University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) - Class of 1914 Page 1 of 464
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1914 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 464 of the 1914 volume: “
mmm tmmmmmim.ifim i mm ' =T[ days on Mount Oread, tKat it shall strengthen bond of interest and sympa- thy existing ' between each o us and our Alma Mater. l «t v«K «. c.out 4 11% III KHIlHmiB TOUR on Mount Oread with the Seniors Lawrence Kansas Tiii IllIB , - wmmm Eegistrar George 0. jFogter a true frienb of Itfje situbentsJ, iW bolume of is; resipectfuUp bebicateb 5rO«A tCQ-OK ' i[n ' ' ' | iwMamin«aiivna CRANE ft COMPANY PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS, BINDERS TOPEKA feA Ml II! iff ill ill ill ill Jf RASER HALL S|p i Vrore iSi SS58555S SI 11 ••- ' — M | ssps!ip5 ; s; 5 . i ! i ill ill ill §99 [3£= m ie Ji5LV:Hi«WI lii «««SSSSS5 Si Chemistry I ill 13 at s x , svN «. : $S mhe JAXMAV Tf mm i§ 1 1 li ii II ii ii 14 Administration SSSsssisjsi sS r ' ' ' iFhe JAUSMWMKER. USEUM III iii B I S ill III III ill g§S III iii ill 111 iii iie Hi lis iii Iii ill III ill 15 «p i i i ill ii li til ill ii| if 11 i ill jr OWI.ER SHOPS iLi3i III III s gg III III II ' - -„.„„-„-,.. III III III iSiSSiSSSSSSSiS fcjfl (Gymnasium II JShe JAV HAWKERi i li HYSICS â– â– m ie::: AXiiMMM m â– ' sssisississss ill III ill III ill III III ill ill ill 111 ill ill i i i i i i SSs III III ! i i ill 11 1 S S 9 ill III i I i i ss ill ii IBRARY III ill is! Ill ill III ill ill ill •■■■issss ' Ill sii ill III Hi i S 9 i B § III Hi f |i lit ill ! S S HI ill d HI ill if I ill ill lit |ii ill III ill !|| !| .J ill I I i tit ill ill AWORTH HALL 5 3 5 5 5 I i IShe JAYHAWKE â– v ' iSf I a s ill ill III I i i ill III Hi III ill III ill III I i I iii ill ill ill iii HI III ill ti! ifi III m -ftfniiii-MMBm NOW HALL III III III 111 ill III iii ii 31 21 ■•u â– ' T ' CTPHHIWWBWW â– i m (j NGINEERING r ' 1 iiifi ' T - - - • Ti ifii wf-iiii I - ' T f mrrm Board of Administration ill ill i ! i ill III ill III ill ii i ! I i ili III I i i ili III ill E. W. HocH. Mrs. Cora G. Lewis. Edward T. Hackney, President. Ill ill ill mmmmmmmm imsms sms s s s mssismsmmmsisismsmmsi ' he JAVH WKER iSf Frank Strong, Chancellor. _Ji |ii III 11 ill B i B III ill ill iLikJ  1 Hi «%S SiSSSSSS 24 r Ji M s ' Fi? Chancellor ' s Statement ! THE issuance of the Jayhawker is always an event of interest in the University year. Its pubKcation through a long series of years is a matter of great historical importance. In this book ap- pears a fairly complete and accurate delineation of the inner life of the University, and a careful examination during a series of years will give a very satisfactory im- pression of the institution. The issuance of such a publication also has much to do with the growth of wholesome tradition, for it is mementos like this, hav- ing some substantial form, that students carry with them out into life. The four years spent in college are in many respects the most unique period of one ' s life. While it is real life in a very definite sense, yet the more sordid things of life do not obtrude themselves, the fierceness of com- petition of after years has not yet arisen, life is not yet a battle ; and while the college man is critical he is at the same time generous. He has quite missed one of the finest things in life who has not had this experience and has not learned what it really means to be a college man. The class of 1914 will carry with it the hearty good wishes of the University of Kansas. FRANK STRONG, Chancellor. Ill ill ill III ill ill iii Hi |g|%. s - f« A JisSSSSSSSSSiiSSSSSiS S 25 wMnmwJM aaei.. mm III ill III 1 1 1 1 1 i ji| III ill ill ill III Hi ill III III ill ill III ill ill ill ill Hi I E i ill 1 mi mmmm ms IShe aA Hi WKER. sm S The College B Y AN ACT of Congress ap- proved January 29, 1861, the day on which Kansas was ad- mitted to statehood, seventy-two sec- tions of land were set apart and re- served for the use and support of a State University. The State accepted the trust, and in 1863 the Legislature selected the city of Lawrence as the location for the institution. One year later the Legislature passed an act or- ganizing the University and giving to it the name of The University of Kan- sas, its object, as defined by that act, being to provide the inhabitants of the State with the means of acquiring a thorough knowledge of the various branches of literature, science, and the arts. A charter was immediately drawn up, and the government of the institution was vested in a Board of Regents, appointed by the Governor. The University opened with twenty- nine women and twenty-six men students in the preparatory department and four on the faculty. The next year there were two women in the collegiate department with fifty women and fifty -three men in the preparatory department. In 1890 the preparatory department was discontinued. The first class to graduate from the collegiate department was in 1873 — a class of three. In 1891 the collegiate department became known as the School of Arts, which name was changed in 1904 by the Board of Regents to the Col- lege of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The Rev. R. W. Oliver, the first Chancellor of the University, resigned his position after one year of service, and was succeeded by Gen. John Fraser, after whom Fraser Hall was named. Dean Olin Templin I 1 he JAYHAWKER. W SStfSSi S rir Raymond Osborne Dart, Kansas City. N2N; Y. M. C. A. 2). A. B. Donald R. Black, A. B. Goodwell, Okla. $Bn. Howard E. Marchbanks, . . . A. B. Pittsburg. BIT ; Treasurer Sophomore Class (2) ; Soccer (1), Directory Board Y. M. C. A. (2-3-4). Robert Crenshaw Davis, . . A. B. Kansas City. N2N; Skull and K, Student Council (3) (4), Varsity Track (2), Class Track (1) (2), Senior Play Com. ii i i 11 ill III III ill 111 Iff ill ill ill he ill Nell Carraher, Kansas City, Mo. KA0, Thespians, Hawks, Junior Prom Com. Elmer Clinton Clark, Jr., . . A, B. Oswego. ATQ, Masque Club, Junior Farce, Hawk Club, Jurisprudence Club. Amanda Neuschwanger, . Bloomington. Zoology Club, Entomology Club. A.B. Sarah Neuschwanger, Bloomington. Zoology Club, Entomology Club. il III ill I ill it J Ti jv ss s g ; « Harold R,. Branine, . . . . A. B. Hutchinson. AA, BK, Alemannia, Good Gov ' t Club, College Basket-ball (2-3-4). Gladys Beck, A. B. Kansas City. James Ryan Elliott, Linn. 4 Bn. A.B. Frank Spreier, A.B. Pawnee Rock. $AK, German Play (2-3), Cross Country Team (3-4). I III !ii III nl til ill II mhe JAV Hi iWKE ill ill ill jil I ' M 11 ill ill III Martha Mae Hunter, . . . A. B. Lawrence. Treasurer W. A. A., Manager Tennis (3), German Dramatic Club, President Home Economics Club (4). Maude T. Lourey, . Frankfort. Pres. W. S. G. A. (4). A. B. Lucy Barger, A. B. Beloit. 02 , Kansan Board (4), Quill Club (3, 4), Associate Editor Oread Magazine, Senior Class Day Committee, Secretary Central Organization Co. Clubs. Ray L. Eldridge, .... Ellsworth. HY SAX, University Orchestra (1), Mandolin Club (2), Quill Club, Kansan Board (2-3-4), Chr. Junior Finance Com., Circulation Mgr. Kansan (4). A.B. ill if Irr] ' ill ill 1 1 j ill III III ill lit ill iii fit ill iii ill ill ill ill I £ I III !l iSi ill III III ill ill III ill i i I 1 1 1 ill iii |i! ill ill ill Cl. rence a. Castle, , . . . A. B. St. Joseph, Mo. Rhodes Scholar, K. U. Debating Society (2-3-4). Christine Spreier, Pawnee Rock. A.B. Howard E. Jensen, Herington. A.B. Fred L. Soper, . Hutchinson. A.B. Iii ' l|i Iii ! I ' iShe JAYHA ?V KER. Bernice Edmund Schultz, Barnes. nrS, Torch, Y. W. C. A., Junior Rep- resentative W. A. A. A. B. William Fayette Brown, Lawrence. A.B. Botany Club, Soccer (3-4), Freshman Basket-ball, College Basket-ball (2-3-4), Captain (3), Varsity Basket-ball (2-3), Entomology Club. Lillian E. Pilkington, Gamett. Quill Club, Y. W. C. A. A.B. Oran C. Dail, A. B. Mooreland, Okla. NSN. ill ill III III III HI ill I! Ill â– IS ' wsjssm 35 rw liSSiSSS SSiSiliiiS ;; S S !i lii It! Ui WHAWKER. w g  i ' i Deax T. Bush, .... Kansas City, Mo. Y. M. C. A., Geology Club. A. B. BoxNiE Dean Bailey, .... A. B. Lawrence Kansas Kirmiss (2), Woman ' s Collegiate Alumnae Scholarship (3), Daughters of American Revolution Scholarship (3), Home Economics Club. Ruth Harger, A. B. Abilene. KA0, nrS, 02 i), Red Domino, Quill, Asst. Editor Oread Magazine, Girls ' Glee Club. Pearl Milton, A. B. Stafford. id ill II II! Ill ill ill ill Hi ill 111 lit i§ 1 1 [ III III III Jii ill 36 5SSSSS««SSi HI I brw-jfeiSSSSSSSiSSiSiSSSSiSiSSSiiS I iii Ishe JiVi HJ V KER. Stella Tremaine, . luka. A. B. VlVL N SUSAXNE StRAHM, Lawrence. A. B. Marie Elizabeth Madden, . . A. B. Mound City. Alemannia (1), Acoth (4), Jay hawker Board (4). Elmer Thomas Wible, Holton. Freshman Football, Indoor Circus (3-4). A. B. K| ill ill iLiul mm mi Lucy Dunbar, Hallowell. Violet Wanda Dunn, . Concordia. SK, Quill Club. WiLLARD Van Slyck, Topeka. «i)AK III A. B. A. B. A. B. Helen Louise Allphin, . . . A. B. Lawrence. Y. W. C. A., Pres. W. A. A. (2), Junior In- vitation Com., Senior Invitation Com. ill ill ggg lis ifl ill III III III III III in Iff III III ill III ill AeL. JA H A KEEa Leslie Ray Thompson, Seneca. Florence Francis Fuqua, Kansas City Mo. KA0, Alemannia Club, Quill Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), Pres. of Y. W. C. A. (4), Student Council (3), Finance Com. (3), Torch. Minnie Elizabeth Dingee, Minneapolis. nrS ., Pres. Mathematics Club (4). Fred F. Leasure, , . . . , A. B. La Cygne. Acacia, Band (2-3-4), Mandolin Club (3). a= . .s s 5k s v. ss â– , x xxs vs -,  v S 5« h0 m Rose Josephine Dyer, Baldwin City. A. B. Arthur C. Perry, A. B. Kansas City, Mo. Ben, 4 BK, Black Helmet, Good Gov- ernment Club, Freshman Track, Class Football (2), Varsity Track (3-4), Win- ner Interfraternity Debate (3), College Com. University Exposition (3), Organi- zation Editor 1914 Jayhawker, (4). Ruth Sankee, A. B. Lawrence. Margaret Roberts, La Cygne. XQ. A. B. ill I i I ill !!! Ill 11! ill III i i ! ill |ii III i i a III 111 iM ! I S III ill Hi til ill III ill ill ill III ill ii! ill III ill i S I 1 i i ISi ill III ill ill III ill ill III S SS iSSJS 40 ' ishe John C. Madden, ..... A. B. Mound City. Daily Kansan Board (2), Circulation Manager (3), Managing Editor (4), Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4), K. U. Debating Society (3), Quill Club (4), Senior Play Commit- tee (4), President Linn County Club (3), Scoop Club (2), Men ' s Student Council (4), Editor-in-Chief Daily Kansan (4). Amarynthia J. Smith, . . . . A. B. Louisville, Ky. KAO, President W. A. A. (1), Junior Prom Com. (2), Junior Farce (2), Senior Play Com. (3), Annual Board (3), Home Economics Club. Bertha Oliva Schwein, Lawrence. A. B. Berenice Aileen Butts, . . . A. B, Wichita. nB . Y. W. C. A., Sophomore Farce, Red Domino, Junior Farce Com., Senior Farce Com. ii ii III eel g § I fi - - ' ' ' RUTHE LaMBE, A. B. Lawrence. Sophomore Farce, Junior Farce, Red Domino (3), Senior Farce Com. Esther Pauline Richardson, . A. B. Lawrence. May F6te (1), Kirmess (2), Home Eco- nomics Club. Esther Rebecca Wilhelm, Lawrence. SK. A. B. Arthur Raymond Chalfont, Garden City. A. B. Ill 11! iffl M x v M vNlm ' «MNlNA v NV 9A vM M 42 . ,L WrwT SSSpimSSSSSSSi SSi 1 Ws4 Otto C. Graber, Moundridge. M. Mabel Hunter, Labette. Wallace C. Magathan, Marion. Acacia, Quill Club. A. B. A. B. A. B. Otto J. Dixon, A, B. Mound Valley. NSN. ssmsssis sisiswssss i ill i i i iSSSSSSiSSSSSiiS S8SSSSSiSSiSSiSSSiSSSi«SSSiSS ill III ss ssssssjsismsissm-ssssimsi HI 1 43 Whe JAV Hi4 WKER3 Hi Mabel Faye Woods, Burden. A. B. EsTELLE V. Butcher, Sedan. A. B. Edna Nadine Bigelow, . . . A. B. Gardner. Secretary Sophomore Class (2), Red Domino, Idle Idol (1), Jayhawker Board (4), Y. W. C. A., Cap and Gown Com., Senior Finance Com. William Adison Smith, Cuba. . A. B. I ill lii !!! HI tit III Hi ill ill ill ill ' J3he JAYHAWKER. Claude Baker Minner, Soldier. Ila Maud Arnett, Lawrence. Y. W. C. A., Mathematics Club. Florence D. Healey, . Lawrence. Quill Club, Lewis Prize Essay. Juliet Snider, nrs Fort Scott. SSSSSSSiSSiiSSSSiMiSSS 45 â– â– I ' he JAYHAVV Ii ig III III i i i ill Hi III Irma Bauman Spangler, . . . A. B. Lawrence. nB , Alemania, Y. W. C. A., W. S. G. A. (3), Junior Prom Com. (3), Torch. Millie Mann, nrs. Grenola. Esther May Crowley, Lawrence. Alexander C. Johnson, Scandia. Mathematics Club. . A.B. A. B. A.B. ica 46 a - SS - iSSSSSSSSSSSiSMSiS 1 SSmSMSSSSSSiSSMSiSMJmi! ill III III ill ill i i i Ml £ i i ill i! Ill III ill ill ill ill III III III ill ill if! I i i III ill ill ili III ill ill ill III ill ili III fii It! Ill ill Nellie R. Taylor, A. B. White Cloud. Botany Club, Zoology Club, Entomology Club, Secretary (4). Walter Edward Hart, Newton. Class Track (1), Quill Club. . . A. B. VivLiN Martha Hazelrigg, Burlington. A. B. Dorothy Sandiford Ward, . . A. B. Lawrence. AAII, IirS, Teacher ' s Diploma, Y. W. C. A., Botany Club, W. S. G. A. (2), Treasurer Y. W. C. A. (4), Senior Fi- nance Com., Plymouth Guild, May F§te (1-2), Girls ' Circus (3), Torch. I i it ill i i i ill iil « s ; rf lii g s g ill III ll! Ill III Ml ill lii III iii III B I i III III |i| ill iii I! iii sr Ollie May Jenkins, McPherson. A.B. Mary Helen Keith, Lawrence. W, S. G. A., Y. W. C. A. A.B. Paul Ross, . . . . . . . A.B. Sterling. $AA, Student Council (3), Finance Com. (3), Chr. Com. on Organizations University Exposition, Chr. Annual Com. (3-4), Varsity Soccer (2-3-4) Class Foot- ball (2-3-4). Clare Morton, A. B, Green. XQ. II! ill III ill s § s iii III III Mi l|i ill iii lir ifi ill ill 11 if iii III iii III iii S9I ill 11 ei! iii iii il| III ill Iii III In III ill ill iii ill Iff ill Martha Frances Terrell, Holton. Y. W. C. A., German Verein. Mabel Ione Terrell, . . . , A. Holton. Y. W. C. A., German Verein. Laurin p. Yust, A. B. Sylvia. Y. M. C. A., Mathematics Club. Naomi Ellen Light, Lawrence. Junior Prom Decorating Com., Deutsche Verein, Home Economics Club, Y. W. C. A. District Chr. W. S. G. A. A. B. ' ' sssss sssssss -ssss iii i9 ' lishe JAVHi40 MBiSl ill III III III III iii III iff I I i III lag III ill iii III Hi III )!i III III ill Iff ill ill 11! iii ill !ii ill III III ill III ill Esther Louise Drake, Lawrence. nrs. A. B. Jessie Freeman Reed, La Plata, Mo. Secretary Senior Class (4). A. B. Cecil Miles Beardsley, Russell. A. B. Ross E. Weaver, Concordia. N2N, Soccer (1). A. B. III ill S 5 ° s I g III iii ill iii III III Iii in !l! iii III ill III III III ill iii Hi iii III III til ill III III Iii iii 50 ill SI fSis I SSSSSiSS II Jii i|i !!! II ill Mi i|i ill Hi ill ill ill ill ill iei ill III III III HI ill lit ill !i! Ill III ill ill 111 Ipl ca Hale S. Cook, Kansas City, Mo IIT. Eugene B. Hyndman, . Wellington. Russell Dunmire Elliott George H. Edwards, Jr., , Kansas City, Mo. 4 K F, SAX, Annual Board (4), Hawk Club, Thespians (2-3), Billy (2), Man- dolin Club (2), Kansan Board (1-2), Scoop Club, Pres. Freshman Pan-Hellenic, Chr. Publicity Com. Unive sity Exposition, Count No Account (4). . j 2! A m Hi i i i 51 mm JAV H24 WKEF â– SSSS Alma Theresa Gustafson, Lawrence. A. B. Velma Shelley, iirs. A. B. lola. Ittai Albert Luke, . . . . A. B. Topeka. 2A J), Class Treasurer (1), Asst. Cheer- leader (2-3-4), University Biological Sur- vey (2), Fine Arts Opera (2), University Debating Society (4). Edgar Miltox Sutton, Cawker City. NSN. A. B. ill III til i I i III III III III III ill ||| III B 3 B I 3 I I I I III III III III ill ill i i B lit III !ii !ii ill 1 1 i i i i III ill ill III III III Hi III !!! Ill isi Mary Edna Tupper, Lawrence. Roland E. Boynton, Lawrence. 4 A©, 4 AA, Good Govt. Club Katharina Toews, Lyons. Alma May Richardson, Lawrence. Y. W. C. A., Botany Club. •It â– ?}vS: JH - .: ' ::i-- i , • 53 â– m s ;cj3 ;j;3t « KsKe A asLfMMmmm 1 1 i ill Hi I i I III ill Hi III ! i 1 III 54 Charles E. Gibson, Lawrence. A. B. Eva M. Cook, A. B. Altamont. nrS, Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship. Edmund Carl Bechtold, . . . A. B. Lawrence. S J II, 4 AK, Founder German Drama- tic Club, Manager (2-3), Vice-President (4), Asst. Circulation Mgr. Daily Kan- san (2), Quill Club, Vice-President (4), Bus. Mgr. Oread Magazine (3-4), Der Bibliothekar (2), Chr. Finance Com. College (4). Arvid L. Frank, A. B. Kansas City, Mo. ASP, $BK, Red Domino, Composer Object Matrimony (2), Mgr. Sopho- more Hop (2), Black Helmet, Kansas- Missouri Debate (3), Class Football (3-4), Student Council (4). m ill il JMMMNk N« NVMIS WON NWAM V III ill ii ' s I III Edward Dahlene, . Lawrence. Geology Club, Y. M. C. A. A. B. Robert Warren Hemphill, Jr., . A. B, Norton. 21A4 , Quill Club, Wrestling Champion- ship (3). Clarence A. Green, Holton. Entomology Club. A. B. Marguerite Olive Villepigue, . A. B. Chanute. 4 BK, Kirmiss (2), University Orchestra, Y.W. C. A., President Botanical Club (4). Ill ' ' s sssssssssssssss 56 ' ' (3 XBhe JAYHAWKER. ii II ii Ii ii ii ii! iii II fi ill ii! i i I iii III III III ill III ii ii I! Eugene Frank Davis, . . . . A. B. Kansas City. Class Basket-ball (3), Class Football (4), Entomology Club. Bernice McFarland, . Lawrence. A.B. Edward Mosely Boddington, . A. B. Kansas City, Kan. K. U. Orchestra, Soph Invitation Com., Red Domino Object Matrimony, Soph. Farce, K. U. Debating Society, Cooley Club, Mgr. of Junior Prom, Secy-Treas. of K. U. Exposition, Chairman of Mem- bership Finance Com. Y. M. C. A., Cabi- net Y. M. C. A., Senior Play. Florence M. Wingert, Kansas City, Mo. A.B. I III ii !t iii Hi ill Hi ««v 57 33he A mMNW i Ws ' !!! i I [ §il III jfl III III ill ill ill lis III ill ii! ft! lii i i i lii III III ill III I i i III ill ill ill i ! i I i I III III Theodora Grove, Newton. Botany Club, Westminster Guild, Y. W, C. A., Sophomore Finance Com. A. B. Vena Spotts, A. B. Lawrence. nrS, Alemannia, W. S. G. A. (1), Junior Prom Com. (3), Secy. W. S. G. A. (4), Torch. Alice Henrietta Lund, Topeka. Y. W. C. A. A. B. Trine Latta, Thespians. A. B. Wichita. ill ill I ! i HI lii 111 Hi 111 ill it! iii ill 5 5 2 ill ill l|i ill sii ii! ill ill ill 111 ill In III ill Hi III iii ill III |!i ill I in li si! ill I S g III Ifl III ill i e I I i ! ill Charles Francis Green, Holton. 4 AK. A. B. Chester A. Badger, Overbrook. Keltz. A. B. Arthur AV. Duston, Washington. A. B., B. S. i AK, Acacia, Manager College Day, Geology Club, Philosophy Club. Elmer C. Neuschwanger, Osborne. J AK, Indoor Circus. A. B. ' ' SSSSsssss SS S i i i ill iii III ! ii 59 ' KBhe JAYHAWKEH . ssfcs III ji! i i ! sis Ruth Barbara Rule, .... A. B. Lawrence. Iir2, Quill Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3) . Annabella Crawford, Lawrence. IirS, Quill Club. A. B. Frances Harris Meservey, , . A. B, Kansas City, Mo. KKr, Junior Prom Invitation Com., Y. W. C. A. Social Com. (2), Senior Finance Com., W. S. G. A. (4), Torch. Joseph Earl Moore, . . . . A, B. Kansas City, Mo. 4 BK, Red Domino, Author Object, Mat- rimony (2), Sophomore Farce. « ill ' KW Emily V. Bergeb, Halstead. KKr, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3), Vice- Pres. Y. W. C. A., Hawk Club, Annual Board, Torch. Frank Porter Miller, Urich, Mo. KA, 4)Bn. Charles Ellsworth Irwin, Lawrence. Debating Squad. Bessie B. Becktell, Macks ville Alemannia. III I { I ill i|l E 3 I ill III III iii III ill III ill Herbert Flint, A. B. Girard. Glee Club (1), K. U. Debating Society (2), Quill Club, Circulation Manager Oread Magazine (3), Managing Editor Daily Kansan (3), Editor-in-Chief Daily Kan- san (4), Skull and K., SAX. Mary Pauline Bossi, . Arkansas City. A. B. Charles G. Williams, . Preston. A. B. Abe M. Goldman, A. B. Kansas City, Mo. German Dramatic Club, Der Bibliothe- kar (3), Glee Club (3), Chairman Music Committee (1), Chairman Music and Pro- gram Com. Sophomore Hop, Student Day Speaker Medic School (2), Program Com. Junior Prom. if! iii ill iii If I I i E i S I iii If i ill Iii Iii III III lit ill III Hi III iii ill III III III III iii !C3 SlSiSJiSimSSSiSiSiSSS ,,ssss « â– 62 i ill iii Lela Golden, Fort Scott. Geology Club. A. B. Marie Patience Sealy, . . . A. B. Independence, Mo. KA0, nrS, Alemannia, Secretary W. A. A. (2), Secretary W. S. G. A. (3), Y. W. C. A. (3-4), Junior Refr« shment Com., Torch. Alfred F. Waddel, . . . . A. B. Ottawa. Skull and K.. Vice-Pres. Junior Class, College Social ( om. Edward Vander Vries, . . . A. B. Grand Itapid.s, Mich. ATli. Freshman Basket-ball. Freshman Baseball, Varsity Basket-ball (!2-4), Var- sitv Baseball. I i ! Ill ill ill III ill iii ill ill Iff III !l! iii George Marks, . A.B. Lawrence. Soccer Football (2-3-4), Asst. Mgr. Sen- ior Play, Mandolin Club (3), Pres. K. U. Debating Society (3), Class Finance Com. (3). Anna Margaret Krebs, . . . A. B. Lawrence. German Verein, Home Economics Club, Y. W. C. A. Maurine Imogene Fair weather, A. B. Kansas City, Mo. nB$, Annual Board (4). S. Earl McMillin, .... Arkansas City. A.B. Ill III ill III III lif ill ill Sol %SS«iSSSSSSSiSSSiSSSSSSi!iSSSS H Jl i py ssiSSisssss!Si «S! r ill ill 11 Leila May Nevin, A. B. Lawrence. Y. W. C. A., Deutsche Verein (2-3-4), In- vitation Com. (2), Class Sec ' y (3), Re- freshment Com. (3), Class Day Com. (4). Meredith Robbins, . . . . A. B. Russell. 4 AK, Orchestra (3-4), German Dra- matic Club, German Play (4). Grace E. Gemberling, Lancaster. A. B. Flossie Winnifred Kincaid, Lawrence. Y. W. C. A. A. B. 3 III ill ill |li |i i i . HI sll I IpSSSSSiSSi SSSSSiSiSSSiSSSSiSSN! n III ill III III iii ill iii 111 SSi iii III ill Iii iii iii Iii III III III III Vera Knoblauch, A. B. Wichita. XQ. UxA Odetta Meredith, . . . A. B. Eureka. D. A. R. Scholarship (3), Blue Rose Dia- mond (3), May F6te (3). Edith Case, A. B. Kansas City. J. Christy Wilson, . . Idaho Falls, Idaho. 4 BK, 24 2, Oread Mag. Staff, Debate Squad (4), Student Day Speaker (4), Quill Club. A. B. tl lit Iii i s 5 ill ill iii ill 111 ii! ill ft! Ill Iii ill iii I I s III III ill III Ii III iii S,vvvv 66  ' «« «SS!iS5Sm NN S ' ' HI I 1 ill Alvin Leroy Babb, Lawrence. Track Team, 1907. A. B. Eda Lora Hinchman, . Lawrence. A. B. Dorothy Keeler, A. B. Lawrence. Acoth, Y. W. C. A., University Orchestra (1-2-3-4), Yeoman of the Guard (3), German Dramatic Club. LuciLE Smith, A. B. Independence, Mo. nB . I IMS ! Charles Raymond Wright, Winfield. A.B Robert S. Dinsmore, Jr., . . . A. B. Troy. Keltz, N2N, Student Council (3), Fresh- man Baseball. Nelle Templeton, . Denver, Colo. AAn, Glee Club. A.B. Charles I. Smith, . Sabetha. B. S. in Education, 4 AK. A.B. Ill ill i i I ill ill III ill [!i jl 11 !i mn i is B :: = i S ill Frances Adelia Rigby. Concordia. XQ. A. B. Humphrey W. Jones, . Emporia. 4 A(-), Thespians. A. B. Charles E. Strickland. . . . A. B. Topeka. i K ' F, SAX, Skull and K, Friars, Man- ager Junior Prom (3), Student Council (2-3) Chairman Invitation Committee Sophomore Hop (2), Freshman Decora- tion Committee (1), Exposition Commit- tee (3), Senior Finance Committee (4), Good Government Club, Scoop Club, Circulation Manager Oread Magazine (2), Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3), K. U. Debating Club, Pan-Hellenic Council (4), Freshman Football Team (1), Senior Play, Count No-Count. Harry W. Dixon, Kansas Citv. A. B. ill lii 1 1 i lii III lii ill 111 ill ifj !ii 111 i J ,i ill i i i m III |i| III li! i i j ii i ill li III III III III iil lai gii lie ill III iil ill ill ii II Ralph W. Yeoman, .... Kingman. 4 K ' F, Pres. of Class (2), Treas. Y. M. C. A. (2), Pres. (3-4), Secy. (3), Black Hel- met, Skull and K, Good Govt. Club. A. B. Lella Watson, A. B. Hutchinson. Secretary Circle Frangais (4), Treasurer (3), Critic El Ateneo (4). Wayne Ridge way, A. B. Kansas City. IIT, Orchestra, French Play, President French Club. Grace Eleanor Givin, Emporia. «i)BK. A. B. •iliMHIiKWHiiiWIIillltM %S SSiSiSSSSWSiSSii is ill iil K l Daniel Henry Maloy, , . . A, B. Eureka. Skull and K, Daily Kansan Board (3-4), Art Editor 1912 and 1913 Jayhawkers, Secy.-Treas. Men ' s Student Council (4), Treas. Junior Class (3), Treas. Senior Class (4). Marjorie Kennedy, Lawrence. A. B. J. CoRwiN Shaw, A. B. Goff. Caroline Virginia Greer, Kansas City, Mo. . A. B. 02 l , Quill Club, Circle Frangais (3-4), Associate Editor Oread Magazine (4) . I 1 1 i III ft! ill ill Hi i!l I ii 11! til ill s s § III III Hi iii ill iii III til ill I J 4 I i i si! ill i I !i! lii i i i m lii fii ill i i i ffl til if! ill ill Hi ill III ill Hi ! I I lii Throck M. Davidson, . Wichita. sx. Ora F. Grubbs, .... A. B., B. S Lawrence. AK. Mary Effie Sollars, . Independence, Mo. Mark Eavald, A. B Lawrence. B. S. in Education, Quill Club. ill m til SsiSsSSMSSSSSSiSiSSSSSiS mt m Nkss X te JAYHA m mwm Veta Blanche Lear, . . . . A. B. Osawatomie. nrS, Alemannia, Y. W. C. A. (4), German Dramatic Club, Philosophy Club, Secretary German Verein (4). LUALLA M. PlLKINGTON, . . . A. B. Gamett. QuiU Club, Y. W. C. A. Levi E. Zimmerman, . . . . A. B. Sterling. SAcf), Soccer Football (2-3-4), Cap- tain Soccer Team (4), Mathematics Club. Mrs. Nellie Charles Terrill, Lawrence. B. S. in Education. A.B. i f 1 74 Ili JAYHAVy:KER; Abel James McAllister, . B. S. in Ed Lawrence. $AK, Asst. Instructor School of Educa- tion. Ina St. Clair Haines, . Edwardsville. George Park Marsh, .... Lawrence. 2A$, SAX, Good Government Club, Scoop Club, Friars, Treasurer, Managing Editor and Editor-in-Chief Daily Kansan (3), Faculty Editor 1914 Jayhawker. Ruth Buchanan, . . . Lawrence. Girls ' Glee Club (3-4), Sec.-Treas. College (4), W. S. G. A. (4). ill i I i iii ill iii ill !ii ii! Ill William Earl Janes, . Spring Hill. University Band. Marjorie Templin, . . . . A. B. Lawrence. Alemannia, Vice-President W. A. A., Sophomore Com. Elsie Marie Landen, . Lawrence. A. B. A. B. James Roger Coolidge, . y . Smith Center. 2X, Sachems, Friars, Senior Play Com. (4), Freshman Football, Freshman Base- ball, Varsity Baseball (2-3), Varsity Captain Baseball (4). A. B. 11! i i i ill i i i III Hi ill ill ill ill s i V I I 1 1 76 ii) Ill ill 1 1 i III li i S. E. Williams, A. B. Burlingame. Neosho Venerable, Lawrence. Blyden Yates, A. B, Kansas City, Mo. Leroy Robbins, . . B. M Arkansas City. Edward S. Baker, Jr., . A. B. Kansas City. Ill ill iii ill iii ill iii ill ill iii iii iii iii iii III Iii ill III Iii III li! i s . ' : : 1 I iii ill 11! i|i III III fii ill III III ill iii III lis III iii iii ill lis 1 ' I 11 e i i III 111 IE l %SiSS SiSSiSiiSSiSSSSSSSiSSSSi«!SSSS s«ss 5«5 S«SSSSSiSSiSSiS fc ' 78 he JAYHAWKER. Engineering School  i I f i III iff III ill III it! lii ill III 111 Dean P. F, Walker. Advisory Dean F. O. Marvin. it ii ill THE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING was organized and separated from the Department of Liberal Arts and Sciences in 1891, with F. O. Mar- vin as Dean. Since that time there have been many changes, but always a steady development towards a larger and better school, and back of everything has been the individuality of one man — Dean Marvin. To the un- tiring efforts, industry and wisdom of this Grand Old Gentleman does the Engi- neering School owe its present high standing and do we Engineers feel so deeply indebted. The steady growth of the school so demanded enlargement in class-room and other facilities that the fo llowing buildings were erected and ready for occupancy in 1909 : Marvin Hall, Haworth Hall, and the Mechanical Laboratory building The School of Engineering offers complete courses of study in the following de- partments : Civil and Sanitary. Electrical. Mechanical. Mining. Chemical. Architectural. In 1912, owing to the continued ill-health of Dean Marvin. Professor P. F. Walker was made Acting Dean, and in May, 1913, was raised to the position of Dean. Dean Marvin is still retained as Advisory Dean. ill ' f s s s npi ' l s -;S! SSs S = i i III 3 1 i lie ill iii ill Eli Hi ill §11 ill III Hi Floyd Bernard Devlin, . . . B. S. Newton. Mechanical Engineer, Knights of Colum- bus, A. S. M. E., Junior Prom Committee, Senior Invitation Committee. Lawrence W. Kinnear, ... B. S. New York City, New York. Ben, OT, Civil Engineer, Sachems, Red Domino Show (3), Junior Farce (3), University Exposition (3), Vice-Pres. C. E. Society (3), Men ' s Student Council (â– i). Senior Play (4). Eugene L. Harshbarger, , . , B. S. Topeka. Civil Engineer, Alemannia, President of the Civil Engineering Society (4). Leslie H. Dodd, B. S. Langdon. 0T, SS, Civil Engineer, Alemannia, Skull and K, President of Men ' s Student Council (4), Secretary and Treasurer of Engineering School (3), Prom Committee (3), Managing Committee of 1914 Jay- hawker. i s I i SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSiSSSS lJ 81 i . ' KB he JAYHAWKER. 1 1 ill ill tea  Herbert Cecil Hansen, ... B. S. Independence. Electrical Engineer, Acacia, Men ' s Stu- dent Council (4), Chairman University of Kansas Branch A. I. E. E. (4), Chairman Senior Finance Committee, Decoration Committee Junior Prom. Howard Clyde Pauly, ... B. S. Kansas City, Mo. Electrical Engineer, Acacia, A. I. E. E., Tumbling Team (1, 2, 3, 4), Class Foot- ball (2), Varsity Track (4). Howard Lee Newby, .... B. S. Acme, Texas. Mechanical Engineer, Junior Class Foot- ball, Mandolin Club (3), Treasurer A. S. M. E. (3), Corresponding Sec. A. S. M. E. (4). Cyrus R. Veirs, Independence. Civil Engineer. B.S. Si N ! lS ill ill ill ill III III lli i s I lli ill III â– SSS! ;SS 82 - SSiSSiSSiSSSSS SSSiS I;; ill III i i i Jlf ili III iij ill Hi a s a i i i ill III ill I i I jll III LoREN Elden Brown, . Delphos. Electrical Engineer. Joseph Segel, McPherson. S3, Electrical Engineer,. B.S. B.S. Frank John Lynch, .... B. S. Herington. Electrical Enginee.-, Knights of Colum- bus, Chairman Senior Football, Student Member A. I. E. E. Arthur J. Fecht, B. S. Kansas City. 21 E, Electrical Engineer, Secy. K. U. Branch A. I. E. E. (3), Student Member A. I. E. E. (3, 4). ill 5 S§ S «5SSSSSSiSSsssissS 83 he JAV HAVVKER, i l III III ill iil ill III I i I ill William H. Severns, . Lawrence. Mechanical Engineer. B. S. George Aveky Washburn, Topeka. Electrical Engineer, Vice-President A. I. E. E. (4). B.S. William Jack Malcolmson, . . B. S. Kansas City, Mo. SS, Mechanical Engineer, A. S. M. E., Vice-President Men ' s Student Council (4), Varsity Track (.S, 4), K Club. Alfred R. Powell, . . . . . B. S. Lawrence. AXS, Chemical Engineer, Vice-Presi- dent of Chemical Engineering Society (4) . Sis 1 1 5 iil 111 ifi iil III III ill ill III ill ill i i i I S e 11! 84 III iil Si S I III ill i i I III ill ill III iii ill III III ill III i f ! E S i ill ill ill iii 11! ill II! ill ill ii III III II! i i ! 11 ill 111 = s = III iii ill Iii iii iii Georgp: Robert Murphy, . . B. S. Oklahoma City, Okla. B0n, 0T, Civil Engineer, Senior Social Committee, Student Day Speaker (4). James West Schwab, .... B. S. Mitchell S. D. B0n, AX2, Chemical Engineer, Sa- chem, Friar, Black Helmet, Varsity Track (2), Freshman Track (1), Varsity Football (3). Francis Montgomery Veatch, . B. S. Atchison. B©n, Sanitary Engineer, Class Football ' 08- ' 09, University Exposition Commit- tee. Fred Hunter, B. S. Labette. Civil Engineer. iii ill (Bhe JAYHAW KBBS Vf i Ni lii ill Henry Calvin Ackerman, . . B. S. Rosedale. Mechanical Engineer, America n Society of Mechanical Engineers. Chester S. Cassingham, ... B. S. Warrensburg, Mo. IIY, Civil Engineer, Friar, C. E. Society, Senior Play. VOLNEY J. CiSSNA, B. S. Fort Scott. Electrical Engineer, Varsity Track (3-4), K Club. John R. Smith, B.S. Sterling. Electrical Engineer, Tennis (2-3-4), K Club. 11 .« .s. ill III ill ill 86 1 i ' Oliver H. Horner, Kansas City, Kan. Electrical Engineer Daniel Bertram Kleihege, La Crosse. Mechanical Engineer. Ralph Logan Seger, Topeka. t A0, 0T, Mining Engineer. Paul King Bunn, B. S Lawrence. Civil Engineer, Y. M. C. A. Board ' LS- ' 14. H klC: psssssssssssmsssmismsss ssmsssssssssss mmm 11! iii Andrew B. Underwood, . Kansas City, Mo. Civil Engineer. B. S. Ivan Paul Parkhurst, . . . B. S. Kinsley. Chemical Engineer, Chemical Engineer- ing Society (2, 3, 4). Donald G. Reid, Kansas City, Mo. Civil Engineer. B. S. Sam Fairchild, B. S. Hutchinson. SAE. Mechanical Engineer, Skull and K, 1-t Lieut. Co. M., K. N. G., Class Football (3-4), A. S. M. E., Vice-Presi- dent Engineering School (4). ill ill H I ll Iff til ill til III ill I 11 ill ill fif E E i Ifl !i! ' iF ie JAVTHAWKER. I III III ill III III III III ill III ill Lyman E. Bolinger, .... B. S. Clearwater. Civil Engineer, Civil Engineering Society (2, 3, 4), Vice-President Civil Engineering Society (4). Lyle Deards AYise, Lawrence. Electrical Engineer. B. S. Lewis Esmonde Nofsingek, . . B. S. Kansas City, Mo. Mechanical Engineer, Member of Student Sect, of A. S. M. E., Sec.-Treas. Christian Science Society 1911-12, 1912-13, Presi- dent Christian Science Society 1913-14. Ernest J. Baldwin, .... B. S. Cherryvale. AXi;, Chemical Engineer, Varsity Bas- ket-ball (2). Freshman Basket-ball, Presi- dent Chemical Engineering Society (4), Band (1-2). ill lag ill i i I lis I i I ill III III III III III !!! I i i Hi fS:Aer ilAYJMM MKER. S S S III fill ' if III Charles Robert Greenlees, . B. S. Lawrence. I rA, Mining Engineer, Freshman Bas- ket-ball, Varsity Basket-ball (2-3-4), Cap- tain in (3), Men ' s Student Council (3), Friars, Sachems, Mce-President Senior Class, Varsity track (3), Varsity Football (4), K Club. John S. Butler, B. S. Kansas City, Mo. ®T, Mechanical Engineer, Keltz, Class Football (2-3), Decoration Committee Junior Prom, Finance Committee Senior Class. Charles Vern Fowler, Lawrence. Electrical Engineer. B. S. LuMAN McLaine Harsh a, Partridge. Civil Engineer. B. S. Hi i|i 111 ca X;5 SS « S5k5SSSS!iSVSSSSiSA;SJS!iSS! ' Ig ' SSiSSSSSSSS SSS 90 1 SSSSSSSSSiSSSiSiSiSSMSiSSSS 1SM i mmsmKsmj S! ! sm sssssssssisisiiss Hi ill til Hi ill III III ill m iii ill ill I I ! HI ill {11 ill ill III I E I lis ill !|i ill ill i i i lit 11! i i I III ill iii III John Allen McCurry, ... B. S. Parsons. Mining Engineer, Acacia, Secretary Geo logical Society (4). H. H. Feierabend, B. S. Atchison. Mechanical Engineer, Knights of Colum- bus, Treas. A. S. M. E. 1913-14. Leland Charles Angevine, . . B. S. Lawrence. 0T, Mechanical Engineer, President of the Student Branch of the American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers. Harlen D. King, B. S. Cawker City. Sanitary Engineer, K. U. Band (1, 2, 3), Class Football (3). ill III ill iii III Hi iii ill ill ill ill -y ymi v â– iSi m s Dan Hazen, . B. S. Lawrence. Mechanical Engineer, Skull and K, Vice- President of Class (2), President of Class (3), K Club, Varsity Track (2-3, Capt. 4), A. S. M. E., Mandolin Club (2-3). Guy Cecil Glenn, B. S. Lawrence. Civil Engineer, Civil Engineering Society. Earl William Hunter, Lawrence. Sanitary Engineer, K. N. G., Y. M. C. A. B. S. James Parker, B. S. Independence. J)rA, 9T, Civil Engineer, Freshman Football (1), Varsity Football (3-4), Sachems, K Club, Pachacamac, Civil Engineering Society. I cs T n ' i ' s Hi i i I i 1 1 ii! ill i i i Ifi III li! ill ill iii ill in lis Is! iii ill li! ill III .vSS ' ' 92 cx x xx XvCCx - x ClX« . - sm m iximssmmmmmimm - X ' ' SSSMSiSSSSSiSSSSiSS i|i III ill ill ill III III ill i|i III ill |S| i i i Isi til i I i isi ill ! ! i ill Iff III III ill III III l!i Lewis Benedict Smith, ... B. S. Ogden, Utah. K2, Mining Engineering, A. B. (1911), President Student Branch A. I. M. E. (4), Boxing (1-2-3-4), Wrestling (1-2-3-4). Claude L. Coggins, .... B. S. Wamego. Mechanical Engineer, Sophomore Prom Committee (2), Junior Prom Committee (3), Ch. Class Day Committee (4), Men ' s Student Council (5), Student Sec. A. S. M E. Merle V. Holmes, . Kansas City, Kansas. Civil Engineer. B. S. William Dale Weidlein, ... B. S. Lawrence. Civil Engineer, Varsity Football (2-3-4, Captain 4), Varsity Basket-ball (4), Sachems, Athletic Board (4). ill III ill ill liE if! li i ill 111 iii III ill Hi m flf 93 KBhe JAYHAWliBlS SiSfc Ill iff III 111 III III III III li! Lawrence M. Allison, Lawrence. B. S. Walter A. Davenport, Lawrence. Sanitary Engineer, Keltz, Student Coun- cil (3), Junior Prom Invitation Commit- tee. B. S. James E. La Rue, B. S. Lawrence. Civil Engineer, Secretary C. E. Society (3). Oscar Aldrich Dingman, ... B. S. Emporia. 0T, Mining Engineer, Pachacamac, Skull and K, Good Government Club, President of Engineering School (4), Vice-President A. I. M. E. (3), Decoration Committee University Exposition, Engineering Edi- tor 1914 Jay hawker, Men ' s Student Council (3), Boxing (1-2-3-4). ill III III III III i I I li I Hi i S i i i I III III III III ill III ill III ill III III I he JAV iPVKERI ill III ill III l!l III ill ill ill Hi III iil i 1 1 111 ill III III i i i 11 ill i I J. Lawrence Bliss, Winfield. ex. Civil Engineer, C. E. Society. B. S. ii! Hi iil ill ill f SSSSiSSSSSSSSSiSSiSS THE COLLEGE WIDOWERS ' PLEA. 5a$e5, uiise, ubose (:l}ou$bt6, profound B vS ogj ux:)rlds of learned f oowled e, o ' pray tell us )0w to learo from booKs, ' Wbeo at i ) 6 co-ed college! zzz zzzz ' Kshe JAYHAWMBl® School of Law ill 1 1 1 is! ill ii i III III THE SCHOOL OF LAW of the University of Kansas was or- ganized as the first profes- sional course in the University in 1878, under the direction of Mr. J. W. Green, a practicing attorney of Law- rence. Thirteen enrolled the first year, and in 1880 the first law class was graduated, having all of eight members. The following are among those who have at some time past been associated with the faculty of the Law School of the University of Kansas : Marcus Summerfield, Jas. Willis Gleed, Judge A. W. Benson, Judge S. A. Riggs, Charles L. Dobson, and Judge David Martin. Since the birth of the Law School, the University of Kansas has been blessed with the services of one of the most loyal and kindest of men, in the person of James Woods Green, Dean of the School of Law of the Uni- versity of Kansas. This grand and glorious old gentleman is best known in and out of school, as Uncle Jimmy Green, and is one of the most beloved and admired of the University ' s faculty members. To him the State of Kansas owes a debt of gratitude and appreciation that can never be paid, except by the success of the young men who have gone from his class-rooms and who have felt that gentleness of spirit and bigness of heart that all have experienced in his presence. The young men passing this year from the in- fluence of his loving kindness thank him and the State of Kansas for the privilege of his association, and wish the world ' s best unto him. Dean James Wood Green. Ill III i 1 1 ill III III III III 1 1 1 III ill a a § III ill III III jjt ill ii! i I i 1 1 1 Hi i 1 1 ill i m 98 Hi ill ill III ill II! ill ill 1 i £ til ttf i i I ill I i E lit 11! ifl iii Hi III III Iii ill ill ill fit ill iii Oliver T. Athertox, .... LL. B. Emporia. Ben, $AA, Scoop Club, Masque Club, Lottery Man, Blue Rose Diamond. Warren J. Myers, . Hutchinson. 4 AA. LL. B. Ben J. KiRCHNER, LL. B. Winfield. Treas. K. U. Debating Society, Cooley Club, Knights of Columbus. Adrian Brooks Campbell, A. B., Washing- ton and Tusculum College, LL. B., K. U. Baileyton, Tennessee. Pres. Jurisprudence Club, Pres. Cooley Club, Pres. K. U. Debating Club, Final Inter-society debates (1-2), Class Speaker Uncle Jimmy Day Banquet 1912, Mis- souri Debating Squad (4). iii iii i ! i I i i S! SSSSS SS!lSSSiSS!iSSSJS!« Hi Hi III Hi Hi ill lii III lii lis lii i |! II! ill III III lii i s i 111 III i i i 11! Ill William H. Schwinn, . Wellington. LL. B. B0n, Junior Farce, ' ' Blue Rose Dia- mond. Elwood Walter Beeson, . Wichita. LL. B. I A I , Good Government Club, Juris- prudence Club, Senior Social Committee. Frank M. McClelland, . College Springs, Iowa. LL. B. A J , ASn, Kansas-Oklahoma Debate (3), Jurisprudence Club. Eugene Bryan Smith, . Chautauqua. LL. B. $A I , Jurisprudence Club, Senior Fi- nance Committee. Hi 1 1 a ill III ii! 100 KSKe Arthur Spencer Humphrey, A. B., LL. B. Junction City. $K F, Scrim Committee, The Dicta- tor, German Plav 1911. Clarence Ralph Sowers, Wichita. . LL. B. J rA, Skull and K, Glee Club (2-3-4), Mgr. (4), President and Director Thespi- ans, Asst. Mgr. and Director Hawks, Ju- risprudence Club, Chr. Senior Play Com., Dramatic Editor Jayhawker (4), Lead in The Aviator, Chr. and Author Junior Farce, Chr. Law Scrim. Charles Clement Fairchild, A. B., LL. B. Lawrence. AA. K Club, Skull and K, Athletic Board, Debating Council, K. U. Debating Society, President (4), Cooley Club, Varsity Track (2-3-4), Class Football (1-3-4-6). Martin Wilbert Goldsworthy, LL. B. Hancock, Mich. B0n, Vice-President Junior Law Class, Sphinx. Ill III III tJ pSSSSSSS8SiSSSSSSS «S«SS Xf;l 5 he JAVHAWI iPi f l 6 I S I D 8 ill III lis iii  1 Milton William Kelley Lawrence. LL. B. Ralph H. Spotts LL.B. Lawrence 4 K $A4), ASP, Y. M. C. A., Good Government Club, Annual Board. Paul Henry Royer, Abilene. LL.B. I AA, Acacia, University Orchestra (1). Albert S. Teed, LL. B. Hutchinson. SAE, Pachacamac, Sphinx, Hawks, Thespian Dramatic Club, University Band (1-3), Finance Com. (1), Senior Farce Com. (3), Chairman Program and Invitation Com., Law Scrim (4). %iS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSi ill ii| Hi ill 111 III ill iii 111 Hi III iii iii III !j! Ill III 33i v[gf 102 i j|T S«SS!S!SSSi«SiiSSSS III ill III Hi ill In ill ill ill ill ill i i 1 III ill ill IS! D. Claire Mopfitt, Wichita William Earl Emick, . Miltonvale. George Lee Brown, Atchison. I AA, Cooley Club. Claude Oliver Conkey, Pleasanton. LL. B. LL. B. LL. B. LL. B. 4 A I , University Band (2-3), Senior Class Day Committee. i I In III 103 SI Cll. rence C. Stewart, Baldwin. LL. B. Bruce C. Hurd, LL. B. Abilene. B0n, $A4 , Friars, Mgr. Junior Prom (3), Good Govt. Club, Jurisprudence Club, Board of Y. M. C. A. (2-3-4), Sa- chems, Object, Matrimony (2), Mgr. Law Scrim (4), Senior Play Com. (4). Joe Edward Lynch, Herington. Knights of Columbus LL. B. Roderick V, Reid, . Clay Center. J AA, Acacia. LL. B. Pi 1 1 1 ill ill III iii ill ISi lii III I li i i ill I i i 104 ' iF i JAYn mmimjm Frank W. Sterns, . Hiawatha. Senior Social Committee. LL. B. Webster Watterson Holloway, LL. B. Hutchinson. SN, A$, Sachems, President ' of Senior Class, Pachacamac, Student Council, Ju- nior Social Committee, Freshman Foot- ball. Matt Guilfoyle, LL. B. Wamego. Knights of Columbus, Pres. Cooley Club (12), Pres. University Debating Council, Vice-President Senior Law Class, Fresh- man Football (10). Alva Frank Lindsay, . Oilman City, Mo. 4 AA. LL. B. 1 In ss , Ss «?SiSSSS«!SSiSSi!Si ««SSSSSSW iSS 105 Irj WsSSSSSSiSiSSSSSSSSSSS! t5:ft JAV Hi4tWKER, i!iZ III III I i i ill Hi III ill III ill ill ill iii III ill Marley R. Brown, Olathe. . LL. B. 4 A I), Annual Board, Good Government Club, Jurisprudence Club. William M. Morton, . St. Joseph, Mo. LL. B. J A0, $AA, Jurisprudence Club, Cooley Club. Ralph U. Pfouts, . Lancaster. AA. LL. B. Bert Leland Hart, Lakin. $AA, Cooley Club. . LL. B. li! Hi ill III Hi iii i i : if ' i i ' 11! |ii i I i Hi III iii i i ! iii ill Hi ill ill I jAYHmmmmm m Edwin S. Coombs LL. B. Kansas City, Mo. SAE. Walter A. Lambert, Leavenworth. LL.B. SAE, I A4 , Jurisprudence Club, Man- ager Uncle Jimmy Banquet 1914. Edgar Chauncey Welsh, . Kansas City, Mo. . LL.B. SAE, Freshman Football, Freshman Basket-ball, Refreshment Com. Law Scrim. Paul Kenneth Cubbison, Kansas City. LL.B. OAX, Pachacamac, Sachems, Treasurer Law Class (4), Chr. Social Com. (4), An- nual Board (4), Chr. Speakers ' Com. Uncle Jimmy Day Banquet (3), Pres- ident Taft Rep. Club (3), Invitation Com. Law Scrim (2). 