggeLieut. John MalloyMr. SaundersGwendoline HawkinsErmytrude JohnsonOtto BernsteinTylerJane Chipman Bernard I. BellRuth PorterJames HickeyMary JohnsonMary SullivanGeorge GarrettPhebe BellHarold SwiftAdolph PierrotAnne DavisEleanor DayAdolph PierrotHoward WoodheadWinifred Dewhursti55Httttttrflttjj of (Eljtragn iramaiir fllfahOfficersPaul V. Harper .Eleanor DayRen slow P. ShererRuth AllenC. Arthur BrucePhebe F. BellJ. Ralph BenziesWillowdean ChattersonEleanor DayMarjorie DayHilmar BaukhageKarl H. DixonGeorge A. GarrettGertrude GreenbaumHarriett GrimR. Duraine GottfriedJames V. HickeyPaul V. Harper Members PresidentVice President. Business ManagerAlbert D. HendersonJessie HickmanEsther M. HallInez JacksonFlorence B. LeavittWynne LackersteenFrank M. OrchardMarie G. OrtmeyerRuth PorterEvaline M. PhillipsRenslow P. ShererJ. Douglas ScottFrank H. ShacklefordSchuyler B. TerryRussel M. Wilder156HE chief object of the Mummers is to make life hard for themen who sit in the offices of Klaw & Erlanger, David Belascoand other producers, reading unsolicited plays. In order toaccomplish their end they dissect such masters of dramatictechnique as have shown themselves worthy of emulation.The club owes its existence largely to the enthusiasm ofFred Carr and Melvin Adams, who inveigled Pinkerton, Klein and Hanseninto their plans and gave them the playwriting germ. Under the leadershipof Dr. Martin Schutze of the German department, the members have studiedthe methods of Ibsen, Shaw, and Oscar Wilde, with a view to obtaining aknowledge of practical stagecraft. The officers and members are :Paul Whittier Pinkerton PresidentFrederick Whitslar Carr Vice PresidentMelvin J. Adams Secretary and TreasurerDr. Martin SchutzeFloyd Alvah KleinHarry Arthur HansenRaymond Deforest PenneyJohn Ralph BenziesHilmar Robert BaukhagePaul Hunter DodgeKarl Hale DixonPreston NibleyWill Chislett158° £&& &# i $ty&> *J' 1"N the Blackfriar plays women's parts are taken by men. Inthe musical comedy and vaudeville sketches of the Sock andBuskin club girls are cast for all male parts. In this the clubhas been markedly successful. Its plays and sketches havepleased immensely. Most of these were prepared by themembers of the club and staged by them. Last year the clubpresented "Fuss and Fudges," a playlet written by Hansenand Klein. Parts of the entertainment were repeated later. The Philosophybeauty chorus, widely advertised, proved a remarkable drawing card. MissMary Swan's love making was almost masculine in its intensity while MissEsther Hall gave so good a take-off on the college fusser that three men sworeoff that night. Miss Sarah Wilkes and Miss Plall won many complimentson their scene, in which they sang "When the Ivy on the Campus Turns toBrown," a new melody that caught the fancy of the audience at once. MissesHall and Swan interpolated the "University Clog" which won encore afterencore. The cast was as follows :Cast of CharactersMiss Meddler, head of Screecher hall Irene KawinAlice Blue, a Freshman Marjorie DayMargaret Maroone, a popular co-ed Sarah WilkesMay Belle Ring, an athletic girl Elizabeth FranklinJulia Marlowe Smythe, trying for the Dramatic Club Nina YeomanMignonette, of Screecher Hall Esther GodshawAristophanes Jones, a man of scholastic attainments Esther GodshawFrank Fusser, a popular college men Esther HallMiss White I )....... Miss RoeMiss Green ] Coeds > Miss RobinsonMiss Brown ( ) Miss E. KawinTennis Beauty Chorus — Misses Stein, Roe, Archer, Kawin, Robinson and ChatfieldMembership in the Sock and Buskin is limited to girls in Philosophycollege. Miss Sarah Wilkes is president for 1908, and Miss Evelyn Phillipssecretary and treasurer. The members are:Mary ArcherElizabeth BurkeSusan ChatfieldErnestine EvansMargaret FordGertrude FishElizabeth FranklinEsther Hall Vere HuntingtonHazel HoffInez JacksonEthel KawinClara MortonAlida McDermidCarlotta SagarNettie Williamsi 60the organization of The Greenroom in the Fall quarterof 1907 Literature College of Women had no dramatic club.This organization was effected as the result of a desire onthe part of several committees to give unique college programs. The histrionic ability of Literature college women hadfound expression somewhat earlier in the presentation of "AProposal Under Difficulties," by John Kendrick Bangs, at theReynolds Club Theater on May 21, under the direction of Adolph Pierrot.To say that the play was given well is putting it mildly. Certainly greatcredit is due each of the performers for her excellent interpretation of therole assigned to her. Who could better express the charming bewildermentof Dorothy Andrews at the peculiar behavior of her two gentleman callersthan did Miss Lorena Underhill? Who better control an excited maid, ormore cleverly insist on giving the awkward fellow a fair chance only toyield gracefully to his appeal ? And two such men as they were : Yardsley —flustered, uncertain, eager to do, but clumsy in the attempt, and yet passionately adoring his "dear Miss Dorothy;" Barlow, insinuating, confident ofsuccess, admirably mannish with his superior airs and exclusive attentionsonly to find his flattery of no avail in the end. Miss Vesta Urey, as Barlow,and Miss Jessie Heckman as Yardsley, were inimitable.Then, funniest of all, with her delicious Irish brogue, her abundance ofcolored handkerchiefs soaked with tears, her expressive featherduster alwaysin evidence, her comical self-appropriation of a proposal not meant for herears and finally, after a stormy scene of mingled sobs and explanations herpassionate return to "beloved Hicks," was Jennie, the Maid, as played by MissMamie Lilly. Snap and vim characterized the entire representation and a certain rare appreciation of the fine points that was most satisfying to theaudience.With this as an incentive the women of Literature college began theorganization of The Greenroom. At the first trials the- Misses Lilly, Wilder,Heckman and Bowlan were chosen as a nucleus. At the second trial theMisses Gardner, Davis, Slaught, Dickey and Tausche proved their ability andwere admitted. Miss Wilder was chosen president and Miss Lilly secretaryThe club hopes to present a new play in the near future.162Gaston Shaw Business ManagerMembersKenneth Owen CrosbyWillis Sage AdamsFrancis Madison OrchardArthur WhiteCharles Otis WoodCharles Christian StaehlingCharles Lee SullivanVictor OlsenWeaver ChamberlainCharles Edwin WattsClayton Hamil RedfieldJohn Douglas ScottWilliam StephensonHarvey Edward MeagherDean Madison KennedyJohn Percy FrancisWelford ShurtliffDe Witt Brewster LightnerCharles SmeltzenAllen Ford BowmanHerbert Groff HopkinsBernard Herman KrogCharles SpenceAccompanistEarl Henry Bowlby166.«B* — *^ttn<y><V-iSty? MniuerHttg of (Hljirago lanoFredric Mason Blanchard, ConductorMorey Earl Drisko, Solo CornetEugene Van Cleef, Solo CornetRaymond D. Elliott, First CornetHoward H. Wickoff, First CornetDavid B. Gore, First CornetEarl Bowlby, Second CornetEdward Leydon McBride, Third CornetJohn M. Quinn, Solo AltoLeopold C. A. Lindeman, Second AltoJohn Merrill Bridgham, Third AltoRoy Underwood Hutchens, Fourth AltoLouis Olney Runner, First TromboneJohnson F. Hammond, Second TromboneRex P. R. Lindeman, Second TromboneHarry J. Corper, Third TromboneHarry Winfred Harriman, First Tenor John H. Stoutemeyer, Second TenorEdgar E. Ewing, Solo ClarinetDelbert Marion Laird, Solo ClarinetArthur Goettsch, First ClarinetOswald Stark, First ClarinetJohn Beverly Moore, Second ClarinetFranklin C. McLean, Second ClarinetAlbert Nathaniel Butler, Third ClarinetJames A. Smyser, Fourth ClarinetEdwin Philbrook McLean, PiccoloNels M. Hokanson, BaritoneFloyd Alvah Klein BB BassClarence Russell, BB BassJacob H. Enns, BassChristian Fjelstad, BassHarry H. Harper, DrumsHarry A. Hansen, Drums1 68QIRLS'OfficersMabel Lea, DirectorFlorence Manning, PresidentGrace AbbotOlive BickellIvy DodgeLucile JarvisEdith HemingwayGrace AllenRose SeitzBernice CrockerBertha GatesHelen Johnson Mary Moynihan, LibrarianMaude Wolcott, Secretary and TreasurerFirst SopranoMary MoynihanHazel RolandGertrude SternNeyra SeymourSecond SopranoVera BassEdna WeldonCatherine DarlingFirst AltoEdith JohnsonBessie CampbellSecond Alto Elizabeth BurkeMaude WolcottAlice LeeLomira PerryOlive DavisBeulah BassGrace DarlingRuth RobertsonFlorence ManningMina Hoskins Vere Huntington Knap May169®t£? ra iifca&Honorary Musical SocietyMembersArthur Gibbon BoveeMax Lewis RichardsKarl Hale DixonCharles W. PaltzerCharles Hammer IrelandRenslow P. ShererAlbert Balch HoughtonWeaver ChamberlainCubsFrancis Madison OrchardHerschel Gaston ShawEarle A. GoodenowKenneth O. CrosbyHurnard Jay KennerCharles Lee Sullivan, Jr.Earl Edward BowlbyJohn Ralph Benzi.esCharles Harrison SpenceDean Madison KennedyEarle P. Berry170^K»-*«§*<•*>VER since the founding of the ReynoldsClub, each year has marked a conspicuousadvance in its general condition and relationship with students. The close of 1907-1908 ends a chapter in its history whichrecords results much beyond those of the past. In everyway the Club has progressed. Not only has the membership' grown considerably and the treasurer's balance showna most satisfactory increase, but improvements have beenmade in every phase of club life.The Club seems now to have established its placein the general scheme of University affairs. Althoughthe strenuous missionary tactics of the past have beendiscontinued, there are six hundred and forty-eight members; four hundred and fifty-eight active, and one hundred and ninety associate. It also rests upon a firmfinancial basis, the treasurer's balance being $3,219.44, ofwhich $2,-000 has been invested in a first real estate mort-The numerous and varied improvements which havebeen either accomplished or outlined for the future are,besides the several successful social functions, the featurewhich probably most prominently marks the year. Anew large table and chairs have been purchased for thelibrary, and a heavy carved door, for the hall leading tothe alumni room. More complete office accessories andnew business systems have been installed. Steps havebeen taken toward the remodeling of part of the basementinto an adequate locker room for members. The purchaseof two new billiard and pool tables has also been favorably considered, and massive colonial seats to encirclethe fireplaces and old mission umbrella racks are amongthe. additions planned.Perhaps the endeavor of the greatest magnitudewhich has been begun, is that toward the installation ofa complete library of standard and popular books, notobtainable in the libraries of the University, It is_&,J3±.Z-i jr>T^>I«T3 <3n»Eto fill the empty shelves of the reading room with fiction, present and past,and other works desirable to the members, having for the purpose a standing orderwith the best publishing houses. Several thousand dollars will probably be needed toaccomplish this end, and ways and means for raising this have been considered anddecided upon.A new constitution was issued during the year, containing alterations from theold in several vital particulars. There is also published with it, for the first time, ahistory of the life of Joseph Reynolds and the manner in which he became the meansof establishing the Club.The annual billiard, pool and bowling tournament held under the auspices ofthe Club brought out more contestants and enthusiasm than ever before. Phil Reddysecured the championship in billiards, and George Garrett in pool. Delta Upsiloncarried off the banner in inter-fraternity bowling, and Freeman Morgan of the teamgot high score, high average and high individual play. Treacy and Gaarde took.high doubles.The officers of the year, elected at the annual meeting, March 1, 1907, wereWilliam Francis Hewitt, president; Frank Herbert Templeton, vice president; KarlHale Dixon, secretary; John Flint Dille, treasurer; and Alvin Frederick Kramer,librarian. During the absence of Dille in the Winter Quarter, Dixon was electedtemporary treasurer. Professors Merriam and Warren continued as members of theexecutive council. The officers for the ensuing year are John Flint Dille, president:Winston Patrick Henry, vice president; Edward Leydon McBride, treasurer, andMansfield Ralph Cleary, librarian.Officers of the Reynolds Club, 1907-08.2fmtH£Founded 1898NATHANIEL BUTLER, HEADThe Faculty and Graduate SchoolsF. H. GeselbrachtHarry O. GilletJ. Leonard HancockAlbert E. HillAndrew F. McLeodHarry D. MorganBertram G. NelsonJames PattersonThe CollegesGeorge H. AndersonRoy BaldridgeClyde BauerGeorge M. BlissAlbert D. BrokawDavid F. DavisJohn P. FrancisPreston F. GassNeil M. GunnHarry W. HarrimanArthur HummelWilliam HummelPaul P. PrincellThomas H. SandersonRobert W. SavidgeAlbert A. SmithLeon P. StarrWalter H. TheobaldP. H. WatkinsBen WilkPledgedReno R. Reeve176SfnuapFoundedDean Nathaniel .ButlerMiss Gertrude DudleyLouise Lyman . House CounsellorHead of House. Secretary and TreasurerMarie Ortmayer The Graduate SchoolsEleanor Elizabeth WhippleJ TheFranc DelzellMary Fiske HeapLouise Bosley LymanPIelen Edith McKeeRuth Tillotson MillerEthel PrestonHazel Dorothy PeekRuth Elizabeth WilsonMarie Ione AveryMargaret EmmaCulbertsonAlice Caroline GromanLouise Chabrier Norton CollegesAnita SturgesBernice- BurtBessie GriffingLonnia Alvah PerryAlice Constance ReeseMiriam Josephine RitchieMargaret VirginiaBernice Ruth WhippleAlice Ferguson LeeMarguerite PalmerAntoinette PalmerMarion Louise Pierce178©ommonutf alfij GlluhMONG the many motives which prompt the organization ofstudents into clubs and societies it is to be expected thatsome must be of a rather practical or utilitarian nature. Thecommon interest of students of the departments of PoliticalScience and Law finds expression in the Commonwealth Club.The club was organized to further good government and toenlighten voters who on entering active business or professional life will bealive to the needs of the public and by virtue of their training will be ableto become leaders of public opinion in the community of which they chanceto be members.The club aims to keep in touch with the various city political clubssuch as the Municipal Voter's League, the Citizen's Association and othersof a perhaps more partisan nature and thus acquaint the members with practical politics and to secure prominent men to come to the University and'give talks on their work. Several of the speakers who have addressed suchmeetings are W. J. Bryan, R. R. McCormick, Charles N. Jesup and JudgeJ. W. Mack. The officers and members of the club are :Samuel McClintockAlvin F. Kramer .William E. WratherClarke C. Steinbeck PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurerF. R. BairdA. B. HoughtonA. B. HallN. H. PritchardLeo SpitzM. J. AdamsHugo M. FriendShowin W. HsuF. S. BevanT. H. SandersonP. H. DodgeL. W. HoffmanK. H. Dixon H. G. ShawChas. LevitonL. C. McNimarR. B. MillerD. S. EisendrathL. S. BerlinD. L. AkersA. L. FridsteinH. B. Fuller, Jr.A. C. TannerJ. S. SalkeyT. Rubovits G. J. UlrichW. J. MathewsJno. F. FosterT. J. EssingtonR. R. MixChas. SchwartzC. A. BruceS. M. RaffieE. H. HendersonMarc HirschH. G. MoultonW. S. MorrisonWinston Henryi 80(germatt GlhtbFor a number of years students and faculty interested in German conversation have met in Lexington Hall on Friday afternoons. Classes in Germanare conducted informally and lectures given between 4 and 5 o'clock afterwhich light refreshments are served. The membership of the club is overninety. Many guests attend the meetings. Mr. Hans E. Gronow, of theGerman Department, is president, and Miss Florence Compton is treasurer.On March 13, 1908, members of the club, under the direction of Mr.Gronow, gave Wilbrandt's "Jugen(lneDe/' to an enthusiastic audience in theReynolds Club Theater. The cast of characters was as follows :Frau von RosenAdelheid, Ihre NichteHeinrich RollerFerdinand von BruckBetty, dessen TochterHildebrand, Gartner der Frau von Rosen Luella De Lamarter. Theo. Golliday. W. Chamberlain. C. E. Parmenter. Lela M. WrightPaul SwainStye Sawttpori CUtthOrganized 1Q07Dr. Charles Goettsch PresidentAlice BraunlichGeorge BraunlichMiles CollinsMargaret DurninArthur GoettschWilliam GehrmannMargaret Gleason Harry HansenClarence HamiltonBernice LeClaireBeatrice LeClaireCarl LambachMary MarksOswald StarkRoma Vogt181When a tired editor remarks, over his lunch atKing's, that the future of the American novel looksgloomy someone is certain to correct him by declaringyrufM t|iat a small army of coming writers is training itself inpractical authorship down at the University of Chicago. That body is thePen club, now in the third year of its existence, the model for half a dozensimilar organizations that have been formed in western universities in thelast year. The members of the Pen club meet around the round table inHutchinson hall once or twice a month and listen to the sage advice of menwho have done things in the literary and journalistic world. During theyear the club has entertained Opie Read, Samuel Ellsworth Kiser, WilburD. Nesbit, Emerson Hough, James O'Donnell Bennett, Wallace Rice, MiltonBucklin, Karl Harriman, and other writers of note in Chicago. RichardHenry Little was the guest of honor at the annual ladies dinner held thisyear on March 3, in the Commons Cafe.This, and the annual authors' reading, which is held in Mandel hall, arethe two events at which the cold, unfeeling world is allowed a glimpse intothe Pen club's Bohemia. The members are as follows :Harry Arthur HansenPreston Florien Gass .Cole Yates RoweFrederick Whitslar CarrWilliam Patterson MacCrackenWinston Patrick HenryEdward Leyden McBrideRenslow Parker ShererPaul HeflinFred D. EberhardPaul Vincent HarperHoward Painter BlackfordHurnard Jay KennerHilmer Robert Baukhage . PresidentHistorianTreasurerJohn Ralph BenziesPaul Whittier PinkertonFloyd Alvah KleinFrank PowellAleck WhitfieldJames Edward FosterPreston NibleyRobert OwenArthur W. WheelerAlbert Dean HendersonHarvey Edward Meagher182The Pre-Legal Club, an organization of students who intend to studylaw, affords opportunity for practise in debate and discussion of questionsof importance to prospective barristers. Each quarter a smoker to which allpre-legal students are invited is held at the Reynolds Club.OfficersCharles Leviton .D. F. LevinsonMarks AlexanderJ. B. Barron . PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurerMembersJ. E. AndersonG. C. ArmstrongNelson BennetA. B. BarronOscar BlumenthalPhilip H. BroudoDavid S. EisendrathM. H. Gladstone Lee MaddenRobert R. MixA. B. MostromGeorge D. ParkinsonReno R. ReeveNathan TatarskyBen F. WilkArthur Kay Wilson184f t?-$Leb\t ©tabOne of the newest of clubs drawing its members from a restricted fieldis the Pre-Medic Club, organized in the Winter quarter of 1908. Studentswho are preparing to study medicine are eligible to membership. The clubaims to help its members in selecting courses and at the same time developtheir social life. During the year the organization has been addressed byDrs. Mann, Stieglitz, Williston and other members of the faculty. The clubhas been instrumental in securing a special course in comparative anatomyfor pre-medical students. The members are :Nels M. Hokanson ....Ralph Henry Kuhns . . ...William J. Kofmehl ....Ben Morgan Harry OttenJohn L. Brady Henry J. UllmanBlythe J. Callantine Clarence W. ShaverFrank DicosolaWilliam A. AldenLyman K. GouldY. B. LutchFred M. Dreman185Edwin P. McLeanGeorge AbelioHarold C. HillEugene CaryKarl H. Schmidt PresidentVice PresidentSecretary and TreasurerCharles T. MaxwellClifford P. McCulloughWilliam C. StephensonFred C. CaldwellJames E. TownsendWilliam A. Lytlf.Charles 0. WoodJohn S. Loomis(Eommmtal OllubThe Commercial Club,, founded December 4, 1907, exists for the purpose of bringing its members into direct contact with the business interestsand the business men of Chicago and its vicinity. During the winter, theorganization has been addressed by President Harry Pratt Judson, DavidAllan Robertson, secretary to the president, and Wallace Heckman, businessmanager and counsel of the University. Speakers from off the campus havebeen Franklin MacVeigh and Secretary Gibson of the Chicago Associationof Commerce. The members of the club also visited the steel works of theCalumet district, the rising town of Gary, Ind., and the Hey worth building.OfficersBenjamin Wilk . . . . .Harry W. Harriman .J. Craig Bowman . . . .Robert L. Allison .MembersAlvin F. KramerHarry H. HarperWilliam P. MacCrackenPaul A. BuhligGeorge E. FullerCharles E. WattsJohn F. DilleFrank J. O'Brien PresidentVice PresidentTreasurerSecretary186V t) QAJ^JM2H|? MpuntBt (ElubA FRIENDLY organization of Japanese students existed evenin the early days of the University, when Mr. Asada received the first doctor's degree. More recently the Japanesestudents have elected officers and adopted by-laws in orderto form an ideal club. Its object is to foster national spiritand to strengthen friendships, and give opportunity for anexchange of views. In its programs, which are given on thesecond Saturday of the month either in the parlor of Middle Divinity or atthe residence of Consul Shimizu, are included papers on scientific and general topics. Cups of native tea are included in the refreshments. OnlyJapanese is spoken at the club meetings. The members are :S. YamanouchiY. SUGITAConsul S. ShimizuMadame M. ShimizuK. HayashiK. KatataiY. Noiri PresidentSecretary and TreasurerK. TakahashiS. TashiroY. 7'omitaY. TsunekawaK. Toda1898 the Chinese government has from time to time sent between five and six hundredyoung men and women to this country to study political science, diplomacy, law, economics,sociology, and many other branches of learning. Chicago did not have the Chinese governmentstudents until the arrival of Messrs. Wenfu Yiko Hu and Showin Weitsen Hsu in the summerof 1906. Both are from aristocratic families. They are well versed in their own literatureand obtained the B.A. degree in the Imperial Examination. In the spring of 1905 Messrs. Huand Hsu and five other young men were appointed by His Excellency, Sheng Kungpas, directorgeneral of the railway administration, vice president of the Ministry of Public Works and Juniorguardian of the Heir Apparent, to study the commerce and banking system in this country ; anda year later they were transferred to the Ministry of Commerce by His Highness, Prince Tsaitsen,president of the ministry, who cabled to Sir Chentung Ljangcheng, the Chinese minister at Washington, t). C, to take charge of them as students belonging to the ministry. Last year whenPrime Minister Yuan Shih Kai, head of the Privy Council and Senior guardian of the HeirApparent, became president of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he cabled to the Chinese Ministerto this country to instruct them to report what they have studied in this country and to specializein diplomacy, political science and international law.In 1905 Messrs. Hu and Hsu entered the State University at Berkeley, Cal. In the summerof 1906, they entered the law school of the University of Chicago. They have planned to go toColumbia and then to Europe ; but in the meantime they may be transferred to Washington, D. C,to study diplomacy.Mr. Yet C. Owyang was transferred from the University of California to Chicago in thefall of 1907. He is a son of the first Chinese Consul General to New York and later to San Fransisco.He has finished the freshman year in the department of Economics of the University of California, and is now in the same department of Chicago. While in California he took activepart in the Chinese Student Alliance. He was appointed to take charge of the annual of the'09 class of the Oriental department of the University of California. Mr. Owyang expects tofurther his study in Harvard.iMatmmtttois (EluhAn Organization Devoted to the Consideration of Problems of Jewish InterestOfficersCharles StrullHattie FischIda PerlsteinLee LevingerPaul WanderJacob BaronMax HandmanSamuel MorwitzSamuel ArveySidney ArtzmanDavid FormanDavid FichmanAnna KohlerIsaac WolkowAllan Shapinsky Members PresidentVice PresidentRecording SecretaryFinancial SecretaryExecutive ChairmanFannie FischEffie FischElma EhrlichLena MovitzMinette BaumHarriet GrimHerman CohenSamuel HaimovitzSolomon DelsonAbe BaronSty? inwBttgatnra' (EluhThe Investigators' Club studies such movements for social reform associalism, anarchism, and the single tax. It examines their tenets andactivities partly on the ground where they have gained most credence andpartly from lectures delivered before it by representatives of the variouspropagandas.OfficersDr. R. F. HoxieR. R. Mix .D. Fichman .L. J. Levinger .MembersDwight L. AkersM. A. Nat an sonA. L. BarronE. G. FischerS. B. Arvey Honorary President. . PresidentVice President ■Secretary-TreasurerPaul WanderI.E. FergusonH. S. RichardsJ. B. BarronI. K. FridsteinL. Woods190Urotljerlnuih of B>t AnirauAn International Society for Men of the Episcopal ChurchChaptersSt. Matthews .Berkley ....Cornell ....Hobart ....Harvard ....Massachusetts InstituteYale ....Kenyon . . .Hoffman HallHampton InstituteBruton ....Sewanee ....Wisconsin . , .MichiganChicago .... San Mateo, CaliforniaMiddletown, Conn.. Ithaca, N. Y.. Geneva, N. Y.Cambridge, Mass.. Boston, Mass.New Haven, Conn.. Gambier, OhioNashville, Tenn.Hampton, VirginiaWilliamsburg, Va.Sewanee, Tenn.. Madison, Wis.. Ann Arbor, Mich.Chicago, 111.The Brotherhood of St. Andrew founded in St. James Church, Chicago,St. Andrew's Day, 1883, exists for the sole purpose of spreading Christ'sKingdom among men. Its members conform to the two rules of prayer andservice.,University of Chicago ChapterInstituted Aprit IQ04OfficersWalter Shoemaker PondPreston Florien Gass DirectorVice DirectorFloyd Erwin BernardPreston Florien Gass MembersWalter Shoemaker PondGlenn Martin MontigelProbationerHedley Heber CooperStyi}t ^xt-MMBtmui (EUthFounded January 7, igo8The object of the organization is to encourage students to pledge themselves for the work of the ministry and to promote the interests of the undergraduates who have definitely decided to become Protestant clergymen, Catholic priests or Jewish rabbis.OfficersPresidentVice PresidentSecretary-TreasurerMembersBenjamin H. Badenoch Donald T. GreyL. E. Baumann Arthur William HummelDavid Fichman Walter Shoemaker PondMaurice T. PriceJames Henry GagnierWalter HoffmanFloyd Erwin Bernard191Gertrude Dudley .... PresidentMiss Anne H. Martin . . . Secretary-TreasurerHE Woman's Union was organized in the fall of 1891, with theobject of uniting the women of the University for the promotion of their common interests. It was hoped that the womenwould find in this organization a means of drawing together ina large and generous fellowship, and of meeting some of thesocial needs which had been felt in the past. Membership wasopen to any woman connected in any way with the University.Rooms were secured in the little Church of the Disciples on the corner ofFifty-seventh street and Lexington Avenue, and used, one as a lunch room andanother as a library and room for social purposes. When Lexington Hall wasbuilt, the Union moved to its present quarters there, room fifteen. This roomhas been pleasantly furnished, and serves now as a quiet study or rest room inthe morning, is used for committee meetings at noon, and for various socialpurposes in the afternoon.Since its organization the Woman's Union has acted as official representative of the women of the University as a whole, and in this capacity has servedas hostess to visiting delegations of women and high school girls. For years aspecial feature in its calendar was a weekly meeting on Wednesday afternoons,at which some guest spoke on affairs of general interest or immediate importance. Various exhibits have been held in the rooms from time to time, as ofJapanese prints, Arts and Crafts and Consumer's League; and excursions ofvarious sorts have been taken under the auspices of the Union. Other specialfeatures have been dances open to all the University, and a Thanksgiving spread.In the fall of 1907 a change in the organization of the Union was made,whereby its main purpose is to keep open the Room for various stated uses ofthe University woman, and to serve them in any more especial way that it can.To this end it is governed at present by a president, vice president and councilconsisting of all women holding official positions in the University, a representative from each of the other women's organizations, and a few other memberschosen by the council.192m wm cisiiah leagueIn theNew students are par-The Young Women's Christian League wasestablished in 1892. Since that time it has beena growing organization with a recognized placein the University. Its aim has been to furtherthe religious life among the women of the University. The League seeks to spread a spirit offriendship among its members and through them among all the women ,jf the UniversityLeague Room, No. 1 Lexington ■ Hall, all women students are welcome.ticularly invited to come there for assistance in registration or in finding rooms and boardinghouses. Social functions are given in the League Room from time to time jointly with the YoungMen's Christian Association. Bible Study is promoted both by organizing voluntary classes withstudent leaders and by supporting the courses offered by the faculty of the Divinity School.Religious meetings are held on Wednesday mornings and Tuesday afternoons. Philanthropic workis carried on at the various settlements and at the Home for Incurables.Delegations have been sent during the past year to the Metropolitan Cabinent Conference heldat %Vheaton, April 5 to 6, to the Summer Conference at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, August 30 toSeptember 10, to the State Convention at Elgin, November 7 to 10.OfficersGrace Peloubet Norton, PresidentMary Fisk Heap, Vice PresidentEsteune Pendleton, Second Vice PresidentCabinetMary Fiske Heap, Chairman Membership CommitteeAi.thea Warren, Chairman Bible Study CommitteeFlorence Manning, Chairman Religious MeetingsElsie Schobinger, Chairman Missionary CommitteeAdvisory CommitteeMiss Gertrude Dudley Dr. Shailer Mathews, ChairmanMiss Marion Talbot Dr. Nathaniel ButlerMiss Myra Reynolds Mrs. Charles HitchcockMrs. L. Wilbur Messer Mrs. James R. Jewett Helen Fisher Peck, Recording SecretaryJessie Heckman, TreasurerHelen Hendricks, General SecretaryEthel Preston, Chairman Social CommitteeLouise Bosley Lyman, Chairman Finance CommitteeFlorence Chaney, Chairman Intercollegiate CommitteeAlice Greenacre, Chairman Whatsoever CommitteeMrs. Francis W. ParkerMrs. John M. CoulterMrs. J. H. TuftsMrs. Benjamin S. TerryMnhmt lloltmte MwxhBelieving the statement of Keith-Falconer that "While vast continentsare shrouded in almost utter darkness, and hundreds of millions suffer thehorrors of heathenism, and of Islam, the burden of proof rests upon you toshow that the circumstances in which God has placed you were meant byGod to keep you out of the foreign field," we have united with the great lifepurpose to become, if God permit, foreign missionaries.Fred C. CaldwellElfreda M. LarsonClarence H. Hamilton . LeaderSecretaryTreasurerBenjamin H. BadenochGerhard C. BrenneckeEva P. CalwellFlorence J. ChaneyCharles W. CollinsGeorge M. CrabbeCharles G. CummingD. J. GlomsetAnnie N. HailWilliam W. HickmanArthur W. HummelWilliam F. HummelA. W. MarshEthel A. MessalesLaura E. Moody Vera MoyerCharles W. PetersonMaurice T. PriceMabel ProctorA. Edward RigbyMark F. SanbornHugo P. SelingerI. Ethyln SharpeNathan W. SwithJohn H. StoutemeyerEdward J. S trickVivien M. UllmerRoscoe G. Van NuysHarvey A. WheelerMark H. WheelerEleanor E. Whipple194^-^m\m\\\\\\\\Wmu$9K» • J""""^^^^ ^4^\m+&jmInmmaott (EluhThe Brownson Club, an organization of the Roman Catholic studentsin the University, was established in 1903. Its activities are both literary andsocial. On January 30, 1908, the club gave an informal party at the CharlevoixClub and on February 22 entertained informally at Lexington Hall. ALenten lecture was given in Haskell Hall by Father P. J. O'Callaghan, Superior of the Paulists, The officers and members of the club are :Paul M. O'DonnellIrene O'Brien .Arthur J. McCareyEva Schultz . . .Francis M. King .Edna WeldonDonald P. MacDonald PresidentVice PresidentSecretarySecretaryTreasurerTreasurerCommitteemanAnita BaileyHarriet BiesonMarion BolanAlice BourJulia BredrzyckElizabeth BurkeMargaret ByrneWill BresnahanR. L. BensonLouis BaumanJohn BradyMary ClarkeMay CunneffE. R. de BothD. B. DoughertyEthel DwyerIrene DwyerWalter J. FenlonEdward Fiedebahl Gerald FitzgibbonsMary FitzsimmonsElla M. FlynnLeonard P. FoxPaul GallagherJ. E. GelroyElizabeth HannonKatherine HannonRaymond HarringtonElizabeth HarrisWilliam F. HewittFrank LagarisCharles C. Maxwell .William Mc AndrewArthur J. McCareyEdward McGrathWilliam McGrathMax MuenichJohn Murphy • L. Manning MunsonBessie O'ConnellAgnes O' GradyMary O'M alleyJ. Elmer PeakTimothy E. RyanJohn SchommerR. H. SchultzF. W. SheehanRose SeitzSusie SextonJ. J. Sprafkarosaburo sugitaLambert SullivanPhil E. StanglJames A. WalshS. C. WeahrleBell WhiteCharles O. Wood196$mttuj MtttB (EJyriattan AasoriaiiimTHE object of the Young Men's Christian Association is to promote a trueChristian fellowship among the men of the University. Its activities are tohelp students to bring their lives up to the highest standard of Christian■ manhood.Joint socials with the Young Women's Christian League are held two orthree times a quarter, to which all members of the University are invited,and especially those who have no other social facilities. Early in the Fallquarter two stag socials were held in Snell and about 200 men attended. Fol-'cb lowing this, an informal reception was given in the Reynolds Club to about60 students and faculty.Group classes for daily systematic Bible study are held in the dormitories and fraternityhouses. Other courses are given by the faculty of the Divinity School on Sunday mornings.In April a series of meetings, conferences on personal religion, was held in Mandel Hall. Mr.John R. Mott, General Secretary of the World's Student Christian Federation, was the principalspeaker. Dr. Gunsaulus also led one large meeting.OfficersAlbert Henderson, (Maurice T. Price) PresidentFrank S. Bevan, Vice PresidentGerhard C. Brennecke, Recording SecretaryArthur W. Hummell, TreasurerMark H. Wheeler, Department SecretaryCommittee ChairmenFred C. Caldwell, MembershipHarvey A. Wheeler, Bible StudyClarence H. Hamilton, Mission StudyHarry W. Harriman, Religious MeetingsFrank S. Bevan, SocialCommittee of ManagementDr. John M. Coulter, ChairmanProf. A. A. Stagg F. W. ParkerProf. Frank J. Miller Ralph MerriamJ. E. Defebaugh William J. WatermanC. A. Marsh Walter A. Payne, TreasurerMark Wheeler,Department Secretaryi'ii*\ V4rSlje 3fmj• * *. I have sprung from the strength of therich, brown soilTo the light of the full, warm sun,From naught I grew till at last I knewThe joy of a life begun.As I stretched my soft, green tendrilforthBirth-blind in the bright, new day,I felt the call of the granite wallAnd clung to its surface gray.For I grew from the heart, as it fromthe handOf a man whose mighty deed,Love-blest at birth broke the deep tilledearthFor the planting of my seed.The pulse of the life through the archand hall,The word and the writ of the brain,Are one with the bond of my leafy frond,The Spirit that links the twain.I smile at the sun I laugh at the wind,Through unrecked years I stay,I reign serene the Spirit Queen, —The Soul of the City Gray.ilA«.s*is»c-O© AY IB^*^>/"\ N January 17, 1908, the negative debating team representing^-^ Chicago in the Triangular debate won from the Northwesternaffirmative team on the subject, "Resolved, that all corporations engaged in interstate commerce should be required totake out a federal charter on such terms as Congress may bylaw prescribe, constitutionality conceded." Michigan defeated Chicago's affirmative team at Chicago, and Northwestern's negativeteam at Ann Arbor, thereby winning two victories. The Chicago negative teamwas composed of Harold G. Moulton, E. J. Marshall and Paul M. O'Donnell.The affirmative team was composed of John I. Liver, J. P. Pope and ThomasH. Sanderson.Moulton MarshallThe Negative Team O'Donnellanln iwlamainnj ©out? ataISS HARRIET GRIM won first place in the Central Oratorical League contest held in Mandel Hall, May 7, 1907. Thecontestants and their subjects were as follows: Miss Harriet Grim of Chicago, "Summer Farm ; James F. Finley ofVirginia, "Liberty not License;" Alfred F. Hughes of OhioWesleyan, "New Patriotism ;" Henry Cohn of Cornell."When Shall the Few Pass?"NORTHERN ORATORICAL LEAGUE CONTESTFrank L. Mott won second place in the Northern Oratorical League contest at Madison, May 3, 1907. His subject was "Christopher Columbus." Theother institutions represented were Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa,Northwestern and Oberlin.JUNIOR DECLAMATION CONTESTAutumn Quarter 1907December 11, 1907WomenMiss Mabel Lodge, Scholarship "The Bungaloo"Miss Carlie Souter "Death of Lincoln"MenEdward Ferguson, Half Scholarship . . . . . "A Vision of War"Edward J. Dykstra, Half Scholarship . . . . "Arbitrament of War"Winter Quarter 1908March 11, 1908WomenMiss Eveline Phillips, Scholarship "Martyr President"Miss Lulu E. Rude . "Child Labor and the Nation"Men .Philip Wolfran, Scholarship. . . . . . "Homes of the People"I. Edward Ferguson . . . "Humboldt"201ano Junior (Balkg* IfhafraHE Freshman debating team defeated the Freshman teamof Northwestern University this spring in a contest that wasarranged through the efforts of Mr. Henry Porter Chandler.Northwestern submitted the question, "Resolved, that theUnited States should subsidize her Merchant Marine." Chicago chose the negative of the question.The debating team for Chicago was chosen in warmlycontested preliminaries, resulting in victory for Vallee O. Appel, Milling-ton F. Carpenter and Harold B. Smith.Considerable interest has been worked up in the inter-college debatesof the Junior men, in which the final result will not be known until near theend of the Spring quarter. In the preliminaries Science took the affirmativeand Literature the negative of the question : "Resolved, that the Canadianbanking system should be adopted in the United States." Philosophy tookthe affirmative and Arts the negative of "Resolved, that the Oklahoma referendum be adopted in all states."The college debating teams of 1908 are made up of the following men :LiteratureWilliam McAndrew, Jr. Lester A. Stern Aleck G. WhitfieldScienceCONRADO BENITEZ CLIFFORD P. McCULLOUGH CHARLES W. SMITHArtsMillington F. Carpenter Frank A. Gilbert Allen SaylesPhilosophyCarlyle M. Keyes Albert Sabath J. Sidney Salkey202, M>£yeS- V/v saW^" /,tec(f G--^et0.fhttl/lff/ja2-Je&m.:...