University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)

 - Class of 1917

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University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1917 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 492 of the 1917 volume:

y cwqawKen SEVENTEEN PRINTED AND BOUND BY UNION BANK NOTE COMPANY ENGRAVINGS BY BURGER ENGRAVING CO. KANSAS CITY, MO. lo PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ■■ rP 71m u cfJ .A Ur j frum. TP TUJi V e £F 6mlitl5tratlon (Tlasses Activities OrganUatlons Tf raternltks (5a? Squawk ' e ISI7 kJ AY H A W K. E R RVCKCfULK jmfiuBmuLv, J ,J ,mm Jayhavvk r Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. A man who loves our Rock Chalk And believes in the Kansas Spirit. CHANCELLOR FRANK STRONG —9— Jayhawker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. Ufow an6 XiT en ocK (T alK (Tame Into elng In the started [E must go back more than thirty years to learn about the beginnings of our famous yell, the Rock Chalk of which we are so proud. year 1883- ' 4 a Science club was by some of the older men of the University, including Dr. E. L. Nichols, now head of the Physics department of Cornell University; Doctor Snow, the late chan- cellor; Professor Marvin, the late dean of the School of Engineering; E. Miller, of California, emeritus professor of Mathe- matics and Astronomy; and the writer, who was professor of Chemistry. None of the above departments were at that time strong enough to support a seminar or department club, as there were only three hundred students in the Uni- versity proper. Consequently the Science Club was started as a clearing house for scientific information, and also to keep the students of the sciences together. At its weekly meetings papers were read and the social side of the club was not neglected. There was an annual Science Club day, with a social gathering in the evening, and the scientific work of the year was re- viewed by professors and advanced students; there were excursions to Blue Mound, Leavenworth or Kansas City. As the ladies were always in the company, these trips were very popular. j y Perhaps the most famous of the doings of the Science Club was the unique annual banquet, known as the It, a name proposed by Professor Martin, after we had sought in vain for an appropriate name for such a feast of jollity and wit. This was attended by members only and held in the basement of the Chemistry building, now Medical Hall. The It recalls many pleasant memories to the students of the Nineties. Usually after an oyster supper prepared by the expert cooks of the club, a program was put on. The speakers told of their own dis- coveries (?) and burlesqued those of their colleagues. I This may seem a long introduction to the history of Rock Chalk but as it was originally designed for the sole use and profit of the Science Club, this seems proper. It was at one of our meetings in 1887 or ' 88, over our doughnuts and cider, that someone suggested that we adopt a yell. Several were presented to the club, tried and found unsatisfactory. Shortly after this meeting, early one morning, I was thinking of the matter of these words occurred to me: Rah, Rah, Jay Hawk, K. U. three times repeated, with staccato emphasis. I proposed this yell at the next meeting of the club and it was adopted. We used it with such success on our picnics and excursions that it was soon taken up by the student body at large and made the regular yell of the University. Shortly after this, by some process of evolution, and I think at the suggestion of some of the Snow Hall men, the Rah, Rah was changed to Rock Chalk, and finally in the en- thusiasm of the early football days, the long roll twice repeated was substituted for the first part of the slogan. And so the yell that sounds o ' er land and sea was introduced into K. U. — Prof. E. H. S. Bailey. ■ t917 4 —10— Jay hawker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. Season of Rock Chalk Proper ANNUAL FOOTBALL PARADE 1917 C —11— if tMW tHiwMib-ai niMnMiMt .1 ayhavvker - Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. I I ' The Grand Old Man of Football ' UNCLE JIMMY GREEN : 1917 c —12— Jayhawker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. THE THUNDERING THOUSAND —13— Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. A Man who maintains the Supremacy of Kansas on Foreign Fields, Manager of Athletics WILLIAM OLIVER HAMILTON . ' :z 917 c; —14— Jay hawker -1 Rock Chalk, Jay Ha wk, K. U. ' ROCK CHALK IN HER WORKING CLOTHES ' MISSOURI RALLY : 1917 g: —15— : Jay hawker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. A LITTLE CONFERENCE AT LINCOLN, NOVEMBER EIGHTEENTH —16— flayhawker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. A PERSISTENT MARCH THROUGH THE NEBRASKA LINE AND THEN— COUNT THE SCORE, KANSAS ' KANSAS-NEBRASKA GAME —17— ' ' ' - Javlia ' V ' ker ' Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. [i H ! i LAWRENCE ' ROCK CHALK ACROSS THE CONTINENT —18— V-- !S Jay hawker Koc Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. NEW YORK ALUMNI ROCK CHALK ACROSS THE CONTINENT A Reunion 3,600 Miles Wide The New York alumni, through the courtesy of the Bell Telphone Company, entertained the Lawrence and San Francisco alumni at its reunion April 8th. The entertainment of the evening was the conversation over the telphone between New York, Lawrence and San Francisco. A telephone receiver was connected at each place at the tables so that the conversations could be heard by everyone. The transmitter was placed at the toastmaster ' s chair. When connection was established at Law- rence, Chancellor Frank Strong gave a five-minute address on the growth of the University. It was thrilling to hear his voice come over the wire. Then followed a tenor solo from New York, Life at Old K. U. ( Carruth), sung by Mr. Benjamin J. Brune. Prof. W. H. Carruth then spoke from San Francisco. It seemed like old times to hear his speech and characteristic humor — ending his speech with: Well, why don ' t you applaud? The K. U. Glee Club at Lawrence sang a medley. This was followed from San Francisco by Harry Lauder on the phonograph, I Love a Lassie. As realistic as if one were on the spot was the roar of the waves of the Pacific Ocean from a transmitter placed on the porch of the Cliff House, accompanied by motion pictures of the surf. The Crimson and the Blue was sung, one stanza by the alumni of each city. The enter- tainment closed with a phonograph record, The Star Spangled Banner in San Francisco, and the good night roll call of cities by the representatives of the telephone company. Thus for the first time in the history of the University, Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. echoed from coast to coast. — Graduate Magazine. SAN FRANCISCO ALUMNI : i9i7C —19— I!! ' I ' ayhawker Rock Chalk, Jaw Hawk. K. U. Rock Chalk in the Mountains of Colorado Y. M. C. A. CONFERENCE, ESTES PARK : .3 1917 c —20— Jayhaw ker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. : 1917 c —21 — . i d ay liawfeer ' Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. —22— Jayhawker Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. : 1917 c —23— ! Jayhawker - Rock Chalk, Jay Hawk, K. U. TT —24— Administration ! Jayhawker l The Campus 1917C -25- ' 2 J ay hawker The Campus I i : 1917 c —26— Jay hawker f The Campus 1917 C —27— |$l Jayhawker The Campus To her feet from the far-flung prairie her loving subjects press, Sprung from the sun-browned heroes who peopled a wilderness; Lads on whose hearts are graven epics of toil unsung, Bolder than olden story boasted in golden tongue. —28— ■ Jayhaw ker l The Campus They have throned her upon a hill-top, mother and queen in one, Bride of the skies at midnight, sister of the sun; Crowned with the glory of wisdom, garlanded with light, With the stars in her shadowy tresses when she sleeps in the arms of night. —29— j Jay ha ker 4 The Campus ! 9 ! 7 - I —30— ■ Jayhawker The Campus 1917 C —31— 2 Jay hawker The Campus ■ ' In her horizons limitless and vast, Her plains that storm the senses like the sea; She has no ruins gray that men revere — Her time is Now, her heritage is Here! :i 1917 c —32— ■ Jayhawker -J The Campus r They have throned her upon a hill-top and her scepter sways afar; The ends of the earth acknowledge her wherever her children are. Never in pride of her glory may those she has nourished forget That not on the purple dais is her throne of dominion set. —33— irriZ J ayhawker C The Campus I —34— I ! J ay hawker The Campus : 1917 c —35— J - fl ' JaylKaM k er The Campus i1 1 1 When the birds had ceased their music and the summer day was done, And prismatic exhalations came a-drifting from the sun; And those gold and purple vapors, and the holy stillness there Lay upon the peaceful valley like a silent evening prayer. f:. 917 -36— I I Jay hawker - The Campus Not for what she has done for me, Though it be great, For what she is — her majesty — I love my State. ■- r rr?= 2r — Jscai 6CQ- ' ' -JtJ: —37— ! Jayliawker The Campus —38— Jay hawker The Campus —39— : JayhawkerC The Campus —40— ' J ay hawker The Campus THE NIGHT With the stars in her shadowy tresses, and a milhon lamps that gem The undulant Hnes of her body to the fringe of her garment-hem. —41 — ZZ Jayliawker 1 Faculty Registrar of the University GEORGE O. FOSTER —42— I Jayhaw ker l Faculty Tf acuUiP ' of t e (TolUse BENNETT MILLS ALLEN Ph.B., 1898, De Pauw; Ph.D. 1913, Chicago. Professor of Zoology. HERMAN CAMP ALLEN A.B. 1904, McPherson; A.M. 190S,lKansas; Ph.D. 1912, Cornell. Associate Professor of Chemistry. CHARLES HAMILTON ASHTON A.B. 1887, Union; A.M. 1893, Harvard; Ph.D. 1909, Munich. Professor of Mathematics. EDGAR HENRY SUMMERFIELD BAILEY Ph.B. 1873, Yale; Ph.D. 1883, Illinois Wesleyan. Professor of Chemistry. WILLIAM JACOB BAUMGARDNER A.B. 1900, Kansas; A.M. 1901, Kansas. Associate Professor of Zoology. FREDRICK HORATIO BILLINGS A.B. 1896, Leland Stanford; A.M. 1897, Harvard; Ph.D. 1901, Munich. Professor of Bacteriology. FRANK WILSON BLACKMAR A.B. 1881. University of the Pacific; A.M. 1884, Uni- versity of the Pacific; Ph.D. 1889, Johns Hopkins. Dean of the Graduate School and Professor of Sociology, ARTHUR JEROME BOYNTON A.B. 1901, Harvard; A.M., 1902, Columbia. Professor of Economics. JOSEPH GRANGER BRANDT Ph.B. 1903, Lawrence College; Ph.D. 1911, Wisconsin. Professor of Greek. EDWARD MAURICE BRIGGS A.B. 1904, Nebraska; A.M. 1908, Kansas. Assistant Professor of German and University Marshal. JOSEPHIN MAY BURNHAM Ph.B. 1901, Chicago: Ph.D. 1911, Yale. Assistant Professor of English. HAMILTON P. CADY A.B. 1897, Kansas; Ph.D. 1903, Kansas. Professor of Chemistry. GRACE MIRIAM CHARLES A.B. 1900, Oberlin; A.M. 190S, Chicago; Ph.D. 1910, Chicago. Assistant Professor of Botany. BENJAMIN J. CLAWSON B.C. 1909, Central; A.M. 1912, Kansas. Assistant Professor of Bacteriology. ALBERTA LINTON CORBIN A.B. 1893, Kansas; Ph.D. 1902, Yale. Associate Professor of German. CLARENCE CORY CRAWFORD A.B. 1903, Kansas; A.M. 1904, Kansas; Ph.D. 1906, Wisconsin. Associate Professor of European History. EDMUND DRESSER CRESSMAN A.B. 1910, Kansas; A.M. 1911, Kansas; Ph.D. 1913, Yale. Assistant Professor of Latin. FREDERICK A. G. COWPER A.B. 1906, Trinity; A.M. 1911, Trinity. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. FRANK BURNETT DAINS Ph.B. 1890, Wesleyan; M.A. 1891, Wesleyan; Ph.D. 1898, Chicago. Professor of Chemistry. WILLIAM WATSON DAVIS „ B.S. 1903, Alabama Polytechnic Institute; M.S. 1904, Alabama Polytechnic Institute; A.M. 1906, Columbia; Ph.D. 1913, Columbia. Associate Professor of American History. FLOYD CARLTON DOCKERAY A.B. 1907, Michigan; A.M. 1909, Michigan; Ph.D. 1915, Michigan. Associate Professor of Psychology. HERMAN DOUTHITT r A.B. 1910, Oklahoma; A.M. 1911, Illinois. Assistant Professor of Zoology. WILLIAM McGLASHAN DUFFUS A.B. 1910, Leland Stanford; A.M. 1913, Wisconsin. Assistant Professor of Economics. CHARLES GRAHAM DUNLAP A.B. 1883, Ohio Wesleyan; A.M. 1899, Ohio Wesleyan; Litt.D., Princeton. Professor of English Literature. CLARENCE ADDISON DYKSTRA A.B. 1903, Iowa. Associate Professor of History. ELMER FRANKLIN ENGLE A.B. 1892, Kansas; A.M. 1898, Harvard. Professor of German. JOHN WAINWRIGHT EVANS A.B. 1907, Princeton. Assistant Professor of Journalism. PAUL VANCE FARAGHER A.B. 1909, Kansas; Ph.D. 1913, Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology. Assistant Professor of Chemistry. LEON NELSON FLINT A.B. 1897, Kansas. Associate Professor of Journalism. EUGENIE GALLOO 1881, Academie de Paris, Brevet; 1884, Sorbonne; B.L. 1892, Michigan; A.M. 1895, Kansas. Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. LULU GARDNER A.B. 1905, Kansas. Professor of Rhetoric. ALICE LITTLEJOHN GOETZ M.D. 1906, Howard University Medical. Associate Professor of Physical Training. WILLIAM ALEXANDER GRIFFITH Graduate Academie Julien. Professor of Drawing and Painting. VICTOR EMMANUEL HELLEBERG A.B. 1883, Yale; LL.B. 1884, Cincinnati. Associate Professor of Sociology. FRANK HEYWOOD HODDER Ph.M. 1883, Michigan. Professor of American History and Political Science. EDMUND HOWARD HOLLANDS Ph.B. 1899, Cornell; A.M. 1901, Cornell; Ph.D. 1905, Cornell. Professor of Philosophy. EDWIN MORTIMER HOPKINS A.B. 1888, Princeton; A.M. 1890, Princeton; Ph.D 1894, Princeton. Professor of Rhetoric and English Language. HERBERT BARKER HUNGERFORD A.B. 1911, Kansas; A.M. 1913, Kansas. Assistant Professor of Entomology. : 1917 c —43— ' Jayhawker Faculty SAMUEL lOHN HUNTER A.B. 1893, Kansas; A.M. 1893, Kansas. Professor of Entomology. IDA HENRIETTA HYDE AB. 1891, Cornell; Ph.D. 1896, Heidelberg. Professor of Physiology. FRDERICK EDWARD KESTER M.E. 1895, Ohio; A.M. 1899, Cornell; Ph.D. 1905, Cornell. Professor of Physics. HENRY OTTO KRUSE A.B. 1896, Kansas; A.M. 1903, Kansas. Associate Professor of German. MARGARET LYNN ♦ B.S. 1899, Tarkio; A.M. 1900, Nebraska. Associate Professor of English Literature. ARTHUR MITCHELL A.B. 1894, Yale; Ph.D. 1910, Harvard. Assistant Professor of Philosophy. ULYSSES GRANT MITCHELL A.B. 1906, Kansas; A.M. 1907, Kansas; Ph.D. 1910, Princeton. Associate Professor. BLAIN TREE MOORE A.B. 1901, Kansas; A.M. 1905. Illionis; Ph.D. 1913, Columbia. Assistant Professor of Political Science. EARL WALTER MURRAY A.B. 1904, Kansas. Associate Professor of Latin. ARTHUR MacMURRAY A.B. 1896, Kansas; M.O. 1904, Ott Schools of Ex- pression. Professor of Public Speaking. JAMES NAISMITH A.B. 1887, McGill; M.D. 1898, Gross Medical School; M.P.E. 1910, Springfield Y. M. C. A. Professor of Physical Education. ELSIE NEUEN-SCHWANDER A.B. 1898, Kansas: Ph.D. 1913, Yale. Associate Professor of Romance Languages. NADLIN NOWLIN A.B. 1903, Kansas; A.M. 1903, Kansas. Assistant Professor of Zoology. HANNAH OLIVER A.B. 1874, Kansas; A.M. 1 Associate Professor of Latin. 8, Kansas. RAPHAEL DORMAN O ' LEARY A.B. 1893, Kansas; A.B. 1895, Harvard. Professor of Rhetoric. ARTHUR LESLIE OWEN A.B. 1906, Vermont; A.M. 1909, Illinois. Associate Professor of Romance Languages. DAVID LESLIE PATTERSON I B.S. 1895, Pennsylvania State. Associate Professor of European History. GEORGE ELLSWORTH PUTNAM A.B. 1907, Kan,sas; A.M. 1908, Yale; B.Litt. 1911 Oxford. Associate Professor of Economics. WILLIAM REES BREMNER ROBERTSON A.B. 1906, Kansas; A.M. 1907, Kansas. Assistant Professor of Zoology. NOBLE PIERCE SHERWOOD A.B. 1905, Kansas; A.M. 1911, Kansas. Associate Professor of Bacteriology. OLE O. STOLAND Professor of Physiology. WM. N. HECKING Professor of Drawing and Painting. WALTER S. HUNTER Professor of Psychology. CHARLES ALBERT SHULL B.S. 1905, Chicago. Associate Professor of Botany. LOUIS EUGENE SISSON A.B. 1904, Leland Stanford; A.M. 1909, Harvard. Associate Professor of Rhetoric. MARK SKIDMORE A.B. 19C5, Missouri; B.S. in Ed. 1916, Missouri; A.M. 1909, Illinois. Assistant Professor of Romance Languag es. THEODORE TOWNSEND SMITH A.B. 19C7, Harvard; A.M. 1908, Harvard. Assistant Professor of Physics. ELIZABETH CADE SPRAGUE Graduate of the Boston Normal School of Household Arts, 1898. Professor of Home Economics. MILES WILSON STERLING A.B. 1883; A.M. 1893. Associate Professor of Greek. WILLIAM CHASE STEVENS B.S. 1885; M.S. 1893. Professor of Botany. EDWIN FISKE STIMPSON B.S. 1890, Kansas. Assistant Professor of Physics. ELLIS BAYLEY STOUFFER A.B., A.M. 1907, Drake; Ph.D. 1911, Illinois. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. GEORGE WEATHERWORTH STRATTON A.B. 1907, Colorado; A.M. 1909, Ohio State; Ph.D. 1912, Ohio State. Assistant Professor of Chemistry. ALBERT MOREY STURTEVANT A.B. 1899, Harvard; A.M. 1901, Harvard; Ph.D. 1905, Harvard Assistant Professor of German. OLIN TEMPLE A.B. 1886, Kansas; A.M. 1890, Kansas. Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Professor of Philosophy. MERLE THORPE A.B. 1908, Washington. Professor of Journalism and Director of University Press and Publicity. HARRY CONRAD THURNAU A.B. 1899, A.M. 1903, Ph.D. 1909, Michigan. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures. JAMES EDWARD TODD A.B. 1867, Oberlin; M.A. 1870, Oberlin. Assistant Professor of Geology and Mineralogy. JOHN NICHOLAS VAN DER VRIES A.B. 1896, Hope; A.M. 1899, Hope; Ph.D. 1901, Clark. Professor of Mathematics. ARTHUR TAPPAN WALKER A.B. 1887, New York; A.M. 1892, Vanderbilt; Ph.D. 1898, Chicago. Professor of Latin Language and Literature. WILLIAM ASBURY WHITAKER Ph.B. 1904, North Carolina; A.M. 19C5, Columbia. Associate Professor of Metallurgy and Director of State Chemical Research. SELDEN LINCOLN WHITCOMB A.B. 1887, Grinnell; A.M. 1893, Columbia. Associate Professor of English Literature. ALEXANDER MARTIN WILCOX A.B. 1877, Yale; Ph.D. 1880, Yale. Professor of Greek Language and Literature. CALVERT JOHNSON WINTER Ph.B. 1905, Hiram. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. WM. S. JOHNSON Professor of English Literature. FREDERICK A. G. COWPER Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. FRDERICK WILLIAM BRUCKMILLER Assistant Professor of Chemistry. —44— liTS Jayhawker Faculty «f acuity of 11)0, School of lEnglne rlrtg CHARLES HAMILTON ASHTON A.B. 1887, Union College; A.M. 1894, Harvard; Ph.D. 1908, Munich. Professor of Mathematics. FRANK LOGAN BROWN B.S. in C.E. 1911, University of Colorado. Assistant Professor of Mechanics. CHARLES C. COCHRAN B.S. 1906, University of Colorado. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Drawing. JOHN DILLE CARVER B.S. 1910, University of Kansas. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. GOLDWIN GOLDSMITH Ph.B. 1896, Columbia University. Professor of Architecture. CHARLES ARTHUR HASKINS B.S. 1910, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Civil and Sanitary Engineering. ERASMUS HA WORTH B.S. 1881, University of Kansas; M.S. 1884, Univer- sity of Kansas, Ph.D. 1888, Johns Hopkins. Professor of Geology and Mineralogy. GEORGE JUSSEN HOOD B.S. 1902, University of Kansas. -Associate Professor of Mechanical Drawing; Chief Ad- viser of Freshman Engineers. FRANK EVERETT JONES Armour Institute. Assistant Professor of Pattern Making and Founding; Superintendent of Fowler Shops. JACOB OSCAR JONES B.S. 1911, University of Kansas; M.C.E. 1915, Cornell. Assistant Professor of Hydraulics. HERBERT EDWIN JORDAN A.B. 1900, A.M. 1901, McMaster University; Ph.D. 1904, Chicago University. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. WILLIAM COLEMAN McNOWN B.S. 1903, University of Wisconsin. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. FREDERIC NEWTON RAYMOND A.M. 1897, Columbia University. Associate Professor of Rhetoric. HERBERT ALLEN RICE C.E. 1897, Ohio State University. Professor of Mechanics and Structural Engineering. MARTIN EVERETT RICE B.S. 1891, M.S. 1893, University of Kansas. Associate Professor of Physics. HARRY ASHTON ROBERTS B.S. 1902, University of Illinois. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. GEORGE CARL SHAAD B.S. 1900, E.E. 190S, Penn. State College. Professor of Electrical Engineering. FREDERICK HUBBARD SIBLEY B.S. 1898, Brown University; M.E. 1904, Case School. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Direc- tor of Fowler Shops. ALFRED HIGGINS SLUSS B.S. 1900, University of Illinois. Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering. ARTHUR C. TERRILL E.M. 1905, Colorado School of Mines; A.M. 1914, Columbia University. Professor of Mining and Ore Dressing. PERLY F. WALKER B.M.E. 1896, M.E. 1900, University of Maine; M.M.E. 1901, Cornell. Professor of Mechanical Engnieering; Dean of the School of Engineering; Director of the Engineering Experiment Station. CLEMENT CLARENCE WILLIAMS B.S. 1900, Southern Iowa Normal College; B.S. in C.E. 1907, University of Illinois; C.E. 1909, Univer- sity of Colorado. Professor of Railway Engineering. J acult of tl)e Scl)Ool of 5lle6lclite SAMUEL JAY CRUMBINE, M.D. Dean. ORVAL JAMES CUNNINGHAM Associate Professor of Surgery. WILLIAM J. V. DEACON Associate Professor of Preventative Medicine. MERVIN TUBMAN SUDLER, Ph.D., M.D. Associate Dean and Professor of Suigery. JAMES NAISMITH, A.B., M.D. Professor of Physical Education. JOHN SUNDWALL, Ph.D., M.D. Professor of Anatomy. SAMUEL A .MATTHEWS, M.D. Professor of Physiology and Pharmacology. LINDSAY S. MILNE, M.D. Professor of Medicine. JOSEPH E. SAWTELL, M.D. Professor of Otorhinolaryngology. DON CARLOS GUFFEY, A.B.., M.D. Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics. FRANKLIN E. MURPHY, M.D. Professor of Clinical Medicine. JACOB BLOCK, M.D. Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases. JOHN WALTER PERKINS, A.B., M.D. Professor of Surgery. ISIDORE JULIUS WOLF, M.D. Professor of Internal Medicine. S. S. GLASSCOCK, M.D. Professor of Psychiatry. GEORGE M. GRAY, M.D. Professor of Clinical Surgery. LYMAN L. UHLS, M.S. Professor of Psychiatry. E. J. CURRAN, M.D. Professor of Ophthalmology. ZACHARIAH NASON, M.D. Professor of Clinical Obstetrics. PETER THOMAS BOHAN, M.D. Professor of Clinical Medicine. WILLIAM KIRK TRIMBLE, M.D. Associate Professor of Internal Medicine (Laboratory Diagnosis.) JOHN N. SCOTT, Ph.G., M.D. Associate Professor of Electrotherapeutics. ARTHUR E. HERTZLER, M.D., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Surgery (Surgical Pathology). ANDREW L. SKOOG, M.D. Associate Professor of Neurology. WILLIAM L. McBRIDE, M.D. Associate Professor of Dermatology. CLAY E. COBURN, M.D. „ Lecturer on State Medicine. .is CHAS. CLINTON CONOVER, M.D. . Associate Prof essor of Clinical Medicine. RICHARD L. SUTTON, M.D. I - Associate Professor of Dermatology. WILLIAM F. KUHN, A.M., M.D. Adjunct Professor and Lecturer. HARRY LESLIE CHAMBERS, M.D. Adjunct Professor of Hygiene. GEORGE E. COGHILL, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy. JESSE E. HUNT, M.D. Associate Professor of Pediatrics. C. FERDINAND NELSON, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physiological Chemistry. JOHN G. HAYDEN, B.S. 1902, M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery. RUSSELL A. ROBERTS, A.M., M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Rectal). EDWARD PARK HALL, M.D. Assistant Professor of Rhinolaryngology. WM. M. DUKE, M.D. Assistant Professor of Medicine. : 1917 c —45— . .-,,.. .:-.„ „«., i 1 1 - j H hHH li — ' ' ' ' B B B ' ill HB F . ' B H jj ffBy ' „ir J a hawker _ Faculty ' - f -4 J ' T, - U-4 ff . ■•?.• i ■ ' :.ir-. K t %« ! ' 1917 C —46— Jayhawker Hfow l)e Student 06 TCooKe6 In September IS66. (North College has passed into history. On January 20th last, the School of Fine Arts moved from its halls and left it standing, silent and alone. With the passing of the mother building of the University, these extracts from The First and the Fiftieth ' , an article by Helen Roda Hoopes, which appeared in the October number of Graduate Magazine, 1915, are of unusual interest to the present student body. In these words Miss Hoopes gives us a vivid picture of the first opening of the University.) N the twelfth of September, 1866, in the chapel of the University building (now North Col- lege), were held the first opening exercises of the University of Kansas. With desks and furnishing still not ready, with the painters still at work on the building, President Rice assembled his fifty-five students on this bright, sunny morning, and for the first time opened school on Mount Oread. The day came for assembling at the new University building. Think of North College being new, and meriting this description, to be found in the catalogue: The University building is a neat, substantial edifice, fifty feet square and three stories high. It stands on Mount Oread, overlooking the city and the surrounding country. At this time the south entrance was not open, but on the north there was a porch with a path leading up to it from the northeast corner of the campus, a path that became very slippery in winter, even as Adams Street does now. They stood on the north porch on that September morning, that little group of ladies and gentlemen, and said to one another: Isn ' t this pleasant to stand out on the porch like this. ' Down at high school the janitor never would have allowed it. Janitors in those days, it seems, were really persons of authority. Indeed, this janitor ' s name appeared in the catalogue following the names of the faculty — Thomas A. Gorrill, Janitor. In view of all this, no wonder that the ladies and gentlemen rejoiced at their newly-acquired provileges — privileges, alas, to be snatched away immediately, for when they went up to the assembly room they were told by Professor Rice that there must never be any loitering on the porch or in the halls, and no talking in the corridors, but that each student must go at once to the cloak-room, remove his or her wraps and repair at once to the school-room. Just think of it — no chapel dates, no lobbying, no electioneering; no pep meetings; just 1860 decorum and strict attention to the business in hand. The rules and regulations laid down for the guidance of the students seem very funny to us today. Those who entered the University left hope behind, because the catalogue said that Entering the University will be regarded as a pledge to obey all its rules and regulations. Then follows a series of articles under the head of Discipline. Note the severity of this one: The rules of the University of Kansas require every student to be in his or her place at all stated exercises, from the beginning to the end of his or her connection with the University. The first half of the next item seems to build a stone wall about the student, but fortunately a convenient loophole for escape was provided in the last half. For every instance of absence, tardi- ness or failure in recitation, a satisfactory excuse must be rendered to the proper officer. No one who has heard excuses manufactured in 1915 and who remembers that human nature is essentially the same, century after century, can for a moment doubt that the ladies and gentlemen of 1866 could furnish a brand that could satisfy any officer, no matter how proper. Students must be prompt at the opening of the term, says the catalogue, sternly, and continue unto the end and not absent themselved from town without permission from the President. Professor Robinson later confides to us that this rule was created because during the first year the number of students reached the vanishing point and that it was only by dint of much persuasion that they were enabled to close the year triumphantly with twenty-two students. Fifty-five to begin with and twenty-two to close with! And this year of 1915 we felt disappointed because we did not quite reach the three thous- and mark. However, the life of the fifty-five was not all a dull grind. True, they were not allowed to talk in the corridors, but in the cloak-room they could enjoy themselves, provided the janitor did not hear them. The girls ' cloak-room was in the basement, just opposite the janitor ' s room, and danger of detection was ever imminent. Every girl wore a hat to school; no girl would have thought of appearing on the street hatless, with her hair blown about the face or tied up with a monstrous bow of gavly- colored ribbon. there was a boy in the Zoology class who, while another student was rattling off classifications, would upset the dignity of the entire class by moving his whole scalp in waves over his head. One student of that first year remembers a night of falling stars when all the boys sat up all night with Professor Snow and inspected the wonders of the heavens through a miniature telescope. Surely there must have been sliegh-riding in the winter, but at all events there were parties — cooky-shines and muffin-worries, General Eraser called them. 1917 ig: —47— Jay hawker - In the spring the boys picked wild strawberries for the girls and put up a swing in a big tree, and gave them glorious swings. Those were the days! Lawrence has been called the city of trees and beautiful girls. The trees we can see for ourselves, but the beautiful girls of 1866, most of them, live only in memory. But they were beautiful, these girls of long ago, with their hair brushed smoothly over their temples or fluffed in curls around their faces (curls laboriously made with a hot slate-pencil.) Yes, they were beautiful, these girls, and some of them knew it; and some of them, I have been told, looked over their shoulders at the boys, even as they do now. They had many difficulties, these girls — the climb up to Mount Oread was very difficult to make, especially in crinolines, because the wind would blow back their skirts like sails and the crinoline would wrap about their feet. And the mud — oh, the mud was awful! Sometimes they had to wear rubber boots to school or else bring with them shoes and white stockings to put on in place of the muddy ones. Their skirts were long and very full, and would sometimes be stained with mud. The boys, some of them, wore blue jeans decorated with patches; and cowhide boots. Occasionally one was found so lost to a sense of social fitness as to black his boots with shoe polish. Others were more like city boys, with braid-bound suits and white shirts, home- made. One particular Adonis was especially admired because of his Eastern clothes and manners. And never the two shall meet, at all events, not in pioneering days. The girls, however, had just as pretty clothes then as now — prettier, some people think. In the fall they wore calicoes or checked ginghams. Indeed, they wore these all winter. They were pretty, of fine material, and cost a good deal. One especially stylish girl (the junior preps loved the work), wore a white dotted swiss, with short puffed sleeves. In the winter they wore gray flannel and blue serges, with full crinoline skirts and basques. Over these they wore white aprons with ruffled bibs. One girl wore a dark gray dress trimmed with steel nail-heads. That was stunning! Their party dresses were their Sunday dresses of merino, in maroon, or blue, or green. Sometimes a girl was fortunate enough to own a black silk dress. That was the height of luxury. They had few jewels; sometimes a little turquoise or topaz ring, worn on the forefinger, and a pin, either a cameo or a branch of polished pink coral, pinned in their lace collars. For rainy weather they had big circular water- proof capes and for cold weather shawls or heavy cloaks. Furs were not dear in those days and every girl had a cape of mink or gray squirrel with a little round muff into which she tucked her mittened hands. Their hats were little round affairs of black velvet, worn low on their foreheads or perhaps at just the merest trifle of a tilt. By special request of Professor Rice, the girls brought to school little breakfast shawls to wear as they went through the cold halls of the University building. Other times, other manners — yes; but the people do not change. Their hearts are the same and their hopes and dreams are the same. And no doubt, after the first opening and after the fiftieth, the fifty-five and the twenty-eight hundred, watching the sun sink back of Mount Oread, lingered a mo- ment to dream dreams and see visions of a bigger and better University of Kansas. — Helen Roda Iloopes, ' .?. 1917 C —48— ' Class es Jayhawker Seniors HiLSMAN Lytle McElvain Smee SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS George Smee President Harold Lytle Vice-President Itasca HiLsm an Secretary Margaret McElvain Treasurer COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN Jack Caffrey Social J . Edward Jones Invitation Constant Poirier Finance Adrain Lindsey Cap and Gown Wi LLARD Gl Asco Memorial William Weber Smoker Paul Flagg Publicity Roy Davidson Senior Play Harlan Russel Football Herb ert Howland Track Georg E Kamp ert Baseball Charles Kietzmann Basketball Carolyn McNutt Girls Mixer —49— . vrA ia xi f: Mut-fUAitvasMi uf iMHmm .. Jay hawker -1 Seniors Deane E. Ackers, B.S. Abilene Engineering, Civil. Ben, ex, Men ' s Student Council (3), Owls, Chairman Engineer Social Committee (3), Chairman Student Social Committee (3), Ex- position Committee. Lydia L. Ainsworth, A.B. College — Education . Lid — K K r. Lyons Ivan A. Allen, LL.B. Washington Lau). Nels — 4 A A, Class Football (1-2). Lewis G. Allen, M.D. Louie — A.B. 1915, B n. Lenixa Una Allen, B.M. Muscotah Fine Arts. Sammie — M E, Orchestra (3-4). —50— Jayhawker Seniors Lyle Anderson, A.B. Partridge College Andy — A 2 P, K. U.-N. U. Debate Team (3-4), Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3-4), Vice-President Junior Laws (4), Inter-society Debate (2). Carl O. Anderson, B.S. Engineering — Mining. Andy — T B O, S T E. Rosedale Glendon Allvine, A.B., LL.B. Kansas City College. G. A. — nr, 4 A , SAX, Kansan Board (1-2-3-4), Associate Editor Kansan (2), Jay- hawker Board (4-5), International Polity Club. Mabel Anderson, A.B. College — Education. Lawrence Mary Anderson, B.M. Fine Arts. De Soto —51 — Ig Jayhawker g; Seniors it May Anderson, A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College. ASA, May Fete (2-3), Y. W. C. A. Committee (1-2-3-4), Junior Prom Committee (3), College Committee (4), Panhellenic (3-4). Zella Anderson, A.B. Lawrence Lawrence Dorothy Lou Angevine, A.B. College. B K, n r S, K. U. Dramatic Club (3-4), Y- W. C. A. Second Cabinet (3), Secretary Y. W- C. A. First Cabinet (4), Junior Farce Com- mittee (3). I HiLMAR George Appel, A.B. Nickcrson College. Dutch — Ben, Alemannia, Black Helmet, Owls, Zoology Club, Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball (2-3). Harold W. Arlin, B.S. Carthage, Mo. Engineering. Judge — A 4 2. ST, T B H, A. L E. E., Memorial Committee. —52— Jayhawker 4 Seniors LiLA Atkinson, A.B. Lawrence College. K A e, n r S, B K, Big Sister Captain, Dis- trict President W. S. G. A., Religious Meetings Committee, Treasurer History Club. Annette Hughes Ashton, A.B. Lawrence College — Medicine. A A n. Torch, Glee Club (2-3), Secretary Math- ematics Club (3), Chairman Westminster Guild Social Committee, Senior Representative Women ' s Athletic Association. Fenton J. Baker, A.B. College. Bake — S X. Joplin, Mo. Clifford W. Baldwin, LL.B. Law. Lucky — A , K. U. Band (1-2). Seneca EusEBio C. Barba, LL.B. Bacnotan Union, Philippines Law. Seb — Knights of Columbus, University De- bating Club. : 1917 g; —53— Jay hawker i| Seniors Katharine Barber, B.M. Fine Arts. Katrine. Holton Charles E. Baysinger, A.B. Hartford College. Chuck — Acacia, Band (1-2), Soccer (2), His- tory Club. George H. Beach, LL.B. Lawrence Law. B B n. Sphinx, Pinafore (1), Senior Invitation Committee. i Andrew T. Beckley, B.S. Engineer — Chemical. Chemallurgist Board. Cherryvale Grace Beckley, A.B. Cherryvale College. Y. W. C. A. Social Committee (3-4), Senior Rep- resentative W. S. G. A., Vice-President Botany Club, Chairman Girls ' Mixer (2-4), Chairman May Fete Committee (3), Big Sister (3-4), May Queen (4). —54 — Jay hawker Steniors Grace Adelaide Bell, B.M. Lawrence Fine Arts. Datie — M I E, Freshman Piano Scholarship (1), Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2-3), Treasurer Y. W. C. A. (3-4). Dorothy Bigelow, A.B. College. Oberli Bliss Bignall, A.B., Ph. G. Wamego Pharmacy. Abigail Bixby, A.B. McPherson College. A A n, Second Cabinet Y. W. C. A. (3). Grace Bixler, A.B. College — E n glish . Ida —55— ! Jaj ' hawker Seniors Vera A. Blackburn, A.B. Larkenburg Dramatic Club, President Rota Club (3-4), Sec- retary French Circle, Memorial Committee (3-4). LuciLE Blackfan, A.B. Halstead College. Loosel — $ B K, German Play (3), Vice- President Verein, Sophomore Finance Commit- tee, Junior and Senior Memorial Committees. -Helen Bocker, B.M. Solomon Fine Arts. Honna — M $ E, Girls ' Mixer Committee(3), Second Cabinet Y. W. C. A. (3), First Cabinet Y. W. C. A. (4), Secretary Student Volunteer Band (4). Llewellyn J. Bond, LL.B. Washington Law. Jack — i A A, Owls, Jurisprudence Club, Sophomore Class Officer, Manager Law Scrim, Professional Inter-Fraternitv Council. Myron M. Booth, B.S. Hutchinson Medicine. Mike — ATA, N S N, Sachems, Pachaca- mac. White Crows, Black Helmet, Sphinx, Men ' s Student Council (4), Pan-Hellenic Council. :SH917C —56— ■ Jayhawker l Seniors BuRNETTE Bower, B.S. Mound City Engineering — Mechanical. Bobbie — S T, T B n, S E, A. S. M. E. Vice- President (3), Governing Board Engineering So- cieties (4). Vernor J. BowERSocK, LL.B. Wayside Law. Judge — - l A J , 40 Club, Junior Prom Com- mittee, K. U. Debating Society, Finance Com- mittee (3-4), Manager Uncle Jimmie Day Banquet (4). Bernice Boyles, A.B. College Bery — Mathematics Club. Silver Lake Carl A. Brand, B.S. Engineering 2 A E. Kansas City, Mo. Ben E. Brown, A.B. College Ida —57— ° Jayhawker Seniors I Dorothy Thornton Brown, A.B. Joplin, Mo. College — Education nB . Joyce E. Brown, Ph.G. Pharmacy Achoth. Logan Oscar Brownlee, A.B. College Alemannia, Owls. Stafford Esther Burke, A.B. Lawrence College Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Senior Basketball Team, Secretary Student Volunteers. Edmund C. Burke, B.S. Kansas City, Mo. Engineering — Electrical 2 T, A 4 S, Secretary-Treasurer A. L E. E. (3). Vice-President A. L E. E. (4). 1917 C -58— Jay hawker Seniors Archie R. Burt, B.S. Blue Mound Engineering — Electrical American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Walter G. Cadmus, Jr., B.S. Parsons Engineering — Architectural A l S, A. E. S., Governing Board Kansas En- gineer (3), Art Staff Jayhawker (3), 40 Club. John P. Caffrey, A.B. Mt. Hope College Jack — $ A A, Dramatic Club, International Polity Club, K. U. Debating Society, Chairman Senior Social Committee, Chairman Junior Fi- nance Committee, College Committee (4), Senior Plav Cast. John L. Calene, Jr., A.B. Sylvan Grove College — Medicine K 2, X, Black Helmet, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (2-3-4), President Student Volunteers (4). Dan S. Campbell, LL.B. Law Swan — K ' . Joplin, Mo. —59— L-Hirf timr t«iMiVi JM««( «W MV«i«Ct « ,1 ayliaw ker -1 Seniors i I i Fred W. Campbell, C.E. Kansas City, Mo. Engineering — Chemical Fritz — A i 2, Chemical Club. Hazel Ellene Carson, A.B. Ashland College — Education II B J , Torch, n r 2, Glee Club (1-2), Y. W. C. A. Second Cabinet (2). First Cabinet (3), W. S. G. A. (2), Secretary VV. S. G. A. (4), J ay hawker Staff (4). Ruth Castles, A.B. Lawrence College A A n, Home Economics Club, Senior Social Committee. 1 i Lawrence W. Cazier, A.B. Wakarusa College — Medicine Cozy — 2 I S, K. U. Vaudeville (1-2), Chair- man Junior Prom Program Committee. L Charles R. Chase, B.S. Emporia Engineering — Architectural Chuck — B en, 2 T, Sphinx, Freshman Base- ball, Varsity Baseball (3). —60— ■ Jayhawker Seniors Laurance N. Christine, B.S. Lawrence Engineering Christie — K. U. Vaudeville (1), Class Foot- ball (1). Hallie Clark, A.B. College AAA. Cherokee, Olcla. Dora Belle Coffin, A.B. Lawrence Billie — Home Economics Club. Stella Cole, A.B. Lawrence College Y. W. C. A. Cabinet,lSecretary Home Eco- nomics Club. Herbert K. Coleman, A.B., M.D. Rosedale Medicine ' Herbie — B n. Football (2-4), Track (2), Vice-President of Class (3). 1917 C —61— J ay hawker -Ig Seniors Margaret Coleman, A.B., B.S. College — Education ASA, Mathematics Club. Lawrence Eugene B. Cook, Ph.G. Cherryvale Pharmacy Cookie — KS, A X S, Sachem, Ahoku, Stu- dent Council (4), Pachacamac, President Phar- macy School (3), President Junior Pharmics (2), Pharmaceutical Society, Jayhawker Staff (4). Rebekah B. Cooper, A.B. Wichita College n B J , Botany Club, Zoology Club, Junior So- cial Committee. Halleck I. Craig, LL.B. Independence Law Red — 4 r A, 4 A A, Freshman Football, Var- sity Football (2), Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball (2-3), K Club, Athletic Board, Owls, Dramatic Club, Student Council, Finance Com- mittee Junior Prom, Pachacamac, Sachems. Stilesville, Ind. Hugh W. Crawford, B.S. Engineering — Civil Birdie — S X, GT, T B n. Owls, Sachems, Pachacamac, Ahoku, President Civil Engin- eering Society (3), Editor-in-Chief Kansas En- gineer (3), Arrangements Committee Com- mencement Week. —62— Jayhawker -l Ssniors Alice Amelia Crouch, A.B. Ft. Stockton, Tex College — Education William J. Crowley, LL.B. Law Kansas City Bill — K, A e , International Polity Club (3), K. U. Debating Society (1-2), Class Track (1-2-3-4), Varsitv Track (3-4), Class Football 1-3), Athletic Board (3), K Club (4), Senior Memorial Committee. Harry Edwin Crum, B.S. Lawrence Engineering— Mining Ted — n K A, 2 T E, S T, Varsity Track (2), K Club, Student Council (3), Pan-Hellenic Council (2), President A. I. M. E. (3), President Geology Club (4). Albert Cruzan, M.A. Lawrence Graduate K-Zip — B.O., A.B., from Texas Christian University, D.O. from American School of Osteopathy. Evelyn M. Cruzan, A.B. College O N, Home Economics Club. Bethany, Mo. —63— . ZII Jay hawker I Seniors John Byron Dail, A.B. College Kanza, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Cherokee, Okla. Ruth N. Daniels, A.B. College n r 2, Torch, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Hiawatha Olin E. Darby, A.B., B.S. Washington College — Education ' ' Ole — Glee Club (2-3-4), Band (1-2-3), Class Football (1-2), Entomology Club, Botany Club, Junior Finance Committee, Senior Memorial Committee, President Washington County Club. Roy Davidson, A.B. Nickerson Davy — A S P, Varsity Debate (3-4), Varsity Track (3-4), Dramatic Club, Junior Finance Committee, Chairman Senior Play Committee, International Polity Club (3, 4), Secretary- Treasurer (4), Debating Council (4). Edna M. Davis, B.M. Chanute Fine Arts X n, Glee Club (1-2-3), Manager Glee Club (3), Vice-President Junior Class, Fine Arts (3). : 1917 c —64— Jayhavvker l Seniors Fred M. Deardorfk, B.S. Kansas City, Mo. Engineering — Architectural S A E, 2 t. Frank V. DeArmond, B.S. Engineering — Civil K. U. Civil Engineering Society. Topeka Adeline DeMare, A.B. Lawrenec College B K, n r 2, French Club, Spanish Club, Y. W. C. A. Rev. Charles Haskell Derr, M.A. Baldwin Education A.B. Park College, Graduate McCormick Teoh- logical Seminary, Missionary Hengchow, Hu- nan, China. Paul A. Diehl, B.S. Peck College Sugarfoot — GT, T B 11, Sachems, Ahoku, Men ' s Student Council, Civil Engineering So- ciety. —65— Jayhawker Seniors Reta Hazel Dielman, A.B. College B K, History Club. Winfield Independence Otto H. Dittmer, LL.B. Law Dutch — FA, 3 AA, 4 A T, Owls, Hawk Club, K. U. Dramatic Club, Als Verlobte Empfehlen Sich, The Man From Home, Ju- risprudence Club, The Witching Hour, Pres. K. U. Dramatic Club (4), Toastmaster Uncle Jimmie Day Banquet (4), Under Cover. Jessie L. Dixon, A.B. College Jess. Mound Valley Kenneth C. Dodderidge, LL.B. White City Law Casey — A T i2. Sphinx, Jayhawker Staff (4). Evelyn Duncan, A.B. Excelsior Spgs., Mo. College — Education : 1917 —ca:— Jay hawker Seniors Mabel Duncan, A.B. College El Ateneo, Quill Club. Perry, Okla. Florence E. Dunigan, A.B. Lawrence College Peggy — Glee Club (3-4), Dramatic Club (4), Chimes of Normandy, Black FriarsClub,Y.W.C.A. Alice Duvall, A.B. College Hutchinson Lewis L. Dyche, Jr., B.S. Lawrence College — Medicine 4 B n. Tumbling Squad (1-2), Gym Team (3), Council Professional Fraternities (3-4). Ada Dykes, A.B. Lebanon College — Education n B , Dramatic Club (3-4), Student Day Speaker, College (3), Lead in Witching Hour (3), Lead in Under Cover (4) Senior Play If I were Dean (4). —67— Jayhawker - Seniors Guy L. Ecroyd, A.B. Arkansas City College Eck — A S, Spanish Play (3), President El Ateneo(3-4), Treasurer Cercle Francais (4). R. H. Edmiston, A.B., M.D. Medicine N S N. Americus Lee M. Egan, LL.B. Law Rip — r A, A e ! . Kansas City, Mo. Arthur E. Elliott, A.B. VVarrensburg, Mo. College — Education Art — A K. Frances Ellis, A.B. College El Dorado —68— Jayhawker Seniors Mabel Marshall Elmore, A.B. Tecumseh College Quill Club, Dramatic Club, Under Cover, Black Friars, Treasurer Shawnee County Club, Sophomore Farce, Sophomore Memorial Com- mittee, Junior Refreshment Committee. D. Henry Else, A.B. College Dan — Botany Club. Lawrence Olen R. Farris, Ph.G. Norwich Pharmacy n K A, 4 A X, Pharmaceutical Society. Charles J. Fee, A.B. Meade College Kanza, K. U. Debating Society, Junior Pro- gram Committee, President Meade County Club Elfriede Fischer, A.B. Lawrence College Fish — X 12, President Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil (3).  