University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) - Class of 1918 Page 1 of 308
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1918 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 308 of the 1918 volume: “
ORDER OF BOOR INTRODUCTOBT UNIYER ITY CLA E ORGANIZATION MILITARY ATHLETIC ACTIYITIE GO IP 1_' 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 III I III 1111111111111111! I llll III 111! 1111111111111111 II 1111111111111111111111111111 j I DEDICATION BY THE j = : ni i ii i ni i ii 11 n i n 11 n i ni i in i ■ 11 in 11 ii it i ni i ii 11 in 1111 nn i n in i tn in 11 n mi i in n 111 n in in n n in i ii = I CLASS OF 1918 I TO THE SONS OF OUR UNIVERSITY, THOSE INTREPID KNIGHTS IN KHAKI-MARTIAL SONS OF OLD KEN- TUCKY, PRIDE OF OUR MOTHERLAND—WHO, TRUE TO THE HISTORY AND TRADITION OF THEIR NATIVE STATE, FIGHT IN THE EMBATTLED HOSTS OF DEMOC- RACY AND OFFER THEMSELVES AS A VICARIOUS SACRI- FICE UPON THE ALTAR PATRIOTISM, THAT OUR COUN- TRY AND OUR LIBERTIES MAY EVER REMAIN SECURE FOREWORD The joys we have possessed HERE TOGETHER ARE EVER OURS, you HAT DISPOSSESS A HAN OF EVERYTHING BUT HIS BLESSED MEMORY; OUT OF THY REACH. BEHIND ETERNITY. HID AMONG THE SACRED TREASUER OF THE PAST. IS THE COMPANION OF HIS SOUL. CRADLED IN THE COUNTLESS CHAMBERS OF THE BRAIN. OUR THOUGHTS ARE LINKED BY MANY A HIDDEN CHAIN. IF WE SHALL AWAKE BUT ONE. LO! WHAT MYRIADS - - ARISE A A A A CREAT KENTUCKIAN Through the still lapse of AGES, THERE HAS COLLECTED UPOM THE SHORES OF TIHE, A GROUP OF KENTUCKIANS, WHOM THE WORLD HAS HONORED WITH A RESTING PLACE IN THE ETER- NAL SUNSHINE. THEIR NAME HAVE NOT ONLY BEEN CHISELED UPON THE ROCK OF IMMORTAL- ITY, BUT HAVE BEEN INDELIBLY WRITTEN IN TNE HEARTS OF MEN. WE ARE HEIRS TO THE MOST EN- VIABLE TRADITIONS, LET U GUARD THEM BY OUR. FUTURE ACTIONS. SUSTAINED BY THE GLORY OF THE PAST, LET U STRIVE TOWARD A MORE GLO- a a a RIOUS FUTURE. a a a JEFFERSON DAVIS CARLISLE President McVey 'R X %AST June G°vernor Stanley appointed a joint committee of trustees and professors to recommend to the board a new president for the university. After much correspondence, consultations with educational authorities, and interviews with desirable men, the committee recommended to the h board Dr. Frank L. McVey, President of the University of North Dakota. On August 15 the Board of Trustees unanimously elected Dr. McVey to the presidency of the University of Kentucky. Dr. McVey is a native of Ohio, and celebrated his forty-eighth birthday Novem- ber 10. He attended the public schools of Toledo, Ohio, and Des Moines, Iowa; is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University, receiving the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and later the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. He received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from Yale, where he pursued graduate work for three years, specializing in Economics. Later he further pursued his studies in England, Dr. McVey has had educational experience as a teacher and director in high schools, normal schools, and universities. For a lime he was an instructor in history in Columbia University Teachers College; later was Professor of Economics at the Uni- versity of Minnesota. He resigned the professorship in the Minnesota institution to accept the Chairmanship of the Minnesota Tax Commission. His services in this position were notable, and the resulting law of such sound value as to be adopted or adapted by many other States, the basic principles of our own new tax law being taken from the Minne- sota law. Two years after his services on the Tax Commission, Dr. McVey was made Presi- dent of the University of North Dakota, which position he held until he resigned to accept the presidency of our own university. Dr. McVey was married in 1898 to Miss Mabel Moore Sawyer, a graduate of the University of Minnesota. They, with their three children, will make their home in the historic old Mulligan home, “Maxwelton,” which has been purchased by the university and is being extensively remodeled as a home for its president. Dr. McVey was in no sense a candidate for the position, having known nothing of the matter until he was sought out by the committee, and in a short time asked to accept the position. He had been President of the University of North Dakota for eight years, and during that time had transformed that institution from the small college type of State institution to one of intense and diverse activities, striving to fulfill its mission of service to all people of the State. He organized it into a smooth working, efficient institution, gained the good will of the people and the financial support of the State, and won for it recog- nition and respect from the educational world. He came to Kentucky, not because he was disappointed with his treatment and his results at North Dakota, but because he saw here greater possibilities for the future in this State of two and one-half million, with its vast natural resources just beginning to be developed. Dr. McVey is ideally qualified to take up his new work among us. He is a gen- tleman of unimpeachable character, of scholarly attainments, an author and authority in the field of Economics, experienced in the practical applying of theory, prominent in educational societies, interested not only in the classical and cultural work of the university, but also intensely interested in the newer fields of agricultural and mechanic arts. He is in the prime of life, with both mind and body trained to hard work, drilled to careful analysis of problems, and skilled in presenting convincingly the great cause of the univer- sity in its relation to the people of the State. It was not until the first of the year that Dr. McVey was able to come to the university and take up his duties permanently, having been in Washington preparing, for government use, a monograph on the Financial System of England. Dr. McVey’s wide knowledge of economics and finance and, in addition, the pursuit of his studies in England, fitted him peculiarly for this study. Although not here, Dr. McVey had assumed active control of the university, directing its activities and reforming its administration. The University of Kentucky has always worked under a great financial handicap. Money was the first thing that was needed. The buildings were out of repair, the heating plant was thoroughly inadequate, and every department suffered from lack of space, equip- ment and instructors. Circumstances had compelled a process of inbreeding in the uni- versity faculty, which tended to narrow its outlook and cramp development. The legis- lature convened in January and Dr. McVey laid out before it the facts as they were, and the immediate necessity of financial assistance. This necessity was planned to be met by a bill reapportioning the tax, in which more income was provided for the university. The bill passed, and the income of the university was practically doubled. Furthermore, it was through the instrumentality of Dr. McVey and the university interests that the bill accepting the provisions of the Smith-Hughes Act for Vocational Education, and the bill accepting the provisions of the Smith-Lever Act, providing for Extension Work, were made into laws. Two other bills directly affecting the university were also passed. Upon the recommendation of Dr. McVey and university authorities, a bill was passed reorganizing the Board of Trustees. The influence of the university was exerted through Dean Lafferty of the 'College of Law in securing the passage of the bill establishing a higher standard for admission of attorneys to the bar. These acts are great strides in the development of the university, and are more gratifying because of the awakening of the people of the State to the necessity of cen- tralized educational effort. Every college on the campus has felt the beneficial influence of an energetic and vigorous administration. The College of Agriculture and the Experiment Station have been greatly benefited by the appointment of Dr. Thomas Cooper as its new Dean and Director, and the preparation of plans for a temporary stock judging pavilion. Upon the granting of an indefinite leave of absence to Dr. Miller, Dean of the College of Arts and Science, Dr. Paul Boyd, head of the Department of Mathematics, was made Dean of the college. The Arts and Science College will in the future comprise the following new departments, Department of Art and Design, Department of Music, Department of Economics and Sociology, and Department of Bacteriology. Agricul- tural and Vocational Education are among the new courses offered. The Colleges of Mechanical and Electrical, and Civil Engineering, and the College of Mines and Metallurgy will probably be combined under a single administration, the Colleges of Engineering. Able professors and instructors of other universities will be added to their efficient faculties. The College of Law will profit by the addition of a professor and an instructor in in law. Dean Lafferty is greatly gratified by the success of his efforts in securing a (26) higher standard for the admission to the bar, and trusts that it will greatly enhance the importance of the Law School. Never before in the history of the university has there been such progress, such a bright prospect for extensive development and added scope of usefulness. Dr. McVey has made his presence seem a veritable wand of enchantment. It has suffered greatly from the war, but it only offered another opportunity to demonstrate its service. The student battalion was practically transformed into a Reserve Officers’ Training Corps and a Signal Corps Training School was instituted. The buildings of the campus are now being put in shape to accommodate the training of four hundred drafted men during the summer months in the handling and operation of motor trucks, signal and radio work, and various minor mechanical arts. The commandant of the university will be in charge, and the professors of the university will assist in the instruction. We are greatly pleased with the results of Dr. MvVey’s efforts and look forward to a great future for the university. A new era for the university has come. What the greatest universities are, and are accomplishing, we will be and do. No man can estimate the good that the university under our new leader will in the coming years render to the people of Kentucky. GOVERNOR STANLEY SIGNING THE APPROPRIATION BILL Board of Trustees Gov. A. O. Stanley .... Judge H. S. Barker .... Frank L. McVey, President . C. B. Nichols.............. C. B. Terrell.............. Frank McKee................ V. O. Gilbert, Superintendent Matt S. Cohen.............. V. J. Harris............... R. J. Bassett.............. T. L. Hornsby.............. J. R. Rash................. J. L. Letterle ............ H. M. Froman............... J. M. Elliston ....... Fred R. Blackburn .... Tibbis Carpenter........... Gov. William H. Cox . . . Denny P. Smith............. Richard C. Stoll........... Dr. J. A. Amon............. Richard N. Wathen .... Judge James Breathitt . . . Dr. James K. Patterson . . James W. Turner ........... R. G. Gordon............... George G. Brock............ Frank Battaile............. J. Irvine Lyle............. John E. Brown ............. P. P. Johnston, Jr. ... Dr. Samuel B. Marks . . . Dr. A. Gatliff............. . . Frankfort, Ky . . Louisville, Ky Lexington, Ky Lexington, Ky Bedford, Ky Versailles, Ky. Frankfort, Ky Frankfort, Ky . . . Kevil, Ky Leitchfield, Ky . Eminence, Ky . . Henderson, Ky Harrod’s Creek. Ky . Lexington, Ky . Elliston, Ky . Stanton, Ky . Scottsville, Ky Maysville, Ky . . . Cadiz, Ky . . Lexington, Ky . . Lancaster, Ky Lebanon, Ky Hopkinsville, Ky . Lexington, Ky . Paintsville, Ky Louisville, Ky . London, Ky . Lexington, Ky . New York City . . Shelbyville, Ky . . Lexington, Ky Lexington, Ky . Williamsburg, Ky The Colleges College of Arts and Science The College of Arls and Science under the efficient leadership of Dean Boyd serves four groups of students; regular undergraduates who want a general humanistic and scientific training with an A.B. degree; students who desire four years of somewhat specialized training for teach- ing, journalism, or applied chemistry; students who must have two years of college work prepa- ratory to professional work in law or medicine; and graduate students who seek advanced in- struction in the departments represented in this college. The College of Arts and Science is also the great service college of the University. In it underclassmen of the Colleges of Agriculture and Engineering obtain their instruction in such sub- jects as English, Mathematics, Chemistry, or Modern Languages. More graduates are turned out from the Col- lege of Arts and Science than from any of the other colleges. The students are attracted to the college by the long list of excellent instructors, and by the knowledge of the high standard main- tained by Dr. Boyd. DEAN BOYD College of Agriculture The College of Agriculture and the Experiment Station have now as their respective Dean and Director, Tom Cooper of North Dakota. Dean Cooper came to us highly recommended by his work and record as an agriculturist in the North- west. While Director of the Experiment Sta- tion in the North Dakota Agricultural College he carried on, with unusual success, the work of extension and experiment research work. He has long been one of the experts on cost of pro- duction for the United States Department of Agriculture. Dean Cooper has been received with much en- thusiasm, and will be backed up in his undertak- ings by one of the strongest faculties of the University, the work and writings of whose mem- bers have received national recognition as authorities. DEAN COOPER The Colleges College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Dean Anderson of ihe College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering is widely known in the engineering profession as an able educator. By his untiring efforts and executive ability he has developed a department from a mere dream of twenty-five years ago to one of the prominent engineering schools of America. The keen interest of the Dean for his depart- ment is felt by all the students. This interest is evinced by his efforts to better the conditions of his department, to keep in touch with alumnus, to secure for his graduates the best positions, and to give the students every opportunity to become acquainted with those things which will best fit him for his work. Dean Anderson realizes the importance of training his men to be executives. To this end many methods are employed; promi- nent men are secured to address the students; in- dustrial moving pictures are shown; extensive in- spection trips are taken; everything possible is done to improve the cultural side of the course, and further develop those inherent qualities which distinguish the true gentleman. Few colleges can attribute their growth and national importance to one man as can the Mechanical and Electrical Engineering College. Dean Anderson has made his college, and continues to improve it. College of Mines and Metallurgy Dean Norwood of the College of Mines and Metallurgy, and Chief of the Department of Mines of Kentucky, has long been a familiar figure on the University campus. “The Dean, as his men call him, may rightly be considered the Dean of the Mining Industry of the State; for much of the high standard of operation of the Kentucky mines is due to his personal efforts to better mining conditions. About forty years of his life have been spent either in public or pri- vate station in service to Kentucky in efforts to promote the development of her natural resources, and has won recognition as an authority in mat- ters pertaining to Geology and Mining. The fact that Kentucky has long been an im- portant mining center, and the opening up of Eastern Kentucky which promises to be one of the richest coal fields of the world, lend prestige to this college, and the graduates are much in demand and hold responsible positions throughout the country. DEAN ANDERSON DEAN NORWOOD (31) The Colleges College of Civil Engineering The College of Civil Engineering, though one of the smaller colleges, finds itself well equipped and located in the best arranged building on the campus, and with a history that it can be duly proud of. It has passed through some discourag- ing, unfortunate, and trying periods, but these have made the college stronger and more vigorous. The unparalleled loyalty of the students has al- ways been a valuable asset of the college. 1 he college in the hands of Acting Dean Terrell looks toward the future with every prospect of an enlarged and enriched sphere of usefulness mf U Z- TT Z- f I O e wh J ' NX W i i-,.-a Bror Si It The Colleges College of Law Why is the State justified in maintaining a Law School, when there are already too many law- yers? It is not because we need more, but be- cause we need better lawyers. If we can equip our students with progressive ideas, if we can imbue them with the vital principles of individual and social justice, better courts and better laws will result. It has been the avowed purpose of Dean Lafferty to raise the standard of admission to the bar in Kentucky, and it was through his in- fluence that the legislature in recent session adopted the bill practically as he had planned it. Furthermore, the official State university law school does not teach men law merely as a trade, but aims by scientific methods to train men so that they will be worthy to be, not only counsellors and advocates, but leaders in the movement which will bring legal methods and institutions abreast of the times. Dean Lafferty, the pioneer and foremost prac- tice court teacher of the country, has succeeded in having the practice work adopted by the Amer- ican Association of Law Schools, and numerous schools are using Judge Lafferty’s manual and methods. Dean Lafferty, who is fast becoming the Grand old Judge of the University, endears all the students to his college by his unequaled personal interest, his abiding judgment, and his kind discretion. DEAN LAFFERTY Dean of Women The most vital problem facing the Dean of Women is the improvement of living conditions of the women at Kentucky. By more careful inspection of rooming houses, by greater co- operation between householders and the office, by the personal attention given at the University Dormitory, and co-operative houses, more conve- nient and comfortable quarters have been pro- vided. The Dean of Women, as Secretary of the Senate Entertainment Committee, also has charge of the greater part of the social activities of the university. Through vocational talks and personal advice Dean Hamilton is endeavoring to impress upon the women to make more of their University opportunities, and devote less time and energy to the more superficial social life, empha- sizing the need to develop a spirit of unity in social life and to create a more democratic loy- alty to the University. DEAN HAMILTON (33) ‘mm Officers of Instruction Harry Raymond Allen, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Mathematics J. Embry Allen, B.A. Instructor in Law Frederick Paul Anderson, M.E. Dean of the College of Mechanical and Elec- trical Engineering; Professor of Mechanical Engineering Virginia Anderson, B.S. Instructor in Freehand Drawing W. S. Anderson, M.A. Assistant Professor of Animal Husbandry Thomas James Barr, B.M.E. Professoi of Mining Engineering Matthew Hume Bedford, Ph.D. Instructor in Physical and Electro Chemistry Paul Prentice Boyd, M.A., Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Science Head of Department of Mathematics Eva Marguerite Brown, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Education A. L. Brueckner, B.S.Acr. Instructor in Veterinary Science Ruby Buckman, A.B., B.S. Assistant Professor of Home Economics Leslie Burgevin, A.B. Instructor in English William Edward Butt, A.M. Assistant Professor of Economics Harry S. Cannon, A.M. Instructor in German William Joseph Carrel, B.S., C.E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering Ioalina Castro Instructor in Modern Languages Lyman Chalkley, LL.B. Professor of Law Thomas C. Cooper, B.S.Agr. Dean of the College of Agriculture; Director of Experiment Station John James Curtis, M.E. . . Assistant Professor of Testing Materials Lloyd Cacie Daniels, Pii.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry On Leave of Absence Lehre Livingston Dantzler, A.M. Professor of Literature; Head of Department of English Joseph Morton Davis, A.M. Professor of Mathematics John Born Dicker Superintendent of Shops; Head of Department of Practical Mechanics Harold Hardesty Downing, B.C.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Edward Franklin Farquhar, M.A. Professor of English Literature Leon Kaufman Frankel, M.E. Professor of Applied Mechanics; Head of Department of Mechanics of Engineering H. Garman, D.Sc. Professor of Entomology and Zoology E. S. Good, M.S. Professor of Animal Husbandry Enoch Grehan, A.B. Head of Department of journalism On leave of absence. (34) Officers of Instruction Vernon Guy Grove, A.B. Teaching Fellor in Mathematics Anna Jackson Hamilton, M.A. Dean of Women; Associate Professor of English Albert Foster Hardman, A.B. Instructor in Chemistry Cecil Chenault Harp, M.E. Instructor in Experimental Engineering S. L. Hibberd, B.S. Instructor in Agronomy J. J. Hooper, M.S.A. Professor of Animal Husbandry Christine Hopkins, A.B. Instructor in English John Sherman Horine, M.E. Assistant Professor of Drawing J. B. Hudson, B.S.Acr. Instructor in Farm Management J. R. Humphrey Professor of Marketing Reuben Brent Hutchcraft, B.A., LL.B. Professor of Law McNeal C. James, A.B., B.S.Acr. Professor of Agricultural Education Mary Frances Jewell, A.B. On Leave of Absence Instructor in English Theodore Tolman Jones, A.M. Head of Department of Latin P. E. Karraker, M.S. Assistant Professor of Agronomy Charles Kerr Instructor in Law Cincinnatus Decatur Killebrew, M.S. Associate Professor of Physics E. J. Kinney, B.S.Acr. Associate Professor of Agronomy Claude Clayton Kiplincer, A.B. Assistant Professor of Chemistry William Thornton Lafferty, A.B., A.M. Dean of the College of Law; Professor of Law F. T. McFarland, M.S. Assistant Professor of Botany Marguerite McLaughlin, A.B. Instructor in Journalism J. Holmes Martin, B.S.Acr. Instructor in Animal Husbandry C. W. Matthews, B.S. Professor of Horticulture Ralph Nelson Maxson, Ph.D. Professor of Inorganic Chemistry Columbus Rudolph Melcher, A.M. Dean of Gen; Professor of German Arthur McQuiston Miller, A.M. Head of Department of Geology On Leave of Absence John Richard Mitchell, A.B. Instructor in Chemistry William Arnold Newman, B.C.E. Instructor in Civil Engineering W. D. Nicholls, M.S.A. Associate Professor of Farm Management James Thomas Cotton Noe, A.M. Head of Department of Education Louis Edward Nollau, M.E. Professor of Drawing; Head of Department Charles Joseph Norwood, M.S. Dean of the College of Mines and Metallurgy; Professor of Mining and Metallurgy A. J. Olney, B.S. Assistant Professor of Ilorliculture On leave of absence. m (4® W.Wv:r- ? • Officers of Instruction Merry Lewis Pence, M.S. Head of Department of Physics Mabel Hardy Pollitt, A.M. Instructor in German R. L. Pontius, V.S. Associate Professor of Veterinary Science John T. Price, M.A. Instructor in English and Journalism Joseph William Pryor, A.M. Head of Department of Anatomy and Physiology Linda Purnell, B.S. Instructor in Home Economics Elijah Laytham Rees, C.E., A.M. Associate Professor of Mathematics Glanville Terrell, Ph.D. Head of Department of Greek Gordon Thurman Instructor in Forge and Machine Shop John James Tigert, A.M. (Oxon.) Head of Department of Philosophy Edward Tuthill, Ph.D. Flead of Department of History and Political Economy Franklin Elliott Tuttle, M.A., Ph.D. Head of Department of Chemistry G. H. Vansell, A.M. Assistant Professor of Entomology and Zoology George W. Vaughn, LL.B. Instructor in Latv Homer Lloyd Reid, A.B. Instructor in Physics McHenry Rhoads, M.A., Ph.M. Professor of Secondary Education George Roberts, M.S. Professor of Agronomy Mabel L. Roe, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Botany Charles Hodge Scott, A.B. Instructor in Geology George Slappey, A.B. Teaching Fellor in English Marshall Ney States, B.S. Instructor in Physics Mary E. Sweeney, M.S., M.A. Associate Professor of hlome Economics Daniel Voiers Terrell, C.E. Acting Dean of the College of Civil Engineering; Professor of Highway Engineering Isaac C. Watkins Assistant in Engineering Laboratories Charles Preston Weaver, A.B. Professor of English William Snyder Webb, M.S. Professor of Physics Clara White Instructor in Home Economics Arza Lytle Wilhoite, M.E. Assistant Professor in Heat Engineering Norton Moore Williams, B.S. Instructor in Chemistry Brice Couch Worley Instructor in Assaying and Metallurgy T. G. Yaxis, M.S. Assistant Professor of Animal Husbandry Alfred Charles Zembrod, A.M. Head of Department of Modern Languages On leave of absence. (36) Alumni Association CHARLES R. Brock...................................................President, Denver, Colo. Thompson R. Bryant.................................................Vice-President, Lexington Samuel B. Marks..............................................Secretary-Treasurer, Lexington Marguerite McLaughlin.....................................Alumnus Editor, Lexington (acting) W. E. Freeman.................................................Executive Committee, Lexington The Alumni of the University of Kentucky extends hearty greetings to the Class of 1918, and welcomes its members into the ranks of the “old grads.” An invitation to the class to attend the annual meeting of the Alumni Association, Wednesday after- noon, June 5, is hereby extended, and on that occasion they may become members of the organization. Last year when the Alumni Association met there were among those present many men wearing the uniform of the United States soldiers, and some of them this year are at the front, so the festivities for 191 8, are anticipated with a shade of sadness because of the enforced absence of many who have made it a custom annually to return for gradua- tion, to meet old friends and enjoy a general reunion with former classmates. Many Seniors of last year, your personal friends and classmates, for whom you enter- tained when they were in the University, will be counted on the honor roll of the absent ones, but there will be others here to greet you, and you may be assured those absent, wherever they are, will be thinking of your graduation day and longing with all the inten- sity of their loyal hearts to be with you. If they could communicate with you that occasion to congratulate you on the success you have obtained and the accomplish- ment of work well done, they would in a word welcome you into the fold of Alumni of the University of Kentucky and bid you enter actively into the workings of the organi- zation, and help bring honor and distinction to your Alma Mater and to the Common- wealth that gave you the means by which you may attain position and citizenship and be of value to the State and nation. (37) Joseph Dicker, for twenty-six years superintendent of shops. College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineer- ing, Uni versify of Kentucky, died Wednesday evening, Octoebr 31st, at 7 o clock, at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Lex- ington, after a short illness. The announcement was sent to the alumni of the University through the November Alumnus, and The Kenlucfyian honors itself by pay- ing tribute to the memory of one whose professional ability and personal characteristics have made lasting impression on more than 2,000 students, and who has been associated so long with the growth of the College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering and with its success. Joe Dicker was a manly man. He had implicit faith in humanity and above all things, he believed in young men and women. He sought to the full measure of his ability, both by word and example, to impress the im- portant lesson that he served humanity best who began whole-heartedly the day’s work and persevered with singleness of purpose unto its end. So wrote the faculty Resolutions Committee on the occasion of Mr. Dicker’s death, and a solemn “Amen” was intoned in the hearts of the many students who remembered the genuine ap- proval for wo:k well done, the kindly assistance in per- plexing tasks and the genial smile pf friendship and interest so generously bestowed by him on those who were called within the scope of his leadership. That the students, and especially the alumni, were de- voted to Joe Dicker was shown in many ways, and especially when, on the occasion of the celebration of the Silver Jubilee of the College of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering, they presented him with a watch and “toasted” him at the luncheon in a numher of appropriate expressions. And that those students who shall henceforth come to the University may know that such a man as Joe Dicker lived, directed the work of the shop for many years and was loved by all who knew him, a lifesize portrait painting of him has been given by “those who loved him” to the University and is hanging in Mechanxal Hall. The presentation exer- cises will be held during Commencement week. Virgil Chapman PRESIDENT OF SENIOR CLASS Senior Class Officers Virgil Chapman.........................................................President Emma Holton.......................................................Vice-President Aileen Kavanaugh.......................................................Secretary John A. Brittain.......................................................Treasurer Bertha Miller . . . '....................................................Prophet Harry L. Milward..........................................................Orator Frieda Lemon...........................................................Historian C. L. Morgan............................................................Crumbier Helen Morris................................................................Poet Russel Hunt............................................................Ciftorian Jasper J. McBrayer................................................Representative (44) Senior Class Wiliam Koontz Adkins, B.M.E..........................................................Depoy, Ky. Edison-Joule; A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Tau Beta Kake. Koontz did not make any noise for three years and made still less during his last year. We had high hopes that in his Senior year he would step out in the open and say something real loud and snappy in order to let everybody know that he was here, but he didn’t come up to expectations. The Sphinx is a small town gossip by the side of Adkins. But still waters run deep, so here is a bottomless pool. He made Mech. Hall his home, though there is something about the Experiment Station for which he seems to have an affinity. The result of his experiments in that line are still in the dark. Adkins is an honest, thorough and conscientious student, who ever keeps his face toward his goal without straying into the by-paths. Lois Ammerman, A.B..............................................................Poindexter, Ky. Horace Mann President (3). Lois is as capable as she is attractive. Horace Mann would have her for its president. ‘‘When she gets in it, she’s sure to win it,” if it is anything resembling an Essay Contest. She finished her Senior year in just half the time an ordinary person takes for it. Paul Maximilian Andres, B.M.E...................................................Lexington, Ky. Edison-Joule; A. a. