The Campanile Camera, Was the Sur- Prise of the Season

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Campanile Camera, Was the Sur- Prise of the Season V ., y p , i^^% r N ?^i- n Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/campanile1917rice r^ M H! N DA Ji, PV, in lllnl iL^ AM MARSH NS OLUME ? 191' EDGAR ODELL LOVETT i^^r^c: ? 1^ O EDCAt-ODELL A \ LOVETT^- WHOSE &1 LOFTY IDEALS AND ki NOBLE AIMS HAVE SER3/ED A3 AN 1N= 3PIRATION TO VS r. THROVH=OVT OVR tf' COLLEGE LIFE 'WE THE SENIOR. CLASS or 19I7«EESPECT" FVLLY DEDICATE THL1 VOLVME OF THE CAMPAMILE U ^^^^p^^^^^^s^^^^-^^. THE STAFF OF THE 1917 CAMPANILE OFFER THIS VOL- U M E TO THE i\l EMBERS A N D FRIENDS OF THE RICE INSTITUTE AS A PERMANENT RECORD OF SCENES AND EXPERIENCES APT TO BE FOR- GOTTEN im^HSBBS^K^KIIHP^ - ' - ^*' ';^ ., . WmgiiW^^''^^^^ ' ' -V- ..-«-.. 5 'iif. aiCk! ...JHiLm:.' W^^'^^i'*^'' '^.* ' (J " . _ - . • "'„' ru -rrrii--t.ifWiM i Wf ;. :-^''V.--';- A" ^.-.v^'-'-l^v^"' '^- ' - *V.. - . w.- .-'-""•v.- 'r.-\:i^d^^ t. '. > ^B^MMi^MKgaaiiBttiHHftj'ASB' '"^ '^ " A" ' !BH^Mi8i^iViSSSFi2i..=2^':^ '.'^'^ - .-<« - " -;^ . - , <»«^(MK'ji^'*'." ",V'x«-r„,^. rtfeS- ' •.-'••.. -7-:. > • — - *^^-r-.'SuiBMttJatmm _,-._'..* , jg^py^^f^-,,,--. _. -"''" • I i..Sj«^MiiSi'ii!& *~ hHHk :4-^A^4j3IMHHI^^^HHflBli ^^^^^^^Hri i^».3ji*-^ ft . ' ''>% '!' '"^^^^ ^«;^^H»«" *^r^ -;,ijjUj'^^K^'>'''^^*^WV«Hi£^-' ^^^^^^^HS^^^iftfi-^-Lajai^^^^^^^HH i t f r rf f tf rr- r r rr »?- r t f f f f if^ / 1 r f ff.f.ii ff-: rrf f"[ Tf- in t.f (?- f f r t.h 'f- f f n r (T- r rf.ff r-. { r 1 .^' .•-*.-- . ttf'ffrrrr7f"fi"^ir':-ff'?'ffrf;[ff-ffT([f ir-f.rfrff^.frfftfrr-f^ ^ '>5:<- Iff! f tr^rffrfir'!r<<r":.ff'?^rrrf;rtrr-ff:f!t[^f,fff.fr'r-. rffftfrr-f( ; f r / r c r r f r if' ; t [ ti ... , - - !^^ Z:-, - '**»** ^. -"^ }T) 1 1 VI] 1 n >,:^ \l 1 U1 -TiU Vin .-1»1].1VM >-?i:lliri l-^rrrTn-=.rVtTil>-^-vn'nv^^ nirfiT:":rrff:rrf-<tr':.ff'frffrf;itf-fff([f fT-frrfff'T- rrrff^ vni.i.^'^ >^ \i i vin n nn --^n n .-'I'.invM -ii.i) nn -"^i ):.riiV'=ti.'i.H-H "Yt n nr-Ti ii v)i :;.-i>T5i*».0!ft5tKS;V»<i«V L Sr :^x 1 '^•?j 111^1 i^"^T^-i''^i''^'^''"^i^^^-^^^^^^^ Vi 1 ' I VI i VI u^un)^-?tnni.^iuviv^ r tf r >?< ( f f rf i tj- f If t f f r f f f I tf if-, r rrf.fr ^r-. rf f rf- r tr p / r r ff rf- / 1 I [i ( r n ft f" i.fff' riff- '"^ --^ i.rTn-='Virrii >-1!"t ri ni •^•Miv)r| VTii'i vii ) ) 1 •-.•^'n' nn -iiii vm .•t^,iiivv\ inn r-^i i r f r f .f.f f If ifnn f:t T'f-- 1 ":.f -f- r f r r.t 1 1 f f .r ^7-. r f f /'?-: i?- ; - n r r-- f.f f r f f rr- r ( n r r f f f ff / f f r . fIHIE lECE MSfETOfE EDGAR ODELL LOVETT : PRESIDENT TIE iOAlP ©F TIOSTEES James Addison Baker : Chairman William Marsh Rice, Jr. : Vice-Chairman Benjamin Botts Rice : vSecretary-Treasurer Cesar Maurice Lombardi Edgar Odell Lovett John Tiiaddeus .Scott n TIHIE F^COLTY Edgar Altenburg, M.A., Ph. D. (Columbia), of Elizabeth, New Jersey; Assistant in Biology at Columbia University; Instructor in Biology. Philip Hcchman Arbucklc, B.A. (Chicago), of Georgetown, Texas; Director of Athletics in Southwestern University; Assistant Professor of Physical Eciuca- tion Stockton Axson, M.A. (Wesleyan), Litt.D. (Pittsburg), L.H.D. (Weslcyan), of Princeton, New Jersey; formerly of the University of Vermont and of Adelphi College; Professor of English Literature in Princeton University; Professor of English Literature. Walter Arthur Blakeslec, B.Se. in M.E. (Illinois), of Kansas City, Missouri; formerly with the Westinghouse Machine Company and lately with the Ford Motor Company; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. Thomas Frederic Blanchard, Litt.B. (California), M.A. (Yale), of Berkeley, California; formerly California Alumni Fellow and Assistant in Rhetoric at Yale University; Instructor in English at the University of California; Assistant Professor of English. Thomas Lindsey Blayney, M.A. (Centre), Ph. D. (Heidelberg), of Danville, Kentucky; Professor of European Literature and the History of European Art in