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Two things there are that can't be beat
Under our skies of azure heat;
Like twin stars to our eyes they shine
—
Alma Mater, half divine;
Newcomb, learned, lovely, true;
H.vermore long life to you
!
THB STORY OF THB YEAR.
Prologue.
HE great sovereign of the material uni-verse,
Father Time, gazed out upon
the immensity of his dominion—the
realm of flaming suns, planets innum-erable,
of worlds made and in the mak-ing,
of all vast unfathomable depths
of space under the wide arch of heaven,
and all subject to his absolute power.
Far, far away, a glimmering spot in ethereal space, shone the
planet known to its own puny inhabitants as the World.
As Father Time's glance rested upon this planet he be-came
aware of a figure drawing nearer and nearer to his em-pyrean
mansion. Remembering the recent folly of Icarus, he
watched the daring spirit anxiously until she stood before him.
Her face, with its broad brow and true thoughtful eyes, shone
with celestial youth and beauty, while a smile of rnatemal
tenderness softened the proud outHnes of her Ups. From the
folds of her gown of softest blue, bourid with an olive girdle,
she drew forth a volume.
"All hail. Father Time!" she began simply. "The chil-dren
of men whom the Creator of all things has made in
His own image, endowed with potentialities for good and for
evil, I strive to uplift, to inspire, to raise to a level with this
divine inheritance. I give them freely of knowledge and its
power, and plant the love of truth, honor, and universal
brotherhood in their hearts. They call me Tulane, and I
have given you, O august controller of destinies, in obedience
to your inexorable law, another year of my life. I come with
a heart overflowing with thankfulness to bring you the record
of my children's strong endeavor—their failures as well as
their triumphs—and to offer at your shrine the final fruits of
the many gifts which both my sons and daughters owe solely
to your beneficence. With fond pride do I point out to you
the eldest of my children, who, owing to your ever-advancing
footsteps, now leave my once-welcomed shelter to go forth
into the shadowy future, brave in the armor which I have
taught them to wear, to await the successive recurrence of
your many birthdays. As their Alma Mater, O Father Time,
I do beseech you to deal gently with them. Grant them
strength ever to retain hope and faith, though they lose fortune
and friends. Receive also the record of my younger children,
who have striven valiantly to do their utmost, and who de-serve
your approbation because of that striving, apart from
success or failure.
' 'The whole tale of my life and of my children's life during
the past year may be found upon the leaves of this volume,
which 1 now place in your hands. Look kindly upon what
you find there written, Father Time, for it is our best, and
records our achievements, our success, and our failures, the
hardships and fears, hopes and joys of college days that are
no more. Turn with a gentle hand the pages of this book, this
Jambalaya as my children call it, and read the record of the
many incidents which make up their college life. Speak, O
Time, what recompense will you make me for the noble efforts
of my children and for all that I and mine have brought you
in the past year?
"Ah! you do not bemoan the yearly appearance of so
many silvered locks, since they represent to the college youth
and maiden all that is best, yet hardest to gain, and you will
promise to my stalwart sons and fair daughters your never-failing
aid and guidance.
"All hail again, Father Time! In implicit trust I give
you my fairest treasures, and during the interv-al before you
receive another year of my life I stand serene and fearless,
secure in the blessed knowledge of your pledge."
Father Time received the Jambalaya, and, turning the
pages, read:
J ust turn my pages and you will see
All the best of College Ufe,
JVlirth and mischievous jolUty
IJlended with a noble strife,
As we battle for the right.
Like a mirror here I hold
A glass of truth so burnished bright
You '11 see our College record told
And blazoned forth in lines of light.
DBDICATION.
Dear Counselor and Guide of four long years,
1 nspirer of the best that we have done,
Leader in paths of wisdom and of worth,
Look kindly on the offeringjpe bring;
Although it be not all we fain would hope.
Receive it as the tribute of our hearts,
Devoted all to friendship and to you.
JAMBS HARDY DILI^ARD.
The adjectives, distinguished or eminent, would displease
Professor James Hardy Dillard, and therefore we shall not use
such terms, although richly deserved, but will endeavor to
write a sketch appropriate to the simplicity of a truly noble
character.
James Hardy Dillard was bom October 24, 1856, in Nan-semond
County, Virginia. After obtaining the degrees of M.A.,
D.Litt., and B.L. at Washington and Lee University, he be-came
Assistant Professor of Mathematics at that institution
in 1876. In the next year he accepted the position of Principal
of the Rodman School in Norfolk, Va., and in 1882 became
Principal of the Norfolk Academy.
He remained in Norfolk until 1887, when he went to St.
Louis to become Principal of the Mary Institute of Washington
University there.
In 1891 Tulane secured his services as Professor of Latin,
and in this position, as in every other that he has honored, he
has shown all who have come in contact with him that life is
more than learning, that a man who stands upright before all
men is more than wealth or power, and that only the fame that
comes unsought for work well done and kindness never failing
is worth having.
Professor Dillard is the President of the Public Library
here, and is the author of several interesting works which have
been very favorably received: "Arithmetic Exercises, "Se-lections
from Wordsworth," and "Fifty Letters of Cicero."
He has become dean of the educational interests in Louisiana
as well as Dean of Tulane University, and as a contributor to
the newspapers on vital questions and as a lecturer he has ex-ercised
a strong influence through the State and upon New
Orleans for the good of the people.
Professor Dillard has secured a firm hold on the hearts of
all the students by his never-failing interest, his absolute
justice and "squareness," and by the splendid example he
sets us of a man living the high ideals which he holds.
A gentleman and a nobleman in character and manner,
he is a thoroughly democratic man of great learning and broad
culture in society, religion, and politics. Tolerant, liberal, and
hospitable to all classes of men, the love of his brother man
and keen interest in his welfare are a part of his character, and
he does not bend to social distinctions and conventions, but is
what he believes.
The truth and strength underlying his genial manner only
add to its cordial simplicity. It takes no unbending on his
part to make the student feel at ease, and while no one stands
in awe of his authority, everyone respects, admires, and loves
him.
JOHN HANNO DBII/BR.
John Hanno Deiler, one of the most noted members of our
Faculty, was bom August 8, 1849, in Altoetting, Germany.
He received his early education in the public schools of his
native town, but his thorough musical education was given
him by his father, a Bavarian court musician, and by the
composer Antoine Mueller. Owing to his great talent, he won
a scholarship at the Royal Bavarian Studien and Musik
Seminar. In 1866 he entered the Royal Normal College at
Munich, and was graduated two years afterward with high
honors. During the following years he held Government ap-pointments
in several schools, finally becoming connected with
the Model School at Munich. After this he attended lectures
in the University of Munich, and pursued advanced studies in
various branches of the Royal Polytechnic Institute. In 1871
he received a call as principal of a German school in New
Orleans, and in 1879 he was appointed Professor of German at
Tulane and later at Newcomb also. Since then he has become
widely known as a lecturer on German hterature and history,
while his "Parsifal" lectures last year drew enormous audi-ences
of the most cultivated people of New Orleans.
Professor Deiler has been prominent in many other direc-tions.
He is the President of the Deutsche Gesellschaft, a
society for attracting and protecting German immigrants, and
was the originator of the German Archives for the history of
the Germans in the South.
In 1882 he founded the New Orleans Quartette Club, of
which he is still President and Musical Director. He has been
notable in several Sangerfeste of the North American Union,
and as the representative of the National Union he addressed
a huge crowd of singers at Vienna in 1890 and another gath-ering
at Stuttgart in 1896. This same year he was made
President of the North American Sangerbund. Locally,
Professor Deiler is well known as the President of the New
Orleans German Gazette and as a member of the Canal Street
Commission.
As a reward for valuable services rendered, the German peo-ple
of the United States, and for distinguished hterary merit,
he has received the Order of Knighthood in the Order of the
Crown from the German Emperor. He has contributed to the
leading periodicals of this country, in one of which he figured
prominently last year in an article on the most noted Germans
in America. The latest honor to be conferred on Professor
Deiler is the appointment to succeed the late Carl Schurz as
judge to award the prizes from the Leipp Memorial Fund
offered by the University of Chicago.
Combining, as he does, these high intellectual attainments
with a most lovable personality, it is no wonder that both
students and fellow-professors look forward with the deepest
regret to the time when Professor's Deiler's resignation will go
into effect. He may rest assured, therefore, that just as long
at Tulane shall endure will his name be honored and loved
throughout its bounds.
10
II
CO M
Page.
Administrators 13
Chapter I. (Faculty) 14-23
Chapter II. (Alumni) 24-29
Chapter III. (Seniors) 30-55
Chapter IV. (Juniors), 56-74
Chapter V. (Sophomores), 76-94
Chapter VI. (Freshmen), 96-115
(Specials), 116-117
Page.
Chapter VI. (Art), ......... 119-125
(Law), 127-132
(Pharmacy) 133-136
Chapter VII. (Fraternities), 138-233
Chapter VIII. (Publications and Literary Societies), 234-253
Chapter IX. (Athletics), 254-280
Chapter X. (Clubs) , . 282-303
Chapter XI. (Miscellaneous), . . . . . . 304-341
Conclusion 348
13
BOARD OF ADMINISTRATORS.
ROBERT MILLER WALMSLEY,
First Vice-President.
CHARLES JANVIER,
Second Vice-President.
JAMES McCONNELL, LL.B.
EDGAR HOWARD FARRAR, M.A.
WALTER ROBINSON STAUFFER.
HENRY CINDER.
JOHN BAPTIST LEVERT, B.Sc.
ASHTON PHELPS.
WALKER BRAINERD SPENCER, A.B., LL.B.
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.
BEVERLEY ELLISON WARNER. A.M., D.D., LL.D.
FREDERICK WILLIAM PARHAM. M.D.
Ex OFFicip.
NEWTON CRAIN BLANCHARD,
Governor of Louisiana.
MARTIN BEHRMAN,
Mayor of New Orleans.
JAMES B. ASWELL,
State Superintendent of Public Education.
«3
THE STORY OF THE YEAR.
Chapter I.
"Here," observed Tulane, pointing to the roll of names bright with merited honors, "you will read the Tists of my
gallant army of helpers who vie with each other in faith, ambition, patience, and diligence in training my chiliren year by
year. All honor to the Faculty, my staff and my pride
!" '
14
IjFX^^MO^eL-iS
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION.
EDWIN BOONE CRAIGHEAD, M.A., LL.D., President.
STANFORD EMERSON CHAILLE, A.M., M.D., LL.D., Dean
of the Medical Department and Professor of Physiology,
Hygiene, and Pathological Anatomy.
ERNEST SIDNEY LEWIS, M.D., Professor of General and
Clinical Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children.
JOHN BARNWELL ELLIOTT, A.B., M.D., Ph.D., Profes-sor
of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and Clinical
Medicine.
JOHN HANNO DEILER (Graduate Royal Normal College of
Miinchen-Freising), Professor of German Language and
Literature.
ALCEE FORTIER, D.Lit., Professor of Romance Languages.
ROBERT SHARP, A.M., Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate De-partment
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).
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.
FRANK ADAIR MONROE, Professor of Commercial Law.
JANE CALDWELL NIXON, Professor of Enghsh (Newcomb
College).
MARIE AUGUSTIN, Professor of French (Newcomb College).
MARY LEAL HARKNESS, A.M., Ph.D., Professor of Latin
(Newcomb College).
JAMES HARDY DILLARD, M.A., LL.B., D.Lit., Vice-
Chairman of the Faculty, Dean of the Academic Colleges,
and Professor of Latin.
WILLIAM BENJAMIN SMITH, A.M., Ph.D., LL.D., Pro-fessor
of Philosophy.
LOUIS FAVROT REYNAUD, M.D., Professor Emeritus of
Materia Medica, Therapeutics, and Clinical Medicine.
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 (New-comb
College).
ABRAHAM LOUIS METZ., M.Ph., M.D., Professor of Chem-istry
and Medical Jurisprudence.
LEVI WASHINGTON WILKINSON, M.Sc, Professor of
Industrial and Sugar Chemistry.
EUGENE DAVIS SAUNDERS, LL.B., Dean of the Law De-partment,
and Professor of Civil Law.
MARY CASS SPENCER, A.B., M.Sc, Professor of Mathemat-ics
(Newcomb College).
CLARA GREGORY BAER (Graduate Posse Normal Schoo 1
of Gymnastics), Professor of Physical Education (New-comb
College).
i6
IZ
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION.-Continued.
JAMES ADAIR LYON, Jr., A.M., Professor of Physics (New-comb
College).
WALTER MILLER, A.M., Professor of Greek.
PIERCE BUTLER, A.M., Ph.D., Professor of History (New-comb
College).
SUSAN DINSMORE TEW, Ph.D., Professor of Greek (New-comb
College).
GERTRUDE ROBERTS SMITH (Graduate Massachusetts
Normal Art School), Professor of Drawing and Painting
(Newcomb College).
MARY GIVEN SHEERER (Graduate Cincinnati Art Acad-emy),
Professor of Ceramic Decoration (Newcomb College).
JOHN TAYLOR HALSEY, M.D., Professor of Materia Medica,
Therapeutics, and Clinical Medicine.
MORTON ARNOLD ALDRICH, Ph.D., Professor of Eco-nomics
and Sociology.
SAMUEL JACKSON BARNETT, A.B., Ph.D., Professor of
Physics.
WILLIAM BENJAMIN GREGORY, M.E., Professor of Ex-perimental
Engineering and Mechanism.
PERCY HUGHES, M.A., Ph.D., Acting Professor of Phil-osophy.
GARVIN DUGAS SHANDS, LL.B., LL.D., Professor of
Common Law.
CHARLES LOUIS CHASSAIGNAC, M.D., Dean of Post-
Graduate Department of the Medical College, and Professor
of Genito-Urinary and Rectal Diseases.
HENRY DICKSON BRUNS, M.D., Professor of Diseases of
the Eye.
ANDREW GAIENNIE FRIEDRICHS, Professor of Dental
and Oral Surgery.
PAUL MIGHINARD, M.D., Professor of Obstetrics and
Gynecology.
ANN HERO, A.M., Professor of Chemistry (Newcomb College).
THOMAS SEILLES KENNEDY, M.D., Professor of Diseases
of Children.
GEORGE FARRAR PATTON, M.D., Professor of Clinical
Medicine.
EDMUND DENEGRE MARTIN, M.D., Professor of General
Surgery.
JOHN JOSEPH ARCHINARD, A.M., M.D., Professor of
Clinical Microscopy and Bacteriology.
JACOB AMBROSE STORCK, M.Ph., M.D., Professor of
Diseases of the Digestive System.
FELIX ALPHONSE LARUE, A.M., M.D., Professor of
Operative and CHnical Surgery.
EDOUARD MICHEL DU PAQUIER, B.Let., B.Sc, M.D.,
Professor of Clinical Therapeutics and Tropical Medicine.
HENRY SULA COCRAM, B.Sc, M.D., Professor of Clinical
Gynecology.
OTTO LERCH, A.M., Ph.D., M.D., Professor of Medical
Diagnosis.
CHARLES JEFFERSON MILLER, M.D., Professor of Op-erative
Gynecology on the Cadaver.
ERNEST ALEXIS ROBIN, B.Sc, M.D., Professor of liiseases
of the Eye.
DOUGLAS SMITH ANDERSON, M.A., Associate Professor
of Electrical Engineering.
GEORGE EUGENE BEYER (University of Beilin), Asso-ciate
Professor of Biology and Curator of the Museum.
ISADORE DYER, Ph.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Dis-eases
of the Skin in the Medical Department and Pro-fessor
of Diseases of the Skin in the Post-Graduate Medi-cal
Department.
JOHN BARNWELL ELLIOTT, Jr., A.M., M.D., Associate
Professor of Clinical Medicine.
f8
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION—Continued.
ERASMUS DARWIN FENNER, A.B., M.D., Associate Pro-fessor
of Diseases of Children.
JAMES MADISON BATCHELOR, B.Sc, M.D., Associate
Professor of Clinical Surgery.
PAUL EMILE ARCHINARD, A.M., M.D., Associate Professor
of Diseases of the Nervous System in the Medical Depart-ment
and Professor of Diseases' of the Nervous System
in the Post-Graduate Medical Department.
HENRY PISLER RUGAN, Associate Professor of Mechanic
Arts.
JOSEPH NETTLES IVEY, A.M., LL.B., Ph.D., Associate
Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy.
HORACE EDWARD CRUMP, B.E., Acting Associate Pro-fessor
of Electrical Engineering.
WILLIAM PRENTISS BROWN, M.A., Assistant Professor of
English.
BENJAMIN PALMER CALDWELL, A.B., Ch.E., Ph.D.,
Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
IMOGEN STONE, A.M., Assistant Professor of English (New-comb
College).
OWEN MERIWETHER JONES, B.E., Assistant Professor
of Civil Engineering.
ALICE McGLOIN ANDERSON, B.Sc, M.A., Assistant Pro-fessor
of Biology (Newcomb College).
ALBERT BLEDSOE DINWIDDIE, M.A., Ph.D., Assistant
Professor of Applied Mathematics and Astronomy.
MONTE MORDECAI LEMANN, A.B., LL.B., Assistant Pro-fessor
of Admiralty and Public and Private International
' - Law.
