Ê Ê È È M The WOLVERINE PUBLISHED IN MAY 1918 Volume XVI Vy the JUNIOR CLASS of MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE PRINTING AND BINDING Robert Smith Company - - Lansing ENGRAVING Jahn & Ollier Company - - Chicago PHOTOS The Le Clear Studio - - - Lansing CAMPUS VIEWS Prof. W. E. Laycock Harvey Photo Shop - - -- College - East Lansing F ore word IN PRESENTING this war-time Wolverine on behalf of the class of ’19 we, the editors ask for it nothing but the recognition due it as Volume XVI of our college annual. If it portrays the life and events of the past college year in a manner that will make it of service on the campus throughout the coming year, and if as the years pass, it fulfills its ulti­ mate function of renewing our memories of college life, functions and friendships, it will have accomplished all that we intended it should. THE EDITORS TO THE HUNDREDS OF MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE ALUMNI AND UNDERGRADUATES REPRESENTED IN PART'BY THE STARS ON THIS SERVICE FLAG WE, THE CLASS OF 1919, DEDICATE THIS WOLVERINE **************** * ïiîîtîîîïîîîîîîîïMBH ★ ★ ★ * * * ★ ★****★*★ ★ ★*★ *★ ★**llll *★ ★** 1 **★★★★★★*★***★★★* ly****** ★ * ****** * ********** ★★★★★★* xíí * * Bl ir ir ir ir **★ *★ * ÉÍ.Í í 1Î***** *★★★★ * ttiiiiìi********* **************** * *** ** * ********** 1 íí*íít*******1111 ****************1 111********* **m ★** * * * «A4 ******* ir *11********★*Mt+ ***************** ** * * ** **★**★ ★*★* 1 ** * * ************* iti iré é ir ** it ******* * ****** *** it iré i i *★ * ****** ****★★★*★** ********11141111I ** ****** * * * ***** ★ ** **★*******★★*’★★ *** ******* ******* ★*************** ★ 11*************** ■■■■■■ ïîumîrtîîîîm &&&&&**&*& ORDER OF BOOKS DEDICATION FACULTY CLASSES ATHLETICS MILITARY CAMPUS GRINDS AND ADS Corporal, Wm. R. Johnson, ’12 The passing of W. R. Johnson fixed the first gold star on our service flag. Mr. Johnson was among those who were lost on the British transport, the Tuscania, when it was sunk by a German submarine off the coast of Ireland. While at M. A. C., Mr. Johnson, popularly known as “Bill,” was prominent in class athletics and well known about the campus. He was manager of the class baseball team in his sophomore year and played with the team through its four years. He was a member of the Athenaeum Society of which he was president in his senior year. After leaving college he was manager of his father’s 260-acre farm until last November when he went to Camp Custer. He made application through Professor Chittenden to be transferred to the 20th Engineers (Forestry). The transfer was made and it was with this division that he sailed for England on the Tuscania. Thus is marked M. A. C.’s first great sacrifice in this world struggle for democracy. 8 The Service List 1885 Hemphill, R. W., Jr., Capt. Ord. Dept. 1888 Ireland, Mark, Major, U. S. A., Q. M. Mech. Repair Shop. Lundy, C. B. (with), Lieut. Com., U. S. S. Pennsylvania. .1902 Chamberlain, Paul M., Major O. R. C., Ord. Dept. Horton, N. B., 1st Lieut. Co. L, 334th Inf. 1890 1903 Hall, Harris F., Capt., 123d H. F. A. 1891 Ashton, Fred W., Lieut.-Col., 7th Inf., Neb. Nat’l Guard. 1892 Gregory, Myron S. (with), Capt. Med. Corps. Kingsley, H. Ray (with), Capt. E. O. R. C., Manila, P. I. Rose, C. B. (with), Major, Aviation Signal Corps, Washington, D. C. 1906 Wilson, W. P., Capt., 7th Regt. C. A., A. E. F. France, via New York. Bird, R. C. 1893 1907 Goss, H. M., Army Y. M. C. A. Holden, James S. (with), A. S. S. C., Const. Div. Percival, Chas. G. (with), Capt. Ord. Dept. 1895 Allen, H. R., Major, Cav. U. S. R. Bye, Levy B. (with). Canfield, Russell S., 1st Lieut. 114th Eng. Granger, C. M., Capt. Hdq. Lines of Com­ munication. Hyatt., W. D. (with), Lieut. O. R. C. Strome, Grant U. (with), 2d Lieut. Co. A, 340th Inf. Towner, W. S. (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Q. M. C. 1898 1908 Ainger, Frank B., Jr. (with), Capt. Supply Co., 340th Inf. Cole, Otis R. (with), Major, 330th Inf. 1899 Ashley, Amos A. (with), Major U. S. A., 119th F. A. Bolte, Guy W. (with), 7th F. A. Kiefer, Francis, Capt. Eng. Hdq. For. Lemmon, K. B., Capt. U. S. A., C. A. Norton, C. B., 1st Lieut. Hdq. S. O. R. C., Smith, L. C. (with). A. S. 1900 1909 Alvarez, Ramon J., 2d Lt. Art. P. I. Nat’l Dodge, Frederick W. (with) Ensign, U. S. N. R. F., U. S. S. Snohomish. Fuller, Geo. B., Aero. Mech. Eng., S. C. A. S. 1901 Baker, Hugh P., Capt. O. R. C., 46th Inf. Curtis, Fred S. (with), Capt. 310th Eng. Gd. Bullis, Coyne G. (with), Machinist’s Mate, 1st Cl. U. S. S. Dorothea. Dewey, Maurice J. (with), A. S. S. C. Frazer, Wm. D., Capt. U. S. A., Bat. A, 7th C. A. C., A. E. F. Harrison, H. H., 1st Lieut., 306th Am. Kierstead, Friend H., 2d Lieut., E. O. R. C., 116th Eng. 10 The Service List Continued Griffin, C. A. (with), Sergt. K. T. Amb. 8th Squad. Avia. Kline, Justin, Co. 80, 6th Regt. 2d Bn. Marine Corps. Lyon, R. R., Capt. U. S. A. McCullough, Nelson, Co. C, 23d Eng. Moss, W. N., Capt. O. R. C., C. A. Parker, F. R., Capt. Ö. R. C., 326th Inf. Stebbins, Stowell C. (with), Capt. Ware­ house Div., Q. M. C. N. A. Tanner, R. V., 1st Lieut., 334th Inf. Webb, Frank K., Capt. 28th Eng. 1910 Bird, E. Morris (with), Capt. C. A. C. Clippert, Clarence G., 1st Lieut. San. Corps, DeCamp, J. Conley, Corp. Co. C, 1st Bn., Base Hospital Lab. 20th Eng. (ror.) Hobbs, George W., 1st Lieut. Motor Equip. Corps. Sec. Ord. Dept. Lemmon, Chas. A., Capt. Co. 1, 1st Bn., 153d Depot Brig., 312th Inf. MacLachlan, Ira D., Capt. 125th Inf. McKenna, Parnel, 1st Lieut. U. S. R., F. A. McEwing, L. B. (with), 2d Lieut. F. A. Ponitz, Chas. H., Capt. Ord. O. R. C. White, W. E., 10th Eng. (For.) 1911 Brightup, Roscoe E., Capt. O. R. C., 15th Co., C. A. 6th Inf. Buck, M. M., 1st Lieut. O. R. C.,. Co. H, Bush, Howard D. (with), 105th M. G. Bn. Button, Aaron C. (with), 1st Lieut. M. O. R. C., 110 Field Amb. B. E. F. Cortright, Ion J., 2d Lieut. Curtiss, C. Dwight, Capt. Co. C, 41st Eng. Dimmick, G. L., 1st Lieut. Inf., 311 Supply Forbes, E. G. (with), Co. A, 21st Eng. Frey, C. N., 1st Lieut. San. Corps. Greenleaf, M. C., Sergt. 5th Co. E. R. O. Train. T. C. Hale, Paul B. (with), Inf. O. T. S. Holdsworth, Robt., P. Capt. Inf. R. C., 23 Co. 6 Bn., 151 Depot Brigade. Johnson, L. G. (with), Sergt.-Major, 372d Aero. Squad. Knepf, C. H., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Porter, Ben C., Jr., Corp. Bat. A, 328 F. A. Roe, C. S., 1st Lieut. Eng. Replacement Depot. Ross, Chas. A. (with), Capt. 14th Inf. Vance, Walter (with), Kelly Field No. 2. Wandeil, E. P., 2d Lieut. Inf., unassigned. Webb, H. S. (with), 1st Sergt. Supply Co., 125th Inf. Urch, Leslie L. (with) Amb. Co. 338, 310 San Tr. 1912 Barnhart, Willis J. (with), O. T. S. Carmody, John H., O. T. S. Cavanagh, Everett (with), 1st Lieut. S. C., Auto Wheel Repair Unit. Chilson, Clinton H., 1st Lieut. U. S. A., 51st Aero. Squad.,'A. S. S. C. Edwardsen, C. A. B. (with), Capt., Per­ sonnel Officer. Eyer, L. E. Gearing, M. J., Capt. O. R. C., 330th F. A. Harris, John J., Capt. O. R. C., 349th F. A., Hdq. Co. Hebard, F. F., U. S. N. R. R. Harris, F. R. (with), 1st. Lieut. A. S. S. C., Iddl'es, Alfred, Lieut. Ord. Dept., Wash., Johnson, Wm. R., lost in the sinking of the D. C. Tuscania. Jonas, Jos. F., 2d Lieut. 471st Aero. Squad. Kessler, T. F. (with) Capt. Ord. Dept. Knowlton, H. E„ Sergt. 1st Bat. O. T. S. Mead, Alfred B., 1st Co. O. T. S. McNabb, C. A. (with), 1st Lieut. O. R. C. Ryther, C. G., 1st Co. O. T. S. Sanford, E. C., 1st Lieut. Co. B., 10th Eng. Sheffield, Geo. C., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 160th (For.) Depot Brigade. Smith, James A., Lieut. C. A. Spraker, E. C. (with), 1st St. Aaide Camp Gen’l Covell, 63d Inf. Stone, F. A., 1st Lieut. Cp. B., 5th Bn., 20th Eng. Taft, H. G., Sergt. Co. 1, O. T. S. Trautmän, W. E. (with), Corp. Bat. A, 322d F. A. N. A. Warner, Russell A., 1st Lieut. Co. D, 2d Eng. VanMeter, Morton, 1st Lieut. Co. B, 3d Bn., 20th Eng., Camp. Watkins, James B. (with), Amb. Co. 339, San. Tr. 310. 1913 Allen, Gleason, 1st Bat. F. A., O. T. S. Benay, C. W. (with), O. T. S. Blomquist, Fritz T., Co. L, 345th Inf. Borgman, Harold H. (with), 1st Lt. Bat. F, 119th F. A. Brooks, John A., Jr. (with), Capt. U. S. A. Busch, Frederick Wm. (with), Navy. Chamberlain, Ralph G., 1st Lieut. C. A. R. C. Colgan, John G. > Aero. Squad. (with), 1st Lieut., 1st Collins, Earl H., Capt. O. R. C., C. A. mm The Service List—Continued Cook, G. D., Sergt. Co. A, 10th Eng. Corey, Walter C., 841st Aero. Squad. Cotton, H. L. (with), 2d Lieut. V. O. R. C., Remount Depot. Crone, Leonard, Cadet No. 152039. Crawford, C., 1st Cook, Amb. Co. 21. Davis, Frank R. (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 5th Bn., 160th Depot Brig. Douglas, E. C., Capt. O. R. C., C. A. Downey, W. D., Jr. (with), Co. F, 310 Eng. Dudley, W. D. (with), U. S. S. Columbia. Fulton, R. H. (with), Inf. Gorenflo, Elmer F., Capt. O. R. C., Cav. Wagon Co. No. 1, 310th Am. Train. Gridley, N. B., 1st Lieut. Harvey, Burt W., Elect. 2d Cl. U. S. S. Columbia. Hazen, J. B. (with), 1st Lieut. Inf. U. S. R. Hutchins, Lee M., Army Med. College. Knapp, Morris (with), Lieut. O. R. C., M. S. T. 409, M. T. C. 375. MacDonald, J. A., 2d Lieut. M. G. Co., 126th Inf. McCreery, Lee B. (with), Co. C, 310 Eng. McDonald, Wm. A., Capt; O. R. C., Co. K, 338th Inf. Mason, A. C., Corp. Co. 49, 13th Bn., 165 Depot Brig. Mather, D. W., 2d Lieut. Raritan Ord. Depot. Morlock, J. F. (with), Lieut. Pierce, Bernard (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Regones, Showley (with), Capt. V. R. C., Co. F, 37th Inf. unassigned. Shanahan, Robt. E., 2d Lieut. Inf. Smith, Wm. R., 2d Lieut.. F. A. Snyder, Clifford L. (with), 2d Lieut. F. A. Stolte, C. Edw. (with), O. T. S. Storms, L. S. (with), 1st Bat. O. T. S. Stone, D. D., 1st Lieut. O. R. C. Ord. Dept. Symes, L. K. (with), Canadian Forces. Ward, H. M., 2d Lieut., Co. D, 2d Brig. M. G. Bn. Wileden, L. A., 2d Lieut. V. R. C. Wilhelm, P. W., 1st Lieut. O. R. C., Inf. Wolf, Art D., : Pvt.* 20th Eng. Yoke, Elmore A. (with), 1st Lieut. Co. C, 330th Inf. 1914 Allen, Pieman H., Co. D, 18th Eng. Ry., U. S. A. P. O. 705. Alderdyce, J. C., 1st Lieut. E. R. C., U. S. M. P. O. 708. Arms, Theron R. (with), Amb. Co. 337. Baker, Pnilip C., Lieut. Lines of Com­ munication. Benoy, Evan H. (with), 2d Lieut. C. A. C. 54 Regt. Hdq. Co. Borden, Clinton T., Sergt. Co. C, 341st Inf. Burt, E. H., 1st Lieut. 14th U. S. Inf. Chartrand, L. F. (with), 20th Eng. (For.), Am. U. Cockroft, W. S., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Caryl, Ralph E., M. R. C., Base Hosp. 35. Coryell, R. I., 2d Avia. Instr. Center. Cushman, D. D., 1st Lieut. Avia. Sec. S. C. Dilts, W. S., Navy, 1912 St. Charles St. Dodge, Ralph J., 409 M. S. T. Co. 375. Ernsberger, Benj. H., Co. C, 328th M. G. Bn. Hall, H. C. Hinger, T. R., Cadet, 2d Avia. Instr. Center. Hill, Irving D. (with), Co. D, 310th Eng. Hodgeman, C. D. (with), U. S. S. Columbia. Hodgkins, R. D., Aero. Squad. 349, Kelly Field No. 3. Hülse, L. C., 2nd Lieut. O. R. C. F. A. Jennings, R. D., School of Aeronautics. Jensen, Ove F., School of Military Aero. Kellogg, Robert B., Jr. (with), Ensign U. S. S. Iowa. Kenney, F. R., 1st Lieut. U. S. A., 1st Cav. Kirshman, Irving. Lacey, Ned W., Avia. Cps. Ledyard, Hugh (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C. McArdle, Clare S., Capt. O. R. C., Co. A, Mason, W. L., 64 Art. Bat. E. Mason, P. G. (with), 3c Musician Hdq. Co., Hdq. Office. 310th Eng. 337th Inf. Mains, Gerald H., 1st Co. O. T. S. Merwin, C. L., 1st Lieut. F. A. Mogge, Norton W., Co. D., O. T. S. Mueller, F. H. Nixon, Allen R., 223 Aero. Squad., Kelly Petrie, J. A., 1st Lieut. O. R. C., Co. H, Seibert, J. T., Sergt. Supply Co., 340th Inf. Shaver, T. R. Sheldon, H. J., 2d Lieut. Co. G, 337th Inf. Shilson, Gilbert T., 2d Lieut., Co. F, 340th Field, S. 59th Inf. Inf. Snyder, R. M., Army Med. College. Smith, Lewis A., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Bat. C, 147th F. A. Toland, D. P. W., 1st Co. Inf. O. T. S. Towar, J. DeLoss, Jr. (with), 15th Cav. Am. Tr., Co. E. Vetter, C. T. (with), Bat. F, 328th F. A. Welch, Arthur E. (with), 1st Lieut. S. R. C., A. S. 1915 Adams, F. O., 1st Lieut. Field Lab., 42d Div. Alden, E. E., 2d Lieut. U. S. A., Co. K, 21st Inf. Amos, E. G., 1st Bat. O. T. S. The Service List Continued Aseltine, Leland B., 2d Lieut. 37th Inf. Auitman, Ralph G., Lieut. O. R. C. Bennett, J. A., U. S. S. Antigone. Bibbins, A. L., Motor Train 375. Billings, Leo B. (with), Capt. Co. G, 338th Inf. Browne, Francis C. (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 160th Depot Brig., 18th Inf., 5th Bn. Brundage, Marsden R., Sergt. 1st Bn., Hdq., 20th Eng. (For.) Buell, H. J., Sergt. Co. D, 334th Inf. Cavanaugh, W. J., 2d Lieut. 339th F. A. Caldwell, Geo! L., 2d Lieut., Sub Dispen­ sary, i4th F. A. Cherry, A. E., 1st Lieut. 15th Cav. Churchill, Thos. W., 1st Lieut. V. O. R. C. Conover, H. R. (with), 1st Lieut. Quarters 140. Decker, Richard E., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Decker, Roy E., Hdq. Co. 3d F. A. Dinan, R. E., Ord. Dept. Navy. Down, E. E., Inf. O. T. S. Drver, O. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Bat. C, 328th F. A., 160th Brig. Engel, A. M., 1st Lieut., Co. A, 7th Eng.- Finch, Arthur L., Co. A, 337th Inf. Fisher, G. K., 1st Lieut., 161 D. B. Bks. 1258. Giffels, Bertram, 1st Lieut. Inf, N. A. 1st Bn., 159th Depot Brigade. Giffels, R. F., 5th Cadet Squad. Gage, G. R. (M. S.) Avia. Cps. Green, Geo. W., Avia. Sec. S.. R. C. Harvey, Earl M., 1st Lieut. Henry, D. D., Lieut Commdg. Navy Rifle Range. Herr, Charles, 1st Lieut. Co. F, 319th Inf. Hood, N. F. (with), 2d Lieut. Inf. Jewell, Albert H., 1st Lieut. Sig. Avia. School. (with), Co. C, 10th Eng. Klasell, Alvin Klein, Harold F., Co. 1, Inf. O. T. S. Lavers, W. W., A. S. S. C. Lawson, J. W., Ord. Corps, Arsenal. McMillan, D. C., 1st Lieut. 126th Inf. Maloney, Clarence B., U. S. Air Ser. Mandenburg, E. C., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Matthews, Fred R. (with), Co. A, 120 M. G. Bn. Maveety, R. P. (with), 313 F. S. Bn., Bks. 3. Meschke, Karl G., 20th Eng., Co. E, 4th Bn. Miller, Oscar R. (with), 310 Regt. Sup. Tr. No. 5. Mosher, Lawrence, 2d Lieut. V. R. C., 313 San. Tr. Amb. Co. No. 1. Nelson, John L. (with), Co. D, 310th Eng. Palm, Donald (with), Sec. 603. Parker, Harold M. (with), U. S. S. Osage. Paulson, A. C., 1st Lieut. Co. I 3d Bn., 336 Inf. Peters, Melville F. (with). Peterson, Ernest E., Corp. Co. D, 310 Eng. Potts, R. J., 2d Lieut. 14th Inf. Robinson, Standish W. (with), 2d Lt. O. R. C., 161st Depot Brig. Roop, C. L. (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 337th Inf. Sayles, A. L., Co. 10, E. O. T. C. Schaffer, Geo. R., Lieut. V. R. C. Sisley, M. J., 1st Lieut. V. O. R. C. Shumaker, L. M., Avia. Sec. S. O. R. C. Skeels, Dorr A., Capt. Co. E, 10th Eng. (For.). Smiley, F. A., Sapper 8th Bat. C. R. T., Co. 4. Smith, Edwin .1 as., Base Hosp., M. D. Corps. Stroh, Donald, Capt., 17th Cav. Tavlor, O. A., 1st Lieut. V. C. N. A., U. S. M. P. O. 701. Tuthill, C. B. (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 7th F. A. Waffle, Ross W., Sergt. 1st Bat. Art. O. T. S. Yuhse, F. J. 1916 Barron, Allen W., 1st Lieut. 1st Co. Inf., 160th D. B. Bates, Frank R., 1st Lieut. V. O. R. C., 184 S. Converse St. Beatty, E. E., Corp., Co. D, 310th Eng. Beden, Wallace S.,«2d Lieut., 14th U. S. Inf. Betts, W. H., 16th Eng. Bottomley, Myrl E., 2d Lieut. Inf. Braun, Bruce E. (with), School of Mil. Aeronautics. Brown, W. B., 1st Co. Inf., O. T. S. Brownell, Stanley J., 1st Inf. O. T. S. Carey, Glenn w‘., 1st Lieut. Bat. A, 119th F. A. Carrington, Harvey (with). Childs, Francis M., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Co. C, 328 M. G. Bn. Clark, H. A., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. 328th F. A. .Coburn, Laurance F., Navy. Cooper, Herbert G., 2d Lieut. 20th F. A. Couchois, Clifford, 1st Lieut. V. O. R. C., 328th F. A. Cowles, Howard E., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Butchery Co. No. 306. Deprato, N. J., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 328th F. A. Dunphy, Chas. B. (with), 1st Lieut. Aux. Remount Depot. ' Ferle, Allan W., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Bat. F, 330th F. A. Gillett, Wallace H., Capt. 15th Cav. Gork, L. Henry, 1st Lieut. Co. H, 45th Inf. Gorton, Walter T., 1st Lieut. O. R. C., Ord. Dept. Goss, Henry A., 2d Lieut. Inf. Greve, L. T., Lieut. A. S. S. C. Hacker, F. G., D. E. C. N. A. Il Hamlin, E. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. M, 166th Inf. Helmer, P. F. (with), 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 328th F. A., Hdq. Co., 160 D. B. Hobbs, Glenn I., Base Hosp. Horan, H. J., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Hough, E. M., 2d Lieut. V. O. R. C., Ad­ vance Base, Vet. Hosp. No. 1, U. S. A. P. O. 709. Howard, S. S. (with), Mess Sergt., Amb. Co. 351. Hutton, K. W. (with), 2d Lieut., Bat. B, 119th F. A. Jensen, M. B;, 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Q. M. C. Johnson, J. M., 2d Lieut. 3d Eng., Scho­ field Bks. Johnson, C. H., 10th Eng., Co. B (For.). Johnson, R. J., Co. B, 29th Eng. Jones, Don F., 2d Lieut., Q. M. C., M. T. S.„ U. S. P. O. 706. Kelley, Wm. C., Co. D, 310th Eng. King, Carl B., 1st Lieut. U. S. R., Co. C, 312th Inf. Kinney, J. M., 4th Co., 1st Bn., 160th Depot Brig. Knickerbocker, W. G., 2d Lieut. Lankey, F. I., Cadet Avia. School. . Lautner, R. W., Ord. School. Lyon, Albert C. (with), Bat. D, 328th F. A. Mac Innis, Leland O (with), Bat. C, 119 F. A. McFarlane, Frank C. (with), Sergt. 4th Bn., Co. D, 20th Eng., Am. Univ. Maze, J. M., 2d Lieut. U. S. F. A. Miller, Blake, 1st Lieut. Inf. O. R. C., Co. A, 330 M. G. Bn. Morrison, V. N., Co. B, 16th Eng. (R. R.). Moore, J. M., 2d Lieut. S, R. C., Hdq. Kelly Field. Nichols, C. A., Sergt. Co. F, 4th Bn., 20th Eng. (For.). Oakes, H. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 309th Eng. O’Callaghan, John, 1st Lieut. 339th Inf., M. G. Bn. Olsen, O. A., 2d Lieut. Supply Co. 302, Q. M. C. Pellett, G. W., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Peabody, Ford, Co. E., 338th Inf. Procter, Chas. C. (with), Co. 15, Naval Avia. De. M. I of T. Pierce, S. S., U. S. N. R. F. Ralya, Lynn. Richards, Harry, Co. F, 337th Inf. Robinette, A. B., Gen. Hdq. Bn. Ricker, F. G., A. S. S. C. 61 Sqdn. Runnells, R. A., 1st Lieut. V. R. C., Aux. Remount Depot. Sales, E. K., 1st Lieut. V. R. C., Remount Sta. L. of C. Sears, Lucius D., Photo Detach. Silverman, Roy (with), Walter Reed Gen. Hosp. Smith, E. G., Capt. 11th M. G. Bn., Co. C. Smith, G. E., 30th Co., 8th Tr. Bn. Spencer, Earl H., Capt. Reg. Adj. 119 F. A. Stanley, L. R., 1st Co. O. T. S. Thomas, Walter P., 2d Lieut. F. A. Thompson, C. E., Co. A, 21st Eng. Thompson, F. B., Avia. School. Tower, P. V., Corp. Bau A, 119th F. A. Townsend, I. W. (with), Kelley Field No. 1, S. Warren, G. Ray, Base Hosp. 35, M. R. C. Waters, C. B., Co. G, 310th Am. Tr. Weaver, Lloyd L., U. S. S. C. Meteor Ser. Wheeting, L. C., 1st Co. Inf., O. T. S. Williams, Loren V., 1st Co., O. T. S. Wilson, L. E., Asst. Insp. of Ord. Wright, Wilbur, Avia. Concentration Camp. Winston, C. N., Capt. Wyant, R. W. 1917 Allen, Don M. (with), Bat. A, 119th F. A. Anderson, Wm., Co. D, 126th Inf. Bailey, D. L. (with), Asst. Chaplain, Bat. F, 329th F. A. Barnett, C. F., 1st Co. Inf. O. T. S. Bartlett, Herbert C., 2d Lieut. C. A. C., Quarters 4. Bayer, A. H., Sergt. Co. M, 303d Inf. Beake, Kenneth G. (with), 2d Lieut. Billings, R. W. (with), Co. A, 10th Eng. (For.). Bolton, R. B., 2d Lieut. V. R. C., 302d F. A. (with), Sergt. Bat. C, Brook, Glenn J. 119th F. A. Burgett, C. S., 2d Lieut. V. O. R. C., Re­ mount Station No. 320. Cadmus, R. L., Detention Co. 4. Campbell, Harry L., 2d Lieut. C. A. C., 1st Training Co. Canfield, C. J., Aux. Remount Depot. Canfield, Harold, Co. C, 328th M. G. Bn. Carlson, E. F., Arsenal. Cashin, Raymond, 2d Lieut. F. A. Chaddock, Frank G. (with), Capt. 119 F. A. Clark, W. J., 1st Bat. F. A. O. T. S. Chynoweth, J. B. (with), 2d Lieut. Inf. Cleveland, L. K. (with), 16th Eng. Clemetsen, Harold A., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. B, 328th M. G. Bn. Colson, Axel A. (with), Amb. Co. 339. Collins, G. C. Crocker, E. S., Sergt., 119th F. A. Crozier, C. R., 2d Lieut. I. R. C. Casual. Dettling, Geo., Co. E, Pub. Works, U. S. N. T. S. Dicker, G. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. C, 101 M. G. Bn., Inf. unattached. Donnelly, C. H. (with), 1st Lieut. Bat. A, 119th'F. The Service List—Continued Dwight, S. H., Corp. Amb. Co. No. 168, 117th San. Train., 42 Div. England, Fred, Jr., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Eppley, Claude (with), 601 U. S. A. A. S. Estes, H. R., 1st Co. Inf. O. T. S. Fick, H. A.,'M. S. T. 409 M. T. C. 375. Fisher, C. U. (with), 2d Lieut. U. S. F. A. Foess, J. E. J., Co. C, 1st Bn., 20th Eng. (For.). Galliver, Geo. F., E. O. C. N. A. U, S. Ar­ senal. Galloway, John F. (with), Sergt. Co. A, 339th Inf. Gibbs, R. T. (with), Co. 5 Eng., R. O. T. C. Gifford, Neil A., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Gould, Russell (with), 57th F. A., Bat. Hdq. Hamann, E. C. (with), 1st Lieut. Hdq. Co., 119th F. A. Hardy, Harold D., Sergt. Supply Co., 329th Inf. ü T. S. Harman, S. Willard, Hosp. Co. C-l, G. L. Hausherr, F. E., Hdq. 6th Bn., 20th Eng. Hebard, C. E. (with), M. O. R. C. Hehn, F. G. (with), 2d Lieut. F. A. Henning, R. B., 1st Lieut. 16th F. A. Henshaw, G. J., 3d Co., S. O. R. C. T. C. Hetrick, R. E. (with), Hdq. Bn., Gen. Hdq. Himebaugh, Gero A., Flying Cadet, Rich Field. Hobbs, Fred, U. S. S. Mass. Hodgkins, P. M., 20th Eng. (For.), Co. E, 6th Bn. Huebner, Herbert C, (with), 2d Lieut. A. S. S. R. C. Huss, E. M. (with). Ingells, G. D. (with), Corp. Ord, Cps, Jennings, L. S. (with), 1st Bat. O. T..S. Keck, Wm. C.* 2d Lieut. V. R. C„ Hdq. 3d Div. Knox, J. S. (with), Kunze, E. F., 2d Lieut. V. R. C., 310th Eng. Leavitt, L. R., 2d Lieut. Inf., O. R. C., Co. B, 329th M. G. Bn. Lee, S. B., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. C, 310 Am. Train. Levin, Louis F., 1st Co. O. T. S. Lloyd, B. W., U. S. N. R. Lyon, M. S. (with), Corp. 16th Aero. Sqdn. McClellan, A. L., 2d Lieut., S. M. A. McClure, B. M., 2d Lieut. 8th Inf., Co. B. McLean, H. P.^Sergt. Supply Co., 328th F. A. Maire, A. L., Ord. Office. Manuel, E. J. Marx, F. W., 2d Lieut C. A. C., 5th Co. Mead, D. L., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. K, 337th Inf. Medalie, Sidney (with), 328th F. A., Hdq. Co. Miller, Geo. F., Yeoman 2C, U. S. Navy Aero. Sta. Squad. II. Moon, C. L. (with), 1st Lieut. Newlon, Wilson E., Mess Sergt., Co. L, 338th Inf. Niergarth, O. (with). Olney, J. F., 2d Lieut. V. O. R. C., M. O. T. C. O’Meara, Percy, Co. C, 338th Inf. Pate, Ed. H., S. C. Pennington, R. A., Weather Bureau. Peppard, David L., Co. D, 7th Regt. Pinckney, E. W., K. T. Hosp. Corps. Pino, Otto W., Supply Sergt., Co. C, 338th Inf. Prillerman, D. M., 1st Sergt. 349 F. A., Hdq. Co. Putnam, H. N., Sergt. Co. B, 10th Eng. (For.). Rasbach, J. B., 2d Lieut. 16th F. A. Rather, Howard C., 1st Bat. F. A. O. T. S. Rowan, W. H. (with), Electrician, 228 Aero. Squad., A. S. S. C. Schneider, Corwin J. (with), 1st Lt. 1st Bn., 119th F. A. Sheehan, R. W., Chief Electrician, U. S. S. Indiana. Sheffield, Arthur R., 2d Lieut., Bat. C, 329th F. A. Sheldon, J. F., 3d Cl. U. S. N. R. F. Sheppard, Wm. H. (with), Naval Av. De­ tachment. Smith, H. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 168 Inf., Co. B. Spaford, Frank, Co. B, 328 M. G. Bn. Spinning, G. W. (with), O. T. S. Stafford, F. W., 2cl Lieut. O. R. C., 162d Inf. Stafseth, H. J., Hdq. Troop 85 Div, Stewart, H. C., Ord. Tr. School. Sullivan, Richard P., U. S. Navy. Tarpinian, M. S., Army Med. School. Thompson, P. E., Sergt. Amb. Co. 338. Thompson, Wm. D., 1st Lieut. 2 M. G. Co., ,M. G. Bn., 1st Brig. 1st Div. Turner, A. L., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. B, 37th Inf. Twiss, C. G. (with), Bat. F, 336 F. A. VanHalteren, Frank E. (with), 1st Lieut. Hdq. 57 F. A. VanBuskirk, Wm. F., 3d F. A. O. T. S. Verschoor, Leonard H., 2d Lieut. Vevia, Paul J., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Walter, R. D., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Warner, F. T., 2d Lieut. F. A. R. C. Warner, H. R. (with), Co. 15, Naval Avia. Detachment, M. I. T. Washburn, Chas., O. E. C. N. A. Weil, Norman O., Sec. 508 U. S. A. A. S. Whalen, F. J., Arsenal, Augusta* Ga. Wilson, L. M., Supply Sergt. Co. E, 337th Inf. Wilson, F. M., 1st Bat. O. T. S. The Service List—Continued Wright, Walter R., Capt. Inf. O. R. C., 160th Depot Brig. WITH 1918 Abbott, H. K., Co. D, 163 D. B. Alford, Howard E., Corp. Co. C, 328th M. G. Bn. Andre, Robt. M., 2d Lieut., 304 M. G. Bn. Barrell, C. L., G. L. N. T. S. Bartlett, H. J. Bartley, Hugh J., 1st Co. O. T. S. Beauchamp, M. F., Navy. Beers, C. W., Bat. A, H9th F. A. Behler, Harold, Co. M, Naval Operating Base. Bellinger, Burdette W., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Hdq. Bat. 330 F. A. Beltz, Harold H., Bat. A, 119th F. A. Benjamin, Lester V., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Q. M. Corps. Bentley, Geo. T., 2d Lieut. Inf. U. S. P. O. 730. Brigham, E- K., Sec. 559, U. S. A. A. S. Boman, -W. C., Camp McArthur, Tex. Brooks, Chas. I., U. S. Naval Radio School, . Co. 30. Brownfield, Carl M., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 337th Inf., Hdq. Co. F. Bugai, W. J. Cavanagh, Dwight C., Sergt. Hdq. Co. 310th Eng. Carmody, M. F. Clark, Edw. R., A. S. S. C. Chapman, W. A., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Clark, Geo. S., Aviation Corps. Clark, Roger S., Co. C, 310th Eng. Corbett, J. A., Sergt. Co. D, 328 M. G. Bn. Coryell, S., 2d cl. seaman, N. R. R. Corson, Wm. A., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., F. A. Crocker, Martin, Co. H, 23d Eng. Daschner, T. J., 2d Lieut. O. .R. C., 337th Inf., Co. L. Daugherty, Burton P., Pharmacist and Pathologist, U. S. H. S. Solace, care Post- master. DePuy, H. E., Co. M, 338th Inf. DeYoung, Warren E., Sergt. R. O. T. C., Eng. Donovan, Wm., Base Hosp. No. 17. Earseman, Willis C., Co. F, 112th Inf. Eddy, H. J., Amb. Co. 351. Emerson, D. D., 5th Prov. Aero. Sqd., Kelly Field, S. Engel, Chas. M., Bugler, Bat. A, 119th F. A. Esselstyn, Frank H., Bat. C, 119th F. A. Finch, E. J., 1st Lieut., 54 Pioneer Inf. Fitzpatrick, F. W., Aero. Q. M. Depot. Foster, T. F., Sergt. Co. C, 310th Eng. Frazier, W. E., Sergt. Co. D, 328th M. G. Bn. Furlong, Harold A., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Co. M, 353d Inf. Gilchrist, M. F., Co. C, 10th Eng. (For). Glohr, Charles E., Q, M. C. Goldberg, Louis, Supply Sergt., Co. G, 305th Am. Train. Haight, Howard P., Hdq. Co. 145th Inf. Hale, Ralph D., Bat. C, 1119th F. A. Hale, Herman B., 2d Lieut. Bat. E, 119th F. A. Harris, L. C., 119th F. A. Harris, Wayne G., Casual Det., Prov. Co. 1. Heasley, Roy M., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Heustis, W. Clifford, 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Bat. E, 328th F. A. Hice, L..K., Bat. C, 119th F. A. Hiller, Clarence, 2d Lieut. Hdq. Co., 18th Inf. Hopperstead, A. M., 23 Eng., Recruiting Detachment. ^ „ Hoyt, W. J., 1st Lieut. O. R. C., 2d Co., 1st Bn., Inf., 160th Depot Brig. Hughes, Leslie, 14th Co., 4 Bn., Depot Brig. Jacklin, J. H., Great Lakes, 111., Q. M. School. Jameson, H. B., Avia. School. , Jewett, M. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 328th Johnson, Einar A., O. T. S., 1st Co. Inf. Joel, A. H., Sergt., Co. E, 314th Inf. Johnson, Frank A., Hdq. Co., 119th F. A. Johnson, S. E., National Army. .Tones. L. N., Capt. O. R. C., Bat. Adj. 330th inney, R. C. lotz, L. J., Base FIosp. ent, D. W., Co. 1 Inf., O. T. S. oleman, N. D., Sergt. Bat. C, l'19th F. A. MH H. M.. Sergt., 310th Supply Tram, Krum, Howard E., Aviation. Kuyers, Harry R., Boatswain’s Mate, 1st class, G. L. N. T. S. Lauder, W. J., Ord. Corps. Lawton, G. L. 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Hdq. Co., 304 F. A. Leveaux, Cosmer, Bat. A, 119th F. A. Lockwood, C. F., Corp. Ludwig, V. H., Sergt. C. C, 320 Inf. Love, Ray H., Supply Co., 337th Inf. MacKenzie, S. W., 2d Lieut. U. S. A., Co. E, 14th Inf. McCool, P. F., Co. 27, Ord. Dept. Jefferson Bks. McIntyre, A. C., 337th Inf., Co. I. Maloney, C. V., Corp. Hdq. Det., 310 Sup. Train. Maxfieid, Geo. G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Merriman, G. E., Oro. Sergt., E. O. C. N. A. Metzgen, Earl N., 48th Aero. Squad. Air Service. The Service List—Continued Millard, Forrest G., 84th Aero. Squad., A. Van Leeuwen, Earl, 2d Lieut. Co. M, 338th S. S. C. 338th Inf. Miller, C. F., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 169th Brig Mills, Harold N., Corps. Co. F, 310th Eng. Mills, W. D., 2d Lieut. Inf. (unassigned). Monroe, Geo. S., Sergt. Bat. F, 119th F. A. Mooney, Arthur , V., Corp. Bat. A, 119th F. A. Morrison, D. E., 6th Co., R. O. T. C. Newhall, Jas. F., Corp. Amb. Co. 339, 310 San. Tr. Nicol, Thos. J., Co. E, 338th Inf. Ode, Francis, Co. C, 310th Eng. Orcutt, B. F., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 328th F» A., 160th Brig. Pancost, M. H., U. S. S. Antigone, Radio. Parks, Harold, 1st Lieut. O. R. C., Co. H, 125th Inf. Parkyn, Percy J., Hdq. Co. 310 Eng. Piatt, Maurice, Army Hosp. No. 3. Pluinley, Ri G., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 39th U. S. Inf. - Putnam, Harold A., Mil. Postal Clerk. Quigley, W. A. L., Navy. Retzlaff, Walter G., M. E. Shop Ord., Co. M, 163 D. B., 2d Bn. Raven, Robt., Lieut. O. R. C-, Co. H, 161 Inf. Rose, Jno. S.,'Bat. A, 119th F. A. Rudelius,'E, A., 2d Lieut. U. S. Prov., 44th Inf. Ribgy, C. P*, Sergt. 112 Amb. Corps, 103 San. Tr. Rust, W. H., 2d Lieut. O. R. Q,, 162. Inf. Sargent, Stanley, Sergt. 126th Inf. Sawall, A. R., U. S. S. Iowa. Schneider, B. L., Sergt. Co. 8, 2d Bn., 160th Depot Brig. Schneider, Louis S., Co. A, 310th Eng. Shumway, G. C., 1st Lieut. F. A. Silcox, C. N., 2d Lieut. School of the line, C-ll. Spaulding, F. F., Bat. A, 328 F. A. Speltz, A: F., O. T. S. Spencer, Jas., Sergt. Co. A, 340th Inf. Springer, Harold A., 125 Inf. Sup. Tr. Stevens, J. Harold, Sec. 601 U. S. A. A. S. Strauss, Carll H., Sergt. Co. F., 338th Inf. StropeyiR. G., 2d Lieut. 119th F. A., Hdq. Co. Sweeney, R. G., Ord. Supply School, 16 Ord. Depot Co. Sweeney, D. C., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Thompson, Harry E., Bat. A, 119th F. A. Thayer, H. F. Tobey, Julian E., Bandsman, U. S. S. Illi­ nois. Townley, Neal R., Sergt. 315 Amb. Go. 304 San. Tr. Tiedemann, G. W., 23d Eng. Co. K. Inf. Walker, Richard, Co, 30, G. L. N. T. S. Warren, Carl, Corp. 119th F. A. Hdq. Co. Weckler, Harry A., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Wellman, Stanley F., Aero. Qm. Depot. Wernette, D. L., 2d Lieut. U. S. R., Inf. Wildern, Frank H., 1st Co. O. T. S. Wilson, G. S., Co. D, 338th Inf. Willman, W. K., Sergt. 310th Eng. Co. D. Wilkinson, John E., Ord. Sup. Sch., 16th Ord. Depot Co. Williams, W. B., 2d Lieut. U. S. R., 20th F. A. Wrench, H. K., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., 337th Inf., Co. M. Yonkman, N. F., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Zehner, F. B., Navy. Zimmerman, L. W-, U. S. S., Mass. Zuver, Glenn, Amb. Co. 351. WITH 1919 Adams, H. R., Bat. C, 119th F. A. Arthur, C. S., Corp. 635 Aero. Squad. Barger, Wm. R., Bat. A, 119th F. A. Bates, J. C., 2d Lieut. O. R. C. Bellingham, J. W., Bat. B., 6th Regt. C. A. C. Bennett, Guy R., Bat. C, 307 F. A. Benedict, G. R., N. R. R. Blacklock, Hugh, Co. 30, G. L. N. T. S. Brown, L. D., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Burlington, Caryl, Corp. Co. C, 328th M. G. Bn. Carlson, E. W., Co. A, 310 Eng. Carver, Francis T., U. S. S. Iowa. Cheetham, W. J., O. T. S., 1st Inf. Chamberlain, ' Wheelock, Sergt. Hdq. Co., Clinton, Frederick A., San. Det. 102d Inf., 123d H. F. A. 26th Div., 51st Brig. Clark, R. R., Det. Div. A. O. B. D. F. Cottle, Louis E., Office Workers, No. B, Block B14. Crandall, C. R., Const. Co. Bricklayers No. 1, A. M. D. Davis, Leon L., Amb. Co. 2. Demmon, R. Donovan, J. B., 52 Aero. Const. Squad. Air Service. Durbin, Earl T., 82d Co., 6th Regt. Freeman, H. A., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Freshwaters, M. R., 119th F. A. Funke, Carlyle, 4th F. A., Bat. C. Gardner, I. G., 2d Co., C. A. C. Gardner, Lee S., Line 132. Ginter, P. L., 20th Eng. (For.). Gleason, B. F., Corp. Co. H, 337th Inf. Gensburg, J. C. Gordon, Max, Bat. F, 328th F. A. Grey, Allen J., Co. A, 310th Eng. Harman, Milton M., Co. C, 11th Regt. HoSp. Corps, G. L. N. T. S. Harper, H. M., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., Q. M. C. Hawley, E. M., 1st Co. Inf. O. T. S. Hinkle, O. N., 1st Sergt. Wagon Co., No. 1, 310th Am. Train. Howard, V. M. Hoxsie, L. D., N. R. R., 2d Cl. Seaman. Hunt, A. N., 1st Lieut. Jarm, Wm. E., Bat. C, 119th F. A. Jarvis, H. C., 2d Lieut. 119th F. A., Hdq. Jewett, A. W., Jr., 2d Lieut. 341 Inf. Jolley, Clare F.- 1st U. S. A. Evacuation Kildoo, G. W., 122d Aero. Squad., Field Co. Hosp. No.f^p Koepnick, P. W., National Army. Lemon, Paul H., Bugler, Co. K, 23 Eng. Liddicoat, R. J., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Lindemann, M. C., Bat. B, 119th F. A. Livingston, Geo. A., Sergt. Bat. A, 119th F. A. Lloyd, Merle C. Loree, H. G., Bat. B, 119th F. A. Malloch, W. F., Co. K, 23 Eng. Maitland, R. M., Field Hosp. 35, Camp Greenleaf. March, H. B., Sergt. Co. A, Band Director, 21st Eng. Markley, Ernest L., Bat. A, 119th F. A. Matthews, A. A., Bat. B, 119th F. A. Menkee, Ernest, Ist Bat. O. T. S. McClung, Donald, Hdq. Co., 18 F. A. Miller, Wafren R., Co. F, 13th Depot Brig. Mills, D. S., Amb. Co. 315, 304th San. Train. Mitchell, R. K., 2d Lieut. Inf. Moran, A. C., Corp. Co. C, 313 F. S. Bn. Oldenburg; H. C., Lieut. Bat. D, 119th F. A. Peterson, T. E., 2d Lieut. O. R. C., M. G. Co., 41st Inf. Pettigrove, H. R., 2d Inf., O. T. S. Post, Robt. E., Bn. Sergt. Major, 324 Aero. Squad. Kelly Field No. 1. Pressley, Lester, Co. A, 29th Eng., Topo­ graphic Div. Intelligence Sect. Read, M. W., 23d Eng. Reed, M. L., Post Laundry. Reeves, M. A. R., 2d Cl. Seaman, N. R. R. Ripattee, Wm. M., Corp. 337th Inf., Co. I. Roblin, Robt. T., Co. G, 337th Inf. Robertson, J. M., 310th Am. Train., Cais. Co. E. Rowland, Arthur A., Co. C-2 Hosp. Sch. Russell, F. G., Royal Flying Corps, Cana­ dian Army. Sayres, Howard H, 1st Co. Mil. Police. Skiver, C. E., 99th Aero. Squad. Smith, B. F., Co. G, 338th Inf. Smith, Paul P. Stevens, Wm. H., M. C., 106th F. A. 26 Stillwell, W. G., 2d Lieut. Hdq. Co. Stover, C. M., 124th Co., 9 Regt., Marines. Taylor, B. F., Sergt. Maj. Hdq. Co., 145th Inf. Thomas, W. F., Co. A, 29th Eng., Intel. Sect. Topo. Div. Trull, Frank W., Co. 1, O. T. S. Tucker, L. H., O. T. S. Utley, Fred H., Avia. School, VanArk, Jas. F., Bugler, Co. I, 23d Eng. Vandervoort, A. D., 1st Lieut. State Con­ stabulary. Vollmer, G. C., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Wilcox, Culver D., Musician 2d Cl. U. S. Submarine Base. Williams, Garth J., Co. A, 337th Inf. Welsh, M. F., 2d Bn., 8th Co., 160th Depot Brig. Yuli, P. C. WITH 1920 Allan, Geo., Co. L, 342d Inf. Bacon, Howard C., Co. G. Baker, Hermon J., Corp., Co. G, 338th Inf. Barteils, Gus, Co. C, 338th Inf. Bauer, Harold H., Sec. 600, U. S. A. A. S. Blatchford, R. F., Sergt, Hdq. Co., 119th F. A. Brown, Edwin, Navy. Burge, F. L., Corp.,* Co. C, 337th Inf. Cull, Arthur M., Sec. 600, U. S. A. A. S. Dakin, J. B., Bat. C, 119th F. A. Dana, F. G., Corp., 119th F. A. Delamarter, Arthur, Co. 85 Dunn, R. E., Bat. C, 119th F. A. Fisher, R. A. Gray, R. F., 2d Cl. Seaman, U. S. N. R. R. Hamilton, Merlin J., Bat. A, 119th F. Hughes, Franklin E., A. S. 2d Rgt., Co. 59, U- S. N. T. S. Ketchum, W. J., 23d Eng. Leiser, Henry H., Co. B, 7th Eng. Lord, Edwin, 1st Trench Mortar Co., Bat. C. Ludwick, J. U., Bat. F, 328th F. A. Lutz, Wm. B., Bat. A, 119th F. A. March, C. M., 21st Eng., Co. C. Miller, Walter F., Sergt. Mutch, Jas. T., National Army. Myers, Edwin K., 4th Evac. Hosp. M. O. T. C., Camp Greenleaf. Paton, R. A., Bat. C, 328th F. A. Pekuri, Andrew H., Co. E, 310th Eng. Pelton, H. J., Radio, U. S. S. Minn. Potter, Chas. K., Co. J, 2d Regt., Bks. 230 North. Potter, Neal D., Co. J, 2d Regt. Bks. 230 North. Roblin, Robt. T., Co. G, 337th Inf. Schultz, A. E.., A. S. S. C., Sec. 602, En. 16. Sheffield, Llovd A., Co. F, 310 Am. Tr. Shepard, D. T., 1st Bat. O. T. S. Stitt, M. D., Signal Co., N. T. S. The Service List—Continued Stoddard, A. E., 116th Co., U. S. M. C. Tobey, Arthur, Band Hdq. 340th Inf. Trownsell, Theodore, 1st Trench Mortar Co., Bat. C. Uren, Richard E.,. Bandman, Hdq. Co., 337th Inf. Wakefield, M. H. Webster, Dale W., Co. F, 310 Am. Tr. Weckler, Chas. A., N. T. S., Signal Co. Woodworth, S., .Detroit Hosp. Unit. 1921 Ash, M. M., Avia. Sec. Ericson, Helmar V., Coast Art. Hoyt, Victor H., Aero. Service. Kerbyson, E.C.,National Army. LaFond, L. A., Hdq. Co., 337th Inf. Mead, Walter J., National Army. Miller, Raymond L. Pritchard, F. S., Coast Art. MISCELLANEOUS Eldred, M, A., S. C. T5, Co. 4, 310th Sup. ! Tr. Falvay, D. K., S. C. Egg Fenn, Warren J., S. C. T6, Co. C, 328th M. G. Bn. Gilmore, H. N., Sp. T2-T3, Sergt. Band Hdq. Co., 328th F. A. Headworth, Lawrence M., S. C. ’16-’17, Sec. 602, U. S. A. A. S. Howland, Arthur, S. C. ’13, Co. M, 310th Eng. Huddleson, I. T., p. g. T7-T8, Camp Green- leaf. Jenkins, Chas. B., S. C. T6-T7, Co. C, 310th Eng. School,-Co. 31. Julian, J. F., S. C. T6, U. S. N. Radio King, Karl S., S. C. ’.l2-’13, Co. M, 337th Inf. Kress, Leo S., S. C. ’10-’ll, Sup. Co., 329th F. A. Lindstrom, Arthur I., S. C. T2, Co. G, 337th Inf. Murphy, C, F., p. g. T7-T8, Recruit Co. C, 4th Tr. Bn., 155 Depot Brig. Oviatt, Milo H., S. C. T3-T4, O. T. S. Page, R. R., Sum. Sch. ’15, Lieut. O. R. C. Pattison, J. Ford, S. C. T2-T3, Sergt., Co. F, 310th Eng. Year, Leonard, Sp. T7.' Wallace, Wm. H., Jr., Sp., U. S. S. Lady Mary, S. P. 212, U. S. N. R. R. Whidden, Raymond A., S. C. ’16-T7, Co. E, 112th Am. Tr. mga H State Board of Agriculture Hon. Jason Woodman, Paw Paw Hon. John W. Beaumont, Detroit Hon. Robert D. Graham, Grand Rapids Hon. Alfred J. Doherty, Clare Hon. William H. Wallace, Saginaw Hon. I. Roy Waterbury, Detroit Hon. Fred L. Keeler, Ex-Officio, Lansing Frank Stewart Kedzie, Ex-Officio, Presiding Officer Addison M. Brown, East Lansing, Secretary Benjamin F. Davis, Lansing, Treasurer 29 Frank Stewart Kedzie, D.Sc., President Frank Stewart Kedzie was born in Vermontville, Michigan, in 1857, and has lived on the Michigan Agricultural Campus since 1868. He was graduated from the College in 1877 with the degree of B.S. Entering the teaching force of the College in 1880, he rose through the successive grades of instructor, assistant professor, adjunct professor and finally professor of chemistry. In 1912 the College conferred upon him the degree of D.Sc., and in 1915, follow­ ing the resignation of Dr. Jonathan Lemoyne Snyder, the State Board of Agriculture prevailed upon Dr. Kedzie to become acting president until a man could be found for the office. On March 5 of the following year the College sustained a severe blow through the loss by fire of the entire Engineering It was here that Dr. Kedzie’s ability and forceful leadership were plant. demonstrated and within a few weeks the State Board of Agriculture announced that Frank S. Kedzie was the new president of M. A. C. Under the able guid­ ance of President Kedzie the College has completely recovered from the fire losses of 1916 and now, with new and modern equipment in all of the depart­ ments, it enters upon an era of constructive service to the state in which the best traditions of the Michigan Agricultural College are bound to be surpassed. 30 31 R. S. Shaw, B.S. Dean of Agriculture and Director of Experiment Station B.S. degree from Ontario Agricultural College (affiliated with Toronto University) 1893 ( Manager Riverside Stock Farm, Ontario, Canada, 1893- 1898; Professor of Agriculture and Agriculturist of the Montana Agricultural College and Experiment Station, 1898-1902; Professor of Agriculture and Live Stock Experimenter, Michigan Agricultural College and Experiment Station, 1902-1908; Dean of Agriculture and Director of Experiment Station, Michigan Agricultural College, 1908. 