1917 C —69— Jayhavv ker Seniors I I I Jesse Morgan Fisher, LL.B. Tonganoxie Law Washburn College, President T S Literary So- ciety (2), President T. P. A., Vice-President District at K. U., A A. Harry Clay Fiske, A.B. College Acacia, Football. Alva, Okla. LioNA B. Fletcher, A.B. College B K, n r 2. John P. Flinn, LL.B. Chanute Law Jimmie — $ A A, White Crows, University Debating Society, Class Football (3), Vice- President Senior Law Class. Lamar, Mo. Alfred V. Forsythe, B.S. Engineering — Electrical Dodge City : 1917 «: —70— 1 Jayliawker Seniors Nelle Foster, A.B. College — Education Olathe Norman M. Foster, B.S. Ellsworth Engineering Butts — A T Si, T B n, S T, Sachems, Knight of the Golden K, Manager Junior Prom, Chairman A. I. E. E. Ruth M. Foster, A.B. Topeka College K K T, Dramatic Club, Secretary Shawnee Co. Club, Black Friars. Frank H. Fox, B.S. Engineering — Electrical Foxy — A. I. E. E. Lawrence Paul Holston Friend, LL.B. Lawrence Law Plukey — 4 FA, t A A, Pachacamac, Sa- chems, Owls, Sphinx, Manager Junior Prom, K. U. Dramatic Club, Law School Editor An- nual, Knights of the Golden K . —71— rZrrZ:ZIIIZZ Jay hawker Seniors Helen G. Frisbie, A.B. College Oskaloosa Joe Gaitskill, LL.B. Girard Law Joe — n T, Pachacamac, Sachems, Owls, Black Helmet, Knights of the Golden K, Cheerleader, Manager of Law Scrim, Sopho- more Farce, F ' reshman Football, Freshman Baseball, Class Football (2-3-4), President Woodrow Wilson Club. Lawrence Helen Marie Gallagher, A. B. College K. U. Dramatic Club, Blackfriars, The Witch- ing Hour (3), Second Shepherd ' s Play (4), Finance Committee (1), Publicity Committee (2), Membership Committee Y. W. C. A., May Fete (1-2-3), W. A. A. Marvin L. Gear, A. B. Buffalo College Boots — Kanza, Pachacamac, Sec-Treasurer Men ' s Student Council, Vice-President Union Co. Club (3-4), Junior Invitation Committee, Commerce Club. Preston Jess Gardner, A.B. College Slim — 4 A A, Prom Committee, Entomo- logical Club, J ay hawker Staff (4), Economics Club, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. —72— ■ J ayha vker Seniors C. R. Gelvin, LL.B. Nashua, Iowa Law Dick — ATA, 4 A , Sachems, Pachaca- camac. Knights of the Golden K , Business Manager 1917 Jayhawker, Glee Club, Pan- Hellenic Council Clifford L. Giles, B.S. College — Medicine A T S2, N 2 N. Kansas Citv VViLLARD M. Glasco, A.B. Lawrencc College Jap — Chairman Senior Memorial, Chairman Student Union Committee, Chairman Junior Memorial, President County Clubs Union, Jay- hawker Board, 40 Club, President Student- Alumni Union of Kansas State Educational In- situtions, K. U. Debating Society. Ernest J. Goppert, LL.B. Belleville Law Gop — Hettie Elizabeth Lewis Prize Essay (2), University Debating Society (1-2-3-4), Company M to Mexico. William Claude Gould, LL.B. Dodge City Law Jay — A . : 1917 « z —7. ' ?— Seniors Mary Louise Govier, A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College n B , n r 2, Torch, Botany Club, Dramatic Club. Marie Graff Topeka College — Education Peggy — Mathematics Club, Glee Club. Paul R. Greever, LL.B. Lansing Law Skin — AT S2, J A , President Men ' s Stu- dent Council, Jurisprudence Club, President Leavenworth Co. Club (2), Chairman Soph Hop Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Student Council (3), War Relief Committee (4). Clarence Lee Griffith, B.S. Engineering — Electrical Griff — A. L E. E. Lawrence Louis A. Griffith, Ph.G. Scott City Pharmacy Blackie — Vice-President Senior Pharmacy Class. —74— I J ay hawker Seniors Everett K. Groene, A.B. Kansas City College Varsity Track (2-3-4), Cross Country (3-4), President University Debating Society (2), Commerce Club, International Polity Club, 40 Club, Senior Memorial Committee (2), K Club. Marguerite Gregory, A.B. Lawrence College r B, Zoology Club. Hugh A. Grutzmacher, A.B. College Temple Gruver, B.M. fine Arts Onaga Lawrence Grutz — S S, M A, Varsity Track (2-3 4), K Club, University Band (1-2-3), Univer- sity Orchestra (3-4), Glee Club (4), Sophomore Athletic Committee, Junior Farce Committee, Athletic Board, Entomological Club. Lawrence Alton Gumbiner, LL.B. Law Gummy — A I , I A T, Sachems, Ahoku, Chairman Law Division, President Jurispru- dence Club, Glee Club (1), K. U. Debating Club, Dramatic Club, Lead in Sophomore Farce Man from Home, Witching Hour, Under Cover, Author Copping the Grapes, Prize- winning Dramatic Club Play (3), Author A Mere Chant of Venus, Football Smoker Bur- lesque, Senior Play Committee, Speaker for Middle Laws Uncle Jimmie Day Banquet, Winner Senior Contest State Bar Association Paper, Author If I Were Dean Prize-winning Dramatic Club Play (4). : 1917 c —75— J ■ Jayha vker - Seniors Joel O. Gunnels, B.S. Paola Engineering — Civil Joe — President Civil Engineering Society of K. U. Mary Louise Gustafson, A.B. College Achoth, Home Economics Club. Wichita Charles W. Hagenbuch, B.S. Kansas City Engineering — Mechanical n T, T B n, S T, Sachem, President A. S. M. E., Student Council (3), Assistant.Manager Kansas Engineer (3), Business Manager Kansas En- gineer (4). Helen Ruth Hargett, M.A. Graduate Y B. Lawrence W. F. Harkrader, A.B. Pratt College Harky — Band ( ' 11- ' 13- ' 14), President Com- merce Club. : i9i7C ! ! Jayhawker ' Harry Hatlan, LL.B. Smith Center Law Judge — A A, Sachem, Ahoku, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (1-2), Glee Club. Cathlene Harris, A.B. Achoth. Eudora George VV. Harrison, Ph.G. Pharmacy Lawrence EdwaRd H. Hashinger, A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College — Medicine Ed — SN, N2N, 4 MA, Charles Griffith Memorial Scholarship (2), Pan-Hellenic Council (2-3-4), Treasurer (4), Committee of the College (4), Cap and Gown Committee (4), Jayhawker Editor for Medical School (4). Irvin Haury, M.A. Newton Graduate Shorty — Fellow Department of Romance Lan- guages and Literature, A.B., Bethel College. —77— ' f Jayiiawker l Seniors 1 A. Earl Heacock, A.B. College — Education Hitch. Attic Milton S. Heath, A.B. Burns College Kanza, White Crows, Men ' s Student Council (3), International Polit Club. Louise Hedrick, A.B. College K A e, n r s, N. William Rea Heath, Jr., A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College Speed — Ben, Ahoku, Varsity Football (2-3-4), Varsity Track (2-3), Varsity Basketball (2). Athletic Board, K Club, Ornithology Club, Zoology Club. Friend Margaret R. Heizer, A.B. Osage City College K K r, S $, Junior Jayhawker Committee, J ay hawker Board (4), Sophomore Farce (3). 3 1917 C —78— ■ Jayhawker - Seniors Nell M. Hennessy University Hospital Kansas City, Mo. Russell C. Hepler, B.S. Cottonwood Falls College — Medicine X. Frank Hetherington, A.B. Topeka College Hale — r A, Spanish Club, K. U. Dramatic Club, Black Helmets, Good Government Club, Zoology Club. Topeka Scalp ' — B e ly 2 A X, Junior Class Foot ball, S.ansan Board. V Bob Hill, B.S. Engineering Cawker City : 1917 g: —79— Jayhawker - Seniors Itasca Powell Hilsman, A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College — Education Tex — X 12, Secretary Dramatic Club (3), Botany Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Secretary Junior Class, Calendar Editor Jayhawker (4), Entomological Club. Florence Hoar, A.B. College Flos — Girls ' Glee Club. Lawrence Howard E. Hoffman, A.B. Abilene College I ' Hoff — A T A, 4 M A, Commerce Club, Jun- ior Prom Committee, Band (1-2). James H. Holden, B.S. Boston, Mass. Engineering — Chem ical Jimmie — Z J ' , A X 2, President Chemical Engineering Society (4), Council of Professional Fraternities (3). Anita M. Hostetter, A.B. Lawrence College — Educafio n r 4 B, Quill Club, Y. W. C. A. Finance Com- mittee (4). lanugo : 1917 c —so— J ay hawker l Herbert Rowland, A.B. Ludell College A Q 4 , Kansan Board, President K. U. Debat- ing Society, Varsity Track (3-4), Cross Countr} ' Team (3), Chairman Junior and Senior Athletic Committees, International Polity Club, Y. M. C. A. Gospel Team, Mott-Robbins Campaign Committee, Jayhawker Staff (4). MoNA Clare Huffman, A.B. Columbus College S K, n r S, Torch, Big Sister Captain, Glee Club (2-3), Junior Representative W. S. G. A. Cabinet (4). Lewis Madison Hull, A.B. Washington, D.C College Louie — nX, B K, 2 2, A T, Glee Club (3), Junior Memorial Committee, Mathematics Club, Dramatic Club, Full House Cast. Edwin W. Hullinger, A.B. Osborne College Ed — S A X; Occidental College, Los Angeles, Cal. (1-2), Alemannia, Kansan Board (3-4), President Associated Students of Journalism, News Editor Kansan (3-4), Editor University Daily Kansan (4). Chauncey D. Hunter, x .B. Abilene College Alemannia, Student Council (3), Band (3-4), Sophomore Farce Committee, Freshman Finance Committee, Class Football (2), Vice-President Westminster Guild (2), President Westminster Guild (3), Manager Colonial Party (3), Chair- man All-University Social Committee (3-4), Chairman Football Smoker Committee (3), Commerce Club. —81— J a ' iiawker Seniors Gertrude Hurley, A.B. College AHA, May Fete (1). Leavenworth Albert B. Irwin, A.B. Kansas City College Al — B K, Acacia, Commerce Club, Men ' s Student Council (4). Frank H. Ise, A.B. Lawrence College Dutch — A T 12, Sphinx, Commerce Club, Freshman Finance Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Cap and Gown Committee. Henry Cushing Jackson, B.S. Springfield, Mass. Engineering — Architectural Jack — A I 2, A. E. S. Carl Luther Johnson, B.S. Topeka Engineering — Chemical Swede — B.S. Washburn ' 14, M.A. University of Kansas ' 15, Fellow in Chemistry (3). -82— Jay hawker Seniors G. Daniel Johnson, B.S. Lindsborg Engineering — Civil Dad — A.B., T B n, Civil Engineering So- ciety. John W. Johnson, A.B. College Jack. Newton J. Edward Jones, A.B. Fredonia College Blondie — 2 N, White Crows, Pacliacamac, Secretary County Club Union, President Wilson County Club, Knights of the Golden K, President Junior Class, Chairman Senior In- vitation Committee. Ogden S. Jones, A.B., A.M. Lawrence College Oggie — B e n. President College (3), Chair- man All University Party, Track and Soccer (2), Class Football, College Social Committee. Viola Jones, B.M. Fine Arts M « £. Fredonia —83— Jayhawker - Seniors Miriam Austin Jones, A.B. Wichita College Torch, Zoology Club, Big Sister Captain (2), President W. A. A. (2), Manager W. A. A. (3), A Club, Captain Senior Basketball, Swimming Team (3), Woman Athletic Editor Jayhawker. Sherwin Finch Kelley, B.S. N.Y. City Engineering — Alining Sergeant — -S F E, Sophomore Smoker Com- mittee, Junior Finance Committee, Secretary and Treasurer Mining Journal (3), Geology Club, Secretary-Treasurer (4), Program Com- mittee (3), Sergeant Co. M. Charles E. Kietzmann, B.S. Engineering Alta Vista Violet G. Kilgore, A.B. Wichita College X fi, Home Economics Club, Senior Girls Bas- ketball Team, Social Committee Y. W. C. A., Publicity Committee, Y. W. C. A., W. A. A. Muriel C. King, A.B. Wichita College Georgeyelliot — Blackfriars, Dramatic Club, Quill Club.  arn«!HeaH «  xSSMiJs.VMSi  vaNUiim • 1917 C —84 — ' J ay hawker Frances M. Klinck A.B. College Quill Club. Hutchinson Roy Knapp, A.B. College White City LuELLA M. Krehbiel, A.B. Moundridge College 4 B K, Tied for X S2 Economics Prize (1), Quill Club. S. Kruse, B.S. Engineering — Electrical Lawrence Anita Lahn, A.B. College Wichita —85— Jayhawker 4 Seniors Josephine Lamborx, A.B. College Joe — 2 K, Glee Club (1-2-3). Burlington Hazen B. Lanning, A.B. College Commerce Club. Wichita Emil C. Lefevre, B.S. Caney Engineering — Chemical French — S H, T B H, A X S, Alpha Chi Sig- ma Scholarship Medal. Lois Libbey, B. M. Fine Arts Altamont I ■ Jean Lindsay, A.B. College n B « . Topeka '  1917 C —86— : Jaykawker : Seniors Marian Lindsay, A.B. College Topeks Wichita Dora Edna Lockett, B.M. Fine Arts Pinafore, Glee Club (1-2-3-4), Sophomore Scholarship in Piano, Dramatic Club (3-4), Winner of K. U. Beauty Contest (3), Manager Girls ' Glee Club (4), Lead in Sophomore Farce, Sophomore Farce Committee, Lead in Spanish Gypsies, Chimes of Normandy, Under Cover. Arthur Kirkwood Loomis, ALA. Graduate Fellow in Education. Kenneth Harrison Lott, A.B., LL.B. Pawnee, Okla. Law Kent — 4 A , President International Polity Club, President Oklahoma Club, President Uni- versity Debating Society, Men ' s Student Coun- cil, Inter-society Debate, Debating Council, Franklins, K. U. Dramatic Club, Copping the Grapes, 40 Club, Treasurer Senior Laws, If I Were Dean. Virginia Wiles Lucas, A.B. Kansas City,Mo. College K K r, B K, Y. W. C. A. First Cabinet, Quill Club, District President, Women ' s Athletic Association A , Manager of K. U. Passing Show (3). Lav : 1917 c —87— Jay hawker Seniors Floss-Irene Lucas, A.B. Cherokee College S K, Pan-Hellenic Debate (3-4), Senior Invita- tion Committee. Gladys Luckan, A.B. College n B J , Botany Club. Lawi Verna Thackeray Makepeace, A.B. Little Cedar, Iowa College Inky — Dramatic Club, Blackfriars, Qui Club. Dorothy Markham, A.B. Pittsburg College n r S, B K, Y. VV. C. A. Hostess Committee (2). Corrine Markley School for Nurses Minneapolis —88— . I 11 Jayhawker -l Seniors J. Leroy Marshall, B.S. Rosedale Engineering — Architectural Marsh — Architectural Society, J ay hawker Board (4). Garnett George H. Marshall, A.B. College — Education 4 B K, Botany Club, History Club, Hattie Elizabeth Lewis Memorial Essay Prize (3). Ethel Martin, A.B. Lawrence College n r S, O N, Home Economics Club. Josephine Martin, B.S. College Jo — K A e. Zoology Club. Kansas City Harold Frank Mattoon, A.B., LL.B. Lawrence Laz 4 A A, A 2 P, B K, Kansas-Colorado Debate (3-4), Kansas-Nebraska Debate (6), Business Manager University Debating Council (3-4-5), President K. U. Debating Society (4-5), Chair- man 1915 Alemorial Committee (2-3), German Verein, German Dramatic Club, Der Dumm- kopf (2), International Polity Club. : 1917 c —89- Jayliaw ' ker -1 Seniors I I Dorothy Miller, A.B. College ' Dottv — K A B Topeka Harold C. Miller, A.B. Chanute College High Jump — K Club, Varsity Track (2-3- 4), Varsity Basketball (3), French Play (2), Senior Track Committee, Chairman Junior Basketball Committee. H. Laurence Miller, LL.B. Horton Law Hungry — B B 11, i A 4 , Jurisprudence Club Black Helmet, Knights of the Golden K President Sophomore Class. Alexander B. Mitchell, LL.B. Lawrence Law Mitch — r A, A 4 , Black Helmet,Sachem, President Law School (4). Helen Moore, A.B. Hutchinson College — Education n B , n r 2, Zoologv Club, Botanv Club, Pan-Hellenic (3-4). 1917 C —90— Jay hawker Seniors Ruth B. Moore, A.B. Hutchinson College K K r, Y. W. C. A. Social Committee, Black- friars. Grover C. Moore, A.B. College-Sociology Agenda Vernon Aubrey Moore, A.B. Gas College Faddie — n K A, S A X, Kansan Board (2-3- 4), Business Manager Kansan (4), Chairman Junior Prom Committee, Associate Journalism Students, Circulation Manager Kansan (3), Senior Memorial Committee, Assistant Business Manager 1917 Jayhazvker. Thomas O. Morton, B.S. Engineering Tom. Atchis Thomas N. Mulloy, LL.B. Law Tubby — K S, A . Lincoln —91— Jay hawker Seniors Albert N. Murphy, LL.B. Okla. City, Okla. Law Mick — B en, A , Pan-Hellenic Council (3-4), Jurisprudence Club, President Oklahoma Club (3), Class Football (1), Chairman Sopho- more Social Committee, Chairman Decoration Committee Law Scrim (4). Lawrence ? 1 I LuLA L. McCanles, A.B., A.M. Graduate B K, n r 2, Quill Club, Chairman Music for May Fete (3-4), Y. W. C. A. Social Committee (3), Blackfriars, Fellowship in English (5), Rep- resentative Graduate School W. S. G. A. (5). John McClenahan, A.B. College Mac. Brownsdale Hannah E. McCoy University Hospital Rogers, Ark. Agnes Marie McDonnell, A.B. Kansas City College Ike. 1917 C —92— Jayliawker l Seniors Margaret McElvain, A.B. Hutchinson College A X fl, e S , Class Secretary (1), Botany Club, Chairman Girls ' Mixer Committee (3), College Committee (3), Class Treasurer (4), Captain Girls ' Basketball (2), Big Sister (3). Ethel Agatha McGreevy, A.B. Great Bend College John McIntyre, B.S. Engineering — Civil Topeka Henrietta McKaughan, A.B. Edgerton College Henry — Quill Club, Treasurer Blackfriars. Morton H. McKean, A.B. Lawrence College Mc — A K, K. U. Debating Society, Y. M. C. A. Quartet (1), Zoology Club, Nebraska De- bate Squad (4). z 1917 : —93— ! Jayhawker |g: Seniors I Mary E. McKinney, A.B, College — Education 4)B K. Ida Inez M. MacKinnon, A.B. Kansas City College John McLoughlin, LL.B. Law Mac. Leavenworth i Lester H. McLaren, B.S. Engineering — Chemical Mac. Tescott S. E. McMillin, LLB., A.B. Arkansas City Law Mac. n 1917 C —94— ' Jay hawker «| Seniors Carolyn McNutt, A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College K A e, e 2 , Torch, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3- 4), Secretary Junior Class, Blackfriars, Chair- man Senior Mixer Committee, Kansan Board (2), Jayhawker Staff (4). Charles Sumner Nelson, B.S. College — Medicine Doc. Westphalia HoYT S. Nelson, LL.B. Lawrence Law Swede — nT, $ A A, A T, President Junior Laws, Mott Campaign Y. M. C. A., Refreshment Committee Soph Hop. Lawrence S. Nelson, B.S. loia College — Medicine Fat — SX, Bn, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Black Helmets, Owls, Sachems, Basketball (3- 4) Captain (4). Stanley B. Nelson, B.S. Paris, Texas Engineering Bat — Kanza, Sachems, Pachacamac, Man- ager Junior Prom, Owls, Men ' s Student Council. 1917 C —95— Jayhawker Seniors Milton W. Nigg, B.S. Los Angeles, Calif. Engineering — Architectural Alemannia, President Governing Board Kansas Engineer, Class Football (1-2-3), Chairman De- corating Committee Colonial Party (4), A. E. S. Secretary (3), Treasurer (4), Jayhawker Board (4). Marquette Arnold Nordstrom, A.B. College — Journalism Nordy — A T A, Sachems, Owls, White Crows, Knights of the Golden K , Junior Editor 1916 Jayhawker, Editor 1917 Jayhawker. Fredrick Ross O ' Donnell, B.S. Ellsworth College — Medicine Fritz — A T J2, N 2 N, Black Helmets, Sphinx Y. M. C. A. Campaign Committee (3). Herbert L. Osborne, Ph.C. Wichita Pharmacy Funny — S N, 4 A X, President Pharmacy Class (3), Pharmaceutical Society, Baseball, Basketball. James W. Orton, B.S. Engineering — Civ il Jimmie — e T, Glee Club (1). Lawrence ' 1917 C —96— ' Jayliawker 1 J. David Pace, A.B. Parsons -AIedici7ie — 4 B n, Inter-Fraternity Council Gwanie ' (4). Hazel Emeline Parkinson, A.B. College Mathematics Club. Topeka Chester M. Patterson, A.B. Galena College Pat — S X, Kansan Board (1-2-3), Interna- tional Polity Club, Dramatic Club, Commerce Club, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3), Commission for Belgians ' Relief. Helen M. Patterson, A.B. College — Education Pat — e S , Kansan Board. Victoria John R. Pattinson, B.S. Hutchinson Engineering — Mechanical Big Pat — Jayhawker Photographer. I 1917 C —97— I Ja yhawker • !! Hubert VV. Paul, A.B. Blue Rapids College — Economics Hupie — A T A, Commerce Club, Junior Prom Committee, Senior Invitation Committee, Ger- man Play (2). Henry S. Pegues, A.B. Hutchinson College — Journalism Suey — K , SAX, A T, Editor Kan- san (4), News Editor Kansan (4), Dramatic Club, Witching Hour (3), Senior Play (4), Senior Play Committee, Chairman Social Co- mittee (3), White Crows, International Polity Club, Manager All-University Hallowe ' en Party. Aaron Piepenburg, LL.B. Law Germany — Friendship. Gillett, Wis. Constant Poirier, A.B. Wathena College Connie — S 4 2, Entomological Club, Botany Club, Zoology Club, Class Football (1), Varsity Baseball (2-3-4), K Club, Chairman Senior Finance Committee, Junior Memorial Com- mittee, Y. M. C. A. Committee, Jayhawker Staff (4), College Committee. Artemesia Powell, A.B. College S K. Tyro —98— I Jayhaw ker Seniors Walter S. Priest, Jr., A.B. Wichita College — Medicine Scottie — S N, N S N, M A, University- Orchestra (1-2-3), Senior Memorial Committee. V. Simpson Rader, B.S. Engineering — Architectural Tim — Acacia, A. E. S. Howard Harold Eugene Ragle, A.B., M.D. Chanute Medicine Peeper — 2 X, N 2 N, Student Council (3). Daisy Leona Ramsey, A.B. College — Education Lawrence Veda Rankin, A.B. Paola College Billie — A A 11, Sophomore Hop Committee, Junior Mixer Committee, Jayhazvker Staff (4). —99— Jayhawker Seniors i: i Jennie Ray, A.B. Lawrence College Jean. Anna C. Rearick, A.B. Aurora, Mo. College Robert H. Reed, A.B. Almena College — Journ alism Bob — n K A. 2 A X, Kansan Board, News Editor Kansan. Irene Jeanette Reeves, A.B. Dodge City College — Education Oscar Optima Reser, A.B. Kansas City, Mo. College —KM)— ' Jayhawker Seniorn Clarence H. Richter, A.B. College C — Acacia, Commerce Club. Mr Jerry Burr Riselv, LL.B., A.B. Law Stockton Isidore Rivkly, A.B. College Iz. Kansas City Fred S. Rodkey, A.B. Blue Rapids College — Education Fritz — 4 AK, Y. M. House, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (2-3-4), Vice-President Westminster Guild (3), Ow ' ls, Class Treasurer (2), Athletic Board (3), University Debating Society, K Club, Freshman Track K , Varsity Track (2-3-4), Captain Varsity Track (4), Varsity Cross Country (2-3-4), Captain Cross Countr (3). Abilene Ames P. Rogers, A.B. College Gabe — B 9 II, Ahoku, Sphinx, Kansan Board (2), V ' ice-President Men ' s Student Council (3), Dramatic Club, Commerce Club, President Hughe. . Club, International Polity Club. —101— Jayhawker Seniors James B. Rogers, A.B., A.M. Graduate Jim — B K. Larned Eugene L. Rolfs, B.S. Kansas City. Mo. Engineering — Architectural Shorty — Kanza, T B 11, Owls, President A. E. S., Chairman Sophomore Finance Committee, Athletic Board (4). Zelma Ross, A.B. College — Education Robert B. Rose, A.B. College Sterling Helen Hayes Ruhlandt, A.B. Osawatomie College Home Economics Club, Big Sister (2-3), Y. W. C. A. Social Committee (3), Class Basketball Team (1-2-3-4), W. A. A. Rosedale : i9i7C —102— Jay hawker Seniors Herbert VV. Rumsfeld, B.S. Kas. City, Mo. Engineering — Chemical ' Gus — nr, A X s. Lowell L. Rush, B.S. Engineering — Civil Kansas City, Mo. Harlan A. Russell, B.S. Lawrence Engineering — Mechanical Had — 2 X, GT, Sachems, Black Helmets. Football (2-3-5), Baseball (4), K Club, Y._M. C. A. Cabinet (5), Estes Park Delegation, Chairman Senior Football Committee. Jean Russell, A.B. Lawrence College — Educatio n Achoth, n r 2, Estes Park Delegation (4). Louise Hays Russell, A.B. Amarillo, Texas College — Educatio n II B . —103— I I % 5 ) Jayliawker Seniors Rachel Sankee, A.B. College n r s, 4 B K. Lawrence Paul H. Sautter, LL.B. Horton Law Dutch — 2 X, Sachems, Sphinx, Pachaca- mac, Glee Club (1-2-3), J ay hawker Board (4). Galepa Ed S. Schmidt, LL.B. Law Skimmy — K S, Freshman Football, Soccer. Sole IvA Scott, A.B. College Y. VV. C. A. Religious Meetings, Big Sister Captain. Angel Sevilla, B.S. Danli Honduras, Cent. A Engineering — Civil Duke IZZ 1917 C —104— Jay hawker Seniors Gladys Sharpless, A.B. College — Education r B, Glee Club. Atchison Marion Shefry, A.B. College Wichita Cora Shinn, A.B. Chanute College — Educatio n X il. Torch, Mathematics Club, Secretary Soph- omore Class, Glee Club (2-.3), W. S. G. A. (2-3), Student A4anager W. A. A. (3), Athletic A , Senior Basketball Team. Blanche Louise Simons, A.B. Lawrence K K r, 9 2 , Glee Club, Orchestra, College Committee (3), Senior Representative W.S.G.A. Charles F. Sloan, B.S. Pomona Engineering Toodles — T B n, Y. M. House, 2 T, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3-4), Editor Kansas Engineer (4), Secretary-Treasurer Engineering School (4). I —105— Jayhawker Seniors i ' Richard D. Small, LL.B. Kansas City. Mo. Law Dick — K , A e ! , Class Football (2-3A), Track K (3), Pinafore (1), Freshman Track, K Club. George Smee, B.S. Wakeeney Engineering — Municipal T, Sachems, President Senior Class, Vice- President Engineering School (4), Varsity Base- ball (2-3-4), Captain Varsity Baseball (4). Gail A. Smith, B.S. Great Bend Engineering— Electrical Sergeant K. N. G., Engineering Student Gov- erning Board. ! Irene Smith, A.B. College Smithy — e 2 4 , Glee Club. Holt, Mo. Mary Lucile Smith, A.B., B.S. College — Education Lawrence 3 1917 C —106— Jayhawker Seniors Walter E. Smith, LL.B. Law 2 X. Horton Dena a. Soller, A.B. College Washington F. LePort Spangler, B.S. Engineering Orchestra. Lecompton F. LeRoy Spangler, A.B. Orchestra. Lecompton L. Gerald Sparks, B.S. Greensburg Engineering — Civil Jersey — n T, S T, T B n, 2 H, Vice-President Junior Class, Assistant Business Manager Kan- sas Engineer (3), Manager Kansas Engineer (4), Student Council (4), C. E. S. : 1917 c —107— ' J ay hawker Seniors Echo Sparr, A.B. Lawrence College ' Miriam Spicer, A.B. Lawrence College Sis — Botany Club. Pauline Sproule, B.M Fine Arts M E, W. S. G. A. (4). W. Cargill Sproull, A.B. L awrence College — Journalism Gill — K , 2 A X, Varsity Track (2-3-4), K Club, Vice-President College (4), Athletic Editor Jayhawker (4), Kansan Board (3-4), Band (1), Associated Journalism Students, So- cial Committee ( ), Athletic Committee (3). Ernest L. Stateler, B.S. Sedan Mineola State — A X S, Ahoku, Captain Cross Coun- try Team (4), Track Team (3-4), K Club. 3 1917 C —108— Jayhavvker l Seniors W. D. Steinhauer. A.B. College Steinie. Leavenworth Ruth Stevenson, A.B. Paola College Steve — O N, President Home Economics Club. Mrs. Hettie Stewart University Hospital Elva Lucile Stoll, A.B. College — Education Lone Elm Grace Stotts, A.B. College — Education Kansas City Bonner Springs —109— Jf clay hawker l Seniors Evelyn Strong, A.B. Lawrence College — Entomology K K r, Torch, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (1-3-4) President (4), Sophomore Bum Committee, Entomological Club, Alma Mater (4) Carl A. Swanson, A.B. College l A K, Cercle Francais, El Ateneo. McPherson Orpha Gladys Swearinger, A.B. Morrison, Okla. College — Education W. S. G. A. Scholarship (1), X fl Economics Prize, Y. W. C. A. Haskell Committee. LuciLE Talbot, A.B. College Lawrence IvA Testerman, A.B. Lawrence College — Education B K, n r S, Economics Prize (1), History Club. : 1917 c —110— ! Jayhawker Seniors Edith Helen Thomas, A.B. College — Education Lawrence JosiE M. Trinkle, A.B. College — Education Quill Club. Mesa, Arizona Elizabeth Ulrich, A.B. Lawrence College — Education Bess — A X fi, Quill Club, Vice-President W. S. G. A., Pan-Hellenic Council, College Social Committee, Jayhawker Board (4), Chairman Commencement Committee. AuGUSTE UtERM ' N, A.B. College — Education Lawrence Marie Uterman, A.B. College — Education Lawrence —111— ZH Jay hawker Seniors I Amy Van Horn, A.B. College n r S, ON, Home Economics Club. Lawrence Earl L. Vermillion, A.B., M.D. Tescott Medicine Red — Cross Country (2-3). William J. Waite, B.S. Kansas City, Mo. Engineering — Chemical Bill — 2 A E, A X 2, Ahoku, Chemallurgist Board (,4). Coral J. Wakenhut, B.S. Salina Engineering — Mining Hoots — 4 FA, GT, Student Branch A. I. M. E. (2-3-4), President (4). Robert Waldie, B.S. Engineering Bob. Lawrence 1917 C —112— ■ Jayhawker Seniors Via Walling, A.B. College Lawrence RoscoE C. Ward, A.B., M.D. Belleville Medicine 2 X, N 2 N, Sophomore Football, Y. M. C. A. Board of Directors (4), First University Expo- sition Representative from School of Medicine. William J. Weber, LL.B. Lazv Bill — K, A e , Freshman Baseball (2), Varsity (3-4), Inter-class Track (3), Chairman Junior Smoker Committee, Chairman Senior- Alumni Smoker Committee, Secretary Senior Laws, Law Scrim Committee, President Barton County Club (3-4), International Polity Club, Treasurer Wilson Club, Jurisprudence Club. Benjamin F. Watkins, B.S. Chanute Engineering — Civil Watt — K, C. E. S., Freshman Smoker Committee, Sophomore Alemorial Committee, Engineers ' Day Arrangements Committee (2) Ellinwood Nickerson Edward M. West, A.B. College — Econ omics Key — Glee Club (4), Chimes of Normany , Commerce Club. —113— ' -«t-% ra rqMii ' icii(s«E3BSw«l ' Jayhawker Seniors William O. Whitaker, A.B., M.D. Medicine Whit. Kiowa Alfred H. Wieters, B.S. Lanham Engineering — Civil Al — n T, S T, Sachems, Owls, Assistant Edi- tor Kansas Engineer (4), President Engineering School (4). Nina Wilhite University Hospital Bartlesville, Okla. U Lola Wilkin, A.B. College — Education Olathe Edna Willman, A.B. College — Education Lawrence  1917 C —114— ! Jayhawker Seniors Marie Woodruff, A.B. College O N, Home Economics Club. Lawrence J. Edwin Wolfe, A.B. Kingman College— Medicine Ed — ATA, N 2 N, Owls, Black Helmets, Sphinx. Alice Woolverton, University Hospital Kansas City, Mo. Emma Frances Wyland, A.B. Harlan College Y. W. C. A. Finance Committee (4), Blackfriars. George E. Wynne, A.B., A.M. Marquette Graduate Deacon — A T A, Fellowship Education. 1917 C —115— Jay hawker - Seniors George H. Yeokum, B.S. Okla. City, Okla. Engineering — Civil e T, T B n, White Crows, Owls, Black Hel- mets, Knights of the Golden K , Ahoku. Manager Sophomore Hop, Varsity Track (2), Oklahoma Club, Men ' s Student Council (4). Robert A. Young, A.B. College Bob. Clearwater Harold H. Lytle, A.B. Lawrence College Butterfly — 4 B K, A A, $ A T, Varsity Basketball (3-4), Vice-President Senior Class, Senior Play, Band (1-2-3), Orchestra (2), Chair- man Farce Committee (3), Dramatic Club, Blackfriars. i William Ayers McKinney, A.B., A.M. Howard Graduate Mac — n K A, K. U. Scholarship, Student Council, International Polity Club, K. U. De- bating Society. Ruth D. Payne, A.B., A.M. Graduate Fellowship English, Blackfriars. Wichita . mi %jm.frm% i fmoMiiMKftmfmtmmmiii —116— ' ! Jayhawker Seniors Allen B. Burch, LL.B. Carthage, Mo. Law Doc — 4 K , Jurisprudence Club, Associate Editor Jayhawker, Dramatic Club, Cast If I Were Dean. Florence Louise Cook, A.B. Kans. City, Mo. College Alemannia, Home Economics Club, Dramatic Club, Orchestra. Frank H. McFarland, LL.B. Topeka Law Packey — 4 K , A 9 , 4 A T, Treasurer Dramatic Club (2-4), Manager Man From Home and Under Cover, Cast of both plays, Junior Farce Cast (2), K. U. Vaudeville (2-4), Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball, Sopho- more Class Football, President Shawnee Co. Club, Cast If I Were Dean. J. Randolph Kennedy, A.B., LL.B. Ft. Scott Law Duke — 4 FA, 4 A , Sachems, Pacaca- mac, Ahoku, Jurisprudence Club. Gail Hall, A.B. McPherson College r I B, e S P, Quill Club, Orchestra, Junior Mixer Committee, Social Service, Big Sister Committee of Y. W. C. A. —117— ■I iiMnmam i Jayliawker -J Seniors Pauline Ketchum, A.B., B.M. Lawrencce Fine Arts Scholarship in Voice, Pinafore , Spanish Gypsies , Chimes of Normandy , Orchestra (1-2), Glee Club (3-4). James MacLeod Stewart, Ph.G. Clay Center Pharmacy Mac. MiNA Upton, A.B. College $ B K, Quill Club. Rosed ale 5 I. F. Bradley, Jr., LL.B. Law Judge — Pfi. Lawrence ' 1917 C -is —118— ■ Jayliawker Juniors Uhrlaub Richter Davis Montgomery Farley Fleeson Joseph Morgan JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Theodore Richter President Rudolph Uhrlaub Vice-President Marion Joseph Secretary Frank Farley Treasurer Howard Fleeson Prom Managers Harry Montgomery j Don Dav s Manager J ay hawker Harry Morgan Editor J ayhawker —119— ' Jay hawker Juniors ' I i Eva Bell Anderson, Eve Lawrence College G. Brandt Arnold, Blondie Newton College 2 4 S, K. U. Vaudeville (1), Pinafore (1), Soph- omore Farce Committee, Manager Glee Club (3), Assistant Manager Chimes of Normandy. Herbert S. Bennie, Bennie Almena College — Medicine n K A, 4) X, Sphinx, Pan-Hellenic Council (2-3) Alice Bowlby Natoma Colle?e A X S2, e 2, 4 ' , Kansan Board (3), Secretary Asso- ciated Journalists (3), Big Sister Captain (3), Jay- hawker Board (3). Alfred Brauer. Butch Newton College S 4 2, Der Deutsche Verein, German Play (1) Botany Club, Snow Zoology Club. Joyce Adine Brown Olathe College Athletic A , Secretary-Treasurer W. A. A. (2) Junior Representative W. A. A. (2), Basketball (1-2-3), Captain Basketball (1). Peabody Kansas City, Mo. Nettie Brown College — Education Marie E. Buchanan College X 12, Glee Club (1-2-3), Secretarv-Treasurer College (2), Second Cabinet Y. W. C. A. ' (2), Big Sister Cap- tain (3), Passing Show of 1916 (2), W. A. A. (3) Chairman Junior Music Committee. Mrs. Dorothy Cole . Lawrence College — Jo urn all sm Glee Club (2-3), Kansan Board (3), Treasurer Asso- ciated Journalists (3), W. A. A. (2), President W. A. A. (3), Dramatic Club, Chairman Publicity Committee Junior Class (3). Persis B. Cook College Lawrence ...I— . 1917 , —120— p J ay hawker - Juniors i Howard R. Cress, Howdy Clements n K A, 2 T, 2 r E, Junior Track Committee, Sophomore Rrefresliment Committee. Alice Davis College Xfi. Chanute Downs Do JAI,D DwiGHT Davis, Don College — Journalism r A, ! A T, Quill Club, Dramatic Club, Dean ' s Honor List, Art Editor Oread Magazine (1), Kan- san Board (1-2), Kansan Sports Editor (3), Jay hawker Board (2), Manager Sophomore Hop (2) Knights of Golden K , Sour Owl Board ef Man- agers (3), Manager Junior Section 1917 Jayhawker, Manager-Elect 1918 Jayhaivker. Marie Dent, Wee-wee College Xfi. Oswego Sterling Howard Fleeson, Tibby College n T, Owls, Class Football (3), Manager Junior Prom. Fay Friedberg Topeka College Russell Friend, Rusty Lawrence College r A, Owls, Sphinx, Sour Owl StaflF. GoLDA FuGER Wathcna College Alemannia. John J. Getgey, Jack Helena, Okla. College AG , Kanza, B.S. Oklahoma A. M. Donald C. Good Hiawatha College K 2, Band (1-2-3), Glee Club (1-3), Cast of Chimes of Normandy. : 1917 c —121- [ Jayliawker Agnes DeMar Gossard College X 12. Jswego Lawrence Arline Griffiths, Dumps College Mixer Committee (2), Big Sister Committee (3), Y. W. C. A. Social Committee, Ciiairman Junior Mixer Committee Agnes Marie Hackerott Osborne Lawrence Sophia B. Helmer College Home Economics Club. Agnes Hertzler Kansas City, Mo. College A X S2, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (3-4). Margaret Hodder Lawrence College K A e, Pan-Hellenic (1-2-3), Dean ' s Honor List, Quill Club. Blackfriars, Class Basketball (1-2-3), Athletic A , Secretary Women ' s Athletic Associa- tion, Junior Prom Committee, Sour Owl Board. Reuben A. Hoffman, Rube Gildford, Mont. College n K A, Freshman Basketball, Varsity Basketball. William E. Hoffman, Billy Lawrence College Entomological Club. Homer B. Hunt, Honei Conway Springs College n K A, Band (1-2). Lois M. Hunt Conway Springs College S K, Dramatic Club, Second Cabinet Y. VV ' . C. A. '  1917 4g: —122— i Jayhawker Juniors Gladys Mary Johnson, Happy Concordia Lawrence Stanley Sherman Jones, S College Ben, Chairman College Committee (2-3), Chair- man Y. M. C. A. Social Committee, All-University and Colonial Party Committee. Marion Joseph Whitewater College n r S, Alemannia, W. S. G. A. (3) Secretary Junior Class, Second Cabinet Y. W. C. A., Orchestra (2), W. A. A. Elizabeth A. Little College Home Economics Club. Lawrence Hiawatha Inez Mack College xn. Lillian Martin College SK. LuciLE Means College A A n, President Pan-Hellenic Association, Second Cabinet Y. W. C. A., Quill Club, Dramatic Club, Blackfriars. Harry V. Montgomery, Monty Junction City Law ATA, Black Helmets, Owls, Orchestra (1), Glee Club (2), Chairman Program Committee Sopho- more Hop, Pan-Hellenic, Manager Junior Prom. Harry Morgan Alta Vista College — Journalism 2 A X, Alemannia, Owls, Editor-Elect 1918 Jay- hawker, Junior Editor 1917 Jayhawker, Kansan Board (1-2-3), Associate Kansan Editor (3), Edi- tor (3), Treasurer Associated Journalism Students (2), War Relief Committee, Art Editor Sour Owl. Eva J. McCannles, Evie Lawrence Fine Arts A A, Y. W. C. A., Quill Dlub. : 1917 c —123— ' Jaykawker Juniors i Bruce E. McKee College International Polity Club. Lawrence Newton Mary Moore Nicholson College A X it, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Junior Social Com- mittee. Edwin F. Price Wellington College ASP, Colorado-Kansas Debate, Nebraska-Kansas Debate, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Dorothy Querfeld College Myrtle F. Rayburn, Rags College Zoology Club. Lawrence Eldorado Lawrence Katherin Reding College A A n, n r 2, Second Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, W. A. A. Board, Girls ' Basketball (1-2), Athletic A, W. S. G. A. (1-2), Treasurer W. S. G. A. (3), Mixer Committee. Theodore H. Richter, Ted Alma College President Junior Class, International Polity Club, Commerce Club, Owls. Gladys Robinson Chanute College Helen Robinson Salina College K A e. Robert L. Robertson, Bob Lawrence College Class Treasurer (2), Under Cover (3). 1917 C —124 — ! Jayhawker Juniors MiGNON ScHELL, Mimmie College Publicity Committee Junior Class. Wichita Alma Ferdinand C. Stuewe, Steve College President Waubaunsee County Club, International Polity Club, Chairman Junior Track Committee. LuciLE Shukers, Lucy College Independence Vivian Virginia Sturgeon, V. V. Thomas, Oklahoma A X S2, 6 2 , Associated Journalists, Y. W. C. A. Membership Committee. Elmer W. Smith College 2 r E. Vesta M. Talbert Fine Arts A An, Orchestra (2-3). Norton Conway Springs Brooks Stephens, Boiling Point Kansas City College — Medic ine X. Frank H. Terrell, Hixon Holton Law 2 N. $ A $, Ahoku, Men ' s Student Council, Owls, Jurisprudence Club, Chairman Social Committee Council, Freshman Basketball and Baseball. Leah Stewart De Soto, Mo. College — Fine Arts X S2, M 1 E, Cast in Chimes of Normandy. Josephine F. Stimpson, Jodie Fine Arts A Xi2. Lawrence 1917 C —125— Jaylunvker f ] Juniors George H. Thiele, Jr. College — Medicine ATA. Ruth L. Thomas, Tommy ' College A An. Warren F. Wattles College Washington Lawrence Wichita Ahoku, Owls, Sour Owl Board, International Polity Club, K. U. Debating Society, Vice-President K. U. Debating Society (2). Helen Frances Wedd College 2 K, Dramatic Club, Mathematics Club. Lenexa Abner R. Willson Engineering n K A. A. I. E. E. Kansas City, Mo. : 1917 c —126— I Jayhawker g: Sophomores Blount Young Matthews Connelly SOPHOMORE OFFICERS Justin A. Blount President C. K. Matth E ws Vice-President Margaret Young Secretary Francis D. Gage Hop Manager J. V. Connelly Treasurer CHAIRMEN CLASS COMMITTEES Burnett Treat, X . Y. Z. Randall Klein, Dance R. G. Bell, Party N. L. Hershey, Smoker Josephine Himes, Girls ' Mixer John Kistler, Publicity Don Woodward, Finance Lester J. Evans, Memorial CHAIRMEN HOP COMMITTEES James Barclay, Finance Sidney Arbuthnot, Refreshments Harold Longnecker, Farce Robert Mason, Program John Tracy, Decoration : 1917 C —127— Jayhawker Runnion Tourtelot Fallis Adams FRESHMEN CLASS OFFICERS Mark H. Adams President Roy D. Tourtelot Vice-President Mabel Fallis Secretary Rutherford R. Run n ion Treasurer —128— , tl)letlc5 ni:Xkh - ii. ' , ;? s, ' : : ' k ■ -pk- ' ik.iJlii tStsM.:- 1 % ■ Jay hawker Athletics lidluh Woodward Pringle Vernson R. SprouU Small Heath Smith Taylor Davidson Frost Winn Treweeke Shinn Cowgill Statler Poirier Rodkey Russell Kabler Appel Craig Pattinson Greene Chase Woody O ' Leary Todd Rinker Smee Gibbens C. Sproull Griitzmacher Fast Weltme 11) 110 ! oar6 Chancellor Frank Strong ..Chairman Ex-Oficio George E. Putnam E. W. Murray H. A. Rice ATHLETIC MEMBERS Hugh Grutzmacher Rea Heath DoRMAN O ' Leary NON-ATHLETIC MEMBERS W. J. Crowley E. L. Rolfs 1917 —129— Jayliawker Athletics HERMAN P. OLCOTT Head Coach of Football I I Herman P. Olcott, head coach of football, has won a host of friends in the two years he has been connected with K. U. athletics. The former Yale star came to Kansas in the fall of 1915 after K. U had been having considerable trouble with its coaching staff each year. He came under a three year contract and won the student admiration the first year he was here. Last season only increased his popularity among the students and after his squad won from Nebraska, Coach Olcott stood a good chance of being elected Governor of Kansas. The permanent coaching system has been found to be a success. George Clark, assistant coach, was added to the staff this year and will return next year. The two men have their candidates lined up so that, unless war conditions intervene, they will be ready to continue work next fall where they left off last year. Coach Olcott has had considerable experience in football, both in playing and coaching. He gained a reputation for himself on the Yale eleven and later returned to coach the team of h is alma mater. He has coached in South Carolina and in the Navy. ' 917 C -130— ■ Jay hawker Athletics LEON McCARTY Coach of Baseball and Freshman Football It is only within recent years that Coach Leon McCarty entered whole-heartedly into the coaching game. In fact, he taught English in the engineering school until last fall when he decided to devote all his time to athletics. As coach of baseball, McCarty has proven his worth by turning out teams of championship caliber, year after year. He takes a sqtiad of green players, teacher them the game and brings in the Valley title. With the freshmen football squad he develops a team capable of giving the Varsity a hard scrimmage in daily practices. McCarty came to Kansas from Ohio State University. He is a valuable man to the K. U. athletic department. GEORGE CLARK Assistant Coach George Potsy Clark is himself an all-round athlete. He has assisted with all sports and he made a frieYid of every student with whom he worked. Clark was graduated from the University of Illinois last year. He has played on football, basketball, baseball and track teams but in his two years in Big Nine athletics he was restricted to two sports. In these two years he had played on the Illinois football and baseball teams which won the championship of the Western Conference. The honor of winning four championship trophies in two years is one held by no other athlete in the Western Con- ference. Potsy recently announced that he will remain at K. U. for at least one more year. —131— Jay hawker Athletics 1 KENNETH GEDNEY Cheer Leader 1917 C —132— Jayhawker Athletics ADRIAN LINDSEY Captain of Football : i9i7C —133— Jayliawker J ' o 10 Ch h ■ f : 1917 c —134— Jayha v ker - PRINGLE Tom Pringle is a powerful halfback. He came from near Alma somewhere and made good in his first year on the squad. Tom is 21 years old, 5 feet 11 inches tall and tips the bar at 175 pounds. LINDSEY Adrian Hobart Lindsey, captain of the 1916 squad, is from Kingfisher, Oklahoma. He served three years under Kansas colors, playing at halfback. His punting and place kicking were features of the Kansas play. He is 5 feet 113 2 inches tall, weighs 173 pounds and admits he is 21 years old. WOODWARD .George Woodward hails from Lawrence. He joined the Jayhawkers after he came back from the border last fall and made a reputation for himself at halfback in the last games of the season. Rook says; Five feet nine, weight 162, over 21. M i ri Robert E. Martin was good at cither tackle or guard. He came from Tad Reid ' s home town but has Tad bested for size. He is 6 feet 2 inches tall; weighs 190 pounds and is 22 years old. : 1917 «; —135— Jayliawker Athletics FAST John C. Fast was the popular halfback with th crowd. Jick lived up to his name on defensive and offensive. He dropped in from Hutchinson and has another year to serve with K. U. He is 22 years old, weighs 160 pounds and is five feet four inches tall (with high heels on.) KABLER Jesse D. Kabler is a Kingman man who won his first letter at tackle this year. He is a Junior in the college. Kabler is 21 years old, is 5 feet 7H inches tall and weighs 190 pounds. BURTON Willard A. Burton returned to K. U. this year for a third football K. He is a reliable man at left tackle. Burton comes from Mound City. He is 25 years old, weighs 185 pounds and is five feet eight inches tall. FROST Austin Frost is another out-of-state player. He comes from La Junta, Colorado, and has already served two years for Kansas. He holds down the right tackle posi- tion with his 185 pounds of beef. He is 6 feet tall and 22 years old. 1917 C —136— ! Jayhawker |g ' Athletics MINOR Jean W. Minor is a Burlingame youth. He is a real center although he weighs only 155 pounds. His red head is 5 feet 11 inches above the floor. He will be back next year. NEILSON Harry M. Neilsen, captain-elect, has played two years at fullback under Coach Olcott. Niele ' s play is con- sistent, seldom verging on the flashy. A touchdown against Nebraska was added to his honors this season. Ntilson is from Hays and is 23 years old. He is 5 feet lOJ and weighs 160 pounds. ' VHMlk A 1 1 Ak y -- ' -- 4 WOODY Warren Vernon Woody is a Sophomore from Barnard, Kansas, who won his first letter this year. Woody is 5 feet S14 inches, weighs 165 pounds and is 19 years old. He will be back again next year. WILSON F. Ivan Wilson is a Lawrence boy, 21 years old. He worked consistently at end and will be back next year for another letter. Humpty is 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 165 pounds. : 1917 c —137— ■ Jayliawker Athletics SMITH Wint Smith has served two years under Coach Olcott. He is a powerful man at guard. He is 6 feet 3 inches tall and weighs 192 pounds. He is 22 years old. TODD J. Edward Todd also comes from Lawrence. He is 19 years old. He works good at quarter, being S feet 7 inches short and weighing 148 pounds. He will be back next year. VERNSON Harry Walter Vernson is helping make Blue Rapids famous. He plays a hard game at guard. Vernson is 6 feet tall and weighs 180 pounds. He is 22 years old. REID Theodore C. Reid is one of the best finds of years He is a strong, reliable end although he weighs only ISO pounds. He is five feet nine inches tall and comes from Stafford. : 1917 c —138— Jayhawker Athletics SHINN Earl Shinn picked several long passes at right end last season. He is fast, gets down well under punts and plays a hard offensive and defensive game. Shinn is 23 years old, S feet 8} inches tall and weighs 158 pounds. FOSTER Lewis C. Foster ran the team from the quarterback position this year. This was Stem ' s first year. He only weighs 140 pounds, but he made good. He is 5 feet 10 inches tall and comes from Kansas City, Mo. m i BT P m ■ ' ■j Lji ' MP R D B ' ' ' . ttuPril 1 1 flmv Hli l 1 THE COACHES —139— --.JffHBM;M.TWffrfWI ' J ay haw k e r i l Athletics : 1917 c —140— k Ja yliawker Athletics Kansas vs. Nebraska I5 e Season of i ootball 1916 |N the 1916 season the Kansas football team faced the hardest schedule ever attempted by |the followers of Jayhawker sports. In many ways it was a peculiar schedule. In summing up the season the results are seen to be just as peculiar. 