RALPH JACOB SCHWARZ, A.B., A.M., LL.B., Assistant
Professor of Equity, Jurisprudence and Practice, Consti-tutional
Law, and Jurisdiction of United States Courts.
HENRY BAYON, A.B., M.D., Demonstrator of Anatomy.
HENRY EDWARD MENAGE, M.D., M.Ph., Assistant Pro-fessor
of Diseases of the Skin.
CAROLINE FRANCIS RICHARDSON, A.M., Acting Assist-ant
Professor of English.
LUTHER SEXTON, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor on
Minor Surgery.
EDWARD WYNN JONES, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical In-structor
on Diseases of the Eye.
OLIVER LOUIS POTHIER, M.D., Demonstrator of Micro-scopical
Anatomy and Bacteriology and Pathological
Anatomy.
HAMPDEN SIDNEY LEWIS, A.B., M.D., Lecturer and Dem-onstrator
of Obstetrics.
SIDNEY PHILIP DbLAUP, B.Sc, Assistant Demonstrator
of Anatomy in the Medical Department and Professor of
Surgery of the Genito-Urinary Organs and Rectum in the
Post-Graduate Medical Department.
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 Demon-strator
of Anatomy in the Medical Department and Pro-fessor
of Orthopedic and Minor Surgery in the Post-
Graduate Medical Department.
GEORGE SAM BEL, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor in
Physical Diagnosis.
WILLIAM MARTIN PERKINS, B.Sc, M.D., Assistant Dem-onstrator
of Operative Surgery in the Medical Department
and Lecturer and Clinical Assistant in General Surgery' in
the Post-Graduate Medical Department.
20
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION—Continued
RALPH HOPKINS, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Physiology and
Hygiyie in the Medical Department and Lecturer and
Clinical Assistant in Diseases of the Skin in the Post-
Graduate Medical Department.
JAMES BIRNEY GUTHRIE, E.Sc, M.D., Lecturer and In-structor
in Materia Medica and Therapeutics.
CARL JOSEPH LEHRMANN, Instructor in Mechanic Arts.
JOHN PETER PEMBERTON, Instructor in Drawing (New-comb
College).
JOHN SMYTH, Jr., M.D., Lecturer and Demonstrator in the
Laboratory of Minor Surgery.
WILLIAM WALTON BUTTERWORTH, M.D., Lecturer and
Clinical Instructor on the Practice of Medicine.
PIERRE JORDA KAHLE, B. Sc, M.D., Instructor in French.
CLARISSE CENAS, Instructor in French (Newcomb College).
SAMUEL MARMADUKE DINWIDDIE CLARK, B.Sc,
M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Instructor of Gynecology and
Obstetrics.
CHARLES LEVERICH ESHLEMAN, A.B., M.D., Assistant
Clinical Instructor of Physical Diagnosis in the Medical
Department and Assistant in Clinical Gynecology in the
Post-Graduate Medical Department.
SAMUEL LOGAN, M.D., Junior Assistant Demonstrator of
Operative Surgery.
GEORGE STEWART BROWN, M.Ph., M.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 in the Medical De-partment
and Professor of the Diseases of the Ear, Nose,
and Throat in the Post-Graduate Medical Department.
JOSEPH HUME, Ph.B., M.D., Lecturer and Clinical In
structor in Venereal and Genito-Urinary Diseases.
DOMINIQUE URBAN MAES, M.D., Junior Assistant Dem-onstrator
of Operative Surgery.
JOSEPH DEUTSCH WEIS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of
Microscopical Anatomy and Bacteriology.
ISAAC IVAN LEMANN, A.B., M.D., Assistant Demonstrator
of Microscopical Anatomy and BacteriologTi'.
MAURICE JOHN COURET, A.M., M.D.. Assistant Demon-strator
of Microscopical Anatomy and Bacteriology'.
MYRON JACOB LUCH, M.A., Teaching Fellow in Greek.
HUGH WILEY PUCKETT, A.B., Teaching Fellow in Latin.
FELIPE FERNANDEZ, A.B., Instructor in Spanish (New-comb
College).
FRANK HOSFORD WATSON, A.B., M.D., Lecturer and
Instructor of Clinical Medicine.
CULLEN MILO BRADY, A.B., M.D., Assistant Clinical In-structor
in Physical Diagnosis.
LOUIS nOUMEING ARCHINARD', D.D.S., CHnical Assistant
in Dental and Oral Surger\-.
PAUL JOSEPH GELPI, A.M., M.D., Lecturer and Clinical
Assistant in Genito-Urinary and Rectal Diseases.
LIONEL LOUIS CAZENAVETTE, M.D., Lecturer and Clin-ical
Assistant in Diseases of the Nervous System.
MARION HERBERT McGUIRE, M.D., Clinical Assistant in
General Surgery.
LOUIS PERRILLIAT. B.Sc. M.D., Lecturer and Clinical
Assistant in Obstetrics and G>Tiecolog\'.
PIERRE LEONCE THIB.\UT, .\.B., M.D., .-IssisUnt in 9p-eratixe
and Clinical Surgery and in Surgery of the CTCnito-
Urinary Organs and Rectum.
SIDNEY KOHN SIMON, A.B.. M.D., .\ssistant in Clinical
Therapeutics and Tropical Medicine.
HOMER DUPUY, A.M.. M.D., CHnical Assistant in Diseases of
the Ear, Nose, and Throat.
JOSEPH DE.MEGRE MARTIN, M.D., Clinical Assistant in
General Surgery.
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION.—Continued.
ALBERT EMILE FOSSIER, A.M., M.D., Lecturer and Clin-ical
Assistant in Medical Diagnosis.
PIERRE LEON CUSACHS, Ph.G., M.D., Assistant in Clinical
Microscopy and Bacteriology.
SAMUEL CHARLES LANDAUER, M.D., Assistant in Clinical
Microscopy and Bacteriology.
ROY McCLEAN VAN WART, A.B., M.D., Lecturer and Clin-ical
Assistant in Diseases of the Nervous System.
LUCIEN MAURICE PROVOSTY, M.D., Lecturer and As-sistant
in General Clinical Medicine.
CHARLES WILLIAM GROETSCH, M.A., M.D., Clinical As-sistant
in Obstetrics and Gynecology.
EDMUND MOSS, M.D., Lecturer and Clinical Assistant in
Orthopedic and Minor Surgery.
CHARLES ARTHUR WALLBILLICH, M.D., Clinical As-sistant
in Orthopedic and Minor Surgery.
PHILIP WILLIAM BOHNE, A.B., M.D., Clinical Assistant in
Orthopedic and Minor Surgery.
CARROLL WOOLSEY ALLEN, M.D., Clinical Assistant in
Genito-Urinary and Rectal Diseases.
JACOB BARNETT, M.D., Assistant in Operative Gynecology
on the Cadaver.
ERASTUS PAUL PUCKETT, A.B., Teaching Fellow in
History.
JESSE TALBOT LITTLETON, Jr., A.B., Teaching Fellow in
Physics.
JAMES MARSHALL ROBERT, B.E., Instructor in Mechan-ical
Engineering and Drawing.
RUDOLPH JOHN ANDERSON, B.Sc, Baker Scholar and
Assistant in Chemical Laboratory.
REGINALD IRVING RAYMOND, B.Sc, Alumni Fellow and
Assistant in English.
HENRY BENJAMIN REESE, Assistant in Mathematics.
JOSEPH LEOPOLD BURTHE, M.D., Clinical Assistant in
Diseases of Children.
CHARLES PETER HOLDERITH, M.D., Assistant in Clinical
Gynecology.
ROBERT HARDIN MARR, Lecturer on the Code of Practice.
JULIA CAROLINA LOGAN (Graduate State Normal College
of Tennessee), Instructor in English (Newcomb College).
KATHARINE KOPMAN (Graduate Newcomb Art Depart-ment),
Instructor in Drawing (Newcomb College).
AMELIE ROMAN (Graduate Newcomb Art Department), In-structor
in Drawing (Newcomb College).
LOUISIANA JOHN CATLETT, M.E.L., Instructor in Math-ematics
(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 Chem-istry
(Newcomb College).
MARY WILLAMS BUTLER (Graduate Newcomb Art De-partment),
Instructor in Drawing (Newcomb College).
LUCY CHURCHILL RICHARDSON, Instructor in Physical
Education (Newcomb College).
MYRA CLARE ROGERS, M.A., Instructor in Latin (New-comb
College).
CLARA LEWIS, A.B., Cadet Teacher (Newcomb College).
JEANETTE GERTRUDE MARKS, A.M., Cadet Teacher
(Newcomb College).
JOSEPH ANATOLE HINCKS, Secretary and Treasurer of
the Tulane Educational Fund.
RICHARD KEARNY BRUFF, Secretary of the University.
LEONORA MARTHA CAGE, Secretary of Newcomb College.
22
OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION AND ADMINISTRATION.—Continaed.
OSWALD CADOGAN BELFIELD, Secretary to the Dean of
the Medical Department.
CLARISSE- HEBERT HAILE, A.B., Registrar of Newcomb
College.
HOWARD CURTIS SMITH, Registrar Post-Graduate Medical
Department.
MINNIE MARIE BELL, Librarian in Charge of the Tulane
University Library.
JOHN ANDREW BACON, Librarian in Charge of the Medical
Department Library.
LOUISE BEERSTECHER KRAUSE, Assistant Librarian
Tulane University Library.
EDWARD ALEXANDER GRAF, Superintendent of Buildings
and Grounds.
TUDOR TUCKER HALL, Mechanician in the Physical
Laboratory.
M.ARIA WILKINS SHIELDS, Lady in Charge of the Joseph-ine
Louise House (Newcomb College).
ELIZABETH MORTON HUSBANDS, Lady in Charge of the
Warren House (Newcomb College).
ETHEL ALICE TAYLOR, Stenographer to the President.
SAMUEL CHARLES LANDAUER, M.D., Assistant in
Clinical Microscopy and Bacteriology.
SUE BLACKMAN BENNETT, Lady in Charge of the New-comb
House (Newcomb College).
MARGARET GREEN DAVIS, Lady in Charge of Morris House
(Newcomb College).
MAUD ROBINSON, Lady in Charge of The Gables (Newcomb
College).
^L'\.RY LOUIS YORK, Lady in Charge of Dormitories.
ALVIXA LAMBERT, Stenographer Art Department (New-comb
College).
LILLIAN ALICE COLLENS, Stenographer to the Dean, Post-
Graduate Medical Department.
LAWRENCE ANDRE WOGAN, Assistant in the Treasurer's
OfBce.
BEULAH De pass, Organist (Newcomb CoUege).
DESIREE ROMAN, Clerk at Pottery .(Newcomb College).
JACOB MEYER, Potter (Newcomb College).
ALBERT JEFFERSON DICKERSON, Foreman of the Uni-versity
Press.
HERMAN F.AIR HUSTEDT, Engineer.
JOSEPH NORMAN HEDRICK, Engineer (Newcomb College).
HENRY BAYON, A.B., M.D., Demonstrator of Ana-tomy.
33
THE STORY OF THE YEAR.
Chapter II.
Father Time paused, and as he turned the pages slowly, Tulane said, with a smile of pride : '"These too are my chil-dren
whom I have equipped with knowledge. They have gone out into the world and are even now nobly fighting the
battle of life, ever ready, as they so valiantly did in the past year, to rally to my support in the hour of need."
24
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OP THE TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA.
OFFICERS.
Dr. Wm. M. Perkins, .
Alex. Allison, Jr.,
Dr. I. I. Lem.\nn,
Rathbone E. De Buys,
Miss Clara M. Bright,
. President.
Vice-President.
. Secretary.
Treasurer.
. Historian.
Executive Committee.
Dr. Wm. M. Perkins.
Dr. M. J. Magruder.
Chas. F. Fletchinger.
H. P. Dart, Jr.
Martin H. Manion.
Dr. Isaac I. Lemann.
Alex. Allison, Jr.
R. E. De Buys.
Pierce Butler.
W. Edw. Walls.
Miss Clara M. Bright. Miss Myra C. Rogers.
Gymnasiutn Plan Committee.
Alex Anderson, Jr., Chairman.
Warren Johnson.
W. A. Bell.
Dr. H. B. Gessner.
Douglas Anderson.
Finance Committee.
Chas. F. Fletchinger, Chairman.
H. P. Dart, Jr. Dr. M. J. Magruder.
Committee on Alumni Room.
Miss M. C. Rogers, Chairman.
W. E. Walls. Dr. 1. 1. Lemann.
Tulane Night Committee.
John DjTnond, Jr., Chairman.
Monte M. Lemann.
St. John Ferret.
Dr. M. J. Magruder.
Ernest Pragst.
Frank W. Hart.
M. M. Brown.
Dr. C. Milo Brady.
J. D. Dresner.
H. P. Dart, Jr.
J. A. Charbonnet.
W. Edw. Walls.
C. C. Crawford.
Ralph Patton.
W. B. Reed.
Miss Nan Gunter.
Miss Clara JL Bright.
Reception Committee.
.\lfred Raymond, Chairman.
Dr. H. B. Gessner. W. B. Reed.
Dr. 1. 1. Lemann. Dr. E. D. Fenner.
H. P. Dart, Jr. D. B. H. Chaffe.
H. Garland Dupr*. Dr. M. J. Jlagruder.
Dr. L. G. Le Beuf. T. C. Campbell.
Geo. Denfegre.
Banquet Committee.
.\lex Allison, Jr., Chairman.
Monte M. Lemann. Dr. ^^ J. Magruder.
27
HISTORICAL.
HE loyalty and success of its alumni
are, without doubt, one of the most
potent factors in the success and
progress of any university, and the
more closely imited the alumni are,
the greater is the weight of their
influence. Tulane University is for-tunate
in having a large number of
(K^Tt its faithful alumni working together
as an organization, chartered under the name of The Alumni
Association of The Tulane University of Louisiana.
Until January 20, 1898, there was no organization among
the alumni of any of the departments of the University except
the Academic. These men were banded together more to
keep up a spirit of good-fellowship than with any idea that
theymight be of service to their ^ /ma Mato-. In January, 1898,
however, some of the members of the original Association de-cided
that the alumni could assist the University in many ways
if the graduates of all the departments were admitted to mem-bership.
After much hard work on the part of the promoters
of this plan, their idea was carried out by taking out a charter
for the present Association. As the years go on and the mem-bership
and influence of the Association widen, the wisdom
of embracing all the departments becomes more and more
apparent.
It does not seem amiss to the writer to enumerate in this
article some of the plans that have been carried out and are
being carried out by the Association in order to show its in-terest
in the University and its students. The under-graduates
have been helped frequently in their athletic enterprises. The
selhng of season tickets for foot-ball and base-ball games has
been managed by committes of members of the Alumni Asso-ciation,
who have given much time and hard work to aid the
Athletic Association. When one of the skating-rinks of the
city offered the use of the rink one night for the benefit of the
Tulane Athletic Association, the Alumni Association was to
the front again to help make a success of the affair.
A fond hope that the student body has long been cherish-ing
is, that they will some day have a gymnasium. In order to
bring about a realization of this hope, the Alumni Association
has a Gymnasium Committee, whose object is to collect the
money necessary for building a gymnasium. This committee
is meeting with much success in its work.
The annual bringing together of the students, friends,
alumni, and Faculty of the University on Tulane Night at the
Tulane Theater was instituted and carried out bv the Alumni
28
Association, and after discontinuing the occasion for two years,
it was again inaugurated most successfully this year. A neat
sum of money was realized from Tulane Night and turned over
to the Athletic Association.
During the heated campaign before the State Legislature
last summer, when Tulane made an effort for State aid, there
were no more earnest workers than the representatives of the
Alumni Association, who gave of their time and labor in trying
to induce the I^egislature to include Tulane in its appropri-ations.
Though they fought a losing fight, they have the
satisfaction of knowing that they made Tulane better known
in Louisiana than it had ever been before.
While the Alumni Association has done much in aid of
athletics, its interest has not been confined to this one field.
For the past two sessions it has maintained a post-graduate
fellowship at the University, which pays the holder ^250 per
annum.
Special efforts have been made to induce the graduates of
Newcomb to become members of this Association. They are
beginning to see that as Newcomb is an important department
of Tulane University, she ought to be represented in the
Alumni Association of Tulane University of Louisiana.
Never before has the Alumni Association been in a more
.
prosperous condition than at present. From a membership of
a little over 200 in good standing two years ago it has increased
over 700, and that in spite of the fact that many members
were dropped at the end of 1906 because they did not show
suflicient interest to maintain good standing by paying their
dues. Although more money has been spent during the past
year than ever before, there was never more money in the
treasury than at present. Indeed, the future of the Alumni
Association seems extremely bright, and as the years roll by
it will be in a position to be more and more helpful to old
Tulane.
29
THE STORY OF THE YEAR.
Chapter III.
Father Time turned toTulane with a twinkle in his shrewd eyes, "These young people seem well satisfied with life,
judging by their beaming faces."
"And well they may," was the prompt reply. "These are my eldest sons and daughters, the Seniors. The last year has
crowned their laborious labors and brought them at last to their long-sought goal. Before them smiles a future all
radiant with the light of youth and hope."
Dear, most dear to Alma Mater
Is the very strong man, Senior
—
He the strongest and the bravest.
He the gentlest and the truest
;
For his knowledge well she loves him,
For his knowledge and his prowess.
In his youth perchance he idled.
