University of California Bulletin THIRD SERIES. Vol. Ill, No. 6 Dr Vl, COLLEGE OF CALIFORNIA JUBILEE MAY 14=18, 1910 THE LIBRARY OF TH£ FEB t APRIL, 1910 BERKELEY THE UNIVERSITY PRESS University of California Bulletin THIRD SERIES. Vol. Ill, No. 6 JUBILEE ANNOUNCEMENT AND PROGRAMME 1860-1910 THE LIBRAE OF THE FEB l ^ ^ THIS NUMBER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BULLETIN SERIES IS ISSUED BY THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. COMMITTEES. Golden Jubilee Committee. Professor Wm. Carey Jones, Chairman. Professor W. A. Setchell. Professor Geo. M. Stratton. Mrs. A. F. Morrison, ? 78. Ezra W. Decoto, '00. Max Thelen, '04. Alumni Committee of One Hundred. E. V. Cowell, >80, Chairman. Committee on Alumni Publicity. C. C. Young, '92, Chairman. Committee of Berkeley Citizens. E. A. Berry, '82, Chairman. Committee on University Exhibit. Professor S. B. Christy, Chairman. Committee on Alumni Headquarters. Professor M. W. Haskell. Music Committee. Professor E. F. Scholz, Chairman. Greek Play. Professor J as. T. Allen, Chairman. Intercollegiate Meet. Ralph P, Mkkritt, '07, Chairman. Pageant. I Iom eb Boushet, lv\ '01, ( 'haii man. Robert Moulton, '10, Chairman Students 1 Committee, Press. Wells Dei by, Secretary Berkeley Chamber of Commerce, NORTHEAST WING OF THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY. THE OCCASION. The. occasion that is to be specially commemorated during the Golden Jubilee Week is the opening of the doors of the College of California, in Oakland, in 1860. In the same year the campus at Berkeley was formally dedicated. Since that time there has been a continuous course of instruction of college and university grade, under an unbroken line of professors, and with a constantly grow- ing body of students and graduates bound together by common traditions. The College of California was the outcome of the unselfish efforts of a small group of- men, of whom Dr. S. H. Willey was the earliest mover and is now the sole survivor. His activity in this matter dates back to April, 1849. In 1853 the master mind of Henry Durant came to the aid of the cause. In 1860 the efforts of Willey and Durant were reinforced by the fine spirit of Martin Kellogg. In 1868 the officers of the College of California transferred to the State all their property, including the campus at Berkeley, on the sole condition that, along with the projected College of Agri- culture and Mechanic Arts, the State should maintain a College of Letters, to the end that there might be a real university in California. The University of California now proposes to celebrate the memory of this institution which was founded and nurtured by Willey, Durant, and Kellogg, and which sacrificed its whole exist- ence for the sake of a larger idea. Transportation. Eeduced rates will be available on the transportation lines from all points in California. Parties of fifteen or more, from points outside the State, can arrange for reduced rates by applying to the local passenger agents. Eeceipt certificates must be procured trom the agent upon purchase of ticket and for privilege of re- duced return rate must be signed by Milton T. Farmer, Secretary of the Jubilee Committee. 6 University of California. Public Invited. The public is cordially invited to attend and participate in the festivities of the Jnbilee Celebration. Class Headquarters. North Hall is to be the rendezvous of all classes from '73 to '01, and also of the class of 1907. South Hall for '01 and '02; the new Mining Building for '03 and '05, while California Hall will accommodate '04, '06, '08, and '09. University Exhibits. Each Department of the University will keep " open house" on certain days of the Celebration, to be announced later. The public is invited to call. An exhibit with charts illustrating the growth of the University, its students, alumni, faculty, endowments, etc., will be displayed at the Bacon Library. For Further Information. A bureau of information will be maintained during the Cele- bration near the Southern Pacific passenger depot, Berkeley station. Inquiries as to hotel accommodations or other details of the Jubilee should be addressed to the Alumni Secretary, 201 Cali- fornia Hall. Special reunions of debating, fraternal and honor societies are arranged for the Jubilee Week. OAKS ON THE LOWER CAMPUS. Jubilee Programme. PROGRAMME. SYMPHONY CONCERT. Thursday, May 12, 3:15 p.m. The New York Symphony Orchestra, Mr. Walter Damrosch, conductor, will give the following specially prepared programme in the Greek Theatre, at 3:15 p.m.: 1. Symphony, No. 5 E Minor: "From the New World " Dvorak Adagio; Allegro molto; Largo; Scherzo; Allegro con fuoco. 