■.. '.. ... . . ■ .........Wqe JfottribleaHonorary Debating SocietyThomas S. MillerAlbert D. HendersonRobert L. Allison PresidentVice PresidentSecretary and TreasurerPaul M. O'DonnellF. R. BairdWilliam E. WratherT. H. SandersonPaul K. JudsonLuther D. FernaldFrank S. BevanGeorge E. FullerAlvin Kramer MembersClyde StackhouseNeil M. GunnPreston F. GassJacob B. BarronJ. Craig BowmanAlbert S. LongAllen SaylesWarren D. FosterFrederick W. Carr204QUIBBLERS, as an organization, is no longer active.Since the Autumn quarter of 1907 no meetings have beenheld and it seems now that the women's Freshman debatingsociety will be abandoned. Its activities extended from theAutumn quarter of 1905, when it was organized with theFreshman Debating club of 1904-1905 as its foundation. Fortwo years it flourished, and up to last fall regular meetings were held. TheQuibblers have prepared the following obituary :IN MEMORIAMThe QuibblersOrganized Fall Quarter, 1905, fromThe Freshman Debating Club of 1904-1905Flourished 1905-1906Languished 1906-1907Expired, Fall Quarter, 1907Aided and abetted during its life by the following criticsMrs. Flint Mr. HustonMiss Breckenridge Mr. McElroyMr. RobertsonMourned for at its decease by the following membersMiss Schultz ' JVEiss BarnesMiss Manning Miss SunnyMiss Weldon Miss ComptonMiss Stebbins Miss KawinMiss Ullmer Miss Westbend205&iumpOfficersElenore W. PhelpsJames Pinckney PopeCarlyle Marlett Keyes .James Hansen ChristensenThomas Harvey SandersonRobert Lund Judd .William Roy Peacock .George Rossman WinterSpringHeber Peart Hostetter ....Robert Rollins MixWilliam Leo Sominville Miller .William Roy Peacock ....MembersWilliam N. BeverlyClarence Arthur BalesC. L. V. ExselsenMelvin Charles HarrisDonald Stanley Hinckley . PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurer. PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurer. PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurerWilliam KixmillerHarry Dale MorganHarold Glenn MoultonCharles SchwartzDavid Alfred SkeenAlvin C. Tanner206font Hontfreshman debating societyValle Orville AppelJohn Elmer Peak .Robert Owen .Aleck Gordon WhitfieldWilliam McAndrew, Jr.Aleck Gordon WhitfieldRobert Owen .M. F. Carpenter. .William McAndrew, Jr.Reno Rucker ReeveJohn Elmer Peak .William H. KuhReno Rucker ReeveConrad BenitezAleck Gordon Whitfield Officers — Autumn QuarterWinter QuarterSpring Quarter . PresidentVice President. Secretary. Treasurer. Sergeant. PresidentVice President. Secretary. Treasurer. Sergeant. PresidentVice President. Secretary. Treasurer. SergeantMembersHilmar R. BaukhageSamuel Edwin EarleLeonard Peter FoxDavid FormanDonald Tillinghast GreyCharles F. GreyAli Benjamin Mostrom Ben MorganClifford P. McCulloughA. Nathaniel PfefferRichard Y. RoweCharles Watson SmithJohn Douglas ScottHarold Bertram SmithDaniel Andrew Tjomsland207f t ar of OII|amptnttsiI|tpaFOUR championships in succession is the brilliant record ofVarsity athletics for the year which is just closing. In tennis,football, basketball and swimming the sturdy wearers of the"C" fought their victorious way to the top. The clean fluke-less defeat of Minnesota on the Minneapolis gridiron coupled£3 with the significance of the truly national championship inbasketball makes the past season one long to be glorious in the annals ofMaroon camps.To the student mind at least, the achievements of each team are typifiedby its captain and coach. When the Chicago man thinks of that score of18 to 12 on that afternoon last fall just before Minneapolis went mad he cannot help but think of Leo De Tray and Amos Alonzo Stagg. And just asclearly are Captain Schommer and Dr. Raycroft identified with the defeat ofWisconsin and Pennsylvania and Captain Badenoch and Coach Knudson withthe aquatic triumphs. And in tennis, the figure of Captain Gray stands outwith even more clearness. All honor be to the men behind the guns as wellas to their leaders but for the brilliant season of 1907-8 the brawny personality of those leaders and their coaches will always be associated with thegreatest collection of championship titles ever brought home to Chicago.Paul Gray started the ball rolling when he won the singles in thewestern inter-collegiate tennis tournament. This feat he followed by thecapture of the doubles with Fred Carr. Next in lime light came Captain DeTray and Director Stagg. Indiana, Illinois and Purdue fell in quick succession before the Maroon eleven and by a decisive defeat Minnesota too washumbled. Thus did the Conference championship come to Chicago.The two other championships were won almost simultaneously. CaptainSchommer's men, coached by Dr. Raycroft, achieved the first really validclaim to primacy in any branch of American athletics. After overcoming theUniversity of Wisconsin and the other teams of the middle west, Chicagodefeated Pennsylvania, champion of the east, in two successive games. Andas the crowning touch, the Varsity five overwhelmed the team of the Brig-ham Young University, which held undisputed claim to the basketball titleof the far west. And finally, Captain Badenoch and Coach Oscar Knudsonsplashed their way to the long desired western swimming pennant.Tennis, football, basketball, swimming — truly it has been a great year.E. AndersonL. DeTrayI. DOSEFFL. T. FalkB. M. FergusonF. R. HandyR. S. HarrisG. C. BlissF. W. GaardeJ. B. MeigsH. G. MoultonN. BarkerH. IddingsS. E. LingleS. A. Lyon . FOOTBALLW. F. HewittA. C. HoffmanH. IddingsW. D. JonesN. A. MerriamE. J. MoultonH. O. PageM. RohdeBASEBALLW. R. NathanJ. J. SchommerC. C. StaehlingTRACKR. J. MaddiganW. McAvoyN. A. MerriamR. B. PomeroyR. L. QuigleyTENNIS C. RussellJ. J. SchommerW. P. SteffenF. H. TempletonF. M. WalkerG. WilliamsenO. W. WorthwineJ. P. SullivanF. H, TempletonL. A. Van PattenF. M. Walker 'C. RussellJ. J. SchommerW. P. SteffenG. WilliamsenF. W. Carr P. R. GrayI? partmt tttProfessor and Director of Physical Culture and AthleticsAmos Alonzo StaggAssistant Professor and Medical ExaminerDr. Joseph Edward RaycroftAssistant CoachesDr. Joseph Edward RaycroftOscar KnudsonFrederick Adolph SpeikHugo Frank BezdekHugo Morris FriendClarence Russell .Frederick Rogers BairdHugo Frank BezdekPaul Wagner .A. M. de Beauviere . Basketball. A quatics. FootballFreshman FootballTrack.% Track. Baseball. BaseballGymnastic Team. FencingCaptains 1907-1908Leo Carter DeTrayFred William GaardeRaymond Leamore Quigley .Frederick Whitslar CarrLoren PIebbardBenjamin Harrison BadenochJohn Joseph Schommer .Fred Cornelius CaldwellFrank Clay MurrahAlumni Representative on Board of ControlWilliam Scott Bond FootballBaseballTrack. TennisGolfA quaticsBasketballCross CountryGymnastic Team213Gfcamposition name w eightRight End . Harlan Orville Page 148Right Tackle Louis Theodore Falk . 180Right Guard Robert Sachs Harris . 174Center . John Emil Anderson . 180Left Guard . Fred Russell Handy .Wellington Downing Jones 217175Left Tackle Ivan Doseff 194Left End William Francis Hewitt . 178Quarter Back Walter Peter Steffen 156Right Half Back . Harold Iddings . 158Full Back . Noah Alvin Merriam .Ben Meyer Ferguson . 163181Left Half Back . Leo DeTray (Captain) 175End . John Joseph Schommer 173Guards Max RohdeOscar William Worthwine 169165Guard or Tackle . Elton James MoultonArthur Charles Hoffman 175176Substitutes . Herman John Ehrhorn .William Joseph Sunderland 161156Q\\t (&txmmOctober 12October 19November 2November 9November 23 Chicago vs. University of Indiana.Chicago vs. University of Illinois at Urbana .Chicago vs. University of Minnesota at MinneapolisChicago vs. Purdue University ....Chicago vs. Carlisle Indians ....Points won — Chicago, 147 ; Opponents, 42216 27-642-618-1256-04-18HICAGO, 18; Minnesota, 12.No flukes. No rain. No accidents.Just football. More football. 'Staggian football. Elevenmen all the time football.The western championship — clean, straight, decisive.No wonder Minneapolis went mad. No wonder thedrummer broke the head of the drum. No wonder — well, nowonder.Of course the town was painted red. And "Minneapolitans came outand helped smear the carmine. Not since the days of Father Hennepin hadsuch a riotous flood of enthusiasm inundated the town. Even had theGophers won it is doubtful if greater recognition would have been accordedthem than was given the invading band from the south. The erstwhile rooters for Minnesota had seen the wonderful eleven which had gone down to arainy defeat the year before on Marshall Field earn a decisive victory andthey were sportsmen enough to show them their admiration.And what a victory it was ! It was won by superior team work, superiorendurance and superior adaptability to the new rules with their innumerableopportunities for a heady team which does not stop to admire the scenery.The triumph gave all the greater joy because itwas hoped for rather than expected. When the gamestarted the result looked dubious to the devoted bandof Maroon adherents, small in number because therailways refused to make any material reduction infare. Scarcely had the referee's whistle first sounded before Capron, the Eckersall of the northland, booted theoval over the posts for a count of four. The Gophers,on a slippery field and backed by their greatly superior weight, seemed for a moment invincible.But suddenly something happened; the causethereof was one Steffen. Wallie suddenly decidedthat he and the ball were wanted down behind thegoal posts, yards and yards away. With the pigskintucked under his arm he arrived at his destination.As startled Gophers picked themselves up from various portions of the field, it appeared that they thought218he must have been in somewhatof a hurry. Page kicked goal, making the score 6 to 4.Then Capron scored again. After a few minutes of gruelling playback and forth, the Minnesota starkicked goal from the fifty-three yardsline. Five minutes later time wascalled for the first half with the score8 to 6 against Chicago.Were the Maroon adherentsdownhearted? They had learned toooften that the game of the "GrandOld Man's" warriors is not overuntil the last sound of the referee'swhistle has died away. They knewthat Mr. Stagg was saying things tohis men — things that counted. Theyremembered the past — how elevenlight battered substitutes had foughttheir way the whole length of FerryField that memorable night whenHugo Bezdek had planted the ballbehind Michigan's goal posts, andwhat had happened in '99 and againin '04. Then the team trotted outagain — virtually the same team because Coach Stagg believed that themen who had actually played in thefirst half were better able to dealwith the beef of Coach William's menthan the fresher reserves.The second half began with theball in Chicago's possession. Aftera few polite exchanges of punts itwas the varsity's ball on the Gopher'stwenty-five yard line. On the firstIddings made a brilliant dodging, serpentine run off tackle and scoreda touchdown.The Maroon machine had begun to work. It could not be stopped —not then. The victorious march down the field commenced again. Minnesota put up a stiff defense but it was useless. In ten minutes of exhibition of what really could be done with the new game a forward pass anda goal from touchdown netted the varsity six points more.Thus the score stood until near the end of the game. Then Capron justto show that the game wasn't a bit one sided booted his third goal from thefield. Three goals from field; three touchdowns. And it was the lightfast team — with Amos Alonzo Stagg back of it, which scored the threetouchdowns against the beef of Coach William's men with their wonderfulCapron. With this game went the Conference championship.Chicago went into the contest an eleven of uncertain ability. It had donefair work in defeating Indiana and Illinois, but had not taken on the appearance of a championship team. The loss of seven of the best men of the yearbefore was a blow to Chicago's chances that could not be forgotten. Whatcould be done without Eckersall, Parry, Walker, Noll, Russell, Kelley andFinger? Steffen, Iddings, Hewitt and Anderson were the only stars leftfrom the year before. Added to these, was Leo De Tray, out of the gamethe year before, who had been elected captain. Evidently it was up to substitutes and new men to make a winning team. With this handicap to workagainst, Director Stagg was consistently non-committal over Chicago'schances.The game with Indiana opened the schedule. The Hoosiers came to theMidway, from whence was emanating an unusually good crop of bear stories,220the remark on the part of Jimmy Sheldon that his team was the best hehad ever worked with. All that the Old Man would say about the brandof football that his pupil would hand him was that Chicago had an evenchance.The much-vaunted eleven came from Bloomington. The Varsity teamwon the game, 27 to 6, and at the same time convinced the critics of the Midway that it was well adapted to the new style of play. The new men playedwell and the Maroon line did not seem half as weak as it was alleged to be.Illinois came next. The Orange and Blue held the Varsity for the firsthalf to a score of ten points but in the second half Chicago rolled up a scoreof thirty-two points which might about as well have been another sixty-threeif the team had taken the trouble. The most spectacular feature of the gamewas a sixty-five yard run for a touchdown by Captain De Tray. Steffenproved a consistent ground-gainer. The final score was 42 to 6.The victory over Purdue, though never in doubt, was needed to cinchthe championship claimed by virtue of the triumph at Minneapolis twoweeks before. The light and inexperienced eleven of the Boilermakers wasoverwhelmed 56 to 0.The last game of the season proved Chicago's only defeat. Carlisle beatthe Varsity 18 to 4. The loss of this contest was all the harder to bear asthe campus dopester had figured that a victory over the Indians would jolteven the superciliousness of the Eastern critics.Yet, said the campus philosopher, it might have been worse. The Indiansplayed their fiercest game and luck was with them all the way. They werefully prepared for Chicago's tactics while their style of play was new to Captain De Tray's warriors. Chicago rallied near the end of the game, and, completely outplaying the redskins for a few minutes, gave Steffen the opportunity to kick a goal from the field.At the end of the season Chicagowas well represented on the all-westernelevens. Captain De Tray, Steffen andHewitt were the most popular choices whileIddings and Doseff were given places by themajority of critics. The work of Page at endand of Harris at guard was well received.From very unpromising material, theOld Man developed one of the greatest teams222ever wore the Maroon. The line, considered before theseason opened as weak, proved practically impenetrable online plunges. The backs worked with machine-like speed andprecision in every game. The frequent changing of Mer-rian and Ferguson at full back did not deprive team playof smoothness. The forward passing of Steffen and Page' was excellent, generally resulting in gains for the playerwho received the ball. They also alternated at the kickingend of the game and succeeded in holding their opponentsa little more than even. The forward pass was the most brilliant of the playsintroduced by the new rules. Under the tutelage of Mr. Stagg, the teamacquired a mastery of its intricacies which was used to the confusion of manya far heavier team.Speed, skill, intellect — these qualities more than made up in the seasonof 1907, as they have made up in every other season since Chicago enteredwestern athletics, for a lack of brawn. Year after year the wearers of theMaroon, representing a university of comparatively few un-223l^uw (&u\x&a ®§m SJaat f uth an % (grtntnroCaptain Leo Carter de TrayCaptain De Tray, besides being an excellent leader, was one of the most brilliant players that ever represented Chicago on the gridiron. His dashing, heady method of carryingthe ball added many a yard to the Maroontotal. He proved flawless at making interference for the runner, and on defense had remarkable skill at designing the point of attackof the opposing team. "Leo" wasn't so badon the forum either.Ivan DoseffHe has been called the "find" of the yearby more than one critic. His weight, coupledwith strength and speed, early won him a position on the regular Maroon team, and eventually on several all-western elevens. Anddespite the charge that he was the masculine"Gibson girl," he could play football whichmade his opponents wonder what would happen to them in case of a collision with a creature of Harrison Fisher's construction. But itis as a practical sociologist who did thingswhen there was necessity for things to be donethat Ivan's chief claim to fame lies.Max RohdeRohde did not get into many scrimmages,but made a favorable impression as a guardthe few times he played. His only drawbackwas his lack of weight. Max declares, however, that he always was more at home in thewater. Besides playing football and waterpolo, Max has the artistic temperament. Andhe is not the only athlete who has specializedin the Department of the History of Art.Francis HewittFrom a novice to one of the best ends inthe West — and all in one year — that is thestory of "Bill" Hewitt's heroic rise in football-dom. His adaptability to the new game gainedhim a place on the majority of the All-Westernelevens for 1907. And yet his happiest moments were when he announced programs atthe smokers of the Reynolds Club. And fromsuch glory to the laboratory of the steel company at South Chicago — such is fate !Wellington Downing Jones"Duke" Jones and "Fat" Handy werer-rivals. "Duke" wanted to be left guard ; sodid "Fat." The answer : both were. If football never has another enemy, it will alwayshave "Duke," for that sport knocked out his■chances of getting Phi Beta Kappa. But theColonial Dames Scholarship ought to beenough for one man.Benjamin FergusonFerguson's 180 pounds were an aid tohim in his work as a line plunger, and he fittedwell with the Maroon machine. He helped therunner, and, though not a flashy player, wasconsistent, and a hard worker.Elton James MoultonMoulton went Jones one better. He wona "C" and a Phi Beta Kappa key. He proveda shifty man at tackle, and was in the runningfor the regular position on the team throughout the season.225(Coach) Mc Andrews Stokes Alsip Rowe StoneBriggs Morris Coambs Reddy B res n ah an SchulzDougherty Smith Rogers Grills Elliott Tatars kyPhelps Kearn Powell Cobb Silberman TyomslandJrttsJjman ^football Emm XBB7HE Freshman football team was not allowed to playgames withhigh schools, or freshmen of other colleges, per Conferenceregulations, and consequently had no other pleasure than acting target for the attack of the Varsity players in practice.Hugo Bezdek, who coached the 1911 squad had a hard2) task set to make a good team out of the green material onhand. "Bunny" Rogers captained the eleven from quarter back position.Dougherty at half back, Crowley at full, Elliott at tackle and Briggs at centeralso did effective work during the season.~UF\&U£S.HICAGO nearly won the Conference. Inspite of the. 78 to 48 defeat administered byIllinois in a dual meet earlier in the trackseason, Director Stagg had hopes of capturing the prized contest on Marshall FieldJune 1. He feared the Illini, but at thelast moment ventured the prediction that the Maroonswould win, if only by their nerve.As it was, the Orange and Blue took first with 31 pointsand the Maroons second with 28 1-3. Now, to lose a meetisn't so bad, but when two points are needed to bring thecoveted position and when these eagerly-sought for pointsare lost through hard luck — well, that's something different.Just suppose Gerry Williamsen had not dropped from college until the end of the season. And what if "Quig" hadnot stumbled and fallen near the finish of the 220? Andmaybe "Ned" Merriam wouldn't have romped in with asure second, if, after qualifying in the 120 yard hurdles, hehad run the final heat ! Besides, Chicago was ahead safelyuntil near the finish, and if anything is disheartening, it isto be beaten out at the last minute.However, we must be kind and forgive Illinois. She forgot her placein the 1907 Conference. She somehow or other thought she was entitled towin the meet. She was considerate to the extent thatshe allowed the Maroons to win second place. Shemight have "fixed" things up with Wisconsin, youknow. These two colleges might have played"snooks." But no. That would have been going justa bit too far. To win the Conference was enough.To let Chicago down worse than second would havebeen unpardonable.After all, Director Stagg should be forgiven fornot gobbling up the Conference. At first sight, it maybe difficult to see it just this way. Illinois won thebaseball pennant. What claim had she to the bigmeet? But the Old Man is a prophet. He saw thefootball championship floating about — and a good,kind fairy told him that he was the chosen conquerorof it. He remembered tennis. He saw the swimming228winning all its meets, the basketball five showing both west andeast how the game should beplayed. He put on his frayelinfield glasses for a glimpse beyondthe reach of the naked eye. He —saw — a — ■ Conference — going —to — Chicago — in — in ...."Ned" Merriam had the honor oftieing with Burroughs of Illinois forhighest number of points, each winning10. He captured the 440, and the 220low hurdles. San Lyon "returned to ourmidst" and contributed five points to theChicago total. San beat the doctor athis own game last year. Since 1905,when he set a record in the two mile, hehas been instructed never to run anothertwo mile race. He would not disobeya physician for anything; so he ran onemile instead of two. Iddings was therewith the long pole, and tied for first withHaggard of Drake.Baseball and track carried on a merry duel for the favor of the versatileSchommer. He likes both, you know.What's more, he just won't give up onefor the other. Result : He divided thepoints for second in the high jump.Pomeroy demonstrated his right to a "C"by capturing second in the broad jump.Thirds by Captain Russell in the discus,Quigley in the 100 and 220, Steffen in the220 low hurdles, and Lingle in the quarter were the other places the Varsity won.With the change from indoor to outdoor track, dopesters began to figure howChicago would stack up in the addedevents. At first, the loss of Ed Parry im-presed itself on them, along with the factthat Burroughs would compete for Illi-229Still, Gerry Williamsen in the hammer and Captain Russell in the discus were counted on to show the famous Illini interesting competition. Then,too, we still had Pomeroy in the broad jump,and Merriam had "found" himself as a hurdler.The Purdue meet, won by a score of 80 to37, was scarcely more than a tryout for Chicago. Chicago took first place in ten of thethirteen events, the only surprise furnishedby the Boilermakers being the victory of Whiteover Barker in the half mile.Illinois came next. This was the dualmeet of most interest on the schedule. It wasexpected to show which of the two teamswould have first call in the Conference; alsowhether Chicago or Illinois was at an advantage in the field events. The score was 78 to48, with the Illini at the agreeable end. Things looked bad for Chicago. Herconsolation lay in the hope that the Conference would bring to the fore anynumber of phenoms in the events in which the Orange and Blue was strongest, and a most remarkable dearth where the Maroon had the advantage. Itturned out that neither happened; that Chicago's showing was due to agreat improvement between the time of the meet and the classic event inJune.The main lesson drawn from the Wisconsin meet, which the Varsitywon, 69 1-3 to 56 2-3, was that the Badgers were destined to be factors in the Conference. Myers, Bertlesand Messmer were the Wisconsin mainstays. Williamsen was out of the meet, having left college. Hisloss was not felt then, but as the time for the Conference drew nearer, it began to be figured out that theVarsity might lose where with the star hammer throwercompeting it might win.The story of the Conference has been told, andneed not, for obvious reasons, be repeated. At theend of the season Captain Russell, Barker, Lyon andMcAvoy were lost to the team. Quigley was electedcaptain for next year.230Wt amClarence Russell, CaptainNorman BarkerFred Cornelius CaldwellGeorge West GravesWilliam Paul HenneberryHarold IddingsSanford Avery LyonSamuel Esleeck LingleRoy James MaddiganRobert Eddy Mathews Walter McAvoyNoah AlVin MerriamRobert Bruce PomeroyRaymond Leamore QuigleyMilo Myron ScheidJohn Joseph SchommerKarl Park ShuartWalter Peter SteffenGerry Williamsen©h? $tasFebruary ' 8 .March 1 .March 13 .March 16 .April 20 .April 27 .May 4 .May 11 .May 25 .June 1 .June Chicago vs. University of Illinois at Urbana . . . 43-43Chicago vs. University of Illinois . : . . 38-48Central A. A. U. Championships at the 7th Regiment ArmoryUniversity of Wisconsin Relay Races at MadisonHigh and Preparatory School Relay Trials :University of Pennsylvania Relay Races, at Philadelphia .Chicago vs. Purdue University, at Lafayette . . . 80-37Chicago vs. University of Illinois 48-78Chicago vs. University of Wisconsin .... 69^-56fSeventh Annual Intercollegiate Conference Meet at MarshallField— Illinois . 31Chicago ........ 28^Sixth Annual Interscholastic Meet, Mercersburg Academy . . 38232Extttk unb Wuib g>mxt&, XBQ7c* -aC rt rj •§-82^ 2^ Univ.ofWis.RelayRacesMarch16 Pennsylvania RelayRacesApril27 S CS "*Ph J^ ii .5a "iO N• -i 05 2<j bi moHN. A. Merriam.. :..J. J. Schommer... 9i8219i5 6i54*15i 6i ii li 101410365664 96^6.314154 13610735910515 10H21 85 74i45141i29i27|R. L. Quigley W. P. Steffen 4i553 ii liN. Barker ii li3H. Idding*s 4 1 24116115i1513im10R. Maddig*an R. B. Pomeroy C. Russell K. P. Shuart li3 3115 3li iiS. E. Lingle li1 36 1G. Williamsen ...4. 35S. A. Lyon 5 10J. D. Lightbody .. 10 10W. McAvoy 5 341 51 1 13 10W. P. HenneberryM. M. Scheid \\95C. S. Jacobs 5 5F. C. Caldwell 1li 1 2G. W. Graves liG. A. Garrett li1 • li1W. Taylor R. E. Mathews 1 1Total 43 38 30 5 9 80 48 691 281 281 379234Itttemrttegiate GLanftrma MntEvent Marshall Field, June 1, 1907Track EventsFirst Second Third Time100 Yards Dash May (I)220 Yards Dash Huff (G)440 Yards Run Merriam (C)880 Yards Run Myers (W)1 Mile Run. . . .Lyon (C)2 Mile Run Jackson (Mo.120 Yards Hurdles Smithson (N. D.) Natwick (W)220 Yards Hurdles . . . .Merriam (C) Gardiner (111.) Quigley (C) :09 4-5Quigley (C) :22Lingle (C) :51Tidd (Mo.) 2:01White (P) 4:37Waggoner (Ames) Bertles (W) 10:06McCord (D) :15 2-5Steffen (C) :25 2-5Field EventsHoff (G)May (I)Lindberg ( I )Davis (Ames)Riley (la.)Shot Put Burroughs (I)43 ft. 1 1-4 in.Hammer Throw Burroughs ( I )149 ft. 3 1-2 in.High Jump Slaght ( G)5 ft. 8 in.Broad Jump Jenkins (I)21 ft. 5 in.Discus Messmer (W)121 ft. 9 in.Pole Vault Iddings (C)Haggard (D)1 1 ft. 4 in. Conway (D) Carrithers (I)41 ft. 10 3-4 in. 41 ft. 4 1-4 inJohnson (W)147 ft. 4 1-2 in.Schommer (C)Norcross (Minn.)Clark (P)5 ft. 6 in.Pomeroy (C)Horner (Mo.)121 ft. 5 in. Conway (D)135 ft. 5 in.Lambert (Ames)Russell (C)118 ft. 3 in.Norris (I)11 ft.Score of PointsIllinois .ChicagoWisconsin . .GrinnellMissouriDrake .AmesNotre DameIowaPurdueMinnesota 3128 11713999532 1-1 1235Lafayette, May 4, 1907Track EventsEvent First . Second Third Timeioo Yards Dash Quigley (C) Barker (C) Pomeroy (C) :io 2-5220 Yards Dash Merriam (C) Lewis (P) Nelson (P) 123440 Yards Run Quigley (C) Lingle (C) Kinkead (P) 153 4-5880 Yards Run White (P) Barker (C) Mathews (C) 2:09 2-5One Mile Run White (P) Tillett (P) Scheid (C) 4:49 1-5120 Yards Hurdles .... , McAvoy (C) Steffen (C) Fifield (P) 117220 Yards Hurdlis .... Merriam (C) Fifield (P) Schommer (C) 126 4-5Field EventsShot Put . Schommer (C) Maddigan (C) Russell (C)40 ft. 2 1-2 in. 39 ft. 1 in. 39 ft.Hammer Throw Williamsen (C) Russell (C) Fullenwider (P)149 ft. 9 in. 136 ft. 6 in. ' 109 ft. 8 in.High Jump Schommer (C) Clark (P) Chapman (P)5 ft. 7 1-8 in.Broad Jump Pomeroy (C) Schommer (C) Lewis (P)21 ft. 1 in. 19 ft. 8 in. 19 ft. 7 1-2 in.Discus Steffens (P) Maddigan (C) Williamsen (C)127 ft. 6 in. 112 ft. 7 in. in ft.Pole Vault Iddings (C) Van Norman (P) Johnson (P), 10 ft.Score of Points — Chicago 80; Purdue 37.(Efytotgo U0. IllinoisMay 11, 1907Track EventsEvent First Second Third Time100 Yards Dash May (I) Quigley (C) Jenkins (I) :io 1-5220 Yards Dash May (I) Quigley (C) Merriam (C) :22 3-5440 Yards Run Merriam (C) Lindberg (I) Barker (C) :52880 Yards Run Lindberg (I) Blomfeldt (I) Barrett (I) 2:06 4-5One Mile Run Lyon (C) Barrett (I) Richardson (I) 4:434-5Two Mile Run Smith (I) Connard (I) 10:374-5Miller (I)120 Yards Hurdles .... Lazear (I) Merriam (C) McAvoy (C) :i6220 Yards Hurdles .... Gardner (I) Steffen (C) Lazear (I) :26 2-5Field EventsShot Put Burroughs (I) Dunham (I) Carrithers (I)43 ft. 8 1-2 in. 40 ft. 10 1-4 in. 40 ft. 7 in.Hammer Throw Burroughs (I) Williamsen (C) Russell (C)152 ft. 9 1-2 in. 149 ft. 10 in. 135 ft. 10 in.High Jump Schommer (C) Ropp (I) Bushnell (I)5 ft. 8 in. 5 ft. 6 in. 5 ft. 4 in.Broad Jump Pomeroy (C) Dunning (I) Schommer (C)20 ft. 11 3-4 in. 20 ft. 5 in. 20 ft. 1 1-2 in.Discus Burroughs (I) Russell (C) Maddigan (C)118 ft. 8 1-4 in. 112 ft. 2 1-2 in. 107 ft. 8 3-4 in.Pole Vault Norris (I) Tarnoski (I)Iddings (C) 10 ft.11 ft. 3 in.Score of Points — Illinois 78 ; Chicago 48.m. wwwmxnEvent First100 Yards Dash ..Quigley (C)220 Yards Dash ..Quigley (C)440 Yards. Run ...Lingle (C)880 Yards Run . . .Meyers (W)1 Mile Run Blankenagle2 Mile Run Bertles (W)120 Yards Hurdles Merriam (C)220 Yards Hurdles Merriam (C) May 25, 1907Track EventsSecondMeyers (W)Meyers (W)Merriam (C)' Barker (C)(W) Wipperman (W)Scheid (C)Steffen (C)Steffen (C) ThirdMueller (W)Mueller (W)Mueller (W)Shuart (C)Caldwell (C)Drew (W)Natwick (W)Natwick (W) 10 Time10 3-5235403:4:42 1-50916 2-526 3-5Field EventsShot Put Maddigan (C)40 ft. 3-4 in.Hammer Throw . Johnson (W)141 ft. 11 in.High Jump Schommer (C)5 ft. 8 in.Broad Jump . . ,Discus Pole Vault Russell (C)39 ft. 11 1-2 in.Messmer (W)129 ft. 11 in.Smith (W)Maddigan (C)Coorsen (W)5 ft. 4 in.VanDerzee (W)19 ft. 11 1-2 in.Maddigan (C)123 ft. 1 in.Wilson (W)10 ft. Schommer (C)38 ft. 6 in.Russell (C)126 ft.. Coorsen (W)20 ft. .9 in...Messmer (W)129 ft. 2 1-2 in.. Iddings (C)10 ft. 4 in.Score of Points — Chicago, 69 1-3; Wisconsin, 56 2-3 McAvoy (C)19 ft. 6 1-2 in.Russell (C)121 ft. 6 in.Steffen (C)8 ft. 6 in.Central Amateur Atfyfcttr AssonatumMarshall Field, August 31, 1907The following University of Chicago men won firsts in this meet :Event Time440 Yards Run N. A. Merriam880 Yards Run J. D. Lightbody1 Mile Run J. D. LightbodyHigh Jump J.J. SchommerPole Vault C. S. Jacobs 530153 4-55 ft. 10 3-8 in.11 ft. 10 1-2 in.B&lajj ©rialsApril 20, 1907The following men were selected at the tryouts to represent the University of Chicago at the meet :One Mile Relay RaceN. A. Merriam R. L. Quigley N. Barker S. E. LingleFor the Special EventsHammer )Discus . V C. RussellShot Put JHammer G. WillamsenPole Vault H. IddingsHigh Jump J. J. SchommerffemtByluanta Stelag EareaApril 27, 1907One Mile Championship Relay Race: Won by Chicago; Pennsylvania Second.Time, 3 :25 2-5. Merriam, Barker, Quigley and Lingle ran on the winning team.Special EventsPole Vault . Allen (Syracuse) Iddings (Chicago) Norris (Illinois)11 ft. 10 1-2 in. 11 ft. 7 in. 11 ft. 4 in.Hammer . . Talbot ( Kansas City Manual Horr (Syracuse) Williamson (Chicago)Training School, 146 1-2 ft. 146 1-4 ft.153 ft. 9 1-2 in.©rack, 190BThe indoor season found the Varsity so badly crippled that at the beginning of the season it was hard to see a victory over Illinois. The down stateteam appeared to have the call in most of the events. Confidence was renewed, however, as the time for the meet drew near and followers of theteam figured out a close score. The Orange and Blue triumphed, however,52 to 34.Coach Friend went to work with his men, studied the Staggian expressionof pessimism, and wore it until the next meet. By reversing every -eventexcept the pole vault, fifty and mile, Captain Quigley's men won a gloriousvictory, 55 to 31.Meets with the First Regiment and Chicago Athletic Association wereboth won by the Varsity. The University of Wisconsin relay race for theConference championship, in which Chicago and Wisconsin were the soleentrants, went easily to Chicago.Meets and Scores1908January 24 Chicago vs. First Regiment ...... 61-43February 7 Chicago vs. Chicago Athletic Association .... 57-47February 14 Chicago vs. University of Illinois at Urbana . . . 34-52February 15 First Regiment Meet Handicap. Won by Chicago.February 19 Chicago Athletic Association Invitation Meet. Won by Chicago.March 7 Chicago vs. University of Illinois . . . . . 55-31March 14 University of Wisconsin Relay Race. Won by Chicago.239tts. MttuttoAt Urbana, February 14, 1908Chicago 34; Illinois 52Track EventsEvent First Second Third Time35 Yards Dash May (I) Steffen (C) Jenkins (I) 4 2-5440 Yards Run Lindberg (I) Quigley (C) Lingle (C) :53 1-5880 Yards Run Garrett (C) Hanley (I) Shuart (C) 2:05 1-5One Mile Run Hinman (I) Long (C) Steffa (C) 4:43 2-5Two Mile Run Miller (I) Caldwell (C) Foreman (I) 10:2540 Yards Hurdles Jenkins (1) Steffen (C) Brown (I) 105 2-5Field EventsShot Put Maddigan (C) Schommer (C) McCord (I)40 ft. 10 in. 40 ft. 3-4 in. 37 ft. 6 in.High Jump Washburn (I) Schommer (C) Wood (I)5 ft. 10 in. 5 ft. 9 in. 5 ft. 8 in.Pole Vault Jones (I) ) q ftDissoway (I) >■ I0 ^Sinnock (I) )Relay Race Illinois 2 48 3-5(Eljiraatf us. IllinoisAt Chicago, March 7, 1908Chicago 55; Illinois 31Track EventsEvent First Second Third50 Yards Dash May (I) Quigley (C) Jenkins (I)440 Yards Run Quigley (C) Lingle (C) Lindberg (I)880 Yards Run Garrett (C) Shuart (C) Hanley (I)One Mile Run Hinman (I) Steffa (C) Johlin (C)Two Mile Run Caldwell (C) McFarland (C) Redhead (I)50 Yards Hurdles Steffen (C) Jenkins (I) Brown (I)Field EventsShot Put Maddigan (C) Schommer (C)40 ft. 11 in. 38 ft. 11 1-2 in.High Jump Schommer (C) Wood (I)5 ft. 9 3-8 in. Washburn (I)Pole Vault Watson (I) ^Jones (I) I 9 ft.Sinnock (I) j 4 in.Dissoway (I) JRelay Chicago — Lingle Morgan Garrett Quigley 3 123 Time:o5 3-5» :55 3-52 :o5 4-54:48 2-510:34 i-5:o6 4-5Hubble (C)37 ft. 3 in.The University of Wisconsin Relay Race for Conference CollegesAt Madison, March 14, 1908Won by Chicago ; Wisconsin Second.Time 3 132 4-5Chicago Team : Lingle, Shuart, Garrett, Quigley240^ > b>3 >3 kCI^^cM ' Os> O *O ON ji _ M a. M H si M <^bO Is) In In. 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Captain for Field Events, Spring QuarterAllen Brewster Glore Jacobs O'Brien SteffaAlexander Dolan Horn Johlin Otten W. TaylorBorden Ehrhorn Hough Lingle Page R. B. TaylorBrokaw Fisiibein Hubble McFarland Simpson WendtWhipp1907 Meets and ScoresMay 4 Freshmen vs. Culver Military "Academy at Culver 57^-50>4May 11 Freshmen vs. Y. M. C A 67-59May 17 Freshmen vs. Armour Institute at Ogden Field 78-30May 25 Freshmen vs. Illinois Freshmen . 54-631908January 17 Triangular Meet : Freshman vs. Morgan Park and Lewis, Freshmen 44February 1 Freshmen vs. Illinois Freshmen at Urbana . 