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Ae?*?3C«*3Cr*^£ ^Z^^^Ms/W^W^ HH^Hillilllhjh^H WR \—L «aE?*?3C«*3Cr*^£ ^Z^^^ms/W^W^ HH^HillilllHJH^H 116 THE 1913 HATCHET —Kajiwara Portrait EDMUND HENRY WUERPEL EDMUND HENRY WUERPEL, Director of School of Fine Arts; First Sellew Medal, Manual Training School; Secretary (1891-1893), and honorary member (1894), American Art Association, Paris; Recording Secretary, Paris Advisory Com- mittee, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Member of Jury of Selection, American Section, Universal Exposition, Paris, 1900; member of Jury of Selection and Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904; Active Member and Vice- President Society of Western Artists; President St. Louis Artists' Guild, 1897-1898; President 2x4 Club, 1895-1897; Silver Medal, Lousiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Silver Medal, Lewis and Clark Exposition, Portland, 1905. The cynosure of neighboring eyes.—E. B. PERHAM. EDMUND H. WUERPEL, Director . Lecturer and Instructor in Composition and Artistic Anatomy CHAS. P. DAVIS Instructor in Antique, Metal and Jewelry HENRIETTA ORD JONES Instructor in Ceramic Decoration and Pottery CORDELIA T. BAKER Instructor in Bookbinding and Leatherwork DAWSON DAWSON-WATSON .... Instructor in Life Classes and Woodcarving GUSTAV VON SCHLEGELL Instructor in Portraiture and Monotyping JULIA FLORENCE KNOFFLOCK . Instructor in Decorative Design and Ap- plied Art GUSTAV F. GOETSCH Instructor in Still Life, Etching and Il- lustration VICTOR S. HOLM Instructor in Modelling RUDOLPH FALKENRATH, JR Instructor in Mechanical and Architectural Drawing, Night School ANNA L. KASPER Instructor in Saturday Drawing Class VICTOR J. HARLES Night Librarian ESTELLE BOWLES Day Librarian FANNY E. PERKINS, A. B Secretary of School When that I was a little, tiny boy. 'POP" BRYAN. 118 THE 1913 HATCHET Honors —June, 1911 Black and White WILFRED GODDARD Silver Medal RUTH FELKER Honorable Mention Color VIOLA MILLER Hors Concour GlLDA BRINGHURST . Honorable Mention Modelling DAISY TAAKE Silver Medal Ornamental Modelling ANGELO CORRUBIA Honorable Mention Bookbinding RUTH LECRON Honorable Mention Ceramics Three declared beyond competition, honors being equally divided HAZEL BEAL MRS. BULLIVANT ANNA RASPER Pottery MADELEINE ROSE FLINT Bronze Medal "Cherrv- -I cry."—JULIA ROGERS. THE 1913 HATCHET 119 Regular Students MARY ALLEN THOS. FURLONG, JR. ROY S. PRICE CONSTANCE WOOD ANDREWS JEANETTE FUQUA ALFREDA PRINCE MRS. AZALEA G. BADGLEY GEO. M. GASSER JAS. W. RAINEY MILDRED BAILEY JULIUS GEWINNER THORVELD RIESE NANCY BARNHART RUTH G. GILBERT EUGENIA RANDALL EUGENIA BAUMAN GUSTAV F. GOETSCH MRS. A. E. SANFORD CHAS. J. BAYER GLADYS GOSS FRED. H. SCHUERMANN HAZEL BEAL PHILIP A. GRONEMEYER MRS. WM. SCULLIN HELEN BEATTIE VICTOR J. HARLES JULIA SECOR DONALD A. BLAKE FLORENCE HAZELTINE CHARLOTTE E. SECOR GRACE BOHN MILDRED HENKEL KATHERINE SEMMES MlLLARD F. BOTKIN MRS. JOHN C. HIGDON MARY SEMPLE GUILDA BRINGHURST MAGENTA C. HILGER ROYCE SHEPPARD ESTELLE BOWLES MINETTE HILL WILTON SMITH MRS. LEOLA BULLIVANT RAYMOND L. HILL IRENE SPERRING BERNERD BURGER HALLIE HYATT MARTHA H. SPROULE DORIS BURGHEIM AMY ISAACS DOROTHEA STAHL MRS. ALENA C. CAMPBELL CHAS. D. JARRETT MRS. NAOMI STEVENS ALTHEA CANTER ANITA JONES DAISY TAAKE EMMA SUTTON CARTER THERESA JESSEL JONES MRS. GEO. TANSEY MARGERY