Urn'
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/jambalayayearboo11edit
^^--JJ-^
INTRODUCTION.
X here 's no use in expecting a wonder,
LJnIess some one makes a big blunder.
LmAke every coflege production,
JlLn Annual needs introduction,
INoting Stunts that may prove most amusing,
dncouraging students' perusing.
To
PROFESSOR STANFORD EMERSON CHAILLE, A.M., M.D., LL.D.,
Dean of the Medical Department; Professor of Pliysiology,
Hygiene, and Pathological Anatomy, Tulane
University of Louisiana,
Whose exemplary cliaracter, and ennobling precept, whose scholarly attain-ments,
and active interest in medical education and organization,
have ever been sources of inspiration to the student
body, and merit the gratitude of the Medical
Profession ^throughout the World, this
volume is dedicated in grate-ful
recognition.
STANFORD EMERSON CHAILLE.
Stanford Emerson Chaille was born July 9, 1830, in Natchez, Mississippi; the son of
William Hamilton and Mary (Sanford) Chaille. Among his ancestors were many who
gained fame in the early Colonial and in Revolutionary times. His early education was
completed at Phillips Academy, South Andover, Massachusetts, in J 847. He has received
the degrees of A.B. and A.M. from Harvard, of M.D. and LL.D. from Tulane.
During 1 860-6 J, and again during 1866-67, Dr. Chaille was a student in Paris; on
the first occasion in the laboratory of Qaude Bernard, the famous physiologist.
At the opening of the Civil War, Dr. Chaille enlisted as a private in the New Orleans
Light Horse. His ability was soon recognized, however, and promotion followed steadily,
until, at the time of his capture in J 865, he was Surgeon-in-chief of the Ocmulgee Hospital,
Macon, Georgia.
The United States Government and the medical world have long appreciated Dr.
Chaille's worth. Conclusive evidence of this is found in the number of important positions
for which he has been chosen, such as one of the seven civilian members of the National
Board of Health, from 1885 to 1893, when it was abolished; and by numerous honors con-ferred
upon him by the International Medical Congresses of J 876 and 1887.
Dr. Chaille is an honorary member of the College of Physicians, Philadelphia; of the
Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland; of the Academy of Sciences, Havana, Cuba;
and of the Louisiana Pharmaceutical Association. The Sons of the American Revolution,
and the American Medical Association, are but two of the numerous organizations of which
he is an active member.
Dr. Chaille's connection with the University began as a student in 1 85 1. During
1852-53 he was an interne at the Charity Hospital. In 1858 his connection as teacher,
which lasts to the present time, began. In 1885 he was elected Dean of the Medical De-partment,
and in 1890 he became Professor of Physiology, Hygiene, and Pathological
Anatomy.
Numerous medical journals, especially "The New Orleans Medical and Surgical
Journal," of which he was co-editor and proprietor (1857-68), contain Dr. Chaille's many
valuable contributions on medical subjects.
Dr. Chaille married, February 23, 1857, Kliss Laura E. Mountford, daughter of
Lieutenant-Colonel John Mountford, U. S. A. Mary Laura Chaille (wife of Dr. David
Jamison, of New Orleans), was their only child.
Though he has long since retired from active practice, all medical matters have for
him a vital interest. And while enjoying the fruits of his well-spent life, he holds the re-spect
and honor both of those of his profession and of all others.
"ir 3r ir
][
CL-MivECR\<vroiU).
Administrators Page 10
Faculty Page 12
Alwmni . Page 21
Academic Department Page 25
Medical Department . . . . . . Page 57
Law Department ....... Page 93
Newcomb Page 103
Fraternities Page 151
Publications . Page 23 J
Literary Sociefcea . Page 24
1
Athletics i
Page 249
Clubs Page 28J
Dormitory Page 289
Miscellaneous [. Page 293
9
BOARD OF ADMINISTRATORS.
CHARLES ERASMUS FENNER, LL.B., LL.D., . President.
ROBERT HILLER WALMSLEY, Second Vice-President.
JAMES McCONNELL, LL.B.,
EDGAR HOWARD FARRAR, M.A.,
WALTER ROBINSON STAUFFER,
HENRY GINDER,
JOHN BAPTIST LEVERT, B. Sc,
ASHTON PHELPS,
CHARLES JANVIER,
WALKER BRAINERD SPENCER, A.B., LL.B.,
BEVERLEY ELLISON WARNER, A.M., D.D.,
WALTER DENIS DENEGRE, A.B., LL.B.,
JOHN DYMOND, Jr., A.B., LL.B.,
DANIEL CULPEPPER SCARBOROUGH,
GUSTAF REINHOLD WESTFELDT,
CHARLES ROSEN, A.B., LL.B.,
ERNEST BENJAMIN KRUTTSCHNITT, M.A., LL.B., LL.D.
EX-OFFICIO.
NEWTON CRAIN BLANCHARD Governor of Louisiana.
MARTIN BEHRMAN Mayor of New Orleans.
JAMES B. ASWELL, State Superintendent of Pufclic Education.
10
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION.
EDWIN BOONE CRAIGHEAD, M.A., LL.D., President.
STANFORD EMERSON CHAILLE, A.M., M.D., LL.D., Dean pf the Medical Department
and Professor of Physiology, Hygiene, and Pathological Anatomy.
ERNEST SIDNEY LEWIS, M.D., Professor of General and Clinical Obstetrics and Dis-eases
of Women and Children.
JOHN BARNWELL ELLIOTT, A.B., M.D., Ph.D., Professor of the Theory and Practice
of Medicine and Clinical Medicine.
JOHN HANNO DEILER (Graduate Royal Normal College of Mwnchen-Freising), Pro-fessor
of German Language and Literature.
ALCEE FORTIER, D.Lt., Professor of Romance Languages.
ROBERT SHARP, A.M., Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate Department and Professor of
English.
EDMOND SOUCHON, M.D., Professor of Anatomy and Clinical Surgery.
WILLIAM WOODWARD (Graduate Massachusetts Normal Art School), Professor of
Drawing and Painting (Newcomb College). i-;.' ?''i^
HENRY DENIS, LL.B., Professor of Civil Law and Lecturer on the Land Laws of the
United States.
JOHN ROSE FICKLEN, B. Let., Professor of History and Political Science.
JOHN WILLIAMSON CALDWELL, A.M., M.D., Professor of Chemistry and Geology.
ELLSWORTH WOODWARD (Graduate Rhode Island School of Design), Professor of
Drawing and Painting and Director of Art Instruction (Newcomb College).
BRANDT VAN BLARCOM DIXON, A.M., LL.D., President of Newcomb College and
Professor of Philosophy.
JANE CALDWELL NIXON, Professor of English (Newcomb College).
MARIE AUGUSTIN, Professor of French (Newcomb CoUege).
FRANK ADAIR MONROE, Professor of Commercial Law and the Law of Corporations.
HARRY HINCKLEY HALL, LL.B., Dean of the Law Department and Professor of
Criminal Law, the Law of Evidence and of Practice under the Code of Practice of
Louisiana.
MARY LEAL HARKNESS, A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Latin (Newcomb College).
JAMES HARDY DILLARD, M.A., LL.B., D.Lt., Vice-Chairman of the Faculty, Dean of
the Academic Colleges, and Professor of Latin.
WILLIAM BENJAMIN SMITH, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D., Professor of Mathematics, and
Acting Professor Philosophy.
LOUIS FAVROT REYNAUD, M.D., Professor Emeritus of Materia Hedica, Therapeutics,
and Clinical Medicine.
(2
WILLIAM HENRY CREIGHTON, U. S. N., Professor of Mechanical Engineering.
RUDOLPH MATAS, M.D., Professor of General and Clinical Surgery.
FREDERICK WESPY, Ph.D., Professor of German (Newcomb College).
ABRAHAM LOIS METZ, M.Ph., M.D., Professor of Cliemistry and Medical Jurisprudence.
LEVI WASHINGTON WILKINSON, M.Sc, Professor of Industrial and Sugar Chemistry.
THOMAS CARGILL WARNER ELLIS, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Admiralty and Inter-national
Law.
EUGENE DAVIS SAUNDERS, LL.B., Professor of Constitutional Law, Common Law,
and Equity.
MARY CASS SPENCER, A.B., M.Sc, Professor of Mathematics (Newcomb College).
CLARA GREGORY BAER (Graduate Posse Normal School of Gymnastics), Professor of
Physical Education (Newcomb College).
JAMES ADAIR LYON, Jr., A.M., Professor of Physics (Newcomb College).
WALTER MILLER, A.M., Professor of Greek.
PIERCE BUTLER, A.M., Ph.D., Professor of History (Newcomb College).
SUSAN DINSMORE TEW, Ph.D., Professor of Greek (Newcomb College).
GERTRUDE ROBERTS SMITH (Graduate Massachusetts Normal Art School), Profes-sor
of Drawing and Painting (Newcomb College).
MARY GIVEN SHEERER (Graduate Cincinnati Art Academy), Professor of Ceramic
Decoration (Newcomb College).
JOHN TAYLOR HALSEY, M.D., Professor of Materia Medica, Therapeutics, and Clinic
Medicine.
ANN HERO, A.M., Professor of Chemistry (Newcomb College).
MORTON ARNOLD ALDRICH, Ph.D., Professor of Economy and Sociology.
SAMUEL JACKSON BARNETT, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of Physics.
DOUGLAS SMITH ANDERSON, M.A., Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering.
GEORGE EUGENE BEYER (University of Berlin), Associate Professor of Biology and
Curator of the Museum.
ISADORE DYER, Ph.B., M.D., Associate Professor of the Diseases of the Skin.
JOHN BARNWELL ELLIOTT, Jr., A.M., M.D., Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine.
ERASMUS DARWIN FENNER, A.B., M.D., Associate Professor of the Diseases of
Children.
JAMES MADISON BATCHELOR, B.Sc, M.D., Associate Professor of Clinical Surgery.
WILLIAM BENJAMIN GREGORY, M.E., Associate Professor of Experimental En-gineering
and Mechanism.
PAUL EMILE ARCHINARD, A.M., M.D., Associate Professor of Diseases of the Nervous
System.
WILLIAM PRENTISS BROWN, M.A., Assistant Professor of English.
HENRY FISLER RUGAN, Assistant Professor of Mechanic Arts.
BENJAMIN PALMER CALDWELL, A.B., Ch.E., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
J4
JOSEPH NETTLES IVEY, A.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics and As-tronomy.
IMOGEN STONE, A.M., Assistant Professor of English (Newcomb College).
SUSAN WILLIAMS MOSES, A.M., Assistant Professor of Languages (Newcomb College).
OWEN MERIWETHER JONES, B.E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering.
LAURA ALICE McGLOIN, B.Sc, M.A., Assistant Professor of Biology (Newcomb College).
HENRY BAYON, A.B., M.D., Demonstrator of Anatomy.
LUTHER SEXTON, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor on Minor Surgery.
EDWARD WYNN JONES, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor on Diseases of the Eye.
OLIVER LOUIS POTHIER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Microscopical Anatomy
and Bacteriology.
HAMPDEN SIDNEY LEWIS, A.B., M.D., Lecturer and Demonstrator of Obstetrics.
SIDNEY PHILIP DELAUP, B.Sc, H.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy.
MARION SIMS SOUCHON, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy.
HAMILTON POLK JONES, M.D., Demonstrator in the Chemical Laboratory.
HERMANN BERTRAM GESSNER, M.A., M.D., Lecturer and Demonstrator of Operative
Surgery.
JOHN FREDERICK OECHSNER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy.
GEORGE SAM BEL, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor on Physical Diagnosis.
WILLIAM MARTIN PERKINS, B.Sc, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Operative
Surgery.
RALPH HOPKINS, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Physiology, Hygiene, and Pathological
Anatomy.
JAMES BIRNEY GUTHRIE, B.Sc, M.D., Lecturer and Instructor in Materia Medica
and Therapeutics.
CARL JOSEPH LEHRMANN, Instructor in Mechanic Arts.
JOHN PETER PEMBERTON, Instructor in Drawing (Newcomb College).
JOHN SMYTH, Jr., M.D., Lecturer and Demonstrator in the Laboratory of Minor Surgery.
WILLIAM WALTON BUTTERWORTH, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor in the
Practice of Medicine.
PIERRE JORDA KAHLE, B.Sc, M.D., Instructor in French.
ROSS EDMOND BREAZEALE, LL.B., Quiz-Master (Law Department).
JAMES MARTIAL LAPEYRE, M.A., C.E., LL.B., Quiz-Master (Law Department).
JULES BLANC MONROE, A.B., LL.B., Quiz-Master (Law Department).
ALLAN CHOTARD EUSTIS, B.Sc, Ph.B., M.D., Assistant Demonstrator in the Chemical
Laboratory.
CLARISSE CENAS, Instructor in French (Newcomb College).
SAMUEL MARMADUKE DINSOIDI CLARK, B.Sc, M. D., Lecturer and Clinical In-structor
of Gynecology and Obstetrics.
16
CHARLES LEVERICH ESHLEHAN, A.B., H.D., Assistant Clinical Instructor of Phys-ical
Diagnosis.
SAHUEL LOGAN, H.D., Junior Assistant Demonstrator of Operative Surgery.
GEORGE STEWART BROWN, M.Ph., H.D., Lecturer and Demonstrator in Charge of
the Pharmaceutical Laboratory.
GORDON KING, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor in the Diseases of the Ear, Nose»
and Throat.
JOSEPH HUHE, Ph.B., M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor on Venereal and Genito-urinary
Diseases.
DOMINIQUE URBAN MAES, M.D., Junior Assistant Demonstrator of Operative Surgery.
JOSEPH DEUTSCH WEIS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Microscopical Aiutomy
and Bacteriology.
ISAAC IVAN LEMANN, A.B., M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Microscopical Anatomy
and Bacteriology.
MAURICE JOHN COURET, A.M., M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Microscopical
Anatomy and Bacteriology.
MYRON JACOB LUCH, H.A., Teaching Fellow in Greek.
JOSEPH WILLIAM PARK, A.B., Teaching Fellow in History.
HUGH WILEY PUCKETT, A.B., Teaching Fellow in Latin.
FELIPE FERNANDEZ, A.B., Instructor in Spanish (Newcomb College).
ALFRED LAMBREMONT WEBRE, B.E., Instructor in Experimental Engineering and
Drawing.
LESLIE BREWSTER SMITH, A.B., Teaching FeUow in Physics.
JULIA CAROLINA LOGAN (Graduate State Normal College of Tennessee), Instructor
in English (Newcomb College).
KATHARINE KOPMAN (Graduate Newcomb Art Department), Instructor in Drawing
(Newcomb College).
AMELIE ROMAN (Graduate Newcomb Art Department), Instructor in Drawing (New-comb
College).
LOUISIANA JOHN CATLETT, M.E.L., Instructor in Mathematics (Newcomb College).
ABBIE RICHMOND, M.A., Instructor in English (Newcomb College).
VIOLA DENESA SIRERA, M.A., Instructor in German, Latin, and History (Newcomb
College).
ADELIN ELAM SPENCER, M.A., B.Sc, Instructor in Chemistry (Newcomb College).
MARY WILLIAMS BUTLER (Graduate Newcomb Art Department), Instructor in
Drawing (Newcomb College).
LUCY CHURCHILL RICHARDSON, Instructor in Physical Education (Newcomb
College).
MYRA CLARE ROGERS, M.A., Instructor in Latin (Newcomb College).
BERTHA ELINOR FRANKENBUSH, B.Sc, M.A., [Instructor in Mathematics and
History (Newcomb College).
18
JOSEPH ANATOLE HINCKS, Secretary and Treasurer of the Tulane Edticational Fund*
RICHARD KEARNY BRUFF, Secretary of the University.
LEONORA MARTHA CAGE, Secretary of Newcomb College.
OSWALD CADOGAN BELFIELD, Secretary to the Dean of the Medical Department.
MINNIE MARIE BELL, Librarian in Charge of the Tulane University Library.
ERIN ELIZABETH SHERRARD, B.Sc, Registrar of Newcomb College.
JOHN ANDREW BACON, Librarian in Charge of the Medical Department Library.
EMMA PARHAM RANDOLPH, Librarian in Charge of the Newcomb College Library.
LOUISE BEERSTECHER KRAUSE, Assistant Librarian, Tulane University Library.
TUDOR TUCKER HALL, Mechanician in the Physical Laboratory.
.
MARY LOUIS YORK, Lady in Charge of Dining Hall (Tulane Campus).
MARIA WILKINS SHIELDS, Lady in Charge of the Josephine Louise House (Newcomb
College).
ELIZABETH MORTON HUSBANDS, Lady in charge of the Warren House (Newcomb
College).
SUE BLACKMAN BENNETT, Lady in Charge of the Newcomb House (Newcomb College).
MARGARET GREEN DAVIS, Lady in Charge of Morris House (Newcomb College).
FRANCES JOSEPHINE HALLONQUIST, Lady in Charge of the Gables (Newcomb
College).
ETHEL ALICE TAYLOR, Stenographer to the President.
ALVINA LAMBERT, Stenographer, Art Department (Newcomb College).
ANDRE WOGAN, Assistant in the Treasurer's Office.
BEULAH DePASS, Organist (Newcomb College).
DESIREE ROMAN, Clerk at Pottery (Newcomb College).
JACOB MEYER, Potter (Newcomb College).
ARTHUR GIO VERDOLYACK, F9reman of the Press.
HERMAN FAIR HUSTEDT, Engineer.
JOSEPH NORMAN HEDRICK, Engineer (Newcomb College).
59
SPEQAL LECTURES,
I905-I906.
PROF. DOUGLAS S. ANDERSON, . "The City of Venice."
PRES. E. B. CRAIGHEAD, "Andrew Carnegie and the Carnegie Foandation.'
PROF. WALTER HILLER "The Isles of Greece."
MR. WILLIAM BEER, "Libraries."
REV. GEORGE SUMMEY, "TheLiterary Attractions of the Bible."
PROF. GEORGE E. BEYER, . . . "The Microscope and Its Uses."
COL. JAMES D. HILL, "A Visit to the Philippines."
MR. N. O. NELSON "The Story of Leclaire."
HON. JARED Y. SANDERS, .... "Louisiana."
RABBI MAX HELLER, "The Maccabean Straggle."
MR. BERNARD McCLOSKEY, . . . "Ireland."
MR. HUNTER C. LEAKE, "Alaska."
MR. EDWIN T. MERRICK, .... "The Romance of the Law."
PROF. J. N. IVEY, "The Solar System."
PROF. OWEN M. JONES, "Ancient Engineering."
PROF. SAMUEL J. BARNETT.
20
21
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE TULANE UNIVERSITY
OF LOUISIANA.