107 l issims M s ! ' he j nmf Ymm. h ' M ill III 3 S B ii! ill ill ill ill lie III iii a 1 1 III III ill III III III III III III ill ill William Martin Howden, Jr., Skidmore, Mo. LL. B. 2AE, Black Helmet, Mgr. Hawk Dra- matic Club, Thespians. Athletic Editor 1914 Jay hawker. BURNEY MaLLOY DuNHAM, Altoona. I A J , Cooley Club. LL. B. Bert Steeper LL. B. Lawrence. Reception Com. Junior Class. K. U. De- bate (1-2-3), Jurisprudence Club, Deco- rating Com. Junior Prom, Chr. Decorat- ing Com. Senior Class (4 Y. M. C. A. Robert L. Maurice, Kansas City. LL. B. J AA, Cooley Club, Sophomore Class Basket-ball. 108 he JAYHAWKER i ill ifi if ii ill ill lEi ill ill ill ill Hi ill ill III iii Winona Ivy McCoskrie, Chanute. LL. B. Secretary Law Class (1-2-3), Jurispru- dence Club, Queen of May (4) . Guy W. Von Schriltz, . Coldwater. LL. B. KS, «i AA, Cooley Club, Pres. Quill Club (3), Freshman Football (1), Junior Football (2), Pres. Junior Laws (1), Election Judge (2), Secretary Hodges for Governor Club (2), Vice-President Wood- row Wilson Club (2), Y. M. C. A., Mana- ger 1914 Jayhawker (3). Russell H. Clark, . Kansas City, Mo. . LL. B. l)Ae, SAX, Editor-in-Chief 1014 Jay- hawker, Sachems, Black Helmet, Sporting Editor Daily Kansan (3), Manager Thes- pians (3), Billy (2), Pan-Hellenic Council (2-3), Student Council (3), Fi- nance Com. University Exposition (3), Manager Hawk Dramatic Club (4), Pres- ident University Progressive Club (3). Frank Ellwood Miller, Topeka. . LL. B. 4 A0, O-AA, Skull and K, Student Council (3), Associate Mgr. Jayhawker (3), Senior Play (3), Red Domino The Blue Rose Diamond (2), Mandolin Club (2), Pan-Hellenic Council (3), Law Com. K. U. Exposition, Sphinx. Ill Iii ill III 109 IShe JAVHAWKER. Lawrence B. Morris, . Junction City. LL. B. • KT, 4 A , Pachacamache, Skull and K, Black Helmet, Sphinx, Asst. Cheer Leader (2), Cheer Leader (3), Glee Club (2-3), Asst. Manager and Treasurer Glee and Mandolin Clubs (3), Mandolin Club (1-2-3), Freshman Football (1), Fresh- man Baseball (1), Mgr. Pike, K. U. Ex- position (2), Boys of Company B (2), Junior Farce (2), Indoor Circus (1-2), Freshman Pan-Hellenic, Y. M. C. A. (2). Paul D. Surber, Independence. LL. B. J rA, Pachacamac, Chr. Music Com., Law Scrim, Senior Program Com., Black Helmet. Webster AV. Kimball, . Parsons. rA. . LL. B. F. E. Fischer, LL.B. Wamego. ATQ, Pachacamac, Good Govt. Club, Jurisprudence Club, Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil (2-3-4), President (4), Chr. Sophomore Farce (2), Sophomore Social Com. (2), Junior Farce Com. (3), Chr. Cap and Gown Com. (4). ill Hi ill ill ill i ! i ill ill III ill ill iii lit III ill iii III III iii Hi ««%««S«JJ S«Si 110 if- i 11 I i ' he tJMcmmmi BSi Oliver Walter Weber, Lawrence. LL. B. A. Bernard Caswell, . Belleville. SX, Sachems. LL. B. E. C. Colin, LL. B. Argonia. $AA. Cale Olin Buckles, Peru. LL. B. Pres. Senior Law Class, Pro-Consul Phi Delta Phi, Good Government Club, Ju- risprudence Club. ikfli IMi ill it 111 111 11 ish JC€Wfl rvmm. sm Kelton E. Lewis, . . . . . LL. B. Kinsley. Mandolin Club, Cooley Club. Alonson Ruckmann Buzick, Sylvan Grove. LL. B. KS, 4 AA, Pachacamac, Thespian, The Aviator ( ' 13), Social Committee (1), Chair. Social Committee (2), Jay- hawker Board ( ' 11, ' 14), Junior Speaker Law Banquet ( ' 11), Toastmaster Uncle Jimmy Day Banquet ( ' 14), Senior Fi- nance Committee. William H. McClure, . Republic City. . LL. B. University Band (1), Varsity Track (2), Cooley Club (1-2-3), K. U. Debating So- ciety (1-2-.S). Herbert C. Sommers, . Abilene. LL. B. rA, Varsity Football (K), Varsity Baseball (K), Friars, Sachems, Pachaca- mac, Chairman Music and Program Com- mittee Junior Prom, Chairman Baseball Committee ( ' 14), K Club. ill S«SiSS5SSS$iSSSS 112 -J 4 III L. Lloyd Smith, . LL. B. Chanute. K2, I)A I , Skull and K, Varsity Bas- ket-ball (2-3-i), K Club, Chairman Junior Social Committee (3). Jxo. Richards Miller, La Cygne. LL. B. Varsity Band, Mandolin Club, Orches- tra, Cooley Club. s i s ill 9 g g i li 114 4 iShe As: iWMmmm m s s School of Medicine ill 181 I g B i i i ill 11! WHEN the Legislature estab- lished the University of Kan- sas, the founding of a medical school was also contemplated, but the first step taken towards its formation was in 1880 when a Preparatory Med- ical Course under the administration of the college was started. In 1899 the School of Medicine was definitely or- ganized and the first two years of a modern medical course were oflFered to students. In 1905 a course was offered whereby a student could obtain an M. D. degree. At the present time two years of college work are required for admittance to the Medical School. Four years in the Medi cal School are required for an M. D. degree. The work of the first year and a half is given at Lawrence, while that of the last half of the second and the third and fourth years is given at Rosedale and is of a clinical nature. Samuel J. Crumbine, head of the Department of Public Health, is Dean of the School, with Dr. Mervin T. Sudler as acting Dean. The faculty is composed of fifty men, all of whom rank high in the medical profession. The University Training School for Nurses is run in connection with the hos- pital at Rosedale. Ill III Dean S. J. Crumbine. Hi I i i III ifi III III Ifi ill III 533 ! ill ill ill « f jl III ill ill III ill llf i i i II II! «««i«sssss,m s5s 116 ' he JAV:Ha iSrKER W SS«5 -«S!Si «SiSSJS kssfcssiSSismiSiSMSs |ii ill III til i|i ill III ill I { i III I i i III I I i III { ! i xii ill i i i III III { i i III III ill III III Hi I i i ill iii III lit III III Homer A. Alexander, . • Nickerson. NSN, 4 BK, AS. A. B., M. D. LeRoy J. Wheeler, Wakeeney. A. B., M. D. Vice-President Senior Medics, Senior In- terne Putoa Sanitarium. Clarence E. Earnest, . A. B,, M. D. Washington. NSN, AS, President Senior Medics. James Edgar Henshall, . A. B., M. D. Osborne. NSN. AS. X«;iSSSSi?SSi?mi!iMiSSS«S?miSSSS 117 ;«S!S5m«« S5S«mS«S«S«!SS(««S««S«!iS ' KShe JAVHi4 WKER i i ill Jessie L. Gove. Cherokee. Vice-President N. B. B. C, Secretary Dancing Club. Ethel Mae Haines. Altamont. Vice-President Class, Secretary N.B.B.C. Orpha Zoa Hall. Elmdale. President N. B. B. C. Mary Cassandra Jefferies. Lawrence, Secretary and Treasurer Class Treasurer N. B. B. C, Secretary Dancing Club. 3 i i s i I 1 3 i ill ill l ill ill I I i 11} lif ill 118 ;Si [11 III ill III ill III III III i 9 ! lis ii! i i ! 9 g g III ill III III iii ill iii ill Hi |ii ill !!! ill ill iii Ruth R. Myer. Columbus. Cyril Evan Sheppard, Wellsville. N2N, AS. A. B., M. D. Watson Campbell, . Attica. A. B., M. D. rA, NSN, AS, 2E Student Council, Good Govt. Club, Sachems, Pan-Hellenic Council. Bell Memorial Hospital and Laboratory, Roseuale. JS p iii iii 119 III til Hi III ill lii 111 ill ill III Hi ill lii ill ill isi i i i III ill ill ill ill 120 | â– .... m ie ' ' iJA H: iV ' n me School of Pharmacy THE SCHOOL OF PHARMA- CY was organized in the year 1885, at which time the Legis- lature adopted a law creating the School. At a meeting of the Kansas Pharmaceutical Society in the spring of the same year, L. E. Say re, the pres- ent Dean, was elected Dean of the School of Pharmacy. The object of this School is to give its students a thorough, practical training in all of those branches connected with the pharmaceutical profession in its vari- ous departments. Special emphasis is placed upon Chemistry, as this is the foundation of all pharmaceutical work. There are three courses offered by the School of Pharmacy : the Two, Three and Four Year Courses. These are arranged logically and progressively ; the instruction is given according to modern methods, and in the spirit of those principles which, in their appli- cation to other classes of modern technical schools, have proved so eminently suc- cessful. Candidates for admission to any of the three courses offered by the School must present certificates of graduation from an accredited high school or its equiv- alent. The courses of study in the School of Pharmacy lead to the three following degrees : Graduate in Pharmacy, on completion of the two-year course ; Pharma- ceutical Chemist for the three-year course ; and on completion of the four-year course the degree of Bachelor of Science is given. As an adjunct to the Pharmaceutical Society an Annex was established in 1890, whose aim it is to secure positions for graduates, and clerks for employers who are graduates of the School. Dean L. H. Sayre. iii iii ill ill ill ill ill ill I iii ita III all III !!! fjl III II! iii If! Mi fll III ill 1 1 m Iii III ill III 111 ill III ill l|i III 111 II ill ica Sidney Grant Gwinner, Chanute. Ph. c. 2A I , Band and Orchestra (2), Secy. Senior Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Society. Lawrence Allen Meadows, St. Joseph. Mo. Ph. c. ATQ, Pharmaceutical Society, Treasurer (3). Harry Orval Speck, Great Bend. Pharmaceutical Society. . Ph. c. George Markley Humes, . . B. S. Bunkerhill. Wrestling team (3), Pharmaceutical So- ciety. %m 123 ira IShe JAYHAWIfEM sssm Tudor Stevenson, . Oberlin. Pharmaceutical Society. Ph. c. Cecil H. Kuhl, .... Cottonwood Falls. Pharmaceutical Society. Ph. C. William P. Barnes, Blue Mound. Ph. c. Vice-President Linn Co. Club, Class Bas- ket-ball, Tennis Tournament (2), Phar- maceutical Society. Matthew Lawrence Walters, Mulberry. Pharmaceutical Society. Ph. C HI _ .jjSSSSiSSiSSSSiSSSiSiSSS 124 4 ii| i I ! Ill ill 111 III Iff i I i ill III III lii ill ill l|l lii ill III III ill !!! Ill ill 3 I ! {I I lii III ill iSSSSSSi M y- miss;m!Si!iSii!i!SJSss Claude Bolton Wandel, . Lawrence. Ph. c. President Junior Pharmics (3), Freshman Baseball, Pharmaceutical Society. William F. Rau, . Ph. C. Wakefield. Vice-President Senior Pharmics, Pharma- ceutical Society. Joe Hostinsky, Ph. C. Cuba. Pharmaceutical Society. . . Ph.C. Pharmaceutical Society, Class Football. Earl William Gsell, Olathe ill «5SS«SWS«iS 125 B Alvin Ralph Johnson, Oneida. 21 J 2, Pharmaceutical Society. B. S. Frank Lawrence Chinery, Coffeyville. Ph. C. Student Council (4), Pharmaceutical So- ciety, Senior Cap and Gown Committee, Jayhawker Editor, Pharmacy School, Freshman Baseball, Secretary and Treas- urer Junior Pharmics (3). Eugene Francis Hamilton, . . Ph. C. Partridge. Pharmaceutical Society. James Benard Early, . Medford, Okla. Wrestling team (2-3-4), Knights of Co- lumbus, Pharmaceutical Society. B. S. SS««m -5SSSS s 126 SiSiSSiSSiSimiSSSiSSSS He M SLfMNMJLYi s ill ft Melvin O. Johnson, Oneida. 24 2, Pharmaceutical Society. B. S. Byrd Oscar Powell, , Adair, Okla. . Ph. C. Treasurer Junior Pharmics, Vice-Presi- dent Senior Pharmics (4), Secretary and Treasurer Pharmaceutical Society (4). Emsley Thomas Johnson, . . . Ph. C. Lawrence. President Pharmaceutical Society, Fresh- man Baseball. Lester W. Wylder, .... Ph. C. Oberlin. Pharmaceutical Society. ill 111 Iff III III III 1 1 1 si! HI ill ill III Hi I i I III III III 127 128 t fl Jj fTNCARIS KsHe JAYM@ii«i School of Fine Arts i| li lit â– a D S III III III HI Jfl III ijl III III III If! Hi 111 III J!| III ill |ii i I § ill ill III lii ill I N 1877 a school of music was or- ganized at the University of Kan- sas, and from this the present school of Fine Arts was established in 1891. The first Dean of the school was William MacDonald, followed by George B. Penny, who was in turn fol- lowed by Charles S. Skilton, the pres- ent Dean. The school is divided into two main parts, the School of Music and the School of Painting, each of which grants a Bachelor ' s Degree in these subjects. The School of Music has an enrollment of about one hun- dred and twenty, which is increasing yearly, and a faculty of eight compe- tent professors. The courses offered in this school are a four-years course in piano, voice and violin, as well as a two-years course in organ and public school music. The latter entitles one to a teacher ' s certificate. The organizations in the music school are the University Orchestra, the Uni- versity Band, the Men ' s Glee Club, the Girls ' Glee Club, the Vesper Chorus, and the Fine Arts Opera. Anyone who takes this course enjoys also the advantages of ensemble and recital work, as well as choir and chorus work. The Annual Exhibition of Paintings under Prof. Griffith, along with the An- nual Music Festival of Symphonic Orchestra and famous soloists, are indeed rare treats to the lovers of the Fine Arts and add a great deal to the cultural side of University life. Dean C. S. Skilton. ill ill ill lis i ill I i ! ill III 111 ' sm.wsssjssss 130 Helen Claire Woolsey, Lawrence. B. M. 2K, M J)E, Red Domino (2), Sopho- more Farce, Junior Farce, Boys of Com- pany B (3), Hawk Dramatic Club, Reader for Glee Club (4), Annual Board (4). Mary Maude Morin, . Lawrence. M4 E. Ruth Burnham, Lawrence. M E. Florence Evelyn Hyre, Lawrence. AAn. B. M. B. M. B. M. :;«f.-.:. . I J, t ill 1 1 i 3 a e ill ill ill lii III 131 m j sss sss ' iF ie JAV Hi W KERs iS| hi ili ill ill ill III III if III ill i|i It! fit! Ill fli ill III 111 III ill III III si! Ill iii i i i |i! ill III III III til Iii ill t|i iii ifi iii ill ESTELLE StRAHM, B. M. Sabetha. A An, Vice-President Fine Arts, W. S. G. A. Hazel Joy Longabaugh, Lawrence. B. M. Y. W. C. A., Pipe Organ Scholarship, Quill Club, Vesper Chorus, Blue Rose Diamond, Junior Farce (3). Kate Elizabeth Shanks, Simpson. M I)E. B. M. Mary Fay BL. m, B. M. Spring Hill. M E, The Yeoman of the Guard (3), Girls ' Glee Club (3-4), Senior Play Com. (4). 11 132 . % M f ' - .x H ..XTl. TmT,- JtlLJL.ftX ' iii iii ill III III ill ill III Iii III [ l! Ill 2 B B ill iii ill Genevieve Ailene Huffman, Abilene. 2K, Girls ' Glee Club (4). B. M. Margaret Dorothy Morgan, Clay Center. M$E. B. M. Etta A. Smith, B. M. Lawrence. Achoth, May F6te (2), Yeoman of the Guard, Red Domino, Junior Farce, Manager Senior Play (4). Edith Myrtle Ellsworth, Cherryvale. A$A, Quill Club. B. P. ii! Ill Hi Mi III 133 ' mhe : JAv: iiiii R;; JSf w 11 11 il 11 I i ll I i W I i if 11 ii Ruth Deibert, B. M. Florence, Colo. M I E, Alemannia. Edith Elizabeth Hinesley, . Lawrence. Sophomore Farce. B. M. Rhea Fa ye Wilson, Columbus. B. M. ES, M i)E, Quill Club, Girls ' Glee Club (4), Annual Board (4), Senior Play (4). Charlotte Marguerite Luckan, B. M. Lawrence. Y. W. C. A., Deutscher Verein. 11 i i i! i i II 134 ii ii pi ii II II f I Arthur A. Jellison, . . . . B. M. Wilson. Orchestra (2), Y. M. C. A., Secretary Y. M. R. T. (2). Mrs. Eva B. Garver. B. M. Lawreace. William V. Hoyt, Lawrence. B. A., B. M. Manager of Orchestra (3-4-5), K. K. Club (2), Philosophy Society, Mandolin Club. Miriam Rose Stone, . Master of Music Lake Forest. M i)E. B. M. ( ' 07) K. U. I 1 i i i i â– i 3S 3 ii : III III III 5 5 5 ill III w ii.m Lydia Emma Cook, . Kansas City, Mo. A I)A, Alemannia, Quill Club. B. P. Ill i i i Hi ill Hi III ill ill Hi III ill ill 1 Student Union Hi iii ill III ill 136 SSMiSiSSSSSiSS SiiSSSiS The Graduate School III ill ill ill Iti ill III i S S ill ill lis III i i I sal II! I Hi ill I I i III II ill ill isi T IHE function of a college is in- structional and disciplinary. The distinguishing character- istic of a university is that it shall offer facilities for the prosecution of efficient research and advanced study. The University of Kansas is the only institution in the State maintaining a Graduate School and having available source materials and equipment ade- quate for satisfactory graduate work. It stands first among schools of its type in the Central Southwest, and very high among those of the entire coun- try, as is evidenced by the recognition accorded its work by all of the great universities of the North and East. Previous to 1896 graduate work was carried on under the direction of a spe- cial committee, of which Professor Arthur G. Canfield was for many years the chairman. In 1901 twenty-eight fellowships were established — perhaps the greatest single factor in the development of the School. Of these, seventeen are general University fellowships, assigned to the several departments, and the remaining eleven are given each year to some graduate of each of eleven Kansas colleges of high standing. The work done by the Graduate School is of very broad scope, extending over Philosophy, History and all of its related subjects, the Languages, the Sciences, and Engineering. Much of the state service and research work is done in the Graduate School. Dean F. W. Blackmar. Ill III III ill ill si! Ill III III III I i ! Ill ill III 1 1 1 |i| Hi Ssi ill III III ill a i i sil III ill §|i III iii ill ail 1 1 [ i!l ill ill ill Frances Christine Wenrich, . A. M. Lawrence. BK, Quill Club, Mathematics Club, Education. Chauncey a. Yeomans, Lawrence. 4 AK, Fellow in Education. A.M. Carl Conrad Guise, Oneida. A. B., President of the Philosophy Club, Oread Glee Singers, Graduate Club, Phi- losophy. A.M. Nora Foraker, A. M. Wellington. Graduate Club, Y. W. C. A., A. B. 1 I «S imiiSSM,«!S v«Sp S!SiiSi Xl ll ishe j smmm m mm ssss L« I Clarence W. Schroeder, Winfield. A.M. President Graduate Club, Y. M. C. A. Glee Club, Fellow in Sociology, A. B. at Southwestern College. Bertha Irene Howat. Plain ville. A.M. nrS, Mathematics Club, Physiology. Joseph S. Magnuson, . Kansas City, Kan. 4 AK, Latin. A.M. Anne C. Malott, A. M. Abilene. AAFI, Fellow in Romance Languages. ill Hi Hi i|! 1 1 f III ill III iii Hi iii III III ill ill iii III 140 I S3t «s mhe M HAWKER. i l Emmett Leslie Bennett. . A. B., A. M. Lawrence. ASP, Winner Bryan Essay Prize (1-3), Griffin Scholarship (2), La Follette Club (2-3-4),K. U. Debating Society (2-3), 1st President Oread Debating Society (3), President University Debating Council (3), Kansas-Colorado Debate (3), A. B. in English and Public Speaking (3), Grad- uate Club (4), Good Government Club (4), Graduate Editor 1914 Jayhawker (4), Bristow Club (4), Sergeant Company M, 1st Reg. Infty., K. N. G., Y. M. C. A. (1-2-3-4), K. U. RiBe Club (3-4), Univer- sity Fellow in Political Science (4). Bernese L. Barry, A. M. Sterling. Secretary of the Graduate Club, A. B. Leila Marie Swarts, . Winfield. A.M. Southwestern College Fellow, A. B. at Southwestern College, Quill Club, Social Committee Graduate Club, Y. W. C. A., English, English Journal Club. Ill (11 Edna Pearl Osborne A. M. Parsons. •JjBK, a. B. at University of Illinois, Quill Club, Associate Editor 1914 Jay- hawker, Graduate Club, Finance Commit- tee Y. W. C. A., English, English Journal Club. Ill III Iff ill III ill III i 1 1 III Hi III i i| Bii I i i ill ill ill ill ill I i I SSSSSSSSSSSSSiSSSSSiSiSSSSSSSSiSSSSS 142 Ira mhe JAYHAWKER. Hazel Clarke, A. M Kansas City, Mo. KKr, Thespian, Graduate Club, Y. W. C. A. Earl Carson, Peabody. Mechanical Engineering. Frank A. Wellman, . . . . A. M. Enid, Okla. History. Ingeborg Sundstrom, .... Lindsborg. Bethany College Fellow, History, Social Committee of the Graduate Club, Y. W. C. A. SSSiSSiSSS! 143 w %! !SiSiS5SiSiSSi!iSi!8S« he JAYHAWTKER. i f JSSiS SSiSSiSSSS iii III III Iii lis iii % 11 l i i 11 ANY graduate of the University of Kansas is, i ' pso facto, a member of the Alumni Association. Former students, not graduates, may be admitted as associate members. Active membership in the Association is hmited to those members who have paid in their current dues. According to the last statistics taken there were 4790 living graduates of the University of Kansas. Over half of this number are active members of the Asso- ciation. The Association this last year built a house which is called the University Club. The house is situated in the 1400 block on Ohio, in the rear of the old Usher property. It contains a dining-room, billiard-room and several sleeping- rooms for active members in the University. The Association, in its endeavor to aid and assist all student activities, this year loaned the new Student Union build- ing five hundred dollars with which to buy furnishings for the house. The officers of the Association are — President, John A. Prescott, i .. B. ' 88, Vice-President, Jesse Dunn, LL. B. ' 93. General Secretary and Treasurer, Leon N. Flint, A. B. ' 97. II DIRECTORS Sheffield Ingalls, A. B. ' 95. Clyde W. Miller, A. B. ' 95. Kate B. Evans, A. B. ' 93. Eefie Loader, A. B. ' 95. Irving Hill, A. B. ' 96. Agnes Thompson, A. B. ' 96. W. S. Metcalf, LL. B. ' 97. Frank Olney, ' 91. W. Y. Morgan, A. B. ' 85. J. C. Nichols, A. B. ' 02. sssisssssssssssss 145 Executive Officers Frank Strong, A. B., 1884, A.M., 1893, Ph.D., 1897, Yale. LL. D., 1909, Baker University. Chancellor of the University and President of the Faculties. George O. Foster, A. B., 1901, University of Kansas. Registrar of the University. William H. Johnson, A. B., A. M., University of Kansas. High School Visitor. Eben F. Crocker, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. Mrs. Eustace H. Brown, Adviser of Women. Minnie Stelle Moodie, Secretary to the Chancellor. College of Liberal Arts and Sciences BOTANY William Chase Stevens, B. S., 1885, M. S., 1893, University of Kansas. Professor of Botany. Frederick Horatio Billings, A. B., 1896, Leland Stanford. A. M., 1897, Harvard. Ph. D., 1901, Munich. Professor of Bacteriology . Charles Morgan Sterling, A. B., 1897, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Botany and Pharmacognosy . Charles Albert Shull, B. S., 1905, University of Chicago. Assistant Professor of Botany. Noble Pierce Sherwood, B. S., 1905, A. M., 1911, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor in Botany and Bacteriology. Grace Miriam Charles, A. B., 1900, OberHn. A. M., 1905, Ph. D., 1910, Univer- sity of Chicago. Instructor in Botany. Myrtle Greenfield, A. B., 1912, A. M., 1912, Univer- sity of Kansas. Laboratory Assistant in Bacteriol- ogy- Benjamin J. Clawson, B. S., 1909, Central University. A. M., 1912, University of Kansas. Instructor in Bacteriology. Kate B. Sears, A. B., University of Nebraska. Assistant in Botany. Larry M. Peace, A. B., 1901, A. M., 1906, University of Kansas. Preparator and Demonstrator in the Botanical Laboratory. CHEMISTRY Edgar Henry S. Bailey, Ph. B., 1873, Yale. Ph. D., 1883, Illinois Wesleyan. Professor of Chemistry and Metal- lurgy and Director of Chemical Laboratories, 1883. Hamilton Perkins Cady, A. B., 1897, Ph. D., 1903, Univer- sity of Kansas. Professor of Chemistry. Frank Burnett Dains, Ph. B., 1890, M. S., 1891, Wesleyan University. Ph.D., 1898, University of Chi- cago. Associate Professor of Chemistry. William Asbury Whitaker, Jr., Ph. B., 1904, University of North Carolina. M. A., 1905, Columbia. Associate Professor of Metallurgy. Herman Camp Allen, A. B., 1904, McPherson College. A, M., 1905, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Paul Vance Faragher, A. B., 1909, University of Kansas. Ph. D., 1913, Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Carl Ferdinand Nelson, A. B., 1908, A.M., 1910, Ph.D., 1912, University of Wisconsin. Assistant Professor of Physiological Chemistry. ill iii If 148 , s s s «. Si ==== ill III Hi Elrick Williams, . B., 1902, A. M., 1903, Univer- sity of Illinois. Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Orville a. Beath, A. B., 1908, A. M., 1912, Univer- sity of Wisconsin. Instructor in Chemistry. Worth Huff Rodebush, A. B., 1912, University of Kansas. Instructor in Chemistry. Homer Otis Lichtenwalter, B. S., 1911, McPherson College. Instructor in Chemistry. John Bennett Whelan, A. B., 1908, Hillsdale College. A. M., 1913, University of Ne- braska. Instructor in Chemistry. Robert Chester Roberts, B. S., 1912, University of Kansas. Assistant Instructor in Chemistry. Jacob P. Schroeder, A. B., 1912, McPherson College. Assistant Instructor in Chemistry. Oscar Lewis Maag, B. S., 1913, University of Kansas. Assistant Instructor in Chemistry. Philip Lind Davis, A. B., 1912, University of Kansas. Assistant Instructor in Chemistry. Clifford Winslow Seibel, B. S., 1913, University of Kansas. Assistant Instructor in Chemistry. George R. King, Dispensing Clerk. CHEMISTRY— FOOD LABORATORY Walter Sterrett Long, A. B., 1905, A. M., 1908, Ohio Wes- ley an University. Assistant Professor of Chemistry, in charge of Food Laboratories. Walter V. Cullison, A. B., 1912, University of Kansas. Food Analyst. Ernest Elmer Lyder, B. S., 1913, M. S., 1914, University of Kansas. Research Assistant in Division of State Chemical Research. James West Schwab, B. S., 1914, University of Kansas. Research Assistant in Division of State Chemical Research. Agnes Anne Anderson, A. B., 1909, Baker University. A. M., 1911, University of Kansas. Assistant in Food Laboratory. CHEMISTRY— WATER ANALYSIS Clifford Caudy Young, A. B., 1910, A. M., 1911, Univer- sity of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Chemistry, in charge of Water Analysis. ECONOMICS Harry Alvin Millis, A. B., 1895, A. M., 1896, Indiana University. Ph.D., 1899, University of Chi- cago. Professor of Economics. Arthur Jerome Boynton, A. B., 1901, Harvard. A. M., 1902, Columbia. Associate Professor of Economics. George Ellsworth Putnam, A. B., 1907, University of Kansas. A. M., 1908, Yale. B. Litt., 1911, Oxon. Assistant Professor of Economics. Victor Nelson Valgren, A. B., 1905, Gustavus Adolphus College. A. M., 1909, University of Minne- sota. Assistant Professor of Economics. Ill ill If ii! 149 ill iii III III ill ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Charles Graham Dunlap, A. B., 1883, A.M., 1899, Ohio Wesleyan. L. D., 1892, Princeton. Professor of English Literature. Edwin Mortimer Hopkins, A. B., 1888, Ph. D., 1894, Prince- ton. Professor of Rhetoric and English. Raphael Dorman O ' Leary, A. B., 1893, University of Kansas. A. M., 1895, Harvard. Associate Professor of Rhetoric. Seldon Lincoln Whitcomb, A. B., 1887, Grinnell. A. M., 1893, Columbia. Associate Professor of English Lit- erature. Louis Eugene Sisson, A. B., 1904, Leland Stanford. A. M., 1909, Harvard. Associate Professor of Rhetoric. William Savage Johnson, A. M., 1900, Ph. D., 1905, Yale. Associate Professor of English Lit- erature. DeWitt Clinton Croissant, A. B., 1899, Ph. D., 1911, Prince- ton. Associate Professor of English. Frederick Newton Raymond, A. B., 1896, University of Kansas. A. M., 1897, Columbia. Assistant Professor of Rhetoric. Margaret Lynn, B. S., 1889, Tarkio. A. M., 1900, University of Ne- braska. Assistant Professor of English Lit- erature. Charles Henry Gray, B. L., 1885, M. L., 1896, Univer- sity of Michigan. Ph.D., 1904, University of Chi- cago. Assistant Professor of English Lit- erature. Lulu Gardner, A. B., 1905, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Rhetoric. Alice Winston, A. B., 1898, A. M., 1903, Univer- sity of Chicago. Instructor in Rhetoric. Rose Ruth Morgan, A. B., 1894, A. M., 1895, Univer- sity of Kansas. Instructor in Rhetoric. Hearty Earl Brown, A. B., A. M., University of Michi- gan. Instructor in Rhetoric. Leon B. McCarty, A. B., 1910, A. M., 1911, Ohio Uni- versity. Instructor in Rhetoric. Sarah Grant Laird, A. B., Oberlin University. Instructor in Rhetoric. Carl Whitman Doxsee, A. B., 1909, A. M., 1910, Wesleyan University. Instructor in Rhetoric. Hubert Emerson Bice, A. B., 1909, A. M., 1913, Ohio State University. Instructor in Rhetoric. ENTOMOLOGY Samuel John Hunter, A. B., A. M., 1893, University of Kansas. Professor of Entomology. Herbert B. Hungerford, A. B., 1911, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor in Entomology. Henry Lorenz Viereck, Jefferson Medical College. Assistant Curator in Entomology. Ruby Cornelia Hosford, A. B., 1909, A. M., 1913, Univer- sity of Kansas. Assistant Instructor in Entomology. Ill Iii 111 i ! I Ill III i ! I ill iii Hi 111 i i I 111 i i I III III Hi Iii 111 III iii III ill fi! «5««i«S««S 150 m m ,jift .e l n GEOLOGY. Erasmus Ha worth, B. S., 1881, M. S., 1884, University of Kansas. Ph. D., 1888, Johns Hopkins. Professor of Geology, Mineralogy, and Mining Fmgineering. James Edward Todd, A. B., 1867, A. M., 1870, Oberlin. Assistant Professor of Geology and Mineralogy. William Henry Twenhofel, A. B., 1904, Lebanon. A. B., 1908, A. M., 1910, Ph. D., 1912, Yale. Associate Professor of Geology. GERMAN Elmer Franklin Engel, A. B., 1892, University of Kansas. A. M., 1898, Harvard. Associate Professor of German. Alberta Linton Corbin, A. B., 1893, University of Kansas. Ph. D., 1902, Yale. Associate Professor of German. Henry Otto Kruse, A. B., 1894, A. M., 1903, Univer- sity of Kansas. Associate Professor of German. James Andrew Campbell, A. B., 1901, A. M., 1906, Univer- sity of Michigan. Assistant Professor of German. Edward Maurice Briggs, A. B., 1904, University of Ne- braska. A. M., 1903, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of German. Albert Morey Sturtevant, A. B., 1899, A. M., 1901, Ph. D., 1905, Harvard. Assistant Professor of German. Allen Anders Seipt, A. B., 1900, A. M., 1903, Ph. D., 1906, University of Pennsyl- vania. Instructor in German. Helen Gaile Jones, Ph. B., 1900, Depauw. Instructor in German. Adolphine Bianca Ernst, A. B., 1909, Ph. D., 1912, Univer- sity of Wisconsin. Instructor in German. Emma Palmer, A. B., 1905, A. M., 1909, Univer- sity of Kansas. Instructor in German. Earl Kilburn Kline, A. B., 1906, University of Okla- homa. B. A., 1910, M. A., 1913, Oxford. Instructor in German. Heinrich Reese, Tiibingen, Leipsic, Marburg. Instructor in German. GREEK Alexander Martin Wilcox, A. B., 1877, Ph. D., 1880, Yale. Professor of Greek Language and Literature. MiLESs Wilson Sterling, A. B., 1883, A. M., 1893, Univer- sity of Kansas. Associate Professor of Greek. HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE Frank Heywood Hodder, A. B., 1883, M. S., 1884, Univer- sity of Michigan. Professor of American History and Political Science. ill if ill til III ll! Hi III 11! ill i i 3 111 ill iii lis ill ill ill ill III III I i| iii 3 3 5 iii III ill ill ill iii ill ill I i I iii iii S!i il I li 151 ' SSMe JAYHAWKER. ss mssssmssssissssimiiM Carl Lotus Becker, B. L., 1896, Ph. D., 1907, Univer- sity of Wisconsin. Professor of Evropean History. David Leslie Patterson, B. S., 1895, Pennsylvania State College. Associate Professor of Eurojiean History. Clarence Addison Dykstra, A. B., 1903, University of Iowa. Associate Professor of American History. William Watson Davis, B. S., 1903, M. S., 1904, Alabama Polvtechnic. A. M. , 1905, Ph. D., 1913, Colum- bia. Assistant Professor of American History and Political Science. Clarence Corey Crawford, A. B., 1903, A. M., 1904, Univer- sity of Kansas. Ph. D., 1906, University of Wiscon- sin. A ssociate Professor of European His- tory. HOME ECONOMICS Edna D. Day, B. S., 1896, M. S., 1897, University of Michigan. Ph.D., 1908, University of Chi- cago. Professor of Home Economics. Elizabeth Nowell, A. B., 1909, B. S. in Home Eco- nomics, 1910, University of Mis- souri. Inst meter in Home Economics. Evangeline Downey, A. B., B. S., 1910, University of Wyoming. A. M., 1913, University of Chicago. Instrvctor in Home Economics. JOURNALISM Merle Thorpe, A. B., 1908, University of Wash- ington. Professor of Journalism and Di- rector of Publicity. Leon Nelson Flint, A. B., 1897, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Journalism. S. H. Lewis, A. B., 1912, University of Wash- ington. Instructor in Journalism. W ' lLLiAM Byron Brown, Assistant Instructor in Journalism. LATIN Arthur Tappan Walker, A. B., 1887, University of New York City. A. M., 1892, Vanderbilt. Ph. D., 1898, University of Chi- cago. Professor of Latin Language and Literature. Hannah Oliver, A. B., 1874, A. M., 1888, Univer- sity of Kansas. Associate Professor of Latin. Earl Walter Murray, A. B., 1904, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Latin. Edmund Dresser Cressman, A. B., 1910, A. M., 1911, Univer- sity of Kansas. Ph. D., 1913, Yale University. Assistant Professor of Latin. MATHEMATICS John Nicholas Van Der Vries, A. B., 1896, A. M., 1899, Hope. Ph. D., 1901, Clark. Associate Professor of Mathematics. II 152 I Sis m he JAYHAWKER : i I Charles Hamilton Ashton, A. B., 1887, Union. A. M., 1893, Harvard. Ph. D., 1909, Munich. Associate Professor of Mathematics. Ulysses Grant Mitchell, A. B., 1906, A. M., 1907, ' Univer- sity of Kansas. Ph. D., 1910, Princeton. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Herbert E. Jordan, A. B., 1900, A. M., 1901, McMas- ters University, Toronto. Ph.D., 1904, University of Chi- cago. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Marion Ballantyne White, Ph. B., 1893, University of Michi- gan. A. M., 1906, University of Wiscon- sin. Ph.D., 1910, University of Chi- cago. Assista nt Professor of Mathematics. Edmund P. R. Duval, B. S., 1901, University of Texas. A. M., 1904, Harvard. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. John Jefferson Wheeler, A. B., 1906, Indiana University. Instructor in Mathematics. Solomon Lefschetz, Ph. D., 1911, Clark University. Instructor in Mathematics. Hermon Henry Conwell, B. S., 1907, Kansas State Agricul- tural College. Instructor in Mathematics. PHILOSOPHY Olin Templin, A. B., 1886, A. M., M. S., 1890, University of Kansas. Dean of College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Professor of Philos- ophy. Edmund Howard Hollands, Ph. B., 1899, A. M., 1901, Ph. D., 1905, Cornell. Professor of Philosophy. David Camp Rogers, A. B., 1899, Princeton. A.M., 1902, Ph. D., 1903, Har- vard. Assistant Professor of Psychology. Arthur Mitchell, A. B., 1894, Yale. Ph. D., 1910, Harvard. Assistant Professor of Philosophy. Floyd Carlton Dockeray, A. B., 1907, A. M., 1909, Univer- sity of Michigan. Assistant Professor of Bychology. PHYSICAL EDUCATION James Naismith, A. B., 1887, McGill University. M. D., 1898, Gross Medical Col- lege. M. P. E., 1910, Springfield Y. M. C. A. College. Professor of Physical Education. Margaret Lee Johnson, M. D., 1908, University of Colo- rado. Associate Professor of Physical Ed- ucation. William Oliver Hamilton, A. B., 1898, William Jewell Col- lege. Associate Professor of Physical Ed- ucation and General Manager of Athletics. Arthur St. Leger Mosse, Assistant Professor of Physical Ed- ucation. Leonard Frank, LL. B., 1912, University of Min- nesota. Instructor in Physical Education. Resigned January, 1914. SSiSiiSSSSS ism JAVHJ tWKER. ill Hi ill i i i il I iii I!! i ! I i i I Hi i|i i i iii ill ill Homer Woodson Hargiss, Graduate of Kansas State Normal. Assistant Professor of Physical Ed- ucation. Sylvia Adams, Graduate of Chautauqua School of Physical Education, 1911. Instructor in Physical Education. PHYSICS. Frederick Edward Kester, M. E., 1895, Ohio State Uhiversity. A. M., 1899, Ph. D., 1905, Cornell. Professor of Physics. Martin Everett Rice, B. S., 1891, M. S., 1893, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Physics. Edwin Fiske Stimpson, B. S., 1890, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Physics. David W. Cornelius, A. B., 1905, Depauw. Assistant Professor of Physics. Theodore Townsend Smith, A. B., 1907, A. M., 1908, Harvard. Assistant Professor of Physics. PHYSIOLOGY Ida Henrietta Hyde, B. S., 1891, Cornell. Ph. D., 1896, Heidelberg, Germany. Professor of Physiology. Samuel Alexander Mathews, M. D., 1895, University of Michi- gan. J Professor of Physiology and Exper- imental Pharmacology. Lalia Viola Walling, A. B., 1905, A. M., 1907, Univer- sity of Kansas. Instructor in Physiology. Howard E. Curl, A. B., 1911, University of Kansas. Instructor in Physiology. PUBLIC SPEAKING. Howard Templeton Hill, B. S., 1910, Iowa State College. Professor of Public Speaking. ROMANCE LANGUAGES Eugenie Galloo, B. L., 1892, University of Michi- gan. Academic de Paris, Brevet, 1881. Sorbonne, 1884, University of France. A. M., University of Kansas. Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. Elise Nuen Schwander, A. B., 1898, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- guages. Arthur Leslie Owen, A. B., 1906, University of Ver- mont. A. M., 1908, University of Illinois. Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- guages. William Philip Ward, A. B., 1906, Western Reserve Uni- versity. Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- guages. Frederick A. G. Cowper, A. B., 1906, A. M., 1911, Trinity. Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- guages. Calvert Johnson Winter, Ph. B., 1905, Hiram College. Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- guages. Mark Skidmore, A. B., 1905, University of Mis- souri. A. M., 1909, University of Illinois. Assistant Professor of Romance Lan- guages. May Gardner, A. B,, 1897, University of Kansas. Instructor in Romance Languages. 154 iS iSSiisssmississssisssssssss §ss 11 11 Ana Jule Enke, Ph. B., 1905, University of Chi- cago. Instructor in Spanish. Amida Stanton, A. B,, 1904, University of Kansas. Instructor in Romance Languages. SOCIOLOGY Frank Wilson Blackmar, Ph. D., 1889, Johns Hopkins. Dean of the Graduate School and Professor of Sociology. Victor Emanuel Helleberg, A. B., 1883, Yale. LL. B., 1885, Cincinnati. Associate Professor of Sociology. Ernest W. Burgess, A. B., 1908, Kingfisher College. Ph.D., 1913, University of Chi- cago. Assistant Professor of Sociology. ZOOLOGY William Jacob Baumgartner, A. B., 1900, A. M., 1901, Univer- sity of Kansas. Associate Professor of Zoology and Histology. William Rees Brebner Robertson, A. B., 1906, A. M., 1907, Univer- sity of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Zoology. Bennet Mills Allen, Ph. B., 1898, Depauw University. Ph. D., 1903, Chicago University. Professor of Zoology. Nadine Nowlin, A. B., A. M., 1903, University of Kansas. Instructor in Zoology. Clarence Lester Turner, A. B., 1912, Ohio Wesleyan. Instructor in Zoology. Handel T. Martin, Assistant Curator of Paleontology. Charles D. Bunker, Assistant Curator of Mammals, Birds and Fishes. School of Education Arvin Solomon Olin, A. B., 1892, Ottawa University. A. M., 1894, University of Kansas. Acting Dean of the School of Edu- cation, Dean of Summer Session, and Professor of Education. William Hamilton Johnson, A. B., 1885, A. M., 1892, Univer- sity of Kansas. High-school Visitor and Professor of Education. Augustus William Trettien, B. L., 1899, University of Wiscon- sin. Ph. D., 1904, Clark University. Assistant Professor of Education and Director of Oread Training School. Homer Walker Josselyn, A. B., 1905, A. M., 1910, Univer- sity of Michigan. Assistant Professor of Education. Raymond Alfred Schwegler, A. B., 1899, Brown. A. M., 1907, Ottawa University. Associate Professor of Education. Ralph Emerson Carter, Ph. B., 1906, Franklin College. A. M., 1911, University of Chicago. Assistant Professor of Education. m ms sm I SiSSSSiSmi SSSSS« S5 «S!SS!«S! he J wmmmma. School of Engineering CIVIL ENGINEERING Frank Olin Marvin, A. B., 1871, A. M., 1874, Allegheny. Advisory Dean of the School of En- gineering. B, J. Dalton, B. C. E., 1890, University of Kan- sas. Professor of Railway Engineering and Surveying, (on leave of ab- sence, second semester, 1913-14.) Grandville R. Jones, C. E., 1904, Ohio State University. S. E., 1907, Mass. Institute of Technology. Professor of Sanitary Engineering. Herbert Allen Rice, C. E., 1897, Ohio State University. Professor of Mechanics and Struc- tural Engineering. Gold WIN Goldsmith, Ph. B. in Architecture, 1896, Co- lumbia University. Professor of Architecture. Charles Arthur Haskins, B. S., 1910, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Sanitary En- gineering. Fred Reeder Hesser, B. S., 1910, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Sanitary En- gineering. William Coleman McNown, B. S., 1903, University of Wiscon- sin. Assistant Professor of Civil Engi- neering. Frank Logan Brown, B. S., 1911, Colorado. Assistant Professor of Mechanics. Roy Albert Porterfield, B. S., 1911, M. S., 1913, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Civil Engi- neering. Jacob Oscar Jones, B. S., 1911, University of Kansas. Instructor in Civil Engineering. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING George Carl Shaad, B. S., 1900, E. E., 1905, Penn. State College. Professor of Electrical Engineering. Clarence Anthony Johnson, B. S., 1906, University of Nebraska. A ssistant Professor of Electrical En- gineering. Sylvester Sparks Schooley, B. S., 1913, University of Kansas. Instructor in Electrical Engineering. MECHANICAL DRAWING George Jussen Hood, B. S., 1902, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Mechanical Dravnng. Charles Cochran, University of Colorado. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Drawing. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Perley F. Walker, B. M. E., 1896, University of Maine. M. M. E., 1901, Cornell. Dean of School of Engineering and Professor of Mechanical Engi- neering. .. :m l msm S Smm TF te JAYHAWKEFL Frederick Hubbard Sibley, B. S., 1898, Brown University. M. E., 1904, Case School. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Alfred Higgins Sluss, B. S., in Mech. Eng., 1901, Univer- sity of Illinois. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. John D. Garver, B. S,, 1910, University of Kansas. Instructor in Mechanical Engineer- ing. (Resigned January, 1914.) MINING ENGINEERING Clinton Mason Young, B. S. in Mining, 1904, E. M., 1909, Case. Associate Professor of Mining En- gineering. SHOPS Frank Everett Jones, Armour Institute. Assistant Professor of Carpentry and Pattern Making. Hubert Wiltfong, Instructor in Forging. Ephraim Edgar Landrum, Assistant Instructor in Woodwork- ing. Samuel McMullan, A. B., 1910, A. M., 1912, McMaster University. Instructor in Machine Shop Prac- tice. ii 11 i i School of Fine Arts Ii! DRAWING AND PAINTING William Alexander Griffith, Academy Julien, Paris. Professor of Drawing and Painting. Maria Levering Benson, A. B., 1900, Newcomb. Instructor in Design and Ceramics. MUSIC. Charles Sanford Skilton, A. B., 1889, Yale. Dean of School of Fine Arts and Professor of Musical Theory and Organ. Carl Adolph Preyer, Vienna; Mus. D., 1909, Baker. Professor of Piano, Counterpoint, Canon, and Fugue. Charles Edward Hubach, Graduate of New England Con- servatory of Music. Sbriglia, Paris. Professor of Voice. Harriet Greissinger, Mus. B., 1895, University of Kan- sas. Assistant Professor of Piano. Wort S. Morse, Brussels, Conservatory. B. S., 1898, Central Wesley an Col- lege. Instructor in Violin. Anna Louise Sweeny, Mus. B., 1906, University of Kan- sas. Assistant Professor in Piano. 1 SSSSSSSiSSiSSSSSiSmmi! XFH 3AYHj ;ysrKE:m I S IE Joseph Colbert McCanles, B. S., 1907, Kansas Christian Col- lege. LL. B., 1909, University of Kansas. Instructor in Band Instruments. Maud Miller, Mus. B., 1898, University of Kan- sas. Instructor in Piano. Pearl Agnes Emley, Mus. B., 1909, Mus. M., 1913, Uni- versity of Kansas. Instructor in Piano. Cora Irene Reynolds, Mus. B., 1912, University of Kan- sas. Instructor in Voice. Joseph Augustus Farrell, Leipsie. Instructor in Voice. School of Law James Woods Green, A. B., 1866, A. M., 1886, Williams. Dean of the School of Law, and Professor of Law. William Livesey Burdick, A. B., 1882, A. M., 1884, Wesleyan. Ph. D., 1885, Grant. LL. B., 1898, Yale. Professor of Law. William Edward Higgins, B. S., 1888, LL. B., 1894, Univer- sity of Kansas. Professor of Law, (on leave of ab- sence.) Henry Wilbur Humble, LL. B., 1904, University of Cincin- nati. A. M., 1908, Cornell. Professor of Law. Edward Delahay Osborne, Williams College. Professor of Law. Raymond Fridman Rice, LL. B., 1908, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Law. School of Medicine Samuel J. Crumbine, M. D., 1889, Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery. Dean of the School of Medicine. ANATOMY John Sundwall, B. S., 1903, Ph. D., 1906, Univer- sity of Chicago. M. D., 1912, Johns Hopkins. Professor of Anatomy. Eugene Smith, M. D., 1876, Rush. Demonstrator in Anatomy. George Ellett Coghill, A. B., 1896, Ph. D., 1902, Brown University. M. S., 1899, New Mexico Univer- sity. Associate Professor of Anatomy. BACTERIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY Thomas Harris Boughton, B. S., 1903, M. S., 1904, Univer- sity of Chicago. M. D., 1906, Rush. Professor of Bacteriology and Pa- thology. i i 158 1 lii III ill III ii i I j I i i s William Kirk Trimble, M. D., 1900, Kansas City Medical College. Associate Professor of Clinical Pa- thology. Harry Leslie Chambers, M. S., 1896, Lane University. M. D., 1895, Kansas City Medical College. Adjunct Professor of Hygiene. Delbert O. Smith, A. B., 19fl, M. D., 1913, Univer- sity of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Pathology and Resident Pathologist. DERMATOLOGY William L. McBride, M. D., 1901, Rush. Associate Professor of Dermatology. Richa rd L. Sutton, M. D., 1901, University Medical College. Associate Professor of Dermatology. GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS Don Carlos Guffey, A. B., 1899, University of Mis- souri. M. D., 1905, University of Penn- sylvania. Professor of Obstetrics and Gyne- cology. Zachariah Nason, M. D., 1888, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore. Professor of Obstetrics. Robert Douglas Ireland, M. D., 1909, University of Kansas. Instructor in Obstetrics. INTERNAL MEDICINE LiNDSEY Stephen Milne, M. B., Ch. B., M. R. C. P., M. D., University of Edinburg. Professor of Clinical Medicine. Franklin E. Murphy, 1893, University of Pennsylvania. Professor of Internal Medicine. IsADORE Julius Wolf, M. D., 1887, Munich. Professor of Internal Medicine. John N. Scott, Ph. G., 1887, University of Kansas. M. D., 1896, University Medical College, Kansas City. Associate Professor of Therapeutics. Andrew L. Skoog, M. D., 1902, Northwestern. Associate Professor of Neurology. Jesse E. Hunt, M. D., 1902, Western Reserve Uni- versity. Associate Professor of Medicine. Charles Clinton Conover, M. D., 1901, University Medical College. Associate Professor of Clinical Med- icine. William Waddell Duke, Ph. B., 1904, Yale. M. D., 1908, Johns Hopkins. Assistant Professor of Medicine, Therapeutics. Peter Thomas Bohan, M. D., 1900, Rush. Instructor in Internal Medicine. MEDICAL ECONOMICS David Rittenhouse Porter, M. D., 1872, Bellevue Medical Col- lege. Professor Emeritus of Internal Med- icine, and Lecturer on Life In- surance. Clay E. Coburn, M. D. Lecturer on State Medicine. 159 «l si is w NEUROLOGY Clarence Case Goddard, M. D., 1873, Bellevue Hospital Medical College. Professor of Neurology. Henry O. Hanawalt, M. D., 1873, Medical College of Ohio. Professor of Neurology. OPHTHALMOLOGY Charles J. Lidikay, M. D., 1894, University of Louis- ville. Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology. Edward James Curran, M. D., 1908, Harvard. D. Ophth., 1910, Oxon. Professor of Ophthalmology. OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY Herbert L. Alkire, M. D. Associate Professor of Otorhino- laryngology. PSYCHIATRY S. S. Glasscock, M. D., 1887, Rush. Professor of Psychiatry. Lyman L. Uhls, M. D., 1884, Rush. Professor of Psychiatry. William F. Kuhn, A. M., 1878, Wittenberg. M. D., 1885, Jefferson Medical Col- lege. Adjunct Professor and Lecturer. RHINOLARYNGOLOGY AND OTOLOGY Joseph E. Sawtell, M. D., 1886, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore. Professor of Rhinolaryngology, and Head of the Department. Edward Park Hall, M. D., 1897, Ensworth Medical College and Hospital. Assistant Professor of Rhinolaryn- gology. SURGERY Mervin Tubman Sudler, Ph. D., 1899, Johns Hopkins. M. D., 1901, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore. Associate Dean of the School of Medicine and Professor of Sur- gery. Jacob Block, M. D., 1879, Medical College of Ohio. Professor of Genito-urinary Sur- gery. John Walker Perkins, A. B., 1882, M. D., 1886, Harvard. Professor of Surgery, Surgical Diag- nosis. George M. Gray, M. D., 1879, Kansas City Medical College. Clinical Professor of Surgery. Walter S. Sutton, A. B., 1900, A. M., 1901, Univer- sity of Kansas. M. D., 1907, College of Physicians and Surgeons. Associate Professor of Surgery. Arthur E. Hertzler, M. D., 1894, Northwestern. Ph. D., 1902, Illinois Wesleyan. Associate Professor of Surgery. Russell A. Roberts, A. B., 1881, A. M., 1886, Marys- ville College. M. D., 1887, Medical College of Indiana. Assistant Professor of Rectal Sur- gery. John G. Hayden, B. S., 1902, Universitv of Chicago. M. D., 1904, Rush. Assistant Professor of Surgery. 160 L. II Clifford C. Nesselrode, M. D., 1906, University of Kansas. Instructor in Surgical Anatomy. James W. May, M. D., 1900, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Kansas City, Kan- sas. Clinical Professor of Surgery. Clarence B. Francisco, M. D., 1907, University of Kansas. Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery. School of Pharmacy Lucius Elmer Sayre, B. S., 1897, University of Michigan. Ph. G., 1866, Ph. M., 1896, Phila- delphia. Dean of the School of Pharmacy and Professor of Pharmacy. L. D. Havenhill, Ph. C, 1893, Ph. M., 1894, Univer- sity of Michigan. B. S., 1903, University of Kansas. Professor of Pharmacy. DRUG LABORATORY George Nathaniel Watson, A. B., 1904, B. S., Ph. C, 1908, University of Michigan. Assistant Professor of Pharmacy. Arthur Earl Stevenson, Ph. C, 1909, University of Kansas. Assistant in Drug Analysis. Library LIBRARIANS AND ASSISTANTS Carrie M. Watson, A. B., 1877, University of Kansas, Librarian. Clara Scioto Gillham, A. B., 1884, University of Kansas. Loan Desk Assistant. Dora Renn Bryant, University of Kansas. Reference Assistant. Mary Maud Smelser, University of Kansas. Accession Assistant. Mary Agnes Collins, A. B., 1904, University of Kansas. Reference Assistant. Sarah Evelyn Stanton, A. B., 1902, University of Kansas. School of Medicine Assistant. Ethel Morrow, University of Kansas. School of Law Assistant. Anna Dyke Learnard, A. B., University of Vermont. School of Engineering Assistant. Flaude Eddy Johnson, A. B., 1913, University of Kansas. Reference Assistant. Etta A. Smith, University of Kansas. Reference Assistant. Esther Preston Evans, A. B., 1913, University of Kansas. Biology Assistant. Edith Griffin, A. B., 1907, University of Kansas. Philosophy Assistant. , .: m m i â– ' i 10 ZJAYHJ y KJEJl, ' f S rwl University Extension 111 ill III li tra De Witt Clinton Croissant, A. B., 1899, Ph. D., 1911, Prince- ton. Director of the University Extension Division. Helen Maude Clarke, A. B., 1903, A. M., 1907, Univer- sity of Kansas. Ph. D., 1910, Cornell. Instructor in Correspondence Study Nellie May Stevenson, A. B,, 1907, University of Kansas. Instructor in Correspondence Study. iSiSiSSSSiSSliSSSSiSSSS Charles Homer Talbot, A. B., 1910, University of Wiscon- sin. Head of the Municipal Reference Bureau and Secretary of the Cor- respondence Study Department, with rank of Assistant Professor. William Arch McKeever, B. A., 1893, Campbell College. A. M., 1898, University of Kansas. Ph. M., 1904, University of Colo- rado. Head of Department of Child Wel- fare, ivith rank of Professor. mmm ssm 11 Hi 162 5 i I ' iShe JAYHAli KEl !i II I! y If ii ii Ii !l ii ' i ii Ii II II II 11 ii il II If It II I i ii Lawrence Morris, Cheer Leader. 163 m 1 Coaches «s ill til 111 III III jjj ill ill III MossK. Fkank. Hamilton. 165 L ' iShe JAYHAWKEia w Wearers of the ' K Weidline Detwiler Stuewe Wilson Tudor Greenlees Sommers Vandervries Cole Greenlees BUSICK cooledge Sommers FOOTBALL 1913 Bishop Reber James Strothers Hammond Keeling Martin BASKET-BALL 1914 Weidline Weaver Sproul BASEBALL 1913 y RUSSEL Maloy Burton Parker — Reserve K 1913— K 1912 Kane — Reserve K 1913 DUNMIRE TRACK 1913 Patterson Malcolmson Davis Hazen Black Hurst Hillton CiSSNA Burnham Perry Crane Reber Edwards Ross Bishop Ward Ebnother , Wilson Delongy Hicks TENNIS 1913 H. L. Richardson Smith E. Richardson Johnston m i i ' SJSSSWiSSSiSSSiS |3| 166 â– J FOOT BALL i I!! Ill lil egg I I see ill III !l III i i i |[a= 168 i:BHe JAVHi ' WVKERI â– ' SS iS Captain Weidlein. |i ii ii ill lis lil ill I i I ill (31 I ' 5sNS A Resume of the 1913 Football Season w HAT gave promise of being one of the most successful football seasons in the history of the University of Kan- sas, finally closed with three defeats that rankled the breast of the doughty Jayhawker and made him look with sidelong glance on the ever-pestering Jinx. And this is not an excuse but a bare fact, as the following will show. When the recruits for the 1913 eleven ran out on McCook field one afternoon in late September, prospects for a victorious season never looked better. Only one man, who had been counted on as 1913 material, was missing. This was Harry Burnham, the big tackle, who was drowned in the Kaw last spring. The championship 1912-13 tyro squad was now eligible for the Varsity and each man was de- termined to make a place. And then Friend ( ?) Jinx took a permanent seat in the bleachers and began to get in his work. After the second practice, Big Groft, of last season ' s team, was taken to the hospital with typhoid and did not get into a suit again for the remainder of the season. Then Captain Bramwell left school to go to work, and left behind him a captainless, disheartened crew. Bill Weidlein was speedily elected to fill the vacancy of captain, and, though he carried the position admirably and led the team with honor throughout the season, the loss of Bram- well perceptibly weakened the line. Bish- op, star of the Freshman team of last year, was unable to open the season be- cause of an operation during the summer, and he played only in a part of three games. Buster Coolidge, team-mate with Detwiler on the 1912 squad, did not appear in a suit at all. And so the sea- son opened. J. Pluvius had now gone into co-hoots with Friend ( ?) Jinx, and let out his wet- t est rain f or the o pening game with Will- iam Jewell. It was a mud battle from start to finish, [the Jay hawks finally skidding ahead with a 7 to victory. II he JAYHAWKER. III lit 111 ie! Ill III lis III III ! i ! Ill i I III I i i The following Saturday, October 11, a clear sky and a light opposing team gave the Crim- son and Blue team a track and field score over Washington University of bb to 7. It had looked like a clean slate for the Mosse-Frank machine, but in the last few minutes of play the fast Washington quarter got away and made their one score of the game. The following week-end Captain Weidlein led his men against the strong Drake aggrega- tion. Kansas went into the contest with every first-team man in the game, a compe- tent bunch of scrubs on the sidelines anxious for a chance in the fray, and the whole team ready and confident. Kansas kicked off to Drake, and on the second down they returned with a 45-yard punt. Detwiler, Greenlees and Steuwe then carried the ball down to the 23-yard line, where Captain Weidlein tried a field goal. The ball failed to cross the bar and Drake gained possession. Several exchanges of punts and the failure of a forward pass by Wilson ended the first quarter with a to score. In the second quarter Kansas carried the ball to Drake ' s one-yard line and there lost it on downs. An attempted punt by Simmons for Drake was blocked, and the ball rolled behind the goal line. Simmons fell on it, for a safety, and Kansas had a 2-point lead. The ball continued in Drake ' s territory and was carried down the field to the 15-yard line. Here Captain Weidline put a pretty place kick over the bar and gave three more points to his team. On the second kick-off, Kansas, by a series of line plunges and several successful forward passes, soon placed the ball on the 8-yard ill ill I I III ill III ill a I i i I ill ill ii ' ' â– ill «%iWsm«sissss« - ' 170 1 VVXSNVVSSVNNSVVSSWNXSXVN VNSNNXVN SSNXVVVSSNXN VVVVVSSVVVVVSVX W II ' he JAV HiWv KEFB i l!i 111 iii ill III iii Ml ii ii line. By as pretty a forward pass as was ever seen on McCook field, Steuwe tossed the ball to Wilson, who caught it behind the goal line and fell for a touchdown. Weidlein failed to kick goal, and the score stood Kansas 11, Drake 0. Neither team scored in the fourth quarter. The game was well fought and hard won, and Kansas supporters were well pleased with the out- come. However, Friend(. ' ) Jinx did not forget the eleven, even in their hour of victory. Dutch Detwiler, the charging half of the 1912 squad, was laid out by a bad kick on the leg and was on the sidelines the remainder of the season. The second conference game had been victorious and dopesters still saw a chance for an ever- victo- rious team. The greater percentage of the Varsity squad were still unpracticed in Varsity style football, but they were playing with a Kansas spirit that had never before been surpassed on the gridiron, and were fast learning the game. This they showed when they met the Aggies at Manhattan, October 25, and, out of a game that looked doubtful, ran away with a 26 to victory. Kansas ' old- time standby, the Minnesota shift, tells the story in one word. It was too much for the Aggies and they went down to defeat under it. This score put Kansas at the head of the list on the dope-sheets, for up to this date the Crim son and Blue team had not lost a game. The following Saturday Coaches Mosse and Frank took their squad to Norman, Oklahoma, to meet the far-famed Bennie Owens aggregation. A slump was due, and a slump came. The Sooners had solved the shift and the Jay- hawkers were powerless without it. The latter could not stop the fast end runs of the Oklahomians and were equally powerless to penetrate the southern team ' s line. In the second quarter, Owens ' s Sooner team went over the line for two touchdowns, while the Jayhawks counted themselves lucky to grab one. In the last quar- ter the Sooners again went over the Kansas line, and, though Weidlein ' s men fought desperately, the final whistle blew with Oklahoma 21, Kansas 7. The first defeat is harder to swallow, but when down, easier to explain. The consensus of opinion was that the team had gone stale and that the drubbing was good for them. But the secret was out, though few liked to ad- mit it. The famous shift had been solved and with- out it the Jayhawker team was useless. The thought of abandoning hope, however, was far from the minds of i S i Is ' ' S S ' ' ' ' â„¢ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . s = «%;«ss §s 171 13he JAV I iKKERS SiSiS S the loyal Kansans, and the following week, with only one branch pruned, it took new growth and blossomed again. On November 8, the Ichabods from Washburn invaded Lawrence with full intention of repeating their victory of the previous year. But Mosse ' s men had sworn a secret oath for swift revenge, and shortly after the first whistle blew the Jayhawkers had found the col ' ed gentl ' man in the woodpile of their rankled pride, and before the end of the second half had soaked the Washburnites with a clean score of 14 to 0. As a mile runner reserves his wind, so did Kansas reserve her stren gth, and in the last few minutes of play walked through the Washburn line for two successive touchdowns. It was sweet, and justly deserved. Hope had fully revived and spirit had taken a new lease on life. The bear stories began arriving from the camp of the Cornhuskers. The sturdy Jayhawk eleven fought and defeated an imaginary Nebraska time after time ; midnight rallies were in vogue and pep ran riotous. Saturday, November 15, arrived, and brought along as companions J. Pluvius and Friend(. ' ) Jinx. The latter had not been idle, though, before this date. Tony James had been laid up in the hospital for the week previous and was not in shape to enter the game, and Steuwe was being troubled with his shoulder. W ith these handicaps the Jayhawkers entered the game in good shape and played a style of ball that was well worth praise. Their form was excellent, their attacks fierce, but they weakened on the defense. Even then criticism should be light, for the Kansas eleven was forced to meet an attack that was without precedent. Halli- gan, Rutherford and Towle defeated the Jayhawkers. Their tackle swings, end runs and terrific line plunges were too much for Weidlein ' s men. Though the coaches had drilled the team especially to meet the attacks of these men, the men so outclassed their own playing that they were impossible to stop. The mud was a severe handicap to the Kansas hopes. The trick plays, the forward passes and the open field work, which Mosse and Frank had so zealously preserved for this big game, worked for naught. They could not be used on a wet iii ill Ira: 172 .iS SS N SsssssiSSSSsSsSSS I III Hi ill i I i III i!l lit fii Hi III ill III III Hi l| [[ ill lis HI HI ill ill ill i i 1 III III i|i If! i i i i s s III ill !!! Ill iii !l! Ill ill ill ifi ill i|i i! field. Forward passes, shift plays and quick get- off s call for a fast field, a field on which each ath- lete is sure of his footing, and this was not provided for the Kansas eleven. But two forward passes were attempted ; both went wild. Nebraska tried five. But one worked, and that was only for a four- yard gain. Kansas was forced to resort to straight football, and they had had no practice in the art of swimming with the ball. In two quarters, the second and third, Kansas looked its best. Five minutes before the end of the first half Nebraska had the ball on the Kansas ten-yard line. In those five minutes the Jayhawkers, by a rapid- fire exchange of kicks, by great line plunging and by shifty end runs, had forced the Lincolnites back 70 yards, 20 into their own territory. Early in the third quarter Kansas got the ball and started a strong and ir- resistible march toward the Nebraska goal. Three first downs in quick succession advanced the pigskin to the Cornhuskers ' 35-yard line. Then the tide turned and the Nebraska line took a brace. On the next third down, with eight yards to go, Wilson attempted a forward pass, but was downed in his tracks before he could throw it. This was a five-yard loss, and on the fourth down Weidlein tried a field goal from the forty-yard line. It was an excellent attempt and fell only a few feet short of the bar, but Kansas had lost her only chance to score. The latter part of the second quarter, the Nebraskans came back and worked their way close enough to the Jayhawkers ' goal for Towle to make a successful drop kick. The second score of the game was chalked up in the last part of the last quarter, when Halligan, on a tackle swing, was sent over the line for a touch- down. When the final whistle blew the figures were chalked up Nebraska 11, Kansas 0. The score of the game had been lost, but the doughty Jayhawkers were never once defeated in spirit. Time and again, when the fast Cornhusker back-field was plow- ing through the Kansas line for long gains, Weidlein ' s men would take a brace and force Purdy ' s team-mates to kick. Kansas lost fairly, squarely, and with honor. The Jayhawker lost her final feather when she met the Missouri Tiger at Co- Hi If I ill i s it iii lumbia, November 22. Mud was the predominating feature of the closing game, though the players on each side put up a beautiful fight. It might be true that the Missouri team outplayed the Crimson and Blue, but they did not outdo them in scrappiness and spirit, In the first quarter the Jayhawks seemed to have the edge on the Tiger eleven. Wilson continually out- punted Shepard, while Steuwe, Tudor and Bishop hit the line for short gains that seemed sure to score. But the Tigers took a brace and the score failed to materialize. In the second quarter the Missourians came back strong, and played most of the remainder of the game in Kansas territory. In the latter part of the third quarter the Tigers carried the ball to the Kansas fif- teen-yard line, but were unable to advance farther. On the fourth down Captain Wilson dropped back and with a neatly timed kick placed the ball squarely be- tween the Jayhawkers ' bars. It was a beautiful kick and marked down the only score of the game. Twice during the third and fourth quarters the Tigers seemed sure of a touchdown, but each time the Kansas line strengthened and held. In the third quarter, also, the Kansans advanced the ball close enough towards the Tiger goal for Weidlein to try a place kick, but the field was too heavy and it fell short. One minute before time was called on the last quarter the Kansans placed the ball on Missouri ' s forty -yard line, and Weidlein, taking a last desperate chance to tie the score, dropped back for a place kick. He sent the ball straight for the Tiger goal, but it fell short five yards and the game was lost. It would be hard to pick any heroes of the season. Captain Weidlein justified the trust put in him, and proved a hard, consistent player and a true leader. Dutch Detwiler was in his old-style line-breaking, ground-gaining form when he was forced to quit the game for the season. Butch Steuwe, Bunny Wil- son, Keeling and all of the rest deserve an honorable mention which space pro- hibits. It was not a victorious season, but every game was a fight to the finish — so what ' s the dif . ' ' Here ' s a health and a cheer for Cap- tain Detwiler and his 1914 squad. Suc- cess to you. ii li 1 1 1 1 1 1 ll 1 1 If I i II II 11 11 ii 5; -l 3 o H o g s iii ill I S i iii i li iii Hi III Ifi III III III III I I i ill III iii iii I iii !tt i!i III iii irai 175 ill ill II o iV . i H â– - ■• ' - R:  05 â– 5 9 [j 1- :flV • $ :$i 4Ht ' ' ' J i %. V M ' R- ' . Ij u BB ' ' l- ls % .r ; } 1 1 Ki {j; r w i ih V â– -!•,! ' 176 Ss Hi III III III If! I i i ill III if! Ill ill • a S2 S 177 T D LockjUOqp- ' 5he JAVHAWKERS sss Ss J S 180 1 III I it m mis III III 11 III ill til ill ill ill III ill III i i i ill ill i ii III ill in III lis I s 1 Varsity Basket-Bali Team COLE WEAVER SMITH WEIDLEIN HAMILTON, COACH SPROUL, CAPTAIN HARGIS N DER VBIES GREENLEE8 DUNMIRE FOLKS HI ill III III ill III ill III ill III III ill III III lii Il3 =53 181 iShe JATHi V KERi Basket-Bali KANSAS has one more Missouri Valley championship medal to hang in the trophy room and one more victorious season to add to its credit. The basket-ball season closed with only one defeat. That was the second game with the Aggies, when they beat us 28 to 26. Every other game was a victory, and Captain Sproul with his men brought down worthy honors. Coach Hamilton should also come in for his full quota of credit for the success- ful season, for though the men did the actual work, Hamilton was the man be- hind the gun and kept the men in shape for each successive victory. The season comprised a total of seventeen games. Stuffy Dunmire is captain-elect for 1915, and he claims his star of ambition set for an ever-victorious team, with mighty good chances for reaching it. ill BASKET-BALL SCORES, 1914. Opponents. K. U. Jan. 7 — Ames at Lawrence 18 24 Jan. 8 — Ames at Lawrence 22 38 Jan. 16 — Washburn at Lawrence 28 39 Jan. 22— K. S. A. C. at Manhattan .26 44 Jan. 23— K. S. A. C. at Manhattan 28 26 Jan. 30— K. S. A. C. at Lawrence 24 28 Jan. 31— K. S. A. C. at Lawrence 16 41 Feb. 6 — Washington U. at Lawrence 19 50 Feb. 7- — Washington U. at Lawrence 11 42 Feb. 11 — Missouri U. at Columbia 25 28 Feb. 12 — Missouri U. at Columbia 21 27 Feb. 13 — Washington U. at St. Louis 19 28 Feb. 14— Washington U. at St. Louis 21 36 Feb. 19 — Warrensburg at Lawrence 22 49 Feb. 25 — Missouri at Lawrence 22 38 Feb. 26 — Missouri at Lawrence 18 31 Feb. 28 — Emporia College, Emporia 15 40 ii! ill ill i I I g i i i I i . 9i 182 I he JAVH. ' S WKER, Jssssff ' College Basket-Bail Team ill WALTERS STRACHAM MELVILLE HAROIlS, COACH BROWN, CAPTAIN BRANINE LAIRD PAINTER KENT ill ill III 183 i ' mhe JAYHi4 VV KER iSSSSSSSSS Freshman Basket-Bail Team LYTLE S0BCU80N BOND ASHBY J. BOND, COACH APPLE KAYSER o ' bbyan BACHMAN WEDEL KEED LINDSEY ill if i! I I ssss TWHO LocKJjUOOO â– XSft JAVHAWKER. Ill I i i ill I i i III i i I ill 1 1 1 ill i i I ili III III ill lit Captain Hazen. J mmm 187 ml l Kansas Track Records 100 - - IKol IS- 220 yd. dash Moulton 1899. 440 yd. run McCoy 1905 . 880 yd. run Miller 1907. 1 mile run Edwards 1914 . 2 mile run Murray 1912 . 120 yd. hurdles Hazen 1913. 220 yd. hurdles C. Woodbury 1911 . High jump French 1911 . Broad jump Wilson 1910. Pole vault C. Woodbury 1912. 16 lb. shot Reber 1913. Discus Ammons 1910. Mile relay 1910. .91 .4.33 .9.511 . .151 . .25 .6 ft. I in. .22 ft. 103 in. .lift. 61 in. .41ft. 5 in. .115ft. 7 in. .3.381 11 |ii ill !!! iii III Hi Iff |il 1 1 i| l III !l ii ssj ill HI Relay Team. 189 .11 Track THE prospects for Kansas on the cinder-path for the 1914 season are the brightest they have been for years. As the Annual goes to press the sea- son is yet young, yet we feel that Captain Hazen and his men will make every true Kansan proud of the track squad. We have this feeling of confidence, even after the result of the indoor meet with Missouri at Kansas City, March 27. We admit they beat us 48 to 37, but when you consider the luck that Kansas had, this can easily be accounted for. It must also be remembered that Kansas has several of the best outdoor men in the Valley, who cannot run indoors on account of weak ankles. The outdoor season is now at hand, and we can only predict, but it is our hope that by the time the Jayhawker comes off the press. Captain Hazen and his men will have the championship for the Valley cinched. 1914 TRACK SCHEDULE Feb. 16 K. S. A. C. at Lawrence. March 7 K. C. A. C. at Kansas City. March 14 M. A. C. at St. Louis. March 27 Mo. U. at Kansas City. April 18 Drake Relay Games at Des Moines. April 25 Pennsylvania at Philadelphia, Pa. April 25 Inter-Class. May 1 Nebraska at Lawrence. May 8 K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 16 Mo. U. at Columbia. May 30 Mo. Valley at St. Louis. June 6 Western Inter-Collegiate at Chicago, 111. Jil BASE BALl_ fl [f D tom joop- t |sssssj$s Captain Coolidge. , (Resigned.) 192 %SteS5SSSSS,NV -« I SSSM iSSSiSSSiS SiSSiS It 53 53 i i i III lit I i i III ill Ijl i 1 1 III ill ill Ijl ill III III ill I I i III i i I i i I III III 111 iii 111 III ' ' IShe Baseball THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS should well feel proud of the baseball team of 1913. The Varsity nine played hard and finished the 1913 season in fine shape by winning the Missouri Valley championship. The pros- pects for the 1914 season are now better than they were this time last year. Captain Coolidge and more than half of last year ' s men are practicing every day on McCook field, and are fast whipping into shape. With a team such as Kansas will undoubtedly put out this year, and with the heightened interest that is being- shown in this sport, the 1914 season in baseball should indeed be a rosy one. 1914 BASEBALL SCHEDULE April 2 K. C. A. C. at Lawrence. April 9 William Jewell at Lawrence. April 16-17 Chinese University at Lawrence. April 23 St. Marys at Lawrence. April 27-28 K. S. A. C. at Lawrence. May 6-7 Mo. U. at Lawrence. May 14-15 Mo. U. at Columbia. May 21-22 Ames at Ames. May 23 Highland Park at Des Moines. May 27-28 K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29 St. Marys at St. Marys. til III lis ill gas !l! Ill % 194 lOi f ARO L-OC UtJOOV Irp-Tp ipSSSm SSSSiSSSSS IShe JLA IiMHiiliB Dr. James Naismith, Head of Physical Education Department. Homer W. Hargiss. Professor of Physical Culture. Ii 11 3 11 III III 111 If ill 1 1 Ji |i i! Ill Hi i! ii II! ill ««SSSSss5SSSSSm S 198 iC3. iSf Wrestling Team III III lit —1 ji !.ssssii SLUiJ I %iSSW«SSS 199 I i ! ill IC Ae JAYMiSSA KER. Tumbling Team Kiltie Dancers ill ill III ill l!l ill 200 - uJl ! PLAY- GR0U7IJ) CLASS f GYMMASIUM J CLASSHS. I Jayhawker Board 11 li f i| iii IM III III 11! iii ill lis III 11 DODD HOWDEN PERRY KINXEAR SPOTTS CHINNERY BROWN LOCKWOOD KOBERT8 SOWERS COLLINS VON SCHRILTZ SMITH CLARK FAIRWEATHER BUZICK WILSON DINGMAN EDWARDS OSBORNE BERGER MILLER MADDEN WOOLSEY CUBBISON BENNETT lli ll ill ill ill iii Mi ill jl it! ill ill I I £ 11 il 11 11 ii li il il S i li ii 1 1 li 1 i il 206 .jjiSiS Nx J - 1  v- II Hi 1914 Jayhawker Board Editor-in-Chief, Russell H. Clark Assistant Editor, Ralph Spotts. Associate Editor Edna Osborne. Art Editor, Ward Lockwood. Editor of College, . . . . E mily Berger. Editor of Engineering, Oscar Dingman. Editor of Law, Marley Brown. Editor of Medicine, Speer Callen. Editor of Pharmacy, Frank Chinnery. Editor of Fine Arts Rhea Wilson. Editor of Graduates, Emmett Bennett. Editor of Athletics, William Howden. Editor of Organizations, . . Arthur Perry. Editor of Fraternities, Lawrence Kinnear. Editor of Sororities, Amarynthia Smith. Editor of Faculty, George Marsh. Editor of Dramatics, Clarence Sowers. ili i i i ill ill ill I LITERARY STAFF. p. k. cubbison Maurine Fairweather Margaret Roberts A. B. Caswell Jack Greenlees Helen Woolsey Alonson Busick Marie Madden George Edwards Marie Collins BUSINESS STAFF Guy W Von Schriltz, Manager. Frank E. Miller, Assistant Manager. Leslie H. Dodd, . Assistant Manager. The photographs and lay-outs were made by John Dennis Smith. ' ««si«ssisisssm s ' 207 i? f III |!e i I i [f III ill III III Kansan Board ABELS KENNEDY ELDRIDGE ALLVINE GLEISSNER MALOY FLINT BARGER PALMER GREE3JLEES MADDEN BECHTOLD BISHOP DYCHE DEGAN III ill III ill ill iii 1 1 j i i ii it ii li ill ! S I iii III III III lit It} iii ill l|l 208 I«%s i •I T ' 1;- i . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ' 3- ' V v ' v t. p UNIVERSITY DAaV KANSAN â– n.o.«,.,.,„, , „, „.,., „i!  {• £.â– jtnv.. IM? COME ON, BOYS, Â¥!E ' RE WITH i ' -ll ' ' ' iU lL KEMP ' IIS 110 J. 0 Cop â– - RIcb ' scEdoI 1! , RKPORTOBIAL STAFF ' COUNCIL SUSPENDS a . - Men ' s Governing Body ? , Rule Violators Three ,tC KVVIW- J, ' ' -rr ' r- « on ' -â– ' ., coa ' lEMfPir Idrlon Bralcy Ov ' ot ' ' ' NUMBER M- % -nss - ,, ,i ' 3000INPN % Two Prote sors Defy Kefnla And Preside, Fri(| y IICOUNCW-.-..; , JusriNT iHiNTj::::;:, ' V I ! § i i I III I 9 i III iii ill III 209 The Oread Magazine THE OREAD MAGAZINE was started in 1910 as the official publication of the Quill Club. It is published four times a year. At present it is the only literary publication of the University of Kansas. It began as a 6x9 thirty-two page magazine, containing stories, sketches, and poems, which had been presented before members of Quill Club and approved. Each year the magazine has increased in size and importance, until the present issues have become repre- sentative of the best material the editors have been able to unearth. The Maga- zine is now a thirty-two page book, 10x12 inches in size, and modeled on the Arts and Crafts lines. It is set three columns wide, in black-face antique type. It is printed on buff tint, deckle-edged paper. Stories in this year ' s magazines have been illustrated by students in the School of Fine Arts. The Oread Magazine holds a unique place among college publications, in regard to size, material, and general make-up. The four issues of this year were : Heroes and Hero Worship ; containing a football story by Guy von Schriltz ; the second number of Vol. IV was dedicated to the Literati of the state and the University, featuring A Plea for a Greater Kansas, by Arthur Capper, of the Topeka Capital, a letter from Margaret Hill McCarter, an unpublished poem by Willard A. Wattles, entitled In His Own Country, and an article on Shakespeare by Mrs. Wood B. Highbrow, as well as many stories, poems, and essays by undergraduates of the University. The third number was the Nonsense Number, filled with all the bits of wit and humor and sonnets of budding spring poets and sorrowful Romeos, that were deposited in the Quill Box in Eraser Hall. The last number to appear at commencement time will be the Girls ' Issue. Ill III Hi ! B S If! Hi III S i I i i I III III isi ill III I i i i|l ill ill ill ill III !|l III ' ll The Staff for this year ' s magazine is composed of the following members : Editor-in-Chief, Helen Rhoda Hoopes. Associate Editor, Caroline Greer. Assistant Editors, Leila Swartz. Walter Hart. Lucy Barger. Thomas B. Root. Business Manager, Edmund C. Bechtold. Advertising Assistants, . . . . . . . . .J. Christy Wilson. Emery J. McIntire. Boyd Prugh. E. Wayne Wingart. Circulation Manager, Frank Henderson. Assistant, Ethelyn Miller. 210 I : i l|l III Ifl |ii ill HI i S I fii Ifl ill iii II! I ii ill It if ii II 11 11 II ii ii ii ft y Other Publications GRADUATE MAGAZINE THE GRADUATE MAGAZINE is published monthly by the Alumni Asso- ciation of the University of Kansas. It is the purpose of the magazine to keep the Alumni in touch with University affairs and activities, in co- operation for the advancement of mutual interests. Professor F. N. Flint, general secretary of the Alumni Association, is editor of the Graduate Magazine. THE KANSAS EDITOR THE KANSAS EDITOR is a monthly journal of information and entertain- ment for the Kansas newspaper fraternity. It is published by the De- partment of Journalism at the University of Kansas. Professor Merle Thorpe is managing editor, with Professors L. N. Flint, S. H. Lewis and Mr, W. B. Brown as associate editors. It is sent free of charge to all Kansas editors, and contains articles and personalities, both serious and witty, covering all sides of the newspaper business in the State of Kansas. T THE NEWS BULLETIN. HE NEWS BULLETIN is a weekly publication by the Department of Journalism. It furnishes items of interest regarding University affairs. It is sent on request to editors, libraries and educational institutions. T THE SCIENCE BULLETIN. HE SCIENCE BULLETIN is an irregular publication, containing four hundred pages a year of scientific articles on original investigation carried on by faculty and students of the University of Kansas. Ill ill III III III ill ill lit ill i |i ii ii II SSssSiSSSSWi 211 Hi Hi 11! Ml it ! I 212 ,ss ««SSSS ,.J «SS POLITICS f ls Men ' s Student Council ill ii MADDEN MC CULLOCH BURKE CHINERY HANSEN HILTON TUDOR FRANK HOLLOWAY DODD MALOY CARSON VIS POTTER COGGINS MILLER KENNEDY MALCOLMSON iii 214 ! i i ill aShe JAYHAWKER, Men ' s Student Council THE MEN ' S STUDENT COUNCIL is now in its fifth year, and is well established as the governing body of the University. The faculty has given the Student Council complete control of all student discipline, and thus done away with the old faculty discipline. OFFICERS President, Leslie H. Dodd. Vice-President, W. J. Malcolmson. Secretary, Henry Maloy. Ill iii MEMBERS til COLLEGE iii John Madden. J. R. Kennedy. H. C. Tudor. Arvid Frank. Cale Carson. Kirk Hilton III Harry McCulloch. -is ill III III TTA.TriTA.TTT ' Tr ' OTATr ' ar ' Xirw - T Claude Coggins. L. W. Kinnear. engineering school Orrin T. Potter. H. C. Hansen. iii ill III ii Webster Holloway law school Frank Miller. medicine R. C. Davis. pharmacy F. L. Chinery. graduate Martin Burke. Ill jjl ill III iii iii ill III SiiK SSiSiiSSi!i« smsssssssssssssMSismis s 215 .13! ssiss W. S. G. A. Council ill ill ill 111 THOMPSON ILE8 KEITH SMITH HUGHES HERRICK STRAHM SPOTTS LOUREY ENGEL MESERVEY BUCHANAN ill lif iil iii ill ill III ill III ill III ill s i i !fj iii ill ill ill III III III S OB ill ill III Ijl III ill iii 216 i Women ' s Student Government Association THE WOMEN ' S STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION was or- ganized in 1909, to meet the social needs of the women of the University. The Association aims to foster among the women of the University a feel- ing of mutual responsibility and a high regard for both liberty and order, to main- tain high standards of living and scholarship, and to promise loyalty to the Uni- versity. The University Council has entrusted the W. S. G. A. Council with disci- plinary control over women students. A district system is maintained. Social dances have been given monthly in the Gymnasium, A scholarship to a deserving Freshman is given every year. Hi i S i i i i 3Se III ill III I i i OFFICERS. President, Maude Lourey. Vice-President from College, Helen Keith. Vice-President from Fine Arts, Estelle Strahm. Secretary, Vera Spotts. Treasurer, ' Marion Manley. MEMBERS. senior representatives Frances Meservey. Ruth Buchanan. ill Agnes Engel. junior representatives Genevieve Herrick. Ill sophomore representatives Agnes Smith. Dorris Iles. freshman representatives Janet Thompson. Margaret Hughes. Succeeded by Dori? Hackbush. 217 fniiT ' si ' ssississsssss tF r JAYHMilK«PSl e f i = = ill Oscar Dingman Buster Brown Sam Fairchild Engineering School Officers President, Oscar Dingman. Vice-President, Sam Fairchild. Secretary and Treasurer, Buster Brown. Ill III III 1 1 1 ill III I ! I I I i iil lil s i I III lii i i j ill 218 s-% I I jl |i| ill ii! Ill III ill III III lii III ill 1 1 1 III I â– A H- , Chables Greenlees Jessie Reed Webb Holloway Etta Smith Senior Class Officers President, Webb Holloway. Vice-President, Charles Greenlees. Secretary, . Jessie Reed. Manager, Etta Smith. I s I ill III lii III ill ii| 219 ' KBhe JAYHMHiSBK ii 1, Coleman Nelson Carson Gear Ulrich Blachly Junior Class Officers President, G. Russell Gear. Vice-President, Herbert Coleman. Secretary, Ethel Ulrich. Treasurer, Fred Blachly. Prom. Managers, Stanley B. Nelson. Cale W. Carson. Junior Class Committees social Clarence Williamson, Chairman. Kirk Dale. Henry O ' Donnell. memorial Harold Mattoon, Chairman. Sam Degan. Albert Ross. Agnes Moses. Clara McDowell. Elmer Rosewurm. Austin Bailey. William A. McKinney. smoker Leon Bocker, Chairman. J. R. Kennedy. Don. Lackey, Homer B incoe, McKinley Warren. Stub Benedict. Earl Vermillion. Mark Massey. football Bud Ritter, Chairman. Paul Neal. Earl Furgeson. 31 220 I ii ill ill ||| Junior Class Committees TRACK Kirk Hilton, Chairman. Leonard Hurst. Ray Edwards. BASEBALL L. C. Bishop, Chairman. L. A. Harsh. Grover Grady. student union Duke Kennedy, Chairman. Victor Householder. Sam Degan. invitation Harry S. Willson, Chairman. Leon Barth. Fred Degan. Frank Russell. Lewis Northrup- Frank Jones. Florence Whicher. Ruth Smith. Hazel Day. program and music Blair Hackney, Chairman. Mary Powell. Maribelle McGill. Joe Howard. Helen Rigby. Richard Templin. Howard Morgan. Fred Giesel. Warren Mack. FARCE Dean McElhenny, Chairman. Margaret Davis. Lewis Allen. Madeline Nachtmann- Wilber Gillett. Genevieve Herrick. Francis Stevens. Virginia Goff. Frank Henderson. DECORATION Philip Ferguson, Chairman. Will Brown. Malcolm McCune. Mary Isabella Thornburrow. R. R. Rader. Celeste Edwards. Y. N. Myra Stevens. Maru Schuchart. Levinson. refereshment Wayne Fowler, Chairman. Louis Starrin. Marie Cadles. John E. Smart. Edith Cross. Geo. A. Vansell. E. S. Talliaferro. Fred Campbell. Mary Jarvis. if ii 11 ii It !l ii 1 1 ii i i ii i! - Ji ill ill i i i I 5 I III iii ill III ill FINANCE Frank Godding, Chairman. Clara Powell. Victor La Mer. Aileen Alderson- Harry Asher. Martha Piotrowski. Lloyd Jackson. Agnes Engel. Harold Evans. Ill E i f ill ill ii! m slis VAN DEHUP JOHNSON Sophomore Class President, J. M. Johnson. Vice-President, Darl S. James. Manager Sophomore Hop, Clyde L. Van Derlip. Secretary, Lillian F. Wolf. Treasurer, Neil F. Cline. CHAIRMEN OF CLASS COMMITTEES Social, Junius W. Dyche. Smoker, Harry V. McColloch. Soph Bum, E. Marion Johnson. Athletics, Lawrence S. Nelson, Memorial, , Chase B. Johnson, CHAIRMEN SOPHOMORE HOP COMMITTEE Invitation, Thomas N. Mulloy. Finance, George A. Rathert. Decoration, Harold E. Wheelock. Refreshments, Arthur W. Ericson. Farce, James B. McNaught. Program, Harland B. Hutchings. J II iii 222 , sssis m«ssississimii 1 HARBISON MC ELVAIN Freshman Class Officers President, Donald Harrison. Vice-President, John E. Curran. Secretary, Mary McElvain. Treasurer, . Cecil Ammons. Ill I i| III III HI ill ill III III III ill ill I 223 S ss ff rir Matt Guilfoyle P. K. Cubbison C. O. Buckles Winona McCoskrie Senior Officers President, CO. Buckles. Vice-President, Matt Guilfoyle. Secretary, Winona McCoskrie. Treasurer, P. K. Cubbison. 224 ( he fi mmkmmxK. If I III III I I Ifl III III III lis hi III ill Hi lit lit i i i ill Hi lii ill i i i lit III in III III III III ill III ii| III lii ill ill III Hi ill ill ill ill ill i i i Middle haw Officers President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Harold DeLongy. Guy Houston. Sam Degen. Frank Jones. Ill ill i i i 225 1 ill ill iii III il! ill l| ill Hi Hi ii! i i IF EGGLESTON Junior Law Officers President, Arthur H. Hoffman. Vice-President, James H. Eggleston. Secretary and Treasurer, Neil F. Cline. G. Allvine. G. W. Adam. E. F. Abels. B. H. ASHER. F. W. Baldwin. M. L. Baker. W. H. Beal. E. M. BODDINGTON. G. J. Booker. R. E. BOYNTON. H. R. Branine. D. C. Burnett. W. N. Calkins. N. F. Cline. A. R. Chalfont. E. C. Clark. C. H. Cory. K. W. Dale. J. DeVine. J. H. Eggleston. R. I. Elswick. H. K. Faust. A. J. Gibson. H. T. Gray. CLASS ROLL C, R. Greenlees. C. E. Halloren. J. W. Hamilton. A. A. Hamilton. B. H. Hamilton. H. Harlan. R. W. Hemphill. J. W. Hill. A. H. Hoffman. J. W. Hull. F. HURD. H. B. Hutchings. C. V. KiNCAID. C. W. King. G. M. LaMar. E. E. Lamb. F. J. Leasure. J. P. McKamen. M. J. Martin. C. A. Meissner. M. F. Meissner. J. B. McKay. V. E. Minor. C. B. Minner. J. R. Moffat. C. L. Moore. L. A. Moss. L. O. Northrup. D. O ' Keefe. C. Reed. B. Robertson. A. C. Perry. H. W. Ridgway. J. B. Riseley. P. Ross. R. C. Skinner. R. Smith. D. M. Stiles. D. H. Stone. G. B. Strothers. R. T. Teasley. R. G. Walters. W. K. Waugh. F. E. Whitten. A. F. Waddel. C A. Strickland. C. J. Weygandt. 22G --fcj !n ' ' 1 ; Pl| B li 1 P I p -J â– ' r ; BUCHANAN Officers of the College President, . Avery F. Olney. Vice-President, Louis Gloyne. Secretary-Treasurer, Ruth Buchanan. Chairman College Day Committee, Arthur W. Duston. Chairman Publicity Committee, Harold F. Mattoon. Chairman Social Committee, . Ogden S. Jones. Chairman Finance Committee, Edmund Bechtold. 1 IShe JAVHAWKERi . ' SIDNEY G. GWrNNER RALPH W. HENDERSON WILLIAM F. RAU Senior Pharmic Officers President, Ralph W. Henderson. Vice-President, William F. Rau. Secretary and Treasurer, Sidney G. Gwinner. Ill 228 fn t I sssssss TFhe JAYHmMmmWH: iij III El VVlLLETf Ernst Dickenson Junior Pharmacy Class Officers President, . . . . . . Walter Wood. Vice-President Alice Dickenson Secretary, Bernice Ernst. Treasurer, Row Willett. HE JUNIOR PHARMACY CLASS was organized January 8, 1914, and the above officers elected. i_ iii g! j iii Johnson Powell McCafferty §1 i I i I ill III ill ill III til iii III iii ill The Pharmaceutical Society President, Emsley T. Johnson. Vice-President, Frank McCafferty. Secretary, Byrd O. Powell. THIS society was organized in December, 1886, by students and instructors of the Department of Pharmacy, for the purpose of assisting each other in the study of sciences especially related to the art of pharmacy, in the particular application of the same, and for friendly intercourse. Meetings are held bi-weekly during the school year. As an adjunct to the Pharmaceutical Society, an annex was established in 1890 whose aim it is to secure positions for graduates, and clerks for employ- ers who are graduates of the School. 230 L GBEENLEE8 BUCKLES BROWN BOTTOMLY PERRY YEOMAN CARSON HURD FISHER MARSH WEAVER BRANINE BOYNTON BENNETT SPOTT8 PROF. DYK8TRA CLARK MORROW KENNEDY STRICKLAND BEE80N DINGMAN Kansas Good Government Club THE GOOD GOVERNMENT CLUB is composed of men of the Senior and Junior classes of the University, the members being chosen by election of the club each year. The aim of the club is to bring before the members some of the significant political movements of the day, and study, from a scientific standpoint, experiments now being tried to secure a better government in city, state, and national administrations. The principal method of study has been from talks before the club by eminent political and business men. After the talks the meetings are thrown open for gen- eral discussion of the subject. The Kansas Club is a member of the national inter-collegiate Civic League which has organizat ions in forty-four other large universities. OFFICERS. President, Ralph Spotts. Vice-President, y Marley C. Brown. Secretary and Treasurer, Arthur C. Perry. MEMBERS. Marley C. Brown. E. L. Bennett. Oscar Dingman. George Marsh. Bruce C. Hurd. Arthur C. Perry. William Morrow. Harold Branine. E. W. Beeson. Charles Strickland. Cale Carson. Jack Greenlees. C. O. Buckles. Ralph Spotts. Arthur B. Weaver. Ralph Yeoman. Floyd Fisher. Russell Clark. Victor Bottomly. Randolph Kennedy. Roland Boynton. FACULTY MEMBERS Prof. C. A. Dykstra. Prof. Merle Thorpe. Prof. A. J. Boynton. Prof. II. A. Rice. Prof. Hill. Prof. Talbot. 232 LUCAS NELSON PRUGH OLSSON WILSON PILKINGTON SWAN80N RUSS TREMAINE HACKBU8H CRAWFORD RULE L. E. PILKINGTON SWARTZ HEALY GREER MILLER BROWN ELLSWORTH ELDRIDGE DUNN BECHTOLD WILSON HENDERSON BARGER HEMPHILL MC INTYRE LONGABAUGH COOK MONAHAN OSBORNE HOOPES STEVENS HARGER HART The Quill Club THE QUILL CLUB was founded twenty years ago by a group of students for the purpose of encouraging literary and critical efforts among the stu- dents of the University who are interested in literature and its production. At present the principal production of the Quill Club is the Oread Magazine, which is issued quarterly. OFFICERS FALL TERM President, . Guy Von Schriltz. Vice-President, Edmund Bechtold. Secretary, Rhea Wilson. Treasurer, Luella Pilkington. Editor of the Oread Magazine, Helen Rhoda Hoopes. Business Manager, . Edmund Bechtold. MEMBERS Lucy Barger. R. W. Hemphill. Florence Healev. Annabel Crawford. Luella Pilkington. Dorothea Hackbush. Helen Hays. Edna Osborne. Marie Collins. Helen Hoopes. Leila Swartz. Leon Howe. Caroline Greer. Annabel Garvey. Lillian Pilkington. E. C. Bechtold. Joana Gorman. Carl Pinkard. Thomas Root. Ethleyn Miller. Marie Russ. Ruth Rule. Ray Eldridge. Olivia Olson. Meda Lucas. Karl Jones. William Prugh. Rhea Wilson. Sam Ferguson. J. C. Wilson. Violet Dunn. Frank Henderson. Wayne Wingart. Guy Von Schriltz. Lucille Brown. Stella Tremaine. Walter E. Hart. Emery McIntyre. Fred Swanson. Ruth Harger. Willard Monahan. Francis Stevens. Ill ill i III ill ill ill ill iil i i i ill i 1 1 i 1 1 III iM III iil ill ill ill CAMPBELL BOTTOMLY BROWN ALEXANDER STEWART MORTON BALDWIN STEEPER WEIBLE GREENSTREET BUCKLES SOWERS MC COSKRIE HOH8LEY SMITH BEESON SOMERS STILES CLARK JR. WATJGH MC CLELLASTD LAMBERT EGGLE8TON SKINNER GRAY HANSON Jurisprudence Club THE JURISPRUDENCE CLUB has existed for the past eight years in the Law School. The club discusses, at each meeting, some topic of general interest. The following persons have taken part in the discussions this year : Chancellor Strong, Hon. Robt. Stone of Topeka, Hon. H. A. Daly of Chicago, Judge Smart, Mr. Henry Albach, Professors Trettien, Naismith, Olin, Boyant, P. F, Walker. Election to the club, which is honorary, is held at the beginning of each year, from the Junior Laws. OFFICERS. 1 President, .... Thomas J. Horsley. 1 Secretary and Treasurer, Samuel M. Degen. 1 MEMBERS 1 A. B. Campbell. C. 0. Buckles. F. M. McClelland. j V. BoTTOMLY. C. R. Sowers. L. A. Lambert. i M. R. Brown. Miss W. I. McCosKRiE. J. H. Eggleston. i 1 C. T. Alexander. T. J. HORSLEY. R. C. Skinner. C. C. Stewart. E. B. Smith. H. T. Gray. j W. M. Morton. E. W. Beeson. H. Hanson. j F. C. Baldwin. J. G. SOMERS. H. R. Duncan. I B. Steeper. D. M. Stiles. W. M. Lowe. i M. H. Weible. E. C. Clark, Jr. S. M. Degen. j J. C. Greenstreet. W. K. Waugh. i SSSSJSSSJSSSSSSSSSS 234 lis iii ill ill III iii lit iii i s ill III !ji ill ill Iii £11 Hi ill ill Iii ill 111 isi III l|! II ii| !|| III Hi ii III |if ill III iii The Debating Council CARSON HILL, COACH MVTTOON, BUSINESS MGR. O ' lEARY croissant GUILFOYLE, P.l J 3IDENT DYKSTRA LATIMER, VICE-PRESIDENT JOSEPH JOHNSON, SECRETARY 111 235 ill 111 iii ill III III III III If! Ill K Colorado Debating Team ANSAS debated against the University of Colorado, on April 8, at Lawrence. The question was : ' ' Resolved, That the several States should adopt a unicameral form of State Legislature. Kansas had the affirmative. tl! ill ill ill lis 236 t? r JAl MHie ii si ii 11 I ii III ill H. MERLE SMITH J. CHRISTY WILSON Missouri Debating Team KANSAS met Missouri April 28 at Lawrence, on the question : ' Resolved, That immigration into the United States should be further restricted by applying to all immigrants a literacy test requiring the ability to read ordinary prose in at least one language or dialect. Kansas debated the negative side of the question. Ill If! ill III i 237 I • ' ' ' ' â– â– ' ' ' ' â– â– â– ' ' ■■■■■• ' - ' - ' â– â– s ' he fi wmmm m ill i ATHERTON FRANK JOSEPH K Oklahoma Debating Team ANSAS debated against the University of Oklahoma, on April 8, at Nor- man. The question was : Resolved, That the several States should adopt a unicameral form of State Legislature. Kansas held the negative. ill ill 238 Si ill hi iii 111 JOSEPH MC CLtJRE REYNOLDS CASTLE SMITH ADAMS BLINCOE WHITESIDE CROWLEY CLARK GARDNER GUILFOYLE FAIRCHILDS SHINN OLNEY FITZGERALD PATTERSON MEI8SNER MCKEAN SCOTT DIEHL CRESS KIRCHNER MATTOON MB1S8NER WALLACK MORGAN The K. U. Debating Society THE KANSAS UNIVERSITY DEBATING SOCIETY was organized January 25th, 1912. It purpose is to afford an opportinuty for debating and drill in parliamentary practice to its members. Meetings are held weekly in the rooms of the society in Eraser Hall. Officers are elected every quar- ter of the school year. Since the organization of this society it has attained prac- tical results and supplied a long-felt need at the University of Kansas. Its effi- ciency has been demonstrated by the fact that over half of the debating squad each year consists of men who have received their training in forensic discussion in this society. OFFICERS OFFICERS OF FIRST QUARTER President, C. C. Fairchild. Vice-President, Wm.H. McClure. Secretary, A. C. Castle. Treasurer, B. J. Kirchner. OFFICERS OF SECOND QUARTER President, H. A. Shinn. Vice-President, M. H. McKean. Secretary, R. A. Reynolds. Treasurer, B. J. Kirchner. DEBATING COUNCIL MEMBERS H. F. Mattoon. Donald Joseph. MEMBERS on THE DEBATING SQUAD A. F. Olney. H. F. Mattoon. H. A. Shinn. G. W. Adams. D. B. Joseph. H. M. Smith. MEMBERS G. W. Adams. C. C. Fairchild. H. F. Mattoon. Roy A. Reynolds. N. L. Anderson. H. Fitzgerald. W. A. McKinney. H. A. Shinn. E. E. Blincoe. Matthew Guilfoyle. W. M. McClure. H. M. Smith. C. A. Castle. Jess Gardner. H. C. Morgan. D. R. Scott. R. Clark. Donald Joseph. M. H. McKeen. E. E. Tillotson. E. F. Cress. Ben Kirchner. A. F. Olney. A. H. Wallack. W. J. Crowley. Geo. Marks. C. M. Patterson. L. H. Whiteside. P. A. DiEHL. C. A. Meissner. A. K. Rader. F. W. Gramp. John DeVine. L. F. Meissner. R. R. Rader. i S I III III ill III III ica 239 m ROCKWELL DURBON SMITH GBOENE BENNETT BLA8DELL 8HOMBER HAKE LUKE WEAVER WOOLSEY MILLER MC GINNES8 MC COLLOCH BEALL ADBRSON LANTIMER ADAMS E. JOHNSON J. JOHNSON ERICSON GOPPEBT I The University Debating Society THE UNIVERSITY DEBATING SOCIETY was organized in September, 1912. It has as its purpose the development of proficiency in debating and in parHamentary practice. Its meetings, which occur every Monday evening, are always interesting and well attended. Last spring the society won the debating championship of the college. Several of its members have participated in the intercollegiate debates, and, considering its youth, the society ' s career has been one of splendid achievement. The University Debating Society is the young- est of its kind at the University, but youth gives it virility, and it is truly one of the live organizations on the hill. OFFICERS President, . . E. G. Smith, President, . . . G. B. Shomber. Vice-President, . . H. Adams. Vice-President, . . E. E. Bennett. Secretary, . . . E. E. Bennett. Secretary, . . . J. E. B. Miller. Treasurer, . . W. O. Hake. Treasurer, . W. L. Rockwell. President, . . y . . . . F. N. Anderson. Vice-President, . . . . . E. M. Johnson. Secretary, B. F. McGinness. Treasurer, W. O. Hake. UNIVERSITY DEBATING COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES W. M. Latimer. J. M. Johnson. MEMBERS W. L. Rockwell. A. M. DUBBON. E. G. Smith. E. Groene. F. N. Anderson. W. M. Latimer. I. A. Luke. E. M. Johnson. E. E. Bennett. H. Adams. W. O. Hake. G. B. Shomber. J. E. B. Miller. A. W. Ericson. R. S. Weaver. W. E. WoOLSEY. H. E. Blasdell. J. M. Johnson. H. V. McCoLLOCH. W. M. Beall. R. Ellis. E. J. GOPPERT. K. H. LoTT. B. F. McGinness. II ii i !