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Tau Beta Kake. His majesty, the Prince, like many another man, fell a victim to the wiles of a woman, and she beguiled him and he did marry. But it was through no special fault of his own, and he finished his college career in connubial bliss. He doesn’t talk very much on the campus, probably the result of home training. This place evidently liked Paul for it kept him quite a while, but he seemed to enjoy his sojourn according to his own fashion. He may be a great engineer some day for he possesses perse- verance and tenacity galore. Many men have lived down the handicap of a name and we don’t see why “Prince Max can’t, too. (46) AMMERMAN ATCHISON BARKER BLE1DT Senior Class Morgan Marion Atchison, LL.B...........................................................Owingsville, Ky. Henry Clay Law Society. “Atch is a sturdy, quiet, industrious youth, never seeking the limelight but contented to do his duty as he sees it. When at home he raises “long green, and no man in the Law College ever loved better to chew it. My, but it’s strong! “Atch can always stop studying long enough to tell a joke or listen to one. With a fondness for politics and a devotion to his party, we suspect his ambition is to be county judge and then represent the Ninth District at Washington, We are not advised whether or not he will run on his “war record. Clyde Russell Barker, A.B., LL.B...................................................Brooksville, Ky. A. B., '16; Class Poet, '16; 1st Lieut. Band, ’15; Union. “Judge” is a sobriquet bestowed upon him because of his name, even before he essayed to make himself a Keeper of the King’s Conscience. He is a diligent student and hard worker; “possesses opinions and a will,” and is not reticent in expressing them, although he is noted for his lack of loquacity. “Judge is a musician and poet, his latest Broadway hit being Till the Kaiser and His Gang Are No More. Before becoming a disciple of Blackstone he was a follower of Pestalozzi. His ambition is to corner the collegiate degrees, and then be a high-salaried professor of law. Everett Price Bleidt, B.S. in Agr....................................................Lexington, Ky. High School Club. We cannot fully comprehend why E. P. likes to study “Bugology and pry around in the mouth parts of “Musca Domestica, but what it takes to look like a scientist E. P. has got it. Fond as he is of bugs, he does not like bug juice. Nevertheless, E. P. is a true Lexingtonian, and his suave and gentle manners have won him many friends among the fellows and one inseparable one with the co-eds. He doesn’t belong to the Strollers, but he is a stroller just the same. Here's hoping he doesn’t end his life as a caretaker of a “bug house. (47) '1 BRADLEY BROWN Senior Class George Clifton Bradley, LL.B............................................................Lexington, Ky. Henry Clay Law Society; Law Debating Team, ’15. George is our Mexican War veteran.” He fought tarantulas, centipedes and snakes galore—every- thing except greasers; ate chille concocted of sand and horse meat, made goo-goo eyes at Senoritas (across the Rio Grande), and then returned to the good Judge” to delve again into the lore whose seat is the bosom of God.” His love of fun is second only to his love for hard work. But we were forgetting all of the dainty dames, and the one in particular. It is whispered that he may remain next year and strive for a master's degree. After that he will probably practice at Richmond. John Alfred Brittain, B.M.E.............................................................Leadville, Colo. Kappa Sigma; Keys; Mystic Thirteen; Lamp and Cross; Tau Beta Pi; Tail Beta Kake; A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Edison-Joule President (4); Pan-Hellenic (3, 1); Y. M. C. A.; Foot- ball (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsity Football (2, 3, 4); Captain (4); Track (1, 2, 3) Brit is a son of the wild and wooly West, he can be the roughest when he is rough and gentlest when he is gentle. Many a man has thought the lightning struck him when as a matter of fact Brit had only tackled him. There is as little need of telling about his football ability as there is ordering Villa to get out of Mexico. He has always been one of the prominent men in class affairs and in campus activities, especially in breaking up midnight scraps on the buildings. Eubanks” is one of the best engineers in the class and succeeded in making both Pi and Kake. The girls think Brit is just a dear, and you know what he thinks about them. He more than returns the compliment. Clarence Carlisle Brown, B.S. in Agr. Williamstown, Ky. Agricultural Society. Cubic Cawatimeter, Shakespeare or Doc, had an unequaled propensity for acquiring nicknames. The name Cubic Cawatimeter has a unique source but it must not be mentioned. He can recite the grades of the Chem. Department verbatim et punctatum. Once upon a time a captain of a military company had dire threats made against him but they were never carried out. Now Brown is reconciled to the military, and is doing service at Fort Dade. Cawatimeter was a teetotaler in society for a while, but in his last semester he gravitated with dizzy celerity into the Primrose Path, and Terpsichore would have conceded her museship to him had she seen the gyrations he went through to the heavenly strains of Smith. (48) CAVALLO CHAPMAN CLARKE Senior Class Emile Barton Cavallo, B.C.E...............................................Vicksburg, Miss. Vicksburg never knew what it was capable of producing until she saw this chap with the queer handle on his name. Emile is quite a pianist, and can draw most anything but a salary, and soon will be able to do that. He came near to dying once because he couldn’t draw his breath. With the feminine element as a whole he is not such a lion, but there is liable to be one heart lose a beat when he leaves; that is, unless she goes along. Virgil Munday Chapman, LL.B........................................................Lexington, Ky. Class President (4); Class Orator (3) Law Prize (3); Instructor in Law (4); Kentucky Law Journal, Assistant Editor (3); Editor-In-Chief (41; Henry Clay Law Society, Attorney General (3); President, Critic (4); Law Debating; Team (4); Kentucky Kernel, Chairman Hoard of Control (3, 4). Staff (4); Delegrate to Southern Students’ Conference (3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (31 ;' Chairman Student Vice Commission; Alpha Delta Sigma; ■ Tau Kappa Alpha. Virgil, the silver-tongued orator, the boy orator of the Pennyrile, whose utterances will linger about us as the perfume of roses. None the less flowery was the path of his triumphial procession from his undaunted loyalty to his Freshman fellows to their honored leadership in his Senior year. The friend of the Old Guard, yet the only unanimous Class President in the history of the university. As an unequalled politician, he must be referred to as a diplomat of no mean ability. The very reincarnation of Jeffersonian democracy and Kentuckian eloquence, Virgil must be considered an heirloom of the glorious past. With a deep insight and admiration for the law, he is ever independent and fearless. Long live the President! Horace Burt Clarke, B.C.E...........................................................Maysville, Ky. Kappa Sigma. Horace tried Sewanee for a year and then came to Old Kentucky. He is from Maysville but he kept quiet about it for a while. He makes girls’ hearts go through antics which at fifty would cause a riot call for physicians. He has a way of being friendly to all and has as many friends as acquain- tances. Maybe he hasn’t enjoyed himself at the dance . Poor Castle was so clumsy. How jealous he would have been of that centrifugal motion Horace develops while dancing. (49) Robert Morris Davis, B.M.E...................................................... Pi Kapa. Alpha; Edison-Joule Secretary (1), Vice-President (3); A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Tau Beta Pi, Honor Man, ’18; Student Assistant in Electrical Laboratory. “Bob” is one of the products that made Owensboro famous and we are proud to have had him with us. “Prof has a dignified, almost regal bearing, and up to the present date has never been seen off his dignity. But, gentle reader, do not for a moment think that he is all stuck up. He tends to his own business and, as is characteristic of such people, he tends to it well. He being long, lean and lanky, likes or probably loves short girls. He is as graceful as a swaying palm when on the ballroom floor. He is a good scout, and all his acquaintances are his friends. To those that know him not words cannot tell, and to those that know him words are of no avail. Owensboro, Ky. Edith Cary Dean, A.B Kappa Kappa Gamma. Edith is in such demand among the educators of the Slate that she can’t spare us much time. Midway must hold some great attraction for her if it is greater than the one she left behind her at the university. Elbert Rorer Dearborn, B.M.E......................................................Cynthiana, Ky. Edison-Joule; Glee Club; A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; 1st Lieut. Band; R. O. T. C. O those eyes, those killing eyes. They charmed all those who looked into their dark depths. Yes, they charmed one and consequently he is now one of the few on the roll of the married. He is a very quiet, industrious flelow who tends to his own business and never lets anybody else’s bother him. He has acquired or absorbed considerable knowledge of mechanics, and with his zeal and industry, faih will ever be a stranger to him. The ivory ball and cushioned table have been the apparatus with which he described parabolas and curves of all sorts and descriptions. !! ..-11-_______________1___________'■■ .............-....-...... ... flSyi i i sm y £S) l 4M 1 sPi§ . -.............................................................................................................-..........................................................................-___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mit® Semor Class Frank Walton Dempsey, LL.B..........................................................Burlington, Ky. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Mystic Thirteen! Football (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsity Football (2, 3, 4). “Cupid's” fame rests not on things written and said but on the arduous greatness of things done.” He is a thunderbolt on the gridiron. It is rumored that he played backfield in high school, but no one believes it. However, he made a touchdown Thanksgiving '17, reminding the spectators of the move- ments of an elephant in the hosts of Xerxes or a tank in No Man's Land. Enjoys a dance every Thanksgiving night. Is as polite as Lord Chesterfield. His motto seems to be: Take Life Easy,” and his ambition to represent the Sixth District in Congress. Dee Richard Ellis, B.M.E..............................................................Eminence, Ky. Kappa Sigma; Edison-Joule;, Captain (3), Major (4); A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Member of War Board. “Major is the Von Hindenburg of the campus and the best major here about. If you don’t believe it just ask some Freshman. Fie could not be a farmer because he cannot head off pigs, owing to the fact that the structural design of his shanks is somewhat similar to that of a pair of misused sugar tongs. Dee is a steady student, a hard worker and one of the best known men on the campus. He is a fast man on the track, and he is no tortoise with the ladies. It is a terrible loss to football that he didn’t have time for playing. You just have to know him to appreciate him. R. B. FENLEY, B.S. in Agr.........................................................Valley Station, Ky. Agricultural Society; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); Captain (4); I.ouisville Club President (4). Should you be in doubt about any question of dairying, military tactics or fresh freshmen, just ask Fenley, for he knows dairying, thinks he knows military tactics, and is a close observer for freshness. One day when he was in a communicative mood, he told somebody that he had had actual experi- ence in milking. Fenley has a world of good sense and uses it to good advantage. The New Dorm has had the honor of sheltering him for four years, and the Old Guard could always count on his support. ■ R FLEGE, R. F. FLEGE, J. B. FLEMING Senior Class Robert Frederic Flege, A.B..................................................Williamstown, Ky. Associate Editor 1918 Kentuckian.” This assiduous student came to us in Little Lord Fauntleroy attire and leaves us a member of the 6-1 Club. His intellect has grown in the same proportion, and he has been awarded a scholarship for the study of Modern Languages in the University of Chicago. Not only is Fred a scholar, but he was active in Class politics, being an important wheel in the Old Guard machine. Fie lived in Heaven, and his room served as a temple of justice. He is opposed to the Terpsichorean art, but danced like a Cavalier at the Junior Prom. JOHN Blain Flege, B.S. in Agr......................................... . Williamstown, Ky. Agricultural Society President (4); Cheer Leader (4). Little Mr. Flege was a country guy who had up-town ways. He has the honor of being one of the few Ags to major in English. Flege was a hard worker, and he was a good student for the amount of studying he did. A reward was once offered by the Third Division for the man who caught him studying. Nothing of importance ever took place on the campus without his knowledge or partici- pation. Hair-cutting was his favorite sport, but he sincerely regretted the fact that four of his classmates were canned for one lock that he cut. His motto is “Don’t rush through life, for the next one may be worse than this.” Ernest Berry Fleming, B.M.E................................................................Elizaville, Ky. Alpha Sigma Phi; Tau Beta Ivake (4). Fleming is one of those ambitious, industrious fellows who puts everything he has into life and will get much in return. Those who saw his antics will never forget his one-night stand as a peanut vendor on Main Street. He has had a busy but quiet career in college, and has chosen a vocation which will still keep him “far from the mad crowd’s ignoble strife.” His field in Kentucky is unlimited, and here’s hoping that he may find such minerals as will make the wealth of Ophir and of Ind pale into insignificance. (53) FLOCKEN GABBERT GAULT Senior Class Jacob John Flocken, B.E.M......................................................New Albany, Ind. Tau Beta Pi; Kentucky Mining Society President (4); Louisville Club. Jacob John is the other twin of the Mining College and is one of the best men the college has ever had. He came from up round Louisville and we are informed that he was some football hero and some more basketball player. Exageration, misrepresentation or rough handling of the truth is characteristic of all Louisvillians. It must come from the water. Flocken is not a crusher of class one, but at various intervals he has been seen in company with the fair sex. William Richard Gabbert, B.S. in Agr...................................................Louisville, Ky. Billy is the busy little man of the class, and is seemingly adept at all farm operations. He was chief assistant flunky at Elmendorf for awhile and he evidently learned all he didn’t know about dairying. He must have been born with a special delivery stamp on his forehead for he is always Johnny-on-the-spot. Effeminitis once came near claiming him as a victim, but probably one of Cupid's poisoned darts caused him to settle down to more sober things. In spite of that, he got sick in Columbus and didn’t want to get well. You cannot always see him, but you can generally hear him. Lelah Vaughn Gault, B.S. in Home Economics.......................................Maysvills, Ky, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (1, 2, 3, 4); President (.4); Blue Ridge Delegate (2); Philosophian; Home Economics Editor Rural Kentuckian (3); Home Economies Club President (4); Stall and Crown; 1«18 “Kentuckian” Staff; Student Assistant in Home Economics (3, 4). The staff and mainstay of the Home Ec. Department. The most capable girl one could find in many a day. Her canning club work has made her famous throughout the State, and her student activities a general favorite at the University. (54) GOOSMAN HAGGAN HAMMOND Senior Class Karl William Goosman, B.M.E.........................................................Richmond, Ky. Alpha Sigma Phi; Edison-Joule; A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Tau Beta Kake; 2nd Lieut. (3); Captain (4). “Tubby” or “Red” (as you like it) has the essence of eternal sunshine in his hair. He is surely a commanding figure when he is all dressed up in military regalia. Tubby and Firecracker had exciting times with each other and the former was the recipient of much good advice from the latter. Red- headed people seldom affiliate well with each other. He had no craving for society in his early years, but during the last year he broke loose with his pent-up energy and became a crusher A-1. Besides being an engineer he is a barber of note and can extract wonderful melodies from a Jew’s-harp. He learned to play the harp without assistance. Henry Clay Haggan, B.S. in Agr.....................................................Covington, Ky. Agricultural Society. Henry is an Irishman, not addicted to the traditional habit of handing out blarney. He is quiet about his business and is studious and unassuming. He came here from a town and was unac- quainted with farm work, but one vacation on a farm caused him to believe that work on the farm is considerably harder than ordinarily depicted in the movies. He is quite proficient in dairying, and may make that his life work. It is rumored that he is a pianist past mediocrity, but he is so modest about it that nobody ever hears his music. John Lewis Hammond, B.S. In Agr...................................................Vanceburg, Ky. The choicest things are often done up in small packages. However, that does not keep the large packages from being valuable. “Fats” is the greatest man in the class, and he is all wool and (nearly) a yard wide. There is an elfish twinkle in his eyes that tells one that his love for telling jokes is equaled only by his love for hearing one. O. Henry, Kipling, Edmund Hoyle, Ben Ali, and Ada Meade are his best friends. He doesn’t believe in co-education, for he thinks that the female is the more deadly of the species and that women are uncertain like unto dynamite and other such things. The downy couch and round table have been important factors in his college education. (55) . I il M ) HARRISON Senior Class Ella Maud Harmon, A.B......................................................Perryville, Ky. Y. AY. C. A.; Philosophiam Horace Mann. Maud is one of our “shining lights.” She nol only persuaded Pops” Downing and Hon. W. E. Butt to bestow an A upon her, but in addition she has persuaded herself that she is a titan haired” beauty. She has a failing for polysyllables and talks with an accent. She is an exhaustive student, and can hold her own in any class. Clyde D. Harrison, B.S. in Agr.............................................Lebanon, Ky. Sigma Chi. Clyde or Longy” hails from Lebanon, if anybody knows where the great city is. At least he knows where it is and that is enough. He endeared himself to every girl in school, more or less, and Mighty came perilously near falling in love with him. By the aid of a spade, though, he suc- ceeded in getting by Mighty. Oh, no, he didn’t deal a cold hand, he merely spaded a garden. He was a fine student considering the time spent on his work. Tenacity was his long suit and it stood him well. Clyde was a Greek letter man and quite prominent in society, but not one of those human ice- bergs so frequently seen. Lexington, Ky. Pi Kappa Alpha; Keys; Mystic Thirteen : A. I. E. E.; A. S. E. M. E.; Pan-Hellenic (4) Tau Beta Kake; Varsity Football, ’13-’14-’17. Sledges” is just the dearest boy you ever saw, so the girls say. Given wings he would be a little cherub. He breaks hearts right and left, but he has one slain proper. Jimmie, ‘the watch charm quarterback,” is the scrappiest piece of humanity that ever went on the gridiron, and, although he called signals in a rather high-pitched tone he could tackle a two-hundred-pounder as a panther would a cow. Sledges is very humorous and provided a great deal of enjoyment for his co-sufferers in the drawing room. The greatest role he ever played was the Prep School Boy in the 18 parade at the Jubilee. He is one of those valuable articles found so frequently in small packages. James Hedges, Jr., B.M.E. (56) JpJv K Hi ,lV ■ 1 vA,.;4 fv W C£5. rzA I ' 'il'V' HIERONYMUS Senior Class Hall Massillon Henry, B.M.E....................................................Lakeland, Ky. Edison-Joule Society Secretary (2); A. I. E. E.; A. S. M. E.; Patterson; Class President (3); Football Manager (4); Assistant Business Manager 191S “Kentuckian; Tau Beta Pi; 1st Lieut. (4); R. O. T. C.; Louisville Club. When this honest, ambitious, courtly youth leaves for a training camp we will lose one of our strongest, best and truest men. Hall charms everyone he smiles upon. Until he made Tau Beta Pi in his Junior year he was the typical Trojan, but afterward was lured by the rustle of silk and damask, averaging two dates a day. Suffice it to say (in confidence) his important dates were made through an intermediary and filled while running. He was an important figure in the “organization” of the Old Guard and the heoro of a close Presidential race in his Junior year. William Shelton Hieronymus, B.S. in Agr. St. Helens, Ky. Most people prefer to call this young man Bill or Hie, and the reasons are doubtlessly obvious. Lots of people almost took his name in vain. His motto was “Have a good time now, for harder times are coming.” Bill is everybody’s friend and the profs like him fine (they tried to keep him in some of his classes). Pool is one of his chief diversions, and he is quite dexterous at handling the stick. He loved all the girls and did a great amount of research work in the library. Emma Gladys Holton, A.B....................................................Forks of Elkhorn, Ky. Kappa Delta; Strollers; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (S, 4) (3); Class Vice-President (4). Pan-Hellenic (3); Blue Ridge Delegate Emma has had her hands full running the language department, making “As” in the most impossible things, attending all the dinners thrust upon her by her ardent admirers among the faculty, and lastly, deciding how she can best benefit the world with her talents. (57) JACKSON Senior Class SHERLEY Hudson, B.C.E...............................................................Louisville, Ky. Phi Delta Theta. Hard-Boy” is one of those fellows like you see in the movies over whose heads they break beer bottles. Yes, and he eats pebbles, seasoned with iron fillings, picks his teeth with ten-penny nails, and does his manicuring with a rasp. He has a leaky valve in the left ventricle, which causes him to have a failing for ‘‘la femme.” He has a liking for audible ties and a fondness for cutting class. Good men can cut class and get by with it and Hard-Boy is going to get by with flying colors. Russell Aubrey Hunt, B.S. in Agr.....................................................Owensboro, Ky. Agricultural Society; Rural Kentuckian Junior Editor (3); Editor-in-Chief (4); Assistant in Animal Husbandry (4). It has never been ascertained what Russell calls himself, but he calls everybody else “Doc.” Owens- boro has the honor of producing him. Lexington developed him, and we hear that Nicholasville will add the finishing touches. R. A. is the pride of the Ag College in editorial circles, and he bids fair to become famous in this line. He will be a good man on the farm, but must never be let out with a gun, for he is too fond of shooting the bull. He is a man of his own mind and it is a good mind, too. George Lewis Jackson, B.M.E...........................................................Franklin, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega; Mystic Thirteen; A. I. E. E.; A. S. M. .E; Tau Beta Kalce. “Dear Daddy” began his college life in single blessedness, but before the grand finale he, too, took to himself a wife. This, however, did not impede his progress but rather added impetus to his efforts. Jackson bore the brunt of quite a bit of kidding in the drawing room, but being some little kidder himself, he knew how to take the medicine. George was always at home with the boys and is now keeping up that home tendency with the wife. He is a veritable beatitude as a husband and a good engineer to boot (58) JAMESON KAVANAUCH KERSWILL Senior Class Laura Lee Jameson, B.S. in Home Economics.......................................Cynthiana, Ky. Alpha Gamma Delta; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4); Delegate to Blue nidge (3); Home Eco- nomics Club. Lollie” is a Home Ec. major and, though she has made for herself a very worth-while place in the University life, we believe that her affections are centered back home. Aileen Gilbert Kavanaugh, A.B............................................Lawrenceburg, Ky. Alpha Gamma Delta; Staff and Crown; Philosophian Play (2); Horace Mann; Pan-Hellenic; Strollers; Y. W. C. A. Glee Club (3). “Kalleen” put Lawrenceburg on the map. She managed to get into everything on the campus- even the Physics building. She has enough “As to start a factory. Lela May Kerswill, B.S.................................................................Lexington, Ky. Class Secretary (3). Lela is famous for her sweet disposition. She is always laughing and it can truthfully be said that no one ever saw her real angry. Her good nature is such that we believe it can withstand the trials and tribulations to which the housekeeper is heir. (59) m: Senior Class Henry J. KolbiE, B.M.E............................................................Warsaw, Russia Edison-Joule; A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Patterson. This man hails from Warsaw in the land where government is as changeable as Mexican presidents. However, he is very steady and has never caused any disturbance. He is sometimes called Leon Trotzky, and it is also whispered that he is the present Czar of Russia. He is an all-around good student; his knowledge ranges from philosophy to thermo dynamics, with five or six languages in between. He is a hard worker, having worked his way through' school, and at the same time has made an enviable record as a student. Maybe he will go back to Russia some time, but from the way he uses the telephone it is quite evident that he likes this place. Frieda Lemon, A.B......................................................................Marion, Ky. Philosophian Vice-President (3); President (4); Strollers Vice-President (4); Cast “Lion and the Mouse; Y. W. C. A. Treasurer (4); Class Historian (4); Associate Editor 1918 “Kentuckian;’’ War Committee; Horace Mann; Stall and Crown. Math, Geology, Philosophy and everything else that seems almost impossible to the rest of us worry Frieda none at all. During her college course her ambitions have been many and varied but her latest and possibly last love is the Radio-work. And we predict for you, Frieda, great success in your career as a radio operator. John William Lindsay, B.S. in Agr...................................................Covington, Ky. Y. M. C. A. President (4); Union Literary Society President (4); Strollers; Agricultural Society. Bill is one of the landmarks of the campus which the ‘18 Class effaces. If you want to hear talks of the days of old, ask Bill, for he knows many thrilling stories of the wild and wooly days. His greatest ambitions were to become President of the Y. M. C. A. and live in Heaven and he accomplished them with ease. Therefore, he is a good man. Bill is a true and loyal member of the Old Guard and was candidate for class presidency, but, like Bryan and many others, he never got there. There was a certain clique that had great fear of Bill, but need never have feared, for he is truly a good scout. (60) With magnificent voice and superb histrionic ability, “Jap” or “Mac, has made a record as the winner of speaking contests. He doesn’t care what he speaks about, but Peace and Prohibition are “favorites” which he rode until, like Casey Jones' engine, they left the rail. Y. M. C. A. is the Mount on which he will make his “war record. His ambition is to represent the home of “Bond and Lillard” in the legislature and then out-Bryan Bryan on the Chautauqua platform. His motto is: “Why work when you can play? and his favorite scripture: “Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow you may die.” Sara Winn McConnell, A.B. Arlington, Ky. Sara Winn will meet any fate with a smile and a jest. She consoled herself for an injured spine with, “Well I still have a bold front, if I have got a bad back.” You cannot resist when she decides to “make you love her.” John Edwin McClure, B.S. in Agr.......................................................Mt. Sterling, Ky. Alpha Sigma Phi; Agricultural Society President (4); Assistant Business Manager Rural Kentuckian. Mac once belonged to the faithful few, but thinking them too antiquated forsook them. Theoretically, Mac is a ladies’ man, but really we are not informed as to his status; however, as to the qualifications of the fair sex he is quite a connoisseur. Having been supply-room man in the Chemistry Department, he is well acquainted with the greenness of the “frosh.” With his downy lip, cane, corduroys, horn rim glasses and deliberate speech, Mac gave quite an impression of seniority. (61) mccormick McGregor mcdougle Senior Class Charles Ellsworth McCormick, B.M.E.......................................Brooks Station, Ky. Sigma Nu; A. I. E. E.; A. S. M. E.; Tau Beta Kake. Cupid” is a product of Brooks Station, Kentucky, but said place has not been located geographically. He is one of those good students you read about, and his knowledge must be innate for he does not spend much time boning. If he had studied as much as Peak and had not been born sleepy he would have been a student without equal. But of all vain ifs the retrospective pluperfect is the vainest, and an antenatal if sublimely ridiculous. This twentieth century Cupid is the counterpart of the original in fame, fortune, face, and confidentially, in fact. Harold Bowers McGregor, A.B..................................................Lexington, Ky. English Club; Patterson. This ambitious Lexingtonian is the Zybisko of the Class, and some day will make a champion bite the dust. Frank Gotch would never have died a champion if he had met Mac. (This is probably the .biggest lie in the book). From all outward appearances the casual onlooker would judge that he was not a chronic sufferer from effeminitis, although on several different occasions he has been seen in the library. You know what that means, and you never can tell about these quiet fellows. Mac is probably the youngest member of the Class of '18. William Darnall McDougle, B.M.E.................................................Lexington, Ky. Edison-Joule; A. S. M. E.; . I. E. E.; Tau Beta Kake. Willie is the beloved of the Senior Mechanicals and is a veritable Willie. He is a lovable lad, so the girls think, but they do their admiring from a distance. The true cause of his seeming aversion and insouciance toward feminity in general is not known, but it may be so simple that it baffles discovery. There is one thing certain and that is, that he ought to have enjoyed his meals (he ate at Hamilton College and was the only man present). He is a very modest, congenial fellow, and ranks very high as a student. (62) Arlie Estus'McGuire, B.S. in Agr.................Saylersville, Ky. Mac is a rosy cheeked son of old Erin, full of common sense and good humor but not vociferous. He is one of those esse quam videre” fellows that are so seldom seen. Take another look- at him right now. He was not here quite as long as some of us, and he evidently believes that it is not how long you hang around, but what you put over while you are there. Had Berea have thought, she never would have let him leave, for his kind are rare. John Da Costa Maddox, B.M.E Eclison-Joule; A. M. E.; A. I. E. E. Da Costa now resides in Lexington, but he lives in Heaven with all of the other angels. He wanted a taste of real life and evidently he got it. He has been seen quit a bit in company with cigars, magazines, etc., but his real ambition is to become a mechanic of renown. In the drawing room he is lovingly dubbed “Mule.” The name owes its origin to his mulish stubbornness and kicking and not to any such thing as asininity. He is one of those fellows who talk little and yet say much. He is a wrestler of note, although the sport world has not heard much from him. Edna Rodgers Martin, A.B. ................................................. Class Secretary (3).. Edna came into the limelight when she was elected Secretary of the Class in her Junior year, quiet and good natured, she has made a wide circle of friends during her sojourn here. t ' Senior Class 5® XU] 