Brief Mention of Graduates^ l8g2—gg 



and children; Dorsey A. Lyon, '98, U. S. Bureau of Mines; Frank M. 

 McFarland, '93, professor of Histology at Stanford; Richard C. McGregor, '98, 

 ornithologist of the Bureau of Science in the Philippines; Duncan MacKinnon, 

 '99, banker, San Diego; Anne Martin, '96, for some years professor of 

 History in the University of Nevada, an active worker in the campaign for 

 women's suffrage, with prospects of becoming United States Senator from 

 Nevada; Stephen I. Miller, '98, sometime assistant professor of Economics 

 at Stanford, now dean of the School of Commerce, University of Washing- 

 ton; Will S. Monroe, '94, teacher and traveler, an authority on the 

 Balkans, professor in the State Normal School at Montclair, N. J.; John 

 F. Newsom, '92, for some years professor of Mining at Stanford, now engaged 

 in professional work outside; Mrs. Anne E. Peck, '98, good neighbor; George 

 C. Price (Ph.D. '97), for many years professor of Comparative Anatomy at 

 Stanford; William W. Price, '97, naturalist, founder of the Agassiz School for 

 boys, now proprietor of the summer camp at Fallen Leaf Lake; Karl G. 

 Rendtorff, '94, formerly a student at the University of Kiel, who upon his 

 graduation from Stanford was appointed to its department of German, in 

 which he made his doctorate and now remains as professor. 



Jackson E. Reynolds, '96, a noted athlete, for some years member of the 

 Law Faculty of Stanford, later in that of Columbia, now president of the 

 First National Bank of New York City; Harry B. Reynolds, '96, his brother 

 and classmate, practicing physician in Palo Alto; Robert C. Root, '94, teaciier 

 of Economics, for years local secretary in California of the American Peace 

 Society; Margaret Schallenberger (Mrs. John McNaught), '98, for a time 

 instructor in Education at Stanford, afterward teacher in the State Normal 

 School at San Jose, and still active in state educational supervision; George W. 

 Scott, '96, sometime professor of International Law at Columbia, a special 

 student of Mexican affairs, now in business in Los Angeles; Edward C. Sewall, 

 '98, now professor in the division of surgery in the Stanford Medical School; 

 Henry D. Sheldon, '96, now professor of Education in the University of Oregon; 

 Perry O. Simons, ex-'gS, zoologist, who after making extensive collections in 

 Peru and Bolivia was murdered by brigands on the Bolivia-Argentina frontier. 



David Snedden, '97, professor of Education in Columbia, sometime state 

 commissioner of education of Massachusetts; William F. Snow, '96, for some 

 years professor of Hygiene at Stanford, now secretary of the American Hygiene 

 Association; Charles D. Snyder, '96, professor of Physiology in Johns Hopkins; 

 Alfred B. Spalding, '96, now professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics at Stanford. 



Henrietta L. Stadtmuller, '95, whose gay wit and friendly vivacity still 

 enliven all Stanford gatherings in San Francisco or on the Campus; Herbert 

 S. Stark, '95, distinguished mining engineer, died in the Transvaal, 1910; 

 Herman D. Stearns, '92, associate professor of Physics at the time of his death 

 in 1907; Laura Steffens (Mrs. Allen H. Suggett), '96, long assistant in the 

 State Library at Sacramento, now in charge of the Sutro Library in San Fran- 

 cisco; Nettie M. Stevens, '99, one of the ablest scientific investigators devel- 

 oped at Stanford, associate in Experimental Morphology at Bryn Mawr until 

 her death in 1912; Thomas A. Storey, '96, sometime assistant professor of 

 Organic Training at Stanford, now professor of Hygiene in the College 

 of the City of New York; Henry Suzzallo, '99, formerly assistant professor 

 of Education at Stanford, later professor at Columbia, now president of the 



C 709 3 