2. The Two Grenadiers Schumann Mr. Marcus Kellerman. 3. Academic Festival Overture Brahms (Written for the University of Breslau.) 4. (a) Moment Musicale ._ Schubert (b) Spinning Song Mendelssohn 5. Aria from il Sappho " ..- Gounod Mme. Van der Veer. 6. Scherzo, Op. 45 Goldmarlc General admission, above the diazoma, 75 cents; reserved seats, $2.00, $1.50, and $1.00. Tickets may be had at usual places in Berkeley, Oakland, and San Francisco, or may be ordered by letter, enclosing check, from Wm. Dallam Armes, '82, chairman Musical and Dramatic Committee of the University, Faculty Club, Berkeley. GEEEK PLAY. Saturday, May 14, 10 a.m. A performance of Sophocles' GEdipus the King in English trans- lation will be presented in the Greek Theatre. The music to be used in this performance is by John Knowles Paine and will be rendered by an orchestra of thirty-eight pieces and a chorus of fifteen male voices under the direction of Mr. Paul Steindorff. Dramatic director, Mr. Charles D. von Neumayer. Costuming and general supervision, Professor James T. Allen, '96. 8 University of California. General admission, above the diazoma, 50 cents; reserved seats, $1.00 and 75 cents. Tickets will be on sale in Berkeley, Oakland, and San Francisco; or may be ordered by letter, enclosing check, from Wm. Dallam Armes, ? 82, Faculty Club, Berkeley. THE "AJAX" OF SOPHOCLES, IN THE GREEK THEATRE. LUNCHEON. President Wheeler has given permission to the Ladies Aid Society of the First Christian Church of Berkeley to serve luncheon under the oaks by the Faculty Club. Luncheon will be served from 11:30 on, and will consist of coffee, cake and sandwiches 25 cents, ice cream 15 cents, and lemonade 5 cents. 7 98 picnic, north of Greek Theatre, 1 p.m. PACIFIC COAST CONFEEENCE MEET. Saturday, May 14, 2:30 p.m. Track and field teams from the Universities of Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Stanford, and California will meet in the first Pacific Coast Conference Meet ever held in the West on the Jubilee Programme. 9 cinder track at 2:30 o'clock, Saturday afternoon, May 14. The teams will be limited to twelve athletes from each college. The alumni classes may have space reserved in the bleechers so as to permit their attending in a body, by making reservations with Mr. Ealph P. Merritt, '07, Graduate Manager, 217 California Hall. Admission, one dollar. Saturday, May 14, 7 p.m. Senior Men's Banquet, Odeon Cafe, San Francisco. '09 Men's Dinner, Heidelberg Inn, San Francisco. THE BACCALAUREATE SERMON. Sunday, May 15, 3 p.m. Reverend George G. Eldredge, pastor of the St. John's Presby- terian Church of Berkeley, will deliver the annual baccalaureate sermon in the Greek Theatre. The Orpheus Club, of Oakland, E. D. Crandall, director, will render the music for the occasion. The Senior Class will assemble in front of North Hall at three o'clock and proceed directly to the Theatre. SENIOR PILGRIMAGE. Monday, May 16, 10 a.m. The usual Senior pilgrimage will be conducted by the graduat- ing class. The names of the student speakers are omitted here. Dr. Willey will deliver the remarks at South Hall. THE SENIOR EXTRAVAGANZA. Monday, May 16, 8 p.m. "The Chasers," an extravaganza by Nathaniel Schmulowitz, '10, and John Hartigan, '10, will be presented in the Greek Theatre by the Senior Class. Seats may be secured in advance by mailing orders to Archer Bowden, 2601 Channing way, before May 12. Checks must accom- pany orders. The seats are seventy-five and fifty cents each. 10 University of California. Monday Evening, May 16. President Hadley will be the guest of the Yale Club and of the University Club at dinner at the club house of the latter, San Francisco. THE JUBILEE ORATION. Tuesday, May 17, 9:30 a.m. A procession composed essentially of alumni will assemble by classes near the Bacon Library and march by two sections to the Greek Theatre, where the entire space below the diazoma has been reserved for those in the line of procession, which will begin to move at 9 a.m. Class secretaries are marshals; class banners should be in evidence; caps and gowns worn at the option of the wearer. Professor Eichardson, chairman of the Public Celebrations Com- mittee of the University, is general marshal for the procession. The Golden Jubilee oration will be delivered by Dr. Arthur T. Hadley, President of Yale University. Music for the occasion will be rendered by the Treble Clef., Glee Club, University Orchestra, and University Band. A GROUP OF BUILDINGS ON THE CAMPUS. Jubilee Programme. 