31-38February 29 Freshmen vs. Illinois Freshmen .... 44-23cr t""1 £*cro w j5. ^ cC/3 3 ,cn rOF-cn £"3 g.t>|tH a. £ J?3P B ^t-w^BCOoofl>O►do3' ^ ^ &- * ^ ^> oo^ 4^ to o<s j* o o o o o-a * ? & & & R &3N*-3 3HH cn t-t ►— ■ fcO 0"cn to cr0cn3 OJ 0i-K l-+>^ H+> <-t- r*~OT. /-N >-n 00 ^00 1 — 10cn 3' cnO P 3 0 3o' r-t- p-vp cr o cr .5? o -^ o ^ o •'ooST S?^"^|s ^ s !8 » 8o m. 22 3 2H Q 0 O tn w p a> g ^ g o4 CT* Cn ,«to vsp<£'g O — 3^'s 2r* CD u_ J ^H CD (X1:. s 5- ^ pO^K CD ™ ^ rt-hj cncr(S S.w n k*cn O 'cn>P OS" ^■^ HH2 ?'I^S3 . O (J ^' P M ^■fk ^ -1 r, m P C! 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U.3OnC^ CO^ CN CNT-O CN H■^sv^t CN CN •s,"3 tSCN CN k^ ■ «< <^T ^EmmFred Mitchell WalkerJames Patrick SullivanFred William GaardeJohn Joseph SchommerJames Burrell MeigsGeorge Custer BlissWalter Robert NathanFrank Herbert Templeton (Captain)Harold Glenn Moulton .Charles Christian Staehling .LeRoy Andrew VanPatten PitcherPitcherCatcher. First Base. First BaseSecond BaseThird Base. Short StopLeft FieldCenter FieldRight FieldMarch 16March 26March 27March 29March 30April 2April 6April 9April 10April 1 1April 17April 20April 23April 27MayMayMay 149May 11May 13May 16May 18May 21May 24May 29Mav 31 Sty? SfcmrftChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicago-ChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoChicagoGames vs. Professionals ....vs. Callahan's Team . '.vs. All-Stars vs. Armour Institutevs. Callahan's / Teamvs. First National Bank .vs. River Forest ....vs. Physicians and Surgeons .vs. Armour Institutevs. St. Ignatius College .vs. Lake Forest College .vs. University of IllinoisNorthwestern University at EvanstonRiver Forest ....University of IllinoisUniversity of WisconsinPurdue UniversityUniversity of Illinois at ChampaignNorthwestern University .Oberlin College ....Williams Collegevs. Northwestern University at Evanstonvs. University of Minnesota at Minneapoli:vs. University of Illinois at Champaignvs. University of Minnesota .Won — Chicago 14; Opponents 10. Tied — 1.246vs.vs.vs.vs.vs.vs.vs.vs.vs. 3- 22- 21- 315- 57- 43- 214- 00-1018- 24-135- 67- 15- 30- 311- 07- 62- 48- 21- 97- 89-15ffi%&^\°% ' I VHE retroactive clause and FreshmanB^^Jr* ru^e 'e^ t^ie baseball material for 190710ci$y=fc^N*^ to ^e drawn entirely from the secondo|ar£p<^p|r^n and third year men. With only threeffty^y nf^Q veterans eligible — Captain Templeton'g^'"'*^*^^* at short and Walker and Gaarde, thebattery — and with a scant supply for the six remainingpositions, the outlook was rather dark.The general opinion was that the team would bestrong in the field and weak at the bat ; but as the season progressed, the men fell down in fielding and hitlike fiends. When the season closed, six were battingover .300 and the team average was .275, the best stickrecord of any Varsity nine.Michigan's deflection lessened somewhat the baseball interest, and left Illinois and Chicago to fight itout. As usual Huff's men took everything that cametheir way; the Illinois baseball "hoodoo" seemed morerelentless than ever before. In two of the four games,Chicago had a safe lead in the ninth, with the game apparently tucked away,when — well, the Maroons lost.Little difficulty was experienced in taking the measure of Oberlin, Purdue, Northwestern and Wisconsin, but Minnesota playing listlessly againstother teams, proved a Tartar for the Varsity. In both games, the Gophersknocked Sullivan out of the box, and Walker was unable to check the slugging.The climax of the season was reached in the Williams game. Williams,one of the strongest of Eastern teams, played a thirteen inning tie with Michigan, was beaten by Illinois by one point, and came to Chicago in desperation.The game proved one of the most exciting seen on Marshall Field.Though Captain Templeton was out of the contest, the Varsity played errorless ball, while Williams made but one mistake. Sensational fielding andterrific hitting characterized the contest. Chicago led until the eighthinning, when a lucky three-bagger just inside the first base foul line, with the248full, sewed up the game for Williams by the score of 4-2. The automobile rides, trips to the amusement parks, and a rousing smoker at theReynolds Club gave the visiting easterners a good impression of Chicago hospitality. Captain Templeton, Walker, Sullivan, Moulton and Van Pattenappeared for the last time in the Williams game on the Varsity diamond.Halting anfc JfrUtittg At^ra^s, XBQ7Batting AveragesGames At Bat Hits AverageVan Patten 15 56 19 .339Gaarde 15 60 19 .317Walker 15 54 17 .315Sullivan 11 32 10 .312Moulton 12 33 10 .303Templeton 10 40 12 .300Meigs 15 47 14 .298Schommer 10 37 10 .270Bliss 14 50 13 .260Nathan 14 34 6 .176Staehling 14 43 5 .116Fielding AveragesChances Errors AverageStaehling 9 0 1.000Gaarde 150 4 .973Schommer 55 . 3 .945Templeton 63 4 .935Meigs 115 7 .934Bliss 56 6 .893Sullivan 32 4 -872Moulton 14 2 .857Van Patten 27 4 .852Nathan 51 9 .823Walker 70 15 .786249Stealjmatt HaaehaU SfeamPitchersCatchersFirst BaseApril 5April 10April 15April 17April 23April 24April 27April 30May 4May 7May 11May 13May 15May 18May 23May 24May 31 . PageSunderlandSlaterTaylorStangleSlater Second BaseThird Base .Short Stop .Left Field .Center FieldRight Field .FreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmenFreshmen THE RECORDvs. Wendell Phillips High School .vs. North Division High Schoolvs. Wendell Phillips High School .vs. Morgan Park Academy at Morgan Parkvs. R. T. Crane High School .vs. Armour Institute at Ogden Fieldvs. Illinois Freshmen at Champaign .vs. R. T. Crane High School .vs. Culver Military Academy at Culver .vs. Armour Institute ....vs. Illinois Freshmen ....vs. Oak Park High Schoolvs. Lake Forest Academy at Lake Forest .vs. Monitor Athletic Clubvs. St. Ignatius College ....vs. Armour Institute at Ogden Fieldvs. St. Ignatius College at St. Ignatius RedfieldPeguesSunderlandCollingsCleary. FalkStern5-48-12-15-33-64-72-69-07-23-72-621-612-29-27-24-78-8HE western championship, the national championship — thefirst truly national championship, and the elevation of basketball from a minor to a major sport — those are the achievements of the Varsity five of 1908.The western championship was won after three hardfast games with Wisconsin. The first, at Madison, Wiscon- sin won 29 to 17, the Varsity's defeat being largely due tothe inexperience of the team as a whole. Chicago won the next in handystyle in Bartlett and also the rubber at Madison by which Dr. Raycroft andDirector Hutchins had agreed to settle the tie. This left Chicago free tomeet Pennsylvania for the national title.Two games were played with the Quakers, both of which Chicago wonafter spectacular playing. Captain Schommer's men won the first, played onthe home floor, by the score of 21 to 18 and the second, played at Philadelphia, by the score of 18 to 16. Each contest was nip and tuck all the way,neither game being won until the last whistle sounded.Except for the Wisconsin and Pennsylvania fives, the Varsity quintetoverwhelmed all the teams which it met although Minnesota offered the greatest objection to being run over.Every man on the team showed stellar brilliance. Captain Schommerproved himself far and away the greatest basketball player in the country.Ryan, his nearest competitor, picked for ail-American center, was outplayedat every point. Hoffman, though not so spectacular a player as Page, didwonderfully effective work particularly when matched against Fitzpatrick.Falls was a steady point-gainer throughout the season and his basket-throwing in the last Pennsylvania game was so good that eastern critics are disposed to give him the credit for cinching the game for Chicago. Georgenand Harris were also effective. .The assertion that this is the first truly national championship ever wonis conservative. Chicago, playing 23 games, defeated all the teams of themiddle west. Illinois which had outplayed all the teams of the south, wasoverwhelmed by the Varsity by the scores of 35 to 21 and 42 to 17. BrighamYoung University was the acknowledged champion of the far west ; CaptainSchommer's men played its team off its feet in about five minutes. Pennsylvania had actually met and defeated in over twenty games all the teams of theeast; Pennsylvania suffered two decisive defeats at the hands of Chicago.The only territory whose basketball representatives had not yielded theirscalps to Captain Schommer's belt was the Pacific coast. If Leland Stanfordand California ever have tried to play basketball, no one west of the SierraNevadas has ever heard of it. Middle west, far west, south and east — -whatbetter claim to a truly national championship could there be?The showing of the team this year was so good that the Board of PhysicalCulture and Athletics raised basketball from a minor to a major sport. Captain Schommer, Georgen, Falls, Hoffman and Page received their Varsity"C" this year.Truly, has not basketball come into its own?252^tatijstirBi of lagkrthall EmmsName Games Total Points Field Goals Free Throws Goals byOpponents FoulsSchommer . ... 22 250 84 82 14 45Falls . . . ... 22 188 72 44 26 44Georgen ... 20 80 40 0 17 ■ 35Harris . . ... 20 67 28 11 17 57Page . . . ... 20 29 14 1 19 74Hoffman ... 13 24 12 0 0 10Summary of the SeasonChicago OpponentsField Goals Free Throws Fouls Field Goals Free Throws Fouls266 191 294 112 178 311The Pennsylvania SeriesChicago •■ University of Pennsylvania10 17 29 7 19 32The Wisconsin SeriesChicago Wisconsin18 23 49 19 26 51253The TeamForwards \ ' ' Frederick Falls| William Math i an Georgen{Harlan Orville PageArthur Charles I^ToffmanRobert Sachs HarrisCenter . John Joseph Schommer (Captain)f . Edwin Powell HubbleSubstitutes - ! • Paul Arthur Buhlig( Mansfield Ralph Cleary[ . . . Alfred KellyDecember 20December 21December 23December 25December 26January 4January 10January 18January 21January -25January 31February 6February 8February 13February 15February 22February 28February 29March 6March 12March 14March 21March 25 The RecordChicago vs. University of Iowa at Iowa City .Chicago vs. Washington University at St. LouisChicago vs. Kansas City A. A. at Kansas City .Chicago vs. Des Moines Y. M. C. A. at Des MoinesChicago vs. Muscatine Y. M. C. A. at MuscatineChicago vs. Columbia UniversityChicago vs. University of Indiana .Chicago vs. University of IowaChicago vs. Central Y. M. C. A. at Central Y..M. C. A.Chicago vs. Purdue UniversityChicago vs. Wisconsin at Madison .Chicago vs. Central Y.'M. C. A.Chicago vs. Illinois at UrbanaChicago vs. NorthwesternChicago vs. Purdue at La Fayette .Chicago vs. Minnesota at MinneapolisChicago vs. Wisconsin ....Chicago vs. Northwestern at EvanstonChicago vs. Illinois ....Chicago vs. Wisconsin at Madison .Chicago vs. Minnesota . .Chicago vs. PennsylvaniaChicago vs. Pennsylvania at PhiladelphiaTotal points scored : Chicago, 721 ; Opponents, 392 35-2630-1049-1931-2360-2628-1349-1829-1017-2753-1117-2930-1435-2141- 631-1926-2324-1918-1042-1718-1622-1221-1816-15254iaakrtballClark (Captain)CobbJanuary 10January 18January 21January 24February 1February 6February 13February 28March 6March 14 The TeamFulkersonHalsey KeeferKlawans ParkerSturgeonThe RecordFreshmen vs. Morgan Park Academy . . . 16-18Freshmen vs. Lake High ...... 23-20Freshmen vs. Central Comets at Y. M. C. A. . . . 17-43Freshmen vs. Northwestern University Freshmen at Evanston 5-13Freshmen vs. Wilson Avenue Y. M. C. A. at Wilson AvenueY. M. C. A . . . 18-31Freshmen vs. Central Comets ...... 23-17Freshmen vs. DePaul University ..... 31-11Freshmen vs. Northwestern Freshmen 33-10Freshmen vs. Culver Military Academy . . . . 21-13Freshmen vs. Wilson Avenue . . . . . . 18-17256Etnnxn Emm IBB7Paul Rowley Gray (Captain)Frederick Whitslar CarrJames Burtis RansomRobert J. HartWinston Patrick HenryEty Sfctmta QUiamptmtalfipA victory for the Varsity in singles and doubles at the Western Inter-Collegiate Tournament won for Chicago the championship in tennis. It wasthe first of the series of victories which' made the past season so gloriouslymemorable in the annals of Maroon athletics. Captain Paul R. Gray won thesingles and he and Frederick W. Carr captured the doubles. Each wasrewarded with the Varsity "C." Captain Gray, though taking two straightsets from Loesch of Wisconsin, found his opponent a harder proposition thanRoehm proved to Carr. In the finals, Carr defaulted to Gray.Minnesota was defeated at Minneapolis 5-1 but heavy rains prevented oneof the contests with Wisconsin. At the end of the season, Robert J. Muir ofMinnesota was elected president and Carr secretary-treasurer of the WesternInter-Collegiate Tennis Association.257u■P s3oOJ3o o"r— HflojoT3fl"E,Iobecrjoo>^ojfr o flOJa;fla £ •r-HD o Ofl<uX! , i ' 'fl *" ^Co aj p~beTt aj. O<D CO o *flaj UX CDfl oCOPh r ) Tjrflfl r N CDo U »HPh Ph?h CDFi aj *hOj CO COrflo rfl '^-r-lCDflfl £ isCD^ flT3 5"iu ■£> aj OSCJ ^T3fl co ^ajvo voaj ^ o~^H VO T— to CO 00CJ CO^or-HOJ COCJ v£>A u o£ ^ r±H- ob/3G•i-iCO flajs Idrfl nda)i-51, S-HS-haj ^CJ ^O CJ vpcogin CJajJ-lo CO<Dr— iOQ oP4_-d 3?fl flaj ojM-Hrfl CDCJ T3 oTdpj 1J-)alr~->,a3 o"o ^Pu^Hcrj ^ A CNfl ifl ~S "9 flflCDbJO^J'£ >->J P OS CDP p ^UJJ*CD"3c3 T3flcvj ^ fl^ ^ *0 ?H ! oiCJ CJ CJ ':::::rV2CD ^ > ^ rrio O ^^ 'r^ ^1" JhHJ hJ VD O VP o^— v.h— 1 (Minn (la.) C£ OjOj v_1— ("^"^ Pi fH rfl rfl ^^ flCD (D o o >aj cdU Ph fl >P ^Han O CO ^HCD A .SPoCD Jh^ P^ ^ "^T3 coCD CDPh flOj 'drfl flI 2O pq bC J^'53 fl^§O a:EnnxtmmtntB6-2, 6-36-2, 6-38-6, 6-26-07-56-36-3. 7-57-5, 6-38-6, 8-66-i, 6-i6-2, 7-56-2, 6-21-6, 6-3, 7-57-5, 6-16-4The Tennis Ci.ub at MadisonChicago vs. Quadrangle Club, May 8-9, 1907SINGLESTorrey (Q) defeated Gray (C) 517)Carr (C) defeated Kinsley '(Q) ^Hobbs (Q) defeated Ransom (C) Hart (C) defeated Barnes (Q) 6_4 4_6Henry (C) defeated Milliken (Q) '.'.'.. (>-a,Dixon (Q) defeated Hostetter (C) .6-2'DOUBLESGray and Carr (C) defeated Hobbs and Torrey (Q)Dixon and Milliken (Q) defeated Henry and Hostetter .Kinsley and Michelson (Q) defeated Hart and Ransom (C)Score: Quadrangle Club 5; Chicago 4.Chicago vs. University of Illinois, May 11, 1907SINGLESCarr (C) defeated Kantz (I) Gray (C) defeated Yott (I) Ransom (C) defeated Parrin (I) Donohue (I) defeated Hart (C) DOUBLESGray and Carr (C) defeated Yott and Perrin (I) Kantz and Donohue (I) defeated Ransom and Hart (C)Score: Chicago 4; Illinois 2.Chicago vs. Aztecs, May IS, 1907SINGLESGray (C) defeated Ricker (A) Forstall (A) defeated Carr (C) Wilkens (A) defeated Henry (C) '.DOUBLESWilkens and Forstall (A) defeated Hart and Cass (C) 6-4, 6-1, 6-1Score: Aztecs, 3; Chicago, I.Chicago vs. University of Minnesota, at Minneapolis, May 20, 1907SINGLESCarr (C) defeated Potter (M) Pidgeon (M) defeated Ransom (C) Gray (C) defeated Muir (M) Henry (C) defeated Stone (M) DOUBLESRansom and Henry (C) defeated Potter and Stone (M) 6-3, 6-2Carr and Gray (C) defeated Muir and Pidgeon (M) . (,-$, 8-6Score: Chicago, 5; Minnesota, I.The University of Chicago Interscholastic Tennis Tournament, June 6-8, 1907SINGLESWon by Adams of Evanston Township High School by defeating Modisette of ClevelandEast High School, 1-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-2.DOUBLESWon by Adams and Moore of Evanston Township High School by defeating Kenfield andToy of Morgan Park Academy, 6-3, 6-2, 4-6, 3-6, 6-1. 6-4, 6-16-2, 6-1.1-6, 6-0, 8-66-1, 6-26-2, 3-6, 6-26-3. 3-6, 6-36-0, 6-4Aquattr EmmKnudson (Coach)FergusonLindsayBickelHirschl PrincellBrooksRohdeKahn Badenoch (Capt.)GoesHarperCareyDayHarattg SferarfoMade in Bartlett Tank40 Yard Swim Harper (1907) 23 seconds40 Yard Breast Stroke . . . Rohde 1908) 27 2-5 seconds60 Yard Swim . . . .' Harper (1908) 37 4- S seconds100 Yard Swim . . . Templeton (1905) I min. 13 secondsPlunge for Distance (new rules) . . Lindsay (1908) 52 feet160 Yard Relay . . . Cary, Bickel, Lindsay, Harper,(1908) 1 minute 33 seconds.260With swimming material plentiful but polo men scarce, Coach Knudsonturned out an aquatic team that won the much-coveted western championship. All three meets were won after severe contests and but one polo garnewas lost, Illinois being responsible for that. Chicago defeated Wisconsin,34 to 21, in the home tank, the Varsity scoring seven goals in polo to nonefor the Cardinals. This victory was followed by one more decisive over Illinois, the down-state men being trounced 38 to 8. In the return meet withthe state university, Chicago lost the polo game but managed to secureenough points in the swimming events to win the contest by a count of 26 to 20.In the spring meet of 1907, Pennsylvania captured all the firsts.40 Yards Swim . .40 Yards Breast60 Yards Swim .100 Yards SwimPlunge for DistanceRelax Race .40 Yards Swim .60 Yards Swim .100 Yards SwimPlunge for DistanceRelay Race . CHICAGO vs. WISCONSINAt Bartlett, February 1, 1908Osthoff (W)Rohde (C)OsthofT (W)Osthoff (W)Lindsay (C) Lindsay (C)Wittich (W)Llarper (C)Carv (C)Princell (C) Bickel (C)Ferguson (C)Kerr (W)Kerr (W)Lowell (W)Chicago (Carly, Bickel, Lindsay, Harper.)Water Polo : Chicago, 7 ; Wisconsin, 0.Total Score : Chicago, 34; Wisconsin, 21CHICAGO vs. ILLINOISAt Bartlett, Feburary 20, 1908Cary (C)Harper (C)Princell (C)Pillinger (I)Chicago ( Cary, Bickel (C) Flanders (I)Lindsay (C) Brooks (I)Day (C) Brooks (I)Lindsay (C) Bickel (C)Lindsay, Bickel, Harper)Polo Score : Chicago, 5 ; Illinois, 1Total Score : Chicago, 38 ; Illinois, 8 22 4-527 2-536 4-505 3-546 ft. 9 in.1:33:24 1-537 4-514 3-557 ft. 6 in.1 :33 2-550 Yards Swim .75 Yards Swim .100 Yards SwimPlunge for DistanceRelay Race . CHICAGO vs. ILLINOISAt Urbana, March 21, 1908Cary (C)Harper (C)Brooks (I)Pillinger (I)Chicago ( Cary, Lindsay (C) Vosburg (I)Brooks (I) Bickel (C)Princell (C) Day (C)Bickel (C) Lindsay (C)Bickel, Lindsay, Harper)Water Polo Score : Chicago, 0 ; Illinois, 2.Total Score : Chicago, 26 ; Illinois, 20. 31 1-553 1-519 2-556 ft. 4 in.2:08 3-5261(ErnBii Country EmmWith the biggest squad that has yet come out for a Varsity cross country team to work with, Captain Caldwell endeavored to wrest the westerninter-collegiate championship from Nebraska and Wisconsin November 23.The two visiting teams proved too fast company for Chicago, however. Caldwell himself was ill and unable to compete, and Johlin, Long, Morgan, Mac-Neish and Shuart were forced to take third place. Nebraska and Wisconsinfinished in the order named.The following is the makeup of the 1907 Cross Country Club : Karl P.Shuart, President; Fred C. Caldwell, captain; J. M. Johlin, Albert Long,John W. MacNeish, Freeman Morgan, L. A. Kling, L. K. Canouse, W. D.Dolan, W. H. Floyd, Norman Barker, F. E. Bernard, S. S. Visher, M. F. Carpenter, M. S. Tait and R. P. Sherer.A IEt\x (&ymtm&tu EmmThis year's gymnastic team was able to sit up a little and take somenourishment. At the meet at Madison, April 9, it took second clace beingdefeated by Wisconsin 31^2 to 10 but beating'Minnesota and Nebraska. Aninjury to Berndt prevented Captain Murrah's men from making a bettershowing.BmcnThe one outside game of the Varsity soccer team was played with Englewood High School, Captain Loose's men winning this by 4 to 0. Early snowfall prevented games with the Wanderers and the Hyde Park Blues.263is the latest sport to gain a foothold at the University. M. deBeauviere took a squad of students in hand, and after but two quarters ofwork entered a team in the A. A. U. championship contest. Though notwinning any points in the finals, the men made the various sectional champions work fast to beat them. The team was made up of S. Lescano, RoyBaldridge, F. O. Koepke, R. J. Kerner, and Walter Jones. R. R. Mix andT. C. Pease represented the University at rapier.The University golf team played only one inter-collegiate tournament in1907, and that was with the University of Wisconsin on the Wisconsin linksJune 1. Captain Hebbard, Harvey Meagher, Erwin Paul Zeisler and WalterH. Morse won from the Badger team, 4 to 3. The matches were played ina driving rain, but this handicap did not prevent the Chicago men from doingsensational work. The four Maroons who competed against Wisconsin received Varsity emblems at the end of the season.Annual Juntnr Sag Mttt'Monday, June 17, 1907The second Junior college field meet held on Marshall Field June 17/was fought out in the face of a strenuous gale. It became evident early thatthe affair was to be a dual between Philosophy and Science Colleges withArts and Literature picking up a few stray points. Philosophy won out,winning 57 points to 40 for Science, 18 for Arts and 7 for Literature.Summaries -Event First Second Third Time or distance100 Yard Dash . . Gaarde (S) Benton (P) Hainsfurther (L ) 0:11220 Yard Dash . Gill (S) Hains further (L' ) Freund (L) 0:26440 Yard Run . Tait (P) Davis (A) Kelley- (L) 0:58 3-5880 Yard Run . Loose (P) Long (A) Fridstein (P) 2:18 3-5One Mile Run . Morgan (A) Loose (P) Long (A) 5:14120 Yard Hurdles Davis (A) Sunderland (P) Morgan (A) ' 0:19220 Yard Hurdles Fishbein (S) iddings (S) Tait (P) 0:30 2-5Pole Vault . Hough (S) Page (S) • Resnick (P) 9 ft. 3 in.High Jump . . Thomas ( S ) Page (S) Hough (S) 5 ft. 1 in.Broad Jump . Benton (P) Sunderland (P) Whipp (L) 18 ft. 11 in.Shot Put . . . Silberman (P) Worthwine (P) Anderson (P) 31 ft. 1 in.Discus Throw . Sunderland (P^ Worthwine (P) Anderson (P) 91 ft. 3 in.Hammer Throw . Worthwine (P) Anderson (P) Silberman (P) 94 ft. 1 in.Half Mile Relay Science Philosophy Literature 1:44ifttfrr-lttteraig laskrtballStanding of the TeamsWon Lost Per Cent.Law 9 0 1.000Senior . . 7 3 .700Science 7 3 .700Philosophy 3 6 .333Arts 2 8 .200Literature 1 9 .100Inter-fraternity athletics were much more vigorous than before in theseason 1907-8. Chi Psi won the baseball championship and after a vigorouscontest, Delta Upsilon captured the bowling banner, Freeman Morgan having acquired a collection of prizes for individual work.265Atrjtettr CaptainsFootball Track1893 A. R. E. Wyant 1894 H. C. Halloway1894 C. W. Allen 1895 H. C. Halloway1895 C. W. Allen 1896 C. V. Bachelle1896 C. J.Roby 1897 F. F. Steigmeyer1897 C. B. Herschberger T. H. Patterson1898 W. S. Kennedy 1898 F. H. Calhoun1899 W. S. Kennedy 1899 B. B. Smith1900 Kellog Speed 1900 W. A. Moloney1901 J. R. Henry 1901 W. A. MoloneyJ. M. Sheldon 1902 F. G. Moloney1902 J. M. Sheldon 1903 J. P. Magee1903 A. C. Ellsworth 1904 C. A. Blair1904 F. A. Speik 1905 H. M. Friend1905 M. S. Catlin 1906 E. E. Parry1906 Walter Eckersall 1907 C. Russell1907 Leo De Tray 1908 R. L. Quigley1908 Walter Steffen N. A. MerriamBaseball Tennis1894 F. D. Nichols1895 H. D. Abells1896 H. D. Abells1897 H. T. Clarke1898 G. W. Sawyer1899 F. Merrifield1900 L. T. Vernon1901 T. B. Smith1902 F. E. Harper1903 F. E. Harper1904 C. R. Rowe1905 J- C. Harper1906 F. R. Baird1907 F. H. Templeton1908 F. W. Gaarde 1893 W. H. Pre scott1894 W. S. Bond1895 C. B. Nell1896 W. S. Bond1897 P. Rand1898 C. D. W. Halsey1899 E. L. Poulson1900 H. N. Gottlieb1901 P. P. Bruce1902 J. W. Bingham1903 J. W. Bingham1904 M. K. Moorehead1905 C. L. Garnett1906 C. L. Garnett1907 P. R. Gray1908 F. W. Carr266F. H. Templeton J. R. McCarthyF. M. Walker H. L. MeffordC. Russell C. F. WatsonS. W. Finger E. E. ParryW. H. EckersallTrackN. Barker W. McAvoyC. Russell S. A. LyonE. E. ParryBaseballF. H. Templeton J. P. SullivanF. M. Walker L. A. VanPattenH. G. Moulton W. H. EckersallCaptainsF. H. Templeton P. R. GrayC. Russell E. E. ParryW. H. Eckersall\nnn& of X\\t "WThe White "R" for FootballHerman John EhrhornWilliam Joseph SunderlandThe Orange "R" for TrackFred Cornelius CaldwellRobert Eddy MathewsMilo Myron ScheidKarl Park Shuart267athletics for women at the University . -of Chicago, Bartlett Gymnasium looms up with a grandeur which precludesany possible interest in the low building south of Lexington. But to thosewho have passed within its doors* have become acquainted with the department continually at work there, and have entered into its activities, the lowbuilding becomes one of the most interesting spots on the campus.. A littleancient history gives it even an aspect of grandeur; far from '98 and thecoming of Miss Dudley, to '08 and the erection of this building, the department was forced to move from a frame building on the present site of Man-del, to a church back of the building formerly occupied, to the presentpsychology . laboratory, and to the College of Education. In spite of thesemigrations and the numerous difficulties entailed, Miss Dudley succeeded inmaintaining a department which has shown steady growth from year to year.Today, Miss Dudley and her assistants carry on a wide range of work withsuch success that the department stands as one of the best in the country.Not only are classes and teams well organized and conducted, but they areconducted with an insistence upon high ideals which brings to every studentmuch besides mere physical training. It is a department which speaks sowell for itself, as a result of the past ten years, that it scarcely needs the warmcommendation so strongly felt by all the initiated.Closely allied with the activity of the department is the work of theWoman's Athletic Association. The present students owe the existence ofthe association to a strong nucleus of athletic students in 1904, whose purpose in organizing it was to secure cooperation with the department for thepromotion of the -physical and social activity of University women. It hasproved to be a most prosperous organization. For four years a carnival demanding the cooperation of a large number of women, has been held withmarked success. Various social activities have been carried on, the eventsof special interest this year being an opening reception and a floor warmingin the Fall quarter, and a reception to the new officers in the Winter quarter.The two traditions, however, which best embody the spirit of the Association, are the annual presentation of the "C" pins, and the Spring athleticbanquet.270From An Address Delivered Before The Club of Progressive Women of Chicago. By Sophronisba Breckinridge. "Friends, I repeat it, the Golden Age has dawned when woman has thrownoff the shakles of tradition, has left the Egypt of her bondage, fulfilled her destinedyears of wandering, and now has entered into the Canaan of her hopes. Sherejoices to behold the rising generation of her sex enjoying the blessed privileges forwhich she has striven. Let me cite in support of my optimistic views regarding thewoman of today an illustration which has come under my personal notice.Would that you might all have visited with me the woman's gymnasium of theUniversity of Chicago on the night of the annual carnival given by the Woman's Athletic Association of that institution. Such evidence of the ingenuity and versatility ofwoman's ability as was there displayed cannot be overlooked. By skillful hands thegymnasium was converted to a small theater, and there the women gave an entertainment wholly original both in production and presentation, with success whichmight well cause the confident Blackfriars pangs of envy.The performance was in the nature of a vaudeville program, well calculated todisplay the varied talents of the ambitious students. An artistic number by the Girl'sGlee Club was followed by a realistic rendition- of Holme's famous ballad of the"Oyster Man" with graceful delsarte accompaniment. There was an exhibition ofmechanical dolls which I am informed, the young ladies actually constructed themselves, representing, very faithfully I judge from their enthusiastic reception, certainrevered members of the faculty. There was a clog dance of wooden figures on vibrating platforms, skillfully manipulated by young women behind an intervening curtain.A comical musical number was given by two charming sisters in picturesque costume,and a complicated dance was performed by two young women in grotesquely interesting garb.Then came the musical sketch, written, staged, and presented by the young women.Here, in song and dance, four quarters of college life were characteristically portrayed by four choruses. There was the athletic spirit of autumn; — be it said to itscredit the University slights not the time-honored adage, "A sound mind in ahealth body." — There was the gentle influence which woman exerts in the socialworld— the theme of the winter chorus. There was the poetic conception of verdantyouth radiant in the springtime, daintily portrayed by a profusion of white gowns,broad-brimmed hats, and graceful garlands. There was the serious, earnestly purposethat pervades the campus in the summer months. If there be any who shake theirpessimistic heads in apprehension for the failing domesticity of the modern woman, Iwould add that the costumes worn were the creation of her needle as well as of hermind, and that the fragrant odor of steaming ( ?) coffee lured crowds into the adjoining building, where ample evidence of her skill in the culinary art was presented forsale. " Finis Extract.Attended annual dinner of Woman's Athletic Ass'n. The association, as I understand it, exists to promote a manual dexterity in hurling semi-clastic spheriods,and other forms of athletic diversion. Miss Thyrza Barton was toast-mistress — however, I could not feel that the specific gravity of the toasts was great, for eruptionsof laughter continued in spasmodic detonation throughout, thereby testing the relative density of her audience.President Judson was the first speaker. Mentioned — -ah, yes, baseball, I believe.—exactly, exactly — more spheroids — one most peculiar remark — ' 'brains in one's armsas well as head"— perfectly true — perfectly general- — perfectly meaningless. He hadscarcely concluded when a most peculiar phenomenon occurred among the youngladies — precisely — a simultaneous outburst of super-heated air, enthusiasm, etc.,producing a strangely volcanic vocal action of singular shrillness in reverberation- —most interesting. (Mem. — Do they do it often?) An interval of quiescence continueduntil another accumulation of heated vapor demanded a repetition of the phenomenon.Dr. Henderson spoke next. 'Athletics Relative to Home Life" — can't get hispoint of view at all.; — Professor Tarbell and I often remark that our Mary Bridget'smuscular development is quite sufficient — exactly — haven't had to summon the Dekesyet for assistance, but can not tell what might happen — some emergency where football men would be useful,I recalled my mind to the subject — I had been skimming over a few simpleproblems in the dissolution of aluminous ortho-silicate occuring in rhombic dodecahedrons — to Miss Jane Addams, who spoke most interestingly of the small park system —followed by Miss Dudley, who presented banners and small metallic symbols forathletic triumphs — (N. B.— Vocal phenomena more apparent) I trembled to thinkof the risks involved in these sports, owing to osseous f rangibility of the players.while discoursing to the young lady on my left on the Plutonic rock formations, shemurmured — "Not exactly Platonic?" "Then exactly not!" I .thundered, notingthe Daily Maroon reporter taking down my words.At last with a shock arising from some sudden violent impulse, whereby anundulation is propagated in various directions we rose from the table — exactly — theundulation might almost have been classified "Table-rock": — the oscillation becameof a subsiding nature, and our re-emergence completed the enumeration of eventsamid spontaneous enthusiasm.Finis of Extract.273Unman 0 Ath>tir AaisnriattnnOFFICERSEthel Preston , • . PresidentMargaret Bell Vice-PresidentMary Florence Lawson .... Secretary-TreasurerADVISORY BOARDMildred Chamberlain Joy Elizabeth FranklinElsie Schobinger Margaret Virginia RowbothamMary Cornelia Phister274nf % "GT f xm fnr 1907Mary F. HeapVesta JamesonAnna La VentureMary E. ArcherWillowdean ChattersonMary F. HeapBertha M. HendersonAvis IvorHattie R. AndersonMarie I. AveryAlice BraunlichBernice BurtFlorence J. ChaneyGertrude HiuzengaAlice JohnsonMary F. HeapFlorence Lawson BasketballFlorence LawsonEdith MarkleyMary McElroyMary MoranBaseballBertha LangMary McElroyCharlotte MerrillMary MoranMary MoynihanHockeyLouise B. LymanMary LynchMary McElroyAnna MontgomeryIda PerlsteinIrene PowersFlorence ScharfensteinEdna SchmidtGymnastic ContestMabel LeeTennisMabel Lee Grace P. NortonLouise C. NortonHelen F. PeckClara RobinsonAdelaide RoeJeanne M. RoeEthel TerryVesta UreyIndia E. SharpePersis SmallwoodMarguerite SyllaFlorence TrumballFlorence TyleyAlthea H. WarrenEleanor E. WhippleBessie O'ConnellEthel Preston(igmttastir CmttetMarch 16, 1907First, Mary Fiske HeapSecond, Margaret Bell .Third, Bessie O'Connell 21 points14 points10 pointsEventLadder (Form) '. . .High Jump(4 ft. 1 in.)Broad Jump .(13 ft. 8 in.)Flying Rings .Traveling RingsInclined Rope .(15 sec.)Horse ....Parallels . . . . .•Club Swinging (Advanced)ElementaryHORSEMary HeapMargaret BellBessie O'ConnellMildred Chamberlain FirstBessie O'ConnellFlorence Lawson(4 ft. 1 in.)Mabel Lee(13 ft. 1 in.)Mary HeapMary HeapEthel Preston(22.2 sec.)Mary HeapMary HeapEthel PrestonWillowdean ChattersonExhibitionPARALLEL BARSMary HeapMargaret BellBessie O'Connell Second ThirdEthel Preston Medora GooginsKatherine Slaught Margaret Heap(4 ft.) (3 ft. 11 in.)Margaret Bell Mary Pitkin(11 ft. 7 1-2 in.) (11 ft. 4 3-4 in.)Margaret BellMildred ChamberlainBessie O'ConnellMargaret Bell(23.2 sec.)Margaret Bell Bessie O'ConnellMargaret Bell • Bessie O'Connelli< lorence ManningEdna Shaw Anna La VentureMary HeapMargaret BellMildred ChamberlainInter-College RacesPOTATO RACEFirstSecondThirdFirstSecondThird S^CK RACE . Literature CollegeArts CollegePhilosophy CollegePhilosophy CollegeScience College. Literature CollegeMargaret BellFlorence Lawson. Mildred ChamberlainRELAY CLUB RACEFirst Science CollegeSecond Literature College .Third Philosophy College .JUNIOR- SENIOR BASKET THROWING CONTESTFirst — Junior College 17 BasketsSecond — Senior College 15 Baskets20-YARD DASHFirst — Junior College Margaret BellSecond — Senior College Mary McElroyTennis TournamentSemi-Finals FinalsDorothy KuhGrace Rosenfeld ) Kuh[ 6-2\ 6-4 BellMargaret Bell [ Belli Default Y 7-5j 6-0Gertrude Greenbaum J 1 ChallengesMiss Mabel Lee[ 6-04-67-5Mary F. HeapEdith Markley ...Vesta Jameson ...Mary McElroy (Capt.)Mary Moran ...Grace P. NortonJean BarnesGertrude Dickerman (Manager) iasskrtbaUThe TeamsPositionForwardsForwardsCenterGuardsGuardsSubstitutes JuniorHelen F. Peck. Anna La VentureMildred Chamberlain (Capt.). Florence LawsonMargaret BellLouise C. NortonRoma VogtMamie Lilly (Manager)senior2016n The ScoresMay 24May 31June 3 JUNIOR81314(Sptnasttr (EnntatMarch 16, 1907First, Mary Fiske ;HeapSecond, Margaret Bell .Third, Bessie O'Connell 21 points14 points10 pointsEventLadder (Form) '. . .High Jump(4 ft. 1 in.)Broad Jump .(13 ft. 8 in.)Flying Rings .Traveling RingsInclined Rope .(15 sec.)HorseParallels . . >Club Swinging (Advanced)Elementary FirstBessie O'ConnellFlorence .Lawson(4 ft. 1 in.)Mabel Lee(13 ft. 1 in.) •Mary HeapMary HeapEthel Preston(22.2 sec.)Mary HeapMary HeapEthel PrestonWillowdean Chatterson Second ThirdEthel Preston Medora GooginsKatherine Slaught Margaret Heap(4 ft.) (3 ft. 11 in.)Margaret Bell Mary Pitkin(11 ft. 7 1-2 in.) (11 ft. 4 3-4 in.)Margaret BellMildred ChamberlainBessie O'ConnellMargaret Bell(23.2 sec.)Margaret Bell Bessie O'ConnellMargaret Bell • Bessie O'Connelli< lorence ManningEdna Shaw Anna La VentureExhibitionhorse parallel bars ringsMary Heap Mary Heap Mary HeapMargaret Bell Margaret Bell Margaret BellBessie O'Connell Bessie O'Connell Mildred ChamberlainMildred ChamberlainInter-College RacesPOTATO RACEFirst . Literature CollegeSecond Arts CollegeThird Philosophy CollegeS4.CK RACEFirst Philosophy CollegeSecond Science CollegeThird Literature CollegeRELAY CLUB RACEFirst Science College Margaret BellSecond Literature College .... Florence LawsonThird Philosophy College .... Mildred ChamberlainJUNIOR-SENIOR BASKET THROWING CONTESTFirst — Junior College 17 BasketsSecond — Senior College 15 Baskets20-YARD DASHFirst — Junior College Margaret BellSecond — Senior College Mary McElroySemi-FinalsDorothy Kuh 1 Kuh6-26-4Bell Tennis To urnamentFinalsGrace RosenfeldMargaret Bell \ Bell1- 7-56-0Gertrude Greenbaum Default J ChallengesMiss Mabel Lee6-04-67-5SeniorMary F. HeapEdith Markley ...Vesta Jameson . . . ,Mary McElroy (Capt.)Mary Moran . . . .Grace P. NortonJean BarnesGertrude Dickerman (Manager)SENIOR2016n laatehallThe TeamsPositionForwardsForwardsCenterGuardsGuardsSubstitutesThe ScoresMay 24May 31June 3 JuniorHelen F. Peck. Anna La VentureMildred Chamberlain (Capt.). Florence LawsonMargaret BellLouise C. NortonRoma VogtMamie Lilly (Manager)junior1314SENIORMabel Lee (Capt.)Mary F. Moran .Ethel TerryBertha HendersonBertha LangMary MoynihanEdna KlineMary F. Heap .Mary McElroy . The TeamsPitcherCatcherFirst BaseSecond BaseThird BaseShort StopRight FieldCenter FieldLeft Field juniorAvis Ivor (Capt.)Anna KellyAdelaide Roe. Jeanne M. RoeVesta Urey'. Charlotte MerrillWillowdean ChattersonClara Robin son-Mary ArcherRuth Miller SubstitutesMarie Oury Nina YoemanUmpireScorers Marie OrtmayerRuth MillerNina YoemanThe Gameseniors \ juniors27 May 29 22278Baseball TeamSenior Baseball Team279Irene PowersAnna Montgomery .Florence ChaneyMarguerite Sylla (Capt/Hattie R. Anderson .Marie WilliamsEdna Schmidt .Althea H. Warren .Eleanor E. WhippleFlorence Trumball .Ida Perlstein . The TeamsRight WingRight InsideCenterLeft InsideLeft WingRight HalfCenter HalfLeft HalfRight Full BackLeft Full BackGoal juniorElizabeth McChesneyIndia E. SharpeFlorence Tyley (Capt.)Bernice BurtMary Lynch. Alice JohnsonFlorence ManningPersis Smallwood. Marie I. AveryLouise B. LymanFlorence ScharfensteinElizabeth StoneAlice BraunlichAnna Lauren SubstitutesEthel HanksGertrude Huizenga Mildred WeilMyrtle MeyerJulia ReichmanThe Gamessenior junior2 May 29 21 May 31 12 June 5 1Field Umpires Marie Ortmayer, H. L. LivermoreGoal Umpires Gertrude Dudley, Sarah GuyerTimekeeper Gertrude DudleyScorers Anna Lauren, Gertrude Huizenga280Hockey TramSenior Hockey TeamSrita SCajtpa Ejtjstlcttpji 2Cappa ifotSeta Styrta ftAljrfja Sriia ptftii>tgma (Eljtpfi S*lta 2ty*iaSriia ®a« SritaS*Iia HpmUmpji (gamma IritaSigma Alplja EjraiiflttS>igma N«ICappa SigmaAljrfya ®a« ©m?gapyi SCappa SigmaNtt Sigma £fapji JUja SigmaAtptja SCappa SCappapjiibiafiStatupji Aljrtja Srifaftp Sriia pjiSrita Olijri(Ikaimatp(gamma AljrfjaBcbatrIrita Sigma SS,tjrnHc CLTIB.G & CDHHuppu IgtrfhmFounded at Yale University, 1844Rol] of ChaptersPhi . . . . . Yale UniversityTheta . . . . . Bowdoin CollegeXi . . . . . Colby CollegeSigma . . . Amherst CollegeGamma . ". . Vanderbilt UniversityPsi . . University of AlabamaUpsilon Brown UniversityChi . ... . University of MississippiBeta University of North CarolinaEta . University of VirginiaKappa . . . . Miami UniversityLambda . . . . . . . Kenyon CollegePi Dartmouth CollegeIota . Central University of KentuckyAlpha Alpha . . ■ . Middlebury CollegeOmicron . . . University of MichiganEpsilon . . . Williams CollegeRho . . Lafayette CollegeTan . . . Hamilton CollegeMn . . . . Colgate CollegeNu . . '■.'