32 George Welton Bissell, M.Ë. Dean of Engineering Sibley College, Cornell University, 1888 ; 'Instructor in Experimental Engineer­ ing, Sibley College, 1888-1891; Assistant and Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Iowa State College, 1892-1907 ; Vice-Dean of Engineering, Iowa State College, 1905-1907 ; Dean of Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1907—. Member American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Chairman of Detroit Section, 1917-1918; Detroit Engineering Society; Michigan Engineering Society, President 1917; Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education (Council 1899-1902, 1910-1913)’; Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education; Land Grant College Engineering Association, Secretary 1914-1915, President 1916; Chairman Michigan State Board of Boiler Rules, 1917-1918. Georgia Laura White, Ph.D-, Dean of Home Economics Graduate of Lake Erie Seminary, Painesville, Ohio, 1894; A.B., Cornell Univer­ sity, 1896; Student at Halle-Wittenberg University, Halle a/S, Germany, 1899- 1900; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1901; Teacher High School, New Castle, Indiana, 1896-1898; Teacher Walnut Lane School, Germantown, Pennsylvania, 1901-^908, Instructor in Economics and Sociology; Smith College, 1903-1905; Associate Pro­ fessor in Economics and Sociology, Smith College, 1905-191 1 ; Dean of Women, Olivet College, 1911-1913; Dean of Home Economics and Dean of Women, Michigan Agricultural College, 1913—. President of Michigan Home Economics Association ; Member of Michigan Woman’s War Board; Home Economics Director of Food Administration for Michigan; Vice-Chairman of Woman’s Committee of Counsel of National Defense, Michigan Division, and Chairman of the Department of Food Administration and Home Economics; Member of Alpha Phi Sorority; President of Grand Council of Omicron Nu. 34 Richard Pope Lyman, M.D.V. Dean of Veterinary Faculty and Professor of Veterinary Science H Massachusetts Agriculture College, 1892; M.D.V., School of Veterinary BHH Harvard University, 1894; Veterinarian to Massachusetts Cattle Bureau, 1894-1895; Practitioner, Hartford, Connecticut 1895-1909; Veterinarian to Hart- lord Cattle Commission, 1903-1906; Veterinarian to Hartford County Milk Com­ mission, 1903-1909 , Member of State Board of Veterinary Examiners, 1903-1910; Chairman of Board three years; Member of A. V. M. A. 1894—; Resident State H H foJ A< V- M- A-, Connecticut, 1896-1904; Vice-President of A. V. M. A., ■HIHHBHH V- M- B IBBi Chairman of Publication Committee, 1904-1907, 1910-1912; Member of Connecticut Medical Association; Honorary Mem- Der °l Iowa State Veterinary Medical Association; Honorary Member of Missouri HUBfiBI Medical Association; Professor of Veterinary Medicine and Clinic, 1907-1910, Kansas City Veterinary College; Chairman of Federal Commission for Mudymg and Unifying Veterinary Education, 1908-1909; Called to Michigan Agri- ural College Fall of 1910 to Organize Division of Veterinary Medicine. Member, Honorary, of Alpha Psi Veterinary Fraternity; Vice-President, 1915-1917. Ernest Athern Bessey, Ph.D. Professor of Botany and Botanist of the Experiment Station A.B. 1896, B.Sc. 1897, A.M. 1898, the University of Nebraska; Ph.D. 1904, University of H aile-W ittenber g (Halle an der Salle, Germany). Assistant in Botany, Colorado Summer School, Colorado Springs, Colo., 1894, 1895, 1896; Botanical Collector for the New fork Botanical Garden, in Montana and Yellowstone Park, Summer of 1897. Botanical Collector for the Division of Agrostology, U. S. Department of Agriculture, in Colorado, Summer ol 1898. Assistant Pathologist, Division of Vegetable Physiology and Pathology, U. S. Depart­ ment of Agriculture, 1899-1901. In charge of the office of Seed and Plant Introduction, U. b. Department of Agriculture, 1901-1902; Agriculture Explorer for the office of Seed and Plant Introduction, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Summer of 1902 in Russia, Caucasus and Turkestan; Summer of 1903, Russia and Caucasus; Winter of 1903-1904, in Russia; Spring of 1904, in Algeria; in the intervals a student at the University of Halle-Wittenberg and for a short time at the University of Munich. Plant Pathologist, Bureau of Plant Industry* U.\ S. Department of Agriculture, stationed at Washington, November, 1904, to December, 1905; thereafter until October, 1908, Pathologist in charge of the Sub-tropical Laboratory and Garden, Miami, Fla. Professor of Botany, M. A. C., since September, 1910. Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member of Botanical Seminar of the University of Nebraska, Michigan Academy of Science (President, 1915-1916), Torrey Botanical Club, American Phytopathological Society, Botanical Society of America, Michigan State Potato Association, Association Internationale des Botanistes, (formerly) Deutsche Botanische Gesellschaft, American Genetic Association, National Geographic Society, Review Editor for American articles for the periodical Rivista di Patolotia Vegetable, 1900 to the present time; Associate Editor of Phytopathology, 1914-1917. Edward Hildreth Ryder, A.M., M.Pd. Professor of History and Political Science; Secretary of the Faculty; Director of Summer School Life Certificate Michigan State Normal School, 1893; M.Pd., 1914; Teacher in Public Schools, 1893-1902; A.B., University of Michigan, 1903; A.M., University of Michigan, 1904; Assistant Department of History, University of Michigan, 1904- 1905; Instructor, Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, Department of History and Economics, 1905-1915; Professor of History and Political Science, 1915, Michi­ gan Agricultural College. Walter Hiram French, M.Pd., M.S. Professor of Agricultural Education State Normal College, 1888; Post Graduate work Hillsdale College, 1898-1899; Post Graduate work University of Michigan, 1900; Master of Pedagogy, State Normal College, 1910, and Master of Science, University of Michigan, 1900; Admitted to the Bar, 1902; Instructor in Pedagogy, Director of Teacher Training in Agriculture; Chairman of Liberal Arts Council and Chairman of Advisory Board, Y. M. C. A. Member of American Society for the Advancement of Agricultural Teaching; The College Teachers of Education; The National Society for the Pro­ motion of Industrial Education. Philip G. Wrightson, Major United States Army, Retired. Commandant of Cadets. In­ B.S., University of Chicago, 1900, and M.S., University of Chicago, 1902. structor in Biology at Armour Institute, 1900-1901. Fellow in Botany at University of Chicago, 1901-1902; Second Lieutenant 20th U. S. Infantry, 1902; First Lieuten­ ant 20th Infantry, 1908; Captain 17th Infantry, 1916; Major, Retired, 1917. Served over four years in the Philippines, two years in Hawaii, and in the Mexican Punitive Expedition of 1916-1917. Received campaign medals for service in war for duty in the Moro campaigns 1905 and the Mexican Expedition 1916-1917. Com­ mandant of Cadets at University of Wisconsin from January, 1913, to November, 1916. Now commandant of Cadets at Michigan Agricultural College. Chester Leland Brewer Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics Special Student, University of Wisconsin, 1893-1898; Instructor, University of Wisconsin, 1898-1899; Director of Athletics, Wisconsin State Normal, 1899-1900; Director of Athletics, Albion College, 1900-1903; Director of Athletics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1903-1910; Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics, University of Missouri, 1910-1917. Member of American Physical Educa­ tion Association; Member American Playground Association; Member of Athletic Research Society|| Member Society of Directors of Physical Education; President Society of Directors of Physical Education of Southwest, 1914-1915 ; Executive Com­ mittee of National Collegiate Athletic Association, 1915-1916; Member Rules Com­ mittee National Collegiate Athletic Association, 1916—; with Commission on Training Camp Activities of War Department, 1917—; Member Phi Gamma Delta, Theta Nu Epsilon, and Acacia Fraternities. 40 General Administrative Officers OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Frank Stewart Kedzie, D.Sc., President. Benjamin A. Faunce, Clerk to the President. Ferris Institute, 1899; Managing Editor M. A. C. Record, 1904-1907, 1910-1913 • in charge of General Advertising Work at Michigan Agricultural College. Blanche Birchard, Secretary to President. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY Addison Makepeace Brown, A.B., Secretary of the State Board of Agriculture and of Michigan Agricultural College. A.B., University of Michigan, 1883; Agriculturist, Schoolcraft, 1883-1902; resident of Schoolcraft; Director of the School Board; Member of State Senate 1899-1901, at which time was Chairman of Committee on the Agricultural College and Member of Committee on University of Michigan. Present position since June 1, 1902. Member Phi Chapter Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Jacob Schepers, Cashier of the Michigan Agricultural College. Lena Maud Maxwell, Assistant Cashier and Bookkeeper. Charles Davitt Betts, Purchasing Agent. Maude Adele Meech, Chief Clerk. OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR Elida Yakeley, Registrar. Anna Louise Ferle, Assistant Registrar. Linda E. Landon, Librarian. , OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN In charge of the Michigan Agricultural College Library for a period of twenty- seven years; assumed the position in 1891. Elizabeth Myrtilla Palm, B.S., Assistant Librarian. B.S. Michigan Agricultural College, 1911; Librarian Michigan Agricultural College, 1911-1915; University of Illinois Library School, 1915-1916. Feronian. Leola Irene Lewis, B.S., Assistant Librarian. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1917; Library Assistant, 1917—, Omicron JNu; Soronan. GEJNERAL Levi Rawson Taft, M.S., State Inspector of Nurseries and Orchards. ’ Agricultural College, 1882; M.S., Missouri Agricultural r Ü9 lio«7’ Assistant Pr°fessor of Horticulture, Massachusetts Agricultural of Horticulture, Missouri Agricultural College, 1885- 888 Horticulturist of Michigan Experiment Station, 1888-1908; State Superin- tendent °f Farmers Institutes, 1902-1917; State Inspector of Nurseries and urcnards, 1902—; Member American Pomological Society and Treasurer, 1897—- secretary-treasurer American Association of Farmers’ Institute Workers, 1913-1917; Chairman Horticulture Jury and Member Superior Jury, St. Louis Universal Exposition, 1904. Author “Greenhouse Construction,” and “Greenhouse Manage­ ment.” Contributor to “Cyclopedia of Horticulture” and “Cyclopedia of Agricul­ ture.” Member American Horticultural Society, American Association of Nursery­ men, Society of American Florists and Ornamental Horticulturists, and of the Missouri, and Michigan State Horticultural Societies; Member National Horticul­ tural Society of France, receiving the “Croix d’Officier du Merite Agricole. Phi Kappa Phi. Frederick Laurence Abel, Director Band, Orchestra, Chorus, and Men s Glee Club. Conservatory of Music, Frankfort, A/M, Germany; Instructor of Piano, Cello and Harmony, Detroit Conservatory of Music; Secretary-Treasurer and Director of Michigan Conservatory of Music, Detroit; Cellist and Manager, Detroit Philharmonic String Quartette Club; Director Shubert Club, Chorus and Orchestra, Jackson; Instructor Cello and Harmony, University School of Music, Ann Arbor; First Lieutenant and Adjutant 31st Michigan in Spanish War; Major and Adjutant General First Brigade, M. N. G. Clifford Worden McKibbin, M.For., Alumni Recorder, Secretary of M. A. C. Association, Editor of M. A. C. Record. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1911; Forest Examiner, U. S. Forest Servipe, 1911-1916; Alumni Advisory Committee on Rebuilding College Hall; Member Society of American Foresters; Secretary M. A. C. Union Board; Member Athletic Board of Control. Don C. Heffley, Secretary of Y. M. C. A. B.S., Northwestern University, 1915. Y. M. C. A. Secretary and Director of Student Employment Bureau, 1915. Division of Home Economics Georgia Laura White, Ph.D., Dean DEPARTMENT OF DOMESTIC ART Lillian Loser Peppard, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Domestic Art. Ph.D., Chicago University; Instructor in Domestic Science and Domestic Art, 1907-1913; Instructor in Domestic Art, 1913-1915; Associate Professor of Domestic Art, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915—. Vice-President Omicron Nu Society, (parent organization), 1916. Zella Ethel Bigelow, B.S., Instructor in Domestic Art. Graduated Household Arts Course, Mechanics Institute, Rochester, New York, 1912; Director of Sewing, Cleveland Trade School, 1912-1914; New Rochelle Public Schools, 1914-1915; Director of Domestic Art Department, Pennsylvania State College,' Summer Session for Teachers, 1914-1917. Omicron Nu. Florence Amelia Stall, B.S., Instructor in Domestic Art. B.A., Michigan Agricultural College, 1916. Ero Alphian; Omicron Nu, (parent) ; Chapter' Omicron Nu, 1915-1916; National President, Omicron Nu, 1915-1916. Grace F. Smiley, B.S., Instructor in Domestic Art. B.S., Ohio State University; Boston School for Social Workers, 1914; Boston University, 1915; Supervisor Domestic Art, Boston Public Schools, 19|gP916; Michigan Agricultural College, 1917—. yfCV E RTloi DEPARTMENT OF DOMESTIC SCIENCE Mary E. Edmonds, B.Sc., Professor of Domestic Science. B.Sc., Ohio State University, 1910; Instructor Ohio State University, 1910-1912; Head of Home Economics Department, University of Montana, 1912-1915; Professor of Domestic Science, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915—. Member of Omicron Nu and Sigma Xi. Edna Murray Garvin, B.S., Assistant Professor in Domestic Science. B.S., Home Economics, Iowa State College, 1914; Teachers’ College, Columbia University, 1915; Instructor Domestic Science and Art, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915-1916; Assistant Professor, Domestic Science, 1917—. Loujse I. Clemens, B.S., Instructor in Domestic Science. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1913; Lawens, Iowa, 1913-1914; Assistant in Domestic Science, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914—. Omicron Nu. Ruth Kellogg, B.S., Instructor in Domestic Science. B.S., Kansas State Agricultural College, 1910. Pi Beta Phi; Omicron Nu. 43 DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC Louise Freyhofer, Director of the Piano Department. B.S., German Wallace College; B.Mus., Baldwin University School of Music, 1897*; Head of the Piano Department, Central Wesleyan College, 1898-1899 ; Student of Music, Stern Conservatory, Berlin, Germany, 1900-1902; Michigan Agricultural College, 1902—. Member of the Lansing Matinee Musicale; Member of the State Music Teachers’ Association^ Associate Member of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae; Member of Omicron Nu. Mabel Louise Leffler, Mus.B., Instructor in Piano and Theory of Music. Mus B., Oberlin Conservatory of Music, 1910; Pupil of Della Thai, Chicago, Summer of 1911; Pupil of Ernesto Console, New York City, 1911-1912 ; Instructor in Piano and History of Music, Bishop Thotpe Manor, South Bethlehem, Pennsyl­ vania, 1910-1912; Instructor of Piano and Theory of Music, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912—. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL CULTURE Edith Warner Casho, Instructor in Physical Culture and Assistant to Dean. Philadelphia Normal School of Physical Education, 1905; Chautauqua Normal School of Physical Education, 1911. Division of Engineering George Welton Bissell, M.E., Dean DEPARTMENT OF DRAWING AND DESIGN Robert Kent Stewart, C.E., Professor of Drawing and Design and Head of the Department. B.S., University of Maine, 1908; C.E., University of Maine, 1911; Instructor at University of Maine in Department of Civil Engineering, 1908-1909; Practical Work in Montana with U. S. R. S., 1909; Instructor in Department of General Engineering Drawing at University of Illinois, 1909-1911; Associate, 1911-1916; Professor of Drawing and Design, Michigan Agricultural College, 1916. Member of National Fraternity of Phi Delta Gamma, also a Member of Society for Promotion of Engineering Education; Honorary Member of Eclectic Society. Lawrence N. Field, Associate Professor of Drawing and Design. B.M.E., University of Michigan, 1912; Engineering Practice, 1912-1916^Assist­ ant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, 1916-1917; Associate Professor of Draw­ ing and Design, 1917—. Member of the Orphic Society; Sigma Xi. Alfred Iddles, M.E„ Assistant Professor of Drawing and Design. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1912; M. E., Michigan Agricultural College, 1917; Commercial Practice, 1912-1914«; Instructor Drawing and Design, Michigan Agricultural College,. 1914.-1916; Assistant Professor, 1917—. Associate Member American Societv of Mechanical Engineers; Consulting Engineer; First Lieutenant Ordnance Reserve Corps, U. S. Army, February 1, 1918—; Assigned to Engineering Bureau for Power Station Design and Operation; Eunomian Society; Tau Beta Pi. Myron B. Chapin, Instructor in Drawing. Caroline Holt, Instructor in Drawing. Frank D. Messenger, B.S., Instructor in Drawing and Design. Chace Newman, Associate Professor of Drawing and Design. Earl H. Stewart, B.S.,M.E., Instructor in Drawing. I DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING Herman Klock Vedder, C.E., Professor of Civil Engineering. C.E., Cornell University, 1887; Fellow in Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1887-1888; Instructor in Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1887-1891; Drafts­ man and Computer, Groton Bridge & Mfg. Co., summers 1887-1888; Contracting Engineer, same company, summer 1889; Engineer, Ithaca Water Works Co., 1890- 1891; Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering, M. A. C., 1891-1909; Professor of Civil Engineering, M. A. C., 1909—. Member of S, P. E. E.; Presii dent of Michigan Engineering Society, 1907; Member of Theta Delta Chi;'Member of Tau Beta Pi; Constructing Engineer for numerous projects and Consulting Engineer for several organizations. Cyrus Alan Melick, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. C.E., Ohio State University, 1903; D.C.E., Ohio State University, 1911; Assistant in Civil Engineering, Ohio State University, 1904 ; Instructor in Civil Engineering, Union College, 1906-1908; Professor of Civil Engineering and Head of Department, Highland Park College (Des Moines, Iowa), 1908-1909; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1911-1916; Assistant Yard Scheme and Grade Crossing Elimination Department, New York. Central and H. R. R. R., 1903-1904; Transitman Chief of Party on Re-location and Double Track Wabash R. R., 1904-1905; Resident Engineer in Charge Bridge Construction I. & G. N. R. R. of Texas, for Waddell and Hedrick Construction Engineering Co., 1905-1906; Summer Vacation, Mt. Oecum Bridge Co., King Bridge Co., and American Bridge Co.; Author of “Stresses in Tall Buildings.” Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Xi. H erbert H. Gehring, C.E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. C.E., Cornell University, 1903; Miscellaneous Engineering Work in New York, 1903-1904; Instructor in Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1905-1908; on Design and Construction of the New York State Barge Canal, 1908-1914; Professor of Civil Engineering, Trinity College, Hartford, 1914-1915; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915—. Associate Member of American Society of Civil Engineers; Member American Association for the Advance­ ment of Science. Ren G. Saxton, C.E.¿ Assistant Professor in Civil Engineering. B.S., in Civil Engineering, University of Wisconsin, 1909; C.E., University of Wisconsin, 1915. First Lieutenant, Scabbard and Blade, First Regiment, 1909; Delegate Scabbard and Blade National Convention, 1909. C. Marshall Cade, C.E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. B. S.i Michigan Agricultural College,; 1907| Instructor in Drawing, Purdue University, 1907; Aid to Assistant U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1908-1913; Instructor in Civil Engineering, M. A. C., 1913-1915; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, 1915. Tau Beta Pi. Butt Kennedy Philip, Instructor in Civil Engineering. C. E., Cornell, 1911; Instructor in Civil Engineering, 1911, Michigan Agricultural College; United States Office of Public Roads, 1912; with Pittsburg Construction Company, 1912-1914; in Civil Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914. Frank.D. Messenger, B.S., Instructor in Civil Engineering. Instructor B.S., Civil and Sanitary Engineering, University of Kansas, 1913; Private Engineering Practice; Instructor in Drawing and Design, 1914; Instructor in Civil Engineering, 1917,-Michigan Agricultural College. Warren Wayland Hitchcock, B.S., Instructor in Civil Engineering. Graduate Civil Engineering, M. A. C., 1907; Instructor in Civil Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1913—. DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Joseph A. Polson, M.E., Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Purdue, Class 1905, School of Mechanical Engineering; M.E. Degree, 1911; Mechanical Engineering Department of Michigan Agricultural College, 1906; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering; Assistant Professor Mechanical Engineering, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Professor of Mechanical Engineer-- ing, 1916. Member of Indiana Alpha Chapter of Tau Beta Pi; Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Society for Testing Materials, and the Society of Automotive Engineers. Royal Gilbert Bigelow, B.S., Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. B.S. in Mechanical Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1916; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering, 1916—. George C. Wright, B.S., Foreman Instructor of Machine Shop Practice. B.S., Purdue University, 1916. Secretary Acacia Fraternity, Purdue Chapter, 1915-1916; Junior Member Society of Automotive Engineers, Detroit Section. Walter Edward Reuling, M.E., Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering. B.S.M.E., Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa; Honor Student M. E. Course, 1906; Elected to Tau Beta Pi; Assistant in Shop and Engineering Laboratory during Senior Year; Engineer with Fairbanks-Morse Co., July, 1906, to September, 1916; Director Y. M. C. A. Orchestra, Beloit; Member Six O’Clock Club; Assistant Professor, Michigan Agricultural College, September, 1916; Classes in Gas Power Engineering, Heating and Ventilation, Mechanics Engineering Laboratory. Roscoe H. Bush, B.S., Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. Jacob A. Eicher, Foreman of Foundry. George H. Peters, Instructor in Pattern Shop. 46 Andrew Krentel, Foreman in Pattern Shop. John Grennan, Foreman of Forge Shop. C. E. Wood, Instructor in Pattern Shop. Andrew Watt, Instructor in Forge Shop. Egbert Crossman, Instructor. DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Arthur Rodney Sawyer, E.E., Professor of Electrical Engineering. A. B., Stanford University, 1893; E.E., University of Wisconsin, 1896; Teacher of Manual Training and Drawing, East Side H. S., Milwaukee, Wis., 1898-1891; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, State University, Kentucky, 1901- 1904; Draftsman and Designer with Milwaukee Electric Co., and Cutler-Hammer Co.; Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1904-1916; Professor of Electrical Engineering, 1916. Member of the A. I. E. E. since 1907; Member of A. A. A. S., 1909-1916; Member of SP. E. E., 1907; Honorary Member Tau Beta Pi; Honorary Member of the Columbian Literary Society. Merton Maine Cory, E.EAssistant Professor of Electrical Engineering. B. S., New Hampshire College, 1908; E.E., New Hampshire College, 1913; Transit Man and Assistant City Engineer, Nashua, N. H., 1902-1906; General Electric Co., Lynn, Mass., Graduate Test Course, 1909-1910; Electrical Engineer, Jamesville Electrical Co., Jamesville, Wis., 1911; Commercial Engineering Depart­ ment, T. M. E. R. and L. Co., 1912-1915; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineer­ ing, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915; Instructor in Electrical Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912-1915. Member Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, 1912-1914; Associate Member American Institute of Elec­ trical Engineers, 1915; Honorary Member Forensic Literary Society, 1913; Associate Member Tau Beta Pi, 1916—; President Gamma Theta Fraternity (now Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega), 1907-1908. Division of Science and Letters DEPARTMENT OF BACTERIOLOGY Ward Giltner, D.V.M., M.S., Professor of Bacteriology and Hygiene. D.V.M., Cornell University, 1906; M.S., Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1908; University of Chicago, Summer 1911; M. A. C., Summer 1915; Instructor and Assistant in Bacteriology, Alabama Polytechnic Institute and Experiment, 1906- 1908; Research Assistant and Instructor in Bacteriology, Michigan Agricultural College and Experiment Station, 1908-1912; Acting Professor and Bacteriologist, 1912-1915; Professor and Bacteriologist, Veterinarian of Michigan, 1911-1913. Member of Society of American Bacteriologists; American Association of Bac­ teriologists and Pathologists;, American Public Health Association; American State and Capital City Veterinary Medical Association; American Chemical Society, and Secretary of Local Section 1918; Michigan Academy of Science (at one time vice- president of Section on Sanitation and Medical Science) ; Member of Sigma Xi; Honorary Member of Alpha Psi; Sem Bot, and Phylean Society. James Franklin Morgan, M.A., Research Associate in Bacteriology. B.A., St. Lawrence University, 1903; M.A., St, Lawrence University, 1906; Assistant Chemist, Hill’s Laboratory, Buffalo, N. Y., 1903-1904; Science Instructor, High School, Titusville, Pa., 1904-1906; Assistant Chemist of Michigan, 1910-1913; Chemist Brown Laboratories; Summer School, University of Michigan, 1913; Research Assistant in Bacteriology, Michigan Experiment Station, 1913-1917; Research Associate in Bacteriology, 1917; First Lieutenant Sanitary Corps, N. A., 1918. Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science; Michigan Academy of Science; American Chemical Society; American Society of Bac­ teriologists ; Phi Sigma Kappa; Phi Beta Kappa; I. O. O. F., and A. M. Lydia Zae Northrup, A.M., Assistant Professor of Bacteriology. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1906; M.H.E., Michigan Agricultural College, 1913; A.M., University of Michigan, 1914. Member of the Society of American Bacteriologists; Member of Omicron Nu; Member of Sororian Literary Society. Leslie H. Cooledge, A.M., Research Associate in Bacteriology, Assistant Professor of Bacteriology. B.S., South Dakota State College, 1911; A.M., University of Missouri, 1912; Agent U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1912-1913; Position at M. A. C. 1913—; Private U. S. Army, 1918. Frederick William Fabian, B.S., Instructor in Bacteriology. B.S., Allegheny College, 1914; Instructor in Chemistry, Allegheny College, 1915; Head of Science Department, Clearfield High School, Clearfield, Pa., 1916; Present Position, 1917. Member Alpha Chi Sigma, Phi Chapter, Allegheny College; Mem­ ber Alden Alembic Club for Advancement of Science; Member of Michigan Milk and Dairy Inspectors’ Association; Member Michigan Dairy Association; Member of Society of American Bacteriologists. Charles G. Nobles, B.S., Research Assistant in Bacteriology. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1916. Dorian Society. Chas. W. BrownHB.S., Instructor in Bacteriology. 48 DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Ernest Athern Bessey, Ph.D., Professor of Botany and Botanist of the Experi­ ment Station. Richard De Zeeuw, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Botany. A. B., Hope College, 1906; A.B., University of Michigan, 1907; A.M., Hope College, 1909; Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1909; Instructor of Botany, 1909- 1910; Assistant Professor of Botany, 1910-1915; Associate Professor of Botany, 1915. Member of the Michigan Academy of Sciences ; Secretary-Treasurer of the Michigan Academy of Sciences, 1911-1917; Member American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1911-1915; Fellow, American Association for the Advance­ ment of Science, 1915—; Member of Sigma Xi. Henry Townsend Darlington, M.S., Assistant Professor of Botany. B. S., University of Idaho, 1903; Chief Engineer, Idaho-Iowa Lateral and Reservoir Company, Boisé, Idaho, 1904-1905; Engineering Staff, Great Western Sugar Company, Denver, Colorado, 1905-1909; M.S., Harvard University, 1911; Instructor in Botany, University of Idaho, 1911-1912; Assistant Professor, 1912- 1914, Assistant Professor, Director of Botanical Garden, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915—-. Edward Fred Woodcock, Ph.D., Instructor in Botany. B.S., University of Vermont, 1909; Professor of Biology, Juniata College, 1909- 1910; Assistant in Biology, Yale University, 1910-1912; M.A., Yale University, 1912; Instructor in Botany, University of West Virginia, 1913-1914 ; Instructor of Botany, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914-1917; Assistant Professor of Botany, Michigan Agricultural College, 1917—; Ph.D., Yale University, 1917. Member of Association for Advancement of Science; Member of Botanical Society of America; Member of Michigan Academy of Science. Harry C. Young, Instructor in Botany. B.S., Ohio University, 1913; Instructor in Botany, North Carolina State College, 1913-1915; M.S., North Carolina; Lackland Fellow, Henry Shaw School of Botany, Washington University, St. Louis, 1915-1916; Instructor in Botany, Michigan Agri­ . Member of Botanical Society of America; Member of cultural College, 1916 American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member of American Genetic Association ; Member of Michigan Academy of Science. Carlyle Wilson Bennett? B.S., Graduate Assistant in Botany. B.S.j University of Kentucky, 1917. Alpha Zeta, Scovell Chapter; Sem Bot, Michigan Agricultural College. Creighton Foster Murphy, B.S., Graduate Assistant in Botany. B.S., Pennsylvania State College, 191.7. Omega Epsilon Fraternity; Sem Bot, M. A. C. Resigned to enter military service February 23, 1917. Rufus Percival Hibbard, Research Plant Physiologist. Williams College, 1899, B.A.; University of Michigan, 1906, Ph.D.; Science Teacher, Kiskiminetas Springs Academy, Pa., 1900-1901; Blair Academy, N. J., 1902-1904; Assistant Woods Hole, Marine Bill. Laboratory, Summer Terms, 1903- 1904; Scientific Assistant Bureau Plant Industry, U. S. D. A., 19||jBpQ8, Bacteriologist and Plant Pathologist, Mississippi Experiment Station, 1908-1911; Research Assistant in Plant Physiology, and Instructor in Plant Physiology, 1911, Research Assistant in Plant Physiology, 1914—. Fellow, A. A. A. S.; Member Society Bact., American Genetic Society; American Chemical Society; Sigma Xi. George Herbert Coons, Associate Professor of Botany; Research Associate in Plant Pathology. A.B., University of Illinois, 1908; A.M*, University of Nebraska, 1911; Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1915; Teacher High School, Hancock, Michigan, 1908-1909; Adjunct Professor Agricultural Botany, University of Nebraska, 1909-1910; In­ structor, M. A. C., 1911-1917; Present Position, 1917—. Member of American Phytopathological Society, Botanical Society of America; Editor Michigan Academy of Science; Delta Sigma Rho, Illinois; Gamma Alpha, Michigan; Sigma Xi, Nebraska.; Ionian Literary Society, M. A. C. Rose M. Taylor, M.A., Instructor in Botany. Bertha E. Thompson, M.A., Instructor in Botany. Walter K. Makemson, B.S., Graduate Assistant in Botany. DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY Arthur John Clark, B.A., Professor of Chemistry and Head of the Department of Chemistry. B.A., University of Wisconsin, 1905; Graduate Student University of Wisconsin Summer* Sessions 1911-1913; University of Chicago Summer Sessions 1915; In­ structor in Chemistry, M. A. C., 1906-1909; Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 1909- 1914; Associate Professor of Chemistry, 1914-1916; Professor of Chemistry, 1916—. Alpha Chapter Alpha Chi Sigma; American Chemical Society. Ralph Chase Huston, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry. B.S., Parsons College, 1906; Instructor in Science, Junction City (Kansas) High School 1906-1907; Scholar in Chemistry, University of Iowa, 1907-1908; M.S., University of Iowa, 1908; Fellow in Chemistry, University of Washington State College 1909-1910; Assistant Professor, 1910-191 1 ; Assistant Professor m Chemistry, Michigan Agricultural College, 191U1918; Ph.D University of Iowa, 1914; Associate Professor of Chemistry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915. Sigma Xi. William P. Wood, A.B., B.Che., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Bruce H. Hartsuch, B.A., Assistant Professor in Chemistry. B.A., Wabash College, 1908; Chemist, B. F. Goodrich Co., 1909-1911; Instructor in Chemistry, M. A. C., 1911-1914; Assistant Professor in Chemistry, M. A. C., 1914—. Member of American Chemical Society. Perry S. Brundage, B.S., Instructor in Chemistry. Life Certificate, Michigan State Normal College, 1908; B.Pd., Michigan State Normal College, 1911; B.S., University of Michigan, 1915; Instructor in Science, High School, Hart, Michigan; Instructor in Chemistry and Physics, High School, Traverse City, Mich., 1911-1914; Assistant in General Chemistry, University of Michigan, 1914-1915; Instructor in Chemistry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1916—. Mabel Carla Mosher, B.Sl, Instructor in Chemistry. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1908; Chemist, Michigan Dairy and Food Department, 1908-1911; Assistant in Chemical Department, M. A. C., "and Special Instructor in Flour Technology, 1911-1917; Chemist, Michigan Dairy and Food Department, 1917—; special Instructor in Flour Technology, Chemical Department, Spring Term, 1918; Secretary-Treasurer Lansing Branch Association Collegiate Alumnae. Dwight Clark Carpenter, B.S., Instructor in Chemistry. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1911; 'Student Assistant in Physics, M. A. C., 1909-1911; Instructor in Chemistry and Physics, Charlevoix High School, 1911-1913; Instructor in Chemistry and Physics, Grand Haven High School, 1913- 1914; Instructor in Chemistry, M. A. C., 1914. Member American Chemical Society. Henry L. Publow, B.S., Instructor in Engineering Chemistry. B.S. in Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914; Assistant Engineer with A. Bentley & Sons, General Contractors, 1914; Instructor in Chemistry M. A. C , 1914—. ’ Dwight P. Ewing, M.S., Instructor in Chemistry. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH William Walter Johnston, A.M., Professor of English and Modern Languages. A. B., Baker University, 1902; A.M., Harvard University, 1908; Instructor in English, Baker University, 1903-1904; Instructor in English, Washington State College, 1905-1907; Assistant Professor of English, Washington State College, 1907- 1908; Professor of English, Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1908- 1912; Dean of Division of Science and Literature, Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1910-1912; Professor of English, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912—. Member National Council of Teachers of English; Member Advisory Council, Simplified Spelling Board. C. Boren Mitchell, M.A., Assistant Professor of Public Speaking. E. Sylvester King, Assistant Professor of Public Speaking. James B. Hasselman, B.S., Instructor in English. B. S., Wesleyan University (Connecticut), 1914; Instructor in English, Michi­ gan Agricultural College, 1915—. Member Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Ray Bennett Weaver, M.A., Instructor in English. B.A., Carroll College, 1914; M.A., University of Chicago, 1915; Professor of Public Speaking, College of Emporia, 1915-1916; Present Position, 1916—. I. A. T. Lewis B. Mayne, A.B., Instructor in English. Leo C. Hu ghes, A.M., Instructor in French. Norma L. Gilchrist, A.B., Instructor in English. Antoinette C. Robson, Instructor in English. DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS William OliN Hedrick, Ph.D., Professor of Economics. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1891; M.S., University of Michigan, 1896; Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1909; Instructor in English, Michigan Agricultural College, 1891-1893; Assistant Professor of History and Economics, Michigan Agri­ cultural College, 1893-1903; Professor of History and Economics, 1903-1916; Professor of Economics, 1916; Collaborator with the Office of Markets and Rural Organizations, 1914-1917; Literary Editor of “Harrow,” 1891; Author of Michigan Railroad Taxation, 1911. Charles Scott Dunford, M.A., Assistant Professor of Economics. Paul L. Miller, M.A., Instructor in Economics. DEPARTMENT OF ENTOMOLOGY Rufus H. Pettit, B.S., Professor of Entomology and Entomologist of Experiment Station. B.S. in Agriculture, Cornell, 1895; Assistant State Entomologist of Minnesota, 1895-1897; Instructor in Zoology and Consulting Entomologist of Station, 1897- 1906; Professor of Entomology, 1906—, M. A. C. Fellow, American Association for Advancement of Science;; Charter Member Entomological Society of America; Active Member American Association of Economic Entomologists and a Member of Entomological Society of Washington; Sigma Xi; Honorary Member Alpha Zeta. Eugenia Inez McDaniel, B.A., Instructor in Entomology. B. A., Kansas University, 1908; Principal High School, Parker, Kansas, 1909- 1910; Instructor in Entomology and Assistant in Entomology on Station, Michigan Agricultural College, 1910—. Member Entomological Society of America; Member American Association of Economic Entomologists. Donald Bion Whelan, M.S., Extension Specialist in Entomology. A. B., Hillsdale College, 1910; Teacher of Science and Athletics, Hudson, Mich., 1911-1912; M.S., Kansas State Agricultural College, 1914; Graduate Assistant, Ohio State University, 1914-1915; Extension Specialist* in Entomology and Instructor in Entomology, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915^: Member American Associa­ tion of Economic Entomologists ;, Entomological Society of America ; Delta Tau Delta. Percy Barnett Wiltberger, M.Sc., Instructor in Entomology and Assistant in Entomology Experiment Station. B. Sc. in Entomology, Ohio State University; M.Sc., Ohio State University, 1916; Assistant in Entomology, West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station; Instructor in Zoology and Entomology, Ohio State University; Inspector, Bacteriological, U. S. D. A., Bureau of Plant Commission in Collaboration with the Florida Plant Industry ; Instructor in Biology, Vertebrate Anatomy, Entomology, and Parasitology, University of Maine. American Association of Economic Entomologists; American Entomological Society; Associate Member of Research Society of the University of Maine, and of the Ohio Academy of Science; Xi Sigma; Phi Sigma; Sigma Phi. Benjamin Franklin Kindig, Instructor in Apiculture and State Inspector of Apiaries. Special Student, Michigan Agricultural College, 1909, 1911, 1912; Deputy State Entomologist of Indiana, 1911-1917; Instructor in Apiculture and State Inspector of Apiaries, Michigan Agricultural College, 1916—. Forensic Society. DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE Edward Hildreth Ryder, A.M., M.Pd., Professor of History and Political Science; Secretary of the Faculty; Director of Summer School. Minnie Hendrick, A.B., Instructor in History. DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS Louis Clark Plant, M.S., Professor of Mathematics. Ph.B., University of Michigan, 1897; University of Michigan, 1893-1897; Graduate Student University of Chicago, 1897-1898, and Summers 1899, 1900, 1902, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1911; M.S., University of Chicago, Peoria, 111., 1904; Assistant in Mathematics, Bradley Polytechnic Institute, 1898-1900; Associate, ibid, 1900- 1904; Instructor, 1904-1907; Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Montana, 1907-1908; Professor of Mathematics, 1908-1913; Professor of Mathe­ matics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1913—. Member Mathematical Association of America; Member American Mathematical Society; Fellow in American Associa­ tion for the Advancement of Science ; Member of Society for Promotion of Engineer­ ing Education ; Member Michigan Schoolmasters’ Club ; Honorary Member Delphic Society. Lloyd Clement Emmons, A.M., Associate Professor of Mathematics. B.S., Central Normal College, Danville, Indiana, 1905; A.B., Indiana Univer­ sity, 1909; A.M., Harvard, 1917; Teaching Assistant in Central Normal College, 1904-1905É Instructor in Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1909-1913; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1913-1916; Assistant Professor on Leave, 1916-1917; Associate Professor of Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1917. Member Michigan Schoolmasters’ Club; Mem­ ber Mathematical Association of America ; Member American Mathematical Society ; Honorary Member of Trimoria Society. Maurice Flower Johnson, C.E., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1907 ; C.E., Michigan Agricultural College, 1913; Graduate Student, University of Michigan, Summers 1916-1917, and Fall Semester, 1917; Instructor in Mathematics, 1909-1912; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 1913-1918; Acting Head of Department of Mathematics, 1912-1913. Member Tau Beta Pi; Union Literary Society. Guy Green Speeker, A.M., Assistant Prof essor of Mathematics. Graduate Indiana State Normal School, 1906; A.B., Indiana University, 1912; A.M., Indiana University, ibid, 1913; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Summers 1914-1917; Instructor in Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912-1917; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 1917. Member Mathematical Asso­ ciation of America ; Member Michigan Schoolmasters’ Club. William Miller Wible, A.M., Instructor in Mathematics. BA., Indiana Universitv, 1906; M.A., Indiana University, 1908; Graduate Student, Universitv of Missouri, 1908-1909; Principal High School, Rolla, Mo., 1909-1911; Instructor in Mathematics, Vincennes University, 1911-1912; Instructor in Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912—. Stanley Edwin Crowe, A.B., Instructor in Mathematics. AB Ohio State University, 1909; Summer School, Wisconsin University, 1911; Summer'School, Chicago University, 1915; Instructor in Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1909. Member Delta Kappa Fraternity, Ohio State Univer­ sity; Honorary Member Olympic Society. Earl Chester Kiefer, B.S., Instructor in Mathematics. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1913 ; Summer Sessions, 1914-1915, Univer­ sity of Michigan; Student Assistant in Mechanical Engineering, Michigan Agricul­ tural College, 1912-1913. Member of Board of Control of Athletics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1916-1918; Aurorean Society. Walter A. Reinert. B.S., C.E., Instructor in Mathematics. B.S.j University of Wisconsin, 1911; University of Chicago Scholarship, Summer Quarter, 1913-1914-1915; Instructor in Mathematics, Oak Park, 111., High School, 1913; Foreman of Bridge Construction, Rockford, 111., Interurban R. R. Co., 1911; Assistant Engineer, Delaware, Ohio, 1912||with Bridge Department, Michigan State Highway Commission, Summer 1916-1917; Instructor in Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914-1918. DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY SCIENCE Philip G. Wrightson, Major, United States Army, Retired; Commandant of Cadets. Charles H. Robinson, Instructor in Military Science; First. Sergeant, Coast Artillery Corps, Retired. Served three years 6th Cavalry, three years 19tli Infantry; Corporal 1898; Sergeant Major 1900, 1st Sergeant 1902; transferred to the Recruiting Service for nine years; from Recruiting Service transferred to 154th Company Coast Artillery Corps, March, 1915, and retired as 1st Sergeant May 4, 1917; assigned as Instructor in Military Science, Michigan Agricultural College, November, 1917. Spanish- American War in Cuba; Philippines during the insurrection, Mexican Border, 1916. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS Charles W. Chapman, B.Pd., Professor of Physics. B.Pd., Michigan State Normal College, 1910; A.B., Michigan State Normal College, 1910; B.S., University of Chicago, 1911; Science Teacher, Fenton High School, Fenton, Michigan, 1903-1907; Assistant Professor of Physics! Michigan Agricultural College, 1912-1916; Associate Professor of Physics, July, 1916- January, 1918, (acting head of Physics) ; Professor of Physics, 1918- Faculty Mem­ ber, Y. M. C. A. Advisory Board; Honorary Member Ionian Society. Oren Leone Snow, B.S., Assistant Professor of Physics. B.S. in Civil-Electrical Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1910; In­ structor in Physics and Electrical Engineering, Michigan Agricultural College, 1910- 1916; Assistant Professor of Physics, 1916—. Member Society for Promotion of Engineering Education; Member Advisory Board of the College Y. M. C. A. • Alumnus, Columbian Society. William Earl Laycock, A.B., Assistant Professor of Physics. DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY Walter Bradford Barrows, B.S., Professor of Zoology and Physiology. B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1876; Assistant in Wards Natural Science Establishment, Rochester, N. Y., 1879-1881 ; Instructor in Chemistry and Physics, Colegio Nacional, Conception del Uraguay, Argentine Republic, S. A.; 1881-1882 Science Teacher Normal School, Westfield, Mass.; Instructor in Biology, Wesleyan University, 1882-1886; Instructor in Botany, Trinity College, 1884-1886; First Assistant Ornithologist, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1886-1894; Lecturer in Economic Ornithology ; Maryland Agricultural College, 1891-1892; Professor of Zoology and Curator of the Museum, Michigan Agricultural College, 1894—. Michi­ gan Agricultural College Experiment Station; Fellow of the A. A. A. S.; Fellow Ornithological Union; Fellow of the Association of Economic Entomologists; Mem­ ber Michigan Academy of Science, Secretary 1896-1901, President 1905; Author “Michigan Bird Life;” Secretary Michigan Non-Game License Commission. Allen Clifton Conger, B.S., M.A., Assistant Professor of Zoology. B.S., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1908; M.A., Ohio State University, 1912; Professor of Biology, Wilmington College, 1909-1912; Instructor in Zoology, Michi­ gan Agricultural College, 1912-1916; Assistant Professor of Zoology, 1912—. Mem­ ber American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member American Microscopical Society; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. Verne Emory Leroy, A.B., M.S., Instructor in Zoology. Wesley Edward Eastman, B.S., Instructor in Geology. Joseph William Stack, B.S., Instructor in Zoology. Stanard Gustav Bergquist, A.B., Instructor in Zoology. Benjamin Brokaw Roseboom, B.S., Assistant Professor of Physiology. DEPARTMENT OF RADIO TELEGRAPHY Paul G. Andres, Instructor in Radio Telegraphy. Radio Electrician, U. S. N., 1907-1911; Michigan Agricultural College, 1911- 1915; Vocational Director, Bessemer High School, 1915-1917. DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL TRAINING Chester Liland Brewer, Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics. Special Student, University of Wisconsin, 1893-1898; Instructor, University of Wisconsin, 1898-1899; Director of Athletics, Wisconsin State Normal, 1899-1900; Director of Athletics, Albion College, 1900-1903; Director of Athletics, Michigan Agricultural College, 1903-1910; Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics, University of Missouri, 1910-1917. Member of American Physical Educa­ tion Association; Member American Playground Association; Member of Athletic Research Society; Member Society of Directors of Physical Education; President Society of Directors of Physical Education of Southwest, 1914-1915; Executive Com­ mittee of National Collegiate Athletic Association, 1915-1916; Member Rules Com­ mittee National Collegiate Athletic Association, 1916—; with Commission on Training Camp Activities of War Department, 1917—; Member Phi Gamma Delta, Theta Nu Epsilon, and Acacia Fraternities. George Earl Gauthier, B.S., Assistant Director of Athletics, 191Jf—. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, Civil Engineering, 1915. Tau Beta Pi, Michigan Alpha Chapter, 1913—; Varsity Club; Eunomian. 56 DEPARTMENT OF METEOROLOGY AND GEOLOGY Dewey Alsdorf Seeley, M.S., Instructor in Meteorology and Official in Charge, U. S. Weather Bureau Station. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1898; M.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1917; Weather Bureau Service, 1898—; Instructor in Meteorology, Bradley Poly­ technic Institute, Peoria, 111., 1902-1909 ; Instructor in Meteorology, Michigan Agri­ cultural College, 1910—. Member Hesperian Society, Michigan Agricultural College; Michigan Academy of Science. Frederick Arthur Burt, Instructor in Geology. Division of Veterinary Science Richard Pope Lyman, M.D.V., Dean and Professor of Veterinary Science James W. Benner, D.V.M., Assistant Professor of Veterinary Medicine. Kansas State Agricultural College, 1911; Practice of Veterinary Medicine, 1911-1914; Graduate Student, University of Kansas, 1912; Instructor in Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1914-1917; Assistant Pro­ fessor of Veterinary Medicine, Michigan Agricultural College, 1917— Member Alpha Psi, Eta Chapter. Howard Eckler Johnson, D.V.M., Assistant Professor of Anatomy. D.V.M., New York State Veterinary College at Cornell University, 1914; In­ structor in Anatomy, Cornell University, 1914-1917; Assistant Professor of Anatomy Michigan Agricultural College, 1917—. Member Omega Tau Sigma. ^ r^wDY ^ALLMAN' D.V.M., Associate Professor of Animal Pathology. HM mmm Instituteb 1910; Instructor in Histology and Bacteriology, Alabama Poly. Institute, 1910-1912; Research Assistant in Bacteriology, M. A. C. >91,2,^1915; Associate Professor Animal Pathology, M. A. C., 1915__ Frank Wilbut Chamberlain, D.V.M., Associate Professor of Comparative Anatomy. B.S., University of Vermont and State Agricultural College, 1904; D.V.M., New York State Veterinary College, Cornell University, 1906; Associate Professor of Veterinary Science and Animal Husbandry, University of Idaho, September, 1909- anuary, 1911; Assistant Professor of Comparative Anatomy, Michigan Agricultural ollege, 1915—. Member Sigma Xi, Cornell University, Alpha Chapter, 1906; Honorary Member Alpha Phi, Michigan Agricultural College, Iota Chapter, 1915—. Division oî Agriculture Robert S. Shaw, B.S.A., Dean of Agriculture Robert S. Shaw, B.S.A., Dean of Agriculture and Director of the Experiment Station. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION Walter Hiram French, M.Pd., M.S., Prof essor of Agricultural Education. E. Lynn Grover, B.S., Assistant Professor of Agricultural Education. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1907; Graduate Student, University of Wis­ consin, 1910; Farmer and School Teacher, 1893-1901; Instructor in Agricultural Education, M. A. C. ; Milk Inspector, Delhaven, Wis., 1907-1909; High School Instructor of Science and Agriculture, Greensberg, Indiana, 1909-1913; Assistant Professor and Critic Teacher, M. A. C., 1917. Secretary M. A. C. Teachers’ Asso­ ciation, 1915-1916; Member Masonic Lodge, Grange, Phylean Society, Upper Peninsula Educational Association, State Teachers’ Association, National Educational Association, Michigan Schoolmasters’ Club. DEPARTMENT OF ANIMAL HUSBANDRY George Arthur Brown, B.S., Professor of Animal Husbandry. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College. William E. J. Edwards, B.S.A., Assistant Professor Animal Husbandry. B.S.A., Ontario Agricultural College. DEPARTMENT OF DAIRY HUSBANDRY A. Crosby Anderson, B.S., Professor of Dairy Husbandry. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1906; Instructor Animal Husbandry, M. A. C., 1905-1908; Assistant Professor Dairy Husbandry, 1908-1909; Associate Professor Dairy Husbandry, 1909-1910, Dairy Husbandry Experiment Station. Member of Michigan Academy of Science; Member of American Society of Animal Nutrition; Member'of American Genetic Association; Editor of Journal of Dairy Science; Vice-President of American Dairy Science Association. Harold W. F. Newhall, B.S.A., Associate Professor in Dairy Husbandry. B.S.A., Toronto University (Ontario Agricultural College), 1911; Instructor in Dairying, Michigan Agricultural College, 1911-1912; Carlyle Dairy Company, Calgary, Alberta, 1912-1913; Sanitary Dairy Limited, St. Catherine, Ontario, 1913- 1917. Homer Edward Dennison, B.S., Instructor in Dairy Husbandry. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1913; Teacher of. Agriculture, Manchester, Michigan, 1911-1912; Instructor in Dairy Husbandry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912-1914; Assistant Professor in Dairy Husbandry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1917-1918. Eunomian. Royce Willard Wyatt, B.S., Instructor in Dairy Manufactures. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1916 ; Instructor in Dairy Department, 1916-1917. Entered United States Army, February 15, 1918, as a private. F. A. Hagedorn, B.S., Instructor in Dairying. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1916. Member Columbian Literary Society; Scabbard and Blade. W. E. J. Edwards, B.S.A., Instructor in Animal Husbandry. B.S.A., Ontario Agricultural College, 1910; Graduate School of Agriculture,’ Michigan Agricultural College, 1912; Representative Ontario Department of Agri­ culture, 1910-1914; Instructor in Animal Husbandry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914. DEPARTMENT OF "FARM CROPS Joseph Frank Cox, B.S., Associate Professor of Farm Crops; Acting Head of Farm Crops Department. B.S., Ohio State University, College of Agriculture, 1912; Field Assistant, Department of Botany, Ohio Experiment Station, 1912; Instructor in Agronomy, Pennsylvania State College, 1912-1913; Farm Crops Department, Michigan Agri­ cultural College, 1913—. Eugene E. Down, B. S., Superintendent of Field Work in Plant Breeding and Assistant in Farm Crops. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1915; Superintendent of Farm in Lenawee County during remainder of 1915; Entered upon duties at Michigan Agricultural College, January, 1918; at present in 1st Company Infantry Officers’ Training Camp at Camp Custer. Frank A. Spragg, B.S.A., M.S., Plant Breeder. B.S.A., Montana Agricultural College, 1902; M.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1906; in charge Agricultural Exhibit during World’s Fair, St. Louis, 1904; Plant Breeder at Michigan Agricultural College, 1906-1908; Introduced the following improved varieties: Worthy and Alexander Oats, 1911; Rosen Rye, 1912; Red Rock Wheat, 1913; Michigan Winter Barley, 1914; Robust Beans, 1915 ; Success and College Wonder Oats, 1916; Michtooro Barley and Wolverine Oats, 1917; of these four examples there were about 100,000 acres of Red Rock Wheat, and 250,000 acres of Rosen Rye sown in Fall of 1917. Life Member of American Genetics Asso­ ciation ; Member of American Society of Agronomy; Member of Botanical Society of America; Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science. Foster Rudolph, B.S., Graduate Assistant of Farm Crops. B.S. Agriculture, Pennsylvania State College, 1917. Eclectic Society at Michi­ gan Agricultural College; Acacia, Pennsylvania State Chapter; Sem Bot, Michigan Agricultural College ; Member of American Genetic Association ; Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science. John Whitney Nicolson, B.S., Extension Specialist, Farm Crops. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1915. Delphic; Sem Bot; Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Zeta. DEPARTMENT OF FARM AND HORSES Ralph Stowell Hudson, B.S., Foreman of Farm. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College. DEPARTMENT OF FARM MECHANICS Harry Hayes Musselman, B.S., Associate Professor of Farm Mechanics. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College; Agricultural Work, 1909; with Whitehead & Kales Structural Iron Works of Detroit, 1910; assumed present position, 1910. Member American Society of Agricultural Engineers, President 1914; Member Michi­ gan Academy Science; Eunomian Society; Tau Beta Pi. Orsel Edwin Robey, B.S., Extension Specialist and Household Engineering. C. N. Rix, Instructor Short Courses. D. N. Thower, Instructor Short Courses. W. Duncan, Instructor. DEPARTMENT OF POULTRY HUSBANDRY Charles Henry Burgess, A.B., Associate Professor of Poultry Husbandry. B., Michigan Normal College, 1895; Superintendent of City Schools to 1912; A. in Chemistry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1913-1914; Assistant Assistant Professor in Poultry Husbandry, 1915-1916-1917. Life Member of American Poultry Association; Life Member of International Association of Investigators and Instructors of Poultry Husbandry; Secretary of Michigan Poultry Association. Bernard A. Knowles, B.S., Instructor in Poultry Husbandry. DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY Alfred Knight Chittenden, M.F., Professor of Forestry. Ph.D., Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University, 1900; M.F., Yale University, 1902; Study Abroad, 1903; United States Forest Service, 1903; United States Geological Survey; Assistant Forest Inspector, 1905; Assistant District Forester, 1907; Forest Inspector, 1910; Forester Department of the Interior; Experiment Station, University of Illinois, 1913; Professor of Forestry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914—. War Committee; Society of American Foresters; Chairman State Wood Fuel Committee; Sigma Zi; Xi Sigma Pi. Frank Hobart Sabford, M.For., Associate Professor of Forestry. B. S. in Forestry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1904; M.For., 1913; Manager of Private Forest Nursery, 1905-1906; Assistant Professor in Forestry, Michigan Agricultural College, 1909; U. S. Forest Service, 1911*7 Associate Professor, 1916. Member Society American Foresters; Lansing Commandery No. 25; Columbian Society, M. A. C. ; Secretary Michigan Maple Sugar Makers’ Association, 1918. Edmund Carl Mandenberg, B.S., Extension Specialist in Forestry. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1915. First Battery, O. T. S., Camp Custer, Michigan. DEPARTMENT OF HORTICULTURE Harry Joshua Eustace, B.S., Professor of Horticulture; "with the Federal Food Administration. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1901; Master Horticulture, Michigan Agri­ cultural College, 1910; Assistant Botanist, New York Agricultural College, 1901- 1906; Assistant Pomologist, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1906-1908 ; Professor of Horticulture, Michigan Agricultural College, 1908—; 1915-1916, on leave of absence, studied Horticulture in important fruit regions of United States; 1917 to date, services loaned U. S. Food Administration by State Board of Agriculture upon request of Mr. Herbert Hoover. Charles Parker Halligan, B.S., Associate Professor of Horticulture. B.S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1903; Instructor two years, National Farm School, Pennsylvania; Instructor Landscape Gardening, Massachusetts Agri­ cultural College; Instructor Horticulture, Michigan Agricultural College, 1907; Assistant Professor, 1908; Associate Professor, 1913—. Robert Earl Loree, B.S., Instructor in Horticulture. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1913. Member Alpha Zeta, 1911; Honorary Member Delphic Society, 1914. Ralph Wesley Peterson, B.S., Assistant Instructor in Horticulture. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1916; University of Minnesota. Sem Bot; Dorian Society. Thomas Gunson, B.S., Superintendent of College Grounds; Instructor in Horti- . culture. - Merris M. McCool, Ph.D., Professor of Soils. DEPARTMENT OF SOILS B.S., Missouri University, 1908; M.S.,Cornell, 1910; Ph.D., Cornell, 1912; Assistant Missouri State Soil Survey, 1906-1908; Instructor N. Y. State College of Agriculture, Cornell University, 1908-1912; Assistant Professor in Soils, Oregon Agricultural College, 1912-1914 ; Professor of Soils, Michigan Agricultural College, 1914—-. Sigma Pi. George M. Grantham, B.S., Assistant Professor of Soils. B.S., University of Illinois, 1914. Alpha Zeta. Charles Ernest Millar, M.S., Assistant Professor of Soils. B.S., University of Illinois, 1909; M.S., University of Illinois, 1911; B.S.A., Kansas State Agricultural College*, 1915; Graduate Assistant in. Chemistry, Univer­ sity of Illinois, 1909-1910; Assistant in Soil Chemistry, Kansas State Agricultural College, 1910-1913; Assistant in Soils, ibid, 1913-1914; Instructor in Soils, ibid, 1914- 1915; Assistant Professor of Soils, Michigan Agricultural College, 1915—. Phi Lambda Upsilon; Alpha Zeta. Charles H. Spurway, B.S., M.A., Assistant Professor of Soil Physics. WINTER COURSES Ashley Moses Berridge, B.S., Director of Winter Courses. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1912; Director of Winter Courses, 1916- 1918; Extension Lecturer, 1915-1916; Farmers’ Institute Lecturer, 1914-1915; Farm Owner and Operator, Greenville, Michigan. President Greenville Fair Association, 1915- 1918. Division of Extension Work (Michigan Agricultural College and United States Department of Agriculture Co-operating ) Robert James Baldwin, B.S., Director Extension Work. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1904; One Year University of Michigan, 1907-1908; Science Teacher, Traverse City High School, 1908-1910; Clerk to Dean of Agriculture, 1910-1913; Director of Extension Work, 1913—. Karl H. McDonel, B.S., Assistant Extension Director. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1916; Farm Management Demonstrations, 1916-1917, Michigan Agricultural College and United States Department of Agri­ culture. Ionian Literary Society. EXTENSION SPECIALISTS Representing the Several Departments of the College William Franklin Raven, Extension Representative in Upper Peninsula. Ivan Karl Maysfead, B.S., Extension Specialist in Farm Crops. John Whitley Nicolson, B.S., Extension Specialist in Farm Crops. John Henry Carmody, B.S., Extension Specialist in Horticulture. Clarence W. Waid, B.S., Extension Specialist in Potatoes and Vegetables. Charles Philo Reed, M.Agr., Extension Farm Management Demonstrator. Paulina Elona Raven, M.S., Extension Specialist in Home Economics. Margaret M. Justin, B.S., Extension Specialist in Household Engineering. Orsel Edwin Robey, B.S., Extension Specialist in Household Engineering. Don Bion Whelan, M.S., Extension Specialist in Control of Insect Pests. James Aaron Waldron, B.S., Extension Specialist in Live Stock. John Allen Petrie, B.S.j Extension Specialist in Horticulture. Edna Viola Smith, B.S., Assistant in Home Economics. Edmund Carl Mandenberg, B.S., Extension Specialist in Forestry. Clara King Morris, B.S., Assistant in Home Economics. Ezra Levin, B.S., Special Worker in Muck Land Crops. COUNTY AGRICULTURAL AGENTS Eben Mumford, Ph.D., Head of County Agent Department. A.B., Buchtel College, 1896; Graduate Student in Sociology, Economics and Psychology, University of Chicago, 1897-1900; Fellow in Sociology, University of Chicago, 1900-1901 and 1902-1904; Student at University of Berlin, 1901-1902; University of Paris, 1902; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1906; Fellow in Psychology, Clark University, 1908-1909; Student at New York School of Philanthropy, 1909; Associate Professor of Sociology and Economics, James Millikin University, 1910- 1911; Professor of Sociology and Economics, Lombard College, 1912; State Leader, Farm Management Field Studies and Demonstrations, Michigan Agricultural College, 1912—. E. P. Robinson, B.S., Assistant State Leader County Agents. James Wade Weston, B.S., 1914, Assistant County Agent Leader, Upper Peninsula. Charles Benjamin Cook, B.S., Assistant to State Leader. Roy Gabriel Hoopingarner, B.S., Iron. Harvey George Smith, B.S.A., Kent. Jason Woodman, B.S., Kalamazoo. Claude Lawrence Nash, B.S., Branch. Harry B. Blandford, Newaygo. Leo M. Geismar, Houghton. George E. Piper, B.S., Wexford. James Frank Kadonsky, B.S., Gogebic. John Martin Wendt, B.S., St. Joseph. Clark Louis Brody, B.S., St. Clair. Lee Roy Walker, B.S., Marquette. Clinton Vede Ballard, B.S., Dickinson. Curtis Linden Coffeen, B.S., Lenawee. Roswell Gilbert Carr, B.S., Ontonagon. Carl Henry Knopf, B.S., Cheboygan. Deloy Lesly Hagerman, B.S., Ottawa. Leslie Olds, Muskegon. Russell Vaughan Tanner, B.S., Mason. Theodore Austin Farrand, Van Buren. David Woodman, Alpena. Alfred Bentall, Allegan. Harry J. Lurkins, Berrien. Frank Sandhammer, B.S., Manistee. Elton Brainard Hill, B.S., Menominee. Edward Glenn Amos, B.S., Schoolcraft. BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ CLUBS Edward Christian Lindemann, B.S., State Leader for Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1911; Editor, The Gleaner, 1911-1912; Social Work, Plymouth Church, Lansing, 1913; State Leader for Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs, Michigan Agricultural College and U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1914- 1918. Eunomian; Alpha Zeta; Cosmopolitan Club ; Editor Holcad; Football Mana­ ger, 1910; President Y. M. C. A., 1910; Literary Editor Junior Annual, 1910; Chairman Gardening Section of Michigan State Teachers’ Association, 1917-1918; Michigan Representative American Gardening Association, 1917-1918; Member of Committee on Rural Social Problems, National Conference of Social Workers, 1917; President Michigan Agricultural College Extension Workers’ Association, 1918; Member State Advisory Committee War Savings Stamps, 1918; Enrolling Officer at Large of Federal Boys’ Working Reserve, 1918. Chester Augustus Spaulding, B.S., Assistant. Reuben N. Kebler, B.S. Teacher Agriculture, Hastings, Mich., 1914-1917. District Club Leader of the Upper Peninsula, 1917—. Arne Gerald Kettunen, B.S., Emergency Assistant State Club Leader. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1917; County Club Leader of Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs, Houghton County, 1917; Emergency Assistant State Club Leader for Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs, 1918. Eunomian; Alpha Zeta; Sem Bot; Member of Michi­ gan Agricultural College Extension Workers’ Association. Emil Conrad Volz, M.S.A., Assistant State Club Leader. B.S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1918; M.S.A., Cornell University, 1918; Instructor in Horticulture, Iowa State College, 1914-1916 ; Instructor Department of Floriculture, Cornell University, 1916-1918. Eunomian; Alpha Zeta. Anna Bryant Cowles, B.S., Assistant. Elda Robb, B.S., Assistant. Barbara Van Heulen, B.S., Assistant. James Nathan McBride, B.L., Director. Ralph Henry Elsworth, A.M., Assistant. MARKETS ilSK EXPERIMENT STATION Station Council Frank Stewart Kedzie, D.Sc., President, ex-officio. Robert Sidney Shaw, B.S.A., Director Harry Joshua Eustace, B.S., M.Hort., Horticulturist and Vice-Director. Rufus Hiram Pettit, B.S.A., Entomologist. Andrew Jaryis Patten, B.S., Chemist. A. Crosby Anderson, B.S., Dairy Husbandman. Ernest Athern Bessey, Ph.D., Botanist. Vernon Morelle Shoesmith, B.S., Farm Crops Experimentalist. Ward Giltner, D.V.M., M.S., Bacteriologist. Alfred Knight Chittenden, M.F., Forester. Merris Mickey McCool, Ph.D., Soil Physicist. Addison Makepeace Brown, A.B., Secretary. Advisory and Assistant Staff Charles Parker Halligan, B.S., Associate Horticulturist. George Arthur Brown, B.S., Associate in Charge of Animal Husbandry. Harry Hayes Musselman, B.S., Associate in Charge of Farm Mechanics. Charles Henry Burgess, A.B.,, Associate in Charge of Poultry Husbandry. George Daniel Shafer, Ph.D., Associate Entomologist. Frank A. Spragg, M.S., Research Associate in Farm Crops (Plant Breeds). Charles Summers Robinson, A.B., M.S., Research Associate in Chemistry. Rufus Percival Hibbard, Ph.D., Research Associate in Plant Physiology. George Herbert Coons, Ph.D., Research Associate in Plant Pathology. George John Bouyoucos, Ph.D., Research Associate in Soils. Charles William Brown, B.S.. Research Assistant in Bacteriology. Leslie Harrison Cooledge, A.M., Research Assistant in Bacteriology. James Franklin Morgan, M.A., Research Assistant in Bacteriology. Orrin Bowman Winter, A.B., Research Assistant in Chemistry. Hans Julian Bock, M.S., Research Assistant in Horticulture. Elroy John Miller, M.S., R esearch Assistant in Chemistry. Lydia Zae Northrup, B.S., A.MAssistant in Bacteriology. Eugenia Inez McDaniel, A.B., Assistant in Entomology. Walter Curtis «Dutton, B.S., Assistant in Horticulture. Grover Cleveland Woodin, B.S.A., Assistant in Entomology. Fred Thomas Riddell, B.S., Assistant in Dairy Husbandry. Eugene Franklin Berger, B.S., Assistant in Chemistry. Jay Howard Muncie, M.A.j Assistant in Plant Pathology. Allen Ellwood Smoll, A.B., Assistant in Chemistry. Edward Adrain DeWindt, B.Ch.E., Assistant in Chemistry. Eldon Eugene Down, B.S., Assistant in Farm Crops. Arthur Clinton Lytle, B.S., Assistant in Dairying. Stanley J. Brownell, B.S., Assistant in Dairying. Ralph Wesley Peterson, B.S., Assistant in Horticulture. Raymond Nelson, B.S., Graduate Assistant in Botany. Herdis Leo Lewis, B.S., Graduate Assistant in Botany. Clinton Fisk Barnum, B.S., Inspector of Feeds and Fertilisers. Frank Foster Hebard, B.S., Inspector of Feeds and Fertilizers. Mrs. Linda Eoline Landon, Librarian. Mrs. Myra Viola Bogue, Bulletin Clerk. 66 CLASS OFFICERS President, R. J. DeMond, Vice-President, Gladys Harker Treasurer, W. M. Coulter Secretary, L. Merle Chubb SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEES General Commencement T. C. Dee, Chairman R. J. DeMond L. Calrow Invitation Lytton Calrow, Chairman R. S. Simmons Gladys Harker H. L. Froelich J. H. Harman S. T. Wellman L. Merle Chubb Senior Party R. S. Simmons, Chairman M. A. Wattles Sabra Oliver Cap and Gown W. N. Cawood, Chairman S. T. Wellman Quindara Oliver Class Gift H. A. Iddles, Chairman M. A. Nelson W. N. Coulter Athletics Football Manager, Walter Bugai Basket Ball Manager, Fred J. Hughes Baseball Manager, Rex Wilcox Tennis Manager, R. S. Simmons Track Manager, S. T. Wellman HOWARD C. ABBOTT “Moonshiner” Lansing Agriculture ZENEDA.M. AMIOTTE “Neda” Traverse City Home Economics, Sphinx, J Hop Committee EDGAR SHANNON ANDERSON “Theda Bara” East Lansing Horticulture, Sem Bot, Dorian, Associate Editor Holcad (4), Hort Club, Chorus EGBERT JAMES ARMSTRONG “Arny” Upper Marlboro, Md. Horticulture, Hort Club CHARLES EDWIN ATWATER “At” Fennville Agriculture DONALD C. BEAVER “Doc” Detroit Veterinary, Forensic, Alpha Psi, M. A. C. Veterinary Medical Association, Associate Editor Holcad (4) RICE A. BEERS “Rab” Richland Engineer, Aurorean, Chorus DONALD R. BENNETT “Bennie” Silver Creek, N. Y. Horticulture, New York Club, Hort Club, Associate Editor Holcad (4) 69 GLEN IRVING BLADES Lansing Horticulture, Alpha Zeta, Class Basket Ball (4), Hort Club, Dramatic Club (3) ROYAL J. BONDIE “Bun” Dearborn Engineer G. HOBART BRIGHAM “Brig” Buckley Engineer, Tau Beta Pi, Olympic, Varsity Basket Ball (4), Class Basket Ball (2) (3), Class Foot­ ball (3), Engineer Society TRACY VERNON BROUGHTON “Trace” Birmingham Agriculture, Ionian, Farmers’ Club, Dairy Seminar, J Hop Committee WALTER JOSEPH BUGAI “Walt” Cedar City Agriculture, Forensic, Class Baseball (3), Class Football (2) (3), Scrub Football (3) C. HAROLD BUTTOLPH Pontiac Horticulture, Forensic, Alpha Zeta, First Lieutenant, R. 0. T. C. LINCOLN EVERETT BUELL Ann Arbor Agriculture, S. C. L. INA L. BUTLER East Lansing Home Economics, Letonian 70 LYTTON CALROW “Cal” _ Horticulture, Scabbard and Blade, Ionian, R. O. T. C., Illinois Club, Hort Club, Advertising Manager ’17 Wolverine, J Hop Committee, Barbecue Committee, Commence­ ment Program Committee, Senior Publicity Committee, Captain Co. G, Officer’s Association WILLIS CAMPBELL “Fat” Alpena Agriculture, Band, Farmers’ Club, Class Football RUTH ELIZABETH CARGO “Peep” Bellevue Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Letonian, L. S. C., Y. W. C. A. Cabinet MARTIN FRANCIS CARMODY “Red” Grand Rapids Horticulture, Olympic, M. A. C. Union (3), Inter-Society Union, J Hop Committee AILEEN CARNEY Decatur Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Themian VERA FOSTER CAVANAGH Haslett Home Economics, Ero Alphian, Sphinx, J Hop Committee, Class Vice-President (3) WILLIAM N. CAWOOD “Bill” Mariette Agriculture, Scabbard and Blade, Alpha Zeta, Student Council (3) (4), Major Second Battalion, J Hop Committee, Class Baseball (2) (3) (4), Class Football (3) ; (4) JOHN ALEX. CHISHOLM “Chis” Montague; Agriculture, Farmers’ Club, Class Football (3), Scrub Foot­ ball (4) LOUIS HENRY COHEN New York City Agriculture L. MERLE CHUBB Mt. Clemens Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Themian, J Hop Committee, Woman’s Student Council (4), Class Secretary (4) ALICE GUNN CLEMENTSEN “Al” Holt Home Economics, Ero Alphian WM. ROBERT COLLINSON “Red” Midland Engineer, Phylean, Class Base­ ball (2), Class Football (2), Manager Class Football (3), J Hop Committee MARION INEZ COOK “Cookie” Lansing Home Economics, Ero Alphian, Art Editor T7 Wolverine WILLARD MOSES COULTER “Bill” Grand Rapids Horticulture, Eclectic, Hort Club, Scrub Football (2), Class Basket Ball (2) (3) (4), J Hop Committee, J Hop Toast Com­ mittee, Dramatic Club (4), Class Treasurer (4) MARY CROCKER “Crock” Algonac Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Sphinx FRANK A. DAVIS “Dare” Lansing Horticulture, Eunomian, Hort Club, Student Council (4), Class Track Team (2), Class Basket Ball (4), Liberty League, Manager Hort Show (4) n ’18 Men in Service tl.K.flBBOTT H.e.auroKo Wf.— L Y. BENJAMIN W. C.BOMflN C.DKOOK5 c.n.&KQWNfmp RC.C«VrtNA<îi H" y . w. ctiftP’tnoH M B s.coi^vtei. BLANCHE DAVIS East Lansing Home Economics THOMAS C. DEE “Tommy” Brooklyn, N. Y. Engineer, Tau Beta Pi, Scabbard and Blade, Forensic, Varsity Yell Master, R. O. T. C., Editor- in-Chief Holcad, Officers’ Asso­ ciation, Inter-Society Union, Engineer Reserve, Engineer Society, New York Club, Class Football, Basket Ball and Base­ ball, Bull Moose RAMOND JOHN DE MOND “Frenchie” Clarkston Engineer, Varsity Club, Phylean, Varsity Baseball (2) (3) (4), Athletic Board of Control, Senior Class President, Bull Moose CLARK ASHLEY DETTLING “Det” Allegan Agriculture, Orphic, Farmers’ Club HENRY GUY DENNING “Guy” Jonesville Engineer, Olympic, Engineer Society, Bull Moose FRANCIS DE WINTER “Red’? Detroit Agriculture, Class Basket Ball (3) WILLIAM DE YOUNG “Bill” Augusta Agriculture, Hermian, Farmers’ Club, Inter-Society Union, Class Football (4), Scrub Football (4) HENRY DORR, Jr. “Hank” Chicago, III. Forestry, Xi Sigma Pi, Sem Bot, AE-Theon, Forestry Club, Chief Forester, Intercollegiate Asso­ ciation of Forestry Clubs, Inter- Society Union, Editor M. A. C. Forester (3) (4), Illinois Club, Band, Chorus, Orchestra WALTER O. DOW “Walt” Boyne City Engineer, Tau Beta Pi, Y. D. RICHARD L. DOYLE “Dick” Hastings Engineer, Tau Beta Pi, Scabbard and Blade, Eunomian, Engineer Society MURIEL ELIZABETH DUNDAS Bad Axe Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Girls’ Glee Club (2) (3) (4) LLOYD RALPH DUNSTAN “Dunnie” Lake Linden Agriculture, Orphic EDWARD F. ELDRIDGE East Lansing Horticulture, Band, College Orchestra FERN FIXLEY FERRIS Allegan Home Economics, Themian, Girls’ Glee Club (2) (3), J Hop Committee, J Hop Toast Committee EDWARD CHARLES FISCHER “King” Saginaw Agriculture, Scabbard and Blade, Union Lit, Officer’s Association, Captain Co. E, R. O. T. C. HOWARD LEWIS FISHER “Bud” Lorain, Ohio Horticulture, Columbian, Hort Club, Buckeye Club, Athletic Editor ’17 Wolverine GEORGE THADDEUS FLEMING “Perry” Shelby Agriculture, Orphic, Farmers’ Club MAY E. FOLEY St. Johns Home Economics, Omicron Nu HOLMES L. FROELICK “Holmes” Fremont Engineer, Delphic, Class Track, Class Football (4), Scrub Foot­ ball (4), Engineer Society, Student Member A. S. M. E. FLOYD RUSSEL FRYE “Gus” Lansing Engineer, Aurorean; Engineer Society, Inter-Society Union PERCY HARP GATES “Puss” Bay City Engineer, Orphic, Class Foot­ ball (2), A. S. M. E. SOLOMAN GERSHBERG East Lynn, Mass. Agriculture CLEO HAZEL GLEDHILL Galion, Ohio Home Economics, Letonian, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, L. S. C., Buckeye Club, Woman’s Student Council (3) JESSIE A. GODFREY “Jakie” Parma Home Economics, Letonian IVA GRANGER Berrien Springs Home Economics, Letonian, L. S. C. MARION L. GRETTENBERGER Okemos Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Letonian, L. S. C., Y. W. C. A. Treasurer GLADYS GRÜNER “Glad” Coldwater Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Ero Alphian, Sphinx, J Hop Committee MORRIS A. HARKAVY “Hark” Brooklyn, N. Y. Engineer GLADYS ALURIA HARKER “Glad” Detroit Home Economics, Sororian, ’17 Wolverine Staff, Class Vice- President (4) AMANDA HELEN HARMS “Mandy” Reesel Home Economics, F. I. Club, L. S. C. JOHN HERBERT HARMAN “Jack” Minneapolis, Minn. Horticulture, Scabbard and Blade, Forensic, Hort Club, Glee Club, Mandolin Club, Captain Cadet Corps, R. O. T. C., Officer’s Association MARY MARGARET HARRINGTON Hubbell Home Economics, Dramatic Club ’18 Men in Service P.H.ritZPATRTiCK H,A.rüfÇi_oNON S.E.40HN30N KENT 78 BEULAH HARRIS Rock Island, III. Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Themian, Student Council (4), Sphinx, J Hop Committee, ’17 Wolverine WALLACE EDGAR HARTMAN “Hart” Augusta Engineer, Hermian, A. S. M. E., Engineers Enlisted Reserve Corps, Engineer Society GEORGE RONALD HAYES Omer Engineer, Class Baseball (2), Class Baseball Manager (4), Football (4), Scrub Football (4) ETHEL M. HIGGINS Vassar Home Economics, Omicron Nu ELMER BRUCE HINT Oakfield, N. Y. Agriculture, Dorian, New York Club, Y. D. PERCY JAMES HOFFMASTER “Pat” Cowan, Pennsylvania Horticulture, Keystone State Club, Hort Club, College Choir HENRY CURTIS HOWARD “Curt” Jamestown, N. Y. Agriculture, Hermian, S. C. L., Varsity Debate (3) (4) FRED JOHN HUGHES “Freddie” Lansing Horticulture, Hort Club, Class Basket Ball (3) Class Basket Ball Manager (4) RAY HUNTER Oakwood Agriculture, Hermian, Farmers’ Club, Students’ Liberty League, J Hop Committee CHAS. A. HUTULA “Hut” Covington Agriculture ARNE IBSEN “Iby” Detroit Agriculture, Phi Delta, J Hop Committee HAROLD AUGUSTUS IDDLES South Haven Agriculture, Eunomian, Alpha Zêta, Farmers’ Club, J Hop Committee, ’17 Wolverine, Glee and Mandolin Club (1) (2) (3) (4), Chapel Choir THERON L. INGERSOL “Bob” Elsie Horticulture, Dorian, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Lieutenant (3) (4), Advisory Board Y. M. C. A. PAUL C. JAMIESON “Jimmie” Wayne Agriculture, Hermian, Married Students’ Association, Farmers’ Club, Class Track Squad (1) (2) (3), Varsity Track Squad (X) IVA OLINE MARIE JENSEN “Jennie” East Lansing Home Economics, Sororian, Sphinx, J Hop Committee, Class Secretary (1), M. A. C. Union CLEMENT CHAS. JOHNSON “Johnny” Salem, Ohio Engineer, Class Baseball (3), Class Football (1) (2) (3), Scrub Baseball (1) (2), Engineer Reserve Corps MARY JOHNSON Marion Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Sphinx, Women’s Student Council HENRY G. JOOST “Hank” Dwight, Illinois Agriculture, Union Lit, Illinois Club HOWARD V. JORDAN “Pete” McDonald, Pennsylvania Agriculture, Alpha Zeta, Inter- Society Union, Athenaeum, Farmers’ Club, Keystone State Club THOMAS WILLIAM KEATING “Thos” Grand Rapids Engineer, Tau Beta Pi, Liberal Arts Union, Scabbard and Blade, Eclectic, J Hop Com­ mittee, J Hop Toast RALPH EMERSON KELLEY Sturgis Agriculture, Farmers’ Club LEON KOCHMAN Cleveland,- Ohio Veterinary OR VA LEWIS KIMBLE “Kim” Bryan, Ohio Agriculture, Delphic, Buckeye Club JOHN ERNEST KOTILA “Kote” Hancock Horticulture, Alpha Zeta, Sem Bot, Ionian, Hort Club, Class Football (2) (3) (4), Class Base­ ball (2) (3), Varsity Scrubs (4) ■BIN BERTHA LANKTON “Bert” Lansing Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Sesame ARNOT LAZELLA LEWIS Port Huron Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Feronian, Sphinx, J Hop Com­ mittee, Woman’s Student Council (3) East Lansing H. LYONS Agriculture, Married Students Association alice j. McCartney Lake Odessa Home Economics, Letonian, L. S. C. GLADYS MARGARET LASENBY Masön Home Economics, Feronian, J Hop Committee EDWARD D. LONGNECKER “Longie” Shelby Agriculture,. Sem Bot, Orphic, Cross Country (2) (3), Varsity Track (2) (4) BLANCHE McNAUGHTON Grand Rapids Home Economics, Soronan, J Hop Committee, Union Board (4), Dramatic Club HAROLD H. McKINNEY “Mack” East Lansing Agriculture, Alpha Zeta, Sem Bot, Married Students’ Association ’18 Men in Service % $ Cr.L.ecvroii K.,H,U3VC yiH.uuvw'îâ sw. n'-KKrtzie <^.C.MCKk:imbn R.N.ME.TZCIS F'.li.MlLl.AW H.H.niU-3 W.17M1UL5 f:ope 6. P. OR.COTT W.fl.QUI0UE.Y 83 MABLE McLACHLAN Sault Stß. Marie Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Letonian, Sphinx EDITH ELIZABETH MASON Avoca Home Economics, Omicron Nu RALPH H. MAJOR Oreana, Illinois Engineer, Forensic W. FLOYD MANBY Battle Creek Agriculture, Dorian, Inter- Society Union, S. C. L., Farmers’ Club, Officers’ Asso­ ciation, First Lieutenant Co. E CHARLES LEO MARGESON “Margy” Union City Engineer, Trimoira, S. C. L., Second Lieutenant Co. E FERN H. MOORE Mason Home Economics MARION MORSE “Mort” ' Lansing Home Economics, Feronian BYRON MURRAY Marquette Engineer, Olympic, Varsity Basket Ball (3) (4), Class Football (3) 84 MORRIS NELSON Grand Rapids Engineer, Olympic, Class Foot­ ball (2) (3), Reserve Foot­ ball (3) QUINDARA OLIVER “Quin” East Lansing Home Economics, Ero Alphian, J Hop Committee SABRA OLIVER “Sabe” East Lansing Home Economics, Ero Alphian, J Hop Committee, Class Secretary (3) CALVIN J. OVERMYER “C. J.” Fremont, Ohio Agriculture, Scabbard and Blade, Delphic, R. O. T. C., Major, Officers’ Association, Buckeye Club, Dairy Seminar RUTH E. PATERSON “Pat” Grand Rapids Home Economics, Feronian, J Hop Committee, Sphinx, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4) CLARE J. PERRY Augusta Horticulture, Scabbard and Blade, AE-Theon, Hort Club, R. O. T. C. RUSSEL V. PERRY “Bud” Ludington Engineer, Track (1) HELEN EDWINA PIERCE Pasadena, California Home Economics, Feronian, Sphinx, J Hop Committee 85 CLARISSA J. PIKE “Criss” Detroit Home Economics, Sororian, J Hop Committee LEONARD S. PLEE “Pete” St. Joseph Engineer, Trimoria, Berrien County Club, Engineers Enlisted Corps MARION PRATT Dost Lansing Home Economics, Sphinx, L. S. C„ Glee Club MARY RAY Manistee Home Economics, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), L. S. C. FLOSSIE JANE READER “Floss” Scottville Home Economics, Sororian, J Hop Committee CLIFFORD M. REED “Cliff” Perry, Ohio Agriculture, Phylean, Buckeye Club. JULIA M. RIGTERINK Hamilton Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Themian, Sphinx, Varsity Tennis (2), J Hop Committee' Lansing FANNY ROGERS Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Sesame, Sphinx, ’17 Wolverine JOSEPH RYAN New York City Horticulture, Dramatic Club HARVEY MAYNARD SASS “Whistler” Comstock Park Engineer, Trimoira, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4), Inter-Society Union, Liberal Arts Committee, S. C. L., Student Member A. S. M. E. EARL E. SAYRE “E. E.” Durand Engineer, Trimoria ROY MAURICE SHANE Rapid River Agriculture, Phylean, Farmers’ Club, Alpha Zeta, Dairy Seminar, Assistant Business Manager ’17 Wolverine, Rifle Team (1) (2) (3) F. ERMA SHATTUCK Sand Lake Home Economics, Themian, J Hop Committee LOUIS S. SHERWIN Brooklyn, New York Agriculture RUSSEL S. SIMMONS “Sim” Alpena Horticulture, Ionian, Hort Club, Holcad Staff (2), Assistant Editor (3), Humorous Editor ’17 Wolverine, Class Tennis Manager (3), J Hop Committee, First Lieut. Cadet Corps, Cap Night Com­ mittee, Senior Publicity Com­ mittee, Manager Holcad (4) BLANCHE A. SMITH Elba Home Economics ’18 Men in Service &.^75ftK'â€HT e».K..3rtwoku. ». L_.iiCHIiEtPE.fC a.P. SPCLTZ rÿ J. a pc. n ce k 'Prç73W'ŒNe,?”': R.c.avvetNEY H. P.THflYCR cs.W.Tl&p'inaMN e.ydNLee.ev/E.H ’ T. VOUMCF?: C.L.WflR,R.EN h.o.Weckceiç P’.C.W'ÊRNETTe r. H.wtk.vtK'N j.F.wicKmson VNf. D.WICU6fia VY.K.vVlLLMnNN ^.5.wtr,aoN h.k,.Wrcmch r.&.z.e.HHeK. TON VE.U.MftRKUEY If IA'KluNS 9. s. mu-\_o K.MlTCHCtL H.K.FCTTi^ROVe K.E..PO.ÖT H.URÉ.IP A.R, RtlïLVe-t) W. RtPOTTE.tr. E.E.StxTOH &. r.SMITH ARK Cf.J.WiLUAMS 110 DOROTHY RÜSCHE “Dot” Painesdale Home Economics, Themian, J Hop Committee FLORENCE SIMONSON Bancroft Home Economics, Sesame, J Hop Committee CHRISTO SARDJOFF “Count Zaviidonii” Koukoush, Macedonia Agriculture, Y. M. E. A., Dairy Seminar, Cosmopolitan Club, Y. M. C. A. WILLIAM A. SIEFERT J enison Engineer, Trimoira ROLAND SHENEFIELD “Shenny” Coldwater Engineer, Eunomian, Engineering Society MARGARET LOUISE SNYDER Detroit Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Themian, J Hop Toast Committee LEMOYNE SNYDER East Lansing Agriculture, Hesperian, Chairman J Hop Eligibility Committee, Manager Debating Team (3), Humorous Editor ’18 Wolverine ORDELIA SOUTHARD Harbor Springs Home Economics, Letonian, Sphinx R. T. STEPHENS “Dick” Fenton Engineer, Eclectic, Scabbard and Blade, J Hop Committee, Student Council (2) (3), Barbecue Committee, Adjutant Third Battalion Cadet Corps, Snap- Shot Editor ’18 Wolverine ETHYL SPAFORD Manchester Home Economics, Omicron Nu, Ero Alphian, J Hop Com­ mittee, Woman’s Student Council (2) (3) HAROLD STARK “Starkie” Lansing Agriculture, Delphic, Holcad Staff, J Hop Committee, Sergeant Co. H W. H. STEINBAUER “Stein” Saginaw Horticulture, Union Lit, Hort Club, J Hop Committee HAZEL SOUTHERLAND Benton Harbor Home Economics, Sesame, Sphinx, Berrien County Club, J Hop Committee W. VERNON TAYLOR Muskegon Engineer, Athenæum GERALD TENNEY White River Junction, Vt. Veterinary NORMAN H. TENNEY “Jack” White River Junction, Vt. Veterinary, Delphic, Veterinary Medical Association 112 RALPH W. TENNY Big Rapids Agriculture, Columbian, Band, Orchestra, S. C. L., Dramatic Club, Liberty League MARION LOUISE TEMPLETON “Mary Ann” Harbor Beach Home Economics, Sesame, Y. W. C. A., Sphinx WILBUR H. THIES “Bill” Traverse City Horticulture, Alpha Zeta, Dorian, President Y. M. C. A. (3), Fresh Debating Team (l), Scrub Foot­ ball (3), S. C. L., Hort Club, Inter-Society Union MARIAN THOMAS “Tommy” Manistique Home Economics, Y. W. C. A., J Hop Committee MARGERY THORNTON “Marj” Hastings Home Economics ADA TUCKER Lansing Home Economics, Feronian EINAR E. UNGREN “Doc” Oil City, Pennsylvania Agriculture, Alpha Zeta, Dorian, S. C. L., Student Council (3), Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (2) (3), J Hop Committee, Band, Assistant Editor ’18 Wolverine, Assistant Editor Holcad (2) (3), Editor-in-Chief Holcad (Elect) FRED H. UTLEY “Dad” Iron Mountain Agriculture, Orphic, Rifle Team (l), Varsity Scrub (2), J Hop Committee FRANK L. VAUGHN “F. L.” Fort Ann, New York Agriculture HENRY COLLINS WASS “Hank” Port Huron ' Engineer, S. C. L. H. M. VAUGHN “Mike” Portville, New York Horticulture, Forensic, Hort Club, S. C. L., New York Club, Scrub Football (3), Chapel Choir, Class Football (3), Class Basket Bail (3) RUTH WALKER Hartford Home Economies, Letonian, L. S. C. ELMER FRANCIS WAY “Skinny” Grand Rapids Engineer, Athenæum, Assistant Business Manager T8 Wolverine, J Hop Committee, College Orchestra (X) (2) (3), Inter- Society Union, Band (1) (2) (3) WALTER E. WEBB “Shrimp” Detroit Forestry, Xi Sigma Pi, Glee Club (3), Columbian, Assistant Business Manager Holcad (3), J Hop Committee, Second Lieutenant Co. B A. G. WEIDEMAN “Andy” Midland Agriculture, Dorian, S. C. L., F. I. Club, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Student Liberty League ELIZABETH WELD Lansing Home Economics, J Hop Committee 114 CHERYL WINDES “Cherry” Middleville Home Economics, Sororian, Dramatic Club, Illinois Club C. C. White Alabaster Engineer, Orphic, Engineering Society R. NORVAL WRIGHT “Bill” Salem, Ohio Horticulture, Alpha Zeta, Hort Club, Eunomian, Class Treasurer (1), Assistant Editor Holcad (3) ELWYN D. YOUNKER “Yonk” Lapeer Agriculture, Alpha Zeta, Dorian, S. C. L., Scrub Foot­ ball (3), Class Football (2), Class Basket Ball (3) Photoless Juniors A. M. Allen A. W. Atkins N. E. Bandeen S. G. Bandeen E. G. Baxter M. Blackman Eleanor M. Childs S. G. Colby A. R. Dunn R. M. Hain Frances L. Hawkins Dorothy E. Kahres B. F. Kindig R. C. Kinney C. F. LaBar D. J. Lamoreaux Louisa D. Landstrom E. J. Linsday C. H. Mitchell Hazel M. Muhlitner Frances L. Overheiser H. F. Peters Elizabeth S. Porter I. A. Robinson Florence E. Rouse J. W. Sims Marion I. Smith F. C. Speidel W. E. Thomas G. W. Trubey M. F. Welsh P. C. Yuli THE LARGEST GYM FLOOR IN THE STATE (Before Completion) Lennah E. Kyes Class oî 1920 CLASS OFFICERS President, Boyd H. Redner* Vice-President, Lennah E. Kyes Treasurer, Stanley S. Radford Secretary, Marie L. Otis CLASS ACTIVITIES Class Track Manager, A. J. Mitchell Class Baseball Manager, L. W. Schroyer Class Basket Ball Manager, L. C. Terwilliger Class Football Manager, C. L. Frankenfield *In service. C.G. AL.PE.R R A.ALRERMAN I.W. ANPERSON. C.S. ANRÊK30N A.V. ARONSON Étti P K.TPONNINSHAtlSEN L.J. &OTTIME.K t.e, PROWN M.C R.W. PAYANT J.H.CftUPWtUV &.M. H.RCAR50N M.CCASH W.H.CURAPACK V CUKIMIN'Vl «.rpavis RAVIS RW, PORP U.rtPUNNtNCi N.H.FE.NKE.U, K.S.fPAZIER J .EMSOUveN E,H.aRAHf»n fk.qkush M.HiMMELEtN R.HOW'ARC» S.ILUEPAN iw H5TON T, ELKiNCS K.D.KLIN6 D.T. KNIGHT ,KOOPM«NN R6f. LftMC ■HRBKKi mmWwMf: P.LlLUE r.fCUOOMlS B.RLVMflN ■■■I J.MAK5PCN fl>. MAKT1M W-J-MCNZtU m.noopy A,N,NE3MAM K.vv. Noppms1 wœmmmmms MM M.fl.rof?TeR: 3.M. POWELL IS.QUIGÌL.C Y dkM KFvKOJNCY RH.KE.pNEK ;KfÊ KOÖEK5 ¿ B N.L.K05SO- E..I.3WTH M.h.STBFFÔRp P.HSTEWAKT W.EOUThtRUftW G.H.TAPPfm (..c.TCKwtEuas^ rt.rn. Thomson C.J.THOMSON M.C.TOVW3E«P> fl.M.VliKNON ' VE. WARP l~.J.W'«TSON M.r — m M.WILUAM50N fl.rt.WINSTON fl G .WOOP5WWT H Shadow-Seeking Sophs Aldredge, Robert Frank Allen, Helen Katherine Anderson, Hazel May Ashton, Frank Winslow Bacon, Howard Chapman Barr, John Huston Basett, Charles Francis Bauer, Arthur Henry Beavis, James Olin Bailey, R. H. Betts, Harriett Isabell Bishop, Ona Bernice Blinston, Chester Burhans, Robert Leslie Burrell, Norma Katherine Bush, Norris Hulms Byrne, Mary Eva Caldwell, Mitt McKinley Carr, Nelson Raymond Case, Walter Fritz Chapel, Howard Neuman Clark, Rex Devere Clemow, Charles Coburn, Don R. Cockerton, Ellen May Collingwood, Laura Dane, Ruth Delamarter, Arthur Ray Dikmans, Gerard Donnely, Paul Eugene Dunn, Zaida Lola East, Rhea Ann Engstrom, Walter Axel Erbaugh, Paul Webster Faunce, Izetta Ruth Fillingham, Fern Lucile Flory, Olive Virginia Folks, Una Florine Fowle, Watson Edward Frankenfield, Charles Lester Frays, Ethel Marie Frazier, Helen Rebecca Gardner, Margaret Elizabeth Gates, William Truman Geiermann, Louis Joseph Gleason, Ban Myron Grambau, Edward John Gray, Robert Fitzpatrick Green, Lola Belle Gulliver, Ray Lemuel Hall, Harold Richard Halladay, Harold Crane Haywood, Winnie E. Heitsch, Maty Hemans, Harris Earl Higbie, Charles Clarence Hilliard, Helen Marie Hock, Alvin Wisher Hoffman, Howard Verne Jacobs, Frank Sheridan Jewell, Helen Margaret Johnston, Stanley Jones, Walter Franklin Keck, Bertha Helena Kehm, Earl Phillip Kempf, Dorotha Kernen, Kenneth Crossett Keyt, Frank Madison Kidd, Edna Marion Kingery, Richard Henry Kurtz, Laurence Diller Laidlaw, Marian Esther Lafler, Cecil William Larrabee, Mary Louise Leach, Theodore Latham Leddick, Roth Merrill Lewis, Leroy Wallace Lindquist, Tauge Gust Loomis, Hazel Josephine Lord, Edwin McCaughan, Eldred Stuart McFadden, Herbert Floyd McLravy, Glenn J. McNinch, Mariette Hane Maier, Dee Malaskey, Edgar Andrew Maloney, Ralph Paul Marx, Julius William Mitchell, Alfred Joseph Myers, Harvey Lincoln Nagler, Victor Moore Neikard, Roy Garfield Normington, Marian Lucile Nye, Clifton C. O’Donald, William Arthur Otis, Marie Lucille 125 Shadow-Seeking Sophs—Continued Owen, Sigfred Carl Parker, Robert Donald Peterson, Clyde Walter Platz, Henry Arthur Palmer, Lynn Courtland Potter, Neal D. Powers, Newell Harvey Proctor, John Joyce Read, Edward George Redfearn,. Ernest Everett Reeves, Merritt Augustus Rose Renwick, Howard M. Rhead, Lucille F. Rice, Rosselyn Adelia Rigterink, Harold Wilson Rood, Clare Alfred Rossman, Phyllis Elizabeth Rothgery, Lee Joseph Rothrock, Stanley Swigart Rowe, Melvern Luke Schall, Harold Lorraine Schreiver, Anna Marie Schroen, Luella Melvina Schroyer, Leon Ward Scramlin, Erma Nancy Seeburger, Arthur William Severance, Esther Lois Shane, Marion Lucile Sheppard, Denzel T. Skoog, Esther Johanna Smith, Kathleen Evangeline Sneider, Irving John Stenholm, Frank August Struble, Floyd Harrison Tappan, Agnes Jean Tate, Esther Isabelle Trownsell, Theodore Richard Tubbs, Margaret Grace Tyler, Talcott Miller Unruh, Elmer Roy Vance, George Archie Weneklasen, Harold Benjamin Waite, Earle Lewis Wible, George Dwight Wiggins, Clifford Rumley Whitcomb, Helen Marguerite Wightman, Irene Williams, Mary Jeanette Wilson, William Ralph Wissmann, Otto William Wolff, Simon Emanuel Yeager, John Fredrick Zachariah, Josephine Alice Zuidema, Albert ft 126 F. N. Bateman Class oî 1921 CLASS OFFICERS President, F. N. Bateman Vice-President, Lois L. Remage Treasurer, R. B. Coulter Secretary, Mary Hunter CLASS ACTIVITIES Basket Ball Manager, C. Macgregor Baseball Manager, H. R. Webber Track Manager, L. S. Hale / RfmEERSOH Msmmmmwî pr: î;/i (Whl'VI C.H.fiKCNP ft .E.ÍÍKNOLP M.n.rtsn g.ç.mvwiuj; K.pyrtiu.Y W.Muwm' M.J.BftUxyiM Qj.Bíh^wí.ll. W §¡ :'Í M.C5. BflKNES c.T.&ftTPoiçr rN,porc.r*j«K Y.PoteWííií I.H.PEflCH HI.S.BErtPLE M.M.BCNNS.TT Ip H ■ / W.S.BEK3EY U.k.eeLTZ m f 3 T.3.DL0IIÇ LJ.BLOY k'.B.BOOMSTfli» H.U.0OOTH 1jrH.poawoKt« ce.,pores m í-. UKOSN S.J BKOOK5 N.E EMÇOVTN MÎ.M.Of ■ —-Y •■! - i y» . hY,cri ¿Tiens» H.E.I7«RUNC ^.0J7ftV'iPôOH p’.^eveR'Eflüx Le.pomp's M.J. W É e,r gaffney J.H.<äAKPNEK . HA KK> N.M.fUCW0£L30N f.H.MOaK J. MORRIS M.P.MUTCHtXK S. F. N LUSO N I.F.O'ÔKIEIH fl.J.FETERSjOfi ñ,L..peTeR»oN[ ^c.pmKHen L.L.RTKMrtftC V E.R\C& RK.K0BIM50H L.W.ROSS C.E. A. ».ROYAL. Wj ■ H.M.SCHntpT El.K.^CHUKK. Y. «.SCUPPER mmmm É# e,c.sackkiplr ■I 21 ! 19 E..M. SMITH H. «».SMITH R.M.SP«LP1N<3 W.R STRAUCH WC.SWANK M,«.TAYLOR. r.EYHOMPSON L.n.rons :¡ligiVANPECAV'ÈYR- N. ft .VASOU? J.P.WftLKCR WftWlX 133 Photoless Fresh Allen, Harold D. Arrigo, Thomas J. Ayer, Ray C. Backus, Ray A. Bates, Ruth E. Batterson, Harold L. Baur, Frank Beck, Marguerite Beltz, Lester L. Blackhurst, James M. Blanchard, Marian Berridge, K. M. Block, Rexford J. Blumenthal, Ivan F. Boyes, Frederick W. Brady, Mildred E. Brendel, Anthony Brophy, Howard M. Buchman, Harry Burdick, Louis Harold Butler, Mary M. Butler, Stephans M. Carpenter, Miriam C. Carr, Frances E. Carter, Fred Douglas Case, Asa H. Cavanaugh, Emerson C. Carl, Horn Christensen, Albert C. Christiansen, Curtis V. Collins, Thomas Comstock, Ralph W. Cooke, Henry S. Coon, Harold M. Coon, Harry W. Corbett, James I. Corbett, Mason V. Cosgrove, Kenneth J. Crampton, Wayne I. Culver, Guy E. Cunningham, Alice W. Curts, Dorothy E. Dalby, Mildred S. Delmet, Dominic DeWright, Ruth Dobie, Donald A. Dressel, Karl Dudgeon, Mina P. Dunning, Leon O. Emerson, Morris L. Erdlitz, Leo W. Erdlitz, Rudolph S. Ewing, Alice A. FritzGerald, David F. Fleming, Roland E. Flink, Walter H. Foster, Walter J. Frost, Margaret H. Garobegian, Garabed K. Geilfuss, Marshall A. Gettel, Frank Gibson, Earl W. Glodowski, Adolph Goodman, Charles S. Green, Arnold Gregory, Henry R. Gretton, Mary A. Grover, Norris E. Guile, Marjorie E. Hale, Lee S. Hamilton, John Hare, Joseph Hartel, Russel J. Hartwig, Herbert B. Harvey, Antoinette Harvie, William H. Hendrick, Fred L. Henson, Cecil R. Harrington, Dorothy Heysett, Dorothy N. Hill,. Irving G. Hitchings, James H. Hoot, Ralph A. Hoyt, Victor H. Horst, Edward F. Hubbard, Harold M. Hunt, Mildred W. Isbell, Janet M. Jackobs, Ivel E. Jackson, Kenith E. Jewell, Peter Johnson, Albin L. Johnson, Leo E. Johnson, Mary A. Johnson, William L. Jones, Emerson W. Joy, Margaret S. Kahn, Charles Z. Kelley, James J. Kelly, Edward B. Kerbyson, Ernest C. Ketcham, William J. King, Theodore N. Kinney, Ernest A. Lancashire, Ellis R. LaFond, Louis H. Lockwood, Roy E. Laur, Earle J. Loupee, Burton Lunden, Lester C. Lyons, Honald C. McComb, Pearl M. McGunegla, Guy N. Mains, Cyril H. Mateuszczyk, Witalis Mead, Walter J. Mercier, Allen T. Merriman, Delia M. Metcalf, Maurice J. Metzger, Hutzel Metzler, Sarah E. Meyre, Gertrude E. Miller, Thomas J. Moore, Lusius H. Mueller, Eugene J. Muhlitner, Justin B. Musselman, Dale T. Myers, Jennie I. Neale, Paul M. Nelson, Nathalie G. Nicholls, George C. Noblet, Ubold J. Norman, Hollis W. Oman, George W. Osborn, Violet L. Ovosivitch, Samuel Palm, Wayne V. Palmer, Linus C. Parker, Harold E. Parks, Ivan W. Parks, Warren Patrick, John L. Pearl, David S. Poole, Thomas B. Prindle, Caryl B. Pritchard, Frank S. Pugsley, Clifford G. Putnam, Harold G. Redfern, William W. Rehkopf, Esther M. Reiss, Lincoln Renton, Irving A. Rey, Richard F. Reynolds, Fay S. Rice, Verle E. Richards, Vivian S. Rider, William S. Robart, John E. Robinson, John H. Rose, Violet A. Sands, Phyllis L. Savage, John F. Schenk, Ray M. Seeley, Marian E. Segelin, Herman E. Scheffield, Earle F. Shoemaker, William R. Shu, Jen Nau Simmons, Walter H. Small, Mark H. Smith, Ethyl M. Smith, James D. Smith, Luther G. Snyder, Plummer B. Sours, Ivan J. Spencer, Wallace L. Spletstoser, F. W. Stanford, Roland C. Steel, Thomas A. Stone, Charles F. Straub, Cecil B. Sullivan, Clyde T. Swain, James R. Swing, Herbert R. Thorburn, Dorothy M. Thorne, Isabella C. Towar, Gladys E. Tower, Robert G. Trumbo, Clyde Turner, Richard H. Urqhart, Charles D. Vandenberg, Willis E. Van Orden, Richard 0. Wait, Myron R. Warner, Harrison Weiss, Minnie Welsh, Carl F. Wetherbee, Dorothea M. Whitfield, Catherine E. Whittemore, Edward R. Wilhelm, Harold N. Williams, Helen A. Wilson, Harold B. Wixson, Sylva Wright, Eva H. Wyatt, Sidney T. Yerkes, Leo H. Monogram Men in Service BASEBALL CAPTAINS Russell Canfield^ ’09 A. L. Bibbins, ’15 E. F. Gorenflo, ’13 I. J. Cortright, ’ll B. W. Harvey, ’13 BASKET BALL CAPTAINS O. G. McKenna; TO Fred Bush, ’ll R. G. Chamberlain; ’12 O. R. Miller, ’15 A. L. McClellan, ’17 FOOTBALL CAPTAINS Sherman Coryell, ’17 A. D. Vandervoort, ’17 Ralph Henning, ’16 Blake Miller, ’15 F. A. Stone, ’ll I. J. Cortright, TO OTHER ATHLETICS Football Amos Ashley, ’08 Frank Chaddock, ’17 N. J. Dynate, ’16 H. G. Fick, ’17 W. D. Frazen, ’09 J. F. Madock, ’13 A. L. McClellan, 17 H. H. Miller, ’16 J. O’Callagh an, ’16 F. Parker, .’09 F. A. Stone, ’12 N. O. Weil, ’17 Basket Ball C. F. Miller, ’18 D. D. Peppard, ’17 C. P. Rigbie, ’18 T. G. Ricker, ’16 A. R. Sheffield, ’16 P. J. Vevia, ’17 Baseball R. S. Bird, ’06 H. A. Clark, ’16 H. H. Harrison, ’08 N. W. Mogge, ’14 E. E. Peterson, ’15 W. F. Thomas, ’16 W. Vance, ’ll W. K. Willman, ’18 Track C. F. Bainnet, ’17 ■C. A. Guffin, TO T. T. Wainer, ’17 R. A. Wainer, ’12 Tennis H. A. Goss, ’16 H. G. Taft, ’12 Russell Crozier, ’17 135 The New Gymnasium The spring of 1918 marked the completion of M. A. C.’s beautiful, new gymnasium, a structure destined to play an important part in the development of the College. The building, erected at a cost of $220,000, takes its place among the finest gymnasiums in the country and assures M. A. C. unlimited possibilities for athletic development. Attractive in appearance and substantial in construction, the new building is a notable addition to the campus. It stands on the banks of the Red Cedar River, convenient to the athletic field, and harmonizes perfectly with its picturesque surroundings. The finishing is of an unusual excellence throughout, no expense or trouble having been spared to keep to the highest standards. The gymnasium is superior, not only in architecture and finish, but also in completeness of equipment. The physical, recreative, and athletic activities of the College have been fully provided for, all the fixtures and apparatus being of the latest and most approved type. The gymnasium room proper, which occupies the second and third stories of the building, measures 165 by 75 feet. It is completely fitted with swinging and flying rings, horizontal and parallel bars, ropes, ladders, bucks, leather horses, etc., and provides three basket ball courts. A sixteen-lap running track, surfaced with cork, circles the room. The first floor is given over to the offices and service rooms. Among the latter are a reading room, an examination room, rooms for boxing, fencing, and wrestling, and two service suites, one for the home team and one for the visiting teams. These suites are fully equipped with dressing 136 rooms, showers, and lockers. The basement contains 1,000 steel lockers of the most modern design, and complete storing, dressing, and bathing facilities, twenty showers featuring the latter. The swimming pool, located in a wing of the main building, is really the feature of the gymnasium. The pool room is the most spacious in the country, and the pool itself the largest in the Middle West. It is ninety feet long, thirty feet wide, and ten feet deep at the diving end. The wing which encloses the pool is finished entirely in white, the floor and pool being faced with white tile. A particularly pleasing feature of the arrangements is the fact that accommoda­ tions have been provided for the women of the College. Separate shower, dressing and lounging rooms have been installed to care for their needs. Chester L. Brewer, Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics, has charge of the building and its appurtenances. His directorship insures the full and constructive utilization of all the advantages of the gymnasium. Mr. Brewer’s return to M. A. C. at this time is unusually significant. The combination—an athletic building which is unexcelled and a director who stands at the top of his profession, honored as sound teacher, wise leader, and prince of gentlemen—points to a period in the history of M. A. C. which will be marked by constant and constructive progress in the athletic and recreative life of the College. Ramsey, DeMond, Davis, Kurtz, Hammes Gauthier, Brewer, Brown, Plant, McKibbin, Musselman, Keifer Athletic Board of Control Since June, 1915, the present Athletic Board of Control h^s been in existence, and during that time its help in connection with athletics at M. A. C. has been invaluable. Its purpose, in conjunction with the head of the athletic department, has been to pass upon all financial obligations, assist in arranging the schedules and in promoting athletics at M. A. C. up to its highest standard and efficiency. It can easily be seen that the Athletic Board of Control is here to stay on account of its fine record of the past. ATHLETIC BOARD OF CONTROL 1917-1918 Chairman, L. C. Plant Secretary, C. L. Brewer Treasurer, A. M. Brown MEMBERS C. L. Brewer L. C. Plant H. H. Musselman C. W. McKibbin Dr. F. S. Kedzie G. C. Gauthier Ex-Officio A. M. Brown Earl Keifer Frank Davis R. J. DeMond C. F. Ramsey J. Schepers Members-Elect Senior Junior J. Hammes L. D. Kurtz Michigan Agricultural College Track Records 100-Yard Dash 220-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash Half-mile Run Mile Run Two-mile Run 120-Yard High Hurdle 220-Yard Low Hurdle Running Broad Jump Running High Jump Shot Put Hammer Throw Discus Pole Vault One-Mile Relay H. E. Moon H. E. Moon C. J. Oviatt E. Sheldon E. Sheldon Ralph Carr G. W. Shaw H. E. Beatty H. E. Moon C. F. Lord A. L. Campbell R. Vosper W. W. Blue C. W. Loveland rC. W. Oviatt J G. H. Allen ] J. W. Knecht lG. H. Bignell 1904 1904 1908 1916 1915 1908 1910 1915 1904 1912 1910 1910 1915 1914 10 s 22% s 51% s 1:59 4:36% 9:56 15% 25% 22 feet 6 feet 1 inch 41 feet Yz inch 126 feet 123 feet 4 inches 11 feet 6 inches 1908 3:31% Monogram Men in College Archer Atkins Bailey Bassett Brigham Coryell DeMond Franson Garrett Hammes Higbie Kurtz Kellogg Leffler Longnecker Mills McCool Miller Murray Montgomery Oas Ramsey Snider Thompson Turner FOOTBALL 1 4 2 Brewer Hammes Oas McCool Bailey Turner Thompson Franson Coryell Snider Bassett Ramsey Leffler Kellogg Montgomery Archer Gauthier Miller GIFFORD JULIAN BREWER GAUTHIER F ootball OFFICERS Head, Coach, Chester L. Brewer Assistant Coach, George E. Gauthier Line Coach, Chester G. Gifford BacJcfield Coach, George Julian Reserve Coach, R. C. Huston All-Fresh Coach, Howard E. Beatty Captain, Sherman Coryell Manager, Russell F. Montgomery Trainer, Jimmy Dugan VARSITY MONOGRAMS AWARDED Sherman Coryell, Captain C. F. Ramsey, Captain-Elect J. H. H ammes R. G. Oas •I. J. Snider J. E. Turner SEASON’S RESULTS C. J. Thompson P. F. McCool H. E. Franson C. F. Bassett R. F. Montgomery - - Hgjl - - - - - - |r. V" - - - - - 7 3 0 0 0 6 0 7 0 - Alma Kalamazoo College U. of Michigan U. of Detroit Western State Normal Northwestern University U. of North Dakota Syracuse - Camp McArthur - - - - - - - - - - 14 7 27 14 14 30 23 -21 20 - H. W. Miller L. Archer P. F. Bailey M. J. Leffler O. T. Kellogg M. A. C. - M. A. C. M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. H ' - - - The Season of 1917 CAPTAIN CORYELL MANAGER R. F. MONTGOMERY CAPTAIN-ELECT RAMSEY The season of 1917 is one that is unique in the annals of football history in more ways than one. A glance at the season’s scores shows that the M. A. C. team failed to win even a practice game. A second glance shows that the coaching staff is one of highest caliber. Still more remarkable is the fact that the student body loyally supported the team and points with pride to its “clean slate.” The reason for these unusual features is not obscure. The M. A. C. football veterans were to be found in the training camps, in the navy and in heroic France. The handful of under classmen who had previous varsity experience were used as a nucleus by Coach Brewer about which to fashion the raw recruits into the semblance of a team. In this the coaching staff succeeded to a gratifying extent, as much by instilling in the recruits the undying M. A. C. spirit as by polish of team work. The Michigan game found an increased quota of M. A. .C. students in the stands regardless of the recognized fact that the team had no chance to win; and right well were the words of Brewer fulfilled, that “the Michigan men will know they have been in a fight,”;Tor the Aggie players, out-weighed and out-generaled, fought so fiercely that the score at half time stood only 6-0 against them. In the second half the battered men could not stem the tide so successfully and the final count stood 27-0. The Syracuse game was played on Homecoming Day, and although the score is recorded as 21-7, the game was so hotly contested that M. A. C. was clearly entitled to half the honors, and the Aggie alumni who had come to find out what was the matter with the team,” remained to rejoice with the student body that although losing, the M. A. C. spirit could still be high and victorious. 1917 Varsity Reserves E. S. Anderson P. G. Borgman H. N. Chapel R. H. Kelty E. Lord R. H. Major C. S. McKenzie 1917 Scrub Football L. R. Bliss W. J. Bugai R. I. Bönninghausen H. T. Campbell J. A. Chisholm W. DeYoung C. L. Frankenfield R. H. Gorsiine J. E. Kotilla H. Koopman B. F. Latter R. L. McGaw R. V. Perry W. V. Taylor L. C. Terwilliger W. H. Thies S. E. Wolf J. E. Yarger E. D. Younker Bñ5KETBñLL Hammes Brewer Snider Kurtz Archer Murray Higbie Gauthier Brigham Garrett w Coach Gauthier Basket Ball Captain B. Murray Coach G. E. Gauthier THE TEAM Murray, Captain, F. Higbie, C. Snider, F. Brigham, F. Hammes, G. Kurtz,G. Garrett, G. Archer,, G. SCHEDULE AND RESULTS Opponents M.A.C January 9 J anuary 11 January 18 J anuary 19 January 25 January 26 F ebruary 1 February 7 February 8 F ebruary15 February 23 March 2 March .9 - Camp Custer Enlisted Men at M. A. C., University of Michigan at Ann Arbor Hope College at Holland - Camp Custer Officers at M. A. C. St. Johns University at Toledo >f: m Detroit Y. M. C. A. at Detroit Notre Dame at M. A. C. Notre Dame at South Bend - - Northwestern University at Evanston Hope at M. A. C. - Oberlin at M. A. C. U. of M. at M. A. C. Detroit Y. M. C. A. at M. A. C. • 7 - - • _ - - - - - - - - - - - ■ - - - 27 17 33 20 19 34 12 25 19 10 20 33 16 16 13 23 24 27 20 27 23 16 35 35 25 23 1918 Basket Ball Using Captain Murray, the only veteran from last year’s team, as a nucleus, Coach Gauthier succeeded in building up a team whose season’s work was a real suc­ cess in spite of the fact only six of the fifteen games played were won. Being pitted against veteran teams accounts for the first five defeats, but progress was made to such an extent that six of the last ten games were won. Old time rivalry, the same as in other sports, existed between M. A. C. and U. of M., and we only regret that we were on |.jie short end 0f the score in both encounters. B. MURRAY, Captain The real game of the season was with Oberlin. Discarding the “bird cage Armory,” the game was held in the new gymnasium and the opening was celebrated by a clean-cut victory over the Ohioians with 35-23 score. The game was nip and tuck all the way through and by sheer grit and fight M. A. C. won. To Captain Murray belongs the lion’s share of the team’s work. His fight and “pep” in every game more than made up for his lack in size. His loss by gradua­ tion will be keenly felt next year. Although not a star at jumping, Higbie at center was in the game every minute, fighting to the last minute. His spectacular long shots were the features in most of the games. Snider and Brigham, both new men, easily adapted themselves to dropping the ball in the basket, and they too, made up in aggressiveness what they lacked in size. In Kurtz and Hammes, Gauthier had two guards whose defensive work largely accounts for the showing of the team during the latter part of the season. To Coach Gauthier a great deal of credit must be given in building up such a team out of entirely new men. If the uncertainty of conditions does not interfere, an! excellent team can be looked forward to, as only Brigham and Captain Murray are lost through graduation. baseball 1 5 2 Fry Millard Oas Hinkle McWilliams Hood Frimodig Fick Mills DeMond Willman Hammes Ronan Pratt Morrissey The 1917 Baseball Season Director of Athletics, George Gauthier Coach, John Morrissey Assistant Coach, A. L. Bibbins Manager, Clem C. Fry Captain, H. A. Fick Our baseball season of 1917 was a success consider­ ing the confusion occasioned by the many men leaving College on account of the war. As in the previous year, John Morrissey wa,s with us as coach, and he was ably assisted by Bibbins, who also spent much of his time coaching the All-Fresh. We won six games and lost five. Much credit for this showing must go to Coach John Morrissey, whose knowledge of the art of baseball goes back to the period just succeeding '‘Pop” Anson and preceding Ty Cobb. CAPTAIN FICK The schedule was not played out. The southern trip, on which we were to play West Virginia University, West Virginian Wesleyan, Washington and Jefferson University, University of Pittsburg, and Carnegie Tech- nical, was not taken on account of the shortness of the term. Nor did we play Michigan, as they had canceled all of their athletics for the rest of the year. ■ —1-V-. Five of last year’s . 4 veterans were on hand for the first call for candidates. 1 hey were Fick, Frimodig, Hood, Me Willi ams and DeMond. This was a very good nucleus about which to start, and after weeding out the best from a gathering of forty or fifty embryo base- ballers, Coach Morrissey soon had a team whipped into shape. captain-elect DeMOND Things looked very good indeed when we started the season by taking Olivet into camp by a 19-2 score. Marshall then came along and engaged us in two encount­ ers, the home team taking the first by a 6-2 score, and the visitors took the long end in the second by a 2-1 score Both were snappy games, especially the second, which kept the spectators on edge every minute of the game. Western State Normal then came along and handed us a beating to the tune of 5-3. Last year they G. FRY, Manager beat “Frenchie” DeMond 2-0, and this year there was no difference, they beat him again. The game with Western Reserve University was a farce. Western Reserve had a collection of what might be called “mere kids,” and we beat them 9-1, which did not add greatly to our credit. The following week the team took a trip to Notre Dame, and here we met our Waterloo. Something was certainly radically wrong, as errors of the worst kind It is needless to were made, and DeMond’s benders were knocked all over the lot. say that we were forced to take the short end of a 12-2 score. We retrieved ourselves somewhat the next Saturday by walloping Alma 12-1. Dame Fortune still continued to smile on us when we beat Niagara University 5-4 the following Friday, but the following day she deserted us, because the Polish Seminary came to town and beat us in a very exciting but drawn out game by the score of 9-8. We ended the season by playing two games with Notre Dame during Commence­ ment Week. We won the first game 5-2 and lost the second 4-2, thus giving the series to Notre Dame. Several new men brought themselves forward and showed that they had baseball ability of unusual caliber. These men were Willman, Hammes and Oas. 1917 BASEBALL SCORES _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ; M. A. C. - M. A. C. - HHH - ’ M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - M. A. C. - ■gB _ M. A. C. - - M. A. C. - - - _ _ - - • ■./_ ■■ , I . v*'-’ _ - - • 19 6 1 3 P 2 12 5 8 5 2 i - - Olivet Marshall Marshall - Western State Normal Western Reserve University Notre Dame Alma U. of Niagara - Polish Seminary Notre Dame Notre Dame ';jg§L - ||j|| - - - - “ - “ “ “ 2 2 2 5 1 12 1 4 9 2 4 MONOGRAMWINNERS DeMond, Captain-Elect Fick, Captain Fry, Manager Frimodig Hammes Hinkle Hood McWilliams Oas Mills Millard Pratt Ronan 1 5 6 Barrell Carlson Atkins Murray Beatty Peppard Lukins Warner Carver Fox Track (Season of 1917) Coach, George E. Gauthier Captain, David L. Peppard In spite of the handicap occasioned by the fracas in Europe, Coach Gauthier succeeded in building a track machine which won the Michigan Intercollegiate handily and gave Notre Dame a warm time in that meet. The new monogram winners for the season were: Barrell, hurdles; Carlson, dashes, and Carver, high jump. Peppard (Captain Barrell Carlson Carver Fox Murray Sargent SQUAD Atkins Allen Hatland J ackson Lukins Warner Warren SCORES Notre Dame at College Field, May 10, 1917 Notre Dame M. A. C. 83% 42% Intercollegiate Meet, College Field, May 12, 1917 - M. A. C. Hillsdale Ypsilanti Normal M. A. C. (All-Fresh) 53 45 18 10 Cross Country During the past season the cross country squad entered two meets, in one of which, the Intercollegiate Meet, they succeeded in placing first, thereby preventing the U. of M. from gaining permanent possession of the Cross Country Trophy which, according to the rules of the contest, becomes the property of the squad which wins it three successive times. The finish of this race was close for a three and one-half mile run, as the fourth man to finish was only one hundred feet behind the first. Geiermann and Brendel were awarded the C. C. sweaters. The other meet in which our squad participated was the annual Thanksgiving Day run of the Detroit Y. M. C. A. Second place was the best that the Aggies could secure in this race, which was run, not on the Belle Isle course, as in former years, but on the paved streets of the Metropolis. The M. A. C. squad finished as follows: Brendel, third; Longnecker, Captain, fifth; Allen, eleventh; Geiermann, seventeenth; Sturm, eighteenth. Intercollegiate Cross Country Meet, M. A. C., November 3, 1917 M. A. C. U. of M. Albion. - - ^ - - - - - 13 17 27 Time—+19 minutes 29 1-5 seconds. The order in which the men crossed the line: 1— Geiermann, M. A. C. 2— Brendel, M. A. C. Fresh. 3— Sedgewick, U. of M. 4— —Longnecker, M. A. C. 5— Stoll, U.. of M. 6— Honfsteter, Albion. 7— Isbell, Albion. 8— Allen, M. A. C. 9—Mainard, U. of M. 10— Sturm, M. A. C. 11— -Fuess, U. of M. 12— Muchan, U. of M. 13— Baldwin, M. A. C. Fresh. 14— Ressigne, Albion. 15— Buell, U. of M. 16— Vaughn, M. A. C. nTfILLTICSC./M.Hotlqnd '\9~ 1 6 0 Simmons, Parks, Tyson, Coulter, Putnam, Beatty, Graves, Van Orden, Stevenson, Roan, Johnson Wilson, Sullivan, Noblet, Wait, Miller, Swing, Leach, Wolfe, Macgregor, Knight Howard E. Beatty (Coach) All-Fresh Football All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh “ - “ - Som - - - ■ - - - ■- •.- 's - - SCORES 6 0 0 13 6 - Albion College - U. of M. All-Fresh - Notre Dame All-Fresh Ypsilanti Normal Camp Custer Ambulance - - - _ - 20 21 7 7 0 HONORS The following men were awarded the 1921 sweaters: H. C. Graves R. S. Erdlitz U. J. Noblet E. J. Mueller W. H. Simmons H. R. Swing T. X. Leach W. Parks G. Putnam C. S. Wolf C. S. Van Orderi C. T. Sullivan H. B. Wilson W. F. Knight FRESH RESERVES P. B. Coulter W. L. Johnson J. Tyson * M. R. Waite C. Macgregor S. C. Rohn C. Trumbo S. Stevenson L. H, LaFond Gauthier Robinson All-Fresh Basket Ball Although the number of victories were scarce, the All-Fresh showed the same ghting spirit as the varsity and every game was closely contested. Some excellent material will be available for the varsity néxt year. - Lansing High Mt. Pleasant Normal Western State Normal Detroit Junior College - Detroit Junior College - - |||j K '- RESULTS 33 22 24 12. 24' AlFFresh . All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh - - - - - - - - - - - - ... - - - ■' - - - - - - 29 21 18 16 26 The following men were awarded jerseys: W. Palm D. Robinson W. Foster H. Coon H. Swing F. Boyes C. Millian All-Fresh Baseball Handicapped by the lack of time in which to practice, the first All-Fresh base­ ball nine was organized and a schedule arranged. Due to the efforts of Coach Bibbiris the team developed rapidly and promises to supply the varsity with good material for the coming season. - Lansing High Owosso - Hillsdale College Ypsilanti - - RESULTS 5 1 8 3 All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh All-Fresh - - t F< ^ C O 5 The following players received numerals: N. Carr Donnelly H. Peters S. Johnston I. Snider O. Kellogg C. Doscher Robinson C. Peterson Hollis Johnson Cawood Collinson Bugai Hayes Murray Wilcox Lauder Kotilla Inter-Class Baseball, 1917 A great deal of interest was shown in the class baseball championship. The fight narrowed down to the Juniors and the Sophomores, the Seniors and the Fresh­ men being put out of the running early in the race for the flag. As can be seen by the races only two games were necessary to decide the winner. The first game ended 11-0 in favor of the Juniors and everyone thought that they would have a walk-a-way. This took place early in the season. The Sophomores,jon the other hand, did not agree with the Juniors and retaliated by winning their games with the Seniors and Freshmen and evened the right to meet the Juniors, who in the meantime had lost a game to the Seniors, for the final decision. After a hard fight, when first one side was ahead and then the other, the Juniors earned the right to wear the numerals. Scores and personnel of the team: INTER-CLASS BASKET BALL 1917 Juniors Sophomores Seniors - Freshmen - Won 6 0 Lost 1 2 4 5 .857 .714 . 