Central University of Kentucky; Professor of German. Robert Granville Caldwell, B.A. (Wooster), Ph. D. (Princeton), of Wooster, Ohio; formerl}' Fellow of Princeton University; Professor of Economics in the College of Wooster; Assistant Professor of History. James H. Chillman, Jr., Al.Sc.in Architecture (Pennsylvania), of Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania; Assistant in Drawing at the University of Pennsylvania; Instructor in Architecture. Percy John Danicll, M.A. (Cambridge), of Liverpool, England; Senior Wrangler and Raylcigh Prizeman of the University of Cambridge; Lecturer in Mathematics at the University of Liverpool; Assistant Professor of Applied Mathematics. Nicholas Diamant, B.A. (Robert), M.Sc. in E.E. (Union), of Schenectady, New York; formerly Instructor in Hydraulics and Mathematics at Union Col- lege; Fellow in Physics at the Rice Institute; Instructor in Engineering. Griffith Conrad Evans, Ph. D. (Harvard), of Boston, Massachusetts; form- erly Instructor in Mathematics at Harvard University; Sheldon Fellow of Har- vard University, at the University of Rome; Professor of Pure Mathematics. Major Joseph Frazier, U. S. Army, retired; Graduate of United States Military Academy at West Point; lately with the Twenty-sixth Infantry; Pro- fessor of Mihtary Science and Tactics. Gerald Fogarty Galloway, B.Sc. in E.E. (Colorado), of Lincoln, Nebraska; formerly with Engineering Department of Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Rail- road; Instructor in Engineering. Denton Loring Geyer, IXI.A. (Wisconsin), Ph.D. (Illinois), of Roswell, New Mexico; formerly Fellow and Assistant in Philosophy at the LTniversity of Illinois; Instructor in Philosophy and Education. Clyde Chew Glascock, Ph.D. (Johns Hopkins), of New Haven, Connecticut; formerly Fellow of Johns Hopkins University; Assistant Professor of German in Yale University; Assistant Professor of Modern Languages. WilHam Caspar Graustein, M.A. (Harvard), Ph. D. (Bonn), of Cambridge, Massachusetts; formerly Sheldon Fellow of Harvard University; Instructor in Mathematics at Harvard LTniversity; Assistant Professor of Pure Mathematics. Albert Leon Guerard, B.A. (Paris), Agrege de I'Universite de France, of Palo Alto, California; formerly Junior Professor of French Literature and Ex- aminer in History, State Normal School, Paris; later Instructor in the Romanic Languages at Williams College; Associate Professor of French in the Leland Stanford Junior University; Professor of French. Raymond Preston Hawes, M.A. (Brown), of Ithaca, New York; Susan Linn Sage Scholar in Sage School of Philosoph3^ Cornell University; Instructor in Education. Claude William Heaps, B.Sc. (Northwestern), Ph. D. (Princeton), of Colum- bia, Missouri; formerly Class of 1860 Experimental Science Fellow of Princeton University; Instructor in Physics at the University of Alissouri; Instructor in Physics. Arthur Romaine Hitch, B.A., M.Sc. (Washington College), Ph.D. (Cornell), of Syracuse, New York; formerly Assistant Instructor in Chemistry at Cornell Universit}^; Research Chemist for the Solvay Company; Instructor in Chemistry. Arthur Llewelyn Hughes, B.A. (Cambridge), D.Sc. (Liverpool), of Cam- bridge, England; Research Scholar of Emanuel College, MacKinnon Student of the Royal Society of London, Assistant Demonstrator in Physics at the Caven- dish Laboratory of Cambridge University; Assistant Professor of Physics. Herbert Kay Humphrey, B.Sc. in E.E. (Illinois), M.Sc. in E.E. (Union), of Schenectady, New York; Assistant Consulting Engineer of the General Electric Company; Instructor in Electrical Engineering. Julian Sorell Huxley, B.A. (Oxford), of Oxford, England; Newdigate Prize- man of the University of Oxford; Lecturer in Biology in Balliol College, and Intercollegiate Lecturer in Oxford University; Assistant Professor of Biology. Frederick J. Lewis, B.Sc. in C.E. (Maine), of Springfield, Massachusetts; Instructor in Civil Engineering at Pennsylvania