. . College of the City of New YorkBeta Phi. -. . . University of RochesterPhi Chi . . —. . Rutgers CollegePsi Phi De Pauw UniversityGamma Phi . . . Wesleyan UniversityPsi Omega . . . . Rennselaer Polytechnic InstituteBeta Chi . . Adelbert CollegeDelta Chi . . . . . . Cornell UniversityDelta Delta . . . . . University of ChicagoPhi Gamma . Syracuse UniversityGamma Beta . . Columbia UniversityTheta Zeta . University of CaliforniaAlpha Chi . . Trinity CollegePhi Epsilon . University of MinnesotaSigma Tau . Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTau Lambda Tulane UniversityAlpha Phi . . University of TorontoDelta Kappa . . , University of Penn.Tau Alpha . . . McGill UniversitySigma Rho . . . . . . . Stanford UniversityDelta Pi . . . . . University of IllinoisRho Delta . : . University of Wisconsin287Delta ChapterEstablished December 10, ig8jThe FacultyFrank Frost Abbott, Yale, '82Charles Otis Whitman, Bowdoin, '68Frank Bigelow Tarbell, Yale, '73George Edgar Vincent/ Yale, '85Addison Webster Moore, DePauw, '90Ernest Leroy Caldwell, Yale, '87Henry Gordon Gale, Chicago, '96Charles Porter Small, Colby, '86Shailer Mathews, Colby, '84Harry Pratt Judson, Williams, '70 Nathaniel Butler, Colby, '73Albion Woodbury Small, Colby, '76James Rowland Angell, Michigan, '90Hiram Parker Williamson, .Middlebiiry, '96Walter Wallace Atwood, Chicago, '97Percy Bernard Eckhart, Chicago, '98Carl Darling Buck, Yale, '86Preston Keyes, Bowdoin, '96Henry Varnum Freeman, Yale, '69Franklin Winslow Johnson, Colby, '91Samuel Sweeney MacClintock, Chicago, '96The Graduate SchoolsWilliam Riggs Trowbridge Thurlow Gault EssingtonRussel Morse Wilder Herman Augustus SpoehrDonald Putman Abbott James Herbert MitchellFletcher Olin McFarlandThe CollegesMaurice Charles PincoffsMax Spencer RohdeNorman Edward BarkerWellington Downing JonesArthur Albert GoesMarcus Andrew HirschlCole Yates RoweRenslow Parker ShererEugene CaryWilliam Joseph SunderlandAlbert Nathaniel ButlerHarry Osgood LathamCharles Lyle BarnesPaul Bethard Heflin Josiah James PeguesJoseph BordenPaul Edgerton GardnerCharles Russell GilbertWalter Harper Simpson -Richard Yates RoweEdward Bernard HallWilliam Raymond MorrisWalter Clark LorenzChauncey Howells AlbrightSydney GardinerRufus Boynton RogersThomas Hodgson HenengeAllen Parker McFarlandCharles Albert CarltonArthur Hoge Bishop PledgedWilliam Henry ThayerFrank James Coyle2884^1 ^^^k^v^ft*0 K. Aff ^ ■« ^1 K**V « J^K*PennsylvaniaPennsylvaniaPennsylvaniaPennsylvaniaPennsylvaniaPennsylvaniaPennsylvaniaPennsylvania AlphaBetaGammaEpsilonZetaEta .ThetaIotaKappaNew Hampshire AlphaMassachusetts AlphaRhode Island AlphaNew York Alpha .New York Beta .New York GammaNew York EpsilonNew York ZetaMaryland Alpha .Virginia AlphaVirginia BetaWest Virginia AlphaMississippi AlphaTennessee DeltaTexas AlphaOhio Alpha .Ohio Beta .Ohio Delta .Ohio EpsilonIndiana Alpha .Indiana BetaIndiana DeltaIllinois AlphaIllinois Beta .Illinois DeltaMichigan AlphaWisconsin AlphaWisconsin GammaMinnesota BetaIowa Alpha .Kansas AlphaNebraska AlphaCalifornia BetaCalifornia Gamma t SCapjra PsiChapter RollDistrict IWashington and Jefferson UniversityAllegheny CollegeBucknell University"Gettysburg CollegeDickinson College. Franklin and Marshall CollegeLafayette College. University of Pennsylvania. Swarthmore CollegeDistrict IIDartmouth CollegeAmherst CollegeBrown UniversityCornell University. Syracuse University. Columbia UniversityColgate UniversityBrooklyn Polytechnic InstituteDistrict III. Johns Hopkins University. University of Virginia. Washington and Lee University. University of West VirginiaUniversity of Mississippi. Vanderbilt UniversityUniversity of TexasDistrict IV. Ohio Wesleyan UniversityWittenberg CollegeUniversity of Ohio. Case School of 'Applied Science. . . ~. DePauw University. . . University of Indiana.t . Purdue UniversityNorthwestern University. University of Chicago. University of IllinoisUniversity of MichiganDistrict VUniversity of WisconsinBeloit CollegeUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of IowaUniversity of KansasUniversity of Nebraska. Leland Stanford, Jr., UniversityUniversity of California291Kappa PatIllinois Beta ChapterThe FacultyDavid Judson Lingle Theodore Lee NeffClarke Butler Whittier George Lincoln HendersonTheodore Gerald SoaresThe Graduate SchoolsEdwin Roy Murphy Heilman WadsworthGustav Leroy Kaufman Frederick BusbyTheGeorge Custer BlissRobert Brent SullivanSydney Walker, Jr.Lucien CaryLeverett Samuel LyonHarold William CanningRoy James MaddiganKarl Park ShuartJames Burrell Meigs CollegesGeorge Henry SheldonGeorge William RothWilliam Edward McGrathGeorge Ralph McAuliffWilliam Burchard DayEdward Tyler SturgeonRobert Walter BoydArnold McEwen KentCarson Paul ParkerJohn Menaugh PledgedGay Harrington292Styrfa PtRollMiami UniversityCincinnati University .Western Reserve UniversityOhio UniversityWashington and Jefferson CollegeDe Pauw UniversityIndiana UniversityUniversity of MichiganWabash CollegeCentral UniversityBrown UniversityHampden-Sidney CollegeUniversity of North CarolinaOhio Wesleyan UniversityHanover CollegeKnox CollegeUniversity of VirginiaDavidson CollegeBethany CollegeBeloit CollegeUniversity of IowaWittenberg CollegeWestminster CollegeIowa Wesleyan UniversityUniversity of ChicagoDenison UniversityWashington UniversityUniversity of WoosterUniversity of KansasUniversity of WisconsinNorthwestern UniversityDickinson CollegeBoston UniversityJohns Hopkins UniversityUniversity of California ChaptersKenyon CollegeRutgers CollegeCornell UniversityStevens Institute of TechnologySt. Lawrence UniversityUniversity of MaineUniversity of PennsylvaniaColgate UniversityUnion UniversityColumbia UniversityAmherst CollegeVanderbilt UniversityUniversity of TexasOhio State UniversityUniversity of NebraskaPennsylvania State CollegeUniversity of DenverUniversity of SyracuseDartmouth CollegeUniversity of MinnesotaWesleyan UniversityUniversity of MissouriLehigh UniversityYale UniversityLeland Stanford, Jr., UniversityUniversity of West VirginiaUniversity of ColoradoBowdoin CollegeWashington S/tate UniversityUniversity of IllinoisPurdue UniversityCase School of Applied ScienceIowa State UniversityUniversity of TorontoOklahoma State Universityatyrta pThe Lambda Rho ChapterEstablished January 25, i8g4The FacultyArthur Fairchild Barnard, Beloit, '93Edward Emerson Barnard, Vanderbilt, '87Charles Reid Barnes, Hanover, '77 .Clarence Fassett Castle, Denison, '80.John Milton Dodson, Wisconsin, '80William Pierce Gorsuch, Knox, 98Charles Richmond HendersonWilliam Bishop Owen, Denison, '87Brown Pusey, Vanderbilt, '89Terome Hall Raymond, Northwestern, '92Rollin D. Salisbury, Beloit, '81Francis Wayland Shepardson, Denison, '82Herbert Ellsworth Slaught, Colgate, '83James Hayden Tufts, Amherst, '84Charles Newton Zueblin, Northwestern, '87The Graduate SchoolsRoswell Talmadge Pettit Ralph MillerPaul McKibben Tyler OglesbyAlbrecht Kipp. Albert HoughtonJesse WilliamsonThe CollegesJohn Carlton Burton Albert Stoneman LongWilliam Francis Hewitt Hobart Russell HunterWaldo Curyea Walker Paul William ChartersEdward Leyden McBride J a: Reichelt ClarkHarold Cushman Gifford George Thomas ShayHarry Johnson Schott John Mason Houghland-William Theron Carter Elmer Hugh LewisHoward Haselton Wikoff Wilbur Mattery, Jr.Charles Melville Bacon Richard Charles HalseyJohn Edward GilroyPledgedWill Boaz296Stella..IriiafijiFounded at Hamilton College^ 1832Roll of ChaptersHamilton CollegeColumbia UniversityBrown University. . . Yale CollegeAmherst CollegeWestern Reserve UniversityBowdoin College. Dartmouth CollegeUniversity of MichiganUniversity of RochesterWilliams CollegeCollege of the City of New YorkWesleyan CollegeKenyon College. Union CollegeCornell UniversityTrinity CollegeJohns Hopkins University. University of MinnesotaUniversity of TorontoUniversity of Chicago. McGill UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin2991? Ita fljtThe Chicago ChapterThe FacultyThomas W. Goodspeed, Rochester, 163Alonzo K. Parker, Rochester, '66Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin, Peninsular, '82Ferdinand Schwill, Yale, '85Edgar J. Goodspeed, Chicago, '90Gordon J. Laing, Johns Hopkins, '96Joseph E. Raycroft, Chicago, '97Joseph Hayes, Amherst, '03Edward O. L. Brown, Chicago, '03The Graduate SchoolsSchulyer Baldwin Terry, '05 Horace Gardner Reed, '07Fred Carroll Elston, '06 Benjamin Davis, '07The CollegesArthur Gibbon Bovee Silas Alfred TuckerHarold Henry Schlabach James Allan RossFrank Herbert Templeton William Alexander Lyti.eMax Lewis Richards Samuel Edwin EarlePaul Vincent Harper Everett Lyle PatchenThomas S. Miller Roberts Bishop OwenMitchell Thompson Daniels Arthur Wellington WheelerWalter Phillips Com stock Elmer Wade BeattyFrederick Whitslar Carr Robert Pollock BakerPatrick Frank Buckley Frank Harris ShacklefordMansfield Ralph Cleary Edward Templeton TaylorJames Elbert TownsendPledgedLee Wellington Pardridge Harry Fox Parker300^gXc&ttS-;/3 r a c h n r-0H|tFounded at Miami University ; i8jjRoll of ChaptersAlpha . . . ■. . ... . . . Miami UniversityBeta . . . . . • • . . . University of WoosterGamma . . . Ohio Wesleyan UniversityEpsilon . . . . . . . • George Washington UniversityZeta ........ Washington and Lee UniversityEta • . . University of MississippiTheta . •. Pennsylvania CollegeKappa . . .... . . . . . Bucknell UniversityLambda . . . . . . . •. . . Indiana UniversityMu . . . . . . • • • • Dennison UniversitvXi • • • DePauw UniversityOmicron . . . . . . . . . . . Dickinson CollegeRho . . . . . . . - • • Butler CollegePhi . . . . . . . • • ... Lafayette CollegeChi . . . . . . ... • • . . Hanover CollegePsi . . . . . . . . . . . University of VirginiaOmega . . . . . . • • Northwestern UniversityAlpha Alpha . . . . . . . . . . . Hobart CollegeAlpha Beta University of CaliforniaAlpha Gamma . Ohio State UniversityAlpha Epsilon . . University of NebraskaAlpha .Zeta . Beloit CollegeAlpha Eta . . . . . . . . State University of IowaAlpha Theta . . . . . . Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyAlpha Iota . . . . ... . . . Illinois WesleyanAlpha Lambda .... . . . University of WisconsinAlpha Nu . , . . . . . . . . University of TexasAlpha Xi University of KansasAlpha Omicron Tulane UniversityAlpha Pi . .... . . . . . Albion CollegeAlpha Rho . . . . . . . . . Lehigh UniversityAlpha Sigma . ... . . . . University of MinnesotaAlpha Upsilon . . . . . . . University of S. CaliforniaAlpha Phi . . Cornell UniversityAlpha Chi ........ Pennsylvania State CollegeAlpha Psi . . . ... . . . Vanderbilt UniversityAlpha Omega Leland Stanford, Jr., UniversityBeta Gamma . . . . . . . . . . Colorado CollegeDelta Delta . . . . . . . . . Purdue UniversityZeta Zeta . . . . . . . . . Central UniversityZeta Psi . . ... . . . • . University of CincinnatiEta Eta . . . Dartmouth CollegeTheta Theta . . . . . . . . University of MichiganKappa Kappa . . . . . . . . University of IllinoisLambda Lambda . . . . . . . . Kentucky . State CollegeMu Mu . . . . . . . . . West Virginia UniversityNu Nu . . . . . ..... Columbia UniversityXi Xi . University of the State of MissouriOmicron Omicron . . . . . . . . University of ChicagoRho Rho . . . . . . . . . University of MaineTau Tau . . . . . . .... Washington UniversityUpsilon Upsilon .... . . . University of WashingtonPhi Phi . . . . . . . . . University of PennsylvaniaPsi Psi . . . . . . . . . . Syracuse UniversityOmega Omega . . . . . . . University of Arkansas303Omicron ChapterEstablished January 23, i8q7The FacultyJames Parker Hall, Cornell, '94 Newman Miller, Albion, '93Solomon Henry Clark, Chicago, '97 George Amos Dorsey, Dennison,Frank Miners, AlbionThe Graduate SchoolsArthur H. ParmaleeFrederick Leroy HudsonWillis A. Chamberlain Herbert HughesGeorge Lewis YapleEarl De Witt HostetterKarl Hale DixonJudson Gerald BennettHerschel Gaston ShawEugene Corthell HoadleyCarl Henry ChristophFrank Theodore WendtJohn Wilson McNeish Julius Ernest LacknerThe CollegesHerman John ChehornHume Cassius YoungFrank Oswald KoepkeLeonard Ward CoulsonStephen Roswell SpencerArthur Carl HoffmanEverett Milton RobinsonGlenn Myers WatersGilbey Kelly Mehagan PledgedHedley Heber CooperDaniel Francis Hayes304i*ltaFounded at Miami IRoll of ChUniversity of IndianaUniversity of WisconsinButler UniversityFranklin CollegeUniversity of MichiganDePauw UniversityUniversity of MissouriUniversity of GeorgiaIowa Wesleyan UniversityCornell UniversityUniversity of CaliforniaRandolph-Macon CollegePennsylvania CollegeVanderbilt UniversityUniversity of MississippiLombard CollegeAllegheny CollegeDickinson CollegeUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of KansasOhio State^ UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaColby CollegeDartmouth CollegeCentral UniversitySouthwestern UniversityWashington and Lee UniversityBrown UniversityWashington UniversityPurdue UniversityCase School of Applied ScienceUniversity of WashingtonMcGill UniversityGeorgia School of TechnologyUniversity of Toronto niversity, 1848Wabash CollegeNorthwestern UniversityOhio Wesleyan UniversityHanover CollegeUniversity of ChicagoOhio UniversityKnox CollegeEmory CollegeMercer UniversityLafayette CollegeUniversity of VirginiaUniversity of NebraskaWashington and Jefferson CollegeLehigh UniversityUniversity of AlabamaAlabama Polytechnic InstituteUniversity of VermontWestminster CollegeUniversity of IowaUniversity of the SouthUniversity of TexasUnion UniversityColumbia UniversityUniversity of North CarolinaWilliams CollegeSyracuse UniversityAmherst CollegeTulane UniversityLeland Stanford, Jr., UniversityUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of CincinnatiKentucky State CollegeUniversity of ColoradoPennsylvania State CollegeUniversity of South Dakota307if Ita ®Ip>iaThe Illinois Beta ChapterFounded February 18. 1897The FacultyJohn Wildman Moncrief, Franklin, '72 Karl Tinsley Waugh, Ohio Wesleyan, '00Otis William Caldwell, Franklin, '94 Oscar Riddle, Indiana, '02Arnold Bennett Hall, Franklin, '04The Graduate SchoolsPorter Hodge Linthicum Robert Young JonesWalter LeRoy Runyan Evarts Ambrose GrahamCharles Alfred Hobbs Erastus Smith EdgertonLee Matthew Ryan Glenn Worthy PutnamHenry Ellsworth Ewing Earl Bloodgood FowlerGordon Lytte^l StewartThe CollegesWalter Peter SteffenBernard Herman KrogLloyd Leonard MosserPaul Philip Rohns\ Ariel Frederick CardonEarle Putnam BerryGeorge Gilbert BuhmannJohn Dayhuff Ellis Lyman Keith GouldElmore Waite Phelps William Redfield Perrin, Jr.Eugene Basil Eastburn Calvin Otis SmithPreston NibleyRobert Taylor RadfordFrederick George EberhardJames Ora NibleyEdwin Philbrook McLeanRaymond Joseph MaddenCecil Delbert StoneDonald Stirling StophletPledgedBartlett Hagemeyer308si HjurtUmFounded 183?Roll of ChaptersUnion CollegeNew York University. Yale UniversityBrown University. Amherst CollegeDartmouth CollegeColumbia College. Bowdoin CollegeHamilton CollegeWesleyan UniversityUniversity of Rochester. Ken3^on CollegeUniversity of MichiganSyracuse UniversityCornell University. Trinity CollegeLehigh UniversityUniversity of Pennsylvania* University of MinnesotaUniversity of Wisconsin. University of ChicagoUniversity of California311IpatlimThe Omega ChapterEstablished November 24, r8gyThe FacultyFrances Adelbert Blackburn, Michigan, '68Charles Richmond Henderson, Chicago, '70Robert Francis Harper, Chicago, '83Eliakim Hastings Moore, Yale, '85George Carter Howland, Amherst, '85Amos Alonzo Stagg, Yale, '88Percy Holmes Boynton, Amherst, '97The Graduate SchoolsBernard Joseph O'Neill, Michigan, 1900Herbert W. Hill, California, '00Arthur Evarts Lord, Chicago, '04Henry Foster Adams, Wesleyan, '05Francis Joseph Neef, Chicago, '05Edward Smiler Oliver, Kenyon, '05John Wesley Tope, Chicago, '06James Vincent Hickey, Chicago, '06The CollegesWilliam Patterson MacCracken, Jr. James Francis MeagherHenry Buell Roney Ralph E. LidsterHarvey Edward Meagher Harold Bertram SmithBenjamin Harrison Badenoch Harry Glenn StibbsNeil Mackay Gunn Ole Bernhardt BergersenPhilip Jerome Reddy Hermann Root KernFrancis Madison Orchard Albert Heckman StraubeFrank John Collings M. Arthur JohnstonEugene Fields Gregory George Hoag RoulstonGeorge Herbert Lindsay La Verne George Hurd312t#wjfcfr jfeglR*lf~ ffc* »*j* ►«*^H*r■Ml f>^wfcjgt"-Slau It ItaFounded at Bethany College, i8$gRoll of ChaptersAlpha . .. .. . Allegheny CollegeGamma Washington and Jefferson CollegeBeta .Ohio UniversityMu . . Ohio Wesleyan UniversityKappa Hillsdale CollegeBeta Alpha . . University of IndianaDelta . . University of MichiganBeta Beta . . De Pauw UniversityBeta Upsilon . University of IllinoisBeta Psi . , . . .Wabash CollegeRho . . . Stevens Institute of TechnologyBeta Lambda Lehigh UniversityNu ... La Fayette CollegeBeta Zeta Butler CollegeEpsilon . . . Albion CollegeUpsilon . Renssealaer Polytechnic InstituteOmicron University of I©waChi . Kenyon CollegeBeta Epsilon Emory CollegeBeta Theta . . University of the SouthZeta . Adelbert CollegeBeta Eta University of MinnesotaBeta Kappa University of ColoradoPi University of MississippiLambda . Vanderbilt UniversityBeta Iota . University of VirginiaBeta Gamma University of WisconsinBeta Mu . . . Tufts CollegeBeta Nu Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyBeta Xi . . . . Tulane UniversityBeta Omicron . . Cornell UniversityBeta Pi Northwestern UniversityBeta Rho . . Leland Stanford Jr. UniversityBeta Tau .. University of NebraskaBeta Phi . . Ohio State UniversityBeta Chi Brown. UniversityPhi . . Washington and Lee UniversityOmega . University of PennsylvaniaBeta Omega University of CaliforniaGamma Alpha . University of ChicagoGamma Beta . Armour Institute of TechnologyGamma Gamma Dartmouth CollegeGamma Delta . University of West VirginiaGamma Zeta . . . Wesleyan UniversityGamma Epsilon Columbia UniversityGamma Theta . Baker UniversityGamma Iota University of TexasGamma Kappa . . University of Missouri®au leltaThe Gamma Alpha ChapterEstablished A/ay, i8g8The FacultyWallace Heckman, Hillsdale College, '74Herbert Lockwood Willett, Bethany College, '86John Paul Goode, University of Minnesota, r89Theodore Ballou Hinckley, Chicago, '04.The Graduate SchoolsWilliam James Galbraith, Jr., Leland StanfordWilliam E. S. Bedford, Baker UniversityAlbert Blaine Enoch, ChicagoClarke Candee Steinbeck, ChicagoThe CollegesCharles Butler Jordan Harlan Orville PageE. Raymond Bliss, Jr. Frank Welles BedfordDaniel Webster Ferguson Floyd Price WillettGeorge Angus Garrett William Henry Rothermel, Jr.Webster Jay Lewis Donald Guild CrightonJames Davis Lightbody Frances Foster PattonHerbert Simeon Hough Ralph Benjamin CobbRussell Tuttle Elwell Frank Allan PaulPerry Dakin Trimble John William MillerPledgedElkan Harrison Powell Carl DegenhardtRobert Duraine Gottfried316■*i:& ^Z^ukp^ft- ~"**M■■***Founded at Union, 1841Roll of ChaptersPi ......... Union CollegeTheta . . Williams CollegeMu Middlebury CollegeAlpha . Wesleyan UniversityPhi Hamilton CollegeEpsilon University of MichiganChi . Amherst Coll eg.,'Psi Cornell UniversityTau . Wafford CollegeNu University of MinnesotaIota University of WisconsinRho . Rutgers CollegeXi . Stevens InstituteAlpha Delta . University of GeorgiaBeta Delta Lehigh UniversityGamma Delta ' Stanford UniversityDelta Delta . University of CaliforniaEpsilon Delta 1 . University of Chicago319fatThe Alpha Epsilon Delta ChapterEstablished November 25, i8g8The FacultyJohn Mathews Manly> Turman, '83 Walter A. Payne, Chicago, '95The CollegesStirling Bruce Parkinson Howard Painter BlackfordAdelbert Moody Hurnard Jay KennerDean Scott Benton Frank Rice PowellHannibal Harlow Chandler, Jr. Clarke Bruce RichieEugene Talbot, Jr. Richard Edwin MeyersWinston Patrick Henry Frederick Blantford BateRobert Osgood Brown320tia HjmtlmtFounded at Williams College, 1834Roll of Chapters 'Williams HarvardUnion WisconsinHamilton LafayetteAmherst ColumbiaAdelbert LehighColby TuftsRochester DePauwMiddlebury PennsylvaniaBowdoin MinnesotaRutgers TechnologyBrown SwarthmoreColgate StanfordNew York CaliforniaCornell McGillMarietta NebraskaSyracuse TorontoMichigan ChicagoNorthwestern Ohio StateIllinois323%atlonThe Chicago ChapterThe FacultyJames Westfall Thompson, Rutgers,Philip Schuyler Allen, Williams, '91Benjamin Terry, Colgate, '78Charles Edmund Hewitt, Rochester,Thomas Atkins Jenkins, Swarthmore,Bertram G. Nelson, Chicago, '02Charles Henry Van Tuyl, Chicago, '03Arthur Eugene Bestor, Chicago, '01 f92 Joseph Parker Warren, Harvard, '96Trevor Arnett, Chicago, '98Harvey Foster Mallory, Colgate, '98'60 Robert Morss Lovett, Harvard, '92'87 Gerald Birney Smith, Brown, '91Samuel Johnston, Colgate, '84Howard Taylor Ricketts, Northwestern, '94Clarence Addison Dykstra, Iowa State, '05The Graduate SchoolsCharles Arthur Bruce, Chicago, '06Harvey Brace Lemon, Chicago, '06 Harry S. Gradle, Michigan, '06Henry Gustav Watters, California, '06Floyd Erwin BernardLuther Dana FernaldGeorge Elmer FullerHarvey Benjamin Fuller,Alfred Charles HicksPaul King JudsonClarence RussellGeorge John UlrichBradford GillAlbert Dean HendersonLe Roy Albert KlingFreeman Ernest MorganOswald Frithiof NelsonCh The CollegesPaul PostWillis Sage AdamsJ. Craig BowmanJr. Edward John DykstraWarren Dunham FosterDean "Madison KennedyFrancis Harvey WellingHilmar Baukhage'Morris Henry BriggsPaul Hazlitt DavisFrederick Vincent DegenhartJohn Douglas ScottAlfred Edward Stokesarles Oliver WoodPledgedCharles Watts, '11324«*4*~&*& H&damma iritaFounded at Washington and Jefferson College, 184^Roll of ChaptersUniversity of MaineWorcester Polytechnic Institute Brown UniversityDartmouth CollegeTrinity CollegeColumbia UniversityColgate UniversityUnion CollegeUniversity of PennsylvaniaLehigh CollegeBucknell UniversityPennsylvania State UniversityWashington and Lee UniversityWashington and Jefferson CollegeWooster UniversityDenison UniversityOhio State UniversityIndiana UniversityHanover CollegeWabash CollegeBethel CollegeUniversity of TexasKnox CollegeUniversity of MichiganUniversity of MinnesotaWilliam Jewell CollegeUniversity of KansasUniversity of CaliforniaMassachusetts Institute of Technology Amherst CollegeYale UniversityNew York UniversityCornell UniversitySyracuse "UniversityLafayette CollegeJohns Hopkins UniversityGettysburg CollegeUniversity of VirginiaRichmond CollegeAllegheny CollegeAdelbert CollegeWittenberg CollegeOhio Wesleyan UniversityDePauw UniversityPurdue UniversityUniversity of TennesseeUniversity of AlabamaIllinois Wesleyan UniversityUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of WisconsinUniversity of ChicagoUniversity of MissouriUniversity of NebraskaUniversity of WashingtonLeland Stanford Jr. UniversityIowa State University327(gamma Se ItaChi Upsilon ChapterEstablished May ig, igo2The FacultyJohn Merle Coulter, Hanover, 77 John Maxwell Crowe, Hanover, '90Joseph Paxson Iddings, Sheffield, '77 David Allan Robertson, Chicago, '02Tilden Hendricks Stearns, Brown, '03 William Kelley Wright, Amherst, '01Rollin Thomas Chamberlin, Chicago, '03The Graduate SchoolsFrederic Rogers BairdWilliam Jacob CuppyCharles Darwin EnfieldRobert Bain FIasner .Charles Walter PaltzerVail Eugene PurdyJohn William ThomsonThe CollegesWilson Albert AustinWillard LeRoy BrooksEdward Raymond DeBothLeo Cartar DeTrayJohn Flint DilleStanley Knickerbocker FayeWilliam Conrad GehrmannEarle Albert GoodenowHerbert Groff HopkinsHarold George IddingsKarl Fenton KeeferHerbert Anthony KellarGerard Nicholas KrostCarl Hamann LambachHargrave Aretas LongWarren Bastian McLaughlinJohn McVey MontgomeryCola George ParkerCharles Lee Sullivan328Alplja lEpatttmFounded at the University of Alabama, March g, 1856Roll of ChaptersUniversity of MaineBoston UniversityMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyHarvard UniversityWorcester Polytechnic InstituteCornell UniversityColumbia UniversitySt. Stephen's CollegeAllegheny CollegeDickinson CollegePennsylvania State CollegeBucknell UniversityGettysburg CollegeUniversity of PennsylvaniaGeorge Washington UniversityUniversity of VirginiaWashington and Lee UniversityUniversity of North CarolinaDavidson CollegeWofford CollegeUniversity of MichiganAdrian CollegeMt. Union CollegeOhio Wesleyan UniversityUniversity of CincinnatiOhio State UniversityCase School of ScienceFranklin CollegePurdue UniversityCentral UniversityBethel CollegeKentucky State CollegeSouthwestern Presbyterian UniversityUniversity of TennesseeUniversity of the South Northwestern UniversityUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of ChicagoUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of WisconsinUniversity of IndianaSyracuse UniversityUniversity of GeorgiaMercer UniversityEmory CollegeGeorgia School of TechnologySouthern UniversityUniversity of AlabamaAlabama Polytechnic InstituteUniversity of MissouriWashington UniversityUniversity of NebraskaUniversity of ArkansasUniversity of KansasUniversity of IowaIowra State CollegeUniversity of ColoradoDenver UniversityColorado School of MinesLeland Stanford Jr. UniversityUniversity of CaliforniaUniversity of WashingtonLouisiana State UniversityTulane UniversityUniversity of MississippiUniversity of TexasCumberland UniversityVanderbilt University. Southwestern Baptist UniversityDartmouth33iAlplja lEpBihmIllinois Theta ChapterEstablished March g, igo3The Graduate SchoolsGeorge Owen Fairweather Russeil Phillip SchulerNorman Hathaway Pritchard Harry Lewis WiemanHollis Elmer Potter Ivan Lee HoltFrederick Joseph Leseman Fred Edgerton AbbottThe CollegesMelbourne ClementsFrank James O'BrienClyde Ernest StackhouseHarry Halstead HarperRobert Lyle AllisonNed Alvin MerriamStuart Munson ChambersNathaniel RubinkamGuy Waldo WhitcombJohn Elias FreedArtur Frederich Wilhelm PlatzHarry Arthur HansenKarl Henry SchmidtForrest Ferdinand CunninghamDaniel Tracy InnesFloyd Alvah KleinAleck Gordon WhitfieldVallee Orville AppelJames Edward FosterGeorge SutherlandCharles Frederick Grey, IIEarl Israel PrestonLyle Harper Fay McKenzie SmithHarold Lewis Nickerson Clarence Edward ParmenterPledgedCharles Augustus Burkholder332**^'f*!":t^^f-^^~"^*10^<ti&*^t£m^< ^*V^*Ji-^<5t \^**<*APhila.NitFounded at Virginia Military Institute, 1 8 6gRoll of ChaptersBeta . . ... . . . . . University of VirginiaEpsilon • . . . Bethany CollegeEta . . . . . Mercer UniversityTheta . • • University of AlabamaIota . . . ■. ". . . . . . . . Harvard CollegeKappa . . . . . . •. North Georgia Agricultural CollegeLambda . . ... . . Washington and Lee UniversityMu . . . . . . .... University of GeorgiaNu .......... Kansas State CollegeXi . . . . . . . . ■•. • • Emory CollegePi . . . . . . ..... Lehigh UniversityRho . . . . . . ... • Missouri State UniversitySigma Vanderbilt UniversityUpsilon . ........ University of TexasPhi . . . . . . . . . Louisiana State University-Psi . . . . . ... . University of North CarolinaBeta Beta . . . . . '. • . . . DePauw UniversityBeta Zeta . . . . . . . . . . Purdue UniversityBeta Eta . . Indiana UniversityBeta Theta . . Alabama Polytechnic InstituteBeta Iota . . . . . . . • • Mount Union CollegeBeta Mu . . . . University of IowaBeta Nu . Ohio State UniversityBeta Xi William Jewell CollegeBeta Rho . . . . . . . • University, of PennsylvaniaBeta Sigma . . \ . . '. . - . • University of VermontBeta Tau . . North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical CollegeBeta Upsilon . . . . . . • . Rose Polytechnic InstituteBeta Phi . . . . . . , . . . Tulane UniversityBeta Chi . . . . . . ' Leland Stanford Junior UniversityBeta Psi . . . . . • • . . University of CaliforniaDelta Theta . . . . . . .. . . Lombard CollegeGamma Alpha . . . . . . . Georgia School of TechnologyGamma Beta ... . . . . . Northwestern UniversityGamma Gamma . . . . . . . . . . Albion CollegeGamma Delta j> . . . • • Stephens Institute of TechnologyGamma Epsilon . . ... . . . . Lafayette CollegeGamma Zeta . . . . . . . . University of OregonGamma Eta . . . . . . . Colorado School of MinesGamma Theta ; . . Cornell UniversityGamma Iota . . . . . . . State College of KentuckyGamma' Kappa University of ColoradoGamma Lambda . . ... . . . University of WisconsinGamma Mu . . . . . ... . University of IllinoisGamma Nu . . . . . . . . . Univers^ of MichiganGamma Chi ....... . University of WashingtonGamma Xi . . . . . . . Missouri State School of MinesGamma Omicron . . ... . . . Washington UniversityGamma Pi . . . . . . . University of West VirginiaGamma Rho . .... . . . University of ChicagoGamma Sigma Iowa State CollegeGamma Tau .... . . . . University of MinnesotaGamma Upsilon . . . . . . . . University of ArkansasGamma Phi . . University of MontanaGamma Psi . . . . . ; . . . . Syracuse University335NitThe Gamma Rho ChapterEstablished January 2, i8g$The FacultyClarence Almon TorreyThe Graduate SchoolsAllin Lee Pendergrass ' William Watson MooneyWalter ScottThe CollegesWilliam Embry WratherFrank Samuel BevanWalter Stuart MorrisonFred William GaardeJohn Lear TreacyGlenn Martin MontigleWilliam Campbell StephensonMaurice Thomas PriceMark Hotchkiss WheelerCharles Watson SmithRalph Duane YoungJohn Elmer PeakJack Warder NicholsonPark Haffield WatkinsCharles Cleveland PapePledgedJames Howard MontgomeryClarence Wilson Shaver336&t$muFounded in i86g at the University of VirginiaChapter RollPsi ... .Alpha RhoBeta Kappa .Gamma EpsilonAlpha Kappa .Gamma Zeta .Gamma Iota .Pi .... University of MaineBowdoin CollegeNew Hampshire CollegeDartmouth CollegeAlpha AlphaAlpha EtaZeta . . .Eta . . .Delta . .Eta PrimeAlpha BetaAlpha TauTheta . .Kappa . .LambdaAlpha SigmaBeta Phi . ,Alpha ZetaChi . . .Alpha Pi .Beta ThetaBeta Mu .Alpha OmegaBeta Gamma .Beta Sigma .Alpha UpsilonGamma . . .Beta OmicronBeta Zeta . .Beta Psi . . •Cornell UniversityNew York UniversitySyracuse UniversitySwarthmore CollegeBeta Pi Gamma DeltaGamma Eta .Beta Alpha .District 2Alpha Delta .Alpha EpsilonAlpha PhiBeta Iota . .. . Dickinson CollegeDistrict 3University of Maryland Mu ....George Washington University Nu ....University of Virginia Upsilon . .Randolph-Macon College Beta Beta . .District 4Davidson College Alpha MuTrinity College Beta Epsilon .Alpha Mu . . Wofford CollegeDistrict 5Mercer University Beta Lambda .Georgia School of Technology Beta Eta . .District 6Cumberland University Phi ....Vanderbilt University Omega . . .University of Tennessee Alpha Theta .District 7Ohio State University Beta Delta . .Case School of Applied Sciences Beta Nu . .District 8District iAlpha Lambda University of VermontUniversity of MichiganPurdue UniversityWabash CollegeUniversity of Indiana Alpha GammaAlpha ChiGamma Beta .Beta Epsilon .District 9Beta Rho . . Massachusetts State CollegeHarvard UniversityBrown UniversityPennsylvania State CollegeUniversity of PennsylvaniaBucknell UniversityLehigh UniversityWashington and Lee UniversityWilliam and Mary CollegeHampton-Sidney CollegeRichmond CollegeUniversity of North CarolinaNorth Carolina A. & M. CollegeUniversity of GeorgiaAlabama Polytechnic InstituteSouthwestern Presbyterian UniversityUniversity of the SouthUnion UniversityWashington and Jefferson CollegeKentucky State CollegeUniversity of IllinoisLake Forest UniversityUniversity of ChicagoUniversity of WisconsinUniversity of IowaUniversity of MinnesotaAlpha Psi . . University of NebraskaDistrict 10William Jewell College Beta Chi . . Missouri School of MinesMissouri State University Beta Tau . . Baker UniversityWashington University Xi .... University of ArkansasGamma Kappa University of OklahomaDistrict iiMillsaps College Sigma r . . Tulane UniversityLouisiana State University Iota . . . Southwestern UniversityTau .... University of TexasDistrict 12University of Denver Beta Omega . Colorado CollegeGamma Gamma Colorado School of MinesDistrict 13Leland Stanford, Jr., University Beta Xi . . University of CaliforniaDistrict 14University of Washington Gamma Alpha University of OregonGamma Theta University of Idaho .IHgmaGamma Beta ChapterInstituted May n, igo4The FacultyWtilliam Isaac Thomas, Tennessee, '84 Winford Lee Lewis, Leland Stanford, '02The CollegesJohn Edwin FosterCharlfs Hammer IrelandKenneth Owen CrosbyWalter Shoemaker PondDeWitt Brewster LightnerGlenn Dukes PetersThomas Bebee MooreFrancis Ambrose LagorioBenjamin Franklyn NewmanWalter Ari FordEdwin Hubble. Claude McCullockWilliam Lucas CrowleyEarl BowlbyEnoch James BrandJoseph Booker CoombsPledgedGalen Bowman340PH1LA.®att (JtegaFounded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865Roll of ChaptersProvince iAlpha Epsilon Alabama Polytechnic Institute Beta EpsilonBeta Beta . . Southern University Beta DeltaAlpha Omega University of Florida Alpha Beta .Alpha Theta . Emory College Alpha Zeta .Beta Iota . Georgia School of Technology Gamma Eta , Tulane UniversityUniversity of AlabamaUniversity of GeorgiaMercer UniversityUniversity of TexasProvince 2Gamma GammaGammaOmicronBeta Kappa .Beta Omicron - Gamma ZetaRose Polytechnic InstitutePurdue UniversityHillsdale CollegeAlbion CollegeGamma IotaGammaLambda University of ColoradoGamma Mu . University of KansasGamma Rho . University of MissouriGamma Pi . University of Washington University of IllinoisGamma Xi . University of ChicagoAlpha Mu . Adrian CollegeBeta Lambda University of MichiganGamma Tau . University of WisconsinProvince 3. University of CaliforniaGamma Upsilon Iowa State CollegeBeta Alpha . Simpson CollegeGamma Nu . University of MinnesotaGamma Theta University of NebraskaProvince 4Beta GammaGamma DeltaGamma SigmaAlpha LambdaBeta ThetaAlpha Pi . .Alpha Rho .XiBetaAlpha Nu .Beta Eta .Beta OmegaBeta PiOmega . Beta Upsilon University of MaineMassachusetts Inst, of Teqhnology Gamma Alpha Colby CollegeBrown University Gamma Beta . Tufts CollegeWorcester School of Technology Beta Zeta . University of VermontProvince 5Columbia University Tau .... University of PennsylvaniaCornell University Alpha Omicron St. Lawrence UniversityWashington and Jefferson College Alpha Iota . Muhlenberg CollegeLehigh University Alpha Upsilon Pennsylvania CollegeProvince 6Alpha Delta , University of North CarolinaTrinity College Beta Xi . . College of CharlestonWashington and Lee University Delta . . . University of VirginiaMount Union CollegeOhio Wesleyan UniversityOhio State University ^Alpha TauVanderbilt UniversityUniversity of the South Province 7Alpha Psi . .Beta Mu . .Gamma Kappa Wittenberg CollegeWooster UniversityWestern Reserve UniversityProvince 8Southwestern Presbyterian UniversityBeta Tau . . Southwestern Baptist UniversityPi .... University of Tennessee343®au (§m?