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Students' Affairs Committee, President Charles E. Street having chosen Stephen Barrows, '17, for this responsibility.

The Golden Bear has announced election to the Order of Franklin K. Lane, ex-'89, Secretary of the Interior, and Charles W. Merrill, '91, the metallurgist, from the alumni; from the Class of 1916 of Howard French Fletcher, Reno, Nevada; Edwin Bernard Fuld, San Francisco; Howard Alden Judy, Antioch; William Sears Rainey, San Francisco, and from the Class of 1917, Stephen Sears Barrows, Berkeley; Robert Blake, Berkeley; Raymond Karnaghan Bontz, Sacramento; John Roberts Bruce, San Francisco; Charles Josef Carey, Sacramento; Douglas Bray Cohen, Oakland; George Washington Cohen, Los Angeles; Albert Lawrence Dunn, Long Beach; Edwin Lowell Garthwaite, Oakland; James Benton Harvey, Sacramento; Henry Raymond Hogaboom, San Diego; Harold Anthony Hyde, Watsonville; LeRoy Farnham Krusi, Alameda; Edwin Marshall Maslin, Watsonville; Willis Robert Montgomery, Berkeley; Luther Allen Nichols, Pomona; Warren Dexter Norton, Berkeley; Louis Hubbard Penney, Colville, Washington; Emery Herman Rogers, Santa Monica; William Alexander Russell, San Jose; Harry Boyd Seymour, Sacramento; Leroy Bassett Sharp, Pacific Grove; Floyd Wayne Stewart, San Jose; John James Vandenburgh, Los Angeles; Willis Guy Witter, Berkeley.

Phi Beta Kappa, the scholarship honor society, on March 22 initiated Ebba Braese, W. B. Brown, A. L. Caulkins, W. F. Cheney, Corinne Cronise, Pirie Davidson, Elizabeth Easton, Ada Fike, Helen Goodall, R. F. Goss, L. N. Hamilton, Freda Hazer, Grace Hobson, R. W. Hodgson, H. A. Judy, R. L. Lipman, Barbara McKenzie, Freda Meyer, Sarah Olsen, G. E. Osborne, Leonard Outhwaite, Alverda Reische, Katharine Rogers, Lena Schafer, W. R. Schoenfeld, Jennie Schwab, H. M. Stafford, J. S. Taylor, Owen Walker, E. C. Woodruff, Dorothy Wormser, E. P. Wright, G. L. Maxwell, Jr., Laurence Seymour, D. R. Merrill, Flossie Banks, and H. A. Hyde.

Sigma Xi, the scientific honor society, has elected to membership the following:

From the faculty: G. W. Corner, Assistant Professor of Anatomy.

Seniors: Agriculture, R. W. Hogdson; Anatomy, Charles E. Locke, Robert Carson Martin, Harry Pratt Smith; Botany, Hsen Hsu Hu; Chemistry, A. L. Caulkins, Victor Thaddeus; Palaeontology and Geology, Clarence L. Moody; Geology, Edmund J. Young; Mathematics, W. F. Cheney, J. S. Taylor; Mechanical Engineering, H. I. Crow, C. V. Foulds, C. W. Frick, R. S. Quick; Mining, Walter G. Farnlacher, Frank J. Hoenigmann, Richard S.

McIntyre; Civil Engineering, R. M. Barnes, W. Dreyer, H. N. Jenks, H. McV. Stafford; Zoology, William C. Jacobsen.

Graduate Students: William C. Boeck, Walter W. Bradley, Clifton W. Clark, E. N. D'Oyly, E. D. Eastman, Willard Gardner, G. L. Greves, W. G. Horch, Edwin Kent, Jr., Amram Khazanoff, John Albert Marshall, George H. Martin, Jr., Howard E. McMinn, H. S. Miller, Hobart C. Rhodes, C. C. Scalione, J. P. van Zandt, Harry B. Yocom.

Beta Kappa Alpha, the biological honor society, has initiated the following named from the Departments of Zoology, Botany, Physiology, Palaeontology, Entomology, Pathology, Hygiene and Anatomy:

Faculty: Dr. H. M. Evans, Dr. G. W. Corner, Dr. K. J. Scott, Dr. R. E. Smith, Mr. E. O. Essig, Dr. R. Ruggles Gates, Miss Dolores Bradley, Miss Grace F. Griffiths, Miss I. M. Stevens.