§i i 240 ' ATO LOCK WOOD mmmm ' =r:a ' l p ' w s i i i III iii The Hawk Club III ill III 111 ill i!i if! ill ill i s e |ii ill Iii iii III iii ill i i I ill itl s a i ill ill ill ill THIS year it became necessary for the betterment of dramatics in the Uni- versity to merge the three dramatic clubs, viz., the Thespians, Masque, and Red Domino, into one organization. Clarence Sowers and Russell H. Clark, with the sanction of Chancellor Strong, wrote up resolutions and by-laws organizing all University dramatic organizations, other than class clubs, into one body, to be known as the Hawk Club. This club was then granted exclusive rights by the University Council to be the only organization of its kind in the Uni- versity. The purpose of this club is to raise the standa rd of dramatics at the University of Kansas, to cut down an over-production of amateur plays, and to produce at least one good play a year as a representative organization. The play this year will be given early in May. It will be chosen by a vote of the club from a list of stock farce-comedies and musical comedies. OFFICERS President, CiiARENCE R. Sowers. Vice-President, Elsa Barteldes. Secretary, Helen Woolsey. Treasurer, Donald Burnett. Acting Manager, Henry Anderson. Advisory Manager, Russell H. Clark. Ill iii III Iff ill 1 i I !|i it! Ill III III lit fil ill 244 T i ( he JAVHJ tWTiKiB Ss 4 m Clarence Sowers. Russell H. Clark. Agnes Engle. Katherine Stone. Elsa Barteldes. Ruth Miller. Helen Woolsey. Una Meredith, Cecile Burton. Francis Sawyer, Alice Coors, Mary Stanwaity, Frank Miller, George Edwards. Frank Henderson. The Hawk Club MEMBERS Elmer Clarke. Cecil DeRoin. Donald Burnett. Roger Coolidge. Ward Lockwood. Hazel Longabaugh. Virginia Goff. Dorothy McKown. Genevieve Herrick. Ida Perry. Nell Carraher, Emily Foster, holliday curran. J. R. Kennedy. Henry Anderson. Leland Thompson. Harlen Hutchins. Francis Stevens, Dean McElhenny. Lawrence Kinnear, Madeline Natchmann. Beulah Davis. Tony James. Alonson Busick. Emily Foster, Albert Teed, William Howden. Lucille Smith. Hazel Williams, « 245 STILLER SMITH MEISNER SPKEIER HACKBU8H BECHTOLD MEREDITH A8HTON ENGLE KIRKENDALL WILLIAMSON MC GILL ENGLE ROBBIN8 German Dramatic Club OFFICERS Manager, Frank Spreier. Treasurer, Madeline Ashton. Director, Patti Hiatt. il! I i E i L ft i|[ ! i r Hi if ' il il Wt 246 ill ill III ill III III III :i III III III III BLACKMAN FBEDEHICK DIETRICH, ACCOMPANIST HOUSTON MC CURDY BURNETT AI MORRIS, PROF. C. E. HUBACH, SOWERS, AS8T. MANAGER DIRECTOR MANAGER ALLEY RANKIN FITZPATRICK WILLIAMS GUMBINER WHEELOCK III III III ill Hi Is! 248 i ifcs Prof. C. E. Hubach, Director Clarence R. Sowers Manager University of Kansas Glee Club and Mandolin Club GLEE CLUB THE GLEE CLUB AND MANDOLIN CLUB took the longest and most successful trip in the history of the organization, under individual man- agement, during the Christmas holidays. The trip including a period of three weeks. The material on the club was far better than in former years, and established a record concert on the Hill. The second concert was given jointly with the Washburn Glee Club, III III III in iA9 m ' iF 10 JAYHi a KER, MICKEY MORRIS MC CONNELL LEWIS PROF. A. H. 8LU88 Mandolin Quintette THE MANDOLIN CLUB, being financially unable to take a trip, deemed it necessary to combine itself with the Glee Club for the school year of 1913-1914. Five of the best players were chosen, after a try-out from the entire school. II i i li ll M i li 11 a 250 ' % TOP ROW : TEMPLETOX THORXBURROW ETTWE:N FOX SAWTELL PIOTROWSKI HUFFMAN CARSON STOUT DAINS MIDDLE R OW : CROSS LOCKETT BLAIR NACHTMANN KANAOA PROF. HUBACH DAVIS WOOLSEY STANWAITY COORS KELSALL BOTTOM ROW : LAMBORX BURKHARDT DAVIS WOOLMAN FERG WILLIAMS WILSON SIMMONS BUCHANON MAGILL BAITY Girls ' Glee Club OFFICERS Manager, Pianist, . Director, Margaret Davis. Nina Kanaga. Prof. Charles E. Hubach Helen Baity. Alice Coors. Margaret Davis. MEMBERS first sopranos Dorothy Ettwein. Dora Lockett. Davida Sawtell, Helen Stout, Hazel Williams. Eileen Burkhardt. Ruth Buchanan. Josephine Lamborn. Fay Blair. Hazel Carson. Edith Cross. second sopranos Blanche Simons Mary Stanwaity. FIRST altos Clara Dains. Ruth Fox. Madeline Nachtmann. Rhea Wilson. Helen Woolsey. Nell Templeton. Esther AVollman. Edna Davis. Gertrude Ferge. Genevieve Huffman, second altos Margaret Kelsall. Maribelle McGill. ISABELL ThORNBURROW. Martha Piotrowski. lis 251 « 1 lis III ill ill III II III ill lit ill III III i|i !!! il| IIe PERSONNEL J. C. McCanles, Director, Cornet. Errol M. Welch. Harold H. Lytle. Oscar S. Major. Fred J. Leasure. Harold L. DeBenham. Chester R. Roberts. Arthur J. Nigg. George A. Collett. Leo F. Smith. CORNETS Allen B. Brown, gola w. coffelt. Jesse Capes. clarinets Charles M. Long. Garret B. Shomber. Fritz V. Hartman. Charles G. Bayles. flute and piccolo Fred E. Schumann, saxophones Howard E. Hoffman. William O. Lytle. Clifford W. Baldwin. Irwin W. Clark, Earl B. Metcalf. Hugh A. Grutzmacher. Charles O. Doub. Cargill W. Sproull. Albert S. Teed. trombones William E. Janes, John M. Hartman. Harry P, Evans. Claude O. Conkey. BASSES William D. Sorgatz. William A. Preston. ALTOS Winfred Harkrader. Norman J. Pierce. Verne C, Oldfield. Cecil S. DeRoin. baritones Charles E. Baysinger. Arthur R. Maltby. drums Olin E. Darby. Joseph W. Hill. i I i ill III ii III ill 11! Ill III If! 252 J 11 University of Kansas Concert Band m ill III III ill i li ill ill ill III ill Hi I ! i ill 9 S ' III ill lit ill ill 111 III ill ill III III |li i i i s i i !!! I i i ii! Ill ill Hi J. C. McCanles, Director. D URING the seven years that J. C. McCanles has been Director of the University Band, the band has made remarkable advancement. Beginning only mediocre it has now become a splendid con- cert band of forty pieces. The band has proved itself a very important factor to the University and very essential. The band makes about 40 appearances each year for athletic events, University functions, com- mencement exercises, and concerts for the students. The band ' s success is due not only to the untiring efforts of Director McCanles, but to the loyalty and true Kansas spirit of each of the forty members composing said organiza- tion. The object of the band is not only to assist in University activities, but to enable bandmen to receive a thorough training in the interpretation and rendition of music by the best composers. While of course the athletic events necessitate the playing of much popular music of the day — which the band always stands ready to do — however, all re- hearsals and concerts are composed of standard and classical music, such as is played by the professional bands. Great praise is due each and every member of the band for the excellent work and their readiness to respond for all rehearsals and engagements. The following programs of two of the concerts given during this school year will give a clear conception of the class and grade of music the band is playing. K. U. BAND CONCERT, FRASER HALL, Wednesday evening, December 17, ' 13, eight o ' clock. PROGRAM 1. March aux Flambeaux . . . Clark 2. Selection — Erminie, f rom Comic Opera, Jakobowski 3. Serenade — Jovitta, .... Armand 4. Cornet Solo — Autumn Colors, Barnhouse J. C. McCanles. 5. Suite — L ' Arlesienne, .... Bizet I. Prelude. II. Minuetto. IV. LeCarillon. FIVE-MINUTE INTERMISSION 6. Caprice — Among the Lilies, . . Frey 7. Selection — Ernani, from Verdi ' s Opera, Verdi 8. Humoreske, Dvorak 9. Polish Dance, Scharwenka. K. U. BAND CONCERT, FRASER HALL, Wednesday evening, April 15, ' 14, eight o ' clock. PROGRAM 1. March — Turque, .... Eilenberg 2. Suite, Chaminade I. Pas des Echarpes, from Callirrhoe. II. Variation, from Callirrhoe. III. La Lisonjera, Caprice. 3. Heart ' s Message, .... Santelman 4. Second Hungarian Rhapsody, Liszt INTERMISSION 5. Spanish Senerade — Anita, . . Allen 6. Duet — Serenade, Till Geo. Collett, Flute. Leo Smith, Alto Saxophone. 7. Overture — Siegfried, .... Wagner 8. Caprice — La Cascade, . . . Garcia 9. Slavonic Dance, Dvorak lis HI s5s«is$sjm s ' 253 ! li ill ill iii i|! University Orchestra !i IL 11 is s t I s IS FIRST HOW : WELCH MARTIN PRIEST SCHUMANX SPANGLER ELLIOT HAVENHILL GILHAMS VILLEPIGUE SAMMONS SPANGLER SECOND ROW : SMART THEILE SAILE SORENSEX SKILTON, LEADER JONES BROWN THIRD RO ' .V : BARNES ROBBIN8 HOYT, MGR. GORSUCH HOPKINS WHITMAN FOURTH ROW : KEELER BLAKEY BARBER SIMONS KETCHUM 11 !! ill ! ill t|l iff 111 iii Hi ill III til III ill iii lit ill ill III ill Iii sis ill III ill lit III «ss««s m wss 254 ,f. Sis fMe J ig University Orchestra OFFICERS President, Manager, Director, Prof. L. D. Havenhill. William Hoyt. Dean C. S. Skilton. sisssJSi i i i III 1 1 1 ill III III ill ill Professor Morse. Katherine Barber. William Hoyt. Jessie Blakey. Blossom Brown. MEMBERS first violins Myron Johnson. John Martin. Walter Priest. second violins Ednah Hopkins. Pauline Ketchum. Francis Saile. Blanche Simons. E. J. SORENSEN. violas Dorothy Keeler. Gordon Welch. violoncellos Robert Barnes. Arthur Jellison. Karl Kruger. Meredith Robbins. BASSES Charlotte Smart. Ernest Thiele. FLUTES Emil Schumann. Esther Burke. clarinet Harry Elliot. Clela Gilhams. Hugh Grutzmacher. bassoon Professor Havenhill.  : '  - ' ' - ' - - ' -- -- - - -â– -N CORNETS Marguerite Villepigue. George Sammons. FRENCH horns Professor F. E. Jones. Frank Spangler. trombone Fred Spangler. HARP Mamie Gorsuch. TYMPANI Muriel Whitman. DRUMS Arthur Maltby. TUBA William Sorgatz. III III III li 11 255 Is Charlie bored ? Soorheri tniles. II! i .;P I. Ill ill III III iil ill Young Men ' s Christian Association of the University of Kansas BLINCOE BURNHAM SPOTTS SOPER BURTON BOTTOMLY STILLER BODDINGTON YEOMAN CARSON WARKEN DIETRICH ELSWICK BARBER HOFFMAN COFFMAN NIXON ii ir I if! l!f Hi ill III III III Hi 5 I B ill SI! iil iSi ill J a 3 III ill THE YOUNG MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION is the largest and most comprehensive student organization in the world. Besides this, it is the only institution in the University that holds as its one aim the pro- motion of clean, manly Christian living. Its purpose is to keep men true to the Christan ideal and to develop in them the high motive of service to men. Identi- fication with the Association signifies an interest in all that is best in college life. Ill III 11 III lis â– 3 i III III OFFICERS President, . . Ralph Yeoman. Vice-President Cale W. Carson. Treasurer, Chas. M. Stiller. Secretary, Victor Bottomly. General Secretary, Conrad Hoffman. Jan. 27, 1914, 5.50 student members. 87 faculty members i ii I j 11 ll II i L, Ii §11 sssisssmisssissss ' 258 i 1 « S sls x$ II Kshe JAVH I0«M E S| ill III ill ca HI He5 h â– â– B P ' 4 H HL I Ki H â– ' LvJK |flHMK ' W m W |B â– ill K nwi HlL ' % r H y F T r ' ' ' E t iJi ; J BERGER ENGLE CORY WHITCHER LEAR CARROLL RULE WARD FREARK Young Women s Christian Association THE YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION is an organiza- tion of the young women of the University for the purpose of Christian study and service. This year the Association has tried to hold helpful weekly meetings ; it has established Bible and mission study classes both in the University and at Haskell, and has held kindergarten, sewing and cooking classes for some of the children of Lawrence. In a wider sense the Association has tried to train girls for a more efficient Christian service. OFFICERS President, Florence Fuqua. Vice-President, Emily Berger. Secretary, Luella Corey. Treasurer, Dorothy Ward. General Secretary, Mollie Carroll. Emily Berger. Florence Engle. Evelyn Strong. Marie Sealy. CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Veta Lear. Ruth Rule. Marie Russ. Genevieve Walker. Stella Stubbs. Florence Whitaker. ADVISORY BOARD Mrs. F. B. Dains, Chairman. Mrs. U. F. Baumgartner. Mrs. D. C. Croissant. Mrs. C. G. Dunlap. Mrs. E. S. Engle. Mrs. a. S. Olin. Mrs. a. W. Trettien. Mrs. a. M. WiLcox. Miss Margaret Lynn. Miss Helen Jones. Hi Hi ill III iil i i III ill ill ill ill a § a iii S! 259 :.- MISS GROVE MRS. OLINGER CAMPBELL HOWARD MARCHBANKS, PRESIDENT ZUTAVERN BAILEY TURKINGTON Westminster Guild WESTMINSTER GUILD was organized January 28, 1911, by the stu- dents associated with the activities of Westminster Hall. The purpose is to promote helpful forms of social life among its members. Monthly socials are held, with an average attendance of one hundred twenty-five. West- minster Hall was founded by the Presbyterians of the State of Kansas, for the purpose of affording religious instruction for all students in the University of Kan- sas who desire to avail themselves of its privileges. Although supported by the Presbyterian church, the instruction is non-sectarian and free to all students. Daily Bible classes are conducted in the hall, and on Sunday at the First Presby- terian Church by the University pastor, Rev. Stanton Olinger, A. M., B. D. Fre- quently lectures and Bible-study glasses are given at Fraternity, Sorority, and club houses. OFFICERS 1913-14 President, Howard Marchbanks. Vice-President, A. B. Campbell. Secretary, Elsa Zutavern. Treasurer, Victor Turkington. Chairman of Social Committee, Austin Bailey. ill s § I ill I § I lit III ill It! If! i! ill ill III lit ill Hi !!! iii ill i : i 111 II ill iii 260 1 SsiSsSSSsS Ssi v - he JAYHAWKER, iss ill III |ii Hi 111 i I i III ISi III {l! ill ill III Iil f I i III ill III I ! I In III III III III Ml iil III ill III If it lit ill III ill Hi lit ill lii S I B III lii III Hi iil 111 f 11 lii III Hi Ji 11 III !I| ill III S S 5 lii ill iil ill ill ill iis lii lii III iil lii If! ill 111 lis ill ill ill iil ill ill ill i I £ E S ill ill lii ill ill i!| ! i3i lis if i Sig s 261 ill IS ;f Y. M. C. A. Quartette GUISE HERRON MC KEAN SMITH I ill ||i ill i|! i:! [f I - ill III HARSHBARGER BISCHOFF HUNTER HACKBUSH STACEY FUQUA RATHERT COORS BROWNLEE RUSS APPEL LEAR POLAND F. COOK BRANINE SPOTTS DEIBERT DEIBEBT TEMPLIN DOWNS DODD THOMPSON ELDRIDGE WOLF L. COOK CLARK SPANGLER JOSEPH SMITH is II !i !i iii III iii III ill yikmaLnnia 264 ' ' ssi sssssssm-sss he JAYHAWKB A Alemannia LEMANNIiV is a student organization founded in 1900. It not only gives its members the opportunity of becoming proficient in speaking the Ger- man language, but affords them a social life as well. MEMBERS i i 11 III ill ill III ill III SENIORS Florence F. Fuqua, . Kansas City. Lydia E. Cook, Kansas City, Mo. Irma Spangler, Lawrence. Vena Spotts, Lawrence. Ruth Deibert, Florence. Colo. Bessie Becktell, Macksville. Veta B. Lear, Osawatomie. Harold R. Branine, Hutchinson. Leslie H. Dodd, Langdon. Eugene Harshbarger, Topeka. juniors Hi 111 : 1 1 Sii III Eva M. Coors, Marie E. Russ, Dorothea Hackbush, Marjorie Templin, Marion Manley, Cornelia M. Downs, Eunice Pleasant, Donald Joseph, Arthur Stacey, Irwin Clark, . Clare A. Poland, . Oklahoma City, Okla. Falls City, Neb. Leavenworth. Lawrence. Junction City. Kansas City. Burlington. Whitewater. Abilene. Osage City. Atchison. i|| ill ill III i!l fill sophomores Lillian Wolf, Kansas City. Charles Eldridge, . Topeka. Adele Bischoff, Washington. Bertha Smith, Kansas City. George Rathert, Junction City. Olin Deibert, Florence, Colo. freshmen. Janet Thompson, Whitewater. Florence Cook, Kansas City, Mo. Chauncey Hunter, Abilene. Hilmer Appel, . Nickerson. Oscar Brownlee, Stafford. If FACULTY George J. Hood. . honorary members Clara Price Newport, . Swarthniore, Pa. Adolphine B. Ernst, Watertown, Wis. Grace M. Charles Oak Park, 111. lii ! S I Hi ill lii iii Knights of Columbus FEIEBABEND LYNCH HAVEKORST WALLENDORF MULLOY SMART GUILFOYLE DEVLIN FITZGERALD J. LYNCH LAMBERT MC MEEL KIRCHNER CROWLEY III III iii 111 ill ill it! 3 i i iii i I ii Hi ii! lii III III ill I i lii i ji ill i s 266 1 V s â– , -, vv « v s •«S 1 SSiSSiiSSSSSiSSSSSSiSSiSiSS KBhe ill ill i ! i iii las ill III |l| III iii III iii iii ||| ill ii| iii 893 Knights of Columbus THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS of the University is an organization of Catholic men who are affiliated with the national fraternal organization of that name. The University of Kansas chapter was installed in 1908, The usual features of any fraternal organization are observed ; but the foremost purpose of the organization is to provide suitable social environment for Catholic men of the University. MEMBERS SENIORS Frank J. Lynch, Herington. Walter A. Lambert, Leavenworth. Matt Guilfoyle, Wamego. Benjamin J. Kirchner, Winfield. Joe E. Lynch, Herington. Floyd B. Devlin, Newton. James Early, Lawrence. Harold H. Feierabend, Atchison. juniors Leo H. Wallendorf, Kansas City. John E. Smart, Cleburne, Tex. sophomores Bernard F. McMeel, Meade. Thomas N. Mulloy, Lincoln Center. Harold E. Fitzgerald, Nickerson. freshmen Walter B. Havekorst, Hanover. Ben M. Bodde, Winchester. William J. Crowley, Kansas City. Ill Iii iii iii iii III ill iii ill 267 I — ' i ' 13he JAYHi KE S University of Kansas Branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS BRANCH OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS was organized in March, 1908, and is a regularly established branch of the national society, with headquarters at New York City. A considerable proportion of the local society are enrolled as student members of the national organization, but the local branch includes such students pursuing the electrical engineering course as may care to affiliate with the local organization. OFFICERS Chairman, H. C. Hansen. Vice-Chairman, G. A. Washburn. Secretary and Treasurer, . L. M. Bocker. Executive Committee, Prof. G. C. Shaad. A. J. Fecht. R. V. Lentz. K. W. Wright. m Nm ssssssss-- I i ill il 268 m -jriM m te jjmmmmmmmj « v« ' Hi !i 11 II II i i if i I 11 11 11 ii ii |i il I! i ! u II ii Ii i I BROWN SEGEL PROFESSOR SHAAD WASHBURN WISE HORNER CIS8NA HANSEN PROFESSOR JOHNSON SCHOOLEY FECHT FOWLER Senior Electricals Prof. G. C. Shaad. Prof. C. A. Johnson Prof. M. E. Rice. S. S. ScHOOLEY. H. G. Appel. E. C. Arnold. H. W. Arlin. C. G. Bayles. B. J. Berger. L. M. BOCKER. L. E. Brown. E. J. B urnham. A. R. Burt. B. E. Beebe. E. C. Burke. V. J. CiSSNA. H. M. CURFMAN. C. R. Copp. G. F. Davis. R. L, Deewall. P. L. Dyer. F. B. Elmore. A. J. Fecht. C. V. Fowler. A. V. Forsyth E. C. L. Griffith. D. R. Harrison. MEMBERS. H. C. Hansen. F. Haskin. R. A. Herrod. O. H. Horner. J. L. Hunt. CM. Jesperson. H. J. Kleihege. S. Kruse. L. B. Leasure. R. V. Lentz. F. J. Lynch. C. D. Luke. W. A. Moore. F. A. Madden. A. R. Maltby. D. C. Martin. M. F. Madden. E. D. Markel. S. A. McCormac. F. H. Miller. T. Q. Morton. V. T. Newton. H. E. Nottingham. C. Oman. H. H. Paul. H. C. Pauly. R. E. A. Putnam. H. R. Reed. F. L. Spangler. H. E. Sampson. E. R. Sanders. J. Segel. G. A. Smith. L. F. Smith. J . R. Smith. E. M. Stephens. C. B. Sykes. R. S. Thomas. S. A. Truesdell. V. H. TURKINGTON. R. E. Thompson. A. M. Wallack. H. R. Wade. R. M. Walker. G. A. Washburn. L. N. Weibel. A. S. WiCKSTRUM. L. D. Wise. K. W. Wright. C. E. DiMMITT. E. K. Carnes. W. T. Frier. J. I. Hammond. 269 i-V TOP ROW : CUNNICK ALLISON BOWER MILES PATTINSON PICKERING RILEY BEAUCHAMP RUTH BOLTZ BOYINGTON NELSON SECOND ROW : PIKE JONES SEVERN8 PAIRCHILD BAUGHER KLEIHEGE FEIERABEND HAZEN BUTLER HAITBRINK CARMEAN THIRD ROW : ACKERMAN NEWBY WELCH PROFESSOR GARVER DEAN WALKER ANGEVINE PROFESSOR SLUS8 PROFESSOR SIBLEY DEVLIN MC CUNE MALC0LM80N BOTTOM ROW : F. HARTMAN CLARK POTTER SMITH NOFSINGEB HAOENBUCH COGGINS CARSON BERWICK J. HARTMAN 11 ilL lit The University of Kansas Student Branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STUDENT BRANCH OF THE AMER- ICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS was affiliated with the national society March 9, 1909. The branch was among the first of the student branches to be admitted to the general society, and ranks among the first six branches. The branch holds weekly meetings, at which members give papers and talks on technical subjects. One meeting a month is addressed by an outside speaker. The fifth annual meeting was held on December 11, 1913. Papers were pre- sented at both the morning and afternoon sessions by men who are prominent in the engineering profession. A banquet was given in the evening for members and visiting guests. The membership of the branch is now fifty-two, exclusive of honorary mem- bers, and it is hoped that the remaining twenty-four students who are enrolled in the mechanical course will become members before the year is ended. The branch has added thirty-one students to its membership this year. OFFICERS Chairman Leland C. Angevine. Vice-Chairman, Orrin T. Potter. Recording Secretary, William J. Malcolmson. Corresponding Secretary, Howard L. Newby. Treasurer, Harold H. Feierabend. I Dean P. F. Walker. Prof. F. H. Sibley. Prof. A. H. Sltjss. HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. J. D. Garver. Lewis E. Kneer. Prof. S. McMullan. William J. Plank. J. Denton Howard. Earl S. Rush. Earl Carson. Iffl 270 %sss., ,m i mm JAVHi4 VVTCER3 SS III Sal S I i III III III Senior Mechanicals Senior Mechanicals — jolly thirteen. Out for a record. Keep the list clean. Heinie is there with all the raw stuff, Which surely will class any George Ade fluff. Allison is nuts on flying machines, Which would be hard on anyone ' s bean. John Butler is one you cannot rile, Except on nine rahs for the old hard file. Cog is a campus-dream — a trance Who learned the hesitation dance. And then there ' s Devlin, who is sure some sleeper ; If he doesn ' t wake up he ' ll get in deeper. Germany at one time said he ' d bet his coat That Arthur J. Boynton had his goat. Dan Hazen is captain of the track team, And in short pants he ' s quite a scream. And Daniel B. Kleihege is dreadfully coy When you hear him say, You ' re right, boy. Jack Malcolmson is the real wise guy ; Has been elected to Sigma Xi. Squiss Newby is the for sure loud guy ; And for forty miles you can hear him cry. Shorty Nofsinger kept down the banquet cost, And for this the members condemned it a frost. Bill Severns has charge of the Mechanical shirts, But they seem to be coming by mighty small jerks. Leland Angevine is Chairman of the Branch; To write these rhymes he went in a trance. And last here ' s Dean Walker, who made us all flee For fear we ' d get stewed in Anheuser-B. i!i III Hi Sis ill ill !!! ill III III ill ii| ll§ Hi ill L 271 IS he JAYHAWMBUS m jl • !Wa -v sssiSsssssssisssssi ' V W T ' -. at- lie 11: ' f f- III ill ill ill I { i ill ill III III S E i III III III I f I 1 1 ! ill I i I American Institute of Civil Engineers THE CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY of the University of Kansas was organized in 1883 and reorganized in 1907. The purpose of the society is to increase the proficiency of the members in the practice of civil engineer- ing and to promote fellowship among the students and faculty of the Civil Engineer- ing Department. OFFICERS President, E. L. Harshbarger. Vice-President, L. E. Bolixger. Secretary and Treasurer, W. E. Brown. Adviser, H. A. Rice. H. A. Rice. B. J. Dalton. P. K. BUNN. G. R. Murphy. G. C. Glenn. M. V. Holmes. L. W. KiNNEAR. Fred Hunter. C. B. Holmes. R. C. Keeling. N. J Pearce. W. A. Kingman. D. E. Ackers. M. F. Daum. A. L. Boman. G. H. Yeokum. L. S. Sparks. C. F. Sloane. G. R. Jones. J. O. Jones. MEMBERS FACULTY W. C. McNouN. F. L. Brown. L. E. BOLINGER. C. S. Cassingham. L. H. DoDD. W. F. Fox. L. M. Harsha. F. M. Veatch N. F. Strachan. A. W. Templin. Alfred Gray. N. W. Brown. D. S. James. W. A. Burton. A. J. Groft. SENIORS E. L. Harshbarger. B. E. Means. W. D. Weidlein. J. A. Brouk. J. E. LaRue. D. G. Reid. JUNIORS L. W. Rutherford. W. A. Stacey. I. S. Siegrist. R. L. Templin. SOPHOMORES G. J. Alt. F. P. Scott. C. J. Hill. FRESHMEN C. D. Hunter. J. C. Kovarik. Ralph Endicott. Ross Rummel. S. F. Kelly. G. D. Johnson. Chas. Cochran. A. B. Underwood. D. M. Rankin. Cyrus Veirs. S. M. Haag. J. L. Bliss. Jame Parker. C. A. PoL. ND. W. E. Brown. E. F. Newcomer. F. M. Bost. G. R. Smee. P. A. Diehl. R. S. Crow. J. O. Gunnels. N. W. NiGG. Ill ii 11 6S ' ii ii 111 ii ii I i ii Ii Ii 272 ii ' (She JAYHAWKER. Senior Civil Engineers X7NDEBWOOD REID BUNN KINNEAR WEIDLEIN HABSHBARGER LA RUE CASSINGHAM PROF. BROWN PROF. DALTON DEAN MARVIN PROF. RICE PROF. JONES HOLMES BROUK GLEXX MURPHY FOX DODD PARKER VEIR8 HUNTER BOLINGER R, NKIN Ji_ III ii! Ill ill ' ill iii III 11! iii III i| igS i i -«., ,, „ Hmiiir- m ; 1 IK . «. 1 â– â– i § t t 1 f 1 i 1 TOP ROW : BROWN TROUP BILL CRAWFORD PROF. YOUNG PROF. HAWORTH PROF. TODD PROF. TWENHOFLE MC CURRY BARTELL COLE DOR8EY BOTTOM row: muck SEGER SMITH KELLEY 8AMMON8 DINGMAN CRUM HAINBACH CHANDLER TODD FISKE The University of Kansas Branch of the Ameri- can Institute of Mining Engineers THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS BRANCH OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING ENGINEERS was organized in the spring of 1910. Up to that time the national organization of the American In- stitute of Mining Engineers had no affihation with the mining students of the lead- ing technical schools of this country. The Kansas branch was among the first to be affiliated with the national organization. The branch meets the first Wednesday of each month, at which engineers from the field address the members on mining or kindred subjects. OFFICERS President, L. B, Smith, Vice-President, H. R. Brown. Secretary and Treasurer, George B. Sammons. J MEMBERS Oscar A. Dingman. Leland E. Fiske. Joseph M. Hainbach. Albert R. Bartell. Ralph L. Seger. Prof. E. Haworth. Harold L. Chandler. Ben A. Sweeney. John A. McCurry. George B. Sammons. Tom R. Crawford. Fred Bill. Lewis B. Smith. V. V. Muck. Prof. C. M. Young. Abram Troup. Hugh R. Brown. Sherwin F. Kelley. Eli F. Dorsey. William N. Todd. Clark B. Carpenter. Harry Crum. Lawrence E. Cole. Prof. J. E. Todd. Prof. W. H. Twenhofle. 11 %SWSi5«««iSSSSS 274 SjtHSIitlMMMNRtJim! He % X ' TL |I â– ;,«.« L â–¼ -â–¼ JIIL JLa A ;ii li S ! ' ' ' ill III !ii III III ill II Hi ill 3|| |i| III iil I III lii BENN LACKEY CAMPBELL, MOYER NEAL NICELET CADWELL ENGLISH BALDWIN POWELL PARKHUBST BECKLEY JACKSON BLACHLEY GOLDTRAP m ' fADDEN Chemical Engineering Society THE Society in its present form was organized in 1911. Its membership consists of all chemical engineers and other students specializing in chem- istry. Meetings are held on the first and third Wednesdays of each month. These consist chiefly of talks either by members of the faculty or men in the pro- fession outside the University. A very successful Chemical Engineers ' day was staged on February 27. Speak- ers were obtained from Kansas City, Omaha, and other cities, and represented nearly every phase of the chemical engineering profession. The annual banquet was held in the evening at the Eldridge House. This, with the Seniors ' inspection trip to Chicago, held in April, gave the chemical engineers a wealth of practical instruction and information obtainable in no other way. ill III jil ill OFFICERS President, Ernest J. Baldwin. Vice-President, Alfred R. Powell. Secretary, Fred E. Blachley. Treasurer, Marion L. English. 275 ifi 111 i i ! Ill I S I flee III III III til III III III III ill lii ill lei ill III ill Ifi II 11 11 1 1 11 Senior Pharmacists F-wr — r ' TOP ROW : E. JOHNSON KUHL BARNES CHINERY WATERS GWINNER, 8EC.-TREAS. RAU, VICE-PRESIDENT HALL MIDDLE BOW : WYLDER POWELL HOSTIN8KY HENDERSON, PRESIDENT DEANSAYRE EARLY HAMILTON SMART MEADOWS BOTTOM ROW : GATES JOHNSON MILLER G8ELL STEVENSON SPECK JOHNSON TAYLOR WANDELL 11 i! 11 11 I! I i 11 II lii i i i lit ill 111 ill i!i ill lii II i i i I i III I  . i. ' ' ._. iâ– vK â– â– . Junior Pharmacy Class Members ' FIRST ROW : OBEK LYLE8 BIBER8TEIN 8TELZNER BROOKS SHERMAN THORPE WILLETT SECOND ROW : BLAYLOCK FAIR LIKES WOOD SAYRE MC CAFFERTY DICKENSON HUNSUCKER LINDAUER THTRD ROW : BIGNALL ROBERTS OSBORNE SCHROERS ERNST WHEELER POTWIN HENNIGH CROFFOOT III If! iii ill ill i!f ill III ||l ill ill ill 277 Captain Frank E. Jones First Lieut. Sam. G. Fairchild Second Lieut. Theodore Utterback 111 e i I III III III i i i ir Kansas National Guard, Company M, 1st Reg. Infantry IN the spring of 1910 a military company, composed entirely of students, was organized and attached to the First Infantry, Kansas National Guard, as a separate company. Clinton R. ShifHer, a law student, was commissioned as captain, and the other officers were elected from the membership. In the years following several changes in the officers of the company took place, until the Military Board decided to place a member of the faculty in command, and in October, 1912, Professor Frank E. Jones, of the Engineering School, was com- missioned captain. Captain Jones has had several years ' experience as a National Guardsman and also served as a non-commissioned officer of Volunteers through the Spanish-American war and Philippine insurrection. January 1, 1914, the company was assigned to First Infantry and designated as Company M. The company has always held a high place among the companies of the State, and at present ranks second highest in general efficiency in the regi- ment. In 1911 the company won the Metcalf Trophy, a large silver cup given to the company having the best scores in target-shooting. Under the coaching of Lieut. Utterback the company has qualified a large per cent of experts — sharp- shooters and marksmen — in rifle practice. ill lit lis i S i 115 III ill I g I i i I ill 278 «««%S5«5jm -SSi kl Kansas National Guard ii I M n 11 ii as ii i I Ii II i i I i ii B 5 11 It OFFICERS Captain, Frank E. Jones First Lieutenant Sam. G. Fairchild Second Lieutenant, Theodore Utterback MEMBERS Allen Sterling, First Sergeant. Edward Todd, Quartermaster Sergeant. Lucius Hayes, Sergeant. Emmett L. Bennett, Sergeant. Wayland H. Meredith, Corporal. Frank Elmore, Corporal. Merril F. Daum, Corporal. Ittai a. Luke, Corporal. Sherwin F. Kelly, Corporal. Claud Clary, Musician. EwART Plank, Musician. Jasper Mayer, Cook. Aaron Piepenberg, Cook. Sam. p. Mover, Artificer. Virgil M. Auchard. Milt. L. Baker. John Barry. Alver M. Durbon. A. W. Ericsenthur. Chas. B. Eggen. Grant B. Smith. F. LeRoy Spangler, William O. Whittaker. John Schopper. James O. Henderson. Chas. B. Holmes. Earl Hunter. privates Arthur S. Humphrey. Joseph C. Kovarik. Chas. V. Kincaid. Glynn Kirby. Donald H. Lackey. Loyd a. Lambert. James B. McKay. Stewart E. McMillin. Chas. L. Moody. Sam C. Musgrave. Earl K. Nixon. John F. Noonan. Elmer Nodurfth. Carmen G. Payne. Frank J. Porter. Frank Royse, Chas. F. Royce. Lowell L. Rush. Harold F. Ruppenthal. Leland C. Schmitter. Gail A. Smith. Jural C. Swisher. F. Le Port Spangler. LONSO A. WiNSOR. RoBT. A. Young. 11! M : , v,v .«,.,., ..v.v.$i ,v N l !Si5!?§iS5Sf!!Sm ill HI i i i Hi ill III III ill ill III Hi If! ill III III III HI ill ill III 1 fe ) I I I HAMILTON SPOTTS MOSSE KINNEAR SCHWAB MC CARTY BISHOP STUEWE HOLLOWAY THORPE CROISSANT RICE WHITNEY SLCSS WEIDLEIN BUCKLES COOLIDGE SOM ERS DETWILER GREENLEES CLARK PARKER HURD CUBBISON JONES CASWELL The Sachems THE SACHEMS is the Senior honorary society for men, founded at the University of Kansas in the fall of 1910 by twelve upper-classmen and graduates. It was the first distinctive class society to be formed on the Hill. The object of the Sachems is to promote and foster a spirit of fellowship and a close acquaintanceship among all of the men of the University. Within the last year several smokers have been given to members of the under-classes and faculty. A silver cup is given by the society each year to the best football kicker in school, and this year a Sachem chair was presented to the new Student Union building. Members are chosen in the spring of every year from men in the Junior class. Identification with University interests and activities is a requisite for member- ship. OFFICERS President, Elmer Whitney. Vice-President, Bruce Hurd. Secretary, . ' . Russell H. Clark. Treasurer, William Weidlein. Elmer Whitney. Russell H. Clark. Webb Holloway. Charles Greenlees. James Parker. Harold Wilson. A. B. Casswell. Bruce Hurd. James Schawb. Robert Heizer. Lawrence Kinnear. J MEMBERS John Detwiler. Roger Coolidge. William Weidlein. Paul K. Cubbison. Lloyd Bishop. Edward Stuewe. Herbert Sommers. Cale Buckles. Ralph Spotts. Prof. H. A. Rice. Prof. Merle Thorpe. Coach W. O. Hamilton. Coach A. St. Leger Mosse. Prof. E. W. Murray. Prof. W. A. Whitaker. Prof. DeWitt C. Croissant. Prof. Leon McCarty. J. O. Jones. Joseph Murray. Prof. A. H. Sluss. 13 SSSSSSSSSSSS SSSSSSSSSSiSSSii 280 tal he JAYHAWIBBK BERKY NELSON LOCKWOOD nUSSELL VAN DERLIP ALBAUGH KENNEDY 8CHROERS CREIGHTON Black Helmet THE ORDER OF THE BLACK HELMET is an honorary Sophomore class society for men. The purpose of the organization is to create a spirit of good-fellowship in the class and the University, and to aid in any under- taking which is of benefit to the school. This society was organized October 13, 1910, by thirteen members of the class of 1913. Each year, on Class Day, members are elected for the following year from men in the Freshman class. Ill John H. Blair. Ralph H. Berry. John B. Kennedy. Houghton S. Albaugh. MEMBERS Harlan A. Russell. Harry G. Schroers. Joseph E. Gaitskill. Lawrence S. Nelson. Lawrence P. Engel. Alexander E. Creighton. Clyde L. Van Derlip. Ward Lockwood. II! i i I lii III m i I: MORRIS HAZEN VON SCHRILTZ SMITH C. FAIRCHILD FLINT SOWERS TUDOR PUTNAM 8. FAIRCHILD FLINT HILL YEOMAN DODD STRICKLAND MILLER DAVIS MALOY R. DAVIS DINGMAN 282 f Hi |!| sis fShe JAYMiiaMliER. Skull and K. IN the fall of 1912, nineteen members of the next year ' s graduating class or- ganized an honorary Senior society for men of the University. The society was christened Skull and K, symbolizing strength, scholarship, and a love of our Alma Mater. Qualifications necessary to election to membership in the society are prominence in the University activities, excellence in scholarship, and efforts in behalf of the best interests of the School. «« 1 iii Iff ill III ill Ijl ill III li! ill Iii Prof. Howard T. Hill. Prof. Geo. E. Putnam. Samuel G. Fairchild. Laaatience Morris. Dan Hazen. Herbert Flint. L. Lloyd Smith. Clarence R. Sowers. HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. L. N. Flint, Hon. W. Y. Morgan. Prof. Chas. H. Johnson. MEMBERS Eugene W. Davis. Herbert C. Tudor. Charles E. Strickland. Ralph Yeoman. Leslie H. Dodd. Frank E. Miller. Guy W. Von Schriltz. D. Henry Maloy. Robert Davis. Charles C. Fairchild. Oscar A. Dingman. Ill ill III ««sssssss sssss 283 lis ill lis ill III Ml ill III i I i 1 i i I ' 5 i 9 i ill ill i 8 1 III III III MC ELHENEY MC CLAYTON NELSON WILSON ALLEN GEAR CARSON DE LONGY KENNEDY ' WEAVER HACKNEY HARSH O ' DONNEL NORTHRUP HENDERSON WILLIAMSON JOSEPH Owls THE OWLS is the Junior Class society at the University of Kansas, or- ganized in February, 1914. The object of the Owls is to promote and initiate organized movements for the best interests of the Junior Class, and also to discuss and promulgate problems of general student concern, and to foster a spirit of fellowship and close acquaintance among the classmen and also all men of the University. J. Randolph Kennedy. G. RussEL Gear. Donald Joseph. Cale W. Carson. Arthur B. Weaver. Harold DeLongy. MEMBERS E. Blair Hackney. Harry S. Wilson. Stanley B. Nelson. Leon D. Harsh. Henry S. O ' Donnel. Gilbert McClayton. J- Lewis O. Northrup. G. Dean McElheney. Lester M, Allen. Clarence M. Williamson. Frank B. Henderson. Leon J. Barth. Ill III III III 111 III Hi 284 ' w. ' .i: 4«ti. 4«4jIii COREY BORDERS MC CURDV ASHBY O DOXXELL WOLF SMITH HOBART ROGERS FRIEND ISE FITZPATRICK STOCKTOX CAREY MICKEY . MILLER Sphinx THE SPHINX society is an organization composed of men of the Fresh- man Class. Its purpose is to advance the spirit of fellowship among the first-year men. During the past year it has furnished stunts for and help to promote several smokers and entertainments. OFFICERS President, Ames Rogers. Vice-President, Warner Corey. Secretary, Rex Miller. Tr easurer, John D. Smith. MEMBERS W. W. Borders. Henry McCurdy. Frank Bunn. Paul Friend. John Carey. John D. Smith. Thomas Ashby. T. W. Benson. Leo Fitzpatrick. Rex Miller. Frank Ise. Fred O ' Donnell. Ames Rogers. Charles Chase. Warner Corey. Charles Hobart. Verto Alley. Boyd Marquis. James Wolfe. Waite Mickey. Roger Bishop. Marcellus Stockton. â– I f ' swssm isi 286 f He JAV Hi VOi L W« iiS III i i § 8EA1.Y BERGER MESERVEY SPANGLER The Torch 111 lis 111 ill ill ill Hi i!i III III ill iii 111 lis i I iii III ill I il III III III THE TORCH is the honor society of Senior women, organized in 1912. It is composed of nine members chosen from the Junior Class by a committee of the faculty and the active members of the society. The membership is announced at the beginning of the spring term of the Senior year. The purpose of the society is the furthering of responsibility among the women of the University. Dorothy Ward. Bernice Schultz. Frances Meservey. MEMBERS Florence Fuqua. Irma Spangler. Agnes Conrad. Vena Spotts. Emily Berger. Marie Sealy. iii III III III HI |l| ill III l|! ill III ill ill 111 III ill ill ill ill iii III |i| i|! Ill iSe ill SJSSSSSSSMSS 287 f4 5 BURNSTAFF YU8T ( ' ONWKLL JOHNSON GUSTAFSON H. GREEN BAILEY ARNETT VAN DER VRIE8 DINGEE C. GREEN WOOD HOWAT SHADE WENRICH DUEKER BURKHARDT LATIMER Mathematics Club III Let Poets chant of Clouds and Things In lonely Attics ; A nobler Lot is his who clings To Mathematics. Sublime he sits, no worldly Strife His bosom vexes. Reducing all the Doubts of Life To Y ' s and X ' s. And Naught to him ' s a Primrose on The river ' s border. A Parallelipipedon Is more in order. Let Braggarts vow to do and dare And right abuses! He rather sit at home and square Hypotenuses. Along his straight ruled paths he goes Contented with ' em. The only Rhythm that he knows A Logarithm. — Arthur Gruterman. ii OFFICERS President, Minnie E. Dingee. Vice-President, Wendell M. Latimer. Secretary, Florence M. Shade. Publicity Agent, Eva M. Coors. Faculty Adviser, John N. Van der Vries. Program Committee, Frank E. Wood. Ottilia W. Dueker. , Chas. F. Green. Maud Arnett. Austin Bailey. Ella Bernstorf. Eileen Burkhardt h. h. conwell. Eva M. Coors. Minnie E. Dingee. MEMBERS Ottilia W. Dueker. Charles F. Green. Hazel Greene. Alma Gustafson. Millie Hanson. Helen Houghton. Irene Howat. Alexander Johnson. Chester L. Kimel. Vera Knoblauch. Wendell M. Latimer. Florence M. Shade. Christine Wenrich. Frank E. Wood. Laurin p. Yust. Ill 288 , , SiSSSSsSSSSSiSSSiSiS ill ill III ill ill III ill The Botanical Club OFFICERS President, Marguerite Villepigue. Vice-President, Dr. Chas. R. Shull. Secretary, Louise Luck, n. Treasurer, John A. Elliot. iij lit i i i ill ill lit Prof. W. C. Stevens, F. W. MULSON. Herbert B. Foote. Prof. Chas. M. Sterling, Dorothy Ward. Nell Taylor. Nora Dalby. J. B. McNaught. Theodora Grove. MEMBERS Lucy Dunbar. Dr. Grace M. Charles. Inez Smith. Grace McCrone. Neva Ritter. Eva Bechtel. Lucille Witte, Ida Malleis. H. G. Harris. Myrtle Greenfield. Maureen McKirnen. P. W. Claussen. Alma Richardson. Bertha V. Sallee. H. W. Dixon. Mary Helen Keith. L. M. Peace. Aldo M. Livingood. i i III iii ill ill ill ill !289 . iSiSSSimSSSmSSSiSSSiS lii CLASSEN BROWN NEU8CHWANGER 8. NEUSCHWANGBJl FREARK POOS BAERG HUNTER VAN8ELL GREEN KELLOGG COLLETT HOSFORD HUNGERFORD TAYLOR BEAMER WINSOR HIMPLE sis III ill III III i i i III III .5 B I III Ifi Jl! ill 111 {! I lii I 3 i III Entomological Club THE aim and purpose of the Entomological Club are the review and dis- cussions of current entomological problems. Membership is confined to instructors and students showing active interest and proficiency in the entomological work. Meetings held every week. OFFICERS President, Ruby Hosford. Secretary, Nell Taylor. P. W, Claussen. Wm. F. Brown. Wm. Baerg. C. A. Green. A. R. Kellogg. Geo. a. Collett. Amanda Neuschwanger. Sarah Neuschwanger. MEMBERS Prof. S. J. Hunter. Ruby Hosford. Prof. H. B. Hungerford. Nell Taylor. Christine B. Freark. Fred W. Poos. Geo. H. Vansell. R. A. Beamer. L. A. WiNSOR. Minnie Himple. Eugene F. Davis. Kirk Hilton. Meredith Robbins. H. L. ViERECK. Roy Eraser. HE 3 s i 11! ill III III Ij! Ill III ill 290 I Hi ill til III lit tJ re JAYH AWKER. BEAMER A. NEUSCHWANGER HOU8HOLDER HAGUE KELLOGG SMITH BAUAIGARTNER TURNER DOWNS 8WARTS TAYLOR ALLEN ROBERTSON S. NEUSCHWANGER DUNBAR TEACHNOR WITTI WILLIAMS HIMPEL Snow Zoology Club EARLY last fall the members of the faculty and fifteen students of the Zoology Department organized a society which is known as the Snow Zoology Club. Once a month this club meets to discuss problems and modern advance- ments of scientific interest which concern the realm of zoology. The founding of this society supplies a long-felt want among the students and faculty of the depart- met, and affords an excellent opportunity for those who are ambitious to keep up with the science and to meet together in the good-fellowship of their common interests. OFFICERS President, Ralph Swarts. Vice-President, Vic. Housholder. Secretary, Florence Hague. Ill III III ill Cora M. Downs. Amanda Neuschwanger. Florence S. Hague, Nell Taylor. Sarah Neuschwanger. Minnie Himpel. Nadine Nowlin. MEMBERS Lucile Witti. Inez Smith. Bennet M. Allen. Clarence L. Turner W. R. B. Robertson. Lucy Dunbar. Raymond Beamer. Remington Kellogg. Dix Teachnor. Chas. G. Williams. W. J. Baumgartner. Vic. H. Housholder.. Ralph E. Swarts. ' si sssm sssiS i I i 11 I I i iff i s I |E| III 291 KBhe JAYHAWKER. s TOP ROW. WOODS DUNBAR HARSELL LIGHT ULRICH EDWARDS MC FARLAND BROWN KREBBS WILSON MIDDLE ROW : WOODRUFF MOSES KEITH HUNTER DR. DAY WOODRUFF LYONS WILLIAMS BAILEY BOTTOM ROW : GOLD8WORTHY RICHARDSON SPREIER BOSSI JACKSON BIGELOW SMITH MADDEN BEAMEB DAUM III ill 11 S i I ill III Home Economic Club THE HOME ECONOMIC CLUB was organized to meet a much-felt need. That is, to prepare the girls who are taking the work and do not expect to teach, to address women ' s clubs and the like in relative subjects. Also the need of association with members of the various classes influenced the growth of the club. Anyone enrolled in the course in Home Economics is eligible for mem- bership. OFFICERS President, .... Vice-President, . Secretarv and Treasurer, Martha Hunter. Mary Jane Simpson. Bernice McFarland. Ill If! 1 1 i §li ill 111 III ill ill III ii{ III i 292 PS J IRJI The Pan-Hellenic Council III III 8urber alexander folks callen somers waugh weaver fischer perry strickland caswell o ' donnell teed sommers miller VANDERLIP ill III ill {i I III ill 11 294 IS i ill I i i SIS III til III III iii i i S SSI III iii ill ill ill i I I Si! ill III 1 1 1 ill Ml ill ill III iii ill ill I S I III ill III III Iii The Pan-Hellenic Council THE PAN-HELLENIC ASSOCIATION of the University of Kansas was organized in 1907. The object of the Association is to promote good feeling and a closer relationship between the general national fraternities, to regulate and control inter-fraternity affairs, and to advance the interests of the fraternities together with those of the University. The Association is governed by a council consisting of two representatives from each of eight national fraternities that are members of the Association. The organization has met with great success, instilling a broad and fair-minded spirit of fraternalism such as prevails in few other institutions. The council has charge of inter-fraternity baseball, debate and track, puts on a Pan -Hellenic smoker each year, and provides entertainment for visitors at the inter-collegiate athletic meets. Fraternalism, a spirit of democracy, fostered by this body, unconsciously in- stills a feeling of loyalty to Alma Mater, and in so doing promotes to a certain degree the best interests of the Universitv. OFFICERS President, Alpha Tau Omega. Vice-President, Beta Theta Pi. Secretary, Phi Gamma Delta. Treasurer, Sigma Nu. REPRESENTATIVES Beta Theta Pi, Arthur C. Perry. Arthur B. Weaver. Phi Kappa Psi, Ray J. Folks, Charles E. Strickland. Phi Gamma Delta, Herbert C. Sommers. Paul D. Surber. Phi Delta Theta, Frank E. Miller. Wm. K. Waugh. Sigma Nu, Charles F. Alexander. Speer Callen, Sigma Chi, A. B. Caswell. John G. Summers. Alpha Tau Omega, Floyd E. Fisher. Wayne E. Wing art. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Albert S. Teed. Clyde S. Vanderlip. 295 Beta Theta Pi If! it III i : I III !f! Ill Hi TOP HOW : ill ill III III ill il! Ill III HEATH ATHERTON 8TROTHER BOTTOMLY A. MURPHY KINNEAR SCHWAB WEAVER HEIZER HOU8HOLDEH GOLDSWORTHY MIDDLE ROW : HAWORTH VEATCH PERRY KURD JONES SCHWINN G. MURPHY EBNOTHER GLEIS8NER KANE GRAY BOTTOM ROW : ALLEN CHASE SWEENEY ACKERS PAYNE HOUSTON BANKER JOHNSON BEACH ROGERS ANDERSON 11 II I I If ll II II 11 li lie 1 1 1 fij III !