$uFounded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865The Gamma Xi ChapterFounded June 16, igo4The Graduate SchoolsVirgil CrumWilliam Ross HamJohn Kelleher MurphyJohn William DavidsonEugene Bryan PattonHarrison Ross RogersJohn Carl PryorVerne Dallas DussenberryCharles Wallace CollinsJohn MooreStanley ZemerThe CollegesLeroy Carr AllenRaymond Lee LatchemLambert James SullivanMarye Yaemans DabneyLouis Manning MunsonLyman Trowbridge LooseCharles Earl FlemingClayton Hamill RedfieldClifford Rush EskeyFred Russel HandyAllen SaylesPaul GallagherVictor Olsen344^r ilnSA-^jCi SS|I>' ^^j^A-'^y^l- ^*44| *Kappa l^ijmaFounded atAlphaDeltaEpsilonZetaEtaIotaMuRhoTauUpsilonPhiPsiAlpha Alpha vAlpha GammaAlpha DeltaAlpha EpsilonAlpha Zeta .Alpha ThetaAlpha Iota .Alpha KappaAlpha Mu .Alpha Nu .Alpha XiAlpha OmicronAlpha Pi ■ •. University of Pennsylvania in 1850Roll of Chapters. University of PennsylvaniaWashington and Jefferson College. . Dickinson CollegeFranklin and Marshall CollegeUniversity of Virginia. Columbia UniversityTulane University. University of IllinoisRandolph- Macon CollegeNorthwestern UniversityRichmond College. Pennsylvania State CollegeWashington and Lee UniversityUniversity of West VirginiaUniversity of MaineArmour Institute of TechnologyUniversity of MarylandUniversity of WisconsinVanderbilt University'. University of AlabamaMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyGeorgia School of TechnologyPurdue University- University of MichiganUniversity of Chicago347ICappa ^tgmaThe Alpha Pi ChapterEstablished February 10, igosThe Graduate SchoolsHugo Frank Bezdek Charles BlairThomas Buck Victor Henry KulpClarence Gilbert PoolThe CollegesHamilton Chester Badger Lee Howard MaddenJohn Joseph O'Connor Earl Chester SteffaIrvin Nolan Walker James Milton BayneRaymond Leamore Quigley John LeBrun BradyRichard Downing Rumsey Alpheus Lynn RockwellJohn Joseph Schommer Howard Raymond SchultzSamuel Clifton Fleming William Henry BresnahanCharles Thomas Maxwell Robert Edward HannemanArthur Noble AitkinPledgedHorton Olson Gordon FricksonLeMoyne Canouse348^igam NuMEDICALKappa ChapterEstablished in i8g3SeniorsH. McGuiganB. J. O'Neill, Jr.G. S. BarberW. G. DarlingF. RileyJuniorsG. E. KnappenbergerW. P. GuyJ. F. CoxH A. BrownH. C. WadsworthJ. C. Paine"M. B. Stokes W. C. Nichols'R. S. DenneyA. E. LordB. ChildsS. B. HerdmanE. A. OliverH.Lv ThorpeS. GrangerR. A. HelmerR. H. SmithJ. W. Tope, Jr.A. L. CharltonSophomoresH. J. WattersJ. E. LacknerE. S. EdgertonE. S. Talbot D. P. AbbottJ. B. StreidJ. L. TreacyH. R. HunterE. B. FowlerFreshmenJ. D. EllisR. M. WilderM. Y. DabneyW. C. MillerA. H. Parma lee H. J. SchotteF. W. GaardeE. L. UhlR. W. ReynoldsE. V. Eyman35i^tgmaFounded at Northwestern, i8goAlphaBeta .GammaDeltaEpsilonZeta .Eta .Theta ,Iota AlphaIota BetaKappaLambdaMu .Nu .OmicronPiRho .SigmaTau .UpsilonPhi .Skull and SceptreChi . . Roll of Chapters. Northwestern University, ChicagoUniversity of Illinois, ChicagoRush Medical College, ChicagoUniversity of Southern California, Los Angeles. -. . Detroit Medical CollegeUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Creighton Medical College, Omaha. Hamline University, Minneapolis. University of Nebraska, Omaha. . University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Western Reserve University, ClevelandMedico- Chirurgical College, Philadelphia. . . University of Iowa, Iowa City. . . Harvard University, BostonWisconsin College of Physicians and Surgeons, MilwaukeeSchool of Medicine of Purdue University, Indianapolis. Jefferson Medical College, PhiladelphiaUniversity of Virginia, -CharlottesvilleUniversity of Minnesota, MinneapolisUniversity College of Medicine, RichmondUniversity of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. . . Yale University, New HavenWestern University of Pennsylvania, Pittsburg353SUjo ^tgmaMEDICALGamma ChapterEstablished i8g$SeniorsFred E. AbbottB. H. DurleyGeo. T. JohnsonJ. M. OsborneH. E. WheelerR. M. CarterA. J. BenderJ. E. ExstromE. S. PorterH. E. Bryant U. G. SachseJuniors J. M. FurrG. G. O'ConnellH. E. PotterW. W. DickerH. S. GradleE. R. MurphyE. L. GoarF. St. Sure-H. E. FlansburgC, S. MenziesR. P. SCHULERM. ClementsF. O. McFarlandI. PerrillR. B. AckerH. HughesS. G. Zemer SophomoresJ. B. MooreFreshmenR. E. SheldonPledgedS. W. B. McLaughlin R. B. DlLLEHUNTF. C. McLeanF. H. FallsH. L. DaleP. S. McKibbenC. H. FjELSTADTW, A. McAuliffS. Walker354to ^<*<!4t~ ^f^^nfriCappa iCappaMEDICALNu ChapterLouis M. MunsonFred Blue OlentineJesse Carl PainterEdward James StrickCharles Everett SmeltzerCarl H. DavisHarry Welrose CoffinJohnson Francis HammondJohn Gaston RyanHarrison Ross RogersFrank Everett StantonHenry HoffmanFrank J. GoodrichThurston William WennWilliam Alvah ParksJohn Hamilton KornsCharles Darwin EnfieldJohn William ThomsonHerbert SaylorRobert Gaylord DavisRobert Bain HasnerLee Ballou RoweSam W. ForneyGuy L. BlissJames Patterson356Delta ChapterJoseph E. TyreeJohn G. SaamGarland D. ScottCharles T. BellAlec A. BlatherwickHarry E. EggersThomas E. FlinnNeil M.. GunnEmmet L. LeeWilliam T. HughesEdwin G. KirkRobert L. BensonRoy L. BuffumEdward McGrathC. F. NelsonJohn H/ BreyerErnest M. JohnstoneBryce R. WallaceWilliam SpeidellR. Pettit Arno B. LuckhartGeorge M. CrabbArthur C. Spurgin,C. W. PetersonGeorge W. BlatherwickCarl H. ParkerJohn T. StrawnR.'H. NicholRUSSEL C. DOOLITTLERoscoe G. Van NuysWilliam H. JameisonAlbert H. GoodWilliam H. OldsHerbert R. MillsBeveridge H. MooreDavid D. GoodGeorge SchwachtgenWalter H. TheobaldW. B. Smith357l>t Alpha 1* itaFounded in i8g3BlackstoneStoreyFullerWebsterMarshallRyanMagruderCampbellGarland .HayBentonCaten Roll of ChaptersA ctiveChicago College of Law, Lake Forest University. . . Illinois College of LawNorthwestern University Law SchoolChicago Law School, Midland University. Law School, University of Chicago. University of Wisconsin Law SchoolLaw Department, University of IllinoisLaw Department, University of MichiganLaw Department, University of ArkansasLaw Department, Western Reserve University. . . . Kansas City Law SchoolLaw Department, Illinois Wesleyan UniversityChicago AlumniMilwaukeeNew York359Alplja if ltaLAWEstablished December 3, igo2The John Marshall ChapterGeorge W BlackVirgil A. CrumAllan CarterJames G. RaleyThomas H. SandersonJohn K. MurphyCharles M. Cad wellCharles H WilburJames McKeagClarence L. MacBrideEdgar A. CorneliusHarry W. HarrimanRoy H. Hunter3601? Ita p>tFounded in i86gRoll of Chapters. Law Department, University of Michigan, Ann ArborLaw Department, Illinois Wesleyan University, BloomingtonNorthwestern University Law School,' Chicago. School of Law, Columbia University, New York CitvSt. Louis Law School, Washington University, St. LouisHastings College of Law, San Francisco-George Washington University, Washington, D. C..Albany Law School, Union University, Albany, N. Y.... School of Law}, Boston University. Law School, University of CincinnatiDepartment of Law, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. . . . Harvard Law School, Cambridge. Yale Law School, New Haven, Conn.. Department of Law, New York University. School of Law, Cornell University, IthacaLaw Department, University of Missouri, ColumbiaLaw Department, University of 'Virginia, CharlottesvilleDepartment of Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Buffalo Law School, Buffalo, N. Y. School of Law, University of Oregon, PortlandSchool of Law, University of Wisconsin, MadisonLaw Department, Ohio State University, ColumbusLaw Department, State University of Iowa, Iowa CityCollege of Law, Universitv of Nebraska, LincolnLaw School of Upper Canada, Toronto-Chicago College of Law, Lake Forest University, Chicago-Law Department, Leland Stanford Jr. University, Palo Alto, Cal.. School of Law, University of Kansas, Lawrence. College of Law, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.. . . . . . New York Law SchoolLaw Department, University of Indiana, Bloomington. Western Reserve Law School, Cleveland, Ohio. Law Department, University of Illinois, Champaign. School of Law, University of Denver. Law School of University of Chicago-School of Law, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.Law Department, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.Brooklyn Law School, St. Lawrence University, Brooklyn, N. Y.Law Department, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo.College of Law, University of Southern California, Los Angeles363irita P?tLAWStephen A. Douglas ChapterEstablished April 14, igo3The FacidtyJames Parker Hall, A.B., LL.B.Floyd R. Mechem, A.M.Clarke Bltler Whittier, A.B., LL.B.Ernst Freund, J.U.D., Ph.D.Julian William Mack, LL.BPercy B. Eckhart, Ph.B., LL.B.The UniversityEdgar Noble DurfeeThurlow Gault EssingtonFrederick Rogers BairdNorman Hathaway PritchardWilliam GalbraithAlbrecht R. C. KippEarl Dewitt HostetterAlbert Balch HoughtonJesse Hunter WilliamsonMarcus Andrew HirschlWilliam Embry WratherDavid Dixon TerryJames Vincent HickeyClaude Charles McCulloughWillard Leroy BrooksNorman Barker364-mm ^^^; 1*-**] ii—a. .1 /; !I f»^OtytFounded October 12, 18 goRoll of ChaptersActiveCornell UniversityNew York UniversityUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of MichiganDickinson UniversityNorthwestern UniversityChicago Kent Law SchoolUniversity of BuffaloOsgoode Hall of TorontoSyracuse UniversityUnion UniversityUniversity of West VirginiaOhio State UniversityUniversity of ChicagoGeorgetown UniversityUniversity of PennsylvaniaUniversity of VirginiaLeland Stanford, Jr., UniversityWashington UniversityUniversity of TexasAlumniChicago BuffaloNew York City Washington367LAWThe University of Chicago ChapterEstablished May 23 1Q03James Pinkney PopeRufus Clarence FulbrightHarry Dale MorganCharles Henry SpeckWalter Edward AndersonFrank Nelson RichmanHarold Frederick HeckerLuther David SwanstromEvans Paul BarnesLeopold C. A. LindmannHarlan T. DeupreeRoy Clyde DarbyRex P. R. LindemannHeber Peart HostetterOtto William SchreiberWilliam Kixmiller368AlptjaChapter RollCornellChicagoJohns HopkinsDartmouth370Aipl?agraduateThe Chicago ChapterEstablished in February, igo8Harold DeForest ArnoldGeorge William BartelmezRobert Louis BensonRobert Earle BuchananElbert ClarkWilliam CrockerReginald Ruggles GatesGeorge Lester KiteFrederick HartzlerkreckerArna Benedict LuckhardtDonald Francis MacDonaldPaul Stilwell McKibbenFranklin Chambers McLeanRoy Herbert NichollJames PattersonCharles Wilson PetersonJohn Gaston RyanRalph Edward SheldonFrank St. SureDavid Duke ToddHarry Lewis WiemanHenry HainesAndrew Fridley McLeodClarence Stone YoakumIrving Knight Lee37i^tgma %\\nRoll of ChaptersUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of MichiganUniversity of ChicagoUniversity of WisconsinNorthwestern UniversityUniversity of OhioUniversity of Indiana372^tgma EfjoThe University ofGeorge O. Fairweather .B. B. Barlser Julian P. BretzBenjamin SamuelsHarry F. AtwoodM. E. AndersonArthur E. BestorThomas C. ClendeningHenry P. ChandlerA. R. ColgroveR. M. DavisDavid S. EisendrathMichael F. GallagherHarry N. GottliebHarriett GrimFred. C. HackArnold B. HallSylvanus G. LevyJoseph L. Lewrusohn ;o ChapterPresident. SecretarySidney LyonsCharles LedererRalph MerriamWm. J. MatthewsC. F. McElroyH. G. MoultonA. N. MerrittBertram T. NelsonL. Brent VaughanGeorge WatsonJ. P. WhyteLeo J. WormserThomas H. SandersonJohn J. LiverEugene J. MarshallJ. M. PopePaul M. O'Donnell373itortar MouthEstablished Noveinber 18Q4The Graduate SchoolsJulia Coburn Hobbs Virginia Wynn LackersteinHelen Elizabeth HendricksThe CollegesSara Davie HendricksMary Reynolds MortonHelen Cowen GunsaulusLaura Tisdale OsmanMary Ethel LackersteinLulubel WalkerGeraldine HigbieElizabeth FoggMarjorie WellsRuth Abigail AllenHelen Frances RiggsEdna Katherine WalshRuth HartwellBertha Montgomery3761894The FacultyEdith Foster Flint Elizabeth WallaceHonorary MemberLouise Palmer VincentThe Graduate SchoolsAnna Pritchitt YoungmanThe CollegesHelen DewhurstHelen Elizabeth HurdGladys Russel BaxterHelen Fisher PeckMary Louise EttenFrances HerrickRuth Marion KelloggHelen Eaton JacobyEva Pearl BarkerWillowdean ChattersonLouise Field Magee378Medical CollegeGrace MeigsThe College of EducationGrace BusenbarkThe CollegesMargaret BellPhebe Frances BellEthel May CoombsCaroline DickeyEmily Allen FrakeJessie HeckmanFannie JohnstonFlora Thomson JonesJeanette Barry LaneEdith MooreFrances NowtakRuth Mary PorterHelen Tytler SunnyAnnie Cleary TempletonElizabeth Louise ThielensGladys Tompkins380L,mmA%j^P^VIjMfcl'1^mrv .sj% PfJ^ \--1 1Eg*** -i*^Hfc^*|5^ ^ r(EUthEstablished i8gjHonorary MemberMrs. Edgar Johnson GoodspeedActive MembersFlorence May HarperLois Ballard KauffmanEleanor Lorinda HallRuth TownsendFlorence Belle LeavittEva Melissa LeonardMildred ScottMarguerite ProbyJean Comptonmarjopie wolfendenAlice Mildred DollingFlorence DrakeHazel WoodAda AhlswedeEdythe HowardEloise KelloggColors : Blue and Black382VgtimtFounded i8g8Honorary MemberMrs. E. Fletcher IngalsActive MembersCarlotta Dyer SagarJeanne Marie RoeGertrude ChalmersHelen Marie SextonSusie O'Dowd SextonWilma RobbinsBlanche PrestonHelen Mildred BrightClara RobinsonEdith Marion RichardsonHarriet Furniss384* ?% 9 ' *,-f * $pi Irta i^ltaFounded r8g8FacidtyEdith Ethel BarnardActive MembersEloise LockhartHarriet Estabrooke WilkesEdith Whitten OsgoodJulia ReichmannJean KruegerGrace Emerson MooreRuth Reis JackmanElizabeth MacMillanInez JacksonSarah WilkesPledgedLouise Leyman Porter Verna Lee386.SUjti ^tgmaFounded January 30, 1903Active MembersNelle WeldonEdna WeldonViolet Elizabeth HigleyFrances Katherine BakerJessie Cecelia BoyingtonVera Kathryn BassMinona Louise FittsIrene Winifred HinesNorma. Frances LocklinMary Gladys HallamAdelaide HeddegardeGertrude Kathryne WagnerMinnie Pearl HigleyHelen Logan ButlerVerna Cartwright TaveyHelen Adela KendallVirginia Harrington AdmiralBeatrice Lucille HillElizabeth BurkeErnestine EvansRuth CrooksKnap MayClub Colors — Royal Blue and Maize388"3^W^jf\m 1 ^Sm^^* 1 *^>^^j PI 3-*•^^^t^bi~-^^W i "^V^^PI i *d>#c^*1M 1 15SEstablished igojHonorary MemberMrs. A. Edward HalsteadActive MembersMary Elizabeth MalloyAudra Winona KnickerbockerHelen Bowman ThompsonMyra Halstead NugentHelen InghamMargaret HuntVilla Bartlett SmithEdith Blanche ChapmanMargarete Lonie SteinAgnes Marguerite BeesonPledgedGreta Hole Helen C PlattCatherine Sloan DarlingColors: Azure and Buff39oOTlubOrganized November, igosRose GrantBertha FoxFlorence TimmEdna BergMary FitzsimmonsFlorence FarwellAdelaide KleimingerMary KenneyElla BergMary NicollEdith GordonE. May BergLillian Francis392(it»l unh §>npmtEstablished i8g6Senior Honor SocietyWilliam Francis HewittWellington Downing JonesWilliam Embry WratherNorman BarkerFrank Herbert TempletonAlvin Frederick KramerLuther Dana Fernald •Charles Butler JordanClarence RussellPaul Vincent HarperJohn Jacob Schommer397Wvbtt of tip Inm MuBkFounded i8ggEdward Leydon McBrideHarry Johnson Schott Bernard Herman KrogWalter Hiram MorseWilliam Patterson MacCracken, Jr. Harold IddingsNed Alvin MerriamFred William Gaarde Renslow Parker ShererCole Yates RoweFrederick Whitslar Carr Paul Vincent HarperWinston Patrick HenryFrancis Harvey Welling Samuel LingleKarl Shuart398$*>tatt OllubEstablished November 2Q, igoiOfficersFrancis Madison OrchardSilas Alfred TuckerHurnard Jay KennerHarry Osgood Latham . PresidentVice-President and SecretaryTreasurerChairman Dance CommitteeMembersFrank Rice PowellJames Allan RossLyle Charles BarnesFrank John CollingsHoward Smith JohnsonEarle Albert GoodenowGeorge Amos FunkhouserGeorge Henry SheldonGeorge William RothFrank Theodore WendtHume Carlton YoungFreeman Ernest MorganOswald Frithiof NelsonClifford JamesEarle Putnam BerryMattinson Clarence Maitinson400^fea&lft-*<!#&. ^<$t?^<V|||'^feifuna to sttntEstablished February i, igo4Tom ThoitsWilliam T. CarterPatrick F. BuckleyRalph M. ClearyGilbert G. BuhmanFrancis G. EberhardCharles E. MaxwellEdward T. O'Bryan-Webster J. LewisGeorge GarrettAlbert D. HendersonBradford GillCola G. ParkerHerbert G. HopkinsStuart M. ChambersFrank J. O'BrienGlen MontigelPaul HeflinJoe J. Pegues402(§uwctn& ClubW. R. MorrisR. B. RogersE. B. HallP. E. GardnerE. T. TaylorG. K. MehagenEd. SturgeonL. K. GouldC. C. DegenhardtR. D. GottfriedC. B. RichieNed EarlJ. E. PeakR. E. LidsterG. H. RoulstonFred BateM. H. BriggsG. T. HUFFAKERE. M. RobinsonR. J. MaddenJ. M. HOUGHLANDH. A. LongW. C. GehrmannC. O. SmithA. E. StokesJ. A. MenenghsR. E. MyersH. H. WikoffC. D. StoneW. Hattery, Jr.404g>ptrattxInter-class Honorary SocietyEstablished igo8Charles JordanHarold GiffordGeorge GarrettWilliam MacCrackenHarvey MeagherFerdinand CunninghamWilson AustinEarle GoodnowS. Alfred TuckerLeo DeTrayCharles IrelandRenslow ShererFrancis WendtEarl HostetterJoseph SunderlandHannibal ChandlerAlvin KramerFrank PowellClarence RussellFred GaardeJohn SchommerRobert SullivanEdward FelsenthalWalter SteffenClayton Redfield406p BiamuEstablished May, igo6Frances NowakEleanor HallLouise CappsHelen Gunsaulus408g>tgtt of u> %\tkUEstablished Nove?nber igoiRush Medical CollegeEthel TerryThe College of EducationMargaret SpenceThe Senior CollegesHelen GunsaulusLouise CappsLois KauffmanFrances NowakMary MortonEmily FrakeHelen PeckElizabeth ThielensHelen HurdThe Junior CollegesJessie HeckmanAda AhlswedeWillowdean ChattersonPearl BarkerCaroline DickeyHelen RiggsRuth Allen4oqClubigo7-igo8Ruth AtkinsonIone BellamyCora BertschJosephine BostedoGeraldine BrownDorothy BuckleyMay CareyMary ChaneyGladys ClaryMary ComptonEmily CoombsEthel CorbetClaire CoxOlive DavisErnestine EvansMargaret FordBeth FossVirginia FreemanHazel StillmanJeannette Thielens Acheah GardnerAnnette GridleyJuliette GriffinMargaret HaasMargaret HackettElizabeth HarrisKatherine JohnstonZita JohnstonBernice LeClaireFaun LorenzMargaret McCrackenFrances MeigsHilda MorrisGertrude PerryMary PhisterLouise PorterWlLHELMINA PRIDDYEdith PrindevilleLaura WilderEdith Young410ilatiputs aun ilje ittmtttg %ljtrolHE most notable event of the year in the Divinity School has been the promotion of Professor Shailer Matthews from Junior Dean to Dean of theSchool. Mr. Mathews fills the 'vacancy caused by the death in February.1907, of Dr. Eri Baker Hulbert, who since the incorporation of the BaptistUnion Theological Seminary within the University as its Divinity School hadbeen its head.In addition to his executive position, Mr. Mathews is Professor of Historical and Comparative Theology in the University and edits The WorldToday. Unlike his predecessor as head of the School, he is an author aswell as a scholar and teacher, many books recognized as standard in theology and religion bearinghis name. Professor Mathews came to the new University in 1894 from Colby College, hisalma mater, where he had occupied the chair of History and Political Economy. He has beenone of the most energetic of the founders of the Religious Education Society.Besides being a scholar and a writer, the new head of the Divinity School is an able executive.Any man who can run a great department of a great university, teach the regular quota of classeseach quarter, manage a monthly magazine of national standing, and take an active part in anynumber of activities on the side is a human mechanism of great power. And as far as DeanMathews is concerned, the wonderful part of it all is that he still has the time to be uniformilykindly. The loss of Dean Hulbert was a great blow to the Divinity School ; surely if anyman can compensate for that loss it is his friend and successor, Shailer Mathews.Every educational institution is dominated by the men who constitute its faculty. To a-remarkable extent this is true of the Divinity School; the scholarship and personality of Dr.Harper, Deans Hulbert and Mathews and their fellow workers have made it what it is.The School.The Divinity School consists of the Graduate Divinity School, the English Theological Seminary, the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary and the Swedish Theological Seminary. Ithas an enrollment of 422 students, from as many as twenty different religious denominations.The men on the faculty are among the ablest in the University and are teachers as well asscholars. The profound impression made upon the school by such men as Dr. Harper and DeanHulbert will always remain. The numerous books and periodicals which are issued by the members of this faculty are shaping the religious and the modern theological thought.The aim of the school as set forth in the curriculum is, "the solution of the problem ofclerical discipline suited to the requirements of the modern times in which we live." The greatdoctrines of Christianity have been thought through from the modern Scientific point of view ;and the results have been correlated with the thinking of the age.The graduates have gone out into all parts of the world carrying with them the spirit and theideals of their Alma Mater and occupying prominent places of leadership. Three former Chicagomen are directors of guilds in connection with the Universities of Iowa, Illinois and Michigan.Nine men of the alumni are state superintendents of church activities. Some have gone to theforeign fields as teachers and preachers, but by far the greatest number of them have become pastors.In a manner nobly consistent with the ideals of their University they are helping to determinethe future of the American people.Student Life.From time out of mind, the divinity student has been the conventional victim of the collegesatirist and cartoonist. He has been pictured as unkempt, unduped and psychologically as wellas physically long haired. Nowhere has this conventional attitude received the jolt that it has atthe University of Chicago. Besides having student activities of their own, the men of the DivinitySchool take an active part in the student life of the whole University. No activity from the Blackfriars to the Y. M. C. A. is without their presence. Aggressive, clean cut, and generally moreprosperous in appearance than the undergraduates or members of the other schools, the divinityman is a potent factor in the student life of the whole University. Of course the lines of endeavorpeculiar to the Divinity School occupy much of his attention. The Evangelistic Band and theorganizations devoted to research in various subjects have always been popular. Devotional andsocial meetings are held frequently in Haskell Assembly Hall and in the parlors of the threedivinity halls. The life of divinity student may be more earnest than the life of the undergraduatein the colleges but it is none the less pleasant or full.ittmtttg (EuuttrilThe Divinity Council is the representative body of the divinity studentsbefore the faculty. It has general charge, on the students' side, of all matters pertaining to the faculty and students. The Council is composed of theofficers and chairmen of the several committees of the Students' Associationof the Divinity School.415#rljuul AfiHoriattmtThe Alumni AssociationOFFICERS 1907-08Charles A. Hobbs, '71T. Allan Hoben, '01Cyrus B. Alden '83W. Jasper Howell, '96Ira M. Price, '82 .John L. Jackson, '74 executive committeeWarren P. Behan, '99 PresidentFirst Vice PresidentSecond Vice PresidentThird Vice President-Secretary and TreasurerFrank L. Anderson, '00Wcp ^iutonis AssociationofficersDouglas Clyde MacintoshJoseph Kinmont HartMark Frank Sanborn .Bruce Edmund JacksonCHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEESCharles Wallace Collins .Guy Carlton Crippen .George Washington CheesmanClaude Edward Boyer .Ingram Ebenezer Bill PresidentVice PresidentSecretaryTreasurerMissionsSocial LifeAthleticsPublic SpeakingDevotional416lEommtfo fSfnmtiPerhaps no member of the faculty ofthe Divinity School has come into such closecontact with the students as Charles EdmundHewitt,, D.D., student secretary. Most ofthe members of the school occupy on Sundaypastorates in and about Chicago. In thisway they obtain actual experience in supplying the needs of a congregation and inaddition secure welcome additions to theirincomes. Dr. Hewitt superintends this work,receives the calls from the churches, andmakes the assignments of the men.Dr. Hewitt's connection with the University dates from 1899. Previously he hadheld pastorates at Ypsilanti, Mich., and atBloomington, Peoria and Chicago, 111. Forthe ten years previous to his coming to Chicago, he held the secretaryship of theNorthwestern Baptist Education Society.He is a graduate of the University of Rochester.The hold which Dr. Hewitt has obtained on the members of the Divinity Schoolis the result of the inherent kindliness of his nature. The anxieties and troubles of themen under his care have always been his own. Other members of the faculty of theDivinity School may have contributed more scholarship to the institution but noman will have a warmer place in the hearts of succeeding generations of alumni.Evangelistic BandBruce Edmund Jackson Business ManagerRobert Lincoln Kei.ley LeaderThe Semitic ClubDaniel David Luckenbill PresidentEdward Atwood Henry SecretaryThe New Testament ClubHarris Lachlan MacNeill PresidentEdgar Johnson GoodspeedFranklin Hermon GeselbrachtJohn McLaughlinArthur Henry Hirsch .Ingram Ebenezer Bill, Jr. The Church History ClubThe Theological ClubCharles Manford SharpsCharles Arthur Exley .William David Endres .Athletic Board(Divinity School Representative)George Washington Cheesman . Vice PresidentSecretary. President. Vice PresidentSecretary - Treasurer. President. Vice PresidentSecretaryBoard of Christian UnionDivinity .School Representative)Douglas Clyde MacintoshlEttangf ItBttr ®auiSixty-six different evangelistic services were conducted by the Band inthe churches in and near Chicago during the year. At these meetings,10,250 people were addressed, two. hundred and two of whom made thedefinite decision to lead the Christian life. The regular trips included theBaptist churches of Elgin, Ft. Wayne, Mishawaka, Indiana, and NormalPark, Chicago. Side trips were made to. Lacon and Sparland, Illinois, andSouth Chicago.OFFICERSRobert Lincoln KelleyIngram Ebenezer Bill .Claude Edward Boyer .Claude Edward BoyerWilliam Frederick BostickGuy CrippenDr. T. G. SoaresJ. M. ArtmanR. H. BarretO. D. BriggsW. F. BostickC. E. BoyerI. E, Bill.G. C. CrippenG. W. Cheesman MEMBERSC. G. CUMM1NGSW. A. ChamberlainJ. L. DonovanH. F. EvansD. I. GroverG. W. GriffinJ. C. GranberyW. J. HowellB. E. Jackson . Leader. Assistant Leaders. Business ManagerChoristersR. L. KelleyW. H. MacLeodJ. S. PengellyW. L. RunyanC. H. ScheikD. M. SimmonsH. P. J. SelingerM. F. SanbornH. A. WheelerWashington CheesmanR. BannettDavid EndresA.B., Christian University, 'oi ; B.D., DrakeUniversity, '06 ; A.M., University of Chicago, '08.Herbert Medbourn GarnCulver Military Academy, '98 ; A.B., Hiran College, '02.Andrew Pettigrew GarrettA.B., Wake Forest, '03.John Cowper GranberryA.B., Randolph-Macon College, '96 ; D.B., Vanderbilt University, '99 ; A.M., University of Chicago, '08.David Matthias Gordon HandA.B., Central University of Iowa, '02.William Hamilton HannumA.. Ohio State University, '97; A.M., UnionTheological Seminary.420Henry HirschA.B., Cornell College, '01 ;Chicago, '08. A.M., University ofRobert Lincoln KeeleyA.B., University of Minnesota, '02 ; DivinityCouncil, 'o6-'o8 ; Leader Evangelistic Band, '08.Ralph Rollin KennanA.B., Hillsdale College, '91; A.M., ibid, '93;D.B., ibid, '96 ; A.M-, University of Chicago, '08.Albert Clarence SaxtonA.B., University of Idaho, '03.Henry SchaeferA.B., Newark Theological Seminary.Charles Henry ScheickA.B., Bucknell University, '05 ; Penn Classicaland Scientific Institute.421Monroe SimmonsA.B., Richmond College, '05.Bennett Taylor WaitesB.S., Valpariso University, '01 ; B.D., Vanderbilt University, '07 ; Fh.M., University of Chicago, '08.Harvey Arnold WheelerA.B., University of Oregon, '07; Ph.M., University of Chicago, '08.422(EuuttriloraAutumn Quarter IQOJDonald Putnam AbbottErastus Smith EdgertonHarry Richard HoffmanGeorge B. SchwachtgenAlfred Marion ShawHarry J. Corper Winter Quarter 1908Donald Putnam AbbottErastus Smith EdgertonHarry Richard HoffmanCharles H. SwiftGeorge B. SchwachtgenEleanor E. WhippleSpring Quarter 1908Donald Putnam AbbottErastus Smith EdgertonHarry Richard HoffmanCharles H. SwiftGeorge B. SchwachtgenEleanor E. Whipple424SellerPresident ice"rV6a' .«JphT Gilchristecy-TVeas-Raymond A. Seiler .J. E. Lackner .Ralph Gilchrist . (HiuBB of lain. PresidentVice PresidentSecretary and Treasurer425President > KusseL/I.WUder• Secyr-TT-eas 1William H. OldsAlbert H. GoodRussel M. Wilder Itahmau ilpotral ©laaa. PresidentVice PresidentSecretary and Treasurer3xtB\\mmx (EuunrtlRobert Booth AckerRobert Cochran CrumptonJames Garfield EarlThomas Arthur JohnsonJohn Joseph SprafkaRussel C DoolittleHerbert LusskyJ. M. Montgomery426Freund, Ph.D., J. U. D.§ mt at tty Hatu j^rtjoolVHE high standards of the Law school have been held up for admiration so often that the historian would almost be impelled to dropthe discussion were it not for the remarkable vindication of theUniversity's requirements, instanced in the enormous increase in thenumber of students. From a little more than seventy embryonicattorneys the number has grown to almost three hundred in fiveyears, and three-fourths of the states, over one hundred collegesand forty law schools have been deplorably depleted of res judicata in the process ofdevelopment.An almost unintelligible tangle of words, indicative of profound legal mentality,has been officially set forth in defence of the standard and system at Chicago thisyear by Dean Hall, who says :"The study of law is no task for immature minds, which can comprehend neitherthe basis of social experience upon which legal principles rest, nor the nature ofthose social problems that are pressing today for solution, nor which can grasp theproper application of these principles to the manifold activities and complexitiesof modern life."As the tremulous freshman waits in anguished suspension for notices in Property, Torts and Contracts, a complete realization of the soundness of the judgmentpronounced upon immature minds enshrouds him. Likewise, the senior, with thatprofundity of thought to which he becomes addicted after three years of associationwith mature minds, expresses, not only his realization, but his affirmation of the principle involved. But, as with most great opinions there is a doleful dissent, for theso-called student who has imbibed freely of college life seriously doubts the efficacyof such preparation.However, behold the result ! Last year there were so many cum laude honorsconferred that the graduate who had done merely Phi Beta Kappa work shrankback into the shadows of dark corners to avoid public shame.The law library has grown this year to thirty thousand volumes, containing complete American, English, Scotch, Irish, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand andIndian reports, and statutes, and enough French, German, Spanish and Mexicantreatises to enable the future lawyer to extract a fee from his client regardless ofnationality. For the benefit of the reform element, which is convinced that the present laws are of trust manufacture there is an exhaustive collection of prehistoriclaws and reports of cases.An event of considerable artistic importance was the adornment of the walls ofthe Law School with the Pike Collection of legal engravings. Most of these arepictures of English judges. There are some Scotch and Irish brethren. A seriesof signed artist's proof etchings of all of the judges of the United States SupremeCourt form the principal part of the American part of the collection. These dignitaries were hung in the different rooms of the law school under the direction of DeanHall, according to the classification of the judicial crimes which they perpetrated uponthe innocent public.An annual resume of Law school affairs would be inexcusably incomplete withouta mention of the most important event of the year — the Law school smoker, December5, 1907. Bill Leary presided as chairman, and with the assistance of Hugo Friendperpetrated a program, the memory of which still lingers in the minds of faculty andstudents.