8 n A Ruth Elizabeth Mathews, A.B..............................................................Lexington, Ky. English Club Secretary (4); T. W. C. A.; Philosophian; Glee Club. One of the brightest stars of the English Department. A girl of quiet, strong personality, a holder of all “A records, of whom her teachers say, “The world is her field. She can do whatever she chooses.” Mary Ricketts Mayes, A.B.............................................................Mt. Sterling, Ky. Philosophian Treasurer (3); Vice-President (4); Horace Mann; English Club; Literal? Club; Strollers; Y. W. C. A.; Kentucky Kernel Staff (4). What more could heart desire? A variety of talents which have made her indispensable to dramatics, art, literary societies, and college paper; an enviable scholastic record; for three years one of the most popular girls; and in her fourth year the holder of a “MRS” degree. James Cleveland Melvin, B.S. in Agr........................................Sedalia, Ky. Agricultural Society; Circulation Manager Rural Kentuckian (4). “Jurassic” must be good natured, at least, he always wore a grin as a facial decoration. Cleve possesses a superabundance of loquacity and could, if need be, cover a scarcity of ideas with a multiplicity of words. Sedalia has the honor of producing Cleve, and he may put it on the map in years. He didn’t have any dealings with the fair product of Kentucky during hi3 undergraduate days, but during the last lap he succumbed to the wiles of the co-eds and graced the hops with his presence. IN I l-AJ (64) Senior Class Bertha Klein Miller, B.S.......................................................Lexington, Ky. Philosophian Play (4); Horace Mann; Strollei-s; Morton High School Club; Class Prophet (4). A natural-born comedienne. Her talents are many and varied; she writes limericks, proverbs and prophecies. Her professors fear her “cartooning” moods. While as a ringmaster, toastmaster, master of ceremonies, master of the art of negro imitations and member of any committee, she is unparalleled. Harry L. MiLWARD, B.M.E..............................................................Lexington, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega; Mystic Thirteen; Lamp and Cross; Edison-Joule President (1); A. S. M. E.; A. I. E. E.; Tau Beta Pi ; Y. M. C. A. Vice-President (2); Blue Ridge Delegate; Morton High Club Secretary (2); 2nd Lieut. (4); Class Orator (4). Harry is a product of Lexington and she will be proud of him if nothing interferes. Notice the if” clause. St. Luke is a devout Y. M. C. A. man and a disciple of the Bible, but will probably revise it some day for his own personal benefit. He was a prominent factor in class elections and would have been nominated for the Senior Class presidency had his old self-appointed campaign manager been present. Mech Hall will feel lonesome without Harry, for he put in quite a few hours there. He is a regular ladies’ man; he loves them all and is loved by all. Yet this does not keep him from being a man’s man, too. Charles Lee Morgan, B.S. in Agr.........................................................Sirocco, Ky. Alpha Zeta; Lamp and Cross; Dairy Judging Team (4); Fat Stock Team (3); Associate Editor Rural Kentuckian (4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Agricultural Society; Class Treasurer (3); Grumbler (4). Morg drifted on to the local horizon from Sirocco and committed himself at once to the tender mercies of Miss Crumbaugh. In consequence of this, he became “acting dean of the Ag. College. Morg’s best friends were his books, and from his record as a student it is to be inferred that he was on the most intimate terms with them. However, his friends are not restricted to his books, for his friends among his fellows are numerous, and among the co-eds they are legion. Morgan is the honor graduate of the class and will be a great man in his chosen field. (65) Senior Class Helen Elizabeth Morris, A.B.......................................................Lexington, Ky. Chi Omega; Morton High School Club. Helen is another one of our “A” makers. Although she has done little else to put herself in the fore- light of university affairs, she has always beer, ready and willing to do her bit” in any place. Samuel Helm Morton, LL.B..........................................................Owensboro, Ky. Kappa Alpha; Phi Alpha Delta; Alpha Delta Sigma; Mystic Thirteen; Henry Clay Law Society; Patterson; Kentucky Kernel Staff; Lawyers’ Bible Class; Editor-in-Chief 191S “Kentuckian.” Sam is a most resourceful boy, whom we fear has never exerted himself to the full measure of his ability. Shrouded in the languid atmosphere of the Old South, he dreams and philosophizes like a true Kentuckian. Although he is by no means speedy, we will always “play him straight,” anyhow. He is the friend of everybody. All the girls say he is just perfectly lovely,” but cupid’s dart has never pierced his stout, big heart. Sam has great ambitions and lofty ideals. He is too young to know what he is going to do, but whenever he decides, it will be well done. Minnie E. NeVille, A.B. Louisville, Ky. Y W C A- Cabinet; Philosopkian, Treasurer (4); Library Club, Secretary-Treasurer (2); Vice-President (3), President (•!);. English Club; Horace Maun. It has been Minnie Evelyn’s function to keep alive in the university an appreciation of music, nature, and Shakespeare. To her they are divine. Such a capacity for work she has! And withal such an interest in and enjoyment of university life in all its phases. (66) m WBm B T'-' ■ wnmmuammmmm MHnBHBMBHHH HBRHHHI m I spiff NICHOLOFF, T. NICHOLOFF, C. NORTHCUTT Senior Class Tudor NichoLoff, B.S. in Agr. ....................................................Koniaro, Bulgaria “Nich evidently feared extermination in Bulgaria and got a passport to Kentucky, where life is worth living. He is to be complimented on his perseverance and his desire to become a real American. He doesn’t make much noise except music, and verily that hath charms to soothe the savage breast. Botany was his hobby but it waxed obstreperous and came near throwing him as he was rounding the last lap. Constantine Nicholoff, B.M.E.....................................................Orchania, Bulgaria A. I. E. E.; A. S. M. E.; Cosmopolitan Club. Nick bade Europe au revoir forever several years ago and cast his lot in Kentucky, but he may have to go back again. He is a pretender to the throne of King Ferdinand. It is funny what pro- pensities these Europeans have for government. He has caused Daddy Jackson quite a bit of ill humor by his greeting, “Give me a kiss.” Nick is a hard worker in school and out, and made his own way through school. The greatest night Nick ever had was the night he was taken into the “Kakes.” He can make a mandolin moan for help, and he furnished Heaven with many harmonious renditions. Archie Lloyd Northcutt, LL.B.....................................................................Burlington, Ky. Henry Clay Law Society. Archie is the tall, dark-haired, handsome boy from the county of mound-builders and mammoth skeletons. He loves the ladies and he loves to laugh. His favorite summer diversion is working at hospitals. Archie likes politics. In September, 1916, he voted the Old Guard ticket in the Junior election, and the next week supported the Fusionists in the Senior election. That was not because he loved the Old Guard less, but because he loved the Lawyers more. This year he was contented to participate in his own Class affairs. Archie believes that the lawyer is the noblest work of God. -;v - t'?w y, j fflJ{].HIjW , 4f , :lm IK Senior Class Harold Parks, B.M.E...............................................................Irvington, Ky. Edison-Joule; A. I. E. E.; A. S. M. E.; Tau Beta Ivake; 2nd Lieut. (4); R. O. T. C. It is indeed strange, but no nickname has ever adhered permanently to this fair-haired lad with the bewitching eyes. But those eyes are not to be compared with that smile like the one that made Fairbanks famous. Engineering holds a great future for him, but he aspires to become a popular favorite of the Silent Drama. He will doubtless create havoc with the tender hearts if he ever breaks loose in the social world. He made a good sheriff during his term, and no prisoner ever escaped. Undoubtedly he has attained an enviable knowledge of mechanics, for his time has been profitably spent and not squandered away on frivolities. T. Ellis Peak, B.M.E...............................................La Grange, Ky. Alpha Tau Omega; Lamp and Cross; A. S. M. E. President (3); A. I. E. E.; Edison-Joule; Captain (4); R. O. T. C.; Tau Beta Pi. Ellis evidently knew the ropes to the campus and the medium to the profs’ note-books, for he made progress with all kinds of speed. Ellis let nothing interfere with his academic work and at this was continually toiling upward in the night-time. However, be it known, he reserved his Friday and Sat- urday evenings for his lady friends. During his stay he has always been a kind of a brother to the great many girls, but he will surprise one of them some time with that phrase over which the most glib persons falter. The engineering world may expect great things of this proficient engineer. Lois Powell, B.S. in Home Economics...............................Red House, Ky. Kappa Delta; Strollers; Pan-Hellenic (2, 3, 4); Secretary (3); Y. W. C. A.; Philosouhian; Home Economics Club. If you are looking for L. P., ask over at the Home Ec. Department. She will be there concocting a frenchy” menu or a Paris hat. She has more time to devote to Home Economics since Dr. Barrow's Unit left. Ask her about the pin she wears and watch her blush! (68) MW W As mi a 11 m si . ------— ■} ri--nrnr-r-.. PRITCHETT Senior Class Virgil James Pritchett, A.B.......................................................Clay, Ky. Alpha Sigma Phi; Tan Kappa Alpha; Patterson; Henry Clay Law Society Debating Team (4); History Club President (4); Y. M. C. A. Virgil tried Bethany for two years and then came to Kentucky. His name implies that he might be poetic, he may be, but if he is he tells it to somebody and does not write it. He knows as much History as Tuthill and as much Political Economy as Butt—so they say. You can take the statement as it stands or leave it. To be safe—leave it. He intends to become a lawyer some sweet day, and since he does what he intends to do—ergo—he will be a lawyer. Maybe you might say a student of law. He is rarely seen on the campus when not in company with a certain other. Charles Spurgeon Ramsey, L.L.B....................................................Sebree, Ky. Jienry Clay Law Society. Ramsey believes with General Lee that “Duty is the sublimest word in the English language.” Con- vinced that still waters run deep he makes little noise but goes steadily on studying assiduously, and conscientiously performing every task assigned him. He never cared for the footlights’ glare, but contented himself with burning the midnight oil (while the gas supply was cut off). Ramsey is taking a degree in a short time, and will return to the Second District to make his mark, meanwhile demon- strating that a lawyer can be an honest man for a that. J. P. Goodson Reynolds, LL.B...................................................Lexington, Ky. Delta Chi; Henry Clay Law Societ3 “On with the dance! Let joy he uneonfined.” Goodson “Alphabet” Reynolds left us in mid-semester to don his Uncle Sam’s Khaki and with wonted chivalry guard the nurses in Hospital Unit No. 40. In fair weather or foul Goodson smiles and the world smiles with him. He is as clean as the proverbial hound’s tooth. This apostle of sunshine has a weakness for ruffles and curls and they generally have a weakness for him. When it comes to enter- taining, he is a player-piano and a cage of monkeys in one. His motto is: “Work little and worry less.” (69) Sapina” is always right out in front in snake dances, parades, philosophy classes, or anything else she is in. If she has gained from her college course in proportion to what she has put into it, she should be well satisfied. Buford B. Russell, B.M.E............................................................Elkton, Ky. Alpha Sigma Phi; A. I. E. E.; A. S. M. E.; Edison-Joule; Tau Beta Kake. Babe is what you might call a hot rock when he is out among the ladies. He kept himself a recluse to society for a while but when he did catch skirt fever he blossomed forth and made the landscape smile. Few men have ever acquired a dexterity at barbering equal to his and few can treat a Freshman so roughly gentle. Buford is rather petite but he is loud. We have heard that as a high school basketball artist he was one of the wonders of sportdom, but hating to beat other aspirants out of a berth on the team, he very considerately retired to the background. Ben H. Scott, LL.B. ...................................................Louisville, Ky. Varsity Baseball, '11, '12, '1G, '17; Henry Clay Law Society President (1); Lawyers’ Bible Class President (1); Law Debating Team; Business Manager 1918 “Kentuckian;” Tau Kappa Alpha; instructor in Law. Almost since “a time when the memory of man runneth not to the contrary,” as his old friend Bill Blackstone would say, “Scotty” has been a familiar figure in U. K. life. He holds the record of five years on the Varsity baseball team and is now its coach. An honor graduate, with love for the blind goddess, pugnacious, industrious, master of details and all-round good scout, he is one of our best men. “Scotty is devoted to the Old Guard, likes machine politics, and generally rides the machine. This little giant is a good lawyer and should rise to the top in his profession. Senior Class John Sewart Sherwood; LL.B. . . .............................Cynthiana, Ky. Henry Clay Law Society; Kernel Staff (3); 1st Lt. (3); Capt. (4); Strollers; Kentucky Law Journal Staff (4). Tradition hath it that this modern knight-errant is a descendant of the “Little John who scouted with Robin Hood in Sherwood Forest. He is as ambitious of military prowess as the “Little Corporal, his physical prototype, albeit as modest as a maiden, and has a disposition as sunny as his voice is gentle. The girls say he is “awfully cute,” and as for him—well, remember the Prom. She lives “up in our country.” One warning we whisper to her: “Watch John when he returns after conquering Potsdam, lest he rival the Hobson of '98 as the cynosure of female eyes, the lode-star of female affection.” Anne Elizabeth Sloan, A.B...............................................................Lexington, Ky. There is a twinkle in her eye that wins her friends among teachers and fellow-students alike wherever she goes. She has also made an excellent teaching record in the last two years. Catherine Belt Snyder, B.S. in Home Economics .... Louisville, Ky. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y. W. C. A.; Philosophian; Horace Mann; Home Ec. Club; Louis- ville Club. “Sannie didn’t intend to stay four years with us, but we are glad she couldn t resist. It seems that she spends her spare time reading “special deliveries” from some mysterious source. (71) SPENCER STAGG STEPHENS Senior Class Frances B. Spencer, A.B...........................................................Birmingham, Ala. Horace Mann; Strollers; History Club, Secy.-Treas. (4). You wouldn’t think anyone so gay as Frances would care for such a deep subject as History—but she majors in it nevertheless. She sometimes signs her name Treasure” of the History Club. Perhaps it is due to ihe President’s influence. Annie Barkley Stagg, A.B......................................................Lexington, Ky. Formerly Teacher of Languages in Beaumont College; Teacher of German in Sayre Col- lege, 1912-’17. Although Annie has been here only one year, she has made a record in all her classes that makes the Class of ’18 proud to have her among its members. May Sweeney Stephens, A.B..................................................Williamsburg, Ky. Alpha Gamma Delta; Pan-Hellenic (4); Philosophian; Strollers; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (4); Delegate to Blue Ridge; Horace Mann; Glee Club. May is a staunch defender of Ada and of the mountains. She has made a record for us as a tennis player at Blue Ridge, and has acquired a formidable list of achievements and friends in her two years here. (72) STEWART TABER THOMAS Senior Class John Gilbert Stewart, B.S. in Agr.........................................................Crittenden, Ky. Alpha Zeta; Agricultural Society, Treasurer (4); Business Manager Rural Kentuckian (4); Dairy Team (4); Captain (3). “Stew” put Crittenden on the map with a record of having 100 per cent of its representatives make Alpha Zeta. By some he was known as the big man with a grouch, but even though he is as silent as a cemetery at midnight he is not a pessimist. His favorite loafing place was the Dean’s office, and his favorite amusement was studying. The city with its bright lights appeals to him, but he loves the cows and chickens and will go back to the farm. J. BRANCH Taber, B.S. in Agr.................................................Elizabethtown, Ky. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Zeta. In addition to A Z and 2 A E, he belongs to an Alpha Gamma Delta. He sure can hand out a bantering line of persiflage. “Kiggie” (he doesn’t like this name), is a man of shifting ardors, and his soul is filled with automatic fire extinguishers. His motto is: “All work and no play makes Branch a dull boy.” Accordingly in his early years he worked to show the profs what he could do; that done he became a man of leisure. Tabe is a most exuberant fellow, full of pep and loyal to his friends, especially to the little maid in Elizabethtown. Mary Josephine Thomas, A.B........................................................Frankfort, Ky. Philosophian; Y. W. C. A.; Strollers; Library Club; 1918 Kentuckian Staff. Jo just loves Biblical characters. She began with a “David in her Freshman year, and ended with another one in her Senior. Many a laddie would be a willing victim to the charm of her big brown eyes and adorable ways, but “David is the “mon for her. Her linguistic ability is a source of delight to the Modern Language Department. (73) warn mamam Mary Elizabeth Walker, B.S. A quiet Economics dark eyed, t present. dark haired little lady, who lavishes all her time and affections Perhaps with a view to lavishing them “elsewhere” in the future. Elmer Weldon, A.B....................................................... Horace Mann, Pres. (4). “Deacon” is what the name implies and then some. Here is where the Freshmen go for information, for verily he can put them on the paths of rectitude. Weldon is the embodiment of all that is proper in young manhood with reference to decorum, and as to scholarship his record will dispel all douhts. A Freshman haled before kangaroo court” let the remark slip that “Deacon Weldon had five dates with his (Freshman’s) girl during one week. We are indeed proud that he put Georgetown out of his mind and cast his lot with the Class of 18. Though not outstanding in prominence, his presence has been felt by all. Robert Eugene Wilson, A.B....................................................Sullivan, Ky. Business Manager Kentucky Kernel (3, 1); Business Manager 1.918 Kentuckian (4). Crittenden County is deservedly famous as the home of two illustrious Kentuckians, viz.: “Gene Wilson and Ollic James. Gene is remembered as a sound business man and astute politician. Once upon a time he looked into a pair of great luminous eyes and he has not looked out since. But Gene has gone to war and some one else has looked into the same eyes with the same results. Yet such is life. Class Prophecy of 1918 ELLOW-CLASSMATES, unlike my predecessors, I am going to point out your faults and virtues in the hope of aiding you to shape your own futures. Swift, as you know, made men dwarfs and giants, only to satirize them. My study of literature from the ground to the third floor of the Administration Building, southwest corner, frigid zone, has made me a great admirer of Dean Swift, so I cannot avoid contrasting our own beloved University with the lands of Lilliput and Brobdingnag. The Lilliputians were as infinitestimally small as we felt when taking chemistry under “Mighty” Maxon or philosophy under Dr. Tigert. The famous Titian-haired English professor could hardly raise us out of the realm of Lilliput. Ah! But what a relief to enter the land of ease, the Agricultural Department, where the Lilliputians swelled to Brobdingnags at the prospect and measured no less than one hundred feet in height. In this respect Agricul- tural students and Education students have much in common. Now, it didn’t take a Sibyl, at the outbreak of the war in 1914, to see that women w’ere henceforth to have a quantitative superiority over the men, just as they have always had a qualitative superiority. Then, I urged my fellow-females to usher in the super- woman, the modern Amazon. Naturally, I had great difficulty in trying to break through their traditional femininism, their timidity and blushing ignorance. But, like Ardiane, I prosecuted a mighty propaganda against the “Bluebeard” sex. Finally, in the year 1925, I determined to see what fruits my efforts had brought forth. So, atmospheric conditions being favorable, I made a flying visit through the world, which, as you know, is divided into two spheres, that of Lilliput and Brobdingnag. Accordingly, I found all the girls in Lilliput and all the boys in Brobdingnag, where they had been placed according to their own estimation of themselves. I first visited Lilliput, and you can imagine their surprise when I appeared before them in my enormous proportions, as superwoman. Frivolity, formerly known as Ruth Mathews, the queen of the Lilliputians, greeted me rather boisterously, after she had become accustomed to my size. She was accompanied by her maids of honor—Indolence, Bessie Hughes, and Beauty, Aileen Kavanaugh. The latter spent most of her time in the physics department learning formulae to increase her powers of attraction. These modest little people, because of their utter timidity, were in a panic as they had been threatened by the overconfident Brogdingnagians. “Morality,” “W. C. T, U.” Chapman, as we knew him, swelled up with scriptural authority over women, was the king of Brogdingnag. He sent over his representatives, Judge Ben Scott, George Bradley, C. R. Ramsey and Morgan Atchison, to demand the subjection of the Lilliputians. But these young dudes were completely overcome by the charms of the Lilliputians, and returned to their king, utterly unsuccessful. The king then sent Slender Sam Morton, who was immune, as he had learned, in his youth, that there is safety in numbers. Did he not still wear that khaki scarf, each row of which was knit by a different girl in Patterson Hall? Sam was more successful than his colleagues. When he consulted with Wisdom, Emma Elolton, she called up all the philosophy and logic she had learned from her friend, Socrates, in the region of the Education building. She then called in “Presh” Powell, (77) who asked her to put off her decision until the next day. The following morning, Stupidity, Lois Ammerman, was sent to tell Sam that the Lilliputians would not listen to his mag- nanimous offer. Imagine the indignation of the officials of Brobdingnag when Sam returned with the truth. “Prince” Andres advanced with ideas concerning the complete annihilation of the Lilliputians. He even suggested having “Lazy” Kolbe do the bulk of the work, which suited that industrious gentleman exactly, since the Lilliputians were all girls. But the king would not listen to these suggestions, because he had already said, “I am a servant of my people and must consult them first.” He even banished D. Ellis from the Senior retreats because he would not obey his command and listen to reason. He made C. L. Morgan food controller and advised him to read all the mail and familiarize himself with the books of the Agricultural department. “Janitor” Davis was made fuel controller and warned that he must save up for that “one big night.” While these men were making preparations the Lilliputians were not idle. Minnie Neville was made the chief of the secret service department, with headquarters in the Dean’s cottage. Here she took with her Josephine Thomas, owner of the wicked eye, and “Sanitation” Snyder, the celebrated dirt chaser. In reconnoitering, these worthy detectives discovered Treasurer Brittain in his luxuriant boat, fitted out by his fellow- classmates, in the region of Patterson Hall. His boat was manned by “Pool-Shark” Dearborn and “Mule” Maddox, whereas little Mr. Flege was his culinary artist. Of course, the appearance of these enormous Brobdingnagians threw the Lilliputian secret service into a panic, but, undaunted, in the middle of the night, they sent forth the boldest among them, Frieda Lemon, to poison them in their sleep. This was no hardship for Frieda, because she was always up, listening for wireless messages. She soon over- powered these giants and returned to the queen. As soon as Lilliput was rid of these three enemies, a great rejoicing was heard. Frivolity declared a holiday to be spent in dancing and merrymaking. “Y. W. C. A.” punch was served. “Lolly” Jameson was dance censor and frequently was forced to call Maud Harmon and Edith Dean to order, much to my surprise, as they had been so different in their college days. I was also amazed to find that May Stevens could not enjoy any of the fun. She went about, half distracted, as if looking for something; always repeating the one name, “Ada,” “Ada.” Promptly on the stroke of twelve, Time, Lelah Gault, brought the gayeties to a close; lights were put out and all was quiet agam. I hardly think it was as quiet in Brobdingnag. Probably our yourVj friend, William Lindsay, was going about looking for a poker game, and “Deacon” Weldon was leaving Mrs. Elliott’s to go on one of his nightly sprees. But none of these Brobdingnagians were asleep. “Frenchy” Hedges kept his chemistry laboratory open night and day. “Cubic Centimeter” Brown had charge of it in the daytime, while “Longy” Harrison did the night work. He had fraternity duties to attend to in the daytime, and, too, Dr. Maxon’s garden needed quite a bit of attention. W. L. Wright had charge of the physics department. He made X-ray photographs of the enormous brain of Mr. Park and put them on exhibition, in charge of Mr. Fenley, who had had experience at the State Fair. As I said, Lilliput was quiet, and even I had retired, when suddenly we heard shouting, and who should come up but Edna Martin and Sara McConnell? I would never have hoped Lo find these two girls in Lilliput, but there they were. They had been having a party at the observatory and took a sudden notion to view the stars which were shooting about in the heavens. Perhaps they saw two stars where there should have been but one. At last I calmed these girls down by telling them that it must have been “Bill” Hieronymous celebrating the discovery of some exam questions, or of someone of importance in the Library of Brobdingnag. Then, too, it may have been “Cupid” Dempsey shooting his darts in the direction of Patterson Hallians. The whole town had been aroused by these cries, and everyone was so excited that sleep was impossible. We awaited developments. The tide began to rise; Mary Mayes went out in search of a rifleman to help protect her highness, Frivolity, in case the rise of the tide meant the approach of the eremy. In the course of her search she found a document, which had been washed ashore. The enormous size of the document assured her that its origin was Brobdingnagian, and upon opening it she found it had been drawn up by the Northcutt brothers. It contained many of the plans of the Brobdingnags. It indicated that as soon as the Lilliputians were captured, “Globby” Hammond would be put in charge of a girls’ school, which would be situaLed on the sight of the mess hall overlooking “Senior heaven.” He was to teach these small creatures strawberry culture, table etiquette and all the duties of a housewife. He was to have J. E. McClure, the football star of the world, to teach them athletics, while the dwarf Hybisco, Harold McGregor, would give them private instruc- tions in the strangle hold. “Newland” McCormick was to have charge of the beauty parlor, and the “Doll’s House,” Morality’s harem. While Mabry was the chief mani- curist. Eugene Wilson was to have charge of the Lilliputian Gazette. He was to do the work, but Morality would do the bossing. Henry Haggin was to be the reporter for sororities, and would have to write articles cn his experiences as a farm hand. Strange as it may seem, these giants said little about the plans for conquering the land. They probably thought that their conquest would be as simple as it had always been. They felt that they were so many times as large as the Lilliputians that their task would be nothing. Karl “Von Hindenburg” Goosman had charge of the entire military situation. Tilford Wilson had tried hard for the office, but was retired because of old age. He had also annoyed the king most cruelly by arousing him before sun-up to discuss matters of state. Karl hoped to surprise the Lilliputians in their retreat, lure them with songs, and force them to submit before those weak creatures could use their charms upon him. He had planned for “Five Per Cent Discount” Nicholoff to play the mandolin, while “Poet” Barker exerted his eloquence to the 1 48th degree. J. G. Stewart was to smile his most winning smile, and if this failed, “Orator” McBrayer might bring them under his power. He knew the proper system, because he had vanquished hordes of females in his life. John Sherwood and “Lady-Killer” Reynolds were given command of some of the Brobdingnagians, with the provision that they would not lose their heads over those girls. Even the smallest Patterson Hallians attracted those warriors; they played no favorites. I was surprised to notice that Willie McDougle was given an office, because he was used to living among girls. You may be sure that the finding of this document caused considerable stir among the Lilliputians, who came to me for advice. Now, I was almost as helpless as they. Even though I towered above the Lilliputians, I was a mere pigmy compared to the Brobdingnags. But I advised them to keep close watch; Lena Clem was given special guard duty, Lela Kerswill was placed at the big “Clark gate, and Elizabeth Sloan got into a car and drove about the country to give the alarm, just as Paul Revere had done, (79) only in a more up-to-date fashion. Mary Walker was of little use except to shout: “I see them coming. Of course, on account of their enormous size, we could see them long before they could see us. The undaunted Vampire, “Sapina” Robinson, rushed around like mad, prepared to conquer them all with one winning smile. But she could not be compared with Frances Spencer, who discovered Virgil Prichett and lost her heart immediately. Helen Morris began looking for the man with the “Carman” look. He had promised to let her live on his farm in Hardin County. Can you imagine such frivolity at the most critical moment in their lives? I was horrified at the sight of the oncoming horde. It reminded me of a house meeting in our college days, when those same girls laughed in the face of doom. Their indifference aroused in me such intense feeling that I sprang to my feet and harangued them, just as a general does on the eve of a battle, in the following words: “How can you be so little as to place affairs of the heart above the affairs of state? Do you mean to say that you are going to allow these Brobdingnags to swoop down upon you and win you by deceits and smiles? In this case woman s progress has amounted to naught. Y ou take her back to primitive times, when she was even smaller than a pigmy. The victory of these giants will mean destruction to the world. They will soon tire of your good looks, which is uppermost in your minds, even when disaster is at your door. Why do some of you shrink from these rough Brobdingnags? Have you no self-respect? Does the sight of a man frighten you? As a last resort, I appeal to you to cast aside this foolish convention and feminine littleness and prove to these giants that you are superwomen, modern Amazons.” As I concluded these remarks I noticed a remarkable change in the Lilliputians. They began to grow and approach Brobdingnagian proportions. If this greatly surprised me, you may well believe