Frisked and frolicked with the lambkins;
Never hung in raptured silence
On the pearls that Ficklen uttered
;
Never quafifed the cup of knowledge
Fortier held with smile enchanting;
But he danced the giddy german.
Flirted madly, madly jolUed.
But those idle days are over.
Past and over and forgotten.
Now he treads the heights of learning.
Gathers prizes, gathers medals.
Rends the air with speech impassioned.
And the heroes cluster round him,
And the women rush to hear him,
And he strikes a lyre supernal.
So his Alma Mater loves him.
And he bears her banner proudly,
Proudly for to fight and conquer.
He the bravest and the wisest.
He the truest and the boldest.
And our heart in joy and sorrow
Goes to greet the gallant Senior
And to bid him win and prosper.
30
ffn /Kemoriam,
Bcrtba Iberolb.
"©oB's finger toucbeS bet, anOsbc slept."
32
Riiss Officers
i\je:tiilH\igq— atcRE-mRY-f|
V\\ly\\/ttlTEr---Hl^TQRiaiM-CDVAD^^
GI6l^—Pair
33
Edna Danziger.
"She was the smallest lady alive,
Made in a piece of Nature's madness,
Too small almost for the joy and
gladness
That over-fined her."
Dorothea Schmidt.
"For she was just that quiet kind
whose natures never vary."
Lily Dupre.
"Do you not know I am a woman?
When I think, 1 must speak."
Marie Breazeale.
"Oh, gently comes the world to one
who is cast in gentle mould."
Bessie Barringer Lyon.
'Her footsteps had the lightness.
Her voice the joyous tone.
The tokens of a youthful heart,
Where sorrow is unknown."
Nell Bres.
"A countenance in which did meet
Sweet records, promises as sweet."
34
Louella A lys Taylor.
"Fair tresses man's imperial race en-snare,
And beauty draws us with a single
hair."
Nettie C. Hugo.
"I, thus neglecting worldly ends, all
dedicate
To closeness and the bettering of my
mind."
Hattie Terwilliger.
'A creature not too bright or good
For human nature's daily food."
Marguerite Saunders.
"By all who mark'd her mind, re-ver'd
;
By all who knew her heart, belov'd."
Frances Hart.
'A voice so thrilling ne'er was heard
In springtime from the cudcoo-bird."
Alma Simmons.
"I have always something or oth-er
to do. If not for myself, for a
neighbor."
35
Bdna McCollam.
"A simple maiden in her flower
Is worth a hundred coat-of-arms."
Elizabeth A. Russell.
"A rosebud set with little prickly
thorns,
And sweet as Southern air can make
her."
Anna Estelle Many.
'Sweet promptings unto kindest deeds
Were in her very look;
We read her- face as one who reads
A true and holy book."
Emily H. White.
'Love, sweetness, goodness in her
person shined
So clear as in no face with more de-light."
Leda Hincks.
'She walks in beauty like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry
skies.
And all that 's best of dark and light
Meets in her aspect and her eyes."
Josie Handy.
' 'What is she,
That all the swains commend her?"
36
Josephine B. Patterson.
'Methinks that there abides in thee
Some concord in humanity."
THIS "AI,SO RANS.'
Emily Van Dorn Miller.
'Linked sweetness, LONG DRAWN
OUT."
A line Howard Gunter.
'The reason firm, the temperate will,
Endurance, foresight, strength, and
skill."
Constance Addington.
Alice Aldige.
Ethel Allen.
Elizabeth Baldwin.
Cecile Baquie.
Eppie Barr.
Alleen Camp.
Daisy Charles.
Virginia Conover.
Jeanette Danziger.
Bettina Dreyfous.
Marguerite Elmer.
Emma Gayle.
Lillian Garrott.
Hilda Godchaux.
Ella Goyer.
Alice Grehan.
Helen Gurley.
Marie Sage,
lone Stern.
Mellie TuUis.
Marv Wilson.
Pearl Hiller.
Katye Hochendel.
Perry Jones.
Edna Krower.
Aline Liebman.
Helfene Maury.
Lucille Metzger.
Frances Moore.
Mary-Elise Morphy.
Caroline Moss.
Alma Newton (Mrs.).
Evelyn Parlange.
Eula Pratt.
EHzabeth Pugh.
Ruth Rosenbaum.
Annie Rothenberg.
Theresa Rothenberg.
Virginia Handley.
Daisy Dean Smith.
Margaret Stubbs.
Helen Wheadon.
37
CI/ASS HISTORY.
Thoug-h the end is not yet, the Class of 1907 feel already
the coolness of the approaching dawn, and see before them
the faint rosy glow that ushers in the dawn of Commencement
Day. Let us, then, before the coming of that day which will
close our career as a class at Newcomb, review the history of
our four years, find solace if we may in what we have striven
and hoped to do, and in what we may.
We can not say that we entered college miracles of wis-dom
or of discretion, nor indeed that we are leaving it in that
condition. "Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and
some have greatness thrust upon 'em," but, alas ! we do not
venture to associate ourselves with IMalvolio in any of these
greatnesses. Still, with more of modesty, we may justly claim
some advance in both wisdom and discretion, and always at
least the faithful and earnest performance of the task that
lay before us. We have striven to fullfil Dr. Dixon's favorite
injunction: "Work while it is yet day."
V/e have stood together and worked together as a class,
though the time has been when our long-sufifering treasurer
has groaned over the non-payment of class dues ; and it is of
class achievements, not of the brilliant performances of indi-viduals,
that I would speak. First of these, the common herit-age
of all of the forty-five who entered as Freshmen as well
as of the twenty-one who now find themselves Seniors, is
our record in basket-hall, a record unequalled by any pre-ceding
class. No Sophomore team had ever been able to
wrest the cup from the older college classes. Our Sophomore
team beat the record, and—we have kept what we took.
Of course we have some weak points. Our bump of
geographical location, in spite of the noble aid rendered by
the Faculty, will probably continue to be as it has been—but
little developed. Still, having learned when and how to study,
we have in most cases applied our knowledge. The dinosaur
no longer fills us with wonder and awe ; things there are com-pared
to which a dinosaur is but a small matter.
Now joined more closely together by a bond of common
joys and sorrows, twenty-one of us remain to finish what forty-five
began. We have kept up our class and college spirit
through all the ups and downs of college life. In depth and
strength of character as well as in knowledge we have grown,
and now, when, after four years together, we are separating,
it is with the certainty that our work at Newcomb will be a
firm stepping-stone to our work, about to begin, in the outside
world.
38
CLASS POEM.
Part I.
Scene: Newcomb Steps. Time: October the First, igoj.
It was the steps of a college, of Newcomb, that college so
famous
That none ever yet to compare has been read of or dreamt
of by any.
Nothing was heard on these steps save the weeping and wail-ing
of Freshinen,
Gloomy and sad at heart, doubtful what Fate had in store for
them,
All unconscious that they, the wonderful Class of Naught
Seven,
Marvelous deeds would perform, gain heights never dreamt
of by mankind.
Sorrowing thus they stood, when all at once in the sunshine
Gleamed a figure resplendent, whose glittering shield and
bright helmet
Proclaimed her the goddess Minerva, Minerva the goddess of
wisdom.
"Great things will you do, O my sisters," spake she to the
faint-hearted Freshmen
;
"Loud shall your name and your fame resound through the
College of Newcomb
:
Cups you shall win by the score, by the aid of my sister Diana;
Cups you shall win by the score, and high "11 be the score of
your ball team
;
Thalia, Melpomene, too, will come at your call, and write class
plays
;
Urania will step from the skies to see that you lluiik not
astronomy
;
-Esculapius teach you his art; \'enus endow you with beauty;
.Apollo as guardian angel will lead through the Forest of
Math
;
Clio will tell yon the story of ages, both ancient and
modern
;
Versatile will be your pen, for the Muses all will adore you.
Jove has nodded and spoken, the Fates will not dare disobey
him."
Thus spake the goddess Minerva, vanishing into the sunshine,
Leaving behind with her sisters a part of her wisdom divine.
39
Part II.
Scene: Same. Time: May the Twenty-ninth, 190'/.
It was the steps of a college, of Newcomb, that college so
famous
That none ever yet to compare has been read of or dreamt
of by any.
Nothing was heard on these steps save the laugh of a gay
band of Seniors,
Save the weeping and wailing of classes who envied the fame
of Naught Seven.
And the Seniors were conscious that they had performed well
their task and "done noble,"
That Dixon's praise had they earned, earned the Diploma of
Newcomb.
Surely Minerva'd be proud to welcome her sisters Naught
Seven.
Into celestial Olympus their diploma will serve as a passport,
Jove will step from his throne, and ask Nan to sit down beside
him;
"Have a glass of nectar. Miss Lyon?" in a dignified tone he
will say;
"Nell, you may sit at my right hand and read me the Jam. of
this year."
Yes, they who have worked well on earth will cause a sensa-tion
in heaven.
For then all Olympus will quake and thunder, "Hurrah for
'07
!"
40
41^
42
CI/ASS OF 1907.
CLASS COLORS.
Gold and Black.
CLASS YELL.
Zipity Zip ! Ko-rack ! Ko-rack
!
Zipity Zip I Ko-rack ! Ko-rack
!
Zipity Zip ! Ko-rack ! Ko-rack
Tulane Seniors, Gold and Black!
OFFICERS.
Ernest Pr.agst President.
Harold E. Raymond Vice-President.
Henry L. Dreyhuss Secretary.
Clive W. Kernan Treasurer.
43
ACADEMIC '07 STATISTICS.
Aiken, John Gayle, Jr., 2X, Literary; T. U. A. A.; Editor-in-
Chief of Jambalaya (4) ; Managing Editor Tulane Weekly
(4); Editor of Tulanian; Speaker G. B. L. S. (3, 4); Campus
Fund Committee; Vice-President of Class (3); Class Secretary
(i); Junior German Club; Tulane German Club; Tulane-
Texas Debate Committee; Chapel Choir; Winner of Camot
Medal (3) ; Tulane-Georgia Debating Team.
Bankston, Emmett Franklin, *KS, KA*, Civil Engineer-ing;
T.U. A. A.; Forum (1, 2, 3, 4,); President of Forum (4);
Editor of Tulanian (3, 4,)
.
rV'^ Briede, Otto Frank, Jr., Civil Engineering; T. U. A. A.
Calongne, Wiljord Francis, IIKA, KA*, Civil Engineering;
Secretary T. U. A. A. ; Captain Class Foot-Ball Team (i) ; Class
Team (2) ; Nominating Committee T. U. A. A.
Cusachs, Philip Caspar, ATA, KA*, Mechanical and Elec-trical
Engineering ; T. U. A. A.;G. B. L. S. (2); Sergeant-at-
Arms G. B. L. S. (3); Junior German Club; Tulane German
Club; Junior Prom. Committee; Vice-President Tulane German
Club; Editor-in-Chief Olive and Blue (4); Assistant Business
Manager Jambalasta (4) ; Chapel Choir (3).
Dreyfuss, Henry L., Mechanical and Electrical Engineer-ing;
Class Secretary (4); 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team (2, 3); Class
Foot-Ball Team.
Ficklen, Alexander, SX, Scientific; Junior German Club (i,
2); G. B. L. S.; Secretary G. B. L. S. (2); Speaker G. B. L. S.
(3); Tulane German Club (3, 4); Olive and Blue (2); Editor-in-
Chief Tulane Weekly (3, 4); Chapel Choir; Heidelberg Chorus
(3); Class Historian (i, 3); Tulane-Texas DepatingTeam (4)
Hardie, Harry, 2X, KA<E>, Classical; Fox Head; Junior
German Club ; Treasurer Tulane German Club ; Clerk of Con-gress'.
G. B. L. S. (2, 3); Captain Cross-Country Club; Track
Manager (4) ; Tulane Tennis Club ; Sub-Treasurer T. U. A. A.
;
Assistant Manager Tulane Weekly (3) ; Manager Tulane Weekly
(4) ; 'Varsity Track Team (3).
Hein, Herbert Marcel, Civil Engineering; T. U. A. A.; G.
B. L. S. (4) ; Clerk of Congress (2) ; Tulane Tennis Club; Assist-ant
Business Manager Tulane Weekly.
Hirsch, Leo Levy, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
T. U. A. A.; Forum (2); Tulane Dormitory Tennis Club (i, 2,
3 4) ; Vice-President T. D. T. C. (3) ; President T. D. T. C. (4).
44
I-vens, Edmund M., $K2, ©NE, KA*, Mechanical and
Electrical Engineering; 'Varsity Base-Ball Team (i, 2, 3);
Captain 'Varsity Base-Ball Team (3) ; Nominating Committee
T. U. A. A. (3, 4) ; Manager 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team (4) ; T. U.
A. A. ; Advisory Board T. U. A. A. (4).
Joubert, Charles Ernest, IIKA, KA*, Mechanical and Elec-trical
Engineering; T. U. A. A. (i, 2, 3, 4); 'Varsity Base-Ball
Team (i, 2, 3); Captain Class Base-Ball Team (i); Editor of
Jambalaya (3) ; Assistant Manager Foot-Ball Team (4) ; Man-ager
Academic Foot-Ball Team (4).
Kernan, Clive W., 2AE, Literary; Fox Head; Junior Ger-man
Club ; Class Secretary (3) ; Vice-President Junior German
Club (2) ; French Circle (1,2); G. B. L. S. (2, 3) ; Players' Club
(3); Tulane Night Committee (i) ; Assistant Editor Olive and
Blue (i, 2) ; Managing Editor Olive and Blue (4) ; T. U. A. A.
;
Winner of Judah-Touro Medal for Ancient History (3) ; Class
Treasurer (4) ; Supervising Editor Olive and Blue (4) ; Business
Manager Jambalaya (4).
Mills, William Parkerson, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
T. U. A. A. (i, 2, 3, 4); Class Foot-Ball Team (2);
'Varsity Base-Ball Team (3) ; Dormitory Committee (4).
Matthews, William Henry, Jr., Scientific; T. U. A. A.;
Treasurer Junior German Club (2) ; Tulane German Club; Editor
of Olive and Blue (4); Cosmo Club; Assistant Business Man-ager
Tulane Weekly; Secretary Tulane Tennis Club; Assistant
Manager 'Varsity Track Team (3).
Monroe, Winder Polk, 2X, KA*, Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; Class President (i, 2); Editor Jambalaya (i, 2);
Class jHistorian (2); Junior German Club (i, 2); Tulane Ger-man
Club (3, 4) ; President Tulane German Club (4) ; Editor of
Tulane Weekly; Tulane Night Committee (i, 2); Track Team
(3); Junior Prom. Committee (3); T. U. A. A. (i, 2, 3); Fox
Head (i).
Murphy, Robert Edward, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
Forum (i); Class Foot-Ball Team (2); Vice-President
Forum (2); Chapel Choir (1,2,3); Vice-President Forum (4);
T. U. A. A.
Nelson, Bernard Stanley, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering.
• ". -
Parkerson, Stirling, SAE, Literary; Junior German Club;
Class Foot-Ball Team (2) ; Editor-in-Chief Olive and Blue (3)
;
Tulane German Club ; Vice-President of Class (2); Fox Head.
Patton, Ralph Clifton, HKA, KA*, Mechanical and Electri-cal
Engineering; T. U. A. A. ; Tulane Night Committee (i, 2);
Chairman (4) ; Vice-President Class (3).
Phelps, Esmond, 2X, KA*, Classical; Tulane German Club
;
President Junior German Club; Assistant Editor Jambalaya (i) ;
Manager Class Base-Ball Team; President Class (2, 3); Critic
G. B. L. S. ; Vice-President Tulane German Club; Business
Manager Tulane Weekly; Junior Prom. Committee; Nominat-ing
Committee T. U. A. A. ; Tap and Bolt.
45
Pragst, Ernest William, KA*, Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; Class President (4); T. U. A. A.; Assistant Busi-ness
Manager Olive and Blue (4); Heidelberg Chorus (3).
Raymond, Harold Earl, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
Vice-President of Class (4); Assistant Editor Jamba-lava
(2, 4). _
Reese, Henry Benjamin, Scientific.
Rice, Frazer Lea, KS, Scientific; Class Treasurer (2) ; Editor
Tulane Weekly (4); G. B. L- S. ; Managing Editor Tulane
Weekly (4).
Riess, Oscar, *KS, KA$, Civil Engineering ; Manager Base-
Ball Team (3) ; Captain Base-Ball Team (4).
Rordain, Roy Paul, Civil Engineering; Secretary Forum
(3, 4); T. U. A. A. (i, 2, 3, 4); Treasurer French Circle (i);
Assistant Business Manager Tulanian (3).
Rtigan, Warren Mixer, KA*, Mechanical and Electrical En-gineering;
Class President (i); Class Foot-Ball Team (i, 2);
Captain Class Foot-Ball Team (2) ; Tulane Night Committee (4,
2); Class Secretary and Treasurer (3); T. U. A. A. (2, 3).
Spencer, Lewis Cass, Scientific.
Talmage, John Van Neste, Mechanical and Electrical En-gineering
; Tulane Representative at Student Volunteer Con-ference
at Nashville.
Theriot, George Joseph, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
Class Historian.