2S Acting on the theory that it is better to be defeated by a good team than to defeat a poor team, the Kansas coaches scheduled a hard series of games. Illinois and Ames were added to the list of Kansas opponents and dates made with them for early in the season. Facing one Big Nine team and a strong Missouri Valley team was great sport for the Kansans but it taught them some fine points of the game which they could get only by facing teams of the first caliber. The re- sult of these games on the playing of the K. U. gridiron stars was apparent in later games. The 1916 season was a series of ups and downs. The season opened with a victory which was followed by a series of defeats; then a tie game, three victories and a defeat. Illinois, Ames and Mis- souri plucked Jayhawk feathers but Nebraska and Oklahoma, long victors over the Kansans, were the victims of some plotting of the sweet revenge variety by Kansas coaches. The Kansas Normals and Washburn also tasted defeat again last fall. The Kansas coaches had an abundance of material to work with for the construction of a football team. There were some weak spots and in some cases it took a long while to fill these. Numerous Kansas vs. Nebraska 1917 C —141— Jayhaw ker 4 1 Athletics O Oq-7 H Kansas vs. Illinois at Urban a (ob Season of 3FoolbaU 1916 — (ronUnu j6) combinations were tried during the season. A squad varying from thirty-five to thirty was carried all season. Twenty-four of these men were given recognition for their services by the athletic board; eighteen receiving K ' and six getting reserve letters. This exceeds any former record of letters awarded to K. U. players. The season ' s practices started with six letter men of the 1915 team out for practice. These men were Captain Lindsey, Fast, Frost, Hellsen, Wilson and Heath. To these were added Clay Fiske, of Oklahoma, and Willard Burton of Lawrence,veterans of othe r years, who returned for a year of football under Coach Herman Olcott and George Clark. Three reserve letter men of 1915, Palkowski, Ruble and Todd, were out for regular football letters. Smith, Kabler and Hartley of the previous year ' s squad were also among the men out for regular berths. From the freshmen leam, 1915, Coach Olcott got some of the most valuable men for his squad. Reid Kansas vs. Illinois at Urbana 1917 C —142— ' Jayhawker Athletics Kansas vs. Missouri on McCook Field —143— Jayhawker l Athletics ■ {Oha. S tason of 3Foolball 1916 — (ToitUnue ) Shinn, Foster, Woodward, Vernson, Minor, Martin, Pringle and Woody entered Varsity competition for the first time last season and won a regular varsity letter in recognition of their services. Of course, these men were new to Valley football an d their playing proved to be more or less inconsistent in some games. The squad got into action earlier than usual last fall, facing the Kansas Normals on McCook field on September 30. Coach Olcott used a varied lineup in this game winning easily although the result was only 13 to 0. This gave the coaches a chance to look over their large squad to pick out a team to take to Illinois the following week. The Kansas eff orts at Urbana were of little avail. The Illinois team, competing against a team coached by Potsy Clark, their former captain and star athlete, played up to championship style and marched down the field for 30 points from Kansas. Captain Lindsey ' s squad was unable to tally against the fast men of Captain Macomber. In another week Kansas went to Ames for another hard game with the Iowa State eleven. But the bruised spots from the Illinois game had not healed and the Kansans were unable to get into regular action against the Ames eleven. However, the northerners were held to a low score of 13 to 0, which was considered good work for the Kansas squad of new men. The Jayhawkers threatened the Ames goal several times during the game but lacked the final punch when most needed. Unlike schedules of other years the 1916 season was provided with a week ' s rest after the two big early season games. With an accurate knowledge of the game gained by experience against larger schools the Jayhawkers spent two weeks putting this knowledge into action. The rest also served as a good time to get relieved of the sore spots and charley horses developed in the first three games. As the team came into action after the short vacation the result appeared to be a new team. The Kansas Aggies, confident of a victory over the Kansas eleven, were held to a scoreless tie. The teams fought from one end of the field to the other for the full sixty minutes but Coaches Clevenger and Olcott had to split the ball to give the victor a souvenir of the game — each coach taking half a ball. The K. U. team kept the Aggies on the defense most of the time but lacked the final driving power necessary to score a victory over the Farmers. Oklahoma invaded Lawrence at a time when the Jayhawkers were going good. The result: K. U. 23, Oklahoma 13. Kansas started a drive with the kick-off and defeated the Sooners at their own game — that of forward passers. The Sooners lacked the Capshaws, Wrights and Geyers of other years and failed to connect for many long passes. The score was tied at 7-7 at the end of the first half but the second half was a landslide, when Kansas got into action with long passes and end runs. The Washburn game was a good warm-up for the second string men of the Kansas team. The regulars took another two weeks ' vacation while their teammates added 27 points to the season ' s total. The rest had the same result as the early season vacation. A victory over Nebraska, 7 to 3, — the first since 1909 — brought the Kansas team into renown over the Missouri Valley and the middle west. Sport writers called it an upset similar to the Illinois vic- tory over Wisconsin, Kansas Aggies over Missouri and several other unexpected results in the football season. But the Kansas rooters felt it was a Kansas year and they backed their team mentally, phy- sically, and financially. The Kansas team went to Lincoln prepared to fight the game of their lives and the game ofi ' ered the Cornhuskers completely swept the northerners off their feet. Although Nebraska led at the end of the first half, 3 to 0, the Kansas rooters saw victory for Kansas and the Corn- huskers held tight to their money and begged for the game to end. A touchdown by Captain-elect Neilson cinched the game for Kansas although the rooters clamored for a more one-sided victory while they were about it. A four-point margin was sufficient to bring joy to the hearts of every Kansan and congratulations poured in from loyal alumni in Chicago, Philadephia, New York and other cities. But the Thanksgiving Day game with Missouri on McCook Field was the really bad part of the season for the Kansas team. After playing a brilliant game of ball against Nebraska the Jayhawkers were picked for winners against Missouri. The confidence spirit entered the Kansas camp while the same fight which won for Kansas against Nebraska was tried by Missouri against Kansas and the re- sult was 13 to for the Tigers. Collins, Rider and Pittam plugged the Kansas line in the same holes time after time but the Kansas line could not hold. Substitutes proved of no avail and on straight line plunges, delayed plays and few open plays Missouri marched down the field for two touchdowns on straight football. Kansas was unable to take advantage of any near chances to score. A glance over the coming season causes the Kansas rooters to wonder the result. The same sched- ule is announced for 1917 but the arrangement is different. The Illinois game comes at the same time. Then comes the week of rest before the main drive starts. The Washburn game has been moved up two weeks making it the third on the Kansas schedule. Ames then comes to Lawrence for a game. The Kansas Aggies, Oklahoma and Nebraska then come in for a game each leaving Missouri and Kansas to meet in Columbia on Thanksgiving day. In shaping a team for next fall Coaches Olcott and Clark — for they will both return again next fall — will have a list of veteran players. Of the nine sophomores on the squad last fall all have ex- pressed their intentions of returning next year. Some of the juniors are returning. Then there is last fall ' s freshman squad to choose from and on that squad Coach McCarty developed some stars of Varsity caliber. The outlook is the best in years and with the veterans training under the same system of coaching prevalent here for two years the team will be able to enter into the heavy games early in the season and continue until the end — victorious. —144— ■ Jayhawker l Athletics Kansas-Oklahoma —145— Jayhawker Athletics FRESHMAN SQUAD Standing — McCarty, Bunn, Hallman, Stephens, Rhinehart, Nettles, Jones, Haynes, Mandeville, Liggett Simons, Hill, Gress, Carpenter, Stubbs, Evans, Sprouli. Sitting — Knoles, Lomberg, Rustenbach, Wilson, Idol, Coe. 3 v(isi)raanlFoothai[ 1917 [HE Freshman squad last fall was one of the best in the history of the University. An unusually large squad turned out for practice under Coaches McCarty and Sprouli and a team was rounded into shape which succeeded in putting up stiff competition against the Varsity and in scoring a number of practice victories over the men of Coaches Olcott and Clark. Scrimmage with Varsity regularly in practice brought out a number of stars on the tyro squad. Instructed under Coach McCarty, many of these men should show up strong for places on the Varsity squad when they become eligible for intercollegiate competition next fall. Among some of the most promising of these men are: Stubbs, a tackle who suffered a broken leg near the end of the sea- son; Nettle, tackle, who continually puzzled the Varsity opposition; Lomberg, end, who played a great game last fall; Rustenbach and Mandeville, who carried the ball consistently all season; Coe at fullback, was especially good on defense; Wilson, quarterback and brother of Bunny Wilson, quarterback of the 1912- ' 13 Varsity teams. All of these men should show up well on the 1917 Varsity squad as well as other members of the Freshman squad, among whom are Gress, center; Hallman, Haines, Rhinehart and Stevens, guards; Knoles and Idol, ends; Simons, Smith and Bunn, halfba cks. t i I I i. - —146— ■ Jay hawker f Athletics Freshmen vs. Varsity —147— Jayhawker Athletics ' liomf 1; Hello, Honey! Purty good, sweetheart; how y ' all comin ' ? Fine. How ' s things? Fair to middlin, ' sugar lump. There you have him. H you have ever dropped around McCook Field, you know Honey Wilson, the caretaker of McCook. Honey has been on the job for — he don ' t remember. I have seen some big teams on dis field, says Honey, but when I take Lindsey and some of dem K. U.s off to one side before de game starts and tells them to promulgate the Nebraskas, dey always masticates dem some. But if they don ' t wait for my advice, it ' s all off mid dem. But why do they call you Honey? Oh, dat ' s easy. My name am Charley Wilson, but the girls all call ,me Honey. : 1917 : —148— Jay hawker Athletics GEORGE SiMEE Captain of Baseball —149— Jayhawker Athletics LEON Mccarty Coach of Baseball 1916 BASEBALL SQUAD Pete Wandell, Captain K Center Field George Smee, Captain-elect K Pitcher Ward W. Weltmer K Right Field Halleck I. Craig K Pitcher Charles Chase K First Base Leon D. Gibbens K Second Base Walter W. Wood K Shortstop WiLLARD King K Third Base Frank Chinery K Left Field LoREN Weltmer K Catcher -Marvin Taylor K Third Base Constant J. Poirier K Pitcher l)e 1916 baseball Season FTER winning the Missouri Valley baseball championship for three successive years, the Jayhawkers divided the coveted honor with the University of Missouri in the 1916 season. The Crimson and Blue athletes played consistently in the conference games, losing only three out of twelve, and those three to the team with whom they shared the Valley title. In the non-conference games, with substitute pitchers on the mound, Kansas was less fortunate; three out of four games were lost and two others called off on account of rain in Lawrence. The season opend with the brightest of prospects. Six letter men appeared as a nucleus for the team and they had to fight to keep their places against the I ' l ' H I M II I Ml lllllllMlil : 1917 c —150— I Jarhawker aamsmeKsssLXKa Athletics —151— I Jay hawker Athletics unusually large squad of aspiring Ty Cobbs and Honus Wagners. Coach McCarty was confronted with the problem of filling the vacancies left by Hal DeLongy behind the bat, Lefty Sproull on the first sack and Leo Weible in right field. But the K. U. coach did not have to hunt long for baseball players. Some forty candidates appeared for the early practices and Coach McCarty had little trouble in finding good material. By a process of elimination the team was cut down to the regular number, Loren Weltmer going behind the bat; Chase to first base and Ward Weltmer to right field. Taylor was kept in the game as utility man at either right field or third base. The same squad with little change rep- resented Kansas in all games and took all trips to foreign diamonds. The Jayhawkers started the season off with victories. In fact, the season resembled that of 1915 in that the squad in early season form was undefeated. Two victories over the Ames Aggies in Lawrence started the team on the right path and the path was adhered to, except in a non-conference game, until the Jayhawkers faced the Missouri Tigers in Columbia. The Tigers won three out of four in this series and won their way to a tie for the Valley title. However, the season was different from the preceding one because the Jay- hawkers ended the season with victories. Two games from the Ames Aggies and two from the Kansas Aggies added to the Kansa win column. For the first time in a number of years the Chinese University baseball team lost a close game to the Jayhawkers. The Chinks won the first game easily but the Kansas rooters clamored for a victory. The Jayhawkers took the lead early in the game and retained it throughout. In the final inning the Chinese rallied but their rally was too late and the seemingly impossible had been completed. The score board read, K. U. 7, Chinese 6. The call for baseball players this year was answered promptly by an unus- ually large squad. Indoor practice, while considerably shorter than usual, brought out some good battery candidates. But with Captain Smee, Red Craig and Connie Piorier to do the hurling, only one end of the battery is open. Spring days brought the baseball aspirants rushing to McCook Field and again Coach Leon McCarty does not have to worry about material for a team. When the men lined up for the first outdoor practice. Captain Smee, Craig, Poirier, Taylor, Lindsey, Gibbens and Chase were on the job ready for another season ' s work. Many Sophomores, graduating from the Freshman squad of last year, are out for their first letter. The schedule this year is slightly different from last year, in that Nebraska replaces Ames. The Cornhuskers have again resumed baseball after dropping the sport for a number of years. The Jayhawkers open the conference season by meeting the Nebraskans here, April 25-26. The season is unusually long, for it started April 5th and lasts until the last day of quiz week in the spring semester. Every indication points to another successful year in baseball this spring and Coach McCarty and the men who are lucky enough to make the squad will do all in their power to bring the Valley pennant to the University of Kansas. 1! I —152— ' J ay haw ker H| Athletics —153— ' Jayhawker Athletics : 1917 : —154— Jayhawker Athletics FAT NELSON Captain of Basketball : 1917 c — 15o— ' Jayhawker -l Athletics Clark Woodward Uhrlaub Lytle Wilson Nelson Laslett Lindsey Hamilton Uhrlaub Gibbens Kauder basketball Season ' s 2 csulls Jan. 10 — Kansas .....;..... 60 Jan. 12 — Kansas 36 Jan. 18 — Kansas 30 Jan. 19 — Kansas 25 Jan. 23 — Kansas 34 Jan. 24— Kansas 27 Feb. 6 — Kansas 24 Feb. 7 — Kansas 17 Feb. 2 — Kansas 9 Feb. 3 — Kansas 29 Feb. 12 — Kansas 34 Feb. 13 — Kansas 33 Feb. 16 — Kansas 19 Feb. 17 — Kansas 30 Feb. 21— Kansas 20 Feb. 22 — Kansas 15 Feb. 23 — Kansas 16 Feb. 24— Kansas 29 Totals— K. U 487 Washburn 9 Kansas Normals 27 Iowa State 13 Iowa State 9 K. S. A. C 16 K. S. A. C 19 Missouri 23 Missouri 26 K. S. A. C 38 K. S. A. C 32 Washington U 26 Washington U 25 Nebraska 21 Nebraska 10 Missouri 24 Missouri 38 Washington U 24 Washington U 19 Opponents 399 —156— Jay hawker l Athletics O e 1917 ! a5ketball Season [HE Jayhawkers started the basketball season this year as a real contender Ufor the Valley title. But it was a lucky brand of ball they were playing and the luck failed to last during the entire season. In fact, the luck broke in the middle of the season and the result was disastrous. Every team faced by the Jayhawkers after their slump took at least one game from Kansas causing an upset in the official standings of the Valley teams. Coach W. O. Hamilton taught his men the fine points of the game. They took a couple of easy victories from Washburn and the Kansas Normals and the team looked like a winner. Then the bunch invaded the home of the Ames Aggies and walked away with two easy games. The showing of the Jayhawkers on the Ames court brought forth much favorable press comment about the wonderful team from Kansas. The Kansas Aggies, winners of the 1917 Valley title, fell before the Kansans in a two-game series the next week. A victory over Missouri a week later added to the win column. Then the slump set in. Missouri won the other three games; the Aggies won two; Nebraska won one out of two and even Washington University succeeded in taking one game out of a four-game series. The real fight for the Valley title was between Kansas Aggies and Missouri. The two-game series in Columbia between these two teams proved to the satis- faction of everyone that the Aggies were the real champs of the Valley. But Kansas points with pride to the early season days when two comparatively easy victories were scored over the Aggies. Although Kansas did not figure high in the percentage column it was the Jayhawkers that really caused the Valley race to be interesting because of victories over every team in the race. In picking a squad this year, Coach Hamilton apparently had an abundance of material. But it was not of the experienced, seasoned variety which was used to make up the teams in the days of Dunmire-Sproull-Greenless-Weaver combi- nations when the Valley title had a firm home in Kansas. Four letter men and one wearer of a reserve letter were out for the team and some thirty recruits con- tested them for places. Several combinations were tried during the season in an effort to retain the lead in the Valley race. Captain Nelson, Laslett, Lytle, Gibbens and the two Uhrlaub twins were the men most seen in the Jayhawker line-up. Kauder, Lindsey, Woodward and Wilson, three of whom were football letter men, appeared on the second list. Among the Kansas team it was hard for sport writers to pick stars as the mem- bers of the squad all played practically the same style of game. In looking forward to the prospects for next year the K. U. rooter looks for a veteran team to represent Kansas in the Valley race. Captain Nelson and Lytle, although winning only the ir second letter this year, will graduate this year, thereby making themselves ineligible for further competition in Valley sports. Gibbens, Ernst and Rudolph Uhrlaub, Laslett, Kauder, Woodward and Wilson from the regulars will be back for another year. With these men as a nucleus for the 1918 team and a strong bunch of first- year men entering Varsity basketball ranks, there is every indication that the K. U. squad will be able to again take her place among the leaders in Valley bas- ketball races — a place which Kansas until recently had held for ten years. —157— ' Jayliawker -jgj Athletics I ] Basketball Squad : 1917 c —158— ■ Jay hawker 1 Athletics personnel of basketball Squa6 Lawrence S. Nelson, captain of the 1917 squad, is the veteran of the team, winning his second letter this year. Fat has played a consistent game at guard for two years but will not return next year. He is a Senior Medic, six feet tall, weights 180 pounds and is twenty-three years old. Leon D. Gibbens is the midget of the squad but he plays a fast, flashy game- Gibbie is a Junior Engineer, and will be back next year for a third letter. He is 5 feet 8 inches tall, weighs 140 pounds and is 21 years old. He lives in Nick- erson. Rudolph Uhrlaub wears jersey No. 7; Ernst wears No. 9. Rudolph also wears a K which he won last year. But in dimensions they are real twins for each weighs 152 pounds, are six feet tall and are each 21 years old. They both live in Lawrence. Ernst Uhrlaub is the twin brother of Rudolph. Rudolph won a letter last year. Ernst wanted one too, so he tried out for basketball this year. They both played forward. How tall is he.? Ask Rudolph. Walter Kauder is another second-year man. He won his first K on Coach Hamilton ' s squad last year. Walter is a Senior in the College, coming from Halstead. He is five feet nine inches tall, weighs 160 pounds and is 22 years old. Harold Lytle is a wearer of a basketball K and a Phi Beta Kappa key- He won them both his year and is not crowded by other athletes claiming the same honors. He is a Senior, College, lives in Lawrence, weighs 170, is 21 years old and is 6 feet lyi inches tall. Howard Laslett, known to everyone as Scrubby, puts his whole heart into the game. He plays a fast, aggressive game at guard and was responsible for low scores by opponents. Scrubby is a Lawrence boy of 23 summers, is 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighs 137 pounds. He is a Sophomore. George Rook Woodward got into the game as soon as the football season ended. He is an aggressive guard. Rook lives in Lawrence. He weighs 172 pounds, if 5 feet 10 inches tall and is past the age of the first vote. Ivan Wilson is another football player on the basketball squad. Humpty is a guard. He comes from Lawrence. He is 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighs 165 pounds and is 22 years old. Adrian Lindsey, captain of the football team, sought the indoor sport after the close of the football season. Lin is good for a touchdown in almost any basketball game. He is a Senior Engineer from Kingfisher, Okla. Lindsey weighs 177 pounds, is 5 feet Wyi inches tall and is almost 21. —159— M o«aMrjv K BiT?j Jay hawker Athletics : 1917 c —160— Jayliavv ' ker - Athletics FRED RODKEY Captain of Track —161— Jayhawker f ; Athletics Brack 5qua6, 9 7 Winn Rowland O ' Leary Crowley Treweeke Small Casey Pattinson Rice Welsh Rinker Hamilton Rodkey Clark Cress Atwood Groene Shreve Murphy Grutzmacher Sproul Yoekum OUT DOOR TRACK SCHEDULE 1917 April 21 — Drake Relay Games at Des Moines April 28 — Penn Games at Philadelphia May 4 — K. S. A. C. at Lawrence May 12 — Missouri at t Lawrence May 19 — Nebraska at Lincoln May 26 — Missouri Valley Meet at Ames June 2 — Western Conference at Chicago OUTDOOR MEETS NOT DUAL The K. U. track team made a good showing in many meets beside the dual engagements. The Drake Relay Games, the Penn Games, Missouri Valley Conference and Western Conference meets, were attended by squads of the K. U. team. In the Drake Games at Des Moines, the two-mile relay team took third place against fast competition. Captain Reber and Treweeke entered the Penn Games in Philadelphia, April 28th. Treweeke tying with three eastern stars for third place in the high jump. Coach Hamilton entered the entire team in the Missouri Valley meet at Columbia in May. The Kansas men made good showings but were unable to get better than third place from Missouri and Ames. Five K. U. track men entered the Western Conference meet in Chicago, June 3rd, taking four and one-half points from the Big Nine teams. Captain Reber took second place in the shot put while Tre- weeke tied for third in the high jump. The Kansas showing in the Western Conference meet is improv- ing each year. —162— ' Jay hawker Athletics lln6oor fleets, 1917 MISSOURI vs. KANSAS, CONVENTION HALL, MARCH 16, 1917 Event First Second Time or Distance 50 Yard Dash Scholts, M.U Simpson, K.U :05 2 50 Yard L. H Simpson, M.U Rennick, M.U :06 50 Yard H. H Simpson, M.U Rennick, M.U 0:6% Mile Run Sproull, K.U Stateler, K.U 4:31 880 Yard Run Rodkev, K.U Rider, M.U 2:02% 440 Yard Run O ' Leary, K.U Wyatt, M.U :52% Two Mile Run Stateler, K.U Groene, K.U 10:09% High Jump Treweeke, K.U Rice, K.U., and Pittam, M.U., tied 6:03 Pole Vault Pattinson, K.U Atwood, K.U., and Sylvester, M. U., tied 11:01 Shot Put Warren, M.U Berry, M.U 40:10 Relay M.U. (Selbie, Wyatt, Daggy, Pittam) 3:28% Totals, Kansas 39, Missouri 46. KANSAS STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE vs. K. U., MARCH 7, 1917 Event First Second Time or Distance 30 Yard Dash Davidson, K.U Crowley, K.U :03 3 30 Yard H. H Wilder, K.S.A.C Casey, K.U :04 1 30 Yard L. H Casey, K.U Wilder, K.S.A.C :04 One Mile Run ..Howland, K.U Stateler, K.U 4:55 3 880 Yard Run Rodkey, K.U Sproull, K.U 2:02 1 440 Yard Run O ' Leary, K.U Welsh, K.U :56 1 Two Mile Run Stateler and Groene, K.U., tied 10:23 3 High Jump Rice and Treweeke, K.U., tied S-.Wyi Shot Put Small, K.U Shafer, K.S.A.C 39:03 Pole Vault Pattinson, K.U Enlow, K.S.A.C 11:00 Relay K.U. (O ' Leary, Welsh, Murphy, Rodkey) 3:48 Total, K. U. 71, K. S. A. C. 14. KANSAS STATE NORMAL vs. KANSAS, LAWRENCE, JAN. 29, 1917. Event First Second Time or Distance 30 Yard Dash Rustenbach, K.U Cross, K. S.N :03% 30 Yard L. H Rustenbach, K.U Cross, K.S.N :04 Mile Run Sproull, K.U Portwood, K.S.N 4:47 30 Yard H. H Seward, K.U Lockman, K.S.N :04% 440 Yard Run O ' Leary, K.U Cross, K.S.N :56% 880 Yard Run Murphy, K.U Rodkey, K.U 2:12 High Jump Treweeke, K.U Miller, K.U 5:09 Shot Put Sharpe, K.S.N Small, K.U 39:07i Two Mile Run Stateler, K.U Weber, K.S.N 10:44 Pole Vault Van Patten, K.S.N Atwood and Taylor, K.U., tied 11:00 Relay Kansas (O ' Leary, Sproull, Welsh, Rodkey) 3:57% Total, K. U. 57, Normal 28. —163— Jay hawker Athletics —164— ' Jayha wker l Athletics Outdoor Mlcets, 1916 KANSAS vs. NEBRASKA, AT LAWRENCE, MAY 5, 1916 Event First Second Time or Distance 100 Yard Dash Irwin, N.U Scott, N.U Mile Run Sproull, K.U Herriott, K.U 4 120 Yard H. H Elliott, K.U Baten, N.U 440 Yard Dash O ' Leary, K.U Owen, N.U Discus Corey, N.U Reber, K.U 118 220 Yard L. H Wilev, N.U Elliott, K.U Pole Vault Pattinson, K.U Campbell, K.U 11 Half Mile Rodkey, K.U Overman, N.U 2 220 Yard Dash O ' Leary, K.U Irwin, N.U Shot Put Reber, K.U Shaw, N.U 43 High Jump Rice, K.U Miller, K.U., Wiley, N.U., tied.... 5 Two mile Run Grady and Statelet, K.U 10 Broad Jump Wiley, N.U Grutzmacher, K.U 22 Mile Relay K.U. (Elliott, Campbell, Rodkey, O ' Leary) 3 Total, K. U. 69K, N. U. 39 - 10% 38% 16% 50% 05 26% 06 00% 23% :033 09 20% :09 29% KANSAS vs. MISSOURI AT COLUMBIA, MAY 12, 1916 Event First Second Time or Distance 100 Yard Dash Simpson, M.U Rennick, M.U :10% Mile Run Gradv, K.U Gabelman, M.U 4:33% 120 Yard H. H Simpson, M.U Elliott, K.U :14% 440 Yard Dash O ' Leary, K.U Wyatt, M.U :50% Discus Warren, M.U Reber, K.U 119:10X 220 Yard L. H Simpson, M.U Rennick, M.U :24% Pole Vault Pattinson, K.U., and Powell, M.U., tie 11:08 Half Mile Rodkey, K.U Rider, M.U 1:58% 220 Yard Dash Simpson, M.U Niedorp, M.U :22 Shot Put Reber, K.U Warren, M.U 41:01 High Jump Pittam and Baker, M.U., tied 5:09 Two Mile Run Groene, K.U... Statelet, K.U 10:34% Broad Jump Simpson, M.U Grutzmacher, K.U 23:06H Relay Missouri (Pittam, Eaton, Wyatt, Daggy). 3:25 Total, K. U. 41, M.U. 68. KANSAS vs. K. S. A. C. AT MANHATTAN, MAY 19, 1916. Event First Second Time or Distance 100 Yard Dash Davidson, K.U Holyroyd, K.S.A.C :10 Mile Run Sproull, K.U Seeber, K.S.A.C 4:32 120 Yard H. H Frizzell, K.S.A.C Wilder, K.S.A.C :I6% 440 Yard Dash O ' Leary, K.U Campbell, K.U :50% Discus Dodrill, K.S.A.C Reber, K.U 122:06 220 Yard L. H Wilder, K.S.A.C Winn, K.U :27 Pole Vault Campbell and Pattinson, K.U., tied 10:06 Half Mile Rodkev, K.U Keys, K.S.A.C 2:03 220 Yard Dash Davidson, K.U O ' Leary, K.U :23% Shot Put Reber, K.U Sharper, K.S.A.C 43:023 High Jump Frizzell, K.S.A.C Rice, K.U 6KX)% Two Mile Run Teeter, K.S.A.C Statelet, K.U 10:03% Broad Jump Grutzmacher, K.U Barnard, K.S.. .C 22:00 Relay Kansas (Elliott, Campbell, Rodkey, O ' Leary) 3:24% Total, K. U. 66, K. S. A. C. 43. : i9ir ig fr —165— J ay hawker Athletics 1917 g: —166— Jay hawker -1 Athletics Unmoor OracK, 1917 ■i ANSAS started off the indoor track season by winning two dual meet % victories. The Kansas Normals fell before a 57 to 28 score on January V 29th before the Jayhawkers had started real training. The meet with the Kansas Aggies on March 7th found the Kansans going at top speed and the men from Manhattan lost, 14 to 71. The dual meet with Missouri in Convention Hall was again decided by the relay, Missouri winning, 46 to 39. Upsets in the dope gave the Tigers unlooked-for points and their chance to win the meet. The Kansas track men were given a chance to enter big competition other than dual meets on the indoor track. Ten men were entered in the First Annual Illinois Relay Games at Urbana, March 3d. Every man entered placed in his event in this meet. Treweeke won the broad jump and tied for first in the high jump. The two-mile relay team, Sproull, Stateler, Murphy, Rodkey — tied for third. On the one-mile relay, Sproull, Rodkey, Welsh and O ' Leary tied for third place. Pattinson tied for third in the pole vault. In the K. C. A. C. games the same night, Kansas men won many places, few men on the squad failing to place in their events. Treweeke and Pattinson represented K. U. in the Missouri Athletic Associ- ation Meet in St. Louis, March 10th. They won first place in the high jump and pole vault, respectively. ela Squa6 The unusually large number of good distance men on the Kansas track team this year makes the picking of a relay quartet a difficult problem. With only two men of last year ' s relay squad on the team this year, Coach Hamilton has to choose two quarter-milers from the other six men out for the places. In the Illinois Relay Games at Urbana, March 3d, Kansas took third place against several Western Conference schools with Sproull running first, Rodkey second, Welsh third and O ' Leary fourth. Against the Kansas Normals the O ' Leary-Sproull-Welsh-Rodkey combination was effective. The Kansas Aggies lost the relay in the dual meet from Welsh, Rodkey, Murphy and O ' Leary. In the dual meet with Missouri in Convention Hall, Missouri won from Crowley, Rodkey, Welsh and O ' Leary. The relay squad will enter the Drake Relay Games and will work for all later meets. The quartet will be picked from Captain Rodkey, O ' Leary, Welsh, Murphy, Sproull, Crowley, Rinker and Shreve. —167— « r Jay hawker Athletics 1S17 C —168— ■ Jayha v ker ' _ Athletics —169— ! ' Tayhawker J ' Athletics RELAY TEAM CROSS COUNTRY TEAM 1917 C -170— Jayhawker Athletics tennis Due to the excellent playing of Captain Dix Teachenor against the odds of inexperienced team- mates, Kansas overcame an early slump and wound up the season with the Missouri Valley Conference Championship title in its possession. Kansas won from Oklahoma but lost from Nebraska and Missouri, in the early dual meets held at Lawrence. Tom O ' Brien and AUie Cowgill were Teachenor ' s teammates in these matches. Teachenor and Cowgill were sent to the Conference Matches at Des Moines, and, again through the consistent playing of its diminutive captain, Kansas won. The ancient Tiger enemy was defeated at this time. The work of Teachenor was notable in that he won every singles match in which he played, thus easily gaining the singles championship of the Valley. Teachenor and Cowgill made a good showing in the doubles. Prospects for the coming season are bright with the eligibility of Kenn Uhls, formerly of Leland Stanford. Uhls has the experience and skill and he should make a good teammate for Captain AUie Cowgill. The All-University tournament, held in the fall, was won by Uhls. Many promising players appeared among the 47 entrants In the tourney; and especially pleasing was the showing made by sev- eral freshmen, as well as faculty members. Prof. Arthur Mitchell succeeded in playing through the final round. (Tross (tountv ' s The cross country squad made a comparatively strong showing this year. Captain Stateler was the mainstay of the team winning the five mile run in both dual meets and In the K. C. A. C. meet. Fred Rod key, last year ' s captain, and Captain-elect Rinker were the other two stars of the team. Groene, Welsh and Dillon placed well toward the front in all meets. Kansas met the Kansas Aggies and Oklahoma in dual meets on the Kansas course. Each meet was held as a curtain raiser for the football game with the same school. Against the Aggies, Kansas scored seven men before the first Aggie man crossed the line. The men finished in the order: Rodkey, Stateler, tie; Rinker, Groene, Welsh, Dillon, Rowland, Buffington. Captain Stateler, Rinker, and Rodkey took the first three places against the Oklahomans, Novem- ber 4th. Winters and Miller of Oklahoma took fourth and fifth with Welsh, Dillon and Groene finish- ing sixth, seventh and eighth. In the Valley meet at Ames, Kansas won second place among the conference schools, Ames winning the meet easily. The Jayhawker runners finished in fourth, sixth, eighth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth places. The K. C. A. C. meet, December 2nd, was a walk-away for the Kansans. Stateler won the event with Welsh and Dillon close seconds. : i9i7C —171 — ; Jay hawker 1917 C ' Jayhawker l WOMEN ' S ATHLETICS 1917 C —173— ' J ay hawker Athletics MISS WULF MISS WOOLSEY MISS TUCKER MISS JONES Capt. Freshman Basketball Capt. Sophomore Basketball Captain Junior Basketball Capt. Senior Basketball 5c e6ule of basket ali Season 1917 Jan. 13 — Juniors 40 Seniors 13 Freshmen 41 Sophomores 11 Jan. 17 — Juniors 54 Sophomores 8 Freshmen 41 Seniors 16 Jan. 20 — Juniors 73 Freshmen 16 Seniors 19 Sophomores 13 GIRLS GYM CLASSES 1917 C -174— ■ Jayhawker Athletics JUNIOR BASKETBALL TEAM Champions Inter-class Tournament Trant Endacott Leibengood Sterling Brown Tucker Pratt Duam Querfeld SENIOR BASKETBALL TEAM Rhulandt Martin Shinn Jones Kiigore Burke —175— ' Jay hawker l Athletics FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM Gear Trant Epley Bottomly Drought Noah Wulf Milvin Alexander SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL TEAM Drake Walling Hall Heathman Martin West Dunmire McBratney Woolsey Canavan Brown 1917 C —176— ' Jayhawker l Women ' s Athletics i Results of Swimming Mleet 1916 Event First Second Third 50 Foot Side Stroke R. Endacott, Soph H. Wagstaff, Fresh. 50 Foot Back Stroke O. Holmes, Senior H. Chapman, Fresh M. Jones, Junior. 50 Foot Breast Stroke B. Ketchell, Grad F. Skinner, Soph L. Spencer, Fresh. 100 Foot Race M. Hodder, Soph M. Jones, Junior B. Ketchell, Grad. Plunge for Distance M. Jones, Junior B. Ketchell, Grad E. Atkinson, Fresh. Diving, Compulsory M. Jones, Junior R. Endacott, Soph E. Atkinson, Fresh. K. Reding, Soph. Diving, Fancy M. Jones, Soph R. Endacott, Soph B. Ketchell, Grad. Relay Sophomores Freshmen. M. Buchanan R. VanAllen R. Endacott H. Chapman M. Hodder H. Wagstaff K. Reding G. Sweet Total — Sophomores, 24, Juniors 20, Freshmen, 15. . - 1917 —177— I Jayhawker Women ' s Athletics I I I -- - .t - -Xi .U Mm 11f9CK.EY -•  a B —178— Jay hawker Women ' s Athletics J ' —179— Jayhawker Women ' s Athletics SENIOR STUNT IF. A. A. Mass Meeting FRESHMEN STUNT W. A. A. Mass Meeting : 1917 C —180— ■ Jay hawker - Women ' s Athletics Hodder Jones Mix Cole EXECUTIVE BOARD Ashton Child Martin XSl omen ' s t letlc Association HE Women ' s Athletic Association, organized in the fall of 1915, has proved to be one of the most active and efficient organizations on the Hill. It has an active membership of 240 women, satisfying and fur- thering a desire for athletics among women and creating a united, demo- cratic feminine student body. In basketball and swimming tournaments held last year, the Sophomore class took the lead. The same class. Juniors this year, won the inter-class basket- ball tournament in January; the Freshmen took second, the Seniors third and the Sophomores fourth place. During the state high school basketball tournament, March 16th and 17th, members of the association officiated as scorekeepers, time-keepers and linesmen at every game played in which girls ' teams entered. The association promotes a social impetus in its two big parties of the year — one a matinee dance for women and the other a formal party that both men and women attend. HAZEL PRATT Director of Sports MARION JOSEPH Cheerleader —181 — Jayhawker Women ' s Athletics I i : 1917 c —182— Jay hawker - 1017 «: —183— ■ ' .J ' M ' .Six ' .e : i: u. ii. i-f ' - iMiiiie :: . Us -Activities ; J ay hawker Activities Wilson Terrell Martin Greever Anderson McKinney Cook Tarrant Gear Irwin Wagner Yeokum Craig Heath Chandler O e Mien ' s Stu6ent (Touncll The Men ' s Student Council, organized in 1909, is the student governing body of the University. It attends to business of general undergraduate concern, and acts as a representative agent of student sentiment. A book exchange is con- ducted each year for the benefit of the students. OFFICERS Paul R. Greever President Marvin L. Gear Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS The College T. C. Tarrant William Wilson Horace Chandler Milton Heath L. M. Anderson School of Engineering A. B. Irwin E. R. Martin George Yeokum Paul Diehl Gerald Sparks Page Wagner School of Law Halleck I. Craig Frank Terrell School of Medicine Myron M. Booth School of Pharmacy E. B. Cook Graduate School W. A. McKinney —193— Jayhawker - Reding Beckley Carson Huffman Hart Carter Simons Sproule Ulrich Joseph Fogarty McCanless Strickland Nowlin Women ' s Student (Bovernment Association The Women ' s Student Government Association was organized in 1909. The Association aims to foster among the women of the University a feeling of mutual responsibility to maintain high standards of living and scholarship, and to promote loyalty to the University. The University Senate has entrusted the W. S. G. A- Council with disciplinary control over women students. Social events are given from time to time for all the women of the University, prominent among which this year has been the Girl ' s Prom. This is an annual affair. The Association gives a scholarship to one Freshman girl each year. OFFICERS MoNA Clare Huffman President Elizabeth Ulrich Vice-President, College Pauline Sproule Vice-President, Fine Arts Hazel Carson Secretary Katherine Reding Treasurer Grace Beckley Blanche Simons Junior Representatives Marion Joseph Pattie Hart Sophomore Representatives Millie Carter Lucile Nowlin Freshmen Representatives Angela Fogarty Frances Strickland 1917 C —194— Jayhawkeiv Activities Gardner Davis Sproull I3 e (Tolkge OFFICERS Jess Gardner President W. Cargill Sproull Vice-President Alice Davis Secretary COMMITTEE Stanley Jones Dorothy Cole Constant J. Poirier Virginia Lucas Ed. Hashinger May Anderson Jack Caffery Dick Treweeke :Sn9i7C —195— Jayha v ker Activities Sloan WiETERS Smee i I i I Officers of t e Engineering 5cl)Ool A. H. WiETERs President George Sm e e Vice-President C. F . S LOAN Secretary- Treasurer i i}7-« ■ Jayhawker l Activities Weber LoTT Mitchell Flinn Senior Caw Officers A. B. Mitchell President J. P. Flinn Vice-President W. J. Weber Secretary Kenneth Lott Treasurer : 1917 c —197— Jayhawker l Activities Hoffman Hershbkrger SARTELDES Hake I66le T:aw Officers A. G. Barteldes President W. O. Ha KE Vice-President Arthur Hershberger Secretary Harry Hoffman Treasurer I : I I 1 A. G. Barteldes L. H. Brewer W. B. Cobb R. Davenport F. M. Fink F. A. Fratcher C. R. Gelvin Jay Hargett A. W. Hershberger W. H. Jones F. L. Pausch C. A. Randolph E. L. Smith CLASS A. R. Bell D. E. Carlson R. P. Colley J. H. Dykes D. S. Flagg A. P. Frost F. A. Guy W. D. Harrison H. W. Hoffman G. L. Norton E. E. Pedroja Carl Rice E. G. Smith Frank Terrell T. W. Benson M. L. Carter R. T. Cowgill C. P. Embry J. L. Fogarty M. W. Gates W. O. Hake W. B. Havekorst J. T. Jackson J. C. Parker K. A. Pringle E. W. Shinn G. E. Smith - 1917 «: —198— Jayhawker Activities Anderson Gai.le Krugg Browne Uunior TLaw Officers David L. Browne President Lyle Anderson Vice-President CoNSUELO Krugg Treasurer James Galle Secretary L. N. Anderson Bruce Baker B. H. Brown C. B. Butler Roscoe Charles Ralph V. Fritts C. O. Gorsuch E. E. Hook M. Johnson Bernard Jensen Consuelo Krugg P. L. Levi Harold Lytle G. L. Mendenhall J. D. Murphy J. T. Pringle Robert Rose F. W. Salvesen A. B. Irwin M. Shearer S. C. Taylor George Woodward J. A. Wertz CLASS C. C. Atwood Fenton J. Baker D. L. Browne J. P. Caffery J. B. Casey J. L. Galle Jess Gardner E. A. Hyer C. C. Jackson M. P. Knight J. A. Krumbach Farel Lobaugh E. H. Mason R. H. Mendenhall Harry Montgomery C. B. Randall O. N. Rush J. A. Simpson D. L. Saywer V. H. Sneed William Towers C. A. Walsh W. L Wulfkuhler C. E. Bailey Willard Benton G. A. Brown C. C. Carper J. E. Curran Willard Glasco W. R. Heath H. Howland W. B. Gregory Randall Kline H. A. Klock F. J. Loren G. A. Milton J. W. Mitchell G. McCaleb A. B. Richmond Fred Shaw F. H. Smith O. W. Schell S. R. Swaller L. Tucker J. N. White W. F. Zoellner : 1917 c —199— Jayhawker Activities Howard COONEY DiLLER Jp armaceutical Society Officers John P. Coon ey President Byron H. Mehl Vice-President Howard E. Diller Secreatry RoscoE Howard Treasurer '  1917 C —200— Jayha v ker l Activities TiMMoNS Carter Hullinger Cole Bowlby l)e Associated 3ouraalism Students Edwin W. Hullinger President Jack Carter Vice-President Vaughn Timmons Men ' s Secretary Alice Bowlby Women ' s Secretary Dorothy Cole Treasurer SOCIAL COMMITTEE Henry Pegues Chauncey Hunter Marjorie Rickard —201 — Jayhawker 4 Activities ft 5 I 1 1917 C —202— Jay hawker Activities 1 HD —203— Jayhawker ' i Nordstrom GliLVIN Ol)e 1917 3aipb wUr Arnold Nordstrom Editor C. R. Gelvin Manager : 1917 : —204— Jay hawker Activities Sauter Coe Moore Friend Heizer Davis Rowland Cook Koester Ulrick Rankin Pegues Gelvin Nordstrom Allvine McNutt Hilsman Glasco Poirier Dodderidgc Morgan Leach Fischer SprouU Gardner Mason 3ajl)awKer Staff Arnold Nordstrom Editor-in-Chief Dick Gelvin Business Manager Allen Burch Associate Editor Vernon Moore Assistant Business Manager Jess Gardner ) College Editors Bess Ulrich J Veda Rankin Minor Schools Editor LuciEN Dyche Engineering Editor Paul Friend Law Editor EuGEN e Coo k Pharmacy Editor Harry Morgan ] Junior Editors Don Davis J Cargi LL S PROULL AthUtics Miriam Jones Woman ' s Athletics Paul Sauter Fraternities Carolyn McNutt Sororities Connie Poirier Organizations Herbert Howland Religion Billy Koester ] „ „ , Wilbur Fischer q Glendon Allvine j Itasca Hillman Calendar Kenneth Dodderidge Darald Hartley Children ' s Section FoRDYCE CoE Military Margaret Heizer Platform Ralph Fittrs WiLLARD Glasco P Hazel Carson J John Pattinson Student Photographer Rob Mason Fred Leach John Marshall Milton Nigg Gordon Stre et Walter Wellhouse Benjamin Minturn Arthur Ellison Ellen Edmonson .Artists —205— Jay hawker Activities Morgan Moore Fisher Flagg Dyer Reed Davis Rowland Weightman Patterson Gardiner Pegues Cole Bowlby Koester Hullinger Butcher Rigsby Rickard Sproull Montgomery Wear liCnlversity iDailp Hiansan Staff OFFICERS Editors-in-Chief Wilbur Fisher Harry Morgan William Koester Edwin Hullinger Henry Pegues News-Editors Edwin Hullinger Henry Pegues Clifford Butcher William Koester Paul Flagg Business Manager Vernon Moore Assistant Managers John Weightman Fred Rigsby Cargill Sproull Eugene Dyer John Montgomery Alfred Hill Herbert Howland D. L. Hartley News Staff Don Davis Bob Reed Paul Flagg Helen Patterson Henry Pegues Harry Morgan Millard Wear Wilbur Fischer Ruth Gardiner Mary Smith Dorothy Cole —206— i? Jay hawker Activities liCnlverslty iDall? TKansan [HE University Daily Kansan was founded January 1, 1912, from the old Tri-Weekly Kansan. The Kansan wishes to help the undergraduate body, and as its flag announces, Aims to picture the undergraduate life of the University of Kansas; to go further than merely printing the news by standing for the ideals the University holds; to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads, in all, to serve to the best of its ability the students of the University. With this as its purpose, the Kansan comes off the Journalism press every school day of the year. The control of the Kansan is lodged in the Senior Council, composed of the members of the Daily Kansan Board who are members of the outgoing class. Membership to the board is open to anyone whom the board feels has taken sufficient interest in the work of the Kansan. The Kansan has been under the indirect supervision of the Department of Journalism the past year, thus enabling the paper to raise its already high standard. The members of the staff were chosen from the Senior Council each to serve a month in the various capacities. —207— Jayhawker Activities 5iu- .