200* .000 THE PERSONNEL OF THE1918TEAM W. J. Bugai W. N. Cawood W. J. Lauder W. R. Collinson B. L. Schneider C.C. Johnson J.E. Kotila L.N. Jones R.Wilcox B.M. Murray G. R. Hayes Inter-Class Track Championship Saturday, May 5, 1917, the Sophomores walked away with the track champion­ ship. Incidentally it was the first class championship credited to the class of 1919. It was a nip and tuck battle all the way with the Sophs coming out on top, followed by the Fresh five points behind. Following are the scores: 110 Yards—Franson, Soph., first; Post, Soph., second; Hice, Jr., third. Time 11 3-5 . seconds. 220-Yard Dash—Bartells, F., first; Franson, Soph., second; Hollis, F., third. Time not taken. 440-Yard Dash—Caldwell, F., first; Kurtz, F., second; Allen, Jr., third. Mile Run—Mitchell, F., first; Jackson, Soph., second; Froelick, Sen., third. 120-Yard Hurdles—Taylor, Soph., first; Nelson, Jr., second. 220-Yard Hurdles—Hatland, Soph., first; Leffler, F., second; Ryan, Jr., third. High Jump—French, Soph., first; Perry, Soph, second; Donovan, Soph., tied with two others for third. Broad Jump—De Vette, F., first; Snyder, Jr., second; Liddicoat, Soph., third. 16-Pound Shot Put—Hammes, Soph., first; Wycoff, Soph., second; Smith, Jr., third. Two Mile—Warner, Jr., first; Fox, Soph., second; Utley, Jr., third. Discus—Major, Jr., first; Leffler, F., second; Hammes, Soph., third. Pole Vault—Gardner, F., first; Stitt, F., second; Johnson, F., third. Javelin—Major, Jr., first; Franson, Soph., second; Ginter, Soph., third. STANDINGS Sophs., 53 1-3; Fresh, 48 1-3; Juniors, 27 1-3; Seniors, 1. Soph Team—Franson, Post, Allen, Jackson, Ginter, Taylor, Hatland,- French, Perry, Liddicoat, Hammes, Wycoff, Fox, Utley, Donovan. Kotilla Cawood Brigham Collinson Johnson Schneider Bugai Murray Wilcox Hayes DeYoung Inter-Class Football The Seniors, with a veteran team, easily romped over the other class teams, only three games being played. The Seniors’ backfield, composed of Murray, Bugai, 'Collinson and Johnson, found no trouble in plowing through the opposing lines for long gains. Seniors Sophomores Seniors RESULTS 24 6 13 Juniors Juniors Sophomores 0 0 0 The following men were awarded numerals: B. M. Murray W. N. Cawood W. J. Bugai W. Retzlaff R. Wilcox R. Perry W. DeYoung C. Johnson H. Froelich B. Schneider W. Collinson Nelson G. Brigham J. Kotilla F. Millard McK night Barr Bassett Terwilliger Geiermann Renwick Inter-Class Basket Ball The Sophomores, despite the fact that they already had five men on the varsity squad, were able to produce a winning team. The games were hotly contested, more real rivalry existed than ever before. The championship was never in doubt and the second year men finished the schedule with a clean slate, Barr being the mainstay of the team. - Sophomores Sophomores Sophomores Sophomores Sophomores Seniors Seniors Juniors J^Bf RESULTS 10 19 27 19 14 11 16 Seniors Freshmen Juniors Freshmen Juniors JH Juniors Juniors Freshmen - The following men wereawarded numerals: T erwilliger Barr Renwick 168 - - - - SB - McKnight Bassett o t > o Ill T. C. DEE, Varsity Yellmaster Rah! Rah! Rah! Uzz! Uzz! Uzz! M. A. C. LOCOMOTIVE Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Uzz! Uzz! Uzz! Uzz! Uzz! Uzz! M. A. C. M. A. C. Osky-wow-wow-wow-wow, Skinny-wow-wow-wow-wow. Skinny-wow-wow-wow-wow -wow-wow-wow-wow-wow! U m-rn-m-m-m-m-m-m—M A-a-a-a-a-a-a-a-a—A Ra-a-a-a-a-a-a-a-a—C M. A. C. Rah! ! ! ! Rat-a-to-thrat! to-thrat! to-thrat! Terrors-to-lick! to-lick! to-lick! Kick-a-ba-ba! Kick-a-ba-ba! M. A. C.—M. A. C.—Rah! Rah! Rah! ! ! M. A. C.! ! M. A. C.! L-a-n-s-i-n-g! Ye can’t fool the farmers, by heck! SIREN R-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-h! Varsity, Rah! R-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-h! Varsity, Rah! R-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-h! Varsity, Rah! M. A. C. Interscholastic.Meet College Field, May 24-25, 1917 220-Yard Hurdles—Kurtz, Kalamazoo, first; Brokaw, Detroit Central, second; Beard, G. R. Central, third; McCallum, Detroit Central, fourth. Time, 28.0 seconds. 100-Yard Dash—Cowan, Pontiac, first; Brown> Detroit Central, second; Hogskins, G. R. Central, third; Gleason, Detroit Eastern, fourth. Time, 10.8 seconds. Mile Run—Varde Vesse, G. R. Central, first; Cooper, Detroit Central,, second; Bruco, G. R. South, third; Gould, Detroit Central, fourth. Time, 4 minutes 45.8 seconds. 440-Yard Dash—Houston, G. R. Central, first; Mathews, Kalamazoo, second; Jones, G. R. Central, third; Brokaw, Detroit Central, fourth. Time, 54.2 seconds. 120-Yard Hurdles—Gleason, Detroit Eastern, first; Kurtz, Kalamazoo, third; Boeman, Kalamazoo, fourth; Spurrier, Detroit Eastern, fourth. Time, 17.6 seconds. 220-Yard Dash—Brown, Detroit Central, first; Houston, G. R. Central, Second; Sitts, Pontiac, third; Rockwell, Detroit Eastern, fourth. Time, 23.8 seconds. 880-Yard Dash—Jones, G. R. Central, first; Bowman, Pontiac, second; Vande Visse, G. R. Central, third; Maugleson, Muskegon, fourth. Time, 2 minutes 11 seconds. Shot Put—Boweison, Otsego, first; Dunphy, Lansing, second; Walters, Otsego, third; Brown, Detroit Central, fourth. Distance, 41 feet 8 inches. Discus—Beltz, Lansing, first; Brown, Detroit Central, second; Shears, Otsego, third; Bishop, Lansing, fourth. Distance, 104 feet 1 inch. Pole Vault—Bailey, Beckenridge and Slaughter, Detroit Central, tied for first; Hamilton, Lansing, and Kean, Detroit Eastern, tied for third. Height, 10 feet 8 inches. High Jump—Hatch, St. Joseph, first; Kurtz, Kalamazoo, second; Platt, Kalamazoo, third; Anderson, Buckenridge and Spurrier, Detroit Eastern; tied for fourth. Height, 5 feet 6 inches. Broad Jump—Shears, Otsego, and Clark, Cass Tech., tied for first; Kurtz, Kala­ mazoo, third; Brokaw, Detroit Central, and Radford, Lansing, tied for fourth. Distance, 19 feet 11 inches. Hammer Throw—Schmidt, Saginaw Eastern, first; Shears, Otsego, second; Steleke, G. R. Central, third; Beltz, Lansing, fourth. Distance, 116 feet. Class A Relay—Beard, G. R. Central, first; Steketee, Houston, Hopkins. Time, 1 minute 41 seconds. Class B Relay—Alma, first; Howell, Walker, Heischberger, Wheaton. Time, 1 minute 45.8 seconds. SUMMARY OF POINTS Grand Rapids Central 33, Detroit Central 25^/2, Kalamazoo 20, Otsego 16, Lansing 12, Pontiac 12, Detroit Eastern 9, Alma 5, Saginaw Eastern 5, St. Joseph 5, Detroit Cass Tech. 4, Grand Rapids South 2, Muskegon 1. SIZMEWiK Sammy on Patriotism Oh, we’re drillin’, drillin’, drillin’ and these days are all alike, An’ Fridays always bean day, and on Saturdays we hike, And the casual observer may sincerely ask to know Why we’re any better soldiers than we were two months ago, - And we’d have a job explaining where the big improvements lie, But there’s l-ittle things a-plenty and we’ll make it bye and bye. An’ the day ’ll come when actually we’re on the Kaiser’s track If we keep our lungs expanded and throw our shoulders back. If a feller isn’t yeller an’ tries to do his best, He is in it every minute and of course he’ll arch his chest. While we’re workin’, workin’, workin’, and the work don’t count at all, There is some as waxes peevish and seems inclined to squall. “What’s the use of all this scrubbin’?’.’ is what you hear ’em say, “When we do the same jobs over for each inspection day? “What’s the use of evenin’ classes when we get the same old dope “How to tell a block of triton from a cake of laundry soap, “How to tie the Spanish bowline and the bloomin’ correct bend, “How to semaphore and wig-wag?” an’ I want to say, “My friend, “If a feller isn’t yeller, and tries to do his best, “He’ll be pert at riggin’ tackle and he’s helpin’ with the rest.” As we talk and talk together there is some opinions formed As to proper disposition and where slackers should be classed, An’ it stricks your Uncle Dudley that there’s some right here in sight That slacks when at attenshun an’ backslides at squads right An’ gawps around at revielle like pumpkins at the fair, An’ goes with busted leggin’ strings and hay seed in their hair An’ I feel inclined to whisper to every such galoot, When I see him pass the Captain and forget the hand salute. If a feller isn’t yeller an’ tries to do his best, He’ll be snappy with the little things and that’s what I suggest. But we’re learnin’, learnin’, learnin’ and when we go acrost We’ll try our level darnd’st to remember what we’ve lost, And we’ll wish we’d learned it better while the learnin’ was so good, But we won’t be half so sorry if we’ve done the best we could, If my patri’tism’s honest as I pray the Lord it is— I’ll pay pertic’lar ’tenshun to my own pertic’lar biz An’ every single order that is to my good luck to get I’ll make a little snappier than I’ve ever made it yet, If a feller isn’t yeller, he’ll do the best he can To bat a straight one thousand as a true American. And we’re hopin’, hopin’, hopin’, that when we get our turn We’ll be plumb full of ginger to use the stuff we learn And witness our sincerity while hopin’ of these hopes By the pep we show in pickin’ up the act of splicin’ ropes, By the way we jab a shovel, by the way we swing a pick, By the way we keep o’stichin’ till the order comes to move, We thus attest our true intent to serve the land we love, If a feller isn’t yeller, why he’ll do the best he can And Uncle Sam will make of him a first-class fighting man. R. S. Clark. ’18 172 Sergeant P. J. Cross M. A. C. has lost a true soldier and a sincere friend in the death of Sergeant “Paddy” Cross, which occurred January 27, 1918. President Kedzie has truly expressed the sentiment of the students, alumni and faculty in the following estimate: “Sergeant Cross’ first appointment as instructor in military science dates from May 1, 1910. His services in the military department have been of the greatest value both I do not overstate the matter, I believe, to the College and to the nation at large. when I say that the work of Sergeant Cross developed interest in military work and created in the minds of our students a more just opinion of the services which a soldier renders to his government. I believe it is due largely to him that our students have responded in so great a measure to our needs in the present conflict.” 173 Engineering Reserve Corps Recently the War Department provided for the entering of service by engineering students in the technical branch of the enlisted Reserve Corps. Under such regulations as the Chief of Engineering may prescribe a portion of the students, as named by the school faculty, pursuing an engineering course in one of the approved engineering schools listed in the War Department may enlist in the Reserve Corps of the Engineering Department. This enlistment places the registrant in class five on the ground that he is in the military service of the United States. A student so enlisted must be a citizen of the United States and of draft age. He must be pursuing a course for a technical degree at one of the schools on the list of technical schools approved by the Secretary of War. Since entering the institution he must have made a record of standing which will place him among the first third, based primarily on the scholastic records, of the young men who have graduated from that institution in the past ten years. Upon completing such a course he becomes a private in the Corps of Engineers. M. A. Clis on this technical list and twenty men took advantage of this fact and on January 28th took the oath of enlistment into the Engineer Enlisted Reserve Corps. , These men have passed the physical examination and fulfilled the other requirements. They have been placed on the inactive list and will continue their courses, meanwhile reporting to the Chief of Engineers every month. C. J. Alder, ’20 * L. L. Bateman, ’20 T. C. Dee, ’18 W. O. Dow, ’18 H. L. Froelich, ’18 P. H. Gates, ’18 Members E. C. Hach, ’20 M. Harkavy, ’18 W. E. Hartman, ’18 H. E. Hemans, ’20 P. A. Howell, ’19 C. C. Johnson, ’18 R. B. Kling, ’20 L. S. Plee, ’18 R. A. Shenefield, ’19 W. F. Spletstoser, ’21 E. H. Walker, ’18 C. R. Wiggins, ’20 174 The R eserve Officers’ Training Corps Military Science has been put upon a ne;w basis at M. A. C. during the past year. The work now offered is laid down by the War Department in General Orders No. 49, which states that “the primary object of establishing units of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps is to qualify, by systematic and standard methods of training, students at civil educational institutions for reserve officers.” The course is divided into two parts : ( 1 ) The first two years are required by the College of all physically fit male students as a prerequisite for graduation and requires three hours per week of instruction. (2) The last two years are elective on the part of the student. Five hours per week are required, of which three are devoted to the practical duties of training the students in the first two years’ work and the other two hours are devoted to studv of more advanced military science under the personal charge of thé commandant. The commissioned officers are selected on a competitive basis from the upper classmen who have good records and are taking the elective work. The non­ commissioned officers may also be selected from this same group but in case there are not enough, some appointments may be made from the lower classes. Appointments are made only after a written examination, a competitive drill and a careful scanning of the applicant’s scholastic record. Students with failures against their records are not eligible. A physical examination is also required for all those who take the course. The new uniforms as prescribed by the War Department, consist of an olive drab wool cap, coat, and breeches, web belt, canvas leggings, two flannel shirts, and a pair of tan shoes, all of the army model. To secure this uniform the student must deposit forty dollars at the secretary’s office. Although this seems high it is well worth the money when we consider: First, that as a member of the training units authorized by Congress, the student is expected to wear the uniform at all times, thus effecting a great saving of his civilian clothes. Second, that last year the State Defense Board allowed a bonus of ten dollars toward the cost of the uniform and this will probably be repeated for the incoming students. Third, that the federal government allows fourteen In addition to this dollars each year to all members of the training units. îefund all commissioned officers receive commutation .of rations which is thirty cents per day during the school year. The course is under the guidance of Major Philip G. Wrightson, U. S. Army, retired, and First Sergeant Charles H. Robinson, U. S. Army, retired. M. A. C. is indeed fortunate in securing these men, both of whom are of wide experience and proven ability. Veterinary Reserve Corps The Medical Enlisted Reserve Corps is similar to the Engineer Corps. It is to the veterinary students what the engineering corps is to the engineers. The applicant for enlistment must be a citizen of the United States, twenty-one years old, and a bona-fide student at one of the well recognized veterinary schools approved by the Surgeon General. After passing the physical examination and fulfilling the other requirements, the registrant is placed in Class 5 on the ground that he is in the military service of the United States. M. A. C. is one of the twenty-five approved veterinary schools and has men enlisted in this Reserve Corps. There is a need of veterinarians in the army and the War Department has authorized the commanders of the various cantonments to allow such men that are already drafted but were pursuing a veterinary course at one of the recognized schools to return and finish their course. Men who avail themselves of this oppor­ tunity are required to attend the summer session of school and finish their course as In furtherance of this plan the Senior veterinary students put in soon as possible. extra time on their studies and were graduated on April 12th. Officers’ Association Engles, M°sher, Manby, Buttolph, Fischer, Wilcox, Strang, Tngersoll, Fisher Stephens, Doyle, Harman, Overmeyer, Wrightson, Robinson, Keating, Dee, Calrow Keydel, Hill, Benkert, Himebaugh, Webb The American University Union in Europe M. A. C. is now a member of the American University Union in Europe, an organization whose object “shall be to meet the needs of American university and college men who are in Europe for military or other service in the cause of the Allies.” The Union has its headquarters in Paris and has a London branch similar to the one in Paris although not as extensive. The constitution of the Union gives the following as the objects of the organization: To provide at moderate cost a home with the privileges of a simple club for American college men and their friends passing through Paris or on a furlough, the privileges to include an information bureau, a writing and news­ paper room, a library, a dining room, bedrooms, baths, social features, etc. To provide a headquarters for the various bureaus already established in France by the representative American universities, colleges and technical schools. To co-operate with these bureaus when established, and in their absence to aid institution, parents, or friends in securing information about college men m all forms of war service, reporting on casualties, visiting the sick and wounded, giving advice, serving as a means of communication, etc. Each college included in the membership pays dues for the maintenance of It is our wish that all com- the Union in proportion to the size of the institution. our men “over there” will have the opportunity to avail themselves of the forts and privileges which the Union affords. ■ Radio Telegraphy The War Department, upon the request of President Kedzie, authorized the estab­ lishment at M. A. C. of a course in radio telegraphy. The course was duly organized early last December and Paul J. Andrews, a with 16 man, who has had con­ siderable experience as a wireless operator in the navy, was secured as instructor. Five College credits are required for this course, but only those men who are registered in the draft are eligible. The work does not excuse a man from draft, if drafted before completing the course, he receives, statements from his instructor and President Kedzie as to his standing and ability.' Upon arrival at camp, he may present these to the commanding officer and, at the same time, make application to be transferred to a radio school where he may finish his course. A great deal of interest is being taken in this work. It is a branch of the service which requires well trained men and the' men of M. A. C. are entering the field as readily as they have answered the calls to other branches of the service. 180 » ä f f Honorary Fraternities ALPHA PSI ALPHA ZETA OMICRON NU SCABBARD AND BLADE SEM BOT TAU BETA PI VARSITY CLUB XI SIGMA PI Tau Beta Pi Dow, Sawyer, Johnson, Bissell, Brigham Dee, Doyle, Keating, Osborne Tau Beta Pi Honorary Engineering Fraternity Established 1885 Michigan claims three chapters of Tau Beta Pi, and of these three, the M. A. C. chapter was the first to receive its charter, hence the name Alpha of Michigan. The other two chapters are Beta, of the School of Mines, and Gamma, of University of Michigan. The Alpha chapter was founded in 1892 and was the first to receive a charter from the parent chapter of Lehigh University. There are at present 32 active and several alumni chapters with a total membership of 7,500. Eligibility to membership is confined to those of the engineering course who stand in the first quarter of their class at the beginning of their Senior year and the first eight of the Junior class at the beginning of the winter term—the Junior having the highest scholarship record at the beginning of his Junior year being counted in this eight and initiated in the fall term. In the final selection of members only those can qualify who possess a good moral character, congeniality and those kindred characteristics which make for leadership among men. HONORARY AND FACULTY MEMBERS Dean G. W. Bissel Prof. C. M. Cade Prof. M. M. Cory Prof. A. Iddles Prof. M. F. Johnson Prof. C. A. Melick Prof. H. H. Musselman Prof. J. A. Poison Prof. A. R. Sawyer Prof. H. K. Vedder G. E. Gauthier OFFICERS President, R. L. Doyle Vice-President, T. W. Keating Recording Secretary, W. O. Dow Treasurer, S. T. Wellman Corresponding Secretary, E. Osborne Associate Editor, T. C. Dee Cataloguer, G. H. Brigham R. L. Doyle T. C. Dee E. R. Benkert B. W. Bellinger R. S. Clark Seniors W. O. Dow G. H. Brigham , Junior E. Osborne N. L. Reed 1918 Men in Service W. E. DeYoung A. M. Hopperstead M. G. Jewett T. W. Keating S. T. Wellman E. D. Crandall L. N. Jones W. G. Retzlaff Alpha Zeta Strang, Thies, McKinney, Blades, Buttolph, Younker, Miller Cawood, Jordan, Wilcox, Iddles, Wattles, Kotilla, Mailman 186 Alpha Zeta Honorary Agriculture Fraternity Kedzie Chapter^ Organized 1902 Established 1897 Prof. H. J. Eustace Pres. F. S. Kedzie E. C. Lindemann J. W. Nicholson R. E. Loree M. A. Wattles H. A. Iddles R. M. Shane H. V. Jordan E. E. Ungren L. W. Miller Prof. Thomas Gunson Prof. R. H. Pettit J. H. Gretton E. R. Trangmar A. G. Kettunen G. I. Blades H. Buttolph A. L. Strang F. W. Fitzpatrick E. D. Younker W. H. Thies HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. W. H. French Dean R. S. Shaw Dr. J. L. Snyder ALUMNI MEMBERS C. H. Spurway E. C. Volz Seniors W. L. Mallmann J. E. Kotila R. A. Wilcox W. N. Cawood H. H. McKinney Juniors R. N. Wright OFFICERS Chancellor, M. A. Wattles Censor, W. N. Cawood Scribe, J. E. Kotila Chronicler, Rex Wilcox Treasurer, H. V. Jordan Omicron Nu Spaford, Caswell, Snyder, McIntyre, Grüner, Hopphan, Harris Grettenberger, Foley, Johnson, MacLachlan, Keiser, Cargo, Chubb, Carney, Rigterink Stevenson, Dundas, Rogers, Lankton, Lewis, Yeiter, Cottrell, Higgins 188 Omicron Nu Honorary Home Economics Sorority Organized! Alpha Chapter at M. A. C., 1912 HONORARY MEMBERS Miss Isabel Beirer, University of Illinois Mrs. Alice P. Norton,. University of Chicago Mrs. Jennie Haver, University of Idaho Miss Belle Crowe, Madison, Wisconsin Miss Bessie Hover, Owosso, Michigan FACULTY MEMBERS Dean Georgia White Mrs. Lillian Peppard Miss Mary Edmonds Miss Edna Garvin Miss Zae Northrup Miss Louise Freyhofer Miss Clara Morris Miss Louise Clemens Miss Paulina Raven Miss Anna Cowles Miss Zella Bigelow Miss Mae Persons OFFICERS President, Arnot Lewis Vice-President, Miss Edmonds Secretary, Gladys Gruner Treasurer, Ruth Cargo Seniors Ruth Cargo Merle Chubb Mary Crocker Muriel Dundas May Foley Marian Grettenberger Gladys Gruner Beulah Harris Doris Stevenson Aileen Carney Mary Johnson Bertha Lankton Arnot Lewis Mahle MacLachlan Edith Mason Fanny Rogers Julia Rigterink Lorenda Zimmermann Florence Yeiter Juniors Orenna Caswell Mabell Higgins Aletha Keiser Margaret Snyder Lavina Cottrell Ethel Hopphan Agnes McIntyre Ethyl Spaford 189 McKinney, Bennett, Allen, Anderson, Giltner Gillette, Kotilla, Bessey, Hibbard, Deadman Dorr, Rudolph, Clements, Diehl, Diehm Sem Bot Honorary Botanical Society Organized 1913 OFFICERS Socius, Dr. E. A. Bessey Lord Wardens, Dr. G. H. Coons, Dr. H. P. Hibbard Mistress of Robes, Bertha A. Hollister Vice-Warden, H. H. McKinney Master of Exchequer, J. E. Kotilla Master of Roll, H. C. Diehl HONARIOUS Dr. Ward Giltner GRADUATE MEMBERS Ordinarii Foster Rudolph N OYITII A. G. Kettune UNDER GRADUATE MEMBERS Novitii B. C. Stone H. Dorr, Jr. E, D. Longneeker H. H. McKinney C. F. Murphy Ezra Levin D. A. Seeley H. C. Diehl E. S. Anderson J. E. Kotilla W. F. Allen O. Diehm C. W. Bennett J. W. Nicholson R. W. Peterson Hazel Deadman Leila Clements Edna Gillette S. Gershberg F, W. Fitzpatrick Giltner, LaBar, Chamberlain, Hanson, Hallman, Beaver Benner, Lyman, Mater, Lamoureaux Dunn, Bandeen, Trubey, Robbins Alpha Psi Honorary Veterinary Fraternity Iota Chapter Organized 1915 OFFICERS President, O. O. Mater Vice-President, C. E. LaBar Treasurer, S. G. Bandeen Secretary, D. C. Beaver HONORARY MEMBERS Dr. Ward Giltner Dr. F. W. Chamberlain FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. J. P. Hutton Dr. J. W. Benner D. C. Beaver A. R. Dunn C. F. LaBar S. G. Bandeen Dr. R. P. Lyman Dr. E. J. Hallman D. J. Lamoureaux K. B. Hanson G. W. Trubey G. D. Robbins Seniors O. O. Mater Juniors 191 Varsity Club Mills, Archer, Franson, Hammes Brewer, Murray, Turner, DeMond, Ramsey Thomson, Kellogg, Snider, Miller 192 Varsity Club Honorary Athletic Fraternity Organized 1915 HONORARY MEMBERS Pres. F. S. Kedzie Coach C. W. Brewer Dean G. W. Bissell Mr. J. B. Hasselman OFFICERS Prof. J. F. Cox Prof. R. C. Huston Mr. G. E. Gauthier President, S. Coryell Vice-President, J. E. Turner Corresponding Secretary, A. W. Atkins Recording Secretary, C. F. Ramsay Treasurer, R. J. DeMond Permanent Treasurer, Prof. R. C. Huston S. Coryell L. A. Archer A. W. Atkins II. E. Franson C. Bassett, O. T. Kelloggoo J. E. Turner W. E. Miller C. F. Ramsav R. G. Oas J. Snider C. J. Thomson Seniors P. F. McCool B. Murray Juniors J. Hammes R. Mont gomery Sophomores M. Lefler 193 Scabbard and Blade Scabbard and Blade is a national honorary fraternity composed of officers in the cadet corps of the various colleges and universities. It was organized in 1902 to further the interest in military work among the students. Company “K” of the 1st Regiment was established at M. A. C. in 1914 and since that time has enjoyed a very successful career. At the call for officers for the National Army nearly the , entire roll of Company “K” responded and left school to attend the first Reserve Officers’ Training Camp at Fort Sheridan. The same conditions are expected to recur this spring and it has therefore been decided to discontinue the active chapter for the period of the war, arrangements being made for the re-establishment thereafter. HONORARY Major Philip G. Wrightson, U. S. A., Retired FACULTY AND RESIDENT MEMBERS Prof. R. G. Saxton E. J. Menery J. W. Nicholson ACTIVE (1917-1918) Colonel W. G. Retzlaf Major W. N. Cawood Major T. W. Keating Major C. J. Overmeyer Captain R. M. Maitland Captain L. Calrow Captain T. C. Dee Captain R. L. Doyle Captain E. C. Fischer Captain J. H. Harman Captain C. J. Perry Captain R. Wilcox 1st Lieutenant J. L. Engels 1st Lieutenant R. J. Liddicoat 1st Lieutenant R. T. Stephens Webb, Thompson, Kessler, Dorr, Chittenden,,Sanford, Bennett, Diehl Xi Sigma Pi Honorary Forestry Fraternity Alpha Chapter Organized at the University of Washington, Seattle, 1908 Beta Chapter at M. A. C., 1916 HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. A. K. Chittenden Prof. F. H. Sanford H. C. Hilton , E. C. Mandenberg, ’15 F M. S. Schaaf, State Forester RESIDENT MEMBERS Prof. A. K. Chittenden Prof. F. H. Sanford E. C. Mandenberg OFFICERS Forester, H. Dorr, Jr. Associate Forester, R. I. Thompson Secretary and Fiscal Agent, H. C. Diehl H. Dorr, Jr. H. C. Diehl J. M. Bennett Seniors Juniors N. A. Kessler R. I. Thompson W. E. Webb Literary Societies AE-THEON ATHENAEUM AUROREAN COLUMBIAN DELPHIC DORIAN ECLECTIC EUNOMIAN FORENSIC HERMIAN HESPERIAN IONIAN. OLYMPIC ORPHIC PHI DELTA PHYLEAN TRIMOIRA UNION LITERARY ERO ALPHIAN FERONIAN LETONIAN SESAME SORORIAN THEMIAN AE-Theon Organized 1915 HONORARY MEMBER Prof. A. K. Chittenden RESIDENT MEMBERS Mr. A. B. Love M. B. Eichelberger Fall Term Winter Term OFFICERS President, C. J. Perry Vice-President, F. H. Wildern Secretary, F. D. Morley Treasurer, H. Dorr, Jr. Marshal, E. S. McCaughan Alumni Secretary, H. Dorr,Jr. President,H. Dorr, Jr. Vice-President, H. T. Campbell Secretary,H. E. Franson T reasurer,P. G. Borgman Marshal, I. V. Anderson Alumni Secretary, G. E. Lankton C. J. Perry H. Dorr, Jr. Seniors P. G. Borgman H. T. Campbell I. V. Anderson W. F. Case A. H. Case ' E. D. Fay R. W. Billings N. W. Beltz W. Donovan L. D. Brown S. F. Beatty G. E. Lankton F. D. Morley E. S. McCaughan W. B. Sutherland H. W. Matzinger W. S..Rider C. Leveaux C. P. Rigby F. H. Wildern R. T. Roblin H. L. Smith Juniors H. E. Franson Sophomores J. B. Golden Freshmen G. N. McGunegle MEN IN SERVICE Seniors C. E. Glohr N. D. Koleman V. Ludwig W. Lauder Juniors B. Bergstrom W. T. Gates P. H. Lemon Sophomores K. B. Baughman 199 Athenaeum Buckman, Zuidema, Quigley, Atkin, Beltz, Laur, Fox Cleraetsen, Way, Taylor, Krueger, Smith, Lyon, Jordan Den Uyl, Luxford, Hubbard, Baur, Simmons, Hamilton, Parker Athenæum Organized 1909 HONORARY MEMBER Howard E. Beatty RESIDENT MEMBERS W. Irving Gilson Howard E. Beatty OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, William V. Taylor Vice-President, Elmer F. Way Secretary, Donald Scott Lyon Marshal, Otto W. Wissman Steward, Edwin R. Smith President, William V. Taylor Vice-President, Arthur W; Atkin Secretary, Milton R. Fox Marshal, Harry Buehman Steward, Howard V. Jordan Howard Vernon Jordan Donald Scott Lyon Elmer Francis Way Milton Russel Fox James Olin Beavis Earle J. Laur Thurman M. Luxford Walter Heath Simmons Harold Edmond Parker Harry Buehman Frank Aurelius Baur Verne Leon Harris Seniors Juniors Edwin Reed Smith William Vernon Taylor Keith Fortune Kruger Arthur William Atkin Sophomores Freshmen Richard Quigley Albert Zuidema Lester Leonard Beltz Harold MacRae Hubbard Daniel DenUyl J ohn Hamilton Walter Sidney Bersey Aurorian Baldwin, Prentice, Kennedy, Bryant, Smith, Powers Roth, Beers, Harris, Frye, Straight, Fortne}7 Dyer, Shedd, Finnigan, Nichle Aurorian Organized 1905 HONORARY MEMBER Prof. A. J. Clark FACULTY MEMBERS Prof. Geo. Brown E. C. Kiefer R. S. Hudson H. L. Bancroft Z. G. Goodell RESIDENT MEMBERS L. H. Belknap R. Nelson R. A. Gleason OFFICERS L. R. Roosa J. J. Shawman Fall Term Winter Term President,' R. A. Beers Vice-President, F. R. Frye Secretary, M. E. Fortney Ti ’easurer, J. E. Wilkinson Registrar, F. R. Frye President, L. C. Harris Vice-President, M. E. Fortney Secretary, E. A. Roth Treasurer, L. C. Harris Registrar, F. R. Frye R. A. Beers F. R. Frye Seniors R. N. Bryant M. E. Fortney M. J. Baldwin G. T. Dyer H. W. Finnigan J. A. Kennedy Sophomores Freshmen Pledge H. W. Norman F. A. Prentice E. A. Roth D. F. Nickle E. L. Powers L. Shedd H. G. Smith Columbian Organized 1892 HONORARY MEMBERS E. H. Ryder C. S. Robinson C. A. R. Sawyer C. Armstrong FACULTY MEMBERS V. M. Shoesmith C. P. Reed O. L. Snow F. H. Sanford OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, S. T. Wellman Vice-President, W. E. Webb Secretary, H. N. Chapel Treasurer, R. M. Davies President, H. L. Fisher Vice-President,H. B. Keydel Secretary, E. E. Redfern Treasurer, R. L. McGaw S. T. Wellman H. L. Fisher Seniors Earl Baxter R. L. Baxter H. N. Chapel H. C. Dascher A. Brendel H. E. Coburn R. 0. Fleming Lee Hale Juniors S. R. Hill R. M. Davies H. B. Keydel Sophomores H. V. Hoffman E. E. Redfern Freshmen C. V. Martin T. L. Miller E. P. North S. C. Rohn Pledges R. L. McGaw W. E. Webb H. J. Ellis P. R. Von Sprecken T. H. Steel L. R. Schuon J. E. Wolf S. T. Wyatt S. V. Bottimer I. G. Hill 205 Delphic Organized 1908 HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. W. H. French Prof. L. C. Plant Prof.J. W. Renner Mr. R. E. Loree Prof. J. E. Burnett J. W. Nicholson R. E. Loree FACULTY MEMBERS OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, H. L. Froelick Vice-President, L. J. Liddicoat Secretary, H. A. Freeman Treasurer, G. W. Cooper Marshal, B. F. Latter President, 0. L. Kimble Vice-President, G. H. Mills SecretaryI C. G. Alder Treasurer, H. L. Froelick Marshal,B. F. Latter W. N. Cawood G. W. Cooper H. A. Freeman C. M. Hatland C. G. Alder O. R. Beal D. R. Coburn F. S. Jacobs K. D. Bailey R. B. Coulter Seniors H. L. Froelick O. L. Kimble Juniors B. F. Latter L. J. Liddicoat Sophomores H. M. Johnson M. J. Lefler B. W. McKinlay Freshmen R. S. Harrington F. H. Lacore T. B. Poole Pledge N. H. Tenney C. J. Overmyer A. L. Strang G. H. Mills H. C. Stark C. F. Meanwell L. R. Pless J. J. Proctor D. T. Sheppard M. B. Rann R. H. Turner Dorian Martin, Estes, Burdock, Pugsley, Allen, Overholt, Lancashire, Folks, Saxton, Townsend Gorsline, Ungren, Anderson, Ingersoll, Manby, Hint, Tliies, Perrine Yeatter, A. Gettel, F. Gettel, Weidemann, Plumb, Cargo, Brooks, Knight ■ Dorian Organized 1915 HONORARY MEMBERS Dr. M. M. McCool Prof. W. W. Johnson B. A. Faunce J. A. Berry R. N. Peterson RESIDENT MEMBERS C. G. Nobles C. A. Hoag Moss Estes OFFICERS Fall Term President, E. B. Hint Vice-President, T. L. Ingersol Secretary, E, L. Overholt Treasurer, L. E. Corrle Attorney, R. S. Clark Reporter, E. E. Ungren Marshal, H. R. Saxton Winter Term President, T. L. Ingersol Vice-President, O. O. Nater Secretary, E. S. Anderson Treasurer, J. N. Folks Attorney, W. H. Thies Reporter, R. E. Yeatter Marshal, B. J. Brooks E. S. Anderson 0. 0. Mater W. F. Allen R. D. Perrine J. M. Burdick R. J. Martin C. G. Pugsley R. E. Yeatter William Cargo ‘ P. M. Neale Seniors E. B. Hint J UNIORS J. N. Folks . W. H. Thies Sophomores G. F. Davis E. L. Overholt H. R. Saxton Freshmen H. J. Hawkins H. J. Plumb Pledges Arthur Goettle A. G. Weideman T. L. Ingersol W. F. Mamby R. H. Gorsline E. E. Ungren B. J. Brooks B. T. Knight S. C. Owen M. C. Townsend E. R. Lancashire Frank Goettle Eclectic Organized 1877 HONORARY MEMBERS Judge C. B. Collingwood Prof. C. L. Brewer Prof. H. K. Vedder Prof. R. K. Steward Mrs. Mildred Osband OFFICERS Fall Term President, Wm. Coulter Vice-President, T. W. Kea.ting Secretary, G. F. Wells Marshal, D. A. Dobie Treasurer, G. R. Benedict W inter Term President, T.W. Keating Vice-President, G. F. Wells Secretary, H."M. Renwick Marshal, Wm. Burns, Jr. Treasurer, G.R. Benedict Wm. Coulter G. F. Wells A. M. Allen R. J. Hille . M. A. Reeves C. H. Basset J. S. Holt H. M. Renwick Wm. Burns, Jr. P. Rice H. Rowley Seniors H. B. Jamieson Juniors R. T. Stephens L. C. Archer Sophomores J. H. Barr R. H. Kingery Freshmen H. L. Patterson J. M. Kelly D. Lacy R. Backus T. W. Keating T. Rudolph G. R. Benedict K. C. Guenter P. C. Yuli D. A. Dobie R. S. McBain E. P. Kehm H. Allen F. E. Shigley H. Hunter Eunomian Winston, Frazier, Hemans, Martin, McKnight, Bennett, Bentley, Snider, Osgood, F. Musselman, Powell Volz, Kettunen, Trangmar, Doyle, Miller, Hotchin, Ulbright, Davis, Iddles, Shenefleld Macgregor, Muhlitner, Kelly, Patrick, D. T. Musselman, Barnes, Kellogg, Lunden 212 Eunomian Organized 1903 HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. C. B. Mitchell Mr. P. L. Miller E. C. Lindemann G. E. Gauthier FACULTY MEMBERS E. R. Trangmar H. H. Musselman C. A. Spaulding OFFICERS A. G. Kettunen Emil Volz Fall Term Winter Term’ President, F. A. Davis Vice-President, R. C. Kinney Secretary, A. E. Winston Treasurer, H. A. Iddles President, R. L. Doyle Vice-President, R. N. Wright Secretary, B. W. Martin Treasurer, S. M. Powell F. A. Davis J. M. Bennett H. E. Hemans B. H. Bentley C. O. Devries O. T. Kellogg M. G. Barnes D. Devereaux E. B. Kelly Seniors R. L. Doyle Juniors F. F. Musselman Sophomores B. W. Martin W. M. McKnight C. H. Osgood K. S. Frazier Freshmen L. C. Lundin C. Macgregor J. B. Muhlitner H. A. Iddles R. A. Shenefield R. N. Wright S. M. Powell I. J. Snider A. W. Winston J. L. Patrick L. W. Ross W. C. Swank Forensic Society Mitchell, Gulliver, B. A. Rainey, Gleason, Menzel, D. F. Rainey, Shaffer Koopman, Bailey, Alderman, Kelty, Lindequist, McLravy, Himebaugh, Vaughn Buttolph, Beaver, Dee, Ballamy, Cory, Harman, Major, Bugai Cosgrove, Baldwin, Weston, Galbraith, Smith, Palmer, Morris, Putnam Forensic Organized 1907 HONORARY MEMBERS Dean Lyman Prof. M. M. Cory P. G. Andrews K. P. Bemis B. F. Kindig FACULTY MEMBERS OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, G. C. Vollmer Vice-President, R. H. Major Treasurer, R. H. Kelty Secretary, D. F. Rainey President, W. H. Ballamy Vice-President, B. A. Rainey Treasurer, R. H. Kelty Secretary, H. M. Vaughn W. H. Ballamy D. C. Beaver P. M. Hodgkins R. H. Kelty O. A. Alderman X. B. Shaffer R. S. Gulliver G. J. McLravy G. W. Baldwin L. C. Palmer J. Morris T. C. Dee J. H. Harmon R. H. Major B. A. Rainey P. F. Bailey D. F. Rainey F. Stenholm H. Koozman K. A. Weston J. K. Cosgrove W. J. Smith Seniors % W. J. Bugai H. Buttolph G. C. Vollmer Juniors H. H. Himebaugh H. M. Vaughn Sophomores W. R. Foule T. G. Lindquist W. J. Metzel A. J. Mitchell M. V. Gleason Freshmen H. G. Putman W. G. Galbraith 215 Hermian Struble, Trippensee, Howard, De Young, Hartman, Jamieson, Spencer, Downer, Flower Powers, Houghton, Reed, Hunter, Rood, Diehm, Nesman Grambau, Nelson, Hedges, Carpp, Wolford 216 Hermian Organized 1915 HONORARY MEMBERS G. M. Grantham C. E. Newlander FACULTY MEMBER A. S. Burkett RESIDENT MEMBER H. J. Knowlton OFFICERS Fall Term President, Wm. DeYoung Vice-President, N. L. Reed Secretary, F. M. Trull Treasurer, L. A. Spencer Winter Term President, R. A. Hunter Vice-President, J. M. Kuder Secretary, H. Cudaback Treasurer, A. E. Downer H. C. Howard Wm. DeYoung N. L. Reed A. E. Downer L. F. Houghton F. H. Struble N. H. Powers S. S. Rothrock R. A. Paton E. J. Grambau Seniors R. A. Hunter W. E. Hartman H. A. Meyers Juniors H. R. Pettigrove J. M. Kuder Sophomores W. A. Tobey M. B. Wolford W. H. Cudaback E. E. Carpp Freshmen P. C. Jamieson H. J. Bartley O. A. Diehm G. L. Cheal L. K, Flower C. L. Phelps A. N. Nesman L. A. Spencer C. A. Rood R. E. Trippensee E. E. Hedges A. L. Peterson A. S. Burkett R. A. Paton W. E. Hartman H. A. Meyers Pledges C. J. Mel ,ean MEN IN SERVICE H. R. Pettigrove W. A. Tobey H. J. Bartley S. P. Nelson C. M. Horn M. B. Wolford C. L. Phelps G. L. Cheal L. K. Flower 217 Hesperian Organized 1888 HONORARY MEMBERS Secretary A. M. Brown Dean R. S. Shaw FACULTY MEMBERS D. A. Seeley OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, N. A. Kessler Vice-President, J. H. Permar Secretary, W. A. O’Donald Treasurer, C. G. Callard House Manager, W. W. Potter President, W. W. Potter Vice-President, W. A. O’Donald Secretary, R. G. Phillips Treasurer, C. G. Callard House Manager, N. A. Kessler C. G. Callard E. D. Crandall H. C. Bacon C. A. Blinston J. 0. Barkwell C. H. King Senior N. A. Kessler Juniors B. O. McKim J. H. Permar F. C. Speidel Sophomores R. D. Clark W. A. O’Donald C. H. Shaver Freshmen R. G. Phillips R. F. Rey G. M. Vail Pledge L. Gordon W. W. Potter L. Snyder D. G. Lane T. L. Leach E. E. Rothman J. D. Walker Ionian Frankenfield, Huxtable, Kurtz, Foster, Ranger, Schenck, Rogers, Moody, Neller, Howell Halbach, Calrow, Lewis, Rotila, Chapman, Simmons, Scott, Broughton, Fogle Stone, Sackrider, Crampton, Bateman, King, Gaffney, Davidson Ionian Organized 1909 HONORARY MEMBERS Dr. G. H. Coons RESIDENT MEMBERS Prof. 0. W. Chapman Prof. W. P. Wood Ralph Scott K. H. McDonel OFFICERS Fall Term President, F. W. Fitzpatrick Vice-President, H. E. Krum Secretary, R. E. Post Treasurer, F. F. Rogers Corresponding Sec’y, Lytton Calrow L. H. Gretton H. E. Neller Winter Term President, R. S. Simmons Vice-President, J. E. Kotila Secretary, P. A. Howell Treasurer, F. F. Rogers Corresponding Sec’y, Lytton Calrow T. V. Broughton Lytton Calrow F. E. Fogle W. I. Crampton C. L. Frankenfield F. N. Bateman J. B. Davidson H. E. Alford H. E. Behler E. J. Finch P. A. Howell E. J. Brown W. W. Wood H. E. Wright R. B. Huxtable F. F. Rogers R. M. Schenck J. B. Ranger E. C. Sackrider H. D. Straight C. L. Warren H. K. Wrench W. F. Thomas T. R. Trownsell Seniors J. E. Kotila R. S. Simmons Juniors P. A. Howell SoPHOMOR.ES L. D. Kurtz F. M; Moody L. W. Schroyer Freshmen B. F. Gaffney C. F. Stone T. N. King MEN IN SERVICE Seniors F. W. Fitzpatrick T. F. Foster A. H. Joel H. E. Krum Juniors R. E. Post C. E. Skiver Sophomores M. J. Hamilton Freshmen F. S. Prichard 221 Olympic Nelson, Small, Parks, Swing, Collins, Hammes, Nicholls, Engels LaBar, Trubey, Murray, Corbett, Carmody, VanAken, Turner, Mitchell, Brigham Hare, Fox, Armstrong, Rowe, Bateman, Stanford, Denning, Sturm, Noblet 222 Olympic Organized 1885 HONORARY MEMBERS Dean G. W. Bissel S. E. Crowe J. F. Cox J. B. Hasselman FACULTY MEMBERS Dean G. W. Bissel S. E. Crowe J. F. Cox J. B. Hasselman OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, B. H. Murray Vice-President, J. E. Turner Secretary, C. W. Peterson House Manager, J. H. Hammes President, M. F. Carmody Vice-President, M. A. Nelson Secretary, L. L. Bateman House Manager, J. H. Hammes L. L. Brigham J. E. Turner J. L. Engels R. A. Mosher Seniors M. F. Carmody B. M. Murray Juniors J. H. Hammes Sophomores M. A. Nelson Alger Corbett G. W. Trubey C. H. Mitchell L. L. Bateman M. L. Rowe T. Collins W. Parks N. R. Swing Freshmen Joe Hare M. H. Small G. C. Nichols Pledges N. J. Noblet R. C. Stanford K. S. Fox W. H. Sturm E. J. Armstrong C. F. LaBar Orphic Organized 1917 HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. J. A. Poison Prof. L. N. Field A. S. Burket OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, F. O. Stang Vice-President, E. R. Benkert Secretary, J. H. Blake Treasurer, P. H. Gates Marshal, O. P. North Reporter, P. G. Lundin Critic, N. E. Warner President, O. P. North Vice-President, G. T. Fleming Secretary, E. D. Longnecker Treasurer, N. E. Warner Marshal, J. G. Premo Reporter, C. W. Lafler Critic, E. R. Benkert J. H. Blake C. A. Dettling P. H. Gates L. C. House E. R. Benkert N. E. Marks Seniors E. D. Longnecker O. P. North F. O. Stang N. E. Warner Juniors P. G. Lundin C. W. Lafler M. Blackman Sophomores J. G. Premo H. A. Platz R. I. Thompson L. R. Dunstan G. T. Fleming F. H. Utley C. C. White S. S. Radford Phi Delta E. K. Snyder, P. B. Snyder, Spencer, Cook, Lyons, Tyson, Hartwig, Pinkham McMillan, Nye, Ibsen, Wilcox, Wattles, Montgomery, Caldwell Broan, Kent, Palm, Harvey, Arnold, Kestell, Johnson 226 Phi Delta Organized 1873 HONORARY MEMBERS V. E. Leroy C. S. Dunford FACULTY MEMBER F. S. Kedzie OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, M. A. Wattles Vice-President, A. S. Ibsen Secretary, B. H. Redner Treasurer, H. F. French Marshal, R. Wilcox President, R. Wilcox Vice-President, A. S. Ibsen Secretary, M. M. Caldwell Treasurer, C. C. Nye Marshal, TU- F. Montgomery Rex Wilcox Seniors M. A. Wattles A. S. Ibsen Juniors D. W. Kent* R. F. Montgomery L. D. Hoxsie* H. F. French* B. H. Redner* M. M. Caldwell C. C. Nye Sophomores W. V. Palm E. K. Snyder F. C. Pinkham P. B. Snyder Freshmen H. S. Cooke* D. C. Lyons* W. H. Harvie S. J. Kestell C. J. McMillan Pledges H. B. Hartwig A. E. Arnold H. L. Broan W. L, Johnson J. Tyson W. L. Spencer *In Service. 