Webb, Rujus Clyde, Jr., 2N, KA*, Scientific; T. U. A. A.;
Forum (1,2,3,4); Class Foot-Ball Team ; Assistant Man-ager
'Varsity Base-Ball Team (3) ; 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team
(4) ; 'Varsity Base-Ball Team (3) ; Manager 'Varsity Base-Ball
Team (4) ; Captain 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team (5).
Wyly, Andrew Jackson, Jr., Literary;
Forum.
Vice-President of
Zeek, Charles Franhlyn, Jr., SX, Classical; G. B. L. S. (3,
4); Editor Tulane Weekly (4); Assistant Editor Jambalaya;
'Cross-Country Club ; Dormitory Tennis Club (2) ; Junior Ger-man
Club; Tulane German Club; T. U. A. A
46
HISTORY OF CLASS OF 1907.
Xo more shall it be said that the memory of man is fleet-ing,
that it needs immense quarries of stone and quaint hiero-glyphics
to record its knowledge for the benefit of posteritj'.
Henceforth, it shall be fixed and reliable as the Polar Star, and
its stores shall be transmitted from generation to generation
unchanged in bulk and qualitj'. No more mountains of chiseled
obelisks, no more countless tons of printed paper; there shall
be but one chronicle, but one memory. There shall be no
possibility of misinterpretation, no chance of promiscuous re-visions
and different editions, for the information man now
has shall never be modified, never increased or diminished.
(Prophetic.)
The simple reason for the above common-place remark,
the truth of which has already been universally recognized, is
that man will have but one great event to remember, one
event the memory- of which he will care to leave as a legacy,
that is the sudden appearance, in the benighted intellectual
heavens, of the ultra-brilliant Sun of 1907.
The dim sun which we are accustomed to see every day
has reached its limit of usefulness, and will waste away : and
this because, from now on, we are to have everlasting day,
maintained by the glorious Sun of 1907, whose effulgent rays
will penetrate to every nook and comer in space, no matter
how many worlds or half-worlds are in the way.
The above remarks are the simple, clear, straightforward
statement of facts. As it is meet that so great a conclave of
beings as "1907" should be humble and modest—and brief, we
shall mention but a few of the innumerable transcendental
truths which "1907" has brought tp light.
Heretofore, the eyes of men have rested on the bare walls
of Finiteness, but now the all-enlightening Sun of 1907 has
obliterated everj' line of demarkation, has rent the veil of
Limitation, and displayed to wondering humanit)-—the myster-ious
and boundless regions of Infinitj'.
In Chemistry we have proved conclusievly that the Sim-ple
Life is not an element, but a savorj- compound of Money,
Automobiles, \\'ines, and Dishes. We'shall not speak of our
electrical achievements, for they would shock our good read-ers:
but in Mechanical Engineering we have revolutionized
the old accepted theory of tlie steam-engine, and subsituted
in its place the extensive use of waste gases from lecture halls.
Besides, we have contributed to the practical world the \'igo
Boiler, riveted with Talmage's Thumbtacks, and tested with
the Murphy Steam Gauge. The solution of the two momentous
questions, "When is an egg?" and "Why is an ampere a volt?''
has drawn from our approving professors the most abject
looks of wonder and admiration. And so on eternally.
Then, wherefore continue? The story of our greatness
will never die. nor will you have to dig up dusty volumes to
find it. "1907" will shine in the firmanent of fame for time ever-lasting,
and all men, all nations, all ages will adore it with the
most devoted affection and reverence.
Class of 1907.
47
50
SI
52
CLASS OP 1907.
CLASS OFFICERS.
M. M. Brown President.
F. W. Brock Vice-President.
R. A. Lambert Secretary.
M. W. Swords Treasurer.
B. T. Wise, Jr Historian.
MEMBERS.
E. W. Anderson Shorterville, Ala.
O. N. Arrington Brookhaven, Miss.
J. B. Benton Port Gibson, Miss.
S. M. Blacl^shear Robeline, La.
G. L. Brown Tupelo, Miss.
M.M.Brown Groesbeck, Tex.
M. Boudreau Sunset, La.
F. W. Brock Brockdale, La.
E. P. Bunkley Stamford, Tex.
G. F. Burgunder New Orleans, La.
A. M. Caine Safford, Ala.
D. C. Carrington Marquez, Tex.
J. F. Cazayous New Orleans, La.
A. B. Childs Church Point, La.
H. L. Cocke rham Liberty, Miss.
\. Cohn Baton Rouge, La.
C. G. Cole Greensburg, La.
M.M.Collins Slaughter, La.
C. C. Colvin Unionville, La.
B. Cracroft Kansas City, Mo.
A. P. Grain Shreveport, La.
B.L.Cunningham Dardanelle, Ark.
H. Daspit, Jr New Orleans, La.
E.C.Day New Orleans, La.
E. P. de Bellard, Jr New Orleans, La.
E. J. de Bergue New Orleans, La.
L.T.Donaldson Reserve, La.
J. F. Dunn New Orleans, La.
O. C. Dunsworth Thackerville, L T.
E. E. Ecuyer New Orleans, La.
C. J. Edwards, Jr. . Vicksburg, Miss.
C. E. Ellard. .
." Kosciusko, Miss.
S. E. Frierson Columbus, Miss.
S. C. Fitz Winfield, La.
T.J.Floyd Dothan, Ala.
S. E. Frieson Columbus, Miss.
S. W. Fry Denton, Tex.
F. A. Fuller Jacksonville, Tex.
G. P. Garland Opelousas, La.
A. G. Gebhard.. . . Godley, Tex.
H. A. Greenwood New Orleans, La.
T. Y. Greet Gadsden, Ala.
H.E. Griffin Kosse, Tex.
J.K.Griffith Port Hudson, La.
53
J. O. Gurney Blue Springs, Mis,?.
J. W. Harper Grandview, Tex-
W. H. Harris New Orleans, La.
C. M. Hartzog Seminary, Miss.
M. C. Hawkins, Jr Greenville, Ala.
A. A. Herold Shreveport, La.
A. J. Hetherington New Orleans, La.
C. A. Hiriart Paquemine, La.
J. B. Hirsch Greenville, Miss.
L. B. Hudson Selma, Ala.
C.C.Jacobs Sancti Spiritus, Cuba.
C. M. Jarrell , Columbia, La.
V. Jastremaski Baton Rouge, La.
M. H. Jordan Birmingham, Ala.
H.J.Kelly New Orleans, La.
G. E. Kornegay Kinston, N. C.
J. E. Landry New Orleans, La.
E. E. Lafferty Gurdon, Ark.
R.A.Lambert Catherine, Ala.
L.H.Landry New Orleans, La.
D. G. Lemkowitz Natchez, Miss.
A. L. Levin New Orleans, La.
L. Levy New Orleans, La.
R. Lyons New Orleans, Lo.
B. A. McClelland Opelousas, La.
L. N. Markham Longview, Tex.
A. D. Mouledous New Orleans, La.
F. D. Mower Newberry, S. C.
H. T. Nicolle Convent, La.
W.W.Nipper Uvalde, Tex.
W. T. Patton New Orleans, La.
R. J. M. Pindergast New Orleans, La.
J. L. Pridgen Thomaston, Tex.
R. Reagan Darbun, Miss.
O. J. Richardson Manifest, La.
A. S. Reisor Shreveport, La.,
W. C. Rice Florida.
P. Rigney Gurley, Ala.
E. M. Robards New Orleans, La.
F. Romaguera New Orleans, La.
T. E. Royals Meridian, Miss.
H. P. St. Martin Theriot, La.
E. L. Sanderson Choudrant, La.
J. H. Sanford Baton Rouge, La.
L. Saporito New Orleans, La.
M. C. Sapp Cameron, Tex.
M. E. Saucier Marksville, Tex.
P. H. Scardino Houston, Tex.
R. D. Schimmelpfennig Little Rock, Ark.
R. C. Segrest Union Church, Miss.
L. Sequeira Bluefields, Nicaragua.
W.S.Sharp Kennard, Tex.
E. B. Sloss Birmingham, Ala.
J.M.Smith Brookhaven, Miss.
J.L.Smith Dubach, La.
M. A. Smith Mt. Point, La.
R.E.Smith Dubberly, La.
J. L. Stallworth Evergreen, Ala.
G. W. Stephens New Orleans, La.
W. A. Stevens Amory, Miss.
V.O.Stewart Liberty, Miss.
W. R. Strange New Orleans, La.
R. A. Strong New Orleans, La.
B. G. Swanson La Grange, Ga.
M. W. Swords Opelousas, La.
P. T. Talbot San Marcos, Tex.
H.O.Taylor Clifford, La.
G.A.Thomas New Orleans, La.
J. W. Tolleson Palmer, Tex.
T. F. Trucks Montevallo, Ala.
'G. H. Upton New Orleans, La.
B.Z.Welch Collins, Miss.
T. Welch Collins, Miss.
C. R. Williams Tyler, Tex.
J. J. Wilson, Jr Coldwater, Miss.
B. T. Wise, Jr Plains, Ga.
E. T. Yancey, Jr Germantown, Tenn.
T. W. Young, Jr Slaughter, La.
54
HISTORY OF CLASS OP 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 peculiar 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 up of good students, it will be a good class,
and vice versa.
In this respect the Class of 1907 has good reason to be
proud. It is made up of good men, and is therefore a good
class, as the records of its four years of existence will show.
In each year it has been faithful, energetic, and painstaking,
doing its work thoroughly 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 do, 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 through the first year of its
existence and learned to walk in the second. It is the duty of
of the present chronicler to tell how, having reached the age
of discretion, it strode sturdily through the third and fourth.
And yet, when one begins to write it down, there seems to be
very little to write, after all. The doings of the medical stu-dent
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 base-ball team,
no foot-ball 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 it.
Instead, he will content himself 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 and moments of despair.
There have been successes and failures and trails and tribula-tions
without number. But through it all the Class has been
moving straight ahead. Though the way has been rough,
we have crossed all our bridges and climbed all our mountains
of trial and toil. We have attained our long-sought goal, and
we pass from the portals of our college halls to write a new
and more glorious history in letters of light in the annals of
the Medical World.
55
THE STORY OF THB YEAR.
Chapter IV.
"And here,"' said Tulane, turning the pages with deft white fingers, while Father Time smiled benignantly, "are
my eager children, who have gladly received nearly all that it is in my power to give them. Even as they have overcome
the trials of the past year, they stand ready for the conflicts of the coming one, anxious to equal and surpass the glories
of their predecessors.''
Out spoke the peerless Junior,
Of old Tulane was he
:
"Lo I I will fight from morn till night.
Beloved Tulane, for thee.
"Plow better spend the passing hour.
Than plan with winsome guile
To knock the spots from Chardenal
And merit Fortier's smile.''
"For what can youth do better
Than pore o'er Chemistree,
Deep Calculus, and musty Trig.
To win his high degree?
"To dig and delve in Physics
And strive with might and main,
With courage bold, for e'er uphold
The glory of Tulane ?"
56
(V-~-v-'
f\
f/
r
58
59
CI/ASS OF 1908.
CIvASS OFFICERS.
Lilian Goldstein President. Carrie Hopkins Treasurer.
Shirley Stearns Vice-President. Miriam Danziger Poet.
Mary CALLAN Secretary. AdelE Monroe Basket-Bail Captain.
COLORS.
Gold and Blue.
FLOWER.
Daffodil.
YELL.
Sis-Boom-Bate
!
Sis-Boom-Bate
!
Newcomb Juniors
!
1908!
60
NBWCOMB JUNIOR STATISTICS.
Callan, Mary E., Secretary (3); French Circle (i, 2, 3); Ag-onistic;
Y. W. C. A.
Campbell, Mary B., nB«; French Circe (i, 2, 3); Basket-
Bail Team (2) ; Clerk of Congress of Agonistic; Y. W. C. A.
Cunningham, Laura, French Circle (i, 2, 3); Basket-Ball
Team (2) ; Y. W. C. A.
Danziger, Miriam, French Circle (i, 2, 3); Class Poet (i, 3),
'08 Editor Tulane Weekly (2, 3) ; Agonistic.
Drake, Irene, KKF; French Circle (i, 3) ; Agonistic; Y. W. C. A.
Dreyfous, Emma, French Circle (i, 2, 3); Basket-Ball Team
(2); Business Manager Dramatic Club (3); Agonistic.
Goldstein, Lilli.\n, French Circle (i); Treasurer (2); Basket-
Ball (2); Playwright (i); President (3).
Hart Nellie S., *M; Treasurer (i); Sub-Editor Jambalaya
(1) ; French Circle (i, 2) ; Manager Basket-Ball Team (2, 3)
;
Y. W. C. A. (i, 2, 3) ; Chapel Choir.
Hopkins, Carrie May, IIB*; Newcomb Business Manager
Tulane Weekly (3) ; Treasurer (3) ; Chapel Choir.
Hereford, Flavia, French Circle (1); Y. W. C. A. (2, 3)!
Basket-Ball Team (2); Agonistic (3); Newcomb Business
Manager Tulanian.
HiLLER, Irma H., French Circle (i. 2, 3); Agonistic.
lyAPEYRE, Janie, Y. W. C. a. (3).
Mayer, Naomie B.
Monroe, Adele, KKP; Vice-President First Half (1); Presi-dent
(2); Basket-Ball Team (2); French Circle (1,2);
Captain Basket-Bail Team (3) ; Agonistic (3).
61
Norman, Anita, KKF; Secretary (i); Sub-Editor Jambalaya
(i); French Circle (i, 3).
PrEot. Nina M., xn, French Circle (i, 2, 3); Secretary French
Circle (3) ; Vice-President First Half (i) ; Vice-President (2)
;
Historian (i, 2); Agonistic.
Randolph, Gladys Pierce.
Stearns, Shirley J., French Circle (i, 2, 3); Vice-President
(3) ; Chapel Choir ; Agonistic.
Tebo, Jessie Wing, nB$; President (i); French Circle (i);
Treasurer French Circle (2) ; Vice-President French Circle
(3); Sub-Editor Jamb.^laya (3).
Waldhorn, Elsie, French Circle, (1, 3).
Weil, Fannie, French Circle, (2, 3); Agonistic; T. A. A.
Weil, Gladys, French Circle (i, 3); Agonistic; T. A. A.
Chapel Choir.
SPECIALS.
Blum, Adele, French Circle (i, 2,3); Agonistic;
Substitute Basket-Bail Team (2).
GiLLis, Lucile, KKr.
Nott, Kate, KKr.
LEgendre, Virgie, XO; French Circle (i).
Loeber, Pauline, xn.
HiNTON, Helen, *m.
Hinton, Bonita, *M.
Williams, Edna.
Woods, Maud, Basket-Ball Team (2); 1908 Editor
Tulanian.
JUNIOR CLASS HISTORY.
Three years she grew in sun and shower
;
Then Nature said, "A lovelier flower
On earth was never sown.''
Three years ago the Junior Class, then in her infancy
entered upon her career in the dignified halls of Newcomb.
And who shall say that that career has not been a brilliant
one ? Much have the members of '"08" accomplished in these
three years, not only for their own Class, which is what many
others have done likewise ; but also for the College, which few
have done so well.
Usually it is not well to enumerate your good deeds, but
in an historian surely this is allowed. In case some young
lady of another class is inclined to be sceptical, we will inform
her upon this subject. In the first place, my dear, if you be-long
to a younger class, you are greatly indebted to our inter-cession,
and the Faculty's consideration, for the easier course
of study you are enjoying this year. We can truthfully say,
"It was not so in our time." The Seniors also owe some obli-gation,
for, the attention of those in authority having been di-rected
to the state of affairs, their burden of work was also
lightened.
Last year, though we did not win the only game of basket-ball
we had a chance to play, we very considerately gave '"06"
a chance to try their prowess against that redoubtable team
whose triumphs look so dangerous for the rest of us and for
the future of the Newcomb cup. But we thought the advan-tages
in experience which the older class had over us would
make them stronger opponents. The blame does not attach
to us that they did not do their duty; we had done ours in
giving them a chance to win. But our strength in this respect
is growing every day—or, rather, every Friday ; and next year
it will be a narration, not of noble self-sacrifice, but of well-earned
victory.
Moreover, we instituted delightful entertainments in our
Class during the latter part of last year, which made that
unusually long term seem to pass much more rapidly than
otherwise would have been the case. And no "good fellows"
have risen to the occasion with more enthusiasm and exerted
themselves more to make everything a success than did the
loyal followers of Gold and Blue.
In conclusion, let us say that during the remainder of our
college life we will strive to follow the example of our deeds
in former years, and we believe that in doing so we will leave
to our successors the name of a Class which ever strove for
the highest and ever attained that result.
Historian.
62
JUNIOR CIvASS POEM.
She dwells in Newcomb's spacious hall,
A maiden fair to see.
In books and ball she leads them all,
This pride of the Faculty.
Her eyes are blue, her hair is gold.
Now tell me, who is she?
Her essays she hajids in on time,
And Pierce's jokes does see
;
She ne 'er mismeters Chaucer's rhjrme
;
Her element 's Chemistry
;
In Astronomy this star does shine.
Who can the wonder be?
To her the haughty Sophomore
Awe-stricken bends the knee
;
The little Freshies her adore.
And long as great to be
;
The Seniors to her doff their caps.
Pray tell me, who is she ?
She speaks Deutsch, Espagflol, Frangais,
Greek, Latin, like a Ph.D.,
Till learned professors pine with envy awav,
(Unless they smile in glee.)