ORPORATED JANUARY 20, 1898.
OFFICERS.
"Wm. M. PERKINS, President.
Wm. C HcLEOD Vice-President.
RATHBONE E. De BUYS, Treasurer.
ABRAHAM GOLDBERG, Secretary.
Mrs. GEORGE S. DODDS, Historian.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
Doaglas S. Anderson. Charles G. Gill. Abraham Goldberg.
Henry P. Dart, Jr. Alexander Allison, Jr. Rathbone E. De Bays.
Mrs. George S. Dodds. "Wm. C. McLeod. John G. Robin. ,
Dr. Wm. M. Perkins. Dr. Chas. Chassaignac.
COMMITTEE ON ANNUAL BANQUET.
J. B. Gtithrie. Jales Lazard. Arsene Perrilliat.
J. Blanc Monroe. Edw. Rightor.
COMMITTEE ON REUNION.
Alex Allison, Doaglas Anderson, H. P. Dart, Jr.,
And representatives from the several Departments of the University and from theAdvisory
Committee on Athletics.
COMMITTEE ON GYMNASIUM PLAN.
Alex Allison, Chairman. R. E. De Bays. Warren Johnson.
Doaglas Anderson, Wm. A. Befl.
23
NEWCOHB ALUMNA.
HELEN De GRANGE HcCLELLAN President.
GERTRUDE KERR JACKMAN, '99, Secretary.
Mrs. B. C. McCLELLAN, Secretary (pro tern.).
FLORENCE DYMOND, Treasurer.
NETTIE BYRNES, '90,. Vice-President.
ELIZABETH HURT ROBINSON, '91 Vice-President.
SOPHIE BACHIME, '92, Vice-President.
ELIZA HARRAL, '93," Vice-President.
ASENATH GENELLA DODDS, '94, Vice-President.
CAROLYN RICHARDSON, '95, Vice-President.
VIOLA SIRERA, '96 Vice-President.
ABBIE RICHMOND, '97 Vice-President.
LILLIAN ESPY REED, '98, Vice-President.
GERTRUDE KERR JACKMAN, '99 Vice-President.
KATHERINE REED, '00, Vice-President.
CECELIA LENARD, '0 J, . Vice-President.
SADIE SHELBY, '02 Vice-President.
KITTY MONROE, '03, Vice-President.
LENORE MEYER, '04, Vice-President.
HILDA BLOUNT, '05, Vice-President.
24
25
26
SEN!ORS
CLASS OF 1906.
COLORS.
Orange and Blue.
YELL.
Hi yi, ki yi!
Ki yi, klix!
Ttjiane Seniors!
Nineteen-sixl
OFFICERS.
EDWARD FAIRFAX NEILD, ...... President.
ROBERT GIBSON ROBINSON, Vice-President.
FERDINAND STERN, Secretary.
CHARLES ALLEN WRIGHT, Treasarer.
RALPH HARRY OLIVER, Historian.
29
ACADEMIC '06 STATISTICS.
ANDERSON, R. J.—Scientific; Foram (2).
BADGER, GEORGE CHESTER.—AKE, KA$: Mechanical Engineering; Forom (I),
(2), (3); Manager of Class Football Team (J), (2); Assistant Manager Varsity Foot-ball
Team (3); Class Treasurer (3); Spanish Circle (3); Treasurer of Campus Fund
Committee (3), (4); Assistant Treasurer of T. U. A. A. (4); Substitute Varsity Foot-ball
Team (3); Member of Players' Club (4).
BOYD, ALBERT CYPRIAN.—Mechanical Engineering; Spanish Circle (3).
BRES, JOSEPH HUGHES.—KA$; Literary; Forum (I), (2), (3), (4); Secretary Forum
(3); Vice-President Forum (3); FrenchjCircIe (J). (2), (3); Treasurer French Circle (2);
F'rench Play (I)> (3); Assistant Manager of Class Football Team (I), (2); Sub. Ed-itor
Jambalaya (J), (2), (3); Editor Tulanian (3); Tulane History Club (3); Editor-in-
chief of Jambalaya (4) ; Editor-in-chief Tulanian (4) ; Chairman Campus Fund
Committee, T. U. A. A.; President Players' Club (4).
CAFFERY, JEFFERSON.—2AE; Fox Head; Literary; Junior German Club; Vice-
President of Class (2); French Circle (2), (3); Vice-President of French Circle (3),
(4); Assistant Business Manager of Olive and Blue (2); Business Manager of Olive
and Blue (3); Captain of Class Track Team (I); Dormitory Board (2); Associate
Editor Olive and Blue (4); Varsity Track Team (3); T. U. A. A Class Football
Team (2).
CALOGNE, SIDNEY EDWARD.—nKA, KA*; Civil Engineering; Forum (I), (2), 3);
Class Treasurer (I); Censor of Forum (J); Class Football Team (J), (2); Manager of
Class Baseball Team (2); Class Baseball Team (2); Varsity Football Squad (J)> (2),
(3), (4); Varsity Team (4); Player Club (4); Captain of Class Football Team (4);
T. U. A. A.
CATE, CHARLES EDWARD.—K2, ATr, KA*; Civil Engineering; Vice-President
Class (2); Spanish Circle (3); Vice-President Spanish Circle (3); Vice-President
Dormitory Tennis Club (2); Varsity Football Team (2), (3), (4); Class Football
Team (I), (2); Varsity Baseball Team (I)» (2), (3); Class Baseball Team (I), (2);
Captain Class Baseball Team (I); T. U. A. A. Nominating Committee (4); Tulane
Tennis Club (4); Varsity Track Team (3); T. U. A. A.
CHAMBERS, JOHN TAYLOR.—*A©, KA$; Civil Engineering; Forum (I), (2);
Censor Forum (I); T. U. A. A.; Tulane German Club; Class President (J); Spanish
Circle (3); Varsity Football Team (2), (3), (4); Class Football Team (J). (2);Captain
Class Football Team (I), (2), (3); Class Baseball Team (I), (2); T. U. A. A.
Nominating Committee (3); Class Treasurer (3); Captain Varsity Football Team
(4); Manager Varsity Track Team (4); Tulane Tennis Club (4).
CULBERTSON, CHARLES WILLIAM.—KS, KA$; Literary; French Circle (2), (3);
Vice-President French Circle (3); Spanish Circle (3); History Club (3); T. U. A. A.;
Mgr. The Tulane Weekly (resigned), (4); Glendy Burke (4).
DART, WILLIAM KERNAN.—" Student."
DAVIDSON, Jr., JOHN.—HKA; Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke (I), (2); Ser-geant-
at-arms Glendy Burke (2); French Circle (2); Treasurer French Circle (2);
Chapel Choir (2), (3), (4).
30
DEILER, ALFRED CONRAD.—Chemical Engineering; Chemical Society; Chapel Choir
(2), (3), (4); Glendy Burke (2).
DUREL, LIONEL CHARLES.—Literary; Forum (I), (2), (3), (4); Treasurer of Forum
(2), (3); French Circle (I)> (2), (3); Secretary French Circle (2); President French Circle (3);
French Play (I)> (3); Class Treasurer (2); Business Manager Tulanian (3); Assistant
Business Manager Olive and Blue (3); Spanish Circle (3); Tulane History Club (3);
Managing Editor Olive and Blue.
HENRY, ORLOFF.—nKA; Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke (I), (2); Sergeant-at-
arms Glendy Burke (I), (2); Treasurer Glendy Burke (2); Spanish Circle (3).
KAISER, HERBERT W,—Literary; Forum; Assistant Treasurer Forum (I); Chapel
Choir; History Club; French Circle; Vice-President Special Class (2); President
Special Class; Sub-Editor Tulane Weekly (4); Sub. Editor Jambalaya (4); Players'
Club (4); Editor-in-chief Tulanian (4); T. U. A. A.; Forum; Glendy Burke Debate
(4).
KING, JULIAN BOARDHAN.—KS; Mechanical Engineering.
LANDAU, ALFRED KATZ.—Chemical Engineering; Glendy Burke (I), (2), (3), (4);
Sergeant-at-arms Glendy Burke (3); Chemical Society.
LEMANN, JACOB.—Literary; Forum (2), (3), (4); Censor Forum (2); French Circle (I);
Spanish Circle (3); T. U. A. A.; Tulane Tennis Club (4).
LANDAU, "W. LOEBER.—KA*; Scientific; Business Manager Jambalaya (3); Man-aging
Editor Tulane Weekly (3); Associate Editor Tulanian (2), (3); Academic
Representative on Committee for Substitute for Tulane Night (3); Assistant in the
Chemical Laboratory (3); Glendy Burke (I), (2), (3); Critic Glendy Burke (3);
Glendy Burke-Forum Debate (2); President Class '07 (2); Chapel Choir (J), (2), (3);
Tulane Tennis Club (3); T. U. A. A. (3).
LEVY, AARON GRETZNER.—Civil Engineering; T. U. A. A.
LOGAN, RICHARD BLAND.—SX; Literary; Junior German Club; Tulane German
Club; French Circle (I), (2); T. U. A. A.
LOVE, WILLIAM ALVIN.—KA, KA*; Literary; T. U. A. A.; Class Baseball Team (2)
French Circle (J), (2), (3); Captain Varsity Track Team (3); Players' Club (3), (4).
McCALL, HARRY.—2X; Literary; Class President (I), (2); Class Treasurer (I); Junior
German Club; Tulane German Club; President Junior German Club (2); Class
Marshal (I), (2).
MASON, NICHOLAS BODDIE.—KA* ; Scientific; Glendy Burke (2), (3), (4); Clerk
Congress Glendy Burke (2), (3); Spanish Circle (3); Dormitory Tennis Club (2),
(3), (4); Secretary Dormitory Tennis Club (4); Secretary Glendy Burke (4);
Business Manager Tulanian (3); Cornot Medal Debate (4).
MESTIER, LOUIS JOHN, Jr.—Sugar Engineering; Forum^(3); Assistant Treasurer Forum
(3); Chemical Society; Spanish Circle (3).
NEILD, EDWARD FAIRFAX.—KA, KA*; Mechanical Engineering; Tulane German
Club; Vice-President Class (3); President Class (3); T. U. A. A.; Dormitory Tennis
Club (2), (3); Vice-President Dormitory Tennis Club (3); Spanish Circle; Class Base-ball
Team (I), (2); Class Football Team (I), (2); Class Marshal Founders' Day (3);
Campus Fund Committee,
NIX, JAY TIMOLEON.—AAE; Scientific; Glendy Burke (2), (3), (4); Assistant in
Chemical Laboratory (4); Forum-GIendy Burke Debate (4).
NICOL, WALTER HILLARD.—2N, KA*; Civil Engineering; Forum (3) Spanish
Circle (3); Secretary Spanish Circle (3); Class President (2); Class Football Team
(2); Varsity Second Team (4); T. U. A. A.
31
O'KELLY, THOMAS FERDINAND.—ATA ; Mechanical Engineering; Fox Head;
Junior German Club; Class Treasurer; T. U. A. A.; Ttjlane German Club; President
Tulane German Club (4). |
OLIVER, RALPH HARRY.—KA* ; Literary; Forum (I), (2), (3), (4); Treasurer Forum
(I); Vice-President Forum (2), (3); French Circle (2), (3); Class Secretary (3);
Class Treasurer (2); Dormitory Tennis Club (2), (3), (4); President Dormitory
Tennis Club (2); Sub-Editor Jambalaya (3); Tulane History Club (3); Dormitory
Board (2); Class Baseball Team (2); Secretary T. U. A. A. (3); President Forum (4);
Editor-in-chief Tulane "Weekly (4); Tulane Tennis Club (4); T. U. A. A. Nominating
Committee (4); Forum-GIendy Burke Debate (4).
PETTIGREW, HERBERT NOEL.—2N; Civil ^Engineering; Forum (I), (2), (3); Censor
Forum (2); Dormitory Tennis Club (2); Dormitory Committee (3), (4); Class Foot-ball
Team (2); Spanish Circle (3).
REUSCH, ALFRED JOSEPH.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Baseball Team (2).
ROBERT, JAMES MARSHALL.—HKA ; Mechanical fEngineering; Spanish Circle (3).
ROBINSON, ROBERT GIBSON.—^A®, KA$; Chemical Engineering; Forum; Junior
German Club; Senior German Club; Fox Head; Chapel Choir (2), (3); Associate
Editor Olive and Blue (2), (3); Dormitory Tennis Club (2); Vice-President Junior
German Club (2); T. U. A. A. Class Secretary (3); Tulane Tennis Club (4) ; Vice-
President Class (4); Vice-President Senior German Club (4); Class Editor Tulane
Weekly (4); President Glee Club (4).
SHARP, ROBERT EDWARD BRUNSWICK.—2X, KA$; Mechanical Engineering;
Glcndy Burke (2), (3); Fox Head; Junior German Club; Tulane German Club; As-sociate
Editor Olive and Blue (2), (3); Class Historian (3); Sergeant-at-Arms Glendy
Burke (2); Tulane Tennis Club (4).
STAGG, TRUMAN.—Mechanical Engineering.
STERN, FERDINAND.—KA*; Mechanical Engineering; Varsity Football Team (J);
(2), (3), (4); Varsity Baseball Team (3); Vice-President Class (3); Secretary Class
(4); T. U. A. A. Nominating Committee (3); Treasurer Tulane Tennis Club (3),
Dormitory Board (3), (4); Secretary and Treasurer Dormitory Tennis Club (2), (3);
Class Football Team (J)» (2); Class Baseball Team (I), (2); Treasurer Tennis Club
(4); T. U. A. A. Sketch Club (3); Forum (3).
TADDIKEN, JOHN FREDERICK, Jr.—2N, KA$, ATF; Mechanical Engineering;
Forum (I), (2); French Circle (I); Class Secretary (I); Manager Class Football
> Team (3); Dormitory Tennis Club (2); Substitute Varsity Football Team (3); Class
Football Team (I), (2); Vice-President Class (2); Manager Varsity Baseball Team
(3);T.U.A.A.
TETE, AUGUSTE JOSEPH.—Mechanical Engineering; Spanish Circle (3); President
Spanish Circle (3); Forum (!)? Dormitory Tennis Club (2); Manager Varsity Track
Team (3); Varsity Track Team (3); French Circle (3); French Play (3); T. U. A. A.
WINN, CLAUDE MAY.—Scientific; Forum (I), (2), (3), (4); Treasurer Forum (3), (4).
WRIGHT, CHARLES ALLEN.—K2; Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke (I), (2),
(3), (4); Clerk of Congress Glendy Burke (2); Class President (2), (3); Spanish Circle
(3); Treasurer Spanish Circle (3); Treasurer Class (3), (4); Editor-in-chief Tulanian
(3); Class Baseball Team (I); Campus Fund Committee.
WOOD, RALPH B.—D, K. E., KA$; Chemical Engineering; Varsity Football Team;
Varsity Basketball Team; T. U. A. A.
32
CLASS HISTORY OF 1906.
In a few weeks the Class of 1906 will pass from the University, and its members
will take their places among the Alumni. Since its entrance in 1902, the Class of 1906 has
been more intimately connected with the life of the University than has any other class.
To relate its history would be to relate largely the Iiistory of Tulane in the past four years.
Its members have been the leaders in every student enterprise; they have been the life of
atliletics, forensics, and literary undertakings. For four years they have been the undis-puted
athletic champions of College; during the Junior and Senior years no team has been
found willing to meet them. In every phase of student life they have been looked up to
and emulated by the other students.
But there is no need to speak of the deeds, reputation, and standing of the Class
of 1906; they are familiar to all. With its graduation, the University will suffer a severe
loss; a loss that will be felt. However, although the College will no longer feel the in-fluence
of the 1 906 men as students, it will feel their influence as Alumni. The men are de-termined
that their connection with Tulane will not be severed. Four years of intimate
life have developed a love that will not die, and the interests of Tulane will always be their
interests. The Class will go into permanent organization, and through this means the men
will be kept in closer touch with each other and with their alma mater. As members of
the organized Class, and as members of the larger body of Alumni, the present Seniors are
determined that they shall do much for Tulane.
"What success the members of the Class of 1906 will have in the world, no one knows.
But it is reasonable to assume that those who have been so successful in their college life
will be successful also in the wider life, for success in the one is largely an earnest of suc-cess
in the other. We reasonably expect that the graduates of 1906 will, in the near future,
rank among the leading lawyers, physicians, engineers, and business men of the land. We
are certain that the University will have no cause to be ashamed of them, but that they
will confer honor upon themselves, upon the Class of J 906, and upon the Tulane University
of Louisiana.
33
34
Ju
N
I
O
R
S
CLASS OF 1907.
CLASS COLORS.
Gold and Black.
CLASS YELL.
Zippity zip, korak, korak!
Zippity zip, korak, korak!
Zippity zip, korak, korak!
Tulane Juniors, gold and black!
CLASS OFFICERS.
ESMOND PHELPS President.
RALPH C. PATTON, Vice-President.
WILFORD CALONGNE, Secretary and Treasurer.
E. P. A. FICKLEN, Historian.
STATISTICS OF THE CLASS OF 1907.
AIKEN," JOHN GAYLE.—2X; Literary; Tolane German Club; Junior German Qub;
Glendy Burke Literary Society; EditorjTalane Weekly (3); Chapel Choir; T. U.
A. A.; Winner of Carnot Debate (3).
AUCOIN, JAHES B.—Mechanical Engineering.
BRIEDE, OTTO F.—Civil Engineering.
CALONGNE, WILFORD F.—HKA, KA*; Qvil Engineering; Class Secretary (3);
Class Football Team (I), (2); Captain Class Football Team (I); T. U. A. A.; Sec-retary
T. U. A. A. (3).
CUSACHS, PHILIP.—Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke Literary Society; Sergeant-at-
arms G. B. L. S. (2), (3).
DREYFUSS, HENRY L.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Vice-Presidentg(2); Varsity
Football Team (2), (3); Class Football Team (I), (2), (3); Forum Literary Society
(2); T. U. A. A.; Dormitory Tennis Club.
FICKELEN, ALEXANDER.—2X; Scientific; Glendy Burke Literary Society; Chapel
Choir; Editor Tulanian (2), (3); Sub. Editor Jambalaya (2); Editor Olive and Blue
(2); Junior German Club; Tulane German Club; Secretary G. B. L. S. (2) ; Speaker
G. B. L. S. (3); Editor Tulane Weekly (3); T. U. A. A.
GILLEAN, CHARLES H. H.—KA; Literary (I). (2); Civil Engineering (3); Class
Secretary-Treasurer (2); Junior German Club; Treasurer Glendy Burke Literary
Society (2); T. U. A. A.; Assistant Business Manager Tulanian (2).
GREHAN, AUSTIN J.—Mechanical Engineering.