- u-,. . ' . ' i tm ■• ' ? k± .sium- — cT M i I... ' Afl.WA,H i-l, 1917 C —208— ■ J ayhawker RELIGION 3j 1917 C —209— ■ Jayhawker - Activities Evans Nelson Dail Smith Rodkey Burns Russell Harlan Todd Wedell Pickering Sloan Reed Gorrill Price Snook Caleue B e V. . d. J . Cabinet Edward Todd President Harry Harlan Vice-President Lloyd Snook Recording Secretary Hugo Wedell .,. General Secretary HUGO WEDELL —210— Jayhawker Activities Gittins Hertzler Huffman Brownlee Cole Hale Mussen Lucas Strong Hilsman Angevine Bocker Daniels Bell McNutt Stevenson Nicholson y. Jt . (T. :2V.. IFirst Cabinet Evelyn Strong President Florence Hale ice-President Dorothy Angevine Secretary Grace Bell Treasurer Elizabeth Ann Gittins General Secretary COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Carolyn McNutt Religious Meetings Mary Brownlee Membership Virginia Lucas Finance Agnes Hertzler Big Sister Itasca Hi lsm an Social Margaretta Stevenson. ..Association News Helen Bocker Promotion and Conference Stella Cole Social Service Edith Mussen Hostess Ruth Daniels Bible and Missions Mary Nicholson Haskell —211— Jaylla vker l Activities Kennedy Means Hitchcock Merritt Sandberg Gillespie Gittins Joseph Hale McKinney Roebke Varner Goodjohn Winsor Hawkins Nowlin y. W. d. Ji. Saconb dahinat Florence Hale President LuciLE Means Secretary ADVISORY BOARD Mrs. W. H. Johnson, Chairman Miss Helen Jones Mrs. P. F. Walker Mrs. F. J. Kelley Mrs. C. G. Dunlap Miss Grace Charles Miss Esther Swenson Mrs. W. J. Baumgartner Mrs. B. P. Young Mrs. Frank Strong ' 3 191T C —212— ' Jayhawker l Activities i 31; f-- KJm v B (■ E li k Hl _ BMfef ||Jrtf - S i iK 1! n ' ' S ..awg ' m .■■..,... mx Wk m t l- f? j — -  i« - - s • , 5 9SM • ir,... . « ' - ' s ' S CO Q S ?, U a, ? o X s U it o .s i 3 o o o  o h o o « . I .Siif U OS ►P tjo e a! !- «J dj c3 u -C (U «j o-2_ 2- CQ u E : 1917 c —213— ' Jayhawker i Irvine Olinger Blincoe Olinger Dieffenbacher Hawkins Mattoon il estmlnUter Bull6 OFFICERS Ernest Blincoe President C. Dieffenbacher Vice-President Ulista Hawkins Secretary H. F. Mattoon Treasurer Frances Irvine Chairman Social Committee The Westminister Social Guild, supported by the Presbyterian Students, gives monthly socials for the University Students. Its purpose is to afford its members a wholesome social life. The meetings are strictly non-sectarian. Westminister Bible Chair, an incorporated institution, offers instruction in the Bible and allied subjects to the students of the University. A four years ' course is offered with a diploma for the completion of twelve hours ' work. Dr. Stanton Olinger, Ph.D.,B.D. is in charge. —214— Jayha sker Activities (Tlass for Kniversltj yUan, TFirst (ri)rl5tlan (T rcl) Dr. Arthur Braden Teacher Ellis Starrett President Charles Cory Vice-President Clarence Boltz Secretary Karl Kreider Treasurer This class was organized in the fall of 1914, with twenty members. The total enrollment this year was about one hundred twenty-five. The courses taught in this class are these regularly taught in the Yale School of Religion. One year is devoted to the Life of Christ, one to the Apostolic Age, and one to Old Testament History. Thus the whole Bible is covered within three years. This class is regularly accredited in the School of Religion. Ten men out of this class have pledged themselves for the ministry and the mission fields this year.  1917 c —215— Jay hawker l Activities 1 f ■ y I ' (Tlass for Kniversity Women IFivst (TljrUUan (T urc Organized January 17, 1904, with four members. Present enrollment, 97. Registrar, George O. Foster, has been the teacher of this class during the thirteen years of its history. Over 600 University women have been members of the class. Of this number, 68 have accepted church membership. Six members of the class are now on the mission field; Turkey, Porto Rico, South America, New Mexico, Mountains of West Virginia, and general work in the United States. The total cash offerings of this class, for religious work, during its history, amount to over 31,700. Membership in the class is open to any University woman without regard to church affiliation. : 1917 « —216— Jaylia%vker ' mamaa jmuea aa iiomamai Activities 1 ' f ■- if % mk «..,..l frA - i .w ■ ■;■ ' : ' !! W 1 p ' mt- .. « - i M vf- I VI 1 r ▼ i rr- ' f .r f 1 • 1 ■if?- 1 4 1 -, w 1 .. , .. - « - . ••• ' .J -- jpl moutl) (Tongregatlonal ible (Tlasses Plymouth gets in close touch with the Congregational students through her University Bible Classes. About 220 students are Congregationalists and of this number twenty-five per cent are enrolled in the bible classes. The following classes meet every Sunday Mrs. a. C. Terrill Class for Freshman Girls Mrs. U. C. Mitchell Class for Sophomore Girls Miss Kate Riggs Class for Junior and Senior Girls Dr. W. L. Burdick Class for University Men and Women —217— ; Jayhavvker Activities lCniv(tvsit ' 2 Students ible (tiassds of tl)e OPHELIAN GIRLS Professor L. E. Sisson Teacher Enrollment 63 Course of Study Sermon on the Mount. Books of the New Testament. OFFICERS ' S I I Minnie Ramsey Anna Benson Amy Van Horn Blanch Simmons AGOGA CLASS O. C. Brown Teacher Enrollment 51 Course of Study Sermon on the Mount. Books of the New Testament. OFFICERS Herbert Howland Wilbur J. Woorly There are 147 Baptists in the University. Ira Weekly Louis Clevenger —218— Jayhawker PLATFORM : i9i7«: —219 . : ■V:  J ftm ' af ' ;iinwie p|tpffCTrBW : Jay hawker Activities f i |4 kl f . 1 p. . J f . f - ' 4.4- ' .i Jii«4 King Makepeace Wedd Hull Gumbiner Shanton McFarland Havekorst Caffrey Grecian Davidson Hart Treweeke Pegues Dyer Smith Lott Day Robertson Haugen Cole Elmore Foster Dittmer MacMurray Dykes Angevine Gallagher Butle Dunigan WuUenwaber Joseph Lockett Govier Scott Hilsman Bender Clark Ol)e TK. K. iDramahc Club OFFICERS Otto H. Dittmer President EuGEN E Dyer Vice-President Ethel Scott Secretary Frank McFarland Manager Prof. Arthur MacMurray Director —220— Jaj liaAvker Activities X5 TK. K. J0ramatic Club Prior to 1913 there were three dramatic clubs active at the University The Thespian, The Red Domino and the Masque Clubs. In the fall of 1913 these were consolidated and one club existed which was known as the Hawk Club. When school opened in the fall of 1914 this club was changed to the K. U. Dra- matic Club. It has made rapid progress under the directorship of the Public Speaking Department. Jack Challis Don Davis Otto H. Dittmer A. Gumbiner Frank Hetherington J. R. Kennedy Hoyt Nelson Ames Rogers Robert Robertson Leland Smith Itasca Hilsman Dorothy Angevine Dora Lockett Florence Cook Florence Dunigan Irma Wullenwaber Muriel King Rosalie Griffith Florence Butler Dorothy Cole Harold Irwin Fred Preble MEMBERS H. I. Craig Eugene Dyer John Dykes L. D. Hartley L. M. Hull Frank McFarland J. Jackson Harry VanVelzer Guy Waldo Lynn Shauten Helen Clark Mabel Elmore Helen Gallager Ruth Foster Cecil Burton Marion Joseph Helen Bender Verna Makepeace Opal Day Pattie Hart Opal Plank Dave Brown Jack Caffrey Paul Friend W. B. Havekorst E. J. Grecian Kenneth Lott Henry Pegues Leland Thompson Dick Treweeke Alfred Richmond Hazel Longabough Mary Govier Ada Dykes Ethel Scott Vera Blackburn Helen Wedd Eva Haugen Susan MacDonld Frank Feierabend Hallie Clark Harold Lytle Ray Davidson —221— Jay ha wker Activities L:::: —222— Jayliawker l Activities Kn6er (Lover The Kansas University Dramatic Club produced Roi Cooper Megrue ' s celebrated American play Under Cover at the Bowersock Theater, February 28th. A crowded house greeted the cast which was composed of thirteen uni- versity students. Press reports of the production pronounced it the most suc- cessful example of the ability of the actors and of careful coaching that the Dra- matic Club ever staged. The scenery for the play was especially constructed and in every detail was an exact copy of that used in the original New York production. The cast was chosen after competitive try-outs, at which nearly a hundred aspirants appeared. The following cast was selected : James Duncan Walte r Have korst Harry Gibbs Lewis Hull Peter Die k Tre wee ke Daniel Taylor Otto Dittmer Sarah Peabody Mabel Elmore Ethel Cartwright Ada Dykes Amy Cartwright Helen Clar k Michael Harrington Alton Gumbiner Lambert David Brown Nora Rutledge Dora Log kett Alice Harrington Cecile Burton Monty Vaughn Robert Robertson Stephen Denby Frank H. McFarland —223— ! Jaylia v ker Activities Brown Price Mattoon KANSAS AFFIRMATIVE TEAM O e MebrasKa iDebates Kansas met Nebraska in a dual debate December 14th. Kansas had the affirmative at Lawrence and the negative at Lincoln. The question was: Re- solved; That submarine warfare upon commerce as now conducted is incompatible with the rights of neutrals and the law of nations in regard to non-combatant enemies. Kansas was defeated at Lincoln by a unanimous decision and at Lawrence by a two to one decision. Wilson Hake Anderson KANSAS NEGATIVE TEAM L. —224— [ Jayha vker ' l ' Activities Harris Price Schmidt OKLAHOMA DEBATING TEAM X5l)e Oriangular JOdhata The question was: Resolved; That the principle of investigation of indus- trial disputes as embodied in the Canadian Compulsory Investigation Act should be adopted by the Congress of the United States. Kansas upheld the affirmative against Oklahoma at Lawrence on March 23rd, and the negative against Colorado at Boulder, March 24th. Kansas lost both debates by a two to one decision. Donaldson Anderson COLORADO DEBATING TEAM Smith —225— Jayl a vker ' _ Activities Dewey Smith THE MISSOURI TEAM Richmond Kansas met Missouri at Columbia, April 23rd. Kansas upheld the negative side of the question: Resolved; That the principle of compulsory investigation of industrial disputes as embodied in the Canadian Compulsory Investigation Act should be adopted by the Congress of the United States. : 1917 c —226— ■ J ay hawker  i Activities First Row — Ketchum Rowles Stout Lindsay Marsh Phinney Beebe Roberts Atwood Smith Second Row — Craig Wood Nevins Harkrader Young Dixon O ' Brien Hendrickson Nuef Third Row — Gorman Tremaine Uhl Cox Dorsett Searle Riddle Parrott Andrews Gregg LaCoss Fourth Row — Lamb GrafF Hoar Stout Buchanan Lockett, Mgr. Groberty Hill Trump Risinger Fifth Row — Rainey Hangen Dunnigan Canfield VanSandt Wasson Sharpless Spencer Bozell Nelson Snider Ol)e ©Iris (5Ue (Tlub The Girls ' Glee Club has been organized now for four years. Professor C. E. Hubach was the first director. The Club has always given at least one concert a year. Last year they staged The Spanish Gypsies opera. This year ' s con- cert was given under the direction of Professor W. B. Downing, with Miss Dora Lockett as manager. i!. 7_«: ' Jaylia vker l Activities i i I I Z D. Q Q S —228— ' Jayhawker l Activities Olje ICnlversitiP of lHansas (Toncert anb The University of Kansas Band Department is keeping up its onward march. More than one hundred band men tried out for places this year. Not only is the number of applicants increasing but the quality is also improving. The Concert Band, composed of forty-five pieces, has made a very enviable record for itself. A more loyal and pro-university bunch of students cannot be found. They give the University, in service with the band, an average of about seven hours a week. Below is a sample of the work done by the Concert band in concert: UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CONCERT BAND In Concert, Fraser Hall, Thursday Evening, Dec. It, 1916, 8 P. M. Program 1 — Wedding March from the Opera, The Ratcharmer 10 — Two movements from Dance Suite II. Cossack of Hamelin ' . F. E. Nessler Revels, (Danse Grotesque), IV, Valse Russe 2 — Overture — The Italians in Algiers Rossini Tschakoft 3— (a) An original Caprice, Solitude Mecradanle 11— March-Song— Our Uncle Jimmy . . C. McCanles (b) Minuetto e Gavotta from the Music Drama rr,, , , , , , ,, Pagliacci Leoncavallo I here s one whom we love and revere above all, . p 1  • r ,r J-. uTT T5 11 • .1 1 ,. He is a friend that ' s true; 4— Selection from Verdi s Opera Un Ballo in Maschera kind word, a smile and a greeting for all, ■•■■ • I ' ■ ' ' • He ' s always loyal to old K. U. 5 — Violin Solo — Hungarian Rhapsody Hauser For thirty-eight years he has ruled judge supreme Miss Ednah Hopkins. Miss Lois Libbey, Piano Being our faithful Law School Dean; Accompanist. He ' s held by his boys in the highest esteem, 6— Saxaphone Quintette— Minuet Paderewski Everyone loves Uncle Jimmy Green Messrs. BuEHLER, GiSH, Banker, Bi oomheart and Jft «, 8 ' hree cheers for Uncle Jimmy Green Dixon. ' ■ grand old man of the University. - r Ko- r T 1 II I, n ,, Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah! for Uncle Jimmy! 7— Overture— Siege of Rochelle Balje l jg manner guide our banner 8 — (a) Serenade . C. McCanles Of the Crimson and the Blue. (b) Andante e Mazurka . C. McCanles 9— Selection— Les Contest d ' Hofrman ( Tales of Hoff- Program, except Numbers 8 and 11, selected from Carl man) Offenbach-Safranek Fischer ' s Military Journal and Gilmore ' s Library. : 1917 c —229— Jay ha lver l Activities i t a -A « «f Roberts Grutzmacher Haynes Farnsworth Wilson Stodder Peacock Haughawout Fahringer Huntsman Wilson Stevens McClintock Steimley Martling Morse Shores Graber Johnson Barber Talbert Kluss Dawson Pitts Hopkins Dalton Minger Hungate Allen Kidwell Imus I I O e University Orchestra The University Orchestra is one of the important musical organizations maintained by the Uni- versity, whose purpose is to educate its members in instrumental technique and in the execution and appreciation of standard musical works, as well as to afford pleasure to the University at large through its concerts. The Orchestra gave a short concert before the Editors ' Association on the evening of February 5th and performed very creditably. The Mid-Winter Concert is on March 1st and a Spring Concert will be given the middle of April. PERSONNEL Prof. Wort S. Morse. Harold P. Shores ...Director .Manager First rial i ns Ednah Hopkins, Concertm ' Katherine Barber Una Allen Harold P. Shores Scott Johnson Irene Imus Volan Kidwell Violas Charlotte Hungate Harold Huntsman Messick Bass Viols Prof. Leonard L. Steimley Arling Graeber Clarinets Hugh A. Grutzmacher Stephen M. Fahringer Horns Prof. Winthrop P. Haynes Harold Roberts Oboe Samuel F. Peacock Piano Pauline McClintock Second Violins r Vesta Talbert Mane Kluss Mildred Pitts Ethel Minger Helen Porter Agatha Kinney Francis H. Martling Violoncellos Dorothy Dawson Prof, William B. Dalton Cornets Frederic G. Stodder Clyde A. Farnsworth Fhite Ailene Wilson Trombone Alvah ri. Haughawout Drums Gail E. Wilson Or I an Philip F. Stevens 1917 C —230— ' JaJ ' ' ha s ' ker -1 Activities SOCIAL 1917 C —231 — Jayhawker ' _ Activities Friend Foster MANAGERS 1916 PROM Fleeson Montgomery A4ANAGERS 1917 PROM —232— ■ Jaylia vkor l Activities JUNIOR PROiM 1917 SOPHOMORE HOP 1916 —233— ; ... ' Jay hawker Activities JOURNALISM CABARET DANCE —234— Organizations I ! Jayliaw ker - OrtlUinizations —235— Jayhawker -1 Organizations Snook Sowers Boese M. Brownlee Schmidt Flint O. Brownlee Fuger Hawkins Hart Stewart Boyington Hunter Engle Kugler McClure Nigg Joseph Hullinger Cook Morgan Rogers Frost Smith Beal Umannia : 191T.C —236— ' Jayha vker Organizations -A.lemannla Founded at the University of Kansas 1900 Publication, Jlemannian ' ' Flower — Red Rose Colors — Red, White and Black Alemannia was founded for the purpose of promoting proficiency in the use of the German language, and to provide for its members a social life as well. ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Florence L. Cook, Kansas City Hilmar Appel, Lawrence Edwin Hullinger, Osborne Marion Joseph, Whitewater Arl H. Frost, Lawrence Lena Rogers, Wellington Mary Brownlee, Stafford Chauncey D. Hunter, Abilene Oscar Brownlee, Stafford Milton W. Nigg, Los Angeles, Cal. Juniors Paul Schmidt, Junction City Golda Fuger, Wathena Harry Morgan, Alta Vista Floyd Snook, Sterling Sophomores Marguerite Sowers, Bonner Springs Mary Smith, Abilene Dorothy Beal, Hamilton Dorothy Flint, Girard Adolph Boese, Hillsboro Helen Hart, Bonner Springs Edna McClure, Arkansas City Viola Engle, Abilene Freshmen Thelma Boyington, Bird City Oliver Stewart, Wathena Ernst Kugler, Abilene W. W. Hawkins Walter Wellhouse Faculty George J. Hood Grace M. Charles O. H. Burns —237— Jaylia wker l Organizations Carter Easton Winters Smith Schoeppel Rogers Buckles Timmins Tatman Sturtevant Cooley Mueller Brown Gibson O e Jf ranKlins An organization to promote fellowship and to further the best interests of its members and the University. Graduates Errett G. Smith, Delphos Seniors Samuel J. Cooley, Kansas City Juniors Ray Winters, Kansas City James V. Brown, Dillwyn John A. Carter, Kansas City Doyle L. Buckles, Sedan Vaughn E. Timmins, Kansas City Sophomores Charles G. Easton, Winchester Whitson G. Rogers, Wellington Freshmen Richard B. Tatman, Coffeyv ille Ralph E. Mueller, Kaasas City Andrew F. Schoeppel, Ransom Philip C. Gibson, Kansas City Special Ira A. Sturtevant, Topeka —238— Jaylia wker _ Organizations Sellers J. Sloan Wehmeyer Dietrich Hoiekvam Foster F. Rodkey F. Williams Wilson Blincoe Thomann C. Sloan Terrill Raymond Bacon Tarr Reitz Brown Austin Wolfe A. Williams R. Rodkey V yti l-fousa The Y. M. House was organized in 1914 with the two-fold purpose of uniting a group of men in the active support of the University Y. M. C. A. and of pro- viding a wholesome social life for its members. ACTIVE MEMBERS GRADUATE James L. Sellers, Neosho Rapids James C. Sloan, Emporia Seniors Robert B. Bacon, Hutchinson Fred S. Rodkey, Blue Rapids William H. Wilson, Bisbee, Ariz. Frank C. Thomson, Summerfield Ernest E. Blincoe, Fort Scott Charles F. Sloan, Pomona Juniors Walter A. Raymond, Rago Gail R. Soper, Hutchinson Sophomores Rex L. Brown, Okla. City, Okla. Harold J. Terrill, Robinson Verle L. Austin, Irving Fred S. Williams, Canon City, Colo. Harlie S. Reitz, Morrill Edmund H. Weymeyer, Kansas City Freshmen Ralph E. Rodkey, Blue Rapids Harry M. Foster, Boise City, Idaho Arthur A. Tarr, Summerfield Pledges Donald B. Hoiekvam, Canon City, Colo. Newton Benscheidt, Hutchinson Carl C. Dietrich, Miltonvale Alvin C. Williams, Canon City, Colo. !1 1917 : —239— ■ Jay hawker g ' i t Organizations I r? 1 1 1 r Tracy Skare House Palmer Bjtler Groene Piepenburg Williams Minturn Hall Wann Davis Farris Goss Lott Smith Wentworth Garvie Hoover Chandler Darby Webster Hensoii Richmond Bowersock Glasco Owen Wattles Major Sebold Cadmus I5 e Jfort? (Tlub The Forty Club was organized at the University of Kansas in the fall of 1912. The purpose of the Club is to furnish entertainment, in the way of social dances. OFFICERS Horace F. Chandler President John Dykes Vice-President Wilfred C. Wann Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Cyril Palmer John Tracy Willard Glasco Paul Webster Harold House Howard Skare Carl Butler Aaron Piepenburg Everette Groene Anton Williams Benney Minturn Wilfred Wann Horace Chandler Kenneth Lott Don Davis Ivan Farris John Dykes Charles Gross Hubart Cox Wilbur Jones John Flinn Stanley Jones Elton Rhine Ray Hemphill Warren Wattles Ted Richter Guido Smith Alfred Richmond Gurrie Henson Hugh Garvie Raymond Darby Frank Wentworth Harold Hoover Robert Walters Walter Cadmus Vernon Bowersock William Owen Oscar Major John Seybold Seldon Hall —240— Jayhawker ' Organizations E l HI E,I H ■ F ' I K H IMI B oil PW Siw ■ H«t H | m [ Mk - ' ? K 1 IkJvXi E ' i K ■ | J| H B |P K]y k BF Ht h _J| i i WviW ijL. L .. 1 1 1 ■i EtlB Shukers Trinkle Elmore Street DoiialJson Frost Hoernig King Krehbiel McDonald Makepeace Roop Suffeld Battey Hoopes Hopkins Burnham Duncan McCallum Osborne Klinck Longabaugh Upton Ulrich McKaughan Spencer Lucas Hostetter McCanles Hawkins Learned OulU Club The Quill Club is the parent society of the inter-collegiate organization of students and instructors especially interested in creative activities, literary, critical and scholarly. It ordinarily conducts a magazine, and of fers prizes from time to time for contributed material. Membership is open to any applicant and applications are accompanied with manuscripts for the approval of the club. Lucile Shukers Susan McDonald Henritta McKaughan Anna Learned Lena Hoernig John Donaldson Ortie Hebbe Ulista Hawkins Mina Upton Gordon Street Eva McCanles STUDENT MEMBERS Muriel King Mabel Duncan Arl Frost Charles Suffield Edna Osborne Anita Hostetter Luella Krehbiel Virginia Lucas Esther Roop Lula McCanles Donald Hartley Lucile Means Verna Makepeace Margaret Hodder Ruth Spencer Frances Klink Pauline Carr Josie Trinkle Mabel Elmore Elizabeth Ulrich Ernest Mowrer Herbert Laslett Edwin M. Hopkins Willard Wattles Sara Laird FACULTY MEMBERS James McCallum Lita Battey Josephine Burnham Leon McCarty Helen Hoopes R. D. O ' Leary —241 — • ' lyi ' ' ' i tT i Organizations Cox Brauer Montgomery ShuU Mix Darby Stevens Else McNaught Van Brunt Fahringer Thompson Trant Sallee Hanscome Charles Spicer O ' Brien McHenry Poirier Guild Hill G. Lukan Cooper Moore Ritter Miller L. Lukan Hilsman Beckley Irwin Govier Duam Sprier botany (Tlub The aim and purpose of the Botany Club is to bring about a closer contact between the faculty and students and to maintain an interest in current botanical work. Membership is confined to instructors and students showing active in- terest and proficiency in botanical work. Neva Ritter President Grace Beckley Vice-President Marcella H anscom e Secretary Henry Ei,se Treasurer : 1917 : —242— Jayhawker l Organizations Cowgill West Paul Hunter Donaldson C. Richter T. Richter Brownlee Schmidt Hoffman Patterson Edwards Irwin Rogers Gardner Groene JoUiffe Black Gorrill Arnold Rader O ' Leary Ise Bacon Chandler (Tommerce (Tlub The Commerce Club of the University of Kansas was organized in November 1916. Members are chosen from among the students majoring in the Depart- ment of Economics and Commerce. The purposes of the organization are to raise scholastic standards in the department; give the members an opportunity to hear speakers who have a practical knowledge of the various fields of business; and to promote a professional spirit among the major students in the department. Regular meetings arc held once a month. OFFICERS A. B. Irwin President D. H. O ' Leary Vice-President C. L. JoLLiFFE Secretary A. K. Rader Treasurer MEMBERS Seniors Oscar Brownlee Carl Jolliife J. F. Gardner H. B. Lanning M. L. Gear C. M. Patterson E. K. Groene H. W. Paul A. K. Rader W. F. Harkrader Howard Hoffman Chauncey Hunter C. H. Richter Ames P. Rogers A. B. Irwin W. D. Steinhauer V. D. Smith Frank H. Ise J. W. Johnson Guy Waldo E. M. West Juniors F. H. Arnold John Donaldson Robert Bacon R. D. Edwards Harold Black C. M. Gorrill H. F. Chandler D. H. O ' Leary E. S. Cowgill T. H. Richter P. W. Schmidt —213— ' Jaylia ' wker l Organizations 1 1 IV ■ .? 1 1 « 1 J J ? 1 n mPi Grutzmacher Johnson Darby Gardner Poirier Fackler Beamer Young Hunter Anderson Lawson Wellhouse Claasen Robinson Holmes Ott Strong Edmonson Freark entomological (Tlub OFFICERS Forrest Anderson President Hugh Grutzmacher Vice-President Ellen Edmonson Secretary The purpose of the Entomological Club is to review and discuss current en- tomological problems. Membership is confined to instructors and students showing active interest and proficiency in entomological work. Meetings are held every week. -3gj iwagiifi3prfBgfWMB ' KrwaBa —241— Cole Little Van Horn Irvine Woodruff Webb Gustafson Lupton Bruckmiller Cruzan Martin Dolecek DeWitt Stevenson Castles Woodruff Hedrick Coffin Rose Corey Forsythe Lambe Brinton WoUey Daum Stevenson Helmer Marshall McClure Bottomly Dickerson Williams Cooke Carter Hinies Hammet Van Arsdale Fairchild TIfome Economics (Tlub Ruth Stevenson President Louise Hedrick Vice-President Ste LLA Cole Secretary Marie Woodruff Treasurer CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Amy Van Horn Program Viola McAtee Special Ethel Martin Publicity Ethel Martin Jennie Dickinson Hester Lambe Nellie Evans Nellie Weidlem Elfrieda Bruckmiller Helen De Witt Margaret Lupton Elizabeth O ' Keffe Fern Stevenson Louise Hedrick Ruth Bottomly Marie Woodruff Ora Webb Florence Ragel Linney Sheets MEMBERS Stella Cole Frances Irvine Millie Carter Mary Van Arsdale Lola Briton Mary Gustafson Edna Dolecek Dora Coffin Hairiett Williams Alice Bowman Ruth Wolley Viola McAtee Margaret Haworth Violet Kilgore Edith Mussen Eugenia Carey Ruth Castles Rilla Hammet Margaret Fairchilds Evelyn Cruzan Sophia Helmer Mildred Rose Anna Forsythe Gladys Corel Josephine Himes Alice Buman Elizabeth Little Ruth Stevenson Kathleen Carney Amy Van Horn Ossee Hughes Helen Robinson Grace Marshall ■ 1917 C —245— ■ Ja yhawker l Organizations I ! Stuewe Richter Flagg Dyer Feierabend Cowgill Derge W. McKinney Caffrey Pringle Walsh Bruington McKee Havekorst Treweeke Whitehead Weber Davidson Tucker Anderson Wattles Bailey AUvine Lott Mattoon Mclntire Tarrant Koepff Piepenburg Metcalfe Myers Nelson Murphy Richmond Washington Malott E. McKinney Chandler I3 e TfateraaUoital Jollt? (Tlub The International Polity Club exists to promote the fair and impartial study of international relations, with a view to the formation of a sound foreign policy for the United States. It is one of thirty similar organizations located in as many leading universities and colleges of the country. A central organization directs, in general, the activities of the local clubs. An annual conference is held to which each club sends deleates. The meetings of the club are devoted to a program of study. The customary procedure is the delivery of an address by an eminent authority upon international problems, followed by a general discussion of the subject presented. The International Polity Club is not a propagandist organization. It lends its support to no cause. It is neither pacifistic nor militaristic in design. It rather seeks to touch those vital issues that lie in this realm without bias or parti- sanship. OFFICERS Kenneth Lott President Roy Davidson Vice-President Prof. C. A. Dykstra Faculty Advisor MEMBERS T. Richter H. A. Nelson C. Walsh E. K. Groene P. Levi F. C. Stuewe R. L. Robertson J. Murphy J. Tucker C. E. Bailey A. C. Douglas A. Frost P. Webster O. H. Burns E. McKinney E. C. Whitehead H. Chandler W. Wattles D. HoUoway T. O. Tarrant B. A. Fleming W. O. Kake A. W. Koepif K. Pringle M. S. Heath E. J. Mclntire A. R. Rader L. A. Smith C. Patterson L. M. Anderson E. Cowgill D. S. Flagg W. Weber H. Mattoon J. E. Hardacre G. Frick H. Rowland D. Malott F. Fierabend K. Lott R. Davidson R. Metcalf N. A. Boyajian R. Treweeke W. Havekorst W. McKinney B. McKee D. Derge J. P. Caffrey H. Washington H. M. Smith ■ G. Allvine D. Good D. Young C. Bruington A. Richmond A. Piepenburg Prof. W. W. Davis Prof. C. A. Dykstra ■ •:■:■::: — —  1917 —246— ■ Jayha vker -J ' Organizations Burgert Lutz Buff ngton Coleman Adams Uhl West Smith Garman Bingham Staimley Wier Hull Lytle Larsen Van der Vries Utermann Beebe Shinn Boyles Abel Graff Parkinson Wedd Stoll Mathematics (Tlub The Mathematics Club was organized in December, 1911, in order to stimu- late interest in the study of mathematics and to discuss many interesting and important topics which do not ordinarily arise in the class-room. Its membership consists of advanced undergraduates and graduates student in mathematics OFFICERS Ada West President Elva Stoll Vice-Presidrnt AuGUSTE Utermann Secretary-Treasurer E. B. Miller Publicity Agent Prof. Van der Vries Faculty Advisor Mildred Abel Sarah Bingham Eran Burgert Marie Graff Hobart Lutz Hazel Parkinson Cora Shinn Elva Stoll Helen Wedd MEMBERS Frances Adams Bernice Boyles Margaret Coleman Lewis Hull Orland Lytle Hazel Quick Mary Ellen Smith Mignonette Uhl Otto J. Weir Rex Brown Georgia Beebe Ralph Buffington Helen Garman A. W. Larsen E. B. Miller Mary Schenck L. L. Steimley Auguste Utermann Ada West : 1917 c —247— ;| Jay hawker l Organizations Jackson Bond Knight Dittmer Burch Carlson Blincoe Kennedy Humble Gumbiner Terrell Weber Murphy Lobough Miller Loren Beall Norton Cobb 3url5pru6ence (Tlub OFFICERS Alton Gumbiner President Frank Terrell Secretary The Jurisprudence Club has existed for the past ten years. The club dis- cusses at each meeting some topic of general interest. Election to the club, which is honorary, is held at the beginning of each year from the Junior class. 1917 C —248— Jayhawker l Organizations Nevin Talbert Dale Rowles Watson Hendrickson Stout Ellison Groberty Downing Huntsman Hungate Humphrey Gregg Gorman Stout McClintock Gillet Nelson Trump 5ttuslc Supervisors OFFICERS Edna Roberts President Gladys Irene Nelson Secretary-Treasurer The Music Supervisors Class was organized in 1911, by Professor C. E Hubach, for the promotion and betterment of the department. Since Professor W. B. Downing came from Drake University, the school has made a remarkable growth. There is a great demand for music supervisors, since public school music has been given a place in the School curriculum. The department has graduated many competent supervisors, who are now filling important positions with great success. 1917 c -219— ■ Jayliawker l Organizations Johnson Wieters Nelson Gunnels Crawford Waldie Orton Watkins Jones Rice Williams McNown Roberts Mclntyre Yeokum Easterday Sloan SeviUah Sparks Christine Rush Senior (Tivil ngineer5 OFFICERS Joel O. Gunnels President Julius J. Krebs Vice-President Rex Brown Secretary- Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS H. A. Rice C. C. Williams F. L. Brown H. A. Roberts J. E. Welker W. C. McNown : 1917 c —250— ■ Jayha%vker Organizations (Tlvll lEitslneering Society of t e KnlversitY of lHansas The Civil Engineering Society of the University of Kansas was organized in 1883, and reorganized in 1907. The purpose of the society is to acquaint the members with professional engineers, their work and some of the problems confronting them, and to promote fellowship among the students and faculty of the Civil Engineering Department. —261— f s r ; ______j J ay riawker Organizations Kietzman Morton Paul Copp Burke Johnson Shaad Foster Curfman Arlin Spangler Griffith Foulk Forsythe Kruse Fox Smith I Senior lEUctrical TErtglneers Seniors C. E. Kietzman T. Q. Morton C. R. Copp N. M. Foster H. W. Arlin C. L. Griffeth A. C. Foulk S. Kruse F. H. Fox A. R. Burt E. C. Burke F. L. Spangler G. A. Smith H. H. Paul A. V. Forsythe Faculty G. C. Shaad F. E. Johnson H. M. Curfman E. E. Hartman —252— Jayha vker - Organizations Knlverslt? of Hiansas ! rancl) T mericart institute of Electrical Engineers The University of Kansas Branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers is one of the fifty-five branches of the national organization. All of the classes in the department of electrical engineering, and the faculty, are repre- sented in the membership. Meetings of the society are held every two weeks throughout the year. The programs at the meetings consist of talks, which may be original or in the form of magazine reviews. Outside speakers are sometimes called upon to take part in these meetings. One day, each year, known as Elec- trical ' s Day, is devoted to a series of meetings through the day and a banquet in the evening. Men, prominent in the engineering world, take part in the pro- gram. OFFICERS N. M. Foster Chairman E. C. Burke Vice-Chairman Geo. M. Bowman Secretary-Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Prof. F. E. Johnson C. R. Copp E. R. Schoenfeldt Clark Davis —253— Jayliawker ' _ Organizations ? I Clawson Russell Staggs Record Eyer Pattinson Bressem March Sluss Hagenbuch Walker Weekley Barber Dillon White Black Bower Malkmus Van Houten Boltz Mahan Bonebrake Nitchey American Society of ! ecl)anlcal Cnglneers The University of Kansas Branch of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers was affiliated with the national society March 9, 1909. The branch was among the first of the student brances to be admitted to the general society, and tanks among the first six branches. The society holds weekly meetings at which current topics are discussed by students, professors and outside men of prominence. The annual meeting is the most prominent affair of the year, with an all-day business session devoted to professional papers followed by a banquet in the evening. OFFICERS Prof. A. H. Sluss Honorary Chairman Ch AS. W. H AGE N BUCK Chairman J. R. Pattinson Vice-Chairman G. W. Nitchey Recording Secretary P. E. Bressem Treasurer H. C. Van Houten Chairman Program Committee Faculty Dean P. F. Walker Prof. A. H. Sluss Prof. F. H. Sibley Prof. J. D. Garver IZI 1917 C —254— ' Jayliawker l Organizations UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS BRANCH OF THE 72Vmerican Institute of Jllinlng TEaglneers OFFICERS C. J. Wakenhut President Carl O. Anderson Vice-President Ray W a lte rs Secretary -Treasurer Seniors Carl O. Anderson Harry E. Crum Homer Cote Joe E. Hainbach George Sammons S.W.Mickey C. J. Wakenhut Juniors James A. Bell Howard Cress F. D. Howland John O. Kirtland Howard L. Reedy Page Wagner Ray Winters Sophomores E. R. Elledge William Tate W. H. Thalls Ray Walters Freshmen Phillip Done D. F. Glenn F. C. Kaindale L. J. Kirkham E. M. Thompson A. J. Lefevre  1917 ' —255— ! Jayhawker Organizations Chase DeWald Kirby Uhrlaub Barnes Beisner Rader DeardorfF Brown Chandler Cleek Dennison Bradley Pickering Nigg Goldsmith Rolfs Bailey Brand Gray Strickland Marshall Watson Street Jackson Hunt Robertson Sorgatz Worrall Ellison Cadmus Icehower rcl)ltectural Engineering SocietiP OFFICERS J. Leroy Marshall President John R. Bradley , Vice-President Gordon F . Stre et Secretary Milton W. Nigg Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS Goldwin Goldsmith LaForce Bailey Dean Walker G. C. Shaad — 25f)— ! Jayhawker -1 ' Or ganiza tions Senior jpl)armacY (tiass Griffith Kampert Cooney Farris Bloomheart Diller Dean Saver Osborne Swartz Trevele Howard Stewart Harrison Senior lpl)Qrmlc Officers A Diller Osborne Griffith Herbert L. Osborne President Howard E. Diller Vice-President Louis A. Griffith Secretary-Treasurer ii: 1917 4 zz: —257— Jay liawker _ Organizations 3unlor 4 armac]p (tlass Gibson McCoUoch Crowell Wilson DefFenbacher Nelson Barnes Spaer Spradlus Kampert Childs Kohl Davis Marhofer Grissom Spencer Smith Baker O ' Toole O. Smith 3unior Jp armic Officers I Marhofer Kampert Childs Wesley M. Childs President Vernon Marhofer Vice-President George Kampert Secretary-Treasurer —258— Jayhawker i i 1 i i i ! i i I 1 i 1 1 i i t t t l H III HHpi H j 1 i 1 f 1 i 1 t  1 i e- ' « |Bi p BI HC 1 5 1 i | ° ' H BwH r y f mS It V nHnHHr j 1 g| 1 1 1 I 1917 C —259— ' Jay hawker l Organizations Wieters Sproull Lindsay Greever Crawford L. Nelson Craig Russell Sautter Kennedy Cook Gelvin Nordstrom S. Nelson Pringle Gumbiner Gaitskill Hagenbusch Smee Harlan Mitchell Freind O e Sachems The Sachems is the Senior honorary society for men, founded at the Univer- sity of Kansas in the fall of 1910 by twelve upperclassmen and graduates. It was the first distinctive class society founded at the University. It combined with the Skull and K, Senior Society, in the spring of 1914. The object of the Sachems is to foster and promote a spirit of fellowship and a close acquaintanceship among all the men of the University. It also attempts the solution of problems relating to the class and the University, and looks out for the interests of the Senior Class. Members are chosen in the spring of every year from the men in the Junior class. Identification with University interests and activities is a requisite for membership. : 1917 c —260— ' Jayhawker l Organizations Govier Strong Carson Huffman Shinn Daniels Jones McNutt Ashton orcl) The Torch is the honor society of Senior women, organized in 1912. It is composed of nine members chosen at the close of the Junior year by a committee of the faculty and the active members of the society. The membership is an- nounced at the beginning of the spring term of the Senior year. The purpose of the society is the fostering of high ideals and the furthering of responsibility among the women of the University. MEMBERS Miriam Jones Hazel Carson Cora Shinn Caroline McNutt Mona Clare Huffman Ruth Daniels Evelyn Strong Mary Govier Annette Ashton —261— f} a y h a wjk er l Organizations C Beal Morgan Richter Treweeke Dyer Carter Havekorst Wattles Hershberger O ' Leary Davenport Friend Terrill Montgomery Davis Walters Gedney Todd Schoenfeldt Guy Kendrick Chandler O e Owls The Owls is the honorary Junior class society for men, founded at the Uni- versity, February, 1914. The purpose of the Owls is to initiate and promulgate movements for the best interests of the Junior class and of the University, and to advance the spirit of fellowship among the students. Its publication is known as The Sour Owl. Russell D. Friend President Howard Fleeson Secretary-Treasurer —262— ■ Jaylifi wker Organizations Weissenborn Pringle Peek Evans Casey Flintom Carper Woody Woodward Caudill Mason Reid Harrison Mee Krumbach Jensen Foster lacK 3felmet$ The Order of Black Helmets is the honorary Sophomore society. It was organized October 13, 1910, by thirteen Sophomores of the class of 1913. The aim of the organization is to create a better spirit of fellowship in the University. OFFICERS George Woodward President Walter We iss en born Vice-President John A. Krumbach Secretary-Treasurer —263— Jayhavvker f Organizations Knoles Evans Palmer Spencer Hartley Williams Axel Ritchey Hunter Oles Campbell Leach Tucker Rourke Vandeschmidt Clark Dewey Wilson Brady Smith Bennett Francisco Murphy Monteith Ross Wallace Peacock Sphinx Freshman Society OFFICERS George W. Rourke President John Monteith Vice-President Webb Wilson Secretary Clark E. Tug ker Treasurer 1917 C —264- Jayliawkor -1 I 1 5- C u z o z D i4 U oi r1 O O t 2 ei u 3 a O O a S U j 13 u ffi ffi K ' M PL, Q 1 —265— Jay hawker Or nizations I Flinn Sloan Wieters Boltz Kampert Pegues Nordstrom Yeokum Brownlee Heath Ol)e Wl)lte (Trows The White Crows is a secret underclass society. No one knows who are the members until the fall of each year when the Seniors, who have been members, announce themselves by the wearing of the White Crow emblem. The active members of the White Crows have established the custom of each year an- nouncing, after two weeks of investigation, the five Senior men who seem to be the most popular. Percy Flinn Arnold Nordstrom Clarence Boltz Milton Heath SENIOR MEMBERS Alfred Wieters Oscar Brownlee Henry Pegues J. Edward Jones Chauncey Strong Bernard Kampert Charles Sloan George Yeokum Hilmar G. Appel t i —206— J ay hawker -1 ' Organizations I Kennedy Stateler Ruble Van Houten Cook Gumbiner Wattles Heath Hake Harlan Rogers Shelley Yeokum Terrell Waite Wagner oku The Ahoku was organized at the University of Kansas in the spring of 1916. Its purpose was to aid in keeping eligible the members of the various athletic teams of the University. The membership was made up of the most prominent students of the various schools of the University, chosen on the merit of their good work in their respective schools by the Board of Athletics and members of the faculty. —267— Jayhawker Organizations lacK llasKs : 1917 c —268— ' Jay hawker MILITARY : 1917 c -269— f -,...,-.. I i Jay hawker l Military (Tompanp Ml on t e or6er By James Naismith Chaplain of First Kansas Infantry Company M was composed almost ex- clusively of college students. There were only eight in the company who had not been associated with the University as a student or a graduate. These were re- cruited after the first call or transferred from other units. The physical chart of the students shows that the highest meas- urement was above the 100 per cent, the minimum measurement never went under the 10 per cent, the average was about a 60 per cent. The average of the company was above the average of the entering class in the University. There were twelve men disqualified at Riley — most of them for being under weight, some on account of eyes, and others on account of temporary conditions that could b e easily removed. From the standpoint of physical skill, the record of the company in comparison with others is shown by the number of prizes won at the inter-company contests at Fort Leavenworth, where four out of the six events were carried off by Company M MAJOR-GEN ' L FREDERICK FUNSTON men, sonie of these including such events as tent pitching which required eight men, shelter tent pitching requiring two men, etc. Our most rllusmous Kansan, a former student, j j . IHty tO endure hardships on and Commander of the forces on the Border. f . Antonio to Austin, only about two men failed to go the entire dis- tance on foot. None were incapacitated for more than a short time. On the re- turn march, the greatest difficulty was to restrain the speed of Company M so as to accommodate the rest of the organizations. During the entire time at Eagle Pass only one hike was missed by Company M, and that was on account of ptomaine poisoning by which quite a number were made ill. In marksman- ship the state was above the average. No member of Company M was sent to the guard house. No member of Company M was acted upon by the summary court. There were only two breaches of discipline. These were for being late in returning to quarters, one of them being three minutes behind the specified time. There was very little grumbling on being appointed to do fatigue duty around the camp and whenever a squad was detailed for a certain purpose, there was less tendency to slight the work than was noticeable in any other organization, but a desire to do the duty appointed and to get back to their quarters. Where growling and profanity is an expression of the dominant feeling, whistling was the characteristic of Company M, and the morale of the whole company was excellent. One noticeable feature of the discipline was the readiness with which they obeyed, not only the officers, but the non-commissioned officers. A strict realization and observance of their duty was noticed in the exactness with which search duty was carried on, and the search conducted with the cheerfulness and consideration that took away a great part of the animosity incidental to search on the international bridge. The manner in which a company spends its spare time is one of the best in- —270— Jayhawker Military —271— ' Jayhawker g ' Military dications of the atmosphere of the company. The way in which the spare time was spent in Company M was about as follows: Decorating the grounds and the officers ' quarters, making the whole camp site for which they were responsible as bright and cheery as possible, conducting biological excursions, and studying the plants and the animal life of the surrounding country. The study of Spanish was carried on by a squad of about twelve individuals who made more or less of a thorough study of Spanish. There hardly was any time when the company was in quarters that you cound not find baseball practice carried on and when football season arrived it took the place of baseball. The versatility of Company M was shown by the demands that were made upon the company for difi erent things. Both officers and men stood the four months in camp in excellent shape and re- turned to their homes in better condition than when they left. In the march to Austin, seventeen out of the whole regiment was the greatest number that fell out in any one day and some days not a single man had to quit the ranks, while in other regiments as many as two hundred fell out in a single day. On the last day ' s march Company M was setting the pace for the regiment when the commander ordered them to halt until the other regiments caught up, and they made the twenty-one miles before one o ' clock in the afternoon and came in whistling and in the best of spirits. Company M was always ready to take its share of the drudgery in a cheerful manner. Just before the train pulled out from Fort Riley a squad was told off to pick up the papers which had been thrown down during entraining and among them was a bachelor of arts, a master of arts, and an undergraduate, all of whom took it as a matter of course and did the work well. In general efficiency the K. U. men showed themselves the equal of any men en- trusted with like responsibility. Lieutenant Sprinkle and his men were called on to make a map of the vicinity of Eagle Pass; Charles Eggen supervised the wiring of the camp; Aaron Piepen- burg was cook for the officers ' mess; Pike Moyer officiated at the organ, Carl Brown at the piano; Lieutenant James was the unanimous choice for football coach; Wayne Edwards was official photographer for the regiment; Arthur Nigg was drum major for the band and supervised the erection of the regimental cook house; Rice was monologist; Milt Baker would sprint, box or wrestle at a moment ' s notice; a University of Kansas basketball team could be got together by blowing a whistle; Wint Smith put pep into the baseball team from his position at first; and the Reverend W. C. Johnson of Company M would supply the pulpit of any church in Eagle Pass or San Antonio. The initiative of the men was shown by the confidence imposed in them by their officers where, when any manoeuvre was to be carried out, it was sufficient to announce that a certain manoeuvre was to take place. The non-commissioned officers saw that all necessary details were performed and that every step had been anticipated. DR. JAMES NAI SMITH Chaplain First Kansas Infantry : 1917 c —272— J a y haw k er 4 Military —273— Ja yliawker Military « The moral standard of Company M was very high as the sentiment of the company was unanimously in favor of law observance and right conduct. And when a crisis arose, Company M could be depended upon to view the matter in the highest moral standing and to add their weight on the right side. From a religious standpoint the men oj Company M recognized the religious element and stood for religion in the conduct of the soldier. The religious services were as well attended by Company M as by any other company in the regiment. Several members of the company conducted classes in the churches of the city and one member, es- pecially, took charge of the church services. As a testimony to the value of a company of college men, I do feel that it would be a handicap to the officers of the regiment not to have a company of this kind and I am perfectly sure that a regiment made up of college men would be one that would accomplish more in any situation in which they were placed, and would be a more pleasant organization to command than any other body of men that could be gotten together. FRANK E. JONES Captain of Company M . 