In Math, she 's sure to find the "a,"
As you will here for me.
Oh! who's this maid all blue and gold?
Now who, say who is she?
Why, you must know ; must you be told
Who Newcomb's darling be?
Straightway a loud hurrah arose:
"Miss 1908!" 'Tis she.
63
«iunior;s 'oa
64
6s
CLASS OF 1908.
CLASS OFFICERS.
Elmo Miller President.
William P. Bradburn Vice-President.
Warren W. Fisher.. Secretary and Treasurer.
COLORS.
Brown and White. ,;..
YELL.
Rip! 'Rah! Roe!
Rip! 'Rah! Ree!
Junior, Junior,
Don't you see?
Junior large, Junior great, '.
Tulane Juniors,
Nineteen Eight!
66
JUNIOR CI/ASS STATISTICS.
Charles R. Armstrong, ATfi, KA*, Mechanical and Electri-cal
Engineering; Glee Club; Junior German Club; Senior Ger-man
Club.
Joseph E. Blum, AAH, Literary ; French Circle.
William P. Bradburn, AAH, Scientific; 'Varsity Basket-
Ball Team; T. A. A.
Frank D. Cejalu, Civil Engineering; A. B. (Jesuits', '04).
Gusline Craft, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
President Tulane Gun and Rod Club.
G. E. Durr, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Morris J. Elgutter, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Warren W. Fisher, Mechanical and Electrical Engineer-ing;
Class Secretary and Treasurer; Tulane Gim and Rod Club
;
T. A. A.
Arthur M. Foley, Civil Engineering; T. A. A.; Dormitory
Tennis Club.
Walter K. Grant, 2AE, KA*, Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; Junior Gennan Club; Senior German Club;
T. A. A.; Tulane Gun and Rod Club.
John R. Hayward, 2X, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
A. B. (Tulane, '03); Senior German Club.
Marton H. Judd, 2N, Civil Engineering; T. A. A.; B. E.
(V. M. I., '06).
F. Sidney Lee, AAH, Classical ; Tulane Glee Club.
/. Reginald Ludlum, Literary; Forum.
Lucien E. Lyons, Jr., ATfl, KA*, Mechanical and Elec-trical
Engineering; Junior German Club; Senior German Club;
Glendy Burke; Secretary T. A. A. ; Tulane Gun and Rod Club.
Louis W. Magni, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
C. William Mayer, Chemical Engineering.
Elmo J. Miller, KA*, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
Class President; Manager 'Varsity Basket-Bail Team;
Tulane Gun and Rod Club; T. A. A.; Track Team.
Clarence F. Monrose, ATA, Civil Engineering; Junior
German Club ; Senior German Club.
Pendleton S. Morris, AKE, KA*, Civil Engineering; Glee
Club; T. A. A.
67
Carroll S. Moses, Civil Engineering ; Glee Club ; T. A. A.
Peter R. Mysing, AAH, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
Tulane Gun and Rod Club; T. A. A.
Francis M. Pearce, Jr., AAH; Literary; French Circle;
Dormitory Tennis Club ; T. A. A.
St. John Perret, AAH, Classical; Forum (i, 2, 3); French
Circle (i, 2); President French Circle (3); French Play (i);
Class Editor Tulane Weekly (2); Editor-in-Chief Tulane
Weekly (3); T. A. A. (3) ; Tulane Night Committee (3) ; Forum-
Glendy-Burke Medal for Oratory (i); Carnot Medal (3); Con-testant
Glendy-Burke Medal for Oratory (3) ; Tulane-Georgia
Debate (3).
J. Howard Sandidge, 2N, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering;
T. A. A.
James F. Seip. Literary.
Franklin C. Talmage, Mechanical and Electrical Engi-neering.
Torvald G. Thorgeson, Civil Engineering.
E. W. Thompson, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
B. S. (Nashville, '03).
E. Earl Wood, 2AE, KA*, ®NE, Mechanical and Electri-cal
Engineering; Junior German Club; Senior German Club;
Tulane Gun and Rod Club.
Frederick Zengel, Jr., Civil Engineering; T. A. A. : Assist-ant
Manager Basket- Ball Team.
68
JUNIOR CI/ASS HISTORY.
Each college year adds glory to the already brilliant record
of the Class of 1908. The history of the present Junior Class,
as herein stated, must necessarily be in the main a reiteration
of the accounts so ably written in the two previous histories.
The facts, although they may be expressed in different words,
must always remain the same.
The Class of 1908 was enrolled at Tulane three years ago.
On the very first day its merit was quickly recognized. The
courteous treatment by upper classmen during the Freshman
year testifies conclusively that its worth was acknowledged and
appreciated. In Athletics and Scholarship "1908" began in
its first year to establish a high standard, which it has suc-cessfully
maintained up to the present.
In the Sophomore year the Class of 1908 gave further
proofs of its excellence. It would take too much time and
space to detail the wonderful successes of '"08" in this year,
but I would render an injustice to the Class not to mention the
crushing defeat administered to the foot-ball team of '"09" by
the representatives of "'08." Never were the laurels of victory
more modestly worn. "1908" in its characteristic manner ex-tended
an encouraging and sympathetic hand to the badly-defeated
'"09." In Track Athletics '"08" was the victor in the
Inter-Class Meet, and furnished the star of the famous meet
with Vanderbilt and Texas.
The most pleasant part of the historian's task is to tell
the story of "1908" in the Junior year. The deeds of this year
are not so striking from a spectacular point of view. They
are not victories in strenuous athletics, since these have just
begun ; but they are the scholarly attainments of the class-room.
These must necessarily appeal to the conservative college-man,
and impress indelibly upon his mind the qualities of the Class.
The high rank of "1908" in scholarship has been so often com-mented
upon, that it seems needless to say more about it.
Although this feature deserves great praise and commendation,
and should be told in eloquent words, it is the desire of "1908"
that the historian make no mention of it. He has nevertheless,
taken the liberty to tell of it, because it might encourage other
classes in their struggling efforts.
The ties of friendship which bind the individual members
of "1908" are certainly deserving of note. It is rightly said
that college friendships are everlasting. In later years reflec-tion
will always recall the pleasant memories and joyful recol-lections
of the "grand old" Class of 1908.
69
70
®S^So
71
ClyASS OF 1908.
CLASS OFFICERS.
President M. C. Henry.
Vice-Presideut J. W. ConELY.
Secretary J. T. O'Ferrall.
Treasurer A. D. LITTLE.
Class Historian • R. E. PEEBLES.
Class Prophet F. O. Mahoney.
Class Poet A. B. Veazie.
Sub-Editors Jambalaya
S. P. Wise.
W. D. Phillips.
MEMBERS.
Aguilar, Julio, A.B., B.S Costa Rica
Adams, Jas. M., B.S., KA, AKK Louisiana
Applewhite, A. S Mississippi
Ardoin, Y Louisiana
Austin, Leon B., IIKA, AKK Mississippi
Austin, T. C, A.B., X* South Carolina
Bailey, P. S., *K*, *X Ohio
Ball, E Arkansas
Baylis, J. E.. B.S., *X Mississippi
Benbow, S. E. XZX Texas
Berry, T. M., AKK Mississippi
Beverly. A. F., K2, *X Texas
Blow, F. T Texas
Brinjonc, Eugene Louisiana
Burch, G. E. . .
.' Louisiana
Chilton, R. H Louisiana
Colgin. F. E., Ph.C, 2X, AKK Texas
Conely, J. W., XZX, Vice-President 'o5-'o6 Texas
Connelly, E. McC, A.B Louisiana
Coulter, W. W., AKK Texas
Craig, S. D., K2 South Carolina
Grain, A. B., XZX, Treasurer 'o5-'o6 Texas
Cryer, W. A., A.B., 2AE Alabama
Daly, E. W., C.E., Ph.G., 2N, *X Alabama
Daly, O. P., XZX Louisiana
Davis, J. S., AOA Texas
Derouen, R. F Louisiana
Duncan, R. A., XZX Texas
Dunn, Jno. L Louisiana
Ellis, J. E., *X Mississippi
Floyd, G. M Florida
Fortenberry, J. C Texas
Foster, R. H Mississippi
Fougerousse, H. T Louisiana
Gardner, Jno. G Canada
Gebharch, F. S Texas
Gladney, J. F Louisiana
Gomila, F. R Louisiana
Griffin, W. F., Jr Alabama
Halfacre, R. R Mississippi
Hall, J. E Mississippi
Hamilton, R Louisiana
Hardin, J. E Alabama
Harris, J. F Texas
Hayes, A. R., XZX Texas
Hays, W. M Louisiana
72
Henry, M.C.,A.B.,K2, AKK, President Class 'o6-'o7. .Mississippi
Hill, F. R., President Class 'o5-'o6 Louisiana
Hines, S. J Louisiana
Holland, S. P., Secretary Class 'o5-'o6 Alabama
Howard, E Louisiana
Jenkins, H Louisiana
Johnson, B. F., Jr., AKK, *K*. . : Mississippi
Johnson, L. F Texas
Jones, R. L., XZX Texas
Kay, T. J Louisiana
Kenny, U. W Texas
Kergosin, A. A Mississippi
Kilpatrick, G. C, *X Alabama
Kimberger, T. J Louisiana
Kirlv, G. C Mississippi
Kostmayer, H. W., A.B., *X, KA® Louisiana
Lacour, A. B Louisiana
Lamothe, F. E., Jr Louisiana
Lafleur, E., Jr Louisiana
Leake, W. W., B.S., M.Ph., 2AE, »X, KA* Louisiana
Little, A. D., K*, Treasurer Class '07 Georgia
Long, J. W Mississippi
Long, T. F., ATO, *X, President Class '05 Alabama
Love, L. A Louisiana
Mahoney, F. O Arkansas
May, C. P., KA, *X Louisiana
Mayfield, L. K Texas
Mcbade, W Louisiana
Miller L. O Louisiana
Miller, E. S Alabama
Mims, A. D., AKK Alabama
McNeese, W. T Mississippi
Mitchell, L Louisiana
Murphy, T. M Mississippi
Odom,'G. L Florida
Oestrich, H Texas
O'Ferrall, J. T., Jr., K2, *X, Secretary Class 'o5-'o6. . Mississippi
Orr, W. R., *X Mississippi
Orr, W. L Mississippi
Patterson, C. W Mississippi
Peebles, R. E., B.S., 5X, AKK Alabama
Perr^-, T. E., A.B Louisiana
Philhps, J. C Mississippi
Phillips, W. D., B.S.. M.Ph., 5N, *X Louisiana
Prosser, J. T., B.S Louisiana
Rew, C. E Louisiana
Reeves, J. U., AOA Alabama
Roeling, G. F Louisiana
Rowell, T. C. 5AE Arkansas
Salerno, E. F ' Louisiana
Scofield, H. W Louisiana
Stanton, E. M Louisiana
Stollenwerck. A. D., B.S., 2AE Alabama
Stroud, E. F., AOA Texas
Tarlton, J. L Louisiana
Thames, J. A., AOA Mississippi
Townsend, S. D., *X Alabama
Utsey, W. T Mississippi
Veazie, Albert V ' Louisiana
Vickers, W Alabama
Watterston, C. W Louisiana
Webb, G. E Mississippi
Welch, R. R., Jr., B.S., AOA Mississippi
White, A. E., *X Texas
White, D. D Mississippi
White, J. P Mississippi
Willis, S Louisiana
Williams, H. E., AKK Arkansas
Wilson, R. D., AOA Texas
Weeks, L. R Florida
Winn, R. B Louisiana
Williamson, W. L., AKK Tennessee
Wise, S. P., A.B., K2, X Georgia
Word, B Louisiana
Woodward, J. T Mississippi
Youngs, L. A., B.S., C.E Louisiana
73
HISTORY OF CI/ASS OP 1908.
To praise "1908" is unnecessary, as she needs none. What
she has done and is doing speaks for her. It is the custom for
Freshmen and Sophs to praise themselves. This they do
because no one else will. But they will soon learn that self-praise
does them no good. When they shall have reached the
high pinnacle of the Junior Class, this self-praise will have
vanished and in its place will come thoughtfulness and hard
work. They will have found that self-praise did not pass ex-aminations.
It would seem too much like the boastful Fresh-man
to narrate the great deeds this Class has done. That is
ancient history, and as I started to write modern history, I will
leave out what we did when we were Freshmen and Sophs.
We started with all the stars of last year, and a large
number of new ones. We have in our Class this year men
from Vanderbilt, Texas, and other schools. These we are
glad to welcome to our midst. And extend to you a greeting
of brotherhood.
If I tried to tell the deeds of a few, I would have tell those
of everyone in the Class. This I would like to do, but, on ac-count
of the limited amount of space, I can only speak for the
Class as a whole.
It must be very apparent to all who have had experience
in class matters that the best and largest facts of its history
are out of the reach and observation of the one deputed to
write the history of this Class. I would find, little doubt, in
the space of six months' session, events and achievements and
triumphs that might crowd and distinguish years. But, as it
cannot be done, we can only judge from the events of the past
and the successful results. But it takes no power of synthesis
to weave from the results a splendid fabric of single-minded
devotion to high ideals and the severe requirements of the
profession we have elected to adorn.
It is no ideal dream or boyish boast to assert that our
progress through college for the last three years has been one
long ovation, one succession of triumphs, since the hour when
as Freshmen we entered Dr. Chaille's office with quaking
hearts, afraid to move lest we arouse his much-talked-of vicious-ness.
But after that first we found that he was our friend.
We dimly realized the mystic significance of our advent into
the realms of medical learning, until now, when we are omnis-cient
Juniors. All classes have acknowledged our superiority
and have echoed our own words : "We are the best and first
Class in school." And when, in 1908 we get our Diplomas
and our Senior year is ended, the Faculty and our fellow-stu-dents
will give this final verdict : Tulane Medical has been
a better and a brighter place because of the lustre we have
given it.
Historian.
74
AN ODE TO THE AMBITIOUS.
I know, of course, that sometime I
Will be rewarded for the good
That I have done while on this earth
—
And I have done all that I could
;
In that eternal home on high,
Where life will be one grand, sweet song,
I '11 get what 's coming to me, but
I 'd like it as I go along
!
II.
I know they say that wealth is dross,
That riches have no power to ope
The shining gates of Paradise,
And all that foolish line of dope;
Yet I '11 be glad to take a chance
—
In fact, I 'd raise my voice in song.
If I could have all that I want.
And have it as I go along.
III.
I want no statue carved of stone,
No niche in storied Hall of Fame
;
Upon the page of History
I have no wish to write mv name.
I only want my friends, my books,
Food, shelter, music, love so strong
That it will knock at Death ; but yet,
I want them as I go along.
SiGISMUND EbERSTADT.
THB STORY OF THE YEAR.
Chapter V.
"What part have these bright-faced lads and lasses played in the last golden year that I have granted you ?" asked Fath-er
Time.
"Much of the jollity and sunshine of the college world is due to them," said Tulane. "These are my Sophomores.
I have watched over and guided them in the past two years, and they have amply repaid my loving care with loyal devo-tion
and diligence, and from the bright record of their past I can safely predict a radiant future."
Once upon the Campus dreary,
As I pondered weak and weary,
Deeply pondering o'er the champions
And the battle-fields of yore,
And I murmured, gently sighing,
"Are our college glories dying?
Who will bear our pennant gleaming
To the victories we are dreaming?"
And voice prophetic whispered,
"He will triumph evermore.
He the doughty Sophomore."
Then I said, inquiring ever,
"Who so learned and so clever
;
Who will cram his vast cerebrum
With all prehistoric lore?
When with other teams we 're vying.
Who will send the pigskin flying?
Who will be our peerless hero,
Spending strength and spilling gore?"
And the voice prophetic shouted
Jubilantly evermore,
"Lo, our gallant Sophomore !"
76
17
CI/ASS OF 1909.
Myra Pond President.
LuciLE Lewis Vice-President.
Bertha Woi.brette Treasurer.
RocHELLE Cachet Secretary.
Natalie Scott Historian.
Hilda Phelps Basket-Bail Captain.
FLOWER.
Carnation with Fern.
YELL.
Nineteen naught nine
!
Nine, naught nine
!
One, nine, naught, nine
!
Nineteen nine
!
MOTTO.
"Ad Astra per Aspera."
COLORS.
Black and Green.
80
NEWCOMB SOPHOMORB STATISTICS.
AcKERMAN, Dorothy, *M; Class Poet; Y. W. C. A.
ALLE^f, RosETTA, Y. W. C. A. ; French Circle ; Newcomb Tennis
Club.
Barnwell, Nettie, AA*; Y. W.C. A.
Barton, Natalie, Newcomb Tennis Club.
Beranger, Santine.
BoaTner, Josephine, Newcomb Tennis Club.
Booth, Emma.
Brown, Elise, Secretary Dramatic Club (2).
Davidson, Gladys, Y. W. C. A. ; Newcomb Tennis Club.
Delcroix, Desiree.
Drott, Violet.
Gochet, RochellE, AOn; Secretary (2); Y. W.C. A.
George, Agnes, nB«; Vice-President (i).
Gilmore, Martha, IIB*; Sub-Editor of Jambalaya.
GrabenheimEr, Lucille, Newcomb Tennis Club.
GuYOL, Caroline, Aon.
Hern, Caroline, Newcomb Tennis Club.