State College; Instructor in Civil Engineering. Roy Petran Lingle, Litt.B. (Princeton), of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Master in English at the Episcopal Academy of Philadelphia; Instructor in EngHsh. Edgar Odell Lovett, Ph.D. (Virginia and Leipsic), LL.D. (Drake and Tulane),of Houston, Texas; formerly Professor of Mathematics in Princeton University, and later Head of the Department of Astronomy in the same in- stitution; President of the Institute; Professor of Mathematics. Lawrence Francis Hawkins Lowe, M.A. (Princeton), of Cleveland, Ohio; Instructor in French at Hoosac School; Instructor in French. John Thomas McCants, M.A. (Virginia and Yale), of Houston, Texas: formerly Scholar at the University of Virginia, and University Fellow at Yale University; Secretary to the President; Instructor in English. Hugh Miller, C.E. (Princeton), of Potsdam, New York; Professor of Civil and Sanitary Engineering at the Clarkson College of Technology; Lecturer in Civil Engineering. Hermann Joseph Muller, Ph.D. (Columbia), of New York Citj'; Assistant Instructor in Biology at Columbia University; Instructor in Biology. Frank D. Murnaghan, M.A. (National University of Ireland), Ph.D. (Johns Hopkins), of Baltimore, Maryland; Fellow by courtesy of Johns Hopkins Uni- versity; Instructor in Mathematics. Joseph Horace Pound, B.Sc. in M.E. (Missouri), of Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania; Instructor in the School of the Westinghouse A'lachine Company; In- structor in Mechanical Engineering. Michael James Roach, B.Sc. in C.E. (Clarkson), of New York City; form- erly with the Turner Construction Company of New York; Instructor in Civil Engineering. Herbert Nelson Roe, B.A. (Colorado), of Chicago, Illinois; Director of Physical Education in the Public Schools of Rock Island, Illinois; Instructor in Physical Education. Frank Barron Russell, Ph. B. (Chicago), M.A. (Harvard), of Chicago, Illinois; Instructor in English at the University of ]\Iinnesota; Fellow in English at the University of Chicago; Instructor in English. John Clark Tiddcn, of Philadelphia, Pennsyh-ania; Fellow and Traveling Scholar of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; Instructor in Drawing and Painting.
Recommended publications
  • The Pennsylvania State University
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School GHOSTS AND THE IMAGINED PAST A Dissertation in Sociology by Christine Bucior © 2019 Christine Bucior Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 2019 The dissertation of Christine Bucior was reviewed and approved* by the following: Alan Sica Professor of Sociology Dissertation Advisor Chair of Committee Gary J. Adler Assistant Professor of Sociology Jeffery T. Ulmer Professor of Sociology and Criminology Associate Department Head, Department of Sociology and Criminology Stephen Browne Liberal Arts Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences Jennifer Van Hook Roy C. Buck Professor of Sociology and Demography Director, Graduate Program in Sociology *Signatures are on file at the Graduate School ii Abstract When persons tell ghost stories, they imagine the past. Ghost stories are complete when they include both an account of paranormal happenings and an account of previous, this-worldly events that ghost-storytellers can use to explain those happenings. But ghost-storytelling differs from other activities in which persons imagine the past (like history education, monumentation, and museum-work). For one, there are no barriers to ghost-storytelling. For two, ghost- storytellers do not set out to imagine the past. They do so because the past is useful for their storytelling purposes. Hence, ghost-storytelling gives a “bottom up” view of the past; it shows what ordinary persons, as part of their unselfconscious assumptions about social life, think the past was like. I explore what that “bottom up” view of the past looks like in Pennsylvania. I ask who it includes.