1917 - : —274 — Jayhawker • Military 191T C —275— I J i y ii a }v k e r -1 I8ok Masorv 3 CHILDREN ' S SECTION L.!: - 1917 C —276— Jay hawker 1 Children ' s Section W . Prof. Arthur J. Boynton, Kaiser of K. U. Loving Frend and Advizer: I am riteing this to let you know how pleezed I was to receive your letter beging me to enter K. U. for my hellth. Nursie was saying just yesterday that a four (4) yere rest would do me goooood — and then your darling invitashun came! It was lovely ov you to promice that my studies shud not bother my footbawl for I must be kapin sum day. You shud see the way I am developing my punting toe. I am botherd by stumick ake considerbul. Hoping you are the same, I am yours, Adrian Lindsey. Dere Frenz: I am shore glad thet I got outa the Mexican warr i time to help beat Kneebraskys. Gosh I hate them geezers. As thuh Chanseller says There a little two kocky. How is thuc chancez fer a feller like mee findin a gurrl er somethin at K. U.? I ' m a regler ol devevl whan I wanna be. Yewers uffeckshunately. Rook Woodward. To the University Senate: You have been voting on lots of serious things this year so I want you to pass a law compelling all brunettes to leave the University. I am a blonde and do not think I would like to asso- ciate with brunettes. Don ' t you agree with me? Sincerely, Mildred Light. Dear Chancellor: Oogle goo! (That means hello).) Oogle goo! I have been busy all day sitting down think- ing. I have been thinking about attending K. U. You did not mention in your letter to me whether or not I would have a good time in Lawrence. Remember — 1 am a demure little maid. Google oo! (That means goodbye). Hallie Clark. 1 19 IT - Sr? —277- C Children ' s Section Mr. H. Allcott, U. off Kanzaz. Dear Coach: Aye tank aye skoll go to sum Uniwercity — maybe Kanzaz. Aye lak Aye skoll bee fooot- ballist — maybe kaptin. My popa he says, harry, se says you go to K. U. end git gude eddicashun. Maybe stay 2 monts but you git gude edidcashun. Aye hope you gone like de way Aye play foootball. Aye bane howelling success out here. Your frend, Harry M. Neilson. Misuz Eustis Brown, University of kanzas. Dere Misyz: Pleez meet me at the choo-choo cars when I ariv in Lorens, bucaws I am verrie bashful and nead pertekshun. Thuh ladees iz always kissing me and it bothurs me dredful. When I git my footbawl K I woooont ' nevar giv it to no gurl. Maybee I shall be a advlzzer of wimmin like youu sum day. Yours blushinly. Earl W. Shinn. Dear Shy Owemeegath: Ith there eny playth for a nithe little Metho- ditht girl in your thorority. I wath alwayth very baskful in Parthonth, but I could play a might clever hand of tholitaire. Wunth me and a young man went to a drug thtore and had an the cweam thoda. Ooooo! Wathn ' t that wicked and nithe. ' Hoping you are the thame, I am yourth, Thelma Wharton. Dere Foaks: Ther iz sum tawk abowt a bawlheded purson beeing no gud but I ' m hear two say thet thay doant ' s no whut they air a-tawkin abowt. Look att mee and see what I ' ve dun fer myselph. Margaret Reinisch. : 1917 C —278— ' Jayha vker Children ' s Section To Whom It May Concern: The Wide, Wide World. Greeting: I am a tuff guy. I eat dinamite and juggle lokomotifs. I drink a tonic of karbolic acid and kereseen every day. I ' m a demon at foot- ball. Once I disabled a man for life when he tried to takle me. I lov ladies and things like that. Freshmen ain ' t got no rite to live. Yours, J. D. KaBI ER. Dear Girls: I ' m a little girlie and I ' m cute too and some day I ' m going to be big like you are and then my mamma ' s going to send me to kollege too may be ' 111 run in a beauty contest and you ' ll vote for me too, won ' t you? Lovely, Ruth Wai.lie. Dear Folks: I ' m mad. That ' s what. They ain ' t nobody loves me. They say I ' ve gotta go to K. U.. Ain ' t nothing inviting about that. Is there. ' ' Especially when nobody loves me. I wanta be a chorus girl and sing Hawaiian ditties. But they think I need tecknick. Think of it! Yours for revolooshun, Leta Ellison. Chancier Strong, Lornce, Kansas. Dear Chancy: In reply to your rekwest for my pitcher to be hung in your parlor, I send this. It is really my pitcher. I hav bin a goood little boy so my oppa will send me to K. U. this yere. I am going to play footbawl so I kin bee a big man lik you and wear numbr five shooz. Lovingly, JiCK Fast. : 1917C —279- 1 Jay lia wker -J Children ' s Section f H 4, A mm Dear Uncle Jimmy: I am writing to answer your letter asking me to please enroll in K. U. to try and influence your students in making better grades. I thank you ever so much but I don ' t seem to have much ability in that way. They don ' t mind a word I say. Margaret McElvain To Whom It Mat Concern: Well, here I am, so you can just make the most of me. And what is more I ' m from Em- poria. That ' s a town, if you please. And if the war gets too hot in the United States I shall go back to that town. I don ' t care though, I ' ve been taking quizzes so long that I am not afraid of the war. Clora Harris Riggs. Deer Mithter Fothter, fVegithtwar, K. U. Thith ith me. I hav itht bin took by the picter man. I am thending thith to you tho you ' ll know that to ekthpect when you thee me coming. Pleath have me all unrolled in my courtheth tho I can go thtwaight to football practith when I come. Truly yourth, Tad Reed. Fren Deen. v I amm a big gye and war long pantz. I used to hev sum good times in my hoam town Man- kaytoe. This iz a town with a hi skule and a watter tank which haz kwite a number going two it. I went allsew. Sew I recken I ' ll kum two K. U. and stay til I git a good ejukashun — eaven if it takes a hole munth. Pleeze sen sum dope on your footbalw coars an oblidje. WiNT Smith. —280— mimmmmmmmmmmmmmim JFVateralties vi:iS -.i.-- — It: ■ Jay 1 1 a vv k  r |gj Sororities Whitcher Parkinson Hodder Dunnett Spencer Ulrich Means Anderson Lingenfelter Button- Moore Robinson Keiiey Mack Light Roebke Women ' s 4 an-llfelUnic (Touncil REPRESENTATIVES Pi Beta Phi Helen Moore Lucine Spencer Kappa Alpha Thela Margaret Hodder Helen Robinson Chi Omega Inez Mack Phyllis Dunnett Alpha Delta Pi Lucile Means Edith Whitcher Alpha Chi Omega Elizabeth Ulrich Dorothy Button Gamma Phi Beta Jeannette Parkinson Doris Roebke Sigma Kappa Bonnie Lingenfelter Dorothy Kelley Alpha Xi Delta May Anderson Mildred Light - 1917 C —281— I Jayhavvker 4 Sororities Smith Atkinson Searle Jobes Moore Wiggins C. Dorsett L. Taylor Dimond Spencer Cooper Darby Prowdfit Lindsay Luckan Stevenson Batey H. Chapman Peairs Gillispie B. Dorsett- Dunne D. Brown Carson M. Taylor Parmenter Shepherd Jacks Greenlees Hunter Govier Fitch Smithmeyer L. Chapman Dykes Mackie 13l : eta 131)1 - 1917 C —282— Jayhawker Sororities 13 1  eta 111)1 Founded at Monmouth College 1867 Kansas Chapter Installed April 1, 1873 Publication — The Arrow Flower — Red Carnation Colors — Wine and Silver Blue ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Helen Moore, Hutchinson Gladys Luckan, Lawrence Ada Dykes, Lebanon Jean Lindsey, Topeka Hazel Carson, Ashland Dorothy Brown, Joplin, Mo. Mary Govier, Kansas City, Mo. Rebekah Cooper, Wichita Louise Russell, Amarillo, Texas Juniors Frances Jobes, Kansas City, Mo. Marie Dunne, Wichita Margeretta Stevenson, Leavenworth Lois Greenlees, Lawrence Blanche Smith, Lawrence Margaret Fitch, Lawrence Cora Russell, Amarillo, Texas Matilda Smithmeyer, Lawrence Sophomores Eleanor Atkinson, Lawrence Imogene Gillispie, Lawrence Gertrude Wiggins, Kansas City, Mo. Mildred Taylor, Kansas City, Mo. Lora Taylor, Kansas City, Mo. Alva Parmenter, Kingman Lucene Spencer, lola Gertrude Shepherd, Kansas City, Mo. Helen Peairs, Lawrence Freshmen Genevieve Searle, Oskaloosa Doris Drought, Kansas City, Mo. Charlotte Dorsette, Spearville Eleanor Proudfit, Kansas City Eva Moore Dimond, Wichita Blanche Dorsette, Spearville Helen Brown, Joplin, Mo. Florence Darby, Kansas City Eva Jacks, Wichita Geneva Hunter, Lawrence Loretta Chapman, Kansas City, Mo. Elizabeth Mackie, Lawrence Special Marcia Baty, Lawrence —283— Jay hawker -1 Sororities Riddle Thompson Robinson Wood Hodder Cotter Dodderidge Carr Strickland Hedrick Humphrey Wagstaff Patterson Goodjohn Schwinn I. Wilhelmi Sawyer Ilsa Wilhelmi Rummel A. Craig Riggs Senhausen McNutt Brown Atkinson Tomlinson Martin J. Craig D. Miller Youmans L. Miller Wyatt TKappa Iplja I5 eta —284— I Jay hawker Sororities TKappa Ip a eta Founded at De Pauw University 1870 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1881 Publication — Kappa Alpha Theta Flower — Black and Gold Pansy Colors — Black and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Carolyn McNutt, Kansas City, Mo. Dorothy Miller, Topeka Josephine Martin, Kansas City, Mo. Ilsa Wilhelmi, Lawrence Frances Sawyer, Kansas City, Mo. Louise Hedrick, Friend Irma Wilhelmi, Lawrence Lila Atkinson, Lawrence Juniors EmmaM.Rummel,Indcpendence,Mo. Julian Senhausen, Leavenworth Helen Robinson, Salina Theo Thompson, Marion James Rachael Cotter, Kas.City, Mo. Margaret Hodder, Lawrence Mary McClure, Kansas City, Mo. Lydia Tomlinson, Independence. Pauline Carr, Augusta Sophomores Coyetta Youmans, Ossawatomie Helen Wagstaff, Lawrence Dorothy Riddle, Herington Elsie Patterson, Abilene Faye Dodderidge, Lawrence Elizabeth Goodjohn, Leavenworth Freshmen Mildred Schwinn, Wellington Frances Strickland, Honeywell Jessie Craig, Osage City Louisa Miller, Lawrence Clora Riggs, Emporia Mary Wood, Minneapolis Jessie Wyatt, Lawrence Anita Humphrey, Chanute Pledges Alma Craig, Wichita Margaret Brown, Lawrence —285— Jay hawker Sororities • L. Ainsworth E. Moore R. Foster Jackson Heizer Strong Uhrich M. Foster McVamish Hogeboom Pitts Melvin Musson L. Clark K. Ainsworth Simons Dawson Lucas De Hart Sampson H. Clark Jackman Waters Groberty R. Moore Martin Rickard Smith A. Fogarty Burrough K. Fogarty Messich Runkie IKappa Hiaffa (bamma : 1917 c —286— Jayliawker _ Sororities Hiaffa TKappa 5amma Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 Kansas Chapter Installed, December 17, 1873 Publication— ' TA Z y Flower — Fleur-de-Lis Colors — Light and Dark Blue ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Evelyn Strong, Lawrence Ruth Foster, Topeka Virginia Lucas, Kansas City, Mo. Lydia Ainsworth, Lyons Margaret Heizer, Osage City Blanche Simons, Lawrence Ruth Moore, Hutchinson Helen Clark, Kansas City, Mo. Katherine Fogarty, Lawrence Edith Musson, Norborne, Mo. Juniors Marjorie Rickard, Lawrence Jane Waters, Bonner Springs Jessie-Lea Messick, Hill City Doris Hogeboom, Pittsburg Sophomores Dorothy McCamish, Kansas City Esther Moore, Hutchinson Elizabeth Ainsworth, Lyons Mildred Steele Pitts, St. Joe, Mo. Florence Butler, Lawrence Lucile Smith, Lawrence Margaret Foster, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Sampson, Topeka Hasseltine Clark, Kansas City, Mo Frances Ulrich, Kansas City Virginia Melvin, Lawrence Freshmen Dorothy Dawson, Gr eat Bend Luella Groberty, Dodge City Mary Martin, Kansas City, Mo. Angela Fogarty, Lawrence Nelle DeHart, Galena Ruth Jackman, Minneapolis Pledges Hester Jackson, Lincoln Etta Louise Runkle, Leavenworth 1917 ' —287— ,-«rfft% . iUJOVSm-Viaai-fSXtiK MiamtBmna Jayhawker ' Sororities Simonds Robertson Imus Fowden Rouse Day Goff Davis Mack Sheets Dunnette McBride Forbes M. Kilgore Robinson Buchanan C. Gossard Mason Finch R. Haworth M. Haworth Waitt Shinn Wharton Hilsman Fischer L. Sheets V. Kilgore McManus Lamb Gargener Dent Elmore Sullivan Reddy Walker M. Gossard Mitchell (T l Omega —288— ■ J aylia wk er 1 ' Sororities (T l Omega Founded at Fayetteville, Ark., 1895 Kansas Chapter Installed, December 18, 1902 Publication — Elensis ' Flower — White Carnation Colors — Cardinal and Straw ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduate Maude Kilgore, Wichita Seniors Itasca Hilsman, Albany, Georgia Violet Kilgore, Wichita Cora Shinn, Lawrence Edna Davis, Chanute Elfrieda Fischer, Lawrence Juniors Leah Stewart, DeSota, Mo. Mary Gossard, Oswego Linnie Sheets, Lawrence Marie Dent, Oswego Inez Mack, Lawrence Alice Davis, Chanute Marie Buchanan, Kansas City, Mo. Gladys Robinson, Chanute Agnes Gossard, Oswego Sophomores Thelma Wharton, Parsons Phyllis Dunnette, Lawrence Helen Forbes, Concordia Rose Haworth, Lawrence Irene Fowden, Dewey, Okla. Margaret Mitchell, Lawrence Elizabeth Sullivan, Kansas City, Mo. Opal Day, Wichita Ruth Rouse, Wichita Jane Sheets, Lawrence Freshmen Margaret Haworth, Lawrence Margaret Walker, Salina Helen Mason, Kansas City, Mo. Mary Waitt, Wichita Lucille Elmore, Topeka Irene Imus, St. Joseph, Mo. Irene McManns, Newton Katherine Gardner, Fort Smith, Ark. Pledges Edna Lamb, Concordia Mateel Finch, Lawrence Edna McBride, Lawrence Laura Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Nan Goff, Lawrence Kathyrn Reddy, Harper Vivian Simonds, Garden City SORORE IN FACULTATE Pearl Emley SORORES IN URBE Edna Fischer Agnes Engel : 1917 1 —289— ■ Jay hawker Sororities Talbert Reding Buck Nixon Bixby Jones Rankin Wiiitcher Garrett Ward Means Ashton Faragher Casdes McClintock Hopkins Reinisch Fairchild Johnson Thomas IMpka T)(tUa pi 1917 C —290— Jayliawker - Sororities I i i :Alfba lB eUa IJl Founded at Wesleyan College, Macon Georgia, 1851 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1912 Flower — Violet Abigail Bixby, McPherson Ruth Castles, Lawrence Colors — Blue and White Seniors Veda Rankin, Paola Annette Ashton, Lawrence Juniors Lucille Means, Hiawatha Vesta Talbert, Conway Springs Katherine Reding, Lawrence Ruth Thomas, Lawrence Sophomores Jessie Lucille Buck, Paola Edith Whitcher, Concordia Louise Nixon, Concordia Margaret Fairchild, Hiawatha Pauline McClintock, Dewey, Okla. Freshmen Mayme Garrett, Kansas City, Mo. Delilah Johnson, Beloit Winifred Ward, Lawrence Vivian Hopkins, Kansas City Iris Russell, Kansas City Goldia Jones, Fredonia Lucile Hampson, Fredonia Dorothy Faragher, Sabetha Marguerite Reinisch, Lawrence S 1917 C —291— ■liaB£BaB ' ' ' i S X :« J ■ Jayha% ' ker li Sororities mdJ . . ' jrii Segelbaum Fish Ludeman Hohn Harper Lamb Russell Gibson Spreier E. Mackie Lindley Gustafson Brown Butts Blurton M. Mackie Harris Logan Harlan Ac otb J - II 1 ■PHI ' B 1 ■ — mm fmf ., _ jmm ■ ' ■ 1 —292— Jayliawker Sororities Ac otl) Founded at Lincoln, Nebraska, 1910 Daleth Chapter Installed 1912 Publication — Kockov ' ' Flower — Lily of the Valley Colors — Sapphire Blue and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduates Elizabeth Mackie, Lawrence Seniors Mabel Mackie, Lawrence Cathlene Harris, Eudora Joyce Brown, Logan Jean Russell, Lawrence Mary Gustafson, Wichita Juniors Hester Lamb, Yates Center Mabel Jane Harper, Frankfort Nell Blurton, Bucklin Amy Spreier, Pawnee Rock Sophomores May Harlan, WaKeeney Nell Hohn, Marysville Sue Butts, Mulvane Frances Ludeman, Anthony Rose Segelbaum, Kansas City Marjory Gibson, WaKeeney Lillian Fish, Lawrence Freshmen Hannah Beagle, Alta Vista Pledges Edna Lindiey, Lawrence Louise Logan, Quenemo 1917 C —293— Jav hawker l Sororities i ■Fl n l HH Er K ■ n H K fc lL. 1 pL W 1 te iM «fflKc!l r MHHi HI P yH BRnp i ' ■ l r IS 1 ■ Jk i 1 1 1 ,-. i - 1 ,.■ i- - ' ■■ ti i% Emerson Lucas Kinney Bastgen Skinner Huffman Pomeroy W ' cdd Hunt Mathews Drake Cissna Hitchens Young Powell Kelly Cutter Genslar Austin Lamborn Banks Martin Lesh B. Lingenfelter Scott Summers L. Lingenfelter Fuller Van Sandt Sigma IKappa i i t - 1917 C —294— ■ Jayliawker 4 Sororities Sigma TKappa Founded at Colby College, 1874 XI Chapter Installed, 1913 Publication — ' Sigma Kappa Triangle Flower — Violet Colors — Lavender and Maroon ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Mona Clare Huffman, Columbus Artemesia Powell, Tyro Josephine Lamborn, Burlington Floss Irene Lucas, Cherokee Winifred Siever, Wichita Juniors Marie Bastgen, St. Joseph, Mo. Hide Fuller, Lawrence Helen Wedd, Lenexa Francis Skinner, Columbus Ethel Scott, Columbus Lillian Martin, Topeka Bonnie Lingenfelter, Fredonia Lois Hunt, Conway Springs Sophomores Margaret Young, Fredonia Gladys Drake, Fort Scott Dorothy Kelly, lola Arnestina Cissna, Kansas City Ruth Banks, Independence Corrine Lesh, Arkansas City Lorna Pomeroy, Pawnee, Okla. Freshmen Mary Emerson, Great Bend Violet Mathews, Topeka Agatha Kinney, Muskogee, Okla. Cathrine Austin, Cottonwood, Falls Corwin Gender, Eldora Edna Hitchens, Burlington Lois Lingengelter, Fredonia Irene Cutter, Lawrence Myra Summers, Lawrence Aileen VanSandt, Chanute —295— ; Jay hawker- : Sororities Glenn Sturgeon Hanscombe McMeel Lupton Langmade LaCoss Hertzler Weilipp Pittenger Nicholson Dew Watson Roby Stimpson Button Ulrich McElvain Bovvlby Doran lpl)a (T l Omega : 1917 c —296— Jayliawker Z. Sororities - Ip a (Tl)! Omega Founded at De Pauw University, 1884 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1914 Publication — The Lyre Flower — Red Carnation Colors — Scarlet and Olive Green ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Margaret McElvain, Hutchinson Elizabeth Ulrich, Lawrence Juniors Gertrude LaCross, Lawrence Vivian Sturgeon, Thomas, Okla. Ruth Glenn, Robinson Marcella Hanscombe, Lawrence Agnes Hertzler, Kansas City, Mo. Josephine Stimpson, Lawrence Mary Nicholson, Newton Alice Bowlby, Natoma Sophomores Dorothy Button, Burrton Lois Weilipp, St. John Marjorie Roby, Topeka Salome Langmade, Oberlin Anne McMeel, Meade Freshmen Lena Pittinger, Arkansas City Caroline Doran, Kansas City, Mo. Graduates Olive Watson, Sterling Margaret Lupton, Lawrence Pledges June Caffery, Mt. Hope Louise Boeker, Lawrence Special Adelaide Dew, Kansas City, Mo. SORORES IN URBE Mrs. Arthur L. Owen Claribel Lupton Mrs. Henry E. Wolfe Mrs. Geo. E. Putnam Mrs. C. W. McKeen Elizabeth Fleeson —297— in.- ( ra ' j TriSa 8H Jayhawker Sorori ties 8 t i I Plank Parkinson Sponsler Marsh Martin Le Suer Holmes Gray Roop S. Gilmore Rush L. Hackman A. Hostetter Nowlin Dale Canfield M. Hostetter Wullenwaber Roebke A. Brownlee M. Hackraan Robb Tudor M. Brownlee Sharpless Reynolds Hargett M. Gilmore Hill Hildinger Smith Gregory (bamma 51)1 !6eta S s —298— ! Jayhawker Sororities i (bamma l eta Flower- Founded at Syracuse University, 1874 Kansas Chapter, Installed 1915 Publication — The Crescent -Carnation Colors — Mode and Brown ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduates Helen Hargett, Lawrence Lois Marsh, Atchison Seniors Anita Hostetter, Lawrence Gladys Sharpless, Atchison Gail Hall, McPherson Juniors Lucille Nowlin, Kansas City, Mo. Opal Plank, Kansas City, Mo. Ethel Rush, Kansas City, Mo. Sophomores Alivia Dale, Carthage, Mo. Marie Hostetter, Lawrence Jeannette Parkinson, Fort Smith Doris Roebke, Holton Irma WuUenwaber, Harper Freshmen Marguerite Gregory, Lawrence Opal Holmes, Lawrence Aleta Brownlee, Salina Vera Hill, Smith Center Esther Roop, Abilene Mina Canfield, Holton Pauline Hildinger, Lawrence Marion LeSuer, Lawrence Olive Reynolds, Holton Elizabeth Blakeslee, Kansas City Muriel Brownlee, Salina Marion Gray, Lawrence Mary Hackman, Lawrence Helen Robb, Chapman Gertrude Sponsler, Hutchinson Dorothy Derge, Lebanon Mildred Gilmore, Lawrence Lucy Hickman, Lawrence Sibyl Martin, Lawrence Nellie Smith, Horton Mary Tudor, Holton SORORE IN FACULTATE Helen Rhoda Hoopes —299— ;g Jayhawker Sororities f ■ Hi ' B £ E T B r l ir ? H j! ■ 1 pw JUI ' ' W Jl Mlfail MMfil R ji P ■T |Pm V 9 !@ Oi K 1 ■ £fiE= .. Ml - . J. ■ - il .. • i S. Trant Sallee Ramsey Morrison Bottomly Caleman Laing Ames Walters Huoni Rhine Hurley R. Trant Chambers Dickerson Light Carter Himes Mack Anderson Jackson Perkins Holmes Smith lAlf )a Xl 1 dta f f j ' ; rw53S «i V ' H S —300— ■ Jay hawker 1 Sororities ' :A f )a Xl 1 dta Founded at Lombard College, Galesburg, 111., 1893 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1915 Insigna— n MzV Flower — Pink Rose Colors — Light and Dark Blue and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors May Anderson, Kansas City Margaret Coleman, Lawrence Gertrude Hurley, Leavenworth Ruth Jackson, Lawrence Juniors Mildred Light, Lawrence Jennie Dickerson, Peabody Sara Trant, Edwardsville Sophomores Helen Chambers, Lawrence Millie Carter, Lawrence Miriam Holmes, Elmdale Irene Mack, Kansas City, Mo. Josephine Himes, Russell Mabel Ramsey, Garnett Freshmen Ruth Bottomly, Cedar Clarinda Ames, Concordia Josephine Huoni, Kansas City, Mo. Margaret Laing, Russell Alice Perkins, Kansas City Mary Rhine, Washington Charlotte Morrison, Lawrence Flora Sallee, Hutchinson Mary Smith, Kansas City Dorothy Somers, Newton Ruth Trant, Edwardsville Velma Walters, Wakefield : i9i7C —301— Jayhawker - Sororities ■i : 1917 c —302— HaatfM:.aat miihatt miair yi imiw gffa «v?i acfaCTi Sororities i t I i —303— ! Jay hawker ] i Fraternities Kennedy CoUey Rhine Arnold Murphy Fogarty Baker Derge Walters Brewster Hashinger O ' Leary Carter Dodderidge Bennie Egan Arbuthnot Gedney Pedroja Pratt Hilton Kendrick Bell pan-Hfellenlc (Touncil OFFICERS Phi Kappa Psi President Phi Gamma Delta Vice-President Phi Delta Theta Secretary Sigma Nu Treasurer —304— Jayliawker Fraternities P an- IKelleitic (Touncil HE Pan-Hellenic Council was organized at the University of Kansas in 1907. The object of this association is to promote good feeling between the general national fraternities, that a well balanced regu- lation of inter-fraternity affairs may be gained, that a more united fraternity force may be formed for occasions which may present themselves and to advance the best interests of the fraternities together with those of the Uni- versity. The association is governed by a council consisting of two representatives from each of the thirteen national fraternities in the University. The organiza- tion has met with great success, instilling a broad and fair-minded spirit of fra- ternalism such as prevails in few other institutions. The council has charge of inter-fraternity baseball and track meet. Each year it puts on a Pan-Hellenic Smoker and provides entertainment for the visitors at the various University track meets, baseball tournaments, etc. Fraternalism, a spirit of democracy, fostered by this body, unconsciously instills a feeling of loyalty to the Alma Mater, and in doing so promotes to a cer- tain degree the best interests of the University. Beta Theta Pi Albert Murphy Francis H. Arnold Sigma Nu E. Hazen Kendrick Page E. Wagner Acacia Elton C. Rhine Ed. Pedroga Phi Delta Theta Richard P. Colley Herbert M. Mee J. A. Dyer REPRESENTATIVES Phi Kappa Psi D. H. O ' Leary John L. Fogarty Phi Gamma Delta Duke Kennedy Maynard Egan Sigma Chi Kenneth B. Uhh Alpha Tau Omega Kenneth C. Dodderidge Sidney E. Arbuthnot Kappa Sigma David R. Derge Sigma Alpha Epsilon Willard Hilton Kenneth Bell Pi Kappa Alpha Herbert S. Bennie Joe Pratt Delta Tau Delta F. C. Walters Harry Montgomery Phi Kappa W. B. Havekorst —305— ■ Jayliawker Fraternities i Murphy Heath F. Arnold Robinson Wealthy Haas Pendleton Reed M. Arnold Jones Willems Smith Mallott Murphey Olander Burkholder G. Nettles Law Melvin C. Nettles Curran Vanderschmidt Klein Spencer Rogers Appel PuUiam Helwig Ackers Beach Gray Chase Scott Harrison Gibbons Hill Jensen Standly Miller ata I5l)eta Ipi Flower- Founded at Miami University, 1839 Alpha Nu Chapter Installed, 1873 Publication — The Beta Theta Pi -La France Rose Colors — Light Blue and Pink 1917 C -306— ' J ay hawker Fraternities ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Deane E. Ackers, Abilene Albert N. Murphy, Okla. City, Okla. Charles R. Chase, Emporia James M. Scott, Mankato H. Laurence Miller, Horton Francis H. Arnold, Emporia H. Merle Smith, Bucklin Edwin V. Burkholder, Marion George H. Beach, Lawrence Ames P. Rogers, Abilene W. Rea Heath, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Hilmer G. Apple, Lawrence Alfred G. Hill, Topeka Juniors Leon D. Gibbens, Nickerson Harry Robinson, Salina John E. Curran, Tulsa, Okla. Willard Olander, Kansas City Sophomores Randall T. Klein, Wichita Burnard Jensen, Emporia Kendall M. Hass, Holton William H. Harrison, Downs Cameron K. Reed, Kansas City, Mo. Marcellus Law, McPherson Ferdinand Helwig, Kansas City Freshmen Paul E. PuUiam, Lyons Charles H. Nettles, Topeka George E. Nettles, Topeka Deane W. Malott, Abilene Marion E. Arnold, Emporia Harold H. Spencer, Pittsburg Willis Vanderschmidt, Leavenworth Harold G. Stanley, La Clede, Mo. Donald R. Welty, Bartlesville, Okla. Bryan Murphy, Leavenworth Joseph Wilson, Stafford George K. Melvin, Lawrence Theodore Pendleton, Lawrence Pledges Harold Brown, Holton Olin Templin E. F. Stimpson FRATRES IN FACULTATE Erasmus Haworth Arthur J. Boynton O. O. Stoland Earl W. Murray D. L. Patterson FRATRES IN URBE Irving Hill R. E. Melvin Wm. H. Pendleton Max Wilhelmi Julius G. Uhrlaub George Darsie Ogden S. Jones Chas. S. Finch Robert C. Rankin Arthur B. Weaver —.307— ! Jayhawker Fraternities ' 1L J J.KI Thompson Erickson Shaw Fogarty B. Hite Flintora O ' Leary Bierer Mason Johnson Evans Pegues Shepherd Stewart Taylor Weightman Barteldes Farrell Bonebrake Dean Winn Small McFarland Burch Campbell Edwards Hook Goodjohn Shelley Stevenson H. Graham Clark SprouU N. Graham Lengemann ' pl)ilKafpa psi Founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pa., 1852 Kansas Alpha Chapter Installed, 1876 Publication— ' TA Shield Flower — Sweet Pea Colors — Pink and Lavender I ' ] ; :: i9ir g: —308— Jayliawker ' I 13l)lTKappal35i ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Ralph D. Sproull, Lawrence Henry S. Pegues, Hutchinson Richard D. Small, Kansas City, Mo. W. Cargill, Sproull, Lawrence Scott Griesa, Lawrence Allen Burch, Carthage, Mo. Frank McFarland, Topeka Dan S. Campbell, Joplin, Mo. Juniors Dorman H. O ' Leary, Lawrence R. D. Edwards, Kansas City, Mo E. Lawrence Winn, Kansas City, Mo. John Dean, Topeka Scott Johnson, Lawrence Blaine Hite, Cherryvalle Harold Shelly, Elmdale John L. Fogarty, Lawrence Sophomores Marvin D. Taylor, Moran A. G. Barteldes, Lawrence L. B. Flintom, Kansas City, Mo Norruth D. Graham, Hiawatha Fred Shaw, Holton F. T. Bonebrake, Topeka William Y Hilton W. Graham, Hiawatha William Lengemann, Kansas City Russell Evans, Kansas City J. A. Weightmann, Topeka John E. Erickson, Topeka H. Welker Sheperd, Hutchinson Woodwar d Hite, Cherryvale J. V. Connley, Colby Enos E. Hook, Wichita Stewart, Hutchinson Freshmen Bion B. Bierer, Hiawatha Mark D. Goodjohn, Leavenworth R. B. Stevenson, Kansas City, Mo. Roy C. Farrell, Pratt H. Earnest Clark, Kansas City Pledges Allen Mason, San Diego, Cal. William Wilmoth, Concordia Orin Slonaker, Lawrence FRATRES IN FACULTATE Frank W. Blackmar C. A. Haskins John D. Garver Frank H. Hodder Chas. G. Dunlap J. A. Farrell Miles W. Sterling John H. Hayden Frank L. Brown FRATRES IN URBE Geo. F. Esterly Herbert B. BuUene Briton W. Woodward Fred P. Smithmeyer Ralph Spotts William Griesa Scott Griesa J. W. Maertindell Art M. Spaulding John Slonaker 1917 C —309— Jayhawker l Fraternities 1 -1 1 ? 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 .1. i T t 1 ,f • i ' 1 t T ? 1 1 Allen Dittmer Halpin Jackson Challiss Mahan Pausch Carter Craig E. Mitchell Fitzpatrick Kennedy Klock B. Mitchell Wright Cubbison Neptune P. Friend Daviss Anderson Van Velzer Perkins Bernardin Hetherington Mehl Egan Miller Dykes Rourke Mason G. Gorrill Hardman C. Gorrill Schroers Hemphill Wakenhut Kirtland Boys R. Friend Stanton IH I Bamma1 zlta Founded at Jefferson College, Canonsburg, Pa., 1848 Kansas Chapter Installed, October 29, 1881 Publication — Phi Gamma Delta Flower — Heliotrope Color — Royal Purple —310— ■ Jayliaw ker - Fraternities P i 5amma iDelta ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduate J. R. Kennedy, Ft. Scott L. M. Egan, Kansas City, Mo. Baldwin Mitchell, Lawrence Otto H. Dittmer, Independence Frank Hetherington, Topeka Harold Neptune, Salina Jared Jackson, Atchison Clarence Gorrill, Lawrence Russell Friend, Lawrence John Kirtland, Salina Helmer Klock, Lawrence Seniors John V. Challiss, Atchison Halleck I. Craig, Independence John M. Miller, Atchison C. J. Wakenhut, Salina Warren Halpin, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Friend, Lawrence Juniors Fred Pausch, Atchison Donald Davis, Downs Byron Mehl, Leavenworth John H. Dykes, Lebanon Sophomores Joe Mahan, Independence Robert Mason, Kansas City, Mo. Edgar Schroers, St. Joseph, Mo. Ray Hemphill, Kansas City, Mo. Lucius Perkins, Lawrence Harry Van Velzer, Ft. Scott Earl Fitzpatrick, Lawrence Freshmen George Rourke, Topeka Gerard Allen, Wichita Dwight Hardman, Phillipsburg North Wright, Atchison Eben Mitchell, Lawrence Jean Carter, Lawrence Irving Wulfekuhler, Leavenworth Pledges Galen Gorrill, Lawrence Arthur Anderson, Lawrence Mason Boys, Independence James Stanton, Leavenworth Santry Reed, Newton FRATRES IN FACULTATE William C. Stevens M. T. Sudler P. F. Walker W. O. Hamilton H. A. Rice George E. Putnam Miles L. Hanley William S. Hekking A. D. Carroll Charles Elwell L. N. Lewis J. C. Shinn Robert C. Manley FRATRES IN URBE Hugh Means E. O. Perkins Thurman Fitzpatrick F. P. Smith Wilder S. Metcalf Russell Fitzpatrick C. D. Perkins Paul A. Dinsmoor Melville Wood —311— Jay hawker Fraternities ? f 1 I I f irrr .| ;, Brewster Thomas Boughten Crowell Stubbs Shirk Montieth Maloney Simons Neilson Hogue Kauder Branine J. Dyche Cowles Colley MacClement Carpenter Stevens Jenkins X. Smith Benedict H. Smith L. Dyche Swartz W. Mee Parnham H. Mee Hughes 131)1 18)eltaI5l)eta Founded at Miami University, December 26, 1848 Kansas Alpha Charter Installed, November 5, 1882 Publication— n Scroll Flower — White Carnation Colors — Azure and Argent I = 1917 C —312— ! Jay hawker 3 ? 15l)l ataI3Ma ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Junius Dyche, Oklahoma City Harry M. Nielson, Natoma Walter B. Kauder, Halstead Juniors Maurice T. Benedict, Lawrence Charles W. Boughten, Lawrence Robert H. Carpenter, CoflFeyville Richard_P._Colley, Tulsa, Okla Paul A. Croweil, Pittsburg Owen W. Lucien R. Dyche, Oklahoma City Tulsa, Okla. Maloney, Sophomores Alden E. Brnine, Newton Edwin S. Brewster, Leavenworth Errol B. Frizzell, Halstead Hobart A. Hogue, Olathe Robert Z. MacClement, Olathe Herbert M. Mee, Oklahoma City William Mee, Jr., Oklahoma City Chester L. Thomas, Topeka Freshmen Fred B. Jenkins, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Loren Simon, Seneca John N. Monteith, Kansas City, Mo. Joseph C. Parnham, Kansas City, Mo. Joseph J. Swartz, Kansas City, Mo. Xenophon P. Smith, Kansas City, Mo. Pledges Rudolph R. Schirk, Pittsburg Isaac H. Eppinger, Kansas City, Mo. FRATRES IN FACULTATE W. E. Higgins R. E. Carter A. L. Owen B. P. Young Howard D. Smith, Wichita Francis C. Orr, Kansas City, Mo. Roscoe Stubbs, Lawrence H. L. Stevens, Hutchinson E. Banks T. Emery H. Olney J. McEwen FRATRES IN URBE O. A. Barteldes O. C. Leseur F. A. Owen E. F. Caldwell J. W. O ' Bryon R. L. Rowlands Klinton Kanaga —313— I Jayhawker Fraternities Baker Patterson Demuth F. Smith Thurman Hettinger Uhls Crawford Nelson E. Cowgill Sentney F. Wilson W. Smith Sautter Hobart Gibson R. Gowgill Frick Blakely Russell Saunders Woodward Rigby Treweeke Fratcher Beall Dewey Lomborg Weaver McCandles Arbuthnot Lane Wagstaff Metcalf Gedney Helmers Irwin W. Wilson i I i Sigma (T i Founded at Miami University, June 28, 1855 Alpha Xi Chapter Installed, 1884 Publications — Sigma Chi Quarterly, ' ' Sigma Chi Bulletin Flower — White Rose Colors — Gold and Blue : 1917 c —314— ! Jayhawker - JI Fraternities ♦ ISi w ' - Sigma (5 ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Harlan A. Russell, Lawrence Chester M. Patterson, Galena Kenneth B. Uhls, Overland Park Fenton J. Baker, Joplin, Mo. Lawrence S. Nelson, lola Paul H. Sautter, Horton Hugh W. Crawford, Stilesville, Ind. Walter E. Smith, Horton John A. Hettinger, Hutchinson Wm. A. Beall, Grantville Russell T. Cowgill, Lawrence Kenneth Gedney, Kansas City, Mo. Wodman Gibson, Lawrence Ivan Wilson, Lawrence Richard L. Treweeke, Wichita Juniors Elvyn S. Cowgill, Lawrence Ralph H. Metcalf, Kansas City, Mo. Richard H. WagstafF, Lawrence Frank Fratcher, Kansas City, Mo. Harold M. Irwin, Anthony Sophomores Gage C. Frick, Kansas City, Mo. Lewis C. Foster, Kansas City, Mo. Harold N. Hobart, Kansas City, Mo. Harold Smith, Kansas City, Mo. George Woodward, Lawrence Howard Demuth, Ellsworth Sidney Arbuthnot, Bellville Clinton Lane, St. Mary ' s Harry E. Smith, Horton Freshmen Webb Wilson, Horton Gordon Saunders, Lawrence Thomas E. Dewey, Topeka Ralph Sentney, Hutchinson Fred Rigby, Topeka Victor K. D. Blakely, Topeka Arthur C. Lomborg, Horton James B. Weaver, Bellville Earl F. McCandles, Hutchinson Pledges William Helmers, Leavenworth David Lupher, Lawrence Louis Duff, Horton George Bidwell, Kinsley William Gregory, Cottonwood Falls FRATRE IN FACULTATE Clifford C. Young FRATRES IN URBE Rev. Evan A. Edwards Henry F. Perkins Warren Henley Dr. John B. Henry Harry B. Barber Joseph W. Schultz Edwin B. Schall Dr. Carl Phillips Robert W. Wagstaff Guy R. Schultz —315— WM H IW ! Jay hawker Fraternities Shelton McCandles Cochran Youngmeyer Hashinger Nutting Jones Priest Francisco Chipman Hyer McPherson Terrell Norton Clawson Benson Rustenbach Osborne H. Engle Bennett Clift Atwood Barrett L. Engle Schnitzler Sorgatz Hendrick Wagner Golden Daniels Sigma 5tu : 1917 c —316— ■ Jay hawker Fraternities Sigma 5lu Flozver- Founded at Virginia Military Institute Nu Chapter Installed, 1884 Publication— D fl -White Rose Colors — Black, White and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Ed. H. Hashinger, Kansas City, Mo. J. Edward Jones, Fredonia Lawrence Engle, Lawrence C. C. Atwood, Gardner Walter S. Priest, Wichita Herbert L. Osborne, Wichita T. W. Benson, Independence Juniors Millard E. Clawson, Concordia E. Hazen Kendrick, Kansas City, Mo. Orville C. McCandless, Wichita Page P. Wagner, Concordia H. Golden, Kensington Sophomores Fred Rustenbach, Fredonia Dave Sorgatz, Concordia Frank Terrell, Holton Gerald Norton, Newton Albert E. Hyer, Olathe R. Herman Engle, Lawrence Waldo McPherson, Lawrence Joe Daniels, Paola Dean Nutting, Russell Floyd Chipman, Stockton Burt E. Cochran, Wichita T. L. Crawford, Topeka Clell Francisco, Lawrence Fritz Schnitzler, Wichita Freshmen Palmer Shelton, Independence Earl Youngmeyer, Lawrence Merle Clift, Blackwell, Okla. Clarence Bennett, Kansas City, Mo. James Barrett, Concordia Dono Olliver, lola Maro Bloomfield, lola FRATRES IN FACULTATE Elmer F. Engle M. K. Forward Arthur McMurray R. H. Major IN MEMORIAM James Barrett E. Hazen Kendrick —317— am Mx aui .mwm m : Jayhawkcr g: Fraternities v Longenecker Mandeville Hassig Latta Williams Haddock Lindsey Barclay Jones F. Gage Shofstall Gray Giger Wandell Noel Tarrant Gates Waite DeardorfF Brand Van Houten Branch H. Hilton Browns W. Gage R. Stodder G. Stodder Loren Bell W. Hilton Atha Howden Murphy. ? ' Sigma Ip a £p5llon —820— Jayhawker - Fraternities Sigma Ip alEpslloR Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856 Kansas Alpha Installed, 1903 Flower — Violet Colors — Royal Purple and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors F. M. Deardorif, Kansas City, Mo. Miles W. Gates, Rosedale Adrian H. Lindsey, Kingfisher, Okla. Carl A. Brand, Kansas City, Mo. William J. Waite, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph A. Branch, Wichita Juniors Willard O. Hilton, Cottonwood Falls Sidney Q. Noel, Glasco Thomas O. Tarrant, Florence Harold C. VanHouten, Topeka Frank Farley, Kansas City Harold Giger, Elmdale Sophomores James F. Barcley, Kansas City Harold J. Longnecker, Lawrence Kenneth G. Bell, Kansas City, Mo. Frank J. Loren, Atchison Francis D. Gage, Minneapolis Paul C. Murphy, Kansas City, Mo. Fred rick C. Stodder, Burden Cecil Hassig, Kansas City Freshmen Marshall Haddock, Kansas City, Mo. J. Hardy Latta, Wichita Howard J. Hilton, Cottonwood Falls Josiah D. Williams, Clay Center Charles K. Shofstall, Kans. City, A o. Rollo R. Howden, Skidnore, Mo. Joseph S. Atha, Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence C. Gray, Kansas City, Mo. Frank P. Mandevale, Kingman Paul R. Jones, Kansas City, Mo. Evan H. Browne, Kansas City Pledges Richard H. Stodder, Burden John W. Cook, Coffeyville William R. Davis, Kansas City, Mo. Walter R. Gage, Minneapolis FRATRES IN FACULTATE F. E. Kester W. A. Whitaker E. H. Hollands : 1917 c —321— Jayliawker Fraternities I I ' I f f J.,: Carper Johnson Grayson Burns McMillen Winchester Clayton Fiske A. K. Rader Rhine Kabier Ingalls McCormac O ' Brein Skourup Smith Hake Hess Thayer Troup Richter Henson Deacon Treece Schreiner Arend Robinson Madden Pedroja Baysinger Irwin Richmond Miller V. Rader. Acacia I 1 1 h 1917 C —322— I Jayhawker Fraternities Acacia Flower — Acacia Founded at the University of Michigan Kansas Chapter Installed, 1904 Publication — ' The Jouryial Colors — Black and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduates H. C. Fisk, Alva, Okla. R. D. Grayson, Oskaloosa A. K. Rader, Lawrence W. R. Schreiner, Frankfort W. N. Skourup, Colony E. Lee Treece, Centerville J. E. Welker, Lawrence Seniors A. B. Irwin, Kansas City, Mo. C. H. Richter, Alma Juniors T. C. Deacon, Topeka F. G. Hart, Topeka S. R. Ingalls, Washington J. D. Kabler, Kingman J. E. B. Miller, lola Elton Rhine, Washington G. C. Robinson, Kansas City Sophomores H. D. Arend, Downs A. Troup, Logan B. E. Smith, Marion Pledges O. H. Burns, Tulsa, Okla. S. A. McCormac, Osborne C. C. Carper, Minneapolis B. L. McMillen, Minneapolis E. C. Hake, Minneapolis S. O ' Brien, Lawrence G. R. Hensen, Englewood V. S. Rader, Lawrence FRATRES IN FACULTATE S. O. Rice J. O. Jones F. T. Thayer E. B. Miller Wm. L. Burdick T. N. Raymond George O. Foster N. P. Sherwood Wm. E. Higgins A. H. Sluss H. W. Humble W. A. Whitaker FRATRES IN URBE L. Mason D. H. Horkman C. E. Baysinger, Hartford A. B. Richmond, Lucas R. H. Clayton, Hill City W. O. Hake, Minneapolis