%uw Class of 13flBWith feelings of great satisfaction, yea, of pride and elation, the historian ofthe magnificent class of 1908 chronicles the many achievements of its illustrious members. Ever since we entered this manufacture of legal lights in the fall of 1905,we have been busy fulfilling and exceeding the expectations and prophecies of futurecareers.During our first year, we quickly assimilated the principal theories and doctrinesregarding gift and payment beneficiaries, the ordinary and reasonable standardof care of the ordinary and reasonably and careful and prudent men under ordinarycircumstances, that "qui facit per alium" must face it himself, and when a thief isnot a thief; and also, last, but not least, Freund asked us, "Vot does a man do venhe gets married?" Bowman, Woolf, and lately Galbraith have solved this lastproblem, so the rest of us take their word for it.Robert B. Scott was our first president, and the honor so overwhelmed him,that he departed from us at the end of the first year. Wayland W. Magee was vicepresident; he also left us, to see what Harvard had to offer. Ralph Miller filled thedouble capacity of secretary and smoker committee man, as a result of which histobacco jar has not been empty since. Carlisle was custodian of the treasury, and is stillat large. Adams, Black and Carlson were our councilors, and supplied the facultywith welcome suggestions.We went to our first Law smoker that year, and heard that it was much betterfor us to read our cases and abstract them, then to copy the headnotes out of theoriginal reports ; that the school was growing rapidly, and that the freshmen makingmerry at the smoker, with the preliminary exams coming off soon were like "the swan,which sings sweetly before it dies."During our second year, we took the course in Trusts and Ventilation under theJudge. We learned that there were 83J/2 exceptions to the Parol Evidence Rule, andthat there is no such thing as Best Evidence. The Dean told us that Equity wouldenjoin a prize fight (Freund contra), and Whit insisted that though the HilaryRules are not used anywhere in the world, still they are nice to know about.As a reward of merit Carlson was promoted from the office of councilor to thatof president. Hugo Freund was made vice president and Ralph Miller was retained as secretary.It was during this year that the Laws won that famous 12-0 victory over theMedics — due largely to the prowess of '08 men such as Edwards, Carlson, Carlisle,Baird, Freund, Leary, et al, besides the mighty Claedge, who, however, nearly causedour downfall by forgetting which way he was going and getting over on the Medics'side.This last year has been the sprint at the finish, in the final effort to clinchour crowns of glory, otherwise known as cum laudes. We learned that a corporationmay often do things it is not supposed to be capable of doing; and in Administrative Law, that the Constitution doesn't apply to Chinamen.At a most peaceable and harmonious class meeting, we elected Fred Bairdpresident, with Bill Mathews, Carter and Miller to share the onerous duties connected with official position, while Pritchard, Long and Freund dispensed wisdom ascouncilors. And at this meeting also, Edwards, after having declined, as Caesar did,the many honors offered, was unanimously and involuntarily elected sergeant-at-armsAnd now as the end draws near, we are preparing to finish our career as a classof the University of Chicago Law School, in an appropriate blaze of glory, and to goforth into the world and convince a sceptical public and a still more sceptical profession, that we know something about law.Rogers Baird, * r A, $ A *President, Class of 1908; Ph.B., Universityof Chicago, '06 ; Mechem Law Club ; Coach University Track Team.W. J. MatthewsVice President, Class of 1908 ; A.B., MonmouthCollege, '03 ; University Debating Team, '06 ;Mechem Law Club ; Commonwealth Club ; MemberLaw Council, '07.Allan Carter, $ A ASecretary and Treasurer, Class 1908 ; DeKalbHigh School, '03 ; Entrance Scholarship ; Scholarship '04-'05 ; Honorable Mention in the JuniorColleges ; Blackfriars ; Varsity Basketball Squad,'05, '06, '07 ; Law Scholarship, '06.George W. BlackA.B., University of Illinois, '03.C Arthur Bruce., A YKansas City Central High School, Kansas City,Carl CollierA.B., University of Cincinnati, '04.431A. Crum, A T n, $ A AB.S., University of Chicago, '05.Paul Hunter DodgePh.B., University of Chicago, '06 ; PresidentFencibles, '06 ; Secretary Stump Debating Club,'05 ; Senior College Council, '05 ; Mummers ; Commonwealth Club.Gasper EdwardsDavid S. Eisendrath, A 2 PSouth Division High School, '04 ; UniversityDebating Team, '07 ; President Whittier LawClub ; Pre-Legal Club ; Commonwealth Club.Albert Enoch, ATAPh.B., University of Chicago, '06.Thurlow Gault Essington, A K E, $ A <f>A.B., University of Illinois, '06 ; Mechem LawClub.432Owen Fairweather, 2 A EGeneral Secretary, University of Chicago AlumniAssociation ; President ASP.John Edwin Foster, K 2A.B., University of Chicago, '05 ; CommonwealthClub.William James Galbraith, A T A, $ A $Leland Stanford, Jr., University ; Belmont, Cal.John Barry HayesEdward Hawkins HulserPh.B., '05, Morningside College ; James ParkerHall Law, Club.Albrecht R. C. Kipp, Jr., B © n, $ A $A.B., Indiana University ; Mechem Law Club.433Henry Kulp, * K 2Ph.B., University of Chicago, '05; * B K;University of Chicago, '05; Honorable MentionSenior College, '05.Norman Hathaway Pritchard, J A E, $ A $A.B., Franklin College, '04; Mechew Law Club.Vail Eugene Purdy, *TAPh.B., University of Chicago, '06; Hall LawClub.Oscar J. PutttnUniversity of Illinois, '06.Clayton H. Redfield, ATflGrinnell Academy, Iowa College.T. Calvin Stephens434Curtis StroudUniversity of Wisconsin, '06; University ofChicago, '08.Frank Hayes SwensonWhitewater, Wis., Normal, '00 ; University ofChicago, '02 ; charter member Whittier Law Club ;President, '07.James Wiggins SimontonA.B., Indiana University, '03 ; Clerk, Hall LawClub, 'o6-'o7 ; Vice Chief Justice, Hall Law Club,'o7-'o8.Walter Edward WoolfIrving S. LivingstonA.B., Illinois Wesleyan University.Hugo Morris FriendPh.B., University of Chicago, '06 ; ChairmanSmoker Committee, '06 ; Law Council, 'o7-'o8 ;Coach, University Track Team.435J. LongA.B., Ohio Northern University; Ph.B., University of Chicago, '07.Ernest William ClarkDes Moines College.Corinne L. RicePh.B., University of Chicago, '99.436ffiaut (HiuBB uf 1909^\T7"HEN that precocious Monarch, Albert Balch, of the House off^k Houghton, known by his subjects as "Sunset Charlie," who gothis A.B. before most of us saw our M.A., when he the thronedescended, after a most happy and eventful reign, there succeededhim the air apparent Prince O'Donnell. At the time of his acces-'c3 sion there were several other presumptive heirs, but they were alleasily rebutted. As a part of the coronation ceremony, the Prince, who hadbeen suffering from a baffling ailment, got rid of a speech, and has been gettingbetter even since. The speech was all cut and dried and only needed haulingaway. But laying aside the hammer temporarily, and crossing the fingers, the Princewas a statesman of rare executive and pullitical ability, and despite his centuries ofRoyal Hibernian descent, he was democratic to the core and a great crony of thatexponent of true Democracy, His Majesty's Jester, George "Butler" Yaple, whosehand extends to all.About the time the Prince became King,, changes were made in the lesser officersof state, and the office of chancellor was suspended as there was no subject-matter forhis jurisdiction and the maintainence of that office was only a drain on the treasury.The chancellor himself said it was quite a change from his arduous duty of keepingKing Albert's conscience.The long "dry spell" of the present reign was broken when the Bench and Barpulled off the trial of a Crown Case Reserved (for the occasion) at the Piccadillyclam house. The defendants Schwartz and Weber were convicted of high treason,though the defendant Schwartz nearly secured an acquittal by not giving the King'scounsel a chance to speak. Everybody but the defendants agreed that the proceedingwas a tribute to justice and a complete vindication of trial by jury. For an interesting narrative account of the trial the reader is referred most respectfully to theof Justice McDonald," who presided at the trial with great fairness. Wehave read with avidity the justice's account of the proceeding and in the way of payinga humble tribute to his memory, desire to say that he has apparently rememberedeverything up to about 1 1 :30 o'clock.The reign of King O'Donnell was ablaze with legal lights and resplendent withbrilliant arguments in court. Many amusing things also happened, to the great merriment of those of us who are more sedate. We well remember the time thatWhittier C. J. fined barristers M and S for "playing marbles" in court, but out ofregard for them we will not refer to that matter. It might be said, however, thatshortly after this incident barrister Schwartz had his coat-of-arms changed to a quinceon a field of lemons with the brief but significant motto, "Jus."We would like to refer to many others, at least in a curseory way, but perhapsit would not be wise, and in closing this brief account of a great era, we voice thesentiment of every loyal subject when we say God Save the King.IGauta Witt laakrttrall PennantH. E. Flanagan McIlrathRight ForwardT. H. Sanderson (Capt.)McIlrath H. D. MorganCenterH. W. Harriman A. L. WeberS Right GuardJ. G. Raley C. H. RedfieldLeft ForwardW. H. Gregory H. D. MorganLeft GuardA basketball season in which the Law team suffered no defeat gave it the pennantin intercollege basketball. Six teams entered these contests, representing theJunior college of Literature, Science, Arts, and Philosophy, the Senior college, andthe Law School. At the opening of the Winter quarter a schedule was arrangedwhereby each of the teams would play two games with each other team, and to theone winning the- largest percentage of the contests would be presented the championship pennant. This schedule was most successfully executed — twenty-nine spiritedand hard-fought games being played, and only one forfeited. Science and the Seniorsran a close race for second place, the victory being decided in favor of Science onlyby a post-season game.flllaHB of 1919HERE is nothing like the first year course in the Law School to take theconceit out of a Freshman. Last fall we were all set up with our importancebecause we were the largest Freshman class in the history of the school,because several second year men visited our classes in Property and Contracts inorder to take advantage of our knowledge of these subjects, because the football team composed chiefly of Freshmen beat the Medics 23 to 13, because wewere so conspicious that a special lecture was delivered at the Smoker by PaMechem for our benefit on the subject — "Why is a Law or What can a Freshman do to reform the profession ?" and for many other reasons which could bestbe understood if you had seen us. But the marks in Property and Contracts are just out, andthe truth that pride goes before a flunk is illustrated perfectly. The fault is not entirely our ownhowever. In fact it seemed like old times again to be rushed for fraternities and law clubs, tobe grasped by the hand in the old familiar condescending fashion, to be invited to dinner byupper classmen and treated generally as "catches." Then too the extreme familiarity and levitywith which the profs were burlesqued at the smoker caused us to be ashamed of the seriousnesswith which we had taken them during the first few days, and now it is too late to get down towork. We were enjoined by proceedings in equity from carrying books about the building, andfrom loud and professional discussion in the corridors to the distress and discomfort of thesophomores who, by the way, were afraid they could not keep up with the procession if theydid not keep us down by some chamber decision front which there is no appeal. Without doing thesethings how can a Freshman learn law? But we learned a little in spite of these preventions, viz.,that the defendant is liable because he did the act complained of; that the weight of authorityis all wrong on the subject of conditions in contracts; that sic utera tuo ut non alium eedereis right whether you think so or not, because the weight of authority says so ; and that even inthe halls of Justice disputes are not always settled by legal proceedings in cases where the fistis mightier than the hot air artist. In fact the appeal to arms caused the one big sensation of theyear and furnished material for several moot cases on which the members of the faculty hadto set in order to preserve the natural right of personal immunity from being infringed. Moreover grafting exists in its worst forms right here where professional courtesy is taught, as witnessthe assessment for the smoker. The money was devoted to stocking the smoking room with newspapers and periodicals instead of giving the councilors a "feed" to stop their charges of misappropriation. Also "politics" is rotten, as witness the smooth way in which Baker grabbed offtwo offices before anyone knew what had happened. We have not despaired however of redemption and future salvation though our aunts and grandmothers think we are committed toeternal perdition already. We are blessed with having many sturdy sons of the soil in our members whose ingenuity in Pleading next year will no doubt enable us to present a good defense tothe declaration of the Devil's counsel.AOi ft ' 4* *rjC&tark? IBnte Wlfffiftr ffiant (ElnbOfficersDavid S. EisendrathRoy D. Thatcher .Howard E. FlanaganAppellate CourtM. M. MuenichM. CollinsE. A. CorneliusD. S. EisendrathR. R. Helm J. W. HooverTyler OglesbyT. H. SandersonI. J. SolomanW. H. Gregory F. H. SwensonSuperior CourtW. J. BlackE. G. FelsenthalH. E. FlanaganM. C. HarrisR. D. Thatcher H. H. HaysL. W. HoffmanR. L. JuddD. A. Skeen PresidentSecretaryTreasurerClerkClerk440ffark^r if all Ham QXlubJames P. HallJames W. SimontonPaul M. O'DonnellGeorge W. Black .James G. RaleyJames A. Knowlton Chief JusticeVice Chief JusticeClerkDocket CommitteeThird Year MenJames W. SimontonJohn F. BowmanArthur L. HooperVail E. Purdy George O. Fair weatherEdward H. HulserGeorge W. BlackSecond Year MenGeorge L. YapleJames G. RaleyGlen Dukes PetersJames P. Pope E. L. BakerEarl D. HostetterKarl Hale DixonPaul M. O'DonnellEvans Paul BarnesFirst Year MenNorman BarkerWilliam KixmillerHarry H. Wheaton Hart E. BakerJames A. KnowltonFrank S. Bevantyqz Mntym ICaut ClnbJames V. HickeyHarry Dale MorganMembersWalter E. AndersonFrederick R. BairdWillard BrooksHarlan DupreeHenry F. DriemeyerEdgar N. DurfeeThurlow G. EssingtonHugo M. FriendR. Clarence FulbrightGeorge Puffer GallaherHarry W. HarrimanWilliam E James Vincent HickeyAlbert B. HoughtonAlbrecht R. C. KippWilliam H. LearyWilliam J. MatthewsClaude C. McCullockHarry Dale MorganOtto W. SchreiberCharles P. SchwartzLuther D. SwanstromDavid D. TerryWrather PresidentClerk441change has been rung in the biggest all-Universitysocial function of the year — the Washington promenade.The success of the prom of February 21, 1908, shows thatChicago is fully capable of supporting such an undertaking.The Washington promenade was the most successful of anyall-University event of recent years, making glad the heartsof the dancers, and enabling the finance committee to remain in residenceduring the succeeding quarter.The promenade was very ably managed. Plans were in order weeksbefore and when the day came everything moved like clockwork. The attendance exceeded all expectations, and set a new mark for Universityformals.Charles B. Jordan and Miss Lois Kaufmann led the grand march, andAlvin Kramer and Miss Eleanor Day led the alternate wing. The work of thereception committee was very successful. The committees were :General Chairman Charles B. JordanFinance — Alvin F. Kramer, chairman ; Hart E. Baker. Karl H. Dixon, Paul V. Harper.Arrangements — Luther D. Fernald, chairman; Francis Baker, Florence Chaney, HelenSunny, Harriet Wilkes, Wilson A. Austin, Kenneth O. Crosby, Harry W. Harriman, Max L.Richards.Reception — Norman Barker, chairman ; Florence Harper, Mary Morton, Ruth Porter,.Harvey B. Fuller, Jr., Marcus A. Hirschl, Clarence Russell.Printing — Frank S. Bevan, chairman ; Mary Heap, Davie Hendricks, Chas. H. Ireland, Franklin C McLean.Decoration — Helen Hurd, chairman ; Jessie Boyington, Eleanor Day, Gertrude Greenbaum,Helen Gunsaulus, Winifred Kelso, Edith Moore, H. H. Chandler, Jr., Henry B. Roney, Thos.H. Sanderson, Chas. C Staehling, Frank H. Templeton.444PROOETWDE lflr.\i.MROMENADES always linger long in the memories of thosewho attend. The glories of the Junior promenade of June 7have not yet passed out from among us. Winston Henrystill has a faint recollection of the comment that swept overthe assembly as with measured thread he moved serenely —and safely — thought the figures of the first grand march.Rens Sherer was there too, but the figures he remembers are of a differentkind, for he held the burdensome position of finance chairman, and was oneof the lucky four who divided the frappe that was left over. There are stillothers who remember the Prom — Famous, the tailor, for instance, and Buck,the liveryman — but their interest, let us hope, has long been forked over.The fortunate ones who were there will say, too, that the decorationswhich completely screened the great high vault of Bartlett and showed a massof leafy branches above the dancers, were particularly attractive. The crowdthat gathered around the tables in Hutchinson hall that evening was largerthan had been seen at a Junior promenade for years.The patronesses for the event were Mrs. Harry Pratt Judson, Mrs,George Edgar Vincent, Mrs. Amos Alonzo Stagg, Miss Sophonisba Breckinridge and Mrs. Robert Morss Lovett.. . Ned MerriamWinston Patrick HenryThe officers and committees were :Chairman of Junior day ... . .Leader of the Promenade ......CommitteesFinance — Renslow Parker Sherer, chairman ; Francis Harvey Welling, John Flint Dille,Daniel Webster Ferguson.Reception — Wijliam Patterson MacCracken, chairman ; Edward MacBride, Paul VincentHarper, John Ernest Davenport, Gertrude Greenbaum, Ethel Louise Chamberlain, MinonaFitts, Ruth Jackman.Printing — Benjamin Franklin Newman, chairman ; Preston Gass, Elsie Schobinger, ColeYates Rowe, Harold Cushman Gifford.Arrangement — Frederick Whitslar Carr, Jean Compton, J. Craig Bowman, Edith WhittenOsgood.Decoration — Elizabeth Thielens, chairman ; Lucia Cole, Alice Bright, Vivian Rice, Mary Kenney, Howard Blackford, Albert Long, Bernard Krog, George Garrett, Marguerite Proby.446within and without the University formed the basis of the two mostunique social affairs ever held at Chicago — the Settlement picnic and the Settlement.dance. At the first, a crowd of University men and women went over to the Settlement and saw its actual conditions and needs against a pleasant, background of supper,entertainment and dance ; at the second, students of every social complexion forgotall the barriers of local caste and packed Bartlett for the sake of the Settlement.The Picnic.On Saturday afternoon and evening, January 11th, the first Settlement picnicwas held at the University Settlement. The picnic was the outcome of a desire toacquaint the students more generally with the activities of our Settlement, and tointerest them in the work. The result was successful even beyond all anticipations,for a very real enthusiasm and interest in the undertaking was shown by the students.It is hoped now that the picnic may become an annual affair.About six hundred went over to the Settlement between five and six o'clock in theafternoon. At. six a buffet supper, furnished by the women of the Settlement Leagues,was served. The long line of guests .filed by the bounteously heaped tables, andwere helped in filling their plates by Mrs. Arnett, Mrs. Eaton, Miss Dudley, MissHarriet Walton and others.After the supper, the. guests gathered in the gymnasium for the evening's entertainment. Miss McDowell told of the problems with which the Settlement had todeal and discussed ways in which the students could help to meet them. A minstrelshow, presented by one of the boys' clubs of the neighborhood was then given and wasmuch appreciated, judging by the demands of the audience for encores.The seats were then cleared away,- and dancing followed for an hour. Musicwas furnished by Miss Walton at the piano, accompanied by Mr. Herman James withthe violin, and Mr. Harry Harper as harpist. The guests left at about ten o'clockfeeling an added interest and sense of responsibilities in the development of theSettlement, and having experienced an enjoyable evening.The student committee in charge was :Marcus A. Hirschl, chairman; Messrs. James, Dabney, Paul, Harper.The Dance.In connection with the picnic, a Settlement dance was given at the University onFriday evening, January 31st. The object was both to raise money for the Settlement,and to institute at the University a big representative dance, which should be essentially informal in character, and in which the University as a whole — both faculty andstudents — should join. Both ends were realized, for about eight hundred peoplecame, as many as Bartlett gymnasium could well accommodate, and in the neighborhood of $400 was received. Simple refreshments were served at tables set in thecorners of the room and presided over by Mrs. Walton, Mrs. Matthews, Mrs.Marsh. Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Eaton, Mrs. Johnson, and Miss Dudley. A committeeof thirty ushers was appointed to aid in introducing people and in making out ofprograms. The ushers were :Helen HendricksHelen SunnyFlorence HarperHelen HurdAlvin KramerH. H. ChandlerHarvey FullerFrank BevanEleanor DayWinifred Kelso ;Edith PowellHarriett GrimMary HeapLaura RoeAnna TempletonEdith OsgoodMarjorie WolfendenHelen PeckHelen GunsaulusW. P. MacCracken Karl; DixonMary WheelerW. E. WratherPaul BuhligT. H. SandersonNorman BarkerKarl ShuartW. F. HewittCharles JordanM. K. DabneyAmong the patronesses were :Mrs. Philip Schuyler AllenMrs. James Rowland AngellMrs. Trevor ArnettMrs. Evas M. BartonMrs. Henry H. BelfieldMrs. Percy H. BoyntonMrs. C. D. BuckMrs. Thomas C. ChamberlainMrs. Solomon H. ClarkMrs. Charles S. EatonMrs. Horace S. FiskeMrs. Henry Gordon GaleMrs. Edgar J. GoodspeedMrs. James Parker HallMrs. William R. HarperMrs. Wallace HeckmanMrs. Charles R. HendersonMrs. E. Fletcher IngallsMrs. Franklin A. JohnsonMrs. Harry Pratt JudsonMrs. Karl KinsleyMrs. Preston Keyes Mrs. Robert M. LovettMrs. W. O. MacClintockMrs. Charles C. MarshMrs. Shailer MathewsMrs. Andrew C. McLaughlinMrs. Floyd R. MechemMrs. Albert MichelsonMrs. Frank J. MillerMrs. Robert A. MillikenMrs. Walter A. PayneMrs. Joseph E. RaycroftMrs. Paul ShoreyMrs. Albion W. SmallMrs. Charles P. SmallMiss Marion TalbotMrs. James W. ThompsonMrs. James Hayden Tufts .Mrs. Geo. E. VincentMrs. Lyman A. WaltonMrs. Jacob A. YoungMrs. Gideon WellsMrs. Nathaniel Butler. Mrs. Wallace AtwoodGeneral ChairmanWillowdean Chatterson,Mrs. Gordon J. LaingMiss Gertrude DudleyThe committees in charge of the dance consisted of :Alvin F. Kramer. . . . .Ticket Committee — W. P. MacCracken, chairmanEleanor Day, Frank Bevan, Helen Hendricks, M. Y. Dabney, H. W. Harriman.Refreshment Committee — Harvey P. Fuller, Jr., chairman; Jessie Heckman,Helen Peck, Helen Sunny, Edward McBride.Committee on Chaperones — Marc Hirschl, Hannibal Chandler.Committee on Ushers — Paul Harper, Davie Hendricks.Committee on Music — H. G. James, Harry Harper.Committee on Singing — Earl Berry, Winston Henry.ATI CUHE real center of social interest in the University is theReynolds Club. Its calendar has included dances and smokers, a Hard Times party, a Leap Year party and other clubevents, besides many other functions given by clubs andorganizations. Of the eleven informals the Hard Timesparty and Leap Year dance stand pre-eminent. At the former masquaraders, shabby genteels, and tramps whirled about the floorunder the dim light of lanterns, sat on nail kegs and rough boards andconsumed apples and cider with the hungry feverishness which accompanies a year of financial panic. Harvey Fuller and Caroline Dickey wonfirst prize for artistic eccentricity of costume; Paul Harper and EthelTerry, second, and Walter Morrison and Marjorie Day third prizes. Forthe best efforts at polite concealment of poverty, Bill McCracken secureda box of the only original Queen Aroma cigars and Miss Fish a bunch ofgenuine American beauties. Bill Wrather also was awarded a bouquet ofbananas and Helen Peck a magnificent spinach. Another box of Aromasmaterialized the hobo's dream of Paradise for Hewitt.The Leap Year party will go down in the University annals as a revelation of the true position of supposed leaders in Chicago's society. Afterthe names of most of the seniors, who before had complacently seated themselves on a high social pedestal, there will not be found mention of thishonor. The Leap Year staff of the Daily Maroon, headed by Esther Hall,attended en masse, and was disturbed only by the fear of rain and the resulting necessity for cabs. Bill Hewitt was probably the first man invited,but as he suggested the affair, the glory of that fact is somewhat clouded.During the Summer quarter a dance was given in the Club for the coedsof Southern clime and sallow complexion.Following a custom inaugurated the year before, a well attended reception was held in honor of President and Mrs. Judson, February 11, 1908.45ohas been an almost overwhelming demand for the use of the Clubby University organizations. Four of the girl's clubs appropriated it forformals, and others for informal dances. There has been rarely a weekthat some undergraduate college has not held a dance and all of the classeshave had at least one party.The Club smokers of the year have been marked by pleasant informality,At the first Dean Vincent with valuable precision shot bits of his vocabulary at receptive freshmen in an address of welcome, and Coach Stagg puton, for the first time, a song and dance stunt, his audience enthusiasticallyswelling the chorus. Burton's "Strumming Singing Scouts," followed in amelodious musical melange, and Wallie Steffen and Tommie Taylor, andlater Kid Tetarsky and Shortie Johnson, more than satisfied the fight fanswith their exhibitions of pugilistic propensities. Each bout by the way, wascalled a draw. The pie eating contest, it will not be forgotten, was won byFat Smith.At another smoker Cartoonist Hopkins of The Motor Age, did creationsin crayon, and Don Crane and George Hunt added a page to the historyof histrionic horrors with an original sketch.The Reynolds Club Commission again provided for and entertainedthe contestants in the Interscholastic Conference Meet. Open house waskept for them for several days.The Club on numerous occasions throughout the year also has beenthrown open to national educational bodies meeting at the University, theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science being perhaps themost prominent example.The members appointed on the entertainment committee were : WilliamF. Hewitt, chairman, Henry B. Roney, Charles B. Jordan, Hannibal H.Chandler, Jr., Arthur G. Bovee, Luther D. Fernald, Charles H. Ireland,Wellington D. Jones, Paul A. Buhlig and John G. Schommer. Those on thecommittee for the new year are : John T. Dille, chairman, Renslow P. Sherer,Herschel G. Shaw, Walter P. Steffen, Daniel W. Ferguson, George E.Fuller, Weaver Chamberlain, Charles H. 'Ireland, and William P. MacCracken, Jr.451CHIPIfityoK" 'Tis seldom, if ever,You find them together,The Time, the Place and the Girl."ND yet, if asked where they could be found, the Chicagograd might look back on the most cherished of his memoriesand say : " 'Twas at the afternoon dances of the Score Club,in Rosalie." And you in your business office on a tryingSaturday afternoon, would remember too, and, looking idlybeyond the pretty little stenographer into the past, youwould see Rosalie, where illusions were never banished, and where bubblesnever broke. You recall how softly you glided over the floor to the entrancing strains of "Vilia ;" how you looked at the mass of golden hair near yourshoulder, and into those eyes with a dreamland of glories behind them. Youremember the little balcony chats and the scramble for the frappe bowl. Allthat was at Rosalie.So the season of 1907-08 came around and Frank Madison Orchard tookthe presidency of the club. Harry Osgood Latham was chairman of thedance committee. The program pleased, as always, and if the orchestra didoverwork the "Merry Widow" strains it was only because it wished toplease its public. The barn dance furnished a welcome diversion, and was popular here, as elsewhere. The club was able to hold all dances as planned,and enjoyed a good patronage, speaking well for the coming fall season.452December 8— -Phi Beta Delta at Reynolds Club.1908February 10 — Delta Kappa Epsilon at Bournique's.February 21 — The Washington Promenade at Bartlett Gymnasium.April 10 — Psi Upsilon at Bournique's.April 24 — Sigma Chi at Auditorium. ,April 24 — Chi Rho Sigma at Metropole.May 1 — Delta Upsilon at Bournique's.May 15 — Quadranglers at Midlothian.May 22 — Sigma Alpha Epsilon at Colonial.May 22— Mortar Board- at Midlothian.May 23— Wyvern at Midlothian.May 29— Sigma at Midlothian.May 29 — Phi Kappa Psi at Colonial.June 5 — The Junior Promenade at Bartlett Gymnasium.453Tomlinson to Louis BevezeteFlorence Cummings to Thomas HairJennie Biery to George HoughIrene Anthony to Clarence ConverseSarah Addams to Ernest YoungKATHERIN6 SOHM TO CaPT. FRANK BARKEElizabeth Street to Ernest Steven'sStella Moore to William JayneBertha Wiggs to L. HeinesMartha Wood, '05 to Allan WolfeLina Small, '04, to Hayden HarrisClara Wheeler, '05, to Joseph McCordAnna Waughop, '07, to Clarence McNeili.eIrma Rice, '06, to George R. BeachClarice Long, '05, to Thomas WeekMary E. Remick, '02, to Irving McDonaldLill Miller Stevens, '02, to Douglas SoutherlandMaude L. Radford, '94, to Joseph Parker WarrenIrene E. Robinson, '95, to George A. AbbottLoretta Toner, '06, to Frank B. HutchinsonAnna Payne Wells, '05, to Lee Wilder MaxwellEthel Freeman to Reuben M. StrongEdith Wiles, '04, to William Sellman BirdAnne Hough, '07, to Clyde A. BlairMarie Lamb, '04, to Charles ChamberlainRuth Reis Jackman, '08, to Newcomb StevensElizabeth Curtis to Felix HughesLillian Stephenson to Charles KennedyElsie Booth to Dr. DavisMartha McDonald to Mr. WrightEdith Shaffer, '03, to Frederick LassGrace Darlington, '04, to George HowellAlice Cary Wood, '05, to Charles ThomasMargarite Hamm to Joseph BordenHelen Cass to Albert J. HopkinsMary P. Blocher to Hugh C. ErnestMarion Chase to Geo. R. SchaefferRuth Goodman to Melville A. HillSimmons to Ralph W. BaileyPauline Palmer to Tom HarsiiaKitty Foster to Fred RobinsonElizabeth Street to Ernest StephensLillian Stephenson to Chas. KennedyMargaret Winnach to Fred. C. FleetFlorence Williams to N. Curtis RogersBernice Jones to A. P. FlemingCALENDARAprilAprilAprilAprilAprilAprilAprilApril 10.April n.April n.April 12.April 12.April 12.April 12.April 13.April 13.April 13.April 13.April 13.April 15.April 18.April 19.April 19.April 20.April 20.April 20.April 25.April 25.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 26.April 27.April 27.April 28.April 29. April 5. Phi Kappa Sigma smoker.Delta Kappa Epsilon dance at home of Harold Swift.Sigma Nu smoker to Illinois chapter.Sigma initiation of Ada Ahlswede, Edythe Howard and FlorenceDrake.Psi Upsilon theater party.Pi Delta Phi theater party.Esoteric Initiation.Kappa Sigma informal.Delta Kappa Epsilon theater party.Phi Kappa Psi smoker.Sigma Alpha Epsilon smoker.Phi Beta Delta luncheon at home of Miss Plimpton.Wyvern club entertained Mortar Board club at Mrs. Ingals.Quadrangler card party at home of Miss Tompkins.Phi Delta Theta alumni smoker.Chi Psi house-party.Chi Rho Sigma luncheon.Esoteric dance at Reynold's club.Phi Gamma Delta initiation.Wyvern luncheon and theater party.Quadrangler initiation of Misses Case, Parmly, Templeton, Therele and Tompkins.Pi Delta Phi initiation of Margaret Hunt.Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained by Northwestern chapter.Spelman House party at Ravinia.Beta Theta Pi alumni smoker.Alpha Tau Omega card party.Sigma Chi annual informal.Mortar Board initiation.Phi Beta Delta Initiation of Sarah Wilkes, Jean Hamilton.Chi Rho Sigma theater party.Delta Tau Delta informal.Sigma Nu banquet of anniversary of installation.Alpha Tau Omega conclave dinner at Hamilton club.Chi Psi informal.Phi Gamma Delta theater party.Chi Psi banquet.Phi Kappa Sigma theater party.Kappa Sigma alumni banquet.Psi Upsilon alumni smoker.Phi Gamma Delta Informal.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Morton.Phi Kappa Sigma initiation of Samuel C. Fleming.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Knickerbocker.Phi Kappa Psi theater party.Phi Delta Theta theater party with Northwestern chapter.Chi Rho Sigma tea at home of Miss Boyington.Spelman House initiation.Kappa Sigma Formal at Hotel Metropole.Delta Upsilon alumni smoker.Psi Upsilon masquerade.Phi Beta Delta alumnae luncheon at Hotel Windermere.Sigma informal at home of Miss Drake.Quadranglers entertained at tea by the Misses Ter-ry.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Nichols.i. Deltho Club entertained by Miss Kenney.May 2. Spelman House spread.May 2. Delta Kappa Epsilon reception.May 2. Psi Upsilon dinner at Auditorium Annex.May 2. Sigma luncheon at home of Miss Leonard.May 3. Sigma Alpha Epsilon parents night.May 3. Phi Gamma Delta Freshman vaudeville and smoker.May 4. Chi Psi bridge party to the alumni.May 4. Phi Kappa Sigma "Dads" night.May 4. Delta Upsilon informal dance.May 4. Miss Day entertained the Wyverns at cards.May 4. Chi Rho Sigma luncheon.May 5. Wyvern spread in the Misses Roe's rooms.May 6. Alpha Delta Phi initiation of H. A. Slater.May 7. Y. W. C. L. reception to Faculty members and friends at the home of Mrs. Jewitt.May 10. Pi Delta Phi theater party.May 10. Phi Kappa Sigma initiation of Madden Leues and Maxwell.May 10. Mortar Board informal at Lincoln Center.May 11. Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained Northwestern chapter at Blackfriars.May 11. The Quadrangle Fete under auspices of the Y. W. C. L.May 11. Chi Psi dinner party before Blackfriars play.May 13. Delta Tau Delta ninth birthday banquet.May 13. Mortar Board entertained by Mrs. Shambough.May 14. Wyvern club entertained at tea by Miss Peabody.May 15. Beta Theta Pi freshmen smoker.May 17. Phi Beta Delta entertained by Miss McMellen.Chi Rho Sigma initiation.May 17. Deltho Club millinery party at the home of Miss Kleiminger.May 17. Sigma Nu informal dance.May 17. Phi Kappa Sigma week end party at Elgin, 111.May 17. Quadrangler annual dinner-dance at Midlothian.May 17. Wyvern card party at Miss Preston's.May 18. Chi Psi house party and formal dance at the home of R. L. Freer, Hinsdale, 111.May 18. Phi Kappa Psi alumni smoker.May 19. Delta Kappa Epsilon initiation of Charles Glore and Joseph Borden.May 20. Spelman house reception.May 23. Delta Upsilon faculty reception.May 23. Esoteric house party at Lakeside, Michigan.May 24. Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Thompson.May 24. Sigma Chi Decennial Celebration.May 24. Sigma dinner-dance at Midlothian.May 25. Phi Beta Delta dinner-dance at the Windermere.May 29. Wyvern cotillion at Hotel Metropole.May 29. Chi Rho Sigma dinner-dance at Reynolds Club.May 30. Phi Kappa Sigma convention dinner at Grand Pacific.May 30. Psi Upsilon informal.May 31. Mortar Board dance at Midlothian.May 31. Phi Kappa Psi dance at the Windermere.May 31. Delta Tau Delta freshman launch party.May 31. Sigma Alpha Epsilon alumni banquet at Auditorium.JuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJune Chi Psi lawn party and dance.Phi Beta Delta lawn party.Beta Theta Pi house party at home of Judge Goodwin, Naperville, 111.Kappa Sigma smoker to seniors.Pi Delta Phi luncheon at Marshall Field.Delta Upsilon excursion on Lake Michigan.Wyvern dance for freshmen.Wyvern luncheon at Miss Peabody's.Phi Kappa Sigma card party at home of Professor Leues.Chi Rho Sigma initiation luncheon at Del Prado.Alpha Delta Phi lawn party, Oak Park.Sigma Nu theater party.Esoteric supper at Tea House.Mortar Board annual reunion and luncheon.Chi Rho Sigma party.Psi Upsilon informal tea at chapter house.Phi Beta Delta initiation of Miss Grace Moore.Sigma Nu dinner to departing seniors.Spelman House luncheon to Seniors and Alumnae.Deltho Club picnic at Glen Ellyn.Delta Kappa Epsilon dance at home of Harold Swift.Spelman House boating party.Phi Kappa Psi Smoker and Farewell Party.Chi Psi dinner at the home of W. P. Henneberry.Sigma Alpha Epsilon alumni reunion and banquet.Alpha Delta Phi initiation of Rush Brown.Wyvern initiation of Miss Sexton.Alpha Tau Omega theater party.Phi Kappa Sigma farewell dinner at Grand Pacific.Sigma Chi banquet at Great Northern.Phi Beta Delta house party at Round Lake, Mich.Sigma Alpha Epsilon Lake party.Wyvern house party at Chicago Heights.Phi Kappa Sigma moonlight boat party.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Ingham.Psi Upsilon Seniors farewell banquet.to July I. — Mortar Board house party at Oconomowoc.Sigma Alpha Epsilon theater party.Quadrangler house party at Castle Park, Mich.Sigma Alpha Epsilon farewell smoker.Deltho Club entertained by Miss Fox.Beta Theta Pi farewell dinner to B. S.. Weber.Delta Kappa Epsilon theater party.Wyvern luncheon. ,Psi Upsilon dinner-dance at Midlothean.Deltho initiation of Misses Gordon, Nicoll and Farwell.Phi Beta Delta luncheon at home of Miss Aniie Hough.Phi Kappa Sigma welcome dinner to Hamilton Badger and N. Fuessle.4583-4-5-JulyJulyJuly 12.July 12.July 14.July 17.July 18.July 18.July 24.July 24.July 24.July 24.July 25.July 25.July 26.July 26.July 26.July 27.July 27.August 6.August 7.August 14.August 14.August 21.August 22.August 22.August 24.August 28.August 28-31September 2.September 2.September 3.September 16.September 17.September 26.September 27.September 27.September 27.September 28.September 30. Sigma Alpha Epsilon annual moonlight picnic.Phi Beta Delta entertained at luncheon at homeof Miss LockhartBeta Theta Pi week end party at home of AlbertHoughton.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Morton.Psi LTpsilon theater party.Phi Kappa Sigma moonlight launch party.Chi Rho Sigma picnic and launch ride.Deltho Club party at home of Miss Ella Berg.Wyvern entertained by Miss Richardson.Sigma reunion at home of Miss Leavitt.Pi Delta Phi picnic at Jackson Park.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Higbie.Pi Delta Phi bowling party.Chi Rho Sigma house party at Morgan Park, 111. . ,Phi Beta Delta entertained by Miss Osgood.Phi Gamma Delta National Convention at Reynolds Club opens.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Walsh.Phi Gamma Delta smoker at Reynolds Club, dinner at Del Prado.Phi Kappa Sigma week end party, Lake Forest, 111.Phi Gamma Delta "Ekklesia" banquet.Sigma Alpha Epsilon smoker.Phi Kappa Psi informal.Phi Gamma Delta automobile party and informal dance.Psi Upsilon tallyho party and dinner :Phi Gamma Delta luncheon at South Shore Country club.>. Chi Rho Sigma house party at Crittendon Lake.\ Phi Beta Delta luncheon.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Hartwell.Deltho boating party.Phi Beta Delta entertained by Miss Reichmann.Phi Kappa Psi reunion and dinner at Great Northern.Chi Rho Sigma house party given by Miss Wagner at Lake Delevan.Chi Psi house party and dinner at Hotel Morain, Highland Park.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Montgomery.Deltho Club house party.Chi Rho Sigma moonlight picnic.Deltho launch party.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Gunsaulus.Sigma luncheon at Fields. 'Mortar Board entertained by Miss Gannon.Deltho Club entertained by Miss Zimm.Mortar Board entertained by Mrs. Wells.Chi Psi smoker to the alumni.Phi Kappa Psi smoker.Phi Beta Delta reunion and luncheon.Esoteric entertained by Miss- Barker.459OctoberOctoberOctoberOctoberOctoberOctober ^.October 4.October 4.October 4.October 4.October 5.October 5.October 5.October 5.October 5.October 6.October 8.October 10.October 11.October 11.October 12.October 12.October 12.October 12.October 12.October 14.October 14.October 14.October 15.October 15.October 18.October 18.October 18.October 18.October 20.October 21.October 21.October 21.October 24.October 24.October 25.October 25.October 25.October 25.October 25.October 25.October 26.October 28.October 30.October 31.October 31.October 31.October 31.October 31. Phi Kappa Sigma reunion and smoker.Psi Upsilon smoker.Sigma Alpha Epsilon smoker.Beta Theta Pi theater party.Quadranglers entertained in honor of Miss CummingsDelta Kappa Epsilon theater party.Freshman Frolic given by Y. W. C. L.Chi Psi theater party.Sigma Nu dinner to pledges.Sigma Chi reunion and smoker.Wyvern club reunion.Chi Rho Sigma entertained by Miss Baker.Kappa Sigma theater party.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Thompson.Phi Beta Delta theater party.Delta Kappa Epsilon dance.Quadranglers entertained by Mrs. Converse.Spelman House party.Joint reception of Y. W. C. A. at Reynold's Club.Chi Psi informal.Delta Tau Delta informal.Beta Theta Pi dance at home of Albert Long.Delta Upsilon theater party.Psi Upsilon smoker.Delta Kappa Epsilon luncheon and football party.Deltho luncheon.Chi Rho Sigma luncheon.Spelman House spread.Wyvern reception at home of Miss Chalmers.Psi Upsilon theater party.Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained by pledges.Chi Psi alumni smoker.Alpha Delta Phi alumni smoker.Delta Kappa Epsilon dance at home of Harold Swift.Wyvern Club corn roast on beach.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Williamson.Chi Psi tallyho party to horse show.Spelman House at home.Sigma's entertained by Miss Harper.Deltho entertained by Miss Nicoll.Alpha Tau Omega euchre party.Kappa Sigma informal.Psi Upsilon informal.Sigma Alpha Epsilon beach party and corn roast.Phi Gamma Delta dinner at Vogelsang's.Phi Kappa Psi hallowe'en party and dance.