11 ALUMNI LUNCHEON. Tuesday, May 17, 12 o'clock. The alumni and guests of the University are invited to lunch after the Golden Jubilee oration under the oaks on the lawn below the Faculty Club. Music will be rendered by an alumni chorus, and the various classes will be kept together as distinct units. Permission has been given to the Ladies Aid Society of the First Christian Church of Berkeley to serve the luncheon. Coffee, cake and sandwiches will cost 25 cents, ice cream 15 cents, and lemonade 5 cents a portion. A brief business meeting of the Alumni Associa- tion will be held immediately after the luncheon. GOOD OF THE UNIVEBSITY MEETING. Greek Theatre, May 17, 2:30 p.m. Students, alumni, faculty, and friends of the University will meet at the Greek Theatre after the Alumni Luncheon. The object of the meeting is to discuss certain matters pertaining to the relations of the University and the State, an understanding of which cannot but result in good for the University. James K. Moffitt, '86, President of the Alumni Association, will preside. The following speakers are announced: Fletcher A. Cutler, Esq., representing Governor James N. Gillett, President Benj. Ide Wheeler, John E. Glascock, >65, Wm. E. Davis, '74, Chas. S. Wheeler, '84, Buss Avery, '94, Mrs. Grace C. Torrey, '97, Max Thelen, '04. PAGEANT. Tuesday Evening, May 17. A pageant comprised of units representing the history of educa- tion, the growth of the University, and the development of the city of Berkeley will be presented as a conclusion to the Alumni Day of the Celebration. The co-operation of the fraternal orders of the city and the separate classes of the alumni is assured. A student committee expects to have twelve hundred undergraduates participate. The University portion of the procession will form at South Hall, march to University and Shattuck avenues, where it will be joined by the contingents provided by the city of Berkeley. The line of march will lead from here to California Field, where a bonfire and rally will be held. 12 University of California. COMMENCEMENT. Wednesday, May 18, 10 a.m. Seniors and faculty will assemble on the path between North and South Halls at 9:15 a.m. and march to the Greek Theatre. The President will address the graduating class. & ' ^ «fflpT ISjBB wMBBsmJ^w^ '*&??' .iimmK^ ■'*• y ^^mBct^i JB^S ■ .^^^^a^tmi CALIFORNIA HALL. Wednesday, May 18, 1:30 p.m. Class of 1905 will assemble in Boom 107, California Hall. 2 o'clock, procession of class to Greek Theatre, where dedication of chair to Henry Morse Stephens, Professor of History and Director of the University Extension, will occur. 2:30 o'clock, procession to Sather Gateway and dedication of seat to Benjamin Ide Wheeler, President of the University. PHI BETA KAPPA ADDRESS. Hearst Hall, May 18, 3 p.m. The annual address will be delivered by Dr. Kendrick C. Bab- cock, President of the University of Arizona. Jubilee Programme. 13 THE PBESIDENT'S EECEPTION. Wednesday Evening, May 18. The President of the University will tender a reception to the graduating class at Hearst Hall on Commencement Evening, 8:30 o'clock. CLASS KEUNIONS. Wednesday Evening, May 18. Secretaries or individual members have undertaken to arrange class reunions for nearly every class. Notices of these meetings have been sent to the members concerned. At the request of the secretaries arranging the reunions we print the following partial list: '79. At the Home of Judge and Mrs. Slack, San Francisco. '93. At the home of Mrs. Warren Gregory, Berkeley. '98. Banquet, Hotel Stewart, San Francisco. '00. Men's Dinner, at University Club, San Francisco. '01. Oakland, place unannounced as yet. '02. Key Eoute Inn, Oakland. '03. Hotel Carleton, Berkeley. '04. Town and Gown Hall, Berkeley. '05. Unity Hall, Berkeley. '06. Home Club, Oakland. '07. Masonic Temple, Berkeley. '08. Hillside Club, North Berkeley. '09. Ebell Club House, Oakland. FIKEWOBKS. Wednesday evening, May 18, Halley's Comet will give a spec- ially arranged and carefully planned exhibition of celestial pyro- technics. This feature it is believed by many will be more wonderful than Dr. Morgan's liquid air demonstration in Physics 1. Certainly it has Paulhan's flight set in the shade. Class Secretaries' Notice. Souvenir Buttons. Jubilee buttons may be obtained now from the Students' Co- operative Store, and during the Celebration at the class head- quarters. Secretaries are arranging for individual class badges. 