Hyman, Aimee La Villebeuvre, French Circle.
H\'MAN. Jeanne La Villebeuvre Manager of Basket-Bali
Team (2); French Circle.
JOFFRiON, Clara, Tennis Club.
Leopold, Edith, President Newcomb Tennis Club.
Lewis, Lucille, Vice-President (2) ; Y. W. C. A.
LoEB, Eda.
Machauer, L.
MoHR, Blanche.
Phelps, Hilda, KKF; Captain Basket-Bail Team ; Y. W.C.A.;
Class President (i) ; Newcomb Tennis Club.
Pond, Myra, AA«; Class President (2) ; Y. W. C. A.
Rece, Irene, aa*-
Rothschild, Myrtis, Newcomb Tennis Club.
Scott, Natalie, Y. W. C. A. ; Class Historian (2) ; Sub-Editor
of Tulane Weekly (i).
Snodgrass, Louise.
Stern, Sara May Lillian, French Circle; Newcomb Tennis
Club.
Sully, Jeanne.
Withers, Virginia, AOH; Y. W. C. A. ; Sub-Editor of rw/ane
Weekly (i).
Wolbrette, Bertha, French Circle; Class Treasurer (2).
81
SPECIALS.
Amsden, Natalie.
Armstrong, Julia, HB*-
CULBERTSON, Louise, AA*'
Diaz, Josephine.
DiLLARD, Mary, IXB*-
Farrar, Jane Kemp, XO-FoLLETT,
Elma, xn, Newcomb Tennis Club.
FuNKENSTEiN, CorinnE, Ncwcomb Tennis Club.
Gunther, Marguerite, *M.
Hart, Adeline Marv.
Hirsch, Emmie, Newcomb Tennis Club.
Jones, Emily AA*- "^
.
LegendrE, Annie, XO, Class Treasurer (i).
Price, W.
Boree, Wilhemma, Newcomb Tennis Club.
Mysing, Lily, AOn, French Circle.
Pike, B.
Raeley, Mary, XO; Y: W. C. A. ; Newcomb Tennis Club.
Westfeldt, Louise, nB*; Sub-Editor of Jambalaya (2)
8a
A HISTORY OF NEWCOMB COLI/BGB.
Chapter XXI.
In this history of the ^sses which greatly influenced
Newcomb, we have now reached a most important date, the
year 1905. In this year was entered the Class of 1909. We
shall sketch as briefly as possible the events of its years at
College.
Its debut was one of unprecedented 6clat. The main
building, in acknowledgment of the coming of the Sovereign
Class, wore its banner. This was indeed a fortunate thing, for
it showed '"09s" supremacy in the outset, so that the usual
struggle between Freshmen and Sophomores was for this time
avoided. The rest of the year was occupied in peaceful and
uncontested sovereignty.
The opening of the next year, however, was marked by
the brief but decisive encounter known as the Battle of the
Colors. Newcomb had again donned the insignia of its rul-ing
Class and all was going peacefully and well. The Fresh-men
had heard of the deeds of their predecessors, and thought
they would do likewise. The first step, they thought, would
be to Clothe Newcomb with their Colors, so they came with
this intention and the Colors necessary for carrying it out.
When they saw the Sophomores, however, doubt assailed them
and they grew afraid. They turned and would have retreat-ed,
but they were too late. The Sophomores saw them, ap-proached,
and perceived their Colors. Realizing that there
could not be a prosperous reign when there was a competitor,
even though such an insignificant one, they determined to crush
at once this show of rivalry; so, gently but firmly, they de-manded
and received the Colors. Thus ended the peaceful
Battle of the Colors, and with it the last show of opposition,
which all realized would have been useless to "1909."
Now, therefore, there was time for the Sophomores to
turn their attention to other matters, and this they did. They
surpassed in the scientific and literary worlds of the College.
They made chemical discoveries wonderful and important,
they handed in mathematical quizzes undeniably perfect ; they
gave vent to glorious outbursts of Spenserian songs; their
history essays have served as models for all succeeding classes,
in fact, they showered welcome gifts of perfect work upon
the astonished and delighted professors.
In basket-ball and in many other things also they sur-passed;
but the account of their other achievements will be
given in another chapter. Historian.
ji\^ asttd jjer aspera
83
SOPHOMOREl
84
I
8s
CIrASS OP 1909.
CLASS OFFICERS.
Richardson Homes President.
W. J. Blanchard Vice-President.
Frank Stonb Secretary and Treasurer.
COLORS.
Crimson and White.
YELL.
KilliKerLool
Ker Lang ! Ker Lang
!
Zipity Zip!
Ker Bang! Ker Bang!
Helli Ker Leckete
!
Helli Ker Line!
Tulane Sophomores,
1909!
86
TUI/ANE SOPHOMORE STATISTICS.
ARNOULT, A. EAGAR, Literary; French Circle; I. P. E. Z.
Club.
ARXOULT, L. D., Scientific, French Circle.
BLANCHARD, WALTER J., *K2, Mechanical Engineering;
T. A. A. ; Vice-President of Sophomore Class ; Class Foot-
Ball Team (i, 2); 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team; Tug-of-War
Team; Class Track Team (i); Assistant Manager of 'Var-sity
Track Team (2^.
BRES, EDWARD SEDLEY, AKE, 0NE, Ci\'il Engineering;
Junior German Club (i, 2); Treasurer Junior German
Club (2); Senior German Club; Class Track Team (i);
Manager Class Foot-Ball Team (2) ; Class Foot-Ball Team
(2); 'Varsity Foot-Ball Squad; Sub-Editor Olive and Blue;
Tug-of-War Team; T. A. A.; Class Basket-Bali Team (i);
Punchke Club; Manager of Class Track Team (2).
BRADBURX, .MUIR, AAH, Scientific; French Circle.
CHAILLE, DAVID JAMISON, ATA, KA«, Civil Engineering;
Tap and Bolt Club ; Cosmos Club ; Mandolin, Banjo and
Guitar Club; Senior German Club; Junior German Club
(i, 2); Vice-President Junior German Club (2): Class
Foot-Ball Team (2) ; Hockey Team; Sub-Editor Olive and
Blue; Artist J.\MB.\L.\Y.^.
CLAYTON, JEAN PAUL, Mechanical Engineering; Substi-tute
on Class Foot-Ball Team: Tug-of-War Team.
DICKSOiN, GEORGE B., Scientific; I. P. E. Z. Club.
FERRER, A. S., Sugar Engineering; Donnitory Tennis Club;
T. A. A.
FOLLETT, JOHN B., Literary; Algiers Social Club (1,2);
Class Foot-Ball Team ; Tug-of-War Team.
FORTIER, JAMES J. A., *A©, ®NE, Literar\-; Glendy Burke;
Vice-President French Circle ; T. A. A. ; Treasurer Junior
German Club; Managing Editor Olive and Blue; Editor
Tulane Weekly; Assistant Business Manager of J.\mbalay.\.
FRANTZ, LOUIS T., *K2, Mechanical Engineering; T. A. A.;
Captain of 'Varsity Basket-Bail Team (2) ; 'Varsity Track
Team (i); Tug-of-War Team; Captain of Class Track
Team (i); Class Foot-Ball Team (2).
GARLAND, ALLEN T., HKA, Literan,-.
GANNON, DONALD BREVARD, ATO, Mechanical Engin-eering;
Cosmos Club; Tap and Bolt Club; Senior German
Club ; Junior German Club ; Class Foot-BaU Team.
GAUCHE, RAYMOND, Literary; Glendy Burke; Managing
Editor Tulane Weekly (2) ; Associate Editor of Tulane
Weekly (i); Assistant Editor Tulanian.
HECHINGER, CARL G., Literary; Tug-of-War.
HOMES, RICHARDSON, HKA, Mechanical Engineering
Punchke Club ; T. A. A. ; President of Sophomore Class
Member of Academic Board; Class Base-Ball Team (i)
Class Track Team (i); Class Foot-Ball Team (2); Assist-ant
Foot-Ball Manager (2); Tug-of-War Team ; Business
Manager O/me and Blue; Class Editor Jambalaya.
87
HOWARD, HENRI, SX, Mechanical Engineering; Junior
German Club.
JACKSON, CHANDLER C, Mechanical Engineering, T. A.
A.; Tug-of-War Team.
LEE, ALONZO CHURCH; KA, Mechanical Engineering;
Secretary Junior Cotillion Club; Class Foot-Ball Team (i)
;
Class Basket-Bail Team (i); Class Track Team (i); 'Var-sity
Basket-Bail Team (i, 2).
LEVY, FERNAND K., Mechanical Engineering; T. A. A.;
Dormitory Tennis Club ; Sight-Seeing Club.
MYERS, B. M., Civil Engineering.
PAGAUD, JAMES LEA, Mechanical Engineering; Class Foot-
Ball Team; Tug-of-War Team; I. P. E. Z. Club.
PASQUIER, CLAUDE M., Jr., *K2, Mechanical Engineer-ing;
PunchkeClub; Tug-of-War Team.
ROBERT, GEORGE, HKA, Mechanical Engineering; Punchke
Club; Tug-of-War Team.
ROTHSCHILD, SIGMUND, Literary; French Circle; Glendy
Burke (Critic); 'Cross-Country Club; Manager Hash
Team; Editor-in-Chief of Tulanian.
SADLER, DUDLEY K., Mechanical Engineering; T. A. A.;
PunchkeClub; Glendy Burke; Class Foot-Ball Team (2);
Tug-of-War Team.
SCHMIDT, ALFRED, Literary; Glendy Burke; Dormitory
Tennis Club ; Sight-Seeing Club ; Assistant Managing Ed-itor
Tulane Weekly.
SCOGIN, JOHN T., Mechanical Engineering; Historian of
Sophomore Class; Tug-of-War Team; Class Foot-Ball
Team (i, 2); 'Varsity Foot-Ball Squad; T. A.A.; 'Cross-
Country Club; Class Track Team (i); Class Base-Ball
Team (i).
SCOTT, NAUMAN STEEL, KA, Civil Engineering; Senior
and Junior German Clubs; Class Foot-Ball Team; Tug-of-
War Team.
SMITH, J. B., IIKA, Mechanical Engineering; Captain Tug-of-
War Team; Captain Class Foot-Ball Team (2); 'Varsity
Foot-Ball Team (i, 2); Class Track Team.
STONE, FRANK F., Civil Engineering; 'Cross-Country Club
;
Secretary of Sophomore Class; Member of Academic
Board; Tug-of-War Team.
STRACK, HENRY F., Mechanical Engineering; Forum; T.
A. A,; Dormitory Tennis Club; Basket-Ball Team (i);
Official Basket-Bali Referee (2) ; Class Base-Ball Team (i).
TERWILLIGER, GILBERT D., AKE, ®NE, Mechanical En-gineering;
Junior German Club ; Secretary Junior German
Club (2).
VALLAS, BRYSON, Civil Engineering; Class Foot-Ball Team
(i, 2); Tug-of-War Team; Class Editor of Jambalaya
Board (i, 2); Class Track Team
.
VILLOLDO, ROGELIO. AKE, Chemical and Sugar Engin-eering.
WILLIAMS, E. G., Chemical Engineering; Glendy Burke (i,
2); Class Track Team.
WILLIAMS, Wm. J., Civil Engineering; 'Cross-Country Club
;
Tug-of-War Team.
WOOD, BURRIS DOWDNEY, KA, Mechanical Engineering;
Vice-President Tulane Junior Cotillion Club ; Class Foot-
Ball Team (i, 2) ; Captain Tulane Hockey Team; T. A. A ;
Punchke Club ; Junior German Club.
YZAGUIRRE, S. M., Civil Engineering; 'Cross-Country Club;
T. A. A. ; Substitute on Class Foot-Ball Team (2) ; Tug-of-
War Team,
88
HISTORY OF CIvASS OF 1909.
Our glory dates from the day of Founders, 1905 A. D.,
when we were called by the name of Freshmen. It was on
this memorable day that we chased the puft'ed-up Sophomores
over hill and dale until there was nothing left to tell the tale
of the '"08s" except crushed derbys, red neckties, and standing
collars, which the Sophomores in a paroxysm of fear tore from
themselves to facilitate their still further flight before the
wrath of the Freshmen. Had it not been for the great love of
our Alma Mater, which is inextinguishable in the breast of
the '"09s," we would have chased them into the Father of
Waters and the Class of '08 would have now been an unknown
quantity.
The next event of any importance in the career of the
of Class of 'og took place after we had succeeded to the name
of Sophomores. It was the training of that husky bunch, the
'"10s," to be modest and useful around the University. Per-haps
we were a little too severe with the young and unsophisti-cated
things ; at any rate, our beloved Dean came to the rescue
and, with tears in his eyes, begged of the mighty men of 'og
to desist and leave the Freshies to his tender care. Then was
called an assemblage of the students of our institution at which
the Class of '09 showed their nobleness and kind-heartedness
by abolishing hazing, and in its place substituted physical con-tests.
But what difference could this make with our illustrious
Class ? Was it not the Sophomores that dragged the Freshies
through a slimy duck-pond, thereby gaining the honor of being
victorious in a tug-of-war? Even after this, those of '10 were
not satisfied, and they made a second attempt to bring honor
to themselves in a game of foot-ball ; but our mighty men of
valor held them down to a zero score, and at last all were made
to recognize the vast and incomprehensible superiority of the
Class of '09. HISTORIA^f.
89
90
~ *- 1907 '-'
IHEDICAL DEPARTMENT
MEDICAL SOPHOMORE STATISTICS.
Second Tear Class, Session 'o6-'o7.
CLASS OFFICERS.
Robert C. FiNLAY '. President. John T. Boyd Secretary and Treasurer.
Robert J. Enochs Vice-President. F. J. O'Connor Historian.
M. A. Watkins, ) ]ams,\laya Editors.
A. M. Gill,
MEMBERS.
Alums, W. B La.
Anderson, C. F. . Tex.
Archibald, E. E La.
Bailey, J. T. Miss.
Barnard, W.C Tex.
Beyt, T. L La.
Boswell, H. P Miss.
Buchannan, C. C Miss.
Burkett, W. T Ala.
Box, C. C Ala.
Boyd, J. T Miss.
Brannon, Troy La.
Brooks, W. F., Jr La.
Brown, J. W La.
Brown, F. T La.
Brock, G. F Tex.
Braswell, W. C (Ala.
Cary, Victor La.
Chapman, C. H Ala.
Cole, J. C Miss.
Cooper, A. S La.
Crumbley, P. B Ga.
Carter, R. O La.
Cranford, W. S Miss.
Dampeer, J. H Miss.
Dawson, H. P Ala.
Davie, N. T Ala.
Douglas, A. E La.
Elebash, C. C Ala.
Enochs, R.J Miss.
Eroche, W. J La.
Faivre, G. W La.
Finlay, R. C La.
Fisher, R. H La.
Fontenot, G. T La.
Fowler, W.D Tex.
Freeman, J. T Miss.
Francez, L. H La.
Gelpi, M. J La.
Gill, A. M Miss.
Gill, W. G Miss.
Gibson, J. I Miss.
Goodall, C. L Tex.
Green, C. C Tex.
Green, J. E Miss.
Gully, P. L Miss.
Gunn, T. A Ala.
Guenther, F. J Tex.
Gleason, J. M La.
Hardy, J." C La.
Hardy, H.W Tex.
Hamner, C. E La.
Hand, A. T Miss.
92
Heineman, A. D La.
Hoge, A. F Ark.
Holdemes, J. T Ark.
Hyde, A. S. J La.
Johnson, M. F Ala.
Jones, H.V La.
Keller, A. A La.
Kidd, O. L La.
Knoble, K. C Tex.
Knox, W.E.J Ala.
Kory, R. C La.
Langston, D. T Miss.
Langlanais, J. R La.
La\vton, J. E., Jr Miss
Lafargue, A. H La.
Lafargue, L. D La.
Lett, F. N Ala.
Letten, A. H La.
Letzerich, A. M Tex.
Leidenheimer, H La.
Livingston, W. H Miss.
Lester, W.C Miss.
Littell, I. F '. .. ..La.
Littlepage, G. F Ala.
Locke, Wellington Miss.
Lynch, C.P Tex.
Mary, A La.
Martinez, R. D La.
Mead, J. A Miss.
Melvin, G. M Miss.
Miller, W.P La.
Miles, W.L Ark.
Michael, J. C La.
Moers, R. H La.
McGuffy, J. H La.
Mclnnis, A. L Tex.
Nabors, S. F Ala.
Neal, S. F Miss.
Newell, S. D Miss.
Nix, J. T.,Jr La.
O'Connor, F. J Tenn.
Oglesby, J. L Ga.
Page, J. H Tex.
Perkins, C. K Miss.
Phillips, T.E Ala.
Ratliff, D. A La.
Reynolds, A. J La.
Raby, R. T Miss.
Rogers, F. A Ala.
Rougon, L B La.
Rush, M. A Miss.
Seymour, D. M N. C.
Shell, T. E Miss.
Smith, R. M La.
Steele, B. W Ala.
Stovall, G. E.. . La.
St. Martin, T. I La.
Tanner, I. F La.
Tenney, J. P La.
Taquino, G. J La.
Toomer, W. A Miss.
Townsend, E. R Tex.
Watts, E. M Tex.
Watkins, M.A .. ..Ala.
Warren, G. T Miss.