J. R. Hess, Topeka T. L. Johnson, McPherson J. E. Madden, Topeka E. E. Pedroja, Lawrence J. S. Amick B .0. Parcels W. F. March J. E. Bond R. V. Reid W. G. Thiele 1917 C —323— [ J ay hawker Fraternities Kohl Good Bruington Fink Eyer Mulloy Charles Derge Young McFarland Idol Plank Crowley Carder Smith Carter Doan Peek Schmidt Taylor Cook Jones Milton Simpson Read Hershberger Oles Calene Galle Costigan Baker Peacock TKappa Sigma ,: «— - —324— Jay hawker Fraternities TKapf a Sigma Founded at the University of Virginia, 1869 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1912 Publication — Caduceous ' Lily of the Valley Colors — Scarlet, White and Emerald Green ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduate Clarke Bruington, A. M., Dodge City Seniors Eugene B. Cook, Cherryvale Jannes L. Galle, McPherson J. L. Calene, Sylvan Grove Juniors M. L. Carter, Howard John Crowley, Lawrence Donald Young, Dodge City Floyd L. Fink, Downs Sophomores C. G. Eyer, Salina G. A. Milton, Kansas City Roscoe Charles, Stafford G. Plank, Lawrence Freshmen Horace H. Rich, Coldwater Floyd Peacock, Stafford Philip D. Doan, Arkansas City Paul McFarland, Lawrence Milward Idol, Robinson Pledges Hugo Kohl, Hayes Glen Baker, Cherryville FRATRES IN URBE Robert Herod Albert Young Glen Swogger J. B. Lawrence Flower- T. N. Mulloy, Lincoln D. R. Derge, Lebanon E. S. Schmidt, Galena A. W. Hershberger, Greensburg D. C. Good, Hiawatha F. L. Dennis, Stockton Wilbur Jones, Wichita James Simpson, Salina J. R. Taylor, Lawrence M. L. Peek, Arkansas City W E. Early Carder, Lawrence Laurence Oles, Independence Joe Read, Coffeyville Elbert Smith, Ellinwood : 1917 c — 32S— ' tlaylia wker l Fraternities Reed D. Flagg Hoffman Ritchey Betscher Matthews Willson Hunt Meyers X. Ayers Gray Schoenfeldt P. Flagg Bennett Crowder Crawford Farris Grecian Metcalf Stephenson Sammons Cress Moore A. McKinney Caudill Chandler Berlin Martin G. Ayers Bennie Crum Pratt Glenn Bowersock E. McKinney IpilKaffa Jdp )a JLtaKs : 1917 c — 32«— ■ Jayha-svlver • ' Fraternities ' r l llKappa lp a Founded at the University of Virginia, 1868 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1914 Publication — Shield and Diamond ' Flower— Lily of the Valley Co orj— Garnet and Old Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduate W. Ayers McKinney, Howard Seniors Paul E. Flagg, Lawrence Robert H. Reed, Almena Vernon A. Moore, lola Harry E. Crum, Lawrence Olin R. Farris, Norwich George B. Sammons, Sabetha Harold Crawford, Tonkawa, Okla. Juniors Donald S. Herbert S Flagg, Lawrence Bennie, Almena Howard R. Cress, Clements Abner R. Willson, Kansas City, Mo. Francis R. Martin, Douglas Burton A. Meyers, Osborne Edward H. Shoenfeldt, Independence Everett J. Grecian, Hill City Earl B. Metcalf, Lawrence Reuben A. Hoffman, Chanute Homer B. Hunt, Conway Springs Sophomores Joe J. Pratt, Appelton City, Mo. Julian R. Stephenson, Pleasanton Brooks Berlin, Sedan Clyde F. Caudill, Protectio n Carl E. Betsher, Eureka George L. Chandler, Topeka Earl Crowder, Neodasha Claude K. Matthews, Kansas City, Mo. Homer J. Henderson, Independence Freshmen Xenia V. Ayers, Almena Harry E. Bennett, Topeka Glenn E. Ayers, Almena Dayton R. Glenn, Robinson Howard R. Ritchey, lola Earl Bowersock, Lawrence Earl B. McKinney, lola Glenn Gray, Protection FRATRES IN FACULTATE William W. Davis FRATRES IN FACULTATE Lance C. Hill Francis Saile : 1917 c —327— Jay hawker Fraternities Peck Knoles Thiele Booth Conklin Wynn Laney Krumbach Brown Leach Mickey Hoffman Kidwell Paul Gelvin Nordstrom Montgomery Krueger Wilson F. Walters Wolfe Cary Binford Fritts Rutherford Park Young Boone R. Walters i)cUa ' Gau. i)ella —328— ■ Jayhawker -J ' Fraternities iDelta Oau i eUa Founded at Bethany, 1859 Gamma Tau Chapter Installed, 1914 Publication — ' ' ' ' The Rainbow ' ' ' ' Flower — Pansy Colors — Purple, White and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduate George E. Wynn, McPherson Seniors Myron M. Booth, Hutchinson C. R. Gelvin, Nashua, Iowa Howard E. Hoffman, Abilene Thomas G. Laney, Jr., Lima, Ohio Arnold R. Nordstrom, Marquette Hubert W. Paul, Blue Rapids J. Edwin Wolfe, Kingman Juniors William R. Brown, Lawrence Ralph V. Fritts, Paola S. Waite Mickey, Junction City Bartholow Park, Atchison George H. Thiele, Jr., Washington Horace F. Chandler, Atchison John A. Krumbach, Shelby, Nebraska Harry V. Montgomery, Junction City Earl W. Shinn, Burns F. Walters, Lawrence Yssel Y. Young, Junction City Sophomores William T. Cary, Arkansas City Tracy R. Conklin, Jr., Abilene Max H. Krueger, Atchison Ray P. Walters, Lawrence Freshmen John A. Binford, Wellsville G. Franklin Boone, Junction City Fred G. Leach, Arkansas City Paul J. Rutherford, Wellington Gail E. Wilson, Beloit Pledges Cleo Kidwell, Ottawa James Knoles, Kingman Victor H. Peck, Kingman FRATRES F. J. Kelly IN Henry W. Hargett FACULTATE J. B. FRATRES IN URBE Gordon B. Thompson Whel; Clyde C. Constant —329— Jayliawker -1 Fraternities Crowley Wirtz Hunter E. Dyer Carmody Browne Feierabend Fuller Kalmet McNally Hoch Watkins J. Dyer Havekorst Casey Weber McHale Ryan Schroepfer Bauman Murphy Potucek Brady Walsh 13 1 TKappa : 1917 c —330— Fraternities T} )i TKappa Founded at Brown University Kansas Chapter Installed, October 2, 1915 Publication — The Temple ' ' Colors — Purple, White and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS B. F. Watkins, Chanute W. J. Crowley, Kansas City Seniors W. J. Weber, Elmwood A. M. Schroepfer, Wamego Juniors Joseph E. McNally, Michigan Valley Frank Hoch, Wilson Frank L. Feierabend, Atchison John A. Dyer, Kansas City Walter B. Havekorst, Hanover J. H. Hainbach, Chanute So-phomores Eugene T. Dyer, Kansas City Louis E. Potucek, Wellington John D. Murphy, Wellington Andrew T. Wirtz, Ellinwood Charles A. Walsh, Jr., Beloit Joseph D. Casey, Norton David L. Browne, Norton Freshmen Rudolph E. Bauman, Wellington Royal R. Ryan, Fredonia Cecil T. McHale, Kansas City Victor E. Fuller, Junction City W. T. Brady, Independence, Mo. Robert A. Carmody, Fredonia Robert T. Hunter, Kansas City Henry L. Klamet, Tonganoxie FRATRES IN URBE T. J- Sweeney J-J- Riling G. J- Eckhart J. M . Shea —331— Jay hawker Fraternities Reid Allvine Ludlow Staggs Wieters Jackson Bressem Wann Tracey Rumsfelt Nelson Hull Woody Gaitskill Altland Palmer Stockton Weltmer Tate Preble Liddle Firestone Ryan McNaught F. Ross Fleeson Hagenbuch Davenport C. Ross Sparks Lyne Cromwell Marshall 131 Kpsilon : 1917 c —332— J ay hawker -l Fraternities ■pl Ki sllon Founded at the University of Kansas, April 26, 1909 Publication— U Bulletin: ' Flower — White Cornation Colors — Dark Green and Old Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduates Glendon AUvine, Kansas City James B. McNaught, Girard Seniors Joe Gaitskill, Girard Herbert Rumsfelt, Kansas City, Mo. Chas. W. Hagenbuch, Kans. City, Mo. Marcellus L. Stockton, Gridley Lewis M. Hull, Washington, D. C. L. Gerald Sparks, Greensburg Hoyt S. Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Alfred H. Wieters, Lanham J lniors W. Leland Altland, Sterling Ross Davenport, Kansas City, Mo. Howard T. Flesson, Sl erling Horace M. Staggs, Hennessey, Okla. Clifford L. Firestone, Lawrence Wilfred C. Wann, Hays City Ward W. Weltmer, Smith Center Sophomores Harry H. Cromwell, Belle-Plaine James G. Lyne, Herington Fred Preble, Hutchinson Theodore C. Reid, Stafford Carl Ross, Kansas City, Mo. Warren V. Woody, Bernard John C. Tracy, Kansas City, Mo. James N. Tate, Lakin Freshmen Edward Bradstreet, Dighton Forest L. Liddle, Rosedale Bronce Jackson, Barnard Erbest A. Ryan, Girard Carl Bressem, Sabetha Stewart Ludlow, Kansas City, Mo. Floyd Ross, Sterling Cyril Palmer, Kansas City, Mo. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Fred W. Bruckmiller, A. M. Paul Vance Faragher, Ph. D. Sam E. Roberts, M. D. Virgil McCary, M. D. William L. Burdick, Ph. D. LL. B. —333— [ Jayhawker Fraternities Cazier Groh Spencer Brush Evans Hull Stephens Minturn Lillis Brauer Tucker Poirier McCreath Arnold Garvie H. D. Cox Gilkey H. B. Cox Schenck Grutzmacher Neumann Walters Sigma Jpl)i Sigma : 1917 c —334— I Jayhawkerdr: yQHVHi twvai Fraternities Sigma pl)l Sigma Founded at University of Kansas, 1912 Publication — ' TA Calumet ' ' ' Flower — American Beauty Rose Colors — Purple Green and Old Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Constant J. Poirier, Wathena L. W. Cazier, Carbondale Seniors Hugh A. Grutzmacher, Onoga Harry M. Gilkey, Richmond Juniors Louis M. Hull, Norton Hugh M. Garver, Abilene Harold B. Cox, Cedarvale Fred. G. Schenck, Burlingame Paul J. Brindel, Kansas City Alfred Brauer, Newton G. Brandt Arnold, Newton Joseph P. Groh, Wathena Warren Newmann, Wymore, Neb. Percy P. Brush, Lawrence Sophomores Hubert D. Cox, Cedarvale Wade H. Evans, WaKeeney E. Benjamin Minturn, Florence Robert Kingsley Walters, Abilene David G. McCreath, Lawrence Freshmen E. Clark Tucker, Kansas City Russel Stephens, Kansas City Clark Lillis, Holliday Merrill D. Spencer, Great Bend —335— . „ f . ■ , r mv fWiW nrHf- ' - f ?M ' Jayhawker Fraternities J J. ? t i S .1 .1 1 3 .?. I .? •? I ? Sibbitt Swarts Welsh Hartley Swarner Fee Dail Nelson Parker Gardner Wallace Adams Butcher Perkins Rolfs Skaer Koester Bernard Heath Gafney Bradley Jakowsky McCaleb Wilson Sutton Gear Owen Peckham Getgey 3ianza —336— ■ Jayhawker f Fraternities TKait a Founded at the University of Kansas, November 20, 1912 Publication — ' The Kanza ' Flower — Sweet Pea Colors — Gray and Blue ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Eugene Rolfs, Lawrence Stanley B. Nelson, Paris, Texas John B. Dail, Cherokee, Okla. Charles J. Fee, Meade Marvin L. Gear, Buffalo Milton S. Heath, Burns Lawrence P. Swarts, Arkansas City Juniors William Koester, Atchison Ray Swarner, Coldwater Garnet McCaleb, Bartelsville, Okla. Jabez Parker, Hill City Charles R. Sibbitt, Protection Sophomores Floyd E. Welsh, Alva, Okla. Clifford Butcher, Severan Forrest M. Record, Lawrence John R. Bradley, Lawton, Okla. Tom Casey, Oscar F. Perkins, Meade Howard A. Skear, Augusta Ray E. Gafney, Winfield John Getgey, Mullinville Wichita Freshmen Charles Wallace, Winfield Francis Fuhr, Meade Robert Hartley, Quincey, 111. Mark Adams, Liberal Byron Owen, Skidmore, Mo. Wayne Willson, Winfield Clarence A. Sutton, Parsons J. Jay Jakowski, Independence Clarence A. Bernard, Cherokee, Jacob Peckham, Morganville Okie —337— ! Jay hawker • ' Fraternities Jenkins McGinniss Diller O. Darby Rhoades Harryman Harrison Leary Ecroyd Campbell Arlin Burke Lampton R. Darby Jackson King Smith Bennett Cadmus T[amb6a 4 Sigma ! : 1917 c —338— Jayhawker 1 Fraternities Xamb6a 4 1)1 Sigma Founded at the University of Kansas, April 21, 1916 Publication — Lambda Bulletin Flower — Red Carnation Colors — Maroon and Pearl Gray ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Harold W. Arlin, Carthage, Mo. Edmund C. Burke, Kansas City, Mo. Walter G. Cadmus, Parsons Fred W. Campbell, Kansas City, Mo. Olin E. Darby, Washington Howard E. Diller, Washington Guy L. Ecroyd, Arkansas City Henry C. Jackson, Springfield, Mass. Juniors Walter A. King, Cawker City Donald R. Harrison, Lawrence Ora Leary, Kansas City Byron F. McGinniss, Aulne Sophomores Raymond V. Darby, Washington Elmer L. Jenkins, Cherokee Ralph O. Rhoades, Lawrence Freshmen Earl D. Harryman, Helper Fred F. Lampton, Cherokee. Pledges Kenneth O. Bennett, Lovewell Harold H. Shaver, Lovewell Lawrence Bennett, Lovewell Oden W. Smith, Garnett —339— ! Jayha%vker i. —340— Jayhawker _ 1917 C —341— Jayha vker l Sororities Wood Risinger Watson Merritt Alcott Perkins Watts Smith Raub Lawellin Weed Allen Hendrickson Henry Hungate Boeker Roberts Trump Whitcroft Sproule Jones Miller G. Bell D. Bell B. Jones Thrall Nelson !Jttu lH l Epsllon —342— Sororities : ttu 15 bl lEpsllon Founded at Cincinnati, Oiiio, 1903 XI Chapter Installed, 1911 Publication — Mm Phi Epsilon Triangle ' Flower — Violet Colors — Purple and White Una Allen, Muscotah Helen Bocker, Solomon Viola Jones, Fredonia ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Grace Bell, Lawrence Gladys Henry, Lawrence Pauline Sproule, Sedan Bonnie Lawellin, Garnett Alta Smith, Lawrence Juniors Lois Risinger, Fredonia Mildred Thrall, Neosho Falls Ruby Whitcroft, Lawrence Sophomores Dorothy Bell, Lawrence Miriam Merritt, Independence Helen Weed, Lawrence Freshmen Bernice Hendrickson, Mankato Lucile Miller, McPherson Gladys Nelson, Neodesha Dorothy Perkins, Bernard Lorna Marie Raub, Lawrence Edna Roberts, Lawrence Mabelle Trump, Formoso Helen Watts, Corning ,Iowa Rachel Wood, Concordia Neva Watson, Minneapolis Pledges Beatrice Jones, Hennessey, Okla. Charlotte Hungate, Albia, Iowa Leah Stewart, De Soto, Mo. SORORES IN FACULTATE Harriett Greissinger Cora Reynolds Maud Miller Evelyn F. Olcott Anna Sweeney —343— Jayhaw ker Sororities Dolecek Dudley Peairs Henley Batchellor Doyle Tudor Elmore Darby Butts Wilson Rice McCanles De Wald Evertson Doran 1 Ma HM elta Founded at the University of Kansas, 1912 Griffith Chapter Installed, 1912 Flower — Sweet Pea Colors — Old Rose and Gold Alice Price ACTIVE MEMBERS Juniors Christine Dolecek Gertrude Doyle Sophmoores Eva McCanles Marian Henley Helen Peairs Letha Evertson Freshmen Caroline Doran Norma Batchellor Florence Darby Lucille Elmore Mary Tudor Specials Ellen Edmondson Amelia DeWald Grace Dudley Jo Wilson Sue E. Butts Miss Benson Lucile Brown SORORES IN URBE Wilma Arnett Addie Underwood Mrs. Humble : 1917 : —344— ! Jayhawker - _ Sororities M. Woodruff Daum Irvine Hedrick Martin Stevenson S. Woodruff Talcott Cruzan Van Horn Omlcron ytxi HOME ECONOMICS Founded at Michigan Agricultural Colleg e, 1912 Iota Chapter Installed, 1915 Flower — Pink Rose Colors — Lavender and Pink ACTIVE MEMBERS Ethel Martin, Lawrence Louise Hedrick, Friend Frances Irvine, Fort Scott Amy Van Horn, Lawrence Ruth Stevenson, Paola Evelyn Cruzan, Bethany, Mo. Marie Woodruff, Lawrence SORORES IN FACULTATE Elizabeth Sprague Avis Gwinn Evangeline Downey Teetor Hazel K. Allen Sybil Woodruff Kate Daum Avis Talcott —345— Jayliawker Sororities Dolecek Dudley Peairs Butts Wilson Henley Batchellor Doyle Rice McCanles De Wald Tudor Elmore Darby Evertson Doran T)eUa 11 bl 1 dta Founded at the University of Kansas, 1912 Griffith Chapter Installed, 1912 Flower — Sweet Pea Colors — Old Rose and Gold Alice Price ACTIVE MEMBERS Juniors Christine Dolecek Gertrude Doyle Sophmoores Eva McCanles Marian Henley Helen Peairs Leth a Evertson Freshmen Caroline Doran Norma Batchellor Florence Darby Lucille Elmore Mary Tudor Specials Ellen Edmondson Amelia DeWald Grace Dudley Jo Wilson Sue E. Butts Miss Benson Lucile Brown SORORES IN URBE Wilma Arnett Addie Underwood Mrs. Humble : 1917 c —344— ■ Jayhawker Sororlries li M. Woodruff Daum Irvine Hedrick Martin S. Woodruff Cruzan Stevenson Talcott Van Horn Omlcron 5lu HOME ECONOMICS Founded at Michigan Agricultural College, 1912 Iota Chapter Installed, 1915 Flower — Pink Rose Colors — -Lavender and Pink ACTIVE MEMBERS Ethel Martin, Lawrence Louise Hedrick, Friend Frances Irvine, Fort Scott Amy Van Horn, Lawrence Ruth Stevenson, Paola Evelyn Cruzan, Bethany, Mo. Marie Woodruff, Lawrence SORORES IN FACULTATE Elizabeth Sprague Evangeline Downey Teetor Hazel K. Allen Avis Gwinn Sybil Woodruff Kate Daum Avis Talcott —345— Jayhawker- Sororities Reding Russell Hoopes Moore Huffman Hedrick Martin Deibel Hale Govier Van Horn Fletcher Carson Rogers Sankee Schenck De Mare Joseph Testerman Atkinson Daniels Markham Angevine McCanles Ipi (Bamma Sigma HONORARY EDUCATIONAL Organized 1913 Flower — White Carnation Colors — Green and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduates Florence Hale Regina Woodruff Lula McCanles Hazel Carson Louise Hedrick Dorothy Angevine Thyrsa Amos Amy Van Horn Lila Atkinson Ruth Daniels Iva Testerman Mary Govier Adeline de Mare If ! Seniors Helen Moore Dorothy Markham Rachel Sankee Jean Russel Ethel Martin Juniors Marie Deibel Mary Schenck Marion Joseph Liona Fletcher Kathrine Reding Pledges Maud Kilgore Stella Orr Neva Ritter Lena Rogers Mary Van Arsdale Helen McKinney Margaretta Stevenson Mary Brownlee Cora Russell Madeline Schultz Marjorie Rickard SORORES IN FACULTATE Eugene Galloo Lita Battery Helen Rhoda Hoopes —346— Jayhawker Sororities Patterson Clark Sturgeon Heizer Bowlby Smith Simons Gardiner Lewis Foster Roberts McElvain Messick B eta Sigma 13 b JOURNALISM Founded at the University of Washington Epsilon Chapter Installed, 1914 Flower — Violet Colors — Nile Green and Lavender ACTIVE MEMBERS ij :. Seniors Helen Patterson, Victoria Hallie Clark, Cherokee, Okla. Margaret Heizer, Osage ' Cily Blanche Simons, Lawrence Margaret].,McElvain, Hutchinson r .|; ; ' J. ' ' -■ ' ■ ' ,. - ' ■ ■■ ' - i: - ' ' - r ■ ' Juniors Alice Bowlby, Natoma Vivian Sturgeon, Thomas, Okla. Mary Roberts, Lawrence Jessie L. Messick, Hill City Irene Smith, Holt, Mo. Nellie Johnson, Republic Ruth Gardiner, Fredonia Sophomores Estella Foster, Sedgwick Special Marion Lewis, Minneapolis Sorore in Facultate Helen Rhoda Hoopes : i9i7C —347— Jayhawker . j H : 1917 : —348— ■ Jay hawker ■m«miiimmmiitt.mamm mmsmm i t-wmi ' ' mKi-xj?; —349— _ Jay hawker Fraternities Shelley Weltmer Stockton Allen Yeokum Holden Dyche Jones (Touncil of 4 rofe$5ional Jf raterrtltles The Council of Professional Fraternities was organized at the University of Kansas in 1915. The object of the council is to advance the interests of the various professional fraternities of the University. The association is governed by a council consisting of two representatives from such of the five professional fraternities which are represented. Though in its second year, the council has met with great success, as it pas put on two inter-fraternity smokers, two dances, and has taken charge of professional fraternity baseball and track meet. OFFI CERS Alpha Chi Si gma President Phi Alpha De lta Vice -President Ph I Beta Pi Secre tary- Tre asure r REPRESENTATIVES Alpha Chi Sigma Phi Alpha Delta Phi Beta Pi ■ James Holden L. J. Bond Lindsay Dyche Guy Robinson Wilbur Jones Marcellus Stockton Phi Chi Theta Tau Harold J. Shelley Geo. H. Yeokum Wardy Weltmer Paul Diehl : 1917 c —350— % Jayiiawker Fraternities Mattoon Price Wilson Burns L. Smith Davidson Anderson Brown H. M. Smith MacMurray Hake elta Sigma o Honorary National Fraternity of Intercollegiate Debaters Founded at the University of Chicago, 1906 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1910 Publication — The Gavel Colors — Light Blue and Gold MEMBERS Harold F. Mattoon Hugo T. Wedell Leland Smith Geo. A. Brown H. Merle Smith William H. Wilson W. O. Hake Lylc N. Anderson Edwin F. Price Fratres in Facultate O. H. Burns Arthur MacMurray Fratres in Urbe R. M. Perkins Ralph H. Spotts —351— Jayhawker l Fraternities Buffington Akers Holder) Asendorf Clark Reber Janney Rumsfeld Greider Walters Kidwell Hetler Stateler Irvin Huicksen Richardson Waggoner Cook Latimer Seibel Estes Stratton Maag Bailey Allen Faragher Parkhurst Clark Thompson Robinson Waite Nelson Farley Johnson Blaylock Todd Jiifi) 13 1 Sigma ! i := 1917 c —352— Jayhawker Fraternities lf l)a (Tl)! Sigma Flozc Founded at the University of Wisconsin, 1898 Kappa Chapter Installed, May 23, 1909 Publication — The Hexagon -Red Carnation Colors — Prussian Blue and Chrome Yellow ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduates H. A. Nelson, McPherson I. P. Parkhurst, Kinsley J. B. Ramsey, Garnett J. A. Reber, Kansas City, Mo. E. A. Todd, Lawrence Seniors H. W. Rumsfield, Kansas City, Mo. E. S. Stateler, Mineola W. J. Waite, Kansas City, Mo. Juniors C. C. Robinson, Kansas City, Mo. E. A. Uhrlaub J. H. Waggoner, Topeka F. C. Walters, Lawrence Pledges S. C. Jounson, Eureka H. H. Richardson, lola W. C. Thompson, Marion res in Facultate H. W. Greider, Topeka W. M. Janney, Eureka C. H. Kidwell, Lawrence W. M. Latimer, Lawrence O. L. Maag, Russell F. O. Blaylock, De Soto E. B. Cook, Cherryvale J. H. Holden, Boston, Mass C. E. Akers, Leavenworth W. F. Asendorf, Garden Plain R. J. Clark, (S. Joseph, Mo. S. F. Farley, Kansas City, Mo. R. M. Buffington, Ness City L. E. Clark, Winchester D. M. Hetler, Osage City Frat H. C. Allen E. H. S. Bailey F. W. Bruckmiller H. P. Cady P. W. Classen F. B. Dains A. H. Huiscken Frat er in Urbe R. R. Irwin C. Estes P. V. Faragher C. W. Seibel G. W. Stratton W. A. Whitaker C. C. Young —353— Jayhaw ker Fraternities ' .m . ' ! k ' - Juh ■ :. k Jones Dittmer Nelson Pedroja Mitchell Bailey Lobaugh Loren Shearer Fink Tucker Pausch Mendenhall Flinn Fisher Mendenhall Craig Colley Carter Bond Brown Friend Allen Harlan Smith Taylor Randolph Johnson Mattoon Hershberger Embry Guy 131)1 :2Vlp batata ' 1917 C —354 — ! Jay hawker -Jg. Fraternities 131)1 :2Vlpl)a elta LEGAL FRATERNITY Founded at Chicago Kent College of Law, 1897 James Wood Green Chapter Installed, 1909 Publication — The Phi Alpha Delta Quarterly Flower — Red Carnation Colors — Purple and Old Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Halleck Craig, I ndependence Otto Dittmer, Independence Ivan Allen, Washington J. Percy Flinn, Chanute Jesse M. Fisher, Lawrence Wilbur H. Jones, Wichita Edward E. Pedroja, Lawrence Richard P. CoUey, Tulsa, Okla, Cecil P. Embry, Pratt Marion L. Carter, Howard Fred L Seniors Llewellyn J. Bond, Washington Hoyt S. Nelson, Kansas City, Mo. Paul Friend, Lawrence Harry Harlan, Smith Center Harold F. Mattoon, Lawrence Middlers Elwin L. Smith, Colony Floyd M. Fink, Downs Francis A. Guy, Wakefield Clarence A. Randolph, Lawrence Arthur W. Hershberger, Greensburg Paush, Atchison Juniors Le Verne T. Tucker, Cawker City Aiorris Johnson, Salina George L. Mendenhall, Gove George Austin Brown, Baldwin Richard H. Mendenhall, Gove Martin Shearer, Junction City Farel R. Lobaugh, Washington Stanley Taylor, Augusta Pledges J. W. Mitchell, Perry Harold Lytle, Lawrence John P. Caflfery, Mount Hope Fratres in Facultate Chancellor Frank Strong Prof. H. W. Humble Fratres in Urbe Roderick V. Reid John H. Riling Judge O. A. Smart J. B. Wilson Edward T. Hackney Urael Emick Chas. H. Griesa —355— Jayhawker Fraternities f f tf f Hoch Sterling Neptune Hereford McConnell Ruble Anderson Uhls Nelson Chambers Johnson Stockton Beal Kehl Green Beveridge Medill Hill Hadley Blount Schofstal Schnitzler Stofer Keeler Dyche Wilhelmy Smith Lane Curtis Arbuthnot Mowery Sullivan Brown Penwell McHale 111)1 : (tta 111 —356— Jayliaw ker Fraternities 131)1 : ita pi Founded at the University of Pittsburg, 1891 Alpha Iota Chapter Installed, March 16, 1910 Publication — Phi Beta Pi Quarterly Colors — Green and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Graduate Forrest N. Anderson Stanley L. Green Kenneth B. Uhls Lindsey L. Dyche John D. Pace Merle C. Ruble Frank M. Hoch Harold E. Neptune Lawrence S. Nelson George Marquis Stofer H. Bradley Sullivan F. I. Wilson Seniors John H. Tait Emseley T. Johnson Lee Verne Hill Dar D Juniors Charles C. Kehl Ernest C. Hadley Glen R. Mowery Marcellus Stockton Sophomores Melvin Hereford Justin Blount Charles Curtis Adelebert Chambers Friedrick Schnitzler George Penwell Ralph G. Haines Howard McConnell Pledges George Medill Cecil Hassig Sidney Arbuthnot Karl Wilhelmy Ralph Luhfer Irwin Brown Joe Swartz ' Cecil McHale Ralph D. Russell Fratres in Facilitate Dr. John Sundwall Dr. S. S. Glasscock Dr. S. A. Mathews Dr. W. K. Trimble Dr. Samuel Roberts Dr. George H. Hoxie Dr. H. M. Berger Dr. C. C. Nesselrode Dr. C. B. Francisco Dr. R. D. Black Dr. J. B. Jackson Dr. A. L. Skoog Dr. A. E. Hertzler N. P. Sherwood Clarence Smith 1917 C —357— Ja yliawker ' Fraternities Peek Meyers Milligan Emerson Feierabend Baum Deacon Markley Tippin Mella Pickerel Wilhelmy Evans Stephens Eitien Troup Calene Hershey D. Hilton Burkhead Veatch Hepler Mclntire Weltmer Dennis Carey Johnson H. Hilton Bennie Amis McNaught Morgan Myer Shelley Dewey Bigger Bell Williams 111)1 (l )i MEDICINE Founded at University of Vermont, 1889 Kappa Upsilon Chapter Installed, May 22, 1915 Publication — The Phi Chi Quarterly Colors — Olive Green and White I I —358— ■ Jayhawker l Fraternities 151)1 €i)i ACTIVE MEMBERS Juniors R. D. Grayson, Oskaloosa T. L. Howden, St. Joseph, Mo. W. E. Janes, Spring Hill D. P. Klepinger, Kansas City Sophomores C. Burkhead, Centerville R. W. Emerson, Osborne R. C. Hepler, Cottonwood Falls C. B. Johnson, Lawrence S. E. Mella, Leavenworth D. J. Milligan, Olathe E. E. Tippin, Wichita Freshmen J. L. Calene, Sylvan Grove Burton Meyers, Osborne C. Deacon, Topeka D. D. Markley, Minneapolis F. B. Pickerel, Wichita B. P. Stephens, Kansas City W. W. Weltmer, Smith Center H. J. Veach, Wier City Pre-Medics Senio rs — Co liege J. B. McNaught, Girard Harold Shelley, Elmdale R. C. Mcllhenny, Conway Springs Juniors S. Bennie, Almena F. L. Feierabend, Atchison F. L. Dennis, Stockton Sophomores Joe Akers, WaKeeney R. C. Drury, Newton L. N. Hershey, Abilene A. Troup, Logan Fratres in Urbe Dr. Geo. E. Coghlll Dr. E. Smith W. J. Baumgardner J. B. Milligan E. E. Tippin J. L. Williams Pledges F. A. Dressier, Mankato H K. G. Bell, Kansas City W. R. Carey, Osage L. J. Evans, Clovis, N. M. Dr. B. M. Allen Dr. O. O. Stoland W. W. Swingle E. Coffey, Kiowa C. C. Dewey, Elk City D. Hilton, Strong City A. E. Mason, Beloit M. L. Peek, Arkansas City W. A. Wilmoth, Kansas City, Mo A. C. Eitzen, Hillsboro H. Hilton, Cottonwood Falls J. E. McNalley, Michigan Valley G. F. Welsh, Lyons L. S. Morgan, Arkansas City 1917 «: —359— Jay hawker Fraternities Buchanan Russell Shughart Bell Mahan Ruble Lindsey Wagner Diehl Ackers Smee Slade Reed Rice Orton Madden Crawford Gibson Van Houten Yeokum Fast Davis Shreve Gedney Wakenhut Cooley Lansing Young l)eta Oaxi i 360— ■ Jayliawker -J ' Fraternities ENGINEERING Founded at the University of Minnesota, 1904 Kansas Zeta Chapter Installed, April 17, 1912 Publication — The Gear of Theta Tau Flower — Jacqueminot Rose Colors — Red and Gold ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Willard A. Burton, Mound City Joseph P. Buckhannan, Mineola Paul A. Diehl, Peck James W. Orton, Lawrence Carrol J. Wakenhut. Salina Kingfisher, Okla. Hugh W. Crawford, Lawrence Deane E. Ackers, Abilene Harlan A. Russel, Lawrence George Smee, WaKeeney George H. Yeokum, Okla. City, Ok. Adrian H. Lindsey, Juniors Charles L. Shughart, Winchester Arnold A. Bell, Great Bend Rowland O. Ruble, Parsons Page P. Wagner, Concordia John P. Slade, Clay Center John E. Madden, Auburn Woodman L. Gibson, Lawrence Harold C. Van Houten, Topeka John C. Fast, Hutchinson John B. Shreve, White Cloud Kenneth H. Gedney, Kas. City, Mo. Samuel J. Cooley, Kansas City Yssel Y. Young, Junction City So-phomores Jack C. Lansing, Leavenworth Joe R. Mahan, Independence Pledges John W. Bunn, Humboldt Theodore C. Reid, Stafford John C. Davis, Salina Wendell Wesley, Stafford Joseph S. La Mer, Leavenworth Francis D. Gage, Minneapolis John J. Jakowsky, Independence Geo. C. Nettles, Topeka Chas. D. Seward, Neodesha Robert E. Ferguson, Minneapolis Paul W. McFarland, Lawrence Gordon Saunders, Lawrence H. A. Rice Fratres in Facultate G. C. Shadd J. O. Jones —361— !! Jayliawker Fraternities Flagg Blincoe Jackson Hettinger Murphy Mulloy Gelvin Bruington AUvine Bowersock Beall Terrell Mitchell Greever Kennedy Hake Lott Shinn Gumbiner Cobb Cowgill Gould Baldwin Miller Norton Havekorst Piepenburg 131)1 1 d ia 131)1 : 1917 K -362- ■ Jay hawker Fraternities 131)1 1 dta pbl LEGAL FRATERNITY Flower- Founded at the University of Michigan, 1869 Green Chapter Installed, 1897 Publication— The Brief -Jacqueminot Rose Colors — Claret Red and Pearl Blue ACTIVE MEMBERS Paul R. Greever, Lansing Ernest E. Blincoe, Fort Scott Kenneth H. Lott, Pawnee, Okla. Clifford W. Baldwin, Seneca Vernor J. Bowersock, Wayside Alexander B. Mitchell, Lawrence J. Randolph Kennedy, Fort Scott Seniors Albert N. Murphy, Okla. City, Ok. H. Lawrence Miller, Horton Thomas N. MuUoy, Lincoln Alton Gumbiner, Lawrence John A. Hettinger, Hutchinson William M. Beall, Grantsville Aaron L. Piepenburg, Gillette, Wis. William C. Gould, Dodge City Middlers Russell T. Cowgill, Lawrence Arthur L. Douglas, Crestline Clyde R. Gelvin, Pratt Wallace O. Hake, Minneapolis Walter B. Havekorst, Hanover Jared F. Jackson, Atchison James G. Norton, Newton Kenneth W. Pringle, Alma Earl W. Shinn, Burns Frank H. Terrell, Holton Clarke Bruington, Dodge City William B. Cobb, Casper, Wyo. Henry H. Asher Samuel D. Bishop M. A. Gorrill R. C. Manley Donald S. Flagg, Lawrence Fratres in Facultate Dean James Wood Green William L. Burdick William F. Higgins Edward A. Osborne Raymond F. Rice Fratres in Urbe Wilder S. Metcalf James H. Mitchell Clarence C. Stewart R. M. Perkins Ralph H. Spotts Walter G. Thiele Glendon Allvine Charles H. Cory '  1917 C —363— - ' i iti ' 9iammm Jayhawker Fraternities Henderson Booth Edmundsen Ferguson O ' Donnell Ragle Priest Treece Champlin Ward Hashinger Whitney Gillis Johnson Peterson Wolfe Welker Engle Cole Walters Colt Olsen. NU SIGMA NU ALPHA SIGMA Pledge Society of Nu Sigma Nu : 1917 c —364— [ J ay hawker Fraternities ytxi Sigma ytxi MEDICINE Founded at the University of Michigan, 1882 Beta Theta Chapter Installed, 1909 Colors — Wine and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors Harry H. Olson H. Eugene Ragle Roscoe C. Ward Ray H. Edmiston Juniors Elmer L. Whitney Paul E. Belknap Harry Henderson Sophomores F. R. O ' Donnell M. M. Booth Clifford Gillis Lawrence Engle James D. Colt Edward Hashinger Freshmen Edmund Walters T. L. Johnson Joseph E. Welker Earle R. Ferguson Paul B. Champlin Edward E. Petterson Warren Cole Walter S. Priest Fratres in Facilitate Dr. Mervin T. Sudler Dr. I. G. Hayden Dr. W. L. McBride Dr. P. W. Bohan Dr. J. E. Sawtell Dr. Don Carlos Guffey Dr. R. H. Major Dr. E. T. Gibson Dr. V. W. McCarty Dr. R. D. Ireland Dr. F. W. Kahn Dr. George M. Gray Dr. F. E. Murphv Dr. W. W. Duke Dr. D. C. Guffey Dr. F. I. Ridge Dr. W. T. Fitzsimmons Dr. C. C. Dennie Dr. T. G. Orr Dr. J. B. Cowherd ALPPA SIGMA Pledge Society of Nu Sigma Nu Orville McVandles James B. Weaver Tracy R. Conklin Howard H. Brown Victor K. Blakeley Charles Haddox Franklin DeWolfe : i9i7c —365— Jay hawker Fraternities Schroepfer Brown Crawford Wagner Garver Arlin Foster Roberts Bower Lefevre Hagenbuch Diehl Sparks Anderson Johnson Rolfs Z3au : eta pi : 1917 C —366— I Ja jhav ker - Fraternities I5au ! eta fii HONORARY ENGINEERING Founded at Lehigh University, 1885 Publication— ' ' The Bent of Tau ' Beta Pi Colors — Seal Brown and White A. M. Schroepfer H. W. Arlin B. O. Bower C. W. Hagenbuch L. G. Sparks G. D. Johnson G. H. Yeokum Juniors Page P. Wagner Robert W. Davis Warren R. Newman Clarence Lynn Frank E. Roll H. W. Crawford N. M. Foster E. C. Lefevre P. A. Diehl C. O. Anderson E. L. Rolfs C. F. Sloan Henry J. Gish S. Frank Farley Chas. L. Shughart Hobart F. Lutz and Fraires in FacuJtate P. F. Walker C. C. Cochrane G. J. Shaad C. C. Williams F. L. Brown G. J. Hood H. A. Ro berts J. D. Garver —367— vm- TfHi- ' iri ■TVifrrrtrmMTmifin Jayhawker - Fraternities McFarland E. G. Smith Knight G. E. SmitJ SprouU Carlson Butler Murphy Hoffman Small Egan Crowley Weber Parker Hargett Rush McCaleb Rice Walsh Getgey White Delta I5l)eta pi ■ 1917 C —368— ■ Jay iia wh e r Fraternities LEGAL FRATERNITY Founded 1913 Kansas Chapter Installed, 1916 Publication — The Paper Book ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors William J. Crowley, Kansas City, Mo. Ralph D. Sproull, Lawrence Richard D. Small, Kansas City, Mo. Lee M. Egan, Kansas City, Mo. Frank McFarland, Topeka William J. Weber, Ellinwood Middlers Harry W. Hoffman, Lawrence Guido E. Smith, Colby J. S. Parker, Hill City Errett G. Smith Carl Rice, Coffeyville h Carl B. Butler, Manhattan David E. Carlson, Caldwell John J. Getgey, Mullinville Jay Hargett, Lawrence Nathaniel P. Knight, Lawrence Garnet McCaleb, Lawrence John D. Murphy, Perth Oren N. Rush, Haviland Chas. A. Walsh, Beloit Joe N. White, White Cloud —369— ' Jayiiawker - Fraternities Moore Morgan Flint Pegues Fischer Treweeke Flagg Allvine Thayer Sproull r Koester HuUinger Sigma iDelta (T i JOURNALISTIC FRATERNITY Founded at De Pauw University, 1909 Beta Chapter Installed, 1910 Publication— The Quill Colors— Black and White ACTIVE MEMBERS H Vernon A. Moore, lola Henry Pegues, Hutchinson Cargill Sproull, Lawrence Harry Morgan, Alta Vista Paul E. Flagg, Lawrence Seniors Glendon Allvine, Kansas City Wilbur A. Fisher, Pleasanton Alfred Hill, Topeka Juniors William Koester, Atchison Dick Treweeke, Wichita Edwin Hullinger, Osborne Fratres in Facultate Leon N. Flint Frank B. Thayer S. O. Rice J. W. Evans D. L. Patterson —370— Jayhawker -1 Fraternities Thralls EUedge Snook Smith Sammons Kelley Cress Holland Anderson Walters Winters Haynes Haworth Terrlll Moore Crawford Crum Sigma (Bamma TEp ilon ALPHA CHAPTER Seniors Harry E. Crum Sherwin F. Kelly George B. Sammons Carl O. Anderson Robert H. Crawford Juniors Francis I. Martin Frank E. Holland John O. Kirtland Ray Winters Page P. Wagner Elmer W. Smith Howard E. Cress Charles W. Boughton A. Floyd Snook Sophomores Emmett R. Elledge Ray P. Walters Warren H. Thralls Special Elton Rhine Faculty Erasmus Haworth Richard L. Grider Arthur C. Terrill William A. Whitaker Raymond C. Moore Winthrop P. Haynes Paul H. Teetor : 1917 c —371— ' Ja.ylia vker l Fraternities ' i Brown McFarland Pegues Davis Treweeke Challis Gumbiner MacMurray Dyer Hemphill Dittmer Havekorst Nelson 13 1 Ji{fi)a I3au Founded 1902 at Emerson School of Oratory, Boston, Mass. Installed at the University of Kansas, March 1, 1915 Publication— Tht Phi Alpha Tau Bulletin Colors — Green and White ACTIVE MEMBERS Prof. Arthur MacMurray Alton Gumbiner Hoyt S. Nelson Henry S. Pegues Donald D. Davis Richard L. Treweeke Eugene T. Dyer Frank McFarland Otto H. Dittmer J. V. Challis Walter B. Havekorst David Brown R. P. Hemphill —372— ■ Jayliawker 1 ' Fraternities Gish Farley Deardorff Staggs Uhrlaub Mathews Hull Stryker Metcalf Foster Parkhurst Brown Clawson Benscheidt Williams Sluss Wieters Walker Burke Dunkley Cress Marshall Schoenfeldt Street Sloan Wheeler Lynn Sparks Chase Crum Arlin Kreigh Sigma au Founded at the University of Nebraska, Feb. 22, 1904 Lambda Chapter Installed, May 22, 1915 Publication — The Pyramid Flower — White Carnation Colors — Yale Blue and White ACTIVE MEMBERS R. Chase, Emporia O. Bower, Mound City F. Sloan, Pomona M. Foster, Ellsworth B. Metcalf, Lawrence H. Wieters, Lanham M. Stryker Seniors H. W. Arlin, Carthage, Mo. C. E. C. Burke, Kansas City, Mo. B. H. E. Crum, Lawrence C. F. M. Deardorif, Kansas City, Mo. N. C. W. Hagenbuch, Kansas City, Mo. E. L. G. Sparks, Greensburg A. I. P. Parkhurst, Kinsley E. Juniors M. E. Clawson, Concordia H. R. Cress, Clements F. Farlev, Kansas City H. J. Gish, Abilene H. A. Marshall, CoffeyviUe L. M. Hull, Norton E. H. Shoenfeldt, Independence C. Lynn, Lawrence H. M. Staggs, Lawrence R. Uhrlaub, Lawrence H. R. Kreigh, Lawrence Pledges N. H. Benscheidt, Hutchinson R. L. Brown, Lawrence C. K. Matthews, Kansas City, Mo. G. Dunkley, Lawrence G. F. Street, Lawrence . L. J. Wheeler, lola P. F. Walker W. A. Whitaker Fratres in Facultate Erasmus Haworth C. A. Haskins A. H. Sluss C. C. Williams —373— Jay hawk( r l Fraternities Smith Gibson Swarts Skaer Wilson Barnes Marhofer Bloomheart Childs Spencer McColloch Crowell Howard Farris Starrett Osborn Marr O ' TooIe PHARMACEUTICAL FRATERNITY Founded at the University of Michigan, 1883 Upsilon Chapter Installed, February 22, 1917 Publica tion — The Communicator Colors — Old Gold and Dregs of Wine ACTIVE MEMBERS Seniors O. R. Farris, Norwich H. L. Osborne, Wichita L. P. Swarts, Arkansas City Jtiniors V. Marhofer, Ransom B. McColloch, LawTence G. E. Smith, Coffeyville J. M. Wilson, Douglass Sophomores J. Spencer, Junction City J. S. Starrett, Lawrence R. D. Howard, Peck Freshman J. J. Marr, Lovewell Fratres in Facultate Dean L. E. Sayer , L. D. Havenhill J. L. Bloomheart, Beverlv W. W. Childs, Kansas City P. A. Crowell, Pittsburg S. W. Gibson, Wakeeney R. B. Barnes, Baxter Springs A. T. O ' Toole, Wakeeney H. A. Skaer, Augusta 1917 c —374— ap Squawk Jayhawker -1 THE CAMPUS MAL-ADMINISTRATION CLASSES FACULTY ATHLETICS ACTIVITIES MUSIC VANITY FAIR SORORITIES FRATERNITIES ADVERTISEMENTS CALENDAR : 1917 c —375— I Jayliawker - —376— Jayliawker - The Campus 1 m . « ' ; •;• -■ Mli EblRDD tytL VIElV OniVE:R51TY OnoviK 3 wnii —377— Jayhawker l Mai-Administration j4 Tragedy of Several Axes (A brief synopsis) Act I. — K. U. has a great football team. Play shows the students on the field watching practice Great enthusiasm. Faculty looks on in disgust. Act II. — Scene in front of the Law Building. Pep running over. Students start a big rally. Scene shifts rapidly from building to building. Students invade classrooms and run over the whole campus. A few weak-kneed students look on. Professors take names of some of the rallyers. Act III. — Deliberation of the governing body of the University. Orders sent out for the capture (dead or alive) of the fugitives whose names have been taken. Names are read out by the professors who recognized students. Act IV. — Scene: A faculty court of justice — Fraser Hall. Sound of trumpets. Haut boys enter from left, right, back and front, followed by the judges: Skylark Patterson, Portia Galloo, Judge Burdick and Justice Walker. Enter the prisoners, Flagg, Holden, Waldo, Barteldes, Williams, Owens, Mcintosh and Wilson. Great flourish of trumpets. Judges sedately seat themselves. Judge Burdick: Ho! Are the malefactors here? Antonio ' Donald Flagg (stepping forward): Ready, so please your grace. Judge Burdick: Ye have a serious charge to meet. Thou and thy mates are come to respond to the call of the noble faculty, incapable of pity, void and empty form and dram of mercy. : 1917 c —378— ■ Jaj4iawker Jimmy Ilolden: Justice Walker: Foice{hom the rear) Judge Burdick: Skylark Patterson. Portia Galloo: Judge Burdick: Flagg: Judge Burdick: Flagg: Body of Faculty (in Judge: Mal-Administration God save the mark! What ho! This unseemly jovialness! Ye ' ll soon be cured of that! What ho! : Gillette, sir, Gillette! [General uproar, soon quelled by the faculty centurions] Four score and twenty years ago No, that ' s not it We are gathered Oh, well, you have been disturbing the peace of the faculty. O, most honrubble Judge, may I state my case? These perfidious students, eight in number. Impelled by various sundry ideas of loyalty and pep, Did enter our sacred classrooms, did lead an inglorious Band of Philistines against our sacred portals. For this Unseemly intrusion. I do demand the penalty for their Ignoble crimes. Slam ' em; put ' em out of school — Take a pound at their flesh! O gentle Skylark, be kind; Be reasonable. Remember that the students can do no wrong. Let the case be stated. Antonio Flagg, step forward. [Prisoner steps toward the bar — naturally.] Yes, your honor. Was ' t in the naughty rally . Yes, your honor; but no more Than thousands of others of the many K. U. students, background, muttering): ' Tis evident that he was a ringleader. He ' s too well satified with life, and prosperous in mien, to be otherwise than leader. He cannot be a follower. Away with him! [Exit Flagg, led away to the University dungeon.] The next! Jimmy Ilolden (aside); ' Tis where I get it in the neck! Judge- Was ' t in the rally? Jimmy: Aye, but no active part did I play. Unfortunately am I too well known and popular With the faculty, and some mutt got my name. That ' s how they copped me. Skylark: I demand justice, oh noble judge. Because 2,982 students got away, this young villain Shall not escape. I demand to pound his flesh! Expel him! Judge: Away with him! [Exit young James H.] In the words of mine own noble barber, Next! Guy Waldo (walking forward): I ' m it! Judge: Was ' t thou a ringleader in the perfidious rally? Waldo: Nay, noble, a-a-stchew! judge. Excuse me my unwarranted action Of sneezing; but there seems to be a chilly atmosphere Emanating from the regions of the faculty — nay, I repeat. Judge (reading from the scroll): Thou was ' t seen leading these student Ishmaelites. Waldo: Nay; ' twere not so! Skylark: But look at his villainous countenance; evidently he ' s guilty. Judge: Peace, Skylark. Waldo, has ' t any friends to plead for thee? Waldo: Nay, But one; and she hath gone from town. Judge: Away with him! [Exit Waldo.] Anton Williams [stepping forward with great confidence]: Judge, I was at home in bed Judge [interrupting): Thou was ' t on the Hill at the time! Anton Williams: — Last night, and I said to myself, I ' m stuck! Yes, O judge, 1 was in the rally; I wan ' t a ringleader. I ' ve got pep Like the rest of the bunch, and I didn ' t break up any classes. That ' s the whole story. I guess some prof, got my name; But I couldn ' t hide. My goose is cooked! O tempora; O, Morris! Mischief, thou art afoot — Judge, do your worst! Judge: Jerk him! [Williams is escorted hitherward and outward]. Next to bat! Armine Barteldes: Methinks I ' m up, O judge. —379— 1 Jayhawker Mai-Administration I I Judge: What has ' t thou to say for thyself? Barteldes: Seriously, Mr. Judge, It was a bully lot of fun. I just went with the gang. Maybe a few classes were broken up, but I wan ' t in it. Skylark: O most mighty judge, believe him not. He must suffer For his hideous crime. I demand to pound his flesh! Judge: Hold thy peace. Skylark! Skylark [looking around]: Where is the piece . Judge: Thou must suffer, O Barteldes. Take him away. [Exit Barty.] Seth Owens: Judge: Owens: Skylark: Owens: Judge [angrily]: Owens now batting. Here I am. Cans ' t save thyself. Never could I save anything; I have no friends. My name was taken. No use to talk. I ' ve struck out. Tempus fugit; what ' s the sentence. ' I demand to pound his flesh! O gentle Skylark shut your jaw! Drag him out! [Exit Owen.] Umbrella — no, Raincoat — I mean Mcintosh! Step up! Mcintosh (who has been peacefully slumbering): I didn ' t do it. Never have I seem him before in my life Skylark: See, he confesses. I demand to pound his flesh. Judge: ' Tis evident! Away with him! [Exit Mcintosh.] Allen Wilson: Judge: Wilson: Judge: Wilson: Skylark: Wilson: Judge: Wilson: Who ' s next. ' ' Present! Taft, Roosevelt No; Wilson! Art guilty or not guilty? Not! Not what? What not! Not guilty! I demand Demand and be hanged! Gentlemen! Gentlemen! Renember that the noble faculty And other ladies are present! The case for the students, O judge, is this: There was some of the eff ervescence. Commonly called pep, which must escape from them immediately, And, O Judge, it exploded. Ha! We are getting to the bottom of it! No; with the explosion you rise to the occasion. To continue. The gang raided some of the rooms, and wondrous classes ceased To be held, were broken up. Eight of us notable and diligent Students, equally unfortunate, were reported by the gentle faculty. This ends my plea, O Judge. Be kind, be generous; remember That others besides us were guilty. O learned Judge, Hear the students. List to their words of prayer. Be not harsh, But kind. It is fair, to me it seemeth, that they who In the raid were caught, should suffer; but be merciful! [Judges deliberate.] The decision of the court is hereby announced. Bring in the prisoners. [Students enterl Prisoners, we have listened to the words Of the gentle Portia. We will be merciful. The decision Of the noble judges is: Thou art suspended, O students, For the rest of the year! Peace be to your ashes! i Great flourish of trumpets. Exeunt all. Epilogue — A great scene in chapel. Promise never to hold another Naughty Rally and agree on expulsion as a punishment for the crime. Amid great cheering the prisoners are freed — and all live happily ever after. — (Written especially for the Jayhawker by Billy Wiggleweapon ) Judge: Wilson: Portia: Judge: —380— ■ Ja } ■ i. vvjver Mai-Administration —381— Jayhawker Classes : 1917 : —382— I Jaykawker Faculty —383— n.