that it played havoc with the enemy. “Dr.” Taber and “Jurasic Cretaceous” Melvin stopped their ship so suddenly that Indolence, Ellis Peak, and Thriftlessness, Mr. Henry, who were lolling over the side, were thrown into the ocean. “Babe” Russell began to cry and was spanked by “Daddy” Jackson. The crews turned towards home, and beat a hasty retreat, stopping only twice— the first time to let Russell Hunt visit Owensboro and Nicholasville, just off the coast of Blefuscu; the second time to leave W. R. Gabbert in Columbus in order that he might recover from the shock of defeat. The Lilliputians, grown to Brobdingnags under the proper stimulus, soon went to explore the land of their enemy. They found most of them gone off to war with a distant country, but those who remained were driven out by the superwoman, whose place in the world was established. I returned home well satisfied. I have but one more wish, that women will retain their superior position in Brobdingnag. Now, friends, don’t you see, I have magnified your Lilliputian faults in College in order to help you avoid them in life. It is up to you to bring your virtues up to Brob- dingnagian proportions. Don’t Hooverize on virtue, but Fletcherize. Moral: Learn to be a Brobdingnag, not a Lilliputian, in Life. Bertha Klein Miller. Cs (81) I — n 'Fh JUNIOR CLAS Junior Class F BY F. M. J. The Class of 1919 is a noteworthy class. From its beginning as a social unit, when, inwardly timid, yet outwardly bold, it entered its college career in September, 1915, this class has progressed successfully. That year saw it a victorious class, with tug-of-war and scholastic honors, in athletics and debates, and the class entered its second year worldly wise—perhaps too much so—but a good sousing in the icy depths of Clifton Pond and several set-tos with as many professors prepared it for the class that it is today. The Class of 1919 proudly served as the cher marante to the Freshmen of . „ 1917, applauding them as they climbed dizzy heights and descended stygian darkness to paint their “21” in bold letters for the world to see. Again they proudly applauded their god-children as they pulled their sworn enemies through that rendezvous of love and hate, Clifton Pond. The Junior Class of 1918 is unspeakably proud of its many men and women now serving their country. These men and women have entered the greatest IOR CLASS 'lass History fight ever waged by man, and the stars on the service flag in chapel shine brightly because of their unselfish service. Those remaining at home to keep the class “a-goin’ ” are participants in all the college activities. Among its members are varsity football, basketball and baseball men, orators, statesmen, actors, engineers, poets, authors, economists, scientists and agriculturists unequalled elsewhere. The stage and business man- agers, as well as the president of the Strollers, the dramatic organization of the University, which this year successfully put on “Mice and Men,” and eight of % the cast were Juniors. The editor-in-chief, managing editor, business manager and eight staff members of the Kentucky Kernel this year were Juniors. There is even one male member of the class who has been masquerading as a member of th fair sex to entertain some poor “poilou” who insists on writing billet-douxes to him, and urges him to become his dear god-mother. The class portends to be the best class yet graduated from the University, and next year promises to be the best year for the Class of 1919. Junior Class Roll College of Arts and Science Mary Beall, A.B.........................................................................Mt. Sterling Alpha Gamma Delta: Y. W. C. A.; Philosophian Literary Society; Horace Mann; Pan- Hellenic; Strollers. Frank Homer Bell, B.S....................................................................Madisonville Edna Berkele, A.B...........................................................................Lancaster Kappa Delta; Strollers; Cast “Mice and Men. Lofton V. Burge, B.S.........................................................................Mayfield Ruth Howard Cardwell, A.B.................................................................Shelbyville Alpha Gamma Delta; Y. W. C. A.; Philosophian; Horace Mann; Strollers. Marie Collins, A.B..................................................................North Middletown Delta Delta Delta; Strollers; Horace Mann; Y. W. C. A. Bessie Taul Conkwright, B.S................................................................Winchester “Kernel” Staff; History Club. John Thornton Connell, A.B......................................................................Paris Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Delta Sigma; Kentucky Kernel” Staff (1, 2); Assistant Editor (2); Editor (3). Elizabeth Featherstone, A.B.................................................................Lexington Strollers; Morton High School Club; Glee Club (2). Earl Ware Foster, A.B.......................................................................Lexington Eli B. Friedman, B.S............................................................................Paris Sigma Alpha Mu. Louis Goldberg, B.S...........................................................................Newport Mildred Hazen Graham, A.B..................................................................Louisville Alpha Xi Delta; Strollers; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (1, 2, 3); Blue Ridge Delegate; Pan- Hellenic; Delegate to Student Volunteer Conference; Vice-President Y. W. C. A. (3); Kernel” Staff (1, 2, 3); Glee Club; English Club. President (3). Virginia Taylor Graham, A.B.................................................................Lexington Henry Enright Grehan, A.B...................................................................Lexington Kappa Alpha; English Club. Lillian Haydon, A.B.........................................................................Lexington Alpha Gamma Delta; Basketball (1, 2, 3); Manager (2); Strollers; Home Economics Club; Morton High School Club; Glee Club. Richard E. Henry, A.B...................................................................Morton’s Gap Patterson Literary Society; Pre-Medical Society. Frederick M. Jackson, A.B..................................................................Versailles Alpha Delta Sigma; Kentucky Kernel” Staff (2); Feature Editor (3); Strollers; Cast Mice and Men.” Everett Edward Kelley,, A.B...............................................................Whitesville Alpha Sigma Phi; Class Treasurer (1); Union Literary Society; Horace Mann; History Club. Birdie Lewis Lucas, B.S.....................................................................Lexington Class Secretary (3); Morton High School Club. Oliver Kennett McAdams, A.B.................................................................Lexington Kappa Sigma. George Lee McClain, A.B.....................................................................Bardstown Kappa Alpha; Alpha Delta Sigma; Patterson Club; English Club; Strollers; Stage Man- ager Mice and Men.” r Lillian Frances McConnell, A.B..............................................................Lexington Elizabeth McGowan, A.B.........................................................................Bagdad Philosophian, Winner Essay Contest; Horace Mann, Treasurer (2); Secretary (3); Winner Short Story Contest; Y. W. C. A.; Blue Ridge Delegate (2); Cabinet (2); English Club. Bernard Moosnick, A.B...................................................................Nicholasville English Club; Henry Clay Law Society; Patterson Club. Mary Lavinia Murrell, A.B.....................................................................Lebanon Arthur Walton Petrey, B.S...................................................................Pineville Pi Kappa Alpha. Eliza MacLean Piggott, A.B......................................................... • • Irvington Chi Omega; Strollers, Prize Skit Amateur Night, '15; Sophomore Class Vice-President; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (1, 2, 3); Delegate Blue Ridge Conference (1); Pan-Hellenic (1, 2, 3); Kentucky Kernel” Staff (.1); Co-editor (2); Managing Editor (3); Junior Editor 1918 Kentuckian.” Walter Clay Piper, A.B....................................................................Lexington Patterson Club, President (3); Crum Medal (3); English Club; R. O. T. C.; Signal Corps (3). Charles Evans Planck, A.B.................................................................Lexington Alpha Delta Sigma; Track Team (1); Yell Deader (3); Patterson Club Secretary (3); Strollers, Business Manager (3); Cast Mice and Men”; 191S “Kentuckian” Staff; Ken- tucky Kernel” Staff (3). I LA See, A.B.................................................................................Levee Horace Mann, Secretary and Treasurer (3); History Club; Philosophian; Y. W. C. A.; Strollers. Margaret Sexton, A.B......................................................................Lexington Edna Withers Smith, A.B......................................................................Corbin Marion Brooke Sprague, B.S................................................................Lexington Morton High School Club; Pre-Medical Society; Red Cross Unit. Eliza Kaye Spurrier, A.B.................................................................Louisville Kappa Delta; Strollers, Cast ‘‘Lion and the Mouse,” ‘‘Mice and Men”; President (3); Prize Skit Amateur Night, '15; Pan-T-Tellenic (1, 2, 3); President (2); ‘‘Kentucky Kernel” Staff (2); Squirrel Pood Editor (3); Louisville Club; English Club, Secretary and Treasurer (3). Louise Singer Stevenson, A.B..............................................................Lexington Morton High School Club; English Club. Cardwell Douglas Triplett, A.B........................................................Beech Grove Pi Kappa Alpha; Union Literary Society. Margaret Helmsing Tuttle, A.B.............................................................Lexington Alpha X; Delta; Morton High School Club; English Club; Library Club, Secretary (3). Dorothy Caldwell Walker, A.B..............................................................Pineville Kappa Kappa Gamma; Basketball Team (3); Strollers, Cast ‘‘Mice and Men”; Y. W. C. A.; Tennis Club. Treasurer (2). Lucy Aloysia Young, A.B.......................................................... .... Lexington Chi Omega. COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE Linville Amburgy, B.S.Agr...................................................................Hindman Agricultural Society; Mountain Club. Mary BieHN, B.S. Home Economics............................................................Falmouth Lois Real Brown, B.S., Home Economics....................................................Providence Kappa Delta; Philosophian; Home Economics Club, Secretary (1); Vice-President (3). Julia Burbank, B.S., Home Economics............................................. Montclair, N. J. Philosophian; Home Economics Club. Sarah Mildred Collins, B.S.Agr...................................................North Middletown Kappa Kappa Gamma; Y. W. C. A.. Cabinet (3); Class Vice-President (3); Home Economics Club; Pan-Hellenic (2, 3); Horace Mann. Jane Walton Crawford, B.S., Home Economics...............................................Louisville Alpha Xi Delta; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Delegate to Blue Ridge; Delegate to Kentucky Student Volunteer Conference; Philosophian. Ruth Montgomery Duckwall, B.S.Agr........................................................Louisville Y. W. C. A., Secretary (1. 2); Delegate to Student Volunteer Conference; Agricultural Society, Secretary (1); Corresponding Secretary (2); Philosophian. Richard Lindsey Duncan, B.S.Agr..........................................................La Grange Alpha Tau Omega; Mystic Thirteen; Union Literary Society, Declamatory Contest (1); Treasurer (3); Agricultural Society; Glee Club; Sti-ollers; Y. M. C. A., Cabinet. Vice- President, President (3); Assistant Football Manager (3) Delegate to Students’ Con- ference, I. P. A. Jerome Parker Durham, B.S.Agr.......................................................Central City Foster Floyd Elliott, B.S.Agr................................................................Eubank Alpha Zeta; Agricultural Society; Assistant Editor “Rural Kentuckian.” Joseph Lee Gayle, B.S.Agr..................................................................Falmouth Alpha Zeta, Honor Man (2); Agricultural Society, Vice-President (3); Y. M. C. A.; Assistant Business Manager Rural Kentuckian.” Madeline Louise Feigel, B.S. Home Economics..........................................St. Matthews Effie Lee Gentry, B.S., Home Economics.....................................................Prentiss Home Economics Club, Secretary (2); Y. W. C. A.; Horace Mann. Anderson Smith Gill, B.S.Agr............................................................. Columbia Alpha Zeta; Agricultural Society; Circulation Manager “Rural Kentuckian”; Y. M. C. A.; First Lieutenant “E” Company (3). Carsie Hammonds, B.S., Home Economics...............................................Russell Springs Agricultural Society. Sarah Caldwell Harbison, B.S., Home Economics...........................................Shelbyville Chi Omega. Lillian Haydon, B.S., Home Economics................................... Harry Hounchell, B.S.Agr......................................... Frank S. Lancaster, B.S.Agr.......................................... Alpha Zeta; Assistant Editor “Rural Kentuckian'’; Junior Business Manager 1918 tuckian”; Y. M. C. A. Left with Hospital Unit No. 10. Austin Page Lilly, B.S., Heme Economics................................... Alpha Xi Delta; Y. W. C. A., Cabinet (3): Delegare to Blue RidgePan-Hellenic;’ sophian; Home Economics Editor of “Rural Kentuckian ; Home Economics Kernel Staff; Strollers; Glee Club. Ben Gordon Marsh, B.S.Agr...................................... Mystic Thirteen; Strollers; Cast “Lion and Mouse”; Basketball (3).......... Eliza Clay Mason, B.S., Home Economics........................................... George Reddish, B.S.Agr............................ Y. M. C. A., Cabinet (1, 2). Wilbur Preston Rhoads, B.S.Agr........................................ Agricultural Society. . Lexington Oneida Lebanon “Ken- . Richmond Philo- Club; . Maysville . Paris . Lexington . . Hartford S. Headley Shouse, B.S.Agr........................................ Phi Delta Theta; Alpha Zeta; Mystic Thirteen; Pan-Hellenic (3); Agricultural Morton High School Club, President (2); Second Lieutenant (2), Captain (3); Y. Harvey Worley Stedman, B.S.Agr. Sigma Chi; left for Navy. Lyon Switzer, B.S.Agr........................................... E. Terrill Tapscott, B.S.Agr............................................. Agricultural Society. . Lexington Society; M. C. A. . Versailles Georgetown . Owensboro Louise Turner, B.S., Llome Economics.............. Chi Omega; Home Economics Club, Secretary (3). Joseph Alexander Wesson, B.S.Agr. -............... Agricultural Society. Lexington . Wingo COLLEGE OF MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING. Frederick Paul Anderson, B.M.E............................................................Lexington Sigma Chi; Tennis Team (1, 3); Westinghouse Society, Vice-President (1), Secretary (2); First Sergeant (2), Lieutenant (3). Robert Samuel Arnold, B.M.E............................................................. Paint Lick Kappa Sigma; Mystic Thirteen; Westinghouse; R. O. T. C.; Strollers.' J. II. Bailey, B.M.E.........................................................................Bagdad Westinghouse, Secretary (3): Lieutenant (3); R. O. T. C. Louis Henry Bauer, Jr., B.M.E............................................................Louisville Westinghouse. Walter Scott Baugh, B.M.E....................................................................London Westinghouse, President (3); Football (3). Trice Morton Bell, B.M.E............................................................. Madisonville Westinghouse; R. O. T. C. William Russell David, B.M.E..............................................................Lexington Westinghouse, Treasurer (3) ; R. O. T. C.; Lieutenant (3); Morton High School Club. C. Frederick de Mey, B.M.E...............................................................Louisville Westinghouse; Louisville Club; First Lieutenant (3); R. O. T. C. David R. Dudley, B.M.E...................................................................Earlington Pi Kappa Alpha; Westinghouse; Class Treasurer (3); R. O. T. C. Joseph Michael Eyl, B.M.E.................................................................Lexington Westinghouse, Vice-President (3); Morton High School Club. Gilbert Frankel, B.M.E...................................................................Louisville Sigma Alpha Mu; Westinghouse, Treasurer (2); Vice-President (30); Louisville Club. Alexander D. Hall, B.M.E..................................................................Lexington Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Westinghouse, President (1); Class President (3); Morton High School Club. Joseph S. Hogard, B.M.E...............................................................Elizabethtown Joined the Navy. Alvin KohN, B.M.E........................................................................Louisville Sigma Alphu Mu; Track Team (2); Westinghouse, Vice-President (2); Louisville Club. John Julian Leman, B.M.E..................................................................Pineville Sigma Alpha Mu; Westinghouse; Mountain Club; Glee Club; Kernel” Staff (3); Lamed Pe. Eucene Allen Lillard, B.M.E..............................................................Versailles Sigma Chi; Westinghouse; R. O. T. C. J. Ellyson McClellan, B.M.E.............................................................Springfield Alpha Sigma Phi; Westinghouse; Edison Joule, Secretary (3); Baseball (1, 2); Captain (3). Hugh Meglone Milton, B.M.E................................................................Lexington Westinghouse; Captain (3); Glee Club; Morton High School Club. Joseph Stanley Misrach, B.M.E..................................................Cincinnati, Ohio R. Smith Park, B.M.E....................................................................Richmond Phi Delta Theta; Westing-house; Assistant Football Manager (2); First Lieutenant (3). Homer G. Proctor, B.M.E............................................................Mt. Vernon Nick Thomas Puckett, B.M.E................................................................Hatton Westinghouse, Treasurer (2); First Lieutenant (3); R. O. T. C. John Felix Shouse, B.M.E...............................................................Lexington Phi Delta Theta; Westinghouse, Treasurer and Vice-President (1). Charles Landen Templin, B.M.E............................................................. Paris Westinghouse, President (2); First Sergeant. Band (3); R. O. T. C. Carl Albert Timmer, B.M.E.............................................................Louisville Mystic Circle; Westinghouse; Louisville Club. James Stuart Wallingford, B.M.E........................................................... Paris Kappa Sigma; Westinghouse; Second Lieutenant (3); R. O. T. C. COLLEGE OF CIVIL ENGINEERING R. K. Diamond, B.C.E................................................................. Louisville Sigma Alpha Mu; Brook3 Engineering Society. Morris Forman, B.C.E..................................................................Louisville Sigma Alpha Mu; Track Team (2). Charles Franklin Johnson, B.C.E.........................................................Mayfield Tau Beta Pi; Honor Man (3); Brooks Engineering Society. John March Land, B.C.E.............................................................Nicholasville Brooks Engineering Society; Strollers. William F. Marshall, B.C.E.............................................................Greendale Brooks Engineering Society. Homer Lloyd Reid, B.C.E................................................................Lexington Entered Government service. Walter Edward Rowe, B,C.E..........................................................Bristol, Ind. Entered Government service. Arthur Crowell Smith, B.C.E............................................................Lexington Mose Smith, B.C.E..................................................................Ruston, La. Sigma Alpha Mu; Brooks Engineering Society. Harry Wilbur Whaley, B.C.E.............................................................Covington Joined an Engineering Corps, U. S. A. COLLEGE OF MINES AND METALLURGY Cecil Norman Batsel, B.E.M.................................................................Fulton Kentucky Mining Society. COLLEGE OF LAW Carl H. Denker, LL.B......................................................................Paducah Henry Clay Law Society; Law Debating Team (3); Glee Club. Herbert H. Greene, LL.B......................................................................Brum Henry Clay Law Society. Edward Everett Hardin, LL.B................................................................bebree Delta Chi; Henry Clay Law Society; Union Literary Society; Law Debating Team (2, 3); Tau Kappa Alpha. Cecil H. Heaverin, LL.B..............................................................Owensboro Alpha Sigma Phi; Henry Clay Law Society; Strollers; Quartet. S. Kerr Hicks, LL.B..........................................................Madisonville, Tenn. Henry Clay Law Society; Patterson Literary Society; History Club; Glee Club. John William McKinzie, LL.B..........................................................La Grange Joined the Navy. Glen Francis Martin, LL.B..............................................................Louisville Joined the Navy. James Park, LL.B.........................................................................Richmond Phi Delta Theta; A.B., '15; Athletic Coach. Rebekah M. PARITZ, LL.B.................................................................Lexington Henry Clay Law Society, Secretary (3); Morton High School Club. Edward Alexander Puryear, LL.B............................................................Paducah Delta Chi; Henry Clay Law Society, Secretary (3). Edgar Everitt Rice, LL.B...............................................................Booneville Tau Kappa Alpha; Henry Clay Law Society; Law Debating Team (2); Union Debating Team (3); Varsity Debating Team (3). Orin C. Walker, LL.B........................................................................Ekron Lamed Pe; Henry Clay Law Society; Lieutenant (1). Urey Gorman Ward, LL.B.......................................................................Inez Delta Chi; Henry Clay Law Society; Patterson Literary Society; Mountain Club. Marshall Baird Wood, LL.B...............................................................Maysville Kappa Sigma; Henry Clay Law Society. (94) SOPHOMORE CU Sophomore Class With the advent of a somewhat obstreperous Freshman class came the call for valiant, enthusiastic, bellicose Sophomores to subjugate the aforesaid hairless wonders and teach them that the Fresh is to be seen, not heard; nor seen too oft at that. The marked antipathy of hair to the Freshman cranium was soon discernible. Next came the contest in the art of numeral painting, and incident to that hand-to-hand encounters between numerous members of the two belligerent classes. That m ght even the noncombatant upperclassmen onlookers were in danger. We had virtually put our antagonists under the yoke when lo, there came the annual tug-of-war. “When Greek meets Greek, etc.” We gave IMCRE CLASS Vs Class History them the hardest pull in history, while our girls made the welkin ring with the silver music of their cheers. Our only revenge after that came through our perfect spy system, which served as a secret aid to the Most High Senior Court. But we were forgetting our prowess on the gridiron. After beating the Freshmen, no other class would meet us. Our class dance was “a thing of beauty and joy forever.” In varsity athletics, debates, dramatics, publications and literary activities the Class of ’20 takes front rank. Our girls are the loveliest in the world, and our boys the most in love. Freshman ( 'lass FRESHMAN CLi September 10 marked the arrival of two hundred and ninety-one Freshmen from all corners of the State, representing the very embodiment of greenness and ignorance. But it seems that this same Freshman Class possessed a marked degree of ingenuity, initiative and ability, which has been evidenced by their participation and repeated success in all undertakings advanced for the upbuilding of the University. The Class wish to express their sorrow for the members of the Sophomore Class who were compelled to go in debt for the printing of their University campus tickets. In serving revenge, the Sophs did most aggressively harass us by erasing our numerals, wherever found on the campus, but lo! one fine morning a most conspicuous “21” was found printed at the very top of the heating plant chimney, directly behind the old Main. This numeral will serve as a memorial of the 1917 Freshman Class. Freshman does not necessarily mean “clipped head,” for we are glad to report that eight Freshmen escaped the clippers of the Sophs. As usual, but in a most unusual manner, the Freshics gave the Sophs the wettest part of “Clifton Pond.” IMAN CLASS Class History The event in which that remarkable judgment of the Freshman Class found its most com- manding expression was in the selection of ‘’Willis” ‘‘Fats Thompson, of Falmouth, Ky., as President—a big-hearted fellow, and a friend to all who know him. This wise selection is, perhaps, explained by the fact that “great men spring from turbulent conditions. Most overwhelmingly the Freshman girls outnumbered the other girls of the University in points of beauty, charm and personality. This is evidenced by the fact that of the seven most “wonderfully beautiful” young ladies of the campus, four were selected from the Fresh- man girls: Misses Mary Heron, Isabelle Dickey, Helen Taylor and Nancy Buckner. The Freshman Class practically equipped the football team of 1917, and the basketball five. As the end of the year draws near, we experience a feeling of sorrow as we miss glad faces from the campus, reminding us that some of those who entered with us just a few months ago are now battling in the army of democracy. Our Freshman days have been a most delightful necessary evil, and among the numerous rebuffs there was intermingled untold enjoyment. Our apprenticeship having been served, we step aside and give salutation to the Class of ’22. Sweet Kentuckians HE morning star of the Kentuckian’s hope, the lodestar of the Kentuckian’s destiny, the first and only true love of the Kentuckian’s heart is the most perfect object of God’s creative hand, the glorious capstone, the crown- ing climax of Creation—the Kentucky Belle! Every fiber of the Kentuckian’s amorous being thrills in her enchanting pres- ence, and his heart with ineffable rapture fills at the mention of her name. The penciled dream of Apelles and the chiseled ideal of Praxi- telles are surpassed in consummate beauty by the Kentuckian heaven- born conception of feminine loveliness as he stands entranced by the rapturous vision of the Kentucky Belle tripping like a winsome fairy across the horizon of life’s blissful morning. She has a fairer form, a sweeter face, a rarer charm, a truer heart than any other being that ever winged its flight from the hand of God. Her shimmering tresses are of paradisaical beauty. Her love-lit eyes— windows of her spotless soul—beam with as bright a radiance and as full of luster as the stars that glitter nightly from the empyrean abyss. Her mellifluous cadences are a perennial madrigal. The Kentuckian’s innate chivalry crowns her with a golden halo pure and resplendent be- yond compare. Enshrined in this Kentuckian’s heart of hearts are hundreds of the sweetest sweethearts. Those here portraj'ed are types representing her whose name is legion, the queenliest queen, the 1918 Kentuckians sweetheart—the Kentucky Belle ! (106) ■} William Baker McClarty Harbison Gifford Brock Henry Hines Robert Brunson Leonard Hughes R. A. Burton Thurston Hughes M. J. Clarke William Hughes Aaron Coates Royce Iglehart Nat Cureton Gaines Jasper Van H. Denny Dulaney Logan Dan Estill Fred Loomis Robert Estill Gambrel McCarty Rollie Foster Tom McCown J. T. N. Geary Poindexter Mabry . Sigma Chi Colors: Blue and Gold w Founded Miami University, 1855 Lambda Lambda Chapter Eslablished 1893 Flower: White Rose Clyde D. Harrison, ’18 Winn Hutchcraft, ’19 Harvey Stedman, ’19 F. Paul Anderson, ’19 Eugene A. Lillard, '19 Charles H. Mahoney, ’20. Virgil L. Mansfield, ’20 Pledged. E. A. Blackburn E. L. Frazier R. L. Erlich R. A. C. Mapstone J. D. Givens Active Chapter J. Thomason Guthrie, ’20. H. Lawrence Thompson, 20 Hiram T. Adair, 20 Edward E. McCully, ’21 Forrest Lettin, ’21 Robert L. Putman, ’21 W. Preston White, ’21 ’21 Will Rice Amon, Bert Embry, '21 Robert W. Owen, Robert W. Hardesty, ’21 Harold A. Wynn, '21 ’21 Brothers in the Service George R. Orme Harvey Stedman R. L. Willis John Barrow W. C. Gullion D. W. Hart 3, A, Smith T. M. Marks McCord Taylor J. McRoberts (123) G. T. Graves J . D. Garrett Pete Garrett Alvin Thompson Mortimer Mueller Clyde Harrison Owen Lee William Robinson John Bryan A. D. Hall, ’19 G. F. Matthews, '20 J. B. Taber, ’18 M. K. Revill, ’20 J. C. Riddle, ’21 J. T. Connell, ‘19 J . A. Dishman , ’20 F. W. Smith, '19 Pledged. R. F. Albert Carl Byrd C. Campbell J. F. Corn C. T. Corn W. L. Coons L. B. E ans A. G. Foster W. O. Fogg J. W. Howard H. O. Holt J. G. Herr Brothers in the Service S. C. Johnson S. H. Jones H. E. Kelly R. P. Lane A. S. Dabney T. N. Lowry B. R. Lowry R. A. Lowry J. G. Nesbit E. G. Penick D. R. Power R. H. Reese Kappa Sigma Founded at the University of Virginia, 1867 Colors: Scarlet, White and Green Flower: Lily of the Valley Publications: “Caduceus,” “Star and Crescent” Beta Mu Chapter Established 1901 Active Chapter J. A. Brittain, ’18 j. B. Juett, '21 H. B. Clark, T8 Marshall Wood, 21 D. R. Ellis, '18 C. F. Johnson, ’19 R. S. Arnold, Jr., ’19 J. S. Wallingford, ’19 T. H. Green, ’20 A. E. Bell, '21 N. Fincel, '20 R. A. Glenn, '21 Lee Oldham, Jr., '20 E. B. Allen Brothers in the Service L. W. Herndon H. T. Powell C. W. Atkinson M. Holbrook R. O. Porter C. E. Archer J. P. Hill W. S. Rust H. H. W. Berckman R. Laverqombe R. A. Schoberth H. I. Burquieres B. H. Logan W. Shinnick E. A. Burquieres O. K. McAdams F. B. Shinnick G. W. Briggs W. H. McAdams W. P. Sayers R. M. Cunningham T. B. McClelland R. L. Sauer H. C. Cox L. W. Macloskey R. T. Taylor H. C. Carpenter S. S. McKinney H. C. Thompson F. C. Dugan M. G. Martin J . B. Warren H. J. Evans W. L. McKee R. R. Yoe J. C. Fuss G. J. McGowan J. H. Gaiser S. F. Parker Killed in action in France, April, 1918. Pi Kappa Alpha Founded University of Virginia, 1868 Colors: Garnet and Old Gold Flower: Lily of the Valley Publicallons: “Shield and Diamond” and “Dagger and Key” Omega Chapter Established 1901 Active Chapter David Dudley, ’19 M. T. Brooks, 71 James Truitt, 71 C. D. Triplett, T9 E. A. Watkins, 71 R. M. Davis, T8 W. R. Whitford, 71 W. R. Wilson, 70 W. S. Sherwood, 70 H. H. Otten, 71 Arthur Petrey, T9 James Hedges, Jr., T8 Brothers in the Service W. S. Carpenter P. E. Hite E. C. Clements H. L. Amoss H. C. Kimbrough R. T. Faulkner R. L. Bernard W. L. Staton R. L. Rawlings M. B. Porch K. R. Nesbit J T. Rawlings M. L. Kimbrough E. S. Penn E. S. Scent Wm. Collins F. W. Button S. H. Smith F. D. Cain Buford Williams W. J. Collins W. M. Lane C. K. Dunn L. P. Young W. G. Field L. G. Hayes B. F. LaMaster W. N. Fant C. R. Bourland D. W. Evans N. L. Kimbrough W. L. Payne G. L. Dickinson T. D. Howard John Downing E. C. Kirtley L. E. Browder H. K. Jennings R. W. Warwick J. M. Morris Drowned on high seas, September, 1917. 