|l f jl III III iii ill Hi III III I ss ill ill ill i i ! Hi 11 ill til 13 296 I J uf ii ! ill ill Beta Theta Pi Founded at Miami University, 1839. Kansas Chapter installed, January 9, 1873. Publication, The Beta Theta Pi. Flower, La France Rose. Colors, T ight Pink and Blue. Ill III ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Francis M. Yeatch, B. S., Atchison. Bruce C. Hurd, LL. B., Abilene. James W. Schwab, B. S., Mitchell, S. D. George R. Murphy, B. S., Oklahoma City. Lawrence W. Kinnear, B. S., New York City. Arthur C. Perry, A. B., Kansas City, Mo. WiLLi. M H. Schwinn, LL. B., Wellington. James R. Ebnother, Ph. C, Downs. Oliver T. Atherton, LL. B., Emporia. Martin Goldsworthy, LL. B., Hancock, Mich. Ill t ( i Hi 1 1 ! ill IM Eli ill ill III Ill f 1 i III Robert Heizer, Osage City. Guy R. Houston, Wichita. Ogden S. Jones, Lawrence. Huntsman Haworth, Lawrence. YicTOR Bottomly, Emporia. George H. Beach, Kansas City, Mo. John M. Gleissner, Abilene. George B. Strothers, Kansas City, Mo. Herbert W. Kane, Springer, N. M. Albert N. Murphey, Oklahoma City. Ames P. Rogers, Abilene. Willi. m M. Gray, Chanute. JUNIORS YicTOR Householder, Columbus. Arthur B. Weaver, Lawrence. Ben a. Sweeney, Kansas City, Mo. Willis R. Banker, Tahlequah, Okla. Henry C. Anderson, Kansas City Mo. SOPHOMORES Carl Anderson, Kansas City, Kan. Francis Payne, Lawrence. Deane Ackers, Abilene. Fred P. Johnson, Lawrence. FRESHMEN Lester M. Allen, Lawrence. Charles R. Chase, Emporia. William R. Heath, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. lit III III Mi III ill tlj Hi til ii{ sii Olin Templin. Erasmus Haworth. Arthur J. Boynton. E. F. Stimpson. Fred Hesser. Irving Hill. E. E. Melvin. Chas. S. Finch. Fred L. Morris . Samuel Weatherby. FRATRES IN FACULTATE David L. Patterson. William F. Kuhn. William H. Johnson. Earl W. Murray. FRATRES IN URBE William H. Pendleton. Max F. W ilhelmi. Robert C. Rankin. Julius G. Uhrlaub. Ervin Ross. «97 __ |ii III III I i i ill ill ii! Phi Kappa Psi SMALL TANNER HAZELTON MC CURDY FOLKS ARNOLD BURCH BORDERS MESERVEY MORRIS YEOMAN DUNMIRE EDWARDS R. SPROULL STRICKLAND HUMPHREY THOMPSON AINSWORTH WHEELOCK EVANS C. GRIE8A DAVIS C. SPROULL 8. GRIESA 8CHOOLEY PEGUES Ii 238 U JUWJI. I ' W- . !! W l I « mne Phi Kappa Psi Founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pa., 1852. Kansas Alpha Chapter installed, February 19, 1876. Ill ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS George H. Edwards, Jr., A. B., Kansas City, Mo. Ralph Yeoman, A. B., Kingman. Lawrence B. Morris, LL. B., Junction City. Ralph H. Spotts, A. B., LL. B., Lawrence. Charles E. Strickland, A. B., Topeka. Arthur S. Humphrey, A. B., LL. B., Junction City. Emmet F. Schooley, Kansas City, Mo, Theo. Scott Griesa, Lawrence. Ray J. Folks, Salem, Oregon. JUNIORS Edwin C. Meservey, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Ralph D. Sproull, Lawrence. Ray a. Dunmire, Lawrence. Bryan L. Davis, Lawrence. Edward W. Tanner, Lawrence. Harold E. Wheelock, Kansas City, Mo. William L. Ainsworth, Lyons. Henry S. Pegues, Hutchinson. Lyman Arnold, Norton. Sydney Hazelton, Norton. Cargill Sproull, Lawrence. SOPHOMORES Chas. H. Griesa, Lawrence. J. Melvin Evans, Pleasanton. Leland Thompson, Marion. FRESHMEN Henry McCurdy, Lawrence. Richard Small, Kansas City, Mo. Allen Burch, Carthage, Mo. Walter Borders, Kansas City, Mo. ill il I III PLEDGES Dan Campbell, Joplin, Mo. Frank O. Marvin. Frank W. Blackmar. Frank H. Hodder. Miles W. Sterling. Charles G. Dunlap. Geo. E. Esterly. William Griesa. John Robertson, Jr. Fred P. Smithmeyer. Herbert B. Bullene. FRATRES IN FACULTATE John G. Hayden. C. A. Haskins. John D. Garver. J. A. Farrell. FRATRES IN URBE Brinton Woodward. Joseph Ramsey. Arthur M. Spalding. J. W. Martindell. Ill ill ill Hi III III III 111 III ill III ill Phi Gamma Delta I 1 5, 5 t I :? III: p. MILLER D. MILLER JACKSON CHALLI8 BENNETT HALPIN DITTMER IRWIN CRAIG HACKNEY SURBER PARKER SOWERS SOMMERS GREENLEE8 BISHOP KIMBALL MITCHELL KENNEDY WAKENHUTT SCHROERS EGAN P. MILLER FRIEND J. MILLER WICKSTRUM HETHERINGTON BUNN lb I r l ill ill III ill !ll if II 1 Phi Qamma Delta i ih ill Phi Gamma Delta Founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pa., 1848. Kansas Chapter installed, October 29, 1881. Publication, Phi Gamma Delta. Flower, Heliotrope. Colors, Royal Purple. if l - 1 1 III ill I ii III I ! I ill |i| ill ill ill ill ill ill III I i i i i ! 3Si i I i ill HI ill 11! if E i|9 i I I III if! ill III ill ill III III ill ill ACTIVE MEMBERS i§i III ill ill ill ! I I ill III Herbert C. Sommers, LL. B., Abilene. Paul D. Surbek, LL. B., Independence. Joseph B. Bishop, A. B., Lawrence. Charles R. Greenlees, B. S., Lawrence. A. Baldwin Mitchell, Lawrence. J. Randolph Kennedy, Fort Scott. E. Blair Hackney, Atchison. Robert J. D. Waters, Bonner Springs. Kenneth D. Bower, Kansas City. Halleck I. Craig, Independence. Paul H. Friend, Lawrence. John M. Miller, Atchison. John V. Challis, Atchison. Jerod F. Jackson, Atchison. Frank L. Bunn, Kansas City, Mo. Frank V. Miller, Lake Charles, La. SENIORS Jambs Parker, B. S., Tulsa, Okla. Clarence R. Sowers, LL. B., Wichita. Webster W. Kimball, LL. B., Parsons. JUNIORS Phil D. Miller, Kansas City. DeLasky Miller, Atchison. Ralph E. Bennett, Winfield. SOPHOMORES Harry G. Schroers, St. Joseph, Mo. Arthur S. Wickstrum, Independence, Mo. FRESHMEN Frank G. Hetherington, Topeka. Otto H. Dittmer, Independence. Carol J. Wakenhut, Salina. Warren J. Halpin, Kansas City, Mo. A. Mead Irwin, Kansas City, Mo. PLEDGES Clarence Barhydt, Kansas City, Mo. William C. Stevens. W. O. Hamilton. P. F. Walker. Dr. M. T. Sudler. A. D. Carroll. Ed. O. Perkins. F. p. Smith. Hugh Means. L. N. Lewis. Paul A. Dinsmore. Wilder S. Metcalf FRATRES IN FACULTATE George E. Putnam. H. A. Rice. D. W. Cornelius. FRATRES IN URBE Clement D. Perkins. Ridley S. Pearson. Robert C. Manley. Charles Elwell. Samuell E. Riggs. Therman H. Fitzpatrick. J. C. Shinn. ill III il I III 1 1 1 III ill III ill 301 isi Mi I lii III III ill III he JAYHAlkSkCKEI Phi Delta Theta ItlM.M- ?! Mr ' MC KONE LYMAN JONES CURRAN 8PROAT MARKEL NAFTZGER MORTON LOCKWOOD CUNNICK CASTLES JENKINS DYCHE CLARK NORTHRUP DETWILER HURST MILLER BOYNTON HARRIS BERGER SMITH BLAIR SEGER WAUGH LAMBERT TODD CAREY HULL DYCHE Phi Delta Thetai House 302 ' T 1 Vs x w N TON vx . s v v, N svx w. v, ■ •S ssmisssissi5!i sisiss!S « ill Phi Delta Theta Founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, December 26, 1848. Kansas Alpha Chapter installed, November 5, 1882. Publications, Scroll, Palladium. Flower, White Carnation. Colors, Azure and Argent. Chapter Publication, The Kansas Alpha News. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Russell H. Clakk, LL. B., Kansas City, Mo. William M. Morton, LL. B., St. Joseph, Roland E. Boyntox, A. B., Colo. Springs, Colo. Ralph L. Seger, B. S., Topeka. Mo. Frank E. Miller, LL. B., Topeka. Humphrey Jones, A. B., Emporia. Ill I 3 I John E. Castles, Fort Morgan, Colo. William Kansas Waugh, Eskridge. Alfred Harris, Emporia. Lewis Northrup, Tola. JUNIORS Eugene Lowther, Emporia. Calvin Lambert, Emporia. John Holliday Curran, Pittsburg. Eli John Detwiler, Smith Center. Frederic D. Naftzger, Wichita. John Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. Ward Lockwood, Atchison. Joseph Hull, Topeka. SOPHOMORES John Blair, Pittsburg. Junius Dyche, Oklahoma City, Okla. Benjamin Berger, Halstead. FRESHMEN LuciEN Dyche, Oklahoma City, Okla. John Carey, Wichita. Wendell P. Lyman, Topeka. Philip Sproat, Topeka. John Cunnick, Lawrence. DiCKisoN Markel, Kansas City, Mo. John Dennis Smith, Kansas City, Mo. PLEDGES Eugene McKone, Tonganoxie. Neely Todd, Leavenworth. William E. Higgins. E. P. R. Duval. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Ralph E. Carter. Ill ill ill ill ill E. F. Caldwell. B. B. Berry. J. W. O ' Bryon. Owen LeSuer. Oscar Learnard S. T. Gillespie. FRATRES IN URBE Otto Barteldes. Robert Rowlands. Frank Banks. F. H. Olney Clinton Kanaga. lie 303 i s 304 1 $ ,„ vs v, v, x v v vN . s s vN â– . S «« Sigma Chi. Founded at Miami University, 1855. Alpha Xi Chapter installed, 1884. Publications, Sigma Clii Quarterly, Sigma Chi Bulletin. Flower, White Rose. Colors, Blue and Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS •J. Rodger Coolidge, A. li.. Smith Center. TniiocK M. Davidson-, A. B., AVichita. Harold W. Wilson, LL. B., Horton. A. Bernard Casswell, LL. B., Belleville. Ill III JUNIORS H. EuGEXE Ragle, Independence. SOPHOMORES ill III i|i i 5 S H. . . Russell, Luwrence. E. J. Suxderl. xd, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Sautter, Horton. Ralph S. Heruvv, Olathe. Dix Teachnor, Kansas City, Mo. Houghton Albaugh, Topeka. Glenx Somers, Newton. FRESHMEN W. T DoRAN, Kansas City, Mo. L. S. KrxGSBURY. Smith Center. J. E. Moore, Hutchinson. Leo .J. FiTZPATRtcK, Wichita. W. E. Smith, Horton. L. Rex Miller, Kansas City. R. T. CowGiLL, Lawrence. C. M. Patterson, Galena. G. E. Strong, Blue Rapids. AV. M. Beall, Grantville. C. C. Young. FRAT RES IN FACULT.VTE DeWitt Croissant. FR ATRES IN TREE iii Perry B. Barber. Roy . . Hexley Joseph W. Suhultz. Guy R. Schultz. Henry F. Perkins. Rev. E. . Edwards. Dr. Carl Phillips. Ed. B. SniALL. Robert W. Wagstaff ill ill jjSS . 305 J Al iS| Sigma Nu LOVELESS CLAWSON BOWMAN ASHLEY 8TELZNOR PRIEST SMITH COWELL CALLEN ALEXANDER HOLLOWAY STALEY STEELSMITH BLANTON WILLIAMS ENGEL JACKSON FOWLER COPE NEWCOMER BENSON HIGLEY MILLER SORGATZ MARTIN SIMMONS NORTON J ill a a a = £ 1 I i I 3g3 ill 306 J g i i ill IShe JAV H yv KERi Sigma Nu Founded at Virginia Military Institute. Nu Chapter installed, 1884. Publication, Delta. Flower, White Rose. Colors, Black, White, Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Webster W. Holloway, LL. B., Hutchinson Harold J. Higley, LL. B., Sterling. Harry H. Staley, B. S., Richmond. Harold P. DeLoxgy. LL. B., Mena. Ark. Spber C. llen, a. B., Junction City. ill [t( ill ill it ii Freeman Alexander, Stockton. Ciias. Smith, Jr., Stockton. Dick Williams, Concordia. Lloyd J. cksox, Chanute. JUNIORS Wayne E. Fowler, Chanute. Justin I. Miller, Emporia. Floyd Loveless, Wetmore. Charles J. Painter, Barclay. T. W. Benson, Independence. James Bigelow, Gardner. Lawrence Engle, Lawrence. SOPHOMORES John Martin, Hutchinson. Byron Cope, Humboldt. i i Ii Tom a. Ashley, Independence. Edgar P. Bl. nton, Gardner. Walter W. Bowman, Topeka. FRESHMEN Walter S. Priest, Wichita. Paul Steelsmtth, Abilene. Gerald Morton, Newton. ii Clarence Atwood, Gardner. Roland Caswell, Lawrence. Floyd Stelzxor, Wamego. PLEDGES Stewart Simmons, Hutchinson. Mill. rd Clawson, Concordia. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Elmer F. Engle. ill III 307 Ill Iff III III III III ' K5K Alpha Tau Omega RINEY HOSKIN STUEWE F. O ' dONNELL BISHOP HAITBBINK RATHFON KING GILLI8 DODDEKIDGE HOWE WINGABT FISCHER CLARK HALL WALDO MEADOWS C. O ' dONNELL PADGETT WAUGH BENEDICT I8E FOSTER FOUST SMITH Hi i i i III I i I ||f III i|i iii ii! ill III i i ! Ill III 9 ! I I i I III ill ill III |!5 ill ill ill Hi 111 III ill isi 308 J SS«SSi$SS«!iSSSS!iS! !S!SSS!  is Alpha Tau Omega Founded at Virginia Military Institute, Septeml)er 11, I860. Kansas Chapter installed, 1901. Publication, The Palm. FloM-er, White Tea Rose. Colors, Sky Blue and Old Gold. ill F. E. Fischer, LL. B. E. C. Clark. A. B. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS L. A. Meadows, Ph. C. R. Eraser. E. Van der Vries, A. B. H, S. O ' Donnell. E. W. WiNGART. F. Haskix. JUNIORS F. G. Benedict. L. C. Bishop. L. E. Howe. E. W. Stuewe. C. R. Riney. Ill ill If! Iff Hi III lit 1 1 i ill 1 1 i III E I I ill tit III ill III |ii ill ill fii Hi ill ill il! ill Hi III III SOPH OMORES E. C. Padgett. G. L. Waldo. K. H. FousT. F. R. O ' Donnell. N. M. Foster. I. H. Waugh. J. N. Van der Vries. C. B. Hosford. C. W. King. L. P. Rathfon. L. F. Smith. FRESHMEN K. C. Dodderidge. F. H. Ise. F. W. Haitbrink. C. L. Gilles. PLEDGES R. A. Hall. FRATRES IN FACULTATE G. E. CoGHiLL. G. J. Hood, FRATRES IN URBE C. Hackman. L. E. Hazen. « s««ssm ' s cm«s ' 309 ill 1 1 i ii! Sigma Alpha Epsilon GATES HOWDEN STEVENS COOMBS FAIRCHILD T. T. TAYLOR BARNES DEARDORFF GEIGER CORY HOBART WELSH LAMBERT TEED E. 8. TAYLOR WOODS PINCKARD CALLENDER CARTER JOHNSON HILTON CHRI8MAN HUTCHINGS ROOT VAN DERLIP BRAND HODGINS 1 i- 310 he JAYHMSsg KMia SSSfeSSSiSSSiSSiSSiSS Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at University of Alabama, March 9, 1856. Kansas Chapter installed, February 14, 1903. Publication, The Record. Flower, Violet. Colors, Purple and Old Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Walter A. Lambert, LL. B., Leavenworth. Samuel G. Fairchild, B. S., Hutchinson. Albert S. Teed, LL. B., Hutchinson. Edgar C. Welsh, LL. B., Kansas City, Mo. William M. Howden, Jr., LL. B., Skidmore, Mo. Edwin S. Coombs, LL. B., Kansas City, Mo. Thos. T. Taylor, Jr., Lewistown, Mont. Kirk E. Hilton, Cottonwood Falls. .TUNIORS Charles T. Geiger, Ottawa. Thos. B. Root, Kansas City, Mo. Roy U. Stevens, Kansas City, Mo. Joseph Chrisman, Independence, Mo. Clyde L. Van Derlip, Ottawa. SOPHOMORES Glenn A. Rishel, Hutchinson. Harland B. Hutchins, Kansas City, Mo. Karl G. Pinckard, Kansas City, Mo. FRESHMEN Eluott S. Taylor, Alton, 111. Warner A. Cory, Kansas City, Mo. James L. Carter, Kansas City, Mo. C. Robert Barnes, Kansas City. Charles H. Hobart, Topeka. Fred M. Deardorff, Kansas City, Mo. Walter W. Woods, Alton, 111. Carl A. Brand, Kansas City, Mo. Miles W. Gates, Rosedale. Myron L. Johnson, Leavenworth. Wm. T. Hodgins, New York City, N. Y. Leonard Callender, Kansas City. Merle Thorpe. Frederick E. Kesteb. FRATRES IN FACULTATE W. A. Whitaker. Edmund H. Hollands. .S« ' iS J isSS S S S Acacia MC CURRY nSKE MC CASLIN HILL CLAYTON CLAYTON GRAYSON CARLSON INGALL8 PAULY LEASURE REID THIELE HANSEN ACKERS ROYER DUSTON HALL MAGATHAN WEYGANDT PORTERFIELD BAYSINGER ii III ii III ill ill Hi 312 11 he JAYHAWKEIL . i smi 11 !l ii ii ii ii ii 1 1 ii 11 ii ii II II J! 11 ii 11 il !! II it J I ill Ii If il 11 Jl II i Acacia Founded at University of Michigan. Kansas Chapter installed, November, 1904. Publication, The Journal. Flower, Acacia. . Colors, Black and Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS Post- Graduate Ross E. Hall, Lawrence. SENIORS W. C. Magathan, a. B., Marion. Fred J. Leasure, A. B., LaCygne. Howard C. Pauly, B. S., Kansas City, Mo. Paul H. Royer, LL. B., Abilene. Herbert C. Hansen, B. S., Independence. J. A. McCuRRY, B. S., Parsons. R. V. Reid, LL. B., Clay Center. A. W. DusTON, A. B., Washington. JUNIORS Roy D. Grayson, Oskaloosa. Frank C. Ackers, Abilene. Ross H. Clayton, Hill City. Samuel R. Ingalls, Washington. Chas. E. Baysinger, Hartford. Otho J. FiSK, Alva, Okla. J. W. McCaslin, Kincaid. SOPHOMORES Gilbert M. Clayton, Hill City. J. W. Hill, Cherokee, Okla. Paul W. Thiele, Washington. Roy a. Carlson, Minneapolis. Wm. L. Bubdick. H. W. Emerson. F. O. Marvin. F. N. Raymond. Geo. O. Foster. Wm. E. Higgins. J. S. Amick. L. L. Kabler. Dave M. Horkmans. B. O. Parcels. FRESHMEN C. J. Weygandt, Riley. PLEDGES Robert S. Brooks, Blue Mound. FRATRES IN FACULTATE H. W. Humble. N. P. SHERVi OOD. A. H. Sluss. J. O. Jones. R. A. PORTERFIELD. FRATRES IN URBE Jay E. Bond. W. F. March. W. G. Thiele. 313 s -sssJ il ii si ' A ' mwmn ' KmR Kappa Sigma As smssmsssisssssssismssss DERGE GODDING CAMPBELL MULLOY D. DILLEY HULL ROOT RYAN JONES WINEY MOORE H. SIMPSON HATCHER VON SCHRILTZ SMITH BUZICK DAVIS BERRY SPRINGER HOFFMAN PAINTER DILLEY ALLEY KENNEDY KILLARNEY MARQUIS MASON JELLISON CALENE J. SIMPSON SCHMIDT HAMILTON .Reipa5ignia House iii ill i Ii Iii iii ill ill Iii lis ill III ill ill Hi iii iii i s i |ii 111 ill III iii ill III 314 ij e jav:ha Kappa Sigma Founded at University of Virginia, 1869. Kansas Chapter installed. May 18, 1912. Publication, Caduceus. Flower, Lily of the Valley. Colors, Scarlet, White, and Green. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS L. Lloyd Smith, LL. B., Chanute. Guy W. von Schriltz, LL. B., Coldwater. Alonson R. Buzick, LL. B., Lawrence. Eugene W. Davis, LL. B., Chapman. Roy S. Springer, A. B., Eldorado. Ward V. Hatcher, LL. B., Kansas City. Lewis B. Smith, B. S., Ogden, Utah. H. Clay Simpson, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. John W. Hamilton, Columbus. Frank E. Godding, Lawrence. Carl E. Painter, Lawrence. JUNIORS Charles L. Moore, Kansas City, Mo. Albert M. Root, Kansas City. Fred C. Campbell, Flint, Mont. SOPHOMORES Arthur H. Hoffman, Enterprise. Thomas N. Mulloy, Lincoln. John D. Kennedy, Kansas City, Mo. George R. O ' Neil, Beattie. Ralph H. Berry, Tulsa, Okla. Joseph B. Ryan, Lincoln. Arthur A. Jellison, Wilson. Harold Winey, Lawrence. John DeWitt Hull, Tulsa, Okla. FRESHMEN Boyd Marquis, Leavenworth. Verto R. Alley, Kansas City, Mo. Edward S. Schmidt, Galena. Donald C. Dilley, Council Grove. John L. Calene, Sylvan Grove. Karl E. Janes, Chanute. Alva N. Dilley, Jr., C ouncil Grove. Mearle D. Mason, Columbus. James A. Simpson, Kansas City, Mo. David R. Derge, Lebanon. PLIGDGES Eloy W. Jacabia, Kansas City, Mo. FRATRES IN URBE Robert Herod. Albert Young. J. B. Lawrence. Howard Milburn. 315 ill ill ' he JAYHiii K®BS Pi Upsilon si«i I fll ill III III ill iSi ill III III 111 MC NAUGHT DIETRICH ALLVINE HAMMOND ELDRIDOE HODGES NELSON CA88INGHAM POTTER COOK CARSON HENDERSON RIDGWAY HAGENBUCH ROBERTSON RUMSFELD STOCKTON GAIT8KILL SMITH SIEQRIST K. O. BISHOP DE BENHAM R. S. BISHOP ill 11 : ill III III III III ill lii itj ll{ f i! i| J I E III III ill i I ||i ill 316 sjissswswiss . Mi il 11 J â– : â„¢ . . Pi Upsilon Founded at University of Kansas. Kansas Chapter installed, April 26, 1909. Publication, Pi U News. Flower, White Carnation. Colors, Dark Green and Old Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Hale S. Cook, A. B., Kansas City, Mo. Rat Eldridge, A. B., Ellsworth. Cale W. Carson, Ashland. Orrin T. Potter, Sapulpa, Okla. Frank B. Henderson, Kansas City, Mo. Joe p. Smith, Kansas City, Mo. A. Omar Hodges, Kansas City. John I. Hammond, Towanda. Kenneth G. Bishop, Kansas City. Joe E. Gaitskill, Girard. Roger S. Bishop, Kansas City. HoYT S. Nelson, Kansas C ty. Mo. Harold L. DeBenham, Independence, Mo. Chester S. Cassingham, B. S., Warrensburg, Mo. Wayne A. Ridgway, A. B., Kansas City, Mo. JUNIORS J. Breathitt Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Ivan S. Siegrist, Kansas City, Mo. SOPHOMORES J. B. McNaught, Girard. Charles Hagenbuch, Kansas City, Mo. Claire L. Dietrich, Kansas City, Mo. Glendon Allvine, Kansas City. FRESHMEN Herbert Rumsfeld, Kansas City, Mo. Marcelltts L. Stockton, Gridley. PLEDGES FRATRES IN FACULTATE Paul V. Faragher, A. M., Ph. D. Frederick W. Bruckmiller, A. M. «SSsssssiS5ssssiisis ill ! £ III |l| ill III ill ill i i r 317 -i t hT « . It. M%irJ ' i Sigma Delta Phi III ill I! 11 MACY BURNETT HEMPHILL SAILE H. MARSH REED MC KINNEY SAMMON8 LUKE G. MARSH POWELL GWINNER ZIMMERMAN POST DAVIS THORN JENKINS MOORE JETER MARTIN 11 11 i§ li li 1 1 1 1 i I 318 i 1 pSSSSiSSiSSISiSSiS!! he JAYHAWK ' E III Iff ill Hi is! f 1 1 ill III III III III ill III fill ill I i I ill III ill s i I Sigma Delta Phi Founded at the University of Kansas, October 26, 1909. Colors, Old Gold and Garnet. ACTIVE MEMBERS Grant S. Gwinner, Ph. C, Chanute. Ittai a. Luke, A. B., Melvern. Byrd O. Powell, Ph. C, Lawrence. William A. McKixney, Howard. HoLLis F. Marsh, Lawrence. Harry B. Jenkins, Tonganoxie. Robert H. Reed, Almena. Dan C. Martin, Lawrence. Vernon A. Moore, Gas. Frederic L Post, Gas. George H. Broderick. Lance Hill. SENIORS Robert W. Hemphill, A. B., Norton. George P. Marsh, A. B., Lawrence. Levi E. Zimmerman, A. B., Sterling. JUNIORS George B. Sammons, Sabetha. SOPHOMORES Francis Saile, Lawrence. Donald C. Burnett, Chanute. FRESHMEN William R. Davis, Frankfort. PLEDGES Druery R. Thorn, Wellsville. FRATRES IN URBE Ernest W. Mact. %ssss 319 Keltz ill III III ill III ill lii ill ill lii III ill ill ,1 l HARRELL CONSTANT HERROD SYKE8 ENGLISH BUTLER WHITNEY BALDWIN BADGER MORROW V. MINER GILLETT RANKIN PALMER DIN8MORE DAVENPORT GREENSTREET HOFFMAN L. MINER FLETCHER MC FADDEN MICKEY BROWN EGGLE8TON MINGER CREIGHTON WOLFE III III lii ill iii III III ill III ill ii! ill III i j I I ji ill ii! til l|! I 1 320 isi.. Dhe Keltz Founded, 1911. Colors, Purple and White. ACTIVE MEMBERS POST-GRA D U ATE Elmer L. Whitney, A. B., A. M., Talmage. SENIORS iSS i i i ill Robert S. Dinsmore, A. B., Troy. John S. Butler, B. S., Kansas City, Mo. Chester A. Badger, A. B., Overbrook. M. Leslie English, Dodge City. Don M. Rankin, Paola. Wilbur G. Gillett, Kingman. Adna E. Palmer, Kingman. George B. Harrell, Washington. Verne E. Miner, A. B., Burlingame. Walter A. Davenport, B. S., Nashville, III. JUNIORS William M. Morrow, Washington. Clyde S. Constant, Lawrence. Roy T. McFadden, Salina. John C. Greenstreet, Jr., Parsons. Frank C. Baldwin, Lawrence. SOPHOMORES ill III Clifford B. Sykes, Kingman. Alexander E. Creighton, Washington . Claude C. Fletcher, Glasco. Richard A. Herrod, Kansas City. S. Waite Mickey, Junction City. J. Edwin Wolfe, Kingman. W. RoLLiE Brown, Lawrence. Floyd F. Minger, Sabetha. Lyle M. Miner, Buriingame. Jambs H. Eggleston, Parsons. FRESHMEN Howard E. Hoffman, Abilene. John R. Moffat, Arkansas City. |i| ill i|l I i ! if I III si! toa: s ; s 321 Sigma Phi Sigma jlj III III ill III is DAVIS CARLTON PRUGH ALT HEBERLING ARNOLD REID A. JOHNSON GLEASON WILSON BBCHTOLD M. JOHNSON TEETERS PIERCE PFEIFER SCANLAND PARK 8. JOHNSON MARSH DE ROIN CAZIER i B ! ill III ill Hi fill i li S i i ill l§i III -3 g i III III III ill ill III ill ii! Ill ill ill IS 322 i5Sisssim!sp ' pr ' | |S 5sW .v v--v-«v v v«v â„¢. sssssstesssssmissssssssss Sigma Phi Sigma Founded at University of Kansas, February 11, 1912. Publication, The Calumet. Flower, American Beauty Rose. Colors, Purple, Green, and Old Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS J. Christy Wilson, A. B., Idaho Falls, Idaho. Maynard H. Heberling, A. B., Wakarusa. Melvin O. Johnson, B. S., Oneida. Edmund C. Bechtold, A. B., Lawrence. Alvin R. Johnson, B. S., Oneida. li ii Norman J. Pierce, White. Cloud. George W. Marsh, Kincaid. Lewis E. Park, Englewood. Glenn L. Alt, Denton. Samuel A. Johnson, Troy. Paul C. Carlton, Garden City. Lawrence W. Cazier, Carbondale. Charles H. Gleason, Baldwin. Jesse L. Teeters, Goodland. George W. Davis, Leona. .TUNIORS Lester A. Scanl. nd, Kansas City, Mo. SOPHOMORES Cecil S. DeRoin, White Cloud. W. Boyd Prugh, Kansas City. Frank E. Royse, Wichita. FRESHMEN G. Brandt Arnold, Newton. Archie L. Pfeifer, Cherryvale. Marion C. Reid, Newton. -â– 323 Phi Beta Kappa Founded at the College of William and Mary, December 5, 1776. Alpha of Kansas Chapter installed, 1890. OFFICERS FOR 1913-1914 President, James A. Campbell. Vice-President, Alberta L. Corbin. Secretary, U. G. Mitchell. Treasurer, Rose R. Morgan. 11 J. A. Campbell. MEMBERS IN FACU E. W. Murray. LTY W. S. Johnson. 11 F. W. Blackmab. W. H. Rodebush. A. M. Sturtevant. 11 C. C. Crawford. Olin Templin. Marion B. White. ii Lulu B. Gardner. F. 0. Marvin. Hearty E. Brown. II H. B. HUNGERFORD. F. C. DOCKERAY. Frank Strong. ii Rose Morgan. Eugenia Galloo. Alberta L. Corbin. if Emma M. Palmer. L. E. Sisson. L. N. Flint. II M. W. Sterling. S. L. Whitcomb. F. H. Hodder. i| E. M. Hopkins. C. W. DOXSEE. U. G. Mitchell. if F. B. Dains. W. E. Higgins. Hannah Oliver. If Adolphine B Ernst. Helen M. Clarke. CM. Sterling. R. F. Rice. E. F. Engel. A. M. Wilcox. Is W. H. TWENHOFEL. E. Ha worth. E. P. R. Duval. II H. A. MiLUs. W. H. Johnson. Ana Jule Enke. Ii W. L. BURDICK. R. D. O ' Leary. Helen G. Jones. ii Edith M. Clarke. Amida Stanton. M. T. Sudler. 1 s W. J Baumgartner. A. T. Walker. P. W. Claassen. Myrtl e Greenfield. F. A. G. Cooper. if S. J. Hunter. C. G. DUNLAP. Otto A. Barteldes. Mrs. E. M. Briggs, Helen Burdick. Mrs. M. W. Newson. C. J. Dodds. Esther Evans. Angie Horn. Maud Maffet. Mildred Newman. Patti Sankee. R. M. Perkins. Mrs. Olin Tempun. Gertrude Blackmar. Mrs. C. C. Crawford. Mary P. Clarke. Ada B. Chessman. Maude Marie Baird. Harold R. Branine. Minnie Elizabeth Dingee. Esther Louise Drake. Lucy Maud Dunbar. Abvid L. Frank. Florence Frances Fuqua. MEMBERS IN CITY Carrie Dolbee. Helen Hoopes. Ruby C. Jackson. Edith Mattoon. Helen G. Metcalf. Mrs. R. D. O ' Leary. Mrs. C. B. Spangler. Mrs. R. M. Perkins. Mrs. a. M. Wilcox. Mrs. F. W. Bruckmiller. Mrs. L. E. Sisson. Jessie M. Coe. Beatrice Dalton. Mrs. etha Parcels. Inez F. Smith. Ruby C. Hosford. INITIATES OF 1914 Grace Eleanor Givin. Walter Edward Hart. Veta Blanche Lear. Naomi Light. Millie Mann. Joseph Earle Moore. Arthur Croat Perry. Mrs. L. N. Morscher. Mrs. Elrick Williams. Miriam Palmer. Ralph Spotts. Jennie Richardson. J. B. Wii oN. Gracia Blair. R. W. Cone. Myrtle Dolbee. Agnes Evans. Gertrude Kenny. J. W. Murray. Mrs. J. H. Parker. Mrs. M. W. Sterling. Kate L. Rtggs. Esther Pauline Richardson. Bernice Edmund Schultz. Juliet Snider. Marguerite Olive Villepigue. Lella Watson. J. Christy Wilson. Ill I i I If! Ill III ill III ill ill ill SSI I i i III |ii ill 324 1 he Sigma XI Founded at Cornell University, November, 1886, Iota Chapter installed, 1890. The society has for its object the promotion of scientific research and investi- gation. OFFICERS OF IOTA CHAPTER, 1913-1914. President, P. F. Walker. Vice-President, H. P. Cady. Secretary, IT. G. Mitchell. Treasurer, W. H. Twenhofel. Representative on National Council, E. H. S. Bailey. Official paper, Sigma Xi Quarterly. ACTIVE MEMBERS, 1913-1914. H. C. Allex. C. H. ASHTON. W. J. Baumgartner. F. L. Brown. H. P. Cady. Helen M. Clarke. Charles Cochran. F. B. Dains. Carl O. Dunbar. L. D. Havenhill. Ruby C. Hosford. h. b. hungerford. Ida H. Hyde. H. E. Jordan. S. L. Lefschetz. S. A. Matthews. C. F. Nelson. H. A. Rice. Mrs. M. E. Rice, w. h. rodebush. G. C. Shaad. H. O. Lichtenwalter. A. J. Fecht. Edwin Wood. N. P. Sherwood. F. H. Sibley. C. M. Sterling. A. E. Stevenson. John Sundwall. W. H. Twenhofel. P. F. Walker. J. J. Wheeler. B. M. Allen. E. H. S. Bailey. F. H. Billings. F. W. Bruckmiller. Grace Charles. B. J. Clawson. Geo. E. Coghill. Edna D. Day. P. V. Faragher. Myrtle Greenfield. E. Ha worth. G. J. Hood. S. J. Hunter. INITIATES, 1913-1914 Edman Greenfield. Merle V. Holmes. W. J. Malcolmson. C. A. Johnson. F. E. Kester. F. O. Marvin. U. G. Mitchell. Nadine Nowlin. M. E. Rice. W. R. B. Robertson. L. E. Sayre. C. A. Shull. S. S. Schooley. Inez F. Smith. W. C. Stevens. S. S. Schooley. M. T. Sudler. J. E. Todd. J. N. Van der Vries. Lalia Walung. C. M. Young. C. C. Young. B. J. Dalton. AuTE Richards. Leslie H. Dodd. Joseph Segel. 325 Phi Delta Phi ill ill I i I III g 1 1 iii s a ill iii 326 m -1 M ii 11 M i â– il Phi Delta Phi Founded at Michigan University, 1869. Kansas Chapter installed, 1897. Publication, The Brief. Flower, Jacquiminot Rose. Colors, Wine Color and Pale Blue. ACTIVE MEMBERS Ralph H. Spotts. Elwood W. Beeson. D. CliAIKE MOFFITT. Cale O. Buckles. Webster W. Holloway. WiLLOUGHBY M. LoWE. William M. Morkow. Justin I. Miller. John G. Somers. Dean James W. Green. William L. Burdick. Henry H. Asher. Samuel D. Bishop, m. a. gorrill. SENIORS Eugene B. Smith. Lawrence Morris. Frank M. McClelland. Walter A. Lambert. Bruce B. Hubd. MIDDLE Harry W. Hanson. Charles F. Alexander. Merle H. Weible. Victor Bottomly. FRATRES IN FACULTATE William E. Higgins. Raymond F. Rice. FRATRES IN URBE R. C. Manley. Wilder S. Metcalf. Walter G. Thiel. Burney M. Dunham. Clarence C. Stewart. Claude O. Conkey. Lester L. Smith. Marley R. Brown. Thomas J. Horsley. Henry R. Duncan. William R. Baker. Edward D. Osborn. R. M. Perkins. James H. Mitchell. 327 -. KENT DALE EMICK HART MC CLUGGAGE MORTON ROSS GREEN8TREET LOVELESS BRANINE REED CURRAN ATHERTON WALTERS FAIRCHILD HILL BROWX MILLER VON SCHRILTZ LINDSAY MYERS DAVIS REID BOYNTON HOFFMAN ROYER COLIN WAUGH PFOUTS MC ELHENNY CALKINS MAURICE 11 Phi lIpKa Delta House 328 m - m ' S% JAVHi WTCEFL Phi Alpha Delta Founded at the Chicago Kent College of Law, 1897. James Wood Green Chapter installed, April 17, 1909. Publication, The Phi Alpha Delta Rodeo. Flower, Red Carnation. Colors, Old Gold and Purple. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Oliver Atherton, Emporia. Arthur Baker, Chanute. Geo. L. Browx, Atchison. Alonson Buzick, Lawrence. Edward Cecil Colin, A. B., Argonia. U. Earl Emick, Lawrence. C. C. Fairchild, a. B., Lawrence. Bert Leland Hart, Lakin. Alva F. Lindsay, Gilman City, Mo. John H. Curran, Pittsburg. Eugene W. Davis, Chapman. John C. Greenstreet, Parsons. J. S. E. Kent, Hutchinson. Harrold Branine, a. B., Hutchinson. Roland E. Boynton, Lawrence. Willis N. Calkins, Burlingame. KiRKE W. Dale, Cedarvale. Arthur H. Huffman, Enterprise. Frank E. Miller, Topeka. William Morton, St. Joseph, Mo. Ralph U. Pfouts, Lancaster. Roderick V. Reid, Lawrence. Guy von Schriltz, Coldwater. Warren J. Myers, Hutchinson. Robert L. Maurice, Kansas City. Paul H. Royer, Abilene. MIDDLES Robert T. McCluggage, A. M., Derby. G. Dean McElhenny, Detroit. Floyd L. Loveless, Wetmore. JUNIORS Clement A. Reed, Burlington. Paul Ross, A. B., Sterling. Raimon G. Walters, Garden City. William K. Waugh, Eskridge. Geo. H. Stone, Bonner Springs. FRATRES IN FACULTATE H. W. Humble, Professor of Law. Howard T. Hill, Professor of Public Speaking. FRATRES IN URBE John Riling. Thurman Fitzpa trick. John W. Robertson, Jr. Jasper B. Wilson. C. A Smart. 329 NEAL SHEPPARD CALLEN HEN8HALL RAGLE DIXON DAIL 0L8EN DINSMORE CAMPBELL WARD DUER SMITH EARNEST DAVIS O ' dONNELL LE MOINE TRUMP HUNT DART SUTTON WEAVER 1 1 i I ill III III If i ill ill I ill 99I iii Mm oisma nu noui ouse 5«5SSSSSSMS«SSi ' ill ill ill ir l| iii III 111 iii til I i ) II ill ill 330 i i! ii 11 i i ii i ! if If II ii ca â– â– . Nu Sigma Nu Founded at University of Michigan. Kansas Chapter installed, 1909. Publication, Chapter Bulletin. Flower. Colors, Wine and White. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS H. A. Alexander. C. E. Earnest. G. R. DuER. A. N. LeMoine. S. W. Callen. R. C. Davis. E. M. Sutton. R. S. DiNSMORE. H. S. O ' DONNELL. J. W. Campbell. J. E. Henshall. JUNIORS C. J. Hunt. H. E. Thompson. SOPHOMORES O. C. Dail. O. J. Dixon. R. C. Ward. FRESHMEN P. R. Neal. H. H. Oi EN. C. E. Sheppard. F. A. Trump. R. O. Dart. L. A. Smith. R. E. Weaver. H. E. Ragle. MEMBERS OF ALPHA SIGMA, PLEDGE SOCIETY E. C. Padgett. G. F. Hashinger. P. D. Miller. M. T. Sudler. W. L. McBride. J. G. Hayden. D. C. Guffet. R. D. Irland. M. T. Sudler. F. R. Vieregg. E. H. Hashinger. H. E. Henderson. FRATRES IN FACULTATE E. T. Gibson. F. E. Murphy. J. E. Sawtell. G. M. Gray. FRATRES IN URBE H. E. Thompson. P. E. Belknap. E. B. Hackney. P. T. BOHAN. J. B. Cowherd. W. W. Duke. D. O. Smith. === ( ' SSSSiissjss =5r ii 531 331 isl ill ill ill III ill III ill i i i ill ill III III ill ill III ill III I I i lis i Phi Beta Pi COLEMAN BACHMAN MARCHBANK8 ANDERSON DRAKE BAKER WEST STERLING BLACK DE MAND SHERWOOD ELLIOTT CAPP8 8CHENCK ALLEN RUTH RINEY MILLER CASTLES MATTICE DIVERS ALBERTY MC EWEN HAYNES DIVELEY BOONE CULTER li ill III III ill I i I III III III if! Ill ill !|l 1 i i III ill ill 11} { I } Iff III ill 332 ' 011 Phi Beta Pi Founded at University of Pittsburg, 1891, Alpha Iota Chapter, installed March 18, 1910 Publication, Phi Beta Pi Quarterly. Flower. Colors, Green and White. Robert L. Hoffman. John R. Campbell. ACTIVE MEMBERS JUNIORS Glen H. Bhoyles. Ellwood a. Sharp. Donald R. Black. Howard E. Marchbanks. Paul M. Drake. SOPHOMORES James R. Elliott. LioNELL A. Anderson. Eugene B. Mattice. MuRL T. Capps. Frank B. Miller. ii! ill iii ill iii ill iii If! Ill III ii! ill i§i if ' Watie M. Aeberty. Wilbur A. Baker. Lewis G. Allen. Arthur H. Haynes. George F. Schenck. George F. Bachman. Francis A. DeMand. Dr. J. S. Sundwall. Dr. S. a. Matthews. Dr. S. S. Glasscock. Dr. a. E. Hertzler. Dr. E. p. Hall. FRESHMEN Herbert R. Coleman. Clyde Culter. Roy F. Ruth. Rex L. Diveley. .John E. Castles. PLEDGES Robert W. Diver. Earle W. Hblvton. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Dr. a. L. Skoog. Dr. H. L. Chambers. Dr. C. C. Nesselrode. Dr. W. K. Trimble. Dr. C. B. Francisco. John E. Sterling. Horace R. Boone. Claude R. Rhiney. Ray West. Lawrence S. Nelson. Oliver W. Miner. Fred J. McEwen. Dr. J. W. Perkins. Dr. W. S. Sutton. Dr. I. J. Wolf. Dr. N. p. Sherwood. J J 333 he .sfi wmm mkim 111 III III ! i i I i i III III i i i II! Ill Hi ill III III lif ill III lis It! Ill III ill III III ill III III i i I III ill iff lii tl III 111 ill III ill Alpha Chi Sigma MAAG BALDWIN SCHWAB ENGLISH SCHROEDEB BENN POWELL CADY BAILEY CULLISON DA1N8 FARBAGHEK RODEBUSH WAY O ' BRIEN LYDER SEIBEL LICHTENWALTEB CADWELI4 JACKSON Iphai Chi 5igma 334 iShe Alpha Chi Sigma III Founded at University of Wisconsin, 1898. Kappa Chapter installed, May 29, 1909. Publication, The Hexagon. Flower, Red Carnation. Colors, Prussian Blue and Chrome Yellow. ACTIVE MEMBERS W. H. RoDEBUSH, A. B., Lawrence. H. O. LiCHTENWALTER, A. B., McPherson. P. W. Claassen, a. B., Hillsboro. J. P. Schroeder, a. B., Hillsboro. C. L. Seibel, B. S., Kansas City, Mo. W. C. CuLLisoN, B. S., Lawrence. E. E. Lyder, B. S., Paola. O. L. Maag, B. S., Russell. H. R. O ' Brien, A. B., Kansas City, Mo. P. B. Way, A.B., McPherson. E. J. Baldwin, B. S., Cherryvale. H. V. Cadwell, B. S., Nowata, Okla. SENIORS J. W. Schwab, B. S., Enid, Okla. A. R. Powell, B. S., Lawrence. JUNIORS L. A. Benn, LaCrosse. Ill ill M. L. English, B. S., Dodge City. L. E. Jackson, Chanute. PLEDGES W. M. Latimer, Lawrence. Ill ill FRATRES IN FACULTATE E. H. S. Bailey, Ph. D. H. C. Allen, Ph. D. F. B. Dains, Ph. D. R. K. Duncan. Ph. D. C. C. Young, M. S. H P. Cady, Ph. D. W. A. Whitaker, M. a. F. W. Bruckmiller, M. S. ica FRATRES IN URBE C. Hoffman. N. 335 I SiSSSS SSiSSSsSSSSiSSSS Ill iii ill iSB Iii ill BODEBU8H JOHNSON MC CLELLAND PROFESSOR HILL ill III III III lis III III !|i III III Delta Sigma Rho Founded at the University of Chicago. Kansas Chapter installed, 1910. Publication, The Gavel. The honorary national debating fraternity. Cale W. Carson. Arvid L. P ' rank. MEMBERS Emmett L. Bennett. Ralph H. Spotts. John M. Johnson. Frank M. McClelland. ill i|i III iii II! H. T. Hill. FRATRES IN FACULTATE W. H. Rodebush. FRATRES IN URBE R. M. Perkins. J 336 LOCKWOOD CALLEN FLINT 8TURTEVANT BLAXTON MARSH PALMER ELDRIDGE THORPE LEWIS GREENLEES PATTERSON STRICKLAND CLARK BUSENBARK Sigma Delta Chi Founded at Depauw. Kansas Chapter installed, 1910. Publication, The Quill. Flower. Colors, Black and White. ill ACTIVE MEMBERS I i ! |i 1 SENIORS ill Russell H. Clark. Charles E. Strickland. Speer W. Callen â– f 1 ill George Marsh. James A. Greenlees. Earl Plowman. George H. Edwards. Ray L. Eldridge. ly JUNIORS III Adna Palmer. Calvin H. Lambert. ill SPECIALS III Leon E. Howe. Edgar P. Blanton. Ward Lockwood. Ross E. Busenbabk. Charles Sturtevant. 5|E III FRATRES IN FACUI.TATE ill Prof. Merle Thorpe. Prof. L. N. Flint. III Prof. S. H. Lewls. Prof. D. L. Patterson. FRATRES IN IJRBE Joe Murray. 337 II PAINTER ACKERS BUTLER FAIRCHILD KINNEAR BURTON NEWCOMER NUTTING BBOWN DODD PARKER RICE ANGEVINE MURPHY PAINTER DINGMAN HUNT GEIGER MC CUNE TEMPLIN SEGER WHEELOCK HARRIS BLISS ii ii ii ' j l 1 Theta Tau Founded at the University of Minnesota, October 15, 1904, Kansas Chapter installed, April 17, 1912. Publication, The Gear. Flower, Jacqueminot Rose. Colors, Red and Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS lii George R. Murphy, Oklahoma City. Lelaxd C. Angevine, Lawrence. Samuel G. Fairchild, Hutchinson. Lawrence W. Kixnear, New York City. John S. Butler, Kansas City, Mo. Carl Painter, Lawrence. Charles Painter, Wichita. Floyd Nutting, Russell. Charles Geiger, Ottawa. James Hunt, Kansas City. Alfred Harris, Emporia. Clyde Van Derlip, Ottawa. SENIORS Ralph L. Seger, Topeka. John L. Bliss, Winfield. James Parker, Tulsa, Okla. Leslie H. Dodd, Langdon. Oscar A. Dingman, Kansas City, Mo. JUNIORS Nathan Brown, Lawrence. Malcolm McCune, Leavenworth. Earl Newcomer, Kansas City, Mo. Richard Templin, Minneapolis. SOPHOMORES WiLLARD Burton, Mound City. Dean Ackers, Abilene. PLEDGES Harold Wheelock, Kansas City, Mo. in ill ill ill if} ill ill ill III ill ill i 1 1 III ill ill ill ill ill lii ill III ill FRATRES IN FACULTATE Prof. H. A. Rice. ill III ill ! i { lit lii III ill ill ill lii S 9 e 339 SPBEIER COFFMAN MC ALLISTER VAN 8LYCK GIESEL C. I. SMITH IBWIN GREEN CORCORAN DU8TON 8CHWEGLER OLIN GRUBBS TRETTIEN J08SELYN CARTER YEOMANS JANSEN NEU8CHWANGEB BECHTOLD MAGNUSON BOBBINS W. A. SMITH WREN GRABSKE II I i s I li Phi Delta Kappa Founded at Indianapolis, February 21, 1910. Kansas Chapter installed, May 4, 1912. The society has for its object the promotion of scientific study of education. ACTIVE MEMBERS Stanton Olinger, Lawrence. Arthur W. Duston, Washington. Chas. I. Smith, Sabetha. WiLLARD N. Van Slyck, Topeka. GRADUATE Chauncey a. Yeomans, Halstead. Cornelius C. Janzen, Hillsboro. Joseph S. Magnuson, Kansas City. li SENIORS ii Elmer G. Neuschwanger, Osborne. Everett W. Wren, Kincaid. Frank Spreier, Pawnee Rock. Abel J. McAllister, Lawrence. William A. Smith, Cuba. Meredith Bobbins, Russell. Harold C. Coffman, Emporia. John P. Corcoran, Lawrence. Chas. E. Irwin, Lawrence. Chas. F. Green, Holton. Ora F. Grubbs, Lawrence. Frederick W. Giesel, Overbrook. Edmund C. Bechtold, Lawrence. JTNIORS Chas. F. Grabske, Rosedale. li li li Homer W. Josselyn. Raymond A. Schwegleb. FACULTY MEMBERS Dean Arvin S. Olin. A. W. Trettien. Ralph E. Carter. 340 i S i L 341 342 Mi Ml L Irw-jWsi SiSSiSiSSSiS III ill lis lit III ishc jav:ha v:kers m Beta Phi LUCKAN BEDELL 8AWTELL COOPER GOULD MILLER PEAIR8 FAIRWEATHER BUTTS HERRICK M. BUTTS WILLITT BROWN E. BROWN SMITH CUBBI80N ATKINSON HEBSHBERGER COORS ZOELLNER il i| 344 Sil EiS i ii ill Hi ill ill III III IH i i I ill III |i| {II III ill III III III III i i i III ill ill III III ill I i I ill III til fill S i I i i i ill III if! Ill IH Iff {11 iii lis I ii i i I ill iii III iii iii iii |S! Iii iii III iii III Iii ill Pi Beta Phi Founded at Monmouth College, April 1, 1873, Monmouth, III. Publication, The Arrow. Flower, Red Carnation. Colors, Wine and Silver Blue. MEMBERS SENIORS LuciLE Smith, Independence, Mo. Berenice Butts, Wichita. Maurine Fairweather, Kansas City, Mo. Marie Willitt, Hiawatha. JUNIORS Gexevieve Herrick, Kansas City, Mo. SOPHOMORES Helen Hershberger, Kansas City Mo. May Miller, Wichita. Grace Zoellner, Tonganoxie. Hazel Gould, Kansas City, Mo. Ruth Peairs, Lawrence. Rebekah Cooper, Wichita. Alice Coors, Las Vegas, N. M. Davida Sawteil, Kansas City. Margaret Butts, Mankato. Elizabeth Brown, Kansas City. Gladys Luckan, Lawrence. Stella Bebell, Kansas City. Hannah Oliver. May Gardner. Nadine Nowlin. Evangeline Downey. FRESHMEN Mary Atkinson, Lawrence. Dorothy Brown, Joplin, Mo. PLEDGES Edith Cubbison, Kansas City. FACULTY Esther Evans. Agnes Evans. Ethel Morrow. 345 I I Sls Kappa Alpha Theta STEVENS BARTELDE8 STONE HIRES FUQUA ABEL MC CLURE L. HEDRICH SAWYER SEALY KEITH SMITH HARGER CARRAHER BLAKEY M. HEDRICH PHILLEY SLADE M. PERRY HENSHALL TOPPING WILHELMI WILHELMI MC NUTT ATKINSON I. PERRY HEIZER H «  346 39 1 I • I i 11 It ill 1 i it Kappa Alpha Theta Founded at Depauw University. Kansas Chapter installed, 1881. Publication, Kappa Alpha Theta. Flower, Black and Gold Pansy. Colors, Black and Gold. ACTIVE MEMBERS Nelx, Carraher, a. B. Ruth Harger, A. B. Elsa Barteldes. Myka Philley. Jessie Blakely. Marie Slade. Barbera Abel. LiLA Atkinson. Louise Hedrich. SENIORS Florence Fuqua, A. B. Eleanor Keith, A. B. JUNIOKS Marie Hedrich. SOPHOMORES Katherine Stone. Ilsa Wilhelmi. Ilma Wilhelmi. FRESHMEN Katherine Keizer. Marjorie Hires. Iben Henshall. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Helen G. Jones. Marie Sealy, A. B. Amarynthia Smith. A. B. Myba Stevens. Ida Perry. Mabel Perry. Frances Sawyer. Carolyne McNutt. Mary McClure. Helen Topping. 347 13he JAYHAWKER, Kappa Kappa Gamma III iii Hi iii III III Iff III III iii Iii ill III III III III lis Iii III III MULLIN HEIZER BERGER SMITH STRONG PREYER MATHEWES R. SMITH AYER8 INGHRAM LOBDELL KANAGA NACHTMANN MESERVEY BURROUGH KEITH VANT CLARK BAYER BOYD SMART DAVIS SIMMONS GUENTHER WILLIAMS HUGHES DAWSON SCHALL LUCAS WELSH Hi HI III ill II! Ill ill Iff III III i i I I III Iff II! ill III li! iii SaS Iii ill ill ill III i I I ill Iii Iff III ill III III III III ill fil lir 111 III 348 1 I tr -TWsSiSiSSSSiS iSSiSSSSS he ill 1 1 i iiE li i i i| |i! Ill ill li! ill 1 1 i |{l III til If! ||i Hi III III i i i Hi ill Kappa Kappa Gamma Founded at Monmouth College, 1870. Kansas Chapter installed, December 17, 1883. Publication, The Key. Flower, Fleur-de-lis. Colors, Light and Dark Blue. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Phyllis M. Burrough, Kansas City, Mo. Hazel B. Clark, Kansas City, Mo. Frances H. Meservey, A. B., Kansas City, Mo. Emily V. Berger, A. B., Halstead. Madeline Nachtmann, Junction City. Agnes Smith, Seneca. Charlotte Smart, Ottawa. Beulah Davis, Hutchinson. Mary Preyer, Lawrence. Nina Kanaga, Lawrence. Helen Dawson, Great Bend. .JUNIORS Ruth A. Smith, Seneca. SOPHOMORES Hazel Williams, Lawrence. Parthenia Keith, Seneca. Gertrude Lobdell, Great Bend. Jessie Inghram, Newton. Evelyn Strong, Lawrence. Bi NCHE MuLLiN, Hutchinson. FRESHMEN Thomasa Boyd, Kansas City. Helen Bayer, St. Joseph, Mo. Dorothy Vant, St. Joseph, Mo. Elizabeth Matthews, Liberty, Mo. Helen Clark, Kansas City, Mo. Thelma Welsh, Hutchinson. Blanche Simons, Lawrence. Nellie May Schall, Lawrence. Alice Guenther, Lawrence. Virginia Lucas, Kansas City, Mo. Margaret Hughes, Kansas City. Margaret Heizer, Osage City. Beulah Ayers, Horton. Amida Stanton. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Flaud Johnson. SsssmssssssmiSi ssiSimismis HI 349 liiw ' - ' ii 11 ii I i 11 I ! ii I i §1 i ! s L 11 ii ll II ii ll ii 1 1 It III III ll! i s i lii XD ie JAVH AWMBlffl Chi Omega s l s ILES FERGUSON E. FISCHER WILKINSON RIGBY KNOBLAUCH RUSSELL JENKINS EWING SAPP SHINN CRANE MOBTON GOFF ENGEL FISCHER JOHNSON BARTBERGER FINCH WALKER ROBERTS CHILDS MAC LEAN SHEETS SHUEY DAVIS ' Jss ssm ss 350 Chi Omega Founded at Fayetteville, Ark. Kansas Chapter installed, December 18, 1902. Publication, Eleusis. Flower, White Carnation. Colors, Cardinal and Straw xVCTIVE MEMBERS Margaret Roberts, A. B., LaCypne. Clare Mortox, A. B., Green. SENIORS Vera Knobl.. uch, A. B., Wichita. Frances Rigby, A. B., Concordia. Helen Rigby. Erna Fischer. Helen S.vpp. Ruth Ewing. Irene Johnson. Helen Jenkins. Edna Davis. Ellen Bronson. Jane Shuey. Nanette Feiususon. ViOL. Stiles. Mrs. Edward E. Brown. Lilian Kebchoff. JUNIORS Virginia Goff. Genevieve Walker. SOPHOMORES Helen Crane. Doris Iles. FRESHMEN Ann Childs. Rowena Wilkinson. Fern McLain. PLEDGES Itasca Hilsman. Josephine Todd. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Pearl Emley. FRATRES IN URBE Gertrude Kerchoff Lilian Matkins. Ethel Bartberger. Agnes Engle. GuLA Finch. Mary Russell. Cora Shinn. Elfriede Fischer. Linnie Sheets. Marie Hotchkiss. Sylvia Alford. 351 Sigma Kappa 11 MILLER PALMER M. HUFFMAN FULLER Q. HUFFMAN DUNN WILSON LUCAS HOSFORD LITCHEN WILSON EDWARDS WOOLSEY MC BRIDE STANWAITY SMITH POWELL MYERS COLE ELGIN G. COLE WILHELM LAMBOHN LILLIS 3.52 Qi ' - 1 Vs « « , s«s s x s ASf C« II he Sigma Kappa Founded at Colby University, 1874. Kansas Chapter installed, April 1, 1913. Publication, Triangle. Flower, Violet. Colors, Lavender and Maroon. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Helen Woolsey, B. M., Lawrence. Rhea Wilson, B. M., Columbus. Esther Wilhelm, A. B., Kansas City, Mo. Genevieve Huffman, B. M., Abilene. Violet Dunn, A. B., Concordia. .JUNIORS Mary Stanwaity, Mnita, Okla. Celeste Edwards, Sedan. Abby Louise Fuller, Eureka. Eunice Pleasant, Burlington. Mary Powell, Exira, Iowa. Ruth Lambert, Baker. Cl. r. Powell, Exira, Iowa. Ruth Litchen, Leavenworth. SOPHOMORES Ruth Lillis, Lawrence. Elizabeth McBride, Kansas City, Mo. Bernita Elgin, Lincoln. Mildred Cole, Lawrence. Vanetta Hosford, Lawrence. KiTTiE Smith, Burlington. Ruth Dyche, Pratt. MoNA Clare Huffman, Columbus. Flossie Irene Lucas, Cherokee. Josephine Lamborn, Burlington. Fern Wilson, Bo se, Idaho. FRESHMEN Glu dys Cole, Lawrence. Mary Myers, Lawrence. Dura Palmer, Kansas City, Mo. FRATRES IN URBE Ethelyn Miller. 353 rSBhe . JAVHi WKER,: Alpha Delta Pi TEMPLETON BIXBY HYRE CORNFORTH A8HTON WARD L. BROWN CASTLE WHITCHER STRAHM MALLOTT RANKIN SAGE PROT8CH MC CORMICK 8TUBBS FERG 8CHEINDENBERGER O. BROWN 354 - â– r I ' i I SSiSSSSSiSSSSSiSSiS ' FKe JAV HAl KER. |! ?s ' i? ' ! ? i! II Alpha Delta Pi Founded at Wesley an College, Macon, Ga. Kansas Chapter installed. May 15, 1912. Publication, Adelphian. Flower, Violet. Colors, Blue and White. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS il Ann Malott. Nelle Templeton. Florence Hyre. )! Dorothy Ward. Lucille Brown. Estelle Strahm. l! JUNIORS il 1 1 Olive Brown. Florence Whitcher. Florence Scheindenb SOPHOMORES 11 Lucille Sage. Veda Rankin. Margaret Cornforth II Gertrude Febg. Catherine Tester. Stella Stubbs. 1 1 Madeline Ashton. il FRESHMEN II Ruth Castle. Abigail Bixby. Rheba Protsch. LUCILE McCoBMICK. 11 PLEDGES Annette Ashton. Helen Baity. |Lk3i 355 IZAk. Achoth LAMBERT ETTWEIX SCHMIDT BROWN BECKER E. LONG CROSS E. KEELER BRADEN SMITH JAGGAR G. LONG D. KEELER KELSALL MADDEN SCHUCHART II 356 â– -Ifc ! ss ssssiSMiSissssmiSisssiss Achoth ill Founded at University of Nebraska, March 5, 1910. Kansas Chapter installed, March 13, 1912. Publication. Flower, Lily of the Valley. Colors, Sapphire, Blue and White. til 111 ill 11! Ill Dorothy Keeler, A. B., Lawrence. Marie Madden, A. B., Lawrence. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Etta Smith, B. M., Lawrence. Edith Cross. JUNIORS Charlotte Jaggar. Mary Schuchart. Ill Iff If! in III til i| Helen Becker. Olive Bra den. Joyce Brown. Dorothy Ettwein. SOPHOMORES Ethel Keeler. Edna Lambert. FRESHMEN Margaret Kelsall. Enola Long. WiLLA Schmidt. Gwendolen Long. PLEDGES Mrs. S. J. Ckumbine. Mrs. John Amick. Mrs D. M Horkmans. FRATRES IN URBE Nelle McFarland. Anna Hutt. Mrs. John Russell. 