-;: :::£- ' 2 ' £iJC££iSm ' Jayha vker |g Athletics t  :gt 1917 c —384— ■ Jayiiaw ker ' Athletics : 1917 c -385 [ Jaylia vkor Activities ' 1917 C —386— Jayhawker - Musir —387— ■ Jayhaw ker Humanity Fair —388— ■ Jayhaw ker ig Humanity Fair : 1917 c —389— ! .layliawker l I ! Tfntcrvlews wltl) IFamons 3)rY TCaw The Bone Dn Law had just been passed and the Jayhawk sauntered forth, seeking sympathy. POM-POM GREEVER, who is fond of Pears, hove in sight, and after wiping off his chin and taking a hitch in his suspenders, consented to be interviewed. I want it understood, said Pom-pom, that I have always favored lemons, liquid and longevity. The legislature is depriving us of one of the most sacred rights and that, too, without due process of law. The legislature did not consult me in the matter, and I have grave doubts that the bill will hold water. When it comes to thirst, I put private necessity above public welfare. TUB MULLOY, pride of the Kappa Sigs, who poses in drapery for the Fine Arts at twenty cents an hour, was next approached and asked for his opinion on the law that is to make a Sahara out of the grand old state of Kansas. The law is impossible, quoth Tubby, Ed Schmidt says so, and Ed knows the law. I am a true follower of Falstaff and I am against any legislation that seeks to deprive me of my daily sup of sack. I intend to run for the Legislature next year, and if I win I promise that this vulgar law shall be wiped off the statute books. My campaign slogan will be: ' Long live Irri- gation ' ! AD LINDSEY, who is famed for his kicking, added another kick to his already long list and remarked: The law is all right but it has a bad effect. I never felt thirsty in my life until I heard that the Legislature had passed it. I don ' t know much about law, but it looks to me as if the Legislature had pulled an offside play. I think they should be penalized. Make ' em drink Lawrence water and the law will re re- pealed. HUGH CRAWFORD, head ruff-neck in the Engineering School, was rampant with ire, and it was difficult for the Jayhawk to interview him with safety after the subject was mentioned. I think the last Legis- lature proved themselves to be the champion nuts of the universe in passing this parching law. I ' m not in favor of any laws, as a matter of fact, and I ' d be satisfied if there were no Laws. My platform has always been ' Free Lunch, Love and Liquor, ' and I think that when a state takes your break- fast food away, as this legislature has done, the time for a revolution is ripe. Emma Goldman forever! —390— ' Jayha ' svker interviews wilb Jttcn on l e !6one Dr Xaw — (Tonlinued The Jayhawk strutted but a short distance further when another man-of-affairs was sighted. DOC BURCH, ham-actor, author of Love Lyrics of a Phi Psi and Chairman of the Reception Committee of the Phi Psi House Warming, consented, for a sma ' .l consideration, to allow his opinions on the subject to become public. For the past four years, said Doc, I have kept the Phi Psis in line and I will undertake to say, that with a few minor exceptions, they have tasted but a small amount of liquor. This year, however, Frank McFarland came back from Utah and brought with him some Mormon ideas with thirst-producing effects — my only hope was to have the Bone Dry Law passed, so I arranged to have it done. The safety of our sorority was at stake. It was my master-stroke. I cannot tell a lie. And then breathlessly, around the corner volplaned Doc Mathews of the Physiology Depart- ment But the Jayhawk took flight. (bamma Jpl)l eta lKou5e Dear Everybody: This entire place is upset over a most important matter. You see it ' s like this, we are thinking of giving a Spring party and we feel that we ought to ask the Beta candlestick to come. But really we don ' t need them half as much as we need an extra man. Still the Betas were kind enough to in- vite over candlesticks to their Turkey Pull and we feel awfully indebted. And since they didn ' t in- vite any of us girls it would seem fresh to have any of their men. How about it, Sis, you ' re up on etiquette.? Gail Hall is back in school now and she certainly is a wiser girl than she used to be. And a more economical one as well. There was a time when she would buy two or three eclair ;s a day without a flicker. Now she ' s living on milk and crackers. And th reason. ' ' She is buying much beautiful linen work of all kinds for her Hope Chest. And once in a while she takes a jaunt to Kansas City wh re Hugh is working. We moved last fraternity meeting to take up some social service work. It is so elevating and up lifting, you know, and the first thing we do we are going to put in a telephone in Marion Grav ' s house We may do this unselfish piece of work partly for selfish reasons, for at all hours of the day we are bothered by people calling her up on the Bell phone, and leaving messages for us to give her. Hurrah, for Social Service. Do you all mind if I major in Journalism.? You see, Vera Hill and Mr. Thayer have just announced their engagement and it seems so easy that three of us freshmen have decided to take some work over in the Kansan office. There are others left. I don ' t know what Irma Wullenwaber would do if she would get married. It would just be her luck to marry a man named Jones or White and then she would have nothing to crack jokes on as she now does on her long woozy name. I ' m going to Wilson ' s to get striped ink. They are surely heaps better than any other soft drink. My love to all, Betty. Alpba Xl dla Ifouse Dear Folks: I ' ll settle down for a few moments and write you all. We have been on a tear all evening. May Anderson, Sarah Trant and Gertrude Hurly were alone in the house and we freshmen saw our chance to get even with them. We did too. Tied them in their rooms so they couldn ' t get out by hook or crook. We are going to steer clear of them for they have a deadly look about them that I don ' t like. We have it on Jo Himes all right, she ' s wearing a Phi Bet pin chained to her Alpha XI pin and she came in tonight with the chain broken. She insists that it caught on a large masculine coat button, but it seems to me a much wiser solution to the problem that it caught on the door. Dad, will you please send me some extra money for our Founders ' Day Banquet.? It sure is going to be great. The best of it all is the stunt that the engaged girls have to pull off. At the end of the banquet these blushing damsels will have to get up and walk all around the table. We are sure that Margaret Long, Jo Himes and Mildred Light will take the fatal journey and between you and mo, I wouldn ' t be at all surprised if Irene, Sarah and Ruth take up the relay. Mother will you please tell me if there is anything to keep porch swings from squeaking. It is horribly trying when I ' m studying on week nights, these fine Spring evenings, to hear that squeak down below me. Of course I never use it myself, except on week-ends. You remember Clorinda Aimes — that little girl we met at the station the last time I was home.? Well, Sis, you will sure like her because she likes cats. She has the strangest hobby I ever knew about — of getting all the stray cats in the neighborhood, bathing them and sprinkling them with talcum powder and toilet water and massaging their faces with Pompeiian. The only way we can get rid of them is to take them up to the Medics. I must stop now and study hard. Your loving daughter, Mary S. : 1917 c —391— Jayhawker Sororities IKappa ' Ipl a l)eta Tfouse Z) ar Family: I ' m surely out of sorts today. Clora Riggs, you known is running for the Vanity Fair Con- test and for the last five or six days Rusty Friend has been hanging around an ' nagging at me to buy a Jayhawker so I can vote for her. I suppose I ' ll have to, to keep peace, but where the three dollars are coming from is more than I can see! If Brother could see Clora, perhaps he would gladly advance the money for the good of the cause! Helen Robinson is home now, sick with the scarlet fever. Her brother, Harry, took her home, but came back the next day, in time for his classes, I guess. Some of the girls laughed when I said that and looked at Alma Craig as if she ought to know. Alma just shrugged her shoulders and showed her dimples in that funny little way of hers. They had a date that night, though! Louise and Russell are downstairs now, playing cribbage. They are laughing so uproariously over their newly-found diversion that I can scarcely keep my mind on this prosaic letter. Oh, did I tell you all about May Wood. ' She went on the Hill that day it was so windy, and because her skirts blew up to her knees, our modest Mary, mortified, hired a taxi to come home in. For the sake of Mary ' s dwindling allowance, we ' ll hope for no more windy days. Jessie Craig and Pewee have made up — thank goodness! I guess the Kappa Sigs are as glad as we are — that is, if Pewee was half as glum and touchy as our Jessie was before her special came — yes it was from 1537 Tennessee! I can ' t seem to think of anything very exciting. Life has been devoid of thrills since Frances Saw- yer ' s five-pound box arrived. We are hoping for a few more, but out hopes don ' t seem to mater- ialize very rapidly — Louise, Helen Rob, Jo, Alma, Lyla Atkinson — all these we are so sure of that it seems a shame that Russell, Jake, and all the other men don ' t send the candy. Still, school is not out. Much may happen yet! You asked me about Pauline Carr. She is a Junior but it doesn ' t make any difference if Vic is a Freshman or not. She likes him and he isn ' t too small for her. I must close now. I promised to help Enmia A-Iay write a verse to say to Si over the phone, thanking him for his candy. Al. A. ' s always up to something, let me tell you! And usually some Beta or other is involved in some way or other, too! Buddy, do send the money for Clora ' s votes. Lots of all to all, Your Freshman Daughter and Sister. P.S. — Since I wrote this letter, yesterday, M. A. ' s developed a new case. It is Jack this time. All we sing is Delta Tau Delta songs. Jessie. a)pf a a]p]pa (Bamma IHousa Dearest Everybody: It ' s so thrilling up here that honestly, I don ' t see how I can ever come down to earth again and write a real prosaic letter. Nevertheless, I ' ll shut my doors to the billing and cooing going on down- stairs and try to tell you the news. To begin with, there are exactly eight cases downstairs at the present moment. Do you wonder that I cannot keep my mind upon the mere writing of a letter.? The Kappas might just as well shut up shop as a real sorority now that they are out of the Pan-Hellenic, and open a matrimonial bureau. They could certainly do a ripping business, or rather, the opposite from ripping, I should say. Well, this isn ' t telling you the news, is it. ' Before I start let me correct a statement of mine that might read wrong. When I said there were eight cases downstairs, I didn ' t mean they were all in the same room; dear me, no! It ' s warm enough to use the porch, you know. And then, our house is built just admirably for just such emergencies. They don ' t always happen like this, but when there are so many it ' s good to have several rooms for them. Where th • cases can be quarantined separately. There is not so much danger of contagion, you know. You ' ll want to know right away about Ogden and Lu -ile, won ' t you Yes, it was a surprise to us fully as much as to you all, but we made up for the shock they gav ■ us, all right! The night that the candy came, Ogden of course called to take Lucile home and we made him walk down between two rows of us to get Lucile. He was so fussed as to think we were a gang of dancing imps instead of demure Kappa Kappa Gammas. Nell is a puzzle to ail of us. She seems to be right fond of Bill Weaver at present, but alas, we hope Bill is not being led on under false pretenses. It is told by truthful persons that a certain rather cor- pulent and diamond stick-pinned traveling man remarked that he was going to marry beautiful Nellie some day. To look at Evelyn Strong and Alma Craig, would you think that they had anything at all in com- mon. ' Well, they have! Both of them have all the symptoms of a certain germ, and some little bug I • will get them some day, without a doubt. However, Evelyn ' s bug will be of the entomology genius, I I species Clawsonia, while. Alma ' s is the genus Beta, species Robinsonia. Both seem at present, h owever, ' ' to be enjoying their dangerous state. We are all just sick about Ames Rogers. He has been trying so hard to live up to Virginia ' s rigid requirements and then he came just one short of making one of the main ones, that of making Phi Beta Kappa. I ' d think that reall) it ought not to make any difference at all for he is handsome enough for this one deficiency. zz: 1917 c ' —392— Jayhawker l —393— I Jayliawker Sororities It must be late, for Mary, Hester and Doris are just saying good night to Ralph, Plukie and Rudie. I ' ll have to say good night to all of you and go to bed. O, may I bring Blanche Simons home with me next week end? She and Pat wanted to look at some of the furniture at Keith ' s and Abernathy ' s, and I thought I ' d like to have Blanche stay with me. Yours ever, HaZ ELTON. (ri)l Ome a IKouse Mumsie Dear: It ' s surely a hard lot to be a Freshman. Why! you never can have a date on week nights without trying to sneak around it some way or other. But you just wait until I ' m a senior. Then I ' m going to have some fun. Why! you know Mrs. Brown called up Edna Davis and when Edna told her that she was engaged to Mitch and intended to have all the dates with him she wanted to, Mrs. Brown said, That ' s all right, dear girl, and I will give you special permission. Gee, I wish I was engaged. Mother Dear, I ' m taking entomology, the same course as Alma Craig with Betas as instructors. And O, I do hope that I will get the same species of bug that they say Alma will some day. It would look lovely with my Chi Omega pin. Mary Gossard is so happy and relieved that I fair ly envy her. The reason for her great joy is that she just received a notice from Gus Bit7.er saying that she relinquished all claims on Red Craig and handed him over bodily to Mary. Now Mary feels perfectly free to exert her charms upon Red with- out encroaching on Gus ' rights. Louise Imus is back visiting us now, at least she is at our house for a few hours. The rest of the time she is taking a course in athletics from Potsy Clark. Funny, but Louise never seemed to be the athletic kind at all, did she. ' O, Mother, I just love fraternity life, it is so helpful. All the girls are always ready to do every- thing in the world for you, that they can. Why, Cora Shinn, who goes with Fat Nelson, fairly grabbed Rook Woodward for Violet Kilgore, and Violet, Dear child is so grateful. She ' s forever in Cora ' s debt and goes around thanking her profusely. There is another thing I just love about College, w:henever things go dead wrong and lovers depart, there ' s always someone else left. Why, I just wish you ' d see Marie and Stockie. Marie thinks that Stockie is mighty sweet. Why in fact, they are crazy about each other. They ' re so confiding, always whispering to each other when they are not chewing gum. You all remember Thelma Wharton. ' Everything is setting purty in her direction. We really believe she is engaged to Cherry down at Baldwin although she isn ' t wearing his Delta Tau pin. Itasca has given up all of her frivilous ideas now. In fact she cares very little for men anymore and is planning on being a Red Cross Nurse. Irene McMannus is decidedly fond of the idle rich and all she does is just ride, and ride, and ride a big Chalmers. It ' s a wonder she can associate with those of us who ride in taxis and jitneys. Oh, we ' re hoping for another drag yet this year from Alice Davis. I ' m sure she ' ll have a Sig pin because she sits around v ith that far away look in her eyes and blushes when Walter is mentioned. Well I guess I can begin to come home week-ends now. Things are beginning to grow rather dull after the party. O, Mother, I am just crazy to get a sweater like Mary Waite ' s. It ' s so easy to do, too. Mary just asked Lefty Sproull for his. There ' s Harry just coming out of the Delta Tau door so I must close. Ever yours. Opal. Si ma liiaipipa IKouse Dearest Dad and All the Rest of You: At last we have a house hero! Captain Sam Fairchilds of Company H came back one night in all his glory and all his spurs and took our Mona Clare to the dance. How proud we all are! O, people it ' s just wonderful to live across the street from the Sigma Nus. It puts us on such friendly terms v ith them. They can just run over at any hour of the da y and we can borrow anything from salt to soap from them.. Dad I ' m getting to be so economical in these days of high living. I didn ' t ever know before I pledged Sigma Kappa that I could do it, but you know they told me that it was all right to wear out all my old party dresses to school. And I am. doing it too, it makes an awful hit. Did you know we were some high steppers in society. ' Yes, sir, we have a girl here who is a lead- ing society belle of Topeka. It ' s Lillian Martin, you know. She goes home every week-endor so and gives a party and then, O, bliss! The next day there is a column or so in the Topeka Capitol or Journal World about it. And I guess she is the only girl on the Hill who carries a swagger stick. O, yes, and she always comes back from Topeka with a corsage. We have some social standing from Lillian, I want you to know. I ' ve made such a grand friend up here — Margaret Young. I just wish you knew her. She ' s a whizz, all the boys just love her, and no matter where she goes she makes friends with men, even on : 1917 c —394— Jayha vke -j Sororities the train. I wish I were like her, she ' s jolly and loves to dansant and sing better than anything in the M orld. She ' s cute, too. Always keeps her dates waiting just ages for her while she dabs on more rouge. Father won ' t you please get me some long black ear-rings like Agatha Kinney ' s. ' I believe I would be more popular if I had ' em, it ' s easy to be devilish with ear-rings. O, you wouldn ' t care if I got married some day, would you. ' I am so envious of Mrs. Dosbaugh that I am just wild to marry and live in a little apartment. Goodie, Mony Clare is going to Topeka, tonight. That means that we can sit out on the porch as long as we want tonight and never pay any attention at all to the old date rule. I must stop now and fuzz-up Floss Irene ' s hair for the party, so good bye. Send my check soon, please, I want to buy a new pink sweater. It will make such a hit with, my red hair. Lots of love, Violet. ) pl  eta bi lfou5e Dear Folks: I have a new party dress. We ' re going to give a Spring party, you know, I needs must look my classiest. I ' ll be home this week end to go shopping. Mother, so please don ' t be busy. We are becoming more and more popular, now that it is out that we are going to give a party. Funny, but just everyone seems to know it. You should see Jack Hettinger! He ' s become such a fixture here, since the rumor got out that he hasn ' t even time to eat lunch with the Sigs. Wouldn ' t it be a joke if he didn ' t get here after all his trouble. After heaps of opposition on Glad I.ukan ' s part, we finally passed a rule in last fraternity meeting forbidding all the sisters to do their studying in any private office of any professor, because they feared the consequence of Mick and Mix mixing at the next Pan-Hellenic mixer. (You all won ' t understand this unless you remember that Mick Murphy and Dr. Mix are rivals for the favor of Glad. O, yes, and at the same meeting. Sister Smithmeyer moved that the fraternity meeting close earlier, since she has to be home by eleven o ' clock. Harold Longnecker certainly must walk slowly, eh. ' You know that chic brown hat of Haze! Carson ' s. ' Well, we finally offered a reward to any person who could successfully kidnap it. And some one — we won ' t divulge lier name — was broke enough to seize this opportunity of reimbursing herself. Hazel was hatless for a while. We almost didn ' t get the Spring party by at all. And merely because of the popularity of Mar- garet Fitch. She opposed the motion on the claim that she is such a general dater, that she simply couldn ' t decide whether to give her original to Sigma Chi, Pi K A, Sigma A. E, Phi Psi, Alpha Tau, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa, Beta Theta Pi, or Phi Gamma Delta. Which one will it be after all, I wonder. ' Mother, you will be sorry to hear that Jean Lindsay hasn ' t been at all well all year. She ' s had to go home every week-end to recuperate from her weeks ' work. I wish you would please never let brother play football. I ' d hate to have him cause any girl such serious heart trouble as Sam Stewart is causing Jean. Honestly, its serious! I ' m surely glad Jane Parmenter is in school, otherwise we would all certainly look like dubs! With- out even being elected, she has been dear enough to appoint herself as the artistic designer and critic of the Pi Phi sisters ' hats, shoes, dresses and hair. Well, people, even though I never find an ideal man, one of my sisters has one, and I shall rejoice unselfishly in her good fortune. It ' s Gert Shepherd, you know, and the perfect man is Larry Winn. To see them together you would almost be lead to believe that he thought she was just about perfect, too. I have to go to the library now with the gang, so good bye. Lots of love, Charlotte. P. S. — Please send my check right away. Mamma, and add ?4.00 more. I owe some money for books! Love to all. C. Dear Sister Dorothy: I want to tell you my latest hobby. I have developed the greatest interest in music lately. I am going to enter the Fine . rts school next year. K. U. has the most wonderful band, cause Fuzzy plays in it and Oh, Dorothy, I think F ' uzzy is simply grand. I do wish I could have a house party when school is out. I ' d have Mame Garrett and Gene Cook. They ' re just the most fun and Pauline and Monty would just have to come, too. You know we re- ceived a marked copy of the Fort Dodge paper stating that Mr. Angevine ' s wife of Lawrence, Kansas, had been visiting him. Pauline did visit him, but insists that she isn ' t his wife. I ' d have Golda Jones : 1917 C —395— Jayhawker Sororities and Fred Rustenbach too, Golda thinks Fred Is awfully cute. I can ' t just decide whom I could have for myself. You know Allen Compton had me down to Kansas City and we went to see all the cabarets and sights. I didn ' t get home until awfully late, but 1 did have the best time. I suppose maybe I should have him, but O, dear, I would so love to have Fu7.7.y. I might have had Rusty Friend, but I guess I can ' t now. I had a few dates with him, but the girls simply refused to let me have any more. Rusty has an awfully nice car and one night we had the most fun sleigh riding. But it never pays for freshmen to argue with upperclassmen so I had to give him up. Dorothy you should be glad you didn ' t stay in school. You know they actually passed a rule limiting the telephone conversations to forty-five minutes. The Kappa Sigs think it is horrid. Pewee can never say all he wants to. I wish I could have mid-week dates all the time like Katherine Reding has. It certainly is lucky for her that Jack Elliott is an out-of-town man. O, let me tell you, Katherine is going to he the next president of the W. S. G. A. We ' re just going to step right out in politics. We have at least one vampire in the Sisterhood, Peg Reinisch still plays the roleof Theda Bara for us. Really Dorothy she smoked a cigarette once when she was on a steak roast. Lucy Means is president of the Pan-Hellenic now. Pll bet we don ' t let the Kappas slip anything over on us. We ' ll have to be careful too, cause they certainly are the limit. Pm afraid we ' ll have a hard time during rushing next year though. You know what an awful temper Vesta Talbert has. Well, she ' s just furious because she wasn ' t elected rushing Captain for next Fall and she insists that she will never bring back that wonderful Hudson Super Six with her. I do hope we can inveigle some more cars into pledging Alpha Delta Pi next year. Doc has been trying to make Jessie Buck put on his pin for some time, but Jessie won ' t put it on. I surely wish the Delta Taus could put out their pins. I certainly wouldn ' t turn one down. I wish I could get a pin before I leave school, it would make my Alpha Delta Pi pin look much prettier. Well Dorothy, I must close now and study because the girls want me to be a Phi Beta Kappa. Lovingly, Delii.ah -A.lpl)a (ri)l Ome a IKou e Dearest Folks: 1 think I shall get married sometime so don ' t be surprised. The Alpha Chis have started a matri- monial bureau. They guarantee cases to all members, even myself, and swear they will culminate in engagements. At least two of which a year will be topped off by marriages. Hurrah, there ' s a chance for me. Langmade and McKernan did it last year and I may be one of the two next year. Do you know I felt frightfully dense at the dinner table tonight, Dorothy Button declared that she owned one piece of furniture already. A Davenport! And the girls just roared. I can ' t see why, can you. Please tell me if you see the point in the very next letter. One of our most conscientious girls is in disgrace now. I ' m sure I ' m glad I ' m not in her shoes! It ' s Mary Nicholson. They may even take her pin off of her because she featured in the Sour Owl. Say, I always manage to be peeking down stairs on Sunday nights. We have a regular drama enacted. Scene, Alpha Chi Drawing Room. Dorothy Button and Ross Davenport seated on the piano bench deeply engrossed, door bell rings. A hurried hand clasp. Enter Red Hughes, Dorothy turns slowly aound on the bench and casually extends her hand in greeting. In the rear a door slams. Red seats himself where Ross had been, two seconds before. That sounds exciting, doesn ' t it. Well, it sure is. We had a called meeting this afternoon .to decide a very important matter. Ann McMeel put the problem before us. It seems that a certain gentleman in Hutchinson has a mustache to which Ann objects. She pleaded v ith us to suggest means of removing it. After a lively discussion lasting an hour we were forced to lay the matter on the table. Poor Ann, she is so worried. I hope the question is settled soon. We ' ve been having more fun Sunday nights, and the joy of it is that the boys wash the dishes. We freshmen, who aren ' t fortunate enough to have dates are exempt. The select men invited are LeRoy Peek, Benton Myers, Innis Whitehead, Amos Wilson and Frog Heart with a scattering of others now and then. Excitement reigns high! Bess Ulrich has an out-of-town lover, he ' s from Kansas City and comes every Saturday night, but she won ' t tell what his name is. I simply must close now. Do send me some stamps soon and my tooth brush, that I left at home last week-end. Lovingly yours, Mar; OKIE. : 1917 C —396— ■ Jay hawker Fraternities PHI DELTA THETA Founded — As a recruiting organization for Mexican War Number Chapters — Too many. Number Members — Equal to that of the I. W. W. The Kansas chapter house, a mansion of the Benjamin Harrison period, is located in the backyard of the Lee ' s College Inn. The site was selected for the benefit of those members who cannot eat hot dog and sauerkraut three times daily. Kansas Phi Belts are very consistent students the chapter having occupied the same relative position in fraternity averages for several years. Among clever members are Fred McEwen and Lucien Dyche who once wrote Quoth the Raven in the remarks column of a sorority guest book. The Pin — Look at any Sigma Phi Sigma. PHI GAMMA Founded — By Romulus and Remus . Number Chapters — Unbelievable. ( h umber Active Members — None. Kansas chapter owns an edifice resembling THE Vanderbuilt home in New York (it has windows). It is located near the police station and three miles from the Hill, making an excellent location. Dramatic talent abounds. Among the gifted performers at the Green Hall theater are Otto Dittmar and Ray Hemphill. These stars have attained such renown as to assure tnem places in any Dra- matic Club production. In fact their influence is so great that any frosh desiring to join the organization should become a Phi Gamm providing he has seen Jack Challis and the rest of the boys and then still wants too. Pt ' w— Fashioned from center of an ace of diamonds. Still recognizes relationship with this particular ace and the fifty-one brethern. Colors — Crimson; denoting vigorous red-blooded men. Motto — We are the Dramatic Club. SIGMA CHI Founded — It wasn ' t. Somebody discovered it. Number of Chapters — Your guess is as good as ours. A umber of Members — Have a heart; the} ' re buying a house. Kansas chapter came into contact with a real estate agent and now owns a brick tenement on Tennessee street. At least the Frosh think the chapter owns it. Sigma Chi can be found in everything including all the city wards, precinjti, and dutch. The chapter ' s steward attended Plattsburg last year to get pointers on feeding a half-million. Jack Heddinger who knows he is a great man, and Dick Treweeke who suspects it, are among the Kansas heroes. Kenny Gedney, beerless cheerleader, also deserves mention. Pin — Shaped like a cross but more common. Colors — Black and Blue. Motto — To be a Sigma Chi pledge you must mix with masses. SIGMA NU Founded — By Pharoh ' s Daughter Number Chapters — Makes no difference. Number of Members — A plenty. Two main parties featured the Kansas chapter ' s activity this year — Republican and Democrat. A few minor parties at Brick ' s also have achieved prominence. Dick Williams, savior of Swede Wilson ' s front billiard table, is the guardian angel. Democracy is the watchword and no graduate of the local chapter will allow a brother or son to pledge Sigma Nu at Kansas. The members are very adventurous and have penetrated the dark depths of many alleys to the East of Massachusetts street. Pin— Is in the shape of a dried prune and contains a diamond which is always good for six bits. Color — Generally conceded to be tan. Motto — Associations make the man. Look at us. —397— ■ JayhaAvker l Fraternities ALPHA TAU Founded — Skin Greever doesn ' t know. A umber Chapters — The epidemic is being checked. Active Members — Few. Dead — The rest. The Kansas chapter occupies a house in the Jones pasture south- east of Lawrence. The house is a model structure with stained floors, handcarved woodwork, and Horse Shoe tinted wall paper. The chapter would like to move if it could find a spot more secluded and away from the noise of the city. The Pit! — Is a cross between a square and a pair of ice skates. The engraving depicts Skin Greever shaking hands with Jun k Herriot and thanking him for not coming back to school. Colors — Bruce Baker says those he got from the ritual cere- mony were black with a touch of blue and green. Motto — H.C.L. does not bother us — We have a cow and a garden. PHI KAPPA PHI Founded — When nobody was looking. Number of Chapters — Steadily increasing with growth of military academies. Number of Members — Proportionate to intelligence of rushees. Number o A umber Dead President Wilson is the most prominent Phi Psi. He believes in the abolition of fraternities. The Kansas chapter is building a house and Dick Small ' s youngest son has been selected to make the dedicatory speech. Tscheese Flintom, who admits he would make a good cheer leader and Lefty Sproull a member of the permanent student body, are prominent members at Kansas. A decided stand has been taken against dances since Tommy Thompson and his Phi Psi Relief Matinees became a thing of the past. Any Phi Psi who has eaten at the house for three weeks can bark. The Pin — Consists of a shield for defense to which a Pi Phi salad fork is attached. Color — Yellow and Green. Motto — What is life with Sui Pegues. BETA THETA PI Founded — In the East. f Chapters — No one seems to care. Living Members — About 23 1-2. Members — Those at Kansas. This fraternity is strong in the East. Kansas is in the West. Kansas chapter is a stone mansion damaged by improvements. The sanctum has a spacious cellar well filled with treasurers and steadily becoming more crowded. The chapters has leaders in every- thing including H. Merle Smith who leads a local choir. Among the prominent members are Ames Rogers, cabaret idol, and Vic House- holder who hopes to complete a treatise on snakes if the bone-dry law is killed. The Pin — Look at any crossing cop. Color — Dark Brown. Motto — We dominate K.U. politics. S.A.E. Founded — They were just fool in Number Chapters — No Sig Alph seems Number Members — We can ' t count to know, ' em. Kansas chapter consists of the football captain, several track men and Miles Gates. The address of the chapter changes too often to be generally known but the headquarters is in East Lawrence. Athletic ability on the part of a rushee overcomes any number of blackballs. Non-secrecy features the Kansas chapter — they don ' t care how loud they talk in their own house or anybody else ' s. Merle Thorp is a Sig. Alp. He ' s gone. The chapter has lost six men since last year. One graduated and Dean Templin got the others. The Pin — Look at almost any frosh athlete. Color — Deep Scarlet. (Gates ' nose is about the proper shade.) Motto — F he can pay his board get Him. 1917 C —398— Jaylia vker -J ' Fraternities PI KAPPA ALPHA Founded — The Civil War caused it all. Number Chapters — No respecting Pi K will tell. Number of Members — Astounding in local Order of Fried Eggs Thirteen hundred dollars is a gang of initiates and starving rations but the Kansas Chapter has sacrificed that amount to live next to Chi Omega. A very efficient house committee headed by Don Flagg, of anughty rally fame, hopes to corner enough necessary wherewith for a house by next year. Chief among local notables is George Sammons who has been here long enough to know better, and several fledges who have never passed anything but the bread. The Pin — Is shaped like a Gillette safety razor, but does not cost as much. Colors — Red and Black shuffled. Motto — In numbers there is strength. KAPPA SIGMA Founded — By the Brewery interests. humber of Chapters — Late figures unavailable. h umber Members — Enough for a standing army. An extremely well ventilated shack with cord wood floors, houses the Kansas chapter. The badge is a Woolworth device worn be- tween the second and third buttons of the vest. Most prominent among Kansas members is David Rothschild Dirge, a dainty dancer who does not care how much he walks on other people ' s feet. No freshman is pledged who does not own three dress suits and know how to stick his little finger out when drinking. Ihe Pin — Look at any laundry queen. Color — Absolutely no issue. Motto — Two-bit limit be damned. Sky blue or nothing. ■ i ' ! ;; DELTA TAU DELTA Founded — As men ' s branch of VV. C. T. U. Number Chapters — In all big schools, including Baker. Active Members. — Very rare. The Kansas chapter is really a college Commercial Club. Sev- eral of the members, including Montgomery, Gelvin and Nordstrum, have worked out economic theories in practice which are too deep even for the faculty economists. The members have agricultural tendencies due to previous environment. The Kansas chapter featured its serenades until the hospital authorities answered the appeals of numerous patients. The members have started a fund to buy a doorbell for the house. The Pin — Is shaped like a warped caramel and is very romantic, with its engravings of stars, eyes, moon, etc. Colors — None, but some of the more prominent members have a leaning toward gold and silver. Motto — Down with the graft. ACACIA Founded — 100() B. C. (Before civilization) Number Chapters — A umber Mem rrs — Depends on treasury. Any bricklayer, stoneworker or expert in the fifty-seven varities of Masonary is elegible for membership in Acacia. The Kansas chapter was discovered years ago and since that time the information has spread until at least a third of the students know of the order. Acacia resembles the other fraternities in that it occu- pies a house, runs a table, gives dances, and is listed in the scholar- ship standings. The Badge — Resembles a Wolrd ' s Almanac cut in two and has engraved on it a picture of Ross Clayton strangling an ant eater. Colors — A conglomeration of Blues. Motto — Mystery unto all including collecting agencies. 1917 C —. 99— ' . i«(ns4  iwv waBPV!r na«URM I Jay hawker g Fraternities « I PHI KAPPA Founded — It wasn ' t. Chapters — One-half Active Members — Bill Weber. Aside from Bill th pcampus is infested with the other inactives. Their home is a mammoth structure towering above the Acacia and Kappa Sig back yards. The strenuous efforts put forth in sing- ing Phi Kappa songs has caused many weak freshmen to shun the order. Other noticable members are Havekorst, Crowley, Brown and Dyer Brothers. Motto — We will be a fraternity. KANZA Founded — In Swede ' s back room. Number Chapters — One-half. Number Members — This organization, which usurped its title from an organiza- tion of Campfire Girls, hopes to thrust its petition into the fraternity grab-bag some day and emerge with a Delta Upsilon charter. Their chief claim for a charter is that a past president of Delta U has been able to live in the same house with them for two years. Kanza has some of the biggest men on the Hill, including Mark Adams, who is six feet, four, in his Hole-proois. As a proof of the local ' s activity they have had their pitcures taken more than any fraternity in school. Also ruined more good nights ' sleep with their serenades. Pin — Combination of P.E.O. and Knights of Phythias badges. Colors — Gray and blue for individuality. Motto — If you don ' t get ' em we will. PI UPSILON Founded — With good intentions Number Chapters — One too. Active Memhe s — Those who have gone. A vigorous, red-blooded. Manly Bunch, inhabiting a frame hovel on Fourteenth street, which has more rooms and less space than any house in town. Pi Upsilon is prominent because of its spirit of hopefulness — it has been petitioning Psi U since the founda- tion of North College was laid. The chapter is made up of many fine men such as Chimmy de Nutt, anteseptic phenemenon; and Ross Davenport, who found the Button. Other prominent members are dashing, dare devil, Glendon Allvine, the malted milk fiend somnolescent convalescent Joe Gaitskill, and other tough gangsters. Pin is shaped like a scrambled egg and has engraved on it a picture of Marcellus Stockton giving his Students Day address. Colors — Dark Brown Taste. Motto — Why should we worry.? It took Shakespeare a cen- tury to become famous. SIGMA PHI SIGMA Founded — -It ' s a deep mystery. Chapters — -One too many. Number of Members — Surprising. This crowd of manly young fellows will sport a chapter of Chi Phi some day providing the investigating committee stays away from Lawrence. Their handsome home, formerly the Phi Psi man- sion, is a modern structure having been built since Quantrell held his hemp feast here. No Sigma Phi stands out prominently now since that eminent journalist, Paul Brindle, left to revolutionize the newspaper game. Pin — Look at any Phi Delt. Color — The Sigma Phi ' s are democratic — they draw no color line. Motto — We have a big field for pledging because we don ' t try to take a man until everyone else is through. ' —400— ; JayhaNvker ; : 1917 . ■ Jayhawker l I i 1917 C ■ Jayhawker A tmospliere Y OU WANT ATMOSPHERE IN YOUR PHOTOGRAPH JUST AS MUCH AS ANY PAINTER DESIRES IT IN HIS PIC- TURES. OUR PHOTOGRAPHY IS A MEANS FOR MAKING REAL PICTURES WITH BEAUTY OF TONE AND LINE— That is Why We are the Official Photographers to the Jayhawker SQUIRES ' Studio Devoted to PHOTOGRAPHY WE CARRY EASTMAN KODAK SUPPLIES : 1917 c ■ Jaylia vker l mm. JAYMAWhlZlNG There ' s a reason YouVe ( 5 old ds Ljou looK GOSSARD ' S VARSITY .:55 Pdirons ore rec uesied io meniionTHt JAYHAWKER. 5 I : 1917 c ■ Jayhaw ' ker l 1917C ' Jayhawker l i -I JAYHAWKIZiNG. When BCTTtR ones are bunt not 5tu|fed Batroni are requested to mention THL JAYHAWKER. : i9i7C ; Jay hawker In this wonderful month of May When Spring is fulfilling her promises we wish to extend to the young people of K. U. our Compliments and our Well Wishes. lanes Bullene Hackman : i9i7C : Jayhawker l JAYHAWKIZiNG Eoentudll!--j, I uohtj noi haoe you a little fdirtj In ijour home, Ask the w n uoho 01X5 05 one. riational Jolj Sinooke Pialrons are recjue stated to mention THE JAYHAWKC R. 3 : 1917 c ■ Jayl a ' ker - Brick ' s Oread Cafe Just a Step from the Campus Our Fourth Birthday When school opens again next September, the Oread Cafe will cel- ebrate its fourth birth- day. The event will mark the beginning of our fifth consecutive year of service to the students and the faculty of the University of Kansas. And they have been busy years. A Story of Improvement The University had no first class restaurant when the management of the Oread Cafe first began business. With the erection of our new and excellently equipped building we were placed in a position to cater to the wants of the stu- dents; and the years just past are years of im- provement for us. Our dining room was en- larged, remodelled and redecorated. Our kitchens were refur- nished with the most improved models of ranges and serving ta- bles to be had. Our system of menu con- struction was constantly revised, with the end ever in view of making our meals the greatest possible value for the money. Lastly, our force of experienced cooks and bakers was added to until we have today an organization without a superior in Lawrence. Feeding the Student It ' s no easy task — this feeding of 400 students thrice a day and keep- ing them supplied with fountain drinks and light lunches in between times. The thing has to be done scientifically and ca re fully : there are countless matters requir- ing the most scrupulous management. Yet stu- dents who eat at Brick ' s never com- plain of their food. They do not know what an undercooked or an over-cooked meal tastes like: and they suffer none of the weary monotony of the same old thing for each meal, that is inescape- able at boarding houses. It ' s a Student Institution And now, after four years of catering to the student wants, we can safely say that we know better than any one else just how they should be taken care of. Through it all we have had the earnest co-operation of the students; and scarce a one of our regular patrons does not feel that Brick ' s is his own restaurant — a restaurant that suits his own par- tic u la r requirements. That ' s why the students stay by us. What ' s here they have put here, and they use it as their own. Extending the Service This year, with the addition of our new banquet room, and an extra force of workers to take care of the cater- ing end of the business, we are better prepared than ever to handle the gastronomic side of the student ' s affairs. The students know it and they let us know it. That ' s why, when they wanfjusta plain meal, or a fussy Sunday night supper, or a midnigh t feed, or a banquet for the Club or the Frater- nity — that ' s why they come to Brick ' s Oread Cafe E. C. BRICKEN, Proprietor. : 1917C Jayhawker 1917 1 1 ' Jaj ' hawker ESTABLISHED IN 1877 The Merchants National Bank OF LAWRENCE William Docking, President C. W. McKeen, Vice-President M. Newmark, Vice-President W. F. March, Cashier F. C. Whipple, Assistant Cashier «J Capital and Surplus, $250,000 Equipped to Give First Class Service M. Newmark, President F. C. Whipple, Cashier The Merchants Loan and Savings Bank Affiliated with the Merchants National Bank and under the same general management PAYS 3% ON TIME DEPOSITS AND ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. LOANS ON REAL ESTATE M. Newmark Eben Baldwin Carl W. McKeen Eli Wilson DIRECTORS: B. E. Wilson J. W. Shaw Geo. A. Esterly Carl Graeber G. M. Smith Hugh Blair W. J. Cummings, Jr. William Docking The Oldest and Largest Bank in Douglas County : i9i7C Jayliawker i I : 191T.C ' Jayhawker -l NEVER IN YOUR LIFE Was there a reason why you should not take a chance on your buying of wearing apparel as now. Quality today is more important than ever before and to be sure you get it, buy from reliable stores that handle reliable goods. You ' ll find our manufacturers are putting more quality into their merchandise than any others in the market. SEVEN STORE QUANTITY BUYING Puts more quality into the apparel for you at the price. At any of these good stores you ' ll find Top-Notchers of value, the newest styles of clothes, hats, shoes and other fur- nishing goods that will interest you. They ' re making a big hit with the live young men. PECKHAM ' S Lawrence, Kansas The Great Western Clo. Co. Peckham ' s Clay Center, Kan. Baldwin, Kan. The Sterling Clo. Co. Holton, Kan. The Onaga Clo. Co. Onaga, Kan. The ToUes Clothing Co. Wellington, Kan. The Cox Clothing Co. Brunswick, Mo. : 1 17 c Jayliawker l ? I : i9i7C J Jay hawker |k 1! ' Sb sJ RSWJ Mtility - Seroice - Elegance Opened irx Ma 1015 lltra- modern in. equipment, complete washed air -Oentiladfid system Mnioue in tRe courtesy of its Ser )ice 5 O O Rooms Ratfe fromf 2? Operated ' by WKifraore Hofel Corrvpany V]i dep tfve Persorval Direct ' iorv. oF .S.J. ' Whitftvore at JosephReichl : i9i7«: Ja yhawker l : 1917 c An Organization of Super- Craftsmen Supported by the Most Thoroughly Equipped Plant in the West. Yours to Command in the Production of College Annuals This Annual Printed and Bound by Union Bank Note Company Printing, Lithographing, Steel and Copper Plate 10th and Central KANSAS GiTY, MO. Jayhawker l Capital, $100,000.00 Surplus, $100,000.00 Watkins National Bank Eleventh and Massachusetts Streets 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 foreign. Its Travelers ' Cheques are self-identifying and the most convenient form of carrying funds. It pays interest on Savings 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 safety and ability to ac- commodate. 