Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)

 - Class of 1938

Page 32 of 416

 

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 32 of 416
Page 32 of 416



Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 31
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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

Senior numerals perched ubovc the sinokusUilv n . ,ill . feud in which the juniors came out second best. Iron rods fully forged, provide the almost invisible perch. Chapel in Anderson Hall nas part of the dail program for many classes of Kansas Staters. Recreation center and art department rooms now fill the place where stage sets used to be. cultural Collcfif, I lie nation ' s pioneer agricultural school. Fairdiild continued the Anderson precedent and the college grew like a healthy youngster. Physical and educational growth stimulated the development of an even more potent force - sclioul spirit. As the students increased from a total of 207 in 1879 to 734 in 1897. class groups and other organiza- tions increased in size and influence. Two more literary societies were formed, the Hamilton and I lie Ionian, in 1884 and 1887 respectively. TheY.M.C . and (he Y. W. C.A. became permanent organizations in 188. ' ). Competition between classes became keen and conihals frequent and sometimes bloody. ' Ihi ' cliicf delight of the underclassmen was lo huniiliale I heir more ad- vanced rivals, before, during or after I he lal lei ' s closely guarded meetings. Organize Athletic Association . tldelics received their first real support in 1897 with the organization of the Athletic Association, Haseball. football, and later basketball began to take their place in student life. The first student newspaper, the Students Herald, began publication January 8, 1896, to answer the increasing demand for student expression on the campus. Two years later a student song contest gave Ihr .ujlege ilie lnia Malrr. II. V. Jones was the aulhor of h,,lh words and nuisic. Political tides swept the campus in 1897 with the sudden vav(! of Populism. It dominated tlie whole slate |)(ilitical pict ure and swept President Fairchild and scNcrai of his conscrvalive faculty co-workers from I lie campus. I ' airchild was replaced by Thomas K. Will, head ,.f Ihe (Irparlnieiil of |»,liliVal .■e.moniy. Lovers ' lane framed many a romantic moment as couples lingered down its shady aisle. Now denude of sheltering trees and shrub- bery, it lacks its former charm of quiet seclusion. nmm Rainbow dances weaved fantastic patterns in front of ivy-covered walls. Literary societies presented many forms of entertainment before the davs of commercialized recreation.

Page 31 text:

Women should learn to sew declared President Anderson. From that time on domestic art has been offered to all Kansas State girls. These early seamstresses had to treadle their own. town of Manhattan, fearful that the college would be combined with the university at Lawrence, contributed a generous sum of money and the present 155-acre campus was purciiased. The following year a pre- tentious barn was planned and one wing erected. Then came an about face and real progress. The change began with a legislative investigation of the college and ended in the appointment of an executive. Anderson Made President John A. Anderson, the new president, took the chair in 1873 and occupied it for only six years, but in that short time he completely reorganized the college, swinging it out of the backwater of classical education into the current of usefulness to the information- hungry people of the expanding state. He abolished the literary course, made 50 minutes of constructive physical labor mandatory for all able- bodied students, installed telegraph between buildings, and offered courses in telegraphy to both men and women. lie changed the barn on the present campus Food, well-cooked and served, opens the door of any man ' s heart. And State ' s co-eds have cheered many jaded palates. The floor-li ' ngth skirts were no hindrance to deft fingers. inlo a classroom and office building and added three new buildings for mechanics, horticulture and chemistry respectively. He also drew the plans for the building which was to become his own monument and the best known symbol of the college he recreated, Anderson Hall. He established the Industrialist in 1875, giving it a dynamic editorial policy and state-wide circulation. Anderson left Kansas State College in 1879 to become a member of Congress, but he had charted a course, established precedents which have guided the institution in all subsequent constructive development. George T. Fairchild, his successor, came to the the helm of Kansas State from Michigan State Agri- Baseball stars of 1897 wore KAC on their jerseys. When thes diamond dusters were playing ball, the school was generally knowi as the Kansas Agricultural College. Wildcat gridsters of ' 90 practiced in the city park. To these early players riiiiipiiiciit was something to wish for. Punishment was severe and cluers meager. They played for the love of the game.



Page 33 text:

Tlif students liked tlie change. It brought them new instructors and a co-operative book store and dining iiail. Townspeople bitterly opposed it, how- ever, and fought the new president and his movonieiit step by step. In 1899 the Populist wave subsided mid Will was puslied out with it. Ernest R. .Nichols. |ii [iul,ii physics professor, advanced to the executive posiimii as acting president. A year later he became jiresi- dent of the college by action of the board of regents. Nichols, a scientist and educator rather than a politician, kept the college out of politics and -limu- lated building and internal growth. Social and class groups rose to new leM ' ls ol prominence. Class feuds interspersed with love feasts , became traditional as class colors and numerals were hung and torn down amid nocturnal conflicts. Pranks of every sort were pulled on rival student groups and on faculty members, to be recorded in class yearbooks which began regular publication. Rise of Fraternities Fraternities first appeared at Kansas Slate in 1901 with the almost simultaneous founding of two local organizations, Tau Omega Sigma and Kappa Delta Pi. The first successful sorority, orig- inally named the Witches , was organized in 1901 and formally chartered under the name Lambda Lambda Theta two years later. Another local so- rority. Phi Kappa Phi, also started in 1901. These early Greek social organizations were op- posed by faculty members and frowned on 1) tiiost uf the students. They were even denied space in I lie annual until 1909, when the yearbook adopted the [icr- manent name of the Royal Purple. History w 0,lt-c. II. ' ! in 1909 wlien Topcka IcfiiNlulors were guests of the ire shown leaving the auditorium after the final meeting defeat of measures which would have tlirottled the .liege. That same year the Men ' s Panhellenic was formed, a third fraternity. Phi Alpha Theta, joining with the two early fraternities. In 1910 the sororities followed suit with Phi Kappa Phi, Lambda Lambda Theta, and Eta Reta Pi, forming the nucleus of the Women ' s Panhellenic. Dramatics received organized sponsorship in 1908 hen the first Kansas State dramatic club was created. The club changed its name from Dramatic Club to I ' nrple Masque Manhattan Theat 1915. It 1928. kas succeeded bs Ih- In the good old days the campus talcen at tlie turn of the century giv smart walk from the city of Manhattan. This picture iew across the site of Aggieville from the east. Student Council Created Students first obtained a Miicf in scl 1 goNcrnnienl in l ' M|i) when pre ious IViclidn the student body resulted in the creation of the student council. In its original form the council was composed of one faculty member and 1 1 students. In this same year an at- tcinpl was made by action of the stale legislature to reduce the college to an experiment station or a subsidiary of the state university. The student council called a mass i ting of both students mid JHcnltv during which was jilannrd and financed, in a few short iiours, a master stroke of salesman- ship which saved Kansas State from legislative restriction. This meeting arranged the transportation of the entire legislative body from Topeka to the campus, chartering a special train and paying for it bv volunlarv contributions.

Suggestions in the Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) collection:

Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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