Graduate Students: Mrs. Christine Essenberg, G. G. Hahn, H. A. Lee, Irene McCulloch, Swarna Mitra, Lulu Newlon, C. J. Pierson, Homer Righetti, Jennie Robinson, Rosabelle Scott, Inez Smith, Frances Torrey, Lore Weber.

Seniors: Emerson Butterworth, R. W. Hodgson, Hsen Hsu Hu, W. C. Jasen, Myrtle Judkins, R. C. Martin, Freda Meyer, F. G. Maggs, Louise McRoberts, Lois Pendleton, H. P. Smith.

Juniors: Coleman Berwick, Elizabeth Ferguson, H. S. Hoyt, A. C. Leigh, Jr., Pearl Walther.

Eta Kappa Nu, the electrical engineering honor society, has initiated Professors C. L. Cory, F. E. Pernot, and B. M. Woods of the faculty of the College of Mechanics, and T. S. Cole, C. A. Hancock, R. T. Hazzard, J. H. Murray, R. M. Steed and W. L. Winter, Seniors, and F. C. Bell, G. A. Fleming, K. W. Houston, W. S. Peterson, Thompson Price, S. H. Rosenblatt, Juniors (1917).

Sigma Kappa Alpha, the history honor society for women, has initiated Barbara Burke, '17; Mary Louise Fundenberg, '17; Frances Lowell, '17, and Florence Macaulay, '17.

Theta Tau, the scholarship honor society for students of Mining and Geology, has initiated L. C. Uren, Instructor in Mining; C. H. Clark, W. E. D'Evelyn, '17; S. J. Ogilvie, '17; C. R. Knox, '17; K. H. Schilling, '17, and G. W. Coffey, '17.

Among the prizes announced at Commencement were the following:

The Bonnheim Dissertation Prizes, given by Mr. Albert Bonnheim: Upper Division, Carl Blick Beals, '16; Paul Longstreth Fussell, '16; Paul Sylvestor Marrin, '17, and Calmur John Struble, '17; Lower Division, Portia Pearl Baker, '18; Idalene Garnett Bray, '18; William Ray Dennes, '19, and Luella Engel Haney, '19.

The Bonnheim Discussion Prizes: Upper Division, Paul Longstreth Fussell, '16; Lower Division, William Ray Dennes, '19.

The Bryce Historical Essay Prize, given by Regent Rudolph J. Taussig, Carl Blick Beals, '16; Honorable Mention, John Waino Granberg, '17.

The Newman Hall Essay Prize, given by the Alumni Council of the Newman Club, Margaret Perkins Hayne, '08.

The Irving Prize for Wit and Humor, given by Samuel C. Irving, '79, Edwin Marshall Maslin, '17.

The Emily Chamberlain Cook Prize in Poetry, endowed by Professor Albert S. Cook, Thomas Gordon Luke, '15.

The Menorah Essay Prize, Annie Paulena Letvinoff, '16; Honorable Mention, Calmur John Struble, '17.

The Richardson Latin Translation Prize, endowed by Professor George Morey Richardson, Jean Marjorie Deming, '16.

George Washington Cohen on April 14 won the Carnot Medal, at the twenty-second annual Carnot Debate with Stanford, the question for debate being: "Resolved, That the Establishment of a System of Compulsory Arbitration Will Promote the Welfore of the French People." Cohen chose the negative.

A Women's Cosmopolitan Club has been organized as an associate section of the University of California Cosmopolitan Club.

For 1916-17 the student publications have chosen editors and managers as follows: Californian, Robert Blake, '17, Editor; Harry Seymour, '17, Managing Editor; F. S. Moulton, Manager. Occident, J. R. Bruce, '17, Editor. Pelican, Edwin Marshall Maslin, '17, Editor; John Benton, '17, Manager. Blue and Gold, J. L. Reith, '18, Editor; Wilson Meyer, '18, Manager. Brass Tacks,

G. L. Maxwell, '17, Editor; J. E. Johnson, '16, Manager.

G. L. Maxwell, '17, has been elected President of the University Y. M. C. A. for 1916-17.

The Sports and Pastimes Association of the women students has decided that hereafter not more than six "C's" shall be

awarded in any one year. Recipients must manifest superior skill in two sports and must also prove themselves good in general work, scholarship, and "sportsmanship." While the "C's" will thus be few in number, gold emblems will be given to those who "make the team' in tennis, basketball, baseball, crew, swimming, hockey, and fencing. Recipients of the "C" will be chosen by a committee consisting of the officers of the Sports and Pastimes Association and the managers and coaches of the various teams.