HARDIE, HARRY.—2X; Classical; Fox Head; Junior German Club; Tulane German
Club; Glendy Burke Literary Society; Cross Country Club; Tulane Tennis Club;
T. U. A. A.
HEIN, HERBERT M.—Mechanical Engineering.
HIRSCH, LEO L.—Mechanical Engineering; Dormitory Tennis Club (I)> (2), (3); Vice-
President Dormitory Tennis Club (3); Forum Literary Society (2).
HOUSTON, PERCY H.—Mechanical Engineering; Forum Literary Society.
IVENS, EDMUND M.—*KE, KA* ; Mechanical Engineering; Varsity Baseball Team
(J), (2), (3); Captain Varsity Baseball Team (3); Nominating Committee T. U. A.
A. (3); Manager Varsity Football Team (4).
JOUBERT, CHARLES E.—HKA; Mechanical Engineering; Varsity Baseball Team (J),
(2), (3); Class Football Team (I), (2); Sub-Editor Jambalaya (3); Assistant Man-ager
Varsity Football Team (4) ; T. U. A. A.
KERNAN, CLIVE W.—2AE; Literary; Class Secretary (2); Editor Olive and Blue;
Managing Editor Olive and Blue (3); Fox Head; Vice-President Junior German
Club (2); French Circle (I), (2); Glendy Burke Literary Society (2); Players' Club
(3); T. U. A. A.
LYONS, J. CLIFFORD.—ATA; Civil Engineering; Junior German Club; Tulane Ger-man
Club; Tulane Tennis Club; Assistant Manager Varsity Basketball Team (3);
T. U. A. A.
38 :
LARUE, FERDINAND L.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Football Team (2).
HILLS, "WILLIAM P.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Football Team (I), (2).
MATTHEWS, WILLIAM H.—Scientific; Treasurer Junior German Club (2); Tulane
German Club; Assistant Business Manager Tulane Weekly; Secretary Tulane Ten-nis
Club; Assistant Manager Varsity Track Team (3).
MONROE, WINDER P.—SX, KA$; Mechanical Engineering; Tulane German Club;
Junior German Club; Fox Head; Sub-Editor Jambalaya (!)» (3); Class Editor
Tulane Weekly (3); Class President (I); Cross Country Club.
MURPHY, ROBERT E.—Mechanical Engineering; Forum Literary Society.
NELSON, B. STANLEY.—Mechanical Engineering.
OWEN, CHAUNCEY H.—Civil Engineering.
PARKERSON, STIRLING.—2AE, KA$; Literary; ^Junior German Club; Tulane
German Club; Fox Head; Class Football Team (I), (2); Class Vice-President (2);
Editor-in-chief Olive and Blue (3).
PATTON, RALPH C—HKA; Mechanical Engineering; T. U. A. A.
PHELPS, ESMOND.—SX, KA$: Classical; Tulane German Club; President Junior
German Club; Sub-Editor Jambalaya (I); Manager Class Baseball Team; Class
President (2), (3); Critic G. B. L. S.; Vice-President Tulane Tennis Club; Business
Manager Tulane Weekly; T. U. A. A.
PRAGST, ERNEST.—Mechanical Engineering.
RAYMOND, HAROLD E.—Mechanical Engineering; Sub-Editor Jambalaya (2).
RUGAN, WARREN M.—Mechanical Engineering; Class President (I); Captain Class
Football Team (2).
RICE, FRAZER L.—KS; Scientific; Qass Treasurer (2).
REESE, HENRY B.—Scientific.
RIESS, OSCAR.—i-KS, KA*; Class Football Team (I), (2), (3); Varsity Baseball
Team (I), (2), (3); Manager Varsity Baseball Team (3).
RORDAM, ROY P.—Civil Engineering; Forum Literary Society; Treasurer French Circle;
Assistant Business Manager Tulahian; Secretary Forum (2); Cross Country Club.
SPENCER, LEWIS C.—Scientific; Glendy Burke Literary Society; French Circle.
TALMAGE, JOHN VAN NESTE.—Mechanical Engineering.
THERIOT, GEORGE J.—Mechanical Engineering.
WARRINER, GEORGE D.—Mechanical Engineering.
WEBB, RUFUS CLYDE.—2N; Scientific; Forum Literary Society; Class Football Team
(I); T. U. A. A.; Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball Team (3).
ZEEK, CHARLES FRANKLIN.—2X; Classical; Junior German Club; Tulane German
Qub; Glendy Burke Literary Society; Dormitory Tennis Club.
39
CLASS HISTORY OF 1907.
"When we marched into the historic halls of Ttilane for the first time as tipper class-men,
we were prepared to recline in philosophic calm and watch the Freshmen and Sopho-mores
paddle each other. But nothing happened, A few Freshmen exhibited themselves
in barrels to Newcomb, and retorted by hurling defiance through the columns of the Tu-lane
Weekly at things in general; but still nothing happened. The derby now sits in
stately inappropriateness on the bulging brow of the infant class, unchallenged. The wind-mill
no longer exhibits chameleon hues to the gaping multitude. Not once from the mouth
oi the tall chimney has sped a rocket in the dead of night. All is gone! And when we
seek the reason for these changes we find that there is but one way of accounting for them
—
that the boys of 1907 are boys no longer, but upper classmen, and that with them has
gone class spirit to the upper classes. But for our enforced and thoughtful dignity we
might still show a thing or , but that, too, has faded into the past. No more at Tu-lane
Night will our colors deck the company from the chorus girl to the star, because Tu-lane
Night has been abolished. Never will the lower classmen mash each other in the
glory of a cane-rush, because the Dean does not approve of cane-rushes. Never, if we can
help it, will we calculate the angle of "fee" (I suppose you call it "fie," young gentlemen!);
or roar at the method of weighing pigs in Arkansas. The time has passed when we made
original mixtures in the laboratory, which were far more "volatile" than any known to
science; and how long ago it seems when we put a brick and an oyster-shell on Dr. Ivey's
desk and sneezed when he scattered snuff with his roll-book.
Those days have gone by far too quickly, and if there are more to follow in our
footsteps, with the firm tread of those who made them, it is not our fault, "^'hat the
University has lost in spirit it has gained in dignity, and the care-worn countenance of
the President has brightened with a glow of pride since the Class of 1907 has been duly
christened "Junior." —Historian.
«m~ml^r ^^ mLJ^ liil
'^ ^im
#1^)^
#^
m^
^^ ^^ ^
SOPHOMORE OLASS, 1908.
CLASS YELL.
Rip Rah Roe!
Rip Rah; Reel;
"
Sophomore, Sophomore,
Don't you see?j
Sophomore large. Sophomore great,
Tulane Sophomores,
Nineteen Eight.
CLASS COLORS.
Brown and White.
OFFICERS.
ELMO MILLER President.
WALTER K. GRANT Vice-President.
WARREN W. FISHER .... Secretary and Treasurer.
43
SOPHOMORE CLASS STATISTICS.
CHARLES R. ARMSTRONG.—Mechanical Engineering; ATii; President Junior German
Club; Cross Country Club; Class Football Team.
JOSEPH E. BLUM, Jr.—Literary; AAH; French Circle.
WILLIAM P. BRADBURN, Jr.—Scientific; AAH Basketball Team; Players' Qob;
T. A. A.
FRANK D. CEFALU.—Civil Engineering; A. B. (Jesuits); Class Football Team.
GUSTINE CRAFT.—Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke.
GEORGE E. DURR.—Mechanical Engineering.
MORRIS J. ELGUTTER.—Mechanical Engineering; T. A. A.; Dormitory Tennis Club.
WARREN W. FISHER.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Secretary; T. A. A.
ARTHUR M. FOLEY.—Civil Engineering.
DONALD B. GANNON.—Mechanical Engineering; ATn; Junior German Club; Class
Football Team.
WALTER K. GRANT.—Mechanical Engineering;' 2AE, ATF; Class Football Team;
Assistant Business Manager Olive and Blue; Qass Vice-President; Junior German
Qub.
LEWIS W.HOLLIDAY.—AKE; Civil Engineering; Manager Varsity Basketball Team;.
Class Football Team; Sub-Editor Jambalaya.
S. CHAILLE JAMISON.—ATA; Scientific; Junior German Club; Tulane German Qub;
Business Manager Tulane Weekly (resigned) ; Assistant Football Manager; Manager
Class Football Team; Qass Football Team; President Tulane Tennis Qub.
F. SIDNEY LEE.—AAH; Classical; Glendy Burke Literary Society; Egan Lisso; Scien-tific;
Forum; Dormitory Tennis Club.
J. REGINALD LL^DLUM.—Literary; Secretary Forum; Dormitory Tennis Club; Assist-ant
Manager Varsity Baseball Team.
LUCIEN E. LYONS, Jr.—ATfl; Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke; Junior German
Qub; Sab-Editor Jambalaya (I), (2); Tulane Tennis Qub; Campus Fund Com-mittee.
LOUIS W. MAGNE.—Mechanical Engineering.
C. WILLIAM MAYER.—Chemical Engineering.
ELMO J. MILLER.—Mechanical Engineering; T. U. A. A.; Class President; Glendy Burke;
Assistant Manager Varsity Basketball Team; Cross Country Club; Dormitory
Tennis Qub.
CLARENCE F. MONROSE.—Gvil Engineering.
PENDLETON S. MORRIS.—Civil Engineering; Cross Country Qub; Qass Football Team;
Tulane Tennis Club.
CARROLL MOSES.—Civil Engineering; Glendy Burke; Players' Qub.
PETER R. MYSING.—AA=: Class Football Team; Mechanical Egineering; Glendy
Burke.
44
FRANCIS M. PEARCE, Jr.—AAE; Literary; French Circle.
ST. JOHN FERRET.—AAE; Classical; Forum; French Circle; Class Editor Tulane
Weekly; Business Manager Players' Club.
ALBERT PORTILLA.—Mechanical Engineering; Glendy Burke; Class Football Team;
Cross Country Club.
HARRY H. RUSSELL.—4>A0; Classical; T. A. A.; Junior German Club; Tulane Tennis
Club.
JACOB RASCH, Jr.—Mechanical Engineering.
J. HOWARD SANDIGE.—Mechanical Engineering; Tulane Tennis Club.
NAUMAN S. SCOTT.—KA; Civil Engineering; Junior German Club; Class Football Team.
SAMUEL S. SEILER.—Civil Engineering.
JAMES F. SEIP.—Literary.
FRANKLIN C. TALMAGE.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Treasurer.
TORVALD G. THORGESON.—Civil Engineering.
THOMAS D. WESTFELDT.—2X, ATF; Tulane German Club; Junior German Club;
Class Football Team; Cross Country Club.
E. EARL WOOD.—2AE, ATF; Mechanical Engineering; Captain Class Football Team;
Junior German Club; Sub-Editor Olive and Blue.
I REDERICK ZENGLE, Jr.—Civil Engineering; T. U. A. A.
HISTORY OF CLASS 1908.
The duty of a class historian is to narrate with absolute truthfulness the past affairs
of his class. The history of 1908 is merely a record of successes, and the duty of reciting
these deeds and acliievements is indeed a pleasant one. To rehearse all the accomplish-ments
of this Class in a brief history is quite impossible, so that the main difficulty in
writing a history of J 908 is in the choice of those events that will do justice to its merit and
worth.
The spirit of the Class manifested itself on the very first day that "1908" entered
Tulane. In an organized body, the present Sophomore Class marched fearlessly to the
College, much to the surprise and dismay of the bewildered upper classmen. Whether
it was upon the advice of the Faculty, or for other equally good reasons, there was a notice-able
lack of hazing at Tulane during the month of October, J 904. What class at Tulane,
present or past, can boast of members of such enthusiastic spirit that they would climb
to the top of Gibson Hall and place their class-year on the roof? 1908 is alone in this
honor. In all events of college life, athletic and otherwise, this brilliant Class maintained
a high standard during the Freshman year.
For some inexplicable reason, the Sophomore year brought a great reduction in its
number. In spite of this discouragement, 1908 has gone to work with that distinctive
zeal and indefatigable energy characteristic of the Qass, not only to maintain its past
record, but also to add 1909 to the long list of victims of its athletic prowess. Never has
quality so triumphantly overcome quantity than in the annual football contest between
the present Sophomore and Freshmen Classes. The representatives of 1908, put forward
by a class of about thirty-four men, decisively defeated the team of the Freshman Class,
which numbers about three times as many.
We have seen some of the results; now let us investigate the causes. The reasons
arc twofold: First, there is a universal feeling of friendship between the individual mem-bers;
secondly, it possesses remarkable class-spirit. It is mainly through the latter feature
that 1908 has been so wonderfully triumphant in all its undertakings.
The motto of this Class has always been "Success"—success in athletics, in studies,
or in whatever else it may undertake. Truly, 1908 has lived up to its motto. So accus-tomed
have we become to hearing of the victories of this Qass that whenever we hear the
name of 1908 mentioned we unconsciously associate with it its motto, "SUCCESS"
46
l\T\e,TV
CLASS OF 1909.
COLORS. 1
Crimson and Gray.
OFFICERS.
LOUIS T. FRANTZ, President.
SARGENT PITCHER, Vice-President.
FRANK F.STONE Secretary.
MUIR BRADBURN, . Historian.
CLASS OF 1909 STATISTICS.
AIKEN, WARWICK.—2X; Scientific; Cross Country Club; Jonior German Clab; Class
Football Team; Campos Fund Committee; Treasurer Cross Country Club; T. U. A. A.
ALLGEYER, ROBERT L.—KA; Literary; Glendy Burke; T. U. A. A.
ARNOULT, A. E.—Literary.
ARNOULT, L. D.—Literary.
AUGUSTIN, LEONCE.—Scientific; Tennis Qob.
BLANCHARD, WALTER J.—Heclianical Engineering; Class Football Team.
BRADBURN, MUIR.—AAH; Scientific; Class Historian.
BRES, EDWARD SEDLEY.—AKE; Qvil Engineering; Treasurer Junior German Club.
CHAILLE, DAVID J.—ATA; Mechanical Engineering; Vice-President Junior German
Club; Tennis Club; Class Football Team.
COLE, RALSTON S.—Gvil Engineering; Qass Football Team; Scrub-Varsity Team;
Cross Country Club; T. A. A.
DICKSON, GEORGE B.—Scientific.
DOSHER, EDWARD, Jr.—Scientific; Glendy Burke.
'
DUNCAN, BROOKE H.—Civil Engineering; 2X; T. A. A.
EBERLE, JOSEPH.—Qvil Engineering.
FERRER, A. S.—Sugar Engineering.
FOLLETT, JOHN B.—Meclianical Engineering.
FORTIER, JAMES J. A.—$A0; Literary; Junior German Club; Glendy Burke.
FRANTZ, LOUIS T.—*K2; Chemical Engineering; Class President; Varsity Basketball
Team; T. A. A.
GARLAND, ALLEN T.—HKA; Literary.
GAUCHE, RAYMOND.—AAH; Scientific; Associate Editor Tulane Weekly; Players'
Club; Glendy Burke.
GOLDMAN, GEO. C, Jr.—ATA; Mechanical Engineering; T. A. A.
HARRIS, E. HORTON.—Mechanical Engineering; Cross Country Club; Forum.
HECHINGER, CARL G.—Literary.
HEIMEL, LEONCE, Jr.—*A0; Civil Engineering; Junior German Club; T. A. A.
HOMES, RICHARDSON.—Chemical Engineering.
HOWARD, HENRI T.—2X; Mechanical Engineering.
JACKSON, CHANDLER C—Civil Engineering.
KROLL, F. O., Jr.—Civil Engineering.
LEE, A. C. Jr.—KA; Mechanical Engineering; Freshman Football Team; Varsity Bas-f"-'
ketball Team; T. A. A.
LEVY, FERNAND K.—Mechanical Engineering; Tennis Club; T. A. A.
MELLEN, J. G.—AKE; Mechanical Engineering.
50
MORRIS, B. F.—2N; Hechanical Engineering.
MEYERS, B. M.—Mechanical Engineering; Tolane Tennis Clob.
OTIS, FRANK G.—Scientific; Basketball Team; Glendy Btirke.
OUTLAW, R. SIDNEY.—Scientific; Cross Country Club; Basketball Team; G. B. L. S.
PAGAUD, JAMES L.—Mechanical Engineering.
PASQUIER, CLAUDE M., Jr.—Mechanical Engineering; *K2.
PITCHER, SARGENT.—AKE; Mechanical Engineering; Class Vice-President; Captain
Class Football Team; Substitute Varsity Team; T. A. A.
ROBERT, GEORGE.—HKA; Mechanical Engineering.
ROTHSCHILD, SIGMUND.—Scientific; Associate Editor Olive and Blue; Glendy Burke
SADLER, D. K.—Mechanical Engineering.
SCHMIDT, ALFRED H.—Literary; Tennis Club; Glendy Burke.
SCOGIN, JOHN T.—Mechanical Engineering; Class Football Team; Cross Country Club
SCOTT, J. WYETH.—KA; Mechanical Engineering; Junior German Club; Tennis
Club; Campus Fund Committee.
SMITH, JOHN H.—nKA; Mechanical Engineering; Class Football Team; Varsity
Football Team; T. A. A.
STONE, FRANK F.—AAH; Civil Engineering; Class Secretary; Jambalaya Board, 1906;
Cross Country Club; T. A. A.
STRACK, HENRY F.—Mechanical Engineering; Basketball Team; Forum; T. A. A.
TERWILLIGER, GILBERT G.—Mechanical Engineering; T. A. A.
TIRCUIT, Wm. E.—Civil Engineering.
VALLAS, BRYSON.—Civil Engineering; Jambalaya Board, 1906; Class Football Team.
VILLOLODO, R.—Sugar Engineering.
WALDO, EDWIN E.—Literary.
WEIL, JACOB.—Literary; Forum.
WEIL, LOUIS A.—Literary; Glendy Burke.
WILLIAMS, EDWARD G.—Chemical Engineering; Glendy Burke.
WOOD, BURRIS, D.—KA; Civil Engineering; Class Football Team; Junior German
Club; T. A. A.
YZAGUIRRE, S. M.—Mechanical Engineering,
WILLIAMS, Wm. J.—Mechanical Engineering; Cross Country Club; T. A. A.
51
CLASS fflSTORY OF 1909.
It gives an historian great pleasure to write a history of sttch a Class as that of 1909.
He does not have to invent cncomiams for his Class; its actions are encomioms in them-selves.
The Class already holds a unique place in the annals of Tulane University in both
scholarship and athletics. On the initial day, the Freshmen proved without a doubt their
superiority over the Sophomores. The battle whicli occurred lasted but a short
time. The Sophomores saw that they were overpowered by the Freshmen, and hastily
retreated. After they were divested of their power they acted like the Indians whose
lands were taken away from them by the white men. They would not attack the body of
Freshmen, but would lie in ambush and fall suddenly upon three or four Freshmen. Many
challenges were sent to them, but none were accepted.