1917C - •Ja lia s ' .ker -1 ' : 1917 1 : ' Jayhaw ' ktvr l Style ind Quality PREDOMINATE IN T e House of Kuppenheimer ' ■ ' . ■wwiiiiiin 1. ( oiiyiit ' ht 11)17 House of Kuppenheimer fopyrisht 191T House of Kuppenheimer A remarkable range of models including the featherweight lined models, which are especially desirable for the hot summer days, and also comfortable and suitable for wear the year round. Robert E. House :an9i7c ' Jayhawker l 1917 C ! Jayhawker L I L_i N U D LEE ' S COLLEGE INN : 1917 c JayhawkerlK; I i ISH : i9i7C ] Jayha vker l Visitors to Kansas City, Welcome TWICE Welcome — welcome not only to Kansas City, but welcome to Kansas City ' s and the Southwest ' s greatest store, Emery. Bird, Thayer Company. A trip through this store has both pleas- urable and educational advantages to make it worth while. Here may be seen each day what is vir- tually a world ' s fair, including thousands of different articles of the highest types of merchandising. From the stolid comforts of winter to a fresh breath of springtime is but a step from one department to another ; here a touch of the Orient; now the inde- finable somethingness of domesticity makes the heart leap with warmth. Here may be found methods of business as liberal, as broad as it is possible to make them. Our service, probably the best known characteristic of this establishment, is something of which we are justly proud. It bespeaks courteous treatment; fair deal- ing, both as to price and to merchandise; wide, roomy aisles, attentive salespeople; and the thousand and one little attentions offered the customer or visitor which makes his shopping trip one of pleasure. AGAIN— YOU Here may be found, also, all the conven- iences and comforts that go to make this store a downtown home. There is the Tea Room for one thing, known throughout the entire West for its unexcelled cuisine and hygienic cooking. A very convenient and homelike place to dine. Then there is the Mezzanine, a delightful and cozy balcony, where one may rest and be served with quick light lunches and delicious soft drinks. The parlor floor, located between the Grand avenue, and the third floors, on the south side of the building, has every comfort for patrons and visitors; there is the Reading and Writing Room, with its desks, where one may write letters, the Reception Room, a delightful place to meet one ' s friends, the Rest Room to lounge in luxurious easy chairs, the Telephone Room with its free telephone service to all parts of the city. But space allows us only a further brief enumeration of some of the conveniences of this great store: The Information Desk— Walnut Street Floor. The United States Sub-Post Office — Walnut Street Floor. The Free Checking Stand — Walnut Street Floor. The Art Gallery — Fourth Floor. The Children ' s Play Room — Fifth Floor Annex. I The Costume Salon — Sixth Floor. ARE WELCOME. %rrsSJ( ,S) AS x KANSAS CITY, MO. ;:: 1917C ' yit Jayha vker 1917 C ■] Jayliawker -j ' The Fraternal Aid Union Home Office LAWRENCE, KANSAS This is a Fraternal Beneficiary Society, accepting both men and women to membership. It has the lodge system, with splendid ritualistic work. One lodge in Lawrence has over 700 members. It is an organization that should especially appeal to the students of the K. U., as its certificate combines the best in fraternal lines and gives the same values that are given by any old line policy. The certificate carries Paid-Up Extended Insurance and Loan values at rates as low as possibly consistent with safety. Membership January 1, 1917 120,000 Assets, January 1, 1917 $ 2,000,000.00 Death Claims Paid since Organization 14,290,059.65 Attractive contracts for those that can write insurance, and special drill given without cost to those who desire to qualify. FOR INFORMATION CALL SUPREME PRESIDENT ' S DEPARTMENT F. A. U. Bldg., Lawrence, Kas. Remember, the Fraternal Aid Union Halls are the finest in the state of Kansas — ideal place for dances, parties, etc. For information regarding dates and price, call Manager F. A. U. Hall, Bell phone 840, Home phone 200. 1917C Jayhawker i ' : 1917 c ! J a 1 1 a w k € r A Vl a chine especially adapted to Student use! CoronA The Personal Writing Machine It ' s as Handy as a Fountain Pen! Carry Corona with you — home on your vacations or any place you go. It weighs only 6 lbs. and comes in a conven- ient leather carrying case. Corona is always ready for use! Easy to operate — anyone can write on this machine — and its clean cut neatness means better themes and reports — produced more quickly and with much less exertion. Call up — or call in for a demonstration. CARTER ' S 1025 MASS. STREET Ail Kinds of Theme, Note and Typewriter Paper. Typewriter Supplies and Repairing. : 1917 c Jaykawker © e jF acuU Untervlewe UNCLE JIMMIE GREEN Timidly the Kansan Kub crept up the steps of the Law building, past a little red Ford, several bulldogs and a few students rolling pills, and pecked at the door of Uncle Jimmy Green ' s office with light, gentle raps. A hoarse voice bellowed deeply, Come in! And the Kub was in the presence of the Dean of the Laws. Well, what do you want here? almost shouted Uncle Jimmy. This is my busy day. Be in a hurry. Out with it! Kansan Kub — I — er — just wanted to ask you about the prospects for a football team. Don ' t care a rap for football, snapped Uncle Jimmy. I don ' t pay any attention to it. ' Zat all? Wiltingly, the Kub said: I hear that one of your Laws is ineligible for the team and Well, what of it? Think I ' ll worry my head about the silly game? The man was absent from my class one day, so I flunked him But, the Kansan Kub interrupted, with a sudden flash of courage, he ' s a star on the team. Can ' t you get him eligible? It means a winning team for K. U. K. U.! K. U.! This college spirit stuff makes me sick! Studies count for more than all your athletics. What do I care whether or not you have a good team? Now, Get Out! ! — and Uncle Jimmy ground his teeth in rage, as the Kansan Kub fled swiftly from the room. ARTHUR JEROME BOYNTON The Kansan Kub entered a large two-by-four office in the Ad. Building, whistling a merry tune, and slammed his books down on a desk in front of a heavy-set man who seemed very busy. The Kub slapped him on the shoulder: HI, old Scout. Do I get a I In ' Banking? ' Professor Arthur Jerome Boynton smiled from ear to ear, with one of those kindly smiles, and said: Why, certainly, my lad, I cannot refuse such soft spoken words. Gladly will I help you even though your recitations are decidedly and persistently colloquial in expression. Thanks, old boy, said the Kub, I knew you ' d do it. By the way, didn ' t you catch one of your students in ' Ec Theory ' cribbing in a quiz? Whatje do to him? Oh, you mean that poor misguided senior? Why, I merely said to him, ' Don ' t you know it ' s wrong to cheat? It injures you and the University, too. ' — And, don ' t you know, I ' ve seen him cheating only once since! Well, Arthur, what do you think of this crazy honor system we ' re trying to get here at K. U.? Quoth A.J.B., softly: I ' m for it. Irrevocably for It. I never think of watching my students while they are taking their exams. I believe in sitting quietly in my chair and never stirring while they are writing in their quiz books. Now, my dear lad, you must excuse me, as I am very busy. Any time you are in trouble don ' t fail to come and see me. — And the Kub, hating to leave this kind sympa- thetic soul, walked slowly from the cubby hole. C. A. DYKSTRA Meeting Professor C. A. Dykstra on the campus, dragging a little Scotch-highball kioodle at the end of a log chain, the Kansan Kub walked boldly up and said: Professor, what ' s your idea of women ' s suffrage? What! he roared. The Kub repeated: What about votes for women? Absolutely absurb, ridiculous, impossible, obnoxious, unconstitutional, sputtered the professor. But . the Kub began. Absolutely! I hate all women — except my wife — and — er — well — I have to — ah — you know. The Kub continued, I hear you give women good grades in your classes. Absurb! A stupendous misconception! If I had my way about It there wouldn ' t be a single woman in my classes. I feel like flunking them all. — Good day, sir — And the professor stalked ma- jestically on. MARTY RICE Speeding hurriedly under the old reliable Physics Clock, and noting the time as ten minutes and four ticks after three o ' clock, but not believing P. C. In the least, the Kansan Kub entered the beautiful sumptuous office of Professor Marty Rice. The curtains, multicolored and filmy; the easy chairs, covered with lavendar tinted velvet; the massive golden oak desk; all these things caught his eye. The Kub sank Into an easy chair and began: Marty, dear old fellow, one of the football men is In trouble, and as usual I came to you. Can ' t you fix him up? Marty looked up smiling. Sure, my dear boy, I ' d do anything in the world to help the team. You know I ' m a red-hot fan. I wouldn ' t miss a football trip for anything, but how can I help? Well, the man ' s flunking In Physics I E Oh, that ' s easily fixed up, broke in Marty. I ' ll send in his full year ' s credit right away. He won ' t even have to come to class to get the credit for the course. and In fifteen hours of other work, continued the Kub. That ' s bad, said Marty, but I ' ll help this man all I can. I love K.U. and want to see a good football team. That ' s my highest ambition. Yes, I ' ll get him eligible somehow. The Kansan Kub arose from the luxurious cushions and departed softly from the room of this great lover of athletic games. I : 1917 c Z Jayhawker t-l Q «r S Q .55 C CD 00 Cs Q III I . (J) e-r. _l :o CQ 5i to .:l ' f. ,l «||l|- hwm ■ ft.V f t . j ««. ' :■ 4 ' i : 1917 r H Q 1 -U a CO to y CQ (i; (i; UJ X bD UJ c (U CO CD ! b c g S W O U u CO si i CO C 3 C S 9 «J trO tfl c Q M (T) CO CO PQ ■ 3 S C « 2 O C C CO 4) ra m u w ' CO C i2 J a 3 CO u W C ) - u XI :3 a. S .S c £? rn a a — a (u CO s- CO i •1—1 cr 4-1 CO CD CQ - .g J 5 S •5 w (u i_ c .S 8 3 tj .2 « c ' TD ! z 03 cd CO i CO bJD D t-. ffl 03 U J ™, 11 Jayliawker I 5 i I 1917 ' ■ Jaylia vker -ji So Nice and Fresh and Cool A Vassal- girl, writing home, said : We are going to have a Hallowe ' en spread here Friday night, and Orange Jell-O is to be served for the dessert. is so different from fudge and gingersnaps and the other things we eat all the time — so nice and fresh and cool to relieve the monotony. There are seve n pure fruit flavors of Jell-O : Straw- berry, Raspberry, Lemon, Orange, Cherry, Peach, Chocolate. Each 10 cents at any grocer ' s. Little folders in Jell-O packages contain all the instruc- tions anyone needs in making the made-in-a-minute Jell-O dainties, but we shall be glad to send you the fine new Jell-O Book if you will favor us with your address. THE GENESEE PURE FOOD COMPANY, Le Roy, N. Y. isiTig: Jaj ' ha v ker |g I i : i9i7« Jayhaw ker IV hen You are in Kansas City Do Your Shopping at Peck ' s A department store, well equipped to supply your many needs. Seasonable clothing for women, misses and children. Furnishings for Men. Household needs. Moderate prices and good quality merchandise have helped to make Peck ' s the great store that it is. BUY BY MAIL If it is inconvenent for you to come to Kansas City, you can order whatever you dssire by mail. Just write to our Personal Service Department and tell them what you want. An experienced saleswoman will fil lyour order. Peck ' s Mail Order News is a bulletin devoted to those who buy by mail name and address and we will mail you a copy free every month, if you desire. Issued monthly. Send us you ORDER UNDER OUR LIBERAL MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE GEO. B. ElSR ELEVENTH AND MAIN STREETS KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI ROWLANDS Booksellers to JayKawkers Just Down the Hill from the Library ROWLANDS College Book Store Students ' Headquarters for UNIVERSITY TEXT BOOKS AND SUPPLIES : 1917 c Jayhawkcr l ? f : i9i7C Jay hawker DEPOSITS GUARANTEED Citizens State Bank We want to get acquainted with the K. U. students — come in and start a checking account. As we are located in the same quarters with the bank, we also want to get acquainted with the K. U. students. We do business in a number of Kansas towns. You will soon be through school. The day may come when we will each profit from our acquaintance. SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES TIME DEPOSITS REAL ESTATE LOANS Perkins Trust Company 700 Mass. Street Tour Store WE call this your store because we want you to realize that it is in every way a store for you. Every day we are working to make this a good place for you to come, not only when you want to buy something, but also when you would like some infor- mation as to the new styles, colors and weaves that are to be worn. We welcome you at any time to come and get acquainted. WEAVER ' S 1917 K Jay hawker i 3 1917 C Jay ha wkcr • Westgate Hotel At the Junction — On Main and Delaware at Ninth Kansas City, Missouri A cozy, comfortable hotel, where all the service and courtesies of a higher priced hotel obtain. Abso- lutely fireproof. Every room has outside street exposure with circu- lating ice water and private bath at the very moderate rates of $1.50 and $200 per day, one person, or $2.25 and $3.00 per day for two persons. Take Chelsea University or Woodland Avenue cars at Union Station direct to hotel James Ketner, Prop, and Mgr. Peoples State Bank of Lawrence GUARANTEED ,.n UNDER THt J( V GUARANTY UAW - ' v orTHE yc jTorKl I Capital, Surplus and Profits $95,000.00 ' ' ' ' Every Banking Service 1917 : Jii yhawker l i : 1917 c Jayhawker - FOR FIFTY YEARS We have catered to Jayhawker trade. We understand your needs and know how to meet them. The University Book Store J. C. GIBB, Proprietor 803 MASS. ST. Make this Your Headquarters When in Kansas City It is a real pleasure to stroll leisurely through this great store. We have provided may conveniences which we invite you to take advantage of while here. Among them are: The Reception Parlor and Rest Room; Free Public Telephones; Free Check Stand; United States Post Office at which you may transact the same business as at the General Office; An ideal Cafeteria. Come to Kansas City at Our Expense We refund 5% of your purchases in cash up to the amount of your round trip railroad fare. Come — we invite you — our out-of-town friends. The Jones Store Co. Kansas City ' s Profit-Sharing Store Main, Twelfth and Walnut Streets ' 1917 C ! Jay hawker -l 1917 ■ J ayhawker Coates House 10th and Broadway Kansas City, Mo. RAT ES Rooms with Running Hot and Cold Water $1.00 per day and up Rooms with Bath $1.50 per day and up. Club Breakfast, 50c Table d ' Hote Lunch, 75c Dinner, Excellent Service. The Coates House is always Headquarters for University Students and Kansans. Banquets Kansas City School ' Dinner Parties of Law •tfk Mh Organized 1895. Attendance last year 286. Three years course leading to degree LL. B. All sessions held in the evening, giving stu- dents an opportunity to be self-supporting and to have practical training in law offices. Good library privileges free. Terms reason- able. Payable in advance or instalments. For bulletin address lAWRCNCC.KANSmS E. D. Ellison, Dean 718-19 Commerce Bldg. Kansas City, Mo. BILLY HUTSON, Prop. O. H. Dean, Pres. E. N. Powell, Treas. : i9i7C Jayhawker (Zaidnbav SEPTEMBER 11 — School house opens again. This has been going on too darn often. Many declare allegiance to Qiristian Science Church to avoid hospital fees. 12 — Annual knock down drag out at enroll- ment. Frat boys all talking fast. Betas hold up motor. Phi Gams wait at depot. 1.3 — Big surprise ; Sig Alphs pledge sixteen. Phi Kappa Psi ' s and Phi Delta Thetas congratulate each other on new pledge, Carpenter. All frats get a better bunch of pledges than anj one else. All fool the usual number. 14 — Some attend classes. Thetas announce that sister Hall decides to take a M-A-N in place of B.-A. 15 — Chapel overflows. Helen Hershberger appears on the Hill to show Phi Phi ' s how to rush. 16 — Y. M. C. A. mixes at the Gym. Pluke and Rusty Friend return from Wild and Wooly West, featured by Fluke ' s mustache. 17 — Sunday — Day of Rest. 18 — Sororities pledge. Just think of the kisses wasted, boys. 19 — Political wheels begin to buzz. Hun- gry JNIiller visits Rho Omega. They ' re off, boys ! They ' re off ! 20 — King Freshmen rapidly coming down t earth. 21 — Don Davis breaks out, announces Jour- nalism Cabarette. 22 — Chancellor talks to Freshman ; also gives half holiday to see County Fair. 23 — Ben Champlain loses sixteen cents play- ing races yesterday. Annual Fresh- man Frolic at Gym. 24— Carl Butler offers $1,000 reward for the person that will introduce him to his wife to be. Some job. 25— Ada Dykes, the K. U. Mrs. Pankhurst, accepts invitation to campaign for the Grand Old Party. Hurrah ! 26 — Pan-Hellenic ousts naughty Kappas. 27 — ' Phi Gams call on Phi Phis. Duke smells of strong hair tonic. 28 — Squirrel Print brings out the usual Beta literature. 29 — First big rally with everybody out. Qass elections. Smee wins Senior presidency in a walk. 30 — Football season opens, K. U. 13-Nor- mals 0. Freshman lids appear. Boys all out in evening gowns for annual parade. OCTOBER 1 — iRock Stubbs eats from mantle; cause- - gauntlet for not wearing cap to game yesterday. 2 — Girls ' Glee Club picked. 3 — Alpha Delta Pis have line party to pic- ture show while serenaders sing sweet- ly with no applause. 4 — Phi Psi ' s pledges serve tea to fraternity Freshmen. .5 — Nix on the chapel, says the senate. L. B. Flintom attends stock show in K. C. Brings back Blue Ribbon. 6 — Same old vegetable soup coming thru water mains. Football team leaves for Illinois. Breaking into the big leagues. 7—1. U. 30— K. U. 0. Now it ' s I. O. U. a good trimming. 8 — Senior Engineers return from Chicago. Many sore necks. 9 — Typhoid begins siege. Several forced to leave ranks. 10 — Ames Rogers elected President of ' Hughes Club. A child shall lead them. 11 — Hon. John Marshall visits our Univer- sity in interest of President Wilson. 12 — Columbus day. Laws take law in their- own hands and declare holiday. Mar- tenelli sings. : 1917 c I Jayiiawker -1 : i9i7C Jayhawker 4 (L alen6ar — (T ontlnue OCTOBER 13 — Dr. Burdick talks in chapel ; also to Laws. Team grabs a rattler while i students rally. 14 — A cloud hovers over us ; gloom in Jay- hawker camp. Ames 13, Lindsay 0. 15 — Please take note. Bud Colley, Pup Norton, Connie Porter, Frank Hether- ington, Frank Gage, Mick Murphy and Lee Clark are among those who attend- ed church this a. m. 16 — Journalists step out in new cords They claim for distinction. How ab- surd ! 17 — Students flock to hospital. Get shot in the arm. Then comes another kind ot morning after. 18 — Stuff of Laughter repeated. Percy Shostac married. Freshman Smoker; much sea-sickness. 19 — Y. M. campaigns for sheckles. 20 — Prof. iHodder rescues Emma Mae Rum- mell and Dorothy Riddle from a hor- rible death by suffocation. When they locked themselves in closet and couldn ' t get out. 21 — Off day for Varsity. Texas beats Mis- souri. F. B. I. C. cleans up; ask Lee. 22 — We refuse to work on Sunday. 23 — Miss Powell tells K. U. about music. Mill tax changes name to Permanent Maintenance. Where there is life there is hope. 24 — Physical exams show girls seventy-five per cent strong. Own observation show boys much stronger for them. 25 — Mother Brown asks if dances are not too numerous ? All participants up in arms as usual. 26 — Y. W. C. A. needs dough. Junior prom date announced; also annual joke about girls ' paying their own dues. 27 — Naughty Rally No. 2. Naughty, Naugh- ty, Naughty. We had a nice Rally ; also with much pep. 28 — All Manhattan visits and best team can do is a tie. Another opportunity lost. 29 — Nice day. Jimmy McNutt organizes aesthetic dancing class, Tom Mulloy, David Derge, Pete Reedy, Paul Cham- plain, Rock Stubbs, Jared Jackson, Skin Greever and P. Head Murphy en- rolled. 30 — K. U. welcomes soldier boys on their return from the sand and cactus. 31 — Mona Clare receives Capt. Fairchilds in uniform, featured by spurs. NOVEMBER 1 — Annual staff appointed. We know n couple of goats. Rip Egans ' law frat initiates. 2 Pan-Hell track meet. Hamilton con- siders moving training table to S. A. E. house. Laws make Freshmen rub off the 20 ' s. 3 — Reception for soldier boys of Co. M at Gym. K. U. by straw vote elects Woodrow. 4— K. U. 21— Oklahoma 14. 5 — Chi Omegas call Chapter roll at spir- itualist meeting. Itasca Hilsman re- mains to talk to spirits. 6 — Ed Howe lectures on success. Tells us, Success is Easy. 7 — Election Wilson or Hughes? 8 — Student gamblers anxiously await re- turns. Hester Jackson, Doris Hogc- boom and Jane Waters spend sleepless night. 9 Mona Clare says nothing doing on High School dances for K. U. dames. Dis- ciplinary Committee appointed. 10 — Election bets paid. Announce Wilson elected. Inter-class track meet won by Freshies. 11 — Y. M. and Y. W. party at Robinson Gym. 12 — As usual, all students attend church. Ministers advise us to spare the paddle. 13 — Botany club banquets with Dr. Coul- ter. Cold weather starts ; warm fire places draw cases in place of swings. 14 — Student council grabs management of Varsity parties. Note — Phi Psi ' s at- tendance falls off. Frank Terrill starts bank account. 15— Everybody out— Rally for Nebraska game. Jayhawkers make preparations for husking bee. 16 A11 aboard for Lincoln. K. U. makes final appeal for team to bring home the bacon. Several trucks start north ; many dead soldiers along the way. 17— Special train to the game. IVIerle Smith, caught trying to bum when he can ' t get his feet under the berth. : i9i7C Jay hawker -1 Colorado is a delightful place to spend your summer vacation. Round trip fare June 1 to Sept. 30, $20, Lawrence or Kansas City to Denver and Colorado Springs. Beautiful Estes Park is only a few hours ' ride from Denver by rail and auto or auto all the way. Additional cost, only $9.60. Low fares also in effect to Utah, Yellowstone and Pacific Coast. For illustrated booklets and complete travel information apply to E. E. ALEXANDER, C. T. A., 711 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kas. Phone 5. Use Electricity for Cooking, Lighting Ironing and Washing Sanitary Economical Modern KANSAS ELECTRIC UTILITIES CO. Lawrence, Kansas The Bank Savings Life Insurance Co. Home Office, Topeka, Kansas Offers Guaranteed Low Cost, Legal Reserve Life Insurance on all Standard Plans Admitted Assets, Dec. 31, 1916, $ 806,250.00 Net Surplus, Dec. 31, 1916. 123,218.42 Insurance in force, Dec. 31, 1916, 8,292,290.00 E. H. LUPTON, President E. E. SALLEE, Secretary 1917 C J ay hawker • (T aUn6ar — (T ontlnued NOVEMBER II 18— Lincoln, Nebraska— KANSAS SEVEN, Nebraska three. 19 — All K. U. welcomes victorious team. 20 — No holiday. 21 — Gerard Allen attempts to burn Phi Gam house. Bath robe catches on fire. Fred- die Pausch the hero. 22 — Plans for Missouri game ; also think- ing of turkey. .23 — Senate calls Naughty ralliers for inter- view. 24 — Gym crowded for rally. Fine Arts banquet. 25 — Manless dance at Gym under auspices of W. S. G. A. Dick Small breaks up party when he appears on track in gym suit. 26 — This is Sunday. 27 — Pi Phi house mother refuses use of piano to midnight serenaders. Rumored it was S. A. E. to go. Dope 28 — Tuesday ; team ready favors the home boys. 29 — ' Alumnpe coming in on all trains. Senior Smoker. Annual burning of Tiger. 30 — K. U. plays Missouri. Enough said. DECEMBER 1 — Gloom in Kansas. Many home for va- cation. 2 — We went home. 3 — Still home. 4 — Students returned with replenished wallets. Cargill Sproull severed diplo- matic relations at Alpha Chi Omega house. 5 — Dr. Humble takes P. A. D. ' s for coon hunt on the Wakarusa. 6 — Sherlock Holmes still waits at stage door ; this time for Leta Ellison. 7 — Greever, Smee and Mitchell take ex- ception to Senate action on Naughty ralliers. 8 — Law Scrim held for football team, but they refuse the hard boiled shirts. 9 — Henry Pegues gets in bad with Ada when he appears to meet father wear- ing corduroys. 10 — Sigma Chi ' s call on Thetas. TubB Hobart and Fent Baker escape thru side window. 11 — Swede Neilson elected football captain. We wish you the best of luck, Niely. 12— 13 — Naughty ralliers come back to fold. Boys all promise to be good. 14 — Bob Reed pleads with Kansas editors to boost campaign for girls to pay Junior prom dues. 15 — William Howard Taft outlines peace policy to K. U. Vacation : 3,000 Kan- sas students gorge themselves sick. 3,000 Kansas students fuss and frolic like everything. 6,000 Kansas students ' fathers and mothers listen to 3,000 lines of bunk. 3,000 Kansas students fathers ' touched. 3 Kansas students honest and truly study. JANUARY, 1917 Happy N ew Year ! 1 — Happy New Year. 2 — Faculty bluff students into attending classes first day after vacation. 3 — The Glee Club needs warblers. Dean Butler offers vocal training free to all members of club. 4 — John Dykes gladdens the heart of a fair coed by honoring her with a ride in the Red-devil. 5 — Junior Prom attended by 2,000 couples, more or less. Pat Murphy shows his ability in handling spot-light. 6 — Howard Fleeson and Harry Montgom- ery file application in Millionaire Club. 7 — Many dates hold late to see eclipse. The naughty Phi Psis go horseback riding. Did they use side saddles? 8 — World of pleasure. Censor committee. Bare legs. Dresses and show cut short. Lindsey and Lupton declare they were sorely disappointed. 9 — Sigma Chis applaud Brother Harold Henry in concert. Pi Phis Grand Vice-President also visits Mt. Oread. Tells of great settlement work of the sisterhood. Alva Jane decides to give her life to the cause. 10 — North College shakes. Basket-ball sea- son open. Washburn 9, Kansas 55. Lindsev tries for touchdown. : i9i7C I Jaykawker • ' When you want to take a real trip, be it a short or a long one, a trip that you will enjoy from the minute you decide to go until long after you returned, journey via the Santa Fe, spend your vaca- tion this year in one of the Santa Fe ' s VacationLands. There are many of them. Write for literature j. m. connell Gen ' l Pass. Act. Torek A, Kans. DRAMA EDUCATION r At the Varsity and Bowersock Theatres Lloyd Ware, Prop. Hotel Kupper 1 Ith and McGee Streets Kansas City, Missouri Walter S. Mars, Prop, and Mgr. European Plan — $1.00 to $2.50 per day- Excellent Cafe in. Connection — Particularly- Desirable for Ladies — Being on Petticoat Lane — The Center of the Shopping District. Convenient to all Theatres — Direct Car Line to Stock Yards. Take the cars marked Northeast at the New Union Station and get off at 11th Street. : 1917 g: r ■ Jayliawker (T alen6ar — (L ontlnue6 JANUARY 11 — Windy day. ledics lined up at win- dows compose following : Shorter, shorter little skirt, Up so high above the dirt. Be as sanitary as you can. Always turn the hose on man. 12 — Lawrence depopulated. Kansas Citv crowded. Hip, Hip, Hoorah. Betas call roll at Edwards. 13 — Medics and Pharmics dance at Prof. ' s expense. How did it happen ? Another question — who invited Alva Jane and Jack Cook to Sigma Nu shin dig? Normals 2, K. U. 36. 14 — Sunday. Kappa Freshman captures Plucky Friend ' s heart. Whispering breezes and Senior Laws join in the sweet refrain — H-e-s-t-e-r-, H-e-s-t-e-r. 15 — Chimes of Normandy, sang by School of Fine Arts. Ding dong bell, good? 16— Mrs. Ellis objects to Phi Delta Phi house being called Keeley Institute by midnight serenaders. 17 — Fine Arts leave North College while going is good. Chi Omegas dine with neighbors ; no gas. 18 — Alfred Noves reads jingles in Eraser. K. U. 30, Ames 13. 19 — Merchants to visit us also ; K. U. beats Ames again 25 to 9. 20 — Library crowded with quiz jammers. 21 — Not a day of rest. 22 — Quizzes start ; gloom. 23— 24_ 25— . « . 26 — Quizzes over ; glory be ! 27 — Those here dance ; others home. 28 — Leo Smith and Blanch Houston decide to try matrimony. 29 — School door opens again. Father touched once more by loving sons and daughters. 30 — Alton Gumbiner shows the State Bar Association that gift of gab is not ex- tinct. 31 ' — Thermometer drops, also many who venture to tread the slippery paths of Mt. Oread. FEBRUARY 1 — Senior officers cannot have pictures taken. Lytle ' s face hurts him. Steen below zero. Prof. Harper calls Annette Clark for date. 2 — Red Craig hunting for new room calls Achoth House. Who gave him the number? Ground hog sees shadow. More cold weather. 3 — Ways and Means Committee visits us. Aggies put champion basket-ball team on the blink. 4 — Phi Psis call Lucile Elmore for date with Runt Sloniker, six feet, four. 5 — ' Merchants ' Week begins. Pat Crowell registers and Joe Gaitskill retreats to the hills. 6 — Co. M says they are ready for war. Bill Beall after a great career leaves our midst. Missouri 23, but K. U. 24. 7 — Gladys Luckan lectures to Botany Club according to Dr. Mix. Missouri 26 to 14. 8 — Sore throat epidemic rages. Doctors discourage close contact. 9 — Grades given out at Eraser. A dark world for many. 10--R. J.? 11 — Hell week starts at Frat houses. 12 — Honest Abe ' s birthday. K. U. blacks Tigers eye with basketball game 24, 23. 13 — Delta Tau house quarantined for small- pox, but nobody home. M. U. and K. U. play again. 14 — Panhellenic smoker, featured by Beta Hula girls. We knew of their Lulus, but not of their Hulas. IS — Reason for sanitary drinking cups being put in Law school, solved ; naughty Laws won ' t have to spit on the floor. 16 — Women ' s Convocation. Mother Brown tells girls Why ' and Don ' t. ' ' Duke Kennedy also lectures to Laws from the Law steps, on How? 17 — Willard Wattles offers prize to Fresh- men rhetoric clas s for seeing campus. ' ' Katherin Gardner competes. 18 — Terrill, Beall, Lupton, and Dodderidge help Benson till his date at Chi Omega house. 19 — Everett L. Jillson seeks place in the sun. Indignation of Laws meeting at Bricks. Wiser counsel prevails and Jillison is allowed to live. 20 — Mitchell and Gumbiner tell Jillson where the war broke out. Did Jillson originate in Brazil? : i i7 C Jayhavvker l ' Everything Good in Everybody ' s Store Dick Brothers DRUGGISTS LAWRENCE, KANSAS The Oldest Jewelry House in Lawrence, Kansas A.Marks Son 735 MASS. STREET The Cleanest, Handiest Fuel on Earth NATURAL GAS Citizens Light, Heat and Power Co. 5 East Eighth Your Order For Steel Die Embossed Stationery, Engraved Invitations and Cards executed promptly and correctly. Loose Leaf Supplies, K Books made to order. A. G. ALRICH 744 MASS. STREET THE LARGEST STOCK OF HURDS FINE WRITING PAPERS AND CORRESPOND- ENCE CARDS IN THE CITY TO SELECT FROM. W. A. Guenther STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES Exclusive Sale of Terdell Can Goods PHONE 226 721 Mass. Street Lawrence, Kansas W.A.Dunmire FANCY GROCERIES 935 MASSACHUSETTS STREET PHONES 58 3 1 17C : . layliawker - (T alett6ar — (T oiitlnue6 FEBRUARY 21— C. B. Randall leaves dance to fall for old fire joke. Why wouldn ' t Dorothy Button dance with Frank Terrill after dancing with John Fogarty? 22 — George has another birthday. 23i— Bone Dry Bill goes into effect!!!! Back to the Old Oaken Bucket, boys. The BETA boys frolic at Eches. 24 — Mother Brown entertains her girls and boys with the annual Colonial Party. 25— C. B. Randall gets Rusty to take one of his Soph Hop dates. 26 — Thetas secure member on Sour Owl Board. Sweet relief. 27 — Mad rush for tickets to see Frank Mc- Farland in Dramatic Club play. 28 — Frank McFarland presents Under Cover. Law Faculty in censor box. Otto Dittmer receives paper posies from loving Laws. MARCH 1 — Student Council fails to obtain chaperon for Varsity party. Horrors, girls, horrors ! 2 — Greever makes usual trip to Mrs. Brown ' s office to square things. 3 — Nell DeHart refuses dates with Doc Wieters ; she admits Bead-eye is King. 4 — Sunday. 5 — Kansas says K. U. has good collection of fossils. Profs, not included. 6 — Clora Riggs leading in beauty contest. Rusty working hard. Hester next to last; Laws urge Pluke to get busy. 7 — Dr. Burdick speaks at Y. M. Senior Laws seek favor with the Doctor. 8 — Permanent Income bill passes the legis- lature at last. 9 — Seniors must stay if they want sheep skin. 10 — Base-ball fiends looking for good weather. 11 — Office closed. 12 — Engineers bring surveying instruments into play. Annual scandal. 13 — Vanity Fair contest closes. Nord- strum ' s and Gelvin ' s popularity with beauties depreciates. Blanche rushes to Kappa House to show Phi Delt pin ob- tained on week night. 14 — Prof. Johnson gives prospective teach- ers lecture on how to act when super- intendents visit. 15 — Larry Winn elected Ideal Man by Girls ' Physical Development Class. Gert says, I told you so. 16 — High School basket-ball tournament be- gins. Spring party season, opens with Chi Omega formal. Indoor track meet. M. U. 46, K. U. 39. Beta con- solation party featured by blue decor- ation. 17 — ' More basket-ball games. Newton boys and Elsmore girls take laurels. Supt. interviewed by Dora Lockett. 18 — Dr. Humble and Law quartette enter- tains at colored Baptist church. 19 — State needs athletic women, says Dr. Childs. Another war scare. 20 — WSGA promises week dates to all coeds who take part in their April 12 Follies. 21 — Don Davis rescinds slam at Tom Dewey published in Kansas column. 22 — Question whether we should abolish paddling. What next? Girls ' Glee Club sings. 23 — Jack Krumbach admits he is dippy over Amma Mae. 24 — Soph Hop announces with many new ideas. One is hike in price. 25 — Usual number of library dates. 26 — Pat Maloney takes Phi Delts for daily ride in Blanche ' s Marion-Handley. 27 — Elenor Proudfit persuades naughty burglar not to steal Pi Phi ' s jewels. 28 — Mrs. Brown raids Wednesday night dance. Fire escape saves many. 29 — Blanche Simmons raids Kansas office to demand more publicity for K. U. follies. Beauty contest in full sway ; all extra annuals sold. 30 — Regular meeting of Entomology Club sings for Prof. Classen, Evelyn you got to quit your devilin. : 1917,1 : Jayhaw ' ker -l ' Confectionery Ice Cream Parlor See Lawrence 1031 Mass Candy Cigars Charlton Melton for Fire and Tornado Insurance, also Bonds, Liability and Compen- sation Insurance, Room 2, Bowersock Theatre Building. Houks Phones Bell 947 Home 855 The Charles N. Jensen Exclusive Ladies ' Tailor Barbers 83 1 Mass Street Lawrence, Kans. Baskest Grocery Quality and Workmanship Sells for Cash and Saves You Money Kennedy Plumbing Co. 937 Mass Street Phones 658 Phones 860 JVe Give You Service Lawrence, Kansas Fischer ' s Shoes Are Good Shoes DRUGS CHEMICALS Evans Drug Store 819 Mass Street KODAKS TOILET ARTICLES 1917 C J ay hawker l V HHHHBHHHH! JHCK JtAf CoaKE Sc ' S I I ■ i9i7«: u Jayhawker l THE Peerless Garage One Block East of Eldridge House Cor. 7th and New Hampshire PHONE 100 OPEN DAY AND NIGHT TAXI CABS and AUTO LIVERY PHONES 609 Spot Cash Grocery Your Money Saver CHAS. F. McCURDY 844 MASS. STREET Swede ' s FOR BILLIARDS PHONE 540 The Rexall Store F.B.McCOLLOCH Druggist 847 MASSACHUSETTS ST. PROTCH THE TAILOR R. B. Wagstaff STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES BOTH PHONES 25 839 Massachusetts Street B. H. DALE ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING BOTH PHONES 228 1207 Massachusetts Street If You are Thinking about Cleaning, Pressing, Altering, Repairing or Dyeing n-member that OWEN KNOWS COUPON TICKETS 10— $1.00 35— 3.00 75— 6.00 BELL 510 1024 MASS STREET : 1917 c ,Iavha ker-l ' I I : 1917 c - Jayhawl «.r T KESS E IO Our Method No high ground floor rents, charge accounts, bad debts, window trimmers, floor walkers, free deHveries, expen- sive fixtures or high early season prices to cover reduction that will be made later. Results Men ' s and Young Men ' s ALL PURE SILK LINED $25.00 Full Dress Suits Tuxedo Suits English Suits Sack Suits Norfolk Suits Over Coats and Top Coats Frock Coats and Vests Our Second- Floor Price $15 1917 Spring Styles Now Selling FRANK J. WEINAND PHESID-NT ALFBFD E. FARMER M N C E I i. BUYER OURELEmTORSmE YOUm ALWAYS 2ND FLOOR CHAMBERS BUILDING S. W. CORNER 12th and WALNUT KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI THE HOUSE OF $15 CLOTHES : 1917 c Jayhawker ' _ 1917 C Jajrhawkcr Kaw Valley Interurban Cars leave Lawrence 35 minutes after the hour every hour, 6:35 a. m. to 9:35 p. m. All except the 8:35 p. m. car go to Kansas City. It goes to Bonner Springs. Cars leave Kansas City 30 minutes after every hour, 6:30 a. m. to 9:30 p. m. and at 11:30 p. m. All except the 8:30 p. m. car go to Lawrence. It goes to Bonner Springs. Car leaving Kansas City at 9 :30 p. m. arrives Lawrence at 1 1 :15 p. m. Car leaving Kansas City at 11 :30 p. m. arrives Lawrence at 1 :15 a. m. Other cars arrive in Lawrence 28 minutes after the hour. The fare between Kansas City and Lawrence is 72 cents. FREIGHT CARS RUN AS FOLLOWS: Leave Lawrence 8:45 a. m. and 12:30 p. m. Arrive Kansas City 11:30 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. Leave Kansas City 12:30 p. m. and 6:00 p. m. Arrive Law- rence 3:30 p. m. and 9:30 p. m. WABASH Night Train to St. Louis Leaves Kansas City 10:00 P.M. Arrives Delmar Station 6:35 A.M. Arrives St. Louis LInion Station 7:00 A.M. Modern up-to-date train. Electric lighted sleepers. Steel coaches, chair cars and club car. A convenient train for the business man to leave Kansas City on, and an ideal time to arrive in St. Louis. THREE LIMITED TRAINS DAILY Leaves Kansas Citv 10:00 A.M. 1:00 P.M. 1000 PM Arrives Delmar Station 6:09 P.M. 10:30 P.M. 6:35 AM Arrives St. Louis 6:30 P.M. 10:50 P.M. 7:00 A.M. In addition to the above, the Wabash Railroad operates excellent train service to Detroit, Mich., Buffalo, N. Y., and New York City. Leaves Kansas City 6:30 P.M. Arrives Detroit 1 :00 P.M. Arrives Buffalo 9:30 P.m ' Arrives New York... 10:55 A.M. {Second morning) TICKET OFFICE, 721 WALNUT ST., KANSAS CITY, MO. J. J. SHINE, Western Passenger Agent F. L. McNALLY, Traveling Passenger Agent : i9i7C [ Jaj ' hawker -( L : 1917« I : JayJmwkerC Do You Need A Typewriter? Do You Want the Best? Seeing is believing. Just drop in at our office and take a look at the WOODSTOCK. You will be pleased with its appearance, its silent light-running action, and the beautiful work it does. Then, too, you will be sur- prised at the terms at which we are offering this high grade machine. Get the best and save the most. MORRISON BLIESNER Eldridge House Corner Phones 164 Write Us for Prices and Terms on KANSAS REPORTS, KANSAS DIGEST and KANSAS LOCAL BOOKS. Vernon Law Book Company Kansas City, Missouri WIEDEMANN ' S TO THE ALUMNI — ' Tis with the fondest memories he looks backward to the days he sent his sweetheart a box of pure chocolates or sat at the old marble top tables and enjoyed our ice cream. TO THE PRESENT STUDENT— You realize with a sanitary up-to-date fountain and a more modern table we are able to serve you with the same high standard of excellence as of yore. TO THE WOULD-BE STUDENT— We welcome you to our parlors and shall endeovor to place at your disposal the same prompt service and the same pure and wholesome candies and cream for which this house has been noted for so many years. Again— Welcome one and all. WIEDEMANN ' S 835 MaSS. Nowadays It ' s the LAWRENCE Tke Cnocolate Shop Open from 7 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. STUDIO Tea Dansant Saturday from 3 to 6 p. m. For Photos and Kodak Finishing. We carry a choice line of Schrafft ' s Chocolates 727 MASSACHUSETTS 811 Kansas Avenue Ground Floor ToPEKA, Kansas : 1917 c Jaykawker 4C ? CLASSIFY ' 1917 C JayhaM ' ker 1 6 JxCflt and PHnce A blrt UttS FULL DRESS RENTAL PARLOR Suite 502 Gordon Koppel Bldg. 1005-1007 Walnut Street Home Phone 2826 Kansas City, Mo. Theo. Lieben Theatrical, Masquerade, Carnival and Lodge Costumes, Wigs and Beards made to order and for rent. MAIL ORDER BUSINESS A SPECIALTY 809 Main Street, Kansas City, Mo. 1514 Howard Street, Omaha, Neb. DIAMONDS WATCHES Ed. W. Parsons Engraving and Repairing 725 Mass. Street CUT GLASS JEWELRY Griffin Ice Company 616 Vermont St. Phones 591. ATHLETIC WEAR SMOKERS ' ARTICLES CARROLL ' S CIGARS PERIODICALS The Leading Students ' ' Store for 36 Years Phone 608. 709 Mass. LEATHER GOODS y4rts and Craft Cover on this Annual burnished by THE DAVIDJ.MOLLOY Compa ny 633 PLYMOUTH COURT CHICAGO, ILLINOIS C?3 GIVE US YOUR IDEAS AND LET US WORK OUT A COVER FOR YOUR BOOK BINDER. NO CHARGE FOR SKETCH WHICH WILL SHOW YOU HOW COMPLETED COVER WILL LOOK. J. D. Bowersock, President H. L. Moore, Vice-President I. J. Meade, Vice-President Geo. W. Kuhne, Cashier The Lawrence National Bank Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits $150,000 UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY LAWRENCE, KANSAS Lawrence National Bank ' ' ' ' Where Your Savings are Safe ' : i9i7C [ J;a,v ' hawker - McNish Sanitary Bottling Works Pure Drinking Water, Highball Ginger Ale. Soda Waters Made from Distilled Waters, Phones 198 LAWRENCE 836 Vermont Griffin Coal Company FUEL 112 WEST 7TH STREET ENGRAVED WEDDING INVITATIONS ANNOUNCEMENTS AND STATIONERY d . DANCE PROGRAMS INTERCOLLEGIATE PRESS KANSAS CITY, MO. STEEPER HADT.RY ' S MORE THAN A RESTAURANT— Cleaning— Pressing Remodeling 715 MASSACHUSETTS MORNING, NOON OR NIGHT ITS A TREAT TO EAT AT 12 YEARS K. U. SERVICE HADI ,EY ' S Model Steam Laundry Frank W. Brown, Prop. 1 1 and 1 3 W. 9th Home 145 Bell 155 Kennedy Ernst HARDWARE, CUTLERY and SPORTING GOODS 826 Mass. Street Phones 341 UeLuxe Cafe Hardware ihat vS t Pi n rl s H PI r cl w p PI r (i£r= = A GOOD PLACE TO EAT. QUICK SERVICE. 7 7}4 MASS. STREET F.W.JAEDICKE 724 MASS. STREET ! 1917 : ' Jayha vker l This Annual is Printed on Aigrette Enameled Book THE BEST COMMERCIAL PAPER OF ITS CLASS ' iKj; Inquiry of Kansas City Paper House will bring a complete, beautiful as- sortment of printed samples on which to base your selection. Kansas City Paper House (Distributors of Aigrette Enamel) Seventh May Streets Kansas City, Mo. 1917 : ' Jaykawker l W ELL ne PUBLIC DEMANDS IT : i i7 c IHiiW iiitfiWiltlJui mmii MMM IllilllJlliilarllltfllllllllfilll M i A ' H ' ■■■■ iiir J V! m IF • ' , 1 ' Mi


Suggestions in the University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) collection:

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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