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Knickerbocker.Wyvern luncheon.Pi Delta Phi halloween party.Spelman House halloween party.Wyvern halloween party.Deltho halloween party at home of Miss Farwell.Psi Upsilon sophomore banquet at States.Phi Beta Delta halloween party.NovemberNovemberNovemberNovemberNovemberNovemberNovember 4.November 6.November 6.November 7.November 8.November 8.November 9.November 11.November 11..November 12.November 13.November 14.November 15.November 15.November 15.November 15.November 15.November 15.November 15.November 15.November 16.November 16.November 16.November 18.November 18.November 20.November 22.November 23.November 23,November 23.November 24.November 24.November 24.November 27.November 27.November 27.November 27.November 27.November 27.November 28.November 29.November 29.November 29.November 29.November 30.November 30.November 30. RDVBnBEH1. Sigma Alpha Epsilon informal.1. Chi Rho Sigma informal at Charlevoix club.1. Delta Kappa Epsilon alumni smoker.1. Phi Kappa Sigma dinner at Chicago Beach.2. Pi Delta Phi theater party.2. Esoteric dance at the home of Miss Magee.2. Sigma initiation of Miss Kellogg.Quadranglers social meeting at home of Miss Frake.Deltho Club entertained by Miss Fox.Delta Tau Delta freshman banquet.Spelman House spread.Delta Upsilon freshman party.Chi Rho Sigma entertained by Miss Wagner.Phi Gamma Delta alumni dinner at Union.Sigma Nu theater party.Alpha Tau Omega annual banquet at Union.Kappa Sigma theater party.Alpha Delta Phi reception to parents.Chi Psi aUtomibile party to Riverside.Mortar Board Masquerade at home of Miss Morton.Phi Kappa Psi dinner and theater party.Phi Beta Delta card party at home of Miss Nixon.Sigma Alpha Epsilon smoker for pledges.Psi Upsilon automobile party to Lake Bluff.Beta Theta Pi informal.Kappa Sigma informal.Chi Rho Sigma entertained at home of Miss Wagner.Sigma Alpha Epsilon theater party.Esoteric dance at the Reynolds Club.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Hunt.Mortar Board entertained by Mrs. Keene.Spelman House reception.Phi Beta Delta luncheon at home of Miss Plimpton.Phi Gamma Delta informal.Faculty of College of Education entertained by students.Pi Delta Phi football party.Delta Upsilon alumni dinner.Sigma Alpha Epsilon musicale.Psi Upsilon smoker.Alpha Delta Phi informal supper.Delta Tau Delta entertained by F. Patton.Sigma Chi alumni banquet at Great Northern.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Stein.Psi Upsilon informal.Chi Rho Sigma theater party.Delta Upsilon informal at Shotwell Hall.Beta Theta Pi dinner at home of H. Gifford.Deltho progressive dinner at Reynolds Club.Wyvern informal at Reynolds Club.Alpha Delta Phi freshman informal.Phi Gamma Delta stag party at Colonial Club.Spelman House alumnae luncheon at Tip Top Inn.Chi Psi luncheon at Union League club.Esoteric luncheon at Fields.DecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecemberDecember ,.December 12.December 13.December 13.December 13.December 13.December 13.December 13.December 13.December 14.December 15.December 15.December 15.December 15.December 20.December 20.December 20.December 24.December 26.December 28.December 28.December 28.December 30.December 30.December 31.December 31.December 31.December 31. Sigma tea at home of Miss Compton.Phi Kappa Sigma dinner and theater party.Delta Kappa Epsilon theater party.Pi Delta Phi luncheon at Tea House.Pi Delta Phi initiation of Edith Chapman and Villa Smith.Chi Psi dinner at home of H. H. Chandler, Jr.Psi Upsilon theater party.Sigma Alpha Epsilon informal.Deltho luncheon at the home of Miss Gordon.Sigma dance at Reynolds Club.Mortar Board literary meeting at home of Mrs. Hartwell.Delta Tau Delta informal.Psi Upsilon informal.Alpha Tau Omega dance at Rosalie.Pi Delta Phi luncheon at Tea house.Spelman House chafing dish party.Phi Kappa Psi alumni dinner and theater party.Phi Kappa Sigma freshman smoker.College of Education informal.Kappa Sigma smoker.Sigma Nu "Friday."Phi Gamma Delta alumni dinner.Sigma Alpha Epsilon alumni banquet at Auditorium.Delta Upsilon informal at-home.Psi Upsilon informal tea.Mortar Board entertained by Miss Lulu Morton.WTyvern entertained by Miss Chalmers.Deltho informal at Reynolds Club.Sigma Alpha Epsilon farewell supper.Phi Beta Delta Christmas party at home of Miss Lockhart.Delta Kappa Epsilon smoker and reunion.Christmas party given by Y. W. C. L. and Y. M. C. A. at Hitchcock Hall.Phi Kappa Psi dinner and theater party.Chi Psi theater party.Phi Kappa Sigma freshmen banquet at Grand Pacific.Phi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Halsted.Wyvern entertained by Miss Helen Sexton.Spelman House entertained by Miss Preston.Psi Upsilon dinner^ at home of G. Le Valley.Phi Beta Delta tea at home of Miss Osgood.Wyvern Dance at home of Mrs. Bright.462£>«*■» *- JA4.0BYJanuaryJanuaryJanuaryJanuaryJanuaryJanuaryJaunaryJaunaryJanuaryJaunaryJanuaryJanuary 10.January 10,January 10,January 10January nJanuary iiJanuary nJanuary nJanuary 13,January 14,January 15January 17,January 17,January 17,January 17.January 18January 18.January 18,January i&,January 1January 20,January 20,January 21January 24.January 24,January 24.January 24.January 25January 25January 26,January 26,January 28.January 29.January 31 Chi Psi alumni smoker and vaudeville.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Mrs. Halsted.Deltho Club picture party at home of Miss Kleiminger.Phi Kappa Sigma reunion dinner.Psi Upsilon informal.Pi Delta Phi initiation of Margarete Stein and Marguerite Beeson.Chi Rho Sigma initiation of Misses May, Burke, Hill and Evans.Sigma Nu alumni smoker.Quadrangler initiation of Fannie Johnston and Flora Jones.Mortar Board entertainment by Miss Gunsaulus.Psi Upsilon theater party.College of Education entertained by Y. W. C. L.Phi Kappa Sigma smoker.Beta Theta Pi initiation and alumni banquet.Esoteric reunion at home of Mrs. Eaton.Beta Theta Pi district convention.Psi Upsilon annual banquet.Sigma Chi initiation.Phi Gamma Delta annual initiation dinner.Sigma card party at home of Miss Hall.Phi Delta Theta alumni chapter dinner at Hamilton Club.Esoteric house party at home of the Misses Nash.Delta Tau Delta initiation.Psi Upsilon smoker.Alpha Tau Omega informal and card party.Spelman House initiation.Phi Kappa Sigma initiation.Spelman House theater party.Pi Delta Phi entertained by Miss Ingham.Phi Beta Delta luncheon at Field's.Chi Rho Sigma luncheon at Field's.Kappa Sigma initiation.Chi Psi entertained at dinner at Auditorium by H. Blackford.Mortar Board entertained by Mrs. Hayden Harris.Kappa Sigma informal.Joint party, Y. W. C. L. and Y. M. C. A. at Lexington Hall.Psi Upsilon alumni "pow-wow."Phi Beta Delta entertained by Miss Wilkes.Alpha Delta Phi initiation.Chi Rho Sigma entertained by Miss Butler.Psi Upsilon informal.Esoteric faculty reception at Foster Hall.Phi Beta Delta tea at home of Miss Jackman.Sigma theater party.Deltho Club entertained by Miss Fitzsimmons.463FebruaryFebruaryFebruaryFebruaryFebruaryFebruaryFebruary 8.February 8February 8.February 8.February ii.February n.February 12.February 13.February 14.February 14.February 14.February 15.February 15.February 15.February 21.February 22.February 22.December 22.February 25.February 26.February 27.February 28.February 29. 1. Reynolds Club dance.4. Smoker of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.5. Christian League Dinner.7. Ball of Delta Kappa Epsilon.7. Junior Clairs dance.7. Freshman dance.Green Hall Faculty party.Delta Upsilon reception to the faculty.Alpha Delta Phi at home.Phi Kappa Sigma Informal.Reynolds Club reception to the President.Phi Kappa Psi dance at the Windermere.Beta Theta Pi luncheon.Sophomore Class dance.Sigma dance.Leap Year cotillion of Literature men.Informal of Arts and Science.Reynolds Club informal.Delta Upsilon informal.Dramatic Club.Washington Promenade.Brownson Club party.Kappa Sigma informal.Delta Upsilon smoker.Sigma Nu smoker.Esoteric Faculty party.Sophomore Class dance.W. A. A. Vaudeville.Reynolds Club informal.464ARCHArts College men at Reynolds Club.Senior class reception at Hitchcock Library.Pen Club annual ladies'* dinner at Hutchinson CommonsPhilosophy women at Reynolds Club.Beta Theta Pi house informal.Beta Theta Pi informal.Chi Rho Sigma dance.Sigma Alpha Epsilon house informal. .Snell Hall dance.Delta Upsilon house informal.Beecher Hall dance.Green Hall dance.Alpha Tau Omega informal.Dramatic Club initiation.Y. W. C- L. party at Lexington Hall.Foster Hall dance.Quadranglers' dance.Lincoln Flouse dinner.Smoker at Reynolds Club.Score Club dance at Rosalie Hall.Alpha Delta Phi house informal.Snell Hall informal at Reynolds Club.Sigma Alpha Epsilon alumni vacation party.Pi Delta Phi dance.Three Quarters Club dance at Reynolds Club.Womens Hall entertainment at Green.Esoteric dance.Women's Hall entertainment.Phi Delta Theta house informal.Phi Beta Delta dance at the Calumet Club.Psi Upsilon formal at Bournique's.Phi Gamma Delta house informal.Alpha Delta Phi house informal.Reynolds Club informal.Chi Psi house informal.Delta Tau Delta supper.Kappa Sigma house informal.Chi Rho Sigma dance.Sigma Chi formal at Auditorium.Score Club at Rosalie Hall.465Roy BaldridgeFred BateHelen JacobyMildred ChamberlainMina HoskinsWalter FordJay WeddellLucy DriscollWalter McAvoyCharles JordanFrancis BlackburnArthur LakeE. R. BlissMwttlimxtamRalph BenziesAlbert HendersonFloyd A. KleinCarlisle KeyesLuther D. FernaldLouis T. BerlinKarl H. DixonEmily FrakeGertrude GreenbaumViola I. ParadiseEdna A. KlineHoward Blackfordhurnard kennerEthel KawinHlLMAR BAUKHAGEHarvey MeagherFred CaldwellGertrude FishJessie Heckmanand KarrgIt was the old, old *story. Larry's heart was broken. Every detail hadbeen so romantic and had pointed with such unfailing certainty to the words"lived happily ever after/' that the unhappy ending had galled. But wait !You shall hear the whole story.Larry had come to college the year before as a Freshman, had undergonethe usual excitement of rushing parties and had at last been pledged to SigmaRho. Now if it had been something else — but anyway it was on his pledgenight that Graham, an old 2 P, led him to his sanctum and there on themantle stood her picture. Now six weeks of masculine society, howeverjovial, is too much for any Freshman, and Larry — well, he appreciated a prettygirl rather more than most.And being only a Freshman, he exclaimed, enthusiastically, "What apeach of a girl!" Graham smiled. Graham was engaged to a girl in Foster.Larry still gazed pensively at the picture."What a peach of a girl !" he repeated. "I say, who is your friend?"He asked the question in such a studied, off-hand manner that Grahamhesitated, then drawled slowly : «"Daisy — Daisy West. Nice girl, too.""A college girl?" pursued Larry."Yes, but not here this year. She lives out West at Atchison, Kansas, volunteered Graham.Larry had gained his end, and Miss Daisy West of Atchison, Kansas, wasregistered that night in a certain book all too full of other verses written onother nights— to other peaches. But you see it was his first of the year.Next morning Larry was thoughtful. His fellows joshed him on forgotten maidens, but Larry only slipped away and quite unintentionally — oh;quite! — he took out pen and paper— his new Sigma Rho paper. He wrote amost modest letter, humbly suggesting that a certain maid could make a poorlonely Freshman happy — I have told before of Larry's long rushing — bywriting a line of comfort to him and — but Larry was a fluent writer. Heread the letter over, then quite unintentionally he addressed it to Miss DaisyWells and stroked the chin where his beard was not, in complacent satisfaction.In his pocket the letter lay for two whole days. Then he mailed it and waited.Graham merely nodded his sage, senior head, when Larry showed amarked preference for his room, his couch, his mantle shelf, and he neverwinked when one day Miss Daisy West failed to smile at him from her accustomed place. Graham, though, was engaged to a girl at Foster.469don't say Larry was a changed man. Fie still took pretty girls to dancesand ate the fudge of wise ones, but he never took the same one twice in succession, and never failed to look at a picture that lay in his drawer each night.He even wore the key to the drawer as a watch charm, and he waited. Therewas no need of blushing when a small, blue, scented envelope with a postmark "Atchison" was brought to him, but he did, and he kissed the picturewhen he had read its timid contents, which marked the beginning of the correspondence.Letters traveled quickly. Larry substituted letters for themes in English II. Larry dreamed in Math and was found wanting even in Astronomy.One day Larry expressed his pen to Atchison, Kansas. Then he began to talkof "college as a waste of time," and of "going into business." The cleans, ontinted stationery agreed with him that college was no place for Larry, buttinted letters from Atchison quite outshone the Junior deans.The one letter that told that Miss West would be in Chicago for theSigma Rho formal was read a hundred times by Larry's beaming eyes. Hebought a gold frame for the picture and left it boldly on the chiffonier. Andall this happiness came while Larry was only a Freshman.The day before the formal, regardless of recent quizzes, Larry wentwhistling out of Cobb, head high and heart higher. Larry stubbed his toe !Larry fell ! Larry sprained his knee, and Larry's heart was broken ! Still,Freshmen do not die of grief, and after awhile he began to think of the girl.He was to meet her with a rose in his left lapel. He asked Graham to meetMiss West and bring her back to tea. He did not explain details. Hisbrothers put him in the window to wait. He asked for all the pictures inhis room — but he only looked at one. He had timed the trains to a minute,but long before Graham's great red car came in sight dowm the street he hadsettled back to beat a nervous tattoo on the window, and wait.His blood waltzed giddily round his heart, and he waited. The red carcame in sight, whizzed up to the house, stopped. Larry blushed, then choked.Graham had stepped out of the car. But —. The other passenger sprang tothe ground, called merrily to the crowd on the porch, which answered: "Hel-loo-o-o, Daisy, old girl. Going in for any Blackfriar stunts this year?'470rro ^~ &cft ftw ^n P P.o n>C/3 o-ir o^ 03 oo o03 p03 Sioft cli^t ow 03 ^ P.ft 03r oP-ft)(A oTCDo incr ft 3o z^SU no ft.^ 00.rt #ff03P ?.%%'iCL *SO( )n3 ?lP"i_ WoP <£n'rT •-a. Is> N? "^ 0 00o O O Co 00o O O 0 Ocn tn 03 *C to 03 OO P M5'""1 ^ ^ CO CO 00*< ■^w » 1-3 03Co W 1-103ft"ft ^9°2oV^0!!^3. ^0 9 ?»05 <J ft _ Wft Jr*ft ' gP P 0>CfQ P 0 0? ft ^^ 0 21 I1 9 3 sP M> *P 3 ^t^1-1 0 0w 1 ww- (*r£2 ft (l ft fl) M iT N #w 1— 1o2 '—1 ft0 2°03 r+ r s Ow'""-9 hr1 O {S3O rt- !> ftff sH*-1 0"* °-o*ft ^*033 4^E£ s° °o*<S ^ft 03 O cn 0 0<!<0 3 E^OO O l-H5'WOcT<-*• ^ 0 5 h-iw1-1 CL.^03* r-t- 0 -Los 2P ft 2 cn 0Hft 3 2 . K^po >B.^' ft Qcn -1 25" M3 M- P^ hrj H<w O ^— '-W ,'?." S*° gd~*K ft^Hos Z2 g.ft hw<03 O p. ft>ft 003 ij*su !U 03 Tj5' 90 5Sp '2 ft 0 0 sir2oMft p"p Qow 1 s~"'0 2- "> -s «P. C P Pt toHftpp_ <5?^n> ^ 1— 0.^3L_J 2 ^P »p5T§ C^<HmO ^ £0 I<T> w ^ 29. OpO CO ^ ° 2^^ 3 P-JLw i-s w r r4^ ww ,&»# c/o cn2 9 ^ P* w *§ WHgW^| 0 . p << ^ « >CfQ <03 oTp° ,-^U*/^fii O ft "< ".3 03 00p 9 M ^ 0-^3 ^ p03 P wP'03 Og P^ftft Cfi*oot?S -SOP 01— 1HOg S0 a*03 <t>1— » 1- P ft s tr WP P pTft ft r+ CLw cn f ^S N_^ , 1 '^-/^w' 1 wP 1 j oodCOn>OsPo»-*(T>cro(T>crOOQCDr-h»-t3o13►-*•P1 — »wCTQCDCD•-tCTQA TALKING MACHINE!Our University records reproduce perfectly all the addresses, publicspeeches and after dinner pleasantries of our representative men.Why sit through several hours of talk in a stuffy hall or class-roomwhen our records enable you to hear the same speech in your ownhome?The University Talking Machine Co. now offers for the first timethe following records, compiled with great care :George E. Vincent : "Freshmen and Gladiators, I Greet You."This is a perfect reproduction of this celebrated address, also knownas "The First of October Speech." On account of the high speedto which our talking machines are geared the record is able to produce perfectly this rapid-fire address. By adjusting the electric fanat the side of the machine the listener will get all the effects of awindy discourse.Professor Fredric Blarichard : "The Aesthetic and Socializing Influence of the University of Chicago Military Band."No home should be without this splendid oration. It is known tohave packed Mandel time and again at the weekly band concerts.People have shed tears on hearing it, and those who came to findfault remained to weep. Specially prepared by the University Talking Machine Co.Dean William D. MacClintock : "The Liberty of the Press."This is a succinct lecture on the rise and glorious predominance ofthe Press. Dr. MacClintock knows the habits of the reporter welland has given us a remarkable presentation of this animal's characteristics. Instructive, exhaustive and entertaining.Professor Frederick Starr: "The Sunday School and the Home."A splendid address by this prominent worker in the Missionary field.That part of the lecture which deals with the missionary himself isespecially rich in diction, comprehensive and at the same time terseand to the point. We recommend this for Fourth of July celebrations. May also be used to advantage by Nihilists and others planning bomb parties. Sent packed with care.for % lExamaIt was almost ten. They were sitting in the big settee that is nearly hidden behind thegrand piano. There was nobody else in the parlor, not a soul — even the lights had gone out.From far away in the distance came prolonged humming, as of many voices speaking inlong, ceaseless chants."What is the sound?" asked Percival, who was of an enquiring mind, since the only mark heever got from his instructors was a question mark."They are boning for the exams," responded Clarice, with a sigh. "Alas ! I, too, haveexams. To-morrow, dearest, in English Three. And I know nothing whatever about unity,emphasis and coherence."Let me teach you, Sister," said Percival. "When you love me and I love you and we bothlove each other — well, that's unity.""Oh !" said the maid. "And what is coherence ?""I will demonstrate," said the youth. "Coherence is doing things in their logical order. See,I place my arm carefully around you like this; then with a slight effort I contract it. ThenI take your right hand in my left — that is coherence.""Oh! And what is emphasis?""This," said Percival. Gently he brought her head to a level with his and gazed soulfullyinto the liquid depths of her eyes. For a moment he hung longingly on her look, then he carefully maneuvered to evade her nose, and place the desired emphasis in the proper dormitory."There," said Percival. "That is emphasis. Do you think the exams will be very hard?""They will be very, very hard," responded Clarice, with another wistful sigh. "Let's reviewsome more."®aa (&oab to h? ®n», or, 2|ta MattytB £mtIt was the bewitching hour of 10 -.30 a. m. as our hero stepped briskly out of Ellis. Thecampus was wrapped in silence except for an occasional warble from one of the tree tops, wherea sweet-voiced Three Quarters pledge poured forth his heart to the azure heavens. Presently atall figure emerged from the deep thicket in front of Cobb and lurked toward him. It was noneother than Reginald Vere de Vere, the Junior class politician! ! !Our hero paled to the roots of his hair at the sight of him."You! !" he exclaimed thickly. "Is it you? Why do you pursue me?""Because the Junior class elections come next week and you are to run for president," saidReginald with a hollow laugh. "Pretty fine, eh? Picture in the Cap and Gown, Maroon write-upto send home to mother, and," lowering' his voice — "it's a perfect cinch if you say so.""What — what do you mean?" faltered our hero, and he blushed rose red."Just this," said the other speaking in a low, tense tone. "You say the word and I'll tipthe fellows off. A little dinner down town for some, a ,box of cigarettes to a few more, a fewpromises of support for the candidates they want — which we can keep or not — and it's done !All I ask is that you help me out a little on the expenses. I'd do it all for you if I could, sinceyou're a member of the University Choir, but I'm a little short just now. Are you on?"A light of understanding had gradually come over the face of our hero, and looking stealthilyaround, he was about to answer, but as he saw a tall, svelte figure approaching, he drew himselfup proudly and replied in a clear, ringing voice :"Never, Reginald Vere de Vere ! ! Whatever goes home to my mother must have honorbehind it and not money !"As the svelte figure passed he murmured : "Gee, I hope that Mortar Board heard me."For a moment he stood thusly, thoughtfully gnawing the west corner of his lip, then with aswift glance about him he turned on his heel and whispered hoarsely :"Sure I'm on. I'll meet you in the Commons at lunch. So long !"473met a few girls while a Freshman;I thought I was wise at the time ;Went in for the picking of peaches,And felt like a king in his prime.The one had her home down in Hyde ParkAnd one said she lived in Green Bay,The third was a maid from Peoria,The last lives in Foster today.I wasn't a very shy freshman,As from this small tale you will see.She smiled at a friend in the classroom —And I — well, I thought she meant me,So I butted right in for a talk-fest,But her only remark was a "Sir !"Then I froze in my talk, beat it quick for a walk,And I learned a good lesson from her.Then, I met the fair one from Wisconsin,The lass who grew up in Green Bay ;She was a small-town girl with money —At least it came to me that way.I'll admit she proved somewhat expensive,And an heiress, of course, as it were,Could not quite comprehend that the busted can't spend,So I had to quit going with her.Then I met one who cared for athletics,Wore out the golf links in her town ;Held records in hockey and baseball —No wonder I had to come down.She left off her hat, wore a sweater,Was; always a-jump and astir.I'm naturally quiet ; on so hard a dietI couldn't quite keep pace with her.For the Fourth I won't take consolation,For I don't seem to know where I'm at.When I think of that tailor-made costumeAnd eyes that shine under that hat —I think she liked me, but we quarreled;'Tis sad that such things will occur,But when both prides are strong, and you feel you are wrong :I just guess I must make up to Her.I've met all the girls ; I'm a senior,But I'm sure that I don't know them all,Yet the lessons I learned while a freshmanHave since saved me many a fall.So the end of it's sitting and thinking,A puzzle they always will be.Let me give you a hunch, rush the whole bloomin' bunch,And you won't get the bumps that got me.474E. SHORE YTAILORONLY FINE WORK404 BEDFORD BUILDING215 DEARBORN STREETTELEPHONE, HARRISON 2630$mzn% 3faU, at, J&\\t i^gjstem Smtka imtm(From the minutes of the Senior Council, Jan. 28) .Harold Heartbreaker was elected leader of the Senior Prom, by a unanimousvote of the Council.Alpha Kappa Upsilon House, January 28.Dear Helen :I've just been elected leader of the Varsity Senior Prom. I knew you'd be gladto hear, of this, because there's just one girl in the world I'd like to share the honorof leading it with. It's a lot to ask her, I know, to come clear over from Berlin justto please me, but perhaps she could find some excuse to cut the foreign visit short —perhaps she won't need an excuse.Do you think she'll do it? '"Sincerely" Hal.Dear May : Alpha Kappa Upsilon House, January 28.I've just been elected leader of the Varsity Senior Prom. I knew you'd be gladto hear of this, because there's just one girl in the world I'd like to share the honor ofleading it with. It's a lot to ask her, I know, to come clear from California just toplease me, but perhaps she could find some excuse to take the trip — perhaps shewon't need an excuse.Do you think she'll do it? "Sincerely" Hal.Dear Harold: Foster Hall, January 28th.I hope I didn't seem rude to you yesterday, but I was so delighted to hear ofyour good fortune that I quite forgot what I started out to ask you, before you packedme off to class. Are you, brilliant social light, busy on the evening of February 28th?The Psi Gams are giving their annual dance then, and I'd be delighted if HaroldHeartbreaker will take me. Cordially Ruth.P. S. — Foster Hall still occupies the southeastern corner of the campus.Foster Hall, January 28th.Dear Jack:It's awfully good of you to ask me to go to the Senior Prom, and I should bedelighted to go with you — except I'm under a sort of half-promise already to go. Doyou think you could wait a couple of days? In that time, perhaps, I could arrangeit so that I could go with you. Could you, Jack? Cordially Ruth.The Campustrians request the pleasure of Mr. Heartbreaker's presence at theirannual dance on the evening of March the sixth.Dear Harold:The Kappas are going to give their dinner-dance on the first of May this year.I wanted to remind you of this informally, and to hope that you'll be good enoughto make it a red letter day for me this year, as you did last. Sincerely Grace.Green Hall, January twenty-fourth."THE OAKS"My Dear Mr. Heartbreaker :I want to remind you that you haven't paid "The Oaks" a visit for nearly twoweeks, and you promised faithfully to take Sunday dinner with us within the month.POINTS OF DISTINCTIONONEApproved FashionsTWOExclusive ColoringsTHREEFaultless TailoringThree points of distinction in favor of our presentcomplete Spring lines of Men's Fine Suits and OvercoatsMARSHALL FIELD & CO.BURTON S. POWELL, President. A. W. FLEMING, Treasurer.The Windermere Pressprinters and engravers434-36-38 EAST SIXTY-THIRD STREETESPECIALLY EQUIPPED for COLLEGE and FRATERNITY WORKMadison Avenue LaundryJ. F. ELLIS, Manager6022-6024 Madison AvenueCHICAGOTelephone, 1009 Hyde Park Special Rates to Studentsshould be delighted to have you dine with Lucy and me next Sunday at one, if youcan come. Very sincerely Evelin Vere-de-Vere.January the twenty-fourth.Dear Hal: January 28.Come and eat with me Sunday out West. Sue and Cousin Nell will be there, andthey have asked particularly to have me bring you. I'll see you tomorrow, but I dropyou a line for fear I'll forget, as I did when I saw you today. Hastily, Dan.The Daily Maroon, Jan. 29."Hal" Heartbreaker and Gladys Jollyer will lead the Senior Prom, accordingto the statement of a close friend of Heartbreaker's, who believed the secret too goodto keep. Miss Jollyer is ""THE OAKS"My Dear Mr. Heartbreaker:I shall have to apologize to you, but Lucy has changed her plans and will be outof town next Sunday. Perhaps you can come at a later time.January 29. Very sincerely yours Evelin Vere-de-Vere.Dear Jack : Foster Hall, January 29th.It's all right. I can go with you to the Prom. I'm so glad I could fix it up.Cordially Ruth.(From the Daily Maroon, Jan. 29)Correction — The Maroon regrets the publication of an unfortunate statement inits issue of yesterday that Mr. Heartbreaker would lead the Senior Prom with MissJollyer. Denial has come from both Miss Jollyer and Mr. Heartbreaker. Miss Jollyerwill be out of town at the time of the Prom, and Mr. Heartbreaker will lead withMiss Beatrice Fayery, as noted elsewhere in this issue.Redlands, Cal., Jan. 31.To Harold Heartbreaker, Alpha Kappa Upsilon House,University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.Sorry cannot come. Leave for Hawaii with Father sixteenth. Writing.May.By Cable from Berlin, Feb. 4.Harold Heartbreaker,University of Chicago, Chicago.Awfully sorry. Can't come. Am writing. Helen.Redlands, Cal., Feb. 5.Harold Heartbreaker, Alpha Kappa Upsilon House,University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.Can come after all. Father has put off trip two weeks. May.By Cable from Berlin, Feb. 5.Harold Heartbreaker, University of Chicago.Can come after all. Trip changed. Reach Chicago Feb. 20. Helen.(From the Daily Maroon, Feb. 10)Prom prospects were overcast yesterday when Miss Fayery, who was to lead theProm with Harold Heartbreaker, fell and sprained her ankle. The injury is so serious that the doctor insists that Miss Fayery cannot walk for a month, and that shecannot think of going to the Prom.VA^LSTJEdited by Herbert VanderhoofThe Magazineof CanadaA PROGRESSIVE publication, with"^ *• the largest paid circulation of anymonthly magazine in Canada. Among itscontributors are such well known writersas Ernest Thompson Seton, explorer andnature student; Emerson Hough, author of"The Mississippi Bubble" and "The Wayof a Man"; Elliot Flower, Novelist; S.E. Kiser, poet; Edwin Balmer, author of the"Wireless" stories in the Saturday EveningPost; Forrest Crissey, novelist; Cy War-man, poet and novelist, etc., etc. Thesemen, and others like them, are filling thepages of CANADA- WEST with specialarticles of timely interest, poetry, humor,and absorbing fiction.Read the story of Canada, from monthto month, as told by these men.Send $1.50 for a year's subscription, or15c for a sample copy, toVanderhoof-Gunn Co.PUBLISHERSWINNIPEG, CANADA HE MOST distinctive andA beautiful bookstore in thecountry. All classes of books,new and old, at lowest prices. Adiscount of 20 per cent allowed onall the new novels and other booksnot published "net". Orders bytelephone (Harrison 2153) will bepromptly delivered. Visitors arecordially invited. :: ::who isCHARLESSCHNEIDERHe makes Bouquets — JHe sells Nosegays — |He fixes up the Funeral Sprays;He decorates for Soirees,For Wedding and Reception Days.For every case of Love or 111He knows at once the proper pillAnd so ye friends of the U of C,Let Schneider strew the path for thee.CENTRAL FLORAL CO.CHARLES SCHNEIDER, Prop.Phone Central 3483 : , 68 State St.Opposite Marshall Field & C o.Cable for Berlin.Harold Heartbreaker, University of Chicago.Cannot leave. Mother suddenly ill. Very sorry. Helen1.Redlands, Cal., Feb. 14.Harold Heartbreaker, Alpha Kappa Upsilon House,University of Chicago.Must go to Hawaii with Father after all. Letter follows. May.(From the Daily Maroon, Feb. 23.)The Washington Promenade, the greatest social event of the Varsity year, washeld last evening in Bartlett gymnasium. The grand march was led by Mr. HaroldHeartbreaker, with his sister, Miss Lucille Heartbreaker. Mr. and Miss Heartbreakerleft immediately after the grand march, Miss Heartbreaker being taken ill. The eventwas a great success.B>mtg of a ^>uflfe n tIn an age that's now departed(For which fact we're not down hearted)There were manners of procedure most unkind.If the personal opinionsOf a baron's lowly minionsWere not just the ones to suit their master's mindWithout council or invectiveBut with treatment quite effectiveHe would quickly make them sorry for their sin ;By applying thumb-screws, fire,Or what e'er he might desireIn short order he'd restore his discipline.That the torture was exquisiteWe may learn should we but visitAny castle of this time, built ages back.But of all machines most vicious,For each punishment propitious,Was the instrument the Ancients called the Rack.Since those days the alterationsIn the customs of the nationsHave decreed the wage of sin a milder sort,Yet here still we have prevailingIn this preceptorial jailingSomething fiendish in the Quarterly Report.Tho to literally bust 'emWas the old, compelling custom,With the levers and the irons, ages back ;We are similarly treatedWhen, in Cobb Hall we are greetedBy those yellow bits of torture — on the Rack!Central Hyde Park BankAnd Safety Deposit VaultsW. K. YOUNG & BRO., BANKERSFifty-Fifth Street and Washington AvenueTHREE PER CENT PAID ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS"\YJ E INVITE the business of students attending the University.Checking accounts can be opened by carrying a balance of onehundred dollars. Safety deposit boxes in our Steel Lined Burglar and FireProof Vaults $3.00 Per Year.Very respectfullyCENTRAL HYDE PARK BANK% pjUaaopljij BunaThe Freshman Member of the Social Committee"Good afternoon — I mean — hello ! Oh, dear ! did you hear me say that stiff 'good afternoon" to that perfectly splendid man I've known all my life? I just know he felt hurt, but Ihad my mouth all fixed to say 'good afternoon' for the rest of the day. You see I'm on thesocial committee of our college, and I think one should show a certain amount of dignity insuch a position. Yes, I'm a freshman. Why did you ask?"Oh, good afternoon, Mr. Brown. I'm sorry, but I'm afraid I can't give you a dance. I'mnot supposed to dance this afternoon. Yes, you see I'm on the social committee and it's one of myduties to see that everybody else's program is filled, so of course I won't get any time to dancemyself. Perhaps I can' find a girl to take my place. Now, there's a girl over there ! Do comeover and let me introduce you. Which one? Why, what difference does it make? Well, if youmust know, it's the one in the purple skirt and pink waist with her hair done in that funny way.She doesn't dance very well, I guess, and I'd love to get a partner for her. Why, Mr. Brown,you're not going? Oh, you must meet a man right away? Well, I'll try and get you an introduction later. Good-bye.""Oh, good afternoon, Tom ! Yes, it does sound funny. I'm saying 'good afternoon' toeverybody to-day, though, because I'm on the social committee. A dance? No; you see I'm notdancing to-day; I'm just introducing and smiling and looking nice. You know I'm on the soc —.What? No, really I can't give you a dance. There's the dean looking at me now and I wouldn'tdare. I'll get a girl for you, though. Here's one I'd like you to meet. Which one ? Never mindwhich one. I want you to meet her! Why don't you come? Well, then, it's the one in thecorner sitting with her hands folded in her lap. Yes, with the glasses and the Phi Beta Kappakey. Tom ! What did you call her ? It's too bad we can't all be good looking, of course ! Well,hurry up, then, if you have to telephone. I'll introduce you later arid you can take her home.Oh ! you're going early ? I think you're mean. Good-bye.""Hello, girlie ! You're awfully late. That's so, you're on the social committee, too, aren'tyou? Tell me, does my hair look all right? I forgot to wear a net to-day — didn't even weara veil. Oh, of course you'd say so. I bet it looks like a fright. No, yours looks dandy — reallyit does, but there's a little smudge on your cheek — no, the other one — right there. Oh ! you madeit worst. Now it's all right. Oh, dear, we must get busy. This is the fourth dance and I haven'tintroduced a soul yet. Do you know who that man is standing over by the banisters ? No, the tallone with the Warfield pompadour. My dear, I rave over him simply rave! Isn't he adorable?Don't you know him? Oh, dear, if I weren't on the social committee I'd hope for a dance. Isn'tthat the grandest two-step they're playing? How I wish I could dance! But I said I wouldn'tbecause I'm on the soc — ""Good afternoon, Mr. White. No, I'm not deserted. I'm not dancing to-day. No, I'm onthe social committee of our college and we aren't supposed to make out programs. Well, sinceyou're so kind, I think that I will have a little frappe, although I ought to be introducing people.Oh, I know what I'll do ! I'll introduce you to some one after I get my frappe. What did yousay? You're not meeting people now? Are you joking or did your grandmother really die?How do you happen to be dancing, then? — oh, I see, just with a few friends. By the way, doyou know that tall man standing up by the bannisters? Yes, he's just turning around. The onewith a cute little red knit necktie. Oh, don't you know him? No, not especially I justwondered who he was. Is that the next dance ? I must go and introduce people. It's such aresponsibility being on the social com —. Oh, certainly I'll excuse you — good-bye.""Good afternoon, Mr. Black. No, I haven't this dance taken — but you see I can't dance.Yes, I'm sorry, too, but I'm on the social committee, so I'm not supposed to dance. This is theseventh dance, isn't it? Just think how many I've missed — oh, dear, it's my favorite waltz!Isn't that exasperating? By the way, do you know that man just walking away from the bannisters ? No, not that one — the tall one in the gray suit and tan shoes — why, he's coming toward us !"He is? A fraternity brother of yours? How perfectly lovely! I should say I would!Good afternoon, Mr. Gray. I'm awfully pleased to meet you ! This dance ? No, I haven't ittaken, but you see I'm on the soc — oh, dear — of course you may have it. Isn't that music heavenly?Have you really wanted to meet me all afternoon ? Why didn't you ask sooner, then ? Don'tsay that ! You know I wanted to. Didn't you notice that I haven't danced a single dance sinceI saw you? By the way, the dean's gone home, hasn't he?"482BLICKENSDERFERA New-Standard Machine in Price, Performance and Appearance.High Enough for Anybody, Low Enough for Everybody. 