However, the Freshmen have asserted themselves in other ways. On the athletic
field they brought themselves to the front. In the L. S. U. game, who made the finest
punt? It was a Freshman. In that game, who gained the name of being ubiquitous?
It was a Fresliman. Again, we see them taking an active part in basketball. One of the
finest players on the basketball team was a Freshjnan. He occupied the position of for-ward,
and is noted for his agility. So in other sports you will find the Freshman asserting
himself.
So far we have considered only the athlete; but let us take a glim.pse of the schol-arship
of such a class. The remarkably few resignations manifest a high degree of intel-lectuality;
for no one would continue with his studies at college if he found them incom-prehensible.
Also the studiousness of those members of the Freshman Class show they
do not attend college merely to possess the superficial name of being collegians.
As this Class of 1909 has displayed so many laudable evidences of what it is capable
of doing, one may safely predict for it a most illustrious name in the annals of Tulane
University. —Historian.
TT)
53
STATISTICS OF IRREGULARS AND SPECIALS.
IRREGULARS.
Officers.
CHARLES JAMES BLOOM, President.
CHARLES W. MACKIE, Jr Vice-President.
HARRY W. MEYER, Secretary and Treasurer.
BLOOM, CHARLES JAMES.—AAH; Course No. II.; Qass Football Team (J); Sketch
Club (I); Glendy Burke Literary Society (I), (2); Treasurer G. B. L. S. (2); Presi-dent
Specials (2)j Players' Club (2); T. U. A. A.; Assistant Business Manager Jam-balaya
(2).
CHILDS, WILLIAM McCULLOGH.—*K2 ; Qvil Engineering.
MACKIE, CHARLES WILLIAM, Jr.—KA; Scientific (I); Course No. IL (2); Glendy
Burke Literary Society (2); Vice-President Class (J), (2); Manager Class Football
Team (2); Assistant Manager Class Baseball Team (I); T. U. A. A.; Tennis Qub;
Captain Cross Country Qub; Players' Qub; Varsity Track Team; Glee Qub.
MENEFEE, JAMES CHAPPEL.—'SKA, ATT; Literary; Forum (I), (2); Class Foot-ball
Team (I); Varsity Football Team (2); Varsity Track Team (I); Captain (2);
Cross Country Qub; Captain Varsity Football Team (3); Varsity Baseball Team
(I); Qass Editor The Tulane Weekly (2); Editor Tulanian (2).
MEYER, HARRY WATKINS.—*A0, ATP; Literary; Secretary Qass (2); Junior
German Qub.
QUINIUS, EDWARD PAUL.—Literary; Forum.
ROGAN, JOHN E.—Mechanical Engineering; Forum; Qass Football Team (J).
SCHARFF, M. CLYDE.—Course No. HI.
STEPHEN, WILLIAM L.—Course No. III.; Forum.
SPECIALS.
BEIN, CHARLES E.—Mechanical Engineering.
CHRISTIAN, SAUNDERS LOUIS.—Scientific.
COMEAUX, JOSEPH S.—K2; Mechanical Engineering.
CRESPO, SIDNEY.—Mechanical Engineering.
FAITHORN, RAYMOND L.—KA.
HUMPHREYS, WALTER BELL.—AAS; Sugar Chemistry.
KREH, HERMAN A.—Sugar Engineering.
LORCH, ADAM M., Jr.—Forum; Varsity Basketball Team (2); Players' Qub.
MENENDEZ, JOSEPH G.—Sugar Chemistry.
PETTIGREW, ASHLEY W.—SN.
PHILIPS, PHILIP TARLETON.—Mechanical Engineering; Players' Club (2); Varsity
Basketball Team; Sub-Editor Jambalaya (3).
RIGGS, WALKER F.—Sugar Engineering.
ROBINSON, WILLIAM H.—KA; Mechanical Engineering.
SEAVER, GEORGE ARTHUR.—Mechanical Engineering; Cross Country Qub;
T. U. A. A.
VIGO, SIDNEY GRAFT.—(See Junior Qass).
55
"TMAY-BE-VAL^ER'-AS-COVtRED-WlTrifiEAS.
- M BuT-nr-PA11Ts;TriflnK-THE-L0RD ,>«
>f ^ DOn'T-BAG-flT-THE-KnE[S! "•'*>^
56
OFFICERS.
D. A. McKINNON President.
LeROY STOWE, Vice-President.
J. B. T. CUHMINGS . . Treasurer.
G. W. COX Secretary.
J. L. ADAMS, Editor.
COLORS.
Light Blae and Maroon.
YELL.
We cat dead men; we care sick.
Where is the patient we can't fix?
Where are the drugs we can 't mix ?
Tolane Medical Nineteen Six I
61
CLASS OF 1906.
J. L. ADAMS. B.S.,
H. F. ADER, A.B.,
L.H.ALARKS,. .
J. I. ALLEN, . . .
C. L. ANDERSON,
S. S. ANDERSON,
G. H. APPLEWHITE,
R. BAILEY, . . .
J.BATH
J.J.BENNETT, .
J.R.BEVIL, . .
W. R. BOEBINGER
H. K. BOYD, A.B.,
C. H. BRADLEY,
W. D. BROWN, .
A. R. BUCHANAN,
G. T. BURGUNDER
W.E.BURT, . .
J. F. CONN, . . .
F. L. CARSON, . .
W.N.CARTER, ,
J. F. CAZAYOUX,
C. F. CHAFFE, . .
J. T. CHAMBERLIN,
G.W.COX, . .
A. B. CROSS, .
J. B. T. CUMMINGS,
J. W. DARBY, . .
H. DASPIT, Jr., .
E.C.DAY, . . .
W. A. DEARMAN,
E. L. Dc BERGUE, M.
E. DESMOND, .
L. T. DONALDSON, Jr
C.H. DRAKE, . .
V.E. DUDLEY, .
J.F.DUNN, . . .
R. C. FRENCH, .
G. L. GARDINER,
J. Q. GRAVES, . .
W. H. GRACE, . .
P.F.GREEN, . . .
E. E. GUILBEAUX,
P. E. GWINN, A.B.,
,.B.,
Ph..
..B.,
La. R. L. HARGRAVE, Tex.
.La. E. R. HARRINGTON La.
La. H.H. HARRIS, Ga.
Tex. W.H. HARRIS La.
Ga. A. D. HENRIQUES, Ph.G La.
Miss. A. A. HERALD, La.
Ok.Ter. L.C.HEINTZ, La.
Tex. CW.HOEFLICH Tex.
. La. B. W. INMAN, Jr., Miss.
. La. THOS. SPEC JONES La.
. Tex. E. S. KEITZ, A.B., La<;
. La. A. A. KENNEDAY, La.
S. Caro. H. D. KING La.
. Tex. K. T.KLEIN Miss.
. Tex. M.T.LANAUX, La.
. Tex. S. W. LAMB, Miss.
. La. L.H. LANDRY, La.
. Ala. J. E. LANDRY, La.
Miss. E. LE ROY NAFRIER, Ala.
Ok. Ten LH. LEVIN, La.
. Ga. L.LEVY La.
, La. D.S.LOWRY, Tex.
. La. E.W. MANOR, Miss.
Miss. R. J. MARINEGRA, La.
. Tex. D. A. MANN Tex.
. La. L.H. MARKS La.
. Ala. L. H. MARTIN, Ph.G Tex.
. La. A. D. MOULEDOUS, Ph.G La.
. La. A. G. McGILL, Ark.
. La. G. M. MOODY, Miss.
Miss. D. A. McKINNON, Fla.
. La. H. J. MEYER, Tex.
Wash. S. J.MAYEUX, La.
. La. E. L. NAPIER, Ala.
. Ala. H. T. NICOLLE, A.B La.
. La. T.S. NORWOOD La.
. La. G. A. OZEINE La.
Miss. G. A. O'CONNELL Ala.
. La. J. E. POLLOCK, La.
. La. R. T. PERKINS, A.B., La.
. Fla. C. G.PEROT La.
Ok. Ter. A. PETTIT, Miss.
. La. H.K. PHELPS, La.
. Ala. W. H. PIPES, B.S La.
62
R. S. PLUNKETT, . Miss.
G. K. PRATT, B.S., La.
N. P. PRUDHOMME, La.
W. W. PUGH, Jr., La.
W.P.RICHARDSON, Tex.
E. C. ROBICHAUX, A.B La.
B. T. ROBINSON, Miss.
L. T. ROBINSON, La.
T. J. SAFLEY Miss.
E. S. SCHARFF La.
R. L. SEAGLE, Ph.G., . . . . N. Caro.
L. SEGUEIRA, . . . Centra.1 America.
J. F. SHIVERS, Tex.
W.H. SORY, Tex.
LEROYSTOWE, Tex.
W. W. SWEED, Jr., Tex.
J.E. SWEED, Tex.
W. C. V/OODCOCK,
L. M. THOMASON, La.
C. E. THOMPSON, Ark.
W.F.THOMSON, Tex.
P.T.TALBOT, Tex.
G.H. UPTON, La.
G.WALLACE> La.
J. 0. WEILBOECHER, A.B., Ph.G., . La.
H. WESTON, Miss.
J. D. WESTMORELAND, Miss.
H. T.WHITE . Ala.
W. T. WHITE, A.B., Tex.
S. L. WHITELY, M.Ph Ga.
B. G. WILBERT, A.M La.
W.F. WILD La.
C. R. WILLIAMS, Tex.
S. J.WILSON, Tex.
J. S. WOOD, Ark.
Ark.
63
- o —— —
The "SKadcs of nfokT Had "fallen.
On the 5<znior 6tu3ants room,
^rv<i cv<iTy nooK and corner thaix
Was <3 rap eel la ^eepcsi" oloom
XL
/I ^rate. With ^inq cm^ers _,
ThTC. w ^cxunt sKaJovsfS }ie"r«Qndt'^ere, Lr
lA/hile. ti'ie glow rainzaled the, Senior
'
In a Iro-ttcrcd -Morris ChaiT*.
_/3 taXLe at \is allrovv"
With t^pe-wnttftn notas \wa5 6pTacui,
Jind. "-Maras on. tKa h.ca.<J
"
-He. had craTnm<i4 ihum mhrs nooUik
T)!! th.«, Sa'l4(t, rolje of nfoKi-
JHad Zretwjriffi^ f^Sdlf alroot hlTl.
•aod. iy^dimrndd Ki-s sansa of Siqht
.
So'Kare. "Ke s'ts iaiu(gj'nQ ia
^eflccti'oris o^T/i<t past.
And avarxts oj-jour [ori^ years
Mppaar h-djorehim thicKondp^t
Mcsees h'nTi<,c[j'a '3r>i%hnian
Uuihf oj^teparxdjullof hope-,
W/iile Kis ouisI4.c wa/stcooi pocfeit
0^1ow& a- ^ I Cam i nq St<z.Ml O Scope
.
-^ndmour ^rom his ccrcln-um
Xe remo-u-e s a Kid Jen peg , And recalls t/-ie ikinq^thoihapp&ri&d
lA/Ke-n h.(i"\A/€r\i op on-fhe. (eo"
6ul )oo)'(.h.''s l;row is cloudiaq
JJh- nov^ondor Kg- ^aS Se<2n^^
Th<2 qhosi of -f/Tsi uear Chaynislyu
IK
fl sku/i upon, the maiitle
Seems to smiie itsjrace CLwajy
MsxhQ Senior^ivesQ passing !ho'^
To SovchorCs T^esume
4 ?>o«cH ~ L
Thea comes acerta/aTtt-ursdoj/
Whea the mucK res pe«rt«2d XV an.
Kad qulzxeahim toct standstill
On the fo actions oj^t/ie SpLcea.
_nna now he's »a the Clln/c
./^nd pulls forth j^rom his vest
-R. p le X /meTc r and harnmer
To percuss some uicti/nsch^si
See tfie lachv_^mal Sccrets'oa
"Shape Llself into a tfear,
\Azh/ch /s sacred to the nicm V^
Of the 6(2(i/OrS Jun/or ucar -
fhvi a. poirit in diaj^nosls
He. Tcmcmlfcrs uo'fth dcLi'gktj
Tor We. rxzvar covldjc>Tae.t the pajn.
Th-Cfcts ctLujaijS cuorseot Ti/Qht'*
TKegruesomc scen.e possassedfor/i/m He's noor u.pon the tkrcsKoid
M most pecofj'ar charm, Of a parMc^ open daor,
Tor twashcrc k<.loun^apat/cnts Uq >j nd tf^e Thou^/itaonc<^ occursto h,m
T J. ^ )
. That he d bceta there uef©re.
Jo arripot<xte h-is arm. J
This last XWou^kt drovah]mfran,1hzpcld Twas aroom filled a,irh cadavers
Tp ivKich Ke had U^rn roarr^ir,^, Lyn^ starK ^^^/^^f S";*^. •
'^'**'^
Jlnd recalled theyzd that /uz. wass/m^lu.
^usinq <frt the ^loarnino.
Soup h«. jwmpedond struck o- 'i_2ntj
J)nd ere he. went to ired
' i/e Ko-d tTia.stered Ls-wis, EUrott
Jind'.nata5 on the. h<z.ad"
Whiie th£. spirits oj f3asslni
ilad Jl'^Bucney wrestled there.
Tvvas well hedicijfor ujstKlhcse vdtcj
/lad the other powers that tre,
iie'llhove-theri^httosign his name
wiihthis suffix,^n.o."
— M.D
HISTORY OF CLASS OF 1906.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, TULANE UNIVERSITY.
It is doubtfal if there was ever a group of men who went through such a varied
series of events, trials, and tribulations in four years as the band of newly-coined doctors
which Tttlane has just turned out. If each member of the medical '06 has as many pe-culiar,
exciting, and thrilling experiences with his patients as he had in the halls of Rich-ardson
Memorial, he will likely exclaim in despair:
Life is real, life is earnest.
And the gold is not to save
—
Spend it freely and be busted;
Let me slide into my grave.
To attempt to narrate the many incidents connected with this Class would require several
Jambalayas, and would necessitate the exhuming of sonie hatchets long buried; so we shall
but vaguely refer to some of them. To do so methodically will require three chapters,
and the kind indulgence of the reader (if there be any to get this far in this article) is asked
for the peculiar classification of the work done and tilings accomplished during a term
of four years.
CHAPTER I.—' ' PoUtics." !'
•
Perhaps the Class was in no way more noted than for its political proclivities. As
Prof. Hetz once aptly remarked in one of his favorite "Arsenical Lectures," ''Judging
from the political activity among you, you should all be coroners some day."
To go back to the beginning, the Class was organized with every man such a stranger
to the other that each one felt that he hardly knew himself. The first men nominated
were elected, and every one was pleased; that is how Stephens, McKinnon, and Lem-konitz
were selected as temporary officers. A month later we proceeded to elect per-manent
officers for the Class. The temporary officers had not had time to do anything
to put them in bad grace, so that Stephens and McKinnon were unanimously elected Presi-dent
and Vice-President respectively. But Lemkonitz was absent, and Herold (who, by some
mysterious means, had gained the confidence of the Class in one month) was called to the
Secretary's desk. Well, both Lemkonitz and Herold were nominated for the permanent
position. It has been said that some of the latter's friends engaged Mr. Lemkonitz in
conversation out of the room so as to detain him until after the election. Be that as it
may, Herold was present and the other candidate was absent, so you know the result.
Shortly after the ballots were cast, Lemkonitz arrived on the scene, and some of the voters
wanted to change. President ruled that it was too late.
66
At the beginning of the 1903-04, political lines commenced to be tightly drawn,
and things were strenuous that term. The first-year officers had hardly been seated when
schemes began to be hatched out. All kinds of political plans were concocted. During
the month of December, J 902, there appeared on the scene one L. M. Thomason, whose
melodious voice could be often heard giving cheer to the officers and words of wisdom to
the ignorant. This man of destiny was the "logical candidate" for the new Presidcrxy.
His friends lost no opportunity of impressing this fact on a majority of the Class, and,
strange to relate, they did so confidentially. He was elected on the first ballot at the end
of J 902-03 session, and it was during his administration that the Class came into such
notorious prominence. At the end of the session of J 903-04 it was time to elect officers
for the Junior year. The friends of Thos. Spec Jones had followed the example of Thom-ason's
friends the year before, and had taken "the bull by the horns." Hany secret meet
ings were held during February and March by the self-appointed Jones Campaign Com-mittee.
Although he had strong opposition, he won by a good margin, and the Class now
had its third honest, conscientious, and painstaking head. We can almost hear Stephens
exclaiming, that year at the election time: "Friends and class-mates, I come not to
praise Jones, but to elect him." It was during the Jones term that the Class, and espec-ially
some of its members, felt that they were treated "shabbily" on Tulane night at the
Tulane Theatre, and let it be known in some very forceful words, which evoked quite a
great deal of attention from the Tulane Night Committee and from our brothers at the
Academic Department. At the end of that session Mr. D. A. McKinnon was elected
President of the student body. This was not accomplished without a great deal of schem-ing
and excitement. It is hoped that under the McKinnon regime all past frictions have
been forgotten, and that members of all cliques have left, with only the best of feeling
toward each one of their classmates.
; CHAPTER II.—"Rowdyism."
The refreshing spring days have come; the brightening days, alas! "If you insult
one of our men, you must lick the whole Class."
The above seemed to be the motto, judging from how the Class, so badly lacerated
byjintcrnal political dissension, would stand together when attacked by an outside foe.
CHAPTER HI.—Work.
This year's Class leaves behind it a record of which it need n't feel ashamed. From
its Freshman to its Senior year compliments have been bestowed upon it by professors,
instructors, and demonstrators. Not only in the examination-room, quiz-room, and lab-oratories
has it done well, but its members have done their share of literary work; also
contributing freely to the Jambalaya, Olive and Blue, the Loto Phagocyte, and Medical
Bulletin. Some members of the Class are taking partial courses at the New Orleans
Charity Hospital, Shreveport, Natchez, and elsewhere, which will leave them over to
.67
graduate later; bat they will always have a feeling of loyalty for old '06. Let it be ar-ranged
that at some future day this Class hold a reunion in New Orleans or elsewhere,
that we may again hear in strenuous tones:
"We cut dead men; we cure sick.
"Where is the patient we can't fix?
Where are the drugs we can't mix?
Tulane Medical nineteen-six!"
—Arthur A. Herold.
68
69
CLASS OF J907*
CLASS COLORS.
Ptirple and White.
YELL.
Oh!—je—he—je—ha,
Je—ha—ha—ha,
Jonior Medical,
Rah—rah—rah!