357 ? Mu Phi Epsilon POWELL QUFLER KETELS SHAN ' KS MORGAN ANDERSON LYON 0LS80N MORIN BLAIR LAMBERT KANAGA UHRLAUB MOSES HENRY WILSON SMYTH BURNHAM DERGE ZUTAVERN STONE SMITH WOOLSEY DAWSON DEIBERT SI ' S ' ' ' fe - «.N iii s II t I 358 Ja a JA :H AV KERS Mu Phi Epsilon Founded at Metropolitan College of Music, Cincinnati, Ohio. Kansas Chapter installed, April 12, 1911. Publication, Mu Phi Espilon Quarterly. Flower, Violet. Colors, Purple and White. ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Fay Bl. ir, Spring Hill. Ruth Burnham, Lawrence. Ruth Deibert, Florence, Colo. Augusta GufeiER, Lawrence. Edna Lyons, Lawrence. Margaret Morgan, Clay Center. Mary Morin, Lawrence. Kate Shanks, Simpson. Gl. dys Henry, Lawrence. Rhea Wilson, Columbus. Helen Woolsey, Lawrence. Marie Ketels, Lawrence. Agnes Moses, Carthage. CoRiNNE Smyth, Eureka. JUNIORS Olivia Olsson, Salina. Clara Powell, Lawrence. Charlotte Anderson, Chetopa. MonaDerge, Lebanon. Helen Dawson, Great Bend. Nina Kanaga, Lawrence. PLEDGES Edna Lambert, Horton. Muriel Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. Miriam Stone, Lawrence. Miss Greissinger. Miss Miller. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Miss Reynolds. Miss Sweeney. FRATRES IN URBE Agnes Uhrlaub. ill (jSSSSiSMSSSSSSSiSSSm! 359 I.i5 ' ill II! Ill ill III III li! lii ii COOPER UNDERWOOD ARVETT NELSON ELLSWORTH COOK ANNADOWN BROWN RUSSELL Delta Phi Delta Founded at University of Kansas, 1912 Kansas Chapter installed, Griffith Chapter, 1912. Publication Flower, Sweet Pea. Colors, Old Rose and Gold. BROWN ill FOSTER KERNOBLE ill 3 3c III lis 1 1 1 III ill lii 1 1 g 9 H i £ lii ill Mi sis ii i! i i i III 1 i i III i i I 2 S i iij If III Lucille Brown, Lawrence. Lydia Cook, Kansas City. Edith Cooper, Lawrence. WiLMA Abnett, Lawrence. Gladys Wilson, Cassaday. Addie Underwood, Lawrence. Lo Alma Brown, Lawrence. ACTIVE MEMBERS GRADUATE SENIORS Myrtle Ellsworth, Kansas City, y JUNIORS Emily Annadown, Lawrence. SOPHOMORES Irene Russell, Kansas City. UNCLASSIFIED Neva Foster, Lawrence. PLEDGES Ruth Kernodle. ill ill i i III ill ill 360 I Si fSI -It MORTON SCHULTZ DINGEE SNIDER COOK RULE 8POTT8 SEALY CRAWFORD LEAR WARD SHELLY HOOPES DRAKE MANN :ii ii :ii tt II 11 n 1 •II If if || i ! ill III Ml III I i i Hi ill III 11 II Helen Hoopes. Pi Gamma Sigma Founded at University of Kansas. Kansas Chapter installed. Publication. Flower. Colors, Green and White. ACTIVE MEMBERS GRADUATES Mary Grant. SENIORS Marie Sealy. Ruth Harger. Minnie Dingee. Bernice Schultz. Esther Brake. Millie Mann. Juliet Snider. Annabelle Crawford. Dorothea Hackbusch. Eunice Pleasant. Genevieve Herrick. Florence Whitcher Eva Coors. Veta Lear. Vena Spotts. Dorothy Ward. Irene Howat. Eva Cook. Ruth Rules. Velma Shelly. PLEDGES Marie Russ. Florence Engle. Ruth Evans. Dora Lupher. FiNA Ott. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Eugenie Galloo. .. 361 %%SSSSSS$SSM5SiSSiSSS« 362 1 Hi III III ill ill ill ill ill III 1 1 § III III III Hi i School of Education T IHE SCHOOL OF EDUCA- TION of the University of Kansas in its general features is representative of a national educa- tional movement. It has developed as follows : In 1876 the Legislature of the State of Kansas established a nor- mal department at the University of Kansas. The work was not of uni- versity grade, and was discontinued by the University after some years. In 1893 a Department of Education, administratively and academically on the same basis with other departments, such as Latin, mathematics and zo- ology, was established, which con- tinued until the year 1909 as a co- ordinate department under the Col- lege of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Dif- ferentiation within the general field of education and the demand for a multi- plication of courses which should deal scientifically as well as practically with various and difficult types of educa- tional problems, together with the con- sequent enlargement of the instruc- tional staff, made necessary a new form of organization. As an expression of the aim, scope and scientific nature of this phase of university service to high-school teachers and school administrators, the Department of Education was erected into a School of Education by the Board of Regents in July, 1909, a Dean of the School being appointed in April, 1910. It thus assumed the rank of the professional schools of Medicine, Law, Engineering, and Pharmacy. The purpose of the School is to furnish to prospective teachers, principals, and superintendents, and to all other persons interested in the professional aspect of education, so far as they fall within the scope of a university, adequate opportunities for specialization in the various phases of educational work. The plan of the organization represents the University ' s policy of assembling and correlating most effectively the numerous forces which naturally contribute more or less directly to the preparation of educa- tional leaders. The voting faculty and teaching staff of the School is consequently representative of practically all teaching interests, consisting of not only instruct- ors in education courses, but of those giving teachers ' courses in all branches of study offered in high schools. Arvin Solomon Olin, A. B., 1892, Ottawa University, A. M., 1894, University of Kansas, Dean of the Summer Session, Acting Dean of the School of Education. s § i III III ill ill HI III ill III III i9i 363 mhe JAVHAW KMl Is! School of Education STUDENT OFFICERS President, Willard N. Van Slyck. Vice-President, . . . . . Edmund C. Bechtold. Secretary, Eva Mildred Coors. Treasurer, Marie Patience Sealy. LIST OF GRADUATES MASTER OF ARTS Frances Christine Wenrich. Chauncey A, Yeomans. [Cuts appear with Graduate School.] bachelor of science (in Ed.). Annabella Crawford. Ora F. Grubbs. Trine Latta. Abel James McAllister, Helen Maude Ransom. Everett W. Wren, Nellie C. Terrill (Mrs.) Charles I. Smith. Mark S. Ewald. Willard N. Van Slyck, [Cuts appear with College of Liberal Arts.] UNIVERSITY TEACHERS ' DIPLOMA AND STATE CERTIFICATE, Allphin, Helen Louise Arnett, I la Maud Babb, Alvin L. Bailey, Bonnie Deane Bechtel, Eva Bechtold, Edmund C. Bossi, Mary A. Butcher, Estelle V. Cook, Eva M. Crawford, Annabella Cressman, Ada Beatrice Dahlene, Edward DiNGEE, Minnie E. Drake, Esther Louise Dunn, Violet Dyer, Rose Josephine Ewald, Mark Scheffer Fairchild, Charles Clement FuQUA, Florence Frances GiviN, Grace E. Golden, Lela GowANS, Harry W. Graber, Otto C. Green, Charles Francis Greene, Hazel Katharine Grove, Theodora Guise, Carl Conrad Gustafson, Alma T. Harger, Ruth Hazelrigg, Vivian Martha Healey, Florence HooPES, Helen Rhoda Hunter, Mabel M. Hunter, Martha Mae Irwin, Charles E. Janzen, C. C. Johnson, Alexander C. Keeler, Dorothy Keith, Eleanor Margaret Kennedy, Marjorie L. KiMEL, Chester LeRoy Kincaid, Flossie W. Krebs, Anna Margaret Lambe, Ruth Landen, Elsie Marie Latta, Trine Lear, Beta Bl. nche Lourey, Maude T. Lucas, Meda Frances Mann, Millie Milton, Iva Pearl McAllister, Abel James Neuschwanger, Amanda Neuschwanger, Sarah Nevin, Leila May PiLKiNGTON, Lillian Elizabeth PiLKINGTON, LUELLA MaRTHA Pope, Jessie Irene Preshaw, Ada M. Rabourn, Emma P. Ransom, Helen Maude Richardson, Alma May RoBBiNs, Meredith Roberts, Margaret Rule, Ruth B. Schultz, Bernice E. Sealy, Marie Patience Shelley, Velma E. Smith, Charles Irving Smith, William Adison Snider, Juliet Spangler, Irma B. Spotts, Vena Taylor, Nellie R. Templeton, Nelle Terrell, Frances Terrell, Mabel Terrill, Nellie C. (Mrs.) Thompson, Leslie R. Toews, Katharina Tremaine, Stella Van der Vries, Edward Van Slyck, Will. rd N. Ward, Dorothy Sandiford Watson, Lell. B. V. WiLHELM, Esther WiLLiTT, Jessie Marie WiNGERT, Florence M. Woodman, Sidney M. Wren, Everett W. YusT, Laurin p. i i ,Ji ii 364 «% SiS«SSSSSS5 1 t 11 he JA M l KElb ' lis III ' â– I i ill lii ill III i i Iff III lii III ill III jll ill lii III ill fil ill ill Ijj III ill I i 3 ill ill ill III 11 1 si! Hi lii III The University Extension Department T Professor D. C. Croissant, Head of the Extension Division HE work of the University Extension Division, which has as its object the making available to every citizen of the State all of the facilities of the University, comprises four departments : the Cor- respondence-Study department, the department of General Information, the department of Municipal Reference, and the department of Child Welfare. The (Correspondence-Study department is the most orthodox of the various activities, and in it is given instruction of University grades in vocational subjects, and in miscellaneous work for various classes of persons in practical subjects. This work has shown a consistent and steady growth from the very begin- ning, until now there are offered in the Correspond- ence-Study bulletin 212 courses, 57 having been offered for the first time this year. The new departure for the Extension Division of this University is the Corre- spondence class-room study plan, by which groups of six or more students pur- suing the same courses of study may have the regular correspondence study courses supplemented by weekly visits of instructors, who will conduct classes and hold personal conference s with the students. Another line that is new in this Univer- sity is the introduction of the vocational work given by the Engineering school. The department of General Information endeavors to supply information on all topics of general interest or value to any citizen of the State who may be suffi- ciently interested to inquire of the department. One of its most important func- tions is the furnishing of package libraries. These consist of clippings from maga- zines or pamphlets which are bound in folders, and are lent to those who are in- terested in the subjects covered. The department also prepares outlines of study for clubs, and furnishes the material for the papers presented at the meeting of clubs. The department of Municipal Reference supplies information and help of all sorts to municipal officials and others concerning city affairs. The department of Child Welfare is another of the innovations introduced this year. It endeavors to assist parents, schools, organizations, in all matters pertaining to the welfare of the child, and in this connection is endeavoring to es- tablish playgrounds, parent-teachers ' associations and the like. A prize of $1,500 is being offered through this department to the city of the second class showing that it is the best place in Kansas to rear children. The Extension Division endeavors to make available all of the facilities of the University to all the citizens of Kansas, and its only limitation is the means sup- plied to it for doing the work. 9x III i|| Hi â– â– â– â– â– loss ' ««SS. S.mW x 366 H wamemmsm ' r L. jt: ' JfjL. i lis THE preceding pages have been devoted entirely to the serious interests, activities and organi- zations which help to make up the life of a student at the University of Kansas. The main object of this book is to depict school life as we have shown it. But there is one other phase of student life that to neglect would leave the 1914 Jayhawker incomplete. Our college life would be a dismal failure if all were serious and humdrum. But the serious things must be considered and remembered as well as the light and humorous incidents. In view of this fact, we print herewith a few serious thoughts which we would like to leave behind us, and with them a resume of the in- cidents and facts surrounding the school year just closing. Some of these incidents are true to fact, others based on rumors we have heard. We wish to assure you, however, that nothing personal is meant and it is our desire and wish to avoid ill-feeling on the part of anyone. It is all in the life, and we earnestly hope and expect that it will be so taken. |i ii 1 1 if If Ii 1 1 II ! ! ii §1 ! r ii if ii II I i II I i i i ii i i 11 ill I L ii ! i ii If it Ii il i i ii 368 I SSi S «SSiiS8SSSi«SiSSSiSSSiSS§SiSS ill II f â– ' i III ill III ill ill ill ill III III Ift III ill IT has never been customary to use the pages of the Jayhawker as a medium for presenting to the students and faculty problems and questions of Uni- versity interest in editorial form. The Board of Editors of the 1914 Jay- hawker can see no reason why such a step should not be taken. True, we are leaving the University this year with a final bow to its campus, and our return will be only in the capacity of alumni. But why should we leave behind our interest for the welfare of the school? Even though we go out into a broader and more complex life, where the problems are more serious and the battle is more fierce, we still have within us that instinctive feeling of loyalty and love for the institution in which we have spent four of the best and happiest years of our lives. Now, as we are about to leave our University for all time, we look back on the experiences we have had ; the political fights we have waged, the interest we have taken in this and that activity, the enthusiasm with which we have been imbued at each and every University contest, and the struggles we have had to keep the midnight lamp burning for that -final. As these different events — for they are events — run through our minds in kaleidoscopic manner, we have that human desire to get in one more lick. So we take this medium of leaving behind us in this, our memorial to the school, a few ideas which, though they may not be ap- proved by all, seem to us to be for the best interests and for the further advance- ment of our great and flourishing University. THE JAYHAWKER The 1914 Jayhawker has come off of the press with money in its pocket. While this statement should not be unusual, nevertheless, in view of the disastrous wreck of the two Jayhawkers immediately preceding it, it is a novel and pleasing phrase to read. Financially, the senior class has achieved the highest success in producing its year-book. It has been proven that a good book can be produced without leaving a deficit, but the question now is. Will the precedent set be fol- lowed ? The Jayhawker is a necessity to the University of Kansas. Not only is it a tradition which to allow to die out would be fatal to the school, but it is a memorial which every graduate and every undergraduate will forever cherish ; a book that will always bring back fond memories, familiar faces and amusing incidents of our college days. It must be perpetuated, but it cannot hope to be unless given sustenance, strength and backing both by the student body and by the University authorities. Previous to the year 1912 the management of the book was turned over to the good graces of one man, he to make or break — himself. The book at that time was far below the present standard ; the cuts were not clear, the general make-up was not as good. The manager usually paid out. In 1912 the senior ««sssss«ss «ss- 1 1 1 III III til HI Iff ill jjf lit I ifi !!l III lit lit i i I III Hi III ill III ill til ill III I I i ! 5 I ill III U 369 II iSSSSiSiSSiSiSSSS SSSiSSi III III III ill Jll S 9 S III ' Xs f JAYH AWKER. class voted to put the Jayhawker on an honor basis, with absolutely no remuner- ation to either the manager or editor. The manager gave little account to expense in putting out this volume. The book was far above the general standard that had been previously set. It was made up in excellent form, the cuts were far better than had been used in former years, and it was on an equal with many annuals of Eastern universities. It was worthy of the University, but the senior class could not meet its cost. A $1200 deficit was the outcome, and the greater part of it still stands. Last year the editor and manager were put on a salary. The plan worked better, but the standard set in 1912 must needs be kept up. The students did not furnish the support needed, and the management dropped about $400. It was plain that the Jayhawker could not continue on this basis, and several plans were considered for financing the proposition. For a while there was talk of abolishing the publication altogether. Then the six-dollar plan for seniors was inaugurated, and its success has been proven. But the present plan cannot be continued in its original form. The issuing of notes to all seniors is too large a task to be followed year after year. A personal canvass of four or five hundred students takes too much time for one who must also make a semblance at doing class work. Another and more thorough plan must be adopted. The seniors must pay in their dues at the beginning of the senior year. When the registration fees are paid the Annual dues must be included. A fixed time limit must be set and enforced for all seniors to pay in their dues. This will give the management a definite amount on which to start as a foundation. Following this, all students other than seniors must order and pay for their Annuals before the book goes to press. The fault of former years has been that the Annuals, 1200 or 1500, have been put on the campus and a chance taken on selling all of them. The chance has proven to be a losing one. With the above plan success- fully carried out, and with the earnest cooperation of the University authorities, the Annual can be published each year with an ever-increasing amount on the credit side of the ledger ; the book may successfully be increased and enlarged to keep up with the growth and advancement of the University, and it will always be a worthy memorial of the class that publishes it. THE NEW DANCES O temporal O mores! Such seems to be the cry of the would-be present- day dance reformers in their attempt to amend the degenerate morals of the students of the University of Kansas. The castle walk has been condemned with a judgment that will no more than equal the Mexican policy of ley de fuega. The reformation movement is characterized with that lack of argument and weak- ness of purpose that has been the principal basis of many like fanatical reforma- tions. The women say Because and the men say We don ' t know how to do it; therefore it is wicked. No definite or logical reason is given as an argument for the reformers. There is no reason to argue. They can put forth no logic. The University of Kansas has a reputation throughout the country as being the cleanest and most moral of any of its sister schools. Scandal and talk are noticeable only through their absence. With 2700 students enrolled it is impossible to keep the entire student body in the straight and narrow path all of the time. 370 Bi« ill ill III ill III if j III III ill III ill i 1 i iif if! â– i I III III ill III III ill ill III III III III III III III HI III lit III III III ! i I ill i ! i ill |l| ill But the variances are so small and so seldom that they arouse criticism only from fanatics, those who search every nook and corner for evil with the idea of bring- ing themselves into the limelight in the role of reformers. Thirty-five years ago the two-step and waltz were just coming into vogue. As is always the case with dances, the young people took them up first and en- joyed them. The old heads, who in their time had danced only the quadrilles and the Virginia reel, held up their hands in horror and lamented the fact that the morals of the younger set were descending to base level. But the world did not seem to grow more wicked, and the dances soon established themselves. Several years ago the Boston was introduced, and again the old heads decried the disgusting moral atmosphere that prevailed among the younger generation. Still the world seemed to roll on in the even tenor of its ways and was not destroyed, as in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah. Now we have the castle walk, and the old heads are shocked be yond expression. They say that the dance is im- moral, suggestive, and disgusting. Some of them even lose sleep over the terrible conditions existing at the State University. But we ask, Where do they get on? The new dances are danced in every community of the United States. They have been taken up by old and young with an enthusiam that either denotes the absolute control of the world by the Devil or the human desire, always present, to enjoy one ' s self in innocent amusement. If the former condition prevails we might as well all give up hope now. The latter is the much more plausible and possible form of reasoning. We do these dances with absolutely no thought of wrong or immorality. The younger generation likes new things and the dances are new. The waltz and two-step are just as immoral, if danced with immoral thoughts. Evil to them who evil think is the phrase that should be applied to the dance reformers, and if they think that the dances are wrong, we most certainly agree that it would be wrong for them to dance them. But why should the reformers try to pollute the minds of the young people with their own stagnant view of things? Their agitation is forcing the young girls and young men to look at all things in an immoral sense, and if it is wrong to dance the castle walk it is absolutely wicked to dance at all. The dance re- formers of the University of Kansas voluntarily put themselves in a class with Florence Finch Kelley in their attempt to govern 1914 customs by 1882 ideas. We ask for either good sound reasoning in your arguments or else immunity from your unwarranted attacks. THE CHAPEL HOUR Eleven o ' clock chapel is an absolute failure. The lack of attendance at the daily exercises and the diminution of general school spirit since the change from ten to eleven o ' clock chapel hour was established have proven the above statement. Eleven o ' clock rolls around and there are no more classes until one-thirty. What is the result? The students file down the Hill to their rooms, and, during the intervening period, mix only with their fellow-roomers or boarders, whom they see every day. It is a peculiar psychological fact that the students will not stay on the Hill and attend chapel with no more incentive than the daily exercises. As a result, spirit dies ; the interest in general school activities lags ; that mixing of students, so essential to cooperation in University affairs, is lost, and the chapel is deserted. ill ' III III 11 ll .Ji ill Ii3i 371 Ten o ' clock chapel showed a different condition existing. On short chapel days the students mixed, for the greater part, on the campus. They talked over University activities and questions with classmates whom they did not come in touch with at their rooming- and boarding-houses, and aroused interest in Uni- versity affairs that can only be aroused on the campus. On long chapel days a much larger percentage of the student body attended chapel than do now. Those who did not go got together in even closer union during the period between classes. At this time rallies were planned, candidates for offices were proposed, friendly but enthusiastic political bodies were formed, and this and that activity was discussed and pledged support. The last year has been the death-knell for all such gatherings ; the general sentiment of the student body is that spirit is dead. Ten o ' clock chapel will resuscitate this essential to a successful university. Where is a better place to arouse school spirit than on the campus itself. ' Where will enthusiasm and pep be bred to such an extent as it will within the shadows of the University buildings . ' Proposals and suggestions of University interest that should and would go through with a rush on the campus, fall dead at the bottom of the Hill. Give the students a chance to get together. Give them an oppor- tunity to formulate their plans and ideas where the influence is of the best, and you will have results of more beneficial nature than can be accomplished by all of the printer ' s ink in the world. iif §11 THE STUDENT COUNCIL The much-maligned organization known as the Men ' s Student Council should perhaps be given a respite in these pages, but we wish to offer words both of com- mendation and condemnation, some of which may help to point a way out of the difficulty. In the first place, the Student Council has not been entirely dormant through- out the year, as it has so often been charged. A committee from this organization suggested and helped to push the present Jayhawker plan, which has worked successfully. The Council formulated and brought into definite issue the Men ' s Student Union, plans for which have long been hanging fire. And the student governors enforced and used their disciplinary powers with reference to the new smoking rule. For these acts they should be commended and recognized. The first criticism arose last fall when the Council refused to take action on the football coaching question. On this subject the Council was in a peculiar situation. The students theniselves did not know what they wanted ; the stu- dents were at variance with each other on the question; and as the Council but represents the students, how were they to come out as a body politic and take a definite stand on one side or the other. ' It was a question that must necessarily be settled by higher authorities, and the Council wisely left it alone. With the Daily Kansan the Council was clearly in error. It acted beyond its authority and on the spur of the moment. Should it be condemned for this one act. ' ' The wisest make mistakes, and the Council, seeing its error, withdrew as gracefully as possible. It has been neglectful in enforcing one or two little acts of discipline, and for this it should be criticised. Even then, we ask, is it entirely at fault? The Student Council is purely the melting-pot for the University Senate. ill I 1 Hi iii S L _ ill i|! IT ih III il I j 3i IL- ' l f|! - i li 1 i i qsim in lis All things disagreeable come into the Council ' s hands first. Matters that require instant and decisive action are sifted through the Council. This would be perfectly right and proper if it were the final source of authority and if its word were law. This is not the case. If the Council takes hold of a matter and acts according to its judgment and discretion and the University Senate approves, everything is all right. The Senate has kept its hands clean, and whatever criticism falls from the student body at large strikes the Council. But if the Senate does not approve the action, the Council is ignored. The matter is taken from without the Council ' s jurisdiction. The Council is slandered, tagged as inefficient and cowardly, and un- worthy to continue. What resource has the Council .f Absolutely none. It must sit back and take the maledictions of the Senate in the best manner possible. It is continually on trial for its life. Its every action must be weighed, not only with discretion as to the matter on which it might be acting, which is as it should be, but also with discretion as to whether or not the Senate will approve. This latter menace takes the whole-hearted effectiveness out of its proceedings. With this vision of the axe ever before it, the Council is naturally reticent about its actions. For the Council to act effectively it must have full power, sub- ject only to recall by the Board of Administration. Questions worthy of its con- sideration are worthy of its action, and questions too big for it to handle should be decided by the real governing body of the University. Give it this power and its actions will become more definite and effective. Remove the bulldozing effect of the University Senate and the Council will have no hesitancy about taking a necessary and required step. Give it assurance that it is more than a nonentity, and you will have real student government at the University of Kansas. DANCING CLUBS (The following is taken from The Kansas Kikkabe, 1882, the first Annual ever issued at the University of Kansas. The dancing situation seemed to be much the same at that time as it is today, and the reformers ' howls that the University in the past year has been dance-mad might well have been emitted, with probably as little effect, thirty-two years ago. — Editor ' s Note.) On with the dance; let joy be unconfined. O Terpsichore! breathe upon us thy divine spirit, that in the words fitly chosen we may celebrate this most important feature of our University life. Let not anyone imagine that we estimate this rather unprecedented feature too highly, or that the progressiveness of the West, joined to the advantages of co- education, has in this instance led us into slightly devious paths. The benefit de- rived from our dancing clubs is inestimable. Under this fostering care the wall flowers have left their barren soil, and, in the heat and light of the ball-room, blossom in all freshness and beauty. The carriage of the once awkward girl, a goddess might now well envy ; and the bashful, blushing youth has become as cheeky as the rest of his sex. Every attitude and gesture is aesthetic, and Bunthornes grace every assembly. The members of the three flourishing clubs are all extremely interested in their work. Many of them are Sophs, and hard students of Analyt, as is seen by the geometrical figures they execute. Among them, also, rank many sons of D. D.s, whose only pangs of conscience come with the trouble their Methodist feet sometimes occasion them. v« ill i )i I ill lit ill III , SiiSiSSSSSiSSSSSSS!SiiSiS«S 373 StWis A dancing lesson is a striking and, to the spectator, an amusing scene. As the strains of the orchestra quicken, the smart youth, who has the step and can get around, clasps closer his fair partner, and inclining his head with a satisfied smile, gracefully treads on her toes. Various groups stand around, viewing them with envious emulation. A few couples who are gyrating about with a look of fixed determination on their heated countenances, and a most decided one, two, three issuing from their lips, will undoubtedly soon be their rivals. Others show by their open-mouthed admiration, their languid attitudes, and their despairing ex- pressions, that they have no expectations of such a happy fate; while the bent head and clasped hands of that individual in the corner, who is striking out alone, exactly in the pathetic manner of one learning to skate, tells us that he has been brought to believe in the efficacy of prayer. However, their motto is a certain indication of the success of all. They seize every occasion for practice, and sometimes in a certain class the rhythmic sound of hurrying feet in the music-room below has necessitated the speedy exit of the Prof. But as yet the offenders remain unknown. In short, the dancers are all thoroughly imbued with the spirit of their work, and they show it in everything they are called to do. They glide slowly and se- dately into chapel ; they gallop quickly through their easy lessons, and waltz gracefully around their hard ones ; they escape the Prof. ' s anger with the same agility with which they racquet ; they lisp through examinations as smoothly as they Newport; and finally, when the inspiring music of the dinner-gong sounds upon their expectant ears, they set off in a tumultous heel and toe, Long life to the organizations, and all honor to their founders. 11 374 J 1 ill ii !| ..I ifi ii! ii: ill I i lil sol III III III III iii if! i a s III ii! ill i!| i|l i I I ill I ji III III ill ii! 1 1 ill Iii ill ' • m ' ' . ' J75 l«, « «v -, v. . ■« v, s « â– ( W â– SS 1 he Through Fraternity Row on the Rubberneck Wagon All aboard, Ladies and Gentlemen! All aboard! The big red auto with room for twenty-five starts from this point in two minutes. See the Fraternities and Sororities, one and all, for Twenty-five Cents, Two Bits, One Quarter, the Fourth Part of a Dollar! Room for three more passengers ! This way, Sir! This way ! No, you ' ll have to hold the baby on your lap, lady ; the extra seat is re- served for Flora Finch Kelly, the famous authoress. All right, driver! Let ' er go! Gentlemen will please throw away lighted cigars. No Smoking Permitted in the Student District according to a recent edict of the Men ' s Student Council, backed up by the Daily Kansan. Yes, lady, Quantrill burned the Beta house when he visited Lawrence. Yes, Quantrill was a Sigma Nu. Slow up, Driver, Slow Up! We here see the palatial mansion of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the envy of the entire fraternity world, and secured by that band of brothers at the enormous rental of twenty-five dollars — in advance. Its Spacious Halls are finished in the softest of Pine, and its walls are tastefully decorated with rare and costly felt tap- estries, as vari-colored as the famous garment of the boy Joseph. These brothers worship the Goddess Minerva, as do the Kappas ; hence the close bond of union and undying love existing between the two societies. To their color the Purple was added some time since the Gold, in compliment to the good taste of a Fa- mous Legal Fraternity which had previously combined the two. The letters, S. A. E., represent the words of the motto, Seeking After Enlightment, and dis- close the purpose of the Order, although what manner of Enlightenment is the object of their quest, no one has as yet been able to discover. On the next corner we discover, to the southwest of Lee ' s garage, the domicile of Phi Delta Theta, said to have been built according to the original plans for Aladdin ' s palace. The colored glass seen at all points, and the beautifully carved exterior decorations, were imported directly from Bagdad at an enormous cost. No, you are mistaken, lady. The tall projection on the roof is used to hang a flag upon, not the freshmen. The latter usually hang around Lee ' s. The Phi Delt leads a strenuous life, and his daily round of toil is one not to be lightly sniffed at. He must strive constantly to accomplish three things : Run the School, en- tertain the Kappas, and wean Papa Cowles. With the first two they have been fairly successful, but in regard to the latter, little hope is felt that their efforts will ever bear fruit. And next door south we discover the neat lodge room of Beta Theta Pi, one of the most prominent of all modern Fraternal Benefit Associations. It is closely modeled after its great contemporary, the Modern Woodmen of America. Mem- bers suffering accident or misfortune are given the Grip, and considerable sym- pathy, — the latter especially by outsiders. No, you are mistaken again! The Im- portant-Looking Individual descending the front stoop is not a Foreign Ambassa- dor here upon diplomatic affairs, but Ezy Anderson, one of the most prominent of the local brethren. He is to meet Arthur Perry, a Popular and Democratic Young Person, and, once together, they will discuss certain weighty matters con- x«v.. v v«™j JSj ; m s 111 I i I III III ill ill Hi i|! Ill I I ! ill III III ill ill ill i ! ! ill III III ill ill l!l I i i ill III lit i I i ill III il l ill til Hi III ill ill 378 nected with the Alpha Delta Pi spring party. These celebrated brothers one and all emulate the example set by Wooglin, a famous dog-catcher of the Middle Ages, and who is said to have founded the Order. However, the Phi Delt and Kappa Sig dogs still seem to be doing nicely. We are slowly approaching the home of Kappa Sigma. This is indeed one of the rare sights of our little municipality, and must not be passed lightly by. This Ancient and Honorable Society for the Prevention of Home- Sickness was founded in Egypt, with Moses as a charter member. Later on, the members, having be- come dissatisfied with the local offering in chorus girls, the whole lodge was moved bodily to America, shortly after this continent was discovered by Brother Colum- bus. No complaint has been heard from them concerning the quality of the Amer- ican artists, and it is hoped they will remain indefinitely. The tri-colored flag — scarlet, white, and emerald green — seen floating above their housetop signifies the three principal diversions of the occupants : bull fights, W. C. T. U. Endeavor, and the Encouragement of Irish Immigration to America. Turning eastward and then south again, we come to the chateau of Alpha Tau Omega, or translated, Beginning to be the End. This beautiful country seat is also called at times The Last Chance In(n). And tra-la-la-la ! here it is that Harry A. Fischer, the Sweet and Celebrated Singer of the Senior Play, together with Adonis Waldo, the Dancing Little Devil, holds forth. To these persons the University is indebted for the introduction of the Barn party, which has now become one of our common diversions. However, none have been successful in creating the exact atmosphere needed to carry off such an event except the origi- nators of the idea. Members of this aggregation have a quaint and amusing cus- tom of leaving the organization at intervals to join other societies. It is for the most part discouraged, however, and is expected to eventually die out. Turning westward, we come at last to the foot of that tall peak upon whose summit rests the castle of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Listen! You may even now hear the sisters chanting their evening hymn, Far above the Distant Valley, Towering towards the Blue, Perch the loyal Kappa Sisters, Admiring the view. Every sister is provided with an aeroplane with which to fly to and from the city far below. These ladies have a peculiar mode and method of rushing. The rushee after being conveyed to the Home among the Clouds is enticed into the spacious living-room, where she is caught and securely fastened in a large leather chair. She is then charmed into insensibility by the sundry vocal and instrumental ac- complishments of one Madeline Nachtmann, a liedersinger and a native of Berlin, here to complete her musical education, so we have Hurd. Upon regaining consciousness the rushee invariably elects to remain, and no one upon whom this means of persuasion has been tried has ever escaped. It is reported that even men are peculiarly affected by it. We now draw up between the homes of Sigma Nu and Pi Beta Phi. You have guessed it. The Sigma Nus are a Fraternity, and a classy and blas6 little aggregation at that. Indeed, it is their Common Boast that they comprise the Banner Chapter of their entire fraternity, a No Small Honor, you may be Sure. The pious-looking individual poking the shotgun through the third-story window is Major A. T. Holloway. He is preparing to take another shot at the Uni- versity Daily Kansan, with Telling Effect. And there we see draped across the 11 ij II i i 11 11 ii II if 11 i i i i || I i ii I I ii ii Ii fl I i Ii ii ii II Ii II !l i i Ii I I il it II ii If II 379 in 33he JAYHAWKBie IS 380 front porch rail Freeman Alexander, who is now busily engaged in reciting that touching little classic, An Old Sweetheart of Mine. We regret not to be able to point out the Rev. Jeremiah DeLongy, but at this moment he is within, deeply engrossed with next Sunday ' s Sermon. Across the way looms Pi Beta Phi, the greatest collection of human butterflies and exponents of Fancy Dress for Every-Day Wear, ever collected under one roof. Please notice, on the veranda to the south, that famous porch swing, whose charms and seductive attractions lately caused the entire chapter to cry aloud in one voice against the further existence of the Mid-week date rule. It is now occupied by the brilliant and adorable Alice Coors, whom you may hear plaintively crying, Hoot, Mon, Hoot! In ordinary English, she means that she desires the presence of a certain individual named Hoot. He will be here pretty soon. The hand- some limousine standing in front belongs to Artie Weaver, official cabman to the sorority. He is Constance personified. Hold your hats, gentlemen, while descending the hill. Here we have the Sigma Kappas. New in Years, but oh my! how old in Experience. From the Stunning and Irresistible Mary Stanwaity down to the Newest Freshman they are a Beautiful Bevy of girls. Realizing early in their career that the Good Will and Brotherly Assistance of a Fraternity would prove Invaluable to them in their cam- paign after Social Prestige, they at once enlisted the services of dear old Phi Kappa Psi. By the aid of that Society, together with t he timely suggestions of Vogue and the Woman ' s Home Companion, a large portion of their fight is already waged, and they have even now so fascinated the young Lochinvars of the Cam- pus that their future is Assured. Nuf Said. Speeding onward, we arrive within the confines of Phi Kappa Psi. This is, as you may properly suppose, a national college fraternity. It was founded at JefiFerson College, in 1852, and now has some fifty odd chapters, of which this is the Kansas Alpha. Grand dues are reasonable, and the local assessments are not excessive. The fraternity issues a neat little magazine, of interest to members, called the Shield. It is strong in a number of localities, and locally is of no mean consequence. The local members of prominence and note are: Edwards, Humphry, Folks, and Dunmire. From here we may also see, at the end of the block. Alpha Delta Pi, sister sorority of Alpha Tau Omega. These fair damsels go in for scholarship with a vengeance, and in their brief existence have gotten to be the handmaidens of their Alma Mater. Ward Hatcher, the educational wonder of Kappa Sigma, scenting the cultured environment found in their midst, is now a frequent visitor there. We now pause before the temple of Chi Omega. Notice the dainty symbol over the entrance by which we are enabled to discover their presence among us. No matter what they used to be, the Chios are at present Regularly Good, and Cutting some Ice on the Hill. Two rather serious tasks constantly confront the sorority — that of caring for the remains of our late lamented Sigma Chi, and in starting each new addition to the Kappa Sigs out upon his social career. However, these tasks will not always interfere with their leisure, and it is expected that things will take a turn for the better in the near future. The Chi Omega ' s back porch is said to be the most spacious in the city. Ward Lockwood has recently 381 he JAYH ' iiiS MSH ' t If i ' III III !!i SIS ill ill II ll ill if) Hi lit ill ill ill ill lii 1 1 i III III ill ill ill ill i!f lii ill i i III i r if ii il ill 382 N VnMMfON««AN! N Vv vS VNSVN ss s â– â– â– Â I 1 - ... iS I iSMSSSiSSmSiSSSSSSiiSiSSSSSS [ I drawn a picture of it lor Harper ' s Weekly. With the compartments full, and the decks cleared for action, it presents an interesting spectacle. And here we have Kappa Alpha Theta, whose stock has risen 100 points above par in the past six months. Oh, yes, they have gotten to be Quite the Rage at K. U., and some of the Freshmen have already earned a Name for themselves even at this early date. Their motto, changed last spring after the departure of the Old Standbys, now reads, We Are For Men, Here every night, as the evening shadows begin to gather in the west, may be heard Perfection Sowers strum- ming on the mandolin and singing Dulcet Lullabies beneath the window of his Charming Juliet. The Dark Object reposing to the left of the front entrance is the Ten-Thirty Bell, discarded with the advent of the new regime. From a furi- ous game of auction to the latest innovation in the castle walk, the Thetas Are There. Turn on the juice, driver, and shoot us to the Phi Gamma Delta House. The little lady in the front seat is simply dying to see Happy Surber ' s moustache. No extra charge will be made. It is all in the show. This club, owing to a recent national ruling, is carrying only thirty-nine members at present. At one time it was quite large. The gentleman wearing the judicial aspect, and seated in the tonneau of yonder motor car, is Judge Kimball, a member of the local bar. The tragic individual practicing with the broadsword in the backyard is Sir Clarence Sowers, the Pride of Phi Gamma Delta. He is rehearsing for the day ' s slaughter, and is the most feared person loose in the vicinity. We will now wend our way in tears toward the mausoleum of Lamented Sigma Chi. Here it was in days gone by, that many a sturdy athlete Booted the Bound- ing Pigskin, or wooed the Fairest Ladies of the Land. How it came to pass that all the wearers of the Little White Cross sickened and died, no one knows. Now, all is silent save for the moaning of a Lone Alumnus come to pay his Last Respects to the Noble Dead. Rest you in peace. Dear Old Fraternity ; your Labors are Ended, Your Work is Done. Passengers will be let out in the next block. The hotel from which we started is ten blocks north. Street cars pass every hour. Good-by, everybody, Good-by. II 383 ««SSSS«SWSSSiS 384 I Hi III III UNCLE JIM A Greeting (The following was taken from The Shingle, a senior law publication issued in 1900.) Brother, in a most true brotherhood, thy hand ; I, too, am from Kansas, God ' s favored land. x nd from K. U. ' s halls, with your LL. B,? Shake again! You ' re more than a brother to me — We have both studied under Uncle Jim. What! You of the nineties swore by his name. ' Why, back in the eighties ' twas just the same ; I ' m glad his place is not filled by another ; Some may be teachers — but he was a brother To the boys who called him Uncle Jim. I remember how — I expect you ' ve seen him do it — When one of his boys was in trouble, and he knew it, He ' d pull him out, though he was in the wrong ; But the lecture that followed was no lullaby song, That fellow ' d get from Uncle Jim. But — yes, I know — his frowns would end with a grin. And some Profs, even dubbed his familiarity a sin. You ' ve got his picture. ' Let me see it again. Many never made lawyers, but he kept us men. And as such we ' ll never forget Uncle Jim. — R. E. ii SSSSSS!SSSiS«SSi4mms«««!S«i  «?«S! . . 385 ' ?5 ' Ae -„ JAYH AWKER. ill ill 3 i E 1 ill g HI H Sii !H Pa III o fill « ill c K 1 i u Q 5 6 f- i = i 2: ill i i i i S S ill 1 i 1 ill iil III ' Sl 386 |P! «S!SSSSSSS SS5S5S«Sm«!iSSSSiSi Isj Ss ill l!l ill Hi III III ill ill ill I i i III III III ill ill i i ! ill til Sil iii ji| III |!