300 Purchasers in the Chicago and Northwestern Universities. Over 135,000buyers in all Lands and Languages in Fifteen Years approve theBLICKENSDERFER TYPEWRITERSbecause of their Simplicity and adaptability of Construction, Ease, ,Speed and Convenience of Operation, Economy in Price andDurability in Service.TWO MODELSNo 5 (6 lbs.) - - - $40-00No 7 (11 lbs.) - - - 50.002 styles type, 2 colors ink, tool kit, Oak Caseand One Year's Guarantee.PHONE HARRISON 4338The Blickensderfer Mfg. Co.,T. S. MARTIN, Manager, CHICAGO, ILLINOISDEARBORN & VAN BUREN204, 6 and 8FISHER BLDG.Beethoven at the Piano"See where Beethoven sits alone — a dream of days elysian,A crownless king upon the throne, reflected in a vision —The man who strikes the potent chords which make the world, in wonder,Acknowledge him, though poor and dim, the mouthpiece of the thunder."To produce an instrument in which themaster passion of a Beethoven could find perfectexpression, is the inspiration which dominates themakers of the Crown Piano.In addition to the "Crown," which we manufacture we carrya superb line of Pianos all of accepted superiority in tone andaction, including the famous Knabe Pianos — both grand andupright styles. Before making a selection be sure to visit thePiano Rooms of GEO. P. BENT CO., 211 Wabash Ave., ChicagoIS ARTISTIC AND NATURALIP FROM THE MOFFETT STUDIOC9hose who should know say we have the finest studio inAmerica. The reproduction below is of the Studio proper.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO STUDENTSare particularly invited to visit our studio and inspect our artistprints of prominent public people. This is the photographstudio that does not want your money unless you are satisfied.25 CongressSt. II fl I" T f" TT P T i I fl I fl Appointments byOpp. Auditorium III 1 1 1* | I I S 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 TelePnoneTheatre Entrance 111 U I I LI 1 U I UUIU Harrison 6706What is't makes the world go round?(Girl.)What sells us candy by the pound?(Girl.)What makes us crowd the Reynolds dance;Why is it to the Prom we prance,As if we're glad to get the chance?(Same thing.)What makes the fellows stand in Cobb?(Girl.)Why do they gather in a mob ?(Girl.)What makes man happy, sad, by turns ;Why is it that he yearns and yearnsTo part with every cent he earns?(The cause above mentioned.)What is the balm for all life's hurts?(Girl.)What makes us jealous when she flirts?(Girl.)Who tells us that she loves but us ;Who likes to make up and to fuss ;Who says : "Oh, stop, I'm sure Miss Talbot is coming down stairs ?"(See above.)Botat Attrrotf £>uwb &txnBtbThe way to the flunkboard is paved with good intentions.Little and often fills the purse of the registrar.Excessive absence makes the heart grow fonder of the thirty cuts.It's an ill wind that doesn't blow good to some newspaper reporter.Honesty is the best policy if you can't crib.If at first you don't succeed, try Dr. Raycroft.#$rritt3 g>anaO, college walls are warm and bare,And campus grass is green,And you may meet a co-ed thereWould match a summer queen.And as I walked by Green at will,Beneath the scrub oaks nigh,A Freshman on the window sillWas singing, much too high :"In, Jackson Park are roses fair,And rowing boats I've seen.I'd rather go a-strolling thereThan write an English theme."C. HARDY WALTER C. FOSTER PAUL 8. ODWARD"Here we are."You have probably heard of us; why not try us when ordering yournext suit?We always carry a full line of woolens that differ from the ones shownby other tailors.Neither expense nor effort is spared to maintain excellence.Remember this, the clothes belong to us until you are satisfied.Fourth FloorATWOOD BUILDINGClark and Madison StsCHICAGO Respectfully yours,HARDY BROS., FOSTER & CO.TAILORSCapital $200,000.00 Surplus $10,000.00Woodlawn Trust and Savings Bank(UNDER STATE CONTROL.)453 East Sixty - Third StreetAccounts of Firms and Individuals Solicited3 PER CENT INTERESTON SAVINGS ACCOUNTSSAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES $3.00 PER YEAR AND UPWARDThe "DUNFORD"With Spring NeedleA Perfect Ink PencilAlways Ready for Use May be carried in any position without Leaking. Polished redvulcanized rubber. An excellent pen for daily use.Will make excellent carbon copies. Price $1.00.DUNWELL & FORDFINE STATIONERS171 Wabash Avenue©rageftg tn (§m &\afoScene — Under the clock in Cobb.Time — 10:30; January 24, 1908.Dramatis personae — A Junior girl. A Senior man.Discovered — the girl. ;ENTER THE MAN.The l Man— Oh, how do you do? I've been looking everywhere for you.The Girl — Oh, have you? Well, I've been here. (Smiles).'The Man — What are you taking this quarter?The Girl — Why Sociology, Anthropology and German 6.The Man — What do you think of Mr. Starr?The Girl — Oh, isn't he just the limit? Why he called me the young woman —.The Man — Do you know, I want to ask you something. I hope I'm not presuming on our short acquaintance.The Girl (aside) — -Oh, joy, oh bliss, the Prom! (Aloud) W'why what is it?The Man — You see, we don't stand on ceremony much here. When we want athing we ask for it.The Girl (aside) —Come on, oh blessed bid!The Man — I've been intending to call —The Girl (aside) — Oh rapture! I'll wear pink.The Man — But this quarter seems to be hard for everybody.The Girl — Yes, isn't it? But I just love the Winter Quarter!The Man — Well, what I make bold to ask is this —The Girl (aside)— I see it in his eyes.The Man-^-My brother's up for Councilor in your division. Don't you want tovote for him?Freshman: Say, is Artie Bovee here on a scholarship?Senior : -No, on a pension.At X\\t Haalitngtott fromFreshman : By, Jove, Kid, lend me a dollar. I've got just a quarter and theprogram says: "No. 10 — Supper Extra."Ihtsptrrii hg a Ipatorg lExamI would not have to write so fast,Nor write with all my might,If I could write with both my handsInstead of just my right.488Facilities for Everything in PhotographyTelephone: Central 609J. J. GIBSON, FounderOfficial World's Fair Photographer, 1893)^^fQfyf5M53 WABASH AVECHICAGO.MAY M. GIBSON, (Mrs. J. J. Gibson), PresidentCollege, Class, and Group Work Always Our Specialty. * We have no Branch StudiosDRESS AND TUXEDO SUITS, PRINCE ALBERTAND CUTAWAY COATS, SILK AND OPERAHATS BOUGHT, SOLD, RENTEDCOL. A. J. GATTERDAMHighest Prices Paid for Nearly New Clothes1 46 La Salle Street Tel. Main 1231CHICAGO, ILL.(fatotaiu lElurt Jot»B ano ©tftmiBEING AN EXTRACT FROM A LETTER HOME.Dear Mother:Rebecca and I intended going to the concert thisafternoon but we were all out of clean turnovers andhandkerchiefs andesimply had to wash some. Whilewe were washing them in one of the bath tubs,Georgia Edith Jones was waiting for a bowl toshampoo her hair in and she told us some thingsabout the latest story she has written. She wouldhave read it to us if she hadn't wanted Grace Stokesto be the first to hear it all. Grace has alreadyheard the first twenty-five pages but she was dreadfully worried over an exam she was cramming forwhen Georgia read it to her and she kind of lostthe thread of the story. She is awfully anxious tohear the other seventy-five pages and is going to letGeorgia know the first minute she has to spare.Georgia says that any number of her ancestors havebeen celebrated writers.For fear that the turnovers and things wouldlook yellow, we boiled them in our chafing dishafterwards. That always makes them so nice andwhite. Rebecca started the fire in the charcoaliron and Georgia Eliot Jones and Sarah Peek tookturns drying their hair over our radiator. Theybecame so excited in an argument as to whether ornot it is necessary to have had a love affair beforeone can write a good story that Georgia upset abottle of bluing and spilled it all down the side ofthe wall and on the floor. And I have had to deposit $5 against damages !While we were cleaning up the bluing, MaryStone came in with her chafing dish and the sugarfor fudge. She said she had decided that it wasworth losing her chance for Phi Beta Kappa justto see how much she could write about a sub-Men'sSpecial,$20 and $25 MOSSLER COReady Service Clothes for—Men and Young Men50 Jackson Blvd.k: . \ v film? ■ • / M&4MmJk 1/ /:> «L3//xt' originate these young men models/Clothes make class distinction as well as the difference between ageand youth. sWe cater to both, but believe we cannot emphasize this distinctiontoo much.We individualize each garment according to the wearer's requirements.They're ready-for service— MOSSLER COPrices range: $20, $25, $28, $30, ™ i , *» ^tic j . ' 50 Jackson Blvd.$35 and up. Just off State°-AND DESIGNERS OF LADIES' AND MISSES' SUITS, EXCELLENTFOR SCHOOL AND COLLEGE WEARW. H. MOSHIER CO.Naval Tailors1404, 1406, 1408, 1410, 1412, 1414Michigan Avenue, ChicagoMartin A. Ryerson's Bldg— VARNEY=^MAKES PHOTOGRAPHSStudioPHONE 3437 DOUGLAS 3937 DREXEL BLVDSpecial Attention given to PrescriptionsWOODLAWN PHARMACYE. R. CLAUSE, R. PH.Phone— Hyde Park 58N. W. Cor. 63rd St. & Kimbark Ave. : : : CHICAGO.about which she knew absolutely nothing. Georgia, still burning with argumentative zeal, looked at Mary with a disapproving eye and coldly remarked thatfudge was entirely out of place among people of literary tendencies who were discussing the more serious problems of the higher life. Mary didn't quite understandand so kept on 'grating a piece of chocolate. Georgia has a beautiful voice, whichshe exercises constantly on high trills and runs when she is under full control of herartistic temperament and is thinking out a new plot. So when Sara's iron smoked alittle Georgia was dreadfully worried for fear the smoke would ruin her voice andthought about going to her own room. Georgia says all her family have always hadbeautiful voices.You know I wrote you about losing my black knit slippers about two monthsjjfe| ago. Well, I thought the ones Sara was wear-^4^ ing seemed awfully familiar and when I asked^Y'K her whose they were she looked quite injured}W^W?' and asked how she could be expected to remember where she borrowed every little thing. Shesaid that she had forgotten to tell me that sheborrowed my evening coat last night and thatI'd better take it home when I came after myslippers.The fudge was very good and Mary atethe most of it and said later that she didn'twant any dinner. Georgia went down to seeGrace Stokes and Sara with my curling iron<fijl went out to look for a lamp. Rebecca and I had"7M& just fifteen minutes left to dress for dinner in.The evening gym class is just over and Iam still wearing Sara's gym suit. Sara seldomgoes to gym because, as Georgia says, her womanly pride revolts at even the idea of appearingin so unbecoming a garb.The insertion you asked Rebecca and me tobuy and send you — The girls across the hall havejust invited me to a fudge party and Mary wantsme to come out into the hall and teach her thebarn dance. I'll write more in the morning.BUSINESS COLLEGEIt enjoys, as. few schools of its kind enjoy, a national reputation.The large attendance and constantly increasing patronage areevidence of the popularity of the institution, and the most substantial proof of its worth and superiority.A practical education insures permanent employment as noother education does. This kind of an education is not an expense, a luxury or an ornament but a necessity — an investmentwhich pays the largest dividends.Have you stopped going to school and are you satisfied withyour education? You can not achieve success unless you havethe particular kind of knowledge and training necessary tosecure it."If I were a young man and had to make my choice to graduate at aclassical college and stop there, or to graduate at a business collegeand stop there, I would take the business college in preference."Albert G. Porter, Ex-Governor of Indiana.Are you a good business penman, and are you rapid andaccurate in figures? Can you write a promissory note, a due bill,a receipt, a draft and other commercial paper commonly used?The essentials of Bookkeeping, Business Law, Shorthand, etc.may be acquired in a comparatively short time; also, a good andrapid long-hand style of writing-, as each instructor is an expert inhis own particular line of work."The best advice I can offer is for every young man to avail himselfof a scholarship in some first-class commercial school. No matter whatit costs, it will be the best investment he can make."Chancellor Kent.We can serve your interests if you will but afford us anopportunity to demonstrate what we can do. Satisfy yourself bythorough, personal investigation, or write for our IllustratedProspectus.F. B, VIRDEIM, President67 Wabash Ave., Chicago, III.Stihatgat af a do-? hSome sigh at the horrors of this Quiz, and someSigh at the Horrors of the Flunk to Come.Ah, take the Trash — but do not mark me low —Tho I know well enough that it is Bum !II.A book of Cosines underneath the Brow,A minus sigh, a muddled head, and thouBeside me, teaching Math in Paradise —Oh, Paradise were wilderness enow!III.I cannot bear Math ! What have I to doWith Sharks and Scholarships ? Now wouldn't youA Great Deal rather have your Program filledThan make Phi Beta Kappa? Wouldn't you?IV.The Shark no question makes of Eyes and Nose,And she's no Beauty, as you may suppose,(But when it comes the time for Term Exams,She knows about It All, She knows, She knows !)V.But lately, in the Library, by Chance,I saw the figure of a friend advance.He had a social Grin upon his Face;I smiled, and then he asked me to the Dance !VI.The Dance, that can with Logic absolute,All the Professors in the World confute!I'm sure that I shall have a Jolly Time :My dress is Stunning, and he's awfully cute.VII.And when at last, oh, Senior, they shall blessYou with Diploma and Commencement Dress,If any one shall ask why I'm Not There,Say, "We take Ph.B.^She's M. R. S."494GOODSCLASS PIPES WE SELL DIRECT YOU GET THE PROFIT OF THEMIDDLEMANA TRY AND WE ARE LIFE LONG FRIENDSWe ARE PLEASED TO TALK CLASS PINSARE HAPPY TO SHOW CLASS FLAGSTHAT'S WHY WE MAKE GOOD ONESARTHUR. W. JOSEPH <& CO.POWERS BUILDING, CHICAGOCOLLEGE SUITS$25 to $30TAILOR FOR YOUNG MEN131 LaSalle St. TWO STORES 44 Jackson Blvd.ERNEST A. HAMILL, PresidentCHARLES L. HUTCHINSON, Vice-PresidentCHAUNCEY J. BLAIR, Vice-President .D. A. MOULTON, Vice-President JOHN C. NEELY, SecretaryFRANK. W. SMITH, CashierB. C. SAMMON S.ASst CashierJ. EDWARD MAASS, Asst CashierTHE CORN EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANKCAPITAL, $3,000,000 SURPLUS, $3,000,000OHICAGODIRECTORS:CHARLES H. WACKER CHARLES H. HULBURDCLARENCE BUCKINGHAM CHAUNCEY J. BLAIRMARTIN A. RYERSON WATSON F. BLAIRCHARLES L. HUTCHINSON ISAAC G. LOMBARD EDWIN G. FOREMANEDWARD A. SHEDD BENJAMIN CARPENTEREDWARD B. BUTLER FREDERICK W. CROSBYERNEST A. MILLto X\\t Jamltgi.A young woman once in deliriumWas enticed in a course under Merriam.When she flunked in a quizShe exclaimed, "Oh, gee whiz !Now just to get even, I'd marry 'im !"II.A learned professor named Hoxie,Who was noted for being quite foxie,Said, uNo text books we'll useThey are simply a ruse,And I don't want to seem orthodoxie."III.A history professor named Bretz,In society moves; in smart setz;He is single, 'tis true,But ere leap year is thruThis may ne'er again cause him regretz.IV.A Shakespeare instructor called Knott,Got so thickly wound up in a kplott,That ere it unwoundIt was found he had drowned,Which on history made a damp kblott !V.There's a psychic professor named Waugh,Whom his students in class never saugh,For a forest of hats,Veils, crowns, brims and ratsFilled the room till the men cried, "Oh, Pshaugh !"VI.There was a young student named Henderson,Whose mother to college would send her son.He was really quite bright,Took each office in sight,And, as far as we know, ain't surrendered none.496RANDOLPH 960Tailors to Particular PeopleHARR Y G. SMUCKERModerate PricesDesigner,EDWARD DO WD 4th Floor Mentor BuildingSTATE & MONROE STS. Salesmen,JAMES B. SCUDDERCARLOS K. ECKHARTVjIllVj/iVJV/i I i ^1 a20Jones Stokersare installed in the powerplant of theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOOne of the many big educationalinstitutions using our apparatus EVERYTHINGINHARDWAREANDTOOLS o©&o If it's HARDWAREwe have itCome to us FIRSTand save timeIdm&tt tn itstr? hhA youth there was, of manner most serene ;Quite famed in Foster, not unknown in Greene.The model he of amorous freshmen all,In choosing a tie or making talk that's small.He ne'er had flunked, or worse, committed a faut,Could yet on such the god's displeasure flow?Ah, yes, alas ! See how he pensive sits,And crushes that white cigarette to bits.Fierce thought must surge beneath that brow so fair,That he arrange his trousers not, nor hair.If papa's threatened failure now had chanced,Refused a picture, one with whom he'd danced !Some dire event must sure take place this day,For had not Famous failed to bring his Gray?But no such thoughts did now his smile destroy,For worse the thing that galled this winning boy.The leap year dance was only three days off ;He had no bid, the freshmen — ah ! — would laugh.Already seemed their mocking lips did curl,To see destruction round their leader whirl.And he had fussed and won so many maids —More than they ever would, those trim young blades.And now, to carrying ices relegated,A sort of college- widower he, belated.In such distress he lived the next days through,His mind filled only with that Book of Blue.No lily hand reached out to save his shame,He was not at the dance, so lost to fame.And all his disposition sweet was marred,His easy confidence and pride were jarred.A desperate resolution straight he took,Ne'er upon maidens, ne'er again to look.I think carbolic rid him of this coil,Or candy helped him his complexion spoil.Why dwell upon a tale of such affairs ?They're much too sad — and after all, who cares ?498ana Night$&£§» 'ifftiCENTRAL ^=S^ Sdl-iMil!MISSISSIPPI VALLEYLEAVE10.02A.M.Daylight Special. ROUTE4&Irq& LEAVE10.15P.M.Diamond Special.For SPRINGFIELD andST LOUISAr. SPRINGFIELD, 3.04 p. m.Ar. ST. LOUIS, . 6.02 p. tn. Ar. SPRINGFIELD, 4.00 a, m.Ar. ST. LOUIS, . 7.24 a. m.Through Car ServiceBY WAY OFGILMAN CLINTONGIBSON MT. PULASKIFARMER CITY LITCHFIELDStops at South Side Through Stations,31st 43rd 53rd 63rd Sts.Buffet-club cars, buffet-library cars, complete dining cars, parlor cars, drawing-room and buffet sleeping cars, reclining chair cars.Illinois CentralCity Ticket Office, 117 Adams Street Phone,Central 6270th* i%attr %ant of lD:3fl A. it.The pretty Coed stepped out of Cobb at 10 :3c* directly in front of the tall College Man, whowas industriously trying not to look as if he had been waiting there ten minutes for her."Good morning," they both said simultaneously. "Going my way?" casually asked theCollege Man."Which way were you going?" she queried smilingly, remembering the stationary positionin which she had found him."Oh, I was just on my way up to the Law Library," he said, as he saw her start in thatdirection, then taking her books and falling in step beside her he continued, "It's been sometime since I've seen you, hasn't it?" "Has it?" she asked nonchalantly, "Yes, I guess ithas been a long time.""Well, I don't care ! It's pretty tough when a girl's so deucedly popular that a fellow hasto put up with such crumbs as carrying her books across the campus !"They were walking fast and had reached the walk leading to the Law Library but he was soengrossed in the recollection of his woes that he was about to stride past when the Coed, slowingup, reminded him."I believe you said you were going to the Library, didn't you. I'll take my books, thank you."He stopped but made no move to give them to her."How far did you say you were going?" he asked."I didn't say, but I have some— some errands to do. The first one's in Foster, I believe.""Oh, that reminds me. I've got to see a fellow in Walker. Awfully glad you reminded me.I'll just go along with you, if you don't mind.'"Oh, not at all. It really is a great relief to have these books out of my way for awhile.Do you know, I believe my arm is growing in a perfect triangle from being hooked around apile of books all the time. "It looks allright to me," he said, looking admiringly at the slimarm swinging along beside him. "Oh, is isn't as bad as all that," she replied ambiguously witha laugh, "I hope I'm not a cripple yet.^"And I certainly hope you never will be. If I can be of any service as a Prevention of —of — what shall I call it? Prevention of Distortion to Educational Biceps? At any rate I offerboth my perfectly good arms in the service.""That's, awfully good of you, I'm sure," she murmured. Perhaps I shall call onthem some day — but here we are at Foster !" They stopped but she made no move to leave."I wonder if she's in her room," she said, thoughtfully scanning the windows for some evidence on the subject. "She might be out, you know."Yes, I shouldn't be at all surprised — this time of day, and everything — Why don't youwait till you have more time? It must be twenty minutes to eleven," the last appealingly."I guess I will," she said, turning away quickly, "I can run in at noon. Are you goingto Walker, did you say?""I — er — yes ! Oh ! is this Walker right here ? Why come to think of it, that fellow won'tbe here now. I think he's in — in the gym. Would you mind walking down that way? Itwill only take a minute, and I'll take care of the books," he said, patting them persuasively."I really ought to — do my errands, but if it will only take a minute—" and she quickened hersteps beside him."What were we talking about?" he asked reminiscently as they turned down Lexingtontoward the Gym. "Oh yes, about when I'm to come over again. As I was saying, you won'tallow anybody over on school nights and then you have every Friday, Saturday and Sundaytaken. I don't see where I come in, do you?""I'm afraid you exaggerate," she said pouting a little, "I never said that all my Fridaysand Saturdays, and Sundays were taken, did I.""No, you didn't say so all at once, but every time I try to get one, each particular oneseems to be taken.""Now, Charley," she said looking up at him in soft reproach, "You know that isn't so, atall. The trouble is you don't ask soon enough. Did you want to come over this Friday night?""Well — er — there's a smoker on at the frat house but — could I come over?""Why, I expect to go to a dance, but — ""Except to go to a dance ! If that doesn't beat anything ! What on earth did you ask meif I wanted to come over for if you were going to a dance?" he snorted, picking the edge of thesidewalk. "Just like a girl !""I wouldn't lose my temper about it," she said sweetly, "It's lots of satisfaction to knowthat you wanted to come, anyway. But if you were going to a smoker, how could you cometo see me even if I wrere going to be home? Here's the Gym. Didn't you say you wanted tosee some one in here?"He had stopped and was digging one toe into the ground at the edge of the sidewalk.At her question he glanced nervously at the building, at her, and then at the ground. "No — Iguess I won't stop now. It might make you late for your errands. Haven't you an eleveno'clock class?"Sure:you are correctly dressed. It will make you feelbrighter and better, and convey the impression thatVour Brains are: Paying DividendsThe world likes prosperous peopleWE WILL DRESSYOUCORRECTLY TAILORWILLIAM JERREMS' SONS. IT'S OURBUSINESS TOKNOWCLARK AND ADAMS ST., CHICAQO423 WABASH AVE."Then we'd better go back."So they turned and retraced their steps down Lexington."Where is your next errand?" he asked."My next errand !" she repeated with a puzzled look, then quickly, "Oh yes, I have tosee some one in — in Kent !'"Good," he said as he thought of the distance. "I mean — do you?" Then as they turnedKent-wards, "But you haven't told me yet when I can come over.""Oh, didn't I?" she said carelessly, "You didn't tell me either why you asked me to comeFriday when you were going to a smoker.""Because I'd cut a smoker any day to call on you," he said with spirit."Jollier !" she teased. "A man that would cut one date would cut another. I hate peoplewho break dates.""But I wouldn't do it for any one else," he protested."Oh, wouldn't you? You wouldn't cut a dance with any one else either, would you?""I wouldn't — what?" a light of perception spreading over his face."You wouldn't cut a dance with any one else either," she repeated firmly, looking steadilyat the sidewalk."Grace," lowering his voice, "You didn't think I cut that dance at the last ReynoldsClub on purpose, did you? Did yon?" eagerly. "I don't s.ee how I could think anything else.Usually when one disappears at the time that one is supposed to dance with some one, and isseen later continuing one's program it is termed in college language cutting a dance ! I presume it is very flimsy evidence but that is the grounds for my statement and — here is Kent,"she concluded significantly, reaching for her books. He pushed them farther under his arm."Look here," he said, "I'm not going to let you go that way. I want to explain : Can'tyou do your errand some other time? Its three minutes to eleven now," consulting his watch,"Where is your class?""In Lexington.""Then you'll just have time to make it. Mine's in Ellis, but I'll go with you.""Don't inconvenience yourself," she said sweetly, "I can manage the books that far aloneI think.""Now Grace, I don't think that's fair. If you only knew how cut-up I've been over this.I didn't know what was the matter with you. Every time I saw you on the campus you sailedby so fast, I could hardly get a chance to say "Hello." I've called you up a dozen times ormore but you were out, or the line was busy, or something. I thought your partner wouldexplain to you that night. My sister asked me to take a friend of hers who was visiting her, andshe got an awful sick headache after about three dances. I had to call a cab and take herhome finally, although I was hoping that she could stay long enough for our dance. I explainedto Dike about it and he said he'd tell you. Then as soon as I'd taken her home I nearly brokemy neck to get back in hopes I'd still be in time for our dance, but it was past, and then sinceI was there I thought I'd finish out my program as a stag. I couldn't get a look at you even.You were always in the center of a crowd, or else ^dancing. Is that why- you've treated me so ?Is it, Grace?" The College Man was pathetic now."Yes," she said softly. "I didn't understand. I'm sorry I was unjust."They had reached Lexington Hall and halted in front of the door. The last tardy girlhad bolted by them to her overdue "eleven-o'clock." She looked up at him slowly."Do you still want to come over Friday night?" s.he asked with a queer little smile."You know I do," he answered feverishly."Then you may !""But the dance — ■""I said I expected to go. I've changed my mind. It is a woman's privilege you know.""You're a peach, Grace," said the College Man fervently. Then with a roguish look, "Willyou promise not to be angry if I say something?""That depends on what it is," she said dubiously."No, promise !""Allright, then, I promise.""I dont believe you had any errands at all.""Wh — The idea !" she gasped indignantly."Remember your promise !" he warned with a laugh."Well, anyway, I know you never even thought of going to the Law Library, or of anyerrands either, and besides — you waited for me !" She finished with an air of triumph.He looked straight into her eyes. "Guilty," he said.For an instant she returned his look, then lowering her eyes, "Ditto," she murmured,"Goodbye," then turned and went slowly up the steps."Hang eleven o'clock classes !" muttered the College Man as he strode toward Ellis.Pirie Scott axoSpring and Summer Apparel forYoung Women and MenOur display of fashions for college men and women embraces a wider diversity of styles than ever heretofore shown.Each style reveals careful and critical making and thedesigning is of the highest grade. Every garment is characterized and distinguished from the ordinary by the introductionof many novel style features shown exclusively here.Moderate Pricing prevails on Hhe varied lines.LOCATIONS OFCHICAGO'SThree Largest Food SupplyHousesFEILCHENFELDBROTHERSWoodlawn Store455-57 East 63rd StreetHyde Park Store313-15-17-19 East 55th StreetKenwood Store126-28 East 43rd Street SMOKE"BEST OF THE BEST"J ALLlHA\kNA\ (ALLMADE IN 40 SIZES FROM IOC TO 50CA. SANTAELLA ®. CO.MANUFACTURERS : : TAMPA, FLA,Chicago Distributors \ REGEN_S„B_UTR^& ™™HOUSKI 132 Lake Streetquality of flunking is a {adit droppeth with a gentle sting, quite sudden,Upon the man "below f it is twice curst —It curseth him that gives and him that gets.'Tis mightiest in the mightiest ; it becomesThe cruel instructor less than cap and gown ;Exams show force of intellectual might,The documents that put us in his power,Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of all ;But flunking is e'en worse than these exams.It is recorded in the offices ;'Tis public made by yellow envelopes ;And students, fearful, watch the bulletinsWhen flunking season's near us. Therefore, Deans,Though flunking be thy right, remember this,That in your course in college you did flunkExaminations. You did pray for mercy,And that same prayer should teach you all to renderDeeds of mercy.We'd know 'em by their tailor-y,Their smirk and smile, and a' that.And e'en their stride and shoulder-yWould tell 'twas they for a' that.For a' that, and a' that,With bonnets none, and a' that,What need to brand 'em with a hat?A Soph's a Soph, for a' that.Fridstein (making an absurd deduction in College Algebra) — Therefore,A equals B.Prof. Slaught — Impossible! That would be like taking a bath withoutwater.Fridstein — How about a sun-bath?Long (the punster) — My entire family has bled to death.Phi Gam Brother (suspiciously) — How is that?Long — A humorous vein has been running in our family for three generations.Fiji (angrily) — Oh, I see; joked to death.?: > z& <« cs <*^ Oic■n *<<*v>■f^ /^ — a o© > ram— -< D0ZH £2 I030)HT Hn0 n0cz 0H■< H>3J <H >I Zn n0Tl 0 an ■n 0> > >n 2 CDCDH cCD $0 Fl 0■n £ z>i— n 0ir z nCO H ji CD r0 >CO z0j^tatrai..See the winding iron stairs —Endless stairs !What a world of weariness their awful number bears !How they echo, never-flaggingIn the gloomy early morn !Oh, the tired bodies draggingFeet, recalcitrantly lagging,Weight too heavy to be borne ;Crying time, time, time,In the never-ending climb,To the topmost floor of Cobb, where an hour's rest repairsThe havoc wrought inside us by theStairs, stairs, stairs —By the infinite succession of the stairs.II.'Tis another flight of stairs —Gray stone stairs —What a line of expletives their vision justly daresIn the middle of the dayHow I plod my weary wayMuch too tired out to talkI can only walk and walkTo the top,With a clamorous pulsation of my poor, hard-working heartWith the stifling, almost bursting over-exercising heart.Leaping higher, higher, higherWith a desperate desireAnd a resolute endeavorNow — now to sit or never,In an easy chair to flop.Oh, the stairs, stairs, stairs !Who can understand the caresThey involve ?How I ardently adoreClasses on the lowest floor —The problem, registration next shall solve.Yes, the body surely knows,By the wendingNever-endingAll the drear fatiguing woes ;Yes, the body surely sharesBabel's trouble —All flight double.One just utterly despairsWhen he contemplates the mounting three times dailyOf the stairsOf the stairs, stairs, stairs, stairs,Stairs, stairs, stairs —The curse-provoking bondage of the stairs.506OUR GUARANTEEJOHN W. DOUGLASTAILORCLWe are exponents of correct clothes for young men.Our ability to give you style, fashion and quality atmoderate prices is the key to our success.CLYou are cordially invited to inspect our varied assortment of fancy patterns. A visit to our establishment at49-51 JACKSON BLVD.will convince you of our competency to give you"CLOTHES that are RIGHT at a Price that is RIGHT"WalingerMAKES FINEPHOTOSStudio:156 Wabash AvenuePowers BuildingSpecial attention to U. of C. studentsGRADE COLLEGE GOODSPENNANTS, BANNERS, PILLOW COVERS, EMBLEMSCLASS and SPECIAL PINS, MEDALS, HATS and CAPSCAPS and GOWNS, STATIONERY, SPECIALTIES ::ATHLETIC GOODSTHE W, G KERN CO,cManufacturers WholesalersMAIN OFFICE, SALESROOM and FACTORY48^50 WABASH AVE, Retailersg£ J 35 E. Randolph St, Chicago S°UsJloride-i411E'57thST'Duplicatesof any Photos that I have made forthe "Cap and Gown" can be had anytime by addressingL. P. EsmoerPhone H. P. 16 243 E. 55th StreetThe Signature Below, names the best Cigarette in the countryMade and Marketed for men who can discriminate between the common and the uncommon.Our goods are the BEST but not the cheapest. They are made for men of GOOD TASTE.CHICAGO12 State Street NEW YORK305 Pearl StreetTRADEMARKREGISTERED T he Cigarette forthe ParticularSmokerSpecial Course of Instruction inWHENWHEREAND HOW" "WHATTOWEARWILL BE CONTINUED ATCarver & Wilkie'sDURING THE YEAR 1908.COLLEGE TAILORS185-187-189 DEARBORN ST.Come in and get a 1908 College Poster (Free) Special Department for College MenCollege StudentWho contemplates a business career shouldPrepare for Businessat theBryant & StrattonBusiness College315-321 Wabash Ave., Opposite AuditoriumCE, Modern Business Methods are technical. Special training is needed,therefore, by those who would be highly successful. This training is notsupplied by the college course.C The Bryant & Stratton College (established 1856) teaches every new andvaluable method known to the business world. Practical specialists inbusiness are in charge of all the instruction.d. Over 45,000 successful graduates in Chicago attest the value of the Bryant& Stratton training.C Mr. Wm. A. Bond says: "I have always regarded the instruction Ireceived at your institution as of great value. Perhaps the best evidence ofmy appreciation of the benefits of my course is the fact that I placed my sonin your college for some months before he began his business life."Students May Enter at Any TimeThe College is in Continuous SessionDAY AND NIGHT SCHOOLBUSINESS COURSES, SHORTHAND ANDTYPEWRITINGVisitors always welcome. Send for Catalogue AddressL. B. V A.UGHAN (u.oic,w)315-321 WABASH AVENUE ManagerMaroon StudioIs the Student's Studio in every sense of the word: FIRSTLY we insure youthe VERY BEST WORK AT MOST REASONABLE PRICES:SECONDLY we give you OUR INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION, and THIRD-LY our heartfelt interest.YOU IN RETURN SHOULD GIVE US YOUR WORK.Platinum, Cartrotype and Wash-Drawing Portraits of every description in exclusive styles,U. of C. PHOTOGRAPHER 5705 COTTAGE GROVEffiTIMtYOULLMDDMWINGS,HALF TONEWGEICHMS;COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHS,WOOD or WAX ENGRAVINGS,RETOU6HED PMOTOGRAPISJIIUSTRATIONSDESIGNS qf all KINDS, EIEGTRQTYPES.itcJahn & Oilier Engraving do.84-86-88 market st. chicagoEngrayersoan» ArtistsUniversities & ©ilegesTELEPHONES \ aT'^53^( Automatic 0004S. D. CHILDS & COMPANY200 CLARK STREEICHICAGOSTATIONERS PRINTERS BLANK BOOK MAKERSENGRAVERS LITHOGRAPHERS DIE SINKERSA Private SecretaryYou could answer that ad if you wfere tosupplement your university education with acourse in Business and Shorthand in GREGGSCHOOL. And we assist you in obtaining- aposition, too.A practical knowledge of Shorthand willenable you to gain much more from your coursein school. A number of University students obtained this in two months in our summer sessionlast year.Day and evening sessions throughout theyear. Students may enter at any time. Visitorsalways welcome.Gregg School151 Wabash AvenueGeorge BantaPublishing Co.College Annualsand CataloguesThis Book is a Sample oj Our Work165-167 Main Street, Menasha, Wis.to AfotrcrttoraBGeorge Banta Publishing Co. • • • • 573Geo. P. Bent Co 4^3Blickensderfer Typewriters • 4^3Browne's Book Store 479Bryant & Stratton Business College .- 5 10CCarson Pirie Scott & Co 503Carver & Wilkie Co 509Central Hyde Park Bank • 4§iChicago Business College 493S. D. Childs & Co 5nCondax Cigarette : 5o8Corn Exchange aBnk 495DJohn W. Douglas • • •/• 507Dunford Ink Pencil • • '• • • 4$7EL. P. Esmoer 5o8FFeilchenfeld Bros 503GA. J. Gatterdam • < 4$9Gibson Art Galleries " 4^9Gregg School 5"HHardy Bros., Foster & Co 4$7IIllinois Central Railroad 499JJahn & Oilier Engraving Co • • 5 1 1Jerrems 495Jones Stokers 497Arthur W. Joseph & Co 495KW. C. Kern Co • 5o8MMadison Avenue Laundry • 477Marshall Field & Co , 477Martyn's Maroon Studio S11Moffett Studio 4^5W. H. Moshier Co 49 15HNicoll The Tailor 501OOptimo Cigars 503Orr & Lockett Hardware Co 497RRoot Studio 501SHenry G. Schmucker 497Charles Schneider 479H. E. Shorey 475VVanderhoof-Gunn Co 47°Varney 491WWalinger 507Webster's International Dictionary 507The White City 505The Windermere Press 477Woodlawn Pharmacy 477515