Oh!—je—he—ha—ha,
Je—ha—ha—ha,
Jtjnior Medical,
Rah—rah—rah
!
OFFICERS.
B.T. "WISE, Jr President.
E. B. SLOSS, Vice-President.
F.W. BROCK Secretary.
T.E. ROYALS, Treasurer.
M.H. JORDAN , .Historian.
A.H.CAINE, Poet.
m
CLASS OF 1907 STATISTICS.
E. C. ARMSTRONG,
R. L. ARMSTRONG,
O. N. ARRINGTON,
M.BOUDREAU,. .
E.De BALLARD, .
J.B.BENTON, . .
S.
E.
F.
G.
A.
C.
M. BLACKSHEAR,
P.BUNKLEY, .
W. BROCK, . .
L. BROWN, . .
M.M. BROWN, . .
R. S.BROWN, . .
M. CAINE, . . .
G.COLE, . . .
C.C. CALVIN, . .
E. McL. CAUSEY, .
D. C. CARRINGTON,
H.S. CHERRY, . .
H.L.CHILDS, . .
H. L. COCKERHAM,
L. A. COCKFIELD,
M. M. COLLINS, B.S.,
J.B.CRANE, . . .
B. F. CUNNINGHAM,
A. K. DOSS, B.A., .
C. J. EDWARDS, Jr.,
S.W.FRY, ....
T.J.FLOYD, . . .
S. O. FORTENBERRY,
S. E. FRIERSON, .
A. P. FRITH, . . .
F. A. FULLER, . .
G.R GARLAND, .
C. R. GARRAWAY,
S. D. GILLESPIE, .
O.P.GOODWIN, .
Miss. H. A. GREENWOOD, La.
. La. F.Y. GREET, Ala.
Miss. V. J. GREGG, Ala.
. La. H. C. GRIFFIN, Tex.
. La. C. M. HARTZOG, Miss.
Miss. M.C. HAWKINS, Ala.
. La. W.P.HICKMAN La.
. La. 0. A. HILL, La.
. La. C. A. HIRIART, La.
Miss. D. J. HIRSCH, Miss.
Tex. S.P.ISRAEL, La.
. La. C. JACOBS, Cuba.
.Ala. CM. JARRELL Tex.
. La. V. JASTREMSKI, La.
. La. M. H. JORDAN Ala.
Miss. G. E. KORNEGAY, Jr., . . . . N. Caro.
Tex. H. J.KELLEY, La.
. Ala. R. A. LAMBERT, B.S., La.
. La. A. L. LEVIN La.
Miss. R. LYONS, B.A La.
. La. F. D. MAIVER S. Caro.
. La. L. N. MARKHAM, Tex.
Tex. J. T. MOSS, Tenn.
Ark. B. A. McClelland, La.
. La. W. E. McDonald, La.
Miss. R. McGLATHERY, La.
Tex. W.E.rffiSSE, Ark.
. La. L. MINORVILLE, La.
Miss. W.W.NIPPER, Tex.
Miss. W. R. ORR, Miss.
. La. B.B. OWENS, L T.
Tex. W.H. PALMER, Ark.
. La. W. T. PATTON, La.
Miss. R. J. M. PENDERGRAST La.
. La. J.L.PRIDGEN, Tex.
. La. C. S. RAGER La.
72
E.M.REBARDS, . .
R. REAGAN, ....
A. S. REISER, . . .
O. J. RICHARDSON,
S. L. ROBINSON, . .
R. W. ROWLAND, .
T.E. ROYALS, . . .
J.H.SANFORD, . .
E. L. SANDERSON, .
M.C.SAPP, ....
L.SAPARITO, . . .
P. H. SCARDINO, . .
R. SCHIHMELFIFERING,
R. L. SEGRIEST, . .
J.N.SHARP, ....
W.S. SHARP, . . .
E.B.SLOSS, ....
, B.S.
. La. J. L. SMITH 1 ,.,
Hiss. M. A. SMITH, m&s.
. La. R.E. SMITH. La.
. La. W. A. STEPHENS, La.
Miss. V. O. STEWART, Miss.
Miss. J. L. STOLLENWERCK Ala.
Miss. H. P. ST. MARTIN, La.
. La. B. F. SWANSON, Jr., Ga.
. La. W.W. SWORDS, La.
Tex. A. G.TAYLOR La.
. La. H.O.TAYLOR, La.
Tex. G.A.THOMAS, La.
Ark. J.WELSH, Hiss.
Miss. J. J. WILSON, Jr., Hiss.
Miss. B. T. WISE, Jr., A.B., Ga.
Tex. K. L. WILLE, Tex.
Miss. F, W, YOUNG, B.S La.
73
HISTORY OF CLASS OF 1907.
Medical classes are like medical men—there are all kinds and conditions of them.
Some are good, many are indifferent, and a few are bad. Each has its own pecttliar faults
and its own peculiar virtues, for the character of a class is merely the sum total of the
characters of the students who compose it. If it is made op of good students, it will fee a
good class, and vice versa.
In this respect, the Class of J 907 has good reason to be proud. It is made up of
good men, and is, therefore, a good class, as the records of its three years of existence will
show. In each year it has been faithful, energetic, and painstaking, doing its work thor-oughly
and well. It has never shirked its duties or performed them in any but a whole-hearted
and serious manner. There has been work to dp, and it has done it to the best of
its ability.
Previous historians have told how the Class, being but an infant, as it were, toddled
rtirough the first year of its existence and learned to walk in the second. It is the duty of
the present chronicler to tell how, having reached the age of discretion, it strode sturdily
through the third. And yet, when one begins to write it down, there seems to be very
little to write, after all. The doings of the medical student would hold little of interest
to the outsider. Unlike his brothers of the other departments, he takes small part in the
general collegiate affairs. His class has no baseball team, no football team, no debating
or literary society; it has in place of them an infinite quantity of work. As other people's
. work is seldom of interest, the historian will spare the reader a record of of it.
Instead, he will content Iiimself with the brief statement that the road has been long
and the going difficult. There have been bright places and dark ones; days of sunshine and
days of storm; moments of triumph arid moments of despair. There have been successes
and failures and trials and tribulations without number. But through it all the Class has
been moving straight ahead. And now that there is only one more year of student life
before it—"only one more river to cross"—it can say, in the words of the poet:
"I have had my disappointments and I 've had my silent fears,
But I reckon that laughs will easy balance all the tears;
It ain't a brilliant record, but I want it understood
That I 'm still a-keeping even, which is doing purty good."
741
'/•f^/M/ /////////'/////!///'''''' 'y'y/yyyy/y/y////My/y///y/////y///v^^
^/////////A////////':///W///V////////////J^///;'/////-^/////^^^^^
75
his pRSJ
^
76
SECOND YEAR CLASS OF 1908.
JULIS AGUILAR,
A. S. APPLEWHITE,
L.B. AUSTIN, . .
YVESARDAIN, .
P. S. BAILEY, . . .
J. R. BASS
J. S. BAYLIS, B. S.,
A. F. BEVERLY, .
F.T.BLOW, . . . ,
EUGENE BRINDJOUC,
G.E.BURCH, . ,
J. B. CASEY, . .
R. H. CHILTON,
J.W. COULEY, . .
E. McC. CONNELY, A.B
A.B. CRAIN
W. H. CRYER, A. B.,
O.P.DALY
J. S. DAVIS, ....
ROBT. F. DERAUEN,
JNO.S.DUNN, . . .
C.F. FARMER, . . .
E. C. FERGUSON, M.Ph,
R. H. FOSTER, B.S.,
H. L. FOUGERAUSE,
F.R.GOHILA, . .
R. R. HALFACRE,
J. E. HALL, . . .
ROY HAMILTON,
J. E. HARDEN, . .
Wm. McL. HAYES,
M. C. HENRY, A.B.,
F. R. HILL, ...
S.G.HINES, . . .
S. P. HOLLAND, .
B. F. JOHNSON, .
Costa Rica. T. J. KAY, La.
Miss. N.M. KENNEY, Tex.
Miss. A. A. KERGOSIEN, Miss.
. La. GEO. C. KILPATRICK, Ala.
Ohio. F. J. KIMBERGER, La.
Miss. CHAS.KIRCHEM La.
Miss. HIRAM KASTMOYER, A.B., . . . .La..
Tex. A. B.LACOUR, La.
Tex. E. LEFLEUR, Jf La.
. La. F. C. LAMOTHE, Jr., La.
. La. W. W. LEAKE, B.S., La.
. La. A. D. H. LITTLE, . Ga.
. La. J.W.LONG, Fliss.
Tex. T.F.LONG, Ala.
. La. L.A.LOVE, La.
. La. F.O.MAHANY, Ark.
.Ala. C.P.MAY, La.
. La. E. A. MEADERS, B.S., Miss.
Tex. W.E. MEASE Ark.
. La. E. S. MILLER, Ala.
. La. L.MILLER, La.
Miss. A. D.MIMS, Ala.
Tex. L. MITCHELL, La.
Miss. T.W. MURPHY, Bliss.
. La. W.T.McNEESE, Miss.
. La. G. L. ODOM, Fla.
Miss. HUGO OESTREICH, B.S., .... Tex.
Miss. JNO. T. O'FERRALL, Jr Miss.
. La. B.B. OWENS Ind. Ter.
.Ala. F. E. PERRY, A.B La.
. La. J. C. PHILLIPS. Miss.
Miss. W. D. PHILLIPS, B.S La.
. La. J. T. PROSSER, B.S., ....... La.
. La. J. U. REAVES Ala.
. Ala. C. E. REW, La.
Miss. C. V.RICHARD La.
78
G.F.ROELING La.
F. C.ROWELL, Ark.
E.F.SALERNO, La.
H. W. SCOFIELD, La.
E.H. STANTON, La.
A. STOLLENWERCK, B.S Ala.
F.E. STROUD, Tex.
F. P. ST. PHILLIP, Jf La.
J.L.TARLTON .'
. La.
J. A. THOMAS Miss.
S. DU BASE TOWNSEND, Ala.
W.T.UTSEY, Miss.
W. S. VANCE, B.S., Miss.
A.V.VEAZIE La.
W.CVICKERS, Ala.
C. J. WATTERSTON, La.
G.L.WEBB, Tex.
R. R. WELCH, B.S., Miss.
D. BE W.WHITE, Miss.
BROUGHTON WILKINSON, . . .Ala.
A. H.WILLIS, La.
ROY DeL. WILSON, Tex.
H. E. WILLIAMS Ark.
R.B.WINN, La.
S.P.WISE,A.B Ga.
BROWN WARD, La.
J. L WOODWARD Miss.
L. A. YOUNGS, B.S., La.
Degrees, 18
Louisiana, . .44
Mississippi, 23
Alabama, 12
Texas, ill
Arkansas, 4
Georgia, 2
Florida, i
Indian Territory, i
Ohio, i
Costa Rica, I
Totnl, lOQ
79
HISTORY OF THE MEDICAL CLASS OF 1908.
Tolane University of Louisiana,
Department of Medicine,
Dear Old Public: 1906.
Thinking you would like to hear something of the "doings" at old Tulane, I decided
(with your permission) to trespass upon your always preoccupied time for a few moments;
and, being familiar with your peculiar fondness for great things, I could not conceive of
anytfiing that would be more stimulating to your skeptical brain than a few facts centered
upon the greatest bunch of embryo M.D.'s this old college has ever had the pleasure of
calling its own—I refer to the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eight.
Although our existence dates back only to the 20th of October, 1904, we have ac-complished
great things. Of such magnitude were the above that the Dean and Faculty
have seen fit to bestow upon us, witliin the short period of one year, the most renowned
and envied of all titles—Sophomore; the simple epigram that Freshmen fear. Juniors envy,
and Seniors respect.
From the moment the functions and activity of life had begun, the Class of 1908
was recognized as an ever-potent factor in the circle of college existence. In every phase
of life during this time we have not been seen to be lacking—every move towards the up-building
and maintenance of our future alma mater being fully supported. In athletics,
being represented by Long, as Assistant Manager of the College Baseball Team, and Con-nenly
and Austin on the Varsity Football Team. In politics, we have amongst our num-ber
some of the best; while in class-work, though we often succumb to the trials of a long
and dry lecture by passing into the realms of dreamland, or in the quiz-room are severely
reprimanded by some of "the wise ones" for attempting to introduce into medical science
some new feature, appearing as possible to no one but the excited and half-frightened
student. Taking all into consideration, our Class has made a most remarkable showing,
and during the future yaers of our coUege and professional career—just as a bit of advice
—
I would suggest that you keep your eyes on 1908, as great things are to come.
We began the journey of college life with ninety-one participants, each one being
imbued with the sting of ambition, pausing here and there to grasp traces of knowledge
to be used when the far-off "Final Day" has arrived and we cast aside the mantle of college
glory, and robe in all the dignity of a Doctor of Medicine. Among the ninety-one above
referred to may be found men of aU descriptions and characters, hailing from all points of
this and other countries. Those things of an unpleasant character are usually told with
reluctance. However, I would consider that something most important had been omitted
should I fail to chronicle a few of the many things concerning the trials of our Freshman
80
life. Anyone to whose fate it has fallen to pass through this stage of college metamor-phosis
fully realizes what it means to be a Freshman. Many times were we disheartened,
feeling as if mere existence was all that could be wished for; as the taunts of an ever-joyous
upper classman, always directed at the most penetrating portion of the poor Freshman,
are something awful. It suffices to say that this life of suspension and humiliation was
brought to a close April 30, 1905.
During the vacation months the members of J 908 spent their time in various ways;
some remaining in New Orleans, being engaged in clinical work, while others were oc-cupied
with similar work in other places. The opening of college for the session of '05-'06
witnessed the return of the majority of the Class; though we lost a few members, the
original number was not only maintained, but strengthened by the addition of several
recruits, who, having heard of the Class of 1908, decided to cast their fate with them.
With such an acquisition, and possessing those traits that go towards the make-up of an
ideal class, you cannot well imagine of anything otherwise than success, and as such the
Sophomore Class of '05-'06 has existed.
Would like to probe deeper into the many reasons why this Class is held with such
high esteem, but for the present will have to trust to your imaginative powers to reason
out, with the above facts, why so many say, "It is the best class I have seen."
As a member of the "Wants Committee," I have an engagement with the Faculty
to decide whether or not we will abolish examinations for the Class of 1908, owing to the
excellence of said Class. I must be gone. With best wishes, yours,
—Historian.
&i
CUi^of i^o<^
OFFICERS OF FRESHMAN 1909.
W. G. GILL President.
W. E. SHARP, Vice-President.
C. C. GREEN, Secretary and Treasarer.
H.H. HARRIS, Historian.
R.C.KORY Editor.
CLASS OF 1909.
E. E. ARCHIBALD,
A. H. ATKINSON,
A.BAUNDS, . . .
L. BAUREGAUJAN,
J.L.BEYT, . . .
H. T. BILLINGER,
A. B. BLAND, . .
T.BRAMAN, . . .
W. F. BROOKS, Jr.,
F.F.BROWN, . .
J.T.BUYD, . . .
N.C. CALVIN, . .
J.B.CARKERN, .
V.CARY, ....
C.K.KATLEN, . .
W. H. CAURET, .
C.H. CHAPMAN, .
A. S. COOPER, . .
P. B. CRUMBLEY,
H. P. DAWSON, .
L. DELAHOUSSAYE,
W. J. ERACHE, . . .
. La- R. J. EUACHS, Hiss.
.Ala. J. F. FARMER La.
Miss, J. L. FIELDS Ala.
. La. R.C.FINLAY, .La.
. La. R.H. FISHER, L .
Miss. L. A.FORTIER, La.
. La. L.H.FRANSEZ,
. La. M. G. GELPE, i.-.
. La. A. B. GIARDINA, La.
. La. A. M. GILL, Jr., Hiss.
Miss. N.G.GILL, Hiss.
. La. J. M. GLEASON, Jr La.
. La. C. C. GREEN, Tex.
. La. P. L. GULLY, H« ..
Tex. A.F.HAYE, Ark.
. La. W.H. JAHEH La.
.Ala. H. V.JONES La.
. La. R.C.KORY,A.B La.
. Ga. A. A. KELLER, La.
. La. W. E. KNOX, Jr., Ala.
. La. A.H.LAFARGUE La.
. La. L.D.LAFARGUE La.
S5
E.LAUDRY, . . . .
J. R. LAUGHNAIS, .
J.E.LAUTES, . . .
J.D.LEBRANO, . .
H. LEIDENHEIMER,
A.H.LETTEN, . . .
J. F. LITTLE, . . . .
G. T. LITTLEPAGE,
W. H. LIVINGSTON,
W.LOKE, . . .
J. S. MANN, . .
C. D. HARILLAN,
R. D. MARTINEZ,
J.N.MASON, .
W. W. MASS, .
A. L. McINNIS,
J. A. MEAD, .
J. C. MICHAEL,
W. P. MILLER,
W.L. MILLS, .
. La. L.C. MINOR Ark.
. La. F.C. NAPIER, . Miss.
. La. W.W.NAPIER Miss.
. La. F.J.O'CANNON, Tenn.
. La. C.R. PERKINS Miss.
. La. T. E. PHILLIPS, Ala.
. La. D.A.RATLIFF La.
.Ala. J.B.RAUGAN, La.
Miss. H. M. RICKETTS, La.
Miss. W.E. SHARP Miss.
Tex. R.M. SMITT La.
. La. T. L ST. MARTIN, La.
. La. G. J.TAQUISSO La.
.Ala. J.P.TENNEY, '.La.
. La. E. K. TOWNSEND, Tex.
Tex. J. L. WADE, La.
Miss. E. WILLIAMSON Miss.
. La. E. F.WOODS, La.
. La. V. G. YEAGER La.
Ark. W.G. ZERR, La.
86
HISTORY OF FRESHMAN CLASS.
A history is a narration of facts, and facts are troths;' hence, it is necessary that one
should write of our Qass both individually and collectively.
On November 2d, when the portals of Tolane Medical Department were first opened
to the Qass of '09, it became at once evident that it was composed of men well fitted to
perform the hereditary duties and obligations devolved upon them. Our Qass is proud
of its fuIIy-developed men—men in both body and mind, brain and brawn, coupled with
strength of will and originality of thought; men who are not only to foflow in the beaten
paths of those who have gone before, but destined to go down in the history of Tulane as a
Class of distinction.
If itjjbecame necessary that the historian, in performance of his duty, should dwell
upon every deed and achievement of his Class, the higher classmen would complain that
he is greedy of space; so only a few of the deeds which go to make the Qass of '09 famous
shall be noted.
