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HEROES: Miller, third from
left in the front row, is the last remaining member
of the Immortal 21, who stole back the Axe in
1930.
Courtesy Art Miller |
Sitting in the foyer of
the Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center, 94-year-old
Art Miller proffered a scrapbook he had lugged from
his home in Fresno, Calif. He opened it, turned a few
pages, and paused to look at a yellowed newspaper photograph.
“That’s me,” he said, pointing to
a handsome, dark-haired young man. He is pictured along
with 20 fellow students, one of whom holds the ax head
that inscribed their names into Stanford lore.
Miller is the last survivor of the “Immortal
21,” the group of Stanford men who, on April 3,
1930, wrested the Axe from the clutches of UC-Berkeley,
whose students had stolen it 31 years earlier. He attended
this November’s Big Game, which marked the 70th
year that the Axe has been used as a prize for the winning
school. “This may be my last Big Game,”
says Miller, ’31, who has donated his memorabilia
to the University.
When Miller and his mates concocted their nervy plan—several
previous attempts had failed—the Axe was kept
in a bank vault and removed once a year for display
at a Big Game rally at Berkeley’s Greek Theatre.
The 21 struck as the Axe was being returned to the bank
after the rally. Several of them hopped onto the armored
car, pretending to be “guards” from Cal.
When the car arrived at the bank, Cal’s Norman
Horner emerged with the Axe and Stanford’s Howard
Avery, ’30, pounced, putting him in a stranglehold.
Bob Loofbourow, ’30, seized the Axe and Miller
tossed a tear gas canister loaned by a friend in the
San Mateo County Sheriff’s office to dissuade
pursuers. The 21 scattered to nearby cars and raced
back to campus, where they were acclaimed as heroes.
Two years later, the schools agreed to make the Axe
a permanent traveling trophy to avoid further escalation
of thievery and dirty tricks.
The story is well-known, but a few details have gone
unreported, says Miller, a former high school teacher
and principal. He recalls that two days after the Axe
theft, Stanford faced Cal in a baseball game electrified
by the recent events. Stanford won, 3-2. The losing
pitcher: Norman Horner.
Afterward, Miller, Stanford’s catcher, ran into
Horner in the locker room. “I didn’t let
on that I was one of the guys who had stolen the Axe.
He was bigger than me.”
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