Indi 



ex 



Richardson, Emmett L., Stanford '92, i. 300, 



ii. 407 

 Richardson, George M., professor at Stan- 

 ford, i. 361, 399, 648 

 Richardson, Henry Hobbs, architect, i. 373 

 Richardson, J. A., Stanford student, i. 526 

 Richardson, Owen, Stanford graduate, i. 300 

 Richardson, Robert D., member of In- 

 diana board of trustees, i. 300 

 Richardson, Rufus B., i. 397 

 Richet, Charles, dinner given by, ii. 616 

 Ridgway, Robert, Smithsonian scientist, i. 



159, 178 

 Riley, James Whitcomb, among author's 

 Indianapolis friends, i. 136; visit of, to 

 Stanford University, 136-137; poem "Be- 

 reaved" by, 137 n.; reading by, at Stan- 

 ford, 474; granting of degree to, by In- 

 diana University, ii. 288 n. 

 Rilo, monastery and village of, ii. 586 

 Ritter, Wade, i. 160 



Ritter, William E., professor at University 

 of California, i. 451; editor of publications 

 of California Academy of Sciences, 541 

 Riverside, CaHfornia, Mission Inn at, i. 470 

 Riviera, visit to the, ii. 558-559 

 Riviere, Joseph A., acquaintance with, in 

 Paris, ii. 321—322; at Congress of Free 

 Christianity in Paris (1913), 463; visit to, 

 in Paris, 615 

 Rixford, Emmett, surgeon, ii. 282 

 Robert College, Constantinople, influence of 

 ii. 577; visit to (1914), 607; praise of, 607- 

 608; department of Engineering »t, 608 

 Roberts, Captain, of the Robert Rush, i. 567 

 Roberts, Milnor, Stanford student, i. 522, 

 523; member of party to Acoma and 

 Enchanted Mesa, 625, 634 

 Roberts, Milnora, Stanford student, i. 522 

 Roberts, Rev. Richard, in New York, ii. 737 

 Robertson, A. J., in El Paso, ii. 695-696 

 Robertson, John M., luncheons with, ii. 646 

 Robinson, Geroid, journalist, ii. 289 

 Roblar Man, the so-called, i. 558-559 

 Roble Hall, erection of, i. 385; effects of 



earthquake at, ii. 170 

 Rockbound Range, trip up, i. 521-522 

 Rock Glen of Oatka River, i. 18 

 Rocksavage, Earl of, ii. 569 

 Rogers, George Warren, physician in Mazat- 



lan, i. 529 

 Rogers, Henry Wade, vice-president Anti- 

 Imperialist League, i. 700 

 Rogers, Howard J., president of Congress 

 at St. Louis (1904), ii. 150 n. 



Rogers, William B., Bloomington attorney, 



i. 195 

 Rojas, Luis Manuel, ii. 691 

 Rolland, Modesto C, ii. 691, 692, 6g6 

 Rome, Ga., visits to, i. 155-156, 163 

 Root, Elihu, Secretary of State under 



Roosevelt, i. 310, ii. 256; estimate of, ii. 



337 

 Root, Robert C, Stanford '94, i. 709 

 "Root of the Evil, The," pamphlet, ii. 



748-749 

 Root-Takahira pact of 1907, ii. 8, 446-447 

 Roosevelt, Theodore, first meeting with, i. 

 305; political ambitions and opinions of, 

 305; on Civil Service Reform, 306; au- 

 thor's many and varied relations with, 

 306; joyously non-conventional nature of, 

 306-307; Natural History the first love of, 

 307; collection of bird skins of, in Owen 

 Hall, Indiana University, 307; knowledge 

 of birds possessed by, 308; Hawaiian 

 fish named for (Rooseveltia brighami), 308; 

 high-water mark reached by governmental 

 science under, 309; second meeting with, 

 while governor of New York, 309; im- 

 pulsive utterances of, 309; interest of, in 

 Civil Service in Alaska, 310; inner ("ten- 

 nis") cabinet of, as President, 310; White 

 House luncheons during administration of, 

 310-31 1; remarks by, on "His Favorite 

 Author," 311; like Steerforth, to be re- 

 membered at his best, 311-312; the 

 strength and the weakness of, 312; im- 

 provement in Civil Service under, 315; 

 lack of patience of, with job hunters, 316; 

 Sequoia planted on Stanford Campus by, 

 429 n.; help given author by, in publica- 

 tion of "The Fishes of Samoa," ii. 117; 

 action taken by, in Pago Pago affair, 126; 

 settlement of Sampson-Schley contro- 

 versy by, 126-127; author's trip with, 

 in Texas, 1 51-152; position of, in calling 

 peace conference at Portsmouth, 153-154; 

 temporary unpopularity of, in Japan, 154; 

 attitude at time of "Oriental school" 

 incident in San Francisco, 187; member of 

 Simplified Spelling Board, 192; author's 

 response to toast to, at banquet in honor 

 of, in San Francisco, 418-419; connection 

 of, with Progressive movement, 419-420; 

 campaign of, for presidency in 1912, 420- 

 422; an estimate of career of, as President, 

 422-423; as a politician, 423; feelings of, 

 after defeat, 423; references to, by ex- 

 President Taft, 704 n. 



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