    [Show full text]
  • Football Award Winners
    FOOTBALL AWARD WINNERS Consensus All-America Selections 2 Consensus All-Americans by School 17 National Award Winners 30 First Team All-Americans Below FBS 41 Postgraduate Scholarship Winners 73 Academic All-America Hall of Fame 82 Academic All-Americans by School 83 CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) compiled the first official comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. The compilation of the All-America roster was supervised by a panel of analysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the files of the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The roster consists of only those players who were first-team selections on one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national audience and received nationwide circulation. Not included are the thousands of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, that were not normally nationwide in scope. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). ALL-AMERICA SELECTORS AA AP C CNN COL CP FBW FC FN FW INS L LIB M N NA NEA SN UP UPI W WCF 1889 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – √ – 1890 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – √ – 1891 – – – – –
    [Show full text]
  • NCAA Division II-III Football Records (Award Winners)
    Award Winners Consensus All-America Selections, 1889-2007 ............................ 126 Special Awards .............................................. 141 First-Team All-Americans Below Football Bowl Subdivision ..... 152 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners ........................................................ 165 Academic All-America Hall of Fame ............................................... 169 Academic All-Americans by School ..... 170 126 CONSENSUS All-AMERIca SELEctIONS Consensus All-America Selections, 1889-2007 In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor compiled the first official comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with The compilation of the All-American roster was supervised by a panel of circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, analysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the that were not normally nationwide in scope. files of the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media The roster consists of only those players who were first-team selections on and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national au- each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). dience and received nationwide circulation. Not
    [Show full text]
  • Award Winners
    Award Winners Consensus All-America Selections ....... 2 Special Awards .............................................. 19 First-Team All-Americans Below FBS ... 26 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners ........................................................ 40 Academic All-America Hall of Fame ............................................... 45 Academic All-Americans by School ..... 46 2 2014 NCAA FOOTBALL RECORDS - CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Consensus All-America Selections In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor compiled the fi rst offi cial comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with The compilation of the All-America roster was supervised by a panel of ana- circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, lysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the fi les of that were not normally nationwide in scope. the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media The roster consists of only those players who were fi rst-team selections on and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national au- each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). dience and received nationwide circulation. Not included are the thousands All-America
    [Show full text]
  • Ivy League Football National Postseason Honors
    11 46 12 Ivy League Football National Postseason Honors THE HEISMAN TROPHY Burr Chamberlin, Yale (1897-98, T) John Hallowell, Harvard (1898-00, E) Roscoe Channing, Princeton (1889, B) *Huntington Hardwick, Harvard (1914, E) WINNERS John Charlesworth, Yale (1927, C) *T. Truxton Hare, Penn (1897-98-99-00, G) 1936 Larry Kelley, Yale Paul Choquette, Brown (1996, TE) Edward Harlan, Princeton (1907, B) 1937 Clint Frank, Yale William Church, Princeton (1896, T) *Ed Hart, Princeton (1911, T) 1951 Dick Kazmaier, Princeton Mike Clare, Harvard (2000, OL) Nick Hartigan, Brown (2005, RB) Chris Clark, Penn (2003, OL) John Hartwell, Yale (1891, E) OTHER TOP FOUR IVY FINISHERS *Garrett Cochran, Princeton (1897, E) Jeff Hatch, Penn (2001, OL) 1935 Pepper Constable, Princeton (fourth) Charles Comerford, Yale (1916, E) *Pudge Heffelfinger, Yale (1889-90-91, G) 1938 Sid Luckman, Columbia (third) Carroll Cooney, Yale (1909, C) Howard Henry, Princeton (1903, E) 1938 Bob MacLeod, Dartmouth (fourth) James Cooney, Princeton (1904-06, T) *Bill Hickok, Yale (1893-94, G) 1942 Paul Governali, Columbia (second) Michael Corbat, Harvard (1982, OL) *Art Hillebrand, Princeton (1898-99, T) 1943 Bob Odell, Penn (second) Hamilton Corbett, Harvard (1908, B) *Frank Hinkey, Yale (1891-92-93-94, E) 1948 Chuck Bednarik, Penn (third) John Corbett, Harvard (1890, B) Harvey Hitchcock, Harvard (1913, T) 1950 Reds Bagnell, Penn (third) *Hector Cowan, Princeton (1889, T) Henry Hobbs, Yale (1909, T) 1971 Ed Marinaro, Cornell (second) Cecil Cox, Harvard (1985, DB) *James Hogan, Yale (1902-03-04,
    [Show full text]