^llt was the first Qass that ever asked for more tlian two days for Christmas,' and
although we did not get what we desired, we at least proved conclusively to the student
body that we have nerve and that the fundamental characteristic of a Freshman was found
not wanting in our Class. ',:y-'v'^"-^'':'^'-'''''l'^MSM V''
Although we were not asked to add our names to the petition funded to the Dean
desiring that more comfortable chairs be substituted for the bleachers now existing in
Dr. Chaille's lecture-room, we were not behind the Sophomores in learning the fact tliat
ahnost anything would be better than those noble old benches, which have stood against
the tempests of changing years.! S
Speaking individually of the members of the Qass, we can only say that each one is
"a thing of beauty and a joy forever"; each possessing some attribute, either good or bad,
wfiich distinguishes him among his classmates.
Now that we are about to put aside our childish ways and become Sophomores, we
are fully aware of the fact that the eyes of the world are upon us, and we are more sure that
when we arc weighed in the balance we shall be found not wanting. —Historian.
87
Iv4iiri2i
88
^^1^1
YELL.
H and 2 and SO^;
Jtst a sip and nothing more;
Skull and crossbones.
River Styx,
Talanc Pharmacy,
7 and 6.
CLASS COLORS.
Black and White.
CLASS FLOWER.
Violet.
OFFICERS.
R.H.MOERS, President
GEO. W. FAIVRE, Vice-President
A.D.CAPDAU, Secretary
T. L. CURRY, - Treasurer
91
PHARMACY CLASS 1906.
MISS REINE BUISSIERE,
C. H. DRAKE, Med., . . .
GEO. W. FAIVRE, Vice-Pres,
W. S. FOSSIER, A.B.,
L. A. GUGLIELHO, .
T. S. JOINES, Med., .
A. J. LAICHE, A.B., .
R. H. MOERS, Pres., .
E. H. MORGAN, M.D.,
, La.
, Ala.
, La.
. La.
. La.
, La.
. La.
. La.
N. Mexico.
J. T; MOSS, Med., Tenn.
JAS. H. PRIDGEN, Jr Tex.
J. C. RICHARDS, La.
H. M. SCROGGIN, Sob. Ed. Jam., . . La.
A. P. SMITH, Miss.
EDWARD C. VOCKE La.
H. WESTON, Med., Miss.
W. W. LEAKE, B.S., Med La.
W. D. PHILLIPS, B.S., Med., .... La.
PHARMACY CLASS 1907.
G. E. AWCOCK, . . .
A. D. CAPDAU, Sec,
E. CHAMBERLAIN, .
S. CARRA
H. CROSS,
T.L. CURRY, . . .
A. J. FICKERSSEN, Treas.,
L.A.FORTIER, ....
V/.G.
. La. D.W.GOLDSTEIN, Mss.
, La. O. J.GRAVOIS La.
. La. C. A.HAMMACK, Miss.
. La. H. H. HARRIS, B.S., Med., Ga.
, Fla. C. A. JOHNSON, Miss.
, La. LEWIS L.LAZAR Miss.
, La. H.RICKETTS La.
, La. M.A.TATE, Miss.
ZERR, Med., La.
92
^^
'1^>*
•1i»%-
%!-:
^^^»»-^
#-*i^rtp,.
'I^R^w '^H"'*^^
fS^>-
95
Hullabaloo! Once for all I
-Sis, Bopm?
Tulane Law!
CLASS STATISTICS I905-I906.
ALLEN, MATTHEW JACKSON.
ANSLEY, EDWARD CONRAD.—*A0, ATF; T. A. A.; Assistant Business Manager
> The Tulane Weekly; Editor-in-chief of Jambalaya from Law Department; Charter
Member The Tolane Law Debating Club; The Black Avengers; G. B. L. S.
AHRENS, FREDERICK AUGUSTUS.—Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating
Club.
ARMBRUSTER, FREDERICK WILLIAM.
BEAR, ARTHUR LEO.—T. A. A.; Forum; Member T. A. A. Nominating Committee;
Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
BERNADAS, FERNAND LOUIS.
BELL, UNIS ANDREW.—A. B. Qass Treasurer.
BERLIN, HENRY HUGH.—BOH; IV.; T. A. A.; Varsity Football Team; Executive
Committee Law Class.
96
BRUMBY, ROBERT ELDREDGE—KA; A.B.; T.A.A.; Editor Tulanian; Charter Mem-ber
The Ttilane Law Debating Clob; Assistant Treasurer T. A. A.; Chairman Dor-mitory
Committee; G. B. L. S.
BYRNE, CHARLES ARION.
CARTER, HOWELL, Jr.^IV.; Executive Committee Law Class.
CASSERLY, JAMES CHARLES.—IV.; A.B., A.M.; Class Secretary.
CHARBONNET, JOSEPH ARTHUR.—T. A. A.; The Black Avengers; Charter Member
The Tulane Law Debating Club.
CHAPPUIS, ABNER CHARLES.—T. A. A.; The Black Avengers; Member T. A. A.
Nominating Committee; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
CONKLIN, CHARLES JOHN.
DAWKINS, BENJAMIN CORNWELL.—KS; T. A. A.; Vice-President The Tulane Law
Debating Club.
DENIS, ARTHUR HEWES.—2X; IV.; T. A. A.; Executive Committee Law Class.
DOUSSAN, DE VILCHES.—Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
DRESSNER,»'JACOB DAVID.—Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
FEARS, JOHN CALHOUN.—KS, ATT- T. A. A.; The Black Avengers.
FLEURY, JOHN EARNEST.—IV.; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club;
Executive Committee Law Class.
FORET, FERNAND JOHN.
FRERET, PIERRE SUAVE.—*A0.
GRAHAi^, LEWIS R0SSNER.—2AE; A.B., A.M.
GARLAND, JOSEPH MOORE.-HKA, IV.; Executive Committee Law Class.
GALLAGHER, WILLIAM JAMES.
GAUTREAUX, JAMES SCALLEN.—A.B.
GAYLE, EDWIN FRANKLIN.—A.B., A.M.; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating
Club; Class First Vice-President.
GUGEL, ANDREW GEORGE.—IV.; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club;
Executive Committee Law Class; Third Vice-President Law Class.
GILMORE, WALTER TIMA.—IV.; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
GILL, ALONZO PRESTON.
GREMILLION, JAMES ALBERT.
GRIMA, ALFRED.—IV.; A.B.; Executive Committee Law Class.
GLISSON, JOHN ELIJAH.
HART, FRANK WILLIAM.—2AE; IV.; A.B.; Executive Committee Law Class;
T. A. A.; Business Manager The Olive and Blue; Charter Member The Tulane Law
Debating Club.
HAUSER, ANDREW.
JOHNSON, DELOS ROSELUS.—Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
LAZARUS, ELDON SPENCER.—A.B.; T. A. A.; Charter Member The Tulane Law De-bating
Club; Executive Committee Law Class.
LEFEBVRE, VICTOR MAMES, Jr.—T. A. A.; The Black Avengers; Charter Member
The Tulane Law Debating Club.
LEVY, ADAM GIFFEN.—A.B.; President The Tulane Law Debating Club; Editor of the
Tulane Weekly froni Law Department.
LEVERICH, WATTS KEARNEY.—ATO; IV.; A.B.; Law Editor The Olive and Blue;
Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
LOUQUE, EDNA LOUISE (Miss).
LOOMIS, JOHN RICHARD.
MAESTRL RICHARD NATALE.—T. A. A.
MAGNE, FRANK WILLIAM,—A.B.; T. A. A.; Varsity Football Team; Executive Com-mittee
Law Qass.
MALONEY, HENRY HERBERT.—A.M.
MAKER, GEORGE OSMOND.—T. A. A.
MOREAU, SAMUEL.
HUSGRAVE, FRANK HOWARD.
McDOUGALL, LINDSAY.—Charter Member The Talane Law Debating Qob.
McGOWEN, ALFRED BUSSEY.
NELSON, WILLIAM MARTIN.—A.B.; T. A. A.; Charter Member The Ttilane Law De-bating
CI«b. fei'
NEUHAUSER, DAVIt)'ADRIAN.
NIXON, CLARK.—ATIi; IV.; Executive Committee Law Class.
NORMAND, NEWTY IGNATIUS.
NOULLET, FRANK JOSEPH.
NUNEZ, FERNAND JOSEPH.—Charter Member The Ttilane Law Debating Clab.
ODOM, JOHN FRED.—K2 ; IV.; T. A. A.; Class Second Vice-President.
PORTEOUS, WILLIAM ALEXANDER.
PARLANGE, WALTER CHARLES.—SX; IV.; T. A. A.; Executive Committee Law
PRATT, ALBERTf MILES.—2AE; IV.; Executive Committee Law Class.
PRAT, JOSEPH ALOYSIUS.—Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
PRUDHOMME, MILBUR EDMOND.
RABORN, ROBERT IVIE.—T. A. A.; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
REID, COLUMBUS.—KS; A.B.; T. A. A. Nominating Committee; Assistant Business
Manager Jambalaya Law Department; The Black Avengers; Charter Member The
Tulane Law Debating Club.
RICHARD, EDWARD HENRY.—$K2; IV.; Treasurer The Tulane Law Debating
Club; Executive Committee.
ROBBERT, EDWARD MARTIN.—*K2; IV; Class President; Charter Member The
Tulane Debating Club.
ROSENTHAL, DAVID RAPHAEL.—T. A. A.; Charter Member The Tulane Law De-bating
Club.
RYAN, EDWARD JOHN.
SBISA, ANTHONY JOSEPH.—Executive Committee Law Class; Charter Member The
Tulane Law Debating Club.
SCHWARTZ, ADRIAN DANIELL.—T. A. A.? Secretary the Tulane Law Debating Club.
SPERLING, JEWELL ARTHUR.—T. A. A.: Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating
Club.
STARKEY, CHARLES THEODORE; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
STEPHENS, JOSEPH HENRY, Jr.-KA; T. A. A. • \i
TAYLOR, BENJAMIN BROWN.—K2; B.S.; T. A. A.; Vice-President Tulane Athletic
Association; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Club.
THOMPSON, MATTHEW CARY.—IV.; Charter Mem.ber The Tulane Law Debating Club;
Executive Committee Law Class.
THIGPEN, JOHN HOWARD.
VISE, JAMES MONROE. - "I
WARD, JOSEPH FRANK.—nKA; IV.; Chairman Law Class Executive Committee;
Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating Qub; Sub-Editor Jambalaya; G. B. L. S.
WOLF, BENJAMIN YEHEIL.—T. A. A.; Charter Member The Tulane Law Debating
Qub. . -' •'
WOOD, HELEN McGLOIN (Mrs.)—Class Historian; Sub-Editor Jambalaya.
WOOTEN, WILLIAM LEONIDAS.—IV.; Executivc'^Committee Law Class.
WRIGHT, WALTER WINN,—*K2; T. A. A.; The Black Avengers; Charter Member
The Tulane Law Debating Qub.
98
LAW SCHOOL.
CLASS HISTORY J905-06.
Work began at the Law School this year on November the 20th with a class of
eighty-two members, all earnest students and determined to succeed.
Our first meetings were held to try and awaken a real "college spirit" among us,
which spirit is claimed to have been lacking in previous classes. Different students spoke
on this subject, and tried to make all feel that they belonged to Tulane; were a part of
this the greatest university in the South, and that her football games and other affairs
were the interests of each student in our Department. These meetings led to an appear-ance
of the entire Class at the Thanksgiving game, where we went together in a special
car, and had much fun and enjoyment in so doing.
Our next occurrence of interest was the selection of Class officers and voting for
them. For the first time in the history of the Law School it so happened this year that
when the time came for voting there was no opposition to the ticket named, it being the
unanimous choice of the Class, and it went through in its entirety to the pleasure and
satisfaction of all concerned.
On the night of the election, Mr. Armbruster was appointed to place Mr. Robbert's
name in nomination, and his address was strong and well spoken. The reply of Mr. Robbert
was excellent, and the whole Class became demonstrative and showed what they thought
of it and of him as President in every possible way. Surely the memory of this election
will give us pleasure whenever we recall it hereafter.
Our Class is exceptional in the number of prominently connected students whc>
compose it. Many are the sons and daughters or close relatives of leading members of
the bar in this city and elsewhere, nearly all of whom will enter the offices of these gen-tlemen
upon graduating.
Among these arc Miss Louque, the daughter of Honorable Charles Louque, one of
our State Senators, but better known to us as the author of Louque's "Digest."
Charles Nixon, the son of Oscar Nixon, who was prominent, before his death, in all
political and civic movements, and one of the ablest lawyers here. Mr. Nixon is a grad-uate
of the Academic Department, and will practice in New Orleans when he receives his
diploma from the Law School.
Eldon Spencer Lazarus, son of Judge Henry L. Lazarus. Mr. Lazarus made his
A.B. degree at Tulane in J 902 and later in 1903 from Harvard.
With us also are Alfred Grima, nephew of the lawyer and notary of that name;
Walter C. Parlange, son of Judge Parlange; Edward C. Ansley and Henry Herbert Maloney,
brothers of Hubert M. Ansley and Robert J. Maloney; Frank W. Hart, son of Wm. O.
Hart; Joseph H. Charbonnet, nephew of F. D. Charbonnet; Abner Charles Chappais,
brother of E. L. Chappuis; and Arthur H. Denis, the nephew of otir esteemed Professor
of the Civil Law.
Others who should be mentioned as leaders in all oar Class movements are Joseph
F. Ward, President of the I. V. Club and Chairman of our Executive Committee; James
Casserly, Secretary; John F. Odom, who intends later to locate in Baton Rouge; Arthur
Leo Bear, the son of A. A. Bear, well known in local cotton circles; Adam. G. Levy, one of
Tulane's graduating class of 1905; Edward Richard, our temporary Chairman until the
election of Mr. Robbert and other officers; William L. Wooten, an enthusiastic member
of the United Sons of the Confederate Veterans, serving at present as one of the general
officers of that Association; Benjamin C. Dawkins, James Scallen Gauttraux, and Benjamin
Brown Taylor.
Jefferson Parish is represented in the Class by A. W. Gugel, Deputy Clerk of the
District Court there, and John E. Fleury.
Nearly all of us are carrying outside work as well as our law studies, but some who
are m-ore busy than others are Mr. A. J. Sbisa, to whom we all go for shorthand reports of
the lectures. Mr. Sbisa, Mr. Pratt, and Mr. Gallagher, besides their work at the Law
School, are employed now under Civil Service in the U. S. Custom House. Mr. Wm.
Wright, holding the position of clerk and stenographer in the office of Dart & Kernan;
Edward John Ryan, telegraph operator on the Times-Democrat; and Charles Arion Byrne
stenographer in the First CrimJnal Court.
An outline should be given in this history of the creditable things done by the in-dividuals
forming the Class, either on the outside, or before becoming m.embers; therefore,
the following sketches will be of interest:
Two of us who have been teachers and are going to be lawyers instead are Mr. Unis
A. Bell, Class Treasurer; and Mr. Edwin Franklin Gayle. Last year Mr. Bell was Assistant
Principal of the Public School in Lake Charles, La.
Mr. Gayle made his A.M. at Columbia in 'G3, and since then has occupied the posi-tion
of Assistant Principal in the State Pligh Schools in Baton Rouge, Lake Charles, and
Opeloasas. Ke also taught English in the Philippines; Chemistry and Physics in the South-western
Industrial Institute at Lafayette; acted as Assistant Professor of Latin and English
at Rugby; and has at present one of the classes in the New Orleans Evening School.
Jewell Arthur Sperling served in the U. S. Navy for several years; traveling around
the Mediterranean Sea, and spending the last two years of his time in the Gunnery Depart-ment
in China, Japan, and the Philippine Islands.
Two of our members are active on the Football Team—Mr. Berlin and Mr. Magne.
The form.er is fullback and the latter is center on the Varsity.
The Medical Department, as well as the Academic, has contributed to our number.
Mr. Bernadas, one of the Pharmacy Class of 1900, having passed second in the State exam-ination
of that year, opened two drug stores here, which he successfully conducted until
he began the study of law.
The Tulane Law Debating Club was organized on January 26, 1906, to prom.ote a
forensic spirit among the members of the Law Class. This prganization fills a long-felt
JOG
want in the Law Department, for ability to expresp one's views is necessary in this Depart-ment,
more, perhaps, than in any other. The charter members of this Club comprise the
leading orators and debaters of the Class, and it is hoped that a debate may be arranged at
some fatare time with one of the other literary societies at Tolane. The first officers of
the CItib are: A. Giffen Levy, President; B. C. Dawkins, Vice-President; A. D. Schwartz,
Secretary; and E. H. Richard, Treasurer.
Class histories in the past have made no mention of the I. V. Club, which, though a
limited organization, is one of the most attractive features of this Department. Our
twenty members constitute the Delta Chapter of this national fraternity and carrry out
its distinctive characteristics, both Bohemian and legal. The Club holds moot cpurts,
with one of its Alum.ni or honorary members as presiding judge. The training thus given is
excellent and shown by the fact that these gentlemen recognizedly form a large part of
the backbone of the Class.
Before closing, the "Constitution," which we hope to have some day, deserves men-tion.
Though a good form has been suggested by Mr. Garland, whenever the subject comes
up we show much "indecision of character," and, like the little animal in Mr. Herford's
"Child's Primer of Natural History," called the platypus, seem unable to make up our
minds over just what we want. From present appearances, though, I have no doubt tfiis
question will be settled soon and agreeably to all concerned.
HELEN McGLOIN WOOD. Class Historian.
lOI
Tbepe^ r?ot t7?iict? Knomle^i^e \z^\ ir? jpoott^j
ll^^noup hcAsls-cWi you iell^y obrMsJ.,
' ^ ' no more
OLGA CZARNOWSKI.
Olga 's a theatre-goer;
She took us once. Would it were more.
At Itinch she eats cream;
She coaches the team;
When the bell rings she makes for the door.
FANNIE LOVELL.
There 's a Newcomb Senior called Fan;
Her dressing *s always spick and span;
A maker of rhymes,
A spender of dimes;
Whatever she will do» she can.
VIOLA MURPHY.
An actress, and student of Greek,
Is Viola, and she is quite meek.
To classes she goes
Upon her tip-toes.
Much wisdom and learning to seek.
ANDREE PROVOSTY.
Andree is fond of "peanuts";
Psychology never she cuts;
When she 's in the "gym"
She 's right in the "swim";
The ball in the basket she puts.
ELIZA EMERSON.
We call our school-teacher Eliza,
And greatly does everyone prize her.
In basketball light;
In German she 's bright;
No teacher you 'd ever find wiser.
BEULAH LOB.
Beulah is bright, I confess.
Does she ever her German words guess?
At singing, a wonder;
Her voice sounds like thunder;
To win the cup she 'II do her bes(t).