14 University of California. Berkeley, California, April 23, 1910. To the Alumni of the University of California: Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the Associa- tion will be held under the oaks below the Faculty Club in Straw- berry Canyon, on Tuesday, May 17, 1910, immediately after the Alumni Luncheon. The principal business of this meeting will be the presentation of the required reports by the President and Secre- tary and the election of officers and councilors. The hold-over members of the Council are: Frank Otis, '73; George Edwards, '84; Ealph Merritt, '07; T. A. Perkins, '96, Law Eepresentative; and Dr. Edith Brownsill, M.D., '98; Medical Eepre- sentative. The following representatives of affiliated colleges have been nominated by their respective Alumni Associations and their elec- tion thereby guaranteed by the constitution: Dr. Guy S. Millberry, D.D.S., '01; Haydn M. Simmons, Ph.G., '95. Nominations for the officers and for three councilors of the Asso- ciation have been made by the following committee of ten, whose report appears elsewhere on this page: T. A. Perkins, '96, chair- man; Dr. Edith Brownsill, M.D., '98; Frank Otis, '73; Geo. Edwards, '84; Ealph Merritt, '07; J. M. Mannon, Jr., '00; J. Harry Jenkins, '08; Perry T. Tompkins, '93, and Miss Tallulah LeConte, '04. Eespectfully called, Milton T. Farmer, Secretary. San Francisco, Cal., April 18, 1910. To the Officers and Members of the Alumni Association of the University of California: The Committee, appointed to nominate officers of the Associa- tion for the ensuing college year, met and nominated: Charles H. Bentley, '91, for the office of President. Orrin K. McMurray, '90, for the office of First Vice-President. Jessica B. Peixotto, '94, for the office of Second Vice-President. Milton T. Farmer, '09, for the office of Secretary. Lewis I. Eeed, '02, for the office of Treasurer. Charles S. Greene, '86, Duncan McDuffie, '99, and Max Thelen, '04, for Councilors. Eespectfully submitted, T. A. Perkins, Chairman. THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. Members: Every graduate of the University is a member of the Alumni Association by virtue of the following clause of the con- stitution: Article III. All persons who have been awarded degrees by the University of California shall be members of this Association. All members of the faculties of the University, not graduates, shall be honorary members of this Association. Purposes of the Association. Article II. The purpose and object of this Association shall be the pro- motion of good fellowship and kindly feeling among its members, the fostering of scientific and liberal culture on the Pacific Coast and the advancement of the interests of the University of California. Obligation of Members. Article VI. The dues of this Association shall be one dollar annually, or five dollars for six years if paid in advance. A member, upon the payment into the treasury of the sum of twenty dollars at one time and for that purpose, shall become a life member of this Association, and shall not be liable for any further annual dues. All such life membership payments shall be kept in a separate fund of which the interest only shall be used. Dues for the ensuing year are payable now. THE CALIFORNIA ALUMNI WEEKLY. If you are not already familiar with the alumni paper a copy will be sent to you upon request. The publication is less than two years old, but it has surely come to stay. A prominent citizen of San Francisco, a ? 98 man, has volunteered the following estimate of its achievement: ' ' Much has been done through the instrumentality of this little paper for the betterment of the University and the good-fellowship of the ' Grads. ' > ' If you wish to keep up-to-date with the progress of the Univer- sity, with the achievements of your fellow-alumni, and with current events in the college world generally, the California Alumni Weekly is just what you want. The subscription is one dollar and fifty cents a year. Combi- nation Rate: A special price of two dollars is offered to those combining alumni dues and subscription to the Alumni Weekly. The souvenir 16-page Jubilee number of the Alumni Weekly will contain specially contributed articles by the best known alumni of each decade and by each of the class secretaries. Its Alumni Isotes column will be unusually comprehensive. The fea- tures of the Jubilee will be detailed in its columns. This number will be sent to all old or new subscribers without additional cost. &M* Make all remittances payable to the Alumni Association of the University of California, and mail to Lewis I. Reed, Treasurer, First National Bank, Berkeley. THE LIBRARY OF THE FEB *6 1931 UNIVERSITY OF IbMNw. 3 0112 10561 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BULLETIN. Entered January 31, 1908, at the Post Office at Berkeley, California, as second-class matter, under the Act of Congress of July 16, 1894. Issued monthly from November to March and in July, and twice a month from April to June.