031) • ' ■ Founded 1869 Publication: “The Delta” Gamma Iota Chapter Established 1902 Active Chapter Flower: White Rose Tilford L. Wilson, ’18 C. E. McCormick, ’18 Grover H. Creech, ’19 J. Winston Coleman, '20 J. G. Heber, ’20 Tom L. Gorman, ’20 Neal W. Knight, ’20 E. V. Murphree, ’20 Herschel A. Auxier, ’21 E. D. Wallace, '21 C. C. Young, ’21 Sidney Morgan, '21 S. D. J. O'Sullivan, '21 Robert Davis, ’21 Pledged. G. B. Morrison K. G. Pulliam, Jr. J. F. Auxier H. F. Nagel J. M. Gibson C. J. Hayden, Jr. J. A. Reed David P. Campbell J. D. Rowlett, Jr., Special Brothers in the Service G. H. Wilson A. B. Goodin . H. M. Skillman G. D. Aaron J. C. Ringo M. M. Montgomery Jerry O’Sullivan S. D. J. O'Sullivan C. H. Matherly Winston Skillman Morris J. Crutcher H. B. COMBEST W. W. Vaughn Floyd H. Wright Harold A. Pulliam Morris E. Pendleton IF (133) Florver: White Tea Rose Alpha Tau Omega Founded V. M. I., 1865. Colors: Sky Blue and Old Gold H. L. Milward, '18 1 . E. Peak, ’18 G. L. Jackson, '18 R. L. Duncan, ’19 W. R. Campbell, '20 Jesse Tapp, ’20 Mu Iota Established February 22, 1909 Active Members J. G. Woodruff, ’20 E. S. Dabney, '20 E. Y. Van Deren, ’20 E. E. Elsey, ’20 W. Walker, '20 A. L. Baston, ’21 F. S. Prothero, ’21 R. E. Deltry, '21 H. C. Thomas, ‘21 Victor Ellis, ’21 W. D. Thompson, ’21 Brothers in the Service James Delaney George Hill Elmer Hopkins Frank Heick Duncan Hamilton Robert Ireland Lawrence Longsworth Stanley Newman Bart Peak R. H. Robnett Glover Strong Howard Kinne Tom Taylor Russel Travis Lloyd Wheeler M. L. Watson E. N. McIlvain John McKenzie Irvine Scrivner B. C. Martin D. D. Felix G. L. Barclay T. H. Cutler J. K. Grannis B. C. Gaither C. W. Hagemeyer I. B. Middleton R. E. Steffy F. Prothero P. H. Porter L. F. Bessey R. L. Acker iUfi Colors: Seal Brown and White Tau Beta Pi Founded Lehigh University, June, 1885 Established April, 1902 Active Chapter Publication: “The Bent' H. M. Henry J. A. Brittain H. L. Milward C. W. Gordon J. W. Cooper R, M. Davis C. F. Johnson C. C. Harp J. J. Flocken T. E. Peak R. W. Waterfill Pledges A. D. Hall C. F . de Mey J. S. Wallingford Fratres in Facultate F. Paul Anderson L. K. Frankel A. L. Wilhoit H. H. Downing C. J. Norwood C. L. Rees J. J. Curtis W. E. Freeman L. E. Nollau J. R. Duncan In the Service National Chapter Roll Lehigh University Michigan Agricultural College Purdue University Stevens Institute of Technology University of Illinois University of Wisconsin Case School of Applied Science University of Kentucky Columbia University University of Missouri Michigan School of Mines Colorado School of Mines University of Colorado Armour Institute of Technology Syracuse University University of Michigan Missouri School of Mines University of California Iowa State College University of Iowa University of Minnesota Cornell University Worcester Polytechnic Institute University of Maine Pennsylvania State College University of Washington University of Arkansas University of Kansas University of Cincinnati Carnegie School of Technology University of Texas J tv ‘TAT? (143) Alpha Zeta Founded Ohio State University, November 4, 1897. Colors: Mode and Sky Blue. Flower: Pink Carnation Publication: “The Quarterly.” Scovell Chapter Established November 8, 1912 Active Chapter C. L. Morgan J. G . Stewart E. P. Bleidt Tilford L. Wilson J. B. Taber J. L. Gayle J. W. Tapp S. H. Shouse A. S. Gill F. S. Lancaster F. F. Elliott R. A Hunt L. E. Steinhauser In the service. Fratres. Dean Tom Cooper George Roberts T. R. Bryant E. S. Good P. E. Karraker in Facultate M. C. James E. J. Gott A. L. Brueckner W. D. Nicholls J. B. Hutson National Chapter Roll Townshend—Ohio State University. Morrill—Pennsylvania State University. Cornell—Cornell University. Kedsie—Michigan Agricultural College. Granite—New Hampshire College of Agriculture. Nebraska—University of Nebraska. North Carolina—University of North Carolina. La Grange—University of Minnesota. Green Mountain -University of Vermont. Wilson—University of Iowa Babcock—University of Wisconsin. Centennial—University of Colorado. Maine—University of Maine. Missouri—University of Missouri. Elliott—University of Washington. California—University of California. Purdue—Purdue University. Kansas—University of Kansas. Dacotah—University of North Dakota. Scovell—University of Kentucky. Morgan—University of Tennessee. Georgia—University of Georgia. Louisiana—University of Louisiana. Oklahoma—University of Oklahoma. (145) Tau Kappa Alpha Founded Buller College, 1908. Colors: Light and Dark Purple Publication: “The Speaker.” Flower: Lily of the Valley Membership limited to those who have represented the University in intercollegiate contests. Active Chapter J. T. C. Noe J .J. McBrayer, T8 C. W. Bailey, ’19 Pledges E. E. Hardin, 19 E. E. Rice, ’19 L. F. Bischof, ’20 E. W. Foster, '19 Ed Dabney, ’19 M. K. Revill, ’20 V. J. Pritchett, ’18 E. S. Dummit, '20 Ben H. Scott, ’18 Virgil Chapman, ’18 National Chapter Roll University of Alabama. Muskingum College. University of Arkansas. New York University. Bethany College. University of North Carolina. Butler College. Occidental College. University of Cincinnati. Ohio University. Clark College. University of Oregon. Colorado College. Purdue University. Columbia University. Randolph-Macon College. University of Denver Richmond College. Dickinson College. University of South Dakota. Emory and Henry College. University of Southern Califor Gettysburg (Pennsylvania) College. Southern Methodist University. Harvard University. St. Lawrence University. Indiana University. University of Tennessee. University of Kentucky. Trinity College. Lawrence College. University of Utah. Louisiana State University. Vanderbilt University. Miami University. University of Vermont. University of Mississippi. Wabash College. Monmouth College. University of Washington. University of Montana. Westminster College. (147) Lamed Pe Founded University of Kentucky, 1910. Colors: Blue and White Flo iver: The Acaci Officers W. S. HlERONYMOUS...................................................................President Prof. George M. Baker.............................................Vice-President Robert Mitchell.................................Secretary-Treasurer Active Members Robert M. Davis, 742 Ky. fW. B. Davis, 576 Ky. F. F. Elliott, 594 Ky. R. M. Hagan, 76 Ky. W. S'. HlERONYMOUS, 684 Ky. Oscar W. Irvin, 144 Ky. Entered Apprentice Degree. JFellowcraft Degree. J. J. Leman, 691 Ky. Robert Mitchell, Jr., 127 Ky. Lee McClain, 249 Ky. H. E. Reis, 23 Ky. W. L. Switzer, 14 Ky. O. C. Walker, 864 Ky. Fratres in Facultate u Prof. G. M. Baker, 265 Ky. Dr. R. P. Boyd, 652 Ky. H. S. Cannon, 61 Ky. Lyman Chalkley, 1 Ky. Thos. P. Cooper, 2 Minn. L. K. Frankel, 1 Ky. T. T. Jones, 1 Ky. W. T. Lafferty, 18 Ky. J. H. Martin, 123 Ind. C. R. Melcher, 652 Ind. L. E. Nallou, 1 Ky. J. T. C. Noe, 691 Ky. C. J. Norwood, 1 Ky. A.. J. Olney, 66 Vt. M. L. Pence, 1 Ky. Capt. J. H. Royden, 89 Conn. G. H. Van Cell, 116 Kan. T. J. Yaxis, 37 N. H. (149) Kappa Kappa Gamma First Row—Celia Crecor, Elizabeth Smith, Irene Evans, Helen Taylor, Nell Alford. Second Row—Maud Asbury, Mildred Collins, Fan Ratcliffe, Catherine Snyder, Edith Dean. Third Row—Dorothy Middelton, Dorothy Walker, Martha McDowell. Katherine Christian. Fourth Row—Martha Prewitt, Eugenia Hume, Lily Cromwell, Elizabeth Marshall, Julia Anderson . Fifth Row—Mary Van Meter, Margaret Jefferson, Mildred Porter, Ruti-i Gregory, Eliza- beth Arnett. Kappa Delta Edna Berkele, ’19, Florence Brown, ’21, Lois Brown, ’19, Amie Dietrich, ’20, Mamie Storms Dunn, ’21, Virginia Gray, 20, Emma Holton, '18, Florence Johnson, 21, Elizabeth Kraft, ’21, Elizabeth Murphy, ’21, Lois Powell, '18, Eliza Spurrier, ’19, Louise Will, ’20. (156) Staff and Crown Senior Women’s Honorary Society Founded University of Kentucky, June 4, 1913. Colors: White and Gold Flower: Red Rose Celia Cregor Frieda Lemon (160) Lelah Gault Aileen Kavanauch Officers Mildred Graham . . . Ruth Matthews ..................Chairman Secretary-Treasurer Prof. L. L. Dantzler Prof. E. E. Farquhar Dean Anna J. Hamilton Mr. Leslie Burgevin Miss Christine Hopkins Mr. John Price Mr. George Slappey May Barnes Browning Isabel Dickey Virginia Graham Henry Grehan Blanche Ilhardt Members Marcaret McClure Elizabeth McGowan Harold McGregor Lee McClain Elizaeeth Marshall Mrs. F. O. Mayes Gertrude Morton Bernard Moosnick J. W. Milam Minnie Neville Zerelda Noland Margaret Peel Adele Slade Walter Pifer Edna Smith Eliza Spurrier Louise Stevenson Brady Stewart Roberta Thornton Katherine Weakly Louise Will Estill Woods Anna Mae Yarbro Lucy Young The Agricultural Society Officers First Semester J. E. McClure.................. J. L. Gayle.............. Mary Beihn . . . . J. G. Stewart E. T. Tapscott . Ruth Duckwall ....................................President ........................Vice-President .....................Secretary) .............. Treasurer . . Sergeanl-at-Arms Correspondence Secretary) Second Semester J. B. Flege..............................................................................President Joe Wesson..............................................................Vice-President Jesse Tapp....................................................Secretary) J. L. Gayle........................................Treasurer J. E. McClure .............................Sergeanl-at-Arms R. A. Belt.........................Correspondence Secretary) 064) CT 127 c OK ®7 UTC . .1— 1 ] J ■ |HBf| - SV ML v. |WBR ------------------------------------1 Senior Mechanical and Electrical Engineers Officers American Society of Mechanical Engineers T. Ellis Peak.......................................................President Harry L. Milward................................................... Secretary George L. Jackson...................................................Treasurer American Institute of Electrical Engineers James M. Hedces.................................................... President R. M. Davis........................................................ Secretary W. D. McDouglz......................................................Treasurer Members P. M. Andres K. W. Goosman J. D. Maddox W. K. Adkins J. M. Hedges, Jr. ILL. Milward J. A. Brittain H. M. Henry C. Nicholoff J. W. Cooper G. L. Jackson T. E. Peak R. M. Davis H. J. Kolbie H. Parks E. R. Dearborn C. E. McCormick B. B. Russell D. R. Ellis W. D. McDouglf. (166) N T W Westinghouse Society Officers First Semester W. S. Baugh..................................................................President Alvin Kohn..................................................Vice-President Paul Anderson.........................................Secretary W. R. David...............................Treasurer H. M. Milton.......................Scrgeanl-al-Arms Second Semester W. S. Baugh . . J. M. Eyl C. A. Timmer . . . . W. R. David . . J. E. McClellan ...........................President ...............Vice-President ............Secretary Treasurer Sergeanl-ai-A rms W. S. Baugh W. R. David C. A. Timmer A. D. Hall T. M. Bell R. S. Arnold C. F. de Mey N. T. Puckett E. A. Lillard Members Alvin Kohn H. M. Milton J. E. McClellan J. H. Bailey D. R. Dudley J. J. Leman J. Frankel L. Templin Paul Anderson J. M. Eyl John Marking R. S. Park L. H. Bauer J. F. Shouse J. S. Misrach H. G. Proctor J. S. Wallingford E. L. Baulch................................................................................ President W. M. Wallace........................................................................... Vice-President B. A. Meadows..................................................................Secretary and Treasurer Members E. Baulch T. L. Gorman H. E. Reis r t 1 W. W. Bogcess T. Guthrie O. E. Richardson 1 n nT H. P. Brown C. M. Hargraves J . B. SlEGLE W. R. Campbell V. L. Johnson H. C. Thompson r—p i—p D. C. Choat B. Meadows W. M. Wallace J. W. Coleman G. McRoberts A. M. Woods J. R. Drummy J. C. Morris J. D. Wood ( ( ' E. E. Elsey T. B. Propps G. Zerfoss ‘TPiTP G. F. Matthews (166) Henry Clay Law Society The Henry Clay Law Society is composed of students of the College of Law who, inspired by the illustrious name of the Sage of Ashland, are striving to prepare themselves to uphold in future years the fair renown of Kentucky as the home of advocates and jurists and the land of orators and statesmen. The society’s debating teams have won many victories in intercollegiate contests. FIRST SEMESTER Virgil Chapman . Ben IT. Scott . Kebekah Paritz . E. S. Dabney . A. L. Northcutt H. P. Haley . Officers SECOND SEMESTER President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer . A llorney-Ceneral Chaplain Sergeant-at-Arms . Critic . Ben H. Scott Eldon Dummitt . Ed Puryear . J. P. Barnes Neville Moore . H. P. Haley PL G. Bryan Virgil Chapman (170) Judge Lyman Chalkley, Teacher This organization is the consequence of the personality of its master teacher. Judge Chalkley’s fine insight into human nature, his excellent interpretations of the scriptures, and as an undoubted searcher for the truth, have endeared his teachings to the hearts of those who have learned from this old Virginia gentleman. Ben H. Scott................. Sam Morton............. M. M. Atchison . J. P. Barnes Officers President Vice-President . . . . Secretary ................... T reasurer (171) Pre-Medical Society J. W. Pryor, M.D. Professor of Anatomy and Physiology; Head of Department. Officers E. M. Pullen.....................................................President A. H. Snyder................................................Vice-President O. K. McAdams...........................................Secretary-Treasurer Members R. E. Henry W. G. Wallace Hyman Kaplan Max Glickman Elizabeth Davis W. R. Whitford Marion B. Sprague Bryan Hall H. A. Stevens Virginia H. Milner Joe R. Nielander 0. C. Greene W. R. Wilson J. G. Woodruff Leland Burton Members of hospital units now in the service. Membership in the Lexington High School Club is limited to the former students of the Lexington High School who are now enrolled in the University. The Club delightfully entertained with a dance at Buell Armory on April 13, in honor of the Senior Class of Lexington High. Officers Tilford L. Wilson.........................................President Dorothy Middelton...............................................Vice-President Margaret Sexton...........................................Secretary John H. Davis...............................Treasurer Lexington High School Club Battalion Officers Herbert N. Royden, Captain U. S. Infantry (retired) Dee R. Ellis....................................... Tilford L. Wilson................................ T. Ellis Peak.................................... R. Smith Park.................................... J. S. Wallingford................................ .............Commandant ....................Major Captain and Adjutant Captain and Quartermaster First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Company “a” Company “c” S. Headley Shouse.......................Captain Hugh M. Milton.........................Captain Harry L. Milward .... First Lieutenant Harold Parks..............................First Lieutenant A. Smith Gill..................Second Lieutenant C. W. Bailey...................Second Lieutenant Company “b” Karl Goosman.......................Captain C. F. DE Mey..............First Lieutenant F. Paul Anderson .... Second Lieutenant Company “d” Horace Clark.........................Captain Hall M. Henry................First Lieutenant W. RUSSELL David .... Second Lieutenant N. T. Puckett Company “e” Captain Fred M. Jackson . Second Lieutenant R. B. Fenley (179) Captain Battalion Band Officers John S. Sherwood...........................................Captain L. A. Cover...............................................................Director E. R. Dearborne......................................First Lieutenant Members R. B. Allincton L. B. Martin N. G. Sullivan H. A. Auxier J. W. Milam C. L. Templin T. L. Gorman N. Moore L. A. Warren E. R. Gregg R. McCracken R. E. Wilson C. H. Heaverin A. W. Petrey A. M. Wood P. B. Hall R. Putman Charles Downing H. R. Kaplan F. Richardson 4a$ Company “B” K. W. Goosman . C. F. de Mey F. W. B. Davis R. K. Diamond E. E. Elsey P. V. Ellis B. E. Embry F. Eastwood B. O. Foster Anderson . . R. A. Arnold L. S. Forester J. C. Farmer R. PI. Farmer N. Fincel G. F. Gallup R. A. Glenn PI. H. Green Officers Members T. H. Green G. PI. Gregory ------Gardner S. S. Grecg PI. R. Halbert C. M. Hargrave H. P. Haley ..........................Capiam . First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant First Sergeant j. P. Head J. G. Heber B. Hines V.L. Johnson R. L. Jones C. W. Justice N. Knight A. J. Lavin A. Lisanby R. E. Sparks W. R. Whitford PI. A. Wy n Company “C” H. Milton Officers H. Parks ................... C. V. Bailey . . . . J. M. Pursifull PI. Dudley J. W. Holland PI. B. Lloyd C. Morris G. Martin b. Meadows P. Miller E. Monynahan W. D. Morgan B. Moosnick A. Muth G. McRoberts M. J, McWharter Members J. O. Nall J. Nielander L. S. Oldham R. O’PIara I-. Orth H. Otten K. Owen Captain First Lieutenant Second j. E. Parker R. Perrin R. Peters V. Piper G. Porter G PI. Powell Lieutenant First Sergeant V. Poindexter T. B. Propps E. Pullen PI. Reis M. Revill Van Arsdall Company “D” H. B. Clark H. M. Henry . . W. R. David .... H. L. Thompson........... Officers Members . Captain First Lieutenant . Second Lieutenant .................First Sergeant R. H. Stiles D. S. Smith G. W. Smith J. B. Siegel H. K. Smith J. T. Stephens E. Schultz W. D. Salmon W. B. Tiiornton J. W. Truitt Jesse Tapp J. B. Taylor H. C. Thompson A. H. Voelcher M. Vileofsky B. L. Wells I. G. Wilson A. C. Watkins F. D. Wetherhold P. R. Wathington J. F. Wilson W. P. White L. N. Winkler R. D. Warth H. W. Walling L. Wise W. R. Wilson E. D. Wallace J. D. Woods W. Yourish C. C. Young E. ZUCKERMAN M. Smith W. M. Wallace W. W. Thompson Company m N. T. Puckett............ F. Jackson . . . . H. E. Grehan Officers Members R. A. Belt W. C. Brown O. W. Collins J. T. Connell W. J. Cambron C. R. Chappell W. R. Campbell J. M. Chambers R. E. Davis S. H. De Brovey J. Dishman C. Downing D. Downing R. M. Guthrie J. F. Guthrie A. Gay J. M. Herndon L. H. Hamilton J. B. Juett M. Lasley L. A. Riedel S. B. Royster R. J. Raible E. L. Ritchie ...................Captain . Second Lieutenant First Sergeant A. P. Shanklin F. J. Trapp H. C. Thomas C. D. Triplett W. W. Thompson W. G. Walker G. E. Zerfoss JtUiU of Jfiottor Students in Military Service Aaron, Geo. D., American Expeditionary Force. Acker, R. L., U. S. Army. Acton, Carl B., 10th Co., U. S. Army. Adams, W. M., Aviation Camp. Adams, Lois LitsEY, Engineering Corps. Adamson, Kenneth Frazer, American Expedi- tionary Force. Albert, Russell F., Engineering Corps. Allen, Elmer B., 2nd Kentucky Infantry. Alden, William O., First Lieutenant, E. O. R.C. Alloway, Fred, Jr., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Almstedt, Wm. C., ’14, Engineering Corps. Amburgy, Lawrence M., ’16, 149th Infantry Supply Co. Ammerman, Walter H., ’12, U. S. Army| Amoss, Harold L., Captain, M. O. R. C. Roll of Honor n Bauer, George, U. S. Marines, American Ex- peditionary Forces. BAUTE, E. A., Coast Artillery. Beam, Henry J., ’19, Signal Battalion. Bennett, J. H., Coast Artillery. BENNETT, R. M., Naval Training Station. Bernhardt, Carl L., Ambulance Service. BlaKER, E. T., '14, Battery Field Artillery. Blevins, Ci-ias. E., ’14, Aviation Flyer. BoerneR, Louis F., Corporal Co. “A, Signal Service. BorNTRAEGER, Henry, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Botto, Lary Lynn, Coast Artillery. Boles, E. T. (Clerk of Regiment), Naval Train- ing Station. Branson, D. P., ’07, Captain, U. S. Army. Brewer, Lee, ’08, First Lieutenant, American Expeditionary Forces. Bridges, Leonard C., ’10, U. S. Army. Briggs, Geo. Waverly, Field Artillery. Expeditionary Forces. Army. Brown, Coleman T., U. S. Army. Browning, J. K., ’08, U. S. Army. Buckner, Webster, Hospital Corps. Burge, George C., U. S. Army. BUTTON, F. W., Second Lieutenant Headquar- ters, U. S. Army. Burr, Duke Bowden, ’13, U. S. Army. Burton, R. A., U. S. Army. Burton, Leland, Hospital Unit No. 40. Byers, James K., ’15, Engineering Corps. Byrd, Carl B., Seventh Cavalry, U. S. Army. Carson, D. Creswell, U. S. Army. CASSIDY, P. R., ’ll, Coast Artillery. Clarke, Carter W., Signal Corps. Clarke, M. J., U. S. Navy. Cart, Nutter O., Hospital Unit No. 40. Cherry, George, ’16, U. S. N. C., Marine Barracks. Clayton, Robert Shirley, U. S. Army. Cleveland, Leslie, U. S. Naval Academy. Clements, Earl, U. S. Army. Chambers, Alvin L., Base Hospital, Unit No. 40. Coates, Aaron, Aviation Corps. Coleman, James H., American Expeditionary Forces. Cole, Samuel H., Base Hospital, Unit No. 40. Coleman, James T., U. S. Army. Coleman, Levi O., ’14, Engineering Corps. Collins, William, ’12, Captain, U. S. Cavalry. Cobb, E. M., Sergeant, U. S. Army. Collins, Wm., Aero Naval Station, Hospital Corps. Cook, S. W., Second Lieutenant Engineering Corps. Coons, Wm. Lester, Hospital Unit No. 40. Cooke, Samuel E., ’15, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Corn, Charles T., Jr., Second Lieutenant, In- fantry. Roll of Honor Corn, J. Franklin, ’17, U. S. Army. Cottrell, Harry, U. S. Army. Cox, James R., U. S. Army. COYLE, T. F., Infantry Band. Craig, B. C., Lieutenant in Service. Creekmore, Larry, U. S. Army. CrecoR, Charles S., Sergeant, U. S. Army. Crump, Henry E., U. S. Army. Cullen, Robert Emmet, U. S. Army. Cureton, Nat, U. S. Naval Academy. Cutler, Thomas E., ’03, Captain, R. O. T. C. Dan forth, Edward, '14, U. S. Navy. Daniel, C. E., ’ll, U. S. Army. Darnaby, E. H., ’15, Aero Supply Squadron. David, R. L., Ambulance Company, U. S. A. Davidson, L. C., U. S. Army. Davis, John C., U. S. Army. Decker, Elmer E., R. O. T. C. Delaney, James, U. S. Army. Denny, Van Hamilton, First Sergeant Regi- ment. Dickerson, Charles B., Field Artillery. Dobbs, Geo. Whipple, U. S. Army. DonaN, David C., First Lieutenant, Medical Re- serve Corps. Dodd, D. J., ’07, U. S. Army. Donan, A. L., U. S. Army. Downing, W. T., U. S. Army. Downing, John, Hospital Unit No. 40. Doyle, Justin L., ’13, R. O. T. C. Doyle, Martin L., ’04, Second Lieutenant of Engineers, U. S. Coast Guards. Duck, Curtis, Base Hospital No. 32. Drake, Ernest G., Hospital Unit No. 40. Dugan, F. Clarke, '10, First Lieutenant, 302th Engineers. Duncan, Robert Edward, U. S. Army. Duncan, D. M., Jr., U. S. Army. Duncan, J. Ray, Lieutenant (J. G.), U. S. N. R. F. Duncan, W. A., ’97, Captain Medical Corps, U. S. A. Dunn, Charles, ’16, U. S. Army. Early, Cuvier C., Hospital Unit No. 40. Elder, Eugene, Signal Corps. Elliott, Porter L., Field Artillery. Estill, Dan, Second Lieutenant, U. S. R. Estill, Robert, First Lieutenant, U. S. R. Eubank, A. L., Lance Corporal, Engineer Corps. Evans, Herndon, Infantry, National Guard. Evans, Lynn B., Ensign, Detroit, Mich. Ewell, Geo. Watkins, ’02, Major Infantry, U. S. A. Farmer, Harry, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Faulkner, H. C., Jr., U. S. A. Faulkner, Robert T., U. S. Army. Fears, John C., ’10, U. S. Army. Felix, Douglas D., ’13, Captain Infantry, U. S. Army. Felix, Herbert, ’16, U. S. Army. Field, Wm. Graddy, Base Hospital Unit No. 40. Filbeck Clyde, 333rd Infantry, Medical De- partment, Fitscher, Fred W., Captain Quartermasters Corps, U. S. A. Fitzgerald, Lloyd, U. S. Army. FlNNEY, M. C., American Expeditionary Forces Fister, William K., Veterinary, O. R. C. Forman, Howard, R. O. T. C. Foster, J. Roi.lie, First Lieutenant Marines. Foster, Richard W., Hospital Unit No. 40. Foster. Daniel G., U. S. Army. Frasier, Edward R., U. S. Army. I I I I I Roll of Honor Frye, Kenneth C., '17, Engineer Corps. Fogg, Richard J., Hospital Unit No. 40. Gaither, Donald M., ’14, Lieutenant Engineer Corps. Gaither, Edgar B., '03, Captain, R. O. T. C. Gallaher, Raymond W., U. S. Army. Galloway, Finnell W., U. S. Army. Galloway, Floyd Emerson, Lieutenant, Coast Artillery. Gardner, A. M., Marine Barracks. Garrett, John W., Field Artillery. Geary, J. T. N., Major, Coast Artillery. Gilbert, Ray, Hospital Unit No. 40. Gibson, Jno. M., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Ginochio, F. S., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Glenn, Howard E., Sergeant, U. S. Army. Gould, Louis P., Navy Hospital Corps. Gordon, Charles W., Washington Barracks. Grabfelder, Earl, U. S. Army. Grady, Clyde, ’02, U. S. Army. Graddy, Geo. Neville, Navy. Graham, Herbert, ’16, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Graham, James FI., 1900, Engineer Corps, American Expeditionary Forces. Grannis, James K., ’08, Construction Division _ Single Corps. Gordon, Charles W., U. S. Engineers, Amer- ican Expeditionary Forces. Graves, Geo. T., Hospital Unit No. 40. Griggs, C. C., U. S. Army. Green, R. M., '17, Aviation Training School. Gregory, Hardin, Quartermaster Department. Gregory, Wm. J., Ordnance Department. Grehan, Robert J., Base Hospital, Thirteenth Division. Guilfoile, James E., U. S. Army. (186) Grubbs, Thos. D., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. GuERRANT, R. H., ’08, Safety Engineer, Rock Island Arsenal. Gullion, Allen W., American Expeditionary Forces. Hagemeyer, C. W., Signal Officers’ Training School. Hamilton, Wallace D., ’14, U. S. Army. Hagan, James A., Hospital Unit No. 40. HAMILTON, --------, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. HarbisON, McClarTY, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Hanson, M. Taylor, Aviation Section, R. C. Harney, Clarence, Hospital Unit No. 40. HARDESTY, Llewellyn C., First Lieutenant, En- gineer Corps. Harrison, Clyde B., Hospital Unit No. 40. Halbert, Wm. C., Engineering Corps. Hart, Aubrey M., Field Artillery. Hart, Derrill W., ’12, Naval Training School. Haswell, Robert B., Aviation Section. Hatter, E. P., ’16, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Hayes, Lorenzo G., Engineering Corps. Hays, R. B., ’17. U. S. Navy. PIeath, Robert M., ’16, U. S. Army. Hedces, James M., Jr., U. S. Navy. FIeick, Frank, Second Lieutenant Cavalry. Hendricks, Elijah C., Field Artillery. Herndon, John T., U. S. Army. Herndon, Lewis W., U. S. Engineers; killed in action in France, April 10, 1918. Hewitt, John M., U. S. Army. Heyman, Lawrence, '16, U. S. Army. Hicks, Herbert E., U. S. S. Pennsylvania. FIigdon, Wm. H., U. S. Army. MMWH Roll of Honor Hill, George H., ’17, Second Lieutenant Engi- neer Corps, American Expeditionary Forces. Hill, James, U. S. Army. Hill, John P., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Hilliard, C. D., U. S. Marine Corps. Hillsman, Geo., U. S. Army. Hines, Harold K., U. S. Army. Hines, Henry, Second Lieutenant, U. S. R. Hite, Paul, U. S. Naval Reserve. Hodges, J. A., '17, Aviation Service. Hogard, Joe S., Engineer Corps. Hogg, Hiram, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. HoLLOWELL, J. E., Naval Training Station. HoLLOWELL, Carney A., Naval Training Station. Hopkins, Elmer W., American Expeditionary Forces. House, Taylor N., '14, U. S. Army. Howard, Otis, U. S. S. Antigone. Howard, Thomas D., First Lieutenant, R. O. T. C. Hubble, Clyde, U. S. Army. Hudgins, Thomas F., '09, Coast Artillery Corps. Hughes, Wm. Neal, '02, U. S. Navy. Hughes, Arthur G., U. S. Army. Hughes, Leonard S., '94, Major Medical Corps. Huhlein, Fred E., Lieutenant U. S. Army. Hundley, Harry D., Cadet Aviation Section. Hundley, Robt. Ed., ’16, Base Hospital Unit, No. 40. Hunt, Lee, '13, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Hughes, Thurston, Captain Coast Artillery Regiment. Husted, Howard, Field Officer’s Clerk. Ingram, E., Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Iglehart, R. M., First Lieutenant, U. S. R. Ireland, T. H., Aviation Section, Signal Corps. Ireland, Robt. Y., Aviation. Irvine, James Farra, Signal Corps. Jackson, Stonewall, '14, Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Jacobs, Chauncey, U. S. Army. Jacob, G. Lawrence, U. S. Engineers, Amer- ican Expeditionary Forces. Jaecle, Wm. H., Second Lieutenant, Engineer Corps Jake, Douglas Cecil, U. S. Navy. Jarvis, William H., Sergeant, U. S. Army. Jetton, Walter C., Sergeant, U. S. Army. Jasper, Gaines, Base Hospital Unit No. 40. Jenkins, J. R., U. S. Navy. Jones, R., Major, U. S. Army. Jones, Stanley, First Lieutenant, U. S. A. Johnson, Herbert C., American Expeditionary Forces. Kerrick, R., ’96, Major, U, S. Army. Kennedy, Frank, Aviation Training School. Kinne, Howard I., Second Lieutenant, C. A., U. S. R., American Expeditionary Forces. Kimbrough, Henry C, Hospital Unit No. 40. Kimbrough, Marion L., Hospital Unit No. 40. King, A. L., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Kahn, David E., U. S. Army. King, Clay, U. S. Army. Kiesel, Walter C., '08, Field Signal Battalion. KlRTLEY, E. C., U. S. Army. Koltinsky, Samuel K., U. S. Army. Knight, Russell H., Medical Department, U. S. Army. Kremer, Frank F., U. S. Army. Kuykendall, E. L., Engineer Corps, U. S. A. Lane, Wm. Muir, Base Hospital Unit No. 40. Land, J. M., Base Hospital Unit No. 40. Lancaster, Frank S., Base Hospital, Unit No. 40. Ledwidge, Guy, Signal Corps. (189) Roll of Honor YjV A ®m Wn Landsberg, Thos. H., Aviation Section, Signal Corps. Lee, Owen Scott, '16, Base Hospital Unit No. 40. LeNIHAN, Wm A., U. S. Army. Lewis, Edward H., '10, First Lieutenant Engi- neers, Reset ve Corps. LiEBSCHUTZ, Jacob, Drafted, September 24. Likens, E. R., American Expeditionary Forces. Lindsay, W. R., Second Engineer Train, Pon- toon Section. Logan, Dulaney, Coast Artillery. Loomis, Fred, Jr., First Lieutenant, Coast Ar- tillery, American Expeditionary Forces. LONCSWORTH, L. I., Government Service. LOWRY, Ben H., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Lovell, Chas. W., U. S. Army. Lowry, Robert H., Lieutenant 23rd Engineers. Little, R. C., Corporal, Engineer Corps. Littleton, Edward L., R. O. T. C. Lovelace, R. C., U. S. Army. Luter, Clarence E., U. S. Army. Luten, Drew W., ’01, Assistant Surgeon, U. S. N. Reserve. McAdams, O. K., Hospital Unit No. 40. McAllister, FIoward B., '13, U. S. Army. MACLOSKEY, L. W., ’15., Navy Supt. Depart- ment Island. McCLINTOCK, Robt. J., American Expedition- ary Forces Reserve, Mallet, France. McCoy, E. M., '16, Captain, U. S. Army. McCarty, Gambrell, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. McCown, T. C., ’17, Aviation Corps, Navy. McDaniel, Stephen, U. S. N. A. McDonald, John W., ’15, First Lieutenant, 12th Cavalry. McGary, Chas. E., U. S. Army. McGowan, Gecrge Jesse, Coast Artillery. McGraw, Geo. B., Field Artillery. McIntyre, B. B., American Expeditionary Forces. McIlvain, E. N., U. S. S. San Francisco. McKenzic, Jno W., Aviation. McKinney, Garnett J., Base Hospital Unit No. 40. McKinney, Sidney S., Second Lieutenant, G. M. C. McRoberts, John M., Medical Department, U. S. A. Maddox, H. E., U. S. Army. Maddox, J. W., Lieutenant-Colonel, U. S. A. Maddox, Robert L., ’09, U. S. Army. Mahan, T. E., ’13, U. S. Army. MAHONEY, Ben, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Mahoney, Chas., U. S. Navy. Marsh, John R., Hospital Unit No. 40. Martin, Glenn U., Naval Aero Station. Matherly, Hartford, ’17, U. S. Army. Martin, B. C., Aviation Service. May, Thurmond, U. S. Navy. Mayes, Sidney B., U. S. Army. Mayes, Fred O., U. S. Marine Corps. MAYNARD, C. E., ’18, U. S. Marine Corps. Melton, H. E., ’16, Signal Reserve Corps. Menefee, Jno. B., Jr., Captain, U. S. Army. Middelton, I. B., Aviation. Middleton, James A., Aviation. Milam, James W., Hospital Unit No. 40. Miller, Jesse I., ’12, Sergeant-Major, U. S. Army. Milligan, Vincent B., ’12, U. S. Navy. Miller, Geo. A., Hospital Unit No. 40. Million, R. T., U. S. S. Wyoming. Milton, James A., U. S. Army. Minihan, W. A., Base Hospital Unit No. 40. (190) Roll of Honor Mitchell, Joe G., U. S. Army. Mitchell, Paul, U. S. Army. Moore, James H., U. S. Army. Moore, Jno. B., Second Lieutenant Cavalry, U. S. R. Moore, Henry P., ’06, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Moore, Rogers T., First Lieutenant Cavalry, U. S. R. Moore, William Estill, Aviation Corps. Montgomery, F. J., '04, U. S. Army. Montgomery, M. M„ Second Lieutenant, Field Artillery. Morris, James Monroe, U. S. Army. Moss, T. E., Medical Department. MunCIE, M. L., U. S. Army. Muller, Mortimier H„ Hospital Unit No. 40. MuSSELMAN, Jos. F., 1900, Consulting Engineer, U. S. Navy. Nagel, Herbert L., ’12, R. O. T. C. NEBLETT, John A., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Neacle, Walter C, U. S. Army. Nelson, Lecoq H., '16, U. S. Army. Newman, Stanley O., U. S. Navy. Nicholson, F. W., Aviation Service. NlCKELL, Ira M., Second Lieutenant, O. R. T. C. Nisbet, J. G., ’06, U. S. Army. NlSBET, B. L., Lieulenant, U. S. Army. Nisbet, Kenneth, Hospital Corps, U. S. Army. Noel, H. K., U. S. Army. Noel, Howard M., American Expeditionary Forces, France. Noland, Harris W., U. S. Navy. Nunan, Thomas R., First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Oosthuizen, Johannes, American Expedition- ary Forces. Oberwarth, Leo K., Landsman Electrician, U. S. Navy. Obenchain, Wm. A., Captain, U. S. Army. O’Brien, Anthony, Hospital Unit No. 40. Owen, Jno. C., Aviation Section. Owens, J. W., Sergeant 7th Regiment Engineers. Palmore, Hovey D., ’14, Captain, U. S. Army. Park, Curtis F., '17, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Parsons, Rhey