ELIZABETH CHASE MARY JANE JORDAN EDITH WRIGHT TAYLOR RHODA COXWELL ANNA KASPER MRS. W. E. TAYLOR, JR. MARGARET CREEKMORE MAUDE KLEIN LILLIAN THOELE MRS. CHRISTIAN S. CULVER ARTHUR T. KLUEGEL RAYDELL THOMAS MRS. CHAS. PERCY DAVIS DWIGHT KNAPP BERTHA THUENER GLADYS DAWES HELEN KUHLMANN FREDA UDE HAZEL DEANE RUTH LECRON MR. G. VON SCHLEGELL MRS. MAY DEGHEEST ROBERT LEMEN EDNA VOSSLER CARSON DONNELL GRACE M. LETSON HARRY WADE MRS. W. B. DOUGLASS LUCILLE LEVY DOROTHY WALLACE EDWARD R. DUNN VINCENT LYNN GEORGIA WALKER LILLIAN DURHAM HAROLD L. MCCORMACH HATTIE A. WANGELIN GRACE F. ELMS ELIZABETH MCLELLAN OWEN T. WARD ADELIA ESCHRICH GRACE MILLER CHARLOTTE WARFIELD SAMUEL WM. ETTINGER MARGARET MOSBY HILDEGARDE WEINHAGEN JOSEPH EDW. FEDOR BERNERDINA MOTT FLORENCE E. WILKINSON RUTH FELKER MOLLIE MUELLER CARRIE KING WILLIAMS AUSTIN E. FITCH LOUISE MURDOCH CARL WILLI MADELEINE ROSE FLINT H. F. MURPHY MRS. GRACE WILSON LOUISE FOLEY MILLY OERTEL CLEO ADELE WOLF MARY L. FOSS NANCY O'FALLON WM. WOLFE, JR. KATHERINE FREDERICK MAJORIE O'ROURKE VERNESS WOODWARD EMIL FREI LUCILLE PILCHER MRS. J. G. WRIGHT HARRY FRITZ CHESTER L. POWELL ELINOR ZIMMERMAN For thy sake, tobacco, I would do anything but die."—JIM RAINEY. 120 THE 1913 HATCHET Art School N peopling the earth the Creator made two classes of human beings, distinct and apart,—art students (including artists), and others. To be a real art student one must have certain qualifications, the chief one of which is temperament; without this it is impossible to be a genuine art student. Just what temperament is has not yet been discovered, but it makes no difference; you must possess it, otherwise you are not the real thing. Then, too, you must love to work,—that is, in reason,—for too much work is abhor- rent. Then, too, the Art School is such a wonderful place for discipline. We all know that one of the pleasant things in life is the power of self-deception. It is a great gift. The dullest mind can grasp it, the wisest one find solace in its blandishments. It is a substitute for courage, conscience and self- denial. But this most dear and delightful thing is one of the joys you must relinquish as an Art student. It has no chance to survive here. It makes no difference what class it may be, for in this particular they are all alike. After two or three criticisms from the wise and beneficent instructor you have not a single delusion left regarding yourself. You may still be able to deceive others,—for instance, a doting family and admiring friends,— in- to thinking you a genius, but never again can you deceive yourself, for you find you are in no way remarkable, nor are your efforts looked upon with awe and wonder. This is due to just one thing, which is our "standard." From the time we enter as "nouveaux" till we attain the coveted position of "upper students" this standard is kept constantly before us, and when in the course of time one is so fortunate as to accomplish something worthy of notice, and one's name is posted up in the hall, it is a matter for congratulation. It may be a life study or a copper tray, a composition or a clay pot, a sketch in black and white, a design, or a carved frame,—no matter what it is, if you have reached somewhere near the "standard" you are a much envied person. But you, on your own part having learned your lesson are not deceived, and instead of being puffed up with pride as you once might have been, you accept your honors with a very becoming modesty; and while you rejoice at having done something half way decent, and gained a notice in the monthly faculty meeting, you experience quite a humble and healthy desire to do very much better. Yes, it is a pretty severe training, but it makes for character as well as artistic success. —M. R. F. Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise.—SALE. ^■1 124 THE 1913 HATCHET —Strauss Portrait WILLIAM TRELEASE, Sc. D„ LL. D. WILLIAM TRELEASE Sc. D., LL.D., Director Henry Shaw School of Botany; B.S., Cornell, 1880; Sc.D., Harvard, 1884; LL.D., U. of Wis., 1902, U. of Mo., 1903, Washington U., 1907; In charge Summer Sch. Botany, Harvard, 1883-4; lecturer botany, John Hopkins, 1884; instr. botany, 1881-3; prof., 1883-5 U. of Wis; Engel- mann prof, botany, Washington U. and dir. Shaw School of Botany since 1885; dir. Mo. Bot. Garden since 1889. Chmn. Am. bd. editors Botanisches Centralblatt, since 1900. Fellow Am. Acad. Arts and Sciences; mem. Nat. Acad. Sciences, Am. Philos. Soc, etc.; directeur (pres) Academie Internationale de Gcographie Botanique, 1896; 1st pres. Bot. Soc. America, 1894-5; pres. Am. Soc. Naturalists 1903, Cambridge Entomol. Club, 1889, Engelmann Bot. Club, 1898-9 (hon. pres. since 1900); sec. Wis. Hort. Soc, 1882-5, Acad*. Science, St. Louis, 1896-1903 (pres. 1909); sec. Round Table Club since 1901. Edited (with Asa Gray) Botanical Works of the Late George Engelmann. Translated Poulsen's "Botanical Micro-Chemistry" and Salomonsen's "Bacteriological Tech- nology". THE 1913 HATCHET 125 Administration and Instruction Advisory Committee DAVID F. HOUSTON Chancellor of Washington University DAVID S. H. SMITH Chairman of the Garden Committee Missouri Botanical Garden ROBERT S. BROOKIKGS EDWARD MALLINCKRODT WILLIAM G. FARLOW Officers of Instruction WILLIAM TRELEASE, SC.D., LL. D., Director, Engelman Professor of Botany GEORGE THOMAS MOORE, PH.D. Professor of Plant Physiology and Applied Botany SAMUEL MONDS COULTER, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Botany GEORGE LEO PELTIER, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Botany ELLEN C. CLARK Assistant at Mary Institute Oh, for a coach, ye -ADA NICHOLSON, after Junior Prom. 126 THE 1913 HATCHET General Statement N June 1885, Mr. Shaw of St. Louis authorized the Chancellor of Washington University to place before the Corporation the following plan:—With the concurrence of the Corporation, to endow a School of Botany as a department of Washington University, by donation of improved real estate yielding over S5,000 revenue, and to place it in such relation to the Missouri Botanical Garden and Arboretum as practically to secure their best uses, for scientific study and investigation, to the professor and students of said School of Botany, for all time to come. The plan was accepted and The Henry Shaw School of Botany estab- lished in the fall of 1885 with Professor William Trelease as its Director. The instruction is divided into the Undergraduate and the Graduate departments. In the former, provision is made for instruction suited to the needs of the College and the Schools of Engineering and Architecture, and in this course special emphasis is placed upon Botany as related to Sanita- tion.
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