| ii! fjl III III ill ill Hi ill ii! I If Only Lee ' s Tables Gould Talk, Apologies to Nat M. Wills. Did you ever go down to Lee Bryant ' s And ponder over the thought, How ' twould break the monotony of silence If only Lee ' s tables could talk ? You ' d hear what Lee thinks of the students Who squander their shekels and rocks. And the curses and grumblings of the hashers, If only Lee ' s tables could talk. You ' d hear the shattered dreams of the coaches How Nebraska beat us in a walk, And how we were swallowed by the Tigers, If only Lee ' s tables could talk. The Sphinx, the Sachems, and Black Helmets, Their secrets all come to naught. And mysteries all would be told us If only Lee ' s tables could talk. My boy, appearances often mislead you ; Your feed was all that she sought. Her line would no longer deceive you, If only Lee ' s tables could talk. On almost any Sunday evening. At seven by the village clock, You could find what it cost to feed her, If only Lee ' s tables could talk. Around the long table in the corner. They sit and squabble and squawk ; Reputations might take long vacations. If only Lee ' s tables could talk. Oh, the many choice bits of scandal That would fly with the wings of the hawk, — We ' d all get a trip through the wringer. If only Lee ' s tables could talk. And now I am through with my ditty ; I ' ve nothing more in my stock. But don ' t fear for w hat you ' ve said there, For Lee ' s tables never talk. 387 ' i ) I â– V 1 388 im Tammany Is Dead. IN the fall of 1910 there hailed from a small farm on the outskirts of the city of Junction, an ambitious youth. The gods did not know of his coming, and when he affixed his motto on the archives of the Honorable George O., no friend took note of his presence. But it came to pass that after various toots on his horn of virtue, the Greeks on Louisiana street begged him to rub his manly bosom against their table-linen, and he began to worship at the shrine of Phi Kappa Psi. These fine lads, somewhat ashamed of their negligence, now told him that they would surely have extended their kind invitation sooner had they not feared the Army of the Little White Cross. Whereupon the young man answered, Long have I awaited your pleas- ure ; I ' ll join your noble lodge, and perchance I can make men of you. Thereupon it immediately dawned upon this clever youth that this was a step to something higher. I ' ll make my name a power on this noble mountain, said he; I ' ll make my smile and soft words into political timber, and yea, verily, in time I ' ll rule the world. So saying, he enlisted the support of his worthy brothers, and, gathering a few trusted cohorts, went into the market for the Suffragettes. Here again his no- ble smile and soft words stood him well, and his Sophomore slate went through without a murmur. And yet again his worthy following put him on the Student Council. Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul. ' Twas not enough. Now he rallied his forces for a supreme effort, and went out for the Grapes. He and the noble Percy took on the management of the Junior Prom. ' Tis well; the gods smile upon me. ' I have a kingdom beneath my sway. ' My wishes are law and nothing is beyond me. Rash words gushed forth from the garrulous Strick. All things political originate at the Phi Kappa Psi House. If you wish a share of the spoils, consult the Phi Psi ' s. And in another fit of anguish he declared boldly that the noble Percy was a weak sister. It was the beginning of the end. Whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad. He did not see the writing on the wall : God hath numbered thy kingdom and finished it; thou art weighed in the bal- ance and art found wanting ; thy kingdom is divided and given to the Medes and Persians, which, translated into the vernacular, would mean, You are through, Charlie; stop while the stopping is good. But no, Victory had smiled upon him. I ' ll be President, quoth the smiling and soft-tongued Charlie. Again he rallied his tried veterans — and went on to his field of Waterloo. Down with the conqueror! cried the allied Greeks and Barbarians. Not that they loved the noble Webster more, but that they loved Charlie less. When the sun set and the smoke of the battle had cleared away, the peerless Strickland was a beaten man. The Engineers went back to the west end of the mountain, and, swelled with the exuberance of a great victory, cried lustily and with great glee, the motto of the oppressed, Sic Semper Tyrannis! 11 Hi ill ! i I III III 11 1 1 11 Pi III i ! I ill iii iii ill III 389 â– â– â– â– â– IHHI XS « 1 Hi III III ill Bhe JAYHAWKER. W XS i i ill Hi ill III ill — 1 FIRST FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY. Dr. F. H. Snow. i il 11 Prof. D. H. Robinson. Prof. E. J. Rice. ill . sym = SiSSiSSSSsSi 390 1 j ismisss ; I liiiioiiwiiHiiainiriiiiiiioiininnniQiiiiiuiHiitiiniiiiiiriiniiiiiiiHiituiMiiitiiiiiaiiiit nMiiiiiiiiiiaiiniiiMtiiuiinniiinintitiiiiiititnniiiiiuiiiaiioiiiiiiiiaiiirinuiiiaiitiiNiiiiiDnMiiiiiMiDiiHiiiniiiQitiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiMiiiuiioiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiwi Sept. 15. — Student body arriv es, 2300 strong, arrangements to reenroU in Common Law Pleading, its annual bath. P. K. Cubbison completes Alpha Tau house undergoes Sept. 16. — 1914 Jayhawker reported to be on unstable basis. Engineers discover that they have a girl in their midst. Coaches Mosse and Frank make their first prophecy of our ever- victorious team. Sept. 17. — Freshmen from all over the State begin joining Greek letter organiza- tions. Betas reported handicapped. Deny charge, and offer names of two pledges in evidence. Sept. 18. — K. U. band advertises for two fat men to handle the big horn and bass drum. Maloy, Kansan cartoonist, reported to have returned. Faculty hold indignation meeting, Sept. 19. — Homer Hoyt, ' 13, arrested in Kansas City on a charge of vagrancy. Kan- sas Phi Beta Kappas rush to his rescue. List of coming attractions at the Bowersock theatre first published. Several cases im- mediately terminate. Sept. 20 — Nutz Hurst arrives from captivity and is introduced to the Phi Delt pledges. Frank Miller offers explanations. Genevieve Herrick announces at the Kappa Sig party that the Pi Phi arrow stands for speed. Sept. 21. — Russell Clark attends church with Virginia Lucas. Phi Delt pledges de- cide their honor is vindicated. Sept. 22. — Political bee buzzes. Strick- land mentioned as a possible candidate for senior president. The Talbot sisters limit themselves to five dates daily. Student Union petitions circulated. Prof, Flint pledges five hundred dollars ($500). Sept. 23. — University obtains a real pul- aaasi! noi «anrtTa ' w ojufl mi iq atiT rAHr III III ill B § I i i| ill ill si! Ill ill f II n! Hi Hi III III ill 1 1 1 III Hi Iff l|i =$SSSSiSSSSiSiSSSSmSSSSi 391 if! ill ill ill ill III ill Eli ill 5 ! I ill I ss III ill ill III ill ill PI MftTlC SITUATION T 1 .0. NO V-ONCrER ABSURD AND INPO SIBkE, moter. Students now find relief from work by suicide impossible. Alpha Delta Phi so- rority change name, but announce that thej- will continue under the same old policy. Another Jayhawker plan announced. Sept. 24. — University Daily Kansan pub- lishes first editorial of the year. James Al- len arrested for carrying concealed weapons. Noted visiting lecturer in chapel says, My mission is saving girls. Oscar Dingman, who has just come in on a comp. : Great ! — save me a couple. Sept. 25. — Billy Norris in town. Says he is visiting the Sigma Chi house. (Billy, why can ' t you own up We all know about it.) Bunny Wilson looks prosperous. Some one remarks that he must have made a raise. Happy Davidson: He did, confound him, and I raised him back when he held four aces. Thespian and Masque clubs pass into history on the birth of the Hawk Dramatic Club. Dramatic situation no longer absurd and impossible. Sept. 26. — Personnel of University band announced. Great excitement. Bill Weidlein elected captain of the football team and Gladys Clark leaves school. Sigma Nus announce that they have pledged Charles Carmine. Chancellor Strong delivers his annual message to the Kansan. Sept. 27. — Six sororities announce that they have pledged the cream of the Hill. Political literature makes first appearance at Lee ' s. Strickland and Hollo- way pull Alphonso-Gaston stunt for senior president by pitching pennies. Sept. 28. — Bruce Hurd gives out statement that persons who drink beer are common. Sept. 29. — University Council comes to the rescue of the Freshmen and puts taboo on diminutive caps. Margaret Roberts an- nounces to Chi Omega sisters that she has definitely decided to be Mrs. Reed. Sept. 30. — Landladies fin themselves holding the sack for rooms a s fraternity and sorority pledges move out. Mosse and Frank bury the hatchet and start in in earnest for an ever- victorious season. Fac- ulty puts ban on tango. First installment of student janitors start work and buildings remain unswept. Entire chapter of Kappa Sigma appear in monocles. Morris elected cheer-leader and Phi Psis have another can- didate for President of the United States. STUDENT JANITORS COWMiiSfOme t) II ii 1! ill ill III iil III II ill 392 I 1 I K.C. MUMN( EXPRESS OPINION OP otiiveRJiTY OAlUV KANi NN Oct. 1. — Great rejoicing from home on arrival of first checks. Wingart and Howe given a vacation. Phi Delts deny joining tango club for purpose of acquiring steps, saying that all the boys knew them months ago. Phi Gams interpose same defense. Kappas and Pi Phis refuse to answer, on advice of counsel. Oct. 2. — University Daily Kansan an- nounces that it is amused at the action of the Alumni Associations of Missouri and Kansas in making an effort to return the annual game to K. C. Alumni leaders ex- press their opinion of said publicity organ. Oct. 3. — A Burns detective arrives in town for the purpose of making an investi- gation into the social situation at the Uni- versity for K. C. Post. Became engaged to a Chi Omega two hours and forty-five min- utes later, and reported social conditions promising. Jack Challiss delivers oration to first-year men on the necessity of fresh- men caps. Oct. 4. — Kansas eleven fights first battle in mud, and wins from William Jewell, 7 to 0. Mosse and Frank again predict an ever- victorious season. TttETft FReSHMEN PECIOB- TO OUCrftN- Oct. 5. — Theta freshmen decide to or- ganize a Heartbroken Club. Several up- perclassmen qualify and are duly admitted. Charlie Strickland chosen as first rushee and Irene Henshaw appointed to pledge him. Hal Curran receives an Aid to Beauty booklet from the physical training depart- ment. Oct. 6. — Hal Curran has first date with Thelma Welsh. Senior caucus in Myers Hall. Hale Cook rises to the occasion and makes the speech of the evening. Laws and Engineers unite in favor of Holloway, and declare themselves invincible. Beulah Davis again seen at a down-town jewelry store. I i Is 11 11 11 i 3 ii 11 It III i 1 1 i i i lit III ill ill III III ill ill ill Els i i i ill III i i I III , â„¢,â„¢ s , s â„¢, 1 ill III ise III III III III III ill III lis 111 III III III ill ill iil III il! ill ill III III il: il il ill ||; ill 1(3 394 jSj ' %SSSSji«SSiSSSSSSS SI 7«SSSiS« !iS!SiSSiiSSSS 1 (she Hi ii! Ill ill iii Mi iii CHWNC6UL0C RENrtlXKS on PEMOtn Mit bPlRIT Oct. 7. — Zeus Wilcox delivers address on What ' s the Matter with the Student Body? Everybody feels sufficiently squelched. Tik-Tok Man of Oz at the Bowersock. Humphrey Jones et al. make hasty exit from the Hiawatha. Oct. 8. — Sandy Hamilton makes his bi- ennial appearance at the Sig Alph house. Kappa Sigs hold special meeting to discuss plans on how to cut down the high cost of living. Oct. 9. — Politics running on high speed. Chancellor remarks on the democratic at- mosphere at the University. Strickland gives out preelection statement that he can win without the aid of the sissy Engineers. Ruth Harger brings a Beta pin home to the sisters. Oct. 10. — Holloway elected senior presi- dent. Phi Psis admit that their political backbone has received a great shock. Em- met Schooley discovers that Kappas are thinking of giving a spring party, and gov- erns himself accordingly. Oct. 11. — Kansas romps away from Wash- ington U., 55 to 0. Mosse predicts an ever- victorious team. Ji ill iii 1 1 1 iii ill iii iii III |l| 11 ii i i il i i !! ill III ill III III ill III III ill III ill 111 ill III ill i!| iii i I i a a a III |!l PAUL OURBtR READS UTTER or CONGRATULATION- Oct. 12. — Sunday mass meeting in West- minster Hall by suffragettes, to celebrate Etta Smith ' s victory over Ward Hatcher in the senior election. Paul Surber reads letter of congratulation from Mrs. Pankhurst. Oct. 13. — Kansan mentions the annual Phi Delt steak roast. Senior Laws, led by Harry Hand, appear wearing canes and other legal regalia. The Quill Club enter- tains the Student Council. Oct. 14. — Prof. Higgins prepares for his European trip. Phi Kappa Psi announces that it will desist from future political ac- tivity. Prof. Croissant delivers an address to prospective Bible students. i§ ft il Ii 395 S.S,W III III I iShe JAVH 4 WKEF Oct. 15. — Chancellor Strong tries to evade the income tax law. Reports that he believes he can dodge it with the aid of the Legislature. Ruth Buchanan is elected secretary of the College. Prof. Schwegler is proven a good citizen. Bowersock shows A Slave Girl of New York. Pi Phis give a line party. Kansas objects to the complexion of the Nebraska football aggregation. Oct. 16. — Everything still dark at Nebraska. Maurine Fairweather takes Ethel Houston ' s place as the official Phi Delt girl. W. A. Lambert buys a cigar for himself and friend. Tense Rigby withdraws from the University. FlKST COLLEGE PANCt IN iSYM cle in eye) — Bah Jove, it ' s ripping. Oct. 17. — First College dance held in the Gym, under the auspices of the Student Council. Seventeen chaperons present. Twenty-seven original steps of the tango in- troduced. Society for the Prevention of Useless Noises starts c ampaign for reducing the number of ' rahs from three to one. Daily Kansan accused by an enthusiastic freshman of being a necessity. Student body returns verdict of Not guilty. Oct. 18. — Kansas plucks the duck. Score : Kansas 11, Drake 0. Reber makes his famous home run. Heard at the game : Bernice Butts — How do you like my new tango dress ? Hook Coombs (with mono- Bernice — Quick! call a taxi. Oct. 19. — Sam Fairchild sings in the Seventh Baptist (colored) choir. Pastor an- nounces that Mr. Fairchil ' have got some voice. Times dull. Weather clear. Oct. 20. — Senior plums announced. Mad- eline Nachtmann fails to qualify. James Eggleston at last pledges Keltz. Alpha Tans entertain. Some party list! Board of Ad- ministration receives $5000 from the Robin- son estate and is hopelessly at loss what to do with it. J Oct. 21. — Judge Park addresses the law students, and states that none but moral men should be lawyers. Contemplated firm of Buckles McClellen voluntarily dissolves. The Grand President of Alpha Delta Pi visits the Kansas chapter and reports the local scholastic standing as excellent. Oct. 22. — Clark and von Schriltz, after nmch o])position, chosen to suffer Jayhaw ker penalties. Waddel feels safe to reenter school, Webster Kimble and Dr. Burdick take a vacation and attend the nickel show together. The College adopts a distinctive yell. Oam jimg in Choir 11 11 i 396 SS SS«8!S!iSSSi 5iSiSSS SM!iSS!! SSSSSiSSiSSS SiSSSiSSSiSS « Oct. 23. — The Phi (iams start rushing Prof. H. A. Rice. Movie man appears on the Hill. Sowers, as usual, takes a promi- nent part. Remainder of law school poses as the angry mob. Kanaan needs copy, and runs another story about class memo- rials. The first communications on Cheat- ing appear. Marguerite Villepigue elected president of the Botany Club. Oct. 24. — Prof. Stevens says that the thistle is a valuable plant and makes good fodder. Thetas refuse to be fed. Sigma Xi chooses three new brothers. Fox again disap- pointed. Big Aggie rally in chapel. Miss Elisa Butler speaks on national Y. M.-Y. W. work. LMOVIF rviAiN APPEARS Ot THH HILt, — Oct. 25. — Big special leaves for Manhat- tan. Because of a daylight ride, many en- thusiastic rooters remain in Lawrence. All dope upset and Kansas pulls down big end of 26 to score. Oct. 26. — Footz Miller and Emily Berger attend the usual Sunday morning services. Hoarse cohorts return from Manhattan. Oct. 27. — President Dodd issues a firm manifesto against i)addling capless freshmen. University Council approves. Kappa-Pi Phi swinnning match post- poned on account of rain. Pi Upsilon reports that it compares favorably with Sigma Delta Phi, and asks for a national charter. Lieutenant Boddington retires from active political service to enter the practice of law. Oct. 28. — Dean Brown of Yale delivers address on the subject of What is a Real Man. ' Cites A. S(s) Humphrey as an ex- ample. Kansan at last recognizes the fact that the Student Council is under the fac- ulty ' s thumb. Everybody deeply moved. Oct. 29.— Prof. L. N. Flint is asked to attend meeting of Nebraska Alumni Associa- tion, upon supposition of membership. Stu- dent body petitions him to attend for pur- pose of explaining How to Secure a Student Union Building, — When Needed. Oct. 30. — R. L. Moore and George Henry Beach engage in fistic encounter at the Santa Fe depot over Helen and her baggage. Hurray for Moore! Lee pushes introduc- tion of brand of one dollar straight cigars by OCT., 28. «SSSS « -! - ' ' 397 ' Sf mmim m â– â– â– â– iBP â– â– â– â– i fl w ij.; «««SSSSssi S i5SSi i I! iii II 11 IL. ill III ill 11 presenting one to each patron. No excitement. Registrar Geo. O. Foster declares M. E, Church to be most popular among students. Local congregation receives many petitions for membership from social climbers. Nov. 1. — Student Council masquerade in Gym ; Kappas attend en masse. Ed Mer- servy dispenses with the use of a corset as an article of apparel. Nov. 2. — Dot Ellis arrives from Kansas City. Larry Kinnear displays expected in- terest and charters the use of the telephone for the day. Zeke Welsh arrives at the usual hour. Sig Alphs applaud. Kappa Sigs attend Kappa open house as per in- structions in Lawrence Gazette. Nov. 3. — Victor LeMere issues call for chess-players to meet in his room for pur- pose of organizing a chess(. ' ' ) club. Prof. Griffith announces University students to be wholly lacking in art appreciation. Uni- versity Book Store immediately disposes of fifty copies of September Morn. Nov. 4. — The Y. M. C. A. takes charge of the movies for one day. Dean Templin ' s office filled with students who have flunked during the first six weeks. Kansan again runs short of news, and prints a freshman theme on The Spirit of K. U. Varsity parties are taken to down-town halls. Nov. 5, — Dr. Burdick lends the dignity of his presence to the local criminal court. Ladies of the faculty hold a pink tea in Haworth Hall for men students. Engineers and Laws drink a convivial cup of tea. Nov. 6. — Paul Surber makes his weekly trip to Wichita on business. Kan- san reports that smoking on the steps of Green Hall has ceased. Many doubt the seriousness of our daily paper. First announcement that the 1914 Jayhawker will be better than ever. Nov. 7. — The Deutscher Verein announce that they will give a puppet show. Giving the literal translation, material should be plentiful. The art ex- hibit ignominiously retires. Freshmen adopt class emblem, and appear on the Hill wearing monocles. Nov. 8. — Kansas 14 ; Washburn 0. A material victory seems to create more enthusiasm than a moral one. Guy Waldo attempts to vault over barbed-wire fence in the presence of several Pi Phis. He exits hurriedly for the tailor ' s. Nov. 9. — Whole school in a chaotic condition. Athletics, the Student Coun- cil, the Tango and the ever-present Kansan obscure the horizon. Herbert Flint, while endeavoring to clear the atmosphere by means of another one of his strik- ing editorials, exposes himself as a cross between Charles Dana and the famous Emma Goldman. igi III III III ilE ill iii ill I 399 1 1 1 lit III lii ill lii III III i s i III lii III ill ill ill 111 i!i ill ill lii ill 11 11 11 11 Nov. 10. — Dean Templin condescends to receive an introduction to the mem- bers of the Board of Administration. Said Board properly awed. Stub Bene- dict, the pride of Alpha Tau Omega, transfers his attentions to the Alpha Delta Pi ' s. Engineers hold smoker. Nov. 11. — Philosophy Club holds an enthusiastic meeting at the home of Prof. Hollands. Prof. Boynton admitted to membership upon his urgent request. Thirty-one students attend chapel ; Chancellor Strongs feels encouraged. Betas finally make an assessment, and purchase much-needed window curtains. Uni- versity orchestra plays in chapel and proves popular. Herb Flint follows Mrs. Kelley ' s lead and writes a burning editorial against fraternities. Nov. 12. — Senior smoker at Eagle ' s Hall. Overflow of pep let out in monster midnight rally. Kappa Sigs pass a resolution prohibiting von Schriltz from further publication of attempted fiction. Advance guard of Nebraska co- horts arrive. Nov. 13. — Student directories appear. Hopes of down-town merchants are revived as lost addresses are found. Phi Alpha Delts slip one over Judge Smart, and incidentally gain more rushing dope. Bruce Hurd becomes des{)ondent over the situation at the Kappa house, and decides to grow a beard. Nov. 14. — Alpha Delta Pi ' s introduce sorority house wedding. Groom (name unknown) said to have survived. George O. Foster receives a comj). to the Kan- sas-Nebraska game. Decides to give whole family a chance to see a football game. (Later reports : He did.) Nov. 15. — It rained today. Jayhawkers win great moral victory on Mc- Cook field by losing to Nebraska, 9 to 0. When the mud had settled and the at- mosphere had become cleared it was discovered that Morris ' s stuffed Jayhawk bird had disappeared. Later reports from Nebraska cleared the mystery. Miss Hassel Templeton and Mr. W. A. Irwin are joined in the holy bond of matrimony at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Nov. 16. — Lee ' s College Inn feels results of the Nebraska game, pentant students attend church. Manv re- Nov. 17. — University Club formally opens with a reception. Profethor Hod- der installed as president. Even as the Betas aspired to remodeling the Usher house, so did the profs, make a club of the Barn of Usher. Senior Engineers leave on a dam inspection trip to Keokuk and the Missouri game. Honor system dreams are told before breakfast. Nov. 18. — The men of the College eat, drink [ciderj and are merry in Eagles ' Hall. Coaches and Uncle Jimmy predict victory over Missouri morally and mathematically. Morris announces extravaganza in gym. fpTJNIVE:R$ITYW !i li if i i I ill III III ill ill III Iff Iff i r â– i I ' Ss TOsiisiS 400 1 SiSSSiSSSSSSSiSiSSiSSiSS jayha %?:ker, lil Cheers for the Class of 1914! You ' ve accomplished great things. May you be equally suc- cessful all through life. We wish to thank all members of the grad- uating class for the valued patronage you have extended to us during your college life. It ' s our most sincere wish that you may honestly say : I have been well served. Not to us alone but all young men who, in the future, plan to at- tend good old K. U. Just say to them : First Quality — First Style — Prices as low as Honest Goods can be sold. That ' s our slogan. Do we not live up to it. After locating and starting in on your life ' s work remember that our excellent clothes service is ever available. Our various catalogues will be interesting. Our mail order department very effi- cient. sssssssss ssm s lil III III i I -I III III ill III ill ill lil ill 401 i§ i § 1 1 I § 11 il |i il Nov. 19. — Paul Kenneth Cubbison, erstwhile University of Michigan stu- dent(?), injures his arm while slipping the Pachacamac grip. Perf Sowers offers prayer of thanks that it was Cubby and not himself who suffered the disa- bility. Nov. 20. — Ad Hades Cum High School Pins edict issued by Student Council. Kansan prints names of those pledged for Missouri trip. Morris holds extrava- ganza in gym. It took the audience fif- teen minutes to leave the building — one was asleep and the other had a charley- horse. More rain. Football rally in South Park. Daily Kansan announces the Ar- rival of Brown Heir. Nov. 21. — The midnight choo-choo leaves for old Missou. Kansas spirit runs high. The Honorable Order of Bums has large increase in membership. The co-eds. 1 ook enviously on as the train pulls out, and fervently pray for suffrage. Nov. 22.— K. U. fortunates take Co- lumbia by storm (but nothing else). Wel- comed by the Engineers and Prof. Rice. John Gleissner leads Missouri alumni parade. Uncle Jimmy has a front row seat in the Kansas rooting section, but is helpless. Score: Missouri 3, Kansas 0. Are we discouraged .f Decidedly not. Nov. 23. — K. U. band increases to 250 men on return trip from Columbia. Florence Finch Kelley visits at the Phi Pi house, and proceeds to roast all Greek- letter organizations on the Hill. Nov. 24. — Muddy field for Law Scrim. Senior Engineers back from dam(p) trip. Soph Bum in gym. Von Sch riltz enter- tains the women of Law School at Lee ' s. Nov. 25. — The mysterious disappearance of one Jack Fullerton of the K. U. Panta- torium. Nov. 26. — Hungry studes chase home for Thanksgiving turkey. Dean Templin and would-be Dean Thorpe depart on trips. Lawrence Pug Morris bids Josephine a fond farewell at 10 : 45 ; ditto Virginia at 11 : 15. Frank Henderson decides to spend his vacation in Lawrence. Hub Kane de- parts for Abilene to ask Papa Harger. Dec. 1. — The Greeks prove themselves guiltless of Mrs. Kelley ' s charges. Chancellor starts his Mosse-back talk. Juniors stuck six bits for a memorial. Ill !|i III III III III III 111 ||l III I i I ill 402 ss sis The McAllister Loose-Leaf Record System Has been introduced in upwards of 200 Cities and Counties of 13 States in less than 30 Months. Why Because It Is EFFICIENT — It promotes efficiency in the clerical work of the schools. COMPREHENSIVE — It meets all the requirements of the modern public school, whether high, elementary, or rural. INDIVIDUAL — It recognizes the importance of the individual as the unit of instruction . ACCURATE — It emphasizes and secures accuracy in the compilation of data. TIME-SAVING — By it the superintendent can refer to any record in- stantaneously. COMPACT — Each form is large enough for its purpose, no larger. Investigate and you will introduce it, too. Inquire regarding The McAllister Loose- Leaf System for Graded Sunday Schools. The School Record PubUshing Co. (Incorporated.) A. J. McAllister, President. V. M. Collins, Sec.-Treas. W. J. Benjamin, Mgr. Printing. Room 6, Bowersock Theatre Bldg., LAWRENCE, KANSAS. We Specialize in High Class Job Printing for Particular Peopl e III III ill ill ill III ill III iii J s 5 - I I I 403 i 404 Jm ill || III Two W. S. G. A. members have dates. Guess who? Univ ' ersity is threatened with an epidemic of country clubs. Dec. 2.- — Y. W. C. A. discusses the honor system. Jayhawker price goes up twenty-five cents. Dr. Day advises girls to prepare hope boxes. Dr. L. B. Mendel of Yale talks in chapel. Dec. 3. — The Alpha Taus circulate petitions on the coaching situation. Adams street becomes Fourteenth street. The lid is [)ut on Fraser lunch. A heavy dew keeps the class football artists indoors. Dec. 4. — Faculty discusses honor sys- tem. Wind artists try out. For band. ' No, for debate. Dec. 5. — Chancellor Strong declares him- self for the honor system. Francisco Hun- singer et al. smile as J. Pluvius calls in time for the Law Scrim. The large number of strangers at the Scrim, discovered to be members of the team disguised in spiketails. Universitj Club holds reception. Dec. 6. — Phi Delta Theta entertains the Topeka high school at a dance. Dec. 7. — Beatch and Helen have their weekly tete-a-tete at Lee ' s. Dec. 8. — O. P. Leonard has a pressing engagement in parts unknown. Kansan again says that it prints nothing but bona fide communications. Y. M. C. A., after due consideration, would adopt honor sys- tem. Gaby Desly ' s ad. appears in the Kan- san. Dr. Hall talks in chapel and advo- cates early marriages. Dec. 9. — Dutch Detwiler elected cap- tain of 1914 football team. General senti- ment against immediate adoption of the .. a til ill III It! ill 40v5 he JAV mMKERS issssjssssm s -ssssssisis s SsSS S mSs III ill III III ill III III ill III ill § § i iii III 111 ill ill ill ill ill ill III III iii III 406 - AURORA 5H0W3 rM(fi PICTURES, honor system. Prof. Cady has appendix taken out and becomes social leader of the Hill. Aurora shows tango pictures. The Chancellor and Prof. Murray seen in the audience. University orchestra plays in chapel. Dec. 10. — Chancellor Strong calls a mass meeting in chapel, and makes appealing speech for the square deal in the coach- ing situation. Enthusiastically supported by the students, and holiday is declared in honor of fair play day. Attendance at football smoker small. Plymouth and West- minster guilds hold rushing parties. Stu- dent Council hold an all-day meeting, and report all matters laid on the table. Dec. 11. — Board of Administration ap- proves of the Junior Memorial plan. Skat- ing rink opens. K. U. women learn to soften steaks. Sowers and Morris, as- sisted by several others, give Glee Club concert. Dec. 12. — The State Board of Health in- terests itself in the University students, and orders Lawrence Water Co. to turn off drink- ing-water. Curtis Guild, Ambassador to Russia, speaks in chapel. Jayhawker man- agement submit resolutions to the Board x rz., 12. of Administration to make six-dollar Annual fee compulsory. Engineers dance in gym. Jack Greenlees, after three years ' faithful work on the Kansan, is elected to the Board. Dec. 13. — Class football starts. Seniors fall before Sophomore onslaught. Fresh- men and Juniors tie. Laws hold dance at Ecke ' s and introduce new steps learned at the Aurora. Y. W. C. A. declares that the movies are degrading. Dec. 14. — Lefty Sproull, Larry Kinnear and others tell why they are not members of the Y. M. C. A. Reasons obvious. Oread Tea Room feeds several couples. Sigma Chis have annual Christmas Tree. Helen Crane receives large Sig pin with 11 = ill is til iii III i I ! I S : ' i 1 1 J i . 1 t J i f . . r 3She.mm m M mmR. |i I! ii 11 11 ii IE it IJ The Strength of a Bank The strength of a Bank hes in its capital, its assets, its his- tory, and the character, stand- ing and aibilty of its Directors and Officers who conduct its affairs. Combining all these elements to an eminent degree, this Bank invites the addition of the names of all University people to its roll of patrons. This invitation is extended to all who contemplate moving to Lawrence to take advantage of the Universitv. ' - sf........... ,,,. U| The LaAvrence National Bank si ii ii Ii i| 407 IS% Casswell ' s name on back. Amid general congratulations she admits that she always did want one. Dec. 15. — Dean Blackmar sent to Lan- sing penitentiary — to make report. Rumor sees resignation of Chancellor Strong for western position. Board of Administration grants six degrees. Dec. 16. — Student Council discusses the plan of bonding pantatorium managers. Discussion is laid on the table. Miss Jess Thomas sings in chapel. W. S. G. A. calls off week-night date rule. Dec. 17. — Prof. Boynton asks Hump Jones to define love. Hump, in the presence of several Chi Omegas, blushingly refuses to answer the question. W. S. G. A. gives another Christmas present to the boys. Dec. 18. — First delegation of students leaves for home. Y. W. and Y. M. C. A. hold their Christmas parties. Cases take their farewell stroll after library hours. Christmas parties much in vogue. Dec. 19. — Off for the holidays. Thank you. Same to you. Jan..5--3QY N on MT. Ol EAD Jan. 5. — Secretary of State Bryan climbs Mount Oread and speaks to 3000. Two more Sigma Kappas appear with sparklers. Mildred Cole exhibits the hope box from Davy. Jan. 6. — Cupid ' s arrow brings down two Pi U. ' s. Rumor has it that Kappa Sig Allie (the freshman, not the rear street) has been hit also. Sigma Chi ark scorched. Casswell is overcome while rescuing Helen ' s picture. Iffll â– SSSS S i Ss ill ill ill III ill i i I lit Iff I i i III III III I i i ttl If! ill Hi i i I i ! E III III ill ill Hi III I!! iii lie Iii ill iii III lit ill 111 Hi ill Iii ill III ill III III ll! ill III ill 111 III 408 m Jan. to 18. Jan. dates. Ja . 7. — Basket-ball season opens. Jayhawks win first game over Aggies, 22 Sam Fairchild prepares to take his regiment to Mexico. 8. — Kappas announce spring party. Hoot Albaugh begins calling up for Jan. 9. — Maud Lourey appears on the Hill in white pumps and white linen skirt. Tango goes unmolested at the Student Council dance. Joe Howard has coat cleaned with coke at Weidie ' s. 10. - On wiTM Tht BANCt, , Lsr JOY BE UNRtflNE-D ' Jan. 10. — On with the dance, let joy be unrefined. Prof. Twenhofel says, Do any- thing you want to, but hold one hand out to the side. Lucile Smith and Helen Hershberger happy. Jan. 11. — Pinky Painter resumes his duties at the Sigma Kappa house after an absence of two weeks. Jan. 12. — Vaudeville theatre opens. Phi Psis occupy the front row. Prof. Murray issues a tango tea bluff — but it works. Glee Lawrence Real Estate We have on liand at all times a large list of residence property for sale or rent and specialize on finding houses for rent for parti es who are contemplating mov- ing to Lawrence to take advantage of the University. It would be wise for you to send your application in at once to be placed on our files, which will en- able us to keep you posted on the changes and splendid bargains offered. We own and control 50 of the vacant property in Lawrence. We also have a large list of suburban properties and farms in Douglas and adjoining counties, of which we would be glad to send you a list, prices, etc. Money on hand at all times to loan on First Mortgages. O. H. McQUARY, Jr. Rooms 1 and 2 Leader Building. Phones : Home, 1076. Bell, 982. Wilson ' s The Popular Drug Store Good Soda A Fine Line of Candy Pure Drugs Perfumes and Toilet Waters of the Best Kodak Supplies Open 365 days in the year. 1101 Massachusetts Phones 678. ill ««S5««S«WS« 409 SSSSSSSSSiiSiSSSSSSiSS (she jKYim mmsm ill ill iii If! jll ii III III ill ill ill 8 i i !!l iii S S i iff ill ill fli I!! ill III ill jll Ii! iii Iii 1 1 i iii ii! i|5 ill iii III ica WHERE STUDENTS GO COLLEGE BOOK STORE Half-way down the hill from Library, Lawrence, Kansas club returns and Sowers is forced to admit that Morris is ])retty good. Jan. 13. — Guy Waldo and Flossie Kincaid attend the tango tea. Student volunteers speak in chapel. Herr Wingate, the tangoist from New York, dances for the benefit of newspapermen, the University Council, and officers of the law. Jan. 14. — Prof. Twenhofel chaperones a Wednesday night dance. Orignates the Twenhofel glide. Jan. 15. — Juniors compelled to shell out six bits for memorial fee. Croissant comes out for simplified spelling. Did you ever have a course under him ? Jan. 16, — Nell refuses to allow Perf to take part in Hawk show, and dramatics at the University go to smash. K. U. again wallops Washburn — this time in bas- ket-ball. Jan. 17. — Women ' s Pan-Hellenic dance at Ecke ' s. Some tango fest, believe us. Did you ever see The Fire-Fly ? Jan. 19. — Prof. Blackmar appointed head i g i ill ««%ssss«sssiss «SSSiSSSSSSSSSSSSiSmiSiSSi SSmi 410 I— I â– I 11 I! of the prison commission. Twenhofel shows his geology class that he can throw as well as tango. Breaks insulators and hot-foots it into town with Santa Fe cops on trail. Jan. 20. — Lawrence pool halls ordered closed the first of next year. City Council also threatens to close Sunday schools, as children might get their feet dirty crossing the streets. Prof. Dykstra announces himself as an understudy of Caruso. Jan. 21. — FF posters appear — also the smallpox. Kappa Sigs quarantined and juniors hold a smokeless smoker in the gym. Chains required to keep Lon Buzick from leaving the house. Jan. 23. — Mrs. Eustace Brown appointed Dean of Women. The Mu Phis give a musicale chocolate. Twenny gets a pardon and breathes easy once Jan. 23. — Kappas consult negro fortune- teller, and on her advice all are vaccinated. Drs. Naismith and Johnson scratch free of charge. Some chickens. Jam., Zb. MPPA5 VACCfNATEO. AND IS YOUR ARM AWFUL 50RL QW MY YE5 ARM IS VEQY 50(?E Jan. 24. — Paul Surber accepts position to teach English in Syria at $1000 a year. Ralph Wiley goes as alternate. Jan. 25. — A playet in two scenes, entitled Dinner at Lee ' s, or How to Get a Free Lunch. Time, Sunday night. Scene, at Lee ' s. One vacant table. Enter Art Perry and another Beta with Lucile Smith and an- other Pi Phi. They sit down at table, leav- ing two vacant chairs, and order a large, a very large, dinner. Enter Scott Griesa and a Sigma Kappa. They accept the inevita- ble, take the only vacant chairs, and order. The same waiter has taken both orders. With bland smiles the Betas bring up the subject of the weather, and they all dis- cuss it. Betas slow up, and they all finish eating at the same time. Enter Ike, the waiter. His lines, To whom shall I make out the check ? Art glances mean- ingly across the table and Scott gets the check for six dinners. Scott again accepts the inevitable. Betas, with dates, rise in satisfied manner and walk out the door as the cash register rings behind them. Curtain. Jan. 26. — Flunks and Conditions Removed by Mail reads a iS an aw head- line. Postoffice authorities make arrangements to put on extra force after Feb. 7. Chancellor Strong promises to warble at the Y. M. jubilee. Jan. 27. — Examination schedule posted. First signs of spring fever appear. Evelyn Strong and Hoot Albaugh attend the Pink Lady. Jan. 28. — Emmett Schooley finds it hopeless to get a Kappa original, and so casts himself upon the Pi Phis. George Edwards is found smoking on the law steps, and is called up before the W. S. G. A. Ill I i i III ill i § s i ! i i ! I III i i i III ill ill 3 S 5 III III III ill III ill HI III . 1 «««Si5«SSJMSSSSi 411 â– .«SVV«S« WjS! III I 3 I III III i i I III III III ii 11 ii Ae_„JAYM®iMKER. A FAMILIAR SCENE Lee ' s College Inn ill sas ill i i ! I 1 1 Ii! Hi ! i I III III I I if! Ill !i ii lij ii, i i 412 w ' . m m mm smmmmsmmimmsmsm III ill III iii ill I i I ill ' A AYM mM m. Jan. 29. — Senior play cast announced. Chancellor sings at the Y. M. C. A. Herb Flint sings his Swan Song in one burning, stinging, knocking Socialistic editorial, and the Student Council heaves a sigh of relief. Jan. 30. — Clarence mends the Theta walk. Skilton ' s orchestra has concert. Leslie Dodd and Cora Lewis learn the Castle walk. Jan. 31. — Exams start. Students grab all available dope to shoot in arms. Feb. 2. — The administration of Herbert Flint, as editor of the Kansan, comes to an end. We pause to drop a tear. Splash ! Feb. 3. — Mgr. Hamilton issues his annual bluff of taking up Student Enterprise tickets. The ivory domes in the city council vote to oust the pool halls. O death, where is thy sting? Perf Sowers calls another meeting of the Hawk Dramatic Club. One Hawk and one carrier pigeon present. Feb. 4. with men. -Thirteen Pi Phis turn out to Wednesday night ])rayer meeting- THE Commencement season is again with us, as is the sweet girl graduate and the pretty Commencement gown. Veritable buds of physical and intellectual beauty, bedecked and embowered in May ' s most gorgeous floral tributes, are the idol of the hour, to whom we bow the willing knee. Nothing would be more appropriate or surer of being aj)])reciated in the line of presents than a box of Wiedemann ' s Fine Candy ill iii III III ill III III iii III W. A. GUENTHER STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES Telephone 226 721 MASS. STREET LAWRENCE, KANSAS III ill III ill ill III i S i ill ||! ill 41S Lsp - PROTCH TAILOR DIAMONDS Ed.W. Parsons 717 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas CUT GLASS JEWELRY C LARK LEANS LOTHES White Front Pantatorium Kennedy Ernst Robeson ' s Sure-Ed e Cutlery and D. M. Athletic Goods 826 Mass. St. Phone 341. Lawrence, Kan. Cleanliness is next to Godliness. If you can ' t be both you can at least trade at The College Inn Shop. BERT WADHAMS Reynolds Bros. Confectionery Ice Cream and Cold Drinks Party Ice Cream Orders a Specialty 1131 Mass. Phone 645 Bell rm, 6. vSrUDENt COUNCll. 5U3PEN05 rWO VICIOUS STUDENTS Feb. 5. — Lefty Sproull scores with Am Smith at the Theta house. Ralph Yeoman attends Y. M. C. A. cabinet. Feb. 6. — Emerging from its prolonged stupor, the Student Council suspends two vicious students who were dragging sto- gies on the Law steps. Quiz week ends. Kansas five throws the hooks into Wash- ington U. Feb. 1.- — Saturday night. Usual excite- ment prevails in the down-town district. Three nickels and two pool halls running open. Curses ! Feb. 8. — Snow-storm cuts down student attendance at church. So cold that the Kappa Sigs are kept busy all day stirring the chips. Feb. 9. — Enrollment. Templin reigns su- preme in the gym, and a general ball-up of everything occurs. Dykstra ' s classes first to close. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread. Pi U house burns. Moral : Don ' t blow out the gas. Feb. 10. — Captain-elect Detwiler goes to Kansas City to have operation. Telling SSSSSSSiSiS «%sss II II 11 If i I sssis 414 •I I I [3 W. A. Dunmire Fancy Groceries 935 Mass. St. Both Phones 58 Dick Brothers Leading Druggists 747 Massachusetts Street Theo. Lieben Theatrical, Masquerade Carni- val and Lodge Costumes, Wigs and Beards Made to order and for rent. Mail order business a specialty. 809 Main Street, Kansas City, Mo. ANDERSON ' S OLD STAND RESTAURANT JOHNSON TUTTLE, Props. Dealers in Confectionery, Cigars, Tobacco, etc. 715 Mass. Street LAWRENCE, KANSAS him Good-by, Bill Morton says, Well, have a good time, old boy. Faculty urge an honor sentiment, not an honor system. Pretty sensible for the faculty. Another last call for Annual dope. Feb. 11. — Fine goes on at the Kappa house for cussing. Twenty-five cents for damn, one dollar for anything worse. We will reform. Dance at Ecke ' s and a musical comedy at the Bowersock herald a holiday. DeLongy makes his d but with Jessie. Feb. 12. — Lincoln ' s birthday. Knowledge farm deserted. O that great men were born every day! Feb. 13 (Friday).— Phi Psis get pulled for coasting, and blame bad luck on the jinx, Others, fostering superstitions, disappointed because they were not in the party. Engineers decide on memorial bust of Dean Marvin. Feb. 14. — Con Squires finally decides to take Harry Staley ' s picture. Man seen entering the Kappa house. Those bill collectors will go anywhere. Phi Delt Matinee Mess. Linen closet kept locked and scandal goes begging. ySSiSSiSSSSiSSSSSiSSMSSSSSSSSSSSS § I E ill III III i § i III III III III III BBS ill i i i 415 jjSHi, ilWffff Sff The Reasons IT 7 _ 1_ _ _ 1_ Is The Best Why The Wabash Road TO ST. LOUIS BECA USE It is the shortest line. It operates the greatest service FOUR STEEL TRAINS EACH WAY DAILY Its trains leave Kansas City at convenient hours: 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m., 9:00 p.m., 11:30 p.m. Its trains ' regularity is superior to all. Its trains are absolutely protected by block system. Its trains carry electric-lighted equipment and dining-car ser- vice. Its track is the smoothest, its line the straightest across the State, and riding is made easy by the elasticity of its roadbed. Its Delmar Avenue and Vandeventer Avenue Stations are a great convenience for passengers desiring to reach the West End of St. Louis. E Berths and Tickets at 903 Main Street OR Union Station KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI J. D. McNAMARA, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Mo. J. J. SHINE, Western Passenger Agent, Kansas City, Mo. m iil iii III i Si Hi ill iii ii 11 Ii Ii 416 I Si piSiSSMSSiS S«S!SiN«S III ill III i i i ill lii ill lii III !!! l!i III ill lii LinCCln ' s eiRTHPAt NO MORNINO CLA55t5 Feb. 15. — Betas entertain visiting high- school students at dinner. Cries and de- mands for food and the loving-cup issue out of the cellar from the lusty throats of Haworth, Sweeney, George Henry Beach, Johnson, Gleissner, Banker, etc., etc. Feb. 16.— K. U. beats the Aggies 61 to 24 on track. The farmers made better time at Manhattan last fall (ask Butch Stu- ewe), Feb. 17. — Geo. Foster issues statistical table of scholarship. Entirely favorable to Phi Beta Kappa. Ed. Howe in chapel. He nominates the Chancellor for the Senate. Sooner or later the bacillus bites us all. Girls ' Glee Club gives concert and Roland Boynton attends. Severe colds keep six of the prima donnas off the program. Feb. 18.— Lora McKay gets $5000 dam- ages from the Lawrence street railway com- pany. That ' s where our nickels go. Pan-Hellenic smoker at F. A. A. hall. George Edwards pulls off some of his rough jokes and disproves the charge made against the Phi Psis at last year ' s smoker. 