B., Sergeant-Major 20th Bn., U. S. Army. Parker, Sam F., Captain, U. S. Army. Payno, Walter Landram, 23rd Aero Squad- ron. Payton, Leland E., R. O. T. C. Peak, Bart N., ’17, U. S. Army. Pearlman, Clarence A., U. S. Army. Pedley, Gracean M., ’16, R. O. T. C. Peel, Dwight R., U. S. Army. Perkinson, Perry M., U. S. Army. Petrie, Charlie, ’15, U. S. Army. Petrie, John W., U. S. Army Pettit, Wm., U. S. Navy. Pickels, Geo. W., Jr., ’04. Aviation Section. Probst, Henry S., American Expeditionnary Forces. Prothero, F., Aviation. Pulliam, Harold, Aviation Service—Hydro- plane. Pulliam, Keeling, Aero Squadron, American Expeditionary Forces. Punch, Richard E., Hospital Unit No. 40. Puryear, Chas. R., U. S. Army. Radford, Bailey Allen, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Radford, W. T., Captain, U. S. Army. Rankin, A. J., Engineering Corps. Redmon, Jno. T., Medical Department, U. S. Army. i mm Roll of Honor Rankin, Robert B., '17, Cavalry, U. S. Army. Rector, Lee Thornton, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Reddish, Wm. D., ’09, Hospital Unit No. 40. Reed, Jewett V., 1900, A. A. Surgeon, U. S. Navy. Reed, Curry, First Lieutenant Cavalry. Reese, R. H., Engineer Corps, American Expe- ditionary Forces. Reid, Homer, Government Employ. Reid, Walter, Government Employ. Reusch, Louis. Jr., R. O. T. C. Reynolds, Goodson, Hospital Unit No. 40. Rhoads, Geo. W., U. S. S. S. C., No. 21, U. S. Navy. Rice, Martin R., First Lieutenant, U. S. Cav- alry. Rice, Than O., R. O. T. C. Richards, T. B., Field Artillery. Richards, Henry, Aviation Corps. Richards, T. T., R. O. T. C. RlNCO, J. C, U. S. Army. Robinson, Earl P., ’12, First Battery, F. A., O. T. C. Robertson, Elmer P., Corporal, U. S. Army. Robnett, P. H., U. S. Army. Roberts, Dan T., U. S. Army. Rodes, William (Doc), First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Rodce , Raymond, Electrical School, Na y Y aids. Rodman, John, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Rogers, G. Clark, First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Rollings, Chas. S., U. S. Army. Rouse, Leonard, U. S. Army. Rowe, Walter E., U. S. Army. Ruby, Charles E., ’16, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Rudy, James Wilson, U. S. Army. Rush, William, Coast Artillery. Rush, Lovell F., Hospital Unit No. 40. Sadler, Will R., U. S. Army. Sallee, Phillip, Aviation Corps Sample, Jno. F., Captain 4th Regiment, M. R. C. Sayres, Warner F., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Scent, Edward, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. SCHOENSIEGEL, Albert D., U. S. Marine De- tachment. Schwartz, Clarence H., ’14, Second Lieuten- ant, Engineering Corps. Scott, Herschel, '15, 20th U. S. Cavalry, C F. A. Scott, T. M., ’14, U. S. Army. Scrivner, E. Irvine, Naval Training Station. Scott, J. L., Field Artillery. Scott, Jno., ’97. U. S. Army. Scott, Roy C., Hospital Unit No. 40. Settles, Grover C., U. S. Army. Server, James, Medical Corps Engineers. Shannon, Phil F., ’07, U. S. Army. Shaw, Harry W., Engineering Corps. Shaw, H. N., ’92, Captain O. M., U. S. R. Shaw, Arthur J., Second Lieutenant F. A., U. S. Army. Shawhan, Hubbard W., First Lieutenant, Coast Artillery. Shinnick, Wm., ’17, Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Shelby, Joseph Bryan, First Lieutenant, Field Artillery. Shaut, Guy E., U. S. Army. Shouse, L. B., Base Hospital Unit No. 40. Short, Hardin B., Hospital Unit No. 40. Shearer. A. L., U. S. Marine Corps. Simpson, Henry Clay, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. (192) V-v-j'V w Skillman, Winston, Hospital Unit No. 40. Skidmore, M. T., Naval Training Station. Slade, Karl Prentice, Aviation. Smith, Henry C., U. S. Army. Smith, Maxwell W., ’06, Captain, Engineering Corps. Smith, Charles R., U. S. Army. Smith, Stanley H., Yeoman, U. S. S. Wilkes, U. S. Navy (drowned September, 1917). Smith, Arthur C., Engineering Corps. Snoddy, Wm. Owsley, American Expeditionary Forces. Sory, James D., Jr., ’13, Captain Infantry, U. S. Army. Speed, Thomas B., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Standard, Drew W., U. S. Army. Stanton, William Linn, U. S. Army. STEFFY, R. E., Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Stedman, Harvey W., U. S. Navy. Stevens, Henry A., Hospital Unit No. 40. Stone, Wm. Carl, U. S. Army. Strahm, Victor H., 12th Aero Squadron. Strong, Henry Glover, Engineering Corps, American Expeditionary Forces, France. Sudduth, Watson, First Lieutenant Engineers, U. S. Regulars. Sullivan, Henry, U. S. Navy. Sullivan, Mitchell S., ’16, U. S. Army. Sullivan, S. D. J., U. S. Army. Stokes, James W., Hospital Unit No. 40. Sumner, Wood, U. S. Army. Taylor, Harry E., First Lieutenant, Engineer- ing Corps. Taylor, T. C., 16, First Lieutenant, Wrights- town, N. J. Sweatt, James F., American Expeditionary Forces. Taylor, Otis, Sergeant, U. S. Army. Taylor, Clyde P., ’15, Second Lieutenant, Quar- termaster Corps. Taylor, Robert Brooks, Chemist, Base Hos- pital No. 40. Taylor, Carroll G., ’10, Aviation Section, Sig- nal Corps. TAYLOR, Lucien W., Quartermaster Corps, U. S. Army. Taylor, Reuben Thornton, Adjutant, Amer- ican Troops in England. Terry, N. Norman, Aviation Department, Sig- nal Corps, American Expeditionary Forces. Terry, Chauncey E., U. S. Army. Thomas, Roy W., U. S. Army. Thompson, Alvin S., Base Hospital Unit No. 40. Tigert, John J., ’09, U. S. Army. Torrence , Jos. E., American Expeditionary Forces. Travis, Russell, U. S. Marines. Troutman, Geo., U. S. Navy. Tomlinson, Robt. H., Hospital Unit No. 40. Turner, Dillard H., U. S. Army. Turner, William Karl, Field Artillery. UpingTON, Theo. E., Base Hospital Unit No. 40. UtteRBACK, Robert E., Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Van Meter, Sol L., Jr., First Lieutenant, U. S. Regulars. Vaughn, Wood, Jr., U. S. Army. Wallingford, J. K., U. S. Navy. Walter, E. M., ’15, Engineering Corps. Wardle, Charles W., ’11, First Lieutenant, E. O. R. C. Warfield, Wm. C., R. O. T. C. Warren, Irvin B., First Lieutenant, Cavalry. (193) Roll of Honor Warwick, G. W., U. S. Army. Wasson, Thompson O., U. S. Army. Waters, J. Newland, U. S. Army. Watson, M. L., Students’ Company, Signal Of- ficers. Waterfill, Robt. W., U. S. Army. Webb, Wm. S., ’02, Captain, U. S. Army. Webb, J. H., Field Artillery. Wells, Emery, ’08, U. S. Army. WHALEY, HARRY, Engineering Corps. Wheeler, Lloyd, Captain, U. S. Army. Whittinghill, Jackson P., ’03, R. O. T. C. WiCKLUND, Carl Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Williams, Delan A., ’15, U. S. Reserve, Med- ical Department. Williams, Charles W., ’15, First Lieutenant, Motor Ambulance. Williams, John H., Hospital Unit No. 40. Wilkes, Frank M., R. O. T. C. Willis, Robert L., ’13, F. A., U. S. T. C. Wilson, Robert E, Hospital Unit No. 40. Wilson, Wm. C„ ’13, U. S. Army. Wilson, Curtis B., '12, Veterinary Reserve Corps. Wilson, James R., ’09, Railroad Engineering Corps, American Expeditionary Forces. Wilson, George H., ’04, First Lieutenant, Medical Section, U. S. R. Wilson, A. C., U. S. Army. Woodson, Wm. T., First Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Wood, T. J., 13, Aero Squadron. Wood, Thomas Jackson, Aero Squadron. Womack, Gilman T., Hospital Unit No. 40. WRIGHT, Walter F., Captain, American Expe- ditionary Forces. Wright, Sidney A., Ambulance Corps, Ameri- can Expeditionary Forces. Wyatt, C. P., Aero Squadron. Young, Bentley, Second Lieutenant, U. S. Army. Young, Leving P., Hospital Unit No. 40. Zerfoss, Karl P., ’16, U. S. Army. Zerfoss, Tom, First Lieutenant, F. A., Amer- ican Expeditionary Forces. (194) Athletic Association Committee 7. E. Freeman............................................................................ Lhairman D. V. Terrell.............................................................................Secretary H. E. Curtis............................................................................. Treasurer J. J. Tigert W. T. Lafferty Student Members John A. Brittain Else McClellan William Campbell Neal Knight “K” Association J. A. Brittain—3, Capt. John Heber—2 Arthur Bastin Clay Downing Craig Riddle William Campbell—2, Capt. Henry Thomas Arthur Shanklin Celia Cregor—2, Capt. Dorothy Walker George Zerfoss Football Walton Dempsey—3 Dewey Downing Walter Baugh Hiram Adair Edward Pullen Hall Henry—Mgr. Basketball, Boys’ Gordon Marsh Joseph Dishman George Zerfoss—2 Basketball, Girls’ Lillie Cromwell Nell Crain Baseball Joe Cambron Ben H. Scott—4 James Hedgges—3 Eger Murphree—2 Rodgers Moore William Walker Arthur Shanklin Arthur Bastin Max Glickman Lillian Haydon—2 Lucy Dean Else McClellan—2 Capt. Tennis F. Paul Anderson, Captain Neal Knight Track Charles Planck Alvin Kohn el 96) Coaching Staff “Daddy” Boles, a product of the far-famed Zuppke school, and Jim Park, who will ever be remembered as Kentucky’s great Wildcat quarter, made a happy paid to whip the boys into shape last fall. With the 1916 team swept away by the war, it was the task of these men to make a Varsity of mostly Freshman material. As to the results we all know. Although the season was no overwhelming success, the team held its own against older and more experienced teams not so badly affected by the war. Yet they produced a team for the emergency, which, with additional experience and maturity, should be able to withstand her most formidable antagonists of 1918. ) (198) . • .. . A Football 1917 Review HEN the brilliant 1916 season was history, supporters of the Blue and White began to look forward to an even more successful year in 1917. The only man to be lost from that splendid squad was Maury Crutcher, the 1916 captain. With all this prospective material and a number of scrubs who had proved themselves of Varsity caliber the athletic authori- ties made the hardest schedule a University of Kentucky team had ever tackled. Not only were Sewanee and Vanderbilt to be played, but Miami University and University of Alabama were added to the list. It seemed that the time had come for the Wildcats to take a fling at the championship of the S. I. A. A., but the grim visage of war cut a wide swarth in the hopes of the Wildcats and the dreams of a winning team vanished like the shade of Creusa. That memorable backfield, composed of the “immortal“ “Doc” Rodes, “Whale” Grabfelder, “Mighty” Mcllvain and the “elusive” Haydon were to strike terror into the hearts of Southern teams no more, for they had heard the call to arms! In the line there would no more be seen “Big” Hickerson, “Shorty” Heick, “Rabbit” Kinne, “Boone” Simpson, “Fats” Clements, for they, too, were in the cantonments. But who would have it otherwise even to bearing the verbal assaults of ambitious alumni and drugstore enthusiasts. The University of Kentucky is more proud of them fighting for Uncle Sam than she would be of a pennant. When September came Captain Brittain, Dempsey, Murphree, Gay and Heber, of the 1916 team, and James Hedges, of the 1915 team, reported. Walker, Pullen, Baugh, Adair and Cambron were left from the scrubs, but Kelley, Boles, Lisanby, Howard, Davidson, Shinnick and Moseley were not here. The first game with Butler College was won by the accustomed score of 33 to 0. Gay, Walker, Shanklin, Riddle and Hedges carried the ball for big gains. In the line were Brittain, Murphree and Heber. Next came Maryville College, a substitute for S. P. U., who cancelled. This team proved somewhat harder to score upon. They seemed not to be anxious to have other teams make gains on them and even offered oppsition when this was attempted, but the Wildcats proved too much for them and they went back, 19 to 0. On the following Saturday came the champion Miami University team. They had played one season and part of another and had not suffered defeat at any time. They were the “champeens” of the Ohio colleges. Nearly everybody must have thought that they would not only defeat the Kentucky boys, but even humble and drive them from their trenches, for only a brave hearted few came out to see this great game. They played for sixty long minutes, and but for a mistake of the referee the score would have been Kentucky 7, Miami 0. But mistakes in football count just the same, whether made by referee or player, and the final score was 0 to 0. It was a great game for the young Kentucky team against the veterans of Miami, but it cost them the services of their star halfback, Gay, and probably thereby lost for them some of the following contests. On October 19th Vanderbilt came to Lexington for their second game in as many years. The Wildcats were somewhat dubious of this team, as they had suffered an un- hallowed experience at their hands in 1916. While the Commodores were not “as strong as of yore,” neither were the Wildcats. It was a hard fought game and Vander- (199) bill won, 5 to 0. It was a hard game to lose, and with Gay back the result might have been different. But it was not so to be. Nevertheless that is the smallest score the Wild- cats have ever played the Commodores. Then to Chattanooga to play Sewanee. We had faced the Tigers twice in our back lot and he had been unable to do us and we had been unable to do him. So now we transferred the tangled web to his camping ground. Again the team fought hard and but for an ell-like run of Wortham, or a penalty, or failure to gain two yards, the score would still be tied. But, alas, these are what might have been. The Tigers won, 7 to 0. On November 3d we went to Danville to play Centre. One would think from the score of the previous year that this game would not be in doubt, for 68 to 0 is some handicap. But Centre had returned a veteran team and received a shipment from Texas. They should have won by at least two touchdowns, but the Kentucky team fought them off from a touchdown and they won the game accidentally by a man kicking a drop- kick who had never done so in a game before or since. Then came that long, desultory trip to Mississippi A. and M. Some trip! Leave Lexington one night; arrive at Mississippi next night, after changing trains several times and standing at stations several hours. Another hard game lost by a close score. Heber got loose for a long run, but fumbled the ball with no one in front of him. Pullen caught a forward pass on Mississippi A. and M. two-yard line just as time was up, but Bobo had been loose for two long runs and that was enough. Then came the measles and Alabama. Wilhelm, Walker, D. Downing and Hedges caught the measles on that Mississippi A. and M. trip and were out for the next two weeks. This was the only game that the team suffered more than 1 4 points to be scored on them. They fought hard, but they could not overcome weight, speed and experience. Thanksgiving Day saw the team at its best and when it really came to itself. All of the boys had recovered from injuries and epidemics except Gay. Brittain was in shape for the first time; Shanklin was back again, and Walker, Hedges, D. Downing and Wilhelm had pushed through the bars of a strict quarantine and were out ready to go. With all in this shape, the University of Florida did not have a chance. Riddle, Shanklin, Walker and Hedges could not be stopped. They went through the line around the ends and through the air. When the mist had blown away the score was 32 to 0. If it had not been for the injury to Gay in the Miami game, to Shanklin in the Vanderbilt game and to Brittain before the Centre game, and the epidemic of measles, some of the other teams might have received part of the Florida score. We are not offering any alibis for not winning these games. We are just stating the facts. The team fought hard in all the games. They did not lower the standard of fight set by the former members of the Wildcat tribe. They were beaten, but never defeated. 1 hey had scores made against them, but they never gave up. They were made of the stuff that, though defeated in several games, came back and played their best game Thanks- giving Day. If the members of this team return next fall, we feel sure that some of the teams they play will have cause to regret. ,7] X “Brit was the best guard Kentucky ever had. As Captain he was a capable leader and an example worthy of any one’s following. Brit was a hard, clean fighter, yet it was not everybody that knew this formidable foe, but many were impressed as by a thunderboldt. There could have been no more touching sight than to have beheld Brit when his legs were failing him in the Centre game, and his repeated efforts to rally to prevent the defeat that was inevitable without him. If Brit ever goes to fight Germans, God help the low-life Huns. John Heber, End Look close and you will see the good end of many a hard-fought fight. Heber was the ferret of the Wildcats’ pack. His favorite pastime was picking up fumbles or staying the progress of the blocked punt, in other words, he liked to put himself out with the enemy. Heber will grace the beys with his presence as Captain next fall. James Hedges, End “Jimmy,” the watch charm half and quarter of 14, was commandeered to inject a little maturity and experience into the young fellows. His second debut was no less successful than the initial, and he very often rounded up and put an end to the enemy. The best man for his size Kentucky has ever had. (201) Ti Walton Dempsey, Center “Cupid” was one of those big boys who has outweathered the ruinous arts of wicked time and emerged his own sweet fat self. It was a fitting finale for his gridiron performance when it was the turn of the central figure to make his first touchdown in the Turkey Day game with Florida. His pon- drous bulk floating serenely o’er the meadow, reminded one of an elephant marathon or a land battleship on dress parade. Craig Riddle, Quarterback As a first year man, we must consider Riddle a genius, and are blinded only to think of the brilliance that will follow with added experience in the future. Riddle overran an open field as though he were coming through the rye. Fur- thermore, he could tackle a man like an undertow and leave him in doubt as to what had laid him low. It is with considerable interest that we look forward to Riddle’s 1918 operations. Eger Murphree, Tackle “Murph” of Herculean build struck terror and agony in the hearts of the men struck. Murph was a strong and steady player and was always among the foreign herd when taps were sounded. We trust that the guiding hand or Providence will prevail upon this youth to arrive on time for practice next fall. (202) Hiram Adair, Fullback “Scrubby” was the nervous and emotional member of the pigskin contingent. He was the one forever anxious as to the outcome. He was always horsing to play, yet there was little horse play; although he was a habitual talker, he was always trying hard and doing his durndest. Observe the heavenward glance, there is much pathos in it. Arthur Shanklin, Halfback “Shank” was one of those fellows who was a regular storehouse of athletic usefulness. Of ath- letic bent, he was of the most reliable sort, with great reserve power and ability as a heady hard worker. He wras one of the foremost of that group of Freshmen which practically made the 1917 team. Rodgers Moore, Guard “Chunky” was another product of Freshman efforts, which redounded to his further glory as a good aggressive player. Chunky’s massive framework moved forward like an advancing Stonewall. He was a hard and consistent worker, and will continue as a steady support for the best of elevens. (203) William Walker, Halfback “Biudge was the small boy of raven locks so oft seen flitting across the landscape and upsetting things in general. Brudge was a good runner off tackle, and premises sweet revenge upon our hereditary rivals of ages passed forever. This vest pocket edition was of the veritable telescope variety, there- fore, caution, beware! Clay Downing, End Dad” suffered a great handicap on account of the measles, and so did the team. As senior partner of the firm of Downing Brothers, he has done his bit in upholding the family name on the gridiron. Dad was a handy article to place in the path of the oncoming horde, and was a hard one to get around. mm Edward Pullen, Fullback Now if you want the ball to come to the front, Pullen is the friend of Mercury who can bring it along with him, for he is the fastest errand boy in the gang. Pullen's build and ability at speed have made him a valuable asset, and he will have an opportunity to be of more service next year. Arthur Bastin, Tackle ‘ Sissy was one of our most active members, if he did not happen to be fighting, he was talking to himself if no other. Sissy was a rather fretful chap, and such was very contagious when he came in hailing distance of the enemy. The only trouble about him was that all of this backed-up pep was often too effervescent, and you can take my word for it, he w'as a whole lot to hold down. He is from up in Eastern Kentucky, that accounts for it. Dewey Downing, Guard “Dude, being the bigger half of Downing Co., was successful in guarding and upholding the name and honor of Downing and Kentucky. Dude kept up the pep to a high pitch, an d will always remember Mississippi A. M., as he was greatly impressed by the subsequent developments. Joseph Dishman Joseph Dishman is from down in Henderson County, about thirty miles from Owensboro, yet men often surmount the impediment of nativity. Dish always worked hard and was a mean kicker of the ball. There will be a rousing applause when he answers roll call in the fall. (205) (C fM OF K. OPPONENTS 33 0 19 0 0 0 0 5 0 7 0 3 0 14 0 27 52 0 SQUAD Schedule and Results 1917 Wildcats Sept. 28—Butler College at Lexington.......................................33 Oct. 5—Maryville College at Lexington.............................. Oct. 12—Miami University at Lexington.......................................0 Oct. 19—Vanderbilt University at Lexington..................................0 Oct. 26—Sewanee at Chattanooga..............................................0 Nov. 3—Centre College at Danville...........................................0 Nov. 10—Mississippi A. M. at Starksvilie..................................0 Nov. 1 7—Alabama University at Lexington....................................0 Nov. 26—Thanksgiving Day—University of Florida at Lexington................52 Football Schedule, 1918 Wildcats Sept. 28—Marshall College.................................................. al Lexington Oct. 5—Miami University......................................................at Oxf°r Oct. 12—Kentucky Wesleyan...................................................al Lexington Oct. 19—University of Alabama...............................................at Tuscaloosa Oct. 26—Sewanee.............................................................a Lexington Nov. 2—Vanderbilt University................................................at Nashville Nov. 9—Georgetown College...................................................al Lexington Nov. 16-Centre College......................................................al Lexington Nov. 28—Open. Possibly University of Chattanooga............................at Lexington BASKETBALL SQUAD Review of the Season BY JIM PARK From the standpoint of games won and lost, the 1918 season cannot be called a huge success. But, taking into consideration the difficulties and handicaps under which they so faithfully worked, the girls of 1918 deserve a great deal of credit for their conscientious efforts in spite of discouragements and defeats. They had that never- give-up spirit, and were true Wildcats in their “comebacks.” Opening the season against Wesleyan, they were defeated by a larger, faster and more experienced team by the score of 20 to 4. Did they give up then and concede that they had no chance against Wesleyan on their own floor? No, they invaded Winchester, and, fighting against tremendous odds, they turned back the Wesleyanites, and at the end of the game the score was 7 to 7. By the rules, the game continued until one side scored two points. Well, a blind shot, guided by the Goddess of Fortune, and we were defeated, but not disgraced. (210) Then came the University of Cincinnati, led by the gallant Nickoloff and his girl’s rules of warfare. The less said of this game, the better—they sent one of our guards to the base hospital for five fouls and almost had the entire team wounded by the same weapon, when victory was conceded them and they went on their way rejoicing. Three defeats in a row—did they give up? No, they secured a game with Hamilton to supply the lack of a second team to practice against, and, playing on the sacred floor of Transylvania, they got the large end of a 22 to 4 score and much good practice. Then the trip to Cincinnati—a defeat by the same score as at Lexington, 19 to 9, and the season was ended. There they held their own until one guard was removed for five fouls and the other was warned on the fourth. Miss Cregor, captain, at center, playing against such players as Elwanger and Brunhoff, more than held her own, and few goals were scored on her. She also did her CRAIN CREGOR CROMWELL (211) share of the scoring for Kentucky, and she will be greatly missed. Misses Crain and Cromwell at forwards, though small, were active and good goal shots, and always kept the opposition busy watching them. Misses Walker, Dean and Haydon, as guards, were always fighting hard. No better example of concentrated energy can be found than the petite Miss Walker, and with Miss Dean, the safety guard, they were hard to score upon. Miss Haydon, at guard, and later at forward, showed her prowess as a versatile and valuable player and as a factor in good team work. Too much credit cannot be given to Misses Porter, Jamieson, Young and Henry, who remained faithful to the last and always gave a good account of themselves whenever given the opportunity. DEAN WALKER HAYDON (212) Basketball Season, 1918 The basketball season of 1918 showed great promise of being one of the most successful that Kentucky has ever had, and these expectations were fulfilled. It is true, only one regular returned for the lineup, but a wealth of new material and a few valiant scrubs made prospects bright. Pat Campbell, the lone survivor, was chosen to head and immediately rounded his team into form. The Cats started off well, defeating Wesleyan by a good score. Then came the mix-up with Centre on their floor and after a hard battle our lads went down in defeat. Sweet revenge, however, was reeked on Georgetown and they were well repaid for the drubbing so deliberately delivered our five last season. They increased their winnings by snowing under the volunteers in two games with an avalanche of points, and continued by renewing attacks upon Wesleyan and George- town with the same results. The second game with Centre proved an excellent exhibition, Kentucky staging her best game of the season, which resulted in a victory after fifteen minutes of extra play. Everyone knows the outcome of the Southern trys. Three more games to our credit. Cumberland College and Tennessee were easy marks. Our hopes were smashed one week later, when, upon journeying to Louisville, where the Colonels seemed to be at a better advantage the Wildcats slipped and loosened their ZERFOSS DISHMAN BASTIN MARSH (214) 2f vu T ‘i w ■£ 3 7 M V _...r AW MyvXv ‘« V v AXB, claws from the mythical banner and State Championship, when Centre took our measure in a fast and aggressive game that really demonstrated her worth. Two events will remain imprinted on the minds of both players and the teams sup- ported with respect to the history of the season just closed. One a source of happiness and a realization of a dream, the other a dispenser of gloom. The source of joy is the humbling of our old rivals, the Volunteers of Tennessee. For years our basketeers have held the hope that they might accomplish this gigantic task, but not until the season just passed have the Cats ever been able to successfully inflict a decisive defeat. They took all four contests, evening up the old debt that has been of such long standing. The gloom appears in a blot on the otherwise clean slate, inflicted by an old-time competitor, who fared better than her co-athletic aspirants in the loss of strong arm men to other fields of endeavor. The entire Blue and White team played well and with the exception of the final game showed excellent and consistent team work. Each individual was a star, but Thomas and Bastin deserve special mention. Thomas made more points than any of his teammates and most of his goals were culminations of brilliant and sensational shots. Bastin was, in the opinion of many, the best guard that appeared on the Kentucky hardwood this season, and not only showed strength in this capacity, but furnished an important part of the scoring machine. Shanklin and Dishman also played excellent ball, handled themselves well, and indi- cations point to a stellar performance in the future on the part of both. Letter men on the squad are Campbell, Zerfoss, Thomas, Bastin, Shanklin, Marsh, Glickman, Dishman. (215) 'C's .i i Ml .' ncr If.V ‘- — .■ i.M fe %; $ i _ BASKETBALL SQUAD Scheduled Results for 1918 Season . OF K. OPPONENTS 23 13 Snowbound 21 29 22 18 33 26 40 12 21 21 25 16 22 20 42 22 29 18 32 20 . 12 24 322 239 IflL 11 £sm$K TfTl 2 hv. Mg 1918 Prospectus ATTER UP.” These welcome words rang out on Stoll Field Saturday afternoon, April 6, and the 1918 baseball season was off with a rush. The 1 igers from Georgetown College had been selected by the Cats for their victims on that particular day, and when the smoke of battle had cleared away and the fans had been induced to take their seats once more, the score stood: Kentucky, 12; Georgetown, 5. McClellan, that hero of many a baseball contest, was on the mound, and the Tigers were completely at his mercy. Despite the fact that Cambron and Mac are the only two veterans on the nine, the team showed up well. All the new men on the squad made a favorable impression upon the fans, and with a little more practice there is little doubt as to who will win the State championship. Coach Jim Park, athletic wizard, used rare judgment in selecting his team this year, and, barring hard luck breaks, the men will undoubtedly give a good account of themselves. Baseball attracted more attention this spring than it has in years, due largely to the fact that track work was discontinued to give it full sway. Twenty men were out for the team, and several of this number were players of the first water, having won their spurs on high school diamonds. Taking it all in all, the outlook was never more brilliant in the history of the University’s baseball. Review of the 1917 Season BY WAYNE COTTINGHAM Six victories and one defeat out of seven games played—that is the record of the Wildcats in the baseball season last spring. College pitchers, university pitchers, overhand artists, underhand throwers—all tried in vain to stop the onslaught of the Kentucky sluggers, who, like their football brothers, absolutely refused to be stopped and kept slugging away. “Batteries for today’s game: McClellan and --------but the umps needed to go no further. With the sound of this dreaded Kentucky pitcher’s name, the hopes of the opponents went almost as low as the place destined to serve as the eternal resting place of Herr Hohenzollern, and the said opponents, be they who they may, realized it was only a question of whether they got any hits at all. Although Mac was the mainstay of the pitching staff, Grubbs and Cooper also came in for their share of the victories. SCOTT WATERS CAMBRON HAYDON Chicken Park, captain of the squad, also deserves credit for the line showing of the slab artists. He caught in every game and was a hard worker all year. On the initial sack was stationed one Haydon, of football fame, who made the infielders’ wild throws look like perfect pegs. Cambron, although a new man, played second like a veteran, and his perfect fielding cinched that position for him this year. “Scotty” and Waters, third baseman and shortstop, respectively, both of whom had had their letters so long that the “K’s” were white with age, galloped around like youngsters and robbed the opposing batters of many a hit. In the outfield Jones, Rodes and George Park pulled the balls out of the ozone in fine style. But with the best fielders and base runners in the world, no team can win without hitters. Six victories out of seven games is evidence that the Wildcats were not entirely wanting in this line. Chicken Park, with eleven hits to his credit, led the squad in batting. (220) JONES RODES C. PARKS FOLLOWING IS THE TEAM’S RECORD: March 27. University of Kentucky April 4. University of Kentucky April 6. University of Kentucky . April 9. University of Kentucky . April 21. University of Kentucky . April 24. University of Kentucky . April 26. University of Kentucky . 