Wade, J. I La.
Wallace, J. E U.
Williams, J. B La.
Williams, R. L Miss.
Williamson, E. H Ala
Witte, B. O Tex.
Wright, T. E La.
Wilson, J. W Miss.
Winn, CM U.
Yeager, V. G La.
Zerr, W. G La.
93
HISTORY OF CLASS OF 1909.
It was in the fall of 1905 that there wended their way to
the Crescent City a non-homogeneous body of students, the
individual members of which presented many different phases
of humanity in their varied trainings, ambitions, deportments,
and addresses.
They came from the villages, the towns, the cities of this
broad land of ours, with many varied ambitions as the reason
for their coming, yet they came with one purpose—the purpose
of making the encyclopedia of medical knowledge their own
—
making it their own in order to further the relief of human
suffering and the advance of medical science.
After many experiences of reaching the city, finding the
ways and means of gaining an audience with our august, re-vered,
and learned Dean, and answering the question satis-factorily,
"Well, have you got the money?" they took up the
task of effecting an organization.
Soon the energetic members of the Class in due form
called a meeting of the students of '09. Officers were elected
and the usual rules adopted.
It was amid the jeers and hisses and knowing looks of
the upper class-men we thus made our entrance into Tulane
medical life.
After spending several months in obtaining some initia-tion
into the mysteries of the "Why" of Chemistry, a "parole"
of things about the life of a medical student, the Class im-pressed
the Faculty as being a Class full of "grit" and having
the quality therefore of holding its banner high above its rivals
in such contests and victories in which the Class wrished to be
a contesting factor.
The Class has ever endeavored to be an active participant
in all affairs of interest to the University, taking an active
interest in some of its athletic activities and lending aid by
the presence of its members at the time of the crucial test on
the field.
Be it said to the credit of the officers of the Class of '09
that they transacted all duties laid upon their shoulders in a
business-like manner and won the approving satisfaction of
all the Class.
In the fall of '06 the Class returned with all the ego-tism,
vain pride, and dignity proper to Sophomores, in honor
of the event of their having worn off the "freshness of the
Fresh," and having been admitted from the Class of "babies"
into the "peckerlarities" and "crackteristics" of being a
Sophomore.
Immediately after its entrance into the new sphere of
"Sophomoredom" the Class placed its hands upon the rounds
of the ladder of success, determined to climb upward beyond
any class which had preceded it.
Thus having narrated to you, reader, something of our
former existence, we invite you to critically but kindly watch
our future progress in our chosen profession. Historian.
94
"THE NEW PYGMALION.'
By Geo. J. Theriot, '07.
I.
A tale of old with a setting new
Beneath clear skies of azure blue,
'Mid tropic palms and shady groves
Where Zephyr at his pleasure roves
;
A favored spot, to Nature dear,
Steeped in a rosy atmosphere.
Laden with rich and sweet perfumes,
Exhaled by hosts of Southern blooms;
A wonderland of sun and flowers,
A paradise of stars and bowers,
A realm fit for Utopians,
By fairies called New Orleans.
III.
Fast fingers shaped the uncouth mass.
Into a tender winsome lass.
With figure lithe and smiling face.
Replete with rich supernal grace
;
A maiden blessed with beauty rare,
With loveliness beyond compare.
The full young lips, the pearly ear.
The soulful eyes, so large and clear,
The youthful cheeks, the curling hair.
The slender hands, the rounded arni.;.
All yielded a being of dimpled charms,
A woman, fairest of the fair.
II.
There dwells a sculptor young and grand.
With noble brow and skillful hand.
Whose statues breathe the breath of life.
And mingle in the great world's strife.
One day to him a stranger came,
A kindly, good, and gentle dame.
Who, an admirer of his craft.
Presented him a marble shaft
Of wondrous beauty, white and fine.
From which to carve a form divine.
Straightway, from the column cold.
His masterpiece he began to mold.
IV.
But lo !—the myth must be complete
—
The sculptor loved his statue sweet,
And for her pleaded life and love.
Not from proud \'enus. nor from Jove.
But from the Southland's deities.
Who heard his prayer and made her his.
She lived, and love lit up her face
As she returned his fond embrace.
And gave the kiss of loyalty
To him for all eternity.
He blushed. Tulane the wise and great.
And "Newcomb" named his new-found mate.
95
THE STORY OF THE YEAR.
Chapter VI.
"My youngest," said Tulane, her face glowing with maternal pride, "Look, Father Time how eagerly they press for-ward
on the roads of college life and learning, to win the highest places as the years roll by! How earnestly they follow
the footsteps of those who have gone triumphantly before !" And even Father Tiine's grim face relaxed as he looked upon
the Freshmen.
Who comes with sunlight on his hair?
Whose face is smooth and pink and fair?
Who lisps in accents sweet and rare?
The Freshman.
Who wears a tie of rosy red?
Whose daily fare is milk and bread?
Who early seeks his little bed?
The Freshman.
96
C3BQ30C30 PQBSCnBa
98
99
FRESHMAN CLASS STATISTICS.
Adler, Bianca, Spedal.
Bloomfield, Anna Henry, Regular.
BoswELL, Edna, Regular.
BousLOG, Helen, Regular.
Cahn, Reine, Special.
Campbell, Flossie, Special; Y. W. C. A.
Clark, Sue, Special; Y. W. C. A.
CoRDiLL, Jane, Special.
Crouse, Florence, KKr, Regular; Y. W. C. A.
CusT, Sarah, Regular; Delegate on Players' Committee.
Delavigne, Gertrude, Regular.
DiELMAN, Elsie, Regular.
DiLLARD, Fay, IIB*, Regular; Class Treasurer.
Dinkelspiel, Cl.^RA, Regvilar.
Drake, Clifford, KKr, Regular; Sub-Editor of Jambalaya.
Dunn, Marion, Regular.
Dunn, Regina, Regular.
Fay, Anita, xn. Regular.
FicKLEN, Bessie, KKr, Regular.
Flower, Maude, KKr, Regular.
Gauche, Mildred, Regular.
GoDCHAUX, Justine, Regular; Secretary of Class.
Gordon, Dorothy, Regular.
Granger, Regina, Special.
Gregory, Lucille Regular.
Harvey, Maude, Regular; Y. W. C. A.
Hernandez, Agnes, Regular.
Hickman, Emma, Regular.
Hollingsworth, Josephine, Regular.
HoDSON, Estelle, Special.
HOLZMAN, DORAH, Regular; Class Poet.
Hyde, Ethel, Regular.
Janvier, Lois, QB*, Class President; Regular; Y. W. C. A.
Jones, Margaret, Special.
Kamien, Sadie, Regular.
Kerlln, Iris, Regular.
Laub, Rosalie, Special.
LoNGLEY, Seymoura, Special.
May, Josephine, Special.
Meyerxng, Beatrix, Regular.
lOI
MitLER, Edith, Regular; Y. W. C. A.; Delegate on Players'
Committee; Class Historian.
Monroe, Marion, KKr, Regular; Vice-President.
Morel, Anita, Special.
Morris, Innes, AOn, Regular.
MouLTQN, Gladys, Regular.
MouNGER, Mary, Regular; Representative of Y. W. C. A.
Cabinet.
MouToN, Lucille, Regular.
MimPHY, Irving, IIB*, Regular.
Netter, Roy, Special.
NoTT, Hilda, Regular.
Pond, Edith, AA*, Regular.
Pearce, Mary, AOII, Regular; Sub-Editor Jambalaya.
PEArce, Nellie May, Regular.
Pipes, Sarah, Regular.
Randolph, Portia, Regular; Y. W. C. A.
Roos, Elsie, Regular.
Samuel, Blanche, Regular.
Sapkord, Dorothy, AOn, Regular; Y. W. C. A.; Sub-Editor
of Tulane Weekly.
Seiler, Agatha, Regular.
SuMRALL, Ruth, Regular.
Spearing, May, Regular.
ShlEnker, Hortense, Regular; Treasurer of Dramatic Club.
West, RosiE, Regular.
Wolfe, Lillian, Regular.
White, Josephine, AA*, Regular.
WarlEck, Frances, Regular.
ZoDiAG, Alma, Special.
FRBSHMAN CI^ASS HISTORY.
103
A PROPHECY FROM MARS.
High up in his turret bleak and bare,
The astronomer of Mars
Through his great telescope did stare,
To search the twinkling stars
;
At last his wandering instrument
Upon the earth did light,
And then, to his astonishment,
He saw a wondrous sight.
The great astronomer in surprise
Cried out, "I know "tis so.
That the sight which now doth greet my eyes
The stars to me did show.
I knew my arts had told me then
It was to come to pass
That Newcomb Freshmen, '1910,'
Would be a Vv'ondrous Class.
A banner olive and bright gold
Met his bewildered gaze;
It spread its graceful silken fold
High up to Heaven's blue haze
And on its soft expanse of green.
In golden letters bright.
The figures "1910" were seen,
Like rays of purest light.
"I read by mystic signs and true
How great this Class would be.
What splendid deeds it was to do
For all the world to see.
In learning it would win renown,
In the arts and every science.
Through the years th.it lead to the Cap and Gown,
'Twould at 'Failure' cast defiance.
"I 've watched for many a changing year
The classes 'mong all men
;
But none have been to me so dear.
As the Class of iqio.
And 'tis their wondrous banner now
Floats heavenward so bold.
And I, the sage of Mars, do bow
To the Olive and the Gold."
DORAH B. HOLZMAN,
Class Poet.
104
io6
CLASS OF 1910.
CLASS OFFICERS.
H.Bass President. W.George Secretary.
J, W. Reily Vice-President. E. EusTis Treasurer.
COLORS.
Garnet and Blue.
MEMBERS.
Bass, H. L—Classical ; 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team ; Captain
Freshman Foot-ball Team ; Class President ; Member
Academic Board ; Tug-of-War.
BiERHORST, H. W.—Scientific; Forum.
Blum, Milton.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering; T.
A. A.
Brandon, John William.—Sigma Nu; Scientific.
Brockman, Thos. H.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineer-ing;
Basket-Bail Squad.
Callan, Nicholas.—Delta Kappa Epsilon ; Literary ; Glendy
Burke.
Cardet, Albert.—Chemical and Sugar Engineering; Tulane
Hockey Team ; T. A. .A.. ; C. C. C.
Carrico, Harry G.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Forum ; Basket-Bail Squad.
ChaFFE, J. B.—Alpha Tau Omega ; Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; Glendy Burke; Junior German Club.
Chambers, H. E., Jr.—Phi Delta Theta ; Mechanical and
Electrical Engineering; Junior German Club.
Cohn, Chas. K.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Glendy Burke; Freshman Foot-Ball Team.
Coleman, Hunter E.—Classical.
Cushman, Milson S.—Literarj'; Forum.
Dalche, August V.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
D'Aunoy, Rigney.—Scientific ; Fonim.
Demorest, Frank.—Scientific ; Tug-of-War.
DiETTEL, A. A.—Civil Engineering.
Donaldson, Guy R.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
DosHER, E. J., Jr.—Scientific; Glendy Burke.
Dunbar, Charles E.—Sigma Nu ; Literary; Glendy Burke.
Duncan, Brooke, H.—Sigma Chi ; Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; President Junior Cotillion Club.
EusTis, Ernest, L.—Alpha Tau Omega; Beta Alpha; Me-chanical
and Electrical Engineering; Junior German
Club; 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team; Freshman Foot-Ball
Team ; Treasurer Freshman Class.
107
Ernst, Lewis T.—Pi Kappa Alpha; Mechanical and Electri-cal
Engineering; T. A. A.
EwiNG, James L.—Literary; Class Editor Tidane Weekly.
Ferrandon, a. H.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Glendy Burke.
FoRTiER, Leon J.—Alpha Delta Xi ; Scientific ; French Circle.
Foster, R. B., Jr.—Delta Kappa Epsilon; Beta Alpha; Me-chanical
and Electrical Engineering ; Junior German Club.
Gehab, Albert.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Forum.
George, Woodruff.—Alpha Tau Omega ; Scientific ; 'Varsity
Foot-Ball Team; Manager Freshman Foot-Ball Team;
Class Secretary ; Glendy Burke ; Junior German Club
;
Academic Board; Tug-of-War.
GuLLATTA, George J.—Literary.
GusiA, Omar.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Harris, E. Horton.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering
;
Forum; Cross-Country Club; Freshman Foot-Ball Team.
Harpel, Edward.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Glendy Burke.
Harvey, W. H.—Civil Engineering.
Howard, Louis C.—Sigma Chi ; Beta Alpha ; Civil Engineer-ing;
Junior Cotillion Club.
Hill, John B.—Kappa Alpha; Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering.
Jewell, Hewitt C.—Scientific.
JuRGENS, George.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Forum.
Koch, Richard.—Delta Kappa Epsilon ; Mechanical and Elec-trical
Engineering ; Junior German Club ; Freshman Foot-
Ball Team ; T. A. A.
Lacroix, Paul G.—Scientific.
io8
Lee, a. Church.—Kappa Alpha; Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; T. A. A.; 'Varsity.
Levy, Lewis Harris.—Scientific; Forum; Basket-Bail Team.
Len'Y, Harold A.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
LxDDLE, Edward BloomField.—Literary ; Forum.
LousTf^LOT, Louis A.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineer-ing;
Glendy Burke; T. A. A.
Maginnis, Donald A.—Alpha Tau Omega; Pi Chi Kappa;
Mechanical and Electrical Engineering; Junior German
.Club; Beta Alpha; Sub-Editor Jambalaya.
McGehee, Robert Micajah.—Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Scien-tific.
McGuiRK, Arthur.—Alpha Delta Xi ; Literary.
Metz, Waldemar R.—Scientific; Glendy Burke; Cross-Coun-try
Club.
Meyer, Morris Daniel.—Literary; Glendy Burke.
Miller, Maurice.—Civil Engineering.
MiLLiKEN, J. H.—Alpha Tau Omega; Special Engineering;
Junior German Club.
McMillan, Lee Richards.—Phi Delta Theta; Pi Chi Kappa;
Mechanical and Electrical Engineering; Junior German
Club ; Cross-Country Club ; T. A. A.
Moore, Godfrey.—Classical; Glendy Burke.
Moore, Wilmot Henry.—Literary; Forum.
MouTON, Marc. M.—Literary.
Norman, William Henderson.—Alpha Tau Omega; Class-ical
; Glendy Burke, Junior German Club.
Olroyel, Foster, Jr.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Parham, Arthur.—Delta Tau Delta; Literary; Junior Ger-man
Club; Glendy Burke.
Phelps, Irwin M.—Scientific.
Phillips, Albert.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Glendy Burke.
PocHE, J. E.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Prados, Rufus H.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Pragst, G. G.—I'i Kappa Alpha; Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering; T. A. A.
Pratt, John G.—Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pi Chi Kappa; Civil
Engineering; Junior German Club.
Pitcher, Sargent.—Delta Kappa Epsilon ; Theta Nu Epsilon
;
Civil Engineering ; Cross-Country Club ; Tulane Man-dolin
Club; Glendy Burke ; Junior Cotillion Club; 'Varsity
Track Team (i); 'Varsity Base-Ball Team (i) ; Sub.
'Varsity Foot-Ball Team (i).
Rainev, J. Woodson.—Alpha Tau Omega ; Mechanical and
Electrical Engineering; Junior German Club.
Renshaw, Donald.—Phi Delta Theta; Civil Engineering;
Junior German Club ; French Circle ; T. A. A.
Richardson, James Kemp.—Delta Kappa Epsilon; Mechan-ical
and Electrical Engineering; Junior German Club;
Class Foot-Ball Team ; T. A. A.
Reilv, James W.—Sigma Alpha Epsilon ; Pi Chi Kappa; Me-chanical
and Electrical Engineering; Junior German Club;
Vice-President Class; T. A. A.
Roach, James Philip, Jr.—Literary.
Robertson, John Gano Winter.—Sigma Chi; Civil Engin-eering
; Freshman Foot-Ball Team ; Junior German Club
;
Beta Alpha.
Rose, Glenn W.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Russell, Edwin Thomas.—Phi Delta Theta ; Mechanical and
Electrical Engineering; Junior German Club; T. A. A.
Schnack, p. C.—Civil Engineering.
Scott, J. W.^Kappa Alpha; Mechanical and Electrical En-gineering
; Junior German Club ; Treasurer Junior Ger-man
Club (l); President Junior German Club (2);
Cosmo Club;T. A. A.
Seip, Micah Flint.—Phi Delta Theta ; Literary ; T. A. A.
Sharp, Covington H.—Sigma Chi; Beta Alpha; Mechanical
and Electrical Engineering; Junior Cotillion Club.
Sherrard, James, Jr.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Silver, E. De Sncet.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Glendy Burke; T. A. A.
Simon, Eugene.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Freshman Foot-Ball Team.
Smith, C. L.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Smith, J. Baker.—Sigma Nu ; Mechanical and Electrical En-gineering
; T. A. A.
Storm, Samuel Becker.—Mechanical and Electrical Engin-eering.
TiPPiN, Hubert H.—Phi Delta Theta; Special Engineering.
TiPPiN, Will Haile.—Phi Delta Theta ; Civil Engineering.
Trousdale, Chas. W.—Literary ; Sub-Editor Jambal.^va.
Trevejo, Rodriguez.—Mechanicail and Electrical Engineering.