CLARA LEWIS.
Clara's long suit is the kodak.
The Seniors from side, front, and back
One day she took,
And right in this book
You 'II see them, and thus no joy lack
ELLA HARDIE.
Ella 's an athlete, they say;
At basketball, jumping, and nay,
Even rope-climbing, she
Much more than all we
Grows better and better each day.
NELLIE COPPEE.
A true college girl is our Nell;
She writes for the O. and B. well;
Frat pins she wears;
No teacher she fears;
And also I 've heard she 's a belle.
EDITH FARRAR.
Than Edith could no one be rarer.
For she for '06 is the carer;
But I 've heard she declares.
And often she swears,
That her name shall keep on being Farrar.
EDNA VALLAS.
If you do not stop growing so fat,
Edna, dear, we are much fearing that
We will have to enlarge
Our class-rooms, and charge
Double car-fare and boarding for that.
EDITH FOLLET.
Edith 's a splendid debater,
And if you will wait a bit later
She '11 elocute well,
And of great events tell
In a way in which none could do better.
MARY SUMMEY.
One of us Mary we call;
She 's slender and not very tall;
Though sometimes she 's lazy.
And often she 's crazy.
She '11 get an A.B., after all.
EDITH MARECHAL.
Here is to E. M. a toast:
She of out Class is the boast;
She comes from Mobile,
And knows how to "spiel";
Hiss H. of as all she loves most.
TRIX FORTUNE.
To Trix there are many things due—
Money, and compliments, too.
She 's a naaghty-six straight;
To classes not late;
The goals she makes are not a few.
EDITH GUNBY.
In Edith a student yoa see.
Of Math., Latin, History;
The girl we call "Hit,"
We all will admit.
Jokes better than B. V. B. D.
RUBY LAWLER.
R«by loves perpendicular lines,
Physics, and mathematical signs;
She plays well at center,
When a sweater is lent her;
A Prof, all her trouble designs.
NORMA RANDOLPH.
Said Norma, "I swear that I read
That a magazine article said
There is many a tribe
Who in England reside.
Who are wild." "Are you out of your head?"
TILLIE LOEB.
Tillie in classes gets A's,
Her graceful high-jumping all praise;
In Latin proficient;
In nothing deficient;
At her basfcrt^i^ ptayir.c; all gaze.
CLASS OF 1906.
CLASS COLORS,
Black and Gold.
.
CLASS FLOWER,
Daffodil.
CLASS YELL.
Rickety-rix! Rickety-rix!
Sis! Boom! Bah!
Nattglity Six! Haughty Six!
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Ra—ri—Ro! Ri—ra—rix!
Newcomb Seniors! J 906!
CLASS OFFICERS.
EDITH FARRAR President.
EDITH FOLLETT, :
Vice-President.
MARY SUMMEY, Secretary.
BEATRIX FORTUNE Treasurer.
VIOLAMURPHY, • HistMian.
FRANCES LOVELL • • ^o^*-
m
SENIOR CLASS OF 1906.
A is for all of the girls in the Class.
B is the best that is in each fair lass.
C suggests Coppee, oar agile right guard,
Who works when she works and then rests just as hard.
D begins Dullard, not one will you find.
E stands for Emerson, a very good mind.
F in our class brings a trio to view,
Miss Farrar, Hiss Fortune, and Miss FoIIett, too.
Edith Follett with her pen can paint
A picture that would drive away the blues;
But Trix Fortune is enough to make one faint
With her everlasting questions of "class dues?"
Then the third whom F must represent,
Edith Farrar, Senior President.
G stands for Gunby, and also for good;
She always gets A, or would if the could.
H is the initial for Hardy, the brave;
As a gay debutante slie will make the men rave.
H is the letter that stands for Miss Harkness;
The 1906 Latins she 's pulled out of darkness.
I stands for intelligent, also industrious.
And in the future may be illustrious.
J stands for Jack, which every one thought
It was awful to use; that is, if one 's caught.
K comes next. It means our kr iwledge
That 's been a surprise to Newi jmb College.
L stands for Lawler, as everyone knows;
Cutting classes, I ween, is the least of her woes.
Lewis and Lovell both use this charmed letter;
The reason, I 'spose, is they could n't do better.
Both Lob and Loeb at ball cxcell.
And they finish the list beginning with L.
H Miss Marechal's best stunt is French.
When she gets started she 's hard to quench.
M is for Murphy, who is, as a rule,
Indifferent to things that happen at school.
N N. O. 's for New Orleans, a very good city;
512
If Newcomb's is moved it will sure be a pity.
P stands for Provosty, next year's reigning belle.
Q Means it 's qaeer if her debut 's a sell.
R stands for Randolpfi, in history tenacious
Of facts that alas! prove sadly fallacious.
S is for Summey, her surname is Mary.
T 's for the teasing that makes her contrary.
U is for us, the Class which, it seems,
Has been most unfortunate with basketball teams,
V is for Vallas, a student of fame?
In Latin or English it 's "A" just the same.
W stands for the work we 've begun;
Also for weary, after 't was done.
-X. Y. Z. LOVELL.
SENIOR CLASS HISTORY.
"Joy have thoa of thy noble victorie.
And endlesse happinesse/
'
From the time we trooped up the Arcade steps, a band of happy-hearted, care-free
Freshmen, confident ( and with good reason) that victory was to be ours, until the present
moment, crowded with hopes realized, as we stand adorned with caps and gcrwns, is there
a single moment of these four years that we can find cause to regret?
Threescore strong we entered college, and now, when we are nearing the close, there
remain but nineteen, many of our comrades having chosen to conquer in other, and perhaps
gayer fields. But what a wealth of pleasure, as well as of profit, those of us who stayed
have to look back upon!
We remember, with tolerant amusement, the Friday afternoon when we hid the
books of the august Class of 1905—a deed our victims thought worthy of basing their
class-play upon; and how grieved we were as Sophomores when we lost our first game of
basketball—a source of woe, never ours now!
As Juniors, how lustily we sang for the Seniors to march into chapel in all their new
glory and as Seniors, how joyfully we sang and are still singing for ourselves!
But we, proud members of this finest Class, have not yet reached the highest point
of our renown. Our fame is going abroad, and we will startle the world as journalists,
authors, professors, woman-suffragists (some of us have shown remarkable talent in up-holding
our rights during the aOotment of seats for Tulane Night), a few of us intend to be
College Presidents (with capital letters); and the rest wiU marry Presidents of the United
States.
J
:'.[ And whatever may be our future lot, we may truly declare to-day that college has
taught us to believe, each of us, that
"In the end, I have known how to brave
AH disillusion, faced the best and worst;
Hy hunger have I stayed, and slaked my thirst.
In the hope ultimate, the trust in right."
114
>IM^
Wha.i's jollier Ibz^n the. ^eskson liihen
OjjipB2v.^K(2,t-|?2xll begins 2^^2^'n?
CLASS OFFICERS 1907.
ANNA MANY, President.
JOSEPHINE PATTERSON, Vice-President.
NELLBRES, Secretary.
MARIE BREAZEALE, Treasurer.
ANNIE GUNTER, Historian.
DOROTHEA SCHMIDT Poet.
BESS LYON, Basketball Captain.
CLASS COLORS,
Scarlet and Black.
CLASS FLOWER,
Poppy.
CLASS YELL.
Boom—arang—arang—atang!
Boom—arang—arang—atang!
Naughty Seven! Naughty Seven!
Bang! Bang! Bang!
117
NEWCOMB JUNIOR STATISTICS.
BREAZEALE, MARIE.—KKr, 02; Class Treasurer (3); Basketball Team (I), (2), (3);
Sub-Editor Jambalaya (2); Agonistic (3).
BRES, NELL.—Class Secretary (2), (3); Assistant Business Manager Tulanian (3); French
Grcle (I), (2), (3); Dramatic Club Committee (3); Agonistic (3); English Circle (2).
DUPRE, TELYBEL.—A0n©2 ; Class Secretary (I); President English Circle (2);
Agonistic (3); Dramatic Club (3).
DANZEZER, EDNA.—French Circle (I); English Circle (2); Agonistic (3).
GUNTER, ANNE H.—Class Historian (3); Tulane Weekly '07 Editor; Treasurer Agonistic
(3); Dramatic Club Committee; Y. W. C. A. (I), (2), (3); Qass President (2); Play-right
(I).
HANDY, JO.—AOH; Club Editor Jambalaya (I), (3); English Circle (2); Agonistic (3);
" Dramatic Club (3); Business Manager Baseball Team (3).
HART, FRANCES W.—English Circle (2).
HEROLD, BERTHA.—Recording Secretary English Circle (2); Agonistic (3); Basketball
Team (I), (3).
HERICKS, LIDA.—Class President (I); Vice-President French Circle (i), (2), (3).
HINTON, BONITO.—English Circle (2).
HINTON, HELEN.—English Circle (2).
HUGO, NETTIE.—Y. W. C. A. (I), (2), (3); English Circle (2); Agonistic (3).
LOEBER, PAULINE.—Xn02 ; Class Vice-President (I), (2); Qass BasebaU Team (2),
(3); English Circle (2); Dramatic Club (3).
LYON, BESSIE B.—AOH; Basketball Team (I), (2), (3); BasketbaU Captain (3);
Y. W. C. A. {I), (2), (3); Treasurer Y. W. C. A (3); Class Treasurer (2); Dramatic
Qub (3); Assistant Business Manager Tulane "Weekly (3); Assistant Business Man-ager
Jambalaya (3); Postal Card Agent (3).
McCOLLAM, EDNA R.—English Circle (2); French Circle (I); Basketball Team (2), (3);
Agonistic (3); Dramatic Club (3).
MANY, ANNE E.—A0n®2: Basketball Team (0), (2), (3); Basketball Captain (2);
Y. W. C. A. (I), (2), (3); Y. W. C. A. Treasurer (2); Vice-President Y. W. C. A. (3);
Assistant Business Manager Dramatic Club (3); Class President (3); Agonistic (3).
MILLER, EMILY VAN DORN.—Xfi; Y. W. C. A. (J); French Circle (0); Class Poet (I),
(2); Chairman Dramatic Club (3); Agonistic (3); English Qrcle (2); Secretary Ag-onistic
(3).
PATTERSON, JOSEPHINE.—Class Vice-President (3); English Circle (2); Dramatic
Club; Y. W. C. A.
RUSSELL, ELIZABETH.—Business Manager Dramatic Club (3); Agonistic (3).
SAUNDERS, MARGLTERITE.—AOn ; Class Historian (I); English Circle Secretary (2);
Agonistic (3); Sub-Editor Tulanian (3).
SCHMIDT, DOROTHEA.—French Circle (I), (2), (3); Class Poet (3).
SIMMONS, ALMA.—French Circle (I); Agonistic (3).
TAYLOR, ALICE.—Agonistic (3); French Circle (I), (2), (3); Y. W. C. A. (3); Dramatic
Club (3); Sub-Editor Jambalaya (3).
TERIVILIGER, HALLIE.—Dramatic Club (3); English Circle (2).
WHITE, EMILY H.—English Circle (2); Dramatic Qub (3); Agonistic (3); Playwright (2).
SPECIALS.
MORPHY, MARY ELISE.—English Qrcle (2); French Circle (I), (2).
PIKE, BELLE.
WALKER, MAISEE.—Agonistic (3).
WERLET^, FRED P.—xn.
118
THE CLASS OF 1907.
All hail to Nawghty Seven's maids,
"Whose match nowhere the wide earth shows! -
"What brighter eyes and fairer cheeks
Compete with these, the gem and rose?
Not long were they in making their's
The college grounds and college halls,
And ere the second week did pass
Had in all hearts themselves installed.
"What makes their charm to last so long?
It is not what they say or sing;
Yet they may touch, as friendship's gift.
The heart with lightest leaf they bring.
As classmates, friends, and sisters true.
Made one by hours of toil and care,
"What greeting is there half so dear
As that welcome which waits them there?
Thus Naughty Seven's banner waves
So proudly mid fair Newcomb's trees.
And Naughty Seven's name is heard
Re-echoed by each passing breeze.
And upward, upward will they climb
To where the mount of glory lies,
"While their fair name, for fame renowned.
Shall stand emblazoned 'gainst the skies.
—DOROTHEA A. SCHMIDT.
119
CLASS HISTORY 1907.
We are a very modest Class—too modest to praise oar own virtaes; bat we do no*
believe in hiding our light under a bushel; and when we are appreciated by those who
know us best, we are glad to let the world know it.
aliv dptcTTeijeti/ Kat VTrupo)(OV
ijifxaiai aXXinv,
—SUSAN D. TEW, Professor of Greek.
Huius modi paucas professores reperiunt classes.
—MARY LEAL HARKNESS, Professor of Latin.
Le soleil de la classe de mil neaf cent sept ne se couchera jamais!
—M. AUGUSTIN, Professor of French.
Wisdomes bethearf,
Worda waerlicra ond witan snyltro,
Se tham athelum sceal and wyrde agifan
For thyslice threat on methle. —IMOGEN STONE,
Professor of Anglo-Saxon.
"Girls, knowledge is now no more a fountain sealed." —MRS. NIXON,
Professor of English.
Zwar weisz ich veil, doch moecht' ich alles wissen.—Goethe's "Faust."
—PROFESSOR WESPY, Professor of German.
120
A LAS SENORITAS DE TERCER ANO.
iQfse es ese corro gentil,
De mirar tan placentero?
Las alamnas de Tercero,
Con stJ algazara infantil.
Estrecha escolar abrazo
A las preciosas doncellas.
Que alegres, felices, bellas,
Forman artistico lazo.
—FELIPE FERNANDEZ.
An unasual combination of energetic elements; stable, not volatile, absolutely re-liable
in all reactions. Its name will ever be associated with that of
Hydrogen Quifur T^itrogen /^arbon-arriet
Oophie iNewcomb V^oUege
as indispensable to the well-being of the community. —ANN HERO,
Professor of Chemistry.
The sloth enjoys a life of ease;
He hangs inverted from the trees.
And views life upside down.
If you, '07, are nothing loth
To live in indolence and sloth.
Unheeding the world's frown.
You, too, unvexed by toil and strife,
May take a humorous view of life.
—ALICE McGLOIN,
(From Lessons in Natural History.)
Though the limit of the sum of the Newcomb Naughty Seven progression must
exist, still, judging from the past, I am convinced that the future will prove to be a very
large quantity. -MARY CASS SPENCER,
Professor of Mathematics.
122
123
NEWCORIB SOPHOMORE STATISTICS.
REGULARS.
ALLISON, SADIE.—French Circle (2); Y. W. C. A. (2).
BOYD, MINNIE.—Substitate Basketball Team (2); Sub-Editor Jaoibalaya (2).
CALLAN, MARY E.
CAMPBELL, MARY B.—French Circle.
CUNNINGHAM, LAURA.—French Qrcle (J), (2); Basketball Team (2).
DANZIZER, MIRIAM.—French Circle (I), (2); Editor Tulane Weekly (2).
FARRAR, MILDRED.—XO; French Circle (J), (2); Y. M. C. A. (I), (2).
FRIERSON, LUCIA.—AOn; Secretary (2); Sab-Editor Jambalaya (2).
GOLDSTEIN, LILLIAN F.—French Circle (I); Treasurer (2); Basketball Team (2);
Playwright (I).
HART, NELLIE S.—Treasurer (I); Sub-Editor Jambalaya (I); French Circle (I), (2);
Manager Basketball Team (2); Y. W. C. A (J), (2).
HOPKINS, CARRIE.—HB*.
HERDFORD, FLAVIA.—French Circle (I); Y. W. C. A.; Basketball Team (I), (2).
HILLER, IRMA H.—French Circle ( I ), (2).
LAPEYRE, JANIE.
MAYER, NAOMI B.
MONROE, ADELE.—KKF; Vice-President (I); President (2); Basketball Team.
NORMAN, ANITA J.—KKF; Secreatry (I); Sub-Editor Jambalaya (I); French Circle
(I), (2).
PREOT, NINA M.—Xn; French Circle (I), (2); Vice-President (first half, I); Vice-
President (2); Historian (I)r (2).
RANDOLPH, GLADYS PIERCE.
STEARNS, SHIRLEY J.—French Circle (I), (2); Y. W. C. A. (I), (2).
TEBO, JESSE WING.—nB$; President (I); French Circle (I), (2); Y. W. C. A. (J).
WALDHORN, ELSIE.—French Circle (I).
WEIL, FANNIE.—French Circle (2).
WEIL, GLADYS.—French Circle (2).
WILLIAMS, EDNA.
WOODS, MAUDE.—Basketball Team.
SPECIALS.
BLUM, ADELE.—French Circle (t), (2); Substitute Basketball Team (2).
BAKER.
BARROW, ZOE G.
BAUR, PHALA P.
BUSH, RUTH E.—KKF; French Circle; Class Poet (2); Basketball Captain (2); Class
Poet (2).
DRAKE, IRENE AUBREY.—KKr, @X
DREYFOUS, EMMA.—French Circle; Basketball Team.
FORD, JANET.—KKr.
JOHNSON, JOYCE AMY.
LAROUSSINI, NINA M.—HE*; French Circle (I), (2).
LEGENDRE, VIRGIE.—XO; French Circle.
McINNIS, MALCOLM.
PIKE, BELLE.
125
THE GOLD AND THE BLUE.
The colors we bear are the tints of the dawn
—
The symbol of all that is bright.
And we see them still at the sunset-hoar,
When the day fades into the night.
The gold stands for yoath and the blue for truth
And courage, whatever our fate;
And, more tlian all else, they smybolize this:
Our love for our Qass 1908.
126
HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1908.
Like most things in the world, the Class of 1908 is steadily growing older; like a
few rare, good things, it is gaining wisdom in an amount stupendously disproportional to
its age. For in years the Class of 1908 is not quite two, in enlargement of brain capacity
it is Father Time's own eldest daughter.
Even from the beginning of our Freshman days we showed signs of greatness.
From the first we grasped the situation of college life and entered on our voyage into the
reahns of higher education with a perfect understanding of what we had to do. What is
more, we did it, and so well that the upper classes were quite put to shame, and the fol-lowing
class has copied us in all possible ways. Besides excelling in the lecture-room and
on the campus, we distinguished ourselves in the composing and producing of a drama;
the last to be given by Newcomb Freshmen. A good play was wanted to end the series
to which every Freshman Class had heretofore contributed, and it follows, of course, that
the Class of 1908 was awaited to cap the climax of this series.
But now we have left those paths of Freshman life to others. Although, of course,
they cannot be worthy successors (who could be?), still they are harmless, obliging children,
and have shown some marks of intelligence insomuch as they have followed the precedent
we established of holding two elections of Class officers in the first year. So, because of
these attenuating traits, we shall spare them any unfavorable criticisms.