3 University of Indiana . I University of Tennessee 5 Miami University 0 University of Illinois 3 Centre College 3 Georgetown College 5 Centre College . . 1 0 1 2 1 0 3 (221) The 1918 Kentuckian Editorial Staff Sam Morton....................................................................... Editor-m-Chief Virgil Chapman.........................................................Associate Editor Frieda Lemon...................................................Associate Editor John L. Hammond.....................................Associate Editor Fred Flege....................................Associate Editor Tilford Wilson........................Athletic Editor Josephine Thomas...............................................................Literary Editor Celia Cregor...............................................................Art Editor William Wallace........................................................ Artist Edgar Gregg.................................................. Cartoonist Charles Planck.................................. Snap-Shots Eliza Piggott...........................Junior Editor Business Staff Ben H. SCOTT....................................................................Business Manager Hall Henry..................................................Assistant Business Manager Frederick Jackson........................................Junior Business Manager (227) E KENTUCKY KERNE University of Kentucky LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY. MARCH 7 1918 I WHAT THRIFT STAMPS ; I WILL BUY KOli SAMMY MlU.NlV. WAR COMMITTEE W APPOINTED BY McVEY Simplified Shnnklin and Wexlcr in Mix- up mi Tennessee Floor Publications Adopted Income oi the University AVHISTI.E IS DOOMED JTHOMAS STARS AGAIN BILL SIGNED TUESDAY duo , the SeowK fVtiniary I til III hili ni .Inii U. liaullUM, « i«S ih-r wnuu -uapim Ui 111- l'n illy 61 KcotlieltF. thu Knl'rii Nil .tlmr.1 uni lb« W«Wn No SrM l. brYnMOM a roJt.lrllul I , itap finv cvtu Hiiic lu oiitl ilj ‘Civilization is . Proseres ing,” Says Cenirc President Members of 11. 0. T. C. 1 Not Exempt From Draft U' A It COM MITTEE M AI ] 10 FOR UNI VERSA’ i niWiniiiR Thoiiun. ;?hnnk! r CO-EDS . P.YJid ILASSED Sr ■ulimltltil (228) CONNELL PIGGOTT MABRY The Kentucky Kernel Published every Thursday throughout the College year by the students of the Uni- versity of Kentucky, for the benefit of the students, alumni, and faculty of the institution. Editorial Staff Thornton Connell . . . . Edilor-in-Chief Miss Eliza Piggott . . . Managing Editor Miss Eliza Spurrier . . . “Squirrel Food'' Miss Mildred Graham . . “Co-ed 'itor Charles Planck .... . Sporting Editor Frederick Jackson . . . . Feature Editor Sam Morton . . . . Larv Lee McClain Agriculture Miss Austin Lilly . . . Home Economics John J. Leman Engineering Mrs. F. O. Mayes . . . Philosophian Virgil Chapman .... Literary Societies Miss V. H. Milner . . . Patterson Hall Miss Elizabeth Murphy . Exchange Editor Robert J. Raible Reporters W. S. Sherwood Miss Bessie Conkwright Business Staff Poindexter Mabry J. P. Barnes . . (229) Business Manager Assistant Business Manager CHAPMAN SCOTT Kentucky Law Journal Virgil Chapman.......................................................... Edilor-in-Chief Ben H. ScOTT...........................................................Business Manager Under its present editorial and business control the Kentucky Law Journal has grown to several times its former proportions and has greatly enhanced its prestige. Their first step was to secure its adoption as the official organ of the Kentucky State Bar Associa- tion. It is the only law magazine of its size and standing edited and managed entirely by students. The current volume has been purchased and bound by most of the lead- ing law libraries in the country. Its articles have been cited repeatedly. The Kentucky Law Journal was instrumental in securing the enactment this year of the law standard- izing admissions to the bar. Its purpose is to advance the science of jurisprudence, and Volume VI has brought its recognition by lawyers everywhere. (230) 1 1 TTTT is HE Strollers’ Dramatic Club of the University claims a unique place among similar organizations in the country. It is self-supporting and self- directed, is the owner of a studio, decorated and furnished with its own money and two Liberty Bonds, each of $100.00 denomination, and each year it awards a $75.00 scholarship. Since the first play, “Brown, of Harvard,” which was produced in 1911, the position of the Strollers has been assured. Its other successes are: “The Virginian, ’ “The Lost Paradise,” “The College Widow,” “Charlie’s Aunt,” “Father and the Boys,” “The Lion and the Mouse,” “Mice and Men.” Three of these plays have been taken on the road, “The Lost Paradise” playing at Louisville, “Charlie’s Aunt” at Mt. Sterling and Georgetown, and “The Lion and the Mouse” at Mt. Sterling and Nicholasville. Plans are now on foot to take “Mice and Men” to several Kentucky towns. Membership to the Strollers can be gained only by coming out Amateur Night, which is usually held Hallowe en. Only members of the Strollers are eligible to try out for parts in the play, and only those students who have made a cast are allowed to wear the pin, which is in the shape of a mask crossed by a sword and a fool’s staff. Another Stroller institution is the annual banquet given in honor of the cast. The officers for the year 1917-1918 were: Eliza Spurrier, President; Freida Lemon, Vice President; Gordon Marsh, Secretary and Treasurer; Lee McClain, Stage Man- ager; Charles Planck, Business Manager, and Enoch Grehan, Faculty Adviser. “MICE AND MEN” The Strollers went “over the top” Friday night, April 5 th, at the Lexington Opera House with Miss Riley’s four-act comedy, “Mice and Men” as a vehicle. Its success, artistic and financial, ranks it high among Stroller productions, indeed the local press placed it over all previous attempts. The story is that of a middle-aged philosopher, Mark Embury, who in order to test out our theories of marriage, adopts a young girl, Peggy, from a foundling home, in order to train her to be his wife. In this scheme he is aided by his friend and neigh- bor, Roger Goodlake, whose wife, Johanna, is carrying on a clandestine romance with Embury’s nephew. Captain Lovell. Of course, even the most infrequent theater-goer can foresee the end; will know that Embury falls in love with “Peggy,” who in turn loves and is loved by Lovell, and will be prepared for Embury’s renunciation of all his dearest dreams, that the two may be happy. Though the story is old, Miss Riley has tinged it with freshness and charm, and the quaint costumes of the early eighteenth century gave an added glamour to the play. TUsRIM 1 Nip? !'■'' ■ WkW wll ' ifir “Mice and Men’’ CAST Mark Embury, a scholar, scientist and philosopher......................................Gus Gay Roger Goodlake, his friend and neighbor .........................................GrOVER Creech Captain George Lovell, his nephew...................................................MlLTON Revell Sir Henry Trimblestone...............................................................Fred Ausburc Peter, Embury’s servant.........................................................Frederick Jackson Joanna Goodlake, wife of Goodlake...................................................Eliza SPURRIER Mrs. Deborah, Embury’s housekeeper . Edna Berkeley Peggy, Little Britain”..............................................................Anne Molloy Matron of the Foundling Hospital.....................................................Ruth Cassidy Beadle, of the Foundling Hospital ..................................................ROBERT RaIBLE Molly, a kitchen maid.............................................................DOROTHY WALKER Orphans: Ncrma Rachal, Elizabeth Picgott, Isabel Dickey, Katherine Weakley, Elizabeth Arnett, May Stephens, Elizabeth Card, Bernice Young, Florence Brown, Lois Powell and Ann Molloy. ! fcW w Boy’s Glee Club Officers Neil G. Sullivan............................................................President E. Terrill Tapscott............................................Vice-President Ralph B. Allington....................................Secretary-Treasurer Prof. Lawrence A. Cover................................Director Members First Tenor First Bass J. W. Lindsay Neville Fincel E. T. Tapscott William Yourish W. W. Thompson W. P. Putnam S. H. Hicks Robert Davis John Marking F. K. Nielander Jacob Siegel J. S. Gregory R. B. Allington H. G. Bryan Second Tenor Second Bass C. H. Heaverin N. G. Sullivan W. H. Klair E. M. Pullen M. T. Brooks T. H. Green M. S. Powell W. S. Baugh R. J. Mitchell J. K. Anderson R. J. Raible H. S. Miller Leon Wise J- J- Eeman (237) I Ui- iA- •'' •: • ' i • • • - ' • v •. • • -■ ■ • - • ■ ■ • .• j.-. . Philosophian Literary Society Officers Ruth Duckwall . . . Frieda Lemon . . . Austin Lilly . Minnie Ne Ville Virginia Croft . . . Louise Will......... Frieda Lemon............. Mary Mayes . . . . Hannah Weakley Mary Beall . . . Katherine Weakley . Catherine Snyder . . . . First Semester Second Semester President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeanl-al-Arms ...............Critic President Vice-President Secretary T reasurer Sergeanl-at-A rms ................Critic 2£ L__I LUj (239) Patterson Literary Society Officers Walter C. Piper............................................................ President Eldon Dummitt..................................................Vice-President Charles E. Planck..........................................Secretary Harold B. McGregor................................. Treasurer Virgil J. Pritchett............................Critic Members Poindexter Mabry Walter Piper Leland Burton Hall Henry Bernard Moosnick Virgil Pritchett Lee McClain William Holland Urey Ward Sam Morton Nevill Moore S. Miller Estill Woods Harold McGregor Edward Tolley Eldon Dummitt William Milam Milton Revill S. K. Hicks Charles Planck William Thompson W ft « ■ Rice Dummit Dabney Bischof Varsity Debating Team The Union and Patterson Literary Societies held their annual debating contest this year, to decided the debating honors of the year—the possession of the Barker trophy, a handsome gold and silver loving cup, donated by former President Barker. This year the Union Society won the decision for the second consecutive time. At this same contest the four most capable and impressive speakers were chosen to compose the two varsity debating teams. Ed E. Rice and E. S. Dabney were chosen to compose the team to debate against Georgetown. Eldon S. Dummitt and Lawrence F. Bischof were chosen to oppose Transylvania. The question, Resolved, That the United Stales should abandon the Monroe doctrine, ’ was upheld by the former team on the negative side, and by the latter team on the affirmative side. In both contests the peerless ability and logic of these men won the victory, and the University of Kentucky possesses the rightful claim to the State championship, having the only pair of undefeated teams. (242) ymm I® (1 fifir tt 71' ' Campus 3a ens r mr Eltty Dayi5 Y ...... E-liza 5 PUfzaia:iz LL HAD! ! 11 MuHPH V Noa {Dachau MA fi ANNA DzVZGBAL y. N L.PAEO Porsrf.i (246) Dor Walke p. Poster a Black ur.n Vjroioia Throcknoerori Great rejoicing, are observed I 11— We go through the mill. 12— Chapel. “ I hou shalt not cut hair.” 13— Where’s Jack? We want our dog. 14— First issue of the Kernel appears. 15— Football practice begins. 16— Dr. McVey addresses a joint meeting of Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. 17— Captain Brittain returns. 18— Highly polished heads classes. 19— Ags straggling in from State Fair. 20— ‘‘Believe me, Xantippe.” 21— Senior Class meeting. Harmony reigns su- preme. Chapman elected president. 22— Philosophian circus. Of course, we didn’t see it, but they claim that it was some circus. 23— “Remember me to the girls”—Shinnick. 24— ‘‘Doc’’ Rodes looks in on things. 25— Senior fountain arrives. 26— First serenade of year given at Patt Hall. 27— A dull day. Very little business. 28— First football rally of season. Planck elected yell leader. 29— Wildcats versus Butler. A walkaway. 30— Freshmen begin to get really homesick. Freshmen conduct an orderly election. •Miss Breckenridge in chapel. •Freshman numerals appear on the smokestack. Sophomore Class meeting. Lasley lands pres- idency. •First Senior Court sits in session. Maryville, 0; Kentucky, 13. Sophs storm the smokestack. Y. M. C. A. war fund campaign begins. ■Morton chosen editor of 1918 Kentuckian. Tug-of-war. Freshies win, as usual. Senior rules published. Doc. Tigert gels a speech broken off in him. Theoretically, we beat Miami, and actually the first lady snake dance in history occurs. Weekly Fresh-Soph scrap. Captain Royden arrives. Dr. McVey makes caustic comment upon certain good old-fashioned customs. Freshmen finally complete their election. Dairy team leaves for Columbus. Kittens defeat Wesleyan, 7-0. Vanderbilt takes us to camp. Freshmen fly a novel pennant from the flag- pole. Calendar 22— Ags start a back-to-the-farm movement. 23— The Kentuckian staff is appointed. 24— Prof. Smith dies in Colorado. 25— Studes give the team a royal send-off. 26— Harmony in chapel. Prof. Noe’s new song. 27— Sewanee beats us. 28— Splendid weather for a stroll. 29— Short course in agriculture begins. 30— Flege’s moustache is awarded the ribbon. 31— Amateur Night. Pep lacking. Not a street car off the track. NOVEMBER 1— The Wildcats prepare for Centre. 2— Tapscott and Flege go to Danville with Slate money. 3— Slow music. Centre, 3; Kentucky, 0. 4— Tapscott and Flege return without State money. 3—Harry Skuller does a thriving business. 6— Jimmy Hedges is victim of an attack by a measle. 7— Bill Lindsay preserves his moustache to pos- terity by means of a camera. 8— No whistle. First time since 1907. 9— Alpha Zeta pledge day. First K dance. 10— Mississippi cleans up on Wildcats. 11— Russell Hunt visits Nicholasville. 12— Ags and Home Ecs make merry. 13— Prof. Southwick gives selections from Lear. Seats considerably reserved for the Battalion. 14— Senior corduroys appear. 15— Patt Hall girls make candy for the soldiers. 16— Chapman assassinated in Evidence Class. Bonfire rally. Some speeches. Tau Beta Pi pledge day. 1 7—Once more—Alabama, 27; Kentucky, 0. 18— Devoted to the great American game. 19— Shades of Slim Felix. 20— Bleidt cuts morning classes. There’s a rea- son. 21— The Mess Hall Literary Society is organized. 22— George Washington begins his Turkey Cam- paign. 23— Freshmen contribute liberally. 24— Tappa Kegga Beer banquet at Phoenix. 25— “The cold gray dawn of the morning after the night before.” 26— Jes' nothin' doin’. 27— Nobody goes to class. 28— Doc. Tigert gets rid of the rest of that speech. 29— We knew it. Kentucky, 52; Florida, 0. 30— Celebration. First chance. DECEMBER 1— War pledges due! Get the cash. 2— Everything quiet. 3— Doc. Tigert picks the All-Kentucky team. Four U. K men. 4— Dean Hamilton gives a Japanese tea. 5— Junior and Senior Mechanicals exempted from service. 6— Basketball practice begins. 7— Snow. 8— K dance. More snow. Taxicabs conspic- uous by their absence. 9— Farewell banquet in honor of Prof. Adams. 10—Everything freezes up. Who wants to shave, anyway ? 1 1—Actual experience proves that gas congeals at 12 below. 12— We believe Monk Miller. This is a return of the glacial period. 13— Now we all know “what’s the matter with the girls.” 14— Still cold. I 5—Cadet hop. 16— Hands on your pocketbook. Red Cross cam- paign begins. 17- 18-19—Nothing but the breeze. 20— Everybody restless. 21— Dismissed for the holidays. Homeward bound. Intermission. Glorious! JANUARY 1— Resolutions. 2— Preparation for departure. 3— Back to school. 4— Fire in the mining building. 5— Investigation. 6— Strollers select “Mice and Men.” 7— Blue Monday—also black. 8— Dean Cooper arrives and takes charge. 9— Wildcats take first basketball game of the season. 10—And we’re convinced that something's “the matter with the boys.” I I—Junior Mechanicals entertain at the Mess Hall. 12— Scrubs win the Red Cross drive. 13— Mumps. 14— U. K .Signal Corps organized. 15— Basketball team freezes up in Hamilton (Ohio). 16— First call for Kentuckian pictures. 17— Kentucky Colonel passes away. Revive us again. 18— Literary societies debate a new subject— Woman Suffrage.” 19 -Water once more. 20— New Yea r’s resolutions begin to break. 21— Preparations for exams. Patt Hall buys the usual midnight oil. 22— Chapel postponed till exams are over. 23— Mess Hall Literary Society dance. Quite a riot. 24— Kentucky defeats Georgetown. WALL MUTJ Prese v toi on of Co ors Pebroary ZZ v The Kentuckian oo m ?- r ft ) THE cot-oes (251) 1- 2- 3- 4- 5- 6- 7- 8— . FEBRUARY -Pall Hall hysterical over chem grades. -Row at Spurr Institute. U. K. victorious. -Thank heaven it’s a day of rest. I—Nothing to do. —Registration day. —Still loafing. Why go to class? —We sorta break up Tennessee’s long string of games. —Ditto with emphasis. —Cadet hop. —George Washington discourses on things spir- itual. -Justice dispensed by Senior Court. —Col. Bain in chapel. —Co-eds lose to Winchester. V arsity defeats Georgetown again, -“Queens of Beauty chosen. -What happened to Mrs. Hughes’ dag? -Sunday. Nothing doing. -The Ada Meade reopens. Rejoicing among the ungoldly -Doc. Tigert’s lectures show lack of prepara- tion. See above. —Cast of Mice and Men is announced. -We ruin Centre's chances for State cham- pionship. Battalion receives colors. Lieut. Perigord speaks. Military ball. -Last meeting of the Knights of the Round Table. -Scotty lakes charge of the business end of the Kentuckian. -Rumors. Is Dr. Barrow going to leave? -Anna Field in “Follow Me.” -Nobody prepared to recite. -Appropriation bill passes. Faculty amuses itself with the whistle. Perade! MARCH -Dr. Barrow’s Hospital Unit leaves. -Third K dance. -Pali Hall gets an honest to goodness phone call from the chief of police. “Have a Heart” at the Opera House. -Oh, joy! Bock beer. Winter pays us a parting visit. •Home in May maybe. Morion and Planck hold a sale of antique newspapers. (232) 9—Centre cleans up on Wildcats, miliation ($). 10— Sunday. To sleep or not to sleep. 11— Bells’ Royal Hawaiians. 12— Burglar in Palt Flail. 13— Co-eds lost once more at Cincy. 14— Cover waxes eloquent in chapel. 13—Tau Beta Pi-Alpha Zeta dance. 16—Sophomore dance—this society life ing us. 17 The logical time to wear green socks, plant spuds, etc. 18—Mechanicals stage an imitation of Judge Chalkley’s Lawyer Stunt. I 9—-Baseball practice begins. 20— Three men show up. Mac swears. 21— Battalion inspection. 22— Mechanical Hall is inspected—why not in- vestigated ? 23— Red Star parade. Rain. 24— Rain. 25 Law Building takes fire. Continuation of parade. 26— President Patterson celebrates his eighty-fifth birthday. 27— Xcitement. Red eggs and pink chicks at the Xperiment farm. 28— First symptoms of spring fever. 29— Seniors order caps and gowns. 30— Fourth K dance. 31— Senior Mechs. start on Eastern trip. Senior rings arrive. APRIL 1 — Time for Kentuckian to go to press (it’s not ready). 2— Everybody working overtime. 3— Strain growing worse. Morton grouchy. Scotty swearing. 4— Maud Adams in “A Kiss for Cinderil 5— Strollers present “Mice and Men.” Every- one gets keen on the “Mouse. Sprague’s recommended for McClain. 6— Wildcats go wild on Georgetown. Ken- tucky, 12; Georgetown, 5. 7— Ben Ali and Bush. 8— Sousa and his band in town. Prof. Cover covered over. 9 Scotty goes North for his general welfare. 10—Morton is swearing all alone. 1 I—Business picking up slowly. 12 Junior Prom. Sophs and Frosh among those not present. 13 Morton High Club throw dance, get gay at banquet 14—Quiet reigns. 15 Tell the boys we still got our boots on Amen.” IP Strollers McClain Roastmaster. m? A v Hear Ye! Hear Ye! Oh, my Fellow-Creatures: Throughout the foregoing pages you have been perusing the loud- est, boldest, most eloquent, self-loving eulogies that were ever penned for mortal men. The Seniors and Juniors wrote their own ads, and each department supervisor has exerted his full ability and influence to make the inmates of his corridor feel all puffed up like the poor inebriate who has been slung by a shot of opium. To even attempt to swallow such raw material would disrupt our moral and ethical balance and produce the most acute indigestion. Such must be roasted, ft must be roasted, broiled and grilled to the appetite of humans. Nothing can accomplish this belter than the usual campus hot air. The fog of disallusion must be dispelled by the high tempered zephyrs. Naught can cook the yellow of ego better than by turning on the gas. This gas is the true essence of that which is below all covered over with surplus surface. That that is of the finer being of things. That that must needs be drilled for and piped for fireside consumption. We trust that this gas will make a light of public scrutiny to wither the emasculated scions of social and political distinction. .1 J J Jl A Tip In Time from the Psi CRAFTY! PON arriving at the University you will know that you have come over the L. N., C. O., Southern, or a Blue Grass Street car. Beyond that, what you konw could be written on a one-cent stamp and you’d still have room for the S. A. E. chapter roll, which is a considerable roll. You will be met at the station by various dignitaries and confidence men Often Boarding Club, and other menaces to the public health, but BE Size up the Nu Enigma before you choose your feed box. One of the best things about the Nus is that they have a rare assortment of lobsters. If you are fond of prunes take a look at the Sigma Chis. The Kappa Alphas keep the best eggs of the soft boiled variety, but the Phi Delts maintain their corner on the hard ones. Now that we have the alimentary course disposed of, we must advise you concerning a place to sleep. If you don’t care for cockroaches keep away from the Alpha Taus. They are a specie which are difficult to avoid. Be sure that your room is equipped with a garage, automatic burglar alarm, sleep-meter, a cuspidor, and perhaps another door or two. If there is a table in your room throw it into the back yard unless it is a green-topped one, in which case sell it to the Law Department or nail it to the floor so they won’t steal it, for all the rooms in the T. N. E. Auxiliary are not fully equipped. Be sure that your room is sanitary, with a collapsible drinking cup, and a convertible garbage receptacle (you may want to dispose of E. B. sometime). Make a definite contract about your room. Have two copies made. Keep one to wrap up your laundry in and give the other to your landlady before she takes it. Your landlady will keep the document under her pillow but ■AfutSHMAN 13 A. J7S2Z.3 you must obtain it. It is merely a trick of the trade, so get wise. Never make a contract for more than one semester because you may graduate in half that time by request or you may want to become a fratter. One circumstance is as fatal to your self-respect as the other unless you become a Delta Chi. Of course no one would know about that. You may want to register in the university, but even after thirty years’ experience we can’t give you any advice that will help you to get started. No one has ever entered without losing five years from the rear end of his life. You had just as well remained at home and sipped Peruna the rest of your days. It will be your first formal introduction to Jimmie (256) Lyons, and see that he goes slow on the breakage. Don’t ask any questions because no one knows any answers. If you are finally admitted to the university there are several pastimes in which you may revel your first few days. You can sleep, write to the light of your life, get acquainted with George Washington, or go down to look upon the sunken garden. Class attendance is supposed to start at once, but most people know the meaning of the word supposed before entering college. Be careful in choosing your classes. Inquire as to the personal characteristics of the respective if not respectable profs. Beware, do not become excited, calm thyself, you will soon forget it all. Never go to an eight o’clock class on Monday. The instructor will not expect you unless he is the exception, which is probably J. Mort. The sheep shearers will be around ere long, be brave, self- defiant, and magnanimous, allow them to rape thy locks in peace and harmony or the Cannon Law will be thy doom. Deport thyself as a gentleman should, but doesn’t. Ascertain the numerous earmarks of the lordly senior. He will appear as an insect in derby, cane, and fade away corduroy, and will be affected with a sparcely inhabited upper lip. Never break one of the things at a dance for that is probably the only reason she is indulging him. Conduct thyself in a manner corresponding with your status, or you will become acquainted with the most high senior court, where punishment is metered out for personal prejudice upon the un- suspecting. Be measured for your military suit at once. You will want the alterations and tailor altercations made in time for the Military Ball. Do not miss the first lecture on personal hygiene, it is the most profitable lecture of the entire course. You may have some trouble with your money. We all have. Ask for advice, you’ll get it. Don’t follow it. Few do. Start a bank account. You must gain the notoriety of having passed a worthless check or you will never get acquainted with the moneyed men of the city. Start out to live within your income, and then get converted. Don’t spend less than 175 per cent of your allowance. It isn’t good form to be conspicuous. Don’t buy everything. If you don’t wear kimonas there is very little excuse for purchasing one, but everything that you might have some possible use for should be bought, but not paid for. You are an infant; you are not responsible. Don’t join everything. Y. M. C. A., Republican Club, T. K. B. are worthy. If you wish to be a cosmopolite, join Sigma Chi. If you are an athlete or a white hope, you won’t have to look up Alpha Tau, they will mail you a button C. O. D., with thirty days free trial. Don’t ask to join Tau Beta Pi. Few get away with it. Join a literary society. It doesn’t cost much, and you will be able to call yourself a member. That is the chief advantage. If the contour of your physiognomy permits you may be a Sigma Alpha Mu by birth. Don’t be in a hurry to pledge yourself to any fraternity. It is never too late for Kappa Sigma or Alpha Sigma Phi. If you have any dates at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house be sure to pro- 's Fratteb vide yourself with a good antidote for chloroform and sew up all the button holes in your coat lapels. Always place your coat in your locker during gym or you may get one on it and be afraid to take it off. Thus membership increases. If you wish to drop a sub- ject from your course do it methodically, every week or so. If you get sick consult Dr. Pryor, he will tell you to see a doctor. Your first bath will be the Tug-of-War. If you are as lucky as your predecessors you may avoid this one. Don’t paint the town red first, the buildings should be covered with numerals. If you hear a call for water when passing the dorm, never think they want it, they never use it. Begin to study as soon as your lessons are assigned. You’ll scon get accustomed to the ways at Kentucky, yet it is never too late to mend. If you want a job go to the Y. M. C. A. then to the business office and then you’ll strike out for yourself. That is what they will advise you to do. In choosing your course do not feel that you must prepare for some definite end. You are are likely to choose wrong. Then why chooze? Look at Revill. He wants to be a lawyer and he should be a manicurist. Beware of Law. If you become exposed to it, be careful that you do not take it. Get a liberal education and something will turn up for you. If it does not turn up, get knocked down to Mr. Skuller and he will knock it off. If you fail at everything else there is still a place for you. Get into politics, the great army of the unemployed. It very seldom pays, though. Read “The Life of Chapman’’ and it may. Should you deviate from the path of moral rectitude read several volumes of the Vice Resolutions of 1917, inspired by the pure and undefiled mind of virgin adolescence. Some people should j never go to college: those who like to speak in public (except W. J. Bryan, e. g. V. Chapman) ; those who are prematurely developed, like Morton; those who have no ambition, such as Fats Hammond; those whose chief ambition is to practice law, like Scott; the morally weak, such as T. Wilson; and the phys- ically imperfect, like Zerfoss and Ellis. We could give the girls advice, but can not dispense such valued information too gen- erously. Yet some should be in the Follies, while others would do well to grace Woolworths. Some professions require college training. But that is not the question. The choice of your pro- fession should be placed in the hands of your rich relatives, the original sweet essence, and the editor of the home town weekly effort. One thing, if you are constructed on a plan similar to Tapscott or Hammond never attempt the terpsicho- rean. It makes very little difference whether you come from a Bear Hollow hamlet or a metropolis like Owensboro, a freshman is a frezhman unless he is a Pi Kap pledge, then he is a victim. But in a few weeks you will become accustomed to the university— long before the university can return the compliment. Each year the crop of freshmen is blighted worse than before. The yield increases but the quality degenerates. Bob Mitchell states that he has survived seven crops of freshmen with surprising tenacity. The it, Somi Shovup e Folliej' (258) answer is that Mitch never got past that stage himself. Bob says he is now a senior freshman. Some freshmen, such as Hardesty, get wise to the institution in a remarkable short time. He learned that you just have to knock three times to get into the All Thor- oughly Obnoxious and that there is a way to sneak out of 144 North Upper with- out being caught. Gay was another one of those demonstrators of button hole badges, but he finally got stuck. When the Frosh is able to roll a cigarette with one hand his education is almost ended. All that remains is a little practice in the applied mechanics of argumentation before the Council of Offensive Administration. But don’t try to convert the natives of the home hamlet to the K. A. method of balancing the mind by the parting of your hair. Get over the notion that you are supposed to study. Do your work in the summer time. The S. A. E. Cafe isn’t open then, so it isn’t a crime to waste a few hours studying the chaste chapters of Beaumont and Fletcher. Never drink mixed drinks like malted milk and pousse cafes. Stick to beer and you won’t get stuck. Smoking dulls the brain, so if you are not too keen, don’t smoke. Respect fine, intellectual, high-minded women such as Siss Hopkins and Dear Dean. Doc Roe can scarcely be included. Choose your own associates as far as possible. Of course there are certain fellows like John Price who can’t be avoided unless he’s in quarantine. Keep away from athletics. Their morals are low and they should be discriminated against—although we hate to entirely eliminate Y. M. C. A. Duncan’s group of compatriots. Avoid school activities, especially publications. Just imagine what this annual has done for me. Now about going to classes. You should do so often. Prayer-meeting may keep you up all night before you get the chips back, but be sure to go to class in the morning. No one but lawyers can get away with that class- cutting stuff. They have a real Dean of men. Now, according to the ideas of your home community, study is the important thing in college. Of course no one at home knows. Why anyone should study English 24 when there are so many interesting things to learn about the main entrance to 1 05 North Lime (which, by the way, is not by way of the gates ajar) is harder than the oft repeated and somewhat related question, “Why not a Chi dance at the hall?” A Phi Beta Kappa key is a nice thing to have if you wish to enter the ministry or library work; but if you want to be president of the United States choose your coat-of-arms from Phi Alpha Delta, Democratic Club, or Theta Nu Epsilon. Woodrow Wilson belongs to them all. Now of course you will want to join something. There are plenty of pins to go around. Some have Greek letters and some have blue backgrounds with red triangles on them, but all of them are about the same weight. A safety pin is often more useful. Men with theological inclinations will find many opportunities to dissemi- nate their un profitable propaganda. The Y. M. C. A. is in good with the authorities. It hasn’t been raided in the last few years. In the basement is the dipping tank, and Daddy (259) Prof.: “A fool can ask questions a wise man cannot answer.’ Stewd: “No wonder so many of us fail. (260 Kappa Alpha (K)nightly Adventurers Founded: By the fusion of Ku Klux Klan and the Salvation Army Number of Chapters: Two Yl ones in Lexington. Motto: “Ladies First Number of Members: Few. This conglomerated mass of preachers, actors, and M.A.s think they live in an abbreviated apart- ment with a checkerboard bold front. The Adventurers reside at home in a dormant state from 3 to 7 a. m. The neighborhood has finally become acclimated, they have slept recently. Any night that you can’t sleep and you must talk, drop in on McClain and Morton at the Sign of the Scarlet Cross. We trust that you realize that we cannot say what we want to about this gang because one of them is checking this stuff up. But such things will come out in time. (262) Sacreligious Community, or Segregated Criminals Founded: Why not? Misery likes company Number of Chapters: Unimportant Number of Members: The greater pari of these are more unimportant Motto: “Come one, come all.” The Criminals seem fond of historical residences, old places ready to be inhabited by the owls, squirrels and bats. They are without the Central figure this year, but there is still a little Isrealite to brighten these days of despair. The boys have not been able to publish a list of their sweethearts this year, they have none, they have practically nothing. Indeed, Gerald, there is not much of them. The illuminated Alumni continue to entertain the neighborhood in its own sweet way. When the cops are dead drunk on the beat and the town is trying hard to slumber, the bunch of good fellows segregate and their uproar has this substance: We have such a problem, it’s driving us mad— Whenever in meeting we sit, We get our secret work tangled up bad With the T. N. E. rit. (263) (204) Sigma Alpha Epsilon Stewed After Eight Founded: By E. B. Webb Number of Chapters: Anywhere they can get a crowd together Number of Members: One born every minute. Motto: There’s always room for one more. If there is one, there i3 a hundred. They come in bunches, remnants, take one, be a sport, if you lose, we don’t. The herd is living in a respectable house this year, due mostly to pledge dues. If you are interested in the Greeks and get acquainted with the:e stcwds you should remain a barbarian. Yet, some of these boys have great capacities, but they often over- flow with effervescent exuberance. Take them for what they are worth. You will more than likely leave them. tLl H I Kappa Sigma Knell Sounded Founded: With Good Intentions Number of Chapters: Immaterial Number of Members: Poor Material Motio: “If we can’s get what we want, we shall take what we can get.” We hadn’t Intended to print obituaries in this book, but the courtesy of the journalistic profession prevailed upon us to give Kappa S gma some space. There is nothing to say but that the obsequities were attended by very little grief from the by-standers. She died an inevitable death. Death and oblivion was a matter of but a short time for her—morbid and uneventful existence terminating in moral insanity. Feeble as she was, she is better dead than alive. She is survived by one “Brit, who will sing a solo at the grave, ‘“Revive us Again.” Their star and crescent are supposed to be the only things connected with the fraternity that will have a place in the heaven above. Amen. 0—1 TS7 j Phi Delta Theta Public Drunks Thrive Founded: To protect the right of personal liberty, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Number of Chapters: Innumerable. Number of Members: Staggering Colors: Whitewashed The Phis have to be carried upstairs when they are brought home. It is only in such a condition that they should ever call it home. The boys have a glorious time as their flat frat house is equipped with an electric piano and a couple of solo dens. The boys are kept busy entertaining the staggering number of Alumni. Such topics as the high cost of poker chips, the usual fight over the various brands of stimulants, and the adjournment to the next bar, are regularly threshed out at their meetings. You will see life, if you can live through it. (266) Pi Kappa Alpha Prospects Keep Away Founded: Secret Branch of “1 won't Work” Number of Chapters: Vague Number of Members: It often appears to them to be doubled. Motto: “We are sports, we will take anybody. The fellow must have been a great humanitarian who conceived the idea of getting these creatures together and letting them bother one another. We have always believed in segregation. This bunch has considerable deadweight, we look for them to sink any moment. They have already been under. We commend the boys for even living in this vale of fears. We can promise one good thing, and that is that the 1919 Year Book should have at least one certified autopsy and a duly authorized post-mortem appreciation. (267) Sigma Nu Signifying Nothing Founded: Archeologists fail here. Number of Chapters: At least one too many. Number of Members: Great and small. Motto: Every Sigma New and every one a nuisance. The New Enigma is still with us, leading the same uneventful existence as the rest of the plebean multitude. They are struggling to live in a two by four apartment over a shoe repair shop and within a stone’s throw of the mahogany lunch stands and the Central Hotel. Creech can hail his friends from the Bay Window while kicking the dogs off the back gallery. And Handsome Wilson grew not a mustache for fear of scratch- ing the woodwork. Rather intensive living, George, but look at some of the members and you will add rather extensive agriculture. We will pass hurriedly on. (268) v i « A l | J yir V I V H X I-vfi ,..I ■' Alpha Tau Omega All Thoroughly Obnoxious Founded: Not guilty, intent lacking Number of Chapters: Plenty of that sort. Number of Members: Constantly fluctuating. Motto: “Spirit, Mind and Body;” or “Sinew, Muscle and Brawn.” Alpha Tau is an organization of strong men, sinewy of back and infinitesimal of mind. At the present writing anyone weighing over 140 pounds, is invited to the gym and conducted to the Examination Room, where his lung capacity, blood pressure, grip strength and lifting ability are tested. If he is up to specifications he is bid. The remainder of the ritualistic and initatory observances will not be related, out of deference to the size of the Alpha Tau brothers. (269) Delta Chi Dangerous Congregation Founded: As a result of legal neglect Number of Members: Any number Number of Chapters: Several out West, they say Motto: “Leggies The members of this congregation cannot live on its reputation, furthermore, they cannot even outlive it. They affirm that they have a house this year, never- theless, we have not been able to locate it. The quality of the men in the Law College is improving, so D. C. is forced to ensnare victims from elsewhere. D. C. has tried so hard and often to break into the realm of the regular fraternities that they are now despairing. All comes to him who waits. In other words, anybody can come. (270) Sigma Alpha Mu Sleep After Midnight Founded: On East Side. Number of Chapters: Now. how many would you want? Number of Members: Marked down. Motto: “Business is Business.” The most exclusive set on the campus. You must have a chain of ancestry reaching back to Abraham or Isaac, and a physiognomy resembling a parrot, before your application will be considered. Their grip is an ambidextrous shuffle. We can’t think of anything else good to say about the S. A. M.s, so we shall now sing the doxology and adjourn without the benediction. (271) Alpha Sigma Phi Affected Social Parasites Founded: In obscurity. Number of Chapters: Only one we ever heard of. Number of Members: Indicates small initiation fee. Motto: In a crowd there is strength.” It was one hot sultry afternoon that a bunch of dyspcpsic non-frat dormites resolved to demonstrate to the public that anybody, no matter if they were the scum of the earth, :an be a frater. Well, they did, and have been reverently living up to the principles pro- pounded by their founders ever since. The bars were low and plenteous, and a big flock was driven in. The army then rented a nice big house and proceeded to live therein rather unnaturally. Yet they have been halted without the bullwarks of Pan-Hell, and their apprenticeship of social ostracism will continue. Hall of Shame 422% On Hardboy Hudson give one look, But please restrain your mirth— We wonder how the angels spare This gentle youth to earth. Beside us in this rectangle We find the missing link; The Stroller Creech, he’s called— A Sigma Nu, we think. Gaze on Sigsbee Sherwood— His face so bright and fair; He hails from Cincinnati— Sure! There's a big zoo there. ‘Judge Rice,” they say his name is; He surely is a pill; To make this prune digestible Would take a Home Ec’s skill. In Patrick Campbell you now see A sad eugenic blunder; When we look on Nature’s sad mistake Our hearts are torn asunder. His name is Hieronymous— Thus spelled in the family Bible; If cursed with such a name, We’d sue Friend Dad for libel. (274) : ••••• ' Hall of Shame Why wasle such hair on such a bloke? Nauglil else lies ’neath his bonnet. Our Hall of Shame would be a joke If McClain weren’t on it. Prep Walker is ?. dashing youth— His nerve is without measure. If to his funeral we were bid, We would accept, with pleasure. To the right just cast your eye, On S. A. E.’s young devil; Now, isn’t he the small town sport- This Freshman, Milton Revill? They say that Woodruff was baptized. And that to church he used to go; But of course religion is renounced When one is joined to A. T. O. Here’s our ladies’ man, Mahoney! What causes him to sigh? Would you not hang your head in shame If joined to Sigma Chi? Calm yourselves, fair ladies— Let this face cause you np.fear; Mitchell wanted his picture in, So we just stuck it here. (275) Kentucky Trained Home Builders’Association Time: Sept. ’ I7-June ’18 Drivers; Teams: Tandem Class Nancy Buckner Louise Mayer Betty Davis Mary Heron Double Entry Class Lee McClain Gus Gay Fred Jackson Transylvania Entry Ed Dabney Ellis Peak ( Doc Lasley 7 Dew Downing R. B. Fenley J Dick Duncan J Col. Mabry j Headley Shouse k Business Man 1 George Zerfoss Hersch Auxier ) c. L. Morgan k CKarlie-Boy Milward Mamie Storms Dunn Sig Sherwood Lee Oldham Catherine Tucker.......................................................J Tillie Wilson ( H. L. Thompson Helen Taylor (i)....................................................... j Henry Thomas I Jake Herndon Josephine Thomas........................................................( Russell David (h) ( Gene Wilson Dot Walker............................................................ j Eger Murphrec ( Harry Milward May Barnes Browning . . . Felix Shouse Roberta Blackburn (g) . . . Algie Wood Gertrude Wallingford................Jim Park Eliza Piggott...............Fred Jackson (h) Fan Ratcliff.............George Matthews Frances Spencer .... Virgil Pritchett Rules of the Track 1. To enter “Tandem Class driver must show class to the extent of three steadies. 2. To enter Double Team Class” driver must successfully manage two steadies and keep them under control. However, on account of unusual endurance qualities, a few single entries are permitted in this class. 3. Any contestant will be ruled out who concentrates on any one steady to the exclusion of others. 4. Any contestant will be automatically eliminated who fails to keep up the pace and drops down to one steady, unless the contestant is entitled to special privileges. (See Rule 2, single entries in Double Class.) 5. The winner in each class shall be the contestant who finishes the race with the best score on the following points: (a) Attendance at dances; (b) Popularity at hops; (c) Speedy disposition of no-breaks; (d) Dates for Sunday morning Church; (e) Engagements for Sunday night church (this counts three) ; (f) Number of times paged at mealtime. —Indicates withdrawal from the race, g—Dropped from “Tandem to Single Entry” class, h—Has promising future. i—Recently ruled out in accordance with Rule 3. (277) O. WILLET EVERDIE Drink Till Drunk; Doorkeeper of Spurr’s Terpsichorean Art Studio; Secretary Alfalfa Growers’ Assoc.; Sergeant-at-Arms T. K. B.; Professor emeritus of Cassidy Drawing Room Etiquette. Willie comes to us from the progressive city of Aeutaday, many many summers ago. There he had delivered a valedictorian address which was pronounced unequaled by the oldest inhabitant. Such a shame it would be to allow such ability to waste itself upon the desert air. Far be it from us to do so. We shall send him to the University. When he arrived he inquired for the best fra- ternity and was forthwith and without delay initiated. He is a connoisseur of billiard quips and family entrances. His feet are more agile than his brain. He is a good mixer, when he has anything to mix. He is a free thinker, but is slow on new thought. All told, he is a fine fellow, and may succeed in life, but in nothing else. U. MAY SEAMORE Eta Pi; Pres. Scarcely In or Out Club; Bald Room Enthusiast; Tandem Class Driver; Secretary Philosopha Club. May immigrated in 1914 from Dick Run, down near Bear’s Creek, up in Jessup County. Before seeking other fields of endeavor, she had hoodwinked several Beauty Contests at Lick Run High Her literary contributions to the monthly “Howl” were regular outbreaks of talent. Her master- pieces, “The Death of the Beautiful Blond Stenographer,” and “The Candy Woman’s Revenge” have been adapted to the Silent Drama. May is a dancer of renown. The dance is well remembered when she lost the upper half of her evening frock, as her string of pearls broke and were smashed by the stampede of stags. This notoriety cinched a social career. Her departure will be accompanied by tears from her great horde of admirers. I. WILL B. ARMSTRONG Deadweight Champion; Ex-Director of Athletics in Mexico; (Tg) Noble Trize as Dis- penser of Wassilous Converse; Pool and Bawl Room Artist; Order of the Pail; Order of Owls; B. P. O. E. it was in Flunkout that I. Will first saw the glorious light of the rising sun. But it never inspired him. It is said that he cursed the day he was born and rocked the rockers off his cradle when he was a week old; his proportions gave great promise for the future. He entered Prep here when the memory of man fadeth out, and has been consistently around here ever since. For years he has been bass in the Meat House Quarto. His attempt to make the Glee Club caused considerable embarrassment, but he was properly instructed as to Clubs, and magnanimously informed that he was far from glee, but not quite as far as he would be. We fear the Disintegration of llie Old Guard upon his departure. He has been with us so long that we have learned to love him. (278) The Mo£t High Senior Court It was early in October as the shadows and leaves began to fall, there was an ele- ment of great unrest pervading the autumnal atmosphere, certain rumors came to our ears of unprecedented activity among the obstreperous underclassmen, the international up- heaval prompted rebellion, and the masses frequently dissipated in socialistic enthusiasm. A body of great men assembled to work out the new world problem. How could they prevent such anarchy? To simplify matters they took the power unto themselves and with the sanction of the common and cannon law, constituted themselves the Most High Senior Court. It was also decided who would be eligible to appear before this court: Any frosh who walked with a girl on the campus. Any frosh who did not tip his hat to a Senior. Any frosh who broke a Senior at a dance. Anyone who did not conduct himself in a manner corresponding with his status. Anyone who spoke in a derogatory manner of the Court’s supreme authority. Anyone that the Court saw fit to accuse. The Senior Court Most High met in “Heaven” on the third floor, as often as the criminal docket had at least one name on it. Sheriff Parks summoned, and usually brought, the culprit and held him in waiting while Judge Y. M. C. A. Chapman assumed (280) the bathrobe of his official station. Blindfolded and bound, the victim was crossly ex- amined in illegal language by Prosecutor Scott. General Fenley appeared against the unassuming offender, and swore about the culprit breaking him at a dance. Count 1. It soon developed that he may have been talking about them behind their backs. Count 2. He had been seen speaking civilly to a girl. Count 3. He evidently did not know his status. Count 4. And to finish himself well, he complained that he could not tell the Seniors from the Freshmen, and consequently failed consistently to tip his hat. At this outburst of impudence, the Judge commanded Magnanimous Sherwood not to proceed with the defense, instructed the jury to step out of the box and get ready for what was to follow, and in a deep, sonorous monotone pronounced punishment to the limit. At these harsh words the culprit snapped the ties that bound him, and gave vent to his pent up energy. Chairs, paddles, poker chips, human figures, and other rubbish occupied the dense air for several minutes. The husky had bidden fair for a hasty retreat, but as the dust settled down he was safe within the arms of the law. He was carried forth- with to the cannon and strapped thereon. And the hushed silence of the midnight hours echoed the last tattoo as each member of the jury wielded the big stick. Repeatedly firing at his heels, he was told to retreat and retire and never utter or speak of what he that night saw and heard. Thus the Senior Court accomplished its work. ADMINISTERING OF PUNISHMENT (231) Things We Know But Won t Tell Who wrote the Fraternity Roasts. What will come from North Dakota next. When the Annual will be out. Where the Editor is going when it comes. How much will the Business Manager clean up. (284) vUR MOST INTIMATE FRIENDS WHO REFUSE TO I 1 ADVERTISE WITH US. TO SHOW THAT OUR w HEARTS ARE IN THE RIGHT PLACE, WE SHALL NOT FORSAKE THEM IN THE HOUR OF NEED TT ?e Ada Meade Theatre Stranded Theatre 1 00 Girls 10 Costumes ©Is A IMMORAL PICTURES HARD SEATS NO MUSIC Never go to Dr. Pryor’s Physi- ology Class, come and see our unequaled exhibition of ana- tomy. ©Is A We can t advertise, for we are honest men. We can’t write any of our jokes here, so come and hear them. Ben Alley Lounge Room PAYETTE DRUG STORE Unsanitary Upholstered Seats German Orchestra Postively No Ventilation Our pictures has stood the test of time. We Drug You for a Nickel. We run Strollers and William S. Hart Spec- ials, but we don’t run ads. If you get drugged, blame it on this Stu- dent Drag. Farewell Music, let thy strains fall no more upon our ears! Curtain, drop you to the floor! Lights, die out and be not! The shadowy actors vanish behind the dim footlights of Time. The poor players strut and fret their hour upon the stage and then are knocked out. Our lines are as a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. Our puny shafts of wit and sarcasm are tipped with no points at all; we have never intended to stab you in the back; just wanted to tickle you in the ribs. “Shivering Jimmy.” “The Mills College girls like Jell-O. With fruit inside and whipped cream outside, it is one of their favorite dishes and is affectionately known as ‘Shivering Jimmy.’ ” Mills College, near San Francisco, is the only woman’s college on the Pacific coast, and the student body is drawn from a field of great extent. It was a Mills College girl who told us about “Shivering Jimmy.” As a change from fudge and other common things, no one can be more appreciative of than the girls who must provide their own dain- ties and do it without devoting much time and effort to it. There are six pure fruit flavors of Jell-O: Strawberry, Raspberry, Lemon, Orange, Cherry, Chocolate. Each 10 cents at any grocer’s. THE GENESEE PURE FOOD COMPANY, Le Roy. N. Y. ■ ..0 Thirty-Four College Annuals m ill Representing Colleges in Seventeen States is Our Record This Season for .. : m fa m Benson Printing Company is a printing plant specially equipped for every kind of school and college work. It is a complete organization with artists and designers and work- men whose thought and inspiration is concentrated in the production of College Annuals and School Literature. Each year Annuals are printed for such institutions as: Vanderbilt, Tulane, Sewanee, Kentucky State, Mississippi A. M., Louisiana State University, University of Alabama, Richmond College, Citadel College. Transylvania College. 13renau College, Wofford College, Roanoke College, University of Mississippi Furman University. Asbury College, West Hampton College, Ouachita College, Sewanee Military Academy, Peace Institute, Carson Newman College, Meridian College, Mercer Hillman College, Kentucky College for Women, Columbia College, Tennessee College, Branham Hughes School, Carthage High School, Eminence High School, Salem High School, Trimble High School. Samples and Prices Upon Request ENSOIsI' (PRINTING CO. NASHVILLE. College Annual Experts J! This Book is a Sample of Our Work iii i I -y. THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY ESTABLISHED IN EIGHTEEN HUNDRED SIXTY-SIX Frank L. McVey, Ph.D., LL.D., President I. The College of Arts and Science offers to men and women programs of study leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science, which may be begun in September or February. The Courses in Education prepare for the profession of teaching in secondary and higher schools, and grant the degrees of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science and a life certificate in Education, entitling the holder to teach in the schools of the State. In this College there are other courses in various fields, and specifically in Journalism, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Journalism. II. The College of Agriculture includes work in instruction, the Experiment Station and the Extension Division. Courses in Agriculture and Home Science are offered, leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science in Agriculture and Bachelor of Science in Home Economics. Short courses are offered to special students from November to March. The Experiment Station carries on research work and experimentation, and the Extension Division has charge of the instruc- tion in Agriculture and Home Economics outside of the University. III. The COLLEGE of Law offers a three years’ course and grants the degree of Bachelor of Laws. IV. The courses of study leading to degrees in Mining Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering are offered in the COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING. V. The Graduate Department presents advanced courses of study leading to the degrees of Master of Arts and Master of Science. VI. The Summer Session provides college courses for students and teach- ers which are accredited for the teachers certificate and toward degrees. VII. The University maintains laboratories and stations and is well equipped to carry on work in scientific fields. It also has provisions for the care of students. Information regarding colleges and departments may be obtained by ad- dressing the Registrar of the University, Lexington, Kentucky. D r h Thanks for Your Patronage Satisfaction Guaranteed We take Pleasure in Handling the Student Work Humphrey’s Studio 341 West Main Street Telephone 1635-X LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY The College Store For College People University Book Store Pennants, Stationery, Books Engraving and Fountain Pens ALL THE NEEDS OF A COLLEGE MAN J. F. BaTTAILE, ’08, Manager 233 West Short Street Be Stylish Wear a Varsity Fifty-Five Your Will Like the Military Touches in the Famous HART SCHAFFNER MARX AND ASHLAND TAILORED CLOTHES AT Kaufman Clothing Company (incorporated) LEXINGTON’S BETTER STORE We have served your school, from time to time, with McGURK’S Jewelry and Stationery The Popular Place for Candy, Ices and Lunches And are prepared to fill your every NOTICE individual need in Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry and Stationery of We have private rooms for private the finest quality, and at the lowest parties, giving you special attention possible prices Careful and Intelligent Mail Service See Us If You Should Want a JACCARD’S Special Party Served MERMOD, JACCARD McGURK’S KING JEWELRY CO. Ninth and Locust Sts. 106 West Main St. St. Louis, Mo. Lexington, Kentucky College Work a Specialty Cottrell Leonard Engraved and Printed Commence- ments and Programs, College and Official Makers of b rat. Kings and Pins WELCH MURRAY Caps, Gowns and Hoods PRINTING CO. (Incorporated) Class contracts a specialty 124 North Limestone Bulletins, Samples, etc., on request Lexington, Ky. Phone 619 Albany, N. Y. C. D. CALLOWAY CO. Woman’s Exchange SPORTING GOODS 106 North Upper Street HEADQUARTERS Opposite Court House Strictly First-Class Motorcycles, Pennants and Posters Complete line of Athletic Goods, Luncheon Eastman Kodaks The Best of Everything Served in Season 146 West Main St. Special Banquet Rates to Students Lexington, Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky Copyright 1917 Tho Houso of Euppoaheimot THE STORE THAT YOUNG MEN LIKE BEST FOR SEVERAL REASONS Young Men. especially College Men, are good judges of style—they know good style when they see it. They appreciate striking patterns and perfect tailoring—it s then reason foi- appreciating Kelsington and Kuppenlieimer College Clothe . Young Men are on this store’s preferred list of Customers—we make extra effoits to please them. The Newest in Haberdashery, Shoes, Hats, etc., are Always Found Here COLLEGE MEN MAKE THIS THEIR HEADQUARTERS GRAVES, COX COMPANY, Inc. “COLLEGE FELLOWS SHOP . , i PATRONIZE OUR Advertisers ' 11 ' ' ill ' I II «11 [T] mi mil I nil i HII i imi i n i' m ii 'mi i mi i mi i mu i m i ii m mu 11 m 11 m i mu i mi i mi I mu i nil i m 11«1 j CUTS IN THIS ANNUAL MADE BY STAFFORD Engraving Co. INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA [c III!........... mi i it.ii mu i mi 11 mi i mi ■ mi 11 ii -111 ■ . A PAGE Activities......................... 223-252 Agriculture, College of..................30 Agricultural Society....................164 Alpha Delta Sigma.......................150 Alpha Gamma Delta.......................153 Alpha Sigma Phi.....................140-141 Alpha Tau Omega.....................134-135 Alpha Xi Delta..........................154 Alpha Zeta........................144r 145 Anderson, Dean...........................31 Arts and Science, College of.............30 Athletics...........................195-222 Alumni Association.......................37 B Baseball........................- . 217-222 Basketball (Boys)...................213-216 Basketball (Girls)................. 209-212 Battalion...........................181-183 Battalion Officers......................179 Board of Trustees........................28 Boyd, Dean...............................30 Boys’ Glee Club.........................237 C Cadet Band..............................180 Calendar........................... 248-252 Campus Clubs........................159-175 Campus Scenes...................... 246-247 Cartoons........................... 282-284 Civil Engineering College................32 Classes..............................41-104 Coaching Staff..........................198 Cooper, Dean.............................30 Council of Administration................29 Commencement Pictures.................40-80 Chi Omega...............................157 D Dedication..............................6-7 Delta Chi...........................136-137 E English Club............................163 Ex Libris................................ 1 F page Flashes from the Front.................276 Football...........................197-216 Foreword............................ . 8 Fountain................................42 Fraternities.......................117-157 Alpha Delta Sigma..................150 Alpha Gamma Delta..................153 Alpha Sigma Phi................140-141 Alpha Tau Omega................134-135 Alpha Xi Delta.....................154 Alpha Zeta.....................144-145 Chi Omega..........................157 Delta Chi......................136-137 Kappa Alpha....................120-121 Kappa Delta........................156 Kappa Kappa Gamma..................155 Kappa Sigma....................126-127 Lamed Pe.......................148-149 Phi Delta Theta................128-129 Pi Kappa Alpha.................130-131 Sgima Alpha Epsilon .... 124-125 Sigma Alpha Mu............... 138-139 Sigma Chi......................122-123 Sigma Nu.......................132-133 Tau Beta Pi....................142-143 Tau Kappa Alpha................146-147 Fraternity Gossip................. 261-272 Freshman Class......................99-104 Frontispiece.............................3 G Girls’ Basketball................. 209-212 Gleaned from a Graveyard...............273 Gossip............................ 253-286 Great Kentuckians.....................9-21 H Hall of Shame..................... 274-275 Hamilton, Dean..........................33 Hammond Society........................169 Henry Clay Law Society.................170 Home Economics Club....................165 Horace Mann............................172 I In Memoriam............................176 (298) J PAGE Joseph Dicker.........................38-39 Junior Class..........................87-94 K “K Men.................... Kappa Alpha............... Kappa Delta............... Kappa Kappa Gamma . . . Kappa Sigma............... Kentucky Kernel Staff Kentucky Law Journal . . Kentuckian Staff . ■ . . . K. T. H. B. A............. L Lafferty, Dean............ Lamed Pe ................. Lamp and Cross............ Law, College of........... Law College Debating Team Lawyers’ Bible Class . . . Lexington High School Clu Library Club.............. Louisville Club........... M McVey, President . . 24-27 Marconi Society . . . 168 Mechanical College .... 31 Melcher, Dean . . . 32 Military 177-194 Mines and Metallurgy, College of . .31 Moving Pictures . . . 279 Music and the Drama . . . 233-238 ... 196 . . 120-121 ... 156 ... 155 . . 126-127 . . 228-229 ... 230 . . 226-227 ... 277 . . 33 148-149 . . 161 . . 33 . . 243 . . 171 . . 174 . . 162 . . 175 P PAGE Pi Kappa Alpha.....................130-131 Pre-Medical Society....................173 Publications...................... 225-231 Prophecy.............................77-81 Q Quartet................................238 R Roll of Honor......................185-194 Royden, Captain........................178 Rural Kentuckian.......................231 S Seniors..............................43-75 Senior Class Officers................44-45 Senior Court...................... 280-281 Senior Gossip..........................278 Senior Prophecy......................77-81 Senior Mechanicals.....................166 Service Flag...........................184 Sigma Alpha Epsilon.............124-125 Sigma Alpha Mu..................138-139 Sigma Chi..........................122-123 Sigma Nu...........................132-133 Sophomore Class......................95-98 Staff and Crown........................160 Strollers ........................ 234-236 Sweet Kentuckians..................106-114 T Tau Beta Pi........................142-143 Tau Kappa Alpha....................146-147 Terrell, Dean...........................32 Tip in Time....................... 256-260 N Norwood, Dean.............. O Officers of Instruction . . . . Order of Books............... Organizations .............. P Pan-Hellenic (Boys) . . . . Pan-Hellenic (Girls) . . . . Patterson Literary Society . . Phi Delta Theta............. Philosophian Literary Society . . .119 . . 152 . . 241 128-129 . . 239 U Union Literary Society..............240 University........................23-40 V Varsity Debating Team...............242 W Westinghouse Society................167 Womens Pan-Hellenic.................152 World of Pleasure...............105-114 Y Y. M. C. A..........................245 Y. W. C. A..........................244
”
1915
1916
1917
1919
1920
1921
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.