VioscA, Rene Ad\ms.—Literary; Foinim.
Watkins, Boyd.—Alpha Tau Omega; Literary; Glendy
Burke ; Junior German Club.
White, Clarence M.—Literary.
White, Percy.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
White, Tho.mas.—Civil Engineering.
White, Richard Franklin.—Kappa Alpha; Classical; Glen-dy
Burke ; Tug-of-War.
West, George Sebastian.—Phi Delta Theta; Phi Chi Kappa;
Mechanical and Electrical Engineering; Freshman Foot-
Ball Team ; T. A. A.
Willis, Harry E.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Wilson, Ralph J.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Wolf, Frank A.—Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Wolf, Monroe.—Scientific.
109
no
III
MEDICAL FRESHMAN.
CLASS OFFICERS.
J. D. David President.
J. T. Bean Vice-President.
J. D. Taylor Secretary and Treasurer.
TB LAm^r' [
^'^'^'' "^ JAMBALAYA.
M. Newhauser Historian.
CLASS ROLL.
Ahearn, W. J Louisiana
Austin, R. B Mississippi
Adams, D. B., B.S South Carolina
Brown, M. E Louisiana
Braun, I Texas
Barker, C. J., A.B., XZX Louisiana
Branch, A. C Georgia
Brinson, J. B., ATO Florida
Bean, J. F., B.S., *A® Alabama
Buckley, J. C Mississippi
Beridon, L. F Louisiana
Bateman, M Louisiana
Broussard, J. A Louisiana
Gates, J. M., A.B Texas
Childs, W. L Louisiana
Carten, G. A Louisiana
Cole, B. G., AOA Louisiana
Clinton, L. O., AOA Louisiana
Chauvin, H. E., AKK Louisiana
Chatelain, L ' Louisiana
Chaisson, J. L Louisiana
Coella, C. E., Ph.B Ecuador
David, J. D Louisiana
Dauterive, H. J Louisiana
De Mahy, M. J., M.A Louisiana
Donald, D. C Alabama
Delcourt, H. C Louisiana
Evans, B. P Mississippi
Paget, F. M Louisiana
Feagin, H. C Texas
Freeman, E. S., IIKA Louisiana
Grafton, G. H Mississippi
Gill, D. D Louisiana
Greene, N. E., *X Mississippi
Guillotte, W. F Louisiana
Hewitt, W. B Louisiana
Harrell, L. H Florida
Henry, G. F Florida
Hoag, J. K Louisiana
Hemler, J. H Louisiana
Hountha, J. M., A.B Louisiana
Jones, L. W Texas
Kennedy, T. P South Carolina
King, E. L., K2 Louisiana
Kahn, R. H Tennessee
Lavigne, Jr., J. B., A.B Louisiana
Luck, A. J., A.B Louisiana
Landry, E.N Louisiana
Larose, J. B., A.B Louisiana
Luckett, F. B Louisiana
Lindner, H. J Louisiana
LischkofF, M .. . Florida
Love, W. A., A.B., KA, XZX Louisiana
Longuis, W. P Arkansas
La Salle, A. C Louisiana
Lobrans, W., M.A Louisiana
McCants, R. S Mississippi
Murphy, P. F Louisiana
Murphy, G. D., AOA Louisiana
McQueen, J. P., *A®, *X Alabama
McMillan, U Louisiana
Morris, G. L Louisiana
McClendon, J. H., A.B., AKK Louisiana
Miller, W. E Louisiana
Miller, V. H Louisiana
Mitchell, J. G Louisiana
Milain, J. F Mississippi
McGehee, E. C Mississippi
McNeil, J. A Mississippi
Moore, H. J., A* Tennessee
Newhauser, M Louisiana
Neal, T. M Texas
Nelson, H. E Louisiana
Olivier, C. K Louisiana
Odeneal, T. H., K2, AKK Mississippi
Owen, J. T Louisiana
Olsen, O. H., HKA Mississippi
Pridgen, R. E Texas
Pinkston, J. C, nFA Alabama
Patterson, J. C Alabama
Peace, T. C, 2X, AKK Alabama
Quin, F. W Louisiana
Rougon, F. F Louisiana
Reynolds, A. H Arkansas
Roeling, H., Jr., Ph.G Louisiana
Rankin, H. P., XZX Alabama
Smith, J. W. A Mississippi
Staring, H. L Louisiana
Stewart, J. H Mississippi
Segura, J. O Louisiana
Scallan, A Louisiana
Savage, T. C Alabama
Schulze, E. C Texas
Tyler, L. I Mississippi
Todds, E. B Cuba
Trialo, J. M Xexas
Tayler, J. D., B.L .Louisiana
Tynes, C. E Mississippi
Trice, H. S., *X Mississippi
Walther, H Louisiana
WilHams, C. B., B.S., AOA Mississippi
West, D. P., SN Virginia
Whisnaut, B Alabama
Wise, J. Z., SAE Louisiana
Yancey, E. R Louisiana
113
FRESHMAN CLASS HISTORY.
Text: "He walked right in, walked
To THE Dear Public :
Realizing your anxiety, and desire to be informed as to
the remarkable Class of 1910, I hasten to so enlighten you.
Having gone carefull)' into the past history of each and
every student connected with this body, and from carefully
compiled statistics, it is my pleasant duty to .inform you that
from an intellectual and moral standpoint, 1910 stands fore-most,
pre-eminently, the acknowledged leader of any Class
which ever entered the portals of Tulane.
And why?
Simply and wholly because she has the material. Science
and Destiny have so arranged it that exactly one hundred years
after the discovery of Algiers by Prof. Metz, a class of med-ical
students be formed, composed of picked men from dififerent
sections of the fair Southland, to perpetuate the memory of
this most noted alchemist. How well she fulfilled the fondest
hopes reposed in her by Science and Destiny is exemplified by
a carefully perusal of her history.
With an ease born of wisdom and learning did she take
hold of the various branches allotted her, and nobly did she
all around, and walked right out again."
acquit herself. Her record is such as to cause a Senior to
doff his hat and even an arrogant Soph, to acknowledge her
superiority. Questions on slips of paper are received daily by
the President of this Class, from the Juniors, and are answered
without discrimination. A most interesting request to stand
God-father of the Class was made by the Dean sometime
during the month of December, but such request having pre-viously
been made by the President of the College, and not
desiring to have a conflict between these most learned. gentle-men
(with the possibility of blows), after mature deliberation,
the offer was respectfully declined.
All matters pertaining to the welfare of the Class are
handled in a manner which clearly bespeaks the executive
ability of the various officers and it is the concensus of opinion
among the entire student body, and a fact generally conceded
by the Faculty of Tulane, that the Class of 1910 will produce
more scientists in the medical field, than has ever been ac-complished
in the fifty years.
This fact in itself was such as to cause a Commission to
be appointed by the Johns Hopkins University to devise ways
114
and means of intimidating the members of this Class to join
their body. Such action on their part was soundly condemned
by both press and pulpit, as you who read the various period-icals
are well aware.
To go further into detail is absolutely unnecessary as suf-ficient
information is given to enable you to comprehend intel-ligently
just what has been accomplished. Finally, please re-member
that this Class has adopted a slogan, which in the years
to come will shine forth in the annals of medicine and surgery
as a beacon to the succeeding generations of man
—
viz.,
"We don't know where we 're going, but are on our
way."
Bum facet clamat. Mayer Newhauser.
Historian.
"S
Charlbs J. Bi,oo3i
John E. Rogan. .
OFFICERS.
.... President.
. Vice-President.
ii6
ACADEMIC SPECIALS.
Cuspo, Sidney, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Faithorn, R. L., KA, Special Civil Engineering; Junior Cotil-lion
Club; Sub-Editorial Board Jambalaya.
Garland, Allen, Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
HoERNER, John, Special Literary.
Kreh, Hermann Albert, Sugar Chemistry.
Luck, William T., Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Sub-Editorial Board Jambalaya.
Menendez, Joseph Garcia, Sugar Chemistry.
Robinson, William Hutchison, KA, Special Engineering;
Junior Cotillion Club.
Seaver, Arthur Y., Mechanical and Electrical Engineering;
Track Team; Treasurer Cross-Country Club; T. A. A.;
Assistant Business Manager Tulane Weekly; Heidelberg
Chorus.
Vigo, Sidney Geo., KA*, Mechanical and Electrical Engin-ering;
T. A. A.; Yell Leader, '06- '07.
Andrews, Claiborne W., Sugar Chemistry Special; S.'VE;
Secretary Class; 'Varsity Foot-Ball Team; Junior German
Club; Punchke Club.
Bloom, Charles James, AAH, KA*, Courses No. 2: Class
Foot-BaU Team(i); Sketch Club (i); Glendy Burke
(i, 2, 3); Treasurer G. B. S. (2, 3); President Class (2, 3);
Players' Club (2) ; T. A. A. (2, 3) ; Assistant Business Man-ager
Jambalaya (2); Business Manager Tulanian (3);.
French Circle (3) ; Treasurer French Circle (3).
Bruns, Logan, Special Literary and Engineering.
Cade, Overton, Sigma Nu, Special Sugar Chemistry.
Clarke, Geo. Steele, T. A. A. ; Foot-BaU Squad.
Clarke, Lewis S., Jr., Mechanical and Electrical Engineering.
Hayward, J. D., Mechanical Engineering; 2X, German Club.
Milliken, Jess, ATn, Junior German Club.
Pitcher, Kenneth, KA, Sugar Chemistry; Foot-Ball Team;
Senior Cotillion Club : Punchke Club.
Rogan, KA*; Vice-President Class; Foot-BaU Team; T. A. A.
JuDD, M. B., SN, Special Civil Engineering.
Armstrong, C. R., ATfi, KA*; Tap and Bolt Club; T. A. A.;
Secretary Class (i) ; Junior German Club (2, 1) ; President
Junior German Club (2); 'Cross-Country Club (2) ; Class
Foot-BaU Team ; Tulane German Club (3) ; Cosmo Club
(i, 2, 3); Mandolin, Banjo, and Guitar Club (2, 3); Sketch
Club.
117
JOHN PETER'S PET PUPPY.
Lucia had a little dog,
With hair of black and white,
To follow her to school one day.
Much to the girls' delight.
Those girls they fed that dog on bread,
They fed that dog on jam
—
And after that they gave him cake.
And then they gave him ham.
But yet, despite these dainties.
That dog he wanted more
Ala.s ! He spied poor "Brother's" coat,
A-hanging on the door.
And when dear Willie sought his coat,
'Twas not behind the door.
A sorrj' wreck he found instead,
A-lying on the floor.
Let 's follow that dog's movements.
What next will he be at?
Oh, gracious! mercy! goodness me!
He 's eating "Johnnie's" hat
!
Woe to thee, unhappy hat
—
Oh, bitter is thy fate!
Thy friends they sought to save thy life.
But they got there too late.
And on thy mutilated form
That once had been so fair
Thy owner's gaze is riveted
With looks of wild despair.
Another hat must do thy work.
That thou performed so well.
But how he '11 get that other hat
Is something I can't tell.
Fair Art Students will keep thee, tho',
And treasure your remains,
For the sake of that sweet, noble head
That thou didst once contain.
ii8
ART SCHOOI/.
COLORS.
Red, Blue, and Yellow.
OFFICERS ART STUDENT BODY.
Anne Robertson, President.
Editor Jambalaya; Editor Tw/ane Weekly.
Julia Byrne, Vice-President; Treasurer; AOn.
Lynne WaTkins, 'o8. Captain Basket-Bail Team.
I20
121
Marian Moore Beane, Pi Beta Phi.
Elizabeth Roane Lansing.
Margaret Stirling Lea.
Ida Florence MacDonald.
JUNIOR CLASS.
May Syndor Morel.
Vera Walker Morel, President.
Lynne Watkins, Basket-Bali Captain and Sub-Editor of
Jambalaya.
Ella Miriam Wood, Sub-Editor of Jambalaya.
122
in«ene nms r vonNakRovopfl**
VImO FkBunisHIO NKR BRIISM
RND HSRPCrf
*Til.t.RT LRarCOLO OF HERAT.
She MRS HEBOKO T«f|RT'
cnvinc swifRnea sr
TRRSie-ftVftB »«EM •
SOPHOMORE CI,ASS.
May Nina Schmide.
Mary Williamson Summey.
Sub-Editor of Jambalaya.
Janie Bert Ennis.
Elizabeth Antoinette Horner.
Frances Lampton.
Katharine Leach,KKF,
Class President and Sub-Editor of Jambalava.
Reine Reeeli.a Martin. .
Molly Harrison Palfrey.
Mary Cecelia Riffel.
Eleanor Woodward.
Vice-President.
May Louise Dunn.
133
FRESHMAN CI^ASS.
Margaret May Arnet.
Clementine Helene Bernard, Sub-Editor of Jambalaya.
Aletha Beatrice Clemens.
Bernadetti Elyardi.
Melanie Tracy Earle.
Gertrude Alice Fallon.
Emily Mary Freret, Class President.
Marie Louise Fredricks, Sub-Editor of Jambalaya.
Ellen Theresa Garie.
Ly.nette Marie Hoffman, Class Secretary and Treasurer.
Mary Rachel Marsh.^ll.
Bettie Stewart Stanfield.
Phenie Marie Veters.
Adele Olive White, Vice-President.
194
ART SPECIALS, POST-GRADUATES AND POTTERY DESIGNERS.
SPECIALS.
Mrs. Earl Wills Anderson.
Bessie Leinad Byrd.
Cordelia Ann Barton.
Kathryn May Burgin.
Clifford Bryan Chaffe.
Bethia Caffery.
Hilda May Cocke.
Marian Gaylb Denegre.
Georgia Bertha Drennan.
Elizabeth Flint.
Beatrix Mary Fortune.
Carmen Madelainie Gonzales.
Nina Ellison Harper.
Mrs. C. E. Howard.
Sally S. Holt.
Betty MacArthur.
Louise E. Howe.
Sadie A. E. Irvine.
Florence Jardet.
cvnthlv s. littlbjohn.
POST-GRADUATES.
Bemis Sharp.
Virginia D. Meyer.
Adele Emily Morales.
Elizabeth McMillan Jones.
Lucia Dillon Jordan.
Mrs. Bainbridge Logan.
Janie Barksdale Miller, IIB*.
Helen Morrell.
Flora Beaslev Murphy, nB*, W. P.
May Stirling Parkerson, AOn.
Elizabeth Gorden Porter.
Hilda May Roder.
Mabel Rouette Shirley.
Margaret Bothwell Sprout.
Mrs. Lilly Boone Stewart.
Martha Gasquet Westfeldt.
Emma Jamisine Urquhart.
JUANITA Marie Mauras.
Edna Lyman Reed, AOn.
Anna Frances Simpson.
Grace Blethen.
U.
Henrietta Davidson Bailey.
Marie Levering Benson.
Emma Ruth Burgess.
Mary Williamsons Butler, HB*.
POTTERY DESIGNERS.
Alice Rosalie Urquhart.
I2S
Marie de Hoa-Le Blanc.
Sara Bloom Levy.
Leona Nicholson.
Maude Robinson.
THE PRUB NEWCOMB SONG.
Fannie Heaslip Lea.
{Air: "Die Wacht am Rhein.")
Where stars arise in southern skies Where deep and slow the currents flow
And loyal love in laughter lies
—
Past silent field and city glow,
O Newcomb fair, we bring to thee We vow our loyal hearts to thee
;
Our heart's allegiance bold and free; O Newcomb, Mother, thine are we.
We bring it thee, who e'er shall be From sea to sea shall never be
The star of our ascendancy. Thy equal in our loyalty.
Newcomb, our Alma Mater, stand we nigh I Newcomb, our Alma Mater, stand we nigh I
Newcomb, thy daughters lift thy flag on high
!
Newcomb, thy daughters lift thy flag on high
!
Where flames the fray, or fades the day.
By open trail or darkling way,
We stand thy sword and shield to be,
O Newcomb, Mother, great and free,
No dawn shall see our army flee.
No foe shall shake our trust in thee
—
Newcomb, our Alma Mater, stand we nigh I
Newcomb, thy daughters lift thy flag on high I
126
piMor\eu-o'T^-
127
I,AW CI,ASS STATISTICS.
p. M. Adema.—Law Debating Club ; Forum.
F. W. Ar-mbruster.
David J. Anders.
Edward Ballinger.
John E. Brogan.—KA, Law Debating Club.
G. BoswELL.—ATA, AX; IV; German Club; B.L., University
of Virginia.
Robert E. Brumbv.—KA; Alumni Editor of Tulane Weekly;
T. U. A. A.; Vice-President of Tennis Club; Student
Member Athletic Advisory' Board; C. C. C.
Francis S. Cannon.—K2; IV.; Tulane Law Debating Club;
Law Editor for Jambalaya; Class Executive Committee;
Five o'clock Club.
Jules A. Carville.
J.-VMES C. Casserrily.—IV; Law Debating Club; Chairman
Executive Committee; Five o'Clock Club.
D. T. Canan.
Arthur Cannerlv.
Thomas W. Collins.
Ralston Colb.
A. C. Ch.\ppins.—*A®, 0NE; Law Debating Club ; Ex-Editor
of Jambalay.\.
Gilbert Cosulich.—Law Debating Club; Secretary' Forum
Literary Society.
A. J. Charbonne