In this our Sophomore year we have absorbed so much knowledge that it is astound-ing
our heads have not puffed out for the accommodation of enlarged brains. If we were
like other Sophomores we would boast unceasingly, and, therefore, most wearisomely, of
our wonderful capacity for learning. The intensity of our work and the consequent
strenuosity of our lives have roused the sympathy of all—even of those hardened judges
of collegiate scholarship, the Professors. But, however harrassing and difficult the work,
you may trust 1908 lives up to its motto, "] 'y suis."
So ingenious are the I908's that however hardly pressed they are in the lecture-rooms,
they still find scraps of time for fun. It 's a strange characteristic, is it not? From
the Class there has been organized a basketball team, which, although it fell before the
redoubtable Senior Class, will show the world great things next year. And then it can be
said of us that we are first in play, as well as what we now are; First in work and first in
the hearts of our dear, beloved Faculty. —HISTORIAN.
J27
129
CLASS OF 1909.
CLASS COLORS.
Black and Green.
CLASS YELL.
Nineteen naoght nine!
Nine, naaght nine!
One, nine, naught, nine!
Nineteen nine!
CLASS FLOWER,
Carnation with Fern.
CLASS MOTTO,
Ad Astra per Aspera.
OFFICERS.
HILDA PHELPS, President.
AGNES GEORGE, Vice-President.
MARYRAILEY Secretary.
ANINA LEGENDRE, Treasurer.
KATHERINE LEACH Historian.
DOROTHY ACKERMAN, Class Poet.
J3J
NEWCOMB FRESHMAN STATISTICS, 1909.
AARON, BEATRICE.—Special Coarse.
ACKERMAN, DOROTHY. — Regular
Coarse; Class Poet; French Circle; Y. W.
C.A.
ALLEN, ROSETTA.—Regular Coarse.
AMSDEN, NATHALIE.—Special Coarse.
ARMSTRONG, JULIA.—nB$; Regular
Coarse.
BARNWELL, NETTIE.—Regular Course.
BARTON, NATALIE.—Regular Coarse;
Frencli Circle; Y. W. C. A.
BEHRHAN, HELEN.—Special Course.
BER, LEONIE.—Regular Coarse.
BERANGER, SANTINE. — Regular
Course.
BOATNER, JOSEPHINE. — Special
Course.
BOOTH, EHMA.—Regular Course.
BORN, WILHELMINA. — Regular
Course.
BROWN, ELISE.—Special Course.
BUSH, RUTH.—KKr; Special Course.
BRISBANE, MARGUERITE. — Special
Course.
CHUNN, NAN.—Regular Coarse; Y.W.C.A.
DAVIDSON, GLADYS. — Regular
Course; Y. W. C. A.
DELCROIX, DESIREE. — Regular
Coarse.
DILLARD, MARY. — nB<l>; Special
Course.
DYER, ELEANOR.—Special Course.
DODDS, ZELDA.—Regular Course.
DROTT, VIOLETT.—Regular Course.
FARLEY, ANNIE.—Regular Course.
FARRAR, JANE.—xn; Special Course.
FRAIZER, EDITH.—Special Course.
FREYHAN, IRMA.—Regular Coarse.
GACHET, ROCHELLE. — AOn; Course;
French Circle.
GEORGE, AGNES. — HB*; Regular
Coarse; Vice-President of Class; Com-mittee
on Players for Dramatic Club;
Sab-Editor for Jambalaya from Fresh-man
Class.
GORE, MARY.—Regular Course.
GRABENHEIHER, LUCILLE. — Reg-ular
Coarse.
GUYOL, CAROLYN. — AOH; Regular
Course.
HAVARD, MARY.—Regular Course.
HARDIN, GLADYS.—Special Course.
HARDIN, MONITA.—Special Course.
HART, ADA.—Special Course.
HERN, CAROLINE.—Regular Course;
French Circle.
HIRSCH, EMMIE.—Regular Course.
HYMAN, AIMEE LA VILLEBEHRE.—
Regular Course; French Circle.
HYMAN, JEANNE LA VILLEBEMRE.—
Regular Course; French Circle.
JOFFRION, CLARA.—Regular Coarse.
JONES, EMILY.—Regular Course.
KELLY, OLIVE.—Special Coarse.
LEGENDRE, ANINA. — Xfl; Regular
Course; Treasurer of Class.
LEOPOLD, EDITH. — Regular Coarse;
French Circle.
LEWIS, LUCILLE. — Regular Course;
French Circle.
LOEB, EDA.—Regular Course.
LEACH, KATHERINE. — KKr; Special
Course; Class Historian; Committee on
Players for Dramatic Qub; Y. W. C. A.
MACHANER, LAVANIA.-Regalar Course.
MAYER, MELONIE.—Regular Coarse.
132
McMURRAY, MARGUERITE. — Special
Course.
HcNEELY, CLAUDIA.—Regular Course.
MOHR, BLANCHE.—Regular Course.
MORITZ, HILDA.—Special Course.
MYSING, LILLY. — AOH; Regular
Course.
VON HYSENBERG, ELSA. — nB*;
Special Course.
VON NORDENFLYCHT, OLGA. — XO;
Special Course.
OLIVIER, ANITA.—Special Course.
PETTIT, CZARINA.—Regular Course.
PHILIPS, ADA.—Special Course.
PHELPS, HILDA. — KKF; Regular
Course; President of Class; Committee
on Plays for Dramatic Club; Y. W. C. A.;
French Circle.
PENROSE, ADELE.—Special Course.
POND, MYRA.—Regular Course; French
Grcle; Y. W. C. A.
POOL, EUGENIA.—Regular Course.
PROSSER, SALLIE.—Regular Course.
RAILEY, MARY.—XO; Regular Course;
Secretary of Class, Secretary of Y. W.
C. A.; Commmittee on Plays for Dra-matic
Club; Sub. Editor for Jambalaya
from Freshman Class; French Circle.
RICE, IRENE.—Regular Course.
ROTHSCHILD, MYRTIS. — Regular
Course. ),.;,!
SCOTT, NATALIE. — Regular Course;
Freshman Editor of The Tulane Weekly;
Secretary of the Dramatic Club; Y. W.
C. A.; French Circle.
SNODGRASS, LOUISE.—Regular Course.
SEWALL, LILLIAN.—Special Course.
SPRAINLY, LUCY.—Special Course.
STERN, SARA.—Regular Course.
STEINER, ADELE. — nB*; Special
Course.
SULLY, JEAN.—Regular Course.
THORSSEN, ADA.—Special Course.
WESTFELDT, LOUISE. —HB*; Regular
Course.
WITHERS, VIRGINIE.—Regular Course;
French Circle; Y. W. C. A.
WOLBRET, BERTHA.—Regular Course.
133
1909.
When yoa are in poetic mood.
And 'round your fancy muses twine,
Oh, come and contemplate awhile
The latest class on college file.
The class that makes Professors smile.
The Class of 1909.
Greece had beginnings, so had Rome,
And may we have o«r starting, too.
Consider not o«r faults so rare;
Remember not our first-day stare;
But let our record, standing fair.
Impress you what we 'II do.
In basketball we 'II reqotds break.
For e'en our President can play;
And there 're two others in our Class.
But hush! We 'II let those marvels pass.
Heave hard the ball, don't mind the glass;
That *s those two Freshmen's way.
We might, perhaps, a gym team form
With Agnes on the Swedish bar;
In stunts our Treasurer does shine;
And our Reporter "chins" so fine;
The goad athletes of J 909
A noble legion are.
In all scholastic matters we
Are very wise and oh, so bright!
And each Professor gives us praise.
Then smashes up the hopes they raise,
But those are just Professor ways;
We know they mean all right.
J 34
Then as to Newcomb we have come.
Let OS in all things try to shine.
Oar fame 's ahready half foretold.
So let each Freshman here aphold
Class honor as a thing of gold.
Success to 1909!
All honor to «s must yoa give;
No hon>or shall we Freshmen lack.
And may we wave oor cares away.
And may we conqaer every day
"With this insignia of otir sway
—
The Nile-green and the black!
—DOROTHY ACKERMAN, Qass Poet.
DH!
THAT
L0QK5
LIKE
WHAT
&ET
aWMV
EPORT''
135
CLASS HISTORY OF 1909.
A history of the Class of 1901! Surely I am incapable of writing the eulogy this
Class so richly deserves. Only the pen of Homer or Milton coald do justice to such an
extensive and important theme. But then, who has not already heard of the strength
and superior wisdom of this illustrious Class? If there are any such unfortunate ones,
to them, it is my duty as historian, to repeat what has been said: "The Class of 1909,
like the brightest star in the vast firmament of heaven, eclipses all others by her brilliancy."
When 1909 stood at the threshold of Newcomb, Seniors, Juniors, and Sophomores,
alike, rushed to throw open wide the doors of this hall of learning. Never before in the
history of our college has there been given to any class such a warm welcome. Not only
did our sisters, the Juniors, hold out their arms to us, but also the Seniors, and even our
traditional foes, the Sophomores, hurried to do us homage by strewing roses in our path
as we entered.
The student body does not stand alone in recognizing our superiority, for the Fac-ulty
also hold us in highest esteem. They watch with amazement the progress of this
the largest Class that Newcomb has ever produced. Not only in our class-work do we
excel, but our basketball material is of such a quality as to cause the Newcomb world to
quake with fear at its coming contests with us.
From the day that we planted our flag on the highest pinnacle of Newcomb and
saw it triumphantly wave—unconquered by the desperate assault of the Sophomore—it
has held, and always will hold, an unrivaled position.
"For we know our flag is glorious.
And we '11 conquer in that sign;
For the Class that 's e'er victorious
Is the Class of 1909!"
136
COLORS.
Red, BItie, and Yellow.
;OFFICERS ART STUDENT BODY-Gladys
Randolph, President.
Qaire Crawford, Vice-President.
Cynthia LittleJohn, Sec. and Trcas.
Ernestine Bres, Editor Jambalaya.
SENIOR CLASS.
Sadie Irvine, President.
Jaanita Mauras, Vice-President.
Ernestine Bres, A©n, Sec. & Treaa.
Gladys Randolph, Tulane Weekly.
Qaire Crawford.
Elizabeth Pattison.
Fanny Simpson.
Cynthia Littlejolin.
Lynne "Watkins, '08,
Capt. Basketball Team.
m mm mmmm mm mg ^mm mun,
01? IfKlg (?>03/^SS Ql? MQM[l1f(lllM°80K
3./\E.IRVINE
hYNnE
so<'ATKiN5 M^YMantL
V£T^^MaT^EL-3E5g|E
M^•T^t^^T^E^l MK^\l^vJ£>t^^e:
^icc-F\esili£:igT
FEIESHMAN CLASS.
ELEANOR WOODWARD, President.
EMMA GIRAULT, Vice-President.
IDA McDonald, Secretary-Treasurer
LAURA FINLAY. SLOCUM GULLEY.
HELEN BAKER. FRANCES LAMPTON.
NINETTE HORNER. REINE MARTIN.
MOLLIE PALFREY. MARGARET SPROTT.
BELL LAWRASON, HB*. HALEY TRACY.
,.,, MAY SMYDE.
J43
SPECIAL STUDENTS.
MISS BARROW.
GERTRUDE MONROE, HB*.
MAZIE WALKER.
MARIA BENSON.
RUTH BURGESS.
IDA ADELE DUGGAN.
MISS GONZALEZ.
NINA HARPER.
MISS JANFROID.
LUCIA JORDAN.
MISS KNIGHT.
ETHEL LAND.
SMITH VANIZ.
MRS. B. W. LOGAN.
MRS. P. WRAIGHT.
MISS McARTHUR.
CARRIE McWILLIAMS, xn.
MISS MORELL.
MISS RIFFEL.
MAUDE ROBINSON.
MISS RODER.
LOUISE LEBEUF.
EMMA URQUHART.
MISS WALKER.
CATHERINE ANDREWS.
MISS WHITE.
Post Graduates.
EDNA REED, AOn, MARGOT LABARRE. ZELIA BARNEI I"
Independent Designers.
MISS BAILEY.
MISS BAKER.
MISS BUTLER.
MISS JOOR.
MISS MARIE H. LE BLANC.
MISS S. B. LEVY.
MISS LONNEGAN.
MISS NICHOLSON.
MISS ROSS.
MISS MAZIE RYAN.
MISS URQUHART.
l4-i
HISS DELAVIGNE.
MISS DUGGAN.
MISS REED.
MISS MAURAS.
MISS ROBERTSON.
MISS JANFROID.
Embroidery Workers.
MISS ROBINSON.
MISS LEBEUF.
MISS BARNETT.
MISS SHELBY. .
MISS BYRNE.
HISS BURGESS.
MISS MONROE.
CLAIRE CRAWFORD.
SADIE IRVINE.
CYNTHIA LITTLEJOHN.
MRS. WRAIGHT.
MISS URQUHART.
MARIA BENSON.
Pottery.
. MAUDE ROBINSON.
EFFIE SHEPARD.
LOUISE LEBEUF.
IDA DUGGAN.
LUCIA JORDAN.
CARRIE McWILLIAMS.
MARGARET LEA.
China Decorators.
GLADYS RANDOLPH. FANNY SIMPSON. ZELIA BARNETl.
145
J 46
mmmiftr
Wmtieir
HT
tVf|lf/l//f/>
KAPPA ALPHA—PSI CHAPTER.
(Fotinded 1882.)
IN FACULTY.
Edwin Boone Craigliead. Robert Sharp.
John Rose Ficklen. Pierre Jorda Kohle.
Hamden Sidney Lewis. Hiram Walters Puckett.
John James Archinard. Ross Edmond Brezeale.
ACTIVE MEMBERS.
Robert Louis Allgeycr. Clarence Prentiss May.
Robert Eldridge Bramby. Edward Fairfax Neild.
Raymond Leslie Faithorn. William Hutchinson Robinson.
Charles Henry Howard Gillean. John Wyeth Scott.
Alonzo Church Lee, Jr. Nauman Steele Scott.
William Alvin Love. Edgar Van Keuren.
Charles William Mackie, Jr. Burris Dowdney Wood.
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS.
William Benjamin Chamberlain, AF. Frank Mower, AA.
John Chamberlain, AE. Thomas Norwood, AE.
Thomas Greet,*. William David Pipes, AI.
Leo Boykin Hudson, *. John Hoy Sandford, Ar.
Richard Gordon Holcombe, AI. Augustus Thetford, AB.
James Henry Stephens, Ar. James Jackson Wilson, AE.
153
,#>#*^ •
•i?-t:
'#'5^
1^^
KAPPA ALPHA.
(Founded 1865.)
CHAPTER ROLL.
^p{j^^ Washington and Lee University.
Gamma, University of Georgia.
Delta ------------ Woiiord College.
Epsilon, S™°fy<S°^lf^^* n u
2eta Randolph-Macon College.
Eta ------------------- Richmond College.
Theta ------------------ Kentucky State College.
Kappa, ------------------ Mercer University.
Lambda, University of Virginia.
jijy _.' _..-.----- Alabama Polytechnic Institute.
Xi' ----------- Southwestern University.
OiAicron, University of Texas.
Pi- ------------------- University of Tennessee.
Sigma ------------------ Davidson College.
Upsilon, University of North Carolina.
pjj .'. - -_-- Southern University.
Chi' -------------- Vanderbilt University.
Psi' ...------ ----- Tulane University.
Om'ega Central University of Kentucky.
Alpha Alpha, University of the South.
Alpha Beta ---- --- University or Alabama.
Alpha Gamma, Louisiana State University.
Aloha Delta ---------- William Jewell LoUege.
Alpha Epsilon, - - Southwestern Presbyterian University.
Alpha Zeta, William and Mary College.
Alpha Eta, Westminster College.
Alpha Theta, - Kentucky Umversity.
Alpha Kappa, Missouri State Umversity.
Alpha Lambda, - - Johns Hopkins University.
Alpha Mu, - MiUsaps College.
Alpha No, George Washington University.
Alpha Xi University of California.
Alpha Oi^cron, - - - - University of Arkansas.
Alpha Pi Leiand Stanford, Jr., Umversity.
Alpha Rho University of West Virginia.
Alpha Sigma, Georgia School of Technology.
Alpha Tau - ----- Hampden-Sidney College.
Alpha Upsilon, University of Miss ssippi.
155
Alpha Pti, _-_---__-------. Trinity College.
Alpha Chi, ---------------- Kentucky Wesleyan Universrty.
Alpha Omega, --------------- North Carolina A. and M. College.
Bta Alpha, ---------------- Missouri School of Hines.
Beta Beta, ---------------- Bethany College.
Beta Gamma, --------------- College of Charleston.
Beta Delta, ---------------- Georgetown College.
Beta Epsilon, --------------- Delaware College.
Beta Zeta, ---------------- University of Florida.
Beta Eta, ----------------- University of Oklahoma.
ALUMNI CHAPTERS.
Norfolk, Va.
Richmond, Va.
New York Gty.
Raleigh, N. C.
Macon, Ga.
Lexington, Ky.
Petersburg, Va.
TaUadega, Ala.
St. Louis, Mo.
Alexandria, La.
Jackson, Miss.
Atlanta, Ga.
Hampton-New Port News, Va.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Montgomery, Ala,
Augusta, Ga.
Staunton, Va.
Jacksonville, Fla.
Shreveport, La.
CentreviUe, Miss.
Hattiesburg, Miss.
Mobile, Ala.
Dallas, Tex.
Franklin, La.
Kansas City, Mo.
San Francisco, Cal.
Baltimore, Md.
Little Rock, Ark.
Anniston, Ala.
Jonesboro, Ark.
NashviUe, Tenn.
Sehna, Ala.
Memphis, Tenn.
Knoxville, Tenn.
New Orleans, La.
Houston, Tex.
Griffin, Ga.
Oklahoma Gty, Okla
Washington, D. C.
Boston, Mass.
Philadelphia, Penn.
ThomasviUe, Ga.
Asheville, N. C.
Spartanburg, S. C.
Savannah, Ga.
Tallahassee, Fla.
Charleston, W. Va.
Louisville, Ky.
Wilmington, N. C.
Baton Rouge, La.
Huntington, W. Va.
i
STATE ASSOCIATION.
Missouri. Alabama.
Georgia. North Carolina.
Kentuoky. Arkansas.
Louisiana.
t56
ALPHA OmCRON CHAPTER.
(Established 1886.)
IN FACULTATE.
ERASMUS DARWIN FENNER. JULES BLANC MONROE.
ACADEMIC.
R. BLAND LOGAN, '06. HARRY McCALL, '06.
R. B. SHARP, '06. ESMOND PHELPS, '07.
HARRY HARDIE, '07. WINDER POLK MONROE, '07.