The Sports and Pastimes Association has adopted training rules for members of women's athletic teams providing that for three weeks before a final competition contestants must be in bed

before ten o'clock, unless previously excused; must refrain from eating anything between meals except "fresh fruit or simple nourishment," must refrain from candy, coffee, tea, pastry, hot bread, and fried foods, must eat three regular meals a day, and must rest undisturbed for at least fifteen consecutive minutes every afternoon.

In the California-Stanford women's tennis interclass tournament, in which each class competed in two singles and one doubles contests, California won eleven and Stanford only one match.

In the California-Stanford women's athletic meet on April 22 California won two out of five of the tennis matches and two out of four of the basketball games, California winning the Junior and Freshman games by 45 to 14 and 27 to 6, and losing the Senior and Sophomore encounters 29 to 28 and 44 to 14.

The California interclass fencing matches were won by the Juniors and Sophomores. The third-year fencers took fourteen out of sixteen bouts from the Seniors and the Sophomores won a tie contest on points from the 1919 team.

The Stanford students have voted to continue to play Rugby, but athletic relations with the University of California have been resumed in all other sports, Freshman contests also being revived, but Freshmen being excluded from all 'varsity teams. In published statements President Wilbur of Stanford has declared that Stanford thinks Rugby superior to American football as a game, and that he objects to resumption of American football as tending toward evils in the way of excessive expenditures for paid coaches.

California won the Stanford-California baseball series, the score being 1 to 0, 3 to 4, and 3 to 2.

The California Freshman nine defeated the Stanford Freshmen on April 1 by 7 to 0.

Samuel Adair, prevented by a broken ankle from serving as this year's baseball captain, has been re-elected for next year.

Basketball finished successfully its first year as a major sport by defeating Stanford 32 to 28 and then 46 to 26. This was the third year of success against Stanford. During the season ten games were won and six lost, and the Oregon Agricultural College tied for the championship of the Pacific Coast Conference.

L. B. Sharpe was elected basketball captain for 1916-17. Stanford won the 'Varsity crew race on April 22 by eight lengths, covering the course in 16 minutes and 37 seconds, as compared with 17 minutes 17 seconds for California.

The Second 'Varsity race was won by Stanford by eight lengths.

California won the Freshman race by seven lengths, in 14 minutes and 10 seconds, as compared with 14 minutes and 33 seconds for Stanford, and California won the second Freshman race by five minutes.

L. H. Penney, '17, has been elected crew captain for 1916-17. The Seniors on March 11 won the inter-class crew regatta, rowing a mile and a half in 12:20.

Football Coach Andrew Smith, Pennsylvania, '06, is to be assisted next fall by Edward Mahan, Harvard, '16, for the past three years named as a member of the All-American team, and by Robert R. Vaughan, as an undergraduate a tackle at Princeton and for the past three years assistant to Smith in the coaching at Purdue. Vaughan came to California this spring to assist Smith in the six-weeks spring training season for football, which ended on April 7.

On March 11 Stanford defeated the California soccer team by 4 to 2. This, with a previous Stanford victory of 3 to 0, gave Stanford the year's championship in soccer.

H. E. Harding, '17, has been elected soccer captain for 1916-17. The proposal that tennis should be reduced from a major to a minor sport and the members of tennis teams no longer be given the honor of a "Big C" was voted down at the student election on March 31, by a vote of 224 for its reduction to a minor sport and of 972 against.

California won four out of five of the tennis matches against Stanford on April 21 and 22, at Stanford. Stanford won, however, all the Freshman tennis events.

Stanford won the track meet on April 15 by 69 to 53. The California-Stanford records broken were as follows: low hurdles, John Norton, Stanford, 0:25 1-5 (this ties the coast record); 220yard dash, Frederick Murray, Stanford, 0:21 3-5; high jump, Frederick Maker, California, 6 feet 4 inches.

The California Freshmen won the track meet with Stanford by 65 1-3 to 56 2-3.

California won the Pacific Amateur Athletic Association meet on April 21. The scores were: California 89, Stanford 61, Olympic Club 30, Caledonian Club 10, Visitacion Valley Athletic Club 5, unattached 3.

The University of Southern California 'Varsity defeated the California Freshman track team at Berkeley March 25 by 78 to 44.

The University of Southern California 'Varsity nine defeated the Freshman team on March 25 by 15 to 3.

The 'Varsity track team beat an "All Southern" team on March 29 by 80 to 42.

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