1915 Jayhawker election. Two men in race : both elected. ___ Feb. 19. — Irene Henshall, unaccompanied by Charles Strickland, sprains her ankle oj ' the Hill. Feb. 20. — Scooj) Club gasps once and again settles in its grave. Big Union Building rally attended by 200 of Duke Kennedy ' s cohorts. Fifteen sign up to support the Union. The Torch burns brightly and catches nine brainy coeds in its flame. Language department turns out for German play. Lucile Smith re- ported dead. Feb. 21. — Kansan denies report that Lucile Smith is dead. The editor ac- knowledges mistake after conferring with Art Perry. Theta Taus pledge nine. Feb. 22 (Sunday) . — Missed a chance for a holiday. Caswell bids farewell to Sigma Chi and Helen. He pleads with Admiral Coolidge to stay by the good old ark. Florence Fuqua cuts Y. W. C. A. meeting to have a date. (Shock! Shock!) Feb. 23. — John Madden writes an editorial on breaking city ordinances and 11 i i 11 !l II II tl 11 11 II IP li III lii III ill ill lii ill ill Hi III I i I ill III iii i S i iii 417 â– l ' ' I niw— cF ije .jAYim mi m IF YOU HAVE VALUABLE PAPERS, SILVER, or OTHER BULKY ARTICLES, you should place them in one of our SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES while you are gone on your SUMMER VACATION. WE HAVE A LARGE STORAGE VAULT in which to keep your Valuables safe from fire and theft. The rate is very low. A GREAT MANY of the K. U. students send us their money for safe-keeping, while they are earning it during the sum- mer months, so that when they return to school it is here for them. We would be pleased to have you do this this summer. Just mail it to us ; we will pay you three per cent interest for the time it is in our hands. Perkins Trust Company 700 Massachusetts Street : Lawrence, Kansas ill ill the results therefrom. Calls attention of police to card-tackers and urges them to do their duty. Professors attend gas hearing at Topeka and return with full stock. Feb. 24. — Senior play. Spud Fischer, the sweet singer of the senior class, makes his debut and exit all in one evening. Lucy Culp and Mary Stanwaity receive call from Orpheum manager, but refuse to sign con- tract until end of school. Kappas take their suit under advisement. (More Panta- torium trouble. ' ) Feb. 25. — The Jayhawks defeat the Mis- souri Tiger at basket-ball, 38 to 22. Oread Magazine appears. Pink Wingert, ex- scandal-spreader, thinks his calling his short stories instead of big ones. He gets away with one about as well as he does the other. Feb. 26.— Pussy-foot Johnson, of the local police force, is riled by Madden ' s con- tinued attacks on his inefficiency, and gets hot on the trail of poster-tackers. Frats initiate fifty-eight of the cream from the short-grass. K. U. 31, Mo. 18. {Calendar continued on page 4S8.) ii ' iSiSSSSSSSiSiSiiSi 418 Ill i I { ill lis A s (SpSSS5;SSSSS â– SSSSSiSiSSiS S! 419 asE «p CRANE COMPANY Topeka : Kansas 45 Years in Topeka, 45 Years in Kansas, Furnishing Crane Quality All the Time. WE RESPECTFULLY SOLICIT YOUR ORDERS FOR PRINTING BINDING PUBLISHING RULING ENGRAVING LITHOGRAPHING ELECTROTYPING STEREOTYPING TYPEWRITERS TYPEWRITER SUPPLIES (Carbons, Typewriter Papers, Oil and Ribbons) TYPEWRITER REPAIRS OFFICE AND HOUSE SAFES SAFE REPAIRS (Combinations Changed and Safes Opened) FILING DEVICES BOOKCASES METAL FURNITURE EVERY KNOWN LOOSE LEAF DEVICE and in fact every single article needed for the furnishing of an office. All county, city, township and school-district records and blanks in stock. Please write for our full illustrated Catalogue. We print High School and College Annuals. We printed THE JAYHAWKER. How does our work impress you ? m V ii 420 KSirn li If II li i I II II li li ]i es i| i! If I i I I If ft w li if I i ii 11 is I i ii ss ii |i Si it i| 11 ! i ' !S Mere Man Dissembles. By E. Wayne Wingart. ALBERT, I must have a new dress, Mrs. Hawkins said with as much au- thority as she could muster without rousing the ire of her husband. Mrs. Seton ' s reception has been announced, and you know I ought to go. I have worn that last afternoon dress of mine so often that I am ashamed to be seen in it again. Another new dress! exclaimed her husband, dropping the newspaper which contained the account of his last speech in the mayoralty race. If it isn ' t a new hat it ' s a dress. I don ' t see why you women can ' t wear clothes as long as men do. If I was to throw a suit away after I had worn it a dozen times I ' d go bankrupt. Besides, you know I have put a lot of money into this campaign, and if I don ' t get elected I ' ll have to sell twice as much coal next year in order to get on my feet. With this emphatic declaration of his position Mr. Hawkins dismissed the sub- ject from his mind and began figuring on the back of an envelope the number of votes he ought to get in each ward. He found he was a just little bit shy in the First and Second wards, where the labor people were strong. Mrs. Hawkins, how- ever, was not so easily put off. She had her heart set on having a new dress for the Seton reception, and had been planning her social conquest ever since she had received the invitation three weeks before ; but she had waited until what she thought the opportune moment before talking with her husband on the painful subject of dresses. I don ' t much care whether I go to the reception or not, but I thought a mayor ' s (to-be) wife should go, Mrs. Hawkins remarked quietly as she turned the pages of the novel she was reading. How many votes will I get if you go to the reception, I ' d like to know. You don ' t suppose the women ' s ballots will be enough to make up for the losses in the First and Second, do you. ' ' her husband growled as he thought of the money it took to buy gowns for his wife and daughter. There was a strained silence, as just before a combat when the two adver- saries are sizing up the strength of each other. Mrs. Hawkins ' face betrayed a faint flicker of a smile of confidence. She had not been planning these three weeks and more for nothing. Besides, she was just at this time reaching what she thought to be the height of her social career. If she could be the most stunningly gowned woman at Mrs. Seton ' s reception her aim would be reached. The society reporter of the Capital would notice it, and perhaps would not be satisfied with an elaborate description of the gown but would want her picture to decorate the middle col- umns of the society page. Her husband, on his part, wore an impassive expression, into which seemed to steal a hint of resignation as if he knew that he would have to submit sooner or later. Yet he tried hard to trick his conscience into believing that he was still boss of his own household. Just as Mr. Hawkins was contem- plating another argument against extravagant dresses, his daughter rushed into the room with all her twenty years of happiness bubbling forth in vivacity. Whew! I ' ll go and get my coat, she exclaimed as she forced a shiver over her body, trying to indicate the coolness of the atmosphere in this particular room. What ' s the matter. Father figure he is going to lose the election and taking it out on you. Mother. ' No, Florence, I was just talking about going to the Seton reception, and your father does not want me to go, her mother answered calmly. With a surprised look Florence Hawkins, who was a pupil of the new school, began a mixed lecture on woman ' s suffrage, — the force of many women ' s clubs as parts of a winning political machine, and the power of advertising. What could a poor man do against two women ? Competing with one is a sufficient task for any one time. Mr. Hawkins did not know whether to resign himself to his fate or de- clare emphatically that he did not think a newspaper could wield influence through its society columns. He soon decided, however. is is ii ii ii ii ii ii ii i i !i 11 S i II ' fwf ' j f wj!! !J Wf ' VN .VWiM;iWtMMM«MNWIWNlMMMM 421 • a« '  '  wT7S55=5is ' ' â– . sssss sssssssss ssssss sssss Just one thing required to convince you of the deHciousness of Meadow-Gold Butter. Try it. It ' s the butter that ' s going into hundreds of thou- sands of homes all over the country. Don ' t think that the tasty, fine-flavored Meadow- Gold Butter may be too high priced. Meadow-Gold Butter never soars like some butters. You will find when you settle down to using it regularly that you can always get it when you want it and you can always buy it at a reasonable price. Made only from pasteurized cream. Send us your order to-day. s £ E 9fi§ if W II ill ill ill S|i ill ill ill III ill If! Ill li! til i i i III III ill 111 i i i III ill ill lit jif III j!l ill ill ill jli Mi iii lit I i ! ill |i! A nice, original gown will catch the eyes of the society reporters and they will write a long description of it, and the women will vote for it. Then they will vote for you, Mrs. Hawkins explained, although she knew very well that the gown would bring more popularity to her than votes to her husband. I don ' t think a long description of your gown in the newspapers will do me one bit of good at the election. In fact, it is liable to hurt me, Mr. Hawkins de- clared. But as soon as he caught the look on his wife ' s face he added, But if you think it will, I am willing to give you the money for the gown. Mr. Hawkins struggled rather stubbornly, but he was unable to escape the kisses that his wife and daughter so generously bestowed upon him. If there was any- thing the head of the Hawkins family did not like, it was being kissed. He had long since lost the inspiration of a kiss, in his efforts to sell coal at a p rofit while competing with natural gas. During the three weeks preceding the Seton reception the Hawkins home was ablaze with excitement. There were trips to Mme. Daphne ' s to look at gowns, and then there were trips to try on the gowns. If the chauffeur had told Mr. Hawkins the amount of gasoline the women used every day in going to town, there would have been one coal merchant and candidate for the mayorship of Kewanee who would have helped boost the high cost of living with a raise in the price of coal. The modiste, being a most up-to-date person, showed Mrs. Hawkins a diaphanous gown of pink and silver, with the explanation that all women were wearing younger clothes this year. Of course I might put a thin layer of chiffon for the under-drapery, the sales-lady said, as she detected hesitation on the part of her customer. Mrs. Hawkins said that she would like something more modest. She did not want the society reporters to describe her as a vaudeville queen. After much deliberating and choosing and rejecting, she and her daughter finally picked out a gown that they thought would fit the occasion most admirably. It was not an ultra-fashionable creation, yet it was smart. It was a lingerie gown, with silken cords at the neck and wrists and a long broad sash of blue charmeuse embroidered in chenille at the waist. The lines of the frock were held smartly by two puffed tunics. The simplicity of the gown displayed the delicacy of the handkerchief linen, broken at intervals with lines of drawn work. The modiste confidently de- clared that she had not made such a gown in years, and that it was the most unique she had ever seen. There was no doubt in her mind but that it would attract much attention at the swell reception. The newspapers of Kewanee, the Capital especially, were playing, as they say in the reporters ' room, the coming election and the Seton reception strong. Politics always is good news, and when one of the city ' s highest society women decided to invite one thousand guests, more than anyone before her had ever invited to a reception, the society reporters raved ; anything to break up the monotony of afternoon teas, bridge parties, whist clubs, and weddings. The society columns of the Capital had been heralding the Seton affair for weeks. Each day the articles were longer and seemed to be leading up to a climax, which of course would be the story of the reception. The ladies of the town who had been invited were being worked to a feverish heat over the event ; then suddenly the Capital ' s news of the reception slumped from a half-column to three lines. Mrs. Thomas B. Seton will entertain tomorrow afternoon at her home, 31 East Forty-third street. One thousand invitations have been issued. This short announcement aroused the curiosity of Mrs. Hawkins. She won- dered what was the matter with Miss Welch. Her anxiety was so strong that she called the Capital office by ' phone. Hello! Yes, this is the society reporter, was the answer Wilson politely gave Mrs. Hawkins as he scowled to himself. But I always thought they had a woman society reporter, Mrs. Hawkins said, still curious. ill III III III Iii ill III III ill III ill 111 ill iii ill ill ss i  p 1 ill i|i ill III III III ill III i|l III lis III ill III ill ill III 3 I i ill ill ill s s e I 3 i III ill III ii| III lis lii III III ill III III III !!l i ii II! ISi ill ii! ill I i I III ill i S i sag lii ill ill iii isi iSiSSSSiSSSSiSSSS«SSSiS«SSSSi« 424 KL ta mhe JAVHi WKERi iSl III III I i i s i ill ill 111 That is generallj the custom, replied Wilson as he adjusted the receiver to his ear and thought of the shortest explanation he could give, for he had been asked the same question a dozen times already. Miss Welch, who is the regular society reporter, was called away suddenly and I am substituting in her place. Was there something you wanted? Oh, no. I just wanted to talk to Miss Welch, thank you, came the answer, as the receiver sputtered in Wilson ' s ear. Well. I ' ll be — ! This was as far as Wilson got. Clark, who was now doing police court in Wilson ' s place, was kind enough to remind him of his position. Perfect society ladies don ' t swear, Miss Wilson, he remarked satirically as he left the room. At that moment the air around the society reporter ' s desk in the Capital office was so heavily charged that a Marconi operator would have been able to get an S. O. S. call without much trouble. Wilson was anything but calm. In his college days he had had one particular aversion, and that was women dressed in gaudy finery and parading like peafowls. Then he did not have to be in their company if he did not want to ; but now he was face to face with a job that thrust him into this very thing he loathed. But with a landlady to pay, the restaurant man to satisfy each week, and a few bills for clothing, he could not quit his job now. There was nothing to do but tackle the job. He had not been used to running away from disagreeable things when he was in college; but he was sorely tempted to begin running at this very minute. Why did the boss pick on me? Wilson asked himself, but was unable to find a satisfactory explanation, except that he supposed somebody had to be plucked and he was the unlucky one. If I could just write what I want to about these weddings and things, I ' d be all right, he thought to hinself, but I can ' t. I ' m in a heluva fix. Eastman, the managing editor of the Capital, was careful to impress it upon Wilson ' s mind that the Seton reception was the biggest social event of the season, and that the gowns of the women in the receiving line should be described fully, with an extra amount of space for Mrs. Seton. So that afternoon the only man society reporter in Kewanee went to the newsdealers and purchased the latest copy of Vogue and several other fashion magazines. What you goin ' to do — start a ladies ' furnishing house or buy a wedding gown? one of his policemen friends accosted him as he turned the corner. No, I am the S. R. now, Wilson smiled; no more murders and bootlegger stories for me. I have turned highbrow, and am now floating in the best society in the town. Tomorrow I attend the Seton reception. Hum, hum. The policeman only laughed and went on his way. That night as Harold studied dress goods in order to be able to distinguish one gown from another the next day, Mrs. Hawkins was brooding over her fate. Just think, she confided in her husband, there is a man society reporter at the Capital office. I am so afraid he will not be able to describe my gown prop- erly. I hope he don ' t say anything about it at all, Mr. Hawkins said. I am afraid it might affect the labor vote. If I lose this election your dressmaker may wish she had never made you that gown. One hundred and fifty dollars! That ' s an awful price. You ought to have sixteen columns of description in the paper for that money. Mrs. Hawkins was no more certain about the results of the new society re- porter ' s maiden performance at receptions than Harold Wilson was himself. He sat in his small room that night and pored over fashion-plates. All the kinds of cloth — charmeuse, chiffon, tulle, crepe de chene, satin, silk, and many more he put down in a list along with all the descriptive adjectives he could find in books, the dictionary, and the fashion magazines. Mrs. Jones ' s gown would be a beautiful creation, built along simple lines although attractive. Then there would be Mrs. Seton. What the deuce will I say about Mrs. Seton ' s gown? Wilson thought to s v v xsv ill i a i i 11 i 8 i iff III Iff til i i E III Hi lii ' ' SSSSSSSSSiSSSS 425 a m â– L U mmFhe JAYHAWKE ill iil ill i I i III III ill ill ill ill ill ill i i s Hi III ill ill ill iil IT NOW WRITES Health and Accident Certificates ON MEN AND WOMEN BETWEEN 16 AND 60 YEARS OF AGE The Fraternal Aid Association Lawrence, Kansas 11! I i i if! ill ill III Hi iii 11° lis i I i I 11 426 J. himself as he eagerly scanned the pages of the magazine. Oh, here ' s one: ' The new Premet model in pale blue made a very smart effect. ' I don ' t know what that means, but it sounds fine. Precisely at twelve o ' clock that night Wilson went to bed with his head full of society ideas, and he dreamed of willowy persons slithering gracefully across the carpets in the fine mansion of Mrs. Seton. Ladies in bottle-green dresses, pink dresses, yellow dresses, blue dresses trimmed with rhinestones, passed in review in this awful hallucination. A prison scene kaleidoscoped itself on the dreamer ' s mind, and a deep voice moaned : You could be put in jail for what you do not know about women ' s clothes. I know I could, Wilson admitted unconsciously as he suddenly awakened. He looked at his watch and found that it was seven o ' clock in the morning. Good morning, he greeted himself as he looked into his mirror. It is a nice day, isn ' t it ? How charming you look in your lovely gown of a-a charmeu-u-se. Oh, damn all the charmeuses, chiffons, and silks and satins! If somebody would offer me a four-dollar meal ticket I ' d quit my job before this darned reception comes off. As Harold Wilson approached the Seton home that afternoon he could see a long line of automobiles, limousines, and carriages, and a cold chill ran up and down his spine. He shivered more when he saw fashionably-dressed women step from late-arriving cars. Their bright colored dresses formed a striking contrast to the greenness of the grass on the spacious lawn, and the dull gray of the sidewalk and stone wall of the mansion. Muffled strains of music from an orchestra could be heard faintly a half-block away. The effect of this scene might have thrilled a woman, but a man of Wilson ' s type it only bored, and made him feel scared. Had he been a Federal general in the Mexican army about to face a gun squad of the Constitutionalists, he probably would have felt more at ease. At least he would have known that his life would be short ; and when he put his foot on the front steps of the Seton home he did not know what would happen to him. He pushed the button at the side of the massive doors, and suddenly was face to face with a colored gentleman in livery — a suit with brass buttons and green braid. The old man shoved a silver card tray under his nose. The Capital ' s illustrious society re- porter fumbled in his pockets, but he could not find a card. He tried to push by as he was accustomed to do when on a police story, but there was no chance. The old negro insisted on a card. I am sorry, old man, but I haven ' t my card with me, said Wilson, trying to calm the fears of the butler. Tell Mrs. Seton that the society reporter of the Capital would like to come in for a few moments. While Wilson stood stiffly in the doorway the butler walked i nto the parlor and whispered into the ear of an elderly lady. She came to the door and greeted Wilson with a cold stare. Is this Mrs. Seton. ' ' he asked politely. No; Mrs. Seton is busy receiving her guests. Did you want something? was the formal reply. Then Wilson had to go through the same explanation he had given the butler. He told the lady, who was one of Mrs. Seton ' s best friends, that he had been sud- denly given the job of society reporter and that he had come to attend the reception. Here are some more ladies. — If you will just stand here a few minutes I will see what I can do, she said as she went back into the parlor to assist in receiving some of the late arrivals. By this time beads of sweat were beginning to stand out on Wilson ' s forehead. He looked around for help, but he could not see a man anywhere. In the parlor a semi-circle of women stood, nodding and chatting to the women as they shook hands, very daintily. To the left in another large room were a number of Kewanee ' s most prominent society women going into ecstacies over a particular woman who wore a stunning gown. W ilson did not know her, and the gown looked the same to him as all the rest. Behind a bank of palms in the conservatory was the orchestra. lii II If) s 1 1 ill ill III III 1 1 1 lii lll III ifi ill ill III 111 III 427 iMMki iir •mmmmmmmitiammmmm tea ' i Ae JAYHi tWKER f ifSf Si SisSmSSiSiSiSSSSJSSiSS Watkins National Bank ELEVENTH AND MASSA- CHUSETTS STREETS CAPITAL, $100,000.00 SURPLUS, $115,000.00 For over a quarter of a century the Watkins National Bank has earned and held the confidence of the people. It issues its own Letters of Credit, both domestic and for- eign. Its Travelers ' Cheques are self-identifying and the most convenient form for carrying funds. It pays interest on vSavings Accounts and Time Certificates. It is thoroughly equipped for all kinds of banking, and its capital and surplus of over two hundred thousand dollars gives abundant assurance of safetv and abilitv to accommodate. 428 Eb r S ' Kshe JAYHAWKER, ill lis III III ill ill i i I III III III i i E ill 3!i The tunes were dreamy waltzes and seemed to blend with the sweet fragrance of violets and roses which came from the flowered women who trailed over the thick carpets from one room to another, now sipping cold tea and nibbling a wafer at one table, and then drinking hot tea served by little girls, charming in their simple white frocks. And a smile went with each cup. All this Wilson saw but he was not a part of it, and he remained in the corner of the large hall until he could stand it no longer. He tried to start a conversation with the butler, but the old negro would not talk. Just as he was about to ask the old fellow about the Civil War, two ladies ap- proached him. Are you the society reporter. they asked. Yes, I am it, Wilson replied in a facetious tone, which was lost upon the ladies. Society was a serious business with them. Could you tell me something about the gowns. ' he said meekly. I haven ' t been the society reporter long, and I don ' t know much about women ' s gowns. Oh, goodness! one of the ladies exclaimed. I do not know whether I can or not. There ' s Mrs. Wilson. Her gown is of cotton crepe and the net is on the line of a silk gown. The bodice is draped with embroidery and the panel drapery is accentuated floss embroidery. That gown of Mrs. Hawkins ' is a stun- ning one, but I cannot tell you just how it is made. This conversation went on at some length, and Wilson took down on paper the names and styles of a dozen gowns. He slipped on a name here and there, but phonetic spelling is sometimes useful and he did the best he could. He thanked the ladies profusely and hurried away from the scene as quickly as possible. He went directly to the Capital office and sat down before his rusty Oliver typewriter and began to write laboriously. He wrote one sentence and tore the paper from the machine. He started again and pecked away until he had about three-quar- ters of a column. That will have to do, he told himself, as he began to compare his descriptions with those in the magazines. I wonder if that gown of Mrs. Smith ' s was a lingerie one or not. ' I can ' t make out what I have down here. Well, I ' ll leave out the kind and just put in the color. Wilson rushed by the city editor ' s desk and dropped the story in the copy- basket. He was afraid to say anything, so hurried out of the room, fearing that when he came back he might not have a job. After he was gone the city editor went over the story carefully, and, not knowing any more about the gowns than Wilson, he did not find fault with it. However, he took the precaution to ask Wil- son if all the gowns were described correctly, thus putting the blame of any possible mistakes on the shoulders of the reporter. ill III ill III lei i i I III III III ill ill ill Iff ill iii ill iii ill lit The next mo rning one thousand women, all of those who had attended the re- ception and many more, eagerly turned to the society page of the Capital for the account of the big event. Their eyes met a commonplace story of a reception. A considerable portion of the space was taken up with gown descriptions ; the orchestra got its share ; the little girls were named ; and the beautiful interior of the Seton home set off in glowing terms. But the story was flat. It lacked the piquancy of a woman ' s style. And it was faulty in many places. Some of the women named as wearing pink gowns wore blue ones, and some of the most charm- ing gowns were left out entirely. Florence Hawkins was the first to discover that her mother ' s dress had not been described. She came to the breakfast table with the paper folded to the society page. She was afraid to say anything, so just handed the paper to her mother. Mrs. Hawkins scanned the story of the reception quickly, and not seeing her name mentioned she turned to her husband. I told you that man on the Capital did not know anything. He didn ' t write a word about my gown, she moaned. I can ' t talk about gowns on election day, Mr. Hawkins cut his wife off sud- denly. I ' ve got to go down in the First and Second today and keep watch on things. Ill ill lit Iii ii9 txrzrwLJi-..: XSfte JAYH AliHiBll [3c= 430 W. Bromelsick, President T. J. Sweeney, Vice-President S. A. Wood, Cashier L. N. Lewis, Vice-President T. J. Sweeney, Jr., Assistant Cashier PEOPLES STATE BANK Capital, $50,000.00 : Surplus, $25,000.00 Lawrence, Kansas Correspondence and inquiries received from non-residents carefully and fully attended to and promptly answered. Collections and special matters given most particular attention. Our officers are always glad to look after strang- ers to our city, and assist them in any way possible. Gifts of Quality GUSTAFSON THE COLLEGE JEWELER CALL OR SEND FOR OUR CATALOG OF ' K, U. and Fraternity Jewelry 911 Massachusetts Street ' A m ill III ill ill III iff III l|i sis ill ft II III III III lis III iff Iff lii 111 lit III III III III ill lii Hi III ill III III (3 ft I But I wanted so much— oh, I am just sick over it! Mrs. Hawkins grieved. I am going to call the Journal society reporter and tell her about my gown. She will understand. The Journal is a better paper than the Capital anyway. That night the front pages of the Kewanee Journal told of how Albert Hawkins had gained considerably in the First and Second wards, and how victory was practically assured for him ; and on the society page considerable space was de- voted to Mrs. Hawkins, wife of the new mayor to be, who presented such a stun- ning appearance at the Seton reception the day before. It was a big beat for the Journal to print the first big story about the new mayor ' s wife, who would be one of the society leaders now. When the Journal got to the Capital office that afternoon there was a big shake-up in the force. Clark, who was doing police temporarily, was put back on the city hall run and Wilson went back to the police court. You ' re all right handling murders, but when it comes to writing receptions you are not worth the powder it would take to blow you up, the city editor growled as he handed Wilson his assignment. The boys in the room were kidding Wilson about his experience, when their attention was suddenly caught by the new mayor, Albert Hawkins, who had just stepped into the room. I ' ve got a box of cigars for you, boys, he said as he placed fifty Perfectos on one of the desks. Help yourselves. You treated me fine during the campaign. Is Wilson here. ' At your service, Mr. Mayor, Wilson answered glibly. That feat of missing my wife ' s expensive gown in your story of the Seton reception did me a lot of good. I don ' t believe I would have gained in the First and Second if a big splurge had been made over her. Come out sometime. I want you to meet my wife and daughter, he said, and then left Wilson to enjoy the cigars. BELL BROTHERS PIANOS Are manufactured exclusively for discriminating musicians and artists. They contain patented improvements not found in any other instruments. These improvements give the Bell Brothers Pianos an elasticity in the action, a particularly sympathetic tone, great reserve power, and wearing qualities no equalled by any other make. We sell Bell Brothers Pianos at prices consistent with the quality, and out easy payments if desired. Van Dyke Studio, 939 8th Ave., New York City. Bell Brothers Piano Co., Gentlemen: — After having used one of your Bell Brothers Pianos for a year it is a pleasure for me to state that I am more than pleased with the instrument. Even with the severe use that I gave it, it is remarkable for standing in tune and retaining its original tone. The action is positively delightful, the tone pure and sympathetic and the entire piano is very satisfactory in every way. Graduate Music Dept. Kansas State University. Yours truly, Student of Dr. Jedlickza, Berlin, Germany. E. Geneve Lichtenavalter. BELL BROTHERS PIANO COMPANY, Lawrence, Kansas 431 - .jmmmmfmmmmm 9S 991 â– SMS ! ,s ss=ii|| Loyal K. U. Supporters H. B. Ober, Men ' s Furnishings, Lawrence A. A. Bigelow, Grocer, Lawrence School Record Publishing Co., Printers, Lawrence Grayson Reinisch, Tinners, Lawrence Con Squires, Photographer, Lawrence Will John, Meat Market, Lawrence O. H. McQuary, Real Estate, Lawrence Wilson ' s Drug Store, Drugs, Lawrence Theodore E. Boone, 1009 Mass. St., Lawrence Rowland ' s Book Store, School Supplies, Lawrence Kennedy Plumbing Co., Plumbing, Lawrence Lawrence National Bank, Lawrence R. B. Wagstaff, Grocer, Lawrence Wiedemann ' s, Confectionery, Lawrence Winey Underwood, Men ' s Furnishings, Lawrence AV. A. Guenther, Grocer, Lawrence A. Marks, Jeweler, Lawrence Protsch, Tailor, Lawrence Ed. W. Parsons, Jeweler, Lawrence Peerless Garage, Taxicabs and Auto Livery, Lawrence Clark Cleans Clothes, Lawrence Bert Wadhams, Barber Shop, at Lee ' s College Inn City Drug Store, Prescriptions a Specialty, Lawrence Reynolds Bros., Confectioners, Lawrence Chas. J. Achning, Hardware, Lawrence W. O. Dunmire, Grocer, Lawrence Dick Bros., Drugs, Lawrence Theo. Lieben, Costumes, Kansas City, Mo. Johnson Tuttle, Restaurant, Lawrence Lee Bryant, Lee ' s College Inn, Lawrence Wabash Railway. Perkins Trust Co., Bankers, Lawrence Peckham Clothing Co., Men ' s Furnishings, Lawrence Beatrice Creamery Co., Topeka Bureau of Engraving, Minneapolis, Minn. j 432 .... ................s..s................ __ 1 K Loyal K. U. Supporters Fraternal Aid Association, Lawrence Watkins National Bank Lawrence Crane Co., Printers, Topeka People ' s State Bank, Lawrence Gustafson, Jeweler, Lawrence Innes, Bullene Hackman, Department Store, Lawrence Morrison Bliesner, Typewriters, Lawrence Blossom House, Hotel, . Kansas City, Mo. Bob Stewart, Barber Shop, . Lawrence B. H. Dale, Printer Lawrence S. G. Clarke, Clothier, Lawrence F. I. Carter, Stationery and Typewriters, Lawrence Carroll ' s News Depot, Lawrence Alrich, Printer, Lawrence Frank Koch, Tailor, Lawrence The Topeka Me rchants Association, Topeka Bell Bros. Music Store, Lawrence A. T. S. F. Ry. Hotel Eldridge, Lawrence Vernon Law Book Co., Kansas City, Mo. Union Pacific Railroad. A. D. Weaver, Department Store, Lawrence Rexall Store, Drugs, Lawrence University Book Store, Books and Supplies, Lawrence Fischer ' s, Shoes, Lawrence Wilder S. Metcalf, Farm Loans, Lawrence Brick Brickens, Oread Cafe, Lawrence Johnson Carl, Men ' s Furnishings, Lawrence Lawrence Pantatorium, Lawrence Hiawatha Cafe, Lawrence Starkweather ' s, Shoes, Lawrence Lawrence Railway Light Co., Lawrence Wilder Bros., Laundry and Made-to-Measure Shirts, . . . Lawrence Kennedy Ernst, Sporting Goods and Hardware, .... Lawrence Merchant ' s National Bank, Lawrence ill III 11 i i 433 ill B SB Down East Clothes Designed and tailored by the world ' s greatest clothes makers — Benjamin Sam Peck Made in New York, where style originates. Displayed and sold exclusively in Lawrence by Johnson Carl 905 Mass. —Use- Electricity -for- Cooking Heating Lighting Power J Sanitary Economical and Modern The La vrence Rail vay and Light Company The Merchants National Bank Established in 1877 Invites New Accounts and offers Good Service. The Merchants Loan and Savings Bank Pays 3 Per Cent Interest on Time Deposits and Savings Accounts. 434 Typewriters BOUGHT, SOLD, RENTED REPAIRED, EXCHANGED Both new and second-hand ma- chines for sale or rent. Have you seen the new Master Model Royal No. 10, just out.f A typewriter of Long-Term Service that need not be traded out and won ' t die young. See this machine before buying a typewriter. Morrison Bliesner 701 Mass. St. Eldridge House Cor. The oldest established and best located Bar- ber Shop in the city. Good service. BOB STEWART ' S Everything sanitary 838 Mass. Street SAMUEL G. CLARKE 707 Mass . St. AGENT FOR E.V PRICE CO. FINE TAILORING When visiting Kansas City STOP AT The Blossom House European Plan OPPOSITE UNION DEPOT B. H. DALE F I N E P R I N T I N G 1027 Massachusetts Street F. L CARTER BOOKS, STATIONERY, TYPEWRITERS AND SUPPLIES 1025 Massachusetts Street PUTTING IT MILDLY Of course we are proud of the 35 years ' supremacy of this store with the student body and the old grads. There ' s a reason, — quality goods and courteous treatment always. The boys feel at home in this old store. Phone 608 709 Mass. St. CARROLL ' S SMITH ' S NEWS DEPOT A. G. ALRICH : PRINTING Binding, Copper-Plate Printing, Rubber Stamps, Engraving, Steel-Die Embossing, Seals, Badges 744 Mass. Street The House of Quality Lawrence, Kansas ill j SjSS m J 435 :]iF i ... . AmimMimmi S SiS! M!SSSm!iSi -SS! - MSS« jii ill ill lil Hi ill ill III ill i I i I For the Particular Man sKOCHB THE TAILOR THE OREAD CAFE takes this space to thank the students for their patronage the past year. The future of the Oread depends on three things {of ivhich it can proudly boast) : Good, wholesome, well-cooked food, at a reason- able price. The soda fountain has enjoyed a good season. Why. ' Because the Ice Cream and Syrups are pure, clean and tasty. Thanks to the many past customers. Yours for future business. E. C. BRICKENS The Oread Cafe Just a step from the campus on Oread Ave. is ii II il ii II i ii 1 II i i ii i g It ii iff III ill III III ill i|i !ij ill ! I i sB| it 436 ssss sssjsswissis II ISHe ' x A gifM Mmm sm i s - ' i m Ml H i S The Popular Dry Goods Store For K. IJ. Students. Complete Stocks in all Departments. Prices always the Lowest. The most Courteous Treatment at all times. A. D. WEAVER The Rexall Store F. B. McCOLLOCH DRUGGIST 847 Massachusetts Street LAWRENCE, KANSAS Shirts, Underwear, Pa- jamas to Measure Samples Upon Request Our Custom Laundry gets out Spe- cials for Students Wilder Bros. Lawrence, Kansas The University Book Store The Oldest in the State All old students know us. new students made welcome, cial low prices made on all books and supplies. 803 MASS. STREET All Spe- text Wilder S. Metcalf Farm Loans â– tn- Eastern Kansas Safe and Prompt LAWRENCE, KANSAS P ill III III ill III ill III !i! ill III lis ill l|| III ill sis ill 111 III Ti 3 iSS UShe III ill ill ill i i i ill i i i ttl ill lii ill III a S i ill I i i i il 11 il il NcH J OTUDtnTS p v Feb. 27.— Coeds tag men. You ' re out — four bits. Big stink on the campus- chemists day. Grad. club meets. Feb. 28. — Ward Hatcher extends his firmament to include Mercury as well as Venus. The Meissnor fratres get a haircut (2 for 45c.). Mar. 1. — Fiftieth anniversary of the University of Kansas. Somebody serenaded the Thetas. Weekly fruit sale at Lee ' s. Mar. 2. — McCarty appointed baseball coach. Senior play cast ate on the manager at Lee ' s. First placards forbidding smoking on University steps and ap- proaches posted. Mar. 3. — Students ' Day in chapel. Stu- dents show signs of chills and faculty go unscathed. The College falls through on its big day blow-out. Foster returns from registrars ' convention. Mar. 4. — Student Union opens. Celebra- tion attended by 500 students and a mem- ber of the local police force. Student Coun- cil members, as hosts of the opening, send their regrets. Engineers visit movies for men only. Mar. b. — Madden, Chinery and Burke jerked out of bed at 1 a. m. by the Minions of the Law. They spend two hours in the city hold-over. Johnny regrets his space- filler notions and tries to ridicule the police for acting on his suggestions. Mar. 6. — Phi Beta Kappa, after a stren- uous rushing season, pledges twenty. Jack Greenlees must have turned the society down. Several senior committees consider a plan for a memorial. Mar. 7. — W. S. G. A. gives a reception for Mrs. Brown. Saturday-night callers at the Kappa house increase as the Spring Party dope gets out. Mar. 8.- — Sigma Nu pin appears on De- Longy ' s little pretty. Mar. 9. — Agitation started for more lights at the library cut-off. Opposition move- ment started by Lockwood, Prof. Hill, Bud Ritter et al. Red placards proclaiming the Lawrence police force a joke appear, tacked on city trees. Chief Myers vows quick vengeance. Ha! Ha! Eva Tanguay sings I Don ' t Care to a full stag house. Major A. T. Holloway takes first shot at Madden, and de- 11 III III i i i ill ill lis ill III ill ill iil III III ill fit ifl ill 438 Efi i ' ?3%e JAY Hi V KEFL plores the editorial policy of the Kanaan. Madden falls back on Herbert for something hot. Mar. 10. — Coolidge ineligible to serve as baseball captain. Sig. Near-Cap- tain No. 2 bites the dust. Senior Annual cuts arrive. One class in which each member has but a single cut. Mar. 11. — Owls initiate. Who are the Owls. Sowers revives the Hawks. Ray Dunmire elected basket-ball captain. Discovered that red })olice placards were printed in the Kansan office. More dir-r-ty work. Mar. 12. — K. U. Vaudeville in gym. En- rollment statistics show 1646 men and 990 females. I, lcri. 12,. K.U. VAUDIVILIL IH GW . Mar. 13. — Engineers have a banquet in Marvin Hall. Entomologists meet. Some real bugs attend. C. Williamson pays for collection of dance posters. Mar. 14. — Kansas City news})apers in- form us that our beloved fellow-classmate Freeman Alexander, of week-end fame, is the victim of a fowl attack by a lady whom he had befriended. Eck bought another diamond the next day and the little Chio never knew. of March with Kan Mar. 15. — Born to Professors Flint and Humble one son each. ( Beware the Ides Boynton back from Chicago. We rise to ask, What ' s the matter ) sas City. Mar. 16. — Pinafore cast selected. Appearance of Mary Stanwaity ' s name at the top of the list assures the success of the play. New combine : Messrs. Kelton Lewis and Marly Brown, specialists on inside information pertaining to the Board of Administration and Women Affairs. Mar. 17. — Washburn and K. U. glee clubs meet in mortal combat. As usual, the innocent bystanders get the worst of the deal. The Hon. Mr. Holloway swings the Student Council and declares the position of editor of the Kansan is vacant. Recommends his friend and Cohort Busick for the job. (Applause by Alonson.) Madden resigns from the Council. Mar. 18. — Sachems give a chair to the Student Union. Heart failure among the faculty on rumor that they will receive their pay-checks earlier. Count No A Count plays for sweet charity — with the exception of Ward Hatcher. Mar. 19. — High-school athletes begin to arrive. Junior farce cast announced. The P. A. D.s receive autograph photo from Brother Woodrow Wilson. Mar. 20. — Kappa Sig conclave meets at the old Beta house, cellor entertains the Governor and the Board of Administration. The Chan- H s II §1 II if It ii 440 IKfteL JAVHAWKER, ill I!! Ill Itl III ill ill ill III ill lit Hi i i i III ill III ill ill ill ill 1 1 ill I i i Ifi if! ill isl i ll III III III ill III ill lit ill A BOUQUET OF GRADUATES FROM THE Edwin Endacott Civil Service Employe Madeline Carter Stenographer Extension Department University of Kansas A. B. Parks Director Commercial De- j)artment, Kansas City. Mo., High School The Lawrence Business College qualifies and places many young people in excellent positions every year. Graduates are sent to all parts of the United States. Through our civil service course many students secure ex- cellent appointments in government work at good salaries. Hundreds of former students are in banks. Many in various lines of business are making several thousand dollars a year, and they owe their success to the start they received in the Lawrence Business College. The Stenotype is now used in over 300 leading business colleges in the United States. This little machine is to pencil shorthand what the typewriter is to long hand. Our Stenotype course offers the best opportunities to young men and women to secure higher salaries than have ever l)efore been paid to busi- ness college graduates. Our school is in session during the en- tire summer months — no vacations. For catalog giving full information con- cerning courses of study and tuition rates, The Machine that Writes Shorthand address Lawrence Business College W. H. QUAKENBUSH, President E. S. WEATHERBY, Superintendent ill ill ill iii II t5:ft ilAVHMWKEIW ksss sSS S III III III ii ii it II it i i Ii 1 1 II i ! i gig i i I tl It II I i Mak. 21. — Lawrence boys and Arkansas City girls win the high-school basket- ball tournament. Kansan issues noon extra without the assistance of Holloway or Busick. Hash-houses and frat leaguers feel the bug. University Council changes name to University Senate. There ' s a Reason. Mar. 22. — Sunday. Four queens and a full house create a furor at the University Club. Is the University Senate dormant also? Mar. 23. — Three Engineers build aeroplane. Student Union continues to call for subscribers to pay up. Mar. 24. — Student Council holds a closed session, Sigma Delta Chi elects ten newspaper men. Mar. 25. — Kappa Case to higher court, says a newspaper heading. Who claims to have a case at the Kappa house? Mar. 26. — Women vote down repeal of week-night date rule. Down with woman suffrage. Hash-houses organize. Hawk Club decides to put on a play. Mar. 27. — News head reads, Golf Club Will Smoke. Query: here or here- after? Quill Club to become a national organization — maybe. Upperclassmen declare themselves in favor of freshmen caps. Mar. 28. — Sphinx freshman society gives a dance. Who said that they had no purpose in organizing ? Mrs. Brown pleads for more social life at K. U. It sure wasn ' t the men who voted down the week-night date rule. Mar. 29. — Maurine Fairweather attended church. Such fair weather should be re- served until Easter. (This sounds like George Edwards and Jack Greenlees.) Mar. 30. — The freshmen vote to wear their caps — probably to keep their faces from being tanned. A course in Military History suggested for the University Here ' s a job for Major A. T. Holloway. Mar. 31. — Engineers decide to publish a journal. Another meeting of the Hawks, at- tended by the manager. Alice Eldridge gives a recital in Eraser. April 1. — The 1914 Jayhawker goes to press. N(.h.,jo. Freshmen vore ro U f. CAPS TO KEEP THIER FACE5(?) PROM O niNG 11 11 Ii ii If III jM I i ii ii i| Ii il Ii IP i| Ii I! 443 .XH ' Alg iii III ill LAWRENCE. KANSAS Kansas Local Books = Dassler ' s Kansas Civil Code Annotated, 1913 (Plead- ing and Practice) $7.50 Dassler ' s Taxation in Kan- sas, including Tax Titles, and Special Assessments, 1911 6.00 Dassler ' s Kansas Form Book, Annotated, 1912 6.50 Marshall ' s Kansas Probate Law and Practice, 1906 .. . 6 . 00 We make a Specialty of Kansas Re- ports and Kansas Digest. Vernon Law Book Company 806 Grand Avenue KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Union Pacific STANDARD ROAD OF THE WEST Direct Through Service to California and the Northwest via Denver and Salt Lake City Three Fast Trains Daily DENVER LIMITED COLORADO LIMITED CALIFORNIA MAIL W. K. CUNDIFF, AssT. Gen. Passenger Agent 901 Walnut Street Kansas City, Mo. xs Kyybai Ba â– mm. - w .   . â– -■« !=• iShe JAYHAWKER. II il il il If 11 II if 11 III III I i I ||| III w THE FOLLOWING ARE Members of the Topeka Merchants Berkson Bros. I Warren M. Crosby Co. Crosby Bros. Co. Capital Building Loan Association Continental Creamery Co. Crane Co. Crockett Merc. Co. Consumers Light, Heat Power Co. Fullerton Bros. Gerstley-Crawford Co. E. B. Guild Music Co. Inter-Ocean Mills Karlan Furniture Co. W. W. Kimball Co. McEntire Bros. Merchants Transfer Co. Merchants National Bank Mills Dry Goods Co. Chas. a. Moore National Hotel Geo. W. Stansfield E. L. Overton 1 i Palace Clothing Co. L. M. Pen WELL Polk-Radges Directory Co. The Payne Shoe Co. Shawnee Building Loan Association Street Railway Co. Shawnee Insurance Agew y Topeka Daily Capital Topeka Pure Milk Co. Wolff Packing Co. Walkover Boot Co. Your Patronage is Respectfully Solicited 444 pw The Grand Canyon of Arizona is earth ' s scenic wonder, 217 miles long, a mile deep, and painted with sunset hues. It is reached only by the Santa Fe. Descriptive booklets free on request. J. M. CoNNELL, General Passenger Agent, Topeka, Kansas. Santa Fe % w ' 5he JAYHAWKEFL It is finished. Our consciences rest easy in the fact that we have given our undivided attention and most ear- nest thought in making up and publishing the 1914 Jay- hawker. We await your praises or criticisms with the utmost composure. m y:ad Editor-in-Chief. i ie rt c u t ' Manager. !SSSSSSSS SSSSS!SSSSS.N Hi III III III III i i I jjl il I 11 w II 1 i is ««%!SJSSSJ5 S 440 ' •-- ijiw __ ii[f -i I I itJiHi III ' tr ■•• ' â–
”
1909
1911
1912
1915
1916
1917
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.