227 Phylean Organized 1911 HONORARY MEMBERS R. C. Huston Ward Giltner RESIDENT MEMBERS R. T. Riddell W. L. Mailman R. C. Buell OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, R. J. DeMond Secretary, A. V. Aronson Vice-President, R. G. Oas Corresponding Secretary, A. W. Hock President, W. R. Collinson Secretary, A. V. Aronson Vice-President, R. J. Waterbury Corresponding Secretary, R. E. Bergman R. M. Shane R. J. DeMond H. B. Vaneklasen S. G. Geiser G. G. Geiser R. E. Bergman Seniors C. M. Reed Juniors K. J. Deal Sophomores R. J. Waterbury Freshmen W. J. Clench S. M. Stephensen Pledges W. R. Collinson W. L. Mailman A. V. Aronson A. C. Christensen L. R. Crane M. A. Johnson W. A. Erbach E. M. DenHerder L. H. Bazuin Trimoira Society m m a a Pitt, Carrow, Plee, Sayre, Noddins, Sass, Hach, Hess, Dymond Carlson, Currie, Kling, Unruh, Waters, Publow, Emmons, Geiermann, Osborne Osgood, Peterson, Hendrick, York, Seifert, Bock, Wilson Trimoira Organized 1913 FACULTY MEMBERS H. L. Publow Prof. L. C. Emmöns B. K. Philip OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, H. M. Sass Vice-President, J. F. VanArk Secretary, R. W. Noddins Treasurer, E. Osborne Marshal, F. C. Allen Reporter, E. R. Unruh Alumni Secretary, C. L. Margeson President, E. C. Waters Vice-President, F. C. Allen Secretary, N. J. Pitt Treasurer, C. H. Currie Marshal, E. Osborne Reporter, E, C. Hack Alumni Secretary, H. M. Sass E. M. Waters L. S. Plee E. Osborne N. J. Pitt A. P. Bock E. W. Carlson L. J. Geiermann A. J. Peterson Y. 0. York E. E. Sayre C. L. Margeson H. G. Carrow W. A. Siefert E. R. Unruh W. R. Wilson C. H. Currie F. L. Hendrick C. E. Watson Seniors H. M. Sass Juniors F. C, Allen Sophomores E. C. Hach R. B. Kling R. W. Noddins Freshmen B. B. Burns Pledge R. W. Carlisle MEN IN SERVICE Seniors A. M. Hopperstead J. S. Brusstar F. A. Johnson J. F. VanArk Juniors E. D. Menkee C. M. Stover Sophomores J. B. Dakin 231 P. W. Koepnick Union Literary Society H. J. Andrews, Joost, Martin, Garrett, Rothgery, Ashton, Wiggins, Karkau, Palmer Grush, Johnston, W. E. Miller, Perkins, C. W. Andrews, L. W. Miller, Bunting, Steinbauer, Bristol Sours, Oviatt, Rouse, Gordon, Rogers, Vergeson, Dendel, Kinsting, Caldwell, Higbie Spletstoser, Hartley, Van Orden, Weber, Coon, McFarland 232 Union Lit Organized 1876 HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. Linda Landon Mrs. Peppard FACULTY MEMBERS O. K. White RESIDENT MEMBERS L. Dendral W. F. Johnson OFFICERS Mrs. Ella Kedzie Mrs. Warren Baljcock M. F. Johnson Ashley Berridge A. F. Gordon W. K. Prudden F. F. Rogers Thos. Gunson W. H. Barrows W. 0. Hedrick R. J. Baldwin W. O. Hedrick R. J. Baldwin O. K. White Fall Term President, R.Maitland Vice-President, E. C.Fischer Secretary, S.Johnson Treasurer, L.W. Miller Winter Term President,E. C. Fischer Vice-President, E. F. Perkins Secretary,C. R. Wiggins Treasurer,L. W. Miller Alumni Registrar, L. Dendral Student Registrar, C. W. Andrews Corresponding Secretary, C. R. Wiggins Seniors E. C. Fischer H.G. Joost E. F. Perkins H. L. Bunting S. Johnson C. C. Higbie G. A. Garrett H. Y. Hartley W. F. Knight F. W. Splitstoser R. M. Maitland S. M. Sargent E. M. Hawley Juniors L. W. Miller W. E. Miller C. W. Andrews Sophomores F. W. Ashton A. Martin Freshmen H. R. Weber H. M. Coon H. W. Coon MEN IN SERVICE Seniors L. K. Cleveland L. W. Zimmerman Juniors L. L. Davis Sophomores M. D. Stitt Freshmen W. H. Steinbauer E. L. Karkau J. H. Caldwell L. C. Palmer , C. R. Wiggins F. R. McFarland M. R. Wait R. 0. VanOrden M. F. Beauchamp H. B. Hale J. L. Graham W. F. Knight P. P. Smith M. Waite Ero Alphian Caswell, Graliam, Moore, Vassolcl, Mutchler, Olcott, Perry, I. Smith, Thompson, Dunphy Watson, Grüner, Maier, Cook, Hubbard, J. Smith, Hallett, Watkins, Campbell Spaford, Ulenden, Hoover, Dodd, Scramlin, Wilder, Clementsen 234 Ero Alphian HONORARY MEMBER Mrs. Peppard SOCIAL MEMBER Lola Bell Green OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, Vera Foster-Cavanaugh Vice-President, Quindara Oliver Secretary, Erma Scramlin Treasurer, Irma Moore Corresponding Secretary, Ester Hallet Marshal, Harriet Wilder President, Inez Cook Vice-President, Gladys Grüner Secretary, Dee Maier Treasurer, Esther Hallet Corresponding Secretary, Clara Perry Marshal, Juanita Smith Gladys Grüner Alice Gunn Clemensen . Orrene Caswell Esther Hallet Jessie Hienden Bernice Campbell Edith Graham Juanita Smith Marion Mutchler Seniors Quindara Oliver Juniors Irene Smith Audrey Dumphy Sophomores Harriet Wilder Dee Maier Daphene Dodd Freshmen Laura Hoover Catherine Watkins Pledges Vera Foster-Cavanaugh Inez Cook Louise Hubbard Irma Moore Ethel Spafford Erma Scramlin Louise Watson Clara Perry Florence Thompson Marion Olcott Nathalia Vasold 235 Feronian Weatherbee, Berridge, Tappan, Curtiss, Miles, Kempf, Heysett, Lyman, Harvey, Kuhn, Pratt, Gordon Newbrough, Boyce, Lewis, Paterson, Yeiter, Derek, Blair, Himmelein, Moak, Mead Lasenby, Smith, Morse, Tucker, Carr, Joy, Chambers, Remage 236 Feronian Organized at M. A. C. in 1891 HONORARY MEMBERS Norma Gilchrist Roseboom Antoinette C. Robson Georgia L. White Elida Yakely Edith Casho OFFICERS Bessie Bailey Towne Agnes Hunt Cade Mrs. L. E. Landon Fall Term President, Helen Pierce Vice-President, Ruth Paterson Secretary, Helen Mead Treasurer, Sherli Blair Winter Term President, Florence Yeiter Vice-President, Gladys Lasenby Secretary, Gertrude Newbrough Treasurer, Sherli Blair Spring Term President, Arnot Lewis Vice-President, Marion Smith Secretary, Gladys Gordon Treasurer, Ruth Miles Arnot Lewis Gladys Lasenby Sherli Blair Ada Tucker Margaret Himmelein Dorotha Kempf Katherine Berridge Mary Chambers Dorothy Heysett Frances Moak Gladys Towar Seniors Marian Smith Ruth Paterson Helen Pierce Juniors Helen Mead Gladys Gordon Margaret Copas Sophomores Bertha Lyman Ada Woodard Agnes Tappan Freshmen Pricilla Boyce Dorothy Curtiss Margaret Joy Lois Remage Madeleine Wardle Pledge Florence Cady 237 Marian Morse Florence Yeiter Martha Pratt Gertrude Newbrough Ruth Miles Verna Derek Frances Carr Ann Harvey Margaret Kuhn Margaret Taylor Dorothea Wetherbee Letonian Musselman, MacLaclilan, Snow, Keiser, Cole, Ceas, Mattoon, McIntyre, Thomson Allen, Granger, Walker, Lott, Cargo, Stevenson, Butler, Grettenberger Haywood, King, Schroen, Overheiser, Rosso, Grimm, McCartney, Gledhill 23S Letonian Organized at M. A. C. 1916 HONORARY MEMBERS Dean Georgia L. White Prof. Mary E. Edmonds Miss Edna Garvir|ll Dean Georgia L. White Prof. Mary E. Edmonds Miss Edna Garvin FACULTY MEMBERS OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, Cleo Gledhill Vice-President, Iva Granger Secretary, Ruth Musselman Treasurer, Alta Snow President, Ruth Cargo Vice-President, Marian Grettenberger Secretary, Esther Lott Treasurer, Mildred Mattoon Ruth Cargo Cleo Gledhill Iva Granger Gertrude Cole Esther Lott Althea Keiser Edna Ceas Martha Rosso Doris Steverson Jessie Godfrey Alice McCartney Ordelia Southard Ruth Walker Agnes McIntyre Mildred Mattoon Luella Schroen Seniors Marian Grettenberger Ina Butler Mabel McLachlan Alta Snow Juniors Ruth Musselman Frances Overheiser Winifred Haywood Sophomores Thelma King Annie Thomson Freshmen Lillian Grimm Pledge Fern Loomis 239 Sesame Dilts, Lankton, Smith, Normington, Booth, Schmidt, Preston, Laidlaw, Roger, Muhlitner, Gebhart, Rossman Burell, Dunning, Tubbs, Snyder, Wilson, Urch, Sutherland, Dennis, Rogers, Robb Fillingham, Grace Urch, Rapp, Corcoran, Kenny, Hilliard, Beck, Clymer 240 Sesame Organized 1911 HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. Peppard FACULTY MEMBERS Mrs. Publow Mrs. Gunson RESIDENT MEMBERS Mrs. Publow Mrs. Gunson OFFICERS Mrs.Raven Mrs. Miss Baldwin Clemens Mrs. Miss Baldwin Clemens Mrs. Landon Mrs. Kiefer Mrs. Bemis Mrs. Kiefer Mrs. Bemis Fall Term President, Frances Hawkins Vice-President, Frances Smith Treasurer, Gertrude Rogers Secretary, Hazel Sutherland Reporter, Ethel Snyder Marshal, Marion Laidlaw Winter Term President, Eileen Wilson Vice-President, Lucille Urch Treasurer, Erma Preston Secretary, Phyllis Rossman Reporter, Madge Dilts Marshal, Faye Stitt Spring Term President, Fanny Rogers Vice-President, Grace Urch Treasurer, Erma Preston Secretary, Hazel Muhlitner Reporter, Marjorie Cook Marshal, Leonare Kenny Seniors Grace Urch Bertha Lankton Juniors Hazel Sutherland Elizabeth Porter Hazel Muhlitner Sophomores Ethel Dennis Léala Dunning Faye Stitt Norma Burell Freshmen Helen Schmidt June Rapp Leonore Kenny Pledge Iva Robb Lucille Urch Frances Smith Florence Simonson Erma Preston Madge Dilts Helen Hilliard Marign Normington Marie Corcoran Phyllis Rossman Helen Booth Mildred Clvmer Fanny Rogers Eileen Wilson Marjorie Cook Gertrude Rogers Marion Templeton Ethel Snyder Cecile Gebhart Marian Laidlaw Margaret Tubbs Marguerite Beck, Fern Fillingham Sororian Lacy, Otis, Osborn, Beach, Harrington, Zachariah, Wagner, Brunson, McComb, Frost, Kitti, Windes Edmonds, Jess, Isbell, McNinch, Jensen, Warner, Kyes, Holliday, Pike, Reader, MacNaughton Faunce, Bloy, Curtis, Burns, Nerreter, Gardener, Lichtenwaiter iHWP Sororian Organized 1901 HONORARYMEMBERS Mrs. Snyder Mrs. Landon Miss Freyhofer RESIDENTMEMBERS Miss White Miss Taylor Mrs. Peppard Miss Clemens Miss Bigelow Miss Holt Mrs. Rosebloom Miss Edmonds Miss Zae Northrop Miss Mable Persons OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, Gladys Harker Vice-President, Mary Warner Secretary, JosephineZachariah Treasurer, Marian Brown President,Mary Warner Vice-President, Iva Jensen Secretary ,Lennah Kyes T reasurer,Jane McNinch Gladys Harker Blanche MacNaughton Alice Brunson Katherine Burns Geraldine Curtis k / Iva Beach Marian Brown I zette Faunce Lydia Bloy Margaret Frost Seniors Caroline Wagner Mary Warner Clarissa Pike Juniors Helen Edmonds Margaret Halliday Sophomores Flossie Reader Iva Jensen Elma Kitti Jane McNinch Cheryl Windes Corinne Lichtenwaiter Margaret Gardner Ferolyn Nerreter Josephine Zachariah Lennah Kyes Marie Otis Dorothy Harrington Violet Osborn Freshmen Pearl McComb Janet Isbel Margaret Jess 243 Themian Childs, Kober, Scott, Lillie, Babcock, L. Collingwood, Seeley, Bennet Rusche, Williams, Carney, Chubb, Carlson, Curts, Cummings, R. Collingwood Schravesande, Rigterink, Shattuck, Snyder, Harris, Ferris, Beebe, McBride, O’Brien, Cotterell Cowan, Lyons, Evans, Coverdale, Whitcomb, Hunter, McBride Themian Organized 1898 HONORARY MEMBERS Miss Morris Miss Kitchen OFFICERS Miss Miss Mrs. Casho Peppard Rosebloom Miss White Miss Edgerton Miss Leffler Fall Term Winter Term President, Merle Chubb Vice-President, Erma Shattuck Secretary, Laura Collingwood Marshal, Gertrude Beebe Treasurer, Margaret Snyder President, Beulah Harris Vice-President, Aileen Carney Secretary, Dorothy Scott Marshal, Hester Schravesands Treasurer, Margaret Snyder Aileen Carney Beulah Harris Eleanor Childs Lois McBride Gertrude Babcock Rebecca Collingwood Hester Schravesand Mildred Bennet Dorothy Cowan Paula Lane Margaret Evans Seniors Lorinda Zimmerman Merle Chubb Julia Rigterink Juniors Dorothy Rusche Lavenia Cottrell Sophomores Marjorie Williams Gertrude Beebe Deborah Cummings Dorothy Scott Freshmen Helen Whitcomb Gladys Carlson Dorothy Curtis Dorotha McBride Pledges Irene O’Brien Mary Ann Hunter Fern Ferris Erma Shattuck Claudice Kober Margaret Snyder Laura Collingwood Barbara Lillie Kathleen Smith Olita Coverdale Mildred Dalby Marian Seeley Patricia Lyons The Prophetess (Published in “Poets of the Future” the Anthology of College Poetry for Year 1917-18) I watched you o’er the tea-cloth’s cool expanse, A gracious girl of gladsome friendliness, And dreamed not you could learn in one swift glance The will of all the years to curse or bless. Yet—lingeringly I drained the last pale drop. O bright-haired seeress of the fragile cup, Your sweet eyes searched among the broken leaves, And reverently and low you budded up The tale, as one who piles the golden sheaves At sunset in a lonely harvest field. The mystic murmur of your voice was merged In rippled whispers of a vagrant stream, That wondered far in shadow ere it surged In sudden gleeful splendor where the gleam Of calm blue water promised radiant rest. You prophesied the joys of hours to come, The petty sorrow, the repentant tears; And underneath the words the drowsy hum Of rambling woodland waters sieged my ears Until my life and the far stream seemed one. You foretold bitter doubts and shadows stark Along the deviating drift of years, Then—sudden luminous peace beyond the dark O truthful prophetess you saw as seers Of old, for still do life and stream seem one. Katherine Hume, ’18 College Activities PUBLICATIONS Record H OLCAD Wolverine \ BAND STUDENT COUNCIL INTER-SOCIETY UNION M. A, C. UNION DEBATING DRAMATICS GLEE CLUB RELIGIOUS TECHNICAL GENERAL C. W. McKibsin The M. A. C. Record The M. A. C. Record first began elbowing its way out among students and alumni in January, 1896, when The Speculum, a student paper, finally succumbed after it had braved the turbulent billows of finance for nearly fifteen years. After digging deeply into their pockets to pay its bills, the faculty took the Record upon themselves and until 1913 it appeared under the direction of that body. For the past five years it has made its weekly appearance as the official organ of the Michigan Agricultural College Association, its present sponsors and publishers. The Record has two distinct aims, the first, to firmly tie alumni and former students to Alma Mater, and the second, to keep them in touch with each other. As a messenger of the M. A. C. Association its underlying purpose is to maintain College spirit and enthusiasm and keep the organization lined up ready to further the interests of M A. C. The Michigan Agricultural College Association is composed of both alumni and former students, membership being open to anyone who has completed one term’s work. The Asso­ ciation holds its annual meeting at commencement time, when alumni and former students, in groups of classes that were in College together, return for their reunions. The object of the Association is the advancement of the interests of M. A. C. aiid service to Alma Mater. Besides publishing the Record to keep members informed of alumni sentiment, the growth of the College, and the progress of their fellow members, they help maintain a permanent secretary and an office for the keeping of alumni records. The mother association and the spirit of M. A. C. are bolstered through the organization of many local associations throughout the state. Every student who leaves M. A. C. should get in touch with the Association in his community, or if none exists, he should get busy and start one. The possibilities for service that may come out of a thoroughly organized and properly supported M. A. C. Association are many. As the organ of the Association the Record is destined to become a powerful factor in mustering alumni support for the College. EDITORS OF THE RECORD 1896-1901—Edited by Faculty and Students. 1901- 1902—H. Edwards and P. H. Stephens. 1902- 1903—P. H. Stephens. 1903- 1904—G. Masselink. 1904- 1907—B. A. Faunce. 1907-1909—W. J. Wright. 1909- 1910- 1913- 1914- 1917- —C. W. McKibbin. 1910—C. Henley. 1913—B. A. Faunce. 1914—G. C. Sheffield. 1917—C. S. Langdon. Stephens, Snyder, Himebaugh, Ungren, Kuder, Keydel, Way Reed, Howell, Osborne, Kober, Fox, Hatland Rainey, Burns, Kitti, Cottrell, Rogers, Hubbard, Montgomery Wolverine Board Edgar Osborne, Editor-in-CMef Milton R. Fox, Business Manager Paul A. Howell, Advertising Manager Associate Staff Einar E. Ungren, Assistant Editor-in-Chief Elmer F. Way, Assistant Business Manager Newton L. Reed, Assistant Advertising Manager John M. Kuder, Class Editor Gertrude M. Rogers, Assistant Class Editor Clarence M. Hatland, Art Editor Lavinia E. Cottrell, Assistant Art Editor Forest F. Musselman, Faculty Editor Louise H. Hubbard, Assistant Faculty Editor Boyd A. Rainey, Military Editor Harold H. Himebaugh, Assistant Military Editor Russell F. Montgomery, Athletic Editor Clarence F. Ramsay, Assistant Athletic Editor H ans B. Keydel, Campus Editor Elma Kitti, Assistant Campus Editor Charles G. Callard, Society Editor Katherine W. Burns, Assistant Society Editor Lemoyne Snyder, Humorous Editor Claudice M. Kober, Assistant Humorous Editor Richard T. Stephens, Snap-shot Editor 251 The history of the M. A. C. College Annual began some thirty-one years ago when in 1887 Volume I of the “Harrow” made its appearance on the campus, sponsored by the Sophomore class, and was accorded a warm welcome by the 323 It was a book of 170 pages (6x9 inches) which students then in attendance. recorded in poem and prose the sayings and doings of the past school year, but did not attempt to publish any pictures save those of a few faculty members. In the following year, 1888, Volume II, likewise called the “Harrow,” made its bow; it was in this year that Abbott Hall, Howard Terrace and the Horticulture Building were completed. Volume III, which appeared in 1889, was the last volume to bear the name of the “Harrow,” and likewise the last annual- to be published by the Sophomore class. Whether or not the choice of a name for the first three volumes of the College yearbook was unwise is a matter of dispute, the harrowing details are obscured by the clouds of time, but certain it is that when Volume IV of the yearbook made its appearance in 1896 the name was changed and we find the Junior class presenting the “Heliostat.” It was in this year that another College publication, the “Record,” made its appearance, also the book recorded the beginning of the Home Economics course in this year. The reception of the “Heliostat,” while cordial, did not suffice to inspire the succeeding class to continue the good work and we find Volume V delayed in pub­ lication until 1900, when the famous class “naughty one,” brought forth a year­ book which they called the “Wolverine”—“which is after the name of that animal which is sacred to the land of our fathers.” This name, with one exception, has been bestowed upon all succeeding annuals. The exception was Volume VI, which was published in 1904 under the name Glück Auf,” this book'marked a forward step in M. A. C. publications, for not only did it print pictures of the faculty, fraternities, societies and athletic teams, but it presented individual pictures of each member of the two upper classes. In 1907, to commemorate in a fitting way the fiftieth birthday of the oldest agri­ cultural college, the “Jubilee Wolverine,” Volume VII, was brought out. It was distinctive in that for the first time the individual pictures of all students from “Prep” to Senior were presented. After the lapse of another three years, Volume VIII of the “Wolverine” appeared in 1910, and then, realizing that what the Sopho­ more classes of ’89, ’90 and ’91 accomplished in publishing the yearbook annually when the student body numbered 300, contrasted most unfavorably with the class spirit and the initiative of those Junior classes who, in spite of rapidly growing numbers, had failed to publish a yearbook, the class of ’12 boldly announced the doctrine that it was the duty of each Junior class to present to the alma mater a College Annual which should be called the “Wolverine.” . From this time on each Junior class has recognized its obligation and, difficult though it has been at times, yet class and college spirit combined have prevailed over such difficulties. The annual “Wolverine” as a memory book for alumni, and social register for the faculty and student body has each year filled a vital part of college life at M. A. C. 252 M. A. C. College Annuals Class Editor-in-Chief Business Mgr.Advertising Mgr. J. H. Wheeler F. G. Clark F. W. Ashton Name I Harrow II Harrow III Harrow IV Heliostat Date 1887SophomoreP. G. Holden Yol. 1888SophomoreH. M. Williams Vol. 1889SophomoreJ. L. Potter Vol. 1896Junior Vol. V Wolverine1900Junior Vol. Vol. VI Glück Auf1904J unior Vol.VII Wolverine1907Junior Vol.VIII Wolverine1910Junior IX Wolverine1911J unior Vol. XWolverine1912Junior Vol. Vol. XI Wolverine1913Junior Vol.XII Wolverine1914Junior Vol.XIII Wolverine1915Junior Vol.XIV Wolverine1916Junior Vol. XV Wolverine1917Junior Vol.XVI Wolverine1918Junior E. D. Sanderson W. R. Goodwin H. P. Baker C. I. Auten H. S. Hunt A. T. Barley R. G. Carr R. W. Sloss N. VanHorne O. W. SchleussnerR. J. TenkenohyE.C. Kiefer D. L. Hagerman R. E. Loree E. C. Voltz G. K. Fischer L. Wells E. Trangmar H. K. Abbott E. Osborne F. H. Mueller L. Billings H. Jessup G. Stewart H. E. Alford M. R. Fox F.L. Granger J.G. Woodman A.N. Hall H.Stinson E.H. Pate L.C. Calrow P.A. Howell G. Dodge C. W. McKibbin 253 Holcad Staff Perkins, D. R. Bennett, Overholt, Rice, Wright, Cudabaek, Roth Stark, Huxtable, Simmons, Yeiter, Dee, Ungren, J. M. Bennett Hatland, Anderson, Carpp, Rothman, Beaver The Holcad The Holcad is the students’ newspaper and is published each week by a staff It has the hearty support of all the students and is a composed entirely of students. recognized factor in molding student opinion. The paper is operated on a competitive basis. In order to be eligible for the position of editor, a student must have first served nearly three yeairs on the staff. He begins as a reporter in his Freshman year and continues as such through two terms of his Sophomore year. At the end of that time he is promoted to an assistant editorship, providing his reportorial work was of such caliber to warrant the pro­ motion. He serves as an assistant editor during the remainder of his Sophomore year and through two terms of his Junior year. Near the close of this last period of service, the Holcad Board, consisting of the retiring editor and business manager, the associate editors, all Seniors, and the president and secretary of the Student Council, select from the four assistant editors two to go before the student body in the general election aS candidates for managing editor of the paper. The competitive system is now in its second year and promises all that wak hoped for it. Through it ambitious College journalists are afforded a fair oppor­ tunity to prove their worth and the paper is assured of a trained editor each year, and one who has fought his way up from the ranks. ' EDITORIAL STAFF Managing Editor, T. C. Dee Business Manager, R. S. Simmons Co-Ed Editor, Florence Yeiter ASSOCIATE STAFF Associate Editors E. S. Anderson D- R. Bennett Assistant Editors E. E. Ungren s, R. N. Wright J. M. Bennett E. E. Perkins Assistant Business ManAGERS R. B. Huxtable B. 0. McKim H. C. Stark W. E. Webb D. G. Lane C. M. Hatland Art W. H. Cudaback E. L. Overholt R. E. Yeatter Reportorial E. E. Rothman E. E. Carpp E. A. Roth P. L. Rice 255 Holead History The Holcad was founded as the result of a mass meeting held by M. A. C. students during the winter of 1909. The first issue appeared in March of that year and was edited by C. C. Taylor, ’09. It was intended at one time to name the paper The Gander, but just before the first issue appeared the name was changed to The Holcad, after the famous Greek ship which bore the good news from Athens to the scattered Greek colonies. During the first year and a half of its existence The Holcad was a magazine-like periodical of some twenty pages and was issued every two weeks. A great deal of space was devoted to short stories and poems written by the students. However, it was a very newsy publication and did credit to the staff which worked out its details. In 1911, under E. C. Lindemann, The Holcad became a weekly but retained its original size. Another advance was made at that time in that the space formerly devoted to College fiction and poetry was largely given over to College news. It was not until 1915 that The Holcad expanded to its present size, an eight-page, five-column weekly. From the first issue The Holcad has improved steadily and every editor and his staff have left behind them some change which has helped to bring out a bigger and better student publication and one that will more nearly approach that ideal set by the founders of the paper, “To give to the student body a representative paper.” In recent years the circulation has increased until practically every student is a subscriber and the general tone of the paper is such that it is quite widely copied by the student papers of other institutions. The policy of the paper has been to consecrate itself to the interests of a greater M. A. C., one that both students and alumni can point to with pride. Holcad Editors and Business Managers 1909 (Spring) 1909-1910 1910-1911 1911-1912 1912-1913 1913-1914 1914-1915 1915-1916 1916-1917 1917-1918 1918-1919 C. C. Taylor J. W. Chapin E. C. Lindemann G. V. Branch K. M. Klinger R. F. Irvin. G. K. Fisher M. E. Bottomley G. 0. Stewart T. C. Dee E. E. Ungren L. G. Johnson I. D. McLachlan G. H. Collingwood H. H. Coplan F. L. Granger J. L. Snellink A. N. Hall L. D. Fisher L. H. Verschoor R. S. Simmons R. B. Huxtable Michigan Agricultural College Band . F. L. Abel, Director D. Baumer, Chief Musician C. G. Callard, Principal Musician C. W. Andrews, Student Manager H. Dorr, Jr., Business Manager and Librarian R. U. Bryant F. S. Jacobs E. E. Carpp X. B. Shaffer C. H. Osgood M. R. Fox C. G. Callard D. Baumer W. E. Thomas J. M. Bennett E. F. Eldridge E. E. Ungren H. M. Coburn C. W. Andrews A. Kilgore F. R. McFarland R. P. Schneider A. M. Estes H. J. Ellis W. Campbell W. W. Redfern C. Coleman C. H. Arend R. L. Gulliver Cornets L. C. Palmer C. L. Watson N. E. Warner M. Blackman E. Kelley Clarinets F. O. Stang E. L. Overholt E. W. Carlson Saxophones R. Yeatter Basses I. Sours Drums H. Dorr, Jr. J. 0. Bevis S. Johnson Altos C. F. Ramsey Trombones R. W. Tenney Oboe E. F. Way Piccolo W. E. Reuling Winston Wilcox Ungren Davis Stephens Cawood Men’s Student Council Our Student Council as elected during the winter of 1917 has been hard hit by various members joining the colors in the course of the year. .When school com­ menced we found ourselves minus one Senior and both Junior members. Appoint­ ments were therefore made and an efficient organization handled some difficult situations which arose throughout the course of the year. In the control of school affairs the Student Council has proven itself invaluable. OFFICERS President, Frank Davis, 18 Secretary, William Cawood, 18 MEMBERS F. A. Davis, ’18 E. E. Ungren, ’19 N. L. Reed, ’19 I. J. Kelty, ’19 B. A. Rainey, ’19 A. W. Winston, ’20 MEMBERS-ELECT W. N. Cawood, ’18 R. T. Stephens, ’19 H. N. Chapel, ’20 S. Johnson, ’20 R. E. Bergman, ’21 Harris Smith Lewis Caswell Yeiter Kober Johnson Women’s Student Council A representative organization of the women of the College. Founded because of the growing need for a,n official organization which will represent the women and help maintain a spirit of co-operation and good will among the girls of our institution. OFFICERS President, Arnot Lewis Secretart1-Treasurer, OrrenaCaswell Arnot Lewis Florence Yeiter Orrena Caswell ROLL Seniors Juniors Sophomore Yuanita Smith Mary Johnson Beulah Harris Claudice Kober » M. A. C. Union The M. A. C. Union, an all-college organization made up of students, alumni, faculty and friends of M. A. C., has for its object the promotion of the social welfare of the students and the fostering of a wholesome spirit of chivalry and good feeling among its members. In endeavoring to perform the functions for which it was created, two events stand out in the year’s activities. The first of these, the Washington Birthday Banquet, held in honor of Camp Custer M. A. C. men, was the biggest “all-college” social affair held on the campus in years. Nearly seven hundred sat down together in the new gymnasium to a sumptuous dinner prepared and served by the women of the home economics department. Student and faculty committees in charge showed true “Union” spirit in their untiring efforts and the success of the affair was due entirely to their work. The second outstanding feature of the year is the recent action of the State Board of Agriculture to rebuild and refit Old College Hall as the home for the Union. The plans are completed and have been accepted by the Board and' the work has been started. The popularity of the several Union parties held during the year was attested by the large cosmopolitan crowds attending. Members of M. A. C. Union Board of Governors FACULTY MEMBERS Prof. R. C. Huston Prof. W. O. Hedrick OFFICERS President, Stanley Johnston Secretary-Treasurer, C. W. McKibbin M. F. Carmody Seniors Blanche MacNaughton Iva Jensen Lois McBride H. T. Campbell Juniors Sophomore S. Johnston ALUMNI MEMBER C. W. McKibbin MEMBERS-ELECT Seniors S. W. Miller Juniors Claudice Kober H. T. Campbell S. M. Powell Rebecca Collingwood Sophomore S. M. Stephenson Inter-Society Union DeMond, Wilcox, DeYoung, Carmody, Himebaugh, Keydel, Sass, Miller Mills, Manby, Campbell, Andrews, Wood, Cawood, Huxtable Doyle, Dee, Engles, Reed, Dorr, Frye Inter-Society Union During the present year war activities have had more attention than social functions. More work and accomplishments are added each year to the Inter-Society Union which creates the prevailing democratic spirit among the societies. OFFICERS President, C. W. Andrews, Union Lit Secretary, Carmody, Olympic Treasurer, Kessler, Hesperian REPRESENTATIVES IN UNION Athenaeum J ordan Way Aurorian Harris Frye Delphic Dorian AE-Theon Dorr Campbell Eclectic Coulter Archer Forensic Dee Himebaugh Manby Thies Columrian Keydel Ramsay Hermian Ionian DeYoung Reed Phi Delta Wilcox Montgomery Wood Huxtable Phylean . DeMond Deal Cawood Mills Eunomian Doyle Musselman H ESPERIAN Kessler Callard Olympic Carmody Engles Orphic Trimoira Union Lit House North Sass Carrow Andrews Miller 265 POWELL RABINOWITZ McLEAN SNYDER (Manager) Tri-State Debate East Lansing, March 14, 1918 Question:—Resolved, That the Federal Government should take immediate steps to acquire and operate the coal mines as a permanent policy. M. A. C. versus IOWA Chairman, Prof. E. H. Ryder M. A. C.—Affirmative Stanley M, Powell, ’20 Cecil J. McLean, ’20 S. Robinowitz, ’18 IOWA STATE—Negative W. C. Lawler Guy Peterson Charles Heezan JUDGES President E. M. Crooks, Alma College Rev. J. R. J. Milligan, Pontiac Judge D. W. Kelley, St. Johns DECISION Unanimous for the Affirmative HOWARD FOWLE SIMS Tri-State Debate La Fayette, Indiana, March 15, 1918 Question:—Resolved, That the Federal Government should take immediate steps to acquire and operate the coal mines as a permanent policy. M. A. C. versus PURDUE UNIVERSITY M. A. C.—Negative Watson E. Fowle, ’20 Henry C. Howard, T8 John W. Sims, T9 PURDUE—Affirmative H. C. Thuerk H. W. Fleisher C. L. Brosseau JUDGES Prof. J. M. Phelps, University of Illinois Prof. J. L. Leonard, Wabash College Prof. A. L. Gates, Miami College DECISION Two to one for the Negative 267 Varsity Mandolin and Glee Club Hatland, Snyder, Overholt, Miller, Fortney, Trumbo, Kelley, Kehm, King Nelson, Rainey, Moody, Webb, Harman, Campbell, Carpp, Sutherland Beal, Bottimer, Lailer, Lancashire, Osgood 268 M. A. C. Glee and Mandolin Clubs OFFICERS Director, Frederick L. Abel Manager, H. T. Campbell Assistant Manager, F. M. Moody President, J. H. Harman Secretary-Treasurer, W. E. Webb H. L. Campbell J. 0. Beavis B. A. Rainey C. M. Hatland F. M. Moody S. P. Nelson J. H. Harman M. E. Fortney PERSONNEL First Tenors I. J. Miller Second Tenors P. B. Snyder C. H. Osgood First Basses E. B. Kelley Second Basses C. Trumbo QUARTET T. N. King W. E. Webb E. L. Overholt W. B. Sutherland H. A. Iddles E. E. Carpp E. P. Kehm S. N. Stevenson Hatland Beavis Moody Harman L. J. Bottimer C. W. Lafler MANDOLIN CLUB O. R. Beal C. H. Osgood E. R. Lancashire McIntyre, Bates, Rhodes, Haywood, Ceas, Pratt Wetherbee, Babcock, Cummings, Freyhofer, Deadman, Byrne Kenny, Toins, Seeley, Coverdale, B. Cole, Skoog Girls’ Glee Club OFFICERS President, Deborah Cummings Secretary-Treasurer, Gertrude Babcock Accompanist, Mildred Mead Director, Miss Louise Freyhofer First Sopranos Gertrude Babcock Caroline Boyes Edna Ceas Bertine Cole Oleta Coverdale Ruth Bates Eva Byrne Gertrude Cple Marian Laidlaw Hazel Deadman Grace Malpass Deborah Cummings Leanore Kenny Mildred Mead Annie Thomson Dorothea Wetherbee Virginia Haywood Esther Skoog Marian Seeley Marian Pratt Agnes McIntyre Alice Rhodes Second Sopranos Lucy Toms First Altos Second Altos 270 Hatland, Overholt, Cummings, Kelly, Iddles G. Cole, Rhodes, Freyhofer, Ceas, Thomson Chapel Choir Director, Miss Louise Freyhofer Sopranos Deborah Cummings Edna Ceas Annie Thomson C. EH Hat!and Tenors Altos E. L. Overholt Gertrude Cole Grace Malpass Alice Rhodes Basses H. A. Iddles E. B. Kelly 271 Dramatic Club Keydel, Yuli, King, Ryan, Coulter Hunter, Smith, Bouschor, Edmonds, Harrington, Windes Dramatic Club The M. A. C. Dramatic Club presented “Kindling the Hearth Fire” al the College It was a great success, as the moral of the play was of vital interest to the Armory. audience; that of making life on the farm more attractive to the vounger generation. - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - Mrs. Field, an overworked farmer’s wife - - Ned, her young son - - Doris, her daughter Mrs. Stringer, a borrowing neighbor Mr. Hartwell, a graduate of the agriculture college Mr. Field, a prosperous farmer Dave Dalton, a neighbor who owns his own farm Ida Johnson, a clerk in a department store Mrs. Ryan, the manager of a lodging house Mr. Bond, a man with money - _ Miss Brooks, visiting housekeeper for the Welfare League - Pete, hired man - Olaf, hired man - - _ - - - - - _ - - - _ - - - - -. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Miss Bouschor - - _ - _ - _ - S. King Miss Edmunds Miss Harrington Mr. Edgar _ Mr. Coulter - Mr. Yuli Miss Smith Miss Windes _ j^gydel Miss Hunter - Mr. Ryan - Mr. Davis ACT ACT ACT I— The kitchen in the Field home. II— A room in a cheap lodging house. HI—The living room in the Field home. DIRECTOR E. Sylvester King Wolford, Sass, Ungren, Johnson, Ingersoll Heffley, Snow, Thies, French, Chapman, Osborne Latter, Weidemann, Powell, Holt Y. M. C. A. ADVISORY BOARD President, Prof. W. H. French Secretary, R. Sherman Clark*, Hugh J. Bartley*, Edgar Osborne Permanent Treasurer, Prof. E. H. Ryder Directors, Prof. C. W. Chapman, Prof. O. L. Snow, Wilbur H. Thies, Clarence H. Hiller*, Stanley E. Johnson*, Theron L. Ingersoll STUDENT OFFICERS President, Wilbur H. Thies Vice-President, Einar E. Ungren Secretary, Stanley M. Powell Treasurer, R. Sherman Clark*, Hugh J. Bartley*, Edgar Osborne DEPARTMENT CHAIRMEN Deputation Work, Stanley E. Johnson*, Harold M. Johnson Devotional, Clarence H. Hiller*, Harvey M. Sass, Watson E. Fowle Hand Pooh and Publicity, Einar E. Ungren, Andrew Weidemann Finance, Glen E. Zuver* Membership, Stanley M. Powell Social, Harold A. Furlong*, J. Sanford Holt Social Service, J. Arthur Tobey* Voluntary Study, Melvin B. Wolford War Correspondence, Theron L. Ingersoll Winter Course Work, Frank H. Weyeneth*, Byron F. Latter Men in the Service Grettenberger, Cole, Wagner Stevenson, Patterson Gledhill, Williams, McIntyre Y. W. C. A. Organized 1906 ADVISORY MEMBERS Miss G. L. White Miss Bigelow Mrs. J. L. Snyder Miss Kellog OFFICERS 1917-1918 President, Rutli Paterson Vice-President, Caroline Wagner Secretary, Doris E. Stevenson Treasurer, Marion Grettenberger COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Bible Study, Agnes McIntyre Social, Cleo Gledhill' Religious Meetings, Louise Lanstrom Membership, Caroline Wagner Financial, Marion Grettenberger Missionary, Gertrude Cole Social Service, Marjorie Williams Publicity, Doris Stevenson 275 j Whitcomb, Myers, Remage Watkins, Thompson, Wagner, Evans, Joy, Watts Kurtz, Grimm, Berridge, Taylor, Fulton The Freshmen Commission This year the Y. W. C. A. organized our first Freshmen Commission, a group of representative girls, one from each ten girls in the Freshman class. Its purpose is four-fold: To learn of the Y. W. C. A., local, national and world-wide; to train for the future leadership; to serve as a medium of access to other general organiza­ tions at M. A. C., and to help create truest democracy in the Class of 1921. OFFICERS President, Margaret Evans Vice-President, Violet Osborn Secretary-Treasurer, Catherine Watkins Advisor, Caroline Wagner ROLL Iva Beach Katharine Berridge Dorothy Curts Margaret Evans Dorothy Fulton Lillian Grimm Margaret Joy Gertrude Myer Violet Osborn Lois Remage Margaret Taylor Florence Thompson Mable Watts Catherine Watkins Helen Whitcomb Pearle McComb Templeton, Amiotte, Kober, Patterson, Moore, McLachlan, Johnson, Caswell, Cole Rogers, Holliday, Rigterink, Pratt, Harris, Crocker, Yeiter, Lewis Dilts, Stevenson, Burns, Dunphy, McBride, Newbrough, McIntyre, Sutherland Sphinx Organized 1916 OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, Helen Pierce Vice-President, Beulah Harris Secretary, Fanny Rogers Treasurer, Mary Johnson Corresponding Secy., Vera F. Cavanaugh President, Beulah Harris Vice-President, Vera Foster Cavanaugh Secretary, Martha S. Pratt Treasurer, Zeneda Amiotte Corresponding Secy., Mary Crocker MEMBERS Louise Clemens Gladys Gruner Iva Jensen Arnot Lewis Julia Rigterink Mary Warner Fanny Rogers Katherine Burns Claudice Kober Irma Moore Marion Templeton Mabel McLachlan Ordelia Southard Ruth Paterson Gertrude Newbrough Mildred Mead Gladys Harker Frances Hawkins Helen Pierce Vera Cavanaugh Beulah Harris Mary Johnson Marion Pratt Doris Stevenson Florence Yeiter Margaret Holliday Lois McBride Audrey Dunphy Hazel Sutherland Madge Dilts Gertrude Cole Agnes McIntyre Martha Pratt Zeneda Amiotte Lorinda Zimmerman Mary Crocker Orrena Caswell League of the Silver Cross Pratt, Williams, Mahrle, Cole, Cargo, Keck, Ray Schurr, Granger, Mattoon, Howard, McCune, Wagner Gledhill, Dunlap, Kidd, Ceas, Thomson, Andrews League of the Silver Cross Organized 1915 HONORARY MEMBER Mrs. C. C. Wood OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, Marion Pratt Vice-President, Amanda Harms Secretary, Thelma King President, Rella Howard Vice-President, Mildred Mattoon Secretary, Maude Stafford Ruth Cargo Iva Granger Amanda Harms Agnes McIntyre Gertrude Cole Irene Benjamin Dorothy Kahles Helen Allen Virginia Flory Gertrude Fischer Rella Howard Gertrude Tappan Annie Thompson Esther Skoog Sylvia Wixon Elizabeth Boyes Alta Richardson Edith Caffin Cleo Gledhill Caroline Wagner Marion Pratt Blanche Smith Frances Overheiser Ruth Walker Edna Kidd Bertha Keck Rhea East Irene Wightman Florine Folks Mildred Mattoon Isabelle Thorne Mary Williams Harriett Betts Eva Schurr Mahle Corey Alice Rhodes Seniors Alice McCartney Marion Grettenberger Mary Ray Juniors Maybelle Higgins Helen Mahrle Ruth Musselman Louise Lanstrom Sophomores Thelma King Rosselyn Rice Maud Stafford Edna Ceas Ethyl Frays Luella Schroen Freshmen Alice Landon Violet Rose Esther Rehkoff Specials Julia Hemlick Frances Spenser 279 Students’ Citizenship League Colthorp, Estes, Sutherland, Trippensee, Watson, Tyson, Gorsline, Overholt, Kurtz, McCaughan, W. F. Allen, Sass, Spencer Perrine, Townsend, Weidemann, Howard, Cudaback, Gettel, Cargo, Wolford, Bottimer, Thies, Heffley, Smith Manby, Tenny, Wass, Brooks, Mrs. Wood, Ungren, Vaughn, Rothrock, Knight, Draper Powell, F. C. Allen, Shedd, Rood, Carpp, Roland Students’ Citizenship League The Students Citizenship League seeks to develop the mental, social and spiritual activities of its members through live Christian fellowship. To this end the League holds weekly literary and social meetings and conducts an open forum Bible class at the Peoples’ church. Every man at M. A. C. is privileged to attend these meetings with the League men. Rev. N. A. McCune D. C. Heffley Mrs. C. C. Wood HONORARY MEMBERS OFFICERS Fall Term President, J. M. Kuder Vice-President, M. B. Wolford Secretary, S. S. Rothrock Treasurer, H. M. Vaughn Winter Term President, E. E. Ungren Vice-President, B. J. Brooks Secretary,H. R. Swing Treasurer, H. M. Vaughn H. C. Howard hMm. Sass F. W. Trull E. F. Webb L. J. Rothgery C. L. Clemow J. M. Küder W. H. Thies R. W. Tenny W. J. Kurtz V. E. Ward B. W. McKinley E. W. Carlson G. F. Davis E. L. Overholt S. S. Rothrock W. H. Cudaback M. C. Townsend R. W. Trippensee T. L. Blair, Jr. M. C. Draper H. J. Kyrtz C. H. Arend G. E. Culver J. S. Cutler C. M. Horn S. P. Nelson C. W. Swank K. A. Weston Seniors H. G. Bartley C. L. Margeson Juniors E. E. Ungren R. D. Perrine L. E. Cottle A. G. Widemann R. H. Gorsline F. C. Allen H. M. Vaughn E. Osborne K. H. Roland Sophomores B. J. Brooks X. B. Shaffer R. E. Yeatter M. B. Wolford 1 L. A. Spenser C. H. Currie B. T. Knight W. B. Sutherland S. J. Marsden Freshmen W. Cargo W. J. Smith J. Tyson B. B. Burns H. P. Conrad H. A. Fellows E. E. Hedges P. M. Neale T. B. Poole M. R. Waite F. W. Manbv L. E. Buell H. M. Wass A. M. Estes M. E. Hath W. Campbell E. D. Younker L. C. House W. F, Allen C. M. Hatland W. H. Sturm W. F. Case L. D. Kurtz E. E. Carpp C. A. Rood L. J. Bottime E. S. McCaughn S. M. Powell R. W. Noddins L. Shedd A. Gettel C. E. Watson R. S. Boonstra F. C. Colthorp J. H. Gardner F. L. Hendrick R. F. Jessop H. R. Swing V. 0. York ! \ w m 1918 HORT SHOW The Hort Club Organized 1902 The Hort Club was organized to promote a more fraternal feeling between the students and the faculty of the Horticultural Department. Meetings are held every Wednesday in the Hort lecture room. Outside speakers, who are interested in the various branches of horticulture, are secured to address the students. From these meetings the student obtains an insight into the practical phases of horticulture. Each year the Hort Club members are invited to attend the meeting and exhibit of the State Horticultural Society. At the meeting held during the first week in December, 1917, the fruit judging and identification contest was won by Atwater, first; Smith, second, and Bennett, third. The honors in the speakings contest were received by Blades, Hoffmaster and Anderson. On January 25 and 26, Manager F. A. Davis, assisted by the members of the Hort Club, conducted the most successful Hort Show ever given by the College. HORT CLUB OFFICERS 1917-1918 Fall Term W inter Term President, W. M. Coulter Vice-President, J. F. Kotilla Secretary, W. A. Chapman Treasurer, M. F. Carmody Reporter, R. S. Simmons Alumni Reporter, D. R. Bennett President, J. E. Kotilla Vice-President, J. F. Ryan Secretary, F. J. Hughes Treasurer, E. F. Armstrong Reporter, H. Buttolph Alumni Reporter, P. J. Hoffmaster Spring Term President, J. H. Harman Vice-President, E. J. Armstrong Secretary, F. J. Hughes Treasurer, J. F. Ryan Reporter, R. B. Huxtable Alumni Reporter, R. A. Mosher 283 Culver, Leach, Wolf, Hock, Trippensee, Van Gulliver, Hatland, Malasky, Weidemann, Faunce, Chapman Grambau, Helmuch, Huston, Harms, Colthorp Ferris Institute Club HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. C. W. Chapman B. A. Faunce Miss Elida Yakely J. Schepers R. C. Huston Helmuch RESIDENT MEMBERS OFFICERS President, A. G. Weidemann Vice-President, Amanda H. Harris Secretary, R. E. Trippensee Treasurer, R. S. Gulliver Senior Amanda H. Harris Juniors A. G. Weidemann C. M. Hatland S. E. Wolff T. L. Leach E. J. Grambau W. S. Rider F. C. Colthrop F. W. Marrs S. C. Vandecaveye Alice A. Ewing K. C. Inselman Sophomores Freshmen 284 R. S. Gulliver E. A. Malasky R. E. Trippensee E. C. Hach R. W. Comstock G. E. Culver H. G. Putnam R. S. Boonstra Alder, Wiggins, Proctor, Wible, Waters, Bock, Downer, Gates, White Reid, Currie, Sass, Hartman, Froelich, Stang, Way, Denning Noddins, Kling, Carlson, Shenefield, Fox, Osborne, Howell Engineering Societies The Engineering Society as heretofore constituted is no more. In its place has evolved a combination of student branches of National Engineering Societies, two of which are already in operation and more in the process of organization. It is expected that the facilities afforded by connection with the national organizations will result in bringing the latest achievements of present day engineering to the attention of the student and make his college course a more vital thing to him. The following are the officers and charter members of the first two branches organized : AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS (A. S. M. E.) President, H. L. Froelich Vice-President, W. G. Retzlaff Secretary, H. M. Sass Treasurer, F. O. Stang H. L. Froelich P. H. Gates W. Hartman MEMBERS E. Osborne F. O. Stang E. M. Waters S. F. Wellman H. M. Sass W. G. Retzlaff A. E. Downer AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS (A. I. E. E.) Secretary-Treasurer, W. A. Seifert President, R. G. Shenefield MEMBERS Seniors W. R. Collinson T. C. Dee L. S. Plee E. E. Sayre H. G. Carrow E. L. Karkau A. P. Bock Juniors R. A. Shenefield W. A. Seifert Sophomores C. C. White W. E. Thomas J. B. Golden R. B. Kling R. W. Noddins 285 Roland, Chisholm, Strang, Fogle, Wolford Broughton, DeYoung, Hunter, Manby, Diehm Farmers’ Club OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term President, W. DeYoung Vice-President, T. V. Broughton Secretary, R. A. Hunter Treasurer, O. P. North President, R. A. Hunter Vice-President, O. P. North Secretary, O. A. Diehm Treasurer, W. F. Manby Spring Term President, J. A. Chisholm Vice-President, O. A. Diehm Secretary, E. E. Carpp Treasurer, P. F. Bailey 286 Baxter, Hallman, LaBar, Giltner, Benner, Mater, Chamberlain, Bailey, Trubey, Robbins, Hanson, Redfern, Thomas, G. Tenney, Smith Krueger, Marks, Lamoreaux, Lyman, Dunn, Beaver, Flower, Woiner, Gregory, Bergman Gladowski, Kochman, Bandeen, Hinkle, Welsh, Michaelson, Garobegian, N. Tenney Veterinary Medical Association HONORARY AND FACULTY MEMBERS Dean R. P. Lyman Dr. Hallman Dr. Chamberlain Dr. Johnson Dr. Giltner OFFICERS Dr. Benner Dr. Hutton Fall Term President, Orville Mater Vice-President, A. R. Dunn Secretary, M. Blackman Treasurer, L. K. Flower Winter Term President, H. E. Wright Vice-President, A. R. Dunn Secretary, Stanley G. Bandeen Treasurer, Chauncey LaBar Donald C. Beaver Orville Mater John W. Randall Stanley G. Bandeen Norman Tenney Gerald Tenney Bernard Robbins L. K. Flower Ernest Redfern Louis Pless Roy Bergman Henry Gregory Seniors Edwin Smith Don Lamoreaux Léon Kochman Juniors Alex. R. Dunn Stanley Colby Earle Baxter Geo. Trubey Chauncey LaBar Sophomores Lynn Palmer Wm. Erbach Gerard Dickman Freshmen Wayne Palm George Thomas Earle Shiffield David Marks Joseph Woinar Harold 'E. Wright Keith Krueger Ross Hinkle Karl Hanson James Corbet Malvin Blackman Don Coburn Phillip Bailey James Morrise B. M. Mecharlson Jones, McKinney, Sims, Jamieson, Atwater Robbins, Jones, Scott, Robbins, Brown Atwater, Sims, Brown, McKinney Married Students’ Association Organized in HONORARY 1913-1914 MEMBERS Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Cook and Mrs. H. H. Fuller and Mrs. W. D. Powell and Mrs. I. B. McMurtry and Mrs. M. A. Leach and Mrs. P. J. Rood and Mrs. A Teske and Mrs. Van Warmer and Mrs. L. R. Walker C. C. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Kittle R. G. Saxton G. W. Beckwith R. G. Voorhorst O. E. Harrington C. A. Smith F. C. Sharrow A. Maloney Blodgett Jesse Stutsma Mr. C. M. Kidman PRESENT MEMBERS and Mrs. H. H. McKinney and Mrs. H. A. Lyon and Mrs. F. F. Curtis and Mrs. J. W. Randall and Mrs. P. C. Jamieson and Mrs. W. F. Jones and Mrs. H. E. Wright Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Atwater Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Brown Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sims Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Heath Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Robbins Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Kindig Mr. R. W. Scott Fall Term OFFICERS Winter Term President, H. H. McKinney Vice-President, Mrs. C. A. Brown Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. C. E. Atwater Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. B. D. Robbins President, C. E. Atwater Vice-President, Mrs. H. H. McKinney Forestry Club OFFICERS Fall Term Winter Term Chief Forester, N. A. Kessler Assistant Forester, R. I. Thompson Keeper of Records, B. Bergstrom Ranger, I. V. Anderson Chief Forester, H. Dorr, Jr. Assistant Forester, J. M. Bennett Keeper of Records, I. V. Anderson Ranger, C. F. Martin H. Dorr, Jr. J. M. Bennett I. V. Anderson O. A. Alderman B. H. Bentley H. E. Frank L. G. Fritz Seniors H. C. Diehl N. A. Kessler Juniors Sophomores W. A. Engstrom H. R. Saxton C. L. Frandenfield Freshmen C. F. Martin C. F. Stone R. I. Thompson W. E. Webb W. F. Jones R. P. Maloney F. H. Struble W. R. Shoemaker S. T. Wyatt The M. A. C. Forester The forestry annual, which has been published each year by the M. A. C. Foresters, will from now on be known as the M. A. C. Forester. This is a publica­ tion of about sixty or seventy pages devoted to the profession of forestry, and is published annually. OFFICERS 1917-1918 Editor-in-Chief, H. Dorr, Jr., T8 F. Associate Editor, J. M. Bennett, T9 F. Business Manager, R. I. Thompson, T8 F. Associate Business Manager, I. V. Anderson, ’20 F. Kimble, Overmeyer, Rothrock, Fortney, Barnes, Phillips, Macgregor Cole, Gledhill, Wilson, Fisher, Tappan, Young, Fischer D. Musselman, F. Musselman, Gardner, Wolford Buckeye Club Organized at M. A. C.y 1916 The Buckeye State Club was organized by the students and faculty members of M. A. C. who have made their homes in Ohio. The club aims to promote a closer friendship among the Buckeyes and it has done a great deal in extending due patriotism and credit to the state for the many things it has done for all to make a greater M. A. C. HONORARY MEMBERS Miss Mabel Leffler Prof. H. H. Musselman Mr. P. L. Miller Miss Grace Smiley FACULTY MEMBERS President, H. L. Fisher Vice-President, Caroline Wagner OFFICERS Cleo Gledhill H. L. Fisher Olive Cole Helen Edmonds A. H. Bauer Nelson Carr M. E. Fortney Mahlon Barnes Elizabeth Burns John Gardner Seniors P. L. Kimble C. J. Overmeyer C. M. Reed Juniors Claudice Kober John M. Kuder Sophomores Gertrude Fischer C. Lichtenwalter Dee Maier S. S. Rothrock Freshmen Emerson Jones Carol Macgregor Dale Musselman 290 Secretary, Marie Burns Treasurer, Mahlon Barnes < Caroline Wagner Eileen Wilson F. Musselman Ruth Musselman Gertrude Tappan Melvin Wolford Ada Young Russell Phillips Lois Remage Herbert Swing Dorr, Stenholm, Hatland, Lindquist, Joost, Major Palmer, Emmons, Carlson, Perkins, Evans, Calrow Grush? Bennett, O’Brien, Windes, Iledan Illinois Club Organized 1914 OFFICERS President, E. F. Perkins Vice-President, Miss I. O’Brien Secretary-Treasurer, H. Dorr, Jr. Reporter, R. H. Major HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. L. C. Emmons Prof. C. E. Millar Mrs. L. C. Emmons RESIDENT MEMBERS Prof. L. C. Emmons Prof. C. E. Millar Mrs. L. C. Emmons Seniors Miss B. E. Harris H. Dorr, Jr. L. Calrow R. H. Major C. M. Hatland E. F. Perkins F. R. Grush S. Iledan Miss I. O’Brien Miss M. Evans H. Joost Juniors Sophomores F. Stenholm Freshmen R. J. Hille Miss C. Windes T. G. Lindquist W. A. Engstrom Miss M. Bennett L. C. Palmer Gilbert, Osgood, Howard, Judson McIntyre, Frazier, Illenden, Allen Lenawee County Club Organized 1917 OFFICERS President, Jessie Illenden Vice-President, E. L. Powers Secretary-Treasurer, C. H. Osgood HONORARY MEMBER W. F. Allen Katherine Burns Kenneth Frazier Harold Halladay Helen Darling J. A. Waldron Juniors Vera Gilbert Sophomores Rella Howard Freshmen L. Judson Jessie Illenden Agnes McIntyre C. H. Osgood A. W. Seeburger E. L. Powers Liberal Arts Entertainments During the course of the year a series of lectures were presented at the Armory under the auspices of the Liberal Arts Council. The State Board of Agriculture in 1912 authorized the appointment of this Council, which was to consist of three members of the faculty and two members of the student body. It is the work of the Council to plan and conduct a lecture course which will appeal to students, combining instruction and entertainment. During the year just past we have enjoyed lectures given by people who have accomplished things in various fields. The speakers and subjects touched upon were: October 27, 1917—Dr. B. R. Baumgard of Los Angeles, on “The Romance of Human Progress.” November 27, 1917—Ross Crane of the Chicago Art Institute, “Art Exhibit and Interpretations.” March 12, 1918—Kate Barnard on “Women and Destiny.” April 8, 1918—Prof. John Masefield, “Tales of the Sea.” Prof. W. H. French Mildred Mead COUNCIL MEMBERS Prof. Halligan Prof. W. W. Johnston Harvey Sass 293 Kuder, Hatland, Downer, Osborne, Hinkle, Welsh, Weidemann, Dell, Sass Wolford, Carpp, Gleason, Dee, Beaver, LaBar, Powers, Saxton, Walker Alder, Hanson, DeYoung, Ungren, Bailey, Howard, Martin Hunter The Lords of Wells ad astra per aspera PROCLAMATION Co ege Howard6Terrare6’ llfl F? havinS been ,duly Petitioned by our friends in Morrill Hall, Tbe Resldence, Brown’s, and Dietrich’s to sit for a photograph and reuuest Be?ow 1sUt\c°I?ni/trnlte r®niembrance of,o.uir most illustrious reign, we have hearkened to the 1917 1918 5L w it7 IBi Pmture ever published of the aristocrats of the Campus in the year of'our lsh ,ton eiPre® 0»f appreciation of the kindness and thoughtfulness tdrf ^A!aB’tu’ ?il Bm H fathering and editing all the matter herein set forth. Mav Ward May Ward F continue to guide the thought and destinies of the Campus for all time to come * A's0’pwe/ War Signed, WARD F. Thomas Christopher Dee, Rex. Andrew George Weidemann, Prime Minister. “Chief” Frank Dowd Donaldson, Matron. WARD F STATISTICS Compiled by “Bill” Thies, Ward E. Sworn and Subscribed to by E. B. S. Hint, Ward C Number of men in Ward F—26 SOCIAL REGISTER Coop calls by F men, Winter Term only....... 781 Parties attended by F men, Winter Term only .............................................. High score,. “Tommy” Dee............................... Coop invitations to Sunday dinner accepted by F men, Winter Term only........................ Same turned down by F men in past four years ............................................ 0 Standing of F at Coop....................................1000 F men married since Fall Term, 1917.............. 2 Number of F men engaged since Fall Term, 73 243 14 1917 ...... 7 Number of F men not engaged but available and very desirable .......................................... 17 (H. E. L. Froelich—Ward A—agent.) WHO’S WHO IN WELLS Number of student editors in College............ Number of student editors in F this year... Number of assistant editors in F.......‘........... Number of Juniors admitted to honorary fraternities, Fall Term, 1917....................... Number of said Juniors residents of F......... Number of honorary fraternity men in F__ Varsity debaters in F..............*...................... 3 3 4 4 3 5 1 BOOKS BY F MEN (R. S. Simmons, Agent) Introduction to Co-Ed Rules, by A. G. Weide­ mann. Third Edition, 1918. Completely Revised and Enlarged. Wisdom and the Veterinary, by Dr. LaBar, Wisdom team (3). Why Did I Leave the Coop? by M. B. Wolford. Why 1 Stopped Fussing, by John Kuder. Cadit Quaestio P ïglSI01K JJJj maemam Jsi«ÄsS*:_ •> . ¿rt ye Qryerre ye Paste Afame- Ve Tfusserre ye &aitfrfuííe p(amc ye ($4itorres %ròòe 9 Cap Night _ The event of Cap Night, that evening for which the Freshmen long from the beginning of the spring term, took place on March 31, 1917. Due to the shortening of the J917 spring term the ceremony was enacted much earlier in the season than in former years. Led by the Alumni, who were visiting for the commencement week program, the long parade started from Williams Hall, went around in front of the Woman’s Building and down to Sleepy Hollow. The Seniors followed the Alumni marchers, then came the Juniors, the Sophomores, and last of all the hilarious Freshmen in their “evening” attire. All carried large sparklers and the line of march was lit by numerous blue, green and red lights. The whole scene was one not easily forgotten by either participant or spectator. Arrived at the big bonfire, the band started to liven things up, fireworks were set off, and the speakers were introduced. W. E. Willman was master of ceremonies and presented President Kenyon Butterfield of the Massachusetts Agricultural College, who had an interesting and snappy talk. The outgoing Senior president, N. O. Weill, then presented the class banner to President Retzlaff of the ’18 class; the Freshmen threw their cherished caps into the flames, while the Seniors burned their old textbooks. Thus another year at M. A. C. was brought to a close and many of the lowei class men as well as Seniors, realized that our four years as Aggies are all too short. 296 The Barbecue Although somewhat late in the season, the Class of 1920 upheld the College custom of giving an annual barbecue in honor of the Freshmen class. November 3 was the date, and early morning found the Sophomore “gang leaders” hard at work. Their part of the work consisted mainly of rounding up the greater part of the Freshmen class and setting them to work, hauling wood, building the pile, or digging post holes. Many classes were thus sadly depleted, but where is there a Sophomore who would attend all his classes on the day of the barbecue? As on previous occasions, the affair was held between Wells Hall and the Chemistry Building. The platform in front of the latter building held the band, and from there the speakers of the evening addressed the throng. F. W. Moody acting as master of ceremonies, assisted by Cheer Leader “Tommy” Dee, introduced to us the following speakers: “Jimmie” Hasselman of the English Department, Coach Chester Brewer, Captain Coryell. Mr. B. Redner, as president of the Soph Class, then delivered his peace talk and presented the huge barbecue knife to Bateman, president of the Freshmen. Even though the evening was a cool one, enough “pep” was presented to keep everyone well warmed up, and as soon as the ceremonies were over the crowd lined up and procured their doughnuts and cider from the “commissary department.” Many barrels of cider and great tins of doughnuts were consumed. The only thing missing was the roast ox, but since Mr. Hoover would have commended the saving in meat, there were no regrets. 297 H i J HOP FLOOR The 1918 Junior Prom On February 21, 1918, the Junior Class held its celebrated J Hop, and in doing so, used for the first time our splendid new gymnasium, to which we had been looking forward for years. As the proms in former years have always been held in Lansing, this year’s was really the first strictly M. A. C. function of its kind. The decorations, both in the gym and in the dining hall of the Women’s Building, where the banquet was served, were very effective. Huge American flags and our own proud service flag, were the outstanding notes in the decorative scheme, while the whole dance floor was surmounted by a canopy of twisted blue and white streamers and large chandeliers. At 6:30 P. M. the banquet was served, and after listening to several excellent toasts, the guests adjourned to the gymnasium. Here thé grand march took place, led by President Jack Engels and his guest, Miss Florence Ristell of Calumet. The dancers then reveled to the tunes of Shook’s Detroit Orchestra until 3 A. M., when everyone left for home, tired out but in the best of spirits. The Hop, although handicapped by war conditions, was nevertheless voted a great success, and much credit is due the committees in charge. The chairmen .of the respective committees follow: Finance, E. R. Benkert Banquet, Gertrude Newbrough Music, H. B. Key del Favors, R. F. Montgomery Programs, R. C. Mosher Toasts, C. H. Mitchell Printing, P. C. Yuli Decorating, H. T. Campbell Eligibility, J. L. Snyder Commencement oi 1917 Last year was the first in ,the history of the College that commencement activities In order to help improve the acute farm labor situa­ began before the first of June. tion due to our entrance in the war, College was closed on June 1st. Similar to last year’s custom, commencement week exercises were carried on before class work was completed by under class men. This plan proved very satis­ factory and has caused greater interest in these exercises among undergraduates. Events of Commencement Week, 1917 Friday, May 25 6:30 P.M. Band Concert - - - - M. A. C. Military Band 7:30 P. M. Athletic Night - - - - - - - - - - - Campus Campus 3:00 P. M. Baccalaureate Sermon - - - - - - Armory Sunday, May 27 6:30 P.M. Sacred Concert Bishop Theodore Henderson - - - - - - - Armory M. A. C. Military Band Thursday, May 31 7:30 P.M. 9:00 P.M. Cap Night Program - Informal Reception andx Party - - - - - - - .Sleepy Hollow Armory - Friday, June 1 10:00 A. M. Commencement Exercises - - - - Dr. Samuel M. Crothers, Pastor of First Unitarian Church, Cambridge, Mass. 12:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. 8:00 P. M. Alumni Meeting and Dinner - Dedication of New Buildings Society Reunions - - ..^7" - . Wells Hall “ Campus ~ Poster Night Instead of a single Poster Night as has usually been the custom, our fair campus was the scene of a double dose of this form of inter-class rivalry in the fall of 1917. This year, however, conditions were somewhat reversed. On the third Thursday night of the fall term the Sophomores decided to put up their posters, and in fact did put up a few on various buildings about the campus. The only trouble was that the Freshmen had been instructed to lay low, and consequently no opposition was offered the ’80 men. In the mean­ time the “Fresh” had secured posters of their own, and led by fifteen or twenty Juniors, sallied forth on Friday night, or rather Saturday at 2 A. M. They were well equipped for the fray with pails of paste, brushes and ladders. After covering the outlying buildings they started on Williams and Abbott Halls. At the latter Sophomore rendezvous the real excitement of the night took place, but the Freshmen were equal to their self-imposed task and some thirty-odd “Sophs” are said to have felt the refreshing waters of the Red Cedar. After keeping up their posters until about 4:30 A. M. the Freshmen made their big mistake in going home. Although presumably beaten, the Sophomores now came forth and managed to obliterate most of the 21 posters before the breakfast bell rang. The Camp Custer Laundry How dear to my heart are its Camp Custer Mem’ries Those hallowed reminders of scenes long ago, The bull pens, alive with the incoming rookies5, The stiffling dust cloud that maddened us so. I seem to recall that we cursed the wool blankets, And grumbled while searching for beans in the soup; Yet glad was our lot; though we did not suspect it— Wer knew not the Laundry that was down by the Loop The gigantic Laundry, the titanic Laundry, The great model Laundry that was down by the Loop, It seemed to us there we were drilled to a frazzle; It seemed that a rookie had very few friends; It seemed like an age from each pass to the next one; An age that began where eternity ends. The Autumn wore on and at last came Thanksgiving, The spirits revived that were starting to droop; December was here and the blow had not fallen. We laughed, for we knew not the Thing at the Loop, The harmless new Laundry, the unfinished Laundry, The impotent Laundry was safe at the Loop. A week before Christmas a rumor was current Of blessings galore that the Powers had prepared, Our clothes would be worked to immaculate cleanness, Our socks will be darned, and our breeches repaired. The Powers had planned for the soldiers’ convenience, (We marveled indeed that the Powers should so stoop) A grand cleaning house for the Camp Custer washing We heard they were building it down by the Loop A government Laundry, the soldiers’ own Laundry, A giant steam Laundry, way down by the Loop. The Laundry was finished and open for business The week after Xmas, as I recollect, The truck came around, but collections were scanty Because there were very few duds to collect. Until one fine morning the bugles blew “pay-call” And everyone welcomed the sound with a whoop, But, alas, each one found himself fourteen bits poorer Because of the rumor concerning the Loop, Because of the Laundry, the new U. S. Laundry In business, they told us, way down by the Loop. Divisional order compelled acquiescence, We trusted our clothes to the Laundry at last And when, three weeks later, the truck made delivery, Our direst forebodings were richly surpassed. Had Sammy sent socks, they were four sizes smaller; No underwear came, and he died with the croup. He squeezed his poor .fists through his shirt’s tiny arm­ holes And cordially cursed everything at the Loop, But mostly the Laundry, the shirt shrinking Laundry, The sock-shrinking Laundry way down by the Loop. And now far removed from Camp Custer’s environs My mem’ry reverts as one’s memory will To the troubles and joys that we knew in the service; I think of the good and I think of the ill, I think of the fun at the Castle club smoker, But when I am listing the opposite group I head the whole list with the name of the Laundry The miserable Laundry that stood by the Loop The soul trying Laundry, the slow service Laundry The government Laundry that stood by the Loop. R. S. Clark, ’18 Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 304 mmmimwä SETS THE PACE FATHERS, SONS, AND GRAND­ SONS, EACH WITHIN THEIR TIME, HAVE FOUND OLDSMOBILE DURABILITY, ENDURANCE AND COMFORT INSEPARABLY WOVEN AMONG THEIR FONDEST FAMILY TRADITIONS. Six-Cylinder models are built in Touring Cars and Roadsters. Eight-Cylinder models are built in Touring Cars, Roadsters and The Sportster. OLDS MOTOR WORKS LANSING, MICHIGAN Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 305 llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllllll!llll!llllllllllllllllllll!lllllll!llll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllll!llillllllll!l ihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniijj] Florsheim Ralston Shoes and Furnishings For Those Who Care . The . Fashion Shop East Lansing Emery Shirts Stetson Hats rhe Michigan Agricultural College ASSOCIATION is made up of the livest of alumni and former students of M. A. C. Our Purpose is the banding together of M. A. C. men and women for Service to Alma Mater We publish the M. A. C. Record, a weekly paper that aims to keep M. A. C. people in touch with themselves and with college. We seek to organize the whole family of College folks into backers and boosters of M. A. C. "The college cannot live on her past — what will you do for her future?” Are you with us? Membership in the Association is open to anyone with 20 credits (one term’s completed work). The annual dues (that help the good work ‘carry on’) are $2.00 which includes subscription to the M. A. C. Record. Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinillllllll! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii biiTïïmrmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiïïiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!....mi...............................................................................................................................................................................................................iiiiiiiiiiiihii......mu COLLEGE BOOKS and SUPPLIES M. A. C. Book Buying Association Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealng with advertisers 306 When the War Closes —What Then ? • Will you be ready to take your place and do your part in the re-construction work which must be done at the close of this great conflict? The demand for men and women trained along practical lines will be far greater than the supply. We here all believe in preparedness. If you do, then enter the MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE next fall and thus take the first step toward preparing for your future work. You will find here splendid facilities and equipment for training along just the lines of work which now is, and will continue to be, most essential — Agriculture, Engineering, Home Economics, Forestry, and Veteri­ nary Medicine. It is necessary that we have men and many of them in the thick of the fight, but our efficiency in the great war, as well as our standing as a nation after it is over, will depend on the way our affairs are handled by the men and women at home. Studying the Cream Separator — M. A. C. Dairy Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 308 Interior Machine Shop — M. A. C. Teachers of Agriculture and Home Economics Under a recent act of Congress, government money is available for the support of teachers of agriculture and home economics in the high schools of the state. Only persons who are graduates of certain colleges, of which M. A. C. is one, giving four years of work in either agriculture or home economics, are eligible for employment as teachers under this act, hence the advisability of entering at once upon this work if you are interested in teaching. College year opens October 7,1918. Summer Session of six weeks beginning June 24 Short winter courses in agriculture beginning about January 1, each year Write for catalog and information FRANK S. KEDZIE, President, East Lansing, Michigan Domestic Science Laboratory—M. A. C. Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 309 E: BURR PATTERSON äc CO. Makers of the High Grade SOCIETY PINS for M. A. C. Write for our "Book for Modern Greeks” showing Rings, Novelties, etc., which can be mounted with your Coat of Arms BURR PATTERSON & CO. FRATERNITY JEWELERS 791 Woodward Avenue MICHIGAN DETROIT Giving Satisfaction is a P” cAttraction oAsbestos Shingles the Everlasting cRoof S. P. CONKLING Steam Pipe and Boiler Covering Roofing Asbestos Paper Millboard Packings If it’s made of Asbestos I have it ! A GIRL’S GEOGRAPHY OF LIFE Cape Flattery—Age 16. Point Defiance—Age 18. Cape Lookout—Age 20. Cape Hope—Age 25. Cape Disappointment—Age 30. Cape Fear—Age 35. Cape Farewell—Age 40. ***** EXPERIENCE I had my money And my friend, I lent my money To my friend, I asked my money Of my friend, I lost my money And my friend. Downhearted ***** 68 Jefferson Avenue kind is it?” DETROIT :: MICHIGAN “They call it a phonograph — it’s a record breaker.” “That’s a fast-looking car of Prof. King’s, what Eh Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 310 TheBe EVERYTHING Trees Plants I.E.ILGENFRITZ S?NS<§ THE MONROE NURSERY MONROE,MICH. Established J64T i M i ■ Confidence is the^reat cementing /actor betu)een the public and the oldest, tartest and most complete Nursery irt Aichi^an Utamfm __ AQEm MttTEi) Kindly mention the Wolverine ichen dealing with advertisers 311 JOHN HERRMANN’S SONS Tailors 218 N. Washington Ave. x LANSING, MICH. SPROWL BROS. Everywomans Store CLOAKS, SUITS, WAISTS, FURS, SKIRTS 119 N. Washington Ave. 7 LANSING, MICH. Everything in the Line of INSURANCE BONDS, ETC. Aetna-izing a Specialty THE DYER-JENISON-BARRY COMPANY, Ltd. LANSING INSURANCE AGENCY, Inc. Bell 228 Citizens 2225 208 Capital National Bank Building A Senior— Deep wisdom; swelled head; Brain fever—he’s dead. A Junior— Fair one; hope fled; Heart busted—he’s dead. A Soph.— Played football; ’nuf sed; Neck broken—he’s dead. A Fresh.— Went fussin’—’tis said; Floor hit him—he’s dead. JOHN F. CROTTY BOOKS and STATIONERY □ □ NEW ADDRESS 110 East Allegan St. Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 312 MAGAZINES AS WE READ THEM AT M. A. C. The Country Gentleman—“Irish” Ramsey. Literary Digest—Professor Johnson’s English classes. Everybody’s—Marion Smith. Ladies’ World—“Coop.” Sunset—Farm Lane. Woman’s Home Companion—Keith Kruger. Adventurers—Freshmen on Campus. Travel—“Spike,” Hespy House, “Coop.” Review of Reviews—Before Finals. Good Housekeeping—“Coop.” Youths’ Companion—Geraldine Curtis. Art-de-la-Mode—-Marion Morse. Vogue—“Tics” (Larry inc.) Century—Registration or Lecture Periods. Short Stories—He and She, Library, “F.” Smart Set—Seniors. Life—Everywhere at M. A. C. Etude—Sissie Anderson. Little Folks—Marjory Cook and ?. Judge—-Pres. Kedzie. KEEP BEES Orchard, Garden, Poultry or Farm specialists will find the production of honey profitable and interesting. We furnish complete equip­ ment either with or without bees. Send for general catalog together with booklet "The Bee Keeper and the Fruit G V rower. General Agents in Michigan for Root’s Bee Supplies. M. H. Hunt & Son 510 North Cedar St. Lansing - Michigan Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 313 I Help I UNCLE SAM I I win the war I Established 1844 Incorporated 1904 Long Distance Phone- Randolph 3421 Private Exchange to all Departments si b by using PAPEC ENSILAGE CUTTERS and AVERY GAS TRACTORS so as to get Maximum Capacity from the farm m a The Banting Machine Company Distributors TOLEDO OHIO Catalogs furnished upon request Sharp & Smith W. N. SHARP, Pres. Makers and Importers of Surgical and Veterinary Instruments Hospital and Invalid Supplies Elastic Stockings and Supporters Artificial Limbs, Trusses Deformity Apparatus Optical and Electrical Goods Manicure and Pedicure Instruments 155-157 N. Michigan Blvd. CHICAGO ILLINOIS Two Doors North of Randolph St. Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 314 / =m s !E An Invitation Members of the M. A. C. faculty and students have always been welcome at the Hugh Lyons factory, and are invited to inspect our plant at any time. Our wood-working depart­ ments are of particular interest to forestry students. Hugh Lyons & Company MAKE BUYERS OUT OF PASSERSBY Lansinc - Michigan NEW YORK SALESROOM’ 35 w. 32nd. STREET CMIOaCO 234 S- FRANKUN ST. DECIDED There are meters iambic and meters trocaic, There are meters in musical tone, But — the meter That’s sweeter And neater Completer Is to meet her At the P. O.—alone. X ? ! ! ***** SH! —SH! — The parlor door was open wide, Mary Ann, dear, by his side— Mary Ann and Hank. Then Mary Ann heard a fuss, And—later found them sitting thus— Mary Ann and Hank. ***** EVOLUTIONS OF A STUDENT Freshman—Louie Smith. Sophomore—Louis Smith. Junior—Louis A. Smithe. Senior—Arthur Louis Smythe. Bring your build- ing troubles to us. Estimates cheerfully given The Largest Retail Lumber Dealers m Central Michigan □ □ Rikerd Lumber Co. “The Home of Quality” Lansing, Mich. Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 315 --------------■------------------—m Farmers ! Sizes 1/4 to 15 Horsepower Dependable Power For Thoroughly reliable, simple, perfectly balanced and compact, Olds Engines are giving dependable, economical, never- faltering service in all sections of the country. A Better Engine at a Lower Price The Olds today—the product of 40 years’ experience—is better than ever. And our guarantee—three times as strong as heretofore — whereby you are to be sole judge as to whether a part is defective or not, is your sure protection. Write for full particulars about this hopper cooled, frost proof engine which is equipped with the Webster Tri-Polar Oscillating Magneto, when so desired. RELIANCE ENGINEERING CO. Over 150,000 Satisfied Users LANSING MICHIGAN 3= B The Empress Theatre Vaudeville and Motion Pictures a— — p OLD, BUT EVER TRUE A Freshman was wrecked on an African shore, Where a cannibal tribe held sway; The Freshman was served up on slices of toast The eve of that very same day. But the vengeance of heaven followed straight on the act, For e’er the next morning was seen, By cholera morbus the tribe was attacked— The Freshman was awfully green. ! ! ! ! OUTLINE OF SHORT STORY F—ierce lessons. L—ate hours. U —nexpected committee meeting. N—othing prepared. K—nocked out. ***** F reshman—Irresponsible. Sophomore—Irrepressible. J unior—Irresistible. Senior—Irreproachable. “Quality”Steel Filing Cabinets Desks and Tables STEEL OFFICE EQUIPMENT OF ALL KINDS The CANTON ART METAL CO. “Quality Products” - CANTON OHIO - : Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 316 E ----E ‘The Gold Standard of Values" REO MOTOR CAR COMPANY Lansing Michigan Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 317 We Sell... ADAM SCHAAF PIANOS and PLAYER PIANOS Columbia Grafonolas Aeolian Vocalions and WHITE Sewing Machines (All sold on easy terms) We also carry a complete line of Columbia double disc records. Yes, they will play on your machine. Budd’s Music House 119 East Allegan St. LANSING :: MICHIGAN BEAN GIANT DUPLEX The power sprayer with ten exclusive features. You can’t afford to buy without investi­ gating this sprayer and the rest of our line. It’s for spraying fruit but will spray beans. Bean Spray Pump Co. LANSING, MICHIGAN 0----------------- Pictures Framed at I ■ m 3 yV '^^^ESTABLISHED 1873 UEBYTTUNG FOB.YOUB OFFICE: ------------------1 223 North Washington Avenue ----B -----~B Abbey & Walters MEN’S DUDS 213 South Washington Avenue b— 3~~ - a =E KEEPING BOOKS ON BOSSIE One can’t milk cows blindfolded any more than he can plow corn blindfolded. Without the Babcock Test and Records, you do it blindly. Let us send you our book “Dairy Figures,” a catalog and book of interesting facts combined. College people tell us it is worth reading because it throws light on this subject. Blanke Mfg. & Supply Co. 214 Washington Ave. ST. LOUIS -------m Kindly mention the Wolverine h............ when dealing with advertisers ..........-E 318 mv* 319 Ss -+ + EAT To those who appreciate Good Laundry PROMPT ATTENTION QUICK SERVICE Banquet Cream We Darn Your Socks and Mend Your Clothes Bread and Bran Bread Made by Wm. Barratt Wholesale Baker Lansing, Mich. We Invite You to Give Us a Trial The Lansing Laundry Co. THE AVIATOR AND MILKY WAY Along the milky way An airship man went flopping; He found to his dismay, His craft was nearly stopping. He couldn’t place the fault Until a kind star-dweller Advised that he should halt And look at the propeller. And then the man was heard Some naughty things to utter, His plight was quite absurd, The shaft was clogged with butter. Home Talent Corner Kerr and Kalamazoo Sts. +■ -----------------------------------------------------------+ Prex: “Do you drink?” Soph (quite huffy) : “That’s my business.” Prex: “Do you have any other business?” Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 320 IhX 11th YEAR All energy, all power generated by the Duplex motor is evenly distributed to all four wheels. The Duplex utilizes its motor power with double effect, and power wastage is eliminated. Use of its motor power with twice the efficiency possible in rear-wheel drive trucks accounts for the titanic haulage tasks performed by the Duplex. Because the Duplex 4-wheel drive principle prevents power wastage, the Duplex has tremendous reserve power. It hauls capacity loads through mud It is equal to any emergency. and sand and up embankments and steep hills. Let us give you a practical demonstration of this super-strength truck— the truck that goes anywhere. DUPLEX SALES AGENCY Washington Ave. and Shiawassee St. A. M. GRIFFITH, Manager DUPLEX TRUCK COMPANY — Lansing, Michigan LOCAL DISTRIBUTORS Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers J» QM il »---- » »— »—ir Larrabee’s Sport Shop Once more renews its allegiance to old M. A. C. and as for twenty-five years past is still endeavoring to merit the patronage of the students in all our lines. We are Lansing agents for Spalding’s Athletic Goods and sell outfits for almost every sport you may desire to indulge in. At the same old stand but with perennially renewed energy for your service with a big “S. ” 325 South Washington Ave. LANSING, MICH. □c lac □□ Mr. FARMER DINEviEL. TMe TRADE MARK OF QUALITY MADE FAMOUS BY COOO IMPLEMENTS You are one of the producers of the na­ tion’s wealth, because the farm is a foundation of wealth. The portion of this wealth to which you are entitled depends on how you manage your farm; what assistance you give nature by using good seed, by providing a proper seed bed, by distributing the seed in the correct pro­ portion by use of accurate seeding ma­ chinery, and by carefully cultivating and harvesting. Good judgment combined with good tools will get good results. We have made a careful, scientific study of agriculture in all its branches We offer you the product of these years of study and experience in the John Deere Full Line of Agricultural Implements. Write us for “Better Farm Implements and How to Use Them.’’ Let us help you win your share of success in the agricultural world. John Deere Plow Co. of Moline Lansing, Michigan 1DC The Dream I slept on a hill, and I dreamed a dream In the checkered gloom of a lone tree’s shade; While the winding stream with its silvery gleam, Moating the hill with a long, slow curve, Wended its way across the glade. I dreamed a dream that is old as life, A vision of death as I wished it to be. A screaming fife in the battle’s strife, The clarion bugle, the rolling drum; All these are not the calls for me. I wished to hear at the close of day, A soft, low voice like the call of a bird That drifts its way like a sprite at play Through the lazy air when the sun is low; A voice that I alone had heard. I wished to die in day’s waning light While Evening brings Night’s sable cloak, And the faint starlight greets my fading sight; Such was my dream before I woke. A. J. Patch, ’17 Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 322 The New Daylight Factory The Gier Pressed Steel Co. Lansing, Mich. Manufacturers of Pressed Steel Parts Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 323 Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 325 IDEAL POWER Built to run with a minimum of care and attention, Ideal Engines are demonstrating their reliability in all lines of construction work. CONSTANT SERVICE Ideal Engines are furnishing dependable power for concrete mixers, power loaders and hoisting and pumping outfits—giving never- faltering, care-free service. Ideal Engine Company R. E. OLDS, Chairman LANSING MICHIGAN FRESHMAN AMBITION He failed in physics, Flunked in math; They heard him softly hiss: “I’d like to find the guy that said That ‘ignorance is bliss.’ ” ***** Larry—“How’s everything?” Bill Coulter—“Oh, she’s all right.” Mary had a little lamb, Observe the tense, we pray; For with the prices that prevail, It couldn’t be today. “Check—Club C” ***** A woodpecker sat on a Freshie’s head, And settled down to drill ; He bored away for half a day, And finally broke his bill. f(JFK/NXKn% could not have led the field for a quarter of a century without possessing sterling quality. They could not lead the field today if they were not recognized as THE BEST—ABSOLUTELY. Instantaneous Readings. Metal lined cases. Accurate—Durable—Dependable On Sale Everywhere. Catalog on Request. THE /uFK/NffU LE Ç o. Saginaw, Mich. New York; London, Eng. Windsor, Canada Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advevtisevs 326 The Campus Press PRINTERS-ENGRAVERS STATIONERS A modern, up-to-date Printing Plant located under the East Lansing State Bank, for the convenience of M. A. C. Men, Women, Classes, Clubs, Societies, Fraternities and allied organizations. ■ill ElllllllllllllllllllliO W. S. KELLOGG, Manager Automatic Phone 2243 "Particular Printing for Particular People” Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing 'with advertisers 327 LE CLEAR THE PHOTOGRAPHER again contributes to the success of the Wolverine by producing its photographs By reason of our years of experience in doing the college work, as well as our spacious and most approved studio, we are Lansing’s only photographers capable of giving the high-grade photographical work demanded by M. A. C. men and women. Equal satisfaction and the same careful attention given in both individual sittings and groupings. Seniors, particularly, their graduating photographs enjoy the satisfaction of having a perfect portrait to give to their friends. in 7. r*, *3f llCllOS. Jackson — Carter Block # Lansing—Capital National Bank Building Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers Old Pard I turned my back on the grime and the black, Of the cities that swarm hot and mad, When I felt the clean air of the mountains, why there I settled contented and glad. And I’m up with the sun like a new life begun, With the strength of a youth’s desire. I sing to the sun when my lone meal is done While the eagle soars higher and higher. Oh, it’s far from the way where worry holds sway, Dull care is no master of mine. For my board bill I charge to Dame Nature at large, And my bed is the soft-needled pine. Some day when I’m old and my few days are told, When my rifle is rust at my side, I’ll saddle my jack and hitch on my pack, And shag on across the Divide. I’ll half hate to go, for the way I don’t know, The trails are too faint for to follow, But I’ll just trust to Him, when my ‘old eyes are dim, While He leads me through upland and hollow. I know on that side of the last great Divide, Will be mountains whose feet are caressed, By a lake cool and deep that reflects half asleep The snow-covered peaks in its breast. There I’ll camp on its shore when my roaming is o’er, When I come home forever, for then I’ll know that He’ll see that an old fellow like me, Must live in the mountains again. David L. Peppard, ’17 ***** FRESH FROM THE COOP “Did you wash that fish before you baked it?” Smart Omicron Nu: “No; what’s the use? It has lived in water all its life.” ***** Victim: “Confound your dog, madam. It’s bitten a piece out of my leg.” Owner: “I’m truly sorry, sir. Naughty, little Daphne! After all my attempts to make Wednes­ day your meatless day.” ***** Future Father-in-Law: “But how can you sup­ port my daughter? Twenty dollars a week won’t pay the rent.” Senior: “You don’t mean to say you’ll charge Helen and me rent, d<$ you?” NOVO POWER For every purpose where dependable service and long life are necessary, you will find the Novo Engine. A compact, self contained Engine, simple in construction, with few working parts. Very simple to operate. Novo outfits built on the same Standard for reliability that has made include: the Novo Engine famous, Deep Well Pumping outfit, Force Pumping outfits, Diaphragm Pumping outfits, Hoists in forty sizes and types, Saw Rigs, Air Compressors, etc. Novo Engines run 80% of the gasoline driven concrete mixers as well as all gasoline driven back fillers. A Novo Engine on your spray rig means excellent service, as operating on side hills or over rough ground has no effect on it. Our book “Reliable Power” will give you further information. N OVO ENGINE C°- Clarence E. Bement.Vice-Pres. &.Gen.Mgr. LANSING, MICHIGAN Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 329 Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 330 1--------------"--------------11--------------11 —11 11 ■ " 11 11 ir~7| Military Uniforms! J AND EQUIPMENTS For Army Officers and College Cadets, tailored to individual measure. Quality and workmanship of best. We Specialize in Complete Contracts for “R. O. T. C.” UNITS Send us now your specifications for next fall’s class We supplied M. A. C. for this year's class NEW OFFICERS: When commissioned you can save money by buying direct from us as we are manufacturers of complete equipment from bed roll to uniforms. Write us for samples of uniform cloths and self-measure blanks for mail orders. Printing Department In our own printing plant you will find facilities and artisans specially well trained for producing high grade college year books,/ This year our schedule of = contracts includes for the second time, “ Michiganensian, ’ ’ the beautiful and = excellent annual of the University of Michigan. LET US FIGURE ON YOUR NEXT BOOK Ihling Rros. Rverard ■ KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN m Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 332 _______ | 1 □- 1 ■ ■ □ □-------= .— - Remember WHITE POPPY Flour It’s the leader Christian Breisch &: Co. Lansing - - Michigan “Everything for the Shop” Our new store with a floor space of 100,000 sq. ft., enables us to carry a very large stock of Metal-working and Wood-working Machinery, Tools of all Kinds, and Factory and Mill Supplies, Our service is good. Give us a trial The Chas. A. Strelinger Co. DETROIT 43-51 E. Larned St. □—--------------------------------------- □ n--------------------------------------------------|----------------□ DEFINITIONS OF A FRESHMAN The Pessimist— “Fussing”—A certain something they say I must not do. “Algebra”—It has brown and black, sometimes yellow stripes; seen at circuses. ! ! ! “Hash”—A certain dish served on meatless days. “Pig”—A hog’s little boy. “Flunk”—What they say I’ll get in math. “Indigestion”—Result of failure to adjust a square meal to a round stomach. “Gentleman Farmers”—Those seldom raise anything but their hats. farmers who “Needles”—Things used to make the Victrola play—aw! ***** Examination Much perspiration No recreation Nervous prostration All flunkeration Humiliation. The Optimist— Examination Anticipation No preparation Some blufferation Realization. ***** SISTERLY ADVICE HEARD AROUND THE. CAMPUS If a body meet a girlie On a windy day; Play the part of true politeness, Look the other way > Barbara: “Nonsense, Kathleen! How do you know that the prunes at Club C are old?” Kathleen: “I tell you I could see the wrinkles in them.” ---------- □ □--------------------------------------------------------------------□ Mechanic— Carpenter Tools We can give you what you want Norton Hardware Co. 212 S. Washington Ave. J. W. Edmonds’ Sons Trunks Travelers' Supplies—Novelties 107 S. Wash. Ave. Established 64 Years □---------------------------------——----- — □ □ .... ....................... □ Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 333 ET 44BLIZZARD” ENSILAGE CUTTERS Manufactured by JOS. DICK MFG. CO., Canton, Ohio Made in Eight Sizes Ask for Catalog Light Running Enormous Capacity CLEMENS & GINGRICH CO. Commerce and Cherry Streets Distributors for Central Western States GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Michigan Butter and Egg Company Home of “Palmas Alias” Wholesale Eggs, Butter, Apples and Cheese LANSING, MICHIGAN Three inmates of Wells were telling of their strange experiences and how they had been mis­ taken for great men. “Would you believe it?” says Borgman, “I was mistaken for Theodore Roose­ velt.” “Peace be with you/’ chimed in Vaughn, “but I have been mistaken for President Wilson.” “Huh/’ said Virshup, “I vas standing on the street corner the other day and a cop comes along and says to me, “Holy Moses, are you here again?” ***** Teacher: “Can anyone give me a sentence with the term ‘weather-beaten’ ?” Boy: “Me old man roots for the Giants whether beaten or not.” ***** ALONG FARM LANE She: “My, these cows look so dejected lately.” He: “Yes, and haven’t you noticed how blue the milk is we’ve been getting?” ***** Gossip No. L—“Gee, she’s crazy over the men.” Gossip No. 2—“Why do you know she even uses ‘Mennen’s Talcum’?” h—............ - Kindly mention the Wolverine token dealing with advertisers 334 The Michigan SiloCompany Manufacturers of the Smith Interlocking Cement Stave Silo Lasts a lifetime. Strength increases with age. Fire and wind proof. No paint. No trouble with loose hoops. Retain their original shape Any height or diameter desired. mm Wet Mix Process Absolutely air-tight and sanitary. Costs less than any other imperishable or high grade wood silo. Made right and stays right. Cured in steam kilns. Moulded in steam heated machines. You Can’t go Wrong on a Smith Inter­ locking Cement Silo The Silo which is mechanically and practically perfect. They are Guaranteed to Satisfy, and are recommended by all agricultural authorities who have investigated them FACTORY AND OFFICE AT KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 335 ¡illlillllllllllllllllllllllllip You can find anything you may need in SHOES At Woodworth’s at the Right Price Choose us for your Men's Wear Store Most Everyone Does The Mapes Co. Established 1900 207-209 S. Washington Ave. Hart, Shafïner & Marx and Michaels-Stern Clothes $20 to $40 Always the Best Hats, Caps and Furnishings 115 North Washington Avenue Ask Any Man in Town ” 0= Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 336 PRUDDEN WHEELS for Passenger Cars Light Delivery Trucks Truck Attachments Heavy Trucks complete with Woodwork, Hubs and Rims PRUDDEN WHEEL COMPANY Manufacturers of Automobile Wheels Complete LANSING, MICHIGAN Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 338 Springtime Brings Memories Thrice the sun has crossed the line Since I left that home of mine, But vacation time will find me At the old farm on a spree. Where Acer saccharum are but maples, And the malus are plain apples; But the syrup’s just as sweet, And marmalade will be a treat. Oh, I’m going back to where When a boy there was no care. Seems like the most I ever did Was to watch where the brown trout hid; Or to look for a muskrat queen— Shy, retiring, seldom seen; Or through the wood I’d make a trip To find a sweet, wild honey drip. Three short years have made a change That no time can rearrange. The old world has grown too large; To know it all becomes a charge. Though much one learns, he’ll still repent, For knowledge does not bring content. Greed for a scholar’s wealth’s to blame For a promise that’s in vain. That’s why I’m going back to where The fields abound in pure air. Where big, brown buds begin to swell— Springtime is coming, they can tell. Just to forget the world of strife, And live again that boyhood life That knew not of the things so strange, I charge with having brought the change. ***** E. L. Waite He^—“Was the car crowded you came out on?” I had a strap all to myself.” Co-ed: “Not very. fV Engine for Every Purpose on the Farm 'QoeSa#* Wmmm' For all classes of work where efficiency and economy are wanted. The "New- Way” Engine leads them all. It has the necessary features to produce entire Satisfaction for the operator. Advanced design consisting of the direct cooling system, enclosed crankcase, splash system of lubri­ cation, light weight, simple, compact, and easy to operate. A Life Guarantee is Furnished With Every Engine “New-Way" engines are built in all sizes and types both vertical and horizontal. The “New-Way” binder engine will save your crops and horses and enable you to get your harvesting done in any kind of weather. ***** Ask for Catalog “Z” Marie Otis: “Oh, dear, I wish I had a new sailor suit.” Helen Edmunds: “What’s the matter, doesn’t your sailor suit?” TkENew-WSy’MoTORCoMPANY Lansing, Michigan, US.A. Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 339 m + + ■+ Compliments of Michigan Supply Co. Lansing, Michigan Michigan Screw Company Manufacturers Of Screw Machine Products Lansing Michigan Wrought Pipe for Steam, Plumbing and Well Work. Iron and Brass Valves, Fittings, Power Trans­ mission, Belting, Hose, Plumbing and Heating Supplies All Goods of Quality +---------------------------------------------------------------•+ Breathes there a maid with soul so dead Who never to her chum hath said: “Is my nose shiny?” Breathes there a man with soul so dead Who after hours’ wait at “Coop” hath not said: x ! — ! x — ? ! x ? W ! * * * * * Oswald: “Good heavens, the clock just struck one, and I promised your mother I’d leave at twelve.” Hepatica: “Good, we’ve eleven hours yet.” ***** A recruiting officer strolled into the dairy barn where a man was milking a cow. “How is it that you are not at the front, young man?” “Because, sir,” answered “there ain’t no milk at that end.” the dusky milker, +■ Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 340 ■+ |JZDDC=]ÜC: □□c □□□□□□ □□c □□c □□c □ ' D! 3 T C □ ¡ U Lnr inr High ideals, energy, purpose, a desire to do all things well, and broad conceptions of all the functions of a merchant govern the conduct of The MILLS Dry Goods Company The Heart of Tansing Silks, Dress Goods, Linens, White Goods, Colored Wash Goods, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Domestics The Only Store in Lansing that Sells WOOLTEX Suits, Coats, Skirts □ DC □□CZDOC Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 341 □OC DDE £ □ ) = [ □ ! □ DC ■ THE GREAT UNITED LINE THE “UNITED” stands for Michigan’s most popular line of farm power equipment. A COMPLETE STOCK at Lansing for prompt shipment. Highest Quality-IlLowest Prices $198°° and up Retail United” Gasoline ot Kerosene Engines. Stationary or Portable 1 Yz to 12 h.p. sizes. The UNITED” Line includes gasoline engines, kerosene engines, cream separators, electric lighting plants, washing machines, feed grinders, chemical closets, pump jacks., belting and supplies. For complete detailed information, prices and advertising, write C. L. SPRINKLE, President UNITED ENGINE COMPANY, Lansing, Michigan, U. S. A. UNITED” Electric Farm Lighting Plants: All Styles and Sizes. YOUR 5 and 10c Store The Customer is Always Right at KNOX’S 5 and 10c Store F. W. Woolnxsorth Co., Successors The Big Store on the Corner Sonnet to M. A.C. To thee, loved College, I my voice upraise; Thou’st given more than knowledge unto me; God, only, knows what wealth I owe to thee Of training needed for life’s unknown maze, Of happy hours amid the busy days, Of friendships true that ne’er forgot shall be, Yea, that shall last through all eternity, Of wider view and broader life always. For half a century hast thou lived and grown And blest each youth that did thy welcome claim, For thou an equal chance to each hath shown; Thy sons and daughters are in many a clime; Oh, may we all prove worthy of thy name And Alma Mater honor through all time. Alice M. Powell, T6 ***** Agnes: “Did you notice that good looking fellow who sat back of us on the car?” Verna: “Oh, the handsome young man with the green necktie and the blue shirt, who wore his hair pompadour? No, why?” Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 349 YOUR EYES! Are you giving them a Square Deal? Science plus Accuracy spells Service! Lenses accurately ground. Towle Glasses Will Relieve Your Eyestrain. Towle Optical Company "WHERE THE EYES ARE ALWAYS MOVIN G” H. E. BRADNER President and Manager H. E. THOMAS Vice-President The AutoBody Co. Lansing, Michigan E. S. PORTER Treasurer FRED C. RUCH Secretary Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 343 i 1 | 1 ] | ! ^gjililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 1 11 llllllllllllllll lllllllll Mil! £ 1 12IMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllll!llll!llllllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllll!l[x The Clothes Shop Try Our $1500 Guaranteed Iceless Soda Fountain ; 1 This is the Only Store showing 111 the renowned Society Brand Clothes Summer or Winter For Young Men and M en who stay Young Clever New Models C. L. Frost & Co. | 120 North Washington Avenue I'r = ¡ i !/'] We use only the choicest, ripest natural fruits. The richest, freshest cream. The finest chocolate. The best of everything combined with clean, sanitary dispensing at popular prices. The College Drug & Grocery, Inc. The REXALL Store A. C. BAUER, Pharmacist Opposite M. A. C. East Lansing, Mich. Siiiiiirahi* | | 1 | | “BULL DOG Gas and Oil Engines NEWS of THE DAY enabling students to keep- informed up-to-the-minute is served promptly and carefully by this live Michigan daily. MAP happenings receive detailed In. H. v. treatment with accuracy and precision through college corre­ spondents. Tho Qfo+p news is handled by I lie Oltuc Speciaj[ writers and through leased wire service, fully, impartially and officially. THp World is brou£ht to, y°,ur IIIC worm desk the authentic reports of the Associated Press on war and international events. through The State Journal By Carrier 10c a week By Mail ¡3.00 a year Over 40,000 in Use Bates & Edmonds Motor Company LANSING :: :: MICHIGAN Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 344 I 111 Michigan Bridge and Pipe Company [«)lll|g |ll11!...........................................mu....iiiiiiiifiTiBMiilMiiiiiiriiinimiBroiiiiiiiii)imnBifmiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiii.i^1 Ij The C. J. Strang | | Printing Company | Good Printing Quick Service j *{ I 'js,' gERa m h Manufacturers of Corrugated Culverts Steel Bridges and Re-enforcing Bars I?> ■ ' ■ - m -s . : . | | ' I Particularly Armco Culverts j. Automatic Phone 3384 Bell Phone 477 316 East Michigan Avenue 1 Lansing - Michigan | | L^JlIllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHlllISI Prize Song Junior SongS-By Ruth Musselman ’19 Hail! dear Alma Mater^ Beloved of us all ; Hail! O cherished spirit That will never fail nor fall. Hail! as on you lead us To fields afar and near For you’ll ever give us courage And lend us of your cheer. First in all life’s battles, Through loss or victory’s gain, You stand amid your rivals With virtues all unstained; Hail! unspotted whiteness and Hail! O green of youth ! Fair symbols of thy Honor; Thy loyalty and truth. Silently you’re sending Your men so brave and true To turn the wheel of justice And make all nations new; Give to us that spirit With which you cover them, To fight, to die, to conquer For our glorious emblem. H......Illlll..............................................................................................................ll!lllll!l!llll!lllllini!l!nilll[lll!llliNI|]l]IMl Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 346 The Holcad iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii A Student Newspaper Published Weekly by M. A. C. Students Read the College News Every Week in Your Own Holcad Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 347 IAMSXN6 C0MRKA1 ai© WASHINGTON AVE.NO. A concern whose ability and facilities put Lansing in the same class witk Chicago in the production of Engravings to illustrate Catalogs-Civculavs- Booklets - Newspaper anything requiring Bell 1904 Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers SHS-2J5HSESHSH5ESHSrM I What you want When you want The way you want it Robert Smith Company A Complete Printing Service LANSING MICHIGAN PRINTERS and BINDERS of the 1918 WOLVERINE Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 349 I ■ 8 i t ii I Jahn I Ollier ^ENG RAVING COMPAnA 'earners ana in prayers of /f/a/?/o/^uir> A /~+ f~\ JIManta - Davenborf-KansasGfi Kindly mention the «IFolverine when dealing with advertisers 350 i % i % II i i il ......................................................gfffflyiljmiMM........'¿¿¡EiiL!.....111111... | Lansing PureIce Company 1 Water Jl f As essential as the purity of the food you eat, is the purity B ■ and the cleanliness of the ice l| which is used to preserve and H keep that food. Our ice is I manufactured from filtered ■ distilled water and is guaran- f teed absolutely pure. Our water is distilled, filtered and aerated, and is positively free from contamination or disease germs. It is valuable for drinking, for medicinal purposes, for mechanical and H jj scientific uses, for washing J delicate fabrics and so forth. *f' If; | I MB; 1 Daily delivery service to every part of the city, and to East Lansing during the summer months l| 1 w." Products of Quality Service for the Public j DURING FARMERS’ INSTITUTE Friend Farmer: “Say, Jenkins, is your son a student?” Farmer Jenkins : “No, he’s an athlete.” ***** AT CLUB C Co-ed 1: “Here is a nickel I found in the hash.” Pleasing Head Table 23: “Yes, I put it there. You’ve been complaining so much about the lack of change in your meals.” ***** Loafing Senior at Sutterby’s: “There’s a fine girl, but she too has her faults.” Companionable Soph.: “Yes, hair and teeth.” ***** A young East Lansing Newlywed remarked that she did not know there was a sugar famine. Beats all how sweet a husband is the first few days. Kindly mention the Wolverine when dealing with advertisers 352 Your Putrid Carcasses Nauseate Us Tts you that shall have YOUR life’s blood drawn from YOU is With the Seeley, Slimy Sewer Your Place Rats That Dwell in the Holes Beneath Us THEREFORE * ]{ on SATURDAY NEXT You Wish to Keep Your ; Brainless Skulls on Your Decayed. Contaminated Corps k'ARK of the Woody Merciless Slaughter :' Hue on That I-\TEFU I DAY! To Be c 0 N T 1 N u E D 353 Index to Advertisers Page Abbey & Walters...................................... 318 Auto Body Co........................................... 343 Banting Machine Co................................ 314 Wm. Barrett Bakery................................ 320 344 Bates & Edmonds ............................ Bean Spray Pump Co.............................. 318 Bijou Theatre .. .............. ..................... 336 Blänke Mfg. & Supply Co....................... 318 Christian Breisch & Co............................ 333 Budd Music Store.................................... 318 310 Burr Patterson & Co.................... Campus Press .......................................... 337 Canton Art Metal Co.............................. 316 Clemens & Gingrich Co........................... 334 College Drug & Grocery Co.................... 344 College Cafe.............................................. 334 S. P. Conkling........................................ 310 Connor Ice Cream Co.............................. 330 Crotty Book Store ............................... . 313 Dancer-Brogan Co..................................... 336 John Deere Plow Co.................................. 333 Duplex Sales Agency................................. 331 Dyer-Jenison-Barry Co........................ 312 J. W. Edmonds’ Sons................................ 333 Emery Book Store................................... 318 •Empress Theatre.................................... 316 Equitable Life Assurance Co................... 324 344 C. L. Frost & Co.. ............................. Fashion Shop .......................... .............. 306 Gier Pressed Steel Co........................... 323 Harvey’s Photo Shop................................ 304 Dr. J. G. Hapeman................................. 324 John Herrmann’s Sons............................ 312 Holcad ....................................................... 347 M. H. Hunt & Son.................................... 313 Ideal Engine Co. . .................................. 326 Ihling Bros. Everard Co.......................... 332 Ilgenfritz Nursery Co.............................. 311 Jahn & Ollier........................................... 350 Keene Forestry Association................ 324 Knox’s 5c & 10c Store............................. 342 Page Lansing Insurance Agency ................... 312 Lansing Laundry Co................................. 320 Lansing Co..............................................., 313 Lansing Pure Ice Co................................ 352 Lansing Foundry Co............................ 352 Lansing Colorplate Co.............................. 348 Larrabee’s Sport Shop............................ 322 LeClear Photo Co.................................... 328 Lufkin Rule Co...................... 326 Hugh Lyons & Co.................................... 315 Michigan Agricultural College.........308-309 M. A. C. Association ............................. 306 M. A. C. Book Buying Association. . . . 306 Mapes Co...............'................................... 336 336 May Bros.............. Michigan Screw Co................................... 340 Michigan Bridge & Pipe Co................... 346 Michigan Supply Co. .............................. 340 Michigan Butter & Egg Co..................... 334 Michigan Silo Co....................................... 335 Elgin Mifflin............................................... 330 Mills Dry Goods Co................................. 341 New-Way Motor Co................................... 339 Norton Hardware Co............................. 333 Novo Engine Co....................................... 329 Olds Motor Works..................................... 305 Page & Harryman.................................... 324 Prudden Wheel Co.................................... 338 J. M. Preston Co...................................... 330 Reo Motor Car Co.................................... 317 Reliance Engineering Co.......................... 316 Rikerd Lumber Co.............................. Robert Smith Co................................. 315 349 Sharpe & Smith......................................... 314 Sprowl Bros.............................................. 312 333 Chas. A. Strelinger Co. .................... 344 State Journal....................................... Strang Printing Co................................... 346 343 Towle Optical Co............................ Triver’s Clothes Shop............................. 324 United Engine Co.................................... 342 Woodworth’s Shoes-................................ 336 354 Index Page Page Activities, College ...................... 248-302 Advertising ...........................................303-354 Administrative Officers................ 41-42 Agriculture, State Board of................... 29 Agricultural Building ............................. 45 Agriculture, Division of................. .58-61 Agricultural Education, Dept, of.................. 58 Animal Husbandry, Dept, of................. 58 135-171 Athletics....................................... Athletic Board of Control................. 138 AE-Theon Literary Society................198-199 Athenaeum Literary Society................200-204 Aurorean Literary Society.................202-203 Alpha Psi ................................................. 191 Alpha Zeta ..........:..............................186-187 American University Union in Europe 179 A. S. M. E.—Student Branch............... 285 A. I. E. E.—Student Branch................. 285 Bacteriology Building ............................. 49 Bacteriology, Dept. of............................. 48 258-259 Band .................................... Barbecue .................................................... 297 Baseball, Varsity................................151-154 Baseball, All-Fresh ................................ 164 Baseball, Inter-Class .............................. 165 Basket Ball, Varsity ..........................147-150 Basket Ball, All-Fresh ......................162-163 Basket Ball, Inter-Class ......................... 168 Bessey, Prof. E. A................................36, 51 Bissell, Prof. G. W................................33, 65 49 Botany, Dept, of.......................... Boys’ and Girls’ Clubs............................ 64 Brewer, Prof. C. L.................................. 40 Brown, A. M..................... 47 .......................................... 290 Buckeye Club Cap Night................................................. 296 Chemistry, Dept, of................................ 50 Chapel Choir............................................. 271 Civil Engineering, Dept, of..................... 45 College Hall in Snow Storm................... 21 Columbian Literary Society..............204-205 Commencement of 1947 ............................. 300 63 County Agricultural Agents............. Cross Country ............... 158 Cross, Sergt. P. J.................................... 173 Dairy Husbandry, Dept, of..................... 58 Deans, Group of........................................ 65 Debating................................................266-267 6 Dedication ................................................. Delphic Literary Society....................206-207 Domestic Art, Dept, of............................ 42 Domestic Science, Dept, of..................... 43 Dorian Literary Society......................208-209 Dramatic Club ................................. .272-273 Drawing and Design, Dept, of............... 44 Eclectic Literary Society..................210-211 Economics, Dept, of................................ 52 Electrical Engineering, Dept, of............ 47 Engineering Societies ............. ... 285 Engineering Reserve Corps.................. 174 44-47 Engineering, Division of............... Engineering Shop No. 1......................... 117 Engineering, R. E. Olds Hall of.. . .25, 117 52 English, Dept, of ...................... Entomology, Dept, of................. 52 Ero Alphian Literary Society............234-235 Eunomian Literary Society............. .212-213 66 Experiment Station ......... Extension Work, Division of..................62-64 Farmers’ Club ...................................... 286 Farm Crops, Dept, of.............................. 59 Farm and Horses, Dept, of................... 60 Farm Mechanics, Dept, of..................... 60 Feronian Literary Society..................236-237 Ferris Institute Club.............................. 284 Football, Varsity.................................141-146 Football, All-Fresh.............................160-161 Football, Inter-Class ........... 167 Forensic Literary Society..................214-215 Forestry Club........................................... 289 Forestry, Dept, of ................................... 60 Fraternities, Honorary .................. . 183-196 French, Prof. W. H.................................. 38 Freshman Class ............. ...127-134 Freshman Commission............................. 276 Geology, Dept, of...................................... 57 Glee Club, Girls’........................................ 270 Glee Club, Varsity...............................268-269 Gymnasium ..........................27, 118, 136-137 Hermian Literary Society...................216-217 Hesperian Literary Society............. .218-219 History, Dept, of...................................... 53 Holcad ..................................................254-257 Home Economics, Division of................42-44 Horticulture Building........................62, 302 Horticulture Club.................................... 283 Hort Show................................................. 282 Horticulture, Dept, of............................. 61 Howard Terrace ...................................... 13 355 Index— Continued Page Illinois Club .............................................. 291 Interseholastic Track Meet................170-171 Inter-Society Union........................ .264-265 Ionian Literary Society.......................220-221 J HoP................................................., 298-299 Johnson, Corporal W. W........................ 8 Junior Class......../.................................93-116 Kedzie, F. S....................................31, 43, 65 League of the Silver Cross............278-279 292 Lenawee County Club................. Letonian Literary Society..........238-239 Liberal Arts........................................... v 293 Lords of Wells............................ 294-295 Lyman, Dean R. P..............................^5, 65 M. A. C. Union.....................................262-263 Mandolin Club .....................................268-269 Married Students’ Association.............. 288 54 Mathematics, Dept, of...................... Mechanical Engineering, Dept, of........ 46 Meteorology, Dept, of............................. 57 Military Science, Dept, of....................... 55 Monogram Men in Service. ................. 135 Music, Dept, of........................................ 44 Officers’ Association................................ 177 Olympic Literary Society....................222-223 Omicron Nu..........................................188-189 Orphic Literary Society......................224-225 178 Parade, Regimental ...................... Phi Delta Literary Society ..............226-227 Physical Culture, Dept, of..................... 44 Physical Training, Dept, of.................... 56 Physics,'Dept of........................................ 55 56 Physiology, Dept, of ...................... Political Science, Dept, of....................... 53 Poster Night .................................,......... 301 Poultry Husbandry, Dept, of................. 60 Radio Telegraphy .............................56, 180 349 Record ............................................. R- O. T. C.................................................. 175 37 Ryder, Prof. E. H. i............... Page Scabbard and Blade.............................194-195 Science and Letters, Division of..........48-57 Sem Bot ................................................. 190 Senior Class............................................67-92 Sesame Literary Society....................240-241 Service List, The.....................................10-28 Shaw, Dean R. S....................................32, 65 Societies, Literary..............................197-245 Soils, Dept, of........................................... 61 Sophomore Class .................................119-126 Sororian Literary Society.................242-243 277 Sphinx Society.................... Split Rock................................................. 53 55 Sleepy Hollow .............................. Students’ Citizenship League..............280-281 Tau Beta Pi ........................................184-185 Themian Literary Society..................244-245 Track Meet, Interscholastic..............170-171 Track, Varsity ....................... 155-157 Track, Class ............................................. 166 Track Records, M. A. C......................... 139 Trimoira Literary Society ................230-231 Union Literary Society.......................232-233 Varsity Club.......................................192-193 Veterinary Buildings ...........................57 59 Veterinary Science, Division of............. 57 Veterinary Medical Association........... 287 Veterinary Enlisted Reserve Corps___ 176 Ward F ..............................................294-295 Wells Hall at Night................................ 47 White, Dean Georgia L........................34 65 250-253 Wolverine................................... 39 Wrightson, Major...................... Xi Sigma Pi.............................................. 19e Yells ................................ 169 Y. M. C. A. ........................................'... 274 Y. W. C. A........................;.................... 275 Zoology, Dept, of.